The Olney Enterprise (Olney, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. [21], Ed. 1 Friday, June 30, 1944 Page: 2 of 8
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The Olney Enterprise
^≥ two
FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1944
SHIRTS
$1.69
*
’ PANTS.
$1.98
Fight besides our
boys! Buy another
and another War
Bond. Buy to the
limit of your ability
during the Fifth War
Loan.
SHIRTS
Women’s and Girls’
GABARDINE SHORTS
Sizes 7 io 12 — 9 io 17 — 14 io 20 . , . fine, grade,
fine count cotton gabardine in NAVY or WHITE
—pleated fronts—some with haliers. They’re in
great demand and difficult io secure, so stock now
for summer!
and PANTS
now
and
July
."Hke. ’’SBasaee Pounds underwent
All Favors Appreciated
can
and
a medi-
ISfeassseeri Lawhorn was
was ad-
■ was ad.rnitted '.for
s .^satnient June. 26.
be culled
4t/i of July Suggestions 1
the above . pro-
SPORTSWEAR
pro-
We Will Be Closed
MONDAY and TUESDAY
JULY 3rd and 4th
Most Favored Summer Work Clothes
COOL
SHANTUNG
30.—Three
and select-
was
and
by
of
Throck-
surgery
A- V. .Smith of Megargel
vs?e sKSmftted for. treatment June
Sfire SL P. Murphy of
T'raGEiis® was admitted for
plenty of fresh
the da;
at regui
and
Sam
m., Rev.
has an-
3Kse. O. T, Byrne of Archer City
for treatment June
For References: Any business man
in Graham.
Monday
continue
a picnic
The present incumbent has had four
terms.
iy. They
liar . in.ter-
Back of Megargel
KTffi&feES fer medical treatment June
only will
money income but it will
company officers ancl officer can-
didates. The instructions will in-
clude two days of rigorous field ’
training, in addition to prescribed
courses in martial law, emergency
and disaster relief plans, use of
weapons, sanitation, scouting and
patrolling. Divided into four
weekly sections, the school will be-
gin Sunday, July. 2, and continue
through July 29.
Among Texas State Guardsmen •
WHY NOT VOTE FOR
A f. (Fred) STEWART
FOR YOUR NEXT
DISTRICT CLERR
^SccsSpr nnd Mrs. Geo. Moffef
£3ia£ii<cofhe visited friends her;
Flii&iy afternoon.
♦'
will begin
July 3, and
with
Austin O’Dell, Jr.,- son of Mr.
and Mrs. A. A.4 O’Dell, recently
was awarded one of nine pure-
bred registered pigs offered to
Young County 4-H Club boys’
through the Sears-Roebuck Foun-
dation.
The prizes were awarded on the
basis of forty per cent for the best
essay on “Advantage of the Cow-
Hog-Hen Plan of Farming” and
sixty per cent upon his facilities
and ability to complete the dem-
onstration successfully!'. Young
O’Dell’s prize-winning essay is as
follows:
“My opinion of a good and suc-
cessful farmer is one who consid-
ers first the- crops best suited
to his soil and climate and then
plans a thorough grogram so that
he has a regular income through-
out the year. He must depend
not only one, two or three items,
such as his grain crops or cotton
crops. If one should fail, he
Olney Men Chosen
For Training At
Camp Bullis
Austin, Texas, June
commissioned officers ____ _______ .
cd officer candidates from Olney
vnits of. the Texas State Guard
have been assigned, by order of
Adjutant General Arthur B.
Knickerbocker, for special training
during one week in July at the
Officers School at Camp Bullis,
near San Antonio.
The school for Texas State
Guard personnel will be conducted •
by Army specialists from the
Eighth Service Command. Its
commandant will be Col. Hobart
Brown, army cavalryman
training officer at Fort
Houston.
Separate courses will be
vided for battalion commanders
assigned to the school are the fol- i A. D. Stewart and Rubin Loftin
lowing: Capt. Jasper Johnson, 1st were business visitors here Tues-
Lt. Silas C. Jeffery, 2nd Lt. Ralph ■>„ ,
Woolsey. 1 day.
Don Simmons, U. S. Navy, visited
friends here last week. He is
attending the University of Vir-
ginia.
Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Miller
Miss Lone McCracken visited rela-
tives and friends here last Thurs-
day.
Baptist Vacation
School Begins
Monday For Week
Preparation Day for the- First
Baptist Church Vacation Bible
School will be held Saturday, July
1, from 9 to .10 o’clock a.
W. H. Townsend,. pastor,
nounced.
Classes
morning,
through July 7
scheduled for July 4. Classes will
be hied each morning from 8 until
11 o’clock.
General officers are Rev. W. H.
Townsend, pastor: Patti Gilbert,
principal; Judith McClatchy, pian-
ist, and Mrs. T. S. Lamb, secre-
tary. Superintendents will be
Mrs. W. H. Townsend, beginners;
Mrs. Ray Davis, primary; and G.
A Holloway, juniors.
or realize an income from the sale
of cream or butter, or both,
having a sufficient number
good, healthy milk cows.
“By managing properly, he
look forward to the income from
several litters of pigs during the
year. If a shorage of feed should
make it necessary to sell, weaning
pigs are a good source of income.
“It is necessary to plan ahead
and have Sudan and green grass I
for hogs, cows, and chickens, as
well as bundle and trashed feed.
“Well fenced patures with suf-
ficient water or tanks, stocked
first with a small number of cows
and then the yearly increase, can
be made the source of a good calf
crop..
“Chickens can be made a profit-
able item on the farm by giving
proper attention to keeping the
houses clean and well ventilated
and by keeping
water throughout
should
vals.
“Not
duce a
produce beef, pork( lard, chickens.
I eggs, butter, cream and milk for
I the farmer’s own table. The pros-
I Prize Winning
! Essay Written By
Austin O’Dell
&TXB. ARMY
Smith, who will
leave
-JSaijy 7: fer service in the Army,
saaaS TE&s. Smith and daughter,
-Gaae, -.«bS Indio, Calif., are visiting
uxirfeer, Mrs. J. M. Hoffman,
■ ri® A family dinner was
Bsati f&is week in' his honor.
perity and well, being and “well-
eating” of a country depends first
upon the farmer, and a good far-
mer makes a prosperous, well fed
nation. Our government knows
this and has requested the farmer
to increase his production of farm
products on a well plannde basis
so that he can realize a good in-
come from his effort and his pro-
duce.
“In entering this contest for one
of the registered pigs, I wish to
say we have pig pens with three
compartments and three good ■
sheds and could take care of it.
Wc also have plenty of feed
skimmed milk.”
TTS'.e Rvran of Archr-j Ciw
sa&o&ted for treatment June
CHILDRENS and MISSES
89c to 1.95
Olney Girls Attend
Saltillo School
Denton. Texas, June 20.—Two
students from Olney have enrolled
in the Texas State College for Wo-
men Summer School of Spanish at
Saltillo, Mexico, which will begin
its fourth annual session July 20.
The term, lengthened to six weeks,
will close August 30.
Miss Peggy Jean Campbell.'
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Campbell, plans to take a review
of Spanish grammar, conversation
and reading. She is a freshman
music education major.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. 1
A. Doyle, Miss Iris Doyle will
study conversation and composi-
tion with a Mexican instructor,,
Mexican folklore with typical
dances and songs, taught by Mexi-
can specialists and a course in
Mexican civilization. She will
head lectures on Mexican ftistory,
customs, arts, crafts, music, folk
dances and make tours of the
city and visits to public institu-
tions, factories, private homes, etc.
Miss Doyle is a sophomore edu-
cation major at TSCW.
To Speak
If Own Dedication
several •weeks of heavy ,
dteBgre-isunal work, Congressman j
'Qejssett left Washington .on I
'S&safixff', June 25, fpr Texas.
CkasseU will speak at the
of the Denison Dam in
y-masEaag of Saturday, July 1.
53-- then open his campaign
with an address in
•- GegEUBtsrSSc., Cooke County, Texas,
it. 'Si'Si: SatEiiday morning.
headquarters will be
at 206 Federal Building,
''TSSezstxa The Congressman
■- 3*80 be called back to
shortly after the July
for Girls and Women
A bright blue sky with golden rays
of sunshine pouring down on
crystal clear water . . . the perfect
setting for bathing suits such a$
these! Figure-flattering and brief
. . . in gay imaginative pastels. De-
signed for the life of a mermaid.
One and two-piece models.
•3L Hu "Hanna of Jermyn
c-ahzsjKaisS -for surgery June 21
June 28.
’'Sfcs. X B. Martin received medi-
csaH ittsataieht June 23-24.
JL Little was admitted June
2S& ffec caedical treatment.
T3K. SE. Hyden of Orth was ad-
nezsaHte^. Jane 24 Joi' medical treat-
Dr. Ralph Woolsey
OPTOMETRIST
Phone 147-R
203 First National Bank Bldg
$498
to $2.98
Women’s Non-Rationed
Play Shoes
IFe Will Close Monday and Tuesday, July 3rd & 4th
$098
Red! Beige!
medium heels,
to 9, in narrow
Re-
White!
Flat or
in sizes 4
or medium widths,
markable values!
Shantung is one of the_"ACE" sell-
ers for hoi weather—swell for work
or play—gives good service—and is
not expensive . . . These shirts and
pants are perfectly matched in a
popular SUN TAN color.
e
co.
lerkiiixpBHlHrliikc
’ co.
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Warren, Len C. The Olney Enterprise (Olney, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. [21], Ed. 1 Friday, June 30, 1944, newspaper, June 30, 1944; Olney, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1212408/m1/2/: accessed June 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Olney Community Library.