Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 80, Ed. 1 Monday, December 2, 1940 Page: 3 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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of future usefulness to business and
Potts,
from Central Texas Con-
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Charles Pruett,
covers a large part of east and south- is asking $125,000 to take care of its
$600.00 Protection
year.
GEESE FLYING SOUTH
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Don't Envy the Well-Posted Man (or Woman
Read Regularly
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Use The Graham Daily Reporter Ads
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eventful years in the world’s history-
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CLIP THIS COUPON AND MAIL TODAY
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provision
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standing rank'among orphanages of
the country.
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equipment are available at the
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The Dallas Morning News
“Texas Leading Newspaper”
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MORRISON BURIAL ASSOCIATION
Graham, Texas
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The most modern of dppl
Texas Scottish Rite Hospital______„_________________
31,000 children have been treated free of all cost since its establishment
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Ludi Mae Jaobs, 7, at the left is ference; ________ . ....
from the big,Texas Conference, which New Mexico Conference.
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gas 20
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in 1923, The picture sho
Grove. Texas,
scientifie steps_______
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Being Made
E. Orphonage
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tion to The Dallas News
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THE
is made from nature' own beneflelal
roots and herbs—each with Ita own
enecdal purpose to HELP WOMEN.
Famous for over 00 ream—Pinkham's
Compound is the beat known and one
of the moat effective "women's" tonios
ohtainebie T
Then Read WHY I
Lydia E. Pinkham's |
Vegetable Compound Is m
Real Woman's Friend"! r
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R. F. D -
Sauqait
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DAILY WITH
SUNDAY
) Regular Price $i0.oc
VLtestnc. FORT WORTH
wKWSTAR -TELEGRAM
■ y ERIs | 1941 wn K on. ot mo
• I ____ad.a___• a___aj. L.a__
WACE
e are n
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Occasionally at night of late dur- j -
ing brief intervals of silence, there 11
Lyeta E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Co
Has Helped Thoesands I
have been unusual sounds from the
skies—geese flying south. It is pos-
‘ sible at times to see their V-shaped
I formations as they pass overhead.
i The noise of fowl on their Fall
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possum and persimmon hunts.
The weather man has taken the
b wiegd r
12, from ।
The Home
months by mail.
NAKM
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Mwvesto,"*
b- j
annl
dents of the schools represented. Only
seniors and students in advanced work
are eligible.
Paul is a member of the S.M.U
Student Gauncil and of the Phi Delti
Mr. and Mrs. P K. Deats, 80e Vir-
ginia Street.
and Be One You ielf!
dents in American Universities and
Colleges." The biographies of those
selected will be printed in the 1940-
41 edition.
Listing in “Who’s Who” is consid-
ered one of the highest honors that a
student can achieve while in college.
To be included a student must have
a combination of character, leader-
Modern Methods Are Aid to *
• Little Hospital Patients
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AgeSVore9
Post Office
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-P4Gs
INDIGESTION
may affect the Heart
Om trapded in ihe stoma-h er xunet may act ik.
hair enigcer on the heart A, the am alen of distrea
•man men and womnen depend on Benl-an. Tablet, to
a bet Kas free. No laxative but made of the fastest-
acingmedleines known for acid indigestion, jf the
FIR8T DOBE doesn’t prove Bell-ns better, returu
bottle to us and recelve DOUELE Money Back, 25c,
Fewjyor ien today do not have some sign of
fundr on I trouble. Maybe you've noticed
YOURS ILF getting rest less, moody, nervous,
derrepsee latey- your work U»o much for you-
Then try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compou d to hep quiet unstrung nerves,
relieve montbly pain (cramps, backache,
headach ) and weak dizzy fainting spells
due to functional disorders. For over 60
years Pinkham's Compound baa helped bun-
dreds of tbousands of weak, rundown ner-
vous women. Try itl
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THE DALLAS NEWS,
Dallas, Texas
Gentlemen:
Everyone of the six Methodist Con-
ferences in Texas and New Mexico,
which are making their pledges now
to orphaned youngsters to be brought
up in it. In this group, whose ages
run from four months to 20 year ,
DON’T BE BOSSED
BY YOUR LAXATIVE-RELIEVE
CONSTIPATION THIS MODERN WAY
• When you feel gassy, headachy, logy
due to clogged-up bowels, do aa nulhont
do- take Peen AM rot at bedtime Next
- morning — thorough, comfortable relief,
helping you start the day full of your
normal energy and pep, feelhng like a
million! Feen-A-Mint doesn't disturb
your night's rest or interfere with work the
next day. Try Feen A-Mint, the chewing
gum laxative, yourself. It tastes good. it’»
handy and economical ... a family supply
FEEN-A-MINT 10
WHY SUFFER Functional
FEMALE /
COMPLAINTS
■ I ■ ■ .. " 3 I
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is from Northwest Texas Conference; |
John Henry Jones, whom she is hold-
ing, the home’s youngest child at four
months, is from Southwest Texas '
Conference; Mary Cain, 20, is from I
......... .53c per nonn
NO MEDICAL EXAMINATION
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it the largest J ___________________________
o an o th/Paul Deats Listed
the coX^Jln “Who's Who”
eftdces led it last year i
in contributions. Txas conference, ’
. . .. . / Paul Deats of Graham was one of
embracing most of east and southeast ... . a .. ".m
Texas, was first with North Texas » students at Southern Methodist
second. A number of centra, T.». {University officially,accepted by the
pastors and district superintendents editors »' "Who's Who Among Stu-
which has an outstanding chorus.
,85
“norther" and also plan«.for hemt-}48 Per cent Qctober a,year
. , ago, ice cream manufacture 20 per
ing on the next week end. They also. ,
I, , , ,,, cent. ( heese output remained about
'inspired arrangements for hayrides,
the same.
! The seasonal slump from Septem-
, _ iber brought declines ranging from
place nowadays of migratorv fowl in,, □
a ,, _t -» P<*r cent in butter production to
forecasting cold waves. Then1 are . . . . .
, ,,, ... . . 21 per cent in ice cream production,
fewer wild geese and ducks, and they ... , .
। . . . . . . . * Cheese manificture declined 13.5 per
pass unheeded arFely over the noise cent
and distraction of cities. Hunting is —,
_ The ^iates total output of these
not a major sport that it once was. .
e,, . three products in October WAS esti-
and hayrides have passed with the , , . g.
i , , A , ,, mated at 3.228.000 pounds of butter,
advent of the automobile. For older ), , , ,
. , , 1.162,4M)4) pounds of cheese and 86,-
persons, the sound of geese flyingg.
1000) gallons of ice cream.
south at night ma} arouse a nostag- l
migration southward has little if any Texas dairy industry, while retarded
meaning7° the younger generation, by fall cold weather, continucd du
' A few decades ago, wild geese and AI . ,
i . . . . ing October to turn out mre prod-
ducks were an important weather . .1 A 1o.0 it •
i . ........... than in October, 19339, Univer-
.sign that was generally heeded, for!sity of Texas Bureau or Business Re.
the harbingers of cold scarch officials report.
Creamery butter production gained
4
Other ages and amounts in same proportion
See Our Agents or Phone 600 • 1
Barnes, Ft. Worthi,, D KPorter ship, scholarship, .nd potentiMlities
Gatesviller Dt:‛R. Bareus, George--
town;
T. H.
Bond,
-
y.
North Texas Conference; Arthur I
subscripfion price is eeduood
SAVE BY BRINGMG YOUR
ORDER TO MS osnaca . ,
. ed
$100 Father Nat Over 31-years aid ..
$100 Mother Not over 31-years old ...
$100 Ue Child Not over 11-years old
$100 One Chilu not Over lu-ycars old ....
$100 One Child not Over 7-yeurs old ..
$100 One Child Not Over 5-years old
iseription Fates: By mail, daily and Sunday, one year
$10.00; six months. $5.50:’ three months. $2.75; one month,
$1.00. These prices effective only in Texas.
. they were
weathere They meant
around dome against the
18 2-3c per month
10 z-3c per month
8 l-3c per mouth
8 l-3c per month
8 1-3 per month
G 2-3 pt nionth
Fs4
th- Big Sunday News
Family Group of Six
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( events
\ as they
\ happen
| in 1 94 1.
AUSTIN, Texas- An
nance. This year the board of direc-
tors has set a budget 9, $125,000.
Much of it will be spent for food,
since the Home, with a family of 400
children, has a hig grocery bill. Some
will be spent fr clothing, although
a satisfactory plan--participated in
by many churches of Central Texan
'conference of having church groups
“adopt” children to whom they send
personally selected clothes, is in force.
Another part of the money raised
will be spent on the vocational school,
where the Home teaches its residents
Ha for an irrevocable past, when it 1
seemed that life was more real in TRY A CLASSIFIED FOK RESULT
its closer relation with nature. Fort
, Worth Star-Telegram.
V (7 DAYS A WEEK
r DAILY !--------- _ „
EXCEPT SUNDAY 8
Regular Price $8.00 V
/on” Wax^achTe;^ 7 than 550 collekes and
* universities were represented in the
,n erford . \ aa .. ,, 'sixth edition issued last January.
Not an endowed institution, the ■ - '
. ... I Selections for the book are made I _
Home depends each year on free will in collaboration with deans and presi- east Texas; Eva Mae McPherson, 16, 400 wards for the next
offerings of Methodists for mainte-
A Rotogravure Picture Section; “THIS WEEK,” Colorgravure
Magazine; a 16 page comic section in Tuli colors; also the
. American Institute of Public Opinion, with Dr. Gallup's
weekly polls?
The News relies not alone on one areat wire service
—it has TWO . . . the greatest in the world— As-
sociated Press and United Press. It also has the
great wire feature service of North American News-
papen Alliance (NANA). Most newspapers would be
content with these—but NOT The News, which also
maintains its exclusively-own bureaus in Washing-
ton, Austin, Mexico City, East and Central Texas . . .
to say nothing of more than 200 local correspondents
scattered over the southwest . . . and the largest
local staff of editors, reporters, srtists and feature
writers of any newspaper in Texas.
In October
o.
MONDAY, DECEMBER J
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The war spreeding throughout he
world ad our own national defeme
program affect the lives of every man,
woman and child in the United States.
It affects every phase of agricultuve
and business. Next year-of al years
—you will want The STAR-TELEGRAM
which will reach you first, w’th all he
news and pic’ures from everywhere.
A COMPLETE STATE DAILY NEW-
PAPER with features for your entiee
family. lake advantage of the specie
were present for the anniversary cel-
ebration, and will lead their churches1
in the December offering. District
superintendent, recently reappointed,
include Dr. S. W. Williams, Brown-
wood; Dr. R. A. Langston, Cisco;
Dr. L. L. Felder, Cleburne; Dr. R.
Otis Sory, Corsicana; Dr. S. A.
1
Some 1 women sufler nevere monthly
pain derempuabnskoshaasbordargegdye
innpm needutena to ucoqe upse" and
they get crog, andmoody.
hy nd take Lydia * Pinkham’s
ible Qompound made empeciallu
, tire run-down, nervoms wom-
■ t
iow rates that enable you
fully informed of fast-ch
ncrease Output
l.A Part of the budget goes to the de-
MPPos 29.- Methodist partment of religious education and
Weu centre Texas confer- to club groups sponsored on (the
I the qheixpledges, during campus, as the Home attempts to give
evdpvecevg to the 1941 I every child the same religious and
L-of Mket Home here, social training a private home would
Athe d s.other confer- afford him. Proved worth of its
M a? • Mexico sup- program lies in the number of sue- l
omes on the cessful graduates, and in its out- ,
‛tieth anniver- I
No) 'which Central i
Texas Dairies
r
—
how to make a living. Some money
will be spent -on thet music school,
M %
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Sr
SICK, NERVOUS-
v CRANKY mX ? .
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Largest agricultural show in the world, the International Live-Stock
Exposition and Horse Show, will be held in Chicago from November 30 to
December 7. Above is shown a scene from last year’s show, which was
attended by 450,000 persons. B. H Heide (insei) iiF secretary-manager
•f the exposition.
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. Live Stock Show Opens
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picture shows six-year-old Richard Saunders of Blooming
i, undergoing a diathermy treatment, which is one of the
a toward restoring him to health and activity. *
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Trout, H. I. Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 80, Ed. 1 Monday, December 2, 1940, newspaper, December 2, 1940; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1505991/m1/3/?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.