The Canadian Record (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 28, 1935 Page: 6 of 6
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JACKIE COOGAN HERO
OF ZANE GREY FILM
Grown into a tall, bronzed and
handsome vouitgr man, Jackie Coo
gari of "The Kid" fame, returns to
the 'screen for his first adult role
in Paramount's "Home on the
Range," which will open at the
Palace theater Friday night and
continue Saturday matinee and
night.
And fully accoutred with Stet-
son, hat, high-heeled boots and
six-shooters, Jackie Coogan proves
as hard-riding and straight-shoot-
ing a Western star as Randolph
Scott, Addison Richards, Fuzzy
Knight or any of "the other 300
famous punchers who appear in
the film.
With 'Evelyn Brent and Ann
Sheridan providing the feminine
interest, "Home on the Range" is
the story of the deadly feud be-
tween a gang of crooks and the
BMW
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mm
tms&nm
Canadian, Texas
HOME OF HHE BEST
TALKIES IN TEXAS
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
March 1-2
Matinee Saturday 2 p. m.
ZANE GREY'S
u ' j
Lg|H
mm
*s III
nw
mm
THE RANGE"
with Jackie Coogan,
Randolph Scott, Evelyn Brent
—and Joe Morrison singing
. "Home on the Range"
—Two-Act Comedy—
"GEM OF THE OCEAN"
Chapter No. 11
"THE RED RIDER"
^Ldm. 10c, 15c & 25c
SUNDAY MATINEE, 2 to 6
March 3
MONDAY and TUESDAY
NIGHTS
March 4 and 5
The Greatest Show on Earth
"THE MIGHTY
yy
with
Wallace Beery
and a cast of hundreds
Stupendous, Colossal,
Gargantuan
The Wonder Entertainment
Nothing Bigger Ever Filmed
Two-Act Comedy
"DU3SSB -LUCK"
Also Cartoon Comedy
VEitr SPECIAL
EXTRA ADDED!
"The
Hauptmann Trial"
See Richard Bruno Haupt-
mann on Trial for Kidnap
and Murder of the Lindbergh
Baby. All this big show and
no raise in admission. The
greatest show ever brought
to your Palace.
Adm. 10c, 25c & 35c
WEDNESDAY and
THURSDAY
March 6 and 7
Walter Connolly
Paul Lukas
Gertrude Michael
in
"FATHER BROWN,
DETECTIVE"
Also Two 1-Act Specials
and Wednesday is
"MONEY NIGHT'
Adm. 10c, 15c & 25c
COMING—
Richard Arlen and
Madge Evans in
MMtodo"
FOR SALE—At all times, good
work mares; at L. M. Storm ranch.
G- E. Storm. ll-4tnp
CRISSIE STRONGBERG gets the
, big money for your stock. Give
i him a trial. Vici, Okla., every two
weeks, <on Monday. 11-ltnp
FOR SALE—Two good John
Deere riding cultivators. Priced
to sell. J. lE. Gilbert, Singer Shop,
' Canadian. Itnp
MAN WANTED for Rawleigh
Route of 800 families. Write to-
day. Rawleigh, Dept. TXB-113-SA,
Memphis, Tenn. 8-4
rancher brothers, played by Coo-
gan and Randolph Scott.
Through devious channels the
crooks get control of the ranch,
owned by the brothers in order to
take possession of the racing
horses. But Evelyn Brent, a mem-
ber of the crcoks' band, falls in
love with Scott and turns the ta-
bles on her former colleagues.
There are thrilling fights and a
hair-raising escape from death in
a forest fire. But these are only
preludes to the blood-tingling
horse race in which Jackie Coogan
rides his horse, Midnight, to vic-
tory, after the crooks have been
bested.
"Home -on the Range" repre-
sents the initial directorial effort
of Arthur Jacobson, who turns in
a completely creditable and excit-
ing job of direction.
Background music, throughout
the film, is furnished by the su-
premely fine voice -of Joe Morri-
son, famous for "The Last Round-
up," who sings "Home on the
Range."
o
'THE MIGHTY BARNUM"
IS COMING TO TOWN
P. T. Bai*num, self-styled "Prince
of Humbugs," comes back to a
hearty life Sunday afternoon at
the Palace theater, in the person
of Wallace Beery, who plays the
matchless showman in Zanuck's
production of "The Mighty Bar-
num." Besides the Sunday matinee
this feature will be shown Monday
and Tuesday nights.
The story opens with Barnum's
entrance into the sideshow busi-
ness exactly 100 years ago when,
having acquired a few reptile mon-
strosities and an aged negress
named Joice Heth, purported to be
160 years old and erstwhile nurse
of. the. infants George Washington,
he left his failing Bowery grocery,
rented a livery stable and opened
Barnum's American Museum.
The famous midget, Gen. Tom
Thumb, and his bride, Lavinia, the
Cardiff Giant, the Bearded Lady,
the Fiji Mermaid, the Woolly
Horse and all the rest of the "nat-
ural oddities" with which Barnum
staggered New York a century ago
are also seen. His splurge from
the grotesque to the sublime with
the sponsoring "of the American
debut of Jenny Lind, the lovely
Swedish Nightingale, at Castle
Garden, plays a big part in the
picture, with Virginia Bruce
charmingly interpreting the gol-
den-voiced Jenny.
Adolphe Menjou, Rochelle Hud-
son and Janet Beeber are also im-
portantly cast in this Joseph M.
Schenck presentation, which Wal-
ter Lang directed.
Economic Highlights
The Roosevelt administration's
recovery program is based upon
the work -of two major bureaus.
One, the NRiA, was designed to aid
industry and industrial workers.
The other, the AAA, was created
to help solve the farmer problems
and put agriculture on a paying
basis.
Both bureaus adopted plans for
raising and fixing prices. The
NRA did this by means of execu-
tive fiat. The AAA, however,
which was dealing with products
largely dependent on the whims
SEE
Reid Chevrolet Co.
BEFORE BUYING
A USED CAR
Phone 175
of nature, went much farther.
There was more meat being pro-
duced than people could buy—so
it killed off pigs. There was more
cotton than people were , using—
so it placed heavy restrictions on
cotton acreage, and paid bonuses
to farmers for not raising a crop.
It followed a similar procedure
with other basic farm products.
At the beginning, AAA execu-
tives said their purpose was to
bring the farm price index back
to the pre-war level—this, they
held, would enable the farmer to
make a profit, and would not im-
pose an excessive burden on the
buying power of the public. Prices
came back, touched the pre-war
figure—and then continued to
soar. The other day the price
level was 25 per cent over its 1913
equivalent—and AAA found itself
with a first class consumers' war
on its hands. Rumblings of dis-
content are heard from millions
of homes, where incomes have not
risen anywhere near the extent of
the rise in the cost of living.
Terrific rises are taking place
in meat prices. Butter is higher
than it has been for many years.
Even spring vegetables, usually
dirt cheap, will, according to fore-
casts, b« relatively expensive. Of
the major edibles, only fish, which
is not subject to AAA control, is
not advancing materially in cost.
The result of all this is that
AAA is now definitely on the re-
treat. Crop curtailment will prob
ably be dropped, so that produc-
tion mav increase and automati-
cally stop the present price trend.
Protest is coming in against this
change from agricultural centers,
which can see only the boon of
high prices, but the chances are
that consumer pressure will win
out. It is probable that all re-
strictions will be taken off the
farmer until prices return to the
pre-war level, when the AAA may
resume its crop control policy.
Thus, one of the two basic re-
covery bureaus has been forced to
draw in its horns. As for the
other, the NRA, there is plenty of
trouble "in the offing. Even its
sponsor, Mr. Roosevett, is believed
to be cooling off so far as it is
concerned—he wants congress to
continue it, but on a somewhat
different set-up than in the past.
Wage and hour provisions will be
maintained and labor will be
guaranteed the right to bargain
collectively if it chooses — but
many NRA. powers over business
management will be dropped. A
strong drive against NRA price-
fixing is. developing in the senate,
led by that old-time foe of monop-
oly, Senator Borah. It is a safe
prognostication that the NRA will
have little or nothing to say about
prices in the future—and there is
an excellent chance that the anti-
trust laws, which the NRA made
inoperative, will be brought back
into play.
As a result, the administration's
price-fixing program in both the
industrial and agricultural fields,
can fairly be said to 'have .col-
lapsed. Best opinion holds that
the administration is shifting in
its position, that it will give in-
dustry and agriculture more of a
chance to work out their own
problems, will depend less on leg-
islative palliatives. It hasn't, been
heralded in headlines, but a num-
ber of left-wingers—who ; are
strong for collectivism and regi-
mentation— have recently' been
eased out of important positions
in both the AAA and NRA. The
more conservative citizens are
pleased—they see a chance to get
the kind of governmental policy
they asked for and didn't get two
years ago.
ti a eh bb ffl Bffl®,
Among
IE
FARM WOMEN
a a i i
"I :have five flats made of crates
and scrap lumber found about the
place," said Mrs. S. Arnold,
garden demonstrator of the Mod-
erners Club. She referred to the
shallow boxes of convenient size
for lifting when filled with soil,
in which she will plant seed of
vegetables which will later be
transplanted to the garden. Such
flats are used in greenihlouses for
starting seedlings and are much
more convenient than the huge
boxes or old washtubs so often
used until the partially protected
seedlngs freeze.
Mrs. Arnold has carrots, from
last year's garden, of the Long
Orange variety, in an earth-cov-
ered hill. The two presented to the
agent were a foot long and of ex-
cellent qualty and were used raw
as a salad.
The garden plot is 50x50 feet,
located very near the elevated
tank. It has been fertilized with
well-rotted manure collected from
the corrals. This has been plowed
under and the soil thoroughly
soaked by water from the wind-
mill. .
Two perennials, rhubarb and
shallots, have begun to grow.
Pokeberry roots from the river
are to be placed along the draw-
where a dry land garden is located.
Asparagus crowns will be secured
from a neighbor. That will make
four very certain early vegetables
in Mrs. Arnold's garden. Such
perennial plants are not seriously
affected by the sand storms of
spring.
From her 1934 surface irrigated
garden Mrs. Arnold canned and
cured 100 quarts of tomatoes, cu-
cumbers, okra, butter beans, green
snap beans, beets, Swiss chard
and cabbage.
shed type, 12x14 feet in size, and
has a coal-Heated brooder stove
and cellogjass windows. It is well
constructed, leaving no cracks for
drafts, wihich often cause roup to
develop.
The brcoder house and a chick-
en house were bothi made fromi the
lumber in an old barn bought in
Ciuiadirin for $25. It was torn
down and moved. When rebuilt,
the roof and walls were covered
outside with roofing paper, mak-
ing a warm house at little cost.
Last year's record shows that
150 White Leghorn chicks were
bought on April 15, and about 150
more hatched later under hens.
All were grown in two lots in the
brooder house. Those sold and
eaten paid for the baby cihicks,
the eggs set and the feed con-
sumed, even though some were
lost when the brooder stove got
too hot one day. Mrs. Arnold has
for returns on her labor a flock
of 14 Rhode Island Red hens and
63 White Leghorns. These hens
New Consumers'
Guide
"The brooder house was white-
washed yesterday, February 21.
Three hundred fifty White Leg-
horn baby chicks are expected on
March 15," stated Mrs. S. E. Ar-
nold. iAfter such a statement the
home demonstration agent was not
surprised to find only one hen of
a non-producing type when a flock
of 77 was culled. That one had
been crippled for some time.
The brooder house is of the
MM
produce
present. kj
"* P"t in t> |
nht*n
'sr^vsj
°r of a small cl J
lng room. Hi. "ft
side the livit cl°i|
"PPer M
•deal spot 0n whiwl
®ad dough to ^l
A commodious
convenient shelved
Locke before they
canned mds. ||
ClUdes in ^ p?j
"ou h Phalli
floor, quart jar8 !u?|
lowed by pintgiM
shelves w 11
'ocate a1' foc^ gl
1 'ans include an al
c,en for this seascl
"What can bTL|
fhia c*11—* 4
-ins Cciicu { was astol
home demonstrate J
Lone Star Club fiJ
comfortable cellar
home of Mrs. G,
after their last club J
agent had to delibJL
before answering, Itfl
suggestion was thatnf
be provided to jyL
color and flavor fcoia
glass jars. Mrs, $P1"
former pantry demob
vised that the
washed or painted ijj
Good points notedf
all empty container^
and in one place, e&
when wanted; (2) thill
stair risers were th«|
the treads eight inci$i
ing it possible.'for
to carry loads up aM
greater ease; (3) thatl
sorted and labeled oil
to simplify their uiijL
ed; (4) that order alfl
prevailed. '
Mrs. J. F. Oefelert i]
hospital at Clovis, fcl
son, Frederick, is *ffi|
In her new job, chairman of
the Nit A Consumers' Advisory
Board, Mrs. Emily Newell Blair
w|ill keep consumers advised on
fair prices and (jnality of food,
to shield them rrom jtougers
Mrs. Blair succeeds the late
Mrs. Mary Itumsey
Stomacii
One dm o! ASH
0 ly relieves pi Nj
out BOTH mill
bowels, Jllosijm
• sltep good. Quietl
tlon yet pntleaii
Bader's PtanaJ
BUY OTHER NEEDS WITH WHAT YOU SAVE
Those who believe that the prin
cipal menace to the United States'
territorial security lies across the'
Pacific in Japan, find ammunition
to back their theory in the ad-
ministration's 500 million dollar
army development program.
Lost in a welter of items con-
cerning new airplanes, additional
troops, and a build-up of the na-
tional guard, is a requisition that
has been little publicized as yet
but is of tremendous significance.
It provides for a great Hawaiian
air base, to cost 11 million dollars.
Army officers, queried on the
meaning of this, said frankly that
the war department wishes to
move the national frontier 2,000
miles into the 'Pacific.
It is proposed to have a string
of such' bases eventually built
from Alaska to Panama.
RAVENW0QD - NIGGERHEA0
SUNSHINE -MAITIAND
Best Colorado Coals
Sold By Your Co.}I [Jc.n't /
Late statistics indicate that the
general industrial upturn is con-
tinuing, with various industries
coming close to the 1923-25 aver-
age. The improvement in steel has
been due principally to orders
from the automobile industrv
J,'£ * «XPreS8ed in "cy-
cles that the recent rise has been
too rapid—that recession will
set in.
Our New Lower Prices
Are the Talk of the Town1
The cream of the smart models
shown at the recnt style shows
and exhibitions are coming in
daily. Even large sizes up to 52
have the bright, youthful look, and
in big assortments that will please
every fancy.
COATS
SWAGGER SUITS
SHORT COAT SUITS
REDINGOTES
*8.95to *39.75
DRESSES
Including the New Sheer Suits
*3.95 to,l 6.95
Be Sure to See Our Beautiful Styles
-8.95
(You'll Be Surprised)
EYELET DRESSES
'2.95
New Browns; Navys, Greens
cou
t in Hemphl
be resumes
complete shl
ojects last
k of relief
Jilonday, M
"'for teams,
jjorial servic
rding to woi
Austin offi<
[ Adminiatri
teams and r1
jyS will be i
highway
jn, county
I allotment oJ
1 for Marcbfl
j month a sp
fe received fd
%m, the AuJ
| the Hemp)
je. This ia
Ee amount gi
in Februa
L. Helton si
whether tl"
inds is meH
i old and'nf
I relief or
Winning of|
rojects.
ir received
ijtions for n
ins the gas,
jie Hemphill
[will be cut
|s found to
ise.
money
ia'rch, ther^
about 5,000
0 cartons
I and a half
125 pounds|
■Jiy 0 .
|CELEBRA1
AMAR1LLO.I
[the Canadj
Bed the Pan!
iciation anc"
jnarillo Tuq
s. Otto Yoli
tas Jones,
Ibb, Mr. ar
I. E. J. Cuss
I; Miss Sadie
jder, Bud W«
L McQuiddy
Ik Chamber
o—
MS HEAR
I0NDERS
(to Mexico" I
at the mel
|ub Tuesday!
Carl Studei
ch made si
be things wo
hile attendi
[Rotary oo
!ity next Ji
■ Boston, Pa
^fiilo, and
o—
vly Esca
Serious
L
Beautiful
SpringS
Seer
Chiffon*
49c
prx
Hale
All Silk Hal
Veighted q
Pure Dye
Beautiful!
Pure Silk M
Best Grade, f
Sport
Plaids, Stripe*
iVeaevs,
Special, Jl;|
Quadriga
Finest
NewPatt
NEW HATS
NEW SHOES
Large Asson
SOMETHING NEW EVERY DAY
tragedy'
J night when
ple,. driv<
{Canadian,
ath when
lat was out,
■The place
Tchool house
I no warning
flayed at
|e bridge
Jfhe bridge
led across t
J feet from
Is about ten
It wide.
steep hill
■the car 1
F did /not
iHairell
P1® timbers,
Pwn across
P'id across
|Ped with tt
[ ?Pen spic
Tajied with
«d considt
| have escap
|Nly dami
Plnj
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Noble, Joseph M. The Canadian Record (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 28, 1935, newspaper, February 28, 1935; Canadian, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth125899/m1/6/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hemphill County Library.