Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 79, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 14, 1923 Page: 3 of 8
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We Work On Fords Only Now
We sell only genuine Ford—
DENTON STEAM LAUNDRY CO.
I
FOR SALE OR TRADE
“ODORLESS” DRY CLEANING.
if
T"
T“~
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It’s All a Part of Entertainment Week at
the Dreamland.
I
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We have installed a new
MARSHALL CONSTANT POTENTIAL
CHARGING MACHINE
SMITH-HAMILTON MOTOR CO.
220 W. Hickory. ' Phono 2BB.
ROUGH DRY
AND
FINISHED FAMILY LAUNDRY
SERVICE
FOR SALE-GROCERY STORE
In Denton
DOING GOOD BUSINESS .
...
Record-
A Good Buick Six Touring Car
I
Four oversize cord tirea. Motor in fine cortdition.
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Comedy Attraction— _
“FELIX COMES BACK.’’
Admission only 10c and 30c.
4i;J
' - HILL BROTHERS GARAGE
Phone 234. . • 115 W. Mulberry..
So bring in your Ford and let us repair or adjust it. It might
save you a big repair bill later on. w* —"
parts.
Which fully charges your battery in eight hours.
■ ' *■ ■^'oi
If .Interested write Box X, care
chronicle.
r ;
This ia the machine recommended by Willard.
——•— I
WILLLARD SERVICE STATION fl
(Formerly Triangle Battery Shop'.) x
M mighty photoplay of terrific drama, belaboring
ZA with all the impassioned fervor of a brand the
"*■ shame and deceits of this dizzy, jazz-crazed age,
where men and women go whirling and rushing to the very
brink of Doom to steep themselves in illicit pleasures.
• y. I
1 l
• J I
I l
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II
EE it and think—see it and absorb—see it and
drink in its fervent message to the race—see it and
tingle with the thrill of knowing what you didn’t
know before. Not a preachment—not a treatise, but a
whirling panorama of terrific drama.
PURINA CHOWS
IN CHECKERBOARD BAGS
More Eggtf or Money Back—Purina Hen
and Chicken Chowder.
will be delivered to you on the following baa
hens fail to lay more eggs when fed these Chows
directed than when fed any other ration, the mon
paid for both the Chows money will be refunded.
2 SURE WAYS TO GET BIGGER MILK CHEC1
Make More Milk Save More MOh
Make more miRt t>y supplying what is lacking
tho ordinary ration; Save more, ml” * ‘
tor yoyr calves.
. ... LONG & KING
Idistributors
--- I. n .....THrt- *v. ............■ -
WE NOW HAVE EXCLUSIVE
On S. & H. Green Trading Stamps for
Filling Stations in Denton
Ask for them when trading at either tho
Post Office Filling Station
or
Tourist Filling Station
Allowed on all cash sales and accounts paid on or
before the 10th.ef the month (except where commer-
< cial rebate is given.) <-
HAMMOND & KIRBY OIL CO.
~ I I—...... -.....iHfr
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KINDS
EVANS
•ON
IS
kJ'
er counties have since been formed.
PALACE
TODAY AND TOMORROW
ALSO A GOOD COMEDY
DREAMLAND
TODAY-TOMORROW
on
FARM AND CITY LOANS
AT LOW RATE OF
MORE
TEXAS
INTEREST,
MASTERS & ROBERTS
ir
♦
Phone 242.
Quarrel Over Partition ot
Property; One Dead, One in
Jail, Two Others Wounded
or
ia
In
ahoflt-
corn-
Marlin,
C. S. G*
Sheriff
from
Syrn
... Mr. and Mrs.
. DENTW WtCORD-CHRO:
Two stars in the greatest roles they
----- Story By the famdus Clyde
■ ]
killed
In
at Treece, Kan.
for the
and has
was
near
ha a
• r ■
is considered ur-
>n with the work
in the
FILIPINO LEPERS
BETTER FOOD
better
an
B
JL14 Rahsy BMg.
URGED TO EAT
TURKEYS
AUSTIN, Nov. ’4.—Because of the
depressed price of turkeys, incident
to large erop in Terns and other
status. State Marketing Agent Mc-
Bride urges Texans to eat more
turkeys this Thanksgiving and Christ
mas. There is a heavy cold-ator-
Ago carry-over in tb’e , East which
Wlso'ds affecting market p*l*M .Mc-
Bride said. *<•
A . _ ___
a*
L£X
' -M
$ w
DALLAS. Nov. 14.—M J. Muse, a
truck driver, died at a hospital here
Three 1
fools
GOtD^* FRrjtRTT
KING VIDOR'f PRODUCTION
OF. JOHN GOtDeG GRM1 pact WfttlJ
DBA AUTTt* VTXPNG
RSL Whk »tA*,o av
3RM4 *nRk cQAk wiManaau smith
DEMES KLAN
THE ROCKS”
ATLANTA, Nov. 14.—In a state-
ment issued here yesterday Imper-
ial Wizard Evans of the Ku Klux
Klan denied the* charge of Ernper-
W. J. Simmons that the Klan
“on the rocks."
PllINCES.
TODAY AND TOMORROW
MARY MILES MINTER AND TOM MOORE
in V ___
“THE COWBOY AND THE LADY*
A roaring Western round-up of thrills and real 1
romance.
have ever had.
Fitch.
price will be placed on milk and if
that price is not paid by private
concerns, we will of course use the
milk at our own station. In this
wey h will constitute a sort of pro-
tective measure. ,
“A party of dairymen and Dallas
merchants recently returned .from
the World Dairy Congress
cuae, N. Y.,’’ Gadberry added. “They
report that milk handled thru the
association there nets producers a
much better price than they receive
in this section. The members there
are better organised, however, and
before we can receive the full bene-
fit* of a dairy association we must
build up a better spirit of co-opera-
tion"
The society here has about 153 —
members, Gadberry said ■ They now
own a co-operative feed store and
are installing a new feed grinder
at a cost of about $1,500, which will
do custom grinding as well.
Economy and Beauty in the 1
IRONTON
Bunsen Heater1
IRONTON’S Bynaen Burner* I j
save gas. In a surprisingly 1
abort time the room become* 1
warm, because all the gas ta J
* turned into heat, and all avail-*
able heat distributed evenly i
through the room. There w
no wastage, no odor.
Wa can show you IRONTONSsuiMcl J
»-J
HARRIS-KOENIG J
HDW. CO.
Men pass to grentnesi through
the portal of humility.
Ambition means
forethought; that
afraid of planting
you know you
fruit or
■a sov. .c __________________________
Dallas Man Swings at Toirth Committee to Lay Out West Negro Forger P«s» $48
Slips, Misses, Heal Crashes
Against Sidewalk and Is Dead
r 4hi» unusual and informal snapshtff shows Governor Pinchot of
Pennsylvania and wife, taken at ths recent dedication of the Roosevelt
House in New York. The governor was Roosevelt's intimate friend.
out that group psychology can be em-
ployed in this connection, as no child
likes to be thought different from
his fellows, and can drink milk with
(he other children in school when he
could not possibly do so at home.
Miss Carey urged that the teach-
ers devise games for teaching health
to the children and make report to
the organisation, which is in exist-
ence for the benefit of the children's
health. She stated that no program
has been put out by the organiza-
tion that was not suggested by soma
teacher who had tried it out.
The speaker i ’ “ ;
point of the fact that the teacher
must play the health game by the
rules strictly, “for anaemic, worn-
out teacher can put over a health
program for the children," she said
She stated that the Parent-Teacher
Associations can be ef valuable as-
sistance to the health teaching in
the schools.
■______________________________________________•
MARLIN. Nov. 14.—, Walter Tln-
kerg. 35, is aean, Andrew Didner,
52, is in a Murlirt hospital with a
wound tn hts right Titp, and the
small son of Mrs. T. Rabrokcr,
lYMM TEIMGIMOI
Emphasizing that it is the duty of
the teacher to teach .health to the
school children, Miss Margaret Ca-
rey from the New York headquar-
ters of the Child Health Organisa-
tion, addressed the teachers of the
city schools and a number of pa-
trons and others interested in health
education at the study hall of tho
High School building Tuesday after-
noon< The lecture was Included in
the regular teae^iers* institute for
the afternoon, which later ' included
a tecture by F G. Jone. of d. j? A.
Miss Carey gave a brief review of
the origin of the organization she
represents, whjch grew out of the
American Child Hygiene Association
for babies and the Child Health Or-
jmni^aYton for school children which’
were combined last January into the
Child Heitith Organization to include
all children from infancy through
school .days, not Omitting the all-
important ages of two to six years
neglected before.
Concerning t,
rules in the schools,
said it devolved
grade teacher to
to form health hi ,
youth. She stated that as formerly
taught physiology and hygiene wero
dead, as they were not made to apply
to the children themselves, but to
something impersonal and apart
from reality. “Hygiene was a sys-
tem of don’t*,' she said, adding that
too much oT’khe education is of a
negative nature.
She urged (hat the teachers not
leave too much to the doctors and
nprses, for “one visit per year from
a doctor telling children -they should
brush their teeth every day will not
form a habit among them. Not even
periodical visits from the nurse can
do that The teacher herself must
apply these health rules every day."'
The need of scales in every school,
With periodical measuring And
' J was one of the emphasiz-
ed points of the lecture. Miss Carey
teaching of health
the speaker
largely upon »he
teach the children
mbits in their early
ry of Sanger reported
to Sheriff Swinney late Tuesday-
that he had been the victim ot
a negro check artist who cashed
an alleged forged check
sum of 548 about N<UL.XQ
since disappeared. The 'Week
drawn on J. W. Stone of
Sanger for whom the negro
been working and was made pay-
able to Ernest Nash. Gary and
the deputy sheriff at Sangel
brought a negro named Tom
Montgomery to Denton with them
an.1 whom Gary identified as be-
ing with the other negro when the
check was cashed and a charge
of forgery was filed against Mont-
gomery Wednesday morning.
No trace has been foiimd of the
negro said to have signed his
name as Ernest Nash. Sheriff
Swinney said Wednesday that he
thought Nash was the negro's cor.
rect name though he has been
working around Sanger under the
name of Lewis Smith. Swinney
said a negro named Ernest Nash
was wanted in Oklahoma on a
forgery charge under circumstances
similat, to those in the Sanger case.
The Red .Cross membership drive
under the county chairmanship of
W. E- Smoot and city chairmanship
of Jack Christel,, is m continue un-
til Thanksgiving and it is planned
to solicit further when the weather
permits, as it ia diffffiffeult to get
thru the work during the rpins.
Voluntary contributions of about
$10 have been revived by Christa!
since Saturday wHbn the drive be-
gan, cl9*inK *t that time with 515
TrtJrk has _ . - ,
the Teachers College campus, but’
this will be done with more favora-
J. W.
for the
PIONEER SHERIFF DIES AT SAN
ANGELO.
SAN ANGELO, Nov. 14.-4. W.
Johnson, 65. vice-president and
chairman of tho board of director*
of the Central National Bank of
San Angelo and one of the weal-
thiest cattlemen in Texas, died at
his home here early today of acute
indigestion and a stroke of paraly-
sis. From 1884 to 1894 ho was
sheriff and tax collector for Tom
MANILA—A better organized
kitchen service, with an executive
familiar with the science of diet-
etics at its head,
gent in connection
being carried on in the Culion
Colony for the relief of 5,000 lep-
ers there. At present the kitchen
service is deficient, according to an
investigator, the food being unbal-
anced and inadequately prepared
and served. With hardly no .in-
crease of the expenses of the food
suuply of the colony, the kitchen
service eould be improved if a ca-
pable dietician were placed at it*
head, it is said. The investigator Green County, from which 16 oth-
«• »wm aw waaws j < y -I found that there is need of thor-
made an emphafic m<Aher-in-law rrr tlie two men, tv bughly~cboked food for the lepers,
" ~ J served about five or six times a
day in small quantities.
Two Oklahoma Men killed
JOPLIN, Mo.—Frank Holman, 31,
and Robert B. Wilson, 35, of Fich-
er, Ok., were killed in a prema-
ture explosion In the Chub mine
that you have
you are not
a tree, although
may never eat it*
sit in its shade.
suffering from a flesh wound
the neck as the result of a i
ing affray in the Westphalia
munity, 20 miles' west of
lute yesterday.
Didner has been charged with
murder, it being alleged by offi-
cers that he fired all the shots and
accidentally shot himself as -.-be
pulled his pistol from his pocket.
The trouble grew out of partit-
ion of property, it was s^id.'
The shooting took place on the
front porch of the Rabroker home,
one of the three bullets alleged to
having been fired passing thru the
wall of the house and wounding
the boy.
Rnd Instructed to Report Check On 8.S. Gary it Sanger
*!**"**"* r tfMIHB
On motion parsed Tuesday af-
ternoon' tho County Commissioner*
Court Instructed the committee ap-
pointed some time ago to lay out
Denton West Highway from
the underpass on the Ponder-Jus-
.Li Highway to the county line
and to asses* the damages fpe
the land nee<|ed for the right-of-
way to report, at the next regular
meeting of the court.
The Court adjourned Tuesday af-
ternoon.
Denton Kiwanians Attended
Mayers' Luncheon in Ft. Wort
Mayor H. V. Hennen, Secretary
Geo. N. Rucker, E. L. Anderson
and J. W. Gray of the Denton
Kiwanis Club with L. Bailey a*
guest attended the mayors' lun-
cheon of the Fort Worth Kiwanls
Club held at the Texas Hotel
Tuesday noon as a part of the
Fort Worth Diamond Jubilee cele-
bration. E. L. Anderson conducted
the sing-song for the luncheon.
s yet been done on
ble weather, Christa! said.
Pen4^r is sub-chairman
Tcatners College section.
Fltt Local Men Attended
Dairy Meeting hi Dallas
H. C. Gadberry, secretary of the
Denton Dairying Association, B. F.
Chastain, D, C. Sockwell, G, H.
Stallings and H. P. Worthington re-
turned TuesdaP evening from* Dal-
las where they attended l,»® session
of the North Texas Dairymen’s As-
sociation. About 100 producers at-
tended the meeting, Gadberry said,
and plans for establishing a milk
receiving plant at Dallas were dis-
etna.
The plant which the Association
hopes to put in operation soon, will
care for the surplus milk of the
membership. Money for the stetiwn-
and 'for its operation until it be-
comes—self-supporting. will he. tifcj
rived from'an assessment of l-2c
a gallon on milk sold by Association
members. Th'" l®vy- ig said, will
produce approximately 5100 a day.
“It is not the Association’s inlen- <
tion to compete with private buy-
ers,” Gadberry said. “We simply wlw)
hope to build a plant to use surplus weiKhing
production. Howeves^ a^ demand e(j pOjntg
stated that “weighing day" should
be made an important occasion, and
that a chart showing the actual
Weight of each child compared with
what he should weigh should be kept
in each room as a pupils’ project.
She showed how a number of meth-
ods may be used to correlate the reg-
ular school work with teaching the
health rules.
She stated that the work done by
the elown Cho-Cho and the Health
Fairy sent out by the organization st
different times have had more direct
results than any procet they have
fYied* "When children hear Cho-Cho
they should drink milk to get
the baseball nine, they will drink
milk," she declared. She also pointed
•g'
Itl
the
nt midnight from injuries received hn
when he fell while fighting two mere
on a downtown street yesterday af-
ternoon. His neck was broken when
he fell to the sidewalk during an
altercation with Frank Stensky and
John Harris.
According to police reports Muse*
narrowly missed hitting the tw<j
youth* with his truck. They called
to him to be more careful how he-
drove, they told police. Muse stopt
his truck, according to their story,
and came back to where they war*
standing and swung at Stansky. Ho
missed his swing, slipt and his head
struck the sidewalk. At a hospital
it was found his neck was broken. a
NEED
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„ .- - ,■ - V .. „■ -
This
Emblem
’.tya '
“houses •
• **€?•* • * i
V’ f ■ r ' -
Saving by' Spending
Q^GOOD average value upon the
contents of a refrigerator is around
three dollars. * - —
These foods are perishable—subject
to bacteria growth when improperly
protected—likely to spoil when the
refrigerator is uniced.
' Is it or is it not good hoosekeeping to pro-
tect a few dollars worth of food with a few
cents worth of ice? Particularly when Fall
2 consumption.
That’s saving by spending. Let our year
'round service brio you save.
ALLIANCE ICE COMPANY
. JPJHOIVE 130
MEMBER NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF KE INDUSTHLIES T
163 T*W AFaftfogto CMsayo. /Afrwte
Your
Protection
4 - FOR SALE
ilflinrtot, 56x160, 1700 block, North Elm St?
rmsrf with small payment down. Four new
houses in samfrblock. *
. Also tw»*kJt8 in Fry Addition for sale ch^ap.
WKWMIWMMK '
North Elm Street.
■ K.
ir'
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KINO- VIDOR
WILLARD 8-HOUR SERVICE
-s j,
1
juMt Mrrmf
,GO<-OWYN PI CT UR1
CALL 32
I
MRS. BERTA I. STOUT
« »■».
For Good Holstein or Jersey Milk
We would appreciate your business during the month
of November. -
We deliver every evening.
THE B. & N. FACTORY
Invites you to inspect its products at any time. -
When you want House Dresses, Aprons, Night *
Shirts and Gowns ask for—
B. & N. Products
The B. & N. House Dress, Gown and Apron J
Factory is a Denton factory and IA. building its
future on quality work and materials.
Ask for B. & N. Goods and Patronize a j
Home Industry.
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aavrt ,vm *.» kiVllMPr . JI* ajii*J»J4jste*i
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 79, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 14, 1923, newspaper, November 14, 1923; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1238945/m1/3/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.