The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 63, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 4, 1947 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brady Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the FM Buck Richards Library.
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Console—Value
$229.50
40 Records—Value
25.20
Total Value
$254.70
SPECIAL-ONLY
$210.00
Easy Monthly Terms
TUBES: 6BA6 Tuned R F. Amplifier
1620 kc.
tandard broadcast, and 83 MG
to
SPEAKER: Jo” Permanent magnet Alnico 5
Converter
IF. amplifier
I F. amplifier
6BE8
6SGT
6SGT
WAVE BAND: S35
to 103 MC, FM
CABINET: Graceful period style cabinet in rich mahogany, or blonde
finish. Solid top. Sound escape, design permits playing with doors
closed, giving ample room volume.
plays 10” or 12” records
ystal pick-up. True-to-
ured by tone-com |>en-
Beam Pow
Rectifier
6SH7 T.imiter
6S8GT AM,
PHONOGRAPH: Pull-out record changer
automatically or manually. Wide range
life reproduction at all volume levels
sated volume control.
Detector, FM Detect-
A VC. 1st audio
output
Offers
SPECIAL OUTSTANDING VALUES
AND TORTILLA FACTORY
'etail and Wholesale
Mrs. Joe Roman
I
I
I
Jakey D. Wood And
I Bride Visit Here
I Mrs. Richard Wood had as her
I guests last week, her son, Jakey
i D. Wood and his bride of Texar-i
| kana, who were enroute home af-
; ter a wedding trip to the Paint-1
I ed Desert, Grand Canyon and
other points of interest in Ari-
zona. They also visited with his I
brother, Lt. Denver Wood and
family in Phoenix, Artz. ,,
The couple wfYe married in
the First Baptist Church of Tex-
1947
PAGE THRKB
time
Mr*
graduate
TURKEY
HATCHING
EGGS
are
HOW OPEN
BRADY COOPERATIVE
PATIO
*
POULTRY ASS’N
706 S. China
RING .MEXICAN FOODS
The Oldest Turkey Hatching Egg Shipper in the
Southwest
lerved in our new and modern
J
dining room.
GENE SAMUELSON
5 P. M.
MIGHTY MONARCH OF THE AIR
We Also Have A
going to be short this coming season and
prices should correspond with related commodities.
good flock of Broad
Breast Bronze Breeders, see us for further information.
up
same
Wrck-End GufM
.Miss Frances Jane Davis of San
Angelo, spent the week-end in
the Houston Braly home, meeting
Miss Alice Braly, who was
from San Antonio at the
much as
need for
o Meals Served Daily
11 A. M. To 2 P. M.
. M.
• SALES Books and Salesman’*
Order Books at The Brady Stan-
dard Office.
then toward the
add sugar to
few grains of salt, such
as clove, nutmeg, cinna-
or allspice, and a little
Other
ber of your family.
Raisins can be
cake, cookies, in bread and rice
pudding, cup cake:
and candies.
on Monday enroute to Walla
Walia, Wash., where they plan to
make their home.
Mr. autd Airs. J. li. Joy «f
Doole are the parents of a son.
born at Brady Hospital on Octo-
ber 12th.
If you have or have available a
.DEMONSTRATION
CLUB NEWS
I a good idea to feature fruits in
desserts for the family. A var-
iety of fruits, fresh, canned and
dried, are on the market this
fall, h»<1 there is plenty of sugar
and sirups for sweetening.
All homemakers know that
baked pears and baked apples are
easy to prepare as well as good
to eat. Dried apples, peaches, ap-
ricots and prunes can he served
many ways. Raisins add taste
and ’ texture variety to sucl.
dishes as baked
From available information,
good hot or
as a re-
! or as
n dessert. Prepare the prunes in
■ the usual way,
( end of cooking.
I taste, a '
i spices
mon
vinegar
i can
Raisins add
variety to
dishes as baked apples, apple-
raisin marmalade, fruit and Wal-
dorf salads.
Spiced prunes are
cold and may be served
lish with the meat course
fruit sauce
clove, nutmeg,
allspice, and
vinegar or lemon juice,
dried fruits can be spiced by the
same recipe.
If fruits are used as
possible, there is les*
Mr. and Mrs, George Ray and
children, formerly of Brady and
, i Mission, visited in Brady briefly
merican Association of University , --
ftock H«nlini
or 612
Will Be
nclair Station
Natl Ban*
12.
THE BRADY STANDARD AND HEART O’ TEXAS NEWS. BRADY, TEXAS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 4
I The couple also visited with his
sister, Mr*, (j. o. Dariey, and
with hta brother. Everett Wood
respective families
cakes, pies and pudding*. By cut-
ting down on baked desserts, the
housewife is doing her part in
the government’* program for
1 saving certain foods.
Raisins
Take advantage of the liberal
supply of raisins on your grocer’s
shelf this fall and use them as a
food that’s high in calories, cal-
cium and iron as well as one
that’s appetizing to every mem-
richer flavor, or you
want the cluster raisins,
are dried in bunches, and
ially packed and sold as a dessert
delicacy.
Instead of Meat, What?
Homemakers are an anxious
as anyone else to h<*lp out in the
government’s food conservation
program, but when it comes right ■
dewn to planning menus for
meatless days, the questions that
are hard to answer are "What
‘ will take the place of meat? Will
the family like it?”
Meatless Tuesday may develop
into more of a problem in the
home than poultryless Thursdays, [
because most families plan two
oi three meals a day aroQnd
meat. Take the meat away and
the gap that is left in the menu ,
is mighty hard to fill.
Wholesome menus for meat- |
less days are not impossible, how-
ever. Irish potato pancakes can 1
be substituted at the breakfast'
table for the usual main dish . . . I
they are delicious with either
honey or syrup, and take the
place of toast, flour pancakes,,
or bacon or ham-and-eggs. For a
noon-day meal, there’s macaroni
ring with creamtfd salmon. The 8-
ounce can of salmon will serve
six, which is an important thing
to remember in these days of high
prices. For supper, few people
can resist the sight of a fluffy,
piping hot cheese omelet.
The addition of fruit, fresh and
I cooked vegetables to each of these
main dishes will provide appetiz-
ing as well as nutritious meals.
(
arkana at 8 o’clock on October
Uth. The bride I* the former.
MIbs Elna Ruth Womack, daugh-J
ter of Mrs. Troy Womack of Tex- and their
arkana. while here.
Mrs. Wood Is a graduate of!
North Texas State College, Den- ----
ton where rhe was a member of' '*“'•* -Washington
Delta Psi Kappa, honorary so-
ciety for physical education ma-
jors. She Js a member of the A-
useil in nle and ls a promt-i
1 ’ nent young business woman of
I Texarkana.
The groom, a graduate of Bra-
11
i speech and dramatics from ’
| Southwestern State Teachers Col-!
, lege. San Marcos, and has done,
graduate work in the University
,,r of Texas. He was principal of the
--—[high school at Marathon, before
; to Texarkana where he
i -—- —...» *^«xws(swsa wa ,
raisins the chief in the general supply
,--------1 in the Ordnance Plant
Women, the Junto Club and Beta
Sigma sorority,
1 nent young business woman
gingerbread I
They add to the sauce or stuff- dy H,*h B'*00’. hold8 a degree 'n
h; ing for your poultry or meet—es-
' pecially in a fruit sauce srved
with baked ham.
Select the type of raisin
the recipe you’re going to use. The i ]
small seedless type is used gen- going to Texarkana whf.r;-
erally in puddings, mincemeat, j holds the position of assistant
fruit cakes: the larger i------
may be preferred for their sweet- division
er, richer flavor, or you mayI
which I
espec-
sPECIAL FEATURES: Large acoustic power output: li gang con-
denser; built-in folded FM dipole antenna; continuously variable
tone control with bass boost circuit; new Majestic FM "Electric
N’oise-Gate” circuit; uses 3-gang condenser.
CONTROLS:
and tone
Concentric tuning and bandswitch; concentric volume
with switch; radio-phonograph switch.
h
y -
Model 5AR-780
I
0
ASBESTOS SHINGLES
AND SIDING
loan terms.
Built up roofing a specialty.
Pueblo Roofing Co.
307 E. First Phone 398
Applied By Experts. Lasts a
Lifetime.
Also insulated brickface siding
and composition shingles in
Lake Blue, Sunset Red, Wood-
land Green, Mountain Gray in
all patterns. Inquire about our
I jj
1
.$112.10
Total Value
S89.50
SPECIAL-ONLY
Easy Monthly Terms
CABINET:
TUBES:
1st audio
1620 kc.
35 kc
12” rcords
nil mini-
built-in directional antenna; hi
volume eoi.trol.
SPECIAL FEATURES: Baaa boost circuit:
ature tubes; Underwriters’ approved.
Amplifier
A\C and
automatically or manually. Aid©
-Is as ur.d by tone-comp'nauted
playa 10” or
A beautiful modern <iesign chairside radio-phonograph that will .-
height beside your chair or davenport for easy radio tuning or record
hogany, and blonde finishes.
12BA6 Converter
12BE6 High G.M. I F
12AT6 Diode detector,
5oB5 Power output
35 \V 4 Rectifier
WAVE BAND: Standard Broadcast
SPEAKER: Alnico 5. permanent magnet
PHONOGRAPH Automatic record changer
at just the convenient
ing. Available in ma-
Model 8FM776
•:<
I
CHAIRSIDE SET—Value
20 Records—Value
$ 99.50
12.60
>■
EASY
TERMS
3
EASY
TERMS
BRADY HARDWAREC°.
110 W. COMMERCEPHONE 120
* BRADY,TEXAS *
1
1
<
and eftf*
IE
ED
ING
,Anywl»ere
v. B-
^uncil
'oca [
iual „ ]
and eftf3
5
I
f/
Office
Chair* [
I
Exhibits;
Exhibits-
>4 •'
•4
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SI
uth
I
•Texas
57
■ire
Brady, Texas
i
R.M.
Co.
I
I
nisti
*
1
rich Silvertowns
ewar tires
Jobber*
Jim
"A Oi
6.00 x 16 SIZE
1440
■kMh plus tax
ITT
1.50 Down
1.25 A Week
Pufs*a-W?i • o.UOx 16
Tire On Your Car
s with an
Nil AUOWANCE
ir present tires
11 B. 1‘. Goodrich Silvertown tires — extras
tra money.
der-faced tread that puts more rubber on
mileage. More and sturdier cords give the
»gth.
I you a whopping "All-Out” allowance for
Jon t delay. Come in today.
Kich I Qu&uMttcc
Every tire and tube of our manufacture
t"!? and serial number is
lye free from defects in
I workmanship and material without limit
I as to time and mileage.”
ENGDAHL SERVICE STATION
Phone 408
%
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Smith, L. B. The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 63, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 4, 1947, newspaper, November 4, 1947; Brady, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1357509/m1/3/: accessed June 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting FM Buck Richards Library.