Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 115, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 26, 1935 Page: 2 of 6
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DENTON, TEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1935
BARBS
Menneez
g Editor
Get A New Philco
Ten Christmas .
1
King Radio Shop
Corduroy for Pajamas and Robes
64c
All Colors, yard
GRAND LEADER COMPANY
and being with
j
banks
r
PHONE 2
Tomorrow—Mrs. Quacko Calls.
HE
FOR WRECKER
SERVICE
inet
and other expenses that have been forced
on business.
S. I. SELF
MOTOR CO.
1
EFA
Beauty Shops
*
Radio Repairs
Electrical Appliances
Rental Library
Barber Shops
Florists
3c PER' DAY
Beauty School-Shop
Shoe Repairs
FEEDS
Good Insurance
Bus Lines
Isn’t Cheap
FRUIT
Drink
CAKES
THINK IT OVER
N -
Family
Needs
And enjoy fine enter-
tainment from all over
the world.
#5.50
. 8.00
1.30
. 350
Home
Needs
JUST
AMONG US
FOLKS
Kills Self at ।
Fraternity Dance
At
of
BOOKS—BOOKS—BOOKS
No matter what your taste you can
always find a book of your own
choice here.
We have a few
Delicious
50c per lb.
Purity Bakery
Phone 106
■
-
The Fort Worth Star-Telegram
comments:
Italy is reported dissatisfied with the Franco-
British peace proposal. The League, however, may
refuse to throw in a gate around the world.
__________Bustness Manager
....................MAn agar
damn mall matter at Denton.
(Oopyright, IMS, NBA Service, Inc.)
A western department store Santa was found
on the federal rellet roll, which, after all, is not
a bad way to brush up on one's technique.
( ...
The stomach ripper, fitted on a Chicagoan af-
ter an operation, may appeal to that European
surgeon who recently left a towel in his patient.
• • .
In view of Japanese aggressiveness, there may
be something prophetic in the fact that the sis-
ter. ship of the China Clipper is the Philippine
CUpper
Last year the county ginned 10,-
148 bales to Dec. 13, at which time
the ginning season was virtually at
an end. This year’s total, therefore,
will show about an 80 per cent in-
crease over last year's figures. The
price has been higher thiis year than
last most of the time, although the
lowered quality of the late-gathered
staple reduced the price somewhat
below the middling quotation this
month. In view of the curtailed ac-
reage the heavy insect infestation
and the loss of staple because of
the bed weather, the county’s yield
was unusually good. More money
has been turned to the farmers from
this season's cotton-crop than from
any crop in recent years.
Puddle Muddle
you."
"Maybe every
that way about
law, and adds that through the
education of the. public It is hoped
to drive every unethical dealer in
securities from this state.
In Bottles
Try MIIwaukee’s
New and delicious drink,
"FRESH FIIT ORANGE"
Made with fresh oranges daily.
arises from his tension and con-
flict?
To this query one expertenced
physician replies, "I have found it
worth While to-present to him 'the
Isadore Qastanaga, Joe Louis’ next opponent,
says he’ll stop the Bomber in three rounds. Evi-
dently the talented Spaniard can imitate a traffic
signal.
S
ho
in
wl
a
pa
“I s
Uhm
cueuatom“ppatenhnemen
JUST CALL 31
If you want that overcoat clean-
rd. hat blocked or your suit made
new in appearance.
EAST HIDE TAILOR SHOP
Chas. Woods
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tn
go
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The logic of the contemporary’s
position is difficult to fathom. It is
our observaton that not many peo-
ple are in a vely thankful spirit at
the end of January. What with
Christmas bills which have been
paid, tax obligations discharged and
the conviction on the part of many
that they do not have the will pow-
er to carry out their new year reso-
lutions. It would be a drab time to
try a Thanksgiving day.
DENTON FLOWER SHOP
Cut nowers, potted planta, floral
designs
WELL MAKE YOUR SHOES
MORE COMORTABLE
Shoe, made wider or longer.
NORTH SIDE SHOE SHOP
Telephone 344________
J. J. Maclachlan
INSURANCE
Phone 365
808 Smoot-Curtis Bldg.
Lamont replies that Floyd, ‘ like Senator Nye and
other individuals," misquoted Wilson's 1918 St. Louis
speech.
"If we ar going to quote our deceased presidents,
let us quote them correctly and justly," says Lamont,
and quotes what he calls the context from a 16-year-
old St. Louis newspaper, in brief. Wilson told how
Germans had removed Belgian factory machinery be-
cause they hated Belgium for her superiority in
textile and' iron industries.
Man About Manhattan
By RODNEY DUTCHER
NEW YORK, Dec. 28.—Five minutes ago the Sin-
ister Shadow that hovers over this department ambled
in and wanted to know how much longer he'd have
to wait for his column.
“Knockin’ it out now," I lied.
You may add to your list of hop-skip commuters
the name of Roland Young, who already has hopped
to the coast for a film assignment before skipping
back to his London retreat. Young has a lot of that
"Ah Qod, to be in England" in his veins and neither
Broadway nor Beverly Hills can hold him.
His four months in New York were for the suc-
cessful “A Touch of Brimstone"—a stormy piece based
on the bell-fire plus eccentricities of Producer Jed
Harris It was strenuous business for the otherwise
suave Mr. Young, who takes his relaxation, when to
town, by going to see “Jumbo" at every opportunity.
Imagine relaxing at that circus-in-a-dress-suit!
W E A *
. With 17,179 bales of cotton gin-
ned In Denton County to Dec. 13.
the date of the most recent sta-
tistical report, the county is assur-
ed of a much larger yield than many
people had expected. Some early es-
timates were for an 18,000 or 20,000
bale crop, but much late insect dam.
age and continued rams in the fall
which delayed picking and dbeat
much of the staple out of the bolls
had caused most observers to great-
ly lower ther estimates. A consider-
able amount of cotton has been
ginned since the figures were gath-
ered, since the weather has been
falr most of the time, and some re-
mains in the field. It is likely that
the season's total will exceed 18,-
000 bales.
Dry Cleaning
Wedding Licenses
Ten marriage licenses were Issued
Christmas eve and Christmas day,
bringing the total number for the
month -to 45, according to records
in the office of Mrs.' Oberia Ed-
wards, county clerk. : ,
The largest number of licenses
to be issued any one day this month
JONES CLEANERS
116 Fry St.
Telephone 275
MEN’S WOOL SUITS
1 Cleaned and pressed
35c
(Cash and Carry)
By deed filed Tuesday afternoon in the office of
County Clerk Roy Mays for recording L. F. Collins
has given an acre of land in the Cooper Creek com-
munity for church purposes for the Cooper Creek
Missionary Baptist Church. A clause in the deed pro-
vides that in case of abandonment of the- land by
the church that the congregation shall have the right
to sell any and all buildings erected upon it and the
land shall revert to the grantor.
- ----o—--
OIL AT 81 PAYS TAXES OF $1.14
The petroleum industry and consumers of petro-
leum products paid taxes of more than $1,125,000,000
in 1935, according to the American Petroleum In-
dustries Committee. The tax was equivalent to 81.14
for each barrel of crude petroleum produced during
the year, which sold at an average price of around 81.
More than $860,000,000 orsts amount went to the
States which have levied gasoline taxes and other
taxes on the oil industry, while only $265,000,000 went
to the federal government. The amount paid in 1935
increased 860,000,000 over the previous year.
The huge sum extracted from the users of petro-
leum products, who after all pay the entire tax bill, is
a good share of the total cost of supporting govern-
ment. The motorists, the drinkers of beer and whis-
ky, and the smokers of cigarettes and users of tobacco
in other forms, pay a surprising percentage of the
totel cost of government.
C
\X
Classified Directory
This Week, Names of Denton People Will Appear In
The Advertisements In this Section Entitling Someone
to a Guest Ticket to The Palace Theater. Call at Place
of Business of Advertiser in Whose Ad Your Name Ap-
pears for Your Guest Ticket. Read These Ads Every
Week and See If Your Name Appears.__
. 64
184
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en
By Mary Graham Bonner
AFTER CHRISTMAS THOUGHTS
“I love the day after Christmas,”
exclaime Willy Nilly. ’Then we
can look over our presents more
slowly and wth even greater pleas-
ure. We re so excited on Christmas
Day that We hardly look at any-
thing well—though I wouldn't miss
that excitement for anything in the
world."
• "Taht’s the way I feel about it,”
cawed Christopher Columbus Crow.
Rip came over and put‘his head
in Willy Nilly’s lap.
“I wonder if you know, Willy Nil-
ly, how happy you make all of us.
There isn’t place in the world like
A PERIOD OF BUMMING UP
Anyone who gets pleasure from studying figures
will have his annual treat during the next week or
two, when all of the end-of-the-year summaries of
business, crime, accidents and other interesting sta-
tistics will appear in the daily newspapers. The week
after Christmas is the time when newspaper offices
begin to assemble interesting facts to print on New
Yar’s Day or soon after, to give the reading public
an inkling of whether the Nation, the State or the
city has progressed during 1935.
This year it is expected that January 1 reports will
reveal a substantial upward trend, and that in many
lines of business, the sales curve will surpass the
peaked lines of 1929 The only difference likely will
bes disparity in the net profits, due to increases
one wouldn’t feel '
Puddle Muddle," 1
BUBSCRIPTION RATES
Cm year (in advance) ...........-............
u montba by mail (in advance) ----------
Tmee montba by mail (in advance) —
One month delkverea _________________
Bottling Plants
15 years im Denton with
Southwestern Life Insurance Company,
Consult ma about your insurance problems
ELI P. COX
A pollcy far evenz need. Phone 488-2.
Dairies 4
IORDER YOUR MILK FROM
“Graham Dairy"
Delivered dally to your front
doorstep.
. TELEPHONE 700-3
Mr. Jimmie Leslle will please call
at the Graham Dalry and receive
a guest ticket to the Palace The-
atfe.
road at 214 West Hickory Street. Denton,
afternoon except Sunday by, the Record-
wapany, —m_ ♦
Audit Bureau of curculattona.
Amoctated Pfee.
Texaa Daily Prens Lengue.
PHONES
1 .
Behind Scenes In Washington
By RODNEY DUTCHER
NEA Service Staff Corresponqent
WASHINGTON, Dec. 28.—Soon Congress will re-
sume debate on neutrality legislation and you will
notice that many are saying things about the cause
of American entry into the World War which would
have put teem in prison had they uttered such opin-
ions while the war was still on.
One thread of the argument in which men who
r&J: - ■ .
Cn Oct 18. Thomas W. Lamont of Morgan & co.
writes the New York-Times protesting a book review
by Robert L Duffus. which suggested that the Mor-
. gan firm helped" get-the United States into war.
Lamont admits "wetwerapro-Ally by inheritance,
by instinct, by opinion,” but denies any Morgan prop-
aganda or pressure for war.
William Ployd, director of Peace Patriots, shoots
back quoting the famous telegram from Ambassador
Page at London in March, 1917 1917, to the effect
that this country would have a panic unless it has-
tened to support the Allies
Floyd then quotes Woodrow Wilson as saying: This
was an industrial and commercial war.”
—2 l-eri
HAVE YOUR HAIR SIIAPED and
wa\ed at the Nona Mae Beauty
shop. You'll be prodr or any
beauty work you have dupe here.
Phone 191 for appointment.
Mrs. J. 4>. Hall Jr. will please call
at the Nona Mae Beauty Shop and
receive a guest ticket to the Pal-
ace Theater.
PERMANENTS YOULL LIKE
Telephone M for an appointment
next time you get your perma-
nent. We say you’ll be pleased.
KATHERINE'S BEAUTY SHOP
In the Im Mode
Mrs. Francis Craddock will please
call at Katherine’s Beauty shop
and receive a guest ticket to the
Palace Theater.
. . . . "----- A1 - . R
was 13, Which was Saturday. The
three licenses issued from that of-
lice Sunday brought the total for
last week-end to 16.
Nakita Balief, who looks like Santa Claus and who
is the father at the modern theater-restaurant, now
glorified on Broadway, has what by and large is the
oddest accent on record. When he first came to
America, it was possible to get most anything he said.
But the longer he speaks English the worse he gets.
The fact that his "Chauve Souris" is now in the
Continental room at the St. Morita (once a basement)
inspired this question:
"How does it seem to be in a basement?"
“Wonderful. That's where ’Chauve Souris’ began
—In a Moscow basement. Besides, I am tired of physi-
cal heights such as roofs and roof-gardens. A bat
cannot live in rarefied atmosphere."
• • •
George Bernard Shaw is on<* of two Englishmen
whose books are permitted to be sold in Italy. The
other was a preUy good writer, too—Shakespeare.
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
tation at standing of any firm, Individual or corpora-
tion will be gladly corrected,upon being called to the
publshers’ attention.
Tha Amsoclatea Press is exclustvely entitled to the
use for re-publioation of all news dispatches credited to
It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the
local news published herein.
DENTON, TEXAS, DECEMBER 36, 1935 ‘
URGES BANKERS TO LEND MONEY
Robert V. Fleming, president of the American
Bankers’ Association, is urging bankers to resume
their functions as lenders of money and take over
the responsibility that was shifted to the shoulders
of the government when the banking structure of
the Nation became somewhat shaky. He pointed out
that hile State and federal laws sometimes circum-
scribed the lending limits of a bank, ways could be
found to assist would-be borrowers to meet the re-
quirements for a loan.
For a number of years there has been some demand
that the government take over the function of the
private banks, but no one who has studied the prob-
lem with an open mind is convinced that this would
be a sound move. There is, however, a realization
that unless the banks are more aggressive in reas-
suming the responsibilities they once had, the door
is opened a little wider for nationalization of the
Plumbing
COLD WEATHER MEANS TROU-
BLE TO FAULTY PwMBING
assetter let us eheek all those eut-"
offs ami dtrains and pH every l li log
in order.
MAYFIELD PLUMRING SHOP
Telephone 143
Mr. E. W. Sawyer will please call
at the May Held Plumbing Shop
and receive a guest ticket to the
Palace Theater.
REOORD-CTRONICLE COMPANY, INC
2 i Sr—......—......1
UB Donal
See and Hear the
NEW PHILCO
Entertainment from all lands.
Low la price but high in quality.
____KING RADIO SHOP
Next comes Newton D Baker. Wilson’s secretary
of war, in a letter Nov. 13, saying he never heard
Wilson or any cabinet member say we must go to
war or that any commercial or financial Interest would
be promoted by our going in.
Oswald Garrison Villard, Heywood Broun, and other
columnists suggest that "we all” did a bum Job of
it and that it's funny Baker never heard of the suc-
cessful Lansing-McAdoo pressure to reverse the Bryan
neutrality policy barring flotation of war loans here.
Then certain New York and Washington nwspapers
take up for Baker and Lamont editorially, decrying
"cruel aspersions cast on the memory of Woodrow
Wilson by the ignorant and ignoble," the ’intolerably
insulting . . . unfounded allegations of the Nye com-
mittee . : and so on.
JR
ETH
The Pilgrim Fathers inad-
vertently played it low down on
us, The proper time for Thanks-
giving is the last Thursday in
January instead of November.
That is the proper perspective
of Christmas and the New YeAr
Resolutions."
Mrs. Mark Walarip, Mgr.
Telephone 223
1710 N. Elm. Free Delivery
ISHRI BS, EVERGREENS
If you need shrubs, cut flowefs, or
potted plants call or see our stock.
R. L. SELBY * SONS
Telephone 374_________
LITTLE ROCK. Ark., Dec. 26.—
(— A Christmas fraternity dance
ended in tragedy early today as 17-
year-old Alvin Niemeyer shot him-
self to death on the crowded floor
of a night club.
One of two bullets the youth
fired through his heart struck Miss
Dorothy Bell, I, president of the
Little Rock High School Student
Council, causing slight wounds in
her back and left arm.
regular schemes have been uncov-
ered since the securities act became patient*. perhaps better to remind
effective Mav 23, the commission-1 him somewhat in the manner of
er asserted. He reports numerous the Greek chorus chanting the flow
grand fury indictments in connec- of life from the wings of some . .
tion with the enforcement of the | general principles which he can
-- -- ----■ use in relieving the tension and the
BE SURE of A SAFE,
OOM FORT ABUL AND ECONOM-
ICAL Journey nevt time. Ride the
Dixie Motor Coach Lnes.
Mrs. P. E. Robertson will please
call at the Dixie Motor Coach or-
flee and receive a guest ticket to
the Palace Tlleater.
Garage & Used Cars
IF YOUR CAR NEEDS REPAIR-
ING call us and let our expert
mechanics do the Job correctly.
WES BENTLEY'S GARAGE
210 E. McKInney Phone 234
MOTHER’S FOOD STORES
“Make Peace With Your Purge”
* Telephone 283. $1 Orders or More Delivered
210 Ash Street and Sherman Drive
CHEAP INSURANCE
ISN’T GOOD
Stephen Raushenbush, chief investigator of the
munitions committee is good and sore by this time
and writes another letter to the Times, quoting from
the authorized text of the St Louis speech.
He presents something Lamont left out: “The real
reason that the war we have Just finished took place
was that Germany feared her commercial rivals were
going to get the better of her and the reason why
some nations went into the war against Germany
was that they thought Germany would get the com-
mercial advantage of them."
Hence, says Raushenbush. Wilson obviously didn't
refer only to Germany in that controversial remark.
(Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.)
Come to JACQUES BEAUTY
SHOP for the best and the most
economical beauty services. Base-
ment N. €. corner square.
Miss Peggie Pender will please call
at the Jacques Beauty Shop and
receive a guest ticket to the Pal-
ace Theater. - -__
umns—the kind you pretty up with a lot at dots."
Now to be perfectly forthright and honest, that’s
exactly what I'd planned. But ao guy is going to an- |
ticipate me and get away with it. I m going to forget I
personal notes and give him something like a bit of
a twittie. some hoky-poky, and a whole gob of thisa
and thata:
There’s a Turk ambling around Broadway, with
red boots and a fez, who swears he's 108 years old.
He's spry, too. . .. Elsa Maxwell's opening as a night-
club entertainer drew the moot ULTRA audience of
the season . . . Alex Yokel used to be a press agent
before he became the producer of “Three Men on a
Horse." . . . Hollywood matrimonial note for 1935:
44 marriages and 42 break-ups, . . . Three years ago
Constance Hope had to choose between a career as
secretary to Grace Moore, or the stage. . . . So she
organized an advertising agency, now one of the city's
best. . . . 300,000 Christmas trees have been stacked
in West street. . . . James H R LAttell, better known
as Jo-Jo, has played an accordion in every sawdust
circle between here and Shanghai. . .. He’s back now, I
after a. two-year absence, . ..Jo-Jo was one of the ,
boys who appeared in the early Mae West shows—
“the only show she ever produced that wasn't pinch-
ed," he recalls.
25 A "
. _______________________________________________
Denton Record-Chronicle
Earn While You Learn
Two young men and three young
women may now earn attractive
part of tuition by working in Col-
lege office. Excellent opportunity to
prepare for business career at mod-
erate cost. More positions than we
ran 1111. First comes. first served.
Write for full information today.
Draughon’s College, Dallas, Texas.
115
19 Years Ago Today
'From Record-Chroniele, Dec. 36, 1918)
The explosion of a window full of fireworks at the
Olympia Confectionery Saturday night did heavy
damage to the building and the stock of goods. The
loss will amount to 83,500 or more besides the loss
at the Christmas trade. The stock of goods and the
building were protected by insurance The fire was
started from a little girl touching a pocket of fre-
crackers to a cigar lighter. Some of them popped into
the window where the fireworks for the season’s trad/
were stored and it was only a few minutes until the
entire window full was exploding.
• • •
Two literary societies of the high school, the Hous-
tonian and Pierian, elected officers for the next term
of school Just before the school closed for the holi-
days. The results of the elections were as follows:
Pierian—John Pierce, president: Marion Bralley, vice
president: Miss Mabel Tucker, secretary. Miss Kath-
ryn Taylor, treasurer: William Jarrell, sergeant-at-
arms. Houstonian—Luther Hamilton. president: Roy
— Jones, vice president; Miss Sue Mood, secretary: Miss
Sophia Bain, assistant secretary; Miss Minnie Ubben,
treasurer; James Coleman, sergeant-at-arms; Miss
Addle Bob Bowles and P. C. Storrie, tellers; Tom
Whitehead, associate editor.
be completed but agreed 11 would
take several months:
When the records are of no fur-
ther use they likely will be destroy-
ed and the building turned over to
the state for a records or office
building
A HAIRCUT, A SHAVE AND A
SHAMPOO. No matter what you
order, your patronage is appre-
ciated. JACQUES BAKBEK SHOP,
T Basement N.E. corner square.
Mr. James Wheeler will please call
at the Jacques Barber Shop and
receive a guest ticket to the Pal-
ace Theater,
said Willy Nilly, "although I think
it is beautiful" and his eyes gazed
out at 'the snowy mounds and the
unbeaten road.
“If you care for a place and you
care for the person oar people in
it, then it is the most beautiful
place in he world," cackled Top
Notch, in his practical, direct, sen-
sible fashion.
“True, true. Top Notch has said
something very wise," quacked the
ducks and all the others joined bi
this chorus.
"Wasn't it wonderful that we had
those"rides with Santa Claus," said
Willy Nilly.
“We're a fortunate lot that’s what
we are, ’ barked Rip.
They went to bed earily for they
were all quite tired, but they fell I
asleep thinking happily of Puddle
Muddle, pf Willy Nilly, of Santa
Claus, of Christmas, of being ih
the exciting, glorous world land
Willy Nilly smiled in his sleep, for
never had a little man a more de-
voted set of fritnds.
REZNOR RADIANT IIEATERS
s9,90 tn $22,50. Bathroom heaters
$2.15 up. -
G. W. MARTIN RADIO AND
GIFT SHOP e
Contemporary Thought
EXAMPLE TO CHILDREN
A new public school building in Long Beach, Calif,
was named after Robert E. Lee, some mgnths ago;
and the Long Beach board of education got a fare-
back recently when various private citizens protested
against this means of honoring the memory of a
“rebel."
Half a century ago such protests would have been
loud and lusty, and the board of education undoubt-
edly would have heeded them; but today they are
little more than curiosities.
The reason is that as the bitterness of fratricidal
war has died down, northerners have been able to
see more and more dearly that the character and
knightly manhood of Lee constitute one of the coun-
try’s most precious possessions
Lee didn't start the war. That was done by hot-
heads and politicians, north and south. He fought for
the right as he saw. It, accepted defeat like a man,
and left a shining example of the nobility human
nature is capable of. Not a bad figure for school chil-
dren to contemplate, is it?—Amarillo News.
conflict within him " These general
principles are:
Of the strong probability that the .
patient will recover.
Of the remarkable self-righting ‘
power of the mind and of the |
mechanism of mental recovery by
bringing the problem to the sur-
face and naming it frankly.
Of the person’s legitimate right
to his self-confidence and self-es-
teem.
Of the influence of the “stream
of consciousness," the self-conduct-
ed mental commentary that for
good or ill. gathers our rills of
thought into the river of personal-
ity.
Of the resolving power of time.
Ho lesson is harder to learn, but
none more salutary than that all
things and above all peace comes
to those who know how to wait.
Of getting around what one can-
not get throngh or over.
Of the serenity of the mature.
Hyper-reaction of childish.
Of the value of detachment and i
the power of non-interference—es- !
peclally important to Depress on the
overzealous parent confronted by the
rebellious child.
Of the vice of continuous effort
even in a good cause and the ex-
haustion that comes to the per-
petual striver who nearer grants a
mortrium to himself or others or
indulges in purposeful uselessnes
masterly inactivity or conscientious
laziness.
Of solitude and the fact that one
is not alone, for even "misery loves
company.”
Of the relief of large thoughts—
a looking out over the universe, a
hilltop perspective.
were important at the time have participated cen-
tered on what Wodrow Wilson himself fnally
— thought at it all Since probably only a small mi-
nority of readers have followed it, your correspondent
undertakes to trace its outline.
• • •
Romance in the dreamy tropics,
stark drama on uncharted coral is-
lands, the deadly typhoon are the
highlights of “Last at the Pagano”
with Mala and Lotos at the Pal-
ace Friday and Saturday of this
week. Ask for guest ticket to this
epic of the South Seas if your name
appears in among the ads in the
Classiried Directory in today's
paper.
EM f she No Yonk Academm, 4 MeRtog
• IAGO GALDSTOe
MENTAL BROMIDES
What is to be done, when, with
the aid of the physician, the pa-
tient is made to realize that the
major portion of his difficulties
Capital Chatter
AUSTIN, Dec. 26.--The
huge record of state and national
relief in Texas will be assembled
under one roof for a final audit
and accounting.
The State Board of Control has
ordered plans for a building, esti-
mated to cost 8100,000, to be fi-
nanced by the Federal government
and erected on state land in Aus-
tin. Records of county and dis-
trict relief organizations, the old
Civil Work Administration, the Ru-
ral Resettlement Administralon
and the current Work Progress Ad-
ministration, will te concentrated
there.
Relief officials estimated that the
thousands of documents snow tug
where the - millions poured -- into
Texas for relief were expended,
would fill at least 30 freight cars.
No one would hazard a guess when
stupendous task of auditing would i
Talk of a possible compromise bo-
nus bill that might receive the ap-
proval of the president is heard as
the time for the reconventnging of
Congress nears. Speaker Byrns
holds qut hope of the possibility of
such al, measure. It is certain that
the bonus question will precipitate
one of the major. If not the'major,
controversies of the new Session.
The membership of both the Sen-
ate and House is said to be over-
whelmingly in favor of a cash bo-
nus payment, and the question
can not be finally disposed of until
some kind of a measure is approv-
ed which will be reasonably satis-
factory to the former soldiers.
I i
SEE THE NEW MANSFIELD
BALLOON ALTO TIRES
They’re built for quick starts and
fast stops. On display at ARKAN-
HAS MILLING CO., phone 410.
Mr. Kenneth Pyson will please
call at the Arkansas Mill and re-
ceive a guest ticket to the Palace
Theater.
Talks
to
pare _
By Brooke Patera Church
BED MAKING
One third of the adult's life and
probably two -fifths of a child's is
spent in bed. For the invalid who
must sit in a chair all day special
comforts are provided. A place
where one must spend so many
hours of inactivity must be as re-
laxing as it can be made. A child
probably spends nearly as much
time in bed as a cripple spends in
his chatr, but in many families this
fact! S disregarded in furnishing
the house.
The springs of Ned's bed sag and
when he gets into it he is forced to
lie curled up as if he were in a
hammock. So many hours in a con-
tracted position is not lonly un-
comfortable but actually Injurious
to the growing child. In the X
family the children learn early to
make their own beds. But does any-
one look to see how they are made,
or lias any one taken the trouble
in the first place to teach them bed
making? All they do is to pull sheets
and blankets up and throw a spread
over the results.. Their beds are
not aired the sheets are loose and
wrinkled, the blankets keep pull-
ing put, small wonder that they
are alf restless sleepers.
When Mrs. Y went to the hospital
she was amazed at the attention
which the nurses gave to bed mak-
ing. It had never occurred to her
that her sleep would be sounder and
more restful in a bed which was
firm and even, with sheets pulled
taut and mitred at the corners and
blankets anchored so that they
could not slip.
The technique is not difficult and
to make a bed correctly takes little
more time than to throw the cover-
inug in place. If a child is ued to
a comfortable and well made bed
from babyhood up, his sleep will be
sounder and his back straighter
than if he sleeps in a sagging nest.
oat,” he said caustically, "Itn be one of
isonal-notes-om -a-New- Yorker’s -cuff col-
Ur
■
Many organized groups of swind-
lers have been driven from Texas,
according to a statement from Leon
Harp, state securities commission-
er. He added that he is looking
forward to the new year with the
hope that the securities field ih Tex-
as will be as clean as that of any
other state in the nation. Many
“shameful frauds" involving the ex-
pendiutde by the public of hun-
dreds of thousands of dollars to
VOERTMA¥S
T, C. STORE BOOK STORE
1314 W. Hickory 1418 Oakland
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 115, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 26, 1935, newspaper, December 26, 1935; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1539469/m1/2/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.