The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1944 Page: 4 of 6
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The Lingo-Leeper Co
■•GOOD LUMBER SINCE 1872”
TEXAS POWER & IIGHT COMPANY
PAGE FOUR
THE DENISON PRESS
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(led Rive* Valley
Odd tfollcuai and (leMeJzaUi AiiociaiUut
DENISON, TEXAS
THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1944, W. O. W. HALL
OFFICERS
President, H. E. Nix...........................................................................Durant
Vice-President, Dr. B. R. Busby Denison
Second Vice-President, Fred Calloway ...............................Durant
Secretary, Mae Flaskamp .........................•..............................Denison
Treasurer, Ruby Laymance....................................................Durant
Conductor Billy Bruhin ........................................ Denison
Warden, Edries Mosse Denison
Call to Order .........................................................President
Presentation of Flag ...... Conductor and Warden
Pledge of Allegiance ........................................................Audience
National Anthem .....................................................................Audience
Invocation ......................................................................^ ^
Roll Call of Officers and Reading of Minutes
Address of Welcome 1 ru'a Crane
Response to Welcome Address ........................Joe D. Summitt
Appointment of Committees
Report from Lodges.
Report of Treasurer.
Unfinished Business.
Report of Sick Members.
New Business.
Report of Committees.
Memorial Service..............
Benediction
Denison Rebekahs
P. A. Scobey
FRIDAY, MAY 5,
,1044
vr ... A„|. Retired Workers Should Get
iNCW Uope Will Correct Information, Tutt Say.
On Storage Of
Eggs By A. & M.
College Station. ■— Recent re-
search has caused food preserva-
tion experts to change their minds
about which part of this refriger-
ator eggs should be stored tn.
Put them in the hydrator.
The studies which led to this
conclusion were made by the
Utah Experiment Station, accord-
ing to Mrs. Winifred Leverenz,
specialist in food preservation for
the Texas A, and M. College Ex-
tension Service. Formerly, home
economists recommended that
eggs be stored in wire baskets in
the refrigerator.
In the project, 10 ihompajakers
cooperated by storing refrigerated
eggs in open containers, in paste-
board cartons, and in hydrators-
Additional eggs were stored in a
Dallas, Texas.—Inaccurate ad-
vice front wpll-imeaning but in-
adequately informed friends may
be costing some retired workers
money in the form of old-age and
survivors insurance benefits,
Emesit L. Tutt, Manager of the
Dallas office of the Social Se-
curity Board, said Tuesday. The
same kind of advice also may be
keeping benefit checks from
(widows, children and parents of
workers who die, Mr. Tutt said.
I
Similarly when, a worker dies,
the widow or other close rela-
tive should immediately contact
the Social Security Board field
office where complete assistance
will be given in filing a claim for
survivors’ benefits, Mr. lull
said. Contacts may be made bv
personal visit, by letter or by
telephone.
Several retined workers who
have delayed filing their claims
that
PROGRAM
Sk.it By * Durant Rebekah Lodge
Original ''Our Sons" Reading by Mrs. W. R. Mahan, Denison
Grayson Canton No. 1, Denison
> Special Music By Joy McHorse and Mary Alice Clark
£ Reading ... By Austin Kennedy, Durant
J Refreshments
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kitchen cupboard. At the end|have biiormcd tbe L were
of the week, the scientists found' fl'leni s ,f u sai(1' «The
most of the eggs in the cupboard ”ot elljflble’ Mr> TUtt - -
had deteriorated from Grade A
tc Grade C, while some wgre not
fit to eat. i >
The refiigerated eggs did much
better, even though the grades
for them went down also. Almost
half of th,e eggs in cartons and
open containersi went down to
Grade C, and the remainder be-
came Grade B. However, only
five per cent of the eggs in the
hydrator went down to C grade,
and 95 per cent of them
grade B at the end of the testing
period.
Mrs. Leverenz explains th r
the kydrakor probably pro/ties
the most successful storage totce
since eggs contain a great dea
of water and they require storage
that is cool, fairly moist, and
f:ee from objectionable odors a ■■ I
niovement of air. She warns that
the naMural “bloom” on an egc; is j
necessary to fits keeping well, so
dirty eggs Should not be washed.
"The
best thing to do,” he added, “is
to come to our office and secuu
correct information.”
“The true facts are that a
Worker may qualify for retire-
ment benefits at any age
65.”
How to Grow Vine Crops
In Victory Gardens .
<S
Mi
Mv.;
■
mm-
above
They may be wiped with a rough
dry cloth.
Incidentally, with the current
surplus of eggs, Mrs. Leverenz
we,e1 hopes most Texas families are
eating so many they need not be
kept in the refrigerator long.
mm'
T'*s v-f'
f
V y-..; >
C'. cambers Mature Early and Have Long Harvest,
Vcgti . io vine crops arc all len-
der. They should not be planted
until the ground is warm and dan-
ger of frost is over. A sunny ex-
posure and a light soil are best for
.he vines; and they need plenty of
water and food, because they grow
so fart, and produce so much.
Cucumbers, squash, pumpkins
. vi mel ns ere the i .-tncipal vine
cv J. Even the small garden can
row some of them. Cucumbers
i iould always be tried, if there is
:-,poce. The early varieties mature
m two months, and they can rtt
bo restrained to a reasonable st
Pinch o(T the ends of the v<
which grow too far; this will si;
j::1 o the selling of fruit,
Rush squash need about ten
• i,-1,, l i■ f apiece. The Itali i
re of the best; its fruits
o< harvested when three inches
. cr ... any .-b a.upward to t>
fci t long. At all sizes there is n
deli': oils way to serve them. Th ree
; also a bush pumpkin taking
about the same space. It is not so
i iiK-tivc of food, since the fruits
are allowed to mature; but they
make fine pumpkin pies and fair
jack-o-lanterns.
Mdons need more room, the
vines like to run. They should
have light soil, and full sun. and
.bundant plant food. Mix in ■ ta-
t-K sp- nfu) to the hill before plant-
Choose a melon whloii wiU
n of growth lu your
city. There are varieties which
mre in from 75 to 110 days and
you cannot plant the resd until
ground is warm, you fen figure
i what arc the chances of »«ttir.*
ture lruit before frost Mine*
ids on the weather!
u r is required a
| produce sweet melons.
FOR VICTORY
M,
THANKS, VOTERS t: GRAYSON COUNTY
You Gave me nearly *>0 per cent of the popular vote
In 1942. Jh.lte ft "5 per cent or more this time.
i#i BUY
UNITED
m 'mm w*
LEROY M. ANDERSON
PUBLISHER DENISON PRESS
CANDIDATE FOR \
REPRESENTATIVE
GRAYSON COUNTY
PLACE ONE, DISTRICT 44
MAN
STATES
\VA R
fhONDS
AND
STAMPS
MY PLATFORM IN BRIEF
Cuu ,-i.i i Legislature; no added taxes; fullest
co-opetation with Federal Government In securing for
our . : . r boys and girls a fair chance at taking up
life where they left; More adequate paymenfs of
p :i<, . to ag'-d: fullest protection of all natural
resources for Texas and Its Industries for the boys and
girls of tomorrow; back to old Democratic principles
nnd local self-government with all its Implications;
Bight of all men to work as well a» the right or collect
lve b . tnlng; Ample ■ ttonal advantage* for nil
alike with special emphasis on 'rchnloal training; along
with sp- ling np of educational life: expanding cf Indus-
_ try, f; itn lif--, with special ttiwly of same as to larger
“ future of all products; less polities nnd more progress
; Givt business, Industry, farming
(■dm i n, m- dicine and all other economic questions
b - into the hi nds of the people nn-l end the dayl of
in.i ing them political footballs and guinea pigs.
(Political Advertisement)
^-l/t£ fiwtd
BALSAM - WOOL
ATTIC INSULATION
PAYS FOR ITSELF
IN FUEL SAVINGS
m SHORT TIME!
4 &SSSZ&S& 1
1 t
lil ICEMAN
■A Th* J lomcn, like Lexington’s Minute Men of
1T75, ere alart, ctpehl* end ready ... day or night
open th* li/e Lines of modern living
... yrjnf Elartfic Power Lines.
TP Sri. lawmen are truly the Minute Men on the
Production Front, on the Home Front. Vigilantly
and wmwntly, they keep Electric Power on the
move... serving military installations, war plants
and industries, military and civilian hospitals,
home* and farms.
Patrolling the vast system of Transmission and
Distribution Lines which form a 52-county network, yourTP&L Linemen keep these Lines
in rip-top condition so that power may flow in abundance wherever and whenever needed.
They are the men who go out into storms and floods and hail and sleet to maintain service,
without thought of sleep or food or comfort. They are real heroes during war and peace...
sewing the nation, serving Texas and Texans, speeding Victory in a very practical way.
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1944, newspaper, May 5, 1944; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth527046/m1/4/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.