The Lampasas Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, May 16, 1930 Page: 2 of 8
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M'C0RMIC|deering
DEERING TWINE
Less Tangling and More
Bundles to the Ball
The Lampasas Leader
Published Every Friday
fl. Abney Herbert Abney
J. H. ABNEY & SON
Owners and Publishers
tSSstiered at the postoffice at Lampasas,
fL'exas, as second class mail matter.
Subscription Price
..*3u2 months ___________________________
months _________________________
months ___________________________
..$1.50
- .T6
- .60
OTY HAS CLEAR WATER
REGARDLESS OF RISES
The new city water system has
•proven that we can now have clear
water regardless of the condition of
tSae creek from which the water is
pumped. This is the first time the
creek has been on a rise since in-
stalling the new system, but water
was beihg pumped from the creek
Saturday when it was very muddy.
There are two complete units of
■the water plant and the water is
brought to a vat where the lime, iron,
etc., is thoroughly mixed with the
•water and it then passes on through
•three vats for settlement before being
pumped into the standpipe. It is worth
si trip out to the plant to see how
this water is handled to see how
muddy the creek is where the water
is pumped from.
There are some adjustments of the
plant that are learned by actual ex-
ILL 12 YEARS
KONJOLA WINS
REAL VICTORY
Stubborn Case Soon Yields To Power
Of New Medicine—Grateful Lady
MRS. LILLIAN LORANE
“I suffered for twelve years from
kidney trouble and nervousness,” said
Mrs. Lillian Lorane, Mablevale, Ark.,
near Little Rock. “My kidneys were in
a very bad state and I was forced to
rise many times each night. This nat-
urally made sleep difficult..My nerves
were in a very bad condition and this
seemed to affect my eye sight. I could
scarcely go about my work and I was
wori’ied and discouraged. I seemed to
have no energy for anything.
“I tried a great many medicine and
treatments but nothing seemed to do
me the least bit of good. I finally
decided to give Konjola a trial and
the benefit which I received from this
■perienee and it should only be a short medicine is almost unbelievable. Kon-
itime until the operation of the plant j jola built up my health until I am
"is such thac we can have good clear jn a better condition than I have been
water properly treated at all times, , jn years. My kidneys are normal and
-regardless
•creek.
■of the condition of the
WANT TO LEASE
'Want to lease 3 or 4 hundred acres
-pasture. Good fence, well watered and
some farm land. Write Mrs. J. M.
Porter, Llano, Texas. (w30pd)
I can sleep without interruption. My
entire system seemed to respond to
this modern medicine and my friends
all remark upon the improvement in
my appearance.”
Konjola has become the most talked
of medicine in America because it
makes good. Taken after meals over
a period of from six to eight weeks,
DOLL »AN LLNCH STAND TO this great medicine has made a re-
HAVE NEW QUARTERS markable record in the most stubborn
cases.
"Worse was started Monday morning Konjola is sold in Lampasas, Texas,
preparing a portion of the City Bakery at Mackey’s drug store, and by all
building xor the use oi Oscar Donovan j the best druggists in all towns thru-
In the operation of his lunch stand j 0ut this entire section. (w-adv.)
■wMch for the past four years he has ! _
operated next to the Central Filling
Station,
These new quarters will afford Mr.
Donovnn a bit more room and also
be a great deal more conveniently ar-
ranged,1 giving him an opportunity to
more efficiently serve his patrons.
Mr. Donovan expects to move into
bis new location about Thursday,
May 15th.
Women Suffering
Bladder irritation
Tf functional Bladder Irritation
•disturbs your sleep, or causes Burn-
{ng for Itching Sensation, Backache,
JLeg Pains, or muscular aches, mak-
ing you feel tired, depressed, and
discouraged, why not try the Cystex
48 Hour Test? Don’t give up. Get
Cystex today at. any drug store. Put
it to the test. See for yourself how
•quickly it works. Money back if it
doesn’t bring quick improvement,
and satisfy you completely. Try
Cystex today. Only 60c.
LION DRUG STORE (d-w)
For poultry that have exposed to
Blue Bugs, and other blood-sucking
insects, give
POULTRYTONE
A tonic to be mixed with the feed,
f3ear fljarifltry houses infested with in-
.-sects, paint or spray Martin’s Roost
amt, an insecticide and wood pre-
--server.. For sale by
'MACKEY’S DRUG STORE (w31-d)
.MAGAZINE SEEKS TO
PROVE ARTICLE
Mother Knows
Her Secret Now
"“For a long time I couldn’t find
<3lit what was making my little girl
.so drowsy and cross,” says Mrs. J. N.
Mathis, who lives at 1141 Busby
street, here in Shreveport.
“She suffered, too, v/ith pains in
her stomach, she was restless, and
-would whine and grit her teeth in
3ier sleep. I tried laxatives and other
medicines, but to no good. I had a
friend in Texas who recommended
White’s Cream Vermifuge, and —
Normadelle started feeling better
fright away. Her cheeks are now
plump and rosy. She is so full of
dun, play and pep I can hardly keep
#jp with her.”
When children stay sickly looking
tand can’t sleep at night, even after
yon have; given them laxatives to
clear the bowels, that’s usually the
sign of round or pin worms. White’s
Cream Vermifuge is perhaps the best
medicine you can give them.
The Lion Drug Store
BROWNSVILLE, May 12.—Witnes-
ses were drawn from the hostile camp
by Colliers’ Weekly today in defend-
ing the half million dollar libel suit
brought by R. B. Creager, Republi-
can national committeeman for Tex-
as, against the magazine.
Charlie Fordson, Hidalgo county
district clerk and rpember of Sheriff
A. Y. Baker’s Democratic adminis-
tration castigated in “High Handed
and Hell Bent,” the article upon which
Creager based his suit, was brought
in to testify that he believed Creager
and Baker were working in the poli-
tical harmony which the magazine was
seeking to establish.
Logan Duncan of Mission, Creager
republican, admitted in testimony that
although he voted for Baker in the
1928 democratic primary, he was a
delegate to the county republican con-
vention and bolted it when Creager’s
choice for chairman, Harry Carroll,
was voted down from the floor.
Fordson, in giving his opinion, join-
ed a number of others, most of whom
went further and declared it generally
known that Baker and Creager were
in a political alliance.
Creager was put on the stand by
the defense but remained only long
enough to identify paper both sides
handed him but did not submit in
evidence.
One witness was allowed to testify
in connection with the Baker admin-
istration that there was “a bunch of
thieves” in Hidalgo county offices. Jack
Berry, Edinburgh fruit grower, insis-
ted that the statement was “true be-
yond a doubt,” declaring that they
were “self confessed and proved.”
SHERIFF’S SALE
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
County of Lampasas.
By virtue of an order of sale, is
sued by the Clerk of the District Court
of McLennan County, Texas, on the
21st day of April 1930, as directed by
the terms! of a judgment rendered in
said Court on the 19th day of October
1929, in a certain cause wherein the
N. Wood is plaintiff, and W. B. Wells
is defendant, in favor of the said plain-
tiff, and against said defendant W. B.
Wells, for the sum of Four Hundred
Sixty-six & 99-100 Dollars, with in-
on said sum at the rate of 8
per cent per annum from date of judg-
ment, together with all costs of suit
And Whereas, on said date and in
the above entitled and numbered
cause, the plaintiff, N. Wood, recov-
ered a judgment against the defend-
ant, W. B. Wells, primarily, and
against the defendant, John M. Grim-
land, secondarily, for the sum of
$941.15, together with 8 per cent per
annum interest thereon from the 10th
day of October, 1929, and all costs
of suit.
And Whereas, the said judgments
are foreclosures of two deeds of trust
liens as same existed on July 10, 1928,
and July 17, 1928, respectively, on the
the following described property and
premises:
Lot No. Three (3) in block No. For-
ty-eight (48) of the Lampasas Springs
Company’s Addition to the town of
Lampasas, Texas, according to the plat
of said Addition duly recorded in the
County Clerk’s office of Lampasas
County, Texas, and being same pro-
perty described in deed from A. L.
Townsend and wife to W. W. Wood-
son, dated September 22, 1925, and
recorded in Book 49, page 64 of Lam-
pasas County Deed Records,
And Whereas, the said judgment
has been credited with the payment
of the sum of $9.13 on the 19th day
of April 1930, and to me directed and j
delivered as Sheriff of said Lampasas j
County, I have seized, levied upon, and j
will, on the first Tuesday in June \
1930, the same being the 3rd day of !
said month, at the C&irt House door !
of said Lampasas County, in the City j
of Lampasas, between the hours of,
10 o’clock a. m. and 4 o’clock p. m.
on said day proceed to sell for cash
to the highest bidder all the right,
title and interest of W. R Wells in
and to the following described real
estate, levied upon on the 22nd day
of April 1930, as the property of W.
B. Wells to wit: Lot No. (3) in block
No. Forty-eight (48) of the Lampasas
Springs Company’s Addition.
W. M. FAUBION, Sheriff,
(w-31) Lampasas Co., Texas.
SOMEBODY GROWS IT FOR YOU
NEED COMPELS MARRIED
WOMEN TO SEEK WORK
DR. C. H. FAIRES
DENTAL SURGEON
Attention Given Plate and
Bridge Work
BLOCK ANESTHESIA
<2$4ke ever Mackey A Suntn'i Drag
j, Mata* Lamyaaae, Texas.
WASHINGTON, May 11.—That
married women do not seek employ-
ment because they prefer to work
is indicated by a study just com-
pleted by the United States Wo-
men’s Bureau. Of a group of mar-
riled women applying for wpjrk in
Denver, Colo., 90 per cent said that
need compelled them to work, and
74 per cent reported that they re-
ceived no support from their hus-
bands.
Mrs. Harriett Manuel and Mrs. A.
W. Ruf of Kenilworth, 111., who has
been her guest here for several days,
left Sunday night for Chicago. Mrs.
Manuel will spend the summer months
in Illinois.
When a farmer goes to town and
buys a can of milk, a slab of pork,
canned tomatoes, dried beans and a
dozen other kinds of foodstuffs, he is
patronizing farmers who have pro-
duced them for him. If he were buy-
ing direct from these farmers and
could exchange other products with
him, the Hade would be even and
profitable, but when he buys of the
merchant, he is paying from three to
four profits. The grower gets the
small end of it.
The moral in this comment is: It
is not what you can sell an article
for that counts most, but what you
must pay for it when you find it ne-
cessary to buy. When you sell pork
on the hoof, you get around 9 cents a
pound. When you buy it, you pay from
25 to 40 cents per pound. You pay
the commission merchant his profit;
you pay the railroad transportation to'
the packing house; you pay the pack-
er a profit and your share of the
wages and salaries of packing house
employees; you pay transportation
and icing back to your own town on
the prepared product and then you
pay a small profit to the retail mer-
chant.
There are many items of food that
a farmer can not produce to an ad-
vantage, but most farmers are so sit-
uated that by a little management,
they can cut their food expense more
than half; have more food; a greater
variety and a better quality than they
are able to purchase for cash or on
store account. The cost of living is a
large part of what any person is able
to make, whether he live in the city
or on the farm, and if this cost can
be cut in half, or better, the money
received from major crops means
something more than just a means of
paying the merchant and the banker
for ;fo|od already consumed or for
money borrowed to carry one through
until the crop it laid by.—Farm and
Ranch.
LAMPASAS GETS SHOWERS
OF RAIN ON MONDAY
Gentle showers of rain fell in Lam-
pasas Monday at various intervals dur-
ing the day, the total amount of
moisture registering about .12 of an
inch by 2 o’clock.
Lampasas Weekly Leader 1 year $1.50
Fox & Mills Hardware Co.
LAMPASAS, TEXAS
Leading Hardware Merchants
FOR 35 YEARS IN THIS SECTION
WHY?
BECAUSE WE HANDLE THE BEST KNOWN LINES OF MERCHANDISE. OUR
PRICES ARE RIGHT; OUR SERVICE IS UNEXCELLED
M'wRnKX’BEBHNS
FARM MACHINES
. AND a
IS. IMPLEMENTS^
Do You Need a Grain Binder? If So We Have
The McCormlck-Deering
FOR YOU
McCormick-Deering
Cultivators
4 and 6 Plow, Round and Square Beams
Spring Trip
Order Ybur
Repairs Earhj
NATIONAL PRESSURE
COOKERS
10-12-18 & 25 Quart Sizes
Use Only Genuine
I. H. C. Repairs
Just Received Large Shipment Today
BURPEE AND NATIONAL
SEALERS
Repairs for Cookers and Sealers
CANS
1-2 & 3 lb. Plain Cans
2 & 3 lb. Enameled Cans
Extra lids, all sizes.
Save your gardens. Have fresh
vegetables every day in the year.
Hibbard Files, all sizes
_None, Better _
Machine Oil, Cup Grease
Axle Grease
0. V. B. HOES
TRUE TEMPER AND STRAIGHT HANDLES
When you are in Lampasas, make our store your store—our service your service.
We are here to please you and help you in every way we can.
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The Lampasas Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, May 16, 1930, newspaper, May 16, 1930; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth892566/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.