Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 26, Ed. 1 Monday, September 14, 1931 Page: 2 of 8
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J E, MONDAY, SEPTEMBEE 14, i931
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Denton,
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Tomorrow—"The Ronfire"
*
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HELPING TO BUILD TEXAS
understanding
depei
city park site. Tex-
purchase of
arkana lets contracts
d
Tomorrow—The Liver
■
HUM
CHECK YOUR NEEDS NOW
SHEETS
three +
ALL LINES OF
INSURANCE
to serve you.
. The Williams' Store'
transaction. But tM case in ques-
15e.
T
■ I - -T~
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*
4-)-,
See
DRAPES
PILLOWS
4. Ort
pubi
J. A. COOK GRO.
We Deliver in alFurry
around thestteofthe new federal
building, work on which soon Is to
the
when
By Alice Judson Peale
WHEN COMPANY COMES
a.
*1
$5 50
3.00
. 150
.60
Denton,
Record-
64
184
Know Texas
By BILL EDWARDS
THE TWO COLLEGES HERE
WILL OPEN NEXT WEEK
Specify
Purity
Products
SCHOOL' DAYS
ARE HERE
-4
31
Talks Tss
&&, parents
Pershing Visits
Sister in Lincoln
A new method of applyinz alum-
inum to irop produces in ettect a
■•rustless" iron
Farmers Have Deer Slain
MATADOR Farmers near Mat-
ador were so annoyed by the depre-
dations of two deer both bucks,
that they had the animals killed by
a state game warden
With the
Exchanges
By L. A. M.
444444
Ihi
2
9
a
He is then taught to appreciate
the nature of his illness That is
Written
in Strong
Old Line
Stock N
Companies
J. J. Maclachlan
Insurance—Bonds
308 Smoot-Gurtis Bldgi
Phone 365.
Looking over Jha newspapers.
It oerurs to na that Bluebeard
must be a pretty well khowt fel-
low to the headline writers.
Pies
Cakes
Cookies
Rolls
Buns
Ask for Purity Bread
Home M
“2.2
to our
The system was experimental and had no chance to
work out because the war came. Pre-war and war-
.. »t» from cm:
equer and H-from employed
cost $49s,000,000 m the itseal
i and employes combined paid
meriek, meanwhile han him
er titled to the money they got
A new law, which recently became effective, would
have greatly reduced the official fees by limiting the
that may be brought in connecton
No one will deny that now
ana then a real reformer arises
who is able to point out some
social abuse that needs atten-
tion. On the other hand, a large
percentage of would-be reform-
ers are merely chronic med-
dlers who have no honest de-
ride to be of service to socie-
ty.—Granbury News.
v our wrvl
Today on the phone a drawling “r” dropping gen-
tleman introduced himself as Major Rutherford Gil-
ford Gilpen of Georgia and so mighty is the power
of suggestion that ever since I have been sitting menu
around panting for a mint julep.
(Copyright. 1931. McNaught Syndicate, Inc.)
/ SHucKs’--
GUESS MY OLDL
FNGEApOESNT
' \ HUET So Bad
X AFTER, ALL!
cure one disease after another and
menu are being projected for the (
fan and early winter over Texas, 1
which are counted on materially to
EAemTwo
beginning of recovery which
nds largely upon the patient’s
I
I
number of charge
with one criminal
New York Day by Day
- By O. O. MeINTYRE
Striving Onw
ow modern fuheral t
ths monumen of our i
la serveg this eornma
reseat yem We have
|
| ■
.. ..WASHINGTON
LETTER
WUNEYOUIUHEH
NEA Service Writer
SLIPS
CURTAINS
BLANKETS
help the employment situation in
many localities. Dallas, which re-
WASHINGTON. September 14.—The two great-
est nations of the world are more or less upset about
something known as the "dole "
A proposed 10 per cent cut In Great Brttain l week-
ly "dole” to her unemployed has caused a political
upheaval.
Some of our own statesmen are using the term us
a scare-word to describe any federal appropriation
which Congress might make this winter toward relief
of the hungry and destitute
The diet onary describes s dole as that which is
distributed, or a limited portion, especially a gift of
charity.
The British “dole” is the unnatural outgrowth of a
national unemployment system establtshed before the
World War, under which payments to the unemploy-
ed now amount to a large proportion ct the Eetonal
Eudget. Forces in this country opposed to federal re-
lief intimate that Britain’s "dole” has aggravated her
economic troubles and that congressional appropri-
ations to relieve distress would have a similar effect
and would saddle a similar system on this country.
• • •
At least two fundamental differences have to be
recognised First. those who urge federal relief this
winter are not pressing for an unemployment insur-
ance system but a sum of money which would be dis-
tibufed where most needed by the Red Cross or other
agency Second. British law-but not American law-
provides for maintenance of the destitute under the
poor relief system When some 2,000,000 Britons be-
came employed by 1921 their government had to de-
cide whether these workers and thgi. families should
be cared for by the poor law machinery or whether the
set-up of the unemployment insurance system should
be utilised to provide the maintenance Among rea-
sons for choosing the latter alternative were fear that
local taxes would often be inadequate for the enter-
geney. realisation that great numbers of persons
would be humiliated although unemployed through
no fault of theirs and a belief that the emergency
would prove temporary
England. In 1911. became the first nation to adopt
a compulsory-contributory employment insurance
law It then covered about 2 250,000 workers For each
person so Insured the employer paid into the benenl:
fund 5.1 cents weekly. the employe 5 1 cents and
the exchequer 34 cents Benefits of 91 70 weekly were
started In 1911 to such unemployed as had contributed
to the fund lor six months
Louisiana leads the United Stat
es in quantity production of furs
-
raised until a man with a wife and a coupt o» chil-
dren. is paid about a dollar a day .
We handle a full line of
pencils, tablets, notebook
paper, theme paper, ink; in
fact, most everything you
may need in schoou supplies.
ly a pretty considerate chap takes
the occasion when father is enter-
taining a fried in the library to
turn on the radio full bias: with
2*
PHONES
Business and Eaitorlal Office ...............
Ctrgulation Department -.......................
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
One year (in advance) ------
Six months by mall (in advance)
Three months by mall (in ndvance)
One month, delivered..........................-
rum makes faces. jumps on
xlety states as a distinct disease
condition.
Though essentially a problem in
psychiatry, the general practitioner
is frequently confronted with such
' sufferers.
19 Years Ago Today
(From Record-Chronicle, Sept. 14. 1912)
District Agent William Oanzer of the Federal De-
partment of Agticulture returned Friday night from
an inspection trip through the various West Texas
counties under his supervision.
A meeting of all former students of Texas Universi-
ty has been called for Tuesday night next, at which
time a Denton County Club will be organized, and
plans tor activities for the ensuing year will be out-
lined.
■Im forced to rate your water system 100 per cent
perfect," said Dr M M Carrick, inspector of the Hol-
land Magazine clean City Contest, while here the
other day.
Me
and Gran Middleton
Contemporary Thought
LEGAL RACKETEERING
Down in Caldwell county, south of Austin, a young
man was indicted for taking money belonging to his
employer As usually happens when there is embezt
element the money was not taken all at once: a few
dollars on one day. a few dollars a day or two later,
until the total was too large to escape discovery. As
each theft was technically a separate offense, an in-
dictment was returned for each, making a total of T2
Indictments all relating to the same crime
Insanity proceedings were brought and the offender
was duly adjudged insine Dismissal of all the in-
dictments was then necessary, and was ordered by
the court •
But the sheriff and the district lerk collected the
full amount of fees due them for each of the 73
cases. Although the service they rendered was purely
routine, the law gave them the right to certain fees
in each case The sheriff, for example, was entitled
to a fee for making an arrest. Technically, the prison-
er had been arrested 72 times; so the'sheriff collected
the fee 72 times The state paid over ,82,000 to Cald-
well county officials for the nominal service rendered
It was entirely legal Under the law, the officers were
The Junior B. Y P U. of the Baptist Church en-
tertained Friday evening with a social at the home of
Mrs T B Porter. Games and contests were enjoyed,
and in one contest Mias Verna Adams won the first
prize, and Oran Middleton the booby. An ice course
* * .a a--1Al.a--- Afieede Umrnn A fl® mS
was served tO tiw avu-m*- —------- ' A
Rby Gabbert Rita Wilkerson. Martitia Reynolds.
Blanche Garrison. Clara Curtis, Janie Lou Forrester.
Stella Graham Beulah Witt, Emma Johmson,Helen
Bushey: Messrs Ben Roberts. Ector Roberts. Charles
Crain. Ben Owens, Ben Copass. Douglas Witt.. Eibert
Hooper. Emory Witt. Woodson Dyer. Oran Bell, Scott
Hickey. Walker Jagoe, Winnie Graham, Vivian Porter
sofa. and chatters shrilly
The general here for
Potawatami Indians. claiming
they were cheated, plan to sue for
a billion dollars for lands in the
heart of Chicago. If the suit
aghinst Chicago were tor 40 cents
the Indians sti would have to be
clawed a» Incurable optimists.__
Many bands make light arm*
cut proposals.
• • •
Three major scandals are brew-
ing in Hollywood, says a writer.
Say, Just what is a "major scan-
dal" in Hollywoodt
4 * *
MLadtes ana gentiemen," be be-
gan. “In this aistresstmg period
'of readjustment let us not forget
how much we own to our friends
the bankers—” but just then
everybody laughed.
(Copyright, 1931, NLA service, Inc. j
Denton Record-Chronicle
RECORD-CHROMICLE COMPANY. INC
— SE
3,8. FoWLER _______________Advertising Manager
for paving
resetion. to his situation.
The first thing he must appre-
ciate is that his physical trouble
masks his unwillingness or inabil-
ity to face his emotional andpsy-
chologic problems
The anxiety patient terms him-
self nervous
He may complain of loss ol mem-
ory. Inability to concentrate, a de-
pressed teeng and qther general
states.
Again, lie may manifest definite
anxiety. such as the need to go
back several times to make sure
that a door is locked.
The patient may appreciate that
his physical symptoms are related
to his nervousness. but may hesi-
tate to talk about It for fear that
the physicinn will be unsympa-
thetic
Such an attitude operates to the
disadvantage of both pattent and
physician
BARBS
the most strident variety of jazz.
Four-year-old Dorr, who ordi
■-------o--------
THE HEART OF HUMANITY
Although modern civilization often is accused of
being cruel and hard-hearted in its dealings wltn
those who have misfortunes, sometimes this same
cvization almost outdoes itself in giving needed
assistance. Newspapers the other day devoted much
space to the frenzied efforts that were made to se-
cure a small phial of cortin, a rare and almost price-
less extract, in order to save the life of a penniless
mother of six children who was near death from
Addison's disease, a rare malady for which cortin is
the only known remedy. The medicine was rushed by
airplane and automobile from Buffalo to'Chicago in
time to retard the progress of the disease which is
—inevitably fatal, friendly hands seeing that the .rsak- -
ment was made avallable, regardless of cost
it is likely that the rarity of the disease and Jie
expense of the treatment that aroused the sympathy
of those who made the cortin treatment possible.
There are hundreds of other instances every day
where people die for the lack of far less expensive
treatments than that donated to the Chicago mother.
People just do not hear of these ordinary cases It
something unusual. spectacular, something
more than just the specter of death, to cause peo-
ple to offer help.
--- —--- health"
m^r h patsyanendsunuam,‘saslpgosensyonaniygsuah,; patusnttucs
zaadsntcgalcandgguend xnzngosand pracutioner with uncommon Meili or
What makes children behave like
Texas ranks fifth among the
states in number of wholesale
establishments, eighth in vol-
ume of wholesale business, fif-
teenth in wholesale business
per 1,000 population. It has 9.-
606 establishments doing an an-
nual business of S2.804.509 1 to
or 4 03 per cent of the nation’s
total
time employment were good and at the end of the .
war the fund had an undistributed balance of $79.-
000.000 There was little call on the fund because
• England was paying special post-war out-of-work al-
, lowances amounting to some 8300.000.000
la 1920. with umemployment only around 500,000.
the system was extended to nearly all but agricultural
workers, covering 11,000,000. Empolyers and em-
ployes each paid 8 cents a week, the (government 4
cents Benefits wire raised to 1.65 tor men and $2.92
, for women. The scheme was stin held oh an actuarial
basis, with benefits claimable definitely related to
contributions paid to Parliament still holds the
theory that England will return to that basis and
that eventually it will * possibte to stop uslifu the
: 1 stem as an instrument of general reler
"Requtrements for previous contributions from ben-
« eflclaries have been thrown off since 1921- the gov-
erumem standing the immense difference in expense
-- lately have been 16 cnts
Widespread municipal impreve-
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
,"22
pubiiherAstcnnta"press is exclusively entitled to the
local news published herein._________________
DENTON, TEXAS, SEPT 14, 1931
”” MEXICO FOR MEXICANS
In their efforts to build a nation. Mexican leaders
have passed laws which probably seem all right from
their viewpoint, but are rather harsh when viewed by
those whose citizenship is left in the mother country.
From the tenor of several of these laws, it is evident
that Mexico will resist any semblance of foreign dom-
ination. The land laws, oil laws and other such legis-
lation are plainly marked "Mexico for Mexicans."
Another of these "Mexican citizens first” laws went
into effect in Mexico two weeks ago, requiring that
90 per cent of the employes of all industries and bus-
iness in Mexico be composed of Mexican citizens. As
a result, an exodus of American citizens has occurred
due to the necessary shifts in personnel of a number
of large frts. American citizens must either become
naturalized Mexicans or trust that they are among
the 10 per cent of foreigners allowed to hold jobs.
Mexico can hardly be criticized for its attitude to-
ward foreign workers. In the early days of this nation.
- a similar one prevailed here, but there was no large
industrial firms to aggravate the situation as there
is today in Mexico. •
HOW'S yaut
HEALTH
L.’eue -
it’s a great life—preparing for
school days Children, according
to parents' wishes, are having
tonsils removed and are taking
the cold 'serum that should as-
sure them that ounce of pre:
vention from gaining a slight
cold and perhaps a subsequent
illness not so slight — Lurkin
News.
Instrance
AU Kinds
bepnomaamoxpyuzvioe
C. M. MIZELL
NOTICE TO sunscamszns
if you fail to receive your copy
i of the Record Chronicle, call the
omce before 6:30 p. pt. and « copy
will be sent out by special camet.
for paving Second Street. the ccst
of it being borne by the state, city
and owners of abutting property.
Marshall lets contract for paving a
dozen of Its principal streets at a
cost of $102 000 Whitesboro lets
contract for a concrete slab on Un-
ion Street to serve Highway No 10.
now being completed north from
the Denton county line into Sher-
man
tlWfoUowW M^ Verna Adams, start at a cost of around 8700 000.
tne -o" ----I •—M- Freeport lets, for 378.104. contract
6)
ga
Edtredb Kr the Naw Yosh
Dr. lege Galdon Acekcfhy of Medina
weeks' visit with his aister. Miss
May Pershing, and his so, Wazren,
chatted with old friends and be-
came merely an ordinary citizen.
He declined appearances, state-
ments and interviews
Food prices in cafes of the high shots, as a general
thing have been lowered but little. Desserts that were
60 are now 50 cents and a few meats are shaded from
$1,50 to 1130 The excuse is that many cafes are
paying boomday overhead and, with depression
patronage, to cut prices would close them.
■ ——0do ■
Pertmayivanta $wvant says
the world is in shape of a soup
bowl. Some have got the idea .
by now that it's a bread line—
Dallas News.
It mayxe a great life, this pre-
paring for school, but the children,
at least in their own minds, oc-
cupy the somewhat unenviable po-
sition of the frog in the incident
when a group of toys were throw-
ing rocks at it: Fun for the boys
but hard on the frog.
Indiana will devote a 8750,-
non surplus to road-building.
What a swell flock of detwute:
Full line fresh country
vegetables. .
Plenty of Home Spun
Country Syrup at 65c per
gallon.
Pure comb Honey, gal. $1.10
Pure comb Honey, half
gal..............................601
Strained Honey, gal.,.....95c
Strained Honey, half gal. 50c
Plenty of freshcountry
butter, cooking butter, pound
$
1
\\ /
cently sold $800,000 worth of bonds
for a $300,000 extension and im-
provement program at Love Feld
and a $500,000 street-Widening pro-
ject. now will issue 8700.000 more.
Of which $500,000 2 for sewer ex-
tensions and $200,000 for street im-
provement. It is estimated that
$200,000 ol the sewer work will be
expended for manual labor, and
something new in Texas in regard
to it is that the citys welfare de-
partment will designate the workers
employed on the job and that they
will be given their choice of accep -
Ing their pay in groceries or cash
or part groceries and part casl.
Marlin votes $25,000 bonds or
street Improvement and $15,000 for
And some seem to have the idea
that the world is both a soup bowl
and a bread line, judzing from
the trouble charitable agencies
over the country are having - in
getting idle people to take jobs of
cotton pidking and other work
avallable so they will not have to
continue to be fed by the public.
Denton Plumbing Co.
R. E. Goodwin
Prompt Service
225 W. Oak St Phone 520 1
1.
NEW YORK. Sept. 14— Diary of a modern Pepys:
Upand a telegram from Irvin Cobb to spend the
week at his ‘ Easthampton estates, which I would
rather do than anything I know if it were possible.
So calling at Nellie Revell's hotel but she away and
in the lobby came upon Eugene Walter, the play-
wright.
Walking through 47th street I suddenly discover-
ed my shoes unmated; one brown, one black; and had
a polisher turn the brown one black to keep from
being twitted at home. Then to a musicale to hear
young Ernest Charles sing his own tunes and as tal-
ented a young composer as I know. In the evening to
a dinner and John Charles Thomas and his wife there;
also Vincent Lopez, with his polish of a Spanish
grandee, Leon Leitrim, the dancer, and Aubrey and
Peggy Hoyt Eads. Home late and gorged on a tin
of imported sardines and a beaker of Iced milk.
A psychologist tells me most of the momentous de-
cisions of the world are made by individals and na-
tions between 10 a. m. and 12 noon. That is the period
when human courage is notched highest. Low ebb of
indecision is between 4 and 5 in the afternoon. That
is the hour, by the way, when many husbands try to
decide whether they will have to stay late at the
office, etc.
In Wall Street these days, bright young men of the
banks and bond houses refer to their particular in-
stitutions as "the shop." One went a bit further today
on the phone. In speaking of his magnificently mar-
bled and coppered sanctuary, he said: "Next time
you are below Fulton, pop into the hovel.”
Personal nomination for the most even tempered
writing man in America—Frazier Hunt.
"Spike" Hunt is a sharp example of my firm be-
lief no endeavor begets tolerance like travel. A sea-
soned globe trotter is invariably detached from the
nesty pettiness of little minds. He cannot digest silly
jealousies and meanesses so often clinging to those in
a groove. Hunt has rounded out perhaps the fullest
travel life of any contemporary scribbler, touching
port at every civilized country on the globe. Yet he
never fails to read his Alexis, Ill., weekly from "kiver
to kiver.” •
---ooo---
Few plays are announced for Autumn Producers
are marking time. Usually at this period a hundred
or more shows are in preparation Today there are not
20. The Follies and Vanities seem the outstanding
hits.
---ooo---
I stopped in at a Child’s, offering all one may eat
tor 60 cents. The experiment proved an Interesting
study in mob psychology, increasing receipts, in in-
stances. 10 per cent. It further proved Only 15 per
cent of the public is greedy. The other 85 ate with
no greater rgusto than when paying for each item. At
first, restaurants furnished free carbonate of soda
for gluttons but had no calls. The clientele for the
most part, when I was there, seemed elderly men
down on their luck and young folk obvibusly out to
gourmandize
A hard back to the good old days in cheaper res-
taurants and careterasIs Ive Wilt tea. coffer and
mik And. hooray, one chain offers a pie a la mode
for 10 cents.
PICTURE OF PEACE:—The wolf
also shall dwell with the lamb, and
the leopard shall lie down with the
Marand the catr and the young
lion and the fatling together and
a ntde child shall lead them—
Isaiah 11 6
8
this? The answer is easy They
want what everybody want*-at- tne
tention and the center of the stige.
LINCOLN. Neb . Sept 14 a -
Gen John J Pershing tho was
commandant of University of Ne-
braska cadets here 35 years a4o to-
day rested up after a busy day
spent to Lincoln yesterday cele-
brating his 71st btrthday.
Phone 442
Our word's good when
we say we furnish you
the finest foods at the
• best priee.
SERVICE
Grocery nnd Markel
We, Deliver.
.. ria*1* ■ 1 1 11 ■
den-Ton texas hecord-ihro^hi
tion had arisen before that law was in fero-
Whan 72 different seta of fees are collected in such
a way, it is racketeering tegar .proper.’authorized
rackeleering. of course, but racketeering just the same
The people will wake up one c thebedays to th tact
that the fee system is a racket, even U It i$ legal
and that tney ate pnying the MH — Wienlt« Falls
Tmes
Every mother knows that the best
child in the world is likely to act
up when company comes.
Six-year-old Jim, who is general- -such’patients not uncommonly
complain of headaches, insomnia,
fainting spells, heart troubles, dyin
pespsla and the like.
This masking often fools even
the best practitioner. The result to
- - I that the victim of anxiety may
narily is the very pattern of deco- » rr .
By Mary Graham Bonner
• AIR WADING
John and Feggy took a good look
at the air farm. The Little Black
tock had been able, because of his
magic, to turn the time far for-
ward into the future when they
had farms to the air.
Just as in the old days planes
could stand up for a long time now
they could build houses and farms
upon gigantic dirigibles which could
stay up to the air all the time.
Many people Uke to take trips
and stay up in the air for a very
long time, and others liked to stay
there almost all the' time.
In fact, it was almost as much of
an excitement in these days for
people to visit the earth, as it was
to the days when Johns and Peg-
gy's parents were young to see
planes flying overhead
The one who owned the farm ex-
plained how they not only made
deliveries of milk in the milk plane,
but how they took eggs am chick-
ens and other farm produce to the
air hotels.
There were planes for all of these
provisions and John and Peggy
could not get over the tremendous
difference between these days of
the future, and the days when
wagons and then automobiles had
carried food to from the country.
But now the one wh owned the
farm asked them if they would like
to go vading.
-He took them to a po id, nol far
from where the cows waded in tneir
stream, and they went in wading.
The water, lite air farmer ex-
plained, all came trom clouds, and
they had special’ pipes which they
could run into rain clouds when-
ever dhey wanted any water.
It was a beautiful ending to their
thrilltag trip to the air farm: Then
they took their plane and went
back to the earth
Sotiie Folia Don11 Know When They Are Lucky ,
a L3s2.7 - Noga,“
fane roee
-25 g ADeTS’LKE.
-in '
A large percentage of the re-
formers, it might be added, are
those who want to make other
folks look at things as they do.
Merely' because some other fellow's
idea is different, the chronic re-
former takes the view that he is i
bound to be wrong. Not so much
meddling but rather the desire to
make other folks look at things as
they do and do as they say is re-
sponsible for most of the world's
reformers, as we see it •
never escape what he calls "ill
The rush of college students back to Denton
will begin next week—as will the search for pleas-
ant, comfortable rooms. And those that are newly
decorated will be in great demand. Not in a score
of years have prices been so inviting, particularly
those of home-furnishings. So bring down your list
and let us help you check over it. We are anxious
anxiety
in every day speech the words
eager and anxious are used as 11
I synonymous.
Strictly considered. eagerness
' connotes Intense desire, while an-
1 xlety includes a large element of
fear.
’ Medicte recognizes so-catiee en-
it occurs to me that to all the “wine brick" furore’
I have yet to hear anyone say it makes a good or bad |
drink. In the same fashion, It strikes me that, de- I
spite Its rage, I've seen no one yet—save Helen Men- (
gen—who looked chic to afl" Empress Eugenie hat.
And my secret survey shoys it is on its way out.
Denton Baking Co.
Phone 106
Th6 fact that they go about it
crudely and inconstrierately is nt
so much their fault az It is a lack
of clever management on the par-
ents' part
Jimmy would not have found it
necessary to turn on the. radio to
order to assert himself had father
given him the courtesy of an in-
troduction to his friend and allow-
ed bim to enter the conversation
for a few brief moments before
running out to play.
Dora would have behaved like a
model child had’sha been pernit-
ted to pass the cookie plate
The baby would lately have been
quite content had he been given a
few favorite toy’s to play with off
to a quiet corner.
Of course no chid can be expect-
ed to behave perfectly in the midst
of grown-up sociability which pec-
essrlly excludes him for too long
a time, and it is i treasonable to
expect it of him "
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Daily issued at 814 West Hickory Street.
Texas, every afternoon except Bunday by tne
Chronicle company.
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Assoclat Prees and United Ptess service.
Member Texas Daily Press League.
Eatered as second-class mall matter at
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 26, Ed. 1 Monday, September 14, 1931, newspaper, September 14, 1931; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538579/m1/2/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.