Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 217, Ed. 1 Monday, April 25, 1938 Page: 2 of 8
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DENTON, TEXAS, RECOBP-CHRONICLE, MONDAY, APRIL U, 1031
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God, that cannot lie.—Titus 1 2
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could not write sonnets in
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due to move atMad
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Successor to I eeper- Bald win
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Staff Correspondens
(Copyright. mt. SEA Service. Inc•
At the campaign opening of Er-
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The Williams Store
FINE CLOTHING SINCE 1884
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LITERARY
GUIDEPOST
MJOmN SELBT
Be not overcome of evil, but over-
come evil good.— Romans 12:21.
, last week emphasize the need of still
ta to protect the lives of men who dig
FRANCIS M.
CRADDOCK,
Grocer
Phone 71
PROPOSEP
SPENDING
CROGRM
W. Troutaf
L.Bvensen of
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chi
air
vic
for
me
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the
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III Sundown
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lt'a a dollar to doughnuts Benito
is tickled he's not Hirohito.
fl
13,09 •
mor L
Bk
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in the
tivities,
edl,
ensasa
Phone Us Your
Order .
for Quality Fruits,
Vegetables and
Groceries
____id _
MoDORALD
,wi
spo
be
Finest Quality Seasoned Lumber
For Every Building Purpose—At a Fair Price
WAPLES-PAINTER LUMBER CO.
pa
po
< ii
lai
pla
hul
e=eto"
220 ■ J
chairman, Carl
ck, vice chair-
9
"n
Highest Quality
and
Lowest Prices
We Specialize In
Tender Steaks and
Roasts
We are having calls for homes as
well as lots. C. E. MILLER. Phone
7. 221
LOW RATES
A2a e„u,
/ ’
M.
A Finnish university has conferred an honoramy
degree on Herbert Hoover but think of the degree
Uncle Bam will presently confer on Finland: Paid
in full —St Louis Post-Dispatch.
. DENTON, TEXAS, APRIL 38, 1938_______
STILL DANGEROUS " ,
, Despite the constant efforts that have been made
to reduce the hazards of coal mining, accidents such
as the explosion in the Keen Mountain mine in west-
-98-10
-128
mnIX THOUGHT FOB
TODAY
sharp claws. Our flippers are
flat and, three cornered and hair-
— You can tell the difference
- the two families that way.
too, the seal has a shorter
"111 go to work on this at once," Gabriel agreed.
thentdopyaucwan,."2 When do you plan to put
“Oh,” explained the producer, “I forgot to tali you.
It won’t go into production. We couldn’t get Yehudi,
and Toecanini wouldn't come out here at any price
We really aren't going to make the picture at all.
But it's a swell idea for a story and you said you
were unhappy because you had nothing to wRite.
Now you can write and be happy as you like.’’
This story was told your corfespondent by a writer
who is vacationing in New York. He to under contract
to the same studio and he assures me the story to
true. There is no reason to believe it is not.
An American who returned from Europe rev.
cently reported that the Old Country was way
ahead of us in the development of the hicxle.
Oh, how can we ever hold our heads up after this?
and keep
of Stuart'
I
p
",545
Most of us have not taken the trouble to try to
understand the complicated farm bill Another de-
lightful way to save Uma la not to read about the
resterilization of gold.—Brubaker in New Yorker.
It to just possible, of course, that the beat way for
business to assure the government meaaling to busi-
new is for business to meddle in government
more—Colorado Springs (Colo News.
is honest and courageous; his prestige in this ad-
ministration has grown rather than diminished.
When Roosevelt chose between Hull and his then
pet brain-truster, Raymond Moley, easing the latter
from the State Department lest Hull quit and cause
a revolt among southern conservatives, he was rec-
ognizing Hull's high stature among the Important
southern conservative group.
The secretary’s more radical acguaintanaes think
he is way behind the times in his social -econOin ic
outlook. Nevertheless, when some of the most ad-
vanced liberals in Congress and the administration
less than three years ago formed a group to study
possibilities of a constitutional amendment which
would curb the Supreme Court, they could be found
meeting once a week in Hull’s apartment.
Hull has cordial relationships with the Tugwell-
Taussig-Berle “American Molasses" brain trust group
which earlier this year steered Owen D. Young. Tom
Lamont, and John L. Lewis into a “co-operation"
conference with Roosevelt at the White House.
Berle, an important original brain-truster, quit the
New Deal to brain-trust for Mayor, LaGuardia to
New York. When he came here recently as assistant
secretary of state it was hoped that he could wangle
Roosevelt’s support for the goverhorship of New York.
That hasn't worked out.
But to team with Hull he may well be going many
more places than tils enemies intend.
(Copyright, 1938, NEA Service, Inc.)
luSsxt the
20/1he
Acron.
Dentop
s%
- A
POLITICAL heart of Czecho-
I Slovakia and storm center of
the nation these days is Prague,
with its massive towers and storied
architectur. For here must be
faced, inevitably, the threat of
the Nation’s coal. Government mine experts, safety
engineers and mine engineers have worked together
diligently to lower the death rate per ton of coal
mined, and have made notable progress, especially
as compared with records in other countries, but
still unexpected explosions blast through mine tun-
nels and snuff out the lives of dozens of men.
What a paradise this would be if politicians were
as competent as the business leaders they decry and
try to hamstring —Detroit Free Press.
'Bulmi. to Hull and Berle goes most of the
tor the fact that the speech was, as Wash-
Tl prezdenteas possibility More so in the
M his friends and admirers than in the mind
SpimaelL But also in the minds of objective
r* whe.pee in him a possible oompromise at
t Democratic convention as between the New
M piBoomevelt forces, on one hand, and
fex machine forces and old line conservative
The only kind thing that can be said for Stalin
in his system of mass purges 1* that he rtslists that.
misery loves company.—Tyler Telegraph.
Al we want is education wlthoet study.' wealth
without earning it. and fame without years of hard
work.—Kerrville Mountain Sun.
ACT AT ONCE
If you have property for sale list
The Denton High giris basketball team claims the
state championship by reason of its defeating the
strongest teams.o North Texas and Waco, cham-
plona at Central and South Texas: A picture of the
teem applies in today's Record-Chronicle. Members
of the squad are Edythe Kerley. Louise Preston, Fem
Ussery, Marian Rowland, charlotte Collins, Sene
Ashworth, Helen French and Ida Mae Hall.
a
.....M
-IM
quantity
it certain
tl or not __________
local news bubliahed hereto.
Man About Manhattan
By GEORGE TUCKER
NEW YORK, April 25—The fantastic anecdotes of
Hollywood continue to wing their way back from
studio lots, and if this one is to be believed, and
there is no reason why it shouldn’t, it merits a high
place in the uncollected annals of absuraity.
It concerns Gilbert Gabriel, former New York
dramatic critic, who went to Hollywood to write for
the films He didn't just go there. He rushed. By
plane At the insistence of studio chiefs who tele-
graphed him that speed was imperative. Drop every-
thing and take the first plane, they urged. Hurry I
Hurry!
So Gabriel tossed a few shirts in a bag and board-
ed a fast transcontinental plane. He arrived. He was
jA
r «
the
tio
tio
del
ing
till
mJ
. — —tea-
— —sn2
be along for you almost any day
now.”
"We. must practice our tricks,’"
barked the sea lions. And as Willy
NUly told the others this news, too.
they all began to try out their
act. or k they had no acts, they
merely, looked out over their yards
as though they were seeing a great
many people.
That very night, the owner of
the., wild animal show arrived to-
gether with the drivers of the au-
tomobile vans and a few others
How proud the little man was to
think that he had had wild ani-
mal guests for a winter and that it
had been a peaceful, lovely season.
Smoot-Otitte Bidg.
Phone 865
--tmne tert 1-1
•soeiatod Pries is exclusively entitled to the
publication of all news dispatches credited to
otherwise credited la this paper and also the
way we do."
The sea lions were splashing and
barking and diving and doing all
sorts of tricks.
“You're all going to leave me
soon." said Willy NUly. “I had a
NOTICE TO TU PUMLIC, -
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
Westindbsodse
MARTN RADIO a GIFT
SHOP
Phone sos
California, according to a recent survey, lead*
- -the world in its export trade of prunes. Hollywood
sends out a pretty good crop of lemons once in a
while, too.
A 9-year-old Chicago boy has been spending
most of his time making political campaign
speeches, but don’t worry about him. Hes not
supposed to act like an adult till he actually is
one, is he?
censes without warn tooth— and
on other eway terma to next March
Hi Thereaftet more stringent re-
quirements will apply.
Mexoters ofthe board are Walter
DAYLIGHT TIME GAINS
The moving up of clock* in six Eastern States and
to 74g dttos and towns of 11 other states Sunday
show how daylight saving time, a World War Inno-
vation. has gained to popularity through wide public
acceptance. Each year more cities and States adopt
. this method at giving citizens more daylight hours
for work or recreation, especially to the industrial
areas, of the country.
In agyicuzsural sections, the adoption of daylight
-"mvg tnhe mr oeemr so popuae, formrm workers
follow sun time, and no saving occurs through set-
ttes up clocks, except to make the noon meal coms
an hour earlier. About the only inconvenlence of
daylight time to ths farmer is that with the advent
of the radio, he has to change the time tar listening
to favorite programs
EARLY ADJOURNMENT WOULD HELP
Congressiona leaders have set June 1 as the ap-
proximate date for summer adjournment and are
shaping legislation so a* to clean up as much as
possible of the pending program by that time. The
revised tax measure is expected to go to the White
House this week and the chances of the naval ex-
pansion bill getting Senate approval appear good.
Other legislation is going through without causing
f ay major jams such as have prolonged Congres-
f sonattsesstons to recent yean.
/ harly adjournment should be helpful to business.
fq no matter what Congress is considering, it has
a powerful influence on business. The deliberations
of this body during the last fe wyears have, rightly
or not. kept many businessmen to a state of uncer-
taintp. It is all right to urge that business quit wor-
-yingiover what the politicians do. but this appar-
edus doesn't work out very satisfactorily, especially
sitae much of the trouble of business has been due
to unjustified economic tinkering by politicians.
107
An odd suggestion from a man of
an inventive turn of mind who
SAFETY FIRST!
No one knews better than the funeral director how many ghastly
accidents happen daily that commo sense and rare could prevent.
We urge you to follow the simple safety sngges-
tions issued by our local police, that this community may be a
safer place in which to live. Phone 148.
SHEPARD FUNERAL HOME
probable that the manner to
which these few have. continued
to demand that much cotton be
grown by their renters. has had
much to do with this cut to
acreage program to riser—I the
constantly increasing cottan pro-
ductton To somqe extent this
program may be an experiment
by the government, but it is up
to every farmer and landowner
to fully co-operate and deter-
mine du- wisdom of the restric-
tiona of acreage."
Lkewine Denton County will not
be affected a*, much aS some coun-
ties hr . the 1938 cotton control pro-
gram. due to the wide diyerstt of
: like the snow. We. have good fun.
t "The seals are not so fond of
2 being away from home as we are.
F
N 1
Acting under theultceosing: law
which became effective about 11
months ago, the board has issued
2220 ltpemseho which scompares with
11156 to New. York, 6,588,1 Ohio,
4534 In Cautoria and 3,304 in
Pennsylvania.
The board -has. received 3,775 ap-
plications, howeves, is rejecting s
negligible number, and expects to
• 1
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e
ae5
..2
y/Ale
w
■reset. Dmtm.
kg the Record-
AW'
N%NVN
’ JUST
AMONG VS
A FOLKS |
{A «
But the ghost salary continued to come to. Each
week he was handed his money Good money. You
could spend it anywhere But Gabriel began to get
jittery He was tired twiddling his thumbs Finally
he went to his studio chief:
“I can't stare into space and be happy. You got
me out here on a rush assignment and I've been here
for months without doing anything I want an as-
signment. I want a story tf write."
“Ah." cried the executive, "why didn’t you say sol
But of course you are not happy. You must have an
important story to write."
So the executive went hone and thought about
it and came beck with a gleam of triumph to his
eyes. He said to Gabriel:
“Now it is all arranged. You are to write an im-
portant story—a magnificent picture starring Yehudi
Menuhin, the prodigy, the great boy violfnist, but
there must be no love scenes to the picture. iher
must also be a fat part to the story for Toecanini,
the great Toecanini What a picture! What box-office!
Yehudi and Toscanini Remember now, no love in-
terest for Yehudi That, is not permitted. But une
your imagination Write anything you Uke. Write a
great story, a magnificent story. Do you like this as-
signment?"
“It is okay with me," replied Gabriel, "so long as
I am working But it seems strange that a picture,
should be made witbout any love interest whatso-
ever."
"Nevertheless, there must be no love interest, de-
clared the executive. . __________.
SOAM CETER
7 CzEcHOSLOWAKIA
peoge
parflculsr, a* it - --------
at ths farmers in this ta^Ut
RgcordClironicle^
DIO
Advertising Manager
mana a* Danton.
; yM^ to
* J.J.MACLACHLAN
Stories
—B, Mar Bomneg-
THE BEA LIONS
“You don’t want to go up North
do you?” Wily Nilly asked the sea
lions as they played around in their
--76
g BARBS g
‘ (Copyright, 1938. NEA Service, me
Somebody in Wynyard, Saskatchewan, has been
stealing horses’ talls. That's not petty thievery,
it's petty nagging.
■ n
.1 /(
-
met. He was welcomed and greeted enthusiastically.
He was cheered and told that the wheels probably
would have ceased turning had he not caught that
partiqular- plane-----------------------------------—tere
And then he aat quietly for three months, without u
of negWratton tor
state has
fesV. Al-
azidom.
Already Premier Milan Hodza
has announced that his govern-
or letter from your owner, and mest
E aagea, too, when his friend came
. to letch the walrus. He says he’ll
man, George R. Brown of Houston.
Bd C Connor of Dallas, J. B. Aud-
nail of Tylet and, P A Righter at
San Antonio and Austin, secretary.
A, rumon has been heard that
fornem Got. R. B. Steel ing at Houm-
ten may re-enter politics some time
to the. future, pogadbly .seeking the
second term demjedhim in 1932.
Observers think thearumor has
little baste in probability, but they
notesreporta that sterling has re.
couped Ma personal fortune which'
cetved a nice bit of applause when
introduced to the large crowd as a
"beloved former governor." He bow-
edsandssardsrerthng“succeeded Dan
Moody as governor having defeated
Mrs Miriam A. Ferguson in a run-
off primary. He received 473.371
Votes to Mrs. Ferguson’s 384.402.
In 1932 when he asked a second
term, but lost to Mrs. Ferguson,
again to a runoff primary, by less
than 4,000 votes. The vote for Mir
Ferguson was 477,644 and for Ster-
ling 473,846.
Admittedly a handicap for Ster-
ling would be his age He is 63
Titer* were items in the "chat" for which HUH and
Bata with their strong desire to quiet admtnistra-
tion critics, were not responsible. Roosevelt’s asser-
ton that taxes and government expenditure money
. “ultumnately comes out of the labor of all the people. ”
that government spending money should be dts-
tribmted at the bottom as well as the top of the eco-
nomid scale and that wage-hour legislation conse-
qumny shound be promptly passed-that was much
nsoab to the spirit of the philosophy of David Cusb-
C.EMIILERR
"5 XosuRANeE AGENCX
5 » .. Phone. 4
32,
suflered eo severely in the depres-
sion and from the standpoint of
money to meet expenses of an-
other campaign is in excellent
shape
3,} a//N
A wwN/,2HM
8//
' y, e
LOANS
CITY AND FARMS
9/5 '• a1
2120098
acreage. Cotton, wben the yield
and.price are. good, is about the
greatest money crop.that can be
grown in this section. But with the
uncertain yield’ and frequent low
price situation which have pre-
vailed to recent yearn, the crop
hasn’t been very profitable. Aa the
Clifton contempgraty says. It.h up
to the farmer to co-operate fully
with the new.plaq, it’s too bad that
we can’t grow all.we,wantto.of
everything we, would Ilka, but it
has bean demonstrated that if this
ia attempted, ruinous prices result
in the absence of anything bettor,
we favor full observance, of the
1938 Federal cotton progcam
CAPITALJIGSAW
By HOWARD D. MARSHALL
AUSTIN, April 25,—•P--By the
end, of this year Texas probably
wUl rank fourth among thestates
to the number at licensed profes-
siomak enagieers.
Ai present it is preceded only by
New. York. OMo, nMitamt* and
Pennsylvania and raparta fmom the
JC.
suite,
cent I
doesn't like to perform be-
cause there isn’t so much he can
do. His nippers aren’t very strong
and he doesn’t enjoy games the
............ । , rh
A Chicagoan write* Idaho’s etete veterinneian that
mmngaeofDbpmegucanapzocuznaezannnnonamuk
miee once decided, ncoording to Mop to bail the___,
Ita much the same problem.--Jamestown (N Y3
» POdt. - ----
, 8imza
" emis
_ as its spired
4 cities indicate
3: Shown here is
2 the great St.
J Nicholas
T Church in
* Prague. - typ-
ical of the
rare beauty
that is this
tiny republic’s.
anmdevtaete
• l
have recetve between 4000 and 4.-
500 by the end of ,1938,
I* recently Issued a statewide
warning that the deadline for mak-
ing applications under a provislon !
of,; the law which authortzed 11- -
. pezrown-Horererg # coun- •---
ty lines up with the new program
as it should, many fanners will be
compelled to reduce their cotton
Tim Meddlin says: Tbe budget wiU be balanced a
messmEz
r
"BEYOND DARK HILLS," by Jesse
st wart. __
Jesse Stuart's third book deserves
the attention his first two have had.
You perhaps remember the first,
that gargantuan book of 700-odd
sonnets written directly out of the
Kentucky hill soil. It was not an
even performance, even Shakespeare
U tl
ling sat on the platform and re-
FULL . ,
MEDICAL ..
AUTOMOBILE
ACCIDENT
POLICY
You never know when you
when
may mean a hospital bil rpn-
• anfatto man hundreds of I
*!• a war buys: 12,500 Prin-
. rl|Mtl „um; $500 netmbucme- .
r -me far cost of mrdleol sur-
hospital and nursing at-
special week over to a bii
date ok theoecaslop i
31 14 purpowlTta 4a
puhlic with the advanta
airnaajlservice, and he.
office.
WASHINGTON April 35—Secretary of State Cor-
den.anu is working quietly to keep the Democrate
party from doing it* threatened Humpty-Dumpty
ML In the midst of toner-administration sniping.
RUH seeks peace, compromise and a united adminis-
tmuon frail.
mhe-uoft, sweetly reasonable words in Roosevelt’s
recent Pireside Ghat were more attributable to the
influence of Hull than to any other. One of the
gbost-writlag collaborators on that document was
A mUtant Secretary of State Adolf Augustus Berle,
the brilliant brain truster, who is working closely
with Hdil on the latter’s sub rasa domestic concilia-
uon program.
hills again. He knows they are in-
escapeable, and is glad.
The book is strong and simple. It
is also careless in spots—for exam-
pie. Stuart writes on one pege that
he was paid 26 cents a day, and on
Saturday noon collected 83 15 for his
week's work. His editor might have
saved him that But these are small,
unimportant, matters. The book is
too sound to be injured by them.
Thirty-five pilots of Transconti-
nental and Western Air, Inc., form
the entire personnel of the 76th
bombardment squadron, United
States army corp reserve. This is the
only squadron in the country com-
posed of officers from a single air-
line.
Texas schoois WUl get a nice una
crease to NYA money for the next
Mutton, ace, rcemmendatiq aA,
ment would try to reach a "sym-
pathetic understanding" with Ite
minorities, chiefly the 3,200.000
Sudeten Germans and already
Nazis have expressed dissatisfac-
tion.
So from Prague issue new
orders to strengthen Czechoslo-
vakia’s border fortifications, par-
ticularly along the vulnerable Ger-
man, and Silesian sides; to create
new tank regiments; increase the
number of rst-lihe planes from
550 to 2000. The Czech army,
small, is nevertheless perhaps the
best-armed force of its size in the
world, strong in heavy artillery,
antpiaircraft equipment, machine
guns and tank*.
Prague does not expect the army
could long repel German invasion
but it could protect the beautiful
little country until help arrived—
providing it did arrive Czecho-
slovakia possesses an intense na-
tionalism. is strongly spiritual.
this reader’s mind now as ever, and
he has not seen "Man With a Bull-
Tongue Plow*’ since 1034.
The same power and sensitivity
were in Head O’ W-Hollow This
was a book of short pieces, some of
which were pure beauty
And now the young Mr Stuart has
written his life story to date He is
too young to have a career to talk
t about, which is a blessing Instead
he talks about his real self, his an-
cestors. his parents, his homes. And
the Kentucky bills. The book is a
symphony, albeit one in which the
usual sequences of tempi are out of
order
The beginning is in the Kentucky
hill, with a boy hoeing tobacco,
planting corn, hunting with Black
Boy the dog, lying on his stomach
at night with a lantern tied to a
tree doing plane geometry There are
few reticences in the book, and these
are never affected. The reader comes
to feel with the Stuarts, so thst when
at last they have the money to buy
50 acres and build a house, he comes
to the house with the same joy its
new owners have. So with echool,
and the rest of Kentucky life.
The middle movement of Stuart's
symphony is an ironic scherzo, full
of the clangor of the steel mills—and
their tragedy, too Then back again
to the hills Stuart is at the moment
in the British Isles on a fellowship
But even after that, it will be the
to diversify and it to believed
that the program set out by the
Pederal government wil have
little effect on their usual crop
plans. Of counse, there are some
farmers, the large land Orman
to particular, who have de-
manded that the greater part
of their land be planted to cot-
ton by their tenants, will feel
the effect of thts program. It is
1 .
red. It is a plan to "take the twist
out of twister "
Requesting the use of planes to
launch time bombs near the fun-
nel of "cyclones." the writer said
this "would undoubtedly release the
vacuum caused by the centrifugal
force, and the cyclone’s power would
be ended."
He denied he had a selfish mo-
tive, but insisted he was prompted
by a desire to help humanity. The
letter was received about the time
a series of tornadoes were wreak-
ing havoc to a number of states
and newspapens were full of ac-
counts of lives lost and property
damaged.
Recalling that Henry Ford and
his ideas on automobile building
once were "hooted at," George
Clark, the governor’s secretary, hesi-
tated. he said, to "laugh this one
off." He thanked the writer, but
no planes have been sent.
The highly-publicized "opening"
speeches of candidates for governor
nearly always are "flops," says Gov.
Allred, who has had considerable
experience.
Speaking recently at a press con-
ference without reference to any
candidate in this year's campaign,
he said:
"An opening is a great strain,
much harder than anyone can
realize who has not gone through
one.
“I sympathize with the man who
has to prepare a platform and an
opening speech, receive advice from
everyone on what to put in and what
to leave out, and know that what-
ever he says probably will lose him
some votes.
“Usually the opening speech will
be the most carefully prepared of
any the candidate will make, and
yet it likely will be the worst
"A fellow has to make a dozen
or so speeches, familiarizing himself
with the subject, before he can do
a good Job "
He laughed and slapped his knee,
suggesting "How glad I am that I
am out of it!"
7 LtKfc Tb WATCH YOU ^ORK9
KING’S GROCERY
& MARKET
Phone 27 East of P. O.
Free Delivery -
mammommommkiu
19 Years Ago Today
(From Record-Chronicle. Aprn 25, 1919)
* for about 12,000 textbooks to be used
by Denton school children has been sent to the State
euperintendent at Public Instruction, Supt J. W.
Beaty announced Thursday Besides this number,
aupptamentery books are also required. The books
are to be furnished school children free of charge
begitiing with next year.
Qeorge G. Welch, former attache of the O. I A
busmess omce, is at home from France, where he has
for the past eight months. Mr. Welch, who is
----accountant, was immediately put to the
- department, and spent the whole
to the expeditionary force to that branch.
• • •
The Bernard school closed Friday after a very suc-
eeMful term, a picnic marking the closing day. The
sdhpoi was taught by F. B, Huey and Mleeas Mamie
HpUoway and Sallie Hicks. An Easter egg hunt was
enjoyed during the morning, after which the teach-
•a. pupils and visitors went to a grove to the pasture
nearby where a sumptuous picnic dinner was served.
Behind Scenes in Washington
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 217, Ed. 1 Monday, April 25, 1938, newspaper, April 25, 1938; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1540190/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.