Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 77, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 11, 1933 Page: 4 of 6
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11 ..........
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PAG* roU
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HARRIERS wni ALSO CLASH
Coach Jack Ssc9s Eagles lined
the Lone Star championship which
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that patted much yardage through-
to th eight-semester rule.
Every
school in our Class B District (20)
ball—6 feet. 7 3-4 inches and Cap-
2
6:
The Bruins pinned their main
passing of Joe Pearce, on Pearce's
BOLIVAR
set. Princeton. an alert outfit with
We Deliver
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made of cotton, attractive plaids,
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o'clock this afternoon for their lost
game here at home.
a crimson victory 1
der the head of a
Despite a program of four Big
Ton Conference games, the Mid-
$6.90
Size* 36148
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come un-
mdous up-
gam req
three-touc
undisputed Big Ten title, was for
voted against the speedy Hawkeyes
of Iowa .and Nebraska looked to
clinch the Big Six crown again
with a victory over Kansas
Duke. Southern Conference pow-
t- -
t
1. Double blanket
-lull size
Sectional Combats Feature Football
Menu Armistice Day As Championship
Contenders Meet For Crucial Games
they eked out a 3 to 0 win over the
Sam Houston Bearcats of Hunts-
. Nearly 500 Commerce fans and a
number of Teachers College exes,
here for a home-coming week-end.
swelled the crowds and by noon it
appeared that the seats would be
known for his speed.
All of the Texas Christian play-
ers were in condition for the fray
except Paul HUI, who is out with
a fractured left ankle.
AUSTIN, Nov. 1—(P—The Bay-
lor Bears, who rose to unexpected
glory last week by eliminating T.
C. U. from the race for the South-
No Failures
"So far as I know, no coach or
superintendent in this district has
A heavy and experienced Sher-
' man Bearkat eleven, doped by pret
Georgia a 1933 pecan crop is esti-
mated at 5,000,000 pounds or 92 per
cent above last year's production
ville • - -
The Bearcats, developed unexpect-
ed defensive strength, came with-
Primed to the hilt, the Eagles
wrJ-set to resume the annual
grudge play by giving the formid-
able Lions a run for their money,
though pregame dope placed the
locals under the invading eleven.
Gridiron. Cross-Country
' The Lons, seeing their first first
class chance at a conference title
in many . years looming Just, over
the horizon, were due to put up
the bitterest fight the Eagle-Com-
merce rivalry has engendered to
date.
•The game decides whether the
locals retain a fighting chance for
BUILDING
MATERIALS
are advancing in price.
Repair that porch, do
the odd jobs now and
give a job.
F oxworth-Galbraith
Lumber Co.
Phone 57
EAGLES TAKE FELD AGAINST
COMMERCEINLASTHOMEGO;
“L
broken field and on the famed
Baylor line, five members of which
played throughout the entire T. C.
U. game.
GREEN VALLEY
GREEN VALLEY, Nov. A—The
first Sunday singing was held here
—a good crowd was present.
Miss Jewell Meadow and Joel Hunt
were married Nov. 2.
Mrs. Ellis Sutherland of Aubrey
visited Mrs W T Bothwell.
Mr. and Mrs. L E. Madden Miss
Louise Madden, Mr. and Mrs E. E
Love. Dr. and Mrs. Robertson of
Aubrey attended church here Sun-
day.
Miss Pearl Robertson of Rockwall
visited Mr and Mrs. H. A. Keen
o E. Love was in Fort Worth.
Mr and Mrs Johnnie Bailey and
daughters of Wylie visited Mr. and
Mrs. R. 8 Zachary
Mr. and Mrs Jim McMahan. John
McMahan Misses Ola Justice. Joe
Phillips and Wiley Coots of Oak
Grove visited Mr and Mrs C. T
SPORTS HORN
By BILL PAEKER,
Associated Press Sports Writer
J. G. Barry, director of schools at
Hondo, writes concerning the eight
semester rule in the Texas Inter-
scholastic League:
’“The majority of schools in the
THANKSGIVING
Turkey Market
. ■ ' Mzr
coaches and holdovers a large num- west, as well as the country at
ber of boys who failed in the eighth large, watched with intense inter-
grade before they ever came out for est Notre Dame's attempt to halt
football are being penalized 4 fthe unbeaten Boilermakers of Pur-
•The attitude of some superi- due. Despite successive defeats by
tendents who favor the eight semes- Carnegie Pitt and Navy, the Ram-
ter rule has been that the coaches | blera continued to give the impres-
are raising a row beeause tneywankteoin of having all kinds ol power
better material. That is natural to that might break out. .at any mo-
SERVICE DRUG STORE
FREE DELIVERY
Phone 171 At Your Service
a
FIGHTING BRONCO GRIDDERS
HOLD SHERMAN TOM SCORE;
MANDERS, LEOPARDS WIN
ton at Sherman Friday. found a
fighting Bronco squad a hard pill
to swallow and only managed to
eke out a * to 0 wi by a tally in
thes last few minutes of play.
The winning score was rung up
by an overhead attack. A penalty
gave Sherman the ball on Den-
ton'S 42-yard line and a long pass.
Guzick to Slayden on a trick play,
gave a first down on the Bronco
24-yard- line. Sherman lost .15
yards on a penalty for use of hands
on offense, then a pass to Gu-
ziok to Jackson put the ball on
the four-yard stripe. From there
Guzick plunged over to score.
In the closing play a Denton
offensive was launched overhead
and Hester's passes took the ball
to the Bearkat 20-yard line, but
there Guzick intercepted a toss and
carried the play back from pay
dirt.
The Broncos rolled up eight first
downs. Sherman nine.
Brones Click Smoothly
Shorty Hester was the big gun
21
——;--- C
—------------—v-- —
Bobcats Down ,
Sam Houston in
Tight Encounter
#3
..START
taf ■ 4
planning your Thanks-
giving dinner now with
the choice foods to be
found here.
Francis M. Craddock
Grocer {
- Phone 71
Broncos offence. going
H3-T
J.C.PENNEYce
good game at quarter and did some
good punting and passing
Captain Harrison was the main
reason that the Sherman plays were
not working. Harrison was in the
Sherman backfield most of the‘'aft-
ernoon breaking up Sherman plays
before they could get started. Ad-
kins. who has been on the injured
list, was able to return to the line-
up and stop the famous sweeping
end runs of the Bearcats getting
in on nearly every play and getting
more than his share of the tackles
during the afternoon.
Matthews. Nelson and Abbey play-
ed a very strong defensive game in
the line, completely outplaying their
heavier opponents throughout the
game.
On the offense Hester at quar-
ter and Richey at half were the
main ground gainers for the Bron-
cos going through the line many
times for neat gains before being
brought down by the secondary de-
fense.
Highlanders Swamp Lions
All other district squads were
seeing action Friday
At Dallas the Highland Park
Scots. favorites in the title races,
coasted to a 38-to-6 victory over
an invading McKinney Lion eleven.
The lone Lion score Was in the
sekcond period whhen an overhead and
ground attack took the ball to the
Scots’ five-yard line and from there
plunged through the middle of the
line to score. Highland Park scor-
ed twice in the opening period on
recovered fumbles Comng ringing
up the first tally. Cornelius the
second Again i the second period,
twice more in the third and finally
once again in the fourth. High-
land Park cross the McKinney goal
tangle between halve* in a cross-
country contest, with Coach Choc
Sportsman's Eagle harriers and an
invading squad fairly evedly match-
ed and set for an effort to crack
the standing time for the Denton
whole game. His fifth year boys
could replace these small boys, and
the latter would still have a chance
to play a year or two later when
they are big enough.
•The high school mentioned has
over two hundred students. Of course
we could do as one league official
suggested at the May meeting: we
could play basketball instead of foot-
ball But we feel that if football is a
fine game and is good for the boys
in the large high schools, It is good
for our boys, too We feel that
the league should try’ to accomplish
the most good for the largest num-
ber If the Class. B schools want a
ten semester rule,why not give it to
them Does the league serve us, or do
we serve the league? Or will the
powers that be do the thinking for
the majority of us, and lead us from
darkness into the light in spite of
ourselves?
narrow margin of 3 to 0. .A
In non-conterence play today, tha
Trinity Tigers at Waxahachie meet
an invasion of the Southwestern
University Pirates.
allowed to use ten semester stu-
dents in athletics. The matter has
been put square up to the State com-
mittee. •
“Those who know the problems
of the small school that is trying to
play football can appreciate the pre-
dicamAit we are in. The smaller
high schools are playing under-age
and under-weight boys against op-
ponents who are normal." There are
as many as three too-young and too-
small boys on seven of the twelve
teams in our district.
“The two or three fifth-year boys
in each of these schools would re-
place. either or the first team or as
substitutes. boys Who really should
not be subjected to playing a whole
San Marcos Bobcats continued
their march toward the 1933 Lone
Star Conference title Friday when
Southwest Games
FORT WORTH, Nov. 11 —4—
An intersectional football game
bringing together the University
of North Dakota and Texas Chris-
tian University teams was the Ar-
mistice Day sports feature here.
. It was the first encounter be-
tween teams of the Southwest and
the North Central Conferences
The North. Dakota squad arrived
me Brumns pinned neir main ---- fif - nther
hopes for success on the bullet like game; A coach toldme the. other
nassine of Joe Pearce, on Pearces day that he.was plaring. twothi.
teen-year-old boys on.his team the
They faced one of their two
toughest assignments of the sea-
son, the East Texas Lions of Com-
merce rating in the same class
with San Marcos’ Bobcats in the — ------—
Lone Star Conference scramble. three and two-tenths miles course.
to take at least- a
m victory over Den-
- “ Part wool blanket*,
• warm and fluffy. Beau-
• tiful plaids of rose, blue
Alegreen, gold and orchid,
bound in good quality
3928 satin. Big double blan-
33 ket for double bed.
Big Lot of STOVES
at a real BARGAIN
Also Dishes and Cooking Utensils at Old Prices
TALIAFERRO & SON
Phone 125 . -ue
BLANKETS
Friday’s football results:
(By Associated Press)
EAST
Washington and Jefferson
George Washingtop 13
■
77//37
ever persuaded a boy to fail a course power and speed to burn, was
in order to return for another year the public choice over a rapidly
of football. I do not doubt that there improving Dartmouth eleven.
have been a few such cases in Uw 1 ’ - —
state, but in order to punish a few
• up at Teachers College field 9 2:20. -he aaabondddthe gridiron match,
the two colleges were scheduled to
AUTOMOBILE
WINDOW GLASS
. We cut and install glass
for car windows, doors,
etc. Drive by and have
that draft remedied.
Travelstead Auto
Supply Co,
___ Phone’ 1057
• L-ie
Hip! Hooray!
• Denton Now Has A
Children’s Little
Theatre
..Morris & MeClendon..
219 W. Hickory St.
in an ace of upsetting the Bobcat
advance, holding the title favor-
ites scoreless until late in the clos-
ing period. Then in the last few
minutes of play Carnes. Bobcat
kicker sent the ball sailing between
the goal posts to score three points
on a field goal and decide the en-
counter.
It was the third Lone Star win for
the Bobcats, and their eighth suc-
cessive victory this season. The win
leaves but two more hurdles for the
San Marcos squad to clear next
week their crucial battle of the sea-
son against the East Texas Lions
at Commerce and the following
week their season closer against the
Eagles, played at San Marcos.
1 west Texas Teachers 3 ___
Texas Arts and Industries Prosh S;
Corpus Christi College-Academy 14:
Sam Houston Teachers Frosh 15;
East Texas Teachers Frosh 0.
this week-end was played yester- .
day with San Marcos nosing out M
a Sam Houston by the upsetting
ability to get away -through a
SOUTH'
Mississippi College 0; Loyola (New
Orleans) 38
Erskine 8; Rollins 25.
MIDWEST „ .
Missouri Mines 0. St Louis Uni-
versity 2« — _ . _
Ouacblta 14: Arkansas lech 7.
Arkansas State Teachers 13: Ar-
kansas College 7.
Hendrix 13: Magnolla A. and M.. «.
Kansas Wesleyan 13: Emport
Teachers 22. __ . „
southwest I Okla I Teachers 23,
Northwest Teachers 0.
SOUTHWEST
Austin College 0; Abilene Chris-
tian 13. a
Ranger Junior College 0: Schreiner
Institute 9. _ _ , .
Texarkana College 15; Paris Junior
College 0
Sam Houston Teachers 0; South-
understand it, is unknown. Ger-
many 13 ruled by the Nazis, and
adds to the loss of all liberty only
at German Jews, at Socialists. Com-
munists, and trade unionists but at
every man of liberty or pacifist
views
Jugoslavia, aggrandized as a re-
sult of the war. is ruled by a king-
dictator. Hungary is ruled by.a
small band of Magyar land-owning
nobles Poland is under the dom-
ination of Marshal Pilsudski
Turkey is bossed by Mustapha
Kemal. Japan is under the thumb
of military and naval martinets who
do not stop at murder to stifle op-
position. Spain. still A republic
waver* before a dubious future
Kings vau and Dictators Rise.
Only a few countries, 15 years aft-
er. *UU cherish liberty and offer
freedom as uneasy home—the Unit-
ed States, Great Britain. France,
Holland, Belgium, Switzerland
Czechoslovakia and Scandinavia
The kings, the princes, and the
dukes have almost vanished but
in their place have risen dictators
and ruling cliques.
Today, 15. years after "The War
to End Wars.” a ne wwar is at least
as likely as it was in 1014. Nations
not bound by the various peace trea-
ties are arming as never before
France is armed to ths teeth. So
are her allies and friends. Poland
Czechoslovakia. Jugoslavia, and Ru-
mania Italy is fully armed. and
talks of "primacy."
Russia is heavily armed in a "new
socialist nationalism." Japan not
only is armed, but is using its arms
to wrest Manchuria fupm the help-
less Chinese and press on to what
well may be a major conflict with
Russia,
The United States Is increasing
tier navy, and Britain is preparing
to increase her air force.
League of Natiens Proves Impotent
Everywhere in Europe, among the
nations that maintain armies and
navies, military expense ■ a large
part of the national budget
Germany, disarmed -at Versailles,
prepares now to re-arm. Some con-
tend she already is well on the way
through the line on off tackle plays here yesterday after a 1,560-mile
■ punonroo"reorenas-porhasmetetstartheablaz-tootben.ata ts
■ ‘ “ tackle who is reputed to be the
tallest Stayer in college foot-
is opposed to it. At the state meet-
ing of delegates last May a motion
passed recommending to the state
committee that Class B schools be
no
K Massey.
Mrs T. J. George, Charlie George.
1 from Maryland, and Georgia, de-
1 spite a lengthy casualty list. was
picked to beat Yale for the fourth
; successive time, a feat no school
' but Harbard ever has accom-
plished. Army had no visions of
another 46-0 rout of Harvard but
Miss Inez George of Denton and
Miss Corine George of Dallas were
here. _
Mr and Mrs Jess Moore of Den-
ton visited Mrs J. D. Moore.
Miss Marv Beth Banks, who at-
tend s school in Fort Worth, visited
her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Winston Cannors
visited Mrs M E Richardson
Jack Burhead of Fort Worth was
Hubert Burkhead is in Fort Worth.
ME and Mrs. E. N. Massey of
Denton visited Mr. and Mrs A. T.
Massey. _ .
Frank and Fred Grace of Wichi-
ta Falls were here •
Misses Velma Maxwell and Mau-
rice Sanders of Double Oak were
here.
Mr. and Mrs Clyde Walker of
Aubrey visited Mr. and Mrs. Wick-
Gainesville Downs Jackets
in the other District Six en-
counter, Gainesville's Leopards
nosed' out the Denison Jackets. 3
to 0. on the Jackets' home field. A
bitterly-contested game saw both
squads scoreless until the final pe-
riod, when Green of Gainesville
kicked a field goal from the Den-
ison 18-yard line to net the de-
cisive three points. The Leopard at-
tacks kept Denison on the defense
throughout, running up 14 first
downs to one for the Jackets, but
the famed Denison defensive wall
always tightened when time for the
final scoring punch arrived and
successfully blunted Gainesville's
charged.
west Conference 4 amrcionship,
were primed today to repeat the
performance against the University
of Texas.
The Texas record was unblem-
ished in two' conference starts.
Baylor had won but one- out of
three league tilts. Texas was fa-
vored to win, but so was T. C. U.
last week.
1
Denton County Produce Co.
nesinemmrsnhrimnidawtsem M Manager, E. A. Nall
sdemBmmserehogeeneifGme-mnAeMA*-
with her highly trained professional
officers, her "pocket battleships."
her huge civilian flying force, and
the disquleting rumors of new pois-
on gases against which there is no
defense.
The League of Nations, which was
to have been the door to a new era
in world relations, has (ailed again
and again to measure up to its hopes
It did not prevent the Italians from
slezing Fiume, the Poles from taking
Vina, the Japanese from grabbing
Manchuria, nor several South Am-
erican countries from waging long
and bitter warefare.
American we-toldyou-8o‛s be"
bring only Europe's bitter answer—
"You threw us down. You started it.
and then wouldn't join it. If you
had added your weight ‘the league
might have done much ”
Bitter Cup of Defeat Drained by
Leaders
The leaders of that Armistice Day
of 15 years ago have been strick-
en no less than the countries they
led. Every one has had to drink
the cup of bitterness to the tees.
Wilson saw a hostile Senate re-
BOLIVAR, Nov 7—O. M Rey-
nolds was here from Abilene
B R. Bentley Jr', and Ed and
Less Harbeson and Glen Waide at-
tended the races at Arlington
Downs
Henry Shackelford has moved
near Vaughtown
Esten Bentley was .here from
Qainesvile.
tain Pierce. a triplethreat man
WE WANT YOUR
GROCERY ACCOUNT!
’*^1^ We have a large stock of merchandise
r RA and are in a position to save you moey '
son the. advanced prices on many tems
“8N Plenty of good combi and st rained homey:
23• Also new crop sorghum syrup. Save you (
C? money on flour; in fact, on most every
""o thing in the grocery line. •
COME TO SEE US OR PHONE 174 ,
J. A. COOK GROCERY
"We Deliver In A Hurry"
ject his Convenant of the League.
and died, his spirit broken. Clemen-
ceau. whose tigerish will drove dis-
heartened France through to vic-
tory. was denied the final honor of
the presidency Lloyd George, who
brought the British through trlum-l
phant, sits today in Parliament. an;
unreal ghost without a following.
Orlando. who stiffened Italy aft-
er the nearly fatal defeat at Cap:
oretto, finds himself in disagreement
with Fascism and lives in obscuri-
ty. almost forgotten. ,
Worse than all these thing*. the
endangering of democracy, the new
arms race, the disappointments of
the League. Is the terrible economic
aftermath of the war.
Economic Distrems Worse Than
Contliet
A violent eruption of a volcano
often i» followed year* afterward by
earthquakes over a wide area. Just
*o the eruption of the World War
has been followed by economic earth-
quakes almost as terrible as war it-
self.
was seriously threatened by Ton- -
nessee in a southern slate marked
ctherwise by Virginia Poly’s at-
tempt to halt the rugged crimson
tide of Alabama
- Colorado University stood forth
a formidable menace to Utah's
Rocky Mountain Conference cham-
ptons. While Texas and Arkansas,
Southwest Conference leaders, were
favored over Baylor and Rice re-
spectively.
Football Results
filled to capacity.
Trinity Plays Today
The other conference game of
a certain extent, but. it those super- ment, into * tremendous scoring
intendants have coaches who are splurge. , '
mozsainegrehamcnrwinnins thonn r other ““7 d
“nsdomf (ist batheron "hnymenu"notabzy s
Ham.inel inedto5 W Wotmohe in- clash at Pittsburgh between Du-
Texas.arsuusm welfare of the boys qicsne’s undefeated and untied
in the weMare of the boy’s with Flu Panthers: .the
than are the superintendents. tass-up duel of Columbia and Navy
~ -o. .. wien Denton in- at New York; the annual clash of
.Do.zour New York University and Ford-
stituttonsh.i-l--d----------tham at the Yankee Stadium, and
of Brown and Syracuse at Provi-
dence
Mississippi’s right to continue in
the case for the Southeastern title
%
It is estmated here that between
30 and 40 millions of . the earth's
workers are out of employment to-
day. In many places in the world
are mountains of wheat and wool
and cotton, and millions are hungry
and unclothed. The world flound-
ers toward means of bringing them
together. , ,
And so, 15 years after, the world
struggles to pay its war debts. Not
the monetary’ debts over which na-
tions now are wrangling, but the
far greater debt that is the price
of dislocating and upheaving a world
by war The generation that brought
on the World War is dying. The
generation that fought it passes
into middle age and declip, ND
ther, it seems, will live to see {9
end.
•*)
&
AB)) •
(/
. .24.- .2
By HERBERT W. BARKEK
Associated Press Sports Writer
NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—•Foot-
ball’s Championship contenders
fought It out all along the bat-
tleground today for their own glory
and the entertainment at the na-
tion's fandom.
For the first time this season,
sectional combats completely dom-
inated the brogram excel* tor
Georgia's sally into the North to
meet Yale and Ohio State's trip
to Philadelphia to battle Pennsyl-
vanja
Otherwise it was Southern Call-
fornia-Stahford and Oregon-Oregon
State, in the far west: Michigan-
Iowa in the Big Ten; Nebras-
ka-Kansas in the Big Six: Duke-
Maryland. Mississippi-Tennessee to
the South, and Princeton-Dart-
mouth and Army-Harvard in the
East.
Big Crowd Predicted _
The day's largest crowd, perhaps
85,000, was expected in the Los
Angeles coliseum where Southern
California, unbeaten but tied by
Oregon State, tackled Stanford.
That same giant-killing Oregon
State outfit hoped to ruin Oregon's
undefeated and untied record.
Along with Oregon. Michigan.
Nebraska. Duke. Princeton, Army
and Georgia, bidding for another
1
HPEOF CREANWARLIESIN ASHES; BETRAYEDC
WORLDSEES PEACEDREAM DIE ......
Genuine Horsehide
Leather VESTS
Will be open and in full swing
MONDAY
Nov. 13th
2 Be sure, if possible, to market tur-
2 keys the forepart of the week as
I latter prt will be rushed and
t dressing plants may not be able
I 'to accommodte you.
For beat market'price*, soe us!
-
I
Mr. and Mrs. R S. Zachary visit-
ed Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Jenkins at
Pilot Point
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Richardson
visited Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Maxwell
of Denton.
• - —----------
1,704
/8==e
*6632
I " » " - a a MMLl
BY MILTON BRONNER.
NEA Service Staff Cortespondent
LONDON Nov. 11— Fifteen years
ago, at 2 o'clock in the morning of
Nov. 11, an armistice was signed
between representatives of the allied
power* and Germany The awful
war butchery which had dragged
through four years was ended.
People everywhere hoped that a
new and better page had been turn-
ed in the World* history. Hence-
forth. If mankind was still to be a
ittle lower than the angels, at least
it was to be a little higher than the
beasts. For War to Make the World
Safe for Democracy," was over.
. Humble men and women every-
where dreamed of lasting peace; of
re-la* able to go about the day's work
without danger; of a lifting of the
burden of armaments; at an end to
secret diplomacy, an end to allianc-
es and balance* of power.
Dream at Safe Demoracy dies.
Fifteen years have passed. And
now—
’ Te begin with, the world has been
made unsafe for democracy Rus-
sia is ruled by the iron hands of a
small band of Bolsheviks, and lib-
erty has disappeared.
Italy is ruled by a small band of
Fascists, and Uberty. as Americans
HOUSTON. Nov. 11—The
University of Arkansas Porkers,
unbeaten and untied in Southwest
Conference competition, were in
Houston for a football encounter
this afteroon with the rejuvenated
Rice Owls, who had yet to reg-
ister their first conference victory.
The Owls were cheered by the
return of Leche Sylvester, scintil-
lating Sophomgre wingman from
Brownsville, who suffered a brok-
en hand in the game wtlh Creigh-
ton three week* ago. A special
cast .and glove had been prepared
for Sylvester so that he might
start against the Razorbacks
er. apparently had little to taar
$139. 4
GRAND LEADER C0.
. aee
—-FaEE
M, V s "e"j
Phone 1133
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 77, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 11, 1933, newspaper, November 11, 1933; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538975/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.