Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 250, Ed. 1 Friday, June 1, 1934 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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A -
T
\
4
for three conseeutive terms.
tal
has decided to retire voluntarily.
t '..
Special This Week
1M
INDIVIDUAL PIES
5c each
T*e
Denton Baking Co.
4
a realistic setting.
made toward
Ing problem of why it is
the
8
become impressed
vy’s proposal-that
presented. Ute
arm
that- the
ef
GOOD NEWS
FOR SMART DRESSERS WHO SEW
W
Tomorrow-Gall-Bladder Disease
2
THE WILLIAMS STORE
them.
I
. }
About New York
By GEORGE TUCKER
3c
"WALRE EcouOMrRUUST
ear
RAJAH SANDWICH
SPREAD
Pint Jar
15c
8y2 og. jar .... 10c
WISCONSIN NO. 1
k
CHEESE
16c
Pi
I
18c
MEDINA BRAND
SPINACH
I
No. 2 can
8c
WHITE HOUSE
MILK 6
small
tall
18c
or
cans
YUKON GINGER
TOILET PAPER
ALE
minimized
dingiy:
3, 12 og. bottles 22c
28 og. bottle .... 15c
One must be either crazy or a genius.
k
18
Pound
A&P COFFEE TRIO
Paper Bag
21c
18
6
lioka r, lb. 27c
j
I
Mi
8 (FClock. pttund .
Red Circle, lb. 23c
Pacific, 3 rolls ...
Waldorf, 3 rolls :.
Scot-Tissue, 3 rolls
10c
13c
20c
FRESH
Beets, 2 bunches 3c
GOLDEN RIPE
Bananas, pound 5c
Ask for Purity Bread
At Your Grocer
JUST i"
AMONG US
FOLKS
Poqnd
Cloth Bag
By DR. IAGO GALOGTOM
CAUSES OF MENTAL ILLNESS
It is difficult for physicians and
JR
•TH
Commission Orders
Motorcycle Back
To Former Officer
Fight Looms at
Socialist Session
FOR BAKING AND FRYING—
SNOWDRIFT, 3 lb. pail . . . 37c
It begins to look like the prolong-
ed drouth is going to do what the
AAA has been finding an exceeding-
ly difficult task—that of reducing
production to meet consumption.
teurs. It is said.
Emory G. Horger. director. said
that the staging has been simpli-
fied in order to maintain the flow
and Editorial <
m Department
hopes, buoyed by the spirit and en-
; thusiasm of youth, and their abil-
ity to maintain this spirit will have
much to do with their chance to
achieve success and happiness The
grownups, proud of the graduating
youth and rejoicing with them, owe
Assorted Fruit And
Pecan
Wife knows husband so well that when he talks
to her over the telephone she can tell he Isn’t where
he says he is.—Claude Callin in Star-Telegram
(Copyright, 1934. NEA Service, Inc.)
A man in Berlin, Germany, kicked about the
street railway service, so he got railroaded to
jail for four weeks.
Annual Play at
C. I. A. Tonight
patient has broken down at the age
of 35, while his sister of 40 and his
brother of 35, of the same stock, are
healthy and well orientated.
As our data are accumulated, we
SUITE
Slightly used.
NEW Rrn
Potatoes, 10 lbs. 19c
Edward* & McCrary
Phone 530
FRESH
CORN
BARBS
----- ----School, a Socialist institution in
life deserve friendly co-operation New York.
GROCERIES THAT
SATISFY
New pieces of corded Cotton Lace az in today.
Mere words cannot picture the intricatestexture of
this smart, sheer fabric. We can only suggest that
you see it... , and sew it. In soft, mellow colors for
all formal daytime use.
= HA =
The first report of Denton Coun-
ty wheat market this year, is en-
couraging. J. J. Hathorn. living in
By R.w,BAERY
AUSTIN, June 1—(—Bob Long
of Wichita Falls, who served his
district in the House of the Legis-
Over 800 students had registered by 2 o’clock to-
day at the Normal College, which is believed to be
the biggest to the history of the school on the first
day of enrollment. Indications now ate that the
enrollment for the term will far exceed that of last
summer, when more than 1,000 students registered.
I " l -
CAPITAL WHIRLIGIG
EWANDS _
. McDonald ....
A MCDONALD
FOWLEB ...........
Pushing Pictures _
Now all that has been changed. Rockefeller center
is gradually evolving until eventually it will operate
as a separate unit. Already the theater and the pro-
duction departmcais have been separated. Bob-Sisk,
black-haired Baltimore newspaperman formerly with
the Theatre Guild and later director of advertising
and publicity for RKO. was given a choice of hand-
ling the theater publicity or directing advertising for
RKO pictures. He chose the latter, and I for one
think he was wise.
Publicizing pictures is a rhymeless and ’ reasonless
business. I know because I had four years of it.
Each picture must be sold differently in every com-
munity. for what is sure fire in Toledo is almost cer-
tain to be sure death in St. Louis. That is to say,
some localities go heavily for romance while others
lean towards the two-fisted virility of out-door stuff.
Consequently, a definite knowledge of each commun-
ity is essential, because one slip in diagnosing the
public taste is likely to result in an unbelievable loss.
•••
What It Takes
Another vital factor is the billing of names. Stars
have tremendous drawing power in some cities and
practically none in others. When a picture features a
player who is popular, say in Boston, that player’s
name is emblazoned all over the ads, but if the play-
er has little or no box office appeal, then the title
of the picture is 34 sheeted and the player’s name
Now Is The Time To
Check YougScreens
We will be glad to do
the job for you and give
you an estimate of the
cost for needed repairs.
Foxworth-Galbraith
Lumber Co.
— Phone 57
Francis M. Craddock
Phone 71
It is all right to advise a man not to worry, but
it is better to not give him anything to worry over.
—Dallas News.
t
experienced is being felt over a wide
area of rich agricultural country,
and not only is the wheat crop be-
ing very rapidly reduced but thous-
ands of head of live stock will have
to be slaughtered to save them from
starvation. There have been dire
fereeasterswhe. ever rinse the gee.
ernment started on its crop reduc-
tion program, have given vent to
their belief that it was wrong to
destroy that which had been grown,
and now some of the prophets may
rise up to claim that the present
distress is punishment being meted
out. Regardless of one’s attitude in
such matters, he will have to ad-
mit that nature can do a better job
than man ‘when it cornea to cur-
tailing production
b •—•s,--:—
The Henrietta Independent has.
this to say:
Roosevelt labor policy and turn the A. F. of L. up-
silo down.
Much will depend on the result of an internal fight
now going on between conservative officers of the
A F. of L. steel union, which had about 5000 mem-
bers a year ago, and leaders of an estimated 76,000
to 100,000 new members. -
Factors against a serious labor upheavel in steel
are:
The industry is entering the slack season, when
there’s heavy demand for tin-plate only—a demand
which comes from the canners.
Roosevelt normally wouldn’t have much trouble in
getting A. F. of L. leaders to call off the strike. They
don’t want one »
The steel industry is well organized and well heel-
ed. probably more closely knit for defense than any
other major industry. it has the best developed labor
spy system of any and apparently is willing to spend
large sums to break a strike.
But if resentment is as bitter as that shown to
Toledo and Minneapolis, present A. F. of L. officers
will be overridden and there will be no end of trou-
ble. despite the workers’ present tepid leadership and
lack of organization.
46c
49c
$
/u
m-.T.
motorcycles along • frequently
highway in a densely. poPunated
community, Chief L. G. Phares 01
the patrol ordered all his men to
be d the outlook tor the perpetra-
tors. He assigned some of them sole-
Jy to the job of temUng out the
Offenders.
Since then there has been a move-
ment to consolidate the Rangers
and the patrolmen into one organ-
ization of state police. The attitude
of the legislature will be looked for
with interest.
SUGAR
Pure Cane
4
uss ice pe-pL
it or not therwiee
Revised version: Hie world to so full of a number
of things that it seems we are all as unhappy as
kings,—Dallas News,
Daily issued at 214 West Hickory Street, Deaton,
riaa. even arternoon except Sunday by the Aecord-
kronlcto Oompany.
Member Audit Bureau at Ctroudatioma.
Associated Frees and United Frees Bevios.
Member Texas Daily Frees Lengue.
poNEs
*$
w ))
•»*
1100
- M
City Attorney Luther Hoffman today gave a rul-
ing that farmers who raise their own truck and pro-
duce can sell it on the square. The question was
submitted to Secretary of Chamber of Commerce
George Roark. who in turn asked the attorney for a
ruling. A number of farmers who have watermelons
and fruit for sale are interested in the legality of
the question. ’"Hie ordinance is rather a protection
to the man who wants to sell his own products in
Denton." said Mr. Hoffman, “for it especially exempts
from the provisions those selling their own products
of any description."
Icr. Much of the oat acreage in the
county has been cut and some
wheat is in the shock. Very little
threshing has been done, however,
but will be started generally within
a short time Hathorn is harvesting
his grain with a combine. The en-
couraging grain reports and the ad-
vancing prices add materially to
the farm and business outlook in
this section.
Here in New York gang murders are never seen on
the screen. You set the "killer pull the trigger .but you
never see the victim receive the impact of the lead.
The fathers who govern such things believe this to
bad for a city where so much shooting has taken
place. On the other hand, romance goes unrestrain-
ed. People are accustomed to seeing embraces on
the screen here that would shock other communities.
By the same token, those same centers get their ac-
tion stuff in far stronger doses. •
You can see what a whale of a task it is to sell
the same picture to about 50 communities. Frankly,
I know of nothing that calls for more vigilance than
exploiting motion pictures. It is a business in which
mediocrity has not the slightest chance to succeed.
---- ---- news
DENTON TEXAS, JUNE 1, 1934_______
DISARMAMENT AT THE CROSSROADS
Recent international events have indicated rather
conclusively that disarmament by agreement between
nations has reached a crisis, and the disarmament
conference now under way at Geneva may be the
turning point between international sanity in dispos-
ing of the disarmament problem, and unrestrained
building ot armaments.
The difficulties which this country and a few oth-
ers have experienced in securing any unanimity of
opinion in regard to cutting down offensive arma-
ments lends support to the Russian demand for com-
plete disarmament as the only solution of interna-
tional security. The efforts to disarm gradually are
something like a smoker trying to taper off while
continually surrounded by other smokers, and the
Russion plan to simply disarm is too obvious for
the diplomats. - f
Norman H Davis, American ambassador at large,
He will devote his time to practice
of the law. When he first was elect-
ed to the 41st Legislature he was
studying law, at the University of
Texas and continued as a student
there during the first part of his
legislative career.
Long always was interested in
legislation pertaining to Ure oil in-
dustry.
There are five candidates for his
place, Long said.
HE
=- = Ar He Ye Act eMie
However, such cases are relative-
ly in the minority. The far larger
number of cases at mental illness
are not the result of a specific, or
what might be called impersonal
cause. On the contrary, their causes,
intangible in nature, reside within
the individual
One of the contributing causes to
the development of mental illness
which has been widely recognized
both by psychiatrists and the laity
is heredity The psychiatrist knows
that his patients tend to come from
what is conveniently catted bad
stock. However, in the face of this
with the fact
mental illness
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
tetion = stanaing otw firm, individual or corpora-
tion mo ve gladly corrected upon being called to the
‘ —---.ft—
- - exclusively etitlea to the
news dispatches credited to
in this paper and also the
aments decreased while defensive armaments be in-
creased. The American contention is that such a
process would increase national security, and at the
same time make other nations feel more secure from
outside attack, and that in time, the defensive
armaments could be reduced.
The only difficulty with this plan to that a divid-
ing line between defensive and offensive armaments
to difficult to draw, and defensive arms can be uti-
lized in offensive warfare. Pacts of non-aggresston
also would be needed, and so far such pacts haven’t
been very successful. e
ter immediately upon a business
DETROIT, June 1—(-An ac-
rimonious schismatic fight loom-
ed today over the Socialist na-
tional convention at a time con-
sidered by many leaders to be -a
critical moment in the party’s his-
tory
The fight centers on the aoppo-
sition to the “old guard"—the fac-
tion of the right wing led for
many yean by the late Morris
Hillquit.
The opponents. It was learned au-
thoritatively. already have marked
up one victory against the “old
guard." At a session of the na-
tional executive commute, the old
guard leaden made an unsuccess-
ful effort to invoke the unit rule
in state delegations—and lost.
The New York delegation to the
largest in the convention and to
presumably controlled by some of
the party leaders who were allied
with Hillquit, including Louis L
Waldman, the party’s candidate
tar governor in the Empire State
in 1933 and Algernon Lee, who for
many years has headed the Rand
The new MeClurkan building now under construc-
ton will have the largest single floor space of any
building in Denton. It to 90x130 feet under one roof
and in one big room, and the store’s area will be
considerably Increased-by the mezzanine floor which
extends over the back part of the building. Work
was delayed Tuesday on account of delay in the
arrival of materials, but a car load of ship-lap for
the .flooring and 40 tams of steel Wednesday per-
mitted the resumption of work.
----—O -
FREE SUMMER SCHOOLS
Public school student* of Denton must have heard
with misgivings the announcement that the Teach-
er’s College again will conduct free summer classes
at the two high schools and at one ward schpol. Not
so many years ago. summer classes were offered only
on payment of tuition, and it was only an earnest
parent who made the sacrifice necessary to keep
children in school during the summer months.
The Teachers’ College needs the summer classes
for demonstration work by student teachers, and the
public school children of Dento nbeneft, or lose. de-
pending upon the individual attitude. At any rate,
those parents who want children to attend school
during the summer months have no financial ob-
stacle to overcome.
Three of the city commissioners,
constituting a quorum, met brief-
ly with Mayor J. L Wright Thurs-
day and authorized the mayor to
execute the bill of sale which
transfers title to a motorcycle
back to H. Murray, former offi-
cer. Murray recently resigned his
post as city traffic officer to accept
a position with a bus line, and the
cycle. to which he had given the
city title when he took the Job,
was transferred back to him.
No other matters were before the
meeting In the absence of Chair-
man Lee Johnson, J. L. Baldwin
was named chairman pro tem.
Have you read me ads today?
They may tell you about the very
thing you are Interested in
lend their assistance in seeing that
they are given a chance to do some-
thing for themselves. Most of these
young people will enroll in college,
and those who do should be care-
ful in making selection of their
schools and the courses they will
take In order that they may develop
to the greatest possible degree their
talents and vocational ambitions.
Those boys and girls who will en-
Conndential reports indicating that chances are
I aginst any major labor blow-up are tempered by
the fact that strikers have displayed spectacular mil-
itancy in Toledo, Minneapolis .nd elsewhere
On* labor expert has just returned from the steel
area with a report that there’* about one chance
to four, of a strike which will wreck the present
’_______________
are multiform; that stock plays an
important but not decisive role;
that tangible causes such as injury.
Intoxication and bad hygiene are of
real significance.
But there are also psychic causes
arising out of some difficulties
which the individual experiences in
his attempt to understand and ad-
just himself to his environment,
which in a very large percentage of
case* are the most important of the
various causes which produce men-
.tal illness, ,
DENTON, IEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE, FIDAX, JUNE L 1934
Advertlatng Manner
timer for Mr. Rockefeller and his friend*. These seats
are of almost fabulous luxuriousness. When Mr
Rockefeller and his friends want to see a new movie,
all they need do is hie themselves there. The seats
are waiting.
This courtesy is maintained at considerable ex-
pense, since crowds often are turned away when they
might easily be sold the empty Rockefeller seats.
Unless actively identified with the business, the
man on the street has no idea of the vast amount ot
detail connected with a large theatrical company. Not
so long ago the publicity for Radio City, the RKO
chain of theaters—both in New York and in the
field—and also the publicity for Radio pictures was
under one head.
Since the slaying of Clyde Bar-
row and Bonnie Parker, the south-
west’s premier - team ot outlaws,
there has been considerable talk
about amalgamating the state’s
law-enforeing agencies. Until the •
state highway patrol was created
by the legislature a few years ago,
the Texas Rangers. With limited,
poorly-paid personnel was the only
state "constabulary." The 130 men
of the highway patrol brought into
action a “small army." However,
the’ duties of the petrolmen did not
include the "tracking of criminals."
They were supposed to aid motorist.-,
and see that the laws governing
travel on the highways were re-
spected.
When two of their number were j
slain wantonly as they rode their I
" o
eRELAEP COMMISSION MIX-UP
R. L. Holliday of El Paso, unceremoniously remov-
ed from the Texas Relief Commission a month ago,
is still a member, the Texas Supreme Court ruled
the other day and Julius Dorenfeld Jr. of Amarillo,
appointed to the commission, to not entitled to the
place. This means a further mix-up in the relief
commission which began when Coke Stevenson,
Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives n-
legally removed Holliday and appointed Dorenfeld.
Under the illegally constituted commission, Adam R
Johnson, relief director was ejected from his posi-
tion. so it stands to reason that Johnson is auto-
matically reinstated, along with Holliday
The average citizen has no means of knowing all
that to behind these Austin moves, despite the
rumors that are afloat about the Ferguson influence
on the commission, and other accusations. All the
public knows is that the relief commission is set up
to administer to Texas needy, and that an organiza-
tion that has internal troubles certainly cant do ■
good job.
4 Good Slightly Used
BED ROOM SUITES
. ... (Latest Styles)
ONE DINING ROOM
Groceries to meet the Wants of
‘ *11 the people We are are pre-
pared st all times to give you
the best on the market—clean,
fresh fruits, vegetables and
groceries at . very moderate
prices. We appreciate your
NEW YORK—in Radio City Music Hall one eh-.- . ------ . - —-
tire section of the front mezzanine is reserved at all “ 10 these boys and Kins to Eive
them every encouragement and
the Justin community, Thursday laymen alike to grasp the intangible
sold a truckload of the grain in I quality of certain of the prominent
Fort Worth, receiving 80 cent* per causes of mental illness.
bushel and a premium of 5 cents There is no difficulty in under-
per bushel. Hie’load weighed 60 standing how an individual experi-
pounds to the bushel, and Hathom encing a severe blow on the head
reported to the Fort Worth buyers might suffer such injury and dam-
that his grain was making from 30 age to his nervous system as to
to 25 bushets to the acre. This tsa | cause him to be affected in his he-
fair yield and a much better price havior. In fact, it is so very easy
than the farmer received for his to appreciate this that many a fic-
grain a year or two ago. Wheat has | tion of “having fallen on his head"
developed remarkably during the or “having been dropped as a baby"
past two weeks, according to re- is conveniently used by sympathetic
ports from over the county, and the I individuals to explain the deficien-
yield is expected to be much bet-1 cles in a given person’s intellec-
ter than had been anticipated earl- tual capacities, behavior, etc.
Secretary Ickes invaded Secretary Wallaces fav-
orite field of religion when he addressed the Pres-
byterian General Assembly at Cleveland. He would
have invaded it harder if some who looked over his
speech in advance hadn’t suggested that it might
be just as good policy not to urge the pastors to pay
more attention to the affairs of this world and less
to those ot the next.
Even so, Ickes went as fsr in comparing the New
Deal with Christianity as any Republican campaign-
er ever did in tying up Herbert Hoover and Abraham
Lincoln.
“It is interesting to recall," he said, “that Christ’s
doctrines were held unconstitutional by the Pharisees
of his day."
Ickes has a large and choice vocabulary of profan-
ity. but he -left it in, Washington.
• • . • . , . -
The Department of Commerce clipping bureau has
received more copies of editorials on the Willard
Thorp case than on any other incident in its his-
tory Ninety per cent of the editorials protest the
way in which Thorp, head of the Bureau of Foreign
and Domestic Commerce, was deprived of his job
when Senator Stephens ot Mississippi persuaded
Roosevelt to withdraw the nomination
Thorp, incidentally, has received offers of two oth-
er government poets and to likely to accept one of
“All hail the high school
graduates, they are proud of
themselves, but no prouder than
we are of them."
We join heartily with the Inde-
pendent in its greeting to the high
school graduates. Denton last night
presented diplomas to 102"boys and
girls, atong with the thousands of
others over the nation who“are re-
ceiving recognition which marks
the first milestone In their quest
for an education and preparation
to take a place of service in the
world These boys and girls are
coming out of school with high
knowledge, the psychiatrist is fre-
One of the severest drouths ever I quentiy confronted by the perplex- of action, and no effort has been
Everything to ready for the pre-
sentation of the final C. t A. Ht-
Us Theater-play tor this session,
which is the annual commence-
ment play to be given at 8:15
o'clock tonight at the college out-
door theaer. The play is Shak-
espeare's “All'* Well That Ends
WeH."
Elaborate costumes, which were
ordered for the occasion, are to be
one of the features of the en-
tertainment. The puy to bring
produced especially for seniors and
ex-students on the campus, but
the public is invited.
Originally called “Love's Labour
Won," the play is one of Shak-
espeare’s minor comedies which to
produced with no breaks in the
scenes. It has been reproduced on-
ly three times in the United States
by either professionals or ama-
l .______
Behind Scenes in Washington
L / By RODNEY DUTCHER
| NEA Service Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON—The steel strike threat worries
tha administration just enough to make it interest-
as mecona-clams mail mate* *« Denton,
]enton RecordAJhromcle
aedonp-emomoa OOMPANT. IBO.
GRANDMOTHER’S
BREAD
Rolls, 5c pkg.
AJAX LAUNDRY
SOAP, 3bars.......
INSURANCE
IN ALL OF ITS
BRANCHES
. written in strong old
line" stock companies
that have survived the
financial storms _ for
more than ONE HUN-
DRED YEARS. *
In times like these it
pays to KNOW YOUR
COMPANY.
J. J. Maclachlan
INSURANCE
Phene 365.
808 Smoot-Curtis Bldg.
The production staff includes Miss
Helen Mstthews, assistant direc-
tor; Miss Prance* Tramonte, lights;
Miss Martha Brown, programs;
Miss Edwynna Phillips, prompting.
The scenery to under the direction
or u. J. Hsmeyr---------
Membersgof the cast are Misses
Mary Alice Wilson, Betty Lighten,
Mary Sweeney, Naomi Garrison,
Gladene Parr, Florence Prewitt,
Sara Wheat, Av* Caln Hamilton,
Pauline Stevenson, Ewynna Phil-
lips, Joan Stubbs. Martha Brown.
Jeanette Sowell. Helen Matthews.
Frances Tramonte, Virginia Ann
Shultz, Elizabeth Tate and Louise
Reese and Mrs. Genevieve Law-
son
Postomce officials point out that an aviation
executive made nearly *10,000,000 on a *353 start
—and a chance to make good.
• •---#—
Scientists are arguing over whether an ancient
queen of Egypt was as important as any of the
Pharaohs. Anyway, she’s just as dead.
The House passed the bank “pay off" bill,
which was to be expected. Imagine a congress-
man turning down a “pay ofr"!
• • •
Telephone directories, a London court decrees,
are works of literature—except that the plot is
always the same.
• k,
No. 2 can 15c
PINEAPPLE .RUSHED
r pt. WESSON OIL and Quick J A
Mayonnaise Maker......... «vC
and encouragement from the grown- with the unit rule in effect, these
ups with whom they will come to: leaders would have been in a
contact. This is _a great day for strong position to dictate forma-
the Kraduatesand likewise a great ton or the Soclalist party's pro-
day tot their parents and theirfgram for the next tw
friends, oneuo theshappiesttimes. This defeat 0 "old guard"
in f t’ >u eTCT experience. Aeaders in their first skirmish gave
pr. y TV - I rise to freguent predictions that
rtnal Exams at the Socialist party will emerge
from this off-year convention more
T. C. Completed aggressive than at any time in
i J recent years. —
Work at TeachersCollege for the Moro Data Fromtoe. Behave
1933-34. session was brought, to a MANILA - Datu Tahil, Moro
close Thursday with the last final leader who went on the Warpath
examinations. A number of sto- in 1913 ana agam in 1027 aganst
dents are arTiving, from out-of- American and Filipino officials, has
town and making plans for attend, been released from prison and say.
tog the summer session. AU offices he is through with being an out-
orpthescollege ar open.a wonga. law. He rejoined his wife, Princess
aFegistration.wilbesheldMondayTarhata, rormer University of 11-
ana Tuesday, and classwork will be- linni. en ad
gin Wednesday morning. unois co eq.
19 Years Ago Today
•From Record and "Chronicle, June 1, 1915)
The Baptist soliciting committee for the new Bap-
tist parsonage, which is to be erected at a cost of
- 83.000, started out Monday morning to solicit con-
L— tributions from the church membership to raise the
■ amount needed.
SUBSCEITION RATES
One year (in advanot)—;.....—--------
Mx months by mall (in advance) ------
Three months by matt (in advance)
One month delivered ..........................
xonich TO THZ PUBLIC
—Only $° A Yard—
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 250, Ed. 1 Friday, June 1, 1934, newspaper, June 1, 1934; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1539136/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.