The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, July 22, 1927 Page: 4 of 8
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FARM LOANS
We will renew your farm loan coming due this fall at
five percent interest for thirty six years and give you the
privilege of paying the loan off any time you wish.
SEE US NOW.
Tisinger & Tucker
Garland.
Texas ■ ■
Mil I I 111 I I H I I I H I I I H I H-+-H I I I I I l-H II I I I I H > I I HM
THE CHRONICLE
B. J. WHITMORE
Editor and Owner.
Published Every Friday
Entered at the postnffice at Caroll-
ton, Texas* as second class matter.
With cotton blooming, corn al-
ready made, it will not be long
nntil the business thermometei
will register atabout 100 degrees.
Then watch things hum,
There is always a sweet conso-
lation to every unpleasant thing
that happens, even these scorch-
ing hot days, we can say that it
takes weather like this to keep
down the boll weaveis, for what
would Texas do if that pest had
full sway at her main crop? So
the next time you meet a fellow
and he starts to remark how hot
it is, say, “This is sure boll
wesvel killing weather.’. It will
not sound nearly as hot.
We do not know of a single in-
stance when the citizens of Car-
rollton hasturned down a worthy
cause of charity. We have no-
ticed that when a petition for a
cause of this nature is presented
to them, that they never fall
abort of the amount asked for
and in most cases have gone
above the amount. This is a
very commendable feature for
any town and Carrolltou should
be proud of the fact that they
have a reputation cf coming to
the aid of their fellowmen.
Coppell, called at our office Sat-
urday afternoon and left us a
large basket of the finest peach-
es in his orchBrd and then about
the time they were all gone
Judge Ramsey drove by our
"joint” and left us another
basket full. To ssy that we en-
joyed them would not be doing
justice to our feeling, but those
are the only words in our vocab-
ulary that we have to try to ex-
press our appreciation.
Farmers Branch News
THE
We have been noticing that
Editor Bill Holford of the Gar-
land News has been bragging
about being selected to pass his
expert opinion on the ability of a
student who is learning to cook
Well, he has nothing on us, for
during the past week we have
been feasting on peaches, raw,
pies, in fact every palatable way
that you can fix that delicious
fruit, and the beauty about it is
that the peaches were given to
us. Rev, G. W. Thompson, who
lives between Carrollton and
Carpenters are rushing to
completion the beautiful brick
vaneer home of Mr, Edgar She
hane iu the south suburb of
Farmers Branch.
Dewitt Henry of Pine Bluff.
Ark., spent Tuesday and Wed-
nesday among friends here.
Miss Hattie Strait and J. W.
Field are spending the week at
San Angelo.
Mrs. C. K. Butts and family
are spending the summer at
Kennitt, Texas.
M rs. Tom Marsh is resting
fine sihee the operation at St.
Paul’s Sanitarium Monday.
Bill Benton and family of Har-
linger arrived Wednesday night
and will visit their relatives here
several days,
G. N. Dennis returned Wed
nesday from Marlin where he
spent several days vacation.
Buia Mae Marsh spent seve-
ral days at Garza with Winde-
fred Wheeler.
Mrs. M. L. Ford returned
from Pine Bluff, Ark.
DO YOU WANT A BUSINESS
OF YOUR OWN?
We need honeat men end women
everywhere. We will show yon bow
to get Into ■ big paying buaineaa
of YOUR OWN, from which you can
cam 925.00 to 176.00 a month in
your spire time, and If you own n
car or other conveyance, and can 1
work full time, you can earn 12.000
and up per year, aupnlylng BAKER
QUALITY PRODUCTS and the pop-
ular KERBA Toilet Requisites di-
rect to the homes of the eonsumer.
Ask ua to explain the RAKER PLAN.
Full particulara FREE. Write
BAKER LABORATORIES, Inc.
241-243 North Second St.
MEMPHIS, TENN.
The giant
in every man
i. l!
f
1
OUT your finger on an electric switch tad
* you beeome a giant, with strength $»
nod metal in two, to weld it together, to
j pierce the hardest rock.
Efficient, economical—electricity has ml*
\.• tiplied man-power in industry. And in the
j, Imww* too.
Make the most of this powerful servant we
1 keep ever at your call. Make sure you have
[the moat effective kind of installation. Put
' this up to your electrical contractor. Or ask ua.
“Your Electric Servant”
TEXAS POWER
AND L^ht COMPANY
Four Year
Katy Record
* d* 4*
B doted ^eiMSfsr frtiai ere
om rwe^isa r coker the» Jbe
role. The Ketj it peri tern-
lorly promd of lit record for
pettenger iroim perform,
once, im I9M. of dt ike
Koiy pet tern get troims oper*
oted, HJ% tmode tekedtded
tirmo beloeen termineit. Im
the fome poor period ended
December 31, I9M. 9479%
of oil Kory pence get troimi
oporeted mode rchedmied
time between iermimoU.
/f THE many organised services, contributing to the comfort
<1 ) and convenience at daily Mb in America, none plays a more
v-r important past than the pasaenger train. Paaaenger trains
not only carry an average of two and one-half million passengers
daily, but they perform an equally important service in the trans-
portation of mail and express. Other means of transportation may
at times serve our needs partially, but the passenger train is the
one indispensable agency on which the public must constantly and
under all conditions rely for service which no other transportation
agency can supply.
Realising the important relationship of the passenger train to
American life, and their responsibility for uninterrupted continu-
ance of contacts and interchange vital to business and society, the
railroads—-in face of steadily decreasing passenger revenues—have
constantly improved passenger service until it is now recognised,
from the standpoints of regularity, punctuality, comfort and safety,
as better than ever before.
Railroad passenger service is an all weather service. Interruptions
of its regularity are infrequent; even in (he face of floods and blizz-
ards it is provided almost normally. Passenger trains do not cease
to operate when the weather or roads are bad, but even under
adverse conditions, and despite increased expenses incident to opfa-
tion, they continue the safe delivery of passengers, mail and express.
While development of other means of travel has naturally resulted
in heavy decreases in railroad passenger revenues, passenger train
service has, become increasingly important to the public. Since
1930 the number of passengers handled by American Railroads
has declined approximately 30%, but a like reduction in the number
of trains operated has, of course, not been possible.
The Katy—the pioneer railroad in its distinctive territory, and the
only line serving ail of the more important centers in Oklahoma
and Texas through both the St Louis and Kansas City gateways—
is proud of its position and reputation as an outstanding passenger
line. Despite a decrease of more than 50% in its passenger revenues
since 1930, the Katy—realising its continuing obligation to provide
aervioe indispensable to the public—has steadily improved the stand-
ard of Katy Passenger Service. Your support of the policies which
make high class passenger service possible is earnestly solicited.
A r
I f
TO AND PROM
T H.fi lOilLB A Tjk S O ITT H W E S
c * NO I
Also Kills Mosquitoes
Health authorities have
doomed flies. They are a
dangerous menace to the
health of your family. Cenrn
Fly Destroyer rids whole
rooms of flies quickly, com-
pletely. Safe, clean, easy"
to use. Get Cenol Fly De-
stroyer at any Cenol-Service
Drug Store.
CENOL
Home
Sanitation
Service
Cenol- Service
Drag Store* offer
you an extensive
home sanitation
service with de-
pendable, time-
proved Cenol In-
secticides, Rat and
other pest destroy-
ers, Pipe Flush for
clogged drains, and
other Cenol Prod-
uct* for cleaner,
healthier, happier
home*.
SOLD BY
EAST SIDE PHARMACY
Cenol Agent
Here’s A Husky Infant Industry
Mitliir Fills Relief Fir
Her Chill
Ma. Abner, at Delta, Ak., Ohm Her Thn»-Year-01d
t Boy liver and Blood Syrup, With Good Rewrite.
r "l matt td yea hew Thacker's fat and plaaeaaS as he aaa be. Wa
User ami Blood fivrt '
But eat anything, and we eoold not
get anything to do him any good,
and we got a bottle of Thacker's Liver
and Blood Syrup and in a abort while
hi was wall and all right He is an
Drt Thacker's |
Livar and Blood Byrap ainee the that
bottle we got. The whole family takas 1
it and it doe* lota of good.
“I want you to print this hi Dr,
Thacker's Almanac ao other peopla will
raadjrhai good it baa dona nay little
A NEW industry which has
/\ grown from Infancy to a
state of stout maturity In
the comparatively brief period of
twenty-five yean ia the pineapple
Industry In Hawaii. A quarter of
• century ago. it amounted to
nothing, but the Territory is now
exporting 181,000,000 worth of
canned pineapple* annually, and
expects to reach the $60,000,000
mark within a few year*.
The man reepenaihle for this
prophecy ia James D. Dole, presi-
dent of the Hawaiian Pineapple
Company, the largest company an-
gagsd In this culture in the Is-
lands. Dole backs his faith with
deeds. Fire years ago his com-
pany bought the practically des-
ert island of Lanai in order to
Increase its pineapple acreage.
This island contains 140 square
miles, and is located 60 miles
from Honolulu. Its first crop of
pineapples, harvested last year,
amounted to approximately 6,000
tons, and the company expects to
harvest five times that tonnage
* -—.....
this year. Within tan years, ac-
cording to Dole again. Lanai will
furnish one-fourth of the whole
pineapple output of Hawaii.
Dole recently invited the an Hue
membership of both the house
and senate of the Hawaiian legis-
lature to visit this Island and sae
what has boon accomplished there.
They found a huge harbor aft
Kaumalapau on its coast, with fr
three-hundred foot breakwater
end a wharf a hundred feet long-
er. Approximately $4,600,000 hna
been spent on the island—for its
purchase, the harbor, macadam
roads, the building of a modal
city, and the putting of 2800 acres
into pineapples. Four thousand
additional acres to Its total of
20,000 of good pineapple land
have already been cleared.
Dole is a Harvard man who went
out to Hawaii, a year after he waa
graduated, without any money. nU
company now pays 4% of all taxes
paid into the territorial treasury,
and is the largest individual ta#-
paying institution in Hawaii.
—
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Whitmore, R. J. The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, July 22, 1927, newspaper, July 22, 1927; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth592179/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carrollton Public Library.