Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 144, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 29, 1930 Page: 8 of 8
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LONDON. Jan. 29—In private
Coach Terrence Myracle’s Eagle
Last Day Showing
MN
With
HOFFMAN & LAKEY
Mrs. Drake’s .
SANDWICHES
<
ARE FRESH EVERY DAY -
Drive by and get ’e.m at
hr
Edison Radios
Cottage Cheese
most of them, would be no match
i healthy bodi<
£■
Re tn ember
Sea Food Lunch
a.
A
American Cheeae
ft
Iff-
- ~-~-
®*r~-
o
st “
L
C
THE BEST FOOD
Why Furniture?
/ W
LEE H. BRADY
Phone 242
Because it is something
. Dealer
for all the family—and for
ft
SPARKMAN
years to come.
402 W Hickory.
Denton, Texas.
»>
NEW BEAUTY
9
For the
NEW FORD
I
r —1—
HEADLEE TIRE CO.
I
“WE KNOW TIKES"
HANDY MOTOR CO.
AND BATTERIES
Vs
M
JU
i*
..r.
X.
£
^***^■31
II
-
I
‘ *
WEST SIDE
SQUARE
p’tJfcEwW" -
Bulgarian Buttermilk
Pasteurized Sweet Milk
13-plate
15-plate
12-volt
Road Service Anywhere
Phone SS, 11)00 or 44
$7.96 Ex.
$10.95 Ex.
$12.95 Ex.
Thursday and Friday
His First Talking
Picture!
TELEPHONE
75
Reuben E. Turner
Grocery and Market
A Clarence Brown pro-
duction with Anita Page,
Karl Dane, J. C. Nugent.
Phyllis Haver J
James Murray
Every Friday from 11:30
m. to 8 p. m.
;i 1
"a
) u« swell up considerable, and ev.
if to eweU.som« also Nut Bed ‘
TACOMA, Wash.. Jan.
"Strangler” Lewis, former
house of commons
t At 6:15 p. m. MacDonald will re-
ceive Premier Wakatsukl, Japanese
delegate, at the same office, and at
7:00 p. m. will receive Foreign Min-
BATTERY AND ELECTRIC
COMPANY
New City Cafe
East Side Square.
Denton Dairy Products Co.
220 W. Oak St.
Phone 292.
Fresh Creamery Butter
$1
IS*
k
Starter and Generator Ser*
T*
■
J
x*
I
5
“A
I
C Willard 3
Autex Batteries
Portables
ORE
DYCHE’S DRUG STORE
College Supplies.
■
»-
-
r
'“I
'•
1
*
Harry Teasley Grocery
Phone 498 We Deliver
IV”
CHANEY
■
BROOKS DAIRY, Inc.
103 Ave. A. Phone 467.
I
f’I
^4
{F J fj
I
__. ..-2^
A
Blue Ribbon Cocoanut, lb.. 25c.
loco*. 2 lb*.. 25e
Country Sausage. lb.. 25c.
Pure Hog Lard, lb. 15c.
No. 2 Sour Pit. Red Cherries. 25c.
No. 2 1-2 Syrup Pack Peaches, 25c.
No. 1 1-2 Fancy Apple*, 10c.
Gallon Blackbcrriea, 65c.
Call 188 or 86 When You Want
Drug Service
the laughs, life and
loves of the gobs
ashore and afloat!
Sprinters Hold
Spotlight For
Indoor Season
General Electric
Refrigerators
Proprietor
Denton Pecan Shellery
New Ford body lines and colors now on
display at our showrooms
F ‘
Taxi Beauties
A Mack Sennett Comedy.
29 —Ed
heavy-
weight wrestling chanaplon, head-
locked his way to a win over Oeorge
McLeod of Nebraska here last night.
Lewis lost the first fall but used his
head crushing hold to take the two
succeeding ones.
Glasses Scientifically
Fitted
-1^ STUDENTS RIOT
AFTER SPANISH
Phone 126. £
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L.3 . ,pr, J
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bpi
Home of Paramount Pictures
Last Times Today
w • --------— -
Entrancing
Enrapturing
News of the Sick
The little daughter of Mr and
Mrs. Paul Thomas had a large pe-
can kernel which had accidentally
been thrust Into the left nostril of
her nose removed Tuesday.
Delicious Home-Made
Candy
A big assortment of Mary
Anne and home-made candy.
Colored Mints.
Creamy Chocolates
Turkish Paste
Date Loaf and other kinds. ;
The Coffee Shop
Northwest Corner Square.
— Is the foundation food upon whi
nW>Eft
L
. ‘ ■ r-
--- ---------PENTON, TEXAS, RECORD
1 jJ
'MpT’
fc
COOPER TIRES
—
Risko Too Little -
to Meet Campolo
. f
NEW YORK. Jan. 29 —Little
Johnny Risko, Cleveland baker boy,
is too wmall and delicate to be ex-
posed to the heavy punches of Vlo-
torio Campolo, Argentine Oaucho,
in New York 3tate. So the New
York state boxing commission, In
solemn conclave, ruled yesterday Jn discussion of humanizing
SIX PLEAD GUILTY TO CON-
SPIRACY CHARGE
OKLAHOMA CITY, Jan. 29—Six
persons named as defendants tn the
Pottawatomie County liquor conspir-
acy case, including Homer Knap-
penberger, former mayor of Earls-
boro, entered pleas of guilty to con-
spiracy charges at the opening of
the trial in federal district court
here today. Judge Edgar 8. Vaught
announced sentences would be Im-
posed Feb. 15.
the first time, has 11 games with
it^f HRB
Braves, Robins, Cardinals, Phllhes
and the Cincinnati Reds. 4?'
The other four American League
Clubs have but few inter-leaciia
contests, St. Louis and Washing-
ton each flve, Cleveland and Bos-
ton each four. The Browns play
Brooklyn and the Cardinals. Cleve-
land meets the Giants and Cin-
cinnati. Washington takes on the
Braves for flve games whlle the Red
Sox meet the Braves and Brook-
lyn In the North. l -i
Thursday Only
COLLEEN
' Host of Fancy Dress Ball “Quite
an original idea, that, coming as
a milkman."
The Other; “Yes, I shan't look
so conspicuous going home tn the
morning."
jjM&r.......... " ...... 1 ............ 1
, < How Do You Like These Two Reports for Beginning
the New Year?
January the National Aid Life had paid for insurance on the
itlng to SM.931.5OO 00 Members in good standing. 38.88S As-
ia 71.16100 Dm th Iomm* paid to date. 11.519.12041 And 92 per cent
thsge losses were paid before the funeraiv
ids by tt —
By HERBERT W. BARKER
(Associated Press Sports Writer)
NEW YORK. Jan 29 —Sprinters,
it appears, will furnish most of the National League Clubs, meel
thrills of tile 1930 Indoor track and
field season.
With no NuTmi, Wide, Peltzer or
Hahn in the immediate offing, mid-
dle distance events, source of most
of the sensations in the track world
for the last five years, may have to
take a back seat while the boys who
specialize in the short distances do
their stuff.
The East has a great trio of dash
men In Karl Wildermuth, George-
town’s Intercollegiate outdoor cham-
pion. Jimmy Daley, of Holy Cross,
Indoor intercollegiate title-holder,
and Chet Bowman, Newark A. C.
veteran. But they will have to be
at top form to make a showing
against the invasion of such West-
ern stars as George Simpson of Ohio
State, Simpson's team-mate, Kriss,
and Jack Elder of Notre Dame, as
well as the Southwestern flash, Cy
Leland of Texas Christian Univer-
sity.
Simpson, the World's record hold-
er at 100 yards—9 2-5 seconds—has
entered the New York A C games
at Madison Square Garden Feb. 17.
Elder, Kriss. Bowman. Leland and
tab Canadians. Johnny FVtzpat-
fick and Leigh Miller are entered
in the sprints of the Millrose A. A.
games Feb 8.
Elder, with a victory over Wilder-
muth already to hla credit this year,
makes hia second eastern appear-
ance In the St. Joseph's Catholic
Club games at Newark tonight. Hfe
chief opposition probably will come
Daley.------ — ‘ "
Rupert Fi."___,__,____
50, 60, and 70 yards, distances well
Keep your medicine chest filled with home rem-
edies, for “an ounce of prevention is worth a pound
of cure.”
declining to sanction the Risko-
Campolo bout Madison Square Gats
den had scheduled for Feb. 7. ■
The commission said that Risko,'
Nearly one acre in eveYy four in
the United States is natural-wood-
land, once’ covered with UriUxir,
which will not profitably produce
agricultural crops. Of every four
acres of thia natural woodland three
have been cut over. We have de-
stroyed the best and most accessible
of our natural forests.
The best food in the human dietary from every -flr
angle and viewpoint is cow’s milk. If a man's stom-
ach is his friend, milk is h^s stomach’s best friend.
It is admirably qualified as such "by the ease with
which it is digested, the accelaration with which it
is assimilated, its ability to lend itself to appropria-
tion without waste or refuse, and its superlative
power to nourish. f-
Be sure it’s Brooks Dairy Perfectly Pasteurized
Milk.
L I
K.. I
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fe.
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I
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1^’
t
L ' m
Ef-S ■ -
K
Br-r
There came continuing assurances
of pr ogress, although al| delegations
wire cautious about dtacloslng de-
tails. A concensus of statements
from the five delegation headquar-
ters indicated that in the week
since the conference convened the
following seemed today to have been,
pr about to be, accomplished.
■Much Accomplished y
First, the British and French
have approached a compromise com-
bining the global and categorical
methods of measuring navies so
that each nation will be allotted a
total tonnage which she may dis-
tribute metre pr less as she sees fit
among various classes of ships. This
will be discussed tomorrow with
prospects of acceptance.
Second, France and Italy tempo-
rarily have suspended theis disa-
___________£ .
ALWAYS IN STYLE
Lilac
time
With
GARY COOPER
ANWi!
ores of them. Squadrons of them.
>• Heaven* Clack with -hem
moping, looping, darting, diving,
unglng to destruction Every known
atsm* fifty ■ > - A
wai iu uiuwun mto n
ring flying circus
lean start Risko whipped. Scott
Cleveland several years ago and 1
FOUND
A place to buy full fashioned hose
i that are slightly irregular for One
DoHar.
Ar-Lfi-Tex-O
i s Store, Denton, Texas
COMING NEXT WEEK
GLORIA SWANSON
in
“THE TRESPASSER”
A UNITED ARTI8T ALL TALKlNYi-BINGINO PICTURE
Edwards & McCrary!
Phone 580.
■i it r ‘"X”';
Now going on Wonderful
bargains in clothing for ev-
ery member of the family.
.—......
JC---- cral Primo de Rivers, for six years
The Boston Store
Sells for Less.
.DREAMLAND
?> SV . '•
■ Y'T*"
conference today made extensive
preparations for tomorrow’s Impor-
tant open plenary session at St.
K
-
Green for Vigor!
A health-giving diet de-
mands a certain percentage
of fresh, green vegetables,
for the vitamines and min-
eral value, and for rough-
age.
Phone 25 for Fresh Veg-
etables.
___ _________
ifAMTHURSDAY L Maj™ Leagu es
CHICAGO, Jan. 29 —The tiro «g-
lw leagues wW have plenty of,—
j for a pre-worH g|
debate as to their superiority I
K-
up ’•
I ■
l C- L’
\
We maintain a free delivery for the accommo- *■ i
dation of our customers. Phone us your drug wants > 1
and we’ll see to it that you receive your order fn *
record time.
MR
W
NO CHARGE
For rent batteries while we re-charge or repair your
battey.
Starter and generator repair service.
Electric brake adjusting and relining.
Denton Brake Service Co.
Waiter Smoot
315 North Lscust.
^^^B I —
..........
^Bt|.;
"~BK i
I 1
p *
&
K-
t
Ik*'*'' f
WindowGIass
—one of the common and inexpensive necessities of
modern times—hardly given a thought, when all gois
well, but greatly missed if broken or needed to make more
sunlight in a room.
We have a good stock of WINDOW GLASS.
Call on us for any size you need. If you cannot put
it in yourself, let us help you.
. It is poor economy to do without WINDOW-GLASS,
when the cost is so small an^ the benefits so great '
Evers Hdw.Co
■” “ — Brushes - , - Duco
Jiii.
MAURICE
■ CHEVALIER
in Paramount'!
»• Spectacular Sophisticated
Tuneful Picture
The Love Parade
Produced by
Ernst Lubitsch
with a *narklin< cast
Including
Jeanette MacDonald
Lupino Lane Lillian Roth
. A dlaealnful modem Queen In het
■> luxurious court turn* marriage
into » Bcandhl, until the megoiftic
Maurice Chevalier tamea her with
hl* roguish singing of sly French'
conge and enticing airs of ro-
.. meace
W/
Made in Co-operation
with the U. S. Destroyer
Fleet—
were arrested and many were In-
jured, several seriously.
Meanwhile General Primo de Ri-
| vera whose resignation was accept-
| ed by King Alfonso last night, con-
ferred with his successor—and per-
ennial enemy—General Damaso Ber-
enguer, chief of King Alfonso XIII's
military household and former com-
mander In Borocco.
General Primo de Rivera, bidding
farewell to King Alfonso and to
the country as head of the govern-
ment and explaining reasons for his
resignation, issued an official note
which concluded:
I "And now to rest a little, to re-
cover my health. Two thousand
three hundred and twenty six days
have been filled with -inquitltude,
iespoiuibllity and labor! But rest-
ed. then if God wishes. I shall re-
turn to serve Spain until I die!"
He then expressed the belief It
would be necessary for the govern-
ment to have some form of dictator-
ship to continue governing the
country during the next few years.
He pledged his personal loyalty to
King Alfonso and declared he wel-
comed the incoming government.
General Berenguer's statement
upon his accession contained the
words:
“I shall form a cabinet composed
mostly of civilians, none of whom
however are as yet selected. From
this moment until my government
may end I swear allegiance to the
constitution of 1876 "
Demonstrations here did not get
started until after midnight, when
a crowd of students set fire to a
news stand and overturned another.
The fire department was called .and
great excitement prevailed while po-
lice and firemen combined forces to
disperse the crowd. As soon as dem-
onstrations were quieted in one sec-
tion they began in another.
1
wf
MODENA WILSON'S
• °------ Wright Bldg. ,
YOU CAN BUY IT IN DENTON
THE SERVICE GROCERY
AU That the Name Implies.
Phon. 442.
conferences and consultations, del-
’ -egationa to the five-power naval
spring. They will clash in 83 inter-
le4jue exhibition games prior to
The world’s champion Philadel-
phia Athletics lead, as In 1938, with’
23 games with teams from the 8efl-N
lor circuit, while the Chicago White
Sox come next with 17, all with
the New York Giants The Athlet-
ics have seven games scheduled
with the Phillies, two in Florida
and flve In Philadelphia. They also
encounter the St Louis Cardinals
In four games, the Boston Braves
in six, Brooklyn in two and Cin-
cinnati In four.
The New York Yankees tackle
National League Clubs In 11 games
in Florida and wind up their train-
ing season with two games with
Brooklyn at home The Yanka have
18 games with minor league clubs
cn their grand tour of the South
and southwest after breaking camp
at St. Petersburg. ;
Detroit, training In Florida Ibr greement over the Italian claim to
Ball Brothers
MARKET, GROCERY AND DELICATESSEN
Telephone No. 9.
—:------------ ..i'-, . i,1 ........... .....................
m-"*-! . ____________
x-y ' - =T| ---------—b th. woman who nlwte her h.ta, cwt.. dr.M«. .1-
Naval Conference Delegates Prepare —-
P rji o * TL J Northeast Corner Square.
ror Open plenary Session Ihursday —“-----—
ister Grand! of Italy. The purpose
of these conference la to inform thfc
American, Japanese and Italian
chiefs as to what has taken place
In the British and French confer-
ences. *
The British prime minister wtU
open tomorrow's plenary session
and then the other delegates will be
given an opportunity of speaking in
alphabetical order.
W e althy Indian’s
Transfer of Funds
Is Held Ill•j’al
TOPEKA. Kan.. Jan. The
federal government today was faced
with the task of reassembling the
scattered fortune of Jackson Bar-
nett, incompetent Oklahoma Creek
Indian, who eight years ago gave
with a thumbprint signature more
than 31,000.000 In liberty bonds to
charitable institutions and his white
wife.
The order which will effect re-
turn of the fortune to the govern-
ment came yesterday in a decision
handed down by the United States
court of appeals lor the tenth dis-
trict, holding that transfer of the
huge sum to other parties %was Il-
legal, since It was held in trust by
the government as guardian of Bar-
nett.
The ruling came In a suit brought
by the government against Marshall
L. Mott, Washington lawyer, seek-
ing return of 115,000 paid him as
attorney’s fees for handling phases
of the transfer.
Mrs. Barnett was given $550,000
TYie other half of the Indian's for-
tune. $550,000, was given to the Bap-
tist Home Mission Society ol "New
York. ;
from letter from our MBA Health and Accident Aaan :
M»«nowlnc you are interested In the aucceaa and protfr.-iu.
Association, we arr giving the figure* showing the gain made
remluma CoUectec during 1929. •10,275,666 60 Premium* col-
; |92S. S9.487.704 00 Oaln made In premium* collected In 192#.
jritb four good help we made SJargor gain last year than any
W similar compaay fa the world Your* very truly. Mutual Benefit Health
IMtdMt AMn. C C Crta*. Treasurer
h reports as the two above, ha*
■» of our policy tolden have a right
.
■ Ur* •-A'V • •*-*'. *Jv***,^^*t!f**T “
■■■
-----------------.
Some thinks the Ground Hog regulates the weather, but the Hofi^w
Mutual Life Association .does not worry, with Jack Barnard “field ma^J I
ager” and Edgar H.* Doolin “Agency Supervisor”, the Association Is I
going over the top. Room 300, 8moot-Curtis Bldg., P. 0. Ho* 898.
Phono IM. WATCH US OROW. . —H
'■haiWn***. - - .■ ” r* ■ I
* urn 4 .*« . . i ui . ai.-t. «4«* i#».- —a . •< |
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n
.fc
■}• i
if 1'
Lena M. Skiles, Opt. D.
Office McCray’s Jewelry
Store.
a navy as large as the French, but
with the understanding the Italian
delegation will have an opportun-
ity tomorrow to expand further her
thesis of parity.
Third, the Americans have made
subtsantial progress with their ef-
forts to have cruisers considered,
first when ship classes are taken up.
Fourth, under America?! leader-
ship tha conference has determined
to tbrdk opeq all ita plenary ses-
sions to the press of the world.
Little Dhagrcemen!
Perhaps to this list should be ad-
ded the general aeeempMshment of
having.,, brought the conference
through its initial Week without an
important diplomatic encounter
save only the Franco-Italian disa-
greement over parity. ~ ♦
Colonel Henry L, Stimson, Amer-
ican secretary of state, in a radio
address last night described the
conference as hard at work, but con-
fidently at wefrk.
As conversations proceeded It was
disclosed there was a strong dispo-
sition in some quarters to inelude
f naval war-
fare in the conference agenda
r » Reference of Colonel Stimson In
Alls radio address to this subject at-
’ traded wide attention. Colotiel
who has met them all and whlppetf Stimson said that If abolition of
L fc—12 2— —2_21 the submarine was Impossible the
for Campolo, who dropped a decis- .United States hoped to restrict its
ion to Phil Scott in his last Amw- use It was understood the French
Would like to go even further and
_ -tfreft a code covering other typas of
beaten among others, Otto Von Po- warships.
Conference with MacDonald
fc.— — - _>4faU
meet him
I
-Jr
BRAZILIAN STEAMER TOWED
TO DRY DOCKS
HAVRE, France, Jan, 29—The
Brazilian steamer Alagrete, which
ran ashore during a fog four miles
from Havre last night, was pulled
off the rocks today and taken In tow
for a dry-dock. The vessel carried
36,000 bags of coffee and officials
said moat of. the cargo probably
would not be damaged.
XUm--- - J-e.. fc.a--.^
... ~ _
1930
Results Alrea«
suited to the Notre Dame football
playwer.
Fred Sturdy, famous Yale pole
vaulter, will make his first appear-
ance of the year against such riv-
als as Barney Berllnger of Penn-
sylvania, and Vic Packard, former-
ly of Pittsburgh and a member of
the 1928 Canadian Olympic team.
Phil Edwards, Ray Conger and Ed-
die Blake are to battle in a 1,000
yards scratch race.
rat. Ricardo Bertazzolo. Jack Shaft I
«. Elder to to run 4a the I
Mill* sprtaU. series at
Delaney, ‘. ““ ' a3r8T3<T p m tn his offices at- thaj----
The commission’s decision oame os
a shock to sports writers. Risko, a
rough and ready customer at all
times, has been able to protect him-
self without outside help time he
has fought here. He has been par-
ticularly successful against bigger
heavyweights.
FORT WORTH WM.:
PREMIER "auffs[TQ pyy EAGLE! Games Fixed 8p
MADRID. Jan 29 ■ Police today
battled crowds of students boister-
ously celebrating in the streets of
the capital the resignation of Gen-
premier and dictator. Almost 2001 eagers will meet tjie T. & P. Coal portunltv
■ • ■ —----- *- and .Oil quintet, leaders of the Fort
W6rth major city league, on
Thursday evening, it was announced
Wednesday.
The game was matched to give
the Eagles a final stiff contest be-
fore taking the rood this week-end
tor four hard T. I. A. A. games with
Huntsville and Nacogdoches.
The Fort Worth team this year
is leaamg in the major city league
at Port Worth and the game is ex-
pected to be just as high class bas-
ket ball as would be seen if both
quintets were college representa-
tives.
JC.PENNEYCQ
Honor Muslin
A household staple and
an outstanding value.
Only, yard,
124c
5?F8SBtBS»rs3
nmumuimnmmma.
E W
Ilfirili
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 144, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 29, 1930, newspaper, January 29, 1930; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369955/m1/8/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.