The Teague Chronicle (Teague, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 15, 1942 Page: 8 of 8
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Specials for Friday-Saturday
BREAD ur^ i^af 10c
,
r
CRI9CO, 6 lbs. ....... .............$1.38
-*"1
CRISCO, 3 lbs............................................... 69c
SHORTENING • — 71c
COOKING OIL, Gallon Jug $139
OXYDOL, Giant, size 71... - 59c
■ . ''-T
’ CREAM MEAL ~ - 53e
SODA, 2 1-lb. Pkgs. Arm & Hammer 15c
SALT, 3 Boxes .................... ........-.................10c
PINTO BEANS, 3 lbs. ....................... 19c
Z=t
FLOUR ,,0NTerJ $1.69
SOAP, P&G. 6 bars
25c
GULF SPRAY, Quart
—
39c
2-lb. Box
OATS
Mother’s Toy
19c
Green CABBAGE, per lb.
3V2c
YAMS, 10 lbs.
33c
EH
MACARONI or SPAGHETTI, 3 pkgs. 10c
BANANAS
Saturday Only
per Dozen
15c
WILL BE OPEN SUNDAY MORNING.
EARLE McSPADDEN
Phone 7
Phone 8
New Hampshire Fanners
* Convinced on Cooperation
When 60 farmer* of Coo* county.
N. H.. in the spring of 1041, took on
joint responsibility for operating
three grain combine*, they were
done too *ure how the co-operation
would work out. When the season
was over, experience had canvi
them. They harvested 547 acre*
and then"'threshed oat* and behn*
in the barn*.
The co-operators realized the im-
portance of home-grown grain in the
"Food for Freedom” program.
Nurse crop* help establish meadow*
and pastures. ltiatiT New England
farmer* used oat* or barley, some-
time* both. But these grain acre-
age* were too limited to warrant
threshing facilities. They decided
on joint ownership of enougli com-
bines toedo the „work.
Each of the groups elected ;i man-
ager to operate its machine. Co-
operators pay $5 an acre for com-
bining. This year all planted early
to get the grain ripened early.
Farmers see the need for fuller
use of partly idle machinery through
sharing service. Combining is par-
ticularly Important this year be-
cause use of scarce binder twine
Is avoided. The Coos county farm-
ers find that the combines are sav-
ing money, too. They say the old
method—reaping, storing in the
barn, and threshing with a tractor
and separator—cost twice as much.
Co-operative combining, they re-
port, has encouraged the growing of
nurse grains that mean better crop
rotations and better quality rough-
age.
Donald Nelsod (left), chief of the
War Production board, ajid Paul V.
McNutt, chief of the War Manpow-
er commission, are shown as they
were drying dishes at the opening
of Washington’s “stage door can-
teen.’*
MPA I 20-lb. Sack
IVIELML. _ Cream
m
• i
AN S. O. 8, CALL COMES
FROM HAWAIIAN AIR DEPOT
FOR CLASSIFIED LABORERS
Classified Laborers! An S. O. S.
call comes from..the Hawaiian Air
Depot for you. Answer it today
by calling in person on the local
civil service Secretary at Teague,
Texas.
You will be paid |1320 a year
while training in the United States
and immediately upon sailing you
will receive a 26 per cent wage in-
crease. with all expenses paid to.
Hawaii! -*—*--
If -you have four years of school-
ing, or six months of experience in
manual work above the grade of
unskilled laborer, and a 3-A draft
classification, you are eligible for
thia war job.
See your loyal civil service
secretary today!
Applications are not desired
from persons engaged on war
work, except in those cases where
the positions open call for the use
of higher skils than the worker ia
now using in hia present employ-
ment
Mrs. R. G. Radford of Kilgore
and daughter, Mrs. Robert J.
Price of Oil City, La., were
Teague visitors a few days of thia
week.
African Gold Coast City,
Accra, Doubles Population
Accra, where American soldiers
are reported stationed, is the head-
quarters of the British' administra-
tion of Africa’s Gold Coast says a
bulletin from the National Geo-
graphic society.
The city’s recent growth has been
paced by the remarkable expansion
of the Gold Coast’s cocoa crop. In
20 years Its population has doubled
and now lrf nearly 80,000. Averaging
about 28,000 tons of cacao beans
annually in recent years, the Gold
Coast’s production accounts for
nearly half of the world crop. Four
years aga Gold Coast cocoa pro-
ducers burned many tons of theft
gfeatest crop because of the low
prices. Today they have coco* to
burn because of the lack of ships
to transport it to distant markets.
No deep harbor was available any-
where along the Gold Coast until
1928 (at Takoradi, 120 miles west),
but Accra grew although . every
pound of export was transported
from.the beaches in surf boats to
ships anchored two miles offshore.
Accra's recent growth has made it
a modern city with medieval land-
mark*. It has a straight, wide main
street over taro miles long, with
modem bank and business build-
ings. There are good schools, hos-
pitals and a college to serve this
region.
Automatic Vending Stand*
Will Increase Milk Sales
Elimination of some milk routes
and delivery of larger quantities of
milk at stations'offer about the only
possibilities for .decreasing tfce cost
of milk to consumers.
E. ft. Eudaly, dairyman for the A.
and M. college extension service,
point* but that the cost and scarcity
oi labor, high cost of feed, and trans-
portation difficulties mean the dairy
farmer must get relatively high
prlcea for milk if be is to stay in
buslqesi Much of the same prob-
lem*confront distributors. Some
plants are having difficulty in ob-
taining parts for’keeping machinery
in repair.
One contribution the dairy indus-
try might make to better diets of
the nation is selling bottled skimmed
milk. It is a valuable food and in
some seasons goes to waste in Texas
plants, Eudaly gays. The difficulty Is
that it costs the distributor as much
to bottle and deliver skimmed milk
as whole milk, for which he can get
a much higher price.
Milk consumption per capita could
be increased considerably, Eudaly
believes, by the introduction of
vending machines or nickel-ih-the-
■lot milk. Some war industries re-
port favorably on the use of these
Try a Nice GOAT ROAST.
They are Tender and Good.
—
-Salad Dressing
Fresh Maid
Quart
TOILET TISSUE
Waldorff
6 Rolls
25c
MAIZE
eturn a
*165
When you return a
good sack
Per sack
SALT
8 - lVfc-lb. Boxes
10c
Baking P
9r— v
0W(
25-oz. K. C.
18c
.
SODA
1 lb. A and H
7ie
SWEET 10
POTATOES lbs.
Cocoa
Hershey’s
1-lb. can
Post Toasties
llr-oz! Box
CARROTS
Large Bunch
5c
machines, but priorities on materi-
als have curtailed their production.
After the war, the dairy industries
expect a boom in this type of, milk
distribution. The Texas state nu-
trition committee recently ex-
pressed interest in promoting nickel-
in-the-slot milk.
TOMATOES
No. 2 Can
10c
2Vi lbs.
BEANS
Pintos
18c
FLOUR
Florida Rose
48 lbs. j
Guaranteed
Grape Fruit Ji
No. 2 Can
10c
PHONES 93
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Keys, former
residents of Teague, and who have
reaided in Gila Bend, Ariz., have
recently moved back to Teague.
C. M. Beaver of Port Arthur,
viaited ’Selativea andfrtend* Tiere
last week end. • *
W. W. Christopher of Killeen
spent the week end with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W.
Christopher.
%.
MASONIC LODGE
Boggy Lodge No. 789,
A. F. and A. M.
meets on the third
Tuesday in each
month. All members
are urged to attend, and visiting
MaBons in the city are always
welcomed C. W. Fqrd, W. M.;
E. V. Hcidlee, secretary.
NOW IS THE TIME
TO GET YOUR LAYERS
IN GOOD CONDITION For
THE WINTER LAYING
PERIOD! :
goooooo
§
mm
Am
’BtJKlri
>•****
For high egg production and best profits feed
your poultry correctly. ,
DITTLINGER’S BESl ECLIPSE LAYING MASH
is a well known favorite. The formula’s scientific
—the quality of ingredients is the finest.
1
When you buy Layii
er’s Best
by
it is Dittling-
for tags
be sure to
Modern Bed-Living Room
A bed-living room for a modem
girl is charmingly done in green
and golden-buff. Modem furniture
of natural finish birch, fashioned on
the simplest of lines, has chair
seats of striped "material in white
and golden buff -te-naetoh -the bufl-
palnted waU and white trim. The”
Wartime Morale Studied
By Child Welfare Group
Cooperating with the Committee
on National Morale in the present
emergency, the Institute of Child
Welfare at the University of Cali-
fornia, under the leadership of Dr.
Harold E- Jones, is directing its
activities to working out family
morale problems affecting the war
effort.
At the request of the coordinator
of Information, E. H. Erikson, lec-
turer in psychology and research
associate at the institute, received
a three-month leave of absence to
work under, the committee, on jia-
confldentlal
WE D1
Livestock Show
(Continued from page 1)
third. -
, Other
first.
verities, Roy
Bonner,
Other
verities, Roy
Bonner,
second.
Other
varities, Weldon
Hender-
son, tl\ird.
Pop com, Clifford Colwell, first.
tional morale on a confident!a! as- _ . . . , . rv. - ------:----— —- -----------------------
alignment covSflnff" Wfyhlngtdn • and . anflgalgri^ - - jBugar.Sift flour,*alt, baking pow- way possible, tp-get
carpet is dull, grayed green woven
to large leaf pattern, and
■square.
modern chair is upholstered in a
deep green textured weave. A small
round table holding a white, gold
and green tea service, is covered
with a door length cloth of white,
bordered with a Greek Key design
in green to match the chair. The
large studio couch— llkq the dressing
table, seat—is covered in ecru col-
ored . fabric of raised .diagonal
weave. Tjie edge of the couch is
piped with deep green. White glass
curtains cover the large double win-
dow, framed by floor length
draperies of material like the couch.
Two white lamps with white shades
trimmed with a flat green btw orna-
ment the dressing table.
various New
from which
turned.
Eng la i
nd localities,
recently re-
fold Colwell, first.
Peanut (vine and gallon) JameB
Serving as leader in organizing
various local study groups dealing
with problems of civilian morale.
Dr. Nevitt Sanford, research asso-
ciate in the institute and assistant
professor of psychology, has con-
ducted seminars and presided at
numerous community meeting*.
The attitude of high school stu-
dent* toward the present emergency
Is the subject of a study being con-
ducted at present by the institute,
with the Anal report on trenda fn
youth morale expected to appear
next month.
Wei-
REA Mobile Generator Alda Wit
The use of a Kansas-owned gen-
erator, first In North Carolina and
then in Texaa, la typical of the way
Rural Electrification administra-
tion’s mobile units are being moved
to to serve where war emergencies
require them.
The Swisher County Electric Co-
operative of Tulia, Texas, provided
the emergency electric service for
a war project beyond it* existing
power lines. Service on a round-
the-clock basis was made possible
by means of a diesel-powered mo-
bile generating unit leased by the
co-operative and brought to the
plant aite from North Carolina. The
100-kilowatt unit, mounted on a trail-
er, le owned by a REA system to
Kansas)
Tex*s account
for more than
40 per cent of the natural gas
produced in the United States.
Pye,“Second.
Peanut (vine and gallon)
don Henderson, third.
Poland China gilt, Walter Wirt
Bonner, first: Henry Gene Wil-
liams, second. ‘
Duroc Jersey gilt, Bob Riley
Ham, first: Dale Willard, secoitd,
and Horace Wayne Carroll, third.
Duroc sow and litter, Roger
Dale Anderson* first.
Duroc boar, Billy Taylor, first.
Fat barrow; . Clifford Colwell,
first: Roy Bonner, second:-' and
Clifford Colwell, third.
Feeder calf, Jerry Glen W
first.
Jersey heifer, Roger Dale
THE CHRONICLE’S
Weekly Scrapbook
Week’s Best Recipe
Fig Suet . Pudding: 2c bread
crumbs, He flour, 2t baking pow-
der, lc sugar, 141 salt, 2 eggs, 1
c milk, 1 c chopped suet, V4 c
chopped figs, 44 t grated rind of
lemon. Beat eggB well, add sugar.
Mix well with crumbs, figs, lem-
on rind and suet. Add to eggs and
der and stir into first mixture,
alternately with milk. Steam m
“What
covered container 3 hours. Serve] tacked
with hard sauce or the following:
Beat the white of one egg, add 44
c powdered sugar and beat well.
Add yolk of egg and beat. Add 44
c whipped cream and
well. '
again beat he__
what ,
Cake Facti
For a dark-colored chocolate
cake use brown sugar and add
half a teaspoon of powdered
late is to be added
should be cooled and
Texas i. U,. ,
Anderson, first: Bob Riley Ham,
leading carbon black
producing state, accounting for
about four fifths of the nation’s
supply.
Poul
ner, first.
Poultry
heavy, Roy Bon-
(pen)
This Week—
(Continued from pagtl
General Hershey explains
people are still governed |
philosophy of abundance,
understand that there
scarcity of anything. Wei
know how many men we’ll |
raobolize to lick Gen
Japan. The fighting arid
groups must be reinforced 4
suits.”
General Hershey particuls]
those Americans «1S
do you want me to|
saying'that such an attift
similar to that of people in|
tarian countries. “In a |
supposed ]
done and ,
same |
late a*)0l*t the war prograrr
board, ,
to the frosting just bution to the war effort
on the cake,
frosting.
fable
It is
Pile th
is no
or decayed
f°r ptntog for a Cutting
garden of animals next year. Tt
in late fall, so ,
could in some other job
pointed out that if labo
cannot quickly b
lods
cont
Metes
Oak, It
of coal
Texas.
_
*
ureea of
fuel—oil,
gasoline, lig-
"Stellar Attraction
In a middle western I
featured coldrful
togs in lta
tried an i
Kno*
J
V,
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Stringer, William J. The Teague Chronicle (Teague, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 15, 1942, newspaper, October 15, 1942; Teague, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1136696/m1/8/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fairfield Library.