The Leonard Graphic (Leonard, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, January 10, 1969 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE LEONARD GRAPHIC, Friday, January 10, 1969
WYNNE CHESTER SAYS:
Miss Rlatricia Toney hes return-
in
2
* over $450,000 in rewards to trap
r i
(■*
p.
I
a
(
(ii
I
College costs
Business Phone 583-2828
FOR LEASE
HUMBLE SERVICE STATION
IN LEONARD
On Highway 69 & 78
Contact E. J> BRENT In Bonham
ft
I
I
4
I
?&VjJlGSi
I
1
QUALITY!
* KGUIAK GttNO*
6 Oz.
1 lb. can
79>
73
Shurfine Peaches, lYi size, 4 for $1.00
303 Rosarita Refried Beans, 3 for - 50c
Energy Detergent, giant size ... 49c
Snowdrift Shortening, 3 lb. can... 59c
i
Sunshine Krispy Crackers, 11b... 39c
Grade A Whole Fryers, lb.
29c
Red Potatoes, 20 lb. bag........69c
Affiliated Food Bacon, lb
59c
Bananas, pound
10c
Sunshine Asst. Sourballs, 10 oz... 39c
HILL’S FOOD STORE
BENNETT'S FASHION OUTLET
EAST SIDE SQUARE
LEONARD, TEXAS
1
i
^anjandCk'
CoffeA
Phone 583-2829 - Days
Phone 583-2998 - Nights
SALES AND SERVICE EASY PAYMENT PLAN
Commercial and Residential
Rev. J. E. Feeder
Died In Bonham
Services Saturday
First Baptist Church
Services Schedule
AIR CONDITIONING
AND HEATING
NEW SPRING COLORS OF BLOUSES
AND NYLON STRETCH PANTS
HAVE ARRIVED
NYLON STRETCH PANTS
Reg. $10.98 — NOW $6.00
Polyester - Reg. $12.98 — NOW $7.00
WEDNESDAY
Teachers & Officers—7:00 P.M
Prayer Service—7:30 P. M.
Choir Rehearsal—8:15 P. M.
SUNDAY:
Sunday School—9:45 A. M.
Morning Worship—10:50 AM.
Training Union—6:00 P. M.
Evening Worship—7:00 P. M.
BONDED KNIT DRESSES & JUMPERS
Regular $15.00
Reduced to $7.00
DRIP DRY COTTON SHIFTS
Regular $12.00
Reduced to $5.00
OTHER LONG BLOUSES
Regular $15.00
Reduced to $5.98
- 1108 COLLEGE ST. LEONARD PHONE 587*2278
TWO BLOCKS WEST OF EVANS RESTAURANT
300 SIZE
Clear Sailin Pork & Beans, 8 for - $1.00
DACRON POLYESTER DRESSES
Reg. $20-00 — In Red, Black, Gold, Grey, Green
Reduced to $10.00
NEHRU TOPS — Reduced to $5.00
Regular $10.00
■J
I
J
|r
ip
|g
|fe
v.j
Crops In Rotation
Is Very Profitable
V
/_
iW'
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Jenkins visit-
ed Mr. and Mrs. James Sudderth
in Bonham Sunday.
Mr. 'and Mrs. Woodrow Pender-
Reece Electrical & Refrigeration Service i
JOHN D. REECE. Owner
1700 North Center St. Bonham. Texas
Residential Phone 583-3060
SALE
GRAPHIC AS GIFT
A. R. Tucker of Corpus Christ’
will receive The Graphic for a
year as a birthday gift from Mr.
and Mrs. C. F. Jones.
a
a
■f
A. F. Mellorine,
[ and skeet shooters. Regional
S;
iftd
r
p
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Cargill and
Angie of Perryton visited in
® •
ife
jfc
fc
ALL PURPOSE
34NONEOIL
Oils Everything
Prevents Rust
REGULAR — OIL SPRAY — ELECTRIC MOTOB
I
W'>A-
5
1
&
I
&
FULLY COOKED
Cedar Farm Picnic, 3 lb. can .. $1.99
US. Savings Bond*, ,
new freedom Snares
I increased his maize crop from
' about 2,000 pounds of grain per
acre to 4,000 pounds or above.
This practice is a must in grow-
ing cotton on root rot land. It
has increased production from a-
bout 300 pounds per acre to 450
I pounds.”
I For more information about a
K /i //
Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Newsome
md son, Danny, have returned
■o Brentwood. Calif., after visiting Whitewright and Leonard during
relatives in Texas. the New Year’s holidays.
FINEST QUALITY
MEATS
V 'W T'"<r T T. T T T T
“Today a farmer must ’be very
alert and intellegent to make
money farming,” states Leslie
Eubanks, technician with the Soil
Conservation Service. A farmer
must knew his soil and its capa-
bility. Last, but not least, they
have to know how to conserve
theiir soil. One igood practice is
applying a good “conservation
cropping system.” One of these
practices .is crop rotation. In
your rotation there should be one
crop with high residue and
fertilized such as small grain or
gram sorghum. These crops have
to produce as much as 3.000
pounds of residue per acre to
maintain the organic content of
the soil.
While talking to Mr. Ralph
Howell of Windom, he says. “To
8
farmer must practice crop rota-
, tion on most soils; also fertiliza-
tion is very important.” Mr.
Howell states, “By practicing crop
daughters, Mrs. Harvey C. Ray, i tion Service personnel-
Jr., of Fort Worth, Mrs. Richard
T. Hopper and Mrs. Harry O.
Bail of Bonham; three sisters,
Mrs- Odis Wilson of Lamasco, (
and Mrs. Leroy Buckman and
Mrs. Buford Denney, both of
California, and eight grandchil-
dren.
Active pallbearers were John
Smith, C. W. Bond, Jr., Doss
Clark, Grady Gddiens, Kurt Gopf-
farth and W. L. Birdwell, Sr.
Honorary pallbearers were
members of the (Men’s Bible Class
at the First Baptist Church in
Bonham, and all ministers of
Fannin County.
Mrs. Paul H. Taylor' Saturday grass and son, Steve,, of Dallas,
afternoon. This visit was young visited Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Toney
Bart’s first to his grandparents, and family during the holidays.
M It CovW Happen to Tool
_____
championship teams will again
win all-expense paid trips to the
Bahamas, and the Grand Cham-
pionship team this time will be
sent on a fun-filled, all-expense-
paid shooting and hunting tour
of South America. But that isn’t
all, by a long shot. Club level
winners will receive presentation
sets of Winchester shotguns, for
instance, and there’s a special
sweepstakes, too... prizes range
from sets of Tupperware through
camping outfits to complete duck
hunting rigs.
For more information, contact
your nearest Winchester Fran-
chise Public Shooting Center or
go talk to your local gun dealer.
But don’t delay. The qualifica-
tion period ends September 2nd,
so do it nov.
Mr. and Mrs. Jhck Sanders
end >son, Bart, visited Mr. and
Paul H. Taylor Saturday grass and son, St&ve,, of Dallas,
______________...... „
Last year’s Grana ^uampiua
winners of the Winchester Clay-
bird Tournament won a trip
around the world. And as proof
that the tournament’s classifica-
tion system gives everyone an
equal chance at the prizes, that
winning team was comprised of
three “average” men, a pretty
young housewife, and a 13-year-
old boy who had taken up shoot-
ing just a few months earlier! So
I why shouldn’t you be among the
winners this year?
The 1968 Winchester Clay-
1 . bird Tournament is the prize-
’’ winningest contest yet, offering
Make sure wrten he’s ready for it
you'll be ready, too.
College costs are high. They’ll be
higher by the time this young man gets
there. But you can be ready for them if
you start your savings fund now and
stick with it
U.S. Savings Bonds are ideal for the-
purpose—safe, guaranteed, with an as-
sured rate of 4.25% when held , to
maturity and an automatic extension
privilege after maturity. But perhaps
even more important, they offer tax sav-
ings that can substantially increase the
value of your education fund.
If you pay state or local income taxes
where you live, there’s an automatic
saving, because Savings Bonds interest
is exempt. And even Federal tax can
be saved if the Bonds are bought in
your child’s name and a tax return filed
for him to declare interest on an annual
basis.
EXTRA
' ■ .._____________________■_________________________________ i
’/p-gal.,3for... $1.00
The details of this plan r itant
—so consult the special ,
tngs Bonds for Education” xor particu-
lars. Request a free copy from: US.
Savings Bonds Division, The Depart-
ment of the Treasury, Washington,
D.G 20226.
Do it today. And vdiflt you’re in the
writing mood, sign an application for
automatic Bond purchases through Pay-
roll Savings where you work or the
Bond-a-Month Plan where you bank.
Make sure when Junior’s ready for
ollege you’11 be ready, too.
? T-. and Mrs. Robert Stewman
J relatives m McKinney ed home after spending the New1
EunJay. Year Holidays witlh friends in
. ’Corpus Christi.
Rev. J. E. Fender, 77, of 5C8
West Fifth St., Bonham, died in
i Bonham hospital at 6:10 p. m-
Thursday, January 2, 1969. He
had been ill for the past several
weeks.
Funeral services were held at
the First Baptist Church in Bon-
ham at 2:00 p. m. Saturday, witl
Rev. Ira Bentley, Baptist minister
of Fort Worth, officiating, as-
sisted by Rev. Mac Hargrove,
pastor of the Firs Baptist Church,
and Rev. Tommy Marshall, pastor
of 'Seventh and Main Baptist
Church, Bonham. Interment was
in Willow Wild Cemetery, Bon-
ham.
Rev. Fender was born October
22, 1891, in Fannin County. He
married Rosetta Vermillion De- st,ay m the farming business,
cemiber 26, 1915, and was ordain-
ed a Baptist minister in 1930-
He was serving as Ahsociation-
al Missionary in Fannin and
Grayson Counties at the time of: rotation and fertilization he has
his death..
Rev. Fender had served as,
pastor of a number of Baptist
Church ep in Fannin County and
at Rush Springs. Kingfisher and
Watonga, Okla., and in Dallas.
He .served as supply minister on
numerous occasions and filled the
pulpit on special occasions for
many of the churches in the area, f “conservation cropping system,”
* Survivors are his wife, three entact your local Soil Conserva-
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Leonard Graphic (Leonard, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, January 10, 1969, newspaper, January 10, 1969; Leonard, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1217341/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Leonard Public Library.