Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 135, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 19, 1938 Page: 1 of 8
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VOL. XXXVII
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WHEN OIL WELL BURNEU^iT KILGORE
------------—-----------------—a.---------------- -------4--
50 MEMBERS OF
59c
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NEFFICIENCY IN
ADVISORY GROUP
V
n
4
SEE PRESIDENT
By AmsocI
Press
188
"hu
—3
11
r
, No Showdown Due at
■ & *
*
1
ter
/
-
s
-
i
forcement of Senate debate rules
•m
The bombers new in two squad-
There was no troudte ot any
89
4
1.
5
n
do not get out-doom as much as I
they did in the "good old days."
; it would tend to encourage distribu-
ity Leader Rayburn (D-Tex) warn-
Soviet Prison
Guy was in correspondence with ; this purpose and will undermine
still to be discussed.
r?
France Wants
trafc-law violators adds quite
a
nice sum
day this week, 1540 were collected
4
1
Plains Section
. CONGRESS
Coin Machines
Severe (old in
senatgm
manner of sr lectins the grand jury
political tight-rope while the gov- 1 the Mississippi River, the Far West
Northeast Area
4
its action it had no alternative but
Unemploy
to reverse the sentences
tee hears state rellet ofieiala
tnial
Taxi
H.
Cromwell
4
New Soviet Council
■red its
sec-
4
and Thurs-
winds on
WEST TEXAS: Mosuy eloudy.
*
probably
J rains tonteht
and Thursday except
Of trash to the fact that there
was
warmer la east
at.
-L
—E-
1
ft
I
9
Jap Offensive
Against Railroad
ABOUT
TOWN
with
1934
you
ful
ur
CANADIAN SCHOOL FIRE; 17
KNOWN DEAD AND 21 INJURED
IE
New England and New York State
was "slowly rising" temperatures.
comes tcough the tact that we
are better-housed, better clot lied and
kind," Warner said,
tta commander
Ofd-timers hope that the mild
weather this Winter does not for-
bode another March of 1888. when
one of the worst blizzards of his-
tory struck the natton. The bliz-
zard followed mild weather and in
instances the thermometer drop-
ped to 30 below in a short time,
Officials of the comptrollers de-
partment said today collections of
1938 taxes on the devices already
aggregated more than $ 100 000, but
than usual We had several days
in which to get out the rubbish
and I believe the notice should be
given several days ahead of the
starting day."
Senator Clark (D-Mo) said, he
would start demanding strict en-
troops, large stocks of munitions,
and artillery, horses and tanks at
U.S. STAGES
GREATEST MASS
n in HISTORY
but that newspapermen could not
be permitted to visit the city.
letter. It was written on Jan 29. |
1828 by a Mrs. Guy to her Great ,
Chinese were attempting to recap-
ture The Japanese spokesman as-
serted the 40 Americans and other
fita-
1.39
-
2.
SANTA FE. N M — State po-
lice are on the alert for "Rob-
in Hood of the delivery trucks."
El Paso police wrote them a
blond youth had been holf-
up trucks but "invariably
the driver how much of the
money belongs to him and re-
turns it."
terprises."
Furthermore, Cromwell asserted.
Delay Search
for Soviet Fl yers
from violators of Dallas traffic laws
And. too, Denton, at times, receives
euite a Httle money -from fines
imposed each Monday morning
in nearly three Weeks Several cas-
ualties resulted.
Texas oil areas.
The annual tax on nickel plea-
sure devices is $30 whereas that on
music machihes is only $250
-23
a
1
Central portions toni
day and near coast,
Ue to moderate seat
Present in Lynch
Bill Fight.
er
Upstate New York apparently reg-
istered the lowest be low-zero fig-
ures in some spots it wax 38 be-
low
Boston Weather Bureau officials
97 Too Old
To Change
Homes
tlie thermometer dropped to four-
teen degrees below zero."
‘ ,7
L
5957623
W
I
(By Associated Press)
Sub-zero cold hugged the nerth-
to visit Mrs. Marie Rubens of New
York City m prison. a reliable source
indicated today.
It was not ascertained whether
me requestwas granted
(Secretary of State Cordell Hull
"I note that the last cleanup re-
quired more truckloads than ever
before.” said Mack Gay. Jr.. "I
attribute the one hundred per cent
cooveration and the large amount
Roosevelt Ready to
Discuss Any Topic
T t^'be^ ! and uneconomic discrimination be-
that the people in the early days
suffered; however, weather records I
I
I Revelations Branded
By Pittman As
“Astounding."
testines before House committee Ml
tax reviatom.
Yesterdey:
Hoove pasmed treasuty-postoffice
appropriallon bil.
taaato debated anti-lymchine aig
(By Associated Press)
France acknowledging her need
Cromwell said such a "scientific
j tax system" would end "the unjust
The Soviet Union comsiqer
problem solved. Joseph Stan
party, ordered an end to mass ex-
pulsions of party members. Some
foreigners thought it might sigmal-
ize the end of wholesale renuncia-
tions and arreste but the full ef-
fect remained to be seen.
A new council of commissars, or
cabinet, was announced in Mos-
--------—----—---
In Rumania. 16 political parties
began campaigns for new elections
after King Carol dissolved Parlla-
new labor troubles.
Chautemps, whose coalition gov-
ernment fell because of the labor
2.
Drought Hurts
Wheat in Great
HERRIN. Ill—Monroe Colyer,
97. came from Whitesville, Ky.,
to spend the winter with his
son. Lee, 75. but Lee took him
home again.
"Dad got homesick." the, son.
explained."
interior department.
The committee has been holding
hearings on the nomination of E
K Burlew to be first assistant sec-
Death Sentences 45 DEAD OR MISSING IN
T
4*74
mm
"i
The other 126 men in the ships
were relieved, and rested in night.
The last plane landed at 7 07.
Pacific Standard Time.
I mi ttee
j There is sentiment, they said. for
complete repeal of the undistrib-
futed profits tax and more thorough
adjustment of the capital gains tax
Chairman Harrison (D-Mass) said
(By Associated Press)
Today:
Appropriations — House debates
em—-H
visions for cotton, wheat, rice, and I dared their, forces were pressing
tobacco, leaving the com section | Japanese hard Tor possession of the
‘3
I
-4
OKLAHOMA: “Inerensimgthlua-
of tlie wealthy Doris Duke Crom-
well. recommended to the House
ways and means committee today
immediate reduction and ultimate
repeal of all forms of income tax.
He also advocated revision of es-
tete.and eip.saxes. and adoption
of a manufacturers' sales tax on
fnished consumer goods.
DEPARTMENT Of
INTERIOR CHARGED
EAST TEXAS: GSOtf, grata
My secastonal rains tai We and
-e
tee had received "astounding Rebates
| revelations in regard to the
: laxity and inefficiency, if not
i criminal carelessness” in the
Roper’s Council Talks
Over Business
Problems.
j (D-Nev) told the Senate to-
l day the public lands commit-
Senate Committee
Is Told of Fraud
•4—
WASHINGTON, Jan. 19 —
! (AP)—Senator Pittman
-94
— t=t
inlhr dtv mttera bne 12? taxes than is being considered
to.! tun Vuco ersicone by the House ways and means com-
WASHINGTON, Jan. 19 —(—
The weather bureau reported to-
day drought conditions continued
prevalent In the Great Plaine area,
damaging the winter wheat crop.
Moisture is needed badly in vir-
tuallyan fanning secttons west of
Taken from atop a derrck, this graphic picture shows the stern fight oil men and firemen put up for 12
hours before extincutshing a dangerous oil well fire which roared in the heart of Kilgore, endangering the
entire city The fire was put out only after damage totaling $130,000 had been done Kilgore is in the East
Texas oil field, largest in the world.’
---
7^
Do A wav With
Limits on Navy
Fines received in Dallas from
I frauded the government of $84,000
। of CCC funds. i
- Pittman, a committee member.
addressed the Senate. before the
Southerners resumed their filibus-
1 ter against the anti-lynching bill.
Senate leaders abandohed hope
today of an immediate showdown
on the anti-lynching bill.
The measure has drawn a steady :
j 12-day flow opposition oratory
I from Southern Senators, blocking
' Senate consideration of the gov-
ernment' reorganization bill and
other Roosevelt proposals
No Night Sesslons
Administration lieutenants had
I talked of wearing down the speak-
har mtarriage, was Miss Jennie
Whitehead, of Denton It was writ-
ten in the days when it was the
custom to "bind out") sons, so as to
enable them to get schooling Mrs
This towering pillar of smoke andftame coming from the wild oll’well in Kilgore tells its own story of the
threat to the Crame Memorial hospital here. Three times the hospital caught fire and three times was saved. _____________
The hospital was only 25 feet from the roaring well. During the height of the blaze, after 35 other patients | retary, of the Interior. Testimony
had been moved to safety. doctors completed an operation that was under way when the well exploded has shown, that Reno Stitey, an
and caught fire. — ' ■ —-------:---------—“ ' • I Interior Department pay clerk, de-
%
naval supply bill
Anil-lynching—8
continue filibuster.
_ My friends were poor but hon-
eat—Shakespeare
caster seaboard for the second mille Chautemps strained to keep
consecutive day today Rising tern- j a delicate balance, disturbed by
peratures were in prospect. howev- •— •
ttriemrrut.t.azuc
kedut
-2-3
K
New moons and full moons be-
came confused in the statement
of George Rayzor, who intended
to say that there would be two
new moons in January, none in
February and two in March Tlie
moon-men have not definitely ex-
plained the reason, as the moon-man
says the days just happen to fall
that way and that it will bring about
an early Easter.
J- . pi e ■
PAP ’
me more the people know about I
the ante-lynching bill, now before
the United States Senate, the more
the pubic opinion rises against its
enactment, especially the people
of the South believe such a bill is-
unjustified. While the people of the
South do not condone lynching,
such a bill, if enacted into law,
would work a severe injustice to the
counties and officials in which lynch-
illgs might take place. The bill re-
quires the payment of $10,000 to the
lynch ed's family if he is taken from
the enforcement officers, regardless
of whether they attempt to pro-
tect the accused or not The peo-
ple of the South condemn lynch-
ings as they do other forms of crime
and violence, as the records of the
past few years show a determined
more notice given in thia cleanup pleasure machines are tn certain
— ‘ - — South Texas sections and West
night in heavy vapor given off by
the ocean, rode into the harbor
at Cutler, Ma., under her own
said. Help had been asked when
the boat's engine became disab-
led. —
TT
issue, formed a new government
with 18 radical -socialist mtntsters
out of 20. He had dismissed com-
munist support from the coalition
said the snap evidently was burn- | but still needed socialist support
Ing its course The foret ast for both ! to retain hhs power.
judge erred in summoning grand
jurors through the sheriff instead
of naming a commission for choos-
ing them
Oscar Redmon of Denton Coun-
ty farced life imprisonment as the
tribunal affirmed a sentence given
him on conviction of burglary, the
third felony less than a capital one
for which he had been convicted.
It also affirmed a 30-day jail
sentence and $200 fine assessed
Mervin Ash of Travis County for
bookmaking
for haf an hour today, the first ment, creating a test at strength
bombardment of consequence here * - -
they expected the total this year
| to be lower than that of approx-
imately $439,000 for 1937.
1 Operation of illegal machines.
AUSTIN. Jan 10 —A’— The
Court of Criminal Appeals today
reversed the death sentences and,
ordered dismissed the prosecution ।
of Ascension Martinez and Placido
Handy, given the extreme penalties
for the slaying of an unknown man
whose body was found floating in
the Rio Grande near Donna, Dec
15, 1935.
The court said the time and
ernments of Rumania and Russia
also battled internal strife and
; armies in Spain and China ma-
i neuvered for apparently decisive
struggles
The reorganized cabinet of Ca-
which pay off in cash or merchan-
dise has declined materially, offi-
cials said, since Governor James
V. Allred and the Legislature col-
laborated last summer in an anti-
gambling drive. One thing working
against open display of the ma-
chines in 1938 is the fart this Is
an election year.
The comptroller's department
said many of the machines are
legal. It estimated the number of
music machines would show an In-
crease this year of around 50 per
cent Certain pleasure devices such
as football and baseball games
have no pay-offs. ,
The heaviest concgntraMosw of
, -IT T ,4 U°u or wealth and enhance labor's
W C. Fyffe may have thqught : bargaining power
he possessed the oldest letter in He testined at hearings on pro-
Denton, but Mrs. C. S. McMath, i posals of a ways and means sub-
1014 Bolivar, tias a letter that was ; committee tor revising the tax
written five years prior to the Fvffe ' structure.
"I believe," Cromwell said, “that
the capitalistic system."
More Drastic Revision
Senate finance committee mem-
I bers forecast today the Senate
would vote a more drastic revision
___alone, a hundred in. Nebraska, other
hundreds in Iowa, Minnesota and
nearby states. The Atlantic and New
England States were blanketed
under three feet of snow, which in
drifts went to twenty feet in places.
Most of the old-timers, and even
some of the young old-timers, are
of the opinion that present-day
weather does not compare with
Winter Problem
CHICAGO—Three brothers,
Walter, Michael and Frank
Naggo .who live on Wood Street,
set out in their truck to get wood
to heat their flit.
But they weren’t particular
where they did their chopping.
Police found them in a vacant
budding tearing up the floor
for kindling.
erated machines, mainly marble ta- , . . , ,
bles. continue to pour money into' regular and although it regretted
the state school and old age pen- " *e " *"
sion funds despite efforts in many
localities to suppress Illegal ones
a just and ever-increasing distri-
| bution of wealth can be gained
Mississippi Mrs. McMath. prior to i only by encouraging the investment
on the size of her battleships.
A high French authority said
there had "an exchange of views"
among the American, British and
French governments concerning re-
vision of the London naval treaty
of 1936 so as to permit construction
of battleships exceeding 35,000
tons.
Franeet new cabinet walked a
Farm MU—Conference commit-
Grandmother, Mrs. Stevens, in
which indicted the men was ir-
Topsy-Turvy
WOODBURN, Ind—Even the
surgeons were turned around
when they finished operating
on Evans Roberts, 20. and Dee
Coles, 21.
. After a long search they found
Roberts* appendix on the left
—instead of the right side of
his body near the spleen.
When surgeons discovered
Coles' appendix on the left side,
too, they explored further and
found his heart on the right
side. All other internal organs
were misplaced.
(A man and woman with pass-
ports underthe names of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald L. Robinson disap-
peared mysteriously to Mpscow
last month. Identification of a pho-
tograph subsequently establshed
that the woman was Mrs Rubens)
j tween the taxation of cornorat-ions
and of unincorporated business en-
Specifically it held the
ers by holding night sessions, but n - 1, fc 1
•.....Panont woudar Barlaernnnouna- Predicted Short 1 v
week. ,= _____ *
for cannon as well as butter, sought |
a way today to wipe out limitations
18 Big Navy Bombers
Land Early at
Honolulu.
New Record Set at
20 And Half Hours
MA ' 1 .
hog -
river port.
—Japanese oflicers. reported
of savings in productive enterprise
and that attempts to obtain great-
er equality by political action
through income estate, and cor-
porate surplus taxes will defeat
effort on the part of the people
- to stop lynchings. Why is it ne-
cessary to single out lynchings tor
such a fine when there are thous-
ands of murders committed in the
various states each year? It seems
purely political and the sorry part
of it is that the Northern and East-
ern Democrats are the strongest
supporters of the measure. Most
Southern Senators are opposed to
its enactment, and our own Sen-
ator Tom Connally is the leader of
the opposition to such legislation.
He deserves the commendation q
____every Southerner, as it has been
through his efforts, to a large ex-
tent, that the bill has nol already
been passed in the Senate. The
" T Ta
, I
‘rmmA. • • 1.68
A gi, saugi, 447
A”
-has been making Denton since
1899, was here Wednesday morn-
ing. "The first biH of goods I ever
sold in Denton was to the late J.
F. Raley, when he operated the
Raley Drug Co." he said. "That was
in 1899 and well do I recall the
record-breaking temperatures we
had in February of that year when
WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.—
(AP)—President Roosevelt
reporting progress in his con-
ferences on economic prob-
lems, Called together today
the 50 members of Secretary
Roper’s business advisory
council.
The chief executive told reporters
he would talk on any subject the
council wished to take up at the
late afternoon gathering.
It was generally expected the
group would consider broadly all
phases of the recession.
There has been some talk of ap-
pointing a council committee to
discuss industrial stabilization
The council headed by W. Aver-
ell Harriman of the Union Pacific
Railroad has been active since 1933.
Informed persons have credited
its surveys with having consider-
able influence on administration
policies.
Mr. Roosevelt answered seven!
eeenemte tnqutries at his press con-
ference yesterday but he declined
to elaborate on his statement of
last week that he favored the abo-
lition of all holding companies.
- g.________ Isingtao which is linked by the —
treasury and ^stoffice departments Shantung rallway wiih the Tinpu. VT nil tri Viait
in.the 1938-39 fiscal year. route of the Japanese southward; W OULU V ISlt
During yesterday s debate, major- drive on Buchow i M.. ni
Chinese reported that Japanese MrS, KUOCnS in
ed House Democrats they would troops had withdrawn from 101
have to take responsibility for a towns on parts of the Yangtze ,
continuation of unbalanced budgets. Valley front to join the column
A joint committee was approach- driving north from Nanking against
ing completion of its complicated j Suchow.
Job of drafting compromise farm i " m---- •-----
legislation Senator Smith (D-8C) were' locked in a heavy batte in
said the group had agreed on pro- i the vicinity of Wuhu. Chinese de-
said conditions compared
those preceding the severe
and 1936 droughts
I am the light of the world: he
that followeth me shall not walk
in darkness, but shall have the
light of'life.—John 8-12.
AUSTIN. Jan. 19.—145—Cein-op
roe-
e
, f
States that Mrs. Rubens was un-
foreigners at Hangchow were safe.' der arrest in Moscow on suspicion
— 2--------—.. - of espionage.
SHANGHAI, Jan. 19. —(— A formed on ths planes, but not
___strongly reinforced Japanese ofTen-tenough-to cagse trouble,.
to prevent dilly-dallying by South- sive against China's "lifeline” The rest of the trip, the com-
i ’ en opponents 1 Lunghal railroad was forecast to- | mender sald, wee "perfect."
' t s 400.000s
lf __.... 1 ffert bUxSH Jtymae rt- ’ The commander Sd not wS
wem on thesenate. speechmaking 1 lor^ to consoildate their North . during the flight He was admi-
"enbso, china and Shanghafares con-tedlyurd. ...
hfT QU6t6. —
That chamber passed and sent 1 Japanese landed rome 10,000
to the Senate yesterday a bill ap-
proprntiong $1515,000X100 for the
E±
Japensse.and Sheness, bowven ! ^E^Xr^^x’
DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
NO 135 ------ DENTON, TBXA8,. WKDNESIMY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 19, 1938 ~ ~ AfisocUted Pre- Lowed Wirg ~ EIGHT PAGES
adic lighting in the environs of
Hangchow. Chekiang Province cap- 1 announcna- wetardng w-
ital southwest of Shanghai, which announcd. yesterday.’then.reguest
— - was decided upon alter the Soviet
government informed the United
Cromwell Advocates
Repeal of Income
Tax Levies.
Northern Democrats want the
heavy Negro vote in their sections
and they're willing, it seems, to
jeopardize the party, in a way,' for
their own selfish interests. It is not
only the penalty that the people
object to; It's an insult to the South-
land to even Introduce such a bill.
It was not conceived in good faith
or because of necessity, but purely
for political aggrandizement of
some candidates.
FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Jan 19—
(45—Search for six Soviet trans-
polar fliers who vanished live
months ago was delayed another
month today as poor-.weather pre--
vented any more moonlight flights
during the January full moon.
Sir George Hubert Wilkins, not -
ed explorer, was kept aground at
his Aklavih, N. W. T„ base by
| heavy clouds ,last night.
-teiirhers and pupth; were reported
dead or missing by Sacred Heart
College authorities today after Ure
I destroyed the college building yes-
terday.
Seventeen were known dead and
28 were unaceounted tor in addi-
tion. 21 were injured, some of them
seriously.
There WAS noindication exactly I
how many students and teachers ;
perished when flames ' enguifed
the four story structure Provincial
police said the bodies of some or
those missing might be found in
ruins ot the building, but that oth-
ors might have found shelter in
farmhouses near the college
Sixteen bodies had been recover-
ed from tlie ruins One person died
in a hospital
The only dead definitely identi-
fled were Brother Jean Baptiste.
84. 61 Sherbrooke, Que ; Joseph
Vincent, 15, and Guy Malpain. 18.
both, cl St. Hyacinthe
School and fire authorities said
they had been unable to determine
the origin of the fire which broke
out shortly arfter midnight and
gained a half hour hour start he- _
Tore it was discovered It ran rap-
idly through the building which
housed 80 boarding students and 31
teaching brothers.
Faremen had to wait hours for
(See 46 DEAD Page 4)
C. P. Dodson, of Decatur, for sev-
eral years district manager of the
Texas Power & Light Co. tn this
section, has resigned, and begin-
ning January 1 his post was as-
sumed by E R. Williams, former-
ly district salesman. It was announ-
ced Tuesday. Williams, whose head-
quarters will continue to be at De- J ’ I Q 1 l m i
catur, has been salesman in this Ald SClIOOl r linftS
district for the past ten years. I ______
ROUND
-Senate commit-
The Portland. Me , fishing schoon-
er Richard J. Nunan. sought by retary"generai Se communist
coast guardsmen since Monday •
Father and Son
Die for Slaying
BOSTON, Jan 18 Praying
with a fervor more in keeping with
a Sunday Church service than with
a brilliantly-lighted death cham-
ber. Frank and Anthony Di Sta-
sto, father and son, died in the
electric chair at state prison ear-
ly today for the "torch murder"
of Daniel Crowley, a Boston labor-
er.
I was Massachusetts* first father-
son execution on record.
Anthony, 2*. shuffled into the
chamber* a few minutes after mid-
night.
At the chair he said, simply:
"Goodbye father."
He was prayig when he died, a
[ the Senate committee would get to
j work as soon as the House com-
| mittee reports the bill
The House committee hopes to
complete public hearings this week
Unfavorable Weather
Faced in Early
Part of Trip.
HONOLULU, Jan. 19.
(AP)—S wooping down
through bright tropical moon-
i light into the glare of spot-
lights, 18 big navy bombing
planes from California landed
on Pearl Harbor before dawn
today completing the great- /
est mass flight in aviation
history in record breaking
time.
The first plane landed at 5:48
a, m. Pacific Standard Time, 20
hours and 30 miutes after the
official takeoff" at 9:18 a. m. yes-
terday from San Diego, Calif.
The official flight time bested the
previous naval mark at 31 hours. •
25 minutes, set by a squadron of
12 planes tn another "routine trans-
ter" from San Diego nine months
ago.
Only 100 spectators lined the
I smooth waters at Pearl Harbors
channel to watch the planes roar
! high over Honolulu, head stratght _
j for the harbor and land quickly in
I orderly fashion behind Lieut. Com-
' mander S. H Warner.
Warner said the squadrons flew
through unfavorable weather__
through the first third of the trip.
Escaped Storm
They climbed to 15,000 feet and
edged more then 100 miles south of
d hrtrd fs to OffC. #
"cold front" of clouds, rain and
35-mile-an-hour headwinds. Ice
MADRID SHELLED BY INSUR-
GENT GUNS
MADRID Jan 19 —<45—Madrid
was shelled by Insurgent artillery
Would Repeal
It brought death to thousands of j । T
people, a thousand in the Dakotas Income 1 axes
—WASHENGTON; Jan. 19:1 —IA•
James H. R. Cromwell, husband
--- -1
ST HYACINTHE, Que , Jan 19
—(Canadian Press) - Forty-five
4
for Premier Octavian Ooga.
Thousands of Rumanian Jewa
looked for havens abroad.
ness, nighty warmer except la
treme northwest porulon probebty
oecaslonal rins in ektreme wees
portton tonlght; Thuraday eloudy,
probably occastonal mina
Mrs. Stevens about "binding out"
; James Farmer, gramarntner or N
McMath
and locally in Rocky Mountain
States, It said.
In some sections farmers were
compelled to haul water for live-
stock
Dust storms last week damaged
the wheat crop in Western Kansas.
Oklahoma and Eastern New Mex-
Ico, the bureau said.
Agriculture department officials
H
F 9 a'e ‘je
’ ndiure £ eoe
E—- ..5 2 V - ’ -a
__A. ■
mi l
Mk
--------—— -u
» /28
2,
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s,‘$ -
4 14
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 135, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 19, 1938, newspaper, January 19, 1938; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1540109/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.