Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 260, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 1, 1941 Page: 2 of 4
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I
FEMININE
HYGIENE
ation program had provided for in-
creasing the peanut acreage for oil
purposes on any part of the 1941 cot-
ton acreage allotment not used for
cotton production, without deductions
being incurred in AAA payments.
The new change permits an even
and low in calcium, two pound*
oyster shell flour or limestone
ir should be included in each ion
after supper.
Encourage every member of the
family to make his own bed and hang
up his own sleeping garments each
morning.
Be sure to clean muddy shoes be-
foie entering the house* This will
save a lot of floor cleaning.
Warh the bath tub and hang up
the bath mat after every use.
Have a hamper or laundry bag and
place soiled clothing in it rather
than on a cto. ct dour.
Keep clothing on coat hangers.
This saves much pressing.
Ask every member of the family
to fold up his own napkin and place
it rn tht« dining table after each
meal, -
Arrange a storage place for wraps, 1
rein coats, and rubbers and keep
them there when not in use.
kind to get
pounds of this mixture.
If the low grade wheat is fed prop-
erly it should bring as much a bushel
as number pne wheat on the market
peanuts that will be made available!
for crushing for oil.
Present indications are that oats
may be out of line in price as com-
pared to corn, at least for a while.
When corn it worth 50 cents a bushel
WHY USE PAJAMAS
and cottonseed meal $1.50 a hundred,
trend). It not
oats are worth 28 cents .a bushel.
When Corn is worth Z£ cents a bushel
and cottonseed meal $2 a hundred,
oath are worth S9 cents a bushel.
It is Eudsly’s opinion thst it would
pay to feed more oats in the ration
to dairy cows when that grain sella
for less than these comparative
prices. Ground oats are very palat-
able feed, but should be ground to
The nurse was Inquiring of the only discourse* bacterial g
new patient, a husky looking six- j KEf11
footer from the country, whether ho 'tfiSUJona and discharge i
. . . . . ... , . tonic effect on delicate a
had brought any pajamas with him., inexpensive! All druggists.
“Pajamas? ‘‘What are pajamas?”j
“Night clothes. Didn’t you bring '
any with you?" j “I ain’t iuj tsocial r)iim
“Heck, no!” answered the patient, night comes I go to bed.
A and vitamin G.
THE CHEESE
Orie.ifcil
L’l.Oil
i A LKA - SELTZER affords
/% unusually prompt and ef-
fective relief in Headache
because it is in complete solu-
tion, ready to go to work as
Soon es you swallow it Its
painrolievlng action is made
•tore positive by alkaline buf-
fers, which protect it from
VroakdoVh in the stomach.
Aiks-Seltzer being a combina-
tion of painrelieving and alka-
Bsing Ingredients has gained
Wide Usage and popularity
dor a
Doans Pills
GRAHAM DAILY
TUHDAY, JULY 1, 1*41.
Ground Wheat
Makes Excellent
Dairy tow Feed
COLLEGE STATION, July 1.—
Farmers should get a larger return
by feeding to livestock wheat which
wfll not qualify for government loan
than selling it on the market. ^
According to E. R. Eudaly, dairy-
man for the A. and M. College Exten-
sion Service, ground wheat ia equal
to con, pound for pound, for feed-
ing dairy cows and ia a satisfactory
food even over a long period provided
H is fed in a suitable concentrate
mixture and in a pro pertly balanced
ration. .
Wheat should not be ground too
finely on account of its tendency to
cake, it is best to mix it with a bulky
concentrated feed, such as ground
ear corn or ground maize heads.
Ground wheat can be balanced with
cottonseed meal, Eudaly says, and
then mixed with some cottonseed
hulls or ground bundle feed to make
a bulk feed. Nince wheat and cotton-
seed meal are both high in phosphor-
us
of
Family Co-Op
a v
Cut Down On
Bad Disposition
COLLEGE 8TATION, July 1—
Family cooperation in small house-
hold duties saves not only time but
wear and tear of dispositions. Louise
Bryant, specialist for the A. and M.
College Extension (Service, says
when families consider home man-
agement, most frequently they think
of finance-management and forget
the time factor.
Here are some suggestions she of-
fers for family cooperation which
will save time and result in sharing
the small, but sometimes . harassing,
household tasks:
Let one number of the family be
responsible each night for leaving
the living room in order. This will
save work next morning.
Put magazines and daily papers
in a rack after use. Don’t let them
get’ scattered.
Make sandwich filling for the next
to
for
prices.
able feed, but
a medium fineness for dairy cows.
They need not be ground when fed
tu valves up to six months of age,
Mrs. Alta Birdsong left Monday for
Los Angeles, Califoiyiia, where she
will visit wfth her sons, H. L. and
J. C- Birdsong.
AAA Encourages
Planting of
Peanuts In 1941
Farmers in Young county can
plant as much acreage as they wish
to peanuts for crushing for oil with-
out incurring deductions in any AAA
payments except the peanut conserv-
ation payment, H. G. Millican, chair-
man of the county AAA committee,
announced today.
The United States Department of
Agriculture has changed provisions
of the AAA program to encourage
the production of peanuts for oil as
a result of anticipated increases
in the demand for such oil, the AAA
committeeman said.
The change does not affect the
marketing quota program on pea-
nuts, he declared. Under provisions
of that program, peanuts produced in
excess of the farm quota must be
delivered to a designated agency at
oil prices, in order to avoid payment
of the marketing penalty.
A previous change in the conserv-
CAUSTIC COMMENTARY
The most caustic comment en the
terrible toll from accidents which a
civilized society permits every day
in the yeai comes from James B.
I organ, Chicago Red Cross official.
Great Britain’s loss of life is' act-
ually lower, today, in the very face
of the German bombings, than it
was in peace time, says Forgan.
Does that seem impossible, when
thousands are being killed by bombs?
-Forgan says it’s true. Thousands
have been trained in first aid, acci-
dent prevention, nutrition, hygiene,
and sanitation. A large proportion
of automobiles have been removed
from the highways. Result: More
lives saved than Hitler has snuffed
out in months of blitz-bombing.
'It shows what could be done in the
peaceful United States if safety and
health measures could be made as
effective here as war has forced
them to become in England.
KILL NUT GRABS
Quertion : "My garden spot is cov-
ered in nut grass sad want a rem-
edy to kill it," a reader Writes to tbs
editor of a farm magazine. He also
wants to know if the soil will be
killed in killing this nut grass and
for how long if it is.
Answer: Aremc pentoxide, 3
pounds to 1 gallon of water with the
addition of 20 per cent sulphuric acid,
used as a spray after the grass has
been mowed, will completely destroy
the nut grass. It is said that a sec-
ond spraying is sometimes necessary
^ *
* V*r:
in about 3 weeks. A reliable friead
told us about his success with Ar-
senic pentoxide and said the next jmm
he cultivated the ground and made
a fine crop of corn, so it seems that
this treatment does net injure the
soil.—From Citizen's Journal.
INBI8EST10R
kUi» MUriM bm Sr Mid bltt—llM. If a-
NEW!
+JAL~ BIG 11-OUNCE
“ BOTTLE OF •
HINDS
HONEY A ALMOND CREAM
Regular *1 size
limited time only— ,
MILD cheese flavor
DIGESTIBLE AS MILK ITSELF .
Naval
ersills
JriH
fg j&sf*
YOUR CHEAP ELECTRICITY
Will Keep. You Cool
SUMMER
and
Every
SUMMER
ig those who occasionally
suffer from Add Indigestion,
Cold Symptoms,• “MomfUp
After” misery, Muscular Fo»
Myuc and Muscular Paina
JUka-Sel
Itzer is pleasant to
j take, non-laxative, prompt and
[affective in action.
pYsur drugrts* kssi Alks-Se
ll* ■
LISTEN!NE ANTISEPTIC
•re Mmkm Your Brnmth Sweeter
CK, NERVOUS
Y‘m*L9
Here ate three proven ways of
making your home cool and
pleasant in hot weather:
Air Conditioning—Can be ia-*
stalled to Oaol a single room or an
entire house. It gives fell control
•of temperature, humidity and air
movement.
Evaporative Cooling—Utilises
the principle of evaporating water
to lower the temperature in oar
room or an entire home.
Attic Vontllatlon—Cools by
bringing in outside air to evaporate
asoiature on the skin and docking,
producing a marked effect.
If you are planning on building
or remodeling your home* you’11
save money and
add to your com-
fort by making
provision for the
many electric ap-
f>liances that
make • home
Hoc afternoons and nights are just something to read
about in the paper when you have your home com-
fortably cooled by electric cooling equipment. .You
just pull up your easy chair and settle down to a
pleasant evening of reading, and later enjoy cool
restful sleep. — -----------——
Electric cooling equipment can be used to cool one
room or an entire home. Some types are just what
you need to keep your store or office pleasantly,cool
In hoc weather. And electricity to run a cooling sys-
tem costs very little, bringing you cool comfort this
summer and every summer.
Investigate now the modern types of electric cooling
__ _ _ ^
systems ftat can be Uncalled Ik your home. A dealer
will be glad to give you detailed information about
the kind of cooling system best fitted for your need*.
/
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Trout, H. I. Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 260, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 1, 1941, newspaper, July 1, 1941; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth888280/m1/2/: accessed June 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.