Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 86, Ed. 1 Monday, November 23, 1931 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
f
A
»-
—
FAGE TWO
VHAT ^PPON MUST BEWARE!
ft!
’-k
3
r
constzuction.
backed by a $35,000,000
//
8
1
IS5N
—LEST CHINA ACGUIRE A BACKBONE. WHERE AWISHBONEUSED TO 6?
BARBS
*+44**
and Allen
42
000
hfe.
chuds
Court House News ’
think he should get an estimate.
COtNTY COCH
I
W
among
3
HEAL ESTATE TRASSFWRS
Johnston and wife to
pare.ora surveyor
A Harris, L B
There kt something rather impressive about the
taete: .
I
naval expenses which has been creating such a furore travel
Ta
j. a.
CAMP CLEANERS
AS
A
AE
1
I
ALL LINES OF
1930, but his
was a mere tonnaUtr as he
I
3
INSURANCE
a
It
II
95c
95c
yard
pair
at
at
children and citimens Kieked in more than $300,000
*
}
em--
s
I
.25
nA
1
Light Globes
Edison-Mazda
DECORATIVE
DAMASK
50 watt ...
40 watt ...
25 watt ...
restoration it was decided to
dollars and do the job. School
Decorate For the Holidays
with Bright, New Drapes
NEW LACE
PANELS
Texas & Pacific
Railway Announces
New Low Rates
20c
20c
20c
KING
Radio Shop
tact that this
George Waaht
started back in the days when the hazards of travel
aad communication made A aasesaarr and nothing has
a j. EDWANDS...........
u ASeDONAID------
uot R McDonald —
3. & POWLE&..................
as to need com
spend a half ml
frigate was the nauon’s pride tn
is time, led our fleet in the first
Tuesday. December 1, will be an
important date in the history of
the Texas and Pacific Railway, said
Frank Jensen. General Passenger
Agent On Tuesday, December 1.
for the first time in the history at
the railroads in Ulis country, a
daily one-way coach rate of one
and three fourth cents per mile
will become effective between Tex-
5
But Senator Norris proposes
giving the unemployed highway
work. and that will put several
thousand more on tie road.
congressmen
attend the ses-
ARTSTYLE
CHOCOLATES
Several corporations are alleged
to have made a senator a git of
$100,000 to lobby tor a sugar
tariz. That waa aweet of them
S. Side
Phone
52.
i'
—1
James Shaw,
er of Texas, vs
Chorea is more common in chil-
dren than it is in adults. It may
be the first manifestation of rheu-
matic fever
Chorea is two to three times aa
A hl
her. e
THE TWO GREAT COMMAND-
MENTS:—Thou shalt love the Lord
thy God with all thy heart, and
with all thy soul, and with all thy
strength, and with all thy mind;
and thy neighbour as thyself.—Luke
10:27.
-298
Datsies won't tell, but neither
will a pansy.
{Copyright, 4931, NEA Service, Ine.)
Written
in Strong
Old Line
Entered aa
Tsui
N. Side
Phone
444.
common among girls
boys.
WOODRUM TRUCK LINES
Phone 45.
Smith.
000-
a half be-
rose It was
MOW'S yau
H EALTH
MARKIAGE INTENTIONS
Milton Smith. Lewisvile. and Miss
Erna Oelhike. ’
Denton Plumbing Co.
R. E. Goodwin
Prompt Service
225 W. Oak St Phone 520.
The Williams Store
—for nearly Fifty Years!
k.
3
By Alice Judson Peale
WALKING ALONE
Be formation of habits of self-
concern The two units will employ
100 workers, additional units pro-
T
L -
her to be broken up and sold. In 1830 Oliver Wendel)
Halmes wrote his famous poem which began "Ay,
tear her tattered ensign downand the poem wm
published in newspapers and on handbills every-
where The country became excited in "a most runt-
eotus protest against such an unnecessary and unpa-
triotic transaction." Public clamor caused her to be
refitted
in 1833 she was recommissioned and became flue-
ship of our naval forces in the Mediterranean and
then of the Afriean squadron But in 1865 she war
laid up at the Portsmouth navy yard and stayed there
until 1860, when she went of to Annapolis aa a
training shtp. She was rebuilt in the seventies and
served to eonntetiom with the Parts exposition. In
the eighties and nineties she was used aa a training
ot barrack hip.
44644*
Let us block, clean and
keep that felt like new.
CAMP CLEANS
THE MODERN
WAY
Phone 1212.
—000-*—
Personal nomination for the most appealing per-
sonality in current vaudeville—Grace Allen of Burns
___I .
a One of the
tor him to tell
Daffy iaeued at 214 Wart Hickory Street, Denton.
Texaa, ann arternoon except Sunday by Uss aecord-
19 Years Ago Today
I From Record and Chronicle, Nov. 23, 1912
J. H Paine will shortly begin the erection of more
than 15 miles of hog proof fencing on his place south-
west of the city.
A Washington dispatch announces that Hon Mor-
ria Sheppard, chairman of the Public Buildings Com-
mitine, H doing work on an omnibus bunetg ban. The
dispatch called to mind the promise given by Mr.
Sheppard in a speech here last summer, when he was
campagning for the Senate, that he would do his
part toward seeing that Denton got a post office
building
been done to change it.
There is no reason on earth
cuta not be elected one month
wars we undertook as a nation, was first saved from
•ale ane destruction by President Andrew Jackson,
trained our midshipmen in the CWU War and is now
4 victim of the 1920-31 depression and the cut in
HELPING TO BUILD TEXAS
The first two units of the dozen
similar units that ultimately will be
built at Jasper for dhe manufacture
of wooden crates and other wooden
-
FNAWS
years ago they started trying to destroy
ling her as unsea worthy and ordering
P. R Powdedge, debt. judgment for
plaintrr.
Tomorrow—" Wallaby Woes"
tmks ib
3
She is virtually in the conditipa of a new ahip. An
old gees who served on her 51 years ago went aboard
the other day and after inspection reported that ahe
was exacuy the same vessel except that he missed
the hand spikes with which they used to swing the
gun trucks in order to point the guns
,570 ----- ------------— -
Old Ironsides fought to 42 battles and never suffer-
ed defeat She licked the British and the Barbary pt-
rates She won her nicknatme after she sailed awav
from Washington to the War of 1812 with 44 guns, and
among other things so wrecked the Guerrlere Inn 26-
minute engagement that the British frigate couldn't
be towed into port.
a
el
Contemporary Thought
ANTIQUATED LAWS .
This week five Democrats and two Republicans are
entering a short, splrited campalgn for the seat in
Congress vacated by the death of the late Harry M
Wurzbach. The election will be held shortly and be-
tore a month has elapsed from the time the cadi-
paign started. the candidate chosen will be taking
his seat in Congress.
Consider the difference from the ordinary proce-
dure Our Pour turn n was elected in November.
and David B. Lawhon, icluding 102
1-3 Acres, 3100 aad other conalaera-
non*. April 30. 1931,
AUTOMOBILE &EGISTRATIOSS
non* the next politicians who champton the "lame
duer system are simpiy bloking goyeramental proa
re aqa eNta—* rtwmM tart no opportumty to tell
’“’’iSSsK-®-
L. ■ paoxEs—s,-
Bustnees and nattrta! orice-—--------
□IrculoUoa Department .......—--------—
seascainiok BA TBS
One year (In ndvence).3—---......-.....--
BIX zontaa by man (to advence).----------—
Tun* months by malt (in advance)-------
Qaa asoatK datwared—-__________________________
DENTON, TEXAS, NOV. 23, 1831
New York Day by Day
By d.o. McINTTRE
ebeoting a congrtamman nearly a year
fore he la to serve la coptinued simply
atone pizyed no mal part in the
problem she presented to the first
grade teacher.
The child was bright and eager
to learn but thoroughly incapable
of carrying through any sort of
effort without constant attention
from an adult
She could do no work unless she
sat very close to the teacher
When the class went on one of
its frequent trips Bar-bare. e rted us-
leak she could walk with teacher
and hold her hand.
If she was forced to take another
child for a partner she was anx-
aart and unhappy and got nothing
optlol the trip.
It was easy to see that Barbara
suhatitute for her mother during
school hours.
She carried over in relation to
her all the httle habita of depend-
enco which tier mother had permit-
red her to develop
Wherever Barbara went with tier
mother she held her hand Along
the Btreet, in the park. even, she
would not relinquish It to run and
jump like other children
Undoubtedly this one little habit
did much to continue allitudes of
dependence and to cut her off from
a variety of play and social con-
the virus of rheumatic lever which
has not as yet been isolated or es-
tablished as the cause of chorea.
Presumably it affects the brain
She went to attend the Eentepnial of her own
launching at Boston in 1807,
Elgntyrars later she was recom------ded as a target
for the North Atlantic neet, her usefulness again
considered ended But the Ladies of the War of 1812
fomented another great public upheaval at the plan
to sink her so inglorlously. Congress voted 60,000
Tor repairs, after which ahe was used as a sort of naval
mauneum
The navy was through trying to get rid of her
and when in IBU she waa found in such bad repair
Wholesale grocers of Lamesa re-
ported a 40 per cent increase to
volume of businpns from June to
October.
had won the Democrate primary contest m July.
ISM In other words, nearly a year and a half ago
the voters of this district selected him to represent
them for i (to year term to Congtess.
In Congress hewilbe called upon to represent the
peopie of this distrtet on issues that were not dream-
ad of at the time of his campaign The sentiment of
the enteenson mmportent matters mieh have chanced
since he was elected. Yet the ridiculous system of
1*79 7
rH
sed
---000---
And in the cloak room on the way out one of those
pert check girls was philosophizing. If it isn't one
thing it's something else," she sighed. "Two days ago
I had to snatch a razor from a mooning guy who de-
cided to take up throat slitting in a big way. And
before coming to work today I talked a neighbor
woman out of pounding up lamp chimneys for a deep
dish pie Yet for eight years I've been standing the
gaff in dumps like this to play hookey-ftom a poor
farm. And the old grin is still goofey but untar-
nished."
siladen, uncontrollable movements
—T
- ,
products are under
A Texas college I* giving a
course in canoeing. Canoe Imag-
ine t batt
There appears to be a constitu-
tional predisposition in those af-
fected with the disease.
A picture of the typical girl suf-
taring Iran an onset of chorea
sat Carol Wainwright. Georges Carpentier, Steve
Hanagan, Sophie Tucker, Maury Paul and Beth Leary.
Home very late and very tired.
My night club visits are few and far between. But
when I go what astorishes me is the persistence of
"regulars." I see many faces I used to see at Bus-
tanoby’s. Rector’s and Healy's in days of their opu-
lence. it is a crowd that sits in a studious stilted in-
difference—not rounders in an alcoholic sense, but
largely those in eternal quest of a thrill they rarely
experience. For them all glamour has been squeezed
out of what was once considered a recund folly. With
Buddha-like boredom they sip innocuous drinks, puff
eigarets. never laugh, and confine conversation to
monosyllabllc clicks it has the ghostly monotony of
the Death Watch
William Seamans tea party in their Waverly Place
penthouse And there were three orchestras, Chic E.
dor and Charlie Farrell improvised some waggish
lyrics and never have I seen so many celebritias.
Ciara Waish and Vincent Lopez to dinner and off
to a play ruled with Cockney talk. which I enjoyed
mightily. And later to a nice club where amongrothers
ST, VITUS DANCE
St. Vitus Dance or chorea. is a
form of rheumatic fever in which
the involvement, of the nervous
•min is Oto most prominent fea-
ture. --
However, the disease is not 11m-
Texas fabricating plants sup-
ply about one-halt of the struc-
ture stasi annually used in the -
The 1 3-4e coach rates which are
being authorized by the Texas and
Pacific Railway effective Decem-
ber 1st, are, of course, purely in
the nature of an experiment, and
the increased travel superinduced
by reason of tile establishment of
these sensationally low rail rates
will, of course, be the determining
factor as to the continuation o
these drastically reduced fares af-
ter the six months experimental
period is over, said Mr Jensen.
• ” . Joli a exclaimed as they walked
Michigan across a field of coarse, dry grass
---2 -They’te smaller than the opes
we saw before,” Peggy said.
NEW YORK, Nov. 23.- Diary of a modern Pepys:
Betimes to Reuben’s for cheesecake and riagon of
coffee and later talking to Lee Otwell and George
Buckley of our sorrow over the passing of that rare
soul Morzise Aleshire Then home and found Judge
and Teal Potter and Mike and Alice Hogg newly from
Houston.
laboured unti sundown and with my wife to the
O. yes. I wonder if others in their gas-Ut pilgrim-
ages notice the amazing certainty of tango dancers
oh the postage stamp floors- No person in the world
has the grim sureness of the tangoist. And I’m the
mean-tempered snippet who would enjoy hissing
them.
Rauwax is makin): the atronges —Hua good idea to think over
bld within its power for passenger
The Normal College basket bag team romped all
over Pilot Point High School Saturday afternoon.
47 to 5 The Una up of th* visiting team could not be
secured. Manager C. L Davis stated but the Normal
players were as follows Forwards W B Btrong and
A. M Huffman; center. W. A. Sean; substitute. F A.
McOunlough: guard*. R N. Thomas and I. O. Munns
would show a rather tall anaemic, omnt*
thin youngster. between the ages of 1 - ■
Wheat is now quoted ideally at *1 a bushel Turkeys
are coming tn by the wagonload and bringing 10c a
pound. Pecans are more plentiful on the local anar-
kel unw and are bringing from Be to 12 l-3c per
pound.
245-861- Huey - Phip Harawar:
Co.. Dallas, Chevrolet truck.
* atk-year-ole Bar. zhiel
r learned to walk ease.
rellance depends upon small and tissue and causes changes therein
apparenty insienincant details of which are responstbie for (be jerky.
A LITTUE STAGEY
The departure of Mayor Walker of New York for
Celitornia, where he will intercede with Governor
Rolph for’executive clemency for Tom Mooney and
Warren Billings has received more than a modicum
of newspaper publicity, based on the Mayor’s sym-
pathetic effort* to secure justice for the convicted
bomb-throwers. His sympathy for the cause of these
two labor leaders may be genuine, but in leaving
Mew -York at ts.time, it seems that the Mayor is
anxiods to have anything discussed except the local
7^.'. scandais that have been aired within recent months.
Mooney and Billings have been in the penitentiary
for years. Their cases have occupied thousands of col- .
umns of newspaper and magazine space, yet the New *
York Mayor waits until he feels the need of personal
publicity before making his Calilarnin pilgrimage. It
all seems just a wee bit dramatic, a little too pre-
arranged. especially when the shrewd and politically-
wise New York Mayor is the hero. ■ e
------o------
NEWSPAPERS AS TEXTBOOKS
Students of the West Ward school are gathering ar- .
tide* from newspapers and other contemporary pub-
lication* dealing with the situation in China. They
dip articles from every source available, along with
photographs at individuals and general scenes, which
are posted on the school bulletin board for the use of
other pupil*. Already the student* have collected much
_ material about Thomas A. Edison since his death.
The idea of using newspapers as a source of his-
torical mformatioh is not new, and within recent
years, progresive teachers have learned to make
more and more use of the daily newspapers as supple-
mentary textbook* tor advanced students. The most
modern histories, are at best several years behind the
times, and must besuppiensebted with current tond
gained from the newspapers. Regardless of what Held
of study is considered, the daily newspaper carries
articles of direct interest to those engaged in such
study, whether tt be raising rabbits or the quantum
theory.
At one time in the history of education, there was
a huge gap between the training given to students
in textbook* while in school and the Information the
' students had to dig out for themselves in newspapers,
periodicals and other publications after they left
~— schoot Nowadays. * large preset age of the grad-
uates of schools and colleges confine their serious
reading to the newspapers, so it is fitting that early
in their school careers students should be-given an
appreciation of the wealth of information to be found
in the daily newspaper as a chronicle of current his-
tory, the development of the sciences and general in-
formation of interest to the well informed person.
Give the whole family a before-Christmas gift for
' the home. New window decorations will make a
happier holiday season for them all. The entire
house can be transformed with no great strain on
the Christmas budget, with prices lowered as they
are today. We have many valuable suggestions for
you Listed below are two worthy examples;
MR. SMOKER
Do you smoke because of
the pleasure you get out of
your pipe or cigar? Your
favorite brands are here at
Curtis’. €igars well selet.fr1
ed, well kept and you can
Ret a good now for 5c. Fine
tobaccos, cigarettes, a splen-
did line of pipes an other
smokers’ supplies. •
The Curtis Stores
New Jersey to etimtnatiug 61
grade crossinga. Which means
that hard cimes are eoming to Jer-
sey repatrmeu, doetora and under-
taker*.
—000--
in the nocturnal haunts surviving the economic
eclpse one feature is noticeable. Provocative maids no
longer try to sell customers ahose gangly-legged
Parisian dolls and other souvenirs of a night out.
Wine-flushed gentlemen used to respond generously
to such sales advances. But not any more.
----000---
It was interested in fragments at a conversation
drifting tram a nearby table A depressed gentleman
was moaning his threnody about a collapsing world
"What is needed. he Mid. "is to abolish the whole
bustness—get a new Adam and Eve, a garden, and
start from scratch.”
on Trains 3 and 4.
The basic rate per mile at the
present time on all railroads
throughout the United States is 3.6
cents per mile, and the action of
the Texas and Pacific Railway in
experimenting with a daily one-way
coach rate of one and three-fourths
cents per mile (which is less than
one-half of the regular rate) is be-
ing watched with interest- by the
passenger traffic fraternity of the
railroads throughout the country.
There is no question, said Mr
Jensen, but that a rate of one and
three-fourths cent* per mile on pas-
senger trains is the cheapest means
of transportation in the world to-
■day. It is impossible for anyone to
use their automoblle or any other
means of transportation at so low
a cost.
When you stop to consider that
the world's finest transportation 'I*
now available at the lowest fare*
in history and that you can travel
a distance of, say. forty miles for
70 cents, 100 miles for $75, etc.,
and check 100 pounds of baggage
free, also that one-half of these
exceptionally low rules wil apply
for children five and under twelve
years of age it is bound to be ap-
parent that the Texas and Paciha
portionately more.
An example of community effort
is reported from Snyder where a
hundred men and women from ov-
er Scurry county devoted six days’
work to canning more than 4 000
pounds of meat and vegetables con-
tributed by other citizens. The
whole was contributed to charity
organizations for tree distribution.
Pouring of concrete on State
Highway No. 10 between Collins-
ville and Tioga (Grayson County)
is under way. Seven more miles will
connect the Grayson county system
with the Denton county highways
on the south. At Whitesboro, on
the north, connection with No. 5.
from Texarkana to Wichita Falls,
already exists for another trans-
state highway.
Kilgore, transformed by its pro-
ximity to one of the great oil fields
of the world from a farming ham-
let to a thriving oil and industrial
center, recently celebrated comple-
tion of its first block at paving, is
busy getting ready to build more.
PEMTON, TEAS, HECORD-OIONICLE.MONDAY.NOVEMBER. 23,, 1931
•Mir WdeNewd
Du tag* Gdda "Aqdhggaah
R
A:
El
FnAFana“ipnandtweenp
■ ----- las. Fort Worth and Big Spring
. ited. but may at the very same
te time, or subsequentiy, extend to
9 and involve the heart.
- -L . All present indications point to
A .WASHINGTON
9 LETTER
By RODNEY DUTCHKK
— NEA Bervice Writer
WASHINGTON, Nov. 23—Old Ironsides, threaten-
ed since 1797 with fate* that Mamed worse than
death—and only recently dbomed to be moored in-
definitely in Washington navy yard in the name of
economy—again faces the seas, this time for a junket
along the southern coast
Just When it seemed that the historic old ship would
be relegated to comparative oblivion—to save the
8200,000 a year which it costs to keep her in com-
missign—Charles Francis Adam*, secretary of the
navy, anndunced that she would resume her visits
to the South Atlantic and gulf coast cities.
In her visits to other cities, 850,000 people have
inspected her.' ,
The UK A frigate Constitution is her real name
and the was restored a few years ago at a eoat of
$500,000, most of which was raised by popular sub-
ecription by school children.
MORE REASON FOR THANKSGIVING
. Thanksgiving is just a in days ott. and when it
comes, there will be real cause tor feeling grateful
_ over general business and agricultural conditions.
Just a year ago the business world was in a veritable
fog of uncertainty and doubt and conditions were
considerably worse than they are now. Purthermore,
a year ego, there was little to see in the future,
while within the last twelve months, or rather the
last three months, there has been a definite breaking
in the mists which enshrouded business, revealing a
few day* of sunshine that have been eagerly sought
for the last two years
This Thanksgiving should be a season of sincere
gratefulness. Bountiful crops, favorable weather and
B restored confidence, all in- a few months should
restore cheerfulness throughout the the country.
. ' . . ' - — -O.----- -a.:
When you give a friend a
box of candy its quality is a
very important thing. It
might be terrible, yet she
would smile, thank you and
tell you how good it was.
And might have thrown it in
the aewer becausshe didn’t
eat that sort of candy. Art-
style will never fail you.
Sweet Pickin’s at $1.00 per
pound. Pour Vous at $1.50
are two outstanding num-
bers.
caretully your treatment of your
own ehUd MI relation to stmnitar
situation.
It la through teaming early to
eat, wash, dress, and walk by htm-
seif that he outgrow* his babyhood
ana all the limitations of character
and activities that go with it.
INSURANCE
Not all kinds—but the right
kind.
L. B. SHAVER
McCrary Bldg. Phone 252.
By Mary Graham Bonner '
THE WALLABY FAMILY
Ji hn and Peggy found temselves
once again in .Australia. Th pilot
of cheir special plane had let them
sleeg al the way.
- "Were seeing more Kangaroos
It strikes me the real joy of dallying overtime along
the primrose path is to see Broadway momentarily
anew in the pink of dawn. In a few hours its glow
is dimmed by the mucky flow of tawdriness But at
sunup, with clean winds from the harbor Wowing
through its canyons, the "rap” that mart of us give
it might easily be turned Into a rhapsody. There l»
about it the tissue of mystery and glamous, of patnos
and for no reason at all somnethingnippingiy allur-
ing. , "... -----
Know Texas
By mLL EDwanDe e
Companies
J. J. Maclachlan
Insurance—Bonds
308 Smoot-Curtis Bldg,
Phone 365. / TT
‘w
state—160,000- tons valued
roughly at 415,000,000. The
wages of. Uy Texas steel i-
dustry are about »3,500,000 a
year.
kin* Commission-
T Ratchford and
#+******
♦ BIBLE THOUGHT FOB ♦
• TODAY
KANSAS CITY, Nov 33—(P--
Belief that w. W McConnell, etty
superintendent of schools at win-
field, ka». Whose body was found
on the high school campus Tues-
day night, had been murdered was
exgressed here by M A GUL a bal-
listic expert.
..........................Oenarol Manager
........ ........Adamazinx.zanher
—-adittt ae
clama man matter at Denton,
-ml-
aly f 1
Denton Record-Chronicle
nEConD-cnoMICLE COMPANY. INC. IN
Rheamatte Fevre
seven and twelve She ft usually
bright conscientious. emoTemal
and ndgety:
Excessive study, worry and fright.
While not causes of chorea, may
in the rheumatic child predispose
it to the detelopment at Um qn-
dition.
Early symptoms of the involve-
meat at the nervous system are
changes in temperament
The child may become head-
strong and resenttul it is likely to
show emotional instability, to cry
at the least provocation to be
moody and to lack the power at
concentration.
The child ft usually fidgety There
may be present jerky movements
in the face muscles
The child's handwriting will
sometime* reveal irregular move-
ments in her band mas ales Mus-
cular weakness is nearly always
present.
-They are sntaller—1 that is in-
deed true," said the pilot, “but
they're not Kangaroo*. They're
Wailabies. and there is a large fam-
Hy Jt them.
i ‘-They're relations of the Kanga-
roos. In fact, they're all of the
same big family.
“They have tile same ways. They
do their marketing in the daytime
unuike many creatures who think
the evenings are safer and quieter
"A the mothers carry their ba-
bies in their pouches, and they all
love vegetables. Come! You must
talk to some of them."
Now the members of the Wallaby
famiy, having heard that John
and Peggy would be friendly, camel
leavine( over to talk
“We have something to say,” one
of them began. "We used to roam
over this continent and feel quite
free But now they catch us for
our skins which they say make
good shoe leather."
Peggy and John felt quite sure
their shoes were not made of kan-
garoo or wallaby leather and they
felt relieved about this.
"Then the farmers did not like
us because we enjoyed vegetables,
but we were more their friends thzn
they realized. We used to eat the
short, stubby, dry grass, too, and
now that there aren't so many of
us roaming around, that grass gets
a chance to grow and it becomes
so very dry that it is only too easy
for it to catch fire and make bad
tush nres. And there is more to
our led story."
4
1
A
i
l
M
A
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 86, Ed. 1 Monday, November 23, 1931, newspaper, November 23, 1931; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538639/m1/2/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.