The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 65, No. 197, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 17, 1956 Page: 3 of 8
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[Wednesday, October 17, 1956
f
larket Reports
The El Reno (Okla.) Daily Tribune
ENO MARKETS
Vreeted to 2 p.m.
Eggs ...............
Eggs....._........
Hens, 4Vi-Ib. Grade
I Hens ______________
Ihoma CITY LIVESTOCK
lAHOMA CITY, Oct. 17 — UP
Itle 3.200; calves 500; stand-
id good slaughter steers 19.00
|5; good and choice slaughter
14.00 to 17.00; medium and
CHICAGO GRAINS
Oct. 17) | CHICAGO, Oct. 17 -OH- A mod-
-.....$2.04 erate demand and an absence of
-------2.20 | selling pressure combined to send
------1.35 j grains highers on the board of trade
------ .80 today.
......* A burst of buying got the market
.27 j 0ff (0 a g00(j start. Prices turned
j downward in mid-morning on news
n« ^ Yugoslavia might not accept Amer
-0° ican economic aid. Toward the fin-
06
[ ish a new buying flurry sent prices
to the day’s best levels.
Wheat closed 7/8 to 1 3/4 higher,
December $2.31 to $2.31 1/8, corn
1 1/8 to 1 7/8 higher, December
$1.35 5/8 to 3/4, oats 3/8 lower to
5/8 higher, December 78 3/4 to 5/8,
, ___________ ____ rye 1 to 1 1/2 higher, December
tuckers and feeders 12.00 to $1-54 3.4 to 1/2, soybeans 3 to 5
cents higher, November $2.41 to
800; No. 1 to 2 200 to 240 2-41 1/2 antl lard unchanged to 23
[butchers 16.25 to 17.00; sows cents a hundred Pounds higher,
[400 pound 14.50 to 16.00. October $12.45 to $12.35.
P 300; good and choice wool-
ibs 17.75 to 19 25. NEW YORK ST0CKS
NEW YORK, Oct. 17 —(*— The
stock market continued lower in
! quiet trading late this afternoon but
rails advanced against the trend.
Volume for the day was estimat-
j ed at around 1.700,000 shares com-
pared with 1,580,000 yesterday.
js close. December 33 86 A few selected issues made good
3.91, and May 33.94. gains but Pivolal stocks generally
__' were down from fractions to .1 pojnj
or so.
Except for a scattering of indivi-
dual stocks, the market mostly ig
nored bullish economic and corpo
rate news.
|YORK COTTON
YORK, Oct. 17 —ijfi—Cotton
|> declined today under pres-
Jf liquidation and hedging.
afternoon prices were 20
■cents a bale lower than the
FREE DELIVERY
&Z DAILY
lave your physician phone
pur prescription to as.
graduate registered phar-
macist on duty at all times
|/e Give Green Stamps
FTE&SON DRUG CO.
Phone 167
Bulldozing
Scraper Work
Land Leveling
Terracing
|!LL HUNT
Phone 3170-W-3
KANSAS CITY LIVESTOCK
KANSAS CITY, Oct. 17 -Ufi—
Cattle 3,000; calves 600; good and
low choice fed steers 18.00 to 23.75;
good and low choice heifers 17.00
to 21.50; good and choice slaughter
calves 12.00 to 15.00.
Hogs 3,000;* most mixed lots No.
1 to 3, 200 to 260 pounds 15.50 to
85; sows steady to 25 lower, No.
1 to 4 grade 380 to 550 pounds 14.25
to 15.50.
Sheep 1,000; good and choice 80
to 135 pound wooled slaughter
lambs about steady 17.50 to 19.00
|mbo prints
Extra Charge
ONE-DAY
PHOTO
FINISHING
. Film in Before 5:30—
Prints Next Day at 5:30
EVENINGS * SUNDAY
lOURNE’S
Ielrt-drugs-photo
1906 Hospitality Pass
Honored at Louisville
LOUISVILLE, Ky„ Oet. 16-IUV-
C. Arthur Blair, retired Temple
City, Calif., pharmacist, recently
received all the hospitality prom-
ised on a 1906 courtesy pass to the
City of Louisville — except for a
trolley ride.
Blair had kept the yellowed pass,
issued by the now defunct Louis-
ville Commercial Club, for 50
years. A native of I^tcher County,
Ky., he decided to try his luck
with it while passing through on
a visit.
A startled Chamber of Commerce
—successor to the old Commercial
Club—honored the pass and gave
him a chauffeur-driven limousine
to take in the city’s sights. Louis-
ville's last trolleys were retired 10
years ago.
READY-MIX CONCRETE
CeiKrcfi Finisher* Available
BOTTS-HULME-BROWN
South End Barker Avenue
|Temco Wo!! Heaters
psi
I Keller
★ TEMCO FLOOR FURNACES
★ TEMCO CIRCULATING HEATERS
★ PEERLESS BATH HEATERS
★ PERMAGLAS HOT WATER HEATERS
★ AMERICAN-STANDARD BATH FIXTURES
PLUMBING CONTRACTOR
1021 EAST ROGERS
PHONE S9
TRIBUNE
FARM NEWS
Fall Is Right Time
t
For Pest Control
Annette Albers . . . Typical 4-H Girl
County 4-H'ers on Parade
By Susan Smith
A REVIEW of the record of An-
nette Albers is presented
this week as she has been select-
ed the county 4-H’er of the week.
Annette is the 11-year old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tony
Albers, Union City, and she is be-
ginning work in her fourth year
of 4-H club work. She has com-
pleted work in twelve projects
and has also done some fine work
in special activities connected
with the 4-H club program.
Some of Annette's best work
has been in food preparation,
home improvement, clothing and
home grounds beautification. She
is a very active member of the
Union City 4-H club and takes
part in most every club activity.
She has given many interesting
demonstrations and timely
speeches for club meetings, and
has also given both demonstra-
tions and speeches for County
Contest events. She has earned
many nice placings with her en-
tries at the county contest events,
county fairs and county poultry
shows, too.
In the special activities of her
Provision Of
Soil Bank Act
Is Stressed
club, Annettte has participated
in numerous share-the-fun events.
She has participated in the health
contests each year, and she has
the fine record of attending all
county 4-H club meetings. She
has also attended county 4-H club
camp several times.
This year Annette is a sixth
grade student at the Union City
school. She likes her school work
very much. Basketball and the
other school athletic events hold
her interest. She also enjoys mu-
sic very much, and sings with
many of the school music groups.
Annette’s best loved hobby is
reading. She has read many,
many books. She lists music as
one of her favorite hobbys, too,
as well as many outdoor activi-
ties.
With her brothers, Tony, jr.,
and Rocke and her younger sis-
ter, Genel, Annette attends the
Methodist church, Union City.
She is a member of the Metho-
dist Youth fellowship organiza-
tion of her church affiliation.
j ing to swim upstream in a road-
side ditch near Lake Madison. He
got out of his car and clubbed
eight of them to death with a num-
ber nine golf iron.
Contest Deadline
Reminder Mailed
Two letters have been sent to
members of county home demon-
stration clubs by Mrs. Eugene
Fitch, demonstration agent, in con-
nection with the annual home im-
provement contest.
One letter was.sent to all club
members who have entered the
contest requesting final informa-
tion for the judging days, Oet. 25
and 26, while the second was sent
to club presidents.
The second letter listed the names
of women from each club who have
entered the contest and asked that
'J'HE time of year is now right for lice to begin their build-
up in population and is also the time for cattle grub con-
trol practices to begin,” L. D. Warkenlin, county agent said
today.
Parasites cause the livestock owners of this county mil-
lions of dollars in damage annually,” the agent stated, “and
there is no reason to feed parasites on scarce feed supplies ”
The agent pointed out that with the feed and grass short-
ages, drouth and cost of wintering cattle, parasite control
is a must for every livestock ---------
program. la period of years. For this reason, . any names omitted from the list
Control of cattle lice on beef he continued, it is most satisfac-1 be added by the club president,
cattle is accomplished, the agent tory to treat bindweed when it is Miss Grace Spivev specialist
227** ;r ““ ,*» mC I •» * *■»■« «... , JL A. ami M. ,55 d“t
Vf nh.p 10, j5|?rcen.t Kamfma “Several materials have been scoring,
isomer of BUG at the rate of five found satisfactory and are recom- _
poum s per 100 gallons of water mended by A and M college ex- PLEDGES FRATERNITY
rnV?,:„a1.e”d‘pray’iccordinEu“""'*“**••• w.rk,„u„8„id.i "‘"zr
Sodium chlorate, applied in dry pledged Tau Kappa Epsilon social
HPHE BHC solution is not good f°rm during the fall at about four fraternity at Southwestern State
-*■ for very young animals or ,0 *‘ve pounds per square rod, is
one product recommended by the
for very young animals or
dairy cattle, the agent said, but
methoxychlor is one recommend-
ed product that can be used. It
should be used as eight pounds of
50 percent wettable powder, per
100 gallons of W'ater.
“Grub control will be a neces-
sary management practice for
many cattlemen in the near fu-
ture,’’ Warkentin stated, “as it is
estimated grubs cost Oklahoma
extension service, according to
Warkentin, but is inflammable and
dangerous and must be handled
with care.
Atlacide, which is somewhat
safer to handle, should be applied
before the frost at a rate of six
or seven pounds to the square rod.
college, Weatherford
TYPEWRITERS AND
ADDING MACHINES
SALES—RENTAL— REPAIRS
New and Reconditioned
HENRY BEHNE
Typewriter Dept. Phone 280
ROY — Mr. and Mrs. Donald
King, 520 South Choctaw, are the
parents of a son, born Tuesday,
Oct. 16, in Park View hospital.
The baby weighed seven pounds,
nine ounces.
RUGS CLEANED
The Patented Hild Way
Phone 11 or 58
CRYSTAL
LAUNDRY
CLEANERS
BULLDOZER
WORK
• TERRACING
• WATERWAYS
• FARM PONDS
HERBFRT HUCHTEMANN
Phone 3160-J-3
::,
TJORAX compounds can also be
farmers and ranchers some” 10 to | I
12 million dollars annually.” It?' af.0“‘ “ to 2° P°,unds a
.... rod’ but aU of these, due to cost
Control may be accomplished at and nature, are recommended only
a nominal cost with two or three for small areas. 1
applications of rotenone spray at
30 day intervals, Warkentin said.
Using the rotenone as directed the
spraying should be in the fall be-
fore the first grubs emerge from
the animal’s back, to obtain the
FISHING
SIOUX FALLS, S. D.-iW-Dwight ---------------„ _ lul
Nystrom spotted some carp try* most of our wheat and small grain
best results, said the agent.
“And a combination treatment j field,
for both cattle lice and grubs, us-
ing the mixtures given, provides
good control of both pests,” Wark-
entin stated.
4UTLHE control of weeds is an-
A other problem forced on the
county farmer,” Warkentin said
“and the bindweed is undoubtedly
the number one weed problem for
For large areas and entire fields
the best control, while still getting
use of the field, comes from the
2, 4-D compounds, Warkentin said,
hut farmers should keep in mind
it is easier to kill weeds before
they have spread throughout a
see ii» todd-ao
IVw Rodgers & Hammerstein's g
'Set nuAKjrin
w -A.-SeLk/A ’W/ 4.Va# A. ■
SEATS AVAILABLE
THRU OCTOBER
You may Phone
CE 2-8191 or write
for reservation!.
Send checls and
self-addressed
stamped envelope
with all Mail
Orders.
GORDON t SHIRLEY
MacRAE JONES
SEE THE PROLOGUE
"The Miracle of TODD-AO'*
S T AT E Theatre
20 NORTH ROBINSON, OKLAHOMA CITY
PRICES AND
PERFORMANCES
Mon. thru Fm
2 PM-1 25-1 50
8 20 PM-!.50 2 00
Sat.-Sun. and
Holidays—1 PM
4 30 PM-8 20 PM
1.50-2.00
m ms am7
A section of the soil bank act
was pointed out to county farmers
today by R. C. Stephenson, ASC
office manager, whereby farmers
that do not plant their full allot-
ment for a crop could have the
entire allotment counted in the
history of their farm.
Stephenson said farmers that do
not plant their full allotment could
file a form MQ-31 in the ASC office
and the reduced acreage would not
be counted against them when fu-
ture acreage allotments were fig-
ured.
This does not, Stephenson said,
mean that future allotments will be
as large as they are now, but, al-
lotments will not be reduced if the
farmer does not plant the full quota
due to drouth or other circum-
stances, providing he files the
necessary form.
Deadlines for filing the form
MQ-31 are wheat, May 1, 1957; cot-
ton, June 1, 1957; peanuts, June
ll, 1957.
producers.”
The best control of bindweed, the
agent said, is obtained by using
chemicals which sterilize the soil
and prevent all plant growth for
V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.'.V.V.V
CANADIAN COUNTY'S
CHECKERBOARD NEWS
By Walter Ross
As Reported By
IIOMER SMUDRICK and DERALD MILLER
El Keno Seed & Feed's Feeding Advisors
'
I V ■ >
Precentory'i
3# -
M4
-wm
pH ‘
T/
k\
m
Don't Forget
Friday, October 19
Sweet, low, smooth and sassy! Oh, how you'll fall
in love with tEjp one that goes 'em all one better!
Fly, walk, run or swim, but don't you dare miss
the county's biggest new car showing. These strik-
ing beauties will dazzle your eyes as you behold
their trim, beautiful lines. Don't miss itl
MARSHALL CHEVROLET
"Our 32nd Year"
WILL YOU BUY FEED
OR PROFITS THIS FALL?
Now’s the time when you should
decide what you'll feed your milk-
ers this winter and switch them
over to it. Before you decide . . .
THINK . . . will you be buying
feed or profits?
Purina's Cow Builder rations
pay . . . pay in several important
ways.
First, they pay because they
help cows produce milk at the
level where milk comes easiest
. . . the profit level of produc-
tion.
They keep average cows in
condititin to produce their natur-
al supply of milk steadily, and
without forcing.
Second—Cow Builder feeding
is also a profitable long-range
practice. Keeping cows in condi-
tion pays dividends at calving
time and good condition insures
against breeding troubles. Well-
fed cows stay in the herd year
after year and good old cows
make the biggest profits . . .
both in extra calves and in extra
milk.
Third—Purina's Cow Builder
plan adapts itself to your grain
supplies. Mainstay of the Cow
Builder ration, is Purina Bulky-
Las which mixes effectively with
corn, corn and cob meal, oats,
milo, barley and other grain
crops. It helps balance these
grains for top feeding efficiency,
palatability and bulk . . , often
reduces the per bushel cast of
the ration below the cost of grain
alone.
See how flexible the Cow
Builder plan really Is . . . how it
can work on your farm. Stop In
now and we'll talk winter feed-
ing with the Cow Builder plan
LET HOGS WORK OVER
FIELD AFTER CORN PICKER
Don't let the 3 to 5 bushels of
corn per acre the corn pickers
leave go to waste. Your hogs can
turn it into pork. For best re-
sults. be sure you do these things
when you turn out hogs to clean
up the fields:
1. Let hogs work over a small
area until thoroughly cleaned up.
Then move them to another
small area. They can't make
good gains if they walk too far
for com.
2 Make sure there's plenty of
fresh, clean water available.
3. Provide some kind of shade
or shelter.
4 Locate self-feeders near
shade and water. For pigs up to
100 lbs., fill ’em with Purina
Sow & Pig Chow Checkers. Older
hogs should get Hog Chow
Checkers.
Come In right away. Let’s dis-
cuss your hog feeding program.
Free Cattle Book Ready
Yes sir, our new free Purina
Cattle Book is ready for you.
Packs a terrific amount of valu-
able cattle Information. Ask for
it.
BRING HEIFERS INTO THE
BARN EARLY AND FEED 'EM
We hope your heifers have been
getting proper grain while on
pasture this summer. If they
haven't, it’s all the more impor-
tant that you get them into the
barn early before the rainy
weather and cold nights set in
and start feeding them.
On the Purina Program heif-
ers should have sufficient size
to breed at about 15 months.
They should freshen at about 24
months. Heifers from 4 months
to 24 months should get a good
nourishing body-building ration.
Purina D & F Chow is a top
quality growing heifer feed.
Farmers with grain can save
money by mixing Purina D&F
Supplement and oats half and
half. Ask about the Purina Heif-
er Program that will help you
put well developed milkers into
the string at 24 months.
CALL YOUR VET EARLY
WHEN DISEASE STRIKES
Delay and wrong diagnosis by
unqualified people annually costs
farmers millions of dollars in
dealing with diseases. Don't fool
(round. Call your veterinarian at
the first sign of trouble. He Is
qualified to diagnose and treat
by years of formal education
backed by on-the-farm experi-
ence. He’s a good man to know,
a valuable farm "employee.”
\
\
8,0 x 7:0 With '$r*| x
Track Hardware----
BORG BRAND
bath scales
CLOSE-OUT
SPECIAL----------
ciose-out setc'At.
asbestos SHHH6
Limited Quantity
Per Square
ONE LOT
2x4 LUMBER
k «•"*-' rv * 5'
for Framing —-
215-LB. THICK BUTT
SHINGLES .. „
36-INCH OAK FINISH
RUG BORDER
| CAST ALUMINUM-BRASS PLATED BAR
SASH LIFTS
NEWELL SCREEN and
STORM DOOR CLOSER
SNOW WHITE-CLOSE-OUT!
WATERLESS CLEANER
STORM DOOR
CRASH STOP
ONE ONLY
BENCH GRINDER
SURFACE MOUNT
MEDICINE CABINET
2:8 x 6 8 WHITE PINE-GALVANIZED
SCREEN DOOR
18x26 METALLIC COPPER BACK BEVELED
MIRRORS
3 0 x 6 8 ALUMINUM COMB. SCREEN &
STORM DOOR Al...
BLACK & DECKER TABLE and ADJUSTMENTS
POWER SAW TABLE
VANITY CABINET W/ FORMICA TOP
BATH LAVATORY
SPEEDWAY
POWER SAW
Lin. Ft.
Each
Each
CLOPAY
FOLDING DOOR
FLOOR FURNACE
GUARD
50-FT. ROLL WHITE
PICKET FENCE.......
PLASTIC BAKED ENAMEL FINI5H-FROM STOCK
MARSH TILE BOARD
MAJESTIC DELUXE MODEL CIRCULATOR
FIREPLACE LINER
RED CEDAR-TONGUE and GROOVE
CLOSE! LINING 25c
220 WEST WOODSON
6.95
23c
4c
1.49
o, 99c
Each 60C
2.29
Each 3.95
Each 5.95
Each 7.95
39.95
Each 39.95
57.50
24.95
Each 8.95
Each 4.95
18.95
29c
59.50
Each
Each
EL RENO SEED & FEED
(Ross and Sons)
JO-104 S. Choctaw Phone 540
.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.
LET US HELP YOU WITH
Home. Gyno^eJin
NO DOWN PAYMENT
UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY
CALL 608
W
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 65, No. 197, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 17, 1956, newspaper, October 17, 1956; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920450/m1/3/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.