Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 185, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 18, 1930 Page: 6 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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» y
if-
WAFER
Times do
P««
>j«ct
ixjdldfci
L
For
ijvct
CMMUdi
one of three things lying around the house!
mt*
Object
ngw
—
I Mate
I
♦hone ass
Opening
'oi
t
FOR YOUR SALADS
tor
• - 1 ,
>ject
were
,te
T1
3 ‘JR
abject
They were talking about jnys-
The
Loafer went over in ttie agricul-
■ i
i
.■j
•'IL.
op
nd -
much for any sort of a rabbit— |
I
For
If will be spent.
You've earned it.
For
tor
rtut of one little Incident A
I everything
j ;
Oandl
R
what
FOLKS
F
HARRIS
vertised products!
Ian.
ran I
set of china or a
-
«
F
t
Baby
2
w
. f
2
[ V i
• t-
- ____________________
y_________
u/'y-rr*
—
•a
..
KBMMl
.1
Products that
Products that
It’s your money.
For fuel, clothes, furniture, food, all sorts of necessities
. . . and if there’s any left, for luxuries.
' • •. < 4* ‘ ' — f ■ ‘
•-’V- ” -4*?' , ' «.
Because It Doeah’t Pay to Advertiac Poor Product*,
It Doe* Pay to Buy Those Advertised
I
j
Be sure to get your
money’s worth
right Then came the
displays. Some swell
and
were
| v un vw I .» a jk <*4^1*
cultural paper were busy and tried
to sell Loafer a paper and a map. GmCrally favcmible
Loafer tried to jew them down but |
1
THIS IS WOODSON
TOOTING
i < ■ •
For C<
lubjact
r.
onlv
close
Oo
iject
p*
ubjact
R.
Candii
would have had his
yet
Loafer tried to go
auditorium and met
they mostly Jackasses
chang;.
-H
■r
J
p
low
u.ao
1480
1400
1507
1603
1524
l
HOME MADE
MAYONNAISE
P’J
Pr
I.
I 21
v ?
’1
ISE
MRS. DALTON’S
I
I
dU‘■'
on his terrgees. Wilks Is building a
stem of terraces on one of his
5 ‘W
r
ri«w *
Jan
' Mar
I Muy
1 July
| Ort
j Dec
1 Max'
1526
Why wait for
reception -
Cattle and
plain light steers 940:
to 11.50; desirable cows '
slaughter calves up to 11.00
Sheep 1 .
T.50-8 no. aged wethers 8 00
* 1 'i ■ ■' ’
it used to
to sell for
now
good
was
the map. The sheet writer began
talking and the sucker kept walk-
Nother special blond coflee good
enough for anybody is B'-lling for
35 cent* Try a pound
.St
I’
’ *
not touch the sheep." '
man. woman and child that came
along had to p J. _1.
that came In reach Signs did
Coffee to cheaper than
be. Coffee that we had
35 cents a short time ago is
selling at 25 cents and it is
coffee too.
re*v; lower
lower;
Hires clom-d firm.
March 8 07; Mav BOO; Ju’v 8 13; i
October 8 14; December 8 19; January
8.21 I
I loved ’that dog with a boy's de\o- j
lion and when he fell dead I could
stand it no longer.".
j
'A .. - . •
i
b *
nedy’s bouse and when he went
to the door some men told him
that they wanted him to get Ids
surgical case and go with them He
told them that
his horse but they told him that he
nJed not bother about the ho"<c
ar They had a horse and wovM t
brtnp, him back When he went out I
' iS «j.thcy blindfolded him and placed
.£■ Vi»x 0 horon T'1 .«»r»
' the
i
present indications, 40 more reftn-
confer- cries mutt cease operation in the
near future
T
Ibb<
J
7--
Close
1555
1607 <»
1528 30
1537- 39
1537—38
1550
Mar
IO
East Texas got Loafer’s vote
cause they hud most to eat.
Some sheet writers lor an
"Il I knew that cohi would be as
1 good as It was last year I would
plant all my cotton land in corn
I this year.” said T. M. Killings worth
I of Little Elm My com last yegr
| i. ade more money than did the
j cotton land If 1 was not ,iu8t
’ afraid T would plant comi instead
of cotton As it is I will plant more
com anyhow but guess 1 will still
or eight prizes with
Wise County was In
i .J
'• fe1 '• . .S ; ? f 1
" T1 ■■lf*-------------Tillite „„ --
■
nor nowhere. Loafer knows and he
has good reason for knowing. How
. «V¥ ONE, GET ONE
FREE!
"We have moved back to Lewis-
ville and are again running the ho-
tel." said W H Prague. "Moved off
five years ago and are right back
where we left.” Prague is an old
time friend of Loafer’s having been
boys in the same community.
■ fr- irtijii^i
The London naval < (inference
rapidly approaching 1
the three diplomats shown here
playing big parts Aristide. Briand,
\ l, W* ' afe''
Refineries Closed
VHNOVHt H a rec*nt
cnOe of the , Agrarian jiurty the
CrechoBlovakian Minister of Agri-
culture. Bradic announced that in
the past tew years lack of business
has compelled ' eighteen .Czecho-
slovak sugar refineries to <*ase op-
eration and that, according to the
TT*f remniTaMc how that singer
can hoki one of his notes tor almost’
a minute.
That's nothing—why I’ve held one
cf hl* notes lor two years.
rl
.. •
land and burning Johnny Peiple-
mann gone to Pilot Point—Main-
tainer grading roads Dalt Keen at-
tending boss Monday in Pilot Point
—rode hossback and led mufea—
photograph wanted Strong effort
being made in Aubrey to reorganise
the bank prospect for rain dispell-
ed by high worth wind—planting
corn popular.
V
Li
I
I
re w
h "ha
Ll laeJ
I
h i<>< 1 n I
» d
♦ertouir happenings and Jim Chafti-
1 bera of Lewisville tokj of one that
happened to. Dr J W. Kennedy of
L—many years ajo. Dr “
himself Was responsible
-3
- >
■■■*!• ><5
GENERAL INSURANCE
"BUT IT IN ORNTOW Gvn> tservlc* Drug Best!
Good Groceries a good 1930 slogan.
Craddock’s Cash Grocery
115 S. Elm. - i, * Phone 71.
~ 1 I JTlfftf ”'i ~1 ~ "Nntj r
L. B. Shaver
B«-s
>><*
JN
■r- ht**
■ - ■
t
.
I '
E
Mbjectl
hB
Midata
Bob J set
IFo<mTnoiI ftnTrix “
Phone 80
a
In addition to awards published
elsewhere. Plnck Underwood won
third prize of exhibtor's flock of
Rambouillet, sheep Only Texas A.
Ar M and Oklahoma A. Ac M beat
him and a she said these colleges
are hard to beat
• nFNTON. TKKAB, RE(T>R1
“Fighting Faces”
At Naval Meet
a* '
L v-
F * v /
r
J’ James E. Chambers of Lewisville
I j van In a reminiscent mood and
talking about told Limes in the
■ Bartonville country The name of
Uw late W. C. Prather was men-
tioned and that- set Jim off on
things that happened when he was
much younger than now and when
life’s tragedies were acute
“One Sunday morning a neigh-
bor came to our house and told
us that a mad dog had been in
• tlie community the night before
and that .he had been flghtin; with
many of the dogs in the neighbor-
hood. The neighborhood was aroup- ,
cd and a hunt started Frashcr had | - . „
stick to the cotton.”
’ 1 1'wf
IT
-
...... v,V' W’Vrv’'**' ......—rjwww ,
PALI.A* SPOTS
4. DAJ-LA4L .March 18 .
'.mlddlina 15 05; Houston 15.65
* vesion 15 70
‘1 - •■>» NEW ORLKANM HPOT8
f Ngw ORLEANS. March
When you buy a watch or a rake, a
radio net that is advertised in this paper, you are buying a
product Whose maker is willing to talk about it, put what
he knows about it in print and sign his name to it. When
you buy advertised merchandise by name, you get the ut-
most of purchasing value from every dollar.
<
through that
a feller who
told Ixmfer that it was no use. That
he had to go out at the same hole
he came tn at A one-way old audi-
torium Loafer went and found a
side exit that let him nut Into the
street and went Into the new agri-
culture building There he found
the chickens, turkeys and other
feathered folk. They were good
chickens Good turkeys and good
arrangements Coops in double decks
to (jpnservc space and It looked all
merchant’s
doings and
loafer looked at the display of the
packing companies. One of them
showed how they were preparing to
sell all the meat used in the coun-
try in packages You lust called up
the phoneTind ordered roast, steak,
chops or liver and the man brought
it to you in the original package.
Loafer guesses that it will be all
right but he has grown used to the
butcher weighing his hand and is
not in favor of cutting out that
time-honored practice Somehow
Loafer is ag;n that new fangled idea
of selling the steaks, chops and
roasts sight unseen Mav be all right
but then It mav not
Urafer went Ipto the automobile | «he did not believe that old fat'
hall and it uas some hall, believe j man knew any more about that
this Ixrafer No buggies nor carriages sheep than she did She was pretty
at all and Just a few hbrsea and'near right at that.
DENTON COUNTY BONDS ~
Free from All Federal Income Taxea.
Write for our list of offeringg. ■
Buchanan Investment €<
(ten* Bldg DAll AS
J. C. COIT, Depton Repmaentativa.
tn 813, Smoot-Curt is BMg - Fbona 104
I .....- -
Hleh
IMS
1505
1530
1539
1528
1550
.....X Jan 1530:
1190; July 1508: Oct 1507; Dec |
Pr
1547
1527
1495
1518
1528
1522
1503
1542
1534
Jan new
Mar 1507. Mav 1528; July 1638.
ORLEANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS March 18 —Cotton
fUluri:. cloned very steady at net ad-
vance of 26 tn 43 points
Pr Cl
1525
1405
1485
1501 '
1501 j
1522 I
1470-B.
_ - ’ loafer caught Chance o’llks at
ike it fire at the lightest touch home and also caught him working
* “*’3 tnrronne VJIIWk Ik HliilMhw A
No, thia lan't a blast furaaco that Alva Smith of CiucinnaU la Bring.
It's a real “he man" pipe whittled from hickory. It hae a bowl 10
Inches deep and a pipeful of tobacco hg.s a lasting quality whic*
will satisfy any veteran smoker. Wives, imagine a husband leavtn
* / ■ ''' 1 ' r
1 j
I
s Pip©!
same thing goes for $150 goats. Vll-
Slgns all over the place said "Do . ure show. Had five women and four
Do you eat pickles? If you arc a
woman you do The ladies cat
picktea bi>t ♦he men don’t much. A
great btg quart of sour pickles for
two bits. A quart of sweet pickles
for 35 cents and they arc good. Both
arc good, better get a quart or two
Baby chicks are coming into the
world rapidly and we have the
Starteria to start them right and
keep them right? It is a balanced
ration. Then we haye the
I Chick Chow
call Phdhe BO ami us w« do the
ronk '
you eould hear him for two miles.
Math was soundinc the warning
vociferously and we knew that he
had faund something so a runner
was tent after the men and they
soon arrived at Math's place He
told them of seeing the dog go
down into a small branch and there
have a fit Frasher rode up in sight
of the dog and raised that long
rifle and when It cracked that dog
hunt was ended
"Then every dog in the neighbor-
hood was condemned to die for
fear that they might have been
bitten by the mad dog It was a
sad time- and Frasher was ap-
pointed as official executor of the
<.0/8 He had the do;s brought to
his home apd led oft down in the
woods where they never came back
My brother and I were appointed
to take our dog over and have him
killed It was an awful task The
dog thought we were gojng hunt-
ing so he ranged arouhd trying to
start a rabbit or some game until
we reached the place wdiere Frasher
was awaiting the neighborhood
dogs Our do’ was running gayly
about but suddenly he ran up on
♦he carcass of another dog and he
stopped to investigate That rifle
cracked again and he lay a crump-
led mass of dead dog and there
wete two boys running home as
isst as they could blinded with
♦ ?ars and sobbing as though their
hearts would break It seemed to
ic ihat my heart would break,
hkt wks the first tragedy that
capje into my life and it hurt as
bad as any other that ever came
• EORT WORTH LIVE MTO< K
FORT WORTH. March 18— (U S
D A. 1- Hogs 800; Steady; top 99 35.
for good lights; bulk truck hogs 8 50-
C1 875
----------- calves: 1,600; steady; I
yearlings up ’
“ 7 50-8 00. |
1.100; steady; shorn lambs
he spent
ns an
liir, Johann
soldier tn the
Imperial Army returned home by
covering almost 2.000 miles on foot
without a card of identification in
his possession
a '
fellows than there was in the cat-
tle If their ribbons had been hung
on the leaders Loafer would not
have been judge for any money. He
ribbons until
an ab-
yello’
.Mi Mav 79
r82 1-4
| Oats.: Ho. 3 White 45 1-2-48
EOKEXiN EXt HANGEX
NEW YORK March 18—Foreign
exchanges mlsed; Great Britain de-
mand 4 85 15-18; cables 4 88 3-16.
80-dtiv bills on banka 4.83 1-16
France, demand 3.91: Italv 5 23
1-8; Belgium 13 92 1-2: Germany 23 -
83; Tckyo 49.35; Montreal 99.93 3-4.
Great Britain dollars, others in
cent; , >
NEW YORK <<>TT<»N
NEW YORK March 18—Cotton
I opened steady at an advance of 3 to I
12 points on a continuation of c«w- I
erlng m old crop months, relatively [
firm again LlverprMil Just about met |
yesterday's IocjcI advance, and after j
some irregularity, th rmarket sold up
to 15 38 for Muy making a new high
for the present movement and a net.
advance of about 20 to 25 points on
old cron nositions
lite early advance carried the mar-
Loufer met an old ucqualntaiue
While walking through that auto-
mobile display. Loafer and this old
friend stopped behind a blq fine
car to swap reminiscences A sales-
man was showing the car to some
ladies and they went .inside and
sat down to try the upholstering or
at least that is what Loafer sup-
poses they were doing. Anyhow one
of the ladies began telliiig that
salesman how much she disliked
cars of moderata prices. Said that
nothing less than a Lincoln or a
Packard would interest her That
they had been using both and had
Anally decided that when they dis-
posed, of their Lincoln that they
would buy another of the same
make
Loafer was not paying much at-
tention as he was talking himself
and you know that keeps Loafer
awfully busy. His friend, however,
caught a word and stepped up and
peered through the back glass and
turned around grinning. Logfer
arked him what was the cause of
all that wide grin.
"Huh, I was Just listening to that
old gtrl talk about her Lincoln. I
know her and know that if the old
family Ford could only hear her now
that It would swell up and bust every
tire on it They have never had any-
thing but a Ford and to hear her
bull that salesman you would think
that she never rode In anything less
than a 35,000 car." Loafer guesses
that all the windies do not wear
trousers.
Loafer walked through the cattle
department. Lots of fat cattle but
the greater majority had white
faces. It is a white faced show. The
showing of shorthorns was modest
and the black polls were not so nu-
merous. About 200 Jerseys entertain-
ed John Underwood and Wflbur
Lowe. A lot of other fellows too but
the Jerseys all had the.'r clothes on
and Loafer could not tell what was
under the clothes Believes that he
can look at a Jersey’s head and give
a good guess at what there is under
the blanket but ht got tired Of look-
ing at that. Then there, was the
sheep and goats. Penn Heath and
Pinck Underwood were there with
their sheep. Lark Heath inspected
Penn and then left him Loafer vis-
ited witn the sheep and the goats.
The goats were all right and all busy
having a nice time Some of them
were long haired sure enough Loaf-
er saw a sign which said “Milk
Goats." He went there and saw more
goats and more kids than goats:
every one of them milk goats must
have had three kids. Saw one small-
ish goat attached to a largish ud-
der. The udder was or would have
been a credit to a tnw but looked
sadly undergoated wh’Ye it was. It
had large brown freckles on it and
Loafer wondered, it that goat gave °P Henry L. Stimson, center, chief
freckled milk. Loafer thought of of its deieration
what the~ late Homer &noot. said ‘‘ ’
w— pcuuw win, uwncQ h aersey [
“f poor U>;
own a cow and too pioud to milk a
t gpat. Loafer thought that he might
. buy a goat If the price was not too
_ _j high so he asked a mannishly cos-
human Now fat 1 tum*d Httle women what some goats
were worth.
She said tBat grade goats of
Inferior milking quality would cost
had hard luck and they soon told
him to get out of the way and let
: omeixxiv who had the price in.
Jtul Uitu it fellow with his family
came along and the .sheet writer
remembered that he I jumped up and handed him a
T cow and calf map rolled up and turned around
j to show the follow what wa» in
looked miserable Ixxiked like they! Bn asked him for one goat Yooks |
! ing- with the map When the sheet
; writer saw what, was happening and
that be was about to be shy one per-
fectly good map and no dollar to
; Jingle in the till he started a live-
ly sprint. Ran up beside the man
with the map, jerked it out of his
Long Trek ^o Home
ADA, Jugoslavia After
rent e of 15 years, most of which time
in Russia prison camps
unexchnAged prisoner of
Varga, formerly a
A ustra-Hungarian
Low
1545
1529
1507
TS20
1683
1523
1503
1535 1565 -«8
1523 1536—38
1549;
NEW YORK U Tl REM
NEW YORK. March 18—Cotton fu-
tures
is
[Jan old
1 crisis with Jan new
shown liereMnr
1 I May
“• I Jtrty
above, foreign minister of France.'Oct olrt
declares the parley has only a short IOcl new
time to live Ramsay MacDonald be-;{^
low’. British premie., faces reverses, c:-----
in parliament wt ich may throw the i >529
conference into tinm al America’s SepSi527
hopes for averting •t(jllures re^ts up-| .
$2 steak to Loafer only he did not I a darned goat anyhow Loafer guess
have the 32. e* he is ignorant but that is the
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS. March 18 —Cotton
opened 6 to 7 pointe up a* cables
were considerijblr better than due. 1
— ~ ", Liverpool trade
and financial nf»» aided the market
after the start, and May traded up
to 15 07, July to 15 18 and October to I
15 17. or 15 to 17 points above the'
previous close Towards the end of 1
the first hour, the market tur/ied
downward on realizing, losing 3 to
5 points of the gain, but the under-
tone continued steady
The market turned firm later and J
old crop months made further ad-
vances due to good trade demand 1
Mav traded up to 15 15. and July to
15.25. or 24 io 30 pointe above yester- (
day’a clone October did not Improve,
continuing tp rule at 15 17 high of
; early trading and onlv 16 points
above the previous close Towards ,
upon prices eased 9 to 12 point* on
old crop months due to moderate |
realizing
hbise after
be-.daged
around and led
hr lost all sense of direction and
he wa. led back to hU own door.
Tliey handed him 325 and told
him tc keep quiet about what he
had done and what happened The
men then disappeared and the doc-
tor never heard from them nor the
wounced man again
•’When they found that skele-
ton when they wee bui'din'i the
ctam up at Lake D-.'las a lev ycxr.
ago I wondered if that could be
♦ tie bones of that wounded man."
s»id Chambers "It miaht have been
in that direction or it might have
been tn any other direction No
one will ever know "
Nnkide Attempt Falla
TOKYO — Despondent Japanese I
youths have hit on a new meth - '
od of suicide—by freezing Impress- (
Close
1565 — 66
1538 41
1545
1555—58
J 562—65
1548
152 V 26
You wouldn’t woiF30
socondv for
Razor track headed easterly Fish
I ‘n Trap causeway crossing of dark
fc brown soil. Water ret ting lower and
I lower. Jim Conway talking peas—
Dave JTUrner making garden—ote
1 Tnomrr and Buck McCarroll loose
■t- the highway—Charlie Justus get-
tihg hla seed com ready - Red
Woods ill with home trouble with
his side—Mr Inman who lived near
Oreen Valley last year moving from
. the Old Lee McReynolds place L
W Harp talking about a potato
L • ItbBt grew on that McReynolds
^ Tinn that weighed some enormous
mount—«aid it weighed 1.600 lbs
-that to what J W Wall and Bill
btop said Be said He said that J
jf. and Bill stretched the facts by
iultlpljring hto statement by 100
Eswwtw*
K|v amn found in county who to
■M BONBgg so far-^. W. Rtat-
ir getting ready to ckwe out hto
* UMW“ ’nm
Hb&S|WKbHcower. fighting
■HRMjli'W Wflnc H off the
ed with stories of the painless death
of a number of students ftoeen on
a skiing expedilton in the mountains
mrttr- NishTda, 23. of Koyoto Prrfec’-
ture, climbed a snowy .peak and
_________________ ____ . _______________ . 16 —BlOt y‘TL-TT
Hural hail and yp.prft' He-KtSw-tf - at cotton cloaed steady^ .4^
.he eon.W,«. T™, ... J-.J
there and East, Texas was there. c,.|Pts 1927. stock 465 447
agri-
The way to make that hard-earned money Ko farthest
is tn purchase products of certain value,
are hacked by well-known manufacturers.
I
are widely bought and used, that are carefully and pains-
takingly kept to high standards of quality, and that have
been found over and over again to give full Worth. Ad-
LIVKItPOOL COTTON.
LIVERPOOL. March 18—Cotton
spot moderate demand higher.
American strict good middling 9 18:
good middling 8 83. strict middling '
8.53; middling 8 23; strict low mld-j
riling 7.73. tow nUddling 73S< atricC
good, o I'd I nary 8 83; good ordinary 6.. 4
43 Sale* 5 00o bales, 3.000 American
1 Receipts 12,000, Amdncan 11.BOO Fu-
..ave 1 nr 1 ri nc us iguurani out uiai is me
Loafer looked at the cattle and at | way it looks anyhow. That looks
♦he fellows leading them. There was (like it might be in the same class
whole lot metre dif'crence In the as that 350 rabbit that the feller
llrtwc than thorn wa« in t ha rat- t TlPd to Sf*ll Loafer Hf tlllkod HkC I
he thought it was a real bargain | hand, walked back with utmost dig-
but Loafer has chased too many riity. The supposed sucker winked
molly cotton tails and twisted them Ht Loafer with his off-eye and Just
out qf too many trees to pay that ^rpf walking
—* _» —ut,. j Homer Taylor of Justin was the
(boldest man Loafer saw in that en-
g6M<XB; TUBSOAY, MARCH 11,
DAILY MARKET 0U0TA1
( HICkOO FOt l-TKY jket up to I8.tf lor ____
rcago. ktaroh 18 —Poultry odvancm of about 28 to 36 point
ly to firm; fowls 26-28; springs old crop month* while t— EEzF
brpJtrs 84-40; roostor* 28: tur-|soki r<*fn» id to 18 points above
iiisoe^Aguras. The late forenoon vnar-
ket was fairly steady. At midday May
waa sailing around 1»38 and n«w
October 15.07, or 4 to tt points net
higher.
MaRKETK aF a GLANCE
NEW YORK: (
Stocks strong; Radio and \Oeneral
Motors at year's best prices '
Bonds strong; Investment demand
bnxutMiN. .
'Curb strong: Amertev> Cyfcnamtd
at new 1930 high.
FOi-eign exchanges mixed: Cana-
dian dollar approaches parttg.
Cotton higher; trade buying
Sugar easy; tower spot market
CoBec lower; comm las ton Q house
selling. - t k
CHICAGO: .
Wheat steady; bullish Kansan re-
ports. • ’ , '
Chrn firm; good twh demand
Cattle steady.
Hcga strong to higher
CHK-AGQ MMNtUCR
CHICAGO. March 18— Butter firm;
errumery extras 40. standards 40; ex-
tm first* 88 1-2-39; firsts 34 1-2-37
l-3l second* 31-32. ,■
Bgga easier; eatra firsts 25 1-2-36;
graded firsts 24 1-2-26; ordinary
firsts 23-24; storage packed first* 26
1-4: storage package extras 26 3-4.
KAN8AM CITY LIVE 8tQ<K
’ KANSAS CITY. March 18.— (U 8
■?. A.)—Hogs: 6 000; 240 lbs down
16-25c fower; weightier kinds steady I
fto ifle higher; top 419.00 on choice
180-229 lb*.
Cattle: 6.500: calves: 1,100; steady
' to weak; slaughter Stiers. g<»<l and
I choice 950-1600 lbs 1150-14 50; fed
yiarllngs 1176-15 00 heifers 10.50-
I 13 75; cows 7 76-1090; vealers IM-
| 12.60; stocker and feeder steers 10.35-
13 00
Ehi-ep: 10,000. very slow: lambs 9-
00-9 85; ewes 4 50-8 10 7
Loafer went to the animal fair.
"The birds and the beasts
there"
M T Payne "as responsible for
Loafer's getting there straight and
all right. The day was fine and ev-
erything went off fine and theYe was
no fire. The last time Loafer went
to the Fat Stock show he burned
It up Anyhow it burned and Loafer
was there. Tills time it did not burn
so Loafer guesses that he did not
cause the conflagration test year.
They call it tfie fat stock show
and that IsJuU *’i»t It to. . TL: -------- ----------
r. Ken 1 cattle atv .*0 fBF that -they alMaok ahoUL ik’Rllow who owned a Jerwy
51e ! 0" * alike. ^5on1e hYNF^’^PWWe miters ■♦— —— . .._.w
*1 the story as he told it after some ' but they are all fat and some fat-
Ka lime had elapsed I ^cr oifi p ever occur to you that
I "One night in the middle seven-f jf you put fat enough on any »ni-
romr one called at Dr. Ken-|nial that lt win look rCKx1 that is
k . k_ ‘ anything except a ,
j girls l<»k good to some of the boys I
I but nobody loves a fat man no how '
... . .. nor nowhere. Loafer knows and he. -----—----
he would catch i hM <o0(j reaFon for knowing How .r *4?\Thal-,^ r^gk,/5cd goat
I he knows to nobody's business Loaf- . , ' **n ' ^°.,for th2.
er dropped four bits tn a slot and I “"J1” “nd.
he was in the show. First thing Jlod ^ hc went \ualgte ‘away
kiH'w hc whs in the auditorium and; there He r *
It was filled with white fated cattle w b„y B whole cM]f
of youthful appearance Yearlings or wilh reglstration papers and every-
something that were so fat that they thing for less money than the worn-
icownhln I ^wxtrrxrl 1 i ir o iKnl' •. *“
were uncomfortably fat Looked like j to Loafer like 3150 to too much for
Bachract
'■■•■■111
I ?
IL.
£331
Takes a Man to Smoke '
lay down in ■ • drift to rffe. Moun-
taineers rescued him, carried him tn
-------t spring and revtvW Mtrir* j
Phonograph Records '
3 for $1.00
Ar-La-Tex-O
Store No, 187.
Northeast Corner Square.
W»».-Uk a up
1-8, and 5 0U0 U S I
•8jMr.bHk.-r however,
. SsSil'.d K< imecotl I 4.
■ « '’.jfcttmisll'' report* ircm the de- ,
tattmen : dY commerce regaMtaig lm-
^HBlRmeiit m employment and the
VOiBme ol constructl'ui projects caua-
‘ ””jBiz bull partv to move forward ,
a fresh contwlence. P< .nnnd for
Wjarcs continued
_f s Hteel extended Its gain to 6 .
BSfCI, and American Can. Warner
~ja»e4.. end Timken Rullcl 3 pointe
' auto, the lust to a new top Phillips
rutech um and Simms each ms®
about a point to now high levels
q; 6 Industrial Alcohol wa* a soft
■MM, losini; a point American Tele- (
u. ■Hkie sagged 7-0
“ VbrctKit exchanges opened steady,
** With sterling, iinchavned at 44.86.
> K'.NSAS < TTY GRAIN <
KANSAS CITY. March 18 Wheat; !
N No 2 dark hard nominally 97-1.05:
R Ito. 2 herd 97-97 12: No 2 red. nom-
| matt- I 10-1 12 Ma; 98 3.4. July £8
* Corn No 2 white 76 1-2-77; No 2 '
yellow 77-70. 1-2; No 2 mixed 74 1-2- |C
1-4; Julv 81 18; Sept.11
“I learned a lesson last year,"
said J W Wai! '1 learned that a
lellow with pyorrhea had better get
busy I suffered almost all the tor-
tunes that death brings, before I
had my teeth out. Had to give up
farming and move to Lloyd Doctor
told me not to try to work I could
not work but since I became tooth-
less I have been getting better so
fast that I feel almost like a new
man. Do not believe any man ever
Improved as fast as I have In the
shine length of time.”
him on a horae Then they turned
horse around several times
unHl he lost all sense of direction
and set out They told him that
he would not be hurt and that hc
would be paid fot his trip That a
man was shot and needed the ser-
A-f^ec of a doctor
' 1 hat doctor said hc did not know
how far they rode out that hc be
lieved that they went some six
< r seven miles when they stopp’d
and told him to dismount. He found
that they' were in the bed of n
creek and that there was a. badly
wounded man on a [Millet. The
doctor rendered such aid as »a>
possible and gave directions as to
what should be done to aid the
wounded man
“He wax then told to mount the
his eyes were again
The horse was turned
in a circle until
nat
— ----i on
th» naw crop
nta above yee-
tapared off at
punch every sheep
1 no I p|] oj w|Sp Cqunty was so happy
lady I dub bovs of
was wiggling her flixgcrs In the j
hair of a goat trying to see how
long the mohair w-as The goat was
quiet but all at once It "Baaed
right loud and that old girl Jumped
about a foot high and lit a-running.
She thought that she had busted
that goat
Loafer walked until he saw most
of it and then he went to Plnck
Underwoods sheep pen and sat
Just sat and watched the folks and
got a lot of fun out of watching.
Folks came along and talked. One
man said that some rough-haired
sheep were goats and got mad
when somebody 'disputed his word
Everybody who came along want-
ed to punch the sheep One lady
came along When Pinck was gone
to vtoit and asked where eyes of
the sheep were located Loafer told
her that they were right at the
root of the horns and she pried
around trying to see but could not
| find them As she left Loafer over-
heard her telling her sidekick that
High
1666
1545
1545
1558’
1666
tM4
1626
1569
1542
Opening Jan old
new 1508 Dec old 1545
ket up to li
old <
Jbtyitoni 84-40. roostars 28: tur-lnold eofi
l 28; heavy duck* 20-23; geese V. 1
t NEW YORK KTOI KH
nv YORK. March 1g—TtlC stock
kei moved smartly forward In
k scale trading at the opening
hr Case mounted 4 points Weat-
ptise Electric 2 1-2 Bethlehe^n
L Johns Manville. Worthington
Ito ami A M Byers, about 1
5, the lost two to new 1930 hlgite.
t c! 10.000 shores of Packard
1 -4. 8.000 tilinma up
Steel, up 9-8.
slipped back
g-
nn old fashioned squirrel rifle One
cf those old Kentucky guns that
shoot true and had tw<* triggers to
mat ■ ------------
’rhe men mounted on horses and
stmted to find the dog It was not is;
long before we heard Math Moore | fields which will be one of the best
whistle through his fingers He I in the county when it is finished.
< ould put the ends of his lingers The best looking flock Of barred
in his mouth and whistle so tha’ | rock chickens In the county clucks
ler Mrs Wilks More than 100 hens
Chance is getting revdy to plant
corn but is not rushed as yet.
Yet every | ^ids and seemed happy Loafer has
— __.„e i }>[R doubts whether Homer had
them or they had Homer. Guy Pow-
good loafer got a large sized kick 1 that he was telling the story. The ■iHMHBaiiH
Wise County won |
except one prize and I
that went, to a boy iitom Kansas. 1 S-.*
C E. Holt was nine prizes with ■ BA*WBRB
eight .slurp or eight prizes with .1 I1T IL N
rlne sheep. Wise County was in j | Mflw
Loafer would like to tel! what
he saw at the fat. stock show but '
he has talked too much already
I
.-Al
I
T’>'- .
- » - J
a’
MIILiHiflElHHItWHIim
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 185, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 18, 1930, newspaper, March 18, 1930; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369996/m1/6/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.