Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [27], No. 281, Ed. 1 Friday, July 6, 1928 Page: 8 of 10
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Woodson Harris No. 1
if 4
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East Side Square.
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Phone 47 or 80.
4;
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. Contemporary Thought
I w.—. I M IMI —
Chance
Fresh Barbecue
»
Every Day
Phone 85.
I
—
promise of success.
No. 82,
L.
to N.
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FIRST N
id
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rk&i
.asms, wee*
■•tore*
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AMoeMUon.
at Denton.
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pj»H vittor
Oa&toi.
her there
I'I wear
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V
[el; once ths leader of the Russian
but the Soviet slogan would
general wrangle.-—Columbus
Willis Grocery and
Market
Watch Repairs
A SPECIALTY.
ed
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vt
Woodson Harris No. 2
(Formerly laasley & Son)
Phone 404.
£ ?
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Vannoy Jewelry Co.
West Side Square.
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bl
Me
tob
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Mb
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With the
Exchanges
By U A. M.
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■■■....—» i«ivn»r» re‘*w«»«
Washington Letter
By RODNEY DUTCHER
I'1
“tFet-Dry” Issue
agol Will
Lord Coventry of England has
■ten 68 runnings of the Epsqm
Derby. Almost enough experience
to pick a winner.
Careless Indeed
INDIANAPOLIS—A police auction
held at headquarters recently prov-
ed especially attractive to crippica.
The list of cooflsattcd goods to be
Bold Included several wooden Icrs
and artificial arms, that had been
found and uncalled for.
Attention, Motorists!
Come in and get one of our
• One of the functf >Bi o
applying the nt ess ari ki
financial operations so that
t a _ ,i • . ,
•ji/,q>-
in Denton '
.ftf
**« • I. »1>, ■
Jtoy *. 1W1 I '
on his ear, now
> reason Senator
ilatform committee
_jt he presented a
----------.------------------JT
Word study: “Use a word three
times and it is yours.” Let us in-
consummation; the utmost comple-
tion. "The consummation of p
between the two nations was
result.” ?
WTP pr ■ *
• • • •
Servants probably are trained
up in the way they should depart.
r>.
I
• t
\ r.
. *
This ngp-fangied radio Is just
about going to rutn political con-
ventft)ns. particularly as assets to
cities which land them, present in-
dications are. With folks able to
Rye Straw Sayings
By GEORGE BINGHAM
Rural Reporter
fc-4
to children
ups.—Mon-
Slim Pickens says when any right
smart intelligent perrxms goes to
talking to htm about rorrrthing he
don’t know anything about, he just
goes ahead and covers up his ig-
norance by noddint hta head and
agreeing with everything he says.
§3l
‘ seashore!-- /'
-IF I HAVB TO /
?------ •
If'
r"S
WIDOW AND BROTHI RS FACE
MC'RDER CHARGES
VAN BUREN, Ark . July 5.-FiTJt
degree murder charges were filed
Wednesday against the widoa BR#
two brothers-in-law of W G. □teu-
ton of Tulsa. Ok. His body Wat
found in a bayou near here, we^fht-
ed down with rodks and with a bul-
let tn the head.
[to
E' *'
r.di ■ i
v-esatew,., toto.sMii iw u i —
if .....in nog.
19
IF ’
..
Don’t Take a
**♦£«« O V t ~
PT* ■
tonklifr of Littk' Elm dUd in St-
; LMs AOftly after t arriving there to visit her
LW L o. OFptoW*0**1
r *
To whisper secrets in my ear.
I’ll sleep and eat and read and be
Bo sorry for the nominee -
----- w1 .J j- i ' 4 i
DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH
By W. L. Gordon
uua
■ ' ’ *
’ '-W'F .-
Cash Grocery
Phone IM. • tn W. "-*■
Free Delivery.
Big Jnlry f^mdtw. dot. ,....
16 ox. Vermont Maple Ryrap
Fresh Black-eyed Peas. to.
Sliced Bacon, fh. tic and
16 ox. Peannt Ratter
32 ox. Plain Olives
Fresh Corn. dox.
Guaranteed Fresh Eggs
Tail cans Fra neo-American
Spaghetti ................
Every order appreciated.
Miss Flutie Belcher says if she
could find her a right good position
with good pay, she wouldn’t mind
getting married
♦ ♦♦♦ --- ♦♦♦♦
FRIENDLINESS A man that
hath friends must shew himself
friendly; and there is a friend that
sticket.li closer than a brother.
With thoRe old tires. Come
down right now and let me
put you on a set of new ones.
Then you can drive in com-
fort.
U. C. Travelstead
Phone 1057
215 E. Hickory St.
. ywiratoto'.iBgi
, *
'7* --- - .3^
This bank stands r®*t
with you on ypur tinaH|ial
i • **
r 1
_____bi* .* ■. • > Adi
M,.; SS
■ af
fl
Words often misused: Do not say
“am t I invited?" Say "am I hot."
Often mispronounced: affluence.
Accent first syllable, not the sec-
ond.
Often misspelled: hypodermic.
Synonyms: doubter, unbeliever,
skeptic, agnostic, atheist, infidel.
£*m£’Xe"’£
Ung better bodies
M , there is a Tar
beauty -ihd S f*r
art on the'part of
re to bring put
THEW1
HI .............
PALM BEACH.
The ideal summet fahfric for the matt wh6 wants
a suit above the average is the genuine PALM
BEACH. ; ’-'^1
Ours bring you authentic style and exceptional
tailoring. In solid colors and unusual weaves.
Your size and your pattern is here. _
Special on Straw ria^r, ;
We are making's special price on. all straw
hats. These are DOBBS Mats and are all
new. f t -■ ■ I
One-Fourth Off
' .....-........... I ■ -■■ in Ml I I
■■W*
• HOW, LISTEN
TO HEKRY’-AL
THEY PRETTIER AND
WHY?
Are young girls prettier than they
used to be?
It seems to me that
Xs it mere accident
happened to see a
girls? Is the race getfh
looking ao it pragreseea .to
millennium (I know that
some who pretend they <
licve that we are making
progress, but who could be
he did really believe t&R*,
- My gueae Is a oompound, pt the
last two reason^;*” JT „
Breeding
I think that I
dltions. more f<
everyone is bn
And I think I
greater sense c
more deflate e
women cverywt, r „ . w
their gaMHptets. "
I was one of a group of alumnae
the other night tvho foregathered
with a group of girls still in od-
lege. The alUmnae dated back from
recent graduates to girts 25 years
out of college. The comment WM
made on how many pretty gtrts
there were in the group at girls still
in college. • l
"They ’re much pettier than we
were,” said one older gradu—
Then another added
it'a partly because they-J
differently. Look at t»
dresses they wear. There wasn’t
anything like them in the shops
when we were in ooUegf.” , ' ‘
Whereupon an alumnae who is
known and loved for bar funny
frank way of putting things brought
down the house by adding: "Yes
indeed, and besides we used to wear
The radio In thttr homes, but able
to hear practically ncfJiing? and
see but little while in the conven-
tion hall tn pe-son, it is not un-
reasonable to believe that more and
more people will come to the idea
of staying at home and "save the
difference.” In whirb event, the
business interests that put up a
few hundred thousand dollars to
pay the expenses of entertaining
National conventions will get little
return on thetr investment. But
with the radio growing in popular-
ity, a vacation for the people as
a whole had about as well be de-
clared during convention periods
as few have time to do anything
but sit tn front, of their wireless
machines while the politicians are
P- telling how to save the country^
IMaata* Vacas DaUy Prssa Lsagwe.
_ .Ibtored M lienal illu bmU matter
wtU to sowweW upon toing called to the
ri5l Dentoa C'nunty
fl|g> ' gsa>«Ma...........
.41)
Bl
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>IMI — I—I — .MIMI— ....... MIMIM.M" >
WASHINGTON, July 6 - Senator J. Boom-
boom McWhorter, who landed outside the platform
committee room at Kansas City <
threatens to boll the party. The
MqWhorter landed outside the pls
room on his ear was merely that ... .
platform which he bad written himself and demand-
ed its adoption. Hia unceremonious objection left
which hardly seemed justified in the light of sub-
sequent events. . .,
McWhorter took the position that the party
candidate should be allowed to write the party plan-
form. Senator McWhorter's Republican platform is
presented, exclusively, herewith:.
—“We, the Republican party, congratulate the
country on eight years of prosperity under Repub-
lican rule, in the early stages of which it was
snatched from the brink of ruin toward which it
had been rushed by thieving Democrats.
“We point with pride to the spontaneous rush
of our party to oversubscribe the 1160,000 fund
raised by Senator Borah to pay off the party’s debt
to Harry Sinclair and to the prompt ousting of
Secretary of the Treasury Mellon and National
Chairman Butler from their positions of trust as
soon as it "was learned that they had known of the
Sinclair contribution to the party campaign chest
and had failed to reveal it
"Coolidge economy held its increase in national
expenses this year below 8300,000,000.
"The complete success of prohibition enforce-
ment under Republican guidance furnishes a shin
ing mark of law administration for the ages to
shoot at.
“In the ensuing four years the Republican
party promises t to enforce this law impartially,
without fear or fervor. Voters who elect wet poli-
ticians are hereby promised -strictly wet enforce-
ment and voters who elect dry politicians are pro-
mised strictly dry enforcement. ,
“We view with satisfaction the fact that there
is now no unemployment and virtually no prospect
of any unless the country is silly enough to elect a
Democrat. In cast anyone cannot find himself a job
during the next administration, new federal govern-
ment job» will be created.
the agricultural problem has been boldly and satis-
factorily solved by Calvin Coolidge and that the
farmers are now contentedly enjoying an unprece-
dented period of prosperity. As long as our party is
in power, nothing i* too good for the farmers,
• • i •
“With Republican support, Col. Charles A.
Lindbergh blazed a new trail across the Atlantic
Ocean. This could never have occurred in a Demo-
cratic administration. This party unqualifiedly en-
dorses bigger and better transoceanic flights.
"The brilliant victory of our brave marines,
guided by a Republican president, who overcame
and captured ths rebel Sandifio in Nicaragua with
such ease and dispatch, knows no counterpart in
military history since the World War. As a diplo-
mata victory, our pacification wf Nicaragua is only
excelled by our success in scaring the Mexican gov
ernment out of its wits and forcing it to back down
on all points at Issue between the two governments.
“We join with the nation in paying homage to
Secretary of State Kellogg, who bravely and sin-
gle-handed solved the Nicaraguan, Mexican and
Chinese problems and more recently has earned the
undying gratitude of the world by causing war to
be formally outlawed. Thanhs to the Republican
party, there will never be another war."
The Rye Straw storekeeper says
whenever he sees Mrs. Poke Eazley
coming toward the store, he knows
she doesn't want much- as she is
cither coming after a box of snufl
or Poke.
1 ‘
Stog-i—.
Htfrflafi Interest Editorials
By WICKW trjtWKrf®*- ” ' '
'"4 ■ 1 HE GAMBLERS
A short time ago an aatnsst.young man got up
in . Sunday School and discoursed well on the evils
of gambling. The next evening on bis way home
from the office he waa halted by a train that was
blbching the street. J<at wtehtng to be delsyed he
started to crawl under. The train moved and he
lost a lag,-A leg, acoording to tew, is valued at ap
proximatajy >5,000. But what able bodied man
wodlrf take >100,000 for a teg? ,
This young man who baa stood up and talked
so sincerely in Sunday School about gambling had
taken a chance that the seost• reckless professional
gambler in the world weald not take. Ho gambled a
leg worth at least >5,000 against a minute of time
worth at most a nickel. Do you suppose any game-
ster however rabid would bet >5,000 against «
nickel? . ,p.> s. . u.a.
Every day you see persons who would be horri-
fied if somebody should ask them to play cards or
billiards or dominoes or checkers for money, doing
just such gambling as that young Sunday School
gambler did. d .ki: .- rii. .• .^.j .■ ■
A chap who has. married a high-ctes* gigl from,
a wealthy high-class family, and who-to holding a
high-ctess, high salarted job in an establishment
belonging to his wife’s folks, will risk his home end
hia mate and his job and his social standing just to
slip an arm around a pretty stenographer with a
come-on eye. Isn’t that gambling of the most ab-
surd sort?—with nine hundred and ninety-nine
chances out of a thousand to lose and nothing to
■ ■——
■
I Just
! Folks
| By Bdgar A. Owtet
Ite _____________- f »i.‘‘ ,a : ■■ J
Copyright IMm. BOgar A. Ouast
PITYING THK NOMINKE
It brings no great despair to me
That -I shan’t be the nominee.
All summer lopg my porch will be
A resting spot for Ma and me
Reporters keen won’t |
To chronicle what cloti
Photographers won’t hang about
To picture me as 1 come out.
him only with hopes of” the presidential nomination. Important people won’t draw near
. . . y r ,.e.r. . .. «• » . « ■ 'Tri whlsn*’ RMrrth tn mv M.r.
General Wrangel. _
white army, is dea^
seem to be long Tree
Dispatch. ,
. He who is able to have many things stands in
danger that many things may get him.—Christian
Advocate. ii
. .Tte.jHMn < Mb to increaaing nd Bctonce claims
hte credit, bat awnething to due the fact that the
good dto y>—8 BiwHya TtaiM.
Bank .
......
la,
tl f
Anntjicr thing we’ve learned by
actual experience, and we’ve often
hern told that experience is the
best teacher, "though rather nrbi
trary." is that you can take in a
political convention by radio with-
out rajslng blisters on your heels
and getting your shirt to look like
something the cook forgot to take
out of the sink —Mineral Wells
Index.
n '2
B i
COURTESY
Did it ever occur to you what an important thing
tho seemingly unimportant thing, courtesy, is?
A friend of the writer recently went to Detroit
— • bosteMA lrip, Ha stM'ed three or four days;
when he came bwek he was enthusiastic about the
eHy. Mapm, be said, a gseat tow*.
Questioned, he could hardly account for his
He wasn’t greatly impressed by the tall
boildingB, the industrial development, the shii
It was jost.a feeling he had carried away witl.......
At- last ft om
contacts had been__
IMoyes of tho hotel where he stopped; the clerk*
and stenographers In the offices he had visited; the
—Momma, ho hod talked to on street corners; the
THE SHOWDOWN
A negro preacher had pestered his bishop so
much with appeals for help that the bishop finally
told hWn with a tone of finality that he didn't want
any mare —peals from him.
Th* next week came another letter from the
’preacher:
“Dear Bishop: 1 assure you thia is not an ap-
peal. It is a report. I hare no pants.”
BJG AND LITTLE
a It to better to be big enough to talk t_ J
than little enough to preach to grown-ups.
treal Star.
1.B0
..... JO
'..•’so
toWtekiy ^Wtaa <ma«ema a— New Mexico
Oto y- fte 2SSS? 0W*“ <*“* ’ 61 ~
Bta months (in advance) ------------------.so
------*— .f.-................................
Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the
. news dispatches credited
dfted in this paper and star
herein.
. TtfA8, JULY 6, 1928 ’
DISCREDIT ANT( SALOON LEAGUE
Alleged shady political deals of the Antj-.
Saloon League .are responsible for the severance, of
potttieal relations between the National prohibition
party and the Anti-Saloon League, according to D.
Leigh Coiyin, national chairman of the party. He
further charged that the league is not a political
party, but has become to be a group of paid super-
intendents.
Ever since prohibition b«c*m« .a part. at,. the
law of this Nation, the power of the Anti-Saloon
league has been on the wane. Instead of having the
baektat' of thousands of individuate who have con-
tribated small amounts, the league membership has
dwindled to a.number of individuals who contribute
comparatively large amounts to carry on the work
which has become legislative and lobby work, rath-
er than rfrer a great field of endeavor.
The Anti-Saloon League has suffered frorq its
own officials and it is not surprising that the pro-
hibition party should not want to align itself with
the league’s political campaign this year.,,
--------o —- ■ -
PRACtftlNG DIVERSIFICATION
Cooke County, to the north, is one of the coun-
ties which, is profiting from diversification of fant>
crops. X—mber of farmers in the county are rais-
ing potatoes this year as a side crop, and have pro-
duced remarkable yields, in spite of the late frosts
of the spring.
*" One truck farmer produced 52 bushels yf big
white potatoes from two and a half acres of land,
while another farmer made 30 bushels of potatoes
from two bushels of seed pots tea. The farmers in
that section also have been raising onions with
good success. -
MILLIONS 0Y WORDS
' Everybody is checking Up on what the Demo-
cratic convention at Houston accomplished along
various lines. One of these accomplishments was
providing some 8320,000 words which were wired
out by newspaper correspondents during the four-
dsy session. This does not include the stuff sent out
in the regular mail.
IncidsptaUy, the Democratic convention fur-
nished ijoiybo more words fn press matter over
the wires than did the Republican convention at
Kansas City.
—_——Q.---—
interesting Experiment
A novel method of eliminating the boll weevil,
fleas and other cotton pests is under way near
Edinburg, where * farmer has declared that by ap-
plication of crude oil to the stalks, these insects
are prerented from doing great damage. The ap-
plications were made hy hanging a cafivas sack of
crude oil from a cultivator, letting the oil oozing
from the sack rub against the stalks of cotton.
It is possible that such a plan is feasible, and
will be worth attempting on a larger scale to provp
its practicability. Simpler solutions of more serious
problems have been discovered from time to time,
and it may be that this plan will solve the weevil
problem to a large extent. At any rate, Texas has
both the cotton and the oil and the boll weevils.
-------o------
III Ml Hl IIIIIII. I I
a manicure, Btt ——T V
ttoe i ‘ 2______
either have itoturalhr a
have it curled tn some
straight lair was be
ranged in some smart I
StataUca show that.
women spend In beauty
tncreated sereral hunm
in the last ten years.
Incidental!), I imagine tliat many
of the girls had used lip slick and
rouge.
Imagine a College Girt Ustag Up
suek to I9M
And just ImMBto What would
have beer thought of the cohere
qirl who did that 20 years
remember negloclipg to
face after being in a cc
ISf
And next fo t— glortoua adven-
ture of being one of them, I think
oomes the pleasure of looking at
them Just as one tores to took at
« lovely new flower ggrden.
Tomorrow—Are Trial, and Hap-
p&iesx genl Us*
jrf
DETROIT .RAct DRIVER KILL*
CD IN CRASH
MILWAUKEE, Wla, July L-
Bruno Milter. Detroit race driver,
was almost instantly kilted Weff-
netday when thrte car* ptted —
in an automobile nee at.St—i
Part. The other driven teere hurt,
' ......... mamtegai—*3—a—J
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
* BIBLE THOUGHT ♦
♦ FOR TODAY ♦
ath_G—raa*
coto* atoekt—a «— —WhSL
suite.”
AM Ftaanel PaUleowto
To which atwttov ——S?
“And flannel petticoat* in winter.
prewy Ana just imagine any or us mv«
' ing a marcel." put in « M—R
"Come o». tell us. did any of you
graduates of 20 yean a— ever have
a marcel while you were In oltegv?
Or a fadal or a manicure?”
Two admitted a marcel and one
undrt—iataB who dMnt
bate
— or n
light' bob.
’r.^Mi
Iter earn
n ' 7
T 4 VVE RE GOIMG TO THE
DEPENDABLE
BANKING
SERVICE
Since 1881
Exchange National
Georg* Bernard Shaw posM
for the movies the other day. Are
the film people st ill seeking a new
Valentino?
tfiANK
r
HKu
DENTON REC GRp-<^a
CHANGE MADE IN STYLE OF
DRY AfUDttt
WASHINGTON, July Orders
were given Thursday by W. James
M. Doran, chief of the U. 8, dry
force*, for all administrators to se-
lect agents who can enforce the
laws without violence 0T the neces-
sity for apologies afterward. T—
new praMMtton agent wfiktoa a van
who know* Ma job and does ft to *
quiet, thorough manner without
spectacular raids, he Mid.
Free Vacation Log
Books
■ Jip . Elil
_ GECKfRITZ
Oakland and Pontiae Dealer.
201 S. Elm St. Phone 51.
-----"• ^ -*■ ■* * _ -
KNOWIEDCtOFriNANdE
‘ of a flood bank is that of
ltn6wledfl« of finance and
ino.iv... vptiM!...m wiwv visions, ff firtctica!, may
be turned into plana, and the plans carried put with
■ C’L. ’
all times to confer
i that they are. .
■ (t that I --L
“ 01
ng t—
>wwd the
isr me tf
gain worth having if he wins.
Take the fellow who knows that his brakes
aren't right. Isn’t he a gambler? Sometimes be is
a minister of the gospel, or a. deacon of the church
Who lifts his hands in holy horror at those who
haxgrd against a ohance. Yet he will risk an auto-
mobile full of human freight, including himself,
against the chance that those bum brakes won’t
slip at the wrong moment..' .
A man who lovea his wife and children bettes
than all the rest of the world put together will take
a chatfe on an unsafe gas connection which may
slip off at any timte and asphyxiate the whole fam-
ily. He gambles the lives of those he holds dearest
against a dollar's worth of rubber tubing; .
A man will install his radio aerial without a
lightaipg arrester. He gambles his house and fur-
ntohfags and perhaps the lives of his folk, against
a little contraption costing a dollar or a dollar and
a half.
■ .Not all the gamblers are to be found at Monte
Carlo or in the hind rooms of pool parlors or roll-
ing the bones in.back alley*. ..
We're beginning to think mdre
and more that what Mr. Bower*
meant in his keynote speech In
Houston war: “Turn the rascals
out."
* • , *
Maybe one of the reasons ■raw
writers are turning out so many
risque books nowadays is because
the people wanj. books bad. _
The New York street rloanlnfl
department Is being investigated.
"We*jo7n‘withVthe*natlon In giving thanks that It seem •the streets were not the
•....... • only things cleaned up.
(Copyright, 1»2S, NEA S< i vice, Inc.?
........r
MKy-
fc FRirgir, ito' r nig'
fyrt the Only Ones With a
IffT.. •
-try - yr- yr*
'
BE PEAS0MABLE/-.
LAST WWTBR YOU
prqmiss> WBfc<5ox>w ry
mountains! -/ftrr
KNOW YA Dtp’/’I p
It
If
I';.'.! .
ir *
i
1’ ’
fee.
t < h'”
• 1 /■ ..... "TF— ■JUM Z.
l$&r, ■■
1
y—'(to £
Three months (tn advance)
Jx
to It or____
M» tooal news
he could hardly account for his
____________i \ _:_r _j
buildings, the industrial development, the shipping.
It waa Jost • feeling he had carried away with him
—’a vague liking for the city
out. It happened that all his
arked by courtesy. The em-
iphers in the offices he
in the stores he had shopped in; all
M—> Mht eourteoua t* him. The result
feeling for the city with-
They made him like
V
LO
I
Bove
I
PRIN
108
- PHO'
J
ECONO!)
FOR
1 ’
FRE1GH
«
In fact,
Bn
Quali
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we o:
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [27], No. 281, Ed. 1 Friday, July 6, 1928, newspaper, July 6, 1928; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335443/m1/8/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.