Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 28, Ed. 1 Monday, September 16, 1935 Page: 2 of 6
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DENTON. TEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE, MONDAt, PEPTEMBEH 18. 1MC
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Talks
BARBS
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J. & FOWLER
Circulation Department
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| justice of the peace be?
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CAPITAL CHATTER
Ite omcials. I observed him dining with senator Walsh
(Copyright, 1935,
8
5
comments on the air mail service:
of the teeth. Pericdically, too, the
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BURR’S
CAPITAL JIGSAW
4
12c Doz.
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Tomorrow—Safe Home Canning
property on the street.
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Good Insurance
S
BUY AT CURTIS NOW
Isn’t Cheap
1
drew up behind the tent in
Klenzo 2th Paste 4 Brush 49
which their side-show was to to
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greet them
THINK IT OVER "
------- ----+#
Tomorrow—“The Rehearsa""
An Educational Policy
Insures • college education rot
South
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be hoped that the publication of
such a story will sene its purpose
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29
184
JUST
AMONG US
FOLKS
Purity Bakery
Phone 106 ;
1 not long ago
Service, Ie.
tragedies which are becoming
mon along every highway. Il
through and goes home and busi-
ness starts breathing easier again.
Texas solons start work and throw
-
Kotex, 4 4M fot
Kleenex. WO
of the liquor business under the re-
peal amendment, and the question
of old-ago pensions is one which
may bring on little lev argument.
NEW YORK. Sept. 16.— (P—1 Four
members of the crew of the light-
house Tender Tulip drowned today
when a small boat in which they
were taking supplies to the light-
house Roamer capsized in the lower
bay. The dead are Harry L. Chris-
tiansen. boatswain. Ernest W Ott-
man, assistant engineer, and Alfred
Steen and Niles Oakland, seamen.
■
maiming,
* • • • • • 16.
Texans will have on their hands
tor several weeks their Legisature,
which convenes in special session
today. With several unusually con-
troversial subjects up for considera-
tion, and knowing the amount of
time it requires for a legislative
body to act, it may be taken for
granted that the hope for only one
special session of 30 days is ex-
tremely slim Many divergent view-
points must be harmonized in the
1
Hy4
The breathing spell may be here, Presdent
Roosevelt, but some business men are still trying
to catch their breath.
were going to appear in a sideshow
together with a giant.
S0o
69e
390
88-80
3.00
. 1.50
. M
British scientist discovers that the earth is
circled by a belt of hot air That will be dispell-
ed soon, for congress has adjourned.
By Man oraham Bonner
EXCITEMENT
Come to Burr’*
For Your
“Back to School”
Values
help the Texans fight for liberty
Soon after the battle, it was sent
to Mrs. Sherman as a testimonial
of her husband's gallantry in ac-
tion.
On Aug. 8, 1896. the flag was pre-
sented to the state by a daughter 0
Qen. Sherman, was restored by a
I-gislativa act in 1932 and was ac-
cepted formally by the state April
31. 1933.
others. Com is very good in nearly
all ne:ds. The price for the latter
is disappointing, but the cotton- re-
turns will ndt be bad in view of
the subsidy the government has of-
fered A month of sunshine would
see most of the crops gathered.
Nangingator
xabensgnaga
2. What is a. saloon?
3. How can you tell when a negro
is 65 years old?
4. How can you get money "when
there ain't Miy2'______________________
Liquor regulation, substitution of
salaries for many county officers
receiving fees and old-age pensions
probably will be the subjects of the
session.
J. J. Maclachlan
INSURANCE
Phone 365
308 Smoot-Curtis Bldg.
com-
la to
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations,
Member Associated Press.
Member Texas Daily Press League.
—------ .--.f PHONKs
Busines and Editorial Office .......................
Everything For The
Children!
PAGEFOUR
Denton Record-Chronicle
RCORD-OHRONICLE COMPANY, ng. ;
themselves and the almost fell out
of the automobile admiring their
pictures.
"Let me look at my picture I"
cackled Top Notch.
"We're there, toor" quacked the
ducks.
“Let’s see, let's see. let's see," they
all cried.
They now drove along a back road
taka place.
"We're here!”- announced Willy
FOUR MEN DROWN WHEN BOAT
CAPSIZES
B. J. EDWARDS .....
8 HsRr
Emperor Haile Selassie has several foreign ad-
visers teaching him a language Mussolini might
understand
ness conditions disturbed as little ,Opon this shell other, similar films
as possible. ' are deposited and ultimately a per-
The Pudde Muddlers, led by the
little man Wil
A few newspapermen have deserted their trade to
take up lobbying Jim West, who left his job cover-
ing Hoover for a press association to become press
agent for the Republican National Committee for a
while, received $8400 from shipbuilding companies
during the Senate munitions hearings and 67500 from
duPont. Remington, and Curtiss-Wright
Very rarely a correspondent is discovered to be on
the secret payroll of an organization engaged in lob-
bying or propaganda, whereupon he is fired from the
Senate press gallery if be hasn't formaly disclosed
the' connection
..
2320
-*-6
Hre. mayranoe
A political writer representing a Boston newspape
used to brand such progressives as Norris and Wheel
er regularly as "bolsheviks' until it was discovered
he was working on the side for the New England
Power Association, which then hired him as one of
$12,500,000 FROM DELINQUENT TAXES
State Senator T. J. Holbrook of Galveston revealed
last week that Governor Allred had agreed to submit
an omnibus delinquent tax bill at the special session
of the Legislature. This bill. written by the late Sen-
ator A. P. Duggan, was the result of months of study
of the Senate Tax Research Committee of which Sen-
ator Duggan was chairman. ____'
(It la estimated by the members of the committee
that if this bUli* passed, It will result in the collec-
tion of at least $2,500,000 in delinquent takes the
first year, without harming the little property own-
ers who are genuinely unable to pay taxes. It is aim-
ed primarily to those citizens of wealth and property
who simply refuse to pay taxes because they can get
by without this expense.
In the special session of the Legislature, more rev-
enue is certain to be an important topic at discussion.
If not action, and it seems reasonable that the Leg-
islature should pay especial attention to collecting de-
linquent tax money due it before attempting to levy
new taxes or to shift the burden around.
I
(\‘ P
\
k
jown
r{esP
The Pilot Point public schools opened Monday with
a large enrollment and prospects for an excellent
school year. The faculty is as follows Superinten-
dent. A. 8. Keith; principal J. B. Brooks; high school
teachers. Misses Eugenia Simmons and Willie Mae
Ledbetter; grade teachers. Misses Stella Simmons.
Nan Alexander, Hallie Scott, Madle Gainer, Iva
Jones, Alma Shaw and Mrs. Bessie Lewis.
' the most recent officials to resign and join
hierhood is former Assistant Attorney eh-
tem in its history. There are,
about 29,000 miles on which
planes fly on the basis of 40 -
000,000 miles annually on the
fastest schedules in thie world '
It is unfair to a commumty, not
to be fully informed thereon.
McKinney is served by the Dal-
las airport. Letters can be dis-
patched from here to Dallas in
an hour's time to make connec-
tion with air mail planes to al-
most every portion of the Uni-
ted States and Mexico Use this
service that Uncle Sam affords
you."
(Copyright, 1935, NBA Service. Inc.)
President Id Secretary Howe is recuperating.
Pro-Roosevelt Democrats seeking a snappy 1936
slogan might consider him for the vice presidency.
• • a
Any careless Missouri autolst who hits a pe-
destrian hereafter may have to pay for clearing
the street of sales tax caps.
= 1
“4 I
eral William Stanley, who has established law prac-
tice and has been representing certain financing com-
panies which want more out of the Federal Housing
Administration set-up than they've been getting.
Some congressmen insist on putting themselves
under obligation to lobbyists. Millard of New York,
who recently was yelling so loudly about the Jim
Farley stamp scandal requested the United Drydocks
Co. to give some of Ite sheet metal work to a New
York man. A company official sent an inter-office
memorandum suggesting compliance with the request,
"as; of course. a ihember of the House naval affaire
committee may be vety useful in future dealings with
the navy."
About 36,000 lawyers and agents (most at them not
Washingtonians) are licensed to practice before the
Treasury More than 200 have been disbarred, sus-
pended or reprimanded in the past few years by a
Treasury committee appointed to enforce ethical
standards. The cream of this business is in tax re-
funds tor corporations and rebates for huge estates.
I g
i
l
your child.
A. J. COOPER
men drivers. It is not that women
drive worse than men. or are ig-
norant of the rules of the road. To
a great extent they simply lack
thought for the “other fellow" as a
result of their training.
Withal that for years they have
demanded equal rights, they have
failed in many instances to remem-
ber that equal rights imply equal
duties. Meanwhile, moreover. nur-
sery manners have not changed to
meet the new dispensation.
Mary lias been teasing and wor-
rying Tommy beyond endurance. II
Tommy strikes her on knocks her
down, he is scolded and perhaps
“Dead," the factual police report said. "Dead, of
malnutrition." . . . With perhaps a dozen other scribes
I climbed the stairs and felt my way through the
darkened hall. We turned into an open door, which
id presently to the rom or deatn. She was 27, neigh-
boring tenants told us, a strange girl who almost
never left the lone Ultle room in which she lived. It
seemed strange that she should have died of star-
vation. considering the fact that children In the
gloomy hall were having a fine time playing "steam-
roller'' with three quart bottles of milk.
Rattlesnake meat la. no longer a novelty in New
York, but it is still rather startling to pass that shop
which advertised "rattlesnake sandwiches—toasted."
• • •
New window displays denote a return to popularity
this fall of yellow raincoats.
It was a horrible story published
in the Record-Chronicle Saturday,
titled "And Sudden Death". It was
almost too terrible to print, but in
view of the ever-mounting toll of
death and mangling from automo-
bile accidents, those who have been
giving much thought to the situa-
tion have backed the publication of
such a vivid story of what a seri-
ous motor accident really is, strip-
ped of its veneer of avoidance at
horrible details as the news stories
are printed. People shudder at the
terrible toll of highway mishaps,
but they usually think little of the
horror-of the Intimate details un-
til they themselves have actually
been a participant of one of the
Entered as second-ciass mail matter at Denton,
Texua.
Daily saauod at 214 West Hickory Street, Denton.
Texas, every afternoon except Sunday by the Record
Chronicle Company. Inc.
RI
• • • • . ceptible formation results. This is
The McKinney Courier-Gazette called tartar
™ - — --e: The formation of tartar may be
Contemporary Thought
GOOD NAVAL REFORM
The United States navy has decided to depart
from its time-honored policy of insisting that every
officer, no matter what his specialty, take his reg-
ular turn at ordinary sea duty. Henceforth expert
aviation officers, especially those gifted in design of
planes and engines, will be allowed to remain per-
manently in the posts which they are best adapted
to fill.
Here is a reform in naval policy which seems to
have been long overdue. For a good many years,
critics hve protested that the navy was reducing
Its own efficiency by periodically shifting its "spe-
etalists" out of their special jobs to regular quarter-
deck assignments.
The new ruling should make it possible to build up
a permanent corps of expert officers whose service
will mean a more efficient and up-to-date fighting
fleet.-Texarkana Gazette,
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
tation or stanang of any Arm, individual or corpora-
tion will be glad corrected upon being called to the
PuP"the"Autcsatta"pregs le excsustvety entitled to the
UM for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to
it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the
local news published herein.
DENTON, TEXAS, SEPTEMBER 16, 1935
1TIME FOR THE REAL TEST
Hogs reached the highest price on the Chicago mar-
ket this week that has been attained since August.
1929. Adding in the processing tax of 82 25 per hun-
dred. hogs cost the packers $14.50, the highest price
in almost 10 years.
The rise in the pried of pork has demonstrated
rather forcefully that the AAA can Increase prices
by restricting hog production and passing the bene-
fits along to the hog farmers. Receipts of hogs at the
packing centers have been about half normal, which
indicates that there is a shortage of hogs, or that
farmers are waiting for higher prices.
But what about the consumer? He has seen bacon,
ham and fresh pork prices skyrocket within the last
few months, and his only protection so far against
high prices is eating less pork.
I the AAA can boost pork prices with its process-
ing tax and corn-hog program. It might contemplate
using the tax as a balance to keep pork prices within
reason. That was what the framers of the corn-hog
program intended, for they realised that after hog
prices reached a profitable level, there was no fur-
ther excuse for the processing tax.
However there are political complications in re-
ducing or eliminating the hog processing tax. Hog
raisers naturally like to get 1929 prices for their pork
and also the benefit payments for not raising as
many hogs. Any effort to take away these benefits
would bring down the wrath at the hog raisers, and
apparently the AAA had rather weather the wrath
of a few delegations to Washington and the passive
resistance of the public to eating high-priced pork
than to displease farmers who are beginning to de-
pend upon their benefit payments. 9
SUBSCHIPTION RATES
anyazontndnydanoqmadvanoey
Thiree months by mall (in advance) .....
One month delivered .......-..........................
The air mall service has shewn
rapid expansion in recent yeats, and
perhaps will continue to grow for
years to come. When connections
are close, a considerable amount of
time is saved in the dispatch of
mail In many instances, however,
mail going by plane reaches its des-
tination little sooner than it oth-
erwise would, particularly when this
mall has to be transported by train
and pass through terminal points.
The government has spent a con-
siderable sum of money in provid-
ing subsidies for air. mail, and is
entitled to some definite results
therefrom. The average person who
uses the malls doesn't stop to con-
sider the speed he might be able
to gain by sending it through the
air it might be well for those with
important mail to be handled to
inform themselves of the quicker
delivery that is possible in many
instances by using the air mall serv-
ice, so that full benefit may accrue
from the money that has been spent
in developing the service.
_______. ______ _______ ,, food debris, mucin from saliva, and
a new scare.-Peoptearetited at vatious -nicro-organlsms
legislation, so much having been! At first the deposit is like a soft,
enacted in recent years, and it isjticky film. Within ‘24 to 48 hours
the fervent hope that the Texas tpis -film. If allowed to remain, be-
Legislature will complete Its work’comes toughened. Subsenquentiy it
without delay and return home.; becomes impregnated with calcium
leaving the tax structure and busi- | and forms a hard rock-like shell.
Homer Kerley and Homer Klepper returned home
Friday from Valentine where they have been with
the state militia since it was called out over four
months ago. Both have secured honorable discharges
but state that it is becoming very hard to get dis-
charges for even the most urgent reasons. Over half
of the Denton boys who went to the border at the
first call have received discharges.
The city street force is placing a sewer main on
Pearl Street from Carroll Avenue to John B. Denton
Street. The pipe is being paid for by owners of the
e9
QgamKe -pg
“--,2
53gs
LATRELLE TOILETRIES
Made of the finest of materials: sold and guaranteed by us to gfve
complete satisfaction. They will please you. Cleansing Cream, 8 02,
• 1.00. 4 Purpose Cream. 8 oz . 81.00. Astringent. 8 oz., $1.00; Cu-
climber Lotion, 8 oz., 75c; Face Powder, 81 00.
RUBBER GOODS
We are agents for United Rubber Co and always have on hand
fresh stock direct from the factory Guaranteed to give satisfac-
tion. Defender Fountain Syringe or Hot Water Bottle. 2-quart,
seamless, pure gum ruhber, 98c.
THE MEDICINE MAN
Our store has served the people of Denton county under the same
management for 35 years We carry complete stocks of drug store
merchandise and guarantee satisfaction. Phone 52. Prompt dellv-
ery.
asking Stevensoh to seek re-elec-
tion. On the basis of this support
Stevenson announced
When the campaign warmed and
both sides started putting on the
pressure there was much squirming.
Members who previously had pledg-
ed their support to one or the other
candidates were in a tight place
Only those who had withheld def-
inite commitments could sit back
and get even a small measure of en
joyment out of the race.
SIX members are mentioned as
likely candidates. They are Reps.
Morris Roberts at Pettus. Walter
E. Jones of Jourdanton, D Em-
mett Morse of Houston, Sidney
Latham of Longview, Albert Walker
of Vernon and Bob Alexander of
Childress. The candidacies of all.
however, are uncertain.
It is reported Roberts lias been
approached by friends to run for the
Senate to succeed E. J. Blackert of
Victoria. Walker may not seek re-
election while Latham, the political
grapevine reveals, may have ambi-
tions toward another office also.
Morse was one of Stevenson's
chief lieutenants In the last speak-
ership clash. But Jones also put in
some sturdy work for Stevenson and
the present speaker likely would
keep out of the race should it sim-
mer down to these two.
thers and splendid red comb. The
ducks had spruced themselvensa
look their best. There was not a
single burr to be found in Rip's
coat. He was wagging his tail and
barking with excitement.
Christopher Columbus Crow look
ed black and shiny and magnifi-
cent. The bears looked so strong
and well nourished and Sweet Face,
the lamb, wore a blue ribbon around
his neck to which was attached a
teeth should be thoroughly clean-
ed by a dentist. This treatment con-
sists in what is called scaling the
teeth, that is, scraping them clean
of all deposits.
Many different methods of brush-
ing the teet hhave been devised in
the main, though, dental authori-
ties agree that proper brushing con-
sists essentially in moving the
brush with a vibratory motion over
the teeth and the gums, so that ev-
ery portion of the teeth and the
gum margins are reached by the
bristles. The long stroke motion
usually results in cleaning only the
high spots.
It must be kept. In mind that the
modem diet composed as it is of
soft foods, does not call for much
vigorous chewing. Were our foods
hard adn totigh, our teeth would be
cleansed and our gums would be
vigorously massaged in the process
of mastication. Lacking wen exer-
else, it is important that we should
make amends by deliberately clean-
ing our teeth ahd b} massaging
our gums.
prevented by the proper brushing
"The United States new has - - " — —
the most extensive air mail sys-
Senator Tom Deberry suggests
the Legislature convening Sept. 18
might answer four questions and
go home.
They are:
1. What should the salary of a
cToNotwhelookedAsedandsomeoas NilI as the giant came forth to
CHEAP INSURANCE
ISN’T GOOD
Illy Nilly, were all ready . .
to start for the County Fair. They an
CaMwrlk Syr. Fepalo, 5 oz. 496
Curtis Mineral Oil. is oz. 49c
Curtis Skapn 256
Curtis Cheat Kuh, 1 1-2 oz. 250
Vicks Vapo Kwh, < oz, 29e
Man About Manhattan
By GEORGE TUCKER
NEW YORK, Sept 16.—Aviators aren't the only
ones who hit air-pockets—writers sometimes do too.
I have in mind a young scribbler who has climbed
to considerable height* on the list of writers whose
- stuff is welcomed by alert magazine editors. A bach-
elor. he spent his money freely, and so when tt came
tone to lead a pretty thing to the altar he placated
her with the assurance that he would "knock off a
lew stories" and fatten the bankroll.
"You'd better sell a few first, honey," she insisted
Nothing loath, he got down to work and turned in
the stuff to his agent. Several weeks Isler, receiving
no word, the young man approached his ezent
“Jack," his agent replied seriously. '".a strange,
confoundedly strange I can't place any of those
stories. The editors tell me they aren't up to your
usual standard.’
The upshot of this was that the young groom-to-
be. In a panic, returned to his typewriter and wrote
steadily for weeks. He couldn't place a thing. The lit-
erary "air-pocket" into which he had tumbled lasted
for nearly two years, and he was almost convinced
that he had written himself out—that is. reached
the end of his string -when suddenly he found his
second wind Now he is going great-guns, but he is
mindful of the fact that air-pockets do exist even
for the most skillful pilots and that chicken today
may often mean feathers tomorrow.
Epsom Salts, sm for
Curtis Pure Castor on,
10 07
Aremati Cascara, 8 or..
Curtis Syr. Pepsin, 8 or..
A school election being held in the Ponder district
today is to determine on the levy of ah additional
20c tax for adding two rooms to the present building.
Behind Scenes In Washington
By RODNEY DUTCH®
NBA Service Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON, Sept 16-Further notes on lob-
bying:
The “power trust” lobby, which for years has spent
more money and hired more lobbyists than any oth-
er, probably will join the prohibition lobby as a has-
been. Its devious, secretive methods are blocked by
a provision m the utility holding company act for-
bidding anyone paid by a holding company or sub-
sidiary from lobbying without publicly registering
, with the SEC
You can get a rough idea how many resident lobby-
ists there are here by counting some 2500 lawyers
and law firms In the city telephone directory. Several
hundred other lobbyists don't profess to be lawyers
Nobody knows how many, among those who do, ever
’ A passed bar exams.
Sometimes lobbyists start with an ace in the hole
A congressman who voted against the "death sen-
tence" tells me he made a survey among colleagues
who did likewise and found about 85 per cent of them
either owned holding company securities or had
members of thetr immediate families who owned
g3
T---
By CHARLES E: SIMONS
AUSTIN, sept. 16—(PThe spe-
cial session of the-Legislature should
witness a quickening of mterest in
the race for speaker of the 45th
House.
When the Legislature adjourned
Ite regular meeting in May the
speakership contest was wide open.
Small blocs had formed around a
few of the prospective contenders
but the majority of the membership
went home unpledged and unallied-
Ordinarily at the elose of a -long
regular session the lines in the race
for speaker of the succeeding House
are fairly well defined
This was true in the 42nd when
Coke Stevenson of Junction and A
P. Johnson of Carrizo Springs were
contestants A similar condition
existed In the 43nd when Steven-
son again was a candidate and his
opposition lined up with J. B Ford
of McGreger, Ford, however, aban-
doned the chase in favor of young
R W Calvert a few months before
the 44th met.
The experience of representatives
in the last speakership campaign is
credited with causing most of the
"hands off" attitude. At the close
of the regular ession of the 43rd.
friends of Stevenson circulated a
petition, signed by 106 members,
punished for hitting a girl. He is
taught to shield and protect girls,
open doors for them, give them
chairs and his seat in the street-
car as they grow older, she may
lead him on by all the feminine
wiles she knows, but if he, answer-
ing the challenge, presumes on it,
he is in the wrong
Na doubt tt is good training for
Iha Boy, but is it as good for the
girl? Where she enters the business
world or plays men's games, should
she not be taught to observe men's
rules, and ngt, try to "get by" be-
cause she is a woman? It is a lesson
which must be taught in childhood.
No advantage is due to petticoats
when they claim equal rights. Even
if in society they can precede men,
can demand services and protec-
tion. from them, yet on the road,
the playground. In business they
must leam the rules and stick to
them.
By HOWARD C. MARSHALL
AUSTIN. Sept. 16— (API— Ap-
proximately 12,000 tourists from
every state and may foreign coun-
tries visited the capltol in June.
July and August.
Nine thousand signed the visitors'
register in the House of Represent-
atives chamber and attendants said
at least One-third did not sign. The
total, compared favorably with the
numbers that came in pre-depres-
sion days.
On Aug. 27 more than 250 regis-
tered from Texas, Ohio. Icwa. North
and South Dakota, Nebraska, Mis-
souri. Minnesota, Illinois, New York,
Wisconsin, Maryland, Pennsylvania
Washington, Oregon, Indiana, Louis-
iana. Michigan and Canada.
They appeared to be most inter-
ested In the flag Tegans carried at
the Battle of San Jacinto and th
electrical voting machine.
Carefully encased in glass and
suspended behind the speaker's
rostrum, the flag is one of the
most treasured relics in the state-
house It is said to have been the
only one .displayed by the Texans
in the battle which decided Texas'
independence from Mexico.
The flag was presented by the
ladles of Newport. Ky.. to Capt, Sid-
ney Sherman when he lefthome to
I have in mind. too. another young writer who sub-
mitted some tales so horribly written that one editor
summoned him to his office
Scenting a sale, the hopeful-one plunged into the
editor’s presence.
"Sit there in that chair—next to the window, where
I can get a good look at you."
Bewildered, the gadabout did as he was bidden. Fin-
ally, after scrutinizing him from head to foot, the
editor cried:
“You couldn’t have written this story in ignorance.
No one could write so atrociously unless deliberately.
What's the gag?"
I sppode the finis of this tale should be that the
young man went home in all humility and turned out
a masterpiece He didn't. If possible his next was
even more awful. He never succeeded in seeing his
name on the glazed paper of a magazine, but he has
turned out some “rave" scenarios in Hollywood. Dis-
illusioned and convinced that he was no good, he
wandered out to the coast, where an "erudite" film
mogul “discovered'' his genius, and now he is regard-
ed as "colossal."
The accumulation of tartar
around the roots of the teeth fre-
quently gives rise to the condition
known as pyorrhea. Some authori-
ties indeed believe that from 90 to
95 per cent of all pyorrhea is the
result of bad mouth hygiene.
19 Years Ago Today
(From Record-Chronicle, Sept. 16, 1916)
"With sixty-five vacant houses at the time the
enumeration was made, our count shows 6,046 peo-
ple in Denton," said T. M. Rucker, who with O. L
Fowler is publishing a new city directory this fall
"Our directory shows the names at only those above
fifteen years of age, but the enumerators were sup-
posed to make a count of the other members of the
family not listed. There are more than 4,000 names
of persons or over."
which was to impress in the wrong-
est manner possible the fac
a powerful motor car is always a
potential instrument of death’and
The subject of taxation, a touchy
one for business, will figure prom-
inently in the Legislature's proceed-
ings, and just as Congress gets
arents^
LAN j By Brooke Peters Church
WOMEN DRIVERS
A few days of sunshine has given
the farmers another lease on field A car which had been holding the
work, and as a consequence no! middle of 11
small amount of cotton and corn stopped sud
But, O lor the Thuch of a Vanished Hand
epgyrreems,, 13
I le, --Me*,
grgmpiuse*s"
Howl’s
VR
HEALTH
EAnad for the New York Academ) o/ Medcime
By DR. IAGO GALDSTON
TARTAR AND PYORRHEA
What your dentist calls “tartar"
is an accumulation of hardened or-
ganic matter on the surfaces of the
teeth The organic matter is com-
posed of lining cells, cast off by
the lining membranes of the mouth.
roep
prueg-- ‘3
gsccs.......
pecjragas 0
el i
—
• ■ _ L. |
HOMER S. CURTIS
SMOOT-CURTIS BUILDING
...............
little bell.
Willy Nilly had pressed his clothes
and apart from the fact that he
had pointed, stlcklng-oUt ears, he
looked very distinguished.
They all piled into Willy Nilly’s
automobile Two-Ways. —
As they approached the County
Fair grounds it was all the Puddle
Muddlers could’do to keep in their
places They saw fine posters of
.P 0e
-
~S
he road for some time,
_____ ____________— _ . _____ idenly, causing the pro-
has been gathered and put on the cession behind it to grihd their
market. Reports differ as to the brakes in the effort to avoid col-
cotton prospects, with the generalillsion "Woman driver!" was the
concensus apparently that the yield 1 muttered comment of half the men.
will be short as a whole with the Most women resent such a com-
county's situation very spotted, | ment, and many of them rightly,
varying from very little staple in | But taken by and large it is prob-
some fields to a good vic’d in ably fair to a large portion of wo-
B3hm--
Assorted 2
Cookies
SPECIAL
I Hb WILK
Laveldr! Rub Alcohol,
18 z. 390
Curtin Ruh Alcohol . 29
Curtis Aspirin. 100 Hg 39c
Bayers Aspiin, 100 62c
Lsterine, 14 oz. / 69c
Curtis Solistolm16cozu. 490
MI .41 Anstipetic. 18 oz. 19c
Pepsodrnt Antiseptie 18 oz. 89
Pepsodent Tooth Paste.-. ....39c
a Ipana Tooth Paste ..................
, Mi Si Tooth Paste 39c
West T. Brush & Paste 50c
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 28, Ed. 1 Monday, September 16, 1935, newspaper, September 16, 1935; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1539383/m1/2/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.