The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 3, 1935 Page: 2 of 4
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Kirkpatrick Pharmacy
GOMER, MAY, Manager
£
We Have It Or
We’ll Get It
You can always get anything in our line for
which there is local demand at this pharma-
cy, for we have a full line of drugs and drug
sundries.
This pharmacy is here to give you service,
and included in that service is providing you
with what you want.
Any time you want something which we do
not have, we will be glad to get it for you
promptly.
Divinity Fudge
Combine 2 cups granulated sugar,
1 teaspoon vanilla. Pour into well
greased and floured muffin pans.
Bake in a moderate__over (350 de-
grees F.) for 25 minutes. Frost with
seven minute frosting and sprinkle
with cocoanut. Makes 1 dozen cakes.
HUSKY THROATS
Overtaxed by
speaking, sing-
ing, smoking
thoroughly. Fold in egg whites and % cup dark corn syrup, % cup cold'
water and 1 teaspoon pure vinegar..
Cook slowly, without stirring, until
this mixture forms a very hard, al-
most brittle ball in cold water. Pourj
gradually over 2 stiffly beaten egg<
whites and beat until creamy. Add
% cup nut meats and 1 teaspoon
vanilla. Pour into a buttered pan
and mark into squares. Candied
cherries or nuts may be added.
Eggnog
Six eggs, 2 cups sugar, 2 cups
whisky, 1 pint whipping cream, 1
pint milk.
Beat whites and yolks of eggs sep-
arately. Add sugar to beaten yolks
and stir well. Add whisky gradually
to the mixture. Beat cream until
whipped and then add the cream and
milk alternately to the mixture, stir-
ring well. Fold whites of eggs in.
Add nutmeg or sprinkle with nut-
meg.
Halstatt, Austria, is a region fa-
mous for its salt mines since Roman
times.
RECIPES
with
cups
tea-
nut-
Orange Taffy
Cook 2 cups sugar, ^4 cup water,
juice 2 oranges to hard-ball stage.
Pour on buttered plate. When cool
enough to handle, pull with tips of
fingers. Stretch into long rope with-
out twisting. Break in pieces
knife when cold.
Honey Pumpkin Pie
One unbaked pie shell, 1%
mashed cooked pumpkin, 2
spoons cinnamon, % teaspoon
meg, % teaspoon salt, 2 eggs, 1 cup
honey, 1 cup milk, 2 tablespoons but-
ter, melted, % cup cream.
Mix pumpkin with spices, salt,
eggs, honey, milk, butter and cream.
Beat well. Pour into pie shell. Bake
15 minutes in hot oven. Lower fire
and bake 40 minutes in moderately
slow oven.
Angel Food Snow Balls
Heat % cup milk with 2 table-
spoons butter to scalding point, add
1 cup sugar, and stir until thorough-
ly dissolved. Sift 1 cup flour with 1
teaspoon baking powder and 14 tea-
spoon salt. Beat 4 egg whites' until
frothy, add % teaspoon cream of tar-
tar and continue to beat until whites
stand-up in a point. Add flour mix-
ture to the milk and sugar. Beat
Jambalaya Rice
One cup rice, 1 tablespoon lard, 1
can tomatoes (small, 1% cups), 1
onion, thyme, 1 slice ham (% to 1
pound), 1 can shrimp (1 cup), 1 bud
garlic, 1 green pepper, parsley, salt,
pepper, tabasco, Worcestershire, red
pepper and 4 cups water.
Make a roux of the lard and
flour, add chopped ham, shrimp,, to-
matoes, and cook a few minutes. Add
onions, other herbs and seasoning
and four cups water. Let simmer
about ten minutes. Add rice and boil
until rice is done (about twenty min-
utes), not stirring, or rice will be
gummy. However, it is necessary to
lift mixture with a fork from the
bottom of the pot occasionally to
keep rice from burning. Keep vessel
covered while cooking. Serves six.
For the Coming Year
We Plan ..
—to help the development of local busi-
ness — farming, merchandising and
manufacturing, by offering assistance
and advice in the all important mat-
ter of finance.
First National Bank
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
—to assist in the developing of the
community by supporting all worth
while enterprises initiated for the pur-
pose of promoting the city’s business
and social welfare.
—to aid every local citizen in his finan-
cial problems, giving the very best of
service to all without regard to size
of accounts.
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fix
Pardon of Slayers
To Be Up To Board
Under Gov. Allred
PRICE FIXING UNDER
NRA RULED ILLEGAL
Pine covered hills, rice fields, and
thatched roofed cottages typify rural
Japan.
130 Year Old Widower
Wants To Marry Again
AUSTIN.—Whether commutations
of death sentences will be made in
capital cases during the administra-
tion of James V. Allred will depend
on the recommendation of the Board
of Pardons and Paroles, Allred said
Monday in a discussion of his guber-
natorial policies.
Many Governors have not hesitated
to grant pardons and other forms of
clemency but some have suffered
mental agony in deciding death pen-
alty cases. They feared to let an in-
nocent man die and were opposed to
permitting a slayer live after a jury
and the courts had said he should
die.
Board Must Investigate
Allred appears willing to place the
responsibility in life and death cases
on the pardon board, whose members
will have time and opportunity to in-
vestigate each case. Also he would
rid himself of the detail and worry
of making personal investigations in
every pardon case. That, too, he said,
is the function of the board.
Another innovation by Allred is a
decision to fix a certain hour each
day to greet the handshaking public
in the executive reception room. At
present those that visit the Capitol
are forced to wait hours in the Gov-
ernor’s reception room and take their
turn in being introduced. Allred will
have regular business hours and a
fixed time to go to his reception
room.
PRISTINA, Jugoslavia. — Bach-
tigar Kozac,' widower, wants to mar-
ry again.
He believes that after forty years
mourning for his second wife he is
entitled to make a third trip into
married life.
The widower-farmer claims to be
130 years old and insists his next
bride must be 16 years old or there-
abouts. Two sons are dead of old
age and his grandson is 88 years old.
Kozac apparently is in good health
and chops kindling wood alone, and
does other chores around his place.
He insists that a young wife will
give him a new lease on life and
might enable him to live to be 300
years old like good old King David
of Biblical lore, which Kozac in-
sists was the result of having young
wives.
He commissioned his grandson to
pick out a wife. Already several pro-
posals to the girls of this and neigh-
boring villages have been made.
KANSAS CITY.—Code price fix-
ing under the NRA was ruled illegal
today by Judge Merril E. Otis in
federal district court here.
Far Reaching Decision
“Congress has no power to
prices in transactions undoubtedly a
part of interstate commerce,” Judge
Otis held in his far reaching decision.
The ruling was made in denying a
temporary injunction sought by the
government against Robert Suther-
land and Mae G. Sutherland operat-
ing as the Sutherland Lumber Com-
pany. The company, with headquar-
ters here, operates lumber yards in
Oklahoma, Iowa, and Nebraska on a
“cash and carry” basis. It lost its
NRA blue eagle last March for con-
tinuing its scale of retail prices be-
low those fixed in the lumber code,
but was not charged with violation
of the wage or hour provisions of the
code.
Maurice Milligan, United States
district attorney, filed a petition for
the temporary injunction June 29.
He asked that the company be re-
strained from selling at prices below
the code list and alleged that the con-
cern, in its Oklahoma City yard, sold
six squares of red cedar shingles to
M. A. Tucker of .Moore, Okla., for
$4.20 a square when the code scale
fixed the price at $4.45 a square.
Check On Hoboes
Shows Most Beg
To Escape Work
■fiSVILLE, ky.—“Brother, can-h
Bpare a dime?”
^^^ne question, according to find-
ings of the Louisville welfare and
police departments, is not whether
you can, but whether you should.
And the odds are about seven to five
that you shouldn’t.
Louisville’s panhandlers are be-
ing subjected to tests to determine
whether they are compelled by cir-
cumstances to beg or do so to avoid
work.
The study thus far has revealed
that seven out of every twelve who
beg are unworthy of cash assistance.
The cases are investigated by trained
social workers, following the ar-
raignment of panhandlers in police
court. Relief and corrective agencies
extend help or fix punishment.
The chronic “bo” gets scant sym-
pathy and is sent to the workhouse.
Treatment is given drug and alcohol
addicts, while relief is given those
honestly in adverse circumstances.
ex-
Household Hints
paper.
prevent shrink-
steaming rub a
ROOSEVELT OPPOSES
BONUS PAYMENT NOW
Henry—“Say, Pop, the early, birds
don’t get all the worms, do they?”
Pop—“I understood they did.”
Henry—“Well, the early apples
get some of them, too.” <
or
a
WASHINGTON. — On the eve of
the convening of Congress, Presi-
dent Roosevelt Monday again op-
posed immediate payment of the
bonus and drew from war veterans a
challenge for a finish fight.
In a letter to a Texas American
Legionnaire, Roosevelt-cited the huge
outlays of cash that would be neces-
sary and denied that the release of
more than $2,000,000,000 to former
soldiers now would speed recovery.
The Veterans of Foreign Wars,
through their national commander,
James E. Van - Zandt, retorted that
the President’s statement would be
a “keen disappointment” to veterans,
and asserted:
“While we respect the views of
President Roosevelt on this and any
other matters of policy, we believe
that Congress will be the final ar-
biter of this issue.”
Veterans’ leaders contended pri-
vately that more than enough votes
were pledged in the Senate and
House to pass a bonus bill and over-
ride a presidential veto.
Contends Bonus Not Due
Mr. Roosevelt’s views were
pressed in a letter to Commander
Garland R. Farmer of the American
Legion post in Henderson, Texas, in
reply to one from Farmer asking for
information on the bonus issue.
Saying it was quite apparent that
there was a general misunderstand-
ing in regard to the Government’s
obligation, the President contended
that payment under the law was not
due until 1945, that it would cost $1,-
620,000,000 above the present certif-
icate value of $2,100,000,000 and
$2,300,000,000 more than the orig-
inal basic adjustment of $1,400,000,-
000.
“I am sure,” Mr. Roosevelt said,
“that many of the veterans have not
given the question sufficient study
to realize the vast sums required to
meet the demands suggested.”
Denies Business Aided
He asserted that $1,000,000,000 in
loans to veterans on their bonus cer-
tificates had not stimulated business,
that preference had been given to
former soldiers in employment and
that few veterans had any other as-
sets than their certificates to leave
their families and dependents.
“I feel, therefore,” Mr. Roosevelt
said, “that those who advocate the
payment of these certificates at this
time for the purpose of stimulating
business certainly can not have given
the interests of the veterans much
thought.”
The veterans of foreign wars coun-
tered with the assertion that the mis-
understanding of the issue appeared
to be on the side of the President,
denied that the emergency relief ad-
ministration gave preference to vet-
erans when hiring men and contended
that PWA regulations providing for
preference was being flagrantly vio-
lated every day.
Woolen garments and under-
clothes will dry more quickly if, aft-
er hanging on the line, the legs and
sleeves are stuffed with crumpled
The paper absorbs the wat-
er, and also prevents shrinking by
keeping the garments open.
When washing new socks
woolens of any description, add
few drops of olive oil to the final
finishing water. This makes them de-
lightfully soft and comfortable to
wear, and helps to
ing.
To prevent glass
piece of damp soap over it, polishing
with a dry duster.
When making starch, add a little
borax; this gives a gloss to articles
when ironed. After starch is made,
stir in a little cold water; this will
prevent the formation of skin on the
top.
If you have no glue just when it is
required, rub a small piece of cold,
boiled potato up and down a piece
of paper for a few minutes. It will
stick as well as the strongest glue.
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN. WHITEWRIGHT. TEXAS
PAGE TWO
Thursday, January 3, 1935.
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The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 3, 1935, newspaper, January 3, 1935; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1289282/m1/2/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.