Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.),, Vol. 1, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 9, 1931 Page: 3 of 8
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Henderson Steam Laundry
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WOMEN AND SONG
The Parker-Davis Motor Company
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Sherman
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REFRIGERA'
The Cash Sanitary Market
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Views of Hindenburg
On Running Again
Interesting
Ruins in Arizona
Relate Stories of
Our First Citizen
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CRIPPLE OBTAINS
LICENSE TO DRIVE
HIS AUTOMOBILE
e' into the motor vehicle regis-
try office <m his hands and re-
quested permission to take (‘
regular test for a driver's license.
An hour later he drove away with
the license in his packet.
Belanger’s automobile is equip-
ped with hand controls of the
clutch and brakes.
o---——
STUDENTS STUDY WINE,
-----------o------------
HARVARD FOR HUDDLE SYS-
TEM
Brazilian
controlled
won
itile
ODORLESS
DRY CLEANERS
16 Years of Knowipg How
215 W. Depot St.
Phone 636
W. E. WILSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office over Pout Office
Oil Leases and Abstract
Examination
I
1
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SURVEYING MAP]
H. E. BERRY
Civil Engineer
Anywhere—Anytime
Phone 602 112 8. Main St.
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THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1931
POLIlicALPOi^
IN GERMANY IS
ABOUT TO BOIL
Top
R
■' PLAYS GOLF IN TURBAN.
LONDON, April 7, (UP)—I. S.
Malik, new Deputy Trade Com-
missioner for India in London,
plays golf regularly tn a turban.
Malik is a member of the Oxford
' and Cambridge Golfing Society,
one of the moot exclusive in Eng-
land, and plays near par figures.
Bi' style is ryf’nie and his irons
I are especially well played.
---------- o
ENGLISH PLAN COTTON COL-
LAB
l
leum which he built several years ago. The former
president of the American League was honored
in death as he was in life by the thousands of base-
ball fans who followed ids bier.
Bl
■k
PITTSFIELD. Mass., April 8,
(UP)—Clarence T. Belanger, 40,
crippled by infantile paralysis
since he was four years old, walk-
* • V ’
Located in Henderson is Mc-
Carter’s Sanitary Market, tele-
phone 456. This is the leading
market in the city, and carries
at all times a large assortment of
Fresh and Cured Meats, that are
Sold at reasonable prices. Fish and
oysters are provided in season.
They cater to out-of-town busi-
ness, as well as the local trade,
and give prompt, and careful at-
tention to all their patrons. J. O.
and J. M. McCarter are the man-
agers.
The importance of having every-
thing strictly clean and sanitary,
where food products are sold can-
not be too emphatically stated.
McCarter’s Sanitary Market is
modem, and up-to-date in every
particular, and has an enviable
record for cleanliness, and sani-
tation.
This market has a large stock
of cured meats, fresh fish and oys-
ters in season, which they keep in
sanitary refrigerators, at the cor-
rect temperatures, at all times,
and which are guaranteed to be
the best on the market.
once there ,wAe no full-length af-
ternoon frocks paraded. Generally,
nine Inches below the knee was
the limit of the day dresses and
suits.
Among the evening clothes,
however, was a sensational model
with a wide skirt of black geor-
gette, a moulded corsage of con-
trasting green georgette and a
most daring V-shaped back cut to
the waist and supported by a ver-
tical strapping of diamante.
Large hats were shown in con-
siderable numbers, but the women
still favored the back-of-the-head
turbans, many of which weigh
only one ounce.
--- o ---------
COURT OF NEBUCHADNEZZAR
JEWELS FOUND BY
EXPLORERS
huahua, Sonora nad Morelos. In
these states, no residence require-
ment is in force. •
If you live in some place other
than those states, want a divorce,
there but feel you can not spare
the time or the funds to go to
Mexico, just appoint someone to
act with power of attorney for
you, and the divorce will be ob-
tained.
Furthermore, any such divorce
will have you legally untfed. At
least Jose L. Navarro, one of the
attorney members of the interna-
tional law office, declares that
such divorces are absolutely legal
in states of the United States.
He cites New York state suprejna
court rulings in holding Mexico
divorces legal. /
' Despite the fact that thete is
no necessity of establishing a resi-
dence with its only amusement of
watching the “tied” come in and
the single go out, the divorce
business hasn’t increased material-
ly in the last few years, Navarro
said.
Of the divorces he’ has engi-
neered in the last few years in
Chihuahua, only about half have
taken advantage of being sepa-
rated by correspondence. . In these
stated. ~~
The Special Six Sedans, which
are surprisingly low, afford con-
veaienceAnd.utUity. in an enclosed,
, all year car of uikland'a'nd Pon-'
tiac superiority. Both have all the
refinements and high class appoint-
ments that would .lend distinction
to the highest priced cars on the
market]- ——
L -From every viewpoint Oakland
and- Pontiac cars now occupy a
unique place in the annals ot
automobile history, All are equip-
ped with special design 4-Wheel
brakes.
Now with a complete line of
cars .embodying refinement and
improvements of pronounced im-
portance, every indication prom-
ises an even greater prestige by
reason of outstanding excellence
and broad measure of value in
Oakland and Pontiac cars.
We are glad to compliment the
Parker-Davis Motor Company and
refer their line of cars to readers
of this edition and we wish to com-
pliment the management upon the
superior service offered and the
admirable manner in which this
establishment is operated.
Located at 205 S. Main St., in
Henderson, phone 539, are deal-
ers for the Oakland and Pontiac
cara?---------. ------
This is a well known firm of this
section, evidencing the fact that
they know the atuomotive business
and Real Auto Value in the selec-
tion of Oakland and Pontiac cars.
The Oakland and Pontiac sixes
are leaddfS1 in cars selling around
$1,000. In no other car selling at
the same price will be found such
engineering features.
The new advanced sixes include
new body styles of surpassing ex-
cellence, and each is a distinctive
beauty. They1 introduce a new
grace and charm,.a new efficiency
and a new measure of value that
reflects in comparable character
to General Motors craftmanship
and can truly be said to mark a
significant new period in Oakland
and Pontiac history.
The Special Six Series, which
are original in design and engin-
eered to a fine point of develop-
ment, possess such compelling fea-
tures heretofore only found in dis-
tinguished cars. Their calibre and
charm can not be too emphatically
u 1
J7 .
"mall dlvoroM,” Navarro take
care of all the proceeding*, file
the papers, sees that notic* of th
suit is given by publication in ot
ficial papers three times ovce «*
ery seven days, and takes care ths
the final decree is entered, *
"Some people think they eai
get a divorce in a couple of hoUl
in Mexico,” Navarro said. *‘Bu
that isn’t the case. It takes tim
to publish a notice of filing an
about the fastest you ean get
Mexican divorce is probably 3
days.” * "'-‘4
11
in
Ow
The following review of Industrial and Professional activities
Henderson has been compiled by Field and Doughtery:
consists in turning out a clean,
smooth garment, which one would
be proud, to wear. New machin-
ery, and sanitary methods are nec-
essary to wash comfort into
clothes, and this laundry surpasses
all others 11 this respect.
‘ If you have never sent your
family washings to this laundry
just phone 590 and the auto de-
livery will come and get your
laundry, and deliver it on time.
The charges are vjry reasonable.
The service of the Henderson
Steam Laundry is all that can be
desired with their efficient, quick
service, and prompt delivery sys-
tem. In this business and indus-
trial review of the onward pro-
gress of the community, we take
pleasure in reterring our readers
to this modem, and up-to-date
establishment.
WASHINGTON, April 9, (UP)
—Students of over 400 colleges in
all but two states are now com-
pleting their papers in the latest
attack on wine, women and song.
"Alcoholic Drink in Modem
Society,” is the title of the $1,000
_______w ______ prize essay contest sponsored by
Department has learned. The en- intercollegiate Prohibition As-
sociation. The first prize will be
a trip to Europe.
-------s------------o . ■ .
The unemployment problem is
_______
the . pavement at once
doing jt a little at a time.—Mar-
shall Messenger.
"■■■ ' 11 o —
Poland has spruce forest esti
mated to coyer 1,900,000 acres. _
■ —
The Ogden Milk Company
__
i .1
William Schemnitzer (right), pictured on his arrival in Albany, N. Y.,
handcuffed to a State trooper. He is accused of slaying Trooper Ser-
en, that will aid in the reduction
of the premium, arid how you ean
get the maximum* of insurance,
at the minimum of expense. z
When you receive a policy from
this well known firm of insurance
experts, you ean rest assured
that your property is amply pro-
tected, in some of the largest in-
surance companies in the world.
A careful selection of companies,
and a clean and straightforward
manner of doing business, has v
for this office, a large clien
in this section of the state.
Mr. DeLamar will not allow
your insurance to lapse, without
notifying you, in ample time to
reinsure, and will keep you in-
formed on all (natters pertaining
to your policy. > This is the kind
of service, that has ivon for Mr.
DeLamar the confidence of the
public, and has been responsible
for their increasing number of
clients.
Always progressive, and looking
m the best interests of the com-
munity at all times, Mr. DeLamar
has become one of the leading
citizens of the community, and this
Located in Henderson at the
foot of E.’ Ragley Street, phone
590, The Henderson Steam Laun-
dry typifies modernism in the
laundry business, as it offers rapid
service and guaranteed satisfac-
tion, and its scope of activity in-
cludes all phases df modern laun-
dering. Mr. T. D. Griffin is the
manager.
Their plant i? equipped with the
very latest machinery, which has
been found not only to be the
best, from the standpoint of the
practical laundryman, but the kind
that has been endorsed by the lead-
ing institutes of scientific research
in this line.
They use the softest of water,
and soaps that will not harm the
most delicate fabrics.
Laundering clothes means not
only taking out the dirt, but also
geant John E. Frey, and has been brought back from McAlester, Okla.,
where he was arrested.
■
I
Sil'
'Women of England
Win in Dress War
• t ;---------
LONDON, April 9 (UP)—Eng-
lish women have apparently won
their fight with the dress design-
ers who wanted to forcew ankle-
length skirts for day wear.
English designers were strong
for long, trailing dresses for both
day and evening wear, but fashion-
able women decided that long
frocks were excellent only for
dress wear. For the daylight hours,
they insisted, dresses just below
calf-length were the smartest
while those dipping to the ground
Were dowdy and easily bedraggled
when worn out of doors. •' .
At' a receift dress show in Lon-
don, fashionable women comment-
ed favorably on the fact that for 5
'J- 2
BROS.
Complete Building
Service
We Finance:
Brick Homes
Duplex Apartn.
Business House:
Filling Stations
REASONABLE
AMOUNTS ON
LIBERAL TERMS
Office Over Post
Office
Here you can obtain Pasteuriz-
ed Milk and Cream. A real pure
milk for babies. They are located
in the Texas Milk Products build-
ing, phone 540.
Ask any doctor. The physician
prescribes nourishing foods, and
plenty of sleep as the two import-
ant factors to good health. And,
were you to ask him for one oth-
er, he’d say—PURE MILK and
plenty of it.
Without a shadow of doubt, one
of the qualifications that a city
may boast of is that city's supply
of pure milk.
Outside of the value and wide
use of milk itself, which accord-
ing to all standards, is the nearest
whole product to a balanced ra-
tion that is known, its by-prodijetr
are used in every home, in the
cooking and preparing of every
meal that we eat.
ONE DAY I
USERVICE
ftNE TRIAL WILL,
U make you a regular
customer!
ddavor to produce a cheap coHaa
is a part of a program to find new
uses for cotton. , .
------------o------------ *
by radio to airplanes in flight.
----------o------
A sub-station at a
hydroelectric plant is
by switches five miles hway.
Bailey Now Back
At Colored Church
Old Harmony Hill
Rev. J. W. Bailey, of Marshall,
Texas, is again the pastor of a
church in Rusk county. Some
twenty years ago, it will be re-
membered, Bailey was a well
known negro minister and school
teacher in Rusk county, he and
his wife teaching school in the
Pirtle community and were regard-
ed as among the most dependa-
ble negro citizens of our county,
With many friends among the
white people. Bailey has recentJ
ly built a church at old Harmony
Hill, some 14 miles northeast from
Henderson, and has announced his
first service In the new church for
next Sunday afternoon at 2:30
o’clock. Col. R. Jones, a well
known Henderson attorney, has
accepted an invitation ta be pres-
ent and will deliver an address to
both white and black on that oc-
casion. An invitation Is extended
to the public in general to be
present.
Cliarged With Trooper’s Death
WASHINGTON, April 9 (UP)
—English scientists are trying to
produce a cotton stiff collar which
can be manufactured so cheaply
that it can be thrown away after
being used once, the Commerce
POWDER PUFF
BEAUTY SHOP
Mw>. M- L. Feger*,. Prop. W
~ Finger Wave, 35 Cent* -
Boom 12 Crim Bldg.
Phone 525
WANTED: Good clean cotton
rags. Will pay 10c per pound*.
Henderson Daily New*.
HAWTHORN
■
3M
MF
Such a market is a great con-
venience to the public, as it as-
sures them of getting anything in
the meat line, that it is possible
to secure.
At this market you will find the
salespeople have the desire of
rendering courteous service, and
giving you exactly what you wish,
and all orders, whether large or
small, receive the same courteous
treatment. Their business policy,
of treating all customers fairly,
has won for them an enviable rep-
utation. This firm has been in-
strumental, in seeing that the
fanners always receive the top
market price for product. See
them before selling your cattle and
hogs.
This well known market enjoys
the patronage of the people, not
only in this city> but of all the
surrounding territory as well, and
we suggest, that the next time
you are in need of meat of any
kind, or provisions, that you call
at their market,‘ in—Henderson,
and look ever their stock, and get
their prices.
Cambridge, Mass., April 9
(UP)—-After a lapse of two years
Harvard’s football team again will
use the huddle next fall. Eddie
Caaey, new head coach, used the
huddle system effectively during
three years as freshman coach,
and he restored It to the varsity’s
repertoire during spring training.
50
COME IN AT OT
ailFN E
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“ ■ sig
the state insurance laws, and the rules
and regulations of the insurance
companies ( has equipped Mr. De-
Lmar for this particular field- of
endeavor. He is able to tell you
what kind of insurance you should
carry how tfce policies can be tU'
This is the oldest insurance
agency tn Henderson, and is a re-
liable agency, with a well estab-
lished insurance business, in good
strong old line companies. It is
located on the 2nd floor First
National Bank, prone 171.
Mr. DeLamar specializes in in-
surance. He writes every form
of insurance, including^ life, acci-
dent, health, fire, automobile, and
all forms of casualty, fidelity and
surety bonds.
One of the most important fac-
tor* in the upbuilding of a com-
munity is the proper protection of
property. The firm that handle*
insurance, is one of the most im-
portant assets that a community
can have. It is through the ef-
forts of insurance experts, that
the property is kept adequately
insured, and the community is pro-
tected against home, and indus-
trial losses.
A thorough knowledge of the
By GEORGE D. CRISSEY
United Press Staff Correspondent
PHOENIX, Ariz., April 9 (UP)
—A story of Arizona’s first citi-
zens—brown men who enjoyed life
on a civilized scale at a time when
ancestors of present day Nordics
were savages—is being uncovered
by this city.
Excavation and restoration of
the Pueblo Grande ruins, six mil^s
from the city limits, Is underway
as a municipal object. Work will
continue until the picture of pre-
historic life is as clear to laymen
as it now is to archaeologists.
It is the only municipally owned
and administrated ruins of the
kind in the United States and
wbfen fully reconstructed will show
a chapter in the life of an ancient
community, now buried beneath
this city.
Phoenix acquired title to the
ruins several years ago, named a
commission, to direct restoration
and research and appointed Odd S.‘
Halseth as the archaeologist in
charge.
Lqcated on an ancient canal, the
ruins already have contributed to
the store o! knowledge Concerning
those who lived in the southwest
ages ago. Soil and rock formation,
covering the ruins, proves conclu-
sively that the people who inhabi-
ted the dwellings lived several
thousand—perhaps as many as 10,-
000—years ago. _____
That these prehistoric "apart-
ment house” dwellers were civil-
ized Is proven by the presence of
the canal and other evidence that
an intelligently operated system
of irrigating farm lands was in
general use.
Pottery as an industry existed
also while the dwellings, funda-
mentally similar to modern city
apartment*, were admirably suited
to the climate then prevailing In
Besides giving their customers
a pure and wholesome food, the
Ogden Milk Company has the prob-
lem of adequate distribution to
take care of, and the many satis-
fied customers of this1 firm, is a
testimony to the service they are
giving the people.
Th3 establishment which pro-
vides a product, that is used so
much in every home, every day,
should be given a little time and
thought, and a visit here will con-
vince all of the wisdom of pur-
chasing dairy products from this
well known firm. ». •
We recommend The Ogden Milk
Company to all our readers and
friends, for the purity of their
products, the cleanlines* of the
"filant, and the courteous service
they arp giving the people of this
section. Mr. C. E. Ogden is the
manager of this concern.
x W. E. DeLamar, General Insurance
. By H. A. PETERS
United Pxess Staff Correspondent
BERLIN, Apr. 9 (UP)—The
question of whether President
Hindenburg will accept a second
term, and, in case he docs not, who
« will be victorious-in the inevitable
scramble which would follow his
refusal to run, is causing politic-
ians to pick up their ears and cast
interested eyes at the gray walls
of the Presidential Palace, and the
thankless Job waiting inside.
The fact that Hindenburg could
return merely by indicating a will-
ingness to do So, ,1s generally con-
ceded. Indeed, two or three move-
rnents have already been started
for extending his term of office be-
yond the normal seven years, as a
gesture bf confidence. This would
obviate the election scheduled -for
April, 1932. In case for some rea-
son he declines, several possibili-
ties arise.
The case is complicated almost
beyond the point of conjecture by
the German electorial systeiji and
the infinite possibilities for party
combinations. The President is
elected by direct vote of the peo-
ple! If he is to win on the first
balloting, he must have a simple
majority. If a candidate falls
short of majority, a second elec-
tion must be "held, at which an ap-
proximate majority is sufficient
for election.
I Second Election'
| Next year a second election Is
almost certain if Hindenburg does
not run. The choice then would
depend on party trading. If the
-• government agreed with the Social
1 Democrats under a Republican
banner (including Catholics, Ba-
varian Catholics, Constitutional
and parts of the Peoples’ and other
parties), they probably would de-
jfeat a right-swing combination of
National Socialists, Nationalists,
.Agrarians and parts of the Eco-
, nomic and Peoples’ party groups.
| A split between the government
and the Socialists, however, could
easily give a Nazi-Nationalist com-
bination a fighting chance for their
own man. Hindenburg, for exam-
ple, an unknown quantity in 1925,
was elected by a right-wing ma-
jority. Thousands of those who
have now gone over to Hitlerism
voted for him.
From the welter of possible can-
didates in the event of Hinden-
burg’s: refusal, two gentlemen of
finance arise who might be able
to muster enough strength to ob-
tain a nomination. One of them,
Dr. Hjalmar Schacht, former pres-
’ - iderrti/? the fteichsbank, has for
some time now had his ear attun-
ed to the varying waves of the
present political ether. The other
is Dr. Hans Luther, former Chan-
cellor and,, Fjnance Minister, now
holding down Schacht’s former
bank jpb, and losing no prestige
in the doing of It. Mentidned al-
so among possibilities is Dr. Otto
Braun, Social pemoctatic Premier
of Prussia. \
Schacht Not Idle
Even with the election more
than a year away, Schacht has not
been idle. Whether his activityi.de-
notes an aspiration to the execu-
tive office, he has not yet indicat-
ed, but his recent trip to the Unit-
ed States, his book, “An End to
Reparations,” and his recent
speeches, including his Stockholm
declarations on the same subject,
show that he will not be unpre-
pared "in case a call should come.”
He has perhaps the most effec-
tive campaign ammunition for
popular appeal in the country to-
day—revision—and with it he
could bag Nationalist, and conceiv-
ably some other right-wing sup-
port, although his signature of
the Young. Plan might make it
hard for the Nazis to swallow him.
Cynics point out that ever since
the preparatory Young-Plan con-
ference at Paris, beginning with
his objections at the final Hague
conference, Schacht’s activities
have been directed toward perfect-
. Ing his alibi for initialing the plan.
I Luther’s possibilities are fw
from remote. His March 1 speech
at the Leipzig Fair, demanding fi-
nancial help for Germany, might
even be taken in part as a bld to
forestall the former Reichsbank
chief and show that Schacht is not
the only one who believes in reliev-
ing the country of war burdens.
Although he has so far given no
indication, Luther appears as a
good gamble for the government
ticket.
EL PASO, April 9, (UP)—-Ne-
vada makes much ado about its
brand new six weeks’ reaidsBM * j
requirements to obtain a divorce,
but there are three states In Mex-
ico where you can obtain a divorce
by correspondence without stirring *
one foot out of your home, wher- ?
ever that may be. 1
"Mail divorces’’ are what you j
office is a big asset to the Indus- might call the separations that can
ttUtklilud a tt* Kite at cu-
’ ... ‘ : . . ■
LONDON, April 9 (UP)—Jew-
els that adorned the beauties at
the Court of Nebuchadnezzar, have
| I been found by the Oxford-Field
;ear up all Museums expedition at Kish, near
instead of the site of old Babylon, »<&>rdtQg
to reports.
The "baubles are said to be price-
less and include solid gold orna-
ments of outstanding beauty. The
jewels, it is believed, may reveal
much of the history -of-that age.
Previous excavations, apcording to
archaeologists, have -supported to
an extraordinary extent the old
Biblical narrative.
The secrets of throe periods of
history are being revealed by the
expedition which is working on
three separate strata. Magnificent
sculpture dating from 250 A. D.,
was found on the top layer above
the great temple of Nebuchad-
nezzar.
Below the temple a series of
Sumerian royal tombs approxi-
mately 6,500 years old were fbund
and are beittg carefully explored,
«*------—-—o-------*
PATROL CHIEF BOASTS OF
INTERNATIONAL FAMILY
NEW ORLEANS, April 9, (UP)
—Miller S. Baker, assistant super-
intendent of the United States
Border patrol for New Orleans,
has a league of nations family.
Miller, a native of Georgia, mar-
ried a Russian girl in Edinburgh,
Scotland. Mary Ann, hi* first
daughter, was born in Constanti-
nople, in a French hospital. Ruth,
the second child, was born in War-
saw Poland, in an English hos-
pital.
And Mrs. Baker can describe in
Russia, Polish, German, French
and English the work her husband
did with the American Red Cross
in -Europe during the war. ,
-——.. o—— <»
' 338 SEEK DEGREES.
AUSTIN, April 9, (UP)—Ten*-
tative lists of students expected to
receive degrees from the college
of arts and sciences of the Uni-
versity of Texas in June, announ-
ced by Dr. H. T. Farlin, senior
dean, show 888 names. Candi-
dates for bachelor of arts de-
grees number 296; for bachelor of
sciene in home economies 21;
* - bachelor of journalism 21.
Mexico Is Offering
Divorces by Mail
FEATUR]
---—..............
SOLONS MAY ATTEND. ‘
MARLIN, Texas, April 9.—Be-
lief that members of the legisla-
ture at Austin will accept the in-
vitation to visit Marlin in a body
during the East Texas Chamber
of Commerce convention here
April 19, 20, and 21, was express-
ed today by Dr. N. D. Buie, one
of the vice presidents of the-cham-
ber, The invitation was extend-
ed by Dr. Buie at the state capi-
tal last week.
PING I
* I
Un St. I
11 ■—! -'-1
• 2”
John Edward Fleming, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon
Einphaaizing Genitory, Urinar
mid Discuses of the 8ktn
(’rim Bldg.
ELECTRIC
The last Inning of Byron Bancroft (Ban) John-
son’s World Series game is played as the body of
the world-famed baseball executive is carried from
the church in Sponcer. Ind., to the beautiful mauso-
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HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON, TEX^g ■ , ; ; P | J' ^rijIlliiT
Game’s Over for Former Czar of Baseball
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.),, Vol. 1, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 9, 1931, newspaper, April 9, 1931; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1330745/m1/3/: accessed June 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.