Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 51, Ed. 1 Monday, October 13, 1930 Page: 2 of 8
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DENTON. TEXAS, RECORD-CHKONICLE. MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1030
FAUE.TWO
, Human Interest Editorials
F
By WICKES WAMBOLDT
!
afternoon
MM
A.
t
e
Adhoclation.
large school must often seem irk-
£
state of mini
-1
i o
There is a reason tor the abundance of sentiment
When your child's school seems
what you
can to
mistakes do
which have ho place in the class
New Mexico.
ferramfrom
e
193
uc
IES
0"
1/
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r ■
11
one
w-ghg.4
4
HOW'S yau
H E ALTH
13.—Red
grand old party take the blame for
eliminate many delays.
“Oh, where are we now?" asked
untoward occurrencea? Undoubted-
—2
ly some of the opponents of the
and he is
Atrophic Rhinitis
"well, he must be pretty proud
ratively
nose; and the term Atrophic implies
erdestryed-inthais-inflammatory
Phone 710 Phone
1
pect.
. i
-11-
N
2
Amendment ridding himself of the dismal drawback
2
p
zesult is that as the air passes thru .
bel
lent
—
BARBS
"L
w
mimde
4
! !6,54((4
i
— years ago
s
« I
1'1
t H
d
--
and
*
ta
"s
I
eandeascOoldShenFt
K
»
. FIRE PREVENTION '
- —
- ’
penalised. Waxahachie Light.
I -
I
u,
nau .
2
2NNA
TP
L
yi
I
V.
9
I
I
blame. Prohibition may be re-
sponsible. or, maybe. Moscow is
iroye
rbor
find themselves in perfect accord.
Group regulations necessary in a
Why not lay. It on to the Rcpubll-
cans. This political party has al-
KING’S
Radio Shop
“Mother McCree" or "That Wonderful Mother of
Mine."
Chairman Alexander Legge
the federal farm board is
ditiqn for seeding to fall-sown
grain. Some wheat had already
iy
ol
Now that wine making is de-
clared to be within the law, many
I
■
room- •‘y
At such times
MOST
SUITABLE?
Ta
—4
FA
I
■ta
have full time hea lth commission-
Lzs. ____ a uvra-m-m:
I
magic power of being able to turn
the time backward, or rorward, had
turned the time back this evening.
"But not nearly so far back as
when we were seeing some of those
■fleven -Wenders of the World," he
h—
9 fo
ZchAMawYank
thing over on her.... -Su di _
Pennayivania gave Moover 2000,000 votes to Smit
1,000,000 and in 1926 gave John 8 Fisher 1,100.!
Bateau of di
s and Unwed
-
rerrttttfthj**
u a. ■. .;.u . .2 2 1 1
A
process.
The normal mucous membranes
cf the nose are constantly bathed
■ .. a .
aaryzam
Dr. Ugo Galdston Academ 0 Modictme
- DRY CATARRH -
to think that his father discovered
America," John said. •
9-
t
eike bre?
- V
Eduadb,
■
It
153
3 E
0
BACKING THE SCHOOL
It is seldom.that home and school
=
of the individual child. ~ .(
Teachers are not always as wise
and skillful as the formulations in
the school announcement lead one to
Rhinitis means an inflammation
of the mucous membranes of the
Pegey,
“Not yet?"
"He’ll never know it, because you
see during those days Columbus
-sa complex that periodical changes of administration
cause needless expense to taxpayers. -
%3*6
his school may not.be al-
thengntup to SIBi' to
cil are in e heated controversy as to who is to pay
. ihe insurance promiums on the public school build-
ings. which expired a few days ago
J. A Minnis Fridav was showing some unusually
large and thin-shelled pecans off some trees at his,
home in North Denton, which he planted several
5853"*
/,4970
c3• nOV2
head doggedly and says, "Nothing doing. Dm in this
and I’m going to see it through "
We do not give the Old Man enough credit for do-
ing what he does
3
Contemporary Thought
TUITION LAW IS UNJUST
Now the schook doors have swung open again for a
nin-nionth term,thousane ef Texas pureuts aare
wondering’ why it is that it iarstin ncessary for
them to pay a full year’s tuition on children who
lack but a month or so of being past the age limit.
Is America thel land of opportumtty -where every-
one is free and equal and accorded the same consid-
eration? No, it U wH true, the school tuition law is
unust and discriminatory.
The Legislature has changed the statute, permit-
go II
- . ’
With the
Exchanges
By L. A. M.
-----1--------e—
Aurora borealis is interferring
W. T. BAILEY
over First State Bank
tained witness that he was right-
eous, God testifying of his gits;
and by it he being dead yet speak-
<th— Heb 11:4.
• • •
Folks who aaw little hope for
entertainment on the boards this
season, failed apparently to take
backgammon into account.
October has been designated as
National Doughnut Month. To
make the country further con-
scious of the hole It Is In?
• • •
A baby less than a year old.
more important, lack of adjustment
IB-
SUNDOW
-S
and other craft used in rlway ser-
vice.
Up to now the crews at either
end of the often mile-Jong freizhta .
have had difficultics in exchanging
important information and signala
edcanew continent and hls
son Diego, never knew that
MT 4$—1+
—sa--
,.. Promenade
—
father was the great discoverer of
America."
“What a pity!" said John. "Hen-
it he knew how he could_boa»t to
the other boys about his dad.
“Why he could say. ,
"My father discovered a new con-
tnent and I guess none of your
fathers could do that
"What a pity he never knew it!"
Tomrrow- Wonder Four."
Ita MtSMIJI I H>>i »•»♦♦♦
$ HBLB THOUGHT FOB •
0 . TODAY
Dry catarrh is an erroneous and
miseading name for the condition
wrhich is technically designated as
—4
A.3
This Week and every week.
Eliminate unnecessary fire
hazards and carry adequate
1
1.
I •> I
insurance protection. ,
Chinese Pirates
. Hold 1 p Steamer
- of ability who would give up their business in order
—t devote their entire time to city affairs for a com-
■- paratfvely small salary. Under the charter change
. nuthorized by Dallas voters, the city council will zive
only a part of their time to city affairs, with the bulk
of the rosiXiiialblllty resting open the city manager
- With this arrangement. It is expected that outstand -
ing and rivic spirited eDwsens will agree to hold city
. ofies.
Faith and Works—By faith Al
offered unto Ood a more excelle
sacrifice than Cain, by which he ob-
the nose serves a number of fur
poses .One among these is to mois-
ten the air passing through the nose
on the way to the lungs
In so-alled dry catarrah thers.
Is a substantial decrease in the
amount of fluid secreted by the
mucous membranes. The nose is rel-
atively dry and it is frequently clog-
ged with a thick pelly-Ike tmucoidr
.substance.
In Atrophic Rinttis there is not
enough moisture secreted and the
• DENTON, TEXAS, OCTOBER 13, 1930
" NEW FORM OF GOVERNMENT FOR DALLAS
« : Dallas voters Friday indicated that they wanted a
’ new form of government, with an appointed city man-
ager instead of an elected mayor, In expressing this
preference, Dallas citizens have fallen in line with.
. “ the progressive movement in city management which-
-3 . already has proved succesatulia number of other
2 large cities.
City governments are rapidly being considered as
great business organizations by citizens, who wish to
n see the government administered along the same lines
—# that a -private- -busmess is run. This is particularly
j true with large city government# which have become
N ’ /
j
I Today, the American Railway As-
sociation announce that—several
years of experimental work have
yielded suitable apparatus for main-
taining practical, constant commu-
nication between caboose and loco-
he maUng a good many
will relieve
w
' \ it
network that has not been proper-
ly conntructea. gave the extra cost
by calling
FRANK. B. HODGES
Phone 1009-W.
M. A. Gay’s Tin Shop
219 W. Oak St.
• "h ,—.-0
especially in bad weather or on
— > radio sets are expected
notoniy to inerease- safety but lo
Illinois went for Hoover by 450.000 and gave snator .
Glenn a majority of about 275.000. The Illinois Aght (
looks like a horse race, but Demcorats here are even ■
more confident of electing J Hamilton Lewis over
Mrs:‘Ruth Hanna McCormick than of electing Bulk-
ley in Ohio Mrs. McCormick's worst worry concerns
the number of dry Republican votes-the Anti-Saloon
League can pull to its independent candidate Ure.
Lottie O'Neill Her next greatest concern is the ques- l
tion of how many voters oppose the idea of having 1
a woman senator and how many are opposed to Mrs. I
McCormick in particular. I
in Washington. Mrs McCormick has lost much,
sympathy because she employed detectives to shadow
Chairman Nye of the Senate primary investigating
committee and then boldly defied Nye to do somen
thing about it. Illinois voters, however, may regard
her as just a spunky little gal from home who isn't I
letting a bunch of senatorial smart-alecks put any-1
"No ism tai 06ew miama
Ktaly’a greatest offenslve weap-
on, m far as we can discern at
this distance, to the rapid fireline
of its premier. , r
(Copyright, 1930, NBA Servloe, Ine)
Chicago "has a department store
for every 78,958 persons in the city
Such an attitude on the part of a
child is sure to reflect itsek in poqr t
Work and. what is probably much
guAIWE4,
3TH WHr-
?
The Williams Store
" * -------------
■ays a news item, to being trained
for the ring in Hull, England.
Already licked and rocked to
sleep, bo's doubtless off to a fine
start . . . WHAT GIFT
California boasts that ths aver- )
age production of one of its oil ,
wells is 10 times as great as that
of a well in other stalos. But na-
tives of California, we’ve learned,
gush .with the same facility. -
prAd.
ThHe never khew he had ciscover-
nane
-
-28
Call 191. Smoot-Curtis Bldg.
The Nona Mae Beauty Shop
Experienced < >perators
S
- 1
man maMer at Deasoa.
fleeing Niagara and bearing the roar thereof i8now,
1 within the reach evan of a Scotchman The roar of
the falls was broadcast the other dy arid a native. . .
of the land at heather bought a picture posteard of Phene96, -
the falls for a penny and listened In -Leonard Oraph- ' W T
Mnta dou
60%
+me
POOR OLD DAD
On the second Sunday of last June this country
celebrated Father's Day There wasn’t much cel-
ebrating done—but the old man did have his day.
It is evident tt the country thinks he ris entitled
to his day. Even every dog s supposed to have his
day—though it may not be much of a day. My preach-
er never opened his head, about Father's Day on
Father’s Day. . .. n-t
But on the second Sunday in May the whole na-
tion turned out to hqnor the mother*. The news-
counties in Georgia, 33'
In their taed of jelly-like masses'
encourages the multiplication of I
the germs that enter the nose with |
the air we breathe. —4--------
The result is that the nose and'
‘ne air spaces (sinuses) which open I
into it .are more subject to infec- ,
ion '
Tomorrow.—Catarrhal Deafness. T
Widespread interest in the New York gubernatorial i
.ront^j^due both to the parnaprohthition has been
the Republicans happen to win, Die Democrats of
the country will have to start looking for a 1933 pres-
idential candidate with a grand Eree-Tor-all in pros-
votes to his Democratia oppon fit's 306,900 in the
face of such majorities and the state's well known
rock-ribbed Republicanism. it to almost impossible to
imagine that Mr. Hemphill, the Democratic candi-
date. will be defeating Gifford Pinchot for the gov-
ernorship. Nevertheless, the strong Republican Vare
machine is said to be combating with the wets against
Pinchot and there will be nosuth G O. P. majorities
this year in the gubernatorial fight. ._________j
Bustnem and maitonel omce.............
Caroulaton Departmnt-.........—.......
«LHSCBOMrioar maria
Daily
□ns year (la .....................—...
sEnomnzbzyemajzndvnaonhans........
•n —*dSsfcs
—r
11 ,
e ~
The weather may have been a little warm in spots |
last week, but as far as we know nobody paid out a
lot of money on froze tripes, like they were doing
last winter —Clarkaville Times ' * 2 r " •
■ "--t—■— ---pm—--—
fl
been sown. More will now be
seeded as soon as settled weatha
> JK gets the ground in proper con-
diton for running the harrow
and the drill.—McKinney Cour-
ler-Gazette.—---
the feed. situation
WILL BE
will probably endeavor to impi
their port by a system of a
development.
- The only right thing to to pay until the child to 7.
Z then quit Here’s a chance for theLegislature, school
boards-or somebody to do apmething really worth
" while M parents who do not deserve thus to be
WASHINGTON. Oct.
flags and swinging lanterns
er need be relied upon to i
Ohio reports a feeling that Robert J. Bulk lev. wet
Democrat, will defeat Senator Roscoe McCulloch, the
dry Republicap. Republicans in those cities are often
more wet than Republleen Bulkley has been win-
ning the straw votes. McCulloch apparently will
have to depend on large majorities from the smaller
communities, strongholds of the Anti-Saloon League.
Despite th? confidence of Democrats and wets in a
Bulkley vietory, however. It is well to remember the
hard cold facts that Hoover carried the state over
Smith in 1928, by a majority of more than 750,900
and that Senator Fess defeated his Democratic oppo-
nent that year by about 500.000.
Illinois is Puzzle
n—soumtn
If you need tin work of
any kind
F5 camPaate STXrnoV Re come our for tne fepeud or the Bhgnteentnsood winter grain pastureage which
with uttle or no reference to campaign planks, while
outspoken critteisms dohisherestoadjusthimselttte it
_______ ... ---- --H
thick jelly-like mucus found in the I
rAal passages. 4
In the more aggravated types of
dry catarrh, crusts- forms in the
nose. ,
The absence of the normal sage-.
tiona of Lnc nose and the presence
There’s one for every oc-
casiom. We’ll giadiy help
you make your selection .
W. L. Yarbrough
ace- JEWELER. .
He thinks of the luxurious, langorous beauty of the
South Seas and of its belles H thinks of freedom
of the tilings he craves to do -of all the fun he could
m mhecnme«rbellas, i aas adlicun to Aind-men haxnecah WwST'w. »«»»».
ness!” But Father doesn’t dusk. He shakes his
authority or to personal irritations they concern hig., . _ .. - i
which have ho place in the class Meanwhile let your Child feel that
MB R.McDONALD.------
A •• FOWMB---------
Daily BMM at ma Wert
with radio again this season.
Some government official should *
be called on to resign for not
abating this nuisance. Perhaps,
0.
OF JEWELRY
th i
“Oh, but he doesn't know it," the -.------- . - -
LW. WMV C»> UM Wd hat mucous membranes are wasted
eaE
— 2S
622
CONCRETE ENGINEERING
is a actence that cannot bo manter-
edin a few days Remember it is ex-
pensive to experiment. We have calls
-1 satd. r -*----- --------
ways claimed credit for everything And we’ve more to see, haven I
good, even for whatever ray of hope we?" asked John.
that to even now penetrating trig, ."Yes, indeed, going to see
bustness gloom, .so why shouldn't the pa tomt’twmxenin: •he -
Quite, evidently they are a re- mistakes do what you (— ,
sponse to hr own need to show her straighten things out in so far as
~ ----- le
tadK m
expect, -h
Frequently Situations arise when!
it must be fairly obvious to even a to wht constitutes one of the rea
____________________________________ rather undiscerning parent that ties of his world. '
on Mothers Day and the lack of it on Fathers Day teacher’s discipllnary tactichavet"“**
’ -
didate anyway, and the recent disclosures of graftwhich resulted in one of the finest
ampng Tammany leadersip New York have provided seasons in the ground. It is
him with a neat issue because Tammany is such an I ' 2.112 .
important part of the New York Democracy. | almost certain that, there will be
no total- curves. The
' —TOr almost invariably Mother does so mueh more
for us than Father.
But let us look at this question from another ingle:
Does Mother in ralitsideserve as much credit tar
what she does as does Father for what he does?
- -It is’Mother’s instinct to be a mother. Her whole
being yearns to care for her children, to protect them,
tonurture’the, to improve them The hardest thing
she could do would be to neglect then. The most
exorutlating pain she could suffer would be to be de-
prived of them. The mother instinct is as natural
to Mother as the desire to eat, to breathe, to live.
But what about Father?
Father is sometimes sick of his job before the sec-
ond one of us comes along—or perhaps-before the.
first. Children worry him and weary him. Some-
times he is sick and tired of Mother, too—with good
reason; and sometimes he is keenly jealous of his
children because Mother thinks so much more of them
than she does of him. .
Day after day Father gets up worn and exhausted,
leaves a house full of squalling young ones and scold-
ing woman, works all day like a horse, and comes
back to a house fall of squalling young ones and
scolding woman.
He keeps that up year after year, when every im-
pulse in him cries out to quit the whole busmess and
beat it. He reads of the attractiveness of Florida, of
California, of the glories of Western North Carolina.
and methods are being criticised at
_ home naturally sends she children
some and unreasonable to the parentto-school in.q.rebelliaus or superior
id which will make for
all sorts of new causes of (piction. ,
of being a dry or straddling candidate in a distinctly throughout the state especially in
dpeendent candidate who will out into the upstate feed was produced because of the
O O. P. vote. extreme drought. The soaking rains
---_ , n The Tammany Handicar. at the beginning of a winter also
Roosevelt, now regarded as the proable presidential • •
nominee in 1932, finds himself faced -with the factmean that there will he sutticient
that Tammany votes are a requisite for victory but I season in the ground to bring up
that Tammany politics is his main handicap. .Be I early spring crops even with little'
” musttakeafirm stand against Tammany eorruptin additionar rain. Farmers are feeling
“nHomgrArktsapena mueh mor hopeful, ana meurmore
on many wet Republican votes as he and Al Smith optimistic outlook adll have a bene-
have In. the past, ift la fortunate, hoyever, in the effect on conditions in gen-
tact that selelom get excited, about corruption OTal in this state,
and the odds seem to remain somewhat in his favor.
Everyone who has been out in the large cities of
ywhich make our chileren fully aware
of our feelings.
-gH6.--27/.
Eeeh 1........Roode-Von
Wie Red .......Nightingale
papers were full of it. Sermons were full of it. You
couldn’t turn on the radio* without running into
Governor Franklin D Roosevelt is standing for rp- .
election, opposed by U. S. District Attorney Charles The agricultural outlook has been
H. Tuttle of New York City. Tuttle is a strong can-1 bettered greatly by the soaking rains.
hipguards, seized four guards nd _______
thirty passengers, and escaped with r."*
$9,000 loot. i !64ji
Bndit ashore cooperated by Kir- l ;U2
ing on the shin while the holdup was
dio in the big switching yards where
cars are made up into trains They
are going further now, wMy-
ing the possibilities of using shrt
wave rets in New York habor he-
tween shore stations and tug boats
A Real Radio
RCA
RADIOLA
Come see the model that
mets your-needs.
taking place.
i-4 nij11 । ~i--------
The sixth Michigan is the state’s
largest congressional district.. Much
>f it is in Detroit. l
sr64
mmsdl.
We Know How.”
engineer and conductor of a freight
train in communication. Short wave
7 ractiots ready to rake over the job
thousht he naddlscovered a)inzundrmashecdretohsuo-wtdb
3-1 that it continually flows back into
Uttle the throat and to swallowedwith
Mis saliva . -
The fluid normally secreted by
Denton Record^hronidfii
nndono-canomoa OOMFAW^ DW,
U R: EOWM--agngpa
children nd its un-American, to not right, is not
jus, contrary to the,, provisions of free government
mM phasrrunetong"eatpn, until the child to-7.
n mthe asstcaUon's exports hava every qny so zepatr
found it practicable also to ue ra-
•2
44,
MQ. 1
■\ . ......
y -m K-ode em--a
yiep
12: -
L :
I
SELEGWURCKHDDATES
HINSPECT THE ISSUES!
cerurmeveresov
- MLT--- 1
____________ PeggYaml—:..
■ s ly some of the opponents of the The scene had changed and they .
WASHINGTON
MFTTFR wi want to blame prohibition, but ^2 name s Diego,- whispered
By XeY BUTCHER —---rensondnirshgonemn £ » caumbu "
NEA Service Writer L shoulder the responsibility on the1’ "ual mnt he nrttnd
• Tezns.
4ft wage born m the spring or summer they go to school i
— »w On the other hand the lather has the same
7 number of Aids, mate! 9100. or one-hairthenalaty.
2 nud because the children were bore in the fall he
£■ mst pey all the year, even though they lack by a
* few Weeks We know, for we have paid >72 on two
z
The fact that school authorities -
yTT * venneminarmomee
. , I GOTHAM GOLD STRIPE FASHION WEEK
thenose it tends to dry out the l, "nm
October 11th- 18th
By Mary Graham Bonner
t * LITTLE DIEGO
The Little-Black Clock, with his
....... . Brownleaf
the cause of it a l —Dallas
Times Herald. -
8^9^^} OShzecherShincs
, held.up the SSteahier sulnamhoi on Of 1 ’’
the West River, skilled two pl the
•K8ecm
A& AgtRe
2 Ahg P 3m"3-* , 624 oaTihrzea
/I\
There, a Gotham Gold Stripe Stockins
Shade for Everything!
I your Cottum’t Your Stoclins thould
Blaek I ps,1, T,.gI
Agkinn. i •>•••••••• M“VN iwpe
Talks 1b .
parents 8-J
By Alice Judson Peale
WASHINGTON, Oct. 13.—Strange things have been party in power.
happening in the Election campaigns, giving rise to ■ IJ
such ordinarily freakish thoughts that a <tepublican [ A splendid, soaking, slow-
poveiuA can be elected in islw tuil teal dial faffing rBhi-nail coverwi comn
ocratic senators can be elected in Ohio and Illinois— 1 County aike a blanket As a re-
with possibly a Democratic governor in Pennsylvania, sult,‘land is plaed in ideal con-
Perhaps none of these things will come to pass. but1 - - -
it takes such possibilities to pep up a campaign.
aar
t, ’"N ’ -t
68 Ehsi'
•—eSS
ana
Ben
' A0“N0i
he points out pridefully his Texas-made suit, shoes
made in Texas of Texas cow hides and his Texas-
made hat. ‘ .
— U a regrettable that a man of Col. Talbot’s type
eant be-mainteined-indefinitely on a speaking sched-
ule to remind Texans to use Texas products. Per-
haps if Col. Talbot could change his political afTilia-
tiona. Democrats would recognise his ability, as have
-------the Republicans, and his chances of being elected
- would be COMIdsrahty greater. - E---------------
------o-------
• -- n
(
sumel-e ------------- uj-.-j.O4I '
-
—
e*22
EK [
\' -i
’ ■ /I
k
Ooe year (in advance) ......................... 4140
Thre. mouth, (irijivance).....--------- 49
Noriom TO tu PUBLIC a
Any erroneous reflection upon the charncter, repu-
sation or standing of any Ann, individual or oorpora-
won Win be gladly corrected upon being called to tbe
publishers’ attention
5 ,
I . 302320282ns '
V rcLEPaoNE. 366 iL
a . sl
19 Years Ago Today—-
(From Record-Chronicle. Oct. 13. 1930)
- - Several good-sized land deals have been closed by
2 the Denton Trust Company this week
3 Hon-Champclark former speaker of the national
2 House of Representatives and pssfble Democratic
E presidential nominee, will lecture at the Normal Col-
‘ E lege auditorium Monday afternoon as one of the
lyceum numbers
At the present lime the tehool board and city coun-
E Ung 6-year-olda to .attend instead, of 7 without iui-
• , tio, but the same identical condition obtains Those
2 who were born a day before the deadline get all the
S^~ advantege ef free school; those a day after must
I . t POne thing we want to know is whether it‘s true
kar = Dallasites pay until a child reaches the age, then
- u that's so no,one can kick for there must
■Fl ; . be a starting date,
Z Take two tamilies living side by side One father
* lias-three children, so has the other.. The first man
makes 9200 a month and because his boys and girls
2 ’ r ’ ------- ' 1 fl-'..----------
’ J t ALL FOR TEXAS. '
2 op. William E Talbot. Republican nominee for goV-
* ernor oLTexas, is making a vigorous campaign. uni-
7 que and outstanding among political speaking cam-
I—.S cpaigns. In the first place, he is dwelling very uttle
- - on his qualifications for governor, and instead, is urg-
—J—mggrexnns.totuyTexas-made produeta
—-L —rio Republican nominee will not, get very far in
• ids political race, but he will go far in the estimation
- -ot Texas ctizens, especially those who realise the
2 necessity of building up Texas from the inside. It
j 2 hasn't been the custom ih the past, with only a few
*. ’ excspiots, forBepuzHean.pomkeces for govgrnorJP
t -Z Texast make a speakmg'Clhnmyn. Now that Col.
* . ‘Talbot has taken he stump for his party and is
[ 5 seeking votes it is. commendable, that he is devoting
f * a large portion of his efTorts toward the education of
I I ‘Texans to use Texas-made products it appears that
I z the Republican organization is no longer taking their
election campaigns as seriously as in the past, and
F « consequently, is gaining more popularity as a result.
L a or at least. Col. Talbot is.
I S Texans deserve a respite from the typical Texas
. .. ............. ........- --
Radio Used For
Communication on
. Long Freight Trams"
IM
ag-----gmm,;7a
Another ^Shop'Now*9 Campaign Strongly Recommended 19
c, - -......__—-e-
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 51, Ed. 1 Monday, October 13, 1930, newspaper, October 13, 1930; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468600/m1/2/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.