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the time the operations were finished the Johnson
Grass roots were well exposed.
Brazos County has a few light fro{its each win-
ter. These frosts are not sufficiently'
heavy to penetrate far enough into
the ground to kill Johnson Grass
roots. But if the roots are exposed, it
\is another story. Last winter when
the frosts came, the roots of the John-
so~ Grass on Mr. Fountain's farm
we;;) all on top of the ground.. ~
It is easily said. But the bald state'
ment gives little idea of the work that
had to be done. Most of the time wet
J - w,eather had to be fought. This made
~it 'necessary to use every possible mo-
ment during the dry spells. Men were
worked in two shifts from dawn until
\ miqnight. There could. be no let-up.
But they did their work well, and this
summer the cotton on the Fountain
farm was cleaner than any in the
neighborhood. .
There were places' where. the. ground could not
be plowed-dit.:hes, wooded creek banks, and the
like.- ThIs"spnntf,'\Vhdl the grass came up in"':he
ditches, it was poisoned. A solution of one pound
of whiteffsenic and two pounds of caustic soda in
ten gallons of boiling water was used successfully.
Octobe/', 1928
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The fa tile Brazos bottom plantation owes
its fertility to the overflows of this tem-
peramental river.
could not be cleared of Johnson Grass, it only served
to make him the more determined. He admits, how-
ever, that at times he had his doubts.
'"It did seem practically impossible,"
he said. '"Why, the man who owned
,the place before Mr. Fountain, lost a
cultivator that-couldn't be found un-
til after we'd cleared it- up. From the
field you couldn't see a car in the road,
the grass was so high.
'"It took a lot of hard work. After
the cotton was' planted, we chopped
it seven times. There was one piece
of ground I had to plow every week,
but finally we got it clean.
'"The tractors were a big factor in
our success. It would have been im-
possible to push mules the way we did
those Fordsons. It would have killed
them. I'm an oldtimer; I like mules;
and until I came on this job, I'd rather
have had mules than machinery; but
I've changed my opinion now. Trac-
tors are the thing." ..
1 He showed us over the plantation, pointing ouL ._
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tne various operations as we drove alCln~.
'"The soil here
is now, he
stated, "in a really
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ACCO P"RESS
Young Johnson Grass has
co111parati7Jely short roots.
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Page Three
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. Once deserted
cabins are 110,('
hap}y h01l1es.
better condition than it was when we
started to work. All the gras~ we turned
under added to its humus. This not. only
enriches the 'land, but also make~ it bet-
ter able to retain moisture. Then, too,
the constant plowing thoroughly aerated
the land. This has helped to keep down.)nsect
pests. ~ 0.-
"We're going to run some hogs with the cattle
on the Johnson Grass in the woods. Hogs will eat
the grass roots, and will eventually, I suppose, clear
it up. We've already made a start in that direction.
By the house there's an alfalfa field in which we've
got a number of pigs. And Mr. Fountain inten,ds to
buy .~ome goats. We'll have a pretty well diversi,
fied'livestock program along with our cotton. Cot-
The wooded places are being fenced off for live'
stock, for it was felt that it would be more satis-
factory thus to utilize the Johnson Grass growing
; the~ej;~an to fight it.
MR. FOUNTAIN employs Mr. J. O. Alexander to
manage his farm. Mr. Alexander is a veteran
of the Brazos bottoms. He is a tenacious man, a
~ghter. When people said that the Fountain farm
A CLAYTON PRESS MAKES A GOOD GIN BETTER
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ACCO PRESS
October, 1928
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ton will, however, continue to be our mainstay.
. '"Have you noticed the number of pecan trees
all around?"
We had.
'"We intend to capitalize them, too. My assist-
ant, Kenneth Smith, made a specialty of horticulture
at Texas A. &" M. This fall he'll bud all those trees.
It won't be long before we'll ge gathering a pretty
good crop from them."
TATER WE had dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Alex-
Lander. There we met Mr. Reuben Grant, the
storekeeper, another old-timer in the bottoms~ The
talk drifted back to a time when Mr. Alexander and
Mr. Grant were younger men, when the Brazos
River rose suddenly, flooding the rich plantations
and taking a heavy toll of life. Mr. Grant has~en
through six such floods. And- It ~
'"I remember the time," said Mr. Alexan er,
'"when I was Assistant Manager of the 8epper
Plantation. The river rose suddenly while I was
visiting at Chance's Ranch. I had to get back to my
place. There was a colored boy with me; and when.
we started back, he insisted that I not ride my saddle
~l\~".-e_l,.,..tL_L~ L,:>_~ m"10 .As t~.<> horse> had ,..oc1- me .
.> ~ 1.al..J..1.0 DUT'~.-,dl\o..\:.. tr" ~\..1 '-'_ "" .1.1'-' .L _ _ ...,'" '"
$300, I dfdn't want to run the risk of losing him,
and so I mounted a big gray mule. The negro got
on a little dun colored mule, and we set out.
"We hit the water. It was so deep that our .ani'
mals had to swim. Something happened to my mule.
What it was I've never been quite able to figure out;
but, anyway, he rolled over and drowned.
'"Night had come while we were in the water.
There was a little. moonlight, however. By it I could
see a tree not far from ,ifhere I was. The water was
icy cold and my clothes as heavy as lead, but I
managed, some way, to reach that tree.
"I looked around and saw the negro, still on his
~ mule, evidently trying to make for me. But, as you
can imagine, my hands were pretty full trying to
. stay in the tree, and for a moment I lost sight of
him. The next time I saw him he was off his mule
and swimming toward me. I leaned as far out as
I could to give him a hand, but the current swept
him by out of reach. Just as he passed, he called,
'Cap, I can't make it!'
'"In a few minutes I saw his mule. My only
chance was to make the mule. I realized it, struck
out for him, and-how, I don't know-climbed on.
Then I tried to find my colored boy, but I couldn't.
'"Yes, I got home all right."
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MR. FOUNTAIN'S farm furnishes mute evidence of
what a farmer can do when he tries. His was
a problem which has baffled many. The cotton
farmer who finds his fields infested with Johnson
Grass is prone to throw up his hands and ask,
'"What's the use!" Numbers before him have tried
and failed; why should he waste his time, energy
and money attempting the impossible? And so, be-
fore he has begun, he is beaten. But the man who is
willing to work, to study and to employ the ma- I
chinery which modern industry has placed at his J
disposal may well profit by Mr. Fountain's experi"
ence. Why Dairy? I
We give below a few reasons why every farmer
should make dairying a part of his farming ope.:"a'
tions:
1. It is a business with few risks.
2. Prices vary very little and they are always such
as to guarantee a profit to those who work in-
telligently.
3. The business can be conducted profitably on a
large or small scale.
4. It enriches the land without cost.
'). It supplies lucrative work for the children who
are old enough to work the year 'round without
interfering with school duties. ~
6. It brings in money every'day of the_year, and
. there is practically no danger of an oyer supply
of the products. -
7. It makes the home an important producer of
wealth, and is an uplifting force for the com'.
munity.
8. The dairy business may be carried on in connec-
tion with other farming, and thus will relieve
the farmer from sole dependence on the '"crop"
that is always extremely uncertain.
-Farm and Factory.
. Feeding Dairy Heifers
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Th~re are three ways to raise heifers: with nurse
cows, by hand feeding on whole milk, and by hand
feeding. on skimmed milk. The nurse cow method
with two or three calves on good common cows
. where pastures and roughage are plentiful and cheap
is very satisfactory and produces a calf good to look
at with lots of flash and finish. Hand feeding of ;,..-.
whole milk~ produces a good calf and one that will- f ~
also show much bloom but is by far thej~most ex- ~
.pen~ive way of raising a. calf a~d all th~.rules. of san- / ""\
ItatlOn set out for feedmg skImmed mIlk WIll have l --I
to be watched. The feeding of skimmed milk is the ]
last and most common method on the dairy farm
and produces a calf not quite so good to look at but
om~~hat will develop into a good cow by the time
she romes into production.
-Southern Pacific Farm News.
A C LAY TON PRE SSM A K E SAG 0 0 D GIN B E. T T E R
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Agricultural & Mechanical College of Texas
College Station, .Texas
March 5, 1951
Mr. Wallace Kimbrough
County Agricultural Agent
Brazos County
Bryan, Texas
Dear Mr. Kimbrough:
Some months ago, Mr. J. O. Alexander of Wellborn, Texas,
called my attention to several large oak trees growing
near the front of his rural residence. The trees had been
injured near their bases by having been used as snubbing
posts in an ef~ort to extricate ~rucks that had mired down
in an attempt to reach a wrecked aeroplane.
I was asked to estimate the damages. Realizing that this
was contingent upon several things, I delayed several weeks
and returned for a re-examinition. The trees were alive,
but the bark on. large areas had failed to reattach itself.
The ugly wounds themselves represent a serious damage, but
the injuries are a hazard to the lives of the valuable
trees. The original injuries which prove to be the undoing
of large. trees are of.ten several years removed the ultimate
loss by death of the injured tree.
There is little doubt that few large trees near a residence
of the type involved enhances the value of the property by
from $560 to $1,000. At the present time the injured trees
are in a dormant state. Prolonged drought has put a severe
strain on all our trees. Those which in addition have sus-
tained injuries may not survive. Were the property mine, I
am sure that I would not have permitted the injury and in-.
curred the chance of loss for le ss than $100 per tree.
Sincerely yours,
/s/ C. C. Doak, Head
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Biology Dep artment
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U S Dept. of Agriculture Cooperating
State of Texas
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Agriculture & Home Economics
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Bryan, Texas
March 17, 1951
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TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
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I checked several oak trees growing in the front yard
of Mr. J. O. Alexander on June 20, 1950. These trees
had been injured to the extent that I do not think
they will live, as it was doubtful at that time, and
now with a prolonged drought the chances of survival
are now smaller.
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Mr. Alexander asked me to estimate the damage, along
with others who would estimate these damages. To me,
these tre~s increased the value of this pl~qe by
,,$,700.00 to $1:200.00. .
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WMK/meh
County Agricultural Agent
Brazos County
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Wellborn, Texas
Maroh 22, 1951
Commanding 0 ff10er "
Connally Air Faroe Base I
Waco, Texas
Det\r Sir:
On May 27, ,1950, Lt. Robert Lee Blazek orashed, in a
training. plane rrom your Base, in a pasture owned by
my mother--Mrs. Luoille Alexander. Said pasture lo-
cated approximately six ml1~s south of College Station,
on the Southern Pacific Railroad, in the community
known as Wellborn.
Immediately following this crash, a Provost Marshal
from your Base was dispatched with a detachment of
Mill tary Police to the scene, to guard aga:!.ns t the
hazard of fire from waste gasoline and a.lso against
possible piltering.
On Saturday night, May 27th--I told this Captain
(Provost Marshal) that due to the oondition of the
soil trom exoessive rainfall in the past week--that
it would be impossible to reach the plane with any
type of wheeled vehicle. I asked him at the time
to oonvey this message to the Commanding Offioer
and in.formad him there was no urgenoy on our' part in
the removal of the plane. Whether or not he con-
veyed this message is unknown to me.
At the p~~ticular ti~e my illother was out of town and
no one was at her residence. This residence is.lo-
oated approximately 250 to 300 yds. from the orash soene.
When I returned on Sunday afternoon, May 28th, two large
vehicles had attempted to reach the wreoked plane, and
in doing so they went direotly across, and in front of
the front yard of this residenoe. 1mmediately upon
leaving the road they began to bog down. After going
approximately 50 yards they wane 80 mired that they
could continue neither forward nor baokwards. As a
result--they put their w'noh lines out and used three
large oak trees, located to the side and 1n front of
this home, as "dead men" or t1sn:ubbing posts".
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An officer in oharge~r this detail ha.d undoubtedly.. '. .
authorized the use of;',:these trees for such purpose~;'"
Had I been presant I would. not have permitted this,. to,
be 4one, as ;.any cable ,oh~in or rope used to circle.8.
. tree will damage aama~-ln. .:that the layers of oambium ,.
,found 1m.rnecliately beneath the bark are inJured.. ,..:~
. Seemingly, this ~ff1cerdld not think about this,':'.8.O;d.,
asa result the trees WE:)re permanently injured.,
As is stated in the attached letters, we have had an
extreme drought in this. area, and as a result it is
very doubtful at the present time, whether these trees
will survive--due to this injury. .
.Lmmediately foilowlng' this incident, a Olaims Officer
visited my mother and told her that she could :file a
claim for this damage anytime within a yeaI*' 5 period.
The reason for not filing this claim sooner, is the
fact that the blologiat wi shed to gi va 8. fair ohanoe
of reoovery in order that a justifiable estimate of
the damages could be made.
I have contaoted Dr. G..C. Doak, head of the Department
of Biology at Texas A & M College and he has written a
letter to Mr. Wallace Kimbrough, County Agent, Brazos
County, whioh is enclosed. Dr. Doak has shown what
,damages WBre done and also has made an estimate as to
what he believes the trees were worth. It 18 the opinion
of several people that these trees, being located near
and in front ot this home, are praotioally prioeless;, as
said t~ees constituted the direct reason for locating
this home at the particular spot.
Alsoenalosed 1s a letter from Mr. Wallaoe Kimbrough
showing his op1nion of the damages to the trees, and
his value of these trees. It might be interesting to
note e. t' this PQint, that these trees are oa.k trees and
were approximately 40 years old. Therefore, you can
see, that money cannot replaoe them.
As the~ is Q varied opinion as to the value of the
trees by all conoerned, I wish this to be a bonaflde
ola1~. to the United states government 1n the amount or
$1000.00. Ireal1ze that this Is a rather high figure,
to place on three trees, but in 80 doing I have also
oonsidered the value of the trees relative to the. beauty
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Connally Air Force Base
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M.aroh .22, 1951
of thl.s home and 1 te future resale value. The home
was built as 9. country. ~ome in 1945 and the. trees
played,Q large part 1n the selection of the looation.
Also, at the time of the c rash, some damage was done
to the land by the vehioles and jeeps used in getting
back and forth. This cost was negligible and we do
not wish to put in a olaim to cover same.
Should it be necessary for a Claims Offioer to visit
this plaoe, will you please write me and designate a
time of a.rrIval, as both my mother and I are out of
town much of the time. I will be glad to meet any
representative from your Base at the Post Office 1n
Wellborn at any time aoceptable to you.
Very sincerely,
joa;hm
J. O. Alexander, Jr.
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KOPPE FARM
J. O. Alexander, Mgr.
Route 4 -.- Bryan, Texas
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