The Panhandle Herald (Panhandle, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, July 8, 1955 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
The Panhandle Herald, Panhandle, Carson County, Texas
Friday, July 8, 1955
G. D. Haden, San Bernadino,
Calif.
James Y. Carroll
Audie Morgan
H. L. MoliOn
' Mrs. J. W. Apel
Mrs. Ann Gaines
Walter Dittberner
Curtis Douglas, Pampa
G. W. Obrecbt, Jeromesville,
Ohio, gift of niece, Mrs. W. H.
Lusk.
Mrs. W. W. Williams, Lubbock,
gift of sister, Mrs. W. H. Lusk.
Mrs. Alma Myatt, Jacksonville,
Fla.
Buizz Urbanczyk, White Deer
M. L. Dowd, White Deer
O. D. Riggs, Pantex
Mrs. Bennett Hardeman, Ros-
well, Ga., gift of sister, Mrs. Ches-
ter Wetsel.
Garrett
HELEN HALE
TF you have a garden which sup-
1 plies lovely produce, be espe-
cially careful in its preparation.
Delightful flavors of the foods
themselves will reward you for the
care you take.
Garden peas are at their best
when shelled just before cooking.
Then cook in a small amount of
RECIPE OF THE WEEK
Fruit Top Cake
(Serves 6-8)
Y4 cup sugar
1 cup syrup from canned cling
peaches
1 envelope plain gelatin
2 tablespoons cold water
% cup crashed strawberries
1 Vz cups canned peach sliced
1 (8-inch) layer of plain cake
Whipped cream
Heat together sugar and
syrup. Soften gelatin in cold
water. Dissolve in hot syrup.
Cool. Blend strawberries and
chill until slightly thickened.
Fold in drained peaches. Pour
into 9-inch layer cake pan and
chill until firm. Just before
serving, loosen edges of gelatin
and invert on cake layer. Gar-
nish with whipped cream.
COSTLY DIGITS . . . Pianist
Virginia Parker, known as “pi-
anothon Girl,” exhibits Lloyd's
policy insuring her fingers for
8185,000.
Dr. Charles W.
W. E. Dart
Lloyd Miller
Paul Dauer
Jim Hunter
Emory Purvines, Pleasant
Plains, 111.
Leslie G. Denny, Tampa, Fla.
A. L. Bordner, Alhambra, Calif.
J. A. Osman
Wendell Dart, Grand Prairie,
gift of father, W. E. Dart.
Dr. P. I. Crum
OPTOMETRIST
offices: 217 Main Street
Phone 3321
Pictured in Fort Frances, On-
tario, at the first of a 12-day Lour
of Ontario are 30 editors repre-
senting 30 separate State Press
Associations. They formed the
Twelfth Annual United States Edi-
tors Goodwill Tour of Ontario
sponsored by the Department of
Travel and Publicity and traveled
approximately 2,000 miles through
out the Province by train, boat
and bus.
Dakota; Dean Williams,
North
Ohio.
Bottom row—G. T. Newby,
Oklahoma; Ross Buck, Pennsyl-
vania,; James L. Platt, South
Carolina; L. L. Coleman, South
Dakota; Loye E. Miller, Tennes-
see; David M. Warren, Texas; Stu
Bennett, Vermont; Watt Miles,
Virginia; Henry Woodyard, West
Virginia; A1 Bearder, Wisconsin.
D'ewel, Iowa; Herbert Meyer, Jr., i
Kansas; Martin Dyche, Kentucky;
Don Stuart, Maine; Glenn James,
Maryland.
Second i*ow—Cyrus Dolbeare,
Massachusetts; Almcn McCall,
Michigan; Everett Mills, Minne-
sota; Charles Blanton,. Jr., Mis-
souri; Bob Kennedy, Nebraska;
Jim Hogan, New Jersey,; Hubert
Murray, New York; Joseph Sink,
North Carolina; Calvin L. Andrist.
They visited Fort Frances, Sioux
Narrows, Kenora, Fort William
and Port Arthur, Sault Ste. Marie,
Sturgeon Falls, North Bay, Ottawa,
Gananoque, Kingston, Oshawa,
Toronto, Hamilton, Niagara-on-the
-Lake and Niagara Falls.
Pictured from.left to right: Top
row—Bob Fisher, Arkansas; Olen
Bell, Colorado; Tom Haggerty,
Connecticut; Fred Siebert, Illinois;
Lowell D'avis, Indiana,; Duane
ALUMINUM GATED
IRRIGATION PIPE
Hastings Heat Treated
M. R. Gores
water until just done and no mora
to preserve their fresh flavor.
Thick slices of tomato whether
broiled or served fresh add a
gourmet touch to other foods. For
broiling, mix mayonnaise with
onion salt and Worcestershire
sauce, spread on tomato and broil
until mayonnaise puffs and browns.
Fresh pineapple, sliced thin and
sugared slightly makes a wonder-
ful dessert combination with melon
balls, strawberries or raspberries.
Add a touch of lemon juice to
heighten flavor.
Cook those garden potatoes with
their “jackets” then slip off peel-
ings and dust with minced chives
or parsley and serve with melted
butter.
Mrs. Maree Mathis, Portales,
N. M., gift of father, G. O. Pruitt.
John E. Hill, Amarillo
Mrs. H T. Hollinghead, Eunice,
N. M.
Marvin McGregor
Charles Lemons
Robert Lemons, Hereford, gift
of father, Charles Lemons.
Ellis Lemons, Canyon; gift of
father, Charles Lemons.
L. H. O’Neal
Mrs. Myrtle Henderson, Lamesa
E. N. Babcock, Groom
Mrs. James R. Sterling, Texar-
kana
Tom Henry, Wichita, Kan,
Randel Motor Co.
Mrs. Clyde C. Cummings
John Driskill, Avoea
Bill Andis, Amarillo
cities in Texas numbering 16 were
Lark, Pantex, Amarillo, San An-
tonio, Hereford, Canyon, Lamesa,
Groom*, Texarkana, Avoca, Rails,
Pampa, Lubbock, White Deer,
Grand Prairie and Panhandle.
Subscriptions have been recexv
ed for:
W. R. Cain
Mrs. R. W. Crites
I. E. Padget
H. N. Munro
Mae H. Dean, Lark
Mrs. Alberta Apel
Leo Looten, Lark
W. H. Blackwell, Pantex
F. A. Paul, Amarillo
Mrs. N. A. Wheeler, Amarillo,
gift of father, F. A. Paul.
Jerome Labus
H. W. McFarling, San Antonio
Phone 2326 after 5:30 p. m.
Or Write Box 781, Panhandle, Texas
BY THE OLD TIMERS
From Charles L. Stewart, Ala-
bama City, Alabama: When I was
a little boy we used to take hay
rides in the family’s old wooden
axle ox wagon. We were too poor
to use axle grease for lubrication
so a tar bucket filled with soft
pitch1' hung outside the wagon bed.
When the wheels began crying so
loud for lubrication that the neigh-
borhood dogs began barking as we
passed we then knew it was time
to "tar up."
Crude and humble though this
method of travel was, we had a
reasonable assurance that we’d
get there in one piece!
I also remember the little brass
lamp with a round wick that was
our only light at night other than
the light of the wood fire In the
giant fireplace.
We children seldom got any can-
dy except at the Christmas sea-
son. Ice cream none of us tasted,
until the turn of the century. Shoes
—I usually got my first pair for
the year at Christmas.
Good old days! A lot of people
say they were, but good for what?
Long hours of labor, coarse food,
jeans, cotton check dresses and
brogan shoes with brass toes!
From California to Florida and
from Illinois to the Gulf have come
the 69 subscriptions received re-
cently by The Herald. Of these
11 were gifts and 8 states were
represented, Texas, New Mexico,
Kansas, California, Ohio, Florida,
Georgia and Illinois. Towns and
It Pays To Advertise
Continually
STOP THAT ITCH!
IN JUST 15 MINUTES.
Your 40c back at any drug store
if not pleased. Try easy-to-apply
ITCH-ME-NOT for the itch of
eczema, ringworm, insect bites,
foot itch or any other surface itch.
Today at Hendrix Drug.
Frank P. Dove
Attorney At Law
Phone 4211
Panhandle
There are 26 other
peaks in Colorado
higher than Pike’s Peak,
But WHO knows about them*
They never advertise.
D W A G 0 N
From Mrs. Forest Cruse, Austin,
Texas: I remember when there
were no telephones In the small
town where I lived as a child, and
when anyone gave a party they
sent out a personal messenger
with a big piece of paper listing
all the people who were being in-
vited. A space by each name would
be filled in by them with such1
notations as: "accept with pleas-
ure," or "sorry we can’t attend,”
etc.
Send contributions to this oolnmn to
The Old Timer, Community Press Serv-
ice. Frankfort
WHY NOT BE A
The Herald
SUMMER BANDWAGON SELL-A-BRATION!
K enl
Is your bear advertising medium
Frank Metcalf
M. D. Eagle
Texan Hotel
Frank Vise
R. F. . Surratt
John C. King, Ralls
Phil Hawkins
V. L. Pratt
Rosalie Boyd,
Calif.
Bill Murray,
Mrs. J. O. Murray.
Fred Obrecht
Lillian Deahl, Amarillo; gift of
Mrs. Jack Griffith.
O. L. Thorp
Ralph Moore
Van Carter
Mrs. Helen Obert, Toledo, Ohio,
gift of sister, Mrs. George Rohan.
San Francisco,
ideas from other editors
and the, three-toned car is the be-
all and end-all of life and not
merely a great convenience to
make life pleasanter and to en-
courage and permit greater effi-
ciency.
It is fair to raise the question
then as to what is true progress.
No one has ever satisfactorily an-
swered that question. The debate
can go on and on all night long,
just as can the discussion as to
"What is a well educated man?**
or "What constitutes a gentle-
man?"
One might say that the youth
who works hard in high school,
graduates from college, serves his
time with the Armed Forces, then
picks-"up a Masters Degree in edu-
cation and goes to teaching is
making true progress. One might
say that the factory owner who
stabilizes employment, improves
working conditions and secures a
firm and sound understanding of
mutual problems with his em-
ployees is making true progress
. . . the banker who . . . encour-
ages thrift and home ownership
in his community . . , the minister,
teacher, the justice or the police
officer . . . who manages to raise
the moral and cultural level of his
community . . . the legislator who
... is able to raise the level of
government . . .
And so it goes, a very wide field
for discussion.
From the Granite State News,
Wolfeboro, New Hampshire: As
we grow older we probably be-
come more and more cynical and
sour, having seen quite a bit of
water go under the bridge and all
over the dam.
All too often it seems that we,
in this modem day and age, are
confusing speed with progress, or,
to phrase it another way, confus-
ing material progress with actual
progress.
If one takes a weekend to visit
around and drive through northern
New England one notes the sud-
den rush of multi-colored, chrome
plate laden cars on the road, two
television set homes, one set for
adults and one for children; kitch-
ens are becoming semi-automatic
with the electric ice box, automatic
washer and dryer, power ventila-
tion and a stove that turns itself
oil and on.
All of these create comforts and
time saving devices are most de-
sirable. No one but a fool would
want his wife to go back to wash-
ing by hand or drawing water at
the frozen pump and lugging in
wood.
But the danger is in all this ma-
terial progress is that we tend to
think of it as true progress and
not merely as material progress.
That is, the danger is in think-
ing that the air conditioned home
This is it! If you hurry, you can take full advantage of our leadership
trading position and save big money on a beautiful new *55 Ford. But,
do it now! While our Summer Bandwagon Sell-a-bration is in full swing.
Come in today. Your present car will never be worth more!
With our extra-high trade-in allowances, you’ll get the deal of a lifetime!
And, of course, there’s a long-term payment plan that makes dealing with
us most convenient. If you work fast, you’ll get the year’s best buy!
Come in today. See how really easy it is to own a big-new, brand-new,
beautiful-new *55 FordI
Bring your title with you. We’ll wrap-up the deal and the details on
the double! You get the car of your choice, the color of you* choice, the
model of your choice ... all at a big saving. And you can get quick deliv-
ery on most models. Get your Ford today!
TOP DOLLAR TRADE-IN!
LONG, EASY TERMS I
PROMPT DELIVERY 1
WHY WORRY ABOUT IT WHEN IT’S
SO EASY TO LET AN AD IN. THIS
NEWSPAPER TURN THINGS
YOU NO LONGER NEED INTO
CASH
Come in and get ear Sell-a-bration Deal
Moore Motor Company
PANHANDLE. TEXAS
—GREAT TV, FORD THEATRE, KGNC, 8:30 P. M., THURSDAY—
DO IT ALL BY PHONE
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Warren, David M. The Panhandle Herald (Panhandle, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, July 8, 1955, newspaper, July 8, 1955; Panhandle, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth881689/m1/3/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carson County Library.