The Navasota Examiner and Grimes County Review (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 28, 1949 Page: 8 of 12
twelve pages: ill. ; page 20 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilmView a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I
i
A
f
11
Jelly. test (when the last drop
III
i
II
6 .
M
28
k
0"-
5
Minutes
h
■ ! - ' ■
LOWEST-PRICED
Phone 99
I
" I-,
Ai
l
I
I
need
)
an
x
(
i
c
9
}
t. •
$
h
Va
3
i
4®
N
$2
■ a*
<
e
1
03
4
: J
H
1
t
with petroleum products of
is
/
%
continuously increased diversity,
<
HUMBLE OIL REFINING C,
HUMBLE
b
L_
4
LUBRICANTS
ASPHALT
KEROSENE
SOLVENTS
RUBBER
AND 43 OTHER PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
. m.S
4
1‘e
»
J
.VENTILATED
mea4
L
--
A STYIt FOR EVERY MOME • .
A DESIGN FOR EVEY orenO
11
I I t
i 4
• A
which saves time and is cheap-
er than the ready prepared sy-
rups.
o
■ 1
4
in your daily life ... A visit to
Bay town will show you how the
petroleum industry Supplies
many of the necessities of modern
living, and how energetically
the industry works to supply them.
For throughout the United
AWJIIU
■ Cuaton
B Budte
A visit to Baytown will give you a glimpse of
the results of scientific research By the oil industry;
for unless you see a modern refinery, you’d
Baytown Refinery
Humble Oil & Refining Co.
Boytown, Tonal
\ i l
_%44
j
mau--
.cd
l
I
I
, ‘w""
N N .
,‘4
THE NAVASOTA EXAMINER-REVIEW
Thursday, July 28, 1949
never suspect that it can break up crude oil
molecules and reconstruct them into
other molecules of wider service to you
TURNER & PIERCE
CALL 42
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Burk, is visit-
ing his aunt and uncle, Mr. and
Mrs. Wright Floyd in Longview
this week.
Attend Church Sunday
By Mrs. Ruth E. McCaleb
County Home Demonstration Agent
Th
»
’ More than MX thousand men and women
work in shift 24 houns 0 day at Baytown to help
supply your needs for petroleum products. .
Yes, his wife DOES need an electric range. And if you'd
spend a day in YOUR kitchen, cooking on an old fashioned
stove, you, too, would agree that it's time YOU got your wife
a modem range—an electric range which, thanks to scien-
tific design and the use of clean electric heat, cooks the food,
not the cook, on hot summer days.
destroys pectin. (3) Work with
small lots of juices (not over 8
Have you tried the ROCKET'Engine^
MAKE A DATE WITH THE
IT
5P
Ax’-
me
Pa
-05
•2.
Ik
3
d. 2.
gifrte
88*8888. *
1
ELECTRIC
RANGE!"
2-gac.
mJ continuously improved quality and
ANNOUNCING OUR NEW
PORTABLE - HIGH SPEED
AUTOMATIC - ELECTRIC
OIL
CHANGER
Home Demonstration
CLUB NOTES
If your vacation leads you down our way,
you ll-find a visit to Humble’s Baytown refinery
a highlight of your trip. It is 'one of the great oil
refineries in tlie world, processing about 200,000
barrels of crude oil daily into such diverse products
as gasoline and asphalt, motor oils and insecticides. -
-- .
‘n States, oil refineries like Baytown
, 1 work night and day to supply you
been having demonstrations on
jelly making by their club lead-
ers this month. The leaders who
ganesthis training to their,, clubs
"were as follows: ,
•TT
.-A
Am
■ $2
.'cultivated plum.’ (2) Use the
Ayoka-"A-
you would make good jelly are:
(1) Use a mixture of slightly
under-ripe and ripe fruit. The
ripe fruit has a better flavor, but
the fruit that is Just beginning
to ripen is heeded for pectin.
"1d .
QM
13
V
er letting the fruit drip in a jel-
ly bag, use 1 cup sugar to 1 cup
juice in making the jelly.
Summer Thirst Quenchers
When this July sun bears
Boytown refinery mokes: MOTOR GASOLINE • AVIATION GASOLINE • MOTOR OIL • HEATING OILS • DIESEL FUELS
"She
. . i ' . ’ m, , . .• J ■
Many big bargains In electric ranges are now being offered
by appliance dealers. There is no-better time than during
these hot days to install an electric range. Shop around now
for YOUR electric range and enjoy a COOL kitchen.
On your vacation trip...
stop for an afternoon at Baytown
This Amazing New Mechanical Device draws oil out of the crankcase through
the dipstick hole. You can see the dirty oil pour out, accumulate in the open
basin. It takes only 2 minutes to complete the job. No plugs to pull — no
need to put car on hoist — no need to wait — oil changed while tank is
filled with ESSO EXTRA.
HUMBLE SERVICE STA.
0r-
( :
mixed to suit your fancy. Lem-
on juice is a good thing to com-
bine with it to keep it from be-
ing too sweet.
Don't-forget the many drinks
that can be made from good cold
milk. They are not only refresh-
ing, but are just plain good for
you. Chocolate milk is a fa-
vorite. If your family is one
which likes it, why not make a
stock cocoa syrup that can be
used summer or winter in hot
or cold drinks. Just use:
% lb. cocoa (2 cups); 1 lb. su-
gar (2 cups): % teaspoon salt; 1
pint water (boiling).
Mix the cocoa, sugar, and salt
together, add the boiling water
slowly, stirring while adding;
Place the mixture in the upper
part of a double boiler and cook
for half an- hour, over boiling
why not try using it in drinks,, ed milk. Cold chocolate milk
can be mixed by the glass,
must: 1) Use fruit in the right
stage and one that has the pro-
per jellying qualities, such as
3"*; tart apples, black and duber-
Miss Lizzie’ | ries, cranberries, ’grapes, wild
' plums and the tart variety of
GULF STATES UTILITIES CO.
---------6’
Tours of the refinery start at 2:00 p.m. every
day. First, you find out what you’re going to see;
then you’re taken on a comfortable bus tour of the ’
plant with a guide to tell you what goes on. The
children are welcome.
I
2- o..“
• .14-*
-ad 7g03
yn-2 BEDW00D
make jelly, we must have the (2) Do not use too much water
right proportion of pectin, sugar. ■ or boil too long in extracting
and acid dissolyed in water. Injuice from fruit, as long boiling
order to get .such a product we destroys peetin (91 war--L -i+k
L -/
M
Eh Ih /
EM. (-
4 •MS-v"5
man.
21‛e
227
Phone 81. SCHERBEL MOTOR COMPANY
or visit303 i
water, stirring occasionally.
When cold, bottle and store in
the refrigerator. For hot cocoh;
put three or four teaspoons of it
in each'cup and fill with scald-
Jelly 1 Anderson ‘club.
Many of . the home demobst^ I Kistler. .
tion clubs ’in the county have] Lynn Grove - Courtney club. -
Mrs..Joe Batts. correct proportion of sugar; and
Navasota club. Mrs. Eugene' 13) Know- how to recognize the
Nolan , +jell. test (when the last drop
Shiro Koans Prairie Club, Mrs.. will not let go the spoon.)
Sim Cone. ' -1 Other points to remember, if
------r-r-O
• Mrs. Hildegarde Streitbeek re-
turned last week from a visit to
Cleburne and Copperal where
she visited her sister, and to
Glen Rose and Industry for a
visit with her father, Julius
Schultze,
• Dr. and Mrs. Gordon Holt of
Galveston spent the week-end
with her mother, Mrs. Hunter
Yarborough.
• Mp. and Mrs. L. A; Peterman
spent the week-end in Lake
Charles, La.
• Mrs. John Lockhart of Gal-
vestoni and daughter, Mrs. J. L.
Jackson and two children of
Wichita Falls are visiting Mrs.
E. A. Harris.
• Mrs. Basil Stewart and 'chil-
dren are visiting her mother,
Mrs. Haynes Shannon.
• Johnnie Mack Floyd, son of
/
ax- ; "T Y 2*%
' • h 9 I 2 0
22s
Le -- m. 3
"-.a
rab.
d ■' ,-2
96’ ' ..03
KT, 2:4. A".
"ROCKCT" ENGINE CAR!
in Only Crankcase Is Drained
2
down, one of our frist thoughts
is, “Let’s have a cold drink”, but
are you in a rut when it comes
to . serving those drinks for
friends who drop in. Do you
feel you have to serve some-
, kthing already prepared at the
store, or do you have some va-
riety and originality in your
i drinks? . .
Fruit and vegetable juices of
| all kinds are good, but the acid
, ones are especially good when
used alone or in combination
with the sweeter juices Sweet-
er foods give more heat, so don’t
/ use too much sweetening. Tart
- juices give more flavor to the
drink. ,
For fruit drinks that need a
little sweetening, here’s a tip
that may help you. Keep some
sugar syrup in the refrigerator
at all times. It is easy to make.
Mix 2 cups of water and 3 cups
’ { of sugar and boil for three mini
jutes, then yOu add 13/8 tea-
spoons cream of tartar to prevent
crystallization. ’If you • should
be like come, people who have
asked me what to do with, jelly
_ that turned out to. be syrup—
IIM Zeaucue Eunvcd
KLATS-G-woOr
Wm. Wehmeyer, Owner and Mgr.
La Salle at McAlpine
cups.) (4) Stir only until sugar
is dissolved, no longer. (5) Use
a wide mouth container and a
hot fire for making jelly, so that
evaporation takes place rapidly.
(6) Sterilize glasses by boiling
15 to 20 minutes.. (7 Seal with
paraffin (may be shaved in bot-
tom of glass before jelly is pour-
ed in. It will then , melt and
come to the top.) (8) Place tight
cover on jar or’glass. (9) Store
in a cool place.
The wild grapes that were in
their peak about a month ago
made beautiful jelly, but they
are Joo ripe now, if they are not
gone entirely. The wild plums
will be in the jelly stage about
the first of August, so you might
want to get some spotted and
not let them get too ripe. Then
there is a small wild grape that
ripens around here in the fall,
so the jelly season, isn’t entirely
over, if you are on your toes. Of
course, you may have some good
jelly plums in your orchard, but
most of us are not that fortun-
ate.
For the wild plums use % cup
water to a pound of prepared
fruit; boil 15 to 20 minutes. In
making the jelly, use cup su-
gar to 1 cup fruit, juice.
For wild grapes use 1 cup wa-
ter to each pound of prepared
fruit; boil 5 to 10 minutes, Aft-
.-8
hid
• : -p
“ ■ L 3
• l ;. . • • -
• To appreciate the "88" you’ve got to let us demonstrate! You’ll have to try the
"88’" action -its smoothness, silence, sensational "Rocket" response! With
automatic Hydra-Matic Drive and this brilliant new Body by Fisher the ”88”
brings you a completely new driving experience! You’ve got to try it to believe it!
OLDSMOBILE
A GE NERAL MOTORS VALUE
—PHONE YOUR NEAREST OLDSMOBILE DEALER
. ■ -f,
And Refilled With
ESSO Motor Oil
3 r'.
/k"
*
| I 4
■ If you can’t visit Baytown -S4ntoww
I in person, ask for a copy I a
| of this book; address your / q
। request to - I
| Plants Manager, I1 HHK4
2
’ , - ' ■
' tasc
। White Hall club. Mrs. Irene
। Sullivan.
Keith club, Mrs. H. B. Trant.
” . Those who attended these
clubs were told that in order to
DOES
(
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Whitten, Bob. The Navasota Examiner and Grimes County Review (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 28, 1949, newspaper, July 28, 1949; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1445623/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Navasota Public Library.