P: I don't know if he is kin to him. He must have been his brother or something. He .was a different Tench. They could have been brothers, but I'm not sure now. M: Where was his office? Do you recall? P: I believe it faced First Street over there by Wilson's. M: It faced the Episcopal Church? P: No, next to the front part of Wilsons. It was smaller in those days. I believe there was an eye doctor downstairs. The telephone company was in the same building. M: So, the phone company and a lot of doctors' offices and Wilson's were all in the same building? P: That's right. M: What about lawyers? Did you ever meet or have an occasion to see a lawyer in town in the '30s? P: Ah, let's see. We didn't have very many lawyers in those days. We had a few. Itknew Zack Douglas in the '30s. M: Now, I understand that even during prohibition there was much moonshine in Gainesville in the early '30s. Do you recall that at all? P: Oh, yeah. M: Where would someone go to get moonshine? P: There used to be one place that some friends of mine used to go on the other side of the prarie. Back in there, somebody was making the best moonshine in the ( Gainesville area. I used to hear that. They had them all over town. M: Well, being today is voting day, and we talked about this before we started the tape, do you recall voting in the '30s? How would you vote? Would there be a voting booth or a hand ballot? Where would you go to vote in the '30s?