Shiner Gazette (Shiner, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 7, 1939 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Shiner Gazette and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Shiner Public Library.
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SHINER GAZETTE, SHINER, TEXAS
Star Dust
★ Real Star Starters
★ What a ‘Stand-In’ Is
★ Jon Hall May Go Native
— By Virginia Vale —
AT THE studios of Metro-
iX Goldwyn-Mayer there is
renewed interest in the film-
ing of “Pocahontas”—if they
do, they predict that early
American history will come
in for its rightful share of the
spotlight. They’ve selected
that continental glamour girl,
Hedy LaMarr, to play the part
of the Indian girl, Pocahontas, who
captured the heart of Capt. John
Smith when she, “whom no entreaty
could prevail, got his head in her
Bruckart*s Washington Digest
President Hits Top in Precedent
Breaking in Thanksgiving Change
Stirs Up More Comment Than Any Statement Ever
Emanating From a Chief Executive; Element of
Uncertainty Injected Makes It Harmful.
By WILLIAM BRUCKART
WNU Service, National Press Bldg., Washington, D. C.
MANY VARIETIES OF COOKIES
(See Recipes Below)
Cookies in the Clipboard
What cookies do folks like best to
eat?
A cookie that’s rich, and spicy and
sweet?
A soft, thick cookie with fruity fla-
vor,
Or the thin, crisp wafer the tea
drinkers savor?
A chocolate cookie that’s moist and
rich,
Or a tasty tidbit with nutmeats,
which
May be flavored with honey, mo-
lasses or spice?
Any kind of a cookie is pretty nice!
There are as many varieties of
cookies as there are occasions for
serving them.
And what satisfy-
ing morsels they
are for the school
lunch box, for
afternoon tea, or
lor a family meal
at home. You’ll
find among the
"tested cookie recipes below one for
any such occasion ranging from
dainty tea cookies to thick, soft, mo-
lasses cookies for an after-school or
bedtime snack. They’re all grand
recipes for the Girl Scout cookie sale
you may be planning, or for the
snext meeting of the church guild.
Soft Molasses Cookies.
(Makes about 7 dozen cookies.)
1 cup shortening
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
1 cup New Orleans molasses
2 teaspoons soda
1 cup buttermilk
6 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon ginger
Cream shortening, and add sugar
gradually. Beat in the eggs and
molasses. Dissolve the soda in the
buttermilk. Sift flour, baking pow-
der and spices together and add to
the first mixture alternately with
the buttermilk. Drop from teaspoon
onto a greased baking sheet. Dip
the bottom of a tumbler in cold wa-
ter, and press down gently on each
cookie. Sprinkle with sugar. Bake
in a hot oven (425 degrees) for about
3 minutes.
Even on Sunday evenings hun-
gry families demand good food
It’s simple enough to provide a
meal that is temptingly different
with suggestions such as those
Eleanor Howe will give you in
her column next week. Be sure
to look for her article “Sunday
Night Suppers”!
fuls on greased cookie sheet and
bake in a moderate oven (350 de-
grees Fahrenheit) for approximate*
ly 15 minutes.
Orange Ice Box Cookies.
(Makes 5 dozen cookies.)
1 cup shortening
Vz cup brown sugar
Vi cup white; sugar
1 egg
2 tablespoons orange juice
1 tablespoon orange rind (grated)
2% cups general purpose flour
V\ teaspoon salt
V\ teaspoon soda
% cup pecan nut meats (broken)
Cream shortening and add sugars
slowly, while beating constantly.
Add egg (well beaten), orange juice
and orange rind. Mix and sift flour,
salt, and soda together and add to
the creamed mixture, together with
the broken nut meats. Form in
rolls in wax paper and chill over-
night in refrigerator. Slice thin,
place on greased baking sheet and
bake in moderately hot oven (375
degrees) 12-15 minutes.
Grandmother’s Sugar Cookies.
(Makes 5 dozen cookies.)
% cup shortening
1 cup sugar
1 egg, and 1 egg yolk
Vi cup sour cream
Vz teaspoon vanilla extract
Vi teaspoon lemon extract
3 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
Vi teaspoon sat
Vi teaspoon soda
1 teaspoon nutmeg
Cream shortening, and add sugar
gradually. Add the egg and beat
until fluffy. Combine sour cream
with flavoring extracts, and add to
the creamed mixture alternately
with the sifted dry ingredients. Chill
for about Vi hour. Roll out and cut.
Place on greased cookie sheet.
Brush tops of cookies with unbeaten
egg white and sprinkle generously
with sugar. Bake in a moderately
hot oven (425 degrees) for about 8
minutes.
Pineapple Cream Tarts.
PART I—Tart Cases.
Vi cup butter
Vi cup granulated sugar
1 egg yolk (beaten)
1 teaspoon lemon-extract
1% cups cake flour
Cream butter thoroughly and add
sugar slowly while beating con-
stantly. Add the
beaten egg yolk
and lemon ex-
tract. Then add
the flour. Divide
dough into 12
even pieces. Then
lay one piece at
a time in the left
Butterscotch Brownies.
(Makes 2 dozen small cookies.)
4 tablespoons butter
1 cup brown sugar
1 egg (slightly beaten)
-% cup flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
% teaspoon vanilla
Vi cup nut meats (cut fine)
Melt the butter in a small sauce-
pan. Add sugar
jj- slowly, and cook
for 2 minutes.
Re m o v e from
flame, and add
remaining ingre-
a, y x dients. Mix well.
/V~>V _ Pour into shallow
greased pan and
s ' bake in a slow
oven (300 degrees Fahrenheit) for
about 18 minutes. Cut in squares.
Chocolate Applesauce Cookle,s.
(Makes 3 dozen cookies.)
Vi cup shortening
1 cup sugar
214 cups flour
1 teaspoon soda
Vi teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons cinnamon
Vi teaspoon cloves
Vi teaspoon ginger
4 teaspoons cocoa
1% cups applesauce (unsweet-
ened) v,
Cream shortening, add sugar and
beat well. Sift together the flour,
soda, salt, spices, and cocoa and
add alternately with the applesauce.
Beat thoroughly. Drop by teaspoon
HEDY LA MARK
arms and laid her own upon his to
save him from death,” when he was
captured by her father, Powhatan,
and was about to have his brains
beaten out.
You probably know any number
of people who claim that they gave
this or that motion picture star the
push that started him or her on the
road to fame and fortune. All too
frequently those star-starters actual-
ly had nothing to do with the per-
son’s success.
There are two men who can shine
in reflected glory, if they want to,
but they’re so busy shining in their
own glory that they can’t be both-
ered. One is a welli-known tailor in
Hollywood, Eddie Schmidt.
Adolphe Menjou went to him when
he first tackled Hollywood. He
knew the value of good clothes, but
he hadn’t any money. He wanted
to make a bargain. If Eddie
Schmidt would make him six suits,
and trust him for them, he’d tell
everybody where he got the clothes.
That wardrobe was the thing that
turned the balance in Menjou’s
favor.
The other star-maker is Sardi,
who owns the famous restaurant in
New York where screen and stage
players eat every day in the week.
Not so very long ago William Gar-
gan was stoney broke. He hadn’t
had a stage engagement for ten
months, his wife was in the hospital.
But he had to be seen in Sardi’s,
so that the theatrical world would
know that he was still about.
Sardi had noticed him, and had
faith in him. He invited the young
actor to eat at his expense, also to
entertain anyone who was important
to him. The investment came to
about $800 altogether. Leslie How-
ard was influential in helping Gar-
gan to make a tremendous success
in the stage version of “The Animal
Kingdom,*’ Hollywood dangled a
contract—and Gargan was set.
Both Menjou and Gargan paid their
backers’ bills the first moment that
they had the money.
Isabelle Sheridan, Mary Pick-
ford’s cousin, is in the movies yet
not in them—and she has no desire
to step before a camera.
She’s a stand-in—which means
that she wears a star’s costumes
and stands patiently while lighting
is tried out on her and the camera
palm; press with the right hand un- i man figures what he wants. She’s
Fill-
til dough is large enough to fit a
muffin tin. Then fit each piece into
the muffin tin and prick well with a
fork. Bake approximately 20 min-
utes in a hot oven. Fill with Pine-
apple Filling.
PART II—Pineapple Cream
ing.
3 tablespoons cornstarch
3 tablespoons sugar
V\ teaspoon salt
1 whole egg (well beaten)
1% cups milk (scalded)
1 teaspoon lemon extract
1 No. 2 can shredded pineapple
1 cup whipping cream (whipped)
Mix cornstarch, sugar and salt.
Add the egg (well beaten) and mix
thoroughly. Pour on the milk (scald-
ed). Return to a double boiler and
cook until thick. Remove from
flame, add lemon extract, and al-
low to cool. Fill tart shells and
just before serving place one spoon-
ful of crushed pineapple (drained)
on top of the cream filling.
Send for Copy of ‘Better Baking.*
Of course you’d like to be able to
make a feathery angel food cake,
lemon pie that melts in your mouth,
and crusty delicious rolls. You can
make all these and many more
tempting dishes with Eleanor
Howe’s cookbook, “Better Baking,”
to guide you. Send 10 cents in coin
to “Better Baking,” care of Eleanor
Howe, 919 North Michigan Avenue,
Chicago, Illinois; for your copy of
this valuable book.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
stood in for Constance Cummins,
Merle Oberon, Virginia Bruce, Sally
Eilers, Joan Biondell and various
other actresses. At present she’s
doing it for Joan Biondell in Hal
Roach’s “The Housekeeper’s Daugh-
ter.”
-———
Looks as if Jon Hall would go on
playing native of the South Seas for
the rest of his screen career. “Hur-
ricane” started him, you may re-
call, and Edward Small’s “South of
Pago Pago” will keep up the good
work.
Bette Davis’ performance in “The
Old Maid” is so good that people
who’ve never liked her on the screen
before are now admitting that the
girl can act. And Warner Brothers’
plans for screening “The Miracle”
have been speeded up and put into
production, after three years of dis-
cussion and preliminary work.
Miss Davis will have the coveted
role of the Nun.
-—
ODDS AND ENDS — Sol Lesser is
Mowing Principal Productions em-
ployees an extra half hour for lunch,
on condition that they’ll play badmin.
ton during their additional time, on the
courts across the street from his offices
at Selznick-International . . . After try-
ing for a year, Charles Correll of
uAmos and Andy” has taught his dog
to roll over . . . Irene Dunne thought
you, the public, wouldn’t like her as
the hard-boiled heroine of “Front
Page,” so the part is being re-wriiten.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.;
WASHINGTON.—President Roose-
velt’s ability to keep things stirred
up has been demonstrated numer-
ous times since his accession to the
White House. He seems to have a
highly developed penchant for doing
the unexpected. He calls it “prece-
dent breaking.” The results have
been varied, although it strikes me
that more of the “breaks” have been
against him in recent months than
when he first began to break prece-
dents as President in 1933.
It appears, however, that Mr.
Roosevelt reached a new peak in
precedent breaking when he changed
the date of our annual Thanksgiving
day. Probably no statement ever
forthcoming from a Chief Executive
stirred up as much comment—un-
less perhaps it was the famous
statement by Calvin Coolidge that
“I do not choose to run.” True, Mr.
Roosevelt moved the date only one
week, making this year’s Thanks-
giving day, Thursday, November 23,
instead of November 30. The effect
was the same, however, whether the
change was one week or one month.
Next year, he proposes that the
date should be moved forward an-
other week so that thereafter the
date upon which we pay homage to
God, as a nation, will be the second
Thursday in November instead of
the last Thursday of the month.
In announcing his plan, the Presi-
dent said he was desirous of rear-
ranging the November holiday so
that “holidays will be more evenly
spaced.” There is Labor day on the
first Monday in September; there
are no national holidays in October;
Thanksgiving day in November and
Christmas day near the end of De-
cember. So, Mr. Roosevelt said it
seemed better to move Thanksgiv-
ing day a bit forward. His action,
he explained, was taken after many
business men had urged it as a
means of giving more time for
Christmas shopping. It is well
known that shoppers do not really
get going on the^r Christmas buy-
ing until after Thanksgiving day,
and Mr. Roosevelt said the change
might spread out the usual rush.
Thanksgiving Day Change
Stirs Up Unusual Comment
Whatever the reason for the
change, the announcement broke out
all of the hissing steam that was
pent up. Business interests here
and there tried vainly to show a
united front. But that was impos-
sible because retailers disagreed as
to its possible benefits. There was
no disclosure by the President of
the identity of those business inter-
ests he had consulted. Some lines
of trade felt that terrific damage
had been done them and their shouts
were angry. Religious groups have
remained silent, as organizations,
but their individual members have
had unpleasant things to say about
the change. Altogether, the picture
seems to show a bad reaction
throughout the nation.
Let us look at the thing, how-
ever, from a practical standpoint:
Mr. Roosevelt made his announce-
ment without consulting the state
department. If he had sought ad-
vice there, he would have learned
that a presidential proclamation can
be enforced only in the District of
Columbia and the territories of the
United States. No state needs pay
any attention to a White House proc-
lamation unless it desires to do so.
Hence, the declaration that Thanks-
giving day shall be November 23,
1939, is binding only upon us folks
here in Washington, and those in
Alaska, Puerto Rico and Hawaii.
There are 11 states that have laws
fixing Thanksgiving day for the last
Thursday in November of each year.
Their legislatures are not in ses-
sion. They will not be called into
session again before the forthcom-
ing Thanksgiving day. Which day
will they celebrate and praise God
for the blessings He has^iven them?
There is no national statute fix-
ing the date. It is a traditional
ceremonial day, a day which, to
Americans, means actually the con-
nection between our economic life
and the Almighty Power that guided
our nation from its inception, the
link between material things and
religion.
For the reasons of its establish-
ment, it strikes me that there ought
not be a national law on the sub-
ject. It is a sacred thing. But my
guess is there will be a law and
that law will say that the last Thurs-
day in November shall be set aside
as a national holiday for expression
of our gratitude. I think such a
law will be passed at the next ses-
sion of congress.
Arouses Fear That All Our
People Are Being Regimented
Mr. Roosevelt surely could not
have guessed the repercussions, the
backfire, that has greeted his an-
nouncement and that has continued
in unabated fury. The politicians
seized upon it for some of the dirti-
est wisecracks I ever have heard.
I heard one that really warrants
Disobedience
Often Sign of
Forgetfulness
® IMPULSIVE ACTS OF
child are made without
thought either of being
obedient or disobedient.
Help in remembering often
much more necessary than
any form of punishment.
repetition here. The remark re-
called that King George, on his re-
cent visit to North America, reset
his birthday so that it could be cel-
ebrated while he was in Canada—
that being a prerogative of a king
and emperor. The question was then
propounded whether our President
contemplated a flexible holiday
schedule that would permit celebra-
tion of events whenever the White
House thought national morale was
low.
There is more to that remark than
just a laugh, Behind the thought is
an indication of a fear that all of
our people are being regimented,
told when to shout or when to weep,
when to work and when to play,
what to eat and what to wear and
not to think, but .to obey. Of course,
it is an exaggerated viewpoint; it
is not so exaggerated, however, that
it is not possible of attainment. It. ,.
is to be remembered that the peo-
pie of Russia, and then of Italy j
and then of Germany have gone |
through that very stage. It was a j
step which they took, and disregard- I
ed as unimportant; It led directly j
to the conditions under which those
people now live and have their be- j
ing, regimented all, controlled, beat- j
en down, living a life of fear.
Now, lest I be misunderstood, I '
hasten to say that I believe there
was no such thoughts as those in
Mr. Roosevelt’s mind. I believe his
action was taken because of his ;
ever-present urge to make changes, j
There are many persons who hold
that it was another move by the
President designed to keep people
from thinking of their troubles, to
help them forget the terrible strug-
gles through whkh we have been,
and are, passing.
Take a Look at Practical
Side of the Situation
Again, as to the practical side
and the results flowing from the
breaking of another precedent:
Let us consider first the litho-
graphing and printing industry of
the country. There are thousands
upon thousands of other businesses
that use the' product of the lithog-
rapher and the printer. Consider
the calendar that hangs on your
wall. It will show November 30 as
the Day of Thanksgiving. The an-
nual bill for calendars, paid for by
industry and by each of us who
buys a calendar, exceeds $100,000,-
000. The calendars are not useless,
of course, but the fact that the “cal-
endar is wrong” has some inde-
scribable effect upon me.
Take the transportation industry.
Officials begin planning many
months ahead for tours, special
rates, excursions. Public events and
ceremonies have been scheduled.
Each ties in with s me other—sched-
uled for Thanksgiving day when
Thanksgiving day was to be Novem-
ber 30. The printing industry has
done its job for most of those things
ahead even of today. What a mess
that is going to be!
Many editorials have been writ-
ten, many interviews given out, con-
cerning the effect of the new
Thanksgiving date on the college
football “industry,” for college foot-
ball receipts run into millions of dol-
Stran^e
!
Bats Aren't Batty
Set for Next World
Swift Blow-Up
Facts
!
By GEORGIA LOTT SELTER
*«/"\H, WHY need children be quite
so heedless and disobedient?”
sighed Mary Lance wearily.
“I wonder if they really are,” an-
swered her neighbor, Mrs. Jaynes,
comfortably. “They behave as they
do because they are children. They
usually act on impulse, without any
thought either of being obedient or
disobedient. You must expect such
conduct until they begin to acquire
i the knowledge that experience
brings.
| “I am convinced that children
need real help in remembering
much more frequently than they
need punishment. This belief is
based partly on my own never-to-be-
forgotten childish experience with a
detested red apron. My aunt, with
whom I lived, made me a big red
from one of her old house
dresses and said: ‘Lucy, you are to
put this apron on over your school
dress each morning until your work
is done.’ I had no objection to that,
but several times each week I
rushed heedlessly away to school,
flaunting the apron’s faded ugliness
for all to see.. My aunt always sent
a message b^'^an older girl who
was our neighbor, reminding me to
remove the apron. And no reproof
was ever considered complete until
these episodes of the red apron
were held up to me as evidence of
my disobedience!
“I’ve never forgotten the unhappi-
ness and embarrassment they in-
curred. Yet how easily my aunt
might have prevented them. She
could have said, ‘Always come to
me before you start to school to be
sure you look nice.’ Or, ‘Always kiss
me good-by, Lucy.’ My love-hungry
little heart would never have al-
lowed me to forget to do that, you
may be sure! And there would have
been no hurting apron episode.”
"But Henry’s case is different,”
said Mrs. Lance. “He is a boy and
should learn to take responsibility.
Yet he never remembers his chores
or his errands.”
“Appreciation Lightens Labor.”
“He just needs the help of a little
reminder,” insisted Mrs. Jaynes.
“Suppose you mention it casually
before his father each time he does
his work well and without being re-
minded? Even we older folks find
that appreciation lightens labor.
"Try to make work pleasant. Nev-
er use it as a punishment.
“Let work lead naturally to suit-
able rewards. If Henry helps you
with the.dishes and tidies the house,
it would be quite evident that you
would have more time. Perhaps
you could both go to the movies or
for a ride. When he has learned
to prepare food he can have picnics
and parties. If he keeps his room in
order, let him know how restful you
find it when you go in to spend a
few moments with him. If he takes
good care of his clothes, brushing
them and hanging them up neatly,
he would be happy indeed if Mother
should buy for Father and him two
articles just alike.
“If Henry is apt to forget his du-
ties, do not credit it to disobedi-
ence but study how you may make
it interesting and profitable for him
The only animals known to car-
ry their lunches on journeys are-'
certain species of bats, notably
the Pipistrellus pygmaeus. They
curl their tails into pouches, fill
them with insects and feed while
in flight.
On the day before a Chinese fu-
neral, the family of the deceased
purchase and burn a number of
paper representations of horses,
boxes of money, extra clothes and
servants, which he or she will need
in the next world. Incidentally, the
shops selling this merchandise are
usually known as “hell-equipment
stores.”
Nitroglycerin acts with such ra-
pidity that if a five-mile pipe filled
with it were detonated at one end
the entire column would explode—
and produce 10,000 times its own
volume of gas—in about one sec-
ond.—Collier’s.
Mending Life’s Garments
It is strange how people will try
to mend their lives when the gar-
ment is torn to shreds. It is
strange, too, how life’s garment,
unlike human weaving, grows
whole with the mending. It is as-
if some .invisible kindness out of
the air had set to work with you—
here a little and there a little.—
Caroline Dale Snadeker.
By burning 25% slower than
the average of the 15 other of
the largest-selling brands test-
ed— slower than any of them —>
CAMELS give a smoking plus
equal to
EXTRA
SMOKES
PER
PACK
lars every year. Through all of the tQ remember. Children dread to
yeqrs, traditional games—the big ’
games—the peak of the season—has
been the Thanksgiving day game for
hundreds of colleges But if Thurs-
day, November 39, is just another
Thursday, what about the “gate”
of those games?
Element of Uncertainty
Makes Change Harmful
And that brings us to the crux of
this situation. It is the element of
uncertainty that Mr. Roosevelt in-
jected into our national life by the
change in one holiday date that is
harmful. Instead of promoting a
feeling of security, my hunch is
that the President has spread un-
certainty and has caused confidence
to crash in many a spot of which
he never dreamed. Instead of cre-
ating a net increase in business by
making a longur Christmas shop-
ping period, I believe a cold analy-
sis will show that the change will
cost the country, as a whole, many
millions of dollers in net losses.
Our nation has grown up, not in
one piece, but in many pieces, each
one fitted to another as smooth
working as the gears of your auto-
mobile. When the engine turns over,
it exerts pressure on the clutch,
then on the drive shaft, then on the
gears and then on the wheels, and
the car moves. When any one unit
of industry in America—any one
phase of life—is changed suddenly,
the clutch and the drive shaft and
the gears and the wheels of others
are affected. More than any other
one thing that has happened in re-
cent years, I believe, the President’s
announcement proves how closely
ks«i‘<ted our lives are. It shows, too,
that government can wreck national
life as well as preserve and protect
it.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
work alone, so make his duties, so
far as you reasonably can. some-
thing that you can share. Do not
expect results beyond the ability of
his years. Praise him when he does
well. Reward him in a natural and
sensible way. Help him remember
for he honestly needs your help.
“And presently you will have the
satisfaction of seeing that he has ac-
quired the habit of reliability and
accepts work as a pleasant and
necessary part of normal living.”
National Kindergarten Association
(WNU Service.)
Ben Jonson Burial
Tradition says that Ben Jonson
was buried in a sitting position be-
cause the plot provided for him on
the north side of the nave in West-
minster abbey was not large
enough for the body to be placed
in the grave in a horizontal posi-
tion. According to a legend, King
Charles I personally promised Jon-
son that he should be interred in the
abbey in any spot that he might
choose. After his death August 6,
1637, it was found that the space he
had selected for burial was already
occupied except about “eighteen
inches of square ground.” Charles
kept his promise and Jonson was
buried with his head toward the sky,
the only occupant of the abbey to
be so honored. The famous inscrip-
tion, “O Rare Ben Jonson,” was
cut in the slab over his grave. Many
years later a portrait bust to his
memory was placed in the Poet’s
corner.
Language of Hawaii
The language of Hawaii is Eng-
lish. Though other languages are
spoken, from the native Hawaiian
to Asiatic tongues, English is the
universal medium of communica-
tion throughout the terri*™"~
Which cigarette gives the most
actual smoking for your money?
Here are the facts recently con-
firmed through impartial labo-
ratory tests of 16 of the largest-
selling brands:
4 CAMELS were found to con-
* tain MORE TOBACCO BY
WEIGHT than the average for
the 15 other of the largest-sell-
ing brands.
n CAMELS BURNED SLOW-
ER THAN ANY OTHER
BRAND TESTED-25%
SLOWER THAN THE AVER-
AGE TIME OF THE 15 OTHER
OF THE LARGEST-SELLING
BRANDS! By burning 25%
slower, on the average, Camels
give smokers the equivalent of 5
EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK!
O In the same tests, CAMELS
O HELD THEIR ASH FAR
LONGER than the average time
for all the other brands.
Buy shrewdly. Get extra smoking and
also enjoy the cooler, milder, tastier
smoking of Camel’s long-burning
costlier tobaccos. Camel is the quality
cigarette every smoker can afford.
CAMELS
per pack
(V\0RI
Camels
LONG-BURNING
COSTLIER TOBACCOS
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Shiner Gazette (Shiner, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 7, 1939, newspaper, September 7, 1939; Shiner, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1142120/m1/3/?q=a+message+about+food+from+the+president: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Shiner Public Library.