Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 8, 1911 Page: 4 of 8
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Record and Chronic
UNDERWOOD BIEL
The
40c
»1.0U
94.00
mjttee yeeterday and next Wednes-
day was fixed •* the time when a
rote will oe taken on the question of
repo ring the measure. No amend-
ments other than that offered by
Senator * Root on the paper clause
will have any chance for considera-
tion, it was authoritatively stated.
The Root amendment will have to be
materially modified before it can be
yr<*epted, It is said. z
haven’t even v aited tor state-wide to
start their blind Oxers. And twen-
ty arrests were made the other day
at Waco for selling liquor without
license. Illicit whisky seilere do not
seem to be confined tenths “dry"
WASHINGTON. June 7.—The
troops are to be moved north from
Galveston soon
AUSTIN, June i.—The Third Court
of »■ IvU Appeals affirmed the case ■
of Mary B. Elliott against tue city
of Brownwood, holding the city not
Hable for damages for the death of
utbo S Elliot , who was killed by a
defective bridge.
QUAN-.H, June 7.—The discovery
of two cases of pellagra at Odell,
Wilbarger county, is reported,
victims are an aged man and
daughter, and disease is in an
vanced stage
FROM ANOTHER VIEWPOINT.
It uoes sound foolish Co advance,
but some folks seem to thin* that tue
i.'aaou bachelors are bachelors Is be-
cause they didn't have toe chance to
oe Benedicts. 7 ‘j —
bhudes of our grandfathers' ghost,
what's the matter with the climate 1
Worth Mon-
ecientifleuHf.
and is xjfl
rd most eos-
in the stats.
in dep<
this st(
been c
bargai
sale is
this sa
before
NKWS4 i:»)M
barton \ 111
Kell Wynn Is vid
hl family.
Lc. W. Aydek
Loved hweTrod
[Charles Slmnj
LJuicy Jolly al
Lere in Lewisvl
[ Vernon 1'ruitl
bell.
NEWS FRC
■PLAINVIEW
the grain is in ]
snnen are begl
their work.’ >11
lag r e
[Arthur Thon
Ihomas and
Anthony Moods
tad Mrs.’ Nath]
riew».«re -v+»ki|
Miss .Land d
lere.
J. A. Owens
IftfhW; toe s|
T E Bryahd
Sidney SmltB
his sister, Mrs
Judson rterd
. Mrs. Fry an]
Halted Mr. I'd
' Mr. L’tigk y
build another]
place berm... |
I W. Y. Barnl
ita we. drlllJ
Mr. and -M
hive been vid
Cb'stain, are I
county. I
Miss Katie I
I. Rev. Burtol
nds son-in-la«l
| The carperil
ID?* s: e .. 1 I
I Among th01
mcently were
[Will Watner
P* NEWS 1
[ ‘WAKETON
er continues
Mfferinc veil
failure If it d
I Grandma 11
i Htnl M. E
Ito:. I
I. 0. Hud
mtWwitl
! ’ B. Med
Beecher Mln
'Thomas wer]
L. H. Card
I to Fort Wor]
reiaihes
Sam ana d
WHn
Mrs Ben|
Merman wi|
W A Hen-J
EjLv'ster nJ
|®an, 'jila.
t'B. L Pu|
gtia hretber I
hies Mil
M«*. Bid
tlahoma.
*ra Het
i-?111 Po’l
“Oded ebu
. Miner F
H. . Fi
Orandm
NEWS FR
’ prairie
*r» having
^f>®stlng
trough ch,
r west is li
feting on »<
0. v. hoi
SUBSCRIPTION RATEb
DENTON,. TEXAS, JUNE «. 1014
be sure-
of Minneapolis.
the last say.
that
One Of'lhA easiest .things S% ' the
GENERAL NEWS BRI
o., June
lot iner, t
I ci procity
i The disease
, be overlooked
The continual pitting the hike
the
good
or
th
has done and Is doing a lot of good" Rvarnnee called the strawberry ton-
■ rrvift- Thft Esotu -n woaU- nr ton
and
to proceed! 0,1 ,ni8 morning r
a whole, four,een miles 'list
from the erwun. la It democratic tar
that.
r.
of
to
also that an filter- '
at once t oni Del. 1
Wax ihachie .and
is that
bite as
for
the
cloths used should at once be
placed ia a solution of this strength
seem
territory.
effort to elect
but adjourned
ballots
killed and wounded was great. The
return march.tu,Galveston begins to-
down-t
laugh,
germs
broad
prepared. This solution should
be nsed to disinfect -all vessels
The
al-
or
Sarah Louise says that she wants
ia moon. and. the woxbl. wi 11 a .lente
nature
of Eden
by
We
stde-
in a
Brotherss
loss is
corn was
had to
I of wltom s y,. the House free list bill
! will inevitably, be presented as one of
John Jacob says that the reason he
is so inordinateiy^Jpnd of big sales
Is that he can dig folks In the ribs
and. they won’t know who di^i it.
source of congratulation to
democrat. —--------— —A nation-wide movement to clean
out vicious -saloons w-as launched Iff"
Chic go Monday. The object of the
campaign Is given to clean out blind
tigers, softydrlnk parlo s of prohibi-
tion. etc., as well as saloons.
WK
WACO. Jmm RsmOs IndlrMe
' WASHINGTON, June 3.—Senator
L Lorimer this afternoon secure-
I permission to appear before the
It isn't so much what we eat as
what -we wear right now.L^-«it-. - «
Gaitan, a Mexlc n. veteran of ths
Mexico-Texas war. the Me* caa war
and severe) revolatloae. diet tn the
and thrives and grows In fUfh.’Is no
fit subject for arousing our tender-
c-* ’''eltngg: and it puis ridicule up-
on an association th>t undoubtedly
HIGH CONT OF “I-AWING."
The law is an exact science you
know. Ot)ly men learned in prece-
dent and technicalities are fit to
touch ft and the common people—
why, they like the cat that may
look at the king and ought to be
th nkfu] for the privilege.
Still, the »aw is. an expensive Inx-
nry. ln spite of ita exactitude and
unerring accuracy in reaching re-
sults. Ask Michael Donnelly of Al-
bany. N. Y. He knows and W«H has
he pal dfor knowledge.' He sued his
brother-in-law, 1> ,J, Ardle, involving
$168,000 In 1809, apd the final de-
ctvton has just been hn-wt down—
and a regular "hand-me-down" it is,
.Mr. Donnelly thinks. They kept hhn
In court twenty-two years. They
gave him seven distinct and separate
trials, covering ninety-seven trial
days. Onely ninety-three lawyers
were employed in those trials, and
only 249 wltneeae heard by some for-
ty justices.
tel-a-phone, tell-a-
go<>d of tneir kind,
r-rt h- s them all beat-
DALmaS, June 2.-*—On account of
the excessive heat, men at work on
thp Oak Cliff viaduct costing ne rly
a million dollars, were ordered to
work av night only.
WEATHERFORD. June 2.—Pick-
ard Bros ’ steam laurdry Au'ned this
morning. The loss is $10,000 with
$1,000 insurance. The origin of the
firs is unknown
purchased Gy"tfaps wltirTTie avowed
horrible purpose Of burn ug’.tUe ili'.s
alter they mar caircbt. • The huuiai.eH H. Harrington has been ap-
pointed agricultural director of v°s
Frisco railroad's South. Texas
One month, .entered ....
■tx months, by mall (in advance)
One year by mail (ia advance)
wM—sMim iwsso— ■■■ *
WeskH entered as second class mall matter at postoffice at Denton, Tex-
as. under act of Congress March 9, 187$. _. ‘ i
Daily entered as second class mall matter Aug -$, 190$, at the postof-
fice at Denton Texas, under act of Congress. March 8, 1873.
All subscriptions to the Weekly Record and Chronicle discontinued- at
expiration.the lan t, which breeds j
WASHINGTON,'J.une I.—Criminal
prosecution of the officials of the
S.andard Oil and Tobacco companies
is proposed Im a concuyrt ht resolu-
tion introduced In the Senate.
extremely-bad ju<igmcut .111 picking
One consoling thought to the per-
son who loses lings is that
ly can'Cbe grasping-.__
All the erne it’s
make some men.
Carbole is one of the most val-
uable disinfectants and* germicides
yon can employ in preventing the
spread of scarlet fever, typhoid
and other infectious diseases.
A solution of Carbole 1 pint
’-WASHINGTON.’-.-'-T&e.Serr.
ate to lay renewed Ha
a president pro tem.
after two ineffectual
gw. The Trver-hurts Tt -week- or ten
days, the rash five -to eight days.
A mild attack may suddenly devel-
op flaming syrnntonis and may be
fol'owjed by ear diseases, enlarged
glands "* the neck, rheumatism,
heart disease or Rilght's disease.
The lat er after two or three weeks.
Treatment: Isolate the child
send for family physician.
ate army.
SAN ANTONO, June 5—Mrs.. Wm.
Dunne, wife of a San Antonian im-
prisoned at Monterey for an alleged
plot against. Madero’s life, writes
from Monterey that there Is good
prospect of securing her husband's
release soon. The American consul I
general is acting Dunne's behalf. ‘
NOTICE TO THE PUl 1C.
Any erronwoua reflaction upon tbo character, reputation or standing
•f any firm, individual or corporation which may appear in the columns
of the Record and Chronicle will be gladly corrected upon being called to
the attention of the publiabom. < -
S'«mbo says that some fol,,s jest
n tchelly" can't belfi betfig crocked'.
ro ldtAt fly--well,
A pest th it’ is
and filth up and down arid
cast
automobile camping totrr
here through West Texas.
MUSKOGEE, Qk., June 1.—Gov-
ernor Haskell, who is ill, was under
dpiates yesterday, but is reported as
much better today.
it is to
scattering]
~$ i'.WiE(rO'<r~T. U. Thomason today' ent HitlOr laws whi' h will continueT
.sold to the-Long-Bell bumber. com- operative except tbnt license laws!’!
J>8.ny of Kangas C.lty , 1 ,^00,000,000 will become inoperative and other re-!
feet.of standing, timber ^itb three vision will be necessary.
- - ■ J - of
RECIPROCITY REPORT.
Washington, June 4.*-The Finance
Comiui.tee’a reportdl. llierei.ltfro-
city birrro’ tire "StirarfTrirr -mrore
the beginning of the third month of
the ex ra seston of Congress,
hearings "whTCll liar, i ontlnued
most a month will close tcraay
Tuesday and Wednesday me commit-
tee, will go Into an executive session^
to determine t«e dispo-ltion at the
measure. Members of tin: .committee,
engrossed in hearings, have had no
opportunity to exchange-views. Many
amendments have been suggested
and tngny more are p.obable.
Time required for e ch of- these
will 'determine the date of the com-
nCttee’s report.'Y.’hairman Penrose is
confident Ms coujjnittee wilt reach
a vote before adjournment Wednes-
day^in which event the bill will be
reported Thursray.
Once in the Senate the bill will
tun ga untie; o spec chia, and amend-
ments. At Iftatt thirty Senators ex--'
pect to address the Senate in op-
. by some to solve that city's wauv-ic
must problem, which h^s been critical" :
, Terrell is oiling some of its pi
A‘‘: pal atp»ta -
Senators Kern and Williams and
Stone In unmasking the secret
source of the opposition should be a
every
Faces, like ad signs, don't always
lead one to correct contusions.
It sometimes tikes a bold opera-
tion to remove a grouch.The pessimist opines that If wishes
were horses [hey'd all probably be
De gas uses.
There
position
is but a
dlC'S the ,— v- — -r-~" — J.V. 1 DJZTraivTn Vl tut? 1. ..<»» .iMuoy, .1 L.11..1 uuu.;
journment of Congress- before Aug-j ^y aOtl jg£$..aa4 chairman. o^pOygnPi^r
Chas.
Minn , .
coadjutor bisaop cf the
Episrop 1 diocese of WeSt Texas
' j'eh he wax recently elected. -
VERNON, June 6.—The survey
t.he proposed railroad from Vernon
Crowell was begun here today.
LEAGUE CITY, June 6.—General
Miles’ regulars were off at daylight ■
tpdry to avoid the heat and thgy
pitdied tents for the day at Lamar-
que ’WSftife' fio'Oh,'
BUC, France, June 6 —Pierre
Vedirlne, winner of the Parjs-to-Mad.
rid aviation race, today sta
the Parls-to-Turin aeroplane race,
^expecting to fly 500 miles before
dark. , - i
Jnstinrent RcpubHcans Senators fail
to obtain adequate attention *0 amend
meats in committee tlrey will seek the
first opportunity to present their pro-
. £lsiaus.ln open Sen;re.,___________
No one counts upon less than six
weeks of debate. Sonic wjio predict
much more extended discusttttyns say
the whole tar.rf fight will be waged
in coaacc^Tori vvitlt t.tie conjti^Pration
9 ■of 'rbcihT®!5ftL~.“^ » c ,
Col. Roosevelt, Speaker Clark. Chief I
Justice White and other notables BWH
ing the principal sttpenkers
«--: - ‘
Waiyers have 'men nsked for tke
sr.le or trade of C" Young, who lor ,
twenty-one consecutive years ha». 1 ]
been one e‘- the greatest pitchers
tne big leagues. He Jias beeh iyM
■twU.-hacinir nlicluul.a game, thia
son I e is termed "the grand
man .of baseball,’’ and his pitcniM^HH
average since 1890 has been
4 97 wins to 303 defeats.
born in Tennessee.
,SAN ANT0N1V, June 6.—An "anti
noise” ordinanc' was Introum el last
night at the c ty council affecting au-
tomobiles, rhbtorcycles and repair
shops. A .p«na> .y of a ftpo of $5 to
$500 is prescribed.
A..TONIO„ June' G.—-Rev
T. Freemen
today declined the office'’of
' " Protestant
to
THE RECORD ANiTlHRONTCLE COMPANY.
W C EDWARDS. Editor. R J EDWARDS. BuHnew Mgr
W C THE ASROClAfED PRESS
TelwboMI (O>d **>d New) U4.
Lorimer, whom Mr Hines o' the con- cal or personal reelings,
cent boasted as having “put over" at empromise is ofet not
an expense of .$100,800. Now comes But the splrjt e lUuse ,
its sinister figure ag in in. the rccr- are showing, even though it be term-' but tell a-wire I-
procity hearings—opposing. vfi»j "couip'omi»e," is one which e.v- s t’« about teh rtrousand -waves,
course, as it opposes anything tend- try democrat sbould applAud.
Ing to reduce the price of lumber.j compromise ntKy not be our
The "swat the fly" mi .paign
’ Mr. Doanelly klmeelt, who ia of PHOMOSKS (YlMPLETK INQUIRY,
robuet row itwt'O*. lived to mo the ‘ INDIANAPOLIS, lad.. June
L , i The abofccUllustration is a picture sity. The building is
• ItOUSTONrJune 6.—The hot, dry+.-; . _ .. ..
' of the new model scboral ^building,
- , , . , . to be one 6 11 e best and
recently erected at Parvm, this venien, b„J(ls of lt)J Bize in
county, according to the. plans Of the A successful term of*
extension board, of ti e State tnivec-’ building.closed last week.
AIMM T SCAKLET FEVER.
A . Denton physc-Im, wh >
ethical reason- will not permit
, furnishes
with a
A FINE BUNCH OF "FARMERS.” tsidefs have talked too lustily; the
Apparently the most active politi<-. ] opposition has cheered and ayged 011
ally of all the big "Interests" ^.the the seething brmk. Each tiffie the
so-called “lumber >trust,’* which democrats have got together again
•eems to be well represented in the without a split and, better, withAut
Uttlted'States Senate, even excludtng- any st.ulntng ot personal or poitti-
' . A spirit or
a 'niirable. . .
1 iel-a-grapb,
democrats' VQniail art. a)!
.•IVftl. .
recognizing and iso-1 1
se.: It usually comes] t
ith vom ting. Higi
'I.-vTT appears On the first day anc
rash on the second, Eruption fir:
^umaars rm rtm nrrk tmrt -spread
ia! comm ttee of 1
he charge of i|rib-f MSXGUE CITY, June 5. Generali u - -------- -
« Mill s army began a sham battle near ( hundred regulars marched into Hous- Baltimore Tuesday, President
^.here -at dawn, today end rifle fire) ,on a< 1 u^q'(Io< k this, morning, com- ' ~
, rattled for hours. The continual 1 pitting the hike *‘from (Talve
."•arrival from the front of ambulances j w|hout a single serious accident
. indicated that the number of feigned | entert inments are planned _fj
l!oldlng*the app. cat:i -. of 'be agree- ^Zachary Taylo
r —'■ - -
Canada so long as local Or provincial
restrictions are-placed on its evporta-
! lofl.
Russell RObeit. aged 13
—.— - — ——-~~—r ■ ...... ' met *jTl-clr was brok°n at Fort
and 'would be t.K« subject-cllJ1>,f yeggmeq.. ^arlrrtj^ay escaped night married Mrs "Blanche Tomp-1 ,„v . ‘ ..bimiiev f-Uine on
debate. «• J with’ over $1300 In 'cash and checks'j,kit'=’•a Kansas girl, st LF e r,Isti<'c (
is a disposition to. play for ! HQPEFUL OF $ECUitING‘AL. ; court, '-‘ ren Hopuiy °lie,-:f1' t a*.!?
:>s the pres dentin! contest j LEt.'ED PLOTTEp.S RELEASE. e<| him from jail. l!eerrtan-is confi- ’ jjirth a Ge m n aviator, set a iw»
year off. Mr. "Penrose pie-| ' EL PASO, Jane Ji—Col. M. F .j dent’he can p^-, his alibi laif record TuesAaf When with a MM
passage of the-bUl and -a4*.iE0fket, speaker of the Tex'as House! .JAItl.ASf June. 2.—International - senger to a height of,5,182 feet. W
weA her is open ng the South Texa-
tomato crop rapidly. Railroads with
Houston as headquarters yesterday
moved elxty car loads some for-Can- eXt
’“.1 ads, . ; {.
in the wot Id. It Is rather surprising
That the society didn’t suggeH orna-
mental cages for trapped flies, w here-
in they might die of old age after
living a long and harmless life.
-----;-----o-------
’’Deploring the trend of his party
toward a tariff on wool, Savoyard
presents some rather convincing fig-
ures. He declares that Schedule K,
whlvh the democrats propose now to
reform rather than extirpate, is the
key-atone of the protection arch, and
unless raw wool Is free and the man-
Ufactufed product admitted THHy un-
der a*-revenue 'duty, .he democr ita
will have failed to redeem their
Pledge. He goes on to say:
"Let me in one word show you
what a sham is in that excuse about
revenue. We Imported in 1910
256.808,638 pounds of wool valued
at-441,617-293,"which paid a r««aaue
ot $31,,.8.728, or a lit !e more th n
44 per cent That same year we Im-
portei 191,861,962 pounds of India
rubber, gutta perch a ami substitute*
therefor, valued at $10«;i* 1,476 and
It paid not one cent of revenue. The
same duty la«d oh R that wool bea-s
would bring ,n $47,01*.949 in reve-
nue. more than double what would be
>oe< if wool wye free But then n,
troons and oM’ic rs tonight.
SAX ANTON. , June 1.--(’aJrj'fn
the first time the advance Jtuard of
tile maneuver division began Its
■ TTrtrrrniflE TOT.mTrTrrrtTrr'Uiu' irafft:~
ing1! The reminder of the troops
•4e -vt> here-tomorrow.
WACO, June 1.—The sale of the!
Citizens Street Railway company
and the Waco Gas And Etertrie com?
p ay to the Sout..?rn Traction com-
pany was formally announced today.:
It was announced
urban win be built
las to Waco via
Hillsboro. A new bridge wil) be put
.acToss_the Brazos.
LONDON, June 1
population is now 2,759,455, which
is an increase of only ». little more
than 280,000 in ten years.
AUSTIN, June 1.—The quarterly
balance in the State Treasury touay Chicago Monday,
shows «i32.797.10 cash and $18,-
000,000 approximately in bonds.
ROME, June 1.-—Raymond Gar-
ros, en route here on the Paris-to-
Turin race, was forced to land once,
but arrived hpre safely this afternoon
FORT WORTH, June 1.—Rev H.
C.. Ba ier, a t ate-wide pro speaker,
will start this week on a 1000-mile
from
LORIMER PROBE COM.
MITTE IS CHO»EN.'
WASHINGTON, June 6.—In taking ,
up the Lorimer Inquiry question yes-j
twdsy the Senate committee on privi- .
leges an.1 elections considered the ,]”‘1nI"1ere un"b,« ‘® march when
first part of Mr Kenyon’s motion di-q •.
recting the committee 1
with the investigation Pg a -----.
but af er brief discussion it was re-
jected by a vote of 10 to'3 the af-
firmative votes being cast by Senators
.Kenyon, Clapp and Jones.
The resolution providing for the
appointment of a -subcommittee of
eight was proposed by Mr. Bailey. It
named Messrs. Dilllngnam, G'mble,
Clapp and Sutherland, republicans,
and Messrs Fletcher, Johnston, Kern
and Lea, democrata --- .
The subcommlt'ee adopted a reso-
lution for presentation to th® Senate
today to clothe the subcommittee Fl,h
al) the. powers of a special CO.mm.LJ-_
tee. ”'l_____ _______‘__
a disposition to confine It* aittings to
Washington as niu^h as possible, bu*
Illinois will be visited. Tuere *D1 be
no effort to conclude the Inquiry dur-
ing the special session, aa the com-
mittee has power to sit during the
regular session.
is uniformly scarlet in typical rases ] .
with pin Toin:a of intense red siio«-
(ng^hrotigh. The throat is red an’1
sore from the beginning ot thu in-
vasion and may develop a whitish
membrane 4»ke diphtheria. The
tongue is at first coaied with red
points showing thrpngh, cleans off
so th t by e third or fourth it
h s the glistening red raspberry ap-
The House democrats are
stepping "Old Man Trouble"
way that excites admiration—also
hope. A half dozen times already
has the democratic itottse member-
. ship approached what appeared to
be and"Yvas declared to be thei«reat
split Outsiders have meddled, in-
‘ . ............. ——--t
<•** ■’ ■*»',. ■ *• ■ )
Scarlet Fever.
Nice tnrneh of tTarmers.’ 0X17 ^:. PPPbncnta tor a . letter-w ntin*
"Farmer” Brownson (lumber and
comrade of Hines); ’
Hastings (paper); "Farmer
(wool,"Farmer" Lyman (more pa-
per); and other equa.ly representlve ivvvi)vtj ;i ,
-farmers" from the American Ito-] tonuiI.t;on m throWn by a ,
test’Be Tariff League. That bum-h s(ri..eiv
alone Were'Sufficient to tell him who u MIrr) ln
reads whose ox would-be gored
the reciprocity treaty. And" yet
shall bear how "we” hnve <ugiu
baitles of ‘the farmers" in the effott L . , „ , .
I bqc. ety L up in arma aga..,.-»t suca
to defeat a non-p:>rUsan act which ai , , .,
.. b.i; >*mty and has suggested the poor
democratic House passe’ <r erwheim-!
ingiy anil which, we believe, is hon-
estly intended to .better t.-e coudi-
tiong of the millions cf American
consumers. '~Tt Is weU-flBHUt'P I
propaganda that has deluded many.
" ” . Ji —. ■ a ,* ..1 I » ar ■■ •
But the outlook now is that people
affected are -—-kentng to how n -ir-
ly tney came to being fooled >>y the
sophistries of . opponents of
cd. Hujnaro; societies
things. Inhumanity to
usetul 1 eas-s is must yemi^mptibie-
But w.ien intelligent people under-
J_ Lias everywhere given satisfaction Whv not
- --♦ waWn-|hat voir-fcikaaf is all right. •: -v>OtsL by.
________. '' ' -r--j. -- - — .. _J . r - • ~
Farmers Implement & Venic e lo
Denton. Tex?s
A favorabl report is not ex-'
from t ’e committee
Lor’nier case w ll-.receive re-!
attention in the. Senate during j.
•he tveck if the committee on privl-j
leges and elections carry out the'
"gentlemen's agreement’ for tiro se-t
lection of a special comm ttee , o^
e gin : o eonsiuer 11
«'ry gainst Senator Lorimer.
In the Sena e. Senator Bonierene
is to call up and sfieak on his re 1-
lution d rec:ing criminal proceed-
ngs ggaints the officers and direc-
<>; s of the b nn'ard pit company
, . an,r A,wcri, an Tobaccry’ company as
j I base I on decisions of the Supreme ’,lnorrow- . I
?t court The OhW^Ubnator is prepared !- FORT WORTH, June 3.—Follow-
,ia i to maku a vigorous plea -or pie ing. the receipt, of a letter alleged to
rapidly’ over'Ihe“bo.7y and' limtrinR j mlbvtum'^rn^ rYsoTUtlOn:—afetr Gw CTrinv'T-rmiur B-rfy if
.. 1 ., - . o.v. ....... — . lie .attends the Antl-r Hv here Mon-
' T ORTWEH- TASE OPTLCHH4-. — » Wef of Po)Iew-WiMUaxx- today
JVASHINGTON, June 5.—Unccr- annou”- ’ •’ -» a perse”-'' body
surrounds the Lorimer case, guard would be offered the Gover-
and tlig, de'ails of me In-voatigafctm, | not,
A very strong, but quiet, effort Was \v
’iisi ovei cd Saturday to keep Senator j Wm.
TTenyon off the «.u1>-cotntdTttee tx>! perm.™.^ ______ ,..v
con'net the'Investigation, pr'esuma- new Senate Investigating commit ee
bly because of ais reputation as an to testify in his own behalf. The
expert prober. This discovery re-! cornlttee will hear him
suited at once in anettm to force | VERGASj Minn „ JuDe 3,_Iu thel
the probe o be conducleiTby Ufe en-t privatc w L s Ber pre.ident of
tire Elections an ' Privileges com- the New Orleans, Mobile and Chicago,
mittee of which he Is a member. ■ ra)lroa(1 was dly hurt and hIg wJfe
f| kll'eti tonight in a wreck on the Min.
neapolis. St. Paql and Sault St Marie
line. Mrs. Berg was born in San An-
j tonio, Texh*
HOUSTON, June 3.—Only fifty-
A few piece* of figured lewnt at Sc.
(rood aMortment of figured lawni worth 10c
lilted up to their reputation—acting i Bad pe-nnies never come b
<ybereJcept. when.folks pasa 'em off
is ground for hoping that the old I
jinx" lias been eliminated, an I that I
the patty is go! ig to act -wi-th sense
and judgment and discretion. -, ----------O------:—e
• Reading the Rankin fe ter and
c iimg the Lightfoot, Hat . is
otuer i“plies, we are constrained u? publication of his name,
J tbg Record and Cnronlclo
’short treatise’on scarlet fever, fie
' | urges, also, that every home .should
. ... . — ' be fumigated if there Is tne least
___ cbntfoveisy. Also, that ttie Reverend guspkion of any infection, and that
“Farmer" Doctor knows something more about P wnul t not i.e hurtful to fumizate
‘ Woods Mvlnouism than "the Governor,
r Would not be hurtful to fumigate
every home In the city. The .short
'rentisC follows
Scarlet fever Is very common at
I all-age above 6 months and occurs
I most frequently in autumn (after
‘school open-S) an 1 I8 very cont'gioue.
Ti.e rocie.y alv;esaiJ j The germs mav be carried -In cloth-|
Texas city which has i-i»'K nn'l t"")' live fnr a vear stowed
away-In clothes and bedding. |
: may. be so mild as tc !
../■ overlooked or so Severe as tp dy- j
stroy life in twenty-four hours
The mildest bia.V furnish germs f -T
one of the severest type, hence the'
importance oi I
Longview' ——w
I An underground I axe has been dl
?udge E.1 covered on .the wets bans ot
II. Gary today testifie I at the Steel Trinity at Dallas which is
Trust invest'ration that the govern- 1
rnent control ot corporations i
come and that the world’s conference; , , ------
in Brus’cls next won't will ’ore miz» • Cardinal Gibbons celebrated -.I
an International Gteel >"ute twenty-fifth anniversary r.s ptltt®
. c.OUSTON, J'ine 1. Forty-fite ' Ce Catholic chuckin' Amert**!beer, "pewaerfedt " ’ , . ,,T, ’ ing terms with the Deirmcratsvjnan£..
—----—' ' , -tX An1 ?•' \ . A 1 wltom s y ..the BouJfree list billr
d'f’eretoe between the* '' 11 ’ ^IwiH inevitabfy be presented as one of ; ------—
d.f„ mu. e between t c M, L, wlus the racp ’ th . modifjca ions of the iecipr^tt^«T?w nftlr in ' the neighborhood" ...... ... .
'Ty'nv'v?4“"*ti7a" Fkrf~lWat"1i- —trrfn4jU^urfe i’resding of ti.e. free .listlDbucett.-TcniBy and New WiHard. (4b„wgh held as a-suspect in a BBds-
cont rnc-io-"' i> gi'vlng .miploy'nA^WM^lvnTb —Blowing a sa[e, i,
women «b.o nvglii otherw ise be or-1
ganizing some more humane socie-
lenoum-e the tie ory and voe1 for it ia> tits, tor the protee.ioii .of- tii<) poor
pracitce. • 'down-trodden fly
SPECIAL'S.
Remember that all tailored and pattern hats are
Half Priori K
One Jot akirtt^yorOTup to $6 50. choice >3,5fr
One Jot marquisette drenei worth up to 22.50
choice $15 0Q.
Special price! on all other white and
DALHART, June 7.-—No bidders
were present for the saie of the
Enid, Ochiltree and YY'estern rail-
toad yesterday. A new sale was set
for July 12. W. B Chauncy bought
the rolling stock.
VERNON, June 7.—Gapt. Shorn
imehett, tax assessor Of WUbargef
wiT8*'Bip*rved'ttn^r ©Var Cfc-'
bell tn the Civil war, died here to-
day, aged 6+ years.
GREENVILLE, June 8—Mm.
Mary Magee, ag’d 106', died yester-
day. Although married three times,
she ig believed to be the last one
UeutoJBfeL SLp wj s one of
pioneer settlers of Texas and tTas
The drouth which seems
eral in practl-ally all the cqt.ton belt :
Is sending up the new crop months -j
the snecn'atlve markets. With-
slight local rain* refcorted anywherttg^
the cotton belt temperatires r*nSKj|jM
, front one io ten degreea.jibove nof"
1-ina.L. The opinion of many tr*oywsMM
Scotland's 1S that the cron Is rapidly getting
into a critical condition.
The United States investigation ot
the so-called lumber trust began !■
The!
w y !
We’ve been reading a lot of how thej-.Rut, ee far; BBXJi has been on- the, around it, and sumohody to fix her
"fariaexs’'.JKfitfLopposing the treaty,; give-and-takp princ pic, wireretn •lair this new way.
and bow diligent certain alleged none gave up- alb, and all “receive.!; „ . k’ ,, ,
, ... ... I* Some folks don t know a soup
ropresefitatiyes of the farmers ^omt-thing they contended for. from a finger bowl.
• atlc totorc tim*"ceniouats "have ,al>»a)s! ‘
Senators—Stone and Kern and AY il- L“‘._ . ...
Hams-—it fell to unmask the "farm-! the fool at Cae "Wrong time,
ers. ’ The list of men who bad con-
ferred with a certain firm of New-
York lobbyists is most illuminating.
An'(Associated Press dispatch from
Washington goes on,la »ayt
JimIS£LJSaj>8i_»njS wpoletv man-| it beginning to trppear tliAt Ler-
uf:,ctunng lnteresu/“accoUTTng" 6^eIld' ay (.rVirjhilt
teatinfony glKerT today by Joseph H. i # v .,*7, " \ 7.,!, .
Alien of the firm of Allen * Gru-' S1: als*
bam Of New Y ork ouered to contrl-• seems- ,o iTat been pewcerfeit
■ ■ bute ttr the,Tight being made against ’
reciprocity by some of the officers ofj a se<
the National Grange. Mr; Allen, |;ntturwt.
‘■ "Vwtbke firth U employed to help the
Grange in’Rs compaigu against the>1' . ‘ ’ .'
bill,- acknowledged that Willi >m M | their Pel.iff m the -tutury of protet-
Wood, president of tjie Ame>i<an j ttou -nd 'o e agiupst it. The latter
Woolen Company, Arthur C. Hast-
ings, president of the American I’a-
per ati<f Pulp association; Chester W.
Lyman, assistant to the prosl'.eut ot
the Internationa) ? Piper company,
and Leonard Bronson, general man-
, ager of the ationql Lumber Manu-
facturing association, ha«i volunteer-
ed a wi.Hngness to contribute to the
fight rgatpst reciprocity '
The most lavish preparations b***1..
been made in Mex’co City for tbe^^m
ceptlon of Gen. Madero Wednesw*
Eight indicfmentg were returned j
Monday at Coiumbu*, O., by
grand jury wh'ch is Investigating-***^
legislative bribery charge*.
_p. ------
Seven deaths ere reported in Cbfe
cago from the terrific h**t.
d'ed Pom the heat in St. Ixrt** *
200 East St. Lou's high school Pu-
pils went.on ai strike because of t»wv
heat. The heat wave vontlnn^
throughout the Southwest and
temperatures and heat prostrSU^^
are reported.
Jhe Old Reliable Bain |
I las been before the public for more than *
fifty years and has been tested in all climates and I
hv not buy
i 2-O-ne immutable law of
Litgt'ng back; ,o the Gyden
! iu that the Eves shall u, ve
well as
.General Hili's army left South Hous-
i on this morning for League City,
t nt, wh^re thev
will divide h to red and blue armies
and hold a battle this afternoon.
SNYDER. June 3.—Wheat is be-
ing harvested in this section. The
yield will be about 10 bushels to the
acre. Oats were damaged by the dry
weather.
DALLAS, June 3.—Two thousand
dozen brooms and six y tons ot
broom corn were destroyed it. a fire
this morning at Spike'
broom factory here. The
$15,000. Smoke from the
so cense that the firemen
*•- M Bpi—f" *"Mirrnrr » chop a hole through two floors io le.
he subcommittee has indicated it out.
... ----- —„--------—,.™,T-------Jahantjiathgl, GermnnXi—......
1. j the secession convention which de-j to foim a car mens'uin'on. Mean-1 -J.-j_.L-.. .
In committee the most serious' i pose 1 (.lov. S’m llous on. died sud-I while street cars are running nearly.„ Ur. and Mrs. R. C. Buckner?
conflict probably will take place over t deniy last night at bls home here, norinal nes.day. celebrated the fifty-set
the.amendment of .Senator Root with >-g~ed years. He accompanied j AUSTIN, June 2.—Suit is to be anniversary of.thej’r wedding—
i'QlJlnglh6 Wg- cat'on ot Zachary Tayio- fh the Mexican war/^istituted against the Pacific Ex- Buckner founded Buckner s Ot
ment to wood pulp imported from and was a colonel in the Uonfedcr-; p .rss (.onipauy for allege ! extortion- home near Dnttxw. • -------
ate charge on eggs from
and Beckville to Marshall.
WASHINGTON, June 2.'
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Edwards, W. C. Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 8, 1911, newspaper, June 8, 1911; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1209144/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.