Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 200, Ed. 1 Friday, April 4, 1930 Page: 9 of 16
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DENTON, TEXAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 4, l»3O
122 SEEK DIPLOMAS FROM
HIGH SCHOOL AT SPRIHG
I
GRADUATION HERE MAY 29
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---®‘ »bte cotton
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found
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of the present-day animate. Th*
i arrn
Rabbit Show to lie
Held in Gainesville
First University
Roundup Will Be
Memorable Event
Irrigation Io Gel Thorough
Trial in Denton County Next
Season on Farm Near Sanger
Pictor i a 1 Bulletin
Is Being Issued By
C.' I. A. Containing
Many Campus Scenes
FEW GIRLS WANT
HOME CAREERS
That
abroad
gg£
RELIEF FOR
LEGISLATO R S
IS PROPOSED
iV', Z'~
made ■Sull
„.t«nd there
will be eight large pictures with one
selected by eopw one outside the
college for the fl rat-page
AU pictures of fthe administra-
tion section have been made in of-
Missouri Berry Ciop Lgwet
ST. LOUIS- Missoni) will harvest
approximately 16,110 acres of straw-
berries this year. it is esp-mated The
acreage Is smaller than in previous
years
AUSTIN. April 4 -The legislators
of Texas have considered farm re-
lief. tax burden relief and several
other kinds of relief but now comm
the latest wrinkle, in the form of
legislative relief.
eauli-
t eco-
Sold -
of seen other
District
which does not
i-
Jooes "but
Texas
to the
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SECTION TWO
jhtTROI
TOLEDO
has they can just get here in wet weath-
tau Bi" Mirt ... - ^,.1. .
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* 'Affifi
N RECORD-CHRONICLE
NBA Cleveland Hwroiu
This map shows the world’s largest prtvately-owned and controlled railway network, builded by O.
P. and M. J. Van Sweringen, Cleveland, *0 . brothers, who began In 1916 with the purchase of the
then broken-down Nickel Plate Their 11,000-mlle, 92,000,000,000 system eclipses the dreams of
Gould. Hill. Harriman and Vanderbilt and is exceeded only by the Canadian National and German
Slate Railway. The Mack lines indicate the roads controlled directly by the Van Sweringens and
the dotted lines show roads controlled in part through holding companies or other Interests
taK ssroKiojn*
TV »,n
Moore to Head
Texas Group to
. S. S. Meet ing
t- I
SCHOOLS OF COUNTY WILL
ELECT TRUSTEES SATURDAY
THREE TOBE NAMED HERE
Rotarians Will
Meet in Tempi
April 23-24
Mystery Play Is
Offered at C. I. A.
___ I
second and third grade* in one j
- "'Dm Call of the Banshee," a
mystery play by W. D. HeperstaU
and Ralph Cunningham was pre-
sented by member* of the C. I. A.
Little Theater In the college audi-
torium Thursday evening Orover C.
Shaw, head of the department of
speech, directed the ptey and was
assisted by Mia* Margaret Grant
An Intriguing plot with nerve-
racking adventure wh'ch came as a
result of the call of the banshee, the
call of death, added to the interest
of the play. ’
NBW YORK..March 26,—Dr. 8
H. William*, the scientist who prg-
--•*-iw’
Bureau Membership Gains
DE8 MOINES— With a 5.000 in-. .
crease officials see a larger mem-
bership in the Iowa farm bureau
federation for 1930 than ever.
Rosalyn .«*>
fr-
.1 offer
' 3
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IS
One hundred and twenty-two stu-
dents are candidates for diplomas at
the annual spring graduation exer-
ctees to be held by the Denton Hlfh
School. Tills number Is slightly
smaller than the number to grad
uate last spring.
Graduation exerctees will be held
on May 29. and the baccalaureate
sermon will be preached on the
pieceding Sunday. May 25 Com-
mencement speakers have not yet
teen selected.
’---V- TBXAKXAS
rust wosth/
Il RO OLDrolNT
louro^v
50 Yean in Apa'rtogpot
BERLIN—Frau Berta Mehlte. 73
years old, has lived for 50 years In
the -same apartment In Southeast
Berlin.
iSfe®JLAy
Clevelanders Build 18,000-Mile Rail System
pit in Florida te believed to h6ld i
__ _ . w j
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roar aterr’iitrC-...
Mpruk wocajj
Turkey Te Center Films
CONSTANTINOPLE — Censor-
ship of films te to be controlled
henceforth by the Turkish national
board of censors Films imported
will be censored, according to offi-
cial statement, on the basis of thetr
’ scientific, social, hygicnce, historic
and national effects."
Z Z
• JAUCXANDIII
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“Heavy Reading" Increasing
DELAWARE. O—The "heavy ■
rtading' type of literature te gain-
ing in popularity, believes Dr. Har-
lan T. Stevenson, director of Per-
kins Observatroy at Ohio Wesleyan
unfiversily. He cites wide sales of
scientific books and other informa-
tional publications.
H
SECTION TWO
>-w
W_______
strong: art editor. Mias Margaret
Kiepper; library editor. Alfred
Jackson; and humor editor. Alton
Herring.
Women's Athletic Association at
Teachers College to Sponsor Play
Day for Schools of County April 19
A
t^l ANU
REFUSES MILLIONS FOR VAN
OIL HOLDINGS
WILLS POINT, April 4—After
farming for more than half a cen-
tury near the Van ZandMBmJth
County line and finding it required
both Industry and economy to live.
R L Wells. 70. refused $1.000 000
cash for his holdings in the Van oil
field. Wells has five children and
says hr does not wish to sell until
they arc satisfied with the trade.
Here te a <
glider in which
The picture was taken as Captain Hawk* wm being congratulated by hla
mother. Mrs c. M Hawk* at Loe Anfetes. The upper picture shows
the glider tn flight.
- L t ,
st Th$ picture* in the beau-
on Mww—4r^
for the flrat
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editor. Mias MlflpHU Reni
ganizatibns editor. Robert
I J
j-’
’ a prrttitorfe hate ?
waa twtae the sb* A
Two
Boar d of Edi
eu also Satui _ _____________
have announced for the places The
txferd consists of one member from
each of the four commissioners’ pre-
c'ncts and one from the county at
large The terms of W A Harper
of Precinct 4 and of B M Hollings-
head of Precinct 1 expire, and per-
sons living in school districts of
less than 500 scholastics in these
precincts are privileged to write the
name of a candidate for the county
board on their tickets
FORT WORTH. April 4—Educa-
tors of Texas have before them a
plan offered by R. T. Ellih. Secre-
tary of the Texas State Teachers
Association, for year-round opera-
tion of public schools as a solution
of numerous problems of the school
system. •
Ellis, in an adress before the so-
cial service club here, presented his
plan in declaring that, "public edu-
cational institutions still arc aper-
ating on the lines of 100 years
ago"
"We are modern in buildings, and
In everything except this matter of
leaving costly plants Idle three or
four months each year." he said.
“There are many inequalities suf-
fered by various classes under the
present system that would b? r-
1'vd by a 12-month school yar Tax-
payers would be saved much money
In operating costs and In bond is-
sues for new buildings If the pres-
ent plants were operated through-
out the year "
He proposed that the school year
be divided into three terms of sev-
enteen weeks each, permitting a stu-
dent to attend the two terms most
convenient
• ■. ■'!
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Th® pictorial bulletin for April,
which to compiled by Miss Jessie
H. Humplu’tes. aaaociate dean of
the college, te now being mailed out.
This bulletin contains views of the
Administration Building, the House
hold Arts Building. Die library, stu-
dent parlors, one of the dormitory
drawing rooms, the living room in
one o( the home management cot-
tages, Brackenridge. Lowry and
Stnlih-Oareii halls, the Auditorium.
GymUMtam, a tMnprama view of
the MMge campus MB’ a reproduc-
tion of.the photograph made at
Hubbard Lage Armistice morning.
The pamphlet to printed on light
green paper with a darker green
ink, and the photographs are like-
wise executed in green A message
from Walker King, registrar, te in-
cluded.
>sw vojik*
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Fhe Womens Athletic Associa-
tion at the Teachers College will
ponsor the annual Play Day pro-
gram Saturday afternoon. April 19.
at the Eagle Park for the children
of the elementary schools of Den-
ton County schools
One of the outstanding features
of the day. Which is an added at-
traction over previous years. Is the
Easter egg hunt. Tumbling, danc-
ing and ell kinds of games will be
conducted Miss Edith Kubeck. spon-
sor of the W A. A., te general direc-
tor of the Play Day and Mias Flo
Robison, president of the organiza-
tion is assistant director. Merman
Cowley will be field marshal. Mem-
bers of the W A A and physical
education majors anixi minors will
assist with the games..
The following committees for We
event have been named Pregnm-
—4
nilk
TEMPLE. Apt it 4 —One of the
largest and most intern ting Rotary
41st district conventions in years
will be held in Temple Apr:I 23-24
when it is expected that more than
750 Rotarians wth gather here
Temple is planning to entertain
the convention in a big way witii
thousands of .ddiUoral colored
lights on the streets, flags and spe-
cial decorations The host city has
two new “skyscraper" Hotels, a new
9150.000 municijw: auditorium that
te handsomely equipped and lias its
four leading hoi~j, principal cafes,
auditorium and committee meeting
places all within u three minute walk
-* —*" -*her , ...< -. j in ui« »
Oovarr-or timsnl RTT bo*4 aates
jre-couvenUou visit here <
“LOST WORLD”
HUNT LEADS TO
PIT IN FLORIDA
The value of irrigation in this make money raising feed stuffs and
section will be given a thorough
lest next year on the M D Jones
800-acre cotton-less farm southeast
of Banger, according to the owner
who has gone to great expense to
operate what he hopes will be a
model farm In Denton County
When-Jones bought the big farm
on the banks of Clear Creek last
April It was almost a briar patch;
now it te one of the most attrac-
tive stock farms in the county and
“it soon will look "much better,' the
owner declares.
Jones, a retired Ice manufacturer
of Dallas who still makes his home
there, has Invested approximately
$50,000 on his farm in this county
rnd one of the biggest projects he
has undertaken has been the con-
struction of a big earthen dam to
empound a 60-acre lake. And this
Jake will be used to try out the feas-
ibility of Irrigation work
To Irrigate Alfalfa
The dam has not tong been built
end the lake has not filled as yet
but two good rains should put wa-
ter over 60 acres of ground. He has
Arranged pipe outlets to be used
in irrigating between 40 and 80
acres of tend below the dam Al-
falfa te to be planted and Jones be-
lieves that the Increase in yield will
be worth the expense in building
the dam. which cost about $14,000.
"We planted alfalfa and hoped to
get our Irrigation plans working this
year," Jones said. “The alfalfa was
killed by the freeze, however, and
now we will wait uhtU next year to
Start Irrigating
Jones farm te one of the few tn
Denton County
bear an acre of —,—
1 un no fanner," eel______
long time and nave come
■•ondusion that the day «
flee surroundings which will add hu-
man interest to the book. The “One
In a Hundred" section will be a
feature of tills years book as it
was last year
There have been 20 DeLuxe copies
of the Yucca ordered for members
of the staff and editors of the oth-
er college publications. Only very
few copies'above the number order-
ed by the students will be received.
*R M Reeves, business managr stat-
11. A few exchanges will be sent to
other schools.
The staff of the yearbook for
1930 follows: Editor. Ralph Hous-
ton; associate editor, Mias Thahna
Lee Jackson; —Mias Johnnie Lee
BUmpeon. college life editor, alh-
cltne hM proven a aouroe of worry
and labor to certain of the anions
wno must daily negotiate its entire
length if they are so unfortunate
ar. to have to walk to the legislative
halls.
It has been proposed that some
effort be made to relieve the law-
makers of this, weary. journey by
the installation of an eecallator de-
vice which would run from the
foot of the capitol walk to the
capitol basement and thete connect
with an elevator on which the ao-
tons could be whisked to their sep-
arate chambers.
A similar device to connect the
capitol with the land office was
proposed by one member of the
legislature.
Material for the 1930 Yucca year-
book of the Teachers College, has
been sent to the printer and the
books will be off the press by May
15 Ralph Houston, editor of the
publication, stated The book will
contain over 350 pages and the
general theme which unifies the va-
rious sections is the history of ed-
ucation.
The double ex»iibres pa/e which
te an innovation will carry out the
theme of the history of education
The color scheme will be brown
with a gold ensign Changes have
been made in the feature section
NEW ORLEANS. April 4 —
The old Southern trac"tion that
girls should be liomebodiea with
no other interests to speak of.
was scorned by 1,000 high school
girls liere.
Only eight oi the student body
<V the Sophie B. Wright girls'
Utah school expicssed n prefer-
ence to be housewives after
graduation
Stxty-five vocations, most of
them far removed from tradi-
tional fields to which women
were once confined, were i'skd
Twelve of the g.rte wanted to be
writers, and only s'- wanted to
go on the stare
To emulate Ruth Elder was
the ambition oi 13. of the girls,
while 58 wanted to enter busi-
ness. The nun.oer wa- exceeded
by 168 who wanted to be teach-
ers.
Some wanted to be detectives,
while one listed the vocation of
a veterinarian as her ambition
Sixty of the girls planned to be
nurses and neatly a score said
they would stuuy la”.
I year ago tttey
bortowing
Today they
and buying
many more secrets that may change
scientist conception of iwehtatoric
times on the North American coh-
tlnent.
Williams’ work on the Loet World
plateau of British Guiana already
has established him as one of the
nation’s leading research experts.
He penetrated that wildness to a
point where he ran against a cliff
8,000 feet high. Before he could
scale that obstacle, he contracted
fever and was forced to return to
civilization.
Before he did that, however, he
exchanged trinkets with yellow In-
dians; saw a giant type armadillo
and mice that resembled kangaroos,
reported water falls higher than Ni-
agara; and sighted millions of
ants that moved in regular forma-
tions, driving all animal life before
them and found also a lizard off
great, size which ran on Its hind
legs, almost erect. The lizard he
thought might be a descendant of
the dinosaur.
It was this plateau In
Guiana that Sir Arthur
Doyle had in mind when he wrote
“The Lost World " At that time
readers believed the book to be sheer
Imagination, but Williams has un ’
covered data that leads scientists to
surmtee that perhaps Sir Arthur’s
fiction was nearer truth than any-
one suspected.
e’eapup ol Captain Frank Hawks, famous airman in the tiny
. ...---Eb he is making a ooMt-to-coest flight from Ban Diego to
New York, towed by an airplane. The cockpit cover has oaen removed.
ize on Hereford cattle. Although he
has just started gathering livestock
on the place he already has a herd
of 30 fine Hereford cows and heifers
and a $2,500 Hereford bull.
e . Registered Sheep .
He also has a flock of registered
sheep and he shortly expects to
purchase some registered hogs.
“I have nothing to do in Dallas
now and I take a great pleasure
in coming up here and watching
things grow," he said. ”1 hope to
make this a model farm and am
always glad to have visitors come
here to look over the farm."
Jones now te anxious to have
a graveled road built from Sanger
to his farm.
"We are trying out some new
ideas here and T believe a number
of farmers tn this section will be
glad to see what we are doing if
■ Hit
$
The first annual Cooke County
Rabbit Show will be held in Gaines-
ville Friday and Saturday, April 11
and 12. under the auspices of the
recently drghnlzed Cooke County
Rabbit Breeders Association
Competition for prizes which are
being offered Is open to rabbit
breeders of Cooke. Denton Grayson.
Montague and Wise Counties, and
many exhibitors from neighboring
counties are expected to make the
competition keen.
There will be first prizes of $1,
second prizes of 50 cehta. and rib-
bons for third places for rabbits of
various ages in Chinchilla, New Zea-
land Red and New Zealand White
breeds and there will be special $1
prizes for the best displays of each
breed and ribbons for the grand
champion and champion bucks and’
does
Judging will begin Friday. April
11, at 10:30 o’clock and all rabbits
must be In thetr cages an hour
earlier. Further Information mRy
be obtained from Dr. V. K. Hannon
of OalnesvfUe. aecretary-itreasurer
of the organisation, it it an announ-
c*?' ‘ ■ ■ •'»’-■ ■
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AUSTIN, April 4>—Hans to make
i tie first University of Texas Round
Up a memorable event are rapid-
ly nearing compteUtion with spe-
cial events planned lor each nay
of the three-day affair. The celebra-
tion was scheduled primarily as a
part of the dedication of the new
. . $500,000 university gymnasium and
auditorium but since has grown in
to a planned reunion of all stu-
dents and ex-students of the insti-
tution. It te set tor April 11. 12 and
13.
The event te being sponsored by
the Ex-Students Association and
the Dads and Mothers Association
and it to the most ambitious of ito
kind ever undertaken
-Tha program include* a baseball
game each day between the Unlver-
r Taaaa and the BayMr Ijpi-
versity of Wbcd and' ATtMSEhcwiir
tracksmeet 'on two days with the
University of Texas. Baylor and
Soutborn k .thodtot Un(vrrsity par-
ticipating
The entire University of Texas
will be on exhibition during the
three-day roundup with each unit
planning some special event aimed
at attracting and entertaining the
visitors
bore are Ibe iteK ha has seen, bf
tugna^ txder apd conveniently lo-
cated. i .
Th<t Temple md Belton clubs,
within eight mile., of each other, are
combining forces to entertain the
convention
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Dentons fame has gone
in many unexpected way*
’ was proved here recently by a visit
! of an Englishman, pr Thomas
I Scott Shepherd, and hte daughter,
j Miss Barbara Shepherd of Ross,
Heresfordshire, England, who spent
from Friday to Tuesday visiting
Denton .and vicinity They were
much pleased with Denton and are
considering it as a home, their in-
tention to locate in America, in
probably North Carolina or Texas.
Shepherd became tube rested in Kwuc ui
Denton through seeing marie the humor section has1 been
news reel picturing MUs ’Blanche
and haring a young danlMel sw-
eated In_ horses and other animate.
While here the visitors were the
guests of Miss Williams for visits
to Lake Dallas and other interest-
ing places over the county. They
were posted befoie thev came she
said, as to what they would like to
see, and were interes’e/* In meeting
some of the local residents and phys-
icians
Dr. Shepherd has visited Texas
before, and has been in every coun-
| try in the world, and in every State
In the Union except two. Arizona
and New Mexico, which he expects
to visit this trip, accc.Cng to Miss
Williams. A son who finirhed a civil
engineering course at Cambridge
last June will enter B?«ton Tech tn
June, and Shepherd, his’ wife and
four daughters arc planning to join
him in America tn make their Pome
Bridwell, Elvira Davidson Eula Wil- t
Ite, Charline Francis, Udell Ferni-
son. Onel Malone. Craig Thompson
and Doyle Thompson; hospitality.
Fred Sigler. J. B Brook. W L. Eeh-
oto, Misses Lucille Cowan. Ovelle
McDonald. Maurice Rector and 8yl-»
via Fae Berry; activity. Misses
Grace Pottz. Thelma Cleveland, Ka-
tle Bryson. Hani Evans. Edith Rob-
erta, Jetta Herndon. Maxine Clay-
ton. Verna Huckaby, and W I.
William*. Cecil Jerden. W E. Gray.
Kit Carter. Bill Echols. Misses Fto-
rtne Nance, Callie Wade. Martha
Rom. Amy Rhoden. Bdna Vaughn;
Doris Clark. Willie Mae Smith. Ina
Mae Ml and Edith Gross
Activities at the park will begin
at 1 o’clock and continue until S
o'clock. The children will be greMP- >
ed according to grade*, with the ftrat
second toid third gradee in one
__________________groupv $h» fourth and fifth in an-
Ma. MM Mi9te —If. Alla ,W dtortr and the sixth and seventh in
Balnea, pattie Thompaon. wntMMK * ,jS
of the market’* bus-
of court? from the
insurance companies and
trust funds. The commercial banks
hold about »16.bOO.OOO.COO In
pon-bearing securities.
A law was passed by the last
slon of the Legislature which
lengttis the terms of member^ of
school boards In Independent and
consolidated high school districts to
Hiett, Woodrow Wilson Hines. Eli-
zabeth L. Hitt, Cecil Horton, Mary
E. Hollingsworth, Mary Glay Huff-
man, Mary A. Humphreys, Priscilla
Jenulne, Leia Mae Kirby, J. Roy
Knuht. Orme Lee Koiner. Gwend?
lyn Maurtne Lanford, William C
Larimer. Mary Kathleen Legett.
Shirley Powell Lingo. Ruth Lip-
scomb, Gordie Littlepage. Sara El-
len Littrell, Cletha Lofland. Ola
Love, Alberta Thelma Lowe, Car-
roll E. Lowery, Weldon Leroy Mun-
cy. William A. Mixon, 1
Mitchell. Mary Frances Mathews,
Gloy Elizabeth Mason. Loraine Mc-
Kenzie, Estelle McClendon. Mary
Merle McClurkan. Juanita McCol-
lum. Robert Leon McElroy. Nona F.
McGalliard. C. P Neale, Major A.
Neeley, Edwin H. Owen. J W. Per-
ryman, Manuel Ralph Pilgrim. Mar-
vin G. Ramey, Lucille Ray, Ciara-
bel Riley. Monroe Roberts. William
Edward Scott, Harold E. Shipp,*
Vera Claudine Simpson, John B.
Skiles, Weldon H Skiles, Robert
Leon Smith. John D Smyers, Alma
Spalding, James Wilmer Stockard.
Wayne R Tarry. Lois Merle Thur-
mond. Ernest Edward Trietsch.
John O. Vlt< Kathryn Corrlnne
Weakley. Mary Jo White. Mary Ag-
nes Williams. Mary Opal Williams.
Mary Lucille Williamson. William
Earl Willis, Allene Marie Wilson,
Mary Wilson. Grace Wolf. J. B
Woodrum Jr„ J, B.. Wootton
Hugh T. Worthington. Lutlyr Paul
Wynn. William Weldon Wynn. Ru-
by Yant. Albert Zeretzke Kibler
Hundley. Woodrow Mullens, Jewel
Cruse, Velma Wilson
three years. School authorities said
here that it was assumed the new
law would not affect the election
Saturday, but that all vacancies
would be filled and that those
elected would draw for places as
to length of terms under the pro-
visions of the new law
Two for County Board
members of the County
ition are to be elect-
iy. but no candidates
—a* a group-ware
money to buy stock*,
are saving
bonds
The bulk
iness comes,
banks.
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Denton County voters will go to
the polls Saturday to elect district
school trustees. A large number of
trustees will be named, the num-
ber varying tn the different dis-
trict* according to the number of
members whose term* expire
Denton will elect three members
<to the School Board. The election
will be held in the Are gtatlon room
in the municipal building and C. 8.
Buckingham, te presiding officer.
Polls opens at 8 a. m and close at
7 p. m.
The names of four candidates
have been announced for the three
; laces. They are Homer Edwards. C
O. Yarbrough, Mrs. C N Adkisson
«nd B E. Drake Those whose terms
erplre are Edward*. Mrs. Adkisson
and Mrs R L West
Election in . AU Dtotricte
An alacUon will be held in each
sciiool district in the county. In
most instance* the voting booth
will be located at the usual polling
place, and all qualified voters are
eligible to participate in the elec-
tions.
1 "lrn'----}
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nolo
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/ .s Attracted to .
Denton by Movie
of Local Ponies
Candidates for IHplomM
Helen Denise Adkins, Katie Belle
Angell. Willie Austin, Mary Eliza-
beth Ballard. .Sophie Hazel Bar-
ter, Robert M Bams Jr., Vera
George Barton. LaVeta Bell, Ella
Mae Bttlgham, Morris Weldon Blau*
kenshlp, Kittle Frances Blanks.
Helen Marie Borchardt, Nimrod
Borchardt, M Bernice Boyd. Floy
Brearley, Myrtle EUzabeth Brear-
ley, Juanita Caln. Mary Louise
Camp. Eldon Carter, Hughes Cham-
bers. James Elbert Chambers. Mil-
dred Christian, William Edward
Cope.’ George Copp. Polly Cox.
Thomas W Davis, Jessie Lorraine
Deavenport, Willie Mae Dunham,
Odell Dyer, Nolyn C. Edsall. Beu-
lah A. Ellis, Allyne Fenwick, Lessie
Thomas M Finley.
Warren T. Finley. Richard E. Fos-
ter. Dorothy May Oay. Nona Agnea
Gay. Warren 8. Gibbons, Francte
E Gresham. Grace Griffin. Bertha
Blanche Ouyer, Marvin P. Harrison
Jr., Jerry Robert Hart, Isabell K.
Head. Golda Heard. Margaret Eliza-
beth Henderson, Thomas Aldop
bably journeyed farther toward th*
Lost Wprld th*n any other whtt*
man, to again on th* trail of pgr- "
MBuuauve rvnai. «otM and animal* who Uv«d so tong 3
AnyoM who has vtoited the State MT® that Uwir boom are worth fur -
capitol know* 1$ 1* situated aroii- tong;
raising livestock on the feed he
grows. I hope to make this farm pay
by following such a program.’
Grows Only Feed
To show that the owner of the
larm practices what he preaches
one has only to visit the well-fenced
farm. Only feed crops are planted
and none of the grain or com rais-
ed on the place is to be sold—“we
will feed it all." he said
A mixture of wheat, oats and
sweet clover has been planted on
about 90 acres. This Jones expects
to harvest and grind, grain, stalk
and *11. to feed to livestock on the
place. The corn will be handled in
the same way
Jones is the first man ever to give
sweet clover a trial on a large scale
tn this county He has planted 150
acres of sweet clover and he ex-
pects to harvest all of the hay he
can use this year.
Some of the finest livestock in
Denton County te to be found on
the place Jones expects to special-
i ■
DALLAS. Aptil 4.—Bishop John
M Moore of Daua* w^l head the
Texs* delegation to a three-day
meeting ol tbr Southern Methodist
Sunday Schorl Board April 8-10 at
Nashville, Tenn. s
In addition to Bishop Moore, first
vice president and a member of
committees on curriculum and the
next annual meeting, the delegates
will include Rev. W. M Pearce of
Amarillo a member of the commit-
tee on curriculum, and Mrs. H. E.
Jackson of San Angelo who is on
the committee on elementary work.
Acting as a budget committee for
the next conference year, the ex-
eutive committee will meet April 8.
It also will prepare agenda for the
general sessions ol the board April
9 and 10.
The Southern Methodist Church
has 6.500 Sunday schools with more
than two million pupils and 180.000
officers and teacners. members of
the board said. Teacher’ and lead-
ers are trained la schools, camps,
conferences, institutes and through
co-operation witn universities. The
two latest schools are at Mount Se-
quoyah. Art anU Lake Junaluska,
N. C
JIaTOW
ORLKAM
OALVKSTUM
J 2 • Month Session
for Public School
in Texas Proposed
PRIVATEBUYERS
AID BOND MART
PUSH UP AGAIN
iBr n ish Doctor , Material for T.C. Yearbook to
Printer, to Be Ready by May 15
NEW YORK. April 4. - Mr. Private
Investor Is a relatively unimport-
ant figure In the bond market, but
hte order* may be taker as a bar-
ometer of investment tastes. Today
he wants only the beX bonds.'
A year ago II v 's hard to sell I
him a bond unlesu it ouried a con-J
version priviloje. He Is still in-!
terested in th»t type of secu: ty.l
but a plain. 'Id-fashioncd first
mortgage at’racts him even more
The riron?er bond market of the
last two c.’ three weekt has been
made possible. In part, by the de-
mands ot incUvidual investors
whose slogan is "safety first."
Investment ileuses report that
new issues <X the highest grades
meet a ready reception; those of
less merit are u it lined in drag
In th* mounting dally yplume of
k* M) the New -Tuck stock
exchange to lumped, a surprisingly
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 200, Ed. 1 Friday, April 4, 1930, newspaper, April 4, 1930; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1370011/m1/9/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.