Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 27, 1908 Page: 3 of 8
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HOLD OVER Mill 1310
ABOUT 990,000 WORTu GOING
ON RIGHT NOW.
sary O fmarriagk.•nd Glycerine, to make fat,Hc
•nd so put together that it hi
Street.
I
INDORSE ON. V. W.
diseases put together^ and until the [g‘me 6f the[m$t<Wemsnt»
last tew years was supposed to be b Fulton to erecting aSuch Is the Statement of U f. Diete
— New Mexico.--
Id . 9 1 •
strung and the kidney^do not both-
w.
an
the
WILL WANT MANY TEACHERS.
If
08,
sh-
COUNTY EXAMINATIONS.
3 M
CLEARING AWAY DEBRIS.
Price 50c.
Attention, A'rthma Sufferers!IS PAINFULLY HURT.
poor.
put Ip.
INIHANIAN HERE ON A
tried
WINS GAME.
EYE KNOCKED OCT.
Shepard and Neill* ’
ter
to
one, and hard to
proper remedy is
are
the
are
So Says William T. Evens Who Has
Just Returned From a Trip to the
North. -■ **There is more catarrh in this sec-
tion of tho" country than all ether
peceasary .and that Mrfl. Haw-
was better.
J. N. RAYit.,, Pres.
GEO. T. COBB. Manager.
ABOUT DENTON ‘
COTTON MARKET
TOMATOES GROWN ON BLACK
LAND WEIGHED 17 OUNCES
135 more teachers than
Jould supply and on ac
a many failures to makeSOUTHLAND UNIVERSITY.
MISS CLA» TON TERRILL TO
WED AT ASHVILLE, N. C.J. H. PAIN SHIPPED OUT
52 BALKS OF OLD COTTON.
THE COURT HOUSE IS -
TAKING A BATH TODAY.“the local ,crop prospects are the
best between here and. St. Louis,”
said Wm. T. Evers, a young business
man toa reporter thia morning after
a return from a couple of weeks spent
in Missouri and'Illinois. “I noticed
carefully all along the way and tn tin
localities in which I sctopped off
and 1 believe that Denton county has
better prospects than anything I saw
along the line of Katy in Oklahoma,
Missouri or even in Central Illinois.
All we need here is more people
and the eyes of the people in ‘the
North are turne/d Texas way right
now.” u
on
ru-
iU
A MEETING OF THE MEM-
BERS OP THE COUNTRY CLUB.
the August term ot ih
is to be selected:
Grund Jury.
D. K, Allisojl, Denton; G. A. Cox,
of those that were burned. A<
Ing to th© ptanu everything w
toe Smith Of . the east part of the
county. . ■ . ■ ;J. K
A big old-fashioned dinner was
served and after dinner a very «n*
wide Iren spike that was sticking up-
right la the top of the gate stuck tn
his hip. tartlet Ing a wound about two
and a half iaehM deop.
Senate McVey. Centerville; Lutto
Duke. Swan: Florence FtaM, Dallas;
Ruth Safford. Mineola; Emma Ni-
ckola. Deaton: Effie Scott. Qnm-
beek; Ethel MeCork In. Gordon; Noua
Chamber tain. OreenvIUe.AUSTIN, Texas , Aug. 24.—Ap-
pointments to State Normal schotar-
shfps by J. W. Stephens, slats con-
troller:
North Texas State Normal at Den-
ton— Miss Ruth Owensby, Celina; EStorting hrtffic th©
court house last week for the pur-
Prospects for Successful Opening
Are Flattering at Present.SAM HAWKINS DANGEROUS-
LY ILL AT FORT WORTH.the compress towns as another
makes competition doubly keen: The
Texas law makes It compulsory that
cotton beatopped at the. first com-
pees along tlvj line it is being ship-
feu jiver and. with the many chances
of routing out of Denton the coBl-
prets that buys the cotton is the
one that gets to compress t”
Mr. Davia leaves the first for Sny-
der where he will buy cotton this
Dr. W. H. Bruce, president of the
North [Texas State Normal, in speak-
ing of the state examinations for
teachers' certificates, said that less
than twenty-nine per cent of those
who took the examination passed
successftiily.
Last year, he says, he had appli-
cations, fq^f 3 5 more teachers than
the schot
count of — .—
good on the examinations this year
he expects to be asked to supply
some 20(f or 300 more teachers than
the school has.“It was a sight I assure you |
Houses they could not burn were lit-
No one is tinmans from kidney
trouble, so just remember that Fo-
ley's Kidney Remedy will stop the
irregularities and cure any case of
kidney or bladder trouble that is not
beyond the reach of medicine. Oy-
Tlson • Kitnmins.Who Has i»een Buying for
25 Years. ■/;
cure on the market. It is
Internally in doses from W
to a teaspoonful. It acts di-
on the blood and muco&»
They offer
who served with
Hayes and William
yearsrin the !3rd
and have no ailmentDENTON PROSPECTS BEST
BETWEEN HERE AND ST. LOUIS
------- t -
Mass Meeting Meld for that 1
. Saturday Night.
• 7:
SANGER
RANGER.
O..-
resulted In a victory for Sanger by
a score of 4 to I. Features of the
MIL AND MILS. JJ. M. READY CKL,
kbrate VimatL worn-
NEW MANAGEMENT OF AL-
LIANCE MILLING CO. MAKES
STATEMENT------
The management of the above con-
cern having passed into our hands we
wish to arsure our* friends-‘and all
former customers of the institution
the saline uniform, and courteous
Remedy ' treatment to which they have been
‘ accustomed..
know-of.1 Sold under guarantee atand the fielding of MeXeleon at short
houses.-in Denton is also a topic that
has been remarked by many. Prac-
tically every desirable hoiiso- in Den-
ton Is'*tK<*upied and there are very
few-of any kind that ara for rent.
Rental- agents are receiving dozens
of applications for gpod homes but
are unable to supply the demand.
,Xew people are moving into Den-
ton for the school* this fall and
rarely a day juksses but what .one
maF see drays filled with household
goods passing- from the depot to ttto
residence sectns oi the town.
Scholarship Awards . Annorniced
for the Ensuing Term.
the King of all
It cures promptly
state for farmers and the hardest
one for the buyers,''* U the way
L. T. Davis, a cotton buyer, d-epribes
conditions tn Denton today.
Mr. Davis says that he has been
buying cotton for the past twenty-
five years (uid that l>e»tou is the
hardtet town from the buyers' point
of view that he has ever found.
“The five comprusaea pegr JQtfn-
ton,’’ Mr. Davis said, "are located at
Denison, Sherman, Gainesville. Fort
Worth and Dallas, add aach of these
concerns is making every effort to
get the cotton that comes to Den-
ton in order do so they are
willing to handle the cotton at cost,
relying on the fifty cents that they
get for compressing each bale to
bring'them the necessary profits. As
a result of this the farmers get a
better price for their cotton heru
than anywhere else that I know of.
I foal safe In saying that there Is
not a bale of cotton sold In Denton
that does not bring more than its
value. So much for the farmers
px't of the deal.
•'The troubleu of the buyer
many. Those who are not in
employ of compress concerns
lowed to buy cotton so that mqpey,
cam-be rirtide out of It They have
n > compress back of them to; tnake
the profits from compressing the
bale. Consequently the buyers a-e
up against it gnod and plenty.
‘•Jhl£ town being on the joint
Attorney GeweaTs Ruling iu Tummt
County Due, Which Is similar to
That in Deuton Ocunty.Officers of Epworth lirngne-1
at Methodist Church.
COUNtNH MAKER appointments.
AUSTIN. Tex.. Aug. S4—IRgth
Superintendent R. B. Cousins baa
made the following appointments to
scholarships in the Denton State Nor-
mal:
” ■ '■ ’’ .
iSf*' ' ’ .'Excellent Hea.th Advice.
Mrs. M. M. Davison, of NO. 379
Gifford Ave., San Jose, Cal., says:
“The worth of Electric Bitters as a
general family remedy, for head-
ache, biliousness and to’por of the
liver and bowels is so pronounced
that I am prompted to say a word
in its favor, for the benefit of those
seeking relief frofn such afflictions.
There is more health for the di-
gestive organs in a bottle of Electric
'T-T. ■ *-
BROCADED.
Prof. Barrett of the Southland Uni
versify said Friday tnai the prospects
for a successful opening ot the school
were as flattering as could be wish-
ed. Letters are being received from
■all parts of the state from prospect-
ive patrons. J*rof. Barrett thinks
that the enrollment during the ini-
tial week will not fall far below 10>
and a larger number, than that is
looked for. The fact of Mr. KHng-
man bein&ainable to come, to penton,
he says. Is not hurting the school
at ail.' Arrangements have about
‘been completed to fill Mr. Klingman's
position. -——-----•
---St'fiout opens on Tuesday, Sept. X,
and that.day will be devoted to a
get acquainted reception for students,
faculty and the board of regents. At
night a recital wHl be given.
The second’ day, Wednesday, will
be given over for nTawtcuTatlon* and
classification of send eats.STUDIO BEING MOVED.
Shnw Studio Being Moved From the
Donebower Building.
The photograph studio in the Don-
ahower bniitUng owned by J. W.
Shay has been moved to ths May
building, where it »M oouxlldat-
ed with th* Shaw studio. The move
is made In order to make room for
the Sears hardware etoek. . :
”"~3. C. Coit Snturday received by ex-
preaa from Mrs S. F. Reynold! If
Roanoke a basket of as fine, toma-
toes as could ho raised anywhere.
While i ll were nusually large there
wore two which weighed 17 ouncea *
or an ounce more than a pound. The
tomatoes w»re grown by Mrs. Rey-
nolds' daughter, Mrs. J. P.Fraxter,
living three miles aouth of Justin,
and were grown on black land. An
especially pleasing feature about the
ftult waa their beautiful, toft color,
urf. a tint so perfect as to be Inde-
icYibable.
So- of E. T. Broun FnlU on Spike
And Is Badly HuL
Failure on Examinations Will Make
Teachera Scarce.
Was Returning Home.When he Was
Stricken—May OperUtP Upon Him
Today.Friday*! Dally. .
Col. Sam Hawkins, penitentiary .in-
spector. is in Fort Worth at the St.
Joseph .Infirmary suffering from
locked bowels. A message received
Why James Lee Got Well.
” ' ' i Zanesville, ■
knows Mrs. Mary Lee, or rural rout©
-g- - glje wr;tes:- ”%Iy husband, Jan
bee, firmly beljevek he owes his life
to the use 6t ’ Dr. King's |iew Dis-
covery.Ifis lungs were so severely
affected that consumption Seebit-d
inevitable, when a friend recom-
mended New Discovery. We tried
JL and Jts use has_ restored him to.
perfet health. ’ . .Dr. . Kind's . New
Discovery is the King of jhroat and
lung remedies. JFor^ coughs and
colds ft lias no equal- The first dose
Tfy it! Sold unde-
r s. Co.’s
drug store. 50c and .>1.00. Trial
bottle free. -
” Cards wer© received here Friday
for the wedding of Miss Laura Clay-
ton Terrill on Sept. 8 to Henry AU ,
bert Foster. The wedding will oc- ,
cur at the home of the bride s sister,
Mrs Thomas C, Sea mon at Ato- ,
ville N C„ on that date at high 8O0U.
Mias TerrRTTs WTT known tn Denton ;
where she .ormerly lived. She la a
sister of Menter B. Terrill and Of
Mra. Oliver M. Thurman,
Mrs. Oliver M. Thurman. Mr Foe- (
ter taught in the John B. Denton ,
college up to the time the 8. W. C.
Christian college was commenced.-
Have you ChBIa.
It cured yotrr Pa *and also your
Ma of chills In the iong ago and it
■Will cure you now” It has been test-
ed by time and Its merits have been
"proven. We guarantee one bottle
to cure any one case of Chills. If
ft fails your money is cheerfully ro
'funded— and Its name is Cly;a,Ujtyn’s
Chill Tonic, __ ___........ ■ .............linn
BIG NEIGHBORHOOD FISH
5 ? FRY HELD YESTERDAY
Foley's Honey and.Tar will giro cotton has been tl»JeMt >wthered
stands ha»* been riddled. Usually
Speaking of
m.- v-, „ Mr.’ Sltx says it la spotted,
Foley’s Honey and Tar is witfc sotne v<iry good and some
Denton man describes
WORK Oi SPRINGFIELD MOR.
Th;> fol^oUing extract from a letter
from J. Ed Schmitz, who is now vis-
. ■ iting his mother at Mendota, Ill., in
regard to- the mob outbreak ' at
Springfield, Ill., will be of interest to
Denton people:- . — 2-7
"I am sending you a Springfield
with an account of the race
riot. Passed through Sprinfleld and
burnt district comprising
about three city blocks. It all ttes.:r- -
opposite the Illinois Central/ailroad j RitterAtbMk In any other remedy I
“•' ktatWn and <yni trgin wai**1! there , ■
The little son of E. T. Broun was
very painfully injured yewterday by
falltliK on an iron spike.
► The boy was walking the fence
an din attempting to pass over a gate
A meeting of the members of the
Country Club was held Saturday
night la the office of Wylfe BmBh
In th* Exchange bank building
About the only business transacted
was the appointment of a commit-
tee on by laws Another meeting
will be held next ^.aturdny night to
receive a report from this c6mmitr
tee. ■. ■■
Friday's Dally. 7
The court house ia taking a bath
today and it Is more than likely that
the building will be benefited In the
process, "Uncle Zack." the janitor,
is being assisted by a force of negroes
in the work and ©very office and
corridot will be thoroughly cleaned
before they finish.
’ 1 “he Like? Good Tilings.
Mrs. Chas. E Smith, of West
hrenklfn. Maine, says: "I like good
things and have adopted Dr. King s
New Life Fills as our family laxa-
tive medicine, because they are good
and, do their work without making
These painless
purifiers sold at J. F. Raley & Co. •
drug store. 2 5c. . ■Beyond Expression.,
. G, w. Farlowe, East Florence,.
1 a sufficient length of time to permit j & drugstore, bllc^ Ala., writes. “For nearly seven years
*1— JonzJnHnn r'ClloP.I nV * — -s . * - . . ,
t ens afflicted with a form of skin > fuss about it
disease which caused an almost My
bearable itching. I could neither
work, rest or Bleep in peace. Noth-
ing -gave me permanent relief until^
I tried Hunt's Cure. One appltetr
tion relieved me; one box cured me.
and though a year has passed, 1
have stayed cured. I am grateful
beyond expression. ’’ .._L-. -
Hunt's Cure is t guaranteed rem-
edy for all itching diseases of th©
skin.
Jost received a letter from*th© attor-
ney general's department, which con-
firms in practically every particular
the press dispatches published several
days ago since as to the attorney
general's ruling ip r-gard to the le-
gality of the Tarrant county commit- — “The best cotton market in the
r, T^B. Faught, C D. Cantrell,
R. Wlfiterson, J. R. .Beale,A neighborhood fish fry with
about two hundred people La attain-
dance was held Thursday on Hiokory
creek-at the H. Lowe farm Peo-
ple froip all of that section ot the
country around the farm attended
and several went out from town.
When dinner was spread there -was
th© usual amount of pies, cakee. etc.,
and something like <a hundred pound
of fish were eooker) and served. Two
barrels of ioe water and a barrel of
Ice cold lemonad© furnished drinks
for the crowd.
tion of 'Springfield is
Wiped out. *,____7 _1__
up here now, especially in
Springfield community.”
.ylpeknown to mp<lical science, Itl* made
of Che glyceric extracU of native medlcf-
[ nal roots found in our forests and con-
tains not a drop of alcohol or harmful, or
E habit-forming drugs. Its ingredients are
all printed on thebotefa-wrapper and at-
tested under oath as correct..
’ Every ingredient enuring Into •Fa-
vorite Prescription" has the written en-
F dorsetnent of the most eminent medical
r writers of all the several schools of prac-
tice—more valuable than any aiqoupt of
non-professlonal testimonials—though'the
' latter are not lacking, having beed con-
tributed voluntarily by grateful pgftentx
in numbers to exceed the endorsements
glveq to any other medicine ex tart for
the cure of woman’s Ills.
You cannotiafford to accept any mei^cine
of unknown composition as a substitute
for this well proven remedy or knows
compositiox, even though the dealer may
makwa little more profit thereby. 1’tor
Interest ip regaining health Is paramount
to any selfish inti-rest q/ hia and it is an
insult to your intelligendb for him to try
to palm off upon you a substitute. You
-know what you want and it is his busi-
ness to supply the article called for.
Di. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are the
original "Little Liver Pills" first put up
by old Dr. Pierce over forty years ago,
much imitated but never equaled. Little
smfay-ooated granules—easy to Uko aA
■ . —vwa uvm.uKum ip law Jtrvw
rare, —- Pvaations *ad th«s» ©omlnati©
ig a realdsnc© I Ward ratified by tfie county
on Fultou avenue that will cost tn tion? County Chairmam Ayres of
the neighborhood of RS.50D or Tarrant submitted the important par-
|J.4)Q®. I’ty question to Attorney General R»v-
J U. Berry is remodeling hia resl-Jidson. Mr. Ayree was elected legally
deuce on South Elm street at a cost.county chairman of Tarrant county
of about Rl.DOQ. „ isa wu Chairman Raytor ot this
* 1 '■**—•* - -■ a.—a k _
TON IB THE BEST THIS YEAR
J. P. Sitz, from the Hickory plains
late cotton in his part of the county
is much bettex than the earlier, or
at least It now gives more promise,
erally torn to ptecee—wrecked in ev-J The^ platrt Is sttll gI^
ery conceivable way. The from now on ought to
rmgiieia i* pracucaiiy ° ah that blooms
•Fresh niggers' are scarce keep m^gro h<?
thinks, will make cotton, as owing
— to conditions the plant has neve-
stopped growing since it was planted.
Strange to say. he note*. th<' Oink•r me at uigb4. 4 procured Doan's
Kidney PUL from J. F. Raley *
Co.'s drug store, and am . triad to
give them my recommendation.” .
For sale by all dealers, price 50
cents. Foster Milburn Co., Buffer ~
lo, New York, sole agents for the
United States.
Remember the name-'Doan’s—
and take no other, ' _ H1 -
Workmen Are 1’roparing to Ro-bafld
' Graham BaildiB*!*© - 4-
Workmen Monday began removing
the debris that resulted from th©
fire on th© weet side of the nquare.
"My father has for years
troubled with diarrhoea, and
©vwry mcgq possible to effort’a
cure, without avail." writes John H.
Zlrkle of Philippi. w Vb- ’*•*• "•*
Cbambertahi‘» Colie. Cholera
---------— 1 ntarrhor© Hemtoy advertised tn the
JSS? Ph'HPiH W***
ley, Denton; W. J. Wisdom, Potte-
vlile;. Mlsa Susanna Hateriue, Aus-
tin; Mis© Augusta, Johnson, Austin;
C. O. Bannon, Aspermont; Mire El-
vle Price. Reagan.
Biggret Job I. the Hodge, Boredlng ^^^rSd'Xcui
Hous© oa Wet Hickory
BEST FOR RAISERS; HARDEST
FOR BUYERS."omhwMt ot town thr*© or four -try ft. two ------- •“ „ ■■
miles, had hie right knocked out cured h(m aad b© has not su
yreterdny afternoon about 5 oelnck. wWfc th* . disease ter etgnteto
Tate wa. driving n cultivator when ' ta|rtBg remedy
l»M II ,1, Tl, ,,*'1,11 B„ .ottol B»^ •** •
T7T_hdm 1 _ are - Are *• HMMB
immediate relief to asthma suffer- by -worms thisuLailv
ers and has cured many cases that -,. —._<.»«»
had refused to yield to other^treat- lhe’MJn >fr.’Site says
nient. 7 " ““ *"
the best remedy for coughs, colds
•nd alt throat and lung trouble
Contains no harmful drugs. Garrb
*on and Klmmfns. . >
THE GRAND JURORS AND
JURY FOR FIRST WEEK
region, dlsagrecalto drains from pelvic
organs, faint spells with general weakness.
If any considerable number of the above
symptoms ar© present there is no remedy
,* that «'Nsg1 ve quicker relief or a more per-
ma*ent £h<e than Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
PrekyA’wb'Cylt baa a record of over forty
is ■ personal- attention,
sale
W. B. Brown ia spending about
>300 in repairing his realdenoe on
West Hickory street near th© Nor-
mal college
Sublett & Wilkerson are building
a meat market In the rear of the
south side ot the square that will
cost about >150 or >300
Chap. Wilkins is erecy.u^ a resi-
dence on his farm at Stony that
will cost completed about >15VV.
Doc Cowan on Hickory cre«k,
south of town, to putting up a >500
barn.
J. D. Hodges to erecting a boarding
house on West Hickory street just
across the street from the Normal
college that will obat between >5000
and >6000. The house will be used
aa a boarding bqus*- for Normal
students. About, twenty- rooms are
contained in th© dwelling and the
dining hall will sent about seventy
people
—Work m«B ar* clearing the ground
for the erection of the Graham
buildings that we-e burned. These
structures will cost about $12,000.
T. M-. Rippy to erecting a home
will cost approximately $6,000.
This building takes the place of his
residence that wu destroyed by fire
a few weeks ago.
WMls. there Is in no sens’ a boom
la building the regular growth of
the town is going on Conditions
ganeraliy it is believed have grown
more0 prosperous WlFhtn the past
month and confidence «°.U8 tq, have
been largely restored It is a notable
fact thsft in hard times there is lit-
tle Or no building goin»on-and the
fact that a number ofc Jew homes
are, being put Up is evidence that
"the TQWn te Tatrir prosperous.----Every HousehuCd tn Denton Should
Know How to Resist It. ,
The ba'ck, aches bsefiuse the kid-
neys are blocaded.
Help the kidneys with their work.
- Th©! back, will ache no more.
Lot© of proof that Doan’s Kidney
Pills do this.
TUs the best proof, foe It eqmoa—
from Denton. —-- ,
Mrs. L. L. Roark, living at 5>
Stroud street, Denton, Tex., tays:
"I suffered for a long time from
kidney trouble. I had nervous
spells, felt tired and exhausted all
the time and had no ambttion to A6
m-y- housework- The kidneys were —
irregular In action and bothered me
very much. I procured a box of f
Dbau s Kidney Pills and they helped
ua to view the desolation caused by ,. -
,“'SXbth, OB .hid, M MM S233,8^OTi
the negro Burton, also the place. BEST THIS YEAR
where they lynched the old negro ^ 3 ^ from the Hickory pialns
Thousands of troops now patrol th-1v-.- • here to(Jfty mJ says th©,
city and comparative quiet is again co 1h t county
The attorney general holds that the
committoe was not legally chosen,
and therefore the members do not
constitute a committee, but that un-
der section lil-<t the law the oK
members shall hold until their sue-
ceasoxnar© elected. .
One clause of the attorney gener-
al’s letter indicates that the com-
mittee chosen in may have to
serv© tour years—until 1910. Th©
letter says: "In accorctance with
section 6 of the Terrell election law
the committee elected in 1906 shall
hold over until a new committee to
elected at the next primary election."
Under this cunatructlon of th© law
there are but two results obtainable.
Either the 1906 committee must
hold for foty years, or a primary
election, mu sit be called for the spe-
cial purpose of electing an executive
committee. Since there Is little like-
lihood of another primary election
being called, because th<|re is no
means of meeting the expense. It ap-
years that, if the attorney general's
ruling Is good, the executive commit-
tee of 1906 must hold for fudr J.^rs.
Chronic Diarrhoea Relieved.
Mr. Edward E. Henry, with the
United States Express Co., Chicago,
writes: "Our "Genital Superintend-
ent, Mr. Quick, handed me a bottle
of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy some time ago"
to check an attack of the old chron-
ic diarrhoea. I have used 1t since
that time and cured many’on our
trains who, have been sick. I am
an old soldier
Rutherford B.
McKinley four
Ohio regiment,
except chronic diarrhoea, which, tins
remedy stops at once.” For sale by
O. M. Curtis.
Considering tho weather conditions
a good crowd was Sunday night
at the Methodist Episcopal church.
South, for the installation of the
officers of the Epworth league. Th«
installation services were conducted
by O. Li Hamilton of Lewisville, who
1h president of the North Texas
Conference Epworth League.
The program as published last
week was carried out with the ad-
dition of a reading by Mias Clark.
The Xoilowlng officers were In-
stalled:
J. L. Griffith, president
Mbs Ankle HOrnB. first vice pres-
ident >
Mr© R. L. Ltobetterr second vice
rrenlcent
Mirs Bessie Smith, third vice
prest lent.
Mrs. Cora Nichole, fourth vice
president. * >. i
Eugene Tanner, secretary-tr-'asu-.'-
er.'
Miss Villa Curtis. Epworth Era
agent.HTATE NORMAL APPOINTMENTS.
swsSSSSm 5WI' MHWHISARY
Bent. of the pelvic organs. Other symp-
toms of female weakness are frequent
headache, dizziness, imaginary specks or
dark spots floating before the eyes, gnaw-
ing sensation in stomach, dragging or
here by his wife stated that Mr.
Hawking was dangerously ill that un-
less be haa relief by today that
operation you Id be performed.
Col. Hawkins had been away
his customary rounds, and was
turning home when he was taken
at Fort Worth.
Mrs. Sam Hawkins and Ed Haw-
k fne went lo Fort Wortto--------------
A telephone message this after-
noon to L. B. Hawkins elicited the
information that no operation had
been
k'ns
Following is^hejist of grand ju- jp^-able evening was spent listening
rots from wliom tlH> grand Jury for. t0 stories of the early days In Texas,
fho rurn, ,O ,h district court by the old dTSek present.
incurable. For a great many year©
doctors pronounced H a local disease
and prescribed local remedies, aqjtl
by constantly failing to cure with lo-
cal remedies, pronounced”it incur-
able. - SCtence has proven catarrh’
tq be"> constitutional disease and
therefore requires (..constitutional
treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure,
manufactured by F. J. Cheney Co..
Toledo,- Ohio, is the only constitu-
tional
taken
drops
rectly
surfaces of the system.
one hundred dollars for‘any case It
fails to cure. Send for cirulars and
testimonials.
Address F. J. CHENEY & CO.,
Toledo, Ohio..
Sold by all Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for con-
stipation.
Do You Itchf
so, you know the sensation is
not an agreeable
c_ure unless the
used.
Hunt’s Cure Is
skin remedies,
any itching trouble known. No mat-
ter the name or place. One apRll-
cation relieves^—one box Is absolute-
ly guaranteed to cure.
-=——=—1 v __—. » uih luwn oeiug on iiiw juiui
East Poland, Maine. IT is (he p>«p- track 'aud as ittenttlte lu ©lllrei of’
er thing too for piles. Try iff Sold
.under guarantee at J. F. Raley &
Co.'s drug store. 25c ’ ".7—
Will be Held at tkmrt HouMe Sep-
trmhrr 4 ©n<J 5.
September 4th and fith have been
set aside for the examination ot
teachers for certificates to teach in
schools in Texas. The examinations
will be conducted by County Super-
intendent Willis at the court house.A Faithful Friend. ", -
"I have used ChamberlalfFTTColic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea
since it was first introduced to the j jn addition to this, however, our
'■pttlfllc in 1872. aud have ueycr ! yuawetving purpose-will be to bn-
found one instance where a cure prove wherevvr pbskIble, both
~ was not speedily effected by Its use.! character of our service and the qual-
, . * , , . , ; ity of our products. .
I have been a commercial traveler | For a contiTntatjon of thep^pa-
for eighteen years, and never start tronage we wish to offer in auvaBte"
out on a trip without this, my faith-i our thanks to those who are at
ful friend.” says H. S. Nichols of.P^nt Its patrons and respectfully
- ,. , , (solicit from thosg who are not a
*—QfiklantL ind,_^X?r. When_a man . trjaj oj> our products, promising to
has used a remedy for thirty-fivfl! au their wants -our most careful
’years he knows its vah e and
competent to speal? of it. For
by O. M. Curtis.
Fronf Argyle this week J. H. Pain
Shipped out 52 bales of cotton from
last year's crop. The lore on th© cot-
ton to said to hav© been almost half
from weather and storage damage,
to say nothing of th© difference la
the prices now aad late MU.
. J R. Christel,’DetiiSiar^ 7 Everybody in
Price, Deuton; L. T. Martin, Pilot
Point; J. T. M. Jones, Filat Point;
W. Ji George, Boan^ke;. iL L* Cat-
lett, Auzrey; A. C. Dyche, Aubrey;
W. E Smoot, Justin; M. Jacobson..
Lewteville; J. H. Donald. Lewisville;
t‘, Cocariougher, Sanger; W. Y. "Fin”
Cher, Argyle; E. E. Miller, Little
Elm; B. VV. McReynolds, Sanger.
First Week's Jury.
Following i§, jretit jury. Jos the
week:
* V O. Th urreen-,- Jerry Burnett.-ft
L. Mize, J. F. Mountain, C. M. Jones,It th© Attorney General's ruling in
the Tarrant county case holds good.
Denton county's old executive ■ com-
mittee u ailR the committee in Dan-
ton county, on account of the fail-
ure to elect their successors flccord-
iag to the Terrell election law. The
taw provides that th© committeemen
According to reports recelv*d at by V.°t*e *"< the pr*’
the various lumber yards of the cl^ Bei©ctsd. .This w^Zn^hTD^T-
there to ©qmstbing like »0,060 or tqn county. Neither was it done in
>35,1)00 wprth of buildings being put (Tarrant eoubty, the connulMwnen
up in and around Denton at present- -being nominated iq the preeinct con-
. . For Sore Feet.
“I have found Bucklen's Arnica
Salve to I* the proper thing to use
for sore feet, as well as for healing
burns, sores, cuts, and all manner of
abrasiohst,” writes Mr. W.stone.ot
Agriculture of the state of Texas, pe-
titions Indorsing Mr. Grubb© and con-
taining between 3v0 and 400 signa-
tures were ore®?ntod.and th© follow.
Saturday’s Dally -
Mf. aad Mrs F. M. Ready cele-
brated tneir fiftieth wedding anni-
versary, the 21st day ow August, <t
their home ip danger.. They W€re
married at the residence of Mrs.
Ready's father, W. H. Bates, on the
twenty-first of August, 1858. by Rev
Grace, a MHhodtat minister. There
were borq to them eight children,
every one of whom is alive and of
whom alx were p-esent, as follows;
Mrd Eliza Halcoinbe. J. D, Ready
nd W. B. Ready of Oklahoma; Y. S
Ready of LewhiVine; Jeff Ready of
Navarro county and Mrs. W. B.
Bates and Chas. Ready of Sanger,
besides their families and other rel-
atives; to the number of sixty-six.
The two absent children were Bush
Ready of Nevada and* Mrs. Hotter of
Their parents we-e neighbors in
Barren county, Kentucky, where they
were both born, he on Feb. 11, 1836,
and she Aug. 30, 1841. She moved
to Texas with her parents tn aboqt
1852 aiyi he and his father’s family
came th© next year, and settled
where they were again neighbors
A’t thlp time a trip from Kentucky
to Texas took several months' time.
They came to Memphis ' by wagon,
from Memphis down the Mississippi
rivet* to the mouth of the Arkansas
Tiyey apd upjthe Arkansas to Little
[Rock by boat. They came the rest
of the way by wagon.* Mr. Ready served in the Cenfed-
, erate army with Martin’s regiment of
Texas Rangers, going in 1862 and
disbanding In May, 1S65, they being
if not the last, amog the last, to
> disband. —
i There were present only three who
— -------,——,—__________-.JAiXfinded the_w.edding celebratlonj,
Mr. and Mrs. Goode and Mrs-.- -Steady
Iliose Who Will Comprise the ”S1- of Oklahoma, there being only pne or
lent Twelve” and the Fir-t Week’s ' tw0 niore aIlve’ one of whom 18 Bria
Talesmen.
Whereas. Hon. R T„ Milner, com-
mtteioner of agriculture, has been ap-
pointed president of the A* • M.
college of Texa© and has expressed
•is Intention of resigning his nomi-
nation tor reelection to that office
on the democratic ticket, and 3
Whereas, Hod. V- W. Grubbs of
Greenville, Texas, father of the ta- r
dustrial education movement In Tex- ,
as .and for a score of years tireless
worker in the cause of industrial ;
training and agricultural pursuits, to,
as we believe, peculiarly fitted for
the position madei vacant by Mr.
Milner's retirement and whose record
as a democrat entitles him to every
couatdprattpp at the hands of hto .V
party, therefore, be it
Resolved, by the democrats of
Denton county. In mass meeting aa- —.
sembled, that we join in a petition
to the democratic state . executive
committee asking that Judge Grubbs
be given the nomination for the po-
sition of commissioner of agriculture
of the state of Texas, and that we
also urge his appointment by Gov-
ernor Campbell fo fill out the unex-
plred term of Hon. R. T. Milner,
resigned-
H. I gives relief.
Ross Edwards, B. W. Yancey, E. B. 1 „narantefi at 1 F Ralev
Hawkins, W. T Hawkins. 9 R., Labe, «uara’?ttte al '* * Ka ?
W. P. Woods. C. L. Burnett, E. E.
Tabor. T. M. Carrico, J, G, Wiley,
C. C. Hankins, M. R. Doyle, D. D.,
H, H. Bryant,. C. L Bennett,
Duke, W. A. Arnold, W M.
, J. O. Davis. Hugh Tobin, F.
M. Craddock, G. W. Durham and
B. Skinner. • ' ,NUNDAY M HOOL CLAM* HCNW.
Mbs Vic Harwell entertained ne.
Sunday school class of the American
rreibyterian eburch at Hliand park
Wednesday Th* time was W pleas
antly spent with nearly all the mem
bars of the class present Mite Har-
well wa. asstoted in the
by Mis. Iris Pow*» *“d Mart*
’Those who ©njoFM M*© picnic were
Yrrui MtrchmaB. ItNrtfcr
Bkito*. Fannie •"*
by little folk.
ALL DRUGGISTS 1 SO©.
AND SLOQa
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Edwards, W. C. Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 27, 1908, newspaper, August 27, 1908; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1208936/m1/3/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.