Refugio County Record (Refugio, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 18, Ed. 1 Monday, December 28, 1964 Page: 2 of 4
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Refugio County Record, Monday, December 28, 1964—Page 2
ACROSS
1. Browned,;
as bread \
S. Boy Scout
gatherings
10. Dra vidian
language
11. Arm joint
13. Rugged
x mountain
crest
14. Apart
15. —— and
Mrs.
16. Like
17. Little
child
18. Part of ;
a clock ,
23. Senor’s
goodby ...
24. Wanders
28. Substandard
dwelling
30. Health ,
resort
33. Chinese /
perfecture
34. Perform
35. Religion
of India
37. Texas
mission
40. Celestial
being
41. Babul
tree pods
42. Of the earth
44. A fox
DOWN
1. Domesticate
2. Leave out
3. Dexterous
4. Thus
CROSSWORD
5. Hoard
\ 6. Snakelike
i fish
7. An account
item
8. Jolted
9. Soft drink
16. City of
Florida
12. Marry !
16. Man's v---
nickname
19. Nickel
' (sym.)
20. Speck
21. Helpfully
22. Mother
25. Norse god
26. Min.
strel
show
per-
former
27. En-
dured
29. Greek
letter
30. Shinto
temple
31. Half
a quart
32. Wrath
36. Take out
(print.)
37. Site of
Taj Mahal
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he mh am
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THE §
FAMILY
LAWYER
38. Den
39. Biblical
name
43. United
Nations
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A BISHOP LOOKS
SY THE RT. REV. EVERETT a JONES, DJk
H» Omtk. Mown «f *•* Tams
A PRAYER FOR 1965
. Surely there is no better way to
enter a new year than with a
• prayer. It is equally true there
: is no better way to begin each day
of the new year. Here is a prayer,
- composed by an unknown writer,
to slip into a Bible, a purse or a
ITCHING
LIKE MAD?
Get this doctor’s formula!
Zemo speedily stops torment of
externally caused itching ... of
eczema, minor skin irritations, non-
poisonous insect bites. Desensitizes
nerve endings. Kills millions of sur-
face germs. “De-itch” skin with
Zemo—Liquid or Ointment.
My Neighbor*
CHILD AT STAKE
In a hospital room, a child lies
seriously ill. Doctors agree on the
medical treatment that the child
should have. But the child’s par-
ents, prompted by sincere religious
convictions, will not allow it.
May a court step in? Does
society have the power to order
medical treatment for a child in
defiance of his own parents?
Clearly, momentous issues, both
moral and legal, are involved. A
state has both the right and the
duty to protect a child in danger.
Yet parents, by and large, are. en-
titled to raise their children as
they see fit. And, in most cases of
this kind, they buttress their posi-
tion by pointing to the cohsti-
tutional guarantee of freedom of
religion.
Case by case, in the law’s cau-
tious fashion, basic doctrines have
been worked out to resolve the
dilemma. Broadly speaking, a
court may indeed step in and
order medical treatment—but it
may do so only in extreme cir-
cumstances. Before taking that
step, the court will weigh these
key questions:
How serious is the child’s ill-
ness?
He figures making like a
Christmas tree will save him.”
What uo tA& hfOffiLVlky
Legislature--
(Continued from Page 1)
gain over October and $12,000,000
gain over November, 1963.
Total dollar amount or securities
processed during the last thiee
months was $110,700,000, compared
to $70,800,000 for the same period
last year.
SHORT SNORTS
Texas Good Roads Association
reveals that “some highway users”
will make attempts, (during the
coming legislative session), to be-
come exempt from State gasoline
taxes, but TARA will oppose all
exemptions.
Talking-Book and Braille copies
of the Warren Report are avail-
able on request from blind persons
“Slow Down and Live.”
“The life you save may be your
own.”
“Drinking Drivers Die.”
These broad, emotional appeals
are typical of the traffic safety
effort in America.
Considering the traditional prac-
ticality which is a legacy to Ameri-
can society from its pioneer for-
bearers, perhaps an appeal also
should be made to the driver’s
business sense.
That’s what Iowa authorities did.
They conducted a test in Polk
County (Des Moines), issuing re-
I flective “safety” license plates to
' 60 per cent of t h e automobiles.
They kept records for a year to
see if the cars with reflective
plates were involved in fewer ac-
cidents than cars with ordinary
painted plates.
They were. In fact, the study
indicated that if reflective tags had
been issued for all cars, they
would have prevented losses total-
ling from $166,000 to $372,000 (de-
pending upon whether you used
minimum or maximum figures to
compute accident cost estimates)
in damage, death and injury that
resulted from the nighttime acci-
dents involving vehicles with or-
dinary painted plates.
It would have cost $25,000 to
reflectorize all license plates is-
sued in Polk County. The return
j to the Texas State Library in Aus-
How risky is the medical treat-, tin. . 0n that $25,000 investment, then
ment that is contemplated? Texas 1965 wheat crop will total havp hpen 664 to 1488 pei
What are the chances that the; 66,500,000 bushels, or eight per cent
treatment will succeed?
above 1964 and 19 per cent above
PAINFUL CORNS?,
AMAZING LIQUID *7
RELIEVES PAIN AS
IT DISSOLVES CORNS AWAY
Now remove corns the fast, easy way
with Freezone®. Liquid Freezone re-
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skin line to dissolve corns away in just
days. Get Freezone...at all drug counters.
wallet for frequent use in the com-
ing year:
Father of all mankind,
throughout this day, and every
day, help me to remember that
a very real portion of Thy king-
dom has been placed in my
keeping. Therefore teach me
to love Thee:
with all my mind—-that I may , , ~ .. ,. „„„
think Thy thoughts after Thee, from ■ aad because the alternative was
dawn to dark, making beautiful almost certain death. And in a
and significant each decision of
my daily living; help me to re-
move all prejudice and small-mind-
edness, O Lord;
with all by heart—that I may
love those whom Thou lovest, feel-
ing for even the most unlovable
CdLlilLJiAL VVi.XJL OUV.L/CCU. | ------- - _ .
Sfforecasts^ “
likely to cause permanent deform-
ity in the victim. Still, the child’s
life was in no danger. And the
operation, although a common one,
did involve an appreciable risk.
Refusing to authorize surgery, the
court said:
“We have not yet adopted as a
public policy the Spartan rule that
children belong, not to their par-
ents, but to the state.”
In another case, however, a
court did authorize removal of a
child’s eye, because the operation
had a good chance to success—
third case a blood transfusion,
needed by a badly burned child,
was given by court order. To the
parents’ insistence on religious
freedom, the court replied:
“The parents in this case have
m iur even me ulliyioulv a perfect right to worship as they
ami difficult of Thy children Thine ! Pjease and believe what they
own everlasting mercy? [
with all my soul — that I may
seek fresh ways in which we can
all be one in Jesus Christ our
52Points!
Man,That's
Texas Buck
High-Flying Prospectors
tended a UNESCO-sponsored
please. They enjoy complete free
dom Of religion. But this right of
theirs ends where somebody else’s
right begins. This child is a human
Lord, praying for Thy divine power being in his own right, with a
to surge through my commonplace sou^ anc* ^1S ovvn>
-fill wlrrVif *
REMOVE
WARTS!
Amazing Compound Dissolve*
Common Warts Away
Without Cutting or Burning
Doctors warn picking or scratch*
ing at warts may cause bleeding,
spreading. Now amazing Com-
pound W® penetrates into warts,
destroys their cells, actually melts
warts away without cutting or
burning. Painless, colorless
Compound W, used as directed,
removes common warts safely,
effectively, I»*
routine from morning till night:
with all my strength—that I
may work the works of Him who
sent me while it is day, seeking
to channel through every act Thy
devotion to the needs of both my
neighbor and myself. Remind me
from moment to moment that this
is not optional, but the last com-
mand of Jesus Christ, our Lord.
Quicken me and use me this day,
for Thy name’s sake. AMEN.
rights of his own.
A public service feature of the
American Bar Association and
the 'State Bar of Texas. Whitten
by Will Bernard.
Austin. — Two astonishing prizes
have been reported to the Parks
and Wildlife Department from the
deep East Texas deer hunting area,
said E. A. Walker, wildlife special-
ist.
Among the estimated 600 bucks
harvested in Polk County by the
first week in December were
these, as described by Game
Warden Wayne D. Chappell of Luf-
kin : i
A 26 pointer which field dressed
220 pounds, shot by John Amor-
tiney of Houston, in the Cold Spring
area of Northwest Polk County;
A 52 pointer which field dress-
ed 163 pounds, bagged by J. A.
Hensley of Onalaska on Sandy
Creek in the west part of Polk
County.
Warden Chappell said many
havingl
The house cat is believed to be
a cross between the sacred cat
of Egypt and the European wild-
cat.
would have been 664 to 1488 per
cent.
Motorists were told the outcome
of the study. As a result, they
showed their busines sense by sup-
porting a bill for reflective license
plates.
The typical cost of reflectorizing
a set of license plates is 50 cents.
That 50 cents could save your life.
According to the Iowa study, this
is the kind of investment that
makes sense.
Reflective plates glow as far
away as 2,000 feet in headlights.
As a result, they prevent many
rear-end collisions involving slow-
moving, disabled or parked cars.
Seventeen states and the District
of Columbia have adopted such
tags.
It cost Flordia only five cents to
reflectorize 1965 plates. That’s the
amount of the increase in registra-
tion fee.
However, Flordia is reflectoriz-
ing only letters, numerals and bor-
der on one plate. Later, says Arch
Livingston, Commissioner of the
Motor Vehicle Commission, the
legislature expects to reflectorize
the entire plate and raise the regis-
tration fee 12 cents.
By then, Livingston expects such
general public approval of reflec-
tive plates that there will be little
or no opposition to an extra 12
cents.
Livingston believes that Florida
motorists will recognize a good
investment when they see one. The
big question now is: Why don’t
Bird’s-eye photography is per-
forming miracles of prospecting
undreamed of by the “desert
rat” who, with only a burro for
company, once searched the
West for gold.
From cameras borne aloft by
planes, rockets and satellites,
today’s “prospector” is discov-
ering unsuspected deposits of
gold, copper, iron and other
minerals. Such cameras can
cover up to 40,000 square miles
with a single exposure.
Aerial photography devel-
oped in World War II, now has
become a peacetime tool, says
the United Nations Educa-
tional, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO). This
| was the consensus of 190 scien-.u -r ------
I tists from 45 countries who at- efficient cataloguing methods.
meeting on the subject in Tou-
louse, France.
But mineral searches are only
one target of high-flying cam-
eras. They also give fast and
accurate information about soil,
vegetation, river systems, coast
lines and animal populations.
UNESCO points out that such
inventories are the first step to
ward putting the vast, emerg
ing portion of the world on the
road to self-support.
“Aerial photography is in-
dispensable to developing coun-
tries ,” UNESCO says. “They
need to catalog their natural re-
sources before they can exploit
them properly. They cannot af-
ford the time for slower, less
Happy Homemaking
•'above average;- bucks ——states make sound' invest-
from 13 to 22 points and weighmg ment in traffiC safety, with such
j 1^-160 pounds have been bagg ■, plates or other devise that has
There are more than 800,000 proved it can save dollars. And
I known species of ants. lives. __
it’s amazing;
i uo CAN GET
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1/ieOldJi/rwi'
“Man can control every-
thing but a woman and a hur-
ricane.”
Women Past 21
WITH BLADDER IRRITATION
Suffer Many Troubles
After 21, common Kidney or Bladder
Irritations affect twice as many women
as men and may make you tense and
nervous from too frequent, burning or
itching urination both day and night.
Secondarily, you may lose sleep and
suffer from Headaches, Backache and
feel old, tired, depressed. In such irri-
tation, CYSTEX usually brings fast,
relaxing comfort by curbing irritating
germs in strong, acid urine and by anal-
gesic pain relief. Get CYSTEX at drug-
gists. See how fast it can help yo>u.
A parmei?GREW,
A FIELD OF ‘
FEftY- UNDER
THE FIELD-
SERVED AS ,
YUE OVEN!
(Waupaca ;W\sc)
A SPttlftL
Rom m-rwe
making of
Swiss
-161$
Form
PND imPfrRYS
A DlSfiN&lW#
fwAVofc io idt
\\fei “
K’ing Charles*!.
OF FRANCE
BECAME INSANE
M\S PHYSICIAN
PRESCRIBED
MILK AND
PCMDERSO
PEARLS, as
A REMEty//
By Elizabeth Stone and
Mable Ode Baca
Home Service Advisers,
United Gas Corporation
Get out your baking utensils and
prepare for some real treats for
'tis the season — for baking and
serving hot breads.
The smell of fresh-baked breads
in the kitchen will draw a crowd
from all around the neighborhood,
so while you’re at it, bake a double
or triple batch of the following,
which we recommend as an excel-
len addition to your recipe file:
EARLY AMERICAN
RAISIN BREAD
1 % cups lukewarm milk
V2 cup sugar
1 tablespoon salt
2 cakes compressed yeast (or two
packages dry granular yeast)
4 eggs, beaten
1 box seedless raisins (15 ounces)
or 1 box currants (11 ounces)
y2 cup soft butter or margarine
6)4 to 6% cups sifted flour
Mix together milk, sugar and
salt. Crumble yeast into mixture
and stir until dissolved. Stir in
eggs, then raisins or currants. Add
butter or margarine and mix in
with spoon (or hand) enough flour
to make dough easy to handle.
Turn dough onto lightly floured
board, cover and let stand 15 min-
utes to tighten up, then knead un-
til elastic. Round up and place in
a greased bowl, turning once to
bring greased side up. Cover with
damp cloth and set to rise at 85
degrees until impression remains
when touched with finger (double
in bulk) . . . m to 2 hours. Punch
doiwn. Round up and set to rise
again until not quite double in
bulk . . . about 30 minutes. Punch
down and divide into two parts.
Form into two loaves. Place in
two greased pans (5x9x3 inch).
Brush tops with melted butter and
sprinkle with sugar. Let rise at
85 degrees until double in bulk . . .
about 1 hour. Bake about 50 min-
utes in moderate, preheated, 350
degree F. gas oven.
Fluids in the insect-eating pitch-
er plant digest meat and dgg white,
but are harmless when swallowed.
ctw Opossums f>re
SoT/NY 20
OF THEM WILL BARELY
Fill a teaspoon !
Peace, be still.— (Mark
4:39).
We cannot be at peace with
God unless we are first at
peace with ourselves—and we
cannot be at peace with our-
selves until we are at peace
with ali other persons and cir-
cumstances. We can call on
Christ, through prayer, to
quell the storms within us,
even as He subdued the winds
and waves.
INGROWN NJUl
HURTING YOU?
Immediate
Relief!
•ring bless*
cRuuK ijwji w. .ngrown na...
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ttiiuwn nail to be cut and thus pre-
,ts further pain and discomfort. OUTGKO
tvailabie at all drug counters.
nail, allows the
ven—-—_
Is available
ARTHRITIS-RHEUMATISM
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For the first time science has found
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“I used to
cry for no
reason at all”
One of the first
"change-of-life"
danger signals
No wonder a woman feels like
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of hot flashes one minute; cold,
clammy perspiration the next
can make a woman wonder
“What’s come over me!”
Change-of-life panic sets
nerves on edge, fills her with
fear!
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Refugio County Record (Refugio, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 18, Ed. 1 Monday, December 28, 1964, newspaper, December 28, 1964; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth709557/m1/2/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dennis M. O’Connor Public Library.