The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 13, 1944 Page: 6 of 8
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Pathe News Reel
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with ANDY CLIVE • GEORGE REEVES • GUSTINE FARNUftU* VICTOR JORY - DOOGLAS FOWLEY
BETTY BLYTHE v FRANCIS MCDONALD /• Directed by.Lesley selander •
'A HARRY SHERMAN PRODUCTION • RELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTS
TUE. & WED., April 18-19
Chapter No. 5 of “THE PHANTOM”
----- EXTRA ----- ♦.
SLIM SUMMERVILLE in “GARDEN OF EATIN”
— And —
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FRIDAY & SATURDAY, APRIL* 14-15
IN NORTH AFRICA—Chief Warrant
Officer Joe B, Dillon, 3rd Communi-
cations Squadron, AAF, who has been
in North Africa for six months. He
.is the grandson of Mrs. W. A. Kirk-
patrick of Whitewright, and the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Dillon of Du-
rant, Okla. (Ilustration courtesy of
Durant Daily Democrat.)
COMING: “Riding High,” “Pistol-Packing Mama,” “Lassie Come
Home,” “Rationing,” “Son of Dracula,” “His Butler’s Sister,” “Best
Foot Forward,” “Flesh and Fantasy,” “The Heat’s On,” “I Dood It,”
“Iron Major,” “Crazy House,” “Lady Takes a Chance,” “Johnny Come
Lately,”
Cartoon:
“ROCKY ROAD TO RUIN”
EXTRA
THURSDAY Only, April 20
SAT. PREVUE, SUNDAY & MONDAY, April 15-16-17
V"
£!
-- EXTRA --
“MARCH OF TIME”
with '
REGINALD GARDINER
VIRGINIA GREY
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\ Directed by Irving Cummings
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RECIPES
of
Creole Stuffed Potatoes
Large white potatoes
Butter or substitute
Milk
Paprika
Salt, pepper
Grated cheese
Bake the required number of pota-
toes at 450 degrees F. Cut in half
lengthwise, scoop out the insides, and
mash with pepper, salt, and butter.
When smooth, add a little hot milk
and melted butter and beat until
white and fluffy. Refill the potato
shells with the mixture, sprinkle with
paprika and grated cheese, or either,
and return to the oven until brown.
Potatoes in Poke
Large white potatoes
Bacon strips
Toothpicks
Boil the potatoes in their jackets.
Peel when done and fold two or three
strips of bacon around each potato,
holding the strips in place with tooth-
picks. Set the potatoes in an uncov-
ered baking pan in the top part of the
oven and allow to remain until bacon
is crisp. This makes. an excellent
luncheon dish.
Puffed Potatoes
White potatoes
Deep frying fat
Peel potatoes and slice crosswise in
thickness of % inch, having all the
I same length and thickness. Fry in
deep, hot—but not smoking-hot—fat
Creole Potato Salad
6 ice-cold boiled potatoes
2 cups salad dressing
2 young green onions
2 hard-boiled eggs
1 large stalk celery
2 green peppers
4 green pickles
% teaspoon black pepper
% lemon or lime
Slice potatoes, cut celery into fine
pieces, and chop all other ingredients.
Mix in earthenware or china bowl
and add pepper, salad dressing, salt,
juice of lemon or lime, and mix well.
Put in refrigerator for 2 hours.
Serve on lettuce leaves. Diced chilled
shrimp may also be added to this
salad.
White Potato Pie
Left-over mashed potato
Any left-over meat or fish
Milk, flour
Salt, pepper
Cream and season the cut-up left-
over meat or fish. Grease pie plate or
individual gem pan. Line with
mashed potato as you would with
piecrust, pinking the edges. Fill with
creamed meat or fish mixture. Place
in oven and bake until potato is
slightly browned, remove from pan,
and serve hot. Left-over chicken
lends itself admirably to this dish.
Beef a la Mode
1 pound stewing beef, cubed
% cup flour
1 % teaspoons salt
% teaspoon pepper
3 tablespoons bacon fat
4 carrots, sliced'
1 large oinon, sliced
6 potatoes, quartered
1 No. 2 % can tomatoes
Roll meat cubes in a mixture
flour, salt, and pepper. Brown cubes
in bacon fat. Arrange meat in deep
baking dish, then add carrots, onion,
potatoes and the pulp drained from
the canned tomatoes. Stir remainder
of flour mixture into fat. Add to this,
gradually, the juice from canned to-
matoes. Cook until slightly thick-
ened. Pour liquid over meat and
vegetables adding, if necessary,
enough water to come 1 inch from top
of the casserole. Cover, bake in a
moderately slow oven for 1 % to 2
hours. The longer the cooking, the
better the dish. Serve over biscuits.
A
Free
Buy your printing in Whitewright.
School Lands for Sale
Palace Theatre
Best Pictures
Best R-C-A Sound
Two Oklahoma Towns
Will Be Moved By Army
Admission
9c and 25c
Tax Included
French fried potatoes,
balls will result, excellent to
with meat or fish.
WASHINGTON.—Army engineers
propose to move two Oklahoma com-
munities, lock, stock and barrel, out
of the reach of flood waters.
Congress has before it the engi-
neers’ recommendation -to relocate
the town of Moffett, population 538,
and the settlement of Alexander
(West Fork Smith), both on the bank
’ of the Arkansas River in Sequoyah
Bascom Giles, Commissioner of the
General Land Office, has announced
the sale for May 2, 1944, of 225,000
acres of State School Land located in
more than 75 counties throughout the
State. Com’r. Giles points out that
the diversified soil and locations of
this land should, in a large measure,
meet t’he present unusual interest in
and heavy demand for land pur-
370 degrees F. until blisters start to
appear. Take from the fat and place
on absorbent paper, being careful to
keep slices separate. Place in the
refrigerator overnight. When ready
to serve, place the potatoes in deep,
hot fat 395 degrees F. and fry as for
Potato puff-
serve
chases.
One of the purposes of the sale is
to convert property, now in the hands
of the State, which, in some instances,
produces small revenue, into private
ownership for development so that it
will be beneficial to the schools and
counties as well as the State.
The terms for sale of Public
School Lands are most attractive.
An initial payment of one-fifth is re-
quired, and the remainder may be
carried over a period of 40 years in
an on-or-before note. The State re-
tains a free royalty of one-eighth of
the gross production of sulphur, and
one-sixteenth of oil, gas and other
minerals.
“Interest in the purchases of land is
exceedingly high at this time due to
the security of land investments
which are comparable to the pur-
chase of War Bonds, and in addition
thereto have the element of specula-
tion which makes the purchase of
land even more intriguing,” Com-
missioner Giles said.
Anyone interested may receive a
list of the lands offered, together
with instructions for bidding by writ-
ing Bascom Giles, Commissioner of
the General Land Office, Austin,
Texas.
CITATION NO. 52489
THE STATE OF TEXAS.
To: J. R. Sewell, Greeting:
You are commanded to appear and
answer the plaintiff’s petition at or
before 10,o’clock A. M. of the first
Monday after the expiration of 42
days from the date of issuance of this
Citation, the same being Monday the
1st day of May, A. D., 1944, at or be-
fore 10 o’clock A. M., before the Hon-
orable District Court of Grayson
County, at the Court House in Sher-
man, Texas.
Said Plaintiff’s petition was filed
on the 17th day of January, 1944. The
file number of said suit being No.
52489.
The names of the parties in said
suit are: Mrs. Lillian Sewell as plain-
tiff, and J. R. Sewell as defendant.
The nature of said suit being sub-
stantially as follows, to-wit: Divorce
on the grounds of cruel treatment.
Issued this the 17th day of March,
1944.
Given under my hand and seal of
said Court, at office in Sherman,
Texas, this the 17th day of March, A.
D., 1944.
S. V. Earnest, Clerk, District Court,
Grayson County, Texas. By Nancy
Drake, Deputy. 4T-A13
Potato Dumplings
1 pound white potatoes
% cup flour
1 whole egg
' 1 egg yolk
3 tablespoons butter or substitute
2 cups grated cheese
Salt, pepper
Tomato or Spanish sauce (hot)
Boil the potatoes and, while still
hot, rub through a sieve. Next mix
the potatoes in a bowl with the flour,
whole egg and yolk of egg, and sea-
son with salt and pepper. Roll into
small balls and then flatten into
small cylinders. Poach these in boil-
ing water for about 10 minutes. Drain
and serve with a tomato or Spanish
sauce and grated cheese. Left-over
gravy, reheated, may also be used on
the dumplings with the cheese. These
dumplings with the sauce make a sat-
isfying dinner dish.
County, Oklahoma. It is part of the
$800,000,000 postwar flood control
bill.
The cost of picking up these com—•
munities and moving them to a “pro-
tected area” is estimated at $210,000.
The threat of floods is ever pres-
ent around Moffett and Alexander,
the engineers contend, and has un-
questionably curtailed development,
upset orderly social processes, en-
dangered the general welfare, result-
ing in mental distress and human
suffering seriously affecting general
morale.
Glen Earnheart
Ambulance and Funeral Service
\
A
Bank
The First National Bank
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Hull Demands U. S.
Internationalism
In Post-War World
The difference between a child and a man
is that the man has grown up. He has “been
places,” known people and events, made
mistakes, gained experience, has helped
others and been helped in turn.
Telephones: Day 15, Night 16
White\yright, Texas
SEE US FOR DEPENDABLE BURIAL INSURANCE
There Comes a Time
When the Child Leaves
This is a “grown-up” bank. We have
learned that there is no merit in growing
old unless you grow more useful. We value
the friends we have made, and we are try-
ing to treat them as friends ought to be
treated. And we’re glad that we’ve grown
up in a friendly community like ours.
with the need to compromise between
Germany and the Allies. Hull men-
tioned no nation specifically but left
no doubt that he had reference to ev-
ery neutral on the rim of Europe—
Sweden, Ireland, Spain, Portugal, and
Turkey—when he declared that “we
can no longer acquiesce in these na-
tions drawing upon the resources of
the Allied world when they at the
same time contribute to the death of
troops whose sacrifice contributes to
their salvation as well as ours.”
4. Military. — Allied strength “has
now grown to the point where we are
on the verge of great events. We
await their development with abso-
lute confidence.”
5. Allies. — Co-operation a m on g
Britain, Russia, China and the United
States is solid framework upon which
all future policy and international
organization must be built. Hull
made a plea for tolerance and under-
standing of the other fellow’s point of
view and asserted emphatically that
for these powers to become divided in
their aims and fail to recognize and
harmonize their basic interests can
produce only disaster and no machin-
ery as such can produce this essential
harmony and unity.
No Compromise Possible
6. The Enemy.—The Secretary de-
clared that there can be no compro-
mise with Fascism and Naziism. It
must go everywhere. He added that
enemy leaders can expect no nego-
tiated peace, no compromise, no op-
portunity to return.
7. Postwar Plans. — The European
advisory commission in London is
now at work upon the treatment of
Germany and will propose to Allied
governments plans for concrete ac-
tion. Meanwhile, the basis of Amer-
ican policy is soundly established aft-
er two years of intensive study, the
direction is clear and the general
methods of accomplishment are
emerging. But this method will be
useless unless it has the ^unified sup-
port of the people at home and ac-
ceptability to co-operating nations
abroad.
He emphasized his belief that along
with political arrangements for post-
war arrangements to give men and
women everywhere an opportunity to
improve their material conditions.
“Grown Up”
By Sue Stephens
For half your life you have la-
bored with these children that are
leaving you, one by one. Labored;
yes, step at a time, but you did it. It
is lonesome when the last child
leaves. It is October and the weath-
er helps your loneliness, rain, wind,
trees moaning.
It was bad enough when they went
one by one to school, or the boys to
work, but they were to come back.
But when the last one leaves, the
rooms are empty, the beds stay
smooth until covered with dust. The
doors give a lonely sound when
opened or closed.
You would not change if you
could, but you live with your own
until they seem a part of you. Now
nothing is left but remembrance—
yes, you can pray. Maybe that is what
it is all for.
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Secretary
of State Cordell Hull, fighting for a
postwar policy of international col-
laboration in organized • peace, ap-
pealed to the American people Sun-
day night not to let the controversies
of an election year create disunity
and destroy their effectiveness in
world affairs.
“Once before in our lifetime,” Hull
said in a broadcast discussion of for-
eign policy, “we fell into disunity and
became ineffective in world affairs
by reason of it. Should this happen
again, it will be a tragedy to you and
to your children and to the world for
generations.”
His foreign policy summation, the
most detailed made by an American
official since the war started, was
built on the assumption that the
United States, Britain and China will
co-operate for peace as well as for
war and if they do not, Hull said,
there is no hope of avoiding another
great conflict in the next twenty to
twenty-five years.
No Secret Agreements
Hull’s address assured the nation
that neither he nor President Roose-
velt have madie or will make any se-
cret agreement, or commitment, po-
litical or financial.
The Secretary said plans for a
world peace organization would be
worked out with the advice and help
of Congress, and said he had asked
for appointment of a bipartisan Sen-
ate group from the foreign relations
committee to join the discussions.
The same thing will be done in the
House, he added.
In a specific discussion of pending
problems, evidently prompted by
criticism that the nation lacks a de-
tailed policy, the secretary made
these main points:
1. France — The United States ex-
pects the French Committee of Na-
tional Liberation (Gen. Charles De-
Gaulle) to be given every opportu-
nity to organize the civil government
of France under Gen. Dwight D.
Eisenhower’s supervision, but “the
committee is, of course, not the gov-
ernment of France, and we cannot
recognize it as such.” This was the
first formal announcement by an
American official of this country’s
French policy since President Roose-
velt finally decided it and notified
the British three weeks ago.
2. Italy.—This government seeks a
promise of success in current political
activities seeking to broaden the base
of the Italian government of Premier-
Badoglio. Hull said frankly that “we
had hoped that before this enough of
Italy would have been freed so that
we might have had at least a pre-
liminary expression” of the will of
the Italian people on their govern-
ment.”
Neutrals Under Pressure
3. Neutral Nations. — The United
States and its Allies are insistently
asking these nations “to cease aiding
our enemy.” The neutrals no longer
need fear that Germany will win the
war and are therefore no longer faced
PAGE SIX
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
Thursday, April 13, 1944.
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 13, 1944, newspaper, April 13, 1944; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1331697/m1/6/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.