See New Uses For Peanuts After War Climbing from Humble Surroundings to Big Place In A New Economy By ELLIS HALLER From The Wall Street Journal. Chicago Bureau Chicago?The lowly peanut, the five-cents-a-bag merchandise of the Arc us vendor, is going to win a higher rank in the fight to lick the fats and oils shortage. The little goober?best known to Americans in candy, peanut, butter, and "in the bag"?is also a prime source of vegetable oil. The war economy means that it must give that oil this year?and abundantly. In pre-Pearl Harbor days, co conut oil from the Philippines, palm oil from the Dutch East In dies and Malaya, and tung oil, (it's been cut off longer) from China account for about 50 per cent of this country's vegetable fats-oils imports That's all out the window now The peanut growers' answer is this?a 1942 production 133 per cent above the 1941 figure. With reasonably satisfactory growing conditions and an aver age yield of 700 pounds to the acre, peanut production this year should reach 3 1-2 billion pounds, compared with the 1,588 billion pounds harvested from 1.9 million acres in 1941. Such a phenomenal crop will assure the street-corner peanut * vendor his usual stick-in-trade this fall. But it will also bolster Uncle Sam's dwindling supply of oils for foods, soaps, munitions and a hundred other uses. The government's 1942 peanut production goal calls for not on ly a 1.9 million acres crop ? the equal of last year's?for "normal" domestic consumption, but also counts on the harvest of an addi tional 3.5 million acres to be crushed for oil purposes. How industry Has f ared Since 1900 For old-timers in the peanut in dustry here?brokers, wa rehouse mm, refmers?the war-b$rn re vival of interest in the peanut as a source of edible oil and as a high-energy food product sum mons ups and downs since the turn of the century. During the first World War, the South had a peanut boom. Short gae of vegetable oil boosted pro duction .and up to the time of the Armistice, many farmers thought the peanut had solved their cash crop problem for all time. But after 1918, importation of oriental peanuts and peanut oils increased and domestic acreage declined. The crop just about held its own until the late twenties, when acre age again started to increase. In recent years, plantings have aver aged well over 1 million acres annually. Will the end of the present war see another decline in peanut pro duction and a collapse in normal markets? Some branches of the trade are hopeful that it will not. They cite several new develop ments in the field which promise sustained production and con sumption. Development of Cloth Fabric According to W. B. Jester, ex ecutive secretary of the National Peanut Council, Inc., research has developed a satisfactory cloth fabric made from the protein of peanuts. "This cloth has the appearance of a good quality Scotch woolen," Mr Jester explains. 'To the eye and touch it has the appearance of all-wool material. The wearing quality has been found to be practically the same as cloth made from wool." Peanut cloth was invented by p Scotchman and was first pat terned in England. Recently pat ents were taken out in the United States by Imperial Chemical In dustries. Ltd. Up to the present time, the cloth has not been plac ed on tfie market in commercial quantities. One of the newest developments from the nuts is peanut flour. This product has a high food value and high vitamin content, and is ob tained from the protein left after Oil is removed from the nut. Pro duction has not yet reached the large-scale stage, as only One mill ih the country is making the flour, and virtually all of that production is going into a concen trated soup mix. Other Experiments Experiments, meanwhile, have utilized peanut hulls for insula tion board, for fertilizer material, r~ PEANUTS AND WAR Holding a prominent place in the production of peanuts (or many years, Martin Coun ty farmers, as a whole, this year heard their country's call and increased their acreage by about one-third or more than 6,000 acres directly (or the war effort. They knew that the price for oil peanuts would not compare with that for those going into the edible trade, but it is just another case where Martin farmers and peanuts are going all out for the war effort. and even tor a synthetic cork. For a relative newcomer, the penaut plant has entrenched it self quite solidly in the agricul tural economy. The crop has been cultivated in the United States for less than 75 years. Sixty years ago, annual production was less than 40 million potinds. The origin of the peanut plant is still pretty much of a mystery. Department of Agriculture ex perts have concluded that it orig inated in Brazil or Peru where it grew wild as a shrub, and was carried by early slave ships to Africa. The nuts were first brought to North America by slave traders in Colonial days, and apparently were used as food for slaves on shipboard because of their cheapness and high food value. For many years, the few pea nut plants cultivated in this coun try were confined to the Carolinas and Virginia. Peanuts were not used much as a food until after the Civil War. Union soldiers were said to have carried roasted nuts back north with them, and in this form they soon became popular as a confection. Food for Fattening Hogs As the destrictuve boll weevil began to move eastward from Texas, menacing the entire south ern crop, more and more farmers turned to peanut growing. Many of them grew the crop chiefly as a food for fattening hogs, using the plant's vines as cattle fodder. Others sold the nuts for the oil content, although peanut oil pro cessing did not develop in any ex tensive fashion until the early years of the present century. In the little town of Enterprise, Ala., peanuts brought such a high degree of prosperity in compari son with the traditional cotton crop that the citizens once voted $3,000 for the erection of a monu ment to the boll weevil?as "The Herald of Prosperity." Like all tropical plants, pea nuts need moderate rainfall, plenty of sunshine and hot wea ther. Hence their cultivation is centered in Virginia, the Caro linas, Tennessee, Georgia, Ala bama, Oklahoma and Texas. There are three principal varieties grown | in this country?Spanish, South eastern Runners, and Virginia > Jumbo, Bunch and Runner. The crop is planted generally in April and May and under favorable weather conditions matures in about 160 days. At harvesting time the plants are ploughed up and piled into stacks around poles to permit the nuts to dry. Picking machines to separate the pods from the vines, and the peanuts are discharged into bags. Later they are taken to mills for clean-! ing, grading and shelling. Less than II per cent for Roasting During the early days of the ndustry, most peanuts were sold for roasting in the shell. Nowa days, less than 10 per cent of the ?ommercial crop reaches the pub ic in that form. Of the total an nual domestic production, about 15 per cent goes into candy and confectionery, about 35 per cent nto peanut butter, 10 per cent or roasting and miscellaneous ises. Within the past few months arge numbers of carloads of raw helled peanuts have been sold to Ireat Britain under the lend -ase arrangement. The govem nent here has also bought sub tantia] quantities of peanut but-1 r for use as a food for the mili ary services. Chicago is the candy center of he peanut candy business, and nnual shipments to the market ; ccount for a large share of the rop Other important peanut mar kets are Baltimore, Boston, Cleve land, Los Angeles, Cincinnati, and New York. According to the Na tional Confectioners Association, the country's candy makers use about 200 million pounds of pea nuts each year?the production of some 437,000 acres. Because of its position as a cen tral storage and shipping point, Chicago also receives quantities of nuts for shipment to other manufacturing or refining points. Some of these supplies come by boat via the Mississippi, others come from the South by rail. Peanut Batter Making Manufacture of peanut butter, now one of the most important uses for the nut is a fairly recent development. It was about 40 years ago that food researchers discovered a palatable paste could be made from ground peanuts, but it took some years to gain popu larity. Most of the refining of peanut oil is done in the south, although some manufacturers of salad oils and shortenings refine the prod uct at their northern plants. Among the larger refiners are Proctor and Gamble, Swift St Co., Southern Cotton Oil Co., and the Durkee Famous Foods division of the Glidden Co. Peanut oil can be transformed into a variety of useful products. It has been used chiefly in vege table shortenings, oleomargarine, cooking fats and salad oils. It al so goes into soaps, shaving creams, cosmetics, glycerine, printers inks and pharmaceuticals. In the past, peanut oil has had cheaper cottonseed oil and im ported oils; but wartime shipping difficulties have indirectly put peanut oil on a better competitive plan. Difficulties Anticipated Planters are expecting their share of difficulties in getting this fall's crop harvested. TTiere is a shortage of farm machinery for cultivating the crop and for pick ing the nuts. Labor is becoming an increasingly important prob lem, particularly in areas near war industry plants. Scarcity of bur lap bags has forced substitution of cotton bags, but there are not en ough of these to go around. IT COSTS LESS TO VARIETY SHOP " ANN'S J STORE We Are Ready to Outfit Your Family Shoes for e\erv iiiembrr of the family, dresses. ' t . j rout- and hats for the ladies, shirts, ties and work clothes for the men and complete out fits for the children. It will pay you to see our new styles in ready-to-wear before buying your fall needs. ? : i Quality HIGHER Prices LOWER For VALUE, STYLE and PRICE ... It pays to shop at ANN'S. Our storks, in the main, were purchased before prices advanced and if you will do your shopping here we'll guar antee to save you money on many items of wearing apparel. Anil's Variety Sftore WILLIAMSTON