The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 150, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 29, 1935 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Lampasas Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Lampasas Public Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
J. R. Key, C. A. Northington, W.
B. McGee and James Abney attended
the funeral services for Mrs. Tom
Connally in Marlin, Thursday after-
noon.
FOR SALE OR TRADE
A large size, blac k and white Shet-
land suitable, for children. Would
trade for jersey milk cow.—H. J.
Abney. (d-w)
September Groceries
The month of September begins with us on Friday, Aug-
ust 30, continuing through Saturday and Monday. All
goods charged on and after Fi iday goes on your September
account. Our slogan is the very best in Quality, Service
and Price and Pure Foods handled in the most sanitary man-
ner possible. Begin your September account with us on
Friday, Saturday or Monday when we will sell:
Sugar Cured Hock- OP*
less Hams, 6-8-lb @ CQC
Decker’s Regular
Hams, ree. today.... COG
Decker’s Fancy
Luncheon Sau-
sage, per lb.....
12*c
Radio Bacon (a real** ft**
buy) 4-6-lb @........OUC
Tomato, Macaroni
and Cheese, Pickle
and Pimento Lunch
Meat, @....... .......
3-lb can Maxwell House, Admiration Aj
or John Bremond Coffee ..............................................O'
3-lb can Maxwell House Coffee and 4
y2-lb Maxwell House Tea for.................................... i *•
1-lb can Maxwell House Coffee and 41
14-lb Maxwell House Tea for......................................“fr
1- lb Folger’s Golden Gate Coffee A1
(drip grind or steel cut) ..............................................O'
2- lbs Folger’s Golden Gate Coffee AI
(drip grind or steel cut) ..............................................O’
The World’s greatest Coffee.
3- lb package Admiration
Coffee .............................................................................. ■ 1
3-lb package Bright and (Ji
Early Coffee .................... O’
PINEAPPLE SPECIAL
No. 1 Del Monte Pineapple, sliced or
crushed, per dozen ......................................................
No. 2 Del Monte Pineapple, sliced or
crushed, per dozen ......................................................
No. 2^/2 Del Monte Pineapple, sliced or
crushed, per dozen ......................................................
If you buy Del Monte you buy the best.
1.00
1.85
2.50
GALLON FURITS
No. 10 Apricots, Peaches, Apples, Pears, sliced or
crushed Pineapple, Red Pitted Cherries, per can........OOC
BROOM AND MOP
5-string 50c Broom and 35c Cotton or
Linen Mop, both for .....................................OwC
650-sheet roll R#% 4 packages Jello, OCtf*
Toilet Tissue..........— wC all flavors................
GRAPE JUICE—GINGER ALE—LIME RICKEY
1 quart DeSoto Ginger Ale 20c; gr
3 bottles for ................. .............................................
1 quart DeSoto Lime Rickey 20c; gf
2 Bottles Clicquot Club Ag
Ginger Ale for .............................................................fca**
1 bottle Texas Dry 4 f
Ginger Ale for .............................................................. I %
1 quart Welch’s Grape Juice,
1 pint Welch’s Grape Juice, 4 £
25c size for ..............__ ........................................... I ^
1 quart Royal Purple Grape Juice,
1 pint Royal Purple Grape Juice, 4 £
25c size for .................................................................... ■ %
3 Pounds
Crisco .J.................
60c
8-lb Carton
Jewel Lard ..........
1.10
6 Pounds
Crisco ....................
1.20
2 cans
Tuna Fish ............
25c
4-lb Carton
Jewel Lard ....______
55c
3 cans or
jars Pimentos ......
25c
50c size K. C.
Baking Powder ....
35c
6 bars Giant Crys-
tal White or
P. & G. Soap..........fc^G
3 pkgs. Rinso, Oxy-
dol or Super Suds....
6 packages 4
5c Gold Dust.......... I *JG
Sunbrite g?**
Cleanser......................vG
5-lb size K. C.
Baking Powder ....
10-lb size K. C.
Baking Powder ....
l-lb pkg. DeLuxe
Vanilla Wafers ....
65c
1.00
15 c
l-lb pkg. Marsh-
mallow Puffs........
15c
3 cans Old
Dutch Cleanser ....
25c
3 cans Del Monte
Pineapple Juice....
25c
3 cans Gold Dust
Scouring Cleanser
25c
3 cans Campbell’s
Tomato Juice ......
25c
100-lb sack Mill
Run Bran ............
1.15
3 cans
Prune Juice ..........
25c
100-lb sack
Gray Shorts ........
1.40
3 cans Grape-
fruit Juice........
25 c
100-lb sk. Cotton
Seed Cake or Meal
1.50
All Fresh Fruits and Vegetables to be had.
Our Store is as near as your phone.
PHONE EARLY AND OFTEN
Andrew-Wright Gro. Co.
“The Home of Good Things to Eat”
AIL Phones 380
THANK YOU.
Washington, Aug-. 27.—President
Roosevelt broke all nomination rec-
ords during the session of congress
just closed.
A final check today by the senate
'executive clerk, Lew'ijs W. Bailey,
showed 14,998 names submitted to
14,926 confirmed.
The number of appointments ex-
ceeded by more than 5000 the total
for the two sessions of the first
Roosevelt congress.
The president also had an unus-
ually high average of confirmations.
Of the 14,998 appointments, only
12 were rejected—all but one being
postoffice nominees—25 were with-
drawn by the White House before
senate action and 35 were not acted
upon.
For the second time in history, the
administration put through an order
before adjournment waiving the rule
that all nominations not acted upon
must be returned to the White House.
The 35 will remain in their present
status until next session, and the
president will not have to make re-
cess appointments. Those named
will draw pay until disposed of next
winter.
'The 35 included 32 postmasters
and three other civilian nominations.
T)he three -civilians a1,re Edwin R.
Holmes of Mississippi to be federal
judge of the Fifth Circuit, and Works
Progress Administrators C. B. Tread-
way of Florida and E. W. S. Key
for Oklahoma.
The Lampasas Daily Leader
J. H. ABNEY & SON
Herbert J. Abney, Publisher
Entered at the postoffice at Lampasas
March 7, 1904, as second-class mail.
THE LAMPASAS DAILY LEADER
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
(Payable in Advance)
One month .....................................$ .40
Three months ..............................$1.00
One year ______________________________________$4.00
RECORD IS SET BY ROOSEVELT
ALLRED IS SHAKEN
BY NIGHTMARE
Austin, Texas, Aug. 25.—Beset by
a nightmare in which he was a con-
demned man without clemency, Gov.
Janies V. Allred grimly stuck to his
policy Wednesday of deciding death
case appeals strictly on merit.
The governor admitted the bad
dream had recurred for clemency for
men under death sentences reached
his desk. Two demanding immediate
decision confronted him Wednesday,
Passing on death cases, a task he
cannot avoid, was the most difficult
part about the chief executiveship,
he said. He said he had not slept a
wink on night when men were elec-
trocuted.
Describing the nightmare, which he
termed realistic to an uncomfortable
degree, the governor said:
“I dreamed I was one of the con-
demned men and called for a secretary
to prepare a proclamation commut-
ing my sentence. But there was a
question of whether I could sign it.
“Perhaps, I dreamed, the Lieuten-
ant Governor, in such a case would
have to sign it. It worried me bad-
ly, for I had only three minutes to
live.
“Then my secretary said she
couldn’t finish typing the proclama-
tion in three minutes.
“Guards started carrying me into
the ‘little green room.’. It was then
that I awoke in a cold sweat.”
* NARUNA NOTES *
ff. # #
(By Reporter)
The meeting at Naruna Baptist
Church closed Sunday night. There
were eight additions to the chui’ch.
The pastor, Rev. Linsford, conduct-
ed the services.
Mr. and Mrs. D. C .Bodenhamer
returned home last Wednesday from
Houston and Bryan, where they spent
several days visiting relatives. They
were accompanied home by Mr. and
Mrs. Albert George and son Ralph,
who spent the balance of the week
with them; they returned Sunday to
their home at College Station.
Mrs. J. N. Watson and daughters,
Misses Veylena and Modena, visited
their mother and grandmother, Mrs.
Smart at Rumley, Tuesday.
Sunday was a day of enjoyment
for Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Zimmerman.
Their children all coming home to
celebrate their father’s birthday: Mr.
and Mrs. Guy Zimmerman and son,
Billy Farriss of Burnet, Mr. and Mrs.
Van Coupland and daughters, Kath-
ryn and Margaret of Taylor, Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Zimmerman and son,
Ronald of Morgan, Mr. and Mrs. W.
C. Cagle of Austin, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Zimmerman of Lampasas,
Henry Zimmerman and Miss June
Smith of Burnet, Misses Sallie and
Ada, and Jeff, who are at home with
their parents. It. was the first time
all of them had been together in sev-.
eral years. They enjoyed a nice pic-
nic dinner on the creek. Mr. Zim-
EVERY DOG Has Its DAY-
Here’s a BIG DAYjfcr YOURS
(\V! i
/•
.delta
YOUNG
and "BUCK" in
"CALL of
the WILD'
Coming to the Leroy Sunday and
Monday, September 1-2.
merman was the recipient of several
nice presents.
Mr. and Mrs. Temple Gilmore and
children of Lake Victor spent Tues-
day in the home of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. W. A. Martin.
Wayne Bowman Jr. of Houston is
visiting his aunt, Mrs. D. C. Boden-
hamer, and other relatives here.
BODY OF LAST OF
DILLINGER GANG FOUND
Oswego, 111., Aug. 28.—The body
of John Hamilton, Dillinger gangster,
badiy decomposed, was found in a
shallow grave near a gravel pit half
a mile north of Oswego today by
three federal agents.
The agents, who refused to give
their names, said they identified the
body of the machine gunner from
the teeth and expressed the opinion
Hamilton was fatally wounded April
23, 1934, in a battle with officers at
South St.. Paul, Minn.
The announcement of the finding
of the body was made in Washington
by J. Edgar Hoover, chief of the fed-
eral bureau of investigation, and was
the first information that local au-
thorities had of the discovery.
Two hours after the Hoover an-
nouncement, Coroner F. M. Groner |
of Kendall county was given sketchy
details of the find. He ordered the
body be taken to a local undertak-
ing establishment.
He said an inquest would be held
tomorrow and probably would be con-
tinued.
The body was lying without any
wrapping in a trench about three
feet deep on a grassy tract between
the gravel pit and a county road.
First examination disclosed no bul-
let wounds, but agents pointed out
that because of the condition of the
body it would be difficult to discover
such wounds without a thorough ex-
amination.
The agents refused to explain
what clue led them to search for the
outlaw’s burying ground in this re-
gion.
Three federal agents found the
outlaw’s mouldeiring remains, con-
cluding a hunt, which had been in-
tensified after Hamilton, with John
Dillinger and other members of the
mcb, shot their way out of a govern-
ment trap at Little Bohemia resort
in Wisconsin, April 22, 1934, killing
two men, one a federal agent.
HOW TO KEEP WEEVILS
OUT OF PEAS
Those of you who are picking peas
had better “dope” them with carbon
disulphide (high life) or heat them
to 137 degrees F. before putting them
in storage. The home gardner should
fill a barrel with dried peas (in hull
or shell) and put a teacup of (highj
t life) in a flat pan to top of the peas, j
then place an air tight cover on the
barrel and leave for 48 hours. Re-
move the cover and air the peas for
6 hours to rid them of the “high life”
fumes, then^tore in 25 pound lard
cans, in gallon syrup buckets, or in
other tight containers. If heat is
used, place the peas in flat pans and
bring the temperature to 137 degrees
F. The peas should be stirred sev-
eral times during the heating pi*o-
cess.—W. P. Graham, County. Agent,
Lampasas County.
*Miss Frances Helm returned Wed-
nesday to her home in Taylor after
visiting here several days with Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas B. McDonald.
Misses Shirley and Lucille Johnson
of Taylor are visiting here in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B.
McDonald.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Bales and Miss
Maurine Tittle left Thursday for a
visit in San Angelo.
YE COPY WRITERS!
Copy furnished to the printer
should be written only on one side of
the paper, otherwise a part of it is
likely to be overlooked. PLEASE re-
member this.
SPECIALS
FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Our first of September. All or any part of your food
business will be appreciated. We handle nothing but the
highest quality foods, and they are cared for in the very
best sanitary way, and sold at the very lowest prices pos-
sible. Pay our store a visit and note the many new items
we are stocking each day.
10-lbs Pure
Cane Sugar
55e
Lge. size Post Toas-4
ties or Corn Flakes I UG
1-pound package
1 pound package 4 |g* ^
Vanilla Wafers ...... i
2 pounds Fig
Bar Cakes ..............
4 packages
Jello ......................Ol#
Any Flavor
Q-Jel, package ..........wG
Any brand Oat Meal
with Plate or cup
and Saucer ............
3 large Libby’s
Tomato Juice ........
3 large Libby’s
Pineapple Juice ....
No. 2 Grape 4
2 large Bottles
Quart Jar
Sour Pickles ..........G
Quart Jar 4 g?
Mustard .................. I 3G
Comet Macaroni, A ^
8 oz. bottles
Vanilla Extract......fe%5G
4. oz. bottles 4
Vanilla Extract...... ■ wG
2 oz. bottles 4 (ft**
Vanilla Extract...... I ill#
Lge size Ginger Ale^g?**
or Lime Rickey 2for
SHORTENING
8-Tb carton Swift 4 4 g**
or Armour Shrtng 1 ■ ■ v
3-lb Bucket
Crisco ...................
70s
4-lb carton Swift
Armour Shrtng.......OtJli?
6-lb bkt. Snow-
drift Shortening.
1.20
3-lb bkt. ’ Snow-
drift Shortening .
60c
6-lb Bucket 4 *|g?
Crisco .................... S ivv
1 gallon cans
Cooking Oil .........
1.20
COFFEE AND TEA
1.08
7 Pounds
Ground Coffee
5-lbs our own Se-
lect Coffee, 4
we grind it .......... I
3-lb cans, not pkg.
Maxwell House or
Admiration Coffee.. OOl#
30c
l-lb can, not pkg.
Maxwell House or
Admiration Coffee..
l-lb Bliss or
Par Coffee ............
l-lb Lipton Tea
4 tea glasses free..
1/2-lb Lipton Tea
2 tea glasses free..
14,-lb Lipton Tea,
1 tea glass free....
25c
SOc
I
A p _
CAN FISH
3 Large
Mackerel ...
2 Large
Salmon .......
3 Small
Salmon .......
Large Size
Tuna Fish .
Large Oval
Sardines .....
American
Sardines ............
Can Sausage
dozen ....:.............
Potted Meat,
dozen ..................
Canned Oysters,
2 for.....................
Can Shrimp
for ......................
No. 1 can
Tomatoes ................
No. 2 can
Tomatoes, 3 for......
No. 21/2
Hominy ..................
No. 1 tall
Hominy .....................
No. 2 String
Beans ......................
Red Kidney or
Chuck Wagon
Beans, 3 for ..........
CAN VEGETABLES
No. 2 Vegetable
Soup ........................
No. 2 Tomato
Soup ........................
No. 2 English
Peas ........................
No>. 2 Spinach <
3 for ......................I
No. 21/2 Kraut, 1
Libby’s, 2 for ........ I
No. 2 can
Spaghetti ................
No. 1 Kraut, Libby’s*
3 for ................... i
25c
SOAPS AND SOAP CHIPS
6 Double size Laun-
dry Soap, P. & G.,
Crystal White,
or White Flyer...... fa«3?G
20cr package Snap ■! fl
Washing Compound S UG
3 Oxydol, Super
Suds or Rinso ....
25c
7 pkgs Borax Wash-^|?
ing Compound........Bw'feiG
3 packages
Gold Dust .
10c
10c size Vanity Fair g?**
Toilet Soap ................vG
C a m a y, Palmolive,
Coco Hardwater or g?**
Heath Toilet Soap...... wC
3 bars Garden 4
Toilet Soap ............ I UG
Try a sack of Bewley’s Best or Bewley’s Golden Fruit
Flour for best results, 48, 24 and 12-pound bags. Also
Bewley’s Cream Corn Meal, it is white as snow. No bugs.
We will have a complete line of fresh fruits and vege-
tables for Friday and Saturday trade.
WE THANK YOU
COME TO SEE OR CALL US OFTEN
You are always welcome at our store.
Senterfitt Grocery Co.
ALL PHONES 375
_
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 150, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 29, 1935, newspaper, August 29, 1935; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth897338/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lampasas Public Library.