White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, November 12, 1943 Page: 1 of 4
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tos Letha Oramet
I
White Deer Review
VOLUME XX.
WHITE DEER, CARSON COUNTY, TEXAS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1943
NUMBER 36
«
4
l
* J
| Toughest part of the trip was 16-
I mile portage of materials around
| Pellican Rapids.
SHORTS-CLAD Barbara Green-
wood, senior Lake Mills Wiscon-
sin High School girl, is one of
the many students who volun-
teered to help process 1,100 acre
crop of lima beans. Barbara
is sorting beans in the picking
room of the Libby cannery.
lESi
To the Editor of The Review:
We wish to take this means
through the columns of your good j
paper to thank the people who
have contriuted to the Carson Co.
Whr Chest, Fund.
We are away over the top and
donations are still coming in.
We thank you for your valuable
publicity work, and for the adver-
tising donated by your paper. Ev-
erybody in Carson County and our
outside friends certainly believed
in taking “A Texan’s Share.”
Yours very truly,
Carson County War Chest,
by Asberry A. Callaghan,
Chairman
VERNELLE BLOCK AND
CAPT. C. C. ROGERS
WED IN COLORADO
White Deer Bucks Trim Phillips Black Hawks 12 to 2
Mrs .Ida M. Barnes, 2710 Har-
marriage of her daughter, Miss
xison St., Amarillo, announces the
Vernelle Blotek, to Capt. Charles
C. Rogers, whose home is in Villa
Grove, 111.
The wedding was performed in
the post chapel at Lowry Field in
Denver, Colo., at oclock the eve-
ning of Oct. 30. An Army chaplain
officiated with a double ring cere-
mony.
The bride was iven in marriage
by her brother, Ivan L. Block of
Plainview. She wore a tailored
powder blue suit with brown ac-
cessories and a corsage of pink
rosebuds. Mrs. Block served as
matron of honor. She wore a
brown suit with matching access-
ories and a corsage of salmon pink
rosebuds.
Capt. David L. Hilliam served as
best man. '
Mrs. Barnes wore a black tailor-
ed suit with black accessories. A
white gardenia and red rosebuds
formed her corsage. .
Mrs. Rogers attended White
Deer Schools, is a graduate of the
Pampa High School and Colorado
Women’s College. She also attend-
ed Dickinson Secretarial School
and has been emiu^—d fbiv the Bay
Oil Company in Denver. In college
she was a member of Beta Sigma
Phi sorority. , . , .
he-J lYtjeeiost etaom etaom etaoi
Captain Rogers received his
master’s degree from the Univer-
sity of Illinois. He is a member ot
the Fighting Nineteenth Bombard-
ment Group which Avon recognition
for meritorious achievement m
bomber combat missions over Eu-
rope during the past 18 months.
The couple will live at Alamo-
gorda, New Mex.__
DANES BOW UP GERMANS
When the Danish Admiral Ve-
del had given his order that the
fleet Avas to be either scuttled o
sailed to Sweden, a detachment of
German marines succeeded m get-
+ino- on board the Danish naval
ship “Ingolf.” The German com-
mander demanded 10 hostages as
guarantee that the ship Avould no.
be blown up or scuttled. The cap-
tain of the “Ingolf’ said, lean
not prevent you from taking —
hostages but I must call y°ur
tention to the fact that the sea-
cocks are already open. The Ge
■mans put their ten hostages in. a
row beta on the deck, when sud-
denly a signal sounded, the whole
Danish crew, hostages and all,
-jumped overboard, and deafening
'explosions shoo kthe ship Many
of the Germans Avere killed oi
wounded, but all the Danes escap-
ed This report came from the
.Stockholm newspaper, Dagens Ny-
GERMANS KILL
ITALIAN MULES
An American division in the
Italian mountains became the envy
-of others when it -received 300
large mules to padk supplies and
ammunition. As soon as the Ger-
mans realized that American in-
fantrymen Avere using the animals,
They began a systemtic slaughter
of all Itailian mules they could
find.____
SANTA CLAUS WITH
AN AMERICAN ACCENT
Members of the Eighth Army
Air Force in England have opened
a hobby shop. Here the boys spend
their spare time making toys for
English children—model tanks,_ fire
trucks, cradles, tommy-guns, little
wooden locomotives, racing auto-
mobiles, with real Avindshields. The
boys go to the schools m poorer
■districts and ask the teacher winch
children need things and what they
most. The boys set a goal
For Sale: W2 b. p. electric mo-
or-, 1*4 b. p. electric motor; one
asoline washing machine motor;
ne 30 lb air direct compressor,
nquire for H. C. Simmons at the
Vhite Deer Review office.
■Subscribe Tor The REVIEW!
Marines Take Over
U. S. Marine Corps Photo
Two U. S. Marines investigate the interior of a captured Jap dugout
near Munda Point on New Georgia Island after it had been blasted
with dynamite by attacking Leathernecks. Pfc. Richard T. Coffey
of Detroit, left, has a Jap Luger pistol and Pfc. Alanson W. Brown
of Pearsall, Tex., holds a Jap mortar shell.
Process 1,100 Acre Bean Crop
LAKE MILLS of 1943,
-old Mrs. Augusta
vith one great-grandson
1 grandsons in the Navy,
.1 of Lake Mills, Wise,
ity of 2,000 citizens who
dir housework, closed
Ail and bank and went
in the Libby cannery to1
rvest and process one-
Wisconsin’s production
beans.
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS and housewives worked side by side in the
cannery in response to an appeal for workers made by S. C. Sorenson,
manager of the Libby cannery. As a result of volunteers, no aid was
needed from the U. S. Employment Service or nearby Army camps.
EDNA URBANCZYK AND
STAFF-SGT. REINART WED
HEREFORD, Nov. 9.—-Miss Ed-
na Urbanczyk, daughter of .Mr
and Mrs. Felix Urbanczyk, Avas
married to 'Staff Sgt. Arhart H.
Reinart, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Reinart, in a ceremony performed
Oct. 28 at St. Anthony Catholic
Church in ereford The ceremony
was read by Rev. Albert Heald.
Rev. James S&lvi played the wed-
ding music. Miss Adeline Koelzer
sang “Ave Mario,” by A. H.
RoseAvig, and the Choir sang Mass
in Honor of the Blessed Sacriment.
Miss Rosaline Urbanczyk Avas
her sister’s maid of honor, and
bridesmaids Avere Miss Ethel Ur-
Ibanczyk and Miss Helen Reinart.
The bridegroom Avas attended by
his brother, Cpl. Elmer Reinart.
Mrs. Reinart is a graduate of
Hereford High School and attend-
St. Mary’s Academy in Amarillo.
Sergeant Reinart was employed
at a Hereford lumber yard before
his induction into the army. He
is stationed at Luke Field, Ariz.
RAISE HAMBURGER
POINT VALUE
The ration point value of ham-
burger (has been increased from
seven to eight pointls per pound.
OPA has also (broadened it defini-
tion to include additional meatier
eats of the lower grades of beef.
V-MAIL CHRISTMAS
PRESENTS BEFORE DEC. 1
Relatives and friends still have
time to send men and women over-
seas V-Mail notices of Avar 'bond
gifts for Christmas. The Army
Postal Service has assured deliv-
ery by Dec. 25 of all V-Mail no-
tices sent before Dec. 1. War bonds
as Christmas ifts will help to hold
doAvn inflationary buying of scarce
merchandise, and will be a finan-
cial cushion for the service man or
woman upon return to civilian life,
the Treasury Department added.
INCREASE CIVILIAN
FOOD SUPPLY
More peas, beans, rice and Ched-
dar cheese are going to be avail-
able for civilian consumption. Sup-
plies have been increased by the
removal or reduction of govern-
ment set-aside orders. Present con-
ditions indicate there will be
enouhgh dry beans to provide 10.4
,pounds per capita for civilian con-
sumption in the 1943-44 marketing
season,compare d with 8.6 pounds
in 1942-43.
Fred Urbanczyk is home on fur-
lough for a v*s;t with homefolks.
James Jackson has returned to
damp after a visit here with his
wife and daughter.
She Pilots a Tug on “Road to Tokyo
Mrs. Fred Macniski takes her trick
at the helm of her husband’s tug
during the transfer of supplies.
mv
m
■^TfOMEN are playing an impor-
Tt tant part in America and Can-
ada’s joint undertaking of getting
oil to the United Nations war ma-
chine so that it will roll smoothly
I along the “road to Tokyo.”
1 Following the building of the Alas-
kan Highway, one of the greatest
engineering feats of World War II,
j Americans and Canadians have
i joined forces again to lay 550 miles
| of pipe line through the Avilderness
of the Canadian North West from
the huge underground lake of
petroleum in the Mackenzie basin
at Fort Norman to the Whitehorse
I region in the Yukon.
Here the oil will keep the trucks
running along the Alaska Highway
and supply the planes and ships off
the Alaska shore.
The huge undertaking required
the transportation of pipe and sup-
plies more than a 1000 miles
through the vastness of the Cana-
dian North West.
CAN OPENERS STILL
HAVE PLENTY TO DO
IN COUNTY KITCHENS
Rationing has not emptied the
shelves of Carson County residents
of canned foods it was revealed to-
day. a total of 44,712 cans being
used monthly, according to A. H.
Nugent, general sales manager of
the American Can Company.
Mr. (Nugent biased his figures on
the government’s compilation of
6;624 ration book holders in the
county and the statement that the
per capita consumption of canned
goods so far this year is .225 cans
a day. On the basis of the average
size pre-war can, approximately
108 pounds of pure metalic tin is
reclaimable for the war effort from
the cans, he explained.
Men in service eat 8,000,000 cans
of food a day and millions of
pounds of canned items are being
shipped abroad for lend lease, he
said.
Many foods strange to Ameri-
can palates are being packed in
cans for overseas. One of these is
“Tushonka” for Russian con-
sumption, this product being high-
ly seasoned pork packed in lard.
Squid, a variety of octopus, is be-
ing canned for Italian consump-
tion. Canned foods for England
usually seasoned quite differently
to those intended for American
use, Mr. Nugent said.
REDUCE OCTANE IN GAS
Premium gasoline used by civil-
ians will be reduced from 78 and
80-octane to 76 octane to conserve:
tetraethyl lead and volatile gaso-
line. tetraethyl lead and volatile
line fractions, both of which are
required in the manufacture ^ of
high-octane military gasoline.
More than 50 million* gallons of
aasoline, fuel oils, lubricants, and
other petroleum products are go-
ing directly to the fighting forces
every day, the Petroleum Adminis-
tration for War disclosed. One-
third of all gasoline produced in
the U. S. is noAV required for mili-
tary purposes.
CUT NEW CAR QUOTA
Only 20,600 neAV passenger auto-
mobiles have been released for ra-
tioning during November, OPA has
announced. This is the loAvest fig-
ure since rationing began and rep-
resents a reduction of nearly 35
percent from the October quota of
30,800. •__
RAISE LIMIT ON
FARM CONSTRUCTION
The limit on farm construction,
includin residential, has been plac-
ed at $1,000 under a revision of
Order L-41 by WPB. Previously,
there vyere separate limits, farm
residences not being considered a
MILLIONS SIGN
HOME FRONT PLEDGE
More than 12 million pledges
have been signed, during OPA’s
Home Front Pledge Campaign—
The Citizen’s Battle to Kill Black
Markets and Hold the Line A-
gainst Higher Prices. In Minne-
sota, so many signed the pledge
that the district OPA office ran
out of forms, and had to stipulate
that one member sign for the en-
tire family. When the supply ran
low in Evansville, Ind., neAvspa-
pers printed the pledge so the cam-
paign could carry on. Similarily,
in West Virginia, 1,030,00 pledge
scrolls Avere printed without
charge to relieve a shortage. NeAvs-
papers in Sian Francisco and We-
natchee, Wash., likewise printed
the pledge form.
PLANE PRODUCTION
REACHES NEW HIGH
Production of all types of air-
craft reached a neAV high of 8,362
planes in October, including the
largest number of heavy bombers
ever produced in a single month,
it was announced recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Hopins and
children of Amarillo visited in the
home of P. D. McBride and fam-
ily, Sundaiy evening.
HINTS FOR HOMEMAKERS
By Elsie Cunningham
Carson Co. Home Demonstration
Agent, Extension Serivee, A&M
Perhaps you are one of the many
homemakers who did. not get to
put up as many cucumber pickles
a syour family can use while the
eucin‘li ers Avere in season. Or you
may be one of the many Victory
Gardeners Avho have lots of green
tomatoes on hand for Avhich you
have found no use.
Why not wrap some of these
green tomatoes in neAvspaper and
store them in a cool place such as
the cellar ? When you need ripe
tomatoes for salads put a few out
in the kitchen AvindoAV to ripen. I
in the kitchen windoAV to ripen. I
have kept tomatoes this Avay until
after Christmas.
INoav for a green tomato pickle
recipe which I think you will like.
Over Night Green Tomato Pickle
Six quarts gee ntomatoes, wash-
ed and sliced thick, 1-2 cup salt, 6
small onions sliced, 3 cups white
sugar, cider vinegar to cover, 2
tablespoons Av'hole cloves, 2 table-
spoons Avhole allspice, and 2 hot
red peppers chopped. Or use 2
tablespoons mixed pickling spice.
Stprinkle salt over sliced tomatoes
and let stand overnight. Drain pff
juice. Put tomatoes in a kettle Avith
other ingredients, having spices
tied in cheesecloth bag. Cover with
cider vinegar. Bring just to scald-
ing and simlmer until the tomatoes
tare just tender. Remove bag of
spices. Pafck hot in hot setrilized
White Deer Coach Tyson Cox
led his rolicking Bucks to a Avell-
earned Armstice Day victory over
the higher rated Phillips Black
HaAvks when the visitors Avent
doAvn on the short end of the score
12 to 2.
After suffering a defeat in a
conference game Avith Canadian, it
was generality conceded that the
undefeated, strong Phillips team
from the rubber center town would
be more than a match for our team,
(but the forecasts did not dim the
spirit of the game Bucks, and from
the start until the final AA’histle,
fonght every inch of the gridiron
until victory Avas theirs.
Coaches Waler and Forbes have
a fine team and all declare yester-
terday’s game the best game seejt
on anybody’s football field this
season.
The line-np of the two teams
Avas as folloAVs.
WHITE DEER PHILLIPS
Hester LE Barger
West LT Witt
Lopez LC Bradea
Weaver C Williams
Haiduk RG Davis
Wall RT St. Clair
Clements RE Hopper
Page QB Baldwin
Murphy FB Cook
Panley HB Delameter
Urbanczyk HB Bain
Score: White Deer 12; Phillips
2.
PTA MEETING IS
POSTPONED A WEEK
The Parent-Teachers Asociation
meeting Avhich Avas to have been
held Monday, Nov. 15 has been
postponed until Monday, Nov. 22,
due to a progam conflict, according
to announcement made by Mrs. F.
Evans, the president.
CONWAY OFFICER
IS PROMOTED
(Melvin R. Callahan, son of Mr.
and Mrs. R. W. Calahan of Con-
way, this county, has been pro-
moted to the rank 0 fcaptain at
La Junta Army Air Field, where
he is purchasing agent and con-
tracting officer in the Quarter-
master Corps.
Captain Callahan and his wife
are living at Las Animas, near the
field. He is a 1942 graduate of
Texas A&M College.
A brother, Maj. Marrin Calla-
han is serving with the Army Air
Forces. The Callahans came tp
Carson County from Collin County
many years, ago.
ODT ASKS FOR BAN
ON HOLIDAY TRAVEL
The Office of Defense Transpor-
tation has requested all govern-
ment agences and private employ-
ers to deny holiday vacation leav-
es to employes, where travel is in-
Arolved, from Dec. 17 through Jan.
10.
Joseph B. Eastman, ODT direc-
tor, also urged rigid curtailment
of business travel which con be
deferred -without, impairing the
war effort.
Maximum curtailment of civil-
ian travel is needed, Eastman said,
to prevent interference Avith the
orderly movement, of military per-
sonel on furlough' during the holi-
days
PLENTY OF TURKEYS
The civilian supply, just start-
ing to come on the maret, will be
almost as large as last year, ac-
cording to the Department of Ag-
riculture However, this year’s de-
mand Avill probalblv (be much larger
and shoppers will be wise to put in
orders early. Men and Avomen on
duty in the American forces, at
home and abroad, will be served a
pound of turkey at dinner Thanks-
giving Day and Avil have all the
traditional ‘1 fixin’s. ’ ’
W. S. C. C. MEET AT CHURCH
The Womans Society of Chris-
tian Service met at the Methodist
Church Mond&y, Avith devotional
by Mrs. Wheetley and prayer led
by Rev. D. R. Davidson, Avho also'
reported on an item from ‘ * Metho-
dist Woman.
Mrs. Wheetley gave an interest-
ing article on the World Outlook.
Mrs. Davidson gave the second
chapter from the Mission Book.
The week of Prayer Offering is
still coming on. Mrs. Harsh dis-
missed with prayer.
Those present were: Mmes. D.
Davidson, Langham, Thompson,
Fleming, Beu, Darnell, Barnett,
Wheetley and Harsh, and one vis-
itor, Mrs. F. L. Lewis.
Cow, branded OM on right side,
strayed from my place. Usual re-
ward offered for information.
BOB MARTIN
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Simmons, W. W. White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, November 12, 1943, newspaper, November 12, 1943; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1159034/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=270: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carson County Library.