Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 19, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 5, 1933 Page: 3 of 6
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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PERSONALS
Deposit Guaranty
r
PATSY 5
LY
U
3
HOW
TO
RECAPTURE
BEAUTY
“Is
Darkest
n
I
J.C.PENNEY.CQ
I
$1.98
WIRE BRIEFS
6,
AL-BRAN
Free Delivery
Telephone 47
pointment.
HELM KEEP YOU FIT
21
BUY NOW
Q
7,
DING DONG! DING DONG!
SAVE
'/
7
We’re Keen About
I
0)
Cottons for Back-to-
now.
School. -
USE OUR LAY AWAY PLAN
and it won't be long now!
McColl Printed Patterns TSOI A 7502
F
X
NEW COTTON PRINTS
"6
J
Black Calf Only
$2.95
$1.49
».
of
The finest prints that your dimes can buy (and it IS a matter
dimes at these prices). They’re guaranteed fast colors .... vat
>1
PROBAK BLADES
I
f
$1.95
$2.95
BROWNbilt SHOE STORE
4
--
Free Delivery
Phons 29 and 39
e
5
-eeitne
2
IAHIIIHHaiHI-
IE
Mrs. Hodges, Long
Time Resident o f
County, Is Dead
MARATHON
FALL HATS
Mrs. Young Again
Selected Head o f
W illing Work ers
Arrests Not -
Monotonous
to Lanzettis
Black or Tan,
Narrow Widths
Patent Strap
$1.95
GILLETTE BLADES
Both Blue and White
Services Held
For J. C. Payne
Notice On Pig
Embargo Given
in
the
dow display of these fine cotton prints. It’s the largest window
display of prints ever shqyn in Deniton. ' '
VALET AUTO
STROP BLADES
Alabama Negro
Assessed Death
Catching Col
VICKS 41
NOSE DROP-
W ‘A
AUSTIN, Sept. 5. —<45—The Tex-
as Highway Commission today ask-
ed for bids on construction estimat-
ed to coat $1,000,000. September IS
was set for considering the bids.
The work will be done under the
National Recovery program
for
of
in-
til
>d. .
en
he
R. B. Foster And Mrs.
McLemore Wed
Let us supply you with your blades. Also shaving
creams, talcum powders, shaving lotions, etc.
We deliver in a hurry. .
I
Montana beer brewers pay a state
license fee of 1750.
F/.N )
eg.e/
the
Nez
use.
nto
iny
4-2
GILLETTE ANNOUNCES SENSA-
TIONAL PRICE REDUCTIONS
EFFECTIVE TODAY
i
t
r
s
g
School’s Out
OVERTON. Neb.—For the first
time in 48 years, the J. M. Porters
of Overton have no one to send to
school this term The Porters have
provided education for their chil-
dren. grandchildren and for some
adopted children.
I
1
r
t
b
r
re
a-
at
to
h-
re
25
-- 1
DENTON, TEXAS, RECORb CHRONICLE, TUEADAT, SEPTEMBER «, 1>M
1
1
BROOKS DRUG STORE
West Side Square
Vermont Votes
on Repeal Today
E
m
it
er
d
A-
-
rs
p-
m.
of
Black or Brown,
A. 2% to 8
$1.95
" .1 - - *
We have other fine prints selling at 12%c and 15 a yard: 4
in this small space, but if
up, see our Elm street win-
ced
eal
ake
an-
mic
19d
Scores of people have laid their shoes away. Buy them now.
Get them when you need them. Thereby getting them at the old
low price. This plan ends September 14th!
ks ■ ‘
Reduced to
5 • for. 25c
IIS.
ved
MLS
no
s."
he
rds
by
as
J
. 8
Black or Two
~ Tone Brown.
10
How to Lose Vote
McKeesport, Po.—Out of the boil-
ing political pot emerged a candi-
date for school director who but-
ton-holed a voter and began '‘rout-
ing” Dr. J. D. Richey, superintend-
ent of schools.
“I'm against Richey," he assert-
ed vehemently.
Im sorry to hear that," com-
mented the voter. "I happen to be
Dr. Richey."
. - MONTPELIER. Vt„ Sept. 5—
—The weather man smiled on the
prohibitionists today as Vermont
began be ting on repeal.
Clear skies meant a heavy rural
vote—traditionally dry—but anti-
prohibitionists remained confident
that the ballot boxes of the wes-
tern cities would make Vermont
the 25th state to repeal the 18th
amendment.
The total vote was not expected
to approach the proportions of
the vote cast at a regular state
election—partly because there were
no other issues on the ballot and
partly because there was a gen-
eral feeling that Vermont's ac-
tion would make little difference
in the final outcome of the coun-
try-wide repeal campaign.
Rev. Rolfe Barnard who is con-
ducting a revival in the Baptist
for 49c
\ * i k x
Shoking
SPRINGFIELD, Ill-Illinois is
using electricity to feed its fish.
Here's how: High voltage lamps
over the feeding and breeding ponds
at Mattoon. attract bugs, which are
killed by the heat. When they fall
into the water the fish gobble hem
down.
It'S cheaper than buying fish
food.
----- (By Associated Press) -----
By The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA —The secret of
why the four Lanzetti brothers get
arrested so often is out.
The police say the brothers are
marked for death by gangsters It
is feared bystanders will be shot
when the firing begins. So police
arrest the brothers to get them off
the streets.
The four estimate they are selz-
ed at least once a week. Any old
charge will do, they say.
Mr. and Mrs L R McKinney
are preparing to move to Lock-
ney the latter part of this week.
Miss Ema Ruth Lindsey left
Sunday for Newgulz, where she will
teach this year.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Tripp
and sons. Bob and Clarence, were
here Sunday visiting her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Evere. prior
to Bob’s leaving to study this
winter in Boston Tech.
Mrs. R H. Evers visited in Mar-
shall and other East Texas points
last week.
Mrs. O. C. Pass and daughter.
Miss Bernice, will go to Brown-
wood this week-end to visit their
daughter and sister, Mrs. R G
Lyles.
Mrs Clara Fincher had as her
guest Sunday her mother, Mrs N. J
Teague, and Mrs. Ranchel Yoakam
and Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Mabry and
sons. Wayne and J. B Jr., all of
Gainesville. Miss Naomi Juanita
MEADE. Kan, Sept 5 —(-
Brought low by a croquet mallet
swung by Mrs Anson Horning, dim-
inutive wife of a Meade school
teacher, a man believed to be a
member of the Harvey Balley-Wil-
bur Underhill gang was in custody
of authorities here today. The man.
who refused to give his name, was
captured after an encounter with
members of a picnic party at a park
here
dyed. We can’t describe the patterns
you want to view a representative gro
Treating Parents
CHICAGO.—Usually the parents
bring the chilren to- the World's
Fair, but that's not the way it
worked out with Lorraine Lemire.
8, of Manchester, N. H, and Ken-
neth Jones, 7, of Rumford, R. I.
They won a Boston newspaper
contest as the most typical New-
England boy and girl, and a trip to
the fair as their prizes. They got
permission to bring their parents.
Fundamentalist tabernacle.
DECATUR. Ala., Sept. 5.—(P—
Tom Brown, negro. today was con-
victed on a charge of attacking a
white woman and was sentenced to
be electrocuted Friday. Oct. 12.
National Guardsmen petroled the
courthouse.
Brown was convicted on a charge
of attacking a mother of seven chil-
dren Aug. X. The woman identified
the negro aa her attacker.
Family Reunion Is
Held at Holt Home
Children of Mr. end Mrs. I. B.
Holt were here Monday tor a
family reunion, held at the resi-
denee at 1501 North Elm Street
Those present were Mr. and Mm.
Sam B Womack and two daugh-
ters from Paris and Mr and Mn
B. Y. Baggett and two daughters
from Cleburne. Mrs Kennie Holt
Rucker was also present, having re-
turned from her summer's tour
of the Western United States.
seemed to be moving almost in a
direct line for Laredo, according to
reports there.
The hurricane was taking in nu-
merous small towns and settlements
in the sparsely settled country be-
tween Laredo and Brownsville.
The Southwestern Bell Telephone
Company reported that its lines to
Roma and Rio Grande City pent
down this morning. Toward the Rio
Grande Valley communication lines
were up only as far as Falfurrias,
150 miles north of Brownsville
No route of communication was
open to Brownsville. Harlingen.
Edinburg or other valley cities.
Ship Radios Silent
Seagoing ships in the Gulf of
Mexico have been silenced by the
tropical hurricane which smashed
that section of the country with
untold damage and no radio mes-
sages can be picked up at San An-
tonio.
The radio station at Kelly Field
usually contacts these ships every
day, but today there la a deadly
quiet everywhere south of San An-
tonio as far as radio communica-
tions are concerned.
C2g2
GALVESTON, Sept 5.—UP) —
Gladys Cook. who said her home
was in Beaumont, died in a hospital
here today of injuries suffered last
night when she fell from a fourth
floor room of a hotel. Before dy-
ing, she told police her sister, Ma-
rie Sturger. lived on Sabine Street
in Beaumont.
Funeral services for J. C Payne,
aged pioneer who died Thursday at
noon while visiting his daughter.
Mrs. Nat Wilks, were held Friday
afternoon at 4 o'clock in the Bap-
tist Church at Little Elm, where
he had made his home for a num-
ber of years? Dr Karl H Moore,
pastor of the First Baptist Church,
had charge of the services, assisted
by Rev. T. H McSpadden, Bap-
tist minister of Frisco. A quar-
tet composed of J. W Pender, J. L
Wright and Misses Willie Brashears
and Esther Ubben sang several
hymns.
Burial was in the Little Elm
cemetery, and pallbearers were Ro-
gie and Alvin Killingsworth and
Eugene Clark of Little Elm. C. L.
Richey of Lailas. Randall Watkins
of Thrift, and Clint Wilks of Ath-
ens. Ploper girls were eight grand-
daughters of Paynes'.
Payne, who was 85, had lived in
Texas 61 years and in Denton Coun-
ty 42 years. He was a native of
Tennessee. All of the six surviving
children except Press Payne of
Freer were present.’ They includ-
ed Mrs. Wilks. Mrs. A. W. Martin
of Frisco, Mrs. Prank Witt of Lit-
tle Elm and Mrs. C L. Richey and
Clarence Payne of Dallas. Payne is
also survived by a sister and two
brothers, who were unable to be
present. Mrs. J. I. Lewis of Roys-
ton. Bascom Payne of Los Angeles.
Cal., and Red Payne of Chatanoo-
ga. Tenn. Besides the children and
their families and grandchildren!
a number of other relatives and
friends from Denton. Dallas and the
Little Elm and Frisco communities
Mrs Laura McLemore and R
B Foster. Denton residents, were
married here Monday morning, the
ceremony being said by Justice
of the Peace W A. Mathews in
his office The couple will make
their resigence here. -
pata, Roma and Rlr Grande City. attended the services,
all farther southeast at Laredo, and ------------
rect most types of
constipation. If not
relieved this way,
see your doctor.
Get the red-and.
green package at
your grocer's. Mada
ty Kellogg in B.U
My'Beauty Hint Bankers Express
' . Doubt About U. S.
The Willing Workers, a Sunday
School class of the First Baptist
Church, met in business session
Monday afternoon and elected of-
ficers for the coming year, most of
them re-elected, reviewed the past
year's work and made plans for the
future. Mrs. J. A. Young, who has
served as president for five years,
was re-elected, and Miss Cora Cole-
man. teacher, and Ike Emory, as-
sistant teacher, elected last spring,
were re-elected.
Others named are as follows First
vioe-president. Mrs G. A. Doug-
lass: second vice-president. Mrs W
T. Bailey; third vice-president. Mrs.
J. A. Minnis; fourth vice-president,
Mrs Gertrude Hayes; secretary-
treasurer, Mrs. E L Brown; her
assistant, Mrs. T. B. Merritt: per-
sonal service. Mrs. U H Ubben;
benevolent, Mrs. W L. Jones; re-
porter. Mrs. W. J Lunday; pianist.
Mrs. C. A. Whitehead, choirster.;
Mrs. E. Winston, and work chair-
man. Mrs. J. T. Sherrod.
That's th* consensus of
opinion among the
young folk who come in
our store for their back-
to-sehool fabrica.
Yoakum of Gainesville was the
week-end guest of her cousin, Miss
Verna Fincher.
Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Patterson has
as week-end guests Miss Evelyn
Patterson of Houston, Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice Patterson and children of
Dallas and Mrs E R. Barnhill and
son of Mineral Wells.___________- -
Mr and Mrs. Guy Hubert had as
Labor Day guests. Mr. and Mrs R
T Craig and daughter. Miss Mabel,
and sons. Floyd and R T. Jr., of
Sherman.
Howard Floyd, son of Mr and
Mrs L. P. Floyd, left Sunday for
Stillwater, Okla., where he wilben-
•er the Oklahoma A. A M College.
Howard Floyd is tn Stillpater, Ok .
where he has entered Oklahoma A
& M College.
Mr and Mrs. Randall Watkins,
who have been visiting relatives
here, left Saturday for Thrift, where
preach this evening on
World Approaching its
Good looks are often a matter of
good health. Sparkling eyes and a
smooth complexion are outward
signs of an abundant vitality.
To be charming, conserve your
health. Guard against constipation.
It so often brings wrinkles, sallow
skins, dull eyes, pimples.
Try the pleasant "cereal way” to
protect yourself from constipation.
Science has proved that Kellogg's
AL-BRAN provides “bulk” to ex-
ercise the intestines, and vitamin
B to tone the intestinal tract. All-
Bran also furnishes iron, which
helps build up the blood.
The "bulk” In this delicious
cereal is much like that of lettuce.
How much safer than abusing your
system with pills and drugs — to
often habit-forming.
Two tablespoonfuls daily will cor-
Mrs. Adacia Hodges, for many
years a resident of Denton Coun-
ty. principally of the Justin com-
munity. died of pneumonia at the
home at her son, Leonard Hodges
in Dallas Thursday night, word
has been received here. No de-
tails of funeral services were re-
ceived. except that burial was in
Justin Friday.
Mrs Hodges was born in Illi-
nois in 1855, and was married to
W J. E Hodges in 1884. Hodges
died several years ago She is sur-
vived by three children: Mrs Roe
Teague of Decatur, Mrs. William
Tidwell of Justin and Leonard
Hodges Six grandchildren and
eight great-grandchildren also sur-
vive.
smooth. This is good also for
rough or wrinkled elbows.
they will teach again this year. \
Mr and Mrs C W Woods and
Misses Lula Jewell Hussey and
Katherine Bailey are leaving tomor-
row morning for Chicago to visit the
Century of Progress Exposition for
two weeks
Stop Chills
and Fever!
RidYoarSyttam of Malaria!
Bhivering with chills one moment
and burning with fever the next—
that's one of the effects of Malaria.
Unless checked, tbs diseade will do
serious harm to your health Malaria,
a blood infection, calls for two
things First, destroying the Infec-
tion in the blood Second, building
up the blood to overcome Uw effects
of the disease and to fortify against
further attack.
Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic sup-
plies both these effects It contains
(asteless quinine, which kills the in-
fection In the blood, and Iron, which
enriches and builds up tbs .blood
Chills and fever soon stop and you
are restored to health and comfort.
For half a century, Grove’s Tasteless
Chill Tonic has been *ure relief for
Malaria It la Just ss useful, too, as
a general tonic for old and young.
Pleasent to take and abeolutely
harmleas bate to give children. Get
a bottle at any store
■ I -
Barnard to Preach
On “Darkest Hour”
Ar roughened, work-reddened
hands I recommend lemon Juice
mixed' with corn meal and rub-
bed well into the skin. Dust off
the corn meal and leave the re-
sidue over night. Cornmeal and
vinegar" are equally effective
and leave the skin soft and
The following notice relative to
the pig receipts embargo, which
Monday was continued indefinite-
ly by order of the A. A. Lund,
has been aent Emergency Agent
Frank Buckley here from A &
M College extension heads: -
"Beginning Monday, Sept. 4. all
pigs received for the account o’
the government must be accompa-
nied by permission to ship. No
premium will be paid for hogs un-
less permission has been granted
prior to shipment. Advance per-
mission must be secured through
commission firms in co-operative
commission association operating on
terminal market. Effective imme-
diately no permits are to be is-
sued through commission compa-
nies to anyone other than the ori-
ginal owner and in no case are
permits to be Issued to any one
owner for more than 200 head
Permissions to ship obtained thru
commission firms are to be evident
by letter or telegram to the ori-
ginal owner and all shipments
must be accompanied by such per-
mit. Permission not needed to
ship piggy sows. The minimum
weight of sows ‘qualified to re-
ceive government bonus is effec-
tive immediately allowed from 275
to 240 pounds. Farmers may still
have their pigs handled through
cooperative shipping associations
or by country buyers by supply-
ing them with the letter or tele-
gram from commission firms in-
dicating they have permission to
ship their pigs Such agency may
also act on behalf of original own-
er in securing permits, but these
permits must be made out in the
name of the original owner and
mailed to the original owner and
must accompany the pig to the
Fort Worth market to make this
pig eligible for acceptance under
the government plan.” Signed: A.
A. LUND.
SERVICES SET FOR GREEN-
VILLE PUBLISHER TODAY
GREENVILLE, Sept. 5 —U-
Funeral sendees were arranged
here this afternoon tor William C.
Poole. Sr., 77. publisher of the
Greenville Momning Herald, who
died at his home last night after
a brief illness.
Black, Brown or White
For 10 days more we will
guarantee our present day -
prices. Schools will open
soon. You will make a big
mistake if you don’t buy
Mr . 1 ’ n ......
Kimbrough-Tobin Drug Store
Corpus Beach Dedtroyed.
CORPUS CHRISTI, Sept. 5.—UP)
—Winds of near gale force whipped
through Corpus Christi today,
blowing up an eight-foot tide in
the bay. but the weatherman pre-
dicted that the worst of the tropi-
cal hurricane had passed, with ma-
jor damage probably at and near
Brownsville, the most southern
point of Texas.
The north beach resort district
was destroyed, the water covering
all parts of It deeply. and approach
to Bascule Bridge, connecting Cor-
pus Christi Bay and Nueces Bay
and includes the Breakers Hotel
and 1.000 beach cottages and appart-
ments.
A dancing pavilion on the wa-
ters edge was believed to have been
washed away and several houses
were expected momentarily to fall in-
to the huge tide.
Water on the courthouse lawn re-
ceded early in the day but was
washed back within 15 minutes as
shifting winds piled up the wa-
ters along the bay front. The inun-
dation apparently came from both
the tide and a backwash from Nu-
eces Bay. ,
As the gales continued, peakened
telephone poles and lines between
Corpus Christi and Portland were
levelled and no word came from
the little community only six miles
away.
Causeway Gaea Oat
One hundred and fifty feet of the
city’s pleasure pier was washed away
and 1.000 feet of the causeway con-
necting Corpus Christi with the road
leading to San Antonio went out
As the barometer here rose slowly
and the weatherman sounded a note
of cheer, some of the more optimis-
tic cltizens began to mon back from
the lop bluff to their homes and
business houses on the three treets
running parallel to the bay. Water
Street, next to the bay. and Chap-
paral Street, one block farther away
from the normal water edge still
were Inundated but some of the
stores and homes escaped damage
Some 3,000 persons living on the
flat left for the more certain safe-
ty of the bluff top or the solid,
brick public buildings as soon as
word of the approaching storm was
spread early yesterday
NEWEBBIESS
Haga J. P. Viz, bead at the
manual arts department of th;
Teachers College, returned recently
from New York City, where he
has been attending New York Uni-
verstty during the summer. Vitz
completed work for his Ph. D.
degree with the exception of the
thesis upon which he is now work-
ing.
Brownsville-
cOontinuea rom rasa one
tell what they pere.
"He said it looked like to him that
every house in the town had been
damaged
"The line kept going out every
few minutes."
Brownsville, Harlingen and Ray-
mondville and other cities were
without power service and water
Power Unes went down about 9 p
m.. Monday.
Sixty miles northwest of Browns-
vllle. McAllen reported windows
blown out. signs stripped and trees
uprooted.
Raymondville, a town of 2,500
persons, was reported almost wreck-
ed. Hundreds of citizens crowded
Into the courthouse and schools
throughout the night.
Highways within a radius of 75
miles of Brownsville were made im-
passable by wreckage.
Railroad tracks pere littered with
debris.
Roofs of houses lay everywhere
Glass Uttered the streets of all
the towns In the lower valley.
Meager reports from Harlingen
said the citizens remained "holed
in' while a wind estimated at still
around 70 miles an hour pounded at
buildings this morning.
Small Towns Wrecked.
The center of the hurricane ap-
peared today to be widening its de-
structive scope as it advanced to-
ward Laredo and surrounding
points, destroying homes and pro-
perty in numerous smaller towns as
it swept up the Rio Grande river
and valley.
The hurricane struck Ban Ygacio,
a hamlet 35 miles southwest of La-
redo. about 9 a. m. The town was
reorted almost demolished.
The storm had already struck Za-
FREE RECAL EXAMINATION
Saturday, Sept f, 1 pi a. to S p
m. Non-confining treatment of
piles, hemorrhoids, fissures, fistu-
la*. eU Dr HL E Roberta. 212-14
MeClurkan Bldg Phone 55 for ap-
Hour.". he has announced. The
meeting, which began early last
week, to expected to continue for
some time yet. Three additions to
the church hsve resulted.
n0neAqo, Sept. »—UP)—Five
thousand bankers were told today
by Francis H Sisson, president of
the American Bankers Association,
that the Deposit Guaranty made by
congress this year would be of
"questionable” value.
."The present law largely repeats
the old mistakes on a bigger scale.”
Sisson said in speaking of the bank-
ing act of 1S33. of which the de-
polts guaranty is a part. The act
guarantees deposits up to $2,500.
Jesse H. Jones, chairman of the
Reconstruction Finance Corpora-
tion, called upon the bankers to
co-operate whole heartedly with
President Roosevelt's Revocery pro-
gram by "providing credit to ac-
commodate agriculture, commerce
and Industry based upon a going
country."
"Probably the greatest obstacle in
the NRA program would be failure
of banks to extend available credit
for every unit in our economic
structure," Jones said.
Eugene R Black, governor of
the Federal Reserve Board, told the
bankers they had reached a position
where complete return to normalcy
lay straight ahead. He asked them
to contrast the present state of pub-
lic confidence with that of early
March, during the National Bank-
ing holiday.
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 19, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 5, 1933, newspaper, September 5, 1933; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538917/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.