Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 310, Ed. 1 Monday, August 30, 1937 Page: 3 of 4
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The ciRAHAIh oaILT BETOETBU. MONDAY. AUGUST 3». 1M7
cut • new die for each teal he
contracted to hrtak.—News-Week.
Old Belt MarkeU
Brookne»>-^*c
BurVin«too.N»-
Ch^City.V*-
ClarWunlW, Va.
D«vilU. Va.
Kcnbridge,Va.
Lawrence*'"®' Ve.
Madison. N.C.
Martiarritte.Va.
hlabeue.N.C.
Mow,» Awy.NA..
Petersburg. Ve-
Rddtriik, N.C. —
Rocky mount. Va.
PENNY WORTH $850
CENTRAL CITY. NtK —“Our
highest price for a small sale” wu
the comment of liquor vendors in
Harry's liquor store after a customer
paid for a drink with two dimes
and five pennies.
When one of the pennies was tak-
en to the bank, the teller found
it ties minted in Philadelphia dur-
ing the Georgs Washington adminis-
tration and was worth a minimum
Oak. Fla.
Matter, Ga.
Moultrie. Ca-
Nashville- Ga.
Pelham. Ca.
Statesboro, Ga.
Tilton, Ga. w
Valdosta, Ga.
South Boston, Va.
South HOI, Va.
Stonsville, N. C.
Winston-Salem, N. C.
South Carolina
Markets
Chad bourn, N. C.
Qarlcton, N. C.
Conway, S. C. ^
Darlington, S. C.
Dillon, S. C.
Fair BML N. C.
Fairmont. N.C
KMm,&C
Burley Markets
SCORNS 11.900 .*00
LONDON. — Esther Sebag-Monfa
flore, SB. a widow, gave up moi
than $1,000,000 for love Friday.
eton, », a physiologist, de-
a- clause in the will of her
nkhend. Arthur, which left her
,000 on the condition she did
, Tabor, N.C. I
Thnmonsville, S. C.
WhMev0le,N.C.
Eastern North
Carolina Markets
AbesUa.N.C.
FamviDe, N.C.
Cold*.,., N.C.
Cr«anj|i,W.C
. -BaWiHC. —
M.C
Eo«*y Mount, N.C
r‘ *■*»■»■«.n.c
T“Wa,N.C
WdUm,N.C.
W-UW1.N.C.
SESS"-*
Su^,OUB* I
SSfc
A
«.„c. Jt
sil
m
USH
IN
In the fifteenth century
acid in London for $U.78 a
sugar
pound.
FOOLS
1 have never seen any statistics
of the number of automobile fatali-
ties that are due to amateur first i
aid: I mean the number of injured '
who might have got well if they had ;
been left alone but were killed by'
good but ignorant Samaritans who j
jogged them around driving the
sharp edges of bones into blood ves-
sels or nerve tissue. These figures
should be collected.
When dealing with broken banes
(unless you are an expert) try to
get a doctor to the patient before
pencil. Minaay, tney renewea wien —...........- —------i
vigil-and late in the afternoon a lead and wire «ea!, swung open lhoi
man came in carrying a. bag. ■« the hands of the ragis-
He hurried down to the basement, j «r clocks back 1,000 kilowatt hours,
Theuofficers followed. A few mm- “ml closed the meter with a seal
ON HIS 92ND BIRTHDAY utes later John Bergin, Associate j “more cleverly counterfeited than
C hief inspector of the consolidated counterfeit money. Laurence had al-
Edhon Co. of New York, arrested, legedly made a wax impression and
Walter Lawrence,'Jr., SI, self-styled
EATS M-POUND TURKEY
PORTLAND, Ore.—“Eat, drink
and be merry,” is the motto of
killed by I Aucephas
R. Doolittle, who isn’t
afraid qf the “for tomorrow you
may die” part, even if he is 9(2.
When the near centenarian cele-
brated hi- 92nd birthday recently, he
waded’ Into a 25-pound turkey, par
took generously of all the trimmings
get a doctor to .» >».■*...----- and then leaned back and blew
you try.to got the patient to a doc- most of th* 92 candles on his birth-
tor. 'day cake in one breath.
Mon dangerous fractum _W»T "A vl^0ur -Yankee from Vont,
tbqse of the spine and ahull. Then .'Uoc)itt,e h<)> outiived two wives and
very small movements may cause | lo4>fcil
fatal injury to the spinal cord or
the legs are paralysed
is looking forward to reaching the
lW<yar mark._____________
the tack has been broken. When the He is deeply religious and has al-
arms and legs are paralysed the j ways paid one-tenth of his income
neck has tieen broken. Bleeding ii\ tithing to the chureh.
from the nose or ears suggests at
once a fractured ahull. Any person
who lies unconscious may have a
broken neck or a fractured skull.
Do beware! ,
Safest way to move people so in-
jured, if they must be moved with-
out a doctor’s supervision:
Fractured limbs should be
splinted.
A man with a broken back should
be laid on his fact in a blanket so
that his spine curves towards hi*
frond-
A man with a broken neck should:
bo edged very gently onto a door
'far* upward* and carried, aa the'
army men carry a stretcher, with
the man in front and the man be-1
hind carefully and dellwrtely out
of alep. I
salesman.
This week Lawrence eras sched-
uled to go. on trial charged with
“willfully altering ... the meter
used to measure .... electricity
...- ___________. ________ww . supplied (to the restaurant.I” But
ordered a tumbler of good port and preliminary hearings had- already
let New Yorkers in on an amazing
story.
For six years inspectors of the
consolidated Edison—the country’'
largest gas sand electric firm^-had
been following' the operations of a
ring of professional meter tamper-
ers; the charge for turning back
restaurant, store and hotel meter
docks was half the savings m’tight
bills—occasionally as much as $6,000)
a month. Sometimes, the owners of,
a business were in on the racket; {
ARF YOU ONLY A
THREE-QUARTER WIFE?
because they an men tm . ..
never undent*!ul a three-
quarter wife—a wife who is all love
and kindness throe week* In a
month and a bell cat the rest of
the time.
Ko matter how your hack aches
—how your nerves stream—don t
take It out on your husband.
For three generations one woman
jMM told another how to go "smtW
lot through” with Lydia E. Pink-
...v- barn's Vegetable Compound It
helps Nature tone up the system,
thus lessening tbo discomfort* from
the functional disorder* which
women must «id*rr ► the three
ordeals of life 1. Turning from
girlhood to'~wovnanhor.fi 2 Pre-
____pwlai lor BiQiherhiiod. a. Ap-
proaching ‘'middle age
Don t be a three-quarter with,
take LYDIA K PINKHAM’S
V KG ETA B LE COM PC UN D and
Oo "Mauling Through."
“>•
~ H I -Sr
Howaver, the will provided an an-
nuity of $15,000 If she did many
AMEBIC AN BOY INTRODUCES A
NEW FOOTBALL GAME
In th* early fall i«*o*e of THE
AMERICAN BOY then’ll b# pra-
senUd the story af a new game—
six-man football—fast aa profession-
al football, wide open aa basketball,
thrill9^ a, hockey!
Th* 'game cam* to life through
the need of small schools for some
substitute for 11-man football, which
was too expensive. Stephen iBpler,
a NctapsVa graduate student in ath-
letics, developed the game of ata-
man football to meet this need. In
kix-man football anybody can score,
the poerlbltity of injury from mass
plnys is minimized, and the game
is opan enough for spectators to
follow every exciting development.
The now game U • h'1- New
acliooL are taking it up every day.
In coming lasiius THE AMERICAN
BOY tells the world about this prac
ties! new game. In addition, it pre-
sent,, The Amoricen Boy Official
Handbook, which can be obtained
from the magazine at 30 cents a
copy, or 15 cents when bou^it tn
NOTE: Subscription prices of THE
" 5
buying the mild
’ripe tobacco that makes
smokers say..Chesterfields
give you more pleasure
——
In 1937, Chesterfield tobacco buyers
will attend each one of the 113 auction
markets listed here. In addition they will
be buying tobacco in Southern Maryland,
and ipSmatic leaf in Turkey and Greece.
Wherever Chesterfield tobacco iabought,
in this country or abroad, it must be mild,
it must be ripe.
- There is no higher standard of tobacco
quality than the Chesterfield standard
•_
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Trout, H. I. Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 310, Ed. 1 Monday, August 30, 1937, newspaper, August 30, 1937; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1116209/m1/3/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting The Library of Graham.