The Edna Herald (Edna, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 4, 1960 Page: 2 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 22 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Page 2
THE EDNA (TEXAS) HERALD
THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1960
JACKSON COUNTY AGRICULTURE
Cost of Mechanical
Cotton Stripping in
Blacklands Studied
j COLLEGE STATION Studies
j conducted recby the Texa >
I A^rif ulturaj Experiment Station
Mr id; ■ : ‘ * that on t he BTacSlaftrJ
f'rairk’s, .harvesting cotton w i t h
I.Uvuuhaiwcal aU ippM ■» I-. IOOffe t.4 <*•■■ ■
? M/rru’ o! TFMri 'TToor
Rice Farmers
Need to Please
(I. S. Housewife
New Study Reported
Aids South Texas
Grape Production
Bugs Bottler
Jackson Cotton
to -pull or snap by hand
COLLEGE STATION, T w «
methods have. been developed for
the Successful grafting of Vinift-ra Defoliation prof ceded rapidly In'
grapes to rootstocks that are ye- the lowe* Km Grande Valley owl!
'i-'.1:;! to cotton root rot I'" • moving into the! larger return'
(f<- A -
The Toxa* Departr
These stwiu- covered tin c row - bin’;, ^ r< rrnndi-d
In* seasons o f the 1932-36 This rM"*
five year period incladed t w o !’' ' 11 Y *
gooff ye.tr - end three h a tl ” ‘ ,,ri
year- During thi period, the in- '' ''' ‘'
return-, xi!;: rnar hm< G-' r - x !■ i s make
•tripping averag'd 111 per bale, " '''-on knowingly
but varied from $M*lo $23 I h <■ dome n- Ir.*- ’ok t
smaller return was r«.-< rived in large and unattended on
seasons of poor errge and I h e federal hiphw
f Pubic
attie own-
Public Safety, said state patrolmen The 37th annual meeting of the- Approximately 300 East Texas
will enforce provisions of the law Texas Poultry improvement Asso ' 4-H Club members are members
in an effort to reduce the traffic ciation will be held in Fort Worth, of clubs now enrolled in the Sears-
kaaatd caused by mimaf- on de August 23-A>, in Hotel Texas Mur- Roebuck Foundation Forestry
signated staty, and US highways riMl Miller, extension poultry Awards program, a record number
He said that during the year lii.VJ marketing -pecialist, says the pro- according to Bill Smith, extension
i total of U»>. rural traffii acci- ur ;.n will emphasize the progre- kic-i-r Each of the clubs enroll-
dehto oecufteti T M# JBVatVifsg ‘ made1 afid the future neids of the ed will ‘learn to do by doing" by
animal- of ail tv;ix---::i ttrCse aret l- x;iv ■ Jiunitry tfriuM-y c.- ing fof and practicing good for--
dents 2J6 persons were injured and —--o- estry management on their own
t ;><; or, were killed Road The Edna Herald Ads’ club .forest
illegal, for
permit his
o am • at
tote and
I’ applies re-
ef whether or not the
developments have revived inter - younger cotton, in large numbers j crop seasons. In• good and birtf sea highway right-of-way is fenced.
The consumer is the “Boss". (# in grape culture in South Texas (>,,n weevils and. bollvkorms cor the growers who used Maximum fine for such violation
American housewives who push where pveral previous attempts tinued to be the Vriou- threats t .! unproved production method-, i- $200. and each d„y the violation
the grocery carts through the tn grow grapes I. el failed Ex" an .<> cotton ir, the south, </e-t and ceri : throughout tte ,,on obtained the occurs may he consider' d ' a ep
check stands determine the de of plant losses from cotton root tra| portions of the fate Flea ; |„ . t re ,a|u. irate offense
mand for rice. Farmers need to rot hopper infestations were causing, ff a grower h. 50 or more acres farm to market road- are e x-
educate, sell and please the In the first method rootstock. damage in the north and west.por of cotton that will average at leas? (opted from the law The new law
"Boss" "Rice farmer* have an cuttings were planted 10 to I2in<b Rons of the state Fleahopper in ! h, bale per acre he r an afford to also gives law enforcement of f i
organization working for them ha- es apart In a nursery row during (©stations were causing damage in. own his own stripper This would eers the authority to have such
tionally," said Marcus Mauritz, of j February-and -allowed., to grow for the nrplh arid west portions where '
Ganado, representing the Rice a year fn early January the plants boliworrns had also increa-ed sig
Council for Market Development were dug and the-roots were then mfieantly during the past week
This association of rice growers, buried in damp sawdust until Feb otte r insects reported infesting
dryers, and proceuors Is backing tton wen Cabbage loopers, leafjment Station 1 . put*k bed , bulle
a promotion program *<, make rice planted m their permanent vine worms, gra shoppers, spider mu</ -tin which contains complete anal-
House cleaning for livestock by
the stockman can be a profitable
activity A clean up tan head off
expensive losses Wire ends, nails,
broken bottles, paint and insect!
one of America's most popular yard locations By May 15." tin and brown cotton leafworrris
foods stock and scion united and the bugs nrfgt thrips
“The Rice Council for Market plant had new growth of 15 or Bollwrirrn infestations
Development, with headquarter# at more inches found to t» light in Liberty Conn j
2171 Portsmouth Street, Houston The second propagating terhm ty light to heavy in Wharton Court '
has the sales tools for this'job.' que consisted of growingrihe rtxA ty medium w Jackson County and
'Mr. Mauritz declared " dock cuttings in the nursery, cleft medium to heavy m Matagorda
“Advertising and publicity are grafting them iri I fa- nursery and arid Calhoun Count'ie
telling the rice story to consumers carrying the plant another year weevil infestations were re
throughout America The Council in the nursery At tin- end of the ported- light in Liberty. Wharton
has the selling tools to help ctilti second year, the grated vine- wee- and Fort Ren/I Cuuiifa-'., light toj
vate new markets for rice" cut hack to two bud' above the medium in Calhoun County, me
‘"How these sales tools are used, union arid stored in damp -awdost diurin to .lack ori and Matagorda '
depends to a great extent on the until plaiitmg luia ('..untie Light !< ,f* am uife-l,, I
support given the R,.. d by Ru't^Wl f,, p ... Mat.'r
the rice grower Mr Mount/ -«t. .-?A- i ...rd, ai.-: I. . i s*
stated TMrC is a lot of work to these an- discussed and compared
be done, and the rue grower may in Tea Agricultural Experiment 1. , L ' f • • I
help share the lost he said You Station publication Pit 2145 The, E( UKOSIS IzOntrOI
will be pleased when you pb- ' ■■ publitatirm may be obtained by Advice Offered
"the Boss '’ ' writing the .Agricultural fnforrno
,.............. ^..... bon fMfice, Texiw A A M College, r COIJ-EGE STATION, Control I
College Station, Texas of leukosis, the number one poul
•—-------o--------- - try killer in the If S , cannot be
Twenty years ago. the American accorriplished by the application of
farmer was producing enough for -rntd'iotics to mature tiirds, Dr R
............. himself plus 10 others But today w Moore, assistant. professor o f
c-ide cans or other containers, old h‘‘ 1 producing enough Jor himself veterinary medicine in the Texas
batteries are all hazard for live I'l'i.s 23 others * * M -Syslcm, -ays that
stock as well as their owm-i <' euko'-i, can only be c„ntrolle, at
points out the Texas Farm and if you drink like a fish, swim; .wo evels oi produt ion he
Ranch Safety Council DON ■ T DRIVE1 header level and gruwei leveL
____________ t untroi ,u the breeder level ton
id of trying to hi, • I bird, with
^. « as much natural resistance a s
possible This i- only partly suc-
cessful, bill it I, !- been a major
factor in increasing livability iri
laying birds If birds are purchas-
ed from a reputable dealer and
CM ,| e v e I • ; ij-n ulerabh
; amount of leukosi s, it usually
i mean, that the amount of virus
challenge was -ii grs-nl lli.a it
overeame their natuial resistance
Grower level control consists of
isolating all young turds from ma-
ture birds Ideally, the young birds
-1)01,1,1 he ( ai ed for .by a separate
caretaker Raising riiiiie than one
group of clmks mi the same litter
is idso dangerous, says Dr Moore
la-ukosis is very costly, but.
through the use of proper control
methods, the poultryman tan
I greatly reduce his losses from this
d: a . ,mi, hides fir Moore
be rnore >•- -,r ona- d hint,,; Ir.' k pe k'-d up. - - or,.,1,1,■
c ustom stripping tlixi t w t to he ate the owner, and turned
> ,tf' Sheriff dr < oh stable in
The I;rw does not prohibit the
driving or hoarding of livestock
ysis of these studio- fins bulletin, (Jf-r0S(( or along highways ft gives
f! !M'i, rnay tie obtyirred from the [j,;ic(i officers the .authority to en-
AgricuRural fnformation flffice at force provisions of the act without
College Station. Texas a warrant..
Col Horner Garrison, dr. direc-
tor of the Texas Department of
COOL OFF!!!
MONDAY NIGHT, AUG. 8. NBC-TV
ESTHER
WILLIAMS
CYPRESS
GARDENS!!
ESTHER WILUAMS
*
Modern Appliance and Butane Co.
Located at
Webernick Implement Co.
710 Wejt Main St.
BUTANE SYSTEMS INSTALLED
Regular Ga» Service, Commercial And Domestic
Tappan Ranges and Mission Water Heaters
f
mi
M
%
'et thi
p
m
much ICE
Automatically!
mk a Mi
NEW NORGE QdX Refrigerator
only $10^ a month*
Forget about filling or spilling messy ice trays — NEW NORGE
serves all the Ice you neecf—continuously! Freezes silently . , . with no
moving part*. So dependable, it’s guaranteed 10 years. For our customers:
not ing down, no payments until September, then 48 months to pay!
Your NEW NORGE will tie installed, serviced and guaranteed by Houston
Natural Gas System. See |t at our office- today. ^ ^ „
j „ $399 -
. *witk trader4”
HOUSTON NATURAL GAS. SYSTEM
is rtAOt of stance ro rue rexas ovif coast
Read The Herald ads
WEBERNICK IMPLEMENT CO.
• ALMS CHALMERS DISTRIBUTOR
• GMC DEALER
• GOODYEAR TIKF.S
• FARM EQUIPMENT REPAIRS
710 W Main , Phone OL7-U2S
STAR-
RING
WITH HER GUEST STARS
FERNANDO LAMAS
JOEY BISHOP
DICK POPE,THE AQUAMAIDS. THE
AQUA'MANIACS.CYPRESS GARDENS SKI
BALLET, WORLD CHAMPION DIVERS,
CYPRESS GARDENS AQUABABIES.
UNITED STATES BREWERS
FOUNDATION yWL
z\acl CTiwies
Published by the Gladiolu
People for the Home
Baking Heart of Texas
AUGUST, 1960
$100 AWARD FOR PRIZE-WINK
“GLAZED RAISIN LOAF” RECIPE
Honorable Mention Weimar resident-Mrs-L G- Ringgenberg, says
■
m
Prize Winners
Glad iota checks for $10 go to each
of these 10 ladies for their
delicious yeast bread creations:
Mrs Albcita Williams Cinnamon Puffs
1017 S. t’Tfh Street, Temple, Texas
Mrs. Arnold Heldman Honey Nut Roll
501 N. Broadway, Caldwell, Texas
Mr-, Adolph Btskup ... Orange Butterhorns
Midfield, Texas
Mrs. Frank Polansky ... Butter Rolls
Route 2, Box 90, Halfettsville. Texas
Marie Poston Cocoa Yeast Cake
1009 S. 47th, Temple, Texas
Mrs Herman Fuessel My Favorite Coffee Cake
Route 1, fborndale, Texas
Mrs. Kenneth Raabe Jelly Filled Doughnuts
Route 4, Eiox 83, Floresville, Texas
Mrs. Stanley Wieczyk Apricot Crescents
F uite 1, Box 200F, Richmond. Texas
Mrs. Otihe Maresh Sweet Potato Bread
ELox 213. Granger, Texas
M's Churit-s H-mly . Philly Coffee Cake
727 S. Matthews, Beliville, Texas
!" GLAZED RAISIN LOAF (1 lOAF)"]pi
i a
i i
“GLADIOLA is a must for yeast baking ”
i -
ii i.*
fr:;s1 . ' . ....
Bf 1
Mrs, L. G. Ringgenberg, Weimar, Texas
Encouraged by frienda who tasted her
.deli; ii Glazed Raisin Loaf, Mrs. L. G.
Ringgrenberg, Route 3, Weimar, Texas,
entiu-ed her Vi 'ripe in the GLADIOLA’S
“yea t bread" Raking-Recipe-of-the-
Month Contest.
Upon learning that her recipe had won
first prize,. Mrs. Ringgenberg exclaimed,
“I've never won anything in my life . . .
and now here I am, the big winner.”
One of the secrets of Mrs. Ringgen-
berg's yeast baking is GLADIOLA Special
Har'd Wheat Flour,
with natural
jladiola’s Baking-Recipe-of-the-Month
MRS l G RINGGENBIRG S GLAZED RAISIN IOAF
1 cup seedless raisins 1 teaspoon salt 1 cake compressed yeast
G cup soft butter Vj cup scalded milk G cup lukewarm water
Vi cup sugar 2 eggs, well beaten
4 cups (about) sifted GLADIOLA Special Hard Wheat Flour
Combine raisins, butter, sugar, and salt in mixing bowl; add scalded milk, stir
well, then cool to lukewarm. Dissolve yeast in lukewarm water. Add yeast, eggs,
[and I clip flour to cooled raisin mixture and beat until smooth; add remaining
flour gradually, beating well, to make a medium - ft dough. Cover and let rest
. 10 minutes, then knead on lightly floured surface until smooth and clastic, adding
| more flour as necessary to prevent sticking. Place dough in a greased bow], turn
to grease surface of dough, cover and let rise in a warm place until double in
strength and character that guarantees
uniform good texture whenever yeast
breads are baked.
Mr- Ringgenberg, who looks forward to
baking the recipes found inside GLADI-
OLA flour packages, says, “I really love
GLADIOLA flour, and it isn’t just talk ...
Eve tried almost every brand of flour and
I always go back to GLADIOLA. I use it
in all of my baking.”
_____Jl
in a 9(1
bulk. If I
ll
I
bulk. Punch down and let rest 10 minutes; shape into a loaf and place
greased 9 x6x 3-inch loaf pan. Cover and let rise until almost double in
Bake In a moderate oven (375 degrees) about 30 minutes or until done. When
loaf is sufficiently brown, cover lightly with foil to finish baking. Cool and glaze
[ top with thin powdered sugar icing.
.Clip ♦Hi* r«cip« and post# on fi|« card ..
11 CASH PRIZES EVERY MONTH
HIRl Am THI IASY CONTEST RULtS
u
1. This monthly contest is GLADIOLA’s
way of stimulating the exchange of good
yeast bread recipe ideas between you and
your neighbors here in the Home Baking
Heart of Texas. Anyone may enter except
employees (and their families) of Fant
Milling Company, its affiliated companies
and As advertising agency.
2. Write down your favorite yeast bread
recipe using GLADIOLA Special Hard
Wheat Flour. List all ingredients, then ex-
plain briefly ea.h step in the procedure.
3. Cut off the strip that says “GLADI-
OLA Special Hard Wheat Flour" fp.m the
folder enclosed in every bag Send it . . .
with your-recipe ... to Glad Times. Sher-
man, Texas.
4. Send in as many yeast bread recipe* a«
you wish. Mail each recipe iij a separate
envelope enclosing a GLADIOLA strip as
explained in Rule No. 3.
5. Kaeh month’s recipes are judged sep-
arately, with an independent graduate home
economist as the final judge. R—ipes re-
ceived in August will be eligible for prizes
to be announced in November.
6 For the outstanding recipe received each
mo-h. GLADIOLA wrll pay $100 Half the
ptize money . . $.50 . . . goes to the winner
The remaining $50 goes to the churoh of
Her choice as her special contribution'
7. .Ten other yeast' bread recipes will be
ch,.sen monthly for $10 Honorable Mention
■
N. All recipes suhmitteexbecome the prop-
erty of Fant Milling Company, Shopman,'
Texas, with full publication rights/Recipes
can nut be returned.
GLADIOL.i SPECIAL HARD WHEAT FLOUR
Fhnrinjr the GLADIOLA first prize
award is the First Methodist Church of
Weimar to which Mrs. Ringgenberg has
donated one-half of her' prize.
I he GLADIOLA people are convinced
that the tempting appeal of Mrs. Ringgen-
berg'-; "Glazed Raisin Loaf" will be a win-
ner with evervonp who enjoys tasty yeast
baking
A
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View three places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Evans, Chester. The Edna Herald (Edna, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 4, 1960, newspaper, August 4, 1960; Edna, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth763720/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Jackson County Memorial Library.