The Nocona News (Nocona, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, August 28, 1942 Page: 3 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Montague County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Friends of the Nocona Public Library.
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THE NOCONA NEWS
Friday, August 28, 194X
For Every Purpose
L<
Tooth
IX
milk-fed calf is
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breads
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Nocona, Texas
Phone 129
re Deliver
from
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FARMERS..
TAXI
to CWiCK
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U. S. Treasury Department
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Montague 9:15,
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Professional Cards
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4
W. W. Davis, M. D.
How to Roftotr Cord Frayed Next to Plug
Mrs. W. L. Thurman
the
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CHIROPRACTOR
Re-insert wire in plug.
Phones:
Home 43
Office 31
iiBMT TO
I.
BY
THE
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Dr. A. S. Fonvillr
OPTOMETRIST
1
■---»«• i
707 8th Street
V
EMERGENCY HOSPITAL
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AT THE MILL
A D
• R I K A
't
BLACK-
DRAUGHT
I
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WTOw.
Repairing
Remodeling
Refinishing
Specializing in
Obstetrics & Gynecology
Office at Our Drug Store
Res. Phone 270 Office Phone 91
Anywhere
in City for
Making Good
Quality Hay
Whole Wheat and
Enriched Products
The Fatted Calf For
Home Beef Supply
Phone 777
Wichita Fails. Texas
OK
Tp&>$
C. D. Shamburger
LUMBER CO., INC.
PHONES
91 or 294
Make every market-
day BOND DAY!
FRANK A. MOOD, M. D.
Phones 31 and 42
BiMigMkojr Operating Service . X-Ray Service - Huapltal Baxta
Don't mm adhesive tape.
It cracks very quickly.
Your first introduction
should tcli you
WHY
Specializing in Fitting of Glasses
and Correcting of Eye Defect*
Exclusively
GENERAL PRACTICE
AND SURGERY
Patronize tin* Firms in
thin ProfeKMiunal
Column
al
N
All-Pur-
m
. . .and we help you cut
down costs by cutting
out unnecessary items.
. . . We realize, however,
there is no substitute for
quality.
r ■**
2
A. A. STRIPLING
DENTIST
5
I
Holcomb Drug Co.
and
Our Drug Store
Nocona, Texas
motors and even artillery shells.
Unmatched throughout the
of cars and
frank a.
MOOD, M. D.
527 Hamilton Bldg
Phone 4567
Wichita Falls, Texas
BESI SELLING LAXATIVE
til twr the South
_________Hiir CVrfftrt*
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Unscrew wire from Mee
plug.
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How to Hopak Cord Frayod in Iho Middle
Office over McMahon
Drug Store
Office Phone 208 Res. 210
Nocona, Texas
lital in Denison
■ Vaughn waj
m the Wichit]
it al Thursday.
M * X ’'
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IN A PACiriC
! LIB8IXTV 5HiP
> LAID
20 or 30 minutes twice or three
times daily.
S. J. R. No. 20
A JOINT RESOLUTION
proposing an amendment to
Constitution of the State of Texas
by amending Section 33 of Article
16. of the Constitution of Texas
so as to permit the accounting of-
ficers of this State to draw and
pay warrants for salaries to offi-
cers of the United States Army or
Navy who are assigned to duties
in State Institutions of higher ed-
ucation.
BE IT RESOLVED
ISE
FRAYED CORDS ARE DANGEROUS
AND A NUISANCE
They cause shorts, shocks and blown fuses. Your lights may not work when you need
them most. But you can fix them in a jiffy by following these directions.
For our fighting men,
for our country’s fu-
ture and for freedom
we must meet and
beat our county War
Bond quota and keep on do-
ing it.
Pick up your War Bonds and
Stamps on your second stop
in town ... right after you’ve
sold your eggs, milk, poultry,
stock or grain. No invest-
ment is too small and no in-
vestment is too large . . . the
important thing is to buy
every time you sell!
■L
EpSI-^. *7
... . •• Z..--,'- v
K
I
■,
■
I
7 MANY
' frayed cords
IN YOUR HOME?
f »»
K,
Snip off the frayed part
of the wire.
Clean away the frayed in-
sulation.
Tape up wires separately.
Then together.
Is still carrying on her work at
her residence four blocks East
and one block South of Depot.
LOOK FOR SIGN
Wr
.7:251
i y
w
<■- ..X
-i
lay
Harrell an
and Mrs
family of Gra
se is moving t
lere he will bJ
salesman. i
estimates that during~1941 plane
production reached $1,500,000,000,
an increase of almost one billion
over 1940.
An important goal already
achieved in the country’s all-out
war effort is production by the
Aluminum Company of America
at a rate several times that of
1938, last full peacetime year. In
1942 completion of plants now un-
der construction will lift Amer-
ica's aluminum output to a level
well above that of all Axis coun-
tries. Most of Alcoa’s $215,000,-
000 self-financed expansion pro-
gram has already been completed,
according to Roy A. Hunt, presi-
dent, and the fruits of this labor
are even now making possible tre-
mendous increases in production
of aircraft and other vital ma-
chines of war.
On another front, the speed
with which we achieve final vic-
tory will be accelerated by the
nation’s ability to supply the foods
essential to national health, in the
opinion of John A. Hartford, pres-
ident of Great Atlantic & Pacific
Tea company. This means that
food distributors, says Mr. Hart-
ford, have a grave responsibility
to redouble their efforts to reduce
the cost of moving merchandise
from producer to consumer.
“Agriculture,” he points out, “is
prepared to produce a greater
quantity of foodstuffs than ever;
and I am confident that all distrib-
utors will cooperate with farmers
all over the country to assure or-
derly marketing of produce, to
eliminate spoilage, and waste mo-
tion.”
Not all products are going to be
produced in greater volume this
year.
Rubber tires, for example, have
been rationed. Consequently, the
first major job assigned to Amer-
ica’s war-time citizenry is conser-
vation of rubber. What can be ac-
complished is emphasized by John
L. Collyer, president of B. F
Goodrich company, who states
that, “if each of America’s 30,000,-
000 motorists would see to it that
he gets 10 per cent more mileage
out of his present tires, the annu-
al requirement of rubber for cars
and trucks alone could be reduced
as much as 30,000 tons.”
Meanwhile, steps are being tak-
en to augment our rubber sources
in this hemisphere, says Mr.
Collyer, whose company 18
months ago offered the public the
first tire of synthetic rubber.
Industry’s ingenuity is typified
by the achievement of the distill-
ers. Last year few guessed that a
serious bottleneck in munitions
might be averted because of the
ability of this industry to make
ethyl alcohol for smokeless pow-
der. Yet, according to L S. Ros-
enstiel, chairman of Schenley Dis-
tillers corporation, the industry is
already producing about 93,000,-
000 proof gallons of ethyl alcohol.
Also, he reports, the alcoholic
beverage industry is the largest
industrial tax source, pouring one
billion dollars annually into the
federal treasury.
Thus, briefly, expressions of in-
dustrial leaders of the nation re-
flect confidence that Americans
have the knowledge, ability and
courage to fight to ultimate vic-
tory, to win the battles on the in-
dustrial fronts, and more import-
ant, to win the peace .after the
fighting is over.
Right and Wrong Way to Insert Wire in Plug
- *Wrong way: Wire not drawn
around prong*.
Right wa y: Wire drawn around*
prongs. When cord it yanked or
kicked, the pressure it put on the
prong*.
Cewtlem Ditconnect cord before attempting repairs to any part of if.
COMMUNITY NBLIC SERVICE CO
Bus Service
BOWIE-NOCONA
Via Montague
F. B. Wall, Operator
(War Time)
Lv. Bowie 7 a. m., ar. Montague
To make good quality hay, cut
he crop before It matures, says
p. G. Gibson, assistant dairyman
bf the Texas A. and M. College
Extension Bervice. Sudan, Johnson
br other grasses cut for hay before
hey head will be higher in protein,
more palatable and higher in di-
gestible nutrients than if cut af-
ler heading, he adds. But in or-
ier to obtain quantity as well as
luality, growers should wait until
js near heading time as possible
" = • Before cutting.
On the other hand, the uup
lould b‘ mature to make good si- 1
“ | ounaie leea along witi
< uPAu E A lure and with silage.
?<666
^7.
------------o------------
Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Peterson re-
turned Monday from Nashville,
Tennessee, where they visited their
son.
product. Greater use of yeast
breads rather than biscuits will go
a long way toward conserving the
vitamins in Hour products. This
is because the soda or baking pow-
der used in biscuits destroys part, the ground grain and cottonseed
of the thiamin in the flour, she I meal mixture it will clean up in
explains.
consisting
| Wildroot
98c Pro-
r Brush
lage. As the greater part of'the
Johnson grass now is ripening it
will be best to put into the silo.
Johnson grass stubble will sprout
and produce another crop If rain
comes. The second growth will
make extra quality hay if it cut
before heading. Hay cut during
September and October is mor° pa-
latable because spring and early
summer cuttings dry excessively.
Gibson suggests that the early
crop of grain sorghums should be
put Into the silo. In some cases,
he explains, it may oe advisable
to cut off the heads and put the
stalks into the silo. The second
crop of grain sorghums, and also
the late crop, could be cut and
crop cured for dry bundle feeding.
---I Cattle need some hay or dry
I bundle feed along with green pas-
. The better
the quality of hay and dry bundle
feed the more good it will do the
cattle.
"There is plenty of room for im-
provement in the quality of the
hay and dry bundle feed in Texas,”
Gibson declares.
o-----------
Word has been received that
Newell Tucker was accepted for
service In the Army. Newell Is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. J.
Tucker.
I If it is not on pasture, give it
plenty of good bright hay. Fresh
water and salt also should be kept
before it. Let the calf have all
the roughage it wants, but add all
There are many localities in
Texas in which enriched bread is
not available. And while enriched
flour is generally available to con-
sumers, there is still considerable
lower price and grade unenriched
flour on the market. This situa-
tion has led a national organiza-
tion of bakers, millers and retail
grocers to begin a concerted drive
to obtain the enrichment of all
white flour.
"Enriched flour” is white or
near white flour to which required
amounts of vitamin BL niacin and
iron are added, explains Hazel
Phipps, specialist In food prepara-,
tion for A. & M. College Exten-
sion Service. In line with the re-
commendations of leading authori-
ties in the field of nutrition re-
search, the Extension Service has
long encouraged the use of whole
grain products, she says, but since
many people continue to use re-
fined flours and cereals, enrich-
ment of all flour and bread wall
I>ay dividends in better diets.
Nutritionally speaking, whole
wheat or whole grain products are
best; enriched flour and
should be a second choice.
County Extension agents recent-
ly have been encouraged to co-
operate in the enrichment drive
and to inform rural Texans on the
comparative nutritional value of
whole wheat, enriched, and refined
flours.
Miss Phipps explains that a yeast
bread or quick bread made with
whole wheat flour or half enriched
white flour and half of 100 per I cottonseed meal
cent whole wheat flour makes a: grain
Dr. L. F. Stripling
Practice Limited to Disease
and Surgery of Eye. Ear.
Nose and Throat
— ~a.........
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Pass of Wil-
son. Oklohamo. visited Miss Effie
Pass Wednesday.
------------o------------
Mrs. Marshall Doyle has been
in the Wiichita FalLs General hos-
pital and her condition is report-
ed as improved.
- -
Tom Berry of Solomons, Mary-
land, visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Berry recently.
LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE election, and nave the same pub-
OF ThiXAS: ! lished as required by the Consti-
Section 1. That Section 33 o. ,
Article 16. of the Constitution of the
the State of Texas, be amended so
as to read as follows:
“Section 33.
Ticers of this State snail neither!
draw nor pay a warrant upon the
Producing beef for home use is
a real contribution to the wartime
program. If some families are to
have meat they must produce it,
says Roy W. Snyder, animal in-
dustries specialist of the Texas A.
& M. College Extension Service.
Even the nondescript, pot-bellied,
small, rough-haired Jersey type
calf can be made into satisfactory
beef for family use, Snyder says. It
needs to be fed fattening ration
for four to six months before be-
ing killed. Feeding not only makes
more beef, but Improves the qua-
lity to an almost unbelievable ex-
tent.
If a milk-fed calf is available
It should be started on feed at
once. Use the feeds grown on the
farm. It may take 1,200 pounds of
corn or mllo, 1,200 pounds of hay
and two sacks of cottonseed meal
for the average inexperienced feed-
er to develop a calf into good
edible beef, but the feed will be
used to good advantage.
Feeding the calf until it weighs
at least 500 pounds when it is
ten months old. is a good mark to
shoot at. Snyder suggests. Feed
it all it will eat so that it will put
on fat as it grows. A good prac-
tice is to feed grain as soon as the
calf will eat It. Oats is best to
get a young calf on feed, but if
it is not available, feed corn, mllo
or some other grains. After a few
weeks begin decreasing the oats
and add com or milo.
inthbtt
When the calf receives less milk
later in the feeding period, add
or cake to the
____ ________ ____ _______ _ „____i at the rate of one pound
very good flavored and nutritious' of meal to five pounds of grain.
compensation as |
agent, officer or appointee, who;
holds at the same time any other
office or position of honor, trust
or profit, under this State or the
United Slates, except as prescribed
in this Constitution. Provided, that,
this restriction as to the drawing,
and paying of warrants upon the
Treasurj- shall not apply to offi-
cers of the National Guard of
Texas, the National Guard Re-1
serve, the Officers Reserve Corps
of the United States, nor to en-
listed men of the National Guard,
the National Guard Reserve, and
the Organized Reserves of the Un-
ited States, nor to retired officers
of the United States Army, Navy,
and Marine Corps, and retired
warrant officers and retired en-
listed men of the United States
Army. Navy, and Marine Corps,
nor to officers of the United Stales
Army or Navy who are assigned to
duties in State Institutions of
higher education."
Sec. 2. The foregoing Constitu-1
tlonal Amendment shall be sub-
mitted to a vote of the qualified'
electors of this State at an elec-1
tion to be held throughout the!
State on the third day of Novem-
ber. 1942. at which all ballots shall'
have printed thereon;
"For the Constitutional Amefid-1
ment permitting the accounting
officers of this State to draw and !
pay warrants for salaries to offl- i
cent of the United States Army or |
Navy who are assigned
: In Slate Institutions of higher ed-
' ucailon "
"Against the Constitutional A-
mendment irrmltting the account-
ing officers of this State to draw
■ •id wav warrants for salaries to
ffirera of the United Str.tes Army
>t Navy who are assigned to duties
tn State Institutions ot higher ed-
'•eation."
*!arh voter snail scratch out one
of said clauaw on Hie ballots leav-
g the one expressing his vote on
ie proposed amendment.
See 1. The Governor shall iaeue
to nsnseaary prociemation for aata
7:45, Nocona 8:30.
Lv. Nocona 8:45,
Ar. Bowie 10:00.
Lv. Bowie 2:20 p. m. Ar. Montague
3 p. m., Nocona 3:90.
Lv. Nocona 3:45, Montague 4:15,
Ar. Bowie 5 p. m.
Only one trip Sunday on mom- X.‘“" i
Ing schedule Treasury in favor of any person.)
B _________2___________________for salary or
Aggravating Gas
When atomsch <sa aeoma to amother yon,
ud you can hardly take a deep breath, ty
aDLERIKS. FIVC carmlnatlvoa to vara
and aoothe the atomach and expat yaa. and
THREE laxativea lor yentlo, quick hovel
action, at your Drag Store.
hereby appropriated from any
funds in the State Treasury, not
otherwise appropriated to defray
the expenses of printing said pro-
clamation and of holding said elec-
tion. 5-4tc
Of I tution and laws of this State, and
j sum of Five Thousand
i <$5,000.00) Dollars, or so much
| thereof as may be necessary’, is
The accounting of-I————--------------------
U.S. Industrial Guns' Draw Bead on Axis
k ■’Hb
O H v'4- * V':*’ 'w*-
p\
Se
BY RICHARD WRIGHT
ASHINGTON ( S pe c i a 1 )—
’¥ America in the decisive year
of 1942 is determined to outpro-
duce the world.
President Roosevelt set this goal
in his message to Congress on the
State of the Union—60,000 planes,
45,000 tanks. 20,000 anti-aircraft
guns, 8,000,000 ions of merchant
vessels.
Achievement of the production
goal is promised in statements of
many key business leaders.
To the automobile industry, has
fallen the task of out-producing
the enemy in tanks, guns, planes,
throughout
world as a producer
trucks, the industry nas been call-
ed upon to act with driving haste
in gearing itself to the production
of vital war materials.
At the beginning of 1942 the
government has placed approxi-
mately $4,000,000,000 of war con-
tracts with motor car manufac-
turers—a clear implication, in the
words of J. W. Frazer, president of
Willys - Overland Motors, Inc.,
that America regards the industry
as the keystone of the arsenal of
democracy. His company, inci-
dentally, designed and is produc-
ing thousands of those little quar-
ter-ton trucks, affectionately call-
ed “jeeps” by the froops.
While the auto-makers will be
increasingly occupied during the
year fabricating war machines, the
airplane builders are scheduled to
turn out more aircraft than any
other nation, and more than the
combined output of many Axis-
controlled countries. The Aero-
nautical Chamber of Commerce
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Perry, F. L. The Nocona News (Nocona, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, August 28, 1942, newspaper, August 28, 1942; Nocona, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1230608/m1/3/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Friends of the Nocona Public Library.