The Ladonia News (Ladonia, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, July 19, 1935 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Fannin County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Bonham Public Library.
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THE LAMM A NEWS
PECAN GAP
by Mrs. Moody Houston
Baptist Church
R. E. Cornelius, Pastor
Joe Glowers, Supt.
Sunday School at 10:00 A. M.
Church services at 11:00 A.
||. and 8:00 P. M. on second
and fourth 9undays.
Church of Christ
Sunday School at 10:00 A.
F. M. Morehead, Supt.
Church .cmc flrct Sued., ,
H J. O . Muncy has gone to
Roe. Rso Hssbern of Caasby will
preach at the Methodist church nest
Sunday morning and Sunday even*
ing. Everyone is invited.
Mrs. Edward Haimon and t< ot
Harlingen have been visiting here.
Ray Yant of Dial was here Satur-
day.
Miss Lona Hell Moody is visiting
in Leonard this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Morgan and
daughter were in Frisco Sunday.
Mr. and Mis. Wash Nelms ol Ben
Franklin visited here Thursday.
Mrs Grace Yeager of Denton is
visiting here this week.
Sam Reid of Sherman ia visiting
here this week.
L. E. Pickard and Sim James were
M B. Chunk
T. H. Minga, Pastor
Sunday School at 10:00 A. M
Wood West, Supt.
Preaching services at 11:00
A. M. and evening.
Prayer meeting each Wed-
nesday night.
Friday -Saturday
Close out Sale of
$16.75 and $12.95
Dresses.
Your Choice
$8.95
Silk and Lace, Chiffon
and Crepe. All new
stock. Bonght in May.
Also Street, Sport, gnd
Evening Wear.
HUNTER’S
STYLE SHOP
Paris, Texas
21 Lamar Ave.
One of the moat unusual and in-
teresting display advertisements that
the News has had the pleasure of
printing in some time is carried on
page five of this issue. The ad ia by
the Texas Power and Light Company
and is in the popular cartoon form,
j In addition to being entertaining, it
has a vary decided lesson as well.
THE 39E W S
SNAPSHOTS
| Jeter'* Pharmacy and Swearingm's
( Irsmii are piaariiling a inurli
neater ap|M'arancr. mice inilil
coat* ol paint were added to the
Iron! of each establiihment recently.
Sherman
lor a few days visit.
Mrs. Irene McNutt viated her sis-
er, Mrs. E. T. Shelton, who is in th »•
Paris hospital, Thursday.
Carl McNutt who is stationed at
Kelley Field, San Antonio, with lh«
army, arrived Tuesday to spend a*
months vacation here.
Mr. and Mra. V. E. Shipman we
in Dallas Tuosday.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer McWhirter
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. F.
Price and daughter spent Sunday in
Dallas.
Johnnie Shotwell ol Dallas w
here Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. IX D. Dunn of Coop-
er spent Sunday here.
Virgil Clifton W hittenburg who is
working at Joinersville spent Sunday
here.
Weldon Briscoe and L. D. Mc-
Donald were in Bonham Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Hastings and
son have been visiting in Denison.
POSTMASTER RETIRES
J. A. Gray, who has served- Uncle
Sam for the past 29 years has re-
tire. He was mail carrier for lb
years and has been postmaster 13
years, having served longer than any
other person connected with this
postoffice. Mrs. Cora Price is now
acting as postmistress and Miss Kath-
ryn Crawford is assistant.
(xntenawan had fif-
TEEN WIVES — Hobart A.
Thlcme, of Downey, Cot, cele-
brated hi. 10Jr.I birthday by
looking over hi* IS marriage
certificate* and photo* *1 14
wive*. Js
.-ijr
ATLANTIC CITY NURSES learn about Vitamin I>
tr«t*<! on white rat* At Atlantic City convention ol
American Medical Association Scientist* from
Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation make tint
public test* proving “sunshine" powers of Vitamin
D produced In foods by nitm-vlolet rays. 14,000
whits rat* sro used each year for these experiment*.
/
vs
x
KRY SPENDERS or FOUR BILLIONS—La lo r.: Cot Lawrence Weat-
brook, AMtstant Administrator; Chief Administrator Harry L. Hopklna;
Jacob Baker and Aubrey Williams, Assistant Administrator*.
. t
BASEBALL IS IN HER
ULOODa-SInce she la tlie
daughter of Manager Qra-
biner of the Chicago
White Sox, there Is little
wonder that June Travis
of the Alms, considers
baseball her favorite sport.
She is playing the game at
ftanta BffKh.
'iM
SALADS In the
the waist line
trim, says Jack
D e m p ■ e y ,
showing Chef
Gus A. Halleti
how he mixes
his own in
Dempsey's cor-
n e r opposite
Madison
Square Gar-
den.
THE CALL OF TRADITION
Although he has become an
artist, Hardesty Johnson,
American tenor who Is heard
on the American Radiator
Fireside Recitals Sunday eve-
nings, turns to carpentering
for his hobby. Both his father
and grandfather were build-
ing
h
Mr. L. E. Fuller of (ioanrnt
who is advertising a mowing in n lm ■
III line issue, suys llial lln' Mill' in
which he ran in this paper early n
the season lulled Inin Iwo orders I i
mowers in only a lew dels.
wecklu ha.biir '
EL5ERTA FEAChES
Fancy Peaches. Big red and
golden beauties that have
been allowed to hang on
the tree until ready. No
waste. No worms, t eady for
you. I am conveniently lo-
cated 5 miles north of Bon-
ham on Ivanhoe piKe. Have
phone.
Charles G. Nunn, Bonnam
Office Supplies of *11 kinds
for sale at The News office.
A/£iHS pu.Jm
YOU SAVE MONEY
by keeping your
ear v ashed and greus-
eli regulaily.
()iti IX ash snd Grease
Service v. ..I Plrt.re ^ou and be
easy on U.ui Pockelbook.
Call Us Today
We will eall for your
ear and return it.
SINCLAIR
Service Station
Notice To All
School Patrons
; The telephone goal of Europe
is JUST A GOOD J 0 B £m-
The fast, clear, far-reaching
telephone service of America
hat never been equalled by
European nations. Differ-
ences in equipment, methods
and policies have barred the
way tosuch service among the
many countries there.
In America,yourtclephonc
service has over-leaped state
and regional lines. Here there
are no telephone boundaries.
Your telephone is “first
cousin’* to each of 13 million
other Bell telephones here. It
it designed and manufactured
to meet uniform operating
standards.
Tsom-work
Every Bell telephone line,
local and long distance, it
built to conform to uniform
tests of clarity and volume in
carrying your voice.
Every Bell telephone oper-
ator, whether in New York,
in San Francisco, or in the
thousands of towns and cities
between, is trained to use the
same methods . . . the same
team-work in operating the
vast national communications
network.
Organisation
Thr.t these things are true
is due largely to the Bell Sys-
tem form of organization.
American Telephone and
Telegraph Company, the
parent company, studies and
standardizes better and more
economical methods, appara-
tus and materials for the 24
operating companies of the
System. Bell Laboratories
carries on the research work.
Western Electric manufac-
tures, purchases and dis-
tributes.
Without this organization
behind them, the Southwest-
ern Bell men and women here
who give your telephone ser-
vice could not do their job so
well. For many years it has
materially helped us, as one of
the group of operating com-
panies, in holding the cos. of
good telephone service low to
the user,
SOUTHWEST!RN HU TELEPHONE COMPANY
■
I have just received notice from j
the State Department of Educa-
tion that, under the provisions of
the new transfer law, enacted by
the last legislature, all transfers
must be made by August 1. This
includes high school a» well as
grade children transfers.
It is nec^gsary under this new law
for the County School Superinten-
dent to send a list of all transfers
for both common and independent
school districts to the State Dc-
p irtment of Education, This list
must be in Austin by August 15,
and no changes can he made in
transfers after that time.
All school patrons who wish to
transfer their children should at-
tend to this at once.
'■* L. It. Burkett
Boy Scouts
In Big Meet
A camp no Indian or pioneer in
all American history ever saw, much
less dreamed of, has been planned
for the National Boy Scout Jrmboree
to be held at Washington, D. C„ Aug-
ust 21 to 30. President Roosevelt,
on his invitation will be host to 30,-
000 Boy Scouts for ten days of the
most colorful and picturesque jam-
borees ever held. Boy Scouts from
all the world have started their trek
to Washington to take patt in the
National Jambofee, the first of its
kind ever to be held in the United
States.
Facilities have been provided that
will insure a supply of 1,050,006 gal-
lons of fresh water daily for drink
ing, bathing and cooking. It will be
possible for 2,200 Boy Scouts to take
showeT baths at one time.
Songs, hikes, contests, campfires,
sightseeing, and other activities will
go toward making this jamboree the
greatest ever.
Rev. C. W. Shaw announces that
Wednesday, July 24, will be Fannin
County Day at Buckner’s Orphan’s
Home in Dalles. A large delegation
of friends from the Baptist chnrch
here is expecting to be on band as
usual with the customaiy supply of
fried chicken end other good things.
The day is always a gals occasion lot
the little folks of the Home, and it is
usually enjoyed to ihf fullest extent
by the vieitora as well.
COSTLY TO NEGLECT
COWS ON PASTURE,
WARNS ABENDS
If nny man wlio milks cows were to
stum! out In front of his place day
after day and throw away dollar bills,
lie would soon be seized and held for
observation. Crazy ns that sounds, It’s
no more unreasonable than t^e delib-
erate prnciice of throwing away costly
cow flesh every year—ns many u sane,
Intelligent cow owner persists In doing
when pastures come In, according to
W. It. Arends, noted dairy advisor and
staff member of the Purina Mills’ dairy
department.
“There’s nothing like fresh green
grass,” Arends says, “to stimulate milk
flow. ArJ there’s nothing like grass
to ‘shoot the middle’ out of good cows
when nothing else is fed with It. The
man who turns his cows out on pas-
ture, no matter how good it Is, to let
them get what they can out of It, may
think he’R making cheap milk on grass
alone. Hut lie’s not—he’s making that
milk with grass plus cow flesh—a most
expensive way of doing the Job.
‘‘That’s not Just one man’s opinion.
It is the voice of time-tested exper-
ience, the proven record of long scien-
tific research. To quote one of many
statements from Henry nnd Morrison,
America’s leading publication on Feeds
and Feeding:
“ ‘The proper feeding of milk cows
on pasture Is much simpler than dur-
ing the winter,’ says Henry nnd Mor-
rison, ‘and doubtless this Is the reason
that so many farmers, busy wdth tlielr
crops, fall to give tlielr herd the neces-
sary attention In summer. Often the
cows are merely turned to pasture
after milking nt night nnd In the morn-
ing with no further thought ns to the
supply ot feed nctunlly available for
them. It Is then no wonder that when
the pasturage becomes scanty In mid-
summer, the cows run down In flesh
and fall off severely la yield of milk.
Even If fed liberally when bnrn feed-
ing starts In the fall, quite commonly
they cannot then be brought hack to
their usual production.’
Neglect Is Costly
“From the time cows go on pasture
they should he fed n supplementary
ration,” says Arends. “For grass, no
matter how good it Is, takes more from
the cow than It puts buck Into her sys-
tem. Its Juicy green freshness nnd
succulence nt first stimulate the cow
to pour out the milk In more than
normal abundance. 8ince grass, which
is 80% water, cannot furnish all the
milk-making materials for the extra
heavy production It cnases, the cow na-
turally Is forced to draw on her own
body to make up the deficiency. This
continued withdrawal nnd lack of suf-
ficient replacement mnterlnl leads to
the inevitable milk slump and fulling
off In body weight which conies Inter
In the season—a condition which Is
linstened along faster by the natural
decline In available pasture, tv’hen
these things happen the man behind
the cows discovers that the feed cost
of rebuilding flesh nnd milk yield runs
1m[o way more money than lie would
have had to sgiend to keep the cows on
-a hnlnnced, body sustaining, supple-
mentary ration right from the start.
"A feed to be effective In holding
up milk ami body weight through
spring and summer must obviously he
reinforced In mineral to keep a cow
from drawing on her body for calcium
caused by heavy milking stimulated by
green pasture. It mutt also he highly
concentrated to Insure a cow getting
plenty of nutrients, even In small
quant files, since cows do not take
readily to grain with succulent pae-
lure available. A third requirement
for auch a feed la the pro|ter blending
of It* ingredients to counteract the lax-
ative condition of pasture for better
health and fltneas of the cowe. And
U la equally voaenUal that the coet of
Rev. I’aul E. Martin, pastor of the
Kavanaugh Methodist church in
Greenville, was a visitor here Tuer-
day. The Rev. Mr. Mart n has been
the popular pastor of Kavanaugh
church for the past five years, and
his congregation has recently peti-
tioned (or his return for the sixth
year.
White
Dry Goods Co.
COMMERCE, TEXAS
Prices reduced on
Summer Merchandise
White Shoes —
Summer Dresses
Sheer Piece Goods
1 ®
Who Pays For My Advertising?
Since Advertising Pays Me-
I Do Not Foot The Bill
My Customers Save
In Buying From Me-
They Do Not Pay The Bill
My Non-Advertising Competi
tor Loses When I Advertise ■
He Pays The Bill •
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The Ladonia News (Ladonia, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, July 19, 1935, newspaper, July 19, 1935; Ladonia, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth980842/m1/4/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bonham Public Library.