Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 152, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 7, 1931 Page: 2 of 8
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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2"oc-
?
&
AY,
R’ *
mton Record-Chronicle
Cb-
$ -
4
E
P
al
A
which they are offered almost noth-
thing materially wrong with
our
L 2
7
02 -
7
a know now what we hear in
dul
2
1.
—
-
um-
took little dives and swims in the
has accomplished something worth
The summer schools of the several State institu-
Uem "ef "higk
children, judging from the attitude of
Gove rr Or
—
EMh %
i
BARBS
tery.” novelty; News events. ‘
Ing influence that will affect both
r To the perpetnaf inebriate.
nothing succeeds like excess.
You Get the Best
}
When you tune in with an
King’s Radio Shop
to plug it.
(Copyright. t»S«. NBA Service, |na»
' ed conscience, which precedes epi-
2
3a
r
person could not be credited as long
t
and Pete, recording artists.
will
people.
The. women sent out 55,000
/r
a
22
I
3
A
)
1
A
known Continent," WABC and sta-
We have a full line of gar-
find myself
phone Mi
ind snapping away at a garter. 1 in more
momenta I accompany the snapping with
tane •Mrhank r. MaiLu im a
4'
et rT2
/ —000--
1.00 to 3,50
— Ar — e-2e
--2
p
th A
J
1
1
V $
)
i
/
b
2
sza
WR
l
Str«
.4
summer work, but since few State schools have ex-
cess funds abvoe their bare needs, the suggestion of
the Governor will be of uttle practical use? Perhaps
should take time for his old shower,
be at least 15 minutes of indecision
9
t
cure these commodities. It might be
a good plan for the government to
-
Ri -
I (
• 7
1
1
Radio Featwrei meezte""gas «
Tne sort or a play everybody will 2
ion plants, cabha
and flower seeds.
- EPILEPSY IN HISTORY
Epilepsy is noe of the diseases
184
Saturday Specials
RAISIN BREAD
COFFEE CAKES
?
2.
EE
circulars with electric light bills, listing about 40
kinds of odd jobs around the house that it had men
and women willing to do.
It is to be hoped that your guess
is right, and there is no reason why
F
l
present a number of exclusive Chi-
cago featuires on the chain for the
first time.
distribution system. Not only is the
conisumer having' to va"what ap-
pears to be an unreasonable price
r
• ; 118
,g,i
chinery to the feasible limit, developed new products
and did other things that provided work for more
selectivity, beautiful cabinet.
Let us demonstrate.
...........
prevent meeting the______
feeing, but admitted that it could only bC partially
successful in trying to get everyone a job who didn't
Tc/” ,
2un.s3%
2ahd,
3--’
dents. We find the Talmud, a col-
lection of Hebrew, writings, prohi-
biting marrihge with a woman who
had come from an epileptic family
in Delphi, epilepsy in the female
was valid ground for divorce.
The aura associated with epilep-
sy, representing a state of disturb-
eue
-r,
A Chicago gangster wrote a
song in jail while awaiting trial.
All he needs now is sn acquittal
t
lief figured out that an average of 9,000 dependent
familles would need a relief fund of about $1,733,000
in the first six months of this year, most of which
came from the city treasury. The committee found
that the most elusive part of the unempiyoment prob-
lem comprised cases of persons, who because of pride
or other reasons refused to apply for relief. Bo it
fore, the present administration and
legislative session are starting under
unusually auspicious circumstances,
and the nearly three weeks that the
solons have been at work, together
with the actions of the new gover-
, Any move to curtail the extent of the summer
^courses in the two state colleges here is a serious
local colleges in the summer than during the regu-
lar term. In the past the two colleges have strg-
lepsy was considered by many as
a holy disease and those suffering
from it were at times treated as if
the were sanctified individuals. E
The Koran. (the bible of,the Mo-
72:49
i things can make.somuch.sound."
John exclaimed
It was lovely by the swamp. The
HOWABOOT STRETCH.
ING A POINT FOR A
PAIR OF NEW BRACES,
Bemi-Weekly issues Tuesday and Fridays.
Member Audit Bureau at CtrcutaUona
Associated Frees and United Press Service.
Member Texas Dany Frees League . 4
Entered as second-clasa mail matter at Denton.
Texas. ____,
A
DREAMLAND — Yakima Canutt
in "The Iron Rider’; Al AR in “His
Bunday Of" a compdy; Chinh-
town Mystery. final chapter.
—
Provided Municipal Jobs
Nor does Buffalo appear to have, overlooked many
betes in the attempt to provide employment. Projects
for municipal work were studied and somewhere near
1,000 men have been hired for htree days a week at
$5 a day for such jobs as grading and tree-pruning.
The retail merchants advanced the Christmas buy-
ing season about two weeks, ballyhooed a campaign
for stimulation of buying and, according to ths com-
mittee, both created an additional volume of business
and hired about 2,000 extra employes two or three
weeks earlier than they normally would have been
engaged. Hiring and after-Christmas dismissals were
made on the basis of trying to engage or retain em-
ployee with depenedent families
About 25,000 employers of all types in the city were
circularised and urged to pro-rata available jobs so
that everyone might be assured of at least part-time
work, give preference to employes or applicants sup-
porting families, eliminate_exertime by hiring extra
help, do repair and maintenance work and new con-
struction and develop and make new articles previ-
ously contemplated. Additional suggestions were made
to the larger employers once or twice a week.
. Employers Co-operated
Various manufacturers and other employers, the
committee says. reduced weekly schedules, shortened
Some one has said that if all-
the hungry were fed and an the
needy were clothed, there would
be no over-production of wheat
A?
Ei -x.-,
j Peepers were dot' ab Buff
. They had given their .bi con-
f
21
(Time is Central Standard)
NEW YORK, Feb 7—chicago
comes on the air with a bang hext
week. It is to be the originating
point of 49 National Broadcasting
Company program periods former-
ly presented from New-York.
The change will bring the total
network program from Chicago to
more than 120 and was made, it was
explained, partly because New York
studio facilities are ovemerowded.
— All are to be on the WJZ side
.The announcement said that the
move was “considered one of the
most important in broadcast his-
tory, another step in fuiriment of
the porphecy of M. K. Aylesworth,
President at me. that Chicago is
destined for first place in the realm
of radio The move to to have no
eftect on the personnel in the New
York studios.
— The new acts, ten of which start
• By Mary Graham Bnner
Fussy wiowCRLEARNTION
The Little Black Clock had turn-
ed the time ahead a few weeks and
ted them to’ a swampy place near I
the woods where they had seen the
---
EKORK, Feb. 6—Gharley
*
an
H
~ • A
swampy pond but after a while, as
the Clock turned the time forward
r all whandered ‘back to their
WABC chain at 2 P m. -
New musical program. sweet-
hearts of the Air, WABC group at
5 lw
Lp.
-2i,
+7 *
Uona at 11:30 a. m.
Two hour concert by the. New
York Philharmonic Symphony on
Cookie*, dozen, 10c
“ DENTON :
BAKING CO.
West Oak Street. ~
For Estimates, and
General Contractors
* Ea —222---=-
Fort Worth gave wm Rogers the largest audience
and the’Red Cross drouth fund its largest contribu-
... tion tn the Southwest, and is proud of both facts. AA
* ndt small reason therefor was that Dallas, at which
he appeared earlier, gave him and the Red Cross the
r' smallest he received in the tour.
I am also something in the way of a garter snapper.
When I adjust them each morning it is
to finish off with a sort of quick snap
many times fifteen minutes or so later ! a2u any0012
-Sttig in a chair gazing off into a sort of innocuous
desueutude and snapping away at a garter in more
- irrepressible momenta l accompany the srapping with
New York Day by Day
. By a O- McINTYRE
With it the Spring Peepers.
When they heard them they would
know who they were!
jAs for Ruth St. Dents' preate-
tfug that dancing will dominate
the sports world, how’s ol
round-elay for the boxers?
• - •
ool teachers report all eases at undernourished
Land got churches, dubs and lodges to check
up on needy adults. 1oM ■' Ie * / ( ■ '
AI
(83
a whistling tune “Thank Your Father !”to test of
all.but for a slow measured snap, "Lover, Come Back
to Mer" i not bad ■ •'
; Rom Pinting Co.
21012 W. Oak fig. -
era, knew of and describqd epilep-
sy.
Hippocrates observed that the
brains of persons afflicted with epl-
depsy were "unusually moist." ft
my custom
finale and
*
I *
ER’S APRON ST^IN^, RUT^!
he spring—I thought they were frogs
hut wesn‛ enite sure," Peggy said.
"It certainily seems queer to me
as he was subject to seizures.
The term epilepsy, which is de-
rived from the Oredk. was not used
to describe the disease until after
th tenth century.
. Monday—Children's Health Kab-
ila
Ehe.directions say plainly: "Squeeze only from the
eng For years I want through life squeezine vaste
Ire had them bust in the middle and curl it the redge.
12
have one.
Organised Charaities
Organized public and private charities, the commit-
tee found, would be .able to handle all cases of dis-
tress. The committee concerned itself with seeing
cert— their fst big concert o" the
Now some at the Spring Peepers
I. 8. FOWLER-------------... Advertising Manager
Daily teute at *14 West Hickory Street,,
Texas, ovary afteznoon except Sunday by the Record-
CW
4*5
Yes, something is wrong, when
farmers are in possession at large
quantities of food and cotton for
J.A.C0OK
GROCERY
With the _
Exchanges
glni
---
t •***
CURSING or BLESSING—Cursed
-is thiezman that-irusteth in man.
and maketh flesh h* arm, and
whose hearth departeth from the
Lord. Blesed is the man that trust-
eth in the Lord, and whose hope
the Lord la—Jeremiah 1735, 7.
SCREEN TODAY
100 3.00
rite. A ma
There shoul
been engaged by the New r
York alants to officiate at their
pxhibitilon-games tea year Mo-
ran succeeds Bill Brennan, who did
L
A
Monday—Two Parties,
A women's division put on a campaign for odd
Jobs, with about 30 speakers running around the city
and acting as a clearing house for Buffalo's five free
Sterling as expressed this week before a conference
of the finance committees of the legislature Tn his
desire to reduce State, expenditures, the Governor
doubts the advisaviity of maintaining summer
schools on the usual basis. -
X “ actumuyaunndedtana pieporetzenondocerandoveken
sell them to these people at cost And the buds at the potty Billow
on a long-time account. This should trees opened 10 hear the song.
or cotton. Something is wrong
when an abundance of tesem
things is in storage and people
: are crying tot help Savoy
star. '
rHouj do
KnoL tho
. • 2
is significant that a recent promis.
’ ing study on the cause and control
at epilepsy points to the presence
of exess fluid in and about the
while, with some sessions doing they
much more constructive work than - M
others. As we have remarked be-
What happened! I started out writing something
elane Ind suaaenyisindmyseir dorng"sompenenerta
Eiely different. Yesterday my wife gave me $20 to
—4— pay'one of her bills and betore I realized it I spent,
every cent on a bunch of blue and white polka dot
ties. It upset me terribly. Oh, yes, I know what I
started writing about—exercise. t • •-i a _
Eisuemus? F? *
a -
%
Commercial Printing
Good work- reasonable denseedss seed
prices. ' m 22,
leptic seizuures, was also known to
the ancients. According to the Tal- .
leafy homes in the woods.
Peggy and John, as they left the
Clock* that evening back home, fell
they could hardly wait until the
spring would come along bringing
PALACE-William Boyd in HThe
Painted Desert” with Helen Twelve -
trees and Willlam Famum; "Ace of
spades,"Talkertoon: "Blimp Mys-
fire won £
Dick you f.
the next
victim .
♦ that he forced her to swallow ♦
♦ one that was lighted, was ♦
4 granted' a divorce by Cireuit ♦
♦ Judge R. R. Fowler. A
tessnenecttroe-eeecte-t
FGARDENNG
TIME
Insist on a pair by Hiekoke
r then you will sknow,what
smartly fashioned comfort is:
You will a so discern the
difference between ordi-
nary suspenders and Hiok
' braces.
l . , ».
30. , mud. the testimony of an epileptic
One-act play, "Sham,’ with Alice । - " . ....
HEALTH WORK FOR HUMANS
Texas, a state which has an invigorating climate
and natural conditions favoring its people's health. is
naturally an effective field for the work at prevent-
ing sickness and disease. ‛- . • -
We have progressed greatly as a state of recent
years, yet we are strangely reactionary in some re-
spects. As an example, Texas spends 1551,000 annual-
ly for the cure of disease in live stock, it devotes only
•17,000 to public health work. And one of the penal-
ties we have to pay is the burden of supporting de-
linquents and insane persons, many of whom might
have been reclaimed in early childhood and youth.
According to Dr. J M Frazier of Belton. member
of the state board at health. Texas spends only three
cents per capita for the prevention and cure of winter
among humans in contrast to many states where sev-
enty, five cento per capita is not an uhheard of sum
"Texas is lowest in the list." Not because the citizens
at the state want us t9 remain at the bottom, b-
cause we do not give the matter serious thought.
How many people realize that the average death
rate from typhoid in the United States is three per
100,000 population? How many know uhat the Texas
rate is almost exactly thrO times that! Health is
purchaseable. but the state board of health can not
spend the money until it ts appropriated by the legis-
lature. And the legislature has so many' problems!
"Under present conditions, the board of control
must devote $1Tto,caripg for sick wards of the stole
for every $1 fs devoted to prevention of sickness."'
Dr. Frazier insits that it is economy in the long
run for the state to appropriate large enough sums so
that the health dr the state’s children can be sate-
Euarded. Texas spends a large part of Ito income on
the various eleemosynary institutions which "house
inmates who are victims of disease Entirely ignoring
the humanitarian viewpoint, It to decidedly good
business to apply preventive measures in time. And
the people of Texas and the legislature of Texas need
to consider the probtom of fostering good health for
all -Houston Chronicle, A • J
look up to.
4 i
""'Well," said the condemned,
man as his sentence wee com-
mated, "no nobee is'good noose."
■ j..' • • •
help dispose of the surplus at
benefit to the producer and at the b'wasn quite
same time prevent suffering among —-i .
when the raw products are so cheap,
but those in straightened 'circumn- —, g-, , „ig
stances seem'to be unable to pro- the Pussy Willow trees"
Dr. Isgo Galdstom "cademy ri Madicins
Now. _—
« I
!
1
- - » needy
WASHINTON, —Feb. -7.= Colonel -Arthur _ Woods,
chairman of the Emergency Committee for Employ-
ment, says someone ought to write a story about what
the City of Buffalo has done to meet its unemploy-
ment emergnecy. Woods thinks that Mayor Charles
E. Roesch's emplyment committee has done such a
“splendid’’ job of planned community action that he
has sent a length report of its activities to several
thousand local emergency committees throughout the
ir a ha mm Mans) considered epilepsy an
affliction which might come upon
——those, who thrived by usury:
The hereditary character pt epi-
lepsy was appreciated by the an-
HOW'S yau
HEALTH
daily hours, rotated employes on work, looked up and next Monday and which include Al
assisted fromer employes, repaired and replaced ma- and Fete, recording artists,
The Williams STORE
"3 .
2
T
by the time_-Ahe present appropriations are used M, j
the Governor wiU be a little mhore lenient in allow-
—2 NEW YORK, Feb. 7,—Most of my life I have been
plagued with well-intentioned friends with a notion
I am not getting enough exercise. They look upon
me as a sedentary sap—a sort of human barnacle
attached to a desk chair. You’d think I had but
one corpuscle and R was snow white.
. A.
Try these on your radio tonight;
Second network program by Web-
er and Fields, WEAF and group at
7. 2 ? ■ -
Senator Joseph T. Robinson of
Arkansas as speaker in the national
radio forum bn WABC and chain
at 8:30 ’ ’ ' '
Concert by Minneapolis Sympho
ny Orchestra, WABC and others at
9 in place of showboat.
The Cuckoos with Raymond I.
Knight, WJZ and stations at 9,
Smith Ballew's orchestra via the
WEAF hookup, 11 to 12.
Sunday is to bring:
==========---==----
......My........... - NEWVORK, Feb 6.chi
: :mkeumazmae
And now Jphn and Peggy heard
Che conqert. Hundreds and hun.
dreds of these tiny little Sprins
53 t ‛
ipring Peepers or Tree Frogs, on
heir way to bed. '
"Most of the year," said the Lit-
of starvation. There must be some- days of spring appear they like to
-“r-T visit a swamp or pond for a month.
i We must listen to them. They
have been awkefor quite a little
whu but they have just beeh
spending their time slowly getting
ready for their great celebtation
they give every year in honor of
to te.be hoped that the spirit of
co-Speration and serious desire to '
sagsrmgmre
uere:"ukientOm
5VNI[O ELINuAAEE
MPHAIS QFAmLEn5,
NEscoLASPSErE“
‛ ' / t
ing funds for the summer schools, which have be-
come a vital part of the State's educational scheme
.. . -ee- . ------------- ■
■ . •* / < s 2 * } f
A yo in man likes to change q
his necktie often-rit gives
him variety.* This season its
neat stripes to rther gay
hues ana very small figures
on plain grounds. *n3
24-24mun cmS- —----4- -
Our guess is that the present
Texas Legislature will not only ' - - ..
be a very busy one, but will ac- soft, grey- buds of the pussy wi-
complish a number of things lows were opening and were all in
that will be worth while andofz hloom
lasting good to the shate.—Rich- Spring
ardson Echo. '
1 ? ■
a
' brain as a posable Immediate cause You Get the Best
"mdnrmmum.ee >' ■ ProgrameBes-,
la feund in the New and the Old
Testament and in the holy books of
many religtous sects in fact, cpl-
(1o constructive work will continue,
and the present economic situation
undoubtedly will serve as a stabnif
atoes, Afi-
re plants
air?" *
it strikes me as silly to pop out of bed the second .
you awaken, stand stiff legged and touch the floor
100.times or sprawl.on your back and Aick at the employment agencies
EeHin8- wheD I Open my eyes I liKe to thinK things
DENTON ARTISTS
{■Kg' one of the oil portraits done of former Gover-
HM" - nor Dan Moody to trom the brush of Miss Martha
ture has set aside $500 to-be awarded the painter of
the portrait selected. v
— - Hogue, better known in Denton as Wil-
nam, is another former Denton citizen achieving fame
country. -= ",
The mayor got himself a committee of 55 members
with an executive committee of 18 to carry on dally . _____ _
work, along with a volunteer staff. The committee 4t would not tbe. Every Legislature ,
functioned as a clearing bouse and a planning board. — — — *
______________— It decided that it would commit "Itself to a 100 per
■ am regarrtM m atep- rent objective as regraded relief, letting no otoetacle
— .--- . -maF a Governor prevent meeting the needs of every case of diresu-
is < gled along during the summer months with inadequate
appropriations, and the net result was anything but
- favorable. -- A ... ,4 - - 1 ’
Governor Bterling hopes tiat-the expense of the
regular terms of Blate institutions may be cut suffi-
cientiy to help out the lessened appropriations for the
4 asapninter or both portraits and landscapes, son
of the late RM. C. L. Hogue and Mrs. Hogue and
reared in Denton, -young Hogue has built up a natis-
factory clientele among Texas art-lovers and a high
reputation among Texas artists. _. .
’ THE SUMMER SCHOOLS IN DANGER
- 19 Years Ago Today
(From Record-Chronicle, Feb. 7, 1912.)
pSeonarccnamasarkorcmmerecd mhecergtinz &S
meeting held last night. Discussion of the interur-
ban proposition and the 1912 monthly trades day were
other matters taken up by the body. ,
The Garza school district has secured 1500 from
the State Board of Education to aid in establishing
an agricultural department.
r JE. Wilson has sold a 25-toot front on the southf
side ft the square to the First National Bank for a
consideration of $16,000, an average of $640 a front
took _________ ’ 1
An article appearing in "The Texan,” student news-
paper at Texas Univeitsity, pays high tribute to
Charles Francis, who has been outstanding in debate
and athletics. .
.0, 3 ---
well known to history. Hippocra-
1 wtes, the father of medicine who
lived 400 years before'the Chrstan
mouzegsumpngonwoopmusuraemoprstudntamnme
Blatter to Denton, tor mere are more r- m - work and to make the needy aware of- the existence nor. further emphasize this fact. It
at rageneies which would help teem — "
; The committee helped put on a drive for private
charity funds and city and county-rehef and lodging
facilities Were expandade. The sub-committee on re-
2
g Also carry « full line of
vegetables and fruits, along
with a full stock of grocer-
ies, including chicken feds,
shorta, bran, mixed feed.
We are headquarters for
somthing to eat or plant.
IF you are* not trading with
us, you, should ibe. o give,
us a ring—phone 174
.212.7
em.T -- —- -me
—— ... T—T* - --—-* igo “emw: ■ —"
DENTON. TEXAS, EECOMD-CIRONICLE, S
But today TsqtRlH Qte neatest teeth paste tube, in 4
our block. You can't go in for morning calisthenics
and do a bang-up job of squeezing. It is either one
or the, other. L ule ’ / t." A ■ IIm
—
1
' $‛
0 ' ’ * * *3 t** * *
Roxy Symphony concert, WEAF
and WJZ chains at 10 a. m.
J. B Priestly, English author,
speaking from London on "The Un-
— -
i-
- • ■
R. JC. A. Radiola. Range,
Legislature and governor
Brady and Tom Powers, WEAF
chain at 6:30.
Maria Kurenko, Russian colora-
tore soprano, in the classical con-
cert hour, WEAF and chain at 1:15.
- -3 -------
HUSBAND FORCED WIFE TO
(L SWALLOW LIGHTED FAO
• MARION, UL, Feb. T—Ntn. ♦
♦ Burwell F. Rader, of Herrin, •
♦ Who testified that her husband. ♦
♦ Robert, became so enraged be- ♦
♦ cause she smoked a cigarette ♦
and mustering courage. I like to look out the windows
a while, call up a few friends and otherwise dilly-
dally. r
When I can delay no longer I sneak upon the show-
er, give the fauet a quick turn and chatter a tail
t anguishing "Omigawds!" The same leisure should be
achieved in dresning: Most of my friends dress like
firemen, boasting they can do the job in. say six
I minutes ,!
—000-- _
! Invariably I spend ar least a half hour every morn-
E WBg looking for socks. No one can put them in such
original places. I am what might be termed a sock
M ; tucker, I have found ome tucked under a radiator
and another tucked in the handkerchief pocket of
my pajamas. The minute I get hold of a sock I want
taei .to tuck to some place..i L— —.
---000- —
over, get my day’s worrying done, then roll over for
another nap.
Getting up in the morning should be a leisurely
to think that such little bits of
■ ' " 3
Re t“n0
A 0
’ .......chere
. dhelauednkusA, ru2,
pi
l- &
I • -
H. H. Hardin Lbr. Co.
FOR MATERIAL.
Men who have important work to do in the world
4. I Asuppose cannot report to sock tucking or “garter
snapping but for the non-go-gtters ute In the early
8 morning to greatly enhanced By these simple diver.
2 1mions - r . . ,. t •
KE 2 Pr ' ' —nnn.. * -d..
1 , I PHONES
. Bustness and Editorial Office-----------------
reulation Deparunent L .......................
L .. svascuIrroN BATES
■ crus dnc is
Dne-montt-senipwetkiyanpentoncouniy
One year (in advance)-................. -1 A
Six months (inadvance)-emrt AX
Three months (in advance}
seml-Weekly in Texasokihoma end New Mexico
(utsidebenton County)
One year (in advance)...........M..w-..... •* AX
Me montas (in
Three months (in Mrawe) "
DENTON, TEXAS. FEBRUARY 7, IM1. -
now. The voices of the
rtt _ . T
-----
39BSHSRS
rrLTPHONB^
—-L
aeE
The fact is I can arise and with no more exercise
K. than a walk from the bed to the bath and. then to
i the dining room wolf a breakfast that would shame a
stevedore. All these some 40 years my only concern
"5. about food to will my teeth hold out!
At 90 I expect them to be worn down to the gums
and spend leisure hours snapping at vittles with jaw-
bones Almost daily some intimate breezes in from
Roll, squash or a horseback ride, puffing out his
B . chest, stopping a thigh and giving me a pitying glance.
w They seem to say: “You poor chicken-breasted
jt weasel! Al you do to sit hunched up over a type-
writer -What do you know about the great outdoors
| -th? thrill of the hunt, the long drive on the green,'
the pungent odor of the, pines and the zip of dean
the work for the Giants for the past
two years
PhQne 23
«i ' ■ •'
Carpenter & Crout ......
f^o7^^
| l llLU I If 4- MA •
a-----
whole ar One-Half Ham. lb „u.1 Me
Bensoning MeatJowis,ib. ........toe
Guaranteed Country Butler —MA'
Nice Pruaec. 1b. . ?.........1,.10c
Smtaee—5a
S Mm Renown Coffee ----------------
Gallon soll Pec* Peaches .e5e
No. 3 Engiish Peas Y.....................14c
Yew Monthly Aecount solieitea
Harry Teasleys
Grocery
Phone 498217- Oak ML
4. L WASHINGTON
98 LETTER
By RODNEY DUTCHER
NBA Service Writer
WELL1 IF IT ISNT OUR
OLD FRIEND ....NAS
PIN SIRIPES,
' ’ . -7
athma--amia:t
r..........5 -1.................
stagwgabg-omooOoag-mfanger
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 152, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 7, 1931, newspaper, February 7, 1931; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475282/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.