Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [27], No. 156, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 11, 1928 Page: 4 of 10
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DENTON RECORDCHMQNIOL
T V
'V
V
■?
5ft
All
V
PHONE 71
/
I, 1937
the
For Your Grocery Needs
We assure you always of
penniless
workers. They liked Colonel
prompt service.
introduce an
FRANCIS M. CRADDOCK
attended
ANNOUNCEMENT
Of
V -
FARM WEEK
IN WASHINGTON
the
!•-
at '
to
Y
H. M. Russell & Sons Co.
X3
BUY IT IN DENTON
FA
TEACHERS COLLEGE AUDITORIUM
Pl
I*,
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16
Announcement
“The Patsy
ARABIAN TOILETRIES
An Uproarious Comedy by Barry Conners.
AT OUR STORE ALL NEXT WEEK
•5
As stated above, 1 have sold
Mr. D. T. McClendon, and feel that this
us to give our customers better service, and
demonstration, and meet Mrs. Williams.
who comes to ns direct from the Arabian
We will continue to handle the well known line of—
PATTON’S SUN-PROOF PAINTS
and
skin troubles; dry
BILLIKEI
THIS IS A FINE ARTS NUMBER.
These str
I
W. T. Morri.
J. R
“Buy Paint From
The H<
t
£
A
'A
14"
*
■
a
'■"■’'Yfyn
* j £
Exotic To
i n Sport;
Along Mi;
skin, oily skin, wrinkles, crow’s feet, sal-
lowness, black heads, enlarged pores, flab-
biness, tan, freckles, liver splotches, hol-
low necks, etc.
in patent, lig
£ ties and pum|
The unit
mother will f
4
I
I
"You can go jiu>t as far as vour am-
bitions will carry you. Ignore any
code which condemns the making
will mqke
supervision,
relief
Choice of minnows
Rayzor Ice Plant.
K 1
v|
LI a”
1
jf-
--- >
By FRANK I. WELLER
(Associated Press Farm Editor»
WASHINGTON. Feb. 11.—Wrest-
ling again with the troublesome
Muscle Shoals-problem, congress is
caught in a cross*flre of demands
.3'
II
In
[MILLKINS MAY STARVE AS
BANDITRY AND WAR KEEP
AID FROM CHINESE NEEDY
H
Morris Paint & Paper Co
208 Writ Oak Street.
'P,
DEMONSTRATION
of Well Known
I
Laboratories at Chicago.
We wish to announce to the people of Donton
and Denton County the opening of our
New Millinery and Novelty Shop
■ V
' A
1’he net
inc and leal 1
surpassed al
, jining leatht
. late in footv
^ucceMful t
lawyer and '
pollution in
tthorre-
' cral interests in event of war. Re-
turns from such ealea above the
rT'' ■
r
i... a < .
Pecentlv, under fire ot the pub-
lands committee, Steward was
'i;>-.';tage with his questioners, so
sh i p ::i defining what he consid-
er. : their legal rights, that he was
pi nipilv arrested by an irate Sen-
V
2a
J*
Hbom Oh farm f~
near Cedar'
’ntJSpjd'/-IJou J I Z
learned
pcrcictcncj L__
a: a neuicf.jp.,'
reportr-c-
RE
® “Father Port. Hit Foot Down and Leave. It Down’ ‘ in “THE PATSY”
army ordnance branch when
Muscle Shoals plants were er<
ed.
Senator Norris, republican.
pocketing the money.
Shantung is the hob’ land of the
Flowery Kingdom, the birthplace ot
Confucius and Mencius homeland
of countless sages. Here ts located
the sacred mountain of Tai Shan
Western Shantung Is the peninsu-
la forming the lower Jaw pt the
Gulf of Chihli. Across th. province
flows the Hwang or Yellow River.
Scourge of China" which tn Hood
breaks through its tranks and seeks
new courses across haplew farm-
lands.
When times are good it is one of
the richest agricultural regions of
China
You are cordially invited to attend this
lie Bring the Hospital
to Your Door
Oar !■ valid Car It eqai|,i»*<l
wit* rrcry pre rial aa far Che
xsn.x.-s.-t..."
SCHMITZ UNDERTAKING
COMPANY
JHW. M‘ WM Ml,
For your selection we have Ladies’, Misses’ and
Children’s Spring Hats in the season’s finest colors.
The new braids, taffeta effects anti lovely visca com-
binations are here.
Beautiful imported corsages. . y.
See us before you buy and save money.
MRS. IDA HARRIS
In Building Formerly Occupied by King Radio Shop.
West Court Square.
Mrs. Williams will be glad to give in-
dividual attention and instruction to cover
your particular requirements.
• D.Ti McClendon
Paint Store.**
We also have a most complete .tock of the very latest wall pa-
per—Mime of the prettiest pattern, we have <-vet had—artist*’ sup-
plies, paint brushes, window glass, etc.
You are cordially invited to attend this
demonstration all next week.
Art and G
Mto^lSbet
Permanen
Beautiful Natural It
M.50.
Frederic Methoil.
Bobbin..
McCAI LEV BE
«20 We»t 1
Just arr
icw shades <
nations. In :
Renert, Film Uk
Send High Sch&ol
Girl* to Contest
Field workers of relief organiza-
tiotiB believe conditions also will
make difficult the usual program’ of
relief in exchange for labor on
roads and other public works.
The mountains of southern and
eastern Shantung long have been
the liaunU of organized banditry.
Of late years the lawless elements
have been added to by unpaid sol-
diers and farmers driven to desper-
ation by thefts and crop failures.
General Chang Tsung Chang, the
military governor is held responsi-
ble for much of the terror and des-
olation. He now is said to be taxing
rested by
$»?nate during
oiL pcobo.
humanitarian genius had created.
For eotne reason yet unsolved
they have never filed an accounting
suit to determine what became o<
the much-discussed $3,080,000 in
l iberty bonds. But i>erliaps their re-
straint may be interpreted as a
.‘.vmbol of loyalty to the "big boss"
who actually has bettered their fi-
nancial condition.
Colonel Hob of course, never was
tic« txiv to purchase several shares I a tank-wagon driver or a inechan-
7 . If * *. *?u £5 ? yi". r *.*
or of Grave’s as the most likely candidate in the field.
ter Norris’ resolution providing tot
government operation of Muscle
Shoals was acfiroved February 1 by
the senate agricultural committee
It b argued the company’s prime
interest is to develop and sell pow-
and that its plan to manufac-
ture commercial fertilizer at a low
cost to the farmer Is inconsequen-
tial. The commitees have been told
tho proposed contract to supply 50,-
ooo tons of nitrogen annually with-
in three or four years after get-
ting started, will require only one-
MxUenUi of thw sxiwgr tliat can be
developed.
WATER SPAR VARNISHES AND LACQUERS
When you byy paint from u. you are assured of getting the very
be.t there i. to be had, and it i. fre.h -stock. Out* pnint doe. not »et
on our .helve, for month, and months; it is moved right o\it, and this
is something you should think about when buying p»mt.
lie Made Friends
'.i' ui that first investigation
and a rcond in 1923. he was so
e'U7i'“t m his cooperative testimo-
tr
a disgrace, that success is a sin.
"That is not idealism, but plain
arrant nonsense ’’
In Oil Scandal Now
Today, Stea-art awaits |
punishment for his refusal to
a Senate committee what he might
know about the alleged profit-tak-
ing in a deal with the now infa-
mous and defunct Continental
Trading Co. (Ltd.) of Canada Hi.s
ambitions have
business you may give us.
"The greatest training school in
tire world is the newspaper busi-
not-s..' aaid Stewart. " Chat's where
I learned to be persistent—and any
one can be successful if ho is only
persistent.”
Soon after he got his diploma
from. Yale. Ju read, a ntivspa^er sto-
ry to the effect that the town of
Ptarre was about to be made the
capital of South Dakota. He rea-
soned that the voting eapltfcl ought
to hold many a money-mating op-
portunities for a bright young law-
yer. So he pawned his watch, and
bought a oneway ticket and landed
there without a dime.
Stewart stayed in Pierre 17 years.
After a. struggle, he liecame a auc-
Oessful attorney, finally a politician.
Twice he was state senator from his
district, once state's attorney at
Pierre und for a time was clerk of
He was,
V.3, '/ Wkota,
R.’p1
that the vast war-time equipment
be leased to private interests and
equally insistent overtures for gov-
ernment operation. Meanwhile the
big plants are idle and the poten- I "ith reasonable protection of fed-
tial source of limitless power lies “a! ir.tcrcata :r. event c! nar. P?
tial source of limitless power
dormant.
One side proposes that congress cost ot production, would be used
accept terms of the American Cy- t- ‘ 2 t”
helpers here?"—and Stewart would
introduce a director who used to be
a mechanic's helper.
Aided Ambitions
It was all very stimulating to the
imaginations and ambitions of the
Bob's
liked Colonel
Pcb They enjoyed the Idea of be-
the supreme court,
course, a Republican
His first job with the Standard
Oil Company" came when he acted
as its counsel in a South Dakota
case. Soon afterward began the
military career which was to bring
him the title of "colonel". He join-
ed Roosevelt's "Rough Riders” in
die Spanish-American War, became
i major and commanded one troop
at San Juan Hill After the war, he
reargani'srd the South Dakota Na-
------ ------1 and was appointed
I
country, to conduct fertilized
periments.
at Muscle Shoals and at plants to’
anamid company, manufacturer of I be erected in other parts of
nitrogenous fertilizers; the other
that the government use) the prop-
erty to develop power and with the
proceeds from sales, conduct re-
search experiments and practical
demonstrations irr the use of fer-
tilizer products.
Advocates of both private
federal operalion have carried then
views to committee hearings In
Han iron E. Howe, secretary of
<r
“Patsy buys a set of books to make her wjtty and wisecracking,
one of those “life of the party” young ladie|, and almost wrecks the
family when sht? gets well started on the copyrighted lines.
came an offer from
S' imtard Oil Company, so he went
te ( 'uiago to become ite general at-
V ■ nrv Two years later he became
gcip ial counsel and in that capac-
jt - iu<le his first appearance be-
f< ■. :i s material investigating com-
American Chemical Society, told fi
Senate Agricultural Committee 'i-
cywlamid process qf fixing nitro
gen is obsolescent and that if t:><
country is Io benefit from fern-
lizer experiments a newer proct
must be developed at Muscj
Shoals. He was connected with tic
th- •
Mrs. Williams lias Arabian Prepara-
tions for the various
High School sJudents will assist’
in selling tickets to "Beau Bab-/'
ivur," which u to be shown at the
Palace Theater Feb. 30 and 31, it
was announced Friday, proceeds ot
the sale to be used to defray ex-
penses of » representative of "tWf'
home economics department of Se-
nior High School uo the State
girls’ clothing contest at San An-
tonio April 2b to 38. A coiumtaiion
on all tickets sold by High School
students will be given to the fund.
"Beau Sabreur" is a sequel to
>Beuu Geste." and is tile story of
a French officer who vows never
to look at another woman and then
falls in love with her while on a
mission for hte country. It in a
story of tiuj Foreign Legion and
the Sahara Desert.
WASHINGTON. Feb. 11—Months
of hunger, the hunger that drives
men to eat bark and leaves, to
sell their children and sometimes
to sell their children and sometimes
fo kill their families and themselves
are in prospect for 4,Of#),000 Chin-
ese-
Reports indicate thgt the situa-
tion in western ShanUfhg and
Southern Chihli will bp-as serious
between npw apd May as in the
great famine of 1D20 and 1931. Four
provinces were affected then and
hundreds of thousanda—jxjriuips
millions- died. Bpvs and gijrte wen-
sold as slaves. Many ended their
lives after 'CUTIhg U’ftff-TWpnorsei
America helped generously’ in
i hat famine. But now American re-
lief organizations are unable to
give more than casual aid betau.se
of the prevailing banditry and civil
war. .
The spectre ot starvation ap-
peared for Hie second time in seven
years in these provinces when last
year’s crops in many districts fail-
ed The ptnch of famine is making
itself felt in 05 of the 107 districts
of Shantung a province the size
ot Illinois, but into whieh 26 to 38
million people are crowded. In 35
districts the liarvest wag only ten
per cent of normal. Famine is be-
ginning. too, in southern Chihli
where crops were only 20 pec cent
<?f normal.
Missionaries report that." people
are beginning to selling their cattle
and dispose of their pqoptrty. oth-
ers are migrating. These remaining
are beginning to mix cliaff with
their food
While immediate distress is not
overwhelming, savs M. T. Liang,
chairman of the international fam-
ine relief committee, it la expected
that the most trying period will
come in the three or four months
ahead. Tn the corresponding period
in 1921 as manv as 1.500 persons
were said to have died daily.
Reports to the State Department
at Washington say that banditry
and civil war have aggravated the
distress and probably
work under foreign
impossible any extensive
(Sommandod trwp
of Ipputfh Rider.1? of
w; STEWA2T
Representative Morin, republican.
Pennsylvania, has made the lat-
est move for federal operation. The
Chairman of the House Military
committee. Morin has introduced a
bill empowering the secretary ol
agriculture to take over the neces-
sary machinery for fertilizer inves-
tigations. Failing to obtain a satis-
factory private lease, the secre-
tmd outsjxiken in his progressive
>■ ’tiat he left Washington a
Hina! figure.
i‘ aid that in 1918 directors of
standard Oil Company of In-
da na created the position of chair-
r ni <>t the. board ot directors just
to ivt Stewart a chance at the exc-
cti .s side of the business. Whal-
es r the circumstance;'. Stewart got
tin )ob and has held it ever since.
In rhe natural course of his ea-
rn' Stewart has become a mtl-
liotimre. Whether anv of his wealth
otiyinallv was part of the $0,080,000
".■lush fund" said to have been rais-
ed bv Harry F. Sinclair, the investi-
gating committee intends to find
t u
‘‘The play is built around the tribulations of Patricia Barring-
ton the youngest daughter of a family where the older child has
been getting all the breaks since childhood. Patsy is a t’inderellaish
sort of a little fellow, determined to drag a few laughs out of life even
if Big Sister Grace goes to all the parties and wears Patsy’s new clothes
to them and joins her mother whole-heartedly in the constant brow-
beating the kid of the family gets.
tary of war would be authorized to
operate the generating plapts and
contrac t for the sale ot *power
I wish to announce to my friends and customer* that I have pur-
chased a half interest in the Morris Paint and Paper Co., and will be
Riad to serve you with anything you may need in our line.
d. r McClendon.
I meteoric than >f he had been,
was born on a f----- -----
- Wapids, fa., in
himself mostly bv reading and use
cf night time study until he entered
Coe College, from which he grad-
uated in 1886
Worked lli« Way
Ambitious for more education, he
journeyed east and entered the law
school of Yale, where lie worked his
way by rejxirting for a New HA-___
----- ven newspaper and doing small jobs I tional Guard
mechanics' | for a law firm j colonel of the Fourth regiment
/ /_) ornplogeg''
v\
R j
a one-half interest in my business to
new partnership will enable
we will appreciate any
W. T. MORRIS.
that I been
had been accorded his rise from a
newspaper rejvorter to
chairman of the board of the Stan- I
Oil Company of ' '
pot -Dome scandal He has found |
that, in the eyes of the fmplaca .
ble United States’ Senate, certain
kinds of wealth are indeed a dis-
grace; certain forms of success may
suspiciously resemble a sin.
And that, it might be added, is
no arrant nonsense
"Colonel Bob" followed his for-
mula for success not only by making
I
______ ________SATURDAY, FEB. 11, IMt
JfL R08£RT STEWART, WHOM SENATE wl^TS TO< SbJvb JO 1717^1^4^
________H1SCAREER AS POOR NEWSPAPER REPORTER
“Then Patsy decides she wants a man and picks out a former suit-
His name is
Tony, and he and Patsy make love to each other in a shy innocent
way without knowing what it is all about, until Grace decides she
wants him back in her own fold. Then there is the dickens to pay—
with Patsy and Mr. Harrington aligned against Grace and the Mrs.
You can guess which side wins, of ^ourse, and you can guess, also,
hat Patsy, like the Royal Northwest Mounted Police, “gets her man.”
But the spectators have a lot of fun watching her do it.”
. H
> ' ■ i
"nt
Seats may be reserved at Garrison’s Drug Store or at the college
(Y. M. C. A. room) Wednesday annd Thursday, February 15 and 16.
Single Admission Tickets, 35c and 50c.
X’< in .u-ka, opposes .‘■ale of the prop-
el tv to the American Cyanamid
C< >n the contention It wants the
government to invest an addition-
tt1 *75.000.000 in equipment before
it takes over the project and that
s', ith the exceptions It proposes, the
Tour per cent rate of interest off-
ered actually will amount to but
. and sixrlenths per cent. Sena-
cy and humanity in industry."
Gave Them Representation
dard Oil Company of Lndmna. | He was one of the first executives* methods, and they
someone asked for his formula tor j m industry to introduce an cm- Dei. TLj,
success. j ploves' representation plan All the j ing stockholders and gloried in thp
"Tt’s up to vou.' replied Stewart. | workers were made rtiembers of* solemn council meetings wlpch hip
,.... . | couneilr: there were higher equneijs
attended by the delegates they
chose; at still higher councils, em-
of money or teaches that wealth is plovers and workers were equally
i .'presented,
A stock-selling campaign was
pul on among the employes by
I Stewart He increased the list ol
possible |; tockholdcrs from 4,000 to more than
to tell I twthe times that number. He made
it possible for the $14-a-week of-
t.vo ... ,,<<>. ■. .tl i .a,.*-i uuvri ui u uiecuuii-
Strwnrt used to take his directors ic’s helper, but hi.s rise was no less
■ ith him on tours of the States j meteoric than ti lie had been. He
where the company operated At was born on a farm near Cedar
carried him into meetings ol employes, he would m- | Rapids. Ta., in 1867 He educated
the malodorous tangle of the Tea- quire
"Are there any tank-wngon driv-
ers here9 If there are, stand up "
There always were tank-wagon
drivers then. so they would stand,
locking sheepish.
"Just wanted you to meet T J
Thompson, vour general manager."
Sttwart would say. "He used to
drive a tank-wagon 30 years ago
"Now, are there any
MIAMI BkACl
Little or no ballj
the sport cos turn
son on the winte
KBIT courses and
fitfds. They spea
And in revealing
Will be seen next
•Dfr in the Nortl
out loud.
Observe this o;
■ knitted wool bj
port, of course 1
■nail squares
enough, you say.
dering each small
oblongs in colors,
the comers to
square opening at
I white block
! And the color*
light blue, dark t
yellow, rose and
sleeves end in wi
narrow stripes of
Compared to thi
het unpleasant
hues, Jaccb's Coa
was just a mourn
Seme of the spe
broidered jackets
rose is covered wi
broldcred poises ii
rose
Sport bags alse
cn. borrow their
Baltic, and look i
otic and full ot st;
!ng tint*. Amb
amber clasps, alse
Baltic or Indian h
Costume leweln
these gay frocks
crystals, for inst:
the wrUts and at
the migratory arl
Or a simple piece
graved with the
tures of a Japan*
the wrist with a st
gold cylinders
Don’t be at al! js
try club verandal
are Piled with br
wearing two-toned
close -fitting, in nu
and dark green;
roae; pastel and L
Its what the wi
port; and what th
WlD echo five or i
Kbw.
By NF A Sen ice I money for himself, but bv malerial-
" WASHINGTON Feb 11 — Sis ■ l.V aiding the thousands of employes
years ago. when Robert W. Stewart ol his company. For years he has
was basking in the acclaim that beeii identified as one of the
staunchest advocates of "demccra-
I
Indiana.
for sale at
IM
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Edwards, James L. & McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [27], No. 156, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 11, 1928, newspaper, February 11, 1928; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335319/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.