Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 257, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 10, 1931 Page: 1 of 10
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L
* .
Ve
NO. 257
-
RAN 10
ODD BITS OF
By Associated Press
WORLD NEWS
I.
TEXAS GUINAN MAY
.c a
‘k,
be
F i
3
F
0
-
of Harvey who was here from the
well Wednesday morning. "We en
4
pularity contest
(
H
with
Kex19. Salvador Rubio is also a relative of the Mexican president. Quota
day
Ml
[ these bills this
from
anions pulled
it!
guns.
Emilio Cortes Rubio, young cousin
of the President
suffering
but Qomez,
sandwich
port would be made soon, possibly
late Wednesday afternoon.
s.
the.
1
Id salaries M-
somiewhat colder
tral
said. "Is
1
83V
I
lationships of work and life.
ney
—g
I
f
♦ “
1
mm
j
He was alar talkiug with the
youths. He did not hear the con-
by a two-thirds v
do into immediate
hear midnight Bunday. They stop-
ped at a soft drink stand for a
naify the cultural,
itavoldance of sex
so it would
ct." He had
ARDMORE, Okla., June 10—()
—A tragic story of the Maying of
OTHER REGISTERING
WITH CLASSWORK UN.
DER WAY; FIRST AS-
SEMBLY WEDNESDAY.
TOLEDO, June 10,—(-Heavy
earth shocks caused by the fallmg
ton merchants under the direction
of A. M. Courtney, owner of the
copyright plan which to known as
the Booster Club Campaign "The
Dooster Club" to the copyrigit
mine under which the contest to
of a large
of some p
1
i 1
ing compenss-
the arts,‘relf-
t
i
OKLAHOMA) Cloudy,
tend showers to east and
5
• l
"They had an “avepage of 1
children per 100 women. The tyP-
promised to make a decision by the
and of the week on whether a spe-
rial session would be called.
The chief executive intimated he
would sign or veto the eight or 10
bills remaining on his desk by Fri-
or by the blast
explosive shook
1 j
C I
n
/ 1
ne
It was estimated by ______
however, that in relity the toe «1
plaintiff as prayed for.
Aubrey Independent School Dis-
trict vs. B. F. Wilson, delinquent
ganically sound.
"Don't let the patient worry him-
, (Continued on Page Two)
- i ’
-
4?
7
Smith-Harvey Co. well, going
down on the Daley farm. South of
the Pilot Point Jacobs fleld, had
reached the 121-foot depth Tuesday
afternoon, according to a statement
in getting seed to replant their
farms. N, ■"
past due and runpali
gregated $5,195,000
’ short time, but w!th the sun con
tinuing this work, according to sev-
eral farmers here Wednesday morn-
ing, will not be held up long The
rains seem td be coming along nt
about the. right time.
- District Court
, For Wednesday
No cases were set for District
Court Wednesday and none was dis-
posed of during the day The grand
jury ermained in session Wednes-
Where he went to attend the Con-
federate Veterans Reunion. “We’re
taking in all the sights and have
partiy ane
southerly Wi
WENT TE
tonight and
CHARGES FILED BY COUNTY
; . ATTORNEY
Two charges, one alleging burg-
lary and one chicken theft, were
filed against George Saunders Wed-
nesday morning by County Attor-
Says “Beer Bloc"
Beer Tax Figure
Is Misleading
O. Foster of Clarksville, only Hv-
ing charter member of the organ-
ization, expressing good wishes and
regret that he could not be present
at the Denton meeting.
Commercial exploitation of food
B-u, 7187
" Two shote Fired •
Salvador heard only two shots
"fired, he said, appdrently by Guess.
r, he saw Guess standing by
Mexican's car.’ ‘
. I
... iig
eg
versation. - ' ■ i- .
Croeby called to him to return
& I
There to an evident shortage of
r
t
' I
’ / J
Half of uTy pical Wives" Found to
He VnlidppUy Married; Experiences
Of Girlhood Blamed in Many Cases
governments ware in salary arrears
to the extent, $8,250,000. Of this
M.000.000 w«s represented in judg-
mental
5 (
BOUND
ABOUT
TOWN
Orders Entered
Four civil cases were disposed of
car in which he had left him. Go-
mes was Iyig just outside the car
on the grvumd.
"I thought he was dead but some
np pulled him two or three feet
I understand he breathed a little,
then died "
He told, the court he did not think
either Emilio or Gomez shot. Neith-
er he nor his companions had ever
been in any trouble before, he tes-
tified. . ' '
On cross examination he told at-
torneys for the officers he knew
two automatio pistols, a shot gun
and some ammunition were in the
automobile. The pistols were owned
by Gomez who apparently waa tak-,
ing them home for some, protec-
tion on the trip planninr to sell
them after he arrived The party
had planned to drive from Atchison
to Fort Worth before halting for
rest.
Matthew Alexander, city police-
man. was th# second stats witnens
Chicago’s Money
Troubles Grow
Four Deaths,
Rain Damage
tonight; Thurday
r, Lahi to fresh
Ito on the wto
on hand to enroll, and the attend-
ance to expected to be materlallv
increased. '
• First Assembly
las, chairman of the medical sec-
tion, was in the chair
c. Vitamins nncued
Taking as his subject “Vitamins
and Vitamin Therapy", Dr. Max R.
Woodward of Sherman discussad
normal d‘e and diet deficiencies
illustrating the properties of vita-
mins A. B, O. D and E with slides
showing the results of experiments
with white rate. ,
He declared that the advertising
and pzopaganda of manufacturers
stional meeting
Phthe session,
2a,
PHILADELPHIA, June 10.-VP-
An analysis of happiness in the
married life of 1,000 cultured Amer-,
loan women, based on data obtain-
ed from personal physicians, was
presented at the American Medical
Association meeting today
it showed that girlhood exper-
sences, taboos and training often
thwart or destroy capacity for mar-
ital happiness; and that about half
of the T10 "typical wives" in this
group are unhappily mated. The re-
port was made by Dr. Robert L,
Dickinson, M. D. of New York City.
"These 1,080.” he said, were what
may be called the cultural Amer,
can type. They were urban, of good
, 1
2
by Judge Boyd Tuesday. They were:
city of Dallas vs. G A. Douglass
sequestration. Judgment for
STORY OF MEXICAN STUDENTS’
SLAYING TOLD IN PRELIMINARY
HEARING OF ACCUSED OFFICERS
SEES NO HOPE
FOR BUILDINGS
-AT COLLEGES
;< t — . -"mprie:4- t
AUSTIN, June 10—U-Gover-
nor Rocs 8. Sterling said today
upon his return from Houston taat
he still hrd not cut the appropria ■
tion bills to • figure where he tell
justifed in l ining them'.
The gorernor indicated thire was
no 'hope for the ollege Buidins
program contained in the educa-
tional appropriations bill and that
he was trimming the money pro-
posals as much as feasible.
He lated he would be glad to
see the delezation of oil men sched-
uled to call on him tomorrow. "Most
of these delegates will want a spe-
Left to right, Deputy Cedi Crosby, Sheriff Elmer Ryrd and Deputy Wil-
iam Gues examin ng, arms, claimed to have been seized alter the kill-
1g cf Emilio Cortes Rubio and Manual Garcia Gomez, Mexican stu-
Unto;a Aramorei Okla., about midnight Sunday. Below Salvador Cor-
n
‘ The slow rain of Tuesday
night will delay harvesting
of grain but slightly and was
of material benefit to row
crops, particularly corn, ac-
cording to farmers.
The precipitation measured 38 of
an inch at the State Experiment
Station, four miles northwest of
Denton, m some sections it was
heavier, and in others lighter. The
rain fell slowly and soaked into the
ground
While crops generally wore not
suffering for moisture, the rain will
be benenelal as the ground had
dried out rapidiy from the hot sun
•nd high winds.
Cutting of grain was resumed in
many fields Wednesday. Much of
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sporadie thunder storms in Texas
Wednesday left a toll of four dead.
300 famules in West Tezas facing
want because of ruined crops and
several washouts on railroads and
highways. > - J
Three children of the Ras Punton
family, living on Kemp Creek near
Turkey, to Briscoe count, were
drowned Monday night when a
V O L. XXX
two children, they were considered
socially normal in the"ordinary re-.
I countered ten feet of aa hard lime
. rock as one ever saw, but we got
' thru it after using Mx different
bite. We hit a fhe water sand at
about 24 feet, and our going thru
that muddled some of the neigii-
borhood wells. The Pilt Point
Community well, to be drilled on
the Oscar StU place, has not been
| started yet, but material to on the
ground. to I presume they will be
at active work in a short time."
----------------------------------------------------'
A merchandising campaign in the
gu 1 The youth, 24 years-old, said he
of Mexico and ud his friends arrived in Ardmore
Rill Mitchell, former Denton cit-
teen, who moved to' Perryton with
his family about two yeans ago, has
come back to Denton to live. He
••id. “We’ve been away from ‘home’
• twenty seven months and I’ve been
ready to come back ever since I
left." AA
Guess then searched him and
......
WHERE TWO 1
2 hn."
which condition bespeaks well tor
the town, as in most places houses
are .plentiful. One man, moving
here this week with his family. sald
that he had rented two places, but
thht he was ’talked' out of taking
them, as they seemingly had been
rented at a higher' rental than
agreed for with him. “But Monday
morning” he said “when I agreed
with, another party for rooms, I
just paid, off right then and there,
and within twenty minutes I had
my furniture started there. I was-
n't going to lose out again. It cer-
tainly speaks well for the condi-
tiops of Denton, and Im glad to be
in a town where houses are hard
to find'
Charlie Cobb, former Denton cit-
i isen, has returned her to live and
he, with his family, to domiciled at
409 Amarillo Street. Cobb has open-
ed a shoe repairing shop In con-
nection with the Brownbilt Store.
' • He said. “I left Denton 31 years
ago to live in Farmersville, and for
several years I’ve been wanting to
come back home, and now I’m
; mighty glad to be here.”
- As hewaz taxenspast his motor ' toCip"m each an ‘romp Mom
car, lie saw Emilio, his cousin, ly- day. A few.classes will be necessary
big in the same position in the after, o'clock because of the large
. . w.” "• enrollment.. .
Recrationat features will be open
__. ,______ of so-called synthetic vitamin foods
number of Den- an preparations has misted the
and has no connection
Denton Boosters Club, it
would not in the present circum-
official., stances serve any useful purpose."
Y: to severar
, Fort Wort,
II we will have
to the students in the college park
each even’hg.
All-college programs will be given
Tuesday evenings at 8:30 o’clock in
the college park, preceded by a
band concert. Picture shows will we
given in the auditorium Baturdiy
evenings. ,
It was announced at the college
that registration would close Thurs-
day and that additional students
would not be admitted to classes
after that time.
3,100ENROLLFOR
T.C.SUMMER
SESSION
wAp,
be.
seasoned and conditioned riding or
draft horses and mutes of from 4
to 3 years of age, to list with him
emergency. The . Instructor. 144th.
Infantry. Fort Worth. asks indivir-
ual owners of horses and mules.
was before Red Cross headquarters
in St. Louis todky.
J. Claude Wells of Memphis,
chairman of the Hall county chap-
terwestimated that arena were ruin-
ed on 66,000 acres in Hall and Bris-
coe counties. He said about 300
nature of a pop
being put on by
t A card from oe Akins, erstwhile
moon-prophet, nays that he's hav- - .
Sts fine time in Montgomery, day and it wsbelevedthatare
MEMPHIS. June 10.—(—An
appeal for assistance to farmers
whose crops were destroyed by a .
eloudburst in the neighborhood of
Turkey and Quitaque'Monday night
.-.ic
‘ • 23
.C Ef . ;
3Va
fads was, rapped by doctors in th
■ morning medical section Wednes-
day. Dr. Robert M Barton of Dal-
it houses in Denton at this time, taxes, Judgment for amount sped
for and foreclosure of lien.
i% He was prevented
tonsg..
cion, morab, culture, social pur-
suits, woliticat "euses, over assump-
161. tion of tamil responsibility, worry
— •lover firinhcial extravagaue.
Washington, June 10—(--
The W. C. T. tJ. today said that
every resident in a dozen states
and the District ofColumbla would
have to drink 2 1-2 gallons of beer
a day next year to raise a billion
dollars through taxes aa advocated
by what was described as “the con-
gressional beer bloc".
“The biggest beer tax ever paid
the government in normal pre-war
days," the Union said. “was $87.-
mjm in 1916 with the tax a dol-
lar a baryel, the per capita con-
sumption at 12 1-2 gallons annual-
ly."
The W C. T . U said it would
"require two million sloons, set up
next year, to sell the beer planned
under the beer bloc’s proposal" in
referring to recent statements of
house wet block members advocat-
ing sale of beer to provide revenue
to meet the treasury's deficit.
The organization pointed out
that congress did not meet until
December and that if it should
legalise beer that only in those
states not hating prohibition laws
could it be adid.
States Shaken
By Earth Shocks
ONE ’GLORIA
SWANSON’ LOST
NEW, YORK—“Gloria swan-
sen" appeared in a notice trans-
mitted to all city police sta-
lions. The notice was sent when
a lost person told a policeman
>ch was her name. It result-
ed in James Bungarden, negro,
claiming his daughter, Gloria,
five years old.
ical woman had her first child at
the age of about 26 and wanted
more. When the widows, the di-
vorced and the recently wed were
excluded, 770 remained as typical
wives,"
As causes of unhappiness. Dr.
Diekinson found that complaints
about relatives, money, work, man-
agement of children and the home
were usunlly secondary. Among the
dissatisfied he found in many in-
stances evidence of “some shock 19
childhood trelated to the sex side
P “The effect of extensive educa-
tional and religious training." lie
itfhAH t ftiimtRutittutmu
—
Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Calhoun left
Tuesday for New York, where they
• will study at Columbia University
this summer. They will drive, going
the southern route, by New Or-
team. Chattanooga. Richmond. Bal-
more, Washington. Atlantic City,
and on to Boston, where they will
visit for a few days before enter-
ing Columbia. »
Dentson, Qamesvie
Paris and before Fa
added others
Dalas-was chosen as the December meeting place by
the North Texas Medical Association, at a luncheon at
noon Wednesday preceding the final session of the 101st
semi-annual meeting here. A surgical seeg
Wednesday afternoon, marks the close of),
which drew an attendance of 102 physicians.
A resolutions committee was ap-
pointed, and a committee was nam+
ed to send a message to Dr. John
- "The Federal Government is in-
terested in getting a survey of
horses and mules in Denton and
Wise Counties with the possibl
view of purchase in the event of
the grain is already in the shock
1 and cuttins will be about complet-
ed within the next few days.
Threshers are busy in a few flelda,
end threshing will be under way,
generally next week if the weather
remains fair.
RECOUP IN RENO
NEW YORK—Texas Guinan,
back from a trip to France
which she says coat her “fifty
grand," because that country
debarred her and her girls, la
thinking of recoupins in Reno
She says she has had a fabu-
lous offer to run a night club
there.
i ____________________.
PALEFACE TEACHES
, INDIANS FOREST LORE
ASHEVILLE, N. C.—Indian
1 boys are learning । forest lore
from a paleface. A boy scout
troop has been chartered on the
i. Cherokee Indian reservation
j and a white scoutmaster is now
teaching the members on hikes
in the great Smoky Mountains.
for approximately 300 familles in
Hall and Briscoe counties whoe
crops were ruined by torrential
rains Monday night.
Crepe Benefited -
ELECTRA, June 10.—(- Cotton
and feed crops and pasturage were
believed benefited by light showers
which fell, here early today. Tits
grain harvest was not expected to
be delayed more than a few hours.
LAghtningKins Maw ’ ' J
■MUTTON. June 10—(*>—W. B.
Harmon, about 45, waa tilted by a
bolt of lightning yesterday as he
was working at a bam on his farm
near Britton. The bam caught fire
and burned. Hannon is survived by
his widow and six children.
- r ’■
Aid is Sought
By .Farmers in
Cloudburst Area
! Notris Russell, Bitsy McCray and
Henry schwalbe art. In Fort Worth,
to quality in the River Crest In-
vitaiio ntournament, which opened
I Thursday morning. The Calcutta
Pool wtU be held there Wednesday
night after the qualllying has been
completed.
The rain which fell here Tuesday
j n. t brought smiles to the .truck NT A ■ iw el • •'
[. New Cases Up in
was just the thing they needed.
Harvesting will be delayed for a
, the information as to locatlon, Blackwell, divorce granted; Bonnie
Planagan 'n Omer M. Flanagan,
divorce granted.
Northwestern Ohio and Eastern
Indiana early today.
Thousands of persons were awak-
ened by the shock and-windows
were broken inhouses at a consid-
erable distance from the place where
either a meteor sttuck the earth
or where an explosion occurred.
The center of the shocks was at
a large hole ten feet in diameter
and five feet deep, on the Henry
'Puhlman farm, one half mile north
of Malinto, Ohio.
The heaviest damage was within
a 300 foot radius of the hole. In this
'circle, four telephone poles were
broken, wires were down. smalt trees
knocked over. A field of oats was
crushed to the ground. But there
was no evidence of heat or fire
such as is said generally to accom-
pany a falling meteor.
The shock occurred about 2 a. m
and no eye witness was found.
Police at Findlay said there appar-
ently were three shocks, the first
one light, the second heavy enough
to disturb persons asleep and the
third one light.
Britain Not to
Ask New World
. Debt Conference
—
LONDON, June id—(—Prime
Minister Ramsey MacDonald told
the House of Commons this after-
noon that the government has no
present intention of making any
moves toward an international war
debt conference.
Asked by a conservative member
whether he considered "calling a ,
conference of the powers interested
in international settlements with a
view to mutual cancellation of ob-
ligationrs on the largest possible
scale," the. Prime Minuter replied,
"The attitude of this country in re-
Hard to war debts is well known
and action on the lines suggested
All the ’big dogs’ except old
__’. We aren’t looking for him.
but if he gets in sight—all right.
Enjoyed a. vial t to the Capitol where .
Jeff Davis took the oath of office.” ali
s.
Arthur Pollock et sl. va Peter C.
Carter,' for partition. Judgment for
partition as prayed for; property
found to be incapable of partition
in kind and ordered sold and pro-
ceeds partitioned among the par-
ties, in accordance with their re-
spective interests. George Baker ap-
pointed receiver to sell.
J. B. Dalrymple vs. Traveler’s In-
surance Company, for debt, judg-
ment for plaintiff against defend-
ants for the rents from all crops
except cotton; judgment for de-
fendant for cotton and pasture
rents; cause dismissed as to all
other defendants.
The case of J. L. Meullar et al.
vs F. L. McCullar et al., partition,
waa set for fourth day, second week.
J, A. Barton was appointed receiver
to take charge of the .property in
controversy pending this, outcome of
the trial
Four divorce cases were disposed
of Tuesday afternoon, as follows:
Lucite Barcheers vs. J. T. Barcheers,
divorce granted; A. T. Landreth vs.
Mae Landreth, divorce granted,
Thelma Blackwell vs. Charles
UNTILLED STEEL ORDERS DE-
CREASE
NEW YORK, June 10—-Un-
filled orders of the United States
Steel Corporation decreased 277-
377 tons in May to total of 3,620,-
452 tons May 31. In April a de-
crease of 97,601 tons was reported.
steal ailments was the
en by Dr George L.
family background and. education, taboos- ol
Married to professional men of expressto
ihoderate income,’each with one or Hr f<x
cial session," Gmemor Sterling
aald. “However, it would be use-
less to have an extra session unless
desired legislation could be enacted
ically assured that they were or-
0.
... handed him over to a city police-
from malaria, did not leave the car. man who hnd arrived.
Gomes wore a blanket about his
shonlders.:
he
’ON1
• ’ ’ h,
mae--
2DENTON,TE)
leaving the stand, they drove
three elokks past a filling station,
then stopped the car. Salvador said
he left the car and went to the
Sidewalk.'An automobil slowly fol-
lowed thew mahine, he sald and
stopped a Tittle 'bit in front of the
vehicle the youhs Were' driving.
1. "Crosby got out and asked me
wha I was doing." Salvador said.
“I explnined’and he told me to move
on.,Ha sald nothing more to me
- ,' Heard Discussion
"dhen I neard voices, a discus-
son between Crosby and my com-
paniens but MI couldn't tell what
was saHLs 18
bly period.
Rev. Chas. W. Estes, president of
the Denton Pastors' Association,
said the invocation, welcomed the
students on behalf of the churches
of the city and invited the stu-
dents to attend all religious ser-
vises ... ...
sudden headrise flooded their home
v,., .At w 8. Harmom, 45, farmer living
With approximately 3,100 near Britton, Ellis county, was k-
mitt d.v did the shooting, elaiming the youths pulled guns when they ds e-dsng others
-S--mssmas
a. m and the "first assembly ^“bu?^
was held at 11 a. m. hurt about’ibteet away. » \'
The exact attendance figures were 1 J. Claude Wells, chairman ot the
not available Wednesday because of Hall county chapter of the Red
Cross, Wednesday awaited a reply
CHICAGO, June 10.--Chica-
go's financial troubles, growing out
of its delay in collecting 1029 and
1930 taxes because of reassessment
difficulties, were spreading today.
With failure of the county board
to pay their hospital nurses yes-
terday, the total of unpaid public
employee exceeded 19,500, and the
BERWICK CASE SOON TO
REACH JURY
HOUSTON, June 10—(—Both
sides in Luther Berwick’s murder
trial rested .shortly before noon to'
day and the case likely will go to
the jury late this afternoon. Ber-
wick was tried for the slaying of
M'm Belle Crowe, whom he called
his sweetheart, at Fort Arthur in
October of 1929.
0i ;. ng
----- mun. . -
Gheh. ema
f-,03. ElhE
l u Ea
W
ft.
DIRIGIBLE ENDS 12-1OUR
TRAINING CRUISE
LAKEHURST, N j., June 10—)
-The navy drigible Los Angeles
returned to its hangar today after
a 12-hour training druise.
NORTH TEXAS PHYSICIANS
CHOOSE ' IAS AS PLACE
FOR MEEy W DECEMBER
- X
Final Session of TwoCenvention Wednes-
day Afternoon; Registration Panes 100-
Mark on Second Day.
to the front of his can ~
"I asked Croeby what was aoing the rush of enrolling, but was said -
on but he probably didn’t hear for to be about the same as at this time teom Red Crim headquarters in
he did not anew^ when I was in last year. Many other students* are St. Laulsko hta appeal for relief
front of my car I heard two shots
and saw flashes. That was all I
could distinguish. They were fired
from the right hand side, appar-
ently by Mr. .Guess.”
Salvador Gortes Rubio testified
the shots were close together.
When the shqoting was ever, he
stood for a moment, then Guess
told him to come with him, he said.
Saw Dead Eompanions -
Announcements as to work and
recreation were made at the assem-
it announced. The plan is to give
votes with the purchases from
stores going into the contest, and
the votes so received may then be
cast tor any lady entering the con-
teat It < announced that at the
riem of toe campaign a number of
vAihable prizes are to be given the
tadtn.bhgtdinK.the largehgumbe
tonizht: Thaursday partly
ciowdy
EAST TEXAS: Partly cloudy,
scattered thundershowers to
sagsreJSsS
pothednPhy. narsteringsmd""5e"
'Okrtrie of
■
r .
--
HARVESTING 1
LITTLE 1
K - : zciude e . ‛ - d
--
, so "c-u
Manual Garcia Gomez, his student
comrade, was told in county court
herejoday as Deputy Sheriffs W. E.
Guess and Cecil Cromny received
preliminary hearing o chanzes of
murdee.
. Salvador Cortes Rubfo, aurviving
companion of ..the young Mexican
students, pointed-out Guess as the
man who shot his friends on a trip
from an Atchison. KM„ college to
their homes but was unable to re-
late details of the shootins as he
said he was standing in front of his
parked car, blinded by its lights.
He denied the officers’ story that
they had inferme'd him of their leg-
al capacity and saia he did not
know if his friends had drawn pis-
tols before Guess, fired, as tha dep-
uties professed.
Previously solemn, requiem mass
had been sung for the slain boys
ina little oh e-room -Catholic church
here, while students in Mexico for-
mulated vhgorous proteste to the
killinzs.
number, and type of animal in or-
der that a survey may be made by
KM a Government representative. No
• purchase at this time is contem-
E plated and the listing does not obil-
E gate the owner to sell, or the Oov-
u ernment to buy Any one Interested
Ak is invited to communicate with the
Instructor. 207 1-2 West 11th St .
Fort Worth.
-s l' 2 rid.
■
PRECIPITATION OF .38
INCH BENEFICIAL TO
CROPS j GRAIN CUT-
TING RESUMED.
public, and raised in many persons’
minds an exaggerated fear of suf-
fering from vitamin deficiency. Ad-
vocating a common-sense attitude,
he said that the average diet con-
tabled all the vitamins necessary
for persons in normal health, and
said that dietetics should be on a
sclentific, common sense basis and
not a commercial basis.
In their discussions of Dr. Wood-
ward’s paper. Drs. Flyffe. Price,
Henschen and Onrigsby endorsed the
paper’s position and decried’ the
exploitation of popular misconcep-
tons concerning the prevalence of
. J j - 2
zs Raybib, who was with the two dead youths when they ware fatally
vcundsd by Gues, Emilio Rubio is a cousin of President Ortiz Rubio of
. - ■ - •
CHRONICLE
SNESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE10,1930run amssezoraknzeiwimtii iop-
VEXICAN STUDENTS WERE KILLSD
- 11 ■ ESH
IT *
di.e
. us
Dallas to discussing “Cardiac Nenr-
roses"
— - - Heart Worres
, Dr. Carlisle pointed out that var-
ious irregularities of heart action
do not necessarily Indicate that the
heart is diseased, and said that ner-
vous patients needed to be emphat -
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 257, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 10, 1931, newspaper, June 10, 1931; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475387/m1/1/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.