The Canadian Record (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1935 Page: 4 of 8
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W. C. COTTEN, JR., TO
AMARILLO OFFICE
The engineering office of the
state highway department in Can'
yon was closed last week <and
moved to Amarillo. W. C. Cotten
Jr., and J. D. Gamble, Jr., wen
transferred to the district office
at Amarillo, pending development
of plans for construction in Ran
dall County.
lisiiiiisissa
18 Among Our
FARM WOMEN
gS'lilHilBISI
A drab four room house has
been changed into a delightful
home by Mrs. Raymond Williams
of Locust Grove, at a cost of $5.50,
Three rooms were papered from
a roll of cream colored building
paper. The fourth room was pa-
pered with left overs of wall
paper. The molding was placed
at the top of the walls since the
ceiling is low. This gives the ef-
fect of a taller wall. The lighter
color of the walls - adds to the
seeming size of the rooms and
makes it possible to see better
since no light is absorbed by the
walls. In the former junk room
which is now the attractive bed'
room for the boys a series of
shelves for storage was built in
Under the lowest one a rod for
the children's clothes can be
placed. In her bedroom, Mrs. Wil-
liams has placed ,a rod for hang-
ers and begun work on a closet.
She had a small can of paint
which she used and valued at
twenty cents.
From twenty-five cents worth
of cabbage Mrs. Louis Pundt of
Locust Grove made three gal-
lons of kraut valued at $1.50.
From a dry land garden which
Mrs. C. M. Gettle of Booster, con-
siders a poor garden she reports
all the squash they could use
fresh, twenty quarts of beans
canned, and twenty quarts of
blackeyed peas canned. She pur-
chased one bushel of beets to
pickle and a bushel and a half of
peaches to can. From wild grapes
she made a gallon of grape but-
ter. From wild plums she canned
fifty quarts and made twelve
quarts of jelly and butter. The
total value of canned goods is
estimated as $33.80.
1936 Master De Luxe and Standard Chevrolets are Replete with New Ft
Suggested uses for pie melon:
Cook until no longer watery,
add sugar and any spice used in
apple sauce, lemon juice to taste:
then serve as apple sauce.
To can pie melon process as
squash or pumpkin. Pack hot, add
one teaspoon salt per quart. Pro-
cess at fifteen pounds pressure
for sixty minutes in quart jars
or number two cans; and seventy
minutes for number three cans.
Use R enamel cans.
Delicious two crust pies may be
made from platfn canned pie
melon by adding lemon juice and
peel, or wild plums and dried ap-
ricots.
Relish
Similar to chow-chow
Grind fine using food chopper:
3 cups pie melon
1 turnip
2 carrots for color.
1 onion
Cut 1 sweet red pepper or pi-
mento pepper.
Add 1 teaspoon tumeric
Cook in a spiced vinegar such
as follows:
1 cup sugar
V-2, cup vinegar 5%
1 teaspoon cloves
1 inch stick cinnamon
1 teaspoon tumeric or mustard
Tie spices in a bag. Remove
spices before sealing
Seal while boiling hot.
CITATION BY PUBLICATION
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
To the Sheriff or any Constable
of Hemphill County, Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to
summon L. L. Harris by making
publication of this Citation once
in each week for four successive
weeks previous to the return day
hereof, in some newspaper pub-
lished in your County, if there be
a newspaper published therein,
but if not, then in the nearest
where a newspaper is
i AT.
published, to
next regular tens $ JKe Bis-1
-*ict Court of Hemphiil Coun-
ty, to be holden at the Court
House thereof, in Canadian,
Texas, on the_.First Monday in
December, A. D., 1935, the same
being the 2nd day of December,
A. D. 1935, then and there to
answer a petition filed in said
Court on the 28th day of October,
A. D. 1935, in a suit, numbered
on the docket of said Court as
No. 2232, wherein Effie Harris
is Plaintiff, and L. L. Harris is
Defendant, and said petition al-
leging, that plaintiff is now, and
has been, for a period of 12
months an actual bona fide in-
habitant of the State of Texas,
and a resident of Hemphill Coun-
ty, Texas, for over 6 months time
next preceding filing of this suit.
That plaintiff and defendant
were married at Wheeler, Texas,
December 5, 1933, and separated
May 7, 1935, and have not lived
together as wife and husband
since that date.
That plaintiff was kind af all
times to defendant, and conduct-
ed herself with propriety, but
that defendant was cruel and in-
human in his conduct toward
plaintiff, and generally of such a
nature as to render their further
living together as husband and
wife insupportable, the premises
considered.
That no children were born of
said marriage.
'Prayer is for judgment for di-
vorce in favor plaintiff, and
against defendant, general and
special relief, etc. ,
Herein Fail Not, and have you
before said Court, at its afore-
said next regular term, this writ
with your return thereon, show-
ing how you have executed the
same.
Given Under My Hand and the
Seal of said Court, at office in
Canadian, Texas, this the 28th
day of October, A. D. 1935.
R. C. JACKSON, Clerk,
District Court, Hemphill
(Seal) County
Use the green tomato mince-
meat recipe but substitute pie
melon for the green tomatoes. I
ould suggest that you add some-
thing more tart such as dry
weather peaches, plums, or dried
apricots.
Green Tomato Mincemeat
1 peck green tomatoes
3 pounds brown sugar
2 pounds raisins
1 pound beef suet or cocoanut
2 tablespoonsful salt
% cup water
2 teaspoonfuls of ground cin-
namon
1 tea spoonful of ground cloves
2 teaspoonfuls of nutmeg
3 cupfuls of chopped apples (if
desired)
3 lemons, thinly sliced after
yellow surface of peel has been
grated off.
Chop or slice the tomatoes thin-
ly, or put them thjrough a food
chopper. Sprinkle salt over them
and allow to stand for about one
hour. Drain well, cover with cold
water, and place over the fire
and boil for five minutes. Drain
off all of the liquid by pressing
the tomatoes as dry as possible.
Add the suet or shredded cocoa-
nut and one half cup of water.
Return to the fire and allow to
simmer" tZ twenty minutes.
Stir in sugar and boil until dis-
solved ; then add spices and boil
rapidly for about fifteen to twen-
ty minutes until very thick. Pack
hot and process as for preserves.
One pint of mince meat or enough
for one. large pie can be made
from each two quarts of toma-
toes.
Use any watermelon rind recipe
as:
Candied watermelon rind
Candied ginger watermelon
rings
Watermelon pineapple jam
Watermelon marmalade
New Master De Luxe and Standard Chevrolets for 1936 show marked
advances in appearance and in engineering. Perfected hydraulic brakes, high-
compression engines with full-length water jackets, and balanced rarburetian
are among the mechanical improvements. The solid steel Turret Top Fisher
body is now used on the Standard as well as the Master De Luxe models.
Either Knee-Action or conventional springing mav he • *
sedan, with built-in bunk; top nght, the re-styled, demb
grille, used on all models; lower left, the simple arranSm^r
perfected hydraulic brakes, all models; and, lower right°T
"When the well was out of
order the ordinary cucumbers
died but the Syrian cucumbers
lived and produced well," stated
Mrs. Charles Robbins in answer
to roll call at Locust Grove. She
harvested twenty-five pie pump-
kins just before frost. These will
be canned.
If fresh fruit is used, cook care-
fully in water until tender. Avoid
breaking the fruit. Place the
cooked fruit in a pan \or stone-
ware crock or other convenient
vessel.
Prepare a syrup of white corn
syrup or glucose 1 cup and water
2 cups. Heat this to boiling and
pour it on the prepared, fruit.
Leave 24 hours. Cover^%iffii a
plate to keep submerged.
After 24 hours pour off the
syrup aiM to each 4 cups add V2
cup sugar. Heat to boiling and
pour back on the fruit. At in-
tervals of 24 hours repeat this
one growing season.
stalled in 1933 by ji member of
the Glazier Home Demonstration. n,g
Club. It cost $2.55 for three sacks! _ . T xt m * -
of cement. The yields have been|T 0n J. N. Trout farm at
satisfactory. Cash sales the first Jp £*
year amounted to ten dolalrs.
Among the products canned j
from her home garden this sea-j
son Mrs. John Martin of Gageby;
reports one hundred quarts of
fall grown string beans and 45,
quarts of cream peas and black
eyed peas. Her sister, Mrs. Ruth
Smith has helped with this work
for a. share of the products. The
of the larger one a garden was
planted. The water was siphoned
over the dam by 1
ber hose and iron i
it to the main
garden. They sold "j
bers and have had
crop of tomatoes 1
season.
left from last season.
garden has also produced butter
process adding" cup of sugar beans, carrots and turnip greens,
to each 4 cups of syrup each She has berries from the orchard,
time until the syrup becomes very and peaches apd pickled, peaches
thick and about the • con'sfetjency
of thick honey. Leavfe; ttnjj fruit
in this syrup for about l"*eek. i That a good garden can be
Remove the fruit and drain it. grown on upland by means of
Place it on a coarse wire** jcrien Surface irrigation is Wen proven
and allow to dry for about,} week fcy the garden of 'Mrs. J. T.
in a room Where a draught or feeames of M. K. The mustard,
breeze will strike it. 1 : tendergreen and turnip greens
i Pack in pasteboard or wicker j are at their best now. The first
boxes or open jars. . Do not use egg size Purple Top turnips can
sealed containers. ;; j be used this week. Parsnips and
The slow increase in sugar con-j salsify have thrived this season,
tent is necessary to avoid shrivel- j Celery has not done so well as in
ling and toughening of the ^ruit.; 1934 when they served home
Citrus fruit, peel may be' can-1 grown plants at Thanksgiving and
died with 1' cooking since the Christmas dinners. Rutabaga?
pieces are small. #r« Jione to? satisfactory, eith-
er,_
Four fig trees brought from
east of Oklahoma City are full of
figs this their first season. They
will be protected this winter in
an effort to avoid freezing which
would kill the plants to the
ground. '
Out of eight seedling peaches
two were of good quality and
yield this season. A number of
Cement, tile-1^-- 193a_ win
be moved nearer to the surface
in the vegetable garden at the
home of Mrs. J. J. Caudle. Allu-
vial deposits left by rain and
wind have made it even deeper
than when laid. It has been used
each of the three years -but ob-
servation and experience indicate
that shallow tile, eight to ten; , _ JHB
inches deep, is most satisfactory, one year old seedling peaches and
This was the only cement tile in- apricots have grown 30 inches
I
On the windmill tower icicles
fifteen inches long were hang-
ing. The tomato vines in the gar-
den were black after the frost.
But on the back porch at the
home of Mrs. Louis Pundt on
Achievement Day, November 1,
was a bushel of green tomatoes
covered by a layer of ripe canta-
loupes.
Since it is now the time to make
fruit cake for the Christmas sea-
son recipes are in demand. Mrs.
Brady Meadows of Gageby will
use the following method for
candying citron melon and pine-
apple to1 be used in fruit cake.
Puncture cherries, figs, kum-
quats, crabapples and apricots,
through and through in several
places with a silver fork; peel
pears and peadhes; core or pit
and cut in half. Cut pineapple in
rings as for canning or use the
canned product. Fruit for candy-
ing should be firm ripe but not
soft. Canned fruits may be used
instead of the fresh fruit.
JOB
PRINTING
IS PART OF OUR BUSINESS
When you need any of these—
•
Letterheads—Envelopes—Handbills
Window Cards—Tickets—Calling Cards
Campaign Cards—BUI Heads—Receipts
Sales Books, etc.
-WE CAN MAKE THEM RIGHT—
The Canadian Record
FREE! m
We are giving away a beautiful 2fi j
set of BEACON SILVERWARE on a
urday, November 23 at 4 o'clock.
Cgme in and ask us how toll
beautiful set without cost to you.
Also lots of interesting «p
sale on that date at greatly reduced]
Come in to see us; you are alwajii
come, f?i -
Home Town Grocc
Phone 119
We have just received a car of that
GOLD CHAIN Flour, Bran and
kinds of chicken and dairy
To introduce this Flour,
SATURDAY-
We will give with each 48 Pound Sack o
Chain Flour at the regular price
ONE FREE 10 POUND BAG Best Grad
With 24 Pound Sack Flour
at ~WEWLL"GivE~FBEE 5 POUND SACK 4,1
WITH 12 POUND SACK FLOUR FREE 2 &
We will have a lot of other l
Ask kilt the large $12.50
Dill given FREt
Kin Dark |
ick and
|6 to 16
belt io
cuff
ins
tins
only, I
6 buttl
[with bf
led to [
ice, ea|
LI
11 Suitl
|r covJ
easel
ienI
bs. to
ed, 'Eq
6. per
lover (
a
an
16
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Noble, Joseph M. The Canadian Record (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1935, newspaper, November 14, 1935; Canadian, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth125927/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hemphill County Library.