The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 178, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 1, 1940 Page: 1 of 4
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Daily Leader
TUESDAY
NUMBER 17S.
Thirty-seventh year
TUESDAY
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NEW SALE PRICE!
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Cox & Shanks
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NOTE THE DATE AND CALL EARLY
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. E. S. Hunt returned
Lampasas Furniture Company
Sell it through Leaner Ada!
“The Best Place to Trade After All”
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TW
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should
their
of
the
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be
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“Gosh, I’m surprised! I thought we’d have a hard
Cnlor-wln river in-Mills county. More
500
leader Ada net renulta! Try it.
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TTV' r
TODAY & WEDNESDAY
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“Tailoring
Viiplatj and Silt
A representative of
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Mr. ud Mrs. W. M. Abbey of Del
Rio are. visiting here with Mrs. Ab-
bey’s mother, Rrs. S. J. -Campbell-
Scott, and other relatives.
• Big Twin Unit Oven
• Automatic Oven Light
< • Cooking Top Lamp
• Automatic Time Signal
Speed-Heat cooking
units with 5 speeds
• Smokeless Broiler
there will be
to overcome”
Mo4«l
B-3S
the
the
from pains. 100 5-grain tablets
49c at Nichols & Cass.
been
with
past
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J. M. Aubuchon of Chicago arrived
Tuesday afternoon In Lampasas for
a few days visit with his family. He
and
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hil
Advertising In The
Leader Gets
Results . . .
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Tissue
(d)
•Announcing
DIR IEMI-AII1U
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Our famous Chicago tailors
very »Vi
the Leader’s Reader Ads.”
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-th-
plenty
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this
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The Lampasas
H
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that when
v ill be sentenced
n<> hope
“He wants
on bis
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Sheets Klenzo Facial
for 25c at Nichols A- Cass.
i Miss
derwent
to
mptatid to
southern
at' the
• Automatic Oven Heat
Control
• Automatic Thermizcr Cook
ing with Tbriftomatic Switch
• One piece Porcelain Cabinet
with stainless top
—and many other highest quality features
COME IN AND SEE ITI
SjjEKg
gn
t
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LAMPASAS. TEXAS, OCTOBER 1. 1910.
Leroy Theatre
KIDNAPER AGREES TO MEE IN
JAIL. WITHOUT A TRIAL
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appreciated,
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a
wave” machine sending rays into the
sky which will paralyze German en-
gines.
London
■ aeronautics by
hear- but do
weapon.
Even the
many are
passing
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villa came 4n Monday evening for a
short visit*.here in the homes of his
fell ^5^2
Don Eua»i>i«
AMECHE • LEONTOVICH
Mary B«th Alan
HUGHES • CURTIS
G«otr« Ernoat . Roborr Lxiwary
L»on«l Royce • Sig Rumann
A RO<h Canlury Foa Pictura*-.,^
Plus ’ ‘-"3.......
“PUBLIC JITTERBUG NO. 1”
A Breadway Brevity
Also
“ISLE OE MYSTERY”
A Magic Carpet Short
Length of Program: 2 hrs., 5 min.
Shows start: 2:00, 4:05, (»:10, H.15.
Box Office Open Until 9:30
Mrs. Charles Wachendorfer and
‘ Wilmer Park visited Tuesday after-
noon in Austin.
-----------. J
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• Leo Ehlinger, district engineer, of _____----------—
Brownwood was a busineas visitor
Monday in Lampasas. Leader Ada get reaalta! Try it.
than any Frigidaire Elec n
Range we have ever offered
with all these deluxe features
tw
Nickki Kate Yazell
underwent a tonsillectomy Tuesday
[ morning at the local hospital.
I Will be here with a com-
31 plete showing of the new
Autumn and Winter
woolens in full pieces.
It’s your opportunity to provide
for all your needs in clothes and
have them tailored-to-your order for de-
livery at your convenience.
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY. OCTOBER 2 - 3
E
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rxMW^a i?ai.ai
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most optimistic—and
optimistic with
of September, another
i long series of “crisis
noV say the new weapon will end the
night bombing entirely.
sources said thc_v ex-
letup in the night bomb-
which they say are aimed
and sec-
objective
A. E. co
the
<‘S
The Marlann Phrtan Club will
meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 o’-
clock at the home of Mrs. C. S. Bing-
ham, Jr., with Mrs. Glynn Perkin’s
as co-hosteas.
perfectly aw;ji
hi pleads guilty lie
to life in San Quentin with
of parole,” Bullock said,
absolutely no plea f<u leniency
behalf.”
Muhlenbroich wa■•
raigned today, 10 days
naping, 1
Mary Layne of Austin un-
it tonsillectomy Tuesday
of Lampasas morning at the local hospital.
an hour.
“An unstifled sneeze sprays the
A. I of which travel 12 feet and at a rate
ps high as 150 feet per second,” said I
a foundation bulletin
It warned .that the so-called
was the greatest I
tn- industry, adding
.4
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■'-■?■■—......T
k'
to have been ar-1
. - aftej- the kid- '
but Superior Judge Maxwell |
McNutt refused to 1
()C oilt the advice of counsel
Fl
_lw
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health problvrr ... ■ ■ ..——n ..
thaU haamT. jHvtCVtion -ef workmen^ __
was especially essential during the
I present period of defense production. |
Berlin, Sept. 30.—Walter Barre,
minister of agriculture, declared to-
day that Germany’’ war year bread J
grains harvest would be only 2 per [
Mr. and Mrs. Aubuchon
E.
on West First street
and their furniture is being moved
iu re from Omaha. Mr. Aubuchon will
return to Chicago the latter part of
tin- week, but will return in Novem-
ber tor ij-longer visit with Mrs. Au
buchon and children.
grandson, Edward Bell, and his wife ■
of Salina.
<
_____y________ .
time getting rid of those odd items we had to sell And
we got much mote than we expected, too!*——
AMERICAN LEGION MEETS
SUNDAI AT STATE PARK
The American Legion will have a
“get together” and supper Sunday ■ came by way of Omaha, Neb.,
afternoon, October 6, at 4:30 o'clock 1 was accompanied by Mrs. B. F. Mar-
at the state park. All Legion mem, tin who is making her home With
bers are expected to be present and j them, ami Mrs. J. W. Matthews of
biing their wives and any ex-service i Menard, who has been visiting there
men they care to invite. with them.
I have recently purchased the C.
Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Hunt returned Stokes home
home Tui day aftirnoon from Salina, a,1<' lheii
Kansas, .where they spent about two ■
months. Mi. Hunt was confined to a.
hospital in Kansas City, Mo., for a
few weeks, but is feeling tine now
They were accompanied home by their
BROWNWOOD FACES BOOM AS
A MILITARY TRAINING CENTER FAMINE. NAZI LEADER SAYS
I ' w
Brownwood, Sept. 3(1.-A Texas, nel.|in> Svpt 3().__Walter
eoUege town now becomes a military i
training center, Brownwood faces the ■
pleasant prospect of a substantial
population increase and the release un(1(.,. ,h<. peacetime average and
for local trade of an $800,000 month-
ly payroll.
The war department selected the’
city i"- the «ite of a national guard
training camp, and the government
is spending about $5,000,000 for can-
tonment facilities for 27,000 men —
most of them to be drawn from
• Texas.
Hundreds of workmen are busy at ■
construction on the 2,000 acre camp
site a mile south of the city. A I
contract hold by Robert E. McKee
Construction company of El ‘Paso,
calls for completion by December 1
of 245 buildings and 4,500 wooden |
frames for five-man tents.
Assigned thus far for training
Camp Brownwood are the 3flth Di-
I - vision, including Texas’ national
ugard air unit, the 111th Observation
Squadron, and the 113th Cavalry of
, Iowa.
The municipal airport,- at present
used only by CAA student pilots
from Daniel Baker and Howard
L Payne colleges, will be the home sta-
I tion of'the 111th, which will ..b^
moved heCe from Houston.
| for the 146 men in the unit
I. constructed at the airport.
The guardsmen will manuevor on
I a great tract of ranchland which
I extends from a few miles south of
| the city limits of Brownwood to the
than 80.000* acres already have been ,
leased for maneuvers, and artillery
•nd infantry ranges.
FUNERAL SERVICES MONDAY
FOR MRS. A. M. FRAZER
Funeral services were conducted
Monday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock in
the Presbyterian church fnr Mr*.
A. M. Frazer of Seguin, a former
resident of Lampasas. The services
were in charge of Rev. Kennedy, pas-
tor of r+it- Presbyterian church of,
Seguin, and' he was Assisted by Rev.
C. E. Lambert of this city. Interment
followed at Oak Hill cemetery and
pallbearers were: II. V. Campbell,
\V. B. McGee, C. A. Northington, Ed
Voting, Sam Dickens, Jr., and E. B.
Millican.
t Mrs. Frazer passed away Sunday,
afternoon, September 29th, at her
home in Seguin and her remains
were brought here in the Briggs-
Camel funeral coach. She had been
in bad health for the past five years,
due to paralysis, and confined to
her bed for the past five and a half
months.
The deceased, whose maiden name
was Miss Mabie Lemmon, was born
July 24, D‘81. at Shelbyville, Indiana.
She was married March 7, 1907, in
Lampasas to A. M. Frazer and they
moved from livre in 192(5 to Beeville.
They later lived in Corpus , Christi
and since 19.36 had resided in Se-
guin.
Beside her husband, she is survived
by her mother, Mrs. J. 11. Lemmon,
and two sisters, Miss Maud and
Nell Lemmon of Louisville, Ky.
Lemmon- is critically ill at this time
and both of the daughters are at her i £
bedside and were unable to be here.
The family has many Lampasas
friends who extend sincere sympathy
in their beicavement at this time.
Redwood City, Calif., Sept. 30.—
Wilhelm Jakob Mpblenhroieh agreed I
today to spend the rest of his life in
prison for the "perfect kidnapnjg” of
j three-year-old Mare De Tristan, Jr.,
which failed
. Joseph J. Bullock, attorney ap- I
pointed by the court over Mublen-j
broieh’s prole :. announced the 40-
ycar "Id C' rman would plead jrujlty
tomorrow and ask for an immediate
senteme.
“He i
line or playing cards
land table covers. A our patYbnagc is
| solicited and will
i Mrs. Ft r nic Sale.
Puretest Aspirin for quick .
(dJ i SEEKING ITS VICTIM
Pittsburgh, Sept. 30.—The Air Hy-
Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Wolf of Clarks-; p.ienP Foundatfon reported today that
corrrhon cold germs, propelled by a
t sneeze, hunt new- victims at a speed
brother. They are returning from a letter than 100 miles
vacation trip of three weeks spent in ,
Califrirnia. They were accompanied wjth thousands of droplets, some
on the trip by Mr. and Mrs. O.
Englebrecht of Georgetown and„.vis- j
ited all points of interest en route.
Mr. Wolf and Mr. Engelbrecht arc|
nperstars of motion picture theatres ; “common cold”
and enjoyed very much the visit to
NEW WEAPON IS ABOUT
READY FOR USE
London, Sept. <30.—Swarms of Ger-
man tighter planes are being used as
cavalry of the air to smash British
fighter resistance and allow heavy
Nazi bombers to filter through, neu-
tral air attaches said today.
This tactic* they said, has
employed in daylight iaiding
increasing frepuency in the
three days.
Such raids, it was pointed out, re-
sult from the failure of night
bombers to hit military targets con-
sistently.
These
■ pected no
■ ings, v 1
first at military objectives
ond, at terrorizing the population of
London.
Large scale attacks
as many as
of them
different days in September,
tried first t-o dislodge the Royal Air
Force from its southern bases.
The second, objective was
force th<- R.
“pack" London and
areas with fighter planes at the exT
pensc of the industrial centers in the
Midlands and Wales.
British military comment shows
most experts believe that these- at-
tacks failed and that the R. A I-.
n%w is in a better position than be-
_____________ fore the start of the aerial siege i..
OCCUPIED NATIONS FACE NO
W-i
I
would “ensure the stability of bread
rations in Germany for a long time
to come.”
!, nut the 194<L,grain yields at
24,600.000 metric tons, or 96:l,(jM,(KHJ
bushels.
He asserted that
no, special difficulties
in the occupied countries.
“The food situation there is badly
underestimated twiroad,”' he continu-
| ed. “If some French towns
'suffer hunger next winter—which 1
| dont expect—it would only lie
own fault.”
i He criticized “the lazineqp”
. ■ French agriculture in genend.
, ( He said. jGermany woulff ^ have__a a
buhiper crop of potatoes, her great
staple, estimating it at 60,000,000
mettic tons (2.203,000,000 bushels),
or 5,000,000 metric tons higher than
any previous average.
The minister said only ’18,000^)00
tons of potatoes would be needed for
human consumption and the rest
would be available for feeding stock.
Barracks i Hp th<* !W»r IteeC crop
willbe|ttt 270,000,000, metric tons, which
l also would mean h surplus for stock.
Darre pictured Germany’s food
situation in general as fully satis-
factory and said fat and meat
tion£ could remain unchanged
winter.
sntri the—would have ,
ofll vegetables, but there
i would be a pronounced fruit crop
failure because of the prolonged
Pure Candies, All Filled Mixture,'winter and had aummer’ ’
• 10 os. jar for 25c at Nichols &
ClM», ’ (d) I
correspondents learning
ear declare they
not see — the new
which sent
500 German planes, most
fighters, into action on six
were
HliLfil
SELECT YOl R ( ARDS NOW
I have my sample line of 1940
greeting c;:r ls :iml will be pleased to
show them to you now in order that
th Iyou Inay s'!( ct "hat, you will need.
In ; I also have a
months—do
■ aerial
London Sijitember 7.
These three seasons are given:
1. New British typos of fighters!
and bonj,bets better than anything'
I the Nazis have are ready for action, j i,y
2 The now weapon which will prow r", y , , , . «
, ,. <• cell and found he had written an
the answer to random hombmg of >i( t
London by night is about to come tn- <h(>jr
child. They t"ld him. the English was
not perfect. He tore up the note and
with the rhetorical aid of attorneys
wrote:__
T '‘Being fully consclodl} nf t+
radio i ity of ,h<‘ offen’“' wh'c,“ 1 have com-
Ernest Jones of Buchanan Dam
returned to his home Monday even-
ing after spending the past few
days here with friends and reatives.
'a because everybody MM3* -
/.
Daily Leactef i j
” “Where Lampasas is Entertained”
(Perfect Talking Pictures)
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let him plead with- |
1 and post-1
I poned arraignment until tomorrow. >
Despite Mllhletibl inch's protest, “I
I don’t want an attot ney, ’ Judge Mc-|
Nutt named Bullock and Joseph F.j
as hi counsel.
arrived in Muhlenbroieh’sj
found he had written
pology to the
■ Marc
to use.
» Much has been written but little |
seen or heard about Jhis “new wea-
pon.”
fiuesses rantfl1" frbrfl emirten shtti^a,
Ing clouds of gas into the area where ■
-bombers are in operation, to
I mitted againt you and your imme-
.diat- family, 1 could not possibly ask
you to accept my apologies.”
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The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 178, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 1, 1940, newspaper, October 1, 1940; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1285989/m1/1/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.