The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1935 Page: 1 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 23 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
The Whitewright Sun
WHITEWRIGHT, GRAYSON COUNTY, TEXAS, THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1935.
VOL. 56, NO. 29.
5c a Copy, $1.50 a Year.
*
*
■W
the
consensus
ap-
*■
>4
his
be
<
A
4
A .
You can buy adding machine paper
at the Sun office.
'' \
New Deal Program
Finds Going Hard
First Ten Weeks
AAA Ruled Invalid
Where Sales Made
Wholly Intrastate
Grammar School
Notes
HOLC Bill Passes
House With Only
2 Opposing Votes
MARCH RAINFALL TO
DATE 1.93 INCHES
RULES CONGRESS
CAN’T FIX WAGES
TRUSTEE ELECTION IS
SCHEDULED FOR APRIL
F r azier-Lemke
Amendment Held
Valid by Court
COUNTY PURCHASING
PLAN IS CRITICISED
COST OF LIVING
STILL ADVANCING
PERSONS ON RELIEF
ROLLS MUST REGISTER
SENATE PASSEA BILL
TO REPEAL DRY LAWS
Tom Bean To Get
New $25,000 Gin
Child Asked His
Friend To Fire
‘Unloaded’ Gun
A Want Ad wlil get results for you.
Sell it with a Sun “Want Ad”.
Grammar School boys will play
Whitesboro in a game of baseball
Thursday at 3:30.
JUST SOMETHING MORE
TO MAKE FOLKS BLUE
dictating to news
small cornel’ drug
SLOT MACHINE CASES
DISMISSED AT SHERMAN
BEGIN SURVEY SOON ON
ROUTE FOR HIGHWAY 78
The entire Grammar School facul-
ty will attend the educational confer-
ence at Teachers’ College, Denton,
Saturday. •
on by the local
heretofore have
the farm credit
was pointed out,
A total of 1.93 inches of rainfall
has been registered at the city water
plant, according to Charley Cates, of-
ficial custodian of the rain gauge.
Pi’ecipitation on March 3 was .74
of an inch, on March 9, .54, on
March 10, .31 and on March 11, .34.
Total rainfall for 1935 to date is
7.28 inches, January total being 3.65
inches and February total 1.70.
Farmers in general are of the opin-
ion that rainfall has been sufficient
to give the ground a “season,” since
wells are filling up and springs are
Tunning again.
Rainfall has been general over the
State during the last few days, even
the South Plains getting some much
needed moisture. A letter from H.
H. Stokes, who lives in the south-
western part of Lubbock County, re-
ports 2 % inches of moisture there,
combining rain and snow.
-EMERGENCY SEED LOAN
MONEY NOW AVAILABLE
LIST OF BOOKS NEEDED
BY THE GRADE SCHOOL
Deportment honors for the past
six weeks in the upper grades were
won by the sixth grade. As a reward
for good behavior, each member of
the class was presented with a ticket
to the picture show.
The fourth grade pupils are mak-
ing a study of Mexico. The char-
acteristics of the people, their cus-
toms and the type of government
are being emphasized.
The three primary grades are mak-
ing a study of Holland this week.
no more authority
over the three plaintiffs than the
Canadian Parliament at Ottawa.”
(school edition) ;
the Silver Fox;
Silver
“Here Comes Charlie” is the title
of a play to be presented by mem-
bers of the Grammar School faculty
April 12. It is predicted that even
their own pupils will fail to recognize
the teachers. Come and see for your-
self.
Miss Druliner, county health nurse,
will be at the Grammar School Mon-
day morning again. She especially
desires that the parents, upon re-
ceiving notice from the teacher, be
prompt in coming at the hour speci-
fied in the note, in order that she
may have time to talk with each par-
ent regarding the health of her child.
Inspection will begin with the second
grade Monday.
Miss Druliner will organize a class
in health and home hygiene Monday
afternoon, and every mother who is
interested is requested to be at the
Grammar School at 1 o’clock.
gun
victim,
from the
committees which
functioned under
administration. It
however, that no
loans would be made to farmers who
are able to obtain credit through
usual commercial channels and that
in cases where existing crop or chat-
tel liens existed, waivers and non-
disturbance agreements from such
lien holders will be required before
any loans will be approved. For non-
relief clients, loans not to exceed
$50 will be approved.
Mr. Johnson said the relief com-
mission will discontinue making these
loans immediately upon resumption
of activities by the farm credit ad-
ministration.
Judson H. Wood is Grayson Coun-
ty representative, with headquarters
at the county courthouse.
come
extent this would reach,
much the administration would
willing to compromise to
broad objectives, were
heightening the confusion.
Six weeks ago the •
farm
heretofore
Mr. Johnson said.
ity patients in 1932 was $3,900,
which rose rapidly until it reached
$8,119.75 in 1934.
“The county last year spent $28,-
850.14, or one-fourth of the general
fund 1’evenue of $105,777.68, in car-
ing for paupers,” he stated.
Physicians of the county were se-
verely criticized by the court for al-
leged practice of ordering poor per-
sons sent to the hospital at the coun-
ty’s expense who could be treated as
well at home, and of keeping them
there longer than necessary.
All county relief clients are re-
quested to report at once for re-reg-
istration at their district offices, if
they have not recently done so,
Marion Wilson, county administra-
tor, announced Tuesday. This is a
new, strict requirement of the gov-
ernment.
The order was issued on advice
from FERA authorities asking for
complete re-registration of all eligi-
ble for relief in order to form a more
helpful program of aid.
Clients will be re-registered at dis-
trict headquarters at Sherman, Deni-
son, Whitewright, Whitesboro, and
Van Alstyne. Clients are being asked*
to report to the offic.es-'nearest and
those at which they previously regis-
tered.
The government plans to enroll the
recipients of relief more accurately
as to their trades, professions or skill
in work, so as to develop a more help-
ful variety of work projects, it was
stated.
“If it is known at the relief offices
what type of skilled workers are
available, the relief offices will be
able to apply for more suitable work
projects.
credit administration
has made such
“Loans
NEW YORK. — Living costs for
wage-earners continued to advance
from January to February and were
1 pei' cent higher in the latter month
than at the beginning of 1935, ac-
cording to National Industrial Con-
ference Board estimates. The Feb-
ruary cost of living was 5.2 per cent
higher than in the same 1934 month.
Food prices rose 2 per cent from
January to February and are 12.7
per cent higher than a year ago.
Rents were the only other item ad-
vancing during the month, register-
ing a rise of seven-tenths of 1 per
cent.
Clothing prices declined nearly 1
per cent, continuing a five-month
downward trend. Fuel and light and
sundries costs showed no change.
Purchasing value of the dollar,
taking the 1923 dollar as 100c, was
121.4c in February against 127.7c a
year ago and 100.1c in 1929.
I
Honor Roll
Third grade—Bettye Jane Harpef.
Fifth grade — Mary Dale King,
Doretha Daiwin, Mary Alice Harri-
son.
Sixth grade—Emma Joyce Hinton.
BONHAM.—Fannin County Com-
missioners’ Court agreed to secure
right-of-way for a new route of high-
way 78 between Bonham and Leon-
ard, via Bailey, during a visit here of
J. R. Pirie of Paris, divisional high-
way engineer. He stated that pre-
liminary survey for the route will be
made soon.
An election will be held the first
Saturday in April to elect three trus-
tees for Whitewright Independent
School District, it is announced by
F. E. Douglas, secretary of the Board
of Education.
Board members whose terms expire
this year are John Reeves, R. C. Ves-
tal, and Gomel’ May, all of whom are
serving unexpired terms by appoint-
ment.
Other members of the board are
C. J. Meador, prseident; F. E. Doug-
las, R. A. Gillett, and W. L. Stowers.
Besides the health work connected
with this program, a special study of
Holland is being made by the third
grade this month. Windmills have
been made by the children and many
stories of the Dutch have been read.
SHERMAN.—Judge Jake J. Loy
Friday afternoon dismissed seven-
teen cases pending in County Court
at the- request of Hubert Bookout,
Criminal District Attorney, includ-
ing those against eleven persons
charged with operating slot machines.
Cases dismissed included Harry
Gash, S. A. Hudnall, L. B. Smith,
Bob Richardson, Mrs. Harry Wood,
Harry Dunn, O. D. Worthley, Wade
Hampton, Claude Whiteacre, John
Harris and Guy Jones, all charged
with operating slot machines.
Some Bad Crop Years
Hiram—“Yes, I’ve seen a few bad
crop years in my time, too. One year
our string beans were so poor that
the crop didn’t even pay for the
string.”
Silas — “That’s nothing, Hi. In
1914 our corn crop was so bad that
my old dad, who had a very poor ap-
petite, ate up fourteen acres of corn
at a single meal.”
TOM BEAN.—An all-steel cotton
gin is to be erected at a cost of $25,-
000 within the next several months
by the Tom Bean Gin Company, ac-
cording to P. H. Luby, president and
general manager.
The gin building and all machinery
contained in it will be of steel. Five
eight-saw gin stands, Murray system,
will be installed on a concrete floor.
The line flue will be located under
the floor instead of overhead, an in-
novation in gin construction and
probably the first which will be seen
in Texas.
Laying of foundations will be
started soon, but the plant will not
be erected for some time, it is stated.
The new plant will take the place of
one of-the most complete gins in the
county which burned several months
ago at a loss of approximately $25,-
000/
Officers of the Tom Bean Gin
Company include Dero Austin of
Southmayd, vice president, and S. L.
Ricketts of Sherman, secretary-treas-
urer.
SHERMAN.—The famed central-
ized purchasing plan was late Mon-
day drawn from its pigeon hole to
face anew the buffetings of severe
criticism, and equally as staunch sup-
port, only to be shoved back again,
lacking any action by the county
Commissioners’ Court.
Veering away from either rejec-
tion or acceptance of the plan to buy
by competitive bids, the court heard
the view of Judge J. J. Loy that at
present the county has no policy and
is doing business in a haphazard man-
ner.
The court’s creation of a board of
two printers to set the price on coun-
ty printing subject to the approval
of J. N. Dickson, county auditor, con-
stituted a definite drift away from
ultimate adoption of the central buy-
ing system. “Uncle” Dick Hopson
and Carol Scruggs were named to
figure printing prices and divide the
work equally among printers of Gray-
son County.
The board was formed on unani-
mous Consent of the court after it
heard a stirring appeal from D. R.
Huffaker, Whitesboro publisher, in
which he denounced “cut throat com-
petition,” and phases of the bidding
system he looked upon as unjust.
No formal action was written into
the minutes on the setting up of the
board; for to give it final authority
on such matters would be an unlaw-
ful delegation of power.
Loy Wants Buying Policy
At the outset of Huffaker’s
peal that the competitive plan be
scrapped and the printing be appor-
tioned to Grayson printers, Judge
Loy said: “I wish the court would set
a definite policy this afternoon. So
far as I know at present no two com-
missioners are paying the same price
for lumber or other materials.”
Loy fought vigorously for some
definite plan that would place the
county’s affairs on a business basis.
“As a matter of just public policy,
don’t you think the county should
take advantage of savings that would
come from bids?” Loy asked Huf-
faker.
“I think that the people of Whites-
boro and other points help support
the government and even if the prices
paid them is 10 per cent higher they
are entitled to the business. This
should be divided equally among the
commissioners’ precincts; for this
money will be spent in the county.”
The setting up of a printers price-
fixing board drew sharp criticism
from Judge Loy who opposed it vig-
orously. “By the same policy we
should allow lumbermen and machin-
ery makers to select a board from
among their ranks to set the prices
the county must pay on all pur-
chases,” he said.
The court agreed to investigate
with a view to settling a claim pre-
sented by Horace Vincent, 24, farm-
er living near Tom Bean, who on
Feb. 28 plunged his car into a gap
in the Ida-Tom Bean road, where a
bridge had been torn out for replace-
ment.
Himself only slightly injured, Vin-
cent told the court his car was de-
molished. He said he saw no warn-
ing signs that the road was hazard-
ous. His car hurdled some planks on
the edge of the road and was stop-
ped when it collided with piling
driven down for the new bridge, half-
way down the 18-foot drop. He
asked $150 for the car.
To Move Huge Vault
The two-story steel and concrete
vault, weighing from a million and a
half to two million pounds, will be
severed from its concrete basement
at ground level and moved intact to
a point 63 feet north of its present
location to house county records dur-
ing construction of the new court-
house.
The court Tuesday instructed B.
F. Gafford, its legal adviser, to draw
up a contract with the Roberts Elec-
tric Company of Sherman for moving
the vault at a cost of $1,250. The
Roberts Company was low of the four
bids submitted, the highest being $5,-
990 by a Fort Worth concern.
The award for this work was given
the Roberts Company subject to the
posting of bonds to insure the coun-
ty against any damage that might re-
sult.
Cost of Aiding Sick Heavy
In reply to E. A. Gross, manager
of the Wilson N. Jones Hospital,
seeking- a hike in the $2 per day rate
for charity patients, that these insti-
tutions are called on to bear an un-
just burden in caring for the indigent
ill, the court revealed a hospitaliza-
tion expense which has pyramided
rapidly since 1932.
Gross said that the cost of caring
for patients at his hospital during
January was $3.75 per person, and
that the $2 rate represented nearly
a 50 per cent loss. Twenty per cent
of the patients in January were char-
ity cases, he said. “We don’t think it
is fair to impose this burden on the
few patrons we have when it should
be borne by the county as a whole,”
he said.
The court took no action on the in-
crease asked. J. N. Dickson, county
auditor, revealed that the cost of
; medicine and hospital care for char-
WASHINGTON.—The overwhelm-
ingly Democratic Congress ended its
tenth week yesterday with none of
the new deal program enacted, and
political Washington wondering what
this signifies for the Roosevelt fu-
ture.
Challenged as never before, the
administration’s outward indifference
toward the Senate deadlock posed a
puzzler for those seeking to evaluate
its strategy.
Interpretations varied widely.
Some quarters ■were inclined to con-
sider the White House at a loss for
means to resolve the impasse. Others
viewed the “patient waiting” attitude
as deliberately undertaken with a
weather eye on 1936, and one that
developments would justify.
Back to Normal
Still others, in capitol corridor dis-
cussions, saw the situation as only
“back to normal”—with the execu-
tive and legislative branches having
it out in the traditional manner.
Restiveness in Congress had be-
increasingly obvious. To what
and how
be
seek its
questions
ST. LOUIS, Mo. — United States
Circuit Judge Charles B. Faris, Satur-
day ruled that Congress has no pow-
er to fix wages and hours for intra-
state business.
The ruling denied the Federal Gov-
ernment’s petition for a temporary
injunction to prevent the National
■j Garment Company and the National
'/Underwear Corporation, both of St.
AUSTIN. — Special funds have
been made available to Texas relief
commission by the Federal emergen-
cy relief administration for the pur-
pose of making emergency seed loans
for spring planting of commercial
and forage crops, it was announced
Monday by Adam R. Johnson, State
relief director.
“These funds have been made
available to meet the emergency
created by temporary lack of funds
in the
which
loans,”
will be made in all cases of emer-
gency regardless of whether the ap-
plicant is on relief rolls or not. Ap-
plications will be taken by county re-
lief offices.”
All applications will be passed up-
X lit; Mill W Clb belli IV LI1C OcllcXut/ dL |
^r repeated attempts to raise the $1,-
750,000,000 (billion) to $3,000,000,-
000 (billion) were beaten. Members
of the Banking Committee gave as-
surance again and again that the bill
provided sufficient funds to help de-
seiwing home owners in distress.
Even so, the committee itself had
/added $250,000,000 to the $1,500,-
000,000 (billion) originally in the
measure. It also wrote in a provision
that new applications for help might
be filed for sixty days after the bill
becomes law.
TOM BEAN.—Funeral services for
J. W. Kay, 13-year-old son of Mr. and
Mrs. Bonnie Kay, who was killed
Saturday in the accidental discharge
of a .22 rifle, were held Sunday at
2:30 p. m. The Rev. Temple Bigham,
pastor of the Pentecostal Church, of-
ficiated. Schoolmates of the boy
were pallbearers.
The boy is survived by his parents,
two sisters and other relatives.
The rifle had been given him for
a Christmas present. Doyle and
Hammond Harding, neighborhood
playmates, joined J. W. Saturday for
a hunt, and prior to leaving, the
youngsters were playing in a hayloft,
it was stated.
“Shoot me,” smiled J. W. to
friend.
“Is it loaded?” asked Doyle.
“No,” replied J. W., and the
went off. The accident
struck in the heart, ran
barn almost to the house before he
fell, gasped and died.
WASHINGTON.—With only two
votes against it, the House passed
Tuesday the measure which provides
an additional $1,750,000,000 (bil-
lion) for the Home Owner’s Loan
Corporation to help mortgage-bur-
■dened home owners.
The bill was sent to the Senate aft- ( among the incoming legislators—the
November elections fresh in mind—
was that the new deal would have its
way on those matters without undue
difficulty. Today only the boldest
forecasters would make specific pre-
dictions.
The Grammar School wishes to
thank the Community Public Service
Company for their assistance in the
erection of the three new swings on
the playground. The swings, com-
pleted Tuesday, are for the present
eclipsing all other outdoor activities.
MIAMI, Fla.—Lucienne Boyer, the
French entertainer, appeared here
recently with blue eye lashes and
started a vogue.
Some enthusiasts have gone La
Boyer one better and are using blue
on nails as well. It is strictly an eve-
ning conceit.
Cosmeticians, stumped by sudden
demands for blue lash dressing and
enamel, reported determined cus-
tomers bought the pigment and are
mixing their own.
Pupils of the fifth, sixth and sev-
enth grades are badly in need of
more reading material. Below is a
list by grades of a few of the books
included on the State approved read-
ing list. Most of these books are old
favorites. The list is published with
the hope that possibly some of the
patrons of the school may have in
their possession some of these books
which they would be willing to do-
nate to one of the three grades. Any
donations of approved books will be
greatly appreciated.
Grade Five
Aesep, Fables; Allen, David Crock-
ett; Anderson, Fairy Tales; Brown-
ing, Pied Piper; Carroll, Through the
Looking Glass, Alice’s Adventures in
Wonderland; Collodi, The Adven-
tures of Pinocchie; Cross, Music
Stories for Boys and Girls; De La
Ramee, Dog of Flanders; Elliott, Tex-
as Blue Bonnett; Garland, Boy Life
on the Prairie; Healy, Cat Tales from
Many Lands; Hurlbut, Stories About
Children of All Nations; Kipling,
Stories and Poems; Longfellow, Chil-
dren’s Hour and Other Poems; Maet-
erlinck, Blue Bird; McNeil, In Texas
With Davy Crockett; Porter, Polly-
anna; Scarborough, Stories from the
History of Texas; Scott, Tales of a
Grandfather; Seton, Wild Animal
Ways; Sewell, Black Beauty; Spyri,
Heidi.
PROVIDENCE, R. I. — The agri-
cultural adjustment act is unconstitu-
tional as applied to intrastate busi-
ness, Judge Ira Lloyd Letts ruled in
Federal District Court Wednesday.
Judge Letts granted an injunction
restraining Secretary of Agriculture
Henry Wallace and Local Market Ad-
ministrator O. A. Jamison from en-
forcing the agriculture adjustment
act against three Rhode Island retail
milk dealers.
The petitioners, Clarence E. Col-
lins of Johnston, Thurston Helgerson
of Cranton and Albert L. Latham of
North Smithfield charged that the act
was being enforced against them il-
legally, in that their business was be-
ing carried on solely within the con-
fines of Rhode Island.
States’ Rights Upheld
Upholding the petitioners, Judge
Letts in an extemporaneous ruling
said in part:
“There is no authority for
President or his agents or Congress
to interfere with the business of a
person who is conducting it solely
within his own State.
“If such were a fact, all State
rights with regard to the supervision
of business would be wiped out. If
the Government can dictate the price
of milk and the amount any particu-
lar dealer may sell, it would be justi-
fied similarly in
dealers and the
store.
“Congress has
Grade Six
Alcott, Joe’s Boys, Little Men, An
Old-Fashioned Girl; Aldrich, Story
of a Bad Boy; Allen, David Crockett;
Andrews, Ten Boys Who Lived on
the Road from Long Ago to Now;
Bartlett, Game-Legs, Story of a
Horse; Brown, Rab and His Friends;
Bunyan, Pilgrim’s Progress; Burnett,
Little Lord Fauntleroy; Burroughs,
Bird Stories; Cervantes, Don
Quixote, simplified; Cody, Adven-
tures of Buffalo Bill; Dickens, Christ-
mas Carol, Cricket on the Hearth;
Elliott, Texas Blue Bonnet; Fox, Lit-
tle Shepherd of Kingdom Come,
Mountain Girl; Franklin, Autobiog-
raphy; Gates, Poor Little Rich Girl;
Hale, The Man Without a Country;
Harris, Nights With Uncle Remus,
Uncle Remus and His Friends, Uncle
Remus, His Songs, and Sayings,
Uncle Remus Returns; Hawthorne,
Tanglewood Tales; Irving, Legend of
Sleepy Hollow, Rip Van Winkle, Al-
hambra (adapted), The North
Woods; Johnson, The Little Colonel
Stories, Second Series; Terhune, Lad,
a Dog; Twain, Adventures of Tom
Sawyer; Webster, Daddy Long Legs.
Grade Seven
Aanfud, Lisbeth Longfrock; Coop-
Louis, from violating the NRA code er, Last of the Mohicans; Dickens,
Christmas Stories; Harper, Stowa-
way; Hawthorne, The House of Sev-
en Gables; Keller, The Story of My
Life; Kipling, Selected Stories; Long-
fellow, Courtship of Miles Standish,
Evangeline, Tales of a Wayside Inn;
London, Call of the Wild; Manners,
Peg o’ My Heart; Meigs, Invincible
Louisa; Seton, Wild Animals I Have
Known; Smith, Selected Stories from
O. Henry; Stevenson, Treasure Is-
land; Swift, Gulliver’s Travels; Tark-
ington, Penrod; Twain, The Prince
and the Pauper
Weeks,
Young, The
Shoes.
Skating parties this week will be
on both Friday and Saturday nights.
Five cents will be charged for skat-
ing and candy will be on sale at 5c a
sack. Proceeds will be used for
school equipment.
KANSAS CITY. — Judge Merrill
E. Otis of the United States district
court Wednesday upheld constitu-
tionality of the Frazier-L e m k e
amendment to the Federal bank-
ruptcy act providing a 5-year mora-
torium on farm debts.
While expressing an opinion the
act is “unwise in many of its pro-
visions and almost incomprehensible
in others,” Judge Otis held Congress
had power to legislate to accomplish
the results intended.
The amendment previously had
been upheld by the United States
circuit court of appeals for the sixth
circuit.
The ruling Wednesday was in the
case of Harry G. Jones, a farmer
near St. Joseph, Mo., who had filed
a petition seeking relief from debts.
A program consisting of songs and
two short playlets were given by
pupils of the third grade in assembly
Thursday morning.
for the industry.
The companies, combatting the
Government, attacked the constitu-
tionality of the NRA on sixteen
grounds, one of which asserted that
it “permits unreasonable and oppres-
sive regulations and rules to be pro-
mulgated by self-created groups.”
By the ruling, the Government lost
its fight to compel the two companies
to comply with the maximum hour
and minimum wage provisions of the
code. The two companies were held
strictly “Intra-State,” and the cojirt
pointed out it merely followed de-
cisions of the United States Supreme
Court in formulating its ruling.
AUSTIN.—A plan of submitting
repeal of the dry clause of the State
Constitution finally was worked out
in the Senate Tuesday, on the ninth
day of its consideration—a record
■—and adopted by a vote of 27 to 0.
It is now up to the House before sub-
mission is a certainty, and the form
definite.
Under the resolution, submission
will occur Aug. 24. A last-minute at-
tempt by Joe Hill to change it to the
general election of 1936 was voted
down, 18 to 6. Grady Woodruff also
attempted a change in the ballot
form, but was unsuccessful.
Submission by the Senate came
after much debate and the considera-
tion of a number’ of plans. The one
finally adopted would bar the open
saloon as to liquor, and permit the
Legislature to determine the alcohol-
ic content of beer and wines, thereby
lifting the present 3.2 per cent limita-
tion. It also would give the Legisla-
ture power to adopt the State mo-
nopoly plan if it so desires. Liquors
would have to be drunk at home or
privately, the resolution providing
for sales in sealed packages only
with an inhibition against drinking
on the premises where sold.
When submission was voted, W. K.
Hopkins cried: “Let’s sing ‘Happy
Days Are Here Again,’ or ‘How Dry
I Am’ or ‘Sweet Adeline’ or some-
thing.”
Yukon, the Silver
Unicorn with
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1935, newspaper, March 14, 1935; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1230992/m1/1/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.