Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 306, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 4, 1928 Page: 2 of 10
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Road Service.
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PHONE 40
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WHIS'
Hats Re-made
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First Showing
plot
Indies’ Fall Dresses
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S. Cord Tires
We
received
our early
Pl I
shipments of Ladies’ Silk
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Dresses.
The
colors
are
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—— them to you.
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$19.95
Rig assortment of
new
Fast,
felts for fall.
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Six Women Take
Teachers* Exams
PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY
COMPOUNDED
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We can fix or mend most anything.
“IF WE CAN’T FIX IT, WE WELD IT.”
We can sharpen and adjuslyour lawn mower
and make grass cutting fun.
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Hoist Truck to Fire
Conn —
will co
missionary
OLLIE CAMP
rhe orlglatf 5m* r»st» un* carry.
Dispi
reportel
most ol
stantia]
Caracal
the Ve
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March
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w.th
their f
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feather]
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We guarantee one—
Argentine Ant Poison Outfit
,’NGS TO EAT.
the rai
was eJ
section
rocncd
NEW
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Janiiui
Marili
May
July
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We fix punctures.
■ EXIDE SERVICE STATION
Phone 126.
i
a result or me ngnt ror exisu
much is known of soil influenc-i
farm crops. RelaUvelj, nothing
known of the effect on tree growth,
but Pack is convinced that soil con-
ditions ajw of tremendous import-
ance.
GE
Specifl
WooJ
Epworth Play Is
Well Received
influence oi
IJ« Object of Reeear)
1
Big Reductions
On
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neaa. t
the rei
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time 1
Thle
Jiectm
lines i
restrlc
fleeted
tiadln,
er» dei
over t
sorbed
Motor,
htreurrt
ulieud
$4.50
$5.95
$7.00
...$6.20
.rrr.-.T.-ass $ft. 4 5
$10.00
~^$7.95
...............$11.M
..................$9«S
lanuar
Mrircb
May
Oct<>b<
Decr-m
8p<j
Pi
EOK
head
on sa
stead
Th
als a.
8hee
only 5i
Catt
0 to I
7 50 t«
Vesrlln
Ho's
10 25
9 50 u
Slice
lambs
goab ;
beautiful anol in a big vari-
ety of styles and, trims.
will be our pleasure to show
Hancock Machine Works
845 E. Hickory . Phone 1201
»/<■' . . x;. \. . x ..,.-.
/ Han
fb.; tn
10c p<
labls I
Ing »t
(la to
Screen Encyclopedia Ha> Answer in Film for
Almost Any Question.
the
(tningle againxt exhaustion of fer-
tility and man’s constant movement
©ver the face of the earth in search
won’t have to worry about another ^nd^for liis crops. ^Ifl’ succrss
heavyweight bouUoj>^Ma}L.utfth- “ — k«--
“ ring” until he spoke "excitedly”
to friends and hurried out "almost
unnoticed."
of Hie American
*ays the uholo
hi.-.ory of civilization is "written in
oil." each chapter revea’ing the
J.
* t
Very respectfully yours,
Jewell E. Dycu»
Candidate for Flotorial Representative
Denton and Tarrant Counties.
COF
Mirant
No. Ill
was
Wager
which
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4
FOR SALE OR TRADE
One 1927 Buick Coupe
One 1926 Buick Sedan
One Dodge Sedan —
One’1925 Buick Touring.
Smith-Hamilton Motor Co.
118 So. Locust St. Phone 268.
’ ‘ J
you.
sods in that second Dempse;
How. with the Heeney.g|
passing into history, you J
said that he didn’t do an
except -what was expected t
and that he beat a fellow wl
Just a big bunt, and a hand-
bum. ------ : -------- .11—
ijht and
... ..
' ........ ■ ;
^e7-_
Houses, lots, farms, ranches, stock
farms, poultry farms or acreage. All for
sale. If you are a buyer, come ip and let’s
talk it over.
CHIC
I/"r<c,
off In
Whei
120 7
Corn
Thia drug store is your fortress against serious
illness. Let your doctor prescribe for you when you
are sick, then have him telephone or send your pre-
scriptions to us, where the greatest care is exercised
in filling them- Promptness and accuracy is assured >. •
R’-. •}
expected to double the size of the
stock-shot libraries. Why hire a
new crowd of extras to howl at the
palace gates'when 2.000 husky voices
uoid in a similar scene several
months apo are waiting in a tin can
on a shelf for a chance to howl
ligain? Film records of sounds like-
ly to come in handv some day are
fuat as easy to file away as film rec-
ords of sights.
Enw; ■• ■»■■■.' '
few’-
rr^i • "
x ’ < V
Prof. Jacob G. Lipman, of the New
Jersey agricultural college, tracing
♦Jve inter-nlationshlp of soil and
civilization, declares that human
agencies disturb the balance of na-
ture’s forces and that one genera-
tion of mankind, in providing itself
with food and Aielter, apptoaiably
influences thereby the fortunes ot
the succeeding generation,, The
cutting down of forests, the plowing
of prairies, drainage and irrigation,
the stirring of surface soil .with til-
lage implements and the removal
of plant n.nd animal products from
the land, tell their dory in no un-
certain terms. Exploitation of the
toil, in its many forms, must be fol-
followed by •'conomie and sjohiI
stagnation when not counterac<x«d.
lie says.
Simple as soli facts may be. Pro-
fessor I.lpman explains tmy arc
still calling for syslcToatw CTudy in
their bearing on the rise and fall
of nations and "they still one to be
interpreted in terms of human pro-
gress-political, social and econom-
ic. ’’ ''
’ In Professor Rommell's investiga-
tion an effort will be made to co-
ordinate studies- in several fields of
science and nupply uIl obtainable and
applicable knowledge to the special
problem of forest soils. It will ne-
cessarily dFaf with trr rhemwjv
and biology ot soils and alsb' w'll
have Intimate relation with the
study of heredity tn tree grclrth,
particularly as that study may help
to solve problems of adapting cer-
tain varieties to given soils.
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DKNTON I
*
- $
■i
MEN’S CLOTHING
$22.50 Nurotex Suits $12.49
(Two pair* Pant*) y--
$29.00 Gaberdine Suit* 1
(Two pair* Panto) .,
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H
Igy-..
»1’_ .-_L . - ■
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fluctui
inulin
nurro*
show
»how«
rather
Dallas
14,300.
Rail
OKIuh.
was n
the wi
Straw Hats Half Pti
J. A. ORR, Realtor
Verna Tobin, Secy,
Phone 13 and Res. 419. Smoot-Curtis Bldg.
i. t-<* ■ r ». ( gay r». A >-y, a ■ «■ i kfhV
-1
gage educates the children.
NORTH TEXAS PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION
on County Bank Bldg. F. B. Huey, Mgr.
a»- Bail Bros.
g ; MARKET, GROCERY AND DELICATESSEN
Telephone No. 9.
F
And Now What?
rpHINGS should be h
A bit tn the heavyweight.'ra
the next few weeks, ajohnhy R|
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To the Voters of Denton County
I sincerely appreciate the 1,563
votes cast for me last Saturday. 1
solicit your continued support in
the run-off primary, August 25,
1928.
To those vyho voted for my oppo-
nents, I sincerely solicit your sup-
port, and any consideration you can
give me will be greatly apprecated.
Thanking you for your favors, 1
am,
>’■
e»M.-
r
^Consisting of one can of poison and six feeders, to
"■ rid your house of ants. You can rid your entire
,.J place—no matter how large—of ants by using more
.^ fwders. Come in and let us explain.
j
That Story on Jack
/"|NE of the best articles written
lK>m the .ringside the other
night wax not of the Tminey-
Heepey fight but about Dempsey
—a round-by-round account of
Dempsey’s face as the fight pro-
gressed.
It was Dempsey’s first heavy-
weight championship fight as a
spectator.
Not until the second round did
iis famous fighting scowl appear.
And in the third round that
»cow] "deepened” as Tunney
brought blood to Heeney’s face.
And as the fight progressed, he be-
came somewhat "distracted,"
•"spent time waving at friends”
(nd looked "apathetic" until
Heeney’s eye began closing. And
then that tenth round, when he
showed his "old-time tigerish ac-
tivity" and he "circled around the
— =...- ... .——-
She Needs No Salesman to Tell Her
What to Buy
Only yesterday our mother* depended almoat
wholly on the advice of salesmen when they bought
foods. They needed to be persuaded and convinc-
ed. But the woman of today wants to use her own
knowledge—choose for herself. With no clerks to
urge her, she makes her own decisions at—
FT"
FisfcTire*
-
1 i
centered
played by
thinks he deserve* a crack at Tun-
n>y and it certainly sounds log-
ical. Ho couldn't do any worse
than Heeney did. And , there's
Sharkey. And Ixiughran, the light
heavy champ, who is not averse' to
meeting Tunney. Jiut Gene is
going abroad with that author
fellow to live his own life and we
Gene Got the Rap
QOMEHOW or other, it seems
•^ strange that Tunney should
have been given the "raps” as he
left the ring. It was the same
sort ot a rap that he has had
• anded him after all his impor-
tant fights.
When he beat Tommy Gibbons,
the ones in the racket discredited
the victory by saying Dempsey
had softened Tommy up.
When he took that handsome
Frenchman Carpentier over, the
boys said ho had taken over an-
other »oft ffuy
<And there was that/'hollow
it^iieat
Any sulf or garment that we put
through our dry cleaning process Is
delight Io behold, for It Is refresh-
ed anil renewed and Its
lengthened. Send your clothes to ns
that I hey may he made to give
you added service.
Six women, five whits and one
colored, took examinations for
teaclins' certificates in the office
cf County Superintendent J. L.
Yarbrouuh Friday and Satm-day. c
Four took examinations for second
class hi(;h school certificates
two-fori-clementary certificates.
are here, too. and samples of the
crowded traffic of each. Resorts like
Palm Beach and Deauville are rep-
resented also. One studio has ten
reeLs of St. Mortis, Switzerland,
alone.
The sea in ail moods is filed away
among the stock-shots. No •vpt'ct
of snowy winter is miMitig. And it
it is a hurriranc that is wonted,
one can find it filed away under
"H" and bring its fury to the screen
in a few moments
Crowds of all kinds arc shouting
or Jostling or rioting among the
stock-sbota. Cpt can find baseball
crowds, football crowls. crowd- ob-
serving cricket games; theater au-
diences and church flOn®rega’ions.
And. like the ark that Noah built,
the movies’ celluloid encyclopedia is
full of animate Anything from art-
eaters to elephant* can be made
to walk across the screen in time
it takes to pick a stock-rhot emt ot
, Its numbered pigeon-hole and
r)oud-huntii>n | thread it into thr projection ina-
” chine.
Building up the** stock-shot col-
lections was not undertaken as an
educational enterprise. Producers
pigeon-hole everything that may
crane in handy later. It may be
nothing but a few feet of film show
tng a factory whistle blowing or a
dock with the minute hand mov-
ing toward midnight If it looks like
something that may fit into some
picture months or years later it *
saved and the time usually comes
when it saves the producer inoaer.
The coming ot sound-pictures is
- ■ ii i,* _ _
fiiinra < • n. • ' -
, M u i* t i.y <»-• r i--*#4 J.--.i *r» ♦u'i.rfn.s, j
f . •„ A-‘
JL. '■
liBDAY, AUnUftT 4, 1*M
fluence of Soit on Growth of Twg
jf Research Now Under Way
■■KT t
| ‘’Ti’B-Kion Cord, 30x3 1-2
Tr.xion Cord, 29x4.40
USCO Cord, oversize 30x3 1-2
| 0SCO Cord, regular 30x3 1-2
rTV. S. Roy»* Cord, 30x3 1-2 ....
U. 3. Roral Cbrd, 20x4.40
L'lu^isp' 29x4.40..........
Royal Cord, 30x4.5?
r V0CO Cord, 30x4.50
i
11? 1
FIST
What’ll He Say Now?
YVNB of the baady answers Gene
Tunney had for those who be-
lieved Jack Dempsey was mainly
responsible for those fat gates at
Philadelphia and Chicago waa
that he also was in those tlghtron
thort two nights. -t
In-other word*, that his pres-
ence as a participant on the main
event had aa much to do with
bringing out those who love com-
mercial assault as Iho Dempsey
fellow.
Ihit who believes him now?
Regardless of what factor we
may blame for that lean crowd at
the Yankee Stadium a few nights
ago, and it was the firtit time that
Tex Rickard ever took it on the
chin “or a deficit In a heavyweight
aflat., or? can't help but think
that G*jk wil' admit, perhaps re-
luctantly, tha. Deripccy wits quite'
a drawing card— rnd more than
he is.
I •’Hw-*..* -
k-i tuST*"—•"
U^w7i--
HOLLYWOOD. Cal, Aug. 4.—An
encyclopedia which can answer in
celluloid almost ainy question One
can ask about tic visible world has
been built up hhre by the movie
makers.
Parts of it may be found in the
“stock-shot" library of any Urge
studio. Together Uhese libraries of
jtortc-shots ronstitutc the film in-
dustry's celluloid encycloiieditt or
what it- has filmed and filed away
In pigeon-holes for future refer-
ence.
Suppose for instance. -?ne needs
information on clouds or a sky-
full of floating clotidt to put in a
certain picture. There ar ? stock-
shots of every conceivable cloud for-
mation—cirrus. cirro-stratus, cum-
ulus. strato-cumulus. nimbus and so
on- -day and night shots of timm;
sunset and dawn shots of them. The
right cloud eft eels add much to the
artistic value of an outdoor scene,
sc producers are contftiuslly send-
ing canf'ran.en on <'
expeditions. The big exterior scene
of a picture may have to be photo-
graphed on a cloudless dey, but
stock-shots of floating clouds photo
amphed weeks or months ago can
be superimposed on he empty sky
when the film Is printed in the lab-
oratory. •
Again, there may be a call for
the harlior of Glasgow or S«h Fran-
cisco or Singapore with ships ar-
riving and departing. All the ports
of the world ana bustling with ships
iii the shot-stock librari-s of the
movies. Sky fines of the great cities
“The Path Across tne Hills/’
tlnve-act play which was present-
ed by tjae Epworth Leagur of the
First Methodist Church, was well
received by a large‘■audience at 8
o’clock Friday evening in the rau-
nicipal auditorium
Miss Grace Loveless as Ruth
Conrad, the girl who loved her
grandfather with unselfish devo-
tion, immediately Irad the audience
in sympathy with her when she
appeared on the stahe. C M Dar-
uell as Post, the son whose moth-
er,, and father were kill'll from
grief over the robbing of the bank
where, the inan was president and
v/ho had devoted his lite to the
finding Of tl'e man and the aveng-
ing W the crime, was excellent In
tlw portrayal of the man who
changes ills life from an attitude
cf revenge to one df love for his
fellow men.
■'rhe main plot was
ground "Grandpo.”
Chsirlcs Brooks
-*4t—--a—
DID YOU KNOyV THAJm
IMTILLER HUGGINS say
ho has no pitchers. .JJj
But Plpgras, Hoyt and Pew*. , I
nock have won a I most,
games already. , . . Scholar 41
Gene used the Yankee*’ J (
dressing rooms at the sta- T’
dltim . . . and probably |
socked Tawm so hard be-
cause he was In Ruth’s at-
mosphere. . . . But he can’t
talk like Ruth . even it
he talks as he used to. .
Faut Waner's middle name-
is Glee. . . .-Old Dave Rob-,
orison, the Jlnt many years
ago, is leading the NY-P
Ijoague in hitting . . .'and
Bobby Veach is in the first
five in the American Aaa»—
elation . .. . and Ping Bodi*''
near the top out on the ’Pa-
cific Coast. . . . Some •fir f
Gabby Hartnett is the best
catcher In^iis league . ‘
others like Jimmy Wilson
with the Cards . . . butYSw/
deny Mickey Cochrane is Ute
best in the American league.
’. . . Earle Combs used to
be a school teacher. . .
The coppers- were needed te ■
protect Umpire Rolls at Hol-»
lywood recently. . . . And
Branch Rickey, who owned
Hurst onee, says the Phil**—
first-sacker is a coining star.
. . . The Pirates thought*'
that also once and tried to
get him. . . . And . Gene’s
pilot says Gene’ slept In tha
’plane from Speculator to
New York . . . Yeah!
l*rof. Lgrs G. Rommell Is otMfeefaking the first comprehenMve re-
riari h work on American forest soils. Much of the investigation will
be conducted in the Pack demonrtration forest.
WASHINGTON. Aik;. 4—Soil,
ever dtternjtoing the pathway of
civilization/’ Is expected to guide fu-
ture jirojegts in forestry as it long
bas influenced the fortune of farm
er<,p.s.
Prof. Lar^ O. Rommell. noted
Swedish scientist who has Just been
apixiinted to the Charles Lathrop
, Pack professorship of forest soils at
Cornell university, is cl meeting a
study of the chemical and biological
influences in tree growth. It is the
; fi.-‘ ( comprehensive research on
forest soil ever undertaken tn this
. country. Much of the investigation
wifi be conducted in the 2.000-acre
Pi., k demonstration forest near
, Warrensburg. N. Y., where prelim-
inary surveys already have httn
* (nude by Franklin Moon, dean oi
lie College of Forestry at S?Ta-
cv,i and Torn Gill, forester of the
Clc.vies Lathroy
Tniot.
Pack president
Tn Association.
t
Phone 171. Quick delivery.
SERVICE DRUG STORE
I -• ...t y.j.,..,-, • ,
; i___________________________________________________________________________________■
1
' i .- i i J
Real Estate Real £$tate Real-OfaW
For Sale
aB. Shaver
INSURANCE
““ I MS Over Mervtr* nrut a (ar.
Have a Few Good Cook Stoves Left
.. We are going to close out at’bargain prices to
; make room for our fall shipment.
^iCome in, let us show you what we have.
YAftBROUGH BROS., Phone 1201.
MW ■ • ;— ----i----
; A GOOD POLICY
N. T. P. A. policies manufacture estates for widows
M* orphans—pays the rent—buys a home—burns the
*
Self nervier Is us old h» I hr pyramids of Egypt, but thr modern
srll srnlrr «torr Is thr mnlt of modrrn tefoirf. Von hrnrfff by thfa
rvolnllon No longri do “All n»<t« lead Id Home". Wr hate hlaxrd
tli< trail that lends to the ctllra ot Thrift.
The i-hddi.sh part* v/ere pteyed hy
Miss Rebecca Davis as Lutte the
little girl with :or4; curls who wax
t.lways appearing on tha stag? at
just lhe right moment, and Leon-
ard Maxey, as Walter, the reckless
brctht-r rf Ruth
The remedy for th» play, was
lurnished by Wardo Foutr., as the
negro. Salamander Alexander Ara-
fetida Joim Henry Jefferson Jones,
and his wife. Zu Zu, played by
Miss Wyhelle Love.
Tht play was under the direc-
tion ci Mark Hamilton, Instructor
of dramatics at the TtfiTier* Col-
ic Re.
The proceeds for The; entertain-
rnent will amount tc approximately
$40. according Io Lconaid Maxey,
general tnana ;er. and wdl go to
1 he Epworth' League
fund
' f ... 1
/ .“d
BRIDGEPORT, Conn — When
firemen had difficulty fighting a
blaze on the third floor of a garage
here, a fire engine was placed on
an elevator and takiTL tei the fire,
which was then quickly extin--
quishcd.
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 306, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 4, 1928, newspaper, August 4, 1928; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335467/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.