The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 71, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 28, 1940 Page: 3 of 4
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■ Fur-Clad Island
Gama of Thought
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BABY CHICKS
iTOfg.
JEPARTMKNT 1«
DALLAS, TEXAS
Your Reflection
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The Questions
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with
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Roll like a
4011
• ■ $
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4
amount of smoking per pack (see Mow, left).
FOR EXTRA MIJ
c
CAMELS
SLOW-BURNNG COSTUER TOBACCOS
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EXTRA COOLNESS, EXTRA RAMI-
•HouseholdNeujs
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Cool and frost with boiled
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■TLAJB CHICK CO, Rt- Louis. Mol
A Quiz With Answers
Offering Information
on Various Subjects
ASK ME
ANOTHER
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add sugar
■\ Sift the
Value of Books
Books, like proverbs, receive
their chief value from the stamp
and esteem of ages through which
they have passed.—Sir William
Temple. ’ .
Mixed Defense
The indiscriminate defense of
right and wrong contracts the
understanding, while it hardens
the heart.—Junius.
1. Rome was built on how many
hills?
2. How is the temperature of a
Centigrade thermometer reduced
to Fahrenheit?
3. Why did Lady Godiva ride
through Coventry?
4. What is a salaam, a fish, a
salutation, or a small coal bucket?
5. To .win the Democratic pres-
idential nomination a candidate
must receive—a majority of the
votes in the party convention, two-
_ thirds of the votes, or four-fifths of
the votes?____
6. Why are rats used extensively
in biological research?
7. Wili a car develop less horse-
power at 5,000 feet elevation than
at sea level?
8. What is the beam of a ship?
8. What is a peccadillo—a Span-
QEORGE CASE-lead lag bass-stetosr
of the major leagues
Our Meditation
Though reading and conversa-,
tion may furnish us with many
ideas of men and things, yet it' *
is our own meditation must form
our judgment.—Dr. I. Watts.
-
iritA
«ron.r
WORID
4C
_ Kills
Many Insect?
ON HOWIRSs MUtts
vie it as us a snruss
Oeewad original aaefsU
baftfog, free year dearer
> •«'
» U’l
The world is a looking glass,
and gives back to every man the
reflection of his own face. Frown
St it and it will in turn look sourly
upon you; laugh at it and with it,
and it is a jolly kind companion.—
Thackeray.
DOCTOR’S FORMULA
quickly rsKdvws flary itching af
ECZEMA
If futOf Qf RanHjs RVt*
I .
AAAAAAAAAAAA A AAA Jk
Z'''1 FORGE CASE, Joe DiMaggio, "Bucky" Walters,
V_J Johnny Mize. ..so many of the top-flight players
in America's favorite sport prefer America's favorite
cigarette—CameL
They have found—and you will find—that Camel’s
matchless blend of costlier tobaccos and Camel’s
slower way of burning mean several important
f/
' ■ 'H
A Bit Hasty
“So Tom took a course
aid. Is he good at it?”
“Well, a man was
drowned yesterday, and thb ffrst
THE LAMPASAS LEADER
Rttern
SPEED'S OKAY IN BASEBALL, BUT I LIKE MV CIGARETTE }
SLOW-BURNING. CAMELS BURN SLOWER AND GIVE ME
THE EXTRA MILDNESS I WANT—EXTRA SMOKING,TOO
boiling |
ish word for a peck measure, a
petty fault, or a piglike mammal?
10. What British islands in the
South Atlantic control the Strait
of Magellan?
Date Filling.
1 cup dates (chopped fine)
*/i cup sugar
3 tablespoons flour
1 cup hot water
1 teaspoon lemon extract
Combine ingredients and cook un-
til thick. Cool.
ItMH Ohlskt Msufbly
—!•• LOTS ONLY—
Is JrJr"v
P* a «p aU para-brad.
—W« Xatab <1 Sraada—
■
Cream shortening and sugar to-
gether. Sift flour, soda, salt and
ginger, and blend with the creamed
mixture using a pastry blender or
a fork. Add molasses and egg yolk
•nd beat well. Then add I
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1
The Answers
tf £ -
1. Seven.
2. Multiply by 9/5 and add 32.
3. To help the people escape
heavy taxes.
4. A salutation.
5. A majority.
6. One chief reason: Owing to
their size they require a minimum
amount of testing substances.
7. A..car. developing 100 horsa-
power at sea level will develop
but 82 horsepower at 5,000 feet
elevation because the density of
the air decreases with altitude.
8. Its width.
9. Petty fault.
10. Falkland.
-Fl
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• In recent laboratory tests, CAMELS
horned 25% slower than the svengs
of the 15 other of the largest-selling
brands tested-slower than assy of
them. That means, on the average, •
smoking pirn equal to
E EXTRA SMOKES
3 PER PACKI
a
43
Keeping Time
“What’s the idea—only
prunes?” roared the British army
sergeant.
“You save the stones twice a
week till you get a thousand,”
said the orderly, “and then you
know the war lasted five years all
but ten weeks."
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pjERE’S a beautifully graceful
* 1 dress that has everything you
. need to make your figure look
more slender and supple. Made
with a long, unbroken line in the
back, 8631 has a front panel widen-
ing towaid the hem, (in itself cre-
ating the illusion of height as
against width because it directs
the eye up and down) bodice gath-
ers and shoulder darts. Thus
with a few easy details, it assures
correct fit over the bust, slender-
ness of waistline and hips.
The deep, narrow v of the neck-
line adds to its becomingness, and
you can trim that, and the sleeve
edges, with dainty frills or lace
without losing any of the slim-
ming magic! Wear it now in
small-figured print or dark sheers.
Pattern No. 8631 is designed for
sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50
and 52. Size 38 requires, with
I
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Here’s a Booklet Every
Hoites* Needs.
Eleanor Howe’s cook book, Easy
Entertaining, will give you menus
and tested recipes for other “Teen
Age Parties.” There are hints for
planning picnic lunches, and beach
parties, too, and suggestions for for-
mal and informal entertaining of ev-
fry kind.
Send 10 cents, now, to “Easy En-
tertaining,” care Eleanor Howe, 919
North Michigan Avenue, Chicago,
and get your copy of this useful
! book.
(Released by Western Newspaper UafoaJ
Fold in stiffly beaten egg white.
Spread batter in greased jelly roll-
pan (about 11 by 16 inches) and
bake in a moderately hot oven (375
degrees) for approximately 18 min-
utes,
icing.
yearly . —
thing - Tom did was to thboW'St 4
glass of water in his face.”
_____________ K •*
Quite Modest
They were discussing a certain public •
official.
“The trouble with him,” observed
the cynic, “it that he taken too modest
a view of hit own insignificance.n
%
short sleeves, 4Vi yards of 39-inch
material without nap; with long,
4% yards of 39-inch material. 2V*
yards lace or ruffling to trim.
Send order to:
Foraer Amy Mei
4Lyou are less than 36 years
of age have had at least one
year of continuous service in
the Regular Army, were last
discharged honorably, and
meet the physical require-
ments for Army enlistment,
you are eligible for enlist-
ment in the Regular Army
Reserve. No interference
with civilian occupation. For
particulars Ms to pay ahd
other information regarding
enlistment write or apply to
the nearest Army Recruiting
Station.
I. $. Amy Recruiting
Station
Dallas, Texas
Other U. S. Army Recruiting
Stations are located in Fort
Worth, Paris, .Tyler, Waco,
Sherman, Abilene, Greenville,
Texarkana, Wichita Falls,
Corsicana, and Marshall,
Texas.
■AHU* BUU *411111*4 **1U irriVMUUU* U4M IAJ
'external eauae. Fint trial convinces!
Real severe cases may need Extra
Strength Zemo. All drupttorea.
vft? m
asked one, blandly
? driving too fast?”
“No,” answered the officer, sar-
castically, “you were flying too
low.”
Maid (peeking through the key-
hole)—Really, some people are too
inquisitive. There’s the misfug .
reading her husband’s mail.
College Cakes.
% cup shortening
IVi cups granulated sugar
2*4 cups cake flour
1 teaspocn baking powder
teaspoon soda
¥4 teaspoon salt
1 cup sour milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
4 egg whites
Cream shortening, 1
gradually, and beat well,
flour, baking pow-
der, soda and salt
together, and add
to the creamed T t:
mixture alter- VJ
nately with sour
milk and soda.
Beat egg whites
until stiff and fold
into the batter.
Spread in shal-
low, greased cake
pan and bake in a moderate oven
(365 degrees) for about 25 minutes.
Cool and cut cake into fancy shapes
with cookie cutters. Ice with pastel*
tinted College Icing.
College Icing.
t 2 cups granulated sugar
*4 teaspoon cream of tartar
1 cup hot water
1 pound confectioners’ sugar
(approximately)
Cake coloring
Cook sugar, cream of tartar and
water in a saucepan until a thin
syrup is formed (226 degrees). Cool
slightly. Then add confectioners’
sugar to make an icing of pouring
consistency. Add coloring, then pour
icing over the cakes, covering them
entirely. Decorate as desired.
Old-Fashioned Filled Cookies.
(Makes about 30 cookies.)
1 cup shortening
Its name to Possession, and it
can be found on the charts of
South-West Africa. Seen from the
sea it almost blinds you, because
of the white guano which covers
it, but a hundred years ago a Cap-
tain Morrell, who wrote a book,
“Narrative of Four Voyages,”
said that when he arrived off Pos-
session he found it clad in fur. The
[whole island was covered with the
Bodies of fur-seals, their skins still
fan them. He believed the seals
had been overwhelmed and suf-
focated by one of the terrifically
hot whirlwinds which sweep out to
the ocean fro'a the desert coast.
Captain Morrell may have been
right in his theory, but the same
hot winds blow from the land
Boday and yet the seals do not
^rneet a similar fate. Another of
the sea’s mysteries.
"TMKINtt THR COUNTRY RY STORRS
tfiit—1 no
ALNI ?•*seenuuS I™
CUPPLK* COMMNV, ST. LOUM, MtMOWR
A GET-TOGETHER FOR THE GANG
(See Recipes Below)
Whether it’s games for two or the
Whole crowd, you catTfilUFFThf
4L* ing-on-19 set by
serving unusual
refreshments that
carry an air of so-
phistication. They
needn’t be a bur-
den on the chief
cook, either, if
she masters a few
short cuts in pre-
paring them.
Sandwiches, salted nuts, olives
and radishes, little cakes and coffee
make a spread that appeals to any
age, and that is sure to be acclaimed
by enthusiastic youngsters. Serve
decaffeinated coffee, so that youth-
ful enthusiasm needn’t be checked
in a demand for second cups; and
pass lengths of stick cinnamon in-
stead of spoons to stir this tempting
brew. By all means flatter the so-
phisticated teensters by using your
best demi-tasse cups.
An assortment of sandwiches can
be made in short order if you cut
the bread lengthwise, after remov-
ing the crusts, and buttering. Spread
the filling on one big slice, top with
another, and cut into half a dozen
small sandwiches. You can make
' attractive little cakes that will look
as handsome as the French chef’s
“petit fours” by cutting a plain loaf
i cake or plain layers into small
shapes. Then cover with frosting,
and decorate with candied fruit.
After-Dinner Coffee or Demi-Tasse.
, (Extra Strength.)
Use heaping tablespoons de-
caffeinated coffee, regular grind, for
each cup (Vi pint) of water. Make
by any method desired. If using de-
caffeinated coffee drip grind, meas-
ure well-rounded tablespoon instead
of heaping tablespoon.
Rolled Sandwiches.
1 loaf bread (very fresh for rolling)
I *4 cup butter (thoroughly creamed)
2 packages cream cheese
2 tablespoons cream
¥4 teaspoon oalt
Red and green liquid food coloring
Remove crusts frojn a fresh loaf
of bread. Cut entire loaf in thin
slices lengthwise.
Butter each long
1 slice and spread
j ot each slice
a filling
made of cream
cheese moistened
with cream and
tinted pink with
red food color.
V
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XX7HAT men need today in
* ’ this time of trouble to not.
a way put so much as a way
of high and manly living with-
in.—Sir Wilmott Lewi*.
The merit beloags to the be-
ginaer, should even the sueees-
sor de better.—Arab Proverb.
4 word of kindness is a toad; oft
dropped by chance, it grows istto •
flower.
Do not anxiously hope for
what is not yet come; do not
vainly regret what is already
past.—Chinese Proverb.
Let friendship creep gently to e
height ; if it rush to it, it may soon
run itself out of breath.—Thomas
Fuller.
■
1
4 cups rolled oats
1 teaspoon soda
‘•4 cup boiling water
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
P/i cups flour
1 teaspoon cinnamon
Cream shortening and add suga.
gradually. Add rolled oats. Dissolve
soda in hot water, and add to
creamed mixture with the vanilla.
Add flour and cinnamon, and mix
well. Chill, roll out very thin, and
cut into rounds. Place a teaspoon
of date filling between 2 cookie
rounds and press edges together
with a fork. Place on greased cookie
sheet an8 bake in a moderately hot
oven (375 degrees) for about 15 min.
utes.
Ribbing ’Em
Two motorists were zipping
along at 70 or 80 miles an hour
when a police patrol appeared
from nowhere and forced them
over to the curb.
“What’s the matter, officer?”
"Were wu -
■ v
* range Jiffy Cakes.
¥4 ct p butter
1 cu > sugar
2 eg ;s
1*1 cups cake flour
14 teaspoons baking powder
teaspoon salt
4 cup orange juice
Grated rind—1 orange
Cream butter and add sugar slow-
ly while beating constantly. Add
I eggs, one at a time, mixing thor-
oughly. Mix and sift together the
flour, baking powder, and salt, and
I add alternately with the Grange
1 juice and grated orange rind. Bake
1 in greased muffin tins in a moder-
ately hot oven (375 degrees) for ap-
proximately 20 minutes.
Cornucopia Sandwiches.
Slice fresh bread in ¥4-inch slices.
Trim off crusts, so that each slice
is about 24 inches square. Spread
with softened butter, and any de-
sired sandwich filling. Roll, to form
a cornucopia of horn. Fasten with
ioothpicks. Chill well before serving.
Fort Atkinson Ginger Creams.
(Makes 3 dozen 14-inch squares)
4 cup shortening
2 tablespoons sugar
2 cups flour
¥< teaspoon soda
¥4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon ginger
1 cup dark molasses
1 egg (separated)
1 cup boiling water
Cream shortening and sugar
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Spread the other
j half with moistened cheese tinted
i with green food color. Roll like a
■ jelly roll and wrap in a tea towel
i wi >ng out of cold water. Chill and
’S
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21—40
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Use L Unity
Things worthiest singly are use-
1 collectively.—Ov.L
Pity Forgot
In extreme danger, fear turns
deaf ear to every feeling of pity.
■Caesar.
Waking Dream
You ask what hope is. He (Aris-
tle) says it is a waking dream.—
lertius.
MdatrvMt.
theirwork-
What You Can
The manly part is to do with
night and main what you can do.
I/—Emerson.
Ip Them Cleanse the Blood
of Hazmful Body Wasta
sar kldaaya am m
tka
JTTOURPtP?
Bwo^Rwulsy RaRstof
It yoa thtak an lantiwa
art alike, j oat try thia
nBHK*^ ««a«*aMa lasathra.
, tbarnaglCratraahlM. Ia*i*oratlaa. D*.
SIMPLE I
NEURALGIA
IPENETROJ
waataaattar
•at act aa Natan Intaodad-^faU ta ra-
awra tauaitMlS tkat. if r Hal a it, a»»
pabae tkaaraf aad apaat tka vkaia
ba aaatag kaataaka,
attMkaaf RintaMaa.
■dable raiw frodjpick hr.a.rh**, billow apeUa.
«4 feeling vbcaflawSatati with rawUpntfea.
UL.-1 RQfe • ZSc boa ot NR from root
rnROUl RISK draaalM- Mabe the teat—Ueo
aot deUcbted. retunt the boa to ae. We al*
faad the purebaaa
rice. Thet'e tele.
K NR T.Meta today
■11-
amis
Read Thssa lapiitsrt Facts!
lai raring nerree ean make you old, haggard,
raaky—can make your Ute a aigntmara al
•iouey. aeU pity and “the biuaa.”
Often euch airmaaama ia due to famala
■actional dieordere. So take famoue Lydia
» Hakham’a Vegatabie Compound to hip
dm unstrung name and laaeen functional
Irregularitiaa*’ For over 60 yearn raUet-
Iviag Pinkhaia’a Compound haa helped tone
I thoueaodo of grandmother^ mother* aad
Mgbtera “ia time of need “ Try ill
nftjM^as^atoht^ aweUtag^ puienmn
anxiety aad^eaa at pep aad rtraagth
Other eigne of kidney or bladder die-
ardor are oeaaatiaaaa baraias, aaaaty er
too fraqaaat arinatioa.
Thera akoaH be no doabt that prampt
traataaaot ia artaar thaa aasiaat. Ran
Doan's PiHs. 0aaa*a hare been wtauriag
aw triaada for more thaa forty yean.
They hare a aatiea-wlde reputatfoa.
An recommended by. grateful seoato the
country over. Atk goer neiskborl
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,________________________________________________________________________________
JM*,-
.Doan spills
Watch Your
Kidneys/
TO NIGHT
5
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a . I l Of 1 s r irj i .; ii i .x ‘i 11 . r ,
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
SXWING CIRCLK PATTXRN DR PT.
Room 1M4
til W. Waeker Dr. Chicago
Enclose 15 cents la coins for
Pattern No........... Size...........
Name ...............*................
Addresi .............................
cially for men, be sure to read
Eleanor Howe’s column next
week.
Whether you’re chairman of the
"Eats Committee” for the Busi-
ness Men's club, or planning •
supper party for Dad or • high
school age son, you’ll find hints
on how to be successful*- in this
column next week. There’ll be
menus and tested recipes, too.
K
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The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 71, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 28, 1940, newspaper, May 28, 1940; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1285739/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.