The Mullin Enterprise. (Mullin, Tex.), Vol. [39], No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 10, 1938 Page: 2 of 4
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r eted, the student* are now in
the midst of a full schedule of
work and entertainment, In-
cluding claw all day, polled*
and club picnics, dances, teas
and other social affairs, and an
J;
TO SELL
mtm
Notice
abarged. cards of 1
MaM of raws set and all mat-
M sagular adeertlstnc rates.
Howard Payne
Football Talk
Howard Payne Yellow
Jackets came out of the score-
less Ue with the Abilene Chris-
tian Wildcats without serious
Injuries to add to the crop which
they hare nursed the past sever-
al weeks James Minor was In-
jured the first quarter, but re-
turned Into the Une-up the last
half
The Jacket- Wildcat affray
lived up to pre-game predictions.
It was hard fought on both
sides The Jackets held the edge
statistically They made 7 first
downs to the Wildcats’ 4 and
outg&lned them 129 yards to 92
yards.
The Jackets turn “Arkansas
Travelers" this week when they
Journey to Little Rock, Ark., to
meet the Arkansas State Teach-
ers College Thursday night In
the Jacket’s first out of state
game this year
—...... -*-
Deer Season
To Open Nov. 16
Deer season In Texas will open
Nov 18. and reports have already
been made by game wardens that
hunters are preparing ramps for
the annual hunt for the wild
bucks The State Game Depart-
ment has reported that hunting
leases in the Central Texas hill
country, the favorite haunt of
the big game of the Southwest,
are going rapidly The season
for both whit- and black tall
deer ends Dec 31. except for a
closing date of Nov 30 on the
black tall species west of the Pe-
cos River
Of an estimated total of 30,000
bucks taken throughout the 1937
season, the game department
has reported that 1 002 were tak-
en on hunting preserves in Ma-
son. 1,331 in Gillespie. 1.202 in
Kerr. 938 in Comal and 665 in
Llano counties.
The Central Texas hill coun-
try Is badly In need of rain to
put both the deer and turkey in
top condition for the opening of
the season.- Ex
j km toMfoN^a^‘ifipL,
managed industry as a soft of
perpetual motion, in which fee
processes of production are con-
tiwuows throughout the year.
The factory
few months and stops it mach-
inery. doses 1U doom, and leys
off its labor for weeks ee
months at a time has to main
higher profits for its operating
time or go out of business. The
farm which loafs between crop
seasons Is In the same boat of
Inefficiency.
With the exception of the sub-
tropic portions of the Southwest,
where marketable crops may be
harvested the year round, there
Is only one way of providing
profitable u*e for the available
farm labor and keeping the farm
factory running twelve months
In the year, and that Is by keep-
ing livestock and poultry in con-
nection with crop production.
Livestock and poultry grow while
the farmer sleeps, and use much
that would be lost without them,
while crops await the season. The
only perpetual motion farm
therefore is a balanced farm,
where plants and anlmaIs work
together In their natural rela-
tion, each supporting the other.
With a surplus of fsed on hand
above normal needs, a good
many Southwestern farmers this
year will have to decide the best
use to make of It. There are
plenty of pitfalls for.anyone who
undertakes a new enterprise
without previous experience, and
this is particularly true In “going
Into" the livestock or poultry
business on a commercial scale
right out of a cotton natch.
Notice that we said "going In-
to," not “growing Into” the busi-
ness, for there Is a vast differ-
ence. We Americans like to do
things In a big way. and the
temptation Is great to start with
a big herd of dairy cows, a large
flock of sheep, a carload of beef
cattle or hogs Those who go In
with a bang too often go out the
same way. and then say the
business Is a failure.
With pastures and roughage,
and a small amount of grain,
raising dairy cattle from calf-
hood to milk-cow age carries
about as little risk for the be-
ginner a-s any livestock enter-
prise W R Hancock of Erath
county tells of wintering 29 head
of grade Jersey heifers on pas-
ture, about two bales of hay per
day, and a light ration of oats
and cottonseed cake They cost
Harvest
Dollars
ARE WORTH MORE
THAN 100 CENTS
They ii Bring You a $4 00 Reading Value
ML? attrt
•V ■ **. nws
i
ixM
v -
Wat Months ..
Dm Months
40
entertain
church
If UMf* te*WN«t«IUOunt tt
grain to he sfed tbs jwlMwgi
should gn.tryfeObnttg focttwgh
ter. or ftedtne for .hoavy milk
production or ggp, flnln aiw-
age farm. hNtatr,. wafer .Mir-
age conditions, stock entile or
sheep are taferrfer few beginner
than buying, fefesr* and finish-
ing them forfee kilting tafefet.
Bred ewes and talftra, fed .nod
cared for fettafh am .winter,
begin to pay off within >a few
months,
and
THE MIL LIN ENTERPRISE
i Prlet for Oh Vih-Jr. yo>
AND
POPULAR
MECHANICS
MAGAZINE
(BjgpLirPrkt for One Year—%2.}o)
For only a Year
JUST SION THE MONEY-SAVING COUPON
feeding than.j|
No cnnselfelfo taste IfefoU-
tlon and ifo.JMfefefete J# of
---------*—iir_twirtrr r fefe*
cash-crop fo—fog
again. WtawfeMMCS Mtfefeng
accordingly, to wet upstate com-
bination of step and livestock
suitable to lifer etrcuHMtances.
which will utilise their lend end
labor to a better, advantage and
greater profit
“Perpetual motion” on the
farm Is more easily attainable
than in the factory, for life
goes on without artificial power
The natural cycle of plant and
animal life Is the answer—
‘Ood’a plan,” as an East Texas
negro farmer calls It.
-o-A-
Survey Refutes
Charge Forty Eads
Life Work
Minneapolis —In a survey cover-
ing almost 7,000,000 of the na-
tion’s Jobless, the Northwestern
National Life Insurance Com-
pany has found facts refuting
the contention that depression
policies have resulted in dis-
crimination against workers over
40
The analysis was based upon
data covering two age groups—
those from 15 to 40 and those
over 40 It found that the total
number unemployed was In exact
proportion to the number of per-
sons In the two age groups.
The analysis concluded:
“The unemployed are distri-
buted between the two age
groups in proportions practically
identical with the age distribu-
tion of the entire available
working force. So that almost
exactly the same proportion of
younger men are out of work. In
relation to the total number
available, as are jobless In the
older age group.”
No changes were found In
these ratios from 1930 to 1938.
--o-
Eleven From County
Now At T. S. C. W.
DENTON, Nov. 3.—Eleven Mills
county girls are among the 2700
now enrolled at Texas State Col-
lege for Women. Pinal tabula-
tions show that the school Is
again the largest residential wo-
man’s college In the United Stat-
es, with students from 220 Texas
counties, 26 states and 7 foreign
countries.
Included In the Mills county
list are Misses Mary Margaret
Blgbam, Jean Ooosby, Louise
Ooosby. Ruth Goosby, Florence
McDermott, Joe Whittaker, Vir-
ginia Womack, and Mrs. Sadie
Owens Head, from Ooldthwatte;
Grace Wllmeth Briley from
Ebony; Shirley Outhrle, Nancy
Mildred Mills, from Mullln.
With opening activities com-
tt is a email pfoee,“ said Jim.
“and different, fot then aw
those that love tt. You call up
hours in adwanee. Titers are
only 25 sente at table, and tat
one sitting. You get then on
time or you don’t eat. Then are
but three large tables. You ttt
down to table with a flock of
strangers, and baton you fill
your pteto tor the feted ton# yeu
are kidding everyone around
you about hi* inordinate *»P*
ttte.
Then vus Just a moment to
mow^artteSc'feto'of StwSt
of Altee -to see how she garnish-
ed mlads wttb lush arttftetal
roes* cut from beetroot, and yel-
low mums made from grapefruit;
to note bow she plunked, a ton
branch, thorns and all, athwart
a bowl of lettuce with mayon-
naise and so made that trifle ap-
pear doubly interesting. Then
came the toad.
Sweet Alice was born to prove
beyond the preadventure of a
doubt that the average American
housewife Is Ignorant of the first
principle of domestic science.
She serves grapefruit for a be-
ginner, only it is not baked, and
sauced. She serves roast chick-
en and when the boy returns
with the fourth and fifth platter.
'Hats'* Year*
to on mar
RAM It ... AT A
tI1HRR
SET.
*7«o
■Si
The Daily Chronicle
The Sunday Chronicle
MAO AM INJOY MTM Ttfete foUAT HtafeMfel
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Patterson, Mrs. R. H. The Mullin Enterprise. (Mullin, Tex.), Vol. [39], No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 10, 1938, newspaper, November 10, 1938; Mullin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1060054/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Jennie Trent Dew Library.