Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 260, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 14, 1927 Page: 2 of 10
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SISK?, ’" ■>
I®!->*<
informa-
u
of Para-
TO THE
following
'€
4
■X
LOTS
the
Ueta6“?
Auc-
•q
FJ
S3
27-inch Gingham
not a roaring
10 Yards, 88c
be
40-inch Voile
All pastel shade
6 Yards, 88c
Dress Rayons
36-inch wide—
4 Yards, 88c
Rayon Alpaca
ns
All colors; 36-inch—
2 2 Yards, 88c
that
5,000 Fin
I
t^uainw/ima^
W » Question „f pO||rvt fi.
Threatens
T
_3
tc
EXTRA SPECIAL
INSWIGK CONSOLE
TIRE
FEEDS! FEEDS!
l.-
Ht a bargain.
$2.50
Phone
.!
Good)
Ortd
lame Sto
l>
Bert
ft
^^fMWMRRWl
t L'Jt'L * * i
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Y ■ ...jS
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I
<•
III
, - ■
uly
•4L-M-
TftS-rfc'A. 4l»-_
Thread
37 spools, 88c
WE FILL THE MOST PRESCRIPTIONS EVE-
RY DAY.
Clifford Stroud
Fhotae tli.
The Chance in Methods
The city merchants were first to
see the handwriting on the wall and
f
4
II
t hank^
used ”
uril be made el
Wells, Tex., and
25 Linen Dresses, the $6.50 values; special purchase
price—
Overalls
Good blue denim; all
sizes—
Pair, 88c
Kitchen Towels
Good size; heavy—
11 for 88c
Bath Towels
18x36; colored border,
6 for 88c
Talcum
25c cans—
6 for 88c
Feather Tick
Amoskeag, 8-oz.—
3 Yards, 88c
English Prints
Beautiful patterns—
4 Yards, 88c
Fast colon, solids and
fancies—
Straw Hats
Men’s Sailors—
Each, 88c
PersonaJity 1
>wn collection
in
13
One of the stranbsM'cAi'goes tliat
rvn left the port of Portland. Me.
was that carried by the steamship
C A Snyder, which sailed the other
day with a cargo of salt water for
the fish in the New York acquar-
inin.
Leave a note of
WilderyehA shelter
Coveralls
Hickory stripe; 4 to 8—
Pair, 88c
Khaki Pants
Brown twill—
Pair, 88c
Baseball Bats
Hickory, 75c values—
2 for 88c
Silk Hose
Silk to top; all colors—
Pair, 88c
Flaxons
Lovely cloths--
3 Yards, 88c
Slippers
Children’s odds—
Pair, 88c
.lay
inly
>ct
Work Shirts
All sizes; blue—
2 for 88c
Bpote quiet.
NEW OKI
NEW OHI.KAI
loaed very *lei
an
4ar
July
Spots quiet;
I.IVEHP
LIVERPOOL,
ted *teady 10
bfd quiet. a
k
Moving? Call 45 Woodrum Truck
Lilies. 284
INSURANCE
We represent some of the
oldest, largest and most re-
liable stock companies doing
business in the world.
W’hy not entrust us with
your business?
Phone 76.
W T. BAILEY A CO.
Printed Rayon Frocks; special purchase price—
$3.95
100 smart new felts and flop hats; special purchase
price—
Silk Undies
All kinds, all colors—
88c
Mr.O
' _______
BROOKS DRUG STORE
We fill the most prescriptions every day.
Photic 29-39 We Deliver Postal Substation
WE HAVE IT
BALL BROS.
Market, Grocery,
Delicatessen
RIG DRESS EVENT
•4- - •
r
i
■J'?- *
$9.85
> a a .*
r'^8
j*
T—
and Dyeing.
BBr
Wide Sheeting
10-4 Unbleached—
3 Yards, 88c
Fast Color Prints
36-inch soft finish—
5 Yards, 88c
Men’s Socks
Black, gray, brown—
9 Pairs, 88c
Boy’s Unions
Nainsook; all sizes—
3 for 88c
T«r*--
If NEXT ONE
Sri!!! • i:
I TEXARKAN
[Hie lives of s
she Michael M
Endangered thi
adjacent build
nine filling stat
plre The estim
| Firemen plai
on the hcsplta
ko bring the fl
kier control. H
kled all patient
The cause of
mined.
tir
I
V 1
S'
L 4 “I
i. 1
<
•rr-'*»- -... ,/J wiki
I
■../-Mil
i
a
J
pendence to a world power compris-
ing 48 closely knit states.
Give us a trial order
today.
Pin Check Pants
All sizes; good quality
Pair, 88c
ANSWERS
. Crlbbagc.
®' *
4-
*
»- *
Hand Bags
50 new ones; values to
- $2.00—
Only 88c
u. u
I DITORS LEAVE F'OIi EL PASO
(ON VENTION
FORT WORTH. Juns M— A spec-
ial train nearing XMJ Texas editors
and their wives teft here this morn-
ing for E! Paso to attend the an- ,
nual convention of the Texas Pres.. I
Association The train will reach
El Paso Thursdaj- for the ojienlng
sesf ion <rf the convention. Bide trip;
:orpu|ej^t .Mineral
Maflefa Springs.
■Kgr B .L*
■
‘j„T.
Kitchen Scales
24-Tb. True—
Each 88c
We will show you the difference between
newspaper bargain’ and real, genuine
value giving in the store. The least relia-
ble merchant can make the largest claims
in the papers, but it takes large purchasing!
power and some capital to give the great’
values offered this week in our basement.
go after business in a new way. Ad-
icrtlsing Is now studied as closely
as any other phase of salesmanship.
Morchants no longer open their
stores and wait for trade to walk
in They start afresh every day. in
evtry reasonable way, to show trade
that it is to its interest to find its
way tp their stores. They get then,
there through advertising ajid hold
them through good merchandising
l-oth of which are essential in sales-
manship. It is easy to find In any
town examples of business concerns
that were once prosperous under
the old ways of doing business that
are now fast headed toward bank-
ruptcy. simply because they have
nqt adjusted their business to new
conditions.
I
bL
//(
GRAND LEADER CO.
yT./2?"
•'.L,
HI ■
r a
mj
me
k 1
a
10:30 A
NEW YORK,
loan* at thia
Lotaled 03.118.4
•S8.638.OOO ovei
tornparrtl with
126.000 on Jan
lop of last w«l
llcally 8100 000
brokerage born
bf no email cc
phen it return!
protracted by
bration
One element
kty ao far ae 1
Concerned. how
kxlK<- that a gi
Increase had lx
lion* of bond
boen secret i
have not been
unde tied up 1
Ldded to the
borrowings
This factor i
bearish influent
In stock prices
If stocks held
klllng In early
NEW VI
NKW YORK
[tied steady
Ian
•’ - *
c**' A .
■'L‘
k
Drew Shirts
Men’s; with or without
collars; all sizes--
88c
v I
l n
1 Good Second-Hand
|1 T”
f pT.
r '•
D-;
to
B
Pi i
iS
it
1
■&.
F'"1 ’ w'L
K V.
>, TUTHDAY.
SURE
We Hurry
Dependable P}&mj)ing.
VAUGHN
Plumbing Co.
Phone 178
20 1 East McKinney St.
Onions 6c u
:uce 16 cants
i6c par !b.;
xiniatoea 10c t
aan 30c per 1
much; eouash
aw bunch, cm
aunch. turn
ranch; turnips
aloes 5c per I
aunch; cucumt
ngears 2>4ctc
t>.; black eyed
ilant 25c per
■ch; cantalou
full 5c to 10t
Oc per doe.; o
ioa.; lemons
alackberries 3
alums 82 pet b
WHAT8 THE AN8EWR 14 Hd-rUsr
1. What is Woodcraft?
i. How would you make
fire without matches?
3. What is a- thunderbird?
4. Wliat is the ImsL Under for
use in kindling a fire by fric-
tion?
5. What is the fire by fric-
tion record, and wfao holds it?
ANBWEB0 .
1. A knowledge of the forests.
annuals, birds, stars, weather,
plants, etc., which can be used
in cartn? for emci» seif while
separated from the ordinary
3. Hither by rubbing two
sticks together until an ember
was ignited which could be
fanned into flame, or by strik-
ing a spark from fHnt rock with
a piece of metal;
3. The object in which
upper end of the spindle of a
fire by friction aet revolves So
called by the Indiana because It
"hovers above the fire as does
the rain crowd aboW the earth
during thunder storms
4. Rhredded red cedar bark
5. Hix and two-fifths seconds
Dudley W. Smith.
ure slow business men there is e •
slowly dying town; where busines-
is bone after witii courage and di
termination there is growth and
progress.
; the embers
I "Be courteous
in any
in KECtHMCRBON
traded with the man they liked and
who had the goods to sell at the
right prices. Tltey could soon learn
where to buy by looking about town
a hit. City papers with their allur-
ing advertisements were not largely
read, and those merchants who
went to the cities annually or semi-
annually tp buy their own stocks
were about the only people who
ever supplied their personal wants
from the city stores, it is easier
now for zny buyer, from day labor-
er to banker, to get m his car and
readh a city store than it used to
be for the merchant to go to the
city to buy his stock
We handle all kinds
of feeds such as corn.
Maize, chops, mixed
feed, bran, Cow Joy,
. cotton seed meal, hulls,
hay and a complete line
of Pl RINA poultry and
dairy feeds.
established, howcv- 1 na(? flying from the ramparts of
created tc t.’.e j E()rt McHenry during the British
need of the struggling republics | attack on Baltimore, inspired Fran-
..... ~ (es Scott Key t0 wrpP "The Star J
Spangled Banner." Not until 1818 i
uas the act passed restoring the
original number of .stripes, detci-
minning that they should be hori-
zontal and making provision tor
thi addition of a star in tt>e blue
inton to represent each state as
it was admitted to the Union.
Goods Co.
jrwr .—'i 1
Hats
200 Ladies’ Hats; val-
ues to $3.00—
Only 88c
■ | ||||| | , ! HWp..r—N ------
In two years time this department of our busi-
ness has grown from the smallest to the large«t and
is still growing. Bring your next prescription to us.
DICt CRfDDLE, Jr
Representing
lbs latcreeU of Yoar Family
A
$3.95
Twenty new styles in fine Slippers, beautiful num-
r fieri; special purchase price—
$3.95, $4.95
FORT WO!
FORT WORT
neeptlon of a
nog price* tl
market present
[hanged appeal
moderately actl
I Cattle beevei
I to 7 25 calves
er-i 5 .50 to 7 50,
pearling). 5 50 t
[ Hog* medlm
a 75 to 9 pacl
hnlied 8 25 to
1.75. piga 8 to
[ Sheep lamb*
1 atorker* 5 to
b; wether* 7 50
CHIC;
CHICAGO
brheat »'** qul<
[rade today ’
kround steady 1
Letday a cloning
Id ic lower
[ Corn wa* hlgl
then moved up
keconcarv wave
A-Bc higher
I Oata were at
triade fair adva
Provl*lon* clc
r-lralnv nricet
Wh-,at- July
Corn July 97
OaU July 47
[ Spot* ~aaler.
air. receipt* 20
ale* 8000 Ami
105d
a whole. Agriculture,
the Industries are all p _____
Where there is not a fair rUg-rce
cf prosperity, except in the few lo-
calities where some public calam-
ity has brought distress, the fault
is not with conditions, for they are
gcxKl. This is true front Texarkana
to El Paso and from Texline to
Brownsville. Some places, some
communities, are asleep and not
alive to their opportunities, and na-
ture can net do everything for
these, without assistance, but where
there is the will to do there is little
complaint.
Too (treat Abundance
A country banker not long ago
raid to be that he 'nobed c-otton
would not reach 30 cents, for such
Tl
&
ll—**
wwy 1 ui: JI
Weld
:i price would bring such great pros-
r• -ity that farmers either would
1 ' work enough another year or
! . would overnlani their lands to
I u.tton and would not grow enough
I feedstuffs on their farms; that too
Texas Prosperity i much prosperity one year often
The year is going well for Texas makes for too little another year,
i a whole Agriculture, buatpess I wondered if that does not apply
to, business .about as, well as to
farming.' When we are fairly pros-
pc roti, there i.s likely to be a harm-
ful t< i.dency to slacken our efforts
Who designed and made the first before Congress moved to make the
United States Hag under the reso-
lution ol the Continental Congress
and what became of it, remains a
disputed question among historians
It seems to be <
er, that it was created to meet the
Phone No. 9.
Northwest Corner Square.
act more specific and to allow for
i i< presentation in the flag's design
of new states, declaring that after
May 1, 1795. the emblem should
have 15 stars and 15 stripes. Such a
first
city !
I the ,
F
Hana 13c to
O 38c p«r lb.;
w pound; ti
luck* 10c per 1
•r doz ; tablt
■eking stock
★
X! *
*
'Hi
I
i—rt----■—rrn .
|y i . ir
--
■
Hi
' T ■ U
wherever the flag is reverenced, the
sesqulcentennlaj of that act ig
being celebrated by officials, patri-
otic societies and individuals, un-
der the guidance of the United
States Flag Association, of which
Col. James A. Moss, retired. Is the
founder and director general.
'Hie flag to which homage is be-
ing paid today, with its 48 stars
and 13 stripes, not only represents
the ideals on which Ute nation is
based but pictures its growth
150 yearss from a group of
British colonies fighting for inde-
I--------------------------------
Hus it Ever
occurred to YOU that the time to
buy In*ur*nc« 1* NOW?
Today you may be able to stand an
examination. Tomormw you may not.
Wo buy Fire Insurant* to protect
OUIWIYM
W* buy L1FK Insurance to protect
oUwra? Yea, that I* what mint hoo-
pla a»y. but m-u LIFK lusuranqe
that proteeu yob in old age See foe
about otir INCOME Policy. Also Mk
about dur Children * 20 year pav.
Ypu capnut afford not u» buv one
I for each cklld t>> not d.-lav Bee frtr
Life 4*ur:iu<c Ljo. ‘
| B. fr. Jarrell ■ j
_ J1 f.
■La
■ - r-----
Pride and the Pocketbook
It Is no longer easy to hold trade
to a place through appeal to local
pride. The ease with which every
one who has a car can get to a
neighboring place has created a
neighborly feeling with all the sur-
rounding communities and cities
The average wage earner has about
as much pride in a place he can
and does visit frequently as he has
In his home town or In the next
block, and at heart the business
man often feels the same way tho
he may be more hesitant to sav so.
It is a bit unreasonable to expect
anyone to do his buying in his
home town or at your store unless
he finds that he can do so without
detriment to his own purse. The
business that expects loyalty to
itself must be able and willing to
shew loyalty to the pocketbooks ol
its customers Local pride is now
in almost exact proportic*i to the
interest thnt a business shows In
building itself- up thru progressive
merchandising
HI
WASHINGTON, June 14,-The
Stars an<| Stripes, that stirring em-
blesp symbolising all ot the idials
which have fostered the United
States and mode 11 great as a na-
tion, is 160 yearn old today.
The rough Journal of the Second
Continental Congress dlsclor*s this
entry among a series of Marine
Committee resolutions adopted on
June 14, 1777:
“Resolved, That the flag of the
United States be 13 stripes alter-
nate red and white, that the Union
be 13 stars while in a blue field
representing a new constellation "
Today, throughout the nation.
LOO
Tuaaday * qu
a 81 35. baal* 1
X)rn 80c ear. t>
FOKKKi
NEW YORK
thange open*
iterllng 84 85 t.
0552. Belg
ir
i nn
,1. Billiards
U------- tjon bridge.
-2. Ym
■3. British professional golf-
■er», members of the Ryder Cup
; team which recently lost to
Americans at Worchester, Mass
; Wiita Oather. Nebraska
6. House-fly tsetsefly, gad-
, fly, mosquito, gnat
A Cunard
\ 7,. Th* year by or lor which
‘-accounts are reckoned.
, IB Adulation means excessive
praise, and undulation a wav-
. ins motion.
‘ Chicago
TO. William
f ■»- J - J. -
' r-----------------------
The Passing Day
i By Will H Mkyea
I, or Austin, Texas.
worth The
revolutionary navy and that John
Paul Jones, who was given com-
mand of the Ranger in the same
scries of resolutions which includ-
ed the first Hag act. was the first
to raise it alolt with his own
hands on his new ship.
Eighteen vears passed after the
adoption of the first flag resolution
MOTHERS NEED HELP
AFTER STORK'S VISIT
Women
are often
robbed of thj
the happiness
motherho o d
should bring,
because of a
K weak e n e d
and run-down condition
which often follows this won-
derful eVent of ' bringing a
new life into the world.
Nature foreseeing this,
provided certain roots and
herbs of peculiar strength-
ening properties such as
Blessed Thistle, Blue Cohosh
Root, Squaw Vine, Life Root
Plant, Helonias Root, Star
Grass, Cramp Bark, etc.,
which the makers of St. Jos-
eph's G. F. P. combined into
a vegetable compound and
which women and girls have
been using for more than
fifty years.
How successful G- F. P. is
proving is best shbwn by the
words of thousands of wo-
men and girls who are now
•oming'out iu putdic to praise
it. ’ ’ ’ A’
Mrs. Pearf Conn of 7639
Avenue F„ in Houston, Tex-
as, says, "I started using G.
F. P. right after my baby
came aud now I am as strong
and healthy as I ever was.
I wish every young mother
knew about St. Joseph’s G.
F. P.”
pay much
such high qualiy, with latest
style markings.
ley mount up on the wat-
er bill. Call 520.
(Mt*' -
4 0t Oak St.
At thi* price you can afford to
add one or more to your summer
wardrobe.
K- UU,—Ik
Bp 1 . •? obneral
'* " What games are the fol-
tarnu used: <a> ma*se;
eeo two; <c>
tm aomMs?
1 Is Bolivia norUi
-i H
• ,«3. What have the
* in commo: Ray. Havers. Duq-
MBL JoUy?
; "fA- Who wrote "My Antonia. ’
and what was the scene of most
of the story?
J S. Name three insects belong
’ tag to the order of dlptera
M * 6.,TO what steamship com-
'■j ~pany do the following boats be-
lond: Caronia, Scythia Maure-
tania?
* * 7. What 16 meant by the term
. -fiscal "?
i * .ft; Distinguish between adu-
lation and undulation
< > With sociological work in
what citv is Jane Adams iden-
?. tilted?
10. What is the English
- equivalent for Uie Italian "Gug-
a
rt.
H « % ' ■ 'Mb
. .
1
Phone 1200
We maintain a delivery service for your convenience,
and will gladly send for your clothes to be cleaned, pressed
or dyed, anywhere, any time. Try us ad be satisfied for
all time to come.
Armstrong’s Cleaning
Outdoor Code Urges
Tourists to Behave
CHICAGO. June 14 “Everythin)’
bclmig* to notnebody" I* tin-
commandment In an owuiooi i
ot ethics (<m vncatlonlKlx uni!
foil, who flock to thc^qounoy in
kununer months.
The code waa drafted by the Izeak i
V. ihon Ix-aguc of America and Seth I
E Gordon, extension dlr*wtx,r is • ur ■ I
Its observance will ellinlna»' mu<!)
ol the animosity ep«rend'-r><1 tn
fanners by <srclei»k urban vacutlon-
er*
Other pointe in the code
Never leave a gate , ppen pcrnilt-
»lnK cattle and livestock to roam
from their paaturea
"Don’t disfigure or displace natur-
al r.-HOurcea, 't >
“Be a hiker not a 'ride cadger'
on forbidden
fl*h on posted
h tboee in the same line of bus-
bs in his home town and he
ild count on getting about a.,.
ch trade as his neighboring com- I
iter-by fallowing the same bus!-'
g methods used by him Bual-
s was largely a matter of per-
altty. and of having the right
d of stock to sell. People *el-
n left town to buy and they
i Be-adjaating Business
In traveling recently over many
arctions of the State. 1 have reach-
"/ ffti* conclusion in regard to busi-
jrass conditions that has been for-
uriating for some time and will
athta it for whatever it may
i system of improved
Wiways that is now extending to I
grvsry part of the country must.
. Sripg about a radical change in
.business methods It is now so easy
'in a car and go 30. 60 or
rz— ■ft-mile? to buy what one want*
(fi*St'<bUBineas is not now local llk>
i®gr • few years .ago. Your busi-
F~ mm competitor is no longer just
the man in the next building or
p; the next block, but is also the firm
L > any city or town that can be
[ r reached by automobile tn a few
4MUe ride. The near-b.v cities ar<*
■HftQf (heir dally papers In large
WWkPfc tij. evsry plaoe m numfi.
■afi WMee daily papers are filled
sith attractively worded and dls-'
|>layed advertisements of bargains
o be had in every conceivable kind
if merchandise. The city mer-
dgsnta are making their appeals In
Arse space and in bold type and
*e doing it day after day.
k-Zft.’- --------
|» , Appeals Irresistible
* Most local buyers naturally want
M> be loyal to their home rherch-
>nts and neighbors and ordinarily
L-- - frefer to trade with them, but feu
•withstand the temptations created
H - by the constant appeal of good ad-
D; tNCtMn<- The psychology of love-
‘ • WMidnc and of salesmanship arc
SMMtty much alike “Faint heart
ne’er won fair lady," and faint
I eeurage in business seldom wins any
I*1
-'j.
shfr Is? *•
Breaking Away Slowly
There are other concerns
srfe somewhat the trend of busines:
and are slowly making their read-
justments to the new times. They
find it hard to break away fron
;he old ways, although they see tin
way business Is henaed. The towns
that have tn business the largest
proportion of alert, far-seeing bus
iness men are the places that are
maklne the most rapid and sub ,
stcrtml growth—those quietest to!
grasp tlie situation and with the
business courage to utilize to the
fullest modem salesmanship meth-
ods, both for towns and tn business,
are those that are outstripping
their less progressive neighbors. Go
anywhere you please in Texas, note
what is being done and yon will
find this to be true Where there
- I I
• ll
■
£*• > . Ttr:
* > as
FMt Success in business. Whatever
Be wants, he must go after with
ft and determination, and he
■M not be dl'couraged with a
«r or even many failures to- get
tMt be seek* Big business has
Bmed this, and city merchant*
•vs abn learned the lesson. Oon-
Mnt appeal is irresistible if It is
iMHgpntly presented and is back
I by merit. It is as true in busi-
tas as in anything else
tjjyG ’ • —- •
Rust Lnril Buaine** Must Learn
-Until the building of roads the
cal business man merely competed
Just received a big shipment,
specially purchased and specially
priced. In a variety of sfitt pas-
tel shades. You would expect to
more for dresses of
j- ftgrel-Ffltz Furniture
VUck the' Little Leaks
’J ' w
BARGAIN
BASEMENT
' AND
|88c Days
Wednesday - Thursday
i^k.
■ .
'!’• ’!
"Don’t trespus*
ground, or hunt or
land
"Don’t roam across planted tirldk
walk around them ,(
"Build a camp fire.
Inferno.
"Drown the tire with water when
< amp 1* broken, and bdcr not ncattcr
'I A
4-
•/-
* \
; z -J?
■ •
•JSUteyW; WMMlil Kv. , .wo-aVMM
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Edwards, W. C. & McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 260, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 14, 1927, newspaper, June 14, 1927; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335214/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.