Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 72, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 6, 1923 Page: 4 of 8
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nFXTOX RBCOHD-CHRO1
—
SENATE PROBES SALE OF $3,000,000 OF
Christian Church Tuesday
VETS’ BUREAU SUPPLIES FOR $600,000
1
lb
“ WASHINGTON, Nv.
committee
latter part
Ml** Henryetta Carter of
low
Thij, rule sometimes leads to mis-
24 Men In Lewisville Band
Home
w
i
’I
i
were
I
sheep
w as
He
ads surely do
wo
All
we
prices
\XE
I iu I wi
ofti lais
$1UO chasing
hut I spent
■ ■ :n
t he
that
ith
and
dispatch
WE NOW HAVE EXCLUSIVE
May
$1.06,
I
Ask for them when trading at either the
V. W. SHEPARD
cash sales ami accounts paid on or j
Day Phone 148.
Night Phone 48.
HAMMOND & KIRBY OIL CO.
h
Re ad the <’hiHsifw‘d A«is - -H« * it 11
Z<
OLYMPIA CONFECTIONERY
AT LOW RATE OF
PAYING HIGHEST
INTEREST.
EXTRA SPECIAL
f
MASTERS & ROBERTS
MARKET PRICES
Younger Men's Suits
6
Buying This Week
h
Sizes 34-35-36
ALVIN SILVER
X
and Next for
Thanksgiving
/
Shipment
1
TURKEY
and thickness of pure
Special lot young men’s suits, values up to
silver to resist the hard-
)
MARKET
est wear, in the Luxor
dis-
Pattern,
,8.
on
now
play.
for
Nothing
ATTENTION TURKEY RAISERS AND DEALERS
FOR
>1
nrr table.
<»f
I n
wa«
GUTS THAT LAST.
Watch Our Specials This Week
W. J. McBRAY
itr.
JEWELER.
i
B. H. Deavenport & Co.
I
■ Phone No. 523
DENTON. TEXAS.
, •
BE
L.......1
42
■j
hlAI. t 'teA tev'i
i !■— ——we m———
vlY '*xT~7m~ ‘ .A
I
I
/’violation of
i
J/
The “long life” plate,
which is heavily plated
with a uniform weight
On S. & H. Green Trading Stamps for
Filling Stations in Denton
Funeral Director
Licensed Embalmer
Post Office Filling Station
or
Tourist Filling Station
L. - ■
F; CHICAGO, Nov. 6
I closed unchanged
Shippers bought hug-, at IO to 20c
---. The
calves
y earl-
son
here
of
he
his
■BIRMINGHAM AXE MURDERS
STH.I. I NSOI.VED
ues and
* recti y.
114 Raley Bldg.
Phone 242.
th., paper to find it, for
read it first."
named
outside
6.—“That’s
Frederick
Wanamakei,
Lu
I
McCain
the si
square
J. A. Elder place
south
stroke
ago
be-
was
t here
in-
his
to
in
did
■
I
Is
at
he re
con t in -
Auwt in
game
for
11
; I
- V-M
/ ’
Wew8i
m Brief
few hours af-
• rs ga\e littlw
east
this
W
as
INSURANCE
W<- write Fire, Tornado, Hail, Life,
Automobile. Accident, Bonding. In
fact all kinds.
At this season you should have
full coverage Tornado and Hail.
W. T. HAILEY & CO.
Telephone 76.
Al
t a 11 -
w et -
ha*
I.
1 he
18.78
IS.58
lb.35
17.U4
nkxa
18.83
mix-
com-
lecture from
Wvdnesday
9:30,
well
Ak-
un»
last
w ee k
P
I
RUSSELL-GRAY-JONES CO.
The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx.
Our Fall Clearance Sale
STARKEY
B ROWSWOOD.
Starkev case
wi......
■ fund
Presby-
Austin
-M e x In-
Au -11 n Col
Cliff
Id I,..'
7 u
A. J. COMMONS PRODUCE CO.
DENTON, TEXAS.
219 Blount Street.
. . -tt
J.....
NEWS OF THE SICK
Walter Wnrschhng, norh of Don-
ton. ih . is ill of: malarial fever.
Wylie Tucker, is »’ck at his home
on West I’rnjrie Stareet.
I.. Bruc, 212 College Avenue, its
ill.
Mrs. J. I.. Stringer is sick at her
home on Bolivar Streit.
son. Clint.
Tatum ‘Were
prettier
your Thanksgiving din-
$21M
calling for government
sale of liquor will curry
majority of between 35,000
ooo.
Is It Your Time to
Entertain?
day included
program:
George <
Huff man,
W.
w.
Allowed on all <
before* the I (it h of the month (except where commer- ;
vial rebate is given.)
League
ordering
in any <>,
forwarded Tiif.s.lay morning
id.-nt .I. Tied Jtayzor of the
Asroeiat mn reading:
out of bounds, he may save delay
’ 21 once
the place from which the
______. Further
provision Is to the effect that if it
bo discovered that the first ball is
not out. of bounds the first shall
I continue in play without penalty.
' Tl.ijj rule .sometimes leads to mis-
taken play, arising from the cir-
cumstance that a player who has
made an unsatisfactory shot fUAy
de Elm
k. end
|. children
nine here
li«e Ok* Phyne
Crawford
a
Or la
La wann
Ok Lahoma
farmer sent j |
weighed lb pron,ln,.nl
more ♦h«»»
and
Tidin</B4i
In
L. Bail of the
f the Teachers
with a Selec-
to
I Ath
refused
. game I
t he
off!-
Ih» furc-
of
last
her
A
h n d
W I
Culp
, w
. M.
exas.
for business. See us at brick building just
Bros.’ Gin, next door to Freight Transfer
I
Local Corn.
h , .Good corn,is quon d livre at from
MnMilf *T 80- per bushel.
I
c;.
y,
i’r
■ it.* I
L
.^.00
... ( i 11 i i v i» i i v v i n ,
i North I largely depend
Munday | cessfully
Speer took his al-
humorous replies to
i and wittic[sins nt
6
k i
Special to Ibecord-Chron i<-)e
LEWISVILLE, Nov. .—Chas-
Coull of Dallas has been engaged
Instructor and director of the Lew-
was
I 24
and
'••••' ....... - ......... „...
till a starch of five minutes shall
have been made. This dearly pro-
hibits tli>- good riatui cd custom of
off-hand declaration that "we’ll call
that out of bounds, for It's a rotten
phot anyway." If permitted in the
"friendly game.” thia may cause
j < mbarrasstnent in contests of more
furmul ib.racUr.
Not League
:d. cl. g High
i I'il'IT of t II"
igue
DJ
let himself conclude that if the
jiall has pone out of bounds when
It in actually within playable ter-
ritory. In doing this he yields to
Hie natural temptaiion to procure
a second shot, to overcome the dis-
advantage of the first. This is
parti'ularly apt to happen when
the local rules waive the penalty
stroke connected with a ball out of
bout.ds, for the waiving of this
penalty causes the player to lose
only his original distance rathbr
than both stroke and distance. In
the book of rules there is a special
bote on this subject.
This note stipulates that If the
penalty stroke has been remitted
by local rules, and there Is any
doubt on tlie location of the ball,
| a player is not entitled to presume
th.it the first ball Is out o^ hounds
PARIS, Nov. 6.—Divorce decree
has been granted Mrs. Violet Kru-
ger Wanamaker against Rodman
Wanamaker, it in learned here.
10c per lb.;
cranberries 20e
cooking apples 30<a,43c
----
Nation |
Ttoek.-
Tuesday.
full car-
were
the lo-
We wish tt> announce that we will operate a Turkey Dress-
ing Plant at Denton, T
Now open f ’ ’
south of I ay lor
Company.
I//
-
—I
I
'<3
MWMWMBBT
I
• nd
Chicago Gpain.
-(Grain
to fractionally
| higher on the board of trade today.
Trading was extremely dull and lo-
in |
t hr l
there i I>enton
default with I
i
i
I
r
-
►
!>:
»'
w
?■
-
I
-
I
I
game*
League
show that
lili/t-f. ‘if --fcr-J—
‘Some of the farmers here spent
arqiuid $100 chasing after cotton
piettris, nut I spent 60c on
power in the
[rings coupled
>ned the pro-
city
8:30 and
hear as
“I moved to my present address on
I'e.irl Street about eight months ago
and since that time I have never
missed a copy of the Record ( hron-
i' le," said Mrs. M. E. Burger, com-
menting on the li-C. service.
EMPORIA, Kan., Nov. 6.—Geral-
dine Farra, opera star, is seriously
ill with a cold and has cancelled
dates to appear in concert since
the middle of lust week.
"A State paper carries
this morning about a 16-pound sweet
and says it is the largest
said G. W. Saunders
"I remember when Grover
was inaugurated Presi-
Ellis County
a potato
Do you wear one of these sizes? If
you do, now is the allotted time to get a real
bargain in a suit during
was new in the
DALLAS—The City Commi»sion
and others will go to Wylie Thurs-
day to inspect a proposed dam silo
for Dallas.
“I'm glad to see Roundabout on
| Page 1." said .1 L Wright Tuesday-
“It saves me trouble of locking over
BRIEF ITEMS OF SPORT
HOPPE TIES COCHRAN.
NEW YORK. Nov. 6—With a
sensational rtially Willie Hoppe de-
feated Jake Schaefer 500 to 447 In
the final game of the world’s 18.2
balk line billiard chumpoinship and
tied with Walker Cochran. He and
Cochran will play later in Chicago.
DALLAS—Oak Cilff crusht North
Dallas High 60-6
PLANO—Highland Park, Dallas,
defeated Pluno 9-0-
lambs
and na-
Texas
Nov. 6.—Futures
t>> 36 points high-
Futures
t..
Your insurance' requirements
differ from those of your
neighors.
Your property, being different
from that of others, should
be covered by an insurance
contract that meets the re-
quirements of the situation
You can only feel that your
insurance is correct when you
know that expert, personal at-
tention has been given every
detail of the contract upon
which-you’depend for protec-
tion.
You will find it profijuble to
applv the skill and experience
of this agency in analyzing
your risks, establishing val-
covertng them cor-
i "
<N'i ■■J —
___________________--------. ......'
/2s*! -
HIICI. K, TI KMHY, NOVEMI1I H <>, II
ISlJORTNEW3i
ORDER TO PLAY IN I KEEP YOUR EYE ' '
DALLAS PROTESTED
to
as far
crys-
S with lower hogs
” etalons market. '
/' Closing prices:
—December
^11.11; July $1.07.
Carn—December 75 l-4c; May 73
l-4e; July 74 l-4c
£'• -Oats—December 42c; May -14 l-4c.
Kansas City Livestock.
KANSAS CITY. Mo,, Nov. 6—Cat-
calves 3.000;
killing prices,
best
fairly
higher;
year!
|J
I charged
I Cisco May 5
on change of
uet| to the February
<>f absent witnvs.ses.
i ILgh
VVCWMQ j rd . Ut
inville Band. The first rehearsal 1
held Thursday night. There are
members who have signed up
purchased instruments and others
intend to join the organization lat-
er.
made f<>Y
$ 1,350,(Hl0
South
have
.1, G.
I’rtM-
1’u nd
^1
Following his decisive defeat at
the hands of Carpentier, J<»e Beck- i
ett, the late British heavyweight
champion, has purchased a home *
in Southampton in anticipation
tn* definite ret1reni<^i! from
ring.
ROUNDABOUT TOWN’ Xiwanls Luncheon Held at
. (Continued from Page One)
now ' than at any - time since the
war,” W. M. Brownlow of the
Freight Transfer Co.. -----J '
“One day last week 20
loads of freight for Denton
placed for unloading, and
cal shipments are proportionately
heavy. We are working twice as
many men now as we have been
for some time, and in spite of
that are
on some ears simply because
haven’t been able to unload all
curs on hand fast enough ”
Douglas said, "but now 1 don't I tiovv. I L
The West kind of gets a grip on in"
after one has lived there long an I
i'-ve been here during the ] ant lo
ilays of bad weather ami I eonfo
didn’t like it." Mi -. Douglas
in Texas Federation
Women’s Clubs 'vork.
which weighed lb
ir two pounds more than
repotted this week. Clive-
thought so much of the gift
he neknowledged receipt an.I
'comnured its size with the Demo-
cratic majority in Texas "
Vaughn, east of Denton,
first in this locality
’ a message from
Winnipeg, Canada, with a
receiving set, so far as
show, Cecil King said,
station in
night
and
f rom
nearer stations, he stated.
are |
working twice
as we have
in spite
having to puy demurrage
wi-
the
< ASE < ONTIN'I ED
Nov. t'r. The
in which- he
ith killing Pet Brown
last and v ent
venue was
t e rm
■ ot Jaimary.
potatoes
<-recn
f.c
on •
strinci beans
5c per lb ;
potatoes $1.25(0,1.50 per Fu ;
carrots
per
pe r
than Monday's close.
Md very steady, bus la open 25
joints lip. Wednesday.
18.60
18.35
is 11
17.83
15X3
IS. 66
i*
, I
potato
of record,"
Tuesday.
< ievei a nd
dent, an
him
pounds
the one
la n<l
t hat
Local Cotton.
■FWtddling cott >n was quoted nt 3J<’
today in the Equate bale
in the round bale Gotton;
It ^40 per ton.
--t
Local Produce
L; ' Poultry—Hen 13<i 15c, vggs 35
(%.40c; fryers turkejs
gkjjle butter 35c, gu,n<;<s |3 per
frees* he per lb ; dm ks
ss, per dozen. Packing Mock
b Fre«h
45r per peck,
peppers
4 '' ■■ 2..'A Sa "fyr
Hereafter
a certificate
! he even i
anything that looks
<' 1 ■ tf was not
I ii t <• r*-c h<>lastic
t.lVu’i.ils are only asked to
• hudulos (
t bo gume
scouted the Oak Cliff team during
its game with North Dallas High
which Oak Cliff won by n wrnrr
of 60 to 6.
Scholarship Society of 14
Members Formed at NTSTG 1
Four member* of the senior *Uh ------
at the Teachers College and
juniors, comprising the hignest 10
per cent of each class in schol-
arship standing, have been .selected jfl
for membership in a Scholarship
KwteCy; eegenvred tn the Tssehees
College this pear for the first time. Al
i Officers elected by the local ■
iety were Miss Lola Jackson of
Gladewater, president, Miss Nappy I
Floyd of Clarksville, vice president,
Miss Henryetta Carter of Edge- ’
wood, corresponding secretary, Tay-
lor Cash of Denton, recording aec-
rotary, and Mrs. Mabie Simmons
of Denton, treasurer. Members of
the society, besides the officers
named, are: Juniors, Willln W.
Floyd of Whitesboro, Mrs. Alice G.
Furnish of San ^Antonio, Miss Em-
’l
A
Aj
here visiting bls j
la |
pl.i.i ■ d
‘ I
other day. Gray pickt
animate reptile, put
pocket and went
frighten some
the women's
r—----Fort Worth LtvoMoek. /rr—j. Smycrx* tefr
If; FORT WORTH, Nov. 6.—With 3,-
I 200 head of cattle and 1,000 calves
I here Tuesday, the market remained
. about steady but the calf market
| was slightly sluggish. Most of the
I receipts lacked quality. Two or three
I-, Can of cow old at $5 50 Good < >.v
fc'<. made $3 to $3.35. Cutter went lit
f I225 to $2.7. Canners brought $17.5
___
higher. the top being $7 50.
KMachers market was mostly steady-
Us Ftea ware uneven but uvereged
■ atasdy
I Nothing
K house.
I Cattla—1
I ers S1“C
| J$3.5O®7.50; bulls
f fZCt’7; canners
I Ings $3.50(0.9.
g Hogs -Medium $7.40(<t;7.50;
f ad $7.25®7.40; light $74i7.25;
| mon $5.50(116.
Sheep and lambs—Lambs 10(<i12;
i" yearlings $8®,10; ewes $54*6; culls
$1(0.2; goats $1@2; wethers $6@
I «-$$; Stocker sheep $4@4.50; feeder
t lambs $9(a9.75.
w tin
in
to
the
here.
t he
m
NEW YORK, Nov.
news to me, Mrs. J
Tains, mother of Mrs.
said when informed of her daugh
ter's divorce. Friends of t)>e coup-
le, however, were not surprised.
H. Sullivan,
from classified
I >allas
ito
e. The
Oak Cliff
issued an
" to Dallas.
II ::h Athletic
.1 the order
the game of
hi
' j before coming to Dallas.
Scouted Dak Cliff
Co.u h Stanton took a few of the
i High players to Dallas
him Monday afternoon
O. L. Lewi* of Hebron and Mr*.
Florence Williams of Lewisville
married heie .Monday after-
1’eave J, G.
bis office,
were filed
January
March .
f.-^ctober .
S^-'fkccember
c Spots steady. Sales 10,000 Imports
. y 27,000; American 18,900 Middling
18.90. Good .middling 19 50.
New Orleans Cotton.
p NEW ORLEANS, Nov. r. — Fu-
F lures opened quiet 27 to 31 points
j- up; dosed firm
Open high low closing
»—---- 3S.7bdW.«i JKMW <M.+f,M oO
ireh - 32.66 .'43.75 32,60 33.50®65
ly ______ 32.57 33)75 32 50 33 4O(»50
ly ___ 32.10 33.52 32.09 33.05^13
t _____ 27.88 28.10 27.80 28.50flat
e 32.75 33.65 32.62 33.4464.50
Spots 125 up <^33.25.
Cotton Higher
l-A Cotton reached a new high (or the
K. Mason again today and closed from
KmhMO .to 110 points over Monday'^
Bjfeetus*. E. B. Norman & Co. wired C
I H Thomas & Company: "Owing to
P the continued strength of Liverpool
Sv'market wfc look for still higher
Kf. prices”
K' **’■
Late buying credited to short*
L brought a fractioinal recovery in
t (Wheat values and prices at the do.-e
E. ruled slightly higher for December.
fc Mther deliveries recovered their ear-
■ ller*lo»ses
■ • Corn displayed strength, closing
■ higher. December led in the advance
i tfile to good buying by a strong cash
K. demand.
f. Oats remained dull and neglected.
■ December ruled slightly higher
E while May closed at the opening
V- ; Irvoi.
■> Lacking of buying
I face of liberal
lower hogs
“Those classified
bring results,” said Tom Standifer
Tuesday. “1 lost an auto jack la it
week and Saurdny 1 put an ad in the
Record-Chronicle. About la minutes
after 5 o’clock a person called in 1
said he hud found the jack."
Plans are now
the campaign to
edueut ional fund '
ern Presbyterians
launclied, accord mg
Varner, pastor of 1
hyterian Church
will be u sell for
Presbyterian colleges
and a fund will al>o
byterian churches in
w here State educat nqial
tions lire located The
church is to revive Sln.li'iO.
Colleges to benefit from the
are Daniel Baker, Tvxm "
terian College for Girls,
Presbyterian Seminary, le
stitute at Kingsville,
lege and Presbyterian
Home at Files Valley.
TiWit parking sow« mnstlv 675'1'650;
I' \pigs weak; bulk 500(r525.
K^ohecp .Receipts 3,000
•bout steady; < olorados
1275; sheep strong;
rs 310.
Beeves $3.50@7.50; stock-
$3.506v6.75; cows heifers
S2.5(a/35;
$1.75(B2.15;
!»<• Jig
• a
h the
Dr.
Fir^l
This
ben uli t
to
*h
I »cntoh
Alberta l>« Vote* Wet
(’ALGA RY*, Albert a, Nov. C».
berth voted wet according to
illations today of yesterday's
dry balloting. The province
been dry for seven years.
Returns today indicate the clause
control and
by a
ind 40,
'1 ember
S' hool was nut
I nterschulast ic
ihcii how can
your Itague authorities even take
into « <»r.sideral ion last year’s game
briwecn <>ak (’lifT and Denton High
■ i hi-'-! ■’ It seems t •» us that you
■’hoijlti consider only League
■'« heduh’s in forcing matched games
i vkhi.h case Denton and Oak
1 1. 1T have never inet m a contest
'< hedulvd by yutir a i ociation au-
t horit ie
“Your re,coTit's
played by members
"" . ' , I la.-ii year and I f
,,rl'ha,'s (>ak c.'qf High
^member of the J
played at Denton
wdling to
othe rw: so
| viJ it led to
| “We ask
j vs a»: ♦ i n
I a i t on
b r, handi
ui’h Dai.
Mrs. W. S. Douglas of Fort Sto' k-
ton, who used to be Mhs Emma
Simpson of Lewisvi’le, is visBiir
relatives here. She and her husband,
who also formerly liked itu
rias- »and usetl to run the Dallas
sifted ads and got all the pickers 'tnived tram, have rv<
1 needed,” said J. R. Sullivan, 'from a trip abroad which they
speaking of result
adv e rtising.
_____________ 6.—The dis-
posa) by ths Veteran's Bureau of
more than $3,000,000 in nupplies
stored at Perryville, Md., for one.
. fifth of their original coat to the
Government was examined today by
the Senate committee investigat-
ing the bureau.
According to records introduced
in evidence by General John F.
O’Ryan, counsel for the commit-
tee, surplus supplies at Perryville
■were sold in the Tatter part bT
1922, by direction of former Di-
rector Charles R. Forbes to Thomp-'
son-Kelly, a Boston firm, at a
contract price average 2o i-2c on
the dollar of original invoice value.
The total paid the Government
by Thompson-Kelly for the 156
carloads of supplies they withdrew
under the contract amounted to
approximately $600,000. This price
waa fixed as one-fifth the eost of
the supplies.
13<i 15c,
16<ri !*<•;
35c, gu.mas
geese 8c per 1>> ;
per dozen. Packing
:r 18®20c per lb.
vegetables Iri h
r_____, tomatoes 15c;
15c per lb, cabbage
k lb.; lettuce ltf.q per head:
.. lens 8 l-3c per lb.;’ -----
15c ptr Up; turnips
aweet •.Abair.** si 95r«
K tarn ip 'green*
H Me per lb.;
ff-' T WM ■ •**%« V 4 rv er
AUBREY
received Tuesday stated
Worth boosters for
would be here during
neKduy morning and business
of Denton were requested to
them.
'The guests
besides those
<). Dav
of Gainesville,
<’. (oilier, W.
Loveless, Humer Curtis, W. C. jfa«r bemuse <j
Boyd ami R. L. Marquis'. |y‘‘'‘C having been played when Oak
Plans Being Made for Raising I
Presbyterian Educational Fund
List Kats Hart of ‘Dallas
^»r. " Frank Wilkinson
lily Kb m moved to JNewton.
*1* B. V. Stafford and daugh-
mu Jtabjr.-afid Mrs M. c. miiji-
•an were tn Dapton.
t Rav. Frank McClung has
from Oklahomh where
ipyi*fl t« the bedside of
Who la very sick-
(••bington (D. C.) Ken-
has derided to hold Its
•• daring the last
The weekly luncheon of the KI-
waniH club was held at the First
Christian church Tuesday at noon
with a good attendance and a
number uf visitors pi esent. Fred
H. Minor of the business methods
committee presided as chairman of
the day and introduced Judge John
Speer - as one of the epeakers.
Minor introduced Speer us a Ro-
tarian who had not been allowed
to piake hljk speech at the Rotary
luncheons and Speer took his
lotted time in humorous replies
his introduction : • ‘ “ :
the expense of the Kiwanians.
George Rucker led the club
a sing-song and S.x I
music department of
College entertained with a
tion at the piano, responding
an encore.
Elbert H<K»per reported for the
by-laws committee that the stan-
dard by-laws sent out by Kiwanis
International had been changed by
the committee io fit the needs of
the Denton club and they were
adopted without reading.
Mayor Henncn announced that a
letter received Tuesday stated the
Fort Worth boosters for jubilee
week would be here during Wed-
men
meet
ON THE RULES
BY DUNCAN CAMERON
(Based on U. 8. G. A. llules)
Playing A Second Ball
l nconsclous and unintentional
-------- _! a rule often occurs In
itn “friendly game” of golf In con-
rection with the legislation govern-
ing the territory known as “out of
! bounds." . The rule provides that
, If a player, after making a stroke,
[ considers that his ball has gone
| ‘ ' ----
I by playing another ball at
1rom t' ____ ‘
original ball was played.
’ 1.1.. »» Iu ♦ zs ♦ l» a* aML***a
Liverpool Cottos.
(Cotten quotations furnished—Wy
ths Denton Branch of ths C. H. >
MMHibM Cotton Co.)
1" LIVERPOOL.
opened steady 30
of
“f ' i>>
A
was i nt*
“pick up”
ns
tai
ords
heard
t hat
1 ween
a b I e t o
as from
Ftw yearlings fully steady;
and feeders
kind shade
feedeis 725;
,1”> Each hostess wants to serve some-
Why not serve |
chocolates, opera sticks pr after-
They're delicious.
L G. Dunn and
. W. O.
BIHMINGH.VM AYa, Nt.\ 5 —I’n-
liee redoubled their efforts today
In an attempt Io *«dvo the 4 $t v *$
la test assaults committed last
night in a downtown alley when
Jun.. Jo. i-1 L$'.naR<Uff|rF.7»o
man and \V. T. Conway, "0, white,
>verr victijns.
The w otnan dim!
ter the attack D<
hope of ('on way's
Tim death (,f the tvoni.ni brought
the ^number of all. y murders to
neven, while 1 » (baths have been
recorded ns a result <»f axe assaults
upon kei’pi rs of small shops i.n I
iiicinber.k of their families smm tht
b* ginning of the aw murder \\a,w.
.....
Jim Gray is mortally afraid of
...______ r____ srtakes. Be doesn't fear the rub-
Saturday af- I b»r kind, however, and that is how
' he happened to pick up what he
believed to be an imitation snake
a youth had laid on a showcase
at the Kussell-Gray-Jones store the
•’— ‘’’........: 't up the !-
it in
upstairs
of the employes
department. He
that, hut the fright wasn’t confined
to the women when the snake,
coming alive from the warmth,
| suddenly darted under some furs
| and began a game of hide-and-
seek that created much commotion
while it lasted. Hereafter Jim Is
going to require a certificate of
artificiality before he even gets
doze to anything that looks like
a *nake.
lie ia 1 s su pp<. 11 e< I
eon tent ion and •
for llvnton to
The Dent.
A telegram from
Tuesday stated that the
with Oak 4 I Iff had been
felted by the Interscholastic
League to Oak Cliff through re-
fusal of the Dtnton team to
play” at Dallas. Principal Cal-
buuu uf DeuUm High watt!
Tuesday afternoon that he had
offered to meet Oak Cliff here
or at any place named by
League officials outside of
Dallas.
Aubrey Newi
Iff AUBRET. Nov 1 —A .1 Ha
•f .Oklahoma la F-
ni other
Mr. M
and Mr.
Dallas.
Mrs Hugh
irned home after
kt., and Mu.
““ » were
< > a k Cliff
it SPUUIS I O US
consider only
in forcing matched
r Dwhlun
er inrt in
yuur a.Nbuciatiun
a .member of the .
!.<■ igue. The League
consid
of Inst
• to be
• place, the tele-
luejiday
I from
joyed very much, Mr., Douglas bai l. Djll*
“F\e always kept a lot in" Lewis-
ville in the idea of returning mi <■
day to Denton County to live.'' >!»•-.
Williams
were married here
KIQQIU Jufitice uf the
Boyd ‘Officiating at
ChargrM of affray *rrr filed in
Justice Court Monday against J. G.
Raney and W. M. McCain follow-
ing a fisticuff on the southeast
corner of the court
The house on the J.
near Corinth burned
ternoon, catching from nn unknown
cause. Elder (fstimated his loss at
91,35U on the house with $750 insur-
ance. Virtually all the contents in-
cluding household goods, some fai n
tools and feed, were lost.
\ letter with 15,000,000 marks pos-
tage on it was received fiojn Ber-
lin Germany, by Joe S. (iambill
Tuesday. The envelope bore throe
stamps of 5,000,000 marks denomi-
nation each
Mrs. Modena Wilson and aon, II r
bort Wilson, are planning tu open
“Wilson’s/’ their new store on the
east side of the square, Thursday,
with ready-to-wear, millinery and a
gift shop as feature departments.
Mrs. i Wilson has been with the Jar-
rell-Evana Millinery Department for
several years Announcement of the
opening date was made Tuesday fol-
lowing improvements and remodel-
ing of the store, formerly occupied
by the City Cafe- I
The end uf the middle finger of
MtttI—wtht—nrrj
off when he caught his hand in
a sausage mill at a meat market
here Tuesday morning.
John, ear-old son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. J. Mac lac hl an, 1311
Locust, fell from a fence
afternoon and suffered a compound
fracture i»l the lower left arm.
Mihm 04rtie Flow fell and cut
her lip following a slight stroke
of vertigo which occurred Monday.
J. W. Dunnagin. while NcufTling
with two other men Saturday,
tained a fracture of the rib.
Mrw. J. T. (rawford,
Denton, -who suffered a
paralysis several wtfeks
reported no better Tuesday.
Joe Bushey, injured in a car
wreck near Dallas over a week ago,
has returned to Denton. The wound
on his hand and the severe burn
on his chest are healing, his phy-
sician said Tuesday.
A temperature of 35 degrees was
registered Monday night and the
heaviest frost of the fall formed.
Frost is again forecast for tonight.
The rummage Hale held by the
Parent-Teachers of the Denton High
School Monday brought in $19. The
bad weather of last week prevented
the members from gathering as much
rummage to sell as was expected,
and they sold out in a very short
time.
gbjtft'inknie between Bert Fowler
Doug 1’cnry is as much of
a “uiu'hiding” match as it is a
golf" contest. They play much to-
Igether and each undertakes to I
I make life miserable for the other’
TTr^m“^eyro’^g-feen.....al! Thru .....the"!
course. “Some times I licka di»
bear a.nd some times da bear he
| li< ka *da me’’ tells the story of
| their contests, the results of which
1 on which more suc-
; “gets tht» goat” of the
other for the time being. They
were matched in the local tourna*
inent ami played their preliminary
match Monday hfteirnoon. Doug evi-
dently proved the Wetter “rawhider”
for the nonce, or something, fur
he turned in a victory over Bert
3 and 2, and has he.apt insult on
injury by refusing to let Bert put
in any alibi.
Formal protest uf the instruc-
tions (<f the 1 nterHcholastic League
for Denton High to meet Oak (Jiff
High of Dallas on a Dallas ' field
was forwarded Tuesday tu Roy B.
Henderson, director of the League,
by iho Di ii^oi High School
k’lic Association. Oak (’liff r*
to come t > I leriton for a
this week and instead took
matter up w.th the League
cicJ.s, atking that Dunton
<•<1 to play a> Dallas because
Oak ( lift (()■ .irig to Denton
League
'•‘r in
order
L tie—Receipts 1f»,000,
Vtry little done on
- -
K 1150; Stocker*
■ -active; good
t ether* Steady;
Kites' 750.
■ .iTHogs—Receipts 19,000; ’ mostly
E weak to ten cents lower to pack-
■ ers and shippers; pood 210 to 250
^ peend butchers 700; shippers spot
r—-nsT-fevnc- *mr« mnnttv 616,61'65.0-
ily Hay* of Texarkana, Miss Villa
Hollingsworth of Pilot Point, and
Miss Grace Ratliff of Lcwiavlllfl
seniors, Mrs. Ethel Blair Garrett
of Denton; Miss t'hnrlcie Ames of
Aubrey and Miss Vivian Huffaker
of Denton.
The Teachers College is a char-
ter member of Ktuto organization
| of honor scholarship societies
among all the colleges, promoted
last year by Dean Benedict of the
University of, Texas, who ha* been
made president of the organization, t
Mem be rs hip is limited .to juwief
and senior students Tn Mtina^a-----
colleges who have not lower than
a *‘B” average, But a further pro* 4
vision in that only 10 per cent of
each class may be member!. K In
making the check uf grades at the
Teat here College, 27 Ntudenta from
the two classes were found with
averages higher than “B”, and from
this number I he four senior* of
highest ranking were chosen and
the 10 juniors.
show all
of the
t hey
.School
League w hen they
i last year we are
t your decision,
fuel that we are
hearing.
favor 11 ism.
i fair deal.”
High would go against r i
ap at Dallas in a game '
w he re the latter j
its full reserve
me 70 players ready
u they 'were needed i
Dent on line int -» I
while playing here Oak
not b* mg all her re.
the team* wojjld be j
equal footing. Denton '
have not an noun r-
wiil be taken
• Da 1 l.'H-Dento’i lease the League refuses to act
(•4>nily retu? ri4‘d i favorably on the protest filed lues-
day tlmugh publ.shecl reports
1 k "j f<»! ’ov. mg i pct' ipt of
| order for I ’••ni on to play
w < re that I h ton w ou Id
of the
on the
and Judge
e, T. E.
W. II. Hooks,
Curtis,
lie I
!
| thing different.
1 phorolntnu nttor
__ dinner mints?
FARM AND CITY LOANS
IN i- alw.,ys I .
‘ 111H111 R i It 11,
| (’I I’f ' Would
1‘u! ves ' and
1 he
FRESH CANDY EVERY DAY.
SZZSEEXZ 339
■ • _
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 72, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 6, 1923, newspaper, November 6, 1923; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1239224/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.