Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 23, Ed. 1 Monday, September 10, 1928 Page: 2 of 8
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If you bare something to sen, try
a clasrifiod ad.' They get results at
•"- FjSirw
7 i <h*-»
>uble with the plan, according to In*
•■ surance Commissioner Monk, who resigned several
days ago, was the enormous and unprecedented in-
in fraudulent claims for damagse. Those
claims caused the premiums to be increased Sept.
1-on an average of 17 per cent, and on some types
d ad J
1
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K*
3,410—Bud Gentle, Banger, Chevro-
t trupk. ,. 1
Wiihdw
War
J’u'
$
fromKp'
tempt te ases ter, when Roberts
went tneir rescue tie carried bow-
PHONE 150 /
Prompt Delivery WM
and Quality MtrchandBe. '
necessary to accomplish the pur-
pose.
J,;1*”''
THE WILLIAMS STORE.
“Things to Wear.”
a.
—I—"
oa<ne on them
4m,
KM:
Aten >.
addition
..
. '4|
•T
..______I
lives.
courage I t
You .
ong to
» are
K8Hh3BR®~"' ■z' ~
tetete-
JSS^’X^S-raow. rapu-
ONE KILLED, TH
PLANE <4
ST. JOSEPH. Mo.,
Cobel, 34.
iyw,‘and.
! delivered
than can 1
M>UnMiWi< JT •
■
to come back ai|ve.
........ 140
.........g|.*»
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aw
” r^?21
OFFICERS ANO MRECTORS L
W. E. Smoot, Pres.
■ Iff. 1. Martin, Vice Preu.
O. M. Curtis, Vice Pres.
H
X.T\yj.
dimpanies were writing the insurance instead of
having the State hand the business to them on a
diver platter.
irr
T
________~~
I J
Lyle Womack says Ruth Elder is
cruel because she stays away and
now he wants a divorce to make
her stay away.—Dallas News.
i • . ijvaff ;5 ■ ■ •
‘ ■'
iih ■.'.
Human In
H <?**! .....- *
' W WW
' other in all probability
It is not difficult to <
second canal which would guarantee. ,
ur*^jaaw; there Is aahjrtr io the present canal, a
petuity, C, JM —1 _____*‘ *
The cost of a Nicaraguan canal, incidentally, is es-
* t1?;''st V - • ■
not
‘.tin
■ .X* ,^-v
I-'
pfer
urnJiTitu ♦
HULILCMJULO
__■'. - I
I
too^^-
SERVICE
Since 1881r
.1
_..J|P^4krvi«a:Wt«. .CUI'.
WASHINGTON, Sept. jo.-Proposals for «
_ Ihilitity iban by
indicatiop that the Panama Canal is
e brfo^ the ye/r
matter dr. conjac-
sjr cent of its
m-athiri-Mt
1 in the erig-
aWe to tHM,
r ships as are
made that
. . Id not be
id if a thiid set of
that capacity
Excliange National
venaa^wraa
are droWned.
An explorer heads an expedition
a risk that many feel
i have been taken and was
tied by the results. And It
•xplorer who gON to hie
is loot './.'v ;
Driven Net Qouragoous
The young collage boy thinks he
shows ills daring in driving his ma-
chine n MB 71 mile an hour wi»T
one hand and whan the aMMh up
comgr it is oo| only big life but
three others that era s*cr“—
Ktr*fAc*r\ aKaops aomel
reckless things in foreign 1
knowing that the govenL.^... .
backing them. But more than once
the backing baa coot many Uvea.
is unpardonable asmshness You ,
somewhat on the people wh
dependent upon you ftr lov<
wrong to risk other people’s^
ids an you.
- And ;
> boat
frfrrfr^.'.r.'rf1 y" s?.". .
y^<w'
Is show that 2,500 of
exhibited,^the show drawing entries from aiil por
ever seen in a single show. a Texas
Black Minorca* won a T^*-*-*
the trophy for the beat i
al) breeds competii.
iums. D. J. Coffman'<
on his entry of Rhode
prises and Was a-
in the American cl*a. ’
■^••s Winning, the past week have bee
to ufptet .!>*
aleo wen their share of prises, ff
west is the natural poultry yard of the a
boy baa recovered from the hives
and is again in the *7B” class at
Wild Onion School.
Acmes on Saturday. Jhe low score
“ ‘ to wet grounds
god an absentee player on the
winning acme team.
CSyUTHOUSEHEWS
D1STBITT COl’BT
New suits filed: 'r -
W Q.‘Wardlow et'al. vk.
Wardle wet al. partition. "
' rat
Crump, lot L block 4. Fry
to Denton. Aug 34, TB. Sf.
OU. AND GAS LtApB »ANI
Pacific OU and Gas Co ta 1
OU and Gas Co . 90 scree, do,
BUla survey. July 3. ’Sil. gl. -
‘ ALTOMOBJI-K IWWMSTIt rrn
wtoimwC ‘ • *1
u " ft a «a st a 11—I. —
let truck . .. -,
———---—
♦ — ♦♦♦♦
Ood is merciful—Except the Lord
of hoefa had left unto US A yery
small remnant, we should have been
as Sodom and w gbould have been
like unto Oomorrab.—Iga. I A,
z
Jim and Ray Hundley
Phone 1095-W.
I N Years Ago in Denton
— . — -r------TTjrrn-
E _ ^rt>m Neeohl-Ciironicie, Sept. 10, uMfi )
iSTTJlZu?1**"; KrUm tMsmonii
; ,XMn irfiurtos sustained yesterday i*
—ind-arms were badly ■! a
I Smi^nIs
.■ .. ../'•••• ‘b—....... ■ *'■
A STRONG. CONSERVATIVE
BANK
' * WwPv •.» 'a
With facilities to satisfactorily handle your business,
large or small.
All Boat Riding
Will take place west 'of the
dam on the old Stockard
place.
Rye Straw Sayings
w??nss!,A1,.
E®
LP.l^ffiS
i
The French resort of Deauyllb,
announcing a reform, annowreg
that “only <dventur«sse» of good
character" wj|l be Allowed to Ha-
ger there. Girls, If you must be
advefityrirees, be good '
-W EW
noble steed. Tony, enjoyed a
horse lattgh orb? the recint
Morrissey mlxupf
• • f -.u’i
Add thl* to your stock of ,
similes: "As appealing as a goK
People should opt
things every day, says Thomas
Edison. In thia opinion he is
becked by • conple of muitoa
* Nle-
' y*JP
A British newspaper U conduct-
ing a debate on the gnestton of
whether or not a man has a right
to open his wito’s letters. JBaams
to as more a question of courage.
• 9 f
A sure sign of antuma is evk
«**
until college epeas aad they edn
ride la the family rar again.
It IsaX the heat; It’s th*
who talk about the bumidli.
(Copyright, list. NBA Service, Ifie )
------
.A’
irtl^TLIhlk- AA/LJtMH - f 1
Contemporary Thought.
mi mi-;
NATURAL POULTRY YARD
Jn August an international poultry show was held
at Ardmore, Okie. The records show that 2,500 of
the moM choice birds in the United States were
exhibited, the show drawing entries from all pot-
tiMs of the glbbs. Wife the strongest competition
-ar r --- . -T — , W0U;
e beat pen of chickens in the ehoW,
ling, and won five other first ptom-
of Josephine, Collin county,
Rhode Island Reds, won four fifst
R^M f«4he Wt pen
herald-'
.. Chas. H. Smoot
Ray Wwp"
v- - ■
first State
TheS*u|ffd
~=-: ■■' " ■ Tt-ars'; :■!,, jsu a, t, , rr mg;,-t t tfesaggENteare
I: PAIIY WESSONS IN I
■ - _ - My W. L. Oerfira I
j Aa. •? ..±. '—-L 1 LT^TflfeW-l 'ijf
Wordi. often misused; Do not
say “bo has proven his rare to the
satisfaction of the court.” Say “he
has proved.”
Often mispronounced: mainten-
ance. Pronounce man-te-nans, firtt
a as hi “main," e as in “he.” last
a as in “an.” accent first syllable
Oftdb misspelled: descendant
-S
TWO TEUaTIES KILLED AS
THEY FMEVENT ESCAPE
A.
few
-’Z-
the totol business is much greater than when the
L (Wmpanies had to solicit the business.
Unscrupulous lawyers are responsible for many
- < the claims, according to Mr. Monk, for although
&... - 43.&19 claims were presented, only «l,7gl persons
J*?re reported to have been injured in automobile
■ecidents. As usual, the people pay the costs of
these claims, for the increase in premiums is de-
signed to cover this unusual loss to the insurance
companies.
X . ' ---------------
A COTTON MARKETING PLAN
'Collin County is getting -to be widely known for
* co-operative marketing work. The farmers' in
♦hat county evidently have Learned , that in union
Anything win do as an eacgee fyr
a divorce, RNFM|7«tpect pbuntiOe-
in such cases to be logical What
they want is ■ divorce, and that’s
what they intend to get regardleae
i
v»* 1
5hs
, (noun), drerendant (adj).
L .. Synonyms: > tfcgM|
: grathtoes, endless, eKdurtog. coa-
unual, imperMMblw
Word 9M9\ “Dto a wprd three
times and it la yours" IM us in-
crease oiar vocabulary by maatmr-
ing one word back today. ‘H’Mjrr
word: avid; eager; greedy. wAVid
- curiority prompeted the questton.”
7=^ 11 ""■ "" '■ ■
football .aqugd. eras drowned Mun-
day Ho Late Worth. He want un-
1 dec after raaouing Miss Oartti
■er. M. and Ted Johnson. Id
ware marehers cd an 9«ttog
I at the Mte. Wss Rgney fall
a boat pnd Johnson failed in « .
tempt to rave bar,. when Roberts
of them to a boat apd tben'saiik.
VERMQN. MepL W—Wllbam Hap-
■ teU Newer. IX «w *wdre mom-
tog from injury swtotoed when
he was struck by an automobile on
Mouth Main Streri Saturday olg£k'>'X
A charge jjt IfiUUte .to stop and «n-
■■
•" ' '» 1
L'/"!
- --——
'L£d
IfcAT ^(1
ft
—
^SS~:
L t town thia morning. '
C ■ r Oir! Drags ’ - J ’ “f -
i" ...... BepTfiecuiu ......Apne
To his Death
(X familiar story follows)
Two girts try. to swlin across a
pond, one of them isn’t able to mate
it rani for teto. a young man of
19 comes to the rescue, the girl
25XWXJS*- “ “*
la Year Paper Mart Aay Day shoukT not I
I rail It a familiar headline be- nqt justlfta
sr^nsfiasFfe
same headlines rand the Mine The WRd
this summer.
It seems to me a tragic injustice
that it should be . so easily possible
for those who Mte It tine to do
risky things to in We others Ln that
‘Swimming is the commonest exam-
ple of this kind of enforced risk.
People Who lite to thitfk of them-
selves as brave are again and again
attempting to do more than- they
really should. If they succeed they
are proud of their courage. But it
isn’t eourage, it’s fool-hardiness.
And knave-hardiness if you will per-
mit that coinage. For it unfairly
puts it up to the bystander either
to brand himself a coward or to go
to a rescue which probably means
that he has about one chance tn five
W. C. Oct, Cashier
R. 'W. Bass, Asst. Cash.
Jno. Crain, Asst. Cash.
W. H. Masters
_j| J. M. Evans 7
t
Oesmste ISM WMar A. <MMrt
1 hold it to ••noughty day
. To take what pleasures come
VK-AT-.’ wv’
't’l' '- ' *nd ,et tomorrow what it will
«bring us to face of good or ill.
V . . ‘
Thia much la sure The afclee are fair
And summer bloom* are everywhere.
And some day when wo alt alone .;
, >e may recall this hour we’ve known.
•u7CnoX^orh^dtoturr^ire<’
Can ever save a StegM arttte. \ _
t| Who lets the roeebud bloom aad die
Another rose may soma day buy,
, fiut who may laugh and Will not
. J9ML ,,
can nmr know that chance again."
; Mirth Is aa manna was of oM.
rood for the day waa Moes* .told.
t srfia&ywS & a?.-
DALLAS JpDTH AF
1 DALLAS, Sept. 10 ^CtoL Rob-
I rtta. 18. raptor at Rufiari High
School and member of the Bison
HMCklrilim BAHS
frtxwwsirtl^yws^
Ns year (tn advbnoe) —.................—
s months (tn advance) — -jv
Eu-vas tf’^rai-ss ■«15
(Ontside Denton county.)
:=“io
wm months (tn advance) «o
A&*£rgs.Tt'K." *°
^DjnrroN, texas, September io; 1928
■ nB^Krwarn”
T MOwIMtt..............
EL " Collin County cotton growers, 1,000 strong have
I- ‘ flygsnited the Sunshine Cotton Producers’ Associa-
■ tian and have named a selling agency to handle the
Output of the members. These farmers are groyring
flhe variety of cotton on some 70,000 acres, a va-
riety that already has been used regparly by a
Texas cptton mill and found ideal for such pur*
teses. Growing a high grade of cotton for a defi-
type of cotton mill should tendwto keep the
^0T their product at a reasonable level.
-E^O tte-awage farraWVcbiton ia jtut cotton, but
“ y- the eotton mrtl owner, certain types of cotton
•pin better or make stronger cloth. Mill owners
y**1 t*** ^P* eotton they need for their mUls',
raw kind if they manufacture shirtings, and another
A?-JSt^'ey m*nnfa<',ur* knit goods, or other kinds
kw -t sorts of cptton .goods.
stands to reason that the farmers who grow
-rtton of certain kinds to fill these rather definite
wnands could receive a premium for hia crop, as
impared with thoM» farmers who grow just cot-
m. That is -just what the members of the Sun-
line Cotton Producers’ Association in Collin coun-
r believe they can do with their co-operative mar-
king plant. It will be worth careful watching.
------0---
ID!
--
rCLLGET A
I Him/ j
______________ .
Sj5di‘ js a® sx as
EHstete Tuisfiayi «m Friday?. "
FMrt -and <h»ted. Fvrao.Wrtte*," ■
•w I ’ *•■
■
’. 'iV -rt£(nraraxu
err—
for diffraugt
* SMUGGLING IN GOLD
liquor is not the only contraband that comes in-
to,Thia eonntry from Mexico. Gold has a way of
fiRftrinu across, the Rio Grande, attracted by the
Fhi?Ker prices and greater security for this metal
j? in‘the United States.
F . Mexico la a producer of gold, and is in a poor
Condition financially. The gold is needed to settle
debts, and there is a strong tendency for this metal
1 to gravitate to the country which is supplying much
of the Mexican imports. But Mexico needs the gold —
U|- hnme to help maintain the value of her- curren- .
' cf, no there is a law against exporting gold. Other
i tcamtrito did not make speh a Jaw, and as a result,
the United States now has most, pf the gold of the
' world stacked up in the treasury, in banks and
other institutions over the country.
” ” ’’~RoeeriHy' a MeSpan river guard was captured ~
. while attempting to carry <13,000 in gold aerpas
the international boundary. TCo days later customs
inspectors apprehended a Mexican merchant as he
was crossing the international bridge at Laredo, and
faund *4fif400 in gold concealed in the gasoline tank
r-g, ■ ■ , »—., * 1 n .
*. . COMPULSORY INSURANCE FAILS —-
. £Many States watched with interest about a year
' ■» afo Jfhen Massachusetts began the pften-euggeet«l
petiment of a compulsory liability insurance law
t motorist*. It was argued that automobile own-
» deserved some protection aaainst the imspon-
Je driven who iwere unable to pay for damages
»y ckusod, and cotnpulsory insurance would bo
» easiest way to insure this protection.
But the Massachusetts law has not worked out
sctly.lite its proponents wished. It has not proved
be a bonanza for the underwriters, and instead
SCHOOL TIME
. —iti here with its demand for new school clothes for
. the youngsters. In this store you Mill be able to
outfit them entirely from head to foot ,with clothing
that will stand the strenuous went and tear of tne ^
school days ahead.
' : ■ , ■! •; . J
Particularly, of interest will ypu find our childrpn’R
hosiery department, shdwing countless new num-
bees in colorful, ^ervipeabje hosiery made by Phfie- I
nix. And most mothers know the rear worth of this I
make frpm their own, personal experience. ”
■ 'Hi
; ' I The Prices Are—
25c to 35c and r
*'■ '« A'
. \-.Vr V«■»■’<••• *’<! . ?■».
......
QQt (yf fill Ill»
Hence, wouldn’t it be much safer to have a second
I have made that same remark myself, apd am
heartily- a shamed of it J apologise; pot to the owndi-
or,the other, to
taps It will, but whether it wi|l at won’t,
.hffen cjrag
you and I do
ig no mattei
the
Story in ypur paper fi dozen Urites
(or
years, but a aat-
eaaily within the
—___ J
as it woul<
Jocks were constructed meanwhile
Is of the canal, who cite these facta, do
Nicaragua.'
■sworthy argument in fave
wever, is made frpm the
. 4-J Dfittonal____
-ifkMd timt in even^ of war Scibrt the United
t uflstly ^1111- out, cyT Hi»
isaat^s~p0alMllies for our navy.
Brtsr , ■■ ■- ...............
Washington Letter
By RODNEY DUTCHER
‘ ‘ WASHINGTON, 8ej*. 10.—Prppoe*H
sraguan canal to be started In the next
probably are inspired more by mllitsiy
~^wSj»U no L.
fast approaching its maximum
That time is likely not to cop
2,000, if ever, although the
hmUl ' r--
The can>l now handles about 45 pej
present minimum capacity. If and-.whs.
of locks is built, as was contemplated
Inal plans for the ditch, it will be 4
care of more than four tipies as many
now using jt.
.......J!____-----■■ | -
Tonnage passing through the canal has shown
a steady growth in the last few yaa
uration point may be reached
next few years. One estimate has been
the capacity of the ci
reached until about II
izzj T/_:___ ;wt"
would be doubled.
Is 0, WUU Vite kuoor MV
irstand the persistent agitation for a canal
Nicaragua.
The most seaworthy argument in favor of a aec-
ond canal, however, is mode frpm the standpoint
of military strategy and the national defense. It
*■ ----- * _ ” * I wflRv II
is BtreiMth, ami are gvveming tesir actiom'~ fitetex tliB’faii
— — uBiArwr
r;'■_______________
canal to fall back qn in an emergency ?
It will doubtless occur to the reader that if the
Pariama Canal can be blown up or bottled up, the
same thing might be done to any Nicaraguan canal.
Nevertheless, the argument is tht two canals pre,
better than one and that in the unlikely event that
an earthquake should some time destroy one, the
‘ B? would be left Intact.
.. „ not difficult to demonstrate that if. in war
.a canal Ip per-
—, ---- — — ---4
petuity, come what might, would he wozili the erat.
Tht cost of a Nicaraguan canal, incidentally, is es-
timated as high as a billion doUfiU..
“Hew are Bowles?” I |
asked a friend—or was it an acquaintance?
"There are three things 1 never Uli;” replied
the Colonel: “My «(•; tecMw the figure? are too
me, because the figures are too small;
going to vote, because that Is nobody’F
business but mine.”
— r ‘t”ratio» to teU any ana tew -
t everyone who can vote is
“> vote is your businras,
re a . vote. If you and I
liseand do not exereite-
iirw ateng, we are not
ou and I
, *What difference does
.. _ „_____ JaeW?w as I h%rd «
H-jg .mu over twenty-one, who had lived in I
? ™ nnrf nreeinet tha nannirad iana*h nf time, a
why he hadn’t voted at a recent local
isans, who voted one
asstetenoe I d(d not SU-
not decide an election
TO HURT
4M ’ 1
Sept. 10.—Ivan
it of the Citizens’
ktHed and two others wrrr hurt
(Then the plane in which they were
riding crashed from a height of
400 feet. The Injured are Fred Ttail-
or. Iowa State engineer, and Mira
Virginia Pieringer pf Bedfird. who
is a fanner student of S. M. U. Dal-
las. ‘ ’ »'
" If you have some
rtlraartriArasff rasl *
small cost
Those Republicans never overlook
anything. For the first time in their
Oves all native born-American in-
-y.j;
W Those Republicans are good ppU
look a chance. It may be that be-
fore the election 1s over it wul be
necessary 4o grant the franchise to
B>at the Q. p. P. njay vote Ito full ,
strength! There’s another thing, tod1;
tafite that might be said for the Repub-f teffrtt) wgr du« tfi
licahs whlje we’re about ttr They
do «?pBt 0« t^P fighting among
themselves at other times than just
prior to elections—in glaring con-
traat to the practice of the .Demo-
TWO TBDBTIES
M. lifiM, Sept. 10,-Mer-:
MM1 W, j. Gleow- trus-
, J Norfolk Couhty jail, were
shot to death Sunday night when
they went to the aid of a night
watchman wfio had a surprised a
prisoner to an attempt to escape.
With the watchman the trusties en-
teQner In -a atrug-
fired three times.
JMAN KIILLED
ICIIIISETTS
Sept. 10.—Jessie
Oraham of Oalvestan was shot and
Killed in the presence of several
people here Sunday. Wallape Gra-
ham. her estranged husbghd, Is be-
ing held by pottos. The couple have
t£» children to Fort Worth.
^Editorial?
MWAMMLDT ;
SWSWW—*!■■■">■■
’•There' are three things I
the Colonel: “T, .
large; my income, because
how I sin going to vote, _
he js going to vote; bq£
under obligation to vote? To
it If my business, if we Irtv
hava the privilege of franchi
it every time an election ofi!
attending to our business, y<
It Is all very wril to say,
it mate which crook gets eh
UlkU* vL*cr y-uiira, <»»u M»rau im
un<| precinct the required length of time,
asked 1 ’. ‘ .. ‘
I have made that same remarlt '
dates, but to my fellow'eiti
wat or,the other, to whoa©
Perhaps your vote win
and-prana. ' ‘ _ —■
if you vote according to your conaoienoe and light,
lod hMe_ackia NJk —-• .
If you and I do not vote we have absolutely no
kick coining no matter what the politicians do to
us and torthe country. But If you and I should vote,
if everybody should vote, there wouldn’t be any
unethical politicians far if we didn’t snow ’em to1’’
der one time, we’d kick ’em CUt the te»t.
The man who has'the right to vote and do*n’t
employ that right, the man who can wield political
power and doesn’t do it, is no patriot ;'M js pot
even a good citizen; he falls into the class of the
draft dodgers.
Politically the United States is notoriously cor-
rupt;, and it is th«t way because about fifty per
cent of its could-be voters stay away from the
polls. What a fat time the servantraof ths people
can have with, the people’s goods when the people
do nothing but futilely grumble and cuss. Could
anything be sillier on the part of the people; could
anything.be softer for the grafters and incompet-
All'right, let’s say we are not patriots, you and
I; let’s say We don’t give a couple of whoops what
happens to the country. But how ©bout your peek- -
etbbok and mine? How about those long, deft fin-
gers in our wallets year in and year out? Hml.
about the wasting of our community substance and
mismanagement otf our joint affairs? We are in-
tereeted in those things, aren't we, you and I? We
are interested in our personal financial interests
whether or hot we have in our make-up a single ,
grain Of patriotism.
If you and I desire to improve the conduct of
national, state, county and municipal governments
and God knows there is plenty of room for Im-
provement. When you and I have got to take an
interest in politics we must return to the faith of
our fathers and’vote; and make it our business to
know what we are voting tor
Take an interest in politics, ’rfiat’s not such a
bad slogan Might I suggest it?
Take an interest in ptoltics. If we don’t do it, we
had better change ’ our national emblem from the
eagle to the fish.
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 23, Ed. 1 Monday, September 10, 1928, newspaper, September 10, 1928; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335497/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.