The Meteor Journal Thursday Aug. 10, 1967
“B.L. Helm moved to Arkansas seven years ago with the grim prospect of living for three or four months. “I wanted to get back home while I still had time,” Helm said as he told about his surgery performed by a German doctor at the Southern Pacific Hospital in San Francisco.
It was in April 1960, that Mr. Helm had his larynx and vocal tubes replaced with plastic because of malignant cancer. Unable to talk he used a whistle to communicate.
Mr. Helm never gave p in learning again how to eat (he is still unable to drink water) and to speak by whispering. He can whistle loudly himself and also use a whistle.
Mrs. Helm and Trudie Jordan, Mr. Helm’s sister, believe it was largely his love for animals that kept alive Mr. Helm’s desire to live.
Born in Union County, Mr. Helm was given his first calf by his father, who thought the calf was going to die. Helm later sold the calf and bought two brood sows.
And although he has been an overseer of a plantation, operated a grocery and worked as an inspector for the Southern Pacific Railroad until he retired in 1960, it was the farm life and raising of hogs and cattle that Mr. Helm returned to on Route 1, Donaldson almost seven years ago.
“I sold hogs, bought cheap cattle, sold them and bought some registered ones.” Mr. Helm said.
He now raises Hereford and Angus cattle and 100 head of Yorkshire hogs a year keeping four breeding sows.
But it’s his dogs, Rube and Wheeler, that have since “worn out,” and his Indian pony Pancho that Mr. Helm speaks of with real pride.
The dogs worked exclusively by signals and the whistle. Mrs. Helm said she often could not tell wether he was calling the dogs or her with the whistle. “I nearly walked myself to death,” she said.
In hunting for lost cattle in thick over grown woods, one of the dogs would stay with a cow while the other dog returned to Mr. Helm on his pony and led him to the lost one.
Five-year-sold Pancho who loves apples, is trained as well as the dogs were. Mr. Helm tells of times he has been lost in the woods but was always led out by Pancho who has never been lost…..
The pony has found lost animals no person could find. He will never run off and leave a his rider; when the rider gets off, the horse he freezes.
Mr. Helm demonstrates how well-trained Pancho is by motioning for him to jump into and out o the bed of the pickup truck. And it takes Pancho just a few minutes to round up a herd of cattle in a pasture near the Mt. Zion Community.
In the past seven years Mr. Helm has demonstrated that he is a man with remarkable patience and courage. Yet he seems unaware of it.
When asked what advice he would give to a man in the condition he was at age 60, he replied:
“I tell a man it can be done. Get two or three sows and raise pigs. And raise several calves a year on a cow.”