Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 212, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 18, 1929 Page: 8 of 10
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BIBLE THOUGHT FOB
TODAY
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Recond-Chronicle want ads bring
result*.
only protection
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Turner
Phone 2
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themaelves
• al-
L. P. McCombs
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A dandy ft
er, good tires
new paint.
A Ford Roi
iahed in blacl
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OUR ASSURANCE Fear not, O
land; be glad and rejoice: for the
Lord will do great things —Joel J;al-
■<
chins erf the. immediate Aefchbcr-
hood, mingling with nordlc kids
from the section along the Bast riv-
er. and buying baked sweet pota-
toes from a Hebrew vendor with a
patriarchal beard.
Ml -
Thift Spring—
“FASHIONS ARE FEMININE!”
• • • t ;l
Free* Service.
Publishers association.
H matter at Denton.
COMP AWT
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,^SPECI
>Vegg
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April n,
scientist who Is
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rermnent offlclal.
Eg''
| FNFESSK
PHYSICIAN
11
'PlfflrnNC
PBDrHHO. See
‘ LIVE
POB 8AIX—Reg
calf, awed by "
tor service. T.
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Im
7;- *UBl
InstMtees wrt*4
crone wa km pr
sa. Let ns wme
i-j
PTry /o Cftdnge These
rtf.,.'.'"
'spring show of the Salons of Amer-
iThe millionaire is Irving Brok-
\.a±
In one nuite used Livingroom
Furniture and one Dining
Room Suite.
.•‘XiWX.
teif
Guaranteed
80x3 1-2 Tube ............95e
2nd year Rennett Cotton
Seed, bushel J..........|1.00
Cream Separator OU.
Avenue office building. The door-
imsn is Arch Bonge, who stands
taller than the corn of his native
In a very
can comp
small gn
crop.
The
is:
9 a
Morrel-Fritz Fum. Co..
West Side Square.
K
B. •
1
log war, also
barley Cartls*
the wives of
listen at oit-
WYork 1HB
By BICHABD G. MA8SOCK
give all his time to painting, Just
as Resnickoff, who came to America
five years ago. did when he worked
in a restaurant. And Hallgarten,
when he ran away from a disap-
proving family and came to Amer-
ica us steward on a steamship.
DEN
Mw teas
W. dk^BowW. g
UmSBk®1
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rat
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Frtj^er ,A
Kjuiry vj
V 'fc.'
•tt •.%
M three children for whom
I Years Ago in Denton
»eeoH43^ 1910.)
Ben Cord, well known citiren of Denton County, I
"■ri yesterday at his home four miles southwest
■L?.. ■ ■■■•• m* ®® years old. Death was caused
i drill klay bail this year
'Wlyfta. baseball team.
I day for athletes will he held at the Nor-
-----*** **** 81’
l a good thing we love them.
7^
• i • ■
A talking moving picture of SOO
anidMla was filmed at the Bronx
Zoe tho dtber day. Now the movies
eaa ad* to their eUmtoadvmtlstng
» ?y.W MBt alMdBP aft.
dumb - picture
fCopyriaM. ISM. NBA *
............ aw.1
Et”
lTjI
....
f*.—' II
• ..... 4.-*.,^...
vtUdkii 1 Fit.*
HAU;
j. Tljw .
---few minutes
etely ruin a
In dr Tfuit “
REAL
SMALL ACRKAGE
' Mice S-room
school, move la.
room houM near '
K!wT«%.r?o
DAU.AH HIOHW.
OK east end of
beuutiful country
Bi-',
1
B'ti
■■ k, • >, i
TJSfe !j
Fwb&CUm Plumbing
Installation and Repairing
Philip D. Cray
WR Soba1111.
railroad develpoments. The popu-
ulation oi this town which has been
under six flags in’ its time, has
dropped from 3,000 to 700.
a,
i
f-ti
W ••••». ••••••«..............
■
& ” e—,1"- —i —
OUFCUMMrai DO|mrrln«ill
■ avBacBTrnoN Bang
maU (in advance)
wmau (tn advance)
U-Wemiy tn Denton Count?
n ad vanoe)...................
ij
S£&gT& SS»
WMbyn nd Mdngs.
JKthtKs
We understand from the reports i
that the airmen of Australia are i ____________ „H.„ 4„._„
sending cut rescuers for the fiyerw ;Uonaire and a movie doorman are
to!2_U^ ”“<njr °f «l’owln« samples of their art. which
Southern Cross flyers. It may site u picture painting, at the seventh
be necessary to send rescuers fay. _ , - - - -
the rescuers of the rescuers.—Boo-; ica "
ham Favorite. r
a..a, luWMVMimiV <9 Al VAI Ig DIVW"
J aw. who has a studio atop a Fifth
.
lv.;’
• . ■ ■■
Woodrum Truck Lii
Phone 45, D—ton.
BARGAINS
74$.
am. J
.
was utterb tnamahip of prwvldii*
Finally bis wltodiAand he Wrnil
and moved to a distant city so that
she cojua bring up tt» children.
Give Them a LHtk fnHet, Tee
These up not ^oxtraordfoan
oases, X know. Yair could cap Uair
With others, perhaps some In whlct
the sacrifices hate beeh even heav<
ir •
And btoidee these who actual
take the chiMxn into their horn
there art the mnay. many pcoj
who rive a bit of their lives in t
khape of money (for what is mon
but time, and what Is time b
--------- life?* toward bringing up other ns
pie s chlldren/^Sw to the Im
honor, to be sure, since theirs
••riM far 1MB sacrifice, bat let’s give ttM
some tablet on a corner of the 1/1
mortal ter their bit of vtcatto
parenthood.
g Tv«e
Sold, Rertted Repair
Denton Typewriter
PhOTevIo.
CALLUS
For Your Storage
Problemz
We store anything, and|
have plenty of room.
FOR 8ALK— Voun
for service. Ds
km 00* with roc
Sire U of good blc
M errirfc
BSStoS"**1"re
for" BALX—10-t
^Teachers CoUeg
...........1 ■ ■ 1
Sorts tough, no doubt, for a fel-
tow suddenly to find that the news-
papers apparently have forgotten
his name, after getting a'Mg piny
for a time. But, the vice president s
sinking into quick oblivion is not
without its compensation. Then .
some satisfaction, you know, in be-
ing relieved of the array of critt-
cisf to which every public ofiicuit
who continues in the limelight is
subject.
MVilla
■
k’,'. '> >1 r n ■
L’,’ '.W
&
rave folk who
?r people’s eMl-
aow half a doz-
who dobs not
. often uncom-
Cash or termg.
Harry Teasley Cash
Phone 498
'Bl
TEXAS AND ALAMO
The discussion of the disposition of the privately-
owned ground in which the Alamo stands, serves to
remind us of a project which was brought to an
abrupt end by our entry into the World War.
That was the plan of making the “Cradle of
Texa*. Liberty would reach into the high heavens
popular subscription and then individualize it more
by erecting over it the tallest shaft in the world.
Plans were draWn of it and the complete idea was
worked out in detail. It was to be representative
of eOery county in the State. Completed, it would
contain something of everything specifically Tex-
an and individual Texans would be able to call it
their very own. The value would lie in the fact that
Texas Liberty would reach into the high heavens
farther than that of any other set of men who ever
operated under that battle cry.
Texas was In the act of welcoming the plan
when the interruption came. It hga not been re-
vived. We worider why.
The Alamo is in the heart of a progressive Texas
. city. ffKr land vaiew is sonstantiy snseaaaiag. M ia
unthinkable to permit it to be destroyed. Once the
proper appeal is made to T^xas loyalty, it can be
mode into one of the wonders of the world.
Texas should not be satisfied with It being any
less than that. Those who gave it ita vahm did a
thing that never will bo duplicated. The memorial
should be in keeping with the deed,—Fort Worth
Heron I Telegram. .■'-jKSPtS
An Oklahoma man was |»‘
000 against a preacher who-------
factions. Unless the scale for prohd
in Oklahoma than in Texas the png
have to let the ftUow have his n«o
viilc NdWs. ■■■
Sa
fcs? ' M
----—-—
Impossible
ham Flour ii
have the Ste
■ .Wheat Grat
2 1-2 lb. pack
;>■<' r.,
A seientirt deelare. that within ftvg years we
____ - ■ ea' S ‘ w*_ r
Tm* SOOfWY * ifellOW YWAlIRlNl '
mor* ** •nJoye a va
NU
_) TRMLMA .
^Htofoey. Fb
CORSE
M&.c»w<ai
MUSIC 1
TO MAVB ATAB-
'.-XBT
T4 Me to sab a memorial raised
to w serum group at uunoiem he-
roes and iKrotaes. '< 4-: ■>>1
GROCERIES
Of the better kind. 1 Alwayfij!
have a good stock fresh .
fruits and vegetables.
J r
the local news pubUstooU bsroln_______________ ______
DENTON, TEXAS, APRIL IK, 1029
OUR REPRESENTATIVE IN ENGLAND
1 Americans everywhere rejoice over the selection
..of former Vice President Charles G. Dawes as
' American ambassador to Great Britain. Dawes had
Sthe moral backing of the greater part of the oitL
’ -zenship of this country in his efforts to cut some
of the red tape which surrounded the actions of
..my Senate, and the fact that he was unable to
change the mode of procedure in that body is no
reflection on him, but rather is a reflection of the
inflexibility of the system which has been allowed
to develop in Washington.
Dawes is known as a “tape cutter” and is
out-and-out American. The popular impression
Dawek is that he will make the staid old court of
. .St, James sit up and take notice by his outspoken
frankness, will amoke his upside-down pipe at state
functions and will refuse to abide by useless rules
4 of formality. Perhaps he will, but his background
of success as a lawyer, banker, manufacturer and
a leader of political thought will fit in nicely with
our requirements of the American ambassador to
Great Britain.
...•6 AO
.... ton
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..................... 85
mm and New Mexico.
............
.80
.<0
There are other extremes among
the 350 printers and sculptors
wv.u are on exhibition dur-
«, Ing ApriL Specifically, there are:
.to John Dm. Passoa,, the novelist,
of transportation, which, and Arnold Friedman, who waa
»ce n ptoWtosn.
Jean Joseph, who ia 12 years old,
nd .K. L. Durand, who ia It.
William C. Cornwell, a broker,
■FOene Galloway, a Montana
each girl
Boccinl' Manuel hairdresser and
beauty specialist, and Bernice West,
great-great granddaughter of Ben-
Jainin West, famous .Colonial
portrait painter.
Riki Hallgarten, German grand-
son of Charles Hallgarten. who
founded a banking firm, and Misha
ftesnickoll, former Russian dish-
WMher.
I S. I. Self
215 W.
Lu_____—JCfitaB
F-
F-
___
* > 1 Am
havtokrod3rt>?J
and Am takira a II
!>St arid wKksudd
~— — ——
enough tAtoRWv mother, what
<b.......
fflML.... „ _____ .. ___
|Mta»<«hrf oontasiato alt the worry-
ing and fret about firing the right
thinga-who tatent aeon young
mothers aB but Worn out with it?
Think what tt most mean when it
cotnes to a woman of fifty. And yet
fioa omm • MsOhaem1 eMmaaMMawaa 1
have
m of
i re
h'F y- "E
it
1 i
toMr r .
Jost to keep you Intel
tary Kellogg, author <
national pact outlawin
gave the ruling that Chi
aister must sit below t
ambaasatore and mlnii
cial dinner*.
J . • • •<
A Chinese govt--
here to study L________
methods. Was robbed in PhiladeF
phia. He Will be able to take home
a lot of first hand Information.
A gasoline station attendant' in
a western city was arrested as 'b
bootlogger. How did they over
happen to detect him?
only a dtseaao like whoop-
1 or nmaales. says Prefer
• VaAot of Paris. The
might have gone further
na alimony waa too doe-
By RODNEY DUTCHER
NEA Service Write?.
WASHINGTON, April IB—One may reasonably
suspect, without being able to prove, that Preaident
Hoover whispered something in Secretary of State
Stimson’s ear concerning the decision about th# oo-
cial Status of Mrs. Dolly Curtis Gann. The chances
are that poor Stimson actually asked for a hint
of the presidential attitude. ...
Certainly the president would have handled the
thing in no other way. He has never indicated that
he took the rules and regulations of the Washing-
ton social racket very seriously, but has a distinct
horror of anything that might make his adminis-
tration appear ridiculous. Facing threats that the
Gann case might even be threshed out on the floor
of Congress, Hoover was just the kind of president
to decided that the government ought definitely to
keep out of social squabbles.
When all the diplomats in tpwn began to hold
serious meetings in an attempt to decide or find
out where the vice president’s sister ought ito be
seated at dinner, the question became more than of
enough public interest to merit presidential atten-
tion.
An Embarrassing Job
The State Department is now relieved of an em-
barrassing job, hot only as to the Curtis-Gann case,
but in future complications. It will make no more
decisions about seating lists involving American of-
ficials and their wives or their hostesses. In all
probability this Will mean that the diplomats and
other official entertainers will observe the present
status quo, which will be presented herewith in
brief otffline. -
The State Department had passed the buck be-
fore, but never abandoned its willingness to arrange
seating lists for Washington hostesses. But momen-
tous questions have remained unsettled, such as
whether the supreme court outranks the diplomatic
corps and whether a cabinet wife is as socially im-
portant as a senator’s wife.
Once at a judiciary reception at the White House
the justices learned that the corps was to march
in line before them and simply refused to come,
though the reception was for them. One .time later,
when the judges were parked in front of the diplo-
mats at memorial exercises in the Capitol, the
dean of the corps protested to President Wilson.
Now, at such functions, they are placed side by side
and hostesses don’t invite them to the same parties.
The cabinet and senate wives have worked out
n semi-compromls« whereby the former make the
first calls, but with their husbands precede the sen-
ators and their wives at dinner.
These are the main items in the Washinton
precedence system which remain unsettled, but there
have been many bitter precedence struggles in the
past, some of which required years for addition,
dating back more than 100 years, Joe Cannon
fought for his social rank as speaker of the House
and for a while refused to attend any dinner where
he wasn’t seated as he thought he should be. To-
day the speaker precedes both cabinet and Senate.
The vice president precedes everyone at all times,
except the president; he is regarded as the personal
social representative of the president at many func-
tions. Curtis will usually be found going into din-
ner on the arm of his hostess while Mrs. Gann will
commonly be on the arm of the host. All sets of
society, official, diplomatic and unofficial are sup-
posed to call on the vice president—which means
on his wife or hostess. She cant return so many
calls, so she generally throws a couple of large re-
ceptions each season. Mrs. Gann probably will live
Up to this custom.
It speaks well for the loyalty 0
aviators—always willing to risk-
their lives in the effort to rescue
their fellows. Traditions of the air. Nebraska, in front of a Broadway
bld fair soon to be as weU estab- .
lished as traditions of the sea. Andi th ™ .-
it is fine to ate the spirit of co-oper- wtlO8J wor£
ation and sacrifice in the face o*" 1— -—*• --
the rapid growth of aviations aa.
means
within a comparatively short time 01
undoubtedly will occupy a'very Im-
portant place in the realm of com- “
merce. !
INTERNATIONAL INFANTS
It Is evident these spring days
that the melting pot of New York
has been enlarged to include the
playgrounds of Central park, where
the chiioren of the rich get the
sun. At the ndrtheast comer of the
park, especially, there is a baby
carriage Hague of nations.
There, at noth stoeet and Fifth
avenue, may be seen negro children
from Lower Harlem and Larifi dr-
china <rf the. immediate Mthbcr-
hood, mingling with nordlc kids
//
fV K
'• are selling lots of
tondw—Cane seed, Dar-
hldan, in fbet <11 kinds
fcn and field seeds. A
plete line, of groceries
vegetables. Come to
| or phone 174.
The perambulators are there by
the score, some big and dhiny and
blue, others small and brown and
drab. No danger of race suicide in
that neighborhood, where one
store sells only baby carriages and
juvenile furniture and does a
thriving business.
She.
nd throe ct»ilu_
. aceroa Up oountr
Bngteml granfisiot
wtott IwlaBiiy up
received in. thstr <_____ ____. ____ _
know they had • wonderful one on
the littto isiaiMt farm off ths coast
st New BtoBand where lived their
grandmother and grandfather and
tkree uncles, flatter folks. X can see
their grandmother's fine, somewhat
stern, and yet eery sweet face now.
And I can heat the one phrase of
anything like complaint that she
spoke: “IH never forget the day
they came, the fettle one was bare-
ly more than a baby. And I was 52.
It seemed a big Job and I felt a
little bitter, Ood forgive me. I’d
had five of my own. and no easy
time. But I suppose it’s all for the
best, and X know Ood will help me
to see it through, and of course I
love them as much as my own,
now.’’
An Aimt Who Oi
DianMmd
Then there? an aunt, too, whom
US s
most brifeiasit gfrl I know. She
*1 not'fintah nef eoDeae edum-
- — ■ I WWW
Wri beoMMs gf flamfey needs, bat
she found herself a niche and
worked heroetf into an eamUent
position. > The money she earned
ndgni have given her travel abroad
and all the advantages she craved,
and Which would have carried her
further m her work. But tt went
instead to help out in the family of
a brother who had married and
Toor - .
Presidio, Texas, the “sleeping
town of the Rio Grande,” hopes
Dr. Will-Deront says there is
more d iffififh between 1 a>aa and
man than bstwOea woman and wo-
man. Wo were Just wondering If
the same wore true about differ-
uncos.
statements are difficult to bqjieve. Even
, there wax little love for Germany In this
metry.. The sinking <rf the Lusitania and the un-
striSted submarine warfare against all ships lost,
manny Whatever sympathies she had among the
_ Jk the citizens of this country. Agents of the
Gerasan government could have produced small re-
attempting to win back friendships for
Germany that late in the wai.
£ , Qerinany is as much responsible for acta of van-
; dalteat and sabotage in this country as she is for
I -damages to French and Belgian property. Much
t___ of tM destruction in France waa not ordered by
the* Gorman government, but German individuals
eauM it. American reparation claims are light,
cMgared With claims of other nations, and Ger-
should not expect leniency from us because
wd are removed from the actual scene of battle.
“ ■ ' '<)' ' -----------------*-----------------
CONFOUNDING THE MUSIC CRITICS
The unprecedented retirement of Marion Talley,
WtMOe meteoric rise a few years ago brought wide-
spread acclaim from music lovers, again has put
the auuic critics to talking about this gifted young
«woman. Until a positive announcement si made by
u>o singer, metropolitan followers of grand opera
will continue to make surmises ranging from
charges that she is pulling h press agent stunt to
beliefs that she has failed to reach the degree of
perfection which she should have in order to con-
ilnua as an outstanding singer.
If her retirement has been the result of the lat-
ter belief, and critics have been hinting for sev-
eral months that she has not come up to the full-
est expectations, she acted wisely in choosing pre-
mature retirement to an enforced retirement later.
Young aa she is, she has time yet to perfeet her
Voire and her personality to regain the position in
the world of music she is leaving.
Her announcement of an early retirement might
{ well be emulated by men in the field of business
and In the professions. Oftentimes men who have
enjoyed success fail to see the inevitable decline
toWard which they are gliding and end up sans
money and sans popularity. Men at the heads of
businesses often cling on years past the time when
they should have gracefully retired, sticking to the
f-date methods they grew up with rather than
ap new methods with which they are not
in my1oftjr'MNijtiil towtatanoi
.JW» -tw dtodntothera' w^- *-—
bad to take over toe fa
several children
fep jpa caw the aoa died and the
t-in-law AM from under.
1 the children any-
tom money but
down. In another
and moffter died
n were shipped
ry to tbeir New
toar. X don’t know
they would have
own boute, but 1
OCEAN STEAMSHIP STOCK WILL NOT BE
GIVEN AWAY
This passion of ocean travelers to make haste,
and the imminent menace of the dirigibles and
their breed which threaten to multiply and replenish
the heavens, have caused a desperate state of mind.
Will they surrender to the air invadrs* Are they
discouraged? Will they take their punishment ly-
ing down or cowering in safe harbors? Not by a
darned sight, the casual reader concludes after see-
ing the Associated Press piece coming from Lon-
don describing the proposed production of Marine
Whippets, Super-Olympics, Super-Mauretanias,
whose capacity for getting across with thousand*
of passengers is ample assurance to manufacturers
of lighter-than-air ships and ponderous seaplanes
that the old-fashioned Way of. following the waves
has by no means been abandoned.
Still, for several decades at least there will be
timorous persons to crowd the staterooms of these
ships now building—passengers possibly pledged
by their grandmothers never to leave terra firms
under any circumstances unless it ia to go voyag-
ing on an unsinkable ship. Doubtless, too, even in
this air-minded world there will be children and
grandchildren of this generation who will car* for
sea travel for the sake of sea travel; persona who
believe that the journey is the main thing and not
simply the arriving. And, after all, the boat that
can slip through from Plymouth to New York in
four days can not be called anyone’s pet tortoise.
That moderate—if you please—speed is swift
enough for any average person whose mother didn’t
rear him to be a little wing-heeled Mercury.—The
Birmingham News.
__________________ ■]
VOCATION AND ACOVATION
The medium through which
Oomwell, the broker, finds relaxa-
tion from the violent activities of
the stock market is perhaps the
most curious Of all. For he invented
it, more or less, the painting of
pictures in water-color on t Issue-
paper behind which a light is plac-
ed.
Manuel and Passes likewise paint
for the fun of it The formers real, for an awakening with prospeettve-'
art is making transformations,
while the other's, of course, is writ-
ing realistic novels, when he is not
on a walking tour like the one
through Louisiana, the scenes bf
which he has sketched
The others devote C„.._
more completely to painting,
though^ some were not always a?-
w. for exathple, is a
ing champion,
the younger artists,
Bonge bi merely supporting himself
•-------- n .
Has anyone noticed Vice Presi-
dent Curtis' name in the napers
since March 4? Nothing goes into
Innocuous desuetude as rapidly as
a vice president. Even Hellandman.i
couldn’t survive it.—Port Worth
Record-Telegram.
--o---------
HARD TO BELIEVE
More than 12 years after the occurrence, Ger-
many now declares that German agents were in
no wise responsible for acta of sabotage which oc-
carred prior to the entry of this country in the
World War, and hence the German government
- cannot be held responsible for claims totaling |24,-
fiWJM growing out of these occurrences, including
th* ,Black Tom explosion at the Lehigh Valley ter-
minal in ^oroey City in 1916. Germany claims that
her aganta during that period only were taking ob-
aarVaUMM and ware attempting to cultivate Amer-
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 212, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 18, 1929, newspaper, April 18, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335681/m1/8/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.