The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 18, 1946 Page: 5 of 12
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THE PADUCAH POST THURSDAY APRIL 18, 1946
PAGE FIVE
a *-
Here’s What You Get At The
BEST WELDING SHOP
• BLACKSMITHING • ELECTRIC WELDING
• DISC ROLLING • TRAILORS
• STALK CUTTERS • TRAILOR BEDS
• BULLDOZERS FOR “M” FARMALLS.
• PORTABLE GASOLINE DRIVEN ELECTRIC WELDER.
• GENERAL FARM MACHINE REPAIRING.
We Buy Scrap Iron
Your business will be greatly appreciated.
North Main St. Paducah, Texas
POST WANT ADS GET RESULTS
FROZEN M
MALTSand
ICE CREAM
' Come in and try a dish of the Delic-
ious Frozen Malt or Ice Cream that we
are now serving.
FAT’S CAFE
On South Main Street
AT TH1 SIGN OF THI
FLYING HD HORSE
Summemu
YOUR CAR^fti/FOR
SUMMER DRIVING
Winter oils and greases won’t
do the job when summer heat
comes steaming down. They
should be replaced with the
correct types and grades of
fresh summer MOBILOILS
and MOBILGREASES. En-
gine . . . Gears . . . Chassis
Radiator . . . all should be
checked and put in proper con-
dition for summer driving.
'Tljat is what Magnolia SUM-
MARIZE SERVICE means
... a seasonal preventive main-
tenance service, exclusive with
your Friendly Magnolia Deal-
er. It assures smoother, more
economical operation and all
the Flying Horsepower in the
new MOBILGAS. Get this
protection against the damages
of summer heat today!
, \
v
jfns&is.
MAGNOLIA
COTTLE COUNTIANS CAN HELP TO
MEET THE WORLD FOOD CRISIS
(County Agent G. J. Lane)
President Truman on Febru-
ary 6 said: “For the world as a
whole, a food crisis has develop-
ed which may prove to be the
worst in modern times. More peo-
ple face starvation and even ac-
tual death for want of food to-
day than in any years, and per-
haps in all the war years com-
bined.
Food is so short in Europe that
instead of three good meals daily,
125,000,000 Europeans have
about two meals a day. 28,000,
000 have about one and one-half
meals daily, and numbers of peo-
ple have one meal a day.
Reasons for the world food
crisis are: The 1945 total world
food production was 12 per cent
production was 33 per cent above
the pre-war average. Other re-
gions were below 1945 level of
of feeding wheat to livestock, and
the conservation of all food espe-
cially bread.
2. Special emphasis by the
President on home gardens for
1946 as a means of relieving the
critical world food situation.
3. Secretary Anderson’s re-
vision of 1946 food production
goals calls for increased acres of
spring wheat of 1,000,000 and
1,000,000 or more acres of corn,
additional acreages of grain sor-
ghum, 1,000,000 acres soy beans,
and 100,000 acres smooth dry
edible peas.
4. Steps to satisfy the need
for fats abroad take the form
of making ships available to move
Phillipine copra, and of provid-
ing for the export in 1946 of
375,000 tons of fat from the
CRILLON PAYNE NOW WITH
HALL-SCRUGGS COMPANY
Crillon Payne, former North
Side Dallas High School Coach,
prior to entering the service, has
accepted a position with Hall-
Scruggs. Mr. Payne received his
discharge arouhd the first of this
year.
5. Other steps being taken
are for the U. S. to export 1.6
billion pounds meat in first half
of 1946, and to increase exports
food production for the reasons
that much of Europe was a bat-, gounty farm and ranch
during pait pAond i People and others can do the
SSrsoXg^d-Sh- Lirisiis.0 help meet the worId
eastern Europe and North Afri-
Mrs. Byron Shotts left Sunday
for Fort Smith, Arkansas to meet
her husband. Mr. Shotts will re-
turn to Paducah with her.
VISITS HERE
Mr. J. T. Parker, Crosbyton,
visited friends and relatives here
Friday. While in Paducah he
came by this office and renewed
his subscription to the Post. Mr.
Parker formerly resided at Du-
mont many years ago.
If you are planning to send
flowers by wire in' distant parts
of the country. Don’t wait until
the last minute. Paducah Florist,
telephone 144. 2c.
OVER 100 MILLION BOTTLES
SOLD! SIMPLY GREAT FOR
MONTHLY FAIN
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound does more than relieve
monthly pain when due to female
functional periodic disturbances. It
also relieves accompanying weak,
tired, nervous, cranky feelings—of
such nature. Taken regularly —
Pinkham’s Compound helps build
up resistance against such, distress.
It’s also a great stomachic tonic!
ca had a severe drought in 1945.
Possibilities for food production
in rural sections of Europe where
battles were not fought or armies
1. Save from waste all kinds
of food and feed especially bread
and feed grains.
2. Produce as far as is pos-
battles were not fough\ 01h^’!“ ^sible and practical the milk, eggs,
did not pass were low because, voaUahles fruits cereals
livestock had been driven off hb^ needed bv yoii) f’amily for a good
the enemy. Plows and other) d- , * *
equipment had worn out. Little -
or no fertilizer was available.
Few good seeds were available.
There were few able bodied peo-
3. Produce a variety of meats,
fruits, vegetables, cereals for use
fresn as many months as possible
with as much to
pie~to iabor in the fields Manyj))™ as ">“*> » conserve as
men had died in battle. Or they,, . j> , hivhl nourishing
and many ot the women, had „ 7* Jflocluce. highly nourish! g
been forced to work as slave
laborers, or they were thrown in
concentration camps.
Facilities for transportation
and distribution of food from
the country to the town were
destroyed by war.
Measures being taken to help
meet the world food crisis are:
1. The Wheat Conservation
Order which calls for the flour
extraction rate to be raised from
72% to 80%, stopping of the
use of wheat or non-food and
feed purposes such as brewing,
distilling, and other industrial
uses, discontinuing the practice
THE SEASONAL SERVICE
ALL CARS NEEb
ENGINE—Dirty, thinned winter
oil drained and replaced v/ith the
proper grade of the new detergent
MOBILOIL that cleans as it lubri-
cates ... a war-proved oil that
resists thinning under high heat,
and offers amazing new cleaning
properties for valves, rings, pis-
tons and bearings. Gives you a
MOBILOIL CLEAN Engine that is
smoother running and more ef-
ficient, with new gas and oil econ-
omy.
GEARS—Dirty oils drained from
transmission and differential and
replaced with fresh, tough MO-
BILOIL GEAR OlLjj) of the types
and grades to fit the make and
model of your car.
RADIATOR—Cleaned with MO-
BIL RADIATOR FLUSH. MOBIL
HYDROTONE added to KEEP the
cooling system clean and safe
from rust and scale.
CHASSIS—Complete Mobilubri-
cation of all vital parts, for pro-
tection against friction and wear.
WK-9
Copyright, 1946, Magnolia Petroleum Company
Legal Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
R. M. TOWNLEY, SPECIAL
COMMISSIONER
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
COUNTY OF COTTLE.
Notice is hereby given, that
pursuant to an order passed by
the Commissioners’ Court of .Cot-
tle County, Texas at a Regular
fleeting on the 8th day of April,
1946, which is of record manifest
appointing the undersigned as
Special Commissioner to sell cer-
tain property of and belonging
to said Cottle County, Texas, lo-
cated and situated in Cottle
County, Texas, I will offer for
sale, and sell at public auction,
for cash, to the highest bidder,
during the legal hours of sale,
on the First Tuesday in May,
1946, same being tne 7th day of
May, 1946, at the Court House
Door of said Cottle County, Tex-
as, the following described pro-
perty, to wit :
Being One (1) - Two (2) room
house 12’ by 24’ and being lo-
cated and situated in Cottle
County, Texas on Survey No. 4,
Abstract No. 812, R. M. Thomson,
belonging to Cottle County, Tex-
as shown by deed recorded
Volume 10, Page 628, Deed Re-
cords Cottle County, Texas.
The Commissioner reserves the
right to reject any and all bids.
The successful bidder will be re-
quired to deposit with the Special
Commissioner certified check for
ten per cent (10%) of his bid
to be paid over to Cottle County,
Texas, to guarantee performance
upon approval. No sale shall be
final until approved by said
Commissioners’ Court.
Dated at Paducah, Texas, this
9th day of April, A. D. 1946.
R. M. Townley, Commissioner
Precinct No. 2, as Special Com-
missioner for Public Sale for
Cottle County, Texas. l-3c.
food. Do special work on soil im-
provement; poor soils yield poor
food and these make physically
poor people.
5. Do better food buying.
Don’t handle foods. Keep them
good. Study food grades and la-
bels. Know and buy good quality
foods. Pool orders with your
neighbors and buy scarce foods
not grown locally.
6. Continue to improve food
preservation.
7. Plan and serve better meals.
Follow the Texas Food Standard.
8. Cook foods better. Save
nutrients. Save flavor.
9. Improve your eating habits.
Eat by the Texas Food Standard.
10. Produce better year round
pastures by controlling brush and
weeds; and by fertilizing with
phosphates and potash where
adapted; by seeding with proper
clovers and grasses. Produce and
store an abundant supply of good
quality hay and silage.
11. Balance farm operations
by growing enough grain to take
care of livestock and poultry the
year round.
12. Grow cash crops in line
with the 1946 goals set by the
U. S. D. A.
By following the above out-
line, farm families a,nd others
may have enough food to eat;
have food to share with others
so they may live; hold retail food
prices down so all people may be
better able to buy what they
need; avoid having a return of
such controls as rationing; be
able to see the return of stable
governments, and of peace and
prosperity to the world.
Mr. and Mrs. Arch Dupriest
and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Wood and
daughter, Janell were in Fort
Worth Sunday to view the Ice
Capades.
When you serve a steaming hot dinner prepared from foods that
come from our store. Get everything you need here from deli-
cacies to your meatSii W:
REMEMBER WE DELIVER EVERY DAY
NICE HEADS
LETTUCE per
bead
[5c
PLANTER’S C OCT AIL
PEANUTS Per can .. 29c
DROMIDAR
Orange
Y SUGAR ADDED
Juice, no 2 can 24c
ALL KINDS DDT
FLY SPRAY 25c & 45c
FRYERS
Dressed and Drawn
Ready for tihe frying pan.
In Our Market
WE HANDLE
PASTEURIZED
ILK
Also
BUTTERMILK
TEXAS SWEET
ORANGES All sizes.....
• • lb- IQc
NEW FLORIDA
POTATOES per lb.......
... 8c
5 POUND GLASS
BLUE KARO .....
.....44c
LIPTON
TEA one-fourth lb.......
.....30c
NABISCO
SHREDDED WHEAT box.....\2c
TEXAS RUBY RED
GRAPEFRUIT 2 for. . .. 15c PUMPKIN YAMS lb.. 12
NICE, JUICY
Worley & Finch
Jack Worley
Phone 283
GROCERY
& MARKET
Bill Finch
KRISPY
Crackers
2 lb. box
35c
DUCKS DON’T CARE
IF THE ROOF DOES LEAK
But who wants to be A Duck?
We now have labor and material
to do roofing jobs for the time
being.
/
If yon need a new Roof, Re-Roof or Roof repairing see us at once. "We
recently purchased some of the very latest roofing equipment which enables
us to do the very highest class of work.
FREE ESTIMATES: We will be glad to give vou an estimate on any job
you may wish done. No charge for this service. ALE WORK GUARANTEED.
PADUCAH ROOFING CO.
HUBBARD & THOMPSON, Prop.
P. O. Box 823, Paducah Tels. 58-J or 126-W
Congratulate me...Have a Coke
a
111
l^fl
,,, sociable refreshment for all hands Wound
“I’m engaged !” An event no girl ever forgets. Refreshment is in order,
so the invitation is Have a, Co\e. Coca-Cola just naturally goes with
happy, friendly moments of informal hospitality. Coke belongs in your
icebox—because it belongs with good times and friendly living.
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
Paducah Coca-Cola Bottling & Ice Co.
Coke = Coca-Cola
“Coca-Cola” and its abbreviation
“Coke” are the registered trade-
marks which distinguish the prod-
uct of The Coca-Cola Company.
,© 1946 The C-C Co..
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Hinds, Alfred. The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 18, 1946, newspaper, April 18, 1946; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1014416/m1/5/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.