Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [27], No. 202, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 5, 1928 Page: 12 of 12
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7
Forage Grass From A frican Plateau
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Hats
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Pick Up Your Telephone and Call 31
h&Jpa
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East Side Tailor Shop
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HEA
across 300
Ediv a rd and Ernest Shctron
Grube Bros. Bakery
*
CONGOLEUM RUGS
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M.
us
->
FOR SALE OR TRADE—
I*'
K 3
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to
EASTER DAY ■
p*
ot heat.
Hancock Machine Works
1<
Lawn Mowers—
I?
ordered
the service
re
regimental
Phone 125.
Ohio.
wr
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a
to-
BUY IT IN DENTON
I
I
. A; -
Look Your Best
Easter Morn
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4
College Tailors
ma
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4
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llWaKL
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We Deliver Any
Time; Medicine
First
L-1
For sale. See us before buying.
We weld or fix anything.
“Denton’s Leading Blacksmiths.”
k
Denton Cafe
223 W. Oak St.
man
Tire
commancW
on
f/
'hi
(tor Transit Company, on
of transporting liquor has
for district court here May
IsYourTable
SetPerfectly.7,
Why Big Dandy Bread Is Always Good
From ingredient room to wrapping machine,
your bread Is always under the eyes of Rttttful and
experienced bakers. The resut is a loaf that always
fulfills the expectation of hundreds of Denton house-
wives who depend upon the constant uniformity of
Big Dandy.
/• . ' .'. ’ a®
croenbred anima) usually is larger
and more vigorous than either par-
ent, but attempts to continue breed-
ing from crossbreds usually are dis-
appointing. Toe hereditary material
in the cross Is too complex to make
the results of mating reliable.
• r.
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-;e|
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•nc
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t -
JOB PRINTING
Satisfactory and prompt ser-
vice.
. Ross Printing Co.
Phone 841. 219 1-2 W. Oak
YARBROUGH BROS.
Phone 1201. 231 W. Hickory.
WE HAVE
PLOWSHARES
One 1925 Buick Sedan
One 1923 Buick Sedan
One 1925 Dodge Sedan
", —end several good Fords.
| SMITH-HAMILTON MOTOR CO.
11S SMta Loen.t Street. Phone 2M.
ord Stroud
925 Ford Coupe
luick Coupe.
GEO. FRITZ
eland and Pontiac Dealer.
J. L. Wright Bldg.
S. Elm. Phone 51
I
7
TALIAFERRO & SON
Hardware and Seeds.
[ We Are Open
bm 5 a. m. to 12 p. m. to
Ere you with good things
S^E CHARLIE HENDLEY FOR
FISK TIRES AND TUBES
TIRE SERVICE BATTERY SERVICE
GAS AND OILS
Phone 126—we are always on the job.
EXIDE SERVICE STATION
315 North Locust St.
Di Ft
uoe
photos
Petmeiaei
IFF™
XXXXXXXX
p. m. An4
gw
i
I
VMessle grocei
4^1 air hereafter
“It bar. been
and at times k
but since I havi
County I have
a crop," mid O.
ed here from Ni
yean ago. Davis
ton. having bou
place. He raid “I
ed maize, corn,
stuffs and a llttl
I planted only f
end gathered t
•bales from it. T
put In ten acres
keep chickens,
some for market,
meat by fattcnln
Hi
5
nt
jt’r/r
Quite often, in fact, every day,
someone calle and asks: Do you
deliver this late, or do you deliver
medicine, etc. In reply, we say—
J
of 111
VJchjaa* of thecae
perfection?
kteanffeh<w anffMa rftw theiinif il aai .rfggbl
■-/i
ledast bit of <rfety to a charming tahi
it tn takes «a*r afew-ndaotca just b
ceno-Bq
IncTNM
vo«t,9|
The Pearletot
held their first
fell tai luncheon
tel Saturday at
•on. Pm. and t
•anted all salesi
the linn to the
Uns 357. 116 Fry St.
Hngtime is here with its
E harvest of flowers,
Uidened the air with
FTfragrance so sweet;
hceful the day. and happy
' the hours
If you come to our market
F to purchase your meat.
> USED CARS
1927 Chevrolet Roadster.
[1925 Chevrolet 2-door Se-
ll'
p-
i
I
Dry Cleaning.
SSSEE35ESS
*
•1
thesfxnMoof ICE’^
to dStA ‘
•f
I About twenty-
students sere vf
I ord’-Chroniclc ofl
I thing of conduct
I newspaper Sevei
ray “from the v
here I can't un
paper is ever
I printed." The
pieseed to heve
'glad to show the
I the business.
22 Bids R
ByBoan
C.I.A.!
M
1
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V' ■ ’ 'f!
' ■ . s#*- ■ ■
In Time for Both
A depressed looking men strolled
into the grillroom around lunch
hour The waiter bustled up.
"What will you have, sir’ Some
cold shoulder?”
"No thanks, I had that this mor
ning '
"Well, then, tongue, sir?”
No thanks; I’ll get that
night - London Tld-Bite.
J,
member we
' ' • - ,-e —-
1
1
ft
oMnw
Raptist W. M. U9
1 Meets at ChJt^h
—
1
ft’ ?
iOkC
Is Brought for American Pastures
' ■
K
1 -*■*» - A-
Make Grass Cutting Fun by Using One of Our
Eclipse Ball Bearing, Self-Sharpening Mowers.
We also sharpen and repair all makes of mow-
ers. We have a special machine to sharpen mowers
that sharpens evenly and smooth. No rough edges.
We will call for and deliver.
equator, provided the seed
numerous glasses most likely
suit their purpose.
SUN PROOF
Jfhen labor cost is the
^cost of painting, it’s poor
iiomy to use cheap paint,
;ause a 'quality paint like
1 Proof saves you the la-
• cost of painting so often,
told by
(orris Paint and
Paper Co.
Buy Paint from a Paint Store.
T. Morris D. T. MH'lendon
■ ..
The process of shelling does not
kill European corn borers that have
worked their way into the cob.
Corn carried through the winter in
heavily infested regions and not
helfed'before May 1 should be plac-
ed ID • container so the moths
innot escape after emerging A 12-
11MH Wire screen is satisfactory.
---
A etrawberry patch can be con-
more than two years if it is
Ikvi. well cultivated and fer-
gnd if the old. plants are re-
’each year in favor of the
rong young plants, ft is usually
urefeaable to set new plants each
ta*cp out *he two-year-
id plants after they have fruited.
1
r'WK.’.fefi
Twae:
it coIde
AaMy 1
The farmers
L as fxpresse
ky. are feeltr
I ever the ver
I which have fa
I The crops. pr»
I gun to suffer
I the high wind
I had dried out
I According to
I there now la k
I the groand to
I to the crops al
I that have beei
I yet sprouted 1
I lend in excella
I future plantlni
I Fred Freema
I Freeman Moto
I elected Vice Pr
I Motor Buss As
I meetirh held a
I It was the firs
I the organixatioi
I and eleven repr
itoua parts of t
I tendance. Guy
Lmu tiectod 1
aaid "The by-l
tion are now be
be completed 1'
hope of the asi
Laoon operating
[the aaaodation
■arvice of all op
man and Preen
3JOO miles dal
driven.
I r
The days who
Denton County
deed filed for re
ty Clerk Thur*
ago. transferrin
on Elm Creek 1
ment tranaferre
C. Buster to O.
• Waa written In
in good state c
knolwledgment
of LewisvIUe. Ji
and ex-offlelo n<
h W. M, Jacks
Denton Thun
nald “It alwa;
come to Dento
I get ten the peo
good to me w
I ton. We suffe
from the storm
Denton. The c
waa blown do
that suffered
On Mt, Kilimanjaro (above) th
three mile altitude The two arc
Si
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■
■*7'"'a- IVaAaalA
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KID Rats
Without Peleon
A Naw Btawalaaiar the* la
Abwrtmaly Coto to waa AanrwhMwt
Will not l*|«ft*iBWai« belnji livestock.
dam. c«iB. powht v. vet ia deadly to rata
and mice every time.
k^'.; i
u;sL;.r j
teioew
ToavriD
IwfrMW 1 UH"
■
That’s all that’s necessary to have your suit,
coat or gown thoroughly cleaned and renovated by
our careful and experienced employes. We call for
and deliver.
” I N 01
Send us that dress,
suit, hat or gloves to be
nicely cleaned and
pressed for Easter, or
better just phone
Instant service from 6:30 a. m. to 11
■MS *
PMteurization does not destroy
>he food value in milk. A tempera-
urgflf 148 degrees Fahrenheit for
!0 Minutes has no marked effect on
ho ctMHnical makeup of milk or its
rowfh-promoting propertied. The
irocMS also kills disease-producing
■actigla In milk.
ry -—
Oieaa breeding usually should be
mflned to production of animals
lor CM market with no thought of
isMg them for breeding stock. The
PHONE 40
i
K-R-O does not contain artenic. phot-
phnna barium carlionatvot any deadly
polann. Mad* of powdered tauifl ai rec-
omaiended b« the U, S. Drat, of Ami-
culture (n their ut*M bulletin on "Rat
Control. ”
••One nt ontgaW ewtoaenH«t t«M at be
tj« U yew framMi Imm «taf (few'
U«M» M ■winn.ai Ml pampas!
Just arrived—several new patterns in Gold
Seal Congoleum Rugs. We feel sure that you can
use one or two of these beautiful patterns. Come
see them.
9
<Z
From African mounlains and plateaus K_ L. PetmeLsel lupin'
ins*t| and L. W. Kephart Hower Insrt), ft deral ptant explorers, have
brought forage grass and clover seed to improve American pastures.
Kilimanjaro (above) th found forage grass thriving at a
’ (town b« low on one of their quests.
By Mt Pern Ice
( JEFFERSON CITY, Mv.—Even
* though they're oflly nine and
geveu years old. Edward and Ernest
■hetron are criminals.
The statutes of the state of Mis-
souri say so. and the law is inex-
orable in making discriminations
like that.
Welfare workers pleaded in vain
that the boya be removed from the
Boonville reformatory. Father E.
;J. Flanigan, who directs a boys’
home In Omaha, Neb., which bears
his namo. even went to Governor
Satn A Baker and asked that Fid-
ward and Ernest be paroled to him.
„T’e executive, although sympa-
tkfeic, was powerless He explained
that the Missouri parole laws will
not permit the removal of crimi-
nals to another state.
Cheerless Childhood
Life hasn’t been very kind to Er-
nest and Edward. Before they be-
came full-fledged criminals and
Were eent to the reformatory they
were trying to get the most out of
a riflier cheerless babyhood 4n
thdr home town of Thayer, Mo.
Otto 4ay when they had wo thing
to •with but an idea, they de- I
clihf to become bold, bad bandits.
So they broke into a store and
'• erf caught red-handed. A big
WUteySxH
the Farm N
MH
Protein content has become of
inarMMng importance in determin-
ing the price paid for any particu-
lar lot of wheat. At times ,when the
ipply of high protein wheat has
been Ohort, premiums of fully one
ent have been paid for each add
<d tenth of one per cent of pro-
tein over a given basic amount.
y»Srir; ■■
Grc
5LE
T(
NOTE—It would be illegal to pub-
lish this if not true.
“Disturbed Sleep”
Is Nat tire’s Warning of "Danger
Ahead”. A HealthV Bladder Does
Not Act at Night.
Mrs J N Alexander. Sugden.
Okla says tn her own home papa*,
the Waureka News: "For twenty
years I was troubled with burning
and bladder acting ten or fifteen
I times every night. I tried many re-
I medics but had no relief until I bo,
: gan Keller's I.lthiated Buchu. I now
| sleep all night without getting up
! I am willing to help others by tell-
ing or writing my full CAnerlence."
I Llthlated Buchu Acts on the blad-
der as epaom salts do on the bowels
i Drives out foreign deposit* nad les-
i sens excessive acidity. This relieves
l the Irritation that causee "Getting
I up nights " The tablets coat 3c each
I at all drug stores Kelior Laboratory
Mechanicsburg. Ohio, or locally at
I The Curtis Co.
Cows due to freshen soon should
be removed from the rest of the
herd and placed in a roomy box
stall from which all manure has
been removed and the floors and
walls of which have been scraped
or scrubbed and sprayed with a
good disinfectant The stall should
be kept free from drafts and well
bedded A small pasture, conven-
iently located so that the cow and
calf can be given the proper atten-
tion, makes an ideal calving place
during the warm summer months.
By FRANK I. WF.LI.ER
(AwociaUd Pres', Farm Editor)
WASHINGTON, April 2 Tre
IM the fertility ot
■Ki
thia feed a trial.
Make this Easter day one that will live always
in the memory of your friends. You can do it!
There is a way—the perfect gift—the ‘‘gift that
lasts.”
It will be a pleasure to show them to you.
L W. L. YARBROUGH
L North Side Square. Denton, Texas.
ftYou Are Not
rtttng as many eggs as you
ed, try feeding
Purina Chicken
Chowder
and Hen Chow
ST
KOOSER TRIAL ON LIQUOR
CHARGE MAY 5
LAREDO. April 4.—Trial of H. V.
Kooser. president of the American
Refrigeral
a ^narge
been het f
5. according to District Attorney
.John Valls. Kooser was indicted by
the county grand Jury yesterday He
was arrested a week ago when offi-
cers raided his private car on the
Missouri Pacific railroad tracks
here.
seed of 50 different forage grasses
f nd a dozen species of clover, gath-
ered ty the first white men to
gaze upon tne piant life atop Mt
K< nya. only snow covered spot on
the equator, have been brought to
America to rebuild pasture lands
L W Kephart and R L. Piemel-
sel. federal plant '-xplorers. led the
"criHade for ,rass.'’ a modern ver
sion of the drama that every gen
erut'.on has enacted since
reached the pastoral stage.
I primitive Herdsman moved to dis-
I tant fields when starvation faced
j h:s flocks, but modern agronomic
i practice has reversed the order by
Imaging grass to threatened herds.
Two prime factors directed the
| quest to . Africa's vast plateaus.
For countless centuries they have
been a paradise for herbiverous
animals, an indication that glasses
i I.iown there are rich in pasture
qualities. Equally important is the
fact that highlands of eastern
Africa subject forage plants to
climatic rigors not uncommon
those on the American plains.
In Kenya and Tanganyika the
explorers suffered from cold instead
ot heat. Mt. Kenya itself, attain-
ing an altitude of 17.000 feet and
tipped with the only snow on the
of
tc
Two hundred
policeman took them before a big
Judge, who sent them to the big
prison at Boonville. There were
lots of big boys there who talked
about the big crimes they had com-
mitted—and some explained how
they would "pull bigger Jobe when
they got out of stir."
Naturally, Edward and Erneet
felt pretty small. The law might
call them criminals, but the other
prisoner* called them babies.
To Get Their Chance
Then people started coming In
to talk to the boys One was
Father Flanigan, who told about
the fine home he had-up in Ne-
braska, where there were Other
guests their age and where a fel-
low* had a chance to play and
learn other things than how to
steal automobiles and go with
gangs.
After a -while came word that a
bill was going to be presented to
the state legislature, and that it
wae THEIR bill! It was going to
be a "special dispensation to oraM
the stigma of ’crime’ from theh
lives’’ so that they could bo sent
to the Omaha home. K ;
So Edward and Ernest are
happy, after all. One of these
days they're going through the
big gates of Boonville with Father
Flanigan—and never come back.
TRAMWAYS STOPPED BY CHI-
NESE OFFICERS
SHANGHAI—A Chinese regi-
mental commander, peeved over
a remark made by a tramway con-
ductor in the Native' City, ranr up
the headquarters of the company
and ordered all tram service sus-
pended forthwith.
The officials cf the company, im-
pressed with the rank of the speak-
er. ordered service suspended
Thousands of persons were obliged
to wulk or use rlcshas. Police in-
vestigated and learned that the
suspension order had not been is
med by the Garrison Headquar
ters
They
turned.
The
threat I ned to put his soldiers
the streets to stop the trams it
service was resumed.
The police appealed to the Gar-
rison commander. Service wa1
promptly resumed and the regi-
mental commander disciplined.
F: i
I., 2
At tne business and socli
Ing of the Women's Misaioi
clety of the First Baptist
Tuesday afternoon, Mrs. J<
lins presided in U;a absence of t|
I resident, Mrs. V. R. Cog Devotfa
al was led by Mrs. M C. SUnplR
and reports were given by ’mH
John Crain, treasurer: L.‘ P. RH
Y W A chairman, A L. CiMM
ler, visitation chairman; C. Lip
comb, mission study leader. . *
A committee was appointed
form an R. A. (Royal Ambassado
society, to he composed of youi
boys of the church 'Die comm I
tee is composed ot Mmos. L. - J
Floyd John Crain and NoraUotMM
Plans were made for the meettt
here ot the County Convention 4
April 24-28. Mrs. J 8. Hollobab|
was elected first vice chairman,
society will help to send a nog)
delegate to the inter-racial mcettl
at Piairie View Normal In Apr
Prayers were offered by Mmes.''
J. Fonts and Floyd.
During the social hour Mrs. '
Dickson gave a piano number, i
Miss Mary Joe Coleman read. !,__
land cakes, wafers, and candle*
were serced to 49 members and Ono
visitor by the hostesses, Mme8.lC.p
Lipscomb. M C. Simpkins. HQOlo-
taugh. Ed Grube. B. W. Boyd. . • ,
THESERVICE GROCERY
PHONE 442 «
Our service and merchandise must please. Give
al.
BROOKS DRUG STORE
Postal Substation.*
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B
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re May Paw Law for Two Boy
“Criminals”
1
JO
I I
miles away, on the lofty sloped ofl
Mt Kilimanjaro, they found foswl
yrasc, thriving at a three-mile alti-
tude. the highest elevation reaohed
by African vegetation. On Kenya
the days and nights are each 11,
hours long, and in no other place
In the world does forage grass
grow naturally under such condi-
tions of temperature
Fighting their way ______
miles of both wild and farmed ter-
rain, Kephart and Piemeisel, ac-
companied by native guides, col-
lected seed from 75 per eent of the-
major forage grasses Following'
private laboratory tests,, they will
be turned over to government ox*
periment stations. There isrio
definite knowledge that the plants
will grow in this country, but past
experience leads the department of
floriculture to hope for valuable ad-
ditions to the pastures and mea-
dews of both the north and south
New grxsses to lengthen the sea-
son of green forage, it says, would
be a big factor in lessening the
cost of livestock production. The
west is especially concerned. Fig-
ures indicate it takes from 10 to
15 acres a season to pasture one
animal If the new grasses are
successful, the carryirf; capacity of
western ranges may be materially
increased.
It is regarded as significant that
African grasses, growing waist-high
over an area half as large a* all
of the United States, make it re-
semble the wat’ul; prairies of
American frontier days. For the
most ixrt the grasses are peren-
nial. but whether they will con-
tinue to be when grown In a coun-
try of alternating seasons Is «
question only future experimen'
can answer.
I Twonty-two gei
I hand when the
I Of the College <
f met at the coleg
I poae of awarding
I, erection of the n<
tory. All but the
| rejected and at
I afternoon it was
[ board during the
I decide whether to
Ject both of thee
I TheoUst of 1
F amountr bid we
I by the board. bu
r —Mtect for th<
I the bids nu
J the membe
» here With H
Kays of Swee
I Conneltee of East
OPTOMETRIST ’
McCray’s Jewelry Store
Denton, Texas.
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [27], No. 202, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 5, 1928, newspaper, April 5, 1928; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335365/m1/12/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.