The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 81, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 27, 1976 Page: 11 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Clifton Record and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Nellie Pederson Civic Library.
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'■
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T»wr**y, May 27, 1976
\
My Experience
Joe Stevens tells about tys ,Walk-
er hounds.
-THE HUNTER'S HORN, August, 1972
Attcr sending Pete Raider to
Ohio I decided to breed Joli Blon
to Punk McCoy T. 94787, whom
I had given Mr. and Mrs. James
Townley, Morgan, Tex. for help-
ing me with Chiltons pups when
they were young. I kept two gyps
and a dog. i he dog was shy and
did not turn out, but Fiiendh
Girl (now in the kennel of Jim
Lee, Bain bridge, Gaj and Joli
Blon S. 11 made tine hounds. I
saw Joi: Blon S. II run out about
15 hounds one night near Cam-
eron, Tex. and lead the few re-
maining hounds to catch the sec-
ond coyote about daylight.
however (with apologies) I
sent the runt in this litter as a
present to Herman Paugh in Ohio
to show him the power of old Joli
Blon. He turned out to be what
he thinks is extra ordinary. "Punk”
as he calls him, is an ideal fox-
hound with more heel and a bet-
ter performer than Pete Raider.
He is a fast, smart hunter and nev-
er leaves the general hunting area.
He can start more fox than a half
dozen ordinary hounds. He has
the driving speed of old Jolt Blon
and can make it hard on hounds
in a long race. He has the intel-
ligence I always like, but do not
always find in a foxhound His
pups are beginning to be sought
after. Sincerely I hope he is as
prepotent as Pete Raider. If so he
will help any hunter that makes a
good cross on him.
Silver Blon S. 103084
(Joli Blon 5. ex Raymond S.)
When J. W. Elliott brought
Raymond S. to Texas I was ad-
vised by Albert Sctzer and N. W.
Weldon to breed Joli Blon to him.
This I did and got six nice pups.
Fortunately, I kept Silver Blon S.,
the most beautiful white and lem-
on gyp I have ever owned. She
had a mouth like Joli Blon and
plenty of heel, but could not hold
her game quite as well as Joli
Blon. However, she was a great
hound and I enjoyed her very
much.
Gale Winds S. 113203
(Silver Blon S. ex Climer H.)
When Silver was about three
years old coyotes began to take
over my hunting territory. 1 en-
joyed seeing her desire to run
them and began to seek a good
coyote hound to breed her to. Fi-
nally, I settled on Climer H. own-
ed by Elmer Handcock Center,
Tex. (after getting advice from
Lee Johnson, Richland, Mo.). He
told me about the great ancestory
on the side of Warburton Lee Jr.
and those who knew White Gal S.,
the dam of Climer H., and the old
hound himself attested to their
ability as fox and coyote hounds.
From this cross came the great-
est litter of pups I have ever bred.
There were nine females and only
one male—all white, tan and gray
or white and lemon. 1 wouldn’t
have taken $200.00 for the dog
pup at two months of age. He ran
the first time taken (eight months)
and had the coarsest mouth I ever,
heard as a pup. He was killed on
the highway along with the most
powerfully built white female I
have ever seen. I had one female
left named "Peaches.” She had a
blood curdling squealing mouth,
but alas she was also killed on the
highway before being fully trained.
I was able to get "Squaw Girl"
back from R. C. Meyers in Hill
County and Allen Stoker let me
have the great Gale Winds S.
113203 as a personal favor after
I lost the others.
These young gyps immediately
became the backbone of my pack.
Either one coukl jump a coyote
and drive him, uritil the pack join-
ed in. Gale was the flashiest
hound, but Squaw Girl runs her
game the closest and they are
front wnd hyunds that are dead
game. Allen “iStoker of Brandon,
Tex. has one he calls "Rose” that
is surely exciting to listen to, and
Vaughn Jenncss of Cameron, Tex.
has been catching coyotes with
the three he has since they were
yearlings. Salem Road "Beth" has
a wonderful squealing mouth that
is something else! He has been of-
fered a long price for her but she
is not for sale.
Pete Raider's Son 113202 ex
Gale Winds S. 113203
1 crossed Pete Raider’s Son on
Gale Winds S. and she whelped
nine pups on November 26, 1971.
These pups look good and will
be tested by the best coyote hunt-
ers in this area and on fox in
Ohio and Georgia. Alas! Gale was
killed by a car about two months
ago.
Bandit 98066 IFSB; 62610 SFSB
ex Joli Blon S. II
While searching the Hunter’s
Horn for a well bred Climer H.
hound, I ran across the name of
Bandit 62610 owned by Jimmy
Ray Tipton, Humphreys, Mo. I
wrote Jimmy and have been able
to lease ole Bandit. Joli Blon S.
II has ten nice pups from him at
present. I predict good things
from this cross.
I have just returned from north-
ern Missouri where I observed
pups from six litters—age three
months to three years, by old Ban-
dit. They look right and are good
hounds. Not one was for sale! I
saw two old littermate fSmales to
Bandit and they are the kind I
like. This family of hounds have
the endurance for an all night race
and the speed to drive their game
like it should be done. They are
friendly and bold, but most of all
they are not afraid of a coyote.
This is part of my experience
with the Walker bloodlines I have
to date. I have learned a little
thus far and have enjoyed it im-
mensely. Needless to say, 1 look
to the future with keen anticipa-
tion expecting great things from
the pups of these tested and found
to be true Walker bloodlines. I
will cross my Bandit ex Joli Blon
S. hounds on the Climer H. ex Sil-
ver Blon S. Hounds—thus line
breeding them on the great Joli
Blon S. and Climer H. bloodlines.
□
HONORED—Mrs. E. E. Raley of Clifton received a cor-
sage from the Rev Joe T. Stevens, pastor of First Bap-
tist Church, Laguna Park, during a recent service for
hunters. Mrs. Raley’s late husband was a hunting col-
league and friend of the Rev. Mr. Stevens.
—Photo by Lyndell Smfth
Texas is most tornado-prone
Education aid
for some vets
expiring May 31
Education benefits will ex-
pire May 31 1970, for many
veterans who served in The
Armed Forces between Janu-
ary 31, 1955. and May 31.J966.
Jack Coker, Waco Veterans
Administration Regional Of-
fice Director has reported.
“Veterans in this category
who will continue their educa-
tion should seek alternate edu-
cational financial assistance,"
said Coker.
HEW Office of Education,
Department of Labor, and state
agencies have numerous tinan
eial assistance programs avail-
able.
"School financial aid offices
are also a good source of in-
formation on available assist-
ance," Coker stated.
HEW has Basic Element"”:
Opportunity Grants, lligl er
Education Act Insured Loans,
A
p***"'i
mSsF" -™'“ area’
Texts has the Vocational Re *"* 1°“?^ *erv,ce otn'
Bsxsr- -u" s:;^00
1 Rack Assorted Sizes and Styles
Mon. - Fri. - 10. - 5:30 Sat. — 8-12
BAB'S TOT SHOP
321 W. 5th
Cliften
ot
A/WWNA/^WVW<^/WVVWVWWS/W^^^
Hot. humid, windy weather
can be a dangerous signal for
Texas
Why?
Because these weather condi-
tions breed tornadoes, and Tex-
as is the most tornado-prone
state in the nation, says Dv.
Gary Nelson, agricultural
safety engineer for the Texa*
Agricultural Extension Serv-
ice, College Station.
Texas has an average of 103
tornadoes a year, with most of
them occurring in April and
May when there are violent
winds, severe thunderstorms,
ahd masses of cool and warm
air colliding with each other.
Eight out of 10 tornadoes
occur between noon and mid-
night, with more than 20 per
cent in the two-hour span from
4 to 6 p.m.
Tornadoes, which take an av-
erage of 1B4 human lives in
the U.S., usually travel south-
west and stay on the ground
about 10 minutes. Their for-
ward speed is about 30 miles
per hour, but wind speeds in
the funnel of a tornado can
get up to 300 miles per liouf,
explains Nelson
The National Weather Serv-
ice issues a "tornado watch’’
when atmospheric conditions
are favorable for the develop
ment of tornadoes. A "tornado
warning" is issued when a tor-
nado has actually been sight-
ed or detected by radar.
“If you hear of a tprnadq
watch, stay tuned to a radio or
television for weather reports,1
says the Texas A&M Univer-
sity System engineer. "If a
tornado is issued, take cover in
a basement, cellar or civil de-
fense shelter and keep a bat-
tery-powered radio handy in
case power lines are down,"
The safest refuge, says Nel-
son, is a tornado shelter,
underground excavation or re-
inforced concrete structure..
"If you don’t have a base-
ment, stay in the central part
of the lowest level of the house
or get in a closet or bathroom
or under heavy furniture
Open a few windows but stay
away from them," the engineer
warns.
"If you’re in an office or
factory, stay in an inside hall
way on- the lowest floor or go
to a designated shelter.
"Get out of mobile homes or
old, poorly built buildings and
stay away from any structures
with free-spun roofs such as
•gyms or auditoriums.
"If you’re caught in open
country when a tornado hits,
head for a nearby building or
lie flat in a ravine or ditch.
Don’t stay in a car unless
you can drive away from the
tornado at right angles to its
path.
"If you sight a tornado, re-
port it ai once, but don’t tie
up the phone with unnecessary
cells," advises Nelson.
When cleaning up the debris
from a tornado, wear gloves
and thick soled shoes and
watch for downed electrical
wires and broken gas pipes.
"Don’t light mhtebes or smoke
in or near a building that has
been hit by a tornado until
you’re sure there are no gas
leaks," Nelson cautions.
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Jordan, William T. The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 81, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 27, 1976, newspaper, May 27, 1976; Clifton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth797683/m1/11/?q=waco+tornado: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nellie Pederson Civic Library.