The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, October 4, 1935 Page: 2 of 4
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THE CHRONICLE I
- I
W. L. MARTIN
Editor and Owner.
Published Every Friday
Entered at tha poatoffica at Car-
raUton. Texas, as second-class matter
Bader tha Act of Congress, March 3,
l«T» _
luHertiiars will pleasa nota that the SI M
year subscription price applies to the
ieuntlae .>f Dallas. Tarrant. Denton. Collin.
Roakwail, Kaufman and Ellla. Outside this
■tetria* the price Is 11.60 per year.
In writing In and asking a change
to address, will you please give the
hid address as well as the new on.?
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
In Dallas and Adjoining Counties
Ona Year _______....----------------$1.00
Six Months _____________________________ .00
STirea Months ___________________________ .SO
Outside Above Named District
Again—
The People Speak
By RAYMOND PITCAIRN
National Chairman
Spntinplx of the Republic
An event of unusual import to those
who would tinker with the United
States Constitution has occurred re-
cently in Pennsylvania — the state
wherein our National Charter of Liber-
ties was conceived and written.
There, for the first time since recent
efforts to remould our Federal Con-
stitution along the tines of the newer
political philosophy gained national
prominence, the people themselves were
given opportunity to say what they
thought of that sort of thing.
Emphatically they rejected the Idea.
Dominated by the vote from rural
districts and the smaller cities, they
decided that this was no time to risk
the possible writing into fundamental
law of various unproven theories now
being urged throughout America as a
substitute for crystallized experience.
One Year ----------------------$1.50
Wtx Months _________________________— .85
Three Months ................................ 50
Chickers and potatoes seem
to be the bane of the Adminis-
tration.
And now Dallas pastors are
called upon to- tell the Presi-
dent what they think of the
country’s condition and its
business outlook. This is get-
ting back to Grass-Roots,
folks.
Tax statements have been
sent out by the secretary of
the school board and also by
thecity secretary telling folks
what they were expected to
The people of Pennsylvania, of course,
voted only on the question of revising
their own state constitution. But funda-
mentally—and despite whatever politi-
cal spokesmen on either side may claim
—some of the principles involved were
comparable to those brought into prom-
inence by the nation-wide efforts of
certain groups to remould our Federal
Constitution into a form more readily
influenced by passing fears and passions.
In the response may be read a
heartening message of encouragement
to all who oppose efforts to scrap cer-
tain essential elements of our American
system of government in favor of nev
ind untried theories. It is:
That the great body of the people—
,iie men and women who constitute the
backbone of America—are not at this
time in sympathy with a policy of
sudden changes. They realize that
while it was the Declaration of Inde-
pendence that proclaimed personal Lib-
erty, it is the Federal Constitution that
assures it. They do not intend to sur-
render that guarantee.
Again—the People speak.
pay as their share of running
the schools and the city. If you
were slighted just call on
Eulys Bishop or C. L.Chastain.
No law is much good unless
Properly Enforced. We have a
law requiring two headlights
to be used on an automobile
after darkness falls. Did you
ever hear of the law being en-
forced? Neither did we. Most
evidently it is a menace to
night driving to meet cars
with only one headlight burn-
ing.
A law licensing auto drivers
is being sought. It might be a
good law IF ENFORCED, but
how many of our auto laws
are being enforced ? We know
it means a shock to folks to
pick up the Monday morning
newspapers and read of the
fatalities of the day previous
and we expect it will be worse
when drinkers get to driving
fast automobiles.
-----
There was just one “Ark of
the Covenant” and it was car-
ried around Jericho seven
times. There were seven pens
Used in signing the Wheeler-
Raybuin Bill. Do the propon-
ents of the bill expect the walls
to fall down now when they
blow their trumpets and they
be enabled to go in and take
Coal miners of this country
seem to be “hoeing a hard
row with a lot of stumps in it"
and the end of the row is not in
sight. We can well remember
when they were warned of
what would happen if they per-
sisted in permitting the great
influx of foreign mining labor.
There was a law on the books
against importing “contract
labor" but the law was grossly
disregarded and whenever the
mining companies wanted new
labor it was easy to spread
rosy pictures of conditions in
America before the foreign
miner in Belgium, in England,
in Wales, in Austria, or else-
where where laborers were
restless and soon there was a
flock of them making their
way* thru Castle Garden and
out into the mining districts
of Pennsylvania, Maryland,
West Virginia, and westward
wherever mines were being
operated. The more miners
there were to feed the more
the “company stores” profit-
ed and it was an easy matter
to divide the work so that the
best patrons of the stores
made the most money. They
were worked for about all
they were worth to the com-
pany and the stores in the dis-
tricts where we have been to
the property of the investors observe them, and we presume
is power and gas utilities?
— —— -
There is a rumor afloat that
Hon. Cordell Hull of Tennes-
see, Secretary of State in the
cabinet of President Roose-
velt, will soon resign his port-
folio and return to his home
state and run for the office of
Sesator. If Mr. Hull does this
he will doubtless be elected
and on his return to the Senate
his influence will be greatly
beneficial to that body and
helpful to the party. We have
always had a kindly feeling
for Cordell Hull; held him in
high esteem and believe that
he thinks along the lines of
government which will, or
would if followed, keep us near
that high ideal of American-
ism cherished by those who
would do unto others as they
Would be done by.
---*#*--
"Newspaper adveitising to-
day is a running account of the
commercial history of the
times. It includes every devel-
opment, every activity in the
realms of trade, art, science-
all of them depend upon adver-
tising for their advancement
and expansion," so says James
E. Barrett, managing directoi*
• f the Oklahoma Biltmore
Hotel.
what we have seen is a fair
sample of the workings in any
company-operated coal field.
Labor has in the past sown to
the wind and is reaping the
whirlwind.
The Chicago Cubs and the
Detroit Tigers will be the con-
tending teams in the World
Series for National honors in
baseball The Cubs Won two
games last week from the St.
Louis Cardinals, one of them
off Dizzy Dean, and sinched
the National title thus making
them the contenders against
the American League Cham-
pions.
Next week being Fire Pre-
vention Week it may be pos-
sible to do some work elimi-
nating fire hazards. When the
weeds get dry there will be a
real fire hazard and we might
eliminate a lot. of the weeds
as our stunt.
Senator J. Hamilton Lewis
of Illinois is sick in Moscow,
Russia. His condition was
seiious for a time but this
week he is reported as improv-
ing. It is expected he may be
moved from Moscow early
next week,
We do good job printing.
II
Keif's. v ^;>nv. -
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1
xiii tor tne
ONE that’s
For home news read The Chronicle,
for 52 weeks of information.
MtW
The More
The Merrier
/■'lOOD vegetables are so good
vJT that we want all we can get of
them. Our systems want them—
our health demands them.
Which is all very nice for every-
body except the one who stays in
the kitchen to shell peas, string
beans, scrape carrots and husk
corn. It is very nice to know,
then, that you can buy canned
mixed vegetables all ready to
serve hot with butter, or to toss
into a crisp salad, or into a puffy
tender omelet melting with good-
ness. You’ll like them prepared
in such ways as these:
Full of Vitamins
Vegetable Spanish Rice: Cu*
two slices of bacon in small
squares and fry. Remove from the
fat and then sautd one cUp of
mixed vegetables which have been
drained (and the liquor reserved)
in the bacon fat for a few minutes.
Then add the vegetable liquor and
one and one-half cups of tomatoes.
Season to taste with salt and
pepper. Simmer for a few minutes.
Add two-thirds cup rice which has
been boiled and drained, and pour
into a baking dish. Cover with
one-fourth cup grated cheese and
bake for twenty-five to thirty
minutes in a 375 degree oven.
This serves six persons.
Vegetable Omelet: Make a
French omelet using four eggs,
one-hhlf teaspoon salt, a few
grains of pepper and four table-
spoons milk. Meanwhile have
ready a white sauce made with
one tablespoon butter, one table-
spoon flour and tliree-fourths cup
of milk. Add one cup of canned
mixed vegetables which have been
drained, season with salt and
pepper and heat thoroughly.
Spread this over half the omelet
just before folding. This serves
four persons.
Quick Vegetable Soup: Simmer
one slice of onion with one cup of
canned tomatoes for five minutes.
Press through a sieve. Add the
contents of one can of consomind,
one eup of canned mixed vege-
tables and one cup of water. Sea-
son to taste with salt and pepp<
and boil for several minutes.*
Barriers to Mining
On September 23, the Ameri-
can Mining Congress metal
mines division will meet in
Chicago. Two of the most im-
portant matters for discussion
are those old questions of mine
[taxation and labor legislation,
j Nothing can do more to hold
mining back than onerous,
mistaken and misguided tax
and labor policies on the part
of the states and the federal
; government. Even in the pros-
perous day, mining was contin-
ually in hot water over taxa-
tion. Legislation was often
proposed and sometimes pass-
ed, that practically took the
profit out of mining operations
In these days, with the price
of the metals at extremely low
levels, unfair taxation and leg-
islation tending to create labor
disturbances, could rob mining
of whatever chance it has to
w i n recovery. — Industrial
News Review.
BITS O’ PHILOSOPHY
Dean E. V. WHITE
Texas State College for Women (CIA)
A sensitive person believes
he’s neglected; a sensible per-
son knows he’s not.
Education makes a yearning
heart, a learning mind, and an
earning hand.
When you lose your self-re
spect, only you can find it.
Better walk with God than
run with the Devil.
"The story of human progress
is Ithe story of good roads.—
E. R. W.
C. A. GOOD
D the Representative of the
TEXAS POWER & LIGHT CO
In Carrollton, Farmer* Branch,
Hebron, Addison and Lake Dallam,
For any information about you
electric light service call Mr. Good ai
Carrollton. Phone No. 90 or at hli
home, Phone No. 54.
The Dollar that is sent out of town
for job work that could be done here
is GONE and you will not do busi-
ness on it any more.
Pretty Pears
A LITTLE girl who liked to
A know all'about things was
x x listening with great interest
while her mother told her about
the habits of birds. They ate
grain, yes; they ate crumbs, yes,
she had seen them eat crumbs;
and they ate fruit—
“But mother,” the little girl in-
terrupted, “how do they open the
cans?”
Whereupon, no doubt, the mother
explained, how the bird gets up
even earlier than the canner to
get the prettiest fruit it can find.
But it is an early bird, indeed,
who can beat the canner to the
choicest fruit, for this, in most
cases, is especially grown for the
canneries so that it may be grown
under the best conditions and
harvested when it is at its ripest
and best
Canning Beauty 1
Take pears, for example. Pears
are a fruit with a long and hon-
orable history, yet they have re-
ceived leas attention from recent
generations than many other
fruits probably because of the poor
keeping-quality of fully-ripened
fresh pears. Even though we pick
them when they are a beautiful,
light golden yellow and bring them
indoors and place them in a fruit
dish, it is only a short time be-
fore they begin to deteriorate.
How different they look after
a short time off the tree, from the
pretty firm, yet tender, white pears
that we are familiar with when
we open the can. The delicate
flavor of the canned pear is per-
fectly retained because it has not
been allowed to become over-ripe
before picking.
It is this delicate flavor which
makes it blend with other fruits
so that it has become one of the
most popular for use in fruit cups,
salads and fruit desserts. In the
dish on the table, as well as on
the branch of the tree we hear the
same term used—“pretty pears.”*
If a person really wants to sell the
little articles for which he has no use
he will advertise in the WANT-AD
Department of The Chronicle.
Now is a good time to get a buai*
less education. If you desire to attend
a business college in Dallas or Tyler
it would pay you to see the editor of
he Chronicle; he can save you some
money.
DR. 0. T. MITCHELL
has moved to Plano where he will
continue in the practice of his
Medical Profession as a member
of the firm of
Drs. Ellis, Mitchell & Coleman
Offices will be upstairs in
THE HAYS BUII DING
PLANO, TEXAS
♦
OFFICE HOURS
8 to 10 a. m. 3 to S p. m.
and by appointment
Sunday 9 to 10 a. m.
PHONES
Office: 38 Residence: 30
If Its too good to Burn up,
You’d better INSURE IT!
SEE
McMURRAY and ISOM
"Insurance of all Kinds”
HOURS 9 a. m. to 1 p. m.
Daily and by Appointmant
H. H. Whitney, M. D.
SURGERY OBSTETRICS
CBlfERAL PRACTICE
Carr. Off. McCormick Pharmacy Phono |
Dallas Off. SIS Medical Dent. Bldg Ph
_ Residence Phons - . 3-3B4I
Office in Rainbow Pharmacy
OFFICE HOURS 10-12 a. m. «-fi p. m
DR. T. B. HAMER
General Practice and Obstretrice
FRISCO SURCEOS
R«>. Phon. 142 Office Phone SO
DR. R. L. BLACKBURN
Office in the McCormick
Pharmacy
Office Phone No. 8
Robert J. Cantrell
ATTORNEY
General Practice in All the Courts
Office in the Bank
Dallaa ’Phones—Residencsi 5i7780
Offlcas > 491
F. H. McMURRAY
NOTARY PUBLIC 1
Legal Papers of all Kinds ]
Farmers & Merchants State Bail
Carrollton. Texas A
© 1933, I.iggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
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Martin, W. L. The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, October 4, 1935, newspaper, October 4, 1935; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth728259/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Carrollton Public Library.