The Leonard Graphic (Leonard, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, June 5, 1953 Page: 7 of 8
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Tough on the road-Easy on the budget
B E Goodrich
Cold rubber tread.
Rugged construction.
Buttress-built shoulders.
Wide tread for maximum
traction.
Oeiiance
TIRE
_The Leonard Graphic
I a few higher. Scaling V. Ranch,
I Clay Cohnty, had 17 cows at 1,047
lbs. at $13.7.5, and 20 cows at 110$
lbs. at $12.50. Odds reached $14.
Canners and cutters $6.00-9.00.
Bulls $8.00-1.4.00, Larkin Renick.
Llano County, had two top bulls
at 1,530 lbs. at $14.
Good and choice fat calves drew
$17 to $20, with common and med
ium butchers at $10.00-15.00. Culls
$8.00-10.00. Good and choice Stock-
er steer calves $16.00^20.00; good
and choice Stocker steer yearlings
$15.00-19.00; heifer calves and
yearlings $2 under comparable
steers. Few Stocker cows $10 00-
14.00.
Good and choice fat Spring
lambs $24.00 26.50; medium to good
$18.00-24.00; culls and common
$12.00-$16.00. Stocker and feeder
Spring lambs, shorn lambs and
yearlings $12.00-18.00. Cull old crop
lambs $8.00-12.00. Two-year-olds
$10.00-14.00. Old wethers $8.00-
10.50. Fat shorn old crop lambs
and yearlings $17.00-22.00. Ewes
$4.00-6.00. Old bucks around $4.00.
Friday, June 5, 1953
Minnows Float In
Pecos Rain
PECOS.—Pecos had a one-inch
rain recently, the first one in
months, and afterwards hundreds
of minnows were found floating in
the streets of the housing project
at the former Pecos Army Air
Field, southwest of town.
There were tbrnadic conditions
in the area at the time of the
downpour and it is believed the
minnows were picked up from a
pono by a small twister.
Roman law forbade persons to
approach within 30 feet of Rome’s
aqueducts.
One-half of the world’s patents
have been issued in the United
States.
—--------f.--------
Elephants and falcons often are
used by man as domestic animals
but they do not normally breed
in captivity.
SO GOOD ’
YOUR ENGINE CAN
OUTLAST YOUR CAR
Grady Latimer, Owner Highway No. 69
WE HONOR ALL CREDIT CARDS
A new season means a new hairstyle! A style that is cooler,
more flattering, and requires only a quick brushing to keep it
it in place. Won’t you phone 240 soon, and let us give you a
nerw-season, beauty look.
The BEAUTY BOX
Frances Latimer PHONE 240 Bula Stone
ASK ABOUT SINCLAIR’S AMAZING
100,000 MILE ANTI-WEAR GUARANTEE
GRADY’S SERVICE STATION
Fresh Bar-B-Q
Fish — Steak — Chops
— Try Our Fresh River Catfish —
Lou’s Cafe
South Side Sq.
Mr. and Mrs. Wade Morris
And we might add, women and
children like it, too. Come in
and eat with us.
FOOD COOKED
TO A MAN’S
TASTE..
-AND SINCLAIR
GUARANTEES IT
Glamorize Yourself...
With A New Hairstyle
IT’S THE LAW
LETS TALK
con-
2
written to inform!—not to
were
J. D. WILSON
With A Policy For Every Need!
PHONE 30
Everyone
Let Us Check Your
Healthy
Lighting System
. One sure way to be
at
CRAWFORD PONTIAC CO
Phone 209
Leonard, Texas
—PHONE 270—
Barbee Grocery
PHONE 270
OF YOUR
Ambulance Service
To any Dallas hospital ..$15.00
Charity Patients ....No Charge
J. R. Wilson Co,
LEONARD
Dependable Since 1888
B. F. Goodrich
YOUR
Best Year ’Round Cash Crop IS
Grade A Milk
YOUR
Best Year ’Round Market IS
CABELL’S
U. S. 75 at State Highway 24
McKinney
%
%
population was small-
numbers of cattle on
farms. The ideal re-
generally conceded to
ruled
Bulls
Season tickets may
at a discount of all
the price of five un-
SUPPLEMENTAL
PASTURES ARE
PROFITABLE
Property Rights of Married
Wersons Explained
soil
im-
To Greenville, Bonham,
Sherman or McKinney ..$5.00
• Seals punctures.
• Protects against blowouts.
• Defies skids.
such
have
300
%
State Fair Musical
Sets Ticket Sale
Record
is not
joins
— he .
• Aiming and focusing headlamps is a scientific pro-
cedure. We do it quickly and thoroughly with the aid of modern
chartsand instruments. All faulty lights or headlamp units are
replaced.
proper combination of
season grazing
COURTEOUS SERVICE
FAIR PRICES
By C. G. BROCK, Agronomist
Upper Sabine Soil Conservation
District
Here is the first answer to all
three tire hazards. The new
tread has thousands of tiny
“grip-blocks” which give it a
caterpillar action.
"LIFE-SAVER"
Tubeless Tire
in this area. Much of the
can usually be realized
the summer and winter
These are the moths When
AND
healthy is to eat the right kind
of food. The kind of food we
have in stock for you . . . Yes,
365 days a year you’ll always
find good, wholesome foods
our grocery and market.
Fort Worth — Swine growers
could enjoy a rueful smile Monday
as hogs hit the highest peak since
November 1948 at Fort Worth.
Choice butcher hogs sold at. $25.25-
25.75. The joy was tempered by
the fact that several years of low
prices for hogs had thinned down
the hog population to where while
the price was good, the numbers
were few..
Most hog breeders are franti-
cally trying to re-stock since a
short time ago it was announced
that the hog
er than the
the nation’s
lationship is
be 20 percent more hogs than cat-
tle in the country.
Sows and pigs were steady, sows
mostly $20 to $22 and feeder pigs
from $21 down.
Cattle buyers were highly se-
lective. The fed beeves were
scarre and good and choice drylot
fed cattle ruled strong. Grassers
were weak to lower. Cows
steady to 50 cents lower,
held steady.
Good and choice fat calves
steady but the common, plain and
medium inbetween sorts sold weak
to lower. High quality stockers
were steady, but others draggy
and plain stockers sold mainly for
low grade killers. Demand for
stocker cows was very narrow. .
Good and choice fed steers and
yearlings $18-22.50, I. S. Scott, Cas-
tro County, had a load weighing
758-lbs. at $22.50. B. T. Woodard,
Hunt County, had a load of cross-
bred Brahmans at $21 that aver-
aged 810 lbs. Common, plain and
medium steers and yearlings $10-
$16.00, some rannies.
Fat cows* mostly $9.00-12.00, just
%
1
2
1
U
“Your Insurance Man
• Delivers peak econ-
omy and perform-
ance
NOTICE
YOU CAN NOW GET
U. S. Green Stamps
AT
. Dallas—The State Fair Musicals
set another ticket sale record when
two weeks before the opening of
the season its advance ticket sales
surpassed the total advance for
last season.
be purchased
six shows for
til May 30.
After the single ticket sale opens
June 1, season tickets will no long-
er carry the dissount offer, al-
though they still carry priority
privileges.
The cast for “Brigadoon” which
opens the season June 8, will re-
port for full rehearsals June 1.
Dance rehearsals are in their sec-
ond w'eek and singing chorus re-
hearsals began May 25. Principals
for “Brigadoon” will be Stephen
Douglass and Lois Hunt in the
romantic leads, Jet MacDonald and
Hiram Sherman in the comic leads
with Donald Saddler and Virginia
Bosler in dancing leads. “Briga-
doon” also will introduce Whitford
Kane, distinguished Irish actor, to
State Fair Musicals audiences.
Prices for single tickets are
$3.00, $2.40, $1.80, $1.20 and 90c.
The box office is at 1315 Elm St.,
Dallas.
but result in soil inl-
and reduction in soil
losses when properly
use that can be made of the crops.
From one to two acres of sup-
plemental pasture should be pro-
vided for each mature cow or the
equivalent on the farm. Crops
should be selected that will pro-
vide the longest period of grazing.
A temporary grazing program con-
sisting of small grain and vetch,
one of the biennial sweet clovers
or alfalfa, and Sudan grass would
afford a long period of grazing.
Special attention should also be
given to proper fertilization of
these crops. Most of the upland
and some of the two bottom land
soils are deficient in nitrogen and
phosphorus. Must of the sandy
land needs potash. In the planting
of grazing crops such as the le-
gumes the fertilizers usually give
the best results when applied in
bands or in the drill at the time
of seeding.
Many successful beef and dairy
cattle owners have found supple-
mental pastures to be a very es-
sential and profitable part of their
operations. As an aid to reducing
cost of production, deducing
and water losses, and soil
provement sowed pasture crops oc-
cupy an important place in a
servation system of farming.
F \ June is traditionalljr the month
f for weddings and many couples
| will be taking marriage vows
[ within the next few weeks. But’ the
F act of marrying another person
I does not give the authorization to
k take control of his property.
| Generally speaking, each spouse
has the right to control and dis-
pose of his or her own separate
| property. The separate property of
a husband or wife includes proper-
F ty owned by either before marri-
B age, and that which is acqiired
by either after marriage by gift or
L inheritance. Any other property
k acquired after marriage is pre-
sumed by law to be community
I property until the contrary is
e clearly proved.
r Aside from the ordinary com-
l munity estate, there is a class of
| property known as the wife’s
I “special community,” which in-
l ^ludes all the income from her
t separate real property, and pro-
I bably the interest on bonds or
I notes, and dividends on stocks
f owned in her separate right. While
I husband may have similar
I assets, the law accords them no
particular distinction from ordi-
nary community property.
Although the history of the mat-
r ter is somewhat confusing, it ap-
’ pears that under present day law
the husband has control of ordi-
f nary community property; but con-
trol of the wife’s special communi-
ty property is reserved to her.
Supplemental grazing crops
7
as sweet clover and Sudan
produced between 200 and
pounds of beef per acre unde,
grazing tests. Based on current
prices, of beef the gross income
from these grazing crops wouid
range from $45 ’ to $65 per acre.
Next to an improved permanent
pasture supplementary grazing
crops aree the cheapest feed for
cattle.
The temporary grazing crops
such as the sweet clovers, alfalfa,
vetch, small grain, and Sudan are
well adapted to most of the soils
in the Upper Sabine Soil Conser-
vation District. Crops such as
sweet clover, alfalfa and vetch not
only provide cheaper beef and milk
production
provement
and water
managed.
With the
cool and warm
cro!ps it is usually possible to ob-
tain from 8 to 10 months of 'green
grazing
grazing
during
months.
many of the permahent pasture
grasses are either dormant or
producing a minimum amount of
forage.
A good supplemental grazing
program will also make possible
the resting of permanent Bermuda,
buffalo and bluestem pastures.
Resting of these permanent pas-
tues during all or a portion of tne
growing season will increase the
vigor of the base grasses. Rests
will also usually result in deeper
root system for these grasses. Af-
ter two years of extreme drouth
and intense use many of the per-
manent pastures are badly in need
of rests from grazing.
Sowed crops such as the small
grains, legumes and Sudan when
properly fertilized and managed
offer other possible sources- of in-
come when not needed for grazing.
They may be turned under for
soil improvement, cut for hay or
harvested for seed. However, graz-
ing is probably the most profitable'
HEAVY LATIMER
Service Station
Out of town trips .........$2.00
(Plus 20c Per Mile)
Certain restrictions are imposed
upon both husband and wife in
exercising such control. For in-
stance, the husband cannot legal-
ly dispose of community property
in such a way as to defraud the
wife, nor can he sell the home-
stead without her signature and
acknowledgment. And the wife’s
sale or mortgage of her separate
real estate, stocks or bonds
'valid unless her husband
with her in the transaction
must sign and execute the ne-ces-|
sary legal papers along with her. j
There are laws exempting the
wife’s separate and special com-1
munity proper from liability for I
debts incurred by the husband.;
Such liability is restricted to his j
separate property and the ordinary]
community property.
On the other hand, debts incur-
red by the wide in obtaining neces-
sities for herself or the children
bind all property belonging to ei-
ther party, including the husband’s
separate property. For other debts j
which she has power to incur, ■
only her separate and special com-1
munity property are liable.
All of these distinctions empha- j
size the advisability of keeping!
proper records. By doing so the
various classes of community and
separate property owned by a mar-
ried couple will always be easily
distinguishable. Each category will
then receive the special protection
afforded to it by our laws.
(This column, based on Texas
law, is
advise. No person should ever ap-
ply or interpret any law without
the aid of an attorney who knows
the facts, because the facts may
change the application of the
law.)
TAMALE PIE
Some of the best dishes of the
Southwest borrow heavily from the
finest Spanish and Mexican cook-
ing. A typical dish is Tamale Pie.
Tamale Pie is fine for serving to
a crowd. Prepare it ahead of time
and keep it in the refrigerator until
a“n hour or so before serving time.
Then set it in a moderate oven to
bake while you wait for the crowd
to assemble. Your friends will savor
the combination of the bland corn-
meal “crust” and its spicy ground
beef filling.
Tamale Pie
(Makes 8 servings),
cups boiling water
cup yellow cornmeal
teaspoon salt
pound ground beef
small onion, chopped
tablespoons margarine
small can tomato paste
cup sliced stuffed olives
Paprika
cup sliced ripe olives
cup chopped green pepper
1 teaspoon chili powder
cup beef bouillon or consomme
No. 2 can whole kernel corn
Dash of cayenne pepper
1 teaspoon salt
% cup shredded cheese
Stir cornmeal into rapidly boiling
I water. Cook and stir until thick.
I Remove from heat. In a heavy
i skillet melt margarine and brown
i onion in it. Add ground beef. Stir
and cook until meat is no longer
red. Add tomato paste, olives, green
pepper, chili powder, bouillon, corn,
cayenne and salt. Stir well. Taste to
be sure this is enough salt Line
a shallow baking dish with part of
the cornmeal mush. Pour meat and
vegetable mixture into lined dish.
Drop remaining cornmeal mush in
spoonfuls on top of meat, and
sprinkle shredded cheese over top.
Dash paprika liberally over sur-
face. Bake in moderate oven
I (350° F.) 1 hour.
For other excellent kitchen-tested
recipes, write the National Cotton
Council, P. O. Box118, Memphis 1,
Tennessee, for your free copy of
“Menu Magic with Margarine,” an
attractive 24-page booklet in two
colors
ENGINE
• Reduces corrosive
wear during engine
warm-ups
• Fights friction and
deposit formation
• Resists temperature
extremes
Emergency Ambulance
Calls ...................$5.00
Local calls within City
limits ..................$2.00
Sheridan & Sons Service Station
Phones: Station 88-W; Res. 88-J Leonard
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The Leonard Graphic (Leonard, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, June 5, 1953, newspaper, June 5, 1953; Leonard, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1213409/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Leonard Public Library.