The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex), Vol. 33, No. 26, Ed. 1, Thursday, June 25, 1942 Page: 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Tocker Foundation Grant and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Swisher County Library.
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P4GEF0VR
1 F7 County USDA Boards
Todajfepi on in Must Work Out Farm
< tvnuf n
PRUNES
CORN
Placr Eliauette
WB
The rUc should always b flown or dii
pUycd witli the stars to the left and with
the stripes floatinc to the nchtw
When hancinc with the tdpes lri
vertical position the stars should always
appear In upper lett hand corner
On ftfr de the Amenean flag aHrtyt
claims the place of honor at th right
When flown at halfstaff the flaj should
be hoisted to the pealc for an instant and
then lowered to the halfstaff position Before
lowennj the fbc it should be raised
MCam to the peak On Memorial Day May
3 J the flap should be displayed at halfstaff
from sunrise until noon and it full staff
from noon until sunset
In church the flag should be plaJed at
Mie congregations right Other lacs
should be placed to the left ol the
st
CountyyjlDwar boards sliouli
lake the call In wirtHng out volu
tions for farm labor slioratge pulj
lcms the Texas USDA War Board
Informed the 254 county boards In
Texas this week
In a joint letter to county war
boaids and county victory councils
13 F Vance chairman of the
state board and H H Williamson
chairman of the State Agricultural
Victory Council declared the final
lesponslbllity for farm laboi
reports and planning shall ret
with the County War Boards
County boards were instructed to
make full use of farm labor subcommittees
which have been making
monthly surveys of the labor
situation for the past year
The letter suggested that the
labor subcommittee serve as an
advisory committee to the county
war boards and that membership I
on the committee include five
farmer members and representatives
of the U S Employment
Service and the WPA
The County War Board and
the Farm Labor Advisory Committee
shall take the initiative
and the leadership in the prosecution
of farm labor planning and
cultural officials said
The county board must make
monthly reports to the state board
combining information concerning
the pieviouslyannounccd 12point
Annual Meeting Of
Texas HD Women To
Buntinc shoud be used
or platorms n U 1 1 A r T l
lor for the decoration cf speakers stands Oe Field As USUctl
end for general decorations The blue stripe
should always be placed uppermost and the
ifjfd at the bottom
> On patriotic occasions the flan may be
displayed above and behind the speaker
Uicamst a wall or curtain If flown from a
ttaff it should be placed at the speakers
tHcht
a
Hir i > U
congre
ration In the chancel or on a platform how rural women aie nidmg II
the flag should be placed at the cleriry the Food for Victory piogimi
mans right as he faces the concrccation
fnd the other flags at his left
O
When one haoar I is used or fw 6 or
rnore flags tie Aceticm flag should
ehvays be IWn at Die pi In displajtnt
flags on adjacent snTts t e American lug
hould be hoisted first ar J lowered last
When the American flag is dUplayed
with another flag with sniffs crossed the
American flag should be on the riglx with
the staff over the stall of the other fug
y
V <
Because uir intensifies the uti
puitancc of homo dciuoi > triti > > i
woik annual meeting of the Pes i
Home Demonstration Astoi ition
likely will be held this f 1 m
spite of transportation pithlnn
and many other difficulties ficnn
the Associations 15000 metnlM i
Mrs W G Kennedy Bailc
County farm woman and pi evident
of the rural women s organization
indicted during a iccent
confeience with Extension Sei
vice workers that plans foi Instate
meeting will be made t m
executive session tentativel > si 1
June 21
Home demonstration club uoiK
is vital and important in peuods
of peace but in time of stie 1
its contribution is even greatci
Mrs Kennedy said In discusMin
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
mm FLAKES
kellogos 2 Hoeo
With Howl
Gallon Size
LOPQUAKER
Ea
ch
24 Lb Sack
Atiil 2 Glassy
Del Haven No 2 Cam 2 for
are conserving food clothing md
equipment and are sustainm
the morale of their families She
quoted Lady Halifax wife of Eng
lands ambassador to this conn
1i y who said recently In a radio
broadcast that the only clubs still J
intact in England aie the rural
womens institutes These aie1
compaiable to home dcmonstiationi
clubs in Texas
Farm prices approaching parity I
after 20 years of depiession ofioi
a gteat temptation to farm fain 1
illes to compete for iensonab 1
priced consumer goods the Ulc
president points out When you1
have been getting along without
a kitchen sink for a long time and
il last have the money to buy
one its hard to keep on cairy
Ing your bucket to the windmill
and invest your money in War
Bonds But we are willing to
v ithsuuui that temptation if we
tiin sie our country and give
Otv
18c
39c
98c
PORK BEANS l 27c
i6 o cm 3 Fr
BATHROOM TISSUE
SaiUAOrh
3 Kolls
13c
25c
We cany a full line of fresh vegetables in Refrigerated
Vegetable Cace Shop with us in our air conditioned
building and enjoy yourself while shopping
TOP PRICES FOR YOUR EGGS
Hutto s Food Way
I
STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES
Phone 97 We Deliver
IN TRAINING somewhere in the Middle East is a new Greek Army
the execution of such plans asj
may be recommended the agn our boys better equipment
tlm
farm labor program and informa rnendaton
tion about the labor situation lJ m t
whuh pic lously was ropoitod by
the 1 ilioi ubi omnnttcc
THE TULIA HERALD TULIA TEXAS
U
< VHtd
1 in
lion
L
930 PreFabricated
Wheat Bins Ordered
By Texas Farmers
tinsmltted daily to the lumbermade contributions to the current
yuds in Austin and Houston which1 beautlficatlon move In behalf ol
tanks grenades Bren guns But though the Greek soldiers have given
up their picturesque shortikirted uniforms for khaki they keep the traditions
of their homeland Here a group dances the Kalmatiano dance
at their Middle East camp
winning the war
Thousands tf club women ano
their ncighbots hive piolited from
first Hid and home musing cmis
foi president Indicated She added
that the Extension So t < > w u
MUsnel kins
tlmv piognm tnc Vi toi v Doio
tration i > opulai because It
helps eerj faim and 11ml
yea 1 pon the Fim ily in tlu state know
of the Texas Home time responsibilities
t in < > 1 Consoi ltinn rui
haustcd
1 Shipment of the bins from the
lumber yards will begin this week
Vance said
Already ordered by farmers are
590 bins with a capacity of 1592
bushels each and 340 of the 1213
Line Of Defense
Tradition says that the navy
is Americas first line of defense
but our air forces are our first
ire of offense said MajorGcn
eial H R Harmon commanding
oific r of the Gulf Coast Train
in Aica before a crowd of ap
pro > i < ritely 35000 gathtred at the
its wu Mi and Mrs R V Millet and large Lubbock Army Flying School
I daughter Patsy Ruth visited ica
distiilni es in Htieford Sunday
THURSDAY JUNE 25 1912
of seasonal food surplusc Grocers Needing General Harmon isont on to
n kami much consideration 1 point out that from
Lubbock
c aIom >
county home demonstration Sugar Adjustments
the present field and the
unnls and clubs this year Mrs jvf C Rmrrl
Kennedy explained Waste is con maY JGG DUOru
lu red poor business and is un
fa triple
All grocerymen in Swisher
ntv
South Plains Training School will
turn out more fliers every three
Cpunty yho desire may come tomonthi than were in the whole
1 the local board in the
rationing
I courthouse at Tulltf for adjustments
on their sugar stock on
Mondays and Thursdays of each
i week according to Reed Clayton
I clerk of the board
Institutional and industrial users
United States air forces in 1939 i
Gathering long bdtoro the gates
of the Lubbock Field were scnedA
uled to open the huge crowd saw
the behindthescenes life of an
army camp as they inspected bar
Texas wheat farmers this weekmay come between now and July racks of both cadets and enlisted
already had ordered 930 of the5 f ° r rcregistratlon as of their men day rooms theater post ex
piefabncated wheat bins which business of July and August of change and the flying line itself
will be med to store part of this last year At one end of the large airy
yens nearrecord wheat crop I hangar the Lubbock Army Flying
CEMETERY FUND DONORS School Band under the leadership
Orders for the bins which were
extracted for by the Commodity Following Is a list or citizen of Warrant Officer George P At
Ciedlt Corporation arc being and business houses that have
trldge played a varied program
During the actual dedicatory
services Col Thomas L Gilbert
Rose HU1 cemetery The Herald commanding officer of the Lub
are doing the construction work
Fanners place their orders at their will carry a list of donors each bock school spoke briefly and in
troduced funeral Harmon who
county AAA offices which also week
will handle deliveries of the bins Mr and Mrs Jim Tomllnson
Ewood Bates
B C Vance chairman of the
Texas USDA War Board indicat
Its men come from the heroes of Albania from patriots who escaped efj lhat morc bn ma j c ordered A ll J K
from Greek mainland and the Aegean islands from Greeks living in the ine inItial unnlv of 2000 small Allied Air r Orces
Middle East Commanded by their own officers they are developing Into lasUppy
d 500 mcdium bins Our Tirst
a hardhitting fighting force armed with thejnost modern weapons fl
e ou dished it out with a head start by treachery
now we re going to see how you can take it
Were ganging up on you Tojo in a way you and
your Nazi friends dont understand
Spreading like wildfire from coast to coast and
from Canada to Mexico is our Payroll Savings Plan
get that Tojo Not confiscation savings
By the tens of millions workers and employees of
plants in every state of our country arc cooperating
with their unions and with management
Of their own free will theyre agreeing to put ten
percent a dime from every dollar of their earnings
in United States WAR BONDS
Every payday the plant management sets aside
this ten percent then each time it adds up to 1875
the worker gets his Bond
See Tojo Hundreds of millions of good U S
dollars are going into the planes the tanks the guns
and the ships to blast you right out of your sandals
And were paying for it the workers and employers
the farmers doctors lawyers all of
EVERYBODY
EVERY PAYDAY
THIS ADVElTISfMENT IS A
C0HTIISUTI0N OF
us of our own free will lending it from our pay
And because this is the American way of doing
things were building our own financial security
too against the day when the war will be over
when weve shown you what decent clean free
people can do
Ever year those War Bonds of ours increase in
value Tojo until after ten years Uncle Sam hands
us back TWENTYFIVE IXLLARS for every
1875 we invested in beating you
Get it Tojo It isnt the Jap way the Nazi way
nor the Fascist way
Its the free American way
So when you sec those clouds of planes over your
troops your ships and your factories when the
tanks come at you spitting lead and our good American
boys get you on the run remember were paying
for it Smith and Harrigan and Cohen and
Godowsky and Leblanc and Havlck Americans all
in a free country
So take it Tojo you asked for it
THE TULIA HERALD
arr
1 > y Investing in War Bonds you
help provide the planes the tanks
the guns and the ships we must have
to survive and conquer
2 You prove that you arc a patriotic
American
3 You aid the morale or our fighting
men by showing them that the
entire Nation is behind them
4 You prove to our enemies that
we are a United People
5 You protect your own financial
future as every 1875 you invest
in a War Bond brings you back 25
in 10 years You make the worlds
safest investment by buying a
share in the worlds most powerful
countrj
1
said Although we are now formally
dedicating the field for
practical purposes the field was
dedicated when the first class was
graduated Representing the civil
ian public of Lubbock and sur
oundinj area George Dupree of
ubbock spoke and placed war
csponsibility squarely on civilians
js well as on soldiers
After the formal dedication tha I
sky above the Lubbock Field was
literally aswarm with planes
flown by flying officers and cadets
in various formations and routine
tlights Because of the press of
war time business General Harmon
was forced to cut short his
01 th formal dedication of the visit at Lubbock and flew away
held on Sunday June 21 to nvet picvious commitments
Si
i
s
I
A
r r
4
f
TO AMERICAS AllOUT WAI IFfOIT
r
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The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex), Vol. 33, No. 26, Ed. 1, Thursday, June 25, 1942, newspaper, June 25, 1942; Tulia, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth42703/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Swisher County Library.