Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 71, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 24, 1956 Page: 10 of 16
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Nov. 6 at the anhl tMstrict 4
RANGE
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The
tag the dry weathef.
Smgeammup-eh--uug-ng
Hay Prices Drop
$i boWN ... as law as
haulers.
INrRNAMONAL LABO
stockmen
-said
aras
chhow.
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Suddenly you know how modern a. range should be-
IN BANM
workers were needed.
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flame-fast
ranges alone offer
smokeproof, closed-door broiling I
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ELEGTIG RANGE
MATHIESON
k
DR. IRA E. WOODS
_ Optometrist
1
3
69
Grapevine, Texas
On Saturday - 27th October, 1956
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$1.88 weekly"
PaybleMenshly
the
tinu
ers.
4-H Winners
To Be Feted
In Program
Schluter Heads
Krum FFA Group
ation
! how
wwers
9 A.M. to 5 PM.
338 Main St.
the
Others.
. i • •
ed ? 4
.2,
1
A TE FARMKRS •
“FRIENDLY STORE”
We helutes Fot
• Phry Feeds'
t EustznFardhdnag
. )
SNOW'S
2
urged Charlie
cow and the
-
h i- 'i
.W0“
r Nc"
• €bh-avertopbuffeh
Fods Won't burni
. • All-utemedr
lightingi A
| ’ b comfortafuth
r „Oven Geir
speaker for the awards program
Will be DE Jhh A. uinh, presi-
de Denton-Wise Soil
District, said “it is «
mutt good even the !
did ih this area." •
College
the wards.
ways the riding cowboy.__
“No, yeu cah't tell when I'm
e
j
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[PURCHASEPLAN
\ureggjiwvenqeci
WDaErV rERN.a
Why MH and lug the weight of erdinery lew
analysis grades when Mathieson offen you ferti-
lizers containing up to 214 times more plant foods.
Cost less pet uhit of plant food-eost less to apply-
tritio vale and flavor best when
kept raid. Stored near the ree-
will not hv gil
„Hst ft* the ha
Hercules PWdF
' : e
44 -m.
Several hundred Braceros were
eontractee to eottoh producers to
northeast Collin County during the
past and previous seasons. And in
some years, rainfan has kept the
workers idle for a week or more
at h time on some farms while
kOM MAN
lY
ans commanv
Guhtw.southern rogl^giiS
manager will give the Welcome ad-
dress at the banquet.
DOUBTFUL
kept pointihg
•AS RANGE
j
> Cook-Saver Automatic Top
Burner Control. New flame-fast
got Cook-Saver quickly reaches and
holds pre-set temperoture. Foods
went burol Makes all year pons
eutemticL____________■
New Built-In Rotisserie Broil
indoors with flame-kised "bbibe-
cue flavor." Automotically WMH out
your favorite foods, easily ond
delicously.
Simmer Fleme Or each burner,
toy points of home make walerless,
"‘vileminaseve" eeokery e seapl
Unlimiled keepiwerm ond aimmer
settingsl
Built in Griddie. Parted pin
cakes every Mum— from the new
"griddle-in-the-middle." Holds tem-
peratures evtomefically. Ws elso e
-"glenifhhburer, e
ts.
' 4N
minate expensive holding of work-
ers for jobs. The cobtrsets and
ters could be switched to farms
B sngdle
3400004
..
to cover crops foi
th past, and the sc
and pliable. The moi
depth was Hot edu
nate seed, but the dll
be expected to keep good quality
and flavr tor three to tMt dy
. Mrs. echra
to sell the old
horse, too, but
The request would permit indi-
vidual employers to exchange their
contracted workers with other ina
dividuals. The change would eU-
perhaps longt
--M—;
“They Now wer in bad shape
street eomners and st eottee eount
art. "Butthat's all right, they need
Boca after the $7.60 por ton sub-
sidywgannouneed. hay prices
startedlkyroeketing Md MW stnd
to? al,
was MMMMMbd were vmmTm
$35 level tor the same hay.
SAVE ON POTH WITH '
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Coul, Glean, Covered ___________
.“A " ihg unitr the retrigeraton, it
an g,, o.tLcd Le kUi
r 7/777 7400
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h
At Krum, Dairymen Jack Par-
key and C. H. Horton have a car-
toad due to any day at a total un-
confirmed cost of less than $25 per
tod. The hay is N per cent alfa-
fa. the balance of timothy and
brume grass.
Their prices are less than one-
I .
' I
' 1
- j
/,32
moisture or reserve to keep the
. dak, barley and wheat growing
, once seed has germintd and
1 growth is underway.
-2 Except in isolated instances, last
en19 week’s rains ar not expected to
t4H help the peanut outlook any, the
Agent cohservationist said. Farms that
had recetvedusppd.teins,-ux
ano August WAA mak a ■ lair
peanut crop following last week's
shpwers, but even those yields will
not be up to normal, he added.
Some farmers are witholding har-
i order to make better pro-
uucuva, but most Of the produc-
ers, are continuing with plans and
activities to salvage a hay crop
from the little growth made dur-
Clean Grain Bins
Farmers who store grain to
bins should make surp the bins
have been thoroughly leand first
Old grain, trash, feed sacks and
other objects furnish living quar-
tors for insects which destroy thou
sands of bushels of farm-stored
grain yearly.
PFI
ai
placed At inerase M - —
c0s 1
-
Moll of the cover rops beihg
ptohtOd ift toll ea ark Hair Vetch
and Austrian Winter peas.
General condition of wihter
grains “dusted in” by frmefs is
pretty gd, Pool said, and would
offer good grazing with another
good generl rata.
Like other farthers in the cbun-
ty, however, there is no bottom'
INI -
2 I
J
■NIY , ]
----
Farm Pag_
SurlesAud Pieturen or interest To Parmen
MINTON nftamtMMltONICLK
Page Two_seetion Two Wednendan mmm 1066
■ 8
a
fingers at truckers, saying it was
they who started, and kept push-
ing the increases. The haulers
needed to make money, too, but
not quite so much nor quitetso fast,
producers were saying.
How comes reductions in freight
rales for hay from surplus areas,
and area farmers are looking
close. The prices range between
$25 and $30 per ton, plus freight
One shipment of 1,000 tons or-
dered by Agricultural Services of
the Denton County Farm Bureau
wto bought for $27 per ton. Serv-
ice Office Ross Schleigh reports.
FREIGHT RATES
Freight rates wil be about $20
per ton, of which the producer
will pay BIB, according to agtee-
mOnts made by western railroads
to cut hay freight ears to half.
That makes the foreign hay—
. frOm Wisconsin. South Dakota,
Wyoming and Minnesota—about $37
per ton, less the $7.50 per ton sub-
sidy given producers by the fader-
al government. And it’s as good
alfalfa as can be found.
“At $29.55 per ton, a producer
caB’t afford to pass up good quali-
ty hay," Schleigh said. "We've got
our thumbs on another MO tons and
art locating more every day The
price probably will vary, but at
leAst it toll apt to go up the
$53 a ton being paid now.’’
DON'T Bl FOOLED, i. cooking with as is cheaper. For what it costs you to cook
electrically for one year, yeu can cook for more then four years wifh flame- fast gas.
SAFEST COOKING EVERI A.G.A. seal on each gas range assures reliability.
Fire insurance statistics prove gas Is suferl
sizzu0 TRADH-INS NOW on your gal of electric range. Cook modem -- change
today lb a new ultra-modern gas range.
i
, Md your gasrange dealer or
LONG STAR GUMS ooMNANV
---Marethan esooof wo woman cokwih gal
PILOT PKWTF?? Recent rains
which dumped two to three inches
of moisture in bonte parts of
Northeast benton bunty have
caused a spurt in cover crop plant-
ing in the Pilot Point area. point-
ng to a general brighlening of the
‘witer dust prohler.
W. A. "Dub" Pol, work nit
conservationist stations' here for
OS
with other officers, at a reeeht
“....... •
-09 '
11 ■ ( ;
I 1
COWBOY ONG E
AND FOR ALWAYS
HoHBs, N. M., • - There’s
no changing a man’s habit ;
kormed eVer a long liretime.
Raneher Charlie Cochran
has sold off all his herds ex-
cept one cow because of the
drought. He has retained one
cowpony.
1284072
#=E24___At-
..
ldoNudeb
.lul-lluoi
meeting of the hapteh v
Other new officers art Arfoli
Caddell, vice presient, lson
Elliott, secfetary, Fred -1 (Ml.
treasurer; Jerry Jckso, report-
er: Charles White, sentine » Fil
Miller, parliatttenlBriM; Freddy
Boenker,. chplin, d Joita
Henry Koler, student dviF.
Teacher advisor is M. A. Shields.
f-.csrsme
The Mkt todays bhiould nvMI ’
fot certain whthr or Mt live-
stufe at —
th to grmi-
itanee helped
point up the fact that legtimes will
keep s^s Open when rains do
Che, he sid. 3
the Stitt M Foughage Put- ruesun he Menienn National er
"bracero" progrm and if grant
nsub- ed should have some effect in
priees North Texas.
On Freight Cut
By NORRIS JACKSON half that asked by truekers and
Record-Chronicle Farm Editor
ONLY WITH EXCITING MW
: FEATURES URI THESE CAN
YOU REALLY COOR MODERN!
Ar#"
m ANALYSIS . PELETizED .
AMMO-PHOS.
MERTILIZERST
ifr
it
other farms needed pickets.
GREENHAND FARMERS v
Six members of the Sanger FFA
chapter . have : received their
"Green hand” farmer degrs—
the first degree available in FFA
activities, and usually ores in
the freshman year.
They ‘were Jeb Amyl, Ronald
Stinson. Sammy LeGear, Larry '
Horst, Donald eatts and Donald
McReynolds, chapter Farmer de-
grees went to Ralph Amyx and
Fred Yeatts.
Hold Star banquet. Distrid
Ted Martin has announc ed.
Approximately 200 persons, ih-
eluding parents M the prize win
ners. ar,xpeted.th.attejdthe
program. The eVent will M held Ih
Hubbard Hall. TSCW. gome
Dphtbn qt wlhhers to beHonelvestin
—
Th Gold Star bin is awarded ar-
nully to the outstanding 4-H club
girahd toy lh each county, h
of ’ the district counties -this year
m"m* — -i
winner.
Ittert will be the
Pool pointed out that m one farm
after the rains, the mois-
......
"exceptional "
"That farm had been planted
to have to ride that
to move that cow.”
■ - -■
( 63,*%. - • —3-2822256582
' I ‘-2- ■' - * JWHOI
1 —mM* •2
1 WAINS FAIL TO HALT HARVEST
ounty peahut proueers, already resigned to vest, but mot art taking the hay routebefore they
I they’ll hbt make a harvest this year, art o- lose eVen that small amount of ineome. (eeord-Chreh-
with harvest of plants for hit. Some prou- ide Staff Photo)
spotted areas, will make Asmall peanut har-
THE HIRED HAND
b—VEI 1i; 10)
''
Picture In Pilot Point Area
Cordially I nv i tes You to Attend
The Opening of His New Offices *
. at
HARPOOL
SKID HOUSE
420 E. McKinney C-2568
- (.iw0).....•
¥ I
|| J
t,
ere RAMM CHANOE BAM TME
Only when you brail with gas son you keep the door tightly dosed (without meaty
filter)-no ehanee Of heat pouring out at you during broiling period. Modern fleme-
fait gat ranges are tmekspr oof—flame consumes smoke ond grease. Keeps book
cooler and kitchen elsanor. Your hutbond it ture to be a gat range enthusiast, too
...he knows gas broiling gives steaks that super-delicious flame-kissed flavor.
And a gas broiler is to easy tp usel Flexible burner control permits elowbroiling
or fast-broiling as desired. No wonder smart women toy truly modern cooking is
cooking with flame-fest gas.
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 71, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 24, 1956, newspaper, October 24, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453269/m1/10/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.