The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 88, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 16, 1934 Page: 1 of 4
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The Lampasas Daily Leader
THIRTY-FIRST YEAR
SATURDAY
LAMPASAS, TEXAS. JUNE 16, 1934.
SATURDAY
NUMBER 88
FORD PRICES 1
REDUCED!1
Effective Friday, June 15, prices on Ford V-8 passenger 4
cars, trucks and commercial cars are reduced $10 to $20. •{«
These reductions represent new low prices on 1934 models, Ij,
as there have been no Ford price increases this year. *t;
FORD V-8 PASSENGER CARS (with standard equipment) g
Tudor Sedan ................................................$520 4
Coupe..............................................................$505 |
Fordor Sedan......................-.........................$575 ' X
Victoria..........................................................$600 £
FORD V-8 TRUCKS (closed cab) j;
Stake Truck—131-inch wheelbase............$650 |
Stake Truck—157-inch wheelbase..............$715 jj«
In addition to above, prices are also reduced on other £
commercial car and truck types from $10 to $20. X
All prices F., O. B. Detroit ^
In the Meantime Watch the Fords Go By
and X
Watch the People go BUY Fords I*!
Lampasas Motor Co., Inc. |
BAPTIST REVIVAL CLOSES
SUNDAY NIGHT, JUNE 17
The Revival meeting will come to
a close with the Baptismal service
Sunday evening. There will be no
service tonight (Saturday). Dr. Cul-
pepper returned to his home at.
Stephenville at the close of the Fri-
day evening service. The pastor as-
sisted by Bro. E. L. Carnett will fin-
ish the meeting. Several people have
united with the church, and the
church has been revived.
No one should allow anything to
prevent their coming to these clos-
ing services of the meeting. The
pastor and singer need your full sup-
port.
CHURCH OF CHRIST REVIVAL
WILSON DRUG CO. SPECIAL
Pineapple Lime Sherbert, Sunday
only, quarts, 20c. (d)
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Cox returned
Friday from Temple where they have
been with Mr. Cox’s father, who un-
derwent an operation a few days ago.
Mr. Cox remained in the hospital but
is doing nicely.
Mrs. T. H. Summerville has return-
ed from Galveston where she has
been visiting the past week in the
home of her daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Chapman.
The Revival began last night, with
Bro. J. T. Stricklin preaching. We
ask you to hear the following sub-
jects discussed: Saturday night, 8:00
p. m., “Characteristics of the Bible”;
there will be three services Lord’s
Day—11 a. m., “Loyalty In Christ,”
communion service, 11:45 a. m.; 3:30
p. m. “Personal Work”; 8 p. m. “Pow-
er of God’s Word”. Come be with us
—if you are interested in any ques-
tion, will be glad to have you come
and let us reason together.
Bro. Stricklin is an earnest speak-
er.—Reporter.
Bailey Theatre
Comfortably Cooled
SHOWING TONIGHT
(&> IQ
IMPORTANT MASS
MEETING CALLED FOR
MONDAY EVENING
McCOY
Uv
VOICE ^NIGHTl
/ with Billie Seward
(A Columbia Picture)
They fought side by side through
the night to save a doomed city from
disaster.
EXTRA:
Chapter 9 of Tarzan
“THE EYES OF EVIL”
Plus
Krazy Kat Kai’toon
“Southern Exposure”
All for 10c & 15c
POLO GAME SUNDAY
The Lampasas Yellow Jacket's and
the University of Texas Collegiates
will play Sunday afternoon at 4:00
o’clock in the State Park. Admis-
sion is 25c. (d)
GIRL TURNS UPON KIDNAP-
ERS WITH FEMALE HATRED
FORMER LAMPASAS
GIRL
MARRIES
Miss Effie Opal Bryson, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Bryson of Ber-
tram, was married Saturday, June 9,
to Donald Roper of Mt. Vernon, 111.
Mrs. Roper attended the Lampasas
high school for four years and grad-
uated this year fi*om the University
of Texas. Mr. Roper graduated in
1933 from the University of Texas.
The young couple are to make their
home in Mt. Vernon, 111.
WILSON DRUG CO. SPECIAL
Pineapple Lime Sherbert, Sunday
inly, quarts, 20c. (d)
FATHER ASKS POLICE TO
HELP FIND HIS DAUGHTER
Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Campbell of
Dallas, are in Lampasas for a short
business visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Bedell O’Hair have
returned to their home after spend-
ing the past week in Valley Mills
with friends and relatives.
Frank Thompson of Temple, is
visiting in the home of Mr. and Mrs.
A. J. Bassel.
ICE CREAM
SUNDAY SPECIAL
25c qt.
Pineapple Sherbert
Lime Sherbert
Strawberry Cream
Banana Nut Cream
Vanilla Cream
Butter Scotch Cream
Mackey’s
HOLDENVILLE, Okla., June 15.—
Officers here are seeking two kid-
napers, who probably believe by now
that the female of the species is
more deadly than the male.
Bela Martain, young girl of the
Rock Creek community, heard a noise
in her home about 2 o’clock in the
morning, sot she got out of bed to in-
vestigate.
When she stepped outside two men
grabbed her, but' she calmly reached
for an iron rod and hit the man near-
est her across the nose. The pair
put their hands over her mouth to
prevent an outcry, and hustled her
away.
About a quarter of a mile from the
house the man she struck fell over
in a ditch into a swoon and his part-
ner freed Bela, who ran home. To-
day she gave descriptions of the kid-
napers to officers.
WILSON DRUG CO. SPECIAL
Pineapple Lime Sherbert, Sunday
only, quarts, 20c. (d)
MAN SMASHING LIGHT
TO STOP CHILDREN’S
PLAY ELECTROCUTED
Bartlett Mutual Life Ins. As sn.
Gives You Real Protection
at Low Cost.
Any information desired, see or phone
S. D. JONES, Agt
Keystone Hotel
Rural 132 S. W. 378
CHICAGO, June 14.—Anthony Ani-
cich, 51, made good his threat to
stop a night baseball game which
interfered with his sleep, but it cost
him his life.
Only hoots greeted him as he urg-
ed the youths, who had gathered un-
der his window last night to benefit
from the illumination of a corner
street lamp, to play elsewhere.
Finally, his patience exhausted,
Anicich seized an iron poker and told
members of his family he’d stop the
game—he’d smash the light.
With the poker he scooted to the
top of the 25-foot wooden pole. The
poker described a vicious arc, shat-
tered the light and contacted a high
tension wire.
Anicich toppled from the pole, elec-
trocuted.
PALESTINE, Texas, June 15.—
Claiming he had gone sleepless for
10 days and nights while scouring
the country for his 14-year-old daugh-
ter who disappeared from him while
they were staying at a tourist camp
near Kilgore, R. L. Beagle, about 50,
be-spectacled transient, asked Ander-
son County officers to aid him in a
search for his girl, Helen Louise.
Beagle, almost exhausted from heat
when he reached the jail here with
another daughter, Baby Jo, 11, said
he wasn’t sure whether his older
daughter had been kidnaped, but he
was fearful that such a fate had be-
fallen her. She disappeared on Sat-
urday night, June 2, after attending
a picture show in Kilgore.
“I haven’t been to; sleep a wink
since my girl disappeared,” the fa-
ther sighed. “My baby girl has slept
with her head in my lap, and I am
about to go crazy from worry.”
Asked if he thought it was possible
his daughter had gloped, Beagle an-
swered:
“My God, I don’t know. All I
know is she is gone, and I would do
anything to get her back.”
The girl was reported seen on the
Kilgore-Tyler road on the morning
after her disappearance. She could
not be located in Tyler later that day,
her father said.
$25.00 REWARD
For necessary evidence for con-
viction of anybody cutting our main
telephone lines.
Lampasas Rural Tele. Co.
(d90-w) A. R. Harvey, Sheriff.
WILSON DRUG CO. SPECIAL
Pineapple Lime Sherbert, Sunday
only, quarts, 20c. (d)
Daily Leader 3 Months for $1.01
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Stokes
of Westfield, N. J., who have been
visiting in the home of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. M. Y. Stokes, spent Fri-
day in Austin. Mr. Stokes left from
there for a business trip to San Fran-
cisco, Calif., and Mrs. Stokes return-
ed to Lampasas. She was accompa-
nied home by Sylvester Lewis, who
has been in Austin for the past sev-
eral weeks.
Mr. and Mrs| G. E. Wimberly of
Houston are here for a visit' of a few
days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J. C. Wimberly.
An important mass meeting has
been called fpr Monday evening on
the lawn of the Baptist Church at 8
o’clock. The purpose of this meeting
is to hear a government man discuss
the forming of a Federal Savings and
Loan Association in Lampasas.
A meeting was held Friday after-
noon in the directors’ room of the
First National Bank and at that time
a number of Lampasas business men
had the pleasure of hearing C. Gordon
Jones, field organizer, discuss the
plans of organizing and operating a
Federal Savings and Loan Associa-
tion in Lampasas. The Federal gov-
ernment is willing to put in three
dollars for every one that is raised
locally and the purpose of the organi-
zation is to help those who desire to
build homes or make necessary re-
pairs on those they own and also help
those who wish to start a savings
account.
At the meeting Friday afternoon a
temporary organization was set up
with J. R. Key as chairman; Charles
Wachendorfer, vice chairman; R. J.
Paine, secretary; and G. Tom Bigham
and R, E. Rawls as members of the
board.
The meeting has been called for
Monday evening in order that Mr.
Jones may have the opportunity of
explaining such an organization to
the entire citizenship of Lampasas.
Every man and woman is invited and
urged to attend the meeting.
Below is given a brief outline t>f
such an organization:
What is a Federal Savings and
Loan Association?
A Federal Savings and Loan Asso-
ciation is a privately managed, mu-
tual thrift institution which is or-
ganized and directed by responsible
local business men and owned by all
of its shareholders. Money is invest-
I ed in its shares by many people, in
large and small sums. That money
is loaned by the Association to local
home owners, secured by sound first
mortgages on their homes.
The term of payment must extend
over a period of not less than 5 years
nor more than 20 years, at the end
of which time the entire loan has
gTadually been x*epaid. This form of
loan has never been surpassed in its
safety for the lender, and in its
economy and soundness for the home
owner.
Before any Federal Savings and
Loan Association is chartered, careful
investigation is made as to the char-
acter and responsibility of its pro-
posed management. The directors, as
a rule, are leading citizens in the
community, representative of the
constructive elements in its business
and civic life, and dominated by a
spirit of public service.
Upon receiving a charter, a Fed-
eral Savings and Loan Association
automatically becomes a member of
the Federal Home Loan Bank of the
district in which it is located. It
thereby makes its own credit resour-
ces more liquid, and thus increases
its ability to serve the public.
Designed to Protect Your Savings
Federal Savings and Loan Associa-
tions combine advantages which are
not presented in any other single form
of thrift institution. The Federal
government is empowered to partici-
pate financially in their establishment
and progress.
Each Federal Savings and Loan As-
sociation is under the supervision of
the United States government and
the Federal Home Loan Band of the
district in which it is located. Safety
of the shareholders’ investment is the
guiding motive of each Association,
wihich is a cooperative enterprisle,
with no preferred or promotional
profit for anyone.
The safety of money invested in
any savings and loans association de-
pends upon the conservative charac-
ter of the association’s lending policy.
The stringent regulations under which
a Federal Savings and Loan Associa-
tion operates require sound lending
methods, and an economical home-
purchase plan which gives the home
owner a debt-free property at the
lowest practcal cost.
A Federal Savngs and Loan Asso-
ciation is not a bank. It does not
accept deposits or pay out money on
checking accounts. It is strictly a
mutual investing institution, design-
ed for the long-teim savings of the
people.
How Shares Are Bought.
Different types of shares are avail-
able in any Federal Savings and Loan
Association, to fit the incomes and
Leroy Theatre
“Where Lampasas Is Entertained**
(WASHED AIR COOLING SYSTEM)
BIG DOUBLE PROGRAM TONIGHT!
FEATURE NO. 1
&
wm SMOKE GETS IN YOUR EYEsW
THE FRINKS GET IN YOUR HAIR! V-*-
"THiF <■ **>
X
A First National Loff Riot ivith
ALINE MacMAHON • GUY KIBBEE
HUGH HERBERT • ALLEN JENKINS.
FEATURE NO. 2
J
\
m
Bf;/i
mm
Id
■k
ICirNI
MAYNARD
SUNDAY & MONDAY
June 17-18
Thirty Days A Princess
regally ruling o nationt
jfl
(FV
I1'
mm
The rip-roarin’ stor/1
of a wild horse tamed
when he met his master!
Plus
2-REEL COMEDY
JpP '
THIRTY NIGHTS A
WOMAN...frying fo
rule her own heartt
in
THIRT9DAH
PRINCESS’
with
CARY GRANT
i B. P Sctiulberg Production
A fo‘0 mount Pi (lint
Plus
OSWALD CARTOON
Plus
ORGANLOGUE
Plus
Vitaphone Musical
“BIG CITY FANTASY’
circumstances of various classes of
investors. Shares have a par value
of $100. The main difference between
one type and another is in the meth-
od of paying for them, which varies
from 50 cents a month on installment
payments to $100 in outright lump
sum payment.
Raising Cash on Shares in
Case of Need.
What if you need some of your
savings in cash before your shares
mature? The law provides that, to
meet any legitimate needs, the Asso-
ciation’s Board of Directors may or-
der the immediate repurchase, up to
$100 a month, of pari of a shai*e-
holder’s account. In addition, after
30 days’ notice, at least one-third of
the Association’s total receipts from
shareholders and borrowers must be
applied to (repurchasing shares of
members requiring funds in larger
amounts than $100 a month.
In keeping with the purpose of re-
warding long-term savings, the regu-
lations of Federal Savings and Loan
Associations carry the following stip-
ulations: On shares repurchased with-
in one year from the date of invest-
ment, the Association retains one half
of the dividends declared on the
amount so purchased. On shares re-
purchased after more than 1 year
but in less than 3 years from the date
of purchase, the Association retains
one-fourth of the dividends so de-
clared in that period. On shares re-
purchased 3 years or more after the
date of purchase, the shareholder is
entitled to full dividends declared
thereon to date of repurchase.
A Federal Savings and Loan As-
sociation may lend to a savings mem-
ber up to 75 per cent of the amount
credited on his shares thus avoiding
the need of selling his shares or dis-
turbing his savings plan.
WILSON DRUG CO. SPECIAL
Pineapple Lime Sherbert, Sunday
only, quarts, 20c. (d)
Odell Bostic, whose leg was broken
in a fall late Thursday, was taken to
his home in Bertram Friday evening.
Mr. Bostic was resting as well as
could be expected.
Daily Leader 3 Months for $1.00
I LET’S SHAVE I
f: k
c- New Enders Razor OEa Y
and 5 blades ...............*5 wC
X New Gem Razor ^ f* _ X
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X Probak, Gillette, Blue \
4 Blades, Valet Blades _ I
l 5 for ..............................25C £
| Try Nor-Dex
•{« for Sunburns ................WwW
4 Don’t Forget Our Fountain, the 4
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1 Wilson Drug Co. f
%............... .....i
I LET US HELP YOU I
| Look Your Best
Y
1 Rathman Tailors $
4 S. W. Phone 92 J
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The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 88, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 16, 1934, newspaper, June 16, 1934; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth897167/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.