Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 264, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 18, 1938 Page: 2 of 8
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DENTON TETA S, nEconD -cIONIC:T, sATUTAN. JUNE 13, 1038
—-
- ‘You Beller I Ail That Guy Go9
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Monday— “Lamb at School"
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244
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Comments the Bonham Favorite:
Says the adage, "Is a penny earn-
9
Maybe everybody who is over 40
Phone 1540
We Deliver
An for the method —
even says that those past that age
NORGE
4
they wrong This is not proved in all
worked their way ori a lumber boat.
He used to be here in this office, in New York, and
and undoubtedly will continue to
)
then for a while he was in Washington, looking in
should
3,
served. Green crops with a reason- I
two musicians mentioned, for ekam-
able sugar content need nothing but |
H. M. RUSSELL & SONS CO.
shape of the trench, how to fill it
•**•
•**•
TEST LIFE BY EXPERIENCE
the robber was his son. Harold, 23.
an ex-convict. He went on extra
J.
Kimbrough-Tobin Drug Store
Better Relations
Telephone 47
I
SAN FRANCISCO. June 18 —(A) 400 pounds of beef and the steer did
Few acres wilmake so
r
The Williams Store
I
1
1
Father’s Day Cake
Dr.
FINE CLOTHING SINCE 1884
Order TODAY!
»
/
tne
1
4
f
-a
A
. I
9
‘t
FA
I
Let Us Have Your Order
for a Special Decorated
an industrial world which will not
accept older men along with the
younger, is not a well-balanced one.
much, but every day’s good grazing
represents a pound of beef or but-
terfat: to "save" it means the animal
must be on the ground when the
grazing is ready Like some factories,
the value of by-products saved on
the farm often means the only profit
cither in field or pasture, and crop
residues hrve no market value on
ASK ABOUT TME NORGE
10-Ycar Warranty
ON THE ROLLArOL
COMPRESSTON UNIT
either cut or ensiled in the whole
stalk Other crops, such as alfalfa
“MY AMERICA," by Louis Adamic.
Louis Adamic han written an eval-
uation of America in terms of him-
and Will Stuart Friday sold 14 bales and
Stimson three bales of cotton to Gerlach A
Robertson sometimes speaks of "Business taking
him to Australia’’ . . That isn't strictly true, as
e
I
I
Monter Audit
iember Ausod
•Matter Tem
J
"Evidences of a change com-
ing: A West Virginia corpora-
tion advertising for a reliable
outside salesman, who must be
over forty. A Paris employee of
a wholesale grocery nouse cele-
brating his 77th birthday and the
48th year of his service to the
company—and no prospect of
his being discharged."
t
y
ed of 28 early morning holdups dur-
ing the past two months was re-
vealed tn death today as a po-
liceman's son.
Policeman Ernest L Keen sus-
pected, from victims' descriptions.
Citizens of Salinas, Calif. were surprised to
find a patch of grass springing up on one of their
busiest streets, but Mr. Hoover had been ex-
pecting it all along.
<• . • •
The Nebraska farmer who complained his rye
was growing too high for a binder ought to adver-
tise in the Help Wanted columns. The country's
full of highbinders these days.
Can you afford to carry ths
risk yourseir?
The saving is made through the
amount of money which will be used
to maintain the municipal water and
light plant during the year. This
plant is the sonurce of much of the
income which supports the city of
Denton. Last year a new diesel gen-
erating unit was installed, and with
the other improvements and addi-
tions which have been made in re-
cent years, the plant likely will be
able to meet local needs without
heavy expenditures for some time
to come.
LITERARY
GUIDEPOST
JOHN SELBY
Grady Woodruff
FOR STATE SENATOR
Works for Denton County’s Interests
for allocation s he saw fit. Conclusions and recom-
mendations from the investigation can be at least
partially forecast from Roosevelt's monopoly message
to Congress, which was written so as to set out the
anticipated conclusions in advance.
The primary aim, as a prelude to legislation of
various types suggested in that message, will be to
show the public, through hearings and other pub-
licity. the defects which New Dealers claim to see
in the economic system—beginning with the assump-
tion that free competition now exists only in about
half of American industry and that liberty and pros-
perity are threatened by increasingly concentrated
economic power.
/
p- ( the introduction of the trench silo
of it is quite posalSle to avoid a total
and treat each crop and how to
* insure its keeping, can be learned
from your county agent or your
I neighbor who has had silo experl-
l ence.
. A few cross fences, either tem-
edu of etroulationa.
. pram
y Ptem Leagus.
rONBe
OSes ........—.
cause he takes a middle ground, is feres with curing hay it need not
rather likely to have been right, and he Inet di <t in „ Irenas in I
June 18-Bulk of the work In the
investientiom will be done under
set Attorney General Thurmen
tie Department of Justice's anti-
k \, a
WULL
MEDICAL
AUTOMOBILE
ACCIDENT
POLICY
FOR YOUR
CONVENIENCE
Huy 7-Up in
6 BOTTLE CARTONS
of WPA, once NRA’s chief econ-
important role. Dr. Walton Ham-
By T. C. RICHABBSON
Secretary, Texas Feeder-Breeder Assn.
.$5.50
.. 8 00
.. 1.50
.. JO
away or deteriorate from weather I
There is nothing mysterious or
complicated about ensiling a crop '
otessor of law at Yale, has been
aforine summer. Lkcewise Prest-
■ of Reed College in Oregon, for-
NRA Consumer AdVisory Board.
alsdell, another NRA official who
grtMB with the National Resources
laborute. Other New Deaf bramm-
a Oaten, Tom Corcoran, Sollettor
wckson and Isador Lubi of the
tatisties will be busy in. the back-
duty in an effort to catch him | c" C™. ______ ____..y
Seven detectives trapped young ; generations: ask thy father and he
-Keen last night as he approached i he will show thee; thy elders tnd
________DENTON, TEXAS, JUNE 18. 1838________
NEW FILIBUSTER TECHNIQUE
The closing hours of the Seventy-Fifth Congress
saw the birth of a new filibuster technique, origi-
nated by Representative Short of Missouri. Object-
tag to a bin sponsored by Representative Sirovich
of New York which would establish a federal bureau
of, fine arts, the Missouri Congressman pirouetted
down the aisles of Congress while shooting out quips
on how the needy could be ted and the farmers made
prosperous by having tederal employes teach the
12,000.000 unemployed how to toe dance. The laugh-
tor of members and the uncontrolled anger of Siro-
vich served to bury the bill permanently.
Aside from killing the fine arts bill, Short should
get some kind of medal for easing the pre-adjourn-
ment tension that often causes Congress to do un-
expected things. In fact, If some of the seriousness
coud be eliminated from all congressional delibera-
tion*. the paths of worthwhile bills might be easier
and the life of a Congressman would be more pleas-
ant.
Aether the investitation would be
was ended when Congress gave
arths of the money appropriated
. M
IM
BIBLE THOUGHT VOB
TODAY
A bunch of economists held a dinner a while
ago that cost them 10 cents a plate. Scarcity be-
gins at home.
A traffic expert urges pedestrians to wear white
clothing after dark. Something appropriate like
a winding sheet.
I"
1
Clarence Smith was again named as chief of the
Fire Department in the annual election of
held at the Firemen's Hal Wedhenday night.
The other officers named are as follows: O M. King.
president: T M Kerbow, vice president; Charley
Wells, flat asslatant chief; Luther Woolridge, sec-
and assistant chief; Hub Bates, secretary: W E
Mann. treasurer: Dr. J. W HUI. chaplain; Wm.
Wood*, custodian; Miss Eugenia King, sponsor: Miss
Maurine Beyette, maid of honor; mascot. P. J.
Beyette Jt.
• • •
T. W. Leverett has bought the T. Denton place,
omer Wert Oak and Welch Streeta, trading in his
home further out on West Oak, and will move some-
time between now and August I. The consideration
in the deeds were $4000 for the Leverett home and
*10.800 for the Denton home
•—-- •
Henderson for >1 1-2 a pound. They carried the
staple over from last year, but figure that they
did not lose anything except being without the use
of the money, as thy would not have received a
higher price had they sold as they ginned.
Hext £u*lc£ou
FATHEBR
2 E
be wholly concerned. no far an the
—Pt,
4
_ . be; yet it is hot out of place to
on the Presidents press conferences, talking to Jack give some serious consideration to ; sver
Garner hanging around the Mayflower lobby, the I the fact that men past 40 must
Peacock Alley of Washington, where everybody al- work or go on charity, and that
ways goes sooner or later.
V\
\\
\
J. J. MACLACHLAN
Smoot-Curtia Bldg.
Phone MS
(Copyright, 1938, NEA Service, Inc.)
—i—..
The postoffice finally delivered a card the other
day that had been mailed more than 20 years ago.
Some people are awful slow readers.
pay for the harvesting unless the
livestock do the work It is poor
business to lose this potential cash I
I return. whether for lack of live- !
urom Record-Chronicle. June M, 18181
WB 8. Long and Mis* Stella Simmons were quietly
married at the home of the bride’s parents. Mr. and
Mrs J. T Simmons, 37 Lula Street, Wednesday eve-
ning. with Elder R. D. Smith of the Pearl Street
Church of Christ, officiating. After the ceremony, the
couple lent for Colorado Springs, Goto, where they
will spend a month and return to Denton to make
their home.
L‘)
And so, after a trick her and there he arrived
somehow back in South Carolina, where all those
notes began to take shape in the form of a novel.
. . : He went to work on it. and it s here, and as a
result he has had some amazing experiences.
For instance he writes "Some of the papers have
asked me to write reviews for them, without a by- i
line, so I guess that is the strangest break any writer ■
ever got. I have been very modest. Just saying it was
a fine book and they ought to buy it ... It has let
loose a lot of skeletons—folks have been coming to
me to say they have the same kind of stories in
their Carolina background
As to the story itself, it begins in a rude log cabin
in pre-Revolutionary days, continues up to the pres-
ent. ... It is the Iliad of pioneers who planted the
com and fought off “the painted death", as the In-
dian scalping parties are called.
• • •
Richard Himber, who in addition to being a lead-
ing orchestra director is a crackerjack magician, has
been aske dto try his hand at dramatic acting and
will journey up to Warrensburg, N Y . to play a role
in a streamlined version of "Hamlet". Dick turns
actor July 15.
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
in building our store we tried
to fx it fur your convenience. .
You can come In your car and
drive up and shop from your
ear. Try us for your next gro-
eeries or fruits and see how
it is to whop.
BARNS
GROCERY A FRUIF MARKET
Adamic’s appai
art othe
iBARES
writers, and probably unconsciously
he gives the impression that when
he and they have disagreed (this is
a frequent condition) he himself be-
the home of a friend. They said he
reached for his gun, so they fired
pistols and a machine gun. Eighteen
bullets killed him.
Harolds wife, Angeline, 21, an
expectant mother, was told of the
shooting at the detective bureau
where she had been detained.
“I expected it," she said
Policeman Keen was telephoned.
“The work is done " he said.
"as I knew it must be."
4,
OF OTHERS Remember the days the and usually wil not
of old. consider the years of many (
them when available.
At this season of the year the
Southwest is often threatened with
drouth, com begins to burn up"
and its failure is indicated Since 1
C
NX 1
porery or permanent, are indis-
pensable to the full utilization of
what grows on the farm Grass.
2
Contemporary Thought
SIX-MAN JURY NOT THIRTEEN
The president of the state, district and county at-
torneys association. Dan Jackson of Houston, de-
clared that he would propose to the Joint convention
of the state bar association and the prosecutors that
Texas laws be amended to add an alternate Juror
in protracted trials. The objective is to save the
state money, time and delay in eliminating retrials
where a Juror becomes sick himself or is called out
because of illness or death in his family
This has been proposed for some time but the spon-
sorship has not been strong enough to attract much '
attention. U is regarded by many as Just as addi-
tional expense considering the fact that the cases of
illness among Jurors are somewhat rare.
We wonder why it would not be more expedient
to reduce the number of Jurors to six or seven, with-
out impairing justice in civil or criminal cases. There
is more argument for a jury of six than for a jury
of 13 Juries of six are in use in minor courts and
probably are as satisfactory as 12. In criminal cases
with a 12-man jury, there is much more chance
for a hung jury. Some will regard that as an addi-
tional balance for the scales of Justice An examina-
tion of the results probably will refute this feeling,
does refute this as far as we know. Gve us six men
for a jury rather than thirteen —Sherman Democrat.
9
1,
Signin Department of Agriculture Library: "’The
Good Society' by Walter Lippmann cannot be found."
• • •
Slated to be next president of the American Bar
Association is a celebrated Washingtonian, Frank J.
Hogan. One of Hogan's claims to fame is the spec-
tacular Job he did in getting a Jury acquittal of
Ol' Man E L. Doheny, charged with giving a *100.000
bribe to Albert B. Fall in the naval oil reserve scan-
dal. after Fall had been convicted for accepting the
bribe. Hogan has never denied that he received a
*1,000,000 fee for that piece of work, in addition to
a personal gift of a beautiful limousine from Doheny.
Hogan also represented Andrew W Mellon in the
government's income tax suit against the former
Treasury secretary. Former Assistant Secretary of
Commerce William P MacCracken, Jr . who became
an avation lobbyist as well as secretary of the A. B. A.
which Hogan Is to head, went to jail for burning
papers the Senate airmail committee had subpoenaed
—after being advised by Hogan.
Hogan was born in Washington and grew up here,
a brilliant, friendly and attractive Irish boy who has
become Immensely popular. He wears a monocle. Ev-
ery year he gives a big party for the Gridiron Club
and puts on his own show—one of many methods by
which he attracts Innumerable friends.
plc One is John Philip
the other Deems Taylor
Sousa and . ,,
In both close packing to exclude the air.
suascnIFzrOX KATES
Tire months by mall (in advaaqe)
One month delivered -----------------------
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
JUST >
AMONG US
FOLKS
and past didn’t have a friend; noth- - _____
ing was held out before him butlexpect. Mr. Adamic has spent €-
the probability of becoming an ob- ■ Pagesuin hisLetort to make himself
Ject of pity by a world run wholly
by young people But here of late
we occasionally hear an encour-
aging note. Sometimes there is a re-
port of men over to being employ-
cases not a word is said about them
as musicians: they are only men-
tioned Incidentally The effect is dis-
turbing. and a little sad llie per-
ge
they will tell thee — Dent 32:7.
1 - ------- — cases, and It unbalances the book
pie have been employed all along, . There is another consideratton
and undoubtedly will continue to which produces the same effect it is
t ----------0----------
AMERICANS GOOD SOLDDRCRS
The traditional American attitude, parhaps born
of egotism, that Americans are the world's best
fighters, received partial corfrmation the other day
from an experienced soldier, Lieut. Ooi Vladimir
Cople, who relinquished leadership of the Fifteenth
Interhational Brigade in Spain after IB months of
warfare, declared that the American volunteers made
excellent. If naive and inexperienced soldiers.
OoL Copte, a Yugoslav, comes from a country where
all mate* are trained to carry a gun and to obey
military orders without question. In his country and
ta other European lands, war is a serious threat that
must.be recognized and prepared for, regardless of
treaties and professions of friendship between na-
tions. While praising American fighters, he pointed
out that th* United State* and the other great de-
moeracies of the world have not taken full advantage
of the opportunities to laam what ha* been
Any erroneous redaction upon the character, repu-
, aation or stanazng of any firm. Individual or corpora-
‘ Mon will ba rtxgy cotzecuea upon being called to the
The audosntd
use for me-pubilcatk
it or not r"--------
Behind Scenes in Washington
py RODNEY DUTCHER
1 * NEA Servlet Ktf Correspondent
" Press la exclusively entitled to the
,—.—ition of all news dispatches credited to
puswleasedttnd in this paper and also the
j leave out the graphic arts, music A few supple rules must be ob-
the theater -all that Ther are only served. Green crops with a reason- !
C
A*. Franco completes that march to the sea again
for each edition, one can only surmise that the tide
is going out.—Detroit News
be lost Put it in a trench silo,
which can be dug in a few hours or .
•at most a few days. You can't lose !
it then! It cannot bum up. blow
(4
<(e)±ag
self in the book he publishes today, ed." Thinking of that thrifty prin-
rrlasha gols thTYoAkerver-iongdana l ciple in terms of the farm, making
over-serious though it be. Is a de- i the crop is not completed until it
light. I is saved. It is saved only when it
AIt.is made upof snatches from the has been either safely stored for fu-
Adamie ahdYothtrs,romterrucesand l ture use or consumed by livestock
from various people, new matter con- and transformed into a saleable pro- in the manufacture of the main
sidering many phases of American j duct Tons of meat and milk, eggs product.
will not have to starve to death j action and habit Much of the writ- and wool are produced on some I A Pennsylvania Dutchman lives
after all It looked for a while that ' th inordinrtee lengthE"rconsderong ! farms merely by saving grass well and gets rich by saving what
the fellow who was middle-age there is a far better average of tech- weeds ana crop residues which go we in the Southwest too often waste
.. . mtum - iend: noth- ] nical skill than one has a right to to waste on neighboring farms for j —the straw, grass and manure. None
669 lack of animals or fowls to utilize of them can be sold in the market
—An American Medical Associa- tp
tion rebuke to its spokesmen for P--
lack of "gentleness" toward the ("
press was hailed by progressive ele- '
ments today as a victory over Dr
Morris Fishbein, the generally rec- 1
ognized voice of the profession. ,
rent insensitiveness to
er than literature t
---> y-rt!-------•---
Sundown
Stories
—By Mar Bonittr—
SWEET face LISTENS
Sweet Face followed the children
until they reached a school house
along the side of the road.
He saved ueside until they came
out once more and one of them
•aid:
“Well, all our pencils are ready
and on our desks How I do hate to
see those wancl no nicely sharp-
WLAK
Just at the time when the tomato
grower, especially those who pro-
duce on a large scale, Is navug
a hard time disposing of his out-
put. a story comes along from a
food spectalist at the A. & M. Col-
lege extension service which calls
attention to the importance of to-
matoes in the diet. Nutrition ex-
ports say that to safeguard the
health, either tomatoes or citrus
fruit should be eaten at least onte
a day to Insure ample amounts of
vitamin C suggestions of different
ways of serving tomatoes are offered
by the specialist.
• • • •
The present tomato situation
makes it possible for all to use
plenty of the fruit, it is pointed out.
and it is added that generous use
of the fruit not only will be health-
ful tor the user but will help the
grower by Increasing the demand.
Tomatoes are not grown on an
extensive commercial scale in this
county, but a great many farmers
produce considerable quantities for
the market as side-lines. There are
plenty of tomatoes being offered
for sale in Denton now, and the
opportunity is here to help your-
self and the grower at the same
time.
--—Maeedseb2*
“I never can think of anything
to write when the time comes,"
said another.
"I just hate the sight of those
pencils,” said a third.
Now Sweet Face had a thought.
• It was those pencils they hated.
Wasn’t there something he could
do about them?
The children noticed therh once
more.
"Why you sweet lamb," they call-
ed him, and Sweet Face smiled.
"There is a little poem about a
lamb following a child to school,”
said another. "You’re almost like
the poem.”
Somehow Sweet Face felt very
important. And he was thinking,
thinking hard.
The children had left now, and
Sweet Face returned to Puddle
Muddle. He remembered the time
he had followed too far. That he
must never do again even though
it was so easy Just to follow!
He would have to get up early
Monday morning and hurry all the
distance to the school, for after he
had left the children and had re-
turned to the school-house alone
he had found the doors closed and
locked
Sweet Face was full of plans,
full of schemes. He was proud of
what he had thought. Yes, he was
going to do something important.
loss by cutting the cor and
•storing it in the trench before it |
dries up. That is not merely a penny I
saved and earned, but dollars on
dollars, for the ensilage will keep 1
indefinitely and can be turned into
cash through livestock whenever you
are ready if rainy weather inter-
and his adopted country understood
by himself and his readers.
Adamic is obsessed by the business ;
of riting His associates meaning the
ones he is really interested in, are
i almost exclusively writers His ap-
ed, and once inn a while somebody proach has at its base the solidity c.
the European peasant, but this, when
can do pretty good work It is prob- APPingie-mandaerness IWhlh"ainduno
real service either to a book or a
series of mental processes Mr Ad-
amic tells of hisdealings with many
Dally sebued at 214 Weat Hickory Street, Dentog,
.“5 tantaMteta.te.oro.
1 stock to use it or for lack of fencing
so they can use it.
UXJ:4 p AAn Arkansas authority says an
Wltn i ress AKee acre of good grass has made up to
and other non-saccharine forage
manent part of any culture is its art. crops, require some cheap molasses 1
it is unfortunate that Adamic should to start fermentation The size and
You never know when you
will be the next victim of an
automobile accident which
may mean a hospital bill run-
ning into many hundreds of
dollars.
810 a year bnys: $2,500 Prin-
cipal Sum; $500 Relmhurse-
ment fnr cost of medical, sur-
deal, hospital and nursing at-
tention.
50c and $1.00
at-p
34: Tapikaxag3
Denton will be in good financial
condition for the ensuing year, it
would seem, from information giv-
er, out in connection with the finan-
cial budget for the fiscal year begin-
ning this month. The money to be
expended during the year probably
will be more than $30,000 under last
year’s figures, despite a larger
amount for some needed municipal
activities.
cefF
F3k 3
his friends know The "business" was simply another able, as a matter of fact, that the I
attack of the itching foot, and so off he journeyed, tendency toward younger labor-was
with only the horizon as a destination, until he dis- I a lttle over-emphasized, due to !
covered himself one morning working on a news- the fact that many concerns, and
naper 1n Adelaide. especially the large corporations.
The same thing might be said of his trip to Russia appeared to want younger blood so
. . .He went there to work. it is true, but it occurred f many years of service might be
to him that it would be a lot more fun "thumbing" had in return for the training
than traveling am a passenger So he and a pal given. But many at the older
wnrter +heir -ex a-c e Imher hnet . ....
2552
arts go, Ith writing, because this is
poMibiy the moat parasitic, of the
At Leading Groceries
And ( old Drink Dealers
---------- <
YOUR CHILDREN—
They change so rapidly in a few years. But a . hoto-
graph of them never grows up. Sec us toda
CARRUTH STUDIO
North Side Square
place as such, but what a differ-
ence they make when saved and
used on the farm where they are!
The difference between success and
failure, profit and loss.
A penny saved is still a penny
earned, no matter what form it
takas
COME IN AND LET US
SHOW YOU HOW SURPLUS
POWER GIVES YOU SUR-
PLUS VALUE.
Purity Bakery
PHONE 106
ral economists and brain-trusters
old NRA, vatnty protesting what
be tte monopolistic tendency of
Gen. Hugh Johnson and Donald
tion on the economic side of the
incredible that any man
attempt such a book and
Chicago Gunman
Is Revealed as
Policeman’s Son
CHICAGO, June IB. —i— The
"dawn phantom" gunman accus- |
afforded by the Spanish war. The dictator nations,
according to Copic, have put their men into the
fields of battle to secure first hand knowledge that
win be invaluable to them in case at war. The time
to prepare for war is wen in advance of its start, ac-
cording to Cophe. ~ .
Most Americans contidently believe that if war
threatened, American men would spring to arms to
drive back an invading horde, just as the pioneers
whipped the British a little more than a century and
a half ago. But warfare has changed and American
military strategists, as well as foreign strategists,
know that weeks and months would be necessary to
get American fighting men into shape to hold back
am enemy. The ocean barrier* that formerly were
oar beta defense no longer are a serlous obstacle
to invaders, and a strong navy would have to bear
We brunt of attack until mobilization of men and
materials was complete.
19 Years Ago Today
ap aeco
...
S- ......-
l
PAGE TWO ________________
—I fll —ISB—==
Denton Record-Chronicle
, 3 iaopp-ommonaox ooman -
L A. MCDONALD ...
UB E MCDONALD
1. a. FOWLEa —
Man About Manhattan
By GEORGE TUCKER
NEW YORK, June 18.—A world-roving newspaper
reporter who eschewed the glamor of far ports to
write a dramatic, swift-moving saga of an American
family—a proud and sometimes murderous dynasty
of the Old South—is attracting a lot of attention
with his first novel, "Travelers Rest" (Cottonfield
Publishers. Clemson, S. C).
The author is Ben Robertson, a young man in his
early 30 s, with blue eyes and unruly brown hair and
a widely-spent heritage of wanderlust derived from
M* great-great-great-great uncle Daniel Boone.
Wherever he has traveled—on the scorching deck
of a tramp steamer in the South Seas in a
fog-chilled basement in London . Nights after
working as a reporter in Adelaide, South Australia.
... In Honolulu, in Moscow and Cape Cod. Robert-
son Jotted notes for a strange, long story of a pioneer
southern family. , a
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 264, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 18, 1938, newspaper, June 18, 1938; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1540237/m1/2/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.