Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 91, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 28, 1925 Page: 4 of 16
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Japa" m th”
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gHbnF
bond
M founh 4 1-4s
Sau •—„f,
the Astatte continent is large, au
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-
•P
to anyone vlettie JeparM
While one •
Arut
F
and 3
ent fromite
dg
to
panies has been
economically sound;
result is MhL nervice3
a greater proportion
n’uni electric companies, totalling $81,
Hons of people and a w
he is ast at home.
ImportanosofVnited. Statsko
Japan
S’ "v
it is quite natural that we in
week
154,000 rolls, and there is actfve
=Ae
#
Bad Medicine AMERICAN WEAKNESS
IN CHEMICAL WARFARE
E
DESCRIBED IN REPORT
2
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ed
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%
118
8
it
Granat
IN TO END
A
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duetinn, the cheapest aldehyde avail-
No Jess Important was
research
E
ision,t
Ye
and.
utt
de mate-
ruaaas
21
□
in liquid
g
9
reufered5
sijM
f
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rbE
88
92"
-
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N
8285*82.
Eet
i
I
-
cupboards -into net uni resources for
American housewives and American
season
showu
*
for tha precious knowledge that will
enable them to transmute the poten-
jet closed
6
*
lr Me
er*
He
0
1
even el
tard m
eld Kit
:« end w
men, and many if Mt most
yodnger engimeers, bare hid
properties.
tiah, Gertsan
Hpmeht. the
5. 1
I HV
, 16 :lp
1:2 .
■ in the United States I
pie at consolidation ot
trie and certain other
panics into fewer and li
eeitn
=2
- By BURNETT WALKER
Vic President of Guaranty Com-
. and other
ratio with
oig. West
discusalon now o ttgh
tranamtasiom Unes of even
a
' 2
—
0 ,8
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rg
LTS DAIDO ELECTRIC POWER'T
LTD,
Emh
lij8m
----
g
■ 'I
S^sterl
ire 20101
22386.
Q
trinity in Japan is one of _
the outstanding and re
markable features of that
remarkable country. Most
".01
cbnte
ahempyhad
$-4
. -iei
by bagula-
ik, casein to
nufacture of
“penells and
hitherto u-
hm”
P
in.
—
A,
(
e-s
en
com to the consumer 4
same time greater am
' • teeaua j i
t int different elements and
ered a radical organisation of
Mrs
MMJ
remini
7.
be detected
e,300 calves,
mizea ship
e
,12
54, lad
-ts
-- M»*y et Mew York*---------
HE development of elec
/ , *
,oA
CLASSIRT
anne Goverment has floated an
Imho of $150,000.000 of its Govern-
meat bonds. Within approximate-
ly the' past year, in additten to
certain bank and private loans,
there hare been placed In fill mar
kat Are separate issues of Japan's
part of the world in terms of their'
importance to us rther than' is
toms o ew importane to .them.
’ , , .i, 12" -.
a..prpvi:
intin of
mg-/ re-
tiona. '
people la America win be surprised
at the statement that there is to-
.N
3) i
mib Ls
iAdss
-a
-'
*39,
AH*
4--
500,000 ■
Attitude Toward American and
British Capital
_ One at the most outstanding
facts in Japan today is the attitude
of their fnanciers, business men,
and governmental authorities to
ward American and British capital
No reasonable support is being
wiheld by them, and the require
ments of our own and British bank-
development that her electrical i-
dually. should be pushed forward
not unlike the way in which H has
been advanced in the United sektes
An
f-t.
tma2
*1
Fp
sf
al’an
Oy 24
dnny
-0/
#•3#
Edm8
-.7,
ar ter or q w n ,2 1 -
nenfsonudc2.-
7(4
MHREh82
e61M
now to a great extent is under the
1 of a few large, wdBSMS
nected systems serve many
ide rang
.m*
her large factories use electrically
driven machinery. By the end of
t»23, investment jin Japan’s eieo-
tric industry had mounted to well
over a biilon dollars and in total
XSSXTS
end flerWT Tht "-hn* appeal
and picturesqueness of Japan,—the
=
E
t"tet sirs
*
enjoyed their bet gridiron
An-several years. Thex had
As mpeh sass agains ' "—
ommon foe, as had
a"
- "u*
6*6850
",2
i tow
182
d
15
transmtssion. Which in itself la ope
of the -eutstanding accomplish-
ments of recent years, has now
ruunap
w*=c
dtial tred-
scale with
a improvt-
fertile, 45c
per dozen;
br puekingH
r 206 per Jb.; black
per tn plant
■ lie per 1b.; tur
are still there, but the development
of-hereleotrlearindustrys maea-
tive of Japan’s attainments in our
preset day industrial world.
How Japan Developed Electric
- ’ s Power
The industry had its start in
Japan almost as long ago as in any
other country. Small units were
!AKKET
ey-i *
erib; fryer. M
roosters 5c per
Hdeksand
spgpe 8s 588822 4
E adhd
S HT
here nt hintz-
plan for a.new
known *3 the Amer, -et seturt,
market. They rank hh in the be 3
Informed engiueerinz and mvest.
mentcircles in Londop. aM certain r
of them are known in governmeniar
quarters in London hi connectton » 4
wiih fnancing Oder tTe Britin 1e
Trade Facihtes Aet, But it’tsnos
uninteresting nr uzitmportaut pg ‘
know that at home, in Tekyo and
Osaka, the big fnancifventere of
Japan, where the intimate detalla
of each company ar-wel known.
Philosopier’s Stones— ever seeking
,X
■. Xd
-si
-------
1
e,3
I
Fe
use for it. But metallurgists came
to its aid and after years of experi-
mentation, produced the metal in
this country at a comparatively low
production coat. It now is used in
the construction of battery chargers
and device, for delivering direct cur-
. 88: Mn 11
Estella G./»
O-x 30
1
- -
"V2
I WW -w-
I Ah’ma
, rent to the plates of radio tubes di-
:— -----------------------------------tieeSly-feem the lamp .tykafu .Ta_a
__.. I limited extent. Tantalum also is us-
i vd in the manufacture of certain
NEW YORK, Nov. 28. Working in ' surgical-instruments.
. lions 6c
t13 per lb,j
____ cidozen; ' cab-
*mhtMe 15c per
lippers Me per 1b.; car-
per 1b.; oranges 50c to
20c to 25c per
obscure laboratories. American chem -_____ .. %
ists today are devoting their wizard- : 1. Atomie Discoveny
dry in an unheralded search for new I . Using, the largest diffractiongrat
• ing in the world, American Sclentist8,
by separating chlorine into isotopes,
hash produced a heavy chlorine of
different atomic weight from the
original element, a feat which re-
sulledi-tm "firstwreighable- en+
earlier this year spent
pan fnvestigcting with
Ama anapanese ex-
nuln of the Japanese
try and wan in touch
spa new elertrtg comn-
sort of things the Westerner pits
tures as typical of that country.—
. -
- —4
pn5
Complete candor with the public is a development
of the day’s business enlightenment. In New York
the Gimbel Brothers’ great store recently advertised
in page spaces That October sales were $13,300,000,
' a gain ovrlast October of $1,900,000. Another con;
, spicuous instance of business candor was exhibited
at San Franeiseo last week by Granat Brothers, man- -
ufacturing jewelers, who took a five-column news-
paper space to explain to the public that advertising
is not a tax upon the consumer.
This piece of copy, signed by Jay ‘Haight, the ad-
vertising manager of the store, is a classic. In heavy
display it asks: “Who Pays the Advertising Bills?"
A Granat advertisement in a Sunday newspaper, it
eras shown, cost >800, and Mr. Haight declared: That ,
: ‘ advertisement brought >16,000 in sales, costing 5 per '
cent. It is so year in and year out. Does it raise the
price of the diamond ring you select? Does it add
a further tax upon your pocketbook? We believe
not. The advertising increases sales and as a result
the ratio of other expense is lowered. Whether we
sell >1,000 a year or >100,000 a year, the rent is the------
same.
of a
each of these four companies sow
represenkative of Ako best type et «
n
tntion at skimmtd milk an investi .
«eation that resulted in aseth plas '
=
I
-t--y ’ wSM
a:
ugpe
la going into he okpetric sM»tihas
4a Japan, Ma oqutpment andzep,
and state sMBtMBttea aso m
much like those in the United
States that the American visitor
has to think twiee to reallie that
progressed tozush a point that in
Japhn enere®® tranhported eci
nomically for a distance of approx
Japanese enterprise.
ths United States bought ove 41 1
per cent, of her tots’. as agi nn’
taps than Sf per cent. for the rest of I ‘ ,b 2
namesnoreheldheworid, .cpi .__
fa the matter of capital. within
about a year and a half the Jap-
This remarkable store publicity then goes on to
• show that the average overhead expense of 394 retail
jewelers last year, as certified by the Harvard Bu-
- reau, wag 38.3 per cent of their sales, but Granat___.
- , Brothers expence was 25.2 per cent Many of these
jewelers did not advertise. Their combined sales
"tT WAched >34,978,000 and their net-profits -was only
42 1.2 per ent qf sales. Granat Brothers sold their . _
goods at about 8%‛per cent lower gross profit than „
the average, but made 5% per cent net on sales.
, I. A. Orchestra furnished
» the occasion,
anquet kali was decrated
I roses. -l,------—2‛ee
I
!
Wortane of the United
Japan Take the N, .
y tagnnc. electricat eqmipment kur
: bhen,\bollers and the hiejare to
he seeikyal most everywhere. per-
alons are carried on almost os*
e Waive y by Japanese enzmebrs.
but om usuali teds that the head
IVI a M--*- wa "PP--" ------• ---—--ne
matey 200 miles at a tension of tance and b continuing to
creae in facities to take ad ran
* . . ... ‘
,2 9
ar
----g
. 13 2
-
ca
3 2‛*2
U ad,. A
: Lena Bl
•
-e--
merl res oompanies mnu-
industries in districts cover lag
larre areas. This diverettuntton
of load in Japan, as it the United
States, has given the electrical m
dustry certain of Its most essential
elemenis of stahilitxiandetrenst.
American Infuence in Industry
The Influence eg America in the
industry to immedlately apparemt
"eg -3 ■ ... -
, tie. material; Prepare
’ 22 tion from skimmed a
hat day is used in fhe r
"Nifountain pens, nutoue
instead oft
ed rubber at
2522
NH*SN9NM Daren
t
MSCOTTON NN
Nv.AMarket
uhanea in the Lnfted S. ,
bohzht from Japan n '
year approx Imat.y 95‛ne-
Oft onr total iinpota .‛n
email proporticn to buy ' ca
single eountry», b-Jupn sd "1
over 41 per cent, of her total vn
seas shipments. Her. trade r .
i - .
—mA,
k wax the natural ice
$ Yale would battle
cad ••H. with a slim
Japan and its extension is A’R
of the future program in Ohe id
try. This development gives ___
of the large companies the ndvan Pe
tages of connecting with the lnes .
their .use impossible until plated
withrust resisting ehromium-
. ,s nupurwucm--. Heutitreatmentofnickle-fron al-
into the potential commercial utili- l leys, a process which resulted in a
--te.. L _______ -ilk, an inveqti- i revolutionary change in the opera-
. . • . tion of submrine cables..
Ethylene, a cham leal used in the
eqlortion to maturesyellow
ened, but green fruit. Fruit- -oranges
oexlemohi—that are ripe for the
eromiennihe
meat. EN has 'eared agrienlturtoto
#> fi
......—- ==
——
a
--
g
kg,";- • :• /dm
hSk.l. addddddi
============----===.
aC-mD-™E
L over 37 per cent < f h r f > e
“new l»14; Doc old
new 16 36; May 1.00
miri to mowe.inte KtoAdord-JUJJ-M-
its completion and who broke the
dirt for the foundationa of Smith;.
Carroll Hall, gave remimiscehces of
C. LA when she was bore. „ 17-dny-old
Hune Har krider.Eradohaw .f orats mot
QTEh, zi raduate, •
eence ofC. I. A. during her
andi,in certain parts of Europe.
ol >e electmtemtg indugrk > apan
-fortunately recognises its hmpor-
254 hgiher ang
e75#"e2:
M deproMat ta-
rot Hoge bold wen-
,“2
ta a ; manors >»
762t0 «■: laht
UM to 1100; com-
is M to UM; pack.
..
J
the direction of Orville J. Borchers
sang four numbers, "The Bell Men".
“Rain”, “Listen to the ambs",
“Dawg" and as an encore “The Al-
phabt".
OF MINERS E*#
—t- -Hu** of c J A" by Miss
B "Pa. Nev. "28.2 Ruth West, *28. Mrs. Atlee ne Yearx
d‛t Ga. "hmittna Standifer, ’ll, who was the f
visible material ever produced with
an atomic weight differing from
the ordinary element. This step was
the first actual separation of an
caine only after years of systemnti ■
organic chemical research in a field
in which mhny acientista had labor
ed long and unsuceessfully •
-E The inode rn production of Furfur
‘al, a tre nendously important organ
TecheTrat m"mtustryrtsmether
Lbrillinnt page in American chemi-
rent achievements. Experimentmg
with out hulls, a by-product in the
preparation of breakfast cereal, with
n view to utilising the huheu fuel,
the savants accidently stumbled up
On a secret that chemioally trented
into glue or fertilizer. Blood albu-
min and haemoblobin are the prin-
cipual products.
Pyrex, the heat-resisting, low ex-
pansion glass, now used in arc lamps,
baktesy--pazta,flaska,„heakera._and
teat tubes used in laboratories, ra
+o insulalore, evaporating . and
chafing dishes and other cooking
utensils-
Chromium- piating, the eheathing
of other metals with • layer of chro-
mium plating by an etestto-chemical
proeees. This process has enabled
the um of other metals in industry
whose susceptibility so rust made
of other compamtes and otigteg
change of power on a mutually ad-
vantageous basis. 1
As a country situated zeograph-,
fcally much like England, Japan**
great progress, almost certainly, is Japan, where the eledtric
to be along industrial lines. Her k. . ...
people are epiendid industrial, W control „ _ _______
well as agriculturat, workers, and aged companles. Their inter
Iniyiew of this industrial pregreM —-J ---------------
It 11 a natural and, in fact, essential
almost entirely In small steam sta-
tiona. Water-power was not then
being used an it to today. To carry
power over transmission linos for
more than a very few miles was out
of the question because of the loss
of power in transmission. But the
development of long-distance
#
euma.
I
eta out hulla give large qunntities of
re furfuralat a low coast, with the re-
suit it in today. with acientifie pro
voltage. The counterpart ok tt
the nun dtee—e> “euper pMW
system, is already in exist OMe
- forirn trate. it mter—-r
portance to ‘apan
sheiworkig Will 121
diitgence. TheY iz_
- nd significant In .42 t - •
statea sold jipih !+-" th: •
I
I
11
to 1*der**-o2*
__the annual fall banquet of the
Exstudents’ Association in the 1
F/iiYC ri
A
^lt futures
sod sates os the
ITmeceedaya
g=, -wer,
ok the edge off
opening a it v n nr,■
4 akbra A mand nan .
I to cover by buU
ta tate selling.
MeeAA8
9
M I
it is quite patural that we in ets and business men are being
A-2*-"-etszimpinag ’
Japanese intrests ’ are atready
■Ds MMM: atock-
sady; steek cows
12 hihet; atock
redzfs
3;
k uneven, shipper
Mdy^b
■I
' I
' l
=
Ap.probeu nEroarr.gropuruou established li many citles in the
off M008e8 1g1ted electrically in g i * o 40, 4,4
Japan than to any other country in late 80oand carl Theae Ars
the wertd net wn excepting the onein.T’ky® in 187 nheseemr.
United Starex. Practically all of companles generated their power
camp trit n ;.< gch ajt
stock ar funded d 1
Thefurlen , ;• •
prises of Japa C .,-1no .",
Daido (Great ‘onmgvf ane
Ujigawa ) tmpaniex: \rr j, ca. 4
Falm Grden of the Adotphus Ho- ■
tel a Dallas Friday night ss the 2
Dr. PBlayne told the ex-students I
of the prestige the college gained ■
recently through Hat admiasion to B
Association of Amerkean University 9
and College wmenHe told the 18
body of the flag presented to each 0
succeeding senior dais by the class V
of "25, and of the things the flag .
itand* ftvi otastatae tbs four ’
scornerstones of Amertcan etvihizn-
tion, the home, the j lw,rthe Church
andtheschool 5
More than 100 person*! were
present at the banquet, it was ex-
imated. Mrs. F. M. Bralley, wife .
of the late president of the inati- A
ution, and Mrs. E. Pa Turner, mom- L
bar of the board of regents, and Dr. ■
and Mrs. Lindsey Blayney were I
omongt he honor guests. I
The Dallas chapter of the Ex- I
Students Associatoni was hostess of ■
the occasion. Miss Katharina I
Loughlin of Dallas was toastmts- I
treas, introducing Miss Core Rey: I
nolds, who made a short address of
greeting. Miss Loughlin then spoke 1 1
on the Dallas C. I. A. -Club, after I
which the C. I. A. Glee Club under I
year term for killing a cell
the jail who taunted htmepmoucs,
sponsibilityfor the death oLMaX‛
chud. . Jabir
tick. Baek in 1914 the EUe had
tial wealth nowlocked_in Nature’a
"22:
-- ■ ae0"“ :
mg Taletof/h)tidesa
E "di ““
DR. BLAYNEY SPEAKS
(AT CIA EX-STUDENTS.
BANQUEL IN DALLAS
■ __________________ • I
I "Speaking of the distinction be- I
• tween a college and a university I
) and expressing the hope that C. L l
A. would .remain "a college. Dr. j
Lindsey Blayney, president of the
College of Industrial Arts, address I
+j
i,, el
' industry.
Between the housewifa and the
captain eLjndustry and the ores of
the earth are these- virtually un-
— known alehemists, delving into in
finity and atoms in a ceaseless
search for new secret, new elements
and new products. ------
1 ...... Vast and importantas This work
by American chemists has begn. few
realize the actual magnitude of the
progress of the art in this country.
It win a new field for American
brains, a field in which Europe, the
birthplace and ifor cenkturies the
home of scientific arts, had been
pre-eminent. But American wizard
ry triumphed once more.
America Accomplices Much
The American Chemical Society
has outlined a few of the important
. developments of scientific research
in this country during the last few
decades. Save to the savants them-
selves. the names of the chemists
who made these discoveries sre gen-
erally unknown.
For examples. Bakelite, that hard
synthetic resin used in cigarette
holders, radio dials, radiator cans
or timing gears of ths automobile.
Discovery of this important material
“A UV 42}
_"1- mzmhn”
MM-
H-
PMB, A
i ■ 02
-60
A 11V
A------
7 o--
===easet*EEEE
di-
",*52
Amhefr -- -
ert,oh;kja ' 221"
h-elepEeee
714 - ■ W- -
N*4* '
VkOMAHASHI HYDRO
3f°5—.
x%- h2
? 2 4a
—
-
fair return to the owners euu vpe .. - . . . A,
Aters of the properties. This Baais f their rain g Al
development has taken place - ta
the theory of primary elements
Chief among the accomplishments
in the field of chemical warfare
haybeen. the, laying, of. falling
smokescreens from airplanes by dis
charging the smoke-producing ma-
terial through motor exhausts; the
Stokes mortar shell, the explosion of
which generates a heavy pall of
smoke for land screening, a.distinet.
ly American teargas caPr-d “C. N“
( chloracetophenone); the “C. N."
hand prenad. and cartrtgea whiah
fire this gas, and the McBride gas
gun', a weapon that .discharges a
iachrymal gas- into the faces of ad-
v melhg troops.
Originally a militar weapon. -
‛nur gas’’ neger he.csn hat found
important appliance in peace times.
Police have found it an effective in-
strument? •
Other important discoveries made
by American chemists during the I
last decade include»
Utilization as food values of the
principal protein products of -blood
drhWH from slaughtered ayimals,
1 previously regarded as waste pro-
I ducts available 'only for conversion
(8 ’ i,1
KCE < ;
—-eh---
liUliiy.1 til.
brave, -who wes rleased from. A
charge of murder aft r he hurtedhis
— ‘ I ppoobe alive in the,gravo
of Ha mother. Ite did this, he 8ay5i
at the instgation of Mormon 1306
Cuthatr. elow, aged Ute medicine
man. Cuthair is now serving.. 25
hr-
—F---—
us*d
I l
I 3,15
I *1
E-S
Ea
b 8
24ee
"Advertising," wrote Mr. Haight, “increased sales
to a joint when we could afford to sell our diamonds
a and jewelry at lower prices to you and still make a
nt-1-profit-for nnnelveo. That 4s- having y»ur —----
cake and eating it, too. So our customers did nt
pay for the advertixing in increased prices. Who did
’’ then pay for the advertising We’ll tell you the an- .
a- swer. ur competitors in the jewelry business, chief-.
.. ■ ■ ‘ ly those who do not advertise, paid for our advertis-
/if . ing. They paid for it in trade that slipped, away
from them to us. They paid for it in the new cus-
!s .- .
, ‘ profit^ and low net cost. 1110/ paid for Itln smah
*
= 0 *- ■; • • |
. gmedezesa
■ • ■ ■ V
nmc
grvnsac
i0 in’ e‛ ? •
-tv* wfs
Sa 1 5
8j
if tags of this constantly growing de-
mod ’
! Control of Industry in Strong Hands
WHO PAYS FOR ADVERTISING?
(Editor and Publisher.)
aumbir
PMSmc
"Fh
2’ 2
vershties and perbaps aae la th
bent of our own lectrie companles
I
T‛ "
sm • - -
r ANASHNMASTEAM POWER ALANTOFTaa.
| ELECTRIC POWER. CO Ltd.
L ^.,..,^^3 ; ......
y fea
k " l . - Hut i may not be unintert*
those from Denton who
ar. Misees Mie Ue
rances Olver, 1 Katherine
Ijfurit Canon. CoraaE.
Helen Thelma
5tev|k;Ty.ck>T, "Marly Sanp
Qe$ ■ Anton, 1ean ke V
--
IC PLANT OF THE TOKYO ELECTRIC, _______
i 18,720* erFECTE HEA-
—......
iah.
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Edwards, W. C. & McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 91, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 28, 1925, newspaper, November 28, 1925; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475080/m1/4/?q=Christmas+AND+slave: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.