The Howe Enterprise (Howe, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 18, 1970 Page: 2 of 4
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the HOWE ENTERPRISE, THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1970
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
HOWBAKBER SHOP
Shirley Stephensoiurber 114 Hanning Street
Schedule of Si
GRAYSON-COIN ELECTRIC CO-OP,
A TAX-PAYING, LLLY OWNED CORPORATION
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Don Holloman, Minister
DORCHESTER
BAPTIST CHURCH
Bill Robinson, Pastoi
Sunday School ,.
Worship Service .
Training Union ..
Evening Worship
Wednesday:
.Ri A* s
Mid-week Service
HOWE CONETE COMPANY
P. O. Box 817
HOWE IURANCE AGENCY
582*6122 Raws, Texas
FIRST BAPTIST
Sam Randolph,
Sunday School ...
Morning Worship .
Training Union ..
Evening Worship .
Wednesday:
Mid-week Service .
HOW5TATE BANK
Member F.D.I.C,
BETHEL .BAPTIST CHURCH
Tom E. Johnson, Pastor
Sunday School .... 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship .. 11:00 a.m.
B. T. .............6:15 p.m.
Evening Service ... 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday!
Prayer Meeting .... 7:30 p.m.
PERKINS iRBER SHOP
LDAR PERKB ROWE, TEXAS
FIRST UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Johnny Johnson, Pastor
Sunday School .... 10:00 a
Morning Worship .. 11:00 a
Youth Fellowship .. 6:30 p
Evening Worship .. 7:30 p
Wednesday:
Study Group ....... 7:00 p
TEXA9WER & LIGHT COMPANY
A taking, Investor-owned electric utility
FIRST
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Dr. Frans Attord
Sunday School .... 10:00 a.m
Morning Worship ..11:00 a.m
THE HOT* ENTERPRISE
Phene 5824612 He
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It’s not done this way today, but back in the “Good old days” shocking
grain was just another part of the harvesting Wheat harvest in the
Howe area was completed this year in about 10 days. This photo was
one of three found in the upstairs aection over J. D. Finney’s Air Plane
Service Shop.
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FROM THE FILES OF THE HOWE ENTERPRISE
IN DAYS GONE BY
Roy Morrison brought this
article in Monday morning for
us to print. A letter with this
article said the article was
around 55 years old.
Moonlight Horseback Ride
Semmingly in an effort
to return time backward in it’s
marvelous flight, and make
horseback riding again one
of the orders of the day, a
number of the young people
of Howe, took a moon-light
ride on horse-back last Fri-
day night. There were sixteen
participants, of whom were:
Misses Mattie, Johnnie and M-
idge Bush, Electa Lonon, Nan-
nie and Maude Erskine, Lot-
tie Scoggins, Mega George,
Verna Morrow, Jessie Miller
and Miss Hatton; Messrs At-
lee Barnett, H. Bost, Barrel
Rowe, M.J. Ball and. Bender-
son Bush. There were no
exciting experiences of rema-
rkable incidents except that
it fell to the lot of your ner-
veless editor to ride a four-
teen year old, ball-faced colt
that had stayed in the stall
so long that he was afraid
of his shadow, and on start-
ing out an interuban car ran
up from the rear, frightening
the poor nag and seemed to
caused him to deem it necess-
ary to go through the Tele-
phone Office Via. the second
story window of the Bank Buil-
ding Otherwise the whole rou-
nd was made in a quiet man-
ner and enjoyed very much by
alL
Mrs. Mary Martinek and
Mr. and Mrs. Rush Stewart
travelled to Ennis to attend
a state insurance meeting W-
hile there Mrs. Martinek had
the pleasure of visiting with
old neighbors she had while
living in Czechoslavakia as
a child.
NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS -
HILLSON STEEL PRODUCTS
1705 BAKER ROAD - SHERMAN - PH. 893-6504
BARGAIN PRICES ON:
New and Used Tubing, Pipe and
Structural Steel {
Prime and Reject Sheets and Plates
w
I
VAN APPLIANCE SERVICE
3Q6 6th Street - Phone 482 6251
VAN ALSTYNE, TEXAS
JAMES BIDDLE, Manager
Chisum One-Stoi
Gncarbs, Dry Goods, Hardware
HOMO MILK Half GaNoa fit
TALL KORN BACON lb $c..
GRADE A FRYERS lb $ct
ZEE NAPKINS pkg. ||)c‘
Father's Day, Soailay, Jane 21
Please Him W*’
Pool Prest Shirts and Slacks
THE HOWE ENTERPRISE
Published each Thursday at UR Hanlng Streat by
Howe, Texas 75080 — MaililUL-Ad'dre**, 'Box 4M
UOB WALKER, EDITOR
J. G. CAYCE, PUBLISHER
Second class postage paid at Howe Texas 75.059
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Grayson Coir / $3. 00 Pex Year Other $4.50 year
HOWE’S THAT
continued from page 1
pets, or animals, or owned,
and which are just plain st-
rays. In the future, complaints
of animals running loose will
be handled with the city check-
ing for tags, then notifying
the owner, or, if there are
no tags, the stray dog pop-
ulation can be decreased.
You can tell wnen a person
is in the advertising business
by the advertising he does.
Bobby Hamilton, local DJ,
and ad executive with KTXO
radio in Sherman dropped in this
week to see if we would help
him kick off the “Howe Hour”
via the Howe Enterprise. And,
being in the ad business our-
selves, we promised to do so.
With one stipulation—that he
help us kick of the Howe En-
terprise, via KTXO radio. He
agreed.
Now you can read about
the “Howe Hour” in the Howe
Enterprise on Thursdays, and
listen about the Howe Enterprise
on Bobb’s weekly show broad-
cast, from 5 until 6 Saturday
afternoons.
Have a sneakin’ suspicion
he mi$it say something bad a-
bout us, too.
Ray Lankford In
Missionary Field
Ray Lankford, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Lankford of
Dorchester left last Thursday
for Boston, Mass., where he
will be doing summer miss-
ionary work for the next ten
weeks. Ray is a member of the
Dorchester Baptist Church.
Record Numbers
Receive Tax Refund
A record number of Nor-
th Texas taxpayers received
an income tax refund upon fil-
ing their 1969 income tax re-
turn. Most taxpayers are re-
quired to file an income tax
return between January 1 and
April 15. Although all the re-
turns have not been processed
and all the refunds have not
been issued for the 1969 tax
year, 1,095,428 refund checks
amounting to $223,454,916.33
have been issued to North T-
exas taxpayers. This record
number and amount of refunds
were mailed out after process-
ing 1,554,614 returns. Thous-
ands of taxpayers whose re-
turns have not been processed
for various reasons will still
receive a refund.
However, these taxpayers
will have to wait until tne pro-
blems concerning their retu-
rns have been solved between
them and IPS
Social Security
Many farmers and ran-
chers receive social secur-
ity benefits while still work-
ing, according to Gus Jones,
district manager in Sherman.
Since social security re-
tirement benefits are paid ev-
ery month of the year to those
)A Leaflet On
dening Available
lardening and conserva-
is the subject of a new
leaflet written by the
xmservation Service.
District Conservationist
is Wright of the Sherman
ffice, said the8-foldlea-
titled “Gardening on the
)ur“ outlines ways to con-
erosion in a backyard
in. It tells, for example
rows can be laid out
; contour using a car-
r’s level mounted on a
4. The leaflet also ex-
how rainwater which
is from a neighbor’s pro-
might he diverted away
i your garden.
Some of our gardeners
he Howe area are excel-
conserv ationists”, W right
Many use mulches on
soil surface to help re-
erosion and to improve
fertility similiar to the
conservation farmers use
> residues. A few local
eners compost their grass
lings and tree leaves for
surpose. Others use hay,
w, cottonseed hulls or peat
s. Preventing erosion in a
ien is just as important
gardener as it is to any
land user, “the conser-
onist pointed out.
Wright said copies of the
leaflet are available free
s office at Rm. 104, Fed-
Building, Sherman, tele-
ne no. 892- 6630.
W?man Killed In
Tractor Mishap
Funeral for Mrs. H. A.
Ponder, 63, wha^yras killed
in a farm tractor accident
Friday was held Sunday.
Mrs. Ponder, a retired
school teacher, was mowing
a pasture-land owned by her
and her husband two miles
southeast of Louella.
According to Sheriff Woo-
dy Blanton, Mrs. Ponder app-
arently lost control of the ve-
hicle while trying to avoid
some trees near a fence line.
She traveled about 70 feet to
a ravine and the tractor tip-
ped over, crushing her head.
She was discovered by a ren-
ter on the farm, Harry Hayes
who alerted Ponder at work
on a fence nearby.
A wrecker was taken to
the scene to free the woman’s
body. Peace Justice A.L. Me
Guire pronounced her dead
at the scene.
Mrs. Ponder was born
July 22, 1906, the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. L.E. Cox.
She was a member of the East
Side Baptist Church.
Survivors are her hus-
band; her step-mother, Mrs.
Lucy Cox; two sons, Harold
W. of Dallas, and Norman of
Madison, N.J. ; three sisters
Mrs. G.F. Burk of Van Als-
tyne, Mrs. Clyde Cox, and Mrs.
Raymond Cox, Sherman; and
four grandchildren.
All Kinds Of Insurance
EXCEPT ONE
HOWE INSURANCE AGENCY
108 East Haning Phone 532-6122
Leon Smith
OXYGEN EQUIPPED
AMBULANCE SERVICE
ANYWHERE — ANYTIME
Phone 482-5225
Van Alstyne, Texas
Funeral Service Insurance
Policies from 100 to 1500
FLESHER FUNERAL HOME
We honor aU burial policies at full value
people at least age 62 whose
claims have been approved,
and who are not earning over
$1680 a year, many area far-
mers and ranchers do qual-
ify for these payments, Jones
explained.
He emphasized the fact
that social security’s earnings
limit of $1680 applies to the
net profit of the self-employed
person, not his gross farm in-
come.
Jones urged farmers and
ranchers who might qualify for
these benefits to visit their ne-
arest social security repres-
entative with a copy of their
1969 income tax return, social
security card, and evidence of
their age, preferably their ori-
ginal birth or baptismal cer-
tificate.
Pastor
Bible Classes .....
10:00 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship ..
11:00 a.m.
11:00 a m.
Sunday Evening ...
6:00 p.m.
.6:00 p.m.
. 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday:
Bible Classes ......
7:00 p.m.
5:00 p.m.
. 7:00 p.m.
ASSEMBLY OP
1 GOD
Jimmy Uselton,
Pastor
Sunday School ....
10:00 a.m.
• CHURCH
Worihip Service ,,
11:00 a.m.
, Pastor
Evening Worship ..
6:30 p.m.
. 10:00 a.m.
Thursday:
. 11:00 a.m.
Worship Service ...
i 7:30 p.m-
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Walker, Bob. The Howe Enterprise (Howe, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 18, 1970, newspaper, June 18, 1970; Howe, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth714763/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .