White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1944 Page: 4 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, MJAY 5, 1944
WHITE DEER REVIEW, White Deer, Carson County, Texas
OFFICERS OF THE PANHAND LE HIGH SCHOOL
PRESS ASSOCIATION FOR 1944 - 45 i
Phyllis SihUman, White Deer, president; Jean La Roe, Happy, vice-
president; [Naomi Brumley, Hereford, secretary; and Ellen Sanders,
Canyon, Treasurer.
Willie Urbanczyk Avon first place
on his sport sitory in the annual
contests sponsored by the Panhan-
dle High Sdhool Press Association,
of which Phylis Shuman is presi-
dent for the neAv year.
Entries in the contest this year
were submitted by only six of the
26 member schools. White Deer
won first place on sports story;
Amarillo, first, on advertisement,
editorial, column, and sports col-
umn; Canyon, first, on news story;
and Pampa, first, on feature story.
Other schools entered were Lub-
bock and Happy.
Eadh. year plaques are awarded
the first place winners in the seven
contests, and White Deer students
have won one plaque each year
since such awards have been offer-
ed. In 1940 Bill Hawkins Avon the
award on his sports story the next
year George Davis received the
plaque for sports column. In 1942,
Billie Ruth McDowell took honors
on her editorial; and in ’43, Ches-
ter Williams received the same a-
Avard. Willie Urbanczyk is keeping
up the tradition this year.
RATION REMINDER
Meats, Fats—Red stamps A-8
through Q8 are good indefinitely.
Waste kitchen fats exchanged for
two points and four cents a lb.
Processed Fruits, Vegetables—
good indefinitely.
Sugar stamps 30 and 31 in bonk
IV are good indefinitely for 5 lbs.
Stamp No. 40 in Book IV is good
for 5 pounds of canning sugar
through Feb. 28, 1945.
Gasoline—In the Southwest, A-
11 coupons are good through June
21.
Shoes—Airplane stamps Nos. 1
and 2 in book III are good indefi-
nitely.
ORDER CANCELED
BUSINESS AIDE
If, people would whistle more
and while less,
Hustle more and ihioller less,
Work more and Avorry less,
Boost more and knock less,
Give more and grab-less,
Business Avould get better, Fasti
LUMBER INDUSTRY
NEEDS MORE MEN
More than 60,000 mien are need-
ed for lumbering and pulpAVOod
jobs before next fall if 1944 re-
quirements are to be met, accord-
ing to a statement from the War
ManpoAver Commission. Efforts
will he made to switch labor to the
Avoods as the harvest season closes
and to recruit other 'seasonal la-
borers. Lumber stock is at an all-
time Ioav and the estimated 1944
minimum requirements of 35,500,-
000,000 board feet must be met al-
most entirely from the 1944 out-
put.
BUTTER POINT VALUE
REDUCED 4 POINTS
Methodist Church
Don Davidson, Pastor
10:00 a. m. Church school.
10:55 a. m. Morning Avorship.
7:15 p. m. League service.
8:00 p. m. Evening preaching
service.
Church of Christ
W. H. FIKE, Minister
Sunday school 10 a. m.
Preaching at 11 a. m
Sacred Heart Church
Rev. Peter Morsdh, pastor
Mass and Benediction even7
Sunday at 10 a. m. No^ena service
Fridays 7:30 p. m. Children’s in-
struction, Saturdays, 2 p. m.
Baptist Church
J. W. Hardin, pastor
Tractor Riding
“Grandma” Praises
War Bond League
Mrs. K. C. Henkle of Kenton, Ohio,
does more than her share of war
work. She and her husband run
two farms at maximum production
and with almost no outside help. In
addition, Mrs. Henkle is chairman
in her township for War Bond sales,
for the Red Cross and for the com-
bined scrap paper and grease sal-
vage campaign. She is also a writer
and has composed poems for War
Bond and Red Cross programs over
Stations WMRN, Marion, ^nd WLW,
Cincinnati.
Mrs. Henkle, who has an Army
son, a Navy son, and an Army son-
in-law, enthusiastically endorses
Mrs. George C. Marshall’s appeal
to grandmothers to buy Bonds for
Starlets Collect Waste Paper
Prayer service 9:45 a. m.
Sunday School 10 :00 a. m.
Morning worship 11:00 a. m.
Training Union 7:30 p. m.
Evening Avorship 8 :15 p. m.
MARINES MAY BE TOLD
OF FAMILY ILLNESSES
A Scotchman Avho had ordered
some meat from the butcher for
his cat, came rushing in later to
cancel the order. '
“What’s the matter?” asked
the butcher. “Last your cat?”
“No,” answered Sandy, “but
he has just caught; a mouse. ’ ’
THESE WOMEN!
Sgt.—Hoav is it you don’t like
the girls?
Pvt.—They’re too biased.
Sgt.—Biased? What do you
mean ?
Pvt.—It’s Ibias this and bias
that until I’m broke.
Your Business
Appreciated
Barnett Elevator Go.
J. A. BARNETT, Owner
PHONE 49
Surmounting the Capi-
tol Dome at Washing-
ton stands Crawford’s
bronze statue of Free-
dom, symbol of the
freedom and liberty our
government has guar-
anteed to immigrant
and native citizen alike,
since the founding of
the Republic.
Homs of Freedom
Keep America Free;
Bap War Bonds
In the capitals of con-
quered Europe freedom
and liberty are hollow,
mocking words
mouthed by jackal pup-
ts like Mussert, Quis-
Laval, Degrelle
aural.
petsi
ling,
or L;
The ration point! value of cream-
ery butter has been reduced' from
16 to 12 red points and on country
butter from 12 to 8 points. Mar-
garine has been loAvered from six
to 2 points, per pound. The neAV
values are effective through June
3, 1944. This reduction Avas made
possible by seiasonally increased
production.
ROUND-UP
Civilians have been allocated
120,000,000 pounds of Cheddar
cheese for the quarter ending in
June, WFA says ... OP A an-
nounces that 10,000 neAv passenger
automobiles and 12,000 neAA7: ad-
ult’s bicycles will be available for
eligible applicants in May. . . More
than 41000 Avives and infants Avere
given medical and hospital care in
March under the emergency ma-
ternity and infant-care program,
according to the Department of
.’Lalbor. . . There Avas no net change
in the average cost of living es-
sentials betAveen Feb. 15 and Mar.
15 because loAver food prices bal-
anced higher costs of spring dott-
ing, houshold equipment, and ser-
vices, the Labor Department re-
ports . . . According to WFA, of
am estimated 4,000,000 extra farm
Avorkers needed this year, it is ex-
pested that about 1,200,000 will be
hoys and girls under 18 years of
age and about 800,000 will be avo-
Families of U. S. Marines over-
seas now may include births or
even urgent business matters in
messages Avhich Marine Corps
headquarters Avill transmit abroad
by radio, it has been announced.
In making public the more gen-
erous policy of handling personal
messages for Marines overseas
from their families in the States,
it Avas pointed out that the mes-
sages must be concerned Avith the
Avelfare of the immediate family.
The overseas service may he ob-
tained hv filing 'messages at any
Red Cross chapter, or by sending
them direct to Marine Corp Head-
quarters:, Washington. It was
stressed, hovrever, that messages
must Ibe confined to matters of a
definite emergency nature.
For exampe, should the mother
or.sister of a Marine wbo is over-
seas become dangerously ill, the
family might adA7ise the Marine of
her .state bv filing a message to
him Avith the Red Cross or Avith
Marine Corps Headquarters at
Washington. The message should
be addressed- the same us his let-
ters are addressed.
TO REDUCE HOG PRICES
Ceilimg prices on hogs Avteighing
more than 240 pounds live Aveight
will be reduced 75 cents per hun-
dredAveight on and after May 15,
1944, the OpA said. The action is
designed to .discourage the iise of
corn and other essential grains in
bringing hogs up to heavy, un-
economical Aveigbtls.
SOME VEGETABLES
NOW POINT-FREE
% ■ •
JfSS
ii..... --v, i!
? * ~ *
J V f Lri, '<v 7 ®
*&&**'**
Mrs. K. C. Henkle
their grandchildren. She herself
takes turns buying Bonds for her
five grandchildren ranging in age
from 4 months to 11 years. “Those
Bonds,” she says, “will help edu-
cate the children and set them up
in businesses and farms ten happy
years from now.”
The Grandmothers League was
founded by General Marshall’s wife
and has been widely accepted as a
worthy and unselfish Bond-buying
drive.
Roddy McDowall and Margaret O’Brien, brilliant young M-G-M
starlets, are giving some of their precious time between picture
“takes” to help overcome the nation’s serious waste paper shortage.
Collecting waste paper is everybody’s job. As invasion day draws
nearer and nearer, the demand for this strategic material has grown
far beyond the supply on hand. This need must be met. Eighty-one
tons of supplies, mostly wrapped in PAPER, are required every
month to maintain each fighting man overseas. Start saving now.
Our boys are depending on you!
death for oud oavu boys.
Waste paper collections are now
25% Ibelorwi essential military and
civilian requirements, Mr. Faust
said, causing curtailed production
of vital Avar supplies.
MORE CANNING SUGAR
MAY BE SECURED
U. S. WAR PLANTS NEED I
OLD BOOKS, MAGAZINES 1
Tomatoes, corn, asparagus, beets
leafy greens, spinach, blackeye
[peas, and garbanzo beans have
been added to the point-free list of
processed foods through June 30.
Points have been reduced on spa-
ghetti sauce; soups, grape and to-
mato jams and preserves; apple,
grape, mint and plum jellies; ba-
kers’ jellies and fruit butters.
Reductions Avere made to move out
last year’s stocks before neAV sup-
plies are available in great A7olume.
A preacher stopped at a fish
miarket and said to the clerk:
‘1 Throw me a dozen of those best
mackerel—one by one, high and
£ cist * ^
“What on earth for?” asked
the astonished clerk.
“I’ve got to say I caught them
and I can’t lie about it.”
Space, amounting to nearly five
million cargo pounds, was released
in about a year and a half by the
200 million V-Mail letters sent
overseas—enough space to trans-
port 32,876 men overseas, the Ar-
my and Navy report.
BABY CHICKS AND STARTED
CHICKS. 20,000 Weekly. Blood-
tested stock. Immediately delivery
on all popular breeds.
CLARENDON HATCHERY
Clarendon, Texas
FIGHT
Millions of old books and maga-
zines lying unused in American
homes, libraries and offices are
urgently needed now as raAV ma-
terial for thousands of essential
items of Aval7, it was announced to-
day by Herbert M. Faust, director
of the Salvage Division of the
War Production Board.
“Waste paper is the nation’s
most critical Avar material,” Mr.
Faust said. “It-is as important as
powder since more than 700,000
military items are either made of
Avaste paper products or are paper
Avrapped for shipment overseas.
“The increasingly critical and
would be relieved immeasurably if
Ave threw into the fight all of the
Useless old books and magazines,
of no interest to servicemen, now
gathering dust on our bookshelves
or lying untouched in our attics,
closets and cellars.”
Mr. Faust said since the average
book Avieghs abont a pound, >tie
unused book Avill make tAvo con-
tainers for life-saving plasma, six
cartons for the U. S. Army emer-
gency “K” rations, ten paper-
board boxes for 50 cal. bullets,
thirty containers for lifeboat in-
flation cartridges or scores of oth-
er military items that may mean
the difference betAveen life and
The main features of the 1944
Canning Sugar Program has been
l’eceived in the Local Price & Ra-
tioning Board, office.
Sugar Stamp No. 40 in War
Ration Book 4 has been validated
for five pounds of sugar and good
through Feb. 28,1945. For any
sugar over and above this, stamp
application must be made to the
Board on Form R-323 and Spare
Stamp No. 37 out of Book 4 must
be attached for each individual
covered by the application, Appli-
cation must be made# for five (5)
pounds of sugar or multiples
thereof up to a maximum alloAv-
ance of tAventy (20) pounds per
person OArer and above stamp No.
4. This is necessaryby reason of
the fact that Sugar Allowance
Coupons, Form R-325, are five (5)
pounds. The restriction is with-
draAvn on the amount of sugar
that may Ibe used for jams, jellies,
preserves and fruit butters. More
than one 'application may be made
during the year for home canning
sugar, but the issuance cannot ex-
ceed twenty (20) pounds per per-
son. In this connection the supply
of sugar is quite short and it is
imperative that the amount issued
for home canning purposes he
sharply reduced from that issued
last year. As a result of this,
Washington has suggested that
j the first issuance of home canning
sugar not exceed ten pounds per
person and then specific evidence
presented for the needs of any
future alloAvaiuce.
I The Local Board Avill receive
j applications either by mail or in
| person, Monday through Saturday.
Prof: Conjugate the verb; swim.
'Student: SKviUi, swam, swum.
Prof: Noav congugate the verb,
‘1 dim. ” .
Student: Say, are you Lying to
kid me?
“Joe, you carry the baby and
let me have the eggs. You might
drop them.”
Subscribe for The REVIEW I
Choice Meats and
Other Select Eats
Add to Good Health
We’ll Appreciate Your Business
WAR BONDS
Skaggs
Grocery & Market
—another chance to help
MARXETS
MAKE THIS PLEDGE:
1 Will pay do mare than Top legal Prices
UflllteceptMntiMrifDofc
irtMiMvaMto&M'*'
----------..
Paper board
urgently needed to
pack blood plasma
How does your blood plasma get to tfce
front to save a life?—It’s packed in
heavy paper cartons for safe shipping.
That’s why waste paper is vitally
needed. It’s our No. 1 war material
shortage today.
You’ve done a patriotic job in giv?
ing your blood. Here’s another way
you can help. Save all waste paper—
and especially the hea’vy kinds such
as old boxes, corrugated paper, bags
and brown wrappings. Bundle all your
waste paper—turn it all in to save
lives by shortening the war.
SAVE WASTE PAPER
y. f• VICTORY WASH PAM« CAMPAIGN
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Simmons, W. W. White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1944, newspaper, May 5, 1944; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1159388/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carson County Library.