Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 71, Ed. 1 Monday, November 5, 1928 Page: 3 of 8
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TV
■ 'r.
i
A
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*
—
ELECTRIC REFRIGERAT
Vi
and
loan
UN BL BKABT
it
b'.
Phone 1201.
lie
Phone 8
PHONE 40
'40W1
4
4
ir Broken Parte
•nd
■**
t—t
■f
hte horn.
• :<
■
<’
4
f
TT
*1-
-
thia
peeted it of Hughes.
1
F ,
either 35c or a dollar, and get
rv
$10.00 and $16.50
T
2
•L
Advertised
We
Yitif
*1
guarantee, for— » . .7.
$1.79
-1
WALL PAPER
Dozens of new patterns just in. We'll be very
glad to show you.
„^S
Phone 119.
A
V/ASHiNGTON £
8*icppardL Maytag tuxiioc washmmu writ nrwrtAY a
ent tn hu I ____btbation
«•» West Hickory mmm
Gas Stoves, Cook Stoves and Heater*
We’ll be glad to figure with you.
YARBROUGH BROS.
Furniture.
i*» IM
it
■
party, regard
- and prln
Sqtribbs Dental Cream ...
Or-a-Lo Tooth Brush
Tooth Brush Holder ......
4 • . -
4
X W. Gray Co
- " ■ r
Hats Re made ’
J
f
29c
/ Worth much more.
881 W. Hickory.
' 14
»
■JI
New Books Just Arrived
as played in pic
■ F
Commercial Printing.
Ross Printing Co.
819 1-2 W. Oak St
Phone 841.
.13
'S?
}
y *♦ ■■.1^fsr
at local option and State prohibi-
tion a> be fought to annuli tbem
both in his uwn State.
Jtan Fcrjnison is us good a prohi-
bitionist today a» Morris r_
nu><& morsconsistent
Classified Ads 3 Cents a Word a Week.
J
■1 •
a ■
4 ‘... pal was- asked torn
••. Improve the looks of every room. We have
Mme in new colors—red, green and brass.
~ fool
___zs
--------repeatedly declared
'himself during this campaign to be
»emy of the Volstead Act, the
eighteenth amendment and na-
tional prohibition, and his official
- iiit ' r*wrt *lww hlm to be “** eneniy
Dependable Merchandise Truthfully pa c HEATERS
Advertised •
E. •' ■
fc';- ’
•—
• .. t l-jo jib {•»/>'• 'hv-V’TyBv
▼*/ ’•TV"
I ■
———
REMEMBER
. . :JZ4L_r-_-
'A *!■*> . £>»>«.?
OPTOMETRIST
— *^8,
never read, too
hera. ,•'«
■ -"' |j\
Of promt
colli_^_
Belknap,
parched
iHibiioaa.ci
ntolen for
...............
One large lot of .box paper, in white
only—24 sheets paper and 24 envel-
opes—
,----------".r-- ‘
SPORT DRESSES
... ..... , .
An unusual selection of these
smart sport dresses of silk crepes,
in attractive, colorful color com-
1 binations and designs, featuring
tucks and pleats, one and two-
piece styles, priced at— <
power of atr" avenje-siwa mush-
room was 27 poinds. Mushrooms ra 01
have been known i£> lift and crack
asphalt paths. . ,
SPECIAL
For Thursday, Friday and
Saturday, 3-Ib can Chase &
Sanborn’s Seal Brand Coffee
for $1.43.
L. P. McCombs
Grocery
West Side Square.
Phone 150.
FOR SALE OR TRADE
One 1927 Buick Master Sedan . *
One 1926 Buick Standard Sedan -------------—
One 1928 Chevrolet Coupe *
One 1926 Hudson Coach
One 1925 Ford Coupe."
Smith Hamilton Motor Co. 4
118 S. Locust Phone 268
Two bottles or two syringes may he 4
had at thia price if preferred.
Cenol Rat Paste does the work. Rate
*»» I
tube, either 35c or a dollar, and get
rid of them now.
We Can I
of
ffi =^-fc Wood parts that have rqtted or broken out
We can weld body parts, fenders or any other part
of your car. We can repair your radiator.
k— . “We can weld or fix anything'.’1 -
HANCOCK MACHINE WORKS
K Phone 806. 845 E. Hickory St
.A-
*"* >p-1'
menu of tl
«M torty;
ETTiIn oontSm]
JIM AND RAY HUNDLEY
Phone 82 or 1095-W.
MAJESTIC AND CROSLEY
Radio, Hoover Vacuum Cleaner*, ask for a demonstration.
B-F ELECTRIC
Successors to Black Electric Co.
Geo. A. Fincher W. R. (Dick) Blair
s Try Ug for Qualify and PHce ’
. Phes»e442. We Deliver.
THESERVICE4SROCERY
Clifford Balthrop, Pny. 4 1
Morris Paint and Paper Co.
W. T. Morris. D. T. McClendon
“Buy Paint from a Paint Store.”
--W- ; - y.x?; a a a —.—i——-----!-—----------
—insurance for every need, issued by the beet
J ’companies and serviced by ue. J
J.J.MACLACHLAN
I General TMuraHee 'and Bonds.
I 808 Smoot-Curtis Bldg. Telephone 866. |
•z ■ -
Florence S. I
rrtan ot state
son for forgen
funds; r___ ,
cm attorney g
npirwtor la ths---—
<ruf forced to retlgn; Ha
iiu? R" McuaM*
«2nv>»riqg_wUh _______
J?—wh®
.r"—■ r*.ZT j vsa iv^ivto vm
L*11 ^.d 81nc,alr: Truman Newberry,
Republican Henntor from Michigan,
who resigned beiausc of u’jnpalgn
expenditure scandala; Wtlflinm 8
VatK Xeaawr- from Pmnxyitanla, re-
fused nia seat in the Senate because
'' election Wrarrtt Smith of
nnnofe. •laTShSSi T seahin th-
Senate, because he was charged with
brlb«l by the JtMull
nn»-r. Qommuaton; W1J
Hays, chapman of the Republican
National Committee, who used Bln-
» P*X U»e O o P.
debts, Ed Jackson. Republican Gov-
ernor of Ind lane, who la allMted to
cago. whose Mminlatration la a dis-
grace to Amertan.
thu record of brlg-
ttee Rietory or T&mmanv and the
,f?*mosr»t>c P^ty. and choose you
this _gay wMeh shall serve you.
C P. JUDD. <
iro the Record-Chronicle. » I
DENTON, Nov. 5.—As the day or
the election approaches, the College
A Jnduitrtel Art’s political incuba-
tor which la engaged In the pro-
luction of Al Smith and Tammany
Hall propagwada seems to be
working overtime.
Jpdging from the preponderance
or the Al Smith and Tammany Hall
propaganda that fe originating in
the College bl Industrial Arte fam-
ily. the Al Smith Denton County
Democratic Committee must te «
domiciled there. ’
One posing as i political Moses
and assuming to lead the chwr peo-
ple out of prohibition bondage, into
the land of promise of wine apd
beer where alecholiti beverages flow
tike milk and honey, should not
presume that the people are eo ig-
£u&» U»ey do not know thm
IS^P prohibition M a major issue to the
Acts of pending, presidential eampafi^A^
•A raaJO,<t’" " to“h f01‘
•7'
good books aa the following and for
the small sum of 75c, too.
“OU,” * tale of th. oil fields.
“The Fleet’s In,” featuring Clara
Bow.
“Lord of Himself,” Percy Mirks.
"tn ths ertdit Moblfier, a construction
'?? b«8e controcte at enormous
i
^*‘°n f ton?878. I
*---> wcretery of war. was im- i
for btibcnr. aM reeignsd to <
>n.-in 1876. Samuel J.
ly olectsd prssident of
tes, but . th rough Re-
nerjs the odlce was
the rottea meJa scanttel. stUl a Stt and
stench in the nostrils of tbe Amort- ‘
can people. Ballinger, secretary of the
interior unitor TaM» found bar-
ig'.igVi^Egiw% wT.ss
“Annatlonata." ------ '
“Anne Karenina or Lovo.” ’ ",
“Whi> Shadows in the South Seae.”
“Hangman’s House.” ,
’ “Shackled SouhsTZV . "
“The Blue Window.”
“Four Sons.”
“The Snake and the Sword,” P, C ><The c~wd/
‘Tinda—a ntol lege Girl's Adv—
turoa in Love.”
uli.m »» *' Il
a ...... r ■— ‘
Raa* ’* Z * I
IV,OIRBC Mwwi owfe-----
“King of Kings.”
- —gMto.
vember is hsre a
extendng yon a h
...
'.■■ ■' ~~ • -y . s.: ■ Li •,J - r-
Save at Brooks
• • . . .
IRA SPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK ONLY
40c Hot Water Bottle Special—Keep
-35c warm those
5c hot water h
-Regular VhiUe .*.....7.?3'r.."Z7.90c . tain syringe, both with a twoyoar
Now, all three for— guarantee, for ■ ■.
49c
Wren's latest book.
“Me, Gangster,'1 a vivd tale of
gangster life. \ ■"
“Wings,” by John Monk Saunders.
“War Birds,'* a real air fighting on
the western front during the world
War,
“Sally’s Shoulders,” a modem-day-
girl story.
- “Our Dano
___
lowers v.ould be glad to «ubordinrite
prohibition to minor and trivial to- -
SUbs fo avoid bringing Al Smith's
' liquor connection.*) under the spot-
light of his official records tn the
, Otty and State of Nbw Yort. They
do not want the public to know that
Al smith, while a member of the
New York iwtolature, voted and
tbe passage o< a bill to
open, up hotel bars to over 300 dry
precincts, making hotels independ-
ent-of the local option law They
do not want the public to know that
Al Smith voted in favor of a bill
opening up prohibited areas to tbe
sale of liquor, giving privileges to
certain clubs and denying them to
tortaln churches. They do not
want tbe public to know that Al
Smith while >.|>e«ker mad- desper-
ate efforts to have passed a bill
legalising the opening of saloons on
Bunday tn the City of New York
He is the only living aspirant for
ar high public office that was ever
nm. gunty of such a heinous crime.
-A. Gay—■ -.'.^tnLe txie adoption of the Comtl-
. tutlorr of Texas In 1878, no saloon
advocate has ever been so deprav-
ed as to advocate the opening up
of saloons upon the Lord's Day. ,
They do not want the puttie to
know that A! Smith voted against
a bill to kill the Raines law hotel
•Ct, Which togklized houses of as-
signation and lewdness. In the Btt-
nwn on The Mount we are taught,
^By their frulte ye shall know
I have the pnrfoundbst respect for
an antt-prohttitlonlst who is sup-
---“~j Al Smith, as he is coosist-
and regular, but I have no pa-
tience with any man who claims
that he to a prohibitionist and is
supporting him. -
’ I_ am frequently told that I am
R?™b * Republican because I am adro-
niall eiiHrprtaa at
'"urw «*•.
tsr ItoiiFharn hLitutte Sr^r"~S,
pnin.ry ata was to destroy tbs eeo-
nomlo nroKtves at tbs South.
Hepulillcm -NatAbles’*
“toms’: Alton. B. PalL sserstary of
ths Interior, allMted coasplnuor.
n.omto'-'Smier. MepAbiirAtraiten
Piopnty custodian. oonvlct; Col.
Hirtws. Ecpobiiato bead of ths vet-
eras' Bureau, now m prison tor
■tMUng the soldiers' fumto p. c.
Stephenson, Republican Nader in
Indiana, now tn -prison tor mibdsr;
--- Knapp. Bcpubliean asc-
ite of New York, in prl-
tory and theft of public
f P. DaugbWty, Hepubli-
leged eoa.
mt wandal.
try Sinclair.
of purchaa*
itronage and co-
Ibert Pall: Bdwln
------ —. wuJ
011 'werves to
from Michigan’
• <*wtxr‘«?
• wumm b.
■‘ r . re-
of Morru Sheppaid is true of every
other erstwhile urohibitioniat.
1
not • major issue in the pending,
campaign. There are other collat-
eral issues of grave importance, -but
none of them transcemta the issue
of nrohibition. as it is not only a
national but an international is-
sue, that involves the welfare of the
indiydual, the home, the church,
and the whole of world-civiUsa-
Uon
Many Al Smith supporters claim
that they are for him mm! agatost
prohibition because it is not en-
forced. This same course of logic
Will call for the repeal of every
prohibitory law written Into con-
stitution or upon the statutes, qf
both State and Nation, as they are
all more or leu violated. It would
even call for the repeal of the Ten
Commandments as they are con-
stantly being violated. -
Edison, the electric wizard of all
agas, says prohibition is the best law
ever written into the Federal con-
stitution. He confesses that it is
often violated, but asserts that it
is the best kept prohibitory law in-
tended for tbe restralt of vice and
crime. He says prohibition is 60
per cent enforced, while the law
against murder is 60 per cent en-
forced, and the law against bank
robbing and high-jacking to bnly
|5 per-cent enforced.
If liquor prohibitory laws are to
be repealed or molllfled because
they are not perfectly enforced then
; «I«y. Gther pcou---
’ tflbttbfy Ikw Is subject to similar
treatment
If by persistent lawlessness and
disregard the Eighteenth Amend-
ment which prohibits the manufac-
ture and sale of intoxicating liquors
can be annulled, by the same pro-
cess the fourteenth amendment,
which guarantees to the individual
his property rights can be annulled
and we then will have bolshevism
as It bas existed in Russia singe the
world war. .
If our government is to be per-
petuated. Ito citizenship must be
loyal to its constitution and flag. It
must be temperate, instead of in-
temperate; it must be progressive
rather than retrogressive; it must
be moralized instead of demonUiz-
fng; it must be constructive instead
of destructive.
There is but little doubt as to the
results of this contest and it to .to
ho hoped that the victory win be
so ctectoive tnat- John Barleycortf
and kindred issues will be buried UK
neath such an avalanche of votea
rect themselves until Gabriel blows
hto bora.
J . N RAYZOR
getting bad again. Order out k
— -a-k- —vKa
1
1
■y KWKE L. SIMPSON
WASHINGTON. Nov. J.-R's a
touch proposition for any jud^c tc
■inckrtake consideration of a case
which involves . technics! scientific
questions of fact rather than ot
law. ’ '
Lawyers and judges cannot very
well be deeply lew ned In all the
sciences as well as the law. Yet
they are constantly beinx called
upon in patent suite, for instance,
io cram up in a matter at weeks
or months on most abstruse sc ten-
tlfic questions rufticiently. to PTC- mrens a vote for the
WDt ih argument or to decide an T— — ----------
issue of fact as to priority of patent
rights between claimants. * .
NTATIS IN COURT Th
• NO telefttfffe development of re- OJ*J
- cont times had' been more prolific
cf tcrminbkvy perplexing to a toy-
man in science than radio. Vast
sums of money are involved in pat-
ent suits as to radio's evolution and
even the distinguished lawyers who
compose the United States tupren e
court cannot escape locking horns
at.j' , _ ;• ; •
for them a" reasonable degree of
derstatiding of the mysteries of al-
ternating and direct currents, re-
generative phenomena, heterodyn-
ing effect, high and low frequency
circuits, and all the rest of it.
The so called '.Teed back" e!r-
eutt patent fhjht now before the
rtiprcme court h a case in
Inciduitally. it gave Charles 1
Hughes as counsel for one side, an
opportunity to exhibit in pr^sent-
ing his argument what/seemed to
t>M? Bystander an amazirr; grasp of
the general principles and Luory.of
«dto. „ • •
prices you can afford to pay.
Morrel-Fritz Furniture
West Side Sqaare.
Your Grocery Bill
• Are. yw-ntufiod with
ce? * No-
ri we are
................ ■
■
SMr^Zs”’
-- .
J. J. Rieger Dry Goods Co. .
1 ig
We cordial
HODGSON BROS.
-■ We Deliver
HUGHES EXUI AINING RADIO
1 ’"4rw»,his role to defend a pat-
ent already granted, which la n<*
doubt, an advantage. His opponent
had displayed before the bench on
an easel > “bOok-ur” chart of a
feed-back circuit in contending
1 ha 1 the idea iiad originated not
with the present patent holder but
with tbe scientist from whom his
clients drew their rights. His ex-
planation involved a technical de-
scription of just what a feed-back
circuit is: what happens within the
tube Where ft Is produced and why
------ It to aTundamental element in mO-
, dem radio reception.
Chief Justice Tafi and h‘s col-
teamtow mtened with considerable
evidence that it was very deep stuff
even fcr them. At one point, coun-
2 the beneh,
rather pathetically. If there was net
some, to* Question cn which the is-
sue could be decided. The lawyer
though not.
When Mr. Hughes arose, he virtu.
uUy ighored the chart and spoke
from notes rather than manuscrip t
His argument dealt rzther with the
legal record on the case, which In-
volve* about a dozen big volumes
of testimony but whenever lie had
’occasion to touch on radio techni-
calities he did it in aft offhand way.
without reference to his notes, that
implied he knew exactly what he
was talkinj: about.
< At one point he volunteered an
explanation of “heterodyning ef-
fect," the aords having occurretl
in an excerpt of testimony he was
reading. He defined it in one sen-
tence without using any of the nc- iai--cr—r
ccpted technical terms of radio. *“n
Court attaches glanced about to
catch cacti other’s eyes and not
smilingly/ Evidently they had ex-
pected it of Hughes. • w~
■
1..- MOORE ABSTRACTS
For
LESS MONEY
BMoment Brchonte Nott Book Buldg.
___'PHNTON.i TEXA8.BECORD
Democracy Versa
Republicanism
ih, Nov. 3.—Wheq.tiHU*g|e
st comes’ to cond|ir
thwi Oun. te « amsimr,
y and almost Inlteretrtlv I
or not: It to a paity government, no’i
a government by one individual. It
te a government by law and organ
taatton. not a government by men
Whan our constitution was adopted
we. turned our buck forever, i« u»
hope, on a government by men^MKi
..... ..... by tow
FaTsrwS’.rS
tration of govemmen* muit
from these parties. TTtL X.
fact in mind, the voter must
ber that the present —---
one between two great
ties, not between two —.
Then the conclusion ihevital
lows that a rote tor sitber os
for ths Presidency means a vote for
the partji h« represents. In other
words, a vote for Herbert Hoover
•MAA A Mokj. HAr
ty.’sn endorssmsnt of the policies
ss sWusi.'WJff
ciplee have been and will
Parties Comnared
^Republicans and other enemies
Of ths Democratic party that Is u
«>elween Vamm.Hy lwi
and Herbert Hoover Nothing could
be further from the truth. However. .i«»mg oeen bi
Tammany would not suffer by com-1 ’lllnols Utilities
parison with Hoover and his crowd ■
Stat since our polities! enemies
^hoceo to eenptiisifil ths sins ot
Tammany, wife no credit for its
---------numerous good deeds and construe-
IS. —-I th< aims of tbe Repubiicem party.
w* M111 not for a moinsnt. however,
admit that Tammany is ths sxem-
ganlzatton itor w«U wo-dsr-n .nw-
k***1 Govsrnor Smith Is
rro num controiiM! bi TAmnuusY. but rather
de. in closer-fcob-Ufc ttien. give a re-
Resent- ridM W thi shining reeosd of the
to ow’rart We are not so-
rely for our facta upon the
iten fetid, malicious state-
>f the ehemteo of tbe Depub-
the lno«*rU*1'
Tj or nutory.
, forebears of the Iteputttoan
party were tiis Federalists, the- par-
ty of Hamilton, John
others. This was the party that, held
srseks
•hout^d across the table to Jeffer-
son "Your Iteonla. sir. is noMtlne
but s great beast" The Federal'"?
aseerted that only a pact at the neo-
pie. “th. rich, the well-bon^ ^d
the abje, • should govern the rest.
Does this not sound like Reoubll-
canlsm of 1M8» But space will not
permit these gentle knpeachmente
■WLISK'SXa'
l»6 wore passed by the
•rarwx’" theiTas now
•'‘•"S**' laotituted tbe
Jefferson's administra-
‘hot had been
by impea. h-
Sf sSS »*u»
F^r&f^X^d1*^ K WOrted
Rumor rcBaons. opposed to tte WRK
threatened to oeoede, and refused to
aid in the prosecution of the war. |
the ^5* con,tltut''’J
™ Lo"b**®L.!* «*• totor Republl-
,.prty' wLth few exceptions, oc-
t^ to our pub-
lic domain, lost no opportunity to
h,tted and to em-
banwes tbe economic peogrsA of ths
rtiirJJe. I01’11 War <*■*• •»> the
•88 ABktolAJTy •
9- Then came that series of Re-
t-redit. MobBier, of 1878, intokhlcEl
Mgbtgorenumnt. Qfltciaia were round
°* accepting bribes, and Vice
North Texas Protective Association
©very dollai* paid into this company is kept at home.
Phone 270. Danton Co. Bank Bldg. F. B. Huey, Mgr.
For Life Insurance
Sm
"Y-w?
iSk FOB DBMOMs
i
F
i
BEONICLe, MONDAY, NOVEMBER I, IMg
am- twrAkU / « •”
W It mvrt not bn overlooked that
the Republican party has fostered,
■ncourased. and perpetuated the
taccial Interests tn America, in tooth
’fete and ^Nation. Small business and
royert -tfat'WTTRiuvir and Mr
1 il'jii aavH the attftar’tH* to cialTD
?.he ."•puHtonna have bnut up
fi The
law and adi
Wltb7»te
1 present campaign is
— t— political par-
iliwifn. two great man
► conclusion
Sr
.1*
.
made.
YXj-
elderly obu- I
wife began
purchase ahq
remarkable
tboro people
ry ot a pur-
une she left
talked with
I about wliat
Iw they firek
l (“no it wu
hey came to
lent bargain
ler it would
br not (teU-
fz'sewh^CT
I had been
■very silent- I
boom. What
lent! It told
Kore or less
BY tokL
Id marriage,
led. But it
■ and groom
Btter chance
■their minds
Ire all they
Fmaateriivt
py't word:
[ol being
Ltiatte ap-
farnKwe.
»
r 1
L ■'
i -.
Bloc*
n voters I
the polls
BW'
cP'
i-l-
' Sport^oabL^.
Good looking tweeds,
sport coats in allur-
ing mixed patterns of
wanted colors. In
fact, they aw the alk
coat and very
..
[ servici
i*®ly priced 1
L': ’ a,./c
nee
hen
kJ*1 V
Wr
11
I ’
I® in ill
=
i.
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 71, Ed. 1 Monday, November 5, 1928, newspaper, November 5, 1928; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335543/m1/3/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.