The Matagorda County Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 83, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, October 5, 1928 Page: 2 of 8
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the ranch or farm and in those years engaged in farming
Grandpa Dodd
Four sons and two daughters sur-
of toil and simplicity were devoted to
MISSIONARY COLUMN
/
By CORA H. MOONF
I of
c9
n
। in i ii ml 1111
may rent, Ik no small thing
v
y
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the Administrative Secretary for the My Dear Miss Perkinson:
--4
+
2m
ns
USE
PERFECTION
OIL COOK STOVES AND OVENS
No other liquid fuel stove gives the
all-around genuine satisfaction that is
aSM
other oil stove is as modern in design
1st
and finish as the new style Perfections.
i
Here you can get just the style and
..
size you need. Convenient payments.
TAYLOR BROTHERS
\
The several Jewish stores of the city
were closed yesterday that Yom Kip-
BAY CITY,
DEALERS
TEXAS
4
1
€s
imuiinnii
SL
if you see it
youll have to have it!
> which is recorded in Vol. 18, pages 426-
: 427 of the deed records of Matagorda
Drop your work
for a while and
Silver Anniversary
At Vashti School
The plan of salvation as outlined by
Dr. Gray, of Brownwood, in a series
els—all light-colored . . . swift-
cooking. All finished either ia
porcelain enamel or in Perfecto-
lac, a new, durable lacquer. It
will pay you to see them.
54 ;
}
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,
August 14. 1928.
---------
Social Service
In Mexico
JOHN SUTHERLAND,
CHAS E DULLER,
GEO. T. KILBRIDE,
GEO. E. SERRILL,
J. E. TANNER.
r
her masculine looks, could cook a '
dinner fit for a king. And when i
heels in love with a young man .
who seemed a bit afraid to fall in I
Mrs. Percival had seen to it,
however, that Marion, in spite of |
Marion finally tumbled head over
ENI UR,
- IN THE «
come to look at it. It is one of
24 beautiful new Perfection mod-
-----------0 ■■ ■ ~o ■ ........—........
Postage stamps were first used in
England in 1840 at the suggestion of
Sir Rowland Hill.
In the face of increasing public ex-
penditures and a growing demand for
r
W. H. Nance
---------------O ..............
ROAD NO’ICE TO LAND OWNERS '
velopment Company lands, a plat of
j
LI
a new oil burning range
a VFull porcelain enamel finish.
A0() \ New design..Grouped burners
U- \ Built-in “live heat’oven.. New
E \ heat indicator. .One of 24
NO WONOE, every \ new models. $170 to 0154
woman who sees \ „
Easy way to buy. Your dealer will demonstrate these new stoves for you
and will no doubt tell you how you can buy any one of them on easy terms.
red to us that this would be a good • • • •
time to invite our friends to meet with A Message From Our
us for a day of reminiscences and r PN
thanksgiving to God lor hi- wonder Fraternal Messenger
ful support for our many friend- inl T p . -1
for the beautiful w n anh । * ho- 1O orazu
it into eggs as lightly as possible.
Sift in flour. This also must be done
with as light a handling and as much
speed as possible. I urn into un-
buttered pan and cook in slow oven
They are W E of Beau-
A of California: H. L.. of
sons. This request was granted.
obtained from a Perfection, and no
Let’s adverttse more. It pays.
Friends of the missionary cause
will be grieved to learn of the death
of Miss Daisye Ferguson, missionary
I to Brazil. Because of ill health, she
sailed for home on a Japanese boat on
character was built in this school."
Miss Dye is expecting Mrs. Downs,
County, and conveyed to W. K. Gar-
ner by Palacios City Townsite Com-
pany, by deed dated March 24th, 1909.
' and recorded in Vol. 24, Page 418 of
i the deed records of Matagorda County,
I and then will then and there proceed
to assess any damages for which you
may be entitled on account of the lay-
ing out of the said public road, and
you are hereby requested to produce
to us a statement in writing of the
damages, if any, claimed by you, and
all evidences which you may desire
' to offer in relation to such damages,
and do and perform such other acts
as may be necessary and lawful in the
premises. ' ।
In witness whereof, we have here-
unto set our hands this 26th day of
September, A. D., 1928.
Mr William Henson Nance.
began Sunday and continued until
dusk Monday.
eral Secretary of the Board of Mis-
" ’ the building of character and a de- vive him.
Grandpa Dodd, for many years a votion to duty. That he performed mont: S
this stove wants to buy it on the
spot! It is an entirely new kind
of oil range — a beautiful, swift-
cooking model in snow-white porce-
lain enamel . . Modem in design . .
Safe and economical as only an oil-
burning range can be!
were closed yesterday that Yom Kip- o revival sermons beginning Sunday,
pur. the Day of Atonement, might be September 30, will be a spiritual feast
observed in fasting and prayer. that no one can really afford to miss.
The fasting and prayer ceremonies Conte and be convinced.
with ice cream! Here are the recipes:
1 a
Angel Cake
Whites of 12 eggs
1% cups granulated sugar (measured
after sifting)
1 cup and 1 tablespoon pastry flour
1 teaspoon vanilla
Pinch salt
1% teaspoons cream of tartar
Sift sugar five times. Set aside.
, Sift flour, cream of tartar and salt
together five times. Set aside. Beat
whites to a froth, not quite as stiff as
for meringue Sift in sugar, folding
the 11th of August. Within a day or
two she was taken so violently ,11
that she was put ashore at Victoria,
i Brazil. She was rushed to a hospital
and operated on immediately for ap-
pendicitis. The Baptist missionaries
at that point gave her every care pos-
' sible, and as soon as the tragic news
Chocolate Sauce
2 cups white sugar
2 tablespoons cocoa
% cup water.
Cook to thick syrup. Add nuts and
serve hot over cake.
Proper Heat of Oil Stove
for Angel Cake
Keep flames low, so that they show
blue. (For faster cooking turn them
up 1% inches.) A really good oil
stove will burn with a steady flame,
and will need no watching,
o
How to Cut Angel Cake
Never use a knife on angel cake.
Pull it apart with two forks. This
keeps the feathery texture from
crushing.
। In the matter of the petition of R.
J. Sisk and thirteen other freeholders:
j of Precincts Nos. 1, 4 and 3 for a
change in public road in the County
I of Matagorda, State of Texas.
(THE STATE OF TEXAS,
COUNTY OF MATAGORDA.
To W. L. Garner, address unknown:
I TAKE NOTICE, that the undersign-
|ed Jury, appointed by the Commission-
i ers’ Court of Matagorda County, Texgs,
to lay out and survey a change of lo-
cation .alignment and dimensions in
a public road, as petitioned for by R.
J Sisk and thirteen others, so as to
begin at 7th street in Bay City and
lend at Palacios and to assess the dam-
ages resulting from the establishment
- — ------ ... ----- ----- of the said road, will on the 27th day
• for fifty-five minutes. Put pan of of October, 1928, in discharge of our i
water in oven with it and keep it there said duty, meet upon the following
for forty minutes. Do not open the premises, to which you and othersj
oven door for twenty minutes after 1 have some claim, or title, to-wit:
cake starts to bake. At the end of Lot No. 17 of the J C. Carrington
forty minutes take pan of water out. 1 Sub-Division of the southeast quarter
At the end of fifty-five minutes take „t Section No 9, of the Texas Rice De-
। out cake and turn it upside on plate
to cool in pan.
activity. Mrs Percival’s kitehen was
made a most delightful, most feminine
place (description of it in Nancy's
notebook).
Marion's young man was invited to
dinner. Mrs. Percival came down with I
a convenient headache, and Marion
had to solve the problem of entertain-
ing him while she cooked dinner. It
wound up with his going to the
kitchen and discovering there a
flushed and flustered, but vry house-
wifely Mari'S), that he was not at all
afraid of.
You know the rest—'"Here Comes
the Bride," and all that. And the
Kitchen Club never knew that it had
been called upon to play Cupid I
LEAVES FROM NANCY’S
KITCHEN CLUB
NOTEBOOK
We made Mrs. Perc ival’s kitchen as
sweet and feminine as she is! Walls,
silver-gray; floor, blue and white (
linoleum; oil stove, blue, silver-gray
and white; breakfast nook (built-in),
pale blue trimmed with pink flowers— I
transfer patterns—window box Dainted «
Home Field and Dr w G Cram. Gen Well, we are here in lovely Rio. and was received at Bennett College,
For Complete Cooking Satisfaction
where she worked, Miss Mary Lamar
went immediately to Victoria. With-
in a short time peritonitis developed,
and she passed away on the 17th of
August. Her brothers are requesting
that her body be sent home at their
‘expense. All necessary steps are be-
ing taken by the American consul to
comply with this request, but at this
' writing the remains still lie in Vic-
1 toria. When the body readies New
Orleans, Miss Eliza Perkinson will
represent the missionaries of Brazil,
and the Woman's Council at the fu-
neral.
1 Miss Ferguson went to Brazil from
' Woodville, Miss., in August, 1925.
After her period of language study she
1 was appointed to work in Bennett Col-
lege, Rio de Janerio, where she has
continued to serve up to the time of
her death. In the early summer of
this year, Miss Ferguson sent in her
resignation, asking that she be per-
mitted to come home in August in-
stead of November, for health rea-
love with her, gentle little Mrs.
Percival armed herself for battle,
and sallied forth.
How the Kitchen Club Helpeei
The Kitchen Club was called into
consultation, without being told the
underlying reason for the sudden
of Dallas. $
.Mr. Nance was of a quiet and Yn-
28-5-12-19
1 19w
#ei.
=—=6
sident of Bay City and a familiar nobly is attested to by the scores of Palacios: J D of Bay City; Mrs F.
nest th- older nen ot the frien he left to sorrow ver the 1. Welsh of Ti init and Miss Pi A ,
ings, sympathetic in manner and a
good, loyal friend and neighbor He
was a member of the Christian church.
The Tribune joins the many friends
of the family in an offer of sympathy,
the . „__________
KITCHEN!
4) tl
i
PERFECTION
Oil Burning Ranges
PERFECTION Stove Company, Dallas, Texas
light rose color, and filled with vines
and pink begonias Refrigerator,
table, shelves, etc., white trimmed
with blue Curtains, whitg vith little
blue ruffles!
If? 1B k i!1'
•j6N ’ • >
w
*'1 hit young mtn bichelor days art
numbergd."
Mrs Percival served us a simply
divine dessert, made of big hunks of
angel cake, covered with hot choco-
late sauce filled with nuts, and topped
-t you just do not know how thrilled I
-"20 am We arrived yesterday at about
1 । nine ". lock and you an imagine our
I* joy in seeing the friends Miss Hyde
I Miss Cobb Miss Glonn Miss Mathew
I I Mi" Mathis Mis- Holt Miss Clark
| ! the Terrells and Mr Moore who were town. as well as a boon companion severance of ties of affectionate a
If at th- dock to give us a »e!o me M: upon occasion for the younger gene- soc iations
_ .6 helpt o ' - all ot us in rations especially the children. died This grand old man is survived b; assuming nature, honest in his deal-
-
ancy Holt is planning to go noon at ♦ o’clock. at the age of 94
on my itinerary in this Con- years.
Courteny of the I),meme Sae nce Depart
ment, Perfection Stole Company
"AEY say that if a girl is beau-
X tifal, it isn’t so necessary
that she be a good cook ! But too
often, Mother Nature gives the
curly hair and the baby dimples
to somebody else s daughter. And
then, if you are a wise mother,
you teach your daughter other
ways of being attractive among
which is the old, old one, of being
perfectly at home over a kitchen
stove.
Little Mrs. Percival had always
wondered, in her gentle way, why
Marion, her only child, had
seemed to inherit all the late Mr.
Percival's traits, and none of her
mother’s. She had been a rough-
arid tumble baby; she had been a
tom-boy little girl. And now, at
twenty, she was affecting a sleek
coiffure, wearing horn-rimmed
glasses and threatening to study
law!
sions, also many others who are prom- ference The plan seems to be work- The funeral took place this after-
inent in missionary work, to be pre - ek out as follows. I am to speak to- noon at 4 o’clock in Cedarvale ceme-
ent. Two of the features of the day morrow at Cattete Church on the next tery.
Mr. w A Newell the Council So. will be a barbecue dinner and a day the women of this district are giv- "Grandpa.” as he was familiarly past 30 years a resident of Bay City.
ci21 S.r"ire sverintendent savs that pazeant portraying the activities of inz me a reception at 'he Centro; on known, was one of the very few re- passed away at the home of his son.
one of the finest result* of the Jubilee the school from its bezinning Saturday, I - ' with, Mr Moore and maining frontiersmen Trained in the J D Nance, in this city Tuesday. On
is the stimulus we have received from ‘ ‘ / 3.Ho1 to Jui de oru and will school of hard experience, be grew 2. at noon aul will be buried in
the achievements of missionary so An interracial Peaxmerexwceonsunua} and work into rugged young manhood and fol- Cedarvale cemetery tomorrow (Thurs-
cileties in foreign lands They often , in that .distrfor ' a week - wed a life which put health, vigor day afternoon at 3 o’clock
put us to the blush when wecompa e Committee 1,1 return ’ or ■ i a week * nd stamina into a system that sea- Mr. Nance was born in Alabama in public revenue .would it not be con-
what they accomplish in the race of V1511 bent ” KoinE ” ith Miss An- soned well for a long Hie. for Grand- 1851 At the time of his death he was sistent with principles of equity that
what we shouid consider insurmount- Just . we are bezinning to grow a urade wa: also 1 th : k to meet us 4 was energetic and active up until 77 year- 6 month.- and 2 days of age those who profit most in trading
able obatacles with what we do no’ o little duiuous Uhl what our auxiliary and here Bnnett elping with . few years ago He moved to Texus thirty years azo should pay more in taxes than should
when the doors of opportunity are superintendents are doinz thraughn- Up40 . “! he i8 t0 5 Most of his life had been spent on and had lived here all the time, bein those who profit less in producing?
wide open Note this item which our terracial Committees we find some- itn h " . 11 SePemherr and
Council President gleaned from the thing like this which sends the ther ding ’ a " "5 "507
report of the Mexican Conference mometer of our hopes bounding up “Ws.n w. 1..0 . .. ... •
Superintendent of Social Service: several degrees. 60 We were . etb
one of the pieces of legislation Mrs. J J. Johnson of the North teosad . verv in Mispasye, er-
which she is working for in various Texas Conference sends a report from 8 . HWaz forth .its eem st hat she
cities is the sale of medicines at re- van Alstyne, described by The aux- had apiled.1orthe.S tates on Saturday
duced prices for the poor She has iliary superintendent as "a -mall . ’ . m h ad each d Vic
succeeded in several states. The chier town" in which she says: toriawas si from.an attack o ap-
Object of her written and spoken prop-1 -For three years story-telling has Pe Ih »tha ? h hai to betaken
aganda this year is thrift. She urges been done at the negro school once ion .004 and nurned 10 the 105-
and encourages the Mexicans to save a week. These stories include Bible, pita andwas operated in at once
their money and to tithe. She pub- biography, poetry, classies and mod- . 2. 5aP ” ’ mis 01 aries a _V ictoria
lished four articles on that subject ern literature of all kinds The chii- . 001 . d.auer her .T elee i" ? have
last year She reported 1,118 visits to dren sing spirituals as their part or . , esay > * a 8 ' * doing, we
the sick by the members of eleven the program. A mothers’ club was A , annia Eon", ° ner !
auxiliaries She has formed a plan for organized there this year. This last setha .«<> . 5, ’ . , a ' 1oi
the Improving of public squares, which quarter with the co-operation of the r main till all danger is over. Of
are found in all Mexican cities, and socialservicelcommittee a library coursevevery bodyis anxious, but they
the arranging of a special place in hower was given the school, the piano argdoing, that can be done
each square where the invalids may was tuned, flower bed* were made and ane .. es5a E58. are encoraging ,.o
have their corner among the flower planted in the school yard On the Iar.,.o _ Wil doubtess,haye a.full
and shrubbery." . | last day of school a candy shower was ‘wL Lmae Jhi by this
Mrs. Stephens adds that as our work given the children by the auxiliary. mai,,Mis -amarswill reach there
in Mexico is fa the northern section, a The crowning achievement of this ton ightusandushe will wire ol
wen gnettxtensnonricerwnterinahns " more at ahis
fore a green...........where into the negro dection
This committee has been working on the office, so that they will
this for three years, using all influ- is right with us.
I fluence posBible with the mayor and Love to all
commissioners. Many other things MABEL K HOWELL.
a 1L v unKU W01IU1I could be <ned, such as the entering ot
negro yards in the Home Beautifica-
. . . . tion Campaign The Death of Miss
uk-H cr . -i ... r». ,, c, ,, Let n0 one who reads thi8 simple . _
enTlrChervathtP’setbosurerintnnd.iston eay: We dono know anythi Daisye Ferguson
.......... 11 . .. .1 for an interracial ( omnittee to do in
Ville, (12., announceN that they will . . ,, p, . . .
""A.. 4, d ' our town There Im a need in every
celebrate their silver anniversary on ____ . . ... ..
, ihOL . community where both races live, a
October IV. 1928 She Hayn: ... ... . , .
"Because- of the successful career waitinK task for both to perform co-
this school has enjoyed it has occur- opera Y-
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Smith, Carey. The Matagorda County Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 83, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, October 5, 1928, newspaper, October 5, 1928; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1553729/m1/2/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.