Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 71, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 5, 1936 Page: 3 of 8
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or-
a
straightforwardness
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e
-
$
urs
8 a. m
be made at his own risk
or com-
Nye called attentton to the
causes
States entrance
it
I
DOLLARS
owned the patents could
possible for
SEF THE 1937
Right in the heart of the season . . . Burr’s slashes prices deeply in the Shoe Department.
WORTH SCHOOLS
You can buy at Burr’s, while they last, choice of any ladies’ novelty shoes in the house.
the seas, by recalling that not one
Values up to $3.98
J.C.PENNEYCG
George
I
For ONLY
Pair
996
values up to $2.98 will be
da
sold for ONLY, Pair
F
a
1C
s-pm*e *
An Extra Pair of
m
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pg*
262
$
While they last you
: I
4.
e=F
can buy 2 pairs for
only
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P
‘4
H-tt
Denton,
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Texas
• 4
Square
GULF
A
t
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ns •
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!
'.f
It
2 3 -
ir
—
THE WORLDS FINEST MOTOR OIL
I?
A
MENT STORE
The Big Shoe Sale Will
Start Friday Morning at
OUTING.
FLANNEL
1
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any nation
submarine at
word
was 5
Plan and Makes Plea to Reduce
War Profits in Address at S. C. W.
Defendant Winn
Co. Court Suit
WASHINGTON,
onstitutional am____
izing them to take
it
1.
which <
make it
Serviceable
Comfortable!
10c yd
-
and other members of the jury: S '
D Faust, R D. Sims, N J Nash.
Mack Massey
Motor Co.
North of City Hall
(Left)^ TIMES AROUND EARTH. A
man drove his automobile on GULFPRIDE OIL
100 000 miles—without ever needing a repair, with-
out ever having the head off the motor, without
ever adding one drof nf oil between drains. Expect
great things of GULFPRIDE-you’ll get them!
.1
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TEXAS TRADE
aY,
i
72
No Exchanges or Refunds Made at These P rices
72277
id-1
ith.
— hte2
YOLUME LOOKS
• GOOD FOR 1937
PLYMOUTH and
DE SOTO
IAb»Vt) - MA NY WnU.D-S
RECORDS on land, sea, and in
the air have been set with GULF-
PRIDE OIL. Raring drivers, fliers,
speedboat pilots swear by it. Proved
in the toughest competition, GULF-
PRIDE will outwear, outlast, and
outperform any oil you ever used in
your car!
aress 1
alleged
I
Tae<
ft "See,
For Demonstration
Call 50
204- 1 .
ta. 4
1
I
IOO pairs of novelty Shoes,
1 .*.-(*>-
Ruth-
in the
■ —
T
_____________I
/1 --
• - + -
that of the base period although
this base is comparatively low, em-
bracing two prosperity years, two
depression years and the year 1930
which lies in between. Dr Buechel
says
5
r
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$1.94
g.- -
’■ s .
-——1
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7
gnencb '
a ~vP
1 - . -
tion got very mad about It, nye Ten students of the bookkeeping
tore down tthe last of the alleged elass in the Denton High School
* | went to Fort Worth Tuesday, ac-
companied by Principal A. O. Cal
, houn, to study bookkeeping meth-
these Shoes for only
f. c- pure . : ■' 1
modesty and
i
tt
-4
0,
$1.00
x
going were Misses Velma Austin,
Modene Griffith, Katherine McCro- !
ry. Katherine Foster, and H. A.'
i of the war, at its close.
I The senator also discussed the
co-operation of high military of-
1 ciaL with munitions makers, re- Davis, William Stephens.
I vealing some of the sensational . Ashby, Jimmy Johns, Hubert Riley
findings of his investigating com-I and America Fuson.
R; >S
t d
War, and showed that not one/
of those causes was won by it in
that conflict.
"To make the world safe for de-
mocracy? There are fewer democra-
The world is more dangerously near
another war now thar ever be-
fore in peace-time. If we entered
to help put a certain people in
their place-now they are a great-
er menace to the peace than they
were before the World War. if our
entrance was to end the shame-
till use of the submarine by Ger-
man we should have realized first
thit onlv an American corporation
to make or use a
threw out measures °for taxing the
chain stores and abolishing per-
sonal income taxes
A graduate income tax amend-
crease in the public deb tax ex-
emption for homes worth less than should__...______
*1,000 and a rise in income levies that any American person
A jury hearing the forcible de-
tainer suit of J T Gossett vs. Ira
Archer in County Court late Wed- '
nesax returned a verdict for the'
defendant. Archer The suit was ap- i
pealled from Justice Court at Jus-
tin to County Court
J I Anderson acted as foreman
moving state real estate levies
Missourt, Nebraska and other
kbithufNtti.plviiii aulohcmvojontivisi
BELIEVE IT OR
—---—-------—— , . . -■ . S Tau ■ A 5 . ,
SHOE
He added that by’ aw it
THE ALCHLOR PROCESS
removes all sludge and residue.
Proof: we took 6 of the finest
Pennsylvania oils we could buy
and put them through the Al-
chlor process. It removed 20%
waste from already highly re-
fined oils! Be wise-get GULF-
PRIDE the only oil that Ms
this bead start.
_ ------------•——
■
■ ■ •-1
that time ■
enreeraneine that W N. shepard and C Bingham.
dokPflmuma wutreirsD. " s. STUDENTS VISIT FORT
of that violatioin before the na- j
tion got very mad about it. Nye
i about freedom of the seas
written in to any peace treaty ods in Fort Worth schools. Those
—8
in clear-cut fashion, with
S. OFFIICERS
In tl* list of oflicers
First Methodist W M
— cics today than there were before
ment wmS lost in Washington, and the war. he said "To end al war?
Minnesota defeated a plan for re-
r MAlfO
CAN*
ONLY
AUSTIN, Nov. 5.—(P—The mo-
mentum of Texas' expansion in
trade and industry is sufficient to
carry into 1937.
In a recent survey of general
business conditions and prospects.
Dr. F. A. Buchel, statistician for
the University of Texas Bureau of
Business Research, says Texas is
sharing with the rest of the coun-
try in an accelerated rate of ex-
pansion.
"Aside from one of two indus-
tries which will be adversely affect-
ed by seasonal influences, no let
down from the current rate of com-
mercial and industrial activity is
visualized during the remainder of
1936," he say.
"It is believed, in fact, that the
up-trend has attained sufficient
momentum to carry int next year.’’
Says Dr. Buechel: All of the in-
dexes of business activity computed
for Texas increased from August
to September, after allowance for
seasonal influences. The index of
employment increased from 86 to
88.4; payrolls from 78 2 to 80.51 car-
loadings of miscellaneous freight
from 76.7 to 78 9; runs of crude oil
to stills from 144.8 to 153.1; depart-
ment store salts from 98.3 to 101.5.
and new passenger car registrations
from 108.7 to 110.6.
Percentage Up
"When these component indexes
are weighted and combined, the
composite index is 92 9, compared
with 90 last month That is to say,
after adjusting for seasonal influ-
ences. Business activity in Texas
during September was at the rate
of 92.0 per cent of that during the
average month in 1930 taken as the
base in September, 1935, the com-
posite index was 78 1.
The average monthly farm cash
income during the six month base
period, 1928-32, was $41 967.000, Dr
Buechel says in computing season-
al variation of farm cash income
it was found that during the period
1927-36, farm cash receipts in Sep-
tember are equal to 280 7 per cent
of the average monthly farm cash
receipts during those years, he says.
Average September farm cash re-
ceipts during the base period. 1928-
32, were, therefore, about $115,000,-
000 in September, this year, the in-
dex of farm cash income stands at
75.9 compared with 64.7 in August,
and 44.5 in September 1935. the ac-
of the
S an-
Jcarn the amazing benefits ofQULFPRIDE
South Side
i
F P ""
of the United,
into the World"
. states toted on proposals of local
tual September farm cash income interest. dealing in most cases with
in Texas during the current year, i the reorganization of state govern-
was, therefore, nearly $90,000,000. ments.
Federal Social Security program
had been ratified today by Kan-
sas, Florida, Louisiana and Colo-
rado. although old age pension
plans were headed for defeat in
three other states.
Eleven other states had passed
upon 26 of the proposed amend-
ments, while a host of constitu-
tioinal changes were left in doubt
elsewhere my incomplete tabula-
tions.
Voters in Nevada. Washington
and Oregon apparently had reject-
ed initiative and referendum pro-
posals for old age benefits, south
Carolina returns showed indecisive
results on a similar amendment.
Liquor questions were settled by
ballot in four states, while a wiie
range of tax measures were ap-
proved or rejected, by voters in all
corers ef the country
Oklahoma clung to its prohibi-
tion statues, although North D--
kota decided to permit the sale
of liquor for the first time since
statehood. .
In Texas a proposal for placing
sales in the hands of the state
was trailing far behind and Cali-
fornia decistvelv defeated a local
option scheme.
Amendments authorizing an in-
mittee, and read excerpts of let-
ters revealing the dublous num- (
ner in which munitions sales are
transacted.
Voters Had Lttle Alternative
interviewed prior to the lecture
on his reactions to the presiden-
tial election and to New Deal poll-
der. Nye attributed the landslide
vote for President Roosevelt to
the fact that the Republican par-
t\ offered the American people
no better alternative, its platform
having contained nothing ot real
appeal Calling the muntions and
neutrality problem the most im-
portant issue facing civilization to-
hay, he suggested that It would
have .had tremendous appeal if
incorporated into the platform of
either major party, in the can-
qaign just ended.
"Definttely, he stated, “the re-
election of Roosevelt signifies a
liberal trend in the people of the
United states. In my opinion. It I
also indicates that a greater pos-
sibility for the appearance of a
new party, possibly a labor party,
to attempt to follow Roosevelt in l
power, since the Democratic par- I
ty may swing back to the conger- I
vatism of such Democratic lead- I
ers as Carter Glass, Pat Harrison I
and others, after Roosevelts term I
js ended," he predicted.
"Labor is more in the saddle I
than ever before,’ Nye stated., I
"And if it takes as majoh a pan I
in the national affairs in the next I
four years as it has in the past I
four, losing none of its gained ■ I
ground, I see the possibility for [I
the formation of a strong labor i I
party at some time in the future." | I
Preceding his lecture, Senator 11
Nye was honored at a small pr- j l
vate dinnet-party by President j l
and Mrs. L H. Hubbard of the 11
college. In the S. C. W cafeteria. 11
He left following the lecture tor I
Dallas. where he was to lecture I
Thurnday monming. going trom I
there by plane to Des Moines. I
la., for a speaking engagement. I
IIIHYisit that no other motor oil in all the
W world.can deliver the performance of
GULFPRIDE OIL?
Because only GULFPRIDE starts from the
finest Pennsylvania crudes ... is refined to
the same point as other fine motor oils . . .
and is then further refined by Gulf's exclu-
sive Alchlor process! ,
This process is the most efficient ever de«
veloped-the fruit of 15 years' research by
Gulf scientists—men who stand behind every <
Gulf product.
Read the facts on this page. Then drive
into any Gulf dealer's—and replace your old ,
summer-worn oil with GULFPRIDE now. *
SALE
mt 0
I
r' s
F- • . H
I Ap . ■ 19
Pwu, k
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a
1
Gulfpride
€- rui onr ucnt9»-nnertst» net MunxritruiiA on
9 p q
no meed Wednesday, the name of
Mrs Earl Wilkins, as recording
secretary was inadvertently omitted.
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For the state as a whole farm 1 . . __________________
cash income is substantally below 1 NAME OMITTED FROM W. M.
that held his audience intent and
convinced. U. S. Senator Gerald P.
Nye presented a plan that in his
opinion will keep the United
States out of war, and strongly ad-
vocated the nationalization of the
munitions industry in a lecture
on the 3- C. W. drama series,
Wednesday evening.
The speaker was introduced by
Dr C. D. Judd, director of the de-
partment of government at the col-
lege.
The munitions investigations
chairmen gave the vital four
points of the plan as follows: en-
actment and enforcement of leg-
islation which would (1) make a
declaration of war possible only-
threugh a national popular vote
of the people; (2) levy income
taxes so high. to go into effect
immediately in case war is ever
declared, that it will be impessi-
ble for any citizen or corporation
to reap real profit from the con-
flict; (3) forbid the sale of muni-
tions or private loans, to any other
warring nations; (4) sell any ma-
terials not embargo t<> nations at
v ar, provided those nations come
over here in their own ships, pay
their own money for the mate-
rials and transport them in their
ships under their own flag, not
causes: the fight for freedom of
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—493
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. J
At Burr’s Dept. Store
i - •
Read Every Word of This
Ad and You Will Save
Social Securty :
Plan Approved
By Four States
5xI,
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Hhetee 'JIE
FFji
e—-13
gdB3 wm
Eeag
to 10 per cent were approved in
North Carolina.
Michigan piled up an overwhelm-
ing lead against proposals for ex-
empting foodstuffs from a 3 per
cent sales tax and replacing the
property levies with an income
tax.
Ohio. however, eliminated sales
taxes on food purchases for home
consumption California voters
panv travels abroad in war time,
for commercial or any other pur-
poses.
World War Gauses
in the logical, direct manner
which characterized his entire ad-
DENTON, TtXAS KECOKp CintQNICLK,
Senator Nye Presents Neutrality
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 71, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 5, 1936, newspaper, November 5, 1936; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1539737/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.