Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 107, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 17, 1936 Page: 6 of 8
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PAGE SIX
DENTON, TEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1936
BARBS
FOLKS
Texas, every afternoon except Sunday by the Record-
,/
/
*
one
!
a
Frazier’s Market
.J
«KS
Solve Your Christmas Shopping
laws proposed
Problem in One Purchase
this
at SELF’S in a
II
Con-
n
4
I
wo
claims
Damage
TRADE NOW! PAYMENTS BEGIN IN FEBRUARY!
the
never
(
!
Oldsmobile Dealer
201 South Elm
A
JUST
^WNG*US
worry
man with COLLI-
SION & LIABILI-
TY INSURANCE.
7
General Manager
Managing Editor
Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Entered *8 second-class mall matter at Denton,
64
.184
England’s idea is that if the league keeps its hands
off it will not put its foot in.—Dallas News.
An instructor says the chin position is import-
ant in dancing. In that case, a good case of chat-
tering teeth might indicate a future as a tap
dancer.
a collision between
and an animal. It
of the law to per-
to run at large on
A battalion of fire fighters used
parachutes in Russia recently to
reach a remote area of the Urals,
where it curbed a forest fire.
BIBLE THOUGHT FOB
TODAY
four
and
No
a
* TODAY ♦
♦
&♦♦♦ —-- «««#
THE ACQUISITIVE CONDEMN-
ED: Woe unto them that join house
to house, that ay field to field, till
there be no place, that they may be
placed alone in the midst of the
earth!—Isaiah 5: 8.
NEW FALL PRINTS
36 inches wide 10c
GRAND LEADER COMPANY
For the Best Buys In Groceries and
Fresh Meats Go To
J. D. Brown’s Cash Grocery
Phone 27 Ash St., Back of Postoffice
/
RELIABLE
PAINTS
GIVE FLOWERS FOR CHRISTMAS
Let Us Have Your Order Now
k - . —
FUR COAT INSURANCE
We are specializing this week our “All Risk” Fur and
Fur Coat Insurance. Premium is small. Call
J CLARENCE MILLER, Phone 7
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SPECIAL!
This Week On Car Floor Mats.
As Low As 49c
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Phone 185
Southwestern Life Ins.
Company
212 Smoot-Curtis Bldg.
A. J. COOPER
Representative
Phone 1320-J
fe
|k
w®.......
SMOOKURTISIBLM]
..$5.50
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j
3
1930 Buick
Roadster. Price
S100
1935 Plymouth
Sedan. Price
$335
1929 Chevrolet
Sedan. Price
S125
EARTH 1
1929 De Soto
Coupe. Price
$49
* *
It is probable
y
Y>SR
HEALTH
Edited for the New York Acadein'i °l Medicine
Bv DR. IAGO GALESTON
CHRONIC ALCOHOLISM
\
"A
1934 Plymouth II 1934 Ford I | 1936 Ford
Sedan. Price | | Coupe. Price | | Tudor. Price
$295 $295 $575
1935 Chevrolet I I 1935 Pontiac | I Model ‘T’
Sedan. Price | | Coach. Price - | | Touring. Price
$455 . || $575 $17 |
BRICKEY’S SHOE STORE
Home of Brownbilt Shoes
S. I. SELF MOTOR CO.
b4‘y
trained only in earning a living
has no place in college. If, how-
ever, he wishes also to furnish his
mind, cultivate and broaden his soul,
in short to prepare himself to live
a full and satisfying life, a college
education can help him.
FINLAND PAYS AS USUAL
When each December 15 and June 15 roll around,
the State Department at Washington receives care-
fully phrased notes from the debtor nations explain-
ing just why they cannot pay interest and principal
on war debts—all except tiny Finland which always
has paid its debt installment of almost a quarter of
a million dollars each six months This sum for the
small nation is greater in proportion to its wealth
than that of England, which is still unable even to
make a “token” payment which was popular a few
years ago when that nation sought to save its pres-
tige by making a small payment “on account”.
However, England has left the door open to fur-
ther discussion of war debts with the very diplomatic
expression that the British government “will be glad
to reopen negotiations whenever circumstances are
such as to warrant the hope that a satisfactory re-
sult might be reached.” In other words, the English
won’t even discuss their debts until Uncle Sam is
ready to make some concessions that will be accept-
able to them.
When—and if—a debt settlement is reached, the
United States should credit little Finland with every
cent it pays in excess of the prorata part that other
nations pay, or agree to pay. In fact, it might be a
good idea to credit them interest on what they have
paid and show* that the United States appreciates
honesty in nations, as much as it does in individuals.
-------o-------
POLITICAL MEDDLING
Texans know what happens when politics gets
mixed up in the conduct of colleges and universities,
both state-supported and church-supported institu-
tions. Consequently there is plenty of sympathy in
this state for the citizens of Wisconsin who are watch-
ing a fight that is being made to oust Dr. Glenn L.
Frank, president of the University of Wisconsin.
Dr. Frank has never been sympathetic toward the
La Follette regime and there have been rumblings
for some months that the widely known educator
would be replaced. Now the fight has come out into
the open with the La Follette-appointed board of
regents making formal charges against the president
of mismanagement, loss of prestige, vacillation, lack
of administrative ability and other shortcomings. The
president of the board has denied that politics has
of Nations meeting. He suggested it was time to crack
down and clear the decks as much as possible. Eigh-
teen per cent of American foreign service officers, and
nearly 30 per cent of the foreign service clerks are
married to aliens—a total of about 330 foreign-born
women in American embassies and consulates.
Some of the careerists are sore at Bullitt, accusing
him of a case of “spy fever.” Others think his point
well taken.
It is inconceivable that Roosevelt filled the Mos-
cow post without consulting Bullitt, and other diplo-
mats are saying Bullitt urged the president to ap-
point a hardboiled man who wouldn’t be sympathetic
to the Soviet Union. Also going the rounds is a yarn
that Roosevelt offered Davies the Moscow job in the
belief that he wouldn’t accept anything less than
Faris or London.
* * *
Many serious wrecks are caused
by such accidents), and it is not[
infrequent that some one is kill-
ed because‘nf
ari automobile
is a violation
mit live stock
highways or rights of way, but
this law, like many others, is diffi-
cult to enforce. It is probable that
very few prosecutions result from
the practice of some people in per-
mitting their animals to run at
large.
Contemporary Thought
THE UNITED STATES, TOO
When the people of the United States deplore the
waste and the danger in the vast sums spent last
year for preparations for war they need to be a lit-
tle careful what they say, since their own govern-
ment leads all others in “defense” efforts. Europe,
SWP
SmejOtjv-FY/Umms
PAINT HEADQUARTERS
Morris & McClendon
Phone 958 219 W. Hickory
WASHINGTON, Dec. 17.—Any time Roosevelt
makes an important move in the field of interna-
tional affairs, insiders start peeking behind scenes for
a trace of Ambassador William C. Bullitt.
Bullitt isn’t v6ry popular among the career men
of the Foreign Service, but he still has a large drag
with the president, who listens to him intently.
Paris is the most important as well as the most
interesting of the continental diplomatic posts to-
day. Transfer of the wealthy and still rather young
Philadelphian to our embassy there from Moscow,
after he and the Russians had mutually become tired
of each other, indicated Roosevelt’s respect and lik-
ing for him.
Around the State Department, Bvllitt is now be-
ing credited or blamed for such recent happenings
as the appointment of Joseph E. Davies to the Mos-
cow post and the president’s order that diplomatic
and consular officers submit their resignations here-
after when they wish to marry aliens.
❖
Bullitt, one hears, is convinced that a European
war is perhaps only a matter of weeks. In time of
war the nationality of “diplomatic wives” often be-
comes embarrassing.
In Moscow, Bullitt found that not a single mem-
ber of his staff had an American-born wife. He told
the president a dinner to his staff resembled a League
Denton Record-Chronicle
RECORD-CHRONICLE COMPANY, INC.
R. J. EDWARDS ~ - -
L. A. MCDONALD ...
LEE R. MCDONALD
J. S. FOWLER
If the king and Mrs. Simpson marry, it might
not be tactful to give them, for a present, a
British cabinet.
!w
None of the laws proposed
by Hatton Sumners, chairman
of the judiciary committee of
the House Would curtail the
power of the courts to hold
acts of Congress invalid. But to
give congressional acts more
protection than they now have
is the purpose of the proposal
to permit the department of
justice to intervene in all cases
where constitutionality is an
issue.. As matters stand, the
validity of a law can be ques-
tioned in a suit to which the
government
The
B
X
..dnit have been
proved *
& n1
USERS
k.
Man About Manhattan
By GEORGE TUCKER
NEW YORK, Dec. 17.—Manhattan kaleidoscope:
Martin Stern is a press-agent for frog legs. . . .
More than 500,000 Pekin ducks are produced on
Long Island annually. ... It is practically an im-
possible achievement to locate a barber here on Sun-
day. So, if you must get shaved, go to a private club.
. . . Ginger Rogers’ mother was once a press agent
for the marine corps. . . . Casey Jones, the famous
aviator, is in town. ... He used to operate a flying
academy in Central America.
Dayton Stoddard reports finding an unusual type
of pan-handler. . . . Stepping up to the writer, he
* ❖ ❖
“If married people keep their money separate,
does this show lack of trust in each other?” asks
a psychologist. No, only that the husband sleeps
With his trousers under the pillow.
Footprints, it is said now, are better for iden-
tification than fingerprints. If true, your favorite
detective will be meeting you at the beach.
❖ ❖ ❖
The Davies appointment tends to become more in-
explicable if you get around backstage and discover
that the president was hardly obligated to this smart
practitioner of corporate and international law, de-
spite the fact that Davies had made heavy personal
contributions to the Democratic campaign and had
collected about $100,000 for the party.
Joe had been pretty well taken care of before. He
hired out to lobby for Dictator Trujillo of the so-
called Dominican Republic, promising to get Trujillo’s
foreign debt, amounting to about $15,000,000, adjust-
ed on much easier terms. ,
When the State Department frowned on the pro-
posal, Davies took it to the White House. Roosevelt
intervened and the deal was made. The president
may have been fully justified by the facts, but it cer-
tainly was a pretty nice favor to Joe, who had been
promised a fee of $450,000 from a country whose an-
nual budget is only about six millions.
It is true, of course, that Davies hasn’t collected
all the fee yet. First he got $100,000, then $150,000
more, but Trujillo still has the other $200,000. It’s un-
derstood Davies was also expected to get Trujillo
new loan. He didn’t.
(Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, (Inc. )
The Nation-Wide poll is strictly an American phe-
nomenon. There never has been one of the British
populace to see how it stands on a New Deal Queen.
—Atlanta Constitution.
The building revival is much bigger than we had
dreamed. A local hotel tablecloth yesterday carried
a penciled sketch of a 16-room house.—Detroit News.
Texas.
Dally Issued at 214 West Hickory Street, Denton,
Chronicle Company, Inc.
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations.
Member Associated Press.
Member Texas Daily Press League.
PHONES
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NOTICE SSS PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection uses, the character, repu-
tation or standing of any firm, InalrkhisJ cr corpora-
tion will be gladly corrected upon being to the
publishers’ attention.
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to •
use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to
It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the
local news published herein.
DENTON, TEXAS, DECEMBER 17, 1936
sum of $2,878,000,000 for armaments in 1935. Of this
sum the United States spent only a little less than
one billion dolar^. That was more than twice as
much as any other Nation spent, save Germany,
which expended eight hundred millions out of a
well high bankrupt treasury. All of this vast sum
was spent for “defense” of course, since none of the
Nations are getting ready to wage war. True, Italy
spent a few hundred millions subduing Ethiopia and
Japan spent a little more taking over parts of China,
but even these were purely “defense” measures.—
Bonham Favorite.
I?
Y-
* * ❖ *
However,, it doesn’t seem possi-
ble that a human being could be
so inhuman as to continue a prac-
tice which may cost the life of
a fellow man or cause permanent
maiming. Any person who permits
his live stock to run at large may
be responsible for the life of some
motorist. Yet, it is not uncom-
mon to find cattle, horses, mules and
hogs raming about along high-
ways and country roads, and like-
wise, it is not uncommon to hear
of a serious ^accident because of
his fact.
By Mary Graham Bonner
SANTA ANSWERS
“Christopher Columbus C r o w,’*
said Santa Claus, “I’m delighted
you’ve asked such a question. At
first I thought you had got into some
mischief—but even so—even so—”
and Santa never finished that sen-
tence. He merely twinkled.
“No one would be punished by
Santa Claus to such an extent that
he wouldn’t be visited on Christmas
I Eve.
I “Sometimes parents, Christopher,
„ „ are, can annoy I
me. I don’t like to hear them say, |
as now and again they do, that San- (
to won’t visit the children unless I
tlw’re very good.
“I don’t like to be a threat to I
children—I don’t like them to be
good because they think I’ll be an-
gry and punish them if they’re not.
“Oh, I’m very glad, Christopher,
that you’ve asked your question, very
glad indeed.
“I like children to be good—not
in a goody-goody way — but be-J
cause they want to do all they can i
to make things jollier, more fun. ■
I like them to be unselfish and kind
and good sports and loyal and nev-
er tattle-tale. I hate to hear them
whine and show-off, but I don’t ex-
pect them to be perfect.”
Christopher was enjoying
conversation immensely.
“I am so glad you don’t expect
perfection,” he cawed.
Santa smiled. “Even grown-ups
aren’t perfect,” he continued. “I
wonder if they know that Santa
realizes this; and children have to
be allowed time in which to im-
prove. And I’ll tell you something
more, Christopher.”
Christopher was all crow-atten-
tion.
Tomorrow—“Santa Continues”
DENTON FLOWER SHOP
PHONE 223. WE DELIVER
* *
that not many
who permit their livestock to run
out have stopped to think, of the
possible serious consequences, or
that they may be contributing
to loss of life, surely it must be
a thoughtless act on their part.
What is needed is a campaign
that will impress upon owners of
animals the seriousness of the prac-
tice which is the cause of much
icomplaint. Even were there no
law to prohibit, a thinking per-
son with any regard whatever for
(his fellow man would not permit
this breach of human relation-
ship. Can not offenders be in-
duced to think of the consequences
and as a result, take care to. see
that their their livestock are not
permitted on roads an.d highways
hereafter?
tinue to have the authority to
deciare laws unconstitutional. Yet,
the present method of handling
constitutional contests is- archaic
and some changes are needed. The
one suggested by the Texan would
be a step .in the right directioin.
(Copyright, 1936, NEA Cervice. Inc.)
Join the navy and see the world, says the
poster. The crooner who argued with the group
of gobs probably just missed seeing a few planets.
anything to do with the move, but alumni, other
educators and students are up in arms. Students
have threatened to strike if President Frank is forc-
ed to resign.
For the last few years, Texas schools have been
reasonably free from political troubles, but many ex-
students of the University of Texas recall the puni-
tive measures directed at the University some few
years ago when whole departments were wiped out
by the simple expedient of blue-penciling the appro-
priations for these departments. But this difficulty
. isn’t restricted to state schools, for some of the bit-
terest fights have occurred in the church schools.
Even when these fights do clear up bad situations,
they leave lasting scars and undesirable publicity
that hurt the institutions for years.
--------o--------
PENALTY OF LEADERSHIP
The sweeping Democratic victory last month has
made some of the party leaders in Congress feel the
embarrassment of riches. While they like to have a
majority, they also regret that no strong minority
group is in Congress to keep the majority together.
Congressman Buchanan of Texas, chairman of the
House appropriations committee, is particularly aware
of the dangers that exist and has sounded a warning
that wise leadership will be neded next month when
Congress convenes if the majority group isn’t split
into warring blocs which will tie the body into knots
and prevent the passage of needed legislation. Often
these blocs, representing local interests, must be ap-
peased before important legislation can secure con-
sideration. This encourages trading of influence be-
tween blocs, with the result that more money is spent
and the taxpayers are the losers in the long run.
Another view of this Texas Congressman is inter-
esting. He declared that “an economical government
under a republic is impossible.” He added that “how-
ever, the question is whether this defect is not pref-
erable to the evils of some other form of govern-
, ment.” As the man in charge of working out the
appropriations bill for governmental purposes, Chair-
man Buchanan should know well that a democracy
is an extravagant form of government, particularly
when the public develops a belief that the treasury
has an inexhaustible supply of money awaiting those
individuals and groups which have enough political
power to force appropriations through Congress.
----------o----------- \
Behind Scenes in Washington
By RODNEY DUTCHER
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
* * #
Enforcement activities of the
Texas Highway Patrol resulted in
the collection of additional mo-
tor vehicle registration fees which ,
exceeded by $234,285 the expenses j
of the last fiscal year. Collections I lov^y1 though they
resulting from this enforcement
work were listed as $539,176, while
the operating expenses were only
i $304,890. Arrests totaled 17,004 dur-
inquired: “Could you tell me where I might get a
good meal for 25 cents? . . . “Certainly,” replied (|
Stoddard, “in that restaurant across the street.” ...
“Ah, yes,” murmured the bum, “and now could you
tell me where I might find '25 cents?”’
Deems Taylor believes New York will have 11,000,-
000 people by 1965. . . . “This town is outgrowing it-
self,” he says
X— By fe. A. r
Why not carry on a. campaign
against livestock running at large
on the highways, asked a Denton
motorist. And so here goes. That
(this is one of the .greatest dangers
faced by drivers today , goes with-
out question. The unexplainable
habits of animals walking in front
of cars, even when they have been,
grazing supinely along the right
of way before a car approached, is
well known. As a .consequence, it
often is not possible for even a
careful driver to avoid striking an
animal.
In chronic alcoholism we al'e con-
fronted with an ancient problem
of great complexity. Varioul at-
tempts have been made to res°lve I
it. Prohibition had been tried sb1116 I
1400 years before we ventured
The Koran forbids theuse of fer-'-l
mented drinks to all faithful Mo-
hammedans. Temperance has been
preached since the earliest times,
as the Bible story of Lot attests.
But, seemingly neither the threats
of purgatory nor the appeals to
reason avail to restrain a certain
percentage of human beings from
over-indulging in alcohol.
Forel has summarized its disas-
trous effects in these words:
“It accounts for from one-half to
three-fourths of the crime, a great
share of suicides, of mental disor-
ders, of deaths, of diseases general,
of poverty, of vulgar depravity, of
sexual excesses, of venereal diseases,
and of dissolution of families.”
More recently we have gained ad-
ded knowledge on the specific dis-
turbances which alcohol effects on
gastric function and on general nu-
trition. Also, the automobile driven
by an intoxicated person has cre-
ated a modern “accident problem.”
But in recent years, too, we are
less inclined, as apparently Forel
did, to point the accusing finger at
' alcohol as the sole source of all the
enumerated disasters. We regard it
rather as a contributing agent, the
more significant one being the per-
sonality of the inebriate individual.
Seen in this light, chronic alcohol-
ism is an illness or disease, rather
than a -crime, and its victims re-
quire skilled and considerate treat-.
ment, not punishment.
In the opinion of many psychia-
trists who have studied the relation
of alcohol to crime, the intoxicant
serves merely as “the hammer blow
which fired the cartridge.” Were
the cartridge, that is, the aggres-
sive, destructive, anti-social trend
and impulsion absent, the hammer
blow would have been without ef-
fect.
The chronic alcoholic is most like-
ly a person who, for various rea-
sons, cannot fit himself into the
common social pattern. It is for
modern medicine, notably for the
psychiatrist, to discover why the ad-
dict behaves as he does, and to help
him, whenever possible, to over-
come his disability:
Those who are intimately associ-
ated with the individual who over-
indulges in alcohol, must consider
him an ill person, requiring expert
help. Preachment'or shamming him
is seldom likely to prove effective,
for they are not competent to re-
move or to affect deeply the under-
lying distressing and conflicting
elements. The promise for cure is
. better the sooner appropriate psy-
I chiatric and other treatment is in-
I stituted.
Quality USED CAR .... Sensible, Practical, and, Remember, a
Car Is Enjoyed by ALL the Family. LOOK OVER SOME OF
' THESE PRICES:
* *
Collectors All
There is this factor in the situation whereby* most
celebrities escape from their professional lives. . . .
They are one and all collectors of one thing or an-
other. . . . For instance, Jack Pearl collects hotel
keys; Jimmy Durante, hats; George Gershwin, his
own paintings; Horace Heidt, sheet music; Judith
Anderson, toy dogs.
Ralph - Hitz approaches the collecting hobby on a
grander scale—he collects hotels. . . . Jim Tully owns
two complete sets of Jack London first editions. . . .
It was London who inspired Tully to become a
writer. . . . Quite incidentally, Tully thinks a certain
specie of hobo is the best read sect in the world. . . .
During the depression, he points out, they spent
much time in the libraries, to keep warm, and to
shield the fact that they were vagrants, began read-
ing. ... In this way they devoured the world his-
tories and text books.
#
Retiring' Wife to Star Again
Gloria Swanson has small feet, and if you hurry
and come to Broadway you may see how tiny they
are for yourself. . . . She is here seeing the sights
and talking theater with several producers. ... It is
generally forgotten that Florence Eldridge was a high
ranking actress eight years ago. ... By deliberately
obscuring herself behind her husband’s (Fredric
March) fame, most people know her now as just the
wife of a great star. . . . However, that’s soon to be
changed. . . . While Fredric is in Hollywood she is
on Broadway in a new drama.
* * ❖
Sheila Barrett and Eva Ortega will be among the
entertainers in Florida night spots this winter. . . .
The Cotton Club never did an\ better in Harlem
than it is doing in its new Broadway location.
ing the year, and the state offi-
cers warned more than 100,000 in
the interest of safety and aided
more than 10,000 drivers stranded
by tire or motor trouble. The pa-
trolmen rode 2,961,42 miles in pa-
trolling the highway system of
Texas during the year.
&ays the Dallas Times Herald:
rl
NOW
$1.98
Talks
to (t
parent
By Brooke Peters Church
COLLEGES AND EARNING
“It’s a pity education doesn’t keep
up with progress in science and tech-
nical fields. Here’s Sam at college
studying history, music, literature,
philosophy. Some of the boys even
take Latin and Greek. Will you tell
me what use such things are to
boys going out to earn a living to-
day? Sam’s going to be an engineer.
What’s the big idea in giving him
culture? You can’t eat or wear or
live in culture!”' •
Then why send Sam to college?
There are plenty of technical
schools, which require only
years for a complete course;
there are also trade schools.
ever advertised college as
place where one goes to learn how
to make a living. The present fad
of practical education is one of the
results of the demand for a college
education for everyone.
Colleges should not be vocation-
al schools, nor finishing schools, nor
athletic associations. Nor should
they be used as parking space for
young people between 18 and 21
nor as places where likely young
bond salesmen can make useful con-
tacts. They are centers of learning,
and learning leads to knowledge
which, to be thorough, should be
all-inclusive. For knowledge is
truth, and truth cannot be obtain-
ed by scratching over a lot of super-
ficial, pre-digested facts. To obtain
knowledge, one must desire it avid-
ly and be willing to dig for it.
Colleges were founded for people
who are willink to do this, and the
modern father who is trying to
force the colleg into practical and
material channels is destroying it.
The boy or girl who wishes to be
is not a party,
point of constitutional-
ity may not be adequately dis-
It would be nothing more than
fair for laws passed foy
gress, which consists of direict)
representatives of the people, toi
have the protection suggested by
the Dallas congressman, and it
is to be hoped that such a law
will be passed next year. Dis-
agreeing as we have with a num-
ber of recent decisions of the
Supreme Court, we still believe
that there is a place for such
a tribunal and that it should con-
Japan and the United States expended the huge
cussed. The attorney general
cannot go to the defense of
the law involved. The Dal-
las representative points out
that this leaves an opening
for collusion on the part of
litigants. Certainly, it leaves
the defense of a congressional
act entirely to privately em-
ployed attorneys, who may
not be interested in seeing its
validity upheld. The plan of
Mr. Sumners would remedy
this situation.”
DENTON, TEKAS.
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 107, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 17, 1936, newspaper, December 17, 1936; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1313805/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.