The Harper Herald (Harper, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, July 9, 1948 Page: 3 of 4
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Page Three
The Harper Herald, Harper, Texas
STRATEGY OF SALTING IN LIVESTOCK DISTRIBUTION
assifie
BUY — SELL — RENT
EXCHANGE
WE SPECIALIZE—in fine Cakes
pastries, and Bread. 'KERR-
VILLE BAKERY, Kerrville.
FOR SALE—Gasoline, Kerosene,
Distillate, Tractor Fuel, and
Diesel Fuel. None better. H.
Welge Lewis, Fredericksburg, tf
( POLITICAL
I Anr
SuupH
Announcements
■■■■lUUIRlieiHIBBlM
Political Announcements
payable in advance.
Subject to Democratic
Primaries in July:
FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY:
CAMPBELL K. FORD
of San Saba
SAM CONN ALLY
of San Saba
ROSCOE RUNGE
of Mason
(Re-election)
TIRES FOR SALE—The best in-
surance to prolong your life
and prevent accidents is new
tires on your car, so trade in
your old worn tires on New
Mansfield Tires. Plenty of 21-19-
17 in. tires on hand, also other
popular sizes to be had at H.
Welge Lewis, Fredericksburg,
“Mansfield Tires are Better.” tf
FOR THE BEST—in Boot and
Shoe Repair, send or bring your
work to the Brewster Boot Shop,
formerly E. O. Lowgren Bobt
Shop, Junction, Texas.
FOR SALE—Wanda Pennsylva-
nia Paraffin and Non-Gumming
Diesel Oils, Wanda Greases,
Parany and Ring-Free Oils. No
better products at any price.
H. Welge Lewis, Fredericksburg.
Pennsylya-
Non-Gum-
FOR CONGRESSMAN;
21st District of Texas
O. C. FISHER
of San Angelo
(Re-election)
CHARLES L. SOUTH
of Coleman
HOWELL E. COBB
of Brady
FOR COUNTY JUDGE:
VICTOR H. SAGEBIEL
HENRY HIRSCH
(Re-election)
DISTRICT clerk
E. L. SCHMIDT
(Re-Election)
ASSESSOR AND COLLECTOR
OF TAXES
WM. M. PETMECKY
(Re-Election)
COUNTY CLERK
FELIX SCHERER
(Re-Election)
CO. COMMISSIONER, PREC. 2
ARNOLD MARKWORDT
(Re-Election)
COUNTY SHERIFF
ROBERT LOTH
(Re-Election)
COUNTY TREASURER
REINHOLD TATSCH
(Re-election)
FOR SALE—Wanda
nia Paraffin and
ming Diesel Oils, Wanda Greas-
es, Parany and Ring-Free Oils.
No better products at any price.
H. Welge Lewis, Fredericksburg.
tf
By Merit G. Garter
S6il
Conservation Service
Kerrville, Texas
MUTUAL AID—
(Continued From Page 1)
Since salt attracts animals, it
can be made an important and____________ _____ ______
economical aid in the local con- j monthly basis wit: a 60-day time
troi and distribution of livestock. , limit to nav assessments.
ments will be in advance with a
31-day period of grace. Hereto-
fore payments were made on a
_ . .. .limit'to pay assessments.
Systematic salting can be used As a legal reserve, all present
on grazing lands to lessen over* j members will retain the same
grazing on areas where the ani- j monthly insurance rate and the
mals tend to congregate by put
ting salt on the places that are
lightly used.
Care should be taken to avoid
locating salting stations on areas
too'heavily used, those difficult
Of . access, those where soils are
highly susceptable to erosion or
Where forage is easily killed.
Salt should be placed at read-
ily accessible places on ridges,
knolls, or benches, and in open-
ings in timber and brush. Slight-
ly used areas and patches of
permanently low forage value,
such as rocky knolls, should be
selected rather than places fully
grazed.
same amount of insurance. New
business will be written under
the new plan which can be for
life, or a 10-20- or 30-year plan,
double indemnity, etc. There will
be no limitations on writng in-
surance policies and under the
new plan the company may write
life insurance anywhere within
the State of Texas.
Total assets listed by the assoc-
iation amounted to $61,229.04 as
of July 1, 1948. This reflects an
increase of more than ten times
the total assets claimed by the
association on July 1, 1941. Since
that time, in only seven years,
the assets have grown to above
Auto Count in
Texas Up 30.2%
Since Year 1944
FOR REPRESENTATIVE:
85th Texas District
TOM MARTIN v
(Re-election)
L0NNY F, ZWIENER
CINCINNATI—Texas, with its
automobile population up 30.2%
since 1944, ranks eleventh among
the states in recovering from the
wartime low in car registrations,
Powel Crosley, Jr. pioneer light-
weight car manufacturer, pointed
out.
“Such a gain in the Lone Star
£ te is partly traceable to im-
portant shift; of population in
recent years from the , 'retrial
east, midw- and gr~in states to
the south, southwest and Pacific
Coast,” Crosley said. "Texas ap-
pears not only to have benefited
by this trend but also to have im-
proved the economy of its peo-
ple.”
Motor vehicle ownership in this
state rose from 1,553,574 in 1944
to 2,023,501 last year. Continued
progress in this direction, Crosley
said, is reflected in the growing
demand for small cars which pro-
vide economical transportation
for many families who have hith-
erto been priced out of the auto-
motive market.
Based on recent census figures,
there is one passenger car for
every 4.48 persons in Texas, the
state ranking twenty-sixth in the
nation in this respect.
-ooo———
STONEWALL DEFEATS
CAMP STANLEY 6-0
The location of salt in relation j the $61,000.00 mark from only
to water depends upon a number \ $6,026.20 according to Wm. Dietel,
of factors including soil condi- j secretary-treasurer Of the associ-
tions, topography, nature of feed, j ation.
range condition and condition of ; _
the livestock. It should ordinari- j SECRETARY’S REPORi
ly be placed at a reasonable dis- j —-
tance from Water, preferably not i JULY 1, 1948
neater than half a mile to water] Call for membership meeting
bn large range units, but never fbr Saturday, July 3, 1948, at 2
beyond a practicable walking dis-
tance
farm
p. m. in the court house was
fbr animals. On small made by letter, including notices
pastures where salt can' - —- 1 1
of proposed conversion to legal
reserve company, and by two no-
ties in The Radio Post of Jurte
24 and July 1, 1948.
Directors’ Meetings
Your directors attended 12
monthly and two special meet-
ings during the year. Every
meeting was attended by Pres.
Otto Henke, Chas., J. Lang,' Geo.
Jenschke, and Hugo Weinheim-
er. Viggo Nielsep attended 11
meetings, Henry Hirsch 9 meet-
ings, and John Metzger 7 meet-
ings.
Membership ' \
On July 1, 1947 we had 479
members, today, July 1, 194$, we
have 488 members. Dpfing the
year we admitted 21 new mem-
bers; we lost 7 members by
death.
Death claims paid'during the
year amounted to $5,363.85, the
total claims paid since organiza-
tion is $483,177.01. ..........
Death claims paid during the
year were as follows:
Aug. 1947, R. E. Jordan $1000.00
Sept. 1947, Mrs. J.' F.
Jenschke .................. 456.52
Nov. 1947, Mrs. Otto
Braeutigam ............. 393.08
March, 1948, Max H. .
Beckmann ..............$1000.00
May, 1948, Wm. Efsch .... 1000.00
June, 1948, Mrs. Ernst
Kott ...........1000.00
June, 1948, Paul
Schliessing ......... 514.15
FOR DISTRICT JUDGE:
33rd Judicial District, Texas
THOMAS C. FERGUSON
of Burnet, Texas
NOTICE
The Hill Country Livestock
Protective Association Offers
a reward of $500.00 to the per-
son furnishing information
leading to the arrest and the
conviction of any person steal-
ing livestock from a member
of the Association.
HILL COUNTRY LIVE-
STOCK PROTECTIVE
ASSOCIATION
WARREN McDOUGALL
General Hauling
Livestock, Furniture^ etc.
BONDED & INSURED
Phone 49
HARPER, TEXAS
We invite All Our Harper
Community Friends To Visit
Us When In Fredericksburg!
Travelers Cafe
Alex Mittendorf, Prop.
&
Memorial
FUNERAL HOME
WE HAVE
BURIAL. INSURANCE POLICIES'
No medical examination*
This affords a modern, com-
plete funeral. Call for details
of this service.
Buick Ambulance
ANYTIME ANYWHERE
SEE
MRS. SELMA GKANVILIJE
Or Gene stover
Phone 79
Kerrville • - - • • Texas
Stonewall blanked Camp Stan-
ley to the tune of 6-0 at Boerne
last Sunday with Louis (Schfam),
Schneider on the mound for
Stonewall, pitching a 3-hit game.
Stonewall got 10 hits off of
Meiner and Gombert.
The game was played on Mon-
day to make up for a regularly
scheduled game which was rain-
ed out on Sunday, June 27.
not be used as an aid to livestock-
distribution, it should be placed \
in a location farthest from water j
to avoid undue concentrations
'near the water. Or the salt may
be placed in the farmstead cor-
ral where additional concentra-
tion will generally do no harm.
A Shift in location of salt
grounds, must always be made in
time to prevent damage to the
grazing land in the vicinity of
the salting ground. Salt placed
in boxes set on runners can be
shifted easily and frequently,
and livestock learn to associate
salt with the boxes which can
easily be found by them when
the containers are moved a
short distance each time.
Salt has not had universal use
as an aid in furthering livestock
distribution because of the gen-
eral belief that placing it away
from water may cause animals
to lose flesh in unnecessary
trailing. Behind this assumption
is the belief that livestock must
drink immediately after licking
salt.
With a set of automatic re-
cording devices, the Forest Ser-
vcie has demonstrated that cat-
tle ordinarily do not go directly
from salt to water. Instead, a
3-mOnth test revealed, the aver-
age interval, between taking salt
and watering was 7 1-2 hours
even though the distance from
the salt station to the water
supply was only half a mile.
The cattle in the experiment
usually grazed over an apprecia-
ble.: area and shaded up at least
once before going to water after
they licked salt. Observation
also shbwed that the stops for
salt and - water were made as a
part of the daily circuit of the
pature,- and that the cattle graz-
ed over wide areas on their trips
both to and from salt and water.
-ooo-
Mr. and Mrs-. Bill Proctor of
Austin accompanied Mr. and Mrs,
D. A. Brewer home frOm Austin
Saturday. Mr. Proctor is a stud-
ent minister and is attending
Texas University*
Eleventh Annual Auction of
CORRIEDALES
A consignment sale of 400 best quality Corriedale
rams from the leading breeders 6f California and
the Northwest.
Sale at our bams
SAN ANGELO, TEXAS
TOTAL .........................
. $5363.85
•- ..; / :• '* v . y . ***•*"*"rr/.t,—!^r
Financial Statement
Special Fufid.................
.....$131.50
Expense Fund .............
..... 891.11
MORTUARY FUND:
Fdbg. National Bank ....
$11206.43
Security State Bank.....
... 5009.00
Real Estate Note ..........
... 2100.00
Deposit with. State .......
... 1000.00
U. S. Bonds a.....................
. 41000.00
Total ..............................
60,306.43
Friday, July 9, 1948.
41 dver tiiemt**,
From where I sit... Joe Marsh
Will’s Hospitality
Isn’t "Cracked"!
TOTAL ASSETS
61,229.04
Comparison of Assets
Increase
July 1, 1941......$ 6,026.20
July 1, 1942......14,513.66 8,487.46
July 1, 1943......27,195.71 12,592.05
July 1, 1944......34,816.44 7,710.73
July 1,. 1945......44,577.93 9,761.49
July 1, 1946.-^.47,425.95 1,848.02
July 1, 1947......54,134.26 7,708.31
July 1, 1948......61,229.04 7,094.78
Respectfully submitted,
WM. DIETEL, Sec. Treas.
•~4
Y6u Are Always Welcome
Cottle's Cafe
Mr. and Mrs. Raypiopd Cottle
Harper, Texas
Regular Meals^-Short Orders
T-Bones — Hamburgers, —
Sandwiches, Hot Coffee,
Cold Drinks, Et£
IDR. UDO BASSE!
[ de n TI ST
!
- ■> Office in - .
Palace Theatre Building
FREDERICKSBURG
FRIDAY, JULY 16th
1 P.M.
Fields & Johnson
Dealers in better bucks.
Eyes Carefully Examined
GLASSES , THAT FIT
CORRECTLY
Dr. Leon F, Zwiener
Optometrist
Upstairs In Gold Bldg.
Phone 133J Fredericksburg
Ever since January, Will Dudley
planned to give his living room
that “new look”—planned to care-
fully refinish the woodwork and
replaster the walls.
Every time Will got out the
putty to start filling in the cracks,
a neighbor stopped by to pass the
time of day —and first thing you
knew, there was a group of us help-
ing Will do the job up right. After
Will called a halt to the evening’s
work, we’d sit around the fire en-
joying a friendly argument and a
sparkling glass of mellow beer.
So Will’s living room doesn’t
look like it did a year ago-—but it’s
by far the most “livable” living
room I know: A place yOu can
always drop in for good talk, good
beer, and a warm welcome.
From where I sit, so long as Will
puts that atmosphere of hospital-
ity and good fellowship ahead of
everything else, we’ll all be happy
to help Will change the looks of his
living rooip any time he wants.
Copyright, 1948, United State?,Brewers Foundation
WANTED
EGGS, FRYERS and HENS!
Highest Cash Prices Paid!
Kerrville Poultry & Egg Co.
FEED — POULTRY — EGGS — REMEDIES
INSECTICIDES &
1010 Sidney Baker ------
. ' . KERRVILLE,
SEEDS,
Phone
.TEXAS "
Kpep oof of trouble
thisoumme
Tt won't step Whistling!"
Bring your radio problems
to our skilled service man
WE USE AND
REGSMKENB SYLVAN!!
TUBES
Let our skilled radio service man remove the
whistles, cat-calls and noises that spoil your
radio reception. He can make your radio per-
form as it did the day it came from the factory.
You’ll like our prompt service and low prices.
PfuOfol
I v HPPLi
flppLinntE co.inc.
•tAROESI APPLIANCE ftfORf IN THE HILL COUNTRY*
224.2* WEST MAIN STREET
FREDERICKSBURG. TEXAS
PHONE NO. 392J
Car-owners — don't let
warmer weather catch you
by surprise. Better see us
now for Sinclair-ize for
Summer Service. With
this special service,
we protect your
car ten ways
against summer wear.
Transmission
m CARE FOR
Radiator Oil and Air Filters
Tires
Battery
Special Combination Price
Spark ^||jjpVlug*
your car now
STROEHER & HOUY, Agents
SINCLAIR REPINING COMPANY
TANK SALESMEN:
Felix Hahne ~ Albert Kammlah -
FREDERICKSBURG, TEXAS
Guenther Pfiester
PHONE 200
We solicit your consignment of
WOOL AND MONAIR
on our record of prompt sevice.
Until our warehouse has been rebuilt
we are conducting our business at
our temporary location at the1 corner
of Schreiner & Clay Streets.
SCHREINER WOOL & MOHAIR
COMMISSION CO.
Owned & Operated by
2§ M. Lea Wool Warehouse
- - KERRVILLE, TEXAS
TOURIST CAFE
ELMO BAETHGE, Owner FREDERICKSBURG
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
Short Orders —— Sandwiches t T-Bones
YOU ARE ALWAYS WELCOME!
H. WELGE LEWIS
INDEPENDENT
Gasoline, Kerosene, Oils, Greases
Fredericksburg, Texas - - - Phone No. 22
MAKE YOUR HEADQUARTERS IN HARPER AT . . . f
BILL'S LUNCH ROOM'
BILL KAISER, Prop.
Hamburgers - Sandwiches - Chili
T-Bone Steaks with French Fries
Beer, Cold Drinks, Coffee, Ice Cream
I
1
?
I
I
<**x-x~:~>*xk~x^~xkk~x~x~x~x~xk»*4~x~x~x~x~x-*x~x~x*4
LET US HANDLE YOUR
WOOL & MOHAIR
MOBILGAS - - MOBILOIL
Tires -- Tubes. ~ Batteries
SHEARING SUPPLIES
FIELD AND GARDEN SEED
PROVEN QUALITY LIVESTOCK AND POULTRY
..... FEUDS, REMEDIES, ETC.
Salt Mineral and Mixtures
HEARTS DELIGHT FEEDS
FLOY BODE
STATION AND WAREHOUSE,
eX*<**f-»X-*X^X-X*X^X^X**X-*X-kX-4->X*4*iX*^X**X-^<wX^X**X*‘X*<*-X'**i“X«
| John Deere Quality Implements
TRACTORS, PLANTERS, CULTIVATORS, BINDERS,
MOWERS, RAKES, PLOWS
Aemiotor Mills, Fairbanks Morse Engines—Get Our Price*
Before You Buy — Satisfaction Guaranteed!
KRAUSKOPF BROS.
F RED ERICK SBURG
r ti c ucKiuasouKfe - ; : £, £ X A S *i«
»!«.
eV
|
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The Harper Herald (Harper, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, July 9, 1948, newspaper, July 9, 1948; Harper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1135794/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Harper Library.