The Garland News (Garland, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, June 6, 1941 Page: 3 of 8
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Friday, June 6, 1941
THE GARLAND, TEXAS, NEWS
Page 3
€
urday after Foy’s sister, Mrs. week in Dallas with her relatives.
ASK FOR
CENNESS
DARY
MLLK
AT YOUR GROCER
With A Locker It’s Hog Killing Time the Year ’Round
s
Sunumel
PORK
■
a
/a
' d
4#
a
y
5c
Values
§
.2
Roast
FRUIT COCKTAIL
3
3
Seven Cut
Values
wmeum
lb. 19c
*
6
@
"9
Where’s the best place
Fresh Fruit & Vegetables
OH THS HOAD!
Cherries
SOUTHERN LADY
5c
SANDWICH SPREAD
lb. 15c
15c
Qt. 19c
2 POUNDS 50
* <
2 POUNDS
50
Outstanding Bargins
!
SUNNYBANK MARGARINE
2 LBS.
Qt 19c
*0000082006906
)
BRUCE’S SPICED
RELISH
" 2
VIENNA SAUSAGE GOOD LUNCH 3 FOR 190
J
222222333
Qt. 10c
AIRLIGHT FLOUR
4G POUNDS 99e
SAFEWAY PRICES ARE LOW EVERY DAY!
2888
MEATS
4
POWER & LIGHT COMPANY;
TEXAS
5.8888
SAFEWAY
90 HORSEPOWER
—V-8 SMOOTHNESS
DUTCHESS SALAD DRESSING QUART
ACORN CREAM MEAL 10 POUNDS
AIRWAY COFFEE 2 Lbs.276
EDWARDS COFFEE Lb 230
Fight Told By
Food Expert
110
100
250
100
100
16 Oz.
Can
No. 2
Cans
9222231222:
22380cendas
8882803
BLACKEYED PEAS
CUCUMBERS
i
p
For Baby Chicks, Field .or Gar-
den Seed. See Roach.
210
250
190
90
35c
35c
25c
COLLEGE GRADUATES
ENTERTAINED AT LUNCHEON
Corn 2 large ears 5c
NEW RED
Potatoes 1017c
8
dh
Cool as a
Mountain
Breeze
Sachse News
Reported By
Mrs. L. R. Lawrence
Enjoy cool, refreshing
breezes in your home at the
flip of a switch this sum-
mer. Install an Attic Venti-
Lucille Dorety, Irving and' Miss How To Eat To
2 LBS. 250
LB. 80
LB. 270
Quick Frozen Meats Buy
Quick Freezing Tenderizes, Assures Freshness And
Seals In Vitamin Contents
BACON SQUARES LB. 150
----------- LB.25c
-
• to choose your new car?
4-ounce (uncooked) I
serving contains I
337
MICROGRAMS
(Equal to 112
international units)
4-ounce (uncooked)
serving contains
1 310
I MICROGRAMS
I (Equal to 103
| tmeernational units)
4-ounce (uncooked)
serving contains
16.2
MMIGRMAS
4-ounce (uncooked) s
Serving contains II
8.4
MnLIGRAMS II
Bz eniboflavim) I
MICROGRAMS
4-ounce (uncooked) |
serving contains
344
MICROGRAMS
(Equal to 115 Shet
man-Bourquin units)
7 thr^gh tE Published--------
I °°Urtegy h
a4? I
/
Fresh California
«BING»
s. 32222322818*14228*83: 49 33813226-1*832 ■
\ is ready to meet the in-
LIFEBUOY SOAP 2Bars
LA 53 A
q .
VF ‘
P
•
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Anku-peiagre
Foctor
MILLIGRAMS
4-ounce (uncooked)
serving contains
11.0
•ILLIGRAMS
, 1
/A
/A
AZ
LAMB)
4-ounce (uncooked) I
serving contains I
294
MICROGRAMS |
(Equal to, 98 Sher- I
. man-Bourquin units) |
f 4-ounce (uncooked) |
I serving contains I
397
| MICROGRAMS I
I (Equal to 132 Sher- |
I man-Bourquin umts) |
| 4-ounce (uncooked)
| serving contains
414
1 MICROGRAMS
I (Equal to 138 Sher.
, I man-Bourquin units)
Bi (Thiomine) I
MICROGRAMS
4-ounce (uncooked) I
serving contains I
1602
micrograms |
(Equal to 534
international units)
4-ounce (uncooked)
serving contains
227
MICROGRAMS
(Equal to 76
I international units)
K
BEEF
Pork Chops
Center Cuts
1b. 23c
WE'LL MATCH the "showroom this Ford greatest in its whole
value” of the Ford with anyone field in actual passenger space. N
... but if you want to know how A ride will show what this means.
iTv
REAL ROST
PEANUT BUTTER
ZZe B VITAMINS IN MEAT
- . __________ vescessszasszmusmmMLM/TTN --22228226320222
Jessie Eriscon, who has been ill.
We hope the change will do her
good.
Rev. and Mrs. Sylvesta McMul-
lin and son, of Wills Point, visited
in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Vern-
on Farmer Monday night.
Mrs. G. W. Estes is visiting this
Mrs. Leia Kendall and Miss
Billie Kendall entertained with a
luncheon Friday honoring Miss
Martha Meade, Luling. Miss Dorety |
and Miss Meade are friends of
Miss Kendall at Texas State Col-
lege for Women, and are members
of the June graduating class.
FORD HAS THE
QUALITY FEATURES
V-8 POWER—90 smooth
horsepower. There never
was a low price engine
like this before.
NEW BEAUTY—When you
look at the smooth flowing
lines you see one of the few
cars with really up-to-date
styling this year.
A NEW RESTFUL RIDE —On
the new Ford "Slow Mo-
tion Springs.” A soft, quiet
ride wholly new this year.
EXTRA VAIUE—New ease
of control with positive
mechanical, fine-car type
shift—extra-big hydraulic
brakes—and the famous
Ford semi-centrifugal
clutch.
"--
POTATO SALAD
COOKIES Assorted
.ii
Rev. Vernon Wilson, wife and
baby are spending the week with
Mrs. Wilson’s parents, Mr. and
Mrs. G. W. Estes.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Bailey
and children visited relatives in
Murphy Sunday.
Mrs. Pierson Wilbanks has been
staying with her mother, Mrs. Obe
McCallum in Garland,, who has
b^en ill the past few days.
Miss Alma Joe Butler of Plano
is visiting in the homes of Mrs.
Foy Lemons and Mrs. Clarence
Ingram.
Visitors in the home of Mrs. W.
W. Ingram Saturday afternoon
were Mrs. Garnet Kelso and chil-
dren of Reinhardt, Mrs. C. T.
Davis, Mrs. Jim Sachse and Mrs.
L. R. Lawrence.
ISchool closed Friday. Gradua-
Mr and Mrs. Boone Sarhse, Mrs.
Buna Bailey and baby, Miss Janice
Bailey and Mrs. Joe 'Christian
spent the week-end with Mr. and
Mrs. ONeil Bailey and son in Fort
Bill, Okla.
Foy Lemons and mother, Mrs.
Frank Lemons went to Tyler Sat-
_ "i-
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great car this is, take one out Bigness counts and here it is!
on the road! TEST THE VALUE , . . IN
TEST THE PERFORMANCE ... ACTION. Stop with the biggest
IN ACTION. There never was hydraulic brakes anywhere near
another low price engine like the price. Rest your toe on the
this 90 horsepower Ford V-8. pedal of a fine-car type of semi-
Take it out in traffic—then step centrifugal clutch. Flick through
out on the open road—chai- the gears with the easy, silent
lenge the toughest hills. Draw kind of finger-tip shift that high-
your own conclusions! priced cars use.
TEST THE RIDE ... IN ACTION.
Ride on the pavement, then ride
the roughest road you know.
You’ll find the new Ford ride is
the kind of ride you like. Smooth
where the going’s good. Soft
and steady over the bumps.
TEST THE ROOM . i . IN
ACTION. Measurements show
JUICE ran1
Il UOOtil
88885 pog M
ll
208
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k
VITA POPPED WHEAT 50
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1. ORYOURHOMETIs
2-
•s.
1-82
LB, 190
& 4.0
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atah
78
58838888 y 88
PORK & BEANS X
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WEINERS al
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TOMATO JUICE 10Czn
RUMP ROAST
I BOLOGNA
SALT JOWLS
LOIN STEAK
aAf,
Bananas Ib.
limes 2
l‘ ? pr-
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tion exercises were held Wednes-
day night. Rev. Fred Carrington
spoke on Education. There were
twelve graduates.
Mrs. Pierson Wilbanks and
Mrs. Foy Lemons visited in the
i home of Mrs. Obe McCallum at
Garland and Mrs. W. W. Ingram
Sunday afternoon.
py 2-888585
EgeeA“
,7
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02680.8
Answering President Roose-'
vttic ventilating fan/ h19 Company IS not
in your only meeting the electric
\ service needs of its cusrom.
1 r
? (
। 511 ■
..
—• u a..............., e■.
--- lating Fan. It will drive
,( \. : ’ the hot air from your attic
i' ' %aS\ - 8 ' while drawing fresh, cool
ee AN- air into your living room,
5hy P - dining room, bedrooms and
52: ’ 3333 3; hK V , : -
--------------------------- You'll be surprised \ kitchen. It means COOl com-
hoyy’ihiscomfostA’k L for, picasant evenings, and
your electrical dealer \ refreshing sleep at night.
for an estimate of the j _—T—
cost of installing an } ' ” . .
$ 16 Oz.
& Cans
w rm
k
Assembled in Texas - —w*
by Texas Workers -*
100
50
50
90
250
velt’s appeal for improved diet,
Albertine Berry of Dallas, home
economics director for the Lone
Star Gas System and home service
chairman for American Gas Asso-
ciation, suggests ways by which
goods and cooking advisors cam
strengthen a fighting nation. To
obtain high food value menus at
minimum cost she urges education
on wise planning, proper buying
of foods, purchasing from reliable
food sources, protection of food by
proper storage, and what foods are
available and the best ways of pre-
paring them.
She listed the following as a
typical high food value menu of
comparatively low cost:
Breakfast—baked pears, fried
mush, margarine, cane syrup, hot
milk, coffee, cream, sugar.
Lunch—cream potato soup, raw
carrots, crisp toast, margarine,
bread pudding with raisins.
Dinner—stew of beef, potatoes,
carrotts and onions, cabbage slaw
topped with dressing of salt, sugar,
milk and vinegar; whole wheat
bread, margarine, fruit tapioca,
milk to drink.
Miss Berry said the food dollar
should be divided into five parts,
with 15 cents for milk and cheese;
25 cents for vegetables and fruits;
20 cents for flour, wheat, corn
meal, oats, rice, grits, bread and
other grain foods; 20 cents for
butter, lard other fats, and sugar
and molasses5, and 20 cents for
meat, fish and eggs. For a family
with children the milk and cheese
allotment should be increased 19
cents on the dollar, she said.
"Home service workers can co-
operate with local, county, state
and Federal agencies in promoting
better health through proper
diet,” she explained. "‘Any work
that will build and keep the health
of children—our nation of the
future—is to be particularly re-
commended. Home service workers
can help in emergency by (1) dis-
pensing information on food and
nutrition; (2) promotion of the
use of surplus commodities by
families needing and eligible to re-
ceive them; (3) assisting in menu
planning for meals cooked and ser-
ved in school; and (4) interpret-
ing home economics services to all
income levels, especially for fami-
lies of low inicomes. ” ?
-------•-----:—
Mr. and Mrs. Goldman Rasure
were Sunday afternoon visitors in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. V. J.
Bachman at Garland.
„--T
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Jnamddmg
MARSHMALLOWS Lb.
WAX PAPER cut-Rite
SILK NAPKINS 80 Count
pnGIwA Sunmaid
MHl3 Seedless
POST TOASTIES 3 Boxes
SIRLOIN STEAKS, 1b.
T-BONE STEAKS, 1b.
ROASTS, 1b. _
WE HANDLE ONLY CHOICE BEEF
Your Patronage Is Appreciated
Zero Locker Storage
ers today for comforts and '
( \ conveniences at home, but .
As che power needs of Na-
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The Garland News (Garland, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, June 6, 1941, newspaper, June 6, 1941; Garland, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1511040/m1/3/?q=denton+history: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Heritage Crossing.