White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, September 1, 1944 Page: 2 of 4
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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1944
WHITE BEER REVIEW, White Deer, Carson County, Texas
EASIER FEED SITUATION
LOOKED FOR EN 1945
By C. W. Cottingame, Co. Agent
Indications are for an easier
feed situation in 1945 than in ’44.
Prom reports to the BAE corn
yields will be satisfactory for the
nation as a whole. This fact, to-
gether twlith reduced nuimjbers of
hogs on farms and good yields of
barley and oats, will make feed
grains easier to purchase during
the coming feeding season. How-
ever, cattle numbers are at an all
high, and it is indicated that there
will be little, if any, reduction in
the cattle nventory on dan. 1, as
compared to the sam • p-iiod last
year. Poultry numbers >vill likely
be a.t an all time high • Jan. 1.
Freight ear shortages will likely
make transportation difficulties
greater next pear than they were
this year. This means that feed
customers should begin laying in
the needed fed supplies if, as, and
when theycan behad . There will
very likeiy be nomaterial change
in the protein feed supplies in so
far as the amount per animal unit
is eonicerned for next year.
With these facts in mind farm--
ers should plan o get their wheat
seeded as early as possible so that
wheat pasture may be had if mois-
ture conditions are favorable.
WHEAT ACREAGE GOALS
vTexas wheat acreage goals for
1945 harvest have not been mater-
ially changed from last year. A
reduction of only 28,000 acres has
been announced, by WFA. The
goal for Texas is 4,600,000 acres
as compared to 4,628,000 acres for
las year. Texas A&M Extension
Servce is advising farmers to plant
small grains for winter pasture ais
well as' to meet next year’s feed
goals.
“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. Byrnes, director of War Mobil-
ization, declared in connection
with a directive providing for the
shutting off of materials, fuel,
power 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 tlhie skills required to
produce Avar goods.” Wherever
local committees in charge of the
problem have excess manpower
“they must accept a quota for re-
cruiting in order to meet the needs
of other crtical areas,” he ex-
plained.
After almost total lack of new
School Buses for tAvo years, WPB
approved a 1944 production quota
of 5,000, of which more than 2,400
already have been released to
schools where neAV buses were
needed to prevent absences and
replace unsafe equipment, the Of-
fice of Defense Transportation re-
ports.
Preseripti©ii Filled
Over 15 iiliissi Times
Recommended to do Just two things:
relieve constipation and gas on tire
stomach.
This successful prescription is now put
up under the name of ADLERIKA.
Get a bottle of Ad}erika 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 Adlerika from your druggist today.
White Deer Drug Co.
PIPE DREAM
Waste Paper Keeps Supplies Rolling
(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. 700,000 items, from
pins to tanks, are shipped overseas in PAPER. With Invasion here,,
the need for waste paper groAVs more critical. How about it? Are
you doing your share? Waste paper will help hasten the day when
our men will come marching home victorious and safe!
CHRISTMAS MAIL TO
MEN OVERSEAS
QUICK RELIEF FROi®
Symptoms of Distress Arising from
STOMACH ULCERS
due to EXCESS ACID
FreeBookTellsof HomeTreatmenttbai
Must Help or it Will Cost You Nothing
Over two million bottles of the WILLARD
TREATMENT have been sold for relief oJ
Bymptoms of distress arising from Stomach
and Duodenal Ulcers due to Excess Acid-
Poor Digestion, Sour or Upset Stomach,
Gassiness, Heartburn, Sleeplessness, etc.,
due to Excess Acid. Sold on 15 days’ trial!
Ask for “Willard’s Message” which full;
explains this treatment—free—at
MILLER’S PHARMACY
S kelly town, Texac _
Christmas mail to armed forces
overseas this year is expected to
exceed last year’s record. Plans
are now being made by the Post
Office, War and Navy Depart-
ments to handle the mail. From
Sept, to Oct,. 15, Christmas gift
package s for men overseas Avill be
accepted for mailing if they are no
more than five pounds in. Aveight,
15 inches in length and girth com-
bined. Ony one such package will
be accepted from the same person
the same addressee during one
week, the War Department an-
nunces.
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.
Mechanization of the Army re-
sulted in a surplus stock of 17,000
horses, office of War Information
report on surplus War property
shoAvs. Dealers bought the horses
at sales and sold tihree-fourths of
them to farmers. Between 600 and
700 mules, also displaced by Army
mechanization, have been auction-
ed off.
To be entitled to reemployment
rights under the Selective Act of
1940, the veteran must be honor-
ably discharged and must apply
for reemployment “within 40 days
after he is relieved from” training
service, according to National
Headquarters of Selective Service.
A soldier placed in inactive status
and transferred to the Enlisted
Reserve Corps at his own request
to engage in essential industry,
loses his reemployment rights if
he does not to his former employ-
er for reinstatement within 40
days after his transfer. A veteran
has recourse to the courts to col-
lect hack pay if his reinstatement
is improperly delayed by the em-
ployer.
Disabled veterans of the present
war may apply for job counseling
and vocational training and rehab-
ilitation at centers to be estab-
lished at colleges and universities
throughout the country, according
to the Veterans Administration
and the Office of War Mobiliza-
tion. The Veterans Administration
eligible disabled veterans,; trans-
portation to centers, meals, com-
fortable quarters, medical service,
aptitude tests to determine veter-
ans, abilities* interests and occu-
sueeessful, and professional advice
on vocational training. The first
of the proposed centers will be
opened at the College of the City
of NeAV York.
In repulsing a German counter-
attack at San Pietro, Sgt. Dudley
Henry of Wac, fired between 800
and 1,000 rounds from his Army
Ordnance 60-mm. mortar in one
evening.
MILITARY HAS SEVERE
PRODUCTION SHORTAGES
Farm operating loans have been
made to several hundred honorably-
discharged service men wlio 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.
Indicative of the tremendous
strides made in motorizing our
armed forces, the Ordnance De-
partment, Army Service Forces,
today provides a motor vehicle foi
every nine men, compared 'with
one for ever-*7' 90 men in World
War I.
“Bombs Away!” These bombs
are leaving an American “fortress,”
somewhere over Jap installations.
The bombs we make today will be
dropping on German cities, Japa-
nese islands in a very short time.
The home front must fashion them
and nav for them with War Bonds.
“Production has dropped off
“Production ha® dropped off in
the face of increased demands/’’
from overseas, Gen. Brehon B.
Somervell, of the Army Service
Forces, said in citing some special
shortages suffered in various mili-
tary theaters of Avar. Some ex-
amples cited were—One general
had to call off 100 air missions be-
cause -of lack of the right type of
bombs; another General said he
had to abandon 3,500 heavy trucks
which haATe to be replaced; rate
of fire fro artillery has more than
doubled above estimates, thus in-
creasing demands for neAV guns,
replacement linings and ammuni-
tion. Heavy artillery rather than
air power broke deadlocks at An-
zio, Cassino and in Normandy.
General Somervell said.
Of the eight million tons of pa-
per needd for salvage in 1944, 38
per cent is in hiding in American
homes and farms, while the other
62 per cent is to be found in the
files and storeroome of American
industry. If the Boy Scouts or the
Girl Scouts don’t find those home-
hidden hoards of Avaste paper be-
fore next fall, ehool children hope *
to dig them out.
NOW OPEN!
SEWING MACHINE AND VACUUM
CLEANER REPAIR AND SERVICE
Hemstitching, button hole, covered buckles and buttons
ATI, WORK GUARANTEED
COOPER SEWING MACHINE REPAIR
119 N. Frost PAMPA Phone 364
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 always gets to men in com-
bat areas everyAvhere.
LABOR DAY
Specializes in Probate, Admin-
istration o,f estates, Titles and
Taxation—Federal and State.
H. H. SMITH
Lawyer
Surratt Bldg.
Panhandle. Texas
* * * * * * * * *
J. M. HYDEN
Doctor of Optometry
106 W. 7th Street
Amarillo, Texas
Phone 7723
* * * * * * * * *
Do It Yourself-at Horn
Chm-ifml
PERMANENT WAVS Ml
'Complete with curlers,
ac4wsV(s9«t.
.r.evwj tjrp* of
-A* eurW v? tuX
■ 6 million Bold. - ...
m
White eerD Drug Company
“. . . . means
EVERY DAY
for me!”
says Reddy Kilowatt
your Electrical- Servant
The biggest Labor Day parade this year will consist
of a lot of you folks parading right up to the shop gates
to work as usual, fuming Out'war materials. Still others
will work on farms, helping produce needed food, and
many of you stay-ot-homes will keep busy in your Vic*
tory Gardens all day.
More power to you! That's the way to celebrate a
wartime holiday. Best of all, it's the American way, be-
cause you're doing it voluntorily-no dictator shoved a
gun into your back to drive you to work.
While you're at it, think of me: I'll be "lajyotirtg on
Labor Day," too. I'll be turning the wheels in your plant;
helping you out with the farm chores; probably even
pumping the water you sprinkle on your garden. III
be working jus! as 1 do twenty-four hours every week-
day, every Sunday, every holiday, throughout the year.
Yes, every day is Labor Day for me,’and I'm always
prepared to serve you!
Southwestern
PUBLIC SERVICE
COTTlp^Dt^ ,vu. •
Your Business
Appreciated
Barnett Elevator Co.
J. A. BARNETT, Owner
PHONE 49
; fold Books m
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Simmons, W. W. White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, September 1, 1944, newspaper, September 1, 1944; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1160617/m1/2/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carson County Library.