Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 280, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 6, 1935 Page: 2 of 8
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DENTOK TEXAS, MUX>M»-C!mONlCIA MATUKDAT, JULY «, 1W
T
L.
•-2
7
F
010/2
•Stand up straighk. Mary.” "Let
€
to bear down on representatives fromthbte home
districts.
An unconvinced dongreaman could m rather care
s=
1
4
u > * *
gq
5,
hen, tall, drawling) philosophioa- andran some re-
and keenly conscious or their
These two were co-authors hot thegdcurities, stock
market and holding compumy pin. Discspies of Dr.
industry which has been disturbed
ed the New Deal after some years or inside experience
in Wall Street
J
own
his own interests.
tenderfoot pin; Johnnie Mae Mil-
it tropical fish, it was carved from cherry
tri
4*--.
in eectii
******
Monday—At Night,
I COURT HOUSE
Monday—Trichinosh: L
GIRL
AT
scour
)
NEWS
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Joe I. Evans, Thursday. a boy.
to cover the Lout
York to flash many surprises buchardly, a man who
would return lost comn.i
« tim lead at the close of the Bunday’s
2
Governor James E. Perguson
Groups 3 and 3, served
BUY IT IN DENTON
C
ALWAYS REMEMBER
Wyr
through the trees.
I
SPECTAE THIS WEEK!
Good Insurance
Isn’t Cheap
t___
THE WILLIAMS STORE
w,
• I
THINK IT OVER
-
FOR GOOD THINGS TO WEAR ,
bill in the ouse.
I
%
Telephone and
For the “power trust" was frantic. Its lobbyists
4 - ‘
-
■ I
l
\\
'j
-28-- ’
F
uhn’s tip!
have the
JUST
AMONG US
HMXS
Some 3,600 drinks of grapefruit
juice were prepared for Kiwanians
attending the international conven-
tion, in San Antonio.
consits essentially to making a care-
ful examination of the mental ac-
tivity of the patient, as well as the
MM
128
derfoot- pin; Bettye Frances Knox,
tenderfoot pin; Doris Timkin, ten-
derfoot pin; Varina LeBeau, ten-
derfgot pin; Lob Taylor, tenderfoot
pin; Lois Taylor, tenderfoot pin;
citizen, the
fought his
battles, protected
and carved his
• MU
6
nambulism or sleep walking ran a
close second. The sleep walker was
make all that trip with the help
now of only his four legs. He did
not want to take a chance acept-
l
Attendance Contest
interests T. E. L.
Purity Bakery
Phone 106
tion and Rip was on his way.
He thought of the terrific dis-
30c
per Doz.
tenderloot pin; Ila Belle Ellis, ten-
derfoot pin
t
would get back home. His little dog
heart was brave
/83
1>
red
sct
eie
Me
an
iva
tal
n
me
th
S
co
*" eie:
FILLED •
BUNS
. A J. COOPER.
Southwestera Ln Lnguranee nop
Insurance And Annuities
Telephone 510-w
102
Good Grade Of
Outside Paints
All Colors
e
‘9
233
: ton to speak, much to his regret, according to a let-
- ter from Secretary of State John G. McKay to Judge
• S. M Bradley, the letter being received Thutsday, it
M
wi
pi
. I
of
fa
f al
Sax Roldner has gone back to London. . . . The
English mystery tale writer and creater of Dr Fu
Manchu has grounded himselt thoronghly in New
York, but insists on doing his writing at home .w
Wish I had been on the Zarempo aa she slunk out
of New York harbor the other day.u . . Of nil sau-
J. J. Maclachlan
INSURANCE '
Phone 365
308 Smoot-Curtis Bldg.
CI
tl
By Mary Graham Bonner___
RIF’S BARRING TALK
In the meantime the dogs were
pulling at Rip saying he had stolen
their bone. Rip did not know what
to _do guddeny he cried:
“Wait, H give you your bone if
in the galleries, tnke, sat liign officials and agents
of Aasoctated Gas and Electric, Commonwealth Edi-
son. Chase National Bank Pabies Service ot Naw
Jersey, the Edison Elctrie Institute, and dodens of
other utility groups. Aea 24 : . I
They had spent mhhons ofdollnets to beat Rooe-
velt’s attempt to divest the giant holding companies
of management cortroleover thousands or local -op-
erating companies. ■ tae waet bokcane campanae
slight and ignore their social errors,
however glaring One would cer-
tatmy try to put a friend or a new-
corner at ease and one might do
as much for one’s children.
THE LORD’S COVENANT;. But
this shall be the covenant that I
will make with the House of Israel.
After these days. saith the Lord, I
»lll put my law in their inward
parts and write it in thetr hearts;
and will be their God and they
shall be my people.—Jeremiah 31:33.
They stopped pulling at him.
4 “If you’ll listen to me or search
me quietly. I haven’t taken it. rm
lost and I’m trying to find my way
back home," he continued. "Ive had
a terrible time. Some people thought
I was a stray dog because they
found me wandering around with-
out my collar. They decided they
would ave me a home and they
first took me in an automobile be-
fore I had a chance to do anything
then on a train, then from the sta-
tion to the beach near here and
I’ve escaped. You can see the leash
is still attached to me.
“I wish you could get it off of
me."
The dogs reatized that what. Rip
was telling them was so and they
admired him for his pluck and the
effort he was making to get home
They bit at the leash until they
got it off and they all wished him
the best of good dog luck. ....
I
' I
dustry makes a real fight.” said a powerful Southern
public utilities magnate in a letter recently received
by an official here, "it can command more influence
than the American legion and the American Fed-
। ration of Labor and a dozen other organizations be-
That boast was put to a dramatic test in the in-
dustry’s fight against the Roosevelt public utilities
♦ Bn TAIT FOB
cannot come to Den-
et, according to a let-
h’s
JR
.TH
M
kZa - '
Ik- . 351
i ■ F
Q"RA
years, however, sentiment has grown
rapidly oxer the agricultural section
and tn the ranks of the Democratte
party in favor of tarrs for farm
produeta, as weil as for manurac-
tured goods. It is logical that if
products of the factory are to be
protected. raw materials should be
also, and additiona agricultural tar-
iffs probably would be at material
aid to farmers in these days of un-
certamties. The Fort Worth Star-
Telegram makes the follow mg com-
ment on Jones’ speech. and quotes
from it:
BARBS
TCopyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.)
9444
"ss,n,,
fight, sheiexpected. New
+-******** tance lie had traveled on the train
• and knew that he would have to
Mambee Audit Bureau of Otroulattona
Asndctateg Prem and nited Prem Barvise.
Membar Tezma Daily Prem League.
- . PONEs
eusinem and zaitorial ______________
Clrcntatum bprtmmens -----------
Long Moves to
Tighten Reins
Over Louisiana
Record-Chronicle mailed to
you. Then you can keep in
touch with “The Newfan-
gleg” every day.
,3L
COST OF DRY WEATHER
- A comparison between the use of water in Denton
at the present time and during the first part of July
last year reveals how much water Denton citizens
used in a futile effort to keep lawns and shrubbery
live during the worst drouth in recent years. While
the daily consumption of water now is around a mil-
ion gallons, last year the city pumped an average of
1 809,000 gallons during the same period,' and on a
tew: days the peak consumption was much higher.
some citizens are now sprinkling their laws, and
dhrubs, but the 50 percent higher consumption last
qummer is a pretty good index of how much the
drouth cost local property owners in water bills alone,
in order to keep Denton looking as attractive as pos-
sible in spite of high temperature and lack of rain-
tall So far this year the moisture in the son from
recent rains has been sufficient in most places to
keep grass and shrubs fresh, but a few more days
of hot weather and the sprinklers will be going to
keep up this city's reputation for attractive lawns.
19 Years Ago Today
(From Record-Chronicle, July 6. 1910)
The Denton Fire Department is planning for an
tenderfoot pin and second class.
Profeiency and Merit
The following in all troops re-
ceived proficiency or merit badges:
Ellie Whitmore Health winner,
hestess, needlewoman, scholarship,
cyclist, motorist; Evelyn Whiteside-
Child nurse, cook, dressmaker, first
encouragement Youngsters are suf- l
ficlently wretched when they tind
themselves in a strange crowd, with-
out having all their shortcomings
and faults noticed and enaphasized
They are probably on their beet be-
haviour, anxious to do the right
wouldn’t stand still to be counted, but there seemed
- no reason to doubt a commonly accepted estimate
" Kiat it had assembled between 100 and 600 of them
HE _
. s the Yerk Academy • Mp
a Ok IAGO GALDSTON
n*0,*e Moubepu. 2001 E
Early in the morning of the biggest day of debate,
a small, grim group sat in an office high in the RBC
building. Chier tigures thert were young Tom Cor-
coran. brilliant. tireles. fugt-wonkcnig and Ben Co-
When John Mortimer Rutherford and his bride
checked into the Vanderbilt hotel the other evening
he was returning to the place where he first saw the
light of day. Moreover, he was the first baby to be
born in that holstery, Tom OMally, who remembers
the event well, assures me O’Mally. long a New York
hotel guan has been with the, Vanderbilt since the
day it first, opened. 2 - < —esusu
Sign In Hixsn avenue "Faces Lifted Without ct-
Ung; Noses Reshaped' You could hardly pee
Lily Pons when she boarded a fast train for the
coast the other day She was carrying a bouquet of
six dozen red roses. . . Mrs Hazel Taylor, of Des
Moines, Iowa, doesn't need a lantern in the middle
of the day to find an honest man. . . . She found one
in the box office of a metropolitan theater, where she
left $ In change lying on the till. . . Noting the
loss and chancing to pass the theater next day, she
approached the ticket-seller and inquired after if.
.. . "Certainly.'' cried the agent, passing out a sealed
envelope. Inside were the missing dollar bills . .
Herd with her husband, a Des Moines sports editor.
2
"MILLING/
OKANIZATNONS,
TAKE THE CEDAR-CKESr)
FOLKS ALONG ON VOUR
VACATION ! THEY'LL HELP
NYA HAVE A GOOP TIMEI
girl or boy who is starting out to
society needa self-confidence and
Lawyers, power company omcials, bankers, and
others had been brought to from neanly every state
0,
79
■■ I $
togs to recent months here was most intriguing. eLe onIP
Site’s taking the long haul to the Congo, the hot. “oUTSS
steaming tropics. where the Eastern princes used to
trade with their spices and silks and ayes. . And
where, according to Edgar Rice Burroughs, a guy
named Tarzan (maybe he »UH does) used to swing
of suffocation within a few hours under bags of tele-
grams from constituents. Back went the word from
Washington to turn the heat on him. • at Ea
tenderfoot pin; Avo Vermillon,
tenderfoot pin; Juanita Jarnigan,
- was not an answer to the invitation from 150 Denton
, « citizens, that being, it is expected, answered more
2 formally later.
* ---------------------■
“ Behind Scenes in Washington
By RODNEY DUTCHER
• NEA Sendee Staff Correspondent
# WASHINGTON, July 6.—-When the electrical in-
2 to work upon doubtful members with every device
F known to the lobbyist’s art.
3 • ■
your gloves?" "Don't fidget when
you are talking’’ “Did you shake
hands with Mrs 2?”
And when they got home, “You
must be more gracious in your man-
nen What possessed vou to be so ,
tactless with Mrs. Y?” |
Mary began to be as nervous and
m-nt-ease as her mother and also
dreadng going out and meeting peo-
pie.
Constant criticism, never pays. The
MS
spacta the outstanding legal expen ot the-New Deal the ptuation of egricuuture ando-.
These two were co-autnorsht theadcurities, stock tne basie reasons for aational leg- thing an
istation intended to redress the par- defcienc
\(H SO-JOLLY MILLERS
services, over the side captained by
Mrs J L Wright The annual bas-
ket picnic was set for Aug. 4 to the
City Park Reports were heard from
group captains. During a social
session, the hostesses, members of
of somnambulism. The treatment
farmer could have
Dorothy Milter,
NOTICE To TAE PUALIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
tton or stanaung of any firm, individual or corpra-
.ion iriU be glsdljr corrected upon being called to the
The kseocteted Presa la exclusively entitiea to the
um for re-publication at all newe dlepMefiee credited to
.o nottherwizsasrediced.n thia paper and stao the
Sa news puD-lsned herein.
DENTON, Txas, JULY «. 1935
COUNTY PAROLE BOARDS
The Texas prison system lias reached its maximum
- apacity and the only possibility ot making room for
asw prisoners is to pardon or parole sufficient in-
mates to make room for new arrivals. The abuse at
the pardon and parole privilege to recent years has
caused Governor Allred to be rather careful in ex-
ending executive clemency, but last Wednesday in
Erady at a luncheon to his honor he suggested a plan
>.hereby the established luncheon clubs of each coun-
ty would be asked to appoint a county parole board
to whom worthy convicts may be paroled and to whom
Mey may report regularly. Governor Allred said that
he is convinced that a large number of the men in
prison would go straight upon being paroled if some
cal group would show a little interest to their wel-
fare.
— to August Texas voters wil decide whether the par-
c on privilege the State Constitution now extends to
ihe Qovemor will be modified to require approval of
Lie State Pardon Board Even M the pardoning power
b taken from the chief executive. Allred's plan
to set up county parole boards is a sound and work-
rHs idea At present convicts are paroled to indi-
<riduals, but often this individual is unable to see
that the paroled convict is given the necessary help.
Furthermore there are many in prison who do not
kave a substantial friend to whom they may be
paroled and consequently stay behind bars longer
than those who have a little influence.
The moment a prisoner is placed within the peni-
i entlary walls he begins to count the days until he
13 freed. Extra allowances for good behavior and the
possibity of parole are something worth working for
and are pretty good indications of whether a convict
is ready to make a determined effort to go straight.
A wise parole system not only will reduce the Texas
prison population, but will aid those who are released
to get a new start. Governor Allred's suggestion
d be tried, '___.; _
CHEAP INSURANCE
ISN’T GOOD
The group of young New Dealers—between a shower
of telephone calls on two or three phones— were re-
ceiving their orders of the day
Crisis had arrived. Administration leaders had vir-
tually deserted the president, after a conservative
coalition on Raybum's committee, led by Democrats
Huddleston of Alabama and Pettengill of Indiana,
had knocked out the provision requiring dissolution
of holding company control.
The bill was really drafted as an “emancipation
proclamation" which freed local power companies
from rule by a few men in New York and turned back
the management so that operating companies might
fun themselves again while holding companies, func-
tioning as investment trusts and divorced from man-
agement. might go on holding investments in any
number of companies.
Perhaps a few wavering congressmen might still
be convinced of this. So saying, the young New Deal-
ers marched toward Capitol HUI for the final death'
struggle.
’Copyright. 1935. NEA Service, Inc.)
T8888
12
8
2 Mrs. C- O. Orr of Little Elm. sister-in-law of Ex-
= Sheriff W. C. Orr, of Denton, was bitten by A dog
- Thursday afternoon that is thought to have been
T suffering from hydrophobia. The dog had fits dur-
ig the morning and after it bit Mrs Orr was killed
- and the head sent to Austin for inspection W C.
# Orr expects to hear from the physicians at Austin
# by Friday night end If necessary Mrs. Orr win be
= taken to Austin for treatment "g -
hee—- hAM
A doctrine of a tariff for’ all or
a tariff for none was enunciated by
Congressman Manin Jones of Tex-
as in an address to Congreas on pro-
posed AAA mendnientsc. The prin-
aaple of a tariff, 1s really not right,
but the tkiposiUon of tariff may be
mecesumty, as We see At. Punda-
mentadly.ak would seem to us that
ewerytaoctv shoutd he free 10 grow
Ot omantacture what he rap and
sen what he pleases, without re-
striction at tariff charges. But the
complexity of world affairs un-
jdaubtedty makes this impractiable,
and 013 tariff system which lias
69gdo.,
2612
6 s1
i' 5
Talks wS
to 0 o,“
parent^
By Brooke Peters Church
own niche to the afairs of our
common country:---------------- ------- a
" We grow used to certain things
and they seem commonplace A new
practice causes comment. It is inter-
esting to hear business men criticise
the farmers,for adjusting their pro-
duction when they themselves have
been practicing the same tiling for
years and take it for granted.
Through depression years, industry
in the main reguced its volume and
largely maintained its prices. Agri-
culture largely maintained its vol-
ume and its prices were greatly re-
duced. The whole philosophy of the
agricultural adjustment program is
to apply business principles to ag-
riculture. -T7—
" 'We all recognize the importance
of World trade Of course, other
countries will have to recover before
they can purchase our commodi-
ties in large quantities. Much of
their trade during the period froth
1915 to 1929 was carried on with the
money they borrowed trom us. Il is
not of very great value if you have
to furnish the money to the man
who buys your commodity, but as
we get out of the mist of this thing,
of course, our world trade must be
increased "
TEACHING POISE
In company Mrs. X was a nerv-
ous fidgety woman. She had never
learned ease of manner or quiet
poise. she was self-assertive, tact-
less and made herself and all about
her uncomfortable whenever she
yeut. The secret at her behaviour
lay in the past when she had come
to the city to live. A small town girl
herseir, she had felt criticism evan
when it did not exist and had be-
come too keenly aware of betng
a center at unflattering comment.
Unfortunately alu> was unable to
analyze the situation and when her
dathtey urew up, visited lier own
MAN ABOUT MANHATTAN
By GEORGE TUCKER
NEW YORK, July 6 -There ought to be a story
behind the names of those incredibly rich young men
who have their fun but always manage to stay out of
the “playboy" elass. Almost never do you encounter
them in nightclubs, and rarer still do they figure to
the headlines. They live in a sort of splendid obscur-
ity. a self-imposed anonymity which screens most
effectively the pursuits at thfr private lives.
A. A. Anderson, for instance, is a gentleman paint-
er. but geta his coin from some “diamond' mines
to Arizona The stones are phoney but they bring an
excellent price and are used everywhere in Inexpen-
sive jewelry.
Just for fun, he had his fireplace encrusted with
those Arizona "diamonds." This is at ms town place
on 40th Street, and you can imagine the effect of
trick lights or when the sun catches those gems
through the skylight. Then, too, it‛s hard to get by
those strange doors on the elevator. He had them
imported from Asia and they cost a neat 630,000 I
don't know how much the hand-carved dragon is
worth, but it curls down four flights of stairs, where,
at the end, the head hovers over an aquarium of
®=org,p
Agi"
€A "
2
grown up m this aountry has been
nr enlssrTged from year to yeut There
---- w»> a time when the Democrats be-
leoked-upon-es an mdividualpos-1.
sessed by some mysterious and even tenaertoot pni
P k
k
r F: M
2
itevedi m tariff for revenue only,
while the Republicans, uving in
----- —AtaiHnn Hain tha An.rt ^oare time in the
--ear future, according to Chief Byette: Definite ar-
rangements have not yet been made, but as the new
unotor equipment has not yet givn an exhibition
lor the public, the department feels that such a
drill would be appreciated by the citirens. The ten-
tative plans call for a run to the square, drill, exhl-
. iation of the power of the new motor pumper and
possibly a fireworks display at the court house a
> Corporal 3. O. Harris, in charge of the rechutting
2 station here foi the Texas Infantry, has received no
# chllstments today at two o'clock. Lleutenant I. F.
~ Sproule left last night but Corporal Harris will remain
here about a week. His headquarters are tar the lobby
=‛o the poetoffice building
« • •
z A train of about a dozen coaches in which troops
— were transported to the border passed through here
“ this morning on the way north to be in readiness for
# other troops that might be bent to the border.
BATON ROUGE, La., July 6 —(P ’
—laughing off the ineffectual
thrusts of his opposition. Senator
Huey P Long today prepared to
skim the patronage cream from his
political 1 enemies’ milk by legis-
iation.
With his 26-bill program designed
to put a virtual end to local self- *
government in the state already well
on ilk way toward rmar passage.
Senator Long radiated good cheer
as he directed his obedient major-
ity in the special session of the
Loutisiana Legislature called to
tighten his grip on the state’s poli-
tics.
Standing out among the bills is tile
one placing all non-elecive State
and municipal officers under the
state civil service commission, which A
is controlled by Long’s administra- l
Mon. ’
Still another measure will clinch
the senator's hiring and firing priv-
ileges over the state's 12,000 school
teachers by giving the controlled
state budget committee the right to
. $1.80 Gal.
•e
Morris &
McClendon
Pittsburgh Paint
Products
________ .. ..___—-------— les. Let them learn by imi-
Felix Frankfurter and Juauc Brandes, they enter- uy between agriculture and other tallon, not by prwwpt Compliment
-- - - - ----- - .— -- - ---at—-- them on their successes, however
BURSCMIPTION RATES
yeme (la edvanoe) -......-.........—.........
ME mouths by wall (la wavanoe) ............
uim month by mail (in advace) -
M month delvered _____________________
an Ice
i ........——.
The Girl Scoutssare all very hap-
py over passing their tests and re-
ceiving thetr pins and badges at
the Court of Awards Wednesday
night. The following girls received
badges and pins:
Troop No 1 —Panita Cook, second
A GRUESOME BUILD-UP'
A dispatch from Rome announces that a number
of armed Ethiopians raided Italian territory, slew
some 30 native Italian troops and made -off with sev+
eral thousand head of cattie. 721119 1
Without seeking to deny the muthenticity of this
report, It can be predicted that a good many more
artieles similar to this will appear during the next
few months. 0,
According to all signs, the Italian govertiment is
getting ready to swoop down on Abyssinia with horse,
foot and guns. A venture at that kind takes much
preparation—and part of the preparatton »a flood of
propaganda designed to make the prospective victim
look like cattle-thteves, murderers and uncivilized
wild men. '
So you might as well get ready to read a whole I
string of Roman dispatches telling of disorders along j
the Abyssinian frontier A war. like a heavyweight j
championship prize fight, must be preceded by what
the sport writers call a “build-up."-Amarillo News
superhuman pouen.
Somnambulism has been robbed
of its mystery by modem psychia-
tric studies. We now know that
it is a symptom of an underlying
neurosis or nervous disease.
The mechanism of somnambu-
lism is described as a carrying out
into actual motion of an intense-
ly experienced dream.
The movements of the sleep walk-
er ar* pantomimic, that is, they
represent the purpose and the sense
of the dream A classtcial example
of this is the hand-washing episode
of the sleep-walking Lady Macbeth
in Shakespeare's tragedy.
Guilt lies heavily upon the spirit
of Laby Macbeth and so she rubs
her hands in a gesture of washing
them and mutters the famed
1 words: ——--——s
"Out, damned spall out. I say!"
The doctor at physic who in the
Shakespeare plav attends her has
Be ihanfacturine centers, believed to "Stand up straight. Mary.” “Let
la high protective tariffs to recent +me smooth your hair." "Where ate
- .. . J reject suggested teacher appoint-
Peggy Timkin, tenderfoot pin and , ments
second class; Nannie Lou Simpson, Various other measures will put
the finishing touches on Long’s in-
vasion of the executive powers of
his old enemy. Mayor T. Semmes
Walmsley of New Orleans.
According to a Milwaukee physician, doctors
are born gamblers. What about their patlenta?
There’s one person who doesn't suffer from lack
of permanent work- the hairdresser.
i • • 1
Research reveals meal of the ancient Romans
lasted from three to five hours. Wish we could
acquaint modern waiters with the fact that times
have changed. 2142 ,205 "
During Cleveland's bakery strike, the question
arose: how would the people get bread? Marie
Antoinette aptly handled u similar problem WUh
some suggestion about cakec •
. *1N* •1,15 4 gromie qtn
Joe Louis won't shave until he becomes champ,
since title-holders nowadays are notoriously
wary, Joe'll have to get MM to tripping on his
class badge; Ellie Whitmore, second
class badge; Addine Carter, second
class badge; Dorothy Jo Brock, sec-
ond class badge; Evelyn Whiteside,
second class badge; Leota Watson,
second class badge; Ruth Holbert,
tenderfoot pin; Elaine Edwards,
tenderfoot pin; Edith Elltsn, ten-
derfoot. pin; Dorothy Goode, tender-
foot pin; Margaret Thompson,
by other national legislation in the
pash. Jones was speaking, of course,
6f the AAA in general. Some of the
things he said were:
“ 'Living thousands of miles apart,
producing an infinite variety of
crops in widely separated areas, the
farmer has been hedged about by
organized groups on every side. Had
there been no regulation of com-
merce. had there been no trade
barriers and no monopolies, the
farmer would have needed no leg-
islation. I subscribe to the doctrine
that we ought to have a tariff for
all or a .tariff for none Standing
on a dead level with every other
SLEEf WALKING : Troop’No. 2—Nona Marie Nail.
When hypnotism was the subject I tenderfoot pin; Betty FowTer, ten-
at Intensive lay discussion in the lat- ‘ derfoot pin: Marjorie Vanderhof,
ter half of the last century, som- 1 tenderfoot pin; Kay Duncan, ten-
dertoot pin; Rosalie Mae Brown.
ler, tenderfoot pin; Norma Lee
Milam, tenderfoot pin. The follow-
ing in this troop will receive their
tenderfoot pins when they have at-
tended four regular Scout meetings.
Dorothy Holbert. Evelyn Holbert.
Erma Joe Wankan, Frances Ver-
non Escue.
Troop No. 3— Mary Jo Dutton,
tenderfoot pin; Mary Jo Hargis,
tenderfoot pin; Rosemary January,
tenderfoot pin; Noel Francis, ten-
68
G
"The speech of Representative
Marvin Jones of Texas in the House
on the AAA amendments provided
the clearest sort of .statement of
Accurate measurements made
during the last 100 years have
showne that the New Jersey coast
line has been eroded by the sea
an average along Its 134 miles of
two feet a year
Denton Record-Chronicle
.u.ewe-cmONCLECOMPAXYaHTPianagee
< * ................................Adveruising Manager
motere M encoma-clnma naU matter a. Denton.
i -
Dany tasuea a* 214 West Hickory Street, penton.
autaacdo"Zompang.on eoeP Sund by Ui» Aecord
ing any invitations that might come
his Way for..attaHe had.",scaped. ' experiences which preceded the ap-
Now, no matter how long it took he pearance of sleep walking.
In these fields may be found the
cause of the emotional and mental
conflict which was responsible for
the individual's abnormal behaviour.
( J
Meeeda
TakK Wintiy
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
8. C Carpenter and wife to Joe
Wilson, lot 13. block 35. Shady Shore*
subdivision to Bartlett Eaves sur-
vey, $46. Aug. 4. 1934.
avvowosnE nonsrRAYoSs
300122-1 R T. Slaughter, Denton.
Plymouth coupe.
mB0138"JaS.Malgermah, Lewtsville,
Chevrolet bedan.
800120 R N Richardson, Lewis-
vllle. Ford sedan
300127-a M Coums, Lewisyille,
Ford sedan
A receptacle that holds a pellet
of dry ice has been Invented by Pur-
due University scientists to be
strapped to a person's wrist to keep
his entire body cool to the hot
weather.
aid, health winner, home nurse,
housekeeper, junior citizen, laun-
dress, needlewoman, scholarship,
homemaker, handy woman,rcan-.
ning, cyclist, Otri Scout aide:—
Fanita Cook—Athlete, cook, dress-
maker, first aid, health winner,
hpmne nurse, hostess, housekeeper,
junior citizen, laundress, needlewo-
man. cyclist, criftsman, homemak-
er, Handy-woman. Girl Scout ob-
server, Girl Scout aide
Official Positions
The following girls have held of-
ficial positions in their troops, for |
which they receive stripes to sew <
on their uniforms: Leota? Watson.
1 scribe, patrol leader, assistant pa-
trol leader; Ellle Whitmore, treas- 1
urer and patrol leader; Evelyn
Whiteside, patrol leader and assist-
ant partlo leader; Fanita Cook, pa-
trol leader, assistant patrol leader
and scribe. Addine Carter, patrol
leader and assistant patrol leader;
Dorothy Jo Brock, partlo leader,
scribe; Dorothy Goode, patrol lead-
er, assistant petrol leader and
scribe
They.toldhim of a soodishort bMtorelneldshe the divine than
cut to the railway tracks so that he .. ~Lvcian
would not have to go near the sta- I Remove rrom her the means of an
annoyance.
And still keep eyes upon her. "
______The-modern, “doctor of physic" is
better informed on the‘mechanism
Interest in the meeting of the T. 1
E. L. Class of the First Baptist
chureh Friday afternoon with Mrs.
A C. Bryant centered in the at-
tendance contest, which is to run
mrough the summer month. Mrs.
O. W Gray's side was reported to
Want aos Bring Results A
— I ******
<9—
j
Sh2
—=3
iy ts tea
eense at insecurity on the child.
When the two were out together the
mother kept up a runnig fire of
comment and correction on the
daughter’s behaviour.
beard.
/ =-==
!
■ • T
Q
re
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 280, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 6, 1935, newspaper, July 6, 1935; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1539322/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.