Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 122, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 3, 1934 Page: 3 of 8
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world disarmament stalemate, the
10 solo. Miss Evangeline
before
lions of
Association for
rican
ement —0f Science
The Rebekahs zave a floor dr
H
for
o
E,
A,2/2-
8
7.
1
AUBREY NEWS
■ {
pro
pon-
at Lois.
2
I
Untt . he reached oM John’s take
)
sent the caoe hpihning with a kick.
“I'll take the controls. Oct back
in the rear
front witl
I
WRAP
UP GOOD!
■
3
Curt ordered Smash.
cuv down bis
> patty,
for the
Smash was too careless
~-36
}
I
2
4
5
STANDBY
Men’s Rubbers „
for the new
Men’s “Artics"....
Peacemaker Flour
E ” , ‘ ' • e—T-—-r--——
1934
CHEVROLET
_
* .
3.79
1 .
J-
I:
'> ren
4
IE
N
Fluff Dry, 1b. -
Flat Work, 1b.....
NOTE THESE PRICES
Damp Wash, 1b...... 3« -
Cincinnati Has
Big Fund Balance
son;
Boye
4c
5c
■
WOMEN’S GALOSHES
98c TO $1.49
a mile away.
, (Copyright, William B Mowery)
- eurt’s party- spies out -the -enemy,
tomorrow.
He
but
work
F
■ '
.A
"Olve Me Liberty or Love" and “Last
Round-up", Marijohn Maison; ad-
dress. Mrs. H. L. spratt; reading,
Joe Brackney; "Did You Ever See
a Dream Walking." Marijohn Mel-
vilion
ere at
i the
a
'Lazybones’
"Old Jack
V
I
---- $1.25
1$195
By JOHN SELBY
NEW YORK, Jan. 3.—Curiously
enough, two plays. or rather one
play and a musical show, are up for
consideration this week.
One is Sidney Kingsley’s "Men in
White," which just has been pub-
r form-n l
Lr V ' a 1
22
Boydstun sang
ne Brewer sang
Marylin Bragg
FORBIDDEN VALLEY
-— 8 Uliliam Bynon Mowu
Using the rod to cure, the child is the formula being fonoyed-down south _ for Utile victims of mfantne
paralysis. Denied the fun of the active juvenile sports, patients atGeorgia’s famed Warm Springs Founda-
-1 io n—spon sored by President Roosevelt—are shown in this picturesque setting trying their luck at angling.
A
g
gc,a3328
r Ih- . -x2"/5
i I
-
Special to Record-Chronicle.
SANGER, Jan. 3 —"Tho annual
home-coming of the I. O. O. T. uul
Rebekah lodges was celebrated Mon-
day evening with a turkey dinner
served in the hall followed by this
program: Violm and piano duet, E
——Gurtstudieethe giant.twins care-
fully. He had to get down on that
lake unheard andunseen. for at the
Ih
-
r d
2
Peterkin’s Carolina plantation do
the rest.
Perhaps the best single feature of
the work is that Mrs. Peterkin, most
of whose published work has been
fiction. this time has held herself to
doing a good job of reporting
And perhaps next best is the fact
that she has kept the same view-|
point throughout, which is that of
one” who knows and understands
negroes, and has avoided any sug-
gestion of a patronizing manner.
up I
H
Tss?3e33
No trace at a new Ford car.
belonging to R. 3. Edwards and
stolen Tuesday afternoon as it stood
parked before a house on Boulver
Street, had been reported to dty
or county officers Wednesday morn-
ing
MEN’S RUBBER BOOTS
Black $2.45— Red $2.95
MEN’S TRENCH COATS
J
sa2 ■
-----
Patient Little Patients Try Their Luck
chamber of deputies considered a
navy budget report which declar-
ed that only a four-power pact
can save the world from a naval
armaments race of the worst kind
The report, signed by Marquts
Gtacomo Medici Del Vascello, com-
Into one.
All of ancient Greece, of Rome
and 10 centuries at Europe’s eight
foremost righting nations dwindle
neb
ljk ■
tain of the smartest possible
foot protection. Get Gaytces—
• (the trim, tailored new outer-
P shoes without snaps or fasten-
- era. A selec-
tion of attrac-
siv peteetns
"nd Colors.
See them
coday.
if I
I !
t
ij
1
BIGGER THAN ALL OTHER MAJOR
CONFICTS TN WORLD HISTORY
■Ry» ■
'tail*-—
; i
l
eign Secretary Sir John Simon pre-
" 'on the
SERVICE DRUG STORE
FREE DELIVERY
Phone 171 At Yout Service
b-=
K *
ROME, Jan. 3.— {While Pre-
mier Mussolini and British For-
/■--.fig
the ship,"
hated to
2"-
lished. It is, as might be guessed
from the title, a play about doctors
and hospitals cand, of codtrse
nurses), and it has had one of the
Big successes of the current season
in New York.
Mr. Kingsley has taken his play
very seriously even to the extent
of including footnotes giving his
sources and certaim-comment in the
published version.
Truth to tell, the love interest"
all plays must have is there a little
less convincing than the parts deal-
ing with the sacrifices and perfidies
of certain, members of the profes-
sion.
The young Doctor Ferguson is made
a thoroughly fine young man. almost
a paragon of the medical virtues
and then is permitted to ruin the
life of one fine, If ignorant, young
woman and fall in love with another
whose stupidity is almost too com-
plete.to be true.
In spite of which most readers
will decide that Mr. Kingsley has
made his chief point.
plane; I want Tenn-Og
h me "
Hitherto Unknown Continent I s
Discovered Lying Beneath Pacific
With Broad Plateaus and Mountains
-a
"SHHOUETTE"
Gaytees
............X——. _
ou-
have sharp eyes and long ears. We'll
scout the place out down there be-
fore we spring she fight. and I'll let
you know what we’re doing.”
“Okay. Don’t worry about me ”
A little distance down the shore
Curt happened to turn and glance
back at the cove. A match was flar-
n
I
4
New Congress
3,a, ._,2 1
toon. Smash opened a panel and
flpped. his cigarette into the water
“Hullo! Didn't Keep you waiting,
did I. Curt? Darner sorry; but say,
WOMEN’S RAINCOATS
some of them look as little like rain-
coats as anything you have ever seen.
Checked fabrics made with cute lit-
tle capes, rubberized wool coats that
look just like a very smart polo coat.
Many styles, materials and colors. ——
$1.98, $2.49, $3.50, $5.95,
$6.85 TO $11.95
.1/
■ !a
P * -a '..
. -,e
from the west in erder to keep fiom
flying over the main bund of Kloso-
hecs, he headed on westward for
sixty miles, thenswung.north and
started up across -the rnges. pradu-
1.3
-
1 . 1
“nn
Ie lifted the tank flaps and glanc-
Ue Uaum lie
Fickle weather ahead! Be cer.
—As thes, swung around the
petter and clambered upon A
Intending to approach
Leeper of Dallas and H. T. Qranan
ghah. Refreshments were served to
Messrs and Mmes. E. B Brown. Guy
Batla, W B. Chambers, Ward Chap-
man, R. C. Freeman, H. T. Grana-
ghan, Herman Harris, O. Hughes
John Hughes, A. E. McNeill, Berry
McDaniel,Tommie McDaniel. John
Nicholson, 8. B. Powell. Paul Sull-
man, Troy stinson; Mmes. E, L
Berry and O. M. Gentle; Misses
Gladys Echols and Lee Nichiolson;
Messrs. H. M. Horst. Walton Wil-
fong, Wilson Toon and Jack Stin-
son. Messrs, and Mmes. Lonnie
V Leeper of Dallas and Chas. Mc-
Ateer of Valley View.
Jesse Earl Seal entertained the
high school senior class honoring his
house guest. Miss Dorotha Lou Lowp
-
00-
hevm‛
22741
- .3 —A
WINTERGREEN AGAIN
The only musical show currently
dignified by publication of its "text"
is "Let Em East Cake," which is
the sequel, to "Of Thee I Sing."
Following a great success with a
sequel in precisely the same vein is
dangerous: In this case the effort to
make two posies grow where only
one grew before Las resulted in sub-
stituting the hoe for the garden
trowel, and the ax for the pruning
shears in several scenes. What was
satire in the original becomes deri-
sion in its successor.
Yet “Let 'Em Eat Cake” is funny
a large part at the time, especially
the caustic scene in the Union
League Club, wnich is full of barbs
but barbs that snag laughs is rather
than tear skin. Wintergreen is back,
this time running a revolution and
a factory to supply the necessary
blue shirts for the revolutionists.
Alexander Throttlebottom is also
abroad again, as gunibleeand futile
as of old. The show is the product
of extensive collaboration. George
8. Kaufman and Morrie Ryskind are
responsible for the lines. Ira Gehsh-
... - Tenn-©g look down at the country
back 1 below and blink astonished eyes. Fif-
— hi tecn minute:. ;u«i tha» samp.trip
had taken.sx hard cano~hours that
mining!
21,.2j
About 75 were present.. '
Serial Evnt,m2
Monday night Mr. andN. H
B. Toon entertained with •ridge
II tables playing. The roon” were
beautifully decorated. Awards for
high score went to Mrs. Lonnie V.
ad-
L a466a
Rough Dry, 1b. -.-...66
. y
Denton Laundry And
Dry Cleaners
Phone 8
his goal
I .
AEGT, *
Four-power Pact
Or Navy Race is
Mussolini View
pronged javelin, hardened the .poinis
in the fire; and went down to a rock
jut to spear trout. As Curt turned
he they had stopped fiah- -
ing and Vere listening intently, look-
ingaround the- horizon
A few moments later he caught n
far-away hum, faint as a mosquito’s
at sea," -----------------------
If the big European nations were
to gel together on some step look-
ing toward disarmament, world ten-
sion would be relieved and the way
opened for. A broader agreement
on arms-tncluding naval as well
as land and air—Vascello said. *
Citing particularly the naval
building programs at "America,
England and Japan, the report
placed blame for the heavy arm-
ing on Japan’s-idea of her “world
mission." .
This mission. Vascello declared,’
threatens a race war. ____
“Japan today invades China," he
said. “Inspired by race hatred, she
will plan tomorrow against white
men."
Referring to Japan’s naval ac- ,
tivities, he added.’ "the ground
work for this future danger from
the East is perhaps being laid.
"It has revealed in Japan's re------
cent polleles and diplomacy, i-
teacher there, imprisoned three
times for being too conservative
and three more for being too rad-
ical; now banished and a natur-
alized citizen of the United States.
General Golovin is a former Lleut.
I by Prof. Pitirim A. Sorokin, Har-
vard sociologist, and Lieut. Gen-
eral N. N, Golovin.
Theit Curve, showing nearly the
(whole ■ historical rise and fans
inwarnke spirit among meh, points
i universal peace, la their own
vords, as ohly a miracle." It
-Shews wars steadily worse in mod-
lem times: their apex nearly al-
[ways at the peak of "cultural" and
commercial influence.
The analysts do not gay what
twists in this snakellke curve may
give hopes of peace; but there is
one upon which many statisti-
- I clans might seize, That is the
; j completely efratic flow, with long
I 1 I time variations, suggesting that in
i the past man has done nothing
| about it.
i Prof. Pitirim is a prominent so-
Homecoming for I
Be Enacted bv San^ Lodges
■ V • . •
Washington. Jan. 3-(-
Here is a partial list oflegisla-
tion that probably wiii-be enacted
by the T3rd Cogress before the
dose of its present sesslont
A liquor tax bill, placing a levy
of 53 a gallon on spirits, designed
to raise more than *500.000.000 in
revenue. I •
A general tax measure, revising
the income tax law and tightening
loopholes, estimated to produce
$270,000,000 annually;
Eleven major supply bills. car-
I ding drowsily, and he kept a sharp
7 watch over his own senses.
CINCINNATI, Jan. 2.4(P—With
a balance at nearly four million
dollars in its exchequer, Cincinnati
—where the charter form of gov-
ernment established a record yester-
day by entering its ninth year —
starts 1934 with a comfortable feel-
ing of security and pride. .
That feeling was explained today
in the report of City Manager C. A
Dykstra, who remarked that “Cin-
cinnati has been immensely more
fortunate than most cities."
She is meeting her debts as’ they
come due, without resort to stren-
uouserforte: firr till holds $3,831,-
886, dr mW IHRH ILWU.W 111 ex-
cess of the balance as of Dec. 31,
1932. he reported.
Expenses have been reduced more
than two million dollars since 1931,
and a 5 per cent cut in the pay
of municipal employes has been re-
sorted.
"We lost no public deposits in-
falling banks and comparatvel
few of our citizens had such losses.
Tax revenues held up remarkably
। well, says Dykstra- .
he slippod silently 3 thrgugharfeecy
woGlpack, whre the sky above and
carth below were blotted out and
only his instruments) kept him
pointec-true. ; ’
When he came4 out of the wool-
, he was through the pass and
or For wort " o spin- rpoint.
ning Song" and "Puddin Head Jones"
8AN DIEGO. Oalif.. Jan. 3.
-Stretching beneath the surface
of the North Pacific lies a con-
ttnent, hitherto unknown, withhuge
plateaus broader than an above-
surface continent; with twice the
width of America; with mountains
higher than Mt. Everest and with
great deeps, separating it P from
Asia, that drop more than six
miles to their bottoms.
This unknown territory was dis-
covered recently. It was disclosed
here, by the echoes from the sonic
depth finder aboard the U. 8. S.
Rnmapo on a survey of the ocean
bottom trom America to Asia and
from 10 to 50 degrees north lati-
tude. when she was commanded by
Captain Claude B. Mayo. U.S. N.
The submerged territory is not
marked by steep depths in Ite sev-
aration from North America, which
appears more to be raised eastern
shoulder of the submerged conti-
nent, but the west coast of Asia
ahead.Instead of a help he would be
a constant danger. “Now keep your-
self under cover; these Klosohees
up the Iskitimwah, th? prospect of
gezhing into his plane and whirling _____
2 had buoyed Curt up and kept Cirt gInrer it hem 1lb!-iippedl
i"going long after he had gone -- h-------mi-hmtm - m** - irh
dura on his fet. But he had reach-
ed the limit of human endurance.
to tebmions for emergency spend-
ing;
Authorization for the continua-
uon of the Reconstruction. Cor-
poration and the Civilian Conser-
vation Corps
Amendment of the basic acts un-
der which the NRA and Agricul-
tural Adjustment Administrations
were founded, and some revision of
the Securities Act; and, possibly,
authorization for the president to
pegotiate reciprocal trade agree-
menta without submitting each to
the Senate for ratification.
Additional legislation probably to
be debated, some of which is al-'
most certain at enactment, in-
cludes: -
Ratification of the St. Lawrence
waterway treaty:
Revision of the existing- banking
legislation, including bank deposit
guarantee provisions. -__;
Authorization to the president
to declare arms embargoes in co-
operation with other nations;
Regulation of the stock exchanges
and.
Regulation of the communication
systems tam
slammed open the door and climbed
into thA cabin
win for the lyrics, and George
Gershwin for the music. Alas, the
music 18 not included tn the pub-
lished version,
■F—
JULIA PETERKIN
It is quite possible that "Roll, Jor-
dan, Holl" win become a standard
reference work when writers of the
future want to learn of the southern
negro.
Julia Peterkin wrote the text, a
generous text. Some 70 photographs
taken by Doris Ulmann on Mrs.
W. Melson and Miss Maryolin Mei- pared tadayto converse
son; address. Mayor R. Q„ Hurd;
Special to Record-Chronicle
AUBREY, Jan. 3.—Mr. and Mrs.
Bassie Haynie entertained a group
of young people Sunday evening
with a watch party. Games were
played and a midnight luncheon
was served to 29 guests.
Word was received here of the
death of Mullins Gregory. 31. at
Dallas Friday, of pneumonia. Fun-
eral services were held in Dallas
Saturday. He was born at Aubrey
and with his parents moved to
Dallas several years ago. He is sur-
vived by his wife. . ■
Lutes Bonar returned to New
to the ,Amei
the Avapa
down in the purple shadows .of
Sunalt.
;, down, with the dark
v coming up to meet
him, he veered in toward the south
shor, under Tenn-Og's cabin, he
leveled off. plowed, water, and,came
to a stop. He was there, all right; he
had made it without being seen or
heard; but with less than sir gallons
of gas left, he would never get out
of that mountain-cradled lake. No
escape, no retreat—it was a locked
right now
A light breeze blowing offshore be-
gar drifting the plane out into the
lake Paul reached the. two stubby
paddles from th? canvas canoe out-
fit, and the four men clambered
down on the flouts. By strenuous
work they managed to cifeck the
drift and start the plane in toward
land.
A mile from' the cabin Tenn-Og
' with three ptarmigan, he cleaned
and dressed the Birds, cooked thom,
and prepared a meal.
Near seven o'clock Curt woke up.
hearings
. A iast-he touched Curt's arm and1
peihed-twety-ede—mHes—enst—et-
two lordly elcrct-wrapped mountntn- orrecoufa'avabeenspoted
"Sunali and Dinaggwah," he said;
and hr indiatec fhat on the other
side of them lay the headwaters lake
WINTER IS HERE
.... that is, if he doesn’t fool us
again. Present indications are that we
are in for a nice little taste of good
-a old winter—the time for sniffling
noses and chattering teeth. That's
why we want you to be prepared with
something to keep you snug and
warm.
panel windows on eneh tljte teyiug "yore to stay
desperatcly. t-Elde the Gighl in - - -
the df*p valleys -under keel -twilight
was already gthering; the visibility
a ar made still poorer by a pearly-
' i vanish. But’ it came on and on, till
at last he distinguished the lines of
his plane.
Fer him that glistening plane had
all the splendor of a delivering an-
gel -From its height of ton thousand
feet it glided down and down, bank-
l ed over the lake, leveled off, touch-
ed and came tgxying shoreward.
The three leaped into their canoe
and darted eut to meet tfc
chopped a dead jackpin? into fire-
wood. When Tenn-Og came
--DuNTONTEXASHcOE-cuoNe-E-WEDNKeDAKJANAL___
LAtE WORLD WAR EIGHT TIMES Legislation to
mittee reporter, and accepted as a
statement of 11 Dceis own diev-
warned thhttheprmnetpe
world powers "are already arming
eluding her withdrawal from the
League of Nations. This gesture is
of great importance and la highly
significant and menacing." — -
The reporter did not ask great-
er naval approriattons for Itaty:
contenting himselr with an appeal
for a disarmament agreement.
No Trace Found of
Car Stolen Tuesday
■■ ■
2 - * - * mama >a.1. a2Kal
■ . ..
showed them a small cove, screened
by several, higpines, where the plane
would be fairly well hidden They
warped u inside, moored _ it, got out
4 heir-guns. -- —‘~--i—2
--- "F bare and watch
County Recreational
Meet Here Saturday
Letters are being mailed by Mrs.
Edna W. Trigg, county home dem-
onstration agent, to the presidents
of all home demonstration clubs 1
the county asking that representa-
lives from each attend the county
recreational meeting to be held in
the basertent of the Senior High
School at 7:30 o'clock Saturday eve-
ning. e
Qus Egan of Krum is to be in
charge of the games and contests
ing up—Smash lighting a cigarette.
Ttr131F"b1avk pine shatwsthe point
’ fre could 'have been spoted half
cuologtst, chairman of the DIvt-F
Sion of Sociology at Harvard, a
native of Russia, an egainet
ny 24, Italy 32 and Ruasta tat
"This said the report, “refutes
the theory that war tends to dis-
appear with the progress of civili-
zation. It means also that all the
commendable hopes that war will
disappear in the near future ate
based on nothing more than wish
and a belief in miracles.
"Most of these hopes sprang up
in the 19th century, which was
more peaceful than the period
from the 12th century to the 16th.
"All the data suggests that in
the course at history wAr has no
perpetual trend; it tends neither
to decrease nor to increase; but
oscillates trrailcaJIy wh long-
time ups and downs. In all prob-
ability this trendless or erratic os-
cillation will continue indefinite-
ly."
But to reach it without being seen
was a harder problem, calling for all
the, flying skill be had. There was
a flock of clouds swirling around
the two giants and nlling the pass
between them. If he could keep be-
hind some big cloud onthis approach]
and fly through the pass by instru-
ments. he would come out on.the
shadow side of Sunali. It would be
twilight there and the plane would
hardly be visible a mile away.
He put the plane into a steep
cireling climb. At eighteen thousand
feet he geared in the supercharge to
aid the laboring motor. The ther-
iometer on the wing strut showed
sixteen below, and at nineteen
thousand feet it dropped to twenty-
cne He noticed his companions nod-
-
Uwl * 1 ' ’
I By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE
I Assoclaled Press Science Editor
- I CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Jan. 3
cm The Arst universal, scientific
J war curve, plotting major wars
since 500 years before Christ, shows
the late world war eight time*
bigger than all the others rolled
you ought to thp dance pal
and the whole layout down the
Lake Maria—uh —Why, what's
matter. Curt?"
ed the gauges. One-third full! For a
mom nt he wax tempted to throw
Smash off on that wilderness shore:, Wh
and let him get out to Russian Lake" ^kck.
afoot, if he could. It was like Smash.
gray haze that came dritring down
fror some forest fire in the Yukon
country • —-——
But Uh, . U>b was to gtu‛: them,
and he came throygh with it As a
mountain nomad he was somewhat
used to heights-, and by recognizing
a familiar range of lake system now'
and then, he was able to keep his
General on tthe general staff.
Imperial Russian Army, noted as
____ teacher, historian, strategist
The "statistics and Implica- The modem nations in the curve:
t 1914 to 1919 as presented with the wars of each, are: -
..r - ----- — “ Austria 131, France 185, Holland
23, Spain 25, England 176, Germia
with his mind en Lake Marianne, to
comso[.withuabarelyenough-East
Thete was ‘ . rcachtheLl-
luar headwaters, but none to bring
the ship back south. . When they
reached the lake they would have
no gas to ma neuter with or get put
to civilization •
Taking Qf. hecircladto.five thou-
sand feet and started west, down the
Iskitimwah. Fifteen minutes later,
he sailed out over the river-widening
and the isandof baek- HHes, he mw
York after visiting Mr. and Mrs.
J. E Bonar.
SCRf^^TODAY
PALACE—Today only. Charlie Rug-
gles in "Goodbye Love"; News;
Comedy.
DREAMLAND Charles Laughton in
"White Woman" with Charles
Bickford; Act; Comedy
;un; Calvo
SYNOPSIS: Sonya Volkov has
tracked Igor Karakhan to his
Canadlan wilderness hiding place
to avenge the draths of her
father and brother, whom Kar-
akhan has betrayed to the So-
Karakhan. by a ruse, suc-
eeeds in lying Sonya to a hunk
in his cabin, and teils her lie is
leaving her to the mercy of the
Indians. Her only hope is llurt
fennyson. and Curt is delayed
berause his partner. Smash Des
__plaine s, has failed to meet him
with Curt's plane.
Chapter 44
DELIVERIN ANGEL
tally picking, up altitud till the
needle quivered oh fifteen -thousand.
Tenn-Og kept l i king out 0 th
Paut had supper ready, but Curt
could not force -himself to eat. The
thought of Sonya drawing, nearer
and nearer that headwaters lake sent
htm tramping the landwash again
1ir dstraction. .
Paul and Tenn-Og made atw9-
and the shock of finding himself
hopelessly stranded through Smash's
truancy, pushed him over the limit.
Stumbling under a pine tree, he
slumped down, almgst-in a, collapse,
and dropped into the ••merclfuf dh-
livion of sleep.
Tenn-Og began looking around the
cabin, reading signs—a crushed net-
tle. footprints, a broken twig with
wilted leaves. He announcedpreser-
ly that -Smesh hadnetbeenthere
yesterday or the day before that. H?
had left three days ago.
To sit around and watch the sky
for a plane that did not come Was
more than Payl could bear Wisely
he kept himself busy While Tenn-
Og went down the shore to a. small
stream where ptarmigan were chort-
ling among the cloudberry thickets,
hedrew out the eanoe and gummed
n. freshened up the musty cabin and
song. It semed to come from no-
where in particular; but it rapidly
grew louder, deeper and changed to
a throaty drcne. He located its di-
rection. due south, ac whirled to
look ,
■ Out above a lofty range hove a
gHstening speck, sinning in tha slant
evening sun Curt Stood rooted in
' hm tr.n'ks. ;if raid-that the -growing-
speck-was "a delusion _and mmight
Most Coughs
Demand Creomulsion
’Don't let them get a straz.gle hold
Fignt germs, quickly. Creomulsion
combines 7 major helps in one
powerful but harmless Pleasant to
take No narcotics. Your own drug-
gist is authorized to refund jour
money on the spot if your cough or
cold is not relieved by Creomulsion.
, (adv.)
S. I. Self Motor Co.
FOLLOW HIS EXAMPLE
- AND
of Weatherford. After the games
hot chocolate and cake were serv-
ed to Missea Hargaret Brown, Ju-
lia Miller, Jeanette McClendon.
Margaret and Owen Qiles, Abbie
Lee Gentle, Cliff Wilson, Theda
Cherry, Mattie Belle NcClellan.
Winnie, Ruby and Alyne Seal. An-
na Florlnc Gary of Dallas,’ Messrs.
Gambill and John Lewis Sullivan.
J. T. McClellan, Babe Hughes, Lan-
ier Chestnut, Robert Chambers, T.
H. Averitt, Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Seal.
W. A. Seal of Coleman.
News Briefs.
Aubrey Boydstun. who was Injured
two weeks ago, has been brought
home from a hospital He has not
fully regained consciousness.
Mrs Tom Herd's condition has
become worse and she has been ta-
ken back to a hospital.
Miss Mable Springer of Terrell and
Car) Manghm of Sanger were mar-
ried Dec. 24.
Tha couple will make their home
$2-45,
tsmg npproprtattons for oi dlnnry
Federal activities.
Additional appropriation bills,
poss.bly carrying sums running in-
shows a series of tremendous
———1-—-—
.From north to south in the west
portion of the continent is a mam-
moth mountain ridge with tower-
ing peaks that arc known to Pa-
cific Marines as islands (Hawaii,
etc.) banks and reefs. Although
there is no proof, it may be con-
jectured that when survey is made
of the pacific floor area south of
10 degrees north It wiI be discov-
ered that the various groups of
South Sea Islands are southern
peaks of the great western ridge
of the sub-continent.
This “new" continent, tt was
explained at the Scripps Institu-
tion of Oceanography at La Jolla,
contains definite valleys marking
the courses of ancient rivers, count-
less volcanoes which are still ac-
tive beneath the sea, broad flat
or rolling plateaus and other gen-
eral continental feaatures charac-
teristic of the continents above
water known to man.
—■ '-l' a ■ -------------------------------------*
Phone 1133 . " We Deliver
. ______;____e-------------------------------’-------------------------r
is ideal for making the best of dressing, cakes, pies and bread.
It insures Uniform baking and satisfactory results.
X ■ -
_ i 8 ,
\T
1: V -
80
alliance1 Milling co.
Denton,, Texas
slightest hint of a plane in that -
country Krakhan would escape in
his own ship, find they had nogas
to follow. It the plane could climb
high enough, he could cut of the
engine and glide those twenty-five
miler to the lake and so get there
unheard. - —............
MAN BROUGHT HERE ON
FORGERY CHARGE
■"Paul Shomer, charged here with
forgery, was taken into custody
at Grapevine by Deputy Sherirt
Clint Starr and Dallas Curtsinger
Tuesday night and brought here.
Bond had not been set Wednesday
morning.
In the thin air he “managed to get
nnether thousand out of -his plane
Twenty thousand feet high,’ he look-
ed through a rift of cloud between
the two mountains and caught, ia
glimpse of the dark lake valley be-
’ t d Cutting off the engine, he
pointed the ship at the great cleft.
-nnd began the long silent glide
Heading on and on toward UW
snowy pass, he plunged at ast into
the clouds tha hovered around the,
giants. For a spte of five minutes
ds- s-
'’ ' ' "ve ' '
#s,
m
f | I
201 S. Elm
*.2
1
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 122, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 3, 1934, newspaper, January 3, 1934; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1539008/m1/3/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.