White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1939 Page: 4 of 4
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WHITE DEER REVIEW, White Deer, Carson County, Texas
FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1939
Methodist Church
x. E. Walker—Pastor
Church School 9:45
Morning [Worship 10:55
League Program 7:15
Sermon next Sunday Morning,
“Love is always eager to believe
the best,” The Sacrement of the
Lord Supper, twill be observed at
-the morning hour.
We will not have services Sun-
day evening. The Pastor will be
away to preach a Baccalaureate
Sermon
Presbyteran Church
Pastor—Hubert Travis
Sunday School 10 A. M.
Morning Worship 11 A. M.
Junior Intermediate Endeavor
7 P. M.
Young Peoples Meeting 7 P M.
Evening Worship 7:45 P. M.
Women’s Missionary Society,
Tuesday 2:30 P. M.
Come out and! worship with us
'Sunday.
Baptist Church
HERMAN COE, Pastor
9:45 Sunday School
11:00 Morning Worship
7:30 Baptist Training Union
8:30 Evening Worship
Rev. and Mrs. G. J. Brittain of
PlainvielW, Tex. will be guest of
the Baptist Church over the week
end. Rev. Brittain will preach at
both hours Sunday. He is a man
loved by all who know him. He
is also a great preacher and every
one should hear him. Mother Brit-
tain will render some special voc-
:al numbers. Everyone is invited.
NEWS STORIES
A framed garden 6 X 16 feet
has been built by Mrs. and Mrs.
J. D. Williams, garden demonstra-
tors for the country neighbors
club.
This little garden is sub-irriga-
ted with tin cans. The ends were
cut out of the end's, and then the
can pushed together making a
chain twice the length of the gar-
den. This chain, being flexible:,
was turned at one end and ex-
tended back to the other thus
making only one feed pipe neces-
sary.
Two rows of tile in a six foot
garden is necessary for best re-
sults.
New Naval Chief
V
■Sill:
V >'
SUNBEAM GIVES
INTERESTING PROGRAM
K'*i
111
When la. calaclie pit was dug
|by the county road department
near the home of Mr. and Mrs.
G. R. Collins the top soil was
used to fill in the yard of the Col-
lin’s home.
Bermuda roots have been set in
rows .about 12 or 14 inches apart
over the yard. With good care
and plenty of Water, this grass
should completely cover the la.wn
in one season.
What gives more pleasure than
a beautiful lown? Besides the
pleasure afforded by its beauty,
it adds to the satisfaction of the
family, reducing heat, dust, and
glare, and it supplies a clean
place for the family to play, and
for an occasional outdoor meal.
Rear Admiral Harold R. Stark,
above, will succeed Friday to the
post of chief of United States
navel operations, succeeding Ad-
miral William D. Leahy, who has
reached the retirement age.
“Pete Moss, rather than sugar
■cane litter, is preferable for lit-
ter for baby chicks, because it is
more absorbent and chicks are
not inclined to eat it,” reports
Mrs. Otis Caldwell, poultry dem-
onstrator for Cuyler Home Dem-
onstration club.
Mrs. Caklwell has 101 White
Rock baby chicks living out of
102 bought three weeks ago. She
contributes her success principal-
ly to care in keeping them worm
and sanitary.
“T am well pleased with the
growth of my framed garden”
said Mrs. Frank Vance garden
Demonstrator for [Panhandle
Home Demonstration club.
The little garden is 5ft. by 20ft.
The soil was dug 10 feet deep and
filled with manure and soil. Ra-
dishes, beets, carrots, and' tender-
greens have been planted in it.
Mrs. Vance has kept the garden;
covered most of the time to pro-
tect it from wind and cold.
[With the protection from the
wind and cold vegetables can be
grown earlier in the season. With
'"a longer garden; season fewer veg-
etables have to be canned or
bought, and of course fx-esh veg-
etables taste better and the fresh-
er they are the more vitamins or
protective food! value they con-
tain.
“Tile irrigation is a much
•cleaner wav of irrigating and
takes less work and water,”
said Mrs. .J. L. Silcott, garden
Home Demonstration club.
Mr. and Mrs. Silcott have a-
bout 700 feet of tiled garden
space. Some is 5 feet and some 4
feet gives the best service.
Fences and walks changed,
foundation and screen plantings
put out, and trees growing in the
yard1 of Mr. and Mrs. I. E. King
of the Liberty Community, have
changed the appearance of their
entire place.
Red barberry and aibelia have
been used for foundation plant-
ings along the porch as they will
not grow tail and abstruct the
view.
Pyraeantha and red cedars
have been used at the corners be-
cause they do grow tall and will
soften the corners.
Other tall plants such as for-
sythia has been used between win-
dows at the sides of the house
and lower ones such as spirea has
been placed under the windows.
Climbing roses and tamarick
were used for screen plantings.
Trees for shade and back
ground have been set out in the
yard of Mr. and Mrs. Wood, yard
demonstrators in the Lark com-
munity.
The house faces east and a few
trees were placed in the front
yard for shade, while more were
placed iat the sides and back for
shade from the afternoon sun.
and to form a frame or back-
ground for the house.
The trees were not set i n
straight rows but were set about
over the lawn where they were
needed. This arrangement is more
informal and, broken hillside.
The frame garden of Mr. and
Mrs. Van Carter, of the Friend-
ship Circle district, which was
planted about the middle o f
March, lias already yielded sev-
eral servings of tender greens,
spinach, turnip greens, Mrs. Car-
ter reports the onions are ready
to eat arid the lettuce and radish-
es are up.
Their garden is 6’ X 8’ and is
irrigated with tin cans, “It takes
less water to grow these veget-
ables, and they are easily prepar-
ed to cook, being grown under
cover,” reported Mrs. Carter.
small garden can be made to pro-
duce many servings of fresh veg-
etables for salads and fresh to-
matoes for the table. Every per-
son needs daily two servings of
vegetables and one of tomatoes
or citrus and this is one xvav of
providing some of them.
In addition to providing her
family .with some fresh vegetab-
les, La Fraye is having the ideal
pleasure of watching growing
plants and also the pleasure of
accomplishment.
PRIMARY GRADES GIVE
MUSICAL PROGRAM
Preparation of soil being very
important for good lanvins,, Mr.
and Mrs. J. L. White, yard co-
operators for Panhandle Home
Demonstrator club, should have
much success with their newly
planted lawn.
The yard was filled ini with
manure and soil from a chicken
yard, and the blue grass and clo-
ver that they planted is up.
Four forsythia and two red
barberry plants have recentlv
been planted by Mr. and Mrs. M.
F. Nurse, yard demonstrators, for
Petrolia Home Demonstration
club. The forscythia growes tall
and is used for a foundation
plant. Mr. and Mrs. Nurse plant-
ed it between windows and plan
to put smaller plants under the
windows. The red barberry is- a
low bush, which Mr. and Mrs.
Nurse planted along the porch.
They also set out 19 Chinese elm
and cotton wood trees. The cot-
toriwood were obtained from a
ranch and the Chinese elm were
given to them bv a friend, so
their cash outlay for these impor-
tants have been small.
Little Porter tomato plants
well on their iway to transplant-
ing size, have been grown by Ber-
nadine Ledwig with the help of
her family. The seed were planted
in a box and kept on the porch
where they could get sunshine,
arid were protected from winid
and cold. On cold nights .they
were moved into the house.
The Little Porter tomato is a-
bout the size and shape of a hen
egg. It is not so large but is of
good quality and will produce
earlier than larger varieties. Hen-
ce, Bernadine will plant them for
early tomatoes and will plant
some larger varieties, too, which
she also has browing in boxes.
A living picture, “The lul-
laby,” with Sue Ann Skaggs as
the mother, was the feature of the
program at the Sunbeam meet-
ing, of last week at Sunbeam
Hall.
Mrs. J. W. Everlv, assisted by
Mrs. Frank Evans, conducted the
story hour, and Mrs. Bill Walker
accompanied the group singing.
Plans are being made for a spec-
ial program during Focus week
for Sunbeam work, May 7 to 12.
Ice-cream were served to Jane
Powers, Billie Ruth Walker, Bet-
ty Jo Miller, Barbara Ann Bent-
ley, Sue Anna Skaggs; Sonny
Travis, Tom Boy Walker, Tal-
mage Woodward, Vina Louise
Dittberner, Gay Goodner, Clauda
Osman, Betty Jane Powers, Tay-
lor Skaggs, Robert MeNeelyi, Em-
ma Lee Heath, Jerry Wayne
Schmfidt, Carolyn Evans, and
Mines. Walker, Evans, and Ever-
iv.
I tion for discharge as such Ad-
ministrator of said Estate of
j Thomas W. Arnold, deceased,
which will be heard by said Court,
op the fourth Monday in May A.
D. 1939, the same being the 22
day of May A. D. 1939, at the
Court House thereof, in Panhan-
dle, Texas, at which time all per-
sons interested in Estate may ap-
pear and contest said application,
should they desire to do so.
Herein Fail Not, but have you
this writ before the said Court
at the .time aforesaid, with your
return thereon, showing how you
have executed the same.
Given under my hand and seal
of said Court, at office in Panhan-
dle, Texas, this, the 1st day of
May A. D. 1939.
C. P. McCollough clerk, County
Court, Carsoa County, Texas.
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To the Sheriff or any Constable
of Carson County, Greeting:
You are hereby Commanded to
cause to be published once each
week for a period of ten days be-
fore the return day hereof, in a
newspaper of general circulation,
which has 'been continouslv and
regularly published for a period
of not less than on/e year in said
Carson County, a copy of the fol-
lowing notice:
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To all pel-sons interested in the
Estate of Thomas W. Arnold,
Deceased.
Howard7 Apel, Administrator of
said Estate, has filed in the
County Court of Carson County,
his Final Account and Applies-
Retail Sales Are Up
AT THE THEATRES
LaNORA THEATRE
Fri Sat. “The Lady’s From
Kentucky” Geox’ge Raft, Ellen
Drew, Hugh Herbert, g»azu Pitts.
Prev, Sun & Mon, Tries. “Un-
ion Pacific” Joel McCrea, Barb-
ara Stan wick, Akin Tamiroff,
Robert Preston.
STATE THEATRE
Thurs, Fri, Sat. “Midnight”
Claudette Colbert, Don Ameche,
Francis Lederer, John Barry-
more, Mary Astor.
Fri, Sat. “Sunset Trail” Wil-
liam Boyd, Russell Hayden, Geo-
rge Hayes.
Prev, Sun & Mon. ‘1 Boy Friend ’ ’
Jane Withers, Richard Bond,
Arleen Whalen.
REX THEATRE
Austin, Texas, May 4—Sales of
Texas department stores climbed
25.5 per cent during March, re-
ports to the University of Texas
Bureau of Business Research from
104 Texas department and cloath-
ing stores indicate.
Business for March was slight-
ly better than March last year,
a gain of 1.7 percent being re-
corded in; dollar sales. Agg’regate
sales for the first three months,
however, dropped 1 per cent from
the corresponding period last
year.
Ratio of credit sales to met
sales during March gained slight-
ly over March last yeax1, and ratio
of collections to outstanding ac-
counts dropped a fraction of 1
per cent.
Wed, Thurs. “Romance Of The.
Redwoods” Jean Parkex’, Charles
Bickford.
Fri, Sat. “California Fron-
tier” Buck Joixes.
Sun, Mon. “Kentucky” Richard
Greene, Loretta Youxxg.
Tues. “Kink Of The Under-
world” Humphrey Bogart, Kay
Fx'aucis.
Wed, Thurs. “Heart Of The
Nox’th” Dick Foran, Glox’ia Dick-
son, Gale Page, Allen Jexxkins.
Lola—My husband proposed to
me in a thundbr storm.
Lulu—Thunder always fright-
ens xxxine oxxt of his wits, too.
Bxxt it makes no diffex’ence how
a worm txxrns, after all he is still
a worm!
Young Widow—Why is it that
your handsome bachelors always
speak so lxorx’ibly about max’ri-
age? Married men don’t.
Bachelor Grump—Maybe it’s
because we have no one to pre-
veixt us saying just what we
think.
By selling a chicken house for
$15.00, Mrs. C. F. Hood, yard
demonstrator for Panhandle,
Home demonstration clxxh, financ-
ed the buviner of grass for a space
ahoxxt 100’XI50’ south of her
house and grapevines and straw-
berry plants, and' hauling of ber-
xxiuda roots.
Mi’s. Hood also set out 200 tam-
aracks, trumpet, lace, honeysuck-
le, matromonia] and gourd vines
for a screen. They were all given
to her by friends.
Care in selecting the variety of
tomatoes to plant is important,
as some varieties have more i*e-
sistanee to the hot dry winds
than do others. For this reason
Evelvn Young, garden demonstra-
tor for Groom 4-H club selected
the Little Porter variety.
Other varities adapted to this
section are Earliana, New Stone,
and June Pink. These are larger
tomatoes and though they do not
produce as eai-lv as the Little
Poi’ter.
La Fraye Phillips, garden co-
opei-ator of the Gi’oom 4-H club
is making the best of a small gar-
den space to supply her family
with fresh vegetables. She has ra-
dishes and onions growing and
her mustard and lettuce beds
have been planted. A larger
space is being prepai’ed for to-
nxoto plants.
With intinsive cultivation this
Two oprettas presented by the
first four grades Thursday even-
ing of last week at the Grade
School auditorium.
An opretta showing songs, mu-
sical games, and customs of far
away land's was presented by the
third grades, directed by Misses
Emma C. Hill and Esther Plank.
Two American childx-en, played
by May Joy Kuykendall and Tom
Collins Powers, wished they could
go around the world. L xxcle Saxxx,
played by Chaxles Barnard, took
them on an imaginary trip.
Their stops Were in Sweden,
Holland Spain, Italy, Russia, Chi-
na, and Japan.
Swedish children were Clifford
Baxmer, Theda Hester, Johnny
Bedxxox’z, and Chaxles Eax*p.
Dutch childreix were Merle Noel,
Mary Ann Kalka, Dorothy Ma-
rie Poe, Neva Crumpacker, Sidney
Miller, and Dorothy Jo Earp.
Spanish children were Billy
John Shurlev, Lea Mae Bedhorz,
Martha Sharp, Leah Ballard,
Wanda Bx-own, Dorothy Rodexl-
guez, Wanda Joy Walker, and
Candelaria Lopez.
Irish children were Val Mc-
Creary, Roscoe Rxxssell, Tommy
ColgTove, Nancy Evans, Betty
Joyce O’Neal, and Velma Jean
Heath.
Russian children were Dean Hag-
gerty, Vernelle Crumpacker, Bob-
bie Branden, Patxlcia Brown,
Lee White, Willie Dee Osxnan,
and [Walter Williams.
Chinese clxildx’en were Dorothy
Jean Ballard, Peggy Travis, Jirn-
aloxx Newman, Hexxrv Bobbitt,
Loraine Bisehel, and Donald Mc-
Neely.
Japanese childx’en Were Charles
Walker, James Click, Charxxxian
Coe, Dorothy Jean Garner, Carol
Joyce Jackson, and Leo Bednorz.
An interpretation of the old
story “The Gobbler and the El-
ves,”. directed 'by Miss Lorene
Reeder and Mrs. Juno Dxxval,
was given by the first and second
pt tides
The fix-st elf, played by C. B.
Collis; explained the scenes. The
scenes took place ixx. a forest
where a cobler and his wife lived.
The cobbler was played by Gexxe
Rapstine; his wife, by Scottie
Woods; the rich lxxan by Harry
Buchanan; the leather man by
Robert Jackson; the curtain elves,
* by Charles Winget and Donald
Warminiski
The dancing elves wex’e Vina
Louise Dittberner, Mary Lou
Skaggs, Martha Jo Moon, Clax’a
Meekex’, Margaret Ann Walker,
and Bonnie Swinford.
The ponies were Charles Banks,
A1 Kuykendall, Tonx Horn, and
Leon King.
The forest was mad'e xxp of Jo
Aaroxx, Deano Boyd, Jimmie
Green, Manuel Hernandez, Ax’-
thxxv Lee Phillips. James Culbert-
son, Emma Lee Heath, Mildx’ed
Hester, Mildred Heath, Cleo Mc-
Creary, Betty Jean Navlox’, La
Donna O’Neal, Claudia Osxxxan,
Jane Powers, Dorothy Jean Riob-
erts, Dolores Kalka, Violet
Thornburg, Billy Ruth Walker,
Carla Gores, Geraldine Hester,
Ernestine Banzett, Evelyxx Jo
Kalka, Gaynell Shax’p, Betty Jo
Miller, Ysabel Lopez, Larrine
Bednorz, Ernis Bills, Terry Bob-
bie McBraver, Eddie Gordzelik,
and Geox-ge Bisehel.
SEE OUR SHOW
Tuesday, May 9
w.
&N,
m.
. ’'■***:?
iisw
I -
IN OUR SHOW ROOM
New 1939
ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS
FROZEN FOODS AND DESSERTS
WILL BE SERVED.
GIFTS FOR EVERY BODY
Southwestern
PUBLIC SERVICE
Comparer
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Simmons, W. W. White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1939, newspaper, May 5, 1939; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth871802/m1/4/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carson County Library.