The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, September 11, 1931 Page: 4 of 8
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THE CHRONICLE
W. L. MARTIN
Editor and Owner.
Publiahed Every Friday
Entered at the postoffice at Car-
rollton, Texas, as second-class matter
■nder the Act of Congress, March 3,
1879.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
In Dallas and Adjoining Counties
One Year .......................................$1.00
Six Months .......................................60
Three Months .................................30
Outside Above Named District
One Year ........................................$1.50
Six Months .......................................85
Three Months ...................................50
Subscribers will please note that the fl.ftO
per year subscription price applies to the
•ounties of Dallas, Tarrant, Denton, Collin,
■ockwnll, Kaufman ami Ellin. Outside this
district the price is $1.50 per year.
In writing in and asking a change
in address, will you please give the
old address as well as the new one?
All notices of entertainments, dinners and
•(her benefits, where there is an admission
Cm or other monetary consideration, will he
dhanred for at regular advertising rates.
Lengthy obituaries and obituary poetry, res-
elutionn of respect, memorials, cards of thnnks,
etc., will also be charged for at our regular
advertising rntes.
Man, Bones, and Grapes
Why shouldn’t the Smithsonian In-
stitution accept the Genesistic account
(of the origin of man) and order the
janitor to send the 19.000 old bones in
the locker room to the city cinerator?
--State Press in Da’ias News.
Waste is usually bad business
We have had too much waste al-
ready. The frugality of the
people of Holland is what brot
them to the high place they hold
today. M ay we suggest that
State Press amend his petition
and ask that those o'd bones be
placed about the ro Us of g'ape
Tines to the end that more and
better grapes may be produced,
thus becoming a benefit, au as-
set, to humanity.
The reason we ask for your
patronage is because we r* ally
want it. We have smooth shaves
and stylish haircuts at Groves
Barber Sh< p.
There is to be an eclipse of Have you seen a couple of fel-|
the sun today. It is inv;sihle \lows in -heir cars stop on a busy!
here, however Tomorrow is the
NOTICE OFSHERIKF’S SALE
(REAL ESTATE)
By Virtue of an Alias Execution is-
Jewish or Hebrew New Year.
They certainly took a hot time
of the year to start off with
another year.
The dove season opened Sept.
1. The law provides that a hunt
er may take 15 doves in one day
and 45 doves during onj week,
lawfully, but when he exceeds
that he is a law violaler. It is
figured that a man should leave
s me birds there for his felmw-
man to get some other time.
The limit seems to he high and
15 doves a week ought to be
ample-foi a man. YEl' out in
road and have a visit? When (iued ou, o(theHonorablt Di9tlktCou,t
y<»u came along you had to slow .of f>aj|as County, 441h Judicial District
up and be careful *how you j0f Texas, on the 8th Jay ot Sept.. A. O.
passed ;hem, for another car, or 11931. in the ctse of Pormelia Fox and
perhaps a doz»n, from the other: husband. S. W. Fox, plaintiffs, ver-
side were trying to do the same|*us ,Fr‘nk 'u Ha", '>t,endant Num-
. . _ ber 710 6-A-B, and to me as Sheriff,
thing. You were annoyed and |d, rec ted anJ delivcrei)i i have
may have said D— It, under j levied upon this 8th day of Septem-
your breath Lots of folks wi uld ber, A D. 1931, and will between the
have given you permission to! hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 4 o’clock
say it real loud, had you cared tojP* m *on the Tuestla-V in °c,ober
, ,, j i .i i A. 1). 1931, it being the 6thdayof said
do so. You wonder why those! tl .
month, at the courthouse dorr of said
fellows did not get off the road Dallas county, in the City of Dallas,
in do their visiting. Right now j proceed to sell at public auction to the
we have a lot of I'o folks on the highest bidder, forcarh inhand, all the
bussiness thorofare stopping tolri-ht title and Interest which Frank
visit and cuss conditions. Tim IJA' H“"lw? on ,he 8"’ of "ept
. .. , ,, 'A. D. 11131. or at any time there-
folks who really
tvimhall county within six days I " "l'!' v,“” 1 c“"»v WHnl 10 "" j after, of, in and to the following des-
three gntne wardens had arrest-, ba'e 10 be ver.V cau.ful in get- cribed property, to-wit:
ed 57 violators of the law. It ll,’K ar"ul'd lhem fo1' therPisl A portl“n <>f Block 1502’ Gity
„ , , lots of traffic on the busi
J S"e“S looba<l lhat thorofare. Perhaps the folks j *" lhe N°rtliwrst line of an eighteen
regard for the i foot alley, which line of said alley is
! ctann m«r Iharn (inn IH no o n lov./n 1
of
point
have sc little
rights of their fellowmen that
they wilfuliy violate the law
made to protect the birds and
leave some hunting for some
oilier men. If I were a preach-
er I’d certainly ’bar down
heavy” on folks who violate
what they consider little laws
for therein tomes disregard for
greater laws.
standing there could pay a large
portion of what they owe, per-
haps they could buy many of
the things they say they need,
but they ar.e taking advantage
of the "Talk” of Hard Times
and are not doing anything but
visiting there in the road and
hindering others who might go
faster if the road were char.
A lot of those visitors on ihe
In counting the good things | busjn£S!j th„,.ofai.e may be
Carrollton has we always count!
aried persons who are right now
the Intel-urban as one of them . | veceivinK the same salarV they
Service to Dallas at frtqnent I did two and three
intervals at nominal prices; serv
ice to Denton and imervening
points ai like low fares is some
thing to be valued. We tell folks
when they ask about Carrollton:
We have three railroads, inter-
urban Dallas to Denton, water,
lights and pow<*r, sewer, gas,
bus service, good schools, four
churches, nic° line of business
houses, and a good newspaper.
We are failing to properly appre
ciat some of them, Tbir.k ocea
sionally on these things
If you know of important happen-
ings, tell the Chronicle, phone 92.
they aie bidding for trouble for
themselves and injuring all the
others by their acts. There
should be an end to a lot of this
hooey. Folks who can pay, and
do not; folks who can buy what
they need and do not do so are
impediments on the business
road and it might be legitimate
to shunt ’fem off. Lots of folks
lake advantage of times like
these, and it does not take a
Solomon to spot a lot of them.
You have our permission to treat
’em rough.
The Chronicle prints business cards.
parallel with and 168 feet distant from
the Northwest line of Knight Street,
the Eaid beginning point being 148
feet Southwest from the intersection
of the said Northwest line of said al-
ley with the Southwest line of Cedar
Springs Avenue; Thence Southwest
along the said Northwest line of said
alley. 1 3 7 feet; Thence Northwest
parallel with Cedar Springs Avenue,
75 feet; Thence Northeast para lei with
Knight Street 137 teet* Thence
Southeast parallel with Cedar
Spring s Avenue 75 feet to the place of
beginning.
Said property being levied on as the
years ago and 1 Pr°Perty °f Prank J. Hall and will be
sold to satisfy a judgment amounting to
$1562.01), with interest on $142v .OOthere-
ol at the rate of 8 per cent per annum
and interest on $142.(0 at 6 percent
per annum from December 7, 1927, in
favor of Pormelia Fox and her hus-
band, S. W. Fox, and costs of court
and the further cost oFexecuting this
writ.
Given Under My Hand this 8th
day of September, A. D. 1931.
H. A. HOOD,
Sheriff Dallas County, 1 exas.
By J b Jameson, deputy 43-4
jv^TWEN’T you served the same
I |p| old salads in the same old
way until you were secretly
FYffiO glad that people’s appetites
are like children’s tastes ?
They like repetition in both foods
and stories. But scientists tell us to
diversify our eating and to he careful
to train children to like a wide num-
ber of foods. And then there’s your
neighbor who, every now and then,
serves some novelty in foods.
Haven’t you wanted to go her one
better, and cudgeled your brain for
a still more brilliant recipe to serve?
Hawaiian pineapple is always a re-
source, not only because it is one of
the best fruits canned, but because
there is so much of it this season
that the price is lower than usual.
Summer is the time for salads,
so let’s look over that field, and see
what new combinations have been
recently devised. Did you ever hear
of combining prunes, salted peanuts,
cranberry sauce, maraschino cherries
in mayonnaise and Hawaiian pine-
apple in a salad? There’s a recent
recipe for this combination, and its
name is “Bog Salad," inspired, pre-
sumably, by the bogs in which the
cranberries grow. How about apricot
halves, green gage plums, cottage
cheese, ripe olives, green peppers,
pimiento, raisins and sliced pine-
apple? There’s a recipe for this, too,
and it rejoices in the gay name of
“Nosegay Salad.”
Here Are the Recipes
But it’s no use going on with a
list of ingredients without giving you
the recipes for these new combina-
cipei
tious, so here arc t
new
for the two
we have mentioned and for several
more beside:
Bog Salad: Cut the slices from
a No. 2}/i can of Hawaiian pineapple
in halves, and place, round side
touching, in eight beds of lettuce.
Stone sixteen cooked prunes, and fill
with stiff cranberry sauce, leaving
open at top to show the red. Place
two on each salad, in the cavities
formed by the hole in the pineapple
slice. At the opposite sides pile stiff
mayonnaise filled with chopped mar-
aschino cherries. Sprinkle one-half
cup salted peanuts over the tops of
the eight salads.
Nosegay Salad: Chill the slices
from a No. 2Vi can of Hawaiian
pineapple, and place in eight lettuce
nests. Drain and chill thirty-two
canned green gage plums. Chill
thirty-two canned apricot halves.
Place four of each alternately around
the pineapple. Pile cottage cheese
in center, and make a sunburst effect
of alternate strips of green pepper
and pimiento, topping with a. ripe
olive. Dress with French dressing
made with the syrup from the plums
and pineapple, instead of vinegar,
adding a few chopped raisins.
Fruits with Cheese
Pineapple and Grapefruit Salad
svith Cheese Dressing: Drain two
8-ounce cans of Hawaiian pineapple
tidbits (or use one and one-half cups
of diced sliced canned pineapple),
and toss lightly with one cup grape-
fruit sections, one cup orange sec-
tions and one-half cup halved seeded
grapes. Pile in lettuce leaves and
pour over the following:
Cheese Dressing : Shake together
six tablespoons salad oil, one table-
spoon lemon juice, one tablespoon
r.yrup from the canned pineapple,
salt and paprika. Smooth slowly into
four tablespoons crumbled Roquefort
cheese, and add two tablespoons
chopped pimiento. This recipe
serves eight.
California Salad: Place the slices
from a No. 2Yi can of Hawaiian
pineapple in crisp lettuce leaves.
Cream together one package of
cream cheese and one triangle Roque-
fort cheese, and add one-fourth cup
raisins and one-fourth cup chopped
dates. Pile lightly in center of pine-
apple and serve with mayonnaise
slightly thinned with pineapple syrup.
This serves eight.
Salads with Cider and Lime
Cider and Pineapple Jelly Salad:
Dissolve one package lemon gelatin
in one cup boiling cider and add
two tablespoons sugar. Add the con-
tents of a No. 2 can of crushed
Hawaiian pineapple and two-thirds
cup diced apple, and when the mix-
ture starts to set. fold in one-third
cup mayonnaise. Mold in a loaf.
Chill. Serve in slices on lettuce, and
garnish with mayonnaise. This
serves ten.
Jollied Pineapple JAmc Salad:
Dissolve one package lime gelatin in
thiM-fourths cup boiling water, and
add the contents of a No. 2 can of
crushed Hawaiian pineapple. When
partly set. add one-half cup shredded
blanched almonds, and mold in a flat
tin. Cut in squares and serve on
lettuce with cream mayonnaise gar-
nished with a red and green cherry.
Lay a cheese ball rolled in chopped
mint or parsley at the side of each.
This recipe serves eight to ten.*
NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
(REAL ESTATE)
By Virtue of an Order of Sale
issued out of the Honorable
District Court of Dallas County, 68th
Judicial District of Texas, on the
1st day of May A. D. 1931, in
the case of City of Dallas, a Munici-
pal Corporation, Plaintiff, Fuller Con-
struction Company, * Intervenor; ver-
sus Mrs. Mattie Nichols, a widow;
and Jewell Eva Nichols, Ruth Hazel
Nichols, Lucy Mae Nichols, Bearl Ed-
ward Nichols and Paul Edward Nichols,
minors, Defendants; Number 91651-C
and to me as Sheriff, direct-
ed and delivered, I have levied upon
this 5th day of September, A. D.
1931, and will between the hours
of 10 o’clock A. M. and 4 o’clock P. M.,
on the first Tuesday in October, A. D
1931, it being the 6th day of said month,
at the courthouse door‘of said Dallas
County, in the City of Dallas, pro-
ceed to sell at public auction to the
highest bidder, for cash in hand, all
the right, title and interest which de-
fendants and each of them had on the
3rd day of May, A. D. 1928, or at a n y
time thereafter, of, in and to the fol-
lowing described property, to-wit:
Lying and being situated in the City
and County of Dallas, State of Texas,
being all of lot No. 7, in block 12-1924,
of Deimar Heights Addition, an addi-
tion to the City of Dallas. Texas, ac
cording to the map or plat thereof of
record in Vol. 1, page 188, of the map
records of Dallas county, Texas, sai(^f
lot fronting 50 feet on the South side of
Vickery Boulevard, which was former^
ly known as Price Street; and being
the same and identical property con-
veyed to V. T. Nichols by deed dated
March 4, 1911, executed by W. H. Ir-
win, of record in Vol. 784, page 252, of
the deed records of Dallas County
Texas.
Said property being levied on as the
property of Mrs. Mattie Nichols, a
widow; Jewell Eva Nichols, Ruth Ha-
zel Nichols, Lucy Mae Nichols, Bearl
Edward Nichols and Paul Edward
Nichols, minors, and will be sold to
satisy a judgment amounting to $404.66,
with interest on $272,45 of said sum at
7 percent per unnum and with interest
on $132.21 at the rate of 6 per cent per
annum from May 1st, 1931, in
favor of Fuller Constrnction Company,
Intervenor; and costs of court and the
further cost of executing this writ.
Given Under My Hand This 5th
day of September, A. D. 1931.
H. A. HOOD,
Sheriff Dallas County, Texas.
By J. E. Jameson, deputy. 43-4
There were a lot of HOT days
last week, all in a row, and folks
are not quite so skeptical about
hot places now as they may have!
been a few months ago. When !
the thermometers get to flirting
above the 100 mark in Carrollton
it is surely getting to be hot
weather—and they were doing
J that last week.
j >A/VSAAAAA/VNAA/N/WN/WS/VN^NAA^A/V>AA^A^AA^AA^^^
I 11 I
FALLMARKE T SEASON
If you are coming to Dallas
to do your Fall buying we in-
vite you to make use of the
Interurban service. You will
find it more convenient and
comfortable than any other
form of transportation.
Texas Interurban Railway
Economical Transportation
Business Depression Cure
Harvey C. Crouch, president of one ’
of our railroads gave his solution of
the business depression and it ran
like this:
A garden and a sow,
A smoke house and a cow
Twenty four hens and a rooster
And you’ll have more than you 1
you’ster.
There is a soup the folks
’round here like to sing, ami
then forget about—“Count Your
Blessings.” They sing it with
great abandon and seem to real-
ly mean it and enjoy it, but then
they forget to count their bless-
ings. This year the soil produc
ed lots of feed stuff for stock,
and they do not have to worry
about the feed problem. This
year the gardens produced lots
of vegetables and the orchards |
lots of fruits, and those who
canned to provide for their
future needs do not need to war
r.v about supplies for the table
The fields produced lots of oats
a id wheat and cotton, and quite
a bit of corn, and they do not
need to worry about the needs
in that line. BUT the price one
can get for what they have to
sell is low and lhat ONE fly in
the ointment causes them great
grief. It is not our de ire to
minimize the effects of the low
prices; it is annoying to reahze
that, just when you had pri duced
a dandy fine crop and was plan-
ning on a new car, to have it slip
away from you is distressing.
But aie we counting our bless-
ings? nr are we permitting one
sorrow to outweigh our happi-
ness?
Tonsorial service at Groves
Barber Shop. Modern sanitary
equipment and new and clean
quarters.
Hookin' On
We are just hookin’ on
| and not lettin’ this no
cotton bunk bother us
because we have been
looking forward to cot-
ton picking time for a
year. We knew business
would be better at this
time of the year, and it is,
King Cotton
is cheap but it stimu-
lates business. We know
of nothing in our line
that is not cheaper than
for several years. Just
continue to share your
trade with us and we
will try to please you
and be happy ourselves.
CARROLLTON
HARDWARE CO.
Day Phone 46
68 - Night Phones - 121
roll) P it’ld is in Austin this
week and will watch tlie actiim
of the legisl&'ure with regard to
the cotton measures before it..
Mr. f ield will represent Carroll-
ton Chamber ol Commerce and
the people of this section and
the Pm mors Branch community.
He knows the sentimt nt cf our
people and will watch carefully
any actions taken.
H T. Allen ot Partners Branch
made our heart glad by drop-
ping into the office Wednesday
morning and subscribing to the
Chronicle The list is growing
nicely and we ihank the many
loyal friends for the kind words
which help make the growth.
Mr. and Mrs. P. H. McMurray
spent Sunday in Greenville viss
iting fridnds and on Monday
went to Point to visit her par-
ents. When they returned
Monday evening they were
accompanied by Maurine Preeze
who will spend tile school season
here and be a student in the
school
Mr. and Mrs. E P. Berryhill
have returned to Carrollton and
are located in the Allen house
on the hill. They weie accom-
panied by a brother of Mr. Ber
r.Vhill, one formerly living in
North Carolina and whom they
visited early this summer. They
are ready for the school season
and looking physically fit for it,
$1 brings you the home newspaper
one year.
CITATION BY PUBLICATION
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To the Sheriff or any constable of Dal-
las county—Greeting:
You are Hereby commanded, That by
making publication of tnis citation in some
newspaper published in the county of
Dallas, for four consecutive weeks, pre-
vious to the return day hereof you sum-
mon Valentine & Company, a New
York Corporation, whose resi-
dence Is outside of Texas to be
and appear before the District
court of the 68th Judicial Dis-
trict of Texas, to be holden in and for the
county of Dallas at the court house
thereof, in the city of Dallas, at or before
ten o’clock a. m., of the Monday next fol-
lowing the expiration of forty-two days
from the date of this citation, being Mon-
day at lOo’dock a. m.,on the 12th day of
Oct. A. D. 1931, then and there to answer
to the petition of Wm. N. Shelburne, filed
in said Court on the 25th duy of Aug.
A-D. 1931, against the said Valentin*
& Company, a New York Corporation,
for suit, said suit being Numbered
95161-C the nature of which demand
is as follows, to-wit:
Plaintiff prays judgment of the court
for debt, etc,, alleging that on or about
Sept, 1, 192s plaintiff was authorized
in wriiing to represent the defendant In
certain counties in the State of Texas
on a commission basis, and did sell
certain goods, wares and merchandise
of the value of $45,760.00, for which he
was entitled to $3,571.00 as commis-
sion, that defendant still owes $1,021.-
00 of said commission and though often
requested to pay same defendant has
failed and refused to do so to plaintiff's
damages.
Herein Fail Not, but have youthen
and there before said court this writ,
w ith your return thereon showing how
you have executed the same.
WITNHSS:J. BADE FINKS, Clerk of
t e District court of Dallas county, Texas
Given under my hand and seal of
id Court, at office in the City of
1 ’alias this 25th day of August A. D.
1931.
(test: J. BALIE FINKS,
Clerk District Court, Dallas County.
! ■, Troy E. Hill, Deputy. 41-4
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Martin, W. L. The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, September 11, 1931, newspaper, September 11, 1931; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth728124/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Carrollton Public Library.