Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 70, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 4, 1913 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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=
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
lay MiuUQiii reflection upon the character, reputation or standing of any
■, Individual or corporation will be gladly corrected upon being called
the attention of the publishers.
d rejoins:
»ened to Samson
the pillars of the
i was crazy and
of the United
A TKXAA WONDER.
The Texas Wonder cures kidney
and bladder troubles, dissolves grav-
el, cures diabetes, weak and lasso
backs, rheumatism, and all Irregu-
larities of the kidneys and
both men and women,
bladder troubles in
The South’s Greatest Jewelers I
and Importers of I
Diamonds
Watches, Gold Jewelry,
Silverware, Cut Glass and
Novelties.
Linz Bros, will send selections of Dia-
monds and other merchandise to any re-
sponsible person, all oxpresss{oharoos
prepaid.
GUNTER HOTEL!
\ SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
Absolutely Fireproof, Modern, Euro
A HOTEL BUILT FOR 1
RATES 11.00 to $8.00
HE CLIMATE
PERCY TYRRELL, Mp
(In advance)
WEEKLY
•LOO
•2.00
•4.00
n advance)
(In advance)
be (In advance) .....
sred as second class mall matter at poetofflce at Denton, Texas,
of Congress March 9, 1073.
d as second class mail matter August 23, 1903, at the postoffice
, Texas, under act of Congress, March 8, 1873.
itions to the Weekly Record and Chronicle discontinued at ex-
TAYLOR HARDWARE COMPANY
QUEEN
Is the brand of gas heaters and reflectors we’re inter-
red in showing you. The Queen is an excellent stove,
jiving lots of heat on a small amount of gas. Our Mr.
Abstract; ,Office
Removal.
“TheJLInz Prices are
Estih.
1877
LINZ
BROS.
thelLowont1’
“The’Llnz Qualities the^lllqhest11
-- . ......... —SSSE9SSE9999ES999BBB
Don’t Take A Chance
On taking cold by wearing worn-out shoes. Wear
them to our shoe repair department and have them
mended while you wait.
Fox Bros. Co. *
Shoe Repair Department.
its office to the building on
two weeks visiting Mrs. Haualeln and
family, During the dances, for which
Mrs. Hauslein playea, a table of ”500’’
was maintained, and refreshments of
fruit, nuts, apples, marshmallows and
punch were served. The following
were present: Misses Verna Adams,
Helen and Hilda Schmits, Dot Bell.
Bonnie Bell, Charlie Aldredge, Joe Pin-
er, Jessie Davidson, Grace Christ al,
Ruby Gebhardt; Oron Bell, Walker Ja-
goe, John Storrie, Russell Smith, Al-
bert Adkisson, Virgil Brady, Jack Bald-
win of Mexico, Tom Standifer.
Wood—right kind.
Collins Feed &Fuel Yard
40 N. Locust. J. A. COLLINS, Mgr.
NewZPfoaeJft
Old Phone;518
Feed—all varieties, highest gride
For Miss Hauslein.
A number of the young people were
guests at the home of Mrs. F. A. Haus-
lein Monday ulght at an informal
dance, given for Miss Florence Haus-
lein. Miss Hauslein leaves tonight
with her grandmother, Mrs. E. E. Daw-
son of North Hampton, Mass., for San
Antonio, where she will enter the
Academy of the Incarnate Word for
the winter. Mrs. Dawson and Miss
Hauslein, with Miss Jennie Pierce, re-
cently returned from California, where
»SOCKn HfflWS
1 BUTCH If COM STOMESI
board, George Bailey of the Houston
an' there’s no other place to
NEWS ITEMS FROM SANGER
(Condensed from the Courier.)^
Misses Nell Harter and Grace Mc-
Murtry returned from Dallas, where
they attended the theatre.
Mrs. W. H. Gaskin was in Ponder.
Mrs. George Sullivan was in Dallas.
Mrs. E. B. Noble of Fort Worth is
here visiting her son, E. E. Noble.
F. ML Reeves, W. B. Roberson and
Mr. Huggins are building a large feed
barn on Jim Green’s place two miles
north of Sanger.
Mrs. Lizzie Whitley and son, Harry,
of Pilot Point were guests of her
mother, Mrs. J. R. Sullivan.
W. J. Harter of San Angelo visited
tils sisters hern, - . t
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Curt-
singer, Oct. 26th, a boy; to Mr. and Mrs-
Charles Standifer, Oct. 24th, a girl; to
Mr. and Mrs. W. 1. Strickland, Oct.
24th, a boy.
reply.
“How
Maga-
reason
Is the
Fairs
might
truth-
we've
Ing that Finley J. Shepard, hus-
of Helen Gould, has been elected
a June 4, 1913, the lawful money in
M! 7WKodd national banks in the
would happen in the busi-
Hd tf those 7,000 national
re to attempt to deposit, say
O, or 80 per cent of their en-
jl money to retire thetr cir-
thus contracting the lawful
the extent of three-quarters
When « traveling street fair recently
left Albany, Ga., a local merchant was
left with a supply of confetti on his
hands. As the fair was playing a near-
by town, he thought of a friend there
who was interested in one of the con-
cessions and sent him the following
telegram:
“Shipping you today 10Q pounds con-
fetti to sell at fair.”
In a day or two he had a
“Stuff here,” read the telegram,
do you cook it?”—Everybody’s
zine.
"What do yez mean by
dirrt on the gintieman’s
demanded the officer pomp-
A missionary who was making his
way through • backwoods region came
upon an old woman sitting outside a
cabin. He entered upon a religious
talk and Anally asked her if she didn't
know there was a day of judgment
coming.
“Why, no,” said the old lady, “T
hadn't heerd o’ that. Won’t there be
more’n one day?’
“No, my friend, only one day,” was
the reply.
“Well, then,” she mused, “I don’t
reckon 1 can get to go, for we’ve only
got one mule, and John always has to
go everywher first.”
Girls! Beautify your hair. Make it soft,
fluffy and luxuriant—Try the
Moist Cloth.
Try as you will, after an application
of Danderine, you cannot find a single
trace of dandruff or falling hair and
your scalp will not itch, but what will
please you most, will be after a few
weeks' use, when you seen new hair,
fine and downy at first—yes—but really
new hair—growing all over the scalp.
A little Danderine immediately
doubles the beauty of your hair. No
difference ho wdull, faded, brittle and.
scraggy, just moisten a cloth with
Danderine and carefully' draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. The effect is imme-
diate and amazing—your hair will be
light, fluffy and wavy, and have an
appearance of abundance; an incom-
parable lustre, softness and luxuriance,
the beauty and shimmer of true hair
health.
Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s
Danderine from any drug store or
toilet counter, and prove that your
hair is as pretty and soft as any—that
it has been neglected ox_injured by
careless treatment—that’s all. (adv.)
A pompous city official upon reach-
ing his home one evening, found the
street blockaded and a heap of earth
piled against doorstep. Observing
a workman wielding his shovel in a
ditch near by, he accosted a passing
policeman and complained that the la-
borer was trespassing upon private
property,
t'rowin'
steps ?’’
ously.
“Sure
t’row it, d'ye mind!” replied the work-
man indifferently.
“Weil, thin, in thot case, yez had bet-
ther dig another hole an’ t’row it in
there.”
and medicine offered five college
“In the liquidation of a national
bank one of the first things necessary
of the remaining 1,900 offering four-
teen or more high school entrance
sails. Over 3,000 persons will do resi-
dence work at the University this
academic year, and 1,000 more are do-
ing correspondence work carrying de-
■
And yet this is the institution, whose
entire second-year appropriation was
wiped out at “one fell swoop” of the
Governor’s blue pencil.
./ ------o---------
The Fort Worth Record's rebuke of
George M. Reynolds, president of the
biggest bank of the country west of
Hew York, is both timely and deserv-
ed. Mr. Reynolds, in a somewhat re-
markable speech before a- bankers’
Lseoeiation, predicted that tf the House
currency blH became a law, not
enough National banks would go into
the system to make It effective, the, GLOSSY HAIR
FREE FROM DANDRUFFare county builders,
have gone farther and Just as
tally said, and that’s the. point
Been endeavoring to drive home on
our own constituency here in Denton
county in the hope that we might
have a county fair. The Dallas fair
has been a great object lesson and of
■rent profit not only to Dallas, but
all of North and West and Northeast
Texas. The Cotton Palace down at
Whoo occupies the same high position
hi Central Texas. With a more limit-
ed field, we in Denton county ought to
be striving for a county fair that ‘t
might do for Denton county what
those big fairs have done for more ex-
pensive sections. It Isn't a bit too
early to begin the preliminaries right
now If we ere to have a fair of the
right sort in 1914.
----
That Virginia, Vanderbilt, Sewanee,
Virginia Military Institute anti Wash-
have fewer students than our own
University of Texas is a new fact
we've added to our information, glean-
ed from the speech of Dr. H. Y. Bene-
dict, dean of the University, delivered
at the alumni banquet at Dallas sev-
K eral days ago. We have known all
along that we had a great University
here in Texas, but we confess we did
not know that it was so much greater
than any other Southern University.
Let Dr. Benedict continue:
“On Monday 2,100 students will at-
tend classes in Austin, a number far
greater than ever there was at one
college in the South before * This year
LSfiO will be the registration of the
regular session, and 1.000 was the at-
of the
brother
records,
too, he
have a much more direct interest in
the schools than Nick Longworth has
■nver been able to acquire.” Congress-
san Nick is a permanent rebuke to
jmdc of his father-in-law's ideas.
..............O
“Fairs,” remarks Brother Fitzgerald,
cAcial keeper of the Record Straight,
“are empire builders,” which is an-
other exemplification
why the Fort Worth
—soRie estimate* of H hare gone as
add milk
ra editorship
tion results, and as there are four can-
NEWS FROM ABOUT KRUM
R.
approved.
DE tn LETTER LIST.
nitu sictre ggixV'M s.gywrgjB Jut 41 < iv
Following is the Dead Letter List an(j stimulate sluggish kidneys
I Hu went pndinir Knv 9 JOtS- * .. /. . .
hair.
Dave, John
Gammon, Wiseman
House
best way is not to get it.
has had one whale of a
things in order in the
The little army of tenCONVENTION OF STUDENTS BEGAN
AT 3:15 THIS AFTERNOON AND
MAY LAST INTO THE NIGHT.
lAlilDff. SUIT SUU
OH IN COUNTY COURT
Walker. Sarah
Williams, Miss Leia
Gentlemen's List.
U. iUUWtUf gUOIUlgU,
I appraisement approved.
' Donald H. Gray, a minor, J. H. Gray,
Get a 10-cent box.
Take a Cascaret tonight to cleanse
your Liver, Stomach and Bowels, and
you will surely feel great by morning.
You men and women who have head-
ache, coated tongue, can’t sleep, are
bilious, nervous, upset, bothered with
a sick, gassy, disordered stomach, or
have backache and feel stll worn out.
Are you keeping your bowels clean
with Cascarets—or merely forcing a
passageway every few days with salts,
cathartic pills or castor oil?
Cascarets immediately cleanse and
regulate the stomach, remove the sour,
undigesting and fermenting food and
foul gases; take the excess bile from
Sour Stomach
ish Liver and Bowels—They
Work While You Sleep.
GLASS OF SALTS IF
YOUR KIDNEYS HURLEGAL BATTLE OVER ALLEGED
-DISCREPANCY IN LOT LONG
DRAWN OUT—PROBATE ORDERS.TO MAKE YOUM HAIR
MORE BEAUTIFUL
Don’t worry over your groceries—
phone us and we’ll tell you of the
goods Just received. Phones 44.
Eat less meat if you feel Baekachy or
have Bladder trouble.
U.
the
the
island which was supposed to
Dewey—and didn't. They have
that island now so it is calcu-
to stop anything from the Pi-
of Penzance up~ When the Jap
scare was^it its height this
and stop bladder irritation. Jad Salts
is inexpensive; harmless and makes a
delightful effervescent lithia-water
drink which millions of men and
women take now and then, thus avoid-
ing serious kidney and bladder dis-
eases. (adv.)
Asthma can oa vur-o at noma
Trial treatment and full Information
absolutely free without <*
Write Frontier Asthma Company,
Room 102Buffalo. N. T. (AflU.)
Worth and Denton.
W. F. Clevenger took an auto load
to Sanger Wednesday night to attend
the theatre.
Mrs. S. T. Taylor of Wichita Falls is
visiting relatives here.
O. D. Gose of Decatur visited his
uncle and family Tuesday.
Friday night the Woodmen Circle of J ing her parents, Rev. and Mrs. J. R.
„ Nervous and Sick Headaches
Torpid liver, constipated bowels and
disordered stomach are the causes of
these headaches. Take Dr. King’s New
Life Pills, you will be surprised how
quickly you will get relief. They stim-
ulate the different organs to 'do their
work properly. No better regulator
for liver and bowels. Take 25c and
invest in a box today. At all druggists
or by mail. H. E. Bucklen A Co.,
Philadelphia and St. Louis, (adv.)
Buchanan.
A. B. Barnett of Cleburne will preach
at the First Christian Church Sunday.
The park in the centre of the square
is being filled in and beautified. «
The fourth and last Quarterly Con-
ference of the Pilot Point circuit will
meet at Hemming Saturday and Sun-
day. The business session convenes at
2 o’clock Saturday.
Wednesday evening at the home of
Mrs. George Coppag& Marvin Malloy
and Miss Veda Scott were united in
marriage, Rev. G. A. Lehnhoff of this
city, sayihg the service. Mr. and Mrs.
Molloy will make their home in Hollis,
Oklahoma.
Several contracts have been made for
cement sidewalks around the square.
for lire week ending Nov. 2, 1913:
Ladles' List.
Clark, Mrs. Allie
Dean, Miss Grace
Heliums, Miss Mary
5 Hill, Miss Kola
Holman, Mrs. W. L.
Kenny, Miss Allee
Milam, Miss Lou Anna
McCue, Mrs. J. M.'
Smith, Mrs. Boney
(Condensed from the Dispatch.)
Mrs. Byrle McGee of Lewisville visit-
ed Mr. and Mrs. Ned Gullett. I
Prof. Wm. Buttrill of Polytechnic at
Fort Worth visited his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. p. B. Buttrill, west of town.;Gose and Lindlay, with a crew of . _ WFWW5»».
carpenters, have started work on the WCUIO FDflM ADA||T.p|| AT DAIAIT | Rebecca T. White, deceased.
Fleece residence in the west part of nL"0 IIIUH HDUul FILvI I Villi , Powers, executor: bond of 82
town.*
J. C. Woodward of Houston came in
last week to visit his father, J. W. •
Woodward.
Andrew Wilson of Wynnewood, Okla-
homa, visited his sister, Mrs. T. C. Eu-
banks, part of last week. ;
Mrs. V. lb. McGee’s new residence has
been completed, with the exception of (
the painting.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Trotwood.
Wednesday, a girl.
T. C. Edhanks and family have’ re- tWESTERN ORIGIN OF SUFFRAGE.
Owen Johnson, author of "Murder
In Any Degree,”’on hearing that the
Century Magazine was to publish in
November an article which makes a
powerful defense of the militant suf-
frage movement under the title of “The
Militant Woman—and Woman,” esid:
“It seems to me so obvious that
women will secure the vote In the
United States, that the problem fails
to interest me acutely. Of course, in
England the situation Is entirely dif-
ferent. The tact that here the wo-
To give) your hair that gloss and
lustre and wavy silky-softness, use
Harmony Hair Beautifier. It takes
away the dull dead look of the hair,
and makes it bright—turns the stringi-
ness into fluffiness—overcomes the
oily odors and leaves a sweet, true-
rose fragrance—makes the hafr easier
to put up neatly and easier to keep in
place. It is just exactly what it is
name<P-a hair beautifier, and whether
your hair is ugly now or beautiful, it
will improve its appearance. You’ll
be proud of and delighted with the re-
sults, or your money back. Very easy
to apply—simply sprinkle a little on
your hair each time before brushing
it. Contains no oil; will not change
the color pf hair, nor darken gray
LONG 4KD
r J. H.
Powers, executor; bond of 82,000 and
inventory and appraisement approved.
Ruth Overstreet et al, minors, Geo.
Practically every one of the 938 stu-
dents of the North Texas Normal are ;
assembled in the auditorium this af-
ternoon for the annual election of edit-
or-in-chief of "The Yucca," the col-
lege annual, and practically every one
of the students is awaiting the final
determination of the strenuous two
weeks’ campaign with anxiety or deep
interest.
The students convened in the college
auditorium at 3:15, and at that hour it
looked probable that the session-Avould
extend far into the night, as it was ex- *
the liver and carry off the constipated , pected to “take the lid off” on nomi-
waste matter and poison from the in- : nation speeches, each of which will
testines and bowels. I have several seconding talks. A clear
Remember a Cascaret tonight will'majority is demanded before an elec-
stralghten you out by morning.
10-cent box from your druggist means didates in the field, each loyally sup-
heilthy bowel action; a clear hepd ported, some of the forces will have to
and cheerfulness for months. Don’t
forget the children.and clean, use Harmony
i( This pure, liquid shampoo
convenient to use, because It
instantaneous rich, foaming
lat immediately penetrates to
Ft of hair ‘and scalp, insuringMeat forms uric acid which excites
and overworks the kidneys in their
efforts to filter it from the system.
Regular eaters of meat must flush the
kidneys occasionally. You must re-
lieve them like you relieve your bow-
els: removing all the acids, waste and
poison, else you tael a dull misery in
the kidney region, sharp pains in the
back or sick headache, dizziness, your
stomach sours, tongue is coated and
when the weather is bad you have
rheumatic twinges. The urine is
cloudy, full of sediment; the channels
often get irritated, obliging you to get
up two or three times during the
night. ? '
To neutralize these irritating acids
and flush off the body's urinous waste
get about four ounces of Jad Salts
from .any pharmacy; take a table-
-poonful in a glass of water before
breakfast for a few days and your
Krum went to Denton in five autos to
put on degree work for the Denton
camp. W. F. Clevenger is cantain.
Friday night about thirty >rf the
young people were entertained at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mays?guests
of the Senior class of the Presbyterian
Sunday school. In the contests, Mr
McGee and Miss Nannie Wilson won
prizes. Refreshments were served.
The F. land M. State Bank reports
81094110.44 in individual deposits on the
31st of October.
The First National Bank of Krum re-
ports 822,202.201 in individual deposits
October 31 st.
art collection te the Metropolitan Mu-
seum of New York City. *
His will i provided that if certain sim-
ple conditions were complied with the
collection jof an estimated value of
from 810,000.000 to M5j000,000 should be
housed with the Metropolitan Museum
of Art, to which be left 8150X100 for its
care and maintenance.
To pryv^^J^any possible rejection
pf his■ teiSHpk the Metropolitan Mu-
aeuni, MrTOHman directed that in such
a ease his executors should organize
an Altman museum of art, to which
he left 8250,000 in such a contingency
to provide for ito bousing in his late
residence, 626 Fifth avenue and 1 West
Fiftieth street. The director of the
museum has given assurance that the
conditions of housing and display
would be fulfilled.
It is by far the mc^t valuable gift
the Metropolitan Museum of Art has
ever received. Its cash value as a mat-
ter of fact is incalculable. At the time
of Mr. Altman’s death some persons,
who had seen the collection valued it
at 815,000,000, but it contains many ob-
jects of art upon which it is impossi-
ble to place a cash valuation.
IF CONSTIPATED OR
BILIOUS “CASCARETSFor Sick Headache,
(Condensed from the Post-Signal.)
Dr. Buster delivered a lecture to the Overstreet, guardian; bond of 83,000
physiology class of the higi. school with A. E. Peters and J. R. Jones as
Friday. The trustees have made ar- sureties approved; inventory and ap-
rangements for a better heating sys-| praisement approved,
tern.
The concrete
been completed
Plans are being laid for about three
miles of good roads leading into Pilot? guardian; inventory and appraisement
Point.
Crawford McKnight, son of J. J. Me*
furned from a visit in Houston, Fort. Knight and a Pilot Point boy former-
I ly, has accepted a position with the
Yates Dry Goods Store In Celina.
Mrs. Richard Moore has returned
from Gunter., ’
J. W. Meaders is in Ada, Okla.
Mrs. Frank Elmore of Clarendon is
visiting Mrs. Jess Elmore here.
’ Mrs. R. L. Morris of Chico is visit-
or. Frank E. Baldwin In Peoria Star.)
When 1 got off the steamer and
walked out on the dock at Manila, the
ground wobbled about pretty consid-
erably. 1 wasn't real certain of any
ST my senses. But 1 did wonder why
it won't hotter. Japan had been hot
and Snanghai hotter. Hong Kong was
the place to “take ’em all off" and
.that was the way most of the natives!;
did. I figured it would probably be
a case of "»ee Manila and melt." Noth-
ing of the kind.
To all appearances the road a mile
up to the Mani.a hotel—considered-toy
the way, the finest in the Orient—might
have been duplicated in any thriving
town in Iowa during the month of
.August. It was hot, but not oppres-
sive. And the queer thing about Ma-
nila is it doesn’t get oppressive. You
never hear a good word about Hong
Kong, either in climate or residents.
It Is a plac to be sent into, to do your
work, and get out of as soon as possi-
ble . In Manila people seem to be
willing to live, to stay their lives and
to call it hom< This feeling doesn’t
seem to be all put on, either.
Manila is a big city, three of four
hundred thousand, and very old. It .
is not a concentrated place, but covers
a great amount of space. It is all
very level ground and the ideal spot
for .good roads, which the present
Americans progressive, spirits are
building rapidly, naming them after
everything and everybody American.
The whole town is only a few feet
above sea level. The land does not
rise till eight or ten miles back from
the bay.
Corregidor Protects City.
Manila bay itself is bigger than 1
expecteo. One can not see across it
anywhere, except where it narrows
as one enters from the sea. Blocking
me entrance is Corregidor, the fort-
ified
stop
fixed
lated
rates
war
spring, the whole ten thousand troops
which guard the island were put on
Corregidor and kept there for a long
time. The Americans here get mighty
fidgety, and with good reason. One
ieels a long way from home, when
by the shortest route and hard travel
it takes a solid month to get here,
squarely on the other side oi the earth
from the U. S.
. Morning and night there arises a
thick white mist, something like the
“Creeping Johnnie” of Panama. Un-
til science got at the problem of san-
itation, these mists were supposed to
be deadly. Now they are known to
be as harmless as water. But the
greatest care is taken to guard sfgainst
the bites of insects. Everywhere one
sleeps under a finely woven net, hung
from a frame high on the bed. Mos-
quitoes bring tropical malaria and yel-
low fever. Bubonic plague comes from
the bites of the ordinary rat flea, and
the extermination of rats is the first
step in a plague war. Chqlera comes
from bad unboiled water, and fly con-
tamination of food. Strangely enough,
the Chinese have for ages believed
that to swallow a fly means sure death 1
They even feed flies secretly to ene-
mies to poison them, and it often
works. Anyway, it is a criminal df-
fense in China.
Civilization Brought Typhoid,
Typhoid fever is rare, but becoming
more common. It was unknown on
the Philippines until the American in-
vasion. The worst thing is dysentery,
which is almost an unsolved problem
as yet. The
The U. S.
job getting
Philippines,
thousand men have had to handle eight
millions, not only to control them, but
to change customs, make simple laws
and see that they are kept; and not the
least of all, enforce sanitation. A good
hotel means safely boiled water, safely
cooked food and safe places to sleep
in.
Many of the animals are startling.
The streets are filled with water buf-
falo, the queerest looking creatures,
outside a hippopotamus, on earth.
They haul all the heavy freight loads
and they take their time about IL
When in a hurry they make maybe
two miles an hour. All over every-
where are big and little lizards. They
swarm up and down the walls, under
the furniture, and all over the roofs.
In the morning one is awakened even
in the top story of the Manila hotel
by a chorus of lizard calls; and they
can yell some, too. Luckily 1 didn’t
mind lizards, but some ladies are an
worked up when they first get here.
But only for a short time. The nec-
essarV familiarity quickly breeds con-
tempt.
Green colored fruits were a novelty
to me. One has to learn that bright
green oranges and green bananas are
perfectly ripe. Here we never see yel-
low ones; they have not sugar enough
to be popular.
All the inside walls of the houses
are only built half way to the ceilings.
All doors are sliding, and are thrown
open at night. This makes it cool
enough to crawl under a blanket.
Glass windows are very rare. Thin
flexible shells three or four inches
square are used instead, set into lat-
tice work. This is earthquake-proof >
country. , ■ ..
kidneys will then act fine and
disorders disappear. This famous salts
is made from the acid of grapes and
lemon juiee, combined with llthia,
and has been used for generations to
ruff-free
Shampoo,
is most i
gives an
lather th
every pai
a quick,
off just
lion take
tains not!
leaves nu hi
a sweet-MS
-Both pre
shaped, i
sprinkler
Taking of testimony in the suit of
J. A. Fain et al vs. Taylor Smith et al,
involving damages for an alleged 15-
foot discrepancy in the old Denton
Steam Laundry lot on East McKinney
street, valued af 8150, was still on in
the County court Tuesday afternoon
with the then prospect that the case
would not go to the jury before some-
time Wednesday. Judge Hoskins Tues-
day had to call opposing counsel
sharply to time with threat of fines for
I contempt, so strenuous did the con-
flict become.
Probate Docket Orders.
Estate of—
Tom Lovell, deceased, J. R. Christal,
administrator; report of sale filed Oct.
21, 1913, of hdmestead approved (sold
to-Sadie Lovell for 87,000.)
R. S. Taylor, deceased, will probated
and Mrs. Callie Taylor appointed exe-
. cutrix without bond; J. E. Wilson, J.
fC. Colt and Emory Curtis appointed
— appraisers.
give way before the majority vote can
be secured.
All sorts of rumors of “trades,"
plots and counter plots, ami election- 1
eering schemes have been in progress ,
for the past several days, reaching j
their zenith before the student body
assembled this afternoon.
The four candidates are:
Counts of the Lee; M. T. Reese of
Reagan; Miss Mamie Walker of
Current Literuature and Miss Kather-
ine Black of the Mary Arden.
n rautotncDonom. zm soon ai it cornea
FPTIAU All TAAAV «hou,d ** turned and turned a number
lUluN UN IUUAY
mau. smrurs iiiTcuiu*/ auu
a better heating sys-1 praisement approved.
| Vera and Willie McCord, minors, A.
curb and gutter has H. McCord, guardian; inventory and
to the depot. I appraisement approved.
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Edwards, W. C. Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 70, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 4, 1913, newspaper, November 4, 1913; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1213511/m1/2/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.