No threshing this morning. Papa & Rose went to Waterloo load wheat. Sure was some awful hot days the last while; 110 & 112 in the shade, hottest & dryest [sic] year, in 32 & 36 yrs. ago. In Kansas, it must be terrible, stock all dying; 3700 cows & calf were brought to E. St. Louis Stockyards yesterday, some so weak & they shot them right away. People are dying from the heat, the paper says 510 so far, from different states, one place it rained so much that 28 acres bottom corn, all washed out. Dillinger the gangster was shot to death now, while coming out a theather [sic] Sun. night. Frank Dudenhoeffer’s of Oklahoma, nee Lizzie Mueth, are visiting relatives here, since last Friday, leaving Sun; We went out threshing, at Henry’s, had them for lunch; got 128 bus. oats our share. Uncle Fred & Aunt Mary were also there; came home through town. Watermelon in town.
Thursday, July 26, 1934
Filed Under: 1934, July Tagged With: animal_death, Anton, Aunt Mary, Chicago_Gangster, Chicago_Mob, death, Dillinger, drought, Dudenhoeffer, Dust_Bowl, East_St._Louis_Stockyards, E_St._Louis, heat_wave, Henry, hot_weather, John_Dillinger, Kansas, loss_of_crops, Meuth, Mueth, oats, Oklahoma, Rosalia, stockyards, threshing, Uncle Fred, Waterloo, watermelon, wheat
Stay Connected with Tillie's Tales!