The Caldwell News and The Burleson County Ledger (Caldwell, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, February 27, 1931 Page: 2 of 8
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TBS CALDWELL NIW8
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P, V'
-S^08 planning annual ¡pftin try A
to honor their alma mater * «ul 1111 al5 a
PART OF COMMON
SENSE FARMING
cu*tnle!! *?• <UP>—FolloW-
"e®rly half a century
í íí; graduates of the
I#x*f *'>11 honor their
T\f5 ^?r^'h 2, the anniver-
1 exas independence.
JLTT«* y^1;8 memorial ban-
...v keen held at such remote
/tr^« im.chn1Lkft' <iuam' Iceland,
r f«Mjl8lan(?,8 and Mindanao.
>r rallies will be held in Texas
m miv.JTTToratt! the gVowth *
■ Mwvernity that promises to become
At rHv5^°i Y#1f, of tho Southland.
f, . I*®8. exeii will Itauiquet at
the University Club. Prof. J. W
aiho«'V, t°mx1?trolk'1' of tht' univer-
J * &uesl speaker. Cal-
yS?' formerly a professor of,
mwnemacie.s. has been connected with
e administration for ten years.
Mimilar celebrations are planned by
jgrmer students at Wichita Falls,
Houston, Fort Worth, San Antonio,
fWtpg °"' Amari,,t> and other Texas
Hints .h" Home
By NANCY HART
Tells Why Corns Hurt
Dr. John Arthur Wilson. expert in
the chemistry oí leather, just awarded
the American Chemical Society prize,
«ays damp weather make shoes
Shrink.
VEAL RECIPES
^ye®1 *.s not a good every-day meat,
wit it is most certainly a delicious
once-m-awhile meat. And if it in
thoroughly cooked it is quite whole-
some.
"30f
:h
Roast Veal
Select a piece of veal from the loin
Bd have it boned. Fill with bread
staffing seasoned with onion. Dredge
with salt, pepper and a little flour
and place ifl roasting pan with
three slices of salt pork laid over
the meat. Start cooking in a hot
®TPn and continue in a moderate oven,
allowing twenty minutes to the
P®®nd—more if the roast is small.
Baste frequently. Serve with gravy
made from drippings in the pan.
ll NEVeR FIGOEPED OUT
WHICH SPENDS MONIEY
FASTEST, THE FALLOW
TH*Tfe WOKI A PP.i:e IN
Aujttfpy ok? a widow
vvlth the life in5upancs
MONEY "
SILK SALE
'* CORN WITH PEPPERS |
Two cups canned corn, nine table-i
spoons of grated cheese, six table-;
•poors of cracker crumbs, six green
peppers, six slices tomatoes, one and'
one-half tablespoons butter.
Mix the corn with the salt and „ „
pepper and one-third of the cheese. 10,000 dress-length rernants of
Save ready the peppers which have , finest silk to be cleared by mail, re-
been washed and the tops removed, gardless. Every desired yardage and
Also the seeds and pulp. Fill the color. All 39 inches wide. Let us
By E N. HOLMUREEN
A. & M. Extension Service
Tin- chicken is the smallest of
tl iK"siic animals, yet its • litt.f
indicates its value. During thi' pa-t !
I season's drouth and low priced cot-\
ton tho farm flock prevented many ¡
i'arm home> from facing an actual
food shortage. ( i
Wh%- egg and poultry prices in j
]! •'!(• did not escapt tin gt-neral ik-
pre sion, gootl profits were Mill made
i,V hundreds of farmers in Texas who
cent a flock of well-bred hem care-
ully cared for as a part of their
ommon sense method of farming.
About 287 -ijt*, farmers, acting
i< poultry demonstrators of the Ex-
tension Service and working with
their county and home demonstrators
in keeping accurate records through-
out the year tell the story. They are
but a small part of the many fai -
ners who have round that chicken
money is as good as any other money.
Little but loud as far as profits
go would be an apt expression as the
year's records on all these flocks re-
veal a profit of $l.S0 per hen above
feed cost. Some are higher, some are
lower, but all of them showed a pro-
fit and the profits were mighty wel-
come,
"Almost all we had to depend on
during the drouth," some of them re-
marked, "brought in as much as the
cotton crop," .«-aid others, while they
all agreed that a good flock of hens
on the place in only common sense
farming.
Present egg prices leave little pro-
fit and many thousands of hens are
being marketed daily. Hatcheries re-
port chick sales much reduced. With
fewer hen-s on farms and fewer chicks
being raised, fall prices should re-
turn to normal. The farmer with a
good flock of pullets will be in posi-
tion to secure a nice profit.
o
Be sure to write for free catalogue
of Ramsey's Austin Nursery. Austin,
Texas. (adv)
sprinkl
shallow
pulp. Fill the
In m Ml
le cheese on top. Arrange in a
ow baking pan with about one
of water. Bake for ten minutes,
boating several times. Whilt this is
boina done, dip the tomatoes in the
ctaeker cromos and brown in the
hot butter. Serve the peppers with
• slice of tomato with each.
Fried Almonds
Twenty rounding tablespoons of
Hour, four tablespoons of butter, four
sounding tablespoons of sugar, ore-
half teaspoon or salt, one tablespoon
of vanilla, one-quarter cup of grated
oavities with the corn mixture and send you a piece of genuine $6 Crepe
Paris (very heavy flat crepe) on ap-
proval for your inspection. If you
then wish to keep it mail us your
check at only $1.90 a yard. (Original
price $6 a yd.) Or choose printed
Crepe Paris. Every wanted combina-
tion of colors. We will glandly send
you a piece to look at. What colors
and yardage, please? If you ke«p it
you can mail us check at $1,26 a yd.
(Final reduction. Originally $6 a yd).
All $2 silks, $2 satins and $2 print-
ed crepes are 90c a yd, in this sale.
Every color. Do not ask for or buy
from samples. See the whole piece
almonds. Stir together, roll, cut in- y°u aTe *ettin* £foi* deciding. We
«s almonds shape and fry in hot oil. wa"tI1t0 ba,rUr York reference
Drop into sugar mixed with cinnamon. so1-te11 "s /" ™sh to about y°-ur:
j self and describe the piece you want
¡ to see on approval. Write NOW.
¡ Send no money. To advertise our
Hickory Nut Kisses
Whites of six eggs beaten to a | thread we send you a spool to
■off froth, one pound and one cup
at powdered sugar, one cup of hickory
sat meats chopped and a pinch of
cream of tarter. Drop in spoonfuls
at buttered pans and bake.
Cocoanut Cream Candy
One tablespoon butter, three
quarters cup milk, two cups sugar,
one-half cup grated cocoanut, one-
half teaspoon vanilla extract.
Melt butter in aancepan, add milk
and sugar; stir until su^ar is dis-
solved, heating slowly; boil twelve to
fifteen minutes; remove from fire and
add cocoanut and vanilla, beating
antil creamy. Póur into buttered tins
sad cool.
.For chocolate cocoanut cream candy
add three ounces unsweetened choco-
late to other ingredients before boil-
tog.
match free.
CRANE'S, Silks. 545 Fifth Ave.
N. Y. City
arte
ort
Dodge, Iowa, whose official records
for 1930 gave her a rating of 9286
average score and won her the
trophy of the Amateur Trapshooting
Association.
BUILDING PERMITS HIGH
DALHART, Feb. 19. (UP).—Ac-
cording to information reaching here
building permits in Dumas from
January 16 to February 3 were $8,176.
This included a new modern brick
store building and six residences.
o
Doctor—Have you been tiring this
patient out with a lot of needless con-
versation ?
Nifty Nurse—Oh, no, I've done
every bit of the talking myself.
Mr. Askei—How much for travel-
ers insurance from New York to San
Francisco ?
Ticket Agent Two dollars by the
way of New Orleans, and one hundred
find fifty by the way of Chicago.
Mexico Moves To
Stop Stamp 'Racket'
MEXICO CITY, Fob. 19. (UP).
The price of Mexican postage
stamps will be reduced in states
bordering on the United States,
according to a presidential decree
recently announced.
The reduction in price which is
now ten centaves (approximately
five cents) thruout the Republic
is being made to discourage Mexi-
cans along thi/ border from cross-
ing into the United States and
mailing their letters to points in
Mexico >\ ith two-cent stamps.
The BEST Gray Hair
Remedy is Home Made
To half pint of water add
one ounce bay rum, asmall
box of Barbo Compound
and one-fourth ounce of
glyeerine. Any druggist
can put this up or you csn
.mix it at home at very
little cost. Apply to the
hair twice a week until
the desired shade is ob-
tained. It will gradually darken
Straakad. faded or sw hair and make It aofa
and glaaor. Barbe wiD not calar the i "
It a* stick? m i
(52t-ll-14-31)
Notice!
We have some extra fine Stationery that
we are closing out, without regard to cost.
Come in and look it over.
STONE & HITCHCOCK
P. S.—Some Diptheria cases reported. Better have the
dictor immunice your children. Toxoid is cheaper than
Antitoxin and gives lifetime immunity. We carry the
best Toxoid and Antitoxins.
STONE & HITCHCOCK
Drugs and Jewelry
CORNER DRUG STORE
WHEN BABIES
mia pap THBRB are times wheii
PR El a baby is too fretful or
fawiah to be f ing to
are mm pains a mother
But there's qukk
infantile UK
tfeia pan vegetable prepara Lion,
r coated tongues toil of eonatt-
Hvar there's any alga af
Gaatoria has a food tasto;
love to take it. Buy the gam-
i Cbaa. H. Flstrher's signature
LOOK
for the
FERRY
SEED
BOX
There's a Ferry Seed Box near you, in
your neighborhood store. Look for it
when you plant your garden, for Ferry's
purebred Seeds have been tested from
generations and generations of mother
plants for vigor and sturdiness of growth.
It is not the price of seeds which is ex*
pensive in your garden—it is the labor
and time and investment in the ground.
Yet the quality in your seeds may mean
the difference between a loss of all this
time and investment, and a complete
success.
Look for the name "Ferry's" on the
seeds you buy for your garden. This
means that you arc buying tested seeds.
All Ferry's purebred Seeds come from
generations of plant whirh have proved
their ability to transmit their superior
quality by years of careful growing and
seeding. The evidence of the harvest lies
with Ferry's purebred Seeds. Look for
Ferry's Seeds if you are looking for a
successful garden. Ferry-Morse Seed Co.,
Detroit, Michigan.
FEKKY S purebred SEEDS
"I've just read
Swift 8C Company's
1931 Year Book
♦ ♦ ♦
"This book is most interesting to me, because I'm
one of the 200,000 producers of cream, poultry and
eggs who sell to Swift ft Company. It is just as
interesting to everyone who haa something to sell
to Swift ft Company, as well as the housewife who
buys food for her family.
"This book showed me the source of SwiftftCompany's
profits, which come, mainly, from aavinga in ex-
penses, and not at the expense of the producer or
the consumer. What impressed me was that Swift
earns its dividend from an average profit from all
sources of only a small fraction of a cent a pound.
"The chapter on Swift ft Company's produce plants
on page 35 held my attention, for here is shown how
the company creates a direct road to remote mar-
kets for the producers' products. And you may learn
how Swift's marvelous distributing plan serves pro-
ducer, small retailer and consumer in every comer
of the country.
"1 know that Swift ft Company will gladly send you
the 1931 Year Book free of charge. Send for it;
there's information of interest to every man and
woman. Just fill out this coupon below."
Swift ft Company, 4180 Packers Avenue, Chicago, Illinois
Please mail me free a copy o( Swill A Company's 1931 Year Book.
Name
Address-
City
State
NEW FORD
CO! PK
if. o. n n trmU,
film /r«%kt ana
HfU Mr,. fl.mj
rr* mmi tpmrm firm
•tira ml lorn r#,i.)
the jewels of a fine watch
Evmmx of (be fuBtr heill
lulo Um rum Ford k Um mm of
mora iban twenty ball and roller
bearing*. In addition to
amoolher operation, they aave
gasoline, give more speed and
Sower in flral and aeeond speeds,
eerease noiae and inereaae the
dnrability and efficiency of the
transmission gears.
From the engine to the road,
the entire drive of the new Ford
on all forward needs Is wholly
on anti-frietion ball and roller
bearings.
Come In and let us explain
the many other strnetnraf and
mechanical featnrea that make
the new Ford a value tar abovo
the price you pay.
Cade Auto Company
Caldwell, Texas
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Cromartie, C. E. The Caldwell News and The Burleson County Ledger (Caldwell, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, February 27, 1931, newspaper, February 27, 1931; Caldwell, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth174939/m1/2/: accessed April 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Harrie P. Woodson Memorial Library.