The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, December 28, 1928 Page: 3 of 8
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:
i home.
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seasons of the year when
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U wish every home the most happiness at
lime
ti§
yiiy
when every person is trying to do something to cause
friends and loved ones to even increase their happiness in
this life.
It is our business to help people become home owners that
have never enjoyed this privilege, and we shall be glad to
talk the matter over with you and tell you our plan and listen
to your proposition, if you have any desire to become a
home owner.
.....■ " ■ ........—■ •
Wm. CAMERON & CO., Inc.
LUMBER
CHAS. R. NELSON. Mgr!
TELEPHONE 30 - CLIFTON, TEXAS
HOW MANY MEN SELECT
CHURCH THEY ATTEND
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A few years ago, back on his New
"England farm, the deacon had said
to meMany a man is not only wil-
ling, he’s really anxious to have his
Wife go regularly to any sort of
■church. He has a kind of unworded
fueling that in case her system of
theology happened to be the right
•one, then there’s one member of the
family 0. K. Besides, it comes
natural to any nice man to carry his
claim on the future in his wife,s
name.” . s
“A lot of men go to church with
their wives,” I had suggested.
“Sure enough,” said the deacon.
•“But which one of ’em chooses the
■church?
“No,” he added, reflectively, “not
ly men do as much thinking when
choose a church as when they
■decide between the Rotary and the
Jtiwanis. And they’d rather not join
any church that compels ratiocina-
tion t Whan something exciting hap-
pens that seta people to thinking in- {tains ranch if m
aide a church the membership falls!potency of fresh
CANNED MEAT HEALTH-
FUL, THEY
SAY
Home canned meat, if properly pro-
cessed, retains the vitamin B found
in fresh lean meat and is helpful in
preventing pellagra. Foods Specialist
of A. A M. College announces after
consulting with two eminent Wash-
ington authorities. “Pellagra is a
dietary disease which is on the in-
crease in Texas,” says Miss Blair,
“and the best way of preventing its
occurrence is to consume fruits, veg-
etables, lean meat, and milk.” We
have questioned whether the canned of the comtrf> a naort of whlch T«*-
meat put up by thousands of farm
women every year is entirely helpful
and whether it can substitute for fresh
lean meat in pellagra control.
Dr. Cummins of the United States
Public Health Service writes: “The
studies of the Public Health Service
indicate that canned meat retains
much if'not all the pellagra prevent-
ing potency of fresh meat. This is all
the more probable since tests of
canned salmon have shown that it.re-
net all the protective
salmon.”
off.”—Burge* Johnson In the
-American Review.
North Dr. Louise Stanley, Chief
Bureau
The Clifton Record and the Dallas
12.60 .per year.
M: *
mm
J. C. Carpenter
Physician and Surgeon
Day And Night
Office in 1
BROS. DBU6 STORB
Clifton, Texas
D. J. THOMAS, Jt.
—Phone 61—
Waco Daily
ml
I. T. Hill Dray line
Freight and Transfer Hauling of t
and Transfer Hauling ef All
Kinds. Baggage Called For
and Delivered.-
Phone 287. Night Phone 256
Clifton, Texas
of Hotne Economics in thi
Urtited States Department of Agricul-
ture, says: “I will sty that if the
meat is well canned it will not inter-
fere seriously with its nutritive value.
Vitamins A and B are the ones usu-
ally present in meat. There is no con-
siderable amount of A, and B is
it would be retained. I do not believe
the time and temperature of process-
ing meat would destroy any very large
amount of vitamin B factor and I see
no objection to teaching the Use of
canned meat.”
“This knowledge,” states Miss
Blair, “is important to the thousands
of farm women who are using the
can neH meat. It is, also, important in
the study undertaken by Texas home
demonstration club woman of the pre-
vention of dietary diseases of which
pellagra is the most common to all
parts of the state
The Record and Dallas News $2.50
£L
HI
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* . -
. I 1
panies in to* part of the State. Fol-
■lowing clossly upon the purchase jrf
the Orient road and the completion of
other extensions by the Santa Fe and
Denver lines, the Santa Fe is again
asking for a permit to construct ad-
ditional feeders. It now desires to ex-
tend from Seagraves, Gaines county
through Lea county, New, Mexico,
forty miles, then south for twenty-
six miles. It is to be hoped that no
obstacles may be thrown in the way
of the fullest railroad development
of that rich part of the State and the
adjacent New Mexico territory.
It now seems #o be entirely up to
Ssn Antonio as to whether the pro-
posed Gulf A West Texas Railroad,
from Corpus Christi to San Angelo
is built. The towns along the line
have done all that has been asked of
them and San Antonio is being urged
to subscribe for $650,000 of 1 per cent
preferred participating stock. With
the stock capitalisation, assurance
has been given that bonds can be
floated with which to fill in the neces-
sary gaps to complete a line through
San Antonio that would be the best
trade feeder that city could have. The
promoters of the road have been con-
tinuously at work for more than a
year and are hopeful now that San
Antonio will do Its part to make the
building a certainty.
Sonie Texans still do things in a
big way. John Humphries, a Marfa
real estate man, has donated 23,109
acres of land to the State of Texas
for a State park. It is located 12 miles
east of Presidio, where the Santa Fe
will cross into Mexico, a section of
rugged country, deep canyons and
wonderful scenery. Those who have
seen the ranch say it can, at compar-
atively small expense, be converted
into one of the most attractive parks
ans will always be proud.
The Uvalde pecan show waa a rev-,
elation even to the pecan growers of
the Uvalde section. The exhibition in-
cluded many varieties of both the un-
improved native pecans and the im-
proved Varieties. Much attention is
being given to grafting and budding
the best varieties of pecans on the
native stock of that territory. Uvalde
claims the distinction of being tile
largest pecan shipping point in the
United States, the shipments for this
year being expected to reach 40 car
loads or about 1,500,00(1 pounds. Tex-
as is just coming into a proper appre
elation of the pecan industry.
A Perryton fanner this year raised
more than 50 kinds of vegetables,
fruits and field crops on his farm. He
msmm
MA&
fet§
ill,
'
for the 3d million families
MODSL to. A powerful A. C.
M* that uses 6 A C. tuba
mi l rectifying tube. Without
tuba. $77. '
Radio Speaker*,
to three aiaa.
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for all the events on the air always!
f X TE are ready now to serve you
VV with Atwater Kent Radio
■
rather resistant to heat, so I think also has 400 head of sheep, 40 head
of hogs, 10 horses and 200 chickens
It would be a pretty safe bet that he
has not been heard complaining about
hard times on the farm.
- - -
The next legislature needs to do
something to speed up election re-
turns. But for the Texas Election
Bureau, a private enterprise of the
newspapers, Texans would not be able
to learn the results of one election be-
fore another is on. Some 40 Texas
counties have not yet made their re-
port to the secretary of state, as ex-
pected, though it seems not as re-
quired, by law. ;
A Baptist preacher at Bryan has
“seven Jersey cows on the city
grounds” whatever that may mean,
that produced 258 pounds of butter
during October, 10 pounds of which
was used by the family and the bal-
ance sold for $148.80. That is one
preacher who does' not seem to be
dependent on the generosity of
congregation when the hat is passed.
/
The tax assessors of Texas at their
Austin convention approved a $350,-
000,000 Statewide road bond issue, as
proposed by R. S. Sterling, chairman
of the State Highway
While it has not been
voters for approval
ready much dir " *
sal and strong op]
in some
3 will doubtless
A4. .» ,
sl ame
Commission.
to
eing
’SSL*
stry in Tex-
i|
—already in 2,000,000 homes!
Come in today and choose the
model you want from our complete
stock. Whatever the model, you are
assured of the fine performance and
dependability for which this radio
»famous.
The marvelous tone will bring yon
—realistically—the thrill of foot-
ball, the excitement of election
night, the splendor of grand opera,
the up-to-the-minute news of the
world. ' V t ' •
'v M **¥8
You can’t go Wrong when yon
choose the radio of2,000,000 homes
here.
'll
■w
Iff
ISIS
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Easy terms—come today
CARPENTER BROS.
Dealers
Clifton
Texas
. Vs
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Phone for a free home demonstration
___
.......iWu .’i-SSMBf' '■
THIRTY-NINE YEARS
OF FAITHFUL SERVICE
ADULTS CONTACT CHaDKEN-sfiELL TEXAS HILLS
■The Old Reliable” u the name
given Toby’s Practical Business Col*
lege & School of Finance & Business
Administration by its alumni and ft
is just exactly what they have named
it. For 39 years this institution has
enrolled and graduated students from
all over Texas and adjoining states
and many from far and wide over
the Ui S. and Mexico. Toby’s College
has always been a thorough and dig-
th(4nified in®dtution, rendering faithful
and honest work. Thousand* and thou-
sands of ito graduates, who fie
counted among the most prominent
business men and women of the state
will attest to this fact. It is, and al-
ways will be, ‘“The Old Reliable,” do-
ing faithful and honest work and at
all times not only keeping up with,
but just a little ahead of the times.
A scholarship for a thorough business
course in Toby’s Business College is
the best investment a parent can
make for a son or daughter, and
which will prove the best ins
for old agfe. The young man or
woman who invests money
ness education will live to
t will prove to be one of the
PHgTT DISEASES
Adults can, and do, contract many
children’s diseases. And, usually, they
suffer from them much more than
children do. For instance, many adults
contract worms, an ailment usually
associated with children. Sometimes
Tuesday
wsgotiati
they suffer intensely’and takV expen-1 company
sive medical treatments, without real-
ising that worms are the
their troubles. Yet, the
oms are
<*„ M TO BE FI
Minneapolis, "ST
Bell, president of General Mills, In<
announced
■tor.1
seriates
(muse of located at
wmvsiMW
and restless
and anus and
the same medicine that surely
harmlessly expels round and
which you can get at Price & Stuart
—....... ■, .
POSTED NOTICE
Absolutely no bunting, fishing or
trespassing allowed on the following
farms;
John Pederson,
J. A. Bakke,
C. M. Bakke. Jr. tfc
Itivei
EE*
Texi
try. Eh
3K
and the Dallas
V. 1 • ■
V. ,V'' 9.
ImMi
dent,
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Baldridge, Robert L. The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, December 28, 1928, newspaper, December 28, 1928; Clifton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth775274/m1/3/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nellie Pederson Civic Library.