The Lampasas Leader. (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, November 20, 1925 Page: 2 of 8
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\ The Lampasas Leader
Published Every Friday
Jf H. Abney Herbert Abney
J. H. ABNEY & SON
Owners and Publishers
Entered at the postoffice at Lampasas,
Texas, as second class mail matter.
Subscription Price:
12 months .................................... $1.5C
6 months.....................................75
8 months .....................................50
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ASSOCIATION
PRE$S
* MARTIN L GAFFNEY
Doctor of
SCIENTIFIC MASSAGE
CRYSTAL SPRINGS
LAMPASAS -------- TEXAS
DR. C. H. FA1RES
DENTAL SURGEON
Special Attention Given Plate and
Bridge Work.
BLOCK ANESTHESIA
Office over Mackey & Ransom’s Drug
Store, Lampasas, Texas.
^Undertakers
,W. G. Gamel, a licensed embalmer and
funeral director, is in charge of our
Undertaking Department. Call over
either phone, day or night.
Lampasas Furniture Go.
SIGNS YOU CAN BELIEVE IN
If your breath is bad and you have
spells of swimming in the head, poor
appetite, constipation and a general no-
acccunt feeling, it i3 a sign your liver is
torpid. The one really dependable rem-
edy for all disorders in the liver, stomach
and bowels is Herbine. It acts powerfully
on the liver, strengthens digestion, puri-
fies the bowels and restores a fine feeling
of energv, vim and cheerfulness. Price
60c. Sold by
MACKEY’S DRUG STORE
BANKS AND CASH
If you put your money in the bank,
you help yourself, your community
and the bank, which are three very
good reasons why yo.u should put it
there, instead of hoarding it at your
home. You help yourself by putting
it' safe from, burglars and fire, the
msk of loss being reduced to next to
nothing.—Morris County News.
Rev. T. Lee, pastor of the Metho-
dist church at Liberty Hill, and R. W.
Atkinson, steward from that church,
came in Tuesday to attend a meeting
of district stewards held here aUThe
district parsonage.
Dr. H. F. Dickason and his daugh-
ter, Miss Perla, left Saturday for a
visit tc Hollywood, Calif. Dr. Diek-
ason says he will probably be gone
for a month.
CONJUGAL
There has been a most decided de-
cline and fall in matrimony and home
life, and it is foolish for girls to
think that they have the same chance
of marrying as their mothers and
grandmothers had. If the girl has a
profession and makes enough money
to indulge herself in the luxuries that
women love, marriage becomes to her
merely an incident in life, not the
whole thing. The world to her is
full of desirable things besides wed-
ding ringsr Being able to make your
own living sets you free.—Mexia
Nev s.
Oh, but you do indulge in specious
reasoning, brother philosopher. No
woman is free, no man is free. We
all have to conform sooner or later.
The girl who can make her own liv-
ing' is admirable enough, but the man
who makes a living for her, as his
wife, is himself admirable. It was
no more intended that a girl should
fight her battles alone than it was
intended that man should live alone.
Despite all the modern heroics, wom-
an is still the weaker. sex. Her nat-
ural destiny is to get married, and
mostly she does. It is very true that
marriage is not now regarded as the
rigid, inflexible condition it formerly
was. It is very doubtful if God ever
intended that marriage sohuld be a
punitive experience. Marriage infers
the happiness and contentment of the
married, not the reverse. The ordi-
nance of marriage is man-made. The
Divine will may be concerned in it,
and doubtless is, but the Divine will
is concerned in many other important
matters of life also. Nature knows
nothing of marriage. Nature only
knows of mating. The modern wom-
an is not shackled to her husband as
the ancient woman was. Her food
and clothing and shelter are not all
his to be given or all his to be taken
away. She has rights in law and in
morals, and among these rights is
the right to happiness. Her husband
has equal but not superior rights.
They should strive utterly to be
happy as husband and wife,, but, if
they can not be, who is he that shall
say they must be miserable in order
that some dogma may be justified?
—State Press in Dallas News.
TO SEEK FEDERAL CONTROL
OF FOOT AND MOUTH DISEASE
FORT WORTH, Texas, Nov. 16.—
Plans are being formulated by every
interest in the country affected by
outbreaks of the foot and mouth di-
sease, to prevail upon congress to
take steps for federal control of all
eradication work. This announce-
ment was made today by Leo Callan,
chairman of the state livestock sani-
tary commission.
Each of the eighteen members of
the lower house in congress and the
two Texas senators have been invited
to study this plan and lend their ef-
forts in securing the passage of a
bill that will make it incumbent up-
on the national government to as-
sume national control in eradicating
the foot and mouth disease and other
similar diseases.
Mrs. S. F. Stokes is home from
Corsicana where she spent some time
visiting relatives.
Weekly Leader $1.50 per year.
FIRS
It is unlawful to take pelts before Novem-
ber 14th and the fine is $10.00 for each skin
taken, so we advise that you do not hunt or trap
before that time. We will open our house for
business on that date and will continue our old
policy of honest, square dealing. If you want all
your furs are worth you can’t afford to sell with-
out seeing us first.
On Corner West of Ed Miillcan Produce
Don’t Forget the Place
D. N. Cornett Company
LET US HELP YOU WITH YOUR
Thanksgiving Dinner
«* A *Sl *L jr\A_
By selling you the things you will need in preparing and serving it. Turkey cooked in
a REVONOC ROASTER is delicious and you can cook it in less time than in other
roasters. See this roaster at our store. We also have roasters both in enamel and alum-
inum in different sizes.
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T" is
iiiiiskillliii_
J_—Mil"
ygasiitey__________________
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Carving Sets, Butcher ' Knives, Bread Knives, Paring Knives, with stainless steel blades.
Food Choppers, Mayonnaise Mixers, Egg Beaters, Cake and Pie Tins, Angel Cake Pans,
Aluminum Jelly Molds.
Silverware
We have everything in Silverware that will make your Thanksgiving table attractive.
26-piece Chests of Silver, consisting of 6 Knives and Forks, 6 Table Spoons, 6 Tea
Spoons, 1 Butter Knife, 1 Sugar Shell.
Also Salad Forks, Cold Meat Forks, Tomato Servers, Pie Servers, Serving Spoons, etc.
We have beautiful designs in Diiiherware, in fact, everything you will need to make
your Thanksgiving Dinner a success.
Fox & Mills Hardware Co
THe tor*
THE WAR DEBTS
The debt question between the
United States and the Allies, includ-
ing the reparation question, created
the same kind of problems that a re-
organization or receivei'ship does in
business. The natural way, especial-
ly for a business nation like the Unit-
ed States, to have settled it would
have been to join a conference of all
concerned, for threshing out a gen-
eral understanding. This would have
been a.difficult task. It might have
taken many conferences. But, if
successful, it would have done more
to stabilize European credit than the
Dawes Plan and probably provided
us with as much payment as we shall
get anyway.
The main objection to this grew
out of the irreeoncilables’ suspicion
of Europe. Why should we join a
conference, one of the main objects
of which was the stabilization of Eu-
ropean credit? Hadn’t we done
enough for Europe? Let Europe pay
its debts and stabilize itself. So we
washed our hands of Europe, except
for asking that the different nations
pay us what they owed us. The sol-
vent debtors have paid. The embar-
rassed debtors have not. As far as
finances go we could probably have
got this result at a general confer-
ence.
The main question comes down to
whether it is to our interests to have
Europe stabilized and peaceful and,
if so, whether that interest is vital
enough to make us take a hand in
general settlements. Recent events
indicate that the longer Europe is fi-
nancially embarrassed the larger will
be our final share of the accounting.
It is not clear that the policy of
washing our hands of Europe, except
to ask that it pay us, is profitable
in money. And there are indications
that with our powers, if we did take
a hand in general settlements, we
might do great good to Europe, with
a resulting benefit to ourselves. —
World’s Work.
MOTHERS
Watch for symptoms of worms in your
children. These parasites are the great
destroyers of child life. If you have
reason to think your child ha3 worms, act
quickly. Give the little one a dose or
two of White’s Cream Vermifuge. _ Worms
cannot exist where this time-tried and
successful remedy is used. It drives out
the worms and restores the rosy hue of
health to baby cheeks. Price 35c. Sold by
MACKEY’S DRUG STORE
MRS. R. B. HUFF DEAD
Mrs. R. B. Huff died at her home
here Monday afternoon at 1:30 after
an illness of about a week, the cause
of her death being pneumonia. Mr.
and Mrs. Huff have lived in the town
of Lampasas tor a number of years
and previous to that time lived near
Izoro for some time. The deceased
was a woman of good Christian char-
acter and had a wide circle of friends
throughout this section. Besides her
husband, she is survived by three
children, Arthur and J. J. Huff, of
Tahoka, and Mrs. Cornell, of Ard-
more, Okla. Mrs. Huff had united
with the Methodist church a number
of years ago and had lived a true
Christian life.
The funeral services were conduct-
ed Tuesday afternoon at the home by
Rev. J. Grady Timmons, pastor of the
Methodist church, and he was assist-
ed by Rev. James Rayburn, pastor of
the Presbyterian church. The body
was taken to Oak Hill cemetery for
burial.
The pall bearers were W. E. Moore,
D. T. Briggs, Roy Davis, Claud Don-
nell, A. R. Harvey and Jasper Alex-
ander.
MAKE HENS LAY
with MARTIN’S EGG PRODUCER
and keep them well with MARTIN’S
ROUP TABLETS. Money back guar-
antee by Lion Drug Store. (w9)
Mrs. W. C. Barkley is home from
Childress, where she spent the sum-
mer with relatives. Her many
friends will be glad to know that she
is again at the home of her son, C.
L. Barkley, where she makes her
home..
LOST—A Goodyear Tire, 33x4, on
rim. Lost between Lampasas and
Adamsville. Finder please notify
Holley-Langford, Lampasas, Texas.
(dw)
ARE YOU ALL RUN DOWN?
Many Lampasas Folks Have Felt
That Way.
Feel all out of sorts?
Tired, achy, blue, irritable?
Back lame and stiff?
It may be the story of weak kid-
neys.
Of toxic poisons circulating about
Upsetting blood ap4 nerves.
There’s a way to feel right again.
Help your weakened kidneys with
Doan’s Pills—a stimulant diuretic.
Doan’s are recommended by many
people in this locality.
Mrs. J. E. Lindsay, Goldthwaite,
Tex., says: “I had such pains in my
kidneys I could hardly get around.
When I stooped I could scarcely
straighten. I had headaches and was
so nervous, I couldn’t stand the least
noise. My hands and feet swelled
twice their size and my kidneys acted
irregularly. Doan’s Pills took all the
swelling down and stopped my back
from hurting. I haven’t had any re-
turn of the trouble.”
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
I
Undertakers - Embalmers f
Funeral Directors |
&
Our Mr. C. Boon Taliaferro has been a licensed
undertaker more than a quarter of a century. He &
is thoroughly competent to handle every detail ♦{?
«•>
of the business. X
The Weekly Leader $1.50 year.
i
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The Lampasas Leader. (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, November 20, 1925, newspaper, November 20, 1925; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth885857/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.