Refugio County Record (Refugio, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 43, Ed. 1 Monday, June 14, 1965 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : illus. ; page 23 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Hy Neighbors
■£L
®*Guess it’s safe, Joe—his
Inside end is wagging.”
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low) Mftij Tkey UWe
On Independence Day and Flag Day, Americans honor the
Stars and Stripes. Many are not, however, familiar with the
history of their own state flag.
JfJ........................
New Jersey, for instance, first displayed
state flag design at the surrender of Corn-
wallis' army at Yorktown. The banner’s buff
color is derived from the New Jersey Conti-
nental Regiments’Revolutionary Waruniforms.
The first use of California's
standard was in 1846 to
replace the Mexican flag
after settlers successfully
revolted. White Ohio’s flag
had more peaceful begin-
nings, it is the nation’s only
pennant-shaped flag—first
displayed at the 1901 Pan-
American Exposition.
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Every state flag and that of the_
District of Columbia is flown
on all national and state holi- *a
days on the mall of the State
Mutual Life Assurance Com- ™
pany of America. For a colorful '
free booklet containing picture
and history of each state flag, ^
write to: PR-fM, State Mutual
of America, Worcester, Mass.
A BISHOP LOOKS AT LIFE
IV THE RT. REV. EVERETT H. JONES, DA
At Bp beep of CAwdL Pises— ti West 1mm
(Bishop Jones is on tour in
Italy, Greece, Egypt and the
Holy Land. He is sending oc-
casional messages for this
column from points along his
way.)
THE NEW JERUSALEM
Jerusalem (Israel). — It is
very important to distinguish
between the old and the new
Jerusalem. Though they are sep-
arated in distance by only a
few feet of no man’s land, they j now numbers two and one-
represent two quite different j half million people is one of the
miracles of the twentieth cen-
Jerusalem that belongs to Is-
rael, is a teen-age giant looking
to the future.
In a sense the new city be-
gan a hundred years ago when
people began to move outside
the walls to the west. But its
real beginning was just seven-
teen years ago when the ar-
mistice was established between
Israel and Jordan in 1948.
What has been done in this
brief period by this nation that
Refugio County Record, Mon., June 14, 1965 Page 2
worlds.
The old walled city, with its
many shrines of sacred mean-
ing to Christian, Jew and Mos-
lem, is full of reminders from
the past. The new city, or the
10# 25# 09# 98#
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gists. See how fast it can help you
"I used to
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reason at all”
One of the first
"change-of-life"
danger signals
No wonder a woman feels like
crying! The suffocating surge
of hot flashes one minute; cold,
clammy perspiration the next
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^'What's come over me!"
Change-of-life panic sets
sierves on edge, fills her with
fear!
Proven help! Woman after
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flashes, nervous tensions!
Some women worry themselves
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This is the time of the year
when cool, refreshing desserts
are called for, and some of the
best, and easiest, can be made
from one of the most delectable
fruits on the market — fresh
strawberries.
Strawberries, now in full
swing for production, fit equal-
ly as well in molded salads as
they do fresh with cream or in
fancy dessert dishes.
One of the old standbys which
never is out of style is straw-
berry shortcake, and a more
recent discovery is strawberry
chiffon pie.
Below we have some quick
and easy recipes for serving
strawberries. Make the most of
them while they last.
STRAWBERRY CHIFFON PIE
1 1/3 cups graham-cracker
crumbs (about 16 crackers)
1/4 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup soft butter or mar-
garine
1 package of Danish dessert
1 1/2 cups cold water
3 egg whites
1 1/2 cups slightly sweetened,
sliced, hulled strawberries.
Preheat gas oven to 375 de-
grees F. With a fork combine
crumbs and sugar with butter
or margarine until crumbly. Set
aside three tablespoons of mix-
ture to sprinkle on top of fill-
ing.
With the back of a spoon,
press mixture to the bottom and
sides of a nine-inch pie > plate,
forming a small rim. Bake
eight minutes. Set aside to cool
while making filling. Prepare
the package of Danish dessert
as the package directs, using
1 1/2 cups cold water. Beat egg
whites until stiff but not dry;
slowly pour in boiling dessert,
beating hard. Fold in strawber-
ries. Pour into crust and chill
at least four hours. Spread
whipped cream over top and
sprinkle with crumb mixture.
JIFFY SHORTCAKE
Make and bake three-inch
drop biscuits, using packaged
mix or your favorite biscuit
recipe. While biscuits are hot,
split; butter generously, and put
together with plenty of sweet-
ened, sliced fresh or thawed
frozen strawberries. Top with
more berries, then with whip-
ped cream or sour cream.
STRAWBERRY SALAD
Crush with a fork one pint of
fresh hulled strawberries with
2 teaspoons of lemon juice and
6 tablespoons of sugar. Stir in-
to one and one-half eight-ounce
packages of cream cheese at
room temperature. Fold in one-
half cup heavy cream, whipped.
Pour into ice tray; freeze un-
til firm. Remove from tray;
wrap and freeze. To serve, cut
into slices; place on lettuce;
let stand in food compartment
of refrigerator until eatable
(about one hour).
Question.—What size Savings
Bonds do most people buy?
Answer—In the first quarter
of this year, 65.5 per cent of all
Savings Bonds sold were in the
$25 to $200 denominations—an
increase of about 3 per cent ov-
er a year ago. Sales of Series
E Bonds have been going up
steadily for the past three years
and now are at their highest
level since the end of the World
War II financing days.
Question—What is the differ-
ence between Series E and
Series H Bonds?
Answer—E Bonds are ac-
crual-type securities in denomi-
nations of $25 and up, which are
purchased at three-fourths of
their face value and reach this
value on maturity in seven years
and nine months. They have
an automatic 10-year extension
period. H Bonds are purchased
at face value, in denominations
of $500 or more, and pay inter-
est by Treasury check every six
months. The interest rate for
the first 18 months is about 2.5
per cent, then goes up to 4
per cent for the remaining per-
iod to maturity. On either type
bend, the interest rate aver-
ages 3 3/4 per cent, when held
to maturity.
Question: Series E Bonds
now being sold carry an auto-j
matic 10-year extension priv-1
ilege, I know. But what about,
the bonds I bought during j
World War II and which I still
own?
Answer: Bonds issued be-
tween May, 1841, and May, 1949,
had an original maturity per-
iod of 10 years and have been
granted two 10 year extensions.
One 10-year extension has been
provided for all E Bonds sold
since June, 1949. No Series E
Bond ever sold has ceased to
earn interest.
Getting killed quickly is the
least that can happen to you
in an automobile accident.
Consider the problems of your
family if you, the father, sud-
denly become a cripple — and
mother must go to work.
Consider the loss of a job
while you take several weeks
to recover from injuries.
Consider recurring, though
non-crippling, pain that plagues
you the rest of your life.
If you do die against a tree
or crushed in the wreckage of
two cars, consider the shock
and prolonged anguish of your
children, your wife or husband,
your close friends.
Consider all these things and
then drive more carefully.
Some people die under such
grisly circumstances that the
vision of their death haunts sur-
vivors for years:
An elderly New Hampshire
woman ended her life slowly
and painfully as she struggled
for breath while pinned under
her auto.
A 72-year-old man stepped
from behind a parked vehicle
into the bath of a car. He sus-
tained fractures of both legs,
bruises and shock and died in
the hospital four days later.
As if dying were not enough,
love rubs salt into gaping
wounds when a tiny child dies
of a broken neck; when entire
families perish; when a fiance
is killed; or when the father or
both parents of many children
leave home and never return.
The teen-age daughter of a
man who had been badly crip-
pled in an accident wrote a let-
ter to the local newspaper after
she saw an accident similar to
the one that crippled her fath-
er:
“One car had the driver’s
seat smashed, just like in dad’s
car. I started to cry as the
memories rushed through me.
When I finally pulled myself to-
gether, a song on the radio was
ending with: It’s all over.
“How ironic, I thought. It will
never be over. Not until driv-
ers take their time and obey
the laws.”
tury. It has taken unpromising
land and made it productive.
It has built the modem cities
of Tel Aviv and Haifa. In just
ten years it has made the He-
brew University an impressive
collection of ultra-modem build-
ings with 6,000 students in
Jerusalem and another 4,000 in
other branches. And it is now-
completing a handsome glass-
walled building, one of the fin-
est in the Middle East, for its
. Parliament.
We were fortunate to be in
Israel just five days after the
opening of the new Israel Mu-
seum, including the Shrine of
the Book (to house the Dead Sea
Scrolls) and the Billy Rose Art
Garden. The museum complex,
costing more than 6 million dol-
lars, is beautifully located on a
22 acre hillside, with the Uni-
versity to one side and the Par-
liament building to the other.
The museum proper has 13 pa-
vilions depicting 500,000 years
of life in the Land of the Bible,
in addition to an art gallery.
The Shrine of the Book, located
a short distance away, not only
displays the fragments found
in a cave in 1947, but it is a
symbolic expression of the
resurrection of Israel after 2,-
000 years of darkness.
In presenting to Israel his re-
markable collection of sculp-
ture, Billy Rose made this state-
ment: “I donated my collection
of sculpture, and the gardens
and pavilions in which they are
set out, to a country far remov-
ed from my own. I selected
Israel because I thought it was
hungrier for art than any coun-
try in the world.”
ACROSS
1. Store
5. Moved
through
water
9. Portion
10. Billiard
stroke
12. Throes
13. Straighten
(var.)
14. Black
15. Snaps
16. East by
south
(abbr.)
17. Affirmative
vote
18. Water god
(Babyl.)
19. Unaffected
22. Low islands
24. Not in vogue
25. June bug
26. Petty
quarrel
28. Hoarders
31. Land
measure
32. Equip with
men
33. Exclam a-
tion
34. A
candlestick
(Bib.)
37. Poker stake
39. Once more
40. Not silently
41. Unloads
42. Swiss
capital
(poss.)
43. Comfort
44. A gun
sight
CROSSWORD
DOWN
1. Chinese
province
2. Quantity
of yarn
3. Carousal
4. Footlike part
5. Frighten
6. Skin mark
7. Operatic
melody
8. Zoo
inhabitant
9. Enemy
scouts
11. Flat-topped
hills
15. Secondary
17. High (mus.)
20. Extinct
bird
21. Place
22. Dis-
tance
measure
of
India
23. Before
25. Clamor
28. Dinner
course
27. Czech
capital
28. Insane
29. Spherical
30. Lean-tos
32. Minister’s
house
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BIDBQ
'wiQiaMDpgia.viHiju
wwiviMtflldlomlsW
35. Mother
36. Apple seeds
37. Not
windward
38. Girl’s name
40. Warp-yarn
l
2.
3
4
%
s
6
7
8
%
9
%
\o
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J5L
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%
13
1+
%
15
lb
%
%
a
%
b
13
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20
21
%
22
23
H
m
24
%
2 S
d
%
a*
d
IS
29
30
31
%
32.
%
d
33
34
35
34?
%
37
38
39
AO
41
4X
%
43
m
44
V .
i
Yet am I with you in the
spirit...beholding your order.
—(Col. 2:5)
God blesses us with order,
and we have plenty of time.
We live in eternity. It is the
right use of this particular
moment in which we are living
that is important. If we fill this
moment with constructive, pos-
itive thought, word or action,
we need not be concerned with
the next day, month or year.
Let’s live in the now.
PAINFUL CORNS?/ j
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IT DISSOLVES CORNS AWAY
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ITCHING
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Zemo—Liquid or Ointment.
BTS AMAZING!
flcoM r eco/eueo r
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a Y|pr®R HfttBRO-iaert
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INGR3WN NAIL
HUHTING YOU?
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Almost TW/cg as many
PEOPLE- M V-toRLO
DRiuK GOATS' MILK
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O^ANV OF THE "MAYFLOWER’
Pilgrims perished because
THEY BROUGHT /9LONG HO
CATTLE TO insure FRESH MILK!
Red,HoT,$EET*VN6
wag applied To
SleSimG- vjounOS.T£>
—n lU-Til CENTVRVi INi
3.L eusaopEdt
GILLETTE
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Refugio County Record (Refugio, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 43, Ed. 1 Monday, June 14, 1965, newspaper, June 14, 1965; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth635302/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Dennis M. O’Connor Public Library.