Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 174, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 5, 1929 Page: 7 of 10
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Tl’UI
»»£ Henry L. Farrell
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JCERY
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re
THE DOCTOR
in
Who demands care in
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ian Buttermilk
en.
YOU CAN MOVE ALONG
WITH ANY GASOU
•.V.
•ft]
v ■■
!••. be'
>e Yankee ‘cripples'
7>J
importance.
•• • a * •
•T
■te
< “
*• *•
matter
af-
and
■ J/ty
•fll
real thrill to motoring when you have Conoco
108 Fry St.
k i
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J*.
Fl
4
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1 i- 4$
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.
W1W'W''.' • wWM
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the filling of his pre-
scriptions.
When You Can’t
Get It There
The New Mobiloil costs 35c
a quart. It is made espe-
cially for today’s high-
speed driving conditions
have It
Reuben E. Turner
Grocery
Charlie’s Market
rescription for
ponding is just
J
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f*
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<1
SOwr-
holed out
new record was
"For his takef* She tl
She had come to these <
young bride—eaga
Jack had promised.
I
--W
U. C. Travelstead
Phone 10.57.
215 E. Hickory.
rs
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rhnabtMd..
amr'fo
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than two
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WANTED
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Th
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(Hiring ths
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Let Your
relop into
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WMTiON
• $
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three
Van
has
the ball tn its ascent and had lail
cd to watch the crafty player.
WITH
CONOCOETHYL
»u select your
he best. - -
0*6 FOR TH* 1
Book/ )
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his hired board of
what has hap
ofl-monlhs to
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through?
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. 35c a quart
L_jj. Th- dealer *a-> uu» •-#»*«■«
of the Xew Mohilnlt r.>r |e>a
that? sac ••xj.-etif Mnhi'wi •»■••
rtde lubricating J7'/f
There’s a i ‘ “
Ethyl in the tank.
This snappy power fuel literally pulls al the leash—eager to go—just "rarin”
to release the full power which your motor was designed to develop.
‘ : ::
—ftL j, .;•• > ■' .--a.--- '- ‘
- ■ ew
IZ.'",
by insuring a smooth running engine
—thereby reducing repair bills.
Once you’ve tried Conoco Ethyl you ’
will appreciate what a pleasing dif-
ference it makes in the operation of
your car.
Get it at the Conoco Ethyl pump—
at service stations and garages.
HIGH.WIDEandHAN
--. — - _ _- - - ■ . 1 .
ts6PLF
|fgte^ 1-2^4 j
peetations will
and graduates
bk onea.
and chemicals
Ly not because
at the expense
k.KT -- iigpi 1 —6,ii,Ff-.»aaaa|
jKy^iSami
f -»fcX.«V 1
^'UKlSOIAI
> y g)
Ward's ball was just on the putting
surface and Holmes' ball was near
it; Mayfield's was exactly two feet
from the pin—and Taylor's was
wedged in the cup. against the flag
staff; it evidently had bounced in-
to the hole with some force The
other players holed out as per
schedule and
born
ATT Wferb average golfers All broke
100 in the round, and the average
card of th< foursome was 92. ,
SPORTSMATTER
b> the Chicago White Sox ______
there, he went to Boaton then to
New fork, then ba< k to Boston be-
fore he *9$ obtained by his present
owners in mid season of let’s
Recoad-Chronlcle want ads bring ,
results.
First-Class Plumbing
Installation and Repairing
Philip D. Coury
108 Fry St. Phono 1111.
......d
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ft-
V a
■ ■ -I
■ ."*^9
I-
Br * ■
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balth cwtlflcst®.
I
and West Hck-
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LcrM» %
k”
■ .aa
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4^4
■«»e
osphorous and
» is especially
tin all of these
Mould see that
lasrjtttfsis
krnble care 1M •_•*<-
b exereUry tw1
[ X-Ray
| Examinations
Lnitorium,
•/v/This New Mobiloil now awaits you at
/ any Mobiloil dealer’s for 35c a quart.
.Surprising savings in oil and gasoline
consumption together with better en-
gine performance make this new
lubricant the most economical oil you
can buy today.
MAKE THIS TEST
Drive to th^ nearest Mobiloil dealer . . . have
him drain all the old oil from your crankcase
and . . . fill it up with the correct gtade cf the
New Mobiloil. You know from experience
how your engine ran the last time fresh cil w is
put In the crdnkcase . . .' Now-notice the
difference I
Look for these results—
Increased Oil Mileage Often 100 extra mile*
per quart from the New Mobi’o:l
Incrwed Gasoline Mileage: Many teat* show
gasoline consumption reduced as much as 16%
F<af«r Pick*Up—More Power: Quicker get-
on
-. - 'narrow, texasjuu___
^SQWDZS
natc exactly where you should have the prescription
filled, but he has the hope that your own judgment
will direct the prescription here. He knows the pur-
est, freshest and most efficacious drugs are here, •©«-. -
curately compounded. Don’t handicap your recov-
ery "over the bargain counter.”
Lee Douglass’
SERVICE DRUG STORE
Phone 171. hast Delivery?
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SHANGHAI — General Chan",
Tini-Fong. mayor ot Shanghai. |
wants to make it illegal for any .
one under «0 to have a b rthrtay
parly. The mayor's purpose is to (
promote thrift.
CONTINENTAL OIL COMPANY
‘prtxfucaea, Mares and Markateea
ft kuk «r«i1» MtraWum praduct* Hi AH«eM. ArkaaMa. Calwedw
Idako. Kuim. MlMouri. Montaaa. NaWaaka. NawMawKa. Oktaha-
■M,Or«(an. Soutk Dakota, Ttaaa. Utah, WaaMa<tea and Wyoariac
By UNITED PRESS
The New York Yankees start the
1929 baseball season in the quest of
an American League record -In the
history of the organization no team
has won the championship for four
consecuUve years.
Once before the Yanks won the
flag three times in a row. but in
the fourth year they were nipped
by the Washington Senators And
Detroit gained the pennant in 1907.
1908, and 1909. only to lose out In
1910
And although the Yanks have
been termed the greatest ball club
I of all time there are serious doubts
j as to whether they can continue
the triumphs of the past three sea-
cons. Four factors enter into these
doubts, as follows; r— •
byjffli
r BbIuU
im
1 4’r~a
bVAI
Pal i «
And remember, Conoco Ethyl oper-
ates efficiently at all temperatures—
and at all seasons.
ItM Knocks out that Knock”—turns
carbon into power* Betters the per-
formance of any type of can-whether
of low or high compression-and
more than saves its slight extra cost
• . -7 K. • ■' ftja
B. HUEY, Mr*
ng.
in the off season just as much ai
you do In the summer months, and
1 do.
‘‘J don't ka»« how long 1 11 go.
but 1'11 be In there as long as I rag
*,!<1 *•»* AbdUldu t J I* around a.
few more seasons If 1 take care of
myself!”
- b.
He may not consider It entirely ethical to rfestg-
al a 1 1 1 • . _ . a 1- _ _____
■ < <»|mu law willsgs v
aYe«M Hanan
-- Hoaaeae Ibaaw?
WhrH.DtdniSwxHorHsr
^.r****
atDiita, Charles Black of Nebras-
ka George Edwards cf 1
Clarrnca ‘Nibs” Price of __________
’nd E. P. ‘Husky” Hunt of Leland
Stanford, ere only a few of the
oacharwho arc now d reeling ex-
cellent cage teams and who were
,r<at players in their day.
Perhaps, the most colorful play-
-r that I ever have se<n in action
>n 'he maple floor was H. O. “Pat”
Pace, the old Chicago flash. Pago
is now head coach of football at
h" University of Indiana.
Page made a great Tecord
>«sketball coaching, noth at the
University of Chicago and at But
ler University. His Butler team
won the Nat onal A. A. U cham-
pionship in Kansas City, Mo., in
March. 1924
Tony Lazzeri, whose effectiveness
was hampered by Injuries last
summer
Pennock Out of Series
Pcnnoek. perhaps the ablest
southpaw in the business, was un-
able to pitch at the close of the
season. Moore found his famous
s.nker” eluding him and he volun-
tarily retired from tire club. Laz-
zeri played in the world scries but
he should ‘have been tn a hospital.
The Yanks will have to remodel
their infield this year. Joe Dugan
l ,Is Bahe Ruth slipping? .you
u,,»n«as
ION,
—he called it
A Noble Sacrifice
. . . who was right?
QTANDfNG in the shadows, Marvin
0 Smith saw Jack’s young wife come
Swiftly, silently into tb^moonlight.
How tired she looked—how ragged
her clothes. His pules quickened. She was
getting tired of the struggle. Soon, the
wouldcotne to him ...
••Bobbie." he whispered.
She stifled a cry. “What are you doing
here? —
Thty were dose to each other now,
his body aflame, his arms
aching to hold her.
••Let me help you,
Robbie I I love you-l
wiM you****
—‘ -
* .mZbte’fat* reil^nabi'-'pn.nV
Lower nrl-ee tarivn
pan, subMHuttwa. t ? c «
—■1 _■ ii1 ■ ■' i • i' . ... i I ,„h. ,!■— . th,
R/11
jfl
Lol
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A - 3-^/6^
Lf___By O. B. KEELER i
A hole-in-one customarily Is re- ;
ftarded as a sufficient achievement |
by the lone perpelraftor to excuse |
all rpord-busting proclivities by the |
remainder of the actors in the dra- |
ma although I do remember that
I one time on a French golf course
I Wilfrid Reid, confronting three pre-
ceding shots all within a yard of the
I Mt ana eventually joed for three
I 2‘a canned his own tec shot for
I asr’aoe and thereby set a world rec-
ord of 7 strokes used by a four-
I some on a single hole
I But at the Piedmont park muni-
I elpal course in Atlanta the other
I day a four some omposed of L. C.
I ThvIot H E Mayfield, J Morris
I Ward and G. N. Holmes set an-
I other kind of a record for a single
I ncH wi.'xh they played in the
I order named with the following
I consumpUon of strokes 1-2-3-4
I The flrat hole at Piedmont is of
I H3 yardfl to a green at the top of
I • bluff about a dozen feet above
I the surface of the fairway. It thus
I requires a strong iron or a rood
I react with a spoon for the reason-
I abiv expert player to reach the
I plateau and the putting surface.
I wnioh la. invisible from the tee
I .' Tbe members of the match all
I drove and all the balls got up on
I and Mayfield certainly on green.
I UM plateau, with Messrs. Taylor
I and Mr. Ward proimbly so. When
fciBf WBChU the green,
costs more
I / and
Bivorth it
Chicago, Hugh McDermott of Ok-'MI..h,v^ “ce.n I'<n’orR; how of
— - _. . .... Nortliwo'torp. form?rly of Kausis.
•• many H’"” Hm1)-
Price of California I *’" oSenriv? men at bay until
mome itnr..’ help ccul.i arrive. Hi
was a gr-"t scorn'! threai.
Crii, Ruby, just at er the wpr d
war and hl the d-tys w.ieu Missouri
wpi winning Misa'airi Valley bn-,-
kctball champt n hips, was Mis-
souri's abe. ■ ;
CharliV Black, now of Nebraska,
could play any poslt'on in basket-
ball with equal dexterity. Hi was
crafty, sh fty versatile, and the
coolett man under fire that it h*>
been my privilege to sue in action
The greatest b?idtetba!J play«5
of former days dominate the bas-
kctbell coaching game of today.
much ^a a fireman would run up a )
ladder Will) one foot on the kyce f
and the other near his opponent’s
groin, he put one hand on h's op- K
ponenl's chart and wltii his Iree f j
hand t pped the ball in the des.red TJi
direction.
The husky opponent was com PE
pletely taken by surpr ;e an! pro-
tested loudly to ths r fere . but to \
no avail. The referee had followed 1
r
DID YOU KNOW THAT-w-
UO8S 11 AM MUND told Ihfl"
Garden boys they had
to wear tuxs on th« job Stter,
six each evening ,SJ and <o I
that ihe Garden is in the.
United States wb*re ■ pro-
~hH>rtloii law exists •. and
that it had lo be enforced 1
when they were on
and he haa on*
feller watching 'em to see-
that they obey orders
The Rldfllvs will glvs Mag
f War *a birthday party
at LexiiiR(oa, rKy., on
March 28 he will be 12 ■<*
years old and his sire
i» still living Fair '
Play is 21 The little t
Jap billiard star says he »
won't ro home until he has
won the championship
,ini<l it h too bad Cochran >
and Schaefer are so good '
Trevor Wignall, Kng-
i land's best boxing expert,
says the reason there are no
good boys over there is Ire-
cause they burn themselves
out loo young Jos
Falcaro. the New York -
bowler scored a perfect SOO
the other da> it was
hi> fifteenth time
di''fl
As a player. Page was alway • d>-
i Im; the unexpected. One instance
T enumerate:
Being of short and stock bu Id
Page-had small opportunity to get
the Up-ofT on held or tie balls.
So he used hb ingenuity.
In ltl3. In a game in which I
‘was annwfibef of Pa;e’s opposing
team. Page pulled a crafty pliy
hat will forever enrich my memo-
ries.
• ‘ This was long bsfore the time of
'the hand at the back rule" or the
[•resent rule which requires the
two players to jump. In any im-
aginary four-foot circle.
In this case. Page's opponent was
well over six f-et In height ano
weighed more than two hundr d
pnmnds.
™tt! was a tic ball. The referee
was the only official in the game
fbst as the referee tossed the ball
tn the air. Page's qu.ck wit stood
him tn good stead, for her literally
rah up the frame of his opponent
CONOCO-ETHl
_ . _____ ____ . -- — . - - p* __1 |
Mfl'i
WaL- .r-
|M« V.'Vl- ■ .-T-
■
Just* Another Season
Oh” John Plena Quinn seems I
•>ne of those fellows who re-
fuses |n bow lo Father Time Like
the iiptnoftal brook of Tennyson’s I
poem he apparently is going on I
forever.
The record books give Quinn's I
birthday as July I ISK6 Perhaps!
this is true No nue knows and the
old. fellow neither affirms or dentes
the data given In the record books !
But there are many who believe!
that Sh* books treat hl* age very!
kindly. v
Hf took s rejniinr turn ax a pitch-1
er for Connie Mack last season and I
he probably will be on the firing]
line for the A s again this year I
And out there on the piouud the
greatest thing he will have to baf-
fie halters will be a wise old head
on MH'shoulders
During the 1928 season he won
18 games while losing seven for the
lean boss of the A’e and that was
* record of losses and wins that
was bettered by only five hurlers
In th*-American league last season.
Hk** B««n Around
tHCl'tiES on Quinn's life show he
has been pitching since 1903.
the year he first appeared In the
reoqrjh a» a member ot the Con-
iirlhvllle club In the old 1‘enn
•late league He war with that
club three years
He Joined the New Y»»k Amer-
icans In 1903 and stayed with them
nearly four seasons before he was
adjudged lacking In ability to be
■ major Uaguei and was sent to
Rochestw In the. JnternaUoiuU
Ixagda
He’s baa* areund, this fellow has.
and around plenty Baek to the
majors, a two year stay tn the old
Federal League, then out on t
By FOBBHT C. (PHOG) ALLEN
'PrcMdeat, National Baaketbail
Canehes As*ociaU*n)
Some sill insist that outstanding
players dp not make outstanding
coui hflg. Certainly this does not
nn! tsu* in basketball
Edjia McNlchol of Pennsylvania
Howard Drther of Cornell. Dr H
C. CadNn of Pittsburg, Arthur
Dutchf’ Lcnborg of Northwestern,
Ev rrtt Dean of Indiana. Ward
Pigcy” Lambert of Purdue. Craig
Ruby of Illlno s Nels Norqren ol
To ' buy sutue good, light]
used cate. v \
We bavu (or Mtlc several1
good used cars. If you want(
to buy or sell, see
DALLAS WOMAN ROBBED BY
' ARMED INTRUDER i,
DALLAS, March 5 —At tl.c point
Of a pistpl Mrs. A. Hargreaves was
roboed of >lb by a man who entered |
her home while ah; was working ,
in- a rear {pom Monday. The robber |
escaped in an old iiutotuobilc in
which a companion had been vait-
mT
(
i ft’ 1
u.-> '•
WHY M0UAnV\?i0!1 da , '■ ]
WLt'
thought wildly.
_____T_____iMiOlsie hills *
—-— bride—esger for the love ne»8*
, ' . - Love-nestl Thcr*
were no comforts, not even the bare ne*
ceuitici. Now Jack lay injured... penui*
less... iu pain ...
And here was Marvin Smith, oflerin®
her money, comfort, luxury' His fund*
some face was' bent close tn here.
*’k would be sin," the whtaperrd
“It would be a noble sacrifice." he (ii<T-
Who was right?
. Read "Cea Laar Wia Tiir Uatib' i»
April True Story. Cour-
JbhowMMroi^ th*
biucr problem hie pl seed |
.. .....’» - _
Treia* al* Tret Trey 1
<MXbw!
T'~T ' . 1
Bi
U. rtow reE
r.', TZ7"ft
WORKS
u t WWW
---
ning
suit, eoat, drf«,
i prompt, cheer-
* <
» F1iom81- J
ociation
•;;ir
:■
f aaoline contumption
rairor Pick*Up—Mo
•way. mor* “pep" on the road, lets labor
the hUlfl -
Smoot her Operation: A quieter motor, a vel-
wety smoothness of acceleration, less vfbratkm
when speeding
***’■/“*
/... j
/ ' ’’
-
, , _ _ , FAo<
The bear i.|, a shifty-eyed eras- jIB
titre and will not look straight at * , .
man. says Hur»ld Tupper, a hunMR* J
T* of Hicklev, Me. ■’
X'..' J
Vernon before he wax brought back I *“ man> P*” '« •’ that aged
to the American league In late 1818 ! J.'?1 “n" **
He hasn't the stuff that he had*
many years ago but he has upo«
his shoulden* a wise old head and1.
In bls arm the ability to put that -*•
baseball exact)} where he wants
It to go ,' ' *?*'
And that wire old head and cos-
_______________>■«
at an age when most fellows havb
beep through with baseball for a
number of years and past an age
that sent many famous players out
of activity.
Cy Young was through by thfe'
time he started In hfs forties. Babs
Adams was through at 42
Waller Johnson stepped out two
year* ago when he was 49. Olfl
Aicxknder. who rival* Quinn, fs 41
Bur Qkinn 1* 44, or more, and Mtt|
4t tr*( »•' 'w-ow .?■ • •-1^
X IM ftfes
weaker, v7
One of the chief worries of Col.
Ruppert and
concern*
These are lUtad in the order of ■ Herb Pennock. Wiley Moore”and
>*ir lrwrwrl.no* Tf Y>nbw«. D..ik ros_____ -____. .____ ____
Is gone and it is not yet settled
who will take his place. Ham Byrd. '
outfielder will be given a chance.
and Leo Durochcr, Mark Koenig. I
Gene Robertson and Lyn I .ary alsb '
will be tested nt that bag.
Huggins believes he haa strength-
ened hi.s pitching stafl udth
rookies—Wells, Rhodes
Pelt.
And the enthusiasm that
been reported from St. Petersburg. 1
where the Yanks are training. 1
shows that they at least arc not |
going to be victims of overconfi- !
denec.
Win 11 jou want tu fix som*-
thing a little extra—a fancy
dish or two out of the ordinary
—and ycnir regular grocer
ca t supply you. call 2i or
925 Tli! chances aro wall
r *"
-
1 • • i
EL ,P.- .
Br’-” ■ -
Fw.' ' .
...
j
*
IM OIL COMPANY
Vernon before h* was brought back
From a,x‘ul al ,,H' entl "f ,1s 8*r*BR
Rules for Success
In the major leagues And it’s not
» new one by any means
I *a*t* good care of nivself and
•Mcb my diet." he says
”« know that baseball Isn't a
g»me that yoa can «tay up until all
[’°F’ the night and do your
be«t when you're called upon. It
isn't a game, either, which can be
““*• •»«,forgotten
Si wtnt"nwBth’
to ME* care 4| TXftwM .
1 ^>5
ummsf i
L the Yankee ‘cripples” of I
f«r- I .
their young players come | strategy
I■cned during
their Importance. If Babe Ruth
has a banner season, that about
takes care of any other questions
in regard to Miller Huggins’
trained troupe.
The Case of Ruth
Ruth's swan song is written ev-
ery winter. Observers point to sta-
tistics and prove that he is on the
down grade and that his battin;
average has been falling off tre-
mendou&ly Then Huggins counters
with the assertion tnat Ruth is
good fof at least three and proba-
bly five more years.
The facts of the matter are
simply that the Babe Is getting no
younger and that his comparative-
ly thin legs cant go on forever.
Barring a serious Injury the sup-
ixisition is that the big slugger will
be In the line-up every day ham-
mering out his usual assortment of
[xjwcrful hits. Another factor is
that he will be fighting this year
for a onc-year contract in the
neighborhood qf 8100.000. He simp-
ly can not afford a poor year.
Now as to the opposition the
Yanks will meet. The Athletics,
their closest competitors in IB.
have strengthened themselves but
little but most of their players are
still young and ambitious and
might easily beat out Huggins' men
If a giant inferiority complex could
be conquered The Browns. Tigers,
and Senators, all appear to be
stronger than last year. But there
certainly is no ground to believe
Me called it SIN
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 174, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 5, 1929, newspaper, March 5, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335643/m1/7/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.