Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 97, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 3, 1949 Page: 3 of 8
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BASTROP ADVERTISER NOVEMBER 3, 194'J
/is
CEDAR CREEK NEWS
CEDAR CREEK, Nov. 2.—Mr.
and Mrs. Royce Hollan and son,
Johnnie of Kowtorton are visiting
in the home of Mrs, Hollan's
mother, Mrs. li. C. Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Spence of
Austin were visiting with Cedai
Creek relatives Sunday.
Lt. and Mrs. Johnnie Areuleer
aiul family of Kilieen spent the
week end in the O. P. Wamel
home.
Mrs. A) Nance of Hlanco visit-
ed with relatives in Cedar Creek
recently. i
Mrs. Lee Alexander and Mrs.
Arthur IV Smith attended the
County Council Friday in Bas-
trop.
Mrs. I.aura K. Tempi in was u
i^uest of the Young Married Wo-
man'.- Circle V of the Methodi.i
Church Monday afternoon which
met in the home of Mrs. W. E.
Mavnard. She spoke on China.
Having just returned home from
China \1 >. Templin lias many in-
teresting things to tell about her
trip.
Mr. and Mrs. Cleon Bommer
<>f Austin >pent the week end in
the home of Mrs. Bommer's par-
ents. Mr. an<l Mr>. J. J. Voss.
G. W. Smith was home ovei
the week-end. returning to San
Marcos Monday morning.
Mr- Robert Martin of Angleton
wa- a recent Cedar Creek visitor.
\11 - Dewey Turner and Mt>.
Floyd Martin spent Wednesday
afternoon in Smithville.
rr
Farm and Ranch
Southern Agriculturist
To Be Combined
DALLAS, Tex.—An old Texas
I institution and farmer's standby
I FARM and RANCH magazine, has
completed an expansion program
which gives it 300,000 circulation
in Texas, according to an an-
nouncement this week by Frank
A. Briggs, long-time Editor of
the publication.
Published since 1881, FARM
and RANCH, beginning with the
January l! .r>0 issue, will unite with
SOUTHERN AGRICULTURIST, a
farm publication printed in Nash-
ville, Tennessee since 1869. The
combination of subscribers to
SOU TH.K R N A (i R1OU LTU RI...T
with those of FARM and RANCH
| will give this new publication more
circulation than any magazine go-
ing to Texas readers, and almost
as much as any two magazines.
Editorial offices will be main-
. r.i ■ , , tained in Dallas as usual, Editor
Hannah Liu, Chinese freshman, ... , ,
..... ...i,. i.i .- .u Brigg- reported. The new name
wa- recently elected one of the - , .• . ■ . c- u*,r
five most beautiful Kills in her
CHINESE STUDENT
AT MH-B COLLEGE
BELTON, Tex. Beauty knows
no nationality at Mary Hardin-
Baylor college.
class.
A native of Canton, Miss Liu
ailed from Hong Kong June !!
and arrived in Be I ton just after
the la-t firecracker boomed July
the Fourth.
She i studying education and '
hope to return to China as a!
teacher.
"F MTU" IS TOPK FOR
PRO*, It \ M \ I ( i;i> \K < RFKK
WM > MFKTIVt; WKDSFSDX^
A program on Faith was giver
Wedne-<!a> at an all-das meeting
of the Meth.nlist WSCS in th«
home of Mr*. Sammie Turner.
Speaker- and their subject-
were: Mr*. Laura K. Templin, "Tie
Beginning of Faith"; Mrs. J J
Vtwm. "Our Faith in Salvation";
and Nlo. Iac Alexander. "Ttn
Christian Way."
Mrs. T. C Watt gave the de-
v>>tional on "Th< Sincere Clin t."
Mr*. Ilewey Turner, president
presided at the bu*ine.-> #e
and program.
Sunthine Sl-ters were rev
at the close of the meeting
gift* were exrhanged
A covered-dish luncheon
served at noon, and coffee
cake, after the program.
Those attending were M
Lee Alexander, Mat Alt
Floyd Martin, T C Watt,
Wamel, Tommy Templetor
Smith, Dan Smith, .1 (
Dewey Turner, J. J Vo:«
K Ten.pltr. \rthur I*
< Y Powell and Sammie
stun
aled
ami
wa->
and
«dames
xander,
., (I F
, H C.
Ellis,
. Laura
Smith,
Turner.
The W o m a n s Society of
ChrsatiAi, Service will observe the
Week of Prayer and The World
Day of Prayer Friday, November
4th at the Methodist Church.
H >MKS RftMoDBI.KD
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Turner,
Mr. and Mrs J. A Martin and
Mi H. C. Smith are having their
home* completely worked over.
Several <>ther in the community
are having repair work.
Mr. and VI r . S. T. Simmons
have bought a ready-built house
and are having lights and butane
ga- installed They plan to move
in a* soon as all necessary work
h k been completed.
GIVES MENU FOR
HEARTY "AFTER
GAME" DINNER
Following an exciting afternoon
at a football game, hearty hot
food will be widely welcomed,
i Reba StaggK, home economist, >ug-
Igest an after game dinner treat
of flavor-ome spareribs baked
| with a mashed sweet potato stuff-
ing
To give the stuffing additional
interest the sweet potatoes are
combined with raisins ami seasoned
with ginger and cinnamon. The
mixture is then spread on one
section of spar*.*rib*, topped with
the second section ami baked un
covered on a rack in a moderate
oven (3Ao degrees F.) for two
hours. Spareribs are cut into in
dividual ribs for serving If the
spareribs are served for an after-
game dinner the spare rib- ma>
1m- cooked in advance, stored in
tin refrigerator and reheated just
before serving-
Or spareribs can be braised in
a tungy barbecue sauce. The ribs
are browned in hot lard or drip-
pings, tin barbecue sauce added,
the pan tightly covered and the
meat allowed to cook slowly for
about one hour.
11 a i d rolls or French bread
combine nicely with either stuff-
el or barbecued ribs. Mincemeat
filled baked apples topped with
whipped cream will he a choice
dessert.
of the publication will be FA RM
and RANCH with (SOUTHERN
AORICULTURIST. A special Wes-
tern Edition will be published each
month for Texas and Oklahoma
! readers. Over 75,000 readers in
jOklahoma will receivc the maga-
zine and 11 11,000 in the other
Southern State . Mr. Briggs -aid.
The new united publication will
go to Southern States all told
and over one and one-quarter
million subscribers.
In the pa-t FARM and RANCH
went only to the Southwestern
states, Briggs pointed out.
The Editor; of FARM and
RANCH are Briggs A. B. Kenner-
ly, H. L. Gantz and Mary L.
Smith. Other native Texan who
will now help edit the magazine
are Malcolm Orchard and Charles
E. Ball.
STSTC Homecoming
Scheduled This Week
CAN MARCOS A .'{-act play,
barbecue, football game, and two
dance1 are among highlights plan-
ned for the estimated 3,000 ex-
students who will attend Home-
coming celebrations at Southwest
Texas State Teacher* College on
Friday and Saturday, November
4 and
Beginning on Friday night the
presentation of "Dear Ruth,"
Broadway hit show bv the drama-
m ,tics department, « full two-flay
Angle On Ice Cream program has been ai ranged. At
the Saturday night dam*
Science Finds New
Churches Urged
To Sponsor
Displaced Persons
Congregation- of the Disciples
of Christ in thi and other areas
have blen urged to give serious
consideration to sponsoring one
oi more displaced persons, it was
learned here today in a report
from the Centennial International
Convention of the church in Cin-
cinnati. Local pastors are attend-
ing the six-day convention, which
closes Sunday. -
"No church is too small to
ponsor a displaced person or fam-
ily." Ruth Estes Milner, national
director of church ami community
service, declared at the conven-
tion.
Although Mrs. Mitner stressed
the fact that each individual church
i: free to make it* own decision,
"the pledge of each local church
to sponsor at least one displaced
person will let the convention
know that the Disciples of Christ
are doing their share to meet one
of the world's great problems."
Mrs. Milner indicated that ap-
proximately 100.000 displaced
persons have already found hea-
•\ m erica.
she said, "a total of
more is eligible to comt
shores if sponsorship a?-
are siir' ed before June
Don't let c<
vour ardor
Id wea-
for ice
CHICAGO
ther dampen
cream,
Hating this taste appealing, nu-
trition* food affects the tempera
Hire of your body ho slightly that
it*> high time the myth about its
making you cold i> knocked into
a cocked hat.
For two years Dr A nee I Keys,
director of the laboratory for
Physiological Hygiene at the
University of Minnesota, worked
on the nutritional and physiologi-
cal aspects of ie# cream with 1"
college men a* "guinea pigs."
Following the eating of normal
portion of ice cream (two-thirds
of a cup) at varying tempera-
tures, internal and kin tempar-
atures were recorded, heart ac-
tion wa - checked. X-ray? of the
stomach were taken, and blood
sample were analysed. The dif
ferences in the varying tempera-
ture of the mixture did not af
feet the activity of the stomach
iim did the temperature of the
body (thunge in a noticeable way
as measured at the finger tips.
"Ice cream consumption re-
cords, based on the moi>t recent
statistics from tin Bureau of
Ae m ulturnl Economic I .S D N
lead one to believe," -aid Milton
Hull, President of the National
Dairy Council, "that eon inner*
shy away from eating ice cream
when cold weather begins in Ort-
ober. Figure show a drop of IV.~
per cent compared with the con
sumption record of the iv warm oi
hot months Because ice cream is
an establi.-hed food containing os
scntial vitamins for young and
old alike, a cold breeze or zero
ttmperature shouldn't deprive the
family hou ehold of its favorite
food during the colder months of
the year."
Read The Want Ads
(iaillardians, t raditional
favorites, will also be pre
The identity of the winners
College favorite election i
a Closely-guarded secret
Homecoming
'. the
school
ented
i n t he
kept
until
ven in
"But,"
105,000
to our i
suranees
.'Hi, when the present law ex-
pires."
Greatest oppe-tunitie- for spon-
soring displaced persons arc in
the agricultural field, she pointed
out. However, professional peoph
are also awaiting assurance-.
To date, Illinois, with a total
of 7030, leads the nation in the
number of displaced persons ac-
cepted. Michigan is second with
41 i'.i and Ohio thir l with MHO'.'.
Dr. Says Operations
Inside Heart Possible
CLEVELAND A research spe-
cialist has predicted that surgoons
would be operating inside the heart
before many years.
"Ways will be devised to stop
the heart, keep the brain alive,
open the heart, close it. and start
it beating again," said Dr. Claude
S. Peck in an address to the city
club forum.
Dr. Peck said the newest tech-
nique of heart surgery involved
the grafting of a section of vein
between the aorta and coronary
veins to act as "feeder" to dry
areas of the heart blocked by
clotted arteries. The operation al-
ready has been performed on hu-
man patients, he sain
Dr. Peck is engaged in research
j work to conquet coronary dis-
j ease, commonly known "heart
I at tack." He and his associat es
| have performed nearly ."no ex
iperimental operations on animals
and humans, he said
DANCE
Airline Park
GIDDING S
Saturday, Nov. 5
Music by
ED PALLA
and his pals
— TAYLOR —
IMPERIAL QUARTET I Hearts Of The Nation
TO BE IN WACO Extended To Baylor
Couple And Son
The Imperial Quartet and Mar-
ion Snider Concert will be in
Waco, Thursday night, November
10, at the Tabernacle Baptist
Church, 15th. at Clay.
The musicians are first tenor,
Charley Speed; second tenor,
Homer Tankersly, Jr.; baritone,
Dudley M. Hughes; bass, Floyd
Gray. Marion Snider will be at
the piano.
The ticket door will open at
7::!() p. m. with admission prices
fifty cents for adults and twenty
five cents for children. A hearty
welcome is extended by Rev. A.
Reilly Copeland, pastor of the
church, to everyone.
Governor Shivers
Honorary Chairman
For CROP In Texas
AUSTIN, Tex.—Governor Allan
Shivers has accepted the honorary
chairmanship of the Christian
Rural Overseas Program in Texas
and has designated the month of
November as CROP MONTH IN
TEXAS.
In issuing the official memor-
andum Governor Shivers also de-
signated the period of November
6 - 13 as CROP COLLECTION
WKEK IN TEXAS and the Sun-
day of November ti as CROP SUN-
DAY IN TEXAS.
The Governor in his memoran-
dum asked all churches, agricul-
tural groups, civic organizations
and citizens to share to the full-
est extent they were moved to do
so in this worthy humanitarian
enterprise of relief for those less
fortunate than we.
Governor Shivers called atten-
tion to the fact that the Christian
Waco, Tex.—The hearts of a
nation's people extended to a
Baylor University couple and their
15-month-oid son this week.
The infant is Eddie Wayne
Franks, Jr. Doctors say he has a
highly malignant abdominal can-
cer and there is little chance for
his recovery.
Wayne and Anna Ruth Franks,
his parents, both ex-Marines,
prayed silently for their only
son's recovery. "His case is com-
pletely out of our hands," the
pretty brunette coed mother told
a reporter. "It will truly be an
act of G. d if he gets well."
Fellow students on the Baylor
campus placed large fruit jars
in all campus buildings for loose
change collections to apply on Ed-
die Wayne's expensive medical and
hospital care. Five hundred dollars
in nickels and dimes went into
the jars the first week.
Meanwhile the story of Eddie
Wayne's very unusual disease—
cancer occurs extremely infre-
quently in children of this age and
seldom over is as malignant as
in this case—was spread by news-
papers to al! corners of America.
Radio programs were dedicated to
the sick boy, and people in fat
away places like Boston and San
Francisco wrote letters of com-
fort and enclosed checks.
"Any money received in excess
of actual expenses will be turned
over to cancer research organi-
zations," said the parents.
•Eddie Wayne appeared some
better after 10 days of x-ray
treatment. Dr. C. G. Shellenger-
berger said he hoped the x-ray
would stop the growth that al-
the boy's internal organs,
complete cure still seemed rei
Wayne Franks Sr., the hvf%
father, comes from Bryan, Texaak.
He is 25, a senior business stu-
dent, and a baseball letterman far
Baylor. He started out for var>
sity football, hut stopped in order
to care for Eddie Wayne when
the baby first started feeling bad-
ly three months ago. Mrs. Franks
is the former Anna Ruth Mann of
Newcastle, Pa. She is 24 and m
sophomore radio major. Both are
in Baylor on the G. I. Bill of
Rights.
M. E. (lake)
RABENSBURG
General
INSURANCE AGENT
#TORNADO
• THEFT
• PIRE
• LIFE
SEE ME FOR YOUR
INSURANCE NEEDS
Ph. 81 — Bastrop, Tex.
mmmmmmam
QUICK RELIEF FROM
•,ymi tom5 of Distress Arising from
STOMACH ULCERS
DUE TO EXCESS ACID
Free BookTellsof HomeTreatment thai
Must Help or it Will Cost You Nothcag
uvcr three million bottle* of the WriXARi:
thkatmrnt have been sold for relief ol
cytn(i!-omi of distress arlidng from Stomach
«n<1 Duodenal Ulcer* ilue to Excels Acid —
• o r OlKi-ttlon, Sour or Upset Stomiclv
Gasslness, Heartburn, Slecplcsse.css. ate.
•1iji> to Excess Acid. Sold on 1.1 days' n-rUS
A.«k for "Willard's Messago" liich f ullj
. _ ....... v.._ n....... ...... ... | explains tbis treat men t—free—at
Rural Overseas Program, which roadv had eateR av,av miu.h of C. ERHARD DRUG STORE
i- a church sponsored program to [
collect and provide commodities j
in hulk for distribution overseas j
t the needy by church relief
agencies, was now being organ-
izer! for an intensified campaign
in Texas and the nation.
In accepting the honorary
chairmanship the Governor referr-
ed to the Christian Rural Over-
seas Program as a most worthy
cause and one in which he was
g ad to have a part.
lie said that CROP SUNDAY
offered opportunity to bring the
finer interpretation and full
meaning of the program to church
congregations throughout the state.
Read The Want-Ads
Farmali Tractors - International Trucks
McCormick-Deering Implements
Milking Machines - Milk Coolers
Refrigerators - Home Freezers
Disk Harrows - Grain Drills
Fertilizer attachments & Spreaders
Mowing Machines - Side Delivery Rakes
Self Hay Balers - Combines - Row Binders
Good stock of parts.
Repair shop with trained mechanics
STALMACH'S
Dealers, International Harvester Co.
Sales & Service
Smithville Phone 2
Texas
TAKE HOME A
Pleasant living calls for FkcMIUM QUALITY
PEARL BEER. It's the friendly beverage—
an invitation to relaxl Keep a supply of handy
Keg-Kans* in your refrigerator—ready for
mealtime and between meal treats. The PEARL
label is your assurance of PREMIUM QUALITY
BEER—the best in the art of brewing and the
costliest ingredients. PEARL BEER is now in
Keg-Kans' for convenient storage — easy
disposal — quick cooling —-• in 6, 12 and 24
can cartons. Take home a carton today!
We Call For And Deliver
In Bastrop
MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS
AUSTin LAIMDRY
0IAL 3566 * '1,c do 'family tdnihinq • DIAL3566
1514 LAVACA STREET
leasure
P
P B/M P Q
1/^ERBEER
rlils Is llir famous IVnrl Beer, brewed
In Texas lor Texnns since 1H86, under
our orlttimil formula from the choicest
barley malt, hops ami brewers grains,
combined with San Antonio's world
famous Artesian Wutcr
mm
AVAILAtll IN
KeqKans
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Standifer, Amy S. Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 97, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 3, 1949, newspaper, November 3, 1949; Bastrop, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth237243/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bastrop Public Library.