The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 53, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 6, 1939 Page: 1 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Lampasas Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Lampasas Public Library.
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them 4o
us. We make a specialty of the highest
Don't worry with the men’s and boys’ shirts—send
3
Gifts
CRYSTAL
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WE HAVE THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF USE- :
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FIRIST METHODIST CHURCH
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BUY ALL YOUR HARDWARE FROM
SUNDAY AND MONDAY
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&
Starry
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Shaw '
ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
will
Want Ads that Reach 'Cm—Leaden
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TRY OUR DOUBLE
DUTY CLEANING!
RATHMAN TAILORS
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CHURCH OF CHRIST
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There’s Pep in Peppers
Stuffed With Sardines!
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DAUGHTER OF MR. AND
MRS. R. L. NORTHINGTON
PRESENTED IN RECITAL
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FUNERAL SERVICES FOR
HORACE TOBIN SATURDAY
PYREX AND COLORED
OVENWARE
Phone 92 for Pick-Up
and Delivery!
Also
Color Cartoon
“All’s Fair at the Fair’*
Plus
Pete Smith
’’Heroes aJ Leisure”
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Miss Katherine uartman, who ia
attending the University of Texas in
Austin, is spending the week end
herd in the home of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. G. W. Gartman.
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That Head the List
STATION
At 1st Street and
Highway 281
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Leroy Theatre
“Where Lampasas Is Entertained”
(Perfect Talking Pictures)
DOUBLE PROGRAM Now Playing
Feature No. 1
Gene Autry in
“HOME ON THE PRAIRIE”
Feature No. 2
There will be no services Sunday
May 7, due to reparis being made on
the church..
Chas, Woodward, Rector.
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It improves the appearance of
your clothes and makes them
last longer. Each type of fabric
is given special, individual at-
tention. Each garment is re-
turned to you fresh, new, reju-
venated*
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. McCann, Jr.,
and^fra. J. D. Jackson'were in Lo-
meta, Thursday night, to attend a
reception given by the Lometa Study
Club in the club rooms there at 8:00
o’clock. Entertainment was furnished
by Miss Brannon, of Daniel Baker
College, and her 20-piece orchestra.
Dr. G. L. Messenger, minister
Two very interesting subjects will
be discussed by the pastor at the
I Lord’s Day services. At the morning
■ worship service at 10:45 his subject
will be “The Inner Circle.” In the
evening at 8:00 the subject will be
“Not Far From the Kingdom.**
The Bible school will convene at
9:45 with Joe H. Bozarth and Har-
old Frank, superintendents, in charge.
There are classes for all ages.
The morning worship service will
consist of the observance of the Lord’s
Supper as well as the sermon.
Christian Endeavors will meet in
the church annex at 7:00 instead of
0:30 as heretofore.
Notice is also given that the even-
ing services will begin one-half hour
later, 8:00, instead of ?t30.
The public is cordially invited to
worship with the members of this
congregation in their regular Lord’s
Day services.
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- — — — — — - - ■- ii ■ — > ■- - ■■■» * ■ w * a vaa_M v *
• • FUL Gins IN THIS SECTION OF 1EXAS. 1OO ::
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J CHINA
SILVERWARE
WANTED TO RENT
Large, comfortable home, June 1;
preferably furnished, for two or three
months. Call telephone No. 296. (d53p
Miss Anna Lou Moore, who is a
student at T. S. C. W. in Denton, is
spending the week end here in the
home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
W. E. Moore.
—-- -■--—4
NUMEROUS TO MENTION. OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT. ::
VISIT OUR STORE. IF YOU DO NOT BUY, WE • •
ARE GLAD 10 SEE YOU ANYWAY. ii
SALESMEN WANTED — Rawleith
Route now open in Mills County.
Real opportunity for man who wants
permanent, profitable work. Sales way
up this year. Start promptly. Write
Rawleigh’s, Dept. TXE 428 KT. Mem-
phis, Tenn., or see Veldon Turner,
Coppers•» Cove, Texas. (5-ll-18-25p)
L
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Beulah Dell Northington was pre-
sented in a solo recital at,the home
of her teacher, Miss Helen North-
ington Friday, May 5. Numbers beau-
tifully rendered were: Rustic Dance,
Howell; Melodie, Jules Massenet;
Giga, Geo, F. Handel; Waltz of A
Flat, Johannen Brahms; Blue Dan-
ube Waltz, Strauss; Barcarole!, Offen-
bach; Duet: Parade of Wooden Sol-
liers, J esse I.
Baskets and crystal bowls of sweet
peas, com flowers, and roses were
artistically arranged through the
house.
Guests were invited into the dining
room where Mrs. R. L. Northing-
ton served iced punch and cakes.—
Contributed.
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Services at the Presbyterian Church
Sunday are as follows:
Sunday school 9:45
Norris, Supt.
Morning worship 10:45.
“We had Better Eat the Book”
be the subject of the sermon.
Evening worship 7:80 o’clock.
Rev. E. C. Lambert, minister.
Miss Jeanne Hufstutler, student at
T. C. U. in Fort Worth is spending
the week end here in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Ross W, Bailey.
FANOM 8. AMMAN in cMroe
Hon Produced ond directed bv .••Oiai
»TIV«N». From a »»orv by Bee HecM and
Choriei MacArthur Screen May by Joel
SoVre ond Fred Gutol ____
Hurry for your FREE
Giilflex Lubrication Job
with the purchase if an
oil change — this week
only.
PEAK SERVICE
A*
a. m.,
Funeral services were conducted
Saturday afternoon at 4 o’clock for
Horace Tobin, 11, by the Rev, R. H.
Mathison in Oak Hill Cemetery where
interment was held.
He was the son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Tobin who have lived in Lam-
pasas County for about 15 years. He
was playing with his sisters in a sand
pit near their home in north Lam-
pasas. They had each dug a cave.
Horace crawled in the cave he had
dug and the sand caved in and
suffocated him before he was noticed.
Besides his parents, he is survived
by four sisters, Edith Marguerite,
Alice Inez, Clara Bell and Doris, and
two brothers, J. R. Jr., and Alvin.
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1(0 IADIO5
IOWFIING
SHOW OF SHOWS
CARY MAN? • VICTOR HcLAOLEN
OA<J
DOUILAS FAIRRANKS, JR*
tea MH . Marie CtamB • MMM
W. S. Ezell, minister
Services Sunday, May 7.
Church school 9:45 a. m. Good choir
and orchestra; classes for all age
groups. Lesson for adult classes, “The
Appeal of Hard Tasks?’ from Acts
17:16-18; 18:17; 1 Cor. 2:1-5.
Worship for the congregation, with
Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper, 10:55
a. m. Subject of message, “My Bro-
ther’s Keeper.”
Young people’s devotional meeting
6:45 p. m,.
Congregational worship 7:45 p. m.
Emphasis given to singing, with
young people encouraged to take a
plaee in the choir. Subject of
sage, “Christ in You.”
All who have contributions ,of any
kir.d to make to the missionary home
and training school in San Antonio
will please bring their offering to-
morrow or the following Sunday.
A cordial welcome is offered to all
who will come. We earnestly invite
people who have grown out of the
habit of church attendance. We believe
you owe it to yourself to take a
place in the worship of God with oth-
ers who have accepted a similar ob-
ligation. You will find it to be a
gracious privilege.
"Come, let us go unto the house
of the Lord.”
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mPR- CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH
FOR SALE: Nice fat Red Fryers.—
Tom J. Taylor, Taylor’s Feed
Store. (d53)
FOR SALE: Nice fat Red Fryers.—
Tom J. Taylor, Taylor’s Feed
Store. (d53)
lapping slices and garnish with I
curly endive, whole sardines and
• chartered tomatoes. 11—
QTUFFED with a savory mixture
O of smoked Norwegian sardines,
cream cheese and chopped pickles,
green peppers make rings around
the salad course in something new
for Spring.
Colorful as well as tasteful are
the bright wedges of rosy tomato,
pale green endtve and silvery sar-
dines, which make this salad as
pleasing to look at an It is to taste.
Good and good-looking, it’s also
i a time-saver to the busy hostess,
because the salad may be made
ahead of serving time and put in
the refrigerator to chill, and the
sardines are always ready to
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“snare” right from the tidy can!
The easy directions for making and
serving the salad are given below.
Norwegian Pepper Salad
Select firm medium size green
peppers. Blend together cream
cheese, mashed smoked Norwegian
sardines, chopped pickles and lemon
Jiiifce Season to taste and stuff ,
peepers with this mixture. Wrap
in /Waxed paper and chill. To serve,
slice peppers across with sharp
knife. Place on salad plate tn over-
Innnlwar aUnAS and arartUeh «Hlh
First and Walnut Streets
Silas Aowell, minister
Sunday 10 a. m. Bible study. Class-
es arranged for all.
11 a. m. preaching service and com-
munion. Sermon topic: “The Seed of
Truth.” This theme will be a con-
tinuation of that discussed last Sun-
day morning.
7:15 p. m. Bible study for young
people.
8 p. m. preaching service. Sermon
topic: "The Soldier, the Athlete and
the Farmer.”
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, e o a o o e o e »e »»♦<
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Plus f
Betty Hoop Cartoon
Length of program 2 hrs. 20 min.
Shows start 1:00-3:20-5:40-9:00
Box office open until 10:00 p. m.
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BAPTIST CHURCH-----------—
Sunday school 9:45; morning wor- 'gsa-i
ship 11:00. i
B. T. U. 6:45; evening worship 7:45.
We invite all who will to wonhip
with us tomorrow. Bring ^visitors
with you. The subject for the wor-
ship period in the morning is "The
March of Spiritual Conquest” and
at night “Bad Company for Eter-
nity.” There are vital topics also to
be discussed in the Sunday school
and B. T. U.
“The Wages of Sin 4s Death, but the
gift of God is eternal life, ‘through
Christ our Lord’.’’
R. H. Mathison, pastor.
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shirt work- -and it wiU please the most exacting
—and the price will please your pocketbook.
Lampasas Steam Laundry
Phone 117
man
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We have a complete laundry service for every 4
household need.
Give
Diftclor ol Good Hottitieffimg Intliiult
TIMETABLE FOR COOKING VEGETABLES
Exact Cooking Time Varies With Age of Vegetables
I
▼BGCTABL*
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Ttastos. WMM w Wtew, M
Vegetables A Break!
By Katharine Fisher
KATWAsiNi man
Dtnotot at
Good Houaokatpmg
Jnatituto
Bask Um
Basaa. Btrinc
Beata, Yams
Beata. 014
Beat Qreeea
CaMeee. ShreSM
Artichoke. French
Artichoke. J me all
Aaeeresaa
In Tiehtly CerereS
Saoeepaa With
1' BoiHn* Watae
23—«0 min.
IS—M aaia.
Stand tratt enda In the hotline wa-
ter to cook partially : then lay flat
and complete eookinc U—SO sale.
SO—M mla.
SS—M mla.
IS—M anta.
2 er more hr.
20—SO mln.
IS-SO min.
IS—SS min.
S—IS min.
as-so at*.
1» aStaifn.
2S—aS mta.
is—aa mta.
as—as min.
2—12 mta.
20—ao aata.
IS-ao anta,
as—4a min.
as—48 mtn.
as—«o min.
IT—« min.
8S—M min.
as—as win.
IS—IS aata.
as—a aata.
, W-SS mta.
as-aamta.
CanltAower, Fknrarcto
CanlHtower. Wtete
Celary
ChnrC Bwtea
Cora oa Ook ,
Dandelion Groena
Bale
BohlraM
Oaioee
In
Parchment
Paper
•0 min.
• 88 min.
I wonder why it is that vegetables get such a poor break. We seem
at fuss aplenty over the rest of the meal. Yet when it comes to the
vegetables, too often they look anti taste as if we had left them to shift
for themselves—flavorless, limp, sorely in need of seasoning.
It’s a pity, too! For all that crisp, colorful vegetables ask of us is to
be cooked tender in the shortest possible time, in a small amount of
water, and then to be seasoned with a little care. In return they promise
to come to our tables so appetizing in both color and flavor that the
family, down to the youngest, will ask for a second serving.
—Now, we’ve been cooking vegetables in our In-
w stitutc kitchens for years upon years. And one of the
* casieflt ways to cook them—at least so we find—is in
a covcre<i saucepan. I recommend it to you.
Choose one of your saucepans that will hold the
g vegetables comfortably; then cover the bottom of it
w*lh about an inch of water. No. we don’t believe in
S.® cooking any vegetables, except greens, in a saucepan
MR k without water, for there is too much danger of their
scorching or burning. Bring this water to a merry
boil; then add the salt—one-half teaspoonful for every
cup of water used—and, next, the vegetables. Put the
cover back on, quickly bring the water to boiling
again; then atart counting the cooking time. Cook the
vegetables until they are just tender but no more.
For cooking time, see the table below. ,
Heed this last tip well, won’t you, for when we let our vegetables
simmer along for what may seem just a short time after they are <k«e,
they are likely to be ruined. So be right at hand when the clock tells you
that the vegetable should be done. Test it with a fork, and if it is done,
' turn off the heat. The little water left in the vegetable can be boiled off
with the saucepan cover off; or you can use it as part of the liquid for
• sauce to be poured over the vegetable if you want one, or for gravies,
or in soups.
And now we come to the last-minute touch—one I hope you will never
fail to give. No vegetable, no matter how carefully you may have cooked
it, is ready for its serving dish until you have critically tasted and re-
tested it with your family’s likes as to seasonings well in mind. So get
out your testing spoons, housekeepers! For, unless 1 miss my guess, you
will find that your vegetable needs Just a sprinkle more of salt or pepper,
and perhaps some butter or margarine before you can proclaim it a
perfectly seasoned dish.
Mrs. E. P. Stevenson of Austin is
spending the week end here as the
I guest of her sister, Mrs. J.. B. Allen.
Charles Gillen and Buster Smith
were in Austin Friday to attend the
state track meet J
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Briggs are
spending the week end in Dallas in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Galloway.
Miss Myrl Dodson and Emory Hol-
der of Cameron were guests Fri-
day in the home of Mrs. Alma Johns-
ton.
SHIRTS
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SATURDAY
MAY 6, 1939.
LAMPASAS, TEXAS,
THIRTY-SIXTH YEAR
SATURDAY
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The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 53, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 6, 1939, newspaper, May 6, 1939; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1253627/m1/1/?rotate=180: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lampasas Public Library.