The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 35, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 4, 1936 Page: 4 of 4
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&Sl|
' -jZJ
fem
B. Hnrtshaw, 1101 'West
•tredt, faai announced the
and forthcoming
of fear daughter Gladys,
low C. Wells of Klrks-
lUsaourl. The nuptials will
place In early August at the
iw home with Rev. Earnest
, pastor of South Side Chris-
tian church and school classmate
Of th* bride-elect, officiating.
IBs* Harshaw graduated from
high shool In 11123, the following
pear entering North Texas State
Teachers college In Denton from
where she received her B. A. de-
gree In June. Her family have
been living In Denton for several
years, and Just recently eslablisbel
their residence in this city again.
Dr. Wells Is Instructor of physical
education at a teacher? college in
Xlrksvlile, where the c.'upie will
reside after marriage.
Wednesday evening Miss Har
sfcaw will be complimented with an
Informal party by Misses Anna
Louise Hogg. S-23 West Nelson
street Other events have been
planned for the popular bride-elect
v ,
CENTRAL ZONE MEETING
OF METHODIST ADULTS
OCCURRENCE IN SHERMAN
Approximately 50 adults ..1 tin
central zone of the Sherman Mctlu
dist district attended u zone meet
ing Sunday afternoon at the Ko;
Memorial Methodist church, who
Mrs. Ewing Ellis of Denison, dis-
trict director, presiding. The next
meeting of th zone will be held >'
Sadler nn Sunday, Sept. -
The theme of the SunU.i pro-
gram was 'Christ in Our Com-
munity’ and talks were made h..
Frank Thompson. Sherman la>
leader; the Rev. G. K Canister,
Tan Altyn. ard J I mplo- s*. Van
Alstyne.
The Rev Fred Adams of Deni-
son was in cliarge of the program
and the Rev. Keener If. Isbell, pas
tor of tile hostess chuivll, vd i J-
Votional period. Mrs. Rayford I.ana” b nts.
Or Boston, tie former .Miss c
Vat? Adrian of Denison «.,v
reading.
Murray atrect, entertained ueigh-
herhood play mat c« Saturday morn.
•i g in celebration of his fourth
birthday. Tile party was In the
; aid where older cuildrec enjoyed
t .uygioand equipment and vl».*
yt linger ones played in a aandpile
The birthday cake was cut anJ
served with orange juice at small
tables in the yard while the chu
cen sang birthday songs. i»a\iO
gave hisr guests toy baioons o:
souvenirs. He was assisted in en-
tertaining by his mother; his
and mother, Mrs. D. K. Foster;
1 is aunt, Mrs. Paul Ashbum Sr..
Airs. Linden Hagan and Mrs. Bui
Atilburn. There were eight chil-
dren present.
SEVERAL FROM THIS
SECTION TO RECEIVE
UNIVERSITY DEGREES
LUBBOCK—Two Fannin students
.it d one each from Grayson and Col*
i.u are expected to receive degrees
j* the summer exercises August 25
: t Texas Technological college. The
, ass numbers 180.
Miss Alienee Alverson of White-
Wright i* a c:-iri.Pdate for the b.i
chelor of art s degree in education.
Lenro Keeton ard Miss Robbie
dune Nelms o; n inham aie randl-
u:i*cs tor the same J•*, Mid5
\V.,t..- ')i lan?:. res and Mr. Keet
tn in sciences.
Jc. ry B. Stricklins of McKinney
's inndidate foe the degree ot
’.fthelor i>f business administration
a mooting of looal Odd T*tU>*1
Plan* wor* mate to havo a Joint
Milton with Robokaha next we.-k
at which time Guy Ruoker la to be
fco given a -wenty-flve year pin.
'.e arranging to attend a day a-t
ere arranging to attend a day eat
azide for thla lodge at the Cent’ii-
nlaL The time li August -3th,
end the local commlttte in charge
is comprised of Dr. B. R. Buiby.
John Walker, W. R. Mahan, Leon-
ard Weideman and F. R. Lawliorn.
church met Monday evening with
Mra. W. C. Dowdy. Ml Went
Monterey atreet. A program ot
rmuaementi wan enjoyed and rou
tine buatnen transacted. Refresh-
ment were served a large number
of members ard their guests.
EVERYDAY DENISON .
(Continued from page one)
to wear with the exception of
these raiments we donned this!
morning. Oh well, if you put
away the winter clothes for the I
summer, then put away the sum-
mer clothes for the winter, you
are back where you started, so
what’s the difference, you may
as well just wear the same clothes
the year ’hound and save moth-
ball expense.
GRAYSON DEMONSTRATION
CLUBS WILL HAVE PICNIC
AT LOY WEDNESDAY NIGHT
Home Demonstration clubs of
Grayson county are making ar-
rangements for an all night picnic
it lxiy Park Wednesday Mrs. Freil
Kiddle of Georgtown is in churg ■
Members are asked to bring viands
' iiough for supper, a midnight rc- | ... - ■ — -.......—.
paste and breakfast Thursday ! whose annual picinic is held Aug-
morning. A la-go number Is ex- ("Ust 9, asking his group to send a
DENISON HOMECOMING—
j (Continued From Page 1)
pected.
—BRIEFS—
Miss Aline Goff has returned
from a visit In Dallas with her sis-
ter, Mtss Ethelyn Goff.
“CRM ER D'Z NI SO NIA N
CONTINUES HONORED
WITH VARIED PARTIES
Continued flucial activities bna
i:mu .Miss Hmmajane Fewell. *
’ w’dduu v i.t' of ills Frederick
Klupp of IVnisun. Miss Rel-o
Owen by gave ) breakfast and or.'A
to: shower Suuda> -it lier home, 710
( ertment in Dallas Miss Fewell
: to be married Aug. 9 to \V. A
Johnson, Jr. Miss Owcnby is to
I e bridesmaid. Breakfast guests
sund.-iy inv'udid the bride elect’s
r other, Mrs. M It. Fewell, Mrs
.Martha Meek and Miss Marion
Week, also former Denison resi-
Tlie First Christian church Board
\ ill meet this evening at 8 o’clock
in the chut eh. All numbers asked
to be present.
Miss Marin Walker has gone to
si Louis ami Chicago. In the lat-
tel city she will lie a guest of her
nicle anil aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Har-
iy Shaw.
return message here in time to be
read before the crowd Monday
night. I
The affair is expected to draw
more interest than any program
staged in Denison in years, Me-
Clung said.
| DENISON 02 YEARS AGO -
(Continued From Page 1)
'• o|
_>*r eorferenoe' took plow
(’ally oa th« aot of ‘Public Enemy'*
Wife,’ during the filming ot tb*
Warner Bros, picture allowing at
the Rialto theatre Friday and Sat-
urday. But theie conference* were
not to revise the script.
The conferees, Pat O'Brien, Rob-
ert Armstrong and Dick Foran took
terns telling stories In competition
for a battered trophy which the
poperty man exhumed frnm a
erawer In his prop box.
Tim rules of the informal con-
test wore Blmplc. Betweor
scenes whenever possible, the three
drew chairs into a circle in a
! (heduled corner. The one who
icld the best story of the day, de-
tcrmlned by a vote, got possession
of the cup until the next meeting.
At the end of the picture, the actor
who had held It most often got it
for keeps.
Rat O’Brien a raconteur of sorts,
i won the cup, withArmstrong scc-
i ml and Foran third.
l’ubllc Enemy's AVife' is a pow«
trful drama of a beautiful girls
struggle to escape the tolls of the
aw and also her maniacal husbard
who has caused her to be unjustly
imprisoned.
SECOND GUESS
i'll.* Tli.iburir class of First M. E.
« iirch is amnglng to present th$
Missouri Hil. billies Aug. 6, at Am-
erican Legion ball, Mrs. T. J. Price
i‘i bending plans.
R**v. Harry Lee VIrden, paste1*
of St. Luke’s Episcopal church
with his wife is leaving for Colo-
rndo on a vacation. He will bo
away until early September.
1
LITTLE DAVID LEWIS IN
HAPPY CELEBRATION OF
BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARY
David Lewi3, son
Mrs. Freeman Lewis
RIALTO
LORCAS LAUGHTERS IN
MERRY WATERMELON 'FETE
AT ADRIAN RESIDENCE
Th.- c. X \drian residence, 301
East Murray street, was the s-t
» lii.g of a watermelon party given
of Mr M . i j i . I* " is Daughters of Unpins
of 300 Wesf f Memorial' church when hostesses
_______ — j ., iv Mesdames C. G. Gingles, N.
MHUBBK j Sayre, Adiian. -T. Hopkins, D. F.
A i mi stead, C. M. Perry. .T. M. Cox
ind Miss Nan Adrian.
Prefacing tho serving, a program
j r,f entertainment was enjoyed. Rou-
t. j business taking care of future
n tivities was disposed of, giving
! v. r v to the «-v* nir.gs highlight. L«
fitshments were served on the spa-
ii us an$ attractive lawn.
I
Air (auditioned
^WEATHER!
TODAY ONLY
BARGAIN DAY
15c
MATINEE OR NIGHT
Drive SAFELY—Not Reckiei.lv
I.ois Becklium is visiting in Dal-
- and viewing the Centennial
v itli her uncle, Lacy Beckham of
Abilene, formerly uf Denison. Miss
Beckham will visit with the Beck-
lam family in Abilene after her
Dallas stay.
Mrs. Roxie Sitter, 124 East Sear.-:
street, district deputy of l adles of
Maciaheas, i ns been‘ill for severe;
t’lTit'.s, l.jwter, her condition is
improving, and she has been
honored on a number of oc-
casions,
Miss Jennie Jackson, accompan-
ied by Mesdames W, P. Crawford.
J.
of Bonham, left last weekend for
a visit to different points in Mexi-
co. They will be gone more than
'.wo weeks. *
on fire. It was then breaking out
of the roof, and is supposed to',
have originated from a defective
flue.
The fii'e department had the
same experience as a week or
two ago, the old rotten hose
: leaked more water than went out
of the nozzle. The city council
should delay no longer in or-
dering one or two thousand feet
more of good hose. It is absurd
to expect our firemen to do ef-
fective work without the appli
ances to do it with and property
owners should take more interest
in the matter of their being prop-
erly equipped,
• There are thousand and thous-
ands of bottles of Peruna sold in
the Territory, it contains suffic-
ient whiskey to get drunk on. Ke-
Icently we saw a great many em-|
pty bottle at Tishimingo, on thei
streets and in the alleys. i
A freestone peach, grown near i,ast century.
Sherman, that weighed three
quarters of a pound was on ex-
hibition today.
■ i ■—*
Tho Second Guessers Club woo
i ns why John Sutter did njt guard
1 i: lands fiom invaders nnd mine
I the gold for himself, Sutter was
(riving enormous wealth from his
( reps, cattle, horses and other pro-
ducts which seemed of first impor-
tance to hint. It would have been
i ccessary for him to neglect al!
tin se interests, to concentrate ou
rdd mining. He cottid not know
m advance hew much gold there
was in the earth.
While he wes weighing whether
tc forego what he had for an un-
known value, ids men deserted hint
to dig for themselves. Then carr.-s
the gold hungry horde. It. was too
iptc for Suttee. His sun was set-
ting in the clouds of the Great
Madness of '49,
'Sutter’s Ooid, starring JidwqM
Arnold at tile Star theatre Fit-
c'a> and Saturday, f.'heda light on
the difficulties which beset one of
the most Interesting humans of the
JOAN CAME TO LEARN
Kidneys Must
Clean Out Acids
The only way your body can clean out
tA,Co'odd‘ Tl^.'UoVe K't
.= - .......on tiny, i
ney tube* or filters, but beware of cheap,
iraatlc, Irritating drugs. If functional
Kidney or Bladder dlHurders make you
When 'Exclusive Story,' the new
Me tro-Goldwyr.-Mayer picture
screening at tho Star theatre Tuc?
Up Nl,
th ma
hts, Ni
Kidney or oiaauer
luffer from Getting Up Nigh
less. Leg Pains, Backache. Clrcl
tiyea, Dlizlneas, Rheumatic Pains
jty. Burning. Smarting or Itching, don t
take chances. Get the Docftor’n guaran-
teed prescription called Cyetex
fast, safe and aur<
W. Haden and J. E. Whitwortn !JSaranLTto Say'iT” V'ta"t:
rlption
x). 'Works fast,
urs It piust
arant
mqney back on returi
Cyatex costa only 9c
*nd the guara
nly 9c § day
ntee protects
package. :
Irugglsta I
»
STAR
LAST TIMES TODAY
GEO. BURNS and
GRAC1E ALLEN in
“Here Comes Cookie”
WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY
frui:
KEN
MURRAY in
“The Oily Bird'
Paramount Variety
Wednesday and
Thursday
jSi
Sag
m
Pius
\:
Rahtw—'City Sticker, b
Vonderilte 1
an
•iXf,WE
MOM's tbi ■>•>•«
franchgt tone
ADDED ATTRACTION
BY POPULAR DEMAND
OFFICIAL AUTHENTIC
Schmeling-
Loiiis
Fight Pictures
ROUND! BY ROUND!
BLOW! BY BLOW!
IN SLOW AND
NATURAL MOTION
SEE THE FATAL 4th ROUND
SEE T1IE KNOCKOUT 12th
ROUND
Also
Great Rice’* “FINER POINTS”
W. C. Dowdy, grocer at 1008, Aus-
tin avenue, has returned from a
visit to Erath County, his old home
site. One of the most pleasant
trips he has had to the ‘old home
in the twenty years he has been a
resident of Denison, he declares.
Miss Duke Murray find Mrs.
Edyth Carter are visiting in Da1-
las today. They will view the won-
derful doll house constructed un
dor supervision of Colleen Moore, M
well as go out to the Centennial
grounds,
T ie M-K-T Drum and Bugle
rorp is holding regular practice in
preparation t0 take part on Kat.y
cloy, September f>th at the Centen-
nial. The local unit is directed bv
E B. Woodmansee, (parson Sebers,
K. L Gray and D. L. Finch.
Miss Imogene Meitzen has resum-
'd her duties in the hosiery depart-
om nt of M idden’p store after a va-
(Mion in Dallas and Fort Worth.
In the former city she was a guest
of Mrs. William Kirkham nee Mary
.Margaret Parham of Denison.
TIRED, VI -.-HAS w’J
NO AM. -dOl.
T TO W manj
IT women are
just dragging them-
selves around, all
tired out with peri-
odic weakness and
pain? They should
know that Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Tab-
lets relieve peri-
odic pains ana dis-
comfort. Small size only 25 cents.
Mrs. Dorsie Williams of Danville,
Illinois, says, “1 had no ambition
and was terribly nervous. Your Tab-
lets helped my periods and built me
up.” Try them next month.
COULD NOT DO HER
HOUSEWORK
WYIIEN every.
YV thing you at-
tempt is a burden
—when you are
nervous and irri-
■ table—at your
wit's end—try
this medicine. It
may he just what
you neeu for extra
energy. Mrs. Charles L. Cadmus of
Trenton, New Jersey, says, "After
doing just a little work I had to lie
down. My mother-in-law recom-
mended the Vegetable Compound.
I can see a wonderful change now."
i
Mrs. Marlin R Mansfield of Dal-
and Fort Worth has arrived in
Denison for t tliife-day stay with
datives and fi lends. She is the i
former Miss Finable Pepper ot
this city.
Rainbow Girls sponsored an ice
cream party Monday night nt the
home of Madeo Kennedy, *09 South
Latpar avenue. Marcladten Bailey
(Easy Pleasant Way To
LOSE FAT
How would you like to lose your
(at. Increase your energy snd improve
your health?
How would you like to lose your
double chin and your too promineut
hips and abdomen and >t the tame
time make your skin so dean and
clear that It will compel admiration?
Cot on tbe scales today and see
how mnch you weigh—then get a bot-
tle ol Krtuchen Salta that cost next
to nothing and which will last you 4
week*. Tike one hall teaspoonful in a
glass ol hot water in the morning—
cut down on pastry and fatty meets—
go light on potatoes, butter, cream
and sugar—and when you have fin-,
ished the contents of this first bottle'
weigh yourself egain.
Notice also that you hart gained in;
energy—yon feel younger in body—
Knischen will give any fat parson a
joyous surprise. Refuse Imitations—
safeguard your health—you lose fat
SAFELY the Kniachea way.
NOTB—Many poapl* find that tha
work. Th* *ter adw at
?0r hour* quietly la th* hackgrouCS.
When questioned *Im anted. T
came her* to learn, not to tenth.'
No Crime Ever
Perfect Proved
ByTheFederals
DALLAS—Crime doean't pay. •
Neither can crime be perfect It
you think otherwise examine some
tha machines and the aysteme
exhibited at the Texas Centennial
Exposition which the federal and
state governments use In crime
detection and solution.
Tfiore is an electrical eortlng ma-,
chine, capable of sorting 24,000'
cards per hour, siftings from a*
many as 700 different combinations
which is used In the larger Identl
('Ration Bureaus, among them the I
United States Department of Jus-
tico. Thus Investigators may pour
through this machine the recori
'cards of thousands of criminals and
leave it to the machine to ferret
cut the type they seek. If tha
criminal has blue eyes, brown hair,
scuds five feet nine and limps, the"
machine will pick out the cards of
criminals answering such a de3-
t ription. Then it is but a matter
o: minutes be'fore the list In a
Clime is narrowed down to a few
suspects.
There" tbe state's scientific crime
detection laboratory whlh shows'
Ihe rapid stride of Texas in the'
ast 18 months towards solving lta
crimo problems. The exhibit is
charge of M. T. Gonzaullas, former
Texas Ranger, now head of the
state's Bureau ot Intelligence. In
this exhibit are hundreds of guns,
ranging from machine guns to tiny
p.stols, all of which were taken
from criminals, ^here i8 a com-
plete file of data on firearms, bul-
lets and fired cartridges, dictaphone
sets, u Iravloiet lights, fingerprint,
cameras, enlarging cameras and a
nice display of flngerprinta
Dliectlng youths activities to
keep him away from crime is an-
other feature to be found in this
connection at the Centennial Expo-
sition. Tho Civilian Conservation
Corps and the Boy Scouts, both Of
which tiavc exhibits at the Exposi-
tion are examples. In each or-
ganisation tbe activities of the
'youth aro dlrcced to make better
citizens of the youths in tbetr
ranks.
The Centennial Exposition’s’ free
exhibits explaining the ceaseless
warfare on crime are worth a sepa-
sl Rr*. L N. Dtny mym
fi km fw*4 srikliq <n At
that san teJfa* Al
Mils* Anti-Fate
INNNtkfte
Tnhta, write that 1
u**d dTmHm /
with better mmA
•ran hopaA km,
CountlM*
wtrw would
Selling and the
Printed Word
Seven league boots are mere am-
ateurs compared to the giant
strides that modem printing and
advertising endows you with.
While you might be talking to one
prospect in person, you can be
addressing hundreds through the
medium of expert printing.
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The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 35, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 4, 1936, newspaper, August 4, 1936; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth735721/m1/4/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.