The Kingsville Record (Kingsville, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 12, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 9, 1927 Page: 5 of 22
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November 9, 1927
THE KINGSVILLE RECORD
PAGE 5
HULA' GIVES CLARA BOW
BEST ROLE SINCE
TWO RECIPES FOR
HOMEMADE CANDY
"Hula" brings thut loveable mad
cap of the screen. Clara How, buck to
Kingsville. It will head the program
ut the Kings Inn Theater next Monday
and Tuesday.
As ‘‘Hula,’’ pet of the Calhoun plan-
tation, Clara is said to have her best
role since "It.” She appears as a
carefree miss who, on the eve of her
sixteenth birthday, falls madly in love
with a handsome young English en-
gineer, Clive Hrook. Although he
doesn’t say so at first, he, too, is at-
tracted toward the magnetic girl.
Finally, the inevitable happens. Clara
forces him to admit his love, but at
the same time she also learns that
Brook is the victim of an unhappy
marriage. Ills wife, an unscrupulous
fortune hunter, refuses to grant him
a divorce. In addition to this, Clara
finds another woman attempting to
win Hrook away. How she emerges
from her predicament provides Para-
mount’s scintillating star with plenty :
of opportunities for showing off her
own peculiar talents.
Arlette Marchal is the other worn- j
an and Maude Truax, Brook’s wife.
Arnold Kent anacts an Hawaiian who
is jealous of Hrook because of his love
for Clara. Albert Gran is her disso-J
lute father and Agostino Borgato,
her uncle. Victor Flemming, maker
of “Mantrap" and “The Rough Rid-
ers" and "The Way of All Flesh," di-
rected.
Too many men waste time arguing
about the religion they haven’t got.
Paradoxical though It may seem, a
good old age Is often a very bad one. |
Don’t make the mistake of giving a i
man advice which doesn’t confirm hlsVt
own opinion.
Ton can scarcely blame a yacht for
Jumping up and down when it Is put
on another tack.
Can Be Tried at Next Candy
Pull by Young Folks.
(Prepared b> the Vnltc.1 State* Department
of Awrlcultui e )
Here are two recipes for homemade
candies that can be tried at the next
candy pull given by your young people.
The United States Department of Ag-
riculture supplies the recipes.
Peanut Brittle.
DEADWOOD DIClT
NOHKILLER
Famous Hero of Black Hills
Says He Has No
Notches on Gun.
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup freshly
roasted peanuts
halved
1 cup white corn
sirup
1 tablespoon vine-
gar
A4 teaspoon salt
Took the corn sirup, vlnegnt and
salt In a saucepan until a little
dropped In cold water forms a stilt
hall. Tut the peanuts and this sirup
Into an Iron skillet and stir until the
sirup becomes a golden brown. Re-
move from the lire and stir in the va-
nilla. Have ready a shallow buttered
pan, pour candy in tint! spread out In
a thin sheet. Allow to cool, then re-
move from pan and crack into pieces.
Nut-Coated Marshmallows.
1 cup blanched al-
monds
1 cup pecan kernels
1 cup English wal-
nut kernels
1 M teaspoons salt
2 cups medium
brown sugar
2-3 cup water
1 Vi pound, or 120
fresh soft marsh-
mallows
ISN'T IT THE TROTH?
An arm protruding from the car
ahead means that the driver Is:
1. Knocking ashes off a cigarette.
2. Going to turn to the left.
3. Telling a small boy to shut up,
he won’t buy any red pop.
4. Going to turn to the right
fi. Pointing out a scenic spot
6. Going to buck up.
7. Feeling for rain.
8. Telling his wife, yes, he's sure |
the kitchen door is locked.
9. Saluting a passing motorist or
going to stop.—Gerald Cosgrove in
Life.
Chop the nuts very line, and shake
through a sieve *to get the pieces uni-
form. Add the salt to the chopped
nuts and slit* well.
Make a sirup of the brown sugar
and water, boiling it to 10 s degrees C.,
or 22<> degrees F. If no thermometer
Is available the sirup should be boiled
till It ‘threads” from the spoon; but
tills method of determining Hie right
moment to take It off the tire is not so
accurate or satisfactory. Remove the
saucepan from the flame when the
temperature of 108 degrees C., or 220
degrees F. Is reached, and set in a
larger vessel of hot water. At once
drop the marshmallows one by one
Into the hot sirup, using forks to
handle them. Remove promptly, and
roll at once in the chopped nuts. Place
on oiled paper to dry. If the sirup
gets so cool that it begins to harden,
place it over the flame to reheat, but
do not allow it to come to a boil.
If there is a coating of loose starch
or powdered sugar on the marshmal-
lows brush or shake it off before dip-
ping them into the sirup.
UNTIL A MAN FINDS—
Justice, no charity is acceptable.
Peace, no happiness lasts very long.
God, his universe is without a cen-
ter.
Himself, nothing in life seems worth
while.
A good wife, no home is quite com-
plete.
A work worth while, no Job Is Inter-
esting.
An ideal he can respect, lie has not
begun to live.-—Detroit Free Press.
Not So Big
Hall Caine was the guest <if honor at
a literary dinner, and it fell In Thomas
Nelson Page to introduce him in what
the reporters are fond of calling "a few
well-chosen sentences.”
Just before rising to do so, Page
passed Ids menu card to Caine with a
request that lie autograph it.
"After you have spoken,” whispered
Sir Hall.
"No, no—do It now,” said Page.
Caine obeyed, and later he asked lii>
introducer why he had been in so great
a hurry to obtain his signature.
“Well,” said Page, “if you must
know, it was because I wanted to he
able to say truthfully that I had rein1
something you had written.”
“Knowledge” and “Wisdom”
How it comes to [mss I know not,
and yet it is certainly so, (here is as
much vanity and weakness of judg-
ment in those who proloss tin* great-
est abilities, who take upon them
learned callings and bookish employ-
ments as in any other sort of men
whatever; either because more Is re-
quired and expected from them, and
that common defects arc inexcusable
in them, or rather because Hie opinion
they have of their own learning makes
them more hold to expose and lay■ them-
selves too open, by which they lose
and betray themselves. -Montaigne.
[TirdfBinHrnrfaiiiiTininiiiinniTniinnninnTimRiiHiBiiiaigt.
Christmas Cheer
To Everyone
Put In That Order
Now
Get Your Order In Before Rush Starts
Wc Have a Wonderful Line On Xmas
And New Year’s Greetng Cards.
Kingsville Publishing Company
!i
Sioux Falls, S. D.—How many
notches an* there on the unerring
weapon of Dead Wood l)iek otherwise
plain Richard Clark, yet u resident of
Hie Rlnck hills--whose exploits, or
Imagined exploits, furnished t lie
theme for hundreds of dime and other
novels? Deadwood Dick himself an-
swered this momentous question wiita
the laconic words:
"Not one.”
Then, as if he realized ibis was hard 1
j to believe, he added:
"I tell the truth.”
This confession was made to Fred
I Croft, resident of the Missouri river
; section of South Dakota, who during
a recent visit to the Black hills hud
i the pleasure of riding with Deadwood
! Dick from Belie Fourche to Deud-
| wood.
Thought Him Bogus Hero.
At first Mr. Croft believed the man
beside him was some make-believe act-
ing the part of Deadwood Dick of
story-book fame, hut old-timers w
were present assured him that Dead-
wood Dick was the only original Dead-
wood Dick, scout and sharpshooter of
Black hills stagecoach days.
Dendwood Dick during the journey
told the central South Dakotan much
of the story of his life. How lie [dint-
ed the first stage coach into Deadwood
In 1870. almost two years after he ar-
rived in the Black hills with early
gold seekers. He pointed out the old
stagecoach trails, and at one point on
the Journey pointed out two ‘shacks”
In which he lived in those early and
exciting days and where several of his
children were horn.
Deadwood Dick Is an old man now,
hut spry and active. Mr. Croft states
ho won* a splendid suit of buckskin.
Deadwood Dick related to Mr. Croft
how stagecoaches in the Black Mils
were lirst protected from Indians and
road agents by outriders. These were
horsemen, one of whom rode ahead of
the coach and the other in tlit* rear.
Tlie riders were “armed to the
teeth," as were the two coach guards,
one of whom sat beside the driver and
the other facing the rear on top of tho
coach. Passengers were carried in the
stagecoaches, as were also mail, ex-
press and valuables of all kinds. It
was in tin* protection of their valuable
cargoes that tlie scouts and guards
became famous in tlie new West. This
was before tlie days of the famous
"armored treasure coach."
Deadwood Dick was asked: How
many men did you kill? IIow many
stage holdups were you in? Iimv
many times did Indians attack your
party and kill and scalp all hut you?
How many limes was your life saved
only by tin* swiftness of your horse or
the surenoss of your trusty weapon?
To all of these questions Deadwood
Dick modestly replied:
"Not one; 1 tel! tho truth.”
Some Given to Exaggeration.
Deadwood Dick Intimated that some
of his “pals” during tlie early and ex-
citing days of Indians and road agents
were inclined to paint their experi-
ences red with tin* blood of imaginary
conflicts.
In the dime novels and other litera-
ture of tin* period reckless writers
credited Deadwood Dick with all kinds
of deeds of valor, with routing whole
bands of ferocious Sioux Indians
single-handed, and with making road
agents "inti* tin* dust" before they
had time to “tickle a trigger.”
If there was a shipment of gold to
hi* sent out of tin* Black hills by stage,
Deadwood Dick hauled it. First, lie-
cause every one knew in* was ‘‘true
blue,” and because lie used Ids head
and could outwit pursuers. 11<* “knew
Hie game" and could beat the other
fellow at it.
Old-timers say a dose mouth was
the greatest asset of a stage driver
in the old days, and in liiis particular
Doadwood Dick shone with consider-
able luster.
0000000000 0000000000000000
% Honeymoon Left Out, \
Bridle Deserts Groom
d Boston. — William Alexander, o
possessor of a Scotch brogue, a
recited to Judge Mef’oole of tin* O
Suffolk Probate court the ind- 5
dents of his married life of eight
hours. He sought and obtained
a divorce on the ground of de-
sertion. lie said that he mar-
ried his wife, Catherine, now
living in Lowell, In that city in
January, 1921. After tin* cere-
mony they went to Hie home ho
had prepared In Boston.
As tin* hour of ten o’clock ap-
proached lie suggested to her,
"It's time to go to bod.” Sin*
did not agree to this, he said,
but he carried out his own In-
clination and retired. During
tlie night he awoke to find her
still absent arid going to the
kitdien found her sitting by Hie
stove. He went hack to bed and
on awakening the next morning
heard her telephone to her broth-
er to come and get her. This
the brother did.
When asked for an explana-
tion of this Romewhat unusual
conduct on the part of a bride,
Mr. Alexander offered. "It was
because T did not take her uway
a honeymoon."
SPECIAL FOR
SATURDAY
NOV. 12th
Potatoes
TOUNDS
Peanut Butter 1
1 2 Oz. Pails J*
POTTED MEAT AZr
Per Dozen Cans ^
No. 1 Tomatoes Cp
Limit 10 Cans, per Can
GALLON Per
APPLES Gallon
Gallon Per
Tomatoes Gallon
Chocolate Candy
Extra Good
Per Lb.
Seedless Grape Fruit 25c
TfT
nJ I Jl j
Pkgs
We Will Be Closed Armistice Day
Friday, November 11th
Kingsville Grocery Co.
191
It’s Easy---Just Phone
— PHONE—
193
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The Kingsville Record (Kingsville, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 12, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 9, 1927, newspaper, November 9, 1927; Kingsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth869739/m1/5/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .