The Shamrock Texan (Shamrock, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 1, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 10, 1938 Page: 4 of 4
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Page Four
THE SHAMROCK TEXAN, Shamrock, Texas
Tuesday, May 10, 1938
YOU
WHO!
A Kaiser Loses Her Castle
Sup?rlntemJei>t Perkins always
’wears a good big smile about this
Stoe of the year, as do the rest of
She faculty members and it ‘gets
harder and harder for Students to
arrive at school on time. ... in ftet
ft’s all just twittering nerves.
JfAfATii I My> What a Long Tail Our Car Has Today!
I: 3:
Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Carpenter and
Dr. and Mrs. E. W Moss of Well-
ington spent Sunday in the Bedford
Harrison home.
More moving going on in the
smith part of town.....vans back-
ed up to the George Brown home,
«hey are leaving for Wichita Palfe.
.... tlhe So) Blonsteins. moving
jrom their south main residence to
South Wall street.....Mrs. Sol
'•tramping 'around giving directions
and quite unhappy about the whole
thing.....'the Chafes Greens mov-
ed back to their South Main street
home from the United Gas Plant
■west of town, and the A. C. Hall-
marks are now >ait home in 'the for-
mer Ansel McDowell residence.
Operation-
(Continued from Page One)
atmilar. although small, tumor in
the right eye might be checked be-
fore it could encroach upon the
brain.
After further examination of the
felaby within the next 48 hours, spe-
cialists will decide Whether the right
«ye can 'be saved by x-ray treatment
or must be removed.
Helaine’s condition cheered her
parents, Dr. Herman Golan, 30, a
dentist, and his wife. Estelle, 23. For
four days they strove to decide
■whether the infant should be allow-
ed to die or whether surgeons
should attempt to save her life.
This morning they placed the ba-
by’s fate in the hands of a “jury”.
Ten x-ray and brain specialists, two
rabbis, the father and the maternal
grandfather, Dr. Morris Hershman,
Jbimself a physician, deliberated for
An hour. By unanimous vote they
elected to rely upon medical skill.
-o-
Miss Johnnie Marie Taylor of Ok-
lahoma City spent the week-end in
the home of her sister, Mrs. W. H.
Walker.
E. G. Vierson of Elk City, Okla.,
was here on business Monday.
-o-
Billy Taylor of Electra spent Sun-
day with relatives here.
-o-
Ben Wofford of Wheeler transact-
ed business here this morning.
-o-
Miss Dalton Burleson, county
home demonstrator of Wheeler, vis-
ited in SHamnook Sunday.
M. M. Nix made a trip to Clinton,
Okla., Monday.
Cihlarley Barrett, Who has 'been
seriously ill at his home, is some Im-
proved today.
-o-
Hub Cadenhead is visiting in San
Antonio with hts parents. He 'ac-
companied his sister. Mrs. Kluxer
Willis and Mt. Willis and daughter
of Amarillo.
Congress Leaders-
(Continued from Page One).
House conference saw members of
the appropriations committee and
fhnse concerned with the spending-
lending campaign discussing that
’with the chief executive.
Members of the latter group said
Mr. Roosevelt offered no objections
When told ali approriations would
be made direct to the agencies
’which will use them, as contrasted
■with the previous practice of ap-
propriating a lump sum to 'be allo-
«cated by the chief executive.
The principal uncertainty about
Aiie bill lay in the senate and' the
possibility that southern opponents
■of the measure there would flight it
’with a filibuster. Senateor Harrison,
Democrat, Mississippi, said “there
Will be opposition” to the measure
In the senate. He would not go so
far, however, as to predict a fili-
buster.
--to-
Screaming and wriggling in defiance, but helpless in the arms of
two bailiffs, Miss Augusta Kaiser, 83-year-old Akron, O., spinster,
was evicted from her ancestral mansion as shown above. The
daughter of a pioneer Akron merchant. Miss Kaisei claims that she
was duped Into signing a transfer of the estate in 1936
No More Hunger
for Bishop Noe
Trustees Guests-
(Contlnued from Page One)
for a hilarious skit by north ward
teachers. Miss Maude Lummus read
the story, while Misses Lola Ruth
Stanfield and Ftorine Clay acted
the part of [Ferdinand.
H. C. Weatherby represented the
high school, relating in a humorous
manner the difficulties encountered
in trying to get assistance from the
heads of the various departments
in staging a stunt. He climaxed his
talk with a “fiddlin’" selection.
The principal talk of the evening
was given by M. S. Bavannugfh on
the subject: “The Philosophy and
Trends in Education.” He empha-
sized the present trend hi education
to place, more responsibility upon I
the schools and teachers for the de- |
velqpment of character in the child, j
The demand for more education on I
the part of the teacher and the de-
velopment of a professional spirit I
among members of the profession j
were touched upon.
The closing talk Was made by J. I
B. Clark, former president of the j
school board, who paid tribute to
the teaching fraternity and express-
ed optimism over the future of ed- |
u cation.
Credit for the success of the ban- I
quet, states Mr. Perkins, was due
largely to the efforts of a commit-
tee composed of Mrs. Claude Shel -
ton, Mrs. Martha Dugger, Miss Min-1
nie Hood and Edward Burkhalter.
More than 40 school board mem-1
bens and 'teachers enjoyed the af-1
fair.
-o-
Automatic telephone equipment
will be installed in Oslo, Norway,
for disseminating information con-
cerning local skiing conditions. The
mechanism will be used in the sum-
mer to furnish data on the tem-
perature of the water at local bath-
ing resorts.
-0-
TRY A TEXAN WANT AD!
\VA'AY.VAW.WWY.V -WAYA VWAWVWtWVVVS*
§
Miss Madeleine Klepper
Will Use
One-Act Play la
(Continued from Page One)
Brannon is in charge of the musical
jmrt of the entertainment.
The program is being sponsored
by the Federated Women’s clubs of
the city, and funds derived will toe
used toward the purchase of a piano
tor the auditorium. Admission will
be 40 cents for adults and 15 cents
for children. Sponsors of the pro-
gram point out that this event will
be a great value in entertainment,
As well as serving a public cause.
LIBERTY THEATRE
•When Better Pictures Are Shown
The Liberty Will Show Them"
last Showing Today—
AA
A/I these stars In one fe
Mg tun, music and f
—News Reel & Comedy-
Admission 10c & 25c
Don’t forget “Snow White!”
TINY TOT REVUE
On the stage Thursday, May 12.
nil children under 8 years of age
•eligible and may enter by leaving
name at box office.
Beautiful gold lockets and other
prises given to all children who en-
ter. Please register your child now
at liberty Theatre.
Having put on 65 pounds since
his collapse last January from a
long religious fast the Very Rev.
Israel Harding Noe appears hale
and hearty in the photo above,
taken when he preached at St.
Paul’s Episcopal Church in his
home town, Beaufort, N. C.
Armless, Legless
Youth Takes Part
School Activities
AZLE (UP) — Sixteen-year-old
Kenneth Tucker, bom without arms
and legs, is getting help from his
schoolmates In, living a normal life
despite 'his handicaps.
The three and a half foot young-
ster plays land works almost as well
as his more fortunate classmates. At
school, he writes—better than most
normal children—toy holding the
pencil between his face and should-
er. He passed every grade in school
except the one year when he fell
from a swing and was confined for
two months with: a fractured
shoulder.
Kenneth Is one .of the school’s
beet marble players and can engage
his schoolmates in baseball and
basketball.
Young Tucker lives at his fath-
er's farm home six miles southwest
Of Asle. At home he gathers wood
and helps herd and feed a number
of cows, goats and dheep. He owns
10 sheep and recently reoeived *13.60
for their wool.
Kenneth’s desire to live like his
friends may prevent his accepting
an offer to travel with a commercial
show ithls summer to demonstrate
bis u nusual Abilities for the public.
Wheat, rye, oats Mid rice—Alta
mnMHMnMi
ice’s most important crops, except-
ing corn-Ml oeme from Europe.
PUCKETTS BEST FLOUR,
DEL MONTE PRODUCTS
ADMIRATION COFFEE
In her demonsrtations at the big free
four day
As in an alligator, it’s hard to tell where the tail ends and the body begins on this new super-stream-
lined racing car built at Brooklands, England, for John Cobb’s attempt on the world’s land speed record
at Bonneville on the Utah salt flats next August. As the rear view above shows, the lom>-t:ii!ed •
streamline effect is broken only by the turret in which the driver sits. The new speed dragon was
designed by Reid Railton and contains two Napier engines of 1250 h. p. each which drive the h out
and rear axles independently, making two racing machines in one. Weighing over three tons, the car
is 4 feet 3 inches high and has a wheelbase of 13% feet. The aluminum body weighs less than
_____ 500 nounds.
-tEXAN WANT ADS GET RESULTS-
The following firms are cooperating:
Puckett’s Grocery & Market, Coca-Cola
Bottling Co., Plain view Dairy, and
Bradley’s Bakery.
COOK the Easy
Chambers Way!
See For
Yourself
What Can
Be Done
With the
Extra
Advantages
Of This
Modern
Range!
Miss Madeleine Klepper
Uses a Chambers Gas Range and Kelvinator Refrigerator in her
Demonstrations at the
COOKING ii FREE COOKING SCHOOL
SCHOOL
which begins today at Douglas Hard-
ware and lasts through Friday. All
Shamrock women are cordially invited
to attend.
PUCKETT’S
GROCERY & MARKET
livery \\
(WAftVVW
CLASSES IN THE AFTERNOON FROM 2:00 TO 4:00 P. M.
Tuesday, Wednes., Thursday, Friday
MAY 10, 11, 12 & 13
Attend this interesting and educational session. You will
gain the latest in advanced cooking ideas from the lec-
tures of this famous home economics authority.
We extend an invitation to every lady in Shamrock and
this territory to attend this Cooking School.
CLASSES TO BE HELD AT
PHONE 97 Free Delivery
“wwwvv^^
DOUGLAS HARDWARE
112 NORTH MAIN
SHAMROCK, TEXAS
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Bones, Percy. The Shamrock Texan (Shamrock, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 1, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 10, 1938, newspaper, May 10, 1938; Shamrock, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth525807/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Shamrock Public Library.