The Panhandle Herald (Panhandle, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, October 23, 1953 Page: 3 of 8
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Friday, October 23, 1953
Thi Panhandle Herald, Panhandle, Carson County, Texas
Page Three
30 Years Ago
Taken from the files of the
Panhandle Herald
Oct. 5, 1923
The commissioner’s court auth-
orized the hiring of a county agent
for Carson county.
A. M. Eakin died at his home
near White D'eer. Burial was in
White Deer.
John Whatley sold the first bale
of cotton ever raised near Groom.
John A. Holmes, district attor-
ney, and Miss Velma Sue Green,
Amarillo, were married in Ama-
rilo.
Alma Nickell won a $10 gold
piece from the Fort Worth Star
Telegram for sending in the best
title for a cartoon.
Heavy rains had caused the
streets of Panhandle to be prac-
tically impassable.
Col. W. C. Witcher, Fort Worth,
Spoke in opposition to the Ku
Klux Klan. The meeting was at
the Panhandle Theater.
Asbery A. Callaghan attended
co business in California.
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Boyd were
the parents of a daughter.
Dr. O. C. Warriner went to
Gallup, N. M., to practice chiro-
practic medicine.
An Editorial stated that the
president of the United States was
well paid and well cared for.
Panhandle won from White
Deer 19-3 in the second football
game of the season.
THESE WOMEN 1
By d’Alessio
“Come in, Mr. Parker—we were just discussing what a
wonderful husband you would make!”
“Oh, what a beautiful morning— will be the theme song of your
family after having a breakfast of favorites. Eggs baked in corned
beef hash are served with golden brown, fresh-from-the-oven cranberry
muffins.
If it’s a hurry-up breakfast, slice the corned beef hash and brown in
butter or margarine. Top with fried or poached eggs.
To make the muffins, add cubed canned cranberry sauce to packaged
muffin mix, or to your own favorite muffin recipe.
The corned beef hash-muffin combination makes a good supper, too
Corned Beef Hash with Shirred Eggs
2 1-lb. cans corned beef 1 tablespoon minced onion
hash 1 tablespoon finely chopped
4 eggs green pepper
Salt and pepper 1 tablespoon melted butter,
4 teaspoons light cream or margarine
Put hash in a greased pie pan. Indent with spoon to make four nests
for the eggs. Break eggs and slip gently into the nests. Sprinkle with
salt and pepper. Pour a teaspoon of cream over each egg, and sprinkle
with onion, green pepper and butter. Bake in a moderate oven (375°)
30 minutes, or until eggs are cooked. Four generous servings.
Oct. 12, 1923
The ground in Garson county
was well soaked from the many
rains and the harvest of the row
crop was halted.
Rev. F. M. Neal, Amarillo, con-
ducted a revival at the Methodist
Church.
Both the highway and railroad
bridges were washed out at Cana-
dian. The bridge on the Fort Worth
and Denver, south of Amarillo,
was also washed out.
Duck hunting season opened.
In a government, survey, home
ownership was shown to be drop-
ping.
Mrs. Asbery A. Callaghan was
hostess to the Friday Bridge Club.
Truett Young returned from
Portland, Ore., where he had visit-
ed for 2 months.
A new windmill was erected on
the court house yard.
Oct. 19, 1923
Streets of the town were in bad
condition and the paving of Main
Street was being seriously con-
sidered.
The Panhandle oil field was
*|V TO doubt about it—as thousands of prideful
!M owners will tell you.
When you press the pedal of a 1953 Buick with
Dynaflow, you move.
You move with instantly responsive getaway,
with great quiet, with truly infinite smoothness.
You move in this special and spirited and soul-
satisfying manner because you’re bossing
Tivin-Turbine Dynaflow — where two turbines,
instead of one, now turn out the magic.
We can put pictures before you to show how
TT Dynaflow delivers its sensational perform-
ance and flowing-oil smoothness. And we will,
if you ask.
But surely you ought to take the wheel of a 1953
Buick with this big-thrill wonder drive and let
your own sensations tell you how wonderful it is.
You ought to try it for getaway, for cruising, for
suave deceleration — for the sheer and restful
comfort it gives you every step of the way.
And, very definitely, you ought to try it for the
power that goes with it...
For the highest horsepowers and compression
ratios, Series for Series, ever placed in a Buick—
including the power of the world’s newest V8
engine in every Super and Roadmaster.
^X^hy not come in and try out this terrific per-
formance team of Buick power and TT Dynaflow?
We re ready, willing and eager to show you what
you ve been missing — and how easy it is, price-
wise, to have it. Can you drop in on us for a no-
obligation sampling—this week?
MILTON BERLE stars for BUICK
-in the BUICK-BERLE SHOW on TV
Tuesday evenings. Also, every Saturday, tune
TV Football Game of the Week-a "GM" Key Event
in The
* Standard on Roadmaster, optional at extra cost on other Series
•WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEN
Surratt Motor Company
Panhandle, Texas
promising interesting develop-
ments.
The first Santa Fe train in a
week came through after repairs
were madq/ on the Canadian
bridge.
Mrs. Willie O’Neal purchased
the interest of C. P. McColough
in the MeCollough and O’Neal
Abstract Co. and renamed it the
O’Neal Abstract Co.
After several weeks of rainy-
weather the sun shone again.
Mrs. Frank Paul and children
returned from a 2 monthhs vaca-
tion in California.
Jack Bennett, son of Mr. and
Mrs. A. L. Bennett, was seriously
injured in a fall from a horse.
Alma Nickell fractured an ankle
during basketball practice.
Oct. 20, 1923
Jack Bennett, 18, died of in-
juries received in a fall from, a
horse.
Ninety-one wells were drilled
or drilling in the Panhandle oil
field.
Th; fire rate of White Deer was
reduced from $1 to 97 cents.
Pampa defeated Panhandle 6-0
in a hard fought football game.
Rain again fell for 3 days after
a week of sunshine.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Detten enter-
tained with a dinner in honor of
their 35th wedding anniversary.
Mrs. T. N. Russell was honored
with a surprise party on her birth-
day.
Sybil York entertained in honor
of her birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gripp were
hosts to a community party.
Stop Taking
Harsh Drugs for
Constipation
Avoid intestinal Upset! Get Relief This
Gentle Vegetable Laxative Way!
I For constipation, never take harsh drugs.
They cause brutal cramps and griping,
disrupt normal bowel action, make re-
peated doses seem needed.
Get sure but gentle relief when you
are temporarily constipated. Take Dr. |
Caldwell’s Senna Laxative contained in ,
Syrup Pepsin. No salts, no harsh drugs.
Dr. Caldwell’s contains an extract of
Senna, one of the finest natural vegetahk
uixatives known to medicine.
Dr. Caldwell’s Senna Laxative tastes
good, gives gentle, comfortable, satis-
fying relief for every member of the
family. Helps you get “on schedule”'
without repeated doses. Even relieves
stomach sourness that constipation
often brings.
Buy Dr. Caldwell’s 30^ size today.
Money back if not satisfied. Mail bottle
to Box 280, New York 18, N. Y.
Ruth Hood, who had beep
spending the summer with her
aunt., Mrs. C. L. Upham, and
brother, Fred Hood, returned to
her home at Lehigh, Okla.
Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Smith en-
tertained with a dinner.
The first bale of cotton ever
grown in Potter county brought
60 cents a pound at public auction.
LEGAL NOTICE
NO. 1550
IN THE MATTER OF THE
ESTATE OF
T. M. CLEEK, DECEASED.
IN THE COUNTY COURT
OF
CARSON COUNTY, TEXAS.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF THE
ESTATE OF T. M. CLEEK,
DECEASED.
Notice is hereby given that
original letters of administraton
upon the Estate of T. M. Cleek,
Deceased, were granted to me the
undersigned on the 5th day of
October, 1953, by the County
Court of Carson County. All per-
sons having claims against said
estate are hereby requested to
present the same to me within
ther time prescribed by law. My
residence and Post office addresses
are P. O. Box 1781, Pampa, Gray
County, Texas.
CURTIS DOUGLASS
Independent Executor of the
Estate of T. M. Cleek, Dec’d.
10-9, 16, 23, 30
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Dart visited
over the weekend with his brother,
George Dart, and family, Selman,
Okla.
Food Sense—Not Nonsense
Want to Fish for It?
Not too many generations ago, the minute amount of iodine needed
by the body was hard to obtain. Man had to fish the deep seas and
oceans to get his iodine, but now with the advent of iodized table salt,
he just tips the salt shaker.
The relationship between eating products of the sea—such as sea-
weed and seafoods—and good health was known to our medieval
ancestors. The why of it was not explained until the discovery of iodine,
and seafoods as a source. This was more than a hundred years ago.
Iodine should be supplied by our food. The type of soil producing
that food is important. Soils in many areas of the world, including the
great plains and the northwest regions of this country are iodine poor,
because, long ago, it was washed out of the land into the sea. As a result,
plant and animal foods from these areas are low in this element.
All animal life, including man, requires a minute amount of iodine
for health. This is stored in the thyroid gland which manufactures a
hormone, composed largely of iodine, which regulates activity of the
body cells. In thpse areas where iodine is lacking, the thyroid gland
m man and also in animals increases in size to form a goiter.
To assure an adequate supply of this mineral for persons living in
iodine-poor regions, iodized salt was developed. Since the early 1930’s,
salt manufacturers have voluntarily added iodine to table salt at lev-
els recommended by the United States Public Health Service and the
American Medical Association.
Salt to which iodine has been added—like bread and other cereal
products enriched with thiamine, riboflavin, niacin and iron—has con-
tributed materially to public health. Studies in Michigan, where soils
are very low in iodine, have shown that use of iodized salt resulted in
a 75 to 90 percent decrease in goiter within a ten-year period.
Despite the evidence of the value of iodized salt, only 50 percent of
our table salt is iodized today. It is considered by many that the general
use of iodized salt would practically eliminate goiter.
GOSPEL MEETING
Oct. 26th-31st
You are cordially
invited to attend
and hear a
different speaker
each evening
present the
Gospel of Christ
Each Evening 8:00
Church of Christ
Panhandle, Texas
ROYCE BLACKBURN
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Warren, David M. The Panhandle Herald (Panhandle, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, October 23, 1953, newspaper, October 23, 1953; Panhandle, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth881341/m1/3/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carson County Library.