Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 298, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 26, 1928 Page: 3 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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MNTOM
g, THURSDAY, MT >8, 1996
REDUCED CROWD EXPECTED
a
FOR TITLE FIGHT TONIGHT
O'-:
♦
J
•e
^Department
’4.
pro-
43 to 40;
I
I
Cash
me 498.
ivorite'
<1
Wash Dresses Are Best
I * 1
st.
*4
Washington
8-6
r j
j-
5-1
79C
July
Htandtng
prices
8
17c
t
I
me
the voters
A
Conn and Zenith Band Instruments
»
or -Y
G. C. COLLUM
Representing
I
Whittle Music Co.
Denton County that need more attention than all the rest,
See Tomorrow’s Paper.
i/
I will
4
4
*
I
shades.
i
Your vote will be greatly appreciated.
a
I
-V
as1;'
II
3
y
Al
>r man;
f'fa
of-
V
■■
To the Voters of Denton and Denton
County
Why Go Home for Lunch These
Hot Days?
FFe Open
a ^ew
Ludewig Drums and other high-class musical
merchandise on display at Woods & Meredith Bar-
When you can drop in here and be aerved with a
delicious sandwich and malted milk, and a cool,
pleasant place to enjoy a lunch.
Tilden to Meet
Old Enemy Friday
Staple Patterns and Some
New Novelties
TO THE VOTERS OF DENTON
COUNTY
Such Pretty Plaid, Check
and Novelty Patterns
it now,
)u to eat
and we
e can to
healthy.
tn
below
30
38
38
28
37
37
38
38
W
67
58
50
43
43
43
87
37
18
16
14
18
13
13
12
11
34
39
40
37
48
45
59
61
Pct
631
571
500
.500
481
481
480
393
Back to America came Tunney
after the armistice was signed. de-
termined to make his living by box-
PICTORIAL
PRINTED
PATTERNS*
to buy
LIVERPOOL,
opened steal
ed steady, 1
closing
30.70-74
30 64-68
30.54-60
20 90-98
30 76-SO
Rain at Houston
Puts Wichita in
Clean-Cut I^ad
Club-
New York
Phllsdelnhl*
St. Louis
Chicago
Washington
Cleveland
Boston
Detroit
93
94
96
86
93
90
86
84
94
94
97
93
94
96
91
93
39
38
37
38
37
39
38
38
W
30
19
17
16
13
10
9
9
45
36
38
L
9
0
10
12
14
19
19
19
27
36
47
61
62
53
54
55
11
13
14
13
14
14
13
17
Pct
.63*
585
.579
570
616
500
306
.274
59
55
66
49
Pct
713
.617
615
452
447
.442
407
402
(Pg*
For Sale good used Refrigerator.
Phone 1201. 2M
Erath
MW*
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ■ ■ .........
Printed Cottons Are Smart
And Our Prices Are Thrifty
■.
690
67V
630
671
481
346
321
321
Jersey Cloth
Mercerised
An assortment of dainty
36 inches wide.
29c
V'
Draw No. 424a '
cams
Dtess No. 4356
>OCM
themat-
closing
3036-B
30 36-B
30 17-B
20.34-37
3033-34
21.00.
eived a
strained
lice fry-
oUl®
grocer-
Ve have
service,
cd with
do so.
Pictorial Printed
Psctsrns are not only
prated bus they see
also perforated,
norxhad and cut ate
ready for uas, and they
have no tnaggma as
mm sway oe oratep
arban cutting.
Us are pleated to
•nnounca tbs opening
ef <w now PtOonal
Prinaad Pattern De-
partment where you
win fed a fuB Km of
tfesa f—nui pstwrna
For children’s frocks, charming
house dresses — even summery cur-
tains for the kitchen — women who
sew find many uses for gingham.
H. C. S., Yard
Amoskeag, Yard
ber Shop, across from Interurban Station, this week
only. I would like to see all bandsmen.
-------------------------,----
DID YOU KNOW THAT—
COME of those managers
who have been wanting
them can have Uhle aud Sha-
ute next winter . . . Colonel
Jake Ruppert says ha never
NATIONAL LEAD I E
Cincinnati 16-6. Philadelphia
Brooklyn a. Bt. Louis 1
New Tork 6. Pittsburgh 6.
Boston 3. Chicago 1.
Ntsiidlnc
■
TrW**’1.**».T ,■ r"
PARIS. July J6—William T. Til-
den. reinstated star of the Ameri-
can Davis cup tennis team, will
open the challenge round play at
Roland Oarroe Stadium tomorrow
against Rene LaCoste, his old en- ___
emy and recent conqueror. toumamsm wnere no won the IE
* The draw for 5mplay, in
the United States will try to re-lift
the cup from France, was held to-
day.
Henri Cochet will play Frank T.
Hunter in the second singles match
tomorrow. On Bundav, Hunter will
play baccate and Tilden will play
Oochet. The single doubles match
will be played Saturday. Teams fr.r
this match will be named tomor-
row.
Checks, plaids and plain colors—a
score of good patterns at an econo-
mical price.
1 ♦ 2 4
Girls all like these crisp dresses th^U -
come up smiling after several weak* |
ifigs. Here are cunning styles for
miss 2 to 6 and 7 to 10—smart oon
for miss 11 to 141
?!
L-
PARIS—Headwulters of a Paris
restaurant struck because their
employer refused to let them wear
their croix de guerres, lest the re-
minder of the war offend some of
his patrons.
i
•y
TEXAS
TWO OIL FIELD WORKERS ARE
KILLED TN BLAST
HENRYETTA. Okla., July 26 —
Stanley Catham. 50, driller, and An-
dy Hart. 40. tooldreaser. died Wed-
nesday from burns and other in-
juries received Tuesday night when
gas from a well at which they were
working became ignited and caus-
ed an explosion. Personr a quarter
of a mile away from the well were
knocked down by the blast.
W. H. (WALT) LINDSEY
Candidate for Sheriff Denton County.
(Politicat Advertisement.)
al Land
an effic-
— ■
L 1
ki
pi
M
Fresh New Ginghams
Can Be Used in a Number of Ways
Ask the Democrats
'pEN of the major league cluba
are going to lose money thia
year, half-season figures Indicate,
and their aggregate losseq may ex-
ceed <300.000.
Terrible weather during the first
half of the season cut down the
receipts In each league, but the
tight pennant race brought back
some of the dough in the National
League.
The combination of weather and
the Yankees has been too much for
the American League and as a re-
sult of the runaway pennant race
the Yankees will be the only team
the league to make any kind of
Mend.
<6
' 3
-
will marry . . . When Tom
Heeney pens an autograph
he writes "Kia Ora" ... It
means “Good Luck" in the
language of an old New Zea-
land tribe of wild men . . .
Rickard sold Tunney 400
seats tor the fight . . .And
they were all back of the
thirtieth row . . . The na-
tives iu Scotland two years
ago called Bob Jones "the wee
Rabble” ... The Detroit
Tigers use pinch hitters In
the top of the batting order
. . . The gas'buggies in the
Indianapolis disxy next year
will be allowed to use cu-
bic Inches displacement
again . . . Whatever that
means . . And supercharg-
ers will not be banned . . .
Steve Hannagan has a super-
charger on his buggy, but
lie's afraid to pul hie toot on
'er . . . Frisch still forgets
how many's out . . . Top
Heeney Is a horribls singer
. . . And five men swooned
when Walter Kelly tried to
lend a barber shop tenor to
his lead . . . Cincinnait still
has hopes . . And it’s too
bad to fool people like that.
For every occasion, the rnodiah
choice is a print—the smartest sum*
mer wash frocks will be made of
them.
“Gladio” Percale, Yard Ifc
to Har-
as coun-
>n years.
O:
FOULTWS
Hens 13o to 15c per IB.; fryers 90c
to S5o per oM SMBtSSB Bo per
turkeys Ue to 15c per ducks
10c per lb.; eggs 20 cents per doaen;
table butter 25c to SBc per fb4 pack-
ing stock butter 18c per lb.; cream
aio to 8«c per !b.
'I
<w.
■
Federate
” Bf*‘er
I. Flynt
m Ala- ,
ven. 1
ti
Lag
‘ the
a
\ ' - ' ''
A New Rag Rug
Is Inenpanaivo
__and to effective for that
worn corner I Each
89c
ti
1
r
y heard
we can
ir your-
"*■
r.*'
Sox pitchers to take the first game
of . a double header. 16 to 9. Ai
Slnin-.ons drove in six runs in tt.ls
contest. The Athletics continued to
hit hard in the second game and
won 11 to 7
abstrac-
as accu-
•nd hJ
i of the
t Texsta.
aty over |
ars, his
d worths
ihly to/
st as the
For Summertime Play Hours
5^
nbing
firing
ewv
slightly
The weather
generally i
and aided In the
Worth Street report*^
— - mtn
Can't Lose Penelope
KINGSTON, N. O—Penelope, a
eat. came back. William Warden
took her for an 80-mile ride and
dropped her from his car. A few
days later she inewed greeting' at
his door.
A standard for service—in children's
cunning dresses sad mother's houss frodta.
Remarkably inexpensive, too.
Avenue Prints, Yard 25c
The soft, pongee finish on these prints
rnskes them especially desirable for SMB* -
mer. Interesting patterns.
IEY '
OWSLEY MAKES FOUR TALKS
WEDNESDAY
McKINNEY. July 28 Alvin Ows-
ley. candidate for united States
Senator from Texas, made four
speeches in the interest of his can-
didacy Wednesday. He apoke at the
opening of the Collin County Ocn-
federate Veterans' and Old Set-
tlers Reunion here. Owsley scored
the records of Tom Connally and
Earle B. Mayfield, his opponents.
Not Many Tunnays, Though
rpHE ruling of the New York
* Boxing Commission that spar-
ring partners of the principals in
an important championship fight
cannot appear in the preliminaries
on the big egrd may be an injustice
to the men who sacrifice themselves
In a thankless Job, but it is no
hardship on the customers.
Because it had become the cus-
tom to clutter up the preliminary
card with catchers from each of
the two camps the spectacles that
the customers had to sit through
waiting for the main go were
things horrible aud terrible to be-
hold.
The chance offered to get on the
championship card and earn a
purse larger than they could get
at a smaller club for a harder fight
no doubt helped the champions snd
the challengers get spsrrtng part-
ners, and some of the employers
took sdvsntage of It by psying the
men very little and asking them
to consider their purse money ss a
part of their salary.
The new ruling of the commis-
sion brought about a situation that
is not hard to meet. And Mr. Tun-
ney met it without a moment's
consideration when he told his
men thst he would give them ss
a bonus the amount they were tb
receive for appearing on the card.
And when Mr. Tunney pays them
they will not have to cut up any
of their parse money with the fix-
ers. who demand a fee for getting
boxers Into important shows.
f • • •
Get Hard, Young Man!
’T’HE sudden display of Industry
shown by the Chicago White
Sox after Ray Schalk had stepped
out of the management and I^na
Blackburne had taken his place
can be explained easily— Black-
bin ne says
"When they told me I wns the
msnagcr 1 got the bunch together
in the club house and told them
what they hud to do or else," Black-
burne said. And apparently they
haven't been elselng
Blackburne, who was fired twice
by the Sox before be got the head
man's Job. insists thlt he is the
real manager of the team and that
he'll quit if anyone from the fr-'"'
cfllce interfere-
NEW YORK,
closed steady.
Jan
Muy
Oct
Dec
Lingerie Veil
Rayon Check
A favorite for eumroer
dies—and d'intv frocks.
29c
Club—
Wichita Falls
Houston
Dallas
Ban Antonio
Fort Worth
Waco
Beaumont
Shreveport
AMERICAN LEAOCF.
Philadelphia 16-8. Chicago 0-7
Cleveland 10-16. Boston 3-6
Detroit 3-10. New York 2-7.
84 Louis 13-6. Washington
(Second game twelve fhnlngs).
Htandln-
How They Stand
TEXAH LBAGI'E
Da liar 13 Beaumont 6
Wichita 10. San Antonio 3
Waco 7, Fort Worth 3
Shreveport at Houston, rain
Standing
JCPe®
• "uzAerv tavingt an gnateet99
DENTON
Rag Rugs
For a Bit of Afar
The popular hit and mitt
patterns. Size 24 x 4K
49c ’
M v ■ :ui
fl
As this campaign comes to a close, I want to thank
my friends and the voters for the many courtesies shown
during this campaign. 1 have tried to see as many of
possible, but realising that it ia impossible to
see all of them, 1 want to say to those whom 1 have not
seen that I was born and reared in Denton County, and
have lived in Denton County all of my life except some
fifteen years that I lived at Memphis, Texas. During that
time I had four years* experience as a peace officer, and
I believe that that four years of service qualifies me for
the office which I am asking of you. If elected, I will do
my part in bringing to justice all the criminals, from the
negro crapshooter up to the man who commits murder;
but I believe that there are two classes of criminals in
SCOREBOARD
Yesterday's hero: Clyde Manicn.
St. Louis Brown catcher, whose sin-
gle in the twelfth Inning of the
tecond game gave the Brown* a fl
to 5 victory and a clean' rweep if
the double bill with the Senators.
The Browns won th. first game
12 to 7.
The New York Giants took their
iccond successive Fame from the
Pittsburgh Pirates 6 to 5.
The Brooklyn Dodgers beat the
St. Louis Cardinal^ 8 to 1 behind
good pitching by Jumbo Elliott.
Ed Brandt outpitched Malone
and Jones and the Boston Braves
won from the Chicago Cubs 3 to 1
Cincinnati and Philadelphia
broke even in a double header, the
Reds winning the first ?ajric ifl to
5 and losing the second 7 to 6
County I wil give you a new and a clean administration,
and do my very best to make you the beat sheriff Denton
County has ever had. I earnestly solicit your influence
and votes, and sincerely thank you in advance for the sup-
port that you give me.
A Splendid Electric
Convenient Household Siae *
At An Economical Price
Here is a chance to rt- _
place the iron you have been - ■
using at a very email coet— J kP
highly nichel-plated and %
priced only, J
QCt Iw
and these are thieves and the bootleggers,
sure you, if elected, that 1 will give these two classes of
criminals my undivided attention, and will say in conclu-
sion that I have made no promises other than those which
I can faithfully fulfill, because my experience as a peace
officer has taught me that any peace officer can do only
so much, and then it is up to the prosecuting attorney, the
judge and the people to do the rest. So I will say to you
just what I have said to the people all over the county—
and that is this:.. If you will elect me sheriff of Denton
SERVICE DRUG STORE
............ :
'Y • ■ A’
hTIMK REVIEW
NEW YORK. July 26.—Trading
started off slowly with tbs volume
light Apathy woe due to the t«n-
denry* of the speculative communi-
ty to await the weekly Federal Hb-
serve statements and report on bro-
kerage loans scheduled for publica-
tion after the cloee of the market
tonight
Price movements In the standard
stocks were narrow and genera'lv
ineenlngleae. United Btatee Steel,
however. displayed a strong lone,
rising to new high ground on the
current recovery Buying of Steel
waa attributed to a strong group
with the Fisher Interests prominent.
These people were said U> be groom-
ing steel for market leadership on
the basis ot flourishing conditions
In the steel Industry.
NEW YORK COTTON
----- July 28.—Market
open
30 42
3037
30 25
30 70
30.60 _______
Spots steady; middling 21.15.
NEW ORLEANH COTTON
NEW ORLEANS. July 36 — Sterket
cloned steadj open
Jan 2005
Mar 20 06
May 20 04
Oct 3008
Dec .... 30.10
Hpota steady, middling
..j> LIVERPO4H, COTTON
26— Market
t, 8 to 13 higher; clos-
to 31 higher.
open
10 79
10.77
1078
11.08
1086
10.76
lulet. steady. 9 I
—. American 51i
CHICAOO GRAIN
CHICAGO. July 36 —Covering by
shorts in an oversold market sent
wheat aharplv higher todav on the
board of trade. Short rowings also
accounted for sharp gains in corn.
Oats were Irregular.
Wheat July 131 1-4; Sept 134;
Dec 1 37 7-8
Com July 109 1-4; Sept 96 1-8;
Dec 78 1-4
Oata July 46 3-4, Sept 41; Dec 44.
Ing. He whipped everybody in his
can division, won the light heavy-
weight championship of the world
end si/hed for more worlds to con-
quer. Then Tunney b-gnn r con-
scious effort to ouild up his bedy
to 190 pounds.
He did it by spending long weeks
in the north woods ru a lumber-
jack Then he emerged from the
forest and began defeating heavy-
weights as easily as he had light
heavy we ights.
That bricks nis history down to
that drizzly September night in
1926 when he met the leaden-leg-
ged Jack Dempsey at Philadelphia
ard after 30 minutes of fighting
was hailed as heavyweight cham-
pion of the world
Tunney’s victory was startling.
The old order changed, spilt ir.fin-
ilivts were mended, ind for the
first time in the history of tha
world a heavywe4{ht cburiplon was
: peaking faultless English
That was only a start. Tunney
confessed a liking lor Voltaire.
Keats snd Epicatus. He lectured on
Shakrspeare at Yale, engaged in a
literary controversy with George
Bernard Shaw and admitted he
bad read ' A Winter's Tale" nine
times
Heeney is different. He is a
spoitsman. not a scholar. He likes
his golf, his dogs. And nis ale. His
heart, is as big as his muscle-bound
shoulders, and he radiates cheer
end R ood will. He will come sailing
up from his training camp at Fair
Haven, N J., on a millkonaire's
yacht today, unperturbed by »he
fact that this is the greatest day
cf lite life
Tunney will be calm, tco, as he
files down from Speculator, N Y..
in an amphibian plane That's why
Rickard Is going to lose money
Both fighters ar. too calm. They
rdmit that they like each ether.
Twenty-five thousand visitors are
here for the bout They have come
from Australia. China, Japan. Eng-
land and al) parts of the United
States After two weeks of Indif-
ference. New York is becoming in-
terested in the fight. It is the topic
of discussion on every street cor-
ner.
Il was said along Broadway to-
day that when Tunney climbs into
the lirfj tonight he will stand face
to face with his old foe, Dempsey.
Rickard was authority for the
statement that Dempsey would oe
Hetney's chief second From other
sources the report was denied, and
Dempsey himself would not com-
ment
Betting men say Heeney has one
chance in three to whip Tunney
Those odds will waver before night-
fall. and no one eon say what they
will be when th« fighters stThd
face to face on the square of can-
vas which the world for oome
’- - st range reason- write a ring.-----—
p business with
Gene Tunney and Tom Heeney.
'•Show me any utiher job l'<n
which I can make as much money
and I will quit the ring." said
Tunney.
“If I win I guess I'll loaf for a
while' said Heeney.
At M o'clock eastern dayllgh''.
time tonight there may be another
potential millionaire in New York.
That will be Heeney if he wins. Or
ho may be standing in the glare of
the Ung with his head oloody but
unbowed—Just another good boxer
with a heart of oak who mteaed his
big chance
In bringing Tunney and Heeney
Uiiether, Rickard went to the ends
of the earth for his men. Tunney U.
a native New Yorker, a former
clerk who found his life work while
serving with the marines in the
World War.
Hd first pulled on boxing gloves
st Parris (Co.) Island, where he
was in training for his big fight
overseas. He then weighed 160
pounds. When Tunney's regiment
landed in Prance, he continued
boxing and soon found himself In
the American Expeditionary Forces
tournament where he won the IRjht
Club—
St. Louts
Chicago
Cincinnati
New York
Brooklyn
Pitteburgh
"Boston
Philadelphia
SOUTHERN A8BOCIATION
Mobile 4. Little Rock 8.
New Orleans 9, Memphis J.
Atlanta -4. Birmingham 4-6.
WaatrvHla at 'Chattanooga, ixin
Club-
Little Rock
Memphis
Chattanooga
New Orleans
Atlanta
Mobile
Birmingham
Nashville
Jan
Mar
May
July
Oct
Dec
Spots qul
eel pts 7000.
''I*'..
I . ’
V'T'LX. .A L.c
" 1 ----
■ ■MNNMMB8MMM»«—
fiDvfarkel
DALLAS. July 26 — Rain gt Hous-
ton yesterday enabled the Wichita
Falls Bpudders to assume a clean
cut lead in tho Texas League
ttandings today.
While Houston and Shreveport
remained idle because of J. Pluv-
1UR, Wichita Falls batsmen pounded
the offerings of Ftllinglm and Tlnk
Riviere for 16 hits to defeat San
Antonio. 10 to 3.
Dellas clung to third place by
cutalug'ging Beaumont in a free for
all batting contest. The score wa*
12 to 6. Bagwell and Campbell of
the Beaumont club both hammered
home runs.
Waco won their second straight
game from Fort Worth when Paul
Johnson. Cub left fielder, started
a home run spree among his team
mates. Johnson gathered two hom-
ers, snd Elliott, who pitched for
the Cubs, and Windle reoh got one
The score was 7 to 2.
The games today :
Fort Worth at Waco
Shreveport at Houston
Wichita Falls at San Antnnlo.
Dallas at Beaumont
C, E. (Charles) Fowler
COTTON FUTURES
NEW YORK. July 38—Cotton fu-
tures were steady and quiet in early
dealings today following a heavy
demand by Wall Street. Liverpool
■nd trade interests. The south and
New Orleans were sellers with some
evidence of Increased hedge pres-
sure.
Buying orders also appeared
considerable volume slightly
the market Ths weather in th
eastern belt was generally unfavor-
able overnight
better tone. V
dry goods stronger on further
curtailment.
Japanese lnterv»»* and local
ftsalonals were aellers.
NEW YORK FROnUCE
NEW YORK. July 36 -Butter
firm receipts 12.311; creamery ex-
tra 44 1-3;. apeclal market 45 to
45 1-3.
Eggs firmer: receipts 33,517; near-
by white fancy 43 to 46. state
whites 33 to 43; fresh flrtta 30 to
30 1-2; Pacific coasts 33 to 41: white
westerns 33 to 36; nearby browns
30 1-2 to 40
close
1887
1087
10.88
11 17
1098
1086
higher; re-
_______ 100; sales
5000. American 8000; middling 11.63
FORT WOWTW L1VBYOCK
-SORT 38M133L Juty 969—Tburt-
day's livestock market was active.
Cattle and calves made fully stead
prices and hogs were 10c higher
while sheep 'were unchanged Re-
ceipts were estimated at 3300 cattle.
1400 calves. 900 hogs and 800 sheep
Cattle beeves 7 50 to 18.75; cows
6 to 9 50; calves 580 to 13; Stockers
7 50 to 13; canners 480 to 4 75;
yearlings 8 50 to 14; bulla 8 to 8.
Hogs medium 10 75 to 11.10; light
10 36 to 11; sows 8 50 to 9: mixed
9 76 to 1095; pigs 760 to 8.50.
Sheep lambs 13 to 14; feeder
lambs 8 50 to 9 50; wethers 7 75 to
8 50: goats 3 to 4
a Bright colors—light colors—printB* I
. plaids and checkar—the price, too, ia aa .]
’ _____econo.m.‘S?1 protbera WPOiMu... J
George Kelley drove In seven run*
for the Reels In the first game.
The New York Yankees lost
both games of the double header
with the Detroit Tiger i 3 to 2 and
Iff to 7 LU Stoner let the Yanks
down with four hite Tn the first
came.
Cleveland a masse <9 34 hits in
winning both ends of the double
bill with the Boston Red 8ox 10 to
2 and 15 to 5.
Ry HARRY FERGUSON
NEW YORK. July 26—C’ear
fkies and cool breezes of ea'ly
morning augured well for, the Gene
1 unney-Tom, Heeney heavyweight
(hempionship fight tonight, but
box office indications were I hat the
crowd would fall below- expecta-
tions.
.Sixty thousand oersons are ex-
pected to pars through the turn-
stiles at Yanke? stadium tor.ivht
and there will be room for 28.000
mor e
Tex Rickard, who never yet has
lost on a heavyweight champ'on-
rhip fight, hoped lor a last minute
rush to build up the proceeds for
this mammoth fight program.
It seemed, without definite know-
ledge. that Rickxrds faith in fight
fans rusliing to see a heavyweight
title bout would be shaken if not
shattered.
He has guaranteed Tunney 1525,
ooo and Heeney expects 8100.000 for
his fhare. On the basis of the pres-
ent reat sale and the rather apa-
thetic way New York has reected.
ihere seemed a chance that Rick-
ard would lose possibly 3200.000 on
tonight's venture even though tlie
clear, cool weather fits in well artth
"Rickard Luck."
Many seats will be sold today and
attaches of the Rickard office pre-
dicted the last minute rush would
bring Tex in a profit.
The fight tonight will brirv; to-
gt lher a soft-spoken student of, the
classics and a mild genial black-
smith. both of whom wotiid rather
be playing golf.
Fighting is Just
• IS
If you will elect me to the office of Tax
Assessor of our county I will give you
prompt, efficient and courteous service. ,
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 298, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 26, 1928, newspaper, July 26, 1928; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335459/m1/3/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.