The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 173, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 25, 1940 Page: 2 of 4
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THE LAMPASAS LEADER
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By CHERIE NICHOLAS
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> the side, stomach ache, headache, | ,
Bull Up to Neck in Tar
AU group
games are supervised.
culation by calling on the heart and i
tremendously smart
0
of
Two-Piece Dress
Noveltv Purse
Then X-ray treatment
•jsm
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But ta think
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Thar Is Gold in Them
.Courageous Prize Chow
Q — How
Pinafore Prettiness
and sports occasions have lost none
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nan
Oddities Dumped
In U. S. Mailboxes;
Carriers Nervous
Lizard, Lunches and Tools
Among Queer Things
Turned Up.
Cadets and Instructors
Quickly Rescued.
*
!
1
dresses are
with a mere sleight of hand gesture
of the wearer your garment is a
will enliven your college career.
Mentioning them briefly, there’s
flap pockets are added, the newest
idea being for pockets made'of flat
fur.
children
one-thiid of the children for longer
matology (skin diseases), reports
his use of boiled liver extract in
Boiling Increases Efficiency.
Dr. W. Marshall, Appleton, Wis.,
by a backfire.
Of Mr. ]
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f. .
brush wool sweater with lacy cro-
cheted hood as shown below to right.
The snow-white house robe of fleecy
texture as i
destined to become a college girl
classic.
(Released by WeaWrn Newspaper Union.I
Id X-ray a successful way to treat
a goiter?
A^—1. There is only one thyroid I
gland T -
2. If
mo
ten
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the 1
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to al
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The<
posia
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exhibit
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orary
collej
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•uelega
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dec:<<
F. I
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being
ber w«
tured
genera
ities,
ences,
ences.
The
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H SPEAKING OF
SPORTS
By ROBERT McSHANE
Rslsawd by Nstnpapsr Unios
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niblick shot to
within six feet of the- thirty-fifth
Is ka two sections.
a groat increase in ;
weight after remora! of thyroid
gland, thyroid extract is given. , 1
S. X-ray is an effective seethed ot A
removing a goiter but takes a long J
tine. •
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’ WOULD now appear that an- .
other use for liver extract han
Jersey City police arrived with
emergency equipment nothing but
the bull’s head and part of his back
could be seen above the tar.
With the help of a steel cable,
boom and winch on the 10-ton wreck-
ing truck the bull was extricated
BARNEGAT, N. J. — A tale of
bravery and calm discipline among
14 Admiral Farragut Naval acade-
that the general test of circulation
by exercise (10 deep bends of the j
knees) shows that this group reacts
nated in Thicago in 1935.
attendance now exceeds 5,000,000, its
sponsors claim . . . Glen Seidel is
giving up his coaching job at Tulane
after this year to go into business in
Minnesota . . . The national rifle
and pistol matches, held this year
at Camp Perry, Ohio, have been
held Annually for 35 years. Its spon-
sors are the National Rifle associa-
tion and thrf U. S. war department
different.
Sammy threw a final round of 68
—5 under par—at Nelson, and It
.... didn’t do him any good. Said Sam
The county agent’s office reports • sadly: “I don't know what I have to
do to crash in. there. I guess I’ll
Just never win a' big one.”
A lot of people would argue that
last remark, for Snead proved in
that final 36-hole match that he is
championship material.
Sport Shorts-
H
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ro
football season is on. It is a youth-
ful fur and it's going to be the
“rage” this season. In the picture
it trims a zipper coat in olive green.
1 The bag problem is solved with a
muff bag of the ocelot worked with
the self-wool that fashions the coat.
Fashion scouts looking for the
ideal black coat this season will hail
the model to the left as a real “find.”
It has a zipper fastening. You’ll love
the big pockets bound with Persian
__
were afraid .
that Teller county, in which the
famous gold camp is lotated, ranks
near the top of Colorado counties
in the production of certified seed
potatoes.
These potatoes, the report said,
thrive in the deep, black high al-
titude soil.
J
and gravel. Mr. Bodnar, fearing
that tar-solvent naphtha would do
.. z
is that
do ;
Bomb Crater in Back Yard f
Briton Turn* It to Profit
LONDON.—The owner of a bunga-
low on the outskirts of a southcoast
town where bombs were dropped by
German raiders said he was doing
a flourishing business, charging
sightseers a penny each to see the
large crater made by the bomb in
his back yard. Although the bunga-
low is near the crater, only a few
windows were broken.
Wrecked in 1914, He
Just Learns Details
RENO, NEV.-On Christmas
day, 1914, Ernest C. Bennett was
in a train wreck at Imlay, Nev.,
but traffic was quickly restored
and Bennett went on to his des-
tination without knowing exactly
what happened.
Recently h£ went to a newspa-
per office and looked up the story
of the wreck in the files. Now he
knows what occurred.
i
Ba
look up new coats.
With almost uncanny wizardry de-
signers are designing such ingenious
contrivances as linings that zip in
and out of coats in the twinkling of
an eye, jackets, coats, and even
New is the purse mounted on a
wide shoulder band as pictured. In
this instance the purse is really part
a
Hi 1
EqOa 1
top to the left that tells of the wide-
spread vogue for patriotic jewelry. '
Wear it on your lapel. And the cun- t
ning fringpd shawl of green jersey
with hat to match. See it centered
to the left? It’s adorable. Below note
the many-strand necklace and
bracelet of large pearls. It's the
latest. The sketch at the center top
tells you that huge fur pockets oo
coats are tres chic. A triangle or
bulkiness round the waistline. Thus
the long-torso line is accentuated.
In some instances skirts are the treatment of 14 cases of acne in
seamed on to the new longer-length which he obtained satisfactory re-
jackets, which actually gives im- suits. The injection of liver extract
pression of a two-piece. Often largo —six drops—is given so that a suf-
ficient amount of the specific (or
I needed) vitamin may be had. When
injectable liver extract is boiled for
30 minutes, its acne-improving fac-
tor seems to increase. ‘‘When this
boiled extract is given to patients
already taking liver extract regular-
ly, their improvement appears more
| rapid.”
This means then that to^our pres-
Vanquished by Wildcat
OAKLAND.—The pet chow of Mrs.
William Pearson which won first in
'its claw* at the Oakland dog show
two years ago is dead as the result
of too much courage in chasing a
wildcat.
The dog treed the cat at the top
of a ridge, but eventually the cat
.. leaped to the ground, the dog closed
|a^ a fierce fight ensued, but in the
end Donna, the dog, lay dead with
a broken back.
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MILWAUKEE. — Letter carriers
have found it best to expect the
worst when they open the corner
mailbox preparatory to collecting
■letters and parcels.
‘ As Postmaster John A. Eleissner
]Will verify, the items absent-mind-
:edly dropped into the green boxes
daily in Milwaukee read like the in-
ventory for a well-stocked pawn-
shop—and at that you’d probably
find it difficult to procure a lizard
or a stale loaf of bread undi r the
sign of the three balls.
The lizard Fleissner lists as the
oddest object recovered from a
mailbox, with a diamond drill worth
about $85 rated most valuable.
One day recently a collector dis-
covered two reserved tickets for
“Gone With the Wind.”
He turned them over to the in-
quiry section of the post office and
the theater was notified. Shortly
a man called the box office and was
told where to find his lost tickets.
“I guess I must have dropped
them in the box when I mailed some
letters,” he explained.
Compacts and Purses.
According to Fleissner, unthinking
citizens are particularly prone to
drop such articles as gloves, key
rings, compacts, purses and small
packages containing new purchases
■into the mailboxes. It's also sur-
prising, he says, how many per-
sons must go hungry at noon—
for lunches are quite common
■among the stray objects that are
tossed carelessly into the boxes.
The postmaster thinks that hurry-
ing stenographers, eager to get
Ihome after work, are responsible
for many of the odd itenjs.
Streetcar passes often find their
■way into the mailboxes. However,
thqy are returned only if the owner
can give the neighborhood in which
he “mailed” the pass. That rule
was adopted one week when three
(passes were found and 10 persons
^appeared and claimed to have lost
(them.
Fleissner estimates that between
150 and 200 objects that were never
/meant to be mailed are collected
lin Milwaukee monthly.
Word of Warning.
As a word of warning to those
who find themselves among the ab-
sent-minded, Fleissner points out
that the lost articles cannot be re-
turned by the collector who opens
ithe box, but must be retrieved by
the owner from the post office de-
partment assigned to handle such
items.
About 75 per cent of the stray
articles are called for and the rest
’are sent to the dead parcel-post
^branch at St. Paul, Minn., where
{they periodically are auctioned.
The previously mentioned loaf of
bread technically shouldn't be in-
Jcluded under stray items, as it real-
ty was intended for the mails. How-
lever, the post office was unable to
'deliver it because it was inadequate-
*ljr addressed.
Then one day an excited woman
{called and said her sister had never
[received a loaf of bread mailed to
jher. Did the post office find the
Ibread?
I She was assured that the bread
iwas safe, but a J>it stale by now.
; “The bread isn’t important,” the
[woman explained, "but there's $2
in it. I cut a hole in the loaf and
put the money in to surprise my
sister. Please hold it until she calls
for it.”
burned at sea was recounted recent-
ly by Commandant Herbert D Hill
of the academy.
The youngsters quietly lined up
while two instructors ordered them
to don life preservers and leap sin-
gly into the Atlantic ocean. They
gathered in a circle away from the
/Sweethearts’ Tree’ Dies
Slowly From Progress
BUFFALO, N. Y. — Delaware
park’s "Sweethearts’ tree” is dying
•a slow death—a victim of the city’s
(progress.
The tree, a 60-year-old weeping
;beech, has countless initials carved
on its trunk and lower branches—a
{living memento to innumerable ro-
mantic couples.
Although Father Time has oblit-
,erated many of the older initials,
carvings from as long ago as 1919
‘are still discernible.
thirtieth and went ahead for the first
blazing 60-foot former navy subma-
I self-reliance in these delicate chib
dren.
• • •
Liver Extract Is
i Good for Pimples
square babushka head kerchief of j
multi-colored gleaming rayon satin
been discovered which may mean
[ much to the appearance and thus
very attractive,
blue checked taffeta is being made
up into children’s dresses. Milli- I
ners are making hat and bag sets QUESTION BOX
of red, white and blue jersey. i q._How many thyroid glands
does one have? ^fler the removal
Pinafore styles meant for play substituted for the tost accretion?
and sports occasions have lost none
of their demurely decorative fea-
tures. Many of them have lace
edges on their pockets, collars and
cuffs. Ruffles at hems and shoul-
der straps, shirring on pockets, and
quaint matching bonnets that tie
with a bow under the chin, are some
of the favorite details.
sunk °more deeply.^ By’the thne°lhc .TtaTVJTta,’SS* e’Tonddet.
--------.... ....... .... S^^^sdt.unve, “
with less effort than any other of , .. ■ .2
today’s kingpins. His great distance keeP **’ ,n mlnd when you go to
is featured by fine direction. His
hands, arms and body synchronize
into a smooth, fluid motion which
Yet Snead has never won a Na- I
The pulse remains fast is ;
Hoods are convertible into col- than'five "minutes after exercise.
The blood pressure differs from nor-
mal for it also remains high for ■■
more than five minutes. These twe
tests—heart beat and blood pres-
sure—increased for longer than five
minutes show insufficiency of circu-
lation and inability to react proper- /
ly from exercise.
Group Games Improve Circulation.
Dr. Meyer suggests that as these
children are nearing puberty, the
circulation may improve and be
equal to the demands made upon it.
the treatment recom-
"Invigoration of the
body by gymnastics and sport, es-
The point then for parents is te
have these slender, gangling, pale.
The Derby idea is now five with earth green suede accessories,
a crocheted wool crown with black
velour brim and upright quill in
biack and white; Designers are en-
thusiastic over the use of hand cro-
chet. Very new is the idea of a cloth
jacket with crocheted sleeves of col-
or-matched yam, pockets of the cro-
chet added. A new feature also is
insets of crochet, such as ygn»-cro-
epeted triangles worked into a cloth
dress.
Patriotism Theme
Becoming Popular >
Wear a bejeweled flag pin. Every-
body’s doing it. Perhaps you like i
the American eagle better and it is ent knowledge of the beneficial ef-
icvh> vrs ui^uuvivii jnaui’
tary extract and taking viosterol by
edge that the use of liver extract
The new star pattern prints are boiled for 30 minutes and injected
Red, white and under the skin also cures many
cases of acne.
time on the thirty-second. Through: ,
all of this, he had the edge in tee
and fairway play. Nelson had been
spreading its jeweled wings on many ' fects of X-rays, injection of pitui-
a suit lapel. tary extract and taking viosterol by
The vogue for patriotic themes ex- [ mouth, is added the further knowl-
tends to every phase of fashion.
dress that looks like a suit. ’
will see the smartest models with [ {he use of viosterol by mouth.
the new two-piece look developed j comes liver extract.
in wool, in satin and in velveteen
this fall. ‘ This type drees makes you
look thin, for there is absolutely no in the Journal of Investigative Der-
a IL « A a»xxi a vaxl tk* aat i of 1 a lia a t ______X **_____a. _
of a jewelry ensemble. Bright gold
and topaz are used for bracelet, ear-
rings. purse clip and ring. Wings is
the motif for the purse clip and
small earrings. Both are jeweled
with topaz which also is used for
the finger ring. The jewelry en-
semble is worn with a three-piece
black wool crepe suit highlighted
years oTajn this country. It origi-
*. Annual ,
(Released by Western Newspaper Union
I
rejected for
I cause 1
Practically .every^T
one of these young
fellows, on ques-
tioning, stated that
jthey had never
; played games be- L
i cause their parents
' they would get hurt.
When parents see that their chil- 1
dren are not as others, underweight,
-tall for their age, <
round or drooping
shoulders, it is only
natural that they
are somewhat
alarmed at the
thought of games or
vigorous exercise.
The result i-
these youngsters
not get any exercise
and properly di-
rected exercise ■
at this "growing”
age is exactly whal
I
QLAMMIN’ SAMMY SNEAD, the
luckless pro from White Sulphur
! Springs, W. Va., won a lot of new
I friends recqptly when he lost the
Professional Golfers’ association
_ championship to Byron Nelson.
Calm!y Leap Into
Sea as Ship Bums
KEARNY, N. J.—Pc&ice from two
■cities used a 10-ton wrecking truck
b,asted “
°r . Mock (arm from a lar pit into cup anJ lalj a No. 3 iron fret
whjj-h the bull had fallen. above the cup at the 190-yard thirty- ' dred "tvoe wiH "fairlv stamoede the
The bull, which weighs 000 pounds. ; sixth. His hung o/the Up> b't *“ “^sSn7EheB
wandered awav from the rest of its I _» i_j spectator sport granastana wnen me
match Snead and end the tourna-
ment.
But It was one tournament that
Snead was not ashamed to lose. He
didn’t blow. He merely ran up
against a competitor wbb was play-
ing inspired golf. A
by the i Greatest of Stylists
Passers- !
by heard the bull bellowing and
called the Kearny police, but after golfer’among 'the •lect'wiii tell
an hour s work the bull had only you tba| be bas t|le flnest all-around
It wasn’t that Sam lost the tourna-
ment. Fans are quite accustomed
to that. It was the ivay in which he
lost it.
Snead has been accused of a lot
of things. The most popular accusa-
tion being that he is a front runner
—that he can’t come up from behind
to win tournaments, or at least to
make a good showing. In the P. G. |
A. tournament at Hershey, Pa., he
gave the lie to that charge, even
though he failed to win first money.
my cadets while their training ship | Snead’s Putter Cold
Some measure of Sam’s coura-
geous fight can be gleaned from the
fact that he was as much as 3
down to Nelson during the morning
round of the 36-hole final match. He
didn’t square the match until the
,Girl Attends Six Schoola
To Complete First Grade
' ROME, GA.—Seveh-year-old Glo-
(ria Elizabeth Lambert felt sure she
;held some sort of record as she
(completed her first grade studies
*here.
During the nine-month school
(term Gloria, whose father is a trav-
eling engineer, attended six schools
Jin five different states. She started
’the term in Wyoming, shifted to
{Louisiana, then to Illinois, Florida
land finally to Georgia.
Gloria doesn't mind. She likes to
•travel.
' r
71 h
ALL the highspots in a college
X-' girl’s life, what adventure so
charged with thrills and moments of
excitement as the mad, merry quest
I for back-to-school "clothes” that re-
curs each fall of the year?
The college girl’s what-to-wear
i problem certainly received the per-
! feet answer recently in a preview of
fashions presented in a series of
which the bull had fallen. 1 - ■ —
ABIC MUil, — 1UVII iTW (/VJUIIMS, I
wandered away from the rest of its a„ he nceded was a to
herd in the morning while grazing on
the Kearny meadows and fell into a :
pit on Bergen avenue east of |
Schuyler avenue, which had been i
dug by Kearny authorities as a i
dump for excess tar, gravel and
other road-building materials.
The bull sank slowly into the tar. I
which had been softened
heat of the last few days.
features. He believes, however, that of action, such as basebail, football,
the design is too revolutionary to be tennis and polo.”
placed on a mass production basis. Snead can’t be blamed if he is
---------------- still wondering how he lost the Her-
shey meet. The West Virginia slug-
ger had dropped a lot of big touroa- |
Thar (Irish Potato) Hills ments before by folding up at criti-
CRIPPLE CREEK, COLO.—When «cal moments, but this time it was
and if the yellow gold of Cripple different.
Creek is exhausted from its mines, i Sammy threw a final round of 68 j
Irish potatoes may carry on as a —s under nir at Nelson, and it
source of income.
rine chaser and awaited Harold E.
Reice, 35 years old, of Toms River,
secretary of the academy and skip-
per, and Francis Zeluca, 19, of
Greenwich, Corin., counselor at the
academy's summer camp and mate. <
Mr. Reice and Mr. Zeluca, last off
the boat, suffered slight burns.
Within five minutes after the 16
jumped from the burning training
ship, a boat, the Lea, piloted and
owned by Robert Wright of Seaside
Heights, rescued them and took
them to the Barnegat City coast
guard station. Coast guardsmen
went to the fire, three miles north- :
east of famed Barnegat light, but
the training boat had burned to the
water’s edge and sunk. Coast
guardsmen said the fire was caused ,
■ '___ -
Reice and Mr. Zeldca
Commandant Hill had nothing but
praise for their “exceptionally fine
handling of the situation.”
For the 14 youths, his praise was
mingled with pride. "They proved
true to the spirit of the sailor,” he
said. "They carried out orders in
accordance with naval training.”
Dr. Barton
the body, including heart and lungs,
greatly needs.
“There are children who show
pallor, excessive growth, muscular
.1 weakness, bad posture—sitting and ■
! standing. There are rapid fatigue.
Until recently, acne—pimples—
was considered a distressing ail-
ment which often camo with puber-
ty and had to be endured for 10
or 15 years—the most important
years in life from the appearance
standpoint.
I Some ?kin specialists were able
Looks Like a Suit !«b,tr'2l“r±
ing a diet. 1 hen x-ray treatment
Qpe of the most successful fash- was found effective. Recently, the
ions for eariy fau is toe ‘ ^j^H6h' "6r 'bTtattnry rrtrxrt hwr
J---- —... You given splendid results, -as has also .
Now
- , , j ... I 8cts amazing results,
after another hour, covered with tar v-« Sneed her nev
i tional Open or a P. G. A. tourna- !
- I ment. A championship jinx seems
the bull more 6arm than the tar, | (0 dog bls footsteps when he is in
decided that the bull must wear the sjght of one of golf’s major crowns. I
tar until it wears off. jt js difficult to ascribe his failure |
“ ~~ to any one reason, but Francis Oui-
Molor Car of TomnrrQW __j met, the old master, thinks he has
Has Periscope Equipment ; *u“
BATAVIA, N. Y.—Residents gaze I
pop-eyed when Charles D. Thomas
Dnlnoin (-izIao nkmil i Iv I c mH —
Wardrobe of College Girl Has
Attractive, Pace-Setting Styles
I
■ ■ q
SAM SNEAD
hooking most of the day. But at style clinics held in the great, known
i—.4 .i_ _» a._ far-and-wide Merchandise Mart of
' Chicago where gather semi-annual-
. , ly hundreds of merchants who are
fought off with Snead's | ever on the alert to sense fashion
Then came Nelson’s turn, trends in advance. The two coats
| He made three successive iron shots illustrated herewith were particular-
that spectators will talk about all ly stressed as types style-ambitious
He fired a No. 7 iron four | co-eds are sure to favor.
You can tell at a glance the mes-
made reversible and
j otherwise than completely healthy |
monotone or a vivid plaid at your I
will. 1
lars, detachable pinafore skirts give
you two dresses in one, and for more
change this same double-duty skirt
serves as a cape. A handbag is a
handbag one moment and the next
it develops into a muff; hats have
removable brims, and so on this
necromancy in wearing apparel con-
tinues. It behooves every college
girl to seek out fashion's “latest im-
provements” for it means economy
in dress as well as being first in
your set to proudly flaunt the “new.”
Just a word about the little pen-
and-ink sketches in the background However,
of our illustration. They are items mended is:
gleaned from the aforesaid style pre- 1
view that will "put you wise” as ta a pecially by breathing exercises,
few of the fashion highlights that
will enliven your college career.
Mentioning them briefly, there’s overgrown children attend a gym-
the American jeweled flag pin at the nasium where exercise and group .
games are supervised. AU group I
i games not only strengthen the eir- /
lungs for more blood, but develop
By DR. JAMES W. BARTON.
HAVE spoken before of thl
number of recruits who wev
war service bqf
the chest was too smalP
TWTS
HEALTH
COLUMN
] the reason.
I Concentration the Answer?
That reason, according to Ouimet, ‘
of Batavia rides about in his red- , is lack of concentration. "Winning
hued, modernistic "automobile of to- ' concentration is the hardest thing
morrow.” ' In golf. It isn’t difficult to eoncen-
The 30-year-old mechanic says his trate on a few shots. But to think !
self-designed car is at least 10 years of nothing except the right thing to 1
in advance of the* times. It is S do, shot after shot, hole after hole,
streamlined even on the underside , round after round, is the most dif-
of the body, has a periscope for rear ficult assignment in all sports. Con- >
vision, air-conditioning and other | centration is much simpler tn games
Underweight , I
Child Needs i <
More Exercise) ) 1
worn peasant style you must have.
You will not be able to resist a
the happiness of many girls and
j boys and young men and women.
sketched center below is
This robe is "big news.”
palpitation of the heart, stitches in
i ine siae, siomacn acne, nee
1 dizziness and fainting spells.”
Dr. -L. F. Meyer, in Oriental Jour-
nal of Internal Medicine, reports
least six of Snead's putts either
ringed or hopped out of the cups.
Nelson’s comeback on the thirty-
third was
I stymie.
Saved by 10-Ton Truck
winter.
feet from the thirty-fourth flag for a i
: sage of the model to the right. Yes,
it’s most assuredly spotted fur!
. Leopard and ocelot and fur of kin-
Snead is as .much of an enigma
as any moderir player. Almost ev-
lamb (very smart again this sea-
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The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 173, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 25, 1940, newspaper, September 25, 1940; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1286063/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.