Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 103, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 12, 1928 Page: 2 of 12
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NESPAY, DECEMBER M, Hfl,
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JI? FRANCES FAQRT
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COLLEGE OF INDUSTRIAL ARTS
i Brings a World of Channing Gifts the Women of Denton Approve
The spirit of the modem Christmas is
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Glee Club
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Oley Speaks
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John A. Guinn
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$5.95 and Up
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Give a Man a Horse He Can Ride
Venetian Love Song
Morning
J. Lamont Galbreath
Nevin-Humphries
Speaks Valdwfn
A. J. Boex
...Chriatofore Gluck
Gustave T. Heil
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In the library, Jacaranda, a mot-
hardwood imported
is used for the flrat
instruction, for wains-
f true '
m
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r Quilted Satin
t. !.«■ Robe*
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Complete program is as follows:
In a Garden JZLk--------
Oh My Beloved
’Tin She ll'..............................................
.. . • -.i1
2-^.. .Li .
>•
Life’s Jdys .
r -'H-
God Sh^l Wipe Away All Tears....
To Arms
I
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if
- *1'
FREMONT Keb. Dec. If.—kne-
teen-year-eW Josephine M. Selmef-
c~ ■ :
Fourth of July oetebration at Hum-
phrey two years, ato. That nettled
the 'ititwr question for her. She
would be a pilot.
Her father, Jo^ph Schaefer of
Norfolk, didn't take so kindly to
■ 1
Silk Hosiery
■
Glee Club
5' ■
fed i- ’
land club. wcaUina that th* 0*11.
*1 fewer eahibiUbn gatnaa
----any other melor. leagw dub
l' mmuou, ventured a sug
the same gituattao wilt.
... the new season
'• '''' TS
Stat
could .
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I
TWsffay, Dec. 13th,
Longhorn Qtnrtet and Vodvil Skit
Are Among Features to Be Offered
it'
LIa-. ; .
■■ ?
-
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F;
ii
j-Jr
rn’i'..
- ... .. ____.rift
or enough cosnpeUtian tn» the dou-
hta ble A and A ctaba to make atane
real ball garnaa and navec over*
did.ivn, - /
.j,,
■■
i=^'dPfeMT-HAT6IRL’
out hv the way of not being man- |«—
hat <
WOMAN WITH INFANT AT RIDE
IS STABBED.
ST. LOUIS. Dec. 12 - Mrs. Ma-
ry Phelan, 18. was in a serious con-
dition Tuesday from a wound tn her
breasted inflicted as she lay in a
maternity hospital with her 9-day
old ■ daughter. Thomas F. Phelan,
26. her husband, is held on a
charge of assault to kill.
*
JL
I i • ! 1
' Copen and gold—
Orchid—
Am. Beauty and gold
Cerise— ’ ' f '
Blue— r
88.95to $10.95
Crepe Negligee*
Ostrich and lace trimmed.
Pink, green, blue, orchid, rose—
$5.00 to $13.50
L. j
'' r i-F
»
There is a special’welcome in re-*
reiving a gift of hosiery in chiffon or
Service weight; 32 colors to choose
from. Some with pointed heete, oth-
. era with regulations heels. An, ever-,
welcome gift—one, two or more pairs.
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B
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Ifr;
£-•- --
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fore th
r-OT
reiaaaad aft tha dm
are button holing j
• . - ■ - ,. -, ,. . .. . ; ... ,. . mor laagua aluban
INDIAN^ WILL PICK ON MINOR erty are talking to
------- faw aoouts are locg
Xito^M^th? wouM?
889 Wart HHwry
AB MflWA '* . ’r- - - -
reg/.wyarrwim
KRAZ1L NUTS
RNULISH WALNUTS
HK-KOHV NUTS
PEANUTS, spaatab and Jumbo
peeANs, lag u as* per ream
PFC4NK Shaltod
BtANlrtiL -SaawMb JWSba"
fW4 :ANH 10c to SM BW »*«**•
WALNUTS
LeelL Brady
a. e. mmgMstM*_____
LOOK OUT FOB ISM BB0WN8 against minor hngna.<W»- * .
Dan Howley, good natured man- “It to not good buaihaaa for tha
*«er _Bro*™ w»» to bear (km top hard In
crowed tta bu.sebuij, critics of tha the spring and in spite or warnings
nation W year by finishing third they wm. put out too much OgdtaM
when they ware consigned before another major league club. W« bad
the season to fintoh savtf — ZZ-*
eighth: explains the success „
team in one short sentence. "Hust-
ling did to.” gays Dapper Dan,
cess ot your young, green <Jub out-
side of f
manager?' Ml
easy,’ was the reply. "We had a
hustling club. The players were
all for the club, all for each other
and all for me. They were just a
ijappy family and that's why we
won a lot of ball games '
Manager Howley thinks hta club
will do well in 1929 "Kress will be
a greatly improved ball player," he
said. "He was good last season, of
coyrse, but h$ will be lots better
with that year’s experience under
his belt. I hear good reports of
young Grimes I have seen him play
and he can field beyond question.
If he hits he should make a good
man for us Good reports ore reach-
ing us on Ferrell too, and on the
whole I am in good spirits.”
jfe. IT
"...
KIWUl U 81MP8ON
_ . Dec !Xr-Jnuȣ
„ , w M, , CVFJltS Of
8$nt
again, rat unquestionably they
plaFofl a leading part in the hub- -
but of informal conversation tnut
marked proceedings in both senate
and. house
Ju * how tong anti-Smith Den-
nerals like Hefitn of Alabama Mid
flimmcns of North Carolina oould
refrain from pointing a political
ftKcal for their Democratic col-
letgitcx in the senate there was no
war of telHng. Prom the ir.ere gal-
lery the pair seemed to get an un-
usually sunny greeting on the Re-
publican side and find the ato a
bit chilly when they reached their
— the Democrats.
H BSCOB71NG
J, obsTvsticn of the
swearing In of new member I in
i J
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y ■ M
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RI
fe I’
„Caro Roma
J. H. Maunder
not so, hag. as
1 at each an-
ygtoarai
• iioiel lobbies
ayerg and for-
■sass
tporery relief. “My drwy(tot
Jtod your purely M"**"
' usted my trouble
xl After taking ■
awonderfuidifler
the fact that it had a good ana played
r?** he was asked. “That's than any c
nilH
in th
« ANNJAV
< A situation thi
tt looks to pre*
nual copvanUon
Association of
ball Oub< When
are Mai with bi
mat pMbr,to<j
’for next season.
of them will land Jobs be-
IW convention, iE a^jeMrped.
■
MAKING FUNNELS USEFUL
The old custom of calling all the
ocean lioera steamship hag; had to
be modified since motor liners pro-
pelted by electricity began to take
a piaee of importance in trans-
Attantte passenger commerce. But
even the motor vessels continue to
have two funnels, beeanse the pub-
lic to so accustomed to smokestacks
on its liners.
- And since the #acks are there,
dte TCnnesholm makes use of them
even though they emit no smoke.
One ftomel houses an elevator,
shaft and the other to the upper
reAnbwis of a ventilating system. I
■aii •»■ ■—
what is the rf .ht thirg to wear.
She has sampled minn jL
*por»s extremes, and she lias hf
served the frUlr and frivnlltLs of
cwrv phase of f'mirdne style
scheme and in hei present accept-
ance the hes asserted her prefer-
ence for slim body lines of Mn-l- E°U1
tailored effects for daytime and ac*1'
the «-l“nder sheath with partial
draper: for evening.
1 here are many women
have lest their rense of fi ncra h’
the be-Arildering array of fr
presented but thns- arc not
woi.-.cn who are wotci ed by French
couturiers, studied by modern ttteet-— — -_
.’.igrerr and who inspire the crc- mu.-ic room and smoking room,
ators of fabrics : L **:: - —~
——•=— . .. . -fC* tied tropical
In 1892-1894 Sir Hiram Maxfit*
conducted valuable experiments in
England on a large scale.
NEW YOKK, Dec. 12—In fgl-
lowlng the fashions of those d)y-
criminatirg clothes-conacfous wb-
nr n who are known ter their tastn
to. scltction and the clever gsserv
bling of their costumes, it dsvel
ops that their style judgment', a*
formed independently. This srasw?,
by the rejection of *xtren es in'
txrth the tailored and feminrite
fashion,, they have achieved u
- compromise which hr both tnterevt'"
ing 'nd charming.
This compromise Is distinctly qfj
their nwn making, and directs that'
flares must by controlled tn "Ot>.u
to a mere sUg nation, but collars
may go to the last extreme of sae
and cut and draping. T!^ modern
woman is distinctly loath to rellu •
qulsh the well-groomed Icok id'C
clingt to her fur or fabric topcoat,
nteh, she shows a casual scarf i
few Mde in the brim nf her
and n buckle on her shoes.
‘, Bv tlic same token, she refuses
to appear “furbelowed,” and she
has become cautious about edltm
tne feminine mode, discarding c,-»
fluffiness which to not smart an«llr
adapHnr length with slim fullness
rathw jtlian an.uncontrolled width
without discretion.
„ Hi other wprdj^ the Am«ilc>n
woman has developed a certain
courage and s If assertion in her
clothes attitude. She can no long-
er be told what to wear. She has
attained • a design sense. Sil-
houettes and details must be ‘eru-
J
- -gjfci'
'.\*l I
1
Selections by the Longhorn Quartet —-
Turbeville, Guinn, Stubberfleld and Coeman
Where M> Caravan Haa Rested .. Hermann Lohr ,
C. L. Turbeville, Jr.
. '■ •
rw— ew»w»w» -whw
the show was much in evidence in
the house. Unless utmost "are was
exercised in “cutting” thf film
however, the audible version nf tlv
house of representatives, sever tie th
congress, formally opening for its
test session, will s.wtij '.ike a meb
acene more than anything else.
iv w» even worse u, iwv i*n»-. The uproar ou the floor was tor-
-1 - 1 - - sworn in ri*E. Tt started as the roll cnl|l bc-
„, L _ > prevail- and" tt»*~ cterirs wentwan
ed there but with more excuse ritouta butted hopelessly against
- - - •“ the din. Representative Tilson of
Connecticut, majority leader, fin-
ally thundered a demand for order,
, pltudteg that this was an “tmport-
> tpli" roll can and that members
who tailed to hear their names and
respond on the second re it nd would
go'tfown as AWOL That helped -
a I’itte.
if'-,
t
^JbX •'-! w
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For You Alone - -,-- -Henry E. Geehl
__ Stanley Addington —
wdmaay ■«•? ■,
yl
I
re.
the idea. Josephine determined
, .. upon earning her own money to
er lobk kn airplane ridediifJnifTr T5ay-nr<r UittlOhtSTl flying school
But jobs for young women were
scarce.
The girl came to Frcmcnt, tried
several jobs and finally found site
could make and save mon* money
ns a waitress. She worked 12
hours a day, every day u.’tli she
had saved 9600. With it she paid
for a SO-hour flying course.
Josephine new is flndiqg, cut
that an ambitious aviation enthu-
siast spends many hours on tha
ground toying with valves and pis-
tons to fore she goes alcft.
Her father relented and bought
the girl flying togs
Hand Bags
Many smart new styles have
just arrived in time to be in-
cluded on the Christmas list.
Goat skin, calf skin and
many others—dozens of new
z styles. It will be disap-
pointing not to receive one
of these.
>'1.^-2.^
- -
Breavx > -.r '
—*
. .1
verafty Via
~ an aM M
were in ttentott.
A meuaae froa
receivdd by Mrs.
Earl Lewis,
nouer.es ano oxtails must be ’er.;- .22 to very sick,
pcred to tor correct instinct as
. _> fenbarger were in Denton,
between New York and Goth- Mra. Grimes ot near Denton vis-
ited Mrs. Doris QbeesL - 4
* Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Belvldge vis-
ited their son in Fort Worthy.,
Dr. J. 8. st.ubto visited, »U
Stubbs in Fort Worth. •
German ptanoa, w. am told, have
been hard hit. This has occurred
in our own baariag.—Punch.
Fact th»i silsnee to golden may
srtAsar&s awr
' ... ......... ... ... * J, ’
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‘fi t.‘T't ‘ r '\e «.„• *j
.....■ , .; „ , ’...... ._________________________.u-i: v*-i,
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tack of cwwr.ioi.ial expertness. Tne
rules are adequate, providing that
colleagues from their cwi> states
esc irt the newcomers to cor front
the preriding officer an-i take the
cath; but the metho* ot escorting
♦rimed somewhat tecktaj.
Take Senator Deneerr of Illi-
nci-. tor tx.jnrlc He first offered
one arm, then the other-to fier.s-
tcr-elect Glenn, and wound up by
retains G>un> arm betwren shoul-
der and elbow and prope”in« him
down the c-mter »Me ter an th-*
- world Ukc a polite court bailiff
hdUttng a matefactor up to ludg-
It was even worse in the house,
with half g down to g™ ..
Police court etiquette also prerail-
Irii' oistes.were crowded with gts- l
ripping members, paying no atten-
tion whatever to proceedings, ar.d
eKurt and captive rouM h-.rdly
Irate walked ahreart to the well.be-
fdre the oeakers desk tt they "hud
:rndL - -vie, -U <
HlBBim IN BOUAE
Apparatus for a talking movie of
— -
*
....
: < '-I
•ras4>*»*.............
i:1 W-HT
, Alex'LiRico Master of Ceremonies
— r The Eyes ot Texas —;
Parcfcgse Ko«r liefcete "Mg
They’re going fret. /
Tickets on Sale at Garrison’s Drug Store and Col-
E; lege of Industrial Arts
__ J. ... r ..................... ____,1/ — . L' • —W - -
(Entertainment given under autfAces o^ Sfnior. :
■•.••••■ • ’sr : * ... ’ i- 1
__rassMiMMami»8^—-aa- ; ■■ ~ **a«di*i
'■ '■■■■?/• ''Y
CLUBS
Billy Evans, general manager of
the Cleveland chib who atopptxl at
Toronto to mingle with hto baaebaB '
colleagues after a shopping expe-
dition to the Pacific coaat, de-
clares that the Indians will stifle
to their policy not to travel during
the. training season and play few
exhibition games against major
league clubs. , <_ ' ,
“We came north teat spring in
the best ccmdition of any major
league cluT' said the former star
American League umpire. “And we
wire right up there until tha other
clubs caught us on condition. I
attribute our.good condition to the
fact that we never went mere than
M miles from New Orleans to play t
a game and did all our playing
" V' ■........ ■,
University of Texas
Glee Ctalr
y • - a:\ 1 _■ wo .j
wl
JTSf beM1 rimv^yed Hi tbs fflvinf of gifts that
are useful aS well as practical and in keep-
inc with the voffue of the moment -Such
i gifts are best chosen from such assortments
|as this store affords.
! Negligees
So exquisite is this showng of new neg-
Jigees in material and workmanship that it
[seems especally designed for Christmas
rgffts. There are quilted robes, silk coolie
1 ebats and silk negligees that will thrill the
feminine eye as a special gift to her.
Silk Coolie Coats
Embroidered in con-
trasting colors.
Black—
Peach—
Orqhid—
Apricot—•_
Appreciated Gifts—
$12.50 to $15*00
Sanger Gns
Balesof Cotton
Special to
Banger gins hava ginned 5,515 bales
of cotton to date this ymr-
I of the rain Monday
' " Jl at the
rtatlon
railed for
la.
dm takes pride;
Erick: <w> in hta viking ship; the
trip of Swedish settlpts to a new
world colony in Delaware In 1837;
the engagement of the Monitor,
built by John Ericsson; and the
trans-Atlantle flight of Charles A.
Lindbergh from New York to Par-
ri •
The music room Is the most bril-
liant of the three. Its walls are of
bitch, Sweden's ftatot tree, polished
until is almost mirrorlike. Hie
dome in the celling is of alabaster
At one end of the room hangs a
great Swedish tapestry and at the
other end the walls contain figures
ai|d scenes and maps in inlaid
wood, done with such infinite detail
that every strand In a piece oC ship
rope Is a separate bit Of wood
A MAIMED GODDESS ’
Seabkln ruga and wall panels
and fireplaces of green and vividly
veined Kalmorden marble help to
make' the nner a display of Bwe-
den’s resources as well as an ex-
ample of Its art.
But perhaps the most talked-
about single object on the vessel to.
Ute wooden Stott* , whjfib Wands
at- tWIiead of the main Ctairway..
It Is called 'The Grieving Bac-
chus,” and the god of wine te turn-
ing downcast eyes away as be holds
in his left hand a statue of the God-
dere of Liberty with her torch gone
and her right arm broken off at
the wrist. -r
On account.
night, the crowd was small
meeting to discuai a milk
and a meet*—---
nett Monday ,
The City Council js coqU
traps other rtreeta leading into it
Meetings have been held but no
OMUin^t |NM0 Mve be*, naa*
Red Orarten’,|md\ C, Ashley
were in Dallas. <
?M^tevXi^.,y5^
J. Maratuill Koons went Uhjtyrt
Worth.
Mr. and MM Lawrence Hctr-
borough and daughter of Fort
,‘prorth spent the week-end with her
parenta.' *4
L. I Rami tall and Robert. Brack-
ney were in Denton. -
Mr. arid Mia. Dickens vteitad their
daughter, ,Mra. A. L. Gentteln the
Dentcn Hospital
Wilfong ot Baylog Uni-
dtad hie father, >
■* Afiat Ayne Bulhvan
■ JUO (
from Fort Worth was
that her little granddaughter. Edna
baa dlphiheria and
Mmes. Roy Spratt and B. 1*. Wol-
* mbarger were in Denton.
I
II .
♦ A®
NEW YORKER
_"[AR6E—.
Ry G. D. SEYMOUR
NEW YORK, Dec. 12—The young-
est debutante in the sisterhood of
maiden bow to New York. She is the
Sihburg, Sweden.
New ocean vessels vie these days
£ for luxury and decorative niagnlfl-
eence, and each constitutes a sea-
~alng exposition of the artistic
lavements of the nation whore
flag it files The lie de France is no-
table for ita ultra-modemlstic in-
vito. teriora and Jhe Saturate typifies the
* newest and most brilliant ot Italian
fashions decorative talent. The Kungshotan
act ;•«':(** *te Sweden's contribution to modem
art in liners and the principal pride
Of its designers is in its library, its
from Africa
time in ship!
’cbUng, panels and' bookshelves. The
walls are of pigskin and the ceil-
ings of highly polished black wai-
’ W-
' The smoking room, done in red
’’ and black and gold, has a modern-
istic mural on either wall., one pic-
turing the skyline of New York,
" the other the city of Stockholm.
Both were executed by Kurt Jung-
stedt. a young Swedish artist who
* ifient a summer in New York pre-
paring that mural and who. inci-
dentally. is married to nn Ameri-
can Indian girl. At the four cor-
ners of the room are black and
Ing four fam-
ItVwhteh BW-
voyage at IMf
Av.
Ped
We h
and w
> about
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 103, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 12, 1928, newspaper, December 12, 1928; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335575/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.