The Celina Record (Celina, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 12, 1935 Page: 1 of 8
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VOLUME THIRTY-FOUR
CELINA, TEXAS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 12, 1935
Celina Public School
Got Under Way Monday
The 1935-36 school term opened
Monday morning. Muddy roads pre-
vented the attendance being as large
as it usually is on such occasions,
but a large number of pupils and
patrons were present despite the in-
clement weather.
, The exercise was opened with an
invocation by the Rev. O. M. Turner.
* Superintendent J. W. Chapman
stated that chapel exercises would be
held each Wednesday morning begin-
ning next we^t and made it plain
that the patrons and others inteiv
ested had a cordial invitation to be
present at any or ail of these exer-
cises.
The Rev. R. B. Evans delivered
an impressive address to those as-
sembled. This was followed by a pi-
ano solo by Miss Alta Newsom, a
forceful talk by the Rev. W. J. Ep-
ting, a reading by Miss Louise Mc-
Connell, expression teacher, a talk
by Vice President G. V. Bray of the
school board, and another by Coach I
Cecil Sonntag.
Two new teachers, Miss Louise
McConnell, and Mr. Terrell Yar-
brough, were introduced by Mr.
Chapman. Directions as to what
would follow, by Mr. Chapman,
closed the exercises and another
school term had been launched.
Registration began immediately
and continued to completion. Regu-
lar routine work started Tuesday
morning.
The personnel of the faculty is as
follows: Mrs. Ruth Tate, Miss Wilma
Stone, Miss Winnie Douglas, Mrs.
Joe Bunch, Mr. Terrell Yarbrough,
Mrs. Clifford McKnight, Mrs. W. M.
Cox, Mrs. C. F. Choate, Miss Louise
McCoy, Miss Marjorie Morrison, Mr.
ecil Sonntag, principal and coach,
Mr. J. W. Chapman, superintendent,
Miss Alta Newsom, music, Miss
Louise McConnell, expression.
Lloyd Durham continues as care-
taker..
Capt Tidwell's Home
Entered Tuesday Night
_ The home of Capt. and Mrs. A.
F. Tidwell, in the southeastern part
of town, was entered by a burglar
Tuesday night. Entrance was gained
by unfastening the back screen with
a wire.
The room where Capt. and Mrs.
Tidwell were sleeping was entered,
the Captain's trousers were taken
from a closet and a purse in the
pocket, containing about S2, and
three rings belonging to Mrs. Tid-
well, two of them set with diamonds,
were taken.
The intruder also visited the kitch-
en, and lifted about a dozen eggs,
a bottle of milk and a partly filled
box of crackers. He was tracked to
the spot where he crossed the yard
fence, a portion of a cracker being
found along the route.
Deputy Sheriff Arbie Sparlin came
out from McKinney and endeavored
to get fingerprints, but stated he
was unable to do so.
Cotton Test Suit Reset
For Monday, Sept. 23
Texas, Sept. 9.—The suit
ot D. C. Wallace and the Texas Cot-
ton Ginners’ Association vs. W. A.
Thomas et al., involving the consti-
tutionality of the Bankhead cotton
control act, has been reset for Sept.
23 at Tyler, it was announced Mon-
day by Federal Judge Randolph Bry-
Assassin's Bullet Fatal
To Senator Huey P. Long
Money Is Allocated For
Celina-Pilot Point Road
: regard to the improvement of
Celina-Pilot Point road from the
-on County line to Pilot Point
Pilot Point Post-Signal had the
ng:
g' have been allocated by the
xSilway Commission for the
ng of the highway from Pilot
o the Collin County line,
8 miles east of this city. While
j not yet been announced what
cerial will be used in the surfac-
ig of this road, it is understood
at the project calls for rebuilding
e road bed and graveling of the
rface.
‘Improving of this road has long
?n advocated by residents of Pilot
int, as this higtrway, though pass-
e has been very rough, and in
leeted condition for some time.
; new road will connect with the
'ton-CoIlin County line road and
orovide better highway connec-
»- bewteen Pilot Point and Celina.
It .! also be of great benefit to
Piloi Point school busses.
Tt is understood,” says the Post-
Signal, ‘‘that the county road leading
along the ridge, from the Celina road
to Mustang, will be improved also.”
Senator Huey P. Long was shot in
the abdomen Sunday night as he
left the House of Representatives
and was passing the Governor’s of-
fice in the state capitol building of
Louisiana at Baton Rouge.
The assassin, Dr. C. A. Weiss, Jr.,
30, stepped from behind a pillar of
the building and fired. Long’s body
guards opened fire and Weiss fell
dead with forty bullets in his body.
Long clutched his abdomen and
staggered into the arms of Highway
Commissioner James O’Connor, and
was rushed to a hospitaj, where he
died early Tuesday morning, after a
series of blood transfusions.
The tragedy followed the calling
of the Louisiana together in special
session Saturday night to enact some
special legislation desired by Long,
among that legislation a law that
would change the judicial district of
which Dr. Weiss’ father-in-law,
Judge B. H. Pavy, was judge and re-
sult in the defeat of Judge Pavy at
the next election. This may have
been the motive that prompted Dr.
\\ eiss, though he is said to have giv-
en no intimation to his family that
his feeling was so strong in the mat-
ter.
Originally set down for hearing on
its merits Sept. 11 at Sherman, Judge
bryant reset the case following a
conference with Ralph W. Malone of
Dallas, one of the attorneys repre-
senting Wallace.
Malone declined to comment Mon-
nay on a letter mailed to Grayson
county ginners Saturday by the
Grayson county cotton committee,
which said the suit has been set for
hearing Sept. 11 and “if an injunc-
tion is granted at that time the sit-
uation will be exactly as it was
at and immediately before the time
of the hearing in Houston.”
The letter continued: “That it, the
collectors of internal revenue will
be enjoined from enforcing the Bank-
head act as to the ginners with the
result that the tags and other sup-
plies will not be available from col-
lectors of internal revenue; and the
terms of law prohibit the purchase,
sale and transportation of untagged
cotton. It appeal's, therefore, that
if an injunction is issued in this
case that the movement of the cotton
crop will again be tied up.”
The letter was a copy of a letter
sent cotton control committees by
H. G. Lucas, president of the farm-
ers protective committee of the Tex-
as Agriculture Association.
Following the conference with Ma-
lone, Judge Bryant said the plain-
titts planned to file a supplemental
bill at the Tyler hearing asking some
cnaracter of relief from the expenses
they alleged were incurred in com-
plying with the Bankhead Act.
A preliminary injunction granted
July 19 against the enforcement of
the act never became effective be-
cause of the failure of the ginners to
post a $100,000 bond.
Explains 12c Guarantee
and 10-Cent Cotton Loan
Mud Handicaps Carriers
In Making Their Routes
According to Rural Mail Carriers
John Brewer and Mont Brewer, who
cover the two routes out of Celina,
they had a strenuous time last week-
end and the first of this week serv-
ing their patrons.
Saturday John Brewer and Claude
Duvall started out in an automobile
and went until they stuck. They fin-
ally got out and called three other
men to their aid on horseback, each
taking a section of the mud road. It
took them until nightfall to complete
the task.
Monday Mr. Brewer had to have
the aid of two men in making deliv-
ery to his patrons. Mr. Brewer serv-
ed that portion of his route that has
a pike while two men on horseback
served the portions off the pike.
Carrier Mont Brewer had to call
three men to his aid in order to get
the mail to the patrons of his route,
two using automobiles and two us-
ing horses.
John Brewer says the roads are
softer than he had previously seen
them in the more than
At least twelve physicians were
in attendance on Long, headed by
Dr. Arthur Virdine, chief of staff.
Specialists were summoned by air-
plane. State police guarded the hos-
pital, admitting no one but close per-
sonal friends of the Senator and of-
ficials.
Only the family and the closest
friends, such as Governor Allen and
Lt.-Gov. James A. Noe, who donated
a pint of blood shortly before mid-
night, were permitted in the room.
Mrs. Long visited her husband for
fifteen minutes late Monday morning,
accompanied by her son RussMl, 16.
It was her fourth visit since mid-
night, when Long was brought to
the hospital from the scene of the
shooting in the Capitol.
Long had been a veritable dictator
in Louisiana, having Gov. Allen to
call the legislature together and en-
act laws at his bidding. Feeling was
very bitter and Long was always
surrounded by a strong bodyguard.
On receipt of news of the shooting
of Long President Roosevelt ex-
pressed his regret, branding the af-
fair as un-American.
In Louisiana his death probably
will result in disintegration of one
of. the most powerful political ma-
chines in American history. Observ-
ers believed that no one but a man
of Long’s peculiar genius could hold
together the organization that con-
trols practically every State office
from Governor to constable and most
of the Federal elective offices.
Even while the “boss,” one of the
most colorful and crafty politicians
the country has ever produced,
fought his losing battle for life, the
followers whispered among them-
selves about the future. With Long’s
own Senate seat and many State of-
fices coming before the voters in
1936 elections, observers predicted
the wildest scramble should he die.
President Expresses Regret.
President Roosevelt sent the fol-
lowing wire to Mrs. Long:
“I deeply regret the attempt made
upon the life of Senator Long of
Louisiana. The spirit of violence is
un-American and has no place in a
Political Advertising
Must Carry Signature
*** sVv^'as'a' o0fiailIeatata°:Hme wS^alm^anddS
rural carrier.
Pilot Point to Vote
On Sale of 3.2 Sept. 21
Denton, Sept. 12.—Granting a pe-
tition from residents of Pilot Point,
the County Commissioners’ Court
Monday afternoon ordered an elec-
tion there Sept. 21 on the issue of
legalizing 3.2 beer in the precinct.
The vote was requested, by eighty-
five Pilot Point residents, including
forty businessmen.
It will be the second effort in a
month to crack Denton County’s
wenty-two year-old local option
rought. At the recent State-,wide
)te on amendments, four voting
Doxes of Eastern Denton county
voted on legalizing brew, a move that
lost, nearly two to one. One other
voting box besides Pilot Point, the
community of Mustang, will vote in
the Sept. 21 election.
R. M. Marsh returned home Mon-
y from Richardson, where he di-
’ted the song service in a two
tks revival at the Methodist
rch.
and dis-
passionate approach to the difficult
problems of the day is so essential.”
Weiss Kin Prostrated.
The family of young Dr. Weiss
was prostrated with grief. Mrs.
Weiss, who three months ago gave
birth to a son, and Judge B. H. Pavy,
father-in-law, were undfer a physi-
cian’s care. Judge Pavy was bitter-
ly opposed to Senator Long’s dicta-
torship and faced ouster as the re-
sult of a bill pending before the
State Legislature. It was believed
this might have motivated young
Dr. Weiss in his assassination of
Long.
It was pointed out that he was not
a member of the Anti-Long Square
Deal Association, whose members
clashed with the National Guard here
last January. .
Effective August 11, a new law
entered the statute books of Teras
which prohibits the publication of
political advertising that does not
carry the name of a responsible per-
son, candidate or political commit-
tee. Enforcement cf this law is en-
cumbent on both press and candi-
date. The law in full follows:
‘Article 211. Political Advertising:
Anything published in newspapers,-
pamphlet or printed journal in favor
of or in opposition to any candidate
any public office or in favor of
or in opposition to the success of any
public officer, or in favor of any po-
litical party, or any proposition sub-
mitted to a vote of the people, when
same is published in consideration or
receipt or promise of money or thing
of value, shall be known as political
advertising. And no such advertise-
ment shall be accepted for publica-
tion or printing unless it is signed by
the responsible chairman of any can-
didate’s committee, or any candidate
himself, political committee, or by
the individual responsible for its
publication, and such- signature shall
appear in the advertisement as
printed. All advertisements of mark-
ed ballots, advising or suggesting
how voters should mark their bal-
lots shall he included in the mean-
ing of this Article; and any editor,
publisher, manager or agent, of any
newspaper, pamphlet or printed
journal who shall publish political
advertising other than as advertis-
ing matter, which, shall be labeled at
the beginning or end thereof with the
word “advertisement” or shall wil-
fully demand or receive for the pub-
lication of such political advertising
money or any other thing of value in
excess of the sum due for such ser-
vice at the regular advertising rates
of such newspaper, pamphlet or
printed journal for such, service any
money or thing of value in excess of
the sum due at regular advertising
rates, or any person who shall pay
or offer to pay any editor, publisher,
manager or agent of any newspaper,
pamphlet or printed journal for such
service any money or thing of value
for the publication of political adver-
tising, except as advertising matter
at regular advertising rates, shall
be fined not less than five hundred
dollars ($500) nor more than one
thousand dollars ($1,000), or be im-
prisoned in jail not more than thirty
(30) days. Nothing herein shall be
construed as applying to announce-
ments of candidates for office.”
Tne 12c guarantee and the 10c
loan are not connected. They are dis-
tinctly separate from each other.
Producers do not have to take the
loan in order to receive price adjust-
ment payments. In fact the govern-
ment discourages taking the loan.
Of course if cotton should fall con-
siderably below the 10c level then
producers could take the 10c loan
and get the difference between that
and 12c.
1. Any cotton producer is entitled
to the guarantee of price whose 1935
production is under a 1934 and 1935
Cotton Acreage Adjustment Contract
and who sells cotton before August
1> 1936, and who agrees to partici-
pate in the 1936 Cotton Adjustment
Program of the AAA formulated un-
der the Agi’icultural Adjustment
■A Ct.
2. A producer who does not have
a contract may make application for
guarantee and will receive additional
price when he has executed a 1936
Cotton Contract and complied there-
with.
3. No adjustment payments can be
maae^ f no cotton has been sold.
4. The adjustment payment will be
made in one check, made to the per-
son making application for the farm,
and this person as trustee will pay
to those entitled to share in this
payment their proper share thereof.
5. The rate of payment will be the
amount per pound by which the offi-
cial average base price of cotton on
the ten designated spot cotton mar-
kets is below 12 cents on the day
the cotton was sold. This rate can-
not exceed 2 cents per pound.
6. The seller will secure from the
buyer a Cotton Sale Certificate on
Form No. C. A. P. 1, which certifi-
cate will show the date of sale, the
amount of cotton sold, seller’s name,
buyer’s name, and the Bankhead Ap-
plication Serial Number for the
farm on which the cotton was pro-
duced.
7. Cotton Price Adjustment pav-
ments will be made at the office of
tne county agent, but not immediate-
ly after the cotton is sold. The
guarantee or adjustment payments
will De made at a later date.
8. A producer who secures a 1935
government 10-cent loan on his cot-
ton is eligible to participate in fot-
ton adjustment payments provided
his cotton is sold prior to August 1,
1936.
All-lime August Record
Hung Up by Chevrolet
Detroit, Mich., Sept. 12.—Chevro-
n^o °e“vered to retail consumers 99 -
018 new cars and trucks in August,
eclipsing its July sales by 24 979
units and setting an all-time August
record it was announced here by W.
, Dollar, vice president and gener-
al sales manager of the Chevrolet
Motor Co.
August sales were 33,623 greater
than m the same month last year,
an increase of 51 per cent, and ex-
ceeded every other August in the
history of the company including
August, 1j28. This August’s sales
exceeded the 1928 record by 4100
units, Mr. Hollar said.
Commenting on the heavy volume
registered in a month which normal-
ly sees a slackening off of automo-
bile business, Mr. Holler cited the
Chevrolet sales record as added evi-
dence of improved business. “The
taet that our volume increased so
sharply over its total for July—it-
self an excellent month— shows un-
mistakeably that the country’s buy-
ing power is increasing, and that
there is not only the ability but al-
so a universal willingness on the part
°f«tire publlc huZ” he said.
We were especially gratified at
the uniformity of the improvement
m conditions. Every one of the nine
Chevrolet regions showed a splendid
increase, and this fact forecasts fur-
ther facorable developments for the
remainder of the vear.”
OIL RIG FIREMAN KILLED.
C. M. Martin, fireman for an oil
rig, was killed Tuesday when a 122-
foot oil derrick fell on him at a test
being made seven miles northwest
of Denison. Other members of the
crew shouted a warning to Martin
when the rig began to topple, but he
failed to hear it.
Relative of Celina Lady
Weds At McKinney Sunday
Miss Marie Sockwell of Greenville
and Clyde L. Lytton' of Longview
were united in marriage at the home
of the bride’s sister, Mrs. G. B.
Bradshaw, in McKinney at 6 o’clock
Sunday evening, the Rev. G. B.
Bradshaw officiating.
The couple was attended by the
bride’s sister, Miss Tula Sockwell.
and W. C. Lewis Jr. of McKinney.
Mrs. Lytton wore an ensemble of
grey^ with navy blue accessories.
After a short wedding trip the
couple will be at home in Longview,
where Mr. Lytton holds a position
with the Atlantic Oil Co.
The bride is the daughter of Mrs.
J. L. Sockwell of Greenville and a
niece of Mrs. C. W. O’Brien, who
resides four miles southeast of Ce-
lina.
9. A producer who sold his cotton
before the announcement of the guar-
antee and 10c loan is eligible to re-
ceive payments provided he will se-
cure acceptable certificates of sale
for the cotton and makes his appli-
cation not later than Aug. 15, 1936.
10. Cotton producers who wish,
should go right ahead and sell their
cotton just as they always have, and
the adjustment payments will auto-
matically come to them when they
have signed contracts to reduce in
1936.
11. The reduction in 1936 will
probably be between 25 and 50 per
cent, and we have information that
there will be no rented acres. In oth-
er words the government will pay
producers for having so many acres
of cotton and no more.
jack McCullough,
County Agent.
—•-—•---
Edward Laurence Doheny
Ends Remarkable Career
Former Celina Merchant
Dead At Walnut Springs
R. H. Nail, 62, died Saturday night
at his home two miles southwest of
Springs of a heart attack
that began three weeks earlier. The
body was buried at Walnut Springs
at 4 p. m. Monday.
Mr. Nail was engaged in the dry
goods business here eight or nine
j'ears ago and during his residence
here was married to the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Penland, who
lived near this city, but now reside
near Frisco. The wife and one child
Porn to this union, Robert Penland
•Nail, 9, survive. Also a daughter, the
former Miss Nona Nail, born to
tormer marriage.
and Mrs. H. M. Penland, Mr.
and Mrs. Haga Penland, Henry Vir-
gil, Morris and Miss Ethel Penland
attended the funeral.
NUMBER 11
Fourth Member of Family
Victim of Tuberculosis
Miss Bonnie Burchett, 18-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pat Bur-
chett, who reside in the northeast
portion of Celina, fell a victim of
tuberculosis Monday night, the
fourth member of this family to be
cut down by this disease within
eighteen months.
The body was interred at Cross
Roads Cemetery at 5:00 Monday af-
ternoon following services over it at
the iamily home, conducted by thex
Re^- Bobee of the Church of God.
. family, with so much sickness,
is of course in straitened circum-
stances and contributions were asked
to a fund with which to defrav ex-
penses of burial.
Nine children of a family 0f thir-
teen survive, five of whom are at
home. A son, Hervie Burchett, lives
°n the Stallcup farm near this city.
Mr. Burchett states that so far as
ne knows none of the survivors have
tuberculosis.
The four deaths in the last eight-
een months were those of Noah E.
Burchett, 26, Virgie, 20, and Bonnie,
whose deaths occurred here, and Mrs
Clayton McBee, who died at Knox-
ville, Tenn.
The parents are crushed by the
burden of sorrow resting upon them
and do not know which way to turn.
■-— -—.
High School Classes
Perfect Organization
Los Angeles, Sept. 8.—Edward
^aurence Doheny, 79, who wrested
one of the world’s largest fortunes
from the oil fields of California and
Mexico, died Sunday night after a
long illness.
Discoverer with the late Charles
A. Canfield of one of the first oil
fields of California, Doheny’s career
was one of the most picturesque in
the history of American industry.
In Tampico, Mexico, he reared a vast
industrial empire which came to be
known as one of the greatest con-
centrated oil holdings of private
capital in the world.
Tragedy and sorrow stalked him
at the very zenith of his career, how-
ever, because of his operations in
Elk Hills, Calif.
Doheny’s death was caused by age
and complications after an illness
that kept him bed-ridden almost
three years. At his bedside were his
wife, Estelle, and five grandchild-
ren.
Only recently, a Doheny-controlled
corporation here foreclosed on the
New Mexico ranch of Albert E. Fall,
who disclosed that he had received
orders to vacate.
Doheny and Fall were reported to
have remained clos efriends through
the years, but Doheny could not be
reached for direct comment on the
foreclosure.
Doheny was graduated from high
school at the age of 16 years and
started put with a pack on his back
to make his fortune in the world.
He wandered about the country,
studied geology, mining and law,
and prospected for gold and silver
more than twenty years.
Although 40 years old before he
really made a stake, but his for-
tunes grew by leaps and bounds af-
ter he got started on his career as
an oil man. Even though he suf-
fered . enormous losses in late years,
he ^still was rated one of the coun-
try s most wealthy men.
Daughter Jack Button
Weds At Oklahoma City
Announcements of the marriage of
Miss Maurine Button, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. M. Button of Oklahoma
City, to Mr. Roy Trent at Oklahoma
City, have been received here.
The bride’s parents lived here for
number of years, her father hav-
befo at the head of the Celina
state Bank, which sold out to the
v irst state Bank some years ago.
For the past several years they have
resided in Oklahoma City.
Mr. and Mrs. Trent are at home
rfi ,2!69 ^est Twenty-First street,
Oklahoma City.
* -O----:--
MISSING DENTON YOUTH
IN FLORIDA, HE REPORTS
Denton, Texas, Sept. 9.—R. M.
Barns Jr., 22, Denton vouth for
whom an extended search was begun
recently when relatives feared him
Highjacked, is in Florida, according
to a message from him Monday.
Barns parents did not know he
contemplated the trip a week ago
and became alarmed when he drove
away one night without announcing
his destination. Police dropped their
inquiries twenty-four hours later on
learning the youth himself bought
gasoline and left Denton unaccom-
panied.
PLANO VETERAN OLDEST
AT AMARILLO REUNION
Capt. W. H. L. Wells of Plano,
now in his 96th year, was the oldest
veteran at the Amarillo reunion. He
is very active for his age and was
present at all features of the reun-
ion, even attending the ball, where
the ladies deemed it an honor to
dance with him.
Louis Dabney, 37, was killed early
Sunday night in a crowded South
Dallas drug store. He was shot to
death following a fight. E. H. Rat-
lm, proprietor, said that a fight
started and that when he attempted
to interfere he was attacked and the
shooting started.
Tool Trade Industry Shows
Depression Rapidly Passing
Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 11.—Lead-
ers of America’s machine tool trade,
known as an accurate forecaster of
general business, estimated Wednes-
day the 1935 volume of this industry
will approximate $150,000,000, $20,-
000,000 more than in 1929, the big-
gest previous year in its history.
Convinced that general business
also is on the threshold of a tremen-
dous upturn, the machine tool trade
is hailing its own return to prosper-
ity with what it terms the largest
industrial exposition ever held in
this country.
But behind the exposition at Cleve-
land, first that the machine tool men
have held since 1929, officials said
is the fact that the decision to hold
it was based on the conviction that
general recovery is at hand.
A typical expression of the regard
business has for the machine tool in-
dustry as a business barometer, came
from Harper Sibley, president of the
United States Chamber of Commerce.
“The business world is watching
with lively interest the opening of
the machine tool exposition,” he
said. “Best wishes for a full realiza-
tion of the show which holds so much
promise for industry.”
Class officers and sponsors were
ejected at meetings of the various
masses of Celina High School Tues-
day.
Francis Stallcup was chosen to
head the Senior class of ’36. James
Meachum was chosen as vice presi-
dent; Mary Charles Clark, secretary-
treasurer; Nina Stone, reporter. The
social committee, headed by Rita
Stallcup, includes Dolores Glenden-
ning and Elizabeth Meachum. Cecil <
Sonntag, principal of the high school,
was chosen as class sponsor.
The Junior class chose as presi-
dent W. E. Nelson, as vice president,
.trances Allen, as secretary, Wilma
Norris; as treasurer, Frances Byrd
McNabb; as reporter, Jimmie Lor-
raine Glendenning. Mrs. C. F. Choate,
home economics instructor, was se-
lected as sponsor. 0
Harrison Gunter was elected pres*, s/%
ident of the Sophomore class. Othe ^
class officers chosen are: Bett\ ^
.race, vice president; Faye Stagner
secretary-treasurer; Laura Beth
Howell, reporter. Miss Marjorie Mor-
rison, mstuctor of English, was
elected sponsor.
The Freshman Class elected the
following officers: President, G. W.
Robinson; vice president, Don Glen-
denning; secretary, Wanda Lou Har-
ben; reporter, Martha Ruth Gunter.
Miss Louise McCoy, instructor of
opamsh, was chosen sponsor.
---O--
Death of McKinney Man
Follows Mule's Kick
Q. Z. Wooten, 22, citizen of Mc-
Kinney. died in the McKinney city
hospital at 9:45 Friday night as the
result _ of injuries inflicted when he
was kicked by a mule on the preced-
ing Wednesday.
The body was buried in Walnut
Drove Cemetery at 2:30 Sunday af-
ternoon following services at Crouch
Funeral Home in McKinney, con-
ducted by the Rev. J. Ben Snider of
McKinney.
Mr. Woolen is survived by his
wile, lus parents, a brother,, Lee
Wooten, of Dallas; a daughter, Mrs.
Regina Slaughter, of Dallas, and bis
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. George
W ooten, of Dallas, and Mr. and Mrs.
Lum I'ropes, ot McKinney.
T. S, C. W. Registration
lo Begin Sept. 17th
Denton, Sept. 12.—Registration of
students for the fall semester of
work at Texas State College for
Women (C-IA) will begin Tuesday,
Sept. 17 when students attending the
college for the first time will be en-
rolled. Former students of the col-
lege will matriculate on Wednesday,
Sept. 18, and classes are scheduled
to begin Thursday morning.
The freshmen Engish test, re-
quired of all first-year students up-
on entrance into the college, will be-
given Wednesday morning. Sept. 18
and an orientation lecture is sched-
uled for the afternoon. A series of
entertainments honoring the new
students will be featured activities of
of the first week.
Local Boys Playing
Football At Wesley
Two local athletes, Luther Mc-
Knight and Arvel Morris, reported
for football practice Monday at Wes-
ley College, Greenville, where the
young men are attending college.
This is McKnight’s second term at
Wesley. Last spring, immediately af-
ter his arrival, McKnight was elected
president of the student body, an
office which he will occupy this
school year.
The auditorium of the First Bap-
tist Church of Dallas would not hold
the people who attended the Sun-
day morning service, which marked
the beginning of Dr. George W.
Iruett’s thirty-ninth year as pastor
of the congregation. The seats and
standing room were all taken and
there were Qthers who could not get
in.
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Andrews, C. C. The Celina Record (Celina, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 12, 1935, newspaper, September 12, 1935; Celina, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth772614/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Celina Area Historical Association.