Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 282, Ed. 1 Friday, July 7, 1950 Page: 3 of 10
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Consider These
because it has more to offer you
Qualifications
i
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3
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» Bated on •Mcl«l deo»«r reported »elea during the lost fell meeth fee which hfwre* e*e
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3
ADVANCE-DESIGN TRUCKS
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9
4
5
Payload Leaders Popularity Leaders
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10
Price Leaders
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VOTE FOR THE COMMON MAN
Phone 479
—F
X.
I
CH
*Atr . . tafr a< your ele.lric
lighli.
ECONOMICAL . . . a.tually
tar er ' you money . . . a tery
imall amount of food rhrini-
age heraure ill draflleil
tooting.
2
. ?» .
on^ a'* ot^er Chevrolet Dealer*
have delivered 40,001 Chevrolet trucks
—an average of 1530 a day —in a single
monthl* That's an all-time, all-industry record
that no other truck even approaches. That's the best
possible “buy-sign” for you. It tells you that Chevrolet trucks
are first in user preference because they're first In value.
It tells you that Chevrolet trucks are fhe proved leaders on
all kinds of roads for all kind* of loads. It tells you that
Chevrolet trucks will haul your goods more mile* at less
cost per mile. Come in and get all the money-saving factsl
Chevrolet't newMt and mott powerful ftuckt I no-
Fur* an Improved 9t-h.p. Thrlftmoiter Valve-ln-
Heod engine and a brand-new 103-h.p. Load*
matter Valve-In-Head engine. Smooth, quick
acceleration It provided by Chevrolet'* new
Power-Jet carburetor. Synchro-Meth FrantmltUon
enabler driver to thlft with greater eate and eatery.
Chevrolet frvekt deliver the good* at low
cott per mile—and deliver them fattl Fea-
luret like Chevrolet'! Diaphragm Spring
clutch far tmooth engagement and Double-
Articulated broket for complete driver
control enable you to meet ihg moil
demanding road tchedulee.
RIALtMFUl retain. the nu
trilroui mineral) and i itammr
in the food.
rnror porjlei the
neurit < om eniem er of root-
inf!
G Electric all the waif
ta ft! nw ELECTRIC RANGES K dKtrifd deden
TEXAS POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
' Political Adi t |
CONTROLLED HEAT: Accurate
temperature control iirlt
on and off aulomalii ally.
DEPENDABLE . an ant pit
jAd/>p/r of lou-iost elei irmly
aiudM ready at the flip of a
J H ill h.
Chevrolet Advance-Detign Hucks ore
America's biggest tellersl That's because
users recognise the valve of such Chevrolet
features as Hypoid lem asles that ore 5
times more durable than spiral bevel type
and Un It-Design cob ond bodies that ore
built for added strength and durability.
FAST a turn of the switch
and the highspeed looking
unifi are ready for me.
CLEAN doesn't smoke your
poti and pan*.
me help you make I>nton
I County a better place t<\ live, to
raise youi\ family .and to operate
a legitimate business.
TIME AND LABOR SAVING
cocki a lOmplete meal di one
time . . . dlloti i you to per-
form other homehold duties
tuthout interruptions.
in
I
I
and high trade-la value add op Sa AB
lowest price fat yoo. Compare vahresl
Compare what you get tat the pttap ““J
you pay You'll And ovoryfhtag
favors Chevrolet (reck*.
'• 4 ’’ '
' 4
. « J
^^S J
w
‘jT ii
. ..... -. ‘ .1]
3! years of axe married 10
years, homeounei and taxpay-
er
Graduate of NTSC and Baylor
University Law School
A Mason in vood standing. ;
niemixr of Denton City Park !
Board, various civic oryanisa-
tlons and an active member of
a local church.
Five years in servide with leva!
experiende, teacher In law
NTSC, and active attorney with
experience in justice, count,
district and Federal Courts.
A Clean Record never ar-
rested. convicted or questioned
Reared on small Texas farm,
supported family at ave of 12
selltnv newspapers, worked way
through school and college.
A common worker not bound
by family ties or social obliga-
tions. I
Full cooperation with all law
enforcement agencies assured
A prosecutor, not a persecutor.
Further qualified bv the sincere
desire to serve
COOL . . . rooting heal goes
dirertly into the leriel.
GRACE-BARROW CHEVROLET CO
200 South Locust Phone 99
An electric range . . . with its many convenient features
. . . will give you a new outlook on meal-making! You’ll
discover how easy it is to get (and depend on) delicious
cdokbook results! You’ll spend less time in the kitchen . . .
have more leisure time. Yes, like so many other smart,
modern women today, you'll say . . . electric cooking is the
kind of cooking you want. Here arc ten good reasons why:
Performance Leaders
Chevrolet! rock-bottom Mtial aptf, . —
d opmatioa aed opUst
trado-fo valve add op SaAa
I__I__e ------I —
1
Waut-r
Uy OVID A. MARTIN
1948 crop was har-
What Is h?-Well
of
nine cents below the support
riding stable
doesn't
look
much
like
"It
a
Darwin L. Wilder
yellow ish
Candidate For
County Attorney
73
Hit-
ports
crop
also
tell
Price Supports May INol Mean
Fanners (ret Amounts Set
. according to
the stable opera- I
■ a ■
It s
above
for the
*
But there always are some far-
mers who do not take advantage i
of the supports Some of are ell- !
glble To be eligible they must
comply with government crop con-
trol program and put grain in ac-
ceptable storage
HAVE YOU FORGOTTEN
TO TELL HER YOU
LOVE HER. TODAY?
a
It’s ‘Somethin’^’
r>
HEED THE WARNING—In the frontier Texas tlaya, cattle rustling wasn’t a healthy
pursuit — if the culprit got caught. This sign and that culprit hanging from the
tree limb recreate a bit of the old frontier west as Albany, near Abilene, got ready
for its annual Fort Griffin Fandangle. That’s the Shackelford County Courthojise in
the background* The Fandangle was a ttiree-day affair. (AP Photo)
WASHINGTON. July
Government promises to
farm prices do not always mean ;
that farmers will get the amount |
guaranteed lation to demand, prices tend to
The price support program for j (jrOp below the support level When
1 ft supplies are shoit m relation to
] needs, prices rise abo'e supports
In the 12 years since price sup- | ROCHESTER. Muh., July 7—
port programs were started, prices I —What do you call the baby when
of wheat have averaged from one ' its mama is a hinny and its papa
to nine cents below the support 1 a dEalllon?
I So far. the best that s been done
'something’ ’
.< N
I so tar. me best mat
| here is to call it the '
j colt
It
mule.
lion and an ass
In this instance the mother hin-
ny is brownish colored The stal-
lion. Joe, is yellowish and has a
whi'e mane
■'Something" is also yellowish
'Veterinarians tell me," said
Thorne, "It might te the only ani-
mal of its kind "
last year’s wheat crop affords
good example of tills.
The Agriculture Department an-i -—-
flounced at the start of the har- j
vest season that It would support I
grower prices at a national farm j
average of *1 95 a bushel.
Figures Just released show that j
farmers received an average of j
$1 86 -nine cents a bushel less I
In the 12 years since price sup- |
| level
I:
7 A - I_____
support I (bree
« tYIPQn tan
' ' 1 in five years
In the other seven years pi ices
i averaged above the floor from
to 46 cents
Why? Supply and demand
When supplies are large ri
lation to demand, prices ten i
biggest average above sup- >
was 46 cents for the 1947 ,
That year overseas demand
for grain was so great that United
States supplies were virtually used
up before the
vested
Theoretically prices should nev-
er drop below supports And thev
wouldn't if all farmers took ad-
vantage of price support programs
The government seeks to sup-
jxirt prices by offering farmers
loans on < rops at the support lev-
el. Storage under loans has the
effect of removing supplies from
the market If all grain went un- |
der loan, buyers would have to of-
fer as ninth as the- loan, and per-
h'jps more, to.get It.
__________ _______
I Consequently some farmers sell j
i their crops for whatever they can i
get. This pulls down the general I
average
Prices tend to be lowest during (
the harvest season and highest
months later, after some of the
'■grain has been used and supplies
are reduced A year ago wheat
larmers who did not take advantage
of the prii e s ipjsirt loans were
getting prices ns much as 25 cents ,
a bushel below the support rate I
was born of a
I romance between a Palomino stal-
I lion and the hinny,
! Arthur Thorne, t":
tor
The hinny and the stallion mat-
ed 'i’he result, said Thorne, is a
little animal "about the size of a
real small colt "
"It was born on the Fourth of
I Julv.
I "It doesn't look much l.l,
' horse and nothing like a mule
just an active little 45-pound some-
thing." Thorne said
A hinny, which is clearly not
is a hybrid between a stal-
— Buy it at Evers' and you buy tha Bost
u .
At Blacklands
j
-DENTUN (Tsx.)
Friday. July 7. ISM
3
Pecan Growers Meet
And you'll be ohead.
wrimb<
b HA Officials
Are ApjMrinted
named
Ft
Ponder News
HlllIlJILBj
BUTTERMILK
New, All-Time Record! Users Now Buying
1530 CHEVROLET TRUCKS A DAY!
m
- •
409 N. Locust Phono 293
Sa™ the surface and ycu,save,allf
............ .....................
OBPAIMT
DU PONT
40
pecan industry.
Pecan insect
it:
Wi
J D
sored
Crops
tee
J
’ •>
See the new John Deere Tractors, Mowers, Rakes, Balers,
Plows, Harrows, Drills, Spreaders, Trailers, Feed Mills, etc.
Up-to-date Service Department.
EVERS HARDWARE CO.
Magic Chef Gas Range* • Speed-Queen Washer & Ironer*
A full pint of Cabell's Freah-
ly Churned Buttermilk with
every purchase of one quart or
'••j gallon or more of Cabell's
Regidur or Homogenized Milk.
Limited time only. Take ad-
vantage-of this offer today!
Keeps wHire Houses wuirej
~ hr >
■ •
At W ' ,t; 1
M * i’l
Stay with -
John Deere I
LYON-GRAY
LUMBER COMPANY
I
freeiZa
I More Than 100
The trip was spon-
the Milam County
Conservation Coninill
40
Wftde
R Johnston, superintendent of .
the Temple Station, conducted the
tour He said that the main theme
I piuiic t i pvv an ykix’vvri, i pi < <rt' ('.Hi
| of the organization. o( ,he ProRDun »t the station is
According to Rosborough. many i wo,k ol*l • practical system of
I phases of pecan production and ! agriculture for the Blackland Farin-
| for a total return of 400 pounds of
i beef per acre.
Other topics for discussion will I
include varieties for each section )
of the state and reports on pecan
yields from cultivated and sod pe-
can orchards
Topnotch tn
Tconomt...
JN CXTKA-VAU1E
Fence posts can be cut during
any season of the year but spring
cutting permits sumr seasonings
and treatment can then follow in
the late summer or early fall.
Chemical treatment will add years
to the useful life of fence poets.
page
KEcbltD-CHROMCUr
■’°’,n Deere Tools ore famous -
■’i'brewia l°T f’ie*r 9oo4 quality and the
■” fine work they do.
John Deere Tools are easy to
handle and are built for many
______years of good service.
J’- k Attractive prices ond terms.
Model M-T
OUTSIDE WHITE
Keeps your house white, bright
■ nd lieautiful for years! The
DuPont House Paint laliel
deacnliea its "aelf-cleaning**,
action.
A Start, whita .. Mays whirs
A Praftcft agaiatl rutt, rat,
• nd decay
★ Alta available la "tttfa.
jfrl, tleanlng'*
HP Hntt
In 4-Oal. lata
! USDA
experiment station workers from
, l"all»K?nient will fee <l.lS<Uirt'd Uur- .lug Aiwa, u&Uig nweet eleven ttrmd- •
T tUas 4 titn z4nu ...wnfi.,,, ItOnS '
| rid, evergreen, and hubarm, cotton, j
and small grains for u soil Im-
provement program, supplemented
by cattle to economically divert
forage into beef.
The group of farmers saw a
test plot of oats and clover that
i was producing more than three
In Tyler July 11-121
marketing specialist
seciriary.
SHEPHERD'S GROCERY & MKT.
208 Austin Phon«149l
horticultural
and association seciriary. says
plans have been made tor in out-
standing meeting
W T Evers of Denton uni a
pioneer pecan grower, is president
Fied Hopkins, Jr.,
chairman of the
farmers Home Administration Com-
mittee at the regular meeting of the
group held in the County office re-
cently Hopkins has been on the
committee for two years, and suc-
ceeds Janies C
man
ed Julv 1.
John M Neely of Justin is the “ demonstration of
new committee member, appoint- ' harvesting and cleaning of pecans. [
ed by State Director L. T Cappie- |
man I’he third member of he
committee is John T. Hard of Pi-
lot Point.
The FHA Committee passes on
all applications for loans made by
the agency, and advises with the
county supervisor in all matters
pertaining to the work of the
Farmers Home Administration.
Field Day
A group of more than <00 farm- I
ers attended the annual Milam
J County Held Day al the Blackland
I Experiment Station at Temple laid
| month, reports Milam County Agent
M< x> re
by
and
Mrs Ora Cox had as her guests
her sister. Mrs. Goin of Bonham, I
two brothers. Will and Brooks Her- '
vey, and a niece, Mrs. Alice Her-j
vey of Jdarlow, Okla., rnd Paul ;
Tramell of Colorado
Mr and Mrs Ernest Cndcr of
Fort Worth visited Mrs. Etta Crid-
er during the weekend
Mr. and Mrs D C. Bryant and
children of Fort Worth visited with
Mrs Nora Yarbrough recently. ■
Mr and Mrs. Bobbie Simmon
and daughter and Mrs. Mary Trott
and daughter of Fort Worth visit-
ed Mrs Abbie Poteet, who is ill at
her home
Mr and Mrs McGilliard of Justin
has purchased the C. F. Wakefield
farm In Ponder.
Mrs Crawford of Justin has pur- i
chased a home in Ponder.
Tile annual meeting ot the Tex- j
as Pecan Growers Association will
be held in Tyler on July 11 and
12 J F Rosborough. extension
Other impressive results shown
were those from a lest being run
to determine the amount of run-
j off water when cotton follow* deep-
( rooted inadrid clover on sloping
land A curb around the plot of
cotton measures the amount of
run-off water Since the land was
prepared for planting the 1950 cot- ■
ton crop, a total eg 13 Inches' of
rain has fallen on the plot. Of
this. 12 87 inches went into the
ground with only 13 inches runn-
ing off the plot
was named lng..t*° _.day_ JneeU!'«
Denton County ■ Brownw(xxi Mn(j Shreveport. Louis- :
lana. will report on the latest ex-
perimental findings as "they relate |
to the production of pecans and the !
| pecan industry.
Dooley as chair- I Pecan insect control work villi
,.r„, ’XTS'Kip-- «"■» - ■>» «■
Neely of Justm is the “ demonstration of mechanized
1
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4
f
i
ifi i I
You can expect
more from an
Electric
gangs..
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[4771
9
X'
The most frequently mentioned'
malnutrition problem among adults '
m the United States Is overweight
Hickory St
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ANCI
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to
for lets
eatimalat
Packing
Storage
•9 *
P Serious ill
hildren today
ivers to Mis-
elled , *11 en-
itb his chil-
and Allan Jr..
Grand Valley
Is nt Mission.
>t been dlag-
etc! Iren have
i. f,>r several
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 282, Ed. 1 Friday, July 7, 1950, newspaper, July 7, 1950; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315867/m1/3/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.