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Denton Record-Chronicle from Denton, Texas • Page 1

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ROUND ABOUT TOWN Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests; but the Son of not where to lay his head. In the readjustment of fire insurance penalties and premiums Dentcn secured a reduction of nine per cent in its penalty, as the State Fire Insurance Department announced a six per cent penalty for Denton. Heretofore the penalty has seen fifteen per cent, which in fact gives Denton the nine per cent reduction, effecting a saving in insurance premiums, according to insurance men, of somewhere in the neishrjbrhood $7,000 each year. San Anglic, Sweetwater and Green- vule received neither credits nor PenaJ'-ies. The rate fectA'e March 1st.

The route from Winnipeg to Mexico City, at one time known as the Hockaday Trail, is now termed. the Pan-American Highway Steel markers are being placed along this designated higwhay, and it is Sloped that the markers, bearing the name Pan-American, will be erected from Winnipeg to Mexico City in near future. The markers at present extend to Perry Oklahoma. The Pan-American Highway through Denton on Highways 77 and 10. from Gainesville to and from Denton to Port crth.

It was on this road matter that a committee of Denton Chamber of Commerce representatives last year went to the organization meeting in Monterrey. Mexico. Otis L. Fowler was named as Texas president of the association in Monterrey. DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE VOL.

XXXIV NO. 167 DENTON, TEXAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 25, 1935 Full United Pratt SIX PAGES HUNT HAMILTON, ABDUCTED BOYS DESPERADO SAID HE WAS HEADING FOR DENTON AFTER SPENDING NPT NEAR (AINA McKINNEY, Feb. Raymond Hamilton, slippery desperado who narrowly escaped death in a police ambush near here last night, was reported fleeing west today with three abducted farm boys after spending part of the night at a farm house three miles west of Celina. It was reported that Hamilton was shot in the jaw last night when officers poured a barrage of shots into the car in which the condemned killer and a companion fled from McKinney to Weston, 10 miles Elbert Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs C.

B. Moore of Denton, a former student of Teachers College, will leave here Tuesday for Honolulu -Hawaii, where he will engage in a wrestling campaign. Mr. Moore week from Toledo, Ohio, with his wife, nee Miss Helen Henry, of Fort Worth. Moore is considered one of the 'top notch- ers' in the wrestling game and on the.

mat goes under the name of Sampson. John Piner lays himself liable to much unfriendliness criticism when be says, "Last summer was neither hot nor dry as compared to conditions of this coming summer when we will learn something about a. hot and dry 1 he said "We'd better be begging for rain now as we will sure enough need all the moisture we can get to pull us through this coming summer." Thi may or, not be Fred idea of optimist. child asked his- daddy what is an optimist, and dad replied that it was a fellow who went Into a hotel without baggage and asked to have a check cashed. Sanger grows 'em big.

Four brothers of that city, at one time, placed on the city- scales, weighed just 1,069 pounds. Sullivan, of Dallas.now, tipped the scales for an even 354 pounds, D. R. and F. Sullivan, now of Vicga added 289 and 210 pounds respectively, and Dr.

J. M. Sullivan, of Sanger, put on 216 pounds more, bringing total weight of the four brothers to 1,069" pounds. The' adherents of the ground hog as a prophet are both making excuses about the present cold spell, but, it seems, the boys who believe the appearance from winter hibernation takes place on February 14th are loudest in their excuses, claiming that this cold weather i just another indication of Spring being htrc. The boys who claim February 2 as the day the hog takes a peep at the skies are not so certain as to or not the pig really his shadow, as the day was partly cloudy and partly clear.

But there was no doubt as to the 14th as it was one of those perfect days, known as Denton weather. Farmers seen here Monday morning were of the belief that the low temperature would not do any injury to crops, especially garden sass, unless even colder temperatures prevailed Monday night. The snow and sleet covering were of benefit, they say. Believe it or not! it's John Hobson's story about his house cat, which hitch-hiked or otherwise took a trip of some four hundred miles by his lonely. Hobson said, "Two of my grand children, Bud and Reba Adams, of Sudan, Lamb County, spent five months with us, and only recently returned home.

On the day of their departure, our cat left. We did not know his whereabouts. About five weeks after the children arrived at their home, the cat showed up there. They believed it was our cat, but they were not certain until they wrote us about a cat having come there which they believed was the cat to' which they had become so attached when in Denton." WASHINGTON Feb. of agents are co-operating Texas officers in the hunt for a man reported to be Raymond Hamilton, J.

Edgar Hoover, of the Federal bureau of investigation, said today. He declined to discuss the exact charges upon which Hamilton is'sought by Federal agents. northwest of McKinney. The fugi- abandoned their car abouft a mile and a half west of Weston. Officers searched throughout the night for the gunmen, but could find no "trace of them until this morning and then it was learned the fugitives had continued their flight at daybreak, taking with them three captives.

They were last reported headed in the direction of Denton. They were in a 1929 Chevrolet sedan. Officers learned that abandoning the bullet riddled car near Weston, Hamilton and his companion had. held J. C.

lattice'," 16, farm boy, and driven away in his roadster. Spend Night at Farm They drove to the farm of Bill Mayes. three miles west of Celina, a town 18 miles northwest of McKinney, and spent the remainder of the night. At dawn thev left, taking with them Buster Mayes son of the farmer. J.

C. Harlow, a farm boy, anci young Loftice. Well Armed The district attorney's office here was advised that Hamilton and his companion were armed with two automatic rifles and two pistols. The Denton Officers Aid In Search For Desperado Armed Denton County deputies who hunted Raymond Hamilton, death-house fugitive, in this section, returned here shortly after noon Monday, without catching sight of the desperado. City police were also aiding in the search.

A search of considerable proportions had been carried out Sunday iiight, following 'reports Hamilton had shot his way past a police trap at McKinney and was headed in this direction. Late Monday morning the search, carried on chiefly in the eastern and southeastern part of the coun- 1 ty, was resumed on reports the desperado had turned in this uirection from a farm near Celina where he spent the night. Federal agents were also at the sheriffs office shortly after noon, and had with them in their car a understood to have been brought from McKinney and being taken to refused-to 4 Heavy Wind and Sleet Storms Lash Texas Huge Wartime Bonuses Paid Steel President WASHINGTON, Feb. 25. Bonuses paid to Eugene G.

Grace as president of the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Company and Bethlehem Steel Corporation were disclosed today before the Senate munitions committee to have amounted to $12,282,000 from 1917 to 1931, in addition to a salary of $12,000 a year for most of the period. Just previously, -he expressed opposition to elimination of all profit in the event of a future war involving the United States. The bonus testimony was in connection with committee questioning -whether -Grace would approve having his plant commandeered by the government in time of war and his own salary cut to of a general, "about $10,000 a year." "I can't conceive of the government taking over an institution and telling the man at the head to go on and run it," he replied- "That is not government." He contended government operation of industry would be Records supplied the committee said his salary climbed "to $101,000 in 1931, the last year bonuses were paid to the officials, and. for 1932, 1933 and 1934, his salary was $180,000 a year, and no bonuses. Just Possum In Plain English (By Associated Serge 'Edward Davis of Englewood station knows his animals.

So when- policemen brought in a queer looking animal they had found on the street, he in- Jialed deeply and said: "That's a marsupial of the Didelphidae, of the kind commonly called Didelphis Virginians. It is arboreal, noctural, virtually it's good to eat. In the language of the street, it's possum." He plans to demonstrate the last thought, if no. owner claims the creature. PRESSURE TO GET PASSAGE (HORK RELIEF PREDICTED What's in Name FREDERICK, and Mrs.

A. C. Cronisc looked back en 62 years of happily married life today, they reflected association of names might have had something to do with it. For many years after they were married in 1873, they lived st a place called "Harmonv Grove." WASHINGTON, Feb. A mobilization in behalf of work relief "that will make the bonus army look like a Boy Scout parade in comparison" was foreseen in one quarter today "if it becomes necessary" to secure passage of the administration's $4,880,000.000 bill.

Paul V. Bettersfi. dirccter of the United States Conference of Mayors, made the forecast in a formal statement as Senate leaders marked Ume on the Roosevelt work relief program with. its unwanted McCarran prevailing wage amendment. Awaits Reaction At his Hyde Park home.

President Rcosevelt watched silently for na- lional reaction to the 44 to 43 Senate vote which attached the prevailing wags amendment against his fishes and forced Democratic leaders to return the bill to the appropriations committee. There was some belief Mr. Roosc- a i- i i cen a the Senate to reconsider the Pari-Mutuel Bet Test is Deferred AUSTIN, Feb. test on repeal of the pari-mutuel race wagering law was deferred, when the Texas House today voted to 'adjourn until tomorrow without acting on a bill to stamp out race discus that'feature of the. chase.

Another search was planned for 11 this afternon by the Denton Coun- ty deputies, they indicated on their return here. Adjournment, took House off "the suspension calendarT'. on which the bookie bill was pend- Fortune From Cattle DORCHESTER, England- Farmer George Chell's cattle are. getting extra-fine fodder these wliy iiot? While grazing the day, the cattle kicked up a half dozen gold coins which started' the farmer digging in his pasture. Te unearthed more than hundred coins dating back 300 years.

The treasure, worth about $5,000 is now believed to have been buried during the the ment social unrest which will be unparalleled." Controversies Unsettled Meantime this 74th Congress far Blizzard Strikes Suddenly After Springlike Period (By Associated. Press) A freakish blizzard, lashing the state with chill north winds, snow, etters said that "telling a tidal wave -of telegrams and let- 000 workers they can not -work, re- ters in behalf of the adminlstra- gardless of ihe reason, is to fo- lion's plan of $50 a month wages Both Sides Rest In Barrow-Parker Harboring Trial leaders strove of the cold wave. At Amarillo this to re-assert control'after the de- morning- the temperature had fal- feat on the prevailing wage amend- len to eight degrees above zero and capital wondered wheth- dust, which clouded the air yester- er President Roosevelt would make day, had disappeared. A north wind another of his fireside chats to the of moderate intensity still was nation soon in behalf of his fight blowing and some sleet fell for "security wages." The rrfcrcury tumbled from 75 Administration strategists, who yesterday afternoon to 21 this had the $4,880,000,000 work and re- morning in Dallas. A dust storm lief bill sent back to the commit- followed by a thundershower, pre- tee sifter the McCarran amefnjflj ceded the 'hail and sleet which ment had been tacked on it over blanketed Dallas during the early White House opposition, watched to.

morning Rne sleet still day for-what they hoped would be this morning. Snow in El Paso The weather bureau reported snow falling at El Paso, where the temperature hit a minimum of 32. Abilene had a mercury drop from 77 yesterday afternoon to 20 this morning. A severe dust storm there last night was followed by some sleet. TJust and a strong north wind Shensi, China, Feb.

were slipping through town today. --Unconfirmed reports received by A 50-degree temperature fall-oc- the local office of the China Inland curred at Corsicana, where the mer- Mtesion. saW two mission-; cury hovered around the 31-degree arms, Rev. and Mrs. S.

French- mark this morning. Rain and sleet fell and hard winds damaged signs IRE BRIEFS Michael Mahoney. sports writer of the Dallas Journal, recently made a trip to at which time he, Dr. L. H.

Moore, Bitsy McCray and Norris Russell engaged in a foursome at the Denton Country Club. Mahoney was much impressed. with the golf course as well as by some of its players, saying, "The Denton Country Club has possibilities second to none. There are nine smart holes, well guarded fairways and greens, lots of distance and a variety of shot making lies in wait for all and sundry. Dr.

L. H. Moore is president of the club which was reorganized. Things are going along top hole at the current writing. The membership is 180 per.sons, and enthusiasm is grentor than it has ever been before." tional Guard armory- Dallas officers said they believed Hamilton's companion is a West Dallas hoodlum.

Hamilton has. in the two weeks, barely escaped being shot to death in two police ambushes, the other being at a Dallas apartment, in both cases the car he was in was riddled with Denton County officers patrolled roads leading from' Celina this morning but were unable to sight Hamilton and the captives. Escapes Ambush Eight McKinney officers lay in ambush along an old road two miles north of McKinney last night, and when Hamilton and his companion came by, opened fire on them. About seventy shots two outlaws. probable that Hamilton ion was wounded in the running fight as the officers pursued the two men to Weston.

Hamilton returned the fire. J. H. Cunningham Of Denton Dies J. H.

Cunningham, 73, 342 East Oak Street, died Sunday afternoon at the home of a Mrs. were fired at It was considered S. L. Betty said he and his force raided a local hide-out of ton's a few days ago and four Browning automatic rifles were (Continued on Page Three) SANTA MONICA, Feb. Well, they had the big horse race out here Saturday, for the most money and race ever paid and an Irish horse won it.

He was 7 years old. He had. beea a steeplechase horse and he was Saturday He jumped over 20 American horses. Thf.rc was 5800,000 bet at that track on the races. The stores of Los Anyclcs put on a dollar sale, and they played to more money than did the races and Iowa had a picnic the same day out here and thew had more people than the races and the dollar sale combined.

With all these goings on in one town, I wouldn't worry too much about the country going: Bolshevik. Funeral services will be held at his home here tomorrow afternoon at 1. p. conducted by Rev. Luther C.

Peak, pastor of the Fundamenjt- alist Baptist Church, assisted by Rev. E. L. DarnelL Pallbearers will be T-. A.

Davis, O. H. Turner, C. E. Robertson and C.

H. Homer, sons- in-law, and Rowe Turner and Elmer York, grandsons. Burial will be in the Little Elm cemetery. Cunningham wa born Sept. 6, 1861.

in Mississippi, and had lived in Texas 44 years and in this county 35 years. He -was married to Miss Ophelia Pratt. Feb. E', 1885, in Mississippi and she survives. Seven children survive, J.

B. Cunningham of Krum', Mrs. Turner. R. W.

Cunningham of Wellington, Mrs. C. G. Homer of Decatur, Mrs. S.

F. Hughes of Wakeeney. Mrs. C. E.

Robertson of Olney, and Miss Zera Cunningham, at home. Two sisters also survive, Miss Sally Cunningham of Chico and Mrs. Ella Hargrove of Lorajne. Cunningham was in the grocery business here at the time of his death, and prior to that was engaged in farming: in the county. Ho was a member of the Methodist Church.

Sponsors indicated thev would seek action on the bill, regarded as a means of taking force from repeal arguments, at an early date. They were unable to say definitely when they would bring it up. The House speedly granted Governor James V. Alfreds request for an emergency appropriation for maintenance of the state parks system. It passed.

116 to 11, a bill to appropriate $36,500 through August 31, next. Relief Bonds Debated The. House continued debate on a Senate bill to sell $3,500.000 in relief bonds but failed of final decision. An amendment was adopted authorizing the board of control, re- submission wei lief supervising aeencv. to 1 legislature would Prohibition Repeal Discussion Due -i San Antonio had'a 38 mile wind, the Fcbt narrow ana, in Greece today killed temperature down to degrees.

got under wav at I Ic Ciffht I rSOns and tajnred five "JSSf- and sleetin in 1 eachsidTlSne alloi to from the mercury around 30 de- eacn side being allow- Athens. The casualties were in. In after the sudden bUzzard Jilt the Candia section of the island tnere Crete districts where there was al- Wichita Falls reported a mini- so considerable property damage. ed one hour and 30 minutes. Billie Mace, Bonnie's sister, was the only witness during the mom( ing, and, when she left the stand, ('both government and the de- AUSTIN, Feb.

feil se announced they had no fur- JJi 0 1 Feb 25 A sion of prohibition repeal, a sub- ther-testimony to offer. on an investiga- ject ignored during the first seven Among the defendants were incom and arricnl- weeks of the legislature, was sche- Cumie Barrow, mother of Clyde; Conditions generally was ap- duled to come UD for discussion this and Mrs. Emma Bonnie's )ro 0 hy the Senate and mum of 20 degrees, but there was no moisture. The worst sandstorm in many years whipped through Wi- last duled to come up for discussion this and 5 Emma Bonnie's week before committees of both mother. Mrs.

Barrow testified oat- Houses. The Senate constitutional i urday. Mrs. Parker did not testify. amendments committee planned initial consideration today.

With many prohibitionists join- Trial of the case began last Friday, the formal charge being cons'- to harbor and conceal Clyde sent to the House. TUNISi Tuisia, Feb. Five men were killed and many others injnred when a case of ex- Mellon Shapes Fortune's Destiny PITTSBURGH, Feb. 25. Andrew w.

Mellon personally shapes the policies and guides the destinies of the great Mellon fortune, the banker's secretary. Howard M. Johnson, told the board of tax appeals today. Called as a witness for the fourth day at Mellon's $3,000,000 income tax inquiry, the former book-keeper, who has drawn up the financier's income tax returns for 20 yearV was asked by Government Council Robert H. Jackson: "Were sales or purchases made on your part without consultation with Mr.

Mellon?" Johnson answered: "An individual sale might have been made but it always was in line with the policies set by Mr. Mellon." "Then Mr. Mellon made these policies entrely of his own accord?" queried the attorney. 1 wns thr witness' firm answer. lief supervising agency, to" establish county grievance committees to investigate complaints on administration and report to the state.

The committee would have no connection with the county relief boards. Bills Introduced Senator Allan Shivers of Port Arthur introduced a bill to reduce to 80 per cent of original license cost the fee for re-registration of a motor vehicle. The act.would become effective March 1. 1936. "The emergency clause cited as a necessity the fact that owners of used cars of depreciated value were required to pay the same fees as on new automobiles.

Other bills introduced included: To permit the Texas highway commission to construct interstate bridges, up to $100,000 cost, without participation by the adjoining state. To create the upper Colorado Rver authority in Coke Tom Green Counties. To validate the organization and bonds of all school districts. To empower investigators of district attorneys to make arrests and serve processes. llO.LinjL a.

VI CJl- ing wets in asking that the people and Bonnie while they were plcsivcs blcw lod ay in the hold be given a vote on repeal, advocates tiv es on a Dyer act charge between the French government S. S. of submission WPT-P confident the May, 1933, and May. 1934. 44 Federal Witnesses approve that course by the required two-thirds majority.

One of the matters to be decided most i Q. Gouverneur General Jonrsartt as it was unloading at pits pier. part on statements from' Jam es V. Alircd today chita Falls for several hours terday afternoon- and early night. Cold at Houston The mercury was tumbling rapidly at Houston and a freeze was expected there before nightfall.

The temperature had fallen from 73 yesterday to 43 this morning. There was some rainfall. The temperature also was dropping rapidly in Shreveport, the weather bureau there reporting a slump from 65' degrees at 2 a. m. to 32 at 7 a.

m. Chill winds, cloud- was whether the election would be James Mullen, W. D. Jones and held this summer or postponed un- Henry Methvin, three of the de- til next year, when the number of poll tax payments would be 'the greater. Some of the lawmakers desired to withhold action on submission until the legislature outlines a liquor control plan to become effective if prohibition is repealed.

Injunction Action Due Final 5 action was in prospect in the Senate on a House bill to re- trict the powers of district courts in oil injunction suits against the state railroad commission. The bill would provide that the railroad commis- fendants. Their statements detailed activities of the gang during the period mentioned in the charges. Other witnesses corroborated these statements. The defense had three character witnesses for John Basden, who today changed his plea to guilty.

Mrs. Mace testified that Clyde and thel to make an immediate appropriation of approximately $52,000 for maintenance of slate parks! WASHINGTON, Feb. his first veto of this session, President Rcoserelt today returned to Congress without approval a bfll authorizing an appropriation of $500.000 for the investigation control and eradication of marine or- Hte low 24 degrees of 57 grees from the 18 maximum yesterday. Lubbock's temperature this morning was 9 above zero, and there was (Continued on Page Pour) after reasonable notice and a hearing. The House hoped to complete discussion of a bill to, provide for issuance of the remaining $3,500,000 of state unemployment relief bonds.

Since the House proposal was considerably different from the one passed by the Senate, it was probable the final plan would be worked out by a conference committee. until an adtomobile. ivmue uia.o uayae ana nvi ana cnuiicauon of marine or- Bonnie, who were slain last year by ganwms injurious to shell fish in the officers in Louisiana, had always Atlantic and Gulf States, notified them of an intended meeting by placing a note in a bottle and tossing it in Barrow's mother's yard in West Dallas as he sped past in C. LA. Largest State-Supported Women's College in World; Third Largest Women's School in S.

Denton is the -lome of the largest state-supported college for women in the world and the third largest woman's college in the United States, according to statistics compiled hy the autnorilies of C. I. which has an enrollment this year of approximately 3,840. The statement was made after authorities gathered information from numerous other colleges concerned and from material obtained from the World Almanac. This year's large increase in enrollment put C.

I. A. definitely in the front ranks. The two women's colleges that surpass the local college in size are Hunter College of New Tork City, where there was an enrollment daring tnc first semester of 9,952, and Smith College in Northampton, which had an enrollment of for the 1034- 35 session. Hunter Free College No tuition is charged at Hunter College, which is supported by the city of New York.

Students that attend have no rooming expenses as they are required to live in New York -with cither their parents or guardian to attend the college. The annual student expense there is $29 per year. Smith College is privately endowed and has shown a 59'per cent increase in endowment within the Past 10 years. It is more expensive to students than C. I.

A. Among other outstanding women's colleges andr thefr 1934-35 enrollments arc: Kadcliff, 1,011: Wellesley, Mt Holyoke, 957; Bernard, 991; Vassar, 1317; New Jersey College for Women, 935; Mississippi State College for Women. 866; CoUege, 469. Fifth Pleads Guilty John Basden changed his plea to guilty today. He was the fifth defendant to admit guilt since start 9f the trial in Federal court.

Mary and James Mullen, ex-convict, changed their pleas Saturday. At the start of the trial, when 20 friends and relatives were brought into court for prosecution on Federal charge of giving aid to fugitives from justice, Joe Francis and Mrs. Blanche Barrow pleaded, guilty. Judge William H. Atwell today overruled motions mada Saturday for instructed verdicts of acquittal for Mrs.

Emma Parker. Mrs. Mildred Hamilton. Mrs. Steve Davis, Marie Francis and Audrey Fay Barrow.

He had the motions under consideration over the week-end. Mrs. Parker is the mother of Bonnie Parker. Audrey Fay Barrow is the -wife of L. C.

Barrow. Clyde's younger brother. Mrs. Mildred Hamilton is the wife of Floyd Hamilton, brother of Raymond Hamilton, a former member of the Barrow gang. Mrs.

Steve Davis is Raymond Hamilton's mother. Marie Francis is a younger sister of Clyde Barrow. Met at Lake Dallas The first witness called today was Billie daughter of Mrs. Emma Parker and sister of the slain Bonnie. Mrs.

Mace told of various meetings with Clyde and Bonnie when they were at the height of their depredations in 3S33. On June 18, 1933, she said sne went to Lake Dallas with L. C. Tax Now Goes on Marble Machines An injunction restraining- collect- Ing the state tax on marble machines has been dissolved and the tax will now be levied and collected, County Attorney Judge Gambill and Denton County tax officials have been notified. GambiJl issued a statement, publicly warning owners and exhibitors of such machines that they must pay the tax immediately or they will be prosecuted as operating in violation of the law.

County officials, discussing the tax, indicated several days of grace will be allowed, to reasonable time for the tax to be paid, before charges are filed against owners of machines on which the levy has not been paid. WICHITA FALLS MAN NAMED ON MEDICAL BOARD AUSTIN, Feb. Governor James V. Allred today appointed Dr. O.

B. Kiel of Wichita Falls to succeed the late Dr. J. M. Witt of Waco on the State Board of Medical Examiners.

Dr. Kiel's term will run until 1939. Barrow to meet Clyde. She then related how she and Clyde went to Fort Smith, to the bedside of Bonnie, who had been burned critically when an automobile caught fire. Mrs.

Mace told of staying six or seven days in a tourist camp at Fort Smith with her sister, but she declared she did not dress Bonnie's burns. Missing Twins WASHINGTON, Feb. 25. The eight-year-old twins, John and Margaret Miller, who were the objects of a -frenzied all night search they disappeared yesterday in Indian Creek swamp in nearby Maryland, were found early today on the Baltimore- Washington pike by a Maryland County policeman. The officer.

Claud "Reese of Prince George County, reported the two children were strolling along the highway. They said they had wandered through the swamp until nightfall, then fallen asleep in a pine thicket, making a shelter of their coats. They were brought immediately to the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. George F.

Miller. The twins wandered away yesterday while the family was having picnic near the swamp. WEST TEXAS: Fair, coMer in southeast portion wHh temperatvre 24 to 26 tonight; Tuesday fair, rising temperature. EAST TEXAS: Cold ware wrth- east portion, partly etewdy, in somth and extreme temperature 18 to In 24 to 28 in interior srwlli pKttai, 3d to 32 in the cmst freei- in lower ftfe Grande TaJley tonight; fair. Mi to north portion.

Strong northerQr winds on the safcridiaf. OKLAHOMA: colder In extreme portion tORirhi; fair,.

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About Denton Record-Chronicle Archive

Pages Available:
227,355
Years Available:
1918-1977