Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [28], No. [111], Ed. 1 Saturday, December 22, 1928 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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FORI
1
PHONB 1
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itteriea.
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Mlf gawillna
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Mid my dompaaton.
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took the tide to el
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back yard to get all he needs. Up north, however,
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LOOK!
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UG2——
A tube free with each—-
Cooper Tire
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have
tat-
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if
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Phone 498.
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owner.
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Since 1881
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Washington Hicks says you ought
never to judge a man by his wife.
WICHITA PALLS, Dec. 21.—Re-
peal of the law governing the sale
of oil and gas leases on University
of Texas lands was advocated by
W. B. Hamilton, chairman of the
wait upon the Lord shall -renew
their strength; they shall mount up
with wings as eagles; they shall run
and not be weary; and they shall
walk, and not faint.—Isa. 40:31.
is an old maid but still seems right
peart.
7/
Careful, Efficient
Commercial Printing.
&oss Printing Co.
219 1-2 W. Oak St
Phone 841.
Sam Laney
215 N. Locust.
Phone 425.
Just
Folks
By Bdgar A. Ouste
; --u_---
Quick to Answer
Service Call to
Paraguay Army
jt < 4
who are
• Denton
3
Withtha
Exchanges
By L. A. M. •
1
’i
yr'~
iiuaa Tuesday and Friday.
Assocteted PVMs^and
77
We sell from n<Jw until Jan.
1. 1929.
Sold for cash—no trade-
in.
i u
Fletcher Henstep's mule to drive
over -to Bounding Billows today.
Fletch told him that the mule got
contrary and wouldn't go all he
needed was a good cussing and the
Mail Carrier has promised to come
to the preacher's rescue if necessa-
ry-
DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH
By W. V Oardaa
)
1
NDAMENTALISTS!
JCPeWq
Fancy Shirts
For Men.
Excellent quality broad-
cloth in many attractive
patterns.
$1.49 and $1.98
J
WML1AE?
A plumber was shot on his way
to work in Chleago, sustaining tho
theory that if you stay in one place
long enough something will happen
to you.
like we buy holly and spruce trees.
Most of the mistletoe on the northern markets
* comes from Texas, and the price is lower than usual
this year, indicating a heavy demand.
Miss Pansy Pickens has arrived
from near Thunderation for a visit' ...___________________
with her brother Slim Pickens. She on and gas bureau of the West
“* * Texas Chamber of Commerce, in
address here Thursday before Uie
Lions Club.
jthia yuletide decoration with its osculatory attrac-
tion is in considerable demand and must be bought
' *
F'fet*/:'-
Open Evenings Till Christmas/
----- ■> >, -
<
I
1]K
^~r
SnvA'ing -behind the scenes" is
fortir'den to film ac' ‘’V and ac-
treaseg in se.vral. ’Bitthh stbdlos,
oecauM “ .....
uno\er.
*' Lamps
.While Tfiey Last, fl.95, on
W J
-7 v • yf, ..
-• - Neier ‘‘since the mind of man
runneth not to the contrary” have
the .' how windows of the local stores
been*'decorated as they are now for
the Christmas holidays. Christmas
trees, wreaths and every other
form of decoration reflect the spirit
of the holiday season. It is a good
tight to see.—Florence Vidette.
Mf;'***. .''jji
BNKI
DKNTON, TOXAS.
Interest Editorials
________...
. A A
t / V y
Llbl '
HUH
pjates and
7-
TWO-YEAR SENTENCE IN AS-
SAULT CASE
WAXAHACHIE Dec. 21—A jury
in district court here Thursaay
levied a two-year penitentiary sen-
tence agafnst L. C. McCray, charg-
ed with assuult to murder in con-
nection with the shooting of Al-
bert Stewart at Ennis. The shoot-
ing grew out of a dispute over pay-
ment of a bill.
CENSUS IS EXPENSIVE
The federal census bureau will soon start out its
decennial enumeration of all residents of this coun-
try find Congress has received official notice of the
approaching census year through a request for 119,-
000,000 to <ld the job. It is a nice thing to know
the up-to-the-minute populations of the cities and
towns in this country, and the other information
gathered by the census takers has a myriad of uses,
hut 'ft is doubtful if the average citizen, while he
| * waits anxiously for the official announcement of
TUROAY. DBCTMBER MM 1MB
(QsCaL-,
THE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT
Isn't it strange, oh brother o' mine,
How many differences are forgot
When the light* of Christmas twinkle
and shine?
Isn't It strange how every thought
Turns to others and leaps to say:
"Yours be a Merry Christmas day!”
Isn't It strange my brother, then
Hate and envy and greed die down
And we all wish joy for our fellow-
men? , . ------
The humblest and poorest ones In
town < '.1
Smile at each other and dare to say:
“Yours be a Merry Christmas day!”
-•All the weeks of the long year
through ■
Men remember their petty wrorgs.
See the civil that others do Jmmi
And loin themselves Into w^Bel-
throngs. ' '1HK-
But cometh the Christmas and
forgot
And ay o? the quanrallnc msftom MT
Oh, brother o' mine, what a world
'twould be
If “yours be a merry heart today!"
Were ever the thought of'you and me
And . hate and malice were put
away!
What smiles we’d see and what prais-
es we'd hear
If the Christmas spirit lived all the
year.
ms
Among other notes of prosperity,
the Department of Commerce re-
ports that the supply of nuts is ade-
quate this year.
• • •
President Coolidge has- attked
Congress for 15 new cruisers. You
can’t tell when we'll have a hurry-
up call for good-will envoys,
f • •
Among the most valuable tjps of
the day to stock speculators is the
advice furnished by Mr. Isaac New-
ton.
\ A
WHY PAY MORE
When you can buy the best
for less?
350-th capacity Cream
Separator for ........>57.00
600-It> capacity Cream
Separator for, ........$80.00
Harry Teasley’s Cash
Grocery
Phone 498. We Deliver.
A young man ir _ -always hard to
buy for unlesa you know about
us. Then you can be sure of
‘ giving the right thing even if you
want to buy him a necktie.
r It s an inspiring sight to see how
dties. towns and villages are ob-
serving the Christmas season by
decorating business and , residence
sections in seasonal color* and ’ the
uge of myriads of lights. There was
mk'uJRtt so many yean ago when
' ] W toy-bedeckdd show win-
i *> about the only sign of
4d|BMaVChristmas decoration in
■MK towns, and the community asl—’
a whole, in its barren wintry garb,
was a rather drab sight. Now,
scarcely a town can be found that
does not vividly reflect the spirit of
the holiday season, which brings
pleasure toll passersby. It'scargCM-
ly custom, and bids fair to grow in
favors with each succeeding Yule-
tide.
^TlNSHOr
a a oia^'AaiiYH
you need any corrugated
roofing better see me or we
both lose money. Also any
other sheet metal or sheet
metal work.
M.AGAX
•l' ‘__* L __I _ - * , ’ • ILi®2£KJj
\ • J •
- '0'«...........
The world war is 10 years past,, yet this country,
Which saw relatively little of the real effort in the
4ar is now paying for its part in the war at the
■ . rate of a billion and a quarter dollars a year on
a total estimated coat of our part in the war of
tnore than 35 billion dollars. These figure* might be
presented to Paraguay and Bolivia as a clinching
I argument against armed hostilities.
---------o .......
IJABLE TO GET FINED .
4 Some 1,500 automobile owners in Denton County
liable to awake with the realisation January 1
; they haven’t secured their automobile license
1 are likely to get fined if they operate
r cars without the new numbers. This year Jan-
f 1 has been set as the deadline, and there has
heen no announcement of an extension to February
Yf the last date usually set by the highway depart-
Even if the date is moved up, there will be sev-
s oral hundred automobile owners who will wait un-
til the last minute to register their cars, and the
County Tax Collector will go through the annual
»Wrti occasioned by those who apparently wish to
. . Ijave the distinction of being last minute shoppers.
SJcTlTtJ' * -------9-------
’ It seems that officers of the law at Wink, in t
Winkler County have been taking the name of their
boom city literally and have been winking at law
Violations until they got the services of 20 State
Hangers.
—. ....
bone that we scarcely know exist*
st ail. They-pore over recoids and
devote tjieir lives to study and in ’
the end they have only touched an
infinltestiinal corner of -.he world's
knowledge,*
What Would Holomon Say No-*?
Solomon said: “Of making bocks '
there is no end.” at a thn* .-/hen
books were made slowly and labor- -
iourly hy hand
■Whatever would he say today if
he could see the woild's p-.i^es
putting forth millions of books a
A r a
ndw'anyone can tver be conceit-’’
ed in the free of the vastness of
the things he Can't know is n mar-
vel. *- - •
Or how anyone can ever look
down on someone ebe for net
knowing the things he knows when
that other ferson doubtless knows
so many things he doesn't knew!
If he lived to the axe of Meth-
usaieh and did nothing but rend
from the day
t:.i .____
doub't if one
SLAUS//
lid nothing
he learned, and had
the capacity to retain it all, I
doubt if one num could know oil 1
there is to know worth knowing
about history and economics and
philosophy and astronomy and
medicine and biology and achiwcl-
ogy and all tijc rest of the world'*
store of knowledge.
When Re's Only Gone a
Further
A man spends lour years at col-
lege and thinks of himself as edu-
cated and perhaps looks down on
the man who only went through
high sehcdl. Is it not m if % man
wlto had travelled one milestone *
of the journey around the ea-tli
should look down on the people
at home and think of him.xlt as
a much travelled man?
' Consider the stars.” said a wise ■
rhlbcopher to help quiet tne frets
and pettiness and egocentrieism of
men and wemen. *'J
As a medicine for our conceits ’
let us now and then consider the
world's store of wisdom.
Words often misused: Do noti
say, “I cannot help but believe she I
is truthful." Omit “help.” . Ia
Often mispronounced: ihcredu- Ljj
lous. Pronounce in-krett-u-lua„ not I cr
in-krej, e as in “led,’’ first u as in I or
“unit," last u as in “us.’ accent sec- I s<
, /nd syllable. | “I
^Often misspelled: onyx. * " jM
ASCUNCTON. Paraguay, Dec. 21.
—Fifty thousand persona answer-
ed the call to arms in the 48 hours
after the Issue of Paraguay’s gen-
eral mobilization order. The order
was suspended after Bolivia had
accepted the good offices of the
Pan-American arbitration and
conciliation conference in the Cha-
co region incidents between Boliv-
ia^ and Paraguayan troopr.
President Jose Guggi iri has or-
dered that 40.000 of those who re-
sponded be chosen as subject to
immediate cull to arms.
Government authorities
cautioned the people to observe
strict economy during the next
few mouths In view of the possi-
bility of economic difficulties in
the event of war if the incident is
not settled by pacific means.
| Contemporary TKougfe
’ CLOfHES AND TUBERCULOSIS
; Formerly there was much more tuberculosis
among young men than among young women, but
qow, according to a medical authority writing in
the New York Time*, “the mortality rate in some
instances is twice aa high among young girls as
Among boy* and young men." The reasons given
fior the marked change are the following. “The in-1 .
ww ^frar-wa zumywra Wawtea riy**"*- | jdtKaM
fiKltlenal undernourishment; insufficient protection
«f the body, particularly In cold weather; the flimsy
drees, sleeveless and low cut in front or back, with
•ext to no underwear; low shoes; compression of
Ma breast by tight brassieres, hindering deep ree-
iiration; too much night life; too much cigarette
Masking and in many case* unsanitary sleeping and
Bvlag1 quarters; overheated and badly ventilated
workrooms, offices, factories and stores. -
And yet no few observers, Including physicians,
have etaimed that the light clothing of women is
enefleial and that American women of today are
^better physical condtUon than the jnan. The *ta-
uy be true of
& .1 ra devoted to <
his home town population, is aware of the enormity
tf>4he job and the incident expenses.
Mistletoe is so plentiful in Texas that the aver-
age Christmas decorator only has to go into the
DEPENDABLE
,wi«* BANKING
SERVK1U
Received Another Shipment of t—-
In the Pacific there Is a species
of shack which eats only the
brains of its victims. That’s one
hazard remsved for bathers front
Hollywood. ,
(Copyright, 1321. NBA Service, lnc.pl
STOLEN SHIRT IN LAUNDRY
LEADS TO ARREST
ELECTRA, Iiec. 21—Finding of
a stolen shirt in a laundry here led
to the arrest of seven persons in
connection with a series of burg-
laries in Electra, Vernon, Beau-
mont, Orang? and other towns in
Texas. The shirt had bean stolen -
Rye Straw Sayings
By GEORGB BINGHAM
Kurul Reporter
DltM HGDVEP M
% Latin America
By RQDNEY DUTCHER
NKA Service Writer
(Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.)
WITH HOOVER IN LATIN AMERICA—(By Ca-
ble)—A bullet fired in the little town of Sarajevo
in August, 1914, proved the spark that touched a
war that swept Europe and eventually reached out
to blight the whole world.
Likewise, the recent dash between a handful of
Bolivian and Paraguayan soldiers at Fort V an guar-
dia, on the disputed frontier between those two
countries, may prove the spark that will touch off
a disastrous South American war unless the media-
tion efforts at Washington succeed in bringing
Even a visitor to South America can see lhat the
volatileness Of contiguous nation* is dangerous. Es-
pecially does this apply to Chile, Which is proud
powerful and prepared for war and Is on the most
friendly terms with Httle Paraguay^. Peru, which
fears Chile, is friendly to Bolivia for that reason. '
It is the same fear of Chile, it appears, that has
proved the sole check on Bolivia which, if opposed
only by Paraguay in a war. would stand to clinch
thousands of square miles of disputed territory on
the frontier. This land contains possibly much oil,
rich quebracho forests and would also afford inland
Bolivia a niUte to the sea, down the mighty Parana
to the Atlantic.
The “Gran Chaco”, as the disputed territory be-
tween Bolivia and Paraguay is known, is one of
the most primitive areas in the world. Filled with
alligators, huge poisonous snakes and strange
beasts of many kinds, it Is populated by roving In-
dians who follow the same customs and habits of
life today aa they did when Ferdinand Magellan
saijed down the east coast of the continent four
hundred year* ago.
“When our ancestors invented hell they had no
knowledge of the Chaco,” John Foster Fraser, an
Engliah journalist, once Wrote. He described the
heart of this country as containing nothing more
than swamp and forests, mosquitoes and fever and
savage Indians who would run a spear through a
white man without compunction. The region is full
of alligators, jaguars, tapirs and pecarries and also
abounds in beautiful birds nd insects.
Bolivia, still smarting from the loss of its Pacific
seaport and it* rich nitrate deposits to Chile in by-
gone wars, la heavily mortgaged by foreign loans.
Only last year it borrowed 123,000,000 from the
United State*. The country is rich in tin, tannin and
other natural resources.
Paraguay's Disastrous War
It is doubtful if any nation could be less prepared
for War than little Paraguay, which has not yet fully
recovered from the disastrous Lopez wars that al-
most wrecked the country two generations ago.
Francisco Ixipez, a dictator who had spent some
years in France and had dreams of becoming “the
Napoleon of South America,” plunged Paraguay
into a bloody war with Brazil, Argentina and Uru-
guay. He was aided by his cruel and designing mis-
tress, a Madame Lynch, whom he had brought from
Paris.
Nero was never more cruel than these two bloody
adventurers.
In eight years of warfare they bled Paraguay !
to 30,000 men as against a population of 200,000
women and children. Toward the last, boys of 12
were pushed into the army and flogged when they
fell from exhaustion. Men who could not fight were
executed. The close of the war in 1870 left Paraguay
with a population of less than ,250,000 people as
compared with three or- four times that number
when the fighting began. Almost every man and
boy above 15 had been killed or wounded. The
country was a land of women, old men, children and
I -Uf*-- ■■■ ........
pT""......... i 1 —■ 1
| 19 Years Ago in Denton <
»*■■» ■! I ■ I ■ I ■ I I ■ IM I—. — mi I II11 M I — I >
(From Record-Chronicle, Dec. 22, 1909.) 4-
__f°“r orphan*, the oldest 10 years and the young-
est 18 months, were“setit to an autnt in Arkansas
by the United Charities.
nun linn mi - -> k______ •**» * . s
toherrntasiw ntvWsMl above admit* that thia At a mat*Ina af Yasmara .— . ..
was passed asking the locating board to designate
Denton as the site for a^State experiment station.
There ta-a demand for acreage here nbw and
“I®?1 b,< **Ut* <kal* h*V'‘ b““n
............................ ■ t
•hart‘ *" •
most courteous fish. Perhaps that Is because he
**•** ,rm W^,e "wi,nmiBK'
Jin /i*'«
* BIBLE THOUGHTY
♦ BOB TODAY
women of the leisure class who
__ ___ »or sport* and can sleep a* long
i * they like after lata hours, but be insist that it is
’ ?! J*? •’•"’IfcMffud young women of
_ bow—Fashion—And
i. will continue to ihaiat on dreeaing. a*
>ie, precisely a* do the women of the
pus ctawoL-TexarkM* Daily GaMtte.
Iff WICKES WAMBOLDT
. FUNNY PRIDE
An electriq*) contractor sent one of his. men out
to a house to put in a floor-plug. The man did the
work in a motchy manner, which brought him a stiff
reprimand from his employer. The workman resent-
ed the rebuke. He talked back And got discharged.
In recounting the affair the workman said, “I got
too much pride to let anybody talk to me like that”
The~workman had too much pride to take deserved
criticism; out he did not have too much pride t< do
his work in a way to deserve criticism. That work-
man had the funny sort of pride.
So many parsons have the funny sort of pride,
the kind of pride that get* them all miffed up over
some little thing but makes them indifferent about
some big thing. Figuring the matter logically it
might seem that the workman who put in the
floor-plug should have been angry at, hit unwork-
i iwaulike workmanship and have .been grateful to
his employer for trying to take the kinks out of him.
A man took his brother to task for not observ-
ing the rules of moral turpitude. The erring on*
became infuriated and knocked his brother down.
His pride had been touched. What sort of pride?
The funny sort of pride, the pride that takes more
offense at a word of advice against wrong-doing
than at wrong-doing itself.
A Woman went to call on another woman. The
one being called upon received her visitor hospitably.
She set before her a tall glass of rich milk, a slice
Of pound cake and a slice of fruit cake. After the
caller had ekten the pound cake and the fruit cake
nd had drunk the glass of milk, her-hostess said to
her, “Angelina, I want you to stop angling for my
husband,” whereupon Angelina rose in a huff and
flounced indignantly from the house. She never
called ther* again, she said she had too much pride.
Angelina had the funny sort of pride. She was too
proud to re-enter the home of the woman who had
talked to her straight from the shoulder but she
was not too proud to try to take the woman’s hus-
band away from her.
The other'BW Ifrown said to Jones, “You look
funny in that hat"; whereupon Jones insisted that
his hat was all right: that it was the correct shape,
size and Color. “Well,” conceded Brown, “perhaps
it isn’t the hat.” So perhaps it is not the pride that
is funny. Perhaps it is the person who entertains
the pride who is funny. Perhaps he is funny be-
c*u*e be ha* the wrong'slant at life.
gft and was identified by. it*
Is Headquarters for
aecsuse it dulls1 the eyes of ^nw |— *---1
We can mane
peck^Atao’wil? ha've mix’ed
nuts at a good price. Call or
c‘6me“io ale ua before you
i fruita
and nut*. ‘ * *' '
Have plenty of those good
country sausage and cquntry . ,
”'"p\ph<m. nt. Exchange National j
“TookGrocery I BanR | _■
and Bdltorial C
ClrvtjlsUon Department ...
NOTICE TO THR FVBLIQ
... krt.*SSB
‘ Mon will be Hindi? oonveted upon being called to the
publishers' attention. •
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Ono-year (in advance) ............................................... *s.fiO
Biz months by mail (in advance)...............................3 oo
Three months bv mail (in advance) ......................... 1 50
Ono month, delivered................. .oo
Homi-Weekly In Denton County
One year (in advance)............................... *1.00
Rl» months (In advance)........................................,........co
Three months (in advance).............................................. 3#
Semi-Weekly in Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico.
(Outside Denton County.)
one year (in advano*)...................... ........................*1 so
Hix months (in advance)..................................'.................80
Three rnontlu (In advance) ................ .45
Tlte Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the
use for re-publieatlon of all news dispatches credited
to It or not oUutra’ise credited in this paper and also
the local news poWiahed herein,___________ ,
DENTON, TEXAS, DECEMBER 22, 1928
SEEMS AS IF WE KNOW NEXT
TO NOTHING
How much there I* to know in
the next world.
And how little we know or ever
can know.
The difference tn knowledge be-
tween the moat ignorant man and
the wisest stems tremcndcu<r, un-
til you stop to think how much
greater ir the vast gap between
what the most learned man knows
and what ther. is to know In Uie
world.
And when vou think what a lit-
tle bit of knowledge we ordinary'
folk have, it justT appalls you.
Sometimes when w* find we know
more than others along a certain
line, we nave a moment when wc
feel wise, but the Ichanct* lare
that they know equally much more
along some other line.
And Then I Deflated
Something was1 said about the
tide one day thl* rummer, I tpoki
of its bring two hours in. “Thei.
that means it is almost full tide,
doesn’t it?" said my dompanicn.
I looked at her in astonishment,
sure that I had heard wrong or
that she was xstiug. But she was
not. She didnWmpw how king it
took the tide to ebb and flow. I
could hardly credit it, for she is a
person of education. I was brought
up near the sea and it seemed to
nie I had been born knowing how
long it took the Ude to ebb and
flow, and here was * grownup who
didn't know that sftppie fact. For
a minute I felt quite delightfully
puffed up. And than I got tc
thinking cf the man)', many things
she knows along her line that I
am completely ignorant of, and I
deflated.
Men of science study for vears
on some single period of histrry or
some single bone Ln the body cf
some ancient animal in its rela-
tion to the evolution firm one
species to another. They know a
thousand facts about a period or a
A man save<l from a burning
building in New York wrote to his
rescuer a poem of thanks. Expe-
rienc? is a great teacher.
of the handle
classes.,.
raae U is )ik<
. j
WILL BE MIBSKD
Christmas time in Denton has one handicap which
cannot be overcome. Just before Christmas, about
3,000 students of the two local colleges go to their
homes for the holidays, making a dent in the pop-
ulation which is apparent to everyone. Denton clti-
sens would much prefer to enjoy Christmas with
students, for they give a life and color to the town
lhat rennnt ba provided in any ft her manner
The loss of the student body of the two colleges
- - 1IJ ___- * A -* '» V
(Jite hemecoming of Denton boys and girt* '
attending schools An olfiier cities. Forrtter
citizens also will visit here during the holidays and
wil1 help fill the void until students return from
___ i iliina m, —--yu-. . i-,,w,i ——a——,, ■■■iw,, ,, ■■MwwroqRsBMmm———aw——n—— —*
Christmas vacations.
4
3
Necktie* for A Other a fraud- ,
dad A wide price range.
thJ
i‘W-
~"*"1
WLLIAMSSTORE 1
Gifts of Distinction.
Synonym*: inconsiderate, inatten-
tive, negligent, improvident, indis-
creet, imprudent.
Word study: “Use a word three
time* and it is yours." Let ns in-
crease our vocabulary by mastering
one word each day. Today's word;
solicitude: state of being anxious.
'Your courteous solicitude is appre-
ciated. ”
4.S* 3
:« ® ft
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [28], No. [111], Ed. 1 Saturday, December 22, 1928, newspaper, December 22, 1928; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335583/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.