The Bartlett Tribune and News (Bartlett, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 36, Ed. 1, Friday, May 27, 1938 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Bartlett Tribune and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Bartlett Activities Center and the Historical Society of Bartlett.
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Friday May 27 1988
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$100.00 PUIZE OFFERED
IN HIGH SCHOOL ESSAY
WRITING CONTEST
M prize of $100.00 is being
Ferrd by the Sons of the Ke-
')lie of Texas to the student
a Texas high school who sub-
rriita the best essay on the sub-
ject "San Felipe do Austin
Capital of Austin's Colony" ac-
cording to an announcement
made this week by Hobart Hu-
scn of Refugio State President
tjf that organization. The award
is niade possible by the gonero-
Bity of Colonel George A. Hill
Jr.. promising oil man of Hous
ton and a grandson of James
Monroe Hill one -of the heroes
of the Battle of San Jacinto. In
recognition of the services of
this grandsire the essay com-
mittee has designated the con-
test as the ames Monroe Hill Es-
say Contest.
The Sons of the Republic of
Texas is an organization com-
posed of white male lineal des-
cendants of loyal citizens of the
Pepublic of Texas. One of its
major projects is the restoration
of the old town of San Felipe de
Austin where the Consultation
of Texas met in 1835-1836 and
the making of it another Texas
Shrine. To stimulate general in
terest in this project the essay
committee selected the old capi
tal as the subject of the essays
to be submitted.
Ford Exhibit At New York World's Fair
75 Thousand Texas
Families Have No Chicks
BHH6uv MSffiy s ? l w Wr MJfr Maffl fcfrjBPBPftSCy i WE0UK9fo&Mi I
COACHING SCHOOL FOR
SIX-MAN FOOTBALL TO BE
HELD AT N.T.S.T.C. JUNE 6
TT&AS CORPORATIONS
SHOW HMCREASE
IjpHB thomo" or tho Tm& Motor
JtCompany'o '-exhibit building at
I tho Now York "World'B lfclr In 1939
wttf bo uropbctlo of tho advances
' America may expect In transports
tloh in coming decades according to
an -announcement by Edscl Ford
president ot tho company.-
Cased -upon ari exposition of tho
Institutional character ot tho Ford
company and tho fundamental pol-
icies -which havo directed Its growth
jdui-lng tho imt 35 years tho fair
loxhlblt will roach its climax in "Tho
Hoail ot Tomorrow" an clovntcd
highway moro than half a mllo long
rising upon a series of spiral ramps
traversing tho borders ot a patio
1 and finally circling tho main" build-
mg on a deep setback at tho top of
tho walls. "
' The exhibit in four rather dis-
tinct parts will include an entrance
rotunda facing tho main west gato
0. spacious 'Manufacturing Hall
'la patio.-with pools playjng foun-
tains and largo rest areas and tho
jgoyatcd road. From tho west sido
of tho natio. Bterjfl wiM rlnoto"3
broad mozianlno. Thoro Ford'V-81
and Lincoln-Zephyr cars will loaoTj
passengers for tho rldo over "Tho-
Road of Tomorrow." " '"
From tho loading platform ttiS
cars wilt pass to tho south outer tho!
spiral ramps climbing t6 tho upporj
level and following tho elbvatcdj
highway as it passes over tho mez-
zanine west along Jho south wall
of Manufacturing Hall through a'
tunnel lined with photomuralaj!
thence circling tho top ot tho bullflJ
ing. through a glass tunnol high in
tho Rotunda: down tho jranvp to tho'
second lovol around tho patio and .
back to tho Btartlng" point. . o '
At night flood lighting will fait!
upon tho cars as tho'y clrclo tho
highwny high on tho walls ot Manu-.
facturlng Hall playing moving 61m-'
flows on tho building walls in full
sight ot tho whole fair grounds. Tho
building will occupy tho highest lo-
cation on tho grounds. It will bo '
decorated in whltorcd and bluo'
andwill bo goddllghtod at nlphtf
College Station A total of
75126 Texas farm families or
15 percent of all farm families
In the state do not have a poul-
try flock according to Geo. P.
McCarthy 'poultryman of the
Extension Service of Texas A.'
and M. College. McCarthy's
statement is based on the 1935
agricultural census.
Among the southern states
:nly 'Florida with 30.7 percent
of ner farms without chickens
and Mississippi with 15.4 per-
cent poultryless farms rank be-
xas.
texasiHsconipares tavoraoiy
EElotHejIsouthern states with
of 48 chickens per
have farms produced less than 63
Only Oklahoma with eggs in 1935 the year of the cen-
farm on the farms that
poultry
an average of 60 exceeds Texas sus.
Meanwhile in 1938 the 3-
in the list of southern states. 926 demonstrators including 1-
092 adults 1352 4-H club boys
and 1584 club girls who kept
records and cared for their flocks
under the direction of county
agricultural and home demonst-
ration agents had an average
production of 170.8 eggs per hen.
The H938 average wa;j the
highest that has been recorded
since Extension Service poultry-
men began the demonstrations
in 1930. In 1935 while the aver-
age production over the state
was 62.4 eggs per hen demon-
strators' flocks produced at the
rate of 159.7 eggs.
Representative states from other
sections -of the -nation show Kan-
sas with an average of 97 Ore-
gon 61 Ohio 87 and Maine 55.
These figures McCarthy stress-
ed include commercial flocks.
"The nutrition experts of the
Extension Service tells me that
the average farm family of five
needs a fleck of 50 hens" Mc-
Carthy pionted out. "Certainly
we would like to see more hens
;on all farms im the state and we
would also like to see higher and
mere efficient production."
The average hen an Texjas
Denton May 26 The first in-
struction in coaching of six man
football to be offered in Texas
will be given: during the last
week of a course in the coach-
ing of football to bo taught this
summer at the North Texas
State Teachers College by Jack
Sisco Eagle grid mentor. Tho
grid coaching course will be giv-
en during the first summer
term June 6-July 16 at the Col
lege.
The coaching course at North
Texas will be of especial inter-
est to high school grid mentors
because of the. recent announce-
ment of Rodney Kidd athletic
director of the University In-
terscholastic League that next
fall the League will sponsor the
six-man game for the first time
in this state.
Six-man football first spon-
sored in Nebraska has won in-
creasing attention among smal-
ler high schools in many states
but is just being introduced in
the Southwest. Small schools
with few players and little equip
ment have favored a streamlined
six-man game since it cuts play
ing expense and removes their
disadvantages in manpower. It
also provides fans with a faster
and more open game since all
players are eligible to receive
passes.
A National Youth Administra
tion workshop -project is now un
derway in Lubbock. Sixteen
youths assigned to shdps main-
tained by the Lubbock Public
Schools are assisting in con-
struction and repairing school
furniture.
Austin May 26 Now corpor-
ations chartered in Texas during
April increased substantially
both in comparison with the pre-
ceding month and tho corre-
sponding month last year the
University of Texas Bureau of
Business Research has reported.
Computations from the re
cords of the Secretary of State
show a total of 160 new char
ters granteci miring April an
Increase of 11.9 per cent over fhe
preceding month and a gain of
13.5 por cent over tho like month
last year. Capitalization of the
new corporations $1889000
was however 9.9 per cent under
March and 17.8 per cent below
April alst year.
Is your subscription paid up?
YOUR CHANCES OP
AVOIDING
Injury
in an AUTOMOBILE
ACCIDENT are growing
less and less each month.
THE SAFEST
. . and wisest thing to do
is to obtain protection
against financial loss re-
sulting from an automobile
accident through tho Non-
Cancellable Automobile Ac-
cident Policy. The cost is
small and the coverage is
wide.
For protection against all
kinds of accidents investi-
gate our policies.
JACOB ISAAC
INSURANCE AGENCY
Mrs. OUie Isaac Agent
I sum oolMLJ
InSffiLlipfiMPp MA
STOP IT WiTH
Alka-Seltzer
Docs Headache "slow ybtf
down?" You are a rare ex-
ception it it docs not.
One or two tablets of! ALKA-
SELTZER in a glass of water
makes a pleasant alkalizing
solution that usually brings
relief in just a few minutes.
ALKA-SELTZER is also recom-
mended tor
Gas on Stomach "Morning
After" Add Indigestion
Colds and Muscular rains.
Sou will like the tamrv flavor
nna tno results wnen you ia
Alkn-Scltxcr. Alka-Scltzcr. wh
dissolved In water contains
analgesic (Sodium Acctyl-Sallc
ate). In addition tho alkalis
agents in Alka-Seltzer help to :
uevc xnoso everyday disor-
ders associated with hyper
acidity.
Small package 30c
Largo packago C0c-
rSKmW
"Walt Mister! You're aiming
at the wrong duck!"
- i All too often Beer is just the decoy
. . iyet all too often Beer gets the blame!
Do you know that the taxes paid
by your gat company last year
amounted to about 72 cents per
meter per month? So summer bills of
a dollar or two hardly cover taxes
an operating cost over which we have
no control.
?w
"&&"
:$
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"5SErM3
'"jftfc i ii?7 "
Beer fa on honest drink . . . mild whole-
some refreshing. "There fa nothing more
.promising to combat the evil of too much
i alcohol than the opportunity of drinking
good beer."
And we brewers are with you 100
In every honest effort to improve condi-
tions under which beer fa sold. We are
against Bales to minors or after legal
hours; we are against use of beer licenses
as screens for selling illicit liquor or for
operating illicit resorts.
We offer our cooperation . and we
Invite yours!
Existing laws can curb these evils ....
help us by demanding their strict enforce-
ment Restrict your own patronage to legal
respectable retail outlets.
Give preference if you will to prod-
ucts advertised under the symbol of the
Brewers Foundation shown below.
Do these three things . . . and you wil
see results.
UNITED BREWERS
21 East 40th Street
INDUSTRIAL.
FOUNDATION
New York N. Y.
Correspondence is invited from groups and in-
dividuals everywhere who are interested in the
brewing industry and its social responsibilities.
J
Mto!
ti
'W
m
i'-?ife
Oalr & uaproTd qcu tlm-
mi iumr on 1938 gas
rang jr cos accurately
conliolUd boiling heat at
the "click" oi a voir. Thr
sar gai...!ctp kttchin
coolu.
TJiOR rounding out a healthful well-
balanced meal there is nothing. like
the first tender vegetables of early .
summer. How you cook them is all-
Important if their healthful vitamins and '
minerals their natural flavor and color '
are to. bo retained. A 1938 gas range
excels In boiling vegetables as they J
should be with controlled heat little
.watertcmdln covered utensil . - Aif.. .
Time gas and food values aro aavocV ""
with the Improved gas simmer burners - .
They provide the mostflexlbIo and .
accurately controlled cooking heat yet
devised in a cooking appliance. At the
click of a valve they give you the exact
shading of heat required for any cook-
ing Job. Because of this exact tempera- 1
hire control kitchen heat and humidity
are held to minimum See these new
gas ranges and learn all about their '
many Improvements that make cooking
surer cooler and easier.
Community ESNatural as' G
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Ford, Robert C. The Bartlett Tribune and News (Bartlett, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 36, Ed. 1, Friday, May 27, 1938, newspaper, May 27, 1938; Bartlett, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth76527/m1/2/: accessed May 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bartlett Activities Center and the Historical Society of Bartlett.