Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 43, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 25, 1957 Page: 7 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 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:
■ r
I
PROLIFIC PRGMCER--
77777
Popular In Area Thursday
8
*
comparatively 1
Clover has beet
new
The county committoe. with as-
etnnAA feAu. Aaa DviawctAu
7
9
AV
U
waterway.
122 E. McKinney
. DU2-2723
Two Herds
him beginning at 10 a.m.
Lead Tests
2
KRLD-TV Channel 4»
6
T9
1
1
t
I I
4
t
4'
V
I
Jewel Mara, -Decatur.
vers and alfalfa. Seeding rates are
HIRED HAND
First State
Bank
Of Denton
. Member F. D I. C.
WBAPTV (Cbannel 5»
A
i
*
t
1:00. Matinee Theatre
I
I
• "*
Mel
WVAATV (Cbannel 8)
1111
Li
da
Perted Ftting
Radio Service Center
13-39-0; 16-200; 12-24-12
Ph. -6021
225
1
i
KJZTV (Channel in
*
avallable.
A
e}:
s
Theter
5821
233 W. Hickory
01
4-
1
)
e 2
Ai
relief
of
WHITE INAMILID
BATHROOM HEATER
RECORD TURKEY
CROP FORESEEN +
MOST COMPLETE TELEVISION
SERVICE IN THE SOUTHWEST
Present members of the county
committee are R. C. McCormick..
12.30
1:00
. 11:00
U;M
Rutton also responds well to su-
per phosphate fertilizer. Planting
methods are similar to other do-
Heading un the herd average
figures in July were the 33-cow
registered Jersey herd of Robert
Mote of Greenwood, and the 49-
cow registered Guernsey herd of
10:30 It Could Be You
11:00 Kitty's' Wonderland
11:45 Margaret McDonald
V
13:00
13:30
Safti-Wall
HEATERS
1
practices which will be among the
cost - sharing program, also.
The Thursday meeting will be
The onl
fall is I
LOOK AT
THESE VALU
hb9
hi
A&M
the
U1
in
I
BUDGET
TERMS
\
20,000 BTU
Beauty bonded golden
brown long lasting finish.
Rust proof stool louvers.
Cost iron Burner with raised
ports. Chromo steel hearth
plate. Smartly styled. Priced
to give "More-value-per-
dollar" in heating economy.
7:00
0:00
0:30
0:00
0:30
10:00
26,000 BTU
S-Rediants, 11%*
wide. Full 12" depth.
Miles
or
TALIAFE
"Ask Abad*
209 N. kocust "
I Sa
2
THUKSDAY
Sunup ■
Arlene Francis Show
Treasure Runt
The price is Right
Truth or Consequences
Tie Tae Dough
1
0:30
Foz Show- 7300
Tree
Delivery
pounds or more butterfat during
July, and in June, two cows pro-
duced 84pounds of the profit-mak-
MATHIESON
High Analysis- Plletized
AMMO-PHOS
FERTILIZERS
IV/0N7EW7
High Noon News
Bride and Groom
ily show ( ______
the State Fair in Dallas
BETTER PLANTING
One of the better planting in the
inauleted "Bemle-well."
Cebinete stay eeel, vefe.
guerding ehildren end
uvnishings. Yee SAVE
MOSS el Bebcedk's lew
pelees.
Kitty's Wonderland
Margaret McDonald
High Noon News
Bride St Groom
9:00 Roller Deri
11,00 Starlight 1
2:00
2:45
3:00
3 30
5:40
5:45
6:00
Queen for A Day
Modern Romances
Comedy Time
Channel 3 Movie Club
News and Weather
NBC News
Last of the Mohicans
1 1,000 BTU
3-Radiants, golden
brown finish.
mse"A
222
8:20
0:00
3:30
10:00
10:13
10:23
10:80
10:40
10:55
11:00
A good time to kill quackgrass
spots in fields in while summer-
fallow is in progress. A new chem-
ical week killer, Dalapon, is ef-
fective.
Lux
Jane Wyman Show
You Bet Tour Life
Dragnet
Texas News
Weather Telefnets
News Final
World of sporta
National News
Weather
Tonight
$575
____ Matinee Tissue
3-00 Queen For a Day
WEDNESDAY
7:00 Sunup
3:00 Arlene Francis
3:30 Treasure Hunt
$108
188
FOR BITTER
BIDDING BUYS!
Shop MAGNOLIA
in Denton
10 30
11.-00
11145
13:00
trict here associate with button
clover, a prolific seeder nd for-
ago producer.
3:30 Tic Pac Dough
7 00 People's Choice
7:30 Tennessee Ernie Ford Show
ferine Pride which began her of-
ficial herd - improvement registry
test at the age of 4 years and 4
months. The production was for
a BM - day period.
Five other cows in the Faultless
herd were cited by the American
Jersey Cattle Club for meritorious
production records completed dur-
ing the past two months. The tests
Wedmesday, September U, 1957
------------------
p“ THERMOSTATS
Ow wharmostet meet to em epeeiNte-
8:30 ity"Detectzve,
• oo Command Pertormance
Beauty and quality make
Babcock Bros. Auto Seat
Covers unbeatable in
value I Newest designs
for late model cars. er-
feet Atting, triple stitched
for long weor •
vnu
NNSTALLATION
4X
AE
,2
19
Faultless Jersey
Sets New Record
■ . ndtn e
19 RADIO SHOP
ir 3udget Repair Terms"
Dial DU2-7915
“Button provides a protective
ground cover during a period when
heavy rains are most likely to fall,
and it affords grazing in fall and
winter, with its rapid growth and
forage production coming early in
the spring when winter grain
pastures should be opened for
grain production," he continued.
9:00 The Price to Right
' 9:30 Truth or Consequences
10100 TW Tae Duurt------
---- It «ouid Be You
Legumes S Grain
13-39-0
PLANT VETCH NOW
*3”.
WEDNESDAI
CB8-TV News
Capt. Kangaroo
CB5-TV New*
KRLb-TV News
Garry Moore Show
Arthur Godfrey
Strike tt Rich
Hotel Cosmopolitan
Love Of Ufe
Search For Tomorrow
its reseeding habit. Button clover
broadens the choice of a winter
cover crop for this area. noted
Cliff Powell, work unit conserva-
tionist for the district in Decatur.
4-Radiants,
4954
EN X-656
cSolss
weatR
Mara's herd averaged 700 10 pounds per acre,
pounds per cow on test, with 4 1''-- " - ■ —=
MATHES
Year Around Air-Conditioning
R-C Wise County Bureau
DECATUR-Two herds in the
Wise County Dairy zHerd im-
provement Assn, averaged 30
)
_
.. Delegates from Denton County’s
22 ASC communities meet in Den-
on City Hall Thursday morning
to name members of the all-im-
portant county ACS committee.
The county committee adminis-
ters federal funds available for
cost • sharing conaervation prac-
tices approved for assistance by
the state and federal ASC pro-
grams.
ed County Agent Paul Tapp.
"And there has been a lot of
culling since the DHIA program
was started here several months
ago," he added. "The records af-
forded by the testing program pin-
point the poor doers and actually
brag on the better milk and but-
terfat producers."
8:00
8:30
9:30
1000
10:15
10:30 -______
10:45 Guiding Lght
11:00 News
y® HEATER
HOU
Avole neobelere w
raNi Men fee BeOfc , —
« ten end Meera*.
butterfat percent. Mote’s herd of
Jerseys averaged 640 pounds of
milk per cow, and 33.7 pounds
butterfat from a 5.2 percentage
Highest producing cow was a
Jersey, owned by Billy Joe Shep-
herd of Vineyard, which produced
1,330 pounds milk with 68 pounds
butterfat.
In June, one of Mote's Jerseys
tied with a Holstein of L.D. Winn.
Sunset, for the 84-pound butterfat
production high. Mote's Jersey
I produced 1,520 pounds milk, and
i Winn a Holstein milked 2,010
pounds.
____ SALIX » SERViCR------
Love & Taliaferro TV
RADIO • TELEVISION REFAIR
la Rear Taliaferro Hardware 1 _
North Side of Square Phone C-4812
Shorthorn Men
To Conduct Sale
Here In October
Southwestern Milking Shorthorn
Breeder's Assn, has scheduled its
fall sale for Denton Oct. 15.
The sale, which will include 30
head of some of the association’s
top bulls and females, will be held
et the Denton Fair Grounds live-
stock barn at 1 p.m. that date,
reports Jack Armstrong of Bolivar
secret nry-treasurer.
Auctioneer will be Roy Paull,
Broken Arrow, Okla., and H. K.
Armstrong, Bolfvar, will be sale
manager. C. L. Haggard of Plano
is association president. Animals
will be consigned by 10 breeders
Only On The
HEW SUPER HORIZONTAL CHASSIS t1
with Extended Band Video Amplifer-llows up te II •K
350,000 If NM
th. TV ecreen for greatef picturs detail, derth, realiem I' a-M
enan ordinary narrow band TV receivers. Has 18,000 NFEE
volte of picture power. AHLI U
*2475.5
strutted on Mrs. J. T. Mantooth's
farm west of Blue Ridge, a farm K11H -
pond on Ray Sudderth’s farm at “ buruen
-idouuuuuuu
e $4
T. Boyd, Lewisville; C. C. Gerd,
ing, Lake Dallas; J. F. Bradford,
Double Oak; James Faught, Ar-
gyle; W. L. Dunham, Roanoke:
Ellis Webb.’ Justin: A. E. Ander-
son. Ponder: Bill Holland; Krum:
Jack Holland, Plainview; W. G.
Waide, Bolivar; Huston Higgs.
Sanger; Sam Bingham, Green Val-
ley: Jack Stuart, East Denton, and
Eddie Williams, Denton.
Although a
MlEz*e. .
I.w®
w a JI B-*- . 1
R-C Wise County Bureau
DECATUR - Ute fall and
early spring grazing — and lutz
of it in -most cases — are the
terms cooperator* with the Den
ton - Wise Soil Conservation Dis-
By Nerris Jackson, Record-Chronicle Farm Editor
-----------------------=
Service, Soil Conservation Service
and other farm agency personnel
make recommendations for. the
more water conservation pro-
grams such as that in operation
on the East Fork of the Trinity
where upstream detention sFuc-
ture prevent erosion to farmlands
3:46 Modern Romano**
3 oo Comedy Time
3:30 Channel 8 Movie
8:40 News at Weather
5:45 NBC News
6 00 Cartoon Theatre
8:30 All-Star Theatre
7:00 Kraft TV Theatre
8 00 Thia Is Your Life
8:30 Wagon Train
8:30 Father Knows Best
10:00 Texas News
10:18 Weather Telefacta
10 28 Sou th wee t Newt
10:30 World of Sports
10:40 National New*
10:53 National Weather
11900 Tonight
Waterways have been shaped
and a seedbed prepared on the
following farms Connie Hollis at
Leonard, and H. M. Pruitt and
W. A. Childress, south of Nobility.
Others having seedbeds prepared
on waterways are Taylor P. Wil-
liams, watt of Blue Bidge, D Da-
vis of Leonard andB.0. Jones
farm northwest of Pike. —■
Other conservation activities in-
clude 1.2 miles of terraces con-
ful with the clover on Grand Prai-
rie upland apd bottomland soils.
"I only planted a small area to
begin with, and now I’m getting
it all over the place.
. "Some of the seed were baled
in Johnsongrass hay, and this
started it in pasture. I also think
the cows spread it. It seems to
me that Button clover affords
On Mr*. Jim Lewis' farm, west+
of Blue Ridge, two waterways
have been shaped and a drop
structure installed. The water-
waya, when sodded, will handle
—L-t
8:45 Doug Edwards and the
News
8 00 Weather
6110 Sports
8:15 rhe World Today
3:30 Sgt. Preston Or ukon
■ 7:00 H*rbourma>t*r
7:30 Playhouse BO
9:00 Parade of Stare
e :30 Climax
10:30 News and Weather
10:35 Nighttime Movie
13:00 News
more grazing than any clover I waus mo-
have used, and it’s by far more sistance from Texas Extension
prolific," noted Haynes. F ‘ —
- 2
11:15 Fashions fh Fares
11:30 As The World Turns
13:00 Beat The Clock
12:30 House Party
1:00 Big Payoff
1:30 The Verdict Is Yours,
2:00 Brighter Day
2:15 Secret Storm
2 :30 Edge Of Night
3:00 Jimmy Dean Show
8:30 Herald Playhouse
4 00 Racket Squad
4:30 The Hunter
5:00 Willy
5 30 Cartoons
8:45 Doug Edwards * News
3:00 Weather
8:10 Sports
3:18 The World Today
6:30 I Love Lucy
7:00 The Munonatre
7:80 I've Got A Szoret '
8:00 U.S. Stelxur
9:00 The Bigkecord
10:00 .Spotligt Playhouse
10:80 News and Weather
10:88 Western Theatre
11:45 News -
County ASC
Button Clover Is Panel Vote .
EMeiem gos-seving burn-
•n, inatant heat ra the
task
WBDNBSDAY
12:00 Oartoon Clubhouse
19 30 Million Dollar Matinee
SAS Ann Alden
3:00 Amro 'n Andy
330 Range Rider
4190 Qen Autry
8:00 artoon cubhouse
9100 Soldier* oT Fortune
■ •
Area is on a deep sandy hillside
field on Kyle Riddle’s .farm a mile
north of the Haynes farm, held in Denton's city hall auditor-
' Standing in a knee • deep growth *— --------
of Button clover and oats on ths
Asneezing
_ r hoy fever
DH.GuudsGranMontain8: 20311103
0
mnAvnesou t
! AMMO-PWOS !$
high analysis : 4
pelletized fertilizers S
terrace water off of approximate- - v
ly 80 acres of cultivated land. The1 here, Button Cover has been re-
structure was instilled to stabil- ! lied upon as a dependable soil Am;
ize the lower end of the main proving winter cover for cropland
. and a valuable supplement to win-
Structures have also been in- ter grazing on sod grass pastures
stalled on Mrs. Louise Runkles' in other areas for many years.
farm east of Blue Ridge and N. T.) C. E. Haynes has been success-
Lawler's farm soutir of Nobility to I
stop gullies from cutting back in-
to waterways.
- "..............—~i
WEDNESDAV
6.53 Moruing Devotional —
' 7 00 Today A
8:00 Trouble With Father •
8:30 Meet Corliss Archer
SAO Romper Room
10:00 Your Own Hom*
10 14 Beauty School __;
10:30 Juli* Benell
11:00 Bust*
11:30 Mr. DA.
12:00 Midday Weather
12:05 Midday Newa
13:10 Showtime Matinee
3:00 American Bandstand
4 30 Topper
5:06 mikey Mouse
3 00 Weather
6:05 News
3:13 John Daly and th* News
8:30 Disneyland
9:30 Navy Los
8:00 WadMaday Night Fights
8:45 Locker Room
SAO Omi* and Harlet
3:30 Moment of Deciaton
10 AO News
10:15 Weather
10:25 Sporta
10:30 Man of Annapolis
11 00 Oangbusters
11 ISO Lone Wolf
THURSDAY
3:45 CBS TV News
7:00 Oapl. Kangaroo -------
7:45 CBS-TV N«w*
7:55 KRLD-TV News
8:00 Garry Moore Show
8:30 Arthur Godfrey Show
9:80 strike It Rich
: 10:00 Hotel Cosmopolitan
10:15 Love oi Life
10 *0 Search For Tomorrow
10:45 Guiding Light
11:00 Newt
11:15 Andre’s Fashion Guide
11:80 Aa The World Turn*
13:00 Beat the Clock F
13 30 House Party
1:00 The Big Payoff
A 1:30 The Verdict la Your*
Farm Page
"A Record-Chronicle Wednesday Feature '
DENTON Tt^RD-CHR^
next month.
PEANUT BAGS
Peanut growers are reminded
again that in order to be eligible
for price supports, the peanuts
must be stored in specific type
bags.
Reason for the stringent bagging
requirements is that the CCC has
experienced waste and loss from
torn bags—not to mention more
extreme losses caused by the non-
producer—problems in handling
and stacking in the warehouse,
and difficulty in meeting sanitat-
ion requirements of the pure food
and drug people.
These are the bag requirements
for the 1957 crop:
' Mesh or net type bags are not
eligible; the bags shall be made
of material weighing not less than
7% ounces nor more than 10 oun-
ces per square yard and contain
no sisal fibers; uniform size bags
with approximately two bushel
capacity; and the bags’ shall be
new or thoroughly cleaned used
bags, free from holes and finished
at the top with either the selvage
edge of the material, binding or
hem. «
You figure it out.•
a 3:00 Brighter Dey
3:15 Secret Storm
3 30 Edge Of Night
3 00 Jimmy Dean Show
8:80 Herald Play house
4:00 Racket Squad
4 130 The Hunter
SAO Willy
5:30 Cartoons
"Owners of those herd. are' . Sinceit is)widely adapted to var
emphatic when the time comes : 10us soi .NPes and persistent in
to decide which animals should {
be kept in their herds." comment-
er's noted
The Armstrong's not only skip-
ped the major shows, but skipped _ ____________
the Denton County Fair as well. were made by the Texas
they’ll make thisGellege in cooperation with
" " “ । breeder's organization.
farm near Sweetwater Church,
Henley Cassity commented "the
original clover planting here was
made three years ago — this I'm
in now is a volunteer crop."
Fall showers have been bring-
ing up a crop of Button clover each
year for three years on a 30-acre
Grand Prairie field on George C.
Young'i farm in the Sycamore
community. 'I don't bother about
it any more." he observed. "If
the rains come, the clover is
there."
THURSDAY
•AS Moraing Devotional
7 00 Tody
8:00 Trouble With Father
8:30 Meet Corlias Archer
3:00 Romper Room
10 AO Life With Elizabeth
10:30 Julie Benell
11 oo Susie
11:80 Mr. D. A.
n 13 AO Midday Weather
E 13:05 Midday News
13:10 Showtime Matinee
3 AO America's Bandstand
4:30 Topper
5:00 Mikey Mouse
8 00 Weather
6:05 News
•:U News with John Daly
3:30 Circus Boy
7:00 Action Theatre
3:00 Theatre Time
3:30 O. «. 8.
3:80 Sheriff of Cochise
10:00 News
10:18 Weather
10:38 Sports
10 30 captain David Grief
11:00 Mark Saber
11 AO The Lone Wolf
It appears that total turkey pro-
duction in 1857 will be larger than
in 1388, setting a new record. Also
pointing to the producer's plight
is the large carryover of storage
stocks from last year
Brtghtest point thus far is that
more turkeys are being marketed
earlier thia year and should help
reduce the number available for
the fall market. It'll help strength-
on the fall market, too, but the
price will Mill be below last year's
going quotes.
- The reduction of the turkey
hatch during the closing months
of the present hatching season has
helped to reduce the apparent ex-
tremely large increase that was
indicated earlier in the year. Nev-
ertheless, turkey producers in the
nation are raising about 5 per cent
more turkeys this year than last,
and Texas producers have in-
creased their numbers by six per
cent.
Because of the hold - over from
last year's crop and because a
large number of early turkeys
have been slaughtered this year,
storage holdings are larger — up
as much as 158 per cent.
Turkey prices during the first
half of 1*57 averaged some 15 per
cent below the same feed period
in IBM, while food prices increas-
ed era per cent above last year.
Best bet for coming out on flocks
this year is selling lighter - weight
but well Dnished turkeyg The cost
of feed is great for putting an ex-
tra pound of weight on a bronze
hen weighing 14 pound* or a tom
weighing 26 pounds.
EMANCIPATION
A Rockwall banker, J. O. Wal-
lace, is another in the growing list
of proponents for emancipating the
bl Ackland farmer from cotton.
A long - time leader in the black-
lands and East Texas agriculture,
Wallace told the Fort Worth Farm
and Ranch Club this week "When
history is written for these past 50
years, it will go down as the rise
and fall of King Cotton, and I am
glad of it."
New crops, more widespread
use of legumes and soil building
plants — especially the now crop
angle — were a couple of the
more important means of increas-
ing farm income in the blacklands
to replace cotton .losses.
Wallace also got in a plug for
RYAN BROS. PILUMBIN
IRRIGATION AIDS PEANUTS .
One irrigation made the difference in a plot of peanuts
on the Albert Duesman farm at Pilot Point this sum-
mer. Peanuts at right received one heavy irrigation
in August, and developed for peanuts and foliage than
unirrigated bunch on the left. Duesman estimated
that the irrigated peanuts would yield 50 to 60 bushels
an acre, more than double that of the unwatered bunch.
The two plants were grown in Duesman’s family gar-
den. (Record-Chronicle Staff Photo).
1 4 A
Little Elm. chairman, Edgar
Lynch, Krum, vice chairman; and
Frank Pelzel, Pilot Point, mem-
ber. Alternate members are T. E.
Noles, Navo, and Aaron Yeatts,
Sanger.
Delegates to the county conven-
tion will be chairmen of the Com-
munity cemmitties, and will In-
clude Leonard Berend, Pilot
Point: Raymond Huddleston, Mus-
tang; Emory Knapp, Navo: Char-
lie Redfearn, Aubrey; Perman
Smith, Cross. Roads; Bruce Coul-
ter. Little Elm; J. W. Mays, Lake
Carney.
Morris G. Lord, Hebron; Almon
Page Seveh
Conservation----
Work Increases
• InCollin Area
FARMERSVILLE -. Even
though the harves of, corn and
cotton is three weeks to e month
later than normal in the Farmers-
ville, area of the Collin Soil Con-
servatlon. District, conservation
practices"uch as terracing, water-
way shaping, and seedbed prepar-
ation are getting off to a good 1
•tart.
TEI EVISION SCHEDULES
As announced by teleyinion statlona. Subject to change.
VISIT OUR
SHOWROOM OR CALL
MAGNOLIA BEDDING
COMPANY
git Daita* Dr. 012^833
Bignthz, Theatre .
13AO carEoon luhou..
1380 Muon Dollar Malnee
2:48 Ana Alden —
IS 2,
4100 Roy Kogers
2:08 Soasoa Swphoum. -
A record of 9,393 pounds milk
with 567 pounds fat has been re-
ported for a registered wersey
cow owned by Faultleks" Jersey
Farm at Denton.
The record was made on Aim
। and eliminates disastrous losses
through flooding. 1 - _
VACATION TIME
For the first time in 10 years,
Bolivar'* H K. and Jack Arm-
strong are not making the major
southwestern fair circuit this year.
"It's a chore to groom an entry
list, get them to the show, stny
with them and then show them in
a ring for a couple month's run-
ning," the father side of the lath-
er-son Milking Shorthorn breed-
• • . .,1
HARPOOL'S .*£
420 1. MeKinney DU2-2568 '
The uniformplant feed tontent
In ecch pellet is completely
water soluble end readily
: 5
h,‛
-'T'"
.... ——G
\ ® ANTI.
\ FREEZE
et" Oe yeun new Per
monent Preatone
end ether brendn
. . > --iu
.
. ■ ________________________________________________________________________________________________
.............
wM-PUP QUALITY feren:
ra benuty, comfort end
worn $32.95
an SvuN sayom—newet
etyle end design. $2493
CUSTOM SARAN teps to
pleutie seet cverL $18.88
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.
Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 43, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 25, 1957, newspaper, September 25, 1957; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1450035/m1/7/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.