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' . ' --. ., .. - ., ' ,.,_ . ,·. ' ·; - ·' ' ' ' I " 1 ,• .,.; ' .. ... ....... ,.. . ..,, . . r .,·· _., .. •• ' .. P4-t:.U• .-_,_ lrti,,.,..C:. ' . ' . ' . The l ldvertiEenl .......... , ..... a .. .. •• ' ' .. ., ' ' . . c VOLUME Xli.J:..,-.(Carrlzozo NewB, Vol. 27J · Ur. 'l'ennia Bigelo" held the lucky • number that won the gobbler at the Lyric theatre Wedneaday Hight. ' Fletcher HalJ, ·and Peg Pfings· ten of State College at lAs Cruces were at home for the holidays. Wilma Snow came home for the holidays, , ' ' ' . ' ' , I" ' ', ·J. ' :; ' -. ' ,. v I ' ,l i ' .-. . ' . •• : -)0 ' I I ... . ' ---- ' .. ' ' ; t• Qffioial· Paper of ... incoln •• . ,., '" ...... "'1 ., ' '. - . CARRIZOZO, NEW ME!)CO, FRIDAY, NOV. 1937 ' •• it . . School Notes .- ''' - . - ·- ' "' ' ''. 4t1-a ' "' ' ! .... ' 1:1 •• ' Official ' · U.S. Land Di.t. Paper J ' .;""' •• NUMBER 22 Join. The Red (ross ."·' r ...

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Page 1: archives.lincolncountynm.govarchives.lincolncountynm.gov/wp-content/uploads...' . ' --. ., .. - ., ' ,.,_ . ,·. ' ·; - ·' ' ' I • " -~ 1 ,• .,.; ' .. ... ....... ,.. . ..,,

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' ~ .. P4-t:.U• .-_,_ ~I lrti,,.,..C:.

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Patrc)~et The

l ldvertiEenl

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VOLUME Xli.J:..,-.(Carrlzozo NewB, Vol. 27J

· Ur. 'l'ennia Bigelo" held the lucky • number that won the gobbler at the Lyric theatre Wedneaday Hight. '

Fletcher HalJ, ·and Peg Pfings· ten of State College at lAs Cruces were at home for the holidays.

Wilma Snow came home for the holidays,

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v

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: ~· -)0

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... . ' ---- ~M·

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Qffioial· Paper of ... incoln ~o~nty

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CARRIZOZO, NEW ME!)CO, FRIDAY, NOV. ~6, 1937 •

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••

it

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School Notes • •

.- ''' - . - ·- ' "' ' ''.

4t1-a •

' "' ' ! .... '

1:1 •• • •

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Official ' · U.S. Land Di.t.

Paper J '

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NUMBER 22 •

Join. The Red (ross

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T ' ->

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Historic Hoaxes

ffi 87 ELAJO scoTr WATSON

e Weatcn> Ne.._per UaloD, '

September Mom

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D 0 YOU remember back to the days when college and prep

school boys shocked their elders by diaplaylng on the walla of their rooms the piCture of -a nurle girl atand ing )n o pool ot water? 'It waa called "September Mom" and. al· though It was coru~ldered "highly Improper" In thou days, it became the most famous picture In America -thanks to a press agent named

-narry Reichenbach, who was out of 1 a job, and Anthony Comstock, head ) of the Anti· Vice 60Clety of Ne.w York. It came about in thiS way:

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. -..,. . · LINCOLN CQUNTY NBWS.

~rlsh .. Army Team Is· Best·. at Horse ,Jumping ' .

The cv-iglnlll painting had been re­Jected tor a brewer's calend111' and wan hung In the wtndow ol a .:New York art shop which offered repro- I ducUons of it for ten cents. But , few people were tntere:~ted enough 1 The' Irish Free State army team of Lfeut: G. 1\1. Detfeman and· Capt. F. A. Abeam take the Jnmpa dar­to buy thene copies until Rete hen- 1 fnt the pair JnmplnJ' contest for military class at the Natlonalllorse show hi New York recently. The)' came bach came along and saw the pos- I throurh with flylni eo lora to· wiD the event. · · " 11bWtte11 .In lt. ~need~ to pay,. ,. ·--- •• ·-· --- ....... ---- ... -·- ~- -·--~--·----hill room rent and the art ehop : J n· M . G · promised to pay It ll he could think ; oe I aggto oes Fishing of an lde,o for d lspoalng of the 2.000 copies In illl atock

Relchenboch hod o .. large dUiplay · of the picture put In the window and I then, pretending to he an outraged I c-Itizen, phoned Comotock about it. l '·' He perauaded others to do the same ' thtng end they all declared that the I ·· picture woo undermining the mar· I olll of the youth of the city. Down 1 1.."'­lO the shop marc-hed the viJ'tuoWJ., Anthony. He found a group of rona· · ~ muffin11 (hired by Rt'lchenbach l lol·

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terlng around In front of the shop j on~ making lt't'rlng rt'markll about the picture

Convinced that "September Mom" wao lndet'd o menac-e to the youth of the City, Comnt~k lmmt'dlately ap- I

pealed to the courtll to atop the solo I of the reprodurt1on11 The result was junt what Rt'lrhenbat'h hod hoped for In fot't, the plt'turc become aomethlng of a notional ll!llue- and I before the t'XC'IIt'ment over It died

1•

down 7,000,000 cop:eli hnd het'n cold at Sl 00 t'OC'h' I

• • • The Marie Stone I

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It's a Hair Raiser for Clark Gable

1 It seq-ms that Clark Gable, movie

: , . Ia tar, h:l)l a bor:se named ·Sunny lllld i the horse knows some tricks. One I • ' ,,v-~ ' ... ..,

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·•c AN the Ethiopian chango hill aktn, or the leopard hb

apotn~" Joe Dl l\laulo, sensational ou~ldor of ihe New York Yllllkees, now About !0 yearn oeo a greac"'many

~pie evidently believed that tho llvlnr· wllb bla lamU7 In SllD Franclaco ·for, the wlnter. 11 abown •~ he : .ot them 1s to plek Gable up b7 the fl•beCI for striped lnas In San Pablo bay. \Vhlle admlrlnr onlooker•! balr. An7Wa7 the picture speaks J'oolcd for blm the homc-rnn klnf brourht In several fish. for ltaeU. Ont ha If or that queatlon could be

anawered "yen" and, for a limp, -· · -·------tht11 bt'llef thrt'otcned to give Tulsa, 1,.DJSON •tE•fORIAL Oklo • the lnrgeat negro population 1 ~"• 1 " ,;t ·

of eny clly In the United SIDteo. I It como about when J Burr Glb­

bano, o reporter for tho Tuloo Dcm.

1 ocrat, wroto a newo 11tory announc­Ing tht' d IDC'OVt'ry of a nt'gro having an oil lra11e near Sapulpa who had I llul"C'eeded In maklna a white man · out of hlmnelt According lD the IIUlry, tho tronnfonnoUon nmJted b41cauno the negro drank from a miner a I apr Ina on hill leaoe At Orat. white apota began to appear on hla body. Thtn tht'y gradually 11prend until he waD aa whlte­aktnned a1 any man of Cnut'allian ortatn.

Wht'n thtll atory wad widely reo printed In other popero, on av­alanc·he of mall dt'ccnndl'd upon the Democrat. It olmo!ll gwamped the Tul11a poat office. It came from negrmoo all over the United Stotea who wanted to know more about

1 thlo magic cprtns. what were the chanceD for flndinli employment In Tu111o w they t'ClU!d bathe In It and i

I

I

~njoy Ita wonder-working powero, : Shown after lb recent .completion etc. I at Cornlnt:. N. \' •• Is the rrlant elec- i

' In Case of an Aircraft Raid

• I"" ~#! • ___ ., ,_.,_

fll)tB ••

• ' Of courao, they wert' doomod to ; trlc ll~tht bulb whlcb will surmount 1

1 dlanppolntment but It wog a tong . the SlCO,eoo memorial tower to • time before the lost Inquirer wu · Tbomu Alva Edison at Menlo Park, i convinced that there waa no such N. J., where Edison Invented the • ----' :r:• andrt be,fo~e th':u~llt echoea ftrst lneandese~t elcetrlc llghL Tbe

1. Prospective customers listen with lutcre~ while a street salesman

e repo or 0 oax away. bulb, H feet blr:b, eontalrul 9CO elec· In Geneva, Switzerland, demonstrates special lamp shades lor me In • • • trl~ll&hts-wUh-& U.lneh J:>efleetor .to. .time cl JUL .tk uld. 1\lany de.vJces ncb as these are q~ ~ sal~_ID

The Hoaxer Hoaxed be uUliled as an airplane beacon. European clUes aa preparations for Pint· alr·rald drUls. .

T O PIDNEAS T. BARNUM ona day came a letter from a ml!D tn

Vermont aaylng thnt he had a sen­sational attraction for hb American Museutn on Broadway. It waa a cherry-colored cat which be woulcJ aeU for $200 but tho terms wtre· cuh-fn.advanco and Immediate ac-ceptance of. tho ol!er. ·-

Alwa,a eager to obtain some now wonder, Barnum promptly sent on the $200. When the "wonder" ar­rived, he discovered that It wu only an ordlnar;y lat1e black eat. At­tached to Ita neck was a card which readl ' 11 for1ot to toU you that tho

· eben lea up bore are bloclc oneJ ... At ftrat Barnum waa turloUJ at

the deception. Then be aaw the hu­mor of the altuatton and decided to tum It lD hb own advontaae. Uti dlaplayed tho anlmal tn hiJ museum . and can wide publicity to hla ac­qulalttO!t of a :•cenulntt· cherry-col· Wed eat from Vermont."

U a customer, upon •aetna t\lt animal. c:omplnlned that he had bftn deceived and d&monded blJ. money back. <the showman ••· plalnod that he had bought the anh mal In 1ood faith and that. turtbtrw . m!~~\at!lt~ really was the color ~- .. "' · only (hey wore VennOfif •

---- · · · Uaunllr,-ttowc"'tr.'f:t·

••

Japan Demonstrates Man Power in China

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SEASON IS HERE'" FOR . MINCE PIES , . . . . .

Pmnpkin Pie Also Really Belongs to This Ti~e.

By. EDITII l\1. B~BER ~"""''1\J the most modern of us have

a few· old-fashioned prejudices, and I admit to mine I Glad as I•· am to have most foods ignore local

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IIOUSt:HOLD ·out:STIO~S

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\Vas~ln~ Voile.-VoDe frocks will not shrink t! you use a table­spooqful of epsom. salts to. every gallon of water wbl'n · washing them. · -• • •

For-Dey ShQe PoUsJJ,..,-Shoe pol­ish lwhich has become hard and dry should be tpoistened with a little vinegar,

• • • · seasons, there are certain dishes that I. for one, am glad are u,sually reserved for certain months of the year. Mince pie Is .an outstanding Ten-Minute Sweet~-'Line a but­e;xample of a dessert which belon~s tered pie dish with breadcrumbs. with ·eotd weathe~. While pl,llllp~m Into a pint of milk whisk 2 eggs, pie might well be served at any 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar and a time of year, it still belongs among 1.u••::;u of vanilla essence. Pour our .cold weather desserts by custom 'o\·cr the crumbs and bake for 10 whether it is of the old-fashioned minutes. custard type ot that even more deli· eate chiffon pic.

• • • When Washing Blankets: Never

leave any soap in blankets as this will turn them yellow. Allow halt a C)lpful of vinegar lD each gallon :>f final rinsing water; this will ::lear all soap from them. • • .J.

In a bygone day the making of. mince meat in the early taU was just as common as fall pickling and preserving. Tpday, most of us are content to buy one of the -ready-to­use mix~ which, however, we may like to make individual through the Improving Flavor of Baeon.­oddition of candled .cherries, nuts, When boiling bacon or any kind of bits of left-over caf.!neci fruit, with salted meat, the flavor will be im·

or some other liquor for proved if six cloves, a dessert· . tJawr acce[\t. U. Js a good l.sJ~Oclnfl.tl of lemon. juice, a .table.

to keep a covered jar in the spoonful ot brown sugar, a sprig retrigerator which may be gradual- of mint, and 0 grating of nutmeg ly tWed with any fruit or juice which arc added to the water. · remains after cherries, apricots, pineapple -or other fruits have been served for dessert. This jar con be coiled upon to add addttional tlovor when the' mince pie Is In the mak· • tng.

Pastry for mince pie should be ~ood and rich. By the way, have you seen the gorgeous chromium rolling plnB which can be filled with Ice? The metal and the ice between them make It possible to roll rich pantry eanlly .

By the way, I bad o pic which wnn new to me nat long ago at a dinner party. Have you tasted egg nog pie, flavored as the name shoWs with rum?

llflnce l\leat. 1 pound leon beef 1>2 pound suet 3 large tort apples' • 1 ~ ounces citron 2 pounds raisins 1 pound currants '1.1 tablespoon cinnamon l\!a teanpoon mace ~ teaspoon clovcs * teaspoon allspice ~ tablespoon soil 1 pound brown sugar 1 quart elder

t

Cover meot with boiling water and olmmer until tender. Cut ouet in nmoll plecen and let ntnnd In cold water 1 hour. Drain. Grind meat nuet, apples and citron In thQ meat chopper. Add rainlru:J, cur· rants and npicen mixed with the I!Ugar. Add elder and cook slowly 2 bourn, nt.lrrlng trequontly to pre­vent burning. Seal In hot, air-tight jam. When ready to make pies, add more chopped apples, water, cl· der or brandy.

This recipe maken seven pints mince meaL

Pumpkin Chltron Pie. 3 egg yolk!l ~cup sugar 1\4 cups conned pumpkins 1>2 cup milk. ~ tcq_spoon salt ~ ten~oon ginger ~-~ teaspoon nutmeg

· ~ tenspoorr cinnamon 1 tablespoon granulated gelatin \4 cup cold water 3 egg whltea, stiffiy beaten ~cup sugar Mix egg yolks, sugar, pumpkin.

milk, salt and spices and cook over hot water until of custard consist­en_cy, stirring constantly. Soak gel· otin In cc.ld water 5 minu:es. Add to the hot pumpkin mixture and stir until dissolved. Cool and when mix· ture starts to congeal. fold in beaten egg whites.. and sugar. Pour into baked pastry shell and chill 'to the refrigerator until scL Gnmtsh with wh:pped cream before se•-ving. . _

Chess· Tarts. _ .l CUJt. brown sugar

2 eggs · 1 tablespoon melted butter '4 cup milk 'h teaspoon vanilla extract 'h teaspoon cinnamon ¥.z teaspoon cloves ~4 cup walnut meats ~~ cup curTaJ)ts Pastry Beat sugar alld eggs fogetlier and

adcJ the melted butter. Mix thor­oughly. Add remaining ingredients and flU small tart pans which have been llned with pastry. Bake In a m~erate oyen, 347 degrees Fahren· he1t, for haU on hour.

Err No, Pie-. 1 tablespoon granulated gelatin. V• cup c;old. W:llJer 4 egg y61kS . · · ·· 'h cup sugar ~ teaspoon salt 'h cup hot water'

• • • Savory Salmon Dlsb.-Tum out

a small tin of salmon, remove skin and bones and tlake the fish. Sea­son with pepper and salt. Mix 2 cupfuls of breadcrumbs with 2 ounces of tlour, stir tn 2 well·bcat­cn eggs and the salmon. Mix well, tlwn form into the shape of a fresh salmon steak. Fry In a lit­tle hot fat until brown, turning carefully so that both alden nre coolted. Serve garnlnhed with sliced lemon or tomatoen.

When Sales Drop Between 1929 and 1933 the ex·

"cndlture for odvertinlng In ncwn­papera and, perlodicafa dropped 50 per cent, but the value of manu· factured products ahowed n much creater rcductlon percentage.

ITS GREAT TO BE BACK AT WORK

when youve found a way to ease the

pains of

RHEUMATIS and do it the • • mexpens1ve

way, too.

. . WNU-M

(

W&h Interest Wor'{Y . is the interest paid on

·borrowed trouble.

CONSTIPATION 3 tablespoons rum U I · 4 egg whites, beaten stiff nrt enirna Entiay of Health 'h cup sugar .''HOWnyo•llow.Js?"Thcd<» Whipped cream · · tot asks this fmi:;clrtant ~01\

•Nutmeg btc:ausu J)riinl!VnttCI ol !lO<)dhealtfa So~ ge1atin In> cold 'Wate". Cook Is Eor tht bowtl$loi'tg11Jflly paa off , ... _ • the wastrol me•·'-ol""' ·E ~· -'-.. ~ yo ..... , sugar, salt and hot Water lc . .,g ....,, v ~

ol double lloller Untll . .nowt you tiaMOt W wtll-t tl ~ of consisten· c· v, 8· U'rr·tn·g· Aon~ J:~r~lo,ok weltil 1011•llgw ~Uan

" ... - to hmdcr dally meuwon •nd lltvs •

Stir in · gelatin and t•nn\ bodt clfanll!ltSL Yo. .dlotdd und ··~·,eat 1 .. =~~~'!.~~!!f.~~~~u~u . _ ...

.... un"nu~\ •!V . .,... •• .,., · · ttl:, onw~ tit mild ji'ld ilt'ecttvw- ICt_., • di · · ,­llvl'lnd litpatlcitim:Y&nt.lnQ'eMa:: · flow .Of bile and nllm. t~

:~t:=~= '"' DOANS REGUlETS

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. . ·.Cuddle· Toys from "Odds· and Ends"

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FuJi · to. · sew-inexpensive to ~ake excellent ~for Ci}ri!l~li gifts is this collection of cuddle

.. ~YII• fwO p!ece11 with just the necessary "trimming"· of ears, mane 11nd tails e:x:tr~.. The kiddles Jove them!. Use up those odds

. -Pattern 5932,

• • and ends and make your toys as • colorful as possible-in short ir­

resistible. In pattern 5932 you wiU find a pattern of the three toys: directions for making them; ma­terial requirements.

To obtain this pattern send 15 .. cents In stamps or coins (coins

preferred) to The Sewing Circle, Household Arts Dept., 259 W. Fourteenth St., New York. N. Y.

Please write your name, ad-\ dress and pattern number plainly.

)• Cheap Sales Cost United States census figures for

102!J ohow that· at a cost of but 1.54 per cent advertising created ll market for tho· $70,434,1lG3,443 'liiOrth of manufactured productD cl thbt year.

t::onstlpatetll

Don't Let Gas, Nerve Pressure

Keep You Miserable

-.

GET RID OF BIG UGLY

PORES

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., ·•en

Ecuador Indians '

Were Skillful. in . .

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· .LINCOLN COUNTY NBWS . .

Ne.w·Disease With .

Seve:te.Effects and:Vety Long Name

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New· ~ork,-A new disease;. which may have affected as many as one out of every five adults in the country without

'

·their. ~owing what ~h~y had, 'the Law's Injastlee. came in for discussion at.the SANTA MC~ICA, ·CALIF ...... meeti.ng of the American Pub-- liad it happened in 'another· lie Health ~sso~iation her.e.i · tountry, we'd say, ''What curl··

' The disease has the jaw-bres;tdng ous. i~eas foreigners have of name lymphocytic chorlmeningitis. law' enfor.cernent.'/

· It is caused by a virW!. In about A footpad with an evil recor(l held halt the cases it causes fever and llP a victim. A bystander saw tha

Handling Platinum ; ..

By EMILY C. PAVIS symptotps similar to influenza. In im id tift d th N Y k -0 hi t ri the L-ther "alf it affects t.he mem- cr e, en e 9

ew or . n~ pre s o c "' ·~ tl).ief . people mastered the difficult branes that cover the' brain and The ruffian was metal, platinum, and.. they were causes more severe llymptoms, such· held under indict­Indians of northern E-cuador. as bad headaches, stiff neck, nausea mont. But he could

and vomiting and even slight, tern- giv.e bond. The spec­They were part of the great por.arf paralysis. So far, no death tator was "de­golden Incan empire, althoug\1 has been reported in a proved case tained" as a mate­last to be absorbed into the vast of this disease. rial witness-a gen· Indian political machine before 11 ti:nltl;n:is

116hdifficult or impossible to d.l.5o tle way of saving he

S 1· this new disease by cl!D. was looked up, ex-

panish conquest ended its to tr anotbe . means a ne om r aotly as though he amazmg progress. brain membrane inflammation. had been the.,crlm:'.

These ancients of Ecuador made a.cute aseptic. meningitis, Drs, R~ D. ln~l. Well, he was Irvin s. Cobb platlJlllm jewelry. Apparently, they Baird and Thomas M. Rivers ot the guilty of being poor . were the only ones to use this metal hospital of the Rockefeller Institute Six months later came the trial. ornamentally until recent times. for Medical Research pointed .out. The defendant, having been out all 1hey made -rings and .tools of it, lb Virus Is Isolated. that time on bail, looked hale and but mostly they plated gold with lt The diseiise was discovered- nnd • • '],'he prciscc.utlon's . wjtne:;s to form dangling, shiny- platelets, to its virus isolated by Drs. Charles was produced under guard, pale and catch the light. Armstrong ahd R. D. Lillie of the sickly from close confinement. It

The extraordinary point, though, United States National Institute of didn't help his health any when th9 Is that they:• could blend the soft Health. They found the virus while crook's attorney browbeat him, platinum with other metal to malse studying viruses from St. Louin en-- yelled at hlm, practically accused a harder alloy. It took our civlllza- cephalitls epidemic patients In 1934. hil]l of perjury. tlon about a century to master that Two years before this Commander The citizen sued the state for problem. We force the platinum Paul F. Diclcens of the United false Imprisonment, tbr loss of to melt by intense heat, only pas- States Navy medical corps had rc- wages,.. for se)laratlon from his fam­sible with modern technical appll- ported two cases of what looked like Uy, fpr all he'd suflertd. Under ances. acute aseptic meningitis but which the statutes he had no standing.

Alloy of Platinum &nd Gold. he thought might be another dl.oeaoe They threw his case out. Thnt Indians actually achJeved a ~used by a vlrun. Since then the Meanwhile, the convicted crook

platinum alloy Willi discovered by virus has been recovered from pa· had been released by tho parole Dr. Paul Bercsoe, vice president of tlents and from monkeys, mice and board and wan free ao a bird.

other animals. in this country, En a:· • • • the Danish A!lsoclatlon for Metal- land and France. . .... • Aquatlo Novelties.. , lurglcal Rcoearch. He found a clue Diagnosis of the dl!lelllle, say Dr. JNTERESTING dlncovcriea were In some hnlf-finlshed work, aban- Armntrong, Drs. Baird and Rivers made In Iiawallan watern by gov­doned over 400 years ago. He de- and othera who have studied It, emment lchthyologlst.n. For fear clnrea I~ compels modem oclence depend!! on examination of tho tho olmllarlty of cound may lend to to have new rcnpcct for Indian met- opinal fluid and on a mow:e pro- wrong lmprcwlono, let me otato that aUurgy. The Indian method was to mix tectlon teal. Thin conDints in ml.x.- this departmllnt has nothing to do

lng the pathmt'o oerum with tho with Secretary lckeo, although, platinum graino with gold dust and virus and Injecting It lnttl mice. U since lchthyoloUY pertolnD to fioh, heat it 1mtll the gold ran and plated tho patient hQd tho dioenoe, hl5 Mme. Secretory Perkln!l might pea­the· plaCnum graloo. Then they blood would have antibodies in tt olbly have a contrary view on thin heated It further by blowpipe unW thot neutralize the vlnw. In that point. Bccnuoe they do any there gold and platinum mingled enough cane the mouoo would remain well. arc moments in tho cabinet when to form 0 pasty mllllll that could be But 11 the mouoo gelD olck, It ohowa all Is not WleelnCl!o and accord. hammered when hot. So, by alter- th n 1 •- h U 1 natcly forging and heating they con· at the patlent'o blood hod no vi- owcver, tho po nt w t. at nc o trlved an alloy-not up to modem nw-ncutrallzing !Ultlbodlco, and Sam's plocatorlnl ohorpo dredged up onen, but good enough for modem therefore that he did not have o 11!111 that In mom delectable for olx metaUur"lnt.a to think It WilD pure lymphocytic chorlomenlngitiD. montha of tho year, but polnonous

... . Dr. Armotrong and llll!loclates tho other ntx mol)Uw. So at least platinum. Chcmtcnl tUUilYalll l'c- mode lhlo test on blcod from nctar- they've found n creature cmblcmat-vealed the artificial blend. ly 2,000 well person!l who were hov- lc of tho Collfomla climate.

Tho indJann apparently took their in b Lc ... ,~ b rd--' ~ h g routine !cod tt!llts for othlU' t uuu o rega ...... aroun ere secret to the grave. Hod treonure- reacon!l. They round that among tho llD treason, I wlll atate that 1 m all hunting Spanlorda obSierved tho odult.o, almont 20 per cent bod ncu- loyal a native nttlp::on on any that technique, snyn Dr. Bergr;oe, tho trnllzing' antibodies In their blood. ever came out of Iowa, having been otory of platinum ln Europe might although none of them recalled be- here Jong enough now to Join In have taken a dUierent tum. ing olgk with oymplomo of any JIIUllllng rcooluliono endoroing the

Teeth in the Stone Age Were Very Much Like Ours

Berlin.-La'te Stone age peo­ple had very much the same kind of jaws and teeth that we have nowadays, except that in modern man Cfiries, or tooth cavities, has become very much more numerous. This, in summary. represents the find­ings of Prof. Herman Euler of the University of Breslau, who has made a special study of a large number of skulls found in Silesian village sites of 4,000 years ago, when central Europe was still in .the Neolithic age.

As compnred with modem times, the low Incidence of caries Is very striking. The Silesian skulls show only 0.7 per cent of children's teeth with cavities, ns.against S2 per cent of cariOil!l teeth in modem chU· dren. For adults, the figures are 1.76 and 92 .per. cent, respectively.

In size. and condition of wisdom teeth, however, modet'rul have -a decided advantage of their NeoUthJc predecessorn, Professor Euler's re­search disclosed. Of the skulls from the ancient SUesian graves, 26.8 per cent had no wisdom teeth at all, whereas a check-up on Gern'an uni­versity students showed suppres­sion of wisdom teeth in only 1.3 per cent. In general, wisdom teeth and other molars are larger and solider iii moderns than In the Neolithic skulls. X-ray 11tudies show that pulp cavities are forger in the ancient teeth.

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brain or nerve dlsense. Thin indJ- occrnery ond ot lntervolo uttering cotes that nearly one out of every . thrco loud ringing cheers for the. five adults may hove had the dis- QUJI!let.o. ease. Tho reiUlon it hllD been ml.!lllcd Al!:o let envloun Florldn refrain In thcno potlcnt.a In probably be- irom gloating. To typify Florida'o cmuso when it doell not ofiect the ,. climate that ll!lh would be good only brain lt. behoveD co much like in- four monthn of the year and. powet­fiucnzii that·it would be dlngnm:ed .. fully· hard to put up with tho root IUl nuch. I of tho time. • ------' . . .. Carbon Dioxide Filled I Leclurinr Adventures. : 1 N ALABAMA Is o nect which for-Lamps Supply Daylight i bids its convertn to laugh or

1 oven smUe. Now I know who It Lake Placid, N. Y.-Cnrbon r wan bought .out tho holl!le when 1

d . id fill d · d t · delivered o bumoroll!l lecture down tox e e mean escen · there.

lamps, providing an artificial ' The other day o chop asked me daylight claimed to be a wide why I dldn"t go bock on the lecture improvement ov~r any previous platform. I told him I'd appeared typ f .:n ial d li ht 1

1. In proctl~lly ever sizable lown In

e o ar~utc ay ~ amp, . America, and, though it was years have been commerctally per- : ago ond probably popular indignn- I fected, the Optical Society of 1 lion had abated now, ntiU I wasn't · America was told here. j taking any cbances-1 wns ytnlUng

The lamp 19 suitable far mntcbing 1 for nome new towns to be ~uill. colorn, the test whtch has proved the : ?n~e I trfed the expertmemt of undoing of most previous artitlcial 1 Dlippmg around to the front door to lights, Dr. Thomas J. Killian de- i henr whnt the crowd sold, coming dared. . out. That was the nlaht I attempted

Previous attemrts to use carbon l Suicide by g?s•. but was saved when dioxide in tamps, 0 tong-sought goril ; someone. passmg through ~he hotel beeausenf Us whl~ spectrum. have 1 co~or. smelled somethmg that failed because of the tendency of ; smelled e~ -worse than the trotel the gas to break down under the ' smelled. electric charge sent throu.gh it, with . A lecturer's l,ot is not a ~appy one. consequent changes in its pr.essure · But usually It s the aud1ene.e that and behavior. A simple electronic suffers most. J • • • control for the pressure is the new feature of the light. ·

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To . ..,.... ' ....... . Rut~ 'Wyeth Spears ~

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Silk Shades. GJve a Soft Glow

THERE Is subtlllty In tho light tb,at . glows through ~- silk

shade, and· n\iiny dccoratorS"'are using thorn for the room that needs the softness of pin I ted folds and tho meUowness obtained by placing two tones of fabric one over tho other. "'

Two Iones of China silk, one to

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be used for o plain lining and 1 the other for a gathered outstde lining and nt -tt nround the out­covering will make an attractive stdl.' of the frame 011 shown hero shade. T1-y somple11 in dnyllmo at F. Trtm the jommc nllowtoJJ a and over artlfklol light. You w11l neam ntl shown ot G. Sew to the olso need a roll of oilh bmdinu frame at the bottom ns at II. Trim tope matching the top color or the qmte l.'lo!lc at the bottom. shnde. Thin tnpl• ill to wrap the Turn llntnn to maulc 1111 ut l. wire frame. And fancy bruid el· Slip stitch the jommr. Turn ther In gold, sliver or h hormonlz· In row edson at top and whip Inc tone of ollie lo used to bind the around lop of framl.'. Pin the top and bottom of the nhade. Uoc blndinn around and then nl.'w it cotton thread to match tho out· with olltcheo burled In the meoh aide tone of the ollk. of the brn1d.

Slip the bindlna ta)le ofT tho roll gvcry Homl.'mnkcr ohould hove ond wrap a rubber band around a COllY of Mrs. Spcmra' new boolc, It an nhown here at A. Worklna SEWING. 1-'orty·eiUht pngctJ of from tho ln!llde end of tho tape oll.•p·bY·atcp directtonn for maklflg wrap the frame 08 1.1hown ot n. olipcovero ond drenulng tnblcs; The outoido layer of ollk In put on rcotormn and upholntertnc chnlro,

•next. Thin ln gnthcrcd both top coucheo; maklnl! curtains for cv· ond bottom nnd pinnl'd to 'the ware cry type of room and purpo!le. coverinc an at c and D 00 that u Mnklnc lnmpohades, ruco, otto­i!l 11trctched quite tight. Joininr.n mono und other u!lcful articles . In tho outnldc coverina need not (or the homo. Renders wlnhmg a be nowcd but may be hidden un. copy nhould ncnd nome and od· d~r the foldn. Thi!l material 10 drean, encl&iilng 2!i ccntn. to Mro. r;ewcd ln. Place ao nt E. I Spcaro. 210 South Dcaplalnca St.,

Next, cut n ntrninht otrlp for the Chlcnao. Ullnoln. · '

Points fol' the ""

Best Buy .. in Tire Chains

... / 1. DRbt-•lcl•tiWitllA-r­?" Ice• ~lnfcnaa,.llll Ffll tk

n.cd prCYida .._Ita II•• -tsJ fe wao:r lbntoglo.

• ... / 2. Mode of .. WUDAUOY .. -.... ,., ;h. wacrofttllllllg mataJ ...

,..dally davalopocl fot Wltlllln H-.olns. ,

V ,, SW.d>o!At-lcl•tlaueaw- •· lus:nltlla4 fu •Jdta - .,.alast cvrbs -~~ rtlfl. ~''· -.

V 4. Patantad Lavar.ilnclr ID• H..tc tlmJOOIIII pcrllln• •• •"" taldn1 off cholftt.

• For econ_OlJiy, lnsbt upon genuine WEED Amerieon Bar· Reinforced Tite'cfwlnt. They give you mc.(e than double the tate tnilenge, They are the lmllt buy in tire chalna.

AMERICAN CHAIN & CAlli COMPANY, INC. ·

IIIDGtPOil, COKHI(TICUl •

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f ~incoln ·Cqunty~ews /t$bliahed Ever) Friday

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f~tit .. rf'ltJ 11111 Mt4'HOd·f_!iatt. WD.If,r JniJ. at).

lltU ttt. 11,,. tto•l ••ttina Ill ( ·"'rrlt•N•, N-.. ~IJollr.••. hrtt1or tlJ• Art •·' At•rnt 01 1..,-"'

"~•bacription, In ll~YaOGe, 12 00 P"' \' ... ,

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FJUI>A Y, l\111'. 2fi, 1!137

. ~,, Era B. Smllh" Edllor aod Publlth•(

New Mexicans Named On Federal Board -

W:H;/Jirt).(tlltJ, Nu'l. 22 ...... - Ten ~\ •·11 "M 1·x it·Ewtt w<·r <· numr·d today '"' 11 ~lull' advJ~>~IIY l'ommittoe to at"i,,t 1r1 tlw udrninu.tration of the f•·d•·rul 1/t,vt•rllrrwnl'll rww lt•nant· aid prograrn (or tlw I!OUlhwt'stern dr"ui.d't urt•u.

" • 111 Tl.t· ttllll•· l'nmrntlll'l! WI rr·com-"'' 11'1 t'flllllltt·H to partic•Jpatc in '"·" ,, 111 1 •·rr:wt11 for farm purch-11 , , ar11J 111fl 11id in numinlt , . u r .r y .., . 111 ru r Llt·t·ll for f urthCJ . ,

- 1i:. •~;t;.,,•·t•, ~·,,w :'.lt·xu·o was l•i:u •·d Ulttkr tlw administration uf l·•·adquarlt·m at Amarillo.

'J !.•· !\ t•w :\I t•xJco c•ommittec: .J,, 1,1. J. /)arlt•y, Alhuqut•rrJUC, ,.1,,, ,,,,,.,,,I ;,·or~o H.(JUI·Illmolwrry, J.,.. t r Ut''"' . Vrunk 1-:. Wimbt'rly .~ 1 a,,. 1 · .,flqw; A. ( ;onznll'lh l:.r"alall", fr,.d :-.:t·lsim, lto!lwell; ,\ II 1 ;,·rth-lllun, Lan Vc;gaa; I"'" JLu·.lrp. l{ogt•ra; Lc.·slw \1Mirll, ,\rl•·:.Ja, Cfrurh-rt Madrid, I'"" t nw•·~' n rul l{t·x II. Hn.xlt•r, nlal•· dtrt"t"L"r .,f ruml n•hollllit.u­lr""· l.nh I 'rut·t•tl, l'lll'l'UliVt' 111'1"1 I IIH \

,\ "du,.r bowl" t'•llnrniltc•c• head­' d 1,1 .lt•lw K IIIII of Amarillo, 11 u• ••nrru d for un un•n mclud mu t'llt>l nn I "ol"rurlo, W('fllt•rn Oklu­l.orr•a, •• oulhll't'hl Kana&!!, and r•·•rlhl\1 111 Tt•Xtlll

To Entertain High School Student• -

!-itnl• ( 'ollt ~··· N. Mt•x., Nm. :~1. .\lth11UI1h tlw Alumni \ .. , '"I '"n d !\nv ~I l'.XIC"Il Stnlt'

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'" 1''"•1 \"t•nrR ini'IIPrl · ' ' • ' tnl A (II II llfJt t'i<IJ

rJ. "1•' ,.,,., !Lt<>)l'•lf!lli'!JI·I•I

'""' 1 •• , '", ''''"•ft·d t" tnrludl' all ·,, 1\ "·,), ~""" ruul Jo:J f'BIIO t.tJ!h ,, """' r-~ u·l•·ntn .. r 1'\'l'ry "mdr.

,\II nl udtutu ( nm1 lt;l l'oto and ~.;,.1, :\It~"'" lugh 11rhooln will ht• admllt•·•t frt'i' on Saturday,. l>l'<'.

I. to till' (out hull IIOIOC' twLWt't n tlw Al-'1/ll'fl ruul Snntn llnrbnra Sinh· I ""'~··on l/ut·m•nhl'rryf'il'ld ,,r 2 r:. 11 rn

E1 ''ri ht11h llf•hnnl !lPnior, with till' •· \,., pt '"" of tho!w fnnn l..n11 I 'run·n nttd El l'nno, wtll I e •·nlf•rtiatrwd hy tlwAiumniA~mocio· I ton I\ tl h a f rt•£• lunC"h ot 12 noon. A I I J1 m \\ t•knmanR t>Xt>rt'ifll'S I\ 111 bt• lwld 1n Hntll(')' Hnll.

I 'pnn llll'lr nmval in thP ro~ llotol>, BIUdf>lllll \\IIJ rt'gister Bt lladl1 y Hall nnd will th£1n be In kt·r· un n lour of the c.am pm.L

:\I,.,. \Inn fo'nroytht• iu cll'rking n l H t·rrnn 'n l!'fOfCll'}' !I tort' tlli!l \\ t>t•lt

Notice lor PobUcatiQD r ntll'(l Stoll'S Department or

The Interior G t•rwrnl l~l\lld Otnc<>,~ at Ltu

t 'rw·t'll, Nt•w Mexico, Novllmber 12, l!J37.

N otJrl• is lu•roby given that Wilham Androw Stark, of Ucnson, Aril'.onn, Box 212, who,· on Oct, 29, 1934, made bomestca d entry No. O()Of>r,J, for Bll of, Section 11, Townahip 7S., Range 8E., N.M.P. Meridian, hllD filed notlco of

jnten.tion to mnke 8 y~ar Proof, to establish l'lnim to the land above dMcribcd, b<>fort> Frank J. SngQr, United Statl'tl Commisslon«.>r, at Clll1'izozo, N. Mcx., on tho 28tba day of D~recruber, 1937. ·

Cfnimnnt namea as wltnC&Ses: Ben Rentfrow .

. Uo)IIO Rentfrow Colonel Jones Jack Piereo, all of C~rizoao, N• Mcx. ··~- -- -··---- ~--~-------- ---

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Supnm•

Radiatol' Cleaner Ask for our low prices on popular ·ANTI-FREEZE solutions. For the good of yow; motor, you .con afford only the best . .At "Western Auto" you will find solutior.Js noted for dependability, always at low prices.

kl8fl 6'1c BDd

Sold~~.4Sc Clean radiator and seal leak"li before using •••

GUARANTEED products.

Hot Water Auto Heaters

"Spct:lcd" llffldiJf

I t with ono Onvo rn com or hi of the~ dependable, hlg V

If I hot water heater&. 11 l~tcn · __ _,

1 Monv boaulllul nNUC ~. '"'"Ho OCJtrt... Hcotcrt

~;::·no. .$9.95 lo $11.95

?o;'~f~11~;;'~o1 ~o $05~~~

~~rl Electric Frost Shields -~@c

. to 8495

Auotdlor to olu

Remove Icc, sleet, snow from windshield. H~ovy aloss, $UCtlon cup fasteners. 2. ~ c..r 4 heater wires. Very efficient. Low •.urrcnt con~umptloo.

:r. Speed "llale•ftex"

IDe21\'osting Fan

$ 98 til"

Keep windows clear of lm:.t w•Jh tlllll 6-lnch rubber blado fan. Adtu~loblo brocket. Two ;~ Mutol Bloda Ventilating and Dofrostlng fon1 .... " ....... " ........ - •••• .$1.91 to $2.35 Ci I I ..

lao~d & Fog Lights

.. McKay" Skid-No2s C:ompfcta Tiro Chotn, llrau Flnitft

$:t.~$~,o $4.00 Rg~

Multo Wmtu dllvlrt;~ rofct ''""' tho ~Jt..,..ctlut, P<>nolrot· '!lJ Wnm nf 0t>:1 "' "W nlcm Auto'•" Foo ltahto Rood l"•;~hto. et S;1ethghlll. ~lllhcnl ()Ur>!•lv S Cl M, Unity and LOtrc'no i!tO::~It. SJLV£1l01AM ROADLm

Comv:oto, C.-. 95 · &. thown l7U <qlltle

RUST-RESISTfNG CHAINS "-v<~.....-'1;' 54.2.5 to S9.']0 Polr :;:~ ·

Olhn rl<l 6 ~O<J lliH 4.9S to f.4S ~;>:>fl,:hto ltc:m ,9Se to $.15.$0

EMERGENCY UNIT CHAINS ~Oo to BOo lEach Ar~r..-.o

~lt•D NOT UNIT~37c to .,4c E'o AJ:o ArO " t ~C''/

<W'io· ij'UflRg$ clo:;v

A~ I! t., Top Recovers winter motorinf!, inr.uro driv­

rng safety with Sofo- Trco~cd, long unri/J:I: wearing We~tem Giant Trres ••• "

$ 4' Atm lJP

llng!o Do1Jtol• Toahno Toaluro

I

IILSS

$1.9$

II US

Every Tire boded by our

STBOfJC GUgBJlNTEE ond Service bt any of our more than 200 ntorcs.

Gl!t our Low Not Pri=c• on Your Sin TltcJ • . , A Tiro for EYCitJ Puno

end

Elecaric ·~leo .. nas S4.Jr

$4..80

$S.Sll

Wind\trJhield Wiper

suction Type Windshield

Wiper ·---

.

Top Patch Material

FU4 6 J1oot CUP

High grad a, In hrlndy 3 ·I nth width strips. OleO. motorial.

54-rn. ro!l ......... ---~ ......... lie Tan Sport Mofiltlof JOe pet foot ....... lF!U ..• -...... "--

AUTO TOP CEMENT ~. bottle with 16o swcb..-•• - •• - ..... ., •••• ,., a a

Top Pa f!'h Kit

Protect v0ur I!U)tor by using high grpdo wintl'!r oil. -~ for. Low Pnccs on PENN SUPREME and Wear-well 100% Puro Penn Oils, and Lent llun, high· est quality Wcstem Oil. Insure cold weather stor!inl) power by Installing a dependable, Super

Power Battery from "Westem Auto."

• Motor Onlr

See The .Newest 1938 W eatern Air -Patrol · p Motorola Car Radiot

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.. Burnett's Ca$b ·

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' . · St~ple and Fancy Grocer.ies

Fresh V egeta~ies, Tues~ay and Satutday.

We have the best in Meats Under Perfect refrigeration

Phone. ti - - We Deliver - -·

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Rollan-d's Drug Store -I •;~·-

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·- --tn cno<Mng our medicines we have been ear .. cul

to select those compounded by the greatest cherniatl in the world. They have built up their reputation bacauae they are reliable.

HlflliiiS, (iDdY · <lt<s c~tr!ttts ·

• Pr~sulptlons urerully

(Om pounded

Rolland's Drug Store

Notlee fer PubUb.tlon United States Deparlment 0!

The Interior General Land Office at Las

Crueet, New Mexico, Octo~r, 22, 1987.

Miller Servfco Station Highway 880, West. of

City Limits

RPM 011

Notice is hereby given that ----------­Bello Johtaon, of C~o;o, N • Mn., who, on October 5, 1988, made homtatnd entry, No. 048-188, for NWi Scetlon, 14, N~, Section 16, Townabip GS., Range 9E., N.M.P. Mertdlan, bas filed notice of intention to make 8 year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before Frank J. Sager, U.S. CommiJ.. sioner, a' Carrlz02o, N. Mex., on the lOth day of Dol.'ember, 1987.

Claimant. namta aa witneaset: Colonel JoD.ea Boward Barnes Robert Aihby Jack Pierce, all.of Carrizozo, N. Mcx.

0 2!).N 26 Paul A. Roach

Register.

NQUce lor Publication

United Statf>a Department Of The Interior

General Land Office at Santa Fe, N. M., November 1, 1937.

Notice iJ hereby giren that Joy J. Kennon, of Lon, N. M., who, on December 2, 1932, made

DAWSON HYDRO-CLEANED

COAL Delivered From Cnr See Marvin Burton

Box 3fW

----------·----------Send$}.

THE -

fer IAe nul 6 montJr.. ol

ATLANTIC MONTIILY

MAKE tbe moot of your reodfo5r houro. Knjoy the

wit, the wlodom, thE' com. pnoiooahlp, the chorm that bave mode the ATLANTIC, for aeveoty·6ve yeora, AmE>r­fc.a'a moat quoted and most cherished ma~raaine.

S..d $1. loleoU~lnlt:rr Uu11 ad

"' TAe Atr.n& Montl.l,, BArtu..tcm St •• • Boat on

• Original Stocknt.ising E!llry, No. I. 0. 0. F. 065928, for EiBE}£~.7; SWU CARRIZOZO LODGE, NO. 30 DK. 8; ElNEi, NWi:SEU. SE};(· NWi, E~SWi, Lots 2', S, 4, Stc:tioD 18; Township SS, Range 19E, N.M.P. Meridian, haa filed · notice pf intention to .make. thr~e Meeta Evgzy Tuesday evening y~ Proof, to utab~h claim to w. J. Langston, 0. T. Newton theJandabove<lambed, h;f~re Sec.-Treaa. Noble Grand Lewis Jobnaon; Notary Pubbe, at Ramon,N.M., on the 17th daJ -----------.­ef December, 1937.,

ClaiDWlt names as witne.Mi J&JDIII W. MJeta Clovis Stafford · Ft,teher Cape . . J. W. Zinn, all of Lon,.N. M.

Leo J'. !anch.ez . N6-D8 Register.

22a4. _., _, . .. -----. -------~-'

. ·· WANTED: Pm.n Nuu. . wa PAl alb. Tlte Titawortli Co. InC.

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··-.rolfl.\t.ii=G· oo Ste

Santa Rita Church • -· Rev. Fr. Salvatore announeas Sunday Maaaea at 8:00 and 10:00 a. m. from now on.

T. E. JCIUJ.EY '

Funeral Director and I..JctDHd Embalmer

'Phone 88

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. -- - - - Wedaelday --· -...;.~-

l3irdi~t Walker, Nellie

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• • '·•· .LlNCO(.N 'COUNTY NMI:W.ft"IWS

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B · k ·s · · · · , __ an . ervtce '

IS an intengibl~ commodity .. It c~nnot be t'reat~d fikQ · groe~ries, or gasoline for youl' car, but it is as important a part of your community as any other commodity. It can-not be given -away and advertised like

.·FREE AIR

In filling stations, ~s it is the. stock your bank carries to sell. Your service charge is that portion ot the price you pay for thi.,!! service, while the remainder of its cosi is offset by other bank income. •

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Our checking accounts pay their· way ···help make your bank a safe bank.

LINCOLN COUNTY AGENCY, Citiztins State Bank of Vaughn,

Carrizozo, N. M.

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

----·- .. ' --- --------~

. . .. ... SPECIAL

ANNOU NCEl\IIENT •

• '

~ (/)h_i.an.CJL ]~WI& llahut. llJui.Lwul

au.. (/)f11J., ]lzanRAqio~ • ....

From 7 o'clock Wednesday nighf (November 24) until

4:30 a.m. Friday (November 26) lowest rates will. apply on long distance calls.

'

, ' Enjoy hearing the voices of far­away members of your family, relatives or friends on Thanks

giving. Telephoning is a pleas ure to enjoy, at liftl'e cost

Ark "Lo11g Dirta11a"Jor Rtllt's ~ .

• •

L.ocal aad Personal . Notice for P.obUcatlon United Sta'tes.Depart;ment Of • • ·- . The Interior , ·

M~re. John. Wrig~t and ~acob General Land Office . at Las · Fulmer made a busmeas trap to Cruces, ·New Mexico, October 22, . an~ Santa Fe M~mday 1987• . of this week, N . . h b · · th t 1 . • ·. • , · ottce . ts . ere y ga~en a · Mrs. ,Ufa . ~elts, teacher at John J. Dale, of Ancho, N. Mex.,

ta dnvma a new 1938 who, on .October 8, 1928, and Cheyrolet. October 28 1931 made home• . f - , '

.. Mrs. W. J. FergUJon and family stead entry, ~o.' 038l58 ListS~ o( Coyote were in town last Sat. 1477 and· addtttonal homest~d urday and while ·here payed the entry No. 040733; for WHE!· News Office a Pleasant visit and NEJ4SWX(, W~NEl~Wi, W~-renewe<J her subacription. . SE}.(NW 7.(, SWlSWlNWi, W~-

. . E~SEiNW:4, E~SWJ.:(NWiSec. Mr. Jt., E. Pick Wf!rden, an 28, T. 4S., R. 12E., and NWi,

. .

W. ·& K. Grocery-' .

Handl~s Feed, Flour, Potatoes, «tnd~ a variety of canned .goods. · · . ·

I Special Bargain.: '

2 packages Swans Down cake. flour, ~nd a handsome ca~e plate all for,.60c~

.

Carnation flour contains coupons for many · nice • pnzes.

. .

_Wright & Key, Pt"pps., ' emplqyee of the Adobe Ranch at N~SWl, SEiSWi, SEi, W~NEi,

Magdalena spent the past week Section 27, Town~hip 4S.,· Range -·------- ... ____ _ en'd visiting here. , lOE, N.M.P. Merid~nn, has filed =-~=--- ·-=-_-__ -~--~---~~ -_·..=-- :_ -------:····- ·-- __

HUSTLER WANTED! to in- not~ce of intentio~ to m~ke 3 year Notice To Trespassers · Notice of Hearing of Final • d · 1 d d for Proof, to establish clatm to the Report aJKl Account ~ro uce, ~UPP1. eman . land ~hove described, bef.ore The land northwest. of town Rawl~fgh Neeeuaties. Sar~ way Fra·nk J. Sager, u. S. Commis- 'known as the Ray Lemon raneh In the P.;obatt> Court of Lim'llln County up tbJs :rear. ~ood rout~~op:~ sioner, at Carrizozo, N. Mex., on lis posted against all hunting a~d State of Nl•w Ml•xil·o nearby. RawleJgh Meth 6i ...... g the- 6th day of December, 1937, ! trespaS8ing. Violaters will be pun- ln tlw Muttt>r of tlw f~stutl• l bualneu. No aelllng exp neQce Claimant names as witnesses: : nished accord..1.ng to law. • uf DttvW PooJo Ii:~nOI!:t, · .1.. Nl!,. 426 needed. We supply Salea, George Straley · • - • • 1 N 12.1) 3 ·a~ E. Lemon. • · Dt•l't'Wll>d. l tising literature ·.all you need. Dock Lacey I ' To Mamil' Jom•H fo:arn('llt and Nell Ruth . Profits ahould merease every A. w. Drake lll'tn•n, f\lld to all unknown lwirs of tho month. Low p~icea: good v~lu~s, Less Peters, all of Ancho, N.Mex.! said dl'l"t•dl•nt. and all unknown pemona

. complete service. • Rawletgb s, Paul A. Roach l'laiming any llt•n upon, or rig!lt, tiUc, or Dept. NMK-14-68, Denver, Colo. 0 29_N·26 'Regt'ster. COMET CHAPTER intt>n>.st, in or to, tlw C!ltnlt• of tlw nald

To Attend National Conar••• of 4-H Cluba

' -A delegation or tbrtt youthful

farmers iB prepared today to repreaent tbe Staw of New Mex­co 1!10 gu11ta of tbo Banta Fo RaHway a t the National Conarw ot 4-H Cluba to bt" held in Chicago, Nov. 26 to Dec. 4.

Tht wlnntra of the Rnilw•y', 1937 edueatfonal prizta from this State, announced b:r J. F. Jarrells mana11r of tbt eompany'a

Visualize the

News Turn at once to the icctloa Of newa platur.. takm b7 photoppbtn. In e'lety eoc­aer of tho 1lobe fen

ltn(oln co: news

No. 29 dl'ct•dcnt, and to whom it muy concern:, ORDER EASTERN You, and t•urh of you un• lwrl•by notl~

STAR tlt•d, und rotiet• l!i h••r .. by giwn, that F. D. lh•frl'n1 Adminbtrator of tlw Jo:ntutc of

Met'ls on the first Thursday DBvid l'uoll• Eurnl':~t, dt•n•ruwd, hll!l ft'Jc!f. • in each month. . . in th••''uhoVl' l'lllitl!!d Court hb final rc:

Visiting Stars cordially invited Jlort and urrount U!l ~ul'lt Adminwtrator, Nora E. Phipps Jl.'annette Lemon nnd tlw Court hu.~ 11JII'uinh'tl Monday,

S thl' 3rd duy uf J lmunry, 1!1.111, at thP hout W.M. ec j of ao:ao u'duck u. m .. u.• tlw hour and

1 duy for lwuring of ubJt•clillnn,tf BOY ther • 5 - .. I.- ....... e -· -· .. •• - ••• i bt',to thl' uppruvnl and H-l.tltltrnu·nt ol oBJd I ~ tlnul rt'purt and ucruunt, and tlw d!D­i churl!•' of t1w onld 1•'. 1>. llt•fn••r 11.1 nuch ' Admlnintrator. nnd ut tho huiAr on tho dny nnml'd, tlw l'rulmtv Cuurt win J'ro•

FRANK J. SAGER •

U. 8, C01>1Ml8!110Nt11l

llOliiiSTHAU VILinG!I

AN II 1'1100118

lnauranco

ct'f'd tu dNt•rmint• tlw lll'il'llhtl• nf cal do­n,drnt, till' uwnt•l'llhtl• of hill nuld t'lltate and till' lntt•rt':ll of t•nrh n•nJ~t·t•thv dnlm­nnt tlwrl'to 1md tlwn•m nnd tlw /'Nuona

Notnry Publlo t'fltith•d to tno dintrihutwn tlwn•u . • • office opf•o•ltr Trlt'Jibonr Ka. Tlw nnm•• anu , .... ,, utlll'l• addn'IUI of agricultural department, arc: N M th" attom••Y fur '"" AdmintJJtmtor Ill Char) M K Old' Art .. i Cnrrtloao. · · John 1-~. Hall, Currhw:.a,Nt•w Mnll'o.

ea ae n er, "'"a; __ -·-~- -:.----------·-- _, Wltnf'l'.ll tlw hunuruhlt• Marrtnl G, St. Btmard 'Roth, Fairaerea and . John, Judg•· or thr nuid Cuurt. nnd tho Plaew, Lodes and Pl'oof of 1 h r h 14 h 1 r N 037 Paul Jorney, Jr., CloviJ.. - --- . rwa t ('ff'O. t " .t ( ny II uv., I .

' · ... Labor b!anka for aale at the M Bcm S "Burns spl'nt the~ 1St·al1 Edward l'v.n1lrld, · .:=-=======IN::ST:A:t:ES::Tll:LE:·:PH::ON:ll::&.:T:Iil..E::·G=·R.AP=ii=Q=O~~~~~-~= Wfn1sera 'Ue dttermlned by the ra. ' . Nov. 10, I !137. Clrrk. -· ;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;== .. ·~-·· • Aarieultural Extenalon scrvlcn or Nawa offlc e. -pan-·...,' _w_e_ek_. _l'n_d_in_E_I_P_n_ao_. ___ ;;..r_>r_c._•_o._J_o3_7_. --------:~

CARRIZOZO HOME LAUNDRY •

Work Called For and Delivered

or uaran. ~e Phone 60 Carrizozo, N. Me.x.

eaeh Statt, bued on outat.andlng !":. ===-~---------- . ·· · ·~ performaqm and the Railway makes tht award enabling them to take part In the National CongNu which ia held in connec­tion with tht Intemntlonal Llvt>­atock Show

In addition to the varied featuret offered in

tho program, the winners are to bt auesta or the Santa Fe at a breakfast and entertAinment.. Charles H. Wood•, generalsoliri· or or the Rallwoy, is to be too8tm.n.ster.

).

located in '"the Heart of .

Downtown El Paso Corner. Stantonj Mills

Tho plan to encourage 4· H Club work was adopted soon after the establiahment of tbe National Congress filteen years ago. Since it.l inception more than 1,000 boys and girlt have benefitted and man:r are among the !eadem of the induatry today, aceording to Mr. JarrelL

• NEWLY

DECORATED •

SINGLE ROOMS ,,

If you scan News· Ads carefully, yo~'ll. find tlatt Carrizozo merchant'J' ~n as cheaply as ~t:y stona

Training School

-Special aupplemmtary training

schoola·will be held the week of November 22 throughout nearly 10,000 Chevzoltt dealerships in an partl of the United States, it was announttd this week by C. W. Wood, ma:aager of t.he Chevrolet

ment. and me,banim depart-

The achoolt are designed to aupplement the training received by dealers' serriee and meehameal manaill'l in ·the 11,ew .product

held for seTeral weeks beforJ the aanouncement of the Iliw Chevrolet Diodtla for 1938, Ur~ Wood aplalntd. Enr:v dtaltr'a •rviee men will be 11ehoolei to' gln fall and complete Ht"lice on . the 1988 cars at the

---------------·-------~ eoncluaJoa of the training week,

STAR CAFE be salcl.

' Sleep oa Left

..!JUICK :JPLCJ,\L 1·4-t .. rl~ uL.aa-$1047 Jdit:'11'14 <>I Fltfll. F•a4nt:#tlt, 1diJ1 &l4nt4!111ro niJf;l<flll =n:onn u:ra

.. he prize Automobile Story of power plant -there's sorncthina equally li marvelous at tbe other end of the car! the year Is .wrapped up In Buick That poised, wingin~ ride is or~c thing tltat -with Its DYNAFLAS!f ENGINE DuiCoil Tonocn-Fnnn SrmNGJNa gives.

.. Light•llll·fiuff ltnndlina-frecdom from tail-and TORQUE-FREE SPRINGING .wng~absencc of wander-theRe also stem

· · A • • , , from. those stout springs of coiled steel.

BUICK isn•t one to promise what it can't'· · · · .L h y 'd S 1 ' • 't d b t You hold tho ronu on s arp curves. ou

provJ c. ow •.en wcdn; CXCI c. _n • ou {ace (ewer skid risks. Rear tire!l la!'lt lon~cr, the Dl S.\FfASH cngmc an Jts cornpanwn- II b B IC II S • g· g i here I in.greatne!ls, BuiCoil TottQt:n-Fnllll SPRING- 11 ecau!lc 11 0 prm m 9

JNG-wc'rc not just gushing I Fool you? We wouldn't even try I Let us Jemo11stratr, and you'll k11ow which car

Step' in-take charge-put this quiet honey you've got to hnve 1 up ngainst the driving you know best- • * • * you'll sonse instantly that this car is really . MATCH THESE VALUES I giving you more for yoru: gasolit!C money/ ,. . 4sk more ol it than you've nny honest right to ask-and the frctloss, gracious, joyous way it docs things tells you that you've got somethipg in that DVNAPLASU engine I

And don't lavish .all )'Our pmiso Oil tho

C'.ompll'lt! wlrh bYNM'LASII cmrtlno .orul TOI\QIIt•Fnlt£ SI'RIHGIHCl1 th~Jle ntodela tleiiYt>f Ill Flint, Mlelt. at throt' price•• llulcKSI'WIALbu•tneoacou,.., S9UtllulckSP£<:tAL ""d""" tntltlnlt llt'dan, S1N71 (:&NTtlAY 4-dnor tourlnlt ""d:tn, Wt71 ll0Ab~IAST£R 4-dOOf' tourlna' n...t:.n, $1G4Gt LIMITJI.O 11-p;'asknlttr ~~eda1t, $2350. All prlc•• lnchtda ttand:ard ACC810rlca. Spod:al ac«aOOi'lo•. local ta•e• If nny rutd ltt•I!U>t eum . Better Buy Buick on Ellsy General Motors Terms

• .

··-··--· -·~=···· .. - · -Regmar din-n~r~ -i;Tate lu~ches, short orders.-. sandwiches and coffee

Side, Crowda Heart -- -~ ----- -----·---- -- -·- •

If atomacb GAS ~J·ents aletp---· ·---,·--····--'-!-- ---------·----·----;----· -----i----~~~-~-- - ---r----'---~ , ___ --~---:~- ~---·-~-:;·- ----~~---;-

MNdamea C. 0. J>avi• and E. g;, Dixon, Pr~Ji*• . .

• •

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LINCOLN COUN'fY NEWS ' .

-'• ' '

. IV,,~,. lfevielf) ol Curr~nf. Evf!nts Lewi~ Bock from Europe

·sENATOR LEWIS of Illinois re­. . · turned from a tour of Germany in which he sought to arran£e for Paymepts ·to. American holdere ot German mu{uclpal bonds, The group of which he .was a member has sub­mitted a report to- Secretary of State Hull.

TAX .. REVISION IS C'OMING President's Message Outlines Program ·Designed fo

Assist Small Business

• Lookifli 111 J(he hniS }ust bitten ltllo a sonr;V!i-y sour,· J.lli!l(le, No\'mail' 11 Davia ehlef of the Amcrleao deleratlon to the nine-power conference~ rs~unet11 ' Is pictured chatting with llrlthsh foreign minister Anthonr Eden (letU an'd French torelgn minister Yvon ;Delbos (right). The conference baa raccompllsbed nolblng towards solvlnr tlte Blno-Jap~nese t~ngle.

In France, England, and Genna· ny, the senator JI,Jiid he found .a atr1ont:! Increase In American exports

himself at a loss to see how na­tions could pay for their purchasas, because they are all in debt as a re;~ult of f~verish 'preparations ~or or against war.

' -iC-

Grim T rogedy {tt Sea

THE.~ Greek freighter Tzenny Chandris foundered off Cape

Hatteras, and for hours. the mem­bers of the crew, cUnging to lUe rnf~s and wreckage, 'fought off a horde' ot sharks. They were sighted by aviators from Norfolk and most of them were picked up by the coast guard cutter Mendota and the tanker Swlftsure. One of the ·sur­vivors, the· third engineer, charged that the first S 0 ~ was sent from the vessel only after he drew a knife and threatened to kill. the rn: dlo operator unless he called for ald.

-ie-

Death of Atlee PoJ!Ierene .. -PNEUMONIA put_an end to the career of Atlec Pomerene, for­

'mer senator from Ohio. He died in Cleveland at the age of seventy­three years. Pomerene gained fame as a special prosecutor In the Tea· pot Dome oil inquiry, and Presl· dent Hoover made hhfl chairman of

• the Rcconatruction Finance corpo-SUMMARiZES THE' WORLD'S WEEK ration. A •

0 Wen•rn New1p1pe--r Union. -iC-

Extra Session Opona

W l'rll thto I'Vtd1•nt Intention of dnlltll whul II ('Uil to n1d busl·

ncnn. coTigrt•nn b1·r:nn tls cxtrnordl· nnry ncnrunn flu nrnl bbnlllt'!lll wno

to ltnh•n to n ruth· <'r (Uflll n11"8!lUflC

lrorn Mr ltumw~ ... ll 111 whtd1 tho Chtl't IO:x&wullvt· <·ommll· 11'11 htrmwfl to flnll~· I'd tnx Jaw revloton for the purpmlt' of rrmovanJ! admllltod anjunlt('ro nulfl"rl'd l'IIP<"I'Ilalfy by nmull bunlntonn and non­npN·ufallvc ln\"t'~·

Pre•ldcnt torn Roosevell Mr. noon e v e I t

proponl"d tax "rnodtflcnuons ndr qunto to enl'ouralfe produi'Uvc t'l'l­lf'rprlr.to,'" but explntnrd that he wuflhl prtmnrtfy to 01d nl the t•x­J)('nnr uf tndtvldunl or purlntornhlp u mlrr I u k mg

TI•to Pr<'nllltont notd I'Xt'rCinl' nt ••ordinary t•rudcn('l'" would proltod tho nntton n~tnlnnt prolun~tt>d bunl· nt'IUI ft'l't'll!llllll

lfr rPIINnll'd hill lntl"nllun to bnl· anee tho next fl"<'nl yc:>nr bwll!el, and dtomandl'd that l'Onl!rt'llD nod IUld pro\ tdll new revenue tor any nddt'd rxpendlluren nuthorltrU now.

Tho Prc:>nldenl nnked congrelUI to provide

I. Wn!rCII and huurn loatnlntlon 2. An •• all-wcnthcr•• crop control

procrnm 3. ReorganlulUon of cztocullvl' de­

pnrtmtonto. 4 N aUonnl plann\ng tor better uno

of natural rc11ourcco. It nppt'nrtod certain that a vlg­

oroua oppoAttlon to all or part of thin progran'l would arinto, but near· IJ evl"rybody Gl"tomod In favor of tax low revtnlon

"Rrosido Ch.,t"

CAl.l.INO on the notion for full co­OPf"rBllon In thto taking of the

volunlnry censu11 of the untomploycd. tnkt'n by tho Poat Office depart­ment. President Roosevelt In n "Drl"lllde c:-hal"' by radio oald that permanent cure of tho unemploy­mtont problem llell in findln(t jobn ln lnduntry and agrlc:-ulture Neverlhe­le~t~~, h.o anld. U In otlll the policy of the admlnintrotlon that no one shall atarvl" throuah lack of government Old

lle gave o!llluranco that the aov· ommcmt wtll try ltl otlmuloto prl· va to tndu11try onough to ennblo it to rc-abs:orb tho joblellll; and otter tho reaullll of the cetulu!J oro tabulnted, ll long-range prouram will be launched. This proarnm, he oold, wUI opply to omployero 110 well nn to workers, and In thin wno per· celved n note of cncou!aJ:emont to bu!llnellll.

The Prei!Jdcnt anld prosperity of tho noUon doptlnded upon notional purchmalnu power, and odded:

"O~ar for-oluhted industrial lead· era now recognllto that n very aub­atnntlnl ahore of corpbrato onmlnga munt be paid out ln wnaen, or tho aoll from which theoe lnduatrica crow wlll noon become lmpov­urlllhcd. Our fnrmon recognize that their lorgeot oust6mora ore tho worke.nt tor wages, and that form market. cannot be malntnlned ex­Cf!P\ through widespread purchasing power."

Mr. Roosevelt emphasized that America wtU not try to solve the employnumt problem by n huge armament program, on olher na· tiona are dolpt.

trul when ncce!lnary, and the ever . " f Balance Budget: Morgerlth~Su normal nranory" arc parts of his B USfNE!SS men of America re-

I cciVed a cheering message, pre-1' ;~Je!lo arc thu 11tx .polntll of the oumably direct from the admlnJG­program which Wullace sold would tratlon, delivered by Secretary of hurmonl1e with thll general welfare: the Treasury Mor·

1. Farmcm ohould have a nharc In gcnthau. Addreoning the nnllonnl Income to re-cntlibltnh the Academy of Po-the prcwnr rallo of the overage lltlcal Sciences In ttarmer'o purchanlng power to 'that New York, Mr. Mor· of the overage non-farmer. genthnu declared

2. 'rhe people who live on the tho limo hod come land munt hove nc.curlly of tenure, tor &alanclng the either on ownoro ot land or renters budget, but onid th1Jl on 11 ionll·llme boola. # nhould be nccom-

3. The noll muot be unrd prop'l!rly pll!lhed without addl· and conncrved tor future turmorn tiona! taxation. and futuro c1ty dwollcro. Encouragement tor

4. 1-'arrncro through oound co-op- SccretaQ lnduotry and bU!II· era liven muot come into control of lllorrcnthau neO!I waoo!nted thuo; thonto marketing, proceaolnfl, pur- "Tho lawn chould be co written chantnl! and oervlco functloM which and adml.nlntcred that tho taxpayer thcy c;n monoge efficiently. con continuo to malta a rcanonnblc

5. Family nlzed tarmo nhould be profit with a minimum of Inter­favored by fcdcrol progrnmn, bcnc- terence trom hiD federal govern· fit paymcmto and other ouch aldo to mont." rural .Income. , Morcou:r, tho lrcnnury head went

0 Jo'ederol and ototo fundn nhould on record an oppoacd to a conUnu· cor;llnuo to be opent.to promote on· once ot tho ora of unllml~~d govem­rlcultural rellt'arch ond farm cfll· mont apcmdlng. Snld he: Tho bODlc clcnt"y _.._ Looving It Up to Unci~ Sam

UNLESS conareoo change~~ the neutrality oct, 1t In probable tho

notlorw that nluned and adhered to the nine-power Pacific treaty will .-. lake no positive ac· : . ~ lion against Japan

~:, for violating that , • pact. Tho delegates \)I; . to tho Druoooln con-

'· · · ference, with the ex· ccptlon. of Italy, vot­ed to censure tho Japoneno for mnk· tnu wnr on Chinn, nnd then adjourned to get further ln­strucllons from their

N. U. Davb govemmenttJ. Great Britain and France agreed

to join In any effort "nhnrt of war" whtch the United Stolen may de-

need today 1!1 to Cootor tho Cull np­I·PIIJccllloiD of the drlvlns Coree of prl·

vote capital. We wnnt to ceo copitnl go Into tho productive chnnncl!J ot private lndU!!try. We wont to ceo private bU!llncon expand."

Tho plan odvnnccd by Mr. Mor· genthou for balonclng the budget WQJl to bring next year's exptlndl­turcs, under tho 193!> budget wh~b takCD cltcct next July l, within thl!l year'• rovcnue.o. To oc:hlcve a bal­ance, exclUJJive ol debt retirement paymcn(i), tho prencnt ocale of ex· penditurcn would have to be tlllced $700,000,000, ho added.

While he urged ogainnt tax ID­creDDell, Mr. Morgenthou llUggested that a broader bose for Income taxes, increasing the number of tax· poycrn above tho p'rcnent 3,000,000 would be a more equitable uubstl· tute for the present Cedernl to:Ketlj ott corurumern-the no-called nui­~mnc:c toxcJJ.

clde nhould be made, thlD mconing --tc-economlc uonctiotul agniMt Japan. Reasons. for Thllnks Out the . i9olatlonint poUcy of this AMERICA con be thonlcfu1 for the country would hove to oo nbnndoned blcn!ling of pence, President If such oonclloM were to be of llllY Roosevelt onserted In a proclnma· avail. lion deslgrulting November 25 ll!l

A long document WQJl oubm::i);l:~~~'h Tbnnksglvlng day. to the conference by Chinn w iod unh n rked ln that tho war be ended by the lnftlc- "A per opp Y mn

many ports of the world by strife lion ot pcnnlllen nanlnst Japan. The and threnttJ of war flndg our peop!o memorandum grivc atotfullcal toblcn enjoying the ble!Wng of peace," he that Gbowed economic onnctloruJ sold. "WfJ have no selfish designs could holt Jopon become of that no· agninst other .noUcns." tlon'a dcpendenca un fot'CIIgn mar· At the outset of the proclamaUon kots and foreign sout'l!e• of sUpply, the President rmld, "tbe harvests of

Norman II. Davis, chief Amerl• nelda have been abundant and can ltclclfiitiJ, tn addrcsslnr lim eon- many men and women have been terence, was rather concUlatory to- given the blessing of stable emptoy-wnrd Japan, but. be saldl mont."

"The question ·In Ill final analysis, ·-l'- · Is whether lnternnuonal relations Bloch to Head Navy llhall be dotcrmlned · by arbitrary force or bf l11w and rcspkt for fn.. ABOUT the first of 11!!Xl Febtua.'Y tomatlono trootlei·. In fact, that the American na\.'}" will have a seems to bo the ~realest luue. toe. new commnnder-tn-chtet in the pel'< ing tlto world today, and one of the son of Admiral Clliude Charles. most momentous problems that Bloch, nominated by Secretary monklnd hns been called on to Swanson to succeed Admiral Hep.. solve." " bum. The soil of a Cteehoslo\taklan

--tc- immigrant and a native ot Wood• bury, Ky., hels now IUty-nlne yeata old.

After his graduation ~m the na· val academy Bloch ,erved under "FJahUng Bob" Evans on the -u. s. s. Iowa In the Spanish-American war and was cited tor "ml!ritori· cua" service in rescutna Spaniards from burnlna &hips . of Cervera1& aquadron. DurlnJ the World war. •• commander of the transport Platts-. butf, Bloch won the bt1V1' cross tor ••dl&tiniUilhed aervicl.u f..

Sueae Combines Smartly With Knit _ __, ____ '!

By CHERm NICHOLAS

Safe Cminsel: U$e Chaim For Bml'W eather Driving

'

SAFE counsel for bad drlvlJ)g . weather, accord.lnft. "to· P<?lic;e officials and safety engineers, JS tq use tire ch;tins. . ~

r-'

This warning was issued today, with wlntel." driving conditidns pre­vailing, after the rep_ort of th~ Na­tional Safety council that 28,140 pe.rsoils <Ued In ·traffic accidents during the first nine morytl:JS ·· of 1937 an increase of 9 per· cent'

· ove; the same period last y~ar. With greater· driviJlg dan~\lr in

·winter because of ice aqd snow. , police officials and .l!afety ~n·

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IMPO.H'l'ltN'1' nuw::>-knlt und t~uullc have formed a partnerohlpl It

It's foohlon thrills you arc lleeltlng Juot make a v1sit to tho neareot diG­play of late fall ond winter knitwear faohionn and see how omartly knit and ouede oro carrying on In their now alliance.

It you are lntcrcntcd In knitted ap­parel, and o1 c:oureo you arc, tor every woman io·ocnolf\g more .and more that knitted clothco not only oervo moot tolthfully, but whert It comeo to "otyle" lt'o all thoro and­well, an we were naytnn. If you oro lntcreotcd In knitted apparel juat v•alt before buying until you oce the magic worlled In the new outfiltJ via the added tnuch of llUcdo either In an ncccooory way ouch Dll glovcn, bcltD, hnndbngo, hnltJ and ohoen or by working tho suede In an on In· tegrnl port of Ute contumo ..

Sec the ntwmlng twc-pleeh to the left In the picture. It demonstroteo perfectly how okllfully deolgnero oro U!.llng nucdo with knlL Tho knitted fabric for thlo model 1!1 appropri­ately called "huntreoo tweed." Tho modem Diona wlU certainly "drenn to tho port" in thin otrlklna two­como. Dcnci:lblog the kflltted rna· terinl Owt fMhioM It, there are colld colored cotton nubo cplnttered throughout a vcrtlc:nl rib ntltch. Tho jacket front ID of coft uuede · in n contrnnting color and a zJppcr clonure. Tho allk ncar! matches tiM! tailored cuedo b~lt In color, a ad tho IIUJc akull cnp worn nnugly at tho bock of the head ID of the onme knitted matcrlni an the skirt.

AIJ to tho colrtUme centered in the group, all the way from Tibet cornea the fine coft co11hmere wool so em· photlcolly in vogue in knitted sports­wear thi9 season. Being well !ltyled, thin cashmere knitted dress will prove chlc and comfortable at out·

IN BLACK AND GOLD "17 CUERIB NlctiOLAS

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doar ~:~ports ut thu l!~;~mo umo tha~ It undcrwrlteo a promlso ot being well· dre!ll:;cd at afternoon functions. There ·arc suede accenltJ with gold eyelets and n suede belt with a gold buckle. Tho oltlrt In four-gored and II a reo gracefully. · · Cnnhmcro docG ccrvtce to cmnrt­

neso, comfort and oporltJ otylo In the two-piece knitted dreos ohown to the right. There lo o chlrred yoke effect In tho front part pf tho blouoo, mounted by o nccldlne drawn up and bowed with a, cronr.roln ribbon In pennant toohlon. Tho bolt 1!1 cucdo. Tho wide hlp-bond ompho· nlzco tho youthful silhouette and 1!1 nurmountcd by novelty pockeltJ posed on tho dlosonol,

Wblch remlndo U!.l, tho pocket theme ltJ on Jmportnnt one. Watch tho ncwe11t tltUo Joc:kctn and sec how decoratively and amU!llngly Utfy arQ being pocketed thl!l con· con. Furtbonnorc, odvonc:o newn t.o to tho effect that dcnlgner.o oro go­Ing to continuo to "nay lt" for the new nprlna fooltlOM In tcnru~ of novel and numcrou!l pockoltJ.

It .you nro nllllcmbllng a nuedc oc· cem:ory ensemble, look up tho amort now belltJ mode of cutout leaven In multi colora riveted together with metal eyelcltJ. 'they tone up tho olmpleot knit drCll!l to perfection.

Another way to carry out o llU~ eeJlllful pnrtnernhlp ot ouedo with knit ID to top tho knitted drellD with o knee-length comewhat flaring coat of bright llUede. Thio type CO!Jlumo 1tJ proving a compun favorite. Al!:o to wenr about town thero'o nothing llWonkler. ·

An to nweatern and twtn neltJ (come of tho latter tap the knit puU-cn blouse with o eunnlna lmil bolero instend of tho usual cweotcr jnchot) they yield to the new em· belll!lhment ol suede mast gnlly.

G Wut .. rn N•-.noao-• Unlcm

FASHION RUNS WILD IN USE OF FLOWERS

By CHERIE NICHOLAS It oU stnrted back In the 'days ol

the Restoration, when ladies tied be­guiling. bonnets underneath• thejr chiM, with flowers tucked at tho brim to complete the picture of fern· lnine charm.

Now the designers are giving us bonnets, flowern and femininity, based on Re<~torat!on stylea. And we're using flowers where we never thought of using them before: nose­gays- pinned to chiffon hnndker· chief!J, violets on n black suede glove, velvet neck-bonds finished with forget-me-nots, flower jewelry, and flower polishes for fingertips .•

n•s all part of the boc:k-1:o-fcrmllnlnt-·l Uy movement. which started cropping up ot flowers and the soft· ened, subtle nail polish shades that make the bands look really femi­nine. It's especially smart to match .up your polish to the flower you wear-clover polish with a silver-vi• olet flower in your hair, tulip with o brilliant tulip pinned to your black gown, thistle with a bunch of faun­colored thistles on thg lapel of your brown fur coat.

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Un\e con\binll!d with fun and rich

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· · · warned- that tire chatll$ provide the most- positiv~ anti-sldd al)d traction yet developed~ · The Contest board of the Amer· · · lean Automobile associatiQn, in of· ficlal test No. 3143, conclusively proved the greater margin of safe-ty and stopping ability p~llllided by Weed tire chains. V1v1dly il· lustrati.ng their imperative neces­sity on snow or icc, the AAA test showed that chains, on rear wheels only, stopped a car In '45.8 per cent Jess distance than. when no chains were used, and 10 66.8 per cent less distance Ylhere chains were used on all four wheels! . -- . •· - •

Overdone Pbliteness From early childhood, the Chi·

nesc are taught so thoroughly to mind their own business that they rarely render assistance when a person Is drowning, a house is hurnlng or a store Is being robbed. In fact, purs~·snatchlng in broad. daylight Is a common occurrence on the stracts of Chinese cities be­cause thieves nrc fairly certain that no one will lntcrfcre.-Col­llcr'n Weekly.

=- --. -·-·--Don't Negle~

Your Child's Cold Don't lot choot colds or croupl ooe1g~ 1:0 untre::~tod. Rub ChUdrcil11 MU!!tcrolo on chDd'a thi'Oilt nnd c:hcst nt once. Thts mllder Corm of ITgi!~J M~rolc pmctrnlc:l, ~- ....,. atimulatc, IOCll drcUI!ltlon. 1•1oocb tho bron~ tubes with lta eoothhtg, rcllovln~t V)!p!Jns. MWJterolo brinp re­lief nntur:illy ~bcenWJC! It's o 41cormf~ lrrllllnt11-NCYr jU!!t oe:!lve. Recom­mended by~ dactorD nnd nome. ~ atron~ ~.Children's ·· (mlld), and Extra Stronio

Peace In the Home Ho In hnpplent, bo ho kina or

pennant, who finclo peace In hl.!l homo .-Goethe.

Wasted Treasures Many a beautltullibrary fs only

Joolred at and pointed at by tho ov;ner. '

HOW LONG CAN A THREE-QUARTER WIFE ~ HOLD HER HUSBANO?

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IJNCOLN COU,NTY ·NEWS .

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'WNtJ Sorvlce By ALAN t..E MAY----•

SYNOPSiR ers with enough guts in tlleir belliea • to-r-" His thunder subsided 1 Wheel-

. a ~Illy Wheeler. wealth;!' ~oung. ~L.UJeman.. .er .noticed .how !ill_ the hard ftre urivea 11t the 1M ranch, aummoned by hla · went . out of · this old._m_ an·~~;.; n..·e· friend Horae Dunn, Ita elderly and quick· m u1 tempered oWller, because ot a myaterloua presence of his niece, Marian Dunn m!lfder, Blll7 tl Jn love. with Dunn•a niece tJ 1 ed t n.. th · d Milrlan. whom he baa not aeen for two sa re ax a u•O O er wm OW, )'ean. She bad rejected his suit and 1a atut bet eyes in the far bills; and· her aloof. Dur :~ ranch Ia aurrounded by ent- profile was as motionless as lf abe mlea, lnr {tlna: Link Bender, Pinto Jla!Uday d f 1 d and Sam Cl!ldwell, whom he baa defeated 1n Wt~re carve o cream-co ore mill'-· hiJ ellorla to build a cattle kingdom. Dunn ble. Billy Wheeler had that day dlrecta hta cow hands, V11l Douglu, Tulare- seen horror nnd nntip11 thy in her CI!Jlaban and othera'to ae11rch for the kiUer•a eyes after he had downed Kid Be"d-horae. lie explains to Billy that th.,, !TIOm• •• Ina before he hlld come upon bloodstained er; !lPd be no longer wondered why around at Sllort Creek and found the trail of Horse Dunn lost spirit aometimes a ahod and.,unshod horae. The 1hod horada when she was there. · J'lder had. oeen kWed. The body had dlt• appeared. Link Beqder had arrived at the Horse Dunn mumbled in obsct,lre ;r:: ~::e!f:dti:1° :!~~~~00l"~ ,rne~~i apology, "We're right sorry. Things crtats the ranch may be In jeopardy: his sometimes go like 1hls. But eome­enemlea may make troublr atnce Shertn tl.mes we can't help It lf they do. U Walt Amol II friendly with them. lle nya

• .lie haa aalulcl Old Mnn Co!ft:,e, the countrr'a. only Bob Flagg would get here-:-" belt lraUer, to Jilin them. Dunn and hlllr, Mariah Dunn gU~e no sign otilaV• :.C:'$.';~~ ~Y:t!~~cr.:li~cU'.~th~~~r: lng heard, and there was nn CAWk• at Short Creek. Bender has round the 1la!n ward silence. Then Old Mnn Co.IJ'ee man•a horae, but tho auddlo .ta ml91ng. came stblklng across •:from the cor-

, ~0:e~~pe:••r~:1tti~~l:.:i:a~~r:. r'als, dropped a saddle from his hip 1tamp out all tho trneca. Dunn<&~ an.cercd to the Knllery floor, and let himself when Amos tells ~lm nol to leave the in county. Fol)owlna 11n arsument. Bender • clrawt biJ sun. but Dunn wounds him In "Val Douglas 150)'11 that BWy

otbo arm. Bock at the raneh Old Mon Colfee Wheeler, bes;e, 5tlrred up a little arrives, with a pack of houndll. Coffee llCH:I • t h 11 tod " ld ltb ta act1reh of the de:td man' a tadclle. Dunn ex ra e ny, he Ia w out tella Dilly that Morlan 11 In«~ at him prellrninories. · • for trylnJ to aetlle dlaputc1 by bloodllhed. Horne Dunn grunted, and Wheeler uo reveal• thtlt the ranch It reolty hen, brlefty explnined to ''"e old lion allo that he recentlY aold hll own ra~h ... In Aruona and that bit partner, Bob hunter whqt hnd happened. l'larr, ta en .coute with the money. BUty "Well," Old Mtln CofJee sold, "I acc:ompanltll Morlan on 1 rlda to Short Creek. "Kid" Bender, now a deputy, ride• reckon Morlan can teotlfy ehe ~>een gp. 'l2lt7 bave an ar&umccL him go for hiD gun."

CIIAPTER 111-ConUnaed --IS-

KJd Ben~er'n quirt-marked hand Onnhed to lllo gun. For tho oecond tUnc in two doya Wheeler forgot hl5 own unaccuntomed wcopon. The borccil were neck to ncclt, racing each other; and now Wbeolrr, olnm· rnlng the rowclo Into biD own pony, grabbed at tho opodo bit of KJd Bendcr'o horcc.

Kid Bcnder'o gun exploded 11ky• ward no the Kld'o horne rcored lrtralght up, driven over bocltwardo by tho plungo of Whcclcr'o pony agohwt tho cruel bit. For a.n In· atant llcndcr'.11 pony fought for ltD bntanco en ltn hind leco. Then to­Kclhcr horne and mnn went down.

Wheeler whirled hlo pony ODidc; and now ho drew at lont, and turned tho muulo of hiD cocked gun up-word, rcndy. .

Bcndcr'g hon:c otruggled up and bolted, bucldng agaiMt the lconened aoddle; but the man lny quiet where be bad gono down. •

CUAPTER1V -Vol Douglon, wagon lwM Cor the

ot, leaned agnlnnt the red rock flro­plac:o of tho moln room of the ranch hOU!le, and leaked at Billy Wheeler without admiration. . "Now you've dono it," he naid; "clb, you've done lt now, all rlghtl"

Morton did not verify thi.ll. A1ter a moment HorDe Dunn said, "I aup­poco you didn't find . anythini, or you'd be soy ina ci!."

''I'd aura like to cntch up with thot Coyucc Cayetnno," Coft'ee z;oJd.

.. I~won't ask you what you'd have done In my place," Wheeler ~nld, "Uow'd You La:r Uaodl •'becaw:o l don't give n hoot. But on That?" rn lillY this-if you hnd done much diJiercnlly u would be becaw:e "Today l seen him riding a horce you're a won:e fool than 1 thought." to death, come northward, toward

It Willi many hours now since Billy the Red Sleep. I'd sure like to know Wheeler hyd upset Kid Bender's what he won ot." horc" pinning that r.ewly-made "You worry plenty ahnut tbot m.

"' dian, don't oouf U-" deputy sheriff under the saddle; the , lang pewllarly lucid twilight of the "He knows too much. too !Wil1l," Red Hills cmrntry now lay tool ond Coffee complained. "Why wrum'l lingering tipon the range. But re- h::! promoting the Sl!ort Crlc:k tro.ilil. port ot the clash with Kid Bender like rne? Something fwmy abnut had been delayed by Horse Dunn's this Cayuse, Horse " .b "So you lost out." Horse acc:w:ed scnce. .

Horse Dunn and hill wagon hnss him. had now heard the story or the or· Old Man Coffee eased bbnself der Kid Bender htuJ given Wheeler, onto lhe most uncomfortnble chair and Wheeler's refusal; and of how in the room. nnd there draped him­the Kid had tried to trick Wheeler self angularly. "U there's; anything lnto gJnnelng away whit~ he drew. in the .,.-orld makes me mad,"' he There had been 0 bad moment for said morosely, "it's a ~ fool Whei!ler after he bad overthrown hound." the KJd•s horse, for at first Kid The droop-eared old lion dog Bender bad looked as if he might which bad followed Coffee ln !bcked ..

· be dead, saddle. crushed by his at him mournfully, nnd flopped to !aDen mount. the floor with a grent r~ttle of eJ.

Kid Bender, though, had come to bows, but made no remark. \'l, set with only a broken leg and a dirty out to trail the killer's horse," Cof·

'.. e~:aclccn the he.ad >to show. Anci lee went on. "I toOk off down-crick; Pinto Halliday, shifty-eyed, lanky, ROl'K 'S'!!eklng the trail- where it h.ad appeared from the Short Creek cotr <' out of the water. Pretty soon cuts to take Kid Bender off of he says he's got it, nnd sets up a Wheelei-'s embarrasi;ed hands. Hal· beUer, and away we go, inching Ilday, It appeared, was another along about two miles an hour. That newly-made deputy. Evidently he fool hound takes anyway six; eight had been the other half of the Short miles, ai1 the lime hollering just Creek patrol as confident as lf he kneW what he

"Ncr allow-ofT play like thaJ ever Was at." • does any good," Douglas said. "It Old Mnn CofJee crammed cut plug cml1 stacb trouble onto plenty we Into an ancient pipe• the boWl of already got. u which was carv~ to represent

At Ut« wlrtdow Horse Dunn stirred hearts and ftowers. Impatiently. "Understand t b is, "Well?" Dutm demanded at last. Val,'• he said. ''Billy done just "All this time," Coffee said, u1 what r would have done In a like hadn't been able to rnake out' a de­ease. .rn back Billy's play to the cent track; but 1 was getting kind

• llml~ and that goes for any other of suspicious because of the way • sdatlle wants to makef" the traU wandered around. TIM!n'fi-

••SUre.'' said Douglas. "What else nlillY we come ·on a soft place. can we do?" • where I could see plaiD. And it was·

. ·Wheeler sat. up; angering again. the wrong traiL" . '"Now Just a minute!" "l ~ught thill dog coUldp't be

Horse Dunn whirled. "Cut it out," fooled,' Dunn grunted. . (_ :ro""t~i!l~~~ •cv t 'th t otd "lte wu sure. footed this ttrne. 1 iui!t. go'ine tn: w; ~e The tr.dl yaur wagon boss-.showed .-."".·~ care of hls ·horse, and see thll't rne wM ofJ a eupohooted' · the

- •t... eta•• -·.b w.a out at tf\e toolt hoofs. showed nail IPliu. old --;:--- ~ack/L~~:..:__ "' . . had~-_ ·~d~~~~~ took after a · · . ' •

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wouldn't work no more. But I took "I hear Billy Wheeler1nce to mur-and unraveled the other trail by dered a guy," said he • hand.'' He stepped out onto tlle gal· "Billy Wheeler slopped Kid Bend-

. ana·camebaekwiththe saddle,· -eJLwith a horse." Dunn said. "You Wlliclil' he noW threw down among come all ~he way-· back here. to

•them In a tangle of broken strap- •tell us that?" page. 4'q'bere," he sold casually, "I thought maybe ;you might "is the' death aaddle you was ln.- want to- henr the upshot," Tulare qutrlne after." said. "The .sheri.IJ''s coming out to

BUly Wheeler hearci Mtlrian'a get Wheeler, either tonight or first breath jerk through her teeth. In ~bing in the morning. He's eolnK the falling ligbt.ber eyes looked sur- to throw him In the jug." I prisingly dark.·· "What's the c h a r g e against

"Good Lordi" said Dunn. "How'd Billy?" Horse asked. · you loy banda on that?" "Assault with n deadly weapon."

"Why, I followed the trail of the "Billy didn't assault him with dead mOJl'& hor,se, until I come to anything!" 1 the place be rol~ed loose from it. , "The heclc be didn't," Old Man How'd you suppose?" Coffl!e put ln. "Didn't h,e hurl the

HorBe Dunn bad dropped to his !Cld's horse at him?'' latt'A!l beBide UlP-Baddle. None of "The town is full of srnnll-tlme them had renllzed how. deep the cowmen nnd ih,f:!lr. profesSional cilll • room waa m twlllght until it wa1 thleveo," Tulare reported. "Seems brightened by the flare of the ma.tch like every guy in the country thtst he struck: For a long moment has It In for the 94 Is llWtumlng into Horse Dunn studied the old worn lnsplrotlon. I bet there's 20 guyo leather, until the flame burned to that's tried to get themselves mode hill finger Ups and went out. He deputies. If Walt Amos called for a stood up, slowly• .. You know that p(,ose be could eaoy ralne a hundred nddl!'? ' . men."

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.. No " sold Wheeler. "Do you?" "So they figure to arrest Billy Bcldnc! Horee Dunn's shaggy face Wheeler," Dunn enid. NOW, we ask you, Isn't thlo the mnteriol for the en:~emble pluo 'b

the musc:les were atlfJenlng slowly, • "They con't hold him," OofJeo layout 11upreme for Young 'yord knitted tabrlc for hat, nleeve so thnt although his .feature~ ro- eojd. ''l Buppone KJd Bender will America, Mi!lll Modern und nnd trouser banda and 1,!, yard malned in some seMe a ma!lk, bb run in Pinto llallldoy as a wltnell1l, Mother ,Meticulous? C~ildloh cleo, z.lppor fonlcner for blouoe front. eyes pr6ently began to gleam with and they'll oll lie to bent the cnrdo. t:ophtn!ltated gusto and ·maternal Pattern 1359. lo donlgned for the wblte bent of the nnger which But whtst good will It do 'em7 Mnr- tlattnfacUon will be the order or slzon 12 to 20 (30 to 40 buol). Sho be could not repress. "Yes," he tan was thoro. Bllly'll got a wltno!l!l tho day when you ho\'O run-up 14 ro~Julreo 4'• yards of :19-lnch anld. · that con make o fool of 'em In pny theoo rnvonk wardrobe anr.ets. Ro- material. Wilh three • quarter · Yet he dld not immediately an- court in tho world." member, ll'o tho natural thine to • :"oVt>!l 411• ynrdo nrc requited. BWcr their unl!poken quet~Uon. He Morlo.n Dunn- onld, almoot under Sew-Your.Own! The tww6 and bolt require 2~ turned to tho window ogoin, llnd for her breolh but very clearly, "I For l\Jnoter or l\tln. yar~n rtbbon. o Uttle whilo utood looking out oo lf con't te5tily." " be could not yet tl'Ullt blm!lcil to Horne Dunn looked atnrtlcd. It'o nmnd to be younu In tht• i Pattern 1402 1.11 deolgned for 15penk. Out behind tho bortl%1, Cot- uwhot'o thnt?" ho demanded. wintertime; llwre'tl !10 rnuc·h fun tllll.'!l 3-1 to 40. Size:> 30 rCitlllfCII 4\oi fee's avo other boundb were chum· "I did • hi " ... 1 to bo hnd Mutlwr. lo be nurc yurdo or 3!1-inch mutctlul. Tho in,. tho quiet twlllght with mourn· n t occ anyt ng, moran your l.'dttlon of Vuun1: Amc:>rtt•a t•ullar In conlrnnt rcqulreo lllt

.. oold. ''I don't know how tho flr.ht hull han r.hare nt outduur ftm tlllo yord. ful baUowlngo, and for n lltUo whllo otor1ed. Billy Juut .mddenly jumped they all ~roomed to bo lllltcnlng to hla horne nt tho other ftorr;c, ond wmtcr mult<' 11)1!1 nmur1 ond corn· St-nd your order to The Sewing that. Then Marl.o.n got up nnd went It went over bnckword. Tbnt'o oU Pl•'h! nkt cm:<>mbl<> < 1-'or oatllt'r I Ctrde Puttcrn Dept., Room 1020, quietly from the room, and for once t oow." boy or ll\.fl l It iu nt>•lc>d nfl<>r n l211 W. Wut'ker Drive, Chicago, m. her unc.lo seemed glad to bnvo her llone Dunn tumw to her. Ito real l.'lltl ciHJmpmn'o outfit and f>ncl' of paltcrnll. 15 ccnt!l (la go. t:eemcd puzzled, but very quiet. mak<'u an motnnl htt w1th C\'<'ry numll t>adt.

"'Here Uuly're aotUng out to put .. Morlan," ho cold, .. didn't you hellr younu hu!:lty · tlnc·•d<'ntally • thin New Pattern Book. tho bcolal to me,'1 Homo Dunn 011ld Billy t•JI wh~t '--pn<>nA .. , Jlow Kid em:ernhll' ratt>!l mwhty htr.h 011 o

" .. '"" ··~ "" b r Cl ) . St>ncl 16 eentn for Ute Durbaro at lo!l\-"bunllng a nlrnn"'e holt on "-nder H'C!nt for bin m•nt" rcm<>rn rant"<' rum Santa au!l d .- uc - .. - Dell Jo'all on Winter l,nttcra my brand. And lt'e a chomoful The glrl_!!pld. "Yen. I hnord him." Sophomore Senllnllon. Book. Mnko younwU nttrucllve, thfng thot thlll ahould c:bmo onto UD ••rvo lmot\"1'1 Dilly Wbeot"r ulne• llerc'o o drenn utter yaur own b

" " h ... 1 J , 1 b h ... _ pruelicul ond becoming clothCD. eeouoo rromcbody rubbed out mny· ho hod to chin uno horco'o len to "C!t t>ort, '"' o1 Y ·- rtc o. ...:W·

b .. .. .. y .() 1'- ,_ ' nelectlng dt>nif:IID rrom Ute nar-

11 tho rnO!lt worthle!lll c:hnracter on. Ynu thin" he'd lie to Ull hero?" our wn en .,. tt Ito .,.,,,.omorc th ... th n...a H " "' t• .,._ tl A d ll f 1 1 barn Bell wcll·planncd, coay-to-ot ever ruue 11 u.,-u lll!J tango. "No', 1 didn't nay 1 thou"bt he • ....,n!ln on. "" ap :;. or to o ·

d 0 " 1 d 1 f h multc paUcrM . .,Ycu lcnow tho ruunof" rrol ld lied." ure on pmr.c nrt> typleo o l t> "u.ua,.ndlr""'· •. wr~u o.n~e .. ~on CcfJcc. "Then whot•o to utop you from modern ml!l!l 1-'rom l'urio cnm<'!l

.,Whot'o bllJ nt~mo mattor'l" Horne bacldna him up"" Ito CtJnco~·t> !lllhourllt>. from S. Y .() , · Dunn e:xploded. "HID nome wtlll Lon 1n the glrl'o e:;en ohowcd uomo- · ats con!' I!!(', ~any to follow cewing Still Coug· hin ?·. Magocn-ond what of IU A CO\"/ thing BillY Whe-eler hod never ueen tn!ltrucllon!J. Mokt> your \'ernion lDf!"! thief-in o tmlall, cheap wny. Ho'd there bctore. ller face wa!l an gen· an thm wool or \rh<>t fur A<"t' oc·; ~ go oround on different rQJ'Igen, and Ue ond luc:ld oo the face or a child· . canioM thlo tnnll'r 1 ~~~~11/: 'l~uab. eben he'd ateol a beef here, and nnother but thouah her cyeo were troubled . ('arefuiiJ Planned. ' cold. or bronr.httlllrrttaUon, you can there; mkln 'em nnd cell 'em to there Willi o cober atrcngth hchimJ \\ Molhl'rl'l ore l'lWl't'l in oimogt.1 ~'""· rcltet now wllh Croomulclml. r:omo butcher a hundrc;d milen away them 0!'1 lmmuwblo In it!l way an UJIY kind of dri'!Hl, but In thc trim ! ~ t.roubw DUlY oo llrcw1n,g end for hoU price... the rocky wm of Jtone Dunn. nllw mo:J£>1. above rlnht, lltey'rc : fmJ Clrmot. nfford to ttlko a clinnc:o

"Horne," sntd CofJee, "who would "1 c<tn'l nweor to something I r.u., .. rbl"' owt>!'t. A "lnnrc at the .

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. with llD1 rt!liliOdy lea pc'.en~ Ul!Ul ,.. " ... Crt:o:ntuln!on wbldl goes rlill~ to hove ldllcd thlD tt;~nnt" didn't nee." d ·:H~rurn wtll rnno.·mre Utt> woman tho ct:lt of wo t.roublo cruS ald!l na-

"Anybodyl" Hort~e Dunn ronred. Hon:c Dunn looked nt her, then whh nc~\!1 of llll o:~m I· . wo turotocootheondhc:l.lthofnliD.mcd "Any cowrnan with C!:l\ough gutn to turne-d away and let hill hnndll lnlf \erlllnn!l wall be .aer than one 1 muCOUl) own~ nnt1 to ~ rub out a cow tbll!fl I ought to've In a gesture of utter futility. llln of thill charmmn foshfon. Any. anll ~~ tho GtJm•llulm pbl: killed him myneU lnslllmo I caught eyen tumed to Billy Whcelt!r. "You thin!! from Jl<' al to nht><'r wool ' dt:Foo ~~il uyluld~mul· him with the cnrco.cn of o ot cowl" nco?" he sold. "You sec?" wtll do ntrrly e mntc:oraal ~:tnn. Yom'~ o.uthort:e4 to

''Did you know he wM opernUnc Old Mnn Coffee broke the owk· The terna ttf~ .. l~ ... mnncy lf ~ arG not em thlD range?" ~nrd p~use. "Lank here," he snld. Patlt'rn I!IG5 19 dc~•nned for ·· ~~"()i;Gi:Jif'~~ 'flto ~ ~

"Whnt'o the dlfJerence If I did or ~ere 11 something obmlt thin I !lil'l'n 4. o. o. 10. om1.12 years. Si:c. bottle. Cn:cmub!on (!lone~ not? We lt:nnw It now. Billy, you don t get. Yesterday :rou shot Link 6 rcquirt>s 2"• yordq of S+inl'h t~. and 1~ brul no hyphen 1n tL. take thnt saddle. and kick It under Bendnr through the 111'1T1, Horse. A!:.k ror It plolnl$. Wl tbnt the mme my hunkl'' right hclorc the sherlfru eyes. Noth- en Ulo ootUo b Oroomlili!an. tl1ld

"You better tum it in to the sher- J.ng ~mes or that llow 1.11 It the . Advertising Reduced Cost iCIU1l gn tho aenulno prodw:t. aDI1 U!, Hon;e," Coffee snfd. "You'll he sheriff letn that poru~, yet jumps In I . the rcl1d :;au wunL. <MvJ supprCS!ling evidenell lf :vcm keep it with troth feet the minute Billy A thtrd of o ('t>ntury ago the me." Wheeler raises hi9 b~nd In sell de- '· ~rlc:e of Utc dtraJ'<"Sl nulomolnle I r;=============:~

"'Dnmned lf I wiDI" Hone Dunn feru:e?" I tlD!l ahmlt SS.!lml Today o mu~·h' ua!cS. "All they wnnt bJ to hang ~oycru wnnt to know the nr.swer?" . bi!Uer «.'or coll h<' bought Cor thw thing em the ot-on me. You Horse Dunn demanded. ••He di-dn"t I aroumJ $71111 Advcrtismg crt>al«< think I .:oUed :vcm in to help 'em? take me because he ha!m'l got the l:!rmond. dE'rnond created masg No, by God!" guts to t.nke me. What, haul me in ~ p·utfudinn. with many tumc-s Llhe

em a chotge like that? He knows It r:uml:rer of jobs, ond maS9 pro-con't he dune! What he fail!J to at- tlucllon improvl:'d the quality nnd tow for n~ Ia that the !}4 will nduced the priceQ

GIRLS-YOUR FUTURE? -~ ~·-~ ..... ,~ '"' lr'lf" .. •llll p:.uta• ~~~.u to f'Ct.rtHtJ.Jo.• t::oaa!l' ....-11a lt.t \1'-a~ tan> elllt41o&n:I!C. a~aaC'Clf'cttl'l.c.aJ ogl.Qa• o-:&A toO..,, 'n>Lt a.d Ia cood IM .IS tGilt:>e a.dlt.

w...u. ..,. fOI!l c. -· 110'- IIUUTY ~ a.tOCtr u&as.stltat ... ..,.b-oer.Cifaufr Tulare CalJahan wru~ a sma11 mnn,

very wiry, with n cheerfully hnrd fnce. He hnd relieved Steve Hur­ley, who far three dnyu hnd kept an eye on the stlltc of nfJolrs nt the CO'l.llrty cent of Inspiration, and he now came ~'Garing into the !H loy• out in Horse Dunn's heavy old tour· ing ear. He was grinning with the delight ot an action-hungry man whO srneUs smoke at last.

back Billy Wheeler jlll!t the some OD U he'd been here dU hilt lile. When he finds thnt cut you'D see him drop back I"

"I'm not so sure," said Old Mnn Coffee ngain.

GHEW lONG BILl 'NAVY TOBAGGO . fi "You're not sure? Look ot lt.

mant•• ITO 88 CO.'YTINUBDJ

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"Skin" Divert Still Seek Pearls in California Gulf; Suit Is Introduced

Diving for pear)j in the Gulf of Lower Ollilomla is carried on by .,.akin" divers In the 11ame way In wblctr their an~e!l{ors sought for pearls In the doya long before the Spanish conquest. Doubtless the pearls,. "big as pigeon eggs," thnt were round among the jade and gold ornaments in the tornb of an Ji\dian chief opened at Monte Albnn during 1931, were taken from the waters Of this gulf, o),;serves a writ­er in the New York 'l'itnes. In re­C::C!:I\t years pearls tound In these waters have equnled those found at Monte Albon In beauty but not in size. •

about the lntraduction ot a ~imple diving suit that not only nUows the diver o longer time tO gather oyster shells but lesseta the danger of paralysis. Too, sharks are more ensUy eluded by the man in a diver's suit. But these suits are relotively expensive and boys rnost often start as "skin" divers. Any dny may bring wealth to the diver, so there is 11 certain elon In the ~tlr that ill felt through the time when diving brings merely a bare liv-ing, •

Mexican goverriment experts 11re superviSing the pr~pagntlon of pearl oysters in the bny near Lo Paz. It takes yeors· for the tiny grnnute of sand or pornsite which Is the base of the pearl to be coated Y(.lth pncre by jlut oyster. :the V'alue of the penrl depends upon Us liym- · rrtetry. lt.tSfet< ond tint. '

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The divers, armed only , with a knife, descend fel!t first to a dis­tance about twice their own height. then turn and sWimJQ Ute bottom. Some can stny submetge'.i for two to three rntnute3 at a .iepth of abOut 100 feet, but the average dtv•

>tfoe!-b<lt.-t'ernai~ . ..t.tnd~ y.. rateLJ-~-:··- ~ sufi~~n for more than a · · •t a fight or

· iJ li hazatdous · was in

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I .ocal aad Personal The Livestock Situation ' '

Meaars. V~le~;, Bern~rdo and DesLopai'teAnnegaerlesr,-N~dv~mb~; ts24.-·,·l M G Sal f L' · ecor rece1p o

rs. eno_:veva · .. azar 0 tn· cattle last week at the . Loa

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ZIE-G~·ER _.BROT.HE·Rs·> . . .

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• I~'OR. the sixth ronst•cuti ve tirne, at this licason of t.ho year, we are putting on our

• ~oln .were In. town Tuesd~y at;.. Angeles Union Stock. Yards, 'the tendmg to prob"te court matters. market is holding st.eady and' . -- , .. '

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PRIZf ·GIVING PROGRAM • •

!<'or every dollar'11 worth of M Prrhand is(' sold for cash and f~lr every dollar paid on account, you will

re<~eivl' a tic-kf.t or '.'<'haor~:" which will entitle you to partiripatl• in. our prize drawing ·

<'ontt·t~t wlti1·h will take pla<•u on or abouf

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Dec. .20, 1937 ~ . .

Soml' handmm<· priz1·11 will he !(ivan away JmHt:ltE 'J.'(J ASK I•'Oit YOUR TICKETS

Watch this Dpocc for further Artnouncementa

. prices of all grades and clasaes of Mr. and Mrs. M. C •.. St. John, cattle and caJve11 are .abo~t in line

Mr. and Mrs. Julio Hernandez,. w~tb two weeks ago. The answer and Ml'l. Lorenzo Garcia wer.e in. to this. situation is tbat . . El Paso Monday on buaineaa. are· consuming a larger quantity of --·-a beef than ever before, .;mC that

Miss Barbara Smith who is Cal~forni.l!o ·~ange and feedlot attending business school· in El operators are buying approxi· Paso is at home for the holidays. rpately 40 per cent of the receipts

as replacements. - It is apparent at this time that

A number of out-of-town people the year's total slaughter of cattle attepded "Shall 'We Dance'~ at in the LfJs Angelel" area will the Lyric theatr.e the firat of the exceed the 1936 rt>cord totaL of week, more than 657,000 cattle and.

-----.:...· . . calves. During two months of Mr. Gunther K 1 1987, packers in the metropolitan

rogge was a Los Angeles arP.a have slaughter­busineu visitor to Albuquerque ed more than 47,000 cattle and this week.

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STET SONS Father ••• Son •• • ~here a.re smart styles for both ••• Junior Stetsoos for the younger gener-·· 11tioo and Stetsoos -~ for their Seniors.

• $5.00 and· Up

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indications are that the Novemper e • . . total wnr 'be the largest of 1q_e \!~~~~~~~~§~~~~~~~~~~~

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cleghorn ~ear. An"d"' this meatTs that tim • '!: • - - • • • -were in town from White Oaks, total consumption of beef in thia Wednesday, buying auppbea. area ia the gr;eatest in all history; .. . because b~ef is relatively cheaper

Marx Made Suits & over(odts ,, .. Only 24 more shopping days

until Christmas, so · do your ,..-----------------------~ ahopplng and mailing early and

--"-· .... ·-----as a Pleat food than almost any other commodity. Of course, the real answer to the growth of metropolitan Los Angeles as a meat elaughtering and distribut;.. ing center is the fact th('t popula­tion is increasing each year. The

If you want real class--then come in and· buy one of our hew Marx Made Suits or Overcoats. EARLY POSITIONS • • •••

Hundn•cit~ or yourol! p1·oplt· who lookotl uht>nd only a f1•w rnnnlhlllllln nr"l •r1roll<·d for tho Draughon Tmirolllll 111'1' IHI\\ htlJII') tn p<miliOilfl or trllut ana rl'Rponnlhthty wll h hroud oppurtunitietJ lor ad· VllllN'rnl'rll.

H<1W w1• cnn lwlp y .. u I" <.•pun• for nimilar OJ>portun-ititr:~, an ohorl ltm•· and ul 111111111 I'XJWOSC ·- nnd tlum lll'lp you BI'<'UI'~" 11 uood po:>ition, will be fully uxpluuwd tf you w1ll maii tlw Coupon now for Spoctnl lnformnt1on

Draughon's BusinPss Colleges LublJOck, AIJalt•rw, lJull.w, Wll'htu. :·'nllo, Texas.

Your nnnw. . . . . . . . . . . . . Addrer.1 .

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avoid the delay of tbe heavy mnils during tbe ChriStmas rush.

Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Thornton 1987 industrial development of Oscuro were in town Wednea- 1 undoubtedly will J.>ro'9e to have

attending to business been by Car the greatest recorded mattcl'l. and thousandD upon thoUsands of

new wor~ra arc on lndUBtrial payrollo .•

M ra. Pearl Stenrnt of Nogal, Generouo rainfall in . central was in town Wednesday. 1and northern California have

1 brought early green fted and Mr. Rich Huat, mail carrier or replacements are &eiog made on 0

Nogal was in town Wedn~day. j large scale. So far, rabifall bas 1 been very light in Southern Cali-

Mr. and Ml'l. C. H. Thornton I fornia n! Ctir north as Merced epent ·Wednesday until Saturday 1 the. San Joaquin Valley and up to of lut week In El P~, yisitiog SaUnas on. the Coast. .

Yuu'U be Style-Ritbt for lbank~ti~in~ at

ZIEGLER BROTHERS Where. Value Has a Meaning

Bee' 1 Beauty Shoppe • Phono 81 -

• • FJ\RI{ AVENUE MAOHINELESS PERMANENTS ......... . their daughter and ion·lii-Iaw, ~ · Hog pne~ Blump11d badly on

Mr. and Mra. A. W. Moore.' eaatern marketa during • the Jut '~---------------------------' They atao attended tho Eastern 1 few dayo nnd these dechnes are

_________ ....;,;.--~· Star meeting at that place. ; reflected in a 60 to 75c decline on REALISTIC 11.11d DUART PERMANENTS .. .. . .. . .. .. .......... ..

$7.50 $5.00 $3.50 $2.50

- : tbe Lo11 Angeleo market. For the VOGUE ART and NU PAD PERMANENTS . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... •

THE WORLD·~ GOOD NEWS .. •II '""'' to • <>u • 1 • mr ncry day tbrouab

THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR tfo '"'"""'"" 1 IJml1 !ltGI/al'tr

It r•~or<Jt ft>;f t{:-:J u~ •ctt4 • ' ·, uma.trocUr• ~teat.. Tbt lle!l.tlcf ~~1#, t . .,._ a .. , · .. 1 , t·'t::f ct l:tr. · r f':tt:u a..."Jt1 tl fflncr• ~~ t9t ~·•t• rcr ••;: at .. lt -. ~\fl U ~ o ;, 'oh.:U"-1 fer boar b*'O ADO aUt Uill fam.if !ndu<Ht .• tt:e \~~lip U. .o-.r~ C.::tt:nl.. .... ~--- - . . . .. . ~ ....... -. ----·--·-·-------·-- ·~····-Tht aruuan Itt tf'r..r• P<uUu!: If o c.ct t.tr

tJr·-t rt~tt••' Olt .. ·1. 11:.,l";-:l ~~~··a l<.u~1U

Mt•u .-1 ~_., mr .--.~!.t-~ttt,:i:c:-~ t~~ itt C't.htUan 8:tOf'..U U~Oltcf fOtf a J.f'~ ·;e.1 o1

I u ot tJ r~ I r.;r~r·t '~• t4 ·.: ll rr.tmth.t t2 U I Cl""n\h ,Jo tv.-n: ••~ar luot. hl.t.Jtzj}: I Lfoa--~~:P.A C..rllQ::l VfO.f 12-C). ita.ttsN $So,

Ptsret • ·--·--·· ........... •••-· ...... •••·---· • • .... •• • ,_

·first time in more than a yenr, Mr. and Mrs. Olin~- Branum best hogo sold below $8.00 a

and daughter Jean were home hundredweight on a certain lor Thank!glving. middle western market at the

_____ . · clo:w or last week. On the Los Mr. B""Wr Anderaon was Angeles market nt the close of the

PERMANENT FOR GIRLS 12 AN''O UNDER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •. . ..... .

Bee Johnaon - - Thelma Petcra

.... over week, best grnin·fed l;ogo were from Sa~ Marcial and took selling at $9.00 to $9.60 a hund- • .. Thankagivang dinner with his redweight. Packers have been ~ .. ___ -··-· · mother, Mra. Edith Crawford. • loning a great deal ot money on Doaa. Bladder Irregularity Baptiat Bazaar, Bake

· . hog product£1, according to all · GET YOU UP? "' Sale and Tea Practically eV(li'J' buatnesa howe trade reports, and their deter- Make Tbil Quick Teat. Your

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in town wu closed yesterday in mination to atop losses. in pork 25c back in four days if not pleas- · - . honor of Thanbgiving. departments may be partly tho ed. Flush tho kidneys with juni· The Baptist W. M. u. arc

reason for sharp declines this fall. per oil, buchu leaves, etc., made giving a Bazaar, Baked goods · A number of high school stu· On the other hand, th~re hM been in~ iflen tablets. Help na~ sate and tea at the T. E. Kelley

dcnta met on the neant lot stro~g eon:rumer ruu:tance to dnyo out waste and. ex~. a~da Hardware and Sport Shop on on.:_ betwe<~n Zlealera and the Phipps relatively btgh pork pncea, and a whtch may eaoao the tmlation Sat.urday afternoon December "aq end abroad for article. you can got at bOine, building for a Pep tally Wednes- wndency to turn to other foodP. that wakes you up, eauaea scanty 4th. Everyone is cordially in-•wl at aub.t:antial aaving to you 1 Read Newa Ada. · daJ night b 1 t 0 r 0 the bl I , flow, burning or backache. J~ viled to attend.

t ball · • · g 1 nay Bukets (25c) to any druggist.

If you scan News Acl~ carefully, you'll find that Carrhrozo rtlerchantP ... ·II aS>-cheaply aa city stor~

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A Gel'm Today ••• ..

A SCOURGE I , o

TOM·GR I • Only tho aldU of a trained stlcntlat e<~n control auch tblnp. •

lllodom rct~lltc:b htta made unncenll!lry the lfCIIt plaguet wblch wept Europe ln modlevnl timco • , • ·ctmply· because .mtn baYt' lumed how microscopic RCtmD cAn bo checked ln thelr bordb1e path of destruction. ·

But biicterloloBY !1 only ono of tho atildlta which keep ldtli• tlata buay today. They atudy tho atata and their lnttueact Oft cur wcrld ••• they apllt tho 11tom to aee what alvet It tntrD ••• they discover new method• of maldnr out Uvea ualtt u4 happier. ~ · ·

Ye., their work DOES bold an lntueat (or )'ou, beet~ without tho ald of aclcnco ffi!l\1 of )'OUt $)ltaltil'el; Aft~ artd comforts would bo lmpoulbte. Sclenee te*opllea I~ obif. aatton ln acqualntina tho pubUc with Ita work. btnl:e the wortcra Jeadlna ~tc:\rtb mcm contribute tcauhrly to "Kc:eplq 1tp With Sclenet," a popular feature cf thli m.JP3ptt. It Ia written tn bfmln'• bngu:~co thlt )Ou dn ll!ldmtand, DOt f

. l!l tb• teebnkal ttrlo of tbt acl•ntiat blmMU. You11 W It oat of i&t .mo.t TaWmiiDiTtlliitii OfllilfpiibUmtou: · ~ .. · ···· . . . '

~eeping_-~\up ~With -Sc.ience .-.... , ••••

oot game m Capat.an yeater- FOR SALE-Two wheel trailer Loca'uy tRoll d' Drug Sto fi~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;r day afternoon. Tht cro•d then . and Crosley car radio. Inquire of N• 26-D =~ 8

re. · went out to ·the country and · Leon Dahl:Carrizozo Hotel. touted manbmellowa. • ••

Tbe Sheriff's Office of Lincoln Mr. Floyd Rowland attended Misaea Edith and Jane Norman County bas added a new 1938 the Brotherhood of Railroad

are at home £rom tht University Chevrolet to their equipment. B.all in EI Puo last Saturday at Albuquerque for tht hoUdaya. · · - - mght.

"' • . IN THE PROBATE COURT OF· LIN'- Mr. W. S. Norman spent Jasti COLN COUNTY, STATE OF weekend in Tucumcari

Word received this week from NEW MEXICo • '. I Mr .. R. A Walker, !fbO Ia in the In The Mntter of tho Lnst} . Mr. and Mn. Oacar Bamberger Vcterana hoapltal inhlbuquerque, wm nndTeatrun~t ofJ'oT:tn N.b. (l)fj 800 BiUy tttended the Ol)elltt atatea tbt· ·he it improving W. Ow~. DecellSOO. houao held at Camp O:apitan ' nicely. . Notice Sunday. .

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STRANGE SUPERSTITIONS

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