Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 58, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1922 Page: 3 of 8
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YW '~r1
*•
>AT. OCT, ao, 1933
■01
Creamery Co.,
Fort
I
■
,k
'j'
your fellow man."
/hl
iiistead of
kC-
fore v-
■ his o
obblm*
e.“ He
by t
| trough
kl'uw we would
M
reverent. GotJ-fi
4 •< I 11 V i ** Il x.
--m
I
I
WHY EXPERIMENT?
*
I
{
W. J. McCRAY
’ '1
<
r
r~’-----
1
c£
We have a com-
ffl
J
see
i
I
H
I
,1«
ft
I
YOUR BREAD SHOULD BE FRESH
- "1
Electrical Fixtures That Will Please You
by Anthony Hope
I
DENTON ELECTRIC & BATTERY CO.
I
FRESH GROCERIES
GRUBE BROS. BAKERY
• <
we'guaraNtee to fit you
Call 71.
(a
U-
/f!
<al
lil
I
ion work.
1
lhlXM krjkMl 13 «JM»-
Tifnmc
>
V
K
III
tti
to
j
V. RA
’cKiun
■
STARTING MONDAY, OCT. 23
In a Big Waterproof Tent
BUY YOUR SHOES FROM
AN EXCLUSIVE SHOE STORE
I
I
I
...........
We’ve been serving Denton
people for over 28 years.
Denton’s Oldest Jeweler
West Court Square.
Investigate us and you'll
be our customer. '
THE FUNNIEST WESTERN HE EVER
MADE.
Is the
tMa
(T
6**"»
fSOM TNf STAGE plav
9X
LINCOLN J..CARTER*5
, DiaecTeo by
BtRNAROAOURNING
DREAMLAND,
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
J
J
THE AMUSEMENT EVENT OF THE SEASON
ALL NEXT WEEK
I
■
■ '.j
f
SSEY & HOLLOWAY
Free Shinek On All Shoe* Purchased Here.
PIGGLY WIGGLY
BULLETIN
HOME GROWN, rich, fed, ripe Tomatoes, per Tb
J
4- ? :'
■J
—that it in*
t er I eres,
some ti tnei.
with office
hours.
j. .jSii
' WWBMPWWBII
■
• "I
--------------.’
“STEP ON IT”
I I
I
ff
I
1
f
hundrrd
r<l,M 'l*rurn«>tr<j from
I
209 E.
Ft’ *' •*
will pay from }S to I'J for the lOO'tlv,, tliruout
».2t Instead of 1 th:::-- “::4
800 or 900 pounds of tlies pro- , be was to be
of his plane tn be l<
■ 100 pounds The
the
—------------
>AIAC
” LAST DAY
DREAMLAND
V 7V rZJ______
A Movie Star
:ii Every Package
Sri
* Mont Impurlnnt
lUr preweniKtion <<r hi*
I
I J
I
Our children’s line of school and dress shoes is
complete. We can fit their feet if they are narrow
and long or shott and wide with shoes of Goodyear
welt soles that can be half soled for $2.50 up.
SATURDAY
HOOT GIBSON IN—
I how ya
for
1
I
We carry only fresh grocer-1
ies. Vegetables and all kinds;
of fruits in season.
Now that cold weather is coming, you will need
better and warmer shoes and hose for the children
to go to school and yourself.
No need to have your Eyeing shipped out V7„ „ V„II1_
plete STEAM DYE PLANT and dye all colors of the RAINBOW
Our colors are fast.
We clean and re-block hats.
WE DO BETTER DRY CLEANING.
____
WEST SIDE SQUARE.
Phone 40.
Our wool hose, in all colors, will-njake this first
cold spell like the nice warm days of summer,75c up.
Scenario by Mary O'Hara
Photography by John F. Seitz
Dramatization by Edw- Rose
in *.
Is•--1
I
vt-ev V.M&VI ICT ICBAKaM vvl 1
Such precaution d«-
' „ I
5
d
Jr J
But it need
not. To know
a lifetime of
thrills you
have but to
1^ aig * umv ' «MMnnr
D RODOLPH
^VALENTINO
BZood an^Sand\
^ILA LEE *» NITA NALDI |
ALL NFW PLAVS. ALL NEW VAUDEVILLE
Plays and Vaudeville Changed Nightly
Special Scenic Productions. Special Electrical Effects
Every Play a Feature.
Not a dull moment—something doing all the t,ime
6—BIG FEATURE VAUDEVILLE SPECIALTIES—6
Opening Play Monday Night—
“WHAT A WOMAN WILL DO.”
are iunt three prime
of wealth,” aal.l Curtla.
milled, the Roll. Here all
=====eg^--=~£gBiC 'll
“We Dye to Please You”
•j’ »■»
EXTRA!
ONE LADY ADMITTED FREE MONDAY NIGHT WITH EACH PAID
ADULT TICKET.
Prices....................................x*..................I...........Children 15, Adults 40a
Location: Collins Jot,'just northwest of pofct office building.
"L~—--— --------------------—;
I
I n
MUKK^Mliun L.
•njf emollonul depth |
a,, yg r *■ ** s ' ’ **■ -4 a —»i
"1 am <<»iivhice»l,”
L-- .4.,y
. -- ■ ■ -
hr
Well, of
t the, .......
• only IhuMt* that
I i veMtitiali dj
he
would ha
to net
• • S •
, AUUUI III' OIIIJ Lilli K 4
tinuud J4r. l.’pa|iMWf '’w i*
duce a
fext L'.mI
liutfion !i>
Ui> for ini
•*fet orrcarl
operated Iwhind rioted
had ofllclals uilh |;i-
njiiiK'N hr irt'hrled iu the
Hatton. Well, of. couiB'^ i
th hi mh up t< » they '
ir|ve«LI|f at «■ only f
want to h<-
"PEAKS AT NOHMAI. COLLEGE
Delivering ah addFesH that move..
I*1. ^S17’t's TTohi spontaneous laugh-
in . sparsions of wit to sincerity and__
lite evidently made
Ctlve ImpresHlon ...
Illium David Upshaw
o I th the asaembled
11 •tuaenl >n,l faculty bodies of the
Sim- Normal College tor an hour Thurs-
day,.morntna.
Upshaw wa,, tntrodneed
^hi in
5" \h America.” the almpu aU.ry being ,
•'’•“If a. tribute to the greatness •
or the mhn. The etory ar given re-
lates that .Mr, ('pshaw when a young
roan suffered an Injured spine from
an a.cldent while working on a
a farm aud that he war confined t<>
hlr bed for seven years; that while
in bed he wrule a book, from the
Male whteh and -by tfr If wring
lectures from a rolllriK chulr, he af-
MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY
The trouble with ro-
mance and adventure is
HOME GROWN, rich, red, ripe Tomatoes, per Tb...........116
5-It> boxes Sliced Bacon . *, ..... ...............
------8.1b gaUcJUBmpound ----
8-oz. package best Macaroni .............../..... 08c
8-oz. package best Spaghetti ______________________________________08c
Swan's Down Cake Flour (large) . ......__' •' riHt'^
Aunt Jemima Pan Cake Flour ........... ..............
New Prunes, per pound ...............................r-'
Fancy Bulk Figs ....................................«_______
Sun Maid Seedless Raisins ................................."1
12 cans No. 2 Tomatoes .....................,...._____________
12 cans No. 2 Com ......... |1J| J
12 pounds Pure Cane Sugar ...........;„..............................-WC J
25 pounds Pure Cane Sugar ..._____j..................................$tM
Cranberries, per quart .....................................
1 tb. Your Luck Coffee—vacuum packed ..........J......
•2A4 lbs. Your Luck Coffee- vacuum packed ...........
1 tb Santos Coffee ..................
Fleischmann’s Yeast . ...............................■
Boiled Ham and Baked Ham.
PIGGLY WIGGLY
221 West Hickory. McClurkaa
■ ■ II — -
IIS’ r*
aamons . Am a second eMReiitiftl to maklnff
the rnunt out of college lift; he eald,
You have wut t* ¥*h» haw-
Fot to believe Ttt yourself, and fn
nt r»,i
for a
xixxLzakaaa i i . .. I • ’•"hviihth, ne earnestly
j Hared, "that alt the l.-gl.latlon
it. LtiRhaw characterized Austin or In Capitol. HiU in W.-pin-.i—---—
iligton would full like-chaff tn the *r",n convention
wind if It were riot grounded In the
people.”
, ’ he ron-
farniliar apllcation
nnrt
— - | .. .>*«.- WV«(V«*-V* <« KV7VVIV? Iff
rol!«•><♦* I mor^ than ninety he In thought to
■■ ; .... unirit •* i72 'ILL. ! *'v ‘V** Za‘ I a.vp FWen u good account of tiini- i North
' il. » 1 „ I H ^"‘I’tiaxjxcd this aalf. Hut wh»n the Mupn im?
U point by u humorous arorv. and re- i *K - .....
I corumended br a cure for the blue■» ■ demand’not' - -
hr “« a A-aKe.cent. but an gbeolut-,
of ln.Ugo-Mul>Jeetlvlty“) a line from t . . . _
j hlR Rtory—"Look to the Lord and’
I j be dmTniHHeil ■ By n < on< ri te < x-
■t iimpl- from h!» own Ilf.- he advoted
th-If J th- "radiant Rplrif a« a wholeeome 1
il- i force and a neceHRtty for nuccenH.
-I- t He gave ax his recipe for HIr po- I
the American Cafe
-rhosi IntereHtJr-*'
i the abHi-nce c. . ____ ... ______
,r> I John Speer presided over the meet-
by I Ing and after prayer By Tom Dot- ,
Ur college, > Rett, u Ming Hong led by John Crock- I
a the man.1 t-*!U ami a duet, "gmlle," by the new- j ___________ _____________
the ! wede of the club, Heorge Fritz | permanent advancement of the llve-
«„a r,ti. l'..„ i... ...i...i .,.... Mtoclt industry. Livestock furnishes
I the baeiz fur (ha permanent pros-
• ~ ’ v “t any <
| building of JlvwiUxok iiiiliailry
Introduction and
< /.tif'i I n<> t.U*
He Held the World
Spellbound at his feet while from hi* sensitive fin-
ger-tips came harmonies that brought the plaudit*
of the multitude. Monarchs fawned upon him. He
won a beautiful girl’s wondrous soul. * A universe
was his. And then—Silence! Despair! Hopeless-
ness! The world forgot. The girl shrank from him.
Fate told of affliction greater than his own. Then
began the game of playing God. Came peace, joy,
a new love, a new, more kindly world.
The Tears You Shed Will Make
You Glad
I rt
Directed bu
"Harmon Weight
the Nissley
Worth.
' “Livestock development
nival eRttenttgl step forward
errantry can make.” _____
_ _ __ "You gentlemen of the Rotary Club
if THIHKRAYIIINRH SW■•h
ai inumuAi uinun
- .. - » | slst your county fair Is ohe fmpor-
| tunt method of iiiwlstnni e. I can
With » varied and attractive pro- I :‘1?^^rh^n“Kate*e^^Mhtt
„ jrram featured hv muMeffl nwwmerk t-Dennm County. Judging frotn "the
. ; anti talks on matters of public Cpa- ! geutral excellence of your County!,.] T
I I <---rn, Thursday s Rotary luncheon at fair TL. friendly ‘rtvatry there in- sold
‘'..■'j i*" one of the culoated la Worth while and Its1-------
Interesting recently held. In ; betiefitH tire abow n In the excellence
of President BralleyC of your dairy cattle exhibit. V...
1 aged cow class shown here today la
not excelled by that of th£ State
Fair iiT Dallaa thia fall.
“Metter elrea nre eaaentfnf to any
Invite MethodlRt r-kaferenre !
(»n motion of Wrtt C MrTTntrg-, ’
nistvr of the First Baptist Church. 1
the Rotary Club took pnrt In ]
liivltlnr the d'- rt aesHlon of the i
Texas Methodist conference,
now In session at Sherman, to hold j
its next annual xessoin In Deaton. ■
A- «|Uartet of J. W. Pender. F. H. |
Farrington. C. J. Jackson and John fl
B ‘ Crockett gave one number and |,
an encore.
' ' ’ I
Curtla Talka About Fair
<> M Curtla w^» Introduced
Chairman Fowler as on„
taken a leading part In the devil- chairman today,
opmi llt of the county fair, as tn any i go *
other inoveineiit for the good of
Denton and Denton Coufity.
"There are Juat three
aourc-s of wealth."
"Fisheries, miiica, it,,
f us are dependent on ths prosper-
ity of th,, farms, and It is not only
incumbent upon us as a duty to do
-regardhiK the | w hat we can to encourage and help
Ext- iiaion work | the farmer, but it ts ria -Veil a con-
to the Boys' Work trlbution to our own material wel-
<Jji motion of Wylie -
waa ordered unanimously S
that a telegram be dent to the T«.-x- Q
an dvl-—^JioTT"at the Amertcan Ia-~ I
i requesting their ■
support of Colonel Alvin M- Owsley I
r- - Xatfonnl Commander of the Le-' ■
glon. ■
FIGURE WITH US ON HOUSE WIRING
We can give you a first class job at reasona-
ble prices. We carry a stock of electrical
goods for every need.
In buying your bread here you are assured of
its freshness and wholegomeness. Baked daily in
our own new bakery, where great care is taken to
guard against any impurities, f . _____
serves your patronage.
DutinctiLre Productions, inc.
prejentj-
George Arliss
The Man Who Played God
~?rom a ploy by Julej Ccke/t Goodman founded on
Goucrarneur story of the same name
J
For yourself, mother, we have a nice brown kid
or calf oxford, low rubber heel that will make your
feet easy and give good, long service for $6.50 up.
; K»(t. a wing no ng led
hiM a duet. “iRmile,” hy
_______ ‘ * dub, <h-o _
Mr. I'psh.iw "nd QJIs Fowler, asked that guests
el»l uh liuv- pr-gciit bu Introduced. They
- 1 Shelton of nalneavUl-
SruuuL; Clough UpaiuMub of
- -...... Ofc . with Dr, p. Lipscomb;
Ueorge Fritz with J Fr-d Rayzor.
I CungrcaSmati W D. I'pahaw • of
Gt-orgbt. and I, W Peridor, Denton,
with WIH C. McClungt R. R. Walk-
er. Katy agricultural agent; Dul-
ins; J W. Ridgeway. Nissley Ci;oam-
cry l’o., and Mrs. Ridgeway. Pur t
Walter Burton. Arlington
nau. Jack KvgreU. County
atlon agent, Ilcnton. and
...» B Lillard. Arlington bog
- breeder, with Paul Dunkle; C. J-
i t....v_.._ ••.. Normal College w'Ith
ttt; E. |1. Farrington I ->f
..... Normal College with R. -M it1'
Mitchell.
A communication
Rotary Boy Scout
was referred to the
Commit te.
times I J1."01'!4”
iH-ver * Tackson of Uje ;
j 3ohri B Crucke'
of l he Normal
t
j
mninrtrti i
hm plcu
r ut.irlf •• V.UIIIIIIII It
j Smith It
in Ever}/
■ hrrm “ ■ -■
i Curtis told of the growth of the
] fair, vthlch he -’ObRldereil a r—al eon
tribution to the advancement of th,
I county. I^ist year, he aahl. f-irty,
by I Pen" w en* .enough to handle all ttiel
a t,., hn,t , koga. Thia year It raqulru.* lag. 1
wno nao | —Wp «h(,uIrt take the n(tvlce of th.. ! -
‘talrman today," he concluded, “and
j. to work right now planning for i , ,
the 1923 fair and begin arranging I i,-.,1;.!, , '.‘“‘j1’
for permanent buildings." ■ > ’ ' ’ - *"
LNge Crowd Hears Wm. I
Upshaw On "Americanism" i
(Continued from I’uge one)’:
. lugtltutIona, Coca-Cola -ind tin- K--
Klux Flan, do 1 took Mr Simmons [
16 the In vesl Iglt-Ing <->mn Ittee and
Introilii-’ing l.im I told them ti.al I
, <Hd no' kn< w whet he luid be--n
doing Ifebind eh Red .loi is, out luaj
J-knew him a» a man of- HierUne
• haraeter, of gplendld -noral •'tarn-
r ItYA. as a hero of the KparYls i-AY-ier-
i«4an war and 1 itntw tHiit he could;
not do nnytmng unpatriotic or ai
e0 al the bent li-lon-otit of hl* ebuu-i neatness An amotions of
t»y. I further ntiito.' that 1 knew land which auf'
he had glvet hr.an his <»wr puek-tt deep and eftac
money lot pour negro institution*. I the audience, wl..
• and by his <-wn tnrtu.-n- e prevented j Of Georgia spoke
r the mobbine, of a n- kr<> g-lljty .of , student aind facu
u crime" He thin toll of -1>, V..—
mon*' appcaianie before the com- day, morning,
nintec and hl* eltci ttvy Jetense. nt.d Mh llpshg
quoted Sum Usjbiirn a, s i.ylng <>t I'resident Bn
the occnstnn “IT SHnmottK ta»d ymtvf fy of hfs lif«
opened the doors of the chut,
When he got ,|t rough aomebo-ly
.. ve g<H hurl In I be rush
. . In "
"About th. only thir g 1 did." cor.-
‘ .'4r. ";;:.4xv . to Intr. -
ample resolution to the ef-
t since one h» . r< i orgaii-
'n the eountrv was brought
vesiiguilw.. tiM*t '{.''oy so-
ization In trie ouhty fHut
with lii><lt-Houn<ili n | .y*’® his expet.sea through
• ■ In va-m. • I V0”** ; *'c WHN t<* < <>nKrvH,4
ia lih jv : *rofn the Atlanta diNtjlct •>( Geor-
® ® 1M&. Im the fohndvr and <*di-
l Eidii t °* Th* Holden Ane and eon tri -
I butor to other magazines, and Is
| perhaps beat known ax an advocate
I of prohtblth.n being vice-president
i 9^‘Yk* Anti-Saloon League of Amer-
, tea.
—- ;.....
preaident." Upshaw characterized
Dr Bruc©, and explained that he
and Dr. Bruce were fellow alumni
of M-rser University, “The foot-
prints of Dr. Bruce at Mercer are
Mill bearing fruit." he stated “HIH
influence Mill live.*."
IMr.^ducing hjs theme for the ad-iolnety ' ner
drf*MR, th»* Np*'Ilk( f HMid, "SkJppOM** W- b**• net©•sxsIr. *.
think together this morning about
making the most out of
life One eRM.-ntlal is to get the
FRANCIS CRADDOCK
; GROCERIES.
Your pounds—-but
v is away
ducts
er, he has hauled
difference his gon-- buck into ...
building up the fertility of his farm
The whole crux of the situation
------------- ,--- as I see It Is—Haise feed and fex-tj !
country and the up- | it to livestock of some sort on the
---------- -------7
uxe of I
PRINCES:
Y . wax I
TODAY AND TOMORROW
Lester C uneo, the smiling daredevil, in—
“TRAPPED IN THE AIR
| A story of aeroplane adventure chock full of
love, romance and thrills.
Also RUTH ROLAND in -
•THE TIMBER QUEEN"
1 ,uio Top, Curtain and cuah-
TODAY and
TOMORROW
DANGER’THKILLS! j|
^ACTION! SPEED!
H0LC> W5T TO V0UR' 5EftT YOU JEE
k^jP/THEU/lllidm fbx'U/ONDER MELOORAPTfl
TMf FASTMAIL
m / j f honest iyiotiGn picture *. "
--------------- - <- ■ . ■ •
* * 'k > y !'['
.... _______________■------ ■ ' ■ ■ 1 —imi'.-.-: :
. < —■—x .......,-----idu-ss*
• -..j /■ 7 .v”- , A
7—
Love of the Genuine
He dyfelt at ab.me length on what
he termed n third esswntlal to be
cultivated, which was lovn of the
genuine. In answering his question,
. What la worth while. What may 1
.j let go? fie quoted ‘7 may let irb
hum everything tuat 1 «ui nut uu..
ry with me Into the life eternal. 1
may jet go pretense, for there are
l no ahama hi heaven" - You muxt ho
| genuine yourself,” he said ' You
I must be w hat you pretend to be,
! else you will he shoved back
I your fellow students u, folli.. ,
your fellow men In Hfr, a" the conn
terfelt coin Is shoved back by t
teller In the bank.” Mr. lips
quoted Preaident Garfield
Ing sgld the most jylovli
caused him to grow trr
J ncss ,wm ths
would have to
through life.
"A const tiering purpose" was the
next essential prescribed by the
"peaker, and Impressing his point
he said. "1 should like to have this
I impressed on your minds ns I tried , • .
| to Impress It on the minds xif three I Worth.
million school uhildrun Ui Amoriem/' I P'lhlLry Ui
and he asked his audience to stand I Demonstn
and repeat with him several
the motto;
“Let nothing discourage;
I Ident Taft, wh<f refused It,
J l-e had been tin nnti-prohibltioliist;
,,| T"T.
11 jatas aiw’*
l pshtvz closed pls iiJdr.-Hs with
I1'. b"J.1 f°r ** Ylod-fearing, reverent
AmerleHHlsm,” and refc-rtd to llis
late wir us an example of eultut.,-
.it I Lb c|ln>ttx, which, •uum.Iih; u God*
• rHh ion, h« waid, wiu th*
« llm tx >f listi buriB*n.
|*r«»teil»ilIon Ntt*l fsuie
Taking up another division <>t
L .theme, (he -peaker stared that
must have hot only a- LtTcTTYgettJ'
and loyal Ameri- unis-n. bu- aiso «
sober Antert-'imsni. Air 1'p-b.iw
Wm uarticuliiiy f -r-'iul ln*f»r.
sealing this phase - I his subj-xt.
for he has I'-ng been known as »n
advocate of prohibition, and is vice-
president <>/ lite Antt-Aa-OM, la ague
__of Anit rica- Ut. aiaiiu Li at aoiua an.
sayh-g the prohibition 1 ght < title I
with the rat1 ilea ti.rti of lite I Sth
.. .(imendmet t; out In brlt.git.g up ar-
guments to tett,l- ll ,-s he charged
that there was rec--nt!\ held
Chlcaro a -.It eting ot th-- "atitul-
Itamated. con-'citirattcl and unfunn-
gated liquor l.itereMt <<; tie whole
country" for lite avoWeil |iur|M>k«
•t .-ptulrng the iM'li am- ndrnet <
That the litoior iin-r-st- oft-t ■'
tTiarles Evan Hughes -ne tin
of a million dollars to 1< id
light, thd quoted tie bl'tm
lalinclatlon given l-y Air II tgl'».< n- , He
refusing the offer. A st -ill..t o.*- ' ---
rer. he acid, was madv Hr r«-pt«e-
.Mr. * I'pshaw
In
. fearing spirit,
he earnestly de-
Austin or In Capitol, HHl in W .iah-,
i::„’. .... -
wind if It _ _________ ________
sterling character of th,.
"When I was In rehool.'
tinned, using a .........
for hts explanation, — "a mark
—-4- cent wns conntrd,
hundreds w?Te rurfi, and i atn sui
that now If one makes a grade -
than nlnet- “ ‘ • • ------
given a
; self. But wlt- n the supreme test f->r
I H><^ everlasting life comes. Gb.l will
,...... ' ‘ “'J per - ent < r 99 999 per j
-cent, but an absolute <,ne hundred 1
per cent. And it is only by the im- |
measural-ls grace and goodness of
1 the Great Teacher that we can have
I a card that w ill pas*—written in Hts
. ---- blood the one hun-he-l |wr cent
necessity fur success, ’era.I- amt the wot '
his recipe for his po- I Earth to Hegven.
Developing Livestock Interest |
Jerry Fowler, program chairman. I
was given charge of the meeting I
and Introduced J. X\'. Ridgeway of >
--— -” —■ I! I —
with R.
ng force that , J‘!C-
Ito hts great- t Jt- ,Ac-
knowledge that he j 1 ul;»a,
live With himself '
%
Georgia (yujrrxxiunn Guest IF INTERESTED
At Illium D. I’psb.uw. member of, , t , .
Congress from the Atlanta, (lu , dis-I 1H Dtiyilljf or Selling prop-
trlct, was introduced by his host, CTty here OF ill the KoSSC Oil
I Will M-t’lung ('pshaw got anti field Write mn hern r.r llw.r.,
held th,, close attention of hfs i ?’, WI,IU' n<-*e or J here
hearers tliruout his talk, which Of telephone 633.
J. W. HOKE
A
ter at humorous stories and Lnter-
.----1 ear-
reverence,
a
on
I* cBsip | nestaess pi
1 knew-and which -
____ puck-H deep and <.
institutions, 1 the audience.
tickled
ling to
to feed
by John Cro®l
Club, <
asked
uxivd They were: | t_. _
Shelton of Gainesville with j perltv
■viiii >111 * L ’ I <111 v It tin tun >m Ii ‘1 f t l*»e J 1 <1 • >
; I fiends on the ______________
the best sties obtainable.'
ler states have team-j ranged from humor to pathos and
I experience that they was given an ovation wh'Tt he con,
__— ---------o take from I eluded. He paid ter ■ • —
ths son anU put nothin* back, and tart Spirit which.
i this uewk*r country i th# L . ___ _____ .......
-r ------- --- ------ ItfRwon—the ear- j Hplrit. whlt jj has made in life a i
.lt»tr_t.hf better Ij win b#. ..... leity of a quarter ot a million peo-
Here s u concrete, example that 1 ide from a town of bujooo and made
appealed to me and It may perhaps It, In addition, the best known city'
appeal to you. Twelve bushels ut of Its size In the country. “Some of!
on an average, fed to hogs, | you may not know where Atlanta
will make HH> pounds of pork. The , Is," he said Jocularly 1 11 tell these !
of Coca-Cola I
Rotary. the'KIuanls ami the other 1 I tJt ■, I
di^t^n^ j I KULLEf
the country fur doinw m m
tr,1;;? Jhey've got the^.v
ll-ute to the Ro,
- -------be said, wag «>l -
eknrnr+er the AttrnntJ +
Ich has made In hts life a !
fgr«. _Tbe. Old,
ed from hard ________
cannot continue always to
Riakeway asja. fit is up to gs'lh
--A—, “--i to learn tlje same ler----
l**r --v, icily ui u. ,|uui iut ui < minion
concrete, example that I ide from a town of iojooo end
to you. Twelve bushels uf
corn on an average, fed to hogs, | you may not know
will make HMI pounds of pork. The I Is," he said Jocularly,
man who h*uls away the corn hauls, I that It Is the home ..... ,
.nds Off his Plath <x and Lius Ku, KI ax .Klau.". lJ.paUaw-4-^
----- ------------- ,1 at S0c<he bush- | said the spirit as typlfi. -i in the
our county ] el. The same twelVc bushels of corn. R MR.-. -■ ■
I ak pork. not only nets ’he I civic organizations
grower more roomy-—tint packers were furnlajilng a
* ■ -- , »-—- f ............
hauling things and Illustrated how
with a new story _______ .....
boy's frog that “was slin|-lv tl
TO irettth” When the boy. fiilll
find cither worms or fibs
his pet, f.-d hlrnh a cat-rf-lll.ir
In eltoong the tiCorgia tlopgreKs-
ma’n-pald a glowing tribute tn th-
| fife and memory of the liite J.m lan '
■■ M I ’arrlsh former <'ougressman
1- 1 from this -liefHet whom be held up
IP as lib exemplar of all that Is good
In citizenship and e-rvice
A- boll yeil-r tit nre welt-Tnf-WlfT
•"nd -n hotel, who hns rec- nt'i
ired, eonfe-si'd to hiving recel
4Ui>Ht iH »lift
...Hi-...'
STOCK CO
125 PEOPLE
> e
THEBE NEVER WAS A LOVER
LIKE
RODOLPH VALENTINO
THERE NEVER WAS A PIC-
TURE Like
"BLOOD AND SAND"
I iff
HI
5 g- a* s S-
S2.fr£
c
? Fl
X..J
• 1 *4 ' ii-’i
u 1 ■ i i
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 58, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1922, newspaper, October 20, 1922; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1237936/m1/3/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.