Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 168, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 26, 1929 Page: 8 of 10
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About
With th*
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Molly Picon, the darling of the
too much.
limelight
entirely
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19 Years Ago in Denton
♦
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T. A. Robinson today announced his candidacy for
over there here been frozen up
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Any erranaous
Ma or star""—
, Will be
Some countries, according to the senator, have one
soldier to every 250 inhabitants, and maintains that
“the continuance of these large military establish-
ments on land is unnecessary in times of peace,” is
in contradiction to the spirit of the Kellogg treaty
leave the young couple largely to
themselves, while the rest of the
world attends to its own business.
CASUALTY
INSURANCE
L.l
L
*
on his grasp of the relativity theory.
Now wouldn’t it be just like some
kindergarten pupil in Florida to
prove Einstein’s all wrong?
• » •
BERLIN—Time table worked
to ihe half minute are a fea
ol tne new Kaulsdorf suburban e
trie line. It claims to be the :
service in the world to reckon 1
fractions of minutes.
{Washington Letter
By RODNEY DUTCHER
II
4
*
L\ P. McCombs
Phone 150.
"Mary's
i
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A 13-yearold boy In California
has received a letter from Pro-
•“’"&7F
J
CALLUS I
For
Deviled Ham
Deviled Chicken
Cooked Brains
and
Pickle Hof Feet.
Turner & Evant
127 or 27.
- MMMm and Mttorlal
Circulation Department
i i
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^JUSTICE
MJ
lil’S
•1 **
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■■
Lindbergh and his bride are re-
ceiving much free advice, as well
as much publicity about their per-
sonal affairs which should be left
entirely to them. That the Lind-
bergh publicity has been overdone
we have long thought, and there is
no doubt but that his approa- h-
. ' . .1 ' .. ....
• ifMlL—
OF
INSURANCE
FIRE, AUTOMOBILE
and allied lines.
a
society matron had invited a score
of.friends to an 1890 costume par-
ty. As a surprise the guests were
taken In a chartered bus to see
the old melodrama. It was hard to
say who were the most surprised,
the guests, the actors or the audi-
ence of New York whoopee-makers.
Sounds like good luck to us. It
means that he will not have to use i
the implements, whereas he proba-
bly would had his wife remained at
home.
TRIPLE SURPRISE
Theater parties are so common-
place tliat actors seldom are aware
. of them, but Violet, nale, Ingenue
fessor Einstein, commending him' Of Christopher Morley’s ’’After
Dark” company in Hoboken, re-
I 7
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gram which he hopes will result in a decided cut
in the standing armies, reserves and supplementary
troops in countries which have signed the Kellogg
treaty. He introduced a resolution in the Senate
asking the President to call such a conference, with
a view to lessening the burden which some coun-
tries impose on themselves to keep to a high degree
— of preparedness.
.......mi e *’1 •
WOULD REbUCC STANDING ARMIES. ;
Senator Tydings of Maryland has initiated a pro-
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j. j. maciacnian
» Smoot-durtis Bldg.
»y mall (1
i by mail
delivered
' year (tn advKfoef....................................................•*
mtmtte (In advance)....................... -............. •«'
fclLwX‘111 ^."AkUboma .nd New Mexico
^<O^*»*** Denton County.)
‘(to adwMioe)’'.".!..^............■■
ly entitled to the
llspatcbas credited
gfr;-'
of the beet
he ad fund
ad. It tried
i 1914, and
$
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......................................-
Department - uh
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
■"lemis reflection upen the character, repu-
r of any firm, individual or corpora-
ly corrected upon being called to the
A£*JSllSffSViBSSi
T"—1111** Mdaya.
a* i^af Lrwi ■
iu or vireuiav’ong
United Press Service.
wspaper Publishers association.
Prega League
^^mall matter at Denton.
AVe read in the paper that Wil.
liam "Wrigley was going to supi>> t
Colonel Stewart, but read no head-
lines such an "WRIGLEY STICKS
TO STEWART." i —--------
e e i ■ ’ ------------------------------------
After that terrific cold wave End
rope has been having, the raparad ■> w /-n DLKAICVPA
tlons committee needn’t be mrd r^fN IN 1.1
Kw'
' *
"and creates distrust and fear in the people of one
nation for those of another and seriously calls in-
to question the integrity of the treaty itself.”
... This country already has a lower per capita mili-
tary organization than the other powers, largely be-
cause of our isolated position and compantive free-
dom from land attack over our frontiers. Yet the
expense to which this country is put to maintain its
land forces is tremendous, and if other nations can
concerned. Disarmament will never come at once,
be persuaded to lower their standing armies, so
could this country, with a saving to all countries
but must be conducted gradually over a long period
of years.
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as "second-class
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Your Income Tax
No. 20
T If property was acquired by gift,
alter December 31, 1920. the basis
la the same as it would be in the
hands of the donor, or last preced-
ing owner by whom it was not i
received by gift. For example, ,h ’
man in 1921 bought stock in a cor- |
poration at $100 a share and kept I
it until January, 1922, when it was I
worth $120 and then gave It to I
his son, who tn 1925 gave it to hM 1
wife the stock then being worth
$150 a share. If in 1928 the wife J
sold the stock for $200 a share, the .
taxable gain is not $50 but $100 a
share, the gain over the cost to the
preceding owner who did not ac-
quire the stock by gift.
In computing the gam or loss
from the sale or other disposition
of property Required by gift or by
transfer in trust on or before De-
cember 31, 1920. the basis is the
fair market value of such property
at the time of acquisition. For ex-
ample, a taxpayer received in 1919
a gift of real estate having a fair
market value of $10,000; he sold
it in 1928 for $15,000. The original
cost to the donor was $12,000 The
taxable gain, however, is $5,000.
WE HAVE
Fresh green beans, new po-
tatoes, cucumbers, strawber-
ries, in fact, everything in
the vegetable line.
I' ■
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— I— ,, —, ■■
RED TENNIS BALLS
NEW YORK—Tennis balls dyed
bright scarlet are to be the vogue
in 1929 for use on dark days, for
twilight matches and indoor play.
Tlie scarlet ball already has re-
ceived a thorough tryout and play-
ers who have used it say its visi-
bility is considerably better than
that of the ordinary white ball dis-
colored by play.
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■
RELIC
The gold pen with which Abra-
ham Lincoln signed the proclama-
tion freeing the slaves has become
a legacy which will be turned into
cash February 27.
The pen is on exhibition here
preliminary to its sale at auction on
that date. The owner is W. B.
Tucker of Lansing, Mich., grandson
of Louis Burgdorf, White House
messenger, who held the proclama-
tion while Lincoln was signing IL
President Lincoln himself gave the
pen to his meaenger who was one
of the few witnesses ot that histor-
ic event of January 1, 1836. An or-
dinary gold pen in a wooden holder
it now is valued at more than a
thousand dollars
MMinaM, and it w
’ provinces in Chile, their importance is recognized.
Up until the world war, any open hostility between
these three nations likely would have involved this
country, and still will, if European nations seek to
test the Monroe doctrine by taking sides in a Latin-
American scrap.
WB
ON LKABNING NOT TO
"NO*
“Jennie,* said a mother to the
*>® •** *• what
on the porch/and whatever it’is',
LeU her to stop."
”An<k” says tha
was relating the inc.^..., aw,.
pedagog, but I do beg to disagree
with the gentleman. He evidently
belongs to a tohool to whom disci-
pline means negation
Of course all matters of disci-
pline don't resolve themselves into
a matter of saying "yes” or "no,”
but in the many instances where
discipline is a matter of agreeing
or disagreeing, permitting or deny-
ing, approving or disapproving, it
seems to me that it should Tnean
a pretty carefully considered decis-
ion on the part of the parent as to
when to say "no."
U Bo Waata to De It, It Mast Be
Wroni
A man who was brought up by
a strict father admitted to me that
his first instinct when his children
want anything is to say “no.” “My
folks did not believe in letting chil-
dren have their own way,” he said,
“and I can’t get over that old Pur-
itanical notion that what a child
wants to do must naturally be
wrong.” <
It isn’t the parent who consents
easily nor yet the parent who Is
quick to deny who Js the best disci-
plinarian. It is the parent who con-
siders his decislons even to the!
the child, who is likeliest to get and
maintain obedience In the long run.
Of course, there are times, espec-
ially in the very young years, when
instant and unquestioned obedience
is essential for the child’s welfare,
indeed tor his very life. And I beg
you not to confuse ’talking things
over” with teasing and whining and
arguing. I have known jiarrnts to
say: "No. you can’t do that.” And
NEA Service Writer
'“ WASHINGTON, F«b. 2f>.—Inaugurations aren’t
what they used to be, but William Tyler Page, clerk
- - -- -- •’ * ’ them
a good
tion. Molly, the “it” girl of the east
side, was boin there and lives near
the theater wtimi* site plays in
“Hello. Molly” bilkd as a Yiddish
operetta.
But other Jewish musical come-
dies also seem to attract u ptowners.
“A Galician Wedding" enticed 170,-
000 persons to its first hundred per-
formances. despite competition from
two other theatres, at one of which
ing marirage Is being kept to the something with the title “A Litvish-
___ 1$. er Yankee’ lias beep running for
would appear to be good taste to Quite a while.
At the foot of Second Avenue is
another popular institution, the Na
tignal Winter Garden, where one
is invited to “take a private car
A to tlie heights of pleasure." The car
“ is an elevator to’ the roof, where
burlesque may be seen and heard
in traditional form, even to the
comic's inflated bladder.
TAMPA. Fla. Feb. 20-The body
of Buster Allen, 18-year-old negro
charged with ass ilt on a white
girl was found bui.ed beneath a
cottonwood tree near Brooksville,
police reported today.
Listen men: Just because she's
slender is no sign she can be sup-
ported on that kind of income.
Dallas News.
■J" .......
A West Virginia woman found s
diamond In * can ot lard. Ti> d
wouldn't have been nows at an i«
New York, where big butter and ecf
men are continually casting at h ast,
pearls before swtae.
«Coi>yrlgha ISM. NBA Service, Inc.)
* MBUI TBOUOBT —
♦ “>TOB TODAY
THE OMNIPOTENT - Behold f
am the Lord, the God of all flesh ia
there anything too hard for m<»
Jeremiah 3837 -j
•bon™ j
Rug and Carpet Cleaner
M«kes soiled rugs than.
Will not injure finest fabric)
Two sizes—40c and 11.00. ,
I^et us demonstrate.
-V
■' 7'-W
DELIGHTFUL
SPRING SILKS I
Ultra-smart patterns and decidedly new color com-1
binations mark these silks as leaders in the sprinr
style, bringing the new season to you long before L.
. DOtWtflly arrives.
The patterns will make it unusually simple to pUn
• ‘ becoming frocks and the charming combinations of
colors will afford you an excellent choice to fill your ]
IndtviduaLneeds.
-----
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by its people. Or the east side's
Broadway. But it’s name is Sec-
ond Avenue.
Below Fourteenth Street, Second
Avenue Is the ghetto’s white way.
And New Yorkers, ever looking for
something to stir jaded interest and
imagination, are discovering this
Lindbergh is inclined to remain rialto of Rumanian restaurants and
silent but the first time he comes ! Jewish theaters.
home late to a meal, foUowtog his | J* ”
marriage, "Miss Anne” will make j neighborhood, is the chief a^trac-
lUm talk. Gainesville Register. >
>■■■■■ "W I . ... T
Our idea of hard luck is for a
man to buy a new set of garden
tools and then have his wife go
away for
Favorite.
New^Tfark
By RICHARD G. MASROCK
By RICHARD G. MAS SOCK
NEW YORK, Feb. 26.-It might
the summer. Bonluun be called an Avenue of Nations, so
many dlilrent ones are represented
hv itft twtmlp Or th a rMa*«
Sorreitopa Rule
GAINBbVILLE, FU—Red head
reign royally at the University t
Florida. No less than three sorre
tops have been named captains <
various varsity teams. Bill Duckwal
leads Uw golfers, Edgar Curry sbOS
the pace for the leather-pushe
and Gus L'euer tops the tenn
team.
of the House of Representatives, who has seen
ever since Garfield’s time, believes that’s
thing.
“I favor simple inaugurals because the elaborate
ones involve u tremendous waste of human energy,
time and money. I like a simple, dignified inaugural
with a short parade. 1 have seen so much hardship
inflicted on people who came here from great dis-
tances to, run the risk of pneumonia, poor housing
or unsatisfactory seating arrangements. An old-
fashioned Fourth of July.” »
» ♦ »
McKinley, Page recalls in continuing his story of
inaugurations, had a good day for his second inau-
guration in 1901 and a tremendous crowd, which of
course had no idea that he would be assassinated
within six months. Quite a little attention was paid
to Theodore Roosevelt, the new vice president.
Roosevelt took the oath on September 14 at a pri-
vate home in Buffalo, McKinley having died from
his wounds earlier in the day.
Page, at the time, was accompanying a party of
congressmen and newspapermen in northeastern
Canada and received word of the tragedy on "board
a French warship in Cape Breton harbor. Informed
that the president probably would recover, the con-
gressional committee continued its tour, but hur-
ried back to the United States when it heard the
unexpected news of his death.
“Roosevelt entered his next term with a great
how-do-you-do at inauguration time," Page contin-
ued. “Thu weather was bad, but it made little dif-
ference because Roosevelt was fast becoming a pop-
ular idol and the Republicans were delighted with
his overwhelming victory over Alton B. Parker.
“Taft’s inauguration in 1909 was a dud. A snow-
storm began the day before the inauguration and
everything went to pot, with no use whatever for
the large stands erected. Thousands on trains were
delayed in getting to Washington and many tele-
graph poles were down, almost cutting the capital
off from outside communication. The blizzard seem-
ed confined to a very small area, in and around the
District of Columbia.
“That blizzard became famous as ‘Willis Moore’s
flareback’—that it had doubled back in its tracks.
• • *
“Wilson was inaugurated the first time on a raw,
cold day, but the sun was out despite the wind. With
the first Democratic president sineir IR97, heralded
as the apostle <>f the ‘New Freedom,’ the town was
full of the faithful and Washington was far from
dry. The Republicans were deeply depressed and
had little heart for celebration. Wilson’s second in-
augural in 1917 was quite inauspicious because hi1
had won only by the skin of his teeth and because
the country was in the shadow of war. It was a
very cold, windy and disagreeable day; the celebra-
tion was quiet and almost perfunctory.
Harding wrote a letter asking for a sim-
ple, dignified and inexpensive inauguration gnd so
we had the simplest inaugural since the very early
days of the Republic. There was no parade, but the
ceremony was noteworthy for the first use of am-
Fk1 . ,nau‘fural address. This enablisi more
than 100,000 persons on the scene to hear the preai-
dent, instead of only a few thousand at the moat,
as brfora Of all the inaugurals I have seen I think
y the mo,t iTAb,‘,ive because of its
®v*pyone remarl vw fine it was.
n.11 w v"nie?Lth1i?,t Ukan '*ru*Hon that I re-
’£***• 1 *or the physical safety of P$re-
dig arms and feet often come.”
*' Paper milk bottlea hare' Already been invents I
j*— - --77......... t® - ’ W''
5 -4^7^Wo^n7dkUP I”
Rllton, Ontario, Spectator" r “
-
Morley’s
in Hoboken,
ports one tliat almost stopped the
show.
One night recently the cast was
startled to set t roup mg into the
A small town is one where tlie balcony, a dozen couples attired in
costumes of the '90’s, some almost
duplicates of these worn by the
players. , .
---
tjgfe ----------
We Are Enjoying
A nice grocery business,
whUh is due to our good sqr-
vice and complete stock.
tfrja .Hv,' * I I I
We have plenty of seed
potatoes, garden and flower,
JivedB. Call ur for anything
Ulbjkha grocery line.
|| a • 1 ’ fy
J. A. Cook Grocery
wot a kb
the most widely advertised products in America. It
itent medicine enjoying enormous sales,
is. Vogeler, C * - - -
t” west ovr
- T*11 know"
I OMtraete ran out; basinoM
“* “* u Mfa to «pocu-
‘ads this article
:obs, one of the
»t 35 years ago.
s Pyte’s “Pearl-
1,000 advertising
(toe of the best
J *___a .
--------
Human biterest Editorials
if U. ®y WICKES WAMBOLDT
—r—-r gHE WANTS TO QUIT . .
A young man complains: “Three months ago the
company for which I work promoted me from of-
fice manager to district manager, transferring me
to another city. My wife does not like this city. Her
family and friends live in the town we moved from.
“My wife says she is lonesome in this place—
for I have to be on the road part of the time. She
insists that I resign my position here and return
to my old job. This new position is a big opportun-
ity for me; it uut anly pays more salary but puts
me in line for steady promotion; 1 feel that I
should be missing a big chance if I were to give it
up. But my wife declares unless I do give it up,
and take her back to our home town, she will leave
me and go anyhow. What ahull’ 1 do?”
That young man has come to a point where he
must decide Whether he Is to be a kite or merely a
tail to somebody else’s kite—and a tail to a kite
that probably will do a nose dive.
“A young man married is a man that’s marred,"
exaggerative!;? wrote Shakespeare. Unfortunately
that is sometimes true—and particularly where the
wife puts selfish or childish desires ahead of her
husband’s best interests.
What of it if a wife is lonesome? What of it
if she Is homesick ? Being “lonesome and "HomeWRUT
is a small price to pay for a husband’s success and
one’s own.
I should be willing to wager that that wife who
wants her husband to sacrifice his opportunity is
one of those girls who has been brought up a
spoiled baby, reared to believe that her wishes are
the biggest things in the world; and that all mat-
ters which interfere with her feelings must lie set
aside, turned over or dumped out.
Suppose that every boy who enlisted in Uncle
Sam's army when Germany wag battering down
the gates of Civilization, had insisted on going home
if he became homesick or lonely.
Suppose that every time any person undertook
anything he should quit if some disagreeable fea-
ture presented itself—what a mess things would
be in!
I wonder if anyone ever left home and struck out
into life without having to combat lonesomeness and
homesickness ? Suppose that every time anyone
were to be assailed with such sensations he should
run back home to papa and mama—shouldn’t we
have a nation of perfectly spineless nincompoops?
The wife ot the young man whose case is pre-
sented at the beginning of this article, should brace
up and be a regular wife, a real helpmate. She
should set about to make herself at home in her
new environment. She should work as sys-
tematically and definitely to make a success
of her end of the arrangement as her hus-
band must to make u success of his end of the sit-
uation. Should she do that, it would not be long be-
fore she would find her new surroundings so satis-
factory that she would not wish to return to the
home town.
It would seem that when a young woman is to
’’a young man married," she should make very cer-
tain that she shall never be the cause of his being
“a man that’s marred.”
^2 i i > i 111. • I i
■ ’<-^1
There are no statistics oi^K
number of near-idlots at largMK
cept tlie circulation figures ot ttwd
kin<L of tnagaxines.—MeKinna
Coufier-Gazette.
The vAFd < • ■
- M . at nr
|>.95 to $3.95 ,|g|
W—r ’* ■
LET’S HOPE SO
Announcement was made a few days ago that
the differences between Chile, Peru and Bolivia over
the provinces of Tacna and Arica in northern Chile,
had been amicably settled by agreement. Immedi-
ately following this announcement, which came from
Chile, some doubt as to the permanence ef the
agreement emanated from Peru, and it might be
that the half-century dispute between the nations
will continue to be an open sore, comparable to the
Alsace-Lorraine problem between France and Ger-
many and the Bessarabian problem between Ru-
mania and Russia.
Let’s hope that the agreement which Chile has
accepted will mean an end to the trouble that has
kept other countries on the western hemisphere in
suspense for years. Under its terms, Tacna goes to
Peru, Aries goes to Chile and the port of Arica will
be internationalized so that Bolivia, the only inland
nation on this hemisphere, will have an outlet to
the sea.
Many individuals perhaps cannot see how a dis-
: South
1 —4-i*-■
■
■ 1 1 ’ -'v >* «*' **z'"'- ■ *?
nr-
ful discontented arguing on tha
the part of the child, to give an impoto
PJaW-®f-»R-w«*’ ”«o and are what lent assent. That isn’t the sort of
Mary is all so quiet about out there tiling I mean at all.
When You Bay W Tre QqbW
"Even when my children ware
quite young,” -reye -< aueeoretul
slight, before I Mid nd.’’B you aayl
no’ too quickly, you may later have
to face the unpleasant, truth
your •no’ was unnacaawuty and
unfair to the child and stil sMc
it for consistency's sake, or «1m
in and say 'yes,’ which wea
your discipline.”
Especially at the adolescent agel
a boy or girl should feel free to U
they can doubtless eotne to a co
savors of arguing, and “I never al<
axisrauffwa’*’
HA OMMar A»w WU» I
There are parents who pritta
themselves on being very strict witt
their children who are not “gsttlDi
away with it“ so well as they thinS
they are. Acquiescence and aeeminf
docility in the face of an unreason-
able. unsympathetic “no” often tor
er up willful disobedience behint
the backs of these unsuspectiw
parents, or e» a fervent reaoiw
to break away from home m hoc
„ —.as the opportunity preainiM MM
point of talking things over with Ho. I can’t agree with the peds
,u. -------------A <0#, that uttte Mary.B mother M|
right in assuming that whateve
she was doing an the parah wa
wrong. And IH venture a mre tha
Mary and her mother wifi be hap
pier together in the years to corns
when Mary la in her teens, if he
mother learns to gftre Mary th
benefit of the doubt at least to th
extent of thihking the rnqtter ovs
before she says “no."
UP
---vWMtti
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__------- _
I I J0
’I J’ti
has been having, the repnraj L* “ --------------
AIUUB WUIUII1AW MVWVH w re-w V-
prised to find most ot the ibmii-
— WkSkJMa am ?
. Men’s Shirts
* Of Broadcloth
Fancy patterns and plain col*
---qra. Outstanding value—
£' 98c
newspaper prints a short story
about the death of one of the city s
leading drayman’s work horses.
• • • It developed afterward that
A duffer Is a fellow who car t
tell bls bridge and golf scor< s
apart.
J. J. Maclachlan
bmouv-vurwe oiu*.
Telephone 366. J
___ Scam 'IL 8
Ml Phon. 174. ' '. I
-------------------------------------------------------------■
SUBSCRIPTION RATM
Iiullv
advance! *3^
•
e==
—ai’sur.K' advanee)”™^^.........
Three months (In advance) -
The Aaaoctated Pma ta exclusive!;
sv-j, srssax samr&Tss-—-«>
eKa focal news published herein.
DENTON, TEXAS, FEBRUARY 26, 1929
ww
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F"
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---Auuiy luuiviuiuue ycriispa cau.ivv dcv ««ve
pute between three comparatively weak
Kt; American nations could affect this country, but when
it is remembered that the greater portion of the
world’s nitrates come from these two d(spujted
provinces f ----- 1 *----'-----S“J
Yarbrough Bro«,
Furniture. - ; J
. "-^.r 1
feuWx'Sfs
4-MhXMe
(From Record-Chronicle, Feb. 26, 1910.)
Ben Sullivan was bitten on the hand yesterday by
a hog he was unloading from a wagon.
i'»' „..(A number from here who are interested in avia-
.'v', tion will go to Dallas next month for the aviation
K5. - • “ -
alderman from Ward 4.
4 Contemporary ThoujJt
■By ■■■■»! i ■
WHEN ADVERTISING CEASES
'■ A generation ago “St. Jacobs Oil" was one of
th* most widely advertised products in America. It
was a patent medcine enjoying enormous sales.
the bead of this business, died,
rr the balance sheets and saw
' »g appropriation
*d the advertising expeudi-
g, reasoning that St. Jacoba
that it was unnecessary to
sr to Mveriiae it. Order*
m, and it i*
Harter 6t,Ja<
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 168, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 26, 1929, newspaper, February 26, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335637/m1/8/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.