The Bonham Herald (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 78, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 3, 1945 Page: 3 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Scanned from physical pages.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:
THE BONHAM (Texas) HERALD, THURSDAY, MAY 3,1945
RADIOS
We Service Any Make With
3 Months Guarantee
BONHAM DRUG CO.
ATTENTION!
V^e have the “BERKELEY” Farm
Water Systems. A complete wa-
ter system in every sense of the
word. Deep or shallow well
type. Supine you let us show
them to yflWP1
Have a few BROODERS left.
GAS, KEROSENE and ELEC-
TRIC. Due to high Red Point
Value, better raise chickens.
Also, we have the entire line of
LEE’S Poultry Remedies.
Victory Gardening is essential,
we have the seeds and the tools.
HUMPHREY
SUPPLY CO.
—We appreciate your trade—
BOYS IN UNIFORM
(From The Leonard Graphic)
Arrives At Longview Hospital
|g§
i *
- ;
1st. Lieut. Gene H. Reynolds
Among the 26 Texas veterans
who arrived at Harman General
Hospital last week from both the
Pacific and Atlantic Theatres of
War was 1st Lieut. Gene H. Rey-
nolds, son of Mr. and Mrs.-V. C.
Reynolds. Lieut. Reynolds entered
the service five years ago and serv-
ed overseas four and one-half years.
He was with the Alamo Scouts un-
der General Kruper. He was sent
back to the States 'to rest and re-
cuperate. Wearing many decora-
tions, he expects to be home the
latter part of the week. His par-
ents went to Longview to be with
their son.
m OF THE NloMftF
BY UNCLE BOB
of the Kraft Dairy Farm Service
matter how good a big, thick,
-*■ ^ j uicy steak may be or how hun-
gry you are for such a treat, you still
want some side dishes of vegetables,
a glass or two of milk and a chunk
of apple pie or a dish of ice cream.
So, too, regardless of how hungry
your cows are for fresh green forage,
they want some side dishes also, con-
sisting of grain supplement. They
need grain for two reasons—to keep
them in top condition and to main-
tain milk production at high levels.
The amount of grain a cow
should get while on pasture
depends largely on the amount of
milk produced. Each cow should
be fed on a basis of its produc-
tion. Grain feeding is particu-
larly important in late summer,
when pastures may go down.
A good guide on this subject is
publication B-69, Extension Service,
Texas A. & M. College, College Sta-
tion, Tex. It says a good cow should
get about three pounds of grain daily
per gallon of milk produced while the
cow is on good pasture, and offers
some suggestions for grain mixtures.
The information in this bulletin
will help you figure out how much
of each kind of grain you’ll need to
carry your herd through the summer
at highest production level.
You know, I’ve been under the im-
pression for quite a number of years
that milk comes from cows. Now I
get a USDA leaflet which figures
out how much milk is produced by
an acre of pasture! ,
This l
ro^hn
USDA leaflet discusses a
pro^EHi set up by the Bureau of
airy Industry. Twelve pasture
lots were planted with various
sse?. and clovers, each plot getting
different seeding. The amount of
^Tven by cows pastured on each
f the plots was recorded daily.
Using the milk price in that region,
t was easy to figure how many
ollars worth of milk was produced
n each type of mixture. Some very
harp differences were found.
A mix seeded to orchard grass and
Ladino clover proved the best in that
region. It produced 5,996 lbs. of
milk per acre, with a production
value of $142 per acre, after deduct-
ing cost of fertilizer, grain supple-
ment, mowing cost, etc.
The point is simply this—
maybe there is a better mixture
of grasses than the one now in
your permanent pasture, which
will bring more milk per acre. I
suggest you look into this, by a
visit with your county agent. He
can tell you what mixtures have
proved best in your county.
V.
5-
>K
The best way to handle an accident
or a fire or something of the sort,: is
to prevent it before it happens. And
the best way to control flies is not
after they start pestering, but before
they hatch.
Sprays may make more comfort
for you and the cows at milking time,
but Wisconsin points o.ut in Exten-
sion Folder 88 that most sprays have
very little to do with actual control of
the number of flies around the bam.
Fly control starts in the places
where flies breed. Houseflies and
stable flies breed in manure and
moist, rotting bedding material.
The best thing to do, particu-
larly at this time of year and
on through summer, is to get
manure applied to your land as
soon and as often as possible.
Some new sprays may be available
to farmers soon, using DDT, which
will be a big help in controlling flies.
Meantime, I know you’ll find some
interesting ideas in Folder 88, which
•you can get by writing the Extension
Service, University of Wisconsin,
Madison, Wise.*
*NOTE» Thera usually Is a 5c charge for
pamphlets mailed to non-residents of a
state; but possibly your own state has a
free pamphlet on the same subject. Ask your
county
agent.
uiiei wii mu»uiiie)uu|cu.n>B jrvwi
PUBLISHED NOW AND THEN BY THE
KRAFT CHEESE COMPANY
Leave
Yeoman 1/c Ray Hyde of Kings-
ville is spending a 17-day leave
with his mother. Mr. and Mrs. T. N,
Satterwhite.
Back In France
Pfc. Robert E. Butler, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Butler is back in
France, according to news received
by his parents. Pfc. Butler served
overseas 16 months with an air-
borne division. He served in the
D-Day invasion and the invasion of
Holland. He was sent back to the
Slates and spent a delayed enroute
furlough here.
! D. Bowen is superintendent of
schools at Boyd, Wise County. Lt.
Weldon C. Bowen left Dallas Sun-
day for the South Pacific after
spending a six-day leave with his
parents.
Miss 01 lie Jo Bowen, former
Spanish and English teacher at
Highland Park High School, is with
American Air Lines in Dallas. Fran-
cis Rankin Bowen, hoinoralbly dis-
charged from the Navy, is a chem-
istry teacher at White Rock School,
Longview. All were graduated
from Southern Methodist Universi-
ty. Lt. (jg)) Elh'elee Bowen, now
at a naval hospital in Hawaii, was
graduated from the Medical Center,
Jersey City, N. J. Virginia Bowen,
who attended the University of
Texas and was graduated from Tex-
as State College for Women', Den-
ton, is with the Fifth Ferrying Com-
mand, Dallas. Rebecca Ann Bow-
en is a senior at Highland Park
The Graphic is in receipt of a let-
ter from Pfc. Lewis R. (Bud) Hal-
luin, who is with the Infantry in
Germany. He wrote he had receiv-
ed his first copy of the Graphic and
enjoyed it very much. He says the
boys over there feel that we at
home are backing them one hundred
per cent and it helps them to carry
on. Hallum served two years in
Panama, came back to the States,
then was sent to Germany.
Leave
Seaman 2/c Thomas Blanton of
the U. S. Navy' spent a 6-day leave
with his mother, Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Crawford. Blanton finished his
boot training at San Diego, Calif.,
and he will report back there, then
go to Gulf Port, Miss, to take an
electrician’s (course. He has been
in servie'e four months.
First News In Three Months
Jim Trapp is in receipt of a let-
ter from his son, T/Sgt. J. D. Trapp,
Jr., which is the first in three
months. T/Sgt. Trapp is with the
Bomber Squadron oif the Air Crops
in Germany. He recently was
awarded the Bronze Star and the
Good Conduct Ribbon.
Pivt. Willie Ray Carpenter, hus-
band of Mrs. Ludell Carpenter has
arrived at the Infantry Replacement
Training Center at Camp Wolters
to begin his basic training as Infan-
tryman. He has been assigned to
a battalion stressing rifle.
TWO ANNIVERSARIES
CELEBRATED BY PASTOR
NEW SPRING BEAUTY CAN
BE YOURS
—if you entrust the care of your
skin, hair and nails to any one
of our experienced operators.
We use the best equipment and
supplies that money can buy.
Come in for a new hair style to
complement your new hat and
clothes.
MRS. STARNES BEAUTY
SHOPPE
Phone 548 West Fourth St
High School.
The late Clinton Leslie Bowen,
Jr., who died in 1937, was profes-
sor of romance languages at Allen
Military Academy, Bryan. At 14
he was the youingest freshman at
the University. His wife, Mrs. Hel-
en Bowen, is a junior high school
teacher at Corsicana.—Dallas News.
Rev. Bowen was pastor of the
; 1 B 3 81 H I ■ B BI 1 ■
iBIBBIBIilll
Stunt
. POULTS
RIGHT-
' _______/
For fast growth... high
livability you can de-
pend on Turkey Start-
ena. Takes only 4 lbs.
per poult.
PURINA TURKEY STARTENA
In the Collar
|| Keep 'em working
with this popular
feed, containing
good oats, oil meal.
Gross Feed Store
Your Friendly
Purina Dealer
Phone 58 Bonham
".V.V.V.V.V.V
First Methodist Church in Bonham
from 1934 to 1937.
Staplers and staples at The Her-
ald.
RECAP
WHILE YOU
RIDE
TIRES LOANED
FREE!
WE HELP YOU APPLY
FOR NEW TIRES
B.F. Goodrich
Economy
Auto Store
Ralph Killingsworth,
Manager
|iiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii]ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiijii»^
| Saturday Is Official
( Straw Hat Day
The .Rev. Clinton L. Bowen, busi-
nesslike, blue-eyed pastor of the
Trinity Methodist Church, who likes
to wear ,red rosebuds in his coat
lapel, gave particular note to the
date oln the calendar Sunday.
April 29 marked the seventy-fifth
anniversary of his church as well
as his thirty-fifth anniversary as a
Texas preacher.
Action has always bee*n a signifi-
Icant word in Bowen’s vocabulary.
In thirty-five years the energetic
Methodist estimates he has made
more than 50,000 personal coln.tacts
in Texas and Oklahoma, where he
has been guest preacher at many
revival campaigns. He has built
five churches, three at Avery, Red
River County, ore at Prosper, Col
lin County, and one at Nocona,
Montague Coulnty. He has liquidat-
ed seven church debts, and 3,000
Texans have added their names to
the membership lists at the ichurch-
es he has led.
i Licensed to preach April 29, 1910,
by the Paris conference district
which convened; at Clarksville, Bow-
en was -then a member of the Bon-
ham Street Church at Paris. His
pastor wSis the Rev,. H. E. Anderson,
now pastor of the Lambuth Mem-
orial Church, Crozier near Carpen-
ter.
The late Bishop Edwin D. Mou-
zon presided at Grace Methodist
Church, Junius near North Haskel,
when Bowen was ordained deacon
Dec. 1, 1912, and Bishop James H.
McCoy ordained him elder Dec. 6,
1914, at Denison.
In Dallas Bowein has served at
the Lambuth Memorial Church, Mc-
Kinney Avenue Church and for the
last three years he has been pastor
at the Trinity Methodist Church.
He is proud that in those three
years the church debt has been com-
petely cleared.
“In 1874 my church—then called
the Methodist Episcopal Church,
was located near Akard and Paci-
fic”, he said, “and in 1925 it was
moved to the present site at 2120
McKinney. One hundred and twen-
ty new members have joined since
I (became pastor.”
Bowen, who dresses meticulous-
ly in pin-stripe suits and grows
strawberries and roses in his spare
time, said of his church members,
“There’s no finer folk in the city.”
The pastor is married to the for-
mer Ollie Ethel Starks of Paris.1 ==
They have, seven children. Edwin
*3
m
Do you wilt like a lily, droop like a
daisy when the temperature soars ?
Do you just lie down and die when
the mercury cuts loose? Well, get
up and put a hat on! A cool, por-
ous natural straw ... a feather-
light heat-beater. You’ll walk
along in the shade of its smart
brim with your head completely
insulated and air conditioned!
98
zjm
r Wim
SlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM .....Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllll......IIIIIIIIIIIIHl.........I.................
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.
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.
Newby, G. R. The Bonham Herald (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 78, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 3, 1945, newspaper, May 3, 1945; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1007357/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bonham Public Library.