White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, September 22, 1944 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Carson County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Carson County Library.
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^FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1944
WHITE DEER REVIEW, White Deer, Carson County, Texas
Revival in Marshall Islands
KEEP THOSE TIRE
INSPECTION RECORDS
U. S. Marine Corps Photos
Old-fashioned revival meet-
ings are available to men sta-
tioned on one of the Marshall
Islands atolls, as proclaimed
by the big canvas sign
stretched between two coconut
palms (lower photo). Services
are conducted by an ordained
Baptist minister, Marine Corp.
Leslie Watson of Linden, Tex.,
extreme left above. Assisting,
left to right, are SC 3c Silas
H. Jones, USNR., of Festus,
Mo.; Marine Pfc. Lester M.
York of Hollister, Cal., and
AMM 2c Robert P. Chariton,
USNR, of Pueblo, Colo.'
HINTS TO HOME-MAKERS
By Elsie Cunningham
Carson Co. Home Demonstration
Agent, Extension Serivce, A&M
Early frosts will leave thousands
of Victory gardeners with bushels
of gren tomatoes on their hands.
Some will ripen on the window
sill, but many will rot and go K
waste—a serious loss to the na-
tion’s food supply. Turning them
into spicy relishes is a good, and
easy, way to keep green tomatoes
for eating during the winter.
Green tomatoes are as good a
source of vitamin C as ripened
ones, and this nutritional value is
retained well when they are made
into relishes.
Recipes for chow-chow, picca-
lilli, and green tomato mincemeat
are given this week to help you in
putting up some of those green
tomatoes.
Chow-chow
1 gallon chopped cabbage
12 onions, 12 green peppers
12 red peppers
2 qts. chopped green tomatoes
5 cups of sugar
4 tablespoons ground mustard
1 tablespoon turmeric
4 tablespoons mustard seed
3 tablespoons celery seed
. 1 tablespoon ground ginger
; 2 tablespoons mixed whole spice
1 gallon vinegar
Chop onions and peppers. Mix
all vegetables with 1-2 cup salt.
Let stand over night. Drain. Tie
mixed spices in bag. Add all other
ingredients and simmer until hot
and well-seasoned. Remove spice
bag. Pack hot chow-chow into hot
jars and seal at once.
Piccalilli
1 gallon green tomatoes
1 head cabbage
3 sweet peppers, 2 large onions
1-2 cup salt
1 cup brown sugar
2 tablespoons mustard seed
1 tablespoon celery seed
1 tablespoon horseradish
1 quart vinegar
Chop and mix vegetables with
salt. Let. stand overnight. Drain.
Mix sugar, seasoning, and vinegar.
IBoil 1 minute. Add vegeables.
Heat to (boiling. Pack into hot jars | ters.
and seal at once.
Keep those tire inspection rec-
ords until you get your new mile-
age rationing record form along
with your new “A” book, OP A
says. Since discontinuance of per-
iodic tire inspection last April,
tire inspection records have been
kept primarily as a record of gas-
oline rations issued each automo-
bile, and will no longer be neces-
sary when the form is issued. In
this area the new “A” book will
go into use Sept. 22.
During the past four years, more
than 13,300,000 men and women
enrolled in organized training- pro-
grams for war jobs. The training
was provided by agencies coopera-
ting with the War Manpower Com-
mission Bureau of Training. Of
this vast group, the food produc-
tion war training program, con-
ducted through vocational agricul-
ture schools had 3,035,566 enroll-
ments. The engineering, science
and management war trading pro-
gram. given in selected colleges,
had 1,558,123 enrollments. The
training within industry program
enrolled 1,375,767 supervisors who,
in turn, provided instruction for
millions of war pant workers.
Every veteran, upon being dis-
charged, will receive a booklet en-
titled “Your Rights and Benefits,
A Handy Guide for Veterans of
the Armed Forces and Their De-
pendents. ’ ’ The booklet Avas pre-
pared by the retraining and re-
emlpoyment administration of the
Office of War Mobilization. Near-
ly 2,500,000 copies of the booklet
noAv available. Veterans who
“We are still critically short of
manpower in the neighborhood of
plants making heavy guns and am-
munition, bombs, radar equipment,
trucks, construction' equipment,
tires and tentage fabric,” James
F. Bymes, director of War Mobil-
ization, declared in connection
Avith a directive providing for the
shutting off of materials, fuel,
poAver and services necessary to
to turn production facilities to the
making of these emergency war
materials. “We are going to han-
dle the problem in the area where,
plants are located,” he stated.
“We have placed responsibility on
the area officials to take all nec-
essary steps to free from civilian
and less essential industries, men
possessing tlhe skills required to
produce war goods.” Wherever
local committees in charge of the
problem have excess manpoAVer
“they must accept a quota for re-
cruiting in order to meet the needs
of other crtical areas,” he ex-
plained.
When V-Mail is used, two trans-
port planes can do the work of
100 similar planes carrying the
same number of standard and air-
mail letters, the Array and Navy
said.
Waste Paper Keeps Supplies Rolling
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(Press Associates, Inc.)
The job of moving up vital supplies to strategic places goes on at a
furious pace to support the greatest Invasion in history. Here troops
are using a roller carrier to speed up the task. 709,000 items, from
pins to tanks, are shipped overseas in PAPER. With Invasion here,
the ne,ed for Avaste paper grows more critical. How about it? Are
you doing your share? W^ste paper will help hasten the day wheit
our men will come marching home victorious and safe!
have already been discharged will
be able to obtain copies from draft
boards and othe rinfomation een-
Green Tomato Mincemeat
4 qts. sliced green tomatoes
2 qts pared, sliced tart apples
1-2 lb. currants
4 tablespoons of cinnamon
4 tablespoons citron minced
1-2 tsp. allspice
1-2 lb. seeded raisins
5c. broAvn sugar
2 cups vinegar
2 cups Avater or more later and
less vinegar if the latter is very
acid.
Chop the tomatoes and the ap-
ple fine. Add the other ingredients
and boil the mixture slowly unti
the tomatoes are tender and the
mincemeat is thick and not wat-
ery. Stir it occasionally to prevent
'burning. If desired, this m'ay be
sealed in scalded jars for later
use. The quantities given in this
quarts of mincemeat.
SHOE RATIONING
STILL WITH US
By using a specially designed
Army Ordnance labor-saving de-
vice, a woman worker can now_ re-
move the barrel from the receiver
of a Springfield rifle—an opera-
tion formerly requiring a man of
great strength.
We will appreciate your reneAval
M this time. Why not send the
Review to that boy in the service?
Indicative of the tremendous
strides made in motorizing our
armed forces, the Ordnance De-
partment, Army Service Forces,
today provides a motor vehicle for
every nine men, 'Compared (with
one for everv 90 men in World
War I.
Do It Yourself-at Home
Ch/m-Kml
PERMANENT WAVE Kll
* Complete with curlers,
shampoo and wavelet, *M*3y
■far Charm-Kurl. Over 6 million sold.
White eerD Drug Company
Recommended to do just two things:
relieve constipation and gas on trie
stomach.
This successful prescription is now put
up under the name of ADLERIKA.
Get a bottle of Adlerika next time
you stop at your druggist’s and see
for yourself how quickly gas is re-
lieved and gentle but thorough bowel
action follows. Good for old and young.
Get AVerika from your druggist today.
White Deer Drug Co.
Civilians cannot hope for an
early end of shoe rationing, WPB
says, unless imports of hides in-
crease or unless there is a large
cutback in military orders. Hide
shortages continue in spite of a
large domestic kills of cows^ and
calves. Heavy civilian and .military
consumption and decreased imports
account for the shortages.
“Bravery alone is not enough
to Avin battles,” declared General
of the Marine Corps in urging
youths of pre-military age to re-
return to high school this fall
A. A. Vandergrift, Commandant
“To have bravery Avithout knoAV-
ledge is to be oniy half prepared.
If you have been employed in tlhe
factory or on the farm this sum-
mer, you dbould plan to go back
to high school this fall. We in the
Marine Corps feel you can best
serve your nation and your felloAv
men at school, iioav building the
sound mind n the sound body.
CHRISTMAS MAILING MONTH
DATES SEPT. 15 TO OCT 15
Kerosene use on the home front
must be reduced whereevr possible
this year because of the trmendous
and increasing consumption of
kerosene in vital Avar fuels. Diesel
engines use a fuel a portion of
which has been diverted fro in the
manufacutre of kerosene. Diesel
fuel oil, made of approximately
one-third kerosene fractions, pow-
ers bulldozers, Diesel trucks, cat-
erpillar tractors, construction ma-
cjhinery, dock and yard locomo-
tives, every American submarine
and nearly 100,000 invasion barges.
In repulsing a German counter-
attack at San Pietro, Sgt. Dudley
Henry of Wae, fired betAveen 800
and 1,000 rounds from his Army
Ordnance 60-mm. mortar in one
evening.
Farm operating loans have been
made to several hundred honorably
discharged service men Avho had
no other source of credit to finance
food production, the Department
of Agriculture announces. These
Federal Security Administration
Loans are enabling veterans of the
present Avar to lease or buy farm
land and to obtain all the neces-
sary equipment and facilities need-
ed to start their farm operations.
Not a single V-Mail letter of
223 million sent overseas has been
lost, according to the Army and
Navy, emphasizing the fact that
V-Mail ahvays gets to men in com-
bat areas everyAvhere.
Army Ordnance depot workers
collect and use current magazines
to pack eetrain kinds of war e-
quipment . Thousands o 'fG. I.’s
overseas have been the recipients
of reading meterial delivered in
this ingenious manner.
To release transportation facili-
ties for essential Avar needs, 70 or-
30 organizations have drastically
ganizations—business, labor, relig-
ious, social, etc.,—have cancelled
their respective conventions, and
cut doAvn attendance at their con-
ventions.
Photo by TSgt. Louis Szartia
(Marine Corps Combat Photographer)
Symbolic of things to come is the shadow cast on the hag0
jap hag by Marine First Lieutenant Nathan 11. Smith of White
Haven, Pa. Seventeen fret long and eleven feet wide, tne jap
tanner is claimed to be the largest in captivity. Lieutenant Smith
is one ef three office-'". ■ ■ uncovered the flag in an abandonee,
"■n carns®n build'-'
BALDHEAD ROW
“I’m afraid my shortsighted-
ness 'will prevent me from doing
any actual fighting.”
“That’s all right, old man. We
have special trenches for the
shortsighted ones. Right close up
to the enemy-—you just can’t miss
seeing them..”
NOW OPEN!
SEWING MACHINE AND VACUUM
CLEANER REPAIR AND SERVICE
Hemstitching, button hole, covered buckles and buttons
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
COOPER SEWING MACHINE REPAIR
119 N. Frost PAMPA Phone 364
QUICK RELIEF FROM
Symptoms of Distress Arising from
STOMACH ULCERS
DUE TO EXCESS ACID
FreeBookTellsof HomeTreatmentthai
Must Help or it Will Cost You Nothing
Over two million bottles of the WILLARD
TREATMENT have been sold for rebel oi
symptoms of distress arising from Stomach
End Duodenal Ulcers due to Excess Accd-—
Poor Digestion, Sour or Upset Stomach,
Gassiness, Heartburn, Sleeplessness, etc.,
due to Excess Acid. Sold on 15 days trial I
Ask for “Willard’s Message” which full*
explains this treatment—tree—at
MILLER’S PHARMACY
Skellytown, Texa* _
Specializes in Probate, Admin-
istration o,f estates, Titles and
Taxation—Federal and State.
H. H. SMITH
Lawyer
Surratt Bldg.
Panhandle. Texas
Your Business
Appreciated
Barnett Elevator Co.
J. A. BARNETT, Owner
PHONE 49
****** **
* * *
J. M. HYDEN
Doctor of Optometry
106 W. 7th Street
Amarillo, Texas
Phone 7723
*** ** ****
* *
Sept. 15 to Oct. 15 has been
named Christmas Mailing Month
by the Army and: Navy, which this
year have 33,000 uniformed men
and women in their postal services
to handle an estimated 70 million
Christmas presents, three times as
many as last year. Packages mail-
ed during “Christmas Mailing
Month” should reach their desti-
nation by Christmas day. Packages
flhould weigh no more than five
pounds and have combined length,
width and depth of not more than
36 inches and not over 15 inches
in length. . „
Packages can not be mailed al-
ter Oct. 15 to men overseas unless
you present a written request from
the serviceman and then likely
would not reach him in time for
the holidays.
Perishable goods and inflam-
mable materials are prohibited.
Hard candies, fruit cake and choc-
olate bars should be enclosed in
inner boxes of wood, met! or card-
board. Sharp instruments, such as
razors and knives, must have their
edges and points protected.
One person can mail only one
parcel a week to the same member
of the armed forces.
Christmas packages should be
marked “Christmas parcel.” This
marking will cause the parcel to
receive delivery overseas, by Dec.
25. People who know their gif's
will have to go to distant points
should mail parcels the opening
day, Sept. 15.
He
J®%
m
iMmmi
MAKES
07&r
SHELL CONTAINERS
UJMfictory WASTE PAPER Campaign
’fOiO
Cafe Checks
piorvs in>■ lot oft
,spe<^ band\e Vie can
^Woks and P°WWY. lost
taodso^ ol une q* out
THE WHITE DEER REVIEW
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Simmons, W. W. White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, September 22, 1944, newspaper, September 22, 1944; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1159352/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carson County Library.