Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [28], No. 132, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 15, 1929 Page: 7 of 10
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OUT OUR WAY
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As the Irrigated territory spread.
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Trade With .-'
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■to-date
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ust phone 171.
/
J. A. Cook Grocery
AU-
Phone 174.
Conceal scuffs
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this easy way
were
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Victor Records
inaticMM
New Spring Coats
1UM
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4
FBONT W
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lilk
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THE
Price 75c each.
Many other new records.
i
>11.50 to >19.75
rs
CONSOLE MACHINES
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£
4-
life
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7
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L A. Cook and be happy,
lave plenty of good country
sausage, spare ribs and back'
bone,.frying chickens, hens
and eggs. Still have some of
that good country sorghum.
OULDER DAM TO PROTECT RICH VALLEY
AGAINST SILT NUISANCE IN VAST AREA
Sally oi My Dreams ........
Doin’ the Raccoon ........
She’s Funny That Way
Sonny Boy
You’re a Real Sweetheart
King for a Day ..............<
Dream House
Crazy Rhythm .................
It
0
cctton
M'-tln?
I
OPE Ki "M
CMERCitMC^ HAO
for -
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ih Plant
help, en
td
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to
WASHINGTON, Jan 15—Boulder
I Dam. aUU nwnitlnr ratification by
six states bordering on the Cotora-
wto River, will make it passible wlth-
p-» eteht vear« to overcome barriers
the turbulent stream raised against
agriculture over a vast expanes of
California land long before Amer-
ica was known to the rest of the
world.
■r
p
nsa
nmon all-
■ hlch a.
i. that or
a common
of people
irartlc a4-
Colda are
Id not be
ulta which
Aunty pa-
te disorder
rices when
(FLUENEA
re entirely
sttevers In
haVe. ex-
relief can
ire subject
• merit In
t that the
isnency of
in
of
» «
k
A
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ha*
w
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■4'.
Jll ‘I.
1 HU! ’
Wr V ‘5i¥l
bow yoi^
N». MMN*.
Li/
r
t
i4O'*..
th*;
_ *****
(clow reasonable expectations. 8b-
ciiusc of the numerous irrAtoMrU
I
V--
4U AMF.HCAN C AMJU
M^rasi. msf
Of iW***L< LXPI _
late Einruo.
Greenville Bus
Line Announced
Have arrived and they forecast a
mode that is ever bo smartly feminine.
New fabrics, new trimming motifs are
presented in groups moderately mark-
ed for every preference.. All gre
beautifully tailored and finished with
satin or crepe linings. Priced from—
one fool deep will be stored behind the 550-foot wall of Boulder
. , . , .. .. • . - . .. . ,, ----- „ ...^ .rrc in the Inset would carry
foe lateral irrigation shown in the lettuce fieM above.
A 1
I-
■ otigfn.
and d<b
» **•**
‘or com-
ingM j
glority
iese.
igs
igs
atinum.
dinner
iredous
of per-
- i US 'd.'M
■■■ A*** "w* A««a (id4’-rw
valley yon, will catch the sUt bclund
f rvAfc oe.es 11 r-f esx^vse.o>n0 A D.,
8etUcn> trickled Into the valley,
tapping the Colorado with canals
to obtain water for their crops and |
livestock In 1906, the river broke j
through it* bank* at flood stage and,
poured Into the Salton Bea To re-
irve the the government
built Laguna dam north of Yuma
and tri Wat ad hundreds of acres in
Arizona.
A private corporation contracted
for water and carried it around the
rim of the valey, through Mexico
and back in»o the valley by the Im-
perial canal, allowing Mexico halt
ago wher as chain arid mail-order
distribution expanded to ne./ high
totals Beating up«.n this p.i'nt .1
i>‘»y be said that, cwlng to niall-
oroer bouses openlr? individual
stvirs or chains thC'-ccf. the dis-
h'
California extend;)! to the foot-
hills of the Sierra Ncvada-s On the
AMt. the Colorado thundered to the
wra with its mountainous burden of
silt—sand and gravel cut from can-
yon walls hundreds of miles fur-
a
igL-JI
1.^.- 31^99 ‘-Xi'iiii
wJ
BARTON'S
Dyan$hinE:
' SHOE POLISH
PLEASURE CARS ...TRUCKS ...BUSSES
the whole f’big parade” overwhelmingly
chooses CONOCO for fuel
7/,. , ’
i
in which in rcstri; t”d r<
icr huiin ss has hit war
t the bi% t.vnnn^e it 11
despite compct.ticn < ! ;
and of electiic p>w< r, and ide
bible effect on the > .n'ry s
loads of changes in ir t.'i r. .
iffoits to n^vlate t; e
that tasi? Iuel, con! f!
in the bitinnincus br i i
many possb htics
Bi, Business Abre.r-
The co;irr’ cf thr < iir'r.
ir’j'iua l' ii
th; ir chec‘ uj •> '
Wil' !',< tIui ”
:c (. /'•
t 'P
mi’s rcniai) s for th? future to re-
veal but there ia no lack of ebur-
i r with plenty of co.tfldetv'O
’ amo ’g ferwar d-looklAg elem DU at
■ GRAND LEADER CO. /
Smoot-Curtto Bldg? ' ’ Phone 714.*
-J
A touch or two of the djuher conceal, scuff, like rugic.
Color is restored uniformly to faded uhoes More than
50 long life ahinea—to cents. Colors for black, brown,
tan and white sboea — a neutral pohah for others.
MOTOR FUEL
A. * I Starting
M, ^Acceleration
|| - jPower and
y Mileage
fef-f C-rr
SW t A G
GO^l.
K/l
V
rf-
jF
Fols
‘W'
if I
<> « ear o»e
bbb
U a prescription for
Colds, Grip, Flu, D«ngu«
Bilious Fovor and Malaria
B U ths most aissdy r^msdy known
7^
Announcement was malic Monday
of the sale, subject to approval of
the state Railroad Commission, of
the Denton-Greenvine bus line to
the Southwestern Transportation
Co. Joe Griffin was the owner of
the line. Consideration in the deal
was not disclosed
The Red Ball Bus lines operated
out of Denton were taken over Jan.
1 by Dixie Motor Coaches. Inc.,
who purchased the property from
Freeman & Freeman last month.
Wayne Freeman was retained as
manager of ths dines and no other
in the personnel
‘ PORTABLE VICTROLAS.
COMBINATION RADIO AND VICTROLAS.
I * * *
LJJbii r t i s ’
F South Side Two Drug Stores ; North Side
. L,, Phone 444
i mxir the inenased eonapeUiton
n<m newer countries poaaeu;n-f
I surplus supplies, ha* been at Ul'i-
bulld and
FLIKNKA.
Sale of Denton-
of the water for that governmenta l,
concessions.
Within a few years 150.000 acres
of the valley's arid land bad been
irrigated and BO.OOO people went to
live there. Their first important .
crop was barley, then alfalfa-which
still is grown extensively for feed- [
ing livestock—and later dates, cit- I
rus fruits and truck crops The val- I
ley now ships 55,000 carloads of |
canteloups and 35.000 carloads of
lettuce to market every year bctoie I
other regions are ready for har- '
CONOCO keeps its leadership
by keeping its quality beyond
the standard required for the
modern motor
1; ( .
I
the seggregated water evaporated^ the valley lost »fl.000,000 worth
leaving a huge bowl rimmed around croups. Added to th. ‘
r.VGuun. «.y in. ou„», «
the level of the ocean ’
hole in the earth's surface became
the earth's surface became the Im-
I>enal Valley of California, thous-
ands of acres of sand-blown, arid
land The Colorado still flowed men-
N.
1 h 1 • i"T—aaaaaai
......
an! san shown in exports of autonao-
•di" • bues lartu and ether machinery in
1- '.lie part two yeara. The ultimate
:- I v.i ikii.g cut of revolt;tuonixed m »■
.1 tl-.< d, la all lines r{ Am rktn bui-
lt
\.n 1
xr/irhis to sc tllT.t our . ,. — ,------,
c<iHi'.ii<' ilgl't for cur pns ’ amot’g forward-looking
.'tiUp in the wcrld's t>u‘ ness the new year tl.ihk. ,
--—---. . ------ 1 HMW*W1
changes
made.
Six new busses have been pur-
chased to be used on the run from
Dallas to Ardmore. Freeman said.
The busses are 25-passenger capac-
ity.
’I;/
AM
BY WILLIAMS
I I • I
W
f sAy
i I /
■ ’'jtiWf
I®
Enough water to cover 28 million acrew c~ f__t — - K
JUm- The map shows the projected area. Secondary canals of the type shown
laaa*AAa> t-~ I — d I t.t « « - 1 a a_ _ aa.. a, * a
1 H\ X !W;v
!r.sl
There is no Substitute for Experience”
U';'
I ! X
Sonny Boy ...Geo. Olsen and Orchestra
I Can’t Give You Anything But Love ......Grace Hays
I Loved You Then as 1 Love You Now
...................Franklyn Baur
..................Franklyn Baur
Geo. Olsen and Orchestra
........ Gene Austin
........................Gene Austin
.............. Sam Coslow
.........................Sam Coslow
..........................Lee Lykins
...................Johnny Marvin
■
ly ended in Septeifiber. 1?2R. but
fh*t strike had felled leng before
Metal procuring and consuming
linrs, as a whole, showed best pro-
gress. while amoijg the h'.er-’
lines the me time luxtgy line of
silk manutorturing showed more
progress than <Ld attoRk nr wool
en&. which, perhaty. reftspted tfyle
chang~s ak much as any elher in-
fluence. Building of ordinary .hbuse.
efflee and ttyre constructton w;- j
ged. while huge construction. p*r- I
Ocularly of h’g bjxibo-electric I
works, subways, tunnel^ mads and
other n'bllc or semi pidilic enter-
prises expanded? »
Methods Cha^e
In ordinary wholesale ImtS’ retail
trade, the effects c( thanontlnued
revolutionizing of th» ijltiioJs of
afsfrlbutlcn were still vMWe In
ieduced salts in leadiiar* Vnes of
wholesule mstributkn, whil? sales
ty department stores ilwWed only
small gains dver <nc and two -years
' " 1 ".r^'Miir............rrr=tf|
fleatiptrf ard the department "Cores
pinprT tended tc become mor;
'true than in earlier y*."r oi <1
be intees? competition 'hat all
tb.vfp lines .xeited upon o'rinaG
retail business Increas'd.
In fere gn trad
V iUG LIKt 'Tr-V CW
\ CPs*Jt4E.O /AQs/X
:z
AAD A
I AN) viviEKi AM f
to VS -I , /C0ME -
uici / <;ME, HOU GOT
LiV-’T. |i '-1' OPENI -TM
\ CMSHGEMC-f HAD
1 Abstract frtm Bn odstreet*. Re*
* vlek) • j ?*
NireteCn twinty-eifht was# bet-
ter year than wag IM’ Ik- ’i*’’1
lines but tb»re were enough IP-
stances of decreases in mov.niMit — _. -----— .........
either from 107 o^ 1OI to tinetton betee n these two chssl-
Hs belli; -haractrrlsif! *n’•*’»-
go her “good'' year a It Kted^'L
probable that the t^apicteriartMti
of "fair” wMdd b ttfr flk a
mary which, while gMng MU cred-
it for tire manv reanv *ig thn*'
rccompMxhed. wculd At the
time reflet th* trstaTces if! v
pretness made was dlr'' *“
or in which scluat. tel
‘ ' '* wwcr. ■$.
.. g. ■■j.saa
i usi- ' Our experience in the «hnirk',i»
of jo pent tr.ide in itheat. ccn-.^uent
trad •
4^1
Y7/t
' U/ !
r/G I
mt ust tor o.dinatv
i -s In t v\ i '.<’ii!"i il' in i’ i
:'>!! trade, th’ pr< pre-s
. '.he ; .nlnr year w 11 hold r;.-
i c; unit con.'eqiH i ecs l.;r Ainti i.T’i
1. u;.ulucl'ulng interests. The n„b-i mmatirv as has been tho <xpan-
.>..n: of the 1 i ntl. franc ani sun
lavcr il 1? u p ins as to ;
-.tuaticn shculd h.tt ' 1
<eqir i.ees for -his c ■tin-
trade Th, re !■ ev.de.'.t'v
h . met- , to tA bad abr’art-
■tri’ ai d r s cuts tip t ■■
' tlir.t
I m
horse products.
Lex A ing Forward
Trade und indu.strir.l signals
were, most of them, "set fall' as
IS23 opened, and with th- impetus
gained frotr the ^rcat rally it; the !
last half of 1928, the abundant j
crops of last year and H e banked |
up ord n reported in heavy indus-
tries. aa active first quarter and
probstbiy « Uk* half year deem res- '
sepsbly arcll assured Beyond ihit. I
the aVgrajg: man will d'st-r a fair |
ly cleaf 'Mta of th? new year s iro> ]
prospecta before nuking deflnit’
plans. Beating upon the fu'ure
—<• outlook. * may be said that in di-
toestic Tims the effects o! manv f
pending meig rs in trad; iol
•ll<1 tnA*”y >,nl rents n to be re- ’
aflsgd. Then too, plans made in
ji -M08 tor extension or wha*. has
conte to be variously cesign 'ted as
Vdhmtary reyviation. vol t onal
J Asttrol. end by other similar
thrases. need to be work-d out.
Last year saw th- installation cf
something cf tills sort in prtrol-
emh production, cotton goodr, num-
ufacturing and in lutnue.- pu'rut. 'marke's, with tl
? and still ethers apparently impend pardirg
ji Jiq the ct.il and some other lines, j supplies and "ates
1 “"=~=
• ft
In fcrw gn trad . the f attires
were a dLtinct advance in thc val
tie of exports enabling that hra.vh
ol trade to cpprcach s'ill clos i to
the total srt up In 1920. which im-
ports. because cf le ver pitcc 1-v 1;
fell off from recently preccdng
jears, thia paillcularly mamf-sl -n
rubber, uf-on wh(ch .■•estrltfior.s ns
to shipments expiicd In expor s.
the tncreas” in shipments cf manu-
factured g;od&. this mere pvticv-
lualy of automobiles metals relin-
ed petroleum, ri rioulturn! inipl. -
mrrts and machine toolr mcr1
tbfin offset deci eases 1;> grain.’,
particularly wheat., wheat fl ur nncl |
ry . a®.t meats and other packing j
r ■■ -
7 "1 l
1L^7 W) w- J—j: I
Vi-' -; t .
-«»- - -------- ------
dPt, MWAtT W, 1W>
1928. Bef^nfghWf^27-9- But Not
Altogether Good Year; Sentiment
Generally Pt^erful As 1929 Opens
WNTW,
ther north Below Yuma and the I vest
Mexican border tt started piling up
silt into the gulf and a great ridge I the water supply cut in half by
rose more than 100 feet above sea j agreement with Mexico, became in-
level across the wide waste of wa- j adequate. In 1918 the flow fell to
tor j 1.300 cubic feet a second, whereas
During the ages that followed, '.from 5.000 to 6.000 is necessary and
vvv.vw wurwl Of
that is the con-
> the Colorado
leet Wlow I ’■"•■ui uv»u;ii4.> a;iu cu uui dway ai
This great I a 0051 of $1000 000 a year, sll; de-
posits that averag? 100,000 acbe feel
annually and often are piled It)
feet high on canal banks after thc
dredgings
....... Boulder Dam. to be cre-ted hun-
acingly on the cast, high above the! dreds of miles awaj in BIr'k car.-
. .. —. ------ ... ... . . 1 Us
j 550-foot wall of concrete. Estimates
| say it will he ;to years beiore the
deposits make thc $70,000,000
structure- a gigantic wedge be-
tween two canyon walls--4neffec-
tlve. in the meantime sufficient wa-
ter will, be stored to cover .26 mil-
lion acres of land one foot deep,
Insuring plentj u.
ley farms ww Hr __________
300,000 additional aores filial could
be reclaimed y -
tic, visible. genrrallwlWM Adf *•'
sevcial instances precluded, but P
compromise may. ptfhop*.
rocked by keying tl*at lust »>•
tetter and icasonab'iv aft, . thn»
nicit of its pi< dece&sirs.
Many Marg tvs -- -
•Jhe year, as a while, saw a coh-
uan<e of the intense ci,mf*iaihi<
noted in the prec ding year. With
tiuir cr.j men eagerly fornihr- meT-
$<rr fei gned U> limit this rivalry
for ntw business. Efforts to tegu*
late production took th- form dl
curtulment <*r "vvlitional gcntrol
find-'mire publicity as to ratpai.
in e*p dally rota tie example W-
mg found in eitttn goods manu-
facture, tut with Iwnbeg. >eirr|.
etim and ciher s varpto «ar.pet|‘!v:
trades taking slv liar Attton. Stan-
dardization and staMtatlon be-
came words of coinnMB ije iJnes
of compamtively mmbm*- ”
such chain, irgil-cwhr ■*
partment etc re enti
wider fields, and coit.^_------
pc ted as the rplrlt moved Urenl
Industry ard trade reached
year's hM:h peaks tror^. C '
ward, wlUi it* rather pMr
of late 1927 atolng «M
notably in the steel mid
bile and related traded, t
remarkable sdvancot
1928 was notable. Gains were gen*
eraliy larg at in industrial
which, in 1927, showed noUMe t*-T
cegsir-rs. this mdicaiirt* ffe trftlt
of the prediction made at th^.'.;"*
set of the year 1928. that 1927 bi
ing and c.pendlon had really |
a vacuum to be Ailed. A very li
ir. tact record, volume cf rd
buying crowned the gear'a
except 'vtur* mild weather br ,1
infijensa otilbreak Intervened.
Ind entry Comebark !
In Industry, there «aa 'atagrd A,
veiitaW* comeback, of many of th*
so called “hesvy” indi atrfea. which
in 1921 showed hesitation. , it no#
actual Iosjcs. as a nauU of nurni
ercus natural and artificial draws
Links for which that ear’ler year
wss notable Prominent tn -this lat-
trr diraction, of. court*, was the
inrlement' wcatMr. .gMftfl*:
ua our, io« oocp. <k_ diaaaixwis ff-wto to the WmU-
cepliom er.ovgh to rob lh1 exhto-.,
tt. a* a whole, of its otherwise dori-
vhiring and quite widely dlstrfb*
uted rally For instone* th- vol-,
time cf railway traffic fell slightly
b»’ow that of t*2l, and even more 1 ’
so behind IkM. wher as net oper-
attrxp Incoire gained sMghtJy over
r.<21. whilo below that of 1U26.
Factory employment Indexes gain-
ed slightly (.ver 1927. but dropped' ■«
below recently preceding years, as
cid also pay roils The pear was
not especially preitfle in strikes,
that of thc New Bedford
null operatives. 2TOCO.
iwcnty-fl/c weeks, against g reduc-
tion. failing. The soft coal miners'
btrlke begun April I. .1927. *c«,jU-
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [28], No. 132, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 15, 1929, newspaper, January 15, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335601/m1/7/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.