Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 102, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 11, 1928 Page: 2 of 8
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tents out of Denton to date total 3,-
ittt 3,400 bales have been ginned here
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Washington Letter
By RODNEY DUTCHER
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KELLOGG
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$1>S
Quality*,
Box of S for gift
purposes at
$5.70
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Careful, Efficient
Commercial Printing.
Ross Printing Co.
219 1-2 W. Oak St
Phone 841, -
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fc.
efy X
“JWiTry Qhristmas’
Yvith
PEACH GLOWI
/a -<*■'
piiX
'of
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the
riv<
Separator for $57.00
500-lb capacity Cream
Statioif?
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SERVE
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to . |
•hildh'xxl Be-
long-H l«t-
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Rye Straw Sayings
1?^
one word each day. Today’s word:
Apprehenaio;n disquieting antici-
pating of evil. “She awaited in a
fever of apprehension."
fM
the year:
of holiday
Not only is this u
4 k*
MsTby-asM
H'SUW
No. 444 Chiffon with French Clocks, $2.50.
box of 3 are
$725
THE WILLIAMS STORE
Gifts of Distinction.
'' ' ' ' - ? *1*' —*—-
rTj<
the occasion, with r
or of pocket bookii. ni
ie. first served” applies
One way to loae yeur standing 4
Is to sit around, v z1 a,
11 BI
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ir “‘l w^laoM -Am
:esu»u.‘w>
were
(»
Gasoline and Oil
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WMMWSMMMMBBWWMS
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ca to nui pvbuc
mwttoa wpea the ohataetse.
oi any linn, individual er ee
oorrasaad upon Mnr eaUad
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(From Record-Chronicle, Dec. 11, 1909.)
After making five unsuccessful attempts, .J
aeroplane made by W. E. Brown and Cliffwrd I
of Denton was badly broken in a fall of 200 ft
It was pulled by horsepower and was too small to
carry a man.
* Cotton shipmi
172 bales. Abda
this season.
A bonus of $2fi, and required right-of-way has
been offered by the Chamber of Commerce, through
A. C. Owsley, president, for a Santa Fe line into
Denton from the west. ___
' -------*--trt- i-r...—... ■ „,■ ■
That -machine to match coion will -be a Messing
to the man whose wife sends him around to the
department store.— Indianapolis Star.
Maine now has a talking dog and a parrot that
■ iftflya evwl wA AvvtBrtfiiim m«w fifty to
of tM ;
Since 1881
■ rv **<* - -” *’r?yT'“
-Exchange National
sings "America", and wd are expecting any
her that it boasts a eitlaen who know* all
“Stor-Ppn^led Banner.*—Detroit News.”
‘ An Illinois woman asked a di-
vorce because she couldn't awak-
en her husband, the combined
noise of twelve alarm clocks fail-
ing to budge him. At one time or
other that man must have been
an apartment jehftoir. ! 7 5 ’’’
• • * >
Sir Thomas Lipton says he hat
remained a bachelor because he
could have only one wife it he
married, whereas he Would want
three or four. That should re-
move any doubts you might have
had that Sir Thomas really Is a
challenger.
(Copyright, IS’t. N'EA Service. Inc.)
First-ClaM Plumbing
Ifiatallatioa and BapnfttaS
^“-Mn
Washington Hocks says if a per-
son is just natural born no-ao-
count there is not many folks that
can ever make anything else out
of him.
’ENDABLE
JANaNC*
1 motorists are losing a total of
> short measures in gasoline statl
ag to J. A. Kinard, State iNe
W.T. Bailey & Co.
INSURANCE
AH Kitab
SOLICITS TOUR BUSINESS
FIRST NAT. BANK BLDG.
_______tyONg TK J
I * e ' A" ‘ 'a
Make This Christmas
. j ’ ■ . -.r-
k Furniture Christmas
We have an unusually
large stock of things that
will make useful gifts.
Edwards & McCrary
Mnurtrvm ■ ,
Wert Oak at. ’ Swand Block
-*r V
7 ... / •
r
t —
H , reservoir.
With much talk of a 3-cent gasoline tax, it would
s be weh worth while to consider some feasible means
. of sa^ng the 7-10 cent which is lost for every gal-
lon of 20-cent gasoline purchased.
—----fv------
A Denver woman outtalked a burglar, convinc-
ing him that his life was in danger and that he
I \ should leave her home immediately. How many
I i men would have the nerve to argue with a house-
M- - breaker 7
..r-
r_
Snpnmtor for . .. .480.00
Harry Teasley’s
Grocwy
Phons 498. We Deliver.
A\___
Mrs. Oldfield is not the first person to raise this
question. Feminists in general and many male poli-
ticians have decried the custom of sending widows
to Congress “on a rain check.”
Those who do uphold the plan point with pride
to Mr.a Florence Kahn, Edith Nouns Rogers and
Mrs. William Langley, present congressional wid-
ows, who seem to be doing a job comparable with
that of their male colleagues.
believe
There is an amusing passage in
one ef Zena Gale’s books in Which
the mother is speaking to hn
grownup son of his cl '~
litf hi Manta and how
ed. “Bernard biughef
said, ‘the door was aje
you and him (his father) pointing
to the presents piled around- And
then I knew. But I never told, yyu
I knew. I let vui belief I believed
Lots of the boys did that.*'
Doubtless many of the children
whose parents beHeve in the'r be
lief tn Santa Claus are Just being
kind and considerate
It’s Fan to fretend
••Believe,” is a word of somewhat
clastic meaning The toby doubt-
less believes in the existence of
Santa Oi&us as he believes in the
existence of the grocery boy or his
kindergarten teacher. Then comes
the transition stage and we find
ourselves believing in Santa Claus
the same-way w> believj in fairies.
as a Jolly myth that It is tun to
pL-.y with in the mind. When Fcter
Pan asks- “Da you belleve in Tetr-
ties?” and all the grownups in the
audknee assert that they do, they
hardly mean that they think if
they went out In the woods they
could find a creature two or thre^-
inches tall and node in the image
of a man. They just mean that
they believe it's fun to pretep.t
there are such creatures And it's
fun to pretend that there is a
Santa, and one can get a ’ot of
fun out of .hat preton«.e long al-
ter one knows with part cf one's
mind that lie couldn't possibly
come down the chinimy and that
cue's presents come fFCin mothcr_
and father and “with much love
from Aunt Abce.'* — •’■
Tansetrow—Is It Better to Fuv.’
4*"*'' * ''
measure was due
a few cases, the
pump* had been tampered with, so that a portion
with strongs bundles in their
When the' frownings of the fathers
There can be no doubt f»tou't It— lleve that we can not live long wtth-
ChrUtmss gre ta drawlng neerl consuming such truck. It must,
------------•' *' ,f“- • indeed, have peen a happy exist-
ence when these rugged pioneers
could live to be nearly 100 years
old and eat what they liked I
f .
J nBLK THOUGHT * BUY IT IN DENTON
♦ 1 <-» FOB TODAY < ♦
♦ ♦♦♦ - --- • •♦♦♦
TRIUMPH THROUGH TRAVAIL
country so small that It didn't “»* his
even have one rood-will flver ““I nnd sh<n satisfied: by his
even have one rood will flyer. *noWjedge shall my righteous ser-
xant Justify many: foi he shall bear
their inlqidttag.—Isa. y.|l. '
WHITMORE
sidewalks. e e : fwiigf yo&i caa buy'thfr'-Mt
Chicago win seek the original 1 ; '
Noah’s ark on Mount Ararat for f350-lb capacity Cream
the 193S World's Fair. A boat ------ *
with a capacity, like that could be
sold at a profit alter the fair <0
beer importers along the Detroit
river. • v • ■ J '
JM&Gi
IUthR&*
For Men.
A gift that is always sure,
to please. *
$2.98 to $6.90
......
another-record break'ng performance. In other
words, a four-pound hen produces 676 ounces of
eggs a year.
There is little wonder that she is
$2,000 and her eggs sell for $5 each.
---------0---------
Familiar headlines at this time of
“Prohibition agents seek to stop flow
liquor."’.
With the
Exchanged
By L. A. N.
DUNTON, TEXAS,
Words often misused: Do not
say, “She looks charmingly this
evening.* 8ay “charming."
Often mispronounced: impress
Accent the noun on first syllable,
verb on last syllable.
Often misspelled: worsted.
Synonyms deduction, Induction,
inference, conclusion.
Word study: “Use a word three
times and it is yours.” Let us in-
crease our vocabulary by mastering
NEA Service Writer.
WASHINGTON. Dec. 11.—Mrs. W. A. Oldfield,
our fifth congresswoman in the present session of
Congress and fourth widow of a congressman who
will sit in our next Congress, is not sure that she
appfovaa the practice of assigning deceased con-
gressmen’s seats to their widows,
-Congressman’ W. A. Oldfield of Arkansas, Dem-
ocratic whip of the House; died in Washington late
in November. He was serving hfs eleventh term.
His widow’s name was immediately placed in nom-
ination by the Arkansas state central committee and
submitted to the governor of her state for consid-
eration at a special election. The special election
required 30 days’ ,notice. But the Word has gone
out that there is no shadow of a doubt that pretty
Mrs. Oldfield will be the fifth congresswoman and
take her seat the first.of yes*.
But the fifth congresswoman is not sure that she
wants the honor, nor that she believes ih it, though
she does appreciate it. ■*
•It merely means that the appointment is given
through sympathy, and not because of ability or
fitness for the job,” she said to me. “One can’t
but be touched by the loyalty and honor and tri-
bute to the service of one’s husband, of course, but
I do wonder if it’s just the thing.
“Here am I, for ihstgnce, a woman who firmly
believes and has always practiced the belief that
woman’s career is in her home and husband, and
that if she does that job well she has no time for
outside things, nor is needed in the outside world.
“Because of my domestic interests almost solely
5 am utterly unprepared for this job. I know my
husband’s interests, of course, and will try to carry
them out as well as I can. I know some appoint-
ments he wanted made to West Point and Annap-
olis, and I will take care of those. But as a 0<m-
gresswoman with any general vital interests in
affairs of the nation, I- just won’t 'be capable and
why should I have the job when there are so many
women who are?”
» • « ■ .
Mrs. Oldfield is very sure that she would never
consider another terrti, and passes off the sugges-
tion that now with her busband gone she may be
glad to develop a new outside interest.
“A home woman is. always just that,” she says.
“The outside world frightehs me a little. I am one
of those women who live happily only through per-
, srnal human relationship. I have an old. mother who
will be my one job and interest as soon as this xin-
expired term ends. ' , ,
“1 seriously raise this question of whether wid-
ows should be appointed to their husbands’ con-
gressional seat*. J'raise ft on the grounds of wheth- '
er we are competent and whether a woman can be
expected at such a time to submerge peraonal grief
enough to apply herself to impersonal issues and
problems.”
Just
Folk*
By Idgar A. Quest
—U--
SIGNS’ : U
When the children take their spinach
without making any fuse.
And they wash their hands for dinner
without any word from us.
When they go to bed when told
without running down again
On some vain pretext or other—oh.
it'a very certain then , .
We are speeding through December
and the shopping days are here
And that glorious day of childhood—
Christmas Eve, is drawing near!
When' they drop their little curtsiea
in the way we wish they would.
When their “thank you*s” and their
"pleases" show they're trying to
be good. , ,
.And thgy, sit upright at table and
they clearly say their prayers ,
Without' mumbtBig and “—“
and they place their
chairs, »
Then there isn't any doubtlag it'a
thft last month of th* veftr.
And that glorious day ot childhood—
Christmas Bve. la drawing near I I
torn
And torgi
Remember the good old days
wtaan lettuce leaves and carrots
wwe fed to the rabbits only?—Na-
tfaMT Republic “ .
ga were .the good old days, in-
wfien ihe-itaD 'did fita to b. nothl
Mt theto kind < victuals ~
ntended fbr Juunan consump- -----
tlon. IR, thig day of hurry, bustle i _
. and uncertainty, however, the diet more sense than thy eget credit for.
' expert, are trying to make us be-. »• they grow feathers all the sum-
licvs that, we can not live lone with- keep thCm Warm ln
EUick Relwanger went to the
dentists's office the other, dtf. with
Us jaw all stuck out and the den-
U4 ..was about to p<n a tooth
m he found it to be nothing
. •
;x- V, c-."
All work guaranteed,
• : T- . M - jL-L-
Va2noy Jewe,ryCo-
I
-
I
IB^NrtNtobftBftMMMtaBbMtatoBtoBtoButotofltotoetoWSHE!
tEnftSriStod Tueedayo sad MMdaya
, ------—o-------
j GETTING MODERNIZED
In spite of the repeated and vehement protests
of cavalry officers that this 'branch of the service
is yet a vital part to play in warfare, modem in-
ventions have almost preeluded the use of “horses
in spirited dashes across battlefields. The United
States Army recently sponsored a trip of a motor-
T >xed caWalry unit from Maryland to Texas, a dis-
tance 0f 2,000 miles. The men r\de in light auto-
mobiletl fitted with shields and mounting machine
guns ai»d one-pounders.
Horses have played an invaluable part in war-
fare, and they yet out-perform motorized vehicles
in hauling supplies over rough territory, but horses
cn the‘field of battle seem destined to go. Flivvers
do not’ eost much more than horses, and they do
not become unmanageable under extreme conditions.
--------A LOSS THAT CAN BE AVOIDED - -
I.1B2300
Dumps,
Kinard, State IhspAtor <rf.
£ Weights and Measures. The loss is so saribus, that
K In the Opinion of Kinard, immediate action is nec-
essary to stop this loss, which occurs not only to
Texas,'1>ut to every State.
Testa were made of gasoline pumps in the larger
cities of the State and they showed an average
gross shortage of 3 1-2 per certt. Pumps !n Beau-
mont |rere the most accurate, while Galveston
pumjwf showed the greatest shortage. Of 60 pumps
tested.in Fort Worth, six were accurate, 46 gave
short m-'asure and nine delivered too much. In Dal-
ias otfc of 51 pumps examined, one gave correct
mcasujie. 39 cave short measure and 11 were too
generois.
In » number of instances, short
to defective pumps, but in quite
...i, -« ...jU *’MwMr
- • - - •A
'1
. Contemporary Thought
XATE SHOPPERS ARE PENALIZED
„ Gift-giving has become an established custom.
It is « universal practice. It is a pleasure-produc-
ing hjlbit. Selection of the gifts is an interesting
annum event. Delivering them is a happy task. Joy
of the recipient pays dividends in joy to the donor.
Soifietimea, however, there are incidents in con-
nection with the Christmas shopping and the dis-
patching Of the gifts that are cause of grief. Most-
ly thfif ls occasioned by procrastination—letting the
time Blip by without realising that Christmas is ao
close ,at hand.
La$ shoppers find that the stocks of Christmas
goodg have been depleted. More forehanded persons
have|«eevred better selections because they did
their j shopping . earlier. Late shopping has other
Ijjea. Physical fatigue accompanies the task as
rda to the stores become augmented. There
to at the postal and express offices, with
y perms flocking there. There are dis-
noiito whet> it is realised that gifts to
a distance will be late to arrival. 1
wtion caused by last minute selection of
Iso piles up the work for store employes,
and express clerks, for mail carriers and
men, placing them under a physical strain
pastimes leaves them more glad that the
Mng to over than that Christmas fits Aij-
kana Mores have provided a generous array
s ftom which Christmas gift selections may
I. Thera Is a great variety of things auit-
. —... pric< thm fl.
The old saying that
____ ---------- _ ___ J. It is: better to be
< the first.—Texarkana Qasettfl.
'*-* V .W,'3i.XLX •
^-.-1 - ".-A. : ■
. Interest Editorials
By WKWW WAMBOLDT -----
■aavMMMWM
' l WBH
Every now end then you hear a person sa:
wishes he could do this or shat or the other tl
or be this or that or the other thing.
"Wouldn’t it be fine,” a young woman remarked
to me the other day, if thenp really were good
fairiea who would give us our wishes as they do
to the atory books?"
Indeed it would be nice to have a fairy make one
a present of an enchanted ring or some other mag-
ical thing which one had but to press or rub or
bite to make a wish come true. But my recollec-
tion tells me that in the fairy tales such boons
were bestowed as rewards for something or other.
Fairies, hobgoblins and the like did not appear out
of a clear sky for no reason at all to hand one a
talisman that would work wonders for one.
It was the peasant boy who shared his only piece
of bread with some old hag who was given the
beautiful princess in marriage. It was the young
fellow who saved a little bird from a ravening
cat, to discover that the bird was a fairy in di»-
guise, who received a silver sword against which
no enemy could prevail. Aladdin was given a magic
lamp—but he had to rub it to get results—which
reminds me of the lad in “Pinafore” who was
made ruler of the Queen’s Navy because he so
nicely polished up the knocker on the big front
door.
I vised to be fond of fairy stories, and I still am,
but I cannot recall an instance where the idler, or
the fellow who did not put forth commendable ef-
fort, received glittering gifts from fairies.
“I wish I had a business of my own,” sijghs a
man. But what is that man doing toward getting
a business of his own? Probably if he would work
hard and conscientiously, if he would save his
money and use his head, he would have a business
of his own some day; the good fairy of Industrious
Intelligent Application would make his wish come
true. “I wish we had a home of our own,” wails
a woman. But what are she and her husband doing
toward getting a home of their own. A little wise
planning, a little frugality, putting their money
into a house and lot instead of a flivver, and the
kind Go-Getter fairy would give them a home of
their own. “I wish the Company would raise my
salary,” grumbles a man. “I wish I could play
the piano,” yearns a Woman. But what is the man
doing toward getting a raise in salary, and what
is the woman doing about learning to play the
piano?
“I wish my ship would come in,” one observes
wistfully. But one need not expect a ship to come
in unless one sends a ship out. And onfr need not
expect one’s wishes to come true unless one does
something toward making theih come true.
......' H .....A
"■.‘f ' f: . ,,**1 ^i."1 Hta. ..tor.-.. rfir -
WCBIPTION BATto
Jto gsat (la attoBss>
tot BMMBa by m*U (tn advanoe)
rhres BoottM by (tn advanoei
•saflktoMBrt to Dencan county
to r*.. <p> srfxsnoei
'11 tnonUM (IB advMBOO) •
■XLSrSS:
<»«»«• D«MM CMM,.)
Jto fto» (tn advance)
Wx rnoutbe (in advance) ........ *
niroe montb* (tn advance) ................ •'
An AaaoctatM Press is exclusively entitled to tb«
«• £r stopublteattaa of ait news dispatches credited
to ft er not otherwise credited la this paper end etor
to toeal newe published herein
DENTON, TEXAS, DECEMBER 11, 1928
..........)'■»„■ >■"---------------------------:-----------------------------------
VALUABLE HEN
~ A chltken might be a common thing, but every
now an^ then, even a chicken can rise above the
plane oi ordinary chickens and become quite a
genius. Down at Meetia, J. W. Radley owns a hen
who answers to the name of Lady Mexia IV. Her
chief bill to fame is the fact that she holds
official record of laying 325 eggs in 12 months.
record performance, but she de-
posits togs which weigh 26 ounces to the dozen,
^a a a 1 t . - ... — T _
Badger Tlree and Tabea.
Crank earn drained^
awry, gpg - -
Wmairs ♦
V* IJWlosopliy
UOW LONG DID YOU BELIEVE
IN SANTA CLAU8Y
Do children believe in Santa
Claus -after they emerge from
babyhood?
That is » question I Daye always
been interested in. I lave heard so
many people tell of half grown
children, who, so they solemnly
avtrred, hadn’t lost any of their
faith in Santa Clans. I never cculd. cepted him as V delightful make*
quite believe that. For it never
seemed to me that children after
they ware six or seven could actu-
ally believe that all their gilts
came from Santa Clans, that he
drove over the tops of the houses
with a tejim of reindeer, and came
down the chimney with their pres-
ents. « ’
He’d Have Landed in a Hot Air
. Stove
Take the many ways tn Milch
cuch a belief must be assailed. In
the first place by the fact that in
many homes there are no fire-
places My own early dls’jelif f came
partly from the fact that we had
no fireplugs, only stoves and a
furnace Imd Santa come down the
chimney adjacent tn the place
where my stocking was hung he
would have landed in a hot air
Move. Besides, from all h‘s pictures
he was a very portly person and
cur chimneys were small. I knew
very well I couldn't have even sbd
down one myitif And dirtyt And
think of these white whiskers and
trimmings on his coat. It Just
didn't seem reasonable
Then to make belW difficult
there wore the impersonation of
Santa Claus. Half a drren differ-
ent ones every year There were
the toy shop and department store
Santa Clauses, and at church «tnd
school there were more Santa
Clauses. Perhaps we even xPew
their Identity, heard the qrownups
saying that Mr Baxter was coins
to be Batita Claus this year or rec-
cc.uized our next door neighbor af-
ter h« took his whiskers off.
Then thete was the obvirus fact
that gifts came from people we
knew since they were so labeled.
“Johnny, from mother” “Ruth,
z from father" ‘ Betty, with .nuch
!uvc from Atmt Alice," If Santa
— ■ „
I
Five bilMon dollars is the amount
in circulation tn the United States,”
wo read. Shucks! that’s only $40 .
■ fiitoce. If that’s all the money there
I to is, what is all this credit based on?
1 just want to know.—Fort
"°h Worth Star-Telegram.
k> It's discouraging Indeed, for the
average person to contemplate that
$40 trifle which is due in compar-
iaon with the amount of his out-
standing obligations. Good thing
that most of us get more than we
are entitled to or we never would
be able to pay out.
brought the gifts, why wtre they
from other people? The whole
thing was confusing to say the
He Let Them Believe He Believed
It ir my own opinion that as the
mists of babyhood dispelled we
ceased to believe in Santa In the
way in which we believed in the
other real things of life ano ae-
Fhe newest, loveliest stocking color in the world.
With the color moot perfect for gift-giving. Because
it goes with everything. Because it magically
changes from a softly-glowing tan in daythne to a
flushed peach glow at night! t "
Once upon a time there waq*a
-------- ------
even have one good-will flyer.
Several persons were Injured in
New York the other day by falling
on slippery sidewalks end break-
ing hip pdeket ttahke: People
should keep away from slippery
sidewalks.
■
our eh
month:
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 102, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 11, 1928, newspaper, December 11, 1928; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335574/m1/2/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.