Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 44, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 5, 1938 Page: 2 of 8
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4098
9
-
FAGE rwo
DENTON, TEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1938
Denton Record’Chroniele
7
BARBS
FOLKS
a
dedhee—e
2445*
4
/
over the family looked about and
\
DENTON, TEXAS, OCTOBER 5, 1938
I!
Contemporary Thought
*
! '
N
UNNEEDED SURGERY
ty advocated by J E McDonald. Texas commissioner
3535
$
po
>
farmer receive an established
such criticism is helpful in the long run. Dr. J. J. I cotton grown tor the
Golub of New York is one of those who doesnt mind by the government, and that what he sells in the
of
' AUSTIN, Oct. 5.—(P— Heaviest University of Texas whom the par-
WALL PAPER
for the winter
<
।
crop control program went in ef-
fect.
%
Texas to out of state visitors and
mortgagees, and other security hold-
And-
Parrish of
ication from Congreseman Lucian
Photo - Engraving
THE
Kelvinator
Electric
»
»
Refrigerators
t
to be
of the Balkans in Europe, domination of trade as
government. In the latter cate-
White & Bennett Texaco Station
4
1706 North Elm (Waldrip Motor Co.)
— Washing—
Phone 666
— Greasing—
Along in April and May hardly a
been conducted, schools have been
historic interest about it.
the first
$
"Leisure is no substitute for work." says President
The senator has just been appointed chairman of
a
Tow never know when
which
I
-
this way
meant to as-
Even the debt of
4
JUST
AMONG tJS
Morris &
McClendon
Phone 958
219 W. Hickory
83.80
128
for fall breaking. In the meantime,
the heat continues with no sign
Tim Meddlin says “I allus love to shake hands
with the feller that don’t beef cause he has a hard
job"—Homer Price in Marshall News-Messenger.
of notes have shown the two countries
apart in the row over Mexico's failure
But qocasdonally a member of the profession is
outspoken in condemning certain trends, and often
At present at least 25 per cent of us have passed
that age Presumably we should be wiser and more
sedate. with our school days so far behind us. We
ought to be serious in our department and sit a good
deal by the fireside We ought to be growing more
rather than less conservative One might expect to
find us quite settled in our ways These generaliza-
America holds the key to the future of de-
mocracy. a congressman declares. And Europe
holds the dead-lock.
trained in safety last summer.
They don’t know how to read
yet, but they know how to be-
have on the streets. And in this
students employed temporarily.
The tourists from outside Texas
— -
every state in the union is avail-
able for out-bound Texans.
t
The booths at El Paso Wichita
Falls Laredo and Texarkana also
will remain open throughout the
winter months Because of decline
of seasonal traffic, eight at other
CARRUTH
STUDIO
Phone 280
The custom of throwing rice at
weddings is an old one derived from
the Orient where rice has always
been the symbol of fertility
„BustneseKeunager
Advertising Manager
ents had brought to Austin. Par-
ents and chdren were giving the
statehouse the once over.
About the first of the next year,
the custodians add, there will be an
ice for his share of ;
market, guaranteed
Thor Washing
Machines
goes up There is bound to be a
halt
There are 3.500 parts in a standard automobile, but
one loose nut behind the steering wheel to more dan-
gerous than all of the rest at them put together.—
Denison Herald.
Henrietta, in which he outlined the new provisions
concerning the soldiers insurance
'Copyright, 1938, NEA Service Inc.) '
"Japan Friendly to Poland,” reads a headline.
Well, friends of peace, there‘te two countries for
a starter, anyway.
de may be paid of on the
I Gazette.
CAPITAL JIGSAW
By HOWARD C. MARSHALL
A New Jersey candidate for sheriff has just
opened a "front lawn” campaign. That hurricane
probably made the coast a Heaven for stump
speakers.
hopeful, but such hope doesn't al-
ways materialise It is still to be
hoped, then. that people can be
persuaded to be more careful in
the handling of automobiles, but
past experience dims the bright-
eras of such hope Some have come
to the conclusion that about the
only way traffic can be made safer
te to cut dow the power and speed
of the automobile to the point
that 1 will be difficult to take such
chances as are commonly indulged
in now.
Merchants Finance
Company
Baek of Pontoknice „
Youwmtndia cemfortable
way to meet year MBs
The boys at Harvard have revived the handle-
bar mustache. Yale can now be expected to show
its up- to-date -ness by introducing the steering
wheel design
d
#m be the
automobile
nations show signs of loosening up on
l by offering counter-proposals.
• • •
(Prom Record-Chroncle, Oct 5, 1919)
Dr. W. H. Bruce, president of the Normal College,
has confirmed all the appointments and re-appoint-
meats tecommended to him by the publication coun-
cil This year the council will consist of Missys Ruth
Peeler. Harriett Smith, Nora Lee Brown Jolly Blanche
Pitta, and Alfred Stockard. Clifton Simmnons, Free
man Rowell. Oscar Emery. James Edwards and Ollle
Jooss
FULL
MEDICAL
AUTOMOBILE
ACCIDENT
POLICY
184
In the present situation there's only one gear
America can shift into from neutral, and that's
reverse.
Merino s chief concession has been agreement on
the principal of a t ommission to determine values of
Vice President John N Garner and
Jesse Jones, chairman of the Re-
construction Finance Corporation,
which rest on floor racks in the
Senate Chamber near the rostrum
of the Senate president
They seem to be orphans, or step
chMdren. among the rest of the
Senate paintings. All the others,
which include two hug ones giving
an artiste's conceptin of the bat-
tles of the Alamo and San Ja-
a -cinto,-hangon- the walls Thore
Se=
s
ASK FOR
PURITY BREAD
By L. A. M.
Turnip greens threaten to be
scarce this fall. Seldom does a year
present the problem to the greens
lover as.1ms this one. As a rule,
rain can be expected some time in
September, which is the season for
sowing fall turnips, and a fine crop
of both greens and turnips can be
expected by the time cold weather
cornea But thia fall has played
a trick on those who had made
ready for the annual planting of
this lush vegetable Here it is well
along in October and no rain yet.
and hope for a turnip crop has
about gone a-glimmering
• • • •
The drought is really getting se-
j close examination
The bulk of ODantels mail is
ready been made by Germany, this with the full
support of Italy, and we may expect German and
Italian advances into the entire area. Germany par-
ticularly needing the raw materials of the Balkan
States
We enjoy now good trade with erechoslovnkta, but
thk is already falling of. Further losses may be ex-
pected This country, along with England and France,
will feel the economic pinch of the advance of Ger-
many. Italy and Japan And that will give us more
concern over world affairs —Sherman Democrat.
"e
But when Hoover came to Kansas City to deliver
his first blast—and a mighty blast it was, as the text
shows—he ran smack into headlines shrieking the
latest peace-or-war news. Seldom did the story of
Mr Hoover's carefully planned, powerful speech land
on Page One.
(Copyright, 1938, NEA Service. Inc.)
may expect shortly German and Italian dr _____
of the Balkans in Europe domination of trade as ! murderous age there is cause for |
well ar of governments The entering wedge has al- I putting the art of self-protec.
- - - -- — ’ - —1 tion before the art of reading."
==
B
kingdom for a horse has bean superseded by a lol
of fofc who trade kingdom for an am -Dallas News
of the outstanding and historic at-
tractions and aided in choosing the
, . continues to Insist that Mexico put
up a certain amount of money to be held in escrow
pending settjements and to urge .that there be no
more expropriation without prompt compensation.
Behind Scenes in Washington
By WILLIS THORNTON —
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON October I—The only nation with
which the United States has any serious dispute is
Mexico. and secret negotiations are producing a
refining improvement on that front
The Bunday closing ordinance passed by the City
Commission recently will go into effect with the
coming Sunday The ordinance prohibits the sale o
tobaccos and cold drinks on Sunday as well as all
other commodities excepting milk and milk pro-
ducts.
"There is nothing that irritates a father more than
to find his small son mimicking his ways.” says a
writer. And it only makes matters worse to tell the
little fellow to stop acting like a fool.—Humorist
J. J. MACLACHLAN
BSMOg-Curtts Bldg.
Mom im
EROORD-CHRONICLE COMPANY, INC
R. J EDWARDS Oener
L A MCDONALD ..
lex R. MeDONALD
J. A FOWLER
BRING YOU CAR to
Blackburn Oil & Tire Company
for repairs, servicing or any other need.
1211 West Hickory Phene Na 16
may mean a hospital Mil run-
nine into many hundreds of
818 a rear bays: 1230 Ptn-
kipal Bum; wee Metmbure-
meat for eest of medtei, sur-
Elntshoaspttai and nuratm« at-
can you afford to carry the
risk sourmeifr
•a..-
S=
Entered M second-class mall matter at Denton
Texan , _____
Daily imucd at 214 West Hickory Street penton.
Taxa, every afternoon except Sunday by the Record-
Chronicle Company. Inc
B
1
on the wire to the White House if McAdoo quit the
senatorship now. H was pointed out. the Republican
governor of California would immediately appoint
ara own Ina or..hulUmg 1 per cent or |
more of total amnount of bonds. mort- i •
ublican senatorial nominee Philip Bancroft
seat And that would give Bancroft a real
qgtosd and practical advantage
Prealdent fiard K up at once. McAdoo won't
mnt after the election
Phone 54 .
Senator William O McAdoo will have to serve a
fw we ski more of his expiring term in order to help
elect the man who defeated him in the Democratic
megatgrlal primary Sheridan Downey
MeAdco accepted defeat so bitterly that this prob-
ally will give him no greet pleasure But there doesn’t
asset to be much he can do about it
STATE OF TEXAS
COUNTF or DENTON •
Before me, a Notary Publie, In and
tor the state and county aforesaid
personally appeared Lee R McDon-
ald. who. having been duly sworn ac-
cording to law. aepones and says that
he is the bustnes manager of the
Denton Record-Chronicle, and that
the following la. to the best
or hu knowledge and belief, a true
statement of the ownership, manage-
Any erroneous reection upon the character. repu-
tation or mending of any Arm, individual or corpora-
tion will be gladly corrected upon being called to the
publhben* atkenuon
The Assoclated Prem Is exclusively entitied to the
use tor re-publication of all news dispatches credated to
it or not otherwise credited in thia paper and also the
local news pubushed herein
fir
th
ar
ro
held. programs have been present- day passes without the arrival of
ed. statistics printed and horror: throngs of school chiliren, some of
stories told of the tragedy of high- ; whom travel long distances to take
way mihape-and yet the alaught- in Austin and the many points of
er goes on unabated. It is best to be historic interest about it
THEY FORGOT TO PAY UNCLE SAM
Not all of the U. S. war deats are owed by foreign
nations. There are 6,006 Americans who still owe
Uncle 8am $296,000 for loans they received back in
1914 when they were stranded in Europe already |
ablaze with war Uncle Sam came to their rescue
with transportation and money, but of the 13,600
aided. over 6,000 didn’t get around to make a set-
tlement • • < . ,
If war occurs again in Europe, many Americans
again will call on the government to help them get
back home in a hurry. It is. good to know that the
U. 8 treasury will supply the money and will wait
such a nice long time to collect.
SEE THE NEW
WHITE ROTARY SEWING MACHINE
AT RUSSELL & SONS COMPANY
w w tende for your old sewing machine regardiema a mam
WE ALSO DO
REPAIRING ON ALL MAKES
OF SEWING MACHINES
Our experienced sewing machine man win adjust and
o your machine for__:______
K M. R USSELL A SONS CO.
1 - — - ...... ........
order to expedite the movement
of cash into the farmers’ ockets,
an amendment was approved by I
the last session of Congress pro- ]
Finet Sona theeP“mcompiyteneh out or state
o
96,”
comes than when the valuation to-
tals are going the other way
It looks like it is going to be
a long time yet before the farmer
stage was an incident in the settling of a continent,
the adustment of man to the machine. Yet a third I
or more of us may again be going to school in years
to come The spread of adult education and increas-
ducing acreage he receives a bonus of 2 4 a pound.
The domewtic allotment plan proposes that the
mF'* ’-
gtg 2
J.
Fl
D
ge
ul
le
ct
F
M
cl
D
ai
W
M
in
E:
Sundown
Stories
—By Mary Graham Bonarr—
It may be that starting at this gon the communications on old
age wih the children will get age assistance are large
oenewtsThiavantinenpatnea“much rpes of persons who visit the
in the way of lessening traffic ac- i capitol for sight-seeing purposes
cidents. Extended campaigns have van with the seasons
lo
of
M
pl
• !
he
af
J
M
zo
in
ed many weeks Mo that he
of aperches before the con-
Three fine oil portraits which
always attract much attention from
visitors to the capitol are those of
President Franklin D Roosevelt.
A d
it is understood khat in I because Highway 66 is a transcon- • influx of visitors from other states.
77, '-£7 7, TV some counties a cart of the sub- ‘ East-West doute which virtuallv all elderly They will be
i percent tuestimatedathatahot somyepaomtntsAaPeen'mae.sbutlhas had much advertising and is retired business folk, or others with
to four of all those in school will be in high amy payments nas meenmade.lattractine , oreat now nl travel- independent incomes, going south
Greatest Minority Problem of All
—s5--_
'" . s-cU.>ea
NS
\
to givt-Texan informnation on
other states. The last season they
were manned largely with college
gnome-like man with a short body
and rather long legs. wearing side
whiskers and with sticking-out ears
and a ttny nose was sayng some
thing about "Puddle Muddlers ”
He was still talk He was calling
them volunteer Puddle Muddlers
“Yes," he said "wet always
willing to fight a fire and at
home we call Mr Quacko Duck
fire chief "
The people looked at Mr Quacko
as lie stuck out his chest and then
quacked at the top of his duck
votes.
because a great many cotton farmers prefer the do- ! Maxbe imesareuanpttlesbetter
creased renditions. The county’s
taxable values show an increase
] or more than a third of a mu-
1 lion dollars this year over last
it has been suggested the paint- nolaeronn"mmcurnty hodeish wos
inn nAu, hima in +L. LAHnA not appear upon the books of the
sate chamSr, have hecome to S 4a
numerous they ought to be dis- that of a bona tide owner: and this
played in some other room or roans amant has no reason to believe that
of the capitol. especially planned anz.otherrerson. aneciattonasrotcone
e, to__■*- porauon nas any interest direct or
ior a ganen indirect in the Mid stock bonds or
The walls in both halls are sim- other secunities than as so stated by
ply full, not only with the paint- him
Ings of historical character, but 5. That the average .number, of
also wih the group pictures of the copissia"oraahstrmuated, thhiropgplen.
various Legaiatures. Every two masis0 otherwns,to" pala rsuEScrie
years another batch of the latter -------------, — ------------ ■
FOR DOMESTIC ALLOTMENT PLAN ------. .
Secretary Wallace in Fort Worth Friday appealed or abatement and no indication of
for support of his AAA cotton control plan. The : Tai
secretary was down here talking to cotton farmers I
। RAMEY A IVEY
I Smoot-Curtis Building
IF YOU
— - — - - e 1
have pest due accounts you
of Roosevelt. Garner and Jones
25a,
in FoR
INEVekPece'
— T°U,
Special prices and terms.
Taliaferro A Son
Hardware and Snorting Goods
made up of requests for Jota and
suggestions on how to run the
FASCIST ECONOMIC ADVANCE
Restrictions on trade in China, even with the war
tar from won. are such that Japan virtually'controls .
a considerable part of the flow of commerce These !
are expected to grow unUi all operations are at the
win ct Japan, this to give that country all the possible
advantage that can be squeezed from the country
A city man says he has to his employ an “office
boy“ aged sixty-five. We understand that his recent
’ request for the day off to attend his erandson's
christening was the tenth in two years.— Everybody's,
Comments the Wichita Falls
News-Record:
gets his parity payments on the
1937 cotton crop Under the original
law, a tanner must complete his
compliance with the 1938 cotton
program to get the money, but in
fr
er
pi
he
l
American companies are already reporting huge loss-
es in their business due to the Japanese domination
at China.
. There remain, of couth, wane sections of China
which are stim open to free trade but' the Japanese
influence is spreading there and as time goes on we
can expect the entire situation to be controlled from
Tokyc, wteaking heavy I oto ex on the United States,
England and France Presumably Germany and Italy
would be the favored nations
This country is not so directly concerned, but we
moisture to bring it up. It is too
late for rains to revive pastures to
do much good before frost, and
the season has passed for planting
most fall vegetables. But a soak-
ing rain would help get the long-
suffering shrubbery ready for a cold I
winter and put the ground in shape
So^ Yetou totalelementarschtpopumtion’s none"hascome to Denton County . attracting.a great now ot travel-
dropping tn t«W it was J1 29 —• This year it will ■ and snere doesnt seem to be any {north and eastto New
probably be a little less than 20 000 000 in 1870 about hope that this money will reach a I C . la and
313 per cent, the population wenttoschoot .This loa farmers, heforerowitter 18 "m recognition of the importance
year about 225 per cant wiU go. The explanation is toennai.wiubnatime ormelorthenew trame artery toe de-
simple. Fewer chlidrem are being bokn. Our popula- , eomphanehemonyyntone Arebaiy 1 partment xrill keep its information
tionk increasing but fewer of “ are *7 l oK. temaPtrn sPrnD booth at Shamrock, opened this
The truth is that aa a nation we are growing older , notsbeumadeabefoe sprng , year. in‘servcer""hrodghout the
in 1900, for example. 17 7 per cant of us ware over 45 has been the case ever since the । rear in sene "o"OF"
•__ • ... . eron ~nntrnl nrnoram went inn ef- winler.
The Record- Chronlele is in receipt of acorrimtin-
family asked.
“No,” said Willy Nilly, stepping
forward They are my Puddle Mud-
dlers."
The people looked as though
they were dreaming—maybe hear-
ing things. *
First they had been aroused sud-
denly. then they had known that
their house was on fire, then the
fire dpartmant had arrived-In
fact it had arrived so quickly that
no damage had been done
And new they saw the strang-
est collection of animals before
them— the animals whose volces
In June, July and August, the
visitors are distinctly tourist in
type. The women are clad, quite
often, in riding pants and slacks;
the men, also in sports outfits
Cameras are plentiful •
A few days ago, custodians of the
LOANS
We can now make refinance and repair loans on Real
Estate at a reasonable rate. See us!
VOLUNTEER PUDDLE MUD-
DLERS
The volunteer firemen were at
the fire now. The family had gone
to bed but hearing the strange
sounds from the Puddle Muddlers
they had awakened at once and
had escaped in plenty of time
w Now the hose was being played
on the last of the flames and the
family and their friends knew that
the danger was over They had
nothing to worry about
"We have to keep on with the
water in case names start up
again,” said the .volunteer fire
chief, "but we’ve got the fire in
hand. In fact I don’t believe there
will be much damage "
Now that the excitement was
Member Audit Bureau of cireulationa.
Member Associeted Pipa
Member Texas DeUy prtm League.
PoxES
Business and omce ______---------.....
Circulation Department - -.....-......
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One year tin advance) - - —• —*
Six months by mail advace)
by mall (in advance} ..........
One month delivered ...a......—.......—
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
rious. Already it is too late for rain over the family looked about and
to do much good except provide saw the dim figures of the Puddle
water for livestock, which lias been Muddlers.
exhausted on many farms Much “Are they animals from a cir-
wheat has been put tn the ground. cus?" one of the members of the
but it can walk some tae for
best routes Material on nearly
w™s CatpAopeneFLnecesontsturaoychsidh’t. i ipgusofhesarrdstrattonatmsz photomey wrna
ya arixwa's:,»#f5REY0
whe be broke through the line of schimmage and ,
ran 35 yards to score Fred Cobb made the other I
tcuchdown and kicked both points after the scores. 1
The Denton lne-up was Copper, center; McAlister
and Wison, guards; Myers and Beckham, tackles;
Goode and Bradley, ends; J Cobb, quarter; Kelsay
would be censured by the Senate stockholder or security holder Ap-
Ultimately the Senate will adopt pears upon the books of mhe company
. peN “ trustee or in any other fiduciary
a resolution directing the disposl- reiation. ine name ot the person or
tion of the portraits. In the mean- corporation tor whom such trustee
time, nearly everyone in the cap- is acting, is given; also that the »M|
Itoi is afraid to lay a finger on two paragraphs soumtein atatementa
+Hm , embracing amant s full knowledge
-2 and belief aa to the circumstances
voichg hte views and the ocher day addressed a con- wedemactoth NXfkt pecedmmestwondprdu
ueetonnaocpoptsommanKgnstPoperatcomip 1 American cotton to compete with the rest or the
tent without immediate cause sicn operations un- caapstauean cuhnsez thxorlaon- production in
necessarily imperil the health and life of patients America-Dispatch-Journal
according to Dr. Golub. He pointed out that the rate I -----------------
of surgical operation was increasing faster than the GROWING OLDER
population, and predicted that the decline at surgery The opening of the schools in the tnited State*
will be progress and not recesaton. means the mebilization at a peaceful—or relatively
The average ctzen will bail the day when many 1 peacefu-army of about 30.000.000. This.number.4s 77*7'^*“ *‘.7Ti. -EE- summer movea through the Sham-
ilk thnt , um raq 1 1, —,ati,7 will h. nearly equal to the entire population of the country the 1938 regulations Despite akii iv-ce4L,
—ls thatpoW canbe cured only by operaUoo will be at the beginning or the civi War Year by year a the effort Congress made to move port over Highway 66 the
son-raFa.amrearmemnoatsummamaurtounietn E^pS^to^^X^As,^^ ^WM^X a. fneVgtmantmgnavemims ~
-------2— only 2 per cent went to high school, as late as 1900 money It te i
19 Years Ago Today
Members of the medical profession as a whole fol- of agriculture
low a policy of not criticizing fellow members openly t For those who have not kept up wtth at the plans
for mistakes or poor judgment. This policy isn’t m- 1 and proposals for farm relief it may be pointed out .uu . J.. ___
tended to protect the physician who errs, but to i that, under the plan Wallace te using every farmer whie the eity has gained about
prevent the public from losing faun in the protes- is.gven an.acreage guotaand. te hengow catn $23,000. When taxable, valies Mart
"10 L.72, rat 4.7 email —,c,nt., . mietepag ' Cn acres ID eXce6S of his quota he 1S penalied, W nere showing an increase, it looks bet-
hanbnbarayitvodedlpereentase ~ production of^eerton by re- j teTfor the city’s and county's in-
had roused them and a little
House and Senate chambers re-
port there was an influx of bright-
eyed, rather bashful boys and girls
around the ages of 15, 17 and 18.
accompanied, apparently by their
mamas and papas
They were new students at the
warda, Lee R McDonald. Mrs. Nettle
w Edwards. L. A. McDonald. J 8.
Fowler B E Drake, all of Penton.
Texas, and Wm C. Edwards. Edin-
-5" PHOTOGRAPHS
* or 10 days the recent warm rains, and who knows—Some day
■tone- it tent ciear who, but it probably was a I McCarthy may be as big as Bergen —Detroit News
ahlnking Demeem fendly to Domney cot (-----------L —-=................
"If the next generation of
tarns may be true im time They scarcely fit the automobu; drivers knt the border sports, recentiywere.ciased.
vKaa may or m I iiiey -II us use master of every conceivable I _ Purpose of the booths a two-
rertless. experimental age In which we_ live. I traflie situgtam it may find
. tae tune may never again oome wnen nearly *1 itself in B won't be the fan.’’
third of us WiU be of the present school age That | of the"safetycampaigners of
this generation They’re prob-
ably just a little more thorough
than you’d become awarde, un-
have been on the plain wooden Eages.prnother.sesurittes are lK
floor racks about three years . "Nnere state.) ,
Employes of the Senate who work | 4 That the two paragraphs next
s caught at the border, informed I about the hall in the year around above, giving the names of the own-
......... ' don’t know where the portraits of er. it anholoertarnndocconrye Lboldt
the distinguished trio finally will oF stockhiders ana secumity holders
hePlod ' rehatere ndte maa “ “‘e’ * Ppen upon the bowks,of the
52
STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP,
MANAGEMENT. CIRCULATION.
ETC., REQI IRED BY THE ACT OF
CONGRESS OF ALGUST •!, 1912,
AND MARCH 3. 1933 _
Of Denton Record--Chronicle pub-
lished daily at Denton Texas, for *
Otober 1, 1938 -
to pay for expropriated American -owned lands
But Mn inn officials are indratlrw that they want
a settlement ...but a settlement on their own terms.
Just the same, patient State Department officials-
anxiqus to avoid a break with the neighboring re-
public—- think they are getting somewhere in oral
ment (and if a daily paper, the cir-
QUlatlont etc, of the aforesaid pub-
lication for the date shown in the
above caption, required by the Act
of Augst 24, 1912. as amended by
the Act of March 3, 1933 embodied
in section 637 Postal Law's and Reg-
ulations. printed on the reverse of
this form, to wit.
1. That the names and addresses of
the publisher, editor managing edi-
lor. and business managers are:
Publisher Record-Chronicle Co.,
Inc.. Denton, Texas
Editor R J Edwards Denton Tex-
as
Managing Editor L. A McDonald.
Denton. Texas
Business Manager Lee R McDon-
ald. Denton. Texas
2. That the owner is: (If owned by
a corporation, its name and address
must be stated and also immediately
thereunder the names and addresses
of stockholders owning or holding
one per cent or more of total amount
of stock. It not ow ned -by a corpora-
tion. the names and addresses of the
individual owners must be given if
owned by a Arm. company, or other I
unincorporated concern, its name
and address, as well as those of each
individual member must begiven )
Record-Chronicle Co. Inc. Denton,
Texas, R J Edwards, Mrs R. J Ed-
ers during the twelve months preced-
ing the date shown above is 2547.
(This information is required from
daily publications only.)
LEE R MCDONALD.
Sworn to and subscribed before me
this 4th day of October 1938
C. A HOGAN.
(My commission expires Msy 31,
1939.)
and Collins, hairbacks; and F Cobb, fullback.
Mall for W Lee ODaniel te ar-
riving at th* capitol. some address-
ed u> him as “Governor” ODan-
l lei. some as "Hon." and some as
plain "Mr." ODandel
The mailman takes it up to the
suite of Gov James V Allred,
whose staff sends it to the gover-
nor-nominate tn Fgrt Worth. It
| tent opened in Austin.
Gov. Allred’s secretaries say they
I haven't the least idea what the
letters to ODaniel are about but
‘ persons who have had a lock at the
mail received at his Fort Worth
; offices know pretty well without
party temiership Friends who hope
ah be ominated and elected in 1940 sald
onla establish Nmser as the outstanding
b Mg gun capabe 6 dealuns with Roosevelt
________ ..__... „ Dodd of Princeton Neither, says a lazy friend. te
rd of the Dollar Steamahip Une. following Ite work any substitute for leisure — Corsicana Sim.
eon by the Maritime Commission. His .................
gave out word that he would resign ’within Rustic park benches in the West have sprouted in
teas you happened to read
about the Ohio towns of Mans
field and Shelby The traffic
experts of a number at other
cities have heard about Mans-
field and Shelby and what
those towns have been doing
may become the general thing,
before long. They don't start
teaching safety habits in school
They start with the children
who are not old enough to at-
tend school Miniature cities
have been constructed on play-
grounds. complete with streets
and sidewalks and traffic sig-
nals. and the children who are
trained there are from 4 to 6
years old. Nearly 500 children
of those tender years were
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 44, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 5, 1938, newspaper, October 5, 1938; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1540330/m1/2/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.