The Lampasas Record (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 27, 1938 Page: 4 of 8
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.
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THE LAMPASAS RECORD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27. 1938
CLAYROCK M. E. CHURCH
i * aet of March 3rd, 1379.
0. 0. McINTYRE
for
A M. PHARR
TUtES AND NEW LAW
the
seven
won
7:30.
effect
AT MOSES
LARD
4-Pound Carton
42c
year
COFFEE
1-lb. Vacuum Tin
was
Red & White
25c
—None Finer—
15c
MARKET
i
1
SEE OUR BIG CIRCULAR
for many more bargains
W. H. M O S ES
money and
RED110 WHIIE
FOOD STORE
NOTICE
present them to me at Lampasas, Tex-
rest a
Wednesday.
Axe, Hammer and riatchet bandies
Bank
Hauk.’
all this
to travel
Tom Higgins was a bust-
Wednesday in Gladewater
1
X
Judge 3.
ness visitor
and Tyler.
night
and
from
spats
CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Dr. G. L. Messenger, Minister
Chestnut and Third Streets
Wade Wooten advanced his Record
date a full year ahead Saturday and
also took the Temple Telegram tor a
year.
• Services, Sunday, October 30.
Church school, 9:45 m., Rucker
Mrs. G. W. Cook and eon, Hillyard
Cook, returned Monday from a two* j
weeks -visit lii San Angelo and Brown- I,
wood with relatives.
brought nothing, and $400 is more j
than ten bales of cotton are bringing
now. In the good year, however, his
returns- for Ute same weight in beef
would have been $945, the equivalent
of more than a dozen bales of cotton I
at 15 cents.
Sunday 10 a. m. I
! es arranged for all.
i -11 a. in. Preaching serWee
•---—
OUR SITUATION
their
Hi'-
his clothes made by Lan-
and he
This country boy was
impressed by
he resolved
DALE CARNEGIE
5-Minute Biographies
(Author of “How to Win Friends
and Influence l*eople”)
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
W. S. Ezell, Minister
of Control,
show that,
matically
dowment fi
Texas aud
$1,600,000
for paying
the State. (
funds as
eluded the following : $1,450,(MM)
maintain al
$1,800,000
more than-
local Banks change
" ' BUSINESS HOURS
the Lampasas, Texas
Under the new Wage-Hour Law,
which prescribes a 44-hour week max-
It will be done, however, only | Tuesday, November 1, 1938.
is a concerted and insistent ■
by the people for it to be (it)
/ 1 we appointed executor of the Will
^of -W. 8. Bear, deceased, on October
10, 1938, hy the County Court of
Lampasas county, Texas. All persons
owing said estate come forward and
room is there for econ-
always a hotly debated ' (
the free-and-easy spend-1 (
side and the advocates of
will be conducted
Corner First and Walnut Streets
- Silas-Howell, Minister
superintendent will be in
There will be special features
day. There are classes for all
ret of all, $6,760,000 auto- And lf ot tbe expenditures can im^m for workers, the two local banks .. . .. , .
R™ — .. — - jgjg thHr bMjBw(g the MBW. Those having claims
pees
ou recoi
down expenses,
which has been studying for a year
the pOadbillty of reducing state ex-
penses from six to ten million dollars
is expected to submit definite lecom-
the typical man
drink and didn’t
The only thing he offered
package of chewing gum.
Rolls Royce and a chauf-
his favorite exercise was
The Record and Semi-Weekly Farm
News win be continued another year
to W. A.’Whltehertd who paid in the
g.-c >sary *'nniount :J»ete Natufday.
bition
books
York; and, after working on news-
papers in Ohio for several years, he
came to Manhattan and took a posi-
tion on Hampton’s magazine. Three
months after he landed in town, the
magazine failed. He then got a posl-
WANT TO BUY r
i 1 Baby Bed -
1 Wood Cook Stoves and Heaters.
Good Milch Cow—mill pay good price
What have you to sell or trade?
■The Exchange
U. 8. D A., and will be helpful, but
at last the farmer Jiiiuself, perhaps,
with the assistance of bis county1
agent, vocational teacher, or the farm j
management specialist from bls State lg conjjany juvited and will be made
Extension Service, must work out the ! welcome. ’
1-lb. bag
Early Riser
Very Good & Popular Priced
MINCEMEAT, 9-o*. pkg. 9c
PUMPKIN, 2 No. 2 can* 15c
OORN, No. 2 can RAW ...7c
CORN FLAKES, big pkg. 8c
PLUMS, 2% lb*. purple ISc
The
has
Do employes. Ten'years ago
of
we
shall have a fruitful year’s work. All
X C Bear, who lives north
i a ctizen of
county all his life renewed his Record
and 8einl-Weekly News here Saturday.
' O. O. McIntyre aud the late Arthur
14 t*i I
their own- cottonseed.'
quoted
be exact. but
for practical
from his rec
.35
.55 ’
8.00;
----------- . n ■ ■-
Exchange Specials
$L50
1.00
1.50
.65
.60
Shoulder ROAST, lb 18c
Pork SAUSAGE, lb. 19c
Family STEAKS, lb. 17c
rent into permanent en-
ids for The University of
.public schools. Another
las added to the surplus
<f road bonds assumed by
(Rher expenditures of State
unmarized by Teer iri-
1 house 6,500 convicts;
r Confederate pensions;'
Reports from various leaders of In-
dustry over the nation reflect ths
Hath of better conditions In general
a number of these men say that
times are ou the uptrend at this time
First National
Peoples National
■ ■ -------
Mrs. B. W. Fox came in to
Uttle Friday and while in the office
! Sunday School 9:45; morning
j ship 11:00.
| B. T, U. 6:30; evening worship
Increasing attendance has been the
R. A. Speed, who lives south of
town drdpped by Saturday to renew
his Record and Semi-Weekly Farm
News for another year.
“How Much
omy? Thqt Is
question, Jlth
ers on oi_
thrlft on’Ithe other. Disregarding for
the p
sides, let
most ou
years ha
For seventeen years, O. O. Mc-
Intyre wrote a column entitled “New
York Day By Day”. Four hundred
and ninety-efght newspapers printed
it, and about twenty million people
read it daily.
He was the most celebrated com-
mentator on New York life that the
no "pull,”
fire of am-
the ■
New
for maintaining
the 128 dl courts, eleven courts
of civil uppeals, the Supreme Court,
Court of Criminal Appeals, and for
other judicial expenses; $5,600,000 for
maintenance of twenty-one eleemosy-
nary institutions, including new con-'
struction, approximately $6,800,000
for the seventeen State institution^ of
higher IcarnRig; about $9,000,000 for
the various d< pnrtments, exclusive of
the prison s&tem and other activities
already mentioned; approximately
$18,600(000 for the payment of old-
ag? assists to an average of 112,-
000 men ana women; $37,800,000 for
the education of 1,360,000 child-
ren enrolled *n the public school sys-
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Webb of Hous- j
ton visited Jils parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J. E. Webb, at Kempner thia week. I
They went to Dallas today for a short '
visit with his sister. Mrs. Julia Welch.
Gasoline Iron ...
Electric Iron ...
Gasoline Lamp .
3 Gal. Cream Can
Glass Container for 011 Stove
4-Burner Gasoline Cook Stove
—Bargain
Mall Box
Mail Box '
Small Show Case
Wash Pots and Heaters, Picks, Shov- [
els and many other items. t
| Work horses, brood mares, sheep'
and goats.
be reduced in the future—If some of are compelled to fix
the bureaus can be abolished—If cer-' hour8 as follows: Open at 9:00 a. m. I .
tain governmental services can easily and Close at 3:00 p. m., daily. This w,thln the tlme Pre8cr,beC by law
be dispensed with—well, It ought to new schedule will become effective J- Tora (18c)
be done,
if there
demand
done.”
Awhile. back Walter Peterson of bead. Doubtless he
Justin, Texas, was asked by the local cording to a strict
vocational teacher to tell the local
F.F.A. class somethin; about his ex
perlence. “Pete” has regularly top-
ped the Christmas beef market in
yet ■ Fort Worth for a good many years,
and which la “going to town” in a big
was w ay uu j his brother raise Short*
their
and
tbey | Many a Southwestern farm this year |
' has enough feed to fatten from one |
from t<> ten ca]Veg or yearlings, aud it is mark of our services in the recent!
more profitable to feed two or three j weeks. 1-ast Sunday was “Junior Day” I
I Worship of the congregation, 10:55'
a. m. Message by the pastor, “Bringing
Every Thought into Captivity.”
Young people's devotional meeting,'
6:45 p/nk. Congregational worship,
7:30 p. m.
This is the first Sunday of the new
conference year. It Is for us a time
of beginning again. Let us all put our .
hands to the plow and dur shoulders
to the wheel, working faithfull/viu'
co-operation with one another and '
with God for the advancement
the kingdom of God. In that way
sud they predict a good year In 1939. «”wn ever knw»: *“d
automobile manufacturers are putting 00t ln
people buck to work aud some other New York uotU he
industries are doing the same thing I lhirty X°ur-
Along with these reports, however,' To millions of people, . Oscar
luiue a lot of criticism of the new McIntyre or *Odd” I
wage and hour law that went Into called him—was the most famous per-.
ii* week. Some of the Indus- ‘"vn 1° New York,
tries which employ cheap labor have 1 was down in Amarillo, Texas,
had to ‘‘dose shop" and let several a few years ago, and I found that j
thousand people out of employment folks down there talked about only
Western Union and some others say two people in New York—the late I
if the law applies to their message J
carriers they will have to curtail their Brisbane,
workers. and several hundreds of oth- ! There were a lot of odd things
ers wlti be out of a job. 1 about Odd McIntyre. For example,
Just What the law will mean, wbe- he wm paid $2,15U per w(eek 1
ther for,better or worse times, remain writing his daily column;
to be so4n. It is not so much the fact
that 25 -cents an hour is too high
wages id some instances, but the fact
that only 44 hours per week were al-
lowed 1* hurting some businesses.
After tl|e 44-hour week the wages
must be. one-and-a-half tfiat price for
extra hours. In the industries hours
will not; hurt so much, but business
establishments where 48 to 60 hours
have been used is the trouble.*
o---------
ECONOMY IN GOVERNMENT
tern of Texas; $53,000,000 for the
building, maintenance, and operation
of State highways, of which amount
$8,600,000 of State funds went for
retiring eounty road bonds; $2,700,000
for the State bonded debt. Miscella-
. neous expenditures, iuelndiug the cost
does the State Govern-’0' sessions, rounded otft
$154,000,000 in a single' ’*“* *‘“'dule made public by Teer.
ftes listing expenditures' ‘The8e flgUre8 8bow the
' what they are getting in return for
By T. C. RICHARDSON, Secretary Breeder-Feeder Association
“Pete” “Goes To Town”
In our particular section the thing moved the date of her Record up an-
that is hurting now, according to re- ’’Hw*’' year,
ports, is lack of moisture for the grain ’ “
planted. And, too, the worst thing is Mrs. W. L Tomlinson underwent
that farmers made no cotton to speak an appendectomy at the local hospital
of here and got very little for what Saturday * ’
they did make. j ——a--- ------
However, we are not like many sec-' jjn>. J. I. McKinzie of Evant had a
tlons, for we have a number of other major operation at the hospital here
things to depend upon. Livestock have ~ "
brought and are bringing good prices,
mohair sold well, wool Is going at a
fair price, poultry and eggs are help-
ing out, some parts are making a fair
yield of pecans. The turkeys will soon
be moving and trappers will come In
for their part after a few weeks. —Grade A quality at a real bargain Henry Ringer underwent an a
After all. this is a great country. at the CASH HARDWARE STORE. (1 dectomy TueMMy at the local hospital
yet
never talked, face to face, more
three times in his life with the
who payed him that salary.
He made more than $100,(MM) a
by writing; yet he didn’t have a
stenographer. He pecked it all out
himself on a portable typewriter.
Odd McIntyre hadn't the slightest
I desire to go on the air, though he
was offered thirty-one radio contracts
in one year. One concern agreed to
put u microphone right in his New
' York apartment aud pay him five
There is much talk about economy ' ‘•nudred dollars a minute for talking
in state government. The democratic '111 frout but* he wouldn’t do it.
nominee ior governor aud muny nomi-, sald be 80t Soos® pimples at the
forfhe legislature put themselves very thought of It.
as favoring efforts to cut 1 aske<1 llim why Ue turned down
The senate committee thltie fabulous offers, aud he said,
. “Well, because I don’t know how to
.. j talk.” He told me he tried to make
a speech once, at a dinner given for
Jack Dempsey in Los Angeles; and
m.mladuns between now and Jan wheu ue stood up, he was so scared
uary. What will be done and where' tllat swallowed aud stammered
will the cost be lowered is the ques-! aud didn’t say a word.
tion, j Odd McIntyre was born in Platts-
- t „ ! burg, Missouri, where
The Titas Weekly says In part com
, .... j a hotel His mother
cerning the matter the following utd
„ . .. ! was three years old;
leaves the people to study the propo-
sition: a
I horns aud feed them A>ut ou
.... . Odd own oats, corn, sorghum, etc.,
as his frjends ' cottonseed meal for which
be
than I
man a8 fou^te«,, cent8-
I Several valuable points are implied
| if not expressed. First, Walter and
i his brother kept good cattle, raised j
good calves, and fattened some every
yetfr regardless of price. Second, -fat;
cattle could always be sold for Sfppe ,
price, carrying a great deal of grass1
and feed that either could not have ,bt‘ state College of Agriculture, much
been sold at all or would have sold lewi th« author of these periodical
cheaply at harvest time. Third, the1 ‘omments. Is competent to set uj» a
price variation was as wide as even detailed program for any particular
cotton or wheat, but they did not' farm or farmer. But the principles of
go in and out on its ups and downs. ' good farm management are universal
Result, an average for the ten years' and their final analysis may be re-
shows a good market for the feed duced to “ttntelligient a|n^I, complete
they ate. Fourth, they are not "big’’ utilization of labor and land.” Bulle-
fariners erT "big" feeders. A good tins on farm organization and plan-
many people think loss than a carload ning may be had on request from
Of beef 13 too tittle to monkey with State colleges of agriculture and the
The Peterson boys don't; a truck-load
d year has brought them an average
cl about iiwrr net than ten tiales
of cotton would have averaged for the
same period.
Assuming that they had the
average r umber and the average reorganization of his farm right on
weight in the six-cent y?ar, “Pete” the ground. It is not too late to be-
iiad only $405 to show, or $54- a Sin. z
lion as copy reader and mftkfitnp
man on the Evening Mail; bRL he
was sickly and incompetent—and : so
he was fired. .
Then be started to do the thing
he had always wanted Jo do. He Northington, supt. Classes for all age
began writing a dally piece about New 'groups. Lesson for adult classes, ‘Per-
York. Bui nobody wanted to publish sonal Rights and Where They En<l, ’
It; so, in order to get a start, be-gave from Eccl. 2:1-3, 10, 11; Rom. 6:17-23;
it away to newspapers, until he ere- 14:21.
afed a demand for his work.
Odd McIntyre,
about town, didn't
smoke,
me was
He had
feur. Yet
walking.
He had
via, the Paris dressmaker;
bad a wardrobe that would rival the
sartorial trappings of the Prince of
Wales; yet he sat around all day
writing in bis dressing gown aud
lounging pajamas. '
He never had but one sweetheart members and friends are urged to at-
—and he married her. He called her tend every service possible. A cordial
“Snooks” and she caflled h I'm welcome for every one.
“Lover.”*i "*'■ ’ ’ ’•*-*4— ■ -----
his father ran
died when he
and so he was
reared' by his grandmother, In Galli-
i IKilis, Ohio.
I Odd McIntyre worked as a
I clerk In the hotel in Gallipolis,
there he saw traveling men
New York — men who wore
and talked about Broadway with
knowing air.
tremendously
glamour; so
himself.
He had no
but he had youth and the
in his heart. He read all
he could find about
111VAV ^ivutauic W iwv | WVVA.B, 0UUUUJ was Junior A7Uy
i than to merely warm up a carload, in our church .There was a good re-
Few will make the profits or get the spouse on the part of the juniors,
prices the Petersons do, for they are their teachers and their parents in
old hands at the game and don’t have I making the morning service what we '
If I had planned for it to be.
We Invite visitors to all our services. [
‘Come thou with us and we will do
thee good.”
t the arguments of both
s consider some facts. The
tiding fact is that recent
witnessed a tremendous
expansion”of the Texas Government;
that, at Must, is not debatable.
State Go^rnment at present
about 25,<
there wen4 but 15,(MM), and at that
time the Annual cost of conducting
the governmental affairs of the State
was but one-half the $154,000,000 that
the State spent last year. Why has
this happdled? The answer is to be
found In tfie fact that numerous com-
missions, boards, bureaus, institu-
tions, andjpepartments have been cre-
ated in repent years. The State Gov-
ernment tq$ay has 155 of these agen-
cies. Some at them are clearly neces-
sary, of « irse, while others may not
be at all ecessary. In any event,
they exist
“And he
ment spen
year? Fig
for 1937, c&npiled recently by Claude
D. Teer, cl irman of the State Board the Uxe8 ,hey »“»' 1,16 fl«ures ou«h‘
lelp to give an idea. They to 60 8tudied wlth ,hat P°lnt in
Services for the Lord's Bay will be
as follows:
Rally Day in the Bible school will
be observed at 9:45. Joe H. Bozarth,
general
charge,
for the
ages. .-'9, .
Morning woeship, communion and
preaching at 10:45. The pastor will
give a further report of the recent
International Convention which
held in Denver, Colorado,
f*
Christian Endeavors will hold
regular weekly meet at 6:30 in
church annex.
Evening praise and worship at 7:30. i
The pastor will speak upon the sub--,
ject, "Obtaining Salvation.”
To all of these services the public |
"swap
»■ These figures are
memory and may not
are accurate enough
purposes. “Pete” read
ords without any oratorical frills, i
about as follows. For ten years he i
has fattened an average of seven i t , , . ,
. . , j. I to buy the calves to feed, but
and-a-half calves per year, they I „ ■ .
... . ’ . I Southwestern farmer whose cotton or
weighed an average of 900 pounds. ■ „ t
-— . ,. , , . wheat acreage has been reduced go
f t nd sold for au average of ten cents,, , . . .. ...
into the raising aud feeding of live-
or $90 a head. Prices In that ten years I
ranged from as low as six to as high .Bt<x:k aud »°ultry wlth as mu<-h lnter“
| est and stick to it with as much per-
sistence as they have shown in plant-
I lug cash crops regardless of price
I variations, they will find that feed
1 crops properly used in a long-time ro-
| tation system pay as much per acre
and per hour of. time as cotton.
' No expert at Washington or at
at Leodicea”.
' 6:15 p. m. Bible study and
... „ class for young people. At u» voue ...
OHoi.II1O?ey at : young men will M»Uriet4As.jtoWn been
^“7^* . 7 p. m. Preaching M*rvk-e. ~ *” ~
AU
rs and friends are requested
to be present. A cordial welcome
all
churches of Asia.
------ , »9n
BAPTIST CHURCH
R. H. Mathison, Pastor
count; but he sold oome xeea anajtoplc:
some time that would have otherwlm | tinued Th|g ^nclude<ia
Gal
railw
her u
FOR
Plano
Bell or
Hether
Munh.
nesday.
S. T
$1421
Gr
754, a
of
Opera
a d
cent u
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Pharr, E. M. The Lampasas Record (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 27, 1938, newspaper, October 27, 1938; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1214493/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.