Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 126, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 8, 1929 Page: 2 of 10
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The party ttutt Wax held for Governor
•imply |
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the
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its
H
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Ashuret,
*-
leans, he
freedom
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(or
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iK
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I
ywrl
HO
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5
P
t
ate and
to tall
>b ■ *
ane of
. Den-
£
JON
k~Mr. and Mnv ____„W1<_1 a,„ ¥MMWU
fldren of Lloyd* raine McDaniel of Denton
*
much
with the Invariable n
his button hole.
k/- ■■■.
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v‘ ■-■
r -
Scene from
-THE PERFECT CNME’
I®:;:
; •, ■
broad*
erence for business smM
Johnson of California
nest, lor dark brown i
Bingham of Cannectb
Feutof
he pro-
seemed
an the
ms the
iw the
clothes
custom
Il dress
ft •*-
wrent”
activities
enemies-
dictated
McDanield. Mr. and Mrs. Lem
Mrs.
HUI.
Boiler Explodes
Killing Packer
ggj
- t. #4
•1 ■
K
A / ,
Il .<y
International fl
h
JI!! "!!U '.
.... ■',»■ J
fl
3£
fcV* *•!
Hu \
JCPt
jpj- ~
I
I
s
-
Of Valley View visited
ra Susie Nix
tr». J. Perry Burrus of
here.
fade of Dallas visited
k Rob Nix
been able
■ seeing
MMion in
Jguch of
p That
r«t Wis-
Jtt of ap-
me *t
9 in the
xUlar ef-
WCr gen-
1
H1U.
i Mm Bam McCluskey and children
* Denton and Mias Pearl Miller
OlrWi—i was here.
~~71’7 A:
ter of persons. Its withered yellow
hand has clutched irrespective of
degree ■
There are lepers at Carvllle who
still shrink at the word, refusing to
believe that they are tliat and there
are lepers who have so 'accepted
themselves as doomed for a near
lifetime that they dare not believe
Rob Nl« was at Era
Henry Wade of Arkansas Is vis-
ing bis daughter, Mrs Robert Nix.
Misses Lillie and Bertie McDaniel
children of Fort Worth visited Mrs.
■fteri-Nfar;
MlmEthel Nix visited Miss Lo-
campaign through the islands and
provide adequate hospital care.
The famous leper. John Early,
who frequently rah away from those
who would cure him was a rarity for
Candlle. More beg to come there
than beg to go away, but there is a
.. ,.T jail for those who must be forci-
concert pianists, farmers and jfc. Ny detained ro lor criminals who
Fame of Sargon •
Spreads Over
Entire. Nation
* ■
F';.....
s on
i the
pact
of <
^Whowss
nW,
I,! wIllKSI
sF , .
j
u
at Dairy P
txt
"1
s. n
gjL^TWMMT, JAM
I L' a: «i>-
!
-----‘wffi
ding committee
^y^sg
i
and oTjk -»ton, Na
»»oy* PW «*der%fflr
at the livestodi ingeUii
County Court room A
noon.
1 r D. T. Simons, a di
I
I •
$
I
r
other man.
--------vr-TT- —T pianos a^. '
in the cottages: flowers clamber on
iriltea, and the
• AU fragrant.
■
The party Itaat was held for Governor Alfred E. Smith oh his fifty-
and Governor Smith. T -/ 7 . >
i4 1
e:: ; A
a™-.
__.^,1!.! !«■!■ L3EV.!.?.■»»*»
ICOtf-TONSMAKEUSE
FOR NATION’S LEPERS: MSI
t *2 • -pi -*>\.:-A ■-
Those who hare tnea our cteaa-
Ified ads know their tremendous
r power. Tsn words sht ttrnw
asntt.
Divorces Increase
HARTFORD. Conn. - Marriages
‘ ‘' orecs m-
creased in the last five-year period
covered by official returns from
Connecticut courts.
vent
men|
ehis «
r is like
as hots
a ■
Nik, Mr. and Mrs. Bart
Oeo. Nix. Mr and Mrs.
Mr, and Mrs Hampton, Tom Nix,
Misses' Lillie and Bertie McDaniel.
‘
aj*u xvuoy 1 —. i .„ii« — —— ....
ton. *
Mrs. Lam Nix and dau-
> EthM-visited Mr. and
te aad Bbrtie McDaniel
------sen visiting Mr. and Mrs.
-------- Gt N. ENk at Frisco have retura-
—! —“ ■*- •“—** *-gmg here..
•ft M Memphis. Tenn.,
- . ,-j pemwa, Mr. and Mrs.
Will Dixon. —______1 ~
Mrs. Robert Nix and children are
bert
Mr. and Mrs. Will Nall of Lewts-
vflb visited his sister. Mrs. Phillip
Y«i 1
rour table neadi for ’
>m.>.
J.. - ’..A 9
cotton aquirarchy oLthe a
South Carolinian sometim
in other ways. Heflin of
of course, was in his usual winter
ensemble of voluminous dark cut-
away set off with cream eotered vest
and dark gray trousers; and Cope-
land of New York, aqneilv of course,
appeared ip square cut dark blue
with the invariable red carnation in
- --
CUTAWAYS REMAIN -Z~-
A few of the senators, Iflte
„ of Indiana, Overman wt 'Ml
ths colony Jail aa his place of im- | olina, Bruce of
prtsonment was the only solution.
Prisoner Well Treated
Payton
BTv 14 !
her sister. Mrs. Berry Har-
I
I Watson
.. . Car-
ol Artsona atl|p|£rlS^moS
tls of Kansas. Shortrldgw of Califor-
nia and Robinson of ANttpaas are
often garbed in the formal cut-
♦ rule,
a weak-
t cuts;
i
> days
H v
“JM
W ■. B1-
Fa v. ed to
Ll •'“ifi
r# - ■ -
I ■■
ii r- F'
n’- ■
E!'?’
EBi
i and no unwrtten |gw
i compels them to dtm
to appear on the MM
The Bystander had D
to find anybody Nw >
a senator show tip for
golf bags. That ia o
“ modernism as yy WM
youngest senator, -LaRsE
conaln, however, has a
proachlng the aasNE
times. He appease Iraqi
matched blue shirt an
feet popular with ttw j
oration of spotting .iiyt
Blease of South Casolina had an
innovation tn drew to disclose when
the present session, riartod. It was
a claret colored vaat/ worn with a
gray business suit and rather in
keeping with memories of the old
‘ h the
recalls
fess
Denton County
The W|Mr» r*L“J •---
day wqto une
S.Z2
Three ordure,
ed to be the 1
her as man*:
county are interested in
standard of settle n tn
Officers Nai
Officers and directors t
Dopton Oo.intj National .
were elected ftt flic meet I
stockholders, followed by thi I
of directors, held at the I
Tuesday aittrrioon. All nfltet I
din ctors were re-elected -j
Th® stockholders’ mrettog I
First State Bank wac, pcs
from 2 o’clock untM 4 o'clock
day afternoon to enable all I
holders to attend.
Officers and ffirectcrr o l
Penton County National d
named follow;' j
J W I*gan. F. C. Davis, ’
F. Ralty. R. L. Donald, W. J
Crt y, O. T. Turner .md 11
I arns, dlrector»_J. W ! J
president; F. C Davis, vice
dent; C T MUUr. aelive vies 1
ident; R. M. Earns, cashier;
Preston, assistant cashier; J
Boyd assistant cashier. r]
JANVART I, MM
TWO MEN DIE SUDDENLY
VORT WORTH
FORT WORTH. Jan. ?—One
man was found dead in bed and
another fen dead on the street
here last night. Death was believ-
ed tp have teen from natural
causes'In toih casts. The dead are
Dee Irvin, 35, found dead In bed
m bis room, and Fred was-HiM.,
who succumbed on the rtree:
Uncle Barn's leprosarium, where the
nstirwiW lepers are sent, members of
Nto MBfl bring babies into -the -the hope now-offered them
world within the very walls of I IrnrilUnn tHre ehnniA «
M
of
Mtes Ruth Wade of Era visited
bar elater, Mrs. Robert Nix.
Tom Nix visited Bam McCluskey
Denton.
Mr. and Mrs. CUsto Jkmes and
L son of Fort Worth visited Mr and
ijc? v’ D2t5^i
Mr. and Ah
I - 'Mb- gMfjitok.'' Frank Testerman
Eft
- -£—•r* beide tf Ml ispere.—knowing“that
? ' atotoan science has taken terror
Ma, 'flMn the ward
’•VI -nrryH
visited Mrs. B. L. Wakefield of Fris-
co.
Miss Mildred Nix. who lias been
visiting her aunt, Mrs. Berry Har-
bert of Era, has returned home.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Buckner were
at Little Kim ,
Mrs. Susie Nix has returned from
a week's, visit with her sister. Mrs.
Daisy Harbert of Era.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Curry of
Navo visited her parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Phillip Hill.
Miss Mary Bowland of Denton
visited Mrs. Robert Nix.
Charley Fincher of Denton vis-
ited Tom Nix.
Melton Dixon, who has been vis-
iting his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Will
Dixon returned to Memphis. Tenn.
Mrs Berry Harbert and son of
Em visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert
.^T. R. Milisr of Dallas was here.
Mr. and Mrs Omer Beck of Fris-
co visited her mother. Mrs. Geo.
Nix.
Mr and Mrs Phillip Hill visited
her father Tom Kllliugsworlh, of
AflVl|tt|a'<
Mr. and Mrs. W1U Dixon, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Buckner, Mr. and
and Mre. Robert NfcJfr. and Mm Hcu-
SAN ANTONIO. Jan. 8-Anton
Rathman. owner of a packing plant
here, was killed and one workman
and a boy were Injured, and 20
other workmen escaped injury when
the boiler at the plant exploded this
morning and fell back through the
roof of the -building among the
men, Rathman was attempting to
repair the boiler when it exploded.
DALLAS ^‘CrFmE
WAVE” HIT BY
JUDGE_PIPPEN
DALLAS, Jaq;.,K—wnue Ctucu^o
te trying bravely to Uvf d.vwn its
lepa^iliuh as tlq- ci:r< center ol
the nation. Dalias is fearf il lett
this ipproOt’iBi ba-applied to its
fair name. ■
So sLriotts js the crime situa-
tion here now that townspeople'
live hi constant feur -if Berne hi-
jacked. slugged, faulted, robbed
cr murdered cn the' streets or
whjle driving about the city in
’■■rSE!
1 F*FSrM«r’
Excellent qu»lfty 1
cloth in many ata
'"I«'»"■** ! ' A.'____■ - ’ I
Ljw——--k~-.2. .
MT w lira # to other bi
MN arrived and are quite ti
Mr granted The children are , t
iMMnfaiaJMMha■ dread,jdMtagR*».v imatdin—ar nsaka Um .
In the ton. of PonUw PUate,
epare ware herded into the vale of
apen. a Inathanrea. baaat Infested,
jarren spot into which pieces of
I
was believed to be polluted. At Car-
K they live in luxury with radios
t keK« and pianos and orchestra and mo-
ft xrs.
, Wttrt. - o.
«. Aapttai Nw. M But hospital
[T L ■
BSS-y - “• - u ,T|
H :
XftXl
" r _
I • . . vtoja
I ■ ■ s- -V- !•
I
•Sohave
Never before, perhsps !n all hiw
tory haa the denipnd for n proprts-
tary medicine ever approached the 4
wonderful record that U now betegf
made by Sargon, the new scientific I
formula vhtch baa been ic impUSto-I
tag «ueh remarkable results through-11
out this section. Its fame s lapldly 1
spreading over the entire country!]
etui wherever introduced. Sargon is
the most talked of medicine in the I
country today Nothing lUc it has
ever been seen before
Bargou wa« first placed on the
Market jute a little over six months II
ago. Its auccemi was immediate UMII
ss&jwtr
making product-a medicine <rf great I]
power and extraordinary merit, ip
leading cities where it has bien plac-ll
ed ofl sale it has required (mm 8*.’|1
000 to 100.000, bottles to supply the (I
unprecedented demand. CHi»biufiung II
a record probably never before equal- |J
ed in thi history of the drug trad*
OountlcM thousands of men and!
women, in all walks of life, suffer-1
Ing with stomach, lives and bowel
troubles, some of them of long stteMMl
Blaag. Ethel Nix, Gladys tog: to well as thousands or weak,
McDaniel were at Den- nervous men and women ap,
M >»n- pijjteMiy olj the verge of > ollMse
have voluntarily come forw ard and II
testified that they have been fully II
restored to their normal heanh. 11
strength and weight by its use. II
1 Btiflfibers, who seemed fairly tasIL 11
I yet suffered wnh <-onstlpatloD ta nail
worst form indigestion, dvspefia1*- I
headaches, shortness of breath.-Sqdll
complexion, bad bheath. loss of atoK 1J
tlta.. steepleosneae at night a nd ITof n
terribly dejected, depressed fee lidtoll
state that they have been murate II
relieved of these distreeelnc sreap-H
toms and restored to health by torei
Sargon Is the result of the last-MHl
yearn of world-wide i sclenttfio 'W^fl
searchi it embodies ne^ knowledge df ||
certain organs and Ante of thoEMH
reoently coma to light; it h heidflMI
build up run-down men and cotaaKIl
by modern meti>.xl« undim mad..sflil
a generation mo. I
Sargon may 6s obtained tn Deattofl
-----ley: and to.Krum MM
Water Froof Btenkrt |
WASHINGTON—An army ’
ket which has twteg the wan i
otlwr blankets and is water
ant has Men developed t '
quartermaster corps.
Scarcely a night goes bv without
its list of vlctiUis und Judge C.
A Pippen cf the Criminal District
Court epmidered the matter of
sufficient importance tn make spe-
cial mention of it in his hist ruc-
tions to the January grand jurj.
r Dallas—‘ little Chicago,” — said
JudgeJPlppen ar he exhorted the
> n-rare to do ttwlr utmost to maim
( th- town a sale pfety to live by
■ bringing to justice murderers and
i hijackers.
“Bo crewmen have murders and
, robberks become.” he said, "that
life is an uncertain thing and pro
perty aA ell times insecure W"
cannot drive gf night without fear
cf the bandit arid we cannot- leave
cur automobilM on the street for
fear 'of the common thief. Our
homes are at the mercy of
tuigi&r." “ •
ti a nnv 5^
L.. V <
r* t'zf *1
. r ' ' J
L-W* • - 1
I - *1’ - ?!
i-..
’ c . j I
i '
• I
y y^y-y-' ;
KlgM’ ’
Fl
■4. If yaw aswtrartti leprosy tte U. 8. Public Health Service would hustle you right off to the gwvern-
tetoto toper aanMMiaun at Carvtte. La, but you wouldn’t find life there so bad. Upper picture shares a
the Mttto estate in which the patients loaf in the Lou iaiana sunshine and to the left is Dr. Oswald E.
aey. ta ihsrgs M the institution which has recorded many cures. Below to the colony's Jail where a murderer
By NBA Servtee
CARVTLLE La.. Jan fi.-Lep-
imr, A. word once so ghoulish with
its Implied terrors of a living death
tear ft was only whispered. U los-
ing its tenure.
“Leiter’s MU" which, not to
’ centuries ago. warned the
I of the "ctean" against the
wch of those who droned L L
tiring cry of “unclean,” has < Tor leprosy has never been a respec-
way to the smiles and cheer’7'’— T*- —— -■ —>•—
«« . plan of sunshine and hope
and all the normal life of a nor-
mal world outside
. Parents once snatched their chll-
S'-i - dm to them at the hollow sound
of the ’’leper’s bell." but at OarvlUe,
‘WdSDMAF^r^Sn. 8 -
Governor Henry 8. Johnston
fewht a losing fight aralnst 1m-
peachnumt today aa the Iwelfth
( aesai<m. gt the Oklahoma Zeghla-
L ture convened
The nanons opens with the
house organisation controlled bv
mstnmtt leghtotero, the renate
•"tt-JOhmton and the
gWfed tato’JhT hanS°o!
fttoi freely fouCaat that, only
1 developments can pre-
and Impeach-
the yovgritor by oppon-
> a yegr ego fought him
sftiiiy in the “eve lamb
_____________jf* _ ;■ v
AWfnitehit devwkjpments fotmrt
Mll|-ad«iinistrat|on, Ifensa mem-
ten In a d n.i nd for a commit-
tee-on- commUtoto shearing AW
Street, cottewvg^ve speaker-elect,
of L’|s appsintjvg power. ;
This committee, stated U»
S2U1BSML....cl. Hroffinritohitt, j
name u»e inv»«ga1— -7-^r-
ns well as all other committees
Early Ariton ffean
The strategy insures th? takins
up of the impeachment battle i:
the house -during (he first weeks
of the ri*sta*> &nd threatens ira-
[.eachmelit of the gc verner withn
30 days.
Should impeachment articles be
muted out of the house, ‘.yiapa-
thetlc power in the senate at this
time bids to cow piete th« revolt
If these forecasts hold water tn
actual procedure, defeat will mark
the end of reie of the m<jst stormy
gubernatorial terms in Oklahoma's
history and turn from office tin
state’s first woman political gen-
eral.
It will remove with tlw governor
his confidential secretary, Mrs O
O. Hammonds, one of »hc most
dominant figures in t'ne adminis-
tration whose advisory
first aroused/ Jegtalattve
Insurgents7 claimed she „.T_
appointments ard dtcisiono In the
governor’s office and proceeded to
build around her fhc fire of rebel-
lion.
The administration labels the
i evolt a political move of tnc outs
against the ins. The Insurgents' al-
lege emditions of state "ovren-
ment piove their point
Congressional Medal of Honor but- 1
ton won during the avti Wgr, iS|
' alwajw ta. - hta iapai and- saw
then a tie of startling red relieves
the grave dignity of his OMtume, j
The latest corner to the senate. I
Burton of Ohio. back fyom the {
house for the second time in hi®
career, is a recruit to the cutaway
squad. You rarely see him dreaaed
otherwise.
^inetMr. Ma. Oeo. Nix.
ad Nba. Lsw
Mid MnDeniei of Denton.
visiting Mr. and Mrs.
records show that 18 lepers have
been discharged in the past year
arid 40 during the six years Other
nattents are almost ready for the
■ outside world"
The 300 patients range In age
from 5 to TO. There .are artists and
txiijer makers, stenographers and
their torneys, judges and factory girls—
The tradition of the shame and
the eternal taint of leprosy so gripe
these older ones that they cannot
understand' kindliness and accept-
ance as if they were of “tte world
1/_srrp?.-
.Jkrt Like Betel
ttagee housing from 18
and ptai
; the porches, bougaim
There are tennis courts and golf
links, a recreation hall with com-
plete gymnasium equipment, a mo-
vie and chapels for all denomina-
tions.
Dr. Oswald E. Denney, the lep-
rologist in charge, is wdrld renown-
ed as a leper authority. His life has
been devoted to the cure of lepro-
sy. For two years he was in charge
of the leper colony at Culion of
the Philippines in the days before
Major General Wood persuaded the
government to launch a gigantic
are lepers and may not infect the
usual penitentiaries.
Right now Edward Payton is in
the jail with a ten year's imprison-
ment ahead of him. He killed an-
other patient in the colony and
But prisoner or not. Payton is
visited twice dally by doctors and
the finest meals brought him from away. The rest, however,
the dining room; he walks in a
sunny yard and has other special
favors, for the leper comes before
the criminal at Carvihe and his ..
, cure is as important as that of any ..Um taUest man tn th
Aahurat. tebfo la just
i home to N«w Or- ‘
fed about h*-«ifA,
who declined to visit him thebe. He
ran away one night, killed her, sur-
vtetotewL •toaa.Ateot..yet faced trial I
and is in the colony jail.
The age-old use of chauinoogra
oil for the leper is tn the Carvllle
method of treatment, Leprologists
come the world over to see marvels
that Carvllle is doing.
"Science and modem
from prejudice are freeing leprosy
from its dread,” says Dr. Danney,
explaining that any suspicion of it
fchould not throw a uter&on into —,
a panic, but should make him face dacreased and divorcee
it with the same hope as if strick---- ““ *------- ~
en by any disease.
it '.u-t
WASHING
language of
I ting forth thi
powers of tH
Senate imp
spect reached
still obtains, jM
world hung «M
the outcome of
Senate over flff
r nttflcatldn. TM
| | M nations had
posal in one waj
at much less lag
fiteteta's reaettoi
SENATORIAL j
Yot wiLh uU 1
senators fsfil ut
part as of yea*
MB- - - /J'-
' ‘ ft?’ Jg
; ataM
“*1
*
*
•* e
ta-tagl
I
I
i
I I
i
. '< *'’O
I
.....teb
■" ’*'" *'.....q
t. e- -
■
....
*« '-^»F T
to
K
■<
•jigtag—eaatenteii i ...............
fcyj
I-
Ladies’ Slippers, all broken lots up to $6.00 e
i'
i -
i
■>
J
and some smart new rityles in black pat-
ents—
L.]
$3.95
Full size, part wool Plaid Blankets—
$3.95 Pair
Choice of all our Boys' Overcoats, ages to
six years. Some with beaver collars; val-
ues to $6.95—
• to
’ i
Seventeen ladies’ and girls’ warm Ooats,
odds from the stock; . values to $12.50,
only—
Twenty-eight pairs men’s heavy wool
Pants, all sizes; values to $5.50—
$3.95
At 3,95
Twenty-six Frocks, flat crepe, jersey,
georgettes; values to $12.50—
* $3.95
F v
F’-
$3.95
“Shirtcraft” Shirts with “Evejfit’’ collars,
values to $2.00. Extra, special, three for—
$3.95
At3.9SL
Odds in Shaker Knit all-wool Sweaters,
Leather Jackets, Slicker interlined Coats
and water-proof Jackets; values to $7.50
$3.95
Men’s yici kid high Shoes, Goodyear welts,
three excellent toes; all sizes—
$3.95 ’
Overcoats
One real lot of smart Top Coats and men’s
heavy Overcoats; wme ulsters. Values to
$27,50— * v™
, . Only $15.95
■ ■.A . »> * ' *• J
............. "■■■'-X- > ..... - ■ i
A? ■».< .. j" r. '
v--.—— ---• *•» » - ■ ■ ttfixl cte< ■■ lite, I II to 8 ■ *jp<
XARCAIN BASEMMNT. I
* ‘ L
• .....
■fl^bto«<i»*—-— ■ to*- ■
jpyd- • .
L
Winter Suits
$9.95
One lot of odd Suits, largely small sizes,
one and two of a kind; values to $22.50—
Only $9.95 '
Mid-Winter
gjjfr-y " i
tagil, Itartl surf v -r-. i.-^afl
We’ve put the knife to the price of winter goods and all through January A "*
you Will find real bargaihs^Kere, both m the basement and on the first floor.
All odd lots at deep-cut prices. Look what you can buy for spot cash.
$3.95
Choice of all our best horsehide and full
grain Work Shoes, welts; values to $5.00—
$3.95
Fifty first-class Men’s Felt Hats, all good
colors. Some silk lined and smart, new
shapes; values to $5.00—
$3.95
$3.95
A few Flannel Bath Robes for girls, wo-
men, men, only—
$3.95
Three fitted Overnight Cases, values $5.95,
only—
’S5 . ( '
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 126, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 8, 1929, newspaper, January 8, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335595/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.