The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 2, 1925 Page: 2 of 8
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*the tctfte oatHmojes-
beyond iu earning capacity. Whs*
this principle is observed the re-
quired annual expenditure for air
World War service; gmAi
kadKtn -OMpri* Tfenta*
colleges cad schools,-ifrid'
annual free Citizens’ Mflfb
big Camp* held la 'aJf^yini
country *-* "•* •
Alltke unit* of theWirt
Its rendemroos ..jrtBMgi'* t
and supply, are'planned in ,-
and it ft, part to test theeepbne
j> What IS Defmllcyrind why?
• It is an anwasi observance this
year on July 4th-for ilia following
»nppesac.
1. To smphesiia the respoasJbUitr
of the individual citisen for -M»
2. To., acquaint the citisenahip wth
the dtfeaao policy of the republic
FOLKS
armin' th* bows
-IP HR WON’T
come out Ham
' INSTEAD ? ;
I Think |
I^H
Sn,q*Myi»» a**8*-
SSraSStfSK
Low pneofl and easy
Co t»ave
you can have
Security
Electric Co.
beginning at (.(0 o'clock, as well
a street engagement beginning
.four o’clock each afternoon. This
^Ipdiiedufo’-^^ through the
.week, with the’usual series Sunday
; morning and etyanjng. No announce-
ment of services has been made fur-
ther than Sunday,
) The evening services this week have
especially received jgood attendance
^5p!
****** b*gu“ $£ggm
WSsmm»
•pteet, Rev. Joe May*. #t ^
..*» a* Dal Rio-VW^ 1
Baptist Asaocaftion, debar ’the preach- Aokultom ♦*«*
iyrhetat assisted fa. th« devotional fJSSd^tSb aittm
wealthy the pester, Re*. J.** Carter. 4*T«N» 4*3*'
I, ;Rev. May* has been preaching st
the dka&h at a morning service be-
that tp/nji-
^ffsThi----------------
sir,
tk sHHitnm
TUB GRAHAM LHADKK CUMt AM Y
B0WR0N4 McLENDON. Prope.
'JSS^JL^. JSaSErJS
has been marked with sJtrvor and
fire of evangelism which is awaken-
ing many souls to their duty te.God.
Rev. Mayes is i preacher that grows
in favor with the wear of time and
hard usage, and. local . Baptists' are
congratulating themselves and their
co-workers throughout the associa-
tion that so able and consecrated a
servant has been secured for the
mission work of the denomination in
this section.
NOTICE—Any erroneous reflection
are the character, standing or repu-
wHba.e? any person, firm or corpor-
ation which may appear in the col-
umns of The Leader will be gladly
tor tested upon it Wing brought to
the attention pf the publishers.
Subscription Rates1
One Year ...........-------,1...,.......$2.00
ontbZ' 1...—— 1.25 ?*
Three: Months ... rnr
FARMERS’ SHORT COURSE
, The sixteenth annual i Farmers'
Short Course will W held! at the
Agricultural and Mechanical ^oilege
of, Texas at College Station^ Texas,
TuTy YKe T7lh 16 Ahgiismft t«, ac--
o6astderahk
of the work, moreover, has consisted
of resurfacing. It theVefore* pan not
be assussed that the»nat mttaa** d
surfacod roads has increased ihiiRj1
the last three years >y the total
amount of the new eenstrsetiett. The
last complete survey of the road i»-
when the total surfaced mlftage was
reckoned st 887,76Q miles. New con-
have proceeded at a rate wh
Hewed to justify the estimate
net gain since then i* well above 00,000
l" annehnoing these Cacti* tha *Tfkks Ti
department draw* attention to eer-|*".Ty it has
tain wrong ..Ideas that are current
about road improvement
roads, it says, are not 1
the movement of every
Jit W. D. Prenlerof Cleveland, A.JOid. there is a certain cost! which
Ohio, haa been inaugurated president
of the Brotherhood of Locomotive
Engineers, succeeding Mr. Warren
S. Stone, who died a few days ago.
Mr. Stone was one of the greatest
leaders in the history of labor ,,prgan-
wtiptUL The New York Tnhea said:
to a position of influence,
perhaps, greater than that of any one
of the many railroad officials, as the
head of the organisation of, his fel-
low railroad men, the Brotherhood of
Locomotive Engineers. To his lead-
ership’ they owe much * * *
But he will be remembered especially
ssoding to announcement made by T.
O. Walton, Director of the. Farmers’
Short Coursfe. \ l
Any man,‘woman, boy or!girl who
desires to study and1 Item more about
the solution of a^»d home prob-
l«m» are eligible to rpgistar Tor tne
Short Course and take advantage of
the program which has tjeen espe-
cially prepared, ameer the- Short
Course is planned to moet the needs
<Jf m4u...jpomen, boy* and girls who
desire to make farm life more profit-
ble and attractive, t
Agriculture—Work in Agriculture
wijl tie held in all the following de-
partments/ Animal Husbandry, Dairy
Husbandry—Boultry Husbandry, Ag-
ronomy, Horticulture, Entomology,
Plant Diseases,- Rural Sociology,
Aggjcuitaral Economise sad Agricul-
tural Engineering. There will also
bp an exhibit of. improved and mod-
farm machinery and home eqtiip-
if the road be ijn
than if it be left in a state of nature.
Logically, therefore, the on! i limit
that should be placed on exp pditure
for rosd improvement is the . amount
that can be Saved in vehiculi
wting costs.—This ampuiit, of ^conrr
depends upon the number of v*h£l«
using the road. It is poin<
that the country loses more,
creased cost- -of ojjerating
by not Improving roads than it costs
to improve them. In other (words, j
it pays for improved roads Whether
it has them or not. and it pays leB*
out
in-
in
hides,
to terry. 1» other
words, the return to the public in
the form (of economic transportation
is the sole measure of the worth of
road improvement. To say that all
.reads .shsdld h« - hsrd snsfasod, tbs'
department points cat, is merely an-
other way of urging expenditures in
extess of income.
Still another common mistake is
the idee that there is sujch a thing- as
f p^rwtati^nL RQ§j,
tEe department, Has
3. To permit- the trained lead-
ers of the Jugular Army, National
Guard and Organised Reserves once
a year to etpek up on the plane for
■kadi te awat—i into
the skeleton organisations of ibe va
rloue components of the Army one-
mobiHsafleB and taeini^ pf 'jj|l*|ms,
if war should come, in or aaap their
home towns for many
officers from
- ^wva»» -^aek- ssas. fhrwmnidA, ,Qf-
fl^AJHld mDuons of money
it is
in co-operative banking., by having- them Bum-W-not
With a record on the part of the * them. '------— i
brotherhood of "never boring broken j—Another >■ eowmon error, say* the
a contract during the fifty-six ye^rs {department, is that all roads
of its existence, he had a substantial,[be hard-surfaced. Hard surfl
foundation on which to build in ask-! with .concrete, brick asphalt, ttone)
ing public confidence, in his plaas!nr wood block* is an-aypensive pro-1
of cess. When its cost is greater Ithittf
aould
rfbcing
says the department, has fiZ re-
sponsible for much disregard of foad
maintenance. None of the State day volunteers so as to teat the mob- apfe ^fS^Tor defense prepolmd
Highway Departments, however, any
•longer harbors this error. It Is now
thoroughly understood by these pub-
lic ugneies that all roads, regardless
of type, gradually depredate and
wear out under the wheels of ve-
fuclei^arid the action of the.weather.
To keep a road in continuously, good
order,-it hr necessary to start main-
taining it the day its construction is
’M-~ tha ilnnmwmtnt Of thO lot
Aib Tellow workers' by encouraging
and enabling them to have a financial
TSfo' ^SP ita.l£ftglUgi K__
the saving accruing from the
provement, hard-SuMacing is nol
illation plans. In this regard
much like a “fire drill."
4. To deepen, by patriotic exer-
cises, loyalty to country. In short.
peacetime, so that every
should know hie place and Ms <igty „
when war comes. Many American
boys hive . lost their livee unneces-
defense day is an annual conference {sarily because ‘ lack of traiaiog, and A p
of the citisenahip on national de- Ipreparatoa hav« denied them a falr
fense and an annual stock taking ~oT chance on the field of bsttal. .
our resources. Tor the first time w* have a. real,
Ik is thg direct descendant *f the 1 workable;—democrat!
interest and share in the public in-1 vi»able. It is possible to make dfeat
dustries and public utilities of his j improvements in roads without 'h^rd-
country.” surfacing them and these improve-
ment* are quite effective in reduejng
the cost of travel.
.The, records in the cobnty clerk's
TrmT offilce shbW thdt only 81Wr nun1 iage
ad- fe'lioonse was issued during the week.
Mr. Julius Kruttschnitt, former
chairman of the board of the South-
ern Pacific Railway Company, died
in New York City Monday, last week.
Under his direction the read grew in,
twelve years from 10,000 miles to;
10,000 miles, with earnings more than
doubled. The World’s Work had
something to say recently about
ignorant people in the South, but we
remind them 'that Texas furnished
the chairman of the board of the
Home Demonstration Work.—Sev-! Union Pacific; Louisiana furnished
e^al courses in home - demonstration • the chairman of the board gf the
work, especially adapted to the needs Southern Pacific; Texas gate New
of girls and women from rural com- York the lawyer who is probably
munitiea, will be given. VThe work (the leader in his profession in that
Will consist of lecture* and demon-
strations in health work, in meal
£
Mr. A. C: Hardin and Miss Eula
Pqrker drove over from Megargel
and after securing the license were
married in the courthotise. Judge
Parsley performed the ceremony.
annual "muster day” of our Colonial fwith small Regular Army, larga Na-
completed.—Texas Highway Bulletin. | and early National days when the; tional Guard, and the framework of
____j Organised and Unorganised Militia : the great citisen army of the Ot-
m$t one day a year for the same'
•
^It is not a military gesture, it is
not militaristic propaganda, it is not
a threat. Practically all other mu-
ttons have great military maneuvers
simulating warfare every year and
no one takes them as special threats ________________
against anyone. Defense Day is npt | fense Day, July Fourth,
even maneuver or military exercise.
What is our National Defense pol-
POISON THE j^SSHOPPHtS^Sy^r1^^:
te
mite
gsnized Reserve . t- -
ft 1a tha chaapait Rational tnaur- :
ance ever devised. It la in harmony
with American ideals, and traditions.
It will save dollars. More thaa that, ^«.
it will save lives. And, one day, it ^TrJ
will save the Republic.
Learn about it and help it on De-
li now appeal's that considerably under every condition and
damage may likely be done by gri
hoppers in certain parts of
county, according to some of oui
farmers.
In case the hoppers appear to
numerous near the cultivated fields]
or are damaging the growing crops,
Stef* should be taken at once to
ity; S,quth Carolina gave the presi- poMon before the pests get too large
we have
Follow-'
sort ever
(action in this country.
It is the first real evidence that we
planning, table service, clothing,
home improvement and poultry.
dent cf the College of the City of ?«d scatter over the fields. It is
New York, and many other leaders1 touch easier to poison while the
in New York in all lines of work hoppers are young. J
have been furnished by the South.
The number of baccalaureate de-
grees conferred by colleges of the
United States increased from 14,000
in 1900 to nearly 90,000 in 1922. In
1920 there was one college graduate
torj every 5,400 of the population of
the United Sattes- Two decades later
tha ratio had risen to one in 4,000.
CetOor Price On
The interest of the whole world is
centered upon the present turmoil of
China. The spirit of nationalism, a
growing protest against foreign con-
cessions and the influence of Russian
bolshevism, are responsible, in part,
’for the strife in China. There has
been considerable fighting going on
in the Canton and Shanghai regions,
and foreign residents, in many cases,
have been forced to seek protection.
There are ominous ' possibilities in
the Far East. Hussia, China and i
Japan may form an aDlanm which
jbbpvrffize *111 hntioM/ ^nly the
Gospel of Christ both preached and
lived can save the Orient.
no time for experimenting,
ing is the formula: "
Wheat bran (not shorts) .. . 25 lbs,
White arsenic .............................,1 lb.
Oranges or lemons ................ 6 fruits
(l_or. Amyl acetate may be
substituted for the 6 fruits in
the formula U. S. P grade, only-
ow grade cane or molasses
syrup .......r*........................ 2 quarts
f*ter ............. 2 quarts
Mix the bran and poison thorough-
while dry. Dilute the molasses
th the atkount of water named,
eese the lemons -into the dilute
ea, then grind the rinds of the
chopper and add to
it, is me nrsi rest eviuence u»b w« , 9
jmean, what we say wheq we declare .y 1W6; Pjf
The most effective means of con- 1;
trol that has been used is the poterni
bran mash. Since the mash loses
its effectiveness as soon as It gats
dry it is necessary to apply it atififcit in a meat
exactly the right time and place, the liquid also.
Id case the ground is dry and hot the
mash must be applied early in the
morning between daylight and soon
after sunrise, for the reason that the
mash will dry out during the night'after being squeezed
and the hoppers will not touch it* jfalls readily apart.
At the present the hoppers are j Sew by hand over the infested area
found mostly on the turn rows ififi j jMt as you would sow oats, distribut-
Now mix the liquid and poison
mash thoroughly. After an even
mixture haa been obtained, add mors
water until a f mash Is ohtainsd that
in the hand
on uncultivated land, and the mssh
form an aUTanee which ] Should be put out on the edges of the
fields. In case the entire field Is
infested, the mash should be dis-
tributed over the entire area. *
The far mule should he mixed e*»
fcCtly as directed and only
terial named should be used. Nethtaf
should be left out and nothing else
Ing as evenly as possible in particles
about -the sis* of the little fingernail.
The quantity given in the above
formula should cover about five acres.
Do nor aspect . to see many dead
more, hours after
Ordinarily ass come
jncstajiBl application should be suf-
ficient for a piece of ground as the
will eat the jle§0 and
formula that that has boon tried out'jdn- -taws be poisoned.
nr i ate I-”
ACH 0LOOEV/
I TOG* UP NN
used Cars!
AMiknudMA
•MM H8M1 MM JOT8M(- ~
- LIVCGAL TRUNK
Shamrock Motor Comp’y
Southeast Corner Square
— te„,i„ta,i,M1 I.g|mm
Arthur Train, the cslebytod aov-
felltr, prtdr fo hfc trip to the Balkans,
(has taken out a |260,000 insurance
{policy against being kidnaped end
held far ransom.------------- ■
U?-- -I-*»'•£** -l ■. ■ - ■■■y. * - . > .TfcV-
BHggamgg^a jjI,11 m dLlJljjjiSugJ
th*
this
Remember
Is
INM, Ni AtH PM, -WIS 16 A
OCOO-DAPOPTUNITV «6«T
RID Of ROM* O* THIS JUNK-
HOP* I LAND TkAT
Sft flowN Aar CMOOH,
MJMM AND CDMPteNV -
TH#
IN OUR
I MAD E MOOCH
THAr ROCHOUf*
«Sff#
AtWM
mm
Jo*
AiMOST
—m
-I*
t*FT
. It fir our first demonstration of real
faith in democratic defense in a
democratic republic.
Here is how it works:
There is one Army of the United
States witlRmt distinction of uniform
between its three component parts:
1. The Regular Army, ready for
instant service in emergencies, car-
ing for the permanent military posts
and equipment, providing the train-
ing force for the fwo "citisen” com-
ponents.
2. The National Guard, serving the
States for local emergencies as well
as the Nation, drilling once a week
and at annual encampments, recruit-
ing to more than twice the strength
at the regular establishment ready
for the field in a short time, and;
3. The Organized Reserves, fully
officered in peacetime with reserve
officers who ere trained in weelcTy or
fortnightly conferencee, by correspon-
dence courses, and at annual camps,
but with moat of its rank and file
to Come from a selective service act
or volunteering when war comes.
officer* <
CONSTABLE’S SALE
Notice is hereby given, that by
virtue-' qf a certain (Her‘IT Ml
issued by the Clerk of the Ceunty
Court of Young County, on the 24th
that w« do not believe in large stand-
ing armies but rely on the strength „ . , . ... .
of armed citizenship in time of peril.
wherein Commercial Credit Company
is plaintiff, and D. E. Martin l> de- 4» -
#___I..1 <_ _------ — '
West Point and from civil Ufa; the
officers of the! National Guard come
from the rankalof the Guard or from
the Officers J|ppeoy.•‘Ofrpii. the «RI*
was'rendered on the 8th day ef May,
1926, in favw of the said plaintiff
against said defendant for the eum
of Five Hundred Pive ad 66-190 Dol-
lars, with interest thereon at the rate
of 10 per centum per annum from *
date of judgment, together With ail
costs of suit, I have levied upon, and
will, on the first Tuesday lit July.
1925, it being the 7th day «f said
month, at the court house doer 1|t
Grahaip, Young County, Texaa, with-
in legal hours, proceed te -dstt- ter
cash to the highest bidder, all the
right, title and interest of Ifcy E.
Martin in and to the fottomtaf de-
scribed persona) property, levied upon
ss the property of D. E. Martin, to-
wH:
One Star Touring Car, motor No.
101706, serial No. L-211476, <1624
model.
“The above ssie to be made by me^ji
to satiric the above described judg-
ment for Five Hundred JM» and
66-100 Dollars, in favor of Qtrrmer-
da! Credit Company, together Trith
the costs of said suit, and the pro-
ceeds applied to . the
44-46C
The
DAWSON,
D.
nstable Prec. No. 1,
y, Texas.
ham, Texas, June IMS,
YMmf
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The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 2, 1925, newspaper, July 2, 1925; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth882701/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting The Library of Graham.