Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 283, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 10, 1929 Page: 4 of 8
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Conceal scuffs
this easy way
BARTON'S
DyanShinE
SHOE POLISH
A t< ixh er two of tlx dzuix-r conceal* *cufl» like tnamc.
L.ul is reitored utulorti.ly to faded zliocx Mute than
,o long lite d.inr* <.ent» Cokir* for Hack, brown,
tan and white al.oei a neutral polish toe others.
DID YOU KNOW THAT—
game
Ob’
be hot.
Athletles In October
the
Von Elm, no
conversal Ion
the
f rotn
Cryetal Ice plant now open.
f. w
t o ur no ineiit.
ft he
the I
win the
In
doubt
That
t hero
♦!
But
heard
i h i p
amateurs
believed they were approaching
solution of the mysterious disappear- ' Street
nnce last January of 58.000 pesos of
Mexican gold from an automobile
TWO STABBED LN NEW YORK
STRIKE
NEW YORK, July 10 One worn
an and two men were stabbed today
hostilities again broke out
between rival factions of the «trik-
I Ing garment workers. Knives and
i blackjacks were employed, when a
1 rn/Y
of left winjm
Wdl, What of It?
T OOKS like the Cubs and tha
A 1 la* I ia* M In I ka* t a s ae 1/
But Wants Coupla More
JONES, according to Kt »-l<-r ha.
LAREIXJ. July 10 Wltn the ar-
rest here of Enrique Gonzales on a i group of rijht wing pickets
warrant charging theft, authorities' countered a group cl left
a ■ members on 7th Avenue near 38th
■ ' • • ' 1 emm
t <■ r i 11 < * r y
lot of western
111 be
the
When
in a trap in
magnificent
behind him
Tile poor
And Jones
Yankees were played in world sens
atmosphere Shibe park has been In-
adequate tn handle week end crowds ■
at Philadelphia and new attendance
records have been set bv the Chicago when
Cub* at Wrigley field
the open
phenomenal.
The Rob Getting Serioua
rpHE Jones boy. it Is understood j
* from O II Keeler. Atlanta I
sport columnist and the right-
hand man of the golf king, is I
quoting 'he game hi a serious,
way soon . i
Robert doesn't make any mon-
ey out of golf In a direct way and
lie has a family and an infant law
business and trophies don't pay
rent when they we engraved.
There Is no doubt that Jones is
a strict amateur, but he will not
denv hhnrelf that bis golf repu- I
tatlon has hurl him Hut there [
is no doubt that you can't win law
cases out in the pasture and Hint'
It you keep on your game you ,
have to play plenty
Is going to pick an
beat him if he goes
In September
It Is very likely that he will 1
rlav iiy the amateur championship
lias the ambition to equal .
■i oi d of Chick Evans J '
t wo major t it les
K
two ambit Inn* He wants to!
In the American op n and ama-
teur ghampionshlps In the same !
season and he wants to win the
British amateur championship
He has a great < bailee to w in
the two major American cham-
pionships tills year.
Already he has won
championship with u
margin of superiority and no one I
a rnateur l o ;
to California
W/HKN the stewards of the
” Jockey Club lifted the
suspension on Laverne Fa-
tor. America's premier Jock-
ey. they warned him
They said he must ride »p
satisfaction In the future
. And that his work In
the waddle would be care-
fully scrutinized at all times
Bobby Jones never has
his hair combed Hut
the Haig uses grease on his
lock* . . Thu Habu says
Al Simmons, of the A s. ,«
Hie most Improved batter In
the majors And that
when the magnates abolished
the most valuable player
prize they did Simmons out
of one grand Johnny
Earrell sported an Irish
grten blazer with brass but-
tons at the open champion-
ship He was ordered
to wear It by the clothing
company that paid him ten
grand to say that he wears
their clothes
the Jones got
the open a
femme right
said —"Oh'
dear boy"
threw away bls clgaret
Only the Rich Can Go
| ONES will be an overwhelming
•’ favorite to win the amateur If
be does go to California Not
only beiau -* of bls victory In the
(pen. but for the reason that the
(ompelltlon may not be hot
Wit It
Von Elm there is hardly an ama-
teur in the country who can be leaders In uarly July are the wltx-
ratcd close to him Von Elm, no ' ners.
will enter the tournament ' The Cubs have a hard road
bls home territory And ahead of them, but It does look
will be a lot of western • now as If the Athletics can't be
stopped.
They're hading the league In
during the open champion- hitting and have the three lead-
eastern Jug pitchers And what inure
could be needed?
They figure they can’t afford it.
UI1(j I In addition to a bulky transpor-
tation bill the easterners figure It
would take them away from their
1 business for a month and even tf
i golf has its profitable sidelines
there are not many amateurs who
.can duck business fur s muutb.
the exception of George I
If there
is anything In the fable that the
OKI l
;h hi
* HU
'I HU
II
i ooo
Mlddl.m*
Market
ulsoud
1 8 55
18 72
18 72B
18 14
18 51
18 54c
1 8 50
18 69
middling
10
up.
9 90
9 <4
9 96
higher.
Sa iu«
10 40(|
demand’
-53
hil>
to 10
(OilOX
10
9 89
XI H
NEW OKI EANS
opened steady
steads
Jwrrarr
Mar.'b
May
Jiih
(X-t'jbe.-
I December
8jx)U .teady
I l\ I KI OO!
I IVERPOOL
Jan i Jars
March
Mas
Job
<wiob>
I> < rrfiT>< r
Uads
tai’’ Receipt*
American 3 ooo
cr goat
8 BLAZIT
ISPORJS
1.
BLAZING the
TRAIL
teen twenty-five saw Tunney on the
way up, knocking out Tom Gibbons
in the feature affair
their
a
the
was In 1890 |
ask, “What of it’" In short,
permanent retirement of Mr
er
ceipts where the old
concerned.
This seems likely to be the first
sey, at least temporarily, has been!
even more depressing, for there nev-1
.. r- ..'.I.- at,., ....... Cf1-
was
First Signs of Football
The appearance of Spalding's
Official Football Guide and an an-
nouncement from Southern Meth-
odist University that the Warner-
Rockne coaching school will be In
session at Dallas Augustt 19 31. is
the first hints of another approach-
ing gridiron season
The growth of the game has been
steady and will be continuous. In-
tercollegiate football is increasing
in popularity from year to year,
with the end nowhere in sight
Now that the Rules Committee
has decided upon a policy and has
demonstrated it is opposed to con-
stant tinkerbs; with the regula-
tions to ht this theory or mat. the
coaches can feel a little more con-
fident ot their own knowledge of
what to teach than they have m the
past
Knute Rockne and Pop Warner
are two of the greatest football
teachers of all time, their school at
S M U. is well attended, most of
the other coaches being not only
contentt but pleased at the oppor
tunity to sit at tlie feet of the two
old masters
l>|H*n Game
Football, the 1929 rules Indicate
Is to be kept “open ” Chance fum-
bles are better protected than evet
before, the day of Sammy White
01 the Reigels Is done
No more can some young hero—
go scampering the length
of the gridiron after scooping up
a loose ball The lateral pass game
may be developed further now The
Rules Committee has standarized
the game as definitely as possible
and wants to leave matters pretty
much a., they stand for a few sea-
tons and see how thinks work out.
was any question of gate
mauler
easily the outstanding eleven
the East The Army won 14 to
but honors were even.
There is every likelihood of
game between S M. U and
Navy in 1930
Evolution of Football
Parke H Davis, in Spaldlikj's Offi-
cial Football Guide for 1929 has
a most interesting article on the
evolution of the game from 1800 to
teh present He traces its growth
from an Informal campus pastime
to its present status as the most
popular and profitable of college
sports
It was not uijtll 1865 that formal
rules were drawn up for football,
and then It was only an intro-mural
game, played firstt at Rutgers and
soon afterwards at Princeton
Davis notes that it '
that football players started to at i
feet long hair Twenty-five year j
later, they put numbers on their i
backs.
By ALAN J. GOULD
(Associated Press Sports Editor)
Whether, as a few believe, it ,
because of the passing ot the crea-
tive genius of Tex Rickard, or
whether, as most observers hold, it
is because of a slump in the fighting
talent, there is little or no chance of
a successor to Gene Tunney being
elected by acclamation or named by
the royal edict of boxing pilons for
1929
Most of the talk about Jack
Dempsey making a final title bid Is
'just that—talk. Max SchnieUing, the
.nwet,promising prospect, created no
great sensation by chopping up the
woodchopper, Paulino Even If Max-
ie escaped legal entanglements with
his managers long enough for a bout
with Jack Sharkey, the Lithuanian-
American "hope" for keeping the
heavyweight business safe for Am-
i erica, the customers might very well
■ >_ ....„ . ........
. ______________ . ................. Tun-
ney ha.* left the whole heavyweight
industry In a very sad state of re-
I pair. The retirement of Mr Demp-
Tliere has been some concern in a
few places this season about base-
ball attendance. St Louis and Cm - |
cinnatl have not had the patronage '
of former years, for example, and ]
there is talk of the National league I
fianchlse in one of these places be-
ing transferred to Detroit to make
the motor metropolis a two-club
town
This is for the magnates to debate
but when close to 200,000 pile
through the turnstiles In three days
at the Yankee stadium, not much
_ __ .... ______ alarm about the future of the na-
vear in about a decade which has I tional pastime need be felt . The bat-
lacked cither a heavyweight cham- ! tics between the Athletics and the
Gxme in Southwest
The Warner-Rockne coaching
school, located al S M. U.. is an-
other step in the development of
football In the southwest, where the
I game has eaught on and develop-
ed tremendously during the past
decade From a time when little
was known generally of the south-
west's brand of football there has
been such a change that now one
looks for the best on the gridiron
from that region
"All-America" stars now are de-
veloped there, while the average ot
team play is fully as high as in
any other section of the country.
Southern Methodist, Texas. Bay
lor and the other universities of
the southwest are producing team.i
to hold their own with the best
anytime when the Cadets appeared
ol I
13.
pion affair or a battle of "croocial''|
proportions to keep fight fandom in
at least a mild furor The Dempsey
era was full of fireworks while it |
lasted, with big title shows in 1921,1
1923, 1926 and 1927 Tunney came J
along to share the spotlight in the
last two and wind up his career by
annihilating Tom Heeney in 1928 In
1922, the build-up ot Louis Firpo was 1
under way The feature in 1924 was 1
to have been a Dempsey-Wills bat- I
then the black menace, tought and '
tie It never materialized but Wills, I
beat Firpo before a tremendous
crowd at Boyle's Thirty Acres. Nine-1
1 2*.
sout lit 1 I)
i< Hill lilt I
18 '
lb
29
An.<
1 D -
"Il
the
n
•I
V
1 8.
Vk
1-4
’ 0
1 2
1 2
: -4
’H
14 ’
nd
: he
11 35.
12
13; !
hih
1 i j
.ini:
25 p* r
Su < 11
\ OKK
YC’KK
\ 1
rnovde
sold at
18 94
i.nld I nig
,vppk‘
irrived.
irad *1
per
1245
I'
Mum
46
70
Pvik ■
linn.
m r lb
t tock-
vO
75
■ lucks
‘O'.
46
I
I
•4 3.
NJand
I mb< r
ts <;
s 10..-32
20 21.
stM tI U 1
27 12
2 26
lil'UV If:
J hUlL
t ailed for 5,000
JI'l'S
12
:u< ks
I CH 1
FUR a
Uiif”. trdy
pif \ ul 1»'<‘
W' dnefiday
and co a
Y«xrhUQ4
li ally
I
mr ci
fliav
Hoe*
t<?TvrT trvrl
. o 10'
'rrrrrd
cop
•'”iith: ;
I
< I 1 ■ y 11 u
• m 1
. rudinp !
I l\ I
hih 10
market
at
s were i
bulls and calves
Choice veal al\e
around
$3 J5
p-r bbl
bbl l.aid
XI H
NE’A
\\ <»l< I ||
A’OH IH
lower i
n the
Steers
faced u
(OI lox
10 Market op-
ium! y
18 67 68
18 J5'r
1 8 95T
18 17T
18 45
18 69
18 55c
1 up. closed
18 87
19 »4
19 10
1 H 40
I » • 33
cleared -n Aeak
About 1 4o<» nrart
e $10 35 md .he . ruck
u a $10 75
A liberal sheep supply
ettr**ate calling for ’ 000
remained stead'
Cattle- Betvtk 8 50 vo 14 50
rn ' 60 to 10.50; itoc.r cows 5 50
6.60; tat cows 7 25 to 10; -utters
to 6J>0. cauners 150 to 4.76,
itigs 10 .a 14 76. • ulves 14.
dll Ik '. .25 to 160
Hog-—Mcdiuir 11
1025 U) 10 76. heavii
J uh
i<m<* i
mad*
bullish
I'kobl ( I
July 10 i’hhIuci'
i patent s 6 < 13
st eadv, tne.ss 11 50 per I
Middlewest unit 1245
I'alli>a in m pecla 1 |
1 4 per lb »*<•! 1 ih u:n I
rk refined 15 per .’al ‘
2’1
( lift 4(.<)
CHICAGO July io
< d a st rontf t<>ne aft< i
t< <1ay and nadi ^<»od
the more
CanadijU’ crop, less favorable
v.istiin u«at3iur and (abb?'
bent ills ulaimcH
m.’t Iradinv:
larvc num!)°r
he governim nt
rr )uinptd
huin.-l jffhdal Ih-urt
■d recovery from she
1min ■ the morhinp
h
m Ip* 5i 1
a> < ‘*t rl< I -
r p< i ;.l i s t
. p*>rt tic ■
xpi'ctat ;on
vO 11 35. Ight |
a 10/5 11J5; I
J Uj ) 50; pigs 850 u) 9 50 |
• Bheep- Hprini luinbF
«jrfher- 7 25 to 8 75. roatfi >50 m 5,’
shorn lamb. 10 u> 10 75
lb
15 J MI
5 4 >•:»
XEH YOKk
NE1A YORK July
< n d '•tt adv. 6 to
iiirki
broiler:. 1
I < X K
Aeak VO
1‘onditldhH
attie division
t wanted
it :*5c
•emained
nude
■.> 12
■ Voo!
I ul -
♦
III I 1 V
the
in-
ch neral
»uk attaining
1-2 Mont,
it
lx"'
individual k-
»n the upaicie
which moved
levels of
STOCKN IKKK.I I 4H
f • 1TSW YORK July 10 — Renewed
■^in-rrltUnty nver the credit tdtuntion
At>.u»e<i highly 1 new u I ar orlce u
riienta uij lh< sUxk exchange m
(ransuction* today
liiwiu wun little incentive to
tip prices in view of the mixtd
tieiid and most lenders held within
a narrow range uound hen prtv-
iou? Hosing levels
Nevertheless, a few
tueu again stood out i
notably Standard Gas,
up to unniLal its bust
\ L-ui Pai iUnc^unt - Famous -1 .ask y
itmutumui It-lephoiK and
leaders held
uound heli
HOME ICE CO.
OAKLAND
ALL-AMERICAS SIX
PRODUCT OF CtlUIlL MOTORS
■
Book
a utomobile
Home ICE Co.
403 N. Locust St.
We Deliver
Anywhere Any Time
PHON 129
Phone 51.
I
■
you quicker and
Better Service
GEORGE FRITZ
-7 Oakland and Pontiac Dealer.
J. L. Wright Bldg.. 201 S. Elm St.
Buy Your Next Ice Coupon
From
We p romise
h. rontlac,
IhdrnuUc Shock
minimum r«t«.
*1145
AND UP
]\^i7/ion5 of miles
have proved it America’s
finest medium-priced
Bi-causr <»f the type of performance it
provides, the (Oakland All-American Six in
gaining rei-ognition everywhere aa the
outstanding value of its priee elasfl. Yor
since its introduction, it haa carried
thousands of owners millions of miles;
and. mure emphatically than anyone else,
those owners will tel) you that the Oak-
land of today is Anirrica'uftneHt tnediurn-
priced auto/nobile. Come in! See
and drive the All-American Six!
It wins on every basis of compari-
son. And we are prepared to make
a liberal allowance if you have a
car to trade.
Onkhtnd AU- 4mcrimn Sit, 91143 tn 91379, f. n
dz'litNTV fharKeH. Spring mrort and lot'tjor
included in lint prirot. flumpor* and roar fonrior gunrth
Mntort Timo Pgymont Plan arailaldo
< xvnslder the drlivervM prlre* n« well ■« the lUt
price when r«»ni|»«rin|| value® ...
< Jaklan«l-t*i>n I iar <Irlivrrr«i prices include only
rcaaonable ehar*ra for liandlin* and for
hnaix iikH when the 1 iu»r Payment PImi» i* need-
It
■
p,
LOAFER
.> I i ;<l f.
SCOREBOARD
lil"l t: »■
R' - I
\v
.8
Ih
t!
I <
i News of the Sick
10-7
W
4
an •
A! I.m t p
46
Kock
<9
HOME RUNS
R.'.l
Personal Mentions
A t a < 1 > 11
Lawn Mowers
Battery Service
Storage Battering Recharged,
Repaired and Rented.
We also sell Garden Hoae.
= = ?
Refrigerators
Porch Furniture
Ihht- 2 To
min abdul
< bird I j t.
> make
implu-
ulideT*
I) nl >n
WICHITA FALLS
NEW LEADER IN
TEXAS LEAGUE
Fm
<1,. *.
Hall
Wib
S. I. Self Motor Co.
215 W. Hickory
Telephone 2.
8
H
14
. I
N‘st
av. ;ii (led
p >* t p mud vitmv Ixtwuiii Sull
('() and th* smith Hamilton
Cliandlpr
un t the
flub
Birnnib' h.mi
t
i
3
land*
to do
min -
H
100
Mm>
('h:i ’
We Sell
WILLARDS.
1(1
7
10
W
51
<29
W
A
is 111
Val-
N»-w
Un t
26
26
12
20
10
77
7.3
L
30
U.
41
4 1
17
47
46
Club
Philadelphia
New Yprk
St Louis
I )< t ro 11
(‘level Hid
W ,*_.hm^ Um
77
7 1
,73
4G
42
16
47
46
4.)
4!
17
!8
23
3 h
J
S
A’
47
45
IH
33
<2
1 1
26
<30
630
600
519
50(1
1M9
I ht
A
It is Ih.
man ul
the ha’
can
hoiineu.'
turracu
i I .I i
Ke*u II s
1 Dallas 6-0
K Ml Rl< y X I I \<. I r;
I ur:
•’tor
»rk 8
1; I ?
Antonio i
Worth 6-0
Edwards & McCrary
218 W. Uuk Phone 530 term of summer school.
Postponed Ball
Game I uesdav
< >1 I 111 R X ’
R'r nHnk’ham
. 6 Little 1
16, Nashville
■ b- di'Ird
Anding
81
79
82
84
83
86
8 1
78
. N.Gvhl
LI! th
> 4 . ... .
the Phillie
in the 1 ju
b; < <i*
W( r.s of
Him’, of
Man
Port
s»t a Udi iiu
Cong! egut loniil I
msin is tl.e Rrv
who is
C h iciik’<
Wrush In"
New Vol
Bo* ' «n
24
I
terrac-
M ilfer
Club
' Wichita Full
, Waco
Houston
i Foi t W< »rth
K:t j A n t < m to
I ‘-'1. r •• rjM
Bcautn< ait
Dal .a v
Club
Pit tsbmvh
( hicau<
New York
St IzOUl*
Pt n d. | \ [ i
Philadelphia
Boston
em< mniit I
Atxive is a picture of the huge Diesel engine purchased by the city for the purpose ot enlarging the cap-
ac4ty i.l Hie muni, ipa'l water and light plant The engin*. an oil-burner, develops 80(1 horsepowet and cost >55.-
JOu I; is ready toi 'nipnient as soon us t.'w nev. niiiiiti 1 pal utilities building ts completed
both contests
at Beaumont
■Mlaj'r KestlUs
Philadelphia 4
1. . letiott J
I St tx.ul* 7
i.'velaiKl
Standlm;
M
71
I I •
Moto
; club w.t) be pl iy"i! Thur atay at
*! was de -Ktid i:n bv both ' ferent
:<■ (lay I' was *. heduled
bil’ ill
’’111 I !•<!<• I I,m..
st .out I ng
73
C H Berndt of Hebron was at-
tending the school but would not
enroll as a regular student Said 'hat
lie wanted to watch the work but
was not going to try to graduate
I am taking this course on ter
my own personal use." , tin
Koenig "I have several
need terracing and
m.<n
For l tie best terraces hud otf and I
built under (lie supervision of any of I
the s'udents at this school witinn
the next 12 months. H M Russell A '
Sons c > w Hl gi\e a Stetson hat For'
the ' (ond best the Record-Chroni-
< le will give a years subscription!
to Hie Daily Remember that it is1
not the biggest system but the best
designed and constructed M. T.
1‘nyne will <ither decide the ques-
tion < • appoin' a committee to de-
cide provided be is afraid of the con-
testants and wants to shift the rr-
: pore ibl.it v Remember that width
height aiul g.'iieriil (<Histruction will
count ;e iniKli as the designing of
Hie system and more In most cases
tcrra< ( that (omits und Hie
i builds the be* t one wears
The follow that comes next
up and read for a whole
Mil >ow< 11 - Jaci it>M*n Co. an-!
’ tint t he third iwst set of
v. .11 bi awarded a pocket
knife ( let bi; \
4.1
| nirtni n.’ t
Mr mt >h I*
| New Oi l
operated ! Atlan'a
Denton Hospital for ap- I
was reported do- I
ready to do it myself I have a man
ure spreader on the (arms and sev-
eral straw stacks which will be
spread over the field and plowed un-
der. In order to get the benefit ot
this fertilizing the land must be ter-
raced so that it will retain the fer-
tility. Not (4-.lv that but sweet ( lover
and other fertilizers will be used and
it is essential that the land be ter-
raced so that it will hold what is ad-
ded I want to be independent of the
other fellow and able to do my own
terracing when I Want >t done
I
"You have never seen any
ing on my farm," said
Faught "Just come around about
Christmas and see if that farm is
not terraced It will be terraced un-
less something happens to me (lint
1 cannot ion.ee or avoid."
r in W.
Mi.hi ..I
wmt.uig run i
the Pirates for I
.•even innings. Cl :.<• Dudley Brook- I
iyn reir'iit. tultirtd m the last two
innings and the National League i
leaders beat the Robins. 3. to 1. |
Ben Cantwell held the Gubs to
five hits and the Boston Braves
broke in a tout-game series with
Cine. 1 o by winiiin-: Hie flnil game
G to 2 Huck Wilson returmd t > the
flub*.' lineup after three days' su.s-
penston mid hit a double
Tlie New York G.lints inov d up
within 2 1-2 garni s of the -et aid
place Cubs Ir. be.iHn*' Cincinnati 8
to 5. i.weepu';' t lie tour-i’aiii" *,-rie
l.ind..trom and Cohen drove 111 ail
but one ot the G;anI ' 1111 r,
Jun Bottom'ev';.
tenth with two mate
H e st Loin., Card ; a 7 t > 4 win over
He also lut a h iiwr
Hi with 1,no on
Yi .terday s hero
Will relieved Waite
■ t < pi l'd a d ir. erou .
able.I the 1*1. a York
bea' th St 1 xi’ti,
. mi move w it bin
racing for my own pi’rsonal use." , tin* Philadelphia
said A G Koenig "I have several l utli hit h. ni"
farms that need terracing mid it Irnnih
was impossible to find a man who1 With
could do the woi k and I am getting | the Cli
' Atidi t i
ill'", th':
Whit.
<t t lu bi x
Hol.Im 1 til" 1'igi'r. to four hits !
Gmla.td Blast 111 pitched Washing- '
ton to a 2 ' > 1 vic'orv over De- *
tt.at Myr< . tuple miu West’s stni’le I
accounted tor the
After blanking
The sieond day of the school for
terracing was held on the Ben Fritz j
farm northwest of the city and at- (
tended by additional clasres. A new
class ot some sax men which includ 'd
W H Polser of Hebron. J L Stall-
ing.-. ot Denton. A G Kixnig ot Den
ton. C A Peteru 11 of Roanoke and
others who:,!' mini * were not obtain-
ed They were given intensive tram- '
ing in Hie use 01 the 1-vid and target .
and plated in the field Koenig
bought u new level and had it tested
mid tried He then proceeded to
famdianze himself with its work,
ing Tlie actual working oi the level:
was practiced bv laying oft terrace,'
and later plowing a furrow t
the Inn s easy to follow by tlie
mints to be used 111 building the let - j
race:. Terrmes were laid off pre |
paratoi v to Hie bmldn.g Wednesday
when demon.', t rat ants of terrace;
building as it should be were to be
given .
"I am ready to terrace mv
now and want to know how
it myself," said Omus Peterson
"This school is all right and I have
learned much bid want to l'-arn one
more thin;,' and Hint is confidence 111
myself and my ability to do the
things that I have been taught here
I believe that 1 know but I must
know that a know "
I;u '(I.*
I Mt *. S'.1 <' 1 rp< n11 r
Mrs Lvdia S Browder and her
son St phen Rowan Browder, of
IxAiisville Kv . arrived this morn
ing to visit Mrs J W Sullivan Mrs.
Browder is ty rbster of the late J
W Sullivan
Charles Nobe Adkisson is expect-
ed home tornbrrow from San Anto-
nio where he has been in training
In the Infantry dJvisVn at the
! Citizens' Military Training oamp
for the third summer He will enter
the eTachers College for the second
Mr
Mr«t
lev Is ill
Miss Mir.l’.ie
wen' an <
Ho .pit;' i I
Mr and
:‘H
j Mr and Mrs .I.ilin Collins wait
Roy Jones who lives in what the,'0 Monday where ( '.Ilin , was
boys cal) Little Arkansaw on Pilot!"'
Point Route 2. has been a student tn I a"
the school mid says that he thinks
that lie (an lay off terrace:, now
Anyhow both he mid Galen Shipley'
me going to liavc an opportunity I
to do tlwir ,'tutt when they get back I
home .
undergo examination following
illness of about to days
Ji ss Blanks, w ho underwent
| append!'itu o)x*rat um at the Den |
ton Hospital Sunday, was said to be I
doing nicely Wednesday
J W Wood, who was operated up- I
on at tlie Denton Hospital Julv 4.
was said Wednesday to lye recover-
ing rapidly
Miss Pauline Rodgers
tijx.n at 11
pendu Uis July 5
mg na-ely Wednesday
Mis 1.01,11. Davis, who underwent
an operation at the Denton Hospital
Julv 2. w.c- said to be doing nicely
Wi dm sdav
Layman Barter ot Krum, operated
upon tor appendicitis at the Den-
ton Hospital Julv 1, is doing nicely.
Mi s Grace Ginter, who has been
receiving treatment a; the Denton
Hospital for a broken leg. suffered
in an automobile accident some time
I ago was said to be doing nicely
Wednesday Her home is tn Califor-
nia
Mrs A Louise Beach, who suffer-
ed a broken hip when struck by an
automobile several week*, ago. was
I said to be recovering at the Denton
Hospital Wednesday
Mrs Mattie Forester is ill at the
fx-nton Hospital
J T Thompson is very ill at the
Denton Hospital
Galen Shipley of County Line. Pil- |
ot Point, Route 2. was attending the1
school nnd announced that he,
thought that lie could do the work j
Said that hr was going to try.
Lesders
' >" 1 '.i.m!
tie lit i,; Yank
Botti'mley, Cards 22
KI: in, Phillies 21
Card. 21
< 'ul.s 19
liimmont." AlhleHrs 19
Ruth, Yanks 18
( > Doul. Phillies 17
Jackson. Giants. 16
Ycsf • 1 days' hornet '
Bottomley. Cards mid Kelly
I wo e;i( h
Cohen. Giants; Bissonette. Dodv
ers; 1 Waner. Pirates. ODom
Phillies; Ruth Yanks and Mann, h
Browns, one each
Total
National League 444
American Lengiii* 316
lot til 760
t ( ri.'a I: ‘I was :le-'lded
1 tubs '.’'a:! ay I' was
to have I): "ii play cd July 1
1" S-. am:.! . tl.e Self paver.. :
to Clement
al >|
:i when th:
Worth lux! tie best of
111 t he first ( I two bat-
Wmth yesterday and
I h ■ end gmu ■ went
I'.ith i'.:’.the: t am scor-
ing then the Lomsianalans scooped
m thri c inns while port Worth tal-
ked once Shrevejxirt won, 3 to 1.
I' ala r :m t he mound
W I m •• Sox beat I be
to 4 mm i.mieved the
;am ", mil ot tour 'i’ll '
x dimv * Jaik Qumn out
1:1 the fourth
!!■ ill
If' vt
he ba
rally am! co - ‘
Y.uike, t >
Brow 11 . 8 to 7 !
7 1 it gam “s ot
Athletics Babe
m No 13 m th
1 i
1 1 \ \- 1
Tuesda v'
Wlch11 a Fat1 s 9-1
Wh<" !■().
Beaumont
Sin eport
Bv I'NITED PRESS
th,- third time in as many
the Texas Le > ue leadership
■ has fallen into th- hands of a dif-
team and today as a result
of defeatiii' Dallas in both games
<1 a double bill yesterday. 9 to 6 and
1 to 0 Wichita Falls heads the list.
Dall.e .'kidded to a t'.“ tor eighth
I late with the double defeat yes-
lioii ton and Waci divid' d a dou-
la' contest m H iusti n yesterday.
Waci v. hit, ashed the Houston
ti m th" h' t battle. As
is tan pill'. Houston de-
llo tlie I,.",mt no longer
; ; nd while washed Waco tn the sec-
1 : ml 1 ..111" 3 to (1
San Antonio Im t
a double h< ad* r
' 11 1 da;. 10 tn 4 and 7 to 6 The
itidiin lia.l tile seem.d practically
i won tint m the seventh Beaumont
'accounted for six inns to take the
game
F 1;
I Sin n t
"" I-mt
Wi l; ti to 4
I
WIRE BRIEFS
'!t
Uryctal Icr plant now open.
m(Ntt anything you might
All it reasonable
I
Sr leriea, sun shades, seat cov-
erp, jacks, pumps, horns,
brake lining, any kind of
U topis, ignition parts. In fact,
lit. need.
L prices.
BL 1 buy and sell used cars.
U. C. Travehtead
EL. 215 EaM Hickory Street.
*
r a
r •’
1
Auto Supply House
Practically anything for
the car. Tires, tubes, hat
Neb. July in Betting
in Nebraska is legal
District Judge
I vesterriav .11
injunct 1011 I
Interfereme with Ak Sar )
racing by State and County j
Tlie judge ruled that suc-
of the law cf Nebraska
i f 1 perm.t • < <.
(rMAHA
rm horse races
with the action of I
James M Fit Jerald
granting a permanent
Hgamst interferenre with
Ben racing by State and
officials
tio>‘ 159 o! the
under which ra
is eonst.it m io i.a]
PONCA CITY. July 10. Funeral
rites following the traditional Otoe1
Indian 24-hourf uncial feast was
completed today for Mrs Anna J.
Htaek wife of Sam Btnrk. oldest 11 v- j
mg chief of the Otoes The chieftain
and ins wife came iierc from Neb- <
raika in 1885
Mi KINNEY. Julv 10 Ix.cal j.hy-
Kieian;. are urging resident*, here to'
aid in further preventing tlie spread
of typhoid fever in this city by vtv - 1
cination Several cases of typhoid
have been reported and physicians
are doing their utmost to stamp out
Ute disease.
**' fl
wi
®*/l
t J!
F
I
- - - ______________-_______________________DENTON. TEXAS, XtCOBP-CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 19M
little Engine Purchased for Munici/Mil Plant
—Mm mm!
&
. RAPE FOUR '
fiMarket?
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i
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S'lt
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f
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fun<
R
and
that
the
for
that
emo
lilm
his
W
a rd
dtdi
expt
wen
lain:
lives
w
Utr:
Mthc
all t,
that
ble
peat
in t
W
Y<
Ci
(
v.ir
131
FRANK GETTY
SPEAKING OF SPORTS
; ■/. Hi SI 7
w
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 283, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 10, 1929, newspaper, July 10, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335755/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.