The Lion Roar (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, January 18, 1935 Page: 4 of 4
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THE LION ROAR
Four
OTIS NELSON
Shoes, Dry Goods, and
Notions
Bridgefarmer's
Jewelry Store
McKINNEY DRY GOODS
COMPANY
Your Department Store
Ready-to-Wear
Phillips-Taylor,
INC.
For School Supplies
NORTH SIDE DRUG
STORE
Soda and Lunch
Phone 10
CLIFF GOGGANS
For Cleaning and Pressing
Phone 60
CROUCH FUNERAL HOME
AMBULANCE SERVICE
Phone 123
A. & P. Food Store
For Finest of Foods
WHAT'S IN A NAME?
WE HAVE
The APPLE but no sauce;
The FOWILER but no referee;
BROWN but no black;
MOORE and no less;
NOBLETTS and want gdbletts;
WRIGHT but not wrong;
DAY but no night;
YOUNG but not giddy;
GRAVES but no corpses;
SNAPPS but no buttons;
SKELTON but no closet;
A BUTLER but no maid;
SHIELD'S but no swords;
BASS but not perch;
AYERS but no furbelows;
CROWDER but no shover;
GLENN but no dale;
HUNT but no hunter;
HEARN but no his'n;
MACK but no Moran;
MAJORS but no miners;
A COUCH but no bed;
A TUCKER but no shortening;
FROPFHT but no loss;
APPLEBEE but no honeybee;
A HORN but no drum;
LITTLEJOHN but no Robin
Hood;
PAYNE but no ache;
A CARR and a HORN;
ARGO but no "crow";
NICHOLS but no dimes;
A CURRY and a COMBS;
A POE but no raven.
Kathryn Wandry spent the
Christmas holidays visiting in Dal-
las and Fort Worth.
)
It Pays To Trade At
THE
CHICAGO
STORE
"McKINNEY'S LEADING
DEPARTMENTSTORE"
Sanitary Market
For Fresh and Cured Meats
Phone 388
MR. RODGERS HEADS
FINE TRAINING CLASS
Manual training, as taught by
Mr. D. C. Rogers, is one of the
most interesting courses offered
to students of the Junior High
and Senior High schools.
The first term of this course
is devoted mainly to drawings.
Some of these include sketches
of tools, machinery and parts of
machines; others include draw-
ings of desks, beds, and corners
of rooms.
The second term of the school
year Is spent in working in the
shop. The students are allowed
to make only small things at
first, but later, the students are
allowed to choose their own proj-
ect for work on the machines.
Beds, chests, tables and other ar-
ticles in the workshop now attest
to previous artistic and skillful
work.
LOW ELEVEN
CLASS GROUPS
The low eleventh class spon-
sored by Miss Cundiff, has
already selected its invitations
and ordered its rings. Under the
leadership of M. W. Younger,
president; Rebecca Wilson, vice-
president; and James Beaver, sec-
retary and treasurer, the class is
divided into five groups, each
headed by a captain, for the pur-
pose of carrying out various pro-
jects to make money for the low
seniors.
John Mack Harrington, seven-
teen-year-old son of County Judge
and Mrs. J. Frank Harrington,
who was wounded in the right
arm in a hunting accident Mon-
day afternoon is recovering at the
McKinney City Hospital. John
Mack, who is a popular student
of the McKinney High School,
where he is a Low Senior and
yell leader, was struck in the
arm by a charge from a shot-
gun, the gun discharging as he
was placing it in an automobile
after completion of a hunting
trip. His condition is not now se-
rious and his many friends hope
for a rapid recovery.
Louis Johnson went to Dallas
during Christmas holidays.
A. M. Scott & Co.
INSURANCE
Phone 665
J. T. ELLIOTT LBR. CO.
"Since 1872"
Quality Building Materials
226 N. Tenn. Phone 66
X PRY C0(M>S-NOTIONS- RLApy-TO-WEAR
J. P. DOWELL
Furniture and Hardware
Sanitary Grocery
We've got it. We'll get it or
it is not in town.
Thomas* & McKinney
Headquarters for Battery
and Ignition Service
COCKRELL'S GARAGE
202 West Virginia Street
Grocery and Market
GEORGE W. JAMES
Hardware and Implements
Get Graduation Photos
At
GREENWOOD'S
Prompt Service
Congratulations
To
The Mid-Term
Graduation
Class
We Thank You
For Your
Friendship During
Your School Days
AND
Trust That We
May Serve You In
The Future.
J.C. PENNEY CQ
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Thompson, Billy G. The Lion Roar (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, January 18, 1935, newspaper, January 18, 1935; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth192340/m1/4/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.