The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 140, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1933 Page: 3 of 20
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Fort Worth Press and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Fort Worth Public Library.
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THE FORT WORTH PRESS
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IS ROBBED HERE
: Was Accused As Secret
Five Masquerader In
Another Case
Two men were charged with
bery with firearms today after
had beeh identified as the
‘r who tied up two attendants
d looted offices in the Moore
ulding Wednesday and held up
roman cafe operator last night.
Two charges were filed in Jus-
1 Walter Prichard's Court
ilinst Tilghman Van Acker and
“ case against Thomas F.
itesides.
Van Acker was identified by
Gladys Willoughby as the
dit who threatened to kill her
and took $61.30 from her at
home. 311 Routh Jennings
inue, last night.
7 Fired Shot in Chase.
s an Acker and Whitesides were
Ihtified as the armed pair who
stered the Moore Building by
I. Waggoner, elevator operator.
€ AH, WOE IS ME!
" Adventure turned to woe
"or one of the pursuers of a
Land It on South Jennings
venue last night.
. A shot fired by the baudit
'mashed into a package un-
er the man's arm. The re-
giains of a half-gallon fruit
‘ar crashed to the sidewalk
ind an amber pool spread.
: Acker is now under bond on
large of posing as one of the
jret five" and robbing a Mex-
of $60 several weeks ago.
; an Acker fired a shot In
ite last night.
‘rs. Willoughby had closed her
, at 302 South Jennings and
Doug Fairbanks Jr. Sued
For $50,000, Alienation
Of Affections Is Charged
Actor and Wife Declare
Suit is "Blackmail,"
Events Recalled
By United Press.
LOS ANGELES, March 17.-
Characterizing an alienation of
affections suit filed against him
by Jorgen Dietz as “an open and
shut case of blackmail," Douglas
Fairbanks Jr., young film actor,
today laid plans to defend him-
self in court.
Dietz, 32-year-old chemical en-
gineer. demanded $50,000 dam-
ages for alleged alienation of the
affections of his wife, Mrs. Sol-
veig Dietz, scenario writer. In a
second action, he asked 820,000
more for false imprisonment,
charging Fairbanks, Michael Le-
vee, his manager, and District At-
torney Buron Fitts conspired to
deprive him of his liberty.
Joan Crawford, the actor’s
wife; Levee and Fitts joined’with
Fairbanks in terming the actions
"attempted extortion."
The alienation suit complained
that young Fairbanks began
showing attentions to Mrs. Dietz,
who is in Copenhagen, early in
1931, that he “betrayed her on
several occasions," and finally in-
duced her to leave her home on
April 15, 1932,
In the false imprisonment ac-
tion, Dietz declared Fairbanks
and Levee conspired to have him
arrested and taken to the district
a attorney's office last December.
Thence, he said, he was taken to
a hotel room and held four hours
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.
chase was made, he would file an
alienation of affections suit
against Fairbanks,
"The latter refused to buy the
necklace and complained to this
office.
"For the purpose of seeing how
far Dietz would go, this office
suggested to Levee, Fairbanks’
manager, that he deliver a check
for $1,500 to Dietz. This was
done, and when Dietz accepted
the check he was brought to this
office at once.
"It then developed that Dietz
had been separated from his wife
for over a year and a half, and
that he wished to marry Miss Do-
raine. He so stated, and she
• to,her home at 311 Routh
hings with the day’s receipts.
the climbed the stairs to her
71, a stranger knocked at the
1. Mrs. Willoughby sent her
Donald, 16, down to answer. ‘
$ Shot Halts Chase
until he promised to waive any
action against Fairbanks.
made a similar statement.
“Dietz pleaded with Fairbanks
for mercy, and the actor informed
Fitts admitted Dietz had been
questioned by his office. He acted, this office he did not wish to file
he said, on a “request by a repre- any complaint."
sentative of Will H. Hays, to in- • . •
| vestigate an attempted extortion
. . case against Douglas Fairbanks
the bandit camel up the stairs | Jr *
1 a gun in the son’s back.
Give me that money or I’ll
I your hov." he commanded. |
1 Willoughby complied.
■ the robber left the house. |
Iran to a window and yelled at
joup of men and boys on the
ier to stop him.
he boys started after the ban-
but turned back when the
i fired one shot at them.
Companion Found
tv Detectives Carl Howard
Howard Grant, cruising near-
1 an auto, heard the shot and
ured the man as he fled in
700 block Hemphill Street,
ortly afterward, the bandit’s
oanion was arrested hiding
Millions Have Been Dumped C
JS SPEEDED BY On Battered Little Table IN STOCK SHOW
SENATE MOVE Clearing House, Much in News These Days,
DERATE Originated Back in 1775 Above
London Cotfee Shop
Will Hasten Measure
Floor When House
Acts On It
To
Half-Holiday Given; Put
Up Canopies At Rain
Threatens
By ROSCOE FLEMING
Up in a Fort Worth skyscraper is a plain little room
with a battered table and several battered chairs around it.
Here, at 11 a. m., every day, assembles a group of brisk
, , . i young fellows carrying zipper-bags or brief cases. They
as proposed by the administra- open them up, and dump bundles of checks on the table,
tion will go thru in all of its de- 201____________________________________
tails is problematical.
The Roosevelt bill, prepared by
Secretary of Agriculture Wallace,
the heads of the farm organiza-
tions; Fred Lee, their attorney; k into the bags and
Prof. Guy Tugwell; Dr. Mordecai to them back into th bags, and
Ezekial and others, provides for
the taxing of the processing of
farm products. At the outset
these taxes would be applied to
wheat, cotton, corn, hogs, cattle,
sheep, rice, tobacco, and milk and
its products. This processing tax
would equal the difference be-
tween current prices of these
products, and the “fair exchange
value." The latter price is that
which will give the commodity
the same purchasing power, with
respect to articles farmers buy, as
during the pre-war period, 1909
to 1914, I
(Starts on Page 1).
This might mean that the
prices of bread, other wheat prod-
ucts, cotton goods, beef, pork,
etc., would be increased to the
extent of the fluctuating tax.
The government would collect
this tax, and from it pay to farm-
ers of these basic commodities a
reasonable rental for land they
take out of production. In some
instances the bounty would be
paid direct to producers on some
other fair basis which would re-
sult in reduction of production.
Cotton Plan Also.
Generally the bill gives the
President and the secretary of
agriculture authority to put the
domestic allotment plan of farm
relief into effect, altho in and out
(Starts on Page 1).
John Tarleton, Stephenville; Ivan
BOETTCHER CASE I
LINKED WITH OT
By United Press.
ST. PAUL, Minn., March
St. Paul police announced to
, they believed the kidnaping
Charles Boettcher, wealthy D
ver broker, had been linked with
| the abduction last fall of Has-
kell Bohn, son of a millionaire
manufacturer, seized here under
similar circumstances.
Two men charged with the
1 Boettcher kidnaping were par-
Thorne, Mexia; O. B. Hampton, | tally identified as accomplices
Stephenville; Precinct 1 and 2,
Under the experienced eye of +
a man who has been supervising
the process for 18 years, they ex-
change these bundles,, note the
amounts, put the bundles coming
are off.
Fort Worth’s banks have
"cleared" with each other, checks
amounting perhaps to a million
and a half dollars—all the trans-
actions of the past 24 hours. It
takes about 15 minutes.
This is the physical aspect of
the Fort Worth Clearing House,
whose’ manager,. Roscoe Smith,
has been conducting it for 18
years, and has been connected
with it for 30 years.
The Clearing House Association
was much in the news during the
bank holiday. Not this physical
plant, but the association of six
Fort Worth banks which, under
the leadership of W. L. Pier, pres-
ident, gave them a flexible, co-
operative organization which could
act quickly to meet emergencies or
tackle problems of mutual impor-
tance.
The local clearing house is a
transactions. These certificates
are binding on the debtor bank.
It is surprising how much of
the day’s business "washes out."
On one day, the Fort Worth banks
cleared more than a million dol-
lars by the exchange of only about
$30,000. Usually the amount runs
from 8 to 10 per cent,
Nor do the banks send cash to
each other, or even issue checks.
Settlements from each day’s clear-
ing must be made before the close
of the banking day, at 3 p. m.
Banks with money on deposit In
the Federal Reserve may simply
notify that bank to credit the
creditor bank with the amount
owed from the clearing. Or it
may transfer funds in Chicago or
New York.
There is a second, and minor
in the Bohn affair.
Tarrant County, and one from! St. Paul detectives said. Verne
' Sankey and Gordon Elkhorn,
hunted thruout the Northwest in
the Boettcher abduction, had
been identified partially as two
of the men who held young
Bohn prisoner.
Boettcher was held for $60,
000 ransom which relatives are
believed to have paid. Bohn was
released after $5,000 was be-
lieved paid the a greater sum
was asked originally.
"The investigation revealed,"
Fitts said, “that Dietz was at-
tempting to compel Fairbanks to
purchase of one Lucy Doraine a
diamond necklace valued at $300
for the sum of $6,000. Dietz
threatened that, unless this pur-
By United Press.
PHOENIX, Ariz., March 17.-
Superior Judge J. C. Niles yester-
day married Jorgen Dietz, 29, and
Helena Kovacs, 34, both of Los
Angeles. Efforts to locate the
couple following the ceremony
were in vain. Mrs. Dietz was
of the administration efforts are
being made to avoid that name.
This was the plan the House ap-
proved last session, and that was
reported by the Senate agriculture
committee to the Senate, which
did not pass it. In the Roosevelt
bill, the plan is called the "agri-
cultural adjustment."
The proposal also includes the
said by Judge Niles to be a mo-
tion picture, actress.
PEOPLE AND POLITICS
I cotton plan of Chairman Smith.
Under it, all government-owned
cotton, about 3,000,000 bales, is
to be pooled. Cotton farmers who
agree to reduce their production
Fort Worth pioneer. Banks or-
ganized ft to clear transactions
with each other in 1887. •
It is just what its name implies.
If it didn't exist, here is what
would happen.
You have an account in the
Continental. You give a check
to a Fort Worth merchant who
banks at the Fort Worth National.
The check comes in. The Fort
Worth National would have to
send a runner over to the Conti-
nental to deliver it, and also to
get from the Continental the
checks which the latter has taken
in on the Fort Worth National..
Instead of all this, the banks
just .clear all checks at once, thru
the clearing house. They sort the
checks before taking them over.
Naturally, in the process, some
banks turn over checks less in
amount than those they receive.
To the creditor bank, the clear-
ing house issues certificates which
credits it so much on the day’s
clearing at 3 p. m. Banks upon
which checks are drawn may find
some checks are N. S. F., improp-
erly indorsed, or for some other
reason may not accept them. Back
this accounting goes to the clear-
ing house. It is simply noted at
that time, for allowance in the
next day's riearings.
The clearing house as an 'insti-
tution had Its origin in rooms
above a London coffee shop in
17Z5.
There certain Londoners sent
their clerks to exchange notes and
bills, and settle their mutual
debts. The plan worked well. It
has spread to almost all cities
which have enough banks and
enough business to justify it.
And It is good for a city, Mr.
Smith points out that banks in
clearing house cities were allowed
to open a day earlier than in cities
without them, after the bank holi-
day.
Arlington, will compete.
The horse show sweepstakes in
the junior saddle class this after-
noon will be for a prize of 9600.
The entries are Gay Crusader,
owned by Mary Flers, Oklahoma
City; Nona Marie, Horse Shoe
Stables, Dallas; Silver Lace and
Fleeta Flash, T. K. Simmons,
Bixby, Okla.; Black Rose, R. H
Lewis, Dallas.
Oklahoma A. & M. College took
high honors today in the Per-
cheron horse show when they car-
ried off the prizes and $20
awards each for the champion
stallion, Oak Trust Pride, and the
champion mare, Gladena,
In the saddle horse class,
shown to the halter, the cham-
pion stallion, Leland Trigg, was
shown by Horse Shoe Stables of
Dallas. The champion mare Lady
Lou is owned by George W.
Snedden of Tulsa, Okla.Both
prizes carried a $20 award.
At tonight’s Rodeo, the prize
cattle of the show, led by the
newly-crowned grand champions,
will be paraded around the arena.
In addition to being Children’s
Day, with children of school age
being admitted free at the main
gates, more large delegations were
expected from West Texas and
South Texas towns. Saturday will
be American Legion Day, Wichita
Falls Day, Bonham Day, and
Traveling Men’s Day.
More sales were conducted to-
day in the auction arena.
President W. Lee O‘Daniel of
the Chamber of Commerce today
appointed a committee to meet,
the Wichita Falls group schedul-
ed to arrive at 10:30 a. m. to-
morrow.
The Committee: Mayor Wil-
THEFT WAS “BIG SALE"
MONROVIA, Cal."Back In
half an hour, gone to lunch," said
a note Beatrice Bender pinned to
her shop door, “You missed * big
sale,” someone penciled on the
note. Miss Bender found the
“sale" was theft of a $25 ring
during her absence.
Ham Bryce, City Manager George
D. Fairtrace, Manager Jack H.
Hott of the Chamber. Van Zandt
Jarvis, show president; John H,
Davis, show manager; Leon
Gross, H. O. Parr, W. E Connell,
W. T. Waggoner, A. A.. Lund,
Lewis F. Swift, W. L. Pier and
Mrs. Julia McMurtry.
FREE! FREE!
To celebrate our opening
we will give a frozen cus-
tard free with each one pur-
chased. Bring this coupon.
Good only March 16th, 17th
and 18th.
Bill’s Frozen Custard
2200 W. 7th
Across from Trinity Park
Special Gossard Demonstration Saturday—"Second Floor
Roosevelt’s ’Brain Trust’
One Only Has to Read Their Books to Discover
How They Hope to Lead America
by 30 per cent or more are given
an option on an equal amount of
the pool cotton. When selling
time comes, the farmer can have
the government pool dispose of
his cotton, taking the profit, if
any. This has the double purpose
of getting rid of the government-
owned cotton, and reducing this
• year’s cotton crop.
DELEGATES CHOSEN
FOR BAPTIST MEET
lac/J
MAIN AND HOUSTON AT 12TH
r the porch steps of a house By RAY TUCKER
asgett and Jennings WASHINGTON, March 17.—Behind almost every door
t or soo stolen from the of of the Roosevelt administration’s far-flung offices stands
of the Yeoman Insurance a young, brisk college professor. They are popularly known comslourue .nac compete
as the "brain trust,” and they have figured in the news agricultural products.such
ever since Mr. Roosevelt’s election.
u Emergency Powers.
. Like the House bill of last ses-
In the Moore Building.
said they stuck $112 It
also taken from the in-
nce office in a small box.
ty quarter grains of morphine
h from the office of Dr. J. B.
mings has not been recover-
HOOLS ENTER
;HURCH DRIVE
$ ment Vice Campaign
With Plea for •Spiritual
Awakening'
There has been some joshing
about these comparatively youth-
ful and .academic figures upon
whom Mr. Roosevelt relies so
heavily. Rome politicians and
some senators resent their influ-
ence. There are contemptuous
references to their "book knowl-
edge." But those who minimize
their influence, and the direction
and character they are giving to
the administration, are making a
mistake.
Those' daring, energetic and lib-
eral professors have a definite
philosophy, and Mr. Roosevelt has
accepted It almost completely, to
judge from his own but unrevealed
(Starts on Page 1)
plans. They have the idea of a
planned, better balanced society, a
more delicately organized state,
with respect to almost every field
of human activity where it touches
the state. That applies to agri-
Thompson. Members are
L. D. Anderson, Dr. W. R .ne state. .... .pp.ee .. ....-
‘e. Dr. JW . Johnson, Dr. culture, <o industry, to business,
. Culver, Dr. J. Frank Norris to banking, to foreign affairs,
i Mr. Green. . Perhaps the word which best de-
pout 100 pastors and laymen scribes their ideal commonwealth
>ded the meeting, at First is “self-contained.”
Perhaps the word which best de-
slon, the new Roosevelt plan also
i provides for processing taxes on
I commodities that compete with
- i as
| silk and rayon; and it levies tar-
iffs on similar competing import-
stian Church.
‘Ve have been passing thru
conomic and spiritual depres-
and the only way out Is thru
spiritual reformation." the
ol superintendent said.
' Brought Back Saloon.
Ve teachers want to do our
and to plan our program in
a way that the schools will
ribute a greater service to
community and to make this
ribution a spiritual one in-
1 of one purely of the mental
everend Norris said that there
no use denying the fact that
i the Senate passed the beer
yesterday it brought back the
ons, the saddest thing that
happened in the last 10
I."
lust as definitely as God call-
salah and Martin Luther in
• great religious movement,
as He called us Into a great
tual revival of religion," Rev-
d Coleman said.
One has only to read their books
and they are prolific writers—
to discover the direction in which
they hope to lead America. To
listen to their plans and dreams,
and then to recall the slow, cau-
tious, crablike movements of the
| last three Republican presidents,
with their dependence on the Jim
Watsons and Simeon Fesses and
the Republican Old Guard for ad-
vice, is like turning from perusal
of a multiplication table to an old
romance,
These are not the ordinary type
of college professors; not at all.
They are, for one thing, hard-
boiled; they are fighters. They
are curt in manner sometimes, and
crisp in their speech. They are
objective, analytical and concrete.
They come from university class-
rooms in which dead languages
and ancient history are subordi-
nated to courses in the social and
political sciences. Now their lab-
oratory is the government of the
United States.
Most of them have official posi-
tions, and take part in the public
conferences. There is Ray Moley
in the State Department, Rex Guy
Tugwell in the Department of Ag-
riculture and Henry Morgenthau
Jr., as head of the Farm Board.
Not all of these professors are
specially equipped for their spe-
cific posts, but that is not the
point.
Mr. Roosevelt wants them on
the scene and close at hand. He
depends on them, and on such un-
official advisers as M. L. Wilson
of Montana and Prof. A. A. Berle
of New York a great deal more
than anybody except the inner cir-
cle realizes.
The supposedly bookish profes-
sors may pull us out of the mess
the supposedly practical politicians
have made.
ed products.
The powers conferred upon the
President would last until he de-
cided that the agricultural emer-
gency has passed.
As the committees of both
houses started their study of the
bill today there was fairly gen-
eral agreement that it would
have to be simplified, altho no
one was able to say just how.
DOG GAVE FIRE ALARM
KENNEWICK, Wash. — His
name is Goofus, but he’s not so
"Gootus" after all. The six-
month-old rat terrier barked so
long and so loudly here recently
that his owner, H. E. Oliver, came
downstairs to see what was the
matter. A log had rolled out of
the fireplace onto the floor, and
was burning a goodly-sized hole.
The fire was put out, and Goofus
was rewarded with a generous
portion of liver.
Four From Fort Worth to Attend
Washington Convention
Fort Worth will be represent-
ed by four delegates at the South-
ern Baptist Convention to be held
in Washington in May.
Forty-four delegates and alter-
nates were elected yesterday at
the closing session of the annual
executive board meeting of the
Woman’s Missionary Union, Bap-
tist General Convention of Texas,
at Baptist Seminary,
The local delegates will be
Mrs. B. A. Copass, Mrs. W, R.
White, Mrs. Minnie Shepherd and
Mrs. E. N. Henley. The alter-
nates are Mrs. R. E. Evans and
Mrs. L. R. Scarborough.
More than 200 attended the
two-day meeting. Speakers yes-
terday were Dr. Hal Buckner of
Dallas, Mrs. A. T. Alvis of Belton
and Mrs. J. M. Dawson of Waco.
New Spring Straws
Have Just Arrived
For This Evanfl
-Exciting New Shapes
Becoming New Shades
New Bambino Straws
$9
The "Golden Calf Dance" will
be Rabbi Philip Graubart's sub-
ject tonight at the regular serv-
ices of Congregation Ahavath
Sholom.
Grasshopper Glacier, at the
eastern edge of Yellowstone
Park, is so named because of the
myriads of grasshoppers which
are frozen into the ice. No one
knows just when these vast
hordes of insects fell and met
their death on the huge sheet of
ice.
Positive Relief
For Itchy Skin
Cooling and soothing Blue Star
Ointment melts on the skin, sending
tested medicines deeply into pores
where it quickly kills itch, tetter,
rash, eczema, foot itch, ringworm,
etc. Money back if it fails.—Adv.
•
Soft Turbans
Intriguing Brims
You'll see so many at-
tractive styles here at
this low price you’ll want
several for now and all
summer wear! All are
new and unusual values.
22 to 28% inch head
sizes. Featured at. $2
Black, Navy, White
Belge, Dawn Blue, Grey,
Brown and Red
Meacham’s Main Floor
Youthful, Sheer Blouses
Dainty lawns, or-
gandies and silk r
crepe blouses to COh
delight any young D 1
girl. Mannish or 1
feminine styles. 1
White and rotorn to •
please you ......
Meacham’s Second Floor
uthern Pacific
ALWAYS HAS A
I
I i i res
©
Root Beer
9 Your
grantee
f Real fr
of Juices “
40 bottles of d
ms and health- ' ]
Hires Root %
from 1 bottle
es Root Beer
ct. Costs less
if per glass,
money, yet
our family a
wholesome
IN EFFECT
Save Money Going Via "SP”
No manor when you go, you will save maney!
Reduced round trip faree are on sale daily between all Texas and
Louisiana pointe; return limit io 30 days; stopover privileges.
Much lower faree ere on sale every Friday, Saturday, Sunday;
return limit to leave Monday following dare of sale; reduced round
trip Pullman fares.
Or use Scrip Books end save 25%: $108 worth of transportation
for $81; $72 worth of transportation for $54; free baggage allowance
of 300 pounds.
Fast, Popular “SPY Trains Include:
11 A.M.
(Connect with “Sunbeam” at Ennis at
12:535 Noon)
to HouMon
Connections to Corpus Christi,
"Valley” points. New Orisons,
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10:40 P.M. "OWL"
to Houtton, Galveston.
Connections at Houtton to
Shreveport, Beaumont, Now Or
loans, East, El Paso, California.
Southern Pacific
City Ticket Office . Phone 3.1661
116 E. 9th St. I ) Travel Headquarters
, Millions say:
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TERES America’s favorite cracker a a a PREMIUM
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FREE
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National Biscuit Com-
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NATIONAL
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Jneeda
Bakers
Special Sale!
88c Girls’ Dresses
Adorable fast color
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Boys' Patterned Shirts
New checks, plaids,
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Good selection of fast
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to sell at...........
095
Boys’ Spring Pajamas
New pretty patterns or solid color
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Boys' Wash Suits
Gay little wash suits in fancy and sol-
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Hickory Play Suits
Well made coveralls forthe boy of 1 to
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Meacham’s Basement
Stunning New Bags
Patents and calf
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some with small ■
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Here Are Lovely Silk
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55c “
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These are clear even weaves in
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good range of the newest shades
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Ask to see these Saturday. aBe
pair or 2 pass, ...........$1
Meacham’s Main Floor
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Sheldon, Seward R. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 140, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1933, newspaper, March 17, 1933; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1664421/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.