The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 27, 1950 Page: 2 of 20
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CITATION BT PUBLICATION
Tb* State of Tons To Mr*.
Mildred Poor Day, a widow; Mrs.
MHdrod Poor Day, a tom* solo;
who** residence U oakaowa, aad
if ib* bo dooooood, than her hair*
'aad onkaowa kalis, aad tko heir*
aad unknows hairs of all parti**
named Heroin, Defendants,
GREETING:
You and each of you are hereby
commanded to appear before the
Honorable District Court of Young
County, at the Court House there-
of, in Graham, Texas, at or before
10 o’clock A. M. of the first Mon-
day next after the expiration of
forty-two days from the date of
issuance of this citation, same be-
ing the 22 day of May A. D. 1960,
then and there to answer Plain-
tiffe Petition fHed fa) said Court
•n the 18th day of October, 1949,
and amended petition filed Oct 27,
1949 in this cause, numbered 12,-
364 on the docket of said court, and
styled EULA PEACOCK, a widow,
and JESS (J. W.) CLOUD, Plain-
tiffs, vs. Addie Cloud Buford; the
children of Mattie Eidson, deceas-
ed, who are as follows: Minnii
Worrell, whose husband 1* C. V
Worrell; Ines Jaco, whose hus-
band is Ray Jaco; Wayne Eidson,
G. W. Eidson; Irene Donald, whose
husband is M. D. Donald; Jimmie
Fay Gleghorn, whose husband is
Bill Gleghorn; and Ida Lye Shaw,
whose husband is Arlton Shaw;
and the children of Bessie Poer,
deceased,
977, la Young County, Texas, and
known aa subdMaien or tract “C"
la a division of Mm mineral rights
in the cas* of Mia N. A. Cloud
vs. No. 7882, Jess Cloud et al, in
District Court of Yeung County,
Texas, March Tertn, 1996, and the
judgment shown <a record In Vol-
ume ......, Page — of the District
Court Minutes of Young County,
Texas, to which report, judgment,
plat and record thereof, reference
is hereby made for all purposes.
Plaintiffs owning an undivided
1/Sth interest each in the above
described land and premises; and
defendants owning an undivided
3/6ths interest in the land and
premises above described.
Alt as is more fully shown by
Plaintiff’s Petition on file in this
In Ae Young County Area
When it comes time for a mane-
,trimming session at Boys’ Ranch
in Amarillo, Texas, the-job usual-
ly falls to one of the boys in the
tonsorial department of the Ranch
vocational school.
Several of the older hoys are
boys at Boy’s Ranch hav* the op-
portunity to learn carpentry, auto-
Mobil* meehaniee and shoe repair.
The list of tradesi^ing taught
now is small, but iWf hoped that
a vocational school can be built in
the very near future when1 12 or
14 trades can be taught.
With a properly equipped .voca-
tional school, each of the more-than
100 boys can learn a valuable trade*
he will he able to use when he
leaves the Ranch. This will give
him the chance to step into a good
job and make a real hand.
The boys also have their own
grade and high school with seven
teachers, a full sport program that
includes football, softball, basket-
ball and wrestling, and plenty of
opportunity for other recreation
such as fishing, swimming and
riding.
But it’s not all school and play.
The boys raise much of their own
vegetables, beef and pork, and
have their iwn particular jobs
such as milking, hoeing in the gar-
due return ns the law directs.
Issued and given under my hand
and the 8eal of said Court at of-
fice in Graham, Texas, this ths
8th day of April, A. D. 1980.
(Seal) Attest:
DEAN E. HALFORD, Clerk,
District Court, Young County,
Toxas. , 9849c
Young county oil circles lost
week reported on increased drill-
ing program in both shallow and
deeper territories. New location*
were spotted and several comple-
tions were chronicled.
Four miles southeast of Bungcr
in the sand area, Creslct.n Oil
Company completed No. Jf, G. R.
Funk in the J. F. Clark survey,
OLNEY F. H. A.
ENTERTAINS
SCHOOL OFFICIALS
Members of the Olney school
board, school officials and their
wives were guests of the Olney
school's Future Homemokers of
America students at a banquet that
is given nnnually sy the FHA
girls.
The yearly event was under
general supervision of the Oiney
FHA instructor Mrs. J. C. Neelley.
In charge of banquet arrange-
ments and details were the fol-
lowing students:
Kitchen managers, Wanda Han-
kins and Billie Jean Lunsford; as-
sistants to kitchen managers, Inda
Jane Rice, Mary Lou Patrick and
Joy Marie Reed,- Serving, Mary
Gqy Robertson, Freddie Kay Hen-
ning and Carla Wainwright. In
charge of preparing the cocktail
and salad was Mattie June Par-
tain.^,
92 MILLION WILL DIB
Cancer will account for 89 mil-
lion deaths among Americans now
living] if the present death rata con-
tinues, the American Cancer So-
ciety points out. A gift to the I960
Cancer Crusade can help cut this
appalling figure.
section 32, A-2201, in the send at
9640-64 feet and on commission
test flowed 170 barrels of oil in
24 hours through 20-44 choke on
tubing.
Ten miles east of Ofaiey, Carter
A Criswell staked No. 1 Graham
Stewart, 6300-foot test to be drill-
ed 467 feet from the NAE lines
of J. L. Steen survey, A-1824’ a
wildcat and is moved in.
C. T. Robertson and associates
No. l E. B. Burch, in section 466,
TEAL survey, eight miles north-
west of Graham, is dry and aban-
doned at 3811 feet in shale.
Six miles northeast of Jean, H.
D. Eggers No. A-2 Pace-Strangc,
in the S. W. Wann survey, A-1740,
is abandoned as a dry hole at a
liepth of 4280 feet in lime and
shale.
Mid-Continent Pet. Corporation
Panhandle PAR Company, No. 1
Gilbert Unit, ran drill stem test
to Caddo 4282-86 feet and with
tool open 90 minutes recovered
six feet of water and is below
4700 feet. Test is in Diock 270
TEAL survey southeast of True.
Fred M. Manning Inc., No. 1
Drennan, in block 96 TEAL sur-
Ramovaa maka-up quickly
in one delightful application!
den and clean-up details.
Health Officer
Warns of Dangers
Of Sunstroke
Want Ads are read by everybody!
I Caw a . . a ^ ^ssft
, , , Summer weather is just around
learning the bartering trade, and the eorner and many Texang wjn
with over 120 victims to practico try to acquire a sun tan as quickly
on, they are becoming quite profi-1 a* possible. Dr. Geo. W. Cox, State
oient Only the art of shaving is He*,th Officer today released a
neglected at present been use no statement concerning the danger
staff member is willing to risk an of"ver «P°,sur«
ear or Adam’s apple. Sun Stroke is not thought to
In addition to barbering, the ** du« l° ‘he heat of the sun, but
. . ■ , . to certafh direct effects of tne sun
# on the human brain. It ia likely
Ask ft it ritktr to occur after the aun hr a shone
<ndrm-ks ,k, trim, tkinr. excessively on the back of the
head and neck,” Dr. Cox explained.
“This can be prevented by protect-
Afl ing the head and back of the neck
_/ If fi1 If/yfrom the sunshine,’’ he added.
A P-s. Dr. Cox asserted that exposure
f \ the skin to the sun has some
Vn. a virtue since the action of the suu-
Y n I «■ shine tend* to kill the germs, on
\jj VZf J / \2J the skin. Further sunshine jfro-
by tA / / —’*1 duces vitamin D from the fats in
V / / the skin and this product is ab-
, ' I L I sorbed and use<f by the body.
/ / / tutor r I" ‘‘In general the good effects of
/ J) / sunshine are not due to the heat
who are as follows:
Lorena Freeman, whose husband
is W. L. Freeman; J. W. Poer;
D. E. Poer, Florence Moore, whose
husband is J. H. Moore; Fay Dell
Carter, a widow; and Mrs. Mildred
Poer Day, Defendants.
A brief statement of the nature
of this suit is as follows, to-wit:
Suit for partition and division of
surface and mineral rights in th"
following described tracts of land
in the County of Young and State
pf Texas, to-wit:
FIRST TRACT; Surface and
surface rights enly, covering 100
acres of land out of the James R.
Tanner Survey, Abstract 277 in
Young County, Texas, and being
known as Subdivision or Tract
Two of surface rights as parti-
tioned and divided to Tat4 Cloud
in a Certain suit in the District
Court of Young County, Texas,
styled Mrs. N. A. Cloud vs. No.
7882, Jess Cloud et al, filed Aug-
ust 12, 1926, and the judgment,
plat and report of Commissioners
shown of record in the District
Court Minutes of Young County,
Texas, in Vol....... Pag* ______ to
which reference is hereby made for
all purposes.
SECOND TRACT: Tb* mineral
righto, including all th* oil, gaa
cMam 0* sots*
|Cl|4NSING CR«A*
vey, about six miles west cf Olnev,
6000-foot rotary test is below 4600
feet.
Seaboard Oil A Gas Company
No. B-l McCluskey, in section 3415
TEAL survey.-ithree miles west of
South. Bend, perforated Caddo at
3264-70 and is'swabbing some oil.
Cream of Roses cleanting craam
Leaves your complexion 'beautifully clean, soft as rose
petals! This lush pink cream penetrates quickly,
thoroughly melts away all traces of make-up in one
delightful application! Tty Dorothy Perkins tonight!
>100..Jt200,:.....
- Make Our Store Your Headquarter!
Refresh...
add zest |s|jajuLSuM
to the hour
shop refreshed
Stephens Service Drag
rays but ultrajrfa^et rays,” Dr. Cox
stated. “It must be remcioijcred,
however, that it is theae sanv:
rays which burn the akin and ex-
tensive application of direct sun-
shine to the skin may produce
painful and severe burns which
actually may endanger life.”
The State Health Officer advises
those who wiah to obtain an ex-
tensive Suntan to get it by alow
degrees. Expose small portions of
the skin to the sun for a abort pe-
riod of (ime. When tanning is es-
tablished, exposing a greater area
fo'r a longer period of time shoul 1
prove safe and comfortable
YOUR FRIENDLY STORE
You Reach ^
More People ^
Through...
The Graham Leader
AN ADVERTISEMENT THIS SIZE
Fumes from paper mills now
yield thousands of gallons of low
grade turpentine used in certain
kinds of chemical processing.
Graham Coca-Cola Bottling Company
* Safest of all convert) Wet, with steel girder
protection overhead!
h Up to 30 miles to a gallon at average highway
THE GRAHAM LEADER
speed, with new star performance!
* The first rattle-proof convertible ever built—
' with double rigid Airflyte Construction!
* Completely new continental styling—with custom
tailoring to your order!
* Easiest of all to handle and park I
* AB this at America's bweit price for a
frq paeerngrr convertible—with nearly $300
north of equipment included at mo extra coot I
COSTS LESS THAN
Com in and SN SOMETHING ABSOLUTELY NEW-
The Now Nash Ramhtor ConvertiBIg Landau—Nmrast Hombor of tlm Nash Ahflyta FamHy
C PER COPY
• Think of it! An advertisement 10 inches deep by 3 columns
wide (same as shown here) would cost you LESS than one-
third cent per copy.
Where else, how else, can you reach the public so cheaply?
Your dream of a car comet true today! That new
Nash Rambler is here!
The smartest convertible in the whole wide world—
*afe and rattle-proof with Airflyte Construction—
, has sedan comfort at button touch!
The Rambler gets up to 30 miles on a gallon at aver-
age highway speed—with top performance! i
All this at America's lowest price for a five-passenger J
Convertible, with custom “extras," like radio and M
Weather E ye, included al no extra cost!
See all three 1950 Nash Airflyte*, America's greatest
automobile values today! JH
There are no extra costs—no delivery charges, no addressing
expense. Ohe-third of a cent covers everything — paper, ink,
composition, mat service, printing and delivery to the customer's
door.
THE GRAHAM LEADER
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The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 27, 1950, newspaper, April 27, 1950; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth884161/m1/2/: accessed May 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.