The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 25, 1932 Page: 2 of 9
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i
4-
11m Spirit of 1917
Member 1932
< nrimiibility that two highway
projects in the county may be
started soon is encouraging for two
r do not enjoy the advantage of
all-weather highway. Of equal
key industry, and improvement of
quality as well as quantity shheM
add much to Young county’s pros-
MURRAY CAMPAIGN SONG
WHAT DORS IT ACCU-
MULATE? v7;
Specialist In The
Treatment Of
• A Baptist preaaher composed the
song which “Alfalfa Bill” Murray -
will use for his Campaign.
Murray approved the song, en-
titled, “Hoover. Made a Soup Houn’
Rev. Forrest R. Sawyer of Mn!>.„ N
a farmer, and two harbefs sang it '
j. The benefits of advertising
are cumulative, we say—
and we are right. But what
does this advertising accu-
mulate for the' one who in-
Pilee. Ulcers, Skin
Treated successfully,
t«ry,_nopain,noloa.
CONSULTATION
question may be inter-
fit has a kick,” Murray said. And
here it is:
"We Talk about' oqy Honest Aba and
Mr. Wilson still, --------
We cues the Chinks and Japanese
and praise Alfafa Bill. .' Tr
The Queen of fkska traveled far,
m Wise Solomon to bmv .
I voted for the gay who mad»,a
soup houn’ outa me.
..... If . the advertising is of
the ” fight k 1 p d, that is,
.truthful and constructive, it
A-aocamulstas - confidence in
-thC.^advertiser. It' accumu-
late)^* belief that ha is
Kbnest and that he knows
other, yrprasentatives-Jkom nine dif-
ferent counties will “assemble here
for the school, and will tyke home
Too long war have been contented
with cotton and the money it brings
twelve months in • the year. The
problem is how to got it that often.
feeling of security in the mind
if George Washington could be
But the problem Is easy If the peo-
present for the prolonged uolebra-
a belief that the advertiser
on a farm has a decided advantage
over the man ht a ci^y. ....
. But no man can make a living
working a few months in th* year
.favorable public contrast with
lhev one who doesn't advertise.-
“We thought the proper thing would
he, an engineer to get.
We went to Palo Alto and on Her-
bert placed our bet;
TISe surgeons took Sir Wltttam’s
gland and old men made whoo-
it accumulates piled up im-
pressions of articles offered
for sale. It accumulates a
belief that the advertiser car-
ries standard or better grades
of goods. It accumulates new
friends artd.belps tal.keep the
old. -In fact, it accumulates
the material for »n almost im-
pregnable industrial wall which
competition cannot break down
I HI, mi M"W.lfjpi K requires
everlasting toil to ascend the lad-
der of financial independence. There
are numbers of farmers who are
making money without ever plant-
ing eotton. This year they have
fed lambs and calves and steers.
They have net made as much though
ss they will in the future, hi eases
the original cost of the animal Was
Now that the-, bottom
over night. It’s the Insurance
dfiCftriwwsem b still in
business and still jaalous of
tha attitude of the public to-
wad it.—Kentucky Press.
'y» iffgh
has apparently been reached better
figuring can be done and bather
profits made. •
The cow, the sow and tha hen cap
he handled Slid “eared for In con-1
nection with other profitable pur- .
Units,—Coleman Democrat-Voice.
He moved us from our mansions
and put us in a shack. * *,’/>
Our milk cows to the markets go,
my land, it’s' miseree,
I’ll vote against the guy who made
a soup houn’ outa me.
“Our grains won’t1 sail, our notes
eur saUsa’s la
banks, and hidden away in safety
deposit boxes and mattresses hi.
people -who are almost paralysed
with fear that they are going to
lose what they have accumulated.
In the ordinary courae of business
every dollar changes hands seven-
teen times a year. To taka a bil-
lion dollars out of circulation moans
a loss of seventeen billion dollars of
business and that, the experts say,
b a large enough sum to heap Your
million persons St work. ’ ______
There are much safer things to do .crease your energy and improve
with money than to hide it-Money yoHr „h<*tth,?, t ,
is not of «<e "lightest ««*!>< jSmgt
Depression. It leaves “press on.’’ It
takes nerve-but what b nerve?
Nerve'is that which enables
a person
to hang on and die in the last ditch
or win oat. It is undertaking more
than ordinary thiags; it is taking
big rbke on one's own ability; it b
holding the fort against all comers.
It i.» .““ttimr Tdhir IrtlfidilRi twice
a* high as your assoebtea would set
it tor you, and then, reaching it It
is taking chances that are not
chencee—Uf ordinary people the rbk
would be enormous; but the man of
nerve is not even taking chances
because be knows he can carry the
thing through and doesn’t allow
himself to become side-tracked or
even annoyed by people Who »ay:
“It can’t be done.” Nerve consists
not only in undertaking a hard
task, but in everlastingly and un-
flinchingly sticking to it. That b
harm!
to spdnd. Hidden away it earns hi pa
nothing. This b not a time , for time
hoarding money. UntU most of thb
kept-money begins to work again, j,ow
wu are. going to continue to have bottl
going to continue to have
hard times. Those with cash should
first pay their debts and then buy
tha things they “need. Nona should
,i saving in expenditure for food as
a reward far every family enter-
ealmly face an unpleasant Condition
when duty requires it—Brit Bu-
ford, in Eufaula Journal.
NoSleep, No Rest,
Stomach Gas Is Cause
Mrs. A. Cloud says: "For years I
bad a bad stomach and gas. Was
nervous and could net sloop. Adlerika
rid ma of all stomach trouble and
now I sleep fine.’’—L. B. Scott Drug
turkeys produced hi thb county,
has tha atm of increasing tha far.
V V
- SALVE...
Beauty
Work
nkeVfet*VEU,COME OW /
YOy « NOT A BIT
TOUGHER. THAN THE
LAST ONE I HAp TO
TAKE ON • *
PERMANENT WAVES
r....
if- ■
OR TWO FOR $7.00
r-
-
Jk Witt BsE... Jw
...----9h
m
-r r
ft Arch
rUt
Mrs. C. W. Clayton
Phone 397. 817 Elm St.
port#
Sdutfco, Muscular Pales, Pari,
odic Pains.
ful
i • ...:
ruary
Dr. MUas’ Aspir-Mint reUevas
quickly, pleasantly, does not up-
Constl-
ast the stomach or causa Constl-
Patton.
Mrs. Marlow, Rad Wing, Minn.
Myif ’
"I hmvo used Dr. Miles’
Aeptr-Mmt for Chlds and
mould not feel safe unless
I had it in the house. It
ohms such quick relief."
Your druggist has Dr. MiW
Asplr-MlnL Why dent you.ask
ft
importance b. the fact that eon-
*• «traction of tha two highway* will
give employment to a considerable
number of rneKT « "1T time when
job* are at a premium.
We have often heard th* old iay-
tng, “AH work and no play makes
Jnek a dull boy”, which is more true
than is sMnetimeS realised. ,.....Thb
fact was probably borne in mind by
lmibn in extension. service work
in promoting recreations} programs
and amateur theatricals for rural
communities. . Next week - a “Rural
Emma School” b to be held her*
under th* direction of a trained lea-
der from the National Recreation
Association headquarters at Wesh-
—. ington: The county ad«ht* end
ru'
ett
___r7'
*' toil”.'-
-J-.- vf
of the two hundredth an-
nirereary of Ms birth, there is every
probability that he would be inter-
ested not so much in the programs
—planned to honor him as m the way
tha citizens of t»WM«“Umi#d> States
have used th* freedom which he was
instrumental in gaining. He would
sae progress in many respects. In-
stead of the struggling tH*H{hn
jSSiHiSt he would find s nation
spreading from the Atlantic to tha
Peel Vie from wwHfl _t0 ’ thg. t
• JMf of Mexico.' - ISjftoa rftyhe
-old stage coach of coloniKT days he
wwull Bhd automobiles,—railroads,
and airplanes reducing journeys that
one# were long and tedfhu* to mere
.....trifle*. _ Instead of tallow candles
ha would find electricity not only
|IIOVM!hg light but turning the
wheels of industry. The radio, the
telephone, the X-r*J, and hundreds
of other things that are today taken
for (ranted would arouse his in-
terest. In trite field of activity.
A* the initial work of the Young
County Board of Agriculture, two
movements of great significance to
the county and particularly to tha
farmers have been bunched. The
- announcement that the board b to
CTWtfsl To" encourlege
to provide as much
of their fbed supplies as possible
, at hams, should receive an enthus-
iastic’ response. Regardless of the
to win a worthwhile
iy fhmws and farm
wife should welcome the assistance
to be provided in making their plans
in order that they, may have health-
fd, well balanced meals ■ through-
out the year with a very small cash
outlay. For the family of five
it has been estimated that proper
M.M. FRIZZELL ■
PLUMBING
hi
Phone No. 1*. Graham, Texas. 1
1 “
:Tr~" " '1*n ,WT
- . ■ 1
’“Electrical Specials”
1 will mvf you Money on all
wfrk hur ^higf1
switrheH, futures, and riflis •
tag. I carry the FfHusw Ms ata
Lamps. - Repairing called far
- , - M
f
r '
a ad delivered.
- MWSQN ELCCmC CO.
PHONE M. 3
-4
•; 1
-----
RICHARD BROS.
UNDERWOOD TI PE WETTER!
OFFICE EQUIPMENT ft 8UPPUB*
at:
Schedule
<^iange
i- ■■■-" t *; .
Effective February 1st, 1931
-u—
—
North Bound to — WICHITA FALLS
^Leaves 10:20 A. M. and 7:30 P. M.
meals for a year cost ffilO, of i the truest test of nerve. It Ja nerve
Which |&60 worth can be produced^ the t gives jis our steam-boats and
South Bound to — BRECKENRIDGE,
CISCO,, EASTLAND, and ABILENE.
LeiveslH25 A. M. and 7:15 P. M.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION SEE OR
CALL JOE T. CARTER, LOCAL
RAINBOW
Driver Hotel.
ass iv ma iiuim,
[tJT
“re—
WEEEH
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Spears, George T. The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 25, 1932, newspaper, February 25, 1932; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth884067/m1/2/: accessed May 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.