The Shamrock Texan (Shamrock, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 287, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 13, 1938 Page: 4 of 4
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THE SHAMROCK TEXAN Shamrock, Texas
Wednesday, April 13,
YOU
WHO!
Minister Seeks
Kidnap Proof
Changing a typewriter ribbon
a simple operation that can become
very complicated in no time at all.
____and for some reason we always
end up with yards and yards of rib-
bon on the floor after starting out
•with tlie whole idea firmly fixed in
our mind.....A1 Ryan lias trouble
that way and he will never buy
ribbon unless someone puts it
the typewriter.....said he had
used one ribbon for almost a year
one time before he could find a dar-
ing soul who would attempt
change it for him.
We were certainly surprised when
we discovered the lady we always
thought was Mrs. Howard Weather
by was someone else and all these
months we’ve been calling her Mrs.
Weatherby.
JjOCALS
Mrs. Claire Sutherland of Dun-
can, Okla., is here visiting this week.
John D. Glenn and Richard Cocke
of Wellington transacted business
here Tuesday.
-o
Gerald Geyer made a trip to Am-
arillo today.
-o
T. H. Sutherland of Dallas, presi-
dent of the Lone Star Gas Company,
is here on business.
Henry Lemley returned from Dal-
las this morning with his daughter
ILeavern, who has been in the Scot-
tish Rite Hospital for the past six
months.
Mrs. Elizabeth J. Small is gravely
111 at her home. She is the mother
of Jess Small.
-o-
Mrs. J. R. Brown has been visit-
ing in Port Worth with her daugh-
ters.
Loyalists Fight-
(Continued from Page One)
Berras and La Granja in an area
about 18 miles from Lerida along
the Segre Rdver.
At the southern tip of the insur-
gent line, where government-held
territory narrows to less than 15
miles in width, government officers
Maid their troops were in possession
of the heights of Vallibona, com-
manding the highway from Morelia
to the sea.
Rebels Claim Gains
Insurgents denied the reports and
eaid their troops had captured the
village of Beceite in the pass be-
tween mountain ranges guarding
Tortosa, objective of the left wing
of southern Insurgent forces.
JAPANESE SHANTUNG
FORCES IN BAB W
PERSISTENT CHINESE COUNTER
ATTACKS PUT INVADERS
ON DEFENSIVE
SHANGHAI, April 13. — Foreign
military observers believe the Japa-
nese are in an extremely difficult
military position in south Shantung
province, where persistent Chinese
counter attacks have put the Jap-
anese on thedefensive along the 150-
mile battlefront.
The hunt for 12-year-old Peter
Levine, kidnaped from New Ro-
chelle, N. Y., centered on Darien,
Conn., as a new ransom note,
apparently authentic, was re-
ported received there. The Rev.
Francis J. H. Coffin, above, of
Larchmont, N. Y., named inter-
mediary by Murray Levine, the
victim’s father, declared that all
he wants is proof the boy still
lives and he “can get the $30,000
in five minutes.”
The Chinese said today they had
retaken Crufu, birthplace of Con-
fucius, on the Tientsln-Pukow rail-
way in a hand-to-hand combat.
The Chinese said they occupied
the hills surrounding Yihsien, on
a spur line east of the railway, in
a night attack and were engaging
Jaipanees defenders there after they
drove the Japanese from Taierhch-
wang, 25 miles to the southeast.
The Japanese were rushing rein-
forcements by the thousands into
the Shantung War zone in an effort
to repel the Chinese offensive and
resume the Japanese campaign
against Suchow and other strategic
cities along the Lunghai railway,
transportation artery of Central
China.
A Japanese army spokesman here
Believes in Watching
Pennies for U. S.
Carson
TOHN CAR-
J S O N , con-
sumer’s counsel
for the Bitumi-
n o u s C.o a 1
Commission, is
one govern-
ment official
who believes
Uncle Sam’s
money should
be spent spar-
i n g 1 y — so he
will turn back
$50,000 of his
appropriation
for the year
iniiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiHMit
Just Among
Us Boys!
•iinmiiimiiiiMMiiiiiiiiilMMilliiiiliiiiiiiliiiiiliiiiiiiiiii
(Continued from Page One)
started and we let them rave as we
would rather listen to football than
the weather. Well, sir, when Coach
Bill Allen started introducing those
big, clean-cut youngsters who will
make up the football team, we got
the shivers. They have got material
for a varsity squad. To make it
worse, C. A. Cryer, the superintend-
ent of schools who was our host,
would lean over and whisper in our
_ ,, .. . , ear about every other time Bill In-
in the extreme north, reorganized I );ro(juced a man, that fine
units of the government army mov- ymmgster, he>s six feet three and
ed Into mountain positions to block
the Insurgents’ line of attack
through the Pyrenees. Government
etaff officers, after a swift reorgan-
ization tour, set up headquarters at
Fuigcerda, just across the border
from Bourgmadame, France.
insurgents were advancing slowly
against a 50-mile defense line set
up to protect the region and a clash
■was expected. The insurgents were
trying to cut the electric power line
from the Republic of Andorra,
which has been supplying Catalonia
with most of its electric power since
Insurgents seized the hydro-electric
plants at Tremp.
——»-o-
Henry Lemley In—
(Continued from‘Page One)
county, the Depression caught me,
and I have had to do these things.
‘T fully appreciate the fact that a
public officer needs to be honest and
sober, and that even this small office
Is Important, and I promise that If
elected I will conduct myself In
keeping with the oath that I take,
and with the degree of proper living
that such an office should require
“I earnestly solicit your votes and
weighs 190,” or something equally
comforting.
We have said many times, and we
wish to repeat it, McLean consist-
ently has the cleanest-cut football
players and the finest and most loy-
al bunch of fans you ever saw. Sup-
erintendent Cryer and the school
system and the whole town should
be complimented on the contribu-
tion McLean has made to the cause
of good sportsmanship. And listen,
that pep squad is a bunch of honies,
if you ask us.
—JAUB—
State Representative Worley, by
the way, sure made a hit with those
McLean Tigers, pep squad girls, and
fans. He gave them a talk that was
right down their alley and they sure
thronged around him to congratu-
late him after the banquet was over.
Some of the students have volun-
teered to recruit a brigade of high
school boys and girls to go out over
the territory, campaigning for Gene,
when he says the word. (He has no
opponent as yet). Now, isn’t that a
fine attitude for the McLean boys
and girls to take, not only as re-
gards Gene himself, but to show the
neighborly spirit existing between
MieLean and Shamrock?
LIBERTY
THEATRE
“When Better Pictures Are Shown
The Liberty Will Show Them”
Thursday-
“THE WESTIAND
CASE”
With Preston Foster, Frank
lenks, Carroll Hughes and the
cute and beautiful Barbara
Pepper.
-News Reel & Comedy-
Admission 10c & 15c
your influence and pledge myself
that you will not regret having sup-
ported me."
Goodrich Campaign
(Continued from Page One>
territory, will be present at the
meeting to give a brief statement of
the principles of his campaign.
It is a testimonial to the charac-
ter of the candidate that the boys
and girls of Pampa and Shamrock,
the culture of their schools and good
citizens are willing to do him this
honor. His friends believe in him as
an honorable man seeking an hon-
orable position.
The program will begin at 2:30
o’clock in the afternoon.
British Guiana’s trade for
flnrt II months of 1931 was
greatest in nine years.
........... o-
the
the
Kansas university will observe this
year the 78th anniversary of Its
professed to have no available in-
formation on progress of the Shan-
tung fighting but said “important
operations” are proceeding of a
character which he could not re-
veal.
SCURRY FARM YOUTH
SLAYS STEPFATHER
MAN KILLED AS OFFICERS ON
WAY TO ARREST HIM
FOR CRUELTY
SNYDER, TEXAS, April 13. —
Blenard Owens, 38, farmer, was
shot to death Tuesday and Deputy
Sheriff “Pop” Galyean and Con-
stable Ather Chandler said the
man’s step-son, Daniel Odell Arnold,
15, told them he fired after Owens
had threatened to kill him.
The shooting occurred at the
Owens home nine miles southeast of
here while Scurry county officers
were enroute to the farm to arrest
Owens on a charge of cruelty, filed
a few hours earlier by his wife.
Galyean and Chandler, Snyder of-
ficers, said the youth told them he
killed Owens with a single shot
from his rifle as the man approach-
ed the door in which he was stand-
tag.
The youth said the shooting oc-
curred after Owens had threatened
LUBBOCK MOTORISTS
ANGERED BY METERS
OWNERS ’STRIKE’ BY PARKING
CARS IN SPACES WITHOUT
DEPOSITING NICKELS
LUBBOCK, April 13. — Engaging
in what they termed a “sit-down
strike against parking meters,” a
group of Lubbock automobile own-
ers parked their cars in meter
spaces yesterday morning without
depositiing their nickels in the de-
vices.
They declared further that if they
should be prosecuted and fined, they
will “carry the fight to the highest
court.”
Spokesmen for the group were L.
D. Thomas, proprietor of a tailor
shop and a defeated candidate April
5 for the city commission, and Jim
Johnson, associated in ownership of
a barber shop. Joining them were E.
T. Burdett and Cliff Harvey, also
barbers.
Automobiles of each was parked
in front of an idle meter. Each car
bore a police tag citing the owner to
appear in corporation court to an-
swer a charge of illegal parking.
Each car owner displayed a sheaf of
police ‘tickets’ they said they had
received previously and which they
had ignored.
City officials said that if the cases
eventually should reach the higher
courts, it will be the first test, so far
as they were able to determine, of
the law by a person convicted of its
violation. There have been previous
tests, however, of parking meter or-
dinances under civil statutes, higher
courts holding having been uniform-
ly In favor of the validity of the
measures.
of the highest paid operatic si
the world.
Chaliapin died after a two-wi
illness of kidney ailments w]
came complicated with anemla.^L
Tenth largest of the great
of the world, Great Bear Lake]
an area of 10,000 square miles.
FAMED RUSSIAN OPERA
STAR DIES IN PARIS
to kill him and alter Owens had
fought with Mrs. Owens, the officers
reported.
The youth’s version of the slaying
was corroborated by a written state-
ment made to officers by Mrs. Hazel
Kirkland, Owens’ step-daughter.
PARIS, April 13. — Feodor Chal-
iapin, 65, whose great basso voice
raised him from obscure poverty to
world renown, died Tuesday.
The great opera stages of the
world revered him, but he remained
the tempestuous, unaffected person-
ality of his youth when he was the
shoeless, hungry son of a Russian
peasant.
Chaliapin went to the United
States in 1906 to sing at the Metro-
politan, but not until his return to
New York 16 years later was his art
acclaimed. His genius made him one
TRY A TEXAN WANT AD!
Easter
Specials
¥2.50 Oil
Permanent
¥4.00 Oil
Permanent
(Special Oil on These
Permanents)
$2.50
¥5.00
Waves
$3.50
PHONE 341
Nu-Wave Beauty
Shoppe
Mrs. Andrew Morgan
907 N. Okla. St.
THIS MODERN TREASURE'HOUSE OF
C IP K
You can have one of these valuable Complete Kitchen Manuals.
at almost no cost if you save the coupons that, starting today, will
appear daily in this newspaper. Here is all the best of what the entire
world knows about fine cooking. Here are choice, selected recipes
from every nook and corner of the civilized globe, representing the
.outstanding achievements of noted chefs from nearly every country.
Here is a veritable treasure house of dependable suggestions that will
enable any woman to cook expertly—and to give a delicious variety
to the home menu. Here are hundreds of clever answers to the a+fS
woman’s age-old problem “what to serve”. You will thoroughly ap- |r Cir
This Beautiful
art metal
CABINET
brings you
preciate this great Manual. You will find valuable uses for it every day
—and you will come to have the greatest confidence in it, for you
will find it completely dependable. Tou can rely upon it always.
^MtTODAY
PACKET N? 1
PLANTATION KITCHEN SECRETS
0 the OLD SOUTH
Unquestionably much of the American reputation
for luxurious living goes back to the hiaorical planta-
tion* of the Old South, where famous old slave cook*
originated dishes that delighted the gourmets of the
world In this packet it is our privilege to present the
treasured recipes upon which Southern Cooking was
founded Many of these were Jealously guarded secrets
which, so far as we know, have never before been pub-
lished. This packet will be keenly appreciated by wom-
en who love to cook superbly
Save these Coupons and Get this
MAGNIFICENT CABINET
at Merely Nominal Cost
Starting today and continuing for ten weeks an Official TESTED
RECIPES COUPON will appear in this paper daily. Save these
coupons. They will bring you, at merely nominal cost, a complete
service the preparation of which has involved thousands of dollars.
When you have a complete set, numbered from one to six, bring the
set to our office with a dime and receive one packet in the new
TESTED RECIPES series. By saving the coupons regularly you
can acquire the entire collection, 200 cards, each presenting a world
famous recipe, with a precisely accurate list of ingredients and exact
directions. Elsewhere on this page is a description of these packets.
A new packet will be available every week and there are 10 packets
in all. You will want every one of them. At the end of the tenth
week you will be eligible- to receive one of the beautiful Art Metal
Cabinets for but 39c. This Cabinet is constructed of heavy steel to
last a lifetime and is attractively finished in Art Metal—crinkled
Shamrock Green on the outside, Lettuce Green lacquer within. U
has ** hinged cover and will hold approximately JJ0 reape.
cards. To get your first packet fill out this certificate and bring
it to our office.
Cabinet Certificate
TV* CmWmU .MmS ml >1
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Bones, Percy. The Shamrock Texan (Shamrock, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 287, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 13, 1938, newspaper, April 13, 1938; Shamrock, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth525835/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Shamrock Public Library.