The Sunday Record (Mineola, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 10, 1943 Page: 4 of 4
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Page Four
The Sunday Record, January 10,1943
BUY IT 2*1
•Sumi
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
. R. E. Streetman, Pastor
10:00: Sunday School, D. E.
Brooks, Superintendent.
11:00: Sermon: What to do
when in trouble.
6:30: Training Union: W. E.
Cooper Director.
7:30: Sermon: A Strange
Question Asked.
Great thinkers today are
studying the people’s reaction
to the strain of these terrible
ffiff Pul no innn*fi interested
0PA Regulations
Provide Changes
In Gas Prices
Operators Will
Be Allowed Profit
Margin of 3 Cents
Gasoline service station opera -
in how you behave under pres- ' tors may now correct their re-
sure as God is. Each Sunday tail prices so they can realize
you show God as well as your ^ a gross margin of three cents
loved ones what you think this ( per gallon> J H Robbins, Chair-
_S r
1 m
world needs. Is there really any-
thing we need as much as to
find God’s way and favor? That
is what we are searching for in
man of the Wood County War j
Price and Rationing Board poin-;
ted out today.
Where an operator of a re- >
your church Will you join us, station selling gas_
today? You have many reasons
for not attending. Satan sees to
that. But we want you to join
us. Start today.
Last Sunday we had 305 in
our Bible School. All of your
family should be in one of the
classes every Sunday.
--o-
Notice
Mineola Chapter No. 454. O.
E. S. Dated Meeting. Tuesday,
Ary 12, 7:30 p. m. Visitors
•> . ,e Also celebrating New
Year’s Party.
CORA DYER, W.M.
MINNIE JONES, Secty
oline adjusts his prices in this;
manner, tho. lie is required to;
file a statement with the local j
War Price and Rationing Board" j
Mr. Robbins said.
This report must set forth the
service station’s delivered cost,
its maximum selling price per
gallon before a margin adjust- j
ment was made, and the new j
maximum sel.ing price.
The Board chairman explain- I _
ed that when gasoline rationing j
was established, the Office ofj
Price Administration recognized |
that tho consequent reduction j
in volume would create ‘ hard- j
ship to service station dealers
and other sellers of gasoline at
retail who operated on narrow |
FARM TEAM for sale. Nice team
of farm horses for sale. W. Z.
English. 41-43C
Major Business
| Factors Improve
I Austin — Major business fac-
tors of Texas unanimously im-
proved during November, to
reach a composite index of 171.8 |ler. Harmless to other animals,
the University of Texas Bureau 35c and 50c size. Also Arsenic
WANTED: 100,000 rats killed
with Ray’s guaranteed Rat Kil-
of Business Research reports.
This index, composed of pay-
rolls, employment, freight car-
loadings, runs Of crude oil to
refinery stills, department store
WILL BUY Mineral Rights
within drilling activities in
Wood County. Quote lowest
i sales and electric consumption, j price, giving full land descrip-
Liquid. Service Drug Store 413p
AZALIA and Camellia vpl
from $1.00 to $3.50 each. Order!
accepted until the first of Feb-
ruary. Gene Cherry Nufser
Star Route, Mineola, Texas.
FOR 8ALE or Rent: 57 6C
farm, a real bargain. R. B.
liott.
ROSE BUSHES, shrubs, fl
and pecan trees for sale. G|
Cherry Nursry, Star Route,
eola, Texas. 40-1
i was 8.3 points above October | tion. Write Reuben Usher, Cle-
and nearly 50 points ahead of j burne, Texas
Nnvpmhpr 1Q41 * *------
! Electric power use led the ad-jGOO° f°r rentv?e“
j vanee—22.1 points over October £rov?d' 'Y: T ,Dozle1' 405 So«h
land 80 points above NovemberiPaClflC-Mlneoa' 40-41p
SINGLE COMB English
IQ [rc Leghorn Chicks, our Best Qr
from 2 year old hens ma
with R.O.P. roosters, $9.50
100 or 300 for $28. Our Sec|
Grade $8.45 per 100 or 300
$25.00. These Chicks are gii
a year ago .Payrolls gained 9.4 FOR SALE: Very choice regis- . . . . . . .
I points over October, employ- j tered Holstein heifers $50 each.!anteed to be stral&ht run-
l ment 2 points, carloadings, 8.3 Best of Breeding. Homestead jPostaee and guarantee
j points, crude runs 2.1 pointsj Farms, McGraw. N. Y. R. 2. i Delivery. Orders filled prom
| and department store sales 3.2--
RENTER OR FARM HAND Texas, Route 6.
WANTED: Have for rent farm
Hillerest Poultry Farm,
S points.
IVALCP OUT AND lANPtO ON
, (ViE FARM OF AN
SPEAKING CN/NES&
WANT AOS
a*sggaH
Wildlife Program
Popular With
Texas Farm Boys
while others may help protect Mineoia
nests from livestock. Fire pre-1
that made more than four
thousand dollars worth of wat-
ermelons. potatoes, cotton, and
peanuts this year. Halves or
| FOUND - Two keys on ring. thlr? and f *0Uld,
I Owner identify and pay for ad '“Y P,0»0sltl0n to family to
at Monitor Office ' ™rk b>’ daY, Y'lth TaU crop'
!___1______ 75 acres, good house, barn, pas-
;FOR SALE — Overcoat in good j ture, cows to milk. J. J. Puck-
condition. See it at A&P Store.! ett at Hainesville, P. O. Mineola
41-42p
Rt. 1.
40-42c
ivention and controlled hunting; FOR SALE — Six room house,!
also are encouraged.
-----o—-
j all plumbing fixtures, $800 cash. |
I Must be moved. J. S. Sewell.3tc
Mrs. W. L. Smallwood is in
Houston visiting her daughter
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.! margins and who depended on
large volume sales and low cost
marketing operations in order j boys principles of sportsman-
to realize a profit. j ship and proper regard for laws
David Normington J*. and baby
son.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Reagan
and daughter visited their son.
Harold, Jr. who is at Sheppard
Field, during Christmas.
Rev. R. E. Streetman and Rev.
B. T. Shoemake attended the
District One Board meeting at
Pleasant Monday.
e Times Herald
A REAL NEWSPAPER
More features—More news,
local,: state, and national.
Bee—
DOROTHY PARR
Local Agent
Large Nnmber of
Wood County Men
College Station — Teaching Army Reserve
GARDEN SEED: Just received
a big shipment of all kinds of
bulk garden seeds. See us for
your seed needs at Cream Sta-
A total of 45 white and col- | ^ Mrs. E. G. Laminack 41-42
"To provide relief to these op-■! protecting wildlife is one of'the °red .men from. Wood County | helpw ANTED: White and col-
io piuviue rtnei to ii.tse up , ...... have been examined and indue- nrpH fjipnp' sinii-m ntfmHunk
erators,” Mr. Robbins continued, i objectives of the wildlife con- r y °rcd filing station attendants.
“an amendment to Maximum servation program offered Tex- y 1 ^ ! Apply at -the Humble Ware
an amenamtnc tu maximum ^ past week, it was announced i house nn South miimnu t p
Price Regulation No 137 has1 as- 35.000 4-H Ciub boys. R. E. , . ’ . „ | nouse on aoutn jonnson. J. P.
rnce tteguiauon ino. Ild!s i , , Wednesday Several of the men pncriish
been issued. This amendment i Callendar, game management , ; . ,, <h_: £'n^iLsn-
permits dealers whose gross | specialist for the A&M College ™ ^Sd“e
margin was less than three, Extension Service, says this pro-j ?nd wil] entpr active duty in
cents per gallon to increase gram is growing m popularity
their selling price so they can among club boys every year,
realize a three cent gross mar-
gin.
“As an illustration of how the
methods of conservation and
Women!
Here is a name
to remember
A 62 year record
of 2-Way help*
*See Directions on Label
Dallas Mornini
News
$1.00 Per Monti
All the Latest News
Tops In Special Featui
Charles Him
PHONE $»•#
QUICK lELteF FR!
Symptoms of Distress Arising I
STOMACH ULCI
DUE TO EXCESS ACI
Free BookTell s of Homo Troot
Most Help or it Will Cost You N«
Over two million bottles of the WTL3
. TBEATMRNThavebeen soldforrell
symptom* Of distress arising from StoH
and DuotfMKl Ulotrs due to E*MM AS
Poor Digestion, Sour or Upset Stein
Gassiness, Heartburn, Sleeplessness, i
due to Excess AcM. 8old on 15 day* t1
Ask for “Willard’s Message” whicb 1
explains this treatment*—tree—at
Shivers Pharmacy.
*>!•»
provisions of this amendment
the near future. ;
. , . .. Men with an L after their |
As a part of lie prograir.. accepted for limited
county agricultural agents and; servW only „ was sald. j
local leaders tram boys in the, The inducted men are: Roger
Legrand Bland, Claud Meek,
apply, we might assume that a; help them establish practices Eliye Smithf waymon Hayward
JMiLLast
: ForYourCough
tpwBnmnision relieves promptly be-
caose It goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw, tender, in-
flamed bronchial mucous mem-
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulsion with the un-
derstanding you must like the way it
quickly allays the cough or you are
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
service station operator’s max-
imum price for gasoline on De-
cember 1, 1942 was 19 cents per
gallon and the cost of that gas-
oline delivered to his station
was 17 cents per gallon That
left him a gross margin of two
cents a gallon. Under this new'
amendment he may increase his
maximum price to 20 cents per
gallon, thus giving him a three
cent margin gross profit. How-
ever, if his delivered cost is re-
duced at a later date, he will
then have to reduce his selling
price by a
amount.”
on the farm or ranch which
are favorable to the increase of
desirable kinds of wildlife. Club
members also are encouraged to
Head. Roy Hershel Love, James
Tilman Sadler, Charles Phocian
Beard. Wallace Witt Mize, Leon-
ard Ray Puckett, Ernest Chil-
study the life habits and eco- ^on gharp, Oscar Jack Robert-
ncmic value of game and fur-
bearing animals, birds, and fish.
And through conservation
measures, many are producing
wildlife as a crop of the land,
Callender says.
During the past year some
clubs visited nearby government
fish hatcheries and attended
encampments to study wildlife
corresponding j conservation. Others establish-
ed sanctuaries offering both
Mrs Alfora Williams
FLORIST
; Cut Flowers, Designs
\ LOWERS BY WIRE
TELEPHONE 95
Mr. Robbins invited retail
gasoline dealers who wish to
obtain more information about
this provision of the OPA reg-
ulations to inquire at the Office
of the Wood County War Price
and Rationing Board in Quit-
man.
-o-
Prisoners Getting
Red Cross Parcels
AT FIRST
SIGN OF A
C$666
.66 TABLETS. SALVE. NOSE DROM
TRAIN AT TYLER
Tyler’s most modern and pro-
gressive school of business
training. We train the major-
ity of Tyler Students. High
standards, high ideals, private
—select—individual. The only
air-conditioned business college
in this section.
For free college catalog describ-
ing courses address Director of
Admission.
Federal Institute
TYLER, TEXAS
American fighting men and
American civilians taken pris-
oner and interned by Germany
or Italy receive regular Ameri-
can Red Cross standard food
parcels and necessary clothing
as soon as the International
Red Cross Committee at Gen-
ieva it notified of their capture
and camp-.location. Prisoners re-
ceive a package a week and in-
ternees a package every two
weeks. In addition, a prisoner
may also receive a supplemen-
tary package every sixty days i
from his family or friends as
soon as Provost Marshall Gen-
eral's office has notified them
of his whereabouts. Twenty
thousand American Red Cross
parcels were sent to the Far
East last June on the diplo-
matic exchange ship Gripsholm,
for distribution to American
prisoners.
food and cover to wildlife.
Teaching boys to shoot a rifle
properly and accurately always
has been a part of the sports-
manship program and it is ev- Reeves,
en more popular in wartime, the
specialist reports.
Many of the thousands of
game preservation demonstra-
tion markers on fences along
Texas roads and highways were
erected by teen-age 4-H Club
boys who are cooperating in
the program. Some of them
take an actual census of the
wildlife on their farms and
ranches, some establish feeding
stations for birds in minter,
son> James C English, Jack
Dawson Castleberry, George L.
Smith, George Montgomery
Manley jr., James Henderson
Bullard. Leslie Morris Moberts,
Ernest Otto Ford (L), Wilburn
Collins, Cecil McCary, Charles
D. Burns, Claudia Ray Haven-
is, , Doyle Dickerson, Bertrand
Duel Pynes, Henry David Ney-
man, M. L. White, Hubert A.
Baber, James William Parker,
Hiifeert Preston Arrington, Lind-
sey Vernon Halloquist, Luther
Shaw Champion (L), Warren
Scot Sparks (L), James Roscoe
Bennie Boyd, Frank
Cecil Martin. Millard David
Adams, jr., Dewey Andrew Pra-
ther, Jerry Adrian Crow, James
Homer Hughes jr., and Harrison
Ray Hartsfield (L). And the fol-
lowing colored men, Thedward
Willis Briggs, Walter R. L. Mc-
Millan, Estal Guthrie, Busker
Fannin, jr., and Oliver R. Clark.
Mrs. Harvey Jones has gone to
Dallas where she is employed.
!
Belgians in Tunis
Complete Family Protection
From Infancy to Old Age
Children—10c per Month up
Adults—20c per Month up
four neighbor belongs—why not you? . . . We are home
people and we pay our claims in full.
J. H. ENGLISH
jssociation—Funeral Home
tVICE PHONE 107
l MINEOLA, TEXAS
I i
'
.vXs .. . •Xv£.*vvXmX-%vs. ‘■-N*
IB
BELGIAN AIRMEN SHOWN HERE on a Tunisia airfield are taking
an active part in the fighting in North Africa. Moreover a powerful column
of Belgian Congo forces have come all the way from Central Africa to attack
the Axis in tl:e Sahara.
32 PieceCrystal
IjlVt”ll Luncheon Set
»'l
Never before have we been able to make such an attrac-
tive of to the readers of The Monitor. Yes friends, we
will give this beautiful 32-Piece Floral Design Crystal
Luncheon Set to everyone taking advantage of this ex-
ceptional offer.
6 Dessert Dishes
6 Large Plates
1 Large Bowl
6 Salad Plates
6 Cups and 6 Saucers
1 Large Platter
Every woman loves beautiful crystal glassware an it is
now more popular than ever. You will be mighty proud
of this Crystal Luncheon Set and will be the envy of
your friends and neighbors when they see it on your
table. !
HERE’S OUR OFFER—Do not pass up this opportunity
to get this beautiful 32-'Piece Crystal Luncheon Set for
your very own. The offer is good for a limited time only.
ACT NOW!
The Mineola Monitor . . I Yr.
The Progressive Farmer
5 Years
32-Pc Crystal Luncheon Set
Only
Yes. you will get—The Monitor for another whole year.
If your time is already paid up, we will extend your sub-
scription. You will also get The Progressive Farmer, the
South's leading farm and home magazine, with depart-
ments in each issue that are edited for every member
of the home—the father, the mother, and the children—
and covering every phase of farm life. Keep abreast of
the time by reading The Monitor and The Progressive
Fanner, with its recommendations for better farming
methods and more farm profits Mail or Bring in Your
Order Today.
----OFFER — ORDER TODAY----
THE MINEOLA MONITOR
Mineola, Texas
Please enter my order for The Monitor and the Progres-
sive Farmer and send me the 32-Piece Floral Crystal
Luncheon Set, for which I enclose $0.00
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The Sunday Record (Mineola, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 10, 1943, newspaper, January 10, 1943; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth591139/m1/4/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mineola Memorial Library.