Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 207, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 11, 1936 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE TWO
TURTLE PACE
BARBS
FOLKS
ll
Inc.)
“Oh, baby don’t vote
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I
Mexico is a nation of wonderful
room, and let them
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^sasff1
BUY IT IN
DENTON
Jupiter!
. DICKSON-HAMILTON
I
look
I
I
Phone 211
Denton
4
Thus, most
Clare
by
PERFECT
'ALWAYS REMEMBER
CIRCLE
X---90
THE WILLIAMS STORE
Get Our Prices
I
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■
i
JUST
AMONG US
Announcement
Stover Funeral
Home
. 64
.184
A French scientist says the world will end in Sep-
tember, 1936. This may be the best solution.—St.
Louis Star-Times.
There’s nothing basically wrong in a country where
the outs can raise a million dollars to prove there has
been no recovery.—Portland Oregonian.
The League has been successful in a negative sense,
we are told. It has .certainly demonstrated the best
method of not stopping a war.—Toronto Saturday
Night. . ..
the important position
named state president.
CUT RATE AUTO
SUPPLY CO.
Telephone 323
EXPANDER TYPE
PISTON RING
of
call
....$5.50
.... 3.C0
.... 1.50
50
* *
German election song:
no, or maybe.”
MULLINS
MOTOR
PARTS
“Automotive Parts
Of Quality”
Oj
1
Il
j
b
J
4
I
MOTOR COMPANY
Phone 248 115 S. Locust
u
tho.se races where the voting is close among several
candidates.
In the city marshal’s race the vote was widely
scattered and the leader in the race, Marshal Knight,
did not get a majority of the votes cast. No run-off
was necessary in the city attorney’s race, as only two
candidates ran, but in the mayor’s race, the leader,
J. L. Wright, lacked 113 of getting a majority of
the votes cast.
One thing about Tuesday’s election should be grat-
ifying to a great many citizens, and that was the
large vote that was cast, the heaviest in the history
of Denton. The run-off election, Tuesday, April 21,
should bring out just as large, and. perhaps larger
vote.
15 years in Denton with
Southwestern Life Insurance Company
Consult me about your insurance problems
ELI P. COX
A policy for every need. Phone 430-J.
.....
FOR GOOD THINGS TO WEAR.
i 1/
-
J
Anti-Beck lawyers have felt that a majority of the
justices were susceptible to the pressure of their back-
fCopyright,' 1936, NEA Service,
Japanese women use their hairdressing to ex-
press mourning. About all many American women
could manage would be a brief sob.
* * *
That new glass,' elastic as rubber, makes it
rather tough for the host waiting for the signal,
“When!”
' Vignettes: O. Henry—the one I’m talking alqout—
is a Harlem boy who operates an elevator in a large ,
midtown department store. . . . Sailors tell me nobody | couraged to buy property^ for their
knows where the term “windjammer’’ comes from, j own ySe
riety—without organic basis.
Yet, it is believed that irrevers-
ible, that is, organic changes in the
body, also may be effected by strong
emotions. This we will deal with in
feeling influence blood pres- our next column.
4-1 Ji o4--willii 4-4 z-s-P 1a 1 z-trxrl ______
Monday-—Emotions And Disease
For Free Analysis
your insurance problems,
A. J. COOPER
Telephone 1320-J
Southwestern Life
Representative
A proposal to exempt homesteads
up to the value of $3,000 from all
ad valorem taxes except for school
support has been made by Repre-
sentative Hugh Jones of Center. He
pointed out that the state initiated
the movement to relieve the burden
of property taxes on home owners
when a constitutional amendment
was adopted exempting $3,000 of
the value of homesteads from state
taxes. Local taxes were not remov-
ed, however, and these prove rather
burdensome in many instances,
since the local tax rate usually is
much higher than that of the state.
-S'
“To have a contented and indus-
trious citizenship is to encourage
home] ownership, thereby decreasing
the number of tenants and drifters
who have no interest in their com-
munities,” the solon said, and ad-
ded that further relief from the tax
burden would be a step in that di-
rection. A community of home own-
ers is a progressive and contented ’
community, generally speaking, and
there Is iiu doubt that relieving the? ---------■■> —- -
: homestead of tax burdens, which | Jelly .Bear!
J have become heavy,
to undertake to
ever seen us gazing in
Brown?
tax
Representing only
strong proven
companies—a pol-
icy from us is one
of protection in-
deed.
DENTON, TEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE, SATURDAY, APRIL 11, 1936
u——am—iMiWwniit*Tni- -.TiMr—*re— » Ml i wmi
I
TEN WORDS, SIX TIMES, 30 CENTS
Mexico has had more than its
share of troubles since becoming a
nominal republic, and even a sem-
blance of peace has not been main-
tained except when the nation was
being ruled by the “iron hand” of
some virtual dictator. The rank and
file of the Mexican people have not
been trained for the duties of citi-
zenship, and this fact, coupled^ with
the class distinction which prevails,
makes it difficult to maintain the
republican form of government.
•w-
&
■ .
r- - .>
INITIATIVE DESERVES REWARD
In the continual battle between capital and labor,
there nearly always is a lack of appreciation on the
part of labor for the trials and responsibility shoulder-
ed by the man or group of men who run the business.
These are the men who must figure out ways and
means of meeting weekly payrolls, and who must see
that the receipts of the business are enough to pay
salaries and leave a little over as a reward for their
initiative and ability to run a business successfully.
Within recent years a tendency to minimize the
value of the men with initiative who start and de-
velop businesses has been evident in popular think-
ing. So-called “recovery legislation” has tended to
penalize the successful business firms, and to subsidize
those that are operated inefficiently. Labor legisla-
tion also has strengthened the idea that workers de-
serve more of the fruits of efficiency that normally
go to management which takes all of the risk.
In some countries, this process of taking away the
rewards of initiative has gone so far that ownership
of a business is a dubious asset. In Spain the other
day a Scotsman deeded a successful iron mine to
the Spanish government, with the understanding it
would be operated by his 250 employes and the profits,
if any, would be divided among them. He gave up
trying to operate the min'e because of labor condi-
tions which took 'awSy all rewards for tnanfeem^nt,
and increased government taxes which took the rest
of the profits.
Many owners of small businesses who struggle to
make enough to pay their employes must appreciate
the feeling of this Scotsman, for many business men
have gone through the experience of paying employes
on Saturday night and then having little or nothing
for themselves. Only their love for the business, and
an innate desire to create something drives them on
to success, and a good many take the easier course
of accepting a safe job on a salary, free from the
worries and responsibilities of an owner.
HISTORY REPEATS ITSELF
Remember the flapper era a few years ago. Had
you noticed the surprising number of ex-flappers who
are making the loveliest mothers of healthy, husky
youngsters these days—and the little pasty-faced
jelly-bean of the same age isn’t doing so bad in the
role of father. Maybe things have always been that
way. About every decade someone thinks the young-
sters are going to the bow-wows and then in the
next decade admit they were mistaken and that prob-
ably the “kids” just had a lot of good breeding in
them. It was ever thus.—Exchange.
h
Behind Scenes in Washington
By RODNEY DUTCHER
MTEA Service Staff Corresoondem
WASHINGTON, April 11.—-That Pan American
peace conference we are going to have late next sum-
mer in Buenos Aires is no empty gesture.
To be quite frank about it—as nobody else is be-
ing—the main idea is to imbue the Latin American
republics with a pro-United States psychology and
to dissuade any of them from getting too chummy
with Japan.
The administration hopes that a non-aggression
treaty, if not a mutual assistance pact, with provision
for economic sanctions against aggressor nations will
be one result. In other words, it wants the good old
Monroe doctrine to flourish more healthily than ever
on a co-operative basis.
The Japanese have been making commercial ad-
vances in South America, notably in Chile, Peru, and
Ecuador. They have been playing up to the politicians
of those three republics in a manner which long ago
lifted State Department eyebrows at least half an
inch.
The nitrates and copper of Chile appear to possess
an especial appeal for Nippon and “realpolitik” sug-
gests to our statesmen that we should be in position
to have influence on that business should certain
eventualities arise.
❖ ❖ *
The “good neighbor policy” of Roosevelt, which
seems to have charmed Latin America, is regarded
by insiders here as shrewd from several angles. Not
only trade, but also military-naval strategy, are in-
volved. .
The way it works is seen in the case of the new
Panama treaty After wrangling for years over the
issue of Panamanian sovereignty, this government has
negotiated a treaty which recognizes Panama as an
equal and makes protection of the canal and its zone
theoretically a matter of joint defense.
On paper this country has given up its right to
intervene in Panama at its discretion, although ac-
tually any intelligent person knows it will intervene
in case of emergency.
The Panamanians are as pleased as Punch. The
U. S. generals and admirals balked with more or less
customary stupidity, but Secretary Hull beat them
off. From the standpoint of defense of the canal, it
seems much better to have the Panamanians pleased
than aggrieved.
* * *
James Montgomery. Beck, Philadelphia ex-congress-
man, who now carries the Constitution around un-
der his wing and keeps clucking over it, made a speech
the other night to the Rhode Island Bar Association,
from which New Dealers are mimeographing excerpts.
Beck ventured the startling opinion that the spirit
of the supreme court’s decision in the TVA case was
due to “enlightened expediency.” The court, he said,
“cannot be ignorant of the fact that there is a rising
storm in Congress” to curb its powers. Mr. Beck him-
self had declared TVA unconstitutional.
The admission by Mr. Beck that the court was sus-
ceptible to outside pressure is considered astonishing.
Contemporary Thought
OWNERS, NOT TENANTS
Home owning campaigns are in progress all over the
country, not only because it is believed the home
owner is a better citizen, in that he is more settled
and takes a greater interest in his government, both
state and local, but in order to provide work for un-
employed mechanics and to make work for mills and
factories which provide materials for building.
But equally important—perhaps more so—is the
effort the federal government is making to provide
farmers with farm homes and thus reduce tenancy.
Especially is this desirable in the south, though re-
cent surveys have shown that tenancy is increasing
in the north and middle west. It is not expected that
tenancy will be abolished entirely—that would be too
much to expect—but that there are thousands of com-
petent farmers who could maintain their1 own farms
if given assistance in getting a farm is beyond any
question.
It is this class of tenants that the government wants
to assist and it is being done by making loans for
buying farms of not too great size and getting the
farmer started on his own land. Some of them per-
haps will fail to keep up the payments and the farms
will pass out of their possession, but every good plan
has its exceptions and the good in this will far out-
weigh the possible defects.
Any man who can sit in his home and look over
acres that are his is far better off in every way than
the renter or the share-cropper who does not know
from one year to the next where he will be or what
he will be doing. Home ownership means much to
the city or town dweller—it means far more to the
farmer.—Paris News.
In present-day literature we find! changes effected ------„
the emphasis somewhat shifted. The tions are what we call of the revers-
subject of the influence of the emo- ible variety. Whatever alterations
tions upon body function and body jn physiology the patient suffers
structure is featured with increas- are of the so-called functional va-
ing frequency and prominence.
Experimental and clinical experi-
ence shows that even the simplest
form of intellectual (nervous) activ-
ity effects bodily changes. Though
and 1 „
sure, the distribution of blood in
the body, and the tone or tension
of the body musculature.
Strong emotions, such as fear or
rage, exercise a very powerful ef-
fect upon body function. When we
see how anguish forces its victim to
roam about, how it banishes sleep
and the appetite, when we see the
flow of tears, the cold sweat and the
’idtued fa the Na* York Academy of Mateinr
g, DR. IAGO GALDSTON
INFLUENCE OF EMOTIONS
i
❖ * * *
Mrs. R. J. Turrentine of Denton i
has been given the unanimous en-
dorsement of the Second District of
the Texas Federation of Women’s
Clubs, of which she is retiring
president, for the presidency of the
State Federation, the election for
which will be held at the Novem-
ber convention. The endorsement
was given at the district meeting in
Dallas, which closed Friday. Mrs.
Turrentine has been active in wo-
men’s club and other civic work
a
tfovyTs
YOUR
heAlth
SERVICE, “Our Best Always”
AMBULANCE SERVICE
nurses a fixation on her son over
many miles and countries; curious
novel which sounds a little autobi-
ographical at times.
By JOHN SELBY
Winifred Holtby’s “South Riding”
(Macmillan) is certainly one of the
most sincerely felt and successful
novels of a community in recent Eng-
lish letters. The sad feature of the
■ matter is that Miss Holtby, obvious-
ly just attaining her true literary
stature, died shortly after finishing
the book. She left some unpublished
material, but it is said that no novel,
excepting of course “South Riding,”
has been found therein.
The novel’s setting is the mythical
South Riding of Yorkshire, not at
all the smoky and dull section of
which Phyllis Bentley writes so earn-
estly. The book’s purpose is to show
the operation of the English local
government system, not in a wholly
political sense, but as it strikes peo-
ple ; like : you and like me.
To do this Miss? Holtby has Chosen
f a set of extremely interesting people,
1 ha's made them so palpable that one
the ducks—is Chubby by i might almost shake hands with them,
and (this is important because un-
usual) has kept them to their last..
There is none of this business of
starting out Mr. X as a rancorous old
he-demon, and in the end having
widows.
him the mainstay of orphans and
And because any novel_ needs a
by has chosen a small group for that
■ purpose. These are Councillor Rob- ;
! ert Carne, gentleman farmer whose
(fate it is to see his inheritance run
downhill through the demands of the
’ woman he married—the neurotic
i Muriel, daughter of Lord Sedgmire;
. Sarah Burton, the impulsive and
i ly Bear who was ruhning as hard tor/High School, and Aiderman Mrs.
1 • r _ "E2 ozJ zJ rsTyrc ' I '■Vi 1 o 4”4*.QV» 4”z-« Q. CV —
of the physiologic
by strong emo-
Ry A. W-
The frequently strife-torn Mex-
ico is in for more trouble. Contro-
versy has been brewing for months
and already a number of oubreaks
have occurred. Now that Elias Cal-
les, former “iron hand” president
of the republic, has been banished,
it may be expected that the seeth-
ing dissatisfaction likely will come
to a head. The former president
charges that it is communism which
j is causing the trouble, and asserts
that radicalism .is being fostered by
the present regime.
Federal expert says the United States is the
least map-conscious country in the world. Has he
fascination at Joe E.
Medical literature during the lat- (
ter half of the last century as well |
as c .
century was almost
pallor, we know without further evi-
dence that emotion is a very serious
business and penetrates through
every fibre of the being. Emotion
thus always signifies a strong gen-
eral alteration in the functions of
the body.
In general these alterations come
during the early part of this to an end as the emotional tension
entirely de- is dissipated. The body then returns
voted to bacteria, their toxins, and | to its former state of equilibrium,
the diseases they produced.
“In the Malay peninsula, fish may be seen in
the tree branches.” Over here, they’re the ones
who paid money to get into the fight stadium.
Denton Record-Chronicle
RECORD-CHRONICLE COMPANY, INC.
R. J. EDWARDS General Manager
L. A. MCDONALD Managing Editor
LEE R. McDonald Business Manager
J. S. FOWLER Advertising Manager
Entered as second-class mail matter at Denton,
Texas.
Daily issued at 214 West Hickory Street, Denton,
Texas, every afternoon except Sunday by the Record-
Chronicle Company;, Inc.
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations.
Member Associated Press.
Member Texas Daily Press League.
PHONES
Business and Editorial Office
Circulation Department ;
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NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
tation or standing of any firm, individual or corpora-
tion will be gladly corrected upon being called to the
publishers’ Attention.
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled tb the
use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to
it or not otherwise credited in. this paper and also the
local news published herein. ______
DENTON, TEXAS, APRIL 11, 1936
CITY RUN-OFF JUSTIFIED
.Whatever may have been, the arguments for and :
against the holding of run-off elections in. the major
posts to be filled in the city government, the results
‘of the election last Tuesday, the first held under the
new charter change, show that only a run-off will
give the true sentiment of the voters, especially in
ages other than financial, however,! Puddle Muddlers rushed up to the
leave.
“We’ll find him, don’t worry,” :
said Willy Nilly. “Nothing could ;
have happened to him in that core about which to build, Miss Holt- j
short time.” 11
“I’ll go and look for him at
} once,’’ cackled Top Notch.
grounds as corporation lawyers or economic preju-
dices, but they never expected Mr. Beck to admit the
court, to be susceptible to such pressures or any other.
(Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, Inc.)
Man About Manhattan
: ■ By GEORGE TUCKER
NEW YORK, April 11.—fft was rapidly approaching
curfew and save for a few convivial souls Buddy’s bar
was deserted. Georges, who lingered behind the bar,
spun a sarsaparilla soda my way.
“Did you-know-,” he said slowly, “that .this was the
last house in New York that Stanford White built?”
I didn’t know, but my mind went swiftly back to
that luridly sensational trial which any mention of
White’s name always invokes. White was the archi-
tect Harry K. Thaw killed because of Evelyn Nesbit.
“No, Georges,” I told him, “I didn’t know that. Is
it really?”
Georges was thoughtfully polishing glasses and
racking them neatly below. He walked over to the
cash-register and punched out a 40 cent sale.
“That’s right,” he replied. Then, bending low—“Do
you know who that woman is, the one at the end of
the bar with the tired, oh, so tired, eyes and the
beaded mesh bag?”
I knew, of course, although I had never seen her
before. You always know in such moments.
“There she is,” said Georges. “There’s Evelyn Nes-
bit now.”
And there Evelyn Nesbit was. Somehow the situa-
tion seemed too incongruously ironic to belong any-
where except in a play, and a melodrama at that.
But this one wasn’t in a play. It had spilled over in-
to real life.
z
“So will I,” said Rip, the dog.
“We’ll find him, never fear,”
quacked, the ducks.
1 i -r 1 oaiail Dili UVJLl, L1±C Illiquid VIS OiAXM.
‘ Of course we will, growled Jel- progressive headmistress of Kipling-
Beddows .The latter is to some ex-
tent modeled after Miss Holtby’s
mother, who was an aiderman.
But the muddling current of Eng-
lish life is after all. the chief char-
acter.
Thumbnail Reviews
“Horses, Jockeys and Crooks,” by
Arthur J. Sari (Dutton): an English
turf expert speaks .in accents strange;
amusing, but not for the reason the
author intends.
“Light Opera and Musical Com-
edy,” by J. Walker McSpadden (Crow-
ell) : the stories of many light op-
eras, and brief articles on their cre-
ators; informative and. by no means
dull.
“Rabble Rouser,” by Charles Mor-
row Wilson (Longmans): a young
Ozark farmhand learns how to play
upon the emotions of his friends,
with important political results.
“The Puzzle of the Red Stallion,”
by Stuart Palmer (Doubleday, Do-
ran) : Hildegarde Withers, bless her
heart, confounds Inspector Piper and
catches a murderer by her own mys-
terious means.
’ Colorado
“The Golden Lady,” by Dorothy
Gardiner (Doubleday, Doran): Van-
nie becomes a lady through the ef-
fort of her mother and the gift of a
mine: she lives and loves and travels
and comes home to Colorado wiser—
but still Vannie.
“Carcajou,” by Rutherford G.
Montgomery (Caxton); about a mag-
nificently fierce wolverine; one of the
best recent animal stories.
“The Mushroom Handbook,” by
Louis C. C. Krieger (Macmillan):
fascinating book which contains all
anybody needs to know about mush-
rooms, and a little cardboard rule to
measure them by.
“Offspring,” by Clare Sheridan
(Putnam): a peripatetic mother
Give Flowers for Easter. R. L.
Selby & Sons. Phone 374. Ft. Worth
Drive. 207
here.”
at once all around
can find, I left
moment ago—or at
most only a very short time ago.
“Top Notch, crow your loudest,
Wake up the ncighborhojod. Find
there is no doubt that relieving the ' Chubby, my cub.
“T"11y T"".”! Blacky!
would ’encour- j Chubby is missing.
rtalic to own j “Christopher Columbus Crow!!
; theirown homes. Not infrequently ) Use your good eyes and discover
I the remark is heard that it costs i Chubby. '
By Mary Graham Bonner
MISSING- CHUBBY
“Willy Nilly!” screamed Honey
Bear. “Chubby isn’t
“Rip, run
and see if you
him. only a
opportunity, with its rich soils, val- • ^e played at
1_ 1 _ "I _ — ~~ —1 __ _ J_'_s — J 1 J -^.4--VI4 T-Jl QPz> r-»
al and agricultural possibilities, and eeous articles on a table and bring
it is too bad that it has not been the children in to look at them,
possible to establish and maintain After a few moments send them
a stable form of government' under ■ out of the i I;',
which capital would be attracted for write down from memory what
the development of the country. If
ever a stable government is .main-
tained over a period or time and
proof given, that investments will
be safe, an era of rapid develop-
ment may be looked for which will
give the nation its rightful place
industrially and agriculturally in
the category of countries.
knows where the term “windjammer” copies from. >
Some think it was a slang expression. ... By all odds
the most unusual club in New York is, I think, the
Shoe Club. It has an exhibition of shoes worn by
famous people from all - over the world.
❖ ❖ ❖
Last year the foreign sensation of the Rialto was
Elisabeth Eergner, and this year has produced an-
other: Wendy Hiller, who is playing in “Love on the
Dole.”
Taliks \
to -oJ
parent
By Brooke Peters Church
KEEN SENSES
An amusing game to play with
children is the game of observa-
tion. It can be played in a dozen
different ways and called by many
names, but basically it is an ex-
ercise in noticing.
The average man or woman goes
through life with only a few or
perhaps none of his senses alert.
He neither seeis, feels, nears nor
smells a fraction of what he might.
His senses are not trained afid
he misses much Of what life has
to offer.
In this day of detective stories
the game of observation might be
called “detectives” and played
while the family is taking its daily
walk. Encourage the children to
report anything cut of the ordi-
nary that they see, her or smell.
A -small reward might be offered to
the child who contributed the
greatest number of novelties. The
interest in walks is doubled and
the children become more keen-
ly alive to the world about them.
. Another form of the game can
' a children’s party,
uable minerals and varied industri- Place a collection of miscellan-
as he could in his lumberinjg fash-
ion up to the cave.
“We’l find Chubby,” growled
Blacky and Jupiter together.
“Oh, what could have happened
mens ciuu aixvt uuncx ^xvxv to him? What could have hap-
here for years, and will do credit tb ' pened to him?” moaned Honey
’ - -- jf she is i Beer.
, And none of them knew the an-
swer to this. They were worried
in spite of the speeches they had
made to Honey Bear.
And then they all heard a lit-
tle growling voice.
It was the,' voice of Chubby.
they saw.
Or if the game, is played in the
country, let it take the form of
Indiana tracking their prey. Foot-
prints, broken twigs, a bit of haif
caught on a branch, require keen
observation! if they are to> be seen
at all.
The man or woman who sees
and knows the world he lives in is
sure to be more at home in it
and therefore happier than the
one who goes about with blinders
on. Childhood is the best timo
to train him. to look, notitce and,
remember.
New York’s elderly bootblacks are an institution of
some importance, and ply their trade indiscriminate-
ly about Manhattan.
Long before the day of the chain store they realized
that competition aids success. Like the various brands
of notion and grocery stores, which tend to establish
themselves in competitive groups on busy corners, the
bootblacks prefer to swing cloths and brushes in
unison.
A “shineless” citizen, once he is hailed on a down-
town street, must run a gauntlet of solicitation. Sev-
eral bootblacks are almost certain to be found wher-
ever one is in evidence.
Busy Forty-second street, just outside the massive
Grand Central railway station, is a favorite spot for
one man, one box stands.
A few blocks away, on Forty-fifth street, near the
main entrance to the Grand Central postoffice, is
another preferred spot.
Many of the “shines” are real veterans of their ( a5e. Pe°Ple
trade. They don’t become exactly wealthy, but it’s
an easy life—when the weather is favorable. > ■
The nervous little Hudson river ferries that take?1-— -- - — - - , >
thousands of New Jersey residents to and from their 1 ^ne> and when I’ents are at a , • a^.d . . 2. ,,
work in Manhattan have regular crews of “shine : figure, as has been the case foi " 01 *
boys.” New York eats, drinks, and gets its shoes shin- i eral years this probably is true The the pond?"
e<s on | owning of a home has its advant- < As Honey Bear screamed all the
but the greater the reduction that
| can be made in the cost of owning
’ a home the more will people be en-
We take pleasure in- announcing the addition of
BOB VAUGHN 1
before you buy automo-
tive supplies. We carry
quality products at
economical prices.
to our sales personnel and We' as well as' he,' in- -';'®
vite your calling on him at any time. O
| CALVERT BROS. SERVICE I
Call 356 for Dependable Wash and Lubrication
■ Phone 356 115 S. Locust H
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7 ■ © 193G, NEA ■■
WIC XCIIXCIXXS. XO XXXzCXXM. UXXO.U XU .
less to rent a home than to own ? “Sweet Face, look for Chubby. ■
roni-o d T-a al- a "ir-w I ’“IK/Tr TV/Tra (Oil6 r-lra ond -
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 207, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 11, 1936, newspaper, April 11, 1936; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310371/m1/2/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.