The Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 153, Ed. 1 Friday, March 1, 1935 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Graham Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the The Library of Graham.
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THR GRAHAM DAILY RBPORrra. FRIDAY. MARCH I. IMS
T5he
Sirakum
{Reporter
THAT LITTLE CAIKIE^uwi^cM^By B. Link
uer* see. —
3iM ANC. HAflfLY U>n6UJ
-r«n.em,—
Bu-UTbUEUI OME,
S\ttim<s oJHcne he is
he wouldn't pass
veHTH -Two PAIR., So
HE MOST HAVE THJAujM
! ~Xo A Fooa sraAi6HT
on. Poore- Flush.-
HE HASN'T THnoyJM
DovUN HiS HAND So
HE MOST HAVE
^'/vIade* »-r. -
( / “THBOEporiE
V V \ I’*-*- “TA^E , -
c \V UM-M- )
SO Too 'ThiNK.
1 MADE a FLUSH,
HOH ?,
Wouldny rr Be
\FuNNY IF t WAS
f C’MoH! ^VBLOFFiNG ? „
( yoo'ne SuhoepN
tHAN oon.
CLOCK r tv
VT STRIKES
Twelve A.M.AT
^Twelve RM,'
cwonI, V-llp
Svooo Poke
HotuMAM?
l HAVENT
Got All.
NIGHT.t-
■HB't! .
lWlHTAt-»s1
Entered as second-class mail mat-
tes at the postoffice in Graham,
Texas, under act of Congress of
March 3. 1879.
D. B. Wood ai
ham today on b
<TO0 "BBT \
IT VJ OOi_T>
ESPECIALLY IF
Too U»EtVB
CAUGHT !
it's toob. First
sat, dealer,
t CHIRP.
Pabliahed Every Afternoon
Except Sand ay.
Office of Pubkcatiua 600 Oak Street.
Graham. Texas
Miss Evelyn H
after a four wee
Mrs. Bob Parrt
friends in Grahar
Any erroneous reflection upon the
character of any person or firm
appearing in these cniumns will ha
gladly and promotly corrected unan
Miss Leona Ma
Ited relatives her
Ihinii brought to the attention of the-
management.
AU Cards of Thanks. OMtatrtaa,
and like notices are charged for at
half the regular rates.
Mr. and Mrs. C
eastle spent Thu
63 instrumentalists and 2 5 vocalists...
blending to produce i nterpretations of
popular melodies ne*er before achiev-
ed in radio. Directed by Frank Black-
TOMGHT—AT 9:30 CENTRAL
STANDARD TIME.
OVER COAST-TO-COAST NETWORK Of NIC
COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
FIFTH K CHERRY ST. PHONE 185.
The Graham Dailv Rcoorter in-
vites commurtieauons for pubHcatkm
when subject is of general interest,
and if It is not abusive or of a
personal nature. All such communi-
cations must carry the author's sig-
nature—not necaesarilv for oubliea-
J. H. Newman
itor in Wichita
tion. but as indication of good faith.
The liability of The Graham Daily
ttendrtir and- -of -its Dublishers for
fiy error in any adverti»eme-nt is
Bmittd to the cost of such adver-
tisement. _
BR-lM-1
Subscription Rate*.
pany's Networks and available to
Graham over coast-to-coast net-
work at 9:30 C. S. T.
The cast is made up of a famous
male quartet, male and female so-
loist*, a wonderfully trained chor-
us, twenty-five vocalists ia oh.
plus sixty-five instrumental aMm**-.
But the music is plnped^^Bft «®
Ihe^r artists us part of on^^Kg or-
chestra Human voices, you ^Mer, srr
handled a* though they we^^^stMi
tional instruments in the orchasva.
And this great orchestra is direc^
ed by Frank Black, famous as a
conductor and who is musical di-
rector of the National Broadcasting
Company.
The title of the program it “The
Pause That Refreshes On The Air,"
because the music is interrupter
only once, for about a minute ir
8736,000,000 in assessed valuations.
Traversed by 3,600 mile* of “•>n-
line railways, end many thousard
miles of public highways. ,
Flow of the Braxos River is of-
ten as hgh as half million cubic
feet per second.
Three million acres subject to
overflow.
One tributary alone, the Little
River, flowed more water into the
Braxos in one year of flood than
the Mississippi flows into the Gulf
in a normal year. -Grimes County
' IReview. «=
on the upper Braxos. In 191 * antl
1!>18 the laxity of development was
emphasixed by the greatest drought
| then on record.
i In 1912, as a result ot widespread
agitation throughout the watershed,
Gov. Pat Neff called upon his state
engineers to map a means Tor bv
nessing the entire Braxos system.
This body, from 1923 to 1826, in
cooperation1 with the U. Sr Geolo-
gical Survey, drew up the plan for
the present day Braxos development
The survey revealed many inter-
esting features o-f the Brazos wa-
tershed. .
The Braxos is the stale’s largest
river, 900 miles long, with drain-
age area of 44,600 square miles
(24,544,000 acres! or one sixth of
the state's area—larger than either
Virginia. Indiana, Kentucky, Ten
nessee, or Ohio.
Right million acres l.i cultivn
tion.
“THINGS ARE GOING TO AD-
VANCE IN THIS COUNTRY EX-
ACTLY IN PROPORTION TO
COMMUNITY EFFORT. "-FrankllU
R. Roosevelt
niniintHitiiiMiiiirHMiq'MO'MmMrMHM'
NEED FOR SONG BOOKS
WHITE 1
SOAP,
8 Bids
SEED
(Potatoes,
t»d. it can answer that it has -«r
to do that it has eliminated lmi-
effecftively done what it J/het out
densome surpluses at home and pu.
the Nation in position to assist in
decreasing foreign surpluses - while
collecting a tariff forni the priva
lege of doing so.
But in the industrial cehter-, and
with the urban population general-
ly this explanation will not he ac-
ceptable unless something. W done
to stop the rising cost of food
After all, the majority of Ihe vot-
ers belong to the rtonagru ultural
element **f our population. If the
AAA could continue to work at the
problem strictly from the viewpoint
-nf The- farmer there would be no
great cause- for disturbance, but
that is something that AAA can
not do, especially in view of the
next summer's political camnaigns.
The situation is one that cals
for more of that decisive action
for which President Roosevi It has
PEAS, G1
The value ot publi^ school mu
lie has "toeewmt* of such importance
that its instructing is one of the
major progc4*i;$ undertaken ly Ihe
State Department of Educat on this
year. Standardized songs art ustd
to furnish instruction not jnlv iu
music itself--bul^in the subject mas-
ter contained . in the songs. Of
special interest at present is the
preparation for the spring Inter
scholastic league events amt pm-
K. C. BA1
MACARC
ROYAL <
SOMETHING NEW IN
RADIO MUSIC ON
COCA-COLA PROGRAM
Y’ou can tunc in on something
new and different in popular music
on the Coca-Cola radio program to-
night and every Friday night, ov-
er the National Broadcasting Com-
FOLGERi
OATS 3-
Cup A Saucer,
Lae Reporter Ads for Result*.'
RICE, Coi
t Pound Pueki
SOUP, To
CAMPBELLS. ;
Would You
SPINACH
DEBR BRAND
PEAS, Va
ETXBA 8IFTB
money to buy the muck no -ded a*
semblv song book, that a fW. ****** ‘ re»rat*tton' Th"
deal „f time this fine spring weath- ldenJ “Wo™ w“‘t" f°r ■" '‘J
er has been devoted to rehearsal* to ** forc*d on hmi' bul th* effl
when ptav no doubt b-csoned i™y * Government crop regulatim
. *■ combined with drouth destructidl
strongly. , , ....
■a ai. , •», - OL __ . brought this matter to « criti
If the children of Shawnee schoo , ...
.. -. . • , cal juncture ahead of senedue
reallv want the new *orr hooks I .
' . ... __• , .Some revamping pf AAA ar' wel
enough to po>.pone their spring i , \ , _
- . : , . i as NR A before the present Cor
fever and give .ip play f«*r the 1 1 . , .
... -a u u gress adjourns is nol imr/iol abU
practices of the progtam. ti should _ lt * 1
—SEND NEWS OF A DEATH IN A CIRCULAR
LETTER? ~ '— —^
BEST
BAgY F
POST B
PUT NEWS OF YOUR WIFE’S PARTY ON A $HX
BOARD?
PORK*
shawnec child to .hip the louder j
USE A HOTEL REGI8THR TO TBU. THAT VOW
HAD BNLARGHD YOUR 8TOW9T
and I jppier.
-FRES1
Large Tex;
CARROTS
LETTUCE,
BANANAS
News Daily in The
AGRICULTURAL IMPORTS
REPORTS*
The fact that the United States
TACK THE NEWS OF YOUR DAUGHTER'S
WEDDING ON A TELEPHONE POLE?
All Kinds of Auto
mobile Repairing
Done at Reason-
able Prices
subjecting it* inhabitants t0 pe-
i rindic flood* which have brought
enormous damage in years past.”
The flood damage, according to
the United States Weather Bureau,
amounted to two million dollar*
yearly from 1913-1929 More than
250 lives were lost.
! The first suggestions for control
of the Braxos waters probably or-
iginated in Seymour, Baylor coun-
ty, as far back as 1896. Follow-
j ing the drouth at 1886 and 1887
there was a serlea of “wet” and
eonseqnently good crop yean In
| West Texas, resulting in a consid-
erable influx of settlers and dev-
! etopment of the vast wheat range*
\ ot north Texas resulted.
From 1891 to 1896, however, there
: was a series of lean years. The bus-
iness men of Seymour therefore
Per Dozer
OR PLACE YOUR RECITAL PROGRAM
CITY DIRECTORY?
Then Why Not Place Your
Advertising in The
Newspaper Too?
RED F
> rat poi
aoc
TROI
rat poi
Let Us Give Yon Eetimates
On Complete Motor
Overhaul
The Graham Daily Reporter
i. S. Johnson, Prop,
North Elm St
(ida Pi
Oau u * i/ 'i«'
bCONTINTS 6-FL-O1
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The Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 153, Ed. 1 Friday, March 1, 1935, newspaper, March 1, 1935; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1035095/m1/2/?q=%22~1~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting The Library of Graham.