Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 230, Ed. 1 Friday, May 8, 1936 Page: 10 of 10
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I
PAGE TEN
ENJOYMENT OF LIFE
Rotary
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7
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GlOlb
PEG.©,
Everything in fresh vegetables.
V
Mother’s Day
i
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a
DRESSES
J: '
4
or
SALMON'
3
SLIPS
LADIES’ SHOES
$1.98 to $3.95
98c
HOSE
“j
223 WEST OAK
10c
49c
CHILDREN’S DRESSES
KHAKI PANTS
59c
FRESH DAILY, quart
10c
Values to $8.50 Now
5.95
PRINTED BATISTE
COVERTPANTS
'll.
88c
/ft
BOY’S OVERALLS
MUSLIN
Values to $22.50 Now
14.75
I
I
A
t
free delivery
Phones 89 or 1134
WKS
Long Neglected, It May Even
Develop Serious
Consequences
Well made and perfect fitting. Made
of good quality taffeta, with guaran-
teed seams and shadowproof.
in stripes and solid grey, full cut and
ready to give you lots of good sturdy
service.
Three Killed in
Plane Collision
SPECIALLY PRICED
200 NEW
Graduation Dresses
The production of machinery in
Germany jumped 210 per cent be-
tween January, 1933, and January,
■1936.
■
--------------------------t—
Big, Red, Juicy 3 Pint Boxes
STRAWBERRIES 25*5
15 years in Denton with
Southwestern Life Insurance Company
Consult me about your insurance problems
ELI P. COX
A policy for every need. Phone 430-J.
There is good service in these overalls.
Solid blue or stripe. Sizes 4 to 16. They
will sell in a hurry at this price.
49c
14 Oz. Bottle
10c
Fresh, English, Home Grown
PEAS
Grand Leader Company
North Side Square
2 Lbs.
15c
Pound
18c
3 For
25c
Pound
10c
Pound
2c
Pound
20c
Pound
5c
3 Bunches
10c
Pound
29c
Pound
5c
Values to $12.50 Now
7.90
Golden Yellow
BANANAS
A Good One! Pounif
BULK SPAGHETTI 10c
Pound
BULK MACARONI 10c
Nice and Fresh Shelled
PECANS
New Crop Shelled
PEANUTS
Nice Green Heads of
CABBAGE
If groceries or fresh meats, see M System, the store of friendly service. The store
with a price.
iTj
A Good One- Best Maid Quart
SALAD DRESSING 25c
A Good One!
CATSUP
Skinner’s
RAISIN BRAN
Box
10c
2 For
15c
Unbleached muslin, soft finish and 39
inches wide. Lay in a good supply of
them as you are getting a super value.
5c
Green, (Large tender leaves)
SPINACH
Pound
5c
Lb.
5 c
Fresh Shipment of
BELL PEPPERS
Van Camp’s Big Boy 6 Bars
LAUNDRY SOAP 25c
Quart Jar of MUSTARD
DRESSING
Regular 10c Seller Campbell’s
TOMATO JUICE
Varied Program
for Rotary Club
Fresh Pound
COUNTRY BUTTER 25c
Good COOKING
BUTTER
Round and Tender
GREEN BEANS
All Leading Brands
SHORTENING
7T---
Have Your Car Equipped With
JUMBO SEAT COVERS
CALVERT BROS. SERVICE
115 South Locust St. Telephone No. 356 |
.....urn mm ................... ...........rtea
arm Meetings
End, Totalling
Sign-up Papers
211
■lij
MM
TELEPHONE G69
------“
WARSAW, Poland, May 8—(/Pt-
Three men were killed and one
injured seriously today in a col-
ision of three Polish military planes
during maneuvers near Poznea.
CONSTIPATION* MAY F;
COT DOWN YOUR
4-H Club Women of
Lloyd Hold Session
DENTON, TEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1936
8 Lb. Carton
Mcl
Campbell’s 3 For
TOMATOSOUP 25t
Good for Coqking! .>• Largekt^i
_ 2 18c
FRESH SWEET MILK
From John Underwood’s Dairy
(Note the Cream in Each Quart)
In Good Condition 10 Lbs.
OLD POTATOES 25c
•M- SYSTEM GROCERY
WHAT COURTESY AND
SERVICE/AND THEY CARR^
LEVERYTHING/Si^ll
TWO
Dainty prints in batiste and organdy,
also solid color organdies. Trimmed
nicely with the “Little Girl” details.
Size 3 to 14.
A grand, variety of light and dark col-
ors and as, amazing assortment of
clever new patterns. We expect scores
of women will want them. Be here
early for good selection.
14c
WE’RE PROUD OF THE RECORD
To have remained in business for 16 years, weathering the eco-
nomic storms of the last half-decade, is a source of pride to any
firm. We are proud of our record.
We are trying to sell something besides Printing, however: cour-
tesy, fair-dealing, sense of civic responsibility, and an active in-
terest in furthering every good, thing for Denton.
Let’s support ALL our legitimate concerns.
LUSK PRINTING COMPANY
Mr. and Mrs. Ward Lusk
Merchant’s (A Good One) 2 Lb. Box
SODACRACKERS 17c
f.
<■
■’1'
1
First quality all silk chiffon or service .weight, full
fashion, narrow heels, reinforced plaited sole and in
all the fashionable spring shades. They are really a
sensation at
'/■
^^0
Sirs
<-• <| If
We quote just a few of the many specials M Store will have for you Saturday. Se
West Hickory
NEW WHITE PASTEL HATS
Crepes, Straws, Turbans, Large Q£
Shapes, Combinations, Cartwheels.... $ 19 I eV w
The Boston Store
] “YOUR STORE”
They call the Nazis’ head press
agent, Dr. Paul Goebbels, “Mahatma
Propaganda”
of Hope’s room.
(Copyright, 1935,
Margaret Bell Houston)
Dirk has a difficult moment, to-
morrow, at the theater.
The* Lloyd Women’s 4-H Club
met at the home of Mrs. Easther
McMahan Wednesday afternoon
with 17 members, one visitor and
Mrs. Edna Trigg, home agent, pres-
ent. The club voted to contribute
to the fund to send Mrs. Trigg to
a conference at Washington, D. C.
Plans are under way for securing
the funds. A “mothers’ day” shower
was given Mrs. D. W. Tipps for be-
i ing the oldest club mother. She re-
I ceived many useful gifts. Several
I from this club plan to attend the
j short course at S. C. W. May 15.
The club meets at the home of Mrs.
I Jim McMahan May 20.
Try Them! (3 Gallon $1) Gallon
CANNED PRUNES 35c
FROM SOUTH TEXAS
NEW CROP HONEY
10 lb. pail extracted ........................98c
10 lb. pail comb ........................ $1.05
A variety of fabrics, styles and colors to choose from. Fine
cotton fabrics as well as nice silk materials in plain
printed colors. Sizes 14 to 52.
98c to $1.75
7
Straps, ties, oxfords and pumps; me-
dium and low heels.
I Spring Economy Festival
IS JUST IN TIME FOR PURCHASING A GIFT FOR
Community committeemen in the
eight Denton County blocks end-
ed their job of taking applications
under the new Federal farm pro-
gram Thursday night, and Friday
officials at County Agent G. R.
Warren’s office began the lengthy
procedure of checking the papers
and running totals.
An approximate total of the num-
ber of applications under the new
program is not expected to be avail-
able before Monday morning. Fri-
day, a number of community com-
mitteemen were still to report, and
some of the reports are not antici-
pated before Saturday.
No round-up meeting to take ap-
plications is scheduled, since the
funds allotted this county for sign-
up meets did not permit employing
workers after Thursday. The coun-
ty agent, however, has announced
that farmers who because of illness
or being out of the county, or for
some other valid acceptable reason,
did not have opportunity to’ sign at
their community meeting, may
come to Warren’s office and his ap-
plication will be considered there,
until May 15. After May 15, the
state board will take no Texas ap-
plications.
Regular 10c Jeller Beechnut
SPAGHETTI___
A Good One! 2 No. 2 Cans
CANNED CORN 15c
Chiffons, Printed Chiffons,
Mouselline De Soie, Organ-
dy, Nets, Printed Nets, Pink,
Peach, White, Bluebonnet
Blue, Orchid.
MAY HILL
MAY HILL, May 7.—Mr. and
Mrs. K. C. Price and Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Ruddell of Fort Worth
visited Mr, and Mrs. John Price.
Mr. and Mrs B. L. Lowry of
Dallas visited Mr. and Mrs. W. W.
Lowry.
Mr. and Mr. and G. C. Haggard
and son, Mrs. O. L. Ashlock and
Miss Ruth Haggard attended dec-
oration at Little Elm Sunday.
Mr. and. Mrs. B. L. Lowry and
children and Mr, and Mrs. W. W.
Lowry and son were in Jacksboro.
FRESH PORK LIVER, pound_____________________________________________ 12|c
FRESH LAKE DALLAS FISH, pound ................. 10c
SLICED BREAKFAST BACON, Rath’s, pound................25c
TENDER VEAL STEAK, pound ..................................... 15c
STANDING RIB ROAST, branded beef, pound..................17c
DECKER’S IOWANA HAMS, half or whole, 12- to 14-pound
average, pound ............ 25c
Large, Fancy
CARROTS
Yellow or White
SQUASH
2 Lb. Box of
MOTHER’S COCOA 15c
vy u qiiuLt: jLibi ti itw oi cue many bpeciais m oiuie. win nave lor you Saturday. See
M System for your green beans, strawberries, cauliflower, rhubarb, English peas.
Common constipation* keeps you
from being at your best. It causes
discomfort, and may lead to head-
aches and loss of appetite. You feel
below par, lack your usual vigor.
So many people treat this con-
dition as a slight matter. But it
can be the starting point of serious
trouble. It contributes to a general
run-down condition. With lowered
bodily resistance, you are more
likely to pick up the first chance
infection you meet in your every-
day routine.
Common constipation is due usu-
ally to insufficient “bulk” in meals.
Fortunately, a delicious cereal sup-
plies gentle “bulk.” Within the
body,, the “bulk” in Kellogg’s All-
Bran absorbs moisture, forms a
soft Inass, and cleanses the system.
Serve All-Bran as a cereal, with
milk or cream, or cook into muffins,
breads, etc. Two tablespoonfuls
daily are usually sufficient. Stub-
born cases may require All-Bran
oftener. If not relieved this way,
consult your doctor.
All-Bran is guaranteed by the
Kellogg Company as an effective
laxative food for constipation.*
Sold by all grocers. Made by Kel-
logg in Battle Creek.
^Constipation due to insufficient “bulk"
and shirts to match, good material for
service, cut on a pattern that fits per-
fectly and reinforced on points of
strain. Per garment
98c
He opened it, looking ,at the strand
of pearls that had been his mother’s,
the twin bracelets he had bought at
Cartier’s, the brooch, the ring, the
necklace. . . .
Their very touch, he had thought,
would be like touching the flesh of
Elinor. He would have thought, too,
that, receiving this box from her. he
would have sat down to an evening’s
steady drinking.
He looked at his watch. Hope would
be in her room, he reflected. He had
telephoned her two hours before
that he would not be home before
eight, that she was to have dinner
without him, and be dressed for
their evening together. She was
dressing now, Nora assisting her. He
had met Nora going to her room on
his arrival.
Rupert lifted out the strand of his
mother’s pearls, and, opening a small,
inner drawer of his desk, dropped
them within. Then, the box of jewels
in his hand, he knocked on the door
SYNOPSIS: Rupert Joris was ;
drunk when he married Hope—
and he only (lid it because Elinor
Fleming jilted him on account of
his drinking. But when Rupert
finds that, his friends insist the
marriage will not last, he grows
stubborn, gives Hope a $5,000
check, asks her to overlook the
fact that he had suggested an
annulment, and tells her to go
to New York In the morning to
buy herself the clothes she
neids. Dirk, Rupert’s younger
brother, has me,t Hope under pe-
culiar circumstances before the
marriage; he does not know
whether to be glad or sorry of
Rupert’s decision. He is talking
with her about the old and
prominent Joris family.
Chapter 15
JEWELS—RETURNED
Hope spelled out the motto.
“Hilariter. ‘Merrily.’ I like' that,
too. ... Is that this house?”
“As it used to be.” said Dirk. “You
see Hans Joris wanted to do some-
thing big, so he copied the town-
hall back home, and called the place
‘Schlecterhorstveldt’.”
“Big enough!” she smiled.
“Too big for English Admiral Low-
rie, when he married a Joris and
became head of the family. He didn’t
like Dutch things anyhow, so when
a Are destroyed part of the castle he
rebuilt it . . . in good colonial fash-
ion. Gothic towers and a colonial
wing. We’re an awful hodgepodge, in-
side and out. Your room now . . .
it has all the Dutch furniture that’s
left in the house. The old kas . .
t “The kas?”
‘.‘That old painted wardrobe is a
kas. There were kasten i
■ bedrooms. Almost everything was
Dutch to start with. But the genera-
tions came and went, throwing out,
, bringing in. That mantel there, for
instance, is Italian. And the tapes-
’ tries in the hall are French. And the
. drawing-room, you may have noticed,
; is all Chinese Chippendale.
“The only generation that hasn’t
changed something is mine and Ru-
pert’s. All we’ve done is shut up most
of the rooms. It took a platoon of
. servants to run the place. Somewhere
! around here,” pointing to the colon-
ial wing, “there used to be a secret
stair.”
“A secret stair?”
Dirk nodded. “Some canny old
Joris built it, either to escape from
his intimates, or to let them in. It
wasn’t discovered by his descendants
until the fire, and then Admiral
Lowrie tore it out in shocked sur-
prise. But he did something much
worse when he built the wing.”
“It’s all beautiful,” said Hope. “It
looks as if there might have been a
moat and a draw-bridge once, and a
dungeon and a keep.”
“A dungeon, at any rate,” Dirk an-
swered. “We call it a basement. I’ll
show it all to you some day, the old
ballroom, and the Dutch chapel . . .
and the very top of the tower where
they used to watch for the boats. It
will take some climbing.”
She was looking at another crest,
a shield, a hand that held a broken
sword. She read the Latin words’
“My shield is scarred.”
She closed the book. Presently she
said, • . J ■■ 1
“That’s the motto I choose.”
Dirk said, “Can’t I sell you Mer- x
roy? b°tte?”°rat>1€ Winds? TheX suit Black-Draught as soon
“No, they suit you. My shield is conclition you are
; sca’rred.”
She rose, the book in her arrps.
“I’m taking it upstairs. May I?”
“Of course. Aren’t you . . . aren’t
you a Joris, too?”
; “Perhaps. That’s why I want to
read it. It’s . . . something to live . up
H| Dirk went upstairs with her, car-
rying the book. He was disappointed.
He had thought they would have the
evening together. At her door he said,
i “Don’t forget lunch. The Lawyers’
Club.”
He gave her the address. She woiild
remember, she told him, and they
said good night.
When the door was closed she laid
the book on the table beside the bed.
j The bed had been turned down, and
one of her own nightgowns folded
on the pillow. After a moment she
moved noiselessly to the door be-
tween the two rooms, and pressing 1
her cheek against it, listened.
There was a sound now and then
of papers stirring, and once a sharp
noise as if Rupert were knocking out
his pipe.
She stole back, and moving the
lamp, settled herself in the big gild-
ed chair, the “History of the Joris
Family” propped against the table.
She began to read the fine, uneven
print.
Reading, she fell asleep, and woke
when the, great clock in the hall was
striking midnight. She rose then, and
creeping to the door, listened again.
Still the soft rustling of paper. . . .
She undressed and crept into bed.
* *
Dirk met Hope at one o’clock at
the Lawyers’ Club. She had attend-
ed to her deposit at the bank and
had. already done a bit of shopping.
Dirk was conscious that the black
dress looked somehow different, less
demure—;saw that the change in it
was due to the hat, a rakish scrap
with a curling feather.
“Stunning,” he said.
She sparkled. “Look under the ta-
ble.”
He looked, and as he did not come
up at once,
“My shoes!” she explained.
“Oh, your shoes! I should say.”
He came up then to find the waiter
at grave attention.
After lunch he took Hope to the
Joris offices a few doors away. Grave
and dignified quarters that had once
commanded a view of lower Manhat-
tan and the Battery, but that now
__ _ .. were hemmed in by new growths of
in all the , steel and stone.
■ Amid the encircling monoliths
, there seemed something stable in btie
dingy comfort of the Joris offices,
something rooted and secure. The
presence of Judge Blaise Joris, Dirk’s
and Rupert’s father, seemed still to
pervade the place, as the light of a
master star- continues to fall on the
earth long after- the star has passed.
Hope met Sanford Joris, ancL the
members of the Joris staff, lingered
in Rupert’s private sanctum. She was
interested in his secretary—efficient,
thirty-odd—-in the books on his
glessed-in shelves, in the street be-
low his window.
Dirk finally enticed her forth to
look at his own office, and the morn-
ing paper which lay on his desk.
He had folded the paper at the ac-
count of the wedding. It was short, a
mere announcement, and she read
it quickly.
Dirk explained that Connolly had
mislaid some of the data.
“Your father’s name, for one thing,
and the city you hail from. Or it may
be Connolly doesn’t know the items
that belong in the society columns.
At any rate, I have them, and to-
morrow’s issue . . .”
She turned to him, a little pale.
“Please don’t. One account is
enough.”
“I think so, too,” Dirk answered.
BLACK-DRAUGHT
Next Time You
Need a Laxative
For constipation, take a dose of ’
i as you realize
le condition yob. are in. )
“If I am bilidus, have headache or
a cold; I take a dbse of Black-Draught !
at night,” writes Mrs. R. D. Thaxton,
of Lexington, Ga. ‘‘if I have a bad
feeling after; meals, I take just a
pinch of Black-Draught. It relieves
me. I recommend it very highly—a .
.good family medicine. ’-I give my 1
childreht Syrup of Black-Draught. I
find both gopd.” ,
Black^Drafight 1 paves the way for
the relief of many such symptoms as
those mentioned above, when con- |
stipation is at the bottom of the
trouble.
Just try it! Follow the directions
carefully and you’ll probably learn
why Black-Draught is so popular.
A varied program was given at
the Rotary luncheon Thursday. A
quartet composed of Frank Baker,
Dudley King, Wm. McKenzie and
Eddie Miler sang two .numbers,
and Miss Gwendolyn Woodford
gave a Spanish dance. Mrs. M. L.
Hutcheson introduced those on the
program and also sang two solos.
Mary Anna Mary Beil] played a pi-
ano accompaniments for all the
numbers.
Dr. B. B. Harris gave a Rotary
lecture and presented a
pins to Rev. R. R. Yelderman,
who came into the club a few
months ago, and Dr. J. F. Weibib,
who joined the club recently.
Claude Castleberry was program
chairman.
M SYSTEM GROCERY AND MARKET
'NO MORE RUNNING \
AROUND TO A DOZEN I
STORES TRYING TO/
FIND BARGAINS. I S
.TOOK MARY'S ADVICE-1
H MARdARET BELL HOUSTON
She had seemed slightly relieved on
reading the notice, grateful appar-
ently for its brevity. There would be
jao second account if she did not wish
it. He went with her to the elevator.
“So you’re going shopping?”
She answered thoughtfully,
“What color does he like—for eve-
ning, I mean?”
Dirk hardly knew Rupertte prefer-
ence in colors, and mentioned his
own.
“Whits,” he said.
It might be Rupert’s color, at that,
since Elinor so often wore it. He re-
flected that a box had come for Ru-
pert that morning, a small, precious-
looking box. He himself had signed
for it, and carried it up to Rupert’s
room, Rupert having already left for
Whits Plains.
He dreaded the moment when Ru-
pert should find the box, .dreaded it
for Hope. She with her anxiety.as to
Rupert’s choice in colors!
“White,” he said again, for after
all it mattered greatly to himself
what she should wear. ‘‘White, and
for daytime, brown—that sort of rus-
ty brown.”
She thanked, him gravely, stepped
into the elevator, and smiling a good-
by, disappeared.
* * *
Rupert found the box on his ar-
rival home. It contained the jewels
he had. given Elinor during the six
years of their engagement.
I “YOUR NEIGHBOR SAYS”
nHOW is itWtm go-
I YOU'RE HOME] ING TO
SO EARLY Abe from
a JEAN? /(NOW on!
Ku
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 230, Ed. 1 Friday, May 8, 1936, newspaper, May 8, 1936; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1304376/m1/10/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.