Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 166, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 23, 1929 Page: 2 of 8
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DENTON, TEXAS,
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airmen wt
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City. Faucets meant sometotaff in
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fha?
11 from B
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wBfa tfa half century. Maney Invested in
i ' t Ttoaa concerns which are just now beginning to
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Ot • vectors thousands of dollars for every
! vented
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the tort y j
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Cram danyei
ct^mpuniviM
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VMA, Ohio,
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INSURANCE
All Kinds.
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fowl
m the
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the
They” pro-
VSSS’SM^AS:
Kilted in this paper and also
___________-1
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they definitely learn that he dosn t
intend to g)v4 to the public some
information that he undoubtedly
has but which likely will not be
k ‘f iiS
entitled to the
’ credited
EXECUTIONER OF Ito 1
IS FOUND DEAD
AUBURN. N. Y , Feb 23—John
W. Hulbert, who as chief execution-
er for New York. New Jersey and
Massachusetts had put to death 140
persons in the electric chair, was
found dead in the basement of his
home Friday with two bullet holes
in his body There was no indica-
tion of whether he had been shot
or had committed suicide, the cor-
oner said
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d'y
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[ -JB
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Will appreciate your busi-
•' Beas.
Phone 76,
W. T. Bailey
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*4 ft fire. ■ * was «•*•*« roaaua a»Wto
. a hammer that breaketh the rock
Mi mail
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“As the fourth of March dawned Congress had
been in aoaaion all night, for the house was tied up
with a filibuster th; F.»:..kk u*‘ iuw«
had made for the seat of ‘Tamar Jim’ Wilson, who
Booseveit and Taft. ’ "" *' ‘"’•“,,‘ley’
•««.. n«---«... l_.i _ majority, but some of
[^President Grant on the army retired list
nf AnArtt.tronnvnPa ___1 FN 5 Wftg
"SiW : H
,__WORD THAT BREAKS
_ ,,--------------:
in pieces.-Jeremiah M:2».
D. H. SINEWS
The music department under the
direction of Mrs. W. A. Wilson pre-
sented a varied musical
Senior High School s—
day'morning. The foltowing pro- J*’e,
aim was given: Danee of the
Happy Spirits (Olucb). OrrhestTi;
There’s Music in the Nr, Girl’s .
Glee Club; Moonlight
Mixed Glee Club;
k to
tamp
se of
that
science and the banding together
of men has made possible for al-
most the poorest of US.
Today’s U the water Xrti-
' oeL ’ ’
......
23.
i a food shortage by
dropped gunny sack.*
ipplies. some SO or 60
men, women lin< cttfldfen Prt0ay
night Wert; returning to the shel-
ter of civilisation after spending
four days snowbound in the wastes
of the Red Desert in Southwestern
Wyoming. Supplies were dropped to
the maMoned people late Thursday
Moderating weather enabled them
to reach here Friday.
____
LUFKIN—Officials here say Luf-
kin Will have tltodirtlnctlaiMK ihav-
ing more miles of paving than any
SV*
years.
■t-V.rV'Wl-7-V>,
it (Qardner).
ww.; Andante
ydn). Orchestra; HMfcl
Larki (Schubert), Girts
•ij.?* «»e BUW fig- ’
Mi said practically
fa toe White How
in^i'lt
nsttty.
tltodistlnctiaiwMihav-
es oT paving than any
^*|he southwest as a
i $300,000 bond issue. More
1,000 baa been spent Tor
during toe past eight
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lands at too two poles. The east with whieh Byrd
Itepad Ma new found areas would appeal to the
d aaplarors who traversed a country by foot. Byrd
■ hrteg baek with him photographic maps of the
Npe area, taken from airplanes and far more ac-
uate than the best maps made j>y a land party.
Uny of these pictures will be published, and Amer-
dms will have a view of their land without the
L /’ nWtotoity of making a visit to it as was required
KA ■ I,.: _ZEb years ago when this country was first dis-
ired. Shades of Columbus! How that man would
I marveled at the new wrinkles we have put
Prohibition is a noble experiment. <
says the Republican party’s head. '
and with Congress appropriating '
quite a few million dollars more
for the dry law enforcement fund,
it is evident that the Federal gov-
ernment under Republican admin-
istration is intending to some some
more experimenting.
The country ft w
fiEiiiTftTg-iii
> | Washington Letter
By RODNEY DUTCHER
;grd for the de-
iften, oifr prf»-
rgtj i .i . i —a
W Yw Aso in Denton I
fe—---—1
h.,
or, B. 8. Roberta and W. P. Allen
purchased S.TM lucres of land near
F, .Wilson of Nashville, Tenn., for
• have ptodgwd 9100 each toward
bouue to aqcdiw aa interurban
disease. Goitre is more common
SSS HSM. taa-US
sefvice^cmsth^ MteWttJOC
Next Tl«
One of 1
torical nov
on the ai
and strugg_____
of a water supply for
r' . ____ _
those days when water first flowed
through them. If you like that sort
of book write me and I shall tell
you toe name of this one.
Pure adequate, never falling wa-
ter flowing into your house, accessi-
ble not through any labor of pump-
ing but just by the turn of. a hand
—thousands of men have worked
for you to make thia possible and
perhaps hundreds work dally to
maintain this miracle.
The next time you turn a faucet
just meditate for a minute on how
big an inheritance from the years
you . that
wii
’ - ‘^IB
fa mi-
We will give free one can of
Down Cleanser Free .
, Draino unstops your lava-
tories. r
v Turner & Evans
Phone 27 or 127.
r-----— -*—
■ *’ r Y' W - - -4
v.' ^ue-uiwj. .
juw
and science tott we ealmly take for ] . < P<*F C1*M»
II |>I II Uli r( m i
The Republican party has become
the dry party In toe United States,
thus placing itself in a position
whereby it must make an honest
fort to enforce prohibition. It may'
be of interest to watch this ef-
fort.—Big Sandy Times.
m
•'■0
Si
‘GOLD STAR”
MOTHERS’ BILL’
IS REPORTED
WASHINGTON, Feb. 23—The
so-called Gold Star Mothers' bill
was favorably reported today from
the Senate military affairs commit-
tee. It would authorise the Secre-
tary of War to conduct tours free to
the battlefields and cemeteries Qf
France for all widows and mothers
of World War veterans buried
abroad. The House already has
liassed a similar bill
K
Ki
*♦
vote dry^At^ti 6®^
toe ftofy, MtamurtaA’’ mo* valua-
ble contribution to good govern-
ment.—Bryan Eagle.
• Perhaps some members of Con-
gress ar^ waiting with considerable
dheakiness to se^ if toe senator’s
threat is carried out'. No doubt Mr.
Reed could enlighten 'toe country
with some startling information if
he chose to call names. And the
tranquility of mind <rf some of his
colleagues win not be restored unUl
I •' ' “ *' “* ' * —--Ofc
intend to give to toe ptibllc
has but which likely will not
divulged.
lr< [i
Water TUI tb«
Faucet Goes Dry w
You turn R and. water.flfiws out.
If once in a thousand times it does
npt. you set up a great to-do. You
think about the lack of it. But so
long as the water flows you think
nothing of IL
You’ve always had water in your
home perhaps, and maybe your
father and even your grandfather
before you.
Why should you think of the sci-
ence and the work and the organ-
izing and accommodation of inter-
ests and the accumulation of stored
up labor (which is what capital is'
that made it possible for the water
to flow out of that faucet?
Where does your water
from?
It's a two to-one shot you don’t
know, if you live in a city.
Amne Water Trartto Ml MUm Oft «to
Pipes
And a four-to-one shot th%t if
you live in a large city you haven't
ever seen the reservoir from which
the water that comes down your
street and into your house original-
ly comes. -
For often that water has had to
travel through miles and mites of
pipes (at so many dollars a foot*
to reach you. The water from New
York comes 92 mites to reach the
city.
Do you know what tests are gone
through with to make that water
safe for you? Or how gradually that
• •wy > one numes on vo nutncwnvrv vise “•
fkft at she ern and repeats what “Theyu-are say- I I-
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raii7Trr<wfrk if» ■
DENTON, TEXAS, FEBRUARY 23, 1989
lu
When Interested in
Furniture or Stoves
It vrijl pay you to figure with
231 W. Hickorr.
7^, Koto 1201.
MPT WWWfcirJfi? rd'
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Human Interest Editorials '
I - By WICKES WAMBOLDT < <r 1
r ftasamsroe-———..... - 1 in miiRfB
. - “THEY” . >
The best known authority—and the least known
—W “Umy**. The Force most deferred to Is “They*1-
“They” are the real Power behind the thrones, the
legislatures, the chief executives, the courts,
police, the family.
“They” lay down laws and dictums, MJ
nounce sentences. “They” give favors. “T
draw privileges. “They” are kind, comio
ing. “They” are arrogant, tyrannical, M
“They” are the real rulers of the pec
“They” speak folks sit up and take no
meet a man on the street and he saysr ‘‘ttew*, say
Coinblower is in bad financial straits- 'j'.
Do you ask the man whom he means hy “They?"
You do not. You reply, “Is that aol?,.') am sorry,”
even though you are glad. And you proceed to
tell someone else—in more or less confidence—What
’They” say about Coinblower’s being hard up.
A woman meets another woman And observes,
“They say Mrs. Runabout is going to legve her
husband." ■ '*'? jrfjSST?V ,
Does the woman addressed a-^StW arc
‘They?’” No. She hurries on to somewhere else as
{hldB- flI «kA’ a>Ur wwit sans i , Au
ing about lira. Runabout.
There ia.a wide distinction between “They
We. Whan a man says “We”, he is including h
and is prepared to accept a share of responsL
But when he says "They” he places resppnsibtyity. i
altogether elsewhere. ■ 44 1
, You never hear a man say, “We have lynched
Blue Gum Gus.” No, indeed! He says, “Tney h^ve
lynched'Blue Gum Gus.” Though he had a. hafld,
in the hanging he says, “They”. “They” are so mys-
terious—so nebulous. “They” always furnish an
excellent alibi. - " .. ..T
Who are “They?” Who does that pronoun "They’’
stand for? Everybody quotes “They”. Everybody
harkeas to “They”. Send a letter to “They”. It will
never be delivered. Dispatch a telegram to “They”.
It will never be received.
What is the color, shape, size of “They?” “Th®y”
stands for anything, everything, nothing. “Tljey”
« few are here, everywhere, nowhere. You can’t put your
'finger ofi "Th^y”. ''Yltey’* are there, but “They”
aren’t there. Yet the “ 'They’ tell me” remark
starts heads shaking, tongues to wagging. “ ‘They’
say” sends reputations tobogganing—or skyward.
“They” start men to making heavy investments. Or
to selling out that in which they have invested. Or
to hiding their money in an old sock.
■ “They” is a ghost, a myth, a charlatan, a tyrant,
a dictator, a despot, a benefactor. God deliver us
from “They”. God bless “They.”
McCurry, Louise Beeman.
Ml Adams. Billie Hogan, Tru-
deredith. Mildred Hanks. Ed
___ Zhambers, M/rite Fulton, wii-
___ Ham Stovall, Alma Thompson. Ag-
PERSONB O’Shields, and Odessa Johnson
^D ’Iff'.*' ■ ■ v
BUY IT Iff DENTON
—--------
J.C.PENNEYCO.
Men’s Shirts
v ' Of'Broadcloth
" 98c
......' "
We Are Enjoying j
As;WlBB ‘ grocery business,
which fa due to our good ser-
iefc <nd complete stock.
h'hflve' plenty of seed £
ee, garden and flower
Call us for anything
grocery line.
. Code Grocery
JpiB» IK
Modeled with fine regi
sires of weU groomed
ent new showing Itriki
ijote In styled YbF
-------• .
<OMH '> u 2 I
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, IMS ______
' 1
1'^4
eles of science uro art common as
miracles ol Ute suprtmgtufM, were
just before toe first century.
I callsd attention tert a '
the miracle of toe postage
and promised to point out a
the extraordinary advantagi
C2-.— —2 !2_ ----
of men has made possible for al-
maat Dim nMnut nf ill
ijritaMBsi is toe water tw-
in miltons of kitchens through-
out the land the water faucet la a
commonplace.
Never Miss the
ppfr. And only In
« *» hM toe v»-
as tt now is in al-
Eertftt but fn some
S SrStvsR I
i TTOMAlf CRITICAL AFTER
BURNS, says a headline. They get
dissatisfied so^easllyj
A Ksnsas circuit judge has ruled
that smeartfkM te not cheese. Oh,
well, neither Is grand opera, for
' that matter,
I ' The Atchison. Globe feels thst
***^2 sine* fireproof P*P*r hes been per-
V l*cted. It ft time to Mart a news-
n?r ’ Miner In hell. There’s sn editor’s
lor some Chicago police re-
porter.
• • •
Cqlonel Lindbergh chose a quiet,
..... home-loving girl as his life's com-
"w«T*r pantos. Ah aviator, but evidently
hd Somt care'for the ftlfhty kind.
Norria -iwEr ' * * *
Ifr'HFX PeRrtprtrt. One
Edisou says he never han known
an/one who wag really happy. Is
ft Sotelble He hasn't been reading
the cigaret ads?
(^opyriaht. ISM, XgA flprvte«. Inc.)
rock Springs, wyo. peb
staortag!
gunny «
1 OdBoft ............ ®
J/tay oRM^raFi^BSeu^pcm‘tht^haractw. repu-
taftfiFerjteidteff saw Arm. individual or eorpora-
Uoik wUl be Madfr ■<>oeroetBd upon being called to the
■CTfCVFJJON R*T«8
I Wu.\arta8r.m o,“”........
». Oklahoma and Neu Mexico-
Denton County.)
iinMSaaaaaoaaMaaaia«n*<>aM.i >.» am
ft ^9
£ 4
-V. . 1 .. Mb
M . .■*(» X < , ■ ■ . vl
........—
4‘JWeS7«TS
___ I in
a dozen inaugurations and his.
goes back to the time when President-elect Grovqr
the Senate chamber while Congress passed a bill
■ ’ 1 >'s?2. fi'dawsSu
.-Xi.--«a
Marie Wilson, accompanist
Superintendent W. T. Ddgt
left Thursday at nbon for Cte
land, Ohio, where he will attend'
department of superintendence
toe National Education Asaoeiatl
W. C. Blankenship, farmer prin-
cipal of toe Junior High School,
was a visitor at Senior High School
Thursday. He was on his way to
OtawMd. O- to atend the Nation-
al Educational Association. Blank-
ensiUp is now superintendent of the
Big Spring schools.
The All-round Science Club held
its bl-mohthly meeting on the af-
ternoon of Peb 20. O. B. Barnett
gave an Interesting report on “What
— ” * * cgn Do.” Other reports
by members of toe club
Tom Moore Cox.
eorolagy;’ Clay Hufttnes. fGeol-
over the contest Frederick of Iowa
t 9 ‘fi ——.■ — T > _ t Wlkfl— — A _
later was secretary of agriculture under McKinh
Roosevelt and Taft.
"The Democrats had a 1—„UIllc U4
then) favored the bill which the Senate had passed
**, f0* ®x‘^re3*dent Grant on the army retired list
with a lieutenant-general’s rank and pay. Grant was
noverty-slricken and everyone wanted to keep him
from starving, but with the filibuster on there was
no way of getting the bill up to a vote
♦ • •
.last m«n’ink wore on toward noon and by
10 oclock party feelirig and personal rancor were
running very high. It was dangerously near noon
when Tamar Jim’ Wilson climbed up on bls desk
and began to wave both arms for recognition. The
scene on the floor resembled pandemonium and the
golteriea were now wide aWake. Speaker Carlyle
finally managed to recOgniie Wflsoh, who was a
taU, lanky, bearded and quite picturesque Scotch-
man.
< Spra'tfr' y*,Ied Wilson at the top of his
voice, If my Democratic friends on the other side
rtent hin't '^'l1 J*™* thf Oem,ral Gr*nt retire-
rtent tell to be taken tm and acted upon without ob-
■tro^on, I will b« wfillpg to ««k my Republican
I v!te Jn 7hVW)><Xt^Lrw(tMt°ry ,notion« •nd hare
‘"w/JLiin w W>n wntert Bt oncc ’
wan.^ili^r wi',!’shout“d the Democrats, who
erenU the “ rMt W"*
M?* House immediately voted to seat Frtd-
nlJhH th* De’nofr»t. and unseat Wilson, the R«-
Cm wte ^±5rkk Ux,k th*‘ oath and the Grant
m»r on," WMP«n»ion of the rules by
toen- hldnh^" r*<’uin?‘, two-thirds Vote. Of coll roe
« £ k! bTn ?° <rr*aat •atriflee on Wllson’s riart
°n.y ab<,ut an hour m°re to nerve anyhoW*
eriJ-k'1 Jnn><CL»tr° year’’ pay’ 0T IWJOQ for Fred,’
— “y. at t™1* >t was close to 1 o’dock
was at once Inducted as vice nr—to ***’
■a gss’seS
TJje All-round Selene
ts bi-monthly meeting
ernpon of Feb 20. G.
Chemistry
were made .
as follows: Tom Mioore ___
"Phyates;” Thelma Huffman. ’’Met-
rorology;’ Clay Hufttnes, fOeol
ogy;“ and Wltaier Stockard, 'Psy-
chology." A committee was appoint-
ed to select emblems and pins for
the Club
Due to the fact that the majority
of toe students in Senior High
School had bought tickets to toe
District Interscholastlc League
gama between Denton and Arling-
ton, cltaM were dismissed at 1:30
The following students have been
out M sdtool on account of illness:
Lok - 2
Weldon
ett Mei
wiA Qu
NEW LAND FOR U. S.
Reports coming from the Byrd expedition relate
that new land has been discovered and claimed for
.Ulil United States. This land area, said to be in-
dqjtendent of Roas Land, already claimed by Eng-
- JliHMl, includes a mountain range of great height and
I gland perhaps aa great as the English dependency.
“ It has been a long time since land has been claim-
' */ _^<| By any nation in wholesale lots, and not much
gw.............
L 2
r - «
I ' 1
I’ w
r ■
L vN. -k
R-... i'n?
H _ hawa marveieo at tne new wrmxjes we n»ve puv
-into exploring into unknown teas.
---------0---------
■»&$; .?• TEXAS NOT UNKNOWN
Hr % "* & Texans haven't the inclination to invest their
I ft Bute UMMy In Taxaa, there are a number of fa-
teMMrt baukors in toe East who already have in-
sted large sums of money in Texas and are will-
f to invest more. J. C. Wright, vice-president of
I Ioan division of S. W. Straus A Co., investment
^Hiifturrt toured Texas a few days ago with other
‘ LijtoeirtilMe of his company. Here is his idea of the
Jrtare pf Texas aa an investment field: “The in-
9|ltmtntt houses and financiers of the bi« centers
?' ^feo have money to loan and invest are coming to
og; n Texas 's prrtmHfhg TTFld Tor -fatUretT-
Wns. Texas ettfas are Just beginning to grow
tttrw and modern (bwha^are springing up every
’. There is no doubt about they* being real op-
tunities in Texas now and that the State is on
threshold of a great development.”
Uch comments coming from an official of* a firm
eh already has loaned more than 130,000,000 on
aa buildings alone carry conviction. Many T«x-
•f manna are going outside of this State to
lat their money in foreign enterprises, while
tare financiers recognise the real opportunities
. Jus KtaU and are sending their money here.
Many fortaasa have been made in Texas solely be-
p * naast of the growth of this State within the last
S ' M years, and many more fortunes will be made
Bp ■ 2 within the next half century. Money invested
F ’ Twta* concerns which are just now
E . grow will duplicate the financial records of some
K of the older Eastern concerns which have paid in-
ventors thousands of dollars for every 1100 in-
—
ft Contemporary Thou^ I
.............. 1 11 ■ ■■ Ri"f4
< MR. COOLIDGE’S JOB >
What should we do with our ex-president* ? That
I a burning question just now, since Mr. Cooi-
ifh has tana than two weeks on the job as chief
Mcuthra of this great and growing (and growl-
[j^'dfapateh from Washington yesterday let it be
Mtortdantial mfad ha* hot yetJueen
Iftftj Wh ,UMMgn be ia considering several
ituma, among them one to write articles
pwspaper syndicate.
fa spite of the large salary he receives, the presi-
lant of toe United States usually retires from of-
iea far from wealthy. Usually, congress votes the
rntows of presidents a pension of about 16,000 a
ter, but no provision has been made for ex-presi-
|Mto themselvea. Mr. Wilson formed a law partner-
JttB with his former; aaaretary of .state, Mr. Rooss-
vnit wrote for a syndicate. Mr. Taft fits very snugly
Qlto the office of total Justice of the United States.
no dwwl, will find something use-
fa to do. Writing for newspaper ayn-
honorable and well-paid profession.
<ht la.have plenty to talk about.
---nothing during nis seven
'hit* House.—Abilene Reporter.
ent new showing strikes an important
pate ta «M« fof «M» ypring.
And the price, are reasonable:
Fashion Park Suita
$40 to $50
Other Well-Known Suita 1
T^eWiBiams Store
NF.A Service Writer
WASHINGTON, Feb. 23.—Once it was consider-
ed honest enough for both houses of Congress tq
turn back their clocks and continue to function, in-
stead of dying decorously promptly at noon on
March 4.
And if a president and a president-elect, to say
nothing o£ a hundred thousand or more spectators,
were kept waiting for the inauguration ceremony,
what of that? ,
The Hon. William Tyler Page has served
Washington through i ___'_ __2',__2 ' ,
Wthr-'H««»ver inauguration approaches,
Cleveland were forced to cool their heels outside
the Senate chamber while Congress passed a bill
for the financial relief of an ex-president, Ulysses
S. Grant.
Mr. Page is clerk of the House of Representa-
tives. He is widely knpwn as the author of the
American’s Creed. He has served in the house far
longer than any elected member of that body, for
he went there as a page boy aged 13 years and is
now 60 years old.
As a page boy, he played no unimportant part In
that clock-pushing drama which attended the first
inauguration of Cleveland in 1885. He came to
Washington in 1881, but just missed the Garfield
inauguration. Edward MacPherson, who had just
l>een elected clerk of the house, wrote and asked
his mother if she had a boy old enough to be a
page in his office. William Tyler was a printer’s
devil and Mrs. Page sat up all .night to make him
a homespun suit. He came from Frederick, Md., to
take the job at $60 a month.
“Cleveland had grand weather for his first inau-
guration and a tremendous crowd,” he recalls, "for
his was the first Democratic victory since before
the Civil War. Everybody said the weather was
‘Cleveland luck.’
“Perinsjflvanla avenue was a seething, milling
mass of people here for a typical old-fashioned in-
auguration. And Washington was packed fall of
state militiamen. Pennsylvania alone sent 60,000
troops and the problem of housing them all was so
gteat that they were allowed to sleep in federal
buildings.
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 166, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 23, 1929, newspaper, February 23, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335635/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.