The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, March 13, 1936 Page: 2 of 8
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Since you and your friends
bought refrigerators
COLD
A built-in thermometer tells you ex-
actly how cold it is—that food is
being adequately protected against
spoilage.
For the first time in the industry,
Kelvinator provides you with a Cer-
tificate of Low Cost Operation. You
know what your operating cost will be.
every city and town in
ca people are talking about
ator—the new refrigerator,
who have put off buy-
any electric refrigerator—
i have waited for new devel-
nts — have found in the
19)6 Kelvinator the answer to
every question that a conserva-
tive buyer could ask.
The 1936 Kelvinator gives you
Visible Cold. For the first time,
a Built-In Thermometer tells you
in unmistakable figures how cold
it is. You know that food is be-
ing properly preserved, that
health is properly protected.
II
It gives you Visible. Economy.
The new Kelvinator uses a half
or even a third as much current
as many refrigerators now in use.
And there can be no doubt about
economy because every Kelvin-
ator is sold with a Certificate of
•Low Cost of Operation.
And it gives you a Visible Pro-
tection. Every Kelvinator is
backed by a 5-year Protection
Plan signed by the oldest com-
pany in the electric refrigeration
business.
The 19)6 Kelvinator gives a
new meaning to the word "con-
venience.” There are flexible rub-
PROTECTION
The 1936 Kelvinator is backed by a
3-year Protection plan, written and
signed by the oldest company in the
electric refrigeration industry.
ber grids in every ice tray, auto-
matic defrosting switch, sliding
shelves in the food compartment,
interior light, food crisper, util-
ity baskets—everything to lessen
the burden and brighten the
work of housekeeping.
Sunday School and Epworth league
services will be held here Sunday as
usual. Remember your attendance at
these services is always appreciated.
Mrs. C. J. Bagley was carried to
the Providence Sanitarium at Waco
last week. We regret to report that
her condition is still unimproved since
returning home.
Miss Creola Poston who teaches at
Center Hill spent the week-end with
home folks.
Mrs. Will Williams and daughter,
Mrs. Krueger, of Dallas, spent Mon-
day here the guests of relatives.
Mrs. Claud Boulware, supervisor of
the Methodist young people’s work
for the Gatesville district, visited Mrs.
R. M. Lane Wednesday of last week.
Rev. Rube Sisserson of Bartlett
came down Wednesday to accompany
Mrs. Sisserson home. Mrs. Sisserson
had been here since the illness and
death of her father, Mr. Lane.
Mrs. Otis Hopper and Mr. and Mrs.
George Lane and Leon Lane returned
to their respective homes last week
following the illness and death of
their father, Mr. R. M. Lane.
Mrs. W. J. Shelton of Carlton is
here with her mother, Mrs. C. J. Bag-
ley, who is quite ill.
Mr. Alvin Bell of Hico spent the
week-end here the guest of friends;
returning home Monday afternoon.
Reagan Mayfield, the small son of
Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Mayfield is re-
cuperating at the Baptist Sanitarium
in Waco following an appendicitis op-
eration Saturday.
Rev. and Mrs. R. W. Call of Norton,
Texas, visited friends here Thursday.
Rev. and Mrs. Call have many friends
in this section who are always glad
to have them return for a visit.
Cone Dansby and family of Valley
Mills visited relatives here Sunday.
Miss Marie Poston carried her
Sunday school class to Cameron Park,
Waco, Sunday. The young people en-
joyed a delicious lunch and pleasant
outing. They were accompanied by
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Townley and
Mr. and Mrs. Spurgeon Voiles.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe McCormick visited
relatives at Mustang Sunday.
Ladies of the Womack community
don’t forget that the Home Demon-
stration Club meets Friday at 2:30
p. m. All are welcome.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hafer spent
Monday in Dallas.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Anz and son
were in Waco Sunday with her fath-
er, Mr. Braune. Mr. Braune had
broken his leg but is doing nicely
now.
The McDougal family and Mrs.
Raymond Gaston of Cranfills Gap
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Meade Mc-
Dougal Sunday.
C. R. and Maurice Jameson were
in Dallas on business Tuesday.
Miss Minnie Lee was home from
John Tarleton College for the week-
end.
H|......
Swift & Co.
CHAS. RPOADES, Mgr.
PLANTING COTTON SEED
First year Qualla cotton seed for
planting purposes, culled and ginned
separate from other cotton, for sale
at $1.25 per bushel.
3-3tp H. C. Lippe, Mosheim, Tex.
The Best In Beauty
Culture
MRS. INEZ LARSEN
TELEPHONE 200
Clifton, Texas
new
Kelvinator
. -ymt
w. o. w.
Willow Camp No. 827, Mosheim,
will have quite a class to initiate
Tuesday night, March 17. Will also
serve refreshments, free. We are ex-
pecting some noted speakers. Mem-
bers are urged to be present and vis-
iting Sovereigns are cordially invited
Our stated meetings are 1st and
3rd Tuesday nights of each month.
Respectfully,
C. C.
A Gtizen and
a Taxpayer
PUBLIC
SERVICE
Alert and Earfer
To Serve You
1936
KELVINATORS ON
DISPLAY AT C. P. S. CO.
Decidedly improved in design, per-
formance and operating economy, the
new 1936 Kelvinator electric refrig-
erators, which are on display in the
showrooms of the Community Public
Service Co., local Kelvinator dealers,
are attracting considerable public at-
tention, according to L. V. Schunder,
head of the local sales agency.
“For the first time in the electric
refrigeration industry,” Mr. Schun-
der stated, “Kelvinator offers a built-
in thermometer which gives visible
CAYOTE SCHOOL
NEWS
Editor-in-Chief ............ Anita Wheelis
P. T. A.
A P. T. A. meeting was held Friday
night, March 6. Declamations, piano
solos and vocal harmony singing were
rendered. The next meeting will be a
social.
GRADE NEWS
Seventh Grade
The seventh grade students have
just finished taking exams over the | proof of the safely-cold refrigeration
temprature, a five-year protection
plan providing for free replacement
by the factory of any necessary parts
in the compressor mechanism, and a
method of pre-determining the ope-
rating cost by means of a certificate
of low cost of operation.
“Those three features provide the
utmost in electric refrigeraton for the
home, and many people in Clifton are
signing orders for delivery of the new
models. We believe that 1936 will be
the greatest year in the history of
home electrirc refrigeration.”
According to Mr. Schunder, there
are 12 models in the new Kelvinator
line, covering every price range. De-
signed for the mass market of ave-
rage incomes, the K series has five
models, ranging in size from 3.16 to
7.18 cubic feet of net food storage
space. These cabinets are lacquer-fin-
ished on the exterior and have por-
celain finished interiors. Outstanding
economy and convenience features of
the K line include: built-in thermom-
eter, five-purpose control panel, rub-
ber grids in every tray, ice tray lift-
er, electric light, and vegetable crisp-
er with serving tray cover of black
bakelite.
In the PK series, there are three
models with cabinet capacities of 5.16,
6.16 and 7.18 cubic feet of storage
These models have a rust-
proof welded inner metal she!l under-
KMI
last six weeks’ work. So far the
grades look favorable. We are hoping
our teacher will soon be back.
SPORT NEWS
= The junior boys and girls baseball
teams journeyed to Smith Bend,
March 4th and came back victorious
after hard fought games with their
boys and girls. The scores were 28-1,
girls, and 13-7, boys.
Womack visited us March 6th and
carried the victory with them. The
scores were 5-1, girls, and 5-1, boys.
The senior tennis players for the
boys and girls met strong opposition
at the tournament. The girls, Edna
McMillan and Alleen Richards, won
first place in rural schools, and the
boys, Preston Reed and Hugh John-
son, won second place.
PERSONALS
Miss Melma Muller visited Miss
Louise Landgraf Sunday.
Miss Anita Kruse visited kinfolk at
Cranfills Gap Sunday.
i Inez Reed visited her grand-
Sunday, Mr. Warren Reed,
i Winona Sadler spent the week-
1 with Miss Edna McMillan.
Ye are glad to say that Miss Sally
has been ill for the past
at better.
<!<■■ im
HEREFORD BULLS for sale from
Registered Bulls and High Grade
Cows.—Parks Ranch. 3-2tc
of good cotton for
,ell unless have
Mam
neath the exterior porcelain panels,
providing a cabinet wjthin a cabinet.
Features of this line are identical
with those of comparably sized K
models.
Mr. Schunder also disclosed that
Kelvinator offers this year in the
Super DeLuxe series, an entirely new
type of domestic refrigeration—a
two-compartment cabinet which au-
tomatically provides exactly the
right temperature and humidity for
safe food preservation in one com-
partment, and perfected freezing and
below freezing storage in the other.
There are four cabinet sizes in the
SD s’eries with capacities for food
storage ranging from 7.04 to 16.79
cubic feet. In addition to the features
which the K and PK lines have, the
Super DeLuxe series has the refrig-
erated pastry set, water pitcher, slid-
ing fruit drawer and the thrift draw-
er with three glass-covered china
dishes.
Have small order from mill for
some middling cotton and better. See
me if you want to sell cotton, and
have right kind of grades.—A. G.
Gilliam. ltc
"v. D. Goodall, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Office in Old 1st. Nat’l Bank Bldg.
Office Phone 166. Night Phone 92
Clifton : : Texas
Keep a Good Laxative
always in your home
Among the necessities of home Is
a good, reliable laxative. Don’t be
without one! Do your beet to pre-
rent constipation. Don’t nofleet It whsn
you fool any ot Its dlssfrsssbl* symptoms
coming on. . . ”Ws hsTS usod Thsdford’S
Blade-Draught tor II yssrs and hart found
It s Tory useful msdlolns that every family
—*it to hart Ut tbstr horns,” writes lira
nh^i ^'1* “* -
• ftfoodfaativf or fun ““
GOOD VALUES
FOR THE WEEK-END
PAntt Standard 0 No. 2 OtZn
rC3,S, Quality ^ cans fcSJL
Chum Salmon, Ian1 10c
Post Toasties, 10c
Crackers, saxet 2 carton 15c
Tissue Paper, waidrof 3 R°,ls 13c
Bread, Linn s . 16 5c
Coffee, nH lantos lb. 17c
Carrots, 2 Bund*. 5c
Cabbage, «™£h..ds lb. Ic
Winesap Apples, each Ic
SEE OUR WINDOW FOR ADDED SPECIALS
WE BUY ALL KINDS OF COUNTRY PRODUCE
LANE’S FOOD STORE
Why Gulf is the Gas for March
SURE AND IT’S almost the middle of
March—the month the old thermometer
makes an average jump of 5 to 13 de*
grees. The Moral?.. .That your gas should
be made to fit the season! If it isn’t,
you’re not getting all the mileage you
should!.:. Switch to That Good Gulf to*
BLACK-DRAUGHT
>7
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Baldridge, Robert L. The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, March 13, 1936, newspaper, March 13, 1936; Clifton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth775376/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nellie Pederson Civic Library.