Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 223, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 1, 1937 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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DENTON, TiptAS RECORD-cmONICLE SATONDAY. MAT 1 1937
.0-
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11
Song),
A tuneful romance starring de-
Through the Night" (Welsh Polk
to the Texas Theater to an are marooned in a mountain lodge.
through Tuesday.
No finer vehicle has been found his hideout and 811m Summerville
brook of Henrietta, Perry O Aus-
Sumner Welles
last
times today at the Texas.
LOANS
for Dreamland
F
J
tl
seen again as a young traveling
plai
llior
Ray Stone was in Denton
i
a pastor, as Rev. J. D. Grey went
i
tas beautiful daughter with whom
Phone 380
I
suit for commission
National Bank, for writ of garnish-
JUSTIN NEWS
lessons from them
Phone 248
ment.
Denton Federa Savings and
Loan A
au
ji
( ,
hi
“ Tell them tt ctme ta wtrk :..”
W
I
Morris & McClendon
4
dairy. Plenty Cream, quart
I
Kg
See M-Systemfor
I _
Texas Telephone Company
STORE
U
lel
0 o
V
• -
1
4
i
The cost of having a telephone is reasonable. ...
Not having one may prove expensive.... Call the
business office ... Say "1 want a telephone.”
laytime" Brings Music of Nelson
Eddy, Jeanette McDonald, To Texas
Rouse to Speak
at Baptist Church
e our windows for
e many new creations
footwear for 1987.
Refinance
"Your Homes
M-System Grocery and Market
Grande A Milk from John Underwood’*
Spring Styles
Are Here
A full and complete line of fresh Vegeta-
bles and fruits from Rio Grande Valley.
M-System Grocery and Market
- Free Delivery
Mrs. Klepper
Dies Saturday
10c
Bens,
young Arnold loves but leaves to
many his boss's daughter, and Lot-
W. W. King, who was chosen
by the board or anrectors to be
president of the Rotary Club for
the next year. will assume the
duties of his omice July 1.
Building
Repairing or
Refinancing Homes
C. E. Miller
Insurance
Phone 7
wil ineli
weglan
1
Grace-Barrow Chevrolet Co.
ne 99 311 W. OAk St.
f
4
Shirley Temple plays Cupid for
Alice Faye and Robert Young in a
Chinese setting. In "Stowaway". ini-
. tial film offering of the week at the
Dreamland Theater, which opens' a
Left orphaned by missionary par-
enta, Shirley is picked up by Young.
1936 Pontiac. 6-cylinder sedan
1934 Pontiac. 2-door sedan
1933 Plymouth Coupe
DICKSON-HAMILTON MOTOR CO.
Rev. W. T. Rouse, teacher of Bi-
ble in the two colleges here, will
preach at the morning and evening
hours at the First Baptist Church
Two Contender* for
.U. S. Post
the primary chorus
The Intermediate chorus will of-
here April 31. with several towns
ripem,nted Chief speakers Mere
Mias Laura Brelhan of & C. W.
and Miss Sowell of Teachers Goi-
ters. decide to look into things. Ro-
mance comes out on top.
Bette Dayis as a hardbotled host-
ess and Humphrey Bogart as a
young district attorney are the pair
whose daring wrecks a vicious rack-
et in "Marked Woman”, Texas The-
ater feature for Friday and Satur-
uhreart. Will You Remember?", (sephine
i Me Back to Old Virginia". Brent.
cial season last night with a chicken
try attended by 40 couples, held at
the Denton Country Club.
a
1.
Mi.)
r Mustard Greens, Turnip Gi
Plantg, Squash.
Congress considered establishing
a new State Department post when
a controversy emnse over whether
Sumner Welles or R. Walton Moore,
assistant secretaries, should be nam-
ed undersecretary of state. Welles,
who won recognition for Latin di-
plomacy. was said to have threat-
ened retirement unless appointed
Moore was said to be favored by
Secretary of State Cordell Hull.
TNI
STAMDARD
ovqunLIT
A * * *
r
-c..
DISTRICT COURT
New suits filed:
T. J Roady vs. Mrs. Agnes Brier.
evening service R. B Neale Jr. will
COURTHOUSE
KI”
355
83
e
Lou Klepper, Homer C. and Jim
Tom Klepper, all of.Denton, and
Miss Janie Lou Klepper of Detroit .
TAfomance as beautiful as its set-
HSR. divinely blending the voices of
Mstoon Eddy and Jeanette MeDon-
ABRAHAM MAN
OF FAITH
We Are Equipped To Do
ENGRAVING
Or Do Anything In The Photographic Line
THE CARRUTH STUDIO
—1
A
a 8 289,’
7,6".
THE VANITY SHOP
Shop of Style and
Personality
"am
0)
brook of Austin.. Mrs. J. T. Follis
and Mrs. J. T Whitlock, both of
Lewisville, and Mrs E. L. Certain
of Richardson.
Bom in Galjatin, Tenn., in 1888,
Mrs Klepper was brought to Texas,
as a child 43 years ago She was
married to Klepper in Denton in
1909. They had Uved at their pres-
ent home about 35 years.
Rev. W. C. McClung of Dallas,
former pastor of the church, will
have charge of the service.
to New Orleans this week to accept
a pastorate.
At the morning service. Mimes
Tonight. the traditional May Day
dinner will be held in Lowry and
Brackenridge Halls and the senior
cafeteria at 6:15 o’clock, with dec-
orations to follow a spring motif.
Later in the evening, more than 100
sophontores and their escorts will
attend the final class dance of the
season. In the college gymnasium. A
surrealist art theme will be featur-
ed. with prominent sophomores'
faces appearing in modernistic ver-
sion on the walls of the dance-floor.
infected jaw.
Mrs J. H Allen visited her daugh-
ter at Livingstone.
Rev Roy ogaiu of Dallas to con-
ducted a 10-day meeting at the
Church of Christ, which opened
Thursday q
—
later.
Thursday and Friday, May 6 and
7. the Palace will offer Lew Ayres.
Ruth Colemand, and Eugene Pal-
lette in "The Crime Nobody Saw"
mystery drama. Three author seek
the plot for a play which they must
deliver in 34 hours, and the mystery
walks right to on them when a
murdered, man is "planted" in their
apartment
New Highland
Baptist Church
Ready for Use
The new Highland Baptist Church
located on Highland Street between
Welch Street and Avenue A. has
been completed to the extent that
tt can be used by the congregation,
and all services wiM be held in the
new building Sunday Much work
la yet to be done on the bonding,
but it is floored and covered and
will be in use hereafter The build-
ing includes an auditorium and sev-
eral Sunday School rooms.
Rev. Bari Barr will preach at 11
a. m. and 8 p m. Sunday.
No successor has yet been named
for Rev. C W Anderson, who has
resigned and who preached his final
sermons last Sunday. A pulpit com:
mittee has been named to select
his successor.
sr A scene from “Maytime,” showing at the T exaa Theater here tonight at 11 o'clock and
X. through Tuesday, to depicted at the left. In th a picture are Neison Eddy, Jeanette MacDonala
ETand Herman Bing. At the right are Sonja Henle and Don Ameehe to “One in a Milhon which
zui shewing at the Palace Theater today and tomorrow:
accidentally in his car aboard a
cruise ship. She leads him to meet
Alice Faye. and later they marry so
that he can adopt Shirley under
Chinese law.
Leslie Fenton and Muriel Evans
have the leads in "House of Se-
crets", Dreamland booking for Tues-
the girl's loyalty to her trainer and
patron (John Barrymore), demand-
ing that she ahall show her grati-
tude by marrying him. Years later,
both famous operatic favorites, the
two lovers are reunited when fate
finds them paired to the same opera. I day. May 7 and 8. The film exposes
of an ocean away from the Spring set- a vicious scheme for robbing pa-
ting where their youthful romance' trans of night clubs by girls em-
Can we read this story of Abraham.
Sunday. The church aa’now without | prgderetndtnengm clnceptnnat
a pastor, as Rev. J. D Grey went Can we strive to ose him as he was.
a man of his own time. with some
Ce
“One in Million”
At Palace Now
A
A A
"Fifty Roads to Town”
Ann Sothern anu von Ameehe
find adventure of a new order in
"Fifty Roads to Town”, merry com-
A
R. Walton Moore
A T DENTON TH
* : ~ . it.
--
mure Sonja Henjl, international
skating star, and Don Ameehe. isiter
“One in a Miion," which opened —
a two-day engagement at the Pal-
round, was not based upon any such _ _______
narrow oonception. Abraham was not. nv elstere and brothers W J Aus-
only to be Bema, but he was to be l fve . l„„. n A.
a birmins. His destiny was one of
reaponribUty as much as one of sucr
Heads Club
di
Mrs Sarah bane Klepper, wife
of Woodie C Klepper, died at the
family home. Ill Welch Street. at 7
a. m Saturday, following an illness
of several months
Funeral services will be held Sun-
day at 3 p. m. in the First Baptist
Church, of which she was a mem-
ber. Burial will be in the I. O. O. F.
cemetery _
Besides her husband Mrs Klep-
per is survived by five children.
Mrs. G B Patterson. Miss Frankie
Hutchinson and George
Dinners and picnics of the week
opened with the Aglaian Club din-
ner Wednesday evening in the Eagle
Cafe, attended by 33 members. New
officers and Miss Helen Ludeman,
sponsor, were introduced, and a the-
ater party followed the dinner.
Thursday night, Press Club mem-
bers went on a steak-fry in Lowry
Woods. Miss Mamie Walker, sponsor,
was presented with a book by H H
in
"Elves' Dance” (French Dance),
"Swing Song" (Hartford), sung by
Getting things done .. \____
•”Seem» I have more time since we got the
telephone. This morning I ordered the grocer-
ies, had the man call for your suit and got •
most of the’housework done.. This afternoon
I had the drug store send out some dye. You
won’t recognize that old white dress now.”
A telephone saves time and strength for the
jobs ydu have to do in person.
“Brings firemen rushing ..
Abraham appears in our lesson as
a man of destiny. But his destiny is
not ft matter of chance if the story
suggests that he is favored of the Al-
mighty snd that there are great
blessings in store for him; and if
there would seem to be in all this
a certain partiality toward Abraham
as an individual, one hastens to point
out that, his coming greatness, and
that of the nation that he would
H. M. RUSSELL & SONS CO.
OENTON’S LEADING DEPARTMENT
..
I
began The mutoe of "Maytime" to ployed to the places.
3hpett>—Including such favorites as 1 "Mountain Justice", starring Jo-
“.$10.45
ml Alowanee for Your ola
Battery
Finding a job . .
andtows-2a9 wins the girls his father loves.
Miss Farmer has the difficult dual
role of Lotta, cabaret singer whom
Bong), "The Mystic Number" (Aus-
trian Folk Song). “Gypsy Song"
prevue tonight, and show unacquainted. To complicate mat-
ters a gangster decides to make it
Why not borrow Denton
"money to refinance your
home? Plenty of money
available. AU details handled
to Denton. No delays.
3
*
hH
A
Dances,
Dinners anft
Picnics at'S. C. W.
On next week's calendar will be
the T. C. U. Press Club and 8. C. W.
Press Club joint picnic at Lake Dal-
lax. Monday evening; and a buffet
supper Tuesday night in the college
cafeteria, honoring new and old
officers of the Round Table. Miss
Marjorie Lynn Collier of Denton
will preside at that affair; 150
guests are expected. Next Friday
night, May 7. the Alice Freeman
Palmer Club will hold its annual
spring dinner-dance in the senior
dining room.
Approximately 10,000 coyotes and
177 mountain lions were trapped in
California in ini
will be seen for the
through a lifetime, is "May-__- . — .
»", screen version of the 81g- edy coming to the Texas Wednes-
ld Romberg operetta which will day for two days. Ann and Don
Shirley Temple
Sherwin Williams
PAIMT HEnDOUARrENS
"BRICKEYS SHOE
30h u. STORE
Davenport at Krum. Miss Jeanette
Brookshire at West Ward School.
Miss Helen Holliday at West Ward
School. Miss Inez Henry at Center
Point, and Miss Eleanor Banks at
Center Point.
Orchestra Music
The T. C. High School orchestra
will open the program playing
"Royal Palm Overture" (King) and
"Pilgrims’ Chorus” (Wagner). Songs
(Hungarian Folk Song), and “The
Four Winds” (Oretry).
By the two-part chorus will be
sung "Fairy Song" (Old German),
"The Patriot" (Thuringian Folk
Songi. "Farewell" (Tyrolese Folk
Song, and "The Hunter's Horn"
(Bohemian Folk Song).
Junior-Senior Chorus
The junior-senior chorus will sing
"We Ball the Ocean Blue" (Sull-
van,. “I’m Called Little Buttercup"
(Sullivan). "Home" (Dvorak), “A
Merry Life" (Densa). "Music in the
Air” (Old Bong > . The boys’ chorus
will sing “The Pirates" (Protheroe),
and “A Bold Adventurer" Wake-
man); and the T. C. High School
boys' quartet will sing "Far Away
in the South" (Southern Song).
“Canoe Song” (Pestalozza) and
"WaterBoy" (Convict Bong) will be
sung by the T. C. High School
chous, and “Welcome. Sweet Spring-
time" (Rubinstein) and will be sung
by the whole ensemble to complete
the program.
Wander” (French Folk
Text: Genesis 12:1-9; 13:14-18
By WM E. GILROY, D. D.
Editor of Advance
Abraham has been called the first
emigrant. As a matter of fact, there
were emigrants before Abraham, and
he would not seem to be by any
means the first of those who pushed
out from his homeland into a far-
off country But Abraham is the
typical emigrant, going out to bet-
ter his condition with viston and
faith, reaching out for something
larger and finer.
He typifies also the aspect of emi-
gration which has bee so much an
incentive in the movements of man-
kind namely, his going forth because
of religious convictions to seek an
environment not only for better liv-
tag, but also for a larger freedom of
pt Mis . defects and shortcomings of
Ms time and -environment? By no
means an ideal character, because
the Bible, with Its honest realism
and impartiality, records against
him grievous sins and deceptions
Abraham nevertheless was far more
than a man of his own time, a man
who had discovered a great truth 1
concerning life and one so far ahead
of his day that in some respects the
world of today still lags behind him.
In such matters as war and peace,
in fact, we have never attained to
‘for these two than thia stirring story and Stepin Fetchit, local charac-
-of i prima donna and a struggling * * “
^filing baritone who are parted by
Meeting emergencies ...
“. . . please hurry! ... 178 Elm Street.”
When there is a fire ... or burglars ... a tele-
phone call brings firemen or police rushing to
your aid. At such a time, not having a tele-
phone may prove costly.
. I
Personais
Born to Mr. and Un Orville
■hockey. April 35. a girl, who has
been named Dolores Jane.
Pete Goodwin to 1U of influenza
Mrs. V. T Finney visited to Hous-
ton.
DREAMLAND- Last day, Wilam
Boyd in "Hills of Old Wyoming"
with Gale Sheridan; "Jungle Jib",
chapter 3; "Uttle Cheever", Hap- I
py Harmony cartoon.
Experimenta are under way in
three Texas countlev to determine
the relationship between the south-
ern tenant syskem and soil produc-
tivity
AT MOVIES TODAY
TEXAS — Last day, Josephine
Hutchinson and George Brent in
"Mountain Justice"; News Events;
Our Gang in "Three Smart Boys";
Popeye the sailor in "My Artisti-
cal Temperature”. Preview tonight
at 11. Jeanette MacDonald and
Nelson Eddy in "Maytime".
PALACE—"One in a Mulon" with
Soopa Henle and Adolphe Men-
Jou; News Events; Pete Smith in
"KIller Dog.”
The Home Demonstration Club
of Lake Dallas met Wednesday af-
ternoon and the program was on
" Good Manners' Rules of good
manners were read A new vice
president was elected as the former
chairman had moved away April
31. Mrs Trigg, county home agent,
met with the club and gave a dem-
onstration on quick breads. The
group met all day and luncheon was
served to 34 present.
W D Park of Gering, Neb. sup-
plea himself and neighbors with
smoking material from a tobacco
"plantation'' of 30 plants in his gar-
den.
he falls hopelessly in love years Mary Naima and Eltmabeth Prov-
ence will sing a duet, and at the
in a world that has paid and is pay-
ing. an enormous price for war. what
a. world we might have, U we had
a measure of this anolent Abraham's
wulingness to pay the price at peacet
“Good Manners’* . _
Women’* Club Topic
Dances, dinners, and picnics fill-
ed the week for State College for
Women students, and the week
ahead promises an equally full
zoundotsocial-eventa---------
GOODVIEW
GOODVIEW, May 1,—The P.-T.
A. presented a play Tuesday night.
The proceeds of *1450 goes to the
P.-T. A treasury. Special music was
furnished between acts. 2—_
Mr. and Mrs Jerry Giles visited
in Denton
Mrs Fred Hansel of Sherman
visited Mrs C. Bronaugh
Mr and Mrs Brownlow of Gain-
esville visited Mr and Mrs Arthur
McFarlin.
Mrs. C. Bronaugh. Mrs Fred
Givens, and Mrs. C. Baker were
in Denton.
Mrs Fred Givens and Miss Alyne i
Seal were in Dallas —
Abraham's simple philosophy or his
noble practice. It is in this way that
T 7 SSTre D-ton gotuzngdsconen 2°“"
Tia Ro r" Dmtop Coun5z na receive the richest and highest
ATERS NEXT WEEK Fire Schools to
mmsmamomememmm ' Hold Sin^^ong
cess and achievement.
The significant thing about Abra-
ham la that we see in him and in his
acta, despite his weaknesses and er-
rors. the attitude of faith and the
quality of lfving upon which human
affairs can be built
Nothing ever was established upon
unbelief and negation. The men who
, have gone forth to enlarge the
' world’s boundaries and experience*
have always been men of a sort of
faith. It might not be a deeply re-
ligious faith, but it was a faith suf-
ficient to lead them in the quest of
something yet unrealised.
One sees tn Abraham a strongly
developing sense of justice, and a
feeling for human values in an age
when the circumstances of life tend-
ed to involve men and groups of men
in strife as they sought pastures and
watering places for their flocks
Abraham perceived that there was
a nobler and better way than that
of warfare The remarkable thing is
that he showed himself willing to
pay the price of peace When" his
herdsmen and Lot’s were in conflict,
his plea was, "Let there be no strife.
You go to the right hand and I’ll
go to the left, or you go to the left,
and I shall go to the right.”
Il was a revelation of magnanimity
such as later men and later genera-
tions have Uttle imitated, we live
Employer: “Telephone three men on’this
list. Tell them to come to work tomorrow.”
When there is a job to be filled, employers and
agencies want to get in touch with you quickly.
Not having a telephone may mean fewer oppor-
tunities for work.
* Lacto”, “Ozaritza", opera
t on Tschaikowsky’s Fifth
BetRinl
" USS TO USI
A Becnu at cada
dhgrgte t
F smepnt -
- ‛* -K~
"Columbia" (Schubert), “All
Special to Record-Chronicl e.
JUSTIN, May .—The Cervantes
Club observed Cervantes Day April
33 with a Mexican dinner in 8. C.
W tearoom in Denton Present
were eight club members and three
guests Misses Rebecca Switzer and
Mr and Mrs. A. T. Hedgepeth.
The F.-T. A. met in business ses-
sion and named a committee to col-
lect books tor the projected city-
county library.
. Darwin Wright, grand cham-
pion boys' exhibitor at the Dallas
Centennial Stock Show and at the
Bouthweatern Exposition at Fort
Worth in lambs. Is fattening three
animals to enter in the Pan-Amer-
ican show at Dallas this fall
Contestants to represent thin
community in the homemaking ral-
ly will be Ruth Banner. Earlene
Payne, Bettie Flo Baker and Mary
Sue Blair
It’a Time to Think Of
I SPRING APPAREL
J We have all the newest
" fashion details to offer
you, and invite your
visit.
• ' f
#3. -
day only The drama tells of a
young American who inherits a
"haunted” estate in England, only
to find tt occupied by a mystery
couple, father and daughter. A ro-
mance with the daughter follows,
and the hero solves the mystery.
Battle Above Clouds
"Fugitive in the Sky". Wednesday
and Thursday film at the Dream-
land. will star Jean Muir and War-
ren Hull. A newspaper reporter and
a pilot battle above the clouds for
the love of a beautiful air-hostess,
in the film. A mysterious murder
committed in the plane and a ter-
rific dust-storm add thrills.
Next Friday and Saturday, May
7 and S. Charles Starrett will come
to the Dreamland screen in “Dodge
City Trail", stirring musical saga
of the old West Ute plot deals with
outlaw efforts to kidnap for ran-
som pretty Marion Weldon, and
her defense by Starrett. Donald
Grayson, new singing star, also per-
forms a bit of heroism
William Boyd in Hills of Old
Wyoming" will be seen for the last
times today at the local showhouse.
In celebration of Music Week,
which opens Monday, a sing-song
win be held in the Teachers Col-
Oge auditorium Monday at 81s p.
m. by students from the Center
Point, Krum, Denton West Ward.
Denton Junior High. andT. C.
Demonstration Schoola There wUl
be no admission charge and the.
public is invited to attend.
Mr*. Margie Stafford, music su-
pervisor in the Demonstration
School, is directing the program
with the assistance of Miss Florence
Cullin, graduate student who to su-
pervisor at Krum. Miss Ina Louise
Thurman, faculty member and su-
pervisor of music and elementary
education at Center Point. West
Ward, and Junior High Schools.
Music student-teachers who have
assisted in preparation of the pro-
gram Include Grady Whittle at the
Junior High School, Miss Johnnie
115 S. Elm
“SPrettytaughtdr’or a Swiss ton-
keeper who has been her trainer.
Sonja becomes Olympic skating
champion but almost loses her lau-
rels when she appears on a pro-
gram with Adolphe Menjou and
his stranded theatrical troupe, be-
fore the contests. Ameehe is an
American newspapermen who saves
the day, and both fame and ro-
mance come Sonja's way.
Superb tapsters Eleanor Powell
gets involved with the Navy in “Born
to Dance," M -O -M. musical which
will come to the Palace Monday on-
ly. A small-town girl seeking s-
oeas on Broadway. Eleanor and Jis.
Stewart, navy officer, meet to a
Lonely Hearts Club. Rough waters
come when Virginia Bruce, musical
comedy star, takes a fancy to Jim-
my, but this connection serves even-
tually to make Eleanor a star and
assure her of his love as well. Una
Merkey, Bid Silver, Frances Lang-
ford, Buddy Ebsen, 'and
Walburn are prominently
-Come and Get It"
"Come and Get It," dramatic
screening of Edna Ferber's great
novel, will bring Frances Farmer
and Joel McCrea with Edward Ar-
nold to the Palace screen next Tues-
day and Wednesday Arnold plays
the chore boy who becomes a lum-
ber baron. McCasa is his son, who
CALL US WHEN IN NEED Denton. Texas
--------------
• 04ry... . • t-v.
Genuine Chevrolet
BATTERIES
Three stem 13-ptate. 15-plate ana
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 223, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 1, 1937, newspaper, May 1, 1937; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1539887/m1/4/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.