Yoakum Herald-Times (Yoakum, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 9, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 17, 1950 Page: 4 of 8
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Borden’s Products
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Miller recommends that Hu-
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CISCO KID COMES
Borden Company is proud to
TO
YOAKUM
people of Yoakum, and we shall
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strive
of all, the health needs of tiny
legumes to plant in the East
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Today!
SPOETZL BREWERY
HUMBLE OIL I REFINING CO.
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THIS IS OIL PROGRESS WEEK
OCTOBER 1 5
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TYPES OF WINTER LEGUMES TO
PLANT IN CERTAIN AREAS TOLD
$8 billion to find more oil, to increase oil production, to extend pipe
lines and build tankers, to increase and improve refining capacity.
with the renewal of a familiar
inter-state rivalry. Included are
an<
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Common
are also
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bam and Madrid sweetclovers
do well in the river valleys.
replace intersectional games on
this week’s list of Humble Oil
& Refining Company football
broadcasts.
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quality in dairy products.
"To quote from the Borden I
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South at a profit.
The price of cotton, he adds,
may not always justify heavy
expenditures for insecticides and
this is all the more reason every
effort should be made to prevent
the pink bollworm from getting
established in central and north-
central Texas.
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And it is. Since World War II, U. S. oil companies have
plowed back into the development of U. S. oil resources about
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BULLDOS
SCHEDU
— 1950 Season
Oct. 20 Open
Oct. 27 Luling here
Nov. 3 Open
Nov. 10 Lockhart here
Nov. 17 Gonzales there
/
“You phone me
and I’ll wire you!” ■
ere damage to cotton. The tre-
nendous build-up and localized
example.
l He adds that failure to ob-
serve the final date for stalk
21
PBH:
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16
sponsible for the infestation in
central and north-central Texas
«$-,
SPECIAL”
K Bollworms Found in
reral More Texas Counties
Optometrist
DR. JENNINGS’ B. COOK
AT THULEMEYER’S
Eyes Examined —
Glasses Fitted
Office Hours 8 to 5:30
Phone 155 — Flatonjy
ns
4
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ni —‘425
——LaW.
",
So the oil industry has been ready for the Korean emergency
all along. It supplies today’s greatly increased demand for oil in its
stride. As still heavier demands are placed upon it, the industry is
confident that it can supply them, too. It will be a big job. And make
no mistake about it: it will involve many problems; consumers may
be called on to make sacrifices; the job will require time for change
and adjustment. But the oil industry is better prepared than ever
before to take it on.
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HARRY
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adapted to the southern half
of this region.
The annual yellow blossom
sweetclover, Mililotus indica, is
the most desirable legume to
plant in the Gulf coast Prairie,
as we have
gm-** 2**.
L wamami
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Borden’s Dairy Products are
now available in Yoakum gro-
cery stores, according to an an-
। nouncement released this week
by officials of the Borden Com-
pany.
The announcement states, "The
More cars, more tractors, more industries mean a need for
more oil, year after year. This need has required the oil industry to
look far ahead, to keep itself more than ready to supply current needs.
It must be able quickly to meet increased demands.
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K.C.F.H — 1600
Seven-Dp
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land region becaus of their a-
bility td increase crop yields,
acea messasaama
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SWC CONTESTS
TOPS ON AIR
Significant Southwest Con- Ay*-k. HorA
ference championship contests HV dlldUlv llvlv
LUNCH BOX TIPS
Wrap sandwiches individually
ih waxed paper to keep them
fresh. Place them on edge in
the lunch box to prevent crush-
ing.
Crisp carrot sticks, whole
tomatoes, or fresh fruit add in-
teresting texture contrast to the
lunch box. They’ll stay crisp if
you wrap them separately in ।
waxed- paper.
“44.
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hinet
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of difficulities.
Today the U. S. oil industry will be called on to supply the
United States with 6,400,000 barrels of U. S. oil. It supplied that
amount every day last week, and will supply it every day this week
and next. It is a million barrels a day more than the peak of World
War II, and it is 65' < more than it was in 1940.
—2
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^^7 een' 23
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it ruction and the plowing un-
’ of shredded or chopped-up
idue in 1949 is directly re-
m2
1 millions to enjoy milk that can
1 be depended on — always.’ ”
The Borden’s Dairy Products
available in Yoakum include
Homogenized Vitamin-D Milk,
Grade A-Pasteurized Milk, Cot-
tage Cheese, Whipping Cream,
Coffee Cream, Orange Drink and
Chocolate Drink.
The Borden Company, with its
Dairy Farm Improvement Pro-
gram, has pioneered in scienti-
fic dairy methods and advanced
pasteurization producers to pro-
vide absolute purity and better
flavor for all its producers.
Ask for Borden’s at your
favorite grocer’s. Contracts have
already been made with A. O.
Reece Grocery, Ponton Grocery,
Rowan’s Cash Store, Hanys Gro-
cery and Mean’s Grocery and
Market, and others may be
handling the products soon.
) .
ta.. and agency representatives to
damage to the 1950 cotton crop I cooperate with cotton farmers
'In Nueces county is cited as an by assisting and backing early
stalk destruction programs in
W. E. EHLERS
DisTamUToN ___
- ~
anxious to help maintain cotton i
production in Texas and the
The time for planting wintet
legumes for soil improvement
and seed production is here a-
gain. In most areas, the best
time for fall planting is from
the middle of September to No-
vember 1 — not later than No-
vember 15.
E. A. Miller, agronomist for
jthe Texas A. & M. College Ex-
tension Service, says that the
legume to plant depends upon
the section of the state in which
you live.
He adds that hairy vetch,
Singletary peas, Austrian win-
ter peas, Dixie wonder peas and
crimson clover are good winter
An increasing amount of today’s oil goes to the needs of
national defense, but the bulk of it supplies power for the millions
of cars and trucks on American highways, the hundreds of thousands
of tractors on American farms, and for the industries that make all
the things that add up to a high American standard of living.
3 47, ■
JS
III 4 legumes to plant in t
I I !■ Texas Timber Country.
if ’and Willamette vetches
H Pink bollworms have been
found during the past two weeks
in several additional Texas coun-
the counties.
This must be done early
enough to prevent the hibernat-
ing generatton of pink boll-1
worms from being produced.
To the cotton producers. Curl Fall Season is the dangerous time
ygg .......-.....- this is your problem but in the woods---especially if you’re
(areas where the crop is picked everyone is interested and is smoking.
• —------------------------------------------ ,, ------------------------------
OU has been ready!
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y . gnea
reduce losses from cotton root; the Lm.TmU-”^ dairy products to’the:
rot, and open up the soil with I Arkansas, plus the annual Bay- j - -
, lor-Texas Tech meeting. The | during our 92 years of opera.
tion — to produce the highest
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at this time.
Prompt destruction of stalks
Tollowing the harvesting of the
cotton crop is essential through-
out the pink bollworm infested
before killing frosts, says Curl.
Each farmer should get his
crop picked quickly and then
immediately destroy- the stalks
and plow under the residue.
If this is done well ahead of
frost, it ought to prevent a full
generation of pink bollworms
from feeding to nat urity and go-
ing into hibernation, adds Curl.
He urges ginners, oil mill
operators, agricultural leaders
their deep root systems. He
says that the Evergreen bien-’Rice-SMU gamie, at Houston, is
nial is also an excellent sweet- . ■. ® ’___
clover for this area, but seed of Y 8
this variety are still scarce. |-----------------------------------
Hairy vetch and winter peas-re also adapted to this region.! Pledge We will always keep
arean Adapteando in BIA8k 2darvvgetchawinredpeas“nnd tn prodlcum ankenat snu ’
xw ! sxs ssi , or all, the health needs - tiny
as the sweetclovers. Miller re- falfa also does well in this a-' children. By so doing, o offer
commends planting the sweet- ‘rea on the subirrigated soils. to people of all ages milk that
clovers in the fall in the area Miller says that alfalfa is the fulfills these highest standards
south of Waco, but he points principal adapted legume to be I of wholesomeness, richness and
out that they will probably do1 grown under irrigation on the purity- .
better if planted in the early High Plains and in the El Paso' To maintain Borden leader-
spring north of that area, land Pecos valleys, but the bi-1 ship in scientific and sanitary
For the West Cross Timbers ennial sweetclover, hairy vetch,; requirements, to deliver this vi-
area, hairy vetch is the most and winter peas can also betal food to you when you need
but the other legumes named desirable legume; however, win- grown under irrigation in these I it, regardless
2 •2 can be grown. Hu- ter peas and the sweetclovers areas.
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! Finally, to bring Borden’s to
I you at a price that will enable
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— .... — - Three important conference
bam and Madrid sweetclovers be games are on the schedule, along
given first choice in the Black-
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■According to L. F. Curl, divi-
■on leader of the USDA’s
Bureau of Entomlogy and Plant
Quarantine, the spread of this
■Met during the current crop
season is, definitely the most
jjjyious/threat to the future of
S9Up production experienced
sihee the south-wide spread of
the boll weevil.
curi warns that the pink boil
worm is capable of causing se-
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YOAKUM HERALD-TIMES, YOAKUM, TEXAS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1TrH, IMO
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Royal Typewriter
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1201 Hopkins St.
Phone 565, Yoakum
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Malec, Joseph J. Yoakum Herald-Times (Yoakum, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 9, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 17, 1950, newspaper, October 17, 1950; Yoakum, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1469361/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Carl and Mary Welhausen Library.