Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 156, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 12, 1936 Page: 3 of 8
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LOAFER
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for J. C. Parr
YOU GET MORE
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BUY IT IN DENTON
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Wilbur C. Hawk
Of Amarillo Dies
Long’s Policies
to Be Carried Out
Jerry Burnett of
Pilot Point Dies
Huge Highway
Suit Dismissed
Patman Has Real
Reason to Smile
Amarillo Youth
Burns to Death
O. M. Curtis Will
Probated Wednesday
Lost articles are found, help is
secured, real estate is sold through
Record-Chronicle want ads.
Production in Louisiana was up
5,892 barrels for a total of 194,555
to
in
at
WPA Road Funds
Bring County to
117-Mile Total
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Oil Production
Shows Decrease
Gold production in the Philip-
pine Islands continues to break all
records, the output in October
reaching 121,000 tons of ore, valued
at 2,911,000 psos.
Joseph
Joseph Hobson, .
Lucius ’Tompkins and Alfred Doo- ;
ley. Honorary pallbearers included
A. Wayne Robertson, Charles Wil-
kins, J. N. Rayzor, Tom Fry, Will
Williams Sr., J. A. Cook, W. T. Bai-
ley, R. J. Edwards, J. R. Christal,
Jack Christa], W. T. Evers. Bob
Wilkinson, Raymond Dobbins, J.
D. Dobbins and J. C. Coit.
All of Parr's children were here
for the services, but a sister, Mrs.
V. W. Grubbs of Santa Monica,
Calif., the only other surviving
member of his parents’ family, was
unable to be here. Other out of town
relatives and friends here included: .
Harris G. Parr, Mrs. Edna Dalton I
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Smiling over victory won in the
long bonus fight, in which he was
a leading figure, Representative
Wright Patman (Dem,, Tex.) hopes
to wear an even broader smile in
the near future, as he battles with
new optimism for his inflation mea-
sures to meet extra budget costs.
His currency expansion followers
are expected to join farm mortgage
advocates in demanding issuance
of billions in new greenbacks.
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Solon Disagrees
With “Anti-Love
Code” Set Up for
College Students
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51 Will1
MT. PLEASANT, Feb. 12.—(A3)—
Plaintiffs planned an appeal today
from a district court order dismiss-
ing a $2,000,000 suit involving the
Texas highway department and 22
counties in the state.
District court here held it had no
jurisdiction in the case and re-
manded it for trial in each of the
22 affected counties.
Plaintiffs alleged the counties had
on deposit $1,999,519.68 and that in
i February, 1932, the Security Trust
Company of Austin notified the
highway departments it had no
funds on the account.
District Attorney Cook, Wilkin-
son and Wilkinson, a Mt. Vernon
law firm, and Fred S. Rogers sign-
ed the petition. The* suit was filed
in the name of the state against the
trust company and the 22 counties.
- .1 1 > ) D
Funeral services for J. C.. Parr,
pioneer citizen who died Monday,
were held Tuesday afternoon in the
Cumberland Presbyterian Church,
conducted by the pastor, Rev. J. L.
Elliott, assisted by Rev. A. H. Bates
Of Collinsville. Thq church choir
sang several of his favorite hymns.
Women of the church had charge
of a beautiful floral offering.
Burial was in the I. O. O. F.
cemetery. Active pallbearers were
George Bryan, Joseph Hooten,
Oveirton Brown.
Special to Record-Chronicle.
PILOT POINT, Feb. 12— Services
were conducted at the First Baptist
Church Monday for Jerry Burnett,
76, a pioneer resident of Pilot Point,
who died of pneumonia. Rev. Ray
Belcher, H. A. Hale and Rev. E. B.
Jackson conducted the services.
Burneitt was born near st. Joseph,
Mo., in 1860. He came to Texas in
1875 and for the) past 47 years had
been a resident of Denton County.
He was a member and active work-
er in the First Baptist Church. His
wife and tw0 children survive. Pall-
bearers were Robert Morrell, N. H.
Erwin, Joe Shelton. Harpole, Belch-
er, J. A. Rhodes. H. A. Hale directed
the music and Miss Myrtle Her-
ron of Denton was pianist. Burial
was in Masonic cemetery.
Miss Kirk Dies
Funeral services were held at the
Nazarene Church for Miss Minnie
Kirk, 60, who died Saturday of
pneumonia. The services, were di-
rected by Rev. and Mrs. J. R. Rob-
erts’. She is survived by a brother
and two sisters of Chicago. Music
was furnished by Mrs. Batten and
Mrs. Ewing. Active pallbearers were
girls from Rest Collage, of which
she was for 25 years spiritual advis-
or. Burial was in Masonic cemetery.
News Briefs
The home of Mrs. J. E. Sparger
was destroyed by fire about 4 a. m.
Monday. Mrs. Sparger and her
daughter, Mrs. Lee Reese, were
awakened by the roar of the flames.
Some insurance was carried by Mrs,
Sparger.
Several from here attended the
funeral of C. C. Mountain at Belew
cemetery Monday. He was a brother
of W. E. Mountain and died in the
Denison Hospital Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Selz and Mr.
and Mrs. P. E. Blake entertained
Sunday with a turkey dinner. Cov-
ers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. S, H.
Norrod, Mrs. Westbrook, Mr. and
Mrs. N. H. Erwin, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Selz, Mrs. Henry Selz Sr,, Miss Ni-
na Liberty Selz, Vai Selz, the hosits
and hostesses.
Miss Sarah Whitley underwent an
operation for appendicitis in a Dal-
las hospital Sunday.
AMARILLO, Feb. 12—(A3)—Wal-
ter D. Gamblin, 20, was burned
death early today while asleep
a combination bain and garage
his grandmother’s home here.
The youth remained in the* barn
at night to guard a fruit truck.
Firemen theorized that the blaze
was caused by a small oil stove
which was kept burning to protect
the fruit from the cold.
Looks like we might have another
good fruit crop this year. Better fer-
tilize and cultivate your trees and
vines. A good dressing of fertilizer
will make the trees do double duty.
A fruit tree well cultivated and fer-
tilized will make a third more and
twice as good fruit.
How about some multch for your
flowers? We can supply all the peat
Moss you need. Fertilizer too for
flowers and lawns. Not only furnish
the fertilizer but can supply the
machine for distributing it when re-
quired. Deliver fertilizer any where
in the city.
Verne Burch says that his rab-
bit alfalfa hay is the best ever.
Burch ought to know. We can sup-
ply the hay from the Seed House.
Fifteen different varieties of Eng-
lish Peas. All better and one best.
You pick it out. Plenty of the pea
that is grown in Denton County un-
der a half dozen names and every
fellow says his is best.
Treat your peas with Nitrogen
when planting. It makes them do
things. Same thing for beans. Gar-
den size packages for small gar-
dens.
Looks now like it might be time
to get ready to plant garden On-
ion sets, fine small sets thirty cents
gallon. Good sets white yellow or
red. Cabbage plants coming right
along now. Onion slips and onion
seed. Garlic buttons, Leek seed. Any
old sort of breath perfuming plants.
Grow ’em and eat ’em. Let the other
fellow do the smelling.
If it is flower bulbs you can bet
on our having just what you want.
Get them right away and enjoy a
beautiful flower garden. Flower
seeds any kind in any quantity.
Bachelor button seed in great pro-
fusion.
Got some really good home made
tomato preserves in quart jars. Get
me now.
Eighteen different varieties of
seed corn. Say did you ever think
of trying that new sweet corn that
has been put out by the Texas A.
& M. Experiment Stations? The
best sweet corn that ever happen-
ed for Texas and the southwest.
We have the seed and you can get
’em by calling for HONEY JUNE or
Sur Cropper Sugar.
Man drove in here from New Mex-
, ico right in the middle of that last
Norther and bought seed. Bought
several different kinds. Said he was
coming back.
L Think that we want to buy some
oats. Let us know what .you have
( pronto. May not want many and
then may want more.
Want a few bushels of Red cob
corn, either in the ear of shelled,
talk with us about it.
Will buy yellow
amount any type.
Want some nest eggs to fool the
crows and snakes with? We got ’em
and they sure do fool the crows,
also the snakes.
Man wanted some emmer seed.
We did not have it but he got it
any how. We hustled it. Did you I
ever plant any emmer?
How about trying a little flax this
year to see what it will do. Paul
Dunkle says that he believes that
it will pay to grow it for seed. Talks I
like he* had rather bet on flax than
on soy beans as a money crop. Say,
when you think of planting soy
beans do not forget the old friend
cow pea and her family. They are
old friends and tried and true
friends. No plant we can plant will
do more for the soil than the old
fashioned field pea. Good for man
and beast beside.
Got thirty two different kinds of
tomato seed. Forty different kinds
of bean seed. If you feel like try-
ing something new or something
different come* around. If you are
hunting for some kind of seed and
having trouble finding it, better
come here. We have it, if not we
get it pronto.
Remember that we deliver flower
seed and fertilizer. Do not deliver
feed. Positively do not deliver feed.
THE SEED HOUSE
Phone 186 McKinney Street
at Railroad
(Advertisement)
- I X— *
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_ V, I & iCT -''
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cock, M< and Mrs. Harry Wynne, Sorels
* .... Eastern fields including Michigan
decreased from 142,880 to 132,772
barrels; Rocky Mountain area de-
creased 2,150 barrels to 109,810 bar-
rels.
Production in Kansas was down
5,600 barrels to 131,757 barrels.
CUBAN COMPLETES FLIGHT
ACROSS ATLANTIC
DAKAR, French West Africa, Feb.
11.—(A3)—Lieut. Antonio Menendez
of the Cuban Navy completed a
flight across the South Aclajn'tici
last night, landing safely at Bath-
hurst, West Africa, after a fflj*’1’
from Natal, Brazil.
i
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WASHINGTON, Feb. 12..—(TP)—
Vowing to carry on the “share-the
wealth.” campaign of her dead hus-
band, Senator Rose McConnell Long
has set out to learn the ropes
of the Senate into which she was
inducted yesterday.
The woman wh0 baked a prize
cake and won Huey P. Long for a
husband back in thq old Shreveport
days, came to town Monday with
her family to take part in th legis-
lative wars.
•She—and her pert, 19-year-old
daughter Rose—made it clear that
the “share-our-wealth” movemejnt
did not stop with the death of her
husband.
As to whether the new legislator
will make a speech on the Senate
floor, Mrs. Long said she did not
know, she never had made one.
The will of the late O. M. Curtis,
pioneer Denton druggist and ban-
ker, wrho died here recently, was
probated Wednesday morning. By
terms of the will, Curtis’ estate is
left to his widow, Mrs. Lizzie B.
Curtis, and she is named executrix.
County- Judge Geiorge Elbert named
L. Bailey, W. c. Orr and R. W. Bass
appraisers. Pending filing the in-
ventory and appraisement, no ap-
proximation of the state’s value is
of record. The application for pro-
bate formally estimates the value
at $20,000 but such estimate is a
legal form not intended to be a
, close appraisement.
'T^FOR YOUR MONEY IN
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WASHINGTON, Feb. 12.—(A5)—
Rep. Josh Leei, bachelor of arts,
master of arts, doctor of laws and
Oklahoma Democrat, takes excep-
tion to an anti-love code presevrib-
d for college students here.
“Since Adam and Eve,” he ex-
plained, “everything's been chang-
ing except love. It’s the one thing
you can’t legislate into new fangl'ed
ways.
When six boys and six girls who
refer to one another as “my heavy”
began to fall down in their marks
at Americn University, Dean Geo.
B. Woods felt something should be
done. He announced these rules:
1. Not to sit together in iau-1
tomobiles.
2. Not to sit at <the same table
in the library.
3. Not to be together afternoons
except Friday, Saturday and Sun-
dag.
4. No off-campus dates except on
week-ends.
“I hate <to think of the results,”
said Lee, who was formerly a ’pro-
fessor at Oklahoma University.
Law’ Fails to Work
“The Bolsheviks once) issued
law against smallpox. What happen-
ed? Practically everyone began to
contract it. That’s the way it goes.”
He deplored the fact that the
American University lovers’ marks
had fallen, but he did' think their
wholo-hearted devotion was a good
sign.
“There was a campus couple down
at our school,” he said, “who were
just as much in love as anyone, only
they didn’t know it. They were try-
ing to be blase about jt.)”
The boy, he explained, sent a note
to the girl.
“Did I ask you to marry mg last
night?” he asked.
“I told someone I’d marry them,”
the girl replied, “Was it you?”
Lee concluded, his observations as
a school teacher and a legislator
with—“And my advice to Dean
Woods is—forget the code. It’s un-
constitutional, anyhow.”
AMARILLO, Feb. 12.—(A5)—Wilbur
C. Hawk, co-publisher of the Ama-
rillo Globe and News and promin-
ent Republican of the Southwest,
died suddenly today at his home.
Ill for several weeks of high blood
pressure and heart trouble, Mr.
Hawk suffered a stroke and died
before a physician arrived.
He had celebrated his 55th birth-
day Monday and worked at his of-
fice for a short time yesterday. He
had planned to participate in a Re-
publican rally here today.
Forceful personality and execu-
tive ability gained Mr. Hawk a Re-
publican in a Democratic strong-
hold, a place of prominence in pub-
lishing and civic fields.
He entered the ' publishing busi-
ness in 1914 after dropping his du-
ties as deputy warden of the Fed-
eral penitentiary at Atlanta, Ga. He
became co-owner of newspapers in
Atchison, Kas., Falls City, Neb., and
Amarillo, El Paso, Lubbock, Mid-
land, Dalhart and Shamrock, Tex-
as,
At the time of his death he was
affiliated with Gene Howe, son of
Ed Howe, the noted Kansas pub-
lisher, in a partnership that includ-
ed ownership of newspapers at Lub-
bock, Dalhart, Shamrock and Chil-
dress, Texas, and Atchison, Kas.,
and Falls City, Neb.
Mr. Hawk was chairman of the
Republican state committee of Kan-
sas in 1922-24, chairman of the
state’s delegation to the Republican
national convention at Cleveland
in 1924 and a member of the Texas
delegation' to the Kansas City con-
vention in 1928.
He moved here in 1926 and serv-
ed as president of the West Texas
Chamber of Commerce, 1932-33, and
was a leader in the Texas Centen-
nial celebration movement.
Survivors include. his widow, the
former Mrs. Hallie Lucas of Ama-
rillo, whom he married here March
16, 1929.
h v„;........
Allocation of $67,590.05 more WPA
funds to Denton County for improv-
ing lateral roads totalling 46.5 ad-
ditional miles was announced Tues-
day afternoon, and County Engin-
eer L. M. Finley said work on some
of the new projects was expected to
be under way by the last of this
week. The additional grants bring
the county total to 117 miles of
farm roads that will be gravelled.
The new allotments are on pro-
jects in Precincts No. 1, No. 2 and
No. 4. A new allotment in Precinct
No. 3 is expected to be granted and
begin within 30 days, as soon as
sufficient workmen are listed as
available, county officials said. New
projects are:
Precinct No. 1: nine and one-half
miles, from a point three miles east
of Pilot Point, east to the county
line, and from that beginning point
south to the Mustang Baptist
Church. Federal funds $13,554.66;
county funds $5,983.60.
Precinct No. 2: 20.7 miles in four
projects: Lewisville southwest past
Flower Mound Church and north
to Donald School; Lewisville to
Lake Dallas dam; Old McKinney
Road, from Floyd’s Chapel to Elm
Creek; from point on Highway 40
one-fourth mile south of Denton,
crossing Hickory Creek and one
mile west from Sunnydale School.
Federal funds $19,972.96; county
funds $4,812.94.
Precinct No. 4: 16.3 miles in four
projects: Bernard School communi-
ty seven-mile road; one-eighth mile
road on north edge of Denton;
Sanger to Union Hill School;
Hawkeye School to Highway 40. ~ .
Federal funds $15,980; county funds unerat ^erVlCCS
$7,285.89.
Seek to Speed Checks
Meanwhile, something over 300
men are working daily as previously
started jobs continue in all four
precincts.
A group of checks for gravel truck
men arrived Friday, adding to the
number who have received some
pay so that by now a majority of
the drivers have had checks. More
speed in getting the gravel men’s
pay is still being sought by the
Commissioners Court, however.
Workers Now Busy
Workmen in Precinct No. 1 by
Tuesday had practically completed
work on the old McKinney Road
from Denton to the lake and on a
road north by Trinity Church, and
jobs on Navo-Mustang and Green
Valley roads were slated next.
In Precinct No. 2, work was go-
ing on on a road from Lewisville
east to a gravel connection at He-
bron and another from Midway
south to the county line.
In Precinct No. 3, a 20-mile Pon-
der road was nearly finished, and
Roanoke-to-county line and Med-
lin cemetery-to-county line roads
had been' completed. Justin and Ar-
gyle stretches were scheduled next.
In Precinct No. 4, a 17-mile
Hawkeye School road and a Plain-
view-Slidell-to-county line road had
been completed and workmen were
busy on an east-west road north of
New Liberty School and a Krum-
to-Highway 40 stretch.
TULSA, Ok., Feb. 12—(A3)—Daily
average crude oil production in the
United States for the week ending
Feb. 8 was 2,773,905 barrels as com-
pared with 2,830,224 barrels for the
previous week, a decrease of 56,-
319 barrels daily, the Oil and Gas
Journal reports.
California showed the largest
drop in production with a decline
of 47,400 barrels, decreasing from
675,650 to 628,250 barrels.
Oklahoma’s production was 487,-
575 barrels compared with 497,275
barrels the previous week, a decline
of 9,700 barrels. ’
Total Texas production increased
13,252 barrels to 1,059,698 barrels;
East Texas showing a decrease from
’ 1438,298 to 436,803 barrels.
Austin, Misses Ella'’ and Myra Pea-
Mrs. W. G. Cook, Mrs. Otto Brown,
all of Fort Worth; Mr. and Mrs. M.
J. Parr, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Gam-
ble, and Mrs. Luther Gamble, all
of Dallas, and Mr. and Mrs. P. O.
Parr and children of Justin.
Parr became a Master Mason at
Daingerfield in the spring of 1870,
and was a life member of the Stan-
feJd Lodge.
?
*
I
'en
BIG, OVERSIZE TIRES
for additional comfort
• and traction for stops.
RIDE STABILIZER for
level, swayless riding.
NO DRAFT VENTILA-
TION for plenty of fresh
air without drafts.
SAFETY GLASS for extra
protection all around.
KNEE-ACTION WHEELS
for a restful, gliding ride.
•
SUPER- HYDRAULIC
BRAKES for quick,
straight-line stops.
•
"TURRET-TOP" BODY
‘ BY FISHER for greater
protection and beauty.
•
CENTER-CONTROL
STEERING for effortless,
true-course driving.
" OLDSMOBILE has every
fine-car feature . . . none left out
• THE SIX • • THE EIGHT •
’665 • ’810
Sixes $665 and up .. . Eights $810 and up,
list prices at Lansing, subject to change with-
out notice. Safety Glass standard equipment
all around. Special accessory groups extra.
Car illustrated is the Six-Cylinder 4-Door
Sedan, $795 list. A General Motors Value.
• 6% G. M. A. C. TIME PAYMENT PLAN •
T)E as critical as you .like—
-D it’s your money you are
paying out and you are entitled
to the most that every dollar
will buy you . . . That’s why
we say—go see the Oldsmobile!
Look at its size. Try out its
roominess. Count up its mod-
ern fine-car features! Note for ‘ •
yourself Oldsmobile’s every
convenience, every provision
for extra safety, extra comfort,
increased economy and extra-
long life . . . Then consider this
— Oldsmobile “The Car That
Has Everything”—is priced
but a little above the lowest!
I
1935
Pontiac
Coach
(WITH TRUNK)
. . . . this car can hardly be told from new, has all-
steel “turret-top”, hydraulic brakes, “knee-action.”
We have just traded for this car in on a NEW OLDS-
MOBILE, so if you want to save money and at the
same time own a clean, late model car, see us.
SAVE $3OO
ON
Denton, Texas
201 South Elm Street.
S. I. SELF MOTOR COMPANY
S. I. Self Motor Co.
Our Used Cars Are Inside Our Buildings. 201 S. Elm
Edison Mazda
GLOBES
15s, 25s, 40s and 60s
15c EACH
75s and 100s
20c EACH
King’s Radio Shop
Phone 351
GREY
Color with Gray>—High
Fashion Color for Spring . . .
Gray Man Tailored
Duke of Kent
Fred Astaire Style
Mannish Gabardine -
$16.50
GRAY SILKS AND
WOOLENS
Gray Crepe, Sheer ...... 98c
Gray Fiat Rough Crepe 69c
Gray Silk Prints .... 69c, 98c
Gray WooS Crepe Suiting,
$1.49 and ................. $1.95
DENTON, TEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1936
MOTHER’S FOOD STORES I
“Make Peace With Your Purse”
Telephone 283. $1 Orders or More Delivered
210 Ash Street and Sherman Drive__I
ST. VALENTINE’S DAY
FEBRUARY 14
Nothing expresses the spirit of Valentine better than
King’s or Johnson’s candy. We are taking orders
now. Packages wrapped and delivered in Denton- or
we can mail it for you. Notify us a day or two be-
fore the 14th so we can have it to the destination on
time.
Brooks Drug Store
43—PHONES—43
4
t
j'
GRAY
FOOTWEAR
Sandals Oxfords, Ties
2,95___6.50
See our NEW
Cotton Goods
Display
North Window!
GRAY HATS
Felts, New ^Bowler,
New Mannish Style
1.95 2.95
GRAY BAGS
Leather, Suede, Patent,
Combinations
1.00 2.95
The Boston Store
__ ____
Denies Catholics
Being Persecuted
Slayer to Save Her
Son’s Name
PAGE THREE
M———W
Mail Grand Jury
Summonses Feb. 24
Summonses to those called for
grand jury duty the March term of
District Court will be mailed Mon-
day, Feb. 24, it was stated at the
sheriff’s office today. Summonses to
those called for jury duty the first
week of court, which opens March
2, will also go in the mails that
day.
Thirty-two men are called for the
first week, which opens an eight-
week court term and is the first
week of four devoted to the civil
docket^
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SPECIAL!
Model A FORD
BRAKE LININGS
Complete Set
S1.15
Cut Rate Auto Supply
Company
Phone 323
M. L. HOLLAND, M. D.
Denton Hospital
Office Hours:
2:00 to 5:30 P. M.
9:00 to 11:30'A. M.
A variation of one degree in the
mean teamperature of Southern
California, makes a difference of
about $500,000 in the annual re-
ceipts! of the Pacific Lighting Com-
pany, a leading public utility.
BERLIN, Feb. 12.—(AP)—The offi-
cial organ of Adolf Hitler’s black-
shirt guards, Das Cchwarze Korps,
issued a sharp challenge today to
charge's that the Catholic Church
in Germany was being persecuted.
The fact that the “Catholic
Church feels itself menaced and
persecuted, in national Socialist
Germany” can be clearly seen in
sermons and pastoral letters, the
publication said.
In reality, the organ asserted, it
was the old story, as “old as the
church itself,” which Das Schwarze
Korps said, always raises a cry of
“persecution” whenever its politi-
cal ambitions were thwarted.
The “SS” organ took its stand
while Nazi secret police roamed the
Catholic Rhineland district, mak-
ing what informed sources said ap-
peared to be the great number of
wholesale arrests since scores of
nuns and monks were seized a •year
! ago.
Charged with slaying her hus-
band, Robert Smith, 19, after he had
filed an annulment suit last No-
vember, which she feared wotild
leave her infant son without a
name, Mary Elizabeth Smith, 18,
above, went to trial in Denver. De-
fense attorneys pleaded insanity at
the time of the killing.
ao
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 156, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 12, 1936, newspaper, February 12, 1936; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310321/m1/3/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.