The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 260, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 29, 1941 Page: 3 of 4
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TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1941
/
THE DEW 130W PRESS
COURTS
| fifteenth district court
■ R. S. SLAGLE. JR.. JUDGE
New Sails Filed
John McKeon v». Juwell Me-
(Ceon, divorce.
Divorces Granted
Betty Joe Johnson w«. Jack
Johnson, divorce granted and
plaintiff’s former name of Hetty^
Joe Cherry is restored. i
|l)eBerry, 126, iBonham.
George W, Lollia, 21, and Alice
Pi ihoaa, 24, Denison route 2.
Marria(e License
Tomi Rayburn, 45, and
Loyce
Automobile Rofietratlone
M. A. Arnold, Sherman, Hym-
outh coupe.
Oren| Gray, Sherman, Ford
W\
['HAT LITTLE GAME”
■cat ill
If Wifcy Only Knew
coach.
Mra Chloe 'Carter,
Pontiac sedan coupe.
Sherman,
- i» uxe IT much 6ET1ER IF Vou'o
NEVER Plat iniTM Those mem again; -
t MET Jcitei TOOA/,- AND Hi's A
Fine EXAMPLE OP THAT Bumcm,—*
HE 4A1C> To ME, 'Yourt MuSBAMD SHoul*
have been vvitm us the other night,
! vVE PlATEO UHTIL F«VR o'clock IN
The mcrninG'.'
MEB66 i DiONT GivE HIM A PlEcB OF
Mf MuVD,* I Touts HIM A Thing OR Two;
-•rb\ t Told him what t
, J/, \v Thought of a mans
' WHCD STAY OUT
until Four
•u • ■»
I Told Him
| Too WOULDNT
Do Such A
Thing.-
| Told him Tou
Thought Too
Much of Yoult
home TO 00
that,—
and heiau6heb;1
MlHD You,—
the ignoramus
LAuftHEO-
''''' THlS cuckoo WAS in
,« • im GAME TO The FINISH)
h* SNIAHU IHT J
■ BEK WHEN IDS
f *<|F« VUA*
eoo»»«v
/
Realtv Tranefare
Arthur Burke et ux to F. S.
Scroggins, lots 1, 2, 3, 14,
15 and 16, 'block 33, Sunny Side
addition to Denison, $1100, April
16, 1941.
F. P. Mooney et ux to M. T.
Fuller, jit ux, lots 7 and 8, block
29,V>uimas addition to Deniwon,
$2,000, April 22, 1941.
V. Hopper et al to L. 0. Riley,
lot 4, (block 89, Miller’s second
addition to Denison, $370.62, Ap-
ril 24, 11041.
H. R. Jones et al to United
States of Abveriea, 172.64 acres in
the Williams J. Reeves and Thom-
as M. Reeves surveys, $2,000,
April 24, 1941.
V, L. Morcfield et ux to bvy W
Prestage et ux, south half of lot.-
1 and 2, block 7, Tone’s second
addition to Denison, $400, April
8, 1941.
beets Lose Flavor Soon
After They "Are Pulled
slew Hybrid Sweet Com
3ives Heavier Yield
7
Mineral Deed
John Shires et ux to J. H. llud
eon, quarter interest in 30 acre,
in the T. Toby survey, $110, April
22, 1941.
inii)"1"""1"'
INDIGESTION
may affect the Heart
Ou trapped In.the itomaeb or gullatirnijr act 111m a
hair trigger on tha heart At tha first algn of dlatieiu
nmart meu and women depend on Hell*ana Tableta to
F7 ~~ ~
id womc
r«i frae, No laiatln
gDedlclnea knoi
•pend on Bell-ana Tableta to
e but made of the faateat-
lndlgaitlon If tha
sttlna^nediclmf knoiru for aeld ludlgaitlon If tha
IIBST [>OHF doaao'l prove Bell-ana better, return
botUa to ui and •*:al»a DOUBLK Uonay Back, 25c.
Beets are among the foods which
only home gardeners can enjoy at
Ihc-ir peak of tenderness and flavor.
Frjshly picked beets are among the
riciiest of vegetables in sugar con-
tort and as in sweet corn, the sug-
ar begins to change into starch, and
flavor to be lost, when the roots are
pulled. Cook in half an hour for
supreme quality.
They contain vitamins A, B, C
and D, 209 calories a pound, pro-
teins 1.6%, fats 0.1% and carbohy-
drates 9.7%. Favorite vegetable of
the Russians, American home gar-
deners have much better varieties
than the Russians, and can glow
Idem to greater perfection.
Thin sowing is not so important
with the beet, in fact it is almost
Impossible to do this as the seed!,
lo-called, are really collections of
seeds in a single husk and will re-
sult in bunches in spite of anything
liie planter might do to prevent it.
Thinning can be done after the
plants have reached a giowth large
enough to be pulled for greens.
Where baby beets are wanted to
cook leaves and all. the plants
should be left two or three inches
apart In the rows. When the larger
beet for buttering or pickling is
desired this distance should be in-
creased to G inches. It is a good
idea to pull every other plant, us-
ing them fur greens. The remain-
ing one will develop into baby
beets when they may be pulled,
every other one again, and those
still remaining in the ground will
grow into the larger varieties.
Half an Hour from Harvest to Serv
ing Is Best for Beets
A help to germination when plant-
led is to tread the soil firmly
around the seeds. The date of
planting is as early as the ground
will admit of cultivation, and the
beets may be grown the whole sea-
son long from the first of April to
the first of August. It has become
such a staple, in fact, that green-
houses have taken up their culture,
making them available in the win-
tertime as well.
Roots 2 inches in diameter are
considered the best for home use.
Those that grow larger are often-
times earthy tasting and sou: l
woody. Select only the best fed
possible, produced by a ice .
seedsman, to obviate the danger of
poor quality plants.
ft
DAN DUNN - SECRET OPERATT/E 48
HELLO, BEARDSLEY
I'OU'LL FIND FAGAN
IVING IN THE ALLEY
|\T FOURTH AND
OAK- VEH, HE
FOULDNT GHOOT
FABT ENOUGH —
(kND I'M TAKING
THE PLANE FOR
EDMONTON IN AN
HOUR
w
lay
I'M SORRY, ANN-
BUT I'v/E GOT
TO GET WU FANG
BEFORE HE
CAN JUMP OUT—
I'M TAKING
^•"T WOLF, TOO-
i^EANTIME, IN HrilE3
HIDEOUT, WU v-ANG
AND A stranger —
MR, FAGAN
SHOULD BE
HERE WITHIN
OKE,WU FANG,.
THEN WE CAN ;
START PUTTIN'
A weekVout TH' DOUGH
MV CROWD'S
GETTIN' IMPATIENT
—- v
Lil.T-ia_.ir .
Hybrid sweet com is being exten-
sively planted, following the lead
of hybrid field corn, which has in-
creased the yield of farms. Home
gardeners may depend upon an in-
creased yield, if they sow hybrid
sweet corn, and some varieties
have been produced which
among the earliest, and at Aet*1
rival in delicious flavor the old fa-
vorite, Golden Bantam.
There is one point about the hy-
brid strains, however, which should
be considered. All plants of a given
strain tend to mature within a very
brief period. This is fine for the
market grower, but home garden-
ers may prefer a longer period of
harvest from a single planting.
The hybrids have another merit,
resistance to Stewart’s disease, and
in regions where this trouble is
prevalent, they should be used.
But whether hybrid or open pol-
lenated varieties are planted, every
garden which has the space should
grow sweet com because only the
home gardener can enjoy this first
rank all-American delicacy *ts
supreme best. *
Sweet corn is best only when
eaten immediately after harvesting,
because the quality and flavor de-
teriorate rapidly after the ears are
pulled from the plants. The high-
er the temperature, the greater the
deterioration and the loss in «a-
vor will usually be at least forty
per cent in com which is obtained
in the market.
A patch of six rows, each 15 feet
lung, need not occupy more than 15
square feet. In normal seasons,
’dinted to the pedigreed strains,
i- jhouH yield m to tars..
kerneled sorts there are early,
late and mid-season varieties. Trie
earliest will have ears ready for
tabic in seventy days, while the
larger, later varieties require nine-
ty to one hundred days. The ean
are ready for pulling when the silk
has turned black.
Nothing is gained by Phmtin*
corn before both soil and weather
have become thoroughly warm
warm weather, rich soil, and mod-
erate moisture are best for com.
Th“ seed is quite likely to rot in
cold soil. The seedling plants are
very delicate, and cold weather
checks their development so that
often later plantings do better than
early ones. . , . ... „ ,_
Seed may be planted either in
rows or hills. It is better to enrich
poor soil in hills, dropping five or
six seeds per hill, spaced S teet
apart each way. If Planbed in rows
they should be spaced 214 '°T, ,1
apart, depending upon the height of
the variety, dropping the seeds at
the rate of five or six to the foot,
and covering them about 2 inches
deep. When the plants reach a
height of about 4 or 5 inches, it *
best to thin them to 8 or 12 inches
apart, and to keep them we 1 hoed
until the ears are set It is con-
sidered better to plant corn in
blocks of several short rows, aide
by side, rather than in one long
row. The pollen does not fertilize
the ears well when planted iri single
" a "balanced plant food should be
applied at the rate of 4 pounds to
100 square feet.
Sweet corn is reasonably drought
resistant so long as it is cultivated
.11;-
The Worst Is Vet To Come
SNOODLES
By Cy Hunger}ora
|/V\ (3OMMA
MAKE SOME'
/KOMEY-
3cm:
J—“T—
fvJOWi- All
i. Gotta do is
WAIT FER A .
Customer !
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m
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TTS A GREAT LIFE IF YOU DON'T W EAKEN
i_>y Jack KaLLit
VfYOVT'OH
YANG'S,
g,Ot YOU OYJE
fr\£ &
of iSO.'Z
^£LL,vfX
ICOULO
•PAY YOU-
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DOC.?.
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COOLS
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yvjell,yoo
AaiGHT feiMt
rr\^_ P>
collecting
THE. BlLL-
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SUtt-CtDKS
KNIFE
THINGS THAT NEVER HAPPE)
By GENE BYRNES
DOROTHY DARNIT
were coin
[to THE PARK
OO VOU WANT
I TO GO WITH WS’I
FOR YEARS
TAlS HAS B&E-M
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PLACE AND
IT IS STILL. ,
UNK.K)o\ON,.TO /
WUFES /
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 260, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 29, 1941, newspaper, April 29, 1941; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth526488/m1/3/?q=+date%3A1941-1945: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.