Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 66, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 30, 1928 Page: 7 of 10
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COURT HOUSE NEWS
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We have a good stock at
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KINGE
An Excellent Cigan
prices you can afford to pay.
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Morre!-Fritz Furniture
West Side Square.
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Your Grocerj' Bill
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J. A. Cook Grocery
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$2.95 to $10.00
Rubber Ovenhoe,
McBryde.
Caldwell.
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Denton.
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SPORTSMATTER
By George Kirksey, Unites Frees Sparta Editor
Priced—
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Grogan.
Lunow, LewlsvUle,
Ladies* and Children*! Rain Coats
All colors and styles, pricel—
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Yellow rain slick-
ers for ladies, men
and children
of the long runs that characterised
his sensational work at Yale.
Welch, however, has played well
with the Yankees and despite little
help from the Yankee line in the
early games made several good runs
and performed capable under the
circumstances.
Friedman Stands Out
The oustanding star of the ear-
ly games has been Benny Friedman,
the former Michigan quarterback
Inspired by Friedman’s brilliant all
round work, the Detroit team start-
a winning streak and early Jump-
ed into the lead in the National
League.
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SLEDGE & McDADE
South Side.
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Mart <Udu"
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Always Own Boss—That’s Norris
Nebraskan Revolting to Al Smith
Has Remarkable Political Career
teams, have a dasMing aerial game
built around George WUaon. ttte
former Washington WlMeak
Fur B^Uegging
LANSING—The state has colect-
ed U.400 in recent months from
pers who have bootlegged furs
of the states and scores of
3 remain to be tried. More than
convictions figured in the re-
covery. Beaver, muskrat, mink and
coon were the principal furs boot-
legged
• GAS HEATERS
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Here's the young man most base-
ball critics think will take over
Bucky Harris’ Job as second base-
man for the Washington Senators
next summer. He is Jack Hayes,
a product of the University of Al-
abama and s member of the Sen-
ators for the past two years.
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Are you satisfied with
your grocery service? No-
vember ie here and we are
extendng Xftu a hearty
tation to trade with us.
have a free delivery service
that can't be beat.
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NSW COOKE COUNTY WELL
HITS PROMISING SAND
GAINESVILLE, Oct 30—What
is described by local oil men as the
inoqt promising sand yet discovered
in Cooke County was struck Mon-
day in the test being drilled by
Walter OrifTee on ’he Wheelock
farm six miles southeast of Gaines-
ville Iv was ound at 1 314 feet. Pipe
will be set for a test before drill-
’ W further. - ------------ ' '
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Professional football is sUU a
gamble.
Some of the teams in the Nation-
al League at professional football
clubs made money last year, but
most of them lost plenty.
C. C. Pyle, who lifted pro foot-
ball into th* big caaa, still ksUovee
there is a place for it in big cities
Pyle is optimistic over a successful
financial season for his New York
Yankees this year even without Red
Orange.
“We showed a little profit last
year," Pyle said, “and I believe we
will make even more this season."
For ladies, men and children, priced—
50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50
Men’s Rubber Boots
Black or red, priced—
$3.50 and $5.00
’ <4 ’ R
Terry’s Studio
West Side, Over McCray
Jewelry Store.
gi _ig._ -mi.iui i vSite? ~ ~ rTTY-n-.'-^-*^~
Let US five yon mir prfees
on photographs before you
have your picture made.
Myg then made htooelf U^e father | We 4n#y sunrise yott in
price and quality.
Phone 1187.
MOTOKi
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iMile
if Another proof that motori&s who 1|
1 travel on scheduled time depend
exclusively on Conoco Qasoline I
prugreasivlfin. But Nor-
hs refused to Join the Roosevelt L
progressive movement two years
"There is T{o Substitute for Experience99
Keep dry and com-
—fertable these rainy
days. Avoid colds,
flu and other sickness
' caused by getting
_damp ancL weL - . „
We have your
b needs.
Tte Wolverines swsnpM MB
the mw York YtaM M£Wsftto
in the opening gaates gainst these '
teams. ------ ' ■
Friedman’s passing and namina
has been of tbe same high
as it was during hto sMbr
Ann Arbor. In the 1M
against the Giants, FHedan
through taekle and nA •
for a touchdown.
The opposition has bevo
down the field passes and
once in every game he «
one for 40 yards or mods.
The most successful pro!
teams all have highly d _
forward peat attacks and ffitB
moot of their ground by this WisWlS
The big experienced MnoMSn s|Btl
as are found in profesMonal fcot-
bau make it diffcult for even inter
college back to gain ground , gm
the line. l ,.
The Providenc Steam ftoDen.
another of the most sucoeorful firo '
teams ham a danlinw eertai ewme
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DENTON, TEXAS, BEOOMMMBONICLE, TUESDAY, OCTOBEB M, IM
By RODNEY DUTCHER
NEA Service Writer
WASHINGTON. Oct. 30.—The
Senate's greatest fighter has
marched out to enter another fiftht.
Sen. George W. Norris, progres-
sive Republican of Nebraska, by
coming nut for Gov. Alfred E
Smith has added another dramatic
chapter to one of the most re-
markable political careers in his-
toiy.
Nonis is one man in Washington .
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- Wd of them by sheer fenrhemtesK
Ulf A COmpi^vC SusCvcBwiys UlCIClW’A^HDlC
energy and astonishing tenacity.
'7 In Congress 25 Years
Norris' persistent insurgency
lias been opposed by every method
except physical violence and he
has been threatened with that
Because he has no personal ambi-
tions and has bc~ome the leader
cf American progressives by com-
mon consent rather than his own
Tratisportation Co.:
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Denton Students
I to B. S. U. Meet
A group of 1g students o the
Btete colleges went to Abilene the
past weeft-and to atetnd a meeting
~ tof the Baptist Students Union Con
vention which was held on Friday,
Saturday and Bunday. L. F. Floyd
of TMchers OoBAte accompanied
the party which went in a special
bus.
The theme of the convention was
" Magnify Christ, the Mgeter." and
-Miss tXMr SaH, president of the
union at Teachers College, was on
tlie pitgram to lead in a discus •
skm. “Why I Believe in Personal
Sool-Wlnnlng." Other speakers well
known here were Dr. S. P. Brooks,
president of Baylor University, J.
B. Sanderson and T. C. Gardner.
Students who went included Miss
e Irene Pope, president of the Union
at the College of Industrial Arte,
Misses Gertrude Magnus. —’ “
Roberson. Martha Roes,
Fenn. Gertrude Talbert, Rachel
Hughes, Jessie Gay Preston. Jewell
Msthews, M^xle Byrne, Lorene
Fidget, Louise Abbct. Nellie Hil-
l blsh, Minnie V. Hgyr.es, Messrs.
> Joe Brc^’i and Harry White, all
ol Teacners College?
.. . • -- _
seeklilT. tbe very worst thing hb
political enemies sav of him ? is
that he « .<pntini:elly dis-
gruntled. None grudges him ad-
miration cr credit for sincerity.
Norris has been 25 years in
Congress He is 87 years old. Be-
fore he first came to tbe House of
Representatives he had been a dis-
trict Judge and before that a
prosecuting attorney. But he had
been fighting from the start.
His father died when he was a
..... ‘ brother was killed
__ I wd peorge and
nis mother were left poor.
"In the some 11,000,000 miles we have
operated in the last eleven years, we
have not yet failed to deliver people to'
their destination on time, and this we
attribute largely to the uniformity and
_bigilLASHa^^?e£*I*e ptndudgpurehased
from your company... We will require
tank cars of Conoco Gasoline*every
Monday, Wednesday and Friday of each
week.”
Kgrili' F ”■ ■ ■' ? -SA.. r
REAL ENTATE TUASNFERH
Lester Davis and wife to lunlce
Durham, lot 31. block 8, College
View addition to Denton. March 34.
’3U. 8300
Michael Oewaid and wife to O.
E and D W Light. 88 acrea ip
Juan Carbella survey, Oct 38. '38.
•8.080.
Robert E Origin and wife to Ste-
phen H. Origin. 306 acrea tn BBB&
CRR Co survey, Oct 38. '28. 018,000.
Stephen H. Origin and wife to
Robert E. Origin, 100 acrea in R. P.
Hardin and D C Bridges surveys,
Oct. 38, 38. 413.600
Al'TOMOBILE REGIHTRATIONH
388.500—Henry Roca. Krum. Chev-
rolet.
388.503— E E Hargrave. Denton.
Chevrolet
385.504— W E McAfee,
Chevrolet.
385.505— J B
Ford
388.50A T t
Chevrolet.
285,507—R J
Chevrolet.
388,808 W F
Ford.
386.803— Sain
Ford.
385.803— H. L Cooke. Lewisville.
Chevrolet. „
388.804— J. 8. Stubbs. Banger,
Chevrolet.
3.487—D. 0. Oheen. Sanger. Chev-
rolet truck
BUY IT 1 N D E N TON
„ ... he failed to bolt to
La Follette in 1M4.
Voted Against War
n was in toll that Nobraska
elected him to the Senate. Cante
the World War and Ncrrta, stand-
ing beside ths late La Follette and
others, became one of thote neila-
tors whom Wiison called th8 "will
Xul 12 “ Norris could -oat believe
that the'best intereats of the great
masses of people required our en-
try into the war. So he made one
speech against it and voted Arnlnst
the deetamttton of tTOT.
Under a storm of abuse from the
Nebraska press, Norris ottered to
resign. His resignation was not
accepted. But it was as a pariah
among men that went ba' k to
Nebraska. None of his old frini
apparently, dared visit him and ne
was threatened with violence if lie
undertook to make a speech But
Norris made tl>e speech before a
packed hall, because he wanted to
explain why he had voted against
war. And after he had made it
the crowd cheered him hysterically.
In 1918. just before the armistice.
Nebraska re-elected him by a ma-
jority of 20.000. It: 1924 his ma-
jority was 120 000.
It is well known that Norris sup-
ported the Wilson administration's
war measures. It is not commonly
known that he sold all hIslJ*5perfy
in Nebraska and put the proceeds
in Liberty bonds. Nor that he at-
tempted to enlist in the marines
as a private and desisted only when
told that he would not be permitted
to go overseas to fight. Norris felt
keenly the imputations on his pa
trictiam He felt tirat the patriot-
ic thing to do was tn keep out of
the war.
Norris was the o»
lief fighter. Long n
any McNary-Haugi
as chairman cf *tj
mittee on Agricti
the Norria-Slnclalr,
the farmer. Whci
reported out of cot
expected to oass tli* Senate. But
the admintetration.ttro'l'b Sen-
ator Frank Kellorg. pot in a <ar.
more cor-servative bill without
consulting Norris cr the commit-
tee and succeeded fr. blocking the
Norris bill. In a dramatic sprech.
Norris denounced these Republi-
can tactics and at his dose col-
lapsed on the Senate floor. He had
worked himself into a (tengcreus
state of health\dnring that first
farm relief fight and was forced to
rest, away from the Senate, for
months. 7 . ..
Muscle Shoah Fight
He had been trying to carry on
two great fights at the same time
The other VM his struggle to pre-
serve Muscle Shoe is fee the people
and on that, for years, he foujht
alone, ... „ . --------
Sln/lc-handed. he blocked one
bill after another which would
have placed that -prat power site
in private hands for private profit
Henry Ford was one of the first
bidders, but there have been
many others whom Norris has bad
tc beat At the last session. After
many tireteas years of effort. Nor-
shite operation and renreaent-
mg <me of hjg greatest ambitkms.
passed by both houses of Con-
gress. Then President Coolidge
vetoed it.
Norris oppiM;d the League of
Nations and led the fight for the
“lame duck amendment” which
would bring member^ of Congress
into office two months af'er their
election instead of 13 months a*
now prnvideX It is Norris who
has fought hard for an honest tp-
vestVation of federal patronage
scandals in the south which has
thus far been successfully blocked
by various machinations.
And it was Norris who intro-
duced the resolution demanding
an investigation of the Sa't Creek
oil leases, which tbe department
of Juetice lately has de» lan-d to be
illegal.
, fa tbe summer and attended dis-
trict seIMd in tbe winter. He
taught school to erm money for
cofirfre and at the same time
studied law. He attended Val-
' paraiso and Baldwin universities
1 and finished a law course. He was
’ Admitted to the bar in 1883 and
moved from Ohio to Nebraska tn
18K3.
Brake Joe Cannon*? Rule
His first big battie in Washing-
ton came when he undertook to
overthrow the seemingly impfeg-
nablv entrenched Cannon machine
in the House. The srnlaole but re-
actionary Joe Cannon apparently
lisd the House in tbe iron grip of
the speakership- It remained for
Norris to show that CaunonAm
could be unboned, -u
For more than a year he waited,
with ■ resolution in his pocket, for
the opportunity to pierce the Can-
non armor. Finally the chance
came, Norris put Ln his resolution
•nd the House spent two days and
nights in ccntinuoux session. At
the end of that time supreme au-
thority IB the House had parsed
from the speaker to a committee
ft was -a tremendous progressive
victory and booause of hs Header-
ship Norris is sometimes said to
The New York Yankees, featur-
ing Gibby Welch this season In
place of Grange, played to 25,000
persons in the opening game of the
season against the Detroit Wolver-
ines. The next Sunday under ideal
weather conditions the Yankees and
Providence Steam RoUers drew on-
ly 7,000 persons
Pyle attribute* the success or
failure of pro football to one tiling
—the weather.
1 Depends on Weather
“If the weather is good and we
have a lot of Bundays without any
adverse weather conditions moat of
the teams ought to make money this
season" Pyle tsald.
The National League Is composed
of nine teams as follows: Detroit
Wolverines. Frankford Yellow
Jackets. Providence Steam RoUers,
Chicago Bears, New York Giants,
Pottsville, Green Bay Packers, Chi-
cago Cardinals and New York Yan-
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. GRAY COMPANY
tore of Certain SatiafacUon.
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jpROM the first tee to the
*• showers there’s not a hazard
in the entire five and one*half
inches of this excellent cigar.
Try KING EDWARD today.
Only 5 cents and foil-wrapped
to pre serve fresh ness.
Distributors
PrarMone-Boltoa Co.
Bnnnon-Rltiulfo Co.. Dallas
' 1
UTiIj
Hi
Rainy Days Call for Ram Coats
Keep your children dry a* they! go to school. _
$2.98 to $5.50
Ladies' Coate In same colors, sizes 16 to 44,
priced—
I ,. ,11
-
■ ;itpiissiiisT'''T.....— ii
AYS the Yellowstone Park
■ ..-7'
keee. Most of the games are played
on Sunday. „ . -± _ J
Welch the All-America star from
Pittsburgh and Bruce Caldwell,
All-America star from YaJa
the two outstanding 1927 college
players who are performing in pro
circles thia season.
Caldwell’s work with the New
York Giants has been disappoint-
ing thus far. He has been stopped
easily by opposing lines and has __ t__
never been able to get lor any able to "fathom
>3
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 66, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 30, 1928, newspaper, October 30, 1928; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335538/m1/7/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.