The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, December 16, 1932 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Carrollton Public Library.
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THE CHRONICLE
W. L. MARTIN
Editor and Owner.
Published Every Friday
Entered at the poitoffice at Car-
rollton, Texas, as second-class matter
Mder the Act of Congress, March 3,
1179.
One by one the desires of^ J'jgnklin seems to be hav-
w wj wxic wtc ucoiies ui x.
our youthful days are being^g
realized. At: one time we
wondered if we would everi U,K
be able to buy all the ed-
gum drops and peanuts we
desired to consume. It seem-
ed to us that if that time
ever came we would be in
some difficulty get
that Cabinet construct-
We were “a little
afeared of that” and had
planned on suggesting that
he let me and Tom Love
build one down here in
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
In Dallas and Adjoining Counties
Year .......................................$1.00
the Seventh heaven of hap- t !? 7 6 m
piness. We have of ten, since 17exa® and send UP there
. 1__j 11 _ x» 11 ! Tn w o cVi tnerlo« «il ____j__
«x Months
Three Months
.60
.80
Outside Above Named
One Year ________________________
Six Months ________________________
Three Months .....................
District
...........91.60
............86
............60
that time, had all of the I to Washington all ready
gum drops that we cared !for Use on March 4th
to masticate, and, as for
all
ftiburibtrt will pImm note thnt th« |1.00
mr •ub#cription prlra npplii
ibU« of Dallas, Tarrant, Dante:
. pllaa to tha
„ -• *^»"s»-. a arrant, Danton, Collin,
■•Okwall, Kaufman and Bllla. OuUlda thi*
itotrlot tha prica it 11.60 par yaar.
.A11 of entartalnmanta, dinnara and
y*r banaflta, where there la an adminalon
■W or other monetary consideration, will he
■■W f°r «t regular advertising rates.
Umtthy obituaries and obituary poetry, res-
is. as in the days
sdT.rti.inx -When even green apples held
peanuts, we can get
we care to consume at
any time. Whether we can
eat as many of either as
we could have eaten back
in those days of our ard-
ent desire we are not pre-
pared to say, and there is
no way to find out. Some
folks insist that there is
a change in our appetites
and that we would not
care to oonsume so much
in the days when our hair
I..........—*■.| .Vlien even greei
Job Work? The Chronicle of course.' 311 3ppea* for US.
next. When we broached
the subject to some of our
friends they said that Tom
Love would want to put
Dan Moody in for Secre-
tary of War and Oscar Col-
quitt for Secretary of the
Navy and it would never
do. They felt that he
might even get peeved at
some of the democrats and
go out and pick up a lot
of worm-eaten or loblolly
republican timber and try
and work it into the cab-
inet and when Franklin
tried to use it he would
have one far worse than
Mr. Harding had to get
along with7 They didn’t
think I would stand much
chance with Tom Love when
it came to making the cab-'
inet and that he would
run right over me like he
used to do at conventions
where he had his little
old steam roller at work.
To hear Tom talk you
would thipk he would want
a cabinet that was water
tight, but when you see
some of the timber he car-
ries in his yard you won-
der how his conscience acts
about it.
stick, like they used to do
in the land ot Egypt. And
then if, at harvest time,
they were to see the same
farmer gleaning his grain
crop with a sickel? They
would have a conniption
fit and berate the farmer
for not taking advantage
of present day methods.
Yet that same merchant
might be one who is trying
today to do business with-
out using the newspaper in
his community. The news-
paper is the business man’s
best implement to use in
his business if he will but
use it intelligently.
We wonder just how the old
brown hen, which we had plan-
ned on having for our Christ- 'H
mas dinner, figured the thing '
out and began laying eggs
this week? It is really uncan-
ny the way some hens get your
number.
‘High School Revue” Color-
ful, panoramic, tuneful, Blues-
chasing. A full evening of
vutwiug, lull evening 01 ,
delightful entertainment.
Really, what has become
of the home loan bank
that was to relieve the
„ distressed condition of the
in the country, they wouldowner? Just
«* — gsssi
with an ox team and a forked Texan. lne
We wonder what some
business men would say
if, when they were driving
We are wondering just
how a general debt can-
cellation policy would strike
the advocates of foreign
debt cancellation. If one
proposition is fuir the other
ought to be.-Grand Prairie
Texan.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
(Heal Rstate)
L
THE LEADER CAN ACCOMPLISH
WHAT OTHERS DARE NOT TRY
TOMORROW
CHEVROLET
PRESENTS A NEW SIX
Longer • Larger • Faster • Smoother • New in
Styling • More Economical • And Featuring
Fisher No-Draft Ventilation
f I SOMORROW will be Chevrolet Day throughout
A America. And the new car that millions have
been watching and waiting for—the latest product
of the world’s leading builder of automobiles—will go
on display: the New Chevrolet Six—at a new scale of low
prices. Front, side, rear—inside, outside—everything
about this new car is advanced, improved, exciting.
Longer wheelbase makes it the biggest automobile in
today’s low-price field. The latest principle of car
design, “Aer-Stream” styling, gives it a totally differ-
ent, ultra-modern appearance. The new Fisher
bodies are larger, wider—faultlessly streamlined—
swung lower to the road-and offer the first basic
improvement in travel comfort in over ten years:
Fisher No-Draft Ventilation. Chevrolet perform-
ance in every gear is faster, flashier, more brilliant.
The time-proved six-cylinder engine is more powerful
as well as more economical. Improved Free WheeD
ing is combined with a “silent second” Syncro-Mesh
gear-shift. Chevrolet engineers have developed a
remarkable new invention that wins a complete vic-
tory over vibration: The Cushion-Balanced Engine
Mounting. And as far as prices are concerned, several
models now sell at the lowest figures in Chevrolet
history. Chevrolet is able to do all this because
Chevrolet has the advantage of being the world’s largest
builder of cars for 4 out of the past 6 years. Chev-
rolet builds cars in greater volume—buys materials in
greater quantities—does everything on a bigger, more
economical scale. Hence, Chevrolet is in a posi-
tion to provide a better car at a better price than
could possibly issue from „uy other source. The
leader can accomplish w.W others dare not try1
CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN
AT A NEW SCALE OF LOW PRICES
SPORT ROADSTER $485. COUPE $495. COACH $515
PHAETON $515. SPORT COUPE $535. SEDAN $565. CABRIOLET $565.
AUprices /. o. b. Flint, Michigan. Special equipment extra. Low delivered pricea and eaay O. M. A. C. terma
ON DISPLAY TOMORROW AT YOUR LOCAL DEALER'S
A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE ' f.
VANDERGRIFF CHEVROLET COMPANY
CARROLLTON and IRVING, TEXAS
Rv vlrtueofan orderof sale Issued out
at the Honorable District Court of Dal-
las county. 6Hth Judicial District of
Texas, on the 23rd day of November, A.
D. 1032. in the case of Republic Build-
ing & Loan Associati n. Plain-
tiff, versus J. O. Sanderson and Mary
Edna Sanderson, Defendants, Num-
ber 9 8 4 0 1 - C , and to me as
Sheriff, directed and delivered,
I have levied upon this 26th day of
Nov.. A. D. 1932, and will between the
hours of 10 o’clock A. M. and 4 o'clock
P. M.. on the first Tuesday tn Jan-
uary. A D. 1933, It being the 3rd day
of said month, at the courthouse door
of said Dallas county, in the City o,
Dallas proceed to sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for rash in hand,
all the right, title and Interest which
J O. Sanderson and Mary Edna San-
derson had on the nth day of May,
A. IJ. 1928. or at any time thereafter,
of, in and to the following described
property, to-wlt:
Beluga part of Lots 8, 9 and 10 of
Maplewood an addition to the City of
Dallas. Texas, according to the plat
thereof, duly recorded In Vol. 2, page
121, map records of Dgllas county,
Texas, and being more particularly
described as follows:
Beginning at a point In the S. E.
line of Woodrow Avenue 99 feet in a
southwesterly direction from the north
or northwest comer of Lot 10; thence
in a southeasterly direction parallel
with the N. W. line of Highland Street.
1 nO feet to corner in the S. E. line of
said Lot 8; thence in a southwesterly
direction along the S. E. line of Lot 8,
50 feet to corner; thence in a north-
westerly direction parallel with the
S. W. line of Highland Street, 150 feet
to point in the S. E. line of Woodrow
Street; thence In a northeasterly di-
rection along the S. E. line of Wood-
row Street 50 feet to the place of be-
ginning.
Said property being levied on as the
property of J. O. Sanderson and Mary
Edna Sanderson and will be sold to
satisfy a judgment amounting to $1955.69
In favor of Republic Building & Loan
Association, a corporation, and costs of
court and the further costs of execut-
ing this writ.
Given under my hand this 26th
day of November, 1932.
H. A. HOOD.
Sheriff Dallas County, Texas.
^ By J. E. Jameson, deputy
NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
(Real Estate)
By virtue of an order of sale issued
out of the Honorable District Court of
Dallas County, 116th Judicial District
of Texas, on the 21st day of Novem-
ber, A. D. 1932, in the case of Mer-
cantile Bank and Trust Company of
Texas, Plaintiff, versus Mrs. Laura
E. Shannon, James Harold Shannon
and Charles Elder Shannon, Defend-
ants, Number 99460-F, and to me,
as sheriff, directed and delivered. 1
have levied upon this 6th day of De-
cember, A. D. 1932, and will between
the hours of io o’clock a. m. and 4
o’clock p. m., on the first Tuesday in
January, A. D. 1933, It being the 3rd
day of said month, at the Courthouse
door of said Dallas County, in the City
Of Dallas, proceed to sell at public
auction to the highest bidder, for cash
in hand, all the rignt, title and interest
which defendants and each of them had
on the 22nd day of July, A. D.
193c, or at any time thereafter, of, in and
to the following described property,
to-wit:
Lot 4 In Block 5 of Barnes and
Mitchell’s Grand Avenue Addition to
he City of Dallas, Texas, according
to the map or plat thereof recorded In
Tc^s6611 ReC°rdS °f-DallaB county,
Said property being levied on as the
property of Mrs. Laura E. Shannon
-- "ar°‘d Shannon an<l Charles
Elder Shannon and will be sold to satisfy
a judgment amounting to $2537.97, to-
gether with Interest thereon from Sep-
atl°*P» annum on
$2307.25 of said sum and on $230.72 at
6* per annum In favor of Mercantile
Bank and Trust Company of Texas
and costs of court and the further
costs of executing thi s writ.
Given under my hand this 6th day of
December, 1932. „ ■.
H. A. HOOD,
Sheriff Dallas County, Texas.
4-4 By J. E. Jameson Deputy,
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Martin, W. L. The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, December 16, 1932, newspaper, December 16, 1932; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth728705/m1/2/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carrollton Public Library.