The Grandview Tribune (Grandview, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, October 9, 1959 Page: 4 of 4
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PAGE FOUR
THE GRANDVIEW TRIBUNE
ERIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1959
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J. V. WOOD & SONS
Horse % Star Bright!"
Shaxs!
PHONE NO. 5
GRANDVIEW, TEXAS
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HAVE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
YOU
BUSINESS FORMS
RENEWED
LETTERREADS
YOUR
STATEMENTS
SUBSCRIPTION
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ENVELOPES
TO
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CIRCULARS
THE
PROGRAMS
TRIBUNE
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Place Your Order Now
YET
THIS
The Tribune
4,
mExAs POWER & LIGHT COMPANY J
“2
net in-
Texas
Fashion
Shows!
9
2
ON PISPLAY IN .OUR OFFICE
ON AT DARK - OFF AT DAWN
INSTALLED COMPLETE
NO MONEY DOWN
hammered out an agreement
The Spaniards would keep
west of the Sabine River
and the Americans east of
the Arroyo Hondo.
“This created the famous
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; you ere qualified for TP&L’s new "Gold Medallion
Form" sign now ... complete with your name.
Cal your Ideal TP&L Co. Farm Service Advisor
foc complete details.
was $1,047.9 million. It was
$719.1 million in 1957.
Cash receipts from sales
of farm commodities yielded
Texas farmers $2,372.6 mil-
lion in 1958 compared with
$1,702 million in 1957. Gov-
P
NEEDS LITTLE OR NO IRONING
MAKE AN EXPENSIVE LOOKING DRESS
FOR A FRACTION OF COST OF
READY MADE DRESS
LET US HELP YOU SOLVE
YOUR PIECE GOODS PROBLEM
rYOUR JUNIOR FIRE MARSHAL SAYS ---
ITS FIRE PREVENTION WEEK...
-—aU ear €ocg/
■ill
du. ■
20
“DRIP DRF PRINTS
Fire can strike
when portable
heaters are im-
properly used,
keep them from
drapes, curtains,
furniture and
walls. Clean and
check regularly
for leaks. r*
- re o.
net income of $1,001.5 mil-
lion from farming in 1958,
$474.6 million more than in
1957. Estimates prepared by
the Agricultural Marketing
Service, show that Texas
OES YOUR FARM QUALIFY?
g-+-
This is Hie sign of good farming ...
proftable farming.
your farm is
LAL L - ELECTRI c
i
I
I
7
TEXAS TOPS ALL
STATES IN 1958 NET
--FARM-INCOME--
Texas farmers realized
IE; O
, ' 5
‘ate Fair \:
Careless smoking habits are the
leading cause of fires. Be sure
matches and cigarettes are out
before leaving them and DON’T
smoke in bed!
YEAR ?
9 9
CARVER DEPARTMENT STORE
“YOUR HOME: TOWN STORE”
spend after paying
production expenses.
Average realized
come per farm in
OUTING FLANNEL - 36 Inrt
PLAIN OR PRINTED
IDEAL FOR GOWNS, PAJAMAS, ETC.
35* Yard
Little known facts about Texas
boundaries. i-
1 .
I k
CEMETERY TAG DAY
—Q—
Saturday, October 10, is
Cemetery Tag Day. We need
your financial aid in our
Cemetery work. We hope to
contact you Saturday in our
Cemetery drive.
-----
come.
Realized net is the in-
come farm operators have to
in realizing net
While the diplomats wra-
ngled overseas, the French
and Spanish on the spot set-
tled the dispute. They ag-
reed on the Arroyo Hondo,
a tributary of the Red River
between the Sabine and Old
Natchitoches.
Then, in 1803, the United
States bought the Louisiona
territory hazy as to the ex-
tent of land involved.
President Thomas Jeffer-
son claimed the Rio Grande
as the Western boundary.
Spain contended it did not
extend west of Los Adaes, a
Spanish mission on the site
of present day Robeline La.
As a result U. S. troops
moved into Louisiana, drove
the Spanish from Los Adaes
and made general preparat-,
ions for war.
Again local men of war
farm in- mers totaled $122.2 million,
$9.5 million more than in
-gh’em
IT
Battie Border
-2 V * lg
l
I
-485
amounted to $3,430 in 1958,
compared with $1,774 in the
preceding year. The Texas
farm operators ranked 17th.
among the states in realized
net income per farm.
Farm operators in Texas
built up inventories of crops
and livestock in 1958 by
$46.4 million. When realized,
net income is adjusted to al-
low for the change in in-
K
Boys and girls inspect their homes for fire hazards as
Hartford Fire Insurance Company’s Junior Fire Marshal program.
dm), FARM
*5 37888g
Sewed By
Tana fete between the king-
demsof Spain and France J “Neutral Ground”, a strip
,8716-... /■ : 0 1 between Arroyo Hondo and
Hoh xadlons claimed the; the'Sabine, responsible to no
Texas ;alen, ach had milit-jone,’! Wilson points'out.- 6X-
a fereereddy to take ac-l “Overgrown with' dense
ticm. ' "« pine forests this was a nat-
l • *-
... ......egs
I sue s
a” • : ' ..
Use correct size fuses ONLY! Never
use coins behind fuses in fuse box.
Fire, not economy, will result.
CENL.LENI JA DFI icoMLe0MIpar‘vII6,
a
PATTERNS
59* Yard
.E
i : r
533: •
the preceding year. The
gross farm income of Texas
farmers amounted to $2,684.
3 million in 1958, a loss of
$697.7 million from 1957.
Gross income includes cash
receipts and government
payments plus allowances
for the value of food and
fuel produced and consumed
on the farm and the rental
value of the farm dwelling.
Production expenses o f
Texas farm operators rose
from $1,459.7 million i n
1957 to $1,682.8 million in
1958. Production expenses
are subtracted from gross
income to obtain realized
net income.
--------<3--------
The first U. S. destroyer
developed only 1,600 h. p.
while destroyers of today
like the USS Willis A. Lee
develop 60,000 h. p.
~ 02—., .a.
Bed"""*
.
-e-ventevies,thetatelnetfarm.
income of Texas operators
"The Texas boundary line
srekches ever some 4,000
miles and a sizeable portion
of # has been forged and
tmapered in the fiery heat
ef conflict.
AEomey 'General Will
Wilsom is' in one of these
batkles now with the Texas
tidelanc issue before the
ESSupreme Court.
Since 1716 to this good
eay its location has been
fought over.
The Attorney General, a
dediated Texas historian,
Eeks at the overall picture.
“The cola facts are, re-
gazllss o f motive, that
dovsn through the years
there has been bite after
bite attempted on our ter-
ritary, Wilson says.
"Zhe worst and most ten-
acicus of these land biters
has been the federal govern-
’ menL
Thefrst conflict arose al-
eng the; East Texas - Louis-
characters - - adventurers, |
fugitives and outlaws.
They played for keeps.
“The wilderness is gone
now but the old neutral
ground has generated a tra- '
dition all its own and a
breed of independent people
whose names and deeds
wrote Texas history.”
“Today trees cut from the
old neutral ground are used
to make paper for Time, Inc.
a national weekly magazine
with its own tart brand of
independence. The natives
grin and say that the spirit
of those first Texas tourists
seem to soak right through
the paper into the print oi
Time.”
Kinsmen of these neutral
ground settlers "borried" a
cannon from the Mexicans.
When they demanded its re-
turn, the Texans loaded i
with powder and the undis-
puted authority of horse
shoes, raised the flag with
the dare “Come and Take
It,” and fought the battle of
Gonzales.
In 1819 diplomats finally
signed a treaty settling the
b o u n d a ly between the
United States and Spain---
the western banks of the
Sabine to its intersection
with the 32nd. parallel and
then due north to the Red
River.
Congress in 1848, moved
the line from the river bank
eastward to the Sabine
River’s middle channel
where it lies to this day.
However, Wilson observes:
“Before this line was
moved to the middle of the
river it ran along the west-
ern bank of the Sabine to a
point near Southeast of Cor-
thage, went north overland
until it reached the Red
River.
“Congress moved the river
running portions of the line
eastward to mid - stream
with no provision as to what
course it would take north-
ward from the Carthage
area overland to Red River.
“Consequently there is a
strip of land about 150 feet
wide and some 70 miles long
between Texas and Louis-
iana that the turn of events
has left shadowed with
doubt,” Wilson points out.
-------Q------- .
Fire claimed a life in the
U. S. every 46 minutes dur-
ing: 1958. Junior Fire Mans-
hals, through < their ci special
training have; peen credited
with saving numerous, lives
in-fire mishaps. " Do Gpo
Pan-American
2,Livestock
Exposition!/
g5Mh A
",2
ranks 1st. among the states ernment payments to far-
-ma:
ag —-uwes "E
YOUR NAME
Boating Law
Continued from Page (1)
ber on both sides of the bow.
On all boats under 26 feet
in length, each digit and let-
ter must be a minimum of
three inches high.
Greer stated that a regis-
tration^ef mofe than 212,-
000 - individually o w n ed
boats ws expected.
—---Q----
Enl’sted men in the Con-
tinental Marines of 1775 to
17 8 3 wore green coats,
green shirts, and breeches
of light colored cloth.
--!---i— __
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The Grandview Tribune (Grandview, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, October 9, 1959, newspaper, October 9, 1959; Grandview, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468998/m1/4/?q=cemetery: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grandview Public Library.