Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 78, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1946 Page: 3 of 14
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VW*
Fundamentalists
»
Shoot Fireworks At
had
r
X
ive
d
IN
*
Adkins had parked a sound
from
Head ot Fort
3
Favorite Grapefruit Juice Recipe
r
■u
11
front.1
lemon
HOTELS for
j
,u
LIVESTOCK
*
fl
fa
TtXSUU CIHUS IXCHAHGl
WISIACO, TfXAJ
Thanksgiving:
■a
LOIN STEAK
T-BONE STEAK
3c
I RESH LOIN
OUR CITY COUSIN
ot
Q *
o
xi
Al
9c
ROAST BEEE
fanned
(*- *
3c
'-Xi
3ie
>c
I
MOTHER'S
)c
OATS
3c
until at least ten years of age without 16m of' the 6 percent
fertility.
GROCERY & MARKET
.>
4
It,*.
I
^rKC
Fss-
ItSl
Ruth Thompson
GIVES HER
KC Baking Powder
Small 10c Medium 25c
I
hi
National
3-Minute Oats
BAKING
POWDER •
40C
With l\etty Dishes
hat the GI Bill was
iy Congress to give
2 teatpoont baking powder
’A cup nutmoati
A cup choppad roisins
e» dotes
/
Austin
•e the
Young
Cutter
turion
?ll the
[ thai
as not
didale
ue has
.water
- white*
2 drop* ve8^1
o (red, y«—-
4-
1512
N. ELM
.. 1/j cup
2 egg
I or
"rooms”—the pens aasq
man to whom the owner
i
)N
ichitis
I
fl
/ * GRAPEFRUIT
ond GRAPEFRUIT JUICE
Things Are NOT Always as They Seem
• QMIKiQ-
49'
49'
65'
PURE PORK SAUSAGE .55'
BOLOGNA ...............39'
39'
*
.ly be-
nt the
expel
lature
sr, in-
nem-
sll you
le un-
way it
>u axe
I__________’ cur ano SAve
i
The ruperior natural tweelnest oF Textun Fresh grape-
fruit results from matchless soil and climatic advantages
found only down here in the Texsun country. You can
get this superior flavor, too, in the Texsun grapefruit
con. Your favorite grapefruit recipe
will always turn out well when you
use Texsun. ■ ■'->•
! FAMOUS FOOD EDITOR
«. ‘jltymt fob
APPLE TORTE
Yield: 6 servings
1 tablespoon melted butter 'A cup sifted flour
1 egg
4 tort cooking applet
1 cup sugar
'A teaspoon vonIMo
Fare and chop apples.
lot
12’/2C
12’/2C
10c
17C
17C
6C
I2’/2C
6C
8C
15C
A new law setting up standards
| and tune limits for on-the-job train-
I Ing for veterans, was explained to-
day by Charles A Wenfcley. of the
ble of maintaining h*r
ommended M a inaane
that shy breqd«re can be culled from the hard at •. Evton boom larger renchea wqpld do
an early age. Good producing cows may be kept
m-MwIv. si
£ *
£ -
iZ -
RANCH STYLE BEANS 12'
UTAH VALLEY PUMPKIN 23*
Everrcady Fruit Cocktail. 48'
DILI. PICKLES, qt 41'
PEANUT BUTTER, qt. . . .49'
EVERETT BARNETT
poured their
microphone
Chefoo on China s Shantung Pen- ^‘‘of’appro^nate^^lS.’ooO.’"^'
insula is the center of a hairnet , city probably would have received
industry additional fire credit for the 1946
Sift dry IngradUnH together
Combine oil Ingredient*. Spread In a V-tnch square
buttered cake pan. Beta In a moderate oven (350° F I
about 30 minutes, or until apple* ore xoh Serve ho» or
COM wflh foamy or hard *aace.
of about 30 cows b ro*k“
—.table color-
,ellow or green)
k-
Veterans Administration In an ef-
fort to clear up several common
misunderstandings regarding the
provisions of the law
Wensley, Denton contact represen-
tative. said that before the new
I law was passed each state had dif-
ferent: standards by which to judge
and approve on-the-job training.
A course that took three months
in one state might take three years
in another, he said, adding that
under sucti a haphazard system,
many veterans were wasting their
benefits
The law establishes that on-the-
job training other than apprentice-
ship must not last more than two
years, Wensley stated, pointing out
that the new law still leaves it
j up to the states to approve train-
! fng programs, but sets up minimum
I standaids all must follow in approv-
ing firm., ottering training
Another badly misunderstood fea-
| ture of tlie law, he said, is the
| matter of ceilings on the amount a
veteran may earn while in training.
I He Is free to receive any amount
: an employer is willing to apy him,
Wensley emphasized
However, the often-quoted figures
of $175 monthly for veterans with-
out dependents and $200 for those
with dependents are »lmply the
point beyond which tile govenunent
■stops supplementing wages with
subsistence allowances, Wensley as-
serted. adding tl ““
never meant 6;
tlie veteran-trainee full support.
Tire VA will be tlie first to ask
Congress to change the present sub-
sistence figure if it is found to be
too low. Wensley said
Car Rafteries Stolen
Soda BUI Saxr
. . . to be a sucxcm at farming, you
have to dtg in.
... if you want to realize that castle
in the air, you had better get down to
earth first.
City Couiin on the farm
Thought that there wo» little horn*
In eating apples by the dozen ..,
Now be i* our ««cWy cousin!
rr
* i
KblL ... *
BYRD l*OINTS THE WAY—Rear Adm. Richard Evelyn Byrd (left) uses a pipe as a
pointer in locating on a globe, in Washington, the area into wlych he will lead a Navy
Antarctic expedition early in 1917. With him are Vice Adm. Forrest P. Sherman
(center), deputy chief of naval operations, and Capt. Richard H. Cruzen, who will com-
mand the task force assigned to the expedition. (AP Wirephoto).
I Wensley Tells
Vets of (hi-Jol)
Training Liw
Baptist Convention
By WILLIAM C BARNARD
MINERAL WELLS. T«x . Nov
14— (APi Further fundanientahat
fire-works were planned for closing
sessions of the Baptist general con-
vention today
The Rev William Fraser, who
gives his home address as Dallas
but who teaches In the Bible Baptist
Seminary headed by J Frank
Norris in Fort Worth, and the
Sealy
"open air i
across |
convention ,
■
i s
r
k \ a!
in«| ia thia
Tv-
swift & COMPANY 1
UNION STOCK YARDS x
CHICAGO 1 ILLINOIS " J
jFj
Baking* 3 W’y‘! 1
f • tn «b* "** tbf<”j£tn actio® ■'•’’X
‘*‘”*‘^1 -.bal*‘-orof
/. .Khet
c*t> ‘"Ju u*4 “> • h* . Ji* m
%
‘ ^u.^i
lOM
SPREAD
Whan viaitias with livestock
prpducera on farms or ranches,
or at meetings, the subject of
"spread” often cornea up for
dheuaaion. Than I giye them
car | can be maintained as long as the i
losses do not climb
He added that had it not been I
for lire disastrous Shepard Funeral
Home fire early In October with a j
---- ivsn Vi nppiuvuiMiviy >io.vw, uic
hairnet . city probably would have received
1 additional fire credit for the 1C“
■ $
i ■ g
^FAVORfTS Foods
MfAlS Qu a Foods
Del. Apples, lb.
Texas Oranges, lb.
Grapefruit, lb.
Fresh Grapes, lb.
Fresh Tomatoes, lb. 1 5C
Ice-Berg Lettuce
Cauliflower
Bell Peppers
Carrots, bn.
Green Beans
Wax Beans
Cabbage, lb.
In this Thanksgiving month, the people of our
nation—and of many other nations—owe a debt of
gratitude to the ranchers and farmers of America.
All through the war, in spite of its tremendous re-
quirements, our people ate weU. And in spite of
snaring with the earth’s hungry, our people are still
eating well. Today, to be sure, not all the meat they
would like to have . .. but plenty of nutritious food
to keep them well and strong. That is because for
long years millions of farm arid ranch men. women
ana children have kept the food supply up. working
harder than ever Ixefore, overcoming shortages of
help and machinery and many other obstacles.
Yes. Americans may well offer thanks this month to
all those who produce our food.
spread" often comm up for
u$eon. Then I give them
ixplanation of the difference
teen the price they get for
livestock end the price we meat packers receive
for the meat we sell. *
To me it is a source of continual surprise
that the spread is not mater than it is- Dur-
ing my years of experience in the UvMtOck-
meat industry, hefle is what I have learned
about spread. We at Swift & Company have
beeri paying farmers and ranchers approxi-
mately 7fk, on the average, out of every dol-
lar we reeeive from thoaa to whom we sell, for
all products we precess and handle, including
hides, glands, «nd all by-products. That
leaves us 24g to cover the cost of pro rami ng
and marketing.
Out of the 24^ comes the coat of buying
livestock and other agricultural products.
The cost of preparation and refngeratioB.
The coat of loading them into cars ana trucks.
The cost of transporting them to our branch
houses or to retailers. The coat of branch
house operation and of selling and delivering
the products to the retail dealers. In addi
tion. we have taxea to pay; phis insurance
agd all the other necessary costs of doing
business. When all these expenses have been
paid, we make a profit, which over a period
Of years has averaged a fraction df a Cent a
pound on the 6 y$ billion pounds of products
we handle annually.
There is no other business in the country
that dogs so much for so little.
yelled, "let him be heard "
Dr Head shook his finger
Fraser and shouted: "down, down,
say.''
At leatii, Head got to the mi-
crophone and announced that a
pastor *uuld read the scriptures
and pray The audience qulsted,
Fraser descended from the press
table, and there was no further
disturbance
Earlier in the day, Fraser and i the current good Insurance credit I
Adkins had parked a sound car ‘ .... .
in front of tlie convention hall and I
grievances into a
-ATTENTION-
Business Owners
You are required by law to keep books and to file tax returns.
Failure to do so will certainly cost you In heavier tax payments.
Since we have secured tlie license to operate the nation-wide
Dollar-A-WEEK" Bookkeeping <U Tax Sedvice In Texas we are in
position to keep your txxjkx lor you cheaper titan you can keep
them yourself—and better, too!
You don't add any figures and you don't keep any books You
don't even pay for ;x>stage and stationery. We furnish everything
iree
For only $1 a week you get
Books kept for you in our office.
A report each month showing how much you are mak-
ing or losing in business.
Business figures necessary for your Federal and Stale
Income Tax returns.
Office drudgery pays you no profit Why not turn your book-
keeping work over to specialists and devote your time to making
sales? With your time free from bookkeeping woi k you can make
many extra sales the very first one of which will pay you more
than our small fee.
For full details mall us a card today!
DOLLAR-A-WEEK
Bookkeeping and Tax Service
P O Box 2 Edwin 8 Harding—Accountant Denton, Texas
to pasture breediqg if they could thus
s ^ parcent rftkbe ih calf crop obfo
UKD.A. study.
......... i 1 iAb »u _______________
NUTRITION It OUR tUtlNfM—AND YOURS
Chief Cook released U*e total toss
for October, setting tbs figure st
$l»,77g.J0, bringing the 1M| total
to *31,68*. IS. The ssme month tn
1945 showed a toss of only *178.-
in Ifrlpy
Selfy Fire Nol
Xel Determined
’ liLsurance adjusters today
not yet determined the loss suf-
fered by the Helpy Selfy gro.ery
store in an early morning blaze
Wednesday which gutted the in-
terior o( the stock room destory-
ing quantities of stored grocery
stocks, according to Fire Chief
ul Eugene Cook
The store, which was closed Wed-
nesday, is open again today for
business.
Cook said that it was hoped that
a final analysis of the Helpv Selfy
fire would not shew as large as
it first appeared to be. explaining
that the total Deuton fire loss for
1946 is still under the 1945 total by
I nearly 84.000. which means that j
and lemon juice
• a tr»y Ftee“ Untl'
doting * right const*1'
The mechanical device pictured above shoots the
, ball marked A and at the same instant drops the ball
' marked B straight down. It carta inly looks as if
B will hit the ground first, sines ball A has so much
farther to go. But the fact is that they will both
strike the ground at precisely the same instant.
In our business, too, things are not always as they
seem. On September 1, 1946, the U. S. Dept, of
Agriculture reported that in the entire country there
were 356 million pounds of meat stocks in cold stor-
age That is a lot of pounds. But actually it is the
lowest on record for that date . . . and compares with
, 626 million a year ago and a 631-million average for
1941-1945. Here in America we eat about 50 million
pounds of meat a day, so the September 1 supply of
meat in cold storage was barely enough to feed us for
seven days.
I
I
I
I
I
-i
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
IL
r
G<op«^u''
1 cup canned gr»P*
fruit juice
1 cup sugat
Juice of one
buying, it is easy to see that the American
livestock marketing system in the most com-
petitive in the world.
These "livestock hotels” are a separate branch
of the livestock-meat industry. They are pri-
vately owned. Swift & Company does not own a
single share of any stockyards company.
headed by
Fort Worth, and
Rev Janies L Adkins of
were arranging an
evangelistic meeting just
the street from the
hall
Fraser, here as a 'messenger''
from the Central Baptist Church
□f Dallas, and Adkins, who is |
pastor of the First Baptist Church |
of Sealy, threw the convention in-
to turmoil yesterday when they
attempted to be heard By a I
vote Tuesday night, delegates had
denied seats to both men because j
"there was no record of their i
churches cooperating with the i
convention "
Yesterday afternoon, Fraser re- ;
quested permission to speak and j
was refused Then lie leaped atop
the press table at Hie front of
th auditorium ana tried to make I
an address.
Dr E D Head ot Fort Worth ,
president of the convention, de- !
nianded that the fundamentalist
get off the table
L;rst night the blackest abuse [
of religious liberty was perpetrated
when Jim Adkins and I were ex-
cluded from this convention and
denied a hearing'' Fraser said ,
"even Hitler gave pastor Niemoel-
| ler a hearing before he put him !
in a concntration camp. 11 pas-
tors are excluded from conven-
tions without a hearing, then re-
' llgious liberty is gone "
Fraser's further remarks were I
' drowned out as the murmur of the
audience of 4.000 swelled to an
angry roar There were cries of j
"down, down.” and "throw him j
out "
Adkins, sitting near the
THC /
„k:ho £
|WlPROVtWI w
50 YEAR51/!
HOUSTON. Nov 14 — iAP> —
Deputy Sheriff Stanley Mahavier
estimated today that approxi-
mately fiOO automobile batteries
have been stolen from shops, con-
tractors and motorists In the Hous-
ton area during tlie last three
weeks.
The central livestock market is aa American as
the "hot dog.” No other country has the like of
it. European sellers and buyers haggle over
individual animals. In South America most of
the dealing is done right on the estancias, where
the livestock is raised. But here in the leading
livestock nation of the world, for 75 years central
markets have played a big part in the job of
moving meat toward dinner tables of the United
States.
When a carload of livestock rolls off the prairies
or out of the mountains into one of the 65 or
more great central markets, the animals are
"greeted” and "registered” at the unloading
dock, much as travelers are received and regis-
tered in hotels. From there they are sent to their
.<-------,, ,i---------•—to commission
shipped his animals.
There these hogs, cattle, calves and lambs are
rested and given food and drink.
Just as hotels compete for guests, so these
central markets compete with each other for
the business of accommodating the 88 million
head of livestock which come in each year. Thou-
| sands of livestock buyers and order buyers bid
against each other and the sale is made to tlie
highest bidder. With 26,000 r^eat packers and
.other commercial slaughterers active in livestock
- - m i iniiiikM
------------rT
TbttMby, Nw, 14, IM* Yfa.)
98, bringing the iotaFfor'di* «3a
year to S35.M1.
The fire department amwarat 1*
alarms during October ssrt 1* for
the ume month last JRM1,
■ ■ — ---------- - .........- - ii
place m 5
Pmo$hy. add -I
been beaten
encyst serving-
FERTILITY OF RANGE BEEF CATTLE
by A- L. Dakar and J. R. Quaaanbarry
United State* Department of Agriculture
Cowa in the western ranch states drop from a 40 to
a 70 percent calf crop with an average of 63 percent.
f Thw means thht for every 100 cows the average
j rancher can expect to get only 63 calves OB QWt> prowi breeding ability. K
I However, the following recommendations, based ' ____
| on a study made, should aid the rancher in increasing 5- ^tablH^Trrntorsmall breediiy pastures^
I his production:
1. Cows should be identified by proper markings so
"" « 'I 1 < '■■B »» I v '■ I 1 .
2. Cows that fail to produce calves tw^ svoosqsiro «
years should be fulled from the hero. '. X
3. Where pntotical, it is advisable to tost bads fo**t
remen quality before branding eeneqn in <Kf** Wl
eliminate th* partly a ten to bulls.
4. There is an advantage in using bulls four ysa^l
old oc over, of proven breeding ability. TV
recommendations, based 1 ,
>
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 78, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1946, newspaper, November 14, 1946; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1312945/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.