The Albany News (Albany, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 25, 1943 Page: 2 of 4
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•TSr'W
■Mum
Page Two
THE ALBANY
Publlihed Every Thursday
R. H. McCAKTY AND JOHN II. McGAUGHEY
PubllRhem and Owner*
^ r V'l) . 1111 n 111 Ml IH11II III III n IHMMH III) in III Mt 'IIM H11 It I p"
31jr Albana Nw I T D.G.News
Albany, Texas, Thursday, February S5
NEWS
Entered in the Pout Office at Albany, Texan, at Second Class
Mail Matter.
Just
Between Friends
imely Religious j
T:
RATIONING Re«i lr.tion
It the order off the day. School
turned out today and Friday
to that the (acuity could de-
vote thoie day* to regi -
torinff the contumert of the
community and i «ue t.iein
Ration Booki No. 2.
RKGISTUATION liKGAN Wed
neiiday afternoon after school, and
will continue through Saturday.
There is little confunion in regb
tration. The faculty, in their u
ual thorough manner, was adc
quately prepared to register the
connumers. Albany folk had pre
pared themselves to reenter ipiick
ly by ntudyinp: informalion in the
^iresH and on the radio.
NO COMPLAINING ha.
been heard here about food
rationing. Our citizeni have
taken rationinfj in their «tride
and will cooperate in every
war effort that tendu to hort-
en the *«r and Rive our hoyn
food and equipment to fi|{ht
with.
GARDKNKHS are jroinn: at their
annual spring task of preparing
their Harden plots with .fervor this
month. Rationing makes it very
necessary that, everyone plant
* garden and raise as much as
potflible. Many have vegetables
•ooming up. If this fine spring
weBther continues, and if we get
Home rain, there is every indica-
tion that Albany people will raise
a portion of their vegetables.
MARCH IRth the MRTC
band from Camp Berkeley
will play a Victory Concert in
Albany. Thii band ii com-
in* upon invitation of the
high •chool band, which hai
played five Victory Concert*
thit tchool year. The Albany
Service club it HiiiitinK the
band in bringing the MR I~C
band, and will help entertain
the visitor* following the con-
cert. The MRTC band i*
made up of mutician* from all
part* of the nation, and their
mutic will he a treat to Al-
bany folk,
\ HIGHWAY CREW, moved tn
O p I c s. . . .
By J. B. Thompson
p imnMiunnnuiimunniMtHMHMinMnmnnmnmn|t
Charles Wesley's great poetic
sentiment, "0 for 'a thousand
tongues to ing," has literally been
fulfilled in scripture translation
The American Hible Society ha;
printed and distributed the crip
tures, or scripture portion., around
the world in more than a thousand
tongues. The most recent tongue
added to this grow ing ii I i Conob,
a dialect spoken by a group of
Indians living in the department of
lluehuetnango, in the northwc; t
crn part of (Juatemala. The <!o
pel of St. John has been translated
by Newberry II. Cnx, a mi ionar.v
of the Central American mi ion.
The Indians are delighted and at
tor reading a chapter one excla.m
1111 w
OW II
Ten
l'ro-
the
the
inter
serv-
ju,t
. He
lis is
he
on r
roiv-
joy
Albany recently, and is reworking n- contribution
shoulders on the highway, which
makes driving safer. Shoulders put
on the highway within the citv lim-
its will be of great benefit to
drivers in Albany.
Soon the Highway Department
expects to have work on the AI
bany-Haird road in progress again
and this time the road will be op-
ened to Haird with grading and
drainage structures. Survey work
it being done at present.
PRF.CINCT NO. 2 Ware-
house ha* undergone tome
decorating lately. The main
warehouse and all the out-
houses have been painted, and
a new sign, "Precinct No. 2
warehouse," has been put up.
Commissioner M. A. Stewart
is boss of the job.
MORE NKW READERS this
week. They are:
Sgt. Virgil H. Adams, AI'O San
Francisco (New Guinea).
Billy G. Cleveland, CM 2-C,
Pacific Reach, Wash.
Mrs. W. A. Crow, Abilene.
Mrs. Hulda Morris, Abilene.
R. N. Wood, l.ueders.
R. S. Long, Granbury.
Cpl. Amiel I*. Alexander, Camp
Claiborne, I,a.
Pvt. Woodroe W. Ilitt, I J. S.
ed, "This we can understand!
good to have it in our
tongue."
The Laymen's League of
nessee, organized within the
t.estant Episcopal church of
state, is asking every man in
diocese to "take a personal
est in one hoy in the armed
ice. Write him a letter. Not
one letter; write him regularly
an older brother to him." Th
a line suggestion and should
emulated by all church men.
writer has written many of*
hoys in the service and has rei
ed letters of appreciation and
from every one of them.
When Eredric March played the
role of Dr. Spence in the picture,
"One Eoot in Heaven." he fulfill
ed, at least, in make-believe, the
wish of his father, a Presbyterian
elder, that he be a minister. His
father insisted upon the ministry
as a vocation but the son had other
ideas. At one time their pastor
interceded for Eredric when he de
sired to become an actor against
his parents' wishes.
Church news from over the na
tion gives every evidence that our
religious leaders, of all faiths, are
shaping their programs to meet
war emergencies as they arise and
also to make the greatest possible
contribution of moral and spiritual
strength to the people. And bet
ter still, comes the news from ev-
erywhere that the people are re
sponding as never before to tin'
church and its message. N'o great
is being made to
M'Ut'ity that that of
They will continue
peace of the fliture.
The 10 12 crop of religious
books seemed to strike a deeper
note of spiritual reality. The writ
er's purse forbids a wide reading
of them, but we read the reviews
of most of them, read a number
in a circulation library, and
bought a few of the best one . The
most highly advertised and widely
circulated one, and possibly the
year's best seller, bears the imple
title, "Prayer." The author i. the
well known and brilliant pastor of
the Madison Avenue Pre hyterian
church in New York City, Dr
George A. Butterick. The -en ;i
tional story of Eddie Rirkenbarker
also shows the influence of prayer
in human life. Another one which
we read, is "Christians Have
Wings" by W. E. Sankytcr, pa tor
of Central Hall, London. I
the heart of the bombed city,
of the piles of rubble,
for months >n air raid
has found a faith that
ant that has wing .
our
t he
to d
national
■hurdles,
i mi in tin
: By HORSEY I.OONEY !
<■11,1 MM Hit,Milium I III II IIIIMMlfi
We all must have lived better
the Inst week . . . we had a pleas
| ant night for Guard drill. No cold
wind, sand or rain . . . for one
Monday night the weather was
pleasant . . . and aside from some
members having had a hard day at
work, everyone seemed to feel
I good as we were marched to the
| drill field for this week's workout.
The company was formed on
the field and all men who have
joined the guard since Jan. 1st
were ordered to fall out and were
given special instruction by Sgt.
M cK iski . . . while t he re. toft he
j company of old member were re
arranged to balance the M|uads.
! When the officers had arrang
j I'd what Was leift of the men, Cap-
i tain llarri,- drilled us in company
i mass , . . in clo e and extended (>i
der. In case you folk other than
t be Guard read I hi column, clo -i
order drill . . . t he men a re march-
ing with their boulder about four
inches ap i rl ; ill extended, t bey an
SI ■ I'l'OSIvl I lo he about lorl\
Inches. 'I hi varie, according to
how many pay attention to what
they are doing. Anyway, it i
pretty work when ii is done right,
j The left and right turn, were triad
1 in ma.- formation . , . al o a pret
ty drill movement when you learn
what tO do. Tin- 1* Why we have
been trying. And Captain llarri .
SIR . . . who were you watching
when you were calling cadence'.'
SIR, who ever he was ... SIR .
he niu t have been the company
"yard bird" lie wa out of ti p,
Sir . . . Our outfit looked like a
bunch of chickens in an ant bed,
trying to keep in step. Hut we are
all with you Captain . . . we got
to make mi. take to do anything
right. . . . Right'.'
The company was then drilled
by Captain Harris in column of
threes . . . and flank movements by
platoons . . . passing in review, by
the rows of rock seats on the foot
ball field. Fellows this looks like
they might be expecting one of
those fellows . . . commonly called
Brass Hats. Let's be on our toes.
We were drilled then in oblique
. . . right and left . . . For you
folks out ide the guard, this move
mont . . . you are in straight line
or columns of men at the com-
mand right or left oblique, you
turn about forty-five degree- in
the direction and TRY to keep
your posit inn. We are really rag
ged on this. We should do some
of it each week until we can snap
into it and make it look a lot bet-
ter.
s were then turned
omniander , and i'i
tie formation drills,
by the squad. The
lieut. Downing, in-
sider In take hi men
Restaurants Register
March 1st to 10th
Rationing regulations which
commercial eating places and nth
er institutional users of foods fol-
low in obtaining supplies of ra
tinned foods those now being ra
tinned and those to be rationed in
the future have been consolidat-
ed into a single food program. A.
M. Russ, chairman of the Shackel
ford County War Price and Ra
tinning Board announced today.
• The new program will become
effective on March I, when con
sumer sales start under the pro-
cessed foods rationing program,
Mr. Russ said.
All institutional users, such as
boarding house , hospitals, jail ,
canteens, restaurants and hotels,
mil I register under the new pro-
gram. Even though they have ra-
tioned foodstuff on hand, they
will not be permitted to use tin
after the registration period ex
pile , unie they have registered.
The registration period is from
March I to 10, inclusive.
Mlotment period, for all ration
eil fund are two month each for
in: til ut ion . beginning March I
I'lan to determine amounts nf
ned food
obtain
rat ii
may
buses:
I. Tht
fee and proce
ing December
percentage, ot
determined in
to
tin
re tnur.nnt
following
■d
of sugar, col
foods used dur-
ire multiplied by a
"factor," which i
i■ i,■,, ... accnrdaiicc with the
' nation's supplie. nf rationed lood
2. The number of per-on en
eil during December is multiplied
by an allowance per person for
[ each food item.
The . mailer
ures obtained ui
' dilations de. ci ibi
; I he inst it utional ti er'
allotment of
of the
der the
il allow
s ha
each
two fig-
two cal
becomes
rationed
March 1
base for
rt
can
hi
The p
over Io their
en special hi
Our platoon,
commander,
I ructed I he I
food for I he fi r I period,
to May I, i tw ice the
that food.
While the actual use of
food during December
| taken as a basis for fixing the al
lotment, the institutional user doe:
not receive that full amount but i.-
| curtailed in approximately the
| same proportion that rationing
curtails tile individual consumer
under coupon or point rationing.
I'lider rationing, OPA decided,
the amount of rationed food
which a restaurant and a restau-
rant patron can gel should not be
increased merely because unusual
ly large portion: of that fond were
er\ ed in the pa t. Rationed food
are too scarce for that. Ihcrelore,
the per per u>n allowance of ra
tinned foods served becomes a pri-
mary consideration in setting the
ba: i for the re taurant. ' food al
lot ments.
in
front of the re
, and by ham
t them into a
it of
the platoon
and arm signal
given formation
if
rum |
nu' ; pock
ng
shelters hi
is triumph
■ ten
. , . while the rest of the platoon
watched. When the .-quad wa
back in formation, they were ask
ed . . . under what conditions that
particular formation would be
used. This, I think, is good train
ing . . because though most of
the answers were right, they were
all different, as the formation-
have variable use , The platoons
were then iriven these formations
. . under their cummander-
and everyone had to keep on his
toes.
Back in the armory for the u
ual coffee . . and training film
This week we had two GOOD
films . . . the fir<t on ma ntainimr
direction in the field hv cumin-
, . . and nature, and even with a
•t watch. Th; wa onto
few of II knew could lie
\Iso orienl in. or p 1 a, 111
o I hat I errain hourn w a in
Ibi
• HK-
lt
Marine Corps, San Franri «•« ,
(Woodroe, who helped clean tin
Japs off Guadalcanal, ha left
the island for a rest stati<m).
Mrs. Kay Hrandon, Albany.
t ru
The
I was
i won
place
| biddf
on
d Ii
direct ion
econd film
the be 1 WI
"Booby "
le urpr
the
n
to II
FIRE WARNING!
# It would cost you much more to replaco your pro-
perty now than at any time during the last 15 years.
Have you increased your tire insurance sufficiently
to protect you under present conditions?
# If you lost your household goods and your home,
would your insurance replace them?
# Consult us about your insurance problems.
WEBB $ WEBB
ALBANY, TEXAS
REAL ESTATE. INSURANCE, Oil. LEASES. MAPS
wa , 1 think,
e have had. It
rap . . You
1 at some of the
y can be . . . and are
rom a book on i tabh
chair or even .1 tove
oven . . . or a nirture on the wall.
! . . . and the thrill you p t whee
| vmi lind one will make von iro all
to piece . . and I don't mean
yout* ner\e You have all heird
of the SAPPERS . thev are the
1 fellow- who hunt out and de iroy
booby traps and mines before they
do any damage. < Hi t rip they
I make . . they dare the ivrim lean-
er to take 1 swinjC at them with
that cythe.
Attendance i
keep it that wav
week.
still ffood.
. . See vol
I et'
next
RANCH LOANS
We can make yon a loan on
your ranch any place in lcxag
or Oklahoma if it is a good loan
for -1 percent annual interest
Contact us now. We will
give? you the very best of . erv
ice.
GREEN BROS.
Kox 127 Dial 7222
Lubbock, Texas
|
ONE PRICE PLAN
ANNOUNCED ON PEANUTS
('OIiLKGK STATION The oiic 1
priii' y.irin for all peanuts an
nounii'il la I Wrrk practically a
sun's production of the 1,800,000
acre Texas farmers are being
asked to produce under this year
Kood for Freedom program.
Peanuts, whether grown for the
edible trade <>r for oil, will be sup
ported at Kfi percent of the pres-
ent parity price.
t'nder pre ent prices, the aver
age would bring about $1-9 per
ton for No. I peanuts. Incentive
payments will add between $10
and $20 per ton, thu bringing the
average return up to $140 to $ 1 • • 0
per ton.
o
State Wants More
Grain Sorghums
COI.I.Ki;!' ST \TION Pro
! duct ion tfoal on jrrain orjrhum .
oybeaii • and weet potatoe oar
ed in Texa t hi week a res i ed
tiuure were rei • vod by the tatf
I SPA Wai Hoard.
j The grain orulnini
previous!v had been e
J ;h'r• • , w a
acre wi,!,e
acreage wa- innva «
000 to 7."),000 acre
potato /oal wa et at
against a previous tigur
, acres.
( ommenting on the
1 rea «• . the war board
although the new goal.*
I the incentive payment•
•a onM be added inducement
attaining maximum product
The incentive payment <>n grain
so rich um i ^ per acre while the
• soybean payment is •> 1 •> per acre
and applie only to the acreace
planted between i'O and 110 per
j cent of the farm goal.
Other crops for which incentive
payments will be made in Texa
include Irish potatoes, fre-h vege
tables and dried peas.
GIVE
you
TEXASJg
Hv BOYCF. HOUSE
At Matamorns (acros the river
from Hrown.sville) you can dine
or could yearn buck in a netting
that wiiH truly glamoroun, out in
the open with an unbelievably big
moon made of new silver no low
that it win barely above the tops
of the twin palm tree, and a ma
rimba band played soft melodic;
At one time, more .strident than
the Mexican songs, memories stir
red of Texas gridirons for it was:
"We'll roll old Blunkville In the
nod, In the sod,
Hah, rah, rah!"
At a nearby table a Mexican
aviator wn talking in Kngii.-h to
I wo A1111 ■ I'ii:111 . lie wa de -crib
ing a Might at night ovoi l.oiii .ain
w amps:
"I could see light, glimmering in
tile waters. No, it wa not the re
Meet ion of the tar. ; it wa; the
moonlight hitting the eye of the
alligators!"
They have teller of tall tale, in
i all countries.
There has been considerable talk
from Austin in criticism of the
["short work week" over the na
I tion. ,
Well, the hortest work week
| that I know anything about is right
down in Austin under the dome of
[the Capitol.
Just .-it. down and take a . tub
! pencil and the back of an old
envelope and figure it out .for
J yourself. State department em-
ploye.-! come to work at * and get
j oft at 5, with an hour for lunch.
That figures out eight hours a day.
I Hut they're given la minutes in
[ the morning and another la mi 11
utes in the afternoon for coffee, so
that cut. down the time on the job
to seven hours and a half.
Hut we're not through figuring
yet. That seven and a half hours
a day is for Monday through Fri-
day. On Saturday they get off at
iiooii and, of course, don't have to
come back till Monday morning.
A -uniing that a department em
ploye works what time he is actual
ly at his desk and that's a pretty
violent assumption in some in
stances then he works -II 1-2
hours a week.
Hut wait ! We haven't allowed
for two weeks' paid vacation, sick
leave and all the numerous hoii
day that tale departments take
off. Kijrure all this in and, Mr.
Taxpayer, you will do well to get
8(1 hours of ervire per week from
hundreds of your state department
employes.
I If your state bureaus would su.-
I peiid most "I the holidays for the
j duration and if they would work
ion Saturday afternoons and give
tin* public the same type of ser\
ice that the public gets from pri-
vate business and private industry,
then those departments could get
I along with one-fourth less em-
ployes than they now have. This
l w ould release a great number of
people for work in airplane factor
ii-- and it would save the taxpayer-
over a million dollars a year,
j The average business man, :n
these days of war taxes and labor
hortage and -ti" and train, is
working from (10 to 7(1 hours a
week. The farmers always have
worked T'J hours a week on the
aver.aL'o and they re workimr hard
ei than ever now Would it be
I asking too much for our state
'government to go on at least a 4K
hour ba. I Really, somebody
ought to break it gently to the
bureaucrat at Au>tin that there i
' a war going on.
Personal Mention
Mr. and Mrs. William S. (iay
and daughter, Sue, visited in Fort
Worth last week.
o—
W. F. McCain returned Friday
night from Stanton where he had
been since August.
O
Mr. and Mr*. Homer T. Houldin
and son, and Mrs. Key of Mjnerul
Wells were Albany visitors Tues-
duy.
(I
Mrs. Frank Smalley returned
Tuesday .from Dallas where she
visited her daughter, Mrs. Thomas
Wilson.
o —
J. II. Sedwick attended the show Lurtln(,e
and sale of the I exas Hereford | .j_ \
Association in fort
day and Wednesday.
Worth Tues
Albany Earn* Ci
For Good Fire Record*
AUSTIN.--A good fir# record |
credit of 15 percent will apply t« i
fire insurance premiums on polt
eics written in Albany for lfe.
months beginning March 1, it wm
announced today by Marvin Hal],
I state lire insurance commiiil
j This will result in a direct M'
on fire insurance as 15 perccnt
the normal premium will be
ducted on policies written afttr
the effective date.
The 15 percent credit will reroh
in an estimated saving of (10,810 J
on fire insurance costs for Albany *
policyholders during the next year.
The estimate is based on Are in-
premium paymenti in
10 percent credit hu
Mrs. I'or ey l.ooney returned
Wednesday from ( opeville, where
she spent a week with her parent.-.,
Mr. and Mr .1 • C. Mayo.
Joe Overton, Jr
of
Mr
I itary In
1 spent t lie W ei
his parent ,
, ()'. erton, Si.
,, or Texas Mil
San Antonio
I 'ii Albany with
and Mr.. Joe
been in effect for the past year.
The fire record for a city or
town is determined hy a fixed ra-
tio between losses and premiums
figured on a five-year averago.
The maximum good fire record
credit is 25 percent. The maximum
charge (or penalty) for heavy
losses is 15 percent.
Mr Tom I'rice went to < ro
Plain Sunday to vi il her mother
and . tei. She wa accompanied
hy Mr . I,ula Higg.', who pent the
day with her son and wile, Mr. and j
Mr.. C. I'i. Higg .
Mr Hill Conger and
John Walt and Kli/.abeth I'.lien, I
have returned to their home in j
Albany from Austin. Mr. Conger
has gone to I.ake Charles, La., to
work in a defense plant.
4 I
Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Crnwnover
had as their guests Thursday her
father, <!. C. Osborne, and sisters,
Mary Ann and Frances Osborne,
of Abilene, and nephew, James
Hryan Osborne, of Houston.
Mrs. F. H. Townsend of Fort
Worth spent the week-end with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Kendrick. Her husband, who has
been home on a 15-day furlough,
returned to Alameda, Calif., hist
week.
NEW CREDIT PROGRAM
COM.Kin: STATION. A short
term credit program is available
to Texas farmers producing Food
.for Freedom this year.
The new loan program, which
will operate through county I'SUA
War I'ond and th« Regional Ag-
ricultural Credit Corporation, is to
i help farmers meet or surpass high
production goals and at the samo
lime insure them against losg in
case of high risk crops which or-
i iliiiarily would not be grown.
Producers who cooperate under
the -hort term credit program will
sign a special form of note that
limit - the obligation to repay to
the value of the crops produced,
provided certain requirements are
met.
Crop- on which special advance*
may be made include soybean*,
peanuts, potatoes, American-Fgyp-
tinn cotton, dry beans, dry pea*,
tomatoes, snap beans, etc.
o
Throw Your Scrap into the Fightl
Beware Coughs
from common colds
That Hang On
Crcomulslon relieves promptly be-
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ ladon phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw, tender, in-
flamed bronchial mucous mem-
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Crcomulslon with the un-
derstanding you must like the way it
quickly allays the cough or you are
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
TypewritRibbon at Ww Office
I; I b 1 i • 11 '' I ' i'
.000
,> f r.n
III' ^ 011 I «• I « « I \\ r 11
ids ;ui(| Other until
proiT.i
■ '
o
Mr. and M r K rl Mrador mov-
ed from Hreckenridtfe tn Albany
last week, where thev will make
their home Mr-. Meador is the
former Ruby Kenshalo.
o
Throw Your Scran into the Fiirht'
INCOME TAX REPORTS
Will make out your income t
reports. Call *222. HAROI I
CASTLKHERRY. tf.
. ;f njury to health, thi'ro would
letter UlwhrMt uridine <( trhy tie
i ■ iii iii is upset whm kidn«• h f.nl
motion properly.
irii uj:, s. anty >-r tun friMjucnt urinn-
Hornet i utes wurrm that RoruethinK
• in* N >ii Mi ay • ulTer tiugf.'"!! •> '' •"
I . ,i<i.t< ies, fl .•in. , rlu urnin ic
-. jp'ttitiK up at n r;h',;. swi lliiiK
hy not try Doan' Pillt? You will
iir a uu dicini- r« < i>nim<-n<JfiJ tho
M'.er, / ,* t: rtiulal i t ht* futir-
nf th.' I 'dm v" and h.Jp th.
OUt pnti
Th. v <•
VETERAN TELEPHONE
HE-EN LISTS
from
it nothing harmful.
I jh with conlidence.
AT FIRST
SIGN OF A
c
oh!
USE
6fc6 tablets. salve. nose drops
Desk telephones- sturdy vet-
erans that ligt-rcd in thegr >v, t h
of America's telephone s\*stem
for years and >ears are being
called back for wartime servic e
More and more, , I. phone
materials and telephone pro-
duction lines have been shifted
tosupph things the Ai m> and
Navy must haie. I liar means
less and less for tlie nation's
t. lep'ionc s'i em. So ihoir.ands
of these old-timers arc coming
off the shelf.
1 hey are ready to do their part
in meeting today's tremendous
demand for telephones.
I b y are good telephones —
lir (-class talking instruments.
\nd they'll <h> a first-class job
of carrying the calls
of a nation at war. §'
SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
.- es.-«'t
&
' y * '*v. -
^ ' . . •
" i v
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The Albany News (Albany, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 25, 1943, newspaper, February 25, 1943; Albany, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth401456/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Old Jail Art Center.