The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 12, 1950 Page: 3 of 18
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• THE GRAHAM LEADER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1950
Olnoy Pastor To
Rtctivi Doctor's
Dog roe In Kentucky
Rev. Cort R.- Flint, pastor of
the First Baptist Church of Olney,
has been granted • leave of ab-
sence from that church to finish
his' debtor’s degree at the Univer-
sity of Louisville, Kentucky, where
he wjjl spend six weeks in preper-
ationror his Doctor of Theology
Vetch Growers
Anna! Meeting
C. of C Statewide
Mrs Harry Ragan visited her
The Texas Junior Chamber of
BOOKS
NEW AND OLD
on January 14-15. Highlight of the
two-day meeting will be the State
Distinguished Service Award Ban-
quet on Saturday night, January
14, at which time Governor Shiv-
ers will present gold keys to the
five outstanding young Texans for
the year 1949. The ceremonies will
be Broadcast over a state wide
network.;
Jaycees from Vernon, Wichita
Falls, Gainesville, Graham, Den-
ton, Weatherford and Fort Worth
will represent Region II, while
Ranger, Goldthwaite, Hamilton,
Hillaboro, Mexia, Teague, Gates-
ville and Waco will send Jaycees
from Region 12.
E. M. Kirkpatrick, Jr, Baytown,
president of the Texas Jaycees
said “Important items on the busi-
ness agenda include: Campaign
plans for the state-wide support
Sixty-six members of the Young
County Vetch Growers Inc. will
hold their regular annual meeting
Saturday, January 14 at the Court
house in Graham at 2:00 p. m.
F. G. Wiley, chairman, states
that a very nice dividend payment
will be made to all stockholders
and that. each stockholder mem-
ber la urged to be present as there
are many items of importance that
degree. He will leave January 23
New non-fiction books at the
Graham Public Library include
"Life Among the Doctors” by Paul
De Krauif who tells his own story
in summing up an era in medicine
—the past ten years of revolution-
ary changes—and in reporting the
latest news in medicine. The book is
in a limited sense an autobiography
and expresses a personal .philos-
ophy of life. It is a chronicle of
the fight by, responsible but pow-
erful human beings who handicap
the fighters in their struggle. It
has the deepest social implications
and is perhaps Paul De Kruif's
Mrs. James Walden of Roswell,
New Mexico, who has been visit-
ing in the home of a brother, John
Gorce, returned to her home Mon-
day.
Let us help you find next
■ * Sit- spring's trouble spots
“ now — and fix ’em.
We are starting a regu-
l»r program of free
Em machinery inspection on
the farm.
Iljpf^ A trained eye can locate
worn or broken parts that
fp!pl|P8> might be overlooked until
P?* the machine is in the field.
MW Let our man liaten to your
*V* tractor engine . check your
P harvester from hitch to straw rack
. ... examine cultivators, disc harrows,
hydraulic lift. You get a report on the
condition of every major machine on
your farm.
It’s free. There’s no obligation. Give
us a ring and name the date.
* Use Leader Classified Ads
thor of High Time and Suds in
Your Eye. Here is a breathless
account of her latest adventures
in Brooklyn and points west, name-
ly, Newark. “High Time” ended
with the promise of a trip to
Brooklyn, a.visit to sailor-nephew
Danny and his brjde. “One On the
House” opens with the visit about
to end with a good time had by
all. If train-fare home is lost at
the races, there is always inde-
pendence, charm, and a bottom dol-
major work.
Deems Taylor gives the intro-
duction to “The Concert Compan-
ion" which is written by Rober
Bagar and Louis Biancolli. Here,
in one volume, is your guide to
new musical enjoyment. Written
by the annotators for the New
York Philharmonic
13-14-16, Texas Eleemosynary Im-
provement Program, Extension of
new Jaycee clubs, Jaycee Univer-
sal Understanding Program re-
ports and a concerted drive for
Texans to Pay their Poll Taxes.”
The Waco Junior Chamber of
Commerce, serving as host club
for the meeting will entertain
somo 500 Jaycee delegates and
wives with headquarters at the
Roosevelt Hotel, Waco.
Symphony
Society, it is the largest, mpst in-
formative one-volume collection of
concert notes ever made. This book
'can be used for years—and will
never be exhausted. It will become
a guide to be referred to before
attending a concert, while listen-
ing to a broadcast, or when buy-
ASK SOMEONE WHO HAS USED IT
•estore any lost faith in the warmth
of human nature.
• • •
John O’Hara’s newest novel “A
Rage to Live” is Tlis first in eleven
years. It is a large-scale social
chronicle of America, localized in
Central Pennsylvania, but it moves
I will order One Carload of Fertilizer
. . . Give me your order any time in
January. Tell your neighbors, and
see— .U
Protbytarian Sarmon
Subjects Announced
The Rev. John C. Johnson has
announced that the sermon sub-
jects at ths First Presbyterian
Church for Sunday, January 16
rwin be as follows: At 11 a. m. the
Lastor will preach on "Fantasy or
Keality” and at 7:30 p. m. on “Ser-
kenta of Brass.”
[ Preaching service et Hudson
prsebyterian Chapel will be at 6
“Beauty After Forty” by Edyth
Thornton McLeod ia one of the
latest selections at tha>, library
... if you are a woman over forty,
or if rou know a woman over
forty, you will find “Beauty After
Forty’ a real guide to the greater
enjoyment of living—for yourself
bortyish friend. Mrs.
Central Pennsylvania, but it
by forceful application onto the
larger stage of an entire society
in the manifold processes of
change. It is a full-canvas portrait
of a city and its people, done with
movement Precise in detail, it h
a sest for color and light and
always suggestive of the entire
-flius-auiuRms—
■ 1*111 AND' SIRVICI
JOHNSON AND JOHNSON
Young County Vetch Growers
Fair Pork Grounds
or for yqur
McLeod recommends the develop-
ment of outside interests end the
re-examination of family relation-
ships. She has pertinent things to
say to caretr women, too. The
therapeutic value of keeping busy
—for financial gain or philan-
thropic satisfaction—is stressed.
The author writes from personal
experience, and from the sympa-
thetic viewpoint of one who has
observed and remedied, many a
case of jitters.
308 Fourth St,
organism of a city and tke peo-
ple who give it meaning and life.
On the lighter side, j . . “One On
the House” by Mary Laswell, au-
SAVEUS, VINO!
SAVE US!
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‘X'bbh - hrau»hf"<*". -doobio
both c/o'*«P rood
mea-wm, M4r, ^ --------
0,' C0''
Hood,log torqu,.,ubt pr*Uu'» rtdo-
WHAT’LL
HAPPEN?
NAVE COUKASE. SINCLAIR 25% DOT
CONCENTRATE WIU SAVE YOU. I’ll HIS
IT WITH WATER*... AND THEN WATCH>
Leek ever tke IISO B«ick liae, which Pew wkeelkaaee - all planned for
theee three high-fashioned honeys f riding comfort-with overhang re-
repreeent, and decide for yourself If duced to make parking and garaging
that s truth or just talk. easier. Roominess galore, with rear
Wastes* — Yes, It —smart new and Mats as much as 13 inches wider.
variM models to chooee from, and Plenty of outlook as well. And the
all with the eye-catching styling of abiding comfort of coil springs on
bold-lined bumper-guard grilles, all four wheels. And the steady
’le why wet get the whole story,
pric*: .and all, from your Buick
dealer now ? Deliveries are good, the
•'deal" Is right, and a signed-up
order steps you up to that Buick
you've always dreamed about!
going, of torque-tube drive-plus
look of a jet plane In flight.
Safety-Ride rims for comfort plus
control.
Then leek at priees-do they really
fit any budget?
They range from the fine-car level
of the Roadmaster down to just-
above-the-lowest figures on the
Special. But even theee are so little
above anything else —buy you so
many more years of happy use—and
give you a car of such consistently-
better trade-in value—that you’ll
Three full series - Special, Super
and Roadmaster —with Special
models available in both standard
or de line finish.
Thswe separate peemr ptaats-ln five
horsepower ratings—all more power-
ful, higher in compression, all Fire-
ball valve-in-heads—and ona of
them, the sensational new F-M),
giving Super models extra briHiance
on the road.
rfo-tbiRi
YOU RET!
I’ll PHONE
MY SINCLAIR
AGENT NOW
Look this one spraying will re
EFFECTIVE FOR SEVERAL WEEKS ...AND
SINCLAIR 25% DDT CONCENTRATE NAS
MANY OTHER USES, TOO. UTTER 0ET
SOME. irU SAVE Y0JLM0NEY
MM*#*
Tm. to Hf NVT l TAYIO«.
vow rfr to GttArrt vmui
414 ELM STREET
Davidson Motor Company
ilT PhoiM 109 GRAHAM,
TEXAS
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The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 12, 1950, newspaper, January 12, 1950; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth884200/m1/3/: accessed May 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.