The Canadian Record (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1929 Page: 4 of 10
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Conoco Starts Nation Tour
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6/Arthur Brisbane
Warning to Arabs
To Improve Marriage
Pittsburgh's Big Day
Wise Young Dinosaur
Hr!i:s;a lus made the Arabs utuler
t!in: r.i;:"il>'r is K"t u safe pas
time iindor a mandate.
\t Hiiif.i three -Arabs wore s >n
;,.r„v.! to lUvUl ! v Chief Ju.«!ice Sit
SMhlioi itacfiShiieij for causing the
• It-aih of Isa.-U' Mar.uian.
Tl e men (.vnUonni atul Arabs wit
(■>«$.{ tbe trial fa'i'eii upon-;Aliah to
U.
Allah dldn'i, say'anyiliiug. •
IK
was:"
from the scone, as
,i' In Constan-
the nation-wide educational
The "(oniieo No - a d lllW 011 , . s ... . , m
tour. Standing in front of the ship, from left to right are. J. h.
Moorehead. Rav l\ Shrader. H. K. Ludwig -and Frank Moore. |
Another evidence oi tr.e value
oi aviation to big business is
found in the transcontinental
tour of the Continental Oil Com-
pany's six-piace, Trayelair cabin
monoplane. "Conoco -No. 2'." leav-
ing Denver iffi; October; 25 on a
1 trip that carries it through the
Rocky Mountain states, across the
Atlantic seaboard and back to
Denver—a total of over 8.000
miles.'
The tour is planned for the
purpose of acquainting the Con-
tinental Company's sales forces
with the details of a new oil,
prior to public announcement of
the product, which will be known
as "Conoco Germ-Processed Mo-
tor Oil."
Technologists of the Continen-
tal Company authorize.the state-
ment that the new Conoco "Germ-
Processed" Moor Oil will be a
revolutionizmg factor in automo-
tive and general mechanical lub-
rication. They state that it is a
highly Jrefined oil, made from
carefully selected crude by an
exclusive patented process. De-
tails of the claims for the new
oil are to be explained to sales
groups at the various points of
call of the "Conoco No. 2." A
stop of approximately one day is
biing made at each city.
The ship is being piloted by
Ray C. Shrader. chief of the com-
pany's aviation sales division.
Passengers are J. E. -Moorehead,
.sales promotion manager; Frank
Moore,; special representative; and
, G. K. ' Ludwijj, marketing engi-
neer. ■ ;
Stops for the place are sched-
uled at Salt Lake City, Butte,
Great Falls, Chicago, New York,
j Richmond, Kansas City. Lincoln.
Ponca City. Wichita Falls, Albu-
jquerqua and then back to Den-
,ver.
Mr. Moorehead. in charge of
the tour, and his associates, will
> utilize charts, printed matter,
imaps and demonstration appara-
tus in .their appearances before
the various local groups, explain-
ing in detail the refining meth-
od used in producing the new
, "Germ-Processed" oil, and out-
; lining its superior qualities.
C. C. Warner, advertising man-
lager of the Continental Oil Com-
' pany. announces that a nation-
' wide newspaper, poster and farm
paper advertising [campaign to
acquaint the public with the new
oil. will follow the air tour.
EVOLUTION OF SCHOOL | It is now recognized that cities
BUILDINGS FOLLOW NA- iare not good places for children
TION'S SOCIAL CHANGES I jecause there are usually not suf-
.... ; ____ - ficient spaces and opportunities
School buildings in the United for the healthful, wholesome play
States have shown a distinct evo-
lution in keeping with social:
which is one of 'the fundamental
needs of childhood; because the
changes in American life from city shuts children away fromTon- j
pioneer days to the present era of tact with the actual physical:
congested urban centers. world and gives no opportunity.
There have been three stages in for any first-hand knowledge of |
the development 'of the .sQtiool nature; because the city environ-j
building, each of them the result' ment does not give children
of three important changes in our
social and industrial life. In the
c ha nee : to take part in the educa-
tional activities about the home
early pioneer days, life outside ' which formerly constituted sv.ch a
of school contained many activi-, large pai't of their education in
ties of great educational value for : the pioneer village.
children. For these reasons it 0——
was not necessary for the school FOLLETTE — Phillips Petrol-
to teach anything more than the ''eum Company purchased 3 busi-
in turn meant ness lots and will start construc-
schoolhouse of tiori of filling station in near fu-
-'i-
Gainesville—Cook County Oil
operations show greater activity.
three R's. This
that the one-room
those days was-adequate, so far as f "re.
school facilities were concerned.
Toward the middle of the last
century, however, the concentra-
tion of large numbers of people, RHHH H | HHp|||[
in cities brought about changes i GAND SALINE — F ront en-
in the social life which have vital-(trance of post office being repair--
ly affected the whole development! fe(''
of our school system. At frst,; , . "®~ *
as the cities developed, those who GRAND SALINE — McCrain
came from the farm to the city1 Motor Company adds new-equip*
brought to the city the same kind 1 meri**
oi school which had been ade- ° 0
quate in the countrv. However, DEL ^'01—Mohair Producers
since there were more children in form co-operative marketing con-
th.- city, the one-room school ho use r-ern.
would not do. Consequently 4, 8 ~~ ®
and 12 one-room schools were put Mar-Day Customs
tinder one ro/jf.
This is the peri'Kl ir: school- a v v.-i-,
"48 =rV",,r & " """ *
li ,j1iu" j 'etch the flowers fresh." Hawthorne
ally three stones v.:tr, large | branches were carried home about
sunset amlfj much inerry-maktog. The
name, 'Hie May, was gtven to the
hawtlioMie, and the ceremony was
called "the bringing home the May."
A relic of the Roman custom when on
May day the goddess Flora was espe-
cially honored Is seen in the selection
of a beautiful village maid to be
As far back as the Medieval pe-
riod in England, Chaucer says, it was
rooms of high r:e;;;yr.\u . no
: corridor or el\r. the
center of the hv1.A>; the
science of lighting and ventilation
.had not vet devel'/fjed, children
were forced to ait in rooms five
jliours a day under conditions that . _
developed eye strain, bad posture,! crowned as queea of the May.
and respiratory troubles. ] - . :
Undersirable as these physical i TL . n ..
■ 'sssrs yrthey dlir' t"« „P .,te.
constitute the most serious objec-' wilzed dollar" was coined by Prof. Ir-
twns to this type of school. The | vlng Fisher of Yale In bis book, "Sta-
real objection to it was that it blllzlng the Dollar." It is a theoreti-
was entirely unfitted to meet the' ca> dollar having a constant purchng-
needs of children living in cities ',ng P®we1'- ^'he theory of tire com-
It gave no opportunity for ony. Pensated dollar Is to convert the pres-
thinar but the traditional ent 80,<1 standard Into a true com-
thi 7.! modlty standard-that Is, to standard-
the three Rs. It failed complete* izeithe dollar as a unit of purchasing
i - . , ® ® opportunity for the power. Thus," there would be a gold
, Wholesome work and play which dollar of constant purchasing power
had been part of the life of chil* with varying weight Instead of a gold
f «Tren in the pioneer days. ! <l"l|ar of standard weight and varying
.■-lit'—
• .imjili? ("In i>! ia ns ha J boon assured
(fiat at the last moment'If the Turks
tffljk Coiisnuu Inoplif' angols would ap
•H«nr in the square before the Church
..f St. ?!oiia and smite thorn.
T'.irl;s t'i'">l; Constantinople, have
held the city through all the con
mrles since. No angels have ap
pea red.
Moral: If you want anything done,
'hm't depend on Allah.
Great Uritain proposes to bar from
marriage the "mentally unfit." That
might Improve the human race, If you
i.-uuld Identify the mentally unlit with
certainty.
Some unfit will he exempt from
tiiatrimonial ostracism because they
possess: fortunes or Important titles
■ ir names.
Others mentally unfit will escape
oeciiuse they are only dull, belonging
to the negative class that Dante put
into one of hell's disagreeable com
iiarttiiems.
Pittsburgh held a big celebration
and for good reasons.
l-'ifty years ago you could wade
across the Ohio river In many places
.villi water no higher than your knees.
Now the government has built fifty
dams, costing $118,000,000, giving at
least nine foot of water, enough for
large boats, all year round through-
out the 1.000 miles of stream between
Pittsburgh and the Mississippi.
Ohio river traffic lias increased In
Iwelve years from 4,000,000 to 20,-
'.100,000 tons.
The river now makes possible a
saving of $20,000,000 a year In freight
charges.
Overwork Is not so dangerous but
violent emotion is extremely danger-
.ius, says Dr. C. P. Emerson, learned
snnlent of the human body. "A strong
••motion can Inflict a physical Injury,
just ns truly as can a knife," says
;fie doctor.
However, a life that amounts to
anything Is made up of strong emo-
tions.
A giant turtle on the Galapagos Is-
lands never has strong emotions and
lives five or six hundred years. But
who would be a Galapagos turtle?
Hotter be Keats, Alexander, or Na-
poleon.
Samuel Insull, Jr., following In his
father's Industrial dinosaur tracks, as
president of the Midland United Com
pany of Chicago, tells the American
lias association that to boom the gas
industry and increase sales they must
■•tit prices, and use "persuasive ad-
vertising and proper salesmanship."
It young Mr. Insult follows out
those Ideas he will be a big indus-
trial dinosaur some day.
Mr. Lamont, "the" Mr. Lamont, say*
business is good and will contlnu.
good. Gerard Swope, president OfGeu
oral Electric, says "Amen 1" and means
it. Orders received by his company for
the three months ending Septembei
•!0 were S110.0S8.0t4, igalnst $90,328,
ooo in the same period last year. Thai
increase of 29 per cent has prevailed
throughout the entire year.
Madame Curie, who helped the dls
eovery of radium, conies here to ac-
cept for the new Itadlum Institute at
Warsaw, one gram of radium, costing
>">0,000, paid for by American women.
You could put in a small valise radi-
um worth more than all the wealth
of Rockefeller, Ford, Secretary Mellon
and George I''. Baker combined, If such
a radium quantity existed.
Our sun, with its source of terriBc
energy only guessed -X by science, ma;
contain millions of tons of radium.
We can't get at that But we mlgh:
give more poor children the beneflt of
the sun's light, which ts accessible and
costs nothing.
Dr. Frederick Tilney, professor of
neurology at Columbia university,
warns you that a headache is a se-
rious thing. There are sixteen differ-
ent kinds of headaches, all requiring
particular cure and understanding.
Headaches often come from anslety,
and you should be cautious about tak-
ing' medicine to kill a headache.
It may kill the headache, while the
forces that cause the headache con-
tinue working to kill you.
In Cuna'da, Ramsay MacDonuld,
member of the Socialist party, ad-
dressing labor unions, tells them thai
changes must be made by evolution,
not by revolution. That's how they
have been made In the past
195®. bp Kins Ffatureo Syndicate, Inc.)
BBSs
«r™
1
m
CORRECT
Suits
$25
Up
Overcoats
The modern styles, the
right woolens, the wanted
models—Warmth, distinc-
tion. "class." Yes, they
are PERFECTLY COR-
RECT.
$20
Up
"The Store Ahead"
Phone — 290 ...
.Phone
THE B. M. B. MERC CO.
PIGGL
■helph
V UBSELF
nmH
SMILINO
SHELF
PIGGLY-WIGGLY Stores are not an experiment, they
have come to stay. Our biggest advertisers are customers
from other cities that know the advantage of trading at
I'IGGLY-WIGGLY'S. You must be satisfied. For any rea-
son you are not return the goods and get your money.
SPECIAL PRICES FOR SATURDAY
NICE FIRM
HEADS. EACH
CALIFORNIA TOKAYS
PER POUND
Lettuce
Grapes
Corn Flakes
Coffee
KELLOGG'S
Large Size
3 Lbs. Elegant with
Cup and Saucer
3 LB. SUGAR FREE
Pork & Beans
Hominy
Toilet Paper
LibbyVNo, 2
3 cans for
VAN CAMP'S MEDIUM
Size 3 cans
1 Lb. Pure Sugar Stick
Candy
Rex Bacon 1-2 or whole ride, lb. 26c
ruritan Bacon 1-Zorwhnle «j3e lOfa
L<
rinv HI2V. I1. fi-1
I'-Viooiiyiiii'M
•«-, 1SS3 w«sl
Lesson f|
bespect|
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Noble, Joseph M. The Canadian Record (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1929, newspaper, October 31, 1929; Canadian, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth125732/m1/4/: accessed May 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hemphill County Library.