Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 52, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 14, 1931 Page: 2 of 8
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10031
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, OCTOREn 14, 1931
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tCopyright, 1931 McNaught Syndicate, Inc.)
==e
BARBS
their
trees
Tomorrow—“Turning Time Ahead"
King Radio Shop
tone. 90
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8g
V
1%
W. T. Bailey & Co.
6
of love
provemente are completpd Dnie,
that
T omorrow—I Sprains
/
225 W. Oak St Phone 520.
THE FREEMAN SHOE
wo‘‘yo
0
5-00
1:
McKinney, Oat. 13-(P—rnr-
66
8
SLEEVELESS SWEATERS
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2.25
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E
ALL UNES OF
INSURANCE
beautiful they do justice to
subjects "
And in the water all the
were reflected, with all their many,
lovely colors, and in the background
were the dark pine trees.
HOWSyau
M E ALTH
State.
U t
this
gove
gn of the West Texas Chamber of
nothing more than to make West
1 .
%
Know Texas
By BILL EDWARDS
183
done
Undoubtedy children sometimes
k
23
the new Crane County salt plan,
with its material secured from a
salt lake near Crane City has been
Increased to 109 tons a week
The new *150 000 plant of the Bau-
)
I’ ’
Written
In Strong
Old Lino
Stock
Companies
\
w
parent makes to his child should
spring from what the child senses
as a desire to help him to become
his best self. rather than from a
a wish to batter him into shape,
whether he likes it or not
If. when we criticize our chu-
4
1e***
2mealek
Twenty thousand vistors went
through Carlsbad Caverns in Au-
gust
ful sure
the Sta
[ o West T
aatian u
I well as
’, which is to reduce the cost of local
Vest Texas.
e being appointed to male a care-
i cost of government in that part of
wheel all the facts are secured, the
in her of Commerce will be to a po-
onstructive legislation at Austin, as
set steps to be taken by municipas
reliminaty surveys already indicate
tuatlon is alarming. although it is
that taxes in West Texas counties
I as high as in the older parts of the
this some day if you like It doesn’t matt
tor I will not be in this world to read it.
/ » . -
7 -r .-
1 3
The first Shoot of the recently organited Denton
Gun Club will be held Tuesday afternoon at High
land Park and a number of members expect to limber
up their shot guns and unpructiced eyes for trap
shooting
. " $a
/ da
There are 47 men on the White House police force,
most of- them former service men carefully nicked
from the Metropolitan ranks They are under com-
mand of a captain and subject to orders from the
Secret Service officers They wear a snappy black
uniform with gold trimmings
Entirely separate is the Capitol j
strong, directly under the control a
Texas business men more "tax conscious It will have
performed a service of no mean proportion The high
taxes are caused directly by citizens, or, as is often
the ease, by the lack of careful attention of citizens
to tax problews that aftect them in the past it has
been too easy to accept a hike in taxes in the hope
that the benefits to accrue would make the tax ex-
penditures worth while Now taxpayers are scrutinis-
ing every cost of government and in the future it will
not be so easy to get through huge bond issues just
because of civie pride. . • •
Miss Louise Stout entertained a group of little
folks Saturday afternoon at the home of her parents.
West Hickory, in celebration of her birthday. The
children present were: William Gregg and James
Simmons Bettie Inge, Homer Curtis. Ciara Phinizy,
Henry Schweer, Alberta Masters, James and Virginia
Edwards, Christal Poole. Hezen Bailey. Helen Francis,
Marnhne and Francis Woodward and Mary. Louse
-and Myron Stout.
WOODRUM TRUCK LINES
Phone 45.
For
Complete Insurance Service
Phone 76.
For school wear or dress wear there isn’t a more
economical shoe to be had. You’ll like the style and
you’ll like the feel of a Freeman. Many men in
Denton are wearing them with all the ease and com-
fort they would expect only in higher priced shoes
. . . and are saving the difference!
Denton Plumbing Co.
R. E. Goodwin
Prompt Service
With the
Exchange*
By n A. M.
Atwater Kent Radio
$89.00
----000--—
Note: The ‘writer was in Agua Caliente at the time
in Liberty County ip ten years, has
tern completd Mid has spar,ad
grinding Liberty County corn into
meal ... a Dallas wash dress
plan is doubling its capacity at a
New York Day By Day
By O. O. MCINTYRE
■ By Alice Judson Peale
How TO CRITICIZE
Criticizing our children may be
either a method of education or a
**′*
Gerard Swope’s plan, you might
say. is a capital idea.
A.. WASHINGTON
DLETTER
PHONES
Businems and Editorial ------------------------
ourculation Department .............--.....
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One year (in adyanice) ..... ..................
Bix mon th. by mau (in advance) .........
Three months by man (in advance).........
One month, delivered .................................
Talks Tn
&parents
-
—HemetelsMe-priee-eLeetten-cantdren-much
lower, even though the cotton crop does increase be-
yond expectations. A big crop, however, likely will
produce a big carry-over, which will be ratter em-
The mode might be worse than
the Empress Eugenia Suppos-
ing, for example, there were a
Queen Mary vogue?
J. J. Maclachlan
Insurance—Bonds
308. Smoot-Curtis Bldg.
Phono 365.
CAMP CLEANERS
Phone 1212.
f
| closing session of their convention
nere today was presided over by C
A Gerlor, of Dallas, newly install-
ed grand patriarch.
INSURANCE
There’s an enviable peace of
mind about the man who is
adequately and properly in-
sured. \ .
We represent
West Coast
Life Insurance Co.
Jim—Hundley—Ray
Phone 88. ■ -
)
J
will have a weekly production o.
\h.
The details of that evening are considerably blur-
, red. On way to Tia Juana I sat in the back seat of
one of the automobiles with a tipsy gentleman who
tried to make love. I remember that and also vaguely
of visiting various resorts and dance halls. I awaken-
ed the next morning in a cheap hotel but my com-
panion was a woman in the party. She told me I had
passed out Half sick and worried I rushed to Agua
Callenta to my husband. He had gone. I took a Jitney
to San Diego, phoned him at La Jolla. At first he
was relieved and then he called me a name over the
phone that stung to the quick.
There are other details of no interest My oply-in-
tention was to remain in San Diego over night to al-
low him to cool. Not knowing a soul in San Diego I
went back to Agua Caliente, picked up with my slum-
ming crowd again for Just one cocktail and as your
Samuel Pepys says "so to bed." Instead, four days
later I was in Chicago living with a man who was not
my husband.
STUDYING THE COST OF GOVERNMENT
The West Texas Chamber of Commerce, essentially
a "boosting" organization for that section of the State,
ia turning its energies in another direction, but never-
theless a direction which win produce early and no
doubt permanent benefits to that part of the State.
Roosting baa its place in the activities of such an or-
ganization, and naturally will be carried along with
There was nothing I could do but drink and forget.
Three letters and two telegrams to my husband were
unanswered. A telephone call resulted In my being
told "the party refuses to speak to you." All this in-
dicates I have a cheap streak in me. Maybe I had
but the thought of such a life as I have lived in the
past two years would have been hideous befone
that day in Agua Caliente.
—-000——
The woman I have developed to be doesn’t matter.
To my children I suppose I am dead. I understand
they are In-jchaol Ui8wi tzarland. You may nuhllsh
' e '<
l l
bese
dd
' t
oo
"T * " e
im,
ut
02
2
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Have we qualified as a democracy
of ignorance as to a cause and a
remedy of the present situation?
Nearly every fellow we run across
has both a cause and a cure—that
is. he has convinced himself that
he has both. Maj' it not be a fact
coat of *30.000 and when the im-
Theh there’s the hopeful rum
'runner who believes the govern-
meat’s plan to cut down navy ex-
peases will reduce the coast guard
fleet.
Sundown
Stories
Thole three flyers who were
saved after drifting in the ocean
a week demonstrate the moral
that a man may be downed but
not out. • —4g*
Re
P ‘A
Dellas. Octi 14 —Judge Cato, sells, national com-
mitteeman frown/Texas, mays that the state has-si-
ready contribtd $20,000 to the NattonNt Wilson
-Cempaizn Fund ama that he felt confident of »-
cortnetheremainms 830,000 to ,n^* the total reach
the expected 680,000.
barrassing next year, even though other States fall . „ - —- — ------------
Into line on the Texas cotton reduction plan. One of and recanisuincdents mentionad in the letter.
tl» present difficulties besetting4cotton farmers is the ’
24.00 garments . . Production or
rell was selected by the Texas Odd
Fellows Encampment and Canton
As the 1932 convention city. Hie
qp,
3G8
****• — 99999?
Almighty God—I will cry unto
God most high: unto God that per-
formeth all things for me —Psalm
07:2. * ,
AUSTIN, Oct 3.—«—The State
has sold 5,561 bales of 1931 cotton
frotn Ww penitenttarty farms tror
8200,999.35 or an average of a little
better than seven cents per pound.
Governor Sterling was advised to-
day by W A Paddock of Houston,
chairman of the Texas prison om-
mission. '
Northwestern University is
going to have lovers’ clinic. The
laboratory is just anywhere on
the campus, we presume —Dal.
las News.
Young men’s styles and colors in a 100 per cent all-
wool sleeveless sweater. Made to sell at much highu
er prices. Solid colors in self-figures.
7- ? ’ . i • .
Edtedby Wr» de New Tod
Dr. Galdsto ' "Acadehj e IMUm
HEART PAINS
Not all so called heart pains have
anything to do with the heart.
Many, like the pains we feel
when we strike the tunny bone",
are what we term referred pains. .
The trouble may be located* else-
where. bi?t the pains are referred
and felt in the region of the heart
Incidentally there is no "funny
bone" in the human body. a ‛
The tingling sensations fekt in
the little finger are due to a blow
on one of the nerve trunks passing
sow. . called te electro-crdiogsraph.
Surey any er?ic)ma which a Pains In the region at the heart
NOTICE To THE PUBLIC
Any erronepus reflection upon the <character, repu-
tation or standing of any firm, Individual or corpora-
uon will be gladly correctea upon being called to the
pubuisherg’ atiention.
The AnsoOiatea Press is exclusively entitled to the
UM for re-publicauon or aU newa aispatches credited to
it or not otherwise credited in thia paper and also the
Aocal news published herein.
DENTON, TEXAS, OCT 14, 1931
EMBARRASSING COTTON REPORT
The monthly estimates of the cotton crop issued by
the Department of Agriculture are rather embarrss-
ingtoalotof Individuals Every report made so tar
this year has surpassed the previous report, and point
to a bumper crop this year—just when everybody
was hoping that a reduced crop would cause cotton
prices to rally. Texas, of course. U iu the lead in in-
creased production, with more than a million bale
jump over the figures at last year. A five-million
bale crop seems certain.
are able to profit by a criticism
made bitterly and in a spirit of
hate, but it is a learning accom-
panied by reciprocal felings.
Such learning is expensive in
terms of character development and
only seldom can be worth the price
There is nothing that a child can
learn in a spirit of resentment that
he cannot better learn in a spirit
Texas leads the nation in
rural population with 3,435,367
listed under that classification.
400,000 more than Pennsylva-
nia in second place. Shift from
rural to urban in Texas has
been marked in the past three
decades. In 1900 nearly five times
times as many Texans lived on
farms as tn towns and cities,
while in 1930. rural population
than 2,500 population > was less
including those in towns of less
han 1.000.Q00 greater than 1,-
000 000 greater than urban the
pesemtagex having been 17.1
urban in 19 and 41.0 in 1931.
Large cabinjet, automatic
sound control, illuminated
quick vision dial.
See them today.
knew any more as to the cause or
the cure than we know of this one,
but that what appeared to be such
knowledge was only Individual
theories like those of the present?
When the depression finally ends,
we shall have plenty at people in
this good day who will refer patron-
izingly with an “I told you so" air
to their causes and remedies which
they will declare were borne out
by developments.
SS
18
...............85.50
1.80
............ AO
All wersistent heart pains should
be subjected to careful study by al
competent physician I
Aided by the x-ray and an in-
genious electrical instrument which
records the electrical energy pro-
duced by the heart during its move-
ments it is now possible to deter-
mine pretty accurately where andtd
what extent. U any, the heart has
been damaged.
This diagnostic instrument is «
By RODNEY DUTOHER
NEA Service Writer
WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.—WaUiUigton if it is not
the best-policed American city, U certainly the most
policed.
First, there’s a Metropolitan police force of 1341
men and this corresponds to the regular force in any
other city. policing the District of Columbia in gener-
al. Thia force has a superintendent with the title of
major and he is really responsible to President Hoo-
ver because he is named by the three district com-
missloners who are presidential appointees. President
Wilson was once credited with having dictated the
appointment to the superintendency of a cop who
had attracted the favorable attention of the official
family.
particularly cruel form of punish-
ment.’I all depends on how it isJaround the inner bend * the el-
bow ~
Andy Mellon, they say, didn’t
know his aluminum company was
to cut wages. Delicatessen deal-
era have a word for it.
"Copyrigat, 1921, NBA Service, ins.)
core tests for potash ate to be
made soon near Carlsbad N M.
This present depression is the
most remarkable one in history,
being the only one with no
“goat" and no young Lochinvar
riding out of somewhere with a
bottle of cure-all which an ig-
nominious rival will declare to
be poison. If we haven’t any
other variety, we surely have
qualified as a democracy of ig-
norance as to a cause and a
remedy—Fort Worth Star-
Telegram.
. , .... . -------------- •
casino, has was sti there with a pile of chips'in
front of him ard tipsier than I ever saw him.
I do not drink but I went to the bar at the end of
the room and ordered an old fashioned cocktail. A
group of men and women were throwing dice nearby
and asked me to join them. I did, had another drink-
this time a martini.
—000-- *
They were organizing a sort of slumbering party
to drive into old Tia Juana and being angry I ac-
cepted their invitation to go with them. On my way
out I glanced at my husband and that was the last
time I aaw him Nor have I seen my children since.
-
/
■ -g
which cdme on and become aggra-
vated during physical effort should
be looked on with suspicion.
These pains, like shortness of
breath on moderate exertion, may
point to an exhausted overstrained
or diseased heart muscle or to the
presence of some other form of dis-
ease in the heart
On the other hand, to called
heart pains may be due to gall
stones, gastric ulcers, diseases else-
where in the gestro-intestinal tract
or disease in the lungs or the lung
coverings, the pleura
A number of cases of pain in the
region of the heart are due to so
called neurasthenia:
These patients are over concern-
ed over their heart function
The treatment of this type of
case consists in making the patient
target they have a heart, a task
commonly much more diricult and
usually less successfully executed
than the treatment of organic heart
disease
n9dover crops that-serve to hold down the present
pices, and from all indications, mills will stock up
ca cheap cotton to tide them over many months,
another depressing factor in the cotton problem.
f -----o----- -
MUST CHANGE THE HERO
President Hoover told police chiefs attending their
national convention to Florida that if crime is to be,
reduced, the first step must be to change public penti-
ment so that the police, rather than criminal, will
be the hero. Glorir ication of eriminals and the lack
of supporting public opinion were pictured by the
president aa two of the greatest obstacles that law
enforcement officers have to overcome.
Just why people in this country make popular
henoes of lawbreakers and are prone to ridicule the
efforts of police officers canhot be determined, unled
it ta that Americans have a traditional liking for un-
derdogs in any contest, and unthinkingiy classify
criminals aa such. Other countries have great erime
detection agencies which received the full support of
pubiie opinion, such as the famed Scotland Yard in
England. There is no similar institution in this coun-
try. unlers it is tiie United States secret service, whose
activities are limited and seldom receive spectaculac
notice, .
It is only necessary to see a few movies, read pop-
ular magazines, hear jokes on the stage or listen to
an average conversation on the subject to get the
American eitizen's idea of who la the hero to the
continual battle of wits which occurs between police
and criminals To change this opinion will require
much time and concerted effort trom many dire-
tions.
DENTONi TEXAS, RECORD-CIINONICLE. WEDNESDAX
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If it's the campus type of love
laboratory Northwestern University
to going to ruse for its love clinic,
it is establishing nothing new If
there is, any. better love laboratory
in the world than any co-educa-
tional college campus, it has not
been brought to light.
2***********************
X BIBLE THOUGHT FOR •
♦ TODAY ♦
The Williams Store
Exclusive Freeman Agency in Denton
YAGE TWO
Denton Record-Chronicle
REOORD-CMROMICEE COMPANY, INC
R. J. EWARDS............. Manager
L. A. MCDONALD ..................................... Managlog Editor
LEE B. MCDONALD......................... Business Manager
J. B. FOWLER ................................. Advertising Manager
Daily tmsuea at 314 West Hickory Street, Denton.
Texas, every afternoon except Sunday by the Record-
Oaronicle Company.
Member Audit Bureau of Circulattons.
Ausoqiateg From and United Frees Service.
Member Texas Daily Press League,
Entered M second-class mall matter M Denton,
Texan <—'
WP -eKM-2
Nom,g
.55 tl6,44
pr,-
Ia., k
(By Mary Graham Benner)
LEAVES PHOTOGRAPHS
"I kept hearing ‘the different
members of the family talking
about tiie beauty at the leaves this
year," the Little Black Clock said,
“and I thought perhaps we would
simply turn the time back a few
hours and take a row on the Jake.
So they went down to the lake
and got into the rowboat that was
waiting.
Then they rowed along. The trees
had almost all turned color, but so
far hardly any of the leaves had
fallen to the ground. There were
trees of orange and trees of red and
trees of yellow and trees of brown,
and trees of pink and flame color.
At least that was what Peggy said,
but John told her that the leaves
and not the trees were these colors.
Then they had a friendly argu-
ment as to whether you could not
say .leaves when you meant trees,
tor what were trees, as Peggy said,
if they were not made up of leaves
and branches and trunks?
But now the Little Black Clock
drew their attention to the lake. it
was absolutely smooth. Not a rip-
ple crossed over it. It was as smooth
■« wlarn. ...................
‘,Now we U see them*” ” -
"What?" asked the children.
“We’ll see the photographs of the
leaves—for that is what they some-
times call them.
"We would speak of the reflection -
of the leaves in the water, but they
sometimes call them their photo- I
graphs They have photographs
that do not last forever, but just
see how lovely they ate and how
dren, our feelings toward them ar?
right in this fundamental way, there
will be little danger of our saying
the wrong thing
Yet it Is important sthat even
a chnd old enough to listen to a
zenetal criticism of some phase of
this behavior be helped to under-
stand the validity of what he is
being told through illustrations to
terms of immediate experience
General remarks to the adoles-
cent on the subject of his irrespon-
sibility may leave him with only
a confused wish that he were dif-
ferent, unless he la told abo jus:
how he can learn adequately to
dis harvge his responsibilities.
Diet criticize your child impul-
sively. Think out What you want
to say and put it into such terms
that he can use it constructively.
. . —---,---- Congress and
responsible to the sergeant-at-arms of the Senate and
House They patrol the Capitol, the congressional of-
fice buddings and attached grounds apd direct traf-
fic in that territory, dongress created this force re-
membering what happened when the capital was at
Philadelphia. Unpaid soldiers besieged it aud wuterea
on the floors of both houses, the locasicendammes
(bping unable or unwilling to flop them. So Oofiryess
estabhahad a force for its own protection. The Cpi-
tol cops, most of them appointed through politics, I g ______
22*™ the softest and .nicest of the I HELPING TO BUILD TEXAS
local pohoe jobs. They have no oghtact with speak-1 Dhngs industrial Announc.
easies. slums or bums. And only an .occasional crank LX ASmadetatthe wXta^L
U Communists try to riot on the Capitol steps they Irrumimacumauie wcnita nal
call on the Metropolitan cops to squirt the tear wasiuinJanfactory.win continue oper-
and do the black-jacking Many of the Capitol cons I. Sons until late in the year with
are students, working thir way through college or law |, prospect of the reopening be-
school here. [fore January of the window glass
• • • factory A grist mill first built
You find the 75 men on the Park Police all over
town. They work directly under Colonel U 8 Grant
m. director at publie buildings and parks, and in-
directly under the secretary of war They police the
public parks which cotprise such a large part of die
District of Columbia area, many small parkways and
cireles. For Instance streets- and avenues run off
Dupont or Thomas Circle in eight directions streets
up and down and avenues diagonally In the center i mont cnca:c.1. M, —
the Park Police are on guard ontroi over such cir- montCacarCola Ao hasbeen.com-
clea was retained by the War Department when it pie tedadon woncapacity °' ’
thought of the French Revolution mot* and the way old Plant ’ ’ ’ With enough orders
they barricaded and controlled the streets Nobody Ion hand" to continue full time work
has worried about it for a long time, but the idea three, regular shifts working, the
was that, owing to the peculiar layout of Washington "*** factory at Temple has somplet-
small groups could control the whole city from Wiese ed its sixth successive week of sey-
strategic islands which look down the length of so en days each and twenty-four hours
many arteries at traffic j a day Recent orders have gone to
• • • Mexico Cuba. Kansas City Fifty
The Public Building Guards, with 394 men. Is still men ere reglarly employed . . .
another police force This is alko under Colonel Plans are complete lor the new
Grant and patrols 41 buildings and their grounds with $3,000,000 oil refinery on Houston
full police authority on federal property In and Ship Channel It will have a daily
arqundsome of the bildines they handle traffic capacity of 25.009 barrels and on
The Treasury and Agriculture Departmenta. Veter- I ploy 300 men. Export to the Orient
ans Bureau and Smithsonian are among other de-] expectd to furnish 5 oent
partmentsand bureaus which have policemen of their | consumption of the new plant’s
own Agriculture, for instance, has a force of 90 men .Toutpt Jon“counew,panv3
And this not not to mention the forces of detectives. louAutaes. Jon es.Countyn armer
investigators and other enforcement officers main- and businessrareconr ering with
tained by the Treasury 'especially Secret Service and one f The big.chees. manufactur-
Bureau of Internal Revenue), Justice Department, 8 on the practicability of a cheese
Prohibition Bureau. Immigration Service Customs’ Tactory at Anson.
Postoffice Department, Coast Guard and so on Most I -------------
of those officers are out in the field SAYS NEGRO ADMITS SLAYING
----------—— I ' FAMILY
SNOW HILL, Md Oct 13 —IP—
19 Years Ago Today
• > • family of four at Berlin, Md., was
(From Record-Chronicle, Oct 14, 1912) reported by Deputy Sheriff Randall
County Treasurer D M Reeve will be a candidate Pumell..to have confessed late to-
for the position of doorkeeper of the-33rd Legislature day to the murders
and in pursuit of his candidacy will go to Dallas Fri-
day to be pxhent at "Legislators Day ” at the State
Fair He has been promised the support of a number
of friends over the state for the place
what day, ifflit in other depressfonsno one
""T
hko9
SHELTER FOR THESE!
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WN*ef \
NEW YORK. Oct 14.—-This letter, postmarked Bos-
ton and signed merely L ”, L? appended herewith with-
k- out change;
You may or may not recall meeting me at the dog
t track in Agua Caliente over two yeara ago Yuu were
with Will Hogg and several others in the grahdstand
that afternoon were Louella o Parsons, Ann Pen-
nington, Louise Groody. George Bancroft and Wal-
ter Catlett
I remember trivial incidents because it was a
portentious day to my Ute For no reason at aU be-
[ sore the sun slipped behind Mexican mils 1 embarked
I on a series of mis-adventures that ne one who knows
me could possibly believe ft is like a nightmare
{ even now.
Yet what I tell you is true I was on a motor trip
to California with my husband who was with me the
afternoon I met you. We left our two children at La
e Jolla with friends Our lives together nad been or-
dinarily pleasant enough while not overly happy
. I had hitherto been content. .
In all thederm implies I was a loyal wife and loved
b —say chdren. After the races we went to the gambling
I pit room Perhap it will fix the day in your mind to recall
the wentieman who removed his necktie and put on
| B anpther he regarded as luckier You and your wife
Bw * were watching at his table __
r t . That gentlman wos my husband Certainly it was
A pothie io b* excited over He Heil had a drink or »o
AA — -Au qur visit was wrelv a lark and he was wager- '
2 ing only bmall sums. Yet for ™ reason at all I be
i nfuriaced because I thought he was making
' I fumneir rdiculous. •
wihond sayine anything I left the room in a rage
V l -I wolked around awhile, went to my room eapeci lag
fum to come He didnt and at T 30 I went back to the
I
‘67
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 52, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 14, 1931, newspaper, October 14, 1931; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538605/m1/2/?q=%22ROSENBERG%22~1: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.