Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 117, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 28, 1929 Page: 2 of 8
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A Good Resolution
For 1930—to see that you
have sufficient ii
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iFire ,
.Tornado
Hail
Automobile
Plate Glass
'Burglary
Liability
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U|^|a»( .pQurteo>«s prvfae:
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w
Fr
W<'"
■till own thia land as & tribe and the money obtain- ?
ed from the leases they have sold to oil interests ,
liroa hnon aemallw *wiAM>a ikasM
chance to amass the enormous
ear TnzilAMas naln*/l l««r
$
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fa* D*ut<>" c»n»ty
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.afen'
to accept any at all and later fotind he had the most
valuable ISO acres in. .the world.
The government has done all It crAild to protect
the money of the Osages and other Oklahoma. In-
dians. but it has been badly handicapped by a mix-
ture of state and federal authority. The state courts
there appoint guardians for Indiana and the Indian
agents have to listen to the H* ..!1_ _2.L_
as to how money shall be turned over to their wards.
There is ne fell__1 ___1____
do with the money when they
them have done everything v"
over to the Indian owner.
The high point, of *. .
reservation has been reached and the-value of leases
is now on the decline, in the Indian Bureau’s opin-
ion. Last year, howevprK ,
produced from the reservation and
ceived a return, including- certain
J
a- .■' ■?'
I '
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... A Cook Grocery
’vnwiMi*.
■■! X'>W
."4
I
Surety Bonds
. . z_? ..
VUiafatho time pf year w*M
ywajraaaiw a nine latter Arm
Bowe itfaoe ,ar, nephe* ymt JuA.
almoet forgotten. ,
41T bnwtay. 8*h
Bbips leaving Cfotofotam WhI
week carried Texas ootton to^
nine different foreign countries;
It would pay the cotton fanner
to cultivate these markets, edu-
^nT I >
—WHO
Bylh
iwfe/Ki
.■ <» ;
'IF ■ -
educate more than these nine coun- gtarted
tries to use American cotton if wa this wi.
expect to make of cotton growing!their trip,
a profitable Industry. Furthermore,
in order to induce the world to buy - , . v - .1
otw product it is said that we win g^us rooms and the beauUful stair-
have to grow better cotton. Cotton-T8®8 e— ——--—— —
is being grown on a steadily increaa-'-------------------- -
ing scale in foreign countries and it
is said that much of this staple la'
**" belter than ours. Many wonder nowc
LI' J?W ,3<»
JLw > Ja
__/55iaHy. aH«» «3hem .
wmatW AMA HI>afoM.M HMm lfok g
11 as in “ *• ««• men wo
ro wwv tr^W *®a*d **-*•«■••*•
O TTlUCn *T**- -IM *“ “ •»»•- —a —aa *. a a
’ think- it. was time to 1
r waved them
did so both
i covered with some light, soft
W’
•'M
St per capita pedple In th_
»very of oil on their land. At one
— —a—a ,-r-w-J
man, woman and
>r. ■fcntsjryl''
.j- »■ < •
41 ' y't
1!. 1 J
*■ - ■
We offer a fitting service that (peans
real comfort.
Ihe Williams .Wwd
FASHION fARK . CLOTHIERS i. . •’
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f. . :
s
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if
4 ■' ■
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thail
far ti
? pres*
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Ilf
CjJ-
' ’ris-.'Vdr'V- ■ .-rr;- A*.
■ ,.« aa.» \
his amor's Q0
M ly > ■
'f W
r ’ J
■ U.oiy trr
r
egtensive uses of the staple, >
and show price-reducers in foe .
country that the whole world; .
is really our market.—Denison ,
Herald. *
H r •■■ :
I
L.' »
all over the palace and saw the gor-
t. and the chandeliers made of
■les. “ '
4 But what interested them most of
all were the family portraits and
tatues all over the palace. There
fae «o.xnany of tboml
• All fop foimous members of the----—
----------------
dr. afoi wa lie” to pig xfoee friends on x.the
1 1 hill Rarely does one bear his other
: are wyhuie "» chw.” ------------—.
look quite Secretary Stimson is "Stlmy” at jc . . ■ -i
i WW make the state department, and the as- For good groceries during J
2 stetdnt secretary, Joseph P. Cotton,
to
, W. T. BAILEY
Iwuranct.
—..............
> ?
luim
Lt xdif
rf
J
r xfeq
O. A. Vfof-rl
quiet, recently I
.appointed as- 1
sislaot V. *> 1
..attorney gen- t
hS.*l£ -1
",.fL
riaa a stowogfa-
pher in the
pgnilM money
to jay hie way
tkreog* acbooi
F| Doff.
-----------jjayZ,
tr
*
(Sts time O^nfot to ndv it’ was wry tfofflgg seeing them
------------ gte fok .fogy watched
a fod.foqfo uximbero (rf.^he
w Flake families out on their
■ "adventures into foe world.
•< -i How they did laugh and scamper
Fine, but we are going to have fot «nd run races and play as they they
■ 1 off! Bow they toeeed about in d<
way and that as they began*
LJ
jr--vW
f . - K- .
■ Now I
L
_ __thuslv
q^THeorMBR. Q^fiTZ '
mA/
•FH
■i
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Here is a shoe of smart appearance j J
and easy comfort. A roomy, French toe |
effect and rocker bottom ... a Florsheim J
ta host of wearers and is || |
pleasing more every day.
Why tt la that wife foe anp
jfooui4.be>rge and the prieg JoW-* <_
bee—foot CifoiSS^
the producing area has been |
inrrqamd, in America aa wen as fa
other sections at the world, in ro-
dent years, anj! furthermore that
we are producing entirety too
staple of a poor grade. Many
ers my that disaster Is facing the
cotton-growing area of America un-
less we improve the quality pf our
production and increase the use of snowl
.I’*!*"'* -r*" w>'h
- 'il
Foreigners in this country send to their home
countries through the postal money order system
alone mote than |100,000,000 a year. This is an
un-American practice, if foreigners are received In-
to this country and are permitted to earn their
money here, they should not bo allowed to impov-
erish the country by whatsoever their moMy orders
amount to. And this does not eoret the half or per-
haps the tenth part of the total sent by all other
mdahs. It is a serious draft upon American re-
r ftsuse people appear to exist on the theory that
OpportugitaLfthould operate as a burglar and not
doo’" with Installment collectors.—
TcrtXorth RwrdrWegraiu. ., 1
. w* . a * » l"b .
.MDOGRS RSCAPB AFTRB BLAST
9f KNTRY
BBOKLKT., W. Va, Dec. M —Tun
ndnen aacaped aafely from the
Stateabury Mine of the O. a B.
Smokeless Cbal Company, 8 miles
from here, two hours after a local
explosion in one entry Two engi-
neeta were unaccounted for, but
MS fols believed they were in an-
other section at the time of the
blast
CHRISTMAS BUYING HEAVY
A Washington dispatch lets it be known that re-
ports to President Hoover show that Christmas buy-
ers are buying aavpctively throughout the country
as they did in the .season of, 1028. In some ipcal-
it.es, in fact, more money is being spent this year
than in 19.28. This has been a source of deep grati-
fication to the president, since he considers the re-
port an index of good business conditions. Why not!
Uncle Sam has 120,000,000 sons and daughters.
Ninety-five per cent are not Wall Street plungers
or Hock buyers Wall Street isn’t the United States.
There are no black sun spots.—Cleburne Tlmes-
■t*
sswee
nfaforjenough. *
' t*. e e .
Thd Rnmian government' has
SEffiE
wee -done over hero, tho fo/
wmdd M mere *
WtoMto M conducting a fon-
paign tgatBM 'fouUra Go and ....
ask grandma what a masher Is. earned for Wesley Jones foe name
“»aved gy a Halr-
memphis. Trim.—“Bavod by a
hair* might have been the title at
a little drama in federal court here
in which Lgwaence Maestri was die-
mlsssd on a liquor tfasfad Agents
testified he had a mustache when
they bought liquor from him; his
friends testified he had never worn
a mustache
.... ,r,.., ,,1. pw, , ,
A good resolution—
AM. MW I
repreeentaUves.
John Garner, the minority leader
has neper known anything else
than Jo be .gplled -Jask." And
Hamilton Flfo at New York is an-
other ‘Ham.”
stays tn the senate.
The soubriquet eras i
before he had been sworn
if there was any doubi
. Whether it would stick, foe
utee immediately prior to 1
ing foe oath removed it.
Indeed, few of those whited names
are familiar in Washington escape
being nicknamed. And white they
are seldom used when speaking
directly to the person, nevertheless
j are so familiar that no qne is
doubt as to who is talked about.
Some are familiar throughout the
country. Others are rarely heard
And then John and Peggy looked/ outside the capital.
-BEBT” HOOVER
Reference to President Hoover
as “The Chief,” the name given
him while be was secretary of
commerce. Is generally known.
Only Mrs. Hoover calls him “Bbrt"
—the only other by-name beard tn
Washington. ’
have to malte morgjU.
Baraid.
7 Extra Burdens
Bobby’s mother fa a fafofo/N
man.
She has fa particular cause
foab fait "her folfbaM Mjfo
usually lovable and charming >
son who is much in demand. I
for some reason unknown to t
self, reasons which hark back pt
ably to the forgotten limbo of
own childhood, Bobby's |*>thei
jealous.
And so Bobby has boecroe
family scapegoat. At the age <
he carries his mother's burdeng
"Do you tove muaunyi”-aha a
"Yes.”
"Then kiss her. Jfa 'JMmMH
better than anybody else fa.
whole world?" ,71
flfes- ■ ■ ■
“And you won’t ever leave miT
my Slone, will you? You’ll ajw
love mummy best? Now give h
a big hug.”
.... „ . *■ ■ re ■■ ». . I
T‘l .
Maybe Germany decided nfo,.
to kick out of the traces because >
she would rather wait untlL^
France Isn’t looking.—Duller ”
News. 7^. ’J
Perhaps Germany was afraid to
kick out of the traces now She te
not in a position to be a match fo
some of the victorious powers. Bb
if that nation had been prepare
for war the story might have bee
different Another argument for fa
reduction at armaments, for, ag
nation will hesitate about jumpin
into *, conflict unless it feifo the
it te fully prepared to meet the
emergency.
i -Li
I:’ =
| Im im
,, to absorb-X
Mgrcleed over such things as Anuric an adherence
’ isTfoe World Court or the existence of child labor
Ilf wit enlightened day. The queer thing about most
bf 'the'efafo Comment is that obviously it is based
E theory • rather than practical observation. Men
KyjMME.’fot return of mud-scooping, duxt-stirriag
K hfarts when as a matter of feet, a great majority
KI sreiwvmen are wearing long dresses only on formal,
N» wfobdr oefofoms. Outdoors, In offices, driving their
pr CSffS, shopping, they are wearing skirts only slightly
loifayr tnafafa recent years. Two to four inches
bmow the knee is the average range in garment
Ifagtha for SMMt daytime activities from housework
tb gait. If the trailing skirts are worn for teas,
faBNngr; wadding aad opera, why deplore?
6 barptlese and, add variety to the view,
vieot fomplalners about the new styles are
worried more about what they expect to
la the way of extremely long skirts than
•“* ’faey sow-now. They believe thkt the
I eontfauejto swing toward the fare
Rtting itbat .a pendulum, if it’s any
Nowv
. ........
la ^WASHINGTON '
^FanLETTER
rM V • By RODNfTt BUTCHER -
» ♦ -i NEA Service Writer ___
WASHINGTON, Dec. 28.—Somehow a few mark-
ed exceptions to a general condition have given
many persons the idea that most Indians are rolling
in wealth. As a i 1 *
dians at 82 federal agencies, about
have money and the other 95 per cent are very poor.
About 90 per cent suffer from lack of sufficient
food.
*7cu, v* v«vub*aiius vi >nu«*iw, aiw
starvation, are barely keeping alive, ii
by some of the Indian Bureu offlclali
to solve the Z_ ' ' ~ "
where President Coolidge spol
tures with some of the noble
faring almost beyond description in
Many Indians are able to raise t-_._
through the wont months, but those on some res-
ervation* must contend hopeleealy against barren
plains or parched desert.-*—-—-- '-m-
•- Only fae Osages Are Rieh
- -
to tore- known aa-foe ri
thanks to tte d^ , , .
time oil leases and royalties were bringing as high
as ^13,000 a year to every Osage man, woman and
: Officially, there ar« two elassea of Oaage Indians
—the competent and the incompetent. When an In-
dian gets to attain a certain degree bf education
and intelligence the Indian Bureau declares him
competent to administer his own- affairs. In the
care of other Indians who have money, the Indian
agent turns the money over to each one as he thinks
advisable.
In every community where the Indians have had
any money, sharpers have preyed upon them, and
this has been especially true with the Osages of
Oklahoma. The Osages used to live in Kansas. They
sold their land there in the nineties and the money
was used to buy cheaper land in Oklahoma. They
,stillown tfaa. land as a tribe ar"* ** '
lias been divided equally among them.
t Thus they had no t*_r: I. ,
fortunes which a few Indians gained by having
their own allotments of land—as in the case of
Jackson. Barnett, who was forced to take 160 acres
of seemingly worthless land after he had refused
valuable 160 acres fa the werfd.
the money of the t_
dians, but it has been , ,
ture of state and federal authority. The state courts
there appoint guardians for Indiana and tho Indian
agents have to listen to the guardians'who advise
as to how money shall be turned over to their wards.
There is ne federal eheck on what the guardians
do with the money when they get it ana some of
them Have done everything with it except turn it
The high point
I
’ ■ n
' Room
> v*
’.A.
“Knowledge which is acquired Un-
der compulsion." said Plato, "has
no hold on the mind."
That would seem so elementary a
truth, and a fact too readily dis-
coverable. th£t it would appear any-
body but a lunatic ought to realize
it.
Yet apparently the human race
has not realized it to now.
It is true that there are certain
primary facts and accomplishments
which it is almost necessary for ev-
ery living person to know. Every-
body. for example, should be able to
read and write and do enough ordi-
nary addition and subtraction to
make change. Otherwise they would
be a nuisance to society.
But beyond that, nobody can have
knowledge pouttded into them with
a club, if they Are not Interested,
they will not learn. They will mem-
orise enough for the moment to es-
cape aa much of the unpleasant
consequences of failure as possible,
and then promptly forget it all.
phrase meaning to draw out—not
“Education” comes from a Latin
to pour in.
Yet the number of potential phy-
sicians that are ruined in chlldfaxxl
by being forced to pour over a book
of mathematics until they come to
hate the very thought of any kind
of study, and the number of gtrls
who might hart made very good
nurses if they had not been com-
pelled to waste their time pounding
dutifully.away At a piano—the «mn-
ber of these wasted youthful ener-
of “Five and Ten.”
x Borah to "fall” most of Xhe time,
and ha baa been referred "fa as foe
INSURANCE 3 <
1 V (
stotent secretary, Joseph P. Ootton,
M “Uncle Joe.” , >4! - .
Secretary Davis is known far and
.foe Ltttia,Black GlockfoM .wide aa “Jimmy.” The handsome
time to leave, go foe BDfo and cordial assistant secretary of
—-. BaWM Ig M the navy. Ernest L, Jalpdfa la stUl
John and Rfoy ryfwrnd to aa “Oommodork." fast
"l far he was at home in New Orleans.
TW: rtoef of staff of the
General Bununerall. to known
cloee associates as “Bitting I
’ . > tpq napm. of his telephone ext
mm in .France during the world for.
W And at coune the secretary of
the treasury to “Andy” Mellon and
sr of the house of repre-
"Nlck” Longworth.
“HI” AND “BATE” J e
* In the senate, nicknames are
many and varied. - < |
Portly Hiram Johnson tokoown
to his colleagues as "HL" Reed of
Pennsylvania Is never anytlfafa but
“DiSS’V-rT? - r . . 4 |
One would almost have difficulty
if “Jim” Watson were refesMd to
as James, as they would if "Tsm"
Heflin wore ever called Thomaal •
Oote Blease brought hto South
Carolina soubriquet of *iCDtoy” to
Washington and to so known, white
“Doc" Copeland owes UM to fas
fast, that he to the only physMaa
in the senate. ” * i.
La Follette to called “Little Bpb,”
and his prohibition MSMty has
Si.00
.60
. .... A»
in*TexaT*Oklahoma and New Mexico.
JTLr ................•»«
tt* flSfa^iSrSS^.) -”7.:..............................- ■“
fosse, mon the ■ <m-*4mp<w> — -
NOVICE TO VUE PUBLIC
aav erruneofa reflection '*P<>n ‘he character, repu-
—7 IrfMvl nmT individual or corpora-
imdf|pgpfocu<l upon betnx called U> the
ptm* la exclusively entitled to th*-
bHceiion of all news dUpatchoa cre«llt^
rtherwloe credited te this paper and also
I published h'Ti-ln
iNrTBXAS, DECEMBER 28, p29
ikrefo MiBKF.T OPENS IN TEXAS
— ’ cities boast of their
& aUifalg markets, but Sterling City has a
Bp fofaEO dtatteetion as being the only Texas city
L 4’1 fodfai take a-- ovreire market. The winter snake mar-
’/*■ ■< c task eoooon opened a few days ago when a local
LX iwhor gold gfaht monster rattlesnakes to a local
* physician who aMM^s 'them to San Antonio where
fagy..are used in the preparation of ant;-venom for
J hibernah- in the cold months and
AS nring approaches snake hunting parties locate
4mte **»d capture the snakes while still lethargic
W ftlfoh . W- _____
. m DBFKNSE QF MOTION PICTURES
Da 'B.:JBaAm Cadman, whose radio talks are
tasted all over the country, has come to the defense
s' of motion pictures. This widely heard minister be-
KETBtete that most motion pictures are good, and
only a small pateentage can be termed “bad”. Those
mintotors who say that all motion pictures are bad
•gaH that Christians should not patronite the movies
^Htetefok'kfar* .sfast t^hey are talking about, Dr. C»d-
^^HHfofoSfa-Ifafa fa tha type of criticism that does ,
HnOffalulpit the .moat harm, he adds.
bL“ -<Ulfo aa a whole, motion pictures are on a much
jESi. |d^MA|SfaH plane than the average run of cur-
fafo^itoridure. It is true that some motion pictures
fafalif incite some peop'e to commit sins, but pic-
j fawn ot this type arc comparatively few and are
aagllgible in lorte when compared with the dozens
afass films which leave a stronger moral
j’ tkxn the average minister can preach.
.. —,p.——- —-----
B ' i.,-7.|BWITBi;N' CENTS A MEAL
. fowwatean tennis a meal isn't a very great sum
to Tyly toed for a full grown man, especially >
gy 'takt-fafo-do- fao-avsBago eoat ,of food in
;|fate«d.8tatea Amy, according to Major Gfn-
iffaipk-B. Cboatham, quartermaster general.
P ——__1 1- . 2 — . - A q. A1, ■ A ■ ■ ■■■« —
Pof course, MxfofofiaoidiMB^BiIklit make----
B Comments on hearing this, but judging from
i fiyoyto, American soldiers are anything but
tefed, ev^en on 51 cents a day. \
loot American housewives fefa that they are
famfaal when-they feed lire family at a uost of
Mita B>foX*n each day. In some large families,
peially those on farms, the cokt of meals drops
for low, but in the eity, where r.ntell families
I Expensive tastes are the rule, the cast per meal
Jlfoortsr of the fam ty mounts far cbove the
of the army meals. , ,
BlJlLDING UP. THE TEXAS FISH INDlMRY
jltetle by. little, Toxas gulf fisheries arc growing
Ware widening their territory. Not many years
|q> Texas fish were sold mostly te the-cities and
NVBB near the sea coast, but with improvement
t faqthods of refrigeration and - transportation,
l£s all over the Southwest are the logical mar-
for, Texas fisheries. The State Game, Fish and
JfoOT Commission has been laying pldns to pro-
M foe Texas fish industry from wasteful fishing
k^hods and to encourage th.* propagation of fish
i^nland, foters.
Mfo fame is >n indication that Federal aid for
kf Texas fisheries might bo forthcoming if Texas
bfara enough interest in a bill recently introduced
kjpbfoiasn- by Representative W. H.’ White, chair-
3b of foe federal committee cn merchant marine
o£ flfai<riep.,llis bill would provide-$3,909,000 for
fa expansion of the bureau of fisheries, and ap-
fofonataiy >100,000 of this amount would be spent
rXtexaa. About >75,000 wouid be spent for an ex-
fofoootal fishing laboratory and about >35,000 for
stash cultural tub-station in West Texas.
*M».. NBA OwvtoW IM) i
iiw.h —"fair n<!ii»min iita .M.'ere* i U
RESOLVE :
/X-1
v 'T
r—jfo-h -
- i
■afa”’'
■■
’ Some o( the West Texas
When you try all tho m
, Jry the boot—
EVEJUUdit
RADIO SETS
-1
Denton
Typewriter
Exchange
Ii.
<V.-h»364WW$<
— ------fa—,____leiaout
I I 41 '
tfte fata' as-M. I»uur
Dayix>91s_
By MERBERT FtUMMW,. In ttto house of j
Yeafiaon ZX^sewwAia* A he a M
WASHINGTON. Dec. M—Tfce
junior senator from Pronsyivanto—
* Joseph R. Onindy—to dow “Oid Joe”
> on capitol bin. and he will be re-
y ferred to M “Old Joe” — gjrte he
fa fo
min-
fofco
.V. ' ' ' • >1
Contemporary I bought
SKIRT LENGTHS
j and short of wonVcn’s *ty Igs continues
peraons Who might more profitably be
the existence of child labor
, do the influential and the inaig-
nificant receive t different treatment, but in almost
. 1 every wi “
When
a shoestring, he is t
than Insignificant, who ea
of shoes, when Influential
to buy a wrap of p " v
any are to be shown,
the istreet, he receives a;
Influentiaf patronises a restaurant, he gets the bes£
■" registers at a
; _ __ dationa . at the
same money. Even the janitor shows deference to
the other side
res are gentle in
And is it wrong that there should be marked
.1*^1 lltl.__2_. ’ "___l'_* „/ — _ ' ifani-
ficant? I say, no. I think there should be a diatlnc-
.a • . • T • .«*«.••• * a las _
ig and
>f that
matter of fact, among 337,900 In-
sral agencies, about five per cent
and the other 95
per cent suffer
Tens of thousands of Indians, always close to
it is admitted
Is now trying
problem. On the Pine Ridge reservation
ident Coolidge spoke and posed for pic-
tures with some of the noble rod men there is suf-
>tion in the winter.
_j crops to tide them
%*n
pH, production on the Osage
is now on the decline, in the fndian Bureau’s opin-
ion. Last year, however* 16,629,009 barrels <fare
• xv Osages re-
deferred bonus
-------rel
payments of
, w . .. .. ... ... - tar-f1
INFUJEHTUl. ASP IMStOMBW** .
vigorously denied—that thia country
of law: Ofi» for the fafaT Mfi bfo fat
believe the United States >fop»0
L —XV— E-Z *1- fart > do
law has different applicatidBB—-
believe that
P»V
cant.
teoWLADTBIfattrY
The Rrxrw 1*4/ fafa » busy sand-
pr. aads
hat, cam«. ___
ike could not fay rough attention
"^hfatel toe Brews r~inngT
' The assertion is emphatically made from time to
tlms sWkl M' i“
has two kinds t —-
the poor. ’ . . Ut .
I do not I—~ . w.
for the rich and another for the poor; ,Wt A. do
* “ 2. C!—i our law has different r
for the influential, and W»e for
Not only in law
----walk of life.
t Influential goes into a store to purchase
treated with mqre Consideration
enters to purehase a pair
■L1^0*8 to the ti<ket
’hen Influential walks down
the street, he receives special consideration from
all who know him—including tho traffic cops. When
JTm Aaa^vmA ■ uamfiwMvealmtehw aa *•« Iva srsat’a taltfo IwMlt
seat and the best service. When he
hotel, he obtains the beat accommo
same money. Eveh th_ J——------------
Influential. Bankers greet him cordially. And if he
gets into law, attorneys on the other side go easy
about attacking him. Judges are gentle in charging
the jury about him.
'r_— L :■/ _____ ::_____
distinction between the influential and the insigni
flcant? I say, no. I think there should be a diatini
tion. Is that undemocratic? I think not. I believe
there is a reason why one man has standlni
another none. I think divine law is back oi
condition.
Certainly in the hereafter, according to our re-
ligious teachers, there will be greater discrimina-
tion between two classes than is shown here.
If a man is insignificant in this world, it usually
is his own fault; therefore, there should be some
urge to impel him to get himself out of the insig-
nificant grade—to make something of himself. If
there were no advantage in being significant, then
one might as well drift along and be Insignificant
—it’s easier.
It is not necessary for a man to be rich to be
influential. Some of our poorest men have wielded
the greatest influence.
Any man who will earnestly set about living his
life right, doing his share toward the welfare of
his fellows, making himself worthy of the respect
of hie tommupity, will receive preferred treatment
—and that, I contend, ie ae it should be.
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 117, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 28, 1929, newspaper, December 28, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348400/m1/2/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.