The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 42, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 16, 1934 Page: 8 of 8
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THE WORLD'S 6REATEST REPORTING SHORTHAND
Write for endowments of the Byrne Simplified Short-
band by some of the leading court and convention
reporters of the nation.
Byrne Simplified Shorthand is not only the most rapid
and complete shorthand in use, but it is learned in
half the time of other systems.
Ours is the only private business college in this section
that is permitted by contract to teach this famous sys-
tem of shorthand, of which there are over fifty thous-
and writers.
Fill in and mail for endorsements and free discriptive literature.
Name.
Address
Bryne Commercial College
DALLAS, TEXAS.
BA'&Y GALLED "P. 8."
By naming bis 14th child, born
last year, "Finis," Roy Bowen,
of Iowa, announced to anyone
who might be interested that this
child marked the end of "new
arrivals" at bis home. Ho when
a baby <rirl was born this year
nhe was appropriately named
Patricia Sue with the intention
of calling ber by her initials P. S.
STOP THAT ITCHING
If you suffer from a skin trouble, such
as Itch, Eczema, Athlete's Foot Ring-
worm, Tetter or Pimples, we will sell
i you a jar of Black Hawk Ointment on n
| guarantee. Price 50 cent. Pa vis Drug
' Stores.
BUSINESS TRAINING DEFINITELY PAYS
After you finish your business training, our Employment
Department can assist you to find a desirable position.
Business has taken a definite turn for the better, so by the
time you can sii>t ready, we should be able to place .you prompt-
ly. If it were ethical, wh could guarantee to place you.
For thirty-four years we have been training young people
for business. This long experience should qualify us to train
you. You may enter the School of Commerce Department at
any time
Our annual fully explains our courses. Its free.
Ice in 1856.
Victoria, Texart, Oct. 9 —In
those days of gas and electr c
refrigeration as Texas citizens
"warm up" to the possibilities of
the Texas Centennial celebrations
planned for 1930 at San Antonio
Houston, Goliad, Brenham, Nac-
ogdoches, Iluntsville, Qonzaz^s,
Galveston, Dallas and other cities
of interest is an item printed in
the Victoria Advocate July 5
1856, which thanks "our esteem/
ed friend, H B. Cleveland, of In
dianola for a mammot h lump of
ice, received in time to do service
on the 4th. His injunction to
keep cool we fulfilled as far as our
intense patriotism would allow
us."
For Sale a Scholarship in Tvler
Coaimercal (College at this offi e
ANNOUNCEMENTS
USE THIS
COUPON
Your Name.
Your Address
TYLER COMMERCIAL COLLEGE
and School of Business Administration
TYLER, TEXAS
'We arc authorized to announce the
following Democratic candidates sub-
ject to the action of the general election
to be held in November.
DID YOU GROW
THESE YOURSELF
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CANNED AND FRESH
THE end of the fresh vegetable j
season Is approaching, hut J
hero is a stunt which many j
wise housewives are using to pro- '
long It as long as possible. They j
take such canned vegetables as I
asparagus, beets, carrots, corn, I
kidney beans, lima beans, mush-
rooms, peas, sauerkraut, spinach,
stringless beans and tomatoes and
combine them with the remaining
fresh beets, cabbage, carrots, cau-
liflower, celery, cucumbers, egg-
plant, lima beans, mushrooms,
onions, potatoes, radishes, spinach,
squash, sweet potatoes, tomatoes
and turnips which they are able
to obtain, and make tasty dishes.
How Is this done? There's an
art in It, of which a few samples
will suffice to give the idea. Take
the first canned vegetable, aspara-
gus, for instance. Could you ask
for anything better to eat than
the following
Asparagus Combinations
Fresh Tomatoes Stuffr.it with
Asparagus: Cut the stem end3
from four firm uniform tomatoes,
and scoop out the centers. Dust
inside with salt and pepper.
Stand two asparagus tips from a
10>/6-ounce can upright In each
tomato, cutting off the ends so
that they protrude only about half
an inch. Mix the cut pieces of
asparagus with the tomato pulp,
and add enough buttered crumbs
to make the mixture of the right
consistency to stuff. Stuff this
around the asparagus tips in the
tomatoes, and bake in a slow—
325 degree—oven for from twenty,
to thirty minutes. Serves four.
Fresh Mushroom and Asparagus
Roust: Pool six very large mush-
rooms, remove stems and place,
cavity side up, in a shallow pan.
Put a piece of butter in each, and
dust with salt and pepper. Lay
two asparagus tips from a 10Va-
ounce can across each mushroom,
and sprinkle thickly with grated
cheese. Dust with paprika, and
place in a hot oven for about
fifteen minutes. Serve with steak
or on rounds of toast as an entree.
Serves six.
Corn Concoctions
Scalloped Corn, Fresh Celery
and Olives: Boll one cup of diced
celery five minutes, and drain.
Put alternate layers of whole ker-
nel corn from a 10Ms-ounce can,
celery and one-fourth cup chop-
ped ripe olives in a baking dish,
sprinkling with one-fourth tea-
spoon salt and a few grains of
pepper. Dot top with two table-
spoons butter, pour over two-
thirds cup milk, and cover with
onehalf cup buttered crumbs.
Bake for about forty-five minutes
in a 375 degree oven, or until the
celery is tender. Serves six.
Succotash: Melt two tablespoons
butter, and saute three table-
spoons ehopped green pepper and
one tablespoon chopped onion In
It for three minutes. Add the
contents of a No. 2 can of cream
style corn and one pound of new
lima beans which have bocn
shelled and simmered in boiling
water until tender. (This makes
one and a third cups, shelled.)
Season to taste, and add two
tablespoons cream. Serves six.
Parsnip Plate: Peel three
medium parsnips, cut in one-
fourth inch slices lengthwise, and
boil until tender in salted water.
Drain. Cut one medium bunch
celery in two inch pieces, and also
boil and drain. Lay parsnips flat
in a shallow buttered baking dish
or glass pie plate. Lay celery on
top, sprinkle with salt and pepper,
and dot with butter. Heat the
contents of a No. 2 can of toma-
toes, season with salt, pepper and
a tiny bit of sugar, and pour over.
Bake in a 350 degree oven for
about thirty mfnntes or until
brown. Serves six.
Stewed Tomatoes and Fresh
Squash: Pare one summer squash
(yellow crooked neck) thinly, and
cut in small pieces. Put the con-
tents of a No. 2 can of tomatoes
and the squash in a stew pan. and
season with salt and pepper.
Cover and boil gently until squash
is tender. Mash with a fork.
Add butter to season, and serve.
Serves six.
Make Your Own Combinations
Then go on from there, and
make your own combinations-
canned kidney beans with fresh
tomatoes, for instance, canned
corn or carrots with sweet pota-
toes, canned peas with cucumbers
and radishes or canned stringless
beans with carrots and green
pepper.
The combinations offer a wide
range of choice, and you'll find it.
fun to make your family and
guests guess which are the fresh
vegetables In them and which the
canned. You'll also find that they
will frequently guess wrong.*
For
For
For
For
For
For
For
For
For
For
For
For
For
For
Fok
Flotorial Representative, 3rd Dist.
E. HAROLD BECK.
District Attorney—
ELMER L. LINCOLN.
District Clerk—
EUGENF, STONB
County Representative—
DR. A. CROSS I. EY
County Judge—
SAM L. HENDERSON
Sheriff—
E. LOIS JOHNSON
Tax Assessor and Collector—
EBB ALBRIGHT
County Attorney—
B. F. WHIT WORTH
County Clerk—
WILL C. HORNSEY
County Superintendent of Schools-
D. H. BOON
County Treasurer—
IONR WILLIAMS
Commissioner Precincts 1 and 8—
W. B. HARRIS
Justick of the Peace Precinct 1-
E W. CROW
Constable Precinct No. 1 —
BUCK DEER
Pubmc Wbighbk, Precinct 1 —
T. M. HENDERSON
foa.rrtj
3'fl^ive tpa
cverii-
fahit Wilt
uou uye
cm f o i*
money
"No greater promiien than time who have
nothing to gire."
OCTOBER
15—John L. Sullivan, great
champion, born 1658.
16—John Brown makes fa-
mous raid on Harper's
Ferry, 1859.
17—Portland, Maine, is
burned by the British,
1775.
t
IS—Roumanian Queen Ma-
rie visits the U. S„ 1926.
19—Cornwallis surrenders to
General Washington,
1781.
20-
•U. S. rejects the Austrian
peace plan, 1918.
21 —Admiral Nelson wins and
dies at Trafalgar, 1805.
Stsp ChiSkS
and Fever!
Rid Your System of Malaria!
Shivering with chills one moment and
burning with (ever the next—that's rtno
of the effects of Malaria. Unless checked,
the disease will do serious harm to your
health. Malaria, a blood infection, calls
for two things. First, destroying the in-
fection in the blood. Second, building
up the blood to overcome the effects of
the disease and to fortify against further
attack.
Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic supplies
both these effects. It contains tasteless
quinine, which kills the infection in the
blood, and iron, which enriches and
builds up the blood. Chills and fever
soon stop and you are restored to health
and comfort. For half a century, Grove's
Tasteless Chill Tonic has been sure relief
for Malaria. It l« just as useful, too, as a
general tonic for old and young. Pleasant
to take and absolutely harmless. Safe to
give children. Get a bottle at rny drug
store. Now two sizes—50c and $1. The
$1 size contains V/% times as much as the
50c size and gives you 25% more for
your money.
Henry D. Nelson
Attorney-At-Law
DO A GENERAL PRACTICE
N — ALSO——
FIRE, TORNADO, PLATE GLASS
AND BURGLARY INSURANCE.
FARM PROPERTY A SPECIALTY.
LINDEN. TEYAS
Davis & Taylor
PHYSICIANS AND 8URGKON8
I.INDKN, TEXAS.
Prompt attention given to all call
day or night. Office west of Liuden
Drug Co.
I. N\ MARETT
liiMiiraneo and Real Estate
Fire, Tornado and Life
Insurance in Good
Com pauies.
Agont for Clark 5c Boico Land
Dr. A. Crossley
DENTIST
LINDEN, TEXAS
Office over poet office building
Subscribe for the Suit
D I R HJ C T O R V
M. !i. CHURCH SOUTH
D. B. Sueller, Pastor
Sunday School at 10 a. m. each Sun-
day, S. L. Henderson,Superintendent.
Preaching every Sunday by the Pastor
at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. tn.
Prayer meeting every Wednesday
night.
Methodist Missionary Society meets
Monday evening, Mrs. W. D. Narra-
more, President.
Epwortji League meets 0:80 p. m.
The Pastor has the following out-of-
town appointments: Pearl Hill each
1st Sunday at 2:30 p. m.; Wells Chapel,
3rd Sunday, 2:30 p. m.
BAPTIST
T. B. RANDOLPH, Pastor
Preaching each Sunday at 11 a. in
and 7:30 p. in. by the Pastor.
Sunday School at lOo'clock a. m.eacb
;unday, J. S. Penny, Supt.
Training Service each Sunday night,
Wiley Daniel, Director.
Prayer meeting Wedn-sday night.
Baptist W. M. S. meets every Mon-
day evening. Mrs. T. G Williams,Pres.
liU<l£?N
A F. & A. M.
Linden Lodge No. 192 meets every 1st
Tttrsday night in each month.
Eugene Stone, W . M.
B. F. Whitworth, Secretury.
O. K. S.
Linden Order of the Eastern Stat, No
57(i, meets every 3rd Tuesday evening.
Mrs. Eva Barber, W. M.
Mrs. Olive Morris, Sec.
GoKDiii Amox American Lbcion
Meets the first Thursday night of each
month at 7:30 p. in. at courthouse.
Mabren D. Humphrey, Secretary.
Court
DISTRICT COURT
R. II. Harvey, District Judge.
Elmer I. Lincoln, District Attorney.
Robert Salmon, District Clerk.
Court meets at Linden Second Monday
In. Match and First Monday in Septem-
ber.
COMMISSIONERS COURT
Meets Second Monday in each month
S L Hcndersou, Judge; W. B. Harris,
Jones S. Nelson, S. B. Willis, Claik
Birmingham Commissioners.
JUSTICE COURT
Precin-t No. 1 meets last Mondav In
each month.
E. W. Crow,Justice of the Peace.
H. P. Dear, Constable.
COUNTY OFFICERS
S. L. Henderson, County Judge.
B. 1*. Whitworth, County Attorney.
B. M. Wallace Allen, County Clerk.
E. Lois Johnson, Sheriff.
Wiley Daniels, Tax Collector.
Ebb Albright, Fax Assessor.
Miss Hattye Duncan, Co. Treasure'.
Mabren D. Humphrey, County Supt.
Dr. A Crossley, Co. Representative.
E. F. Almond, Supt. County Farm.
J. W. Barker, CountySurveyor.
Lady Says She Took
CARDUI for Cramps;
Was Soon Relieved
Women who suffer as she did
will be Interested In the experience
of Mrs. Maude Crafton, of Belle-
ville, 111., who writes: "For several
years, I suffered from Irregular
trouble and cramping. There would
be days when I would have to stay
In bed. I would get so nervous, I
was miserable. My aunt told me
to try Cardul. She believed It
would build me up, regulate me and
help the nervous trouble. I knew
after taking half a bottle of Cardul
that I was better. I kept on taking
Cardul and found It was doing me
a world of good. I am In good
health, which means a lot'to me."
. . . Thousands of women testify
Cardul benefited them. It It doea
not benefit YOU, cdnsult a physi-
cian. . . . Pride $1.
1
I
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Banger, J. E. A. & Erwin, W. L. The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 42, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 16, 1934, newspaper, October 16, 1934; Linden, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth340836/m1/8/: accessed April 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Atlanta Public Library.