The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 17, 1937 Page: 6 of 8
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Page Six
THE PADUCAH POST
THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1937
• ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦« i
DR. P. A. PRESLAR
26 Years Ago In
Cottle County
Keeps Pin Boy Busy
OPTOMETRIST
Balcony Preriar Drug CHILDRESS
Phon« 58
(Clippings from Editorial column
February 5, 1K09 of The Paducah
Post.)
jT^y DEPARTMENT
CAJj HOME ECONOMICS
LOOKER?
State College lor Women (CIA)
AlO
I don't
Denton, June 16.—Since break-
fast time is one of the loveliest
hours of a summer day, its pos-
sibilities should not be wasted.
While the sun is bright but not
hot and the air is still a little
crisp, the smart housewife can
serve a cheerfully simple meal
that is guaranteed to counteract
any amount of "getting up on the
■wrong side of the bed”.
Many fresh fruits can be obtain-
ed at reasonable prices through-
out the summer, and one cannot
serve too many of them. Nor is
it necessary to stick to one parti-
cular kind of fruit every morning,
when with a little effort berries,
peaches, apricots, and others can
be found.
MENUS
I. Cantaloupe, French toast,
butter, poached eggs, coffee.
II. French peaches with sugar
and top milk. Post Toasties with
milk, scrambled eggs, buttered
toast, coffee, or milk.
IV. Cantaloupe, bacon and eggs,
James AJ. Whatley
ATTORNEY AT-LAW
Office in
First National Bank Bldg.
Rooms 1 and 2, Upstairs
AND *
PR0TECTI0I1
heetf te knew
tUrmit Paint
Sherwin-Williams
PAINT HEAPQUARTERS
Bartlett Co.
Higsenbotham-
popovers, coffee, milk.
V. Fresh figs, toasted rolls with
strawberry jam, creamed codfish
and boiled potatoes, milk, coffee.
Dcripcc
FRENCH TOAST: 3 eggs. 6 t.
milk, 6 slices of bread about %
in. thick. t. salt and pepper.
Beat eggs together in a pan. Add
milk and seasoning; dip slices of
bread in egg mixture and fry in
rather large amount of fat until
golden brown. Serve with syrup
or honey. Butter is not needed
since some fat was absorbed in
the cooking process.
SCRAMBLED EGGS: 8 eggs
plus 1 t. milk for each egg plus
t. salt plus 1 t. butter plus 1-8
t. pepper. Beat eggs lightly to
mix yolk and white; add salt, pep-
per, and milk. Heat French pan
and put in butter; when it is melt-
ed add the egg mixture. Cook un-
til of a creamy consistency from
to 5 minutes, depending on the
surface of the pan. As eggs cook,
stir to allow the uncooked to come
in contact with the pan. Do not
overcook.
BOPOVERS: 2 c. flour, 2 c.
milk or milk and water, 1 t. salt,
3 eggs. 1 t. butter, Beat the eggs
until light and then add liquid and
Hour alternately (salt is added to
flour). Melt butter and add to
mixture. Heat pans and grease
well with fat. Fill pans only half
full of mixture. Place in hot oven.
Bake 45 minutes. Heat may be
reduced when popovers expand af-
ter 15-20 minutes. These are very
crusty with hollow centers and if
cooked too short a time will have
a layer of raw dough on the inside.
Will Make 12 popovers.
CREAMED CODFISH: 1 qt.
water, 1 It) codfish,, 1 pt. milk, 2
T. butter, 2 T flour. Shred the
fish and put into frying pan. Cov-
er with water and cook until ten-
der. When done and water is
boiled out, add 1 pt. of thin white
sauce (omit the salt) ; heat all
together and pour into hot serving
dish. Garnish with slices of hard
cooked eggs.
For best results, use Post want
ads.
Along with railroad matters
forget that we must have a
brick or concrete schoolhouse in
our city this year.
When you see a young man, in
perfect health, loafing about the
streets, who never has money
enough to pay his small accounts,
and always on the “peck” because
its hard times, you can put him
down as being a friend to every-
thing that isn't work.
"Teddy” has recently rejected
a legacy of $10,000.00 left him by
the last will of Benjamin Hadley
and says he will accept it under
no consideration. Guess he is
satisfied with his nice fat salary
for the past eight years.
The two cent passenger fare
don’t appeal to us as being the
proper idea for the Panhandle.
We need more roads and better
roads, and we are not very parti-
cular what it costs us, so we get
'em. Let the three cent rate stand
and give us more roads.
When it comes to a coldblooded
proposition, let us give you this:
Don’t trust a “knocker” as far as
you could throw Taurus by the
tail. They won’t do to depend on. |
All they think about is that—in !
their own imagination—the world J
has got it in for them and they |
must "do” everybody they can;
and if you don’t watch them
they’ll “do you”. Let ’em alone.
NEW YORK . . Mrs. Annie B.
Desel, 75, has been bowling regu-
larly since 1901 and has only scorn
for bridge players. Sbe bowls
every Tuesday night and has an
average score of 165
McMAKIN MOTOR COACHES, INC.
Successors to Red Star Coaches
Through Busses from Paducah to Vernon, Frederick, Lawton, Okla. Direct
connections to Oklahoma City.
EAST BOUND: 5:05 A. M.—10:05 A. M.—4:10 P. M.
to Vernon—Frederick—Altus—Lawton—Oklahoma City—St. Louis
Wichita Falls—Ft. Worth—Dallas—Houston—San Antonio.
WEST BOUND: 2:00 A. M.—8:55 A. M.—3TO P. M.
to Floydada—Plainview—Clovis—Albuquerque—Roswell
El Paso—Los Angeles—Amarillo—Denver, Colo.—Ralls
Lubbock—Brownfield—Seminole—Odessa—McCamey—Hobbs
Monahans—Wink—Pecos—Big Springs—Carlsbad.
You can now make a trip from Paducah to THE CARLSBAD CAVERNS
and return, in one Day. Special Rates to Group Parties making this trip.
LOW FARES F/VERYWHERE-TRAVEL BY BUS
For other information call Mrs. Ola Beavers, local agent.
Let’s Talk About
Clothes
Paducah is growing like a 2-
year-old. Every day we have pros-
pectors coming into our town and
they invariably say that we have
the brightest future of any town
they have seen in the West. New
residences are being built, o 1 d
ones are being improved and sev-
eral prospective merchants have
expressed their opinion that this
is the place for them, and at the
present rate it will not be long
until every vacant lot around the
square will have a business house
on it. Three cheers for Bully,
Building, Booming Paducah!
THIS WEEK IN
TEXAS HISTORY
$25.00 REWARD
| Will be paid by the manufacturer
for any Corn GREAT CHRISTO-
PER Corn Cure cannot remove.
I Also removes Warts and Cal-
| louses. 35c at BIGHAM DRUG
I CO. .a«i
Texas Sweetheart Is Lovely
Paducah has added to her list
of general mercantile houses that
of Lewis & Daugherty of Parvin.
Both men come highly recom-
mended as good citizens and busi-
ness men. They have located in
the old bank building and are now
ready for business.
Cottle County is steadily coming
to the front, and the prospects
are that she will this year witness
the greatest developments and
most substantial improvements of
her youthful existence. When we
stop to think that she has been or-
ganized only about fourteen years,
and isolated as she is from rail-
road facilities, and then turn and
view the progress that has been
made in the way of farms, farm
houses, and the growth that her
county seat, Paducah, has made,
we are forced to confess that the
most sanguine hopes and expecta-
tions have been far surpassed. In
every direction farm houses are
bobbing up. sod being broken, and
the whole county assuming the
cosmopolitian character of citizen
ship.
-o-
Oh! You Would
Say That
Bud Barron says when a fat
woman steps on the scales she
always experiences a sinking feel-
ing.
“It stacks up about like this,”
declares Ren Tippen, “An opti-
mist has no money and a pessi-
mist won’t lend you any.”
Sunday is the day you are re-
minded of your mistakes—either
by a preacher or a traffic cop.
“No matter how much money
talks,” asserts Sherroa Williams,
“no one is ever bored by its con-
versation.”
According to Judge Wimberly,
a woman makes love with her
eyes, a man with his lips and a
darned fool with paper and ink.
The only safe way to do
something without attracting un-
favorable attention and a lot of
comment is to go fishing.
If ministers gave us sermons
as trashy as the shows some peo-
ple go wild over not even the
janitor would stay for the bene-
diction.
According to Joe Schaded many
a bachelorship has been wrecked
by a permanent wave.
Staadbif betwcea the two beaotifol yocca plants, is still more bean-
tifal Grey Downo of Temple, who win reign ns Texas Sweetheart No. 1
at Cano Manana daring the Fort Worth Frontier Fiesta, Jane 2«-October
11 Mins Downs will wow gorgeoae gowno and win be serenaded by
r Metropolitan Opera singer. She won the title,
a rural state-wits eon teat in which 7# atlas'
Sweetheart In
“By studying the ads in a
housekeeping magazine,” asserts
Judge Gibson, “it is now possible
to discover everything needed in
a modern kitchen except a good
cook.”
--o-
Egypt is trying to find the best
bee for its beeswax industry.
The Irish Free States has a
shortage of scrap iron.
Overall suits for dogs are worn
by London society’s pets.
China and Canada will be con-
nected by radio-telegraph.
Denton, June 16.—-A strange
combination of deserts, canyons
and fertile valleys awaits the visi-
tor who heads down from Lubbock
to the land “West of the Pecos.”
Possibly the most interesting
route is across the line into New
Mexico, where Carlsbad Caverns
provide interest and beauty.
Swinging back into Texas by
way of Guadalupe Peak and into
El Paso, the traveler may catch
his first view of Old Mexico in
the city of Juarez, with its an-
cient missions and motley popula-
tion. Immediately soutn of El
Paso the cultivated areas of the
Rio Grande Valley appear, and
in the midst of the oldest com-
munity in the state are the mis-
sions of Ysleta and Cocorro.
Southeastward the Davis moun-
tains, rising a mile above sea
level, are famed for their scenic
beauty, healthy climate and his-
torical importance. Here also is
Mount Locke, where the Univer-
sity of Texas is building the Mc-
Donald Observatory with the sec-
ond largest telescope in America.
No good Texan can skip a de-
tour into the Big Bend country
down in the southern tip of this
western section. The continually
producing Sharter silve mine is
located here, and farther on are
the impressive Los Chisos (The
Ghosts) mountains.
After a good look at the Santa
Helena Canyon of the Rio Grande,
with its 1,800-foot walls, the
visitor can well understand why
the state is trying to acquire
enough land in this territory for
a state park. Two hundred and
fifty thousand acres of the pro-
posed 1,000,000 acre tract has
already been acquired, and the
Mexican government is planning
to match the Texas acreage with
land just across the border. The
completed international park will
include 2,000,000 acres.
Be Careful of Sun
Tan Warns State
Health Officer
“One of the striking examples
of over working a good thing is
the enthusisam displayed by thous-
ands of persons in trying to secure
a sun tan too quickly. Under a
misguided conception of the sun’s
health giving power, such persons
either deliberately or thoughlessly
submit their unprotected faces,
backs, and legs to over-exposure
and suffer painfully, sometimes
seriously, as i>. consequence,” com-
ments Dr. George W. Cox, State
Health Officer.
“The discomforts and annoy-
ance of even mild sunburn should
deter people from repeating this
folly from year to year. However,
especially where younger persons
Hay Fever
Get BROWN’S NOS-O PEN, the new
TWO-WAY TREATMENT opeoe noe-
)ril» immediately 1 It will bring roe
FREE BREATHING to » MINUTES
nr money back. |1j00 «
BIGHAM DRUG CO.
How Modern Women
Lose Pounds of Fat
Swiftly—Safely
Gain in Phjraical Vigor — Feel
Younger With Clearer Skin and
Vivaciowe Eye. That Sparkle
With More Glorious Health
Here’s the recipe that reduces
fat and brings into blossom the
natural attractiveness that every
woman possesses.
Hundreds of satisfied users call
it the Kruschen Way.
Every morning take one half
teaspoonful of Kruschen Salts in
a glass of hot water before break-
fast and cut down on pastry and
fatty meats, butter, cream and
rich pastires—in 3 weeks get on
the scales and note how many
pounds of fat have vanished.
Notice also that you have gain-
ed in energy—your skin is clear-
r—eyes sparkle with more glor-
ious health—you feel younger in
body—keener in mind.
Get a 4-oz. bottle of KRUS-
CHEN SALTS at Brazier A Isbell
Drug Co. or at any other drug
store in the world—lasts for weeks
and costs but few cents.
Note—many people find that
the diet change necessary while
taking Kruschen regularly is TO
EAT LESS.
Denton, June 15.—Shoes are on
a rampage these days, and anyone
who enjoys the game of “match-
ing things up” is in for some fun
with the new summer creations in
footwear.
Since the brevity of dresses
has given milady’s foot a great
deal more prominence than in re-
cent years, blazing color has come
back into its own in shoe mater-
ials. Fore the many black or blue
sheers women will continue to
wear this season nothing can be
more up-to-date than the new rio-
arc concerned, the enthusiasm for
fun and the desire to become
speedily tanned are likely to exact
the inevitable price with painful
regularity.
“It is one thing to apply the
principles of sun treatment scien-
tifically and quite another one to
place the lender skin unrestrained-
ly under the direct rays of the
sun. It should be understood that
when the sun is employed as treat
ment patients are exposed for but
a few minutes at a time, the per-
iods being gradually extended as
the tanning develops.
“The uninformed and the
thoughtless, on the other hand,
give the sun free rein, submit
themselves frequently to hours of
continuous exposure and naturally
reap misery and illness as a di-
rect consequence.
“Before becoming too ardent
over sunbathing, one would do
well to ponder that many a vaca-
tion or weekend excursion has
been runined solely because the
blistering and illness-producing
power of the sun’s rays upon the
tender skin was insufficiently ap-
preciated.”
tous printed shoes.
These flippant numbers have
soft colors printed in small pat-
terns against neutral backgrounds
of brown, navy, or black. Often
they have pipings of patent leath-
er or solid gaberdine or ribbon.
Most of these rather fluffy fash-
ions have high heels and they are
often toe and heel-less.
For sport and street wear
stylists plead for more discretion.
To fill the needs of such occas-
sions dark linen footwear is being
created in the most distinctive and
smart designs that have yet been
shown. Black, brown, and navy
linens take inches off foot length,
and make nice contrast with sum-
mer street clothes. Some have
tiny bits of patent, ribbon, or
embroidery on them, but the un-
trimmed ones are the best buys
for strictly street clothes.
Even some of the simplest
pumps now have cut-out toes,, but
one should be careful that they
are really tailored before'"&tP,'ting
out in them with a sport outfit.
Going to Sea in a Tub
BUFFALO, N. Y. . . . It summer experiments on Lake Erie prove suc-
cessful, Ernest Biegajski plans to sail his remodeled pickle barrel
schooner to Europe. This is the second such boat he has built with
his soldier's bonus money The first model leaked so badly that the
Coast Guard had to come to the rescue.
I WILL OIL-HATE YOUR ENGINE
And even quicker I can plainly state
how it saves your oil and your engine
to change to Oil-Plating. After I put
in Conoco Germ Processed oil, which
is the only oil that forms Oil-Plating,
let’s say you run a bit and then want to
park—a few minutes or maybe hours.
But every drop of Germ Processed oil
will not drain back down into your
crankcase like an everyday oil. Instead
of that, a definite amount of this oil is
always left closely plated all over the
pistons, cylinders, bearings and other
parts, from the bottom clear to the top
of your engine. You’d say that the oil
is united for good, to every working
surface. I don’t know of anything that
will make Oil-Plating let go, no matter
if you want to stop and start at every
doorway, or make 500 miles a day
across the mountains. Staying is place
and not just splashing on and off, Oil-
Plating can’t leave the usual openings
for friction and wear. Vour smooth,
quiet,cool-running engine will certainly
make you notice that, and of course,
your own eyes will see Conoco Germ
Processed oil staying up around full.
CONOCO GERM PROCESSED OIL
J. F. POWELL,
Commission Representative
J. F. Powell Service
Station
NaHfc Mala Os HlfWsy 4
Pfcsas 174
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Carlock, E. A. The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 17, 1937, newspaper, June 17, 1937; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth723521/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.