Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 153, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 28, 1959 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:
K 1
(
+
T
HIRED
HAND
3.90 3.00
1
A Record-Chronicle Wednesday Feature --
16.75 • 3.47
T
1.60 . 1.69
Wednesday, January 28, 1959
.10 , J oo
34.59* 22.78"
28.41
E.
VI MT VKDER'
Grain Mites
Rains Below
On Increase
I
Over Region
ther recorder for Denton Coun- • ologist
Experiment
DU2-6431
603 1. McKINNEY
LOVE & TALIAFERRO TV •
Cut For
REPAIR
SERVICB
DU2-4813
Nerth Side of Square
M.I
,4
P.M.
7
Mewa,Weathu WW IM Wickok
Thee Steoges
4
Center of Maple 8 Myrtle
BePent Shew "What Bat Mesteree
lYowLife
ket at $28.50 cwt, ayer
11*1
SALE!
ood
ClmlMt Amery, "atina, pinsi
Deugls
0‘Kefe
N
THVRSDAVS EARLY SLATE
AM.
AU
today
’1OO
WOOL
Into* fees
KNIT
"Vennf
SUITS
re
Ohannefs
Wear For
Sv
1
Months and
• I
Months to
I
Qcefra Day Boat ne Clock
Coynty telr
Come
wheDvv Tvuah
“r
Migb• <
MovlomIte Eim Mniti Bordar
l
• CRAY • BLACK
#
h
k
ON ALL VALENTINE CARDS
row nomas no nmm with
NEW
TABLETV
N,
The VANITY SHOP
DU2-7915
I
t
A
VA
f
T
2
-t
—
-a
in the LARRO FEED,
L
Kia!
TV
F;
SERVIE
! ‘1,
America's No.
\
SPECIAL' MAP TO
ASSIST HUNTERS
hemplee
Wraskdewn
• RED • BLUE
. • BEIGE and PINK
UN
asun
Morteg
het e Hight
Milan lal
The program will be one of the
first complete poultry discussions
to come before organization mem
Surprise your hungry herd
with these tempting taste
delights. Recipes are in the
Cookbook section of the
BUS W
odna
uartered at Denton
station, termed the
•M Cemuvy* Meeh
IWT, te cel-
ter
Normal In
Past Year
1953
—34
1.07
IN
°4.59
4.73
2.09
1 47 , .» 4.69
1.83 1 1.60 12.18
“monst"pide"diank
Jlmmy Daree
weskangns
Adlinture nme
Peter Lind Mey
Up only SMo
Channet e
ty, showed a total 28.41 Inches
for the year, only 1.31 inches
below the average year's re-
ceipt for two score years.
, The region's last good gen-
eral rain came in September,
when total receipts amounted
to 1M inches
Only half inch rains were
noted during October. Novem-
ber. and December, with two
of them coming in November,
IFortunately, the low rain-
fall may have saved many win-
ter grain fields from severe
ireezes during early January.
Only minor damage was done
to eat crops, which observers
say may have been the result
TTacbouph,
n Coula as to
wAT
use
2w a
B
H
$17,000 Farm Kitchen I
Recipe Round-Up ’
8.84
.02
«
373
3.21
6.74
117
M41
to.fr to*
Wemsur Wue
mng
coneontvatioa
JACK HODGES
Back of Port Office
DU2.6224
By NORRIS JACKSON
Recerd-Chroniele Faras Editor
wAN.
Chamnr,e
1951
SL
2.29
81
1.62
3.54
5.82
For The Bett Trade In Town -
TALIAFERRO'S RADIO SHOP
IB
in
0 00
2,16
2.97
248
271
5,97
»a
wapW
nag
Chenn *
Centinental Clast-
NOW
Mwi a»
FIRST ASSEMBLY
OF GOD
Pagt Seven
— ■■■ ■ । as
WVAA-T
sac
Chanet a
Cto- urn •
torn
■ •
Mevimm
Toss An Dewaben
1948
—56-
4.86
. .70
64
4.20
2.81
2.30-
.11
lit.
133
45
31
19.77
i were Floyd Coop-
whose arm is approximately
3 miles southwest of Snow Hill;
2.35
IN
mt
—54-
305
3 41
Mt
w
Quality I
aey Farm.
The annual membership session
will be held in Decatur March 19,
and the annual heifer sale will be
Carteems
Nem
Cqot. Iwmns ~
to witlams
awe
to lew »
Agatt
Arthur Godfry
Angurvtp"
1 -
4 too tew'
Teg Belle
kvow
towL ughe
chamne a'
•to Mealy shew
Phy Teur Munch
UtoM '
Ou Mina ereeka
bayicwwm
Musk Bing
1949
-4.95
334
2.75
•2
7.50
13.85
3 44
3 41
4.87
4.99
0.00
1.22
40.87
M
2.49
ws".
32, L . 115
4.88
ata
1M
27
2.37
137
2 24
2.28
28 73
3,02
.85
1.53
stands a good chance of alleviating
much of the complaints agatnat
the organisation - sponsored wolf
trapping program in Denton Coun-
t.
A special map will be posted in
the courtouse showing farms
and. ranches on which the trap-
per is currently working, explain-
ed Secretary Hal Rylander. The
map will be kept up to date.
Owners of hounds for coon, fox
Oats are generally continuing in
good shape following the severs
Treeze, but Experiment Station
ASC Cash
Amount of milk sold to the
North Texas market during Decem-
ber continued to iacrease in com-
parison with the same period a
year ago
Likewise. the number of produc-
ers on the market dropped slight-
ly for the month.
Daily producer receipts of hand-
lent amounted to 2.345,848 pounds
during December more than nine
per cent greater than for Decem-
Family
Weekly
1950
4.54-
2.20
1.61
3M
6,41
5.80
2.36
in
I
i
Brighter Dey
Sechet ter
M tsibs tom
Westhr, tow
v Te
One of your recipes could win
tedo
tM*MM>'w«n>
Allc to Ln
I
nust
8
Ringham or Hal Rylander by Mon-
Scheduled for the program will
be an address by George H. Dra-
per, administrator,of the nalional
improvement turkey plan in Tex-
B
20% OFF
ae
1958
2.44
J1
6,15
—With Yeur
SUNDAY DINTON
RECORD. CHRONICLE
TO SUBSCRIBE
DIAL DU2-2551
__________t____________
NOTICE!
nugmzssses-aveneestoro
FARM VAMILIES ONLV ,.
held at the Wise County Sheriff's
- i arena in Decatur March 21. 1
events previously wege sched-
uled one week earlier.
1954
z lm
.20
.73
.2.73
383
3.11
1.68
in
1,83
307
.78
las
22 52
hound packs. The trapper distri-
butes strychnine baits in his pro-
gram of predator control and
The Denten Record-Chronlele Presents
TONIGHTS T.V. SCHEDULE
as to sun tow— aoNwq to Stows wamw swwm mam
4
:8a Movie
Movle: "Tonight and
Evevp-Mighe'
Aita Mavwerth,
to Wowman,
Shell Wipten
Mevie
Taka to
Aso Atto
a be—a Aaam
• mevvvew -vem
*
Roy Rogers
Aston amacostelli
Garly saw
mvni.
H!
#
i
"RED” FOLEY WANTS to give Ms check
- for $100 to every U.S. farmer who takes part in the big
“Red" Foley $100 Cash Award offer. Every farmer
who buys s new Ferguson 35 tractor will receive a
| chock signed by “Rod" Foley for $100.
HARPER SINCLAIR TRACTOR CO.
0u.•
<>i wl 4
Hov,weashu
a... udwards Mewa
T*to nwet
-
F
tow toss
Moyla to Wera,
Stow Mw"e
Movin ' ’
Nw Vto Seto
dqntiel
Navies to Davi
And Mis Jomes"
Ito cumminge,
Chavles Coburn T.
Ito Mavin Sea
Bele
Radio . Televislon e Record Flayer
REPAIR SERVICE
M. D. Love • Reb Law — Serviceme
in Rear Tallaferre Hardware
r
INTEREST GROWS
d-
He's a new member of the Ameri-
can Angus Assn
He made the leap when he regis-
tered some heifers he wanted to
$32.50 Valuta $e (95
WOOL KNITS........ NOW ••
The winter grain mite, helped
along by near-ideal weather con-
ditions last fall, is beginning to
rear its ugly head in grain fields
throughout North Texas
Dr,-H., Chada, SDA entom-
712 South Elm
.........■■■■—■
showing last u...
able to harvest enough roots' this
Jake Kemp. Snow Hill; Joseph C.
Reichert. Pike; and Martha Lor-
ance, Farmersville. A pond' for
livestock water supply was com-
pleted by J. L. Uland on his farm
northeast of Farmersville.
Planning and application of ero-
sion .control measures such as wa-
sear and may be
FT . 0,
Kz• toMfSt.
Mavin: Whom
w Ito coneurm.**
SorM Wiven
Ito to ,
dnna.n-
Gvn cis
—7.
Q
-*
of lew moisture reserves in
the renting areas
Farmers now are searching
for rains to build up reserves
and to make way for spring
planting Rains also are need
ed to help push winter grains
to maturity during the final
two tq three months of growth,
’•to- —------------------------- ’
Total rainfall in Denton
' County during 1938 fell slight- ■ ‘
ly below normal, the result of
three consecutive months of
subnormal receipts the last 1
three months of the’ year.
Figures of the Denton Experi-
mom Station, official U.S. Woo-
REVIVAL
JAN. 28
TO
FEB. 8
Service
Each
Night
Stray-
____At.7:45
. A. I BUD
McCANN
Collin Cooperators Complete i
Planned Work At Year’s End' CASHAWARD
—--s
DENTON record-chromcie
'N—thor conditions last fall
keep for replacements, and found
thaf a member could get the job
done cheaper in the long run All
of his breeding herd is registered,
and all replacements have pa-
________ ...
RADIO SERVICE CENTER
Denton’s New Vranehised Deale
ALL PHIL CO PRODUCT
ORrtrtgenion CAN Conditlener
T.V. WASHERSLRYERS
and wolf hunting long have com-
plained long and loud against the
trapper’s agtivities, mostly from
I the danger that exists for their
less control measures are pushed ‘
into use.
I
i
DU2-4914 N
bottoms have accounted for most
of the Coastal Bermuda produe-
tion in the Decatur area, but re
cently has shownpromise of good
forage production Jon. some cl the
upper stopes, the technician con-
tinued.
As a conservation grass. Coastal
makes a" lush growth and dense
sod protecting critical areas from
erosion.
bar a year ago. The increase was
nesligible. F----'------’—
) Jmmy’vian show
I Mouw Panty
r ligvyw
vwto is Youn
Wise Cooperators
Turn To Coastal
- - - ■ ■ ■ ■
COMB IN PON AM. THE PNIM-WINNSNO FACTS,
CASH IN ON VOUR coowie.-.eET VOUR
OFFICIAL ENTRV BLANK AT OUR IVORS.NOW’
SNOW'S FEED STORE
••to Wto
______,
Wto Ato. Robent wo Sten
each They had been
since October.
a major cause of the infestation.
Mite eggs go through the summer
and hatch with good moisture
vontactehe explained
Chada recommended sprays of
parathion or one and a half to two
pints of malathion per acre as the
best recommended control meas-
ure
The mixture also is best for con-
roi of greenbugs which thus far
have been limited to localized in-
festations. For the greenbug,
Chada recommended waiting for
a day with little wind and when
temperatures are above 50 deg-
rees for best application results
on the greenbug.
Farmersville work unit area who1 Charles E. Ayers. Trenton .
scheduled permanent practices in I A diversion terrace and drop Irv
1958 were able to complete them 1 let structure were constructed by
before a Dec. 31 deadline Guy Spruill, west of Farmersville.
Other cooperators who built drop
"teto AC
-g2
6-
"Surgpise I/
DECATUR (Stat - Neighbor-
ing areas have stolen the march on
planting Coastal Bermuda grass
in pasture improvement efforts,
but cooperators within the Deca
tur work umitot the Denton-Wise
Soil Conservation Distriet are fast
catching up.
Jeff Hollingsworth, Soil Con-
servation Service technician work-
ing with the district in Decatur,
said •‘interest in the high protein
drought - resistant hybrid grows
each day aa sodding time draws
near."
Mart Frye of the Pella commun-
ity northeast of Alvord was among
the first to make a sizeable plant- i
ing of the new introduction. Hol-
lingsworth said. Some of his two-
year-old grass made a fairly good
with completions of practices bo- inlet structyres
• ing sandwiched between periods of er, whose arm
bad" weather. Soil Conservation
$29.00 Values $4 •95
WOOL KNITS........ NOW •4_
5
i
1 ■
pers
He doesn't especlally fit out
m • i res a bulls and heifers for sale as breed-
types of practices which will I On Houitry l rend ing stock, but he does get a cor
qualify for federal cost assistance, I • i tain amount of pleasure out of |
Taylor explained. However, rates GREEN VALLEY * Staff' 3 knowing his herd has proof of its; _ _ .____ ____
LOTiW nan cai eropLW.A,,iU* McCann,Evg
Each farm will have a limita. Green Valley next week for the does well, too. .This week threetr
tion of three practices with a 6200 first time in one of the organize- steers topped the Fort Worth mar-;
ceiling per practice However, if tion’s monthly educational meet- he "ete -ui- ....
a producer has more than one ' ings. , .
. - . . . ,___ farm, the state ‘limitatiom for all The session will be held at 7
. mz - in comparison farms for" the year is $1,500 in- pm Thursday in the community
to November stead of the $1000 limitation for building Women of the commun-
IBM he said. ity will serve the meal. Reser-
The funds will’ be dispersed on a vations should hegreceiyed by Tom
SvyWymann "
2:00 Knqusi" sithan Tis
2:12 Mekenna, Jamis
r 6,NAe
- Sreu
Milk Sales
Continue In
Small Rise
FARMERSVILLE (Staff —I terways were completed by Henry
Most of the Collin Soil Conserva- ■ Donaghey of Trenton; and, three
Farm Page
A comhinatton of tert rust and datldrrrortaigatsjersooda "AKd
Nah.wautuma reosis
M
Service technicians working with
the district reported
Terraces were completed bv W
P. Hickman, five miles southeast
of Farmersville; Archa Evens and
Bill Murphy farm near Leonard;
and F. N. (Jake) Kemp farm, 1
mile west of Snow Hill. These
were field terracesi on. cropland: , _
Waterway sodding was complet-
ed by J. E Shanks. Farmersville:
L. C. Myrick, Blue Ridge: two wa-
. THURS.-FRI.-SAT. ONLY
I
BROOKS' Drug Stores
a BROOKS DRUG STORE. 221W. Miekory, DU2-2565
a BROOKS PHARMACY Ne. 2 412 Normal DU2-6912
a BROOKS PHARMACY Ne. 3 533 Locust DU2-2300
tion District cooperators in the waterways wege completed by
infestation serious, especially in
grain produced under continuous
production of oats, wheat or bar-
ley
Rotated fields also are begin-
ning to show infestations, but not
as severely as the year-after-year
grain • .
Cold weather, which landed
a below-the-belt punch earlier this
month, haa given a big assist in
holding back development of the
mite, the entomologist said The
red-legged insect feeds mostly at
night, pointing to more damage
with arrival of warm weather un-
Agronomist James Gardenhire ex-
pressed concern over the large ,a.
number of fields that were corn-
pletely destroyed by the extreme , Roth e
ryv 2 g V A A M Most freeze damage, he explain- t -
i nis-1 NBW stum
. . . J I moisture has"been“short Denton County Judge W K Bal
An 813 788 reduction in funds my^f*
available to Denton County (arm- .1 ---5 EE— —■.1
£> andrancherntor,pppiying pnhtungatbeqardehashesomasaptet
XX SK . h 09' tr cos J5-
year nPe• ! ne S 04 Weatner naS elmnl-
’ ..k u — , - j .u nated the rust problem for the
Shirbey Taylor, manager of the time heing but the disease weaken-
Agricultural Stabilization Conser- i ed plants are more susceptible
■ ration office.—whieh edminisurs Mo extreme eoid___•E
the program, said total funds al-! —.......
lotted thus far this year amount r.‛ _
to 3110,000. Funds available for Livestock (Iroup
the program during 1958 were I
$128,700. Io Hear Reports
No chhge has beep made in the - 7Pn r
Wfrk w toafr>""
ip"uw
Itafe to RdSir
ton Then Atou
terways, drop inlet structures and
planting of pastures tosod-Torming
grasses are in season at this time
of year, technicians said.
DENTON COUNTY RAINFALL IN LAST 12 YEARS
Meath Norm, 1M7 1848 1848 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1935 1956 1957
Januar¥------2.04-----97-----S6----495----4.54------51-------54-----ius i m at J
February 108 .37 4.86 2 34 2.20 2 28 3 05 1.07 .20 1.76 2 30 3J7
March "* - - — - - "
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
TOTALS
The month was a busy one.
582077207
g-res-
htna
i9
11:5________
Ito Mavin,OmmN Hi A* uoytus tow* Stoto atowfrato. to« Ntot. 1
__2
_LL-.
5.53 4.43
IM .37
110 .74
.84 1 83
2 38 ' .04
.78. 183
.65 1,46
45 ‘3 02
23.64 17.48 -
the leap, and became a "joiner".
there a always a chance a hound
on a long trail of a coon or fox
could pick up the bait. It'a as fatal
to dogs as it is for predators, and
good hunting hounds come expen-
sive.
Unlike the bird hunter who keeys
a close reign on his dogs, the
coon and fox hunter has little
control of his pack once a trail
has been struck. The chase, which
may have originated in a safe
place as far as wolrbaits are con-
cerned. may range over several
farms or ranches, some of which
may be baited for the sheep and
poultry . hungry wolf.
CHANGE IN DATES
However, he Mid little trouble ! for the aiwual meeting a the North
was .anticipated from the Ereen-1 Texas Jersey Cattle Club and its
bug this year, except in localized heifer safe, reports President Her-
fields- shel Reid of Denton'S Faultless Jer-
which provided moisture contact
to hatch eggs was attributed as
spring for new plantings
Jack Wright, farm manager for
J. R. Caswell near Allison has
planted more than 100 acres of I
Coastal Bermuda during the past ।
two years and is preparing land '
to make another planting this
spring-
Whorton Mann of Blewitt plant-
ed about M acres last spring. Al-
though it got off to a slow start.
Hollingsworth said it had made a
good showing by the end of the
growing season.. He expects it to
get into full production this ear.
Hollingsworth pointed to Coastal
Bermuda as one of the better in-
troduced grass species for the
sandy soils of Wise county's cross
timber country. .
"When a nod of Coastal is es-
tablished. it becomes more
drought resistant than the strain
of common Bermuda known so
well. Fertility seems to be more
vital than moisture to the vigor
of the established plant," he add-
ed. "It responds well to a high
nitrogen fertilizer."
Thus far, valleys and branch
ELI
<» isssi n
.34 171
.37 1.15
.08 4 72
5.07 3.15
2.18 107
25.64 30 21
109 N. LOCUST _
—p—-
8 00 1 17
04 .36
Average daily delivery per pro- 1958, he said. .
ee-2m22
-- to Docemher, 136J. .... , sons. Firt period will be January
Producer receipts were 122 2 through March; -second, April
per cent of las I utilization dur-May: third, Jtne through August;
Novem es’whowildlacus trends in tur
cent in November and 115.5 per Practices approvedior this year , “wiIr Joiner of Pilot Point will
"5,2 cam: "h.^. pRodctin.
lers totalled 1,955.526 pounds, 3.3 needed land - use adjustment;
per cent greater than during De- vegetative cover in crop rotations.
cember a year ago and nearly 14 strip crapping, establishment of +ers
per cent greater than for the same cover for soil or watershed pro- _—
month two years ago. , taction, brush control, tanks and
Number of producers on the ponds for livestock or to protect
market in Decomber1958cover, waterways; ter-
3,012, a drop of 131 dairymen for t races, diversion terraces, and wto- 1
tha ssme period a year earlier. ‘ter and summer tegwaneo. ——
$3995 54)495.
WOOL KNITS........NOW «"r
204—97
1.08 .37
1.11 IN
■t
. a - *424
Weqther, Nem
M to Shew
MA Bownt,
Onle end Meriet
6mm 8w4 M»w
Tarye
Noxingi"Bbuy" uia.
mB wn,w .
tow BMMtoJ
Locker Rom
SDN " Slang
Movie: "Delltaag,•
Per, cm., Viian
DONTMISSTHISI Avcipeof ds
youn could be one of the 721 winners. jy | i
Betty Crocker wans to use your own (902225)))
good cooking to help you sell your own "
farm products. Nothing to buy—Enter as o*- Mfiic
often ss as you like “\
Denton's Oldest Shop of Quality Or Personality
" * • •
--wp
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. 56, No. 153, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 28, 1959, newspaper, January 28, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453454/m1/7/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.