Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 13, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 29, 1931 Page: 2 of 8
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and any crop that will add varlety.
to diversification and bring in some
on their leaves.
these
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In bettering conditions.
BARBS
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revolutionized the industry, onion-
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counties.
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Germ KKiller
Nelly Don
extraordinary.
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Phone 365.
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According to the Farmersville
Times 600 cars of onions have
been shipped from the Farmers-
ville (omunity this season On-
ions were a more profitable crop
tihs year than wheat or oats.
If abolishing prohibition woule
bring back good times. Germany’s
hot much ora gtowtng example.
A few moments spent with Record
classifieds may bring you profit
AL LINES OF
INSURANCE
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Know Texas
By BIL.L EDWARDS
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Li
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ica ;
hunt up some new bunch to get
their heroes into trouble
(Copyr!ght. 1931 NEA Bervice, Inc »
it
h
h its first crowd of admiring visitors Friday afternoon
T between 4 and 5 o’clock. Formerly the John B Den-
J Ing sections of the State a year from now to prevent
the picking of cotton from secluded and well-hidden
e " fields.
BEXTON,
goverment
Just before’he left, a dozen men
•**• ---
Sin Separates—Your
2 T
has no onions this year. —Celina
Record.
Onions could be a more profitable
crop than wheat, oats and cotton
and then hardly be worth raising.
But, something must be grown if
the farmer is to continue to exist.
the time w., —, ---------y—
wer on tile shores of an enormous
- '
."T
lak which the Clock said was Lake
Hul >n.
T lere were many Indians around,
ton College, the new renovated structure will accomo-
date 260-odd students. Superintendent J. W. Beaty’s
office will, be located on the first floor, as will four
recitation rooms Upstairs will be five rooms and a
wide hall.
fowets and plants had been brought
Ttom the prairies, where other In-
Jians had grown them, and how the
ariy settlers would take them and
ahd “Don't" are th most frequent-
ly recurring words in grown-up vo-
cabutary
There is a classic story about the
Anyhow the United states is better off with its
treasury in the red than Russia aith a Red in its
treasury.—Weston Leader.
---------- T-- --- —o- ----------
and indications are now that it 3
will prove to have beeh far more
profitable than cotton when a
the cotton crop has been gather-
ed and disposed of But Celina
Written 1
in Strong
Old Line
Stock
Companies
J. j. Maclachlan
Insurance—Bonds
*308 Smoot-Cartis Bldg.
nies to the price of gasoline
The motoring public has had the advantage of un-
usually low prices for gasoline for more than a year,
but while the price of gasoline can be expected to In-
crease as the oil industry gets on its feet, It is hard-
ly likely that the price will get to the high levels
reached within the last decade New processes have
been developed within the last two years Which en-
able the refiners to get nearly a barrel of gasoline
from a barrel of crude oil, and yet have plenty of
residue left over for other by-products, whereas only
a few years ago, less than a third of a barrel was turn-
ed into gasoline.
HIGHER GASOLINE. TOO
While it is fine to see the price of crude oil going-
upward. the average motorist doesn’t get as much
joy over the upward trend of gasoline. Stored oil in
the Southwest has decreased to a low level due to the
shutdown in Oklahoma and East Texas, and conse-
quently several distributors are adding several pen-
uitivate them, too. and how some
Jamples of these plants would be
sent back to England and France
To the Citizens of Den-
ton .
main closed
WASHINGTON AU® 29— A-
-E
</e
iizatlo to another Dormitory building is at
till the nation over.-Eastland Telegram.
Pies
Cakes
Cookies
Rolls
Buns
Ask for Purity Bread
MAJESTIC
Electric Refrigerator
Kitchen designed by
10,000 house w i v e s .
Priced to suit your de-
mand. Three-year guar-
antee.
See them at
BLAIR
Electric Shop,
The Legislature, which over-
produces laws, asked to show the
farmer how not to overproduce.
—Dallas News. .
.
I
MVSCUI^O IN!
2
Denton Baking Co.
- Phone 106
out always has been a. disagreeable
experience.
(..• * *
Now that harem gates have been
unlocked and Turkish women are
i free. movle directors will have to
With the
Exchangee .
B, L A M.
September
First
J. A. COOK
By Alice Judson Peale
DUS T HABIT
How would you like it if 5U times
a a ay you were told that you must
stop doing this, you mustn touch
IM
have separated between you and
your God and your sins have hi l
his face from you. that he will no’
to get even and assert himself •
Remember that too many don’t'
^♦♦l♦H^lll I reemitmt cannot help but make a disobedi-
a __ __ ______ • - and had-temnered child.
♦ AIRLI THOUGHT
• TODAY
e
L.a
iw
HOW’Syaut
HEALTH I
J I
GWAN’MDUSE 15 JUST
A SMALL Time PhCR '
— FROM NOW ON (M
DEBIGSNorIN.DIS
RACKET - AM YOU
CM GIT WHAWSLEFT
tm
—-------
At this writing about 400 employes of the 101
Ranch, their show gone broke. after subsisting as
best they could with some help from the community,
have just left for their homes Their animals went
with them and their efforts to, keep their clutches
on the show property until they received six weeks’
Monday—Soap The
AN EMPTY attic 1s
PD ■
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PnoNES
Bustnees and Editorial Office ..
5rculation Department..............
Texas has the largest shrimp
shipping town in the world-
Port Lavaca with annual ship-
ments of 2,500,000 pounds of the
delicacy; the largest spinach-
shipping town — Crystal City,
which shipped 3,729 carloads in
1930 and more this year; me
largest nenum gas plant—at
Amarillo; the largest chili and
tamale manufacturing plant—
,,
N
A
Conscientious
servtne tar both rieh ana poor
with all the sanctity. fere,
thought and completeness, of
a select and trained orgarlla-
tion.
Schmitt Undertaking Co
Day Phone 20
Mights 761, 1019. 10. or T23-W
7romapt Ambulance Service.
New York' Day by Day
By O. O. McINTYRE
J
tin
jye have a row of sunnowers
Er wing back of the garage." Peg-
gy told the-Clock, and he knew it,
too for he did not stand on the
de k in the back hall all the timhe:
Now one of the Indian chiefs WA
33
%4
While it Isn’t unlawful to pick cotton this year, it
may be next year, judging from recent events it
wouldn't take a lengthy stretch of the imagination to
: see guardsmen scattered throughout the cotton grow-
- Deliver fn a Hurry •
4 ' ' o-,1 .
==—=======-====
Insurance
All Kinds
Basement Smoot-Curtis Bldg. .
Phone 87. Res 222 -W.
C M. MIZELL__
.mininumi'.tng
The Williams Store
THINGS TO WEAR
revolutionized the industry, onion- many of these don’ts could have
growers says, by hupplying home- I been avoided by planning ahead
grown seed . Brown County so that the child would, not have
wheat farmers with 25c a bushel | started doing something forbidden,
offered for their wheat, are findin 2 or by diverting his attention anto
a new outlet for the grain. canning | some more desirable chaniel
---o—
19 Years Ago Today
(From Record -Chronicle. Aug. 29, 1912)
County Judge 8. Hoskins, who for the past fifteen
yean has been sporting” a mustache, created a mild
sensatton about the court house Saturday when he
appeared clean-shaven
The handsome new high school building received
BOMBAY. India. Aug 29-1’
The Mahatma M K. Gandhi clan
only in a loin cloth and a shawi
and accompanied by his two goat
sailed for England today to plear
the cause of Indias swarming mil
lions' before the bar of his majest)
. A Chicago woman wants a di
vorce because her husband passei
out only.ane kiss a week Vasaing
The best way for the Legislature
to show the farmer how not to
overproduce ts To set an example
This would not only help the farm-
er. but the rest of the citizenship
as well. -
Pure Food Inspector H F Browder returned home
today from Fort Worth where he has been conduct-
ing an investigation into alleged violations of the
pure food statute. As a result of his visit, 21 com-
plaints against dairymen and restauranteurs were
filed by the Tarrant county attorney s office
• • •
The new teachers' appointment made yesterday
contains very few changes. For the ensuing year, there
wil be nine teachers in the high school, 12 in the R
E. Lee school, six tn the Sam Houston school and six
in the Stonewall Jackson school, a total of 33 teach-
ers in the city, not including the three negro teachers.
( < intemporary Thought
THE WISE USE OF LEISURE
The young man who delivered the oration at the
class day exercises at Harvard, told h class-mates
that "intelligent loafing is one of the most valuable
things' to be learned at that institution loafing, he
declared, is a fine art.
To make profitable use of the hours not spent in
working, eating and sleeping -is an accomplishment
not to be scorned. If Harvard really teaches it, grad-
uates of that school are fortunate For most Ameri-
cans do not know how to loaf; which is to say, they
do not know how to relax They may golf, or dance.
or play bridge, but they are apt to do these things
under the same tension that grips them during their
bustness hours.
Much has been said and written in recent months
about the six-hour day and the five-day week, which
are supposed to contain the solution of the employ-
„ment problem that the machine age has developed.
The average American has much to learn about in-
telligent loafing before he can adjust himself to the
leisurely order of things that would be Involved in
curtailed work hours. He is so far, today, from the
ability to profitably employ his spare hours, that
probably a new geperaton would have to grow to man-
hood before the shorter work-day and the five-day
week would prove much of a blessing.
Somebody has said that loafing is the hardest
work there is." Under some conditions, it can be
nerve-wracking and soul-destroyng. If Harvard teach-
es its young men to use their leisure time to good ad-
vantage. It is serving them no less in that respect
than in what the books and laboratories teach them
—Wichita Falls Times.
HOUSING FACILITIES FOR COLLEGE GIRLS
A bulletin sent out from the college of education,
federal department lets it be, known that more hous-
ing facilities are provided for college men than for
college women Of the total students residing in col-
| ’ lege dormitories a survey showed 13.000 were men and
1 8,000 women. An unusual shortage of housing facili-
ties for students, both mm and women, exists on th”
campuses of the 52 land grant colleges of the nation
This group includes many of the leading institutions
, at towing of the United States. There is a reason for
the shortage 'Universities have been waiting for state
legislatures to make appropriations to provide need-
ed housing faciiities," Lawmakers are unresponsive
Taxpayers ardwi st the high dost of/I villas tion in the
industrial world it is a case of passing the buck from
hearIsaiah 59:2.
tom smelter—at El Paso, the
largest grain elevator—at Gal-
veston—to enumerate only a
few of its "argests."
be selling at a fair price. Greater-cu
diversity of crops would be one aid Ba
It would be a wholesome exer-
cise for every mother to keep track
in writing of the number of times
she says don't in a sinsl morning
Then let her ask herself how-
told them, too how
it arid putting it on the market i She will be surprised to realize
es a most palatable and nutritious that in nine cases out of ten her
breakfast food at 25c a can. Pro- , don’ts vere caused by her own rri-
cessed under the Sieam pesur I utility lack of foresight or laz-
canning methods, the food has only i ness.
10 be warmed to make it ready to . The don’t habit not only spoils
serve . . Jacksonville reports 15 the child's disposition. but tends
carloads of fruit Jars and tin cans also to "make him negative That
received in Cehorkee County this is, he wants to do the very thing
season for the canning and preserv- which is forbidden.
Ing of more home-canned fruits ; This is partly because simply be-
and vegetables than that county ing told not to do a thing opay fas-
ever saw before and the same is tens his attention upon It the more
true in many other truck-growing more and partly because he wants
ia a SUBSCRIPTION RATES
| . One year (in advance)........................................
Bix months by mall (in advance)...................
Three months by mail (in advance) -
One month, semtew sdekiy )n penton County
One year (in advance) ..........-.......... •1 20
Six months (in advance i ........-...............................—• 60
Three months (in advance) ................................... 30
H _ TsemT-Weekiy in fexas, Oklahoma and New Mexico
(Outside Denton county)
One year (in advance)....................................—..... •1.50
Six months (ir advance)
I rhree months (in advance)
baek pay led to a court fight.
The 400 circus workers were wished on the capi-
tal. however. and do not present such a factor In
the local unemployment problem, as some 4000 em-
ployes of the Census Bureau who must be gradually
dismissed because "their temporary work in connection
with the 1930 census is virtually completed
Between 200 and 300 are being let out' in August
and 600 card punchers will have to go by the end of
October. In past census years the government has
been able to absorb hundreds of these employes in
other temporary positions, but the Job situation in
government service this year is tight.
Other government strTs remain approximately
the same. Memaembets of cbnetess usually keep sec-
retaries here through the surimher to handle routine
office work, although frequently they take a clerk
along to work With them during the’dimmer Occa-
sionally. one hears, a member dispenses with secre-
tarial aid for the months between sessionsand saves
the clerical allowance granted by the government.
NOTICR TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous renteotion upon the character. repu-
tation or standing of any firm, individual or corpora-
Hon will be gladly corrected upon being called to the
publishers' attention. ‘
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the
UM for re-ptrbllcation of all news dispatches credited to
it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the
local news published herein.____________________________
DENTON, TEXAS. AUG 29, 1931
MARTIAL LAW FOR COTTON
-- Negroes in East Texas are reported to ' afraid to
pick cotton as a result of a rumor that the State had
shut down the cotton fields just as it did the oil wells.
Farmers are having a difficult time in convincing
the negroes that it isn't against the law to pick cgt-
ton.
Little Black Clock had turned
ne way way back? aiia-'they ,
Just Try One On
..
HELPING TO BUILD TEXAS
Texas farmers and truck grow-
ers are making major contribu-
tion.' to tlia. production ol, new
wealth in Texas, In the face of rec-
ord low prices they are recetving
for most of their products . :. P
L Milter of Farmersvle, said to be
the largest grower of Bermuda on-
ion seed in the United States, is
threshing 15,000 pounds of seed on
his farm in the Winter Valley re-
gion for the growing of sets that
have made North Texas black land
prolific producers of that crop. Two
years ago when he began his ex-
periments practically all the Ber-
muda onion seed planted in the
United States were imported from
the Teneriffe Islands. and he has
AESistant Secretary Lowman said
today no modification of the order
closmg international eridges between
fexas and Mexico at night hac
been issued by the treasury depart-
ment. Reports from Brownsville
said the order had been modified to
hmlon Parley permu passage lm
.......... 1
IES"
a-
“n /IRN
ington the largest single payroll disbursed in any
American community It amounts to about $175,000,900
a year and it doesn't ftuctuate: That 4 whythe cAp-
ital appears to have been touched less seriously by the
depression than any other city of comparable size.
Average incomes here have been little disturbed
Because the tourist business has not fallen off ap-
preciably the chief effect of the depression has been
felt by persons with large incomes which are based
on Investments outside the District of Columbia
Retail prices, rents and wages seem to have been
maintained nearly at their previous levels, as com-
pared with other cities of more or less similar size
There have been some instances of reduction in uri-
vately paid wages, but these may almost be described
as isolated. Washington is not a distributing center
and its normal wholesale business is relatively low
Such small industries and factories as exist here,
dependent on local consumption, have not been seri-
ously hit because of the capital's sustained purchas-
ing power.
Retail trade, the main business here, normally runs
above the average. In 1929 it was $681 per capita
ns against a $630 average in 35 selected cities of com-
parable size and a national average of $407. Depart-
ment store sales have increased more than two per
cent in the first half of this year and fell off nearly
three per cent for the rest of this federal reserve
district as a whole Only Washington. among cities in
the district, showed a gain Building permits in June
Increased $882,000 over June. 1930. While falling off
about $700,000 in the rest of the reserve district. Col-
lections on credit accounts by retail stores here are
said to be about 40 per cent better than collections as
a whole elsewhere. Washington newspapers showed
a larger gain in volume of newspaper advertising in
the first six months of 1930 than those of any other
among 90 cities and the only cities to show a gain
were Cleveland, Jacksonville, Milwaukee, Omaha,
ROchestre hnd Wichita
Among the recently developed
tools of se medical profession
must be counted the modern
bronchoscope, the instrument I
the aid of which the trained physi-
cian "locks in on the lungs."
... s -
$
)
r AAXs
NEW YORK. Aug 29—Purely a personal piffle:
When I see an one sucking a lemon I pop out in a
sweat and I can never remember what Galileo did. I
named a beautiful pair of twins Joy and Hope and
they never forgave me. When mentally distracted-
and who is not?—I pencil mustaches on magazine 1-
lustrations.—7 (
A hudy gurdy at twilight gives me the blues. Ted
Lewis' battered hat detracts from a smooth act. I
once bet on a horse at Latonia that ran the other way
and Claude Shafer fell out of the grandstand laugh-
ing. My only taste of absinthe was at the Old Absinthe
House in New Orleans.
The most uncomfortable night journey was on the
famous Blue Train. "Coin" Harvey's son Tom rescued
me from drowning as I sank for the third time. My
daily cigarette limit is three-one after breakfast,
two after dinner My wife and I slam doors when
angry. I’m not afraid of spiders
I became ill in a restaurant discovering a broken off
tooth in a bit? of salad and had to leave. On my way
home I discovered the tooth was my own I hate no
one but there are some I do not care to know. Every
so often I have a craving for pop corn balls and black
licorice . ...
Early Fall is my favorite season in New York. I ve
always wanted to shoot craps with the Marx Brothers.
A doorman at the St Regis calls me "Mr. Frish." I
was whiter than a sheet at my wedding I dislike
jewelry, apple strudel, bridge. Shakesperian plays
and sitting in any sort of a breeze:
I never sleep a wink the night before an ocean voy-
age or train trip. And about once every three months
I go an entire night without a wink ofc sleep. The only
card game I like is seven up The biggest fright of
my life was when an organist's monkey ran up a
spout and jumped into a bedroom window
My hand writing changes every few years. I enjoy
reading small town newspapers, eating in Pullman
diners, registering at strange hotels, prowling around
toy stores and watching audiences arrive at the the-
ater. I turned my head before they sprung the trap at
a Kentucky hanging . .
The only city that ever looked just as I pictured it
is San Diego, Cal. The finest residences for the size
of the city arc in Kansas City. Mo. No matter how
rosy things are I invariably find something to worry
about I carry a 5 and 10 cent store glass ash tray
on all travels. My Boston knows when I am de-
pressed and jumps into the •side of my chair and lies
very still.
--000--
Letters standing out in my memory as splendid
symbols of friendship were from Meredith Nicholson,
Courtney Ryley Cooper. Ray Long, Roy Howard, Ru-
pert Hughes. Charles G. Norris, Irvin Cobb, Ed J
Nolan, Minnie C. Vesey and Richmond Temple AU
are preserved in a safety deposit box.
The first time I heard of Royal Gorge I thought
they were speaking of a banquet. My boyhood hero
was Blondin who walked over Niagara Falls on a
rope I have been sent more than 800 remedies for
hiccups and turned them into an article for a maga-
zine. Dr. George Rockwell's new vaudeville act is the
anti they were taking care of a reg-
' mai garden of enormous sunflow-
thia you munt drop thatgt Fomimhe very Mart one of the
peh t yotr think that if you re ’ moqe trying problems in the. pro-
fhus constantly interfered with a 4 dutlom of a working hronchoscope
frustrated in domg what you were was how to secure and how to
bent upon it might cprdie your direct through the examining tube
disposition just a little? ught m intensity to ren-
der the examining cavity visible
money is worthy of consideration'
in planning the farming prgram. 1 He
by nent in his first "exhibition bout?
s The victim probably wouldn't quib
Oi0 Wool C
K *
• tallng to John and Peggy He
f wu telling them how they culti-
Vgied these great daises and how
’ the sunflowers knew how to turn
” on their stalks so as to get the sun-
* Shine on their flowering faces and
. 3,
nsee
We solicit your hearty co-ppera-
tion in observing the rules and re-
gulations governing the new fire
lanes which have been designated
and marked with newly painted
signs for your convenience. «
These fire lanes have been creat-
ed for the sole purpose to protect
lives and property.
For fire engines to be forced to
make runs through these narrow
lanes, with cars parked on both sides,
endangers the lives of both firemen
and bystanders. A very serious ac-
cident is chanced.
For these reasons, the traffic de-
partment has been instructed ab-
solutely to enforce the regulations
against parking in fire lanes.
A. J. Williams. Fire Marshall
Eugene Cook, Chief of Fire Dept.'
wnile brains grow, scientists say
teeth rest, and a man pays for bat
teeth with a better brain. Maybe
that's why movie actors have suet
good teeth.
• • •
By their deds ye shall know
them. Even if they’re real estate
men.
• • •
Dempsey knocked out' his oppo
bers of the "red flag union' who
were demonstrating against him
were seriously injured when th' V
were attacked and their banne s
burned near the pier by National t
supporters.
j
arasn
To many children "No Stop
little girl who. asked her name,descent lamp.
answered promptly, "Mary Don't" Now the combinaticn of an ade-
quate source of light together with
a variety of rigid tubes, forceps,
etc . rtf, makes available to us
not only efficient bronchoscopes,
but scopes < meaning instruments
you look through’ for the stomach,
esophagus, colon, larynx; bladder,
etc.
Bronchoscopes are made in many
patterns to serve different pur
poses but in principle they cn-
sist of a rigid tube and a source of
illumination.
The bronchoscope is employed to
look and see. that is, for making
diagnoses, and it is a most valu-
able instrument for the removal of
foreign bodies lodged in the wind
pipe or bronchi
in recent years the field of use-
fulness of the bronchoscope ha#
been widely extended
it is now also employed in the
treatment of certain lung condi-
tions such as abscesses, where pus
and other materials are to be
drained, following tonsil operations
and in a host of other conditions.
Rid yourself of odds and end# that
crowd your home, and, at the same
time, realize some ready cash. Rec-
ord Classifieds get quick results.
. This problem was tackled in a
variety of ways but was never
efTectively solved until the inven-
tion of the minute electric incan-
"it its
M<i»iday—“Black-Eyed Susans."
where they would also be grown
And now they watched the stems
moving slightly so as to get more
of the sun's warmth and health,
and John and Peggy thought this
was quite marvelous
The children thought how much
more they would regard their own
row of sunflowers when they got
home.
But now the chief showed Peggy
gild John the. animals all eating the
‘ ‘seeds, of the flowers.
Certainly these vreat flowers
were ready to be used for all pur-
poses -+
The idea that such an instru-
. ment . might - vrove useful in a
yur ety of. conditions and for many
purposes appears to have occurred
to a physician by the name of
Bozzni as far back as 1795
’ A crude met', me forillumninal:
- ina cavities of the human body
i was actually produced" by this doc-
........$5 so
......... 3.00
.......... 1.60
........ AO
ers - -
k1 ey were using the stalks, they
1 toic John and Peggy, for materials,
and the leaves would be used for
: Ko, 1 for their horses, and it-s seeds
wo ld be eaten, too. while they
cou d make hair oil and dye from
" the flowers for their dressing-up
Ik NAit
2(MIW
SATURDAY. ALGTST tt. IMt "
F /
-----
-— Denton Record-Chronicle
n
#WA *
»» H- “E.(SanaT
Mm
TOOLS OF THE TRADE
•l:
CT'
The tiouble today is that entrellin,
too many farmers do not hayavan E
of those products which happe to
""
>
vow $ ent and bad-tempered child
• •• 4 no GRANDEBRIDGES TO RK
The First of Neptemier IAAi-
most Herr and Vou re Won-
dering Where to Trade During
the Month!
Just call 174 Cook’s Grocery
We carry a full line of Vege-
tables and Fruits We are lo-
cated by the Trade Square
where we get fresh Country
Produce. Lots of good Country
Butter and that good home-
made Country Syrup We will
sell you wheat Bran. 70c per
hundred Shorts 85c per hun-
dred
Dried Peaches, ? H‘* an
bried Apples, Hi ni 35
naisins, 1b. Ibr
Plenty of Prying Chickens Will
made vou a special price on
Canned Goods by dozen dr case
Iola Cofne to ace us or call J 74
most hilarious of the season
——000--—
The most expressive term for getting drunk is "on
the loose " The most beautiful word in English is
"eloquent" and the ugliest ""ornery." John Charles
Thomas is the moat self effacing professional finger
I know. Neither my wife nor I ever spoke harshly to
our servants. In' California I feel sorry for people in
New York and vice versa The noise of a squeaking
hinge makes me shiver and rub my finger across my
teeth. On moonlight nights I think of Sumatra
although never there.
---000-——
oMytehas been one largely of postponement. I like
to drftik ide water out of a band made cup of twirled,
paper Of all actresses Iremember Julia Arthur most
vividly. I have solemnly vowed many times never
to wear evening clothes again Julia Sanderson s flut-
tery little laugh on the radio amuses me straw nats
hurt my head I can never find a blotter when I need
one Lillian Gish once mistook me for a waitet
eaptain. One of my most self effacing friends is t
loud mouthed stage comedian I always stop and lis-
ten in on street arguments
(Copyright, 1931, McNaught Syndicate, Inc )
h L WASHINGTON’
FtTLETTER
By RODNEY DUTCHER
NEA Service Write
WASHINGTON, Aug 29 —Uncle Sam has in Wash-
mm,
583
AG
4),
Thrice smart is this row
Fall dress. Smart because
it is of wool .. . smart be-
cause" its wool is woven on
the diagonal . . . smart .
because its wide collar
gives a color contrast.
Wear it now without a
coat, as well as all fall
and winter.
Specify
Purity
Products
--------.....
- ■ ICD
van______■ hb
-
"—9 g s
“A8ep-r. -
w 4>."-
r oXs CRmg a-
«: X °‛62 *,200000000
" q*.- -
at Austin: the largest rice a "
packing plant—at Beaumont, 54 Teanmfe
the largest single oil refinery— 4he-4 PIVILIS
at Port Arthur, the largest eus^ _
mexda"vetysatchtoon“eWpt « »
Chronicle company. _____
Bemt-Weekiy issues Tuesday and Fridays.
Member Audit Bureau or circulations.
Associated Press and United Press servce.
meraber Texas Daily Press League.
Entered an vecond-claas mail matter at Denton,
rexes
.0545
-■ ss,
RECORD-OtmONIOLR COMPANY, INC.
B. J. mWAR5S ................................. General Nrenager
L. A. MCDONALD........................ Managing Editor
t .TW R. MeDONAL.D .................. Business Manager
LB. "owL ------------------.....Advertising aenager
-
M,
42
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 13, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 29, 1931, newspaper, August 29, 1931; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538566/m1/2/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.