Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 10, 1936 Page: 1 of 4
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THE GAAHAM DAILY
REPORTER WANT
ADS PAY.
PHONE NO. I.
Graham Daily Reporter
They All Read It — Therefore A First Class Advertising Medium.
The Graham .
Daily Reporter
COVERS GRAHAM
Y’our ad In this paper
will ret results.
N-
THB GRAHAM DAILY REPORTER TMUR8DAY, SEPT. If, 1936
Department Heads For
County Fair Named
a O. Cotart, President of the
Young County Fair, has announced
Hi. appointment of several dopart-
ment head*, who will appoint thklr
* own aatittairU, and begin work ■W*B
on their dtoplay booths.
Mrs. H. M. Tebay will ibe general
diractor of women’* displays, a**
sited by Mr. W. W. Martin and
Mrs. PrSak Whitmire.
Mr,. S. S. Bates will aurperin-
teakd the art; Mrs. Blake Allison,
culinary; Mrs. J. G. Staples, pre-
serves and canned food; Mr*. Re*
s} Garnish, flower show.
' These women will soon make pu-
blic their plans for the fair.
Alsada Taggart, whose original
Mess for antique display* and
whose enthusiasm hss made her
.-i—> value, trill be superinten-
ddht of the Cureo and R*Hc de-
STATE ***
NATIONAL
NEWS
At a Glance
Asheville, N. C.—President Roose-
velt rode through the high moun-
tains near Asheville yesterday,
viewing the Great Smoky range.
He was met by the governors of
Tennessee and North Carolina.
22 BOOKS BOUGHT
FOR NEW RENTAL
SHELF AT LIBRARY
Twenty-two books have been selec-
ted by the library conunittee for
the rental shelf, Mrs. John Dowdle,
librarian, has reported. These books
| will be kept on the shelf until they
p*y out themselves, then others will
replace them. The shelf will be
commenced in another week, Mrs,
Dowdle said.
Following is a list of the new
books:
Young Man in Spats, by P. G.
Wodehouse; I am the Fox, by W.
Van Etten; The Home Place, by
Dorothy Thomas; Magnificent Hoax,
by E. P. Opipenheim.
The American Flags, by Kathleen
Norris; Gretmgates, by R. C. Sher-
iff; Gone With the Wind, by Mar
garet Mitchell; Lost Morning, by
DU Bose HeyWood; Grubstake Gold,
today and BROGDON CASE
tomorrow TO BE UP FOR
TRIAL MOROAY
1.
r. V
HARVARD.....tee years
The whole world of scholarship
which was founded in 1886, three
o the oldeuk American institu-
tion of learning, Harvard University,
is paying compliments this month
nandred years ago.
Harvard’s tercentary interests me
particularly because one of my earl-
iest American ancestors, Dr. Benja-
min StocUbridge, was one of the
first students m the “colledge or!
xchoale" which the Rev. John Har- i
vard endowed in the town which
Sh, i# already making P^^tritos inJ>.ris factories'' ^£££ "*
pGrtment. sne is * were revived Wednesday, when 30,- _. , ... „ „ , . H._n
a_______.. to have the display ol . ... , , . . . The Need We Have, iby A Hanul-
atVangemenbs to nave uk - v t w 000 textile workers struck for ten ,,... , . ___„
■ i ■ , _aIIm one that will at- „ . ton Gibbs; Listen for a Lonesome
curios and relics one per cent increase in wages. Onlv . ' , _ c. „
^ . .Monilon especially, of out- ». Drum by Carl Carmer; Sing, Sister,
tract attention, especially, 7000 rernairve<j on strike after a . 1... . . „ _ u
T7 .. storm | , . Sing, by VicHi Baum; Murder in the
of-state visitors. i 8enes of strikes. _ , . . „ _.___ ,31 „ , —.
’ During the Fourth of July cele- _ / Bookshop, by Carolyn Wells; I Told
j i_ iiue Miss Tag- i ' My Love, by M. Escopt; They Who
for several Washington-J^an’. move to H,ve> by Un.bert; They Walk
Sir wtndow display* and ber.um in the City, by J. B. Prieatley.
^ that of making uae of <*** D°W"’ by Joh“ U
** :nd the attractive in was tefm*d * ™lat,on °f the P*rt McEntire; Mother of the
said hy C1,ude ®wmn*on> Secretary of by Alice Roeman;
SfSSSSrt
his major league debut ha struck
out 18 84looey Browne, allowed
only ( hiu and oa» ran, to wta
for CtavelanA H* stands I feel
and weighs 1TI pounds. “The
speediest since Walt Johnson,*
any experts.
The case of the State versus M.
A. Brogdon, charged in connection
with the death of Henry Hardin at
Belknap last January, has been set
for next Monday, Sept. 14, in Dis-
trict Court at Graham.
Brogdon was tried at Graham last
May and the trial resulted in a
hung jury.
J. C. (Jim) Martin has been nam-
ed by the Court to serve as de-
fense lawyer for the defendant.
was named for his on English uni- ^ Pr0!"~ wi‘‘ * h“nd^ *
versity town of Cambridge. ^ AU°™*
. ___. „ j 1 and T. G. Bmkley as special de-
in its beginning Harvard was a , ,
crude! one-teacher boarding school,1 in*e couns*’
where Nathaniel Eaton, the master, A Ven,re * ‘5 m,!n h*8 been 8um-
five States Have
Entries At Dairy
Fair For Oct 10-18
half starved and mercileesely whip-
ped the unfortunate boys. But from
that seed sprang what is, I be-
lieve, the most far-reaching educa-
tional influence in America, and
the most democratic.
• * *
LOTION .,,,,, for roads)
New York state is about to try
out the new type of cotton road, on
a six-mile stretch in the Mohawk
Valley. Cotton roads have been quite
successful in the South, as the
cheapest improvement on the ordi-
Dallas, Texas—Fifty-seven entries nary gravel or clay road.
Bride, were (received for the National I 1 have been trying to remember a
Give Me One [>airy show at the Texas Centenial< time when the cotton planters of
moned for appearance Monday mor-
ning.
Large crowds are expected to at-
tend the trial as did before.
to be held during October, was re-
- £-=r«H2 * £=zf * ==if sr “ ?s
%jr- - i*• lilsrw:= s
ENROI LEES MAY BE
TAKEN IN OCTOBER
Word of an additional UOC en-
rollment fiom this relief district.
IL NOTES
FROM THE FIELDS
Nanking, China Japanese naval nnrpi ii Orni/lPI'
**t,roIs ~infor£*in ChinT ortllAL otKVllt
j waters Wednesday, because of the
! reported slaying of a Japanese at
Pakhoi. . +- t
Brazos River Bed Oil Co. No. 1,,
Colquitt, drmng at 1R80 faat ^ pi^ ag*in*t two weal-
at shale.
Caprito No. I Laquey, drilling
3li», black shale.
Chicago—^Federal agents broke up
i extortion plot against two weal-
thy Chicago citizens, when a young
t.
PLANNER FOR ALL !
COLLEGE STUDENTS
i survey showed
203 white persons and 13 negroes
eligible for the service in the 13
counties of the district. AprroxL
ara
Alabama—Gov. Eugene Talmadge
R. Cox No. 1. Rodgers cementing ^ ^ ^ ' ^d*"‘
** * 5466 | in the Senate race yesterday. fir8t Ume' 1
Ja
A. Long No. 27, drilling at
hard grey lime. Set six
i*h pipe at 3808.
Lupton and McLester No. 1
ate, in pay sand at MRf. Begad
3806 through 3816. Shot with
aitrogiycarit, and hit
at 3828. Well flowed 2*
Jper day before shot, and
barrels in sapproxl-
Lupton and MoLester No. I Med-
Uh> heirs, drillnng at 20*6.
Rathke No. 1 Hill drilling at 3S80.
Ratke No 2 Hill estate®ted six
Ah pipe dt 3802. Now editing on
MoecoW—Taro men were freed
from blame in a plot on the Dicta-
tor announced today. | or so before the World War that
Five states were represented in the “buy a bale of cotton” propa-
the entries, Californa, Ohio, Con-|ganda was started all over the coun-
neetkut, Missouri and Oklahoma.' try, to help the Southern Planters, j ^ rf 'thit"number
E. F. Peffer of Stocketon. Cali-j The truth about cotton, it seems t eMjrrtl# in WichiU county,
fornia, enkered his Jersey bull, to me, i*\ that it can be grown pip-1 Under ,hi w.w ruta former mwa.
Volunteer of La Lomiu. first prize fitably o^ily in espacailly favored ^ lh# cor|,9 vvi„*V ^ el^.
two-year-old senior and grand cham- regions or where there is a plen- j ib)e for ree|f<,ti,>n
pion at the San Joaquin County tiful supply of the cheapest manii \
Fair mid the California State Fair al labor to “chop” and pick "it. •
1935; first prize senior yea:- Most of - cotton's troubles arise*
the from trying to grow it under con-
fail in 1H34 and junior cham- dition* which militate against pro-
, nion at the fair in 1933. , fits-
ve for colleg. f.r the * H w of youll4rstown,; • • •
The sermon and devot- ^Ur(kl fourteen head of FIGS . , . . , .r„m abroad
ilT ,Shirt ‘W^mte to sfimply
An invitation will be extended, by ^***“s’ Kraad champion
Rev. S. C. Guthrie is planning
boy was used as an innocent col-. -. ,n
lector special Services at the F"irst Pres-1 ‘ .
. , . ' . T . . , I ling and junior champion at
_ bytenan Church Sunday morning for
all college students and those in-1
for reelcction until ^bne full
year after an honorable discharge.
Fritz Hill Resigns
Ingle side Position
mail, to alf would-be students, and
Sybil’s "Pigs” as my friend Ellis Parker
Jersey Butier pointed out in the story in
National Dairy which made, him famous, “is pigs.”
■ Sho*. St. U)«is. | In “Pigs is Pigs” it was a coim- been selected.
Mrs. W. H. Clark of Jansas City, try railway agent who insisted that | Ingleside school will open
cow at the 1985
t
Nash and Windfohr No. 1 Simms
tar's Mrf, it was ladnmd todrry. The ... , . , .
two men had been under invLi*-11 *?***. * “J*"*8’ . them “
l«r.*£dthe ^ ^ ^ U it“hSk»n£ScJom Tthe *°-,*nd ^ Pcwbiy. ^ ^ ! *
Fritz Hill, principal of Ingleside,
Has resigned his position i teach
in Fort Worth, Donald I’.hdAiia,
teacher in the schools, i, * |e «as»
principal, and another :eac - er has
.Li.
Sd> Francrfcd.—flWbdc contrwvwr-
sies have kept the President Hoo-
ver, Dollar liner, from Lea ring
the San Franci-ko harbor. ft has
been guarded by police while the
Sailors’ Union and the company of-
ficers tried to reach argrements.
Boston.—Two passenger
collided in a dense
harbor tart night,
that all passengers w*re
One ship Feat to the bottom
isenger vessels
fog in Boston
It was believed
were rescued.
Oklahoma Cit^, entered 12 and li *asne classifcation as regular pork-
I Jerseys, respectively. *w,
! From ffir-sway New Milford, In England, where they have
I Conn.. Judd'S Bridge 'Farm enter- been breeding pigs since long before
Ernest Heighten and chitd- ed 16 head of Brown Swiss, very Columbus discovered America, pigs
f
\
Presbj’terian pastors to give these
farewell sermons.
ren, M^a. Ernest Bailey, Mrs. 01a ,-are in the Southwest. ! is also pigs, but they know they: j^spit4,
Hail, and Mrs. Vallie Doolen and The sho# will dmtribute >19,506 are not all alike. The kind that bring
Mrs. Arthur Ogletree were in ftrdck-1 cash on five breeds Jerseys, Guem- home the bacon in England are
enridge last Friday afternoon. * j 8eys, Holstein-Friesians, Brown known only by the name of Large
BABY SON BOB N
Mr. and Mrs. B. a. its via of
Jdcksboro amsounce the birth at a
i sdn, born toddy at the QraHdli
Swiss and Ayrshire*.
BIBTH announced
New Orleans.—Violet Hilton, one
of the' Siamese tddns whk married
Ail ling at 42*7, T. D. Pti^gwd badk i or , , .
. , . ,_. . ... „. in the Centennial Cotton Bowl this
Ctf 3789, casing perforated with 38
front 8740 to 37*2. Pulled
1 Yorktex Petroleum Corporation
Aimett No. ,1 drilling in hard lime
Yorktex ^fat. Corp. Clayton No. m*rr’**e-
§ is down to 1800 feet.
summer, is seeking annulment of her
marriage. The petition for annul-
ment was that they had. gene
through the ceremony simply as a
publicity stunt, and that they did
not intend to enter the contract «f
Snow Hughes of Fort Worth at-
tended the funeral of Tom Long
Tuesday. | _
-o- Mr. asid Mrs. Rowland Barnett
Mr. and Mrs. Roes Boyer dTe | announce th> birth of a daughter,
visiting J. D. Waddells and Weather-1 Rowlene Sue, last night at their
alls in Oklahoma City this week. 1 home in Loving.
Mr. and Mrs. Tobe Fitzgerald and | Mrs. R. iE. Skinner of Tampa, just pigs
Black pigs- They are said to be far
more docile than the “fancy” breeds,
and also mom profitable.
Unde Sam h*s just imparted four
1-arge Black pig*, two boars and
two sows, and Is going to try cross-
ing them with familiar American
breeds. Which is interesting to hog-
raiser*. hut to most of us pig* is
Mrs. Ola Hal] were
visitors Wednesday.
For* Worth Florida, has joined her husband
Washington.—Word has come that
passenger-carrying flights from Cal-
ifornia to Manila will become a
reality through the Taguebthhtlc
Air Line.
Lincoln, Neb.—Senator Geo. W.
Norris was nominated for a fifth
term in the senate as an independ-
ent candidate. If he accepts the
nomination, he will be in the runoff
with a Republican and
Townsend pension supports*.
New York.—The DenRSdatic nat-
ional committee has announced cam-
paign contributions .of more than
>60.000 to the Republican cause hi
Maine.
m
Whcky” Mud wick, world
}pfftrtaxwSi&g'
E. L Rene ef Merge* Mil) and
Earl Burns, Jr, arrived today for
a visit with relatives. Dari Buna,
Jr, will ha a senior in Graham High
here He i* ip the oil business. j BATs*j......some useful
_ u ji-njar r - ^miuwnrrJvjInnmvvilwnnnnrTd | j bave lijig accounted bats as
—
College Students—NOTICE!
y , 1 ) '
Many young men and women going away to school
have expressed the desire that—
tHE GRAHAM DAILY REPORTER
, —follow them
In order to help the students keep' up with things
hack home the following special low off4r is made to all
young men and women of Graham an4 Young County
who are now away at school or will eh ter school else-
where this fall:
-ft
*
$9 C*h In AdVanct WiH Send THE
GfcAHAM DAILY REPORTER to your
address at college for Nine Months,
postpaid
W,. Let tia have your name and ad$r—n and $2 at once
so you will keep informed on all focal news happenings
while you are away.
I among the most interesting as well
I as the most useful little animals we
: have. They are useful, because if
you have plenty of bats flying
around your house on Summer eve-
nings you won’t have so many mos-
quitoes. kideed, one Texas town
some years ago built a “bat tower"
In which these flying mice could
live and breed, and so get rid of a
serious mosquito post. »
Only a few persons with ex-
ceptionally’ keen ears can hear the
squeaky cries of bats as they fly
Their tone is pitched in a key be-
yond ordinary audibility.
Not all bats are harmless, how-
ever. The great vampire bats of the
tropics and some ports of Europe
are actually a menace to human and
animal Ufa. And the other day the
Federal government seders d the
killing of eight “flying foxes" from
India, friit bat* with a three-Biot
wing spread, which destroy orchards
and fruit grave* ef ’all Wad*-
Still, I Hke bat*.
see
( HII.DRKV ...... work
A now law has jost gone into
effect in New York, raising frMl
14 u> F6 the age at which a boy
may leave school and get his “work-
ing papers.” Boys of 12 are still
allowed, however, to sell newxg^pera
and shine shoes on the streets.
I have never been convinced that
H is arivay* a good thing for a boy
to keep him from earning hi* own
way in the world, whatever his aga.
I know too many men Who has*
risen to real greatness, who hag
very little formal schooling bat got
their education through their con-
tacts with life itself.
Of course, it all depends on whal
the boy has got m him; bW I think
most boys who want to go to work
don’t get very much of value ou>
of compulsory school attendanc*.
ewAs-*
'1
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Trout, H. I. Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 10, 1936, newspaper, September 10, 1936; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1063960/m1/1/?rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.