The Cameron Herald (Cameron, Tex.), Vol. 96, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 1, 1956 Page: 2 of 12
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THE CAMERON HERALD
LITTLE RIVE RPHILOSQPHER
LOOKS AT ANOTHER SOLU-
TION TO FARM ILLS. AND
FINDS IT WON’T WORK EITH-
ER.
Editor's noir: The Little River
PhUoNopher on his Johnson gT»ss
farm on l.lttle River has tnrne-l
M» thought* to Ute (arm problem
this week, without affecting the
problem one wiy or the other.
Dear editar;
I read an editorial in a news-
paper Ui« other day which fell out
of a car as it rounded a curve out
near my house
which said the rea
Ison we have a
/farm problem is
simple: we have I
too much land.
Now I'll admit
uation is to double the size of an
acre and cut the problem half in
two.
But not only did this editoiial
writer say we have too much land
he said we've also got too many
farmers, and he added that the
solution to the whole problem was
to cut down on both.
Now I can see how it might be
possible to cut down on the num-
ber of farmers, just lower prices
a little more, but when it comes
to cutting down on the amount of
land we've got, that editorial writ-
er is going to have to shaipen his
pencil
It’s my theory that as long as
there's any land to farm, some-
body will farm it, the same as it’s
true that just as long as there's
any gossip to repeat, somebody
First Ten Days
Are Hardest For
Turkey Poults
Turkey producers who end the
first 10 days of the brooding per-
iod with close to 100 percent of
their poults are on the way to a
successful season. Ben Wormeli,
extension poultry husbandman,
says about two-thirds of the poult
losses during the early brooding
period can be traced to manage-
ment factors and the balance to
specific diseases.
Chilling, overheating and crowd
while I have nev-
er run into a farm
er yet who thought he had too
much land, if it was paid for, I
think Congress ought to be in-
formed of it. The writer said we
just have too many acres, and it
shouldn’t take Congress long to
figure out the way to whip that sit-
this is a new ex- j will repeat it. There's something
planation and about a piece of un-farmed land
that sweeps a man off his feet. It
doesn’t make any difference how
many people before have gon"
busted on it. there’s always some-
body else willing to give it a
turn. As I've always said, there
never was a piece of land some
farmer wasn’t willing to farm, or
a woman some man wasn't will-
ing to marry.
Therefore, they'll have to attack
the farm problem from some
other angle. What angle that'll
be is not for me to say. Thal'3
Congress' job. Us farmers only
make the problems, it’s up to
Congress to solve em. This is
known as separation of powers,
guaranteed under the Constitu-
tion.
Yours faithfully,
j. A.
-CAMERON S LEADING NEWSPAPER 8INCE I860”
LL Commander
Head Of Dallas
Recruiting Here
^Miracle Revival-God Heals Today
!Area-Wide Salvation Healing Campaign
FOR ALL PEOPLE OF ALL CHURCHES, CATHOLIC-PROTESTANT-JEW
CAMERON GOSPEL TABERNACLE
Across from City Park Cameron, Texas
HEAR AND SEE
FRED JENSEN
MIRACLE BOY PREACHER
Thousands Have Been Saved. Healed, Filled with the
Holy Ghost Under His Ministry
Rev. H. M. Bowley, Pastor Phone 784
SIGNS! WONDERS! MIRACLES!
Lame Walk — Blind See — Deaf Hear
Healing Line Every Night, Ambulance Cases First
Services Nightly at 7:45 o’clock
ing can cause high death losses
but starve-outs generally do the
most damage. Wormeli says this
condition exists when poults do
not get started on feed snd water.
Losses begin on the third or
fourth day and continue through
the first week. The specialist says
part of the cause may come from
poor lighting. Poults do not have
well developed vision during the
first week of life. A 150 watt light
placed six feet above the floor
and over each brooder and kept
on for 14 hours a day will help
attract them to the feed and wa-
ter.
Poults will eat litter and this
results in a condition similar to
starve-outs, impacted gizzard and
intestinal tract. To prevent this
trouble, cover the entire brooder
area for the first week with clean
feed sacks or a rough textured
building paper.
The litter in the brooder house
should be four inches deep, clean,
free from mold and low in dust
Since poults sleep with their
heads on the litter. mold can
be inhaled and result in lung and
air sack troubles. Dust can cause
eye trouble.
Starting temperature should be
98 degrees two inches above the
floor at the edge of the brooder
hover. This temperature can be
gradually reduced above five
degrees a week until the poults
no longer need heat. Up to
300 poults can be started with
each brooder stove. Wormeli says
a brooder guards wooven wire in
warm weather and cardboard or
sheet iron in cold weather, should
be placed three or four feet from
the edge of the hover during the
Lt. Commander Zavodny, Naval
Recruiting officer in charge of
the Dallas District was in Cam-
eron Thursday and reported
everything in the local recruit-
ing office ‘ Shipshape".
The officer of eighteen years in
the service and still under 40 said
that it takes the towns and com-
munities the country over the
size of Cameron to hold up the re-
cruitment program for the coun-
try. He stated that the larger cit-
ies are “tough" to get volunteers
from and he further assured that
Cameron’ station under Chief
machinists mate George D. John-
son and Chief Charles W. Wofford
is well above the average and is
one of the districts most produc-
tive stations.
“The guided missle within a
few years will obsolete the air-
plane for protection of our coun-
try," said the Lt. Commander.
On the subject of recruits the
Commander said that a minority
cruise, which is less than the
standard four year cruise, can
be shipped on by boys from 17 to
18. These can come out at age 21.
A High School graduate with a
qualifying Score on the test given
in Cameron of 45 percent can be
guaranteed the school he wants.
The local test merely qualifies the
under-graduate to APPLY for en-
listment in Dallas. The Dallas of-
fice has a different test which is
more illustrated and mechanical
than the test on the local level
COURT RECORDS
' MARRIAGES
Maxine Cardwell.
Harry Gordan Harris, Jr. to
Clyde Edward Luetge to Shirley
Carolyn Hart.
first week. Confines the poults to ] where the tests are more text
the heated area and helps them
get started properly on their feed
and water. Allow one square foot
of space for each poult during the
first three weeks, two inches of
feeder space and four one gallon
water fountains for each 100
poults.
Fred Jensen
Has not G°d borne with
these years? Be ye tolerant
others.
literary in nature.
you
to
New Heavyweight
Champs
New 56 Chevrolet Task*Force Trucks
Champs of every weight class!
Resources Confab
In Waco Discusses
Nations Defenses
Civic leaders eager to render a
vital service to the safety of the
nation are enrolling in the Na-
tional Resources Conference to be
held March 12 - 23 in the Masonic
Grand Lodge, according to civil-
ian selection committee chairman
Pat Taggart.
The course will cover the part
to be played by civilian leadership
of the United States with respect
to national security, Taggart said,
and will be presented five days a
week, four hours a day. The In-
dustrial College of the Armed for-
ces, which operates directly under
the joint Chiefs of Staff, will pre-
sent the series of lectures
through six-flight faculty mem-
bers from the College.
The magnitude of the problem
civilians would face in the case of
an all-out emergency will be cov-
ered in such subjects as public
opinion, war finance, transporta-
tion and communication, manpow-
er resources, fuel and power, em-
ergency management, agriculture
civil defense, Soviet potential, and
a host of othe rinsperable prob-
lems essential to survival, Tagger
said.
Central Texas civic leaders not
already enrolled in the Conferen-
ce are urged to make application
now at the Waco Chamber of
Commerce, P. O. Box 1220, Tag-
gart said.
New models to do bigger jobs—rated up
to 32,000 lbs. G.V.W.l New power right
across the board—with a brand-new big
V8 for high-tonnage haulingj New auto-
matic and 5-speed transmissions!
New Lightweight
Champs
Meet today’s most modern truck fleet! It offers new champs of
every weight class, including four new heavy-duty series. It
brings you new power for every job, with a modern short-
stroke V8* for every model.
Then there’s a wider range of Hydra-Matic models and
Powermatic, a new six-speed automatic, plus new five-speed
manual transmissions.t
Come in and see these new Chevrolet trucks!
• I 5 standard in LC/. and Series 8000 and lOOOO models, an extra-cost option
in all other models.
1 Extra-cost options available in a wide range of models (fire-speed transmission
standard In Series 9000 and 10000). g
New Middleweight
Champs
Anything less is an old-fashioned truck!
xzzjjjzzy
Grabein Chevrolet Co.
1M SOUTH TRAVIS
Phone V7S
Cameron, Texas
Royally Studying
Mule At MH Baylor
Amelia K. Lee, grand-daughter
of Korea's last king, has been
admitted to Mary Hardin-Baylor
College to study music.
Miss Lee. who already holds a
B. A. degree from Ewha Girl’s
College, Seoul, will seek a bache-
lor’s degree in music.. She is a
graduate of Sample Primary
school in College of Education
and Kyunggi Girls High School.
The 25-year-old soprano is be-
ing sponsored by the Rev. R. E.
Streetman, pastor of the First
Baptist Church, Colei nan, Texas.
Rev. Streetman's son, David, met
her in 1955 at the Seoul Military
Post Library, where she has
worked for the last three years.
Her grandfather, the Emperor
Yi, abdicated his throne in 1910
after the Japanese annexation of
Korea. Her grandmother had been
slain in 1895 by Japanese soldiers.
Miss Lee expects to leave Ko-
rea toward, the end of April and
enroll in Mary Hardin-Baylor for
the 1956 fall semester.
CAMERON HERALD
CLASSIFIED ADS GET
QUICK RESULTS
DEEDS
Robert A. Ejim et ux to David
S. Eugea et ux: $10.00: Lot and
parcel of land lying and being sit-
uated in Milam County out of the
S. P. Carson Survey.
Raymond J. Cykala et ux to
Verda Lee Stecher and husband:
$250.00: Undivided interest in and
to all that certain lot tract or par-
cel of land in the City of Cam-
eron. ,
Roberl A. Stecher el ux; Verda
Lee Stecher and husband; $250.00
Undivided interest in and to all
that certain lot tract or parcel of
land in the City of Cameron.
Lane Stecher et ux to Verda
Lee Stecher and husband: $250.00
Undivided interest in and to all
that certain lot tract or parcel of
land in the City of Cameron.
Ethel Mae Hill to Clifford Grif-
fith and Lois Faye Griffith: 35 a-
cres more or less in the John F.
Guthrie Grant in Milam County.
Mrs. Lula Burney to Mrs. Veda
Bikhead: $10.00 and other valua-l
ble consideration: 2 tracts of land
situated in Milam County out of
the David Houston League.
A. D. Calton to D. B. Kultgen,
Pat. Beard and Mike Beard: $10-
00 and other good and valuable
consideration: Tract of land ly-
ing and being situated in Milam
County out of the Jose Leal Grant
W. P. Matyastik et ux to Very
Reverend George 3. Duda, Pastor
of St. Monica’s Church: $6,500.00:
Being a tract 0r parcel of land out
of the VV. W. Lewis League in Mi-
lam County also being a portion
of the McLerran Addition t o the
City of Cameron.
F. B. Durnie et ux and Emil C.
Durnie to Woodson Lumber Com.
Wholesale, Caldwell: $10.00 and
other valuable and sufficient con-
sideration: Being a tract of land
out of the W. W. Lewis League in
Milam Co. near the City of Cam-
eron also being 9.69 acres out of
the 118 acre tract described in a
deed from J. D. Hefley et al.
Willis J. Johnson to Mrs. Myrtle
Johnston Crump: $500.00 undivid-
ed one-fifth interest out of the
James Reese League in Milam
County.
Very Reverend George J. Duda,
Pastor of St. Monica’s Church to
Cameron Compress Company:
$10.00 and other valuable and suf-
ficient consideration: Being a
tract or parcel of land out of the
W. W. Lewis League in Milam Co.
also a portion of the McLerran ad-
dition to the city of Cameron.
Aluminum Company of America
to Donald G. Mercer et ux: $13.-
000.00: Lot 16 Blk 4 of the West-
wood Subdivsion, Rockdale.
Lawrence L. Lowe et ux to Al-
uminum Company of America:
$10,333 08: Lot 1 in block 7 of the
Westwood Subdivision Rockdale.
Mary Belie Batte, Lee Barbee
Shipp, Jr. ami Lelia Lee Hickman
and husband t0 W. D. Nicholson:
$10.00 and other valuable and suf-
ficient consideration: 6 tracts of
land situated in Milam County.
Cameron Compress Company to
Most Reverend L. J. Reicher,
Catholic Bishop of Austin Diocese
$10.00 and other valuable consider
ation: Tract or parcel of land out
of the W. W. Lewis League Milam
County.
J. S. Batte and J. C. Martin, In-
dependent Executors of the Es-
tate of R. L. Batte and Mary Belle
Batte to R L. Batte, Jr. and Lelia
Lee Hickman: $1.00: All of the oil
and gas and other minerals from
the OSO-'-i acres of land sutuated
11 miles S 53 E from Cameron.
Dorcas Batte Smith and hus-
band to R. L. Batte, Jr. and Lelia
Lee Batte Hickman $10.00 and
other good and valuable consider-
ation: All of the oil and gas and
other minerals from the 930-Vi
acres of land situated 11 miles S
53 E from Cameron.
THURSDAY, MARCH 1,1956
R. A. Pratt, Jr. et ux to W. T.
Pearson and Sons: $10.00 ttnd
other valuable conaideration: Lot
and parcel of land situated in
Rockdale.
Juanita Cruz Sanchez to Julius
Cruz et ux: $600.00: Lots 1 and 2
in Block 45 in West Cameron «d-
dition to the City of Cameron.
B. T. Burnett to J. L„ Lampkin:
$10.00 and other valuable consid-
oration: two tracts of land lying
and being situated in Milam
County.
F. M. Praesel et ux to I. J. Mc-
Cook, Jr. et ux: $10.00 and other
valuable Consideration: Lot 17 of
Block 1 of the revised Praesel
Subdivision, Rockdale.
Donald N. Shipp to First Nation-
al Bank in Cameron: $1.00 and
other valuable consideration: Un-
divided V4 interest in and to those
3 certain tract! of land each des-
cribed as containing 69 acres out
of the D„ Bowman Survey in Mi-
lam County.
W. C. Rodenbeek Sr. et ux to
W. C. Rodenbeek Jr. et ux: $3,000
and other consideration: Being
out of and a part of Lot 4 in Block
20 of the Town of Thorndale.
Frances D„ Swift and husband
to Clifford Thompson: $10.00 and
other valuable consideration: All
of lot 2 and part of lot 3 in Block
1 of the Gartner Addition to the
Town of Cameron.
Joseph Robinson to Myrtle
Kate Kelley and Julia Ann Miller:
$1.00 and other valuable consider-
ation: Lot 11 through 15 inclusive
in Block 9 of the West Cameron
Addition to the City of Cameron.
Willie Robison Allen and hus-
band to Ilallie L. Cherry: $10.00
and other valuable consideration-
All of undivided one-third interest
in all to that certain tract of 18.9
acre of land situated in the Jose
Leal Grant in Milam County.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hyde of
Eugene Oregon have returned to
their h»me after a weeks visit in
the home of their parents Mr.
and Mrs. George Lentil.
TRADE IN CAMERON
AND SAVE
DRYGOODS
Dollar Day Values
36 INCH WIDTH
CHAMBRAY
SOLIDS AND MATCHING STRIPES
Easily and Unconditionally Washable
The Cloth of Many Uses
SPECIAL
5 Yds.
1.00
BOY’S
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Strong Elastic Waist 3 Pi1.
Reg. 39c Val.
Nylon Re-Inforced
Sizes 2 — 16
1.00
MEN’S BLUE CHAMBRAY
WORK SHIRTS
Double Stitched-Double Yoke
Sanforized Full Cut
Sizes l'l — 17
Reg. 1.29 Val.
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99c
MEN’S
White “T” Shirts 59c Val
Sizes S — M — L
Nylon Reinforced
MEN’S
Shorts
Sanforized Long Wearing,. _
Boxer or Regular Styles 2 Pf*
Sizes 28 — 44
WASH RINSE and DRY
COTTONS
Solids and Prints
Little or No Ironing Necessary
Oh! So Easy To Launder
COTTON SATINS
Solids and Prints
Boy’s Short Sleeve
SPORT SHIRTS
Sanforized
White, Prints, Plaids
Sizes 1 — 16
Special...
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66
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The Cameron Herald (Cameron, Tex.), Vol. 96, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 1, 1956, newspaper, March 1, 1956; Cameron, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth577884/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lucy Hill Patterson Memorial Library.