Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 191, Ed. 1 Monday, October 28, 1935 Page: 2 of 10
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HENDERSON DAILY NEWS. HENDERSON. TEXAS
GE TWO
I
Club
purchased
two
was
Mink Cape
>
of
Nacog-
Mrs.
in
Liberty
0
ADMISSION 10c
I
have evcru seen!
will)
»
A /
TUES.-WED.
ALL LAUGH PICTURE
I
I
a
1
Mr.
*L
LETTERS
STRAND
From the People
HOSIERY
sowing
A *
54-INCH
»
COATS
SUITS
ll
ing.
IT’S EASY
TO OWN
SILK
Roy McKinney,
A Beautiful
KB
STOCKINGS
Woolen
Suit, Dress, Coat. .
when
choose
you
in
“I LIVE MY LIFE”
pr.
V '
$
TUE.—WED.
H i
Buy 3 Pair . . . $2.25
11
yd
l
KAY
FRANCIS
t
and
yd
IN
~ A
STRANDED
PLAIDS . . . CHECKS . . . SOLIDS
Navy, fifmvri,' -Gold, GYten
- • Crisp; New Bwiatifoi
HENDERSON DRY GOODS CO.
J'
A Good Store in a Good Town
.7 • •
—
IBmu... ...
I /
t
I
I
Hollywood
Roundup
S. Main
Street
c —
Club Members Throughout
County Prepare Food
For Winter
JOAN
CRAWFORD
GEORGE
ERENT
WITHOUT
NAMES
<
I
<
Miss Inez Warren attended the
football game in Shreveport Sat-
urday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy McKinney.
West Elk street, visited relatives
in Dallas Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Roberts and
Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Parker spent
Sunday in Shreveport.
Mrs. M. T. Maxwell and sons,
J. K. and Tommie, of Wright City
who spent last week in Houston
returned Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Rountree and
daughter, Marguerite, spent Sun-
day with friends in Houston.
Dr. E. Wolf spent Sunday with
friends in Shreveport,
Miss Lavinia Strong spent Sun-
day in Shreveport with friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Humphreys
moved to Livingston today.
Mrs. Sam Hays and
spent Sunday
KjIMK'-rXte-______
— Tuesday--
2 FEATURES 2
REVIEWS OF FASHION TRENDS;
BEAUTY CULTURE SUGGESTIONS;
ENTERTAINMENTS AND REVIEWS
ROBERT
ARMSTRONG
JAMES
GLEASON
*
--Plug ------
Chapter » “TARZAN”
• and *
“QUEEN OF HEARTS”
PALACE
LAST TIME TODAY
vc-
of
TODAY—MONDAY
XJOMEN^ETIT!
Yes, the Best Plate Lunch in Town
for 35c
JAY'S CAFE
storm WRnbis
SPECIAL SHORTS
MICKEY MOI SE
in
SERVICE STATION
1 'ins
TRAVELTALK—NEWS
t
■
b
I.
<
— and--
FLORENCE RICE
ROBERT ALLEN”
— in —
“GUARD THAT GLRL”
I 1
h rd
Ki
VICTORY
“Same Price”
H u ilit Ai'lusr Societn
_________ MISS JOAN RODGERS, Society Editor
DRESSEb
, ■ *
w
Juvenile Music
Meets in First
Session
MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCT. 28, 1938
PLUS ____________ __________________—........................
SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS
•
FREDM. MURRAY
Madge evans
fe LYNNE OVERMAN
■BEL ......1
The famous Rollins Mills
sold us 35 dozen of their
$1 and $1.25 slightly im-
perfect chiffon hose to
sell at this bargain price.
- HOLLO WEEN —
FREE—FREE-FREE
HORNS, NOISE MAKERS AND CONFETTI WILL BE
FURNISHED FREE TO YOU FOR OUR SPECIAL
MIDNIGHT SHOW THURSDAY NIGHT
Mrs. Jones says this year they
have fed and clothed the family
and bought feed for poultry and
live stock with the proceeds from
curb market sales.
Miss Anna Lou Watson, and
her guests, Miss Alexandria, Miss
Walker and Miss Ledford, all of
Corsicana spent the week end here
with Miss Watson's parents Mr.
and Mrs. W. II. Watson.
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Propes and
daughter, Diane, and Mrs. Jane
Clements returned Sunday from a
week spent in Hot Springs, Ark.
Miss Doris Bolton spent Sunday
in Shreveport with friends.
Misses Nona and Kathlce Jones
of Gladewater were guests Sun-
day of Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Jones.
Walter Ray Watson who is
student in N. T. A. C. spent the
week-end with his parents
and Mrs. W. R. Watson.
Miss Ethel Todd _____„
doches spent the week-end here
with her parents Mr. and
Clate Todd.
Mrs. Ola Leath returned Sunday
from San Angelo, where she had
been v' iting her sons.
Opens
1 p. m.
Brachfield
club met
garden
Miss Bobby Ro'iey of Gaston
was a week-end guest of Miss
Barbara Holt.
''Yout name's on a
bullet and
Utv b> Snnfb lulling
you have it ’‘
LeRoy Garrison is spending a
few days In Austin attending to
business matters.
79'
WOOLENS
for
. - - ■
You may be able to find the im-
perfections in these pretty stock-
ings ... we can't. You will have
to come early as the bargain don't
last long. New Fall colors.
Mr. and Mrs. Tatum Brown
spent Sunday in Fort Worth with
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Wetherby
an <IMr. and Mrs Finis Leath
spent Sunday in Shreveport.
ALWAYS 5-15C
-----Last Times Today-----
NEWin^lotl NEW In local. I NIW in fhrilltl
Mrs. Renne Allred and son,
Renne III, and Mrs. LeRoy Garri-
son spent Saturday in Tyler.
F ■
| | I
1'.$^
Misses Myrtis Nelson. Blanch
Wylie and Margaret Oliver at-
tended the football game in Aus-
tin Saturday.
f 1
• 1
hi • ” il
Hickey Community to
Have Club
Organized
Miss Marie Wilmeth, assistant
Home Demonstration Agent, will
meet with the women of the Hick-
ey Community on Thursday, Octo-
ber 31, at 2:00 p. m. for the pur-
pose of organizing a Woman’s
Home Demonstration Club. The
meeting will be held at the Hickey
Baptist church and all women of
the community are cordially In-
vited to attend.
The Ellen E. Cannon Juvenile
Music club met in their first meet-
ing, Saturday afternoon, at the
home of Mrs. Bob Anthony with
Mrs. C. B. Hornsby co-hostess. The
decorations, program and re-
freshments carried out a Hallo-
Members of the Garth Green
orchestra, left Sunday for Wichita
Falls where they will play at the
opening of a new hotel there.
1”
T. E. L. SUNDAY St HOOL
TO HAVE ALI. DAY MEET
. Thg.T Ji^.U Sunday. School, will
have nri-ntl day quilting at the
First Baptist Church Educational
building, Tuesday. Luncheon will
bo served at noon.
When King James I of England
was a young prince, he had a boy
who was paid to take his whip-
pings for him.
Miss Gladys Trotter of Mexia
Spent the week-end here with her
sister, Mrs. W. H. Urschel.
* KT ‘
---
I ENTERTAINMENT FEATURES;
WOMEN'S CLUB ACTIVITIES;
CHURCH ORGANIZATION NEWS
Mrs. Jones
field Roots
Own Shrubs
For economy and success
growing plants, Mrs Dewey Jones
Cooperator for the Brachfield
club, has found rooting her own
shrubbery a most satisfactory
method of obtaining results. In
a low damp place at the side of
her yard is a shrub bed where she
has rooted 170 cuttings of ever-
greens to be used for foundation
screen and border planting. In
November these rooted cuttings
will be transplanted to a perma-
nent place. She has found the
shrubs have a much better chance
of living and are much easier to
care for during the rooting period
if they are rooted in a bed and
transplanted to the desired place.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Griffith
spent Sunday in Shreveport and
Minden, La., with friends and rel-
atives.
Sore Bleeding Gums
Only one bottle LETO'S PYOR-
RHEA REMEDY is needed to con-
vince anyone. No matter how bad
your case, get a bottle, use as di-
rected, and If you are not satisfied
druggists will return your money.
For sale by Allen Bros. Drug
Store.
' With the first tang of cold
Weather in the air, club members
J; throughout the county think of
C canning vegetables and fruits and
’ . Raving a well filled pantry for the
L Coming cold months. Many of the
Club members have not only raised
• enough vegetables and fruits in
their fall gardens for their own
use but have raised a surplus for
| market vc
|fc.I
if. /j
j .J
ween theme.
Numbers of the program were!
The Wicked Witch, The Ghost,
Faiiy Footsteps, Fairy Moonlight,
and The Gray Owl. Those ap-
pearing on the program were:
Mary Ailcen Deason, Ann Horns
by, Eloise Phillips, Neita Jane Mc-
Carter, L. T. Standley, Bobby Anna
Anthony. Ann Newport, Bobby
Jean Jolies, Janette Sadler. Ethel
Jean Dennani, Shirley Chastian
and Anna Maigaret Sattes.
’ J
L
er, which
years ago.
Storage was improved by mov-
ing shelves already built to a
more convenient place and adding
extra shelves to take care of all
the canned products.
“Big Money”
—with—
Collie Wright drove George
Wright and Jack Hart, students
at Allen’s Academy, back to
Bryan today. They had spent the
week-end here with their parents.
painted the woodwork, refinished
her furniture and added curtains.
-----------o-----------
Dick Brown, student in Law
school in Houston, is spending a
few days here with his parents,
Judge and Mrs. R. T. Brown.
| With Cold Weather Just Around the Corner,
Women Think of Canning Fruit
. and Vegetables
f / 7/ /
Mr / t xI
raff
r I I
Mrs. P. D. Chapman, Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Allen and Miss
Mary Lee Wycher of Timpson at-
tended the football game in Aus-
tin, Saturday.
i
HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 28. (UP)
John Barrymore isn't on his "death
bed’’ or any other bed, he announc-
ed through his brother Lionel to-
day.
Shortly alter the screen Don
Juan came ashore from his yacht,
"Infanta,” a physician visited the
Tower Road mansion where he is
living. Rumors spread through the
film colony that he had suffered a
nervous collapse and was critically
ill.
"John isn’t sick,” Lionel said.
"He has a cold, that's all, and he
is not suffering from mental or
nervous prostration. Certainly he
is not on his death bed. He is not
in bed at all."
For the opening of the Ballet
Russe de Monte Carlo, Mrs. Allan
A. Ryan, Jr., topped her taffeta
evening gown with a mink cape
to make a luxurious contrast.
. \\
of Brach-
Hcr
Brachfield Club Meets
at Home of Garden
Demonstrator
Members of the
Home Demonstration
Wednesday with their
demonstrator, guests meeting with
the club were Mrs. B. F. Jones
and Miss Marie Wilmeth, home
ilemonstratlon agent. Mrs. Jones
talked on how many containers of
fruits, vegetables, fruit juices and
dried vegetables, she had canned,
and also of the sale of fresh ve-
getables, eggs, chickens, milk and
butter Miss Wilmeth talked on
the subject of vegetables and fruit
necessary to health, she also show-
ed a scries of posters relative to
diet and health.
A discussion ot the
club followed, the club has quilted
six quilts and pieced four more.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess.
The next meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. S. F. Orr, the 4th
Wednesday in November.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Durrow of
Ixmgvicw were guests Sunday of
Mr. and Mrs. Montag Harlen.
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Hornsby and
daughter, Ann. and Mrs. Lake
Cannon spent Saturday in Shreve-
port.
I ary news
1
• ■ 1
from our showing.
LAST DAY
One of the best airplane thrillers you
Don’t miss—
SPENCER TRACY
wilh WILLIAM BOYD
Devils’’1 ANN DV0RAK
Plus: COMEDY . . . CARTOON . . . NOVELTY
Mrs.* Erugia of New
London Spends Less
. / /on-Citoceries
Arranged pantry of
" of food, valued at
________ ______ S. W. Frugia. 4-H
Pantry’Demonstrator for the New
London club, finds her expendi-
tures -for groceries about $20 per
month less than that of her nelgh-
Ixirs With, a TSnuly Of equal size.
FronX'S." garden plot 50x150 feet
Mrs. Fsugla furnished her family
Of ftverwith-.fresh vegetables, can-
ned 366 quartrfor winter use and
suppltjid 4 neighbor families with
strfag beans duriqg the summer
Twelve varieties of canned
getables include 185 quarts
leafy vegetables, 38 pints of corn,
93 containers of other vegetables
and 45 quarts of tomatoes obtain-
ed by canning on halves. Other
foods canned include 232 quarts of
fruit, 100 containers of jelly, 33
pints of fig and strawberry pre-
serves, 25 quarts of pickles. 150
lbs. peas, potatoes, butter beans,
and onions are in storage.
In addition to the 751 contain-
ers preserved for home use, Mrs.
Frugia canned 300 containers of
food for neighbors.
All of the non-acld vegetables
were canned in the pressure cook-
/
/■
/ /
:?s ■ ' :
................. J
- Mrs. Jones markets fresh, dried
and canned fruits and vegetables,
butter, milk, eggs, chickens and
fresh and cured pork She aver-
ages selling 12 lbs. of butter week-
ly and this season she has market-
ed 150 fryers average price 55c
each. She has seven hogs that
will be butchered for home and
market.
Shelled peas and beans is her
curb market specialty. One mar-
ket day, Oct. 18, her sales from
shelled butter beans and peas were
$6.50.
Mozelle Conway Makes Mattress
Cover
Tn order to prolong the life of
her mattress and to keep her bed
clean nt all times, Mozelle Con-
way. bed room demonstrator for
the Wood Glen 4-H Club made a
cover for her mattress which may
be removed and laundered as easi-
ly as sheets. Feed’sacks used in
making the cover were put to-
gether with flat fell seams and
made into sections large enough
to cover the bottom and the top
of the mattress. These were then
set together with a five inch box-
ing. This cover is held in place
with tics made of the same ma-
terial.
In addition to Improvements
made on her bed, Mozelle has im-
proved the walls by papering, has
k A i
nauseam, Democratic government
began to crumble. “Eternal vigi-
lance is the price of Liberty."
E. E. Jones, Minden, Texas.
Joe Hoylcr and Hugh Cooper
attended the football in Shreveport
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Proctor and
daughter, Wanda Joy, left today
for Livingston where they will
make their home. Mr. Procter is
an employee of the Owensby
Drilling Co.
Mr. and
daughter, Ruth,
with relatives in Kilgore.
I spoke yesterday at the court-
house in Nacogdoches. I asked
two good men to estimate the
crowd? They estimated between
400 and 500 present. I took a
vote. All except two voted for
tho repeal of the Bankhead law.
These two happened to be on the
payroll of the government.
After my friends had made the
announcement that I woud speak
at 2 p. m., the other crowd un-
dertook to take charge of the
courthouse, and did take charge of
the district courtroom. I spoke
on the courthouse lawn. I took
the crowd away from them. Their
speaker had no one to speak xo.
Intimidation, coercion, brow
beating is the spirit of those who
are seeking to destroy our Demo-
cratic form of government. Just
a little more ot this will bring us
to the verge of civil war. When I
see men, women and children going
hungry and ill-clad, just because
they will work but cannot sell what
what they produce, and others on
relief pampered by the govern
nient because they won’t work, I
see we are approaching the dan-
ger line.
Plenty of this. I’ve talked to
hundreds of people. I know
whereof I speak. When the old
Democratic donkey that has travel-
ed down through the years, having
written all over him with the ink
of pure patriotism “Equal right;
to all and special privileges to
none” was substituted by the “New
Deal Jackass" having written all
over him with the red ink from
the Bolshevik inkstand of Russian
collectivism, N. R. A., E. H. F.
A., A. A. A., XYZ and on ad
Can enough tor home use and
E raise a surplus for the market is
the advice given by Mrs. B. .1.
Jones, garden demonstrator for
the Brachfield Club who has 363
containers of food canned for her
• family of two, and whose average
•ale of products at the curb mar-
ket amounts to $80.00 per month.
H In addition to tho canned foods
Mrs. Jones has in storage 175 lbs.
of dried peas, 10 lbs. dried beans,
20 lbs. onions, 1250 lbs. Irish po-
I tatoes, and 1500 lbs. of sweet po.
tatMa. Moat of the potatoes will Witl) » yhjl
’ $ 1 .’IlMn Mrs™
Beware Coughs
Tram common colds
f That Hang On
No matter how many medicines
you have tried for your cough,
chest COld or bronchial irritation,
you can get relief now with Creo-
mulsion. Serious trouble may be
B brewing and you cannot afford to
take a chance with anything less
than (Jreomulsion, which goes right
to the seat of the trouble to aid
nature to soothe and heal the In-
flamed/ membranes an the germ*
laden-phlegm is loosened and ex-
f.- pslls4£ *
Even if other remedies have
failed, don’t be discouraged, your
druggist is authorized to guaran-
tee Creomulslon and to refund your
money-it yoti are not satisfied with
I result* 'from the very first bottle.
Get Creomulslon right now. (Adv.)
Joy Hodges, young film actress
who once sang in a Des Moines,
lu., church choir, held Hollywood's
first "career insurance" policy to-
day. Press agents said Lloyd's
wrote her a guarantee of $125,000
against anything interfering with
her screen career during the next
three years.
Eklis Edwards of Gladewater
visited friends here Sunday.
Si 00
x yd
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Dean, J. Lawrence. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 191, Ed. 1 Monday, October 28, 1935, newspaper, October 28, 1935; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1312005/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.