The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 5, 1931 Page: 3 of 10
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1
a. mm*
. ______ hoys anti
were the
county,
I; the Uni-
for mera-
loan
•nd $*O,O0«ra«l> >1
Of the Agricultural
College and the Col
fifteen he
I fund.
*Sszz
IN ARKANSAS
Governor Stanley
Vermont, Says:
“Some of you can double your
wealth within a year, if you will.
ThU Bound, like the statement of
a stock salesman two or three years
age.' But let me explain.
“Wealth h a relative term. A
man may have a mllllin dollars 'm
guilt on a desert island and still be
starvation poor. On the other hand,
he may have WttU money or property
r~r-
BUI,
T'Y i -*r
rirTY-riVB years
I. 8. Fisher, who restates near
waa a caller at the Loader
b week to renew hbsub-
ahor has boon *
af the Graham Leader since
a little more then
yean ago ami la a loyal
to the “heme pager”.
TO MOVE KBIT WEEK
’ ii ii * ’ .. ',, ,t..
he 8agdwlch Inn win be moved
part of next week from
location to the building
occupied by the R. C.
Tailor Shag, alee on the
Nat tide of the square. Frank
troxson, manager of the Sandwich
Ian, expects "to be ready to open
h the new location on November 14.
Mrs. J. C Rick mao and two child-
Jou, Jr. and Fatty Jean, vbited
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Rickman Hera
while enroute from
coo, Arixona. lira,
joia her ka. band at
they will make their
Most newspaper men shrink from
the task of wrttiag up a wedding and'
ggp----- ................. prefer to pass that responsibility to
the female society editor. Yet there
C. Wilson of *re exceptions. Occasionally an edi-
tor is found who can paint a word
picture of nuptial events that any
lady reporter might envy. —
We just discovered one editor who
appears to lie hiding hi# gTeat talents
in an obscure Kansas town, while he
ought to be holding down a city job.
Here b • sample of Ms literary sbil-
ty, Which proves our point:
“It was a wonderful wedding The
girl waa as, sweet as any girl who
but hare health, a happy and com- over lived; but modern. As she walk-
fortahle home, and the esteem of AiT* Wup The stole on her father’ll arm,
her lips lightly tiUtod at the comers
with a happy smile, she waa a picture
and goeeamer veil floated around her
of modest beauty. Her filmy gown
fair blonda head like a halo. She
was as nearly an angel as girls get
to be in this world. At the alter
as she passed from her father, tho
man she always loved, to the other
man to whom she would devote the
rest of her life, her dainty slipper
touched a potted lily renting on the
floor and turned it over. Smiling
again, she turned to the dear old pas-
tor waiting at the chancel and said:
“That was s hell of a place to put s
“In aeeordanea with our policy af
clearing our stocks every season ws
will soil on Friday and Saturday,
November 8th. and 7th. every hat
ip. au- store at $2.00 each, values to
91ZM. A few white felts included
in this sale.”
associates and be rich indeed.
“Some of you in the eity are de-
MMtent on an income from invest-
ments shrunken to a point where it
b extremely difficult to Hve re-
spectably. If you ran secure with
that income twice as much in living
comfort or live twice as wall on
your Income, you can fairly say you
have doubled your wealth.
“A family can Hve much snore
cheaply in tho country than in tho
city. Comfortable homes with lawyi
•nd gardon can be bought or ranted
for toes than city prices. This
loaves more money tor clothes, food,
medicine, magexines, books, radio
and automobile and other things that
most class' par necessaries or semi
r
NO APPROVALS
Divine Dress Shop
W
-
K.
.ffll
-
’S8
' "iS|
h ' ~*'r
E . -a-*
K-
KI
m
l';L |
[ council
lily’."
Turney, who b attending
College spent the past
d ia Grahhm VWting hie
Mr. had Mrs. Clyde Turney.
Retail Sutton
"In the country nobody
manual labor demeahh*. The wife
B 4m housekeeper, just as the hus-
band is 4 worker. Clothes are
bought to wear and not to dbplay
a few times. Thera b a wide spread
between city and Country prices for
raHk, eggs, meats, vegetables and
other farm produce. '
“A man and wife with an annual
coma of 8600 to $1000 a year can
live eamfortably and respectably la
tho eeantoy. With ast income of
$1000 to $2000 in the country, they
can be comfortably well off.
“So. If YOU Wfcflt Td Double Tour
Wealth, Mora To/The Country. In
Addition To Financial Betterment,
You ..Will Find Real Neighbors, Peo-
ple Who WUi Really Cm For You.”
Talking Crop Reduc-
tion 69 Tears Ago
Some weeks ago Will McIntyre,
rho resides in the Selfs community,
left »t the Signal-Citisou office a
copy of an old sews paper, which
bora tho date of July, 1800, making
the paper 62 years of ago. Tho
paper waa tho New York Day Book,
publbhed in Now York City. Many
items appearad in the
and It was interesting to note
that on the front page wore db-
of two problems wkieh era
still faring the- American people.
One of these questions was
article discussing prohibition and the
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
The Sunday School meets prompt-
ly at 0:45 A. M. At 19:65 A. M.
the pastor will deiiraf the closing
sermon of HU fleet year as pastor
of this church. Ho extends a cor-
dial invitation to the members and
friends of the chnrah to attend thb
service. At 6:30 P. M. the Young
People’s Division will meet in its
various departments. , Thera will be
8b evening service as wo will par-
ticipate i« the Armbtice Day ser-
vice to be held at the Memorial
Auditorium. ~ • —
R. C. Edwards, Pastor.
_ —me
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Rev. Bryan H. Keathley, Minuter.
Sunday School for all ages at
0:46 A. M., with 2. A. Hudson Gen-
eral Superintendent.
NO EXCHANGES
night beginning at 7:20. ‘
of War shd Peace” 'b tho subject
of tho address for tho evening.
Midweek Activities: Wbrkers’ Con-
ference en Friday night, November
6; Tri-county Layman’s Convention
at Jacks boro, Monday night, Novem-
ber 0, at 7:00 o'clock; monthly board
meeting Tuesday night at T:$0;
prayer meeting Wednesday night at
7:80 and choir practice at 896.
Tho Woman’s Missionary Society
meets on Tneeday aflaraesu. ■,
Oscar T. Molina, Pasto
"ViX
NO CHARGES.
•L a;
told by Mrs. SchUttler. _
gram closed with the Miipah Men*
: (believe it or act1 waa an aril- Sermon and worship at UiOO A. M, Benediction.
Y %
. jm *
as. « ~ \*vj
tyeSkn*'!
vv
a^Pt;. ..
ST
D0WN GOES PRICES
' Electric light Globes, Each .. /.....10c
Curtain Material, Per Yard ........05c
Children’s Rayon Bloomers, Pair —10c
Boys Caps, Each............ 25c
Barrel Shape Glasses............. 05c
Blue Grey Tea Kettle ......... .49c
____Union*Suits ......... .. . 39c
~ Coveralls, 9 to 16............69c
Ladies Ribbed Rayon Hose.........25c
36 Inch Brown Domestic, Heavy ..-. .05c
Ladies Rayon Hose.... ............25c
*s Jersey Bloomers =15e
on Bloomers .......25c
Dress Shirts........... 59c
Outing Gowns.............,49c
SOX ; . fV.v 15C
Jersey Bloomers............25c
■ w /eraH’s ........... 49c
Work SMrts .........49c
Sweaters ..........49c
Curtains..............49c
;:’7*w—-v . f i ; ^ja
...... .4»C
—
L*h- ' .j
Union aerrieea at the Auditorium
at 7:S0 with spocisl sermon 'Ey Rev.
r T. Moline.
da demanding reduction
acreage in order to increase the
price of ootton, even though the pro-
duction of cotton at that time had
not reached the 100,000-bale mark for FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
tho entire ration.—Honey Grove
EKenml Otbsn.
Sunday School begins at »:4S. The
morning worship program begins at day_ evening, with
Sintoo—Grade work and drainage
structures on State Highway N°. IK
through this eity completed
11:16. The subject will be "The
Spiritual Manning of StewarUhipV
. . , . i , JmniAr awel. Vniinm PoAnlog fhpilt.
____________ ____ i#Ftn»or mnn .
Misses Eunice Gibson and Lob iha Endeavor at 090. 'Kora wBr
Babb were visitors in Seymour Fri- U a union Armbtice Day program
Any evening.
mai,
music waa given by Robert Johnson
at the Memorial Auditorium Sunday1 and Kenneth Martin, and a story waa
SENIOR CHRISTIAN BN DRAY OR
. The meeting ef the Senior Chirsts
bn Church Sunday evening was
opened wttfc a song, and prayer bd
by Rev. Oscar T. Moline. Mbs Paul-
ine Neill waa leader for tho pro-
gram, tha subject for which waa
“What Jesus Teaches About Faith
In Gdd". Tha scripture was read
by Vernell Does, and talks were
given by Nomia Barron, .Kathleen
Gunckel, and Paulina Williams. The
meeting closed with tha Miipah
Is This Why We
Are Not In Jail
Our .Dumb An
JUNIOR CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR
“How Can Ws Help in India” was
the topic for the program at the
Junior Christian Endeavor meeting
at the First Christian Church Sun-
Glaudia Pearl
__ as lander. A .scripture
at 11:00 and the morning sermon at | reading was given by J*rk
raLsris:
a dog or cat *r a canary might heap
you from foiat-40-**—fit dose
veem rather fan-fetched, does it aot?
Yet there are dees to lOJOMM ,
dogs in the United States besides
great numbers of cats and birds and
other pets—enough so that every
boy and girls ran have at least eon
But of the men who today are sw-
ing sentences in. prise* bn thus one
in every hundred had a pet wfcea ha
was a boy.
Can it bo poaeifab that awning a
pet does something to a bay er girl
so that he or aha b lass likely to
become a law-breaker? ft b quite
poesible. Having a pet teaches
as good lessees to loyalty, courage
and cheerfulness as tha hart teacher
in the world. And these are the
qualities that make good eitisens. ~
|*-Maybe that old dag of yoara whom
you prise so much as a playmate, b
more valuable than you dreamed.
Perhaps he b an hqidbl factor
in shaping your character. At any
and talks bn the subject were given
by: Mbry Katherine Crawford, WUH*4^T
rate, be is WferiF Wl(ta* treatment
that you can give him. ■
Gift ybur pito and- ’i
Dorcas Claes Saturday,
of square.
----...
.
_ __
ANNOUNCING
OUR FIRST AND GRAHAM’S GREATEST
ALL NEW
Merchandise
$20,000.00
STOCK!!
SALE!
A Complete Stock—Dry Good»—Ready-to-wear—Clothing—Shoes^—Hats and Furnish-
ings—All New Clean Quality Merchandise to go out to the Buying public—At A GREAT
SACRIFICE.
Be Sure and Watch for Our Big Double Page Circular
The Greatest Values in Years. 1
Announcing
:#iSn
Ta
frrMriiW
■ V,v - V • •• u
.
4~—
- -o
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Spears, George T. The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 5, 1931, newspaper, November 5, 1931; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth884255/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.