The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, February 9, 1945 Page: 4 of 4
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I
PAGE FOUR
THE CARROLLTON CHRONICLE, CARROLLTON, TEXAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1945
Seed Cora
STAKE YOUR REPUTATION ON
TEXAS BRED AND GROWN
Hybrid Seed Corn
We Are Headquarters Far Sale of
HARPER’S TEXAS HYBRID SEED CORN
$9.25 is:
See Us For
Feeds and Field Seeds
Of All Types
“Business is Good”
Blanton Brain Company
Dealers In
GRAIN, HAY, and MILLFEEDS
PHONB 11---------CARROLLTON, TEXAS
Coppell News
nr Mary mildred arnett
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Maynard and fam-
ily of Farmers Branch visited Wednes-
day afternoon with Mrs. M. L. Smltn
and children.
Mrs. Dave Millican is ill in a Fort
Worth hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Arnett of Dallas vis-
ited Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. John
Arnett and Mary M.
Mrs. Jack Thompson has been ill.
The Baptist church had as their Wed-
nesday night prayer meeting guest speak-
er, the county missionary. George E.
Hay of Dallas.
Rev. and Mrs. Theo Wright visited re-
cently in Pilot Point with Rev, Wright’s
Answers to War Ouiz
< Count: Question one, 40; rest, 20 each.
•core: 100, perfect; 80, good; ft, fair.
4
JL Mary Churchill, Winston's
ft. Portugal. %-
-ft. Argentina.
ft. False. It's usually hard work.
parents and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Corbin had as their
Tuesday night dinner guests Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Corbin and Mr. and • Mrs.
Clyde Saunders, all of Grapevine.
Mr*. Will Corbin is ill.
Mrs. L. B. Whiteside had as her Wed-
nesday dinner guests, Mrs. A. N. Corbin,
Mrs. E. W. Parr, Mrs. E. C. Gentry and
daughter, Charlotte.
Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Cribbs and John
David had as their Sunday dinner guests
Rev. and Mrs. Theo Wright.
L. B. Whiteside is in a Fort Worth
hospital.
Mrs. Dave Millican is much improved
after a recent illness.
Mrs. Bertie Gordon of Dallas visited
Saturday afternoon with her sister, Mrs.
B. L. Nicks.
Mrs. Jim Thompson had as her Sunday
dinner guests, Mr. and Mrs.
iPjoldieM, 0$ .,,
Waste Fats
Mean Points and Money For You...
. . . And Ammunition For the Front
This is Your Privilege — Let’s Don’t
Abuse It.
ROBERT McINNISH
AND SAVE YOUR MONEY FOR
THE SAKE OF THOSE YOU KNOW
Buy Bonds
PERRY GROCERY AND MARKET
W-3"( Ad'
For Sale-
FOR SALE-TWO 71x175-FT. (EACH)
Choice lots on College Hill near Rex
Good home. Priced to sell. Jess Rich-
ardson, or call at Chronicle. 2-3tc
FOR SALE-4 OR~5TONSBALED
Cane and Hegari Hay.—David Nix.
Phone 42F2. 14-2tp.
Wanted—
>
WANTED—A TRUMPET AND A COR- 1
net—Mrs. John Mitchell. ' 14-tfc
For Rent—
HOUSE FOR RENT-PHONE 69F4,
14-ltp.
Found—
STRAY DOG AT MY PLACE IN CAR-
rollton. Male, reddish tan and black,
has collar. Well fed, young, obeys well.
W. L. MARTIN. 14-tfc
Farm Machinery—
THE BEST STALK CUTTERS in Texas,
Any size. Made to fit your individual
needs.—Carrollton Yielding and Black-
smith. Phone 88. 10-3tc
Addison News
By MRS. J. U. WELCH and
MRS. L. E. ROSSER
Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Hamilton have gone
to Arizona for an extended visit.
Rev. Strickland and family, who have
been making their home with Mrs. S.
Y. Odom, have moved to Ft. Worth.
Mrs. H. H. Lewis, Mrs. H. K. Pistole,
Miss Nora and Elma Gilstrap and Mrs.
J. U. Welch spet Friday with Mrs. An-
nie Welch of Walnut Hill community.
Active services, at Baptist church Sun-
Bennett day- Sunday School , 10 a. m., preaching
Gayle Sanders of Dallas were visitor* at
the L. E. Rosser home Sunday.
Rev. Weins and family were enter- j
tained in the Eld Lewis home Sunday
for lunch, visiting in the evening with
the J. R. Berry family. He preached
both services.
Walker as Dr. Goebbels
Neatn
ess.. .
Frm HEAD is TOES
—Shoe Shine
—TonsorUd W ork
t CLOTHES NEATLY
-—klleitned & Pressed
—Hu!’, the Service You Get At-
STRIWSFELLOW
BARBER SHOP
&
City Cleaners
Phone 126
OWNERS:
MR. & MRS. JACK JOHNSON
BEN4M3NGFELLOW
sWiC
Gentry and small daughters, and Miss
Prudie Thompson of Fort Worth.
Rev. and Mrs. Ray Hand and family
were the Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Bert Colley.
Mrs. Duncan Harrison has been ill.
Earl Cook and Miss Odessa Cook of
Walnut Hill visited Sunday afternoon
with the John Arnett family.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cook and family
visited Mr. Cook’s father, J. W. Cook,
at Addison Sunday. Mr. Cook has been
ill, but is now reported improving.
Margaret Summers and Ruby
are new waitresses at the Elite.
by pastor 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. BTU
vice at 7 p. m.
Pvt. Edward Smirl visited home folks
over the week end and attended services
at the Baptist church.
Miss Morris of Dallas has moved to
Addison and is making her home with
her sister, Mr. Audie Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Berry and children
entertained Thursday in honor of Mr.
and Mrs. C. R. Berry of Dallas. A big
birthday cakeand open house was given
for Mr. Berry's birthday and a number
of friends called. Mrs. L. E. Rosser op-
ened the entertainment with “Happy
Birthday," a surprise greeting.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Hoyle and Mrs.
The ruling of the federal district judge
at Washington upholding the right of
the postmaster general arbitrarily to bar
from the second class mailing privileges
a magazine, Esquire, which he happens
not to like, raises the question of cen-
sorship. in one of its most obnoxious
forms. The law enacted in 1869 giving
the postmaster general this arbitrary
authority for many years had been in-
terpreted reasonably by the department
as enabling it to bar second class privi-
leges to material that was clearly por-
nographic.
But Postmaster General Walker has
MEATS, FATS—Red Stamps chosen to use the discretion vested in
Q5, R5, S5 March 31 him to clamp down on printed matter
T5 U5, V5, W5, X5 April 28 which is objectionable to him personally,
Y5, Z5, & A2, B2, C2, D2 June 2 or objectionable to some of his subor-
PKOCESSED FOODS—Blue Stamps— j dinates. In the case of Esquire a majority
X5, Y5, Z5, & A2, B2 March 31 of the department’s hearing board saw
Grandmother Ella Nance, mother of
Hope Nance, died Saturday night at his
home and was buried Sunday, funeral
services being held at the Addison Meth-
odist church. Rev. Peal officiating. A
large attendance showed the high es-
teem held for her in the community.
Rev. Billy Womack assisted in the ser-
vices.
Last Date
For Use
Spring
Baby Chicks
ARE HERE!
—SEVERAL BREEDS IN STOCK—
Baby Chicks will be scarce this year;
so get the chicks you need while you
can. Book Special Orders Early.
BOOK ORDERS FOR SPECIAL BREEDS
(Our Chick Sale Transactions Are Carried On In the Extreme Back of
Our Store and Does Not In Any Way Hamper Our Market Business)
STOUT’S MARKET
PHONE 75---------—---J. W- STOUT, Owner
C2, D2, E2, F2, G2 April 28
H2, J2, K2, L2, M2 June 2
SUGAR—Stamp 34 February 28
Stamp 35 June 2
SHOES—'Airplane Stamps 1, 2, and 3 in
ook Three, good indefinitely.
COT URGES NO SPRING
SCHOOL RECESS
As another step in tranapor. tion con-
servation, Col. J. Monroe Johnson, direc-
tor of the Office of Defense Transporta-
tion, urges that schools and colleges can-
cel their spring vacations this year. Col.
Johnson pointed out that this year’s
spring vacations will come during the
existing critical period in wartime trans-
portation, when every effort must be
made to avoidnon-essential travel. The
cmL'Sion of these vacations will be espec-
ially desirable as it affects students who
must travej to reach their homes, for it
“will save for each student a trip home
and return,” he wrote in a letter to John
W. Studebaker United States Commis-
sioner of Education. As many as 300,000
I students would normally be taking such
vacation trips, Mr. Studebaker said in
endorsing Col. Johnson’s recommenda-
tion.
All the Worli
Loves Fine Jewelry
Kdtey’i JEWELRY DEPARTMENT
Offers you distinctive jewelry at
reasonable prices . . . prices eval-
jewelry at Kelley’s, you can be
sure of buying from a reliable firm
noted without figuring in ex pen- without paying for the “name.’
sive advertising ... When you buy
Use Our Watch Repair Dept.
EXPERT WATCH REPAIRING
KEHETS&
BACK TUB ATTACK WITH MODE OF YOUR JACK
CULPEPPERS MOVE TO ALLEN
The G. W. Culpepper family moved to
A^en, Texas, Route 1, Tuesday, Jan-
uary 30. Mr. Culpepper works in Dallas
for Eastman Products, and will continue
to work there since his removal to
Allen.
Mrs. J. R. Gammon went to Richard-
son Wednesday, January 31, to attend
the funeral of “Gradnmother” Durham,
old-time resident of Richardson, who
died there on Monday.
no reason for barring the magazine from
the second class privileges. Yet Mr.
Walker overruled his board and on his
personal judgment took action that might
put a magazine of wide circulation out
of business.
The objection first raised was obscen-
ity. But finally the postmaster general
retreated from this position to the con-
tention that the contents of the magazine
were “not of a public character, devoted
to literature, the sciences or the arts.’
Yet it carries informative and literary
articles much like those of such maga-
zines as the New Yorker.
Some weeks ago the New York post-
office put a serious book, Lillian Smith’s
“Strange Fruit,” under the ban and no-
tified the Saturday Review of Literature
it would be barred from second class
mailing privileges if it continued to ad-
vertise this book. A sharp protest of de-
fiance from the Saturday Review
brought a suspension of the order, but
not a rescinding of it
It is obviously intolerable for the post-
office department suddenly to set itself !
up as the Dr. Goebbels of American life,
letting people know what they can read
and what they are barred from reading.
Apparently Postmaster General Walker
is ready to supervise a new burning of
the books.
If the decision of the district court i*
upheld then it’s up to congress to change
the law. or to the President to get a
Office Supplies—
TYPEWRITER RIBBGNS, BLACK &
Red, Black, and Blue (Standard or
Portable); Pure Linen Adding Ma-
chine Ribbons; Stamp Pads and Stamp
Pad Ink.—The Chronicle. tf
Personal—
IF YOU want to get married, write Box
358, Juliaetta, Idaho. Send stamp. 29-tfc
Work Wanted—
MOVING, BREAK GARDENS, HAUL
Wood, Pull Corn. Have own team,
wagon and tools. Bud Simpson, (col-
ored) Rt. 7, Box 500. 5-4tc
BREAK „GARDENS AND PLANT—
General Truck Farming—A. L. Hoff-
man. 26-4tp.
Help. Wanted—
Men Wanted
AGES 21 to 45
The makers of Ivory Soap and
Crisce, in business for over 100
years, an essential war indus-
,try, need warehouse workers.
APPLY FROM
8:00 a. m. to 3 :GO p. m.
Monday thru Saturday
The
PROCTOR & GAMBLE
Manufacturing Co.
1226 LOOMIS STREET
DALLAS, TEXAS
Of the birds, the eagle, crow, raven
and swan are known to have lived to be
a hundred or more years of age.
Idaho and Wyoming are the greatest
centers for range sheep, while Ohio is
the greatest farm sheep center in this
country.
new postmaster general. The American
people are sensitive to the Walker brand
of censorship.—Kansas City Star.
J. D. Noble has* been quite ill but is
reported improving.
Dorothy Joe Elmore of Farmers Branch
is confined at the home of her grand-
parents ,Mr and Mrs. L. E. Nixon, suf-
fering from the mumps.
Mrs. J. T. Whitlock is ill with the flu.
WOLFES ROSSBERRY
'f'lcte Berry Sensation!
A New. Eosy-to-Grcw
MONEY-MAKER
Created by Luther Burbank.
Delicious fruit, larger than
Boysenberries. Raspberry
flavor. Vine* grow vigor-
ously, ofton oxtondlng 20
foot, loaded with giant ber-
ries. Bear* prolifidy the sec-
ond year.
Thrive* In wide range of
soil* and climate*. Ripen*
in early May. Ship* well,
bring* top prices, disease-
resistant. . . Guaranteed to
25 Plants
$6.60
SHIPPED PREPAID
50 Plant*
$11.00
WOLFE NURSERY
THE
'lime
TO CHECK
YOUR 1945
PRINTING
REQUIREMENTS
• The shortage of expert printers, scarci-
ty of printing papers, the unusual amount
of printing work to bo don# end other
war-time conditions, make it imperative
that we have your printing order early if
we are fo deliver your printing needs in
time to meet your "run-out" date. CALI!
US TODAYl
CARROLLTON
CHRONICLE
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Brigham, Roy C. The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, February 9, 1945, newspaper, February 9, 1945; Carrollton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth727603/m1/4/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carrollton Public Library.