Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 289, Ed. 1 Friday, July 19, 1946 Page: 4 of 10
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Friday,
Dr.
City Water fir Light Department
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PAINTING - BODY WORK
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CALL
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713 S. IxKUst
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WOULD YOUGTvE?
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YARD DUMP CARTS
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Delicious salads and sandwiches and cool-
menu id tempting variety, so
(J1
Phone 88
at
BROOKS DRUG STORE
HOW ABOUT
Phones 29 and 39
NEW AND DIFFERENT
YOUR DRUG BUSINESS
When Yau Want
WHOLESALE MEATS
A Trial Will Convince You
Catering To:
Homer S. Curtis Drug Co.
* CAFES
Since 1900
FLOWERS
♦BOARDING HOUSES
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* INDEPENDENT GROCERS
DRIVE DOWN TO CLAUDE BROWN'S
A
CITIES SERVICE
MEAT CUT THE WAY YOU WANT IT!
STATION
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Give Us A Chance To Serve You
“For Quick, Reliable Service”
WHOLESALE ONLY
z
Washing! Lubrication!
★—BEEF
★—PORK
★—PROVISIONS
Gasoline! Oil!
[t
s
Acme Tires!
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419 South Locust
Phone 1636
LET US HIDE
>
JACK WOODWARD, M. D.
''4-.
announces
=-^3
PHONE 1941
And The Association Of
1
$2.25
$2.75
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<&Q
&
KART BIDE SQUARE
Phone 1589
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BLNriVEY
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LIMITING PRACTICE TO EXAMINATION
FOR GLASSES
Soil Resources,
Rotarians'Told
Cambria is the ancient, name of
Wales.
APPLY OVER WALLPAPER
ONE COAT COVERS
DRIES IN 40 MINUTES
SAVES UP TO 50%
Those Shabby Corners With
One of Our New, Beautiful,
Long-wearing
COMPANT
Booth Locust BL In Denton
When You Have Roofing And Sheet
Metal Needs -Call Us!
•d out for a' bottle of
MILK! Will be back in
h
ri
Charlies' Market
Phones 156 - 197
,7v“.
All Forma Of AutomoMlB
iDsaranN
Lyle B. BtatfMMry Oa.
[W1M ODd aonfe
PIMMM Ml
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CALL 1744
For Hauling, Packing or
Crating of Any Kind
Freight Transfer
Ben Ford
Are Words That Grow
mien the spoken isn't enough,
let flowers beautiful fresh flow-
ers speak for you.
Freeh Rappty At
AU Times
WHAYNE FLORISTS
Phone 673 100 N. Locust
Special Attention
for
Special Orders
RAMEY & IVEY
INSURANCE - LOANS
BONDS
DENTON ROOFING AND METAL WORKS
Phone 912 125 E. McKinney
NEW, USED, REBUILT TYPEWRITERS
SEVERAL MODELS TO ( HOOSE FROM
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for e Residence Theft Policy
If yowr home wet ransacked
tonight?
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—a Good Breakfart
—Delidoua Luncheon
—Appetizing Dinner
You'll Find It At
■ ''
BIRTHDAY
and
WEDDING
CAKES
Purity Bakery
Phone 106
$8.95 -and- $9.95
OOZER HOSE
Irrigates Soil by Seepage
RAKES HOES
NO LONG WAITS OR DELAY!
When you have plumbing troubles.
ALTON BLANKENSHIP
Phone 1232-R Shop, 920 Panhandle
WE HAVE INSTALLED A NEW
FEED MILL!
Will Have Plenty of Ground Oats!
--GET OUR PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY--
• CUSTOM GRINDING OF GRAIN”
Distributors Of Burrus Texo
Dairy and Poultry Feeds
WELSH & SON FEED & HATCHERY
300 E. McKinney Phone 1401
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SEAT COVER
PATTERNS
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Safety Glass
FOR ANY MAKE, ANY MODEL
WINDSHIELD OR WINDOW
FEED HENS AND PULLETS NOU FOR
GOOD WINTER PRODUCTION
We have finest dairy and )x>ultry feeds obtainable.
Custom Grinding and Feed Mixing
SNOW'S FEED STORE
Phone 1926 McKinney and Frame
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Sales - Service
311 West Oak
PHONE 440
AND
Many Other Tools For Keeping Your Yard and
And Garden Beautiful.
TALIAFERRO & SON
HARDWARE AND SPORTING (.GODS
Keep Your Car
-SAFE-
Visit Our
Completely Modern
SERVICE
DEPARTMENT
TODAY
Grace - Barrow
f '
.-Kt. ~
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HEADLEE’S
307 North Locust St.
--J
JA< K HODGES. BACK OF POST OFFICE
c
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R
ing desserts are always on our summer
cocJ off"
-
• The world'• largest Manufa©.
turer of water ml ord paints has
appoi nted «e M exclusive dtstribo*
tor of these nationally advertised
brands. Two great paints for walls
and cel lings with these advantages—
Prompt Courteous Service
3 7 2 cVb
Owned and Operatedby Ex-Serviee Men
f. > .
DENTON GLASS SHOP
SOUTH LOCUST STREET 1
Al a
slonarj
in the
D B
Texas
and Ni
pastor
Little
before
county
Mrs
of tiie
was li
Lunch
during
made
in th
evangt
Churci
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■
TEXAS WILL JOIN IN
FREIGHT RATE PARLEY
“One of Our Many Specialties”
For more power and better perform-
ance, let us install a set of Perfect
Circle Rings.
All Mechanical Repairs
Conoco Products
Jack Hill's Service Station fir Garage
: 2. L---i Phone 172
Right Meat Co.
317 East Hickory Denton, Texas
—WE DELIVER—
■■■•■ .........
: ______
THE GRILL
Under New Menacement
Wiry and Miqk Oratory
(Ovma and Operators)
Moat Complete Stock Of Oenu-
tn Chevrolet Porta in North Texas
“Denton county has found no
other crop that will pay oft like
Madrid sweet clover,' Mack Mc-
Connell. district soil conservator,
said in discussing the caah crop
possibilities
Dooley Dawson, ugricuityral rep-
rmentative of the Second National
Bank in Houston, told fanners
n the afternoon session tn the
r ball, Patil Dunkle, superinten-
it of the Tpxas Azrtculturel
pertinent sub-station, where the
tiling aession was held, told
mers that growers in this area
rht expect a demand for seed
wn here for the next 15 or 30
Refreshing Fountain Service
W
Texana should bow their heads
In shame over their high standard
of living because they are drawing
upon soil resources future genera-
tions wUi need, Dooley Dawson,
agricultural director of the Second
National Bank of Houston, told
Rotui iuns and guests Thursday noon
at the T8CW special dining room
The luncheon also included rec-
ognition of the farmers of the Den-
• ton-Wise Soil ahd Water Conserva-
tion District who later in the day
1‘eceived certificates of merit for
completing their conservation pro-
grams. O. R. Warren, county agri-
cultural agent, was program chair-
man,
"We must get to solving our prob-
lems and there is no better way
than through rebuilding our soil
through legumes and all other
methods," Dooley said. "You must
learn to talk the selling points of
soil conservation in the some way
you talk the merits of your mer-
chandise as the only wealth we have
is the 6 or 8 Inches of topsoil.”
He praised the work of the local
soil conservation district and the
State Experiment Station
He urged business and profes-
sional men to look farther than
the city limits of Denton and the
boundaries of the county because
Ute future of the area depends on
the amount each acre will produce.
"Ghost towns” are the alternative,
he said.
Dawson stressed the great need
for soil conservation by pointing
out that 11,000,000 acres of Texas
land—equivalent in area to 22 aver-
aged sized counties—have gone out
of production because of erosion.
Texas averages only 176 pounds
of lint cotton per acre, 19 bushels
of oats and 14 bushels of corn, he
reported, and while the state is 4th
in number of dairy cattle it is 44>h
in number of pounds of milk per
day
He also showed figures that ero-
sion lias taken a great toll in the
blacklands area of Texas.
................■=
HIOZEN FOODS
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goodAear
tXTOA-MUAM
RICAPPING
K>K8' ROMOG-
minutes."
How to Got Mora Light Fil
Your Eye»—Moro for Your Monoy
—use n<ht size bulbs, replace darkened bulbs, P**°®
lamps In beat place to get maximum efficiency—then
Keep the light bulba, bowls and reflectors free of dost
you'll get better light at no extra cost.
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acre this year from sale of seed
E. A. Miller, agronomist from
of innoculation of seed, said that
A. and M College, ip a discussion
tests had shown that innoculation,
and the use of phosphate greatly
increased yield of clover. He recom-
mended a double crop, with the
second crop turned under.
John Faught, chairman of the
Denton-Wise Boll Conservation Dis-
trict, which sponsored the "Legume
Day," presented certificates won in
a recent conservation contest con-
duced by the Port Worth Press
Certificates were awarded to 15
cooperators of the district for hav-
ing the most up-to-date complete
soil and water conservation pro-
gram.
Fortenberry was awarded a spe-
cial plaque from the Fort Worth
Lions Club as the most outstanding
farmer in the Denton-Wise Dis-
trict in soil conservation work.
Certificates were presented to:
Fortenberry. BUI Jemlgan of De-
catur, A. B. Van Meter of Rhome,
Mrs. J. H. Hilton of Decatur, Joe
Thurmond of Rhome, Raymond
Boemer of Pilot Point, Rudolph
Schluter of Argyle, Joe Strittmat-
ter of Pilot Point. Clarence Mat-
thews of Frisco, H. O. Brown of
Denton, T. W. King, Jr , of Roanoke.
,K. K. Meisenbach of Lake Dallas
and Lee Massey of Light Brothers
Ranch al Pilot* Point.
| r .
jjgfc VIOLET DORRIS, 0 D.
Ar • -Y ':L Y-Li , . . -
Visual Training and Examination For Glasses
FhMtll
liati* of Madrid sweet elover
i money crop through sale of
J and as a soil builder, pasture
i and bay producer was reoom-
MJed to 500 Twu fanners and
in a “Legume
here Thursday.
HEART ATTACK FATAL
TO SANGER RESIDENT
SANGER, July 19—W. H. Cearley,
60. died at 9 p. m Wednesday at
His home here following a heart
attack. He recently had undergone
a major operation.
Survivors include his widow and
three sons, A. R. Cearley and Mar-
shall Cearley of Fort Worth and
J. B. Cearley of Houston; three
daughters, Mrs. Ruth Meaders and
Miss Ruby Jo Cearley of Fort
Worth and Mrs. Willie Pearl Mor-
ris of Dos Palos, Calif ; and 10
grandchildren.
Funeral services wfll be held at
2 p. m. Saturday at the First Bap-
tist Church here, with the Rev.
L. C. Green, pastor, officiating, as-
sisted by the Rev. Fred Broyles
and the Rev. C C. Richard-
son. Interment wlU be In the Sang-
er cemetery.
4 Glvee your tin a thick, naw
I Goodyear tread for thousand*
of extra, safe miles. m
a aaw Ural aeo«i4
AUSTIN. July 10—(/FT— Texas
will join six other states In a freight
rate conference at Chicago prepara-
tory to an Interstate Commerce
Commission freight rate hearing
there July 22.
Assistant Attorney General James
D Smullen, acting head of the at-
torney general department’s oil, gas
and -rate division, will leave Friday
for the Chicago meeting. Other
states which will be represented
include Kansas, Oklahoma. Arkan-
sas, Nebraska, North Dakota and
South Dakota.
The ICC’s Chicago hearing Is the
first of a series to be held through-
out the country in connection with
the American railroads’ petition for
a 25 per cent increase In rates.
TSCW swimming classes for chil-
dren will be held on Tuesday and
Friday afterneons. Swimmers’ class-
es from 1 to 2 p. m.; non-swim-
m«n from 3:1$ to 4:15 p. m. Health
certificate from family physician
required. Fee for six weeks, $3.M,
to be paid upon registration at
gymnasium. Includes use of out-
door pooL
Signed.
W. M. LOVELESS,
TSCW Business Manager.
July 17, 18 19 and 21
County’s Best Cash Crop
that because the Houston area was
not suited to seed production, farm-
ers there were in the market for
seed and he was ready to buy
large amounts
"You still have lots of ’agricul-
tural Hums' in North Texas," Daw-
eon commented in urging eoil im-
provement and continued, “The big-
gest factory you hove. Is the soil. If
handled right, clover can tnake a
cash crop as weU as saving the
land for other crops.” <
In a discussion before he intro-
duced other speakers, County
Agent XL R^ Warren said the Ma-
drid clover was making money for
fanners in four ways as: a soil
builder, a nearly year round pas-
ture crop, a hay producer nearly
equal to alfalfa and a splendid
seed cash prop.
Certification on LegumM
R. B. Miller of Texas A. and M.
Extension Service discussed state
certification now being done on
legumes and other crops Including
83 varieties of 15 fipld crops. He
listed six requirements for certifi-
cation of clover seed: foundation
seed must be from a known source;
it must be 1400 feet from any other
clover; land must be clean and
free from clover for past five yean;
land must be rowed to remove off-
typc plants and free from weeds;
seed must germinate and be clean,
grower must give it his personal
attention.
A. T. Fortenberry of the Green-
wood community told of his ex-
perience with Madrid sweet clover
I from which he received $156 per
4'MRMI VRBJ no(MCD-cn<MMa»« mat. Mr ». wtt ■
farmers Told Madrid Clover
j < Ta /i__me —
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13
'He says hero: *Btepp
KXIZKD VITAMIN D
DENTON TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE
S. Sd.e Square Office-Outfitters Phone No. 821
Texarfs Drainfog
MONEY TO LOAN
■V" To Salaried People
For Paying Bills or Many Other Worthy Needs
EMPIA)YEE’S FINANCE COMI’ANY
Phone m First door south Denton Hoepitai W! B. UMJe*
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 289, Ed. 1 Friday, July 19, 1946, newspaper, July 19, 1946; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1336018/m1/4/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.