Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 280, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 6, 1935 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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yrn E
C. W. MeMATH AT WORK
aber
of their Aves; let us
that they are fellow-sufTerers in
ing ko firma and individuals found
In
ton oould be found stored at dirfer-
l
Cool in Coal Crisis
whucn Mr.Russelt wns dhseuseine.
CHURCH SERVICES SUNDAY
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he got what he want'd She had
responsibilitiea connected with the
,2,
• larga port of his worid
come to take'a
&
in it and to lock onit as though it
igon a 1Etle more critically than
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Phone 125
North Side
ire
AT
Bargain Prices
Crowds! Crowds!!
IN
r
TELEPHONE INSTALLATIONS
DURING JULY
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83
mut St. Phene 129.
280
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>7.50 And Up
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the same dafkness,
the same tragedy witi
"..2
-
Call the manager or any employee will take your
order.
had been reaena without taking
any note ot the kind of philosophy
During a special campaign for new customers there
will be no service connection charge on new tele-
phones installed during July.
The" Persian government has re:
quested that the words “Iran" apd
small, and he had been reared by
his mother’s elderly sister in a home
where there were no children. I
this home he had no one to play
with or to think about except him-
sett; and when he went away to
school. He' never found any need
for what one would call feal clo.sc
friendships After leaving school he
haa lived the Nfe of a bachelor un-
til the age of thirty-four, and even
since his marriage, he had contin-
ued to live a sort of unincumber-
ed existence His wife was twelve
years younger than he;' and being
unseinsh and energetic, she had al-
ways made it a point to see thnt
' .
ascpg
tion to the enemy. When I moved
from the San Fernando a colunn
of six hundred Yankees wax march-
ing against Laredo. The disposition
of my command has protected the
cotton commerce and a large extent
of country, and I have been able
to remain here only bv means of the
supplies for which the cotton was
sold Necessity dictated the course
and results have vindicated it.’
"The fact Of selling tMis cotton
Was open and public Capt. Merritt
was a gentleman who had no con-
cealments in regard to such trans-
actions. The complain.' died of its
own want of merit. I am acquaint-
ed with the very small sense of pa-
triotism and duty which actuated
the party who stirred up the tnt-
ter by a letter to Col. Benavides,
bu let bygones be bygones These
comments on the affair are made
to show how supposed great wrongs
sometimes turn out small affatrss."
Mystery Story
to Show at Ritz
1
I
b.n“
YELLOW GOLD MOUNTINGS
FOR YOUR DIAMOND
Latest Styles! Plain or With Diamonds
. I On The Sides
/
Frigidaire
Refrigerator -
$86.50 and up
15c Per Day!
Saves Stir A Day Oh
The New Light Rate
JACOBSEN HARD.
WARE CO. 4
Telephone 724
A new naional memorial.to Abraham Lincoln, to be dedicated July 4. Is this Lincole pioneer village. erected
in the city park of Rockport. Ind., near the place where the Funancipator lived from his seventh to twenty-
first year The community as it was in the days of Lincoln's boyhood has been faithfully reproduced, with
cabins, stockade primitive furniture, and an oxcart:
Thus, more through foree of cir-
cumstance than through anything
else his ego had come to occupy a
the esay he decided to turn over
to the beginning ami see what Ite
utie was 'A Free Mans Religion".
So ue was reading a sort of reli-
gipus doctune. It was the first one
he had prad in a long time Lone
years ago he had put aside a child-
hond religion, which had played a
large part in his early life, some-
What as one puts aside an old qut-
worn,eoal; and he had never taken
the trouble to find another more
In harmony with the world of re
ality, the worid of things. that had
----
" I
1
Minds of these two notables were on coal and winter rather than on
their natty new ice cream suits as they strolled away from the White
House, John L. Lewis, left, and Senator Joseph F. Guffey of Pennsylvania
just had been heartened by President Roosevelt’s indorsement of the
Guffey biH to stabilize the coal industry, a measure also strongly backed
by Lewis, which served to bring postponement of the mine strike set for
June 17.
. -
r- • nS
Texas Telephone Co
Deaton. Texas A
M04- —dud- -E--d—-axd hasd-Me-L
ced that the people prefer !
called "Irani."
Cane Seed, Sudan, Higeria, Maize, Darao, Millet and
other Seed, suitable for planting at this time. Binder
Twine, Hoes, Sweeps, Canning Supplies.
TALIAFERRO & SON
A:
wrote revealingly of som, of the
problems that confronted the army
ometals in supplying their men. Col-
onel Ford’s Memoirs, unpublished,
are in the archives of the Universi-
ty of Texas library in manuscript
form.
"Tne opening of the trade in cot-
ton between Texas and Mexico caus-
ed a lively business to spring Into
existence," Ford wrote. “Matamoros
was the chief mart. Thousands of
bales of the Confederate govern-
ment cotton were carried Into the
place. Thousands of bales belong-
----
F =- — -
I Ei7 ■— TT
McCRAY’S
JEWELRY
STORM
R ।
THE RECREATH^ OF
PROFESSOR MALONEY
By L. H. MOORE, PH.D.; 8. C. w. FACUITY
.....- । ........ g
>
b
All day long, people took advantag
summer-goods at a BIG SAVING. C
■
bat -
..n
It
NEW
THEY CAME, THEY SAW, THEY BOUGHT
- < A,s
- i .g"*
-1e
32 ,2
Btone and Jack La Rue interpret
this unusual French mystery plot
Special Music Sunday
For Downtown Class
TRINITY BAPTIST CNURCH
Blount Street.
Rev. C. N. Wlrs pastor.
9:45 a. m. Sunday School. W. C.
And so when their day is over,
when thetr good and their evil
have become eternal by the im-
mortality of the past, be it ours
to feel that, where they sumer-
ed, where they faned. no need
of ours was the cause; but
wherever a spark of divine fire
kindled in their hearts, we were
ready with sympathy, with en-
igement, with brave words
in which high courage giowed.
When he had finished reading the
entire essay there were two doc-
trines in this "Free Man’s Relt-
gion" that- stood out very clearty to
him; Uiese were, sett-renunciation
and intimate contaets with Ure Mves
of Others Well. he had to confess
that neither of these had played a
very large part in his life. Certain-
ly he had never tried to get very
< lose to the life of any of his stu-
dents A we have already stated,
his English came first and his stu-
dents came second if they came at
all. He prided himself that his of-
fice was a kind ot laboratory where
the English language was dissect-
sumption.
But for SO- years chemists had
wrestled with the problem of pro-
ducing flour from cottonseed and
failed.
Then in 1926, T. J. Harrell, pres-
ident of the Fort Worth concern,
began to study the problem, and
went to Texas A * M College to
find a promising student of chem-
tetry. He selected McMath.
“A job is waiting for you at our
company if you will finish here, spe-
cialising in cottonsee research/"
he said tn effect.
- Studied for job
McMath had gone to A. & M. as a
graduate from Denton High Schoot
and shown signal aptitude in his
field He began the job of prepar-
ing himself to tackle his problem.
He finished his undergraduate work,
took his bachelor's degree, and then
did graduate work in his field and
received his master’s degree. Then
he did research work for another
year ideally equipped and enthu-
siastic, he went to work for the
Traders Mill three years ago
For six months he worked in the
mill itself, to learn the mill work-
ers’ problems, then for eight months
toina
P.me~
#
The Gate of Renunciation- Such
a gate would be rather difficult for
a man Tke PlufesMU Maloney wr
pass through However, this was
not due to the fact that he was bv
nature a selfish man; it was due
more to the fact that hit whole life
had been of such a nature as to
make it habitual with him to be
egocentric He had lived a large
part of his life with only himsi
were a sort of sacred somethin
which was his and his alcpe. In
fact he had been known to boast
that no human sou had ever in-
vaded the secret recesaes of his in-
uermost life. He said that there a as
a little hidden corner deep within
his heart which was his and uU
alone and in which no one could
ever look.
Was it possible that he had been
-------
he had been doing, he came to
comethig about ones reiationship
tohisfellow-man, about giving hi s
friends the pure joy of a nevet-dy-
ing a Beet ton, about shedding sun-
chine on their piths - ,
Let us not weigh in grudging
scales their merits and demerits,
but Ictus think only of thetr
need—of the sorrows, the dr-
ficutties. perhaps the bund-
nenses, that make the misery
ed by my men under .the control
_________ ----- of Col Lovenskiold, or I would have
their way to the same point Cot- been compelled to abandon the sec-
VISIT OUR BARGAIN BASEMENT!
The Boston Store
L h
6.1: j
7
-■■■- -----------I,. ja-11. ""re"' 7 I, I" J..I . -1 ___ " ■ —".........
Achievement of Former Denton boy, Producing
Cottonseed Pibur, Writes New Page in ffistory
of King Cotton; Given Approval by Experts
As he becayl more' interested inted and analysed Whenever a atu-
..... dent came into this laboratory, he
came only for the purpose of fnd-
i ’
I . -A. 0.
- 326*48. 3 - 22
A - m
lee Cold Waterwelons, 1 1-26
Per Lb. Home Tee Co., 407 N. Lo-
m otha
aqr " V
r l
.ehn l
eseV
< vero,v
•mde
‘ae nu.e
8 t : W Ses
B e, J ' e „mmra r
g L.v ;n,400
g
Universal* "Secret of the Cha-
teau," whish will be shown in pre-
view tonight at the Rita Theater
and Monday and Tuesday of next
week, combines mvstery, excite-
ment, terror, adventure and ro-
manee and offers a variety of thrill-
ing situations as Claire Dodd, Alice
White, Osgood Perkins, George E.
3
4 li c —
rearing of the children and Hie
care of the home in order. as ahio
said, that her husband might have
all of his time and energy to dr-
vote to his work at the college.
Except tor those rare spirits
that are born without sin there
is a cavern of darkness to be
traversed before that temple
can be entered The gate to the
cavern is despair, and ite flew
is paved with the gravestone"
of abandoned hopes The self
must die; there eagerness. th«
greed of untamed desire must
be steetn, for only so can the
soul be freed from the emutre
of fate But out of the cavern,
the gate of renunciation leads
egain to the daylight of wis-
dom, by whose radiance a new
Insight, a new tenderess, shines
forth to gladden the pilgrims
heart.
,7
- .722
tse "$
Only 28 years old, and this month
reaching his third year of work as
scientist investigating the commer-
ele pessibaities of cotton. C. W.
McMath of Fort Worth, son of Mr
and Mrs. C. 8. McMath of 1014 Bol-
ivar Street, Denton, has already at-
tained signal success in his field,
ane won honors rarely gained by
men who have spent a lifetime in
the laboratory
. His outstanding achievement was
recently reported by the Traders Oil
Mill officials of Fort Worth, by
whom the young scientist is em-
ployed, a success that may prove
to bring an ever-increasing stream
of dollars to the Southern cotton
farmer—the production of a pala-
table and nutritious flour from cot-
tenseed.--"'____
Renuncintion, was that ull? The
part which he had just read sound
ed something like the old stock
ideas of seir-saerinte and devotion
to duty that he used to hear so
much about at church and which
he nad often thonght, in his ma.
carried most of the burdens and played such a large part in his
-------- "‘later, life. What weft U» tenets 'Jt
thtb"Free Hart’s Regsaton"? A Grul
edteeas 039 zapuraa, ‘a ’.
+AM--- ‘mtaeptetpete dr
Tn Tit m6F M
put "ee -
ac
I AAfe g
for company. His father and moth- ----- -— —- — -----—n .
er had died when he was very Up until now Professor Maloney
living too much clone? Could th x
I be the reason why he was begin-
I ning to experience such melan-
choly hour at increasingly fre-
quent periods during the late years'
ma-u neeg tarevamo hiswhele
outlook on life somewhat in order
to meet the changes which time
and a changing world were thrust-
ing upon him? Did he need to re-
nounce this s2cret corner at least
lese
. . 72
--
(Note: This is bne of a series of
articles taken from the 300 special
collections of family archives fu
the University of Teas library The
collections cover all period, of Tex
as history, from the earliest days
of the Spanish missionaries in the
province of Tejas, through the co-
colonial era. to the present. This
series of articles presents interest
ing excerpts from a number of these
family collections, some chosen for
their intrinsic significance in the
development of the empire of Texas
ethers for their purely human in-
terest in portraying personalities,
economic conditions and social in-
tercourse)
AUSTIN, July 8 —The stress of
economic circumstances during the
Civil War era encouraged many ir-
regularities in the administration of
army supplies. It is indicated by pri-
vate letters, official documents and
other records of that period. In
his Memoirs. John Salmon Ford, a
colonel in command of the Expedi-
tionary Forces of the Rio Grand,
in aid of the Confederate army.
hk world He had hirer years. were given to the peg-f"Tranian" be used instead of "Pr-
greatdear of prid pt a.en nsdn sa. ..I, in .and ■ Persian" and has Minora-
-— ------ ■ t iretion of the powers that be Read- 4
New Telephones Installed During Week
Ending June 29:
Bales. Ns. Mattie, m2 Prattt ....... ....................
Bratcher, Loraine, 313 Egan ............ -...... -1236.
Davis. Otis. 318 Frame rgr......... .. . 1239J
Dean, M. L., Nw th ot City .....4882
Mincy, Mrs. Bernice, 414 Fry Mt, ................................................
Owsley. Henry, 2007 W. Hickory ............-....... «73J
Patterson. MW. Janie, Dallas Dive ................... 3805
e of our Trade Expansion Sale and bought
ome Monday and every day next week.
Had Long Been Problem
For years. a stork of MeMath's
sticcess carried in the Fort Worth
Star-Telegram pointed out recentiy
cottonseed" tas been known as a
valuable feed, rich in protein for
cattle Then it was found oil from
the seed could be used in making
salads as a shortening and for
other products for human con-
A lesson on Hoasr. taught by E
W Provence. and special music by
Willard Crews and four of his vio-
lin pupils will feature the down-
ton Bible Class at the Palace The-
ater Sunday morning at 9 45
o’Mork seventy -six were present
last Sunday . • ’
PALACE—Bert Wheeler, Robert
Woolsey in "Kentucky Kernels”;
extra. Braddock-Baer champion
ship fight pictures; Popeye Car-
roon; Flaramount Sound News.
Preview tonight 10:30, "People
Will Talk” with Charles Ruggies,
Mary Boland, Lelela Hyams
m-—
Pae-me 1
mg mil something about English
or about something either directly
or indirectly connected with Eng-
lish, and he knew when this task
was finished that he must get out
and that he must not be long about
it. The idea that an English offtee I
or class room was a place where a
student Axxild come with a feeling
of being at home and discuss some
of his own personal experiences and
compare them with those other hu-
man experiences portrayed in nt-
erature was perfectly ’ toreign to
Prolesaor Maloney’s way of think-
hiv. Buch an educational philosophy
naturally removed him a long way
frem the actual life of his students.
'Continued Next Saturday)
DREAMLAND- Bill Cody in "Cy-
clone Ranger”; “Perils of Paul-
ine" No 3: Buddy Cartoon.
ent points, on both sides the Rlo
Grande, from Piedras Negrus to the
mouth of the river—a distance of
over three hundred miles.
Cotton Unes Roads
“In passing by way of Banquete,
and above there were cotton roads
in every direction. The aim appears
to have been to find a new and
better way. The chaparalls would be
almost white in places from the Une
detached from passing bales it was
no uncommon thing to find part of
load deposited on the road side The
great distance would exhaust the
energies of the draught animals,
leaving a portion of the lading
would be a matter of extreme neces-
sity Muchgpot this abandoned cot-
ton the person leaving would be un-
able tonnd. A great deal was sto-
len. no doubt. When the Federals
took possession of the lower Rio
Grande, many persons in charge of
PIRST PRESBYTENIAN CHURCH
' I Rev W Fred Galbraith, pastor.
130 Booth Elm St.
9345 a m.—Sunday School. B E.
Looney, superintendent; Will Fred
Galbraith, secretary Lesson, “Moees,
the Leader and Lawgiver ”
10 65 a. m.—Servics. Communion
or the Lord’s Supper: sermon, 'And
When They Had Sung a Hymn.”
7:00 p. m.—Young People’s meet-
ing. Frank Moring. president.
8:00 p. m Sermon. "Thesignn-
cance of Poot-waxning"
Fmsr BAPTIST eneneH
Rev J. D. Grey, pastor. ,
9 30 a m -Bible School. R. J. Gar-
ner. superintendent.
10.40 a m - Closing general essem-
bly of Bibte School.
10 50 a. m.—Worship
6:48 p. m.—Baptist Training Vo-
Ion, R L. Ewing, general director.
_ 8 Ibu p in seMeemont—---————
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
Rev E. E. wiive, pastor.
9 30 g m.—Church School, Claude
Castleberry, superintendent:
10:50 a m — Sermon. "God Moves
Manward." .
7 00 p. m.—Epworth Leagues.
8:00 p m—Sermon subject. "Rum
and Ruin.”
to the point of exposing it to the
gaze of some of his closest friends’'
As he sa at his desk this morning
musing in thia manner, he felt for
the first time that be would not
inand so mu<h If some real friend
were to come in and look into this
secret heart chamber and tell him
xust what he found there. That ego
shtloscphy of his had not been so
bad when he was young. When he
+wasgetuingalonz.whenhewasbe.
ing promoted, whin he fell go nn
of ife- and so self sutlicient; but
now as he began to face the shud-
ows, as he realised that his little
day would soon be done, he was be-
girning to think that it would not
be so bad #-hehad someone who
would walk just a little bit closer
with aim into mo darkness
. New Memorial Rmsed for Lincoln in Indiana .
Treece, superintendent.
11:00 a. m.—Sermon.
6:45 p. m.—B? T. U.
7:45 p. m.—Sermon. ,
CRUEHoF CHRIMT
Corner Peart and Bolivar streets.
_ Lyle Price, minister.
9:45 a. m —Bible study.
10:50 a. m.—Sermon
6 45 p m.—roung People’s meet*
ings.
~~ - in. Oct moo.----- - — -
NAZARENE CHVRCH
Rev J W Dodd, minister.
10:00 a m—Sunday School.
1100 a. m.—Preaching.
6 45 p. m.— Young People's meet-
7 46 p m.—Preaching.
FIRSr CHRISTIAN CRURCH
Rev. R. R. Yelderman, pastor:
9:35 a. di.-Bible School.
1040 a. m.—General Assembly.
10 45 a. m.—Program by children
of the Juliette Fowler Horne.
7:00 p. m.—Young People’s Socie-
ties.
8:00 p m.—Sermon. "The Irresls-
tible Church."
CENTRAL PRESBYTERTAN CRURCH
9 45 a. m —Sunday School. Wm. G.
Woods, superintendent.
11:00 a m.—Preaching by Rev 8.
M Bennett of Arlington
4 no p. m Junlors.
6:00 p. m.— Intermediate
--‘muzznxToLTExASa"EOE:EHQNIEE8ATUADAL,-UL,6,1925
Confederates Along Rio Grande
Found It Necessary to Take Over (
Cotton And Sei! It For Supplies E
u.emni ' K
m
23
2lc,1
he worked in a laboratory specially
equipped for his studies- He achieved
production of the desired flour-
in a test tube.
McMath than attacked the com-
mercial problem He evenuaN
solved that and rich, smooth, nu-
tritious flour could be produced,
from cottonseed, in quantities.
There was a problem then,
brought by the innovation—to equip
a mill to turn out the flour. Mc-
Math turned mechanical engineer,
drew the designs for the new ma-
chinery. and Harrell put up the
$150,000 that bunt and installed the
experimental plant The results
proved McMath right.
Tested on Humans
One final step remained before
introducing the flour to the public
—-getting health and medical auth-
orities to test the product and testity
in its behalf. It was given laboratory
tests, then fed patients in a Fort
Worth tubercular sanatorium and
Xo-a. group of nurseg and doctors
at a hospital. The doctors approved
the results: the committee on foods
of the American Medical Associa-
tion investigated the flour and gave
it the assoctatlon’s seal of approval.
M3prai
6:30 p. m—Seniors.
7:90 p. m.—No eveningescrvice.
FUNDAMENTALIST BAPTIST
CHURCI
Rev Luther C. Peak, pastor.
9 45 a m —Bible School Lesson,
11:00 a. m—Sermon.
7130 p. m—Sermon. _____j
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
401 North Locust Street
Rev C. J. Kinsolving, III, priest-
in-charge.
Services for the "third Sunday af-
ter Trinity.
7:15 a. m.— CelebnUon at the Holy
Eucharist.
9:30 a. m.—Church School.
11 00 a. m.—celebration of the
Holy Eucharist and sermon.
ASSEMRLY OF GOD CHURCH
Rev. M. E. Edmunson, pastor.
702 Myrtle Street.
9:45 a. m—Sunday School, V.
Sparks, superintendent:
11:00 a. m.—sermon.
fl 00 p m —Christ’s Ambassadors
with Virgil Sparks, leader.
7:30 p. m. —Sermon.
MH S»p<yay services at tent.)
LHFRAN CWURCH
703 North Elm Street
Rev; W E. Meyer, pastor.
10:15 a. m-Sunday School.
11:00 a m -Sermon, The Bless-
edness of the Godly "
CUMBERLAND PRESBYTERIAN
CHORCH -
Rev J. U Elliott, pastor.
Corner Welch and Maple Streets.
10:00 a m Sunday School. Rev
A. L. Faw, superintendent
11 :00 a. m—Berman by the pastor
“Our Greatest Obligation," Exodus
94:7
6 30 p. m.—Senior and Junior C.E
8:00 p. m.—Sermon. "Readiness for
Service.’’ Mal. 3:2. 3.
—ee-e88
482258
.......N
- 7g
" 45.
“ 0
\
loads of cotton went to an out of
the way place and discharged it.
Between the Nueces and the lower
Rio Grande cotton could be found
almost anywhere, jus outside the
road, and frequentiy in most of the
timber.
This cotton, whether ubandoned
for goqd. or not. was oonstdeted by
many legitimate matter .to be up-
propriated by any one Who could
carry it across the Rio Grande or to
some other point The desiredatum
was to get it way so the owner
could not find it. In somhe cases it
was difficult to determine the real
owner When the Expeditionary
Forces first appeared in the neigh-
borhood of the Nueces a great deal
of cotton had been left in the sec-
tien between the Nueces, and even
on this side. Col Lovehskiold was
rayine his respects to secreted cot-
ton The troops on the Nueces and
adjacent thereto were ordered to as-
slst - in discovering cottor Capt.
Merritt managed to find some, and
to sell U. It seems that Col. Bena-
vides complained of this to Maj
Gen Magruder. He it seems inquired
into the affair. The inquiry was thus
answered by Col. Ford. Juy 7. 1864.
In a communication to Headquar-
ters:
Staple Saved Day
p “ The fatture of the Gotton Bu-
reau to turn over cotton to Capt
Merritt, being in the Delo, without
supplies, able to obtain no money,
no cotton, and but a very limited
amount of supplies from Col. Bena-
vides. It was necessary for my quar-
termaster to use the cotton obtain-
•3 atha . ... <
.e
ss-Menwrs 1 ua6,
dujiote4
CATHOLIC CHURCH
1204 Bolivar Street
Rev Father Raymonc Vemimont,
priest.
10:00 a m--MasB.
SCREENTODAY
RITZ—Last day, Buck Jones in
"Rocky Rhodes"; chapter 5, "Call
of the Savage”; shorts. Preview to-
night. "Secret ot the Chateau”
with Claire Dodd, Alice White.
Jack La Rue and others: sports.
-de
.........
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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/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.