Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 147, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 20, 1940 Page: 2 of 4
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YOU
N ER VO1
functi<
—
THE MASTER CODE
PUBLK VJELFARE
DANN DUNN
Whan
[the Hol
[ found
HMMM-
DE SCRIBE
HER
I PLEASE
■be well (
not notle
told me t
"Couldn’t
which I
• cliff.
bn. droe
■»»t mon
Uriuenaa.
$1 75
13 00
HOTHI NG MUCH—'
NO FINGER PR I NTS-
THEY ALL WORE
GLOVES- - OFFICER
CUGAN WAS SHOT
WE RECOVERED
Ba THE BULLET? I
are able to
will readily
known that
4OC.000 to
sulfindai
latter da
toid inft
joua now
of cases
OHLY ONE thing-
one OF THEM
WAS CHEWING
A MATCH STICK—
I PICKED IT UP
AFTER THEY
LEFT--HERE IT
'NOW YOU OFFICERS
EXAMINED THIS
PLACE AFTER THE
.ROBBERY - WHAT I
Ldid YOU FIND? J
GUARD- DID YOU NOTICE
ANYTHING PECULIAR
ABOUT EITHER OF
THE BANDITS WHO
HAD YOU COVERED’
brick W
G.. matt
would ei
factions.
YES, MR DUNN, THE GIRL
WORKED HERE A WEEK,
SHE WALKED IN WITH A
GUN IN HER HAND -TO
THWART HER WOULD
HAVE MEANT INSTANT
iMiniTO death? <---
J o» couest sut w»ut
Poor ckem-hoi'
\*SlAlfc«GYt>ui£T HM
bqyt'Vou f
Only a carp rivals the white bass
in egg production. A four to five-
pound carp will produce 400,l>0o to
500,000 eggs
DAY and NIGHT AMBULANCE
SERVICE ANYWHERE
The reason these bass
stock a lake so quickly
be understood
each female
500,000 eggs,
in Texas last
However,
the Game Department was
able to apply the same regulations
to this species of
other bass.
Following
planting at
Department
lakes.
That is the reason the State Game
Department cannot raise white basa
in hatchery ponds. However, the
i able to obtain suffi-
It attains a length of eighteen
inches. Not too particular in its
diet, it will take a hook when bait-
ed with small minnows, angleworms
or grubs and will also strike flies
and plugs. It can be recognized
by its silvery color tinged with
Subscription Rates
Mopth
Months ...
ADVERTISING RATES WILL
GIVEN UPON APPLICATION
murmured
stairs are
to watch
dilly.”
Ealerod as second-class mail mat-
gat at the poatofflce to Graham.
Texas under act of (ongreea
■arch t, itT*.
- World consumption of nickel the
first ten months of 1939 totalled 206
million pounds, an increase over both
1938 and 1937
many sportsmen working these bod- | The white bass, by that or any
ies of water wondered what kind■ other local name tacked on it, is a
of a strange fish they had caught good fish for sport or for the table.
This winter scores of fishermen are
catching many of the bass at Buch-
anan Lake, despite the fact that
body of water, like many others, was
stocked with a few brood fish less
than two years ago.
White bass weighirg from one-
half to two and a half pounds arc
used for stocking purposes.
W CANT
TELL WHEN THE
TEACHER AlNT
LOOKIN'SO HE
WASTA KEEP ON
STUCMN' ,
Use liability of The Graham Daily
Reporter and of Its publishers for
any error in any advertiaement is
limited to the cost of such adver-
Aftar q
.obby, wd
*• mo ths
him, will
ixed neri
come. Aa
AND NOTHING
■h-c EL5E?«iri
SMAME!!
AND LITTLE
SQOiMTY SQUIRES
ONLY HALF '
YOUR SIZE GETS
‘A* IN DEPORTMENT
when it is
lays from
A laboratory count
spring showed 480,000
eggs taken from a two-pound fish.
When there figures are compared
with the egg capacity of other spe-
fish it esn read ly be under-
why sportsmen are catching
tss.» in goodly number-. A
average 16,000
pound rainouw
brood trout of
a two and a
Kurcd
>w do
willing I
failed o«
talk. Ha
be rid i
Lake
started stocking other half-pound smallmouth bass 3,050
In J938 Bill White, present to K.000 and a largemouth bass
Then there’s the one about the
fellow who opened the elevator door
on the first floor but the elevator
wap up above and he fell 3(1 feet
down the shaft into the basement.
When they ran to pick him up. he
in a dazed voice, "Those
all right, but you want
that first step; it’s a
stood
white
20-pound salmon will
eggs. Two to feur
successful trans trout lay 3.000 eggs,
Dallas, the Game the same size 2.500;
superintendent of the Lake Dallas
Hatchery, placid 100 in Lake Kemp
140 to Lake Buchanan, 126 in Me-
dina Lake, 60 in Eagle Mountain
Lake, 108 in Lake Waco and 125 in
Lake Wichita. They have prosper-
ed in all thoae lakes. Last summer
taATK
t WMtaaMVOuCMl
bass, like salmon, must travel up-
stream in the spring to find suit-
able plaFs in which to spawn. Fol-
of ‘ lowirflBne spawning season they rv-
|tum To the lake proper but will
—’never spawn in a lake.
Published Every Afternoon Except
Sunday By
GRAHAM PUBLISHING CO.
Office of Publication. S4S Oak Street - --------- .
Graham, Texae ’ (department is
-1 cient brood bass from lakes with
no. T SPEARS Owner which to stock lakes and the inva-
H. 1. TROUT Editor-Publisher (icn of the striped bass continues.
Lake Dallas provides an excellent
example of the proficiency of the
[white bass. A year after the thir-
Aay erroneous reflection upon the teen brood fish were placed in Lake
character of any person or firm Dallas a few t»>em were caught,
appearing in theee columns
gladly and protnpJy corrected upon
being brought to the attention of ,
the management.
We confidently believe that I
we'll be given your patronage I
—if you check on the satisfac- I
’ IB hon of those who have already £
C/|. (zt patronized us. A good re. ita- |
Asm bon grows by its own ment.
I Qh ovex SCifum. V
lllORRISOR FUNERAL HOME
PHONE 600—GRAHAM—COLLECT
4-H CLUB
EDUCATION
The annual report of the A. & M g
Eetrnninn Service—presents—an im-~ H
piessive record of achievement by i K
4-H Club boys and girls of Texas K
in 1939. Beef fed by Texas boys M
w» gv».vN vhampwnstop honors at 3
the Fort Worth, Chicago and San 3
Francisco livestock shows.
During last year, the report con- . H
tinues, Texas 4-H Club boys exhib- | R
ited 17,007 head of livestock at 170 ■
shows, which constituted invaluable ja
advertising for Texas as a cattle- i 8
raising State. The youthful exhibit- g
ors collected premiums totaling $31.- B
245.33 and made sales that brought IS
in $254,762.25. Prizes have been B?
won by the 4-H Club boys in'cattle,
sheep, swine, dairy animal and poul I 0
try classes. I
Those s tatistics show that work! ~
on the farm and ranch can be prof-
itable for rural youths. But the pri-
mary function of the 4-H Clubs i»|
educational, to train boys and girls
to become better farmers and ranch- .
era. The overhead of this tax-sup-
ported vocational training is ridic-i
ulously low in comparison _wjth the
benefits. The 4-H Club members
gam a practical education to equip
them for life,'and at the same time
derive an income in producing food,
fqr the. .coqixu-y. SomtL, day.. th.c.,
war ideas 'may Ke extended furtfier
into the educational’ system,' where
the majority of students are prin-,
cipallv consumers and -penders,
rather than producers like' 4 fl Club
youths.
Th. vocational training given to
4-H Club boys and girls actually is
the start of lifetime pursuits. There
in no dividing line between the two '
periods, in the former of which a'
youth is a 4-H Club student and in
the latter a farmer. Educatiqn is
most effective when it is practical
training closely identified with a
lifetime pursuit. The results should
be compared with the collegiate
method of loading youths down with
academic theory, which i- mere :b (
straction until it is ipp!i d. Even
the add: tional sirvice of laboiutory *
and field work by c dlegians lacks
th., dem nt of reality whi h is found,
m 4 H Club training.—Star-Teb gram
firm
■ill ba However, by 1935, just three years
after the transplanting, striped bass
were caught by the thousands. Com-
mercial fishermen easily netted as
many as 400 pounds of them in a
All Cards of Thanks. Obituaries, day. However, it was not long
and like notices are charged for aA^.f,
half the regular rates
of the same size 6,000 to 20,000 golden below. Its sides are striped Mineral wool is Pr<*h*'«d •» M
eggs narrow dusky liaes, about five F«t»rlto in th. United State.
above the lateral line, one along it
and has a variable number below it.
a.tion5
e xe
toe
ILL SAY
THEY RE KEEN
Treet
SINGLE EDGE BIADES
GFM and Ivtr-Ready Raton
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Trout, H. I. Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 147, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 20, 1940, newspaper, February 20, 1940; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1506091/m1/2/: accessed May 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.