Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 183, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1940 Page: 3 of 8
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■Mr' /
MODERN
, GIRL SCOUTS
WOMEN
■17 MARIAN MATS MARTIN
J
READ THE CLASSIFIED ADS
y
See The New 1310
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COHt IMO IV NLA SlRVICL. iMC.
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$4.63 Per Month
I
BRAEMORE
PE JI El’S
CLEANSING
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♦
IT'S EASTER AT
TISSUE
(500 In A Box)
3 13
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ANSWER
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Brooks, based
fered bv
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Birthday Dinner for
I
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forts that brings one up short
day afternoon
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history that seems to tie in
and Mrs
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Morrison
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9.9S
Peacemaker Flour
I
• Gay Prints
»
• Solid Colors
i
Always gives Baking Satisfaction
♦
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♦
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Foamy White
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ON NAVY OK BLACK
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Ste
•'SUMMERSHINE”
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New Styles for Easter!
X
SHOES
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"Right
El.
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early!
a Mi
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LOW pnirEq EVERY DAY /
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Smart Antique Finish
SHOES
HAT AWE THE
FOLLOWING .
('alls for suinnifr weight
oils and greases. Let us
make a check now
Good Results From
Frame Garden Use
• Navy with White
• Soft Rayon Fabrics
Hotpoint
Refrigerators
Morris & McClendon
Phone 958
A HAT FOR EVERY
COSTUME
W. F. ‘Pat’ H X MILTON
MOTOR CO.
Phone 218
120 So. Locust
Il ;
Geswiwe crepe. I
mag*. New taring
hi
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6 Cu. Foot Box
$119.95
I*
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COLLEGE
—(4*)—R. R.
ogist of th* *
lege extenaid
of a heart attack. He wiU
in Bryan Saturday.
4-
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life— •
"in years ”
There Is no sense in settling down
before one's time The business or
r* I -yd
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Far Yew Raster
RAYONE
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MEN’S TOWN
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fillWtU) PAlu IPtXlAL'
FRIDAY, MARCH 15 J
Pure Pork
L . SAUSAGE
Look!
L LB. 8c! I
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F TERWlTOfcitlAL.
Ci-XXIAAS OF THE
UifsjiTEO STATES
IN THE ANTARCTIC
apt SUBfSWNYiATSts,
ITAAA'V BE SAID
THAT THE SLJTN
/Vz5VS£X? >SfZrorsi
AAAEL?ICAT4
SOIL..
T M. afC V b PAI OFF
111
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s
at Sherwin-Williams
wWpaint headquarilrs
19c -
J C PENNEY CQ
— - - . i Episcopal Group
Mrs. Mary Daniels
I THIS CURIOUS WORLD
Taliaferro Radio
Shop
**r. and
Mr and
and chll-
Wayne. Mrs. Ida
children. Mildred.
The?e dresses will travel ia the smartest place*
this spring! Very feminine shirred and Inched
bodices, cleverly moulded waiatlinea. graeefeUy
Harin* skirts that make the w»«< •< HW figure,
lively rayon crepe* and sheer* In deUghlfal
prints or solid colors It to <4.
ater Dress
ABRICS
49c yi
elans »tl»Ct|en! Prints
enters.
world go hang brings a fresh ap-
proach to her Job
4 1.
■
BETTY
CO-ED*
HATS®\
Shoat, a young hog, squab, a young pigeon, ewe, a
a female colt. ” — * ~
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Ctear! Ringiem'
GAYMODES
98c •
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Mrs
Phillips of Lloyd. Mr and
Frank Yarbrough. Ruel Yar-
Hoyl McDade of Spring
W H Tips uf Denton,
and E W
■■■• , . e> , > - 1 • 4;,-.****ls*
___________—-
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PS
■■■■■■EZZ
f ..J
pastels you'll wear uow
thru Summer. Shop
perterlty in every detail. Juai a fow
ef the fact ’* J »
a* iNVtS
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1
r el
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Now Many Wear
FALSE T
With 1
EMt. talk, laugh or and
fear oi insecure rates teat
dipping or wabbling.
tyoMS plates tInner and
fortably. Thia pleasant j
no gummy, gooey, paaty Ju....
Ing Doesn't cause nnusea It's alka-
line inon-acld) Checlft. "Plate oa<»‘^ .1
I denture breath) Get FASTKKTH at „
uuy drug store * fl
...............
r**a®
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!,
Mrs Roy Lester, president of the
Bethel Home Demonstration Club,
said that in her frame garden she
has built to protect delicate vege-
tables from early frost and summer
heat, slie has lettuce, radishes, cab-
bage. onions, spinach, and carrots
growing
Use of the frame garden is a com-
paxatively new thing, but the gar-
deners of Denton County are rap-
idly beginning to see’its advantages.
Mrs Lester anid
"Only expense of my garden was
the energy used. Mrs I .ester stated
Her frame garden is 50 square feet,
made of second hand lumber, and
covered with discarded chicken wire
The cloth cover was made out of
an old seed bed cover
SOAAG
GRASSHOPPERS
PROTECT THEIR EGGS
FRCteA WIINTER COLD
SURP’CXJNIDING THEAA
IN THE RALL WITH AN
INSULATED WALL OF
Al PR Bu&e'LES.
■
DENTON, TEXAS, RECORD CHRONICLE, THURSDAY, MARCH 14, IMk
Varied Events
Feature Gymboree
Sall into spring with one o*
these charming straws or
soft supple <«Hts! fn all
popular coteK— gallf trtni-
med. Dusens of alriaHbe
wtylea.’
Exciting
JEAN NEDRA4
HATS
Lute of becoming style* in
straw and felt. Low priced!
/ ■
... ..x
F
#
4
I
|v
frothy lingerie, jackets
or boleros. Prints and
• THE HECK WITH RIDIN’ \\ Vk
AROUND IN CIRCLBS ... \
LETS (iOTOTHE I.C.C.!”.
"We've got some bills to pay and we're going to pay
•em the Industrial credit way r
INDUSTRIAL CREDIT CO.
210 McCLURKAN BUILDING .
___098
Double leathur autaa!
Brugufak lineal
Spring** f st e r 11 e MM
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■■■■■■■■■■■■■■
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A SPRING SONG OF GLEN ROW*
DRESSES
a good deal. Instead of sitting
around her home or the homes of
Spring’s favorite frocks.
Smartly feminine with
slim waists, full skirts,
' '' 7.
The
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The Vanity^Shop
“Shop of Style and PenonaUty*;
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rss
Health Important
"Keepintr your looks rates almost
on a level with keeping your
health." according to Miss Maule
"Health is at the top Don't try to
produce artificially the appearance
of youth—which is practically al-
ways a flop anyway—but study how
to iook age at its absolute top notch
best "
There will be many a dissenting
voice raised, trying to prove that
an appearance of youth can be
produced artificially Granting, for
the sake of argument, that tills is
so. it still doesn't make one young-
er It's quite possible to look young
and act older than Confucious and
noUiing like as wise. So very much I female sheep; filly,
dejiends on ones mental attitude |
As Miss Maule puts it. "Youthful- !
ness implies the capacity for
growth To be young, therefore, you
must keep on
yrntr age
Defeated by a quintet of gloved
basketball boys by a score of 19-12
In the annual "gymboree” at the
Haxrlss Gymnasium Wednesday
night, girls of the college struck
back In a box hockey game that
left them champions in that event.
. Miss Sammy Whlteelde and Aten
■ Johnston wtre featured in a fenc-
ing contest and Jack Lewis won In
a wrestling mateh wMh ftetr
Jim Bone, Bob Waeser, Marvin
Fenn, and Elmer Knox staged a
tumbling act. and other students
participated in folk dancing, mod-
ern dance, and tap dancing.
Wayne Carr. Roy Kyle. Harley
Reddln. Ralph Havenhill. John An-
derson and Eugene Wood were the
boxing glove basketball champions
who defeated a girls’ teem compos-
ed of Misses Aillne Bates. Ruth
Marshik, Jewell Davison, Ge-
nevieve Colvin, and Mary Fran-
ces Hill Officials were Mias Agnes
■\ De Cordova and O W TIUerson.
i In the box hockey contest. Gynne
J Watson and June Dowdy clubbed
|L a winning game against G W TU-
w lerson and Fritt Create.
Sponsors of the “gymboree" were
the Delta Psi Kappa, national phys-
ical education fraternity and Al-
( pha phi Omega, scouting fratem-
Ity on tjie campus
A. R M. EM
Tread easily ir shoe*
that are th* last
wwd In style and
cwafori!
To be young you gated to her. to dine and dance at I 'Diomas of Green Valley
Avert r-.» ♦ b. i r> rw. » i . ... * _____*_ *-.*__ 1 _____________ ,
Delegates Named to
Presoyterial Session
5, Mira Ruby Smith,
Miss Jean Rasco.
■■
. ... « K . . A.'-' A
»**'♦— •- • f
to go
dinner dancing at one of the places
where formal dress was not obli-
gatory end she had the time of her MagUJ alWTnat, the annual
•^e*t tlme 115 *** PUt 1 | Presbytertel in Stephenville tn April
1 Circle.reports showed that the aux-
iliary has exceeded its budgeLs of
$1 000. and will have the same bud-
get for the coming year The devo-
tional opening the session was of - I
fered bv Mrs J M Brooks, based .
on John 15 Thirteen members were
: piesenu
x So i s.
dom which comes from getting first sjon s^e finally consented
hand information on things It has- ‘ “
n't the stability of the older and
wiser It hasn't usually even the
good sense to appreciate youth and
to take advantage of ite privileges
Youth is not an age." says Miss
Maule It is partly a state of body ______ _____ _____ ____ ________
i and partly a state of mind If you professional woman, who gets about
i can keep the state of body and mind
that is associated with youth, what
have any of the merely voung-tn- j others who have decided to let the
i years got that vou haven't?”
Don't Get Into Kut
‘ It isn't only the discovery of the
l first gray hair, or the first wrinkle
I It's the discoven' that one Is plac-
j Ing a higher value on creature com-
] forts that brings one up short
"Youth dwui’t concern itself with ,
small physical comforts If you be- I
11 ChTJMtffifc* hr-kn-’)
■a-
By MRS. T. M. CUNNINGHAM
Girl Scouts rounded out their
2Sth year March 12. It's been a
busy period.
For Girl Scouts believe, you
know, that they have responsibil-
ities. Responsibilities towards
themselves, their homes, their com-
munities, their country, and their
world.
Civic-minded Girl 8couta In New
engtend ran • baby-minding eerv-
7a
7'“,* “twi
■ ' ..... ** . ;
...........
. - - - - -4- - __________
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----------------
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Wr-t
-4’ *
! gin to feel that you can't sleep 4n
I any bed but yotif own. relax except
i in one special chair, have a care.”
| says our canny author
I When you find yourself settling
down contentedly evening after
I evening to the latest mystery or the
' radio bewart Go and visit an art
I exhibition or hear a symphony con-
cert Ttirow that party you've been
thinking of giving and doing noth-
ing about
For Uns sound advice, I. for one.
give 'three heftrtt cheers Here's a ■ ier and daughtc:
219 W. Hickory case ts.i tr» ti.> in
one of the nicer restaurants Slie ,
amazed them by saying that she
hadn't danced for nearly five years
—didn't even own evening clothes
Her social life, while very active,
centered in her own home and the
besides homes of her friends, who were wlUi
exceptions considerably
—
, •.-.jjgf,., c
H
W«WTV
nicely with the story:
An attractive woman who. while
growing-whatever I crowding 50 certainly doesn't look brough
! tt by a good ten years, was Invited I Hill. Mrs
Normally youth Is inquisitive It by a couple who were socially obll- | Mrs E H Thompson
wants to know ‘ ‘ ‘ • - - - -
must be eager to find out things
and how to do things You must
exhibit what is known as intellec-
tual curiosity '
"Get tlie learning habit ”
What has youth got that maturity
hasn't? What, that is.
youth? It hasn't the judment. which
comes from experience, or Uie wis-
on
PAINT and COLOR fl
I STYLE SERVICE jj
I Help* yo« *,lec‘ oo1?”
I (or your hom*-
I quickly. No obbqahon-
—j
L-l.
I 5 I
■ . • 4
HOW TO KEEP JOB IN HPITE
OF YOUR AOE
How to beat the employment
deadline is something every woman
should know Every man should
know, too, I suppose, but age is more
important to a woman—It sneaks up
so on her blind side that she sfidUTd
make plans, while young, to do
something about meeting it graci-
uosly and gracefully Fighting won't
do. much better to bow to the In-
evitable. then set about making it as
palatable as passible
The March issue of Independent
Woman hands on some advice from j
Frances Maule, whose story, ' Beat I
That Deadline.” Is a timely and
pertinent one
"It isn't our birthdays as birth-
days that tear us down In the eyes
of our employers.” says Miss Maule ,
It’s what Our birthdays are likely
to have done to us. Unless we watch
ourselves we are likely, as we grow
older, to take on unfortunate traits
and habits •
When constipation brings ov.--------
stomacn is probably loaded up with cer-
tain undigested food and your bowel* don't
move. So you need both Ihypsm to help
break up fast that nch undigested food in
your stomach, and Laxative Senna to pull
the trigger on those lary bowels. So be
sure your laxative also contains Pepsrn.
and Take Dr. Caldwell's Laxative, because its
1 Syrup Pepsin helps you gain that wexv I
det ful st oniachcvxr. fort, while the Laxative I
Senna moves your bowels. Tests prove the |
power of IVpsin to dissolve those lumps ut j
undigested protein food which may linger |
in your stomacti. to cause belching, gastnc ’
acidity and nausea. This is how pepsin- 1
inng vour stomach helps relieve it of such '
distress. At the tame time this medicine
wakes up la Jy nerves and muscle* in your
bowels to relieve your constipation. So see '
how much better you feel by taking the
laxative that also puts Pepsin to work on j
that stomach discomfort. to«x Even fin-
icky children love to taste this pleasant ]
family laxative. Buy Dr Caldwell's lAs-
•tive—Senna with Syrup l*epun at your
Mrs I druggist today I
The Women's Auxiliary of the
----* "— ------- ” ".. A , in busi-
ness session in the church Tues-
| day afternoon, closed the year's bus-
; iness for the current church year
ending March 31. and elected Mrs
L P. Parker delegate and Mrs Mar-
shall Magill alternate to the annual
In Weekly Session*
Mrs C S Patcheil offered the
devotional. "The Paasion Tide of ’
1940 in the meeting of the Epis-
copal Auxiliaxj in her home Tues- 1
The lesson, a chap- ,
ter on "The Teacher and Xhe Heal- i
er." from the text. 'Through ITag- (
i edy to Triumph, was led by Mrs 1
L H Hubbard. Seven members
and a guest. Mr: W S. Hooie. were |
present Because of Holy Week, no |
meeting will be held next Tues- i
day
Pull the Trigger on
Constipation, and
____________________ Pepsin -ize Acid Stomach Too
McNatt and children. Wh«i constipation brin<i co add indi:
hLnlmy diuy
I IS
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Friends and relatives of Mrs
Mary’ Daniels surprised her with a
birthday dinner Sunday at her
home. She celebrated her 74th
birthday and received many attrac-
tive and useful gifts
Those present were Mi and Mrs
W C Cowan of Aubrey Mr
Mrs General Daniels. I-.
Mrs Dewey Piepelman
dren. Gail and
Brockett and
Ruby Joe Ida Othene and Porter
Brockett. Mr and Mrs C. L Wal-
Kaomi Je&n. <
Miss Kittie Radcliff. Mr and Mrs
Andrew Rogers and sen. G A- |
George Rogers. Mrs Nell Starr. Mr
! and Mrs F McNatt and children. 1
. i Nona aud Dons Lee. Mr. and Mrs [
1 J H Byram and children. Sarabcth
and Jerry. Billy Hampton. Carroll
j Cross. Mrs Verna Self of liberty.
I M: and Mrs. Oscar Byioin and
| son. Leroy. Mrs E G Howell. Mr
and Mrs Bates Byrom and daugh-
j ter, Sally Pearl. Mrs Odessa Jack-
son and daughters. Louise t
Beatrice, Mrs Sarah Byrom. Calvin
Byrom. Mr. and Mrs C L Byrom.
of Navo, Mr and Mrs J. J John-
1 son and son. T L. Mr and Mrs C
O Byrom and daughter. Shirley
i Claudine, of Little Elm, Mr and
| Mrs. O C Robison ol Corinth. Mr
| and Mrs Paul Lockhart. Misses
| Ruby Joe Mullins. Ida Pearl Mul-
lins. Mary Lee Lockhart of Den-
i ton Mr and Mrs Harry Curry of
i Green Valley. Mrs W D Batesman
of Sherman. Mrs T S McReyn-
cgds of Fort Worth. Mrs. C C.
i Squires of Irving. Mr and
----..... . ■ , yr—--
frowned upon defacing them
«3SS»‘SSMff3,X;
became acquainted ' with nature.
They learned to swim, tq weave,
make pottery, to call trees, plants intc rAVCllnl
and birds by name. They learned dted at hte
to work together for the common i . i.—« -
good; to bow to the will of the ma-
jority; U. adjust selfish traits; to
develop the courage of their own
convictions
Many of the above-named activ-
ities were carried out by local Qlrl
Scouts. Denton ha* five troops
whose captains are: Troop 1, Mrs.
Gentry; Troop 2, Mrs R L. Fos-
tee’tei Utet busy mother* could get 35 T21’ SgjgF
£ th/^ls OtkeTZ in XHnld- «' *?"
Mrs J M
$I9.7L
Cemct fit. testing BMnferi, I
J
tee J
to the polls Others in the mid-
west decided a ravine needed clean-
ing up and learned the procedures
involved in getting tire city to at-
tend to it.
A group of senior* lu Pennsylva-
nia planned a recreation center for
little girls from six to nine years
of age They taught folk dances,
weaving and pottery making An-
other group in New England, con-
cerned about Jobs, organized a for-
um, invited guest speakers, then
opened the meetings to the pub-
lic.
Brownies, the seven to ten year
olds, girl sccutlng’s youngest mem-
bers, learned to keep streets clean
by dropping rtfuse into public con-
tainers; learned to be responsible
for themselves by watching traffic
signals; became aware of their
ownership of public buildings and
F* ■ W
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Warmer Weather
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 183, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1940, newspaper, March 14, 1940; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1312633/m1/3/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.