The Rusk Cherokeean (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 103, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 15, 1951 Page: 14 of 16
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fflE JUU8K UHWitOiiKisAWi RUHR^ TEZA5
MAR£H 15, 1951
IKE CHATS OF GOLF AS
TEXAS G. I. CUTS HA.IR
F. 'vt. Jimmy
Lee from here wrote home recent-
ly how he was called upon un-1
expectedly to give General Ike
Eisenhower a hair-cut. Jimmy said
it was the biggest thrill of his life,
when he was summoned to head-
quarters at the base where he is
RELIEF AT LAST
For Your COUGH
Creomulsion relieves promptly because
it goes right to the seat of the trouble
to help loosen and expel germ laden
E' hlegm and aid nature to soothe and
eal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial
membranes. Guaranteed to please you
or money refunded. Creomulsion has
stood the test of millions of users.
CREOMULSION
relieve! Coughs, Chest Colds, Acute Bronchitis I
stationed and asked if he would
utilize h\s civilian skill by giving
the General a hair-cut. "Golf was
all he talked about, while I was
working on him," the Texas man
said, and added, "He tipped me a
dollar.
F. F. A. BOYS WALK
BABIES ALL NIGHT
NAVASOTA — Keeping their
pigs in shape for stock shows is
serious business for the members
of the local F. F. A. Chapter. One
problem was that some of the
swine were slightly overweight, for
the class in which they were
entered. So the boys walked them
all night just before the weighing-
in, and thus were able to reduce
them to the required weight.
Any man who watches the clock
will never be the man of the hour.
NOTICE
Buy A New Car Now At Martin Motor Co.
New 1950 and 1951 Chryslers and Plymouths.
Ready For Immediate Delivery.—
MARTIN MOTOR CO. — PHONE 5
Fc~ Bettor Watch Repair Service
SEE
CROMWELL'S JEWELRY
24-48 HOUR SERVICE
Prices Reasonable Work Guaranteed
HA V E YOUR
CAR
WASHED
BY OUR FAMOUS WASHMOBILE
CAR WASHER
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
15 to «3U IviihuTl. SERVICE
J. C.WILLIAMS
Orange and Semi-Sweet Chocolate
Make Novel Flavor Combination
r .
cup orange marmalade
tablespoons grated orange
rind
cup orange juice
Newest of dessert treats combine the flavors of fresh orange and
-semi-sweet chocolate. A delightful way to enjoy this flavor harmony
js in a home-made orange cake that can be iced with a delicious choc-
olate frosting made with semi-sweet chocolate morsels, or the cake
can be topped with ice cream and sauced with chocolate. Also in-
cluded is a simple Chocolate Duet recipe that makes either frosting
or sauce, depending on the amount of milk added.
Orange Cake
3 cups sifted cake flour 3 eggs
3 teaspoons baking powder 5A
Va teaspoon salt 2
% cup shortening
1 cup sugar 1
Sift flour with baking powder and salt. Cream shortening, add
sugar gradually, blending together until light and fluffy. Add eggs
one at a time, beating well after each addition. Stir in marmalade
and orange rind. Add flour alternately with orange juice, mixing well,
ending with flour. Turn batter into well greased pan (10"xl5"x?i").
Bake in a moderate oven (350°F.) 30 minutes. Cut cake into squares,
top with slice of ice cream, and serve with chocolate sauce, or frost
cake with chocolate frosting. If desired, top with whole or chopped
nuts. YIELD: 24 squares.
Chocolate Duet
(Frosting or Sauce)
1 package semi-sweet 3 to 4 tablespoons hot milk,
chocolate for frosting
2 tablespoons butter or 3,i cup hot milk, for sauce
margarine 1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup sifted confectioners'
sugar
In top of double boiler put semi-sweet chocolate and butter. Heat
until melted and mix until smooth. Kemove from heat. For frosting
add milk and sugar alternately, adding enough milk to make a spread-
able consistency. Stir in vanilla. For sauce, increase milk to Va cup.
YIELD: Frosting for top of 10x15 inch cake, or l\'z cups chocolate
sauce.
WOULD YOU LIKE TO
BUY SOME LADYBUGS?
PERRYTON — There's a pretty
good demand here for ladybugs.
Wheat farmers are buying them,
to be turned loose in their fields,
where they are supposed to de-
vour the green bugs, which other-
wise would destroy the wheat
crop. The going price for lady-
bugs is $7 per gallon .Nearly 500
gallons have been ordered for
this county.
DEED RECORD BOOK
IS 114 YEARS OLD
COLUMBUS — Volume A of
the deed records of this county
is now 114 years old. The yellowed
pages are becoming fragile with
age, but the handwritten record is
still legible. Fearing that the an-
cient book may soon fall apart the
county commissioners have auth-
orized the county clerk to trans-
o •
HILL COUNTY HAS
HISTORICAL MUSEUM
BOERNE — Local citizens have
realized their ambition of long-
standing. They have now establish-
ed a museum where relics of
historical interest of this area will
be preserved.
We've often thought of looking
up the family tree, but every time
someone says we're a sap If we da.
MOBIL TIRES
FOR
Tractors And Trucks
WON'T LET YOU DOWN
Guaranteed by the makers of Mobilgas
and Mobiloil and built to give you long,
safe, economical mileage.
Cherokee Service Station
W. M. Vining
M
Di
liei
• °f
all
ica
thi
hif
fal
•
no
mi
th
% ot
nt
th
he
+ in
WHAT SONG
FOR TEXAS
Along about the middle of the
last century, there was a cryptic
notation which law - enforcement
officers in the east placed upon
their records when they were un-
able to serve warrants. The nota-
tion read: "GTT."
"GTT" was part and parcel of
everyday language then. It meant
"Gone To Texas." The wild bucks
who got into a little trouble and
had to leave town in the middle
of the night streamed into Tex-
as by the hundreds. So did hund-
reds of more or less professional
criminals.
As a result, the empire that Sam
Houston and the other giants were
building in Texas had a certain
lawless flavor for many years, to
put it mildiy. But at the same time,
leavened by the thousands of
venturesome but solid citizens who
came here too, out of the ferment
of the early desperate years there
grew a firm and great tradition of
personal freedom in Texas. Tex-
ans insisted upon being left alone.
They insisted upon working out
their destinies in their own way.
They knew that there was a "ceil-
ing unlimited" for any man who
threw himself into the struggle of
life with courage .resources, and
initiative.
Now in 1951, there is a good
deal of evidence — we can only
FOR YOUR
FERTILIZER
SEE
J. P. ACKER
AT THE TOMATO SHED
Phone 276
3,000 Bags—Good, Pure, FERTILIZER
200 Sacks Ammonia Nitrate
hope it is superficial and transi-
tory — that a good many Texans
are developing a "father-complex"
to replace that responsible self-
reliance. The counties want the
state for their father (rural
road subsidies is an example) and
the state wants the Federal Gov-
ernment for its father (Federal
subsidies to education, highways,
public health, and public welfare
are examples).
In the east a hundred years a-
go, "Gone To Texas'' was used as
a synonym for "gone to the dogs."
Let us hope that in another hund-
red years Texas will not really
have gone there. It's easy for a
county or state to lose its freedom
as well as for the individual; it is
hard to regain independence. Nev-
er forget the ancient maxim:
"Whose bread I eat, his song I
sing."
KEEPER OF 30 CATS
IS NOT A NUISANCE
DALLAS — A kindly, gray-hair-
ed lady was cleared in county court
of violating city health regulations.
The jury decided that keeping 30
cats in her back yard did not
justify the $25 fine which had
been imposed upon her in corpo-
ration court.
EDITOR SOLVES OLD
NEWSPAPER PROBLEM
Granger — Editor H. B. Fox
has worried for years about how
to make his weekly paper come
out with exactly an even number
of pages. Last week he just gave
up and left page 7 blank. He ex-
plained to his readers how hard
it is for a small weekly to make
its advertising and reading mat-
ter come out in the right pro-
portion .Then he told them to use
the blank page to figure their in-
come tax.
FARMERS WARNED ABOUT
IDENTIFYING MACHINERY
EDINBURG — Farmers have
been warned by Sheriff Bill Doan
that they should put identification
marks on their machinery. He
said thieves are busy stealing ma-
chines, cutting them up with
torches and selling the pieces to
junk yards. Hidden identification
marks would help in catching the
thieves, the sheriff said.
o
When your outgo exceeds your
income your upkeep is your down-
fall.
Don't Borrow—Subscribe.
Finest Momumcnts For Lest
Black & Black
MEMORIALS
Rusk, Texas
Every day
is
"COOK'S DAY OFF"
V/ITH THESE TWO
I ^
ill i
Iri I
R B ^
€)
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4
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Whitehead, E. H. The Rusk Cherokeean (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 103, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 15, 1951, newspaper, March 15, 1951; Rusk, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth326250/m1/14/: accessed May 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Singletary Memorial Library.