The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, December 6, 1940 Page: 6 of 8
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THE CIJFTON BECOSD, CL.FTON. ,
[ MODERN EQUIPMENT
t machinery for the care of your garments, and especially
ate ones, we can assure our customers utmost satisfac-
• many years experience prepares us for giving the cus-
satisfaction.
‘ " > best.tailors and will be glad to take your individ-
for suits and other clothing; guaranteeing fit
THANKS FOR YOUR BUSINESS
& CIJFTON TAILORS
Sam Ringness, Prop,
ii : : Clifton Texas
Tribune)
£ Tweedy has been on the
May of Apple Springs
her brothers, Percy
[ John Higginbotham.
left Friday for Brown
he has employment for
Jacob of Dallas spent
I here with her parents:
I, j. R. Jacob,
“ s. Doc Key and son of
; the holidays here with
a, Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Burns
I Mrs. E. C. Lay and sons
were here Thursday
relatives.
Mrs. Paul Powers and Mr
M. O. Slay visited relatives
during the holidays.
Graham of NTSTC, Denton
anksgiving with his mother,
Arch Graham and family here
r. and Mrs. H. B. Nutt attenk-d
B.T.U. convention in Dallas
k-end.
Howard was at home from
for the Thanksgiving holidays
relatives.
Miss Peggy Pool was at home from
Denton Teachers’ College for the
Thanksgiving holidays.
Thomas Hardy of Denton visited
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
Raley here Saturday.
Mrs. Jim Stanford of Jonesbori
visited recently with her sister, Mrs.
Jack York and family.
R. M. Smallwood has been confined
to his home for the past ten days or
more on account of illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Raley of Temple
spent Thanksgiving with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Raley and other re
latives here.
h! Gene Prince of Clifton visited dur-
ing the Thanksgiving holidays with
his uncle, Wifi Freedman and family
in Valley Mills.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M Britain and
daughter, Mary, spent Thanksgiving
FOR HER CHRISTMAS
This Christmas give Watches,
Diamonds, Silverware or
^Jewelry
in
“boxes from Armstrong”
HEADQUARTERS
FOR
RINGS-
..
We specialise in Engagement and Wed-
ding Bings—rings of quality and char-
acter, at prices you can afford.
The finest values to be found.
Convenient credit terms at no
increase in price.
See the Largest Stock of Fine
Diamonds in Central Texas at
day in Asa with Mr. and Mrs. Weldon
Youngblood and family. Mary re-
mained to visit during the holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. V. B. Sadler spent
Thanksgiving day in Coryell City
with their son, Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Sadler and family.
Mrs. Mattie Bailey of Waco visited
with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. J. B. Galbreath last week-
end.
Joe McNeill Jr. of Austin was here
for the holidays visiting his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe R. McNeill and other
relatives and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hays of Waco
motored over Thanksgiving afternoon
for a visit with Mrs. J. E. Jarrett.
Mrs. R. M. Roberts an ddaughter and
family of Spur, were passing visitors
here Thursday with their daughter-in-
law and grandchildren, Mrs. Mamie
Roberts and family.
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Madewell of
China Springs and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Ueckert of Waco were guests
Thursday in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Chas. Bentley.
Miss De Edra Thompson visited
with relatives in Tyle.- during the
holidays.
C. C. Scruggs Jr. of Throckmorton
arrived home Sunday night for a few
days visit with his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. J C. Oliver moved
from Ft. Worth Saturday and are liv-
ing with Mrs. Oliver's mother, Mrs
T. G. Rice.
Miss Ruth Brown of Corpus Christi
was here during the holidays for a
visit with her parents, Supt. and Mrs.
G. H. Brown.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Fluker of Over-
ton spent Thanksgiving with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Tweedy.
Rev. and Mrs. W. C. Dobbs, Mrs.
Archie Hill and Agatha Lawrence
were in Ft. Worth Friday where they
attended the State B.T.U. convention.
Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Montgomery of
Valley View visited from Thursday
until Sunday with her mother, Mrs.
W. H. Lay.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gibbs of Grape-
vine visited during the holidays here
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Gibbs and in Clifton with relatives of
Mrs. Gibbs.
Happy Morris of Austin, Evelyn
Morris of Dallas and Doc Morris of
Pensacola, Fla., spent Thanksgiving
with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs
J. E. Sears.
VALLEY MILLS TEAM
LOSES TO TEAGUE 14 TO 0
Teague, Nov. 28—Teague finally
got going in the second half here
Tuesday afternoon to subdue the stub-
born Valley Mills Eagles, 14 to 0, in
a non-conference pigskin tussle. The
Lions were held without a score the
first two periods as Valley Mills
threatened with its strong passing at-
tack.
Leamon Long skipped 25 yards for
the iLion ice-braker in the third quar-
ter with Guyton plunging the extra
point across.
Herbert Stricklin made both touch-
down and extra point to climax a 25-
yard drive in the fourth period.
Valley Mills, featuring Bray and
Harris, advanced to Teague’s 10-yard
stripe in the first quarter but was
thrown back on some tight line play.
John Rudasil, James Haws and
Raymond Gilmore were stalwarts in
the Lion forward walL
Teague plays Mart for the bi-dis-
trict championship next week.
ATTENTION, PLEASE
Poultrymen, Dairymen and hog
raisers. Bring in your home grown
grains and let ns make or formulate
you a good balanced feed that wifi
give you real results. We carry all
important ingredients and minerals.
You will be surprised how low in
price it will be compared with buy-
ing ready mixed feeds.
The Bronstad Gin & Feed Mill 2tc Misery of
Dr8.Goodall& Witcher
CLINIC-HOSPITAL BLDG.
CLIFTON : TEXAS
H. J. Cureton
ATTORNEY AT LAW
MERIDIAN. TEXAS
To Relieve
The 1941 Jackson day dinners, an-
nual nation-wide celebration sponsor-
ed by the democratic party to raise
campaign funds, will be held in Fe-
bruary instead of January as usual
COLDS
Liquid
t ;h
ose 1
666 W
Try <‘Rub-My-Tism’’-a Wonderful
Liniment
YOUR MONEY WILL
BE
REFUNDED
All those holding season tickets for
the 1940 Clifton High School football
games at Clifton may get a refund
of thirty-five cents for each ticket if
presented at the Farmers State Bank
for that purpose, as one game the
season tickets called for was not
played, though paid for. Money not
refunded to those not desiring it will
remain in the Athletic Fund for fu-
ture use.
ltc The Athletic Council
SATURDAY SPECIALS
PINTO BEANS, 5 Lbs............................................. ........19c
CRUSHED PINEAPPLE, 8-oz. cans, two for..................15c
PEANUT BUTTER, P|nt Jar ... ....... ............................12c
UNCLE BEN’S RICE, 2 Lb. Pkg.................... .................11c
JERGEN’S TOILET SOAP, 4 bars...................................16c
JEWEL SHORTENING, 4 Lb. Carton ...........................35c
SPUDS, Good Ones, 10 Lbs.................................................16c
SPINACH, No. 2 Can, Three Cans .............. .... ..............21c
ORANGES, Nice Ones .........................................................,.l7c
-CREAM, POULTRY & EGGS WANTED-
ANDERSON FOOD STORE
Cranfills Gap -:- Texas
{a Aneteaqe elpecialhf. ^AmtheAi}
M
Yes Sir,
“tops”!
I',■»
:.=■■■ -
Glul&ie+t Uue In a would
Children spend a great deal of time on the floor
at temperature levels far below those at the "breath-
ing line" of adults.
Because heat rises, room temperatures at floor
levels are 5 to 10 degrees COOLER than at heights
of five or six feet, depending upon the manner in
which your home is heated.
Don't give a cold an even break! See to it that
temperatures at floor level are healthfully comfort-
able for your children during the winter season.
and his welfare is an important responsibility.
TmS is not an ordinary advertisement.
It offers neither goods nor merchandise for sale.
_ ft* purpose is to remind you of the added obligation of parents during the
winter season. At the same time we are ever mindful of our own responsibility
in keeping your gas service dependable so that you may have the protection of
adequate heat to safeguard your family’s health.
You see, we too, have children.
We know of the anxious hours in every mother’s life when illness threatens
those she loves. We have watched with alarm a child’s mounting fevet of seri-
ous illness that started as a simple, common cold. With sleepless, fear-filled
eyes we ve watched through the night into the sunrise of a new day_as across
our worried mind flashed that grim published warning—one death every four
minutes from pneumonia! It was then that "prevention is the best remedy”
impressed us with its full significance. It was then we recognized the vital
importance of guarding against die simple, common cold.
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Lone Star
vr-&vG.
Supplying Natural <
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Baldridge, Robert L. The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, December 6, 1940, newspaper, December 6, 1940; Clifton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth778116/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nellie Pederson Civic Library.