The Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 257, Ed. 1 Monday, July 1, 1935 Page: 4 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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mdMi
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oUplar
3 S|gS»
mother and **« to* * **■ Th« ““•« ^"^“uTJl' v it. 2thua-
mother seeing the snake crawl *c- Pen-Amenesn hirhw.y. Hi.
roes the kitchen Hoot, skieked a*di item over the ofJj^
fell bwk«.nh into a bucket ol national toun.m ha. brought h.mje
boiling water, scalding herself bad- .chairmanship of an official «*•
ly A daughter who rushed to her mitt*, to arrange appropriate cele-
assistance taw her mother writhing bratlon of the opening of the L
in the boiling water with the snake edo-to.Mexieo g.ty sector, expected
motionless on the floor, and jumped neat fall,
straight out of the winoow to her “ *
deatji. . >V*
-a
Nefc French Word
Means Pancakes
R“present«tive Keller prediced
that within a few years, when
travelers’ hotel, and other facilities
are developed along the new high-
way. at least 1.0011,000 t. uriets an
mUlly wit motor to and from the
_ , United States and Mexico.
PARIS.-The latest word to en- After the Lnredo-tq-Mexico Chy
ter the French language sound, sector is open. he understands
tike its French lsnguage ps-t. that .the Mexican government
“Pannequet*”— pancake. — is the promptly will shift the c«n»tnic-
word and it entered spoken usage tion workers to the road south
through s menu at the Uiuon In- of Mexico City, aiming at ita
teraliee. the swanky club formed early completion to the Guanta-
for allied soldiers dhring the w»r. matan frontier.
Practically every member of th« Completion of Central American
French Academy, guardian of the sectors of the Pan-American high-
language. is a member of the way may require some external fin-
Union Interalliee and as no objec- ancial assistance hut Representative
tion was made to it. appearance it Keller think, that thi. eventually
ha. become adopted.
TOM CORBETT-
^Continued from front page.)
DOUGHBOYSD
19 TBfl
SHI
ALL-STARS TO I
AT JACK*
TOMORR
will be forthcoming from the Unit-
j ed States.
| “The richest agricultural soil in
the world is in South Mexico and
1 Central America," he said. “The ______________._____
' productivity of this region, with J ____
irrigation, can scarcely be exagger- Black WlOOW Spider B©\ Who Will Not
pan Ko vmwn tftef WA__A__ffl____* A__V !* ___ v • _ AA ’MT _ _
the family to leave. This they ated. One crop can be grown after
did. the father, mother and chil- another. When modern transporta-
dren. After following them a lit- tion i* available that region will
tie di tance the Indians ‘ordered develop rapidly,
the man and children to proceed “The Phn-American highway be-
and the mother to return with sides attracting tourists, will be a
them. The man had no choice, direct stimulus to international
But as soon as he could place his commerce. As other people come
children in safety he returned 0 to know’ each,other, they do busi-
find his wife suffering unbelu-v- ne«s with each other. Better ac-
aW» torture. quamtance' will inspire a sense of
“The Indians had drawn their polincal security among the various
hunting knife around her forehead, countries.
a foetbell. •- ; one since April 19$!,- the National
that he was; Industrial Conference Board report-
trough the field with ,
Beats Tarantula In J 'Chew Lives 20 Years ,k?1tow*?w»*^ jT^hlJ^uIillfc rf"£
Battle; Eats Victim Without Any Meat t0 ** carried *r0UIKl 00 * 18 1,ck unifofniitF
CISCO —The coatroversay over r PHILADELPHIA.—Douglas Bak-
the relative deadliness of the blew
widow spider and the Texas taran
tula was settled here yesterday—
at least as far as representatives
of the two spicies were MUeerned.
1°*” „ .. l
‘Maybe I got used to having
ADKLPHIA.—Douglas Bak- , i"/ Vl, ’ tZZ
er, 20. never has bitten into . only
juick steak or a sweet apple. over >t” he *“d Im CrMy •fcC’U
He is known as “the boy who
will not chew.”
me two spicies were c<nicermu. Since an infant, Douglas’ diet
The black widow, a vicious brute has been only liquids. He has lived
at best and acclaimed by doctors ron milk,' orange juice, tea, coffee
hunting knife around her foreheau, coun'nes. as the most dangerous of Texas wind cornstarch—but physicians hope
and then scalped her by tying Construction of the Phn-Ameri- spiders, turned giant killer and .to correct the strange malady,
her hair to their horses’ tails and can highway south of Panama i* .lew Primo Tarantula. ,. ., Douglas is only 5 feet 3 in<
compelling the horses-to pull. Next still “out in the future." content with that, the champion tall and weighs only 99 pour
milk. But I don’t like cream.’1
most of them pae -temporary mea-
sures,' the board pointed oat
Arizona,. North Carolina and
Washington now ljnve general salsa
..... . ____ --—..... taxes, Mississippi and New Mexico -—
Physicians said the yourth> c^pe grpr.s receipt# taxes, Indians, South
is unusual, but in “no means” uni- i Dakota and West Virginis gross it-
que. They pointed out that life can . come taxes, and retail sales taxes
be maintained for many years onare reported from Arkansas. Cali-
the proper variety of fluids. f fotnia. Colorado, Idaho, Hlteois,
-o-— i Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland. Michi-
gan, Missouri, North Dakota, Ohie,
Woolley’s Good I
upset the City L«ai
in the second game
header Monday nig
nftthy Oinaers wei
decisive 19 to 10 d
the last «f the nint
Th^ game went
inning tied 6 «P bo
of the bottle was
sewed up By the Dc
last-inning rally
ing men 4 rum
Dooley' pitching :
hoys allowed 16 h
vtn*’ 18.
the
they placed the agonizing woman
the ground and trod over her
on the ground and trod over ner . i * i
with their horee* But it is said, false Bank Alarm
and give credit to the noble pon- Pays Policemen $1
ies. that not a pony would let rti
feet touch the woman’s body. j _ ——
• “Despite thi. worse than butch- BOSTON.--Each of 15 policemen
ery tile woman lived four davs^ .( thank, to a mistake
Such was the terror under which of # ^ emp,oye of ^ ch,r)e5.
,w. tta eh-mpio, « » ^ar-Ssls. Tax Grows J oiia—. uuk w.w^. w.«
content ----- ------ ---------- —. —— —.fm u,u; » t-vui
celebrated with a victory feast, the i but his health has been fair,
vanquished spider being the chief | pity the sports tlie other
dish on the menu. |4">y" do,” he said. “I play baseball,
Eugene Lankford, who discover- 1 football and swim. I’m not so good
ed a black widow in a tire he waa.*t running. but I manage to get
changing and promptly bottled it, 1 “ —
yesterday fonnd a tarantula and
placed it in the bottle with the
In Many States ' Vlrg*n»a, Wyoming, New
South Dakota.
Rates vary from one-half
1 NEW YORK—Sales tax laws j . -
“Zgrsz tZ 2IZZ'in ^Bturf,y’ and
killer. Inside, three minutes the
the early settlers lived. town Five Cent Savings Bank.
These pioneers had pluck. I A new ^ Pmpl0ye aecidenUliv
“I remember « Mrs. Ripley who a burfUr butt#B ,nd
going to where her hushand wa« ,whhin tWo a squad of p,,.
working in the field encountered 1|<e,mn B,nk officUls
a number of Indians who ordered ^ ^ ^ the4r
her to ’vamoose. But the ap|1<.armnCf th,t th sent (15 to
woman had taken the precaution
PoUce Commissioner Eugene M. Me-
to arm herself, and kept her gun gw for dislribution among
the Indians. - ...
tnc officers.
steadily pointed at
Had she retreated they most like-
ly would have killed her. Rut
she shod her ground, and know-
hrn throw the bags their
ing a bulle* would brmg at least 'addles and ride unharmed as they
one of them down, the red men through open country. Men
‘vamoosed’. respected1 each other's money «in
“After Mrs. Ripley died her hus- those days,
band remarried and he and Ills “As the big cattle companies
second wife were both killed by came in and fenced up water holes
fndians.” j wire cutting prevailed. Of course
• Mr. Corbett recalls seeing an In- ' th«re were instance, when there
dian stroll through their pastures, ' wa-* n0 cause, except prejudice and
and he also remembers hearing the fear of the open range against the
report of the gnn -by. which the incoming land owners,
marauders killed a, boy in the com- “Tbe Missouri Cattle Company I
munity named Crohfitl. »"d 'be Orrick Company both suf- j
He recalls when the Indians in fered heavily from the wire cut- i
vaded his community and killed ten, and popular malice was a-
and scalped a man named Young- roused In each instance by thebe
blood, that the white men follow- companies reputedly fencing in land
ed the pack and by a good shot i that did not belong to them, in-
brrnght down the Indian--wha wore eluding water holes on which the
at his belt the freah scalp of Mr, (cattle depended.”
Youngblood. .• j ®*r- Corbett bought at Fort Worth
“That Indian was buried,” says and brought to his ranch the sec-
Mr. Corbett, “in a grave with the, “"d female white face cow ever
scalp at hi. side." ’ * I brought to the county.
One of the best markets for their j “I paid 8405 for that cow and
pi duce in those early days was the , her calf, and the neighbors held
soldier forts, at Griffin and Jacks- 1 their breath, until I should be
; judged eraxy. But the white face
“We would sell them com and «"» stayed, and brought protper-
other field prodedls. and get mon- 'ty, through her breed, this
er in return. In that wgy my fath- J country. I aiao helped unload the
er. who returned from the Civil War first ba«4>ed wire ever received
without smunde, accumulated some here
cash. But. as sras the cnetom, there! Mr. Corbett believes in the in-
being i* banks, we loaned the trlnslc value of land. “It won’t
money to the loeel merchants *od grt away from you," he say*. And
when a panic came (and they el- true to hit convictions, he ha* m-
ways do comet, the merchants went vetted hi and continue* to own
broke, and our money was last , torn# thousand, of acres of Young
irrecoverably. I *nd Stephens ootmty land.
“My father moved srhen I wet According to President Milton
Id year* old to the farm near Daniel of the Breekeoridge bank,
Caddo, on wMeh my brother, Quincy, and others who have known Wm
still lives. There were rerioet kinds 1 through the yuarm, there are few
of game, no farming, or towns to men wo see with a steadier eye
speak of, everything on a frontier iato business and pubtte prohiems
bant* than Toss Corbett, whose life te-
-Bat there were virtues as well gan m the Dry Greek community
ae hardships then I toy* seen eleven miles northwest of Weath-
cattl* buyer* fsom * distance bring srford, and who has weathered
•heir saddle bags httfgidg sMth geld the slingi and darts and gale* of
, i pasture ami -count, .opt the fortune for three nnd three-fourths
•e of herds ef eatde. They would .core yanrs.—Stephen* County 8nn
two spiders were at it, and there
was no referee to sward a tech-
nical knockout.
Although much smaller than the
tarantula, the black widow had the
better of'the. scrap from the first,
piling up points in the early, part
of the battle. Finally it bi| the
tarantula and that settled the mat-
ter. —c [
The victor fhen spun a web
abiut the tarantula and turned
cannibal, devouring ita victim and
growing all the while. As soon as
it finished its grisly meal it cut the
web and allowed the tarantula a
skeleton, only part remaining
uneaten, to fall to the bottom of
the bottle.
Use Reporter Ads
YEARS AGO TtyE RADIO
WAS I NDREAMED OF
—But the natural laws, an
which the operation of r^dio
depends, have been in exist^ca
since the beginning of tho
world.
The same thing ip tree of
Chiropradtic. The aataral for-
ces which Chiropractic put" to
work in Ha health-restoring
and health-building process nr#
ageleaa and sternal.
In both cases, it remained
for trained asms of srisoeo^a
take the farena of aatnro pad
pat them to worh for the
nt of mankind. Opr
fathers weald have —
at the —Mention nf ad
things aa f»Bn “8 Chiroprac-
tic. And yet. hath are Gris-
ly established — by vlrtse of
their supreme usefulness—to
this mode— wideawake world.
wre fMH
he btoto-
at
—
and X-Ray
Bcrvtoe.
GRUBY A GRUBY
Palmer Grad ante
CHIROPRACTORS
Company over Araer
«-3 victory was hard
the Shamrock men l
in the last of the I
might have been vt
McDonald, on th«
Shamrock kept Le
hits and 2 walks.
No games will b
fair park diamond
Of the week becaui
Thursday, Friday a
preparations today
that will necessitaU
track and removal
The Inter-City L
•boro will be
tomorrow nigl
UNDERGOES 1
“My Dear, I simply dread this dally shopping!” How maay tlmeo
have you heard that story? Mere than once, we will bet a hat. And
if yeu ask the woman who “dreads shopping” jaat why she doea aa,
yon will usually hour something like this:
“It takes so aauch time! I start out and took and look and took . *
and by the time Pee found what I want I am dead on my fat- Afl la,
my dear. I mean I actually am!”
You can do a friend like that a real service. Ask her If aha reads
the advertisementa. Possibly she will took surprised and say, “Hot
very often. What has that to do wiflh it?”
TeN her hew you have your mind all made up before yap hang the
market basket oner your arm .... how you ate able to save atepa,
■urn of tine and effort. Simply hecauia you have Urn news of
the shopping world at your finger tips all the tin*, by roadlng the h*>
Advertisementa Are News. . Vital, Practical News.
NewB You Need To Keep On Tap
Read The Advertisements Bvery Day
-*••1
. Raymond I
ley! underwent a
ti«/n at the G—hat
day afternoon and
be doing nicely tod
--^-o-
Classes Post
Until
f
i j
‘if
The free swimmii
started Monday am
gh tomorrow bav
until next Monde;
a i position tehearsala,
struetor, announces
— Many of the chi'
the classes have
during the momii
attendance at the
Free classes will
threa days of nei
mittance to the p<
expense.
YtC,
IMPR(
V A. B. Owens w
operation for ap
Graham Hospital
•*” la reported to b«
proved.
-o
It’s Really J
When 1
Begrl
t
4
Clarksville.—Thi
downpour of rain
day* has dampen
well aa the fie
optimistic farm* i
County, a bumpm
In at ore thia y«
leant, when
It £tid grow,
--f.vUrtM*
' crop And that
pened on a farm
ter Baird. Early
started building
fore he was tji
of posrts wee
^ hewed out some
sapling-
y \ The make-sWft
'-purphso, but ihi
gan to put out
| and Uat leaves.
I
__A
.
JR-..
irfk V!
a farmer to roal
amiss, Baird b«
tion and found
roots had forms
k^Wriy every**
numerable plant)
tinge, but only i
n*»i.t«te will v
wood variety so
jeut
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The Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 257, Ed. 1 Monday, July 1, 1935, newspaper, July 1, 1935; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1034758/m1/4/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.