Lipscomb Lime Light and Follett Times (Follett, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 11, 1926 Page: 3 of 6
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Shattuck Siftings
VOL. 2
SHATTUCK, OKLAHOMA, THURSDAY, FEB. U [926
No 21
Baptist Church Notes
Sunday School 9:45 a m
Preaching. 11:00 :
B. Y. P. U --.7:30 p. m.
Sunday eveRing'preaching ser-
vice on church lawn_8:30 p.m.
Prayer meeting every'Wednes-
day_ 8:30 p. m.
A welcome for everyone r.t all
«ur services.
— Dan N. Curb, Pastor.
Dadctus
E.uenmcr
Fair
Ar 7AARY • GRAHAM. • BON2MBR
^ * VBTIKN MtWAW UHlQ* — —.
OPEN EYES
DONT FORGET
US——
When you need any-
thing in die line ?f
and attract! ve
Printing.
fa
13' \ .
m
With the Lodges
Mr. Monkey.
^ Follett I. O. O. F. Lodge meets
every Hiursdav night.
Follett Rebekah Lodge meets
every first and third Tuesday
might of each month. Lodge
starts promptly at 7 30.
Visitors are welcome in both
Orders.
Members are urged most ear.
to Jjj p^snt on ever
meeting night.
Darrouzett Lodge
A. F. & A.IH
No. 1156
Regular Meeting 2nd Sat-
urday of each Month.
Visiting Bros, always wel-
Got Something
You
Want to Sell?
► Mom people have a piece
! of furniture, a form tanpie-
[ meat, or aocnething else
; which they have discard-
! ed and which they 00 lon-
These things are put in
tilt attic, or stored away
in the ten, or left lying
about, getting of less and
less value each year.
"I have never wasted any time."
said Mr. Monkey, "no, never."
"Just what do
you mean by that
speech?" asked
Miss Eva Monkey.
"Just exactly
what I said,': Mr.
Monkey answered.
"Now let me
think it over
then," said Miss
Eva M o n k e y.
"You said you
never wasted
any time, or rath-
er, that you hud
never w a s t e da
time.
,"Y o u must
mean that you
have never wast-
ed any time since the day you were
horn."
"You're getting hot, you're getting
hot," shrieked Mr. Monkey delightedly.
"Oh no, I'm not," said Miss Eva
Monkey. "I'm quite cool, I thank
you."
"You don't understand," said Mr.
Monkey.
"When people guess riddles or look
for objects which rre hidden, when
they come near winning or guessiug or
finding the object that was hidden, the
one who knows where It is says:
" 'You're getting hot,' and If they're
far a Way from the hidden object the
one who knows says:
" 'You're very cool.'
"So you're very near to guessing
what I meant and so I said you were
very hot."
"I see, I see," said AIlss Eva Mon-
key. "But tell me the answer.
"Tell me what you meant.
"I came near the answer.
"That will do for me."
"I have never wasted any time," re-
peated Mr. Monkey, "nor have you."
"We were born with our eyes open
We saw what was going on from the
start.
"We don't want to miss a thing.
"Now the deer family are the same
way and so are many of the vege-
tarian animals.
"The vegetarian animals are the
ones who eat vegetables, ha, ha.
"I understand that!
"But there are some who don't
have- their eyes open when they are
born.
"The squirrels, rats, mice, rabbits,
woodchucks, and those animals who
_'naw are born with their eyes tight
shut.
"Cats are born with their eyes shut
and even great big bears haven't the
sense to look at the world when they
are little cubs.
"But we never
wasted any time,
as I've said sev-
eral times before.
"We want to
se e everything
that is going on
from the very be-
ginning of our
lives."
"That's right."
agreed Miss Eva
Monkey.
"We are bright
monkeys," s h e
added, "and you
speak the truth.
"We have our
eyes open right
from the start—
The KITCADH
GM3IAE
SHATTUCK, OKLAHOMA, DIRECTORY
((E), 1 926, Western .\>wipap«r Union.)
It is -not so much what you say.
A.-? tlie manner in which you say
it;
It Is not so much the language
you use
As the form by which you con-
vey it.
FOOD FOR ANY SEASON
There is no more delicate or appe-
tizing meat dish than tongues, well
cooked and sea-
soned.
Beef Tongue en
Casserole. — Take
a tongue which
has been slightly
corned, remove all
the rough por-
tions, rub with
flour to which lias
been added a dash of allspice and a
pinch of ginger. Fpy a few slices of
suit pork, then add a sliced onion,and
the tongue. Tie the tongue into shape
and flour lightly on all sides. Prepare
;i cupful of gravy made from the broth
of the trimmings, add the juice of a
lemon, three tablespoonfuls of shred
ded almonds, and half a cupful of
seeded raisins. Put the tongue lntu
;i round casserole, pour over the gravy
and hake half an hour In a moderate
oven. Untie the tongue, serve on
a hot platter with the gravy poured
around it.
Raisin Sandwiches.—Put through
the meat chopper alternately a few
raisins which have been steamed un
til plump, and a few walnut meats or
pecan meats until a cupful of each is
used. Add a dash of salt and blend
with enough whipped cream to make
-a mixture to spread.
Cream Prune Pie.—Put a cupful of
stewed prunes through a sieve, add a
cupful of milk, one teaspoonful of
cornstarch, a third of a cupful of
sugar, the yolks of two eggs well
beaten, a pinch of salt; mix well and
[•our Into a pastry-lined plate. Covet
with a meringue and bake all togeth
er; if the crust has been previously
baked, cook the filling first then add
meringue and bake.
Round 8teak Birds.—Cut strips of
round steak, flatten by pounding until
thin. Place on each strip a slice of
bacon, a slice of pickle and a slice of
onion. Roll up and tie with a
string. Dust with salt and pepper
and brown in a little hot fat. Sim
roer until tender, never allowing the
meat to boll. Serve with the gravy
-poured around the rolls, after remov
Ing the "strings.
vrtld
none or ine ninon..,,—tlTl""-
around the count rv are named
"Amuck," but a lot of them ought to
be.
Q. W.MASON
FURNITURE DEALER AND FUNERAL
5DIRLCTOR
CALL
Shattuck, Okla.
Where Service means more |than a Mere Word.
, PHOTOGRAPHY
Rothenberger Studio
Fine?Photcs,
Kodak££Work and
^Enlarging
SHATTUCK, OKLA.
GENERAL MERCHANISE
Tomlin & Edwards
THE BUSY STORE
The right place for fresh
and wholesome Groceries—
the kind you like to* eat.
SHATTUCK, riOKLA.
GARAGES
SHATTUCK OVER-
LAND COMPANY
AT
BROWN'S OARAGE
Shattuck, Okla.
Classified Wants
Wants under this head at the
very reasonable rate of lie per
line. One number or initial to
count same as word.
FOR SALE
Be Live Booster for Shattuck
Robbers are hanged by the whole
sale in China, hut in this country pun
ishment is not even Inflicted by re
tail.
"With ail my worldly goods I thee
endow" in the niiirriage ceremony
seems to be just ;is obsolete as the
word "obey."
"Just What Do
You Mean?"
As a general rule those homes are
happiest where a person taking a bath
has to fish a flotilla of tlD battleships
from the tub.
Among those races whose origin
still baffles anthropologists are the
Basques in southern France and the
American hot dog.
WHY NOT
SELL* THEM? I
Somebody wants those <
very tilings which have *
become of no use to you. I
Why not try to find that <
somebody by putting a j
want advertisement in <
THIS NEWSPAPER? i
whether we're free or here In the
zoo.
Every Man a Genius
Doctor Spearman. who has taker
:iati.\ "ability lests' tell< the British
Vssociathui lor the Advancement ol
deuce, tlal even man is a genius at
omething and a dunce at something
ise lie believes the habitually un
mployed and the misfits in industry
• 1:id "lie of them th> something
hut would r take liitu a treasure. If we
'i\ knew 'A : Ml ii was It is up to
• •i.Mire to fi! d a mentis of putting
ound 1 >i■ - . r-:• . .1 of square ones
nto round hoh - 1 . jiper'S Weekly.
A welfare worker is quoted its say
that in -many homes parents are
'afraid to a«k their young children !•
•to errand-" It is unfortunate that
•mine children should have selected
that kind of parents.
A New York msn has perfected an
airplane that operates by treadle. That
reminds us. Whatever became of the
one-wheel bicycle?
The Treasury department Is trying
to find paper money that lasts longer.
Sometimes the Treasury department
seems almost human.
Some of the sunspote are said to be :
thousands of miles In diameter, and j
yet think of the fuss a girl makes
over an ordinary freckle.
when you want
that next' job of
Printing
You will get first-class
work, and you will get
it when promised, for
having work done
when promised is one
of the rules of this office.
If vou prefer, send the
order by mail or bring
it to the office in person.
Let U Show Yoa
What We Can Do
WE—Have on hand at the
present time bundles of old
papers fcr the small amount of
10 cen s a bundle.— Lipaeotnb
Lime Lighi & Follett 'limes,'Fol-
lett Texa .
FOR SALE—Clover Seed at
$6.00 per bu., Red Top Cain
seed, $2.00 Per. 10a lb. sack.
Call or write Geo. Miller^ Lips-
comb, Texas. 194.1
China's new dictator, according to a
dispatch, tuts restored the practice of
beheading, a form of punishment said
to be extremely efllcaclous.
Current discussion of the prevalence
>f crime suggests that, as in the case
f the weather, everybody talks about
ii, but nobody does anything.
DO IT NOW
Send us the price of a year'?
subscription if you are in arrears
FOR SALE — Set of 32-voit
80-Amp hr Lighting Batteries.
Cheap, money talks, batteries in
good shape, jvst the thing for
a Lighting pl rt out on the farm
reason for celling need bigger
battery if interested Call at the
Lime Light Office.
HATCHING EGGS-from R.
C. Keds of high quality, heavy
layers. Prices resonadle— Mrs.
J. M. Robinson, Darrouzett,
Texas. 135
liABY CHICKS— light and
heavy breeds.—write or phon^
Chas. Goettsche, Higgins Texas.
MAN OR WOMAN—$50.00-
$75.00 weekly showing our
samples and taking ortiers foi-
Famous Packard Tailed Shirts
and Neckwear direct from our
factory. Easy work. Experience
unnecessary. Your pay starts ar
once. Spring line ready. Rt -
p.esentatives in other counth-ji
earning $50.00 to $75.00 a we*K
ESSEX COACH furnish**!
FREE. Act quick. Write io/
FREE samples.—Packard Mai>«
... - T , . ~ jufacluring Co, T836 Orle B ,
We Need the Money [Chicago, 111.
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Skaggs, Ethel. Lipscomb Lime Light and Follett Times (Follett, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 11, 1926, newspaper, February 11, 1926; Follett, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth390388/m1/3/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Higgins Public Library.