The Forney Messenger (Forney, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, July 14, 1944 Page: 2 of 4
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THE FORNEY MESSENGER
/££) ON THE
(home fro
UTHVmi
Nji^
RUTH wytltf iPtAK:^6j
•\1THY not make a week-end
YV project of putting together a
couple of comfortable chairs with
the special features shown here?
You don’t have to have a fancy
workshop. The whole job may be
done out in the yard or on the
porch. Just three stock widths of
lumber are needed; all the cuts
UTCm WADKfSt back
MAT Bf LIFTED OFF
FOB WINTER
STORAGE &M
SSptfes
COOD
PROPORTIONS • fCOMFORTABtrl
STRAIGHT CUTS I TILT TO
EAST CONSTRUCTION k.''_ SEAT
MRS. WI TH WYETII SPEARS
Bedford Mills New York
> Drawer 10
Enclose |5 cents for Design No. 269
Name .1.............................
Address ‘.............................
Willys
W builds the
H versatile
Jee
✓ light Truck
/ Passenger Car
tf light Traetor
r/ Power Plant
RHEUMATIC PAIN
Nod at! Sp«ll y«ar Day—Sat aftar H Raw
Don’t put off getting C-2223 to re-
lieve pain of muscular rheumatism
and other rheumatic pains. Cuution:
Use only uh directed. First bottle
purchase price back if not satisfied.
60c and jl.00. Today, buy C-2223.
CHIkl IRRITATIONS OP
OlVin EXTERNAL CAUSE
Apna pimples, oeieraa, factory rlermn-
tiUs, (unpin ringworm, tetter, snlt rheum,
bumps, (blaekiienils), and ugly hroken-
out skin. Millions relieve itching, burn-
ing and eorcneaa of these mineries with
simple home treatment, done to work at
once. Aids healing, works the anliseptio
way. Uso Black and White Ointment only
as directed. 10c, 26c, 60c mum. 26 years'
success. Money-hack guarantee. Vital
in cleansing is good soap. ICnjoy fa-
tuous Black aud White tikm Soap daily.
LIGHTER
GohtpSefiadc
Dr. FRED Pen,.. . Skin I
WMIenar IlghG-ita tanned
d«rliAktnl Kwr wajrt »<• At
driiu Rl«*r.M I Imp tiny* nMtIlr
•rttwl SntUfn.-h.ti •* Monsy
tSeek. Mill SAMPII S, n<|
P«* |MNlf Itgt< t tftlonol I >«• |»t V.
Hot B*4, Atlanta, tboivtii
OR. FRED PALMER'S
SKIN WHITENER
WIMEOIs
Do You Hate HOT FLASHES?
If you suffer from hot flashes, feel
weak, nervous. a bit blue at time*—
nil due to the functional “middle-
n«e'
Lyd
period peculiar to women—try
ydla K Plnkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound to relieve aucti symptoms
Taken regularly—Plnkham's Corn*
pound helpa build up resistance
against such annoying symptoms
Plnkham’s . Compound la made
eapdmily w«inM)r-4 dirlp^ 410-
ture and that’s the kind of medl-
cl»*v to Amyi follow Uboi directions.
LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S SSSSKE*
NS DIE
PROUDLY
©.WHITS WN.U.TEATURt*
THE STORY THUS FAR: Lieut. Col.
Frank Kurts, pilot of Flying Fortrets
"The Swoote," fella of that fatal day
When the Japi atruck In the Philippines,
killing eight of his men and demolish-
ing Old 99, with many other Forts, be-
fore It could get off the ground. After
esraplng to Australia, what Is left of
the 19th Bombardment firoup flies to
Java, where they defend the Island until
It falla. U. 8. fliers evacuate to Austra-
lia to carry on the war from there. From
lit base In North Australia the ItHh, plus
the 7th, paste New Guinea and New Brit-
ain Islands. Red Varner, Swoose crew
chief, tells of a close call, with the gen-
eral aboard. He had to hug the ground
to prevent being dive-bombed.
are straight and the pieces may
be nailed or screwed together.
But the really important thing
about this chair is that it is com-
fortable to sit in and good to look
at. The removable hack makes it
easy to move around and to store
for the winter.
• • •
NOTE—Mrs Spears has prepared a
large sheet with working diagrams; com-
plete list of materials; dimensions and
step-by-step directions for cutting and as-
sembling tills chair. Ask for Design 20f
and enclose 15 cents. Address;
gj£«
Smoothes - refreshes!
W tin PHJWRimoH or a rAMOUR ocvuar ■
W at au. imuomtmwi »v > Hr 1
Watch Your ^
-Kidneys/
llrip Thmi ('Iran** the Blood
of Harmful Body Waste
Your kidney* are constantly filtering
wnctr matter from the blood It mm. Hut
kidnsy* sometime* lug in their work - do
not act ai Nature Intended—fail to re-
move tmpuritiee that, If retained, may
noieon the ayatem and upaet the wholo
body machinery.
Symptom* may be nagging backacha,
headache, attack* gif ditsineat.
pan
!•*
idache, i
_ tting up nights. aaelling, puf
under the eyea—a feeling of nc
no**
rvou
anxiety and I«mm of pep and atrength.
Other aigna of kidney or bladder dis-
order are •oraetimoe burning, scanty at
too frequent urination
There should be no doubt that
tere should be no doubt that prompt
treatment la wtaer than neglect, lea
Doans /’iUs. Doan’s have been winning
iw friends for more than forty years,
ey have a nation-wide reputation.
net
Thi
Are recommen*
country over
nation-wide reputatio
ded by grateful people t
Ask yon* neighbor l
Doans Pills
CHAPTER XXIII
"So the Major started out then on
an ordinary box-search problem,
trying to find this Cloneurry—you fly
so many minutes north, and then
east, and then south, and then west,
and then, lengthening your time,
north again, and so on. We kept
Ihis up for quite a while, but no
Cloneurry, and our gas was running
out. I’ll say this, though, the Major
sure wasn’t running short of advice.
What with his cockpit full of air gen-
erals of all nations, he had plenty of
that, and every different kind you
can imagine—they all knew just
what to do.
"The trouble was, every time he
paced from the nose of the plane
back to the tail, it would throw the
plane out of balance, and Frank
here would have to trim ship, in
addition to all the questions he was
answering. I guess this pacer hod
never thought of that. . '
"By this time Frank had decided
the only thing to do was to make
a forced landing, so he was leaning
over the side trying to pick a spot.”
"With all of those guys yammer-
ing at you, telling you what to do,”
said Red, "and this guy pacing. Only
for a while he stopped, but just for
a minute, while he was putting on a
parachute. Why, I wouldn’t quite
know. Because we were down to
500 feet, and if he did jump of course
it would never have time to crack.
But I didn’t say a word, because
buckling himself in was keeping him
quiet. Only right away he starts
this pacing again, with the poor Ma-
jor trying to nose her down for a
crash landing, and he tells me to
tell them all to get back in the tail
so it will act as a brake, only this
guy starts pacing again.
"Now I was getting the jumps,
for even if the Major is the best pi-
lot in the business, a crash landing
is no joke, even for old-timers. So
I grabs this pacing guy and ‘Now
look,’ I says to him. ‘You may car-
ry plenty of rank on your shoulders,
but to this pilot you're just two hun-
dred pounds of ballast. So now you
quit shifting around—you get on
back there and sit down.’ And I
herded him back to the very tip end
of the plane, and pushed him down,
parachute and all, on that little seat.
! You’ve probably been wondering all
along, just where this little seat is,
on a bomber. Well, it's just where
it would be any place else—even on
a farm—all you do is follow the
I clothes line, back down to the end
I of the grape arbor, and there she
sets.
"Well, I pushed him down on the
seat, and in about a minute there
was quite a bump, but still it was a
perfect three-point landing. In four
seconds the Major had her rolling
smooth. The ground was soft.
Twenty-five tons is a lot of bomb-
er, and her wheels began to sink in
—about six inches. But the Major
could sense this, so he gave gas to
all four engines to keep her rolling,
and taxied her up to high ground
hard enough to hold her up.
"We got out. Pretty soon Aus-
tralian ranchers begin crawling out
of holes in the ground—I don’t know
where else they came from—and
right away Lieutenant Commander
Johnson gets busy. He begins to
get acquainted. They tell him where
wo are and some of them go off to
get a truck to take us into town
where we can telephone, and more
keep coming, and Johnson is shak-
ing hands all around, and he comes
back and tells us these are real
folks—the best darn folks in the
world, except maybe the folks in his
own Texas. Pretty soon he knows
all their first names, and they’re
telling him why there ought to be a
high t.iTT# otv MtouLiiHYJ;,there
question tig swung that county for
"Johtison befOre"uR-left( He wAfl-tp
his element. I know he sure svvyng
the Swoose crew, lie can catty
that precinct any day.”
"Listening to him made us all
homesick,” said Frank, "so I sup-
pose it was a good tiling we got
suddenly ordered pack to the States
at the end of the month. Ih a curi-
| oils way I was ready now to come,
i I'd turned it down before, because
after we were thrown out of Java
we all had that sick feeling—trying
to hold onto something that was
slipping away in spite of everything
you did. You couldn't walk out
feeling things might suddenly cave
in again.
"But now it was different. In
Australia and that island chain
above we were getting firmly set,
the way we should have been in the
Philippines and Java, and didn't
have time.
"But we'd had it now, and knew
how to use it. Best of all, we were
finally getting some fighting equip-
ment, not just production figures.
So even though we were soaking up
plenty of heavy punches in the is- I
land chain, we wfre sure now we |
could at least hold them. But as
yet I hadn’t dared hope for much
more.
"Only now I come to the thing
which at last changed that, because
I had to see it before I could believe
it.
“It happened out on that long
trans-Pacific trail where we’ve al-
most worn ruts in the sky between
the States and Australia. It was
like this. We were letting down for
one of the island steppingstones
which, according to Harry’s naviga-
tion, should be somewhere ahead of
us. It was very early in the morn-
ing. Harry’s the best navigator in
the business, and he had said we
should be in there six hours from
the time we left the last island.
But of course his figures could be
a little out, or maybe the wind drift
would change—you never know. The
Pacific is too big a place to take
chances in, as Eddie Rickenbacker’s
party found out. So after we’d been
out five hours we got the island on
the radio, and asked them to give
us searchlights, just so we wouldn’t
miss their little pinpoint in the
dawn.
“We’d flown without change of
course for five hours. Now Harry
took his final shots and we started
down the line to that island. Harry
had said six hours—it took us just
five hours and fifty-seven minutes.
The island was an atoll around a
shallow basin where Navy PBY fly-
ing boats could light. The atoll is
two feet above high tide at its high
point. On one side are labor con-
struction tents, a cantonment build-
ing for the tiny garrison, ack-ack,
searchlights, and even a tiny movie
theater. On the other side is the
landing strip. I’ll swear Harry must
have navigated not for the island,
but for that landing strip itself. For
without change of course, all we
have to do is let our wheels down.
Some day I want Eddie Rickenback-
er to meet Harry.
“As we climbed out of the Swoose,
the island garrison asked us, very
excited, ‘Did you see anything?’
When we said we hadn’t, they went
off by themselves, whispering. I
wanted to know what was up, so I
asked their Colonel. Told him we
were on an important mission our-
selves—had a top-ranker aboard—
and what did he expect here at this
atoll?
" ‘Trouble,’ he said. Looking; at
his little setup, I couldn’t help think-
ing of those poor guys who vAre
overwhelmed on Wake Island. But
the Colonel wasn’t sure what kind of
trouble was coming. He only knew
orders had mysteriously come put-
ting the Navy patrol planes on
extra-long hours, doubling shifts.
Somewhere, somebody was certain-
ly on the lookout for something, and
those poor devils had to sit on that
atoll and guess what it might be.
"It didn’t smell good. We gassed
up and got out forty-five minutes lat-
er, just as it was cracking dawn.
By now, the equatorial front had
dissolved into a spotted ceiling. I
suppose we’d been going an hour
when, through a hole in this ceiling,
out suddenly popped four or five
ships down on the wrinkled sea. But
I could only look at one of them.
"Now you think you’re a man,
with everything under control, yet
I’m telling you I reacted to this one
the way a fox terrier does to a rat.
Because it was a whopping aircraft
carrier! And after Java and the
Philippines, say ‘carrier’ to a pilot,
and he steadies everything for his
bomb run, tense as a violin string,
hoping his bombardier has the hair-
lines of his bomb sight crossed on
its flight deck just over the engine
room. It’s like a bird do" pointing
quail, with his tail tip quivering.
Only, after half a second, I’m a
man again and can think, can re-
member we haven't any bombs
swinging on their shackles in our
bomb bays—nothing we can drop on
this beautiful target but the high-
ranking passenger who is riding with
us.
"Then comes reaction number
two. No bombs, but what about the
carrier’s covering fighters? You talk
about a mother tiger fighting for her
young—that’s nothing to the way a
patrolling carrier fighter will defend
its mother ship. Because every car-
rier-based fighter knows that once
his carrier is hit and the waves be-
gin to sweep over that long flight
deck, and one end of her hoists up in
the air, then he’s out in the big sky
by his lonesome—no pontoons, noth-
ing to do but sink into the sea when
his tanks are dry. Those Zeros will
come screaming in to hit me from
almost any cloud. Since I can’t
make a bomb run, I must get away
quick!
“But now, over the interphones,
comes a shout—they’ve spotted an-
other carrier. I look and see it too.
Then another! And now—my God, it
can't be, but it is—four! It makes us
frantic we haven’t got something to
plunk through those smooth flight
decks into their engine rooms, and
maybe blow a few square yards out
of the bottom of their hulls!
"Only we now grow cold, because
where are the escorting fighters? We
can’t speed up, because they should
be up ahead, but they might show
up any place—come leaping up at
us out of this fleecy blanket of over-
cast like dolphins jumping through
the foam.
"Down there are not only four
carriers but a gang of other stuff—
a fog of destroyers, at least fifteen
cruisers, and one thundering big bat-
tleship. Only as a bomber pilot I’m
fixed on those carriers, enormous
brutes. Too enormous. Say, what’s
going on? Because Jap carriers are
little devils—you can hardly pack
forty planes into them, while these
might hold double that, like our best
ones. Now wait. Maybe we’re too
low and these just look big, but
no—I glance at the altimeter and
we’re at 7,500.
"So they’re ours! This big parade
of surface strength is us Ameri-
cans! I change course just the same
—30 degrees, swinging wide of this
big naval parade, because we can
take no chances on their air patrol.
Even an American carrier fighter,
when he sees a bomber over his
mother ship, should shoot first and
ask questions later. We don't want
to tangle with Grummans.
"We swing out wide and away,
but with what a different feeling!
“Well, I guess that’s about all,
except on our homeward trip, we
cracked the trans-Pacific record
wide open. The old Swoose, with
her war-worn motors, made it from
Brisbane to San Francisco in thirty-
six hours ten minutes flying time,
the only one of the original 35 on
Clark Field to see home again.”
“When they said long distance
was calling from San Francisco, of
course that didn’t mean anything to
me,” said Margo. "With two broth-
ers in the Air Corps, one in bom-
bardment and one in pursuit, it
might be either one. Then I heard
Frank’s own voice saying ‘Margo?’
Because I hadn’t heard any over-
seas operators, or any censor click-
ing in, I knew he must be here in
the States. For the first time I could
cry on the phone . . . It’s nice to
be strong, but so much more fun to
let down when you can, and I did.”
(THE END)
Pi-
l
Girl
Overboard
By George F, Worts
•v£*•» • */• .
***
•“ • K - • j *
Zorie Corey hated .herself for being
both meek and shy, yet she allowed old
Admiral Duncan to rush her off to
Hawaii to work on bis very dull memoirs
of the Spanish Vmrriean war. What hap-
pened on that trip changed her fropi »
gentle, docile, friimpily unattractive girl
into a courageous ami surprisingly beau-
tiful young woman—which even goes to
•how that meekness has its advantages.
Look for " Girl Overboard ”
IN THIS PAPER
BEGINNING NEXT ISSUE
AUTOMOBILES
Buy Your Car Here
For ciirs-dMO ForiK Chevrolet* snil
Plymouth v. Perfect condition end res-
ionebly priced. Call, write and »ee us.
(Ralph) Jones Motor & Loan
16 yeare in earne location
*710 Cammerta, Dalla*. Taa. T-1-41J9
BEAUTY COURSE
BEAUTY CAREERS PAY BIG DIVIDENDS
ISBELL’S course offers extra advantages.
Day and night classes for men, women,
girls. Convenient terms. Enroll in June,
graduate and start to work in January.
Writ• for dotaila
ISBELL'S UNIVERSITY OF BEAUTY CULTURE
609 W. 2nd St. Fort Worth 2-9100.
_Business Opportunity_
For Sale—Tin, Radiator Shop, doing good
business Health causes sale. Personal
contact only. H. L. Crouch, Lamesa, Tex.
FARM MACHINERY
FOR SALE—Late model John Deere en-
silage harvester. Run less than 2 seasons.
O. M. LANDER
Waxahachie, Texas.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE—4-B0 saw gin plant, steam
power, 72x10 high-pressure boiler, all
equipment; 13x12 Skinner engine, first
class condition. Lummus gins; Hardwicke-
Etter 10-foot burr machine; two 5-cylinder
incline cleaners; belt distributor; new
Hardwicke-Etter all-steel heavy duty
press; packer; condenser. Might sell part.
Sacrifice. George flecker, Kaufman, Tex.
GOATS
GOATS—GOATS—GOATS
One of the best producing herds, mostly
uns. Herd purchased for production.
r fine producers. Call or write
Saanai
Many fine producers. Call <
L. N. I1AYS, T-7-6171
Addreaa 200 $. Fulton St., Dallus, Texas.
HORSES
FOR SALE
“THOROUGHBREDS’
Two mares with produce and racing
ends —one yearling, excellent blood li
P. O. BOX 05
>lood lines.
ENNIS. TEXAS.
ICE PLANTS
ICE PLANTS COMPLETE—Yorks 10-20-
ton. Extra compressors, condensers, re-
ceivers. scorers. Ice cans, half price.
HORN, 216 N. Wabash, Chicago 1, Illinois.
PLANTS
POTATO SLIPS, Puerto Rico yams, go'
eminent inspected and certified for imnv
diate delivery. $1 per 1.000. f. o. b. Tyler.
BRADSHAW & BAKER
820 Swann Ilidg.
Tyler, Texas.
Portable Vice and Drill
Portable Vise and Drill now available. Re-
pair your machinery on the job without
dismantling. Literature free. W. F. Elk-
ins Tool Company, Box 385, Floydada, Tex.
RANCH
BOSQCE COUNTY RANCH—1.847 acres,
crossfenced Into four pastures, all net wire
fences, buffalo and mesquite grasses, open
land, cedar, elm and oak; 2 wells and mills,
4 tanks, beautiful everlasting steel creek,
goat sheds, corrals, feed barns, dipping
vats; new modern 5-room house with bath,
orchard, hundreds of pecans. 50 acres of
finest farm land. Truly a beautiful section
of Texas. $16 per acre, $12,500 loan at A'c,
School bus and mail route. No agents, sot
ERNEST GUTHRIE
Morgan, Texas. Located six miles east of
Morgan, on Murgan-Steiner Road.
SALESMEN WANTED
ESSENTIAL INDUSTRY
An opportunity to earn good salary. We
have openings for route s ilcsmen. Apply,
METZGER DAIRIES
B827 8. Lamar
Dallas. Tex. 11-21II.
TRACTOR PARTS
ATTENTION
Farmers and Gin Owners
We have
Americ
etc.
for
•lean Bosch magneto;
Dealers take notice.
ELECTROMOTIVE
8209 Commerce, R-KIO.t,
Immediate delivery, new
etos for tractors
COUP.
Dallas, Texas.
TURKEY POULTS
TURKEY POULTS
Baby Reef Bronze. Pullorum tested. July
hatch 50c. L. G. Chambers, Percilla. Tex.
HELP WANTED
PERMANENT WORK FOR
Welders, Fitters, Machine
Operators and Helpers
5 minutes from courthouse. Clean plnce
Kood working conditions; 50 hours weekly!
IIALLAS TANK St WEI.D1NQ CO., INC
l*honc Kiver.lde 6001
to 1-6 West Commerce St.. liulUi, Tessa.
MEN WANTED
WHITE AND COLORED
Steady Inside Jobs.
Foreman, laborers, sackers, sewers, pack-
ers. truckers, truck drivers. Essentl
Industry, paid vacation
tial
industry, paid vacations, gooc
and half for overtime. Apply
RI RIUN FEED MIL
2701 Alamo St. - Dallas. Texas.
— I1CK Ft US FEED MILLS
E. Louisiana St.
McKinney, Texas.
CRAP MACHINE OPERATOR, small
daily eastern Oklahoma, 3 machines, non-
defense town, nonduration. Easy, pleasant
Job. Will help if you can make up inside
pages two days a week. Can make up to
$45 a week. Write ROBERT V. PETER-
SON, Times Drmorrat, Wewuka, Okla.
WANTED '
Man or lady motion picture projectionist.
State qualifications, salary,
references, draft status.
REX THEATRE
Mlnden
Louisiana.
LEARN A GOOD BUSINESS
Old established wholesale hardware con-
cern needs men to work in stock. Steady
work. Write for information. C. V. Shudix.
THE SOUTHERN SUPPLY COMPANY
Dallas 2 - Texas.
AUTO PARTS MEN
We have several positions open for experi-
enced pickers and packers. Good compen-
sation for qualified men or women. Apply
to Mr. Langston. C. S. HAMILTON
MOTOR CO.. 719 N. Pearl St.. Dallas. Tex.
AUTOMOBILE- MECHANICS
You can make from $65 to $100 per week.
We repair Fords and all makes of automo-
biles. Assure yourself of a permanent Job.
We repair from 50 to 75 cars daily. Apply
FROST MOTOR COVANV. INC.
450 Peachtree St., N. E.. Atlanta. Ga.
WANTED—All-round printer for County-
Weekly. Make-up, jobs, presses. Good
rmanent. No war boom.
New Braunfels, Texas.
tiy.
wages, per
HERALD
MEN—GIRLS—HO YS
To work in small sandwich shop. Nice place
to work. No beer served. Top salary plus
meals and uniforms. TODDLE HOUSE,
8115 Oak Lawn, Dnllas, Texas.
Wanted—Line superintendent with initia-
•ience with REA desired. Per-
vith excellent opportunity
Tor advancement. State experience and
draft classification with application. P. O.
Louisiana. Ph. No. 897.
Box 800, Homer,
WANTED
INSIDE MACHINISTS
for Drfense Work.
McDonough iron work
Galveston - - Texas.
All employment
In compliance with W.M.C. Regulations.
WE NEED TWO LINOTYPE operators and
one floorman. Permanent postwar situa-
tions. Investigate this opportunity.
TEMPLE TELEGRAM, Temple, Texas.
District Representative A local salesman
In this territory to sell liquid roof coating,
paints Sc grease. Big pay. Salary, if you
can train salesmen. Box 8064, Dallas. Tex.
#24.60 WEEK AND BONUS
Sewing Machine Operators
We can get you a room, Apt., or
house to live in.
FULLER UNIFORM COMPANY
2009V.I Main St. Dallas, Texas.
EXPERIENCED FRY COOK
Apply in Person.
JAY’S MARINE GRILL
$35 per week and meals.
Six days week.
Hall - Dallas. Texas.
COLORED DISHWASHERS
nd Bus Boy
WANTED,
and Bus Boys
$25 Week and Meals, 6 days I
Apply in Person
JAY’S MARINE GRILL
3718 HALL DALLAS. TEXAS.
WANTED—THOROUGHLY COMPETENT
machlniat-oparator for model 14; also ca*
pable makeup man who can cast cuts.
Write DAILY PRESS, CISCO, TEXAS.
PLUMBERS—First class mechanics for
repair and remodel work. Non-union, steady
work. State age and experience in letter.
P. O. Bov 1816 - Fort Worth. Texas.
WANTED—First class butcher, at once.
Cun furnish house, top salary. LLOYD
SMITH GROCERY. Mineral Wells. Texas.
USED ARMY SHOES
USED ARMY SHOES FOR SALE. No ra-
tion coupon. Price $3 delivered. Cheek or
money order. Wholesale price to merchants
In lots of 50 pairs or more. SHOE FAC-
TORY, 812 Candler Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
Wheel—Folding Chairs
Wheel Chairs and Folding Wheel Chairs
rented nrd sold. Ship anywhere. Elton
II inant. 332 West Davis. Dallas 8, Texas.
—Buy War Bonds and War Savings Stamps—
P Mighty Good Eating/ $
(CORN F
MTh« Crains are Craat Foods”—
Human nu
H • Kellogg’s Corn Flakes bring you
g nearly all the protective food elements
■ of the whole grain declared essential
— to human nutrition.
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mMcii
AsHlGH°‘Eve'
Quoli'V
’, LOW as
in PrilIi-^
You SAVE when you
buy. You SAVE when
you balck, with . . .
Clabber Girl
CLABBER GIRL goe* wilh
the best of everything, for bolting )
CLABBER GTRL
AND COMPANY T|
* * f M A J T S
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The Forney Messenger (Forney, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, July 14, 1944, newspaper, July 14, 1944; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth988345/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .