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The Iola Register from Iola, Kansas • 2

Publication:
The Iola Registeri
Location:
Iola, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I I PAGE TWO THE TOLA REGISTER, TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 17, 1943. IOLA, KANSAS Hedge-Hopping U. S. Bombers Attack Axis Oil. Fields at Ploesti News of the Farm Folks your apartment gets the user collector device! mim Flying at altitudes from 100 to 700 feet, American B-24 Liberator bombeVs skirt Ploesti, Rumania, after effective bombing raid on vital Axis toil fields which the War department reports destroyed the vast bulk of opera ting capacity of the area which supplies one-third of the Axis oil resources.

Two planes are seen at left with another directly below them, white smoke screen being sent up by defenders from smoke generators in widely separated areas is seen developing throughout the district. Blac smoke at center is from burning oil plants and tanks. f. MIDSUMMER COUNTRYSIDE HARMONIES. A woods-aisle radiant With the smile of dawn.

Ripening wheat With sun-lace on, A mockingbirds ode To rosebush bloom. Home-trails sweet With wild thyme perfume, A hillside white With grazing sheep-throng, Barnyard chatter, field workers song, Drowsy twitterings In -a twilit dell. The golden silence, Of a- days farewell. Troubadour winds In hedgerows and trees, Midsummer countryside harmonies. Ruth Y.

Shaw. Surprise Tarty Is Given For Miss Eileen Clark Complimentary to Miss Eileen Clark, Whose birthday was Saturday, a group of friends went to her home Saturday evening for a surprise party. Acovered dish supper was served after which the evening was spent in playing games -and horseback riding. Those present were: Misses Dorothy Johnson, Pattie Kerwood, Colleen Yarton, Mary Alice Martin. Marjorie Colbert, Molly Sturtivant of Tulsa, and the honor guest Eileen Clark.

4 A Farewell Party Is Given At The Conner Home A farewell party was given last evening at the home of Miss Velma Conner by the young people of the Nazarene church in honor of Monroe Ingroum and Benny Hoke, who are leaving soon to Report Vr duty in the navy. Refreshments were served to Misses Lou Donaldson, Shirley OiT, Joan Omdoff, Billie Nell Shultz, Irene Conner; Messrs. Carl Debb, George Lane, Albert LeRoy Hill; Mr. and Mrs. A.

L. Conner, Mrs. M. L. Conner and her daughter Sandra Jean, and the honor guests, Monroe Ingroum and Benny Hoke.

4 Golden Wedding Anniversary Is Celebrated Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Duncan, whose golden wedding anniversary occurred yesterday, celebrated the occasion by holding open house Sunday afternoon for their many friends and neighbors.

Yesterday afternoon the relatives of Mr. and Mrs. Duncan went to Riverside park where a picnic dinner was served in the community building, In their honor. Those attending the celebration yesterday included the honor guests, Mr. and Mrs.

O. P. Duncan. Mr. and Mrs.

M. Q. Duncan of Kansas City, Mr. and Mrs. George Busley, Mrs.

Josephine Neighbor and her children, Catherine May and Howard; Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Duncan LA And for $5 a month extra nf this anti-bill and their daughters Janet and Virginia of Cleveland, Ohio; Mr.

and Mrs. H. A. Dimmitt and their sons Bruce, Albert, and Cary of Kansas City, the Rev. and Mrs.

E. II. Knepp of Morgan ville, Mrs. Lawrence W. Fry, Olathe; Mrs.

Freelie E. Stewart, Mrs. Bulin Henderson, Mrs. Othella Booe, Mrs. Edna Barnett and her daughters Ruth, Mary Ann, and Eunice, Mrs.

Mary E. Barnett of Humboldt; Mrs. J. W. Henderson' her daughters Linda Lee and Margie Ann of New Orleans, Josephine Tonkin and her daughter Jerry of 6ha-nute; Mrs.

Alma Hale and her son Allen Ray, and Mrs. Sarah Doggett of Iola. A Dinner Is Given For Miss Ingroum Mr. and Mrs. C.

F. Leavitt entertained at dinner Sunday evening in their home in honor of Miss Duron Ingroum, the occasion being her birthday. Covers were laid for the Rev. and Mrs. F.

D. Clopine, Mrs. Martha Mitchem, Mr. and Mrs. C.

F. Leavitt, and the honor guest, Miss Ingroum. Yocum-Mankle Miss Carol Yocum became the bride of Mr. Richard Mankle in a single ring ceremony read by the Rev. J.

Lee Releford at his home Monday evening at 7:15 oclock. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. E.

Yocum of Lallarpe. The bridegroom is a son of Mr. and Mrs E. C. Mankle of Lallarpe.

The bride, who has been employed as bookkeeper for her father at the Yokum Service station, graduated from the Lallarpe high school in 1942. Mr. Mankle is a graduate of the 1941 class of the Lallarpe hieh school. The couple will leave the last of CALENDAR FOR TBS WEES The Red Cross knitting rooms will be open from 3 until 4:30 p. m.

each Wednesday and Saturday until further notice. WEDNESDAY The Zoe Atchison Union, W. C. T. U.

meets at 2:30 p. m. with Mrs. Harlan Taylor, 5221 South Sycamore. THURSDAY The Womens Missionary society of the Presbyterian church meets at the church for a breakfast.

at 6 a. m. The south division of the ladies aid of the First Christian church meets at 2 p. m. with Mrs.

Frank Williams for a quilting tea. The north division of the ladies aid of the First Christian church meets with Mrs. Frank Taylor, 220 North Cottonwood. FRIDAY Unity club will hold a summer business meeting at 10 a. m.

at the home of Mrs. E. A. Rosebush, 851 North street. -The Southside Bible class meets at 2:30 p.

m. with Mrs. C. F. Williams, 609 South Walnut.

Farm Bureau Calendar. (Clothing Selettion Lesson.) Aug. 18. Falrlawn unit meeting, with Mrs. O.

G. Smith. Sunflower 4-H project meeting, at Mrs. L. 1 Bakers.

4-II Council meeting 9:00 p. m. Aug. 19 W. M.

B.s with Mrs. Mary Martin, Prevention and Care of Diseases. Full O' Pep 4-II club meeting. Carlyle 4-II club meeting. Aug.

29. Gas City Unit meeting with Airs. 23. F. Fraser.

Lallarpe Unit meeting with Mrs. W. A. Lathrop. Aug.

22. 'Full Pep 4-H club tour and picnic. Sunflower 4-H club tour 1:30. Aug. 23.

South Logan 4-H club meeting. Aug. 24. Groves Unit meeting with Mrs. Will Burtch.

Aug. 25. Carlyle Unit meeting. The Gas City 4-II met at Lillian Schieflelbines home August 2nd. There were eleven members and one guest present.

Roll call was answered by "What you plan to exhibit at the fair." A committee was appointed to plan an ice cream social. The next meeting will be at Arvada Bee dings home, September 6, at 8 p. m. Norbert Catron, Reporter. South Logan Unit The South Logan Farm Bureau met at the home of Mrs.

P. 21 Weldon, July 21. Mrs. Edgar Burroughs, president, presided at the meeting. Roll call was answered by giving the "Way I can enjoy a vacation at home.

Miss Bernice Sievers and Mrs. Weldon gave the lesson and Miss Sievers gave a demonstration on patching. The unit planned an ice cream supper to be held at our August meeting. Refreshments served to Mrs. Edgar Burroughs, Miss Bernice Sievers, Mrs.

Martin Hendricks, Mrs. Harry Baeten and the hostess, Mrs. Weldon. Mrs. Weldon, Reporter.

Nutrition Council Hints Along with our governments asking people to raise more gardens and preserve more foods, comes the desire of people to comply with the request and consequently more people complaining about spoilage of certain canned foods. With inexperienced canners, a person could expect a few failures, but there have been entirely too many serious failures to let the matter go. Corn and tomatoes have been the most serious offenders. Along early In the year people had trouble keeping peas, but this was mainly due to the Inferiority of the crop in the first place. Too much moisture, tomatoes, so far have generally not been of a good grade to can.

Unless raised in the family garden they have been quite expensive, but we hope they will be less expensive later. Tomatoes which have been sunburned, or have spots on them are not good for canning. They will make fairly good tomato Juice, if all the spots are removed, the tomatoes heated to boiling, then cooled, run through a collander or sieve and processed for 30 minutes in boiling water bath. It is better to use good solid fruit, free from blemishes. Many report spoilage of com in large quantities.

This could be from several causes. The filling of the Jars with too compact a pack and not enough liquid might be the cause of spoilage. The pack should be soupy or sloppy, especially for cream style com as it has much higher starch content than whole grain SCREEN HORIZONTAL 2 Pictured actress, i i 13 Railroad (abbr.) 14 Horses pace 15 Mental image 16 Measure 17 Lubricate 19 East (Fr.) 20 Uncooked 21 Babylonian deity ,22 At sea 24 Impetuous' 28 Weight allowance' 27 Turn aside 29 Legal point 30 Snares 31 She enacts' the role of a tease queen in one of her pictures 33 Green vegetables 34 To the inside 35 Wander Answer to EfRMe ns mo eT HIKE, COSTELLOt dSEPu Ri. 36 Knots 38 Tremulous 41 Fur-bearing animals 43 Earthy matter 45 Short sleeps 46 Written form of Mister 47 Grafted (her.) 48 Dined Doves call Jg 50 Be seated 51 Of the thing 52 In a row 54 Votre cmi- nence (abbr.) 55 56 20 com and needs a -higher temperature for processing. Too much corn picked and -allowed to lie more than two or three hours piled up, beiore processing is another good cause of spoilage.

Corn should be freshly picked, preferably early in the morn ing, spread out in a cool place and shucked and processed immediately. Two hours from the garden to the can is a good rule to follow. Corn should have half as much boiling water as com by weight added. After com is cut from cob, meas ure corn and water, bring to boil and pack in jars and add 1 tsp. salt per quart, and process.

Hot Water Bath 3 Hours: Be sure water Is boiling and keeps boiling during entire period and that water is at least inch over the top of the jars at all times. Pressure Cooker Whole Grain Style 60 minutes at 10 lbs. for pints. 70 minutes at 10 lbs. pressure for quarts, Cream Style: 75 minutes at 15 lbs.

pressure for pints. Soybeans Many have inquired about soybeans. Green soybeans may be shelled more easily if the pods are boiled three to five minutes. Shell and prepare much the same as green lima beans. For canning after shelling, blanch in boiling water for 3 or 4 minutes and drain.

Pack at once into jars until about seven-eighths full. Cover with boiling water containing 2 oz. salt to one gal Ion water. Small pieces of pork may be added. Process immediately.

Pressure. Cooker: Pints 60 minutes at 10 lbs. pressure. Quarts 90 minutes at 10 lbs. pressure Water Bath: 4 hours.

Other causes of spoilage not touched upon could be the use of old Jar rubbers or flats. Even though they are purchased new this year does not indicate they are fresh. Drying Vegetables. Some people are wondering about I be dried thoroughly in the open, keeping their beans by drying on then heated to 150 degrees for 30 the vines, shelling and storing. In- minutes, then cooled and stored hi sects, especially the bean weavil lay tight containers.

Paper con their eggs in the 6eans and then tainers are not as good as jars or hatch out under ordinary conditions tin containers with pressure tops, and devour the bean. These should moisture collects on the inside of the container, the product is not dry enough and must be re-heated in the oven. This heating kills the germ of the beans and they are not good for seed. If you want to keep the beans for seed do not heat in this manner. STAR 11 Crawls rCHUTES IN LOCKER South Bend, checks parachute materiel school, U.

Shell rate as a One hundred eighteen different taxes are levied on the oil industry in the United States. Arkansas has 55,085 miles of highways. Seaman Mardell Feiser of parachutes in the dry locker1? at the S. naval air station, XakehursV parachute rigger upon graduation. IFEE Tf Em3 fr-71 wr.

a the week for Klamath Falls, where they expect to make their home. Guests at the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. E. Yocum, Mr.

and Mrs. E. C. Mankle, Mr. and Mrs.

Harold Childress and their children Harold and Lonna Lee and Mr. and Mrs. Leland Toedman. Heath-Jeanmonod The marriage of Mrs. Ruth Heath of Iola and Private John Jeanmorv of Yates Center took place August 5 in.

Iola." Private Jeanmonod is stationed at Eagle Pass, Tex, and Mrs. Jeanmonod will continue to reside at her home here. TIREMEN IMPROVISE Ingenious firemen in the state of Washington are battling material shortages by turning out their own equipment. Home-made trucks trailer pumps, portable light plants, ladders and hand couplings are doing stand-in duty where necessary Cotton, according to scientists, is being planted and picked somewhere in the world every day of the year. California has 100,819 highways in the state.

miles of If you ncod to cc? nnrs pn'7'7, v.i ia Vi. r- Try this great blood-iron tonlo E. Pin Wham's Compound TABLETS (with added Iron) one of the vervbett ways to get iron Into the blood, rlnk-hamg Tablets are also famous to re lleve symptoms of functional monthly disturbances because of tbelr soothing efiect on one of woman a mot important organa. Follow label directions. il -f lit Previous Puzzle from the school house, moved a house on them last week from the farm owned several years ago oy the late Roy Harling.

The house will be enlarged and extensive re modeling both on the Interior anc exterior nas begun. Cons father and Floyd are doing the work. Natalie Leake spent Sunday with Kit Braswell. Hazel and Esther Delaplain visited Saturday night with Glenn and family. Mr.

and Mrs. Virgil Powell were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. E.

Powell and Ivan. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dunlap and small daughter Mary Agnes who recently arrived from California called on Mr. and Mrs.

Frank Cham bers Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Higginbotham and Mrs. Mildred Chambers visite Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs.

C. A. Adams and Waldo Adams Mr. and Mrs. Lee Baker, Tacoma, called on Mr.

-and Mrs. Harry Delaplain and family and Mr. Jim Gilkeson last Wednesday afternoon Mrs. Baker was formerly Miss Maude Caldwell. Suhday dinner guests of Mr.

and Mr. Harry Delaplain ware. Lieut, and Mrs. Elmer Delaplain, Augusta, Mr. and Mrs, Glenn Delaplain and 'Dean, Elsmore, Mrs.

Ralph Madison. Lallarpe, Flossie and Bonnie Creasdn, Iola. 12 Scottish garments 18 Native of Latvia 21 British god of the world 23 Antennae 25 Symbol for germanium 26 Tread down 28 Circles 30 Af ternoon parties 32 Pints (abbr.) 33 Feathered scarf 36 Established 37 Back of the 1 neck 39 Ages 40 She is a of Brooklyn 41 Trap 42 Blackbirds ,44 Allots ,43 Native of 1 Morocco 49 Blood money 52 Near 53 Paid notice sagas RilO Redactors Perishes VERTICAL Wide Gets up Baronet (abbr. Exist SFlowerv Perfume', Wearies Hebrew 1 month i Novel V. Indo-Chinese language Have you anything 0 around the house you would like to trade or sell? Try a Classified Ad.

The cost is only a few cents and there are i i' i i 4 I '5 i probably a lot of folks i I i 4 looking for just what- 1 i (, ever it is you no longer have use for! 1 2 3 4 6 7 8 9 Sterling Heights Unit The members of Sterling Heights Farm Bureau met at Riverside Park Friday the 13th for a picnic dinner and afterwards went to the home of Mrs. Charles Logan for the business meeting. The meeting was opened by the president. Mrs. Warren.

The roll call was "Todays Thoughts. The project lesson on "Clothing Selection was given by Mrs. Slawson, which was very interesting and instructive. Mrs. Slawson also displayed some beautiful buttons that were made from shells taken -out of the Neosho river.

Mrs. Weide gave a report of her vacation trip to the Mothers Camp. Another new member, Mrs. Luther Kin man. was added to our roll.

We had three guests. Miss Dickinson. Mrs. May-son and Mrs. Luther Klnman.

There were 13 members present. Mrs. Wilson, Reporter. CARLYLE Mrs. I.

A. Smith and Mrs. Marie Shelton, Wichita, were Wednesday afternoon visitors of Mrs. -Virgil Powell. Mrs.

Margaret Wood, Iola, spent Thursday with Vina Higginbotham and girls. The North Maple Grove Willing Workers met with Mrs. P. W. Funs-ton last Thursday.

Three guests, Mrs. Howard Shockey, Mrs. Clara Harling and Mrs. Gladys Kisner were present, and nine members: Anna FethcmgiH, Clara Ifowlan Melva Wiggins, Marie Rosebaugh, Mary Brubaker. Sarah Lydia Adams, Florence Howland and Velma James, and the following children: Betty Jo, Phyllis and Donnie Wiggins.

Helen Rosebaugh, Johnnie Howland, Ann and Alice Shockey, Juanita and Harold James. A sumptuous dinner enjoyed At the noon hour and the work of the day was quilting for the hostess. Two members received gifts from their Mystery Pal. Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Vina Higginbotham and daughters were Mrs.

Pauline McVey and children, Miss Verona Crone, Miss Neta Butler and Bob Butler. Mr. and Mrs. Con Higginbotham having purchased the lots across -A i Telephone. 18 i t.

4 RECORD SHIP YEAR United States shipbuilding hit a record high in 1942 with over eight million deadweight tons of merchant shipping rolling off the production line. Goal for 1943 is 19, 000,000 deadweight tons. The manager plan of civic government is used in 425 cities and six counties in the United States. Bauxite ore was discovered near Rome, Ga, in 1887. MEMORIALS BUY DIRECT FROM TIIE MANUFACTURER EXCLUSIVE DEALER OF GOLD BOND GRANITES Which Carry the Longest Written Bonded Guarantee In America BRUCE MARBLE GRANITE WORKS Telephone Day or Night 850 N.

Jcffern. Ila Kansas Phone 285 Classified Ads Get Results.

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About The Iola Register Archive

Pages Available:
346,170
Years Available:
1875-2014