Honey Grove Signal-Citizen (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, October 26, 1951 Page: 3 of 4
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I
HONEY GROVE SIGNAL-CITIZEN October 26, 1951
Business Chances
E. L. EATON
Building Contractor
Mill Work and Supplies
House Leveling
Termites Exterminated
Free Estimates
136 W. Price St. Phone 59
Paris, Texas
Post holes dug.—James Gor-
don, Honey Grove, Rt. 4. ,tf
Strayed—Three head of cat-
tle from my pasture 3 miles
north of Honey Grove. Steers
weigh 450 to 700 pounds and
one big Jersey steer. Reward
for any information leading
to recovery.—F. C. Bomar. tf
For Rent—Black land farm,
good house, piped for butane
gas, electricity. See R. H.
Gauldin. 36-5t*
For Sale—One yellow canary
singer and cage; herd of
Hereford hogs; heavy black-
smith vise and anvil; good
second hand Bois d’Arc
posts and wire; Ford pickup
and four wheel trailer.—C.
H. Harden, Petty, Texas, tf
— REAL ESTATE —
332 acre farm, 4 room dwelling,
fenced pastures, plenty water. On
Hi-way 34, 3 miles W. Ladonia.
88 acres, 33 pasture, 55 cultiva-
tion. 20.5 peanut allot. 5 room
dwelling on milk and school route
fenced and plenty water.
132 acres on Sulphur channel. 4-
room dwelling 2 1-2 E. Gober.
Alexander Drug Store
Station in Bonham.
and Bus
218 1-2 acres, fences, pools, 5-
room house, two rent houses,
pecan grove on west hi-way 82.
Ranch north of .town.
61 acre farm, 30 acres in pasture,
two pools, good dwelling, barn
and outhouses, located 6 miles
north of Honey Grove.
Cafe located on Bonham square.
^VwWs^v V-—• WVWV
Nice building lot on West Main.
NAAAA/VVVA<^/N^A/VVVVA^/'/\AA^^VVVyvVS
For sale the Cabeen estate.
WS/V ' V VWW WN. W/WV/N/N
100 acres on hi-way 82, 3 miles
east of Bonham. 7-room dwelling
with hot and cold water. Other
modem conveniences.
Strayed—Three head of cat-
tle from my pasture 3 miles
north of Honey Grove. Steers
weigh 450 to 700 pounds and
one big Jersey steer. Reward
for any information leading
to recovery.—F. C. Bomar. tf
For Sale—LaMaster lot. cor-
ner Santa Fe and EastMain,
124x132 feet.—J. D. LaMas-
ter 5126 Stoneleigh, Dallas,
Texas. 38-3t*
For Sale—VAC and RC trac-
tors with all equipment;
three trailers; poisoning ma-
chine and 410! gallons liquid
poison. John Mims, 615 W.
Commerce. 37-4t*
For Sale—Used 1938 John
Deere model B tractor; used
Oliver 60 tractor and used
Ford tractor. We are agents
for the Coats shredder and
Bantam shredder. Stevenson
Implement Co
For Sale—E-Z tractor seat
^—foF^40 II FarmaH;— L. C.
Stevenson Implement Co.
For Sale—5 young Hereford
bulls subject to registration;
will sell one or all. Contact
Lee Hawley. 39-2t
smic
SlmdiMr
IS THE REASON
WHITE SWAN
is America’s Finer Coffee
NEW NYLON COUPON
IN EVERY POUND!
y\fHITE Sniffy
GRADE "A” 0W*T
PASTEURIZED p«TEU»Ul9
HOMOGENIZED H0!0
VITAMIN »D VI*5
75 acres on hi-way 82. 4-room
dwelling. Will take car or pic-up
in trade.
Farm and good house on hiway.
WWWWW V »^VWWWW
Two small dwellings to be moved.
6-room dwelling, screened porch
and breezeway, double garage
and barn.
VWWWWNAAAA^AAAAAAAAAAA/WW^
Business building on northeast
corner of square.
7 acre farm, 4-room house 16x2,4,
store building. Pasture and plenty
everlasting water.
12 acres, 1 mile north of town, 6
room house, city water, lights,
bam, chicken house, garage, pool,
fenced, Highway 100.
100 aeres southeast
Grove. Nice 5-room
lights, watera nd gas.
Wouldn’t you
rather have an
g ^ONSIDER the advantages of cooking electrically:
It’s clean! Your electric range gets its heat via
wire. There’s no smoke or soot to blacken pans, mar
curtains, walls and cabinets.
It’s fast! A turn of the switch and an electric range’s
high-speed cooking units are instantly ready for use.
It’s dependable! Accurate temperature control that
cuts on and off automatically, gives you the same good
cooking results every time.
It’s economical! . . . Cooking electrically costs less
than one cent per person per meal. There’s less food
shrinkage, too, with draftless electric cooking.
It’s safe! Electric cooking is match-less . . . there’s
no flame for drafts to bother, as easily operated as an
electric light.
And that’s only a sample of the good things to
come. Once there’s an electric range in your kitchen,
you’ll be saying, “Of course, I’d rather have an elec-
tric range . . . for me, there’s no other!”
Health For All
IF YOU WANT TO BUY OR
SELL PROPERTY SEE ME
Shaw Insurance and
Real Estate
L5K <&>’"***■+*«*
TEXAS POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
in thc U30RL0
pRELIGIDil
vlU.IU.RC id
Now en route to Iindia are
three young representatives
of Oberlin College, who are
unable to go to China under
Oberlin-in-Shansi, but will
serve under the American
Board of Foreign Missions
(Congregational). They are
Richard Eldridge Dudley,
son of the Rev. Raymond A.
Dudley, India secretary of
the American Board, Au-
burndale, Mass.; Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Walter Elder of
Dayton, Ohio. Of this trio
two were born abroad—Rich-
ard E. Dudley in Kodaikanal,
in South India, while his par-
ents were serving under the
American B'oard, and Joseph
W. Elder in Kermanshah,
Iran, of Presbyterian mis-
sionary parents.
* * *
In the “Point 4 Program”
and other suggested aids
from America to the under-
privileged areas of the world,
there will be great opportun-
ity for all Christians and all
mission agencies to help
make Christianity apply on
a scale and in places never
possible before, believes Dr.
John H. Reisner. agricultural
authority of the National
Christian Council of the
Churches, and executive of
Agricultural Missions Foun-
dation. “We need to realize
our tremendous resources,”
he tells the Protestant mis-
sionary societies. “The re-
sources in agricultural mis-
sions are relatively small;
there are only 100 rural mis-
sionaries. Yet the rural areas
are the growing edge of the
church. The challenge we
face is in the economic as-
sistance programs which are
going forward......The
church’s distinctive contri-
bution will be to give new
meaning and purpose to life,
but this cannot be done in a
vacuum. We must now, on a
large scale, make Christian-
ity apply to all of life.”
* * *
William Stauffer, a Men-
nonite pastor at Sugar Creek,
Ohio, bought an abandoned
farm in his parish in 1939.
That year, 12,163 acres of
idle or fallow land was re-
ported in the couhty; people
were leaving for industrial
centers; Mr. Stauffer’s sal-
ary amounted to $900 that
year. The first year he had
to buy hay to feed six head
of cattle because the land
was so badly worn out. Since
then he has improved the
soil, feeds 65 head of cattle,
7o Relieve
Misery of
C°l(66
.|qUtQ 0(t TABLETS-SAME FAST relief
and has hay to sell. Mr.
Stauffer helped organize a
soil conservation district. He
is legislative representative
for his congregational dis-
trict. Monday afternoons he
is weighmaster of the coop-
erative livestock auction. He
has missed preaching one
Sunday in 15 years.
* * *
Beginning this autumn and
continuing through 1952, the
members of the Woman’s
Society of Christian Service,
Methodist Church, which has
organizations in some 25,000
parishes, will conduct a “pro-
gressive visitation cam-
paign” to reach and enroll in
the Society every woman re-
lated to the Mehodist
Church. Some leaders feel
that it should be possbile to
enroll at least another mil-
lion Methodist women. Stress
will also be given during the
year an an “action” pro-
gram to improve social con-
ditions in the local communi-
ties and to improve condi-
tions in the international
sphere. Mrs. Frank G.
Brooks, of Iowa, is national
president.
* * *
Among the many hundreds
of Christian Koreans evacu-
ated from the mainland to
Cheju and Koje—islands of
the Peninsula—there are re-
ported to be about 23,00,0
members of families of
Christian pastors, principal-
ly Presbyterians and Meth-
odists. They are now being
kept alive with some govern-
ment rations, the aid of local
Christians, relief packages
forwarded . them by the
churches in America (the
Church World Service), and
by some jobs found locally.
But many are in physical
danger because of the activi-
ties of communist guerrilla
bands that roam the islands.
Concerning the religious sit-
uation, the Presbyterian
Board of Foreign Missions
reports: “Pastors have or-
ganized themselves to look
after their people and to do
evangelistic work among un-
believers. On Cheju Island
many new church groups
have been formed. Children
get practically no schooling
because the army is occupj7--
ing school buildings. Young
men have organized them in-
to Bible club^groups and give
them Christian training. On
Koje Island 28 Protestant
pastors and over 70 laymen
have established a mission
board to spread the gospel
among the island’s 100,000
inhabitants, only 4,000 of
whom are Christians. Many
non-Christians are attending
church services. Also on Koje
is a Christian hospital, open-
ed at the request of the Ko-
rean government’s health de-
partment by staff members
of Severance Hospital, form-
erly of Seoul.”
Don’t worry about finding
your station in life; some-
body will be sure to fell you
where to get off.
More and more people
throughout the country are
wisely forming the habit of
getting chest X-rays at least
once a year to find out
whether or not there are
signs of tuberculosis in their
lungs.
Although additional tests
are necessary before a defi-
nite diagnosis of tuberculosis
is made, a chest X-ray is one
of the first steps in search-
ing out this communicable
disease. For while early tu-
berculosis has no apparent
symptoms, indications of
even early disease will usu-
ally show up on the X-ray.
People who realize “one
chest X-ray is not enough”
kep a year-to-year check on
the health of their lungs.
For tuberculosis can strike
at any time. A favorable re-
port on a chest X-ray now is
no guarantee that tubercu-
losis will not develop in the
future.
Tuberculosis is caused by
germs called tubercle bacilli
which are passed on by those
who have an active case of
the disease to those who are
well. There is no way of
knowing just when tubercu-
losis may attack.
Obviously, one way to
avoid tuberculosis is by
keeping away from those
who have the disease in an
active stage. But we cannot
always be certain that we
are not in contact with TB.
For people can look and feel
tvell and still be suffering
from tuberculosis, since the
disease has no obvious sym-
ptoms in an early stage.
Hence a person can unknow-
ingly be getting a daily bom-
bardment of tubercule bacilli
within his own family circle
or from relatives and friends
with whom he associates.
That is why doctors and
the tuberculosis associations
urge every adult 15 years of
age and over to form the
habit of having a chest X-
ray at least once a year. If
tuberculosis should develop,
a person then has the best
chance of having his disease
found early, when it is eas-
iest to cure.
Tuberculosis can be cured,
but it is more difficult when
it is found in an advanced
stage.
FO" MAXIMUM
POWER
■ m
Call us for
SINCLAIR
TRACTOR FUEL
■ -p-Si
R. F. HOLLEY
C. H. SANDERS
W. W. WILKINS
E. J. BIERBOWER, JR*
STEVENSON IMPLEMENT CO*
R. B. THOMPKINS
STEVE CRAIG
C. C. ROLAND, DIAL J. H. LOUIS, LADONIA
DEALERS IN SINCLAIR PRODUCTS
MARTIN OHR, JR.
SUPPLIER OF SINCLAIR PRODUCTS
PHONE 123 HONEY GROVE, TEXAS
LOOK!
1
LOOK!
0«amty stock
- .«* *. /
Ts
A MONEY SAVER FOR
HOG RAISERS
% QUAKER SUGARED SHUMACHER 0
—FEED—
CONTAINS
% Com (Hominy Feed) 0 Molasses
© Oat Feed % Soybean Meal
© Ground Barley % Linseed Meal
@ Ground Milo % Steamed Bone Meal
% Wheat Shorts % Iodized Salt
CHEAPER THAN SHORTS
BOOK YOUR FALL BABY CHICKS NOW
BACH’S
HATCHERY
West Market
LOOK FOR THE STRIPES
fUL-Q-PEpsaSK
Regulation Sales Books in stock
at Signal-Citizen office. Buy any
Air mail stationery. — Signal- Blank shipping tags for sale at
Citizen. the Signal-Citizen office.
... to do more work
for your money!
105-h.p. itoadmaster
valve-in-head engine
Heavy-duty channel type
frames
Synchro-Mesh
transmission
Hypoid rear axles
(Continuation of standard equipment and trim
illustrated is dependent on availability of material.)
Hauling big loads? Then Advance-
Design Chevrolet trucks are exactly /j
what you need. Big 105-horsepower
Loadmaster engine . . . extra-rugged
MORE CHEVROLET TRUCKS IN
use than any other make Chevrolet frame . . . smooth shifting
Synchro-Mesh transmission . . . engineered-to-last rear axle
• . . and many other outstanding features make Chevrolet
trucks your best buy. Come in and see the big, brawny
Advance-Design truck that’s just right for your job!
CHEVROLET
Recirculating Ball-Gear
steering
ADVANCE-DESIGN
TRUCKS
Battleship-construction
double-walled cab*
Rowton Chevrolet Company
Honey Grove, Texas
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Thompson, Harry L. Honey Grove Signal-Citizen (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, October 26, 1951, newspaper, October 26, 1951; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth647704/m1/3/?q=wichita+falls: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Honey Grove Preservation League.