Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 289, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 16, 1936 Page: 6 of 8
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BENTON, TEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE, THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1936
PAGE SIX
f
THE ELEPHANT TRAILER
BARBS
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FOLKS
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these groups,
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Such sufferers
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Feet Hurt?
a manu-'
BRICKEY’S SHOE STORE
r
it was six weeks before he could wear a shirt.
I
Contemporary Thought
f
Tomorrow—The Storm.
os
Buy Your
SAFETY
TESTED
USED CAR
fl
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AT
» - _____
S. I. SELF
■A
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n
i
—then come in and let us fit you in comfortable shoes.
“We.Know How”
Crutchfield to
Address W. M. S.
Grand Jury Likely
To Report Today
JUST
AMONG US
Tomorrow—Treating Low Back-
ache.
--------o--------
19 Years Ago Today
64
184
during the last 20 years just about knows what he is
talking about.
BIBLE THOUGHT FOB
TODAY
♦
•>
JOHN COGDELL ARRESTED NOT
DENTON MAN
tion, friends of the latter pointed
out today.
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...$5.50
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cities.
Dallas is a wholesale center and financial center
with its great wholesale houses, banks and insurance
companies. Fort Worth is a great cattle, oil and in-
dustrial city. Dallas cannot hope to become the meat
packing center of Texas, nor can Fort Worth expect
to overcome Dallas’ lead as a financial center. To-
gether, these cities, only 35 miles apart, are in reality
a great urban center of approximately half a million
population.
A London hospital is experiment-
ing with, an inflated rubber pillow
having radio earphones in the cen-
ter.
(Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, Inc.)
Dora believes that the food and drug act guar-
antees both pharmacists’ medicines and sand-
wiches.
they lived
and to
4
gf/ f
j Behind Scenes in Washington
By RODNEY DUTCHER
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
“Much good road work has
been done over Collin County
in the last three or four years.
Such improvemerits not only
serve the traveling public, but
they also provide work for the
unemployed. The government is
justified in co-operating inas-
much as good road building pro-
vides ai permanent improvement
and at the same time keeps men
willing to work from off the re-
lief rolls.”
Collin County has been exceed-
ingly fortunate in the amount of
road building that has been done
in recent months. A huge amount of
Federal and state funds was used
to concrete Highway 75 through the
county, and this lacks much of be-
ing all that has been spent for new
roads in the county to the east.
Collin County labor not only is
finding employment through these
projects, but the county will be re-
ceiving benefits through many years
to come because of her alertness in
obtaining road construction.
&
W
‘K'
Good Used Electric Refrigerators
FOR SALE AT A BARGAIN
WALDRIP MOTOR CO.
ELECTROLUX DEALERS
Oysters cannot breed in water
that is colder than 69 degrees Fa-
hrenheit.
Motor Co.
OLDSMOBILE DEALER
•4s * * *
Comments the McKinney Courier-
Gazette :
See Us tor LOANS!
G. W. MARTIN LUMBER COMPANY
Phone 293 N. Locust St.
&
Congested road
conditions — new
drivers —- all point
to the need
COLLISION
LIABILITY
SURANCE.
HAI-SOL
NASA L WASH
*
< ll
USED CAR SPECIALS
1926 Buick Touring 1927 Buick Sedan
1929 Ford Roadster
DICKSON-HAMILTON MOTOR CO.
Phone 248
Stover Funeral Home
FUNERAL DIRECTORS - AMBULANCE SERVICE
320 W. Oak Street. Phone 211
WASHINGTON, July 16.—The Republican party
has formally declared its belief that states can con-
stitutionally pass minimum wage laws, despite the
supreme court’s 5 to 4 adverse decision in New York’s
; Tipaldo case.
The Democratic party is shying off the constitu-
tional issue, although the court’s opinion in the New
York case was its most unpopular decision of the
last three years.
Governor Landon isn’t sure whether the states
can have such laws constitutionally, and favors an
amendment if they can’t.
New York and 11 other states have decided to con-
tinue enforcement of their minimum wage laws for
women and children despite the Tipaldo decision.
The attorney general of New York is petitioning
for a rehearing of the case and his petition will come
before the court for decision next fall.
The supreme court goes on the spot again, its ul-
timate decision tied in closely with the campaign, in
a case which threatens its prestige and in which it
will be hard put to reconcile an adverse decision with
a previous favorable decision in a similar case.
* * *
All this needs some explaining and any lawyer can
do it for you—if he is smart enough.
Astonishing as it may seem—when you consider
the fact that no one seemed to notice it at the time
—the court didn’t definitely adjudicate the validity of
the New York law, as all or nearly all of us supposed.
The majority opinion was expressly based on a sup-
position that the state of New York had not asked
the court to reconsider the constitutional questions
decided in the‘Adkins case and that the validity of
the principles upon which that decision rested were
not challenged.
The Adkins case involved a federal minimum wage
law for the District of Columbia, which the court
killed in 1923 by a vote of 5 to 3.
The majority concluded that the New York law
could not be distinguished from the invalidated Dis-
trict of Columbia law. But it didn’t decide that by
looking at ..the New York law and comparing it with
the D. O. statute. It merely said that the New York
“We’ve been unable to find her,” he admitted. “If
you run into her on the way over, cable us a story.”
. Charged with this assignment, Barron spent the
better part of two days in a fruitless search for the
missing princess.
“You look worried,” suggested a chic young thing
in the ship’s bar that afternoon. “Anything on your
mind?”
“Not at all,” Barron grinned. “In fact, I was just
thinking how much fun we had dancing last night.
Are we going to do the same tonight?”
“I’ll meet you on deck at 9 o’clock,” she agreed.
Later that evening—that is to say, after several
hours of dancing to the romantic strains of a crack
ship orchestra, Mark suddenly said:
“To hell with that princess—I don’t think she’s on
board anyway!” Noting the wide-eyed expression of
the pretty, he explained. “I’ve been trying to find a
princess ever since we sailed. My office wants a story,
but so far I’ve been unable to locate her.”
The girl beside him suddenly burst out laughing.
“Why didn't you tell me?” she giggled. “Whom do
you think you’ve been dancing with every night any-
way?”
*
A talk on missions will be the
main number on a program at a
county-wide meeting of Zone 3 of
the Methodist Women’s Missionary
Society this evening at 7 o’clock in
the City"Park. The talk will be given
by Rev. F. A. Crutchfield, presiding
elder of the Denton district. Mem-
bers of all churches and their fam-
ilies are invited. Should rain pre-
vent an open air meeting the* First
Methodist Church will be used.
Those attending are to bring bas-
ket lunches for a picnic supper.
* <■ 'I' 'I' 1■I1** I1***
4> +
♦
♦
♦
♦ + + ♦ --- $♦ + *
GREAT DAYS AHEAD: Eye hath
not seen, nor ear heard, neither have
entered into the heart of man, the
things which God hath prepared for
them that love him—1 Corinthians
2:9.
PENSION APPROVED
This editor, being a member of the Legislature
which made provision for the payment of old age as-
sistance to needy persons 65 years old and older, has
interested himself this week in making inquiries
among local citizens who had applied for such as-
sistance.
One man contacted said his application and that
of his wife had been approved for $17 each, making
a total of $34 per month to be paid the couple be-
ginning in July. This man and his wife own their
home, keep a cow, raise vegetables, and have manag-
ed to sustain life. With $34 coming in monthly, he
said, they will be sitting on top of the world. He is
perfectly satisfied with the amount allowed by the
Old Age Assistance Commission.
Another man was approved for $19 and his wife
for $17, the extra $2 in his case being allowed for
the purchase of medicine that he requires. An aged
and practically helpless widow has been approved for
$30 monthly, the maximum amount possible to be al-
lowed. Of this $30, the State will pay $15 and the
Federal Government $15. Other local applicants have
been approved.
The Federal Social Security Act only joins the
State in making payments to aged needy individuals,
and the Federal Government will match State funds
for this purpose only. Those who have made a study
of the Texas Old Age Assistance law are now begin-
ning to say that Texas has the most liberal old age
assistance law of any state. In most of the States
property owned by old people becomes the property
of the State at their death, if they received old age
assistance. And in other States if the aged person
has children who are able to provide for them, they
are denied assistance. No such provisions are to be
found in the Texas law.
The Federal Government has already appropriated
over $1,150,000 to match the State in the July and
August payments. This is more than was appropriated
to any other state, some of which have a larger pop-
ulation than Texas, for July and August payments.
The appropriation is larger because Texas is more
libera] in its Old Age Assistance.—Whitewright Sun.
1
f
X
The John Cogdell whose ar-
rest on beer charges was recently
reported by the Record-Chronicle
was not the John Cbgsdell of Den-
ton, operator of a local filling sta-
some of the domestic duties and the
women too had leisure to put
into learning if they chose.
Today the idea of school as lei-
sure has receded into the shadows''
past. The privilege of learning has
been forgotten, it has become such
an accepted thing, that, like most
commonplaces it has grown tedius.
Yet the child, when he first asks
questions, first begins to examine
the world he lives in and then
his own inner life, still has the
attitude of our remote acestors. He
is still eager and animated and
finds his work play.
If adults would remember this
and keep him in the same state of
interested receptivity, encouraging
his inquiry, leading him on and
on in the paths of knowledge, joim
ing with, him in the search for
truth, instead of talking down to
him and dulling his curiosity,
school might once more connote
pleasure rather than pain.
C0MW
hat-fever
THE MINUTE IT BEGINS!
Don’t wait until your hay fever is in
“full bloom.” The sooner you use
HAI-SOL NASAL WASH the quicker
you may be free of tormenting hay fever
symptoms. Based on an entirely new
principle. HAI-SOL washes irritating
pollens from the nasal tract; brings
quick relief from sneezing, itching, and
nose-running. Ask for HAI-SOL at
leading druggists.
TRIAL BOTTLE: dress with 10c to cover
postage and packing for full day’s treat-
ment to MASSMAN CHEMICAL CO.,
INC., LUFKIN, TEXAS, Dept.B_2,
Though completion of their work
was not definitely scheduled for
Thursday evening, the* grand jury
was thought likely to finish its in-
vestigations with a one-day session
today and report to District Judge
Ben W. Boyd before night. The
body, which recessed last Saturday,
reconvened Thursday morning.
.IB
V
1 7i
I
ts.
-I ar
. By L. A. M.
With a total of 3,392 students en-
rolled for the summer at the Teach-
ers College and 1,197 at the State (
College for Women, both institu- <
tions are showing material increase <
in attendance over last summer. ,
Several additional registrations are (
expected at both institutions by the ,
first of the week. Denton people are (
gratified that both colleges con- ■
tinue to show growth in attendance ■
as well as in physical plants. ,
* * * *
During the past two years Den-
ton colleges have made the most :
remarkable strides in their history.
A big building program, by far the ■
largest for any similar period of
time, has been carried on at each ,
institution, the faculties have been '
enlarged, the scholastic standing of i
the teachers raised and a material
increase in attendance* shown. The
building program is not yet at an
end and both colleges may get new
buildings before the Federal PWA
comes to an end, and there* is every
indication that enrollment will be
large at both institutions when the
fall sessions open. Few colleges are
making the rapid strikes being-
shown by both Denton institutions.
❖ ❖
Fort Worth is ready to open its
big amusement enterprise, the Fron-
tier Centennial, next Saturday, with
an enormous crowd expected on the
first day. The most momentous en-
tertainment enterprise ever offered
in the South has been built in Fort
Worth, and “big time” amusement
has been brought near to the peo-
ple of this section at enormous cost.
The pioneer spirit will prevail in
a big part of the exposition, inter-
spersed with the most up-to-date
of big scale show enterprise. The
Fort Worth project is altogether
different from the exposition in Dal-
las, and the two should serve as
drawing cards for each other rather
than as rivals during centennial
year observance.
❖ * * *
That the trench silo is the eco-
nomical means for preserving feed
for live stock was the trend of
thought expressed at a conference
here for a discussion of this means
of aiding the stockman to keep his
head above the water. Trench silos
are comparatively simple to con-
struct and cost very little, a farmer
being able to do all the work him-
self, it was pointed out. The old
type of silo is expensive and almost
prohibitive for the average farmer,
but the newer means, which has
been given a thorough trial and
pronounced a success by thousands,
* * <•■
With Father Coughlin and Rev. Gerald Smith
represented, it appears that now is the time for
all good men to come to the aid of the third party.
* ♦ *
Were expecting a cable from Hitler, “Is it
true what they say about Maxie?”
* * *
We don’t mind Brazil dumping tons of coffee
into the sea, but can’t understand why our res-
taurant insists on buying the mixture.
❖ ❖ =s;
Indian millionaire offers $100,000 for an in-
somnia cure. He might try counting Europeans
under dictators.
Sahra •
/Ok
--------o--------
“NO FORT WORTH-DALLAS FIGHT”
Take it from no less authority than Amon G.
. Carter that there is no “cat and dog fight” between
' Dallas and Fort Worth in regard to their respective
centennial celebrations. Carter, publisher of the Fort
Worth Star-Telegram and leading spirit of th£
“Frontier Centennial” gave his views this week in
radio broadcast from the Dallas Centennial.
And he is right. While both Fort Worth and Dallas
:]e ❖ *
A. D. Beck has sold his interest in the firm of
Pruitt & Beck to his partner, G. M. Pruitt, and ac-
cepted a position with T. W. Leverett & Co.
* * *
T. J. Brashears, here from Garza Tuesday, said
that the watermelon crop in his community is com-
ing out wonderfully now and he thinks the yield
will be much better than has been anticipated. One
carload of melons is to be shipped out this week, he
said and other shipments are expected to follow.
■ There is a good acreage of melons in the sandy land
f section.
X?®
If California’s average crop of
oranges and lemons were shipped
in one train, the train would have
to be 509 miles long.
X ■
» -
‘ - ..." .
Sic * *
Irving Mills, I’m convinced, wasn’t kidding when
he said, “I think Duke Ellington is far and away the
finest musician in America.”
One of his arguments in support of this assertion
concerned the Duke as a composer.
“Ellington writes hundreds of songs each year,, but
refuses to publish them. He never turns loose
script unless he is sure that it will live.”
“What do you mean—live?” one inquired,
“Name over the songs Duke Ellington has written,”
he suggested. “Some are six and eight years old—
but they are just as popular today as they ever were.”
Then Squire Mills suggested such titles as “Mood
Indigo,” “Shady Lady,” “Solitude” and “Minnie the
Moocher.” And somehow, one got the idea that the
man who has handled hundreds of successful artists ;
Howis
YOUR
Edited fur the Naw York Academy o/ Medicine
DR. IAGO GALDSTON
LOW BACKACHE
Pain in the region of the small
of the back can be both excruciat-
ing and incapacitating. Indeed, a
person with the proverbial lum-
bago or sacro-iliac sprain is fre-
quently a grotesque picture of help-
lessless.
But against the alcute cases that
develop suddenly and which are
completely cripppling, we may set
the more numerous instances
which low backache is mild but
persistent. Such sufferers are
prone to carry their burden with
some litle complaint and to try
home remedies such as heat appli-
cation, back plasters and lini-
ments.
Not infrequently the chronic suf-
ferers of low backache become
neurotic. They then are always
complaining and their neurasthe-
nia overshadows the underlying
condition.
The causes of low backache are
numerous, Organic diseases, such
as those affecting the kidneys,
the reproductive organs and the
circulatory system, may cause pain
■in this region. Different types of ar-
thrites of joint inflammation and
of bone disease may involve this
area.
Defective posture and effort or
muscle sittrains Of various sorts may
also be responsible for low back-
ache. Low backache can often be
classed as an occupational disease.
Persons who have to work in a
cramped position, who must strain
to life or to handle bulky ob-
jects and persons required to as-
sume unaccustomed positions, may
impose a severe tax on their mus-
cle-bone joint structures, with con-
sequent inujury and pain.
The automobile and many of
the so-called easy chairs are fre-
quently responsible for low back-
ache. The luxurious modern seat,
both in the automobile and in the
home, invite the sitter to assume
a lolling position. He relaxes his
muscles and also reverses the
normal curve of the lumbar or the
lower back region. For normally
the small of the back is hollow,
while in the lolling position the
curvature tends to be reversed.
Automobile drivers also frequent-
ly strain their lumbar structures.
« * «
Vignettes in the afternoon:
James Barton, reformed vaudeville hoofer who is
now the star of a long-run hit, ankling through the
lobby of the Astor with a new fishing rod. . . . Niketa
Balieff gazing excitedly at a windowful of puppies.
. . . Nils T. Granland strolling Broadway hatless in
the rain. . . . Bod Reud munching ruin buns in Rum-
pelmayers’ . . . The strongarm bouncer in an Eighth
avenue cafe pouncing upon loiterers like an alert
king-fisher. . . . Major Bowes having a shave in a
Times Square shop (“A barber shop,” he says, “is
one place where I strictly bar amateurs—especially
if they carry razors”).
* ❖ ❖
Ernie Holst, the band leader, is insured against
sunburn. Several years ago he baked too long and
Personally we have never seen a man pretty enough I
to bathe publicly without his shirt on.—Snap Shots L. *
in Dallas News, H
TEXAS CENTENNIAL
DALLAS
The General Electric Exhibit
and “House of Magic” are
located in the Electrical and
Communication Building di-
rectly across from Coliseum
Building. Be sure to -see it.
King Radio Shop
parent
By Brooke Peters Church
SCHOOL—LEISURE
t Xs w’1
is believed to be the solution of the
pressing problem of cheap feed for
the farmer and dairyman who op-
erates on a comparatively small
scale.
By Mary Graham Bonner
CHRISTOPHER’S DISCOVERY
Christopher Columbus Crow and
Willy Nilly were now out in the
garden, and Christopher had just
discovered something.
“What is it? What is it?” asked
Willy Nilly.
“It’s a little tin of adhesive tape
and you must have dropped it some
time when you were coming home.
Now that you will have your ears
fixed anyway I can take it along
and I can also take a sheet and
we can make a very fin© tent,”
Christopher answered.
“I don’t think one of my good
sheets should be used for a tent,”
Willy Nilly objected. But when he
saw Christopher’s look of disap-
pointment he said:
“Oh well, what is the use of
being so careful of everything? You
may take a sheet and the tape,
hut I dont know if you will be
able to make a very good tent.”
“Certainly,” said Christopher,
“and I will have discovered a new
way of ten making. We can use
a fallen tree from, the woods and
spread the sheet over it after we
have planted the tree in ground.
Then we can fasten back the sides
with the tape.” i
Off went Christopher with the
package of tape under one wing
the sheet hanging from his beak
and having quite forgotten about
putting the things back in the Big
Box.
They made their tent and all
J got inside” it.
“It’s too hot,” growled Jelly Bear.
“Much too hot,’ said Honey
Bear. ;
“Of all the nerve!” cawed Chris-
topher. “You wanted a tent and
now you are objecting to it.”
Suddenly came a clap of thun-
der.
'Court of Appeals had so construed it as to make it
indistinguishable from the previous law.
'Is
Authors of the New York law had tried to frame it
to meet the objections raised in the Adkins case. New
York state asked whether the objections had been
met successfully and whether the court, notably in
the Nebbia New York milk control law case, hadn’t
since 1923 modified its position on the due process
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
These issues the majority ducked, except as it said
it couldn’t go beyond the appeals court’s opinion as
to indistinguishability of the two laws.
Thus Justice Roberts, who had delivered the opin-
ion in the Nebbia case, was able to go along with
Justices Sutherland, Butler, Van Devanter, and Mc-
Reynolds, without seeming definitely to reverse
own position.
(Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, Inc.)
Man About Manhattan
By GEORGE TUCKER
NEW YORK, July 16.—Mark Barron, the war cor-
respondent, ran into a situation on the way home
from Ethiopia recently that follows the Hollywood
scenario formula to a T.
Just before boarding ship, one of his foreign edi-
tors assured him there was a princess on board. . . .
Denton Record-Chronicle
RECORD-CHRONICLE COMPANY, INC.
R. J. EDWARDS General Manager
• L. A. MCDONALD Managing Editor
LEE R. MCDONALD Business Manager
J. S. FOWLER Advertising Manager
Entered as second-class mail matter at Denton,
Texas.
Daily issued at 2'14 West Hickory Street, Denton,
Texas, every afternoon except Sunday by the Record-
Chronicle Company, Inc.
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations.
Member Associated Press.
1 Member Texas Daily Press League.
PHONES
Business and Editorial Office
Circulation Department
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One year (in advance)
Six months by mail (in advance)
Three months by mail (in advance)
One month delivered .y
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
tation or standing of any firm, individual or corpora-
tion will be gladly corrected upon being called to the
publishers’ attention.
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the
use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to
it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the
local news published herein.
DENTON, TEXAS, JULY 16, 1936
FAVOR LUMP SUM ALLOTMENT
The State Board of Education is considering this
, week the budget recommendations for Texas colleges
which it will make to the' Board of Control and to
the Texas Legislature. One of the important points
that will be discussed’ is the advisability of- appro-
priating lump sums of money to Texas colleges, to be
spent according to the programs adopted by school
officials and boards of regents.
Under the old system, itemized budgets were sub-
mitted direct to the Legislature, with the result that
unnecessary bickering occurred and needed appro-
priations often were sacrificed to politics. Under the
new plan, the advisory council, maae up of represen-
tatives of various State institutions, the Board of
Education and the Board of Control will work out
the budgets of the various colleges to eliminate dupli-
cations and minimize overlapping activities as far as
practical.
ir ”
■■ i
X-
■ ■. • X X
© 1936, NEA
“She shall have music wherever she goes”—4f
she has a WESTERN TRUETONE
AUTO RADIO
Western Auto Associate Store
C. L. Edwards & Son West Side Square
1L-
Wk
I:■ Iw
I 1
,X;-XX*
■ have attractions to draw visitors to North Texas, the
shows being held at the two cities are complementary,
rather than competitive. Dallas has a true exposi-
tion, one of the finest ever held in the United States.
The Fort Worth show, which opens Saturday, is glor-
ified entertainment of a class that can’t be seen this
• side of New York. True to the traditions of the West,
the Fort Worth Frontier Centennial will have a de-
cidedly western flavor, but the major attractions will
have all the glamor of Broadway.
The leading business men of both Dallas and Fort
I ' Worth realize that neither city can profit by stirring
j up intercity animosity. While both cities can profit
' from healthy rivalry, they should, and usually do
work together on projects of mutual interest. The
i Trinity River Canal project is an example of the co-
operative spirit between the two great North Texas
It wo-uld probabljy surprise most
children and for that matter, many
grownups to head that the word
“school” is derived from the Greek
word meaning leisure. School was
once a privilege which only those
who possessed spare time to spend
could use. Even the rich were of-
ten too busy for school. Fighting
was man’s work, sewing, weaving,
spinning, cooking, bearing, rear-
ing childrens woman’s.
As life became more settle^, cit-
ies sprang up and men fought]
in armies instead of as individ-
uals, some men began to have leis-
ure to turn their minds toward
other things than keeping alive.
They began to inquire first about
the world they lived in, then
about themselves and to spend
their leisure hours in groups, at
what might seem a game of 20
questions.
The women were not included in
these groups, for their work in
the home continued. In time, how-
ever, slaves began to take overs
(From Record-Chronicle, July 16, 1917)
Fritz & Rayzor have opened an automobile sales-
room in the new Graham building on the north side
of the court square and will have very attractive quar-
ters for the display of their lines of cars. With the
large glass front and the central location the build-
ing furnishes a handsome room for the agency. The
company will sell Oldsmobiles, Buicks, Oaklands and
Jeffreys.
i
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 289, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 16, 1936, newspaper, July 16, 1936; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1304456/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.