The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1946 Page: 2 of 12
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Htavitr in
trtad and In
bead . . . »*-
p.eially de-
signed lor
long, low-cost
mileage. Your
boil buy ior
all t y pe*o4
pick-up* and
light delivery
truck*.
N-.V TUBES SAVE T'RESI
Goc , *ar tube* are reinforced for
extra service and safety (Arc
. . . provide tire* with a d
superior air container. No - ,|u, M,
certificate needed. , s.oemi*
Raise Some Vegetables You Can’t Buy
GUESTS IN TURNER HOME ‘
Misses Margaret and Mary Bob
Turner. Junior and Freshman stu-
dents respectfully, in S. M- U..
spent the week-end as guests of
their parents. Mr. and Mrs. R. C-
Turner. They were accompanied
by Margaret's roommate. Miss
Connie Dolph
Miss Sara St. Clair, orchestra
director of Commerce high school,
was a week-end guest of friends
here She formerly was head of
the music department in Graham
High School.
IVE GOT TO TEACH H»M
not to aurty his boa
BISCUITS ALONo
Y/ITH HIS BONES 'J
AT FIRST
JIOROFA
Roy and H. J. Short and family
and Warren Reed and family of
Lubbock spent last Saturday and
Sunday visiting Mrs. Short’s dau-
Caution uae only aa directed
ghter in Ennis.
YOUR PHILCO DEALER
LOOKS
JEAN H. D- CLUB NEWS
The Jean H. D. Club met in the
home of Mrs. J. M Elmore on
March 5th. There were 14 mem=
hers present and two visitors.
The recreation chairman direc-
ted a few games after the devot*-
Meef your Nev?
HIRED HAND . .
the fastis., working
TRACTOR
TIRE
WS'lx
'ItA &ooct 13u<2,iue<2.<i
* TO USE
GOOD BUSINESS
STATIONERY?
★ LETTER HEADS
★ ENVELOP E^S
★ STATEMENTS
!
>
Are your Letter-Heads. Envelopes, State-
ment Blanks and other Printed Business
Forms en asset or a liability to your busi-
ness? .
Do you know that Good Business Stationery
can create a lasting GOOD impression with
the firtns and individuals you send them to?
Why not let us show, you samples of some of
the nation's leading styles of fine, colorful
and distinctive printed business stationery?
We ere equipped to design end print
YOUR outstanding business stationery re-
quirements. See us today. ,
QUALITY PRINTING
, I BARNEY ASHLEY GUEST
8PEAKER OF KNIGHT
OP PYAHIA8
Barney P. Aihley, the Grand
Chancellor, waa guest speaker for
the Knights of Pythias meeting
He and twelve members of the
Breckenridge Lodge aided in the
initation of twelve members into
the Runk of Page. Those initiat-
ed were: Grover Guinn. Gerald
Bishop, W. R. Perrin. W. K. Doo-i
len. Wir. J. Duncan- T. L. Map-
[ Ics, and Henry Clay.
A delicious three course dinner
was served by Pat Word, Boyd
Brazil, and C- D. Talley.
MRS DEER IN PROFESSIONAL
JURY ART SHOW
Mrs. Clinton Deer of 912 East
Street htfs won the honor of be-
ing one of the artists to display
her paintings in the West Traits
Jury Art iSnow sponsored by the
Fort Worth Fine Arts Associa-
tion.
Mrs. Deer’s ojl painting ‘‘One-
way” has for its unusual subject
an opium smoking set. The set
that was used as a model was
brought from Chinatown. San
Francisco, California.
The outstanding features of
Mrs. Deer’s painting are its per-
fect spacing and its rhythmic
lines .
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our thanks
and-appreciation to our many
friends for their kindness and sym
pathy in the death of our sister
an aunt’. Mrs. Mae DeLong and
children.
- jnyn SBl
. —Photo Courtesy Perry-Morn Seed 00.
The only way you can be sure of having certain delicious vegetables
for your table is to raise them in your own garden.
Take Swiss chard, for example. Those appetizing greens have been
widely grown in Victory Garden* these war years. The reason you don't
see them in the markets is because the delicate foliage wills quickly after
picking. To enjoy Swiss chard atf-
its best, you should use it shortly
after cutting. The same planting
will furnish many a “mess o’ greens”
over a long period if only the out-
side stalks are cut each time, al-
lowing the center leaves to go on
growing. (See illustration).
Savoy is a type of cabbage not
at all improved by being hauled
from place to place . . . the crinkly
brittle leaves bruise so easily. By
growing" a few heads in the garden.
watering dish may have originated
in France or Holland. Folks of
Dutch ancestry are the ones most
familiar with edible pod peas in
our own land. Once grown in any-
one’s garden, they are likely to be
on the repeater list year after year.
Do you know that odd shaped
vegetable, kohl rabl? Plant a row
of it and give the family something
out of the ordinary. Although re-
lated to cabbage, it is milder and
you can have this tender, delicately, more delicate in flavor. It looks
git* TKAcn**
y-
flavored, nearly odorless variety at
its finest. It takes no more exer-
tion and care than raising plain
cabbage. Chieftain is the variety
which has become a universal fav-
orite.
Friends Who come to dinner will
exclaim oyer edible piod peas from
-your-gardenvines:’-This is a type of
pea whidh,'TS“<looked and eaten like
snap beans' pod and all,.when the
young peas have barely begun to
form. The liking for this mouth-
like a turnip growing above ground.
Kohl rabi matures quite rapidly and
should be eaten when about two
inches in diameter.
Anybody can have common cu-
cumber pickles. You can add that
extra touch to your list of appetiz-
ers by raising West India gherkins.
The prickly little oval fruits, picked
when fairly small, make unusually
good sweet pickles . . . nearly im-1
possible to get these days for lore
■or money.
hr...
Small lumber mills, like the one
shown above, are almost complet-
ely out of production in these
post-war months in. the face of
low ceiling prices on lumber anti
high labor prices. The shut-down
of such mills removes an estima-
ted 50 percent ol pre-war lumber
stocks from the normal market
" the National
charge.
I.umbel Retailers
Mr. and Mrs. James Q. Sulli-
van and two children from Bak- ■
ersfield. California have had a I
two week vacation in Graham and I
Fort Worth.’visiting friends and I
relatives. Mr. Sullivan is employed
by an oil company, having been I
transferred there from Graham
three years ago.
NANQx S» UUIN65
Mrs Wilma Elledgr of San An-
tonio is visiting relatives in Gra-
ham.
Make it the worlds
first choice tire
good/year
$15.20
Goodyear engineering, quality materials and
outstanding craftsmanship serve unseen to give
you a superior tire . . . maximum mileage, safety
and service.
Only this tire can offer the extra non-skid pro-
tection ef the All-Weather tread design that digs
'down, develops 4-way grip for dependable,
straight-line stops.
And Goodyear's spe-
cial treatment for im-
pregnating fabric
with Goodyear
blended synthetic
rubber makes a
tougher, longer-last-
ing body. 1
Superior in tread and
in body . . . that’s
why more people ride
on Goodyear tifes _
than on any other
kind ... and have for
30-consecutive years.
r'u* tax
* oo X te
good/year
AIR WHEELS
ihPiiy
of ever/ City
has a‘ story of a ri,ci.
who, once wealthy,
dieef in poverty. _
LIFE INSURANCE
is tne
investment you
can make
that is guaranteed
to be werih^moce______
1
WHY NOT SAFEGUARD /
YOUR INVESTMENTS
-Eat Bryan^Sr., C.L.U.
Raprcten n;;
Southwestern Life
•Co.~
M
Flashlights and Batterie*-
Autnmatir Record I'laiviK
Electric Di:«>r (bine-
■ Electric Hot I’latea
RADIO DEAD
CALLRED!
Red’s Radio Shop
GOOD/f’EAl
SINK-GRIP
With the O-P-f-N C-E-N-M-f! TKl'AD
1 You'll cover more acres of ground in less
time with less gallons ef gasoline when
your tractor’s shed with Goodyear Sure-
Grips. Fjor these husky, long-lastir.g ti;os
are designed vnth the icmou3 O-P-E-N
C-E-N-T-E-R tread that cleans itself as
llhe wheel turns; won’t get gummed up;
won't pack with mud r . . meanr less
slippage, less lost motion, more pull,
more push.
GOODYEAR j good/year
SERVICE STORE
W. M. NEVIL East Side Square
SERVICE
W. M. NEVIL, Mgr.
STORE
East Side of Square
wnPTM
Mr*. Elmore had charge of ti»e
program in which she told each of
us how to care for different kjnds
of floors. * .
Our next meeting will be with '
- Mrs A: R. Robinson nfi'March’ 19
--Reporter.
Read The Want Ads.
■PtRW®*-.".
S,
*Save, SAate
TO HELP SUPPLY THE
BOYS "OVER THERE"
Save LIGHT
Save POWER
Save SOAP
Save WATER
Save TOWELS
Sate LINENS
Save HEAT
Save MANPOWER
ZvCtytAi*? SAVE \
wer w -SIMM.
A//A/ ? ^ .
■
HOTEL
H>u‘4 'Z*piuU*i
nc.lL. Monoqor FOhi WORTH. TEXAS
«• • • - r
JLL
v
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Harris, E. B. The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1946, newspaper, March 14, 1946; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth888326/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting The Library of Graham.