The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 20, 1941 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE TWO
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
Thursdya, November 20. 1941,
-X
President of Second District
sentiment
WELCOME
MRS. BARD W. PAUL
rail
and
Second District
Texas Federation
of Music Clubs
The First National Bank
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
0;
4
V
L.
carloads
is the
Mr. Telephone will
WELCOME, CLUB WOMEN
wear plastic
COMPLETE
Drug Service
TO SAVE METAL
FOR UNCLE SAM
a
PROGRAM
0-
J
LIFE OF A TOWN
Crocker
I '
(CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE)
).
Liszt
de Falla
National President
Lone Star President
State President
Mrs. Foster M. Poole
Miss Frances Bretherton
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
NOVEMBER 21-22, 1941
EGG BREAKING
BIG INDUSTRY
FOR DENISON
SUNDRIES—Complete line of
nationally known sundries
and every day needs.
This Pharmacy Stands Rea-
dy to Serve You With Every
Drug Requirement.
del Riego
------Spross
Cadman
Fox
Chopin
..Chopin
Mrs. Paul is president of the Second District, Texas
Federation of Music Clubs, and also state parliamentar-
ian. She is a member of the Cecilian Singers of Dallas,
and is past president of the Dallas Federation of Music
Clubs. On Friday evening she will be honor guest at
the Victory Banquet at the First Presbyterian Church.
Riegger-Foster
Flynn
..Chopin
Foote
Haynes
Bond
LINDBERGH BOULEVARD
NAME TO BE CHANGED
HOSTESS CLUB, WHITEWRIGHT MUSIC CLUB
Mrs. H. T. Arterberry, President
17th Annual Convention
SECOND DISTRICT
' Texas Federation of
Music Clubs
Jtfusicale
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Second District, Texas Federation of Music Clubs
November 21, 1941, 2:30 P. M.
—Debussy
—Edwards
—Renard
—Thomas
...Reddick
Wolf
DISTRICT OFFICERS
President Mrs. Bard W. Paul
Vice-President 1 Mrs. Cecil H. Tinsley
Recording Secretary Miss Marcella Stathakos
Corresponding Secretary Mrs. Harry Steinberg
Treasurer Mrs. R. C. Percival
Parliamentarian Miss Fannie Ellis Exstein
Auditor , Mrs. R. T. Pennington
Historian Mrs. J. C. McMillin
■■p ■ *
>
Program Chairman
Publicity Director
-------------Mrs. Guy Gannett
Mrs. I. D. Cole
Mrs. R. E. Wendland
Childress Pharmacy
R. P. Childress, Manager
---------------Sanderson
--------Gretchaninoff
---------Gretchaninoff
----------------------Terry
whole farm and now the eggshells are
tossed into cavernous ravines andL
gullies all over the place!
<< i
/
A.
We’re making every substitution, salvaging every
bit of usable equipment to keep up with orders as
well as we can.
“America”
HOSTESS CLUB ROSTER
Mrs. Howard Kilgroe
Mrs. J. C. McMillin
Mrs. R. T. Pennington
Miss Viva Phillips
Miss Jack Proctor
Mrs. F. A. Ray
Mrs. H. H. Sears
Miss Cora Mae Thornton
Miss Eva Williams
Mrs. C. I. Witt
Mrs. H. T. Arterberry
Mrs. Floyd Bassett
Mrs. Rex B. Cruse
Mrs. T. G. Doss
Mrs. F. M. Echols
Mrs. Guy Hamilton
Mrs. R. E. Hickman
Mrs. Tom Holmes
Mrs. A. L. Jackson
Mrs. Leon Johnson
Mrs. O. L. Jones
PRESCRIPTIONS — Each pre-
scription is CAREFULLY
compounded as it is pre-
scribed by the physician.
SATURDAY MORNING
8:00 A. M.—BREAKFAST, Past Presidents Assembly
Craig’s Cafe; Mrs. Guy H. Dougherty, presiding
9:00 A. M.—BUSINESS SESSION
Reading of Minutes
Final Report of Credentials Committee
PROGRAM—
Beautiful Dreamer
Sharing
Mrs. J. R. Powell
Mrs. Foster M. Poole, Accompanist
MacDowell Music Club, Ennis
Rhapsodie No. 5
The Fire Dance _v
Miss Winifred Bedford
Todd Club, Dallas
Memorial Service, Whitewright Music Club
Mrs. J. C. McMillin, conducting
Report of Resolutions Committee
Report of Election
Invitations for 1942
Adjournment of Senior Session
“No business man in any town
should allow a newspaper pub-
lished in his town to go without
his name and business being men-
tioned somewhere in its columns.
The man who does not advertise
his business does an injustice to
himself and the town. The life of
a town depends upon the liye,
wide-awake and liberal advertis-
ing business man.” — American
Banker’s Magazine.
2Y__
PAGES
Henrietta Jackson, Janis Jayne Horton, Jean Caraway
Bettye Nell Yeager, Margaret Lucille Hanna
Mary Frances StephensBack to Farmyard
Oh, yes, if you are worried about
what they do with those eggshells,
like I was, that’s another story.
It was a problem for a. while,
sighed Manager William Howell of
the Henningsen-Denison plant. There
was no place to dump them. But
they fixed that.
They just went out and leased a
L
FEDERATION COLLECT
We praise and thank Thee, Father, for the gift of
music. Through us, as channels of Thy grace, may this
blessed legacy be shared with all mankind. Grant that we
may exemplify in our lives the harmony of Thy great
purpose for us. Give us magnitude of soul and such un-
derstanding hearts that we, who make music, may be as
players upon rightly tuned instruments responding to Thy
leading.
Let us with renewed consecration dedicate ourselves to
the purpose of our Federation to bring the spiritualizing
force of music to the inner life of our nation.
Open our minds that divine knowledge and wisdom
may teach us how to best execute oui’ pledge.
Reverie .
A Song of Joy ....
Maiden and Nightingale T
Cecilian Singers
Mr. Frank Renard, Director
Mrs. David Starr, Accompanist
Cecilian Singers, Dallas
Prelude, Opus 20, No. 20
Poem after Omar Khayyam
Mrs. Hughes Wellbaum
Cecilian Club, Dallas
The Ould Plaid Shawl
Little Bit of Honey
Eleanor Willingham
Mrs. G. M. Jones, Accompanist
Wynne Study Club, Dallas
Original Compositions
Dorothy Brinn Crocker
Wiesemann Club, Dallas
Gavotte (Mignon)
Velvet Darkness
Sailormen
Mrs. Marvin Thrasher
Mrs. James Sartain, Accompanist
Schubert Study Club, Dallas
FRIDAY MORNING
8:00 A. M.—REGISTRATION
Mrs. R. C. Percival, Treasurer
Mrs. Leon Johnson, Chairman of Credentials
9:00 A. M.—EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETING
10:00 A. M.—FORMAL OPENING OF CONVENTION
Mrs. H. T. Arterberry, presiding
Invocation, Dr. B. Wrenn Webb, pastor of the First Pres-
byterian Church, Whitewright
Assembly singing, “The Star Spangled Banner” (Key)
Mrs. J. H. Cavender, Jr., Leader
Mrs. Yancy L. Culp, Accompanist
Federation Collect
WELCOME TO WHITEWRIGHT—
Mr. F. M. Echols, Mayor of Whitewright
Mrs. C. P Johnson, President of Grayson County
Federation of Women’s Clubs
Mr. Glen Earnheart, President of Rotary Club
Mrs. Emory Christian, President of Friday Literary
Club
Mrs. H. T. Arterberry, President of Whitewright
Music Club
RESPONSE—
Mrs. Cecil H. Tinsley, Vice-President, Second Dis-
trict, Texas Federation of Music Clubs
Introduction of Officers
Business Session, Mrs. Bard W. Paul, President, presiding
Reading of Minutes
Appointment of Committees
Announcements
Reports of Convention Committees—
Mrs. H. T. Arterberry, General Chairman
Mrs. Leon Johnson, Credentials Chairman
Mrs. R. T. Pennington, Nominating Chairman
Mrs. Fostqr M. Poole, Program Chairman
Rules of the Convention—
Miss Fannie E. Exstein, Parliamentarian
Officers’ Reports
Departmental Reports—
Extension, Mrs. Cecil H. Tinsley
Education, Mrs. Odessa Wilson
American Music, Mrs. Lee J. Taylor
Church Music, Mrs. H. E. Ferree
Publicity, Miss Frances Bretherton
Finance, Mrs. R. C. Percival
Music in National Defense, Mrs. Fred H. Austin
Special Committees—
Printing and Stationery, Mrs. Cecil Hood
Insignia and Flags, Miss Ruth Garvey
Program, Mrs. Foster M. Poole
State Park Art Centers, Mrs. James Sartain
Revisions Committee, Mrs. J. C. McMillin, Mrs. A.
Jackson, Mrs. Guy Hamilton
Student Division, Mrs. Yancy Culp
Junior Division, Mrs. Fred Buchanan
Reports of Clubs
l?l UM Is
LOCAL COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN
General Chairman Mrs. H. T. Arterberry
Registration i = __ Mrs. Leon Johnson
Arrangements and Entertainment.—Mrs. R. T. Pennington
Publicity : Mrs. A. L. Jackson
Reservations r Mrs. R. E. Hickman
Courtesy Mrs. Howard Kilgroe
Transportation „ Miss Viva Phillips
Decorations —Mrs. C. I. Witt
Junior Day Counselor Mrs. Guy Hamilton
We hope that our record over more than 60 years
is evidence that we will always be doing our best
to keep your service as good as conditions permit.
SOUTHWESTERN BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY
We’re ready with a wartime telephone in which
plastic and steel replace the more vital defense
metals—zinc, aluminum, magnesium. It’s not
makeshift telephone—it’s a good telephone.
In the months ahead, however, you may find it
hard to get one. Where all lines in our cables are
taken up we can’t add new customers quickly,
because nearly all the additional cable we can get
is required for vital defense construction.
DALLAS. — Dallas’ Lindbergh.
Boulevard, an important thorough-
fare in the northeast section of the
city, will become an extension of
Skillman evenue as quickly as an:
ordinance can be passed to effect the
change.
Named after the famous flier, agi-
tation to change the name of the
street has long been rife in Dallas,
where there is strong
against Lindbergh’s stand on foreign
relations.
, JU
* AX - O
JUNIOR DAY
Grammar School Auditorium
8:00 A. M.—Registration
9:00 A. M.—Fine Arts Program
12:15 P. M.—Luncheon, First Baptist Church
1:30 P. M.—Business Session
2:30 P. M.—Tea
plant and
egg into
University of Texas geologists pre-
dict a peat industry for Texas frorrt
recent extensive finds of the soft,,
spongy coal-like substance through-
out Texas. German imports of peat
to this country in, 1939 alone totaled,
over $1,000,000, they said.
Reading “The Century of Peace”
Mrs. Wilson Kaiser
Vocal “God Bless America”
Miss Bettye Nell Yeager
Miss Margaret Hanna, Accompanist
8:00 P. M.—SACRED CONCERT, Presbyterian Church
Travis Street l\4ethodist Church Choir, Sherman,
with Assisting Artists from the Music Departments
of Southern Methodist University, Dallas; Hocka-
day School, Dallas, and Texas State College For
Women, Denton
il
I
PROGRAM—
Quiet
Stars :
I Hear, I See
Sons
Mrs. Vincent O’Connor
Mrs. Foster M. Poole, Accompanist
Musical Arts Club, Dallas
Nocturne
Fantasy Impromptu
Mrs. J. B. Rucker
Mickwitz Club, Dallas
12:30 P. M.—LUNCHEON, First Methodist Church
Mrs. R. T. Pennington, presiding
Mrs. George Jenkins, invocation
PROGRAM—
Homing <
Yesterday and Today
Mrs. B. W. Burford
Mrs. Foster M. Poole, Accompanist
Dallas Federation of Music Clubs
Call Me No More^
Rounded Up In Glory
Mrs. Cecil Everett
Mrs. Foster M. Poole, Accompanist
Aeolian Singers, Dallas
White In The Moon The Long Road Lies Fox
Homeland Cain
Mrs. W. F. Bramlett, Mrs. H. C. Vanderpool
Mrs. G. A. Ripley, Mrs. J. H. Krouse
Mrs. G. F. Baker, Mrs. Charles Hughes
Mr. Fred Eggert, Director
Mrs. L. L. Ponton, Accompanist
Melodie Club, Dallas
2:00 P. M.—BUSINESS SESSION
Reading of Minutes
Report of Credentials Committee
Reports of Clubs (Continued)
2:30 P. M.—MUSICALE
Auditorium, First Presbyterian Church
6:30 P. M.—BANQUET, Honoring District President
First Presbyterian Church
Mrs. H. T. Arterberry, presiding
Mrs. James M. Sewell, invocation
PROGRAM—
Trumpet Solo
Billy Rhom Pennington
Miss Margaret Hanna, Accompanist
usual daily production.
Denison is the world’s largest egg
drying point — even more so now
since the Denison Poultry and Egg
Co. has started operations with 1,000
cases being handled in its plant each
day.
Empty egg cases are stacked all
over Denison, the natives say. But
they like it.
Usually it is a seasonal business,
with the plants shut down during
some periods of the year. But now
the lights are never extinguished—
twenty-four hours a day they oper-
ate. More than 350 employees work
in the Henningsen-Denison plant
alone.
By Felix R. McKnight
In Dallas News
DENISON.—Imagine, Mrs. House-
wife, inviting every man, woman and
child in Dallas over for breakfast
some morning and having enough
scrambled eggs on one platter to give
each guest a serving of four eggs .
It would baffle even Sam Goldwyn
on one of his more productive days.
But I actually saw one and a half
million eggs cracked and dropped in-
to a tremendous, stainless steel vat.
It isn’t unusual. It happens every
day right here in Denison—one and
a half million eggs cracked daily!
Three thousand cases of eggs, with
thirty dozen to the case, zip into the
Henningsen-Denison, Inc., plant
daily. By nightfall they are neatly
packed and ready for shipment to
Great Britain and the United States
Army.
Dry, or powdered, eggs, they call
them. Not a particle of the food
value content lost in the intriguing
process, either. Nothing but the
moisture. Of course, it would be a
little difficult to whip these dry eggs
for cake baking, or the like, but they
are good eating eggs and lifesavers to
the British.
Egg to Powder; Eight Minutes
From everywhere — Nebr a ska,
Kansas, Missouri, Indiana, Okla-
homa, Texas and other states—the
eggs come to Denison by
truck each day.
They are hustled to the
the process of making an
powder within eight minutes begins.
Women handler^ take them from
the crates and, incidentally, take
your breath away the way they slam
them around without so much as
denting a shell. First, they are can-
died, held against a light to insure
the quality of each egg.
Then large bucketsfull are placed
beside a long row of fifty women,
who have a rather monotonous but
highly important task to perform for
eight hours daily.
Swiftly they grab an egg in each
hand, break the shells and, with the
motion of a teen-age soda jerker,
hold them aloft while yolks and
whites splash into a container below.
Hour after hour they smash eggs and
drop them without mishap from a
height of about two feet.
When the containers are filled with
eggs, the wqmen hastily give a sec-
ond check to the eggs by smelling
them and then all containers are
dumped into a huge vat.
Purity Guaranteed
Pumps take the eggs into stainless
steel tanks. There they are thorough-
ly mixed and more pumps Shoot them
along to a pasteurizing tank. J'he
process is very similar to pasteuriz-
ing milk.
Into the drying machine go the
eggs. It‘s a huge affair, much larger
than the ordinary sized room. Within
eight minutes a golden brown powder
comes out the bottom—dry eggs.
Strict laboratory control is main-
tained over the entire operation,
twenty-four hours daily. Technicians
test the dry eggs through every
process and when a 150-pound barrel
of dry egg powder is sealed, it is
pure.
The dry eggs, in barrels, are ship-
ped to the Federal urplus Commodity
Corporation for distribution—usually
to Britain and the United States
Army.
It takes fifteen cases of eggs to
make a standard 150-pound barrel
package of dry eggs. Usually, rail-
road cars hurrying away the war-
time food necessity carry from 30,000
to 60,000 pounds.
Seven and a half
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 20, 1941, newspaper, November 20, 1941; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1230718/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.