The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 136, Ed. 2 Saturday, October 30, 1943 Page: 3 of 8
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r 30, 1943
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walian bird
comium
ng Island
por.)
ly the part
host
NLC
NGL
TA 1
L th Ameri- €
1 mountains
brindin dye
mud
ir god •
Iter vetch -
serve
istle
1 mese
AND
PROFESSIONAL-ACTIVITIES
•WITH LITTLE RANGE AVAILABLE-
Feeds Rich in Vitamins Important, Says Henderson
a The next best source of vita- mln boost, declares H. G. Hender-
• mins for livestock, when range is son of the Henderson Grain com-
short or not available, is Ful-O-Pep pany. .
feeds which have a special vita- “If range cattle adn sheep
“If range cattle adn sheep
Man •
Bicily
Oct. 28.—The
In two months
| Jim Hale of
ek from their e
led, his letter
rters division
icily.
GUEST. HOST — Bob Conaway (right), manager of the
• Green Frog cafe, was host recently to the cafe’s owner, Wel-
don Conaway (left). Incidentally, the two are brothers, and
when Weldon, owner, left Abilene, he placed his business in
Bob’s hands. Here, they are dining, as they did every day of
the guest’s visit, on steaks, the Green Frog specialty.
•---1—
one
HAVE YOUR CAR
CHECKED FOR
WINTER DRIVING
It's your duty to keep your car
in the best condition. Our ex-
pert mechanics will completely
check and overhaul your car to
lesson wear and tear of winter
driving.
FRED HUGHES
Dodge—Plymouth Dealer and Service
3rd & Walnut Dial 5275
zed
Preferred
For
Fine
Quality
Cleaning
enit 11
CCea/re/ci—
PLANT AT 1174 SOUTH SECOND
5.297
RY
RGE
Eat Ths
BEST STEAK
In Town
At The
Green Frog
MAKE
THEM
LAST!
ONL Y-
ES:
Gemn/ye
ically
I Testing
Each Cell
Battery .
orrosion
AYS
OF
R Y
one
rs for
, Spark
ration
e
“zone
one
ES
Phone 8581 •
Cafe
418 Pine
Those electrical appliances be-
come more valuable every day
Take good co e of them.
Sun Electric Co.
450 Pine
Diel 4224
Protect your home with point—save it from old age.
You will find that gay new look of o fresh coat of point
makes home a valuable wartime refuge.
Fielder-Dillingham Lumber Co.
410 CHESTNUT DIAL 8171 . 8172
W. M.FRANCE
Completely Insured
LIVESTOCK
TRUCKING
1023 North 21st
Phones 3447 and 2-0052
F U
There’s s
Full-O-Pep
Feed for
Every Need
The Cash Stores
North Seventh and Pine
South Third and Pecan
Henderson Grain Co.
Bring
Your
Livestock
"The Fastest Selling Auction
Ring in West Texas"
Where Seller end Buyer Meet Every Friday
Taylor County Livestock Auction Co.
East End North 8thPhone 5561
BOB H. McDANIEL CHARLES MORRIS
Owners
could be on green pasture or on
tender young wheat fields the
year around there wouldn't be
any vitamin shortage,” he ex-
plained.
"Fortunately, the deficiencies
of the range may be readily
supplied in a small amount of
feed, provided that feed is rich
in essential' vitamins.
’“Intensive research work on
small animals and chickens is con-
stantly emphasizing the importance
of vitamins in the diet of all ani-
mals. Cattle an sheep are no ex-
ception. They are able to manufac-
ture a few vitamins, but those their
system cannot produce must be
supplied by a nurUtious feed
"We know now that most of the
night blindness In cattle is due to
a deficiency of vitamin 4. This de-
ficiency also results in paralysis,
unthriftiness, failure to breed and
early abortion.
"You have all seen unthrifty ani-
-mats whose rough hair hung in
patches and whose skin was dry.
The skinny, unthrifty condition
which accompanies this rough coat
is due primarily to a lack of vita-
mins.
"A good many sheep breeders in
Western Kansas in the drouth
years had a lot of trouble at lamb-
ing time. The ewes failed to pro-
duce sufficient milk. It is believ-
ed that a lack of essential vita-
mins during the first half of the
gestation period brought about
this failure.”
Ful-O-Pep Breeder Mash meets
the demand for essential vitamins,
explains Henderson.
"There are three main sources
of vitamins in this feed—dehydrat-
ed cereal grass, wheat, oats, bar-
ley and rye cut before the first
joint has formed. Another source
is dehydrated alfalfa meal, anoth-
er is irradiated yeast, and another
is fish meal for minerals.
“Ful-O-Pep Range breeder
cubes contain 14 percent pro-
tein. Low protein feed is by
far the most suitable for breed-
ing animals. This vitamin-rich
feed is excellent to use both on
calves, when beyond the creep
feeding stage, and the breeding
cows and bulls.
From one to two pounds a day
per head should be fed, depending
on the size of the animal Sheep
will need only from a quarter to a
half pound per day per head.
"We suggest that you try Ful
Plan Christmas
Photos Early,
Says Thurman
You are planning to surprise the
grandparents with a picture of the
children Christmas?
You were going to have a new
portrait made for that special gift
for your husband?
He had promised you a fine pho-
tograph of himself?
In that case, the time to have
it made is now, which comes as a
suggestion from Thurman's, "The
House of Better Photography."
Already, portraits are promised
for delivery far into November. It
may be only a short time before
deliveries will hove to be booked
beyond the Christmas date. So if
a portrait is to be the gift, the sit-
ting must be made soon.
It takes time to produce qual-
its work of the type which Mr.
and Mrs. Mel Thurman have
educated West Texans to ap-
preciate. Moreover, in the field
of photography, as in all oth-
ers, there is not the manpower
and woman power available
that there once was. When
present supplies of some types
of materials are exhausted,
there will be no more. All this
enters into the need for mak-
ing appointments soon.
If the portrait is to be of a child,
especially an infant, it is essential
that the appointment be made for
the early morning. As for that
matter, any person is more photo-
genic earlier in the day.
There is almost unlimited choice
In the size and the finish of the
portrait from Thurman’s. It may
be a miniature or a handsome por-
trait paint as large as 20 by 04
inches. The miniatures may be on
ivory, or porcelain or imitation
miniatures on paper, but all are of
the high quality paint synonymous
with Thurman.
The portrait may be a black and
white, a gold tone, a tapestry, a
tapestry sketch, a tapestry paint-
ing or portrait paint. These are
matters of personal preference.
FRALEY
COMPANY BUTANE SERVICE
IN ESSENTIAL SERVICE — Providing the Butane gas for oil field activities in a wide section—an extremely vital in-
dustry in wartime—and Butane for hundreds of farms and r anches, Fraley & Co. is engaged in an essential activity that
keeps a fleet of nine trucks, including two transports, const antly on the go. To ease the burden on the trucks as much
as possible, giant storage tanks also were built, here and at B ig Spring. Two of the trucks work out of Big Spring, five
out of Abilene and two out of Graham. W. E. Fraley makes one request, that customers have their tanks filled every
time the truck calls. Not only does this save wear and te ar on tires and equipment, but there just can’t be any special
calls in these war days. —
(Reporter-News Photo)
Remember the Boy
In Uniform With a
HEART: HEART
A wedding band, a service
watch, a handsome signet or
stone ring. He will treasure
the gift always.
Marvin Owen
JEWELER
382 Pine 1
Diel 4900
O-Pep Breeder Cubes for * week
or two, just to determine for your-
self the results.
"Calves apparently are unable to
produce adequately even the vita-
min B complies during the first few
months. As a result, they have a
definite need of vitamin-rich feed.
"Ful-O-Pep Calf Meal is prepar-
ed in pellet form for calf feeding
and in meal form for lambs which
have to be bottle fed. The pellets
can be used most satisfactorily for
creep feeding of lambs as well as
calves. A taste of the pellets will
usually be enough to win a lamb or
calf to Ful-O-Pep Calf Meal Pet-
lets.”
30 Yean Without Hitting «
Person or Turning Over!
“We Move Every g
Minute C1
Phone. 1278 O
BUTANE
GAS
Complete Domestic and Oil
Field Service
FRALEY & CO.
2117 Pine
Phones 8036 and 5795
HAVE YOU
“COLOR-PROBLEM” HAIR
Let our*
ROUX
Z&lhi mt
Solve It! •
Is your once-lovely hair graying?
Dulled? Faded? Has incorrect col-
oring hurt its beauty? Perhaps your
hair requires a completely new
colortone . perhaps just A rinse
or touch-up to give it the gleaming,
lustrous look of youth. Whatever
your hair-color problem, our ‘color-
clinic”’ expert will determine it ... .
• ROUX Hair Coloring will correct
it! And naturally, we also fol-
low ROUX’s ‘‘Caution: Use only
as directed on label."
Mary Beauty Shop
1166 N. 3rd
Dial S01S
J.D MOORE
TRANSIENISTORAC#
Awn
THE LYDICK
ROOFING CO.
Roofing and Metal
Contractors
“52 Years in Businen"
Let us re-roof your residence
and you pay us In 12 months
329 Plum Phone 4088
NOT ONLY BETTER HEARING
WHEN YOU BUY—BUT
CONSTANT BETTER HEARING!
SONOTONE LEADS IN SERVICE AS IT LEADS IN EVERY OTHER
WAY. Avoid frequent, costly hearing interruptions’ SONO-
TONE'S money-saving policy of immediate replacements—instead
of costly repairs—is available wherever you may go in the entire
United Sthtes. For good hearing always, come to the LEADER in
hearing-a id instruments for over 12 years! -
Sonofone OF ABILENE
810 Mims Building
J. S. TINKLE, Moneger
Diel 8044
FDR Backs up
Mine Decision
WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.—(UP) -
President Roosevelt brought pres-
sure on President John L. Lewis of
the United Mine Workers today by
threatening drastic action to break
another general coal strike and en-
dorsing a War Labor Board for-
mula for settling the miners’ wage
dispute.
The President s move came in a
letter to WLB Chairman William
H. Davis who had told Mr Roose-
velt that wildcat strikes in defiance
of the board and of UMW officials
were spreading throughout the na-
tion.
Rites Today for
Mrs. L. D. May
COLORADO CITY, Oct 28- (Spb
—Funeral services for Mrs Lillian
Gale May, 28, wife of L. D May of
Loraine, are to be held Saturday
at 3 p. m. at the Valley View church.
Burial is to be in the Lone Wolf
cemetery, north of Loraine
Mrs. May died in a Roscoe hos-
pital after a short illness Her hus-
band, her mother, Mrs R. L. Gale
of Colorado City, two children, and
four brothers survive.
Mr. Roosevelt announced he
would "not hesitate to take what-
ever steps may be necessary to see
that the coal is mined," but. said
he would take no decisive action
before the union policy committee
meets Monday to consider the WLB
settlement proposal. Despite Lewis’
unfavorable reaction to that pro- "
posal, the President expressed con- 1
fidence that it would be accepted.
Mr. Roosevelt’s letter to Davis
represented a new choice of weap-
ons in the administration’s hand-
ling of the mine dispute. He neither
appealed directly to the strikers nor
ordered them back to work. He ap-
parently hopes to avoid govern-
ment operation of the mines again,
although he retains that last re-
source if the UMW officials reject
the WLB proposal Monday.
Practical Pranks
CHEYENNE, Wyo., Oct 30.-
(P)—War changes even Halloween
pranks.
A group of school children will
ask for handouts-but instead of !
food or candy they want tin cans,
kitchen fats and other materials |
to turn over to salvage authori-
ties.
Washday
CHICAGO, Oct 30.—(P)—The
American Institute of Laundering
came clean today and admitted
it was organizing its women em-
ployes into an alphabetical or-
ganization.
The name of the new group:
Women Active in Safeguarding
health—Wash—for short.
•»
CONSERVE
APPLIANCES
9
FOR
VICTORY!
FDR Says Food Prices Stable
WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.—(PP)—I
Consumer food prices have been States,
held stable in the last few months,
President Roosevelt declared Friday cost
in a press-radio conference at
which he also disclosed:
(1) He has named War Food Ad-
ministrator Marvin Jones the Amer-
ican member of an enlarged Anglo-
American combined food board,
thereby giving Jones a greater voice
in determining Allied policies on
food production, procurement and
distribution.
(2) Secretary of Agriculture
Wickard, whom Jones replaces as
the American member, will become
the boards non-voting head.
(3) Hereafter Canada will have
a representative on the board, along
with Great Britain and the United
Mr. Roosevelt said the actual
of food in the last three
months—a period which largely
covers the tenure of “Jones as food
administrator—has gone up not at
all or but a tiny percentage. The
cost of some items, he added, has
gone down a tiny percentage.
He told the conference that he
expected to send to Congress Mon-
day his long-awaited message on
food.
The Brenner Pass is the lowest
pass through the Alps and is less
than a mile above sea level.
BLACK LEG VACCINE
WE ARE IN THE MARKET FOR DEAD,
• PULLED WOOL AND TAGS
Abilene Wool & Mohair Co.
826 Pine
Bonded Insured Storage
Dial 8863
It Can HAPPEN to You!
ARE You PROTECTED IN CASE YOUR HOMI IS
BURGLARIZED?
Let us show you how cheaply you
can be protected from such a loss.
EMPLOYERS CASUALTY COMPANY
- W. LON STEFFENS. District Manager
JOE JOHNS, Salesman
618 Mimi Bldg. Abilene, Texas Phones 7283-7284
Restored ...
Treasured . .
Fall Tune-up
Keep your car in condition.
Check lubrication, brakes, en-
gine, battery, carburetor,
and wheel alignment, clutch,
rear axle, transmission. Get
ready for Winter!
Western
Chevrolet Co.
1041 North First
PURINA
POST PAINT
KWh
Dial 3201
The WAR ended the man-
ufacture of appliances.
The men who made them,
and the materials they
were made of, are needed
today to make ships, guns,
planes and tanks! So
"carry on" with the things
you now hove Take the
best core possible of your
appliances. MAKE 'EM
LAST!
West Texas Utilities
Compay
ALWAYS ASK FOR
JANGBURNS
La Pure Food
ICE CREAM
INSURE YOUR FLOORS FOR FUTURE USE
FROM TODAY’S PROFITS Install Asphalt
Tile os o 1 5-year floor right out of your moin-
ftenance fund
West Texas Brick & Tile Co.
Home Phone NAN1 1107 Weinut offer Phone 4106
PURINA
LICE
POWDER
Control Lice on Birds with Purina
Roost Paint , , Dust Bird* To Kill
Lice With Purina Lice Powder
L. D. KENNEDY
Grain Store
533 Walnut St.
Cakes for Any Occasion—Fruit
or Cream Pies — Cookies
in Voriety—Do ughnuts, •
Sweet Rolls.
de
sWEErsNOP
1236 N. 5th Dial 2-0326
Fully Enriched
MEAD’S fine BREAD
Abilene’s Favorite Leaf Since 1918
Old photographs are often the most
valued . . A high degree of
artistry is required to reproduce *
old portraits in new beauty. This
type of work receives expert at-
tention, at
THURMAN'S
THE HOUSE OF BETTER PHOTOGRAPHY
1124 North Second Diel 3703
OSCAR
ROSE
General Contractors
1117 Walnut Street
O 7
PHONE
Dine Today At
Hickory Grill
10R0 North 2d
MOVING * W.T.
WILSON
STORING ocu** ...
PACKIN
SHIF
Call
YELLOW CAB
4334
ENJOY THE FULL RICH FLAVOR AND AROMA
Star State
Coffee
Roasted and Packed by
UNIVERSAL MANUFACTURING COMPANY
Abilene, Taxes
"We. Insure
Everything But
The
Great Beyond"
Including Fire
N INSURANCES
COX-HUNTER-HALL
Sth Floor Utilities 8141 Teleph one 4369
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 136, Ed. 2 Saturday, October 30, 1943, newspaper, October 30, 1943; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1635899/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.