The Aspermont Star (Aspermont, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 23, 1942 Page: 4 of 4
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NECESSARY KEYSTONE
NEW SUPPLY
of Ray's Guaranteed Rat Killer.
Harmless to anything hut rats and
mice. Sells for 35c and 50c at
GEO. C. KENADY DRUG
mmm
Lee Bowman - J«M Rogers
Pacific Rendevous
Cartoons — Nnitt Reel
rOR SALE:— Link's Dairy.
Aspermont, Texas tfc
fOR SALE:—All my household
furnishings including piano. See Mrs
Earl Isbill, Swenson, Texas. 51-lc
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PROGRAM
STRUOiON
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Saturday Mat. t/kd Night
Hopalong Cassidy in
Outlaws of the Desert
Serial—King of The Tex-
as Rangers.
Cartoons
Sat Night Prevue -— Sun. Mat.
Frederic March - Loretta Young
Bedtime Story
Cartoons
Sun. Night, Monday and Tuesday
Ann Sheridan - Ronald Reagan
Kings Row
Cartoons •— News Reel
Wednesday. Thursday and Friday
Cartoons
Conrad eVidt - Ann Avars
MRS SMITH HOSTESS TO
S and S. BRIDGE CLUB
Mrs. Wayman Smth was hostess
to the S. and S. Bridge Club Wed-
nesday afternoon at 4:00 o'clock.
Those playing were Mmes. A. P.
Couch, Ira Sturdivant, L. D. Mc-
Afee, Will Flowers, J. Carl Brian,
Herron Flowers, Raymond Johnson,
R. B. Goodtoe, Em Wright, H. V.
Lnk, A. R. Mancille and Pete
Blackshear.
.: —oOo——■—
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Murdoch o>
Sundown, Texas, visited his sister,
Mrs. Arthur Dansby over the week
end.
oOo——-—
Private Vernon Oliver has been
promoted to technician 5th grade at
Camp Barkeley. He is from Dumont,
Texas.
GARNER'S
Butane Service
Truck and Representative
Now In Aspermont
John Johnson at Aspermont
Laundry, Representative
J. L. GARNER, Distributor
I
Men are dying for the Four
Freedoms. The least we MB
do here ml heme la to bey
War Bonds—10% for War
; every pny day.
Current Topics From
P-TA Headquarters
Austin Texas,—"Better Youth for
a Better World." "America Pitch-
es In," and "Babies in Wartime,"
state and national program outlines
concerning the wartime effort, are
some of the new material. included
in the local unit package recently
mailed out from the state office of
the Texas Congress of Parents and
Teachers.
Approximately two thousand of
these packages were sent out to pres-
dents of local units, city, and county
councils, and to the state board. The
local unit package contains the work-
ing "tools" for the associations. A-
mong the twenty-two pieces of ma-
■BBSSaiTOl^^
VOTE FOR
G
FOR
j,-t- •ftltj's''*!- , i" j I|>| V " V 5 ' 1 rTiP'S? V "S*A ~ < \ f
Mrs. R. J. King of Quitman and
ron Bileil, and daughter, Lou Delle,
have been visiting her sister, Mrs. T.
Houston Ward. Rev. W. J. Briscoe
has gone to Quitman to visit her
since her return from the Ward
Ranch. Rev. Briscoe is a retired Bap-
tist minister. He has been in it*
health for the past year and spent
last year with : his daughter, Mrs.
Ward.
oOo-——
• ' ' , -
Dorothy Clare Isbill, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Isbill attended
a defense school in Dallas and now
she and her father, E. Earl Isbill,
former superintendent of.the Swen-
son school, are working for Douglas
Aircraft in California. Dorothy is
riveting and welding planes.
Vi common sense te be
thrifty. If yen save yen are
thrifty. War Bonds he|p yen
te save and help to save
America. Buy yoor ten per*
eent every pay day.
terial in the packagc are the parent-
teacher war-time pledge, the state
plan of work entitled "We Build for
Victory," the manual, findings of
the national convention held in S'an
Antonio, history of the congress
state song sheet, leaflets on the what fodatioii must work as a unit; must
and why of parent-teacher work, begin its program by July 15 and
principal's leaflet, parliamentary pro-
cedure, state by-laws, motion pictures
and visual education, and goal
sheet.
A slab of Texas red granite, three
feet square and engraved with tfte
word "Texas," will be sent this
"-eek from Austin to Marietta, Ga.,
birthplace of Alice McLellan Birn-
ey, founder of the Natonal Congress
of Parents and Teachers in 1897.
This stone and native stones of the
same size from the other states will
make up a flagstone court around
a white marble sundial, the entire
court a monument to Mrs. Rimev.
Plans also include marble benches
and attractive landscaping.
The unveiling of the memoral is
set for September. Alice Birncv Rob-
ert, three-year-old great granddaught-
er of Mrs. Birney and daughter of
socially prominent Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Wood Robert, Jr., of
Washington, D. C., has been invited
to lnveil the monument. Mrs. Wil-
liam Randolph Hearst, mother of
the publisher, was co-founder of the
organization.
As a part of its wartime program,
rhe Texas Congress of Parents and
Teachers will issue certificates of
merit to parent-teacher associations
which accomplish significant war-
time work, the certificates to be pre-
sented at the state conventon in
Mineral Wells, November 18-20,
Requirements are that the local as
make a report of progress to. the dis
trict president by October 15; must
have at least three monthly or call-
ed meetings during this period; must
include one or more rules outlined
by Mrs. M. A. Taylor, of Bonham,
state chairman of wartime activities.
Some of the rules follow: Main-
tenance of normal home life as much
as possible; conservation of food and
clothing; planning recreation; pro-
moting the sale of war bonds and
stamps, registration and identifica-
tion of children; appointment of
"block mothersproviding means
for the care of children of mothers
in industry; conducting first aid
manual classes; providing instruction
for blackouts in homes; promotion of
victory book campaign; putting on
of salvage for victory campaigh; ar-
ranging nutrition classes for house-
wives; appointment of committees to
write to the young men in service
and to extend home hospitality to
them; conducting campaign to safe-
guard service men bv maintaining
wholesome community standard; the
plantin gof gardens; supporting of
the school program; cooperation
with defense agencies in emmunity.
oOo— —
Mrs. Em Wright and Jo Ann
visited in Stamford Monday.
Are ya« entitled te
"tercet"
In War Benda nvety
day. It's yenr badge «f
triettsm
y
0mm
VOTE
FOR
mm
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Miraculous Jeep Turns Farm Worker
FOR RE-ELECTION, SECOND TERM
Your Support Appreciated
■Paid Political Advertisement
VOTE
FOR
Fred
Stockdale
Candidate For
District Attorney
Fully Qualified by Training and Experience
Support Sincerely Apprecaited
■.•v-
&
(Uppor) Mawing er plowing—It's aH one «e the ve
the Jaok-ef-elMradoe Jeop sen be uoad te heul
Harrow and oultlpUoh.
«ethe voroatlle Jeep. (Lewar)
i
TOLtOO. O. tBpoeiall —
Many eanes marching homo bo
probably will «tag« a re union with
Us buddy at tfc* batUodoida. the
"Joop." down on the tsim.
First esperimento conducted by
Mm OHM Ststoo Department of Ag-
riculture and WlUy*Oworland Mo.
tors. toe. asters of tfc* standard
f9H|B WifwwpBl' .TO*; .wVBMHp ™
hi ■ twrm mil wttti as
many potentialities hi paaoo oo tt el*
ready has di*play«d In war.
At tli iiiimniiiM oI tttU at it
4tpertmeef TUJift Miitiliwj Ub*
oratory snr Auburn. Ala, a. &
ImmiIwm! dmlaMdihemr
cotton land, using but Mt gallons ot
gasoUne to tho acre. In anothor tort
the Jew. with its IS horsapowor on*
glue end «*wheal drlWk pulled aa
mush as MOO pounds-without wheel
_ e to
Mundy in aooporaWow with
Willys Hbters. the ieep was m dl to
haul a 1,180 pound wagon toadod
with i900 poundi of corn <or a die-
tanee o« It mfloa. Counting the
turn trth the <nr usad only one gal*
Ion ot gasoline or M gaUona per ton
■iu .
- rhef I. m" -rn him -"MMlbMnhrf .fefih'''
en?^5 Sns ST gwothM Pos
19^
Candidate For
COUNTY
SUPERINTENDENT
A True Representative For You And Your Children
For Honest and Efficient School Government.
Your Vote and Influence Appreciated.
—Paid Pol. Adv.
FOR
SECOND FULL TERM
Your Vote and Support Appreciated
Pedd. Political Advertisement
TO VOTERS OF STONEWALL COUNTYs
Precinct No. 1, Aspermont, Texan
In conclusion I urge you to go to the polls and vote
Saturday. See to it that your friends and neighbors
vote for—-
Henry {Hrim} C
FOB CONSTABLE
a
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—Paid
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Help me to rebuke the slanders
. ► « 5 |
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Moore, L. B. The Aspermont Star (Aspermont, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 23, 1942, newspaper, July 23, 1942; Aspermont, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth127108/m1/4/?q=+date%3A1941-1945: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Stonewall County Library.