The Rusk Cherokeean (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, March 15, 1935 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGE FOUR
THE RUSK CHEROKEEAN
K.D.C COUNCIL
HEMS EXPERTS
-
(By Miss Irene Pricc)
Farm and Home
The Cherokee county Home Dem-
onstration council met in a call meet-
ing Friday, March 11, at the Meth-
odist church, with the vice chairman
in the chair.
House called to order by vice chair-
man, minutes read and approved.
The chairman of the finance com-
mittee Mrs. R. L. Ballard, reported
the committee had decided for each
club to bring in as many feet of
pennies as they felt able, this report
was adopted.
Mr. Bush and Mr. Darrow from
A. & M. College discussed thoroughly
the advantages, ways to organize,
and conduct the community organiz-
ations.
Gallatin club gave the following
report:
The Farm Food Supply demon-
strator since last meeting has helped
one club member can 46 containers,
for herself 6 containers, planted
seven grape cuttings and one fig
cutting.
Market demonstrator has one-halt
acre of garden of vegetabtes, and
250 plants of marglobe tomatoes to
use in canning and making tomato
juice.
Wardrobe demonstrator has made
seven foundation patterns, made
over for children six garments and
made three new garments and one
collar and cuff set.
The club members have made six
rugs, planted 20 grape cuttings after
attending a meeting where the farm
food supply demonstrator showed'
theme how to plant them.
Have paid in to the educational
fund 65 cents.
The 4-H club girls observed Texas
Independance day by having a ctri-
onial party. Every person wh0 did
THE MEN HERE ON
FRIDAY FARM LEADERS
Rusk had three distinguished farm
specialists visiting here Friday after-
noon.
W. H. Darrow, who led discussion
of the farm group present, was head
of the Extension Service of the Tex-
as A. & M. college at College Sta-
tion for several years and is now
field specialist in the Southwestern
division of the AAA. He does contact
work, being an intermediary be-
tween the dirt farmer and the gov-
ernment.
Another of Mr. Darrow's jobs is
to institute new ideas. He said here
that Secretary Wallace hopes to have
the community discussion groups in
every communiy in America. He is
beginning this idea and Rusk was
one of the first communities in which
he started the work.
Accompanying Mr. Darrow were
R. H. Bush, extension organization
specialist in Texas, and L. F. Peter-
son, associate editor of the Exten-
sion Service. Mr. Peterson edits the
copy from the Extension Service that
is received weekly by The Rusk
Cherokeean.
Mr. Bush sees that the Extension
Service is carried on properly, while
Mr. Peterson, who was traveling with
these men to inspect the operation of
the community study groups from
first hand, handles all publicity and
news from that department to Texas
newspapers. He recently was con-
nected with the Amarillo News-
Globe.
MRS. NWS BUDGET
With 1,300 feet row space of leafy
or green colored vegetables, 3,369
feet starchy vegetables and 1,125
feet of other vegetables already
planted, Mrs. J. C. McLeod feels she
will be able to fill her canning bud-
get with the following number of
containers and pounds of stored veg-
etables for her family of eight-
120 containers of leafy or green
colored vegetables, ISO No. 2 cans
of starchy vegetables and store 972
pounds, 120 containers of other veg-
etables and store 972 pounds and
have plenty to use fresh from her
garden.
REDLAWN NEWS
BED FOB ONLY 15-CENTS
not come dressed in colonial clothes
ha dto pay. Including the dress fje
a cake they sold and some candy the
girls realized $5.05.
Craft club reported their club 100
per cent in making out their coming'
budgets, 100 per cent in paying
their educational fund. Both th'eir
demonstrators are working.
Now Relieve Your Cold
"Quick as You Caught It'
For Amazingly Fast Results
Remember Directions ^
in These Simple Pictures
The simple method pictured here is
the way many doctors now treat
colds and the aches and pains colds
bring with them!
It is recognized as a safe, sure,
QUICK way. For it will relieve an
ordinary cold almost as fast as you
caught it.
Ask your doctor about this. And
when you buy, be sure that you get
the real BAYER Aspirin Tablets.
They dissolve (disintegrate) almost
instantly. And thus work almost in-
stantly when you take them. And
for a gargle, Genuine Bayer Aspirin
Tablets disintegrate with speed and
completeness, leaving no irritating
particles or grittiness.
BAYEP, Aspirin prices have been
decisively reduced on all sizes, so
there's no point now in accepting
other than the real Bayer article you
want.
ITake 2 BAYER Aspirin Tablets.
• Make s'jre yau get the BAYER
Tab!i-U you ask tor.
O Drink a full glass of water. Repeat
treatment in 2 hours.
■ * I'.rcat is sore, crush and stir 3
- oAYER Aspirin Tablets in a third
of a glP-ss of water. Gargle twice. This
eases throat ioreneu aiir.ost Instantly.
PRICES on Genuine Bayer Aspirin
Radically Reduced oa All Slut
For $5.45 Mrs. Edgar Banks, a
representative from Iron Mountain
Home Demonstration club who at-
tended the mattress school in Rusk,
now has three practically new beds.
By using the cotton in a bed she
had and adding some new with it,
and using an old but good 8-oz.
feather weight ticking she was able
to make a bed for only 15 cents, the
price of the thread to make the roll.
Mrs. Banks is planning to make
over two more of her beds, she feels
that by making them over herself
she will save on the two beds $8.00.
GARDEN PLANS BEING
MADE AT CENTRAL HIGH
Twenty girls of the Central High
4-H club have madt their garden
plans. The girls learned each person
should have 145 feet of row spaee
of leafy or green colored vegetables,
145 feet of starchy vegetables, 145
feet of other vegetables, and 145
feet of garden fruits at a demonstra-
tion given by their agent Miss Irene
Price.
By multiplying the above amount
by the number in the family each
girl knows just how many feet of
row space to plant in the family
garden.
MRS' DANIELS PLANS
"I am having to buy all the seed
I plant this year, but am planting
and planning so I will have pLnty to
furnish me seed for next year," said
Mrs. A. S. Daniels, farm food supply
demonstrator for the Iron Mount-
ian Home Demonstration club.
Mrs. Daniels has planted onion
seed s she will have her own sets,
in addition to the sets she has put
out sets for her onion now. For her
new vegetables she has planted rhu-
barb and parsley.
ACCEPTS POSITION
College Station—Lola Blair, nu-
trition specialist with the Extension
Service at College Station, left here
Monday, March 4 to take the same
position in Puerto Rico for four
months where she will be located at
Rio Piedras at the College of Agri-
culture and Mechanic Arts of the
University of Puerto Rico.
A church in Ohio operates a filling
station which all members are asked
t0 patronize. This may give some leg-
islator the idea of imposing a special
church tax on gasoline. It i? taxed
for nearly everything else.
We Are Not Selling Positions. But—
We ARE selling business education. If it were ethical to do so,
we could guarairteee positions, because the demand now is greater
than the supply. Indication are that there will be a still greatei
demand in the future.
Spend a few short months and a few dollars and let us prepare
you and then place you in a position promptly.
Our College annual fully explains our courses. Write for it. Its
FREE.
Mail this
Coupon:
Your Name
Your Address
TYLER COMMERCIAL COLLEGE
School of Business Administration
TYLER, TEXAS
(By Mr*. Odell Hamilton.)
♦♦ ♦♦ ♦+ *********** ******
Redlawn, March 11.—Mrs. F. F.
Fox, of Arp, is spending this week
with her mother who is very ill.
Miss Maxine Hamilton and Miss
Virgie Floyd spent Saturday evening
in Rusk.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd White and
daughter, of Atoy, spent Sunday in
the home of Mrs. Odell Hamilton.
Mr. and Mrs. John Justice and
children, of Alto, were visitors in
Redlawn Sunday.
Miss Marie Barnes spent Saturday
night in Alto with Miss Lois Brunt
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Spivey and
daughter and Mrs. "Doc" Durham
spent Sunday in Jacksonville with
Miss Clara Durham.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tullis, of Arp,
were visitors in Redlawn Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Oma Cole, of Lin-
wood were visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
J. E. Cole Sunday.
Sanford Hamilton spent Monday
in Atoy with Mr. and Mrs. Floy
White.
Mrs. R. A. James and daughter, of
Forrest spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. W. S. Satterwhite.
Mrs. M. A. Floyd, of Central High
is visiting her daughter Mrs. Wilford
Pyles.
Mr. and Mrs. Jewel Cole, of Mt
Zion spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Ed Barnes.
Mrs. Rufus Derrett was called to
the bedside of her father, who is very
ill, in Primrose Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Towson spent
Monday in the home of R. A. Rogles.
READ CHEROKEEAN ADS
SALeM
(By Mr*. G. L. Sutton.)
Salem, March 12. — Mesdames
John Philips, Lonnie Spivey and Bry-
an Robinson attended the canning
school in Rusk Thursday, Friday, and
Saturday.
L. D. LONG BEGINS HOME
L. D. Long has begun laying the
foundation for his new brick veneer
home, which when compli ted will
have all modern conveniences. Joe
McKay of Arp, has the contract for
the carpenter work.
George Creel visited James Penn
Sunday.
Mrs. Alton Henderson and child*,
ren visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs,
W. T. Brown Sunday.
David and Lonnie Eay Littlejohn
visited in the T. M. Penn home Sun-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Alton Henderson
were business visitors in Galatin
Monday.
Mrs. L. D. Long and sister visited
Mrs. Jewel McClure in Redlawn Sat-
urday.
Mrs. Mary Burger is visiting her
neice, Mrs. W. T. Brown, this week.
Alton Henderson visited relatives
in the Newburn hospital at Jackson-
ville Sunday.
Mrs. Rasco Ellis and daughter of
Washington, D. C., is visiting her sis-
ter, Mrs. L. D. Long.
Mrs. Chas. Miller visited Mrs. G.
L. Sutton Friday.
"I HA VENT HAD
A GOLD IN ..
FIVE YEARS"
"In the old days I used to drt%ad th«
coming of Winter. I was always fighting
colds—feeling about half alive—trying to
work with my body aching and every nerve
on edge.
"Then a friend told me about McCoy's
Cod Liver Oil Tablets with their marvelous
vitamins A and D. I started to take them
five years ago and I haven't had a cold
since that time.
"McCoy's tablets put new life In folks;
build up resistance so anyory* can laugh at
cold gern:s. They make weak, skinny people
strong, steady-nerved and vigorous. They're
wonderful!" •
Oct the genuine McCoy's Cod lirce effl
Tablets from your druggist touay. Don't
waste money on i>r±i.tion? As* for McCoy'*.
s H i l o H
(By W. G. Singletary.)
Shiloh, March 12.—Adrian Palmer,
of Linwood, spent the week-end in
the John Black home.
Miss Snell Holcomb spent the week-
end in Alto with Mrs. JuTie Rozelte.
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Covington
and children, of Central High, spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. C. H.
Scott.
T. W. Singletary, of Fastrill, spent
Thursday night in the Joe Singletary
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Vance and
Fred Peacock, of Dallas, spent the
week-end with Mr. and Mrs. M. C.
Cook.
Mr. and Mrs. Tempie Black spent
the week-end in Alto with Mrs. A.
G. Black.
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With s0 many government inspec-
tors snooping about, it is rather easy
for imposters to pull their stuff. In
Nashville a bandit armed with a fake
search warrant, gained admission to
tw0 homes and robbed them of sev-
eral hundred dollars.
BUY IT IN RUSK!
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owners
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..i5 Tr • _v''; , •* ' v • . j **
y CHEVROLET/
" ''jgPlif -* torn,
*V' *
nig in economy
Chevrolet trucks!
dav at -mall opel
Chevrolet's own 1]
e poWcii'iij sii
are evident in c\|
chassis. Chevrc
economy and qud
larg'st builder of
CHEVROLET MOl
Compare Chevrolet's
BYRD CHEVRO
RUSK
SeeS
WMMWMSl
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Miller, Elton L. The Rusk Cherokeean (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, March 15, 1935, newspaper, March 15, 1935; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth291671/m1/4/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Singletary Memorial Library.