The Delta Courier (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 43, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 28, 1930 Page: 3 of 4
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THE DELTA COURIER, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1930.
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SOCIETY
Miss Frankie
McKinney Entertains
With Luncheon
■ ■ *
Honoring Miss Cleon Adair, bride-
elect of Clayton Wooldridge, -whose
wedding takes place Nov. 3rd, Miss
Frankie McKinney entertained with
an elaborate luncheon Friday. The
house was attractively decorated with
laid in a linen cut work cloth, the
rut flowers. The luncheon taole was
centerpiece a green basket holding
yellow flowers. Place cards were
miniature bridcc done in green and
yellow; also the nut cups were yellow.
An attractive four course luncheon
was served, the menu carrying out
the same colors of green and yellow.
Miss Adair was presenetd with a
piece of silver in her favorite pat-
tern.
Out of town guests were Mi«s Juli-
Smithers of Huntsville and Misses
Mary Moore and Charlotte Crock of
Paris.
»»f » HUB A MORGAN,
Home Demonstration Agent.
- Process No. 2 cans 45 minuses at 15.
Process No. 3 cans 55 minutes at 15.
ROAST—Cut roast into pieces as
large as will go into can. Roll each
piece in flour to which salt and pep-
per have been added. Put in hot oven
and cook until thoroughly seared.
Turn if necessary, but do not pierce
with fork. Pack into cans. Add 1
tablespoon of fat and seal.
STEAK—Cut into pieces 1 1-2 or 2
inches thick. Flour as for roast. Sear
in a pan of deep very hot fat. Roll
and pack. Add 1 large gpoon of fat
before sealing can.
STEW—Cut in cubes 11-2 or 2 in-
ches. Brown like steak. Make a thick
very brown gravy and All cans. Onions
or other vegetables may be added to
the meat. Celery and tomatoes will
add flavor to the meat. Other veg-
etables had better be cooked fresh
and1 added when the meat is served.
CHILI—15 lbs. meat (1-3 pork if
possible,) 5 medium sized onions, 5
cloves garlic, 3 3-4 cups fat, 5 cups
chili pepper pulp (or 1 large bottle
chili powder,) salt, cominos <cumin
seed—may be purchased at any drug
store.)
Grind meat, onions and garlic. Heat
fat. Cook meat and seasoning for 1
hour. Add equal amount of water.
Cook 1-2 hour.
SOUP—All bones, whether raw or
cut from steak, roast or other cooked
metas, should be utilized for soup
stock. Marrow bones should be sawed
in pieces. The cleaned and soaked
head, split in two, with eyes and soft
bones from nostrils removed, and the
cleaned feet with hoofs removed, may
also be added for soup stock. All
sinews and meat scraps not otherwise
utilized may also ibe added. Cover
with cold water, lightly suited, bring
to a boil and simmer until bones are
entirely exhausted for so-up stock. Re-
move bones and meat scraps. Bones
may be utilized for meat loaf. The
feed or used as fertilizer. Meat scraps
may be utilized for meat loaf-
soup stock should be strained, excess
of grease skimmed off. If not con-
densed enough to' jelly when cold, let
simmer until the right consistency is
reached, All hot into can to within
1-2 inch of top.
MfcAT LOAF—Use meat scraps, boil
and let cool (or the meat scraps left
on the bones when cutting up for
canning, and boiled with the bones
for goup stock, may he removed from
the bones after the soup is made and
Utilized according to this recipe.) run
through meat grinder twice and mix
thoroughly with the following Ingre-
dients for each 5 pounds of chopped
meats:
’ 5 tablespoons of bread CTumbs, 4
to 5 teaspoons of salt (or to taste,)
1 1-2 to 2 teaspoons pepper, 3 tea-
spoons poultry seasoning or sage, 1-2
teaspoon allpsice, 1 teaspoon thyme,
2 to 3 hay leaves broken up finely or
powdered. 2 teaspoons crushed celery
seed, onion juice or finely chopped
onion; 2 eggs beaten together, 1 ts*-
spoon cloves, 1 or 2 cups soup stock,
according to dryness of meat. Fill
cans to within 1-2 inch of top of can.
HASH—Tire lean meat scraps from
the soup may be canned with a little
soup stock to be made into hash as
neded.
MISS McALEXAND-
ER ENTERTAINED
FOR MISS ADAIR
____$>——
Thursday night Miss Lueile Mc-
Alexander entertained for Miss Cleon
Adair, a November bride. The occa-
on was the meeting of the Bridge
Club. Members and a number of
guests played bridge at three tables,
covers ami decorations being in green
a nd yellow, chosen colors of the bride-
rlect. At the conclusion of the games
\ decorated box filled with beautiful
andkerchirfs went to the highest
ider, who in turn presented it to
C's honored. The refreshments were
rved from attractive boxes carrying
t the chosen colors.
Mrs. Houston Good and Msis Ruth
Taylor of Paris were out of town
■ ests.
IRS. r. ENGLE
HOSTESS TO CLUB
Dr. and Mrs. F. Engle entertained
the members cf the San Souci Club
'i-t Tuesday nigh' rind a number of
invited guests. Vases of fall flowers
decorated the different rooms.' After
:he games cf 42 the hostess served a
refreshment plate.
C. H. Henson went to Ballinger
■n:ly Saturday to attend tin funeral
T his father-in-law, J. N. Harris.
FIFTEEN YEARS OF
CONSTIPATION ARE
FINALLY RELIEVED
Fort Worth Matron Attributes
Wonderful Relief To
Argotane.
“I had suffered fifteen years from
constipation before I found relief at
last in Argotane.” was the amazing
statement made to the Argotane rep-
resentative at Fort Worth by Mrs.
Jennie F. Moore, cf 3414 Fitzhugh Ave.
that city.
“My condtiion,” continued Mrs.
moore, "made me so nervous that I
could not rest well at night. Then,
too, I had1 lost my appetite. I would
feel hungry, but as soon as I s-art down
to the table, my appetite left me and
I would just have to force myself to
eat. And sometimes sick headaches
would come upon me and cause me
much suffering. No doubt all this
was caused by a sluggish liver.
‘‘I heard so many people talking
about Argotane that I decided to try
this medicine myself. I am mighty
glad now that I did.
"So far, I have taken four btotles,
and it surely has helped me wonder-
fully. I am no longer troubled with
the sick headaches I used to have and
I rest much better at night. My liver
seems to be acting perfectly.
"Aigotane certainly has given me
wonderful relief. My son is taking it
too, new. I will always recommend
this medicine to my friends, and to
anyone for that matter.”
Genuine Argotane may be bought in
Cooper at the City Drug Store.
NINETY DISASTERSGALL|
FOR RED GROSS RELIEF,!
AT GOST OF $1,200,000
Vice Chairman Fieser Cites Read-;
iness to Act ot National Soci-
ety, Which Lessens Loss of
Life—3,500 Chapters Aid in
Work. !
Readiness to act in an emergency,
should a disaster strike, has become,
part of the Red Cross Chapter pro-
gram in thousands of communities.
The need for this training of local
committees was revealed last year,
when more than ninety communities
required disaster relief work by the
Red CroBS.
As in former years, tornadoes
brought the greatest damage. Twenty-
four serious tornadoes occurred. Fire
also took toll of life and property in
twenty-four communities. Seven forest
lires did great damage; eighteen areas
were affected by floods, and niue
storms caused heavy losses. Other
disasters were cloudbursts, cyclones,
epidemics, mine explosions and ship-
wrecks. In the insular possessions of
the United States the Red Cross gave
relief in twelve disasters, chiefly from
hurricanes. In foreign countries re-
lief was given by the American Red
Cross In six instances of earthquakes,
floods and to refugees.
Tlie disaster relief work ot the Red
Cross cost $1,208,151 last year. Sta-
tistics showed an approximate death
rate of 71)0 persons in these disasters;
buildings destroyed or damaged,
10,578; persons injured, 1,487, and per-
sons assisted by the Red Cross, 90,872.
Through disaster preparedness of
Red Cross Chapters, undoubtedly great
numbers of lives wero saved, and
much distress and grief following the
calamities was prevented, according
to James L. Fieser, vice chairman in
charge of domestic operations of the
Red Cross.
“This type o? work is supported
the membersnips of citizens of the
United States, their volunteer contri-
butions, and their devoted work,” Mr.
Fieser said.
“Every man and woman is urged
to join as a member of the local Red
Cross Chapter, not only to be a part-
ner in supporting the work through
his membership, but also to serve
should an emergency occur.”
Life Savers Numerous
More than a quarter of a million
persons are entitled to wear the
American Red Cross insignia, denot-
ing they have been taught the expert
life saving methods of the organiza-
tion. The number enrolled to date is
273,202.
12 Cents For Cotton
We are accepting cotton at 12 cents
per pound on notes and accounts to
help our customers share the loss of
low priced cotton this year.
DELTA MOTOR CO.
+ + + + 1*44444444444
+ ♦
♦ UK W O. ELLINGTON *
* DP. C. b iLLINOTON •>
♦ 4
* Ellington & Ellington *
DENTISTS •
4
Office Upstairs In Fiist National »
Bank Bldg., Southwest Cor. Bq. 4
*
COOLER, TEXAS *
“The Fastest Growing
Schools In The
Southwest”
The Byrne Commercial Colleges,
located at Dallas, Houston, San An-
tonio, Fort. Worth and Oklahoma City
are each in large employment cen-
ters.
Byrne Colleges have two slogans:
"A postiion for every graduate,” ‘‘We
graduate and place you on the pay-
roll at half the cost of others.” No
term opening, start any day, individual
advancements Each student pursues
each subject at his best speed, en-
abling him to avoid lost time and g.
on the payroll in the shortest possible
time consistent with thoroughness.
Byrne Colleges specialize in turn-
ing our court reparters, high salaried
sccretaies, accountants and executes.
Our Complete Secretarial Courses
contain eight valuable business stu-
dies not taught in other commercial
schools in the Southwest. Write the
Byrne College nearest you for free
catalogue. Investigate our standard
courses and our money back guaran-
tee.
BYRNE COMMERCIAL COLIEGE
H. E. BYRNE, President.
—■ ■ o4o---
SCHOLARSHIP IN BYRNE
BUSINESS COLLEGE
Scholarships, good for any course
given by Byrne Business College, Dal-
las, for sale at Review and Courier
offloe.
,t!«
§1
m
SH“
i HIM
it,
SAME PRESCRIPTION
HE WROTE IN 1892
\ wm
I \ 5.1*1
i I
0 0
FRANK PARKER
SITKKBRJP6E S
BOOKS
Tv.” hundred million hooks were
i t I , readers in the United Stales
last year. Autoliv 200,000,000, pro! -
airly, were I,» p. sons who bor-
row >! them fain public and privaie
lending libraries. Thai means that '.lie
axe .,ge .\ni< ro an reads alrout tliric
books a year. That is not very many
books.
One reason Is that books are not
easy to buy or borrow in most parts
of the United States. The American
Library Association reports that fid
percent of the rural population lias
no public library service. Only a
very few cities have bookstores—
places where books arc the principal
Commodity sold. Enterprising pub-
lishers are now pushing the sale of
books in drugstores, cigar stores and
railroad stations.
We read more newspapers and
uagazines than any other nation, and
that is all to the good. But nobody
can claim to be educated, or get the
most out of life, unless' he or she
also reads books.
* * ♦
PRESSURE
One of the greatest disc verbs ui
science is that if you squeeze anything
hard enough it will change into some-
thin!.’ else. If yoj put two t!..<
ill nit, one p, css.iit cliaini-cr and
apply sufficient [>r> ssure they w ill com-
bine into M.un thing law
Applying tins, Dr. Friedrich Berlins
ol l.vimaiiy diM.uvt.cn that you can
gel ICJ gallons ol l unne out of
iDt) gallons of crude oil You simply
| ut the oil into ; pressure chamber
m company with „ quantity of heated
i.yon-gen gas and apply . pressure of
3,000 pounds to the square inch. The
hydrogen combines with the oil and
you get more gasoline out than you
put oil in
Too much hydiogen in gasoline
ruusis knocking hi the combustion
chamber of voui automobile engine.
Another new applicate n of pressure
is the “gasoline wringer,” which
squeezes ext . ss hydrogen out of gaso-
line. One reason foi the lower price of
g.i.M line most everywhere is the adop-
tion of these and other new scientific
i scoveries by the big oil companies.
* * *
LEMONADE _
Making lemotuuie oat of nothing
but cane sng., is a scientific achieve-
ment which has actually been put into
mmcrcial practice. Chemists of the
U. .S. Bureau of Chemistry told a
scientific meeting recently of a fungus
A Inch, when placed on cane sugar in
l shallow pan and fed with the proper
amount of nitrogen, will convert the
sugar ji rtg. ytric acid, which i the
acid of lemon •.
This prre* ss ir, r-o cheap, they said,
that one r.iai.uiactiirini; concern which
uses citri<- acid in 1 ary quantities has
adopted ihc new method with satis-
factory results.
There is n-i product of nature which
vill not some day he made in factories.
* * *
METHANE
Methane natural gas. Pipe iine.i
carrying it from the oil fields to the
big cities for fuel arc multiplying so
.Jl> ilia! it may not hr long be*
f c eviii the Alant.c seaboard will
he using natural gas.
Vv hen uit supply gives out, as it
\.,u in tune, Professor A. M. Bus-
veil of the Uiiivcisity of Illinois sug-
gests that farmers along the routes of
the pipe lines can manufacture methane
from farm wastes and pump it into
the pipes. He has expenniented with
certain bacteria which turn everything
into methane. He has fed them corn
stalks, soy beans, beau vines, straw
and excelsior and thev turn it all into
natutal gas.
The difficulty »vilh utilizing farm
waste in industry is the expense of
transporting tin w istr to a central
factory. If every lann could have its
own natural gas plant, that! difficulty
vv<iild be eliminated.
» * *
SAFETY
x Tie iiuson why fivers iiks Lind-
ner, b, Uos'.e and Byr.l are acclaimed
s lvroes is because everybody ap-
p ccantes the risk they ran in their
ii stones! flights. When we think of
their feats, xxc think of the pilots,
oof of the planes
The Graf Zeppelin ha: flown
around the world, crossed ''ie At-
lantic four times without m p. The
K-100, British dirigible, was nie fi st
aircraft of any kind t> cross the
ocean, eleven years ago. The R-101
recently voyaged from England to
Canada and bark. Our own Los
Angeles cruises a!' over the Ameri-
can Hemisphere. Nolcd remembers
th names of the pilots of these
slims; we think of tin C..;>, not the
Si Ti.
The reason is that we sen j the
immensely greater safety of the
tlirif ihle. The latter's | ” igcrs
and crew can liardiy he - il n le
risking their lives at all. T bmort- '
ant .or travel of toe futil e wi'l be '
done by dirigible rath r than by
plane.
tori.,
vivo
If.’ A N'”' View ibe Cubital’s Growine Beauty
■: totoS.:
*
!i
Washington grows more beautiful 'IS
pear by year. The classic temple tn the
foreground of this aerial photograph
Is the Lincoln Memorial, with the Me-
norial Bridge to Arlington at the right ,
ind the Washington Monument in the
Ii stance .to-a/wfe*
. I'--;
Brazilian Beauty j
;2*to*. " - 3V
O w. I
Senhorita Yolanda Pereira of Rio
de Janeiro, who was crowned
‘‘Miss Universe” in an international
beamy contest in South America.
Notice to The Public
Request is made of those farmers
who owe us notes and accounts not
to sell their cotton at present pre-
vailing prices. Since the United States
Government is now finnacing and
supervising a marketing plan, operated
upon pretty much the same basis as
the post office, and under which
marketing plan we can hold our cot-
ton yet draw on it for within a few
dollars of what it would bring, on the
present market, we are offering those
who owe us notes or accounts 12c per
pound, basis middling, for their cotton
delivered at nearest railread.
We could not afford to de this, and
would not do so, except for the fact
that we really believe cotton easily
worth 12c per pound, and think that,
it will bring that price if marketed
in an orderly, systematic and efficient
manner such as we are now offered
by the Federal Farm Bureau. We
have handled about 50 bales of cotton
in thus manner, and are well pleased
with the results. rctf
COOPER MOTOR CO.
---- -------
We can make that old suit look new.
Experienced tailors to look after them.
—Tom E. Robertson Co. r43
If you want the news when it is
news, read The Dallas News and The
Dallas Journal.—W. H. Bell, local
agent.
•;* **■ •** »'
❖ S. P. HART J. M. WRIGHT •>
❖ HART & WRIGHT *
❖ . REAL ESTATE *
❖ Commerce, Texas 0
❖ If you want a home or bus-
❖ iness in Commerce, see or *
❖ write us.
4 * * <• •> ❖ ❖ ❖
* + * + 44 + * + **44444
The Cooper Clinic
And Hospital
4
4
4
4
2nd Floor Masonic Bldg. •
COOPER, TEXAS •
Diagnosis and treatment of •
med-ical and surgical dis- •
eases, including Eye, Ear. ♦
Nose and Throat. ••
GLASSES FITTED 4
O. Y. Janes
When Dr. Caldwell •barbed to practice
medicine, back in 1875, the needs for a
laxative were not as great as today.
People lived normal liven, ate plain,
wholesome food, and got plenty of fresh
air. But even that early there were
drastic physics and purges for the relief
of constipation which Dr. Caldwell did
not believe were go ld for human beings.
The prescription for constipation that
be used early in his practice, and which
he put in drug attnee in 184>2 under the
name of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin,
is a liquid vegetable remedy, intended
for women, children and elderly people,
and they need just such a mild, safe
bowel stimulant.
This prescription has proven its worth
and is now t.he largest, selling liquid
laxative. It has won the confidence of
people who needed it to get relief from
headaches, biliousness, flatulence, indi-
gestion, loss of appetite and sleep, bud
breath, dyspepsia, colds, fevers. At your
druggist.' or write "Svrup l'epiin,”
Dept. BB, Monticello. Illinois, for fre»
trial bottle.
When Food
Sours
lyxt.s of folks who vliink they have
"indigestion” have only an acid condition
which could be corrected in flvo or ten
minutes. An effective anti-acid like
Phillips Milk of Magnesia soon restore*
digestion to rorrnal.
Phillips does away with all that sour-
ness and gas right after meals. It pre-
vents the distress so apt to occur two
hours after eating. What a pleasant
preparation to take! And how good It is
for the system! Unlike a burning doss
of soda—which is but temporary relief
Phillips Milk of Magnesia neu-
tralizes many times its volume in acid.
Next time a hearty meal, or too rick
a diet has brought on the least discomr
fort, try—
PHILLIPS
i Milk .
of Magnesia
?To Merchants:—
Is'the Insurance you buy as good
as the merchandise you sell?
WE SELL THE BEST!
A. R. Byrns & Co.
PHONE 135
| Clothes At A
Season’s latest offerings at a real saving. Tailored to in-
dividual measure. Fit, workmanship, style, all wool cloth,
priced to conditions $20.25. $23.50, $25.50—Normally sold
$5.00 to 10.00 more. Clothes cleaned, pressed, altered.
Don’t forget those real Velvet Shaves and Just-Right
Haircuts for entire family. None better. Tonics. Oils and
Shampoos by bottle or application.
G. FRED TURNER
TAILOR - BARBER - HATTER
\ l ^outh Side Square Cooper, Texas
I
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The Delta Courier (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 43, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 28, 1930, newspaper, October 28, 1930; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth983488/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Delta County Public Library.