Refugio County Record (Refugio, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 34, Ed. 1 Monday, April 12, 1965 Page: 2 of 4
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Refugio County Record, Mon., Apr. 12, 1965 Page
My Neighbors
‘1 like it because it ‘says’
something to me!”
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“I used to ’
cry for no
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
can make a woman wonder
*‘What’s come over me!”
Change-of-life panic sets
nerves on edge, fills her with
fear!
Proven help! Woman after
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Some women worry themselves
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FAMILY-
LAWYER
LAW DAY USA
At a police station in Tennes-
see, an indignant schoolboy put
this question to the officer on
duty:
“If the principal whips me at
school, and then my mother
whips me for the same thing
when I get home, can she be
arrested for double jeopardy?”
How does it happen that a
mere schoolboy, still shaky in
his grammar, is already on
speaking terms with an ancient
and technical rule of law?
How does it happen that Poet
Robert Frost defined freedom
not as the lack of all restraint
but as learning to “feel easy in
your harness”?
How does it happen that thou-
sands of prisoners in our jails
are showing more interest in
filing legal papers than in fil-
ing iron bars?
How does it happen that the
power of our government has
been handed over peacefully,
from one administration to the
next, for almost two centuries?
The answer is that the roots of
law run very deep indeed in this
land. And that is what Law Day
USA, the first of May, is all
about.
When President Dwight D.
Eisenhower proclaimed the first
Law Day in 1958, he refrained
from specifying any particular
Happier
HoMtiking
By Ann McCain
Home Service Adviser,
United Gas Corporation
A BISHOP LOOKS AT LIFE
VY THE RT. REV. EVERETT H. JONES, DJX
Pm RphMfNf CM, Mmn •# W«t Turn
ITS AMAZING!
LOOKING AT THE CROSS
In the Christian world no
symbol is so prevalent or so
full of meaning as the cross, or
the crucifix. During the com-
ing Holy Week devout persons
all over the world will spend
many hours of prayer and medi-
tation in concentration upon this
symbol.
Not all ways of looking at
the cross are equally good. It
is not enough to become senti-
mental, and even tearful, over
Sikhs of
WO IF) VVfftR ,
-fURffRMS A
At last the big Easter holi-
day is approaching, and what
is to be your bill of fare for
the great day of celebration?
Perhaps it’s one of those nice
fat ducks you’ve seen at the
supermarket, or even twp if
they’re small.
Key your duck purchase to
the number of persons you will
serve and allow one pound per
person.
Begin preparation the day be-
fore by cleaning ducks well,
drying them thoroughly inside
and out. Rub ducks inside cavi-
ties with salt and lemon juice.
Stuff loosely with chopped ap-
ples and celery. Store overnight
in refrigerator.
Next day, remove stuffing and
grease ducks well, inside and
out. Prepare Pecan Dressing as
follows:
4 cups soft bread crumbs
1 cup finely chopped celery
1 cup finely chopped onion
1 cup seedless raisins
1 cup pecan meats, chopped
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup milk, scalded
2 eggs
6 slices bacon
Sauce:
1 cup tomato catsup
1/4 cup Worcestershire sauce
1/4 cup steak sauce
1/2 cup- chili sauce
Mix bread crumbs, celery,
onion, raisins, nuts and salt
together.
Add hot milk slowly to beat-
en eggs and then add to dry
mixture. Stuff prepared ducks
with dressing and close opening
with skewers or by sewing.
Place on rack in uncovered pan.
Arrange three slices of bacon
over breast of each duck.
Place in preheated gas oven set j
at 325 degrees F. and roast;
until tender and juicy (about 15 i
to 20 minutes per pound, based j
on the weight of largest duck). ;
Twenty minutes before serving
time, combine the last four in-
gredients and baste ducks with
sauce. Garnish with parsley and
orange slices with a few cand-
ied cranberries in center of
each slice. Skim fat from sauce
remaining in roasting pan. Serve
sauce with ducks. Salt pork may
be used in place of bacon if
desired. Recipe makes suffi-
cient dressing for two 21/>-pound
ducks.
Motorists may have appreciat-
ed the daily good deed of two
Cub Scouts in Surrey, England,
but police didn’t. The Scouts
were warning drivers to watch
out for a police speed trap down
the road. Cub Chief Edgar Lea
called a halt to their charity.
kind of ceremony. For this oc-
casion glorifies no single lead-
er and commemorates no sin-
gle event. It honors only a sim-
ple and momentous idea: that
where law rules, men are free.
Thus, the observance takes
many forms. There are quiz
contests among school children
about the Bill of Rights, and
mock trials, and visits to the
local courtroom. There are
sermons and lodge meetings and
TV shows with law as the
theme. And judges add extra
words of warmth as they swear
aliens into citizenship.
There was method in choos-
ing May 1 as the date for
paying our homage to the rule
of law. For that is the date on
which millions behind the Iron
Curtain are paying their hom-
age to power. In the words of
President John F. Kennedy,
Law Day is “the significant an-
swer to Communism’s May
Day.”
Whatever form that answer
takes in your community, you
will understand its message bet-
ter in the context of 100,000
simultaneous obs ervances
across the nation. The rule of
law has strength for the finest
reason in the world: that so
many free people believe in it.
The 1965 Law Day theme is
timely: “Uphold the Law — A
Citizen’s First Duty.”
.. .A public service feature of
the American Bar Association
and the State Bar of Texas.
Written by Will Bernard.
the sufferings that Christ bore
for humanity. It is not enough
to feel bitter and resentful to-
ward those who put Him there,
calling down God’s wrath on
some allegedly guilty group
other than ourselves.
A deeper and more creative
way of looking at the cross will
center in two reminders to our-
selves. The first is, “I did it.”
All the forces that put Him
there are also in me, and in
those about me: the intolerance
of the religious leaders, the
ambition of Pilate, the irre-
sponsibility of Herod, the un-
faithfulness of Judas, the fick-
leness of the crowd, the insen-
sitivity of the soldiers. These
are the sins in us that crucify
Him over and over again. Even
when we think we are free from
pride and self-centeredness, we
are not. The world is not divid-
ed into the white and the black,
“the good guys and the bad.”
The Bible tells us: “All have
sinned and fallen short of the
glory of God.”
The second reminder is, “He
forgives me.” He comes down
from the cross to stand beside
me, as He stood beside His ex-
ecutioners at Calvary, and
prays, “Father, forgive them,
for they know not what they
do.” In spite of all that I have
done He loves me and believes
in me. He loves His whole hu-
man family, and the outreach
of His arms on the cross is all-
inclusive. He has faced life’s
worst for me, and won a vic-
tory of love and faith.
"ThC cow with the~ WmCLE!
JK TEE«=.E-y COW IN) 9T AUGUSTINE.
Born with p\ BlfiCK RING
AVROUHD THE- LEFT EVE WHICH .
kGlMEST*E COW Tvfe APPE^RAMCF
Ik op wearing a Mon ft c l
“If you remember how you
acquired your tools you’ll
never lend them out.”
' % a ua \ //,/ s own iwo ftufo
\\\V !/// ^c=) J trucks in
T LOS flMGELES
i IN noq.
r 1WO
Or drivers msnbged
-fo mEEY one vtri
IN A HERD-ON
COLLISION!
ANCIENT FGVfTlFINS
kEp-F TheiR Sick on <•& roofs!
of TR&tf? homfs eecfluse it
was supposed To hasten
TriFlR RECOVeRV.
< Pure bs ^
v>; THE ORWEN,
SNOW”.... IS
ft f ftw-nefl.
SNOW »*]
’ 1 1 COnTBINS Mfw
IMPURITIES'.!
*N CtflHftj
iT IS often!
Fink vihfni
IT f AILS! i
31
&y/yatu/ P,rector, GAINES DOG RESEARCH CENTER
* • y.$\, / a
THE&ARE LEFT-HANDED DOGM AS WELL AS LEFT-HANDED PEOPLE,
ACCORDING TP SCIENTISTS. THE HUNTING POG INVARIABLY
RAISES THE SAME FORELEG EACH TIME H E FREEZES ON POINT
IN THE BASEMENT OF CASA GU/D/, FLORENCE,
\ 1 ITALY, THE IST-« CENTURY PALAZZO IN WHICH
\ U POETS ROBERT AND ELIZABETH PARRETT
\ MV NttCjrW\V BROWNING SPENT MOST OF THEIR YEAR?,
(L AC<*fT U LIE? BURIED FLUSH,THE LATTER? COGPER
l \ SoLogY U SPANIEL,mm VIRGINIA WOOLF APMIREP
\ MUCH 5HE m°TE ^ Bl0CRAPHY
1ST.SOHAtlENCLAND, A MAN W&ZPVSHC^
APOLOGY TO A POG. BERT PEACOCK
COMPLAINEP TO THE POLICE THAT A NEICH-Jg ^
BORPET HAP BITTEN HI? SON, BUT
RAN AN AP OF APOLOGY IN THE LOCAL
PRESS WHEN HE PISCOVEREP THAT
THE ACCUSATION WAS FALSE
t* 1965 Games Dog Research Center. N. Y. C.
Research is now underway to
develop a car that is so safe a
driver would have difficulty
getting killed in it if he tried.
The “crash-proof” car is the
brain-child of State Sen. Edward
J. Speno of New York, the man
generally credited with initiat-
ing the movement that led to
installation of front seat belts
at the factory in all major
American automobiles.
Sen. Speno says that many
states would contribute to the
$3 million cost of the car as
would the U.S. Public Health
Service and other governmen-
tal agencies.
Purpose of the project is to
develop technical data that law-
makers can use in efforts to
persuade auto makers to incor-
porate design features that
would make cars safer.
Ironically, Sen. Speno’s cru-
sade coincides with a change in
plans by auto makers, who have
not incorporated some safety
features that have been known
for years. Auto makers now
feel that building cars with saf-
er interiors is the “prudent and
economically sound thing to
do,” according to an industry
trade publication.
Some, of the features that
very likely would be included
in a “crash-proof” car are:
Hydraulic, shock - absorbing
bumpers—to protect you in case
you ram into the back of a
car.
Head rests—so you won’t suf-
fer a “whiplash” neck injury
when somebody rams into you.
Roll bar and seat belts front
and rear—so you won’t be
squashed or thrown out if your
car rolls over.
Padded dashboard and visor,
and recessed instrument knobs
and door handles—so you will
be protected somewhat if you
have an accident.
A crash-proof car, of course,
would imply a patronizing at-
titude by its developers. Motor-
ists, they are indicating, are
incapable of driving safely, so
they must be saved from them-
selves.
Are they wrong?
N my will, but thine, be
done—(Luke 22:42).
We should relax. We should
let go. We should let God's
will be done in us, through us
and for us. If there is a need
for peace in our mind we re-
lax. We should let God’s peace
come flooding in upon us. We
know that God’s will is good,
and God’s good is ours if we
seek it out.
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ACKOSS
1. Rough 7
‘©.Cut, as
meat
11. Choice
group
12. Foreign
13. Mother
(Sp.)
14. Edible seed
15. Leaning
Tower site
16. Hasten
17. Music note
19. Sacred
picture
CROSSWORD
2. Mountain 20. Citizen
range of (short-
Central Asia ened)
Answer
21. Mongrel dog 10- Half an em
16. Tap dancers
(slang)
18. Sultan’s
decree
Slowly
(mus.)
25. Wife of
Zeus
26. Having a
springy step
28. Vegetable
29. Girl’s name
30. A Sho-
shonean
31. Friars
32. Pronoun
33. Poetic
contraction
34. Girl’s name
(poss.)
38. Tinfoil
40. Eagle’s nest
41. Kind of
thread
42. Newlywed
43. Paint
pigment
44. Turkish w
money of
account
DOWN
1. Cordage’
plant-
3. Frees 21. Geni-
4. Direct tivc
$. Hawaiian of Cetus
octopus 22. Photo-
6. Small house graph
7. Toward the book
sheltered 23. Perti-
side Rent
8. Narrow „ to diet
inlet 24. Awry (dial.)
(geol.) 25: Indianians 36. Assistant
9. Hazards 27. Palm leaf 37. Prophet
(var.) 39. Tree
31. Better 40. Arab’s
33. Ornamental garment
plate 41. American.
35. Fall in drops Indian (lit)
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mmmm
Gillette
foamy
GILLETTE
Foamy
SHAVING CREAM
79:
i.L.
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Refugio County Record (Refugio, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 34, Ed. 1 Monday, April 12, 1965, newspaper, April 12, 1965; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth635362/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Dennis M. O’Connor Public Library.