The Saint Jo Tribune (Saint Jo, Tex.), Vol. [41], Ed. 1 Friday, February 24, 1939 Page: 4 of 4
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FRIDAY FEBRUAY
1939
STATE
THEATRE
Gainesville, Texas
Want Ads, Etc. j4". ^# in *°f
Free To Farmers |cnc Agricultural
Areas
FRIDAY — SATURDAY
Jane Withers
—in—
"Ari
izona
Wildcat"
—EXTRA SHORTS—
"Mickey's Band Cbncet"
"Three Bears"
"Lone Stranger"
"Peaceful Neighbors"
PREVIEV SAT. NIGHT
SUN — MON — TUES
II
Wings of
The Navy"
—'with—
George Brent, Olivia DeHavilland
and John Payne
PLAZA
FRIDAY — SATURDAY
BOB BAKER
—in—
"Ghost Town
Riders"
—and—
"Scouts To The Rescue"
FARMERS GETTING SMARTER
FOR SALE: A-l Springer Jersey
heifer. C. J. Seibold.
FOR SALE: Model A Ford. Priced
to sell. Two-door sedan. In
good shape with good rubber.
J. F. Rich, Bonita, Texas.
FOR SALE* Four work mules in
good shape and ready to work.
T. P. Mitchell, Star Route
South, Saint Jo.
FOR SALE: 1 Bctfsd'ark wa.;On,
Price Reasonable, OaJl or See—
P J Martin, Route 2, ST. JO.
FOR SALE: Oil leases nine miles
north of St. Jo. F. J. Schink,
Muenster.
FOR SALE: Good yellow ffent corn,
50c. White sure cropper, 40c
per bushel. R. A. Pilcher.
For Sale: Good uped Piano. Rea-
sonable. See Mi*. Luqy Farrier, St.
Jo.
For Sale: 3S head of goats .$300
head. H H Foster, Star Route
South
For Sale: Two incubators, in A-l
oonditlon. One <500 egg alze, other
260 egg size Oali or see Ed Moore,
Soute 2 oairt Jo, Ten*
For Lease: Small farm. See p. M.
Kersey, Montague, T«k&*
FOR SALE—About 400 bushels Of
cane 3 cents per bundle. Had
some crushed weighed 10 pounds
per bundle. R. A. Pilcher.
FOR SALE—Baled Johnson grass,
bright and niqe R. A Pilcher.
SUN' — MON — TUES.
FOR SALE—Prairie Hay, 36c per
, bale. Johnson grass hay, 26c per
bale. Also some good dorn. See
Mrs. Boyd Winder.
o
Texas farmers and ranchmen are
getting smarter, is the belief of
tihose who attended the recent farm,
er-mianiufacturer meeting at Col-
lege Station, where 50 manufactu-
rers from the mid-west and east,
plus a number of Texas indusrti-
afists, met with a like number of
Texas agriqultura ists in a two dayi
session to discuss their mutual pro-
Metais.
"The (bfg thing I got out of the
meeting is the definite conviction
that Texas farmers and ranchmen
have been doing a lot of thinking,"
commented H. H. WlilUamson, di-
rector of the Texas A. & M. Co lege
Extension Service.
"Farmers that 10 years ago did
not know how (far they lived from
town rose up and told the manu-
facturers what they thought was
wrong with the relations between
Industry* and agricufture, and
ranchmen gave an impartial an-
alysis of their problems. They back-
ed up their statements with facts
and figures, and ree'ed off from
men*xry accurate statists about
freight rates, domestic and foreign
markets, and the tariff," the direc-
tor said.
"Those of us who are concerned
with the welfare of agriculture sat
back and felt nrettvj eoort ebon* tV*e
whole thins- Before us developed
concrete rnnoff that farmers arid
ranchmen hove been thinking,
reading, and manning.
"Once aTll those concerned w'fh
aericjulture understand the fun^n
mental problems las w©l' as did
their representatives at *he meet-
ing, We wiV toe Well on the wa.v to
a solution of aPl our troubles'
The meeting brought about a
more thorough understanding of
the common n^Wem.s of agricu'-
ture and industry. WiTHmson
Pointed onit. ar-* he expressed *he
be'ief thit p serle«l of s'm.Hflr me^t-
Ines between Texas manufacturers
buatwre men. form«rs nr>d ranch-
men woifd be of great, value.
pius Musical and Specialty
<IHIIII« IHMtWW
You Want
The Best....
Id Meats, Roasts, and the XmAmc*
* SiMLks, Oome an4 sm
Lawless Market
j
LOST: Suit case with children and
woman's clothes, during the
holidays. Finder please call 29,
Saint Jo, or notify J. B. Lase-
man, Illinois Bend.
o
For Trade....
WANTED TO TRADE—Money tor
100 head of Stated cattle. W E Scott
& Sons. i
WANT£D/~*
yldter
A OOW CAN'T SAY
"HOCUS-POCUS MILK"
Watch
BENNETT
"SWy'li
MAN WANTED for Rawleigh Route
of 800 families. SaJes way up this
year. Write today, Rawfleigh's Dept.
TXB—661—SAH, Memphis, Tenn.,
or see Oregg Howard, Gainesville,
Texas.
o
Mr. and Mrs. CSem LaNier and
Mrs. Boyd Winder were Wichita
FaUs visitors Saturday.
A cow can't say "hocus pocus—
milk." E. R. Eudaly, dairyman of
the Texlas A. & M. College Exten-
sion Service, points out.
While plenty of good feed Is nec-
essary for profitable milk pro-'ac-
tion, there are soreva other fac ers
of equail importance, Eudaly says.
One of these Is water. ,
A cow uses from four to five aid
a ha"f pounds of water for <-ncfi
pound of milk she produces. Thus
row that gives four gallons of
m'ik wi11 need from 16 to 20 gaV
io"s cf '"after a day.
"Exlpertaen's have sIiowtl that
when cows have constant access to
cool, clean! water in, summer and
warm, clean water In winter thev
"reduce 11 percent more than
when watered once a dav, and four
orcent more than when wa.terd
twice a day," the dairyman stat-
ed.
"I don't know of anything that
will return more profit to the own-
er of a dairy c^>w, or of a commerci-
al! herd, in Texas than a roof
about eight feet over the water
trough, EudaPy said "I dom't care
If its made of brush or of the fine-
est roofing, just so it shades the
water."
tlMMHIl
The New
TEXAS
Theatre
SAINT JO, TEXAS
Night Shows 7:30 P. M.
SATURDAY
Ul/' 1/ 99
King Kong
—with—
Fay Wray—Bruce Cabot—Rotoeri;
Armstrong
Serial and "Porkey Pig" Cartoon
Matinee 2PM Night 7:30 P. M.
PREV. SAT. NIGHT
AND SUNDAY
"Arizona
Wildcat
//
—with—
Jane Withers—Leo Oarrillo
Movietone News and A Lew Lehr
"What Every Boy, Should Know"
SUNDAY SHOW STARTS 3 P. M.
Monday Tuesday Feb 27—28
Out of a seething world
iof battle they roar..
r:iMi!ood and guniiow-
jf/ ^ der heroes all!..
Inspire*] bv
KiplintfsstirrlifK
Unit!
'NT* VICTOR MeUSLEH
SOUeUS FAIRBANKS, J
.<*k
S*m !*ft • EAtanfo
Glwnffl .iMn Fontaine J
>>KO RADIO'S 810
SHOW OF SHOWS I
PANDRO j.. fM.VM In charge of prod' :•
erojid d'reeiert bv OIO' '1
17SVINS. • 'om o slory by 0 n H chl < ,-.d
h Choriei MovArthur. Screen Ploy by Jje'
-,«/■ G'jiOl.
Wednesday — Thursday March 1, 2
"Wings of
The Navy"
—with—
George brent — Olivia DeHavilland
John Payne — Fred McHugh ■
National) arid kxjal winners of the
Movie Quiz Contest will be an-
nounced from the stage of this
theatre ^(tond ay, night, February 27.
innmie
Egg-Eating Saddler Takes ort *
Vitamins for Pony Express Race
Mr. and M*s. F. H. Martin of No-
oana visited Mr. and Mrs. Bil
Hooker Sunday.
ilSSffPif Jin*, t (# ,
i .*"(L i,mX'
Bowie's
Department Store
R
M
YOL/P MONEY PUYS
7HE MOST
Sinee 1883
Hoben Salmon, Nocona, Texas, cowboy, conditions Brownie for the
Nocona-Golden Gate Exposition Pony Express race with an even doz~n
per day of fresh White Leghorn eggs. Miss Jane Crawford, three y
with the San Francisco Civic Opera Ballet, stands by with a bar!
the hen fruit. In eggs Brownie gets vitamins A, spinach and coll;..
B, carrots and okra; D, mineral salts and bone building; and G givto
him water cress, turnip tops, beet tops, kale and broccolU Brownie is fat
and sleek while other saddlers on the Salmon ranch are shaggy and
dull. The Pony Express, sponsored by Nocona's Chamber of Commerce,
starts from Nocona on March 1. Practically 100 entrants are expected,
but only one can win the |750 purse for getting to the Exposition flrst
• IT S NEW •
An Aladdin Converter
Makes An Electric
Lamp Out of Any
Aiaddtn
In a Jiffy!
• Think of it * Without
ir> anv way destroviiifi the
efficient) of vour A lad Jin
uh a kerosene lithium de /
vice you may no<* convert
■ i into an electric lamp in
a moment'* time, and back
again if vou desire just as readily. It
gives vou two beautiful lamps in one.
If your power fails, as it often does, just
slip the converter out, put on the
Aladdin mantle and chimney — and
there % you are!--the same beautiful
modern white light of yout Aladdin —
the light that never fails. If your home
is aow wired for electricity, bring out
your old reliable Aladdins again, and
convert (hero into electric.
Hiere'i no reason aow, even though you
expeel to eventually have electricity why you
■hould not enjoy Aladdin white light mean-
while. for when m comes, all you oeed do it
10 insert this limple converter, end you have
n beautiful an electric lamp, at any equal
"xpenditure could provide.
«ARDWARM— TORNITtnMO- -fFOWHStAi,
saint J® AMWUIAUCK SERVICE
iSw - m
MvMiHBiiSf
Slips
Into the
Center
Tube of
Anv
Model
Aladdin
Your Friends
DCOTT BROD
DERfcxrmdis
T xu>
You can't fit a square peg
in a round hole--
No—and likewise yov can't give every woman the same kind
of a hairdress.
_ THAT'S WHY I LAY SUCH STRESS ON
My Individualized Service
If you q&n't wear an extreme vtifion of a 6T>epc-up hair dress
I will modify the stype to make it becoming t® you.
I have many versions of the up-and-up hair dress, lane of
which wUL be flattering to you.
Make your appointments now far a new and loveQy caffure.
Wyrizola's Beauty Studio
Do Not Fly Kites Near
Eleetrie Wires
Boys and girls, flying kites near electric wires it dangerouil
Don't take chances. Follow these suggestions and be safe:
1. Do not use wire or metallic kite strings.
2. Do not use metal kite sticks.
3. Do not fly kites with wet string or in damp
rainy weather.
4. Do not climb poles to get tangled kites.
5. Do not poke sticks at kites caught in wires or
try to pull them down by their tails.
C. Fly your kites in parks, playgrounds or pas-
tures, clear away from power lines.
If kites become entangled in wires, call our office at once.
Our employees know how to remove them without endanger,
ing anyone or causing an interruption to electric service.
pinFUTC* See that theie suggestion! are followed by the
rAlien 10. children in your neighborhood. You may live
• lift «( prevent a terioui injury.
AGtiien and
la Taxpayer- I scrvicc ■
LMwJiBCOMPAml
P,
\>.
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Meador, Frieda. The Saint Jo Tribune (Saint Jo, Tex.), Vol. [41], Ed. 1 Friday, February 24, 1939, newspaper, February 24, 1939; Saint Jo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth335250/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .