The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 18, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 27, 1940 Page: 2 of 4
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the
^TmORE DtP£»DKal
i
At Palace and Cottage
With equal pace, impartial Fate
knocks at the palace, as the cot-
tage gate.—Horace.
Pull the Trigger on
Lazy Bowels, and Also
Pepsin-ize Stomach!
When constipation brings on acid indi-
gestion, bloating, dizzy spells, gas, coated
tongue, sour taste, and bad breath, your
stomach is probably loaded up with cer-
tain undigested food and your bowels don't
move. So you need both Pepsin to help
break up fast that rich undigested food in
your stomach, and Laxative Senna to pull
the trigger on those lazy bowels. So be
•ure your laxative also contains Pepsin.
Take Dr. Caldwell’s Laxative, because its
Syrup Pepsin helps you gain that won-
dcrfulstoma ch com fort, while the Laxative
Senna moves your bowels. Tests prove the
power of Pepsin todissolve those lumps of
undigested protein food which may linger
in your stomach, to cause belching, gastric
acidity and nausea. This is bow pepsin-
izing your stomach helps relieve it of such
distress. At the same time this medicine
wakes up lazy nerves and muscles in your
bowels to relieve your constipation. So see
how much better you feel by taking the
laxative that also puts Pepsin to work on
that stomach discomfort, too. Even fin-
icky children love to taste this pleasant
family laxative. Buy Dr. Caldwell's Lax-
ative-Senna with Syrup Pepsin at your
druggist today!
..............'.p
away quick. Make no less than
half a dozen so that you’ll always
have a fresh one ready, and tuck
a few away for occasional gifts
and bridge prizes, too. You may
be sure everyone will like it as
well as you do. Gingham, per-
cale'iand chintz are practical cot-
tons to choose. You c<jn easily
finish it in a few hours.
Pattern No. 8641 is designed for
sizes 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, and
46. Size 34 requires 2'/4 yards of
35-inch material without nap. 814
j-ards trimming.
Send order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
Room 1124
211 W. Wacker Dr. Chicago
Enclose IS cents In eotna for
Pattern No............. Size..........
Name ..........«.....................
Addreaa ..............................
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8641 Zvrf
MB .......IL
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■\X7HAT a comfort it is to get
’ ’ hold of an apron Jhat but-
tons on easily over your wead, and
stays right where it belongs, fit-
ting snugly at the waist and re-
fusing to slip from the shoulders!
This one (8641) will be the joy of
your life. The back straps buttoh
over the shoulders, the front is
cut to a decorative point, and
there are two patch pockets that
repeat the~point, so that they are
no less decorative than jiseful.
If ever we saw a prize among
pinafores, this is it, and you
should have the pattern right
<
OPPORTUNITY
REMEDY
1
BABY CHICKS
LUMBER
/
COTTON
FARMS FOR SALE
ti.
They came to a
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to
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happen when you am
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Wisdom Is Sought
Wealth may seek us; but wia»
dom must be sought.—Young.
“I'm afraid to
You might
iwprfully
relieves
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ina
pa]
cd
pu<
en<
jui
FHA
30%.
East
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OSTETTER’S BITTERS
. Pep Up Krenooaa Uiuee thoad.
-
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A Human Dissatisfied
It is better to be a human beinig
dissatisfied than a pig satisfied.--
1 J. S. MilL
*A ■
Lit Ui Put Yea in thu
MOVIE BUSINESS
Hundreds am making good money showing
^:^.a^o^r»r,%o,7riSo“.,^2
our projector and films. Write (or our free
book — “MeMag Mmwv trtto Meerns:”
EASTIN 16mm. PICTURES CO.
Beet. O*-l______•______amiswpsrt, le—
I ROSE BUSHES
ROSES—Wholesale and retail. 70 varieties.
Write free booklet in colors, suggestions.
Story Hess Fields, Tyler, Texas. (TAS>
CONSTIPATED!
Gas Crowds HeirL
“Fee yearn I had oesasional lamtissline.
headaches and eatae in tbe back. Awful ran
Moating soomed to crowd my heart. Adlodka
‘ ’ • r. Mow loot Mam,
I want and never tea
Schott. Two things
____________FIRSTS
Accumulated wastes swell up bowels and
Brees on nervee in th. digestive tract. SEC-
OND: Partly digested food starts to decay
forming GAS, often bringing on sour stomach,
indigestion, and heartbum, bloating you up
Until you sometimes gasp for breath. Adlsrikm
gives double relief with DOUBLE ACTION.
BALANCED Adlenka otatairung three lam-
ttvee and five carminatives relieves STOMACH
GAS almost at ones. It often clears bowels
in Isob than two hours. No griping, no altat
edsete, just guiek iweuJto.-----
Sold at all drug stores
AWFUL CASE
of ugly surface
PIMPLES
We want to help!
No matter what you’ve tried for die-
figuring surface pimples and blemished
without success—here’s an a me vinify
successful Doctor’s formula—
soothing Zemo—which quid
intense itching and starts right in to help
nature promote FAST healing Results
from few days’ use of Zemo should thrill
you! Praised from coast to coast. So
dean, dainty yet so EFFECTIVE.
Liquid or Ointment form. Used in beat
homes yet coats only 35*. 60f, IL
"Cep-Brvrh "Applketer
-BUCK LEAF 4«J
DASH IN MATNHtS?X° “U°‘ jfl
BUT TWO-YEAR-OLD FIELD GROWN
ROSES from grower and save. Priced an
low as five cents. Variety and price list
nn request. WIGGINS BROS., KT. 1.
TYLER. TEXAS. (TAS)
i ■
A
t Quality Lumber sold direct. Snve
. Truck delivery. Write for Catalogue.
Texas Sawmills, Avinger, Texan.
I I
CHICNNM^.’Wa’DKw
Wo Guarantor Live Delivery. W- P<n FMtaps.
; ATLAS CHICK CO. St. Louin. Mo.
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(TAS)^
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There U'as a ^ ay,
! And Lass Knew It!
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AN FDEAL FARM HOME 1 ]
215 acres, higlily improved, near Waco, jq '
205 acres in cultivation. As fine land ae a •
there is in Texas. Write » I (
B. M. GAY. WACO. TEXAS. ITASi A
; npWO people were walking alonj,
a road together. One was .
1 young woman, the other a ham
some farm lad. The farm la' •
was carrying a large pail on h? j
back, holding a chicken in oni!
hand, a cane in the other, anc\;_
i leading a goat. They came to a '
dark lane. , V
Said the girl: “I'm afraid to
J walk here with you.
I try to kiss me.”
Said the farm lad: “You need
not be afraid. Jiow could I kiss
you with all this I’m carrying?”
“Well, you might stick the cane
in the ground, tie the goat to it,
I and put the chicken under the
pail,” was the ready reply.
I
LONE STAR leads the field for produc-
i tlon. staple, turnout. 35 years succeaaful
breeding. Private gin. We give you better
I value. State Registered Cotton Breeders.
J no. Gorham A Son, Waco. Texas. (TAS*
dmvbaart. Adtadka
r. loyltoMmp,
____Tirojhii
oonstipated.
nraa no nrrveo in tb«. di|
birr. z___________
forming,GAS, often bringing on sour st
___you oomotTmon gasp for brvatR* J
controls
the
hat
in
The Answers
Freeman and Slave
He is a freeman whom the truth
makes free, and all are slaves be-
sides.—Cowper.-----------------
In One’s Place
It is surprising to observe how
much more anybody may become
by simply being always in his
place.—Salina Watchman.
No Just in Unjust'
To entreat what is unjust from
the just is wrong; but to seek
what is just from the unjust is
folly.—Plautus.
That Which Reigns
At 20 years of age the will
reigns; at 30, the wit; and at 40.
the judgment.—Gratian.
To relieve
CONSTIPATION
AA SOOTHES CHAFES SKIN fjn
WHITE PETROLEUM JELLY *£/
1. How long will a date palm
bear fruit?
2. Is water in a bucket perfectly
level on top?
3. What was the longest siege
in history?
4. Is the practice of cribbing for
examinations a modern practice?
5. What is the name of the sci-
ence of the earth and its life, geol-
ogy, geography or geodesy?
6. Does United States citizen-
ship confer the right to vote?
7. At what battle did the com-
mander order:
lL>
1. A date palm will bear fruit
for two centuries or more.
2. Water in a bucket is slightly
concave on top.
3. The siege of Tyre by Nebu-
chadnezzar, wMich lasted 13 years,
being raised in 572 B. C.
4. Evidence o( cribbing by Chi-
nese students as early as 1562
have been found.
5. Geography.
6. No. States grant the right to
vote.
7. Battle of Bunker Hill.
8. France.
9. It was first worn at the carl
of Derby’s race track.
10. Mercury, the only liquid met-
al, may evaporate in the open air
for years without a detectable loss
in weight.
Take one or two tablets of Ex-Lax before
retiring. It tastes just like delicious choc-
olate. No spoons, no bottles! No fuss,
wo bother! Ex-Lax is easy to use and
pleasant to take I In the morning you have
an easy, comfortable bowel movement.
Ex-Lax vrorks gently, without strain or
diacomfort. Except for the pleasant relief
you enjoy, you scarcely realize you have
taken a laxative. Available at all drug
atorea in economical 104 and 2S< boxes.
WOMEN! Relieve “Trying Days*
by taking Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre-
scription over a period of time. Helps
build physical resistance by improving
nutritional assimulation.—Adv.
Try this
Simple,
Pleasant
? Wayl
tRhw
UOUID. UBUtS. SALV£. NOSI MOPS
WHY SUFFER Functional
FEMALE
COMPLAINTS
U«la E. Flnkham’s Vagatabla Compound
Has Helped Tbousandsl
Faw women today do not have some slrn of
junctional trouble. Maybe you've noticed
YOURSELF rotting reetlees. moody, nervous,
fisnraewd lately—your work toomuchfor you—
Then try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Ve«etable
Compound to help quiet unatruns nervea,
relieve monthly pein (cramps, backache,
headache) and weak diaay fainUng spells
due to functional diaordera. For over 60
yeara Pinkham’s Compound has helped hun-
dreds of thousands of Break, rundown ner-
vous women. Try iU
Don’t shoot until
you see the whites of their eyes.”?
8. What country
island of Tahiti?
9. How did the stiff felt
come to be called a derby?
10. Does mercury evaporate
—7 the open air?
muLrsuKESTsaiaa
Bureau of Standards
f
4
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- Victory of Peace
Peace hath her victories no less
renowned than war.—Wilde.
better. And the place to find out
i *___1____ *- -___
this newspaper. Its columns are
filled with important messages
■j
I
purchasing power every
every year.
A BUSINESS organizatioo
XK which wants to get the
most for the money sets up
standards by which to judge
what is offered to it, just as in
Washington the government
maintains a Bureau of Standards.
• You can have your own Bureau
the advertising columns of your
newspaper. They safeguard
yo^
mODERHIZE
Whether you're planning a party
or remodeling a room you should I ,
I better. And the place to find out “ “ ” “ ----
about aew things is right here in” '
twsgsper. Its columns are
I
Paris Is Now
an
Attractive
i
t
i
Again to Entertain
Boys From Front.
A clever sweater made of gros-
grain ribbon and fastened with gold
hearts. A chain bracelet of gold
matches the outfit.
working in the censorship or who
are not at the front, are busy in-
terpreting the intellectual side of
the war. The critics are looking
for masterpieces born of the new
t conflict, although most of them are
just arriving from the World war.
The new war is more articulate
Sons Inherit $1 Each
Because They’re Thrifty
BRIDGETON, N. J.—Two Ger-
man sons of Rudolph Zeh, Rosen-
hayn farmer who died la$t Novem-
ber, will receive $1 each under
tertns of his will admitted for pro-
bate here.
— Zeh’a three sons ware-born -by a-
first marriage before he came to
this country 37 years ago. In the
United States he married again and
had fqur American-born children.
His German-born sons fought in the
World war and one of them was
killed in action.
Zeh’s attorney said that the father
loved his German sons, but felt
that since they were grown men
they could care for themselves with-
out financial help from him. ____
I . - iU
And right in the midst of the lake
site now lies the once thriving min-
ing camp of Sheridan. All traces
of the camp will be removed before
water is sent into the lake.
Artificial Lake Will
Blot Out Old Mine Camp
DEADWOOD, S. D—Man has
bested nature again and today
Spring creekK a gushing Black Hills
mountain stream, runs over a bed
cut through the heart of a granite
mountain.
The stream was diverted from its
original course through a channel
drilled 650 feet through solid gran-
ite—all because conservationists
wanted it to feed an artificial lake
. being built at Harney National for-
i est, near Sheridan.
The tunnel is five by seven feet
and can carry flood waters of 15
feet.
At present 150 CCC enrollees are
! constructing a 120-foot dam into
in the dozens of cabarets, such as
the Noctambules called the Nox; le
Theatre de Dix Hcures, La Bolee de
Cidre, legendary haunt of Francois
Villon. In these little theaters
where soldiers and weary Parisians
sit together the audience laughs
over clever burlesque of Hitler and
Goebbels, or war themes and Jove
themes and the inevitable triangu-
lar situations.
The music halls such as the Ca-
sino de Paris, the Folics Bergere,
the Cdncert Mayol^where nudity is
glorified, the little Bobino and the
Circus Medrano are the soldiers’ de-
light.—There -they- crowd—in- -with-
their sweethearts and comrades and
sit back and gaze intently on scenes
quite unlike a night on the Moselle
or an outpost in the Saar.
Famed Cafes Are Open.
Most of the big cafes which gave
Paris international fame during
peace time are opened for business,
but in many cases the crowds are
smaller and generally more serious.
In Montparnasse the old Cafe Dome
is going strong. La Coupole, the
biggest night restaurant in Mont-
parnasse, is usually crowded.
The big boulevard cafes are much
more sedate. They have settled
down to a war regime of dignified
tolerance. They still seem to be
more reminiscent of the World war,
which also emptied them, but in
which war correspondents met and
talked and Parisian journalists and
moving-picture actors, artists and
critics foregathered for apertifs.
The American bars born of the
last war have taken on a ney lease
of life. Harry’s New York Bar is
again a den of joy-seeking Royal,
Air Force fliers and newspaper
men. Fred Payne’s cozy little bar
at the gateway to Montmarte in the
lower reaches of the Rue Pigalle is
back in its old role of entertaining
lonesome soldiers and equally lone-
some theater girls, mostly English.
. ofl ■
o’Clock Town
1 which waters of the creek will be
‘ turned this year. The dam, cost-
' ing $250,000, zwill cover five acres
| at the base, sloping up to half an
acre at the top.
When' completed, the artificial
lake will have a shoreline of about
714 miles—400 acres of water sur-
face—and fin average depth of 60
’MM
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PARIS.—The “Gay Faroe” known
by the A. E. F. in 1917-19 is carry-
I ing on in another war, but it’s an
11 o’clock town now.
As the war progressess, new
amusements are appearing, and it
is the men back from the front
who insist on the gayety rather than
! the civil population. Theaters have
i reopened, also music halls, cabarets
„ and rf»nr*A planAg ___________
If there is a dance of death at the
front, there must be a dance of for-
getfulness in Paris. Guardians of
wartime Paris listened to the uni-
I versal complaints and opened up
the town to fun and distraction, that
is, until 11 o’clock when the black-
out descends.
The national playhouses, such as
the Opera, the Opera Comique, the
Comedie FrancaiSe and the Odeon.
are open and crowded. With the
tickets one receives a little slip tell-
ing where the nearest air-raid shel-
ter is located.
Precautions Taken.
One box in the first tier is always
j unoccupied, for it encloses bags of
■ sand and firefighting apparatus in
case of incendiary bombs. These
i precautions have been taken every-
i where and in some houses the am-
i phitheaters are closed to prevent
I possible stampeding down ancient
narrow stairs in case of alarm.
Those authors who are not busy
Three sailors of the British cruiser Ajax stage a little comedy in
which their beards play leading roles on their arrival at an English port,
i The Ajax was one of the British cruisers that fought the German pocket
I battleship Graf Spee off Montevideo, Uruguay. The Graf Spee was or-
: dered scuttled by her captain, Hans Lang sd or fl, who later committed
suicide in Montevideo, where the crew of the ship was imprisoned.
i
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Gay City of Wartime Lives
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€
The Question*
Jlsk Me Jlnother
A A General Quiz
7
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men who opened almost 1,000
graves in the area in northeastern
Washington that will be flooded by
backwater from Grand Coulee dam.
Most of the graves were those of
Indians. Their bones and those of
pioneer white settlers were re-
moved to other cemeteries. All ar-
ticles of historical value were pre-
served, however. They included
copper spearheads, trinkets and
beads.
Ajax Sailors Celebrate in Home Port
I
t
, Bell
to —WNU Service
I
t-
V
Tumrculosis Germ-
Seven DISTINCT
STAGES IN THE LIFE OR
’ THE TUBERCULOSIS QERM’ _ _
HAVE BEEN DISCOVERED.
More variety-
The U S. government
ANNOUNCES
DISCOVERY
OF TWO NEW
STRAWBERRY
UBIETIES ANO
fl
n
' Gold panners.z
In 1952 in California
8,000 PEOPLE WORKED AT PLACER
GOLD MINING, PANNING *450,00O
AGAINST *165,000 IN 1951.
AMAZE A MINUTE
SCIENTIFACTS ** BY ARNOLD
Dust Bowl Prince
Indian Relics Unearthed
In Coulee Backwater Area
SPOKANE. WASH.—Hundreds of
TO
According to police reports, Louis
Peilesier, refugee from the dust
bowl, posed as a French count and
was accepted by San Francisco so-
ciety circles. But when he was un-
able to pay his taxicab fare he was
arrested and exposed. Peilesier had
been employed in the live stock pa-
vilion on Treasure island.
Bible in One Family
More Than 500 Years
ALBANY, ORE. - The small
hand-set Bible owned by P. J.
Chladek of Lebanon has been in
the family for more than 500
years. According to legend,
Chladek’s Seventeenth century
ancestors hid it in a pan of dough
and thrust it in the oven when
soldiers, carrying out an old Eu-
ropean custom of religious perse-
cution for owners of “heretic”
books, came to the house.
■ Wi
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A
Stamp Will Honor Ether
Anesthesia Discoverer
JEFFERSON, GA.—No longer
should there be any doubt of the
debt that man owes Dr. Crawford
W. Long.
Dr. Long, a young physician prac-
ticing on an American frontier, dis-
covered the use of sulfuric ether
as an anesthesia in surgery. This
discovery made modern operating
table miracles possible.
The claim of being the discoverer
of ether anesthesia has been made
for and by others, but the United
States post office has settled that
argument. It will issue a new two-
cent stamp honoring Dr. Long.
It was here that Dr. Long first
used ether in surgery. The first
operation was performed March 30,
1842, when Dr. Long removed a tu-
mor from the neck of James M.
Venable.
Postal authorities studied the
claims for others as discoverers of
ether anesthesia—and found that the
credit belongs to Dr. Long alone.
OR SPREAD ON ROOSTS
KILLS
LICE
Black
Leaf40
EX-LAX
The Original
Chocolated Laxative
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
A NEWSPAPER
/Advertising
•The advertiMOteatxroa Sndia roar bowm
auoar of iaerttoiag hia 6alaa M aaall mvobm
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The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 18, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 27, 1940, newspaper, March 27, 1940; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1285996/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lampasas Public Library.