Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 230, Ed. 1 Monday, May 10, 1915 Page: 2 of 4
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WALT'S DAILY POEM
R. J. EDWARDS, BusineM Mgr
EDWARDS,
United Confederate Veteran’ of
WEEKLY
Twelfth Night
Afternoon
Taming of the Shrew
TEXAS NEWS BRIEFS
FROM ANOTHER VIEWPOINT
SWAT THE
GENERAL NEWS BRIEFS
FUNERAL SERVICES SATURDAY
AT DENTON THEATERS
left Italy
Screen Poors
Screen Wire
wire
electric
Entertained "Mr. Bob” Cast
Make Your Kodak
Notwithstanding its
Autographic
NISH
come popular as a
ional air
oughly at the expense of the
Denton
TIS
the
and
ur bread is always fresh
and is made in Denton.
■ntertained
f this city
’ down nn
your kodak
■ brought up
and there’s
Constable Precinct
ty, Texas.
! It Darkens So Natur
Nobody Can‘Tell.
neer ci
Sunday
month, delivered ___________ ...
months, by mall (In advance)
year, by mail (In advance) ..
lugs
in his arm
Don’t Stay Gray
ally that
N. Locust St. Both Phones
Single Ticket 75 Cents. Series $1.00
nil* the whole outdoors,
irain refreshing, pours,
■ Rights and sotinvis and
fascinate all normal
men arc
4 NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
•^Any erroneous reflection upon the character, reputation or standing of any
firm, individual or corporation will be gladly corrected upon being called to the
•Mention of the publishers.
When you see an ugly, squinch-eyed
fellow in Denton, he is the Amicable
Life man, T. C. Frank.
SAGE TEA PUTS LIFE
AND COLOR IN HAIR
Biou^l Here Monday
on Charge of Seduction
Weekly entered as second class mail matter at postofflee at Denton, Texas, under
: net of Coagrss, .March 3, 1873. — J
ftniiy entered as second class mall matter, August 23, 1903. at the postofflee at
■ Denton, Texas, under act of Congress, March 3, 1873.
All subscriptions to the Weekly Record and Chronicle discontinued at expiration.
Pick out some floorrfn your
house that is scratched and
worn and catches dirt in every
crack—hunt up the chair that
is battered and marred and
ready to be thrown away—
then come to us for a can of
Stainfloor i < .
Always fresh vegetables and fruits.
FRANCIS M. CRADDOCK. JR.
Miss Jusitna Smith, tvho is directing
the cast of the Setofir D. H. S. class play,
entertained the seven members of the
cast and Miss Malone at dinner at Stod-
dard Hall’Saturday evening. The party
were sealed at a special table, with
decorations of roses and fern, and a
most enjoyable occasion made of the
hospitality.
meet-
lodge
were
One year (In advance)__
&x months (In advance)»
Three months (In advance)
of May, A. I). 1915.
G. H. WATSON.
No. 1, Denton Coun-
5-10-3 Mons.
Now’ get busy before it is
. They are good for this
cause,
rest r
of th.'
Members of th'1 <’■
Annie Webb planton
Mrs. W. J. Ml’Cray,
Miss Norma Slmith.
(Issued every day except Sunday.)
RECORD AND CHRONICLE COMPANY
Editor. ■ L.
MEMBERS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Telephones (Old and New) 64.
Publication Office, R Went Hickory Street
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
You can turn
fully dark and
night if you’ll _
•‘Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound’’
at any drug store. Millions of bottles
of this old, famous Sage Tea Recipe are
sold annually, says a well-known drug-
gist here, because it darkens the hair so
naturally and evenly that no one can
tell it l>as been applied.
Those whose hair is turning gray, be-
coming faded, dry, scraggly and thin
have a surprise awaiting them, because
after one or two applications the gray
hair (Vanishes and your Jocks become
luxuriantly dark and beautiful—all dan-
druff goes, scalp itching and falling hair
KOH)
This is the age of youth Gray-bair-
e<l, unattractive folks aren't wanted
around, so get busy with Wyeth’s Sage
and Sulphur tonight and you’ll be de-
lighted with your dark, handsome hair
and your youthful appearance within
a few days. (Advertisement.)
BERNE, Switzerland. May
reported I hr I 10.000 German1
Saturday and Sunday.
Denton Water
Light Dep’t.
MORE RAIN SUNDAY NIGHT;
FARMWORK BADLY DELAYED
GENEVA. Switzerland. May
merous American business
leaving Geneva.
conserva
In a paper before the South
gray, faded hair beauti-
lustrous almost over
get a 50 cent bottle of
FOR THREE NEW NORMALS.
AUSTIN, May 10.—Senators Hender-
son, Parr, Smith, Brelsford and others
are working on the bill creating three
new State normal colleges and placing
their location in the hands of a board
composed of the Governor, Lieutenant-
Governor and Attorney General. The
bill will be introduced this week.
The opponents Of the insurance bill
claim a victory as the result of the first
test in the House and it is claimed that
defeat is practically sure in the House,
while in the Senate eighteen votes are
pledged against the effort'to amend the
Robertson law.
n-y may not bite on other folks, .
Biit they just chew op me until
ley nearly drive me ravin’ mad,
And make me want to slash and kill
LADONIA—Cashier P. T. "Hooks of the
First National bank was shot.. W
Red) Bennett surrendered. Hook
not seriously hurt, although nin
from a shotgun took effect
and body.
DALLAS—Miss Hattie Fenley was hit
ay the city automobile amublance when
(truck by a jitney. She was se-
hurt.
It makes the
answers the ques-
d I make this?
AGUAS CALIENTES—Gen. Pena with
1500 Villistas left Friday for the north,
presumably to reinforce Torreon which
is expecting an attack from Gen. Guiit-
terrez' force of nearly '2,000 men.
Smith, C. C
, J. Butler, J
B. Brandon
Nathan John
Began, J. W
J. K. Holland, E. B
W. H Street, J. M
J. L. Beaty, W. G
enton Record-Chronicle
MINEOLA, N. Y.,—Mrs. Florence Car-
man was acquitted of the murder of
Mrs. Louise D. Bailey at Freeport, N. Y.
MONEY IS GETTING CHEAPER
I have money to loan on Mrm lands.
Why not get my rate before placing a
loan on your farm?
JOE L. BLEWETT, i
(Office in Exchange Bank Building.)
W ‘il’.e Mountain Ice Cream Freeze H,
82 up, at Evers’.
Averaging about two cents a mile in daily use,
Ford cars are a necessity to every business
man, doctor, salesman or farmer. And they
serve the family just as well. Every man is his
own mechanic with a Ford. No need of high-
priced experts. And “Ford After Service for
Ford Owners” is a good thing to remember.
Buyers will share in profits if we sell at retail
300,000 new Ford cars between August 1914
and August 1915. H
Runabout $440; Touring Car $490; Town Car
$090; Coupelet $760; Sedan $975 f. o. b. De-
troit with all
’No," said the manager, “but
audience would.” k
prevalence, the tor
nado will never be
evere. A family
should not be
handy for all
at your drug-
the Sal Ro»» Cafcnp decorated the graves
of their deceased members at the Odd
Fellows’ eemetjery Sunday afternoon.
There were ninety-nine graves of de-
ceased Confederate ex-soldhw in the
cemetery ami on all of which there were
placed appropriate floral deco rat urns
in honor of the fellowship and esteem
hept for them by their surviving com-
rades of the ball tiefield.
A large crowd of relatives and friends
and k’number [of visitors attended the
decoration exercises held at 3 o’clock.
There was an almost unlimited number
of flowers obtainable for the purpose.
Alvin, M. Owsley delivered the only ad-
dress made at the decoration.
On next Sunday the Su| Roas Camp
will decorate the graves of deceased
Confederate Veterans in the City ceme-
tery. They will hold their regular
business meeting at 2 o’clock that after-
noon in order ’ to be ready to go to
the cemetery at 3 o'clock for the deco-
ration.
Following is the list of those whose
glfaves were decorated Sunday and
should there be more the Confederate
veterans request that their names be
turnd in to the Sul Ross Camp:
L. Simmons, S. M. Simmons, J. M.
Copley, Captain S. J Woodward, Mer-
cer, Green Wilson, E. C. ~
Daugherty, F. J. B. Neely
A. Brown, Jim Long, J.
J. H Mounts, .1 J. May,
son. Uriah Spong, J. H.
Gober, Wm. Terry
Peter, J. D. Parks,
Fry, T. A. LeMay,
Evans, G. S. Hafmett, J. W. Inge, A. E.
Allen, J. H. Goode, Elder Sam McKelvy,
B. F. Taylor, L. T. Fowlks, J. T. Jones,
Colonel O. G. Welch, W. G. Sledge, W.
C. Clark, J. A. Kennin, J. A. C. Sprouse,
Bass, D. M. Russell, A. Griffith, J. J.
Keesee, J. W. Cunningham, R. W. Pit-
man, I). L. Hill, Thos. N. Skiles, W . C.
Wright, J. P. Turner, Dr. H. Owsley,
O. C. George, Bi E. Greenlee, I. P. Sub-
lett, C. M. Eads, Dr. C. Lipscomb, W.
H. Taylor, L. L. Stroud, H. H. Dawson,
J. B kearby, Dr. D. M. Stewart, M. W.
Deavenport, Dr. C. L. Herbert, J. R.
Burton, Randolph Paine, R. A. Carruth,
D. J. Carter, Wm. Burris, Q C. Scruggs,
R, H. Bates, Rev. R. J. Hoskins, W. J.
Lacy,' R. S. Roiss, W. J. Grady, T. J.
Porter, Hugh McKenzie, R. D. Gillespie,
J. D.- Whayne, E. 11 Egan. Roswell
Chapman, Rev. Alsup, Captain J. M.
Roark, T. M. Jones, Colonel T. W. Ab-
ney, E. Biggerstaff, T. J. Conley, W. M.
Davidson, H. H. Hoocker, J. M. Johnson,
A. R. Durham, W. A. Edwards, J. W.
Wilks, Colonel Wm. Woods, Clardy, J.
S. Chapman, J. Garson Parr, F. E. Piner,
Judge J. A. Carroll, Thos. E. Hogg.
long range gun would help,
a big machine gun might:
odd send them from the front
iter fight.
WASHINGTON—An attempt to assas-
sinate President Garza was made by
troops led by Gen. Barnes, former mili-
tary commander of Mexico City. His
men were repulsed after severe fight-
ing with losses to both sides, accord-
ing to State Ih’partnient advices. The
situation in the capital is reported to be
critical as the result of the rupture be-
tween Gen. Zapata and Gen Garza.
GENEVA, Switzerland, May 10 — An It-
alian army 600,000 strong and ready for
the held is Concentrated at Vienna, a
strongly fortified town just twenty-
five miles from the Austrian frontier.
Austrians and Germans are reported
fleeing frdm every pari of Italy and all
trains for the nortlomn frontier are full
of foreigners, including merchants and
officials. Notice was given of the sup-
pression of a number of trains and of
the suspension of telephone service
across thej border.
Italy haft called to colors all reserves
of infantry- from 1876 and many troop-
trains arei reported going toward the
frontier. '
NORMAN, Ok.—A mob composed of a
dozen white men fr<>m Noble, eight
miles south of here, took Dr. B. E.
Ward, a white man, from the jail here
and hanged him to a tree. Ward, a
week ago, while under ttie influence of
liquor, stabbed his wife to death at
Noble. *
The funeral services of Mrs. Etta
Yerhy Turpin, wife of L. E. Turpin, who
died late Friday evening, were held
Saturday 'afternoon at the First Bap-
tist church, a large crowd of friends
and relatives of the family being in at-
tendance. Rev. M. E. Hudson was in
charge of the service, and there was
special music. Interment followedrin
the I. O. O. F. cemetery at 4 o’clock.
Mrs. Turpin is survived by several
brothers and sisters, by her husband
and five children, one boy and four
girls. A sister, Miss Avis Yerby, died
a few months ago.
Windstorms Destroy.
Our Policies Construct
dividual. When population was
sparse, and every family had a
demesne of a few thousand acres,
lack of sanitation and cleanliness
laid a penalty that was borne by
the offenders against cleanliness
alone. But under present day con-
ditions, no man can escape all the
consequences of his neighbor’s
carelessness and filth, and the au-
thority of the government should
be readily at hand for his protec-
tion.
AUSTRO-GERMANS IN
ITALY LEAVE; ITALY
ORDERS OUT RESERVE
At the Dreamland.
"Iiavid Harum," appearing at
Dreamland Theater this afternoon
tonight in five reels, features William
H. Crape. The play is a reproduction
of the story by Edward N. Westcott of
the same title and depicts a well-known
type still existent in many of the rural
districts of the country. Westcott in
ffis own words expresses the motto of
tFi7r type, “Do unto the other fellow the
way he'd like to do unto you,—an’ do
it fust.” Among the amusing incident!
arising when David finds the old “deal
kin” in a pouring rain beafing the balky
horse tie traded him and stands back
and laughs at the good man. Consider-
able humor develops when David goes
to Newport and makes his initial ap-
pearance in a dress suit borrowed from
his guest.
8. H. Deavenpert & Go
1 INSURANCE
Builduii
Although the price of flour
has advanced surprisingly
of late, we are giving you
same weight and size
loaf of bread as we have
“ here-to-fore.
• Whooplnji Votigli
Well—everybody knows the effect ot
pine forests ojn coughs. Dr. BeH’s Pine-
Tar-Honey is a remedy which brings
quick relief fpr whooping cough, loos-
tns the mucqus, soothes the lining of
the throat ’arid lungs, and makes the
coughing spejls h
with growing children
without it. [Keep it
coughs and <jolds. , 25c
gist’s. (Advertisement.
Electric Gitters a Spring Tonic
your
house
following dcscril
All rigid, title
fondant Emory ‘
acres of land in
and State of Texas
miles northeast of the town
Texas, and being a part of
Bridges League and Labor
4605 acres, Abstract No. 36,
No. 242, Survey No. ;2>45, and
the old \\
REST ROOM COMMITTEE TO
CANVASS FOR BOOKS FOR
' LIBRARY AT REST RpOM
GEOERGETOWN—Five thousand at
tended the W. g. W. unveiling serxice
here. Senator Sheppard delivered tin
principal address.
THE INEVITABLE
Fran the Kansas
manager of a v
cinct f, Denton Coun-
upon and will
urt house door
on the 1st day
t I lie first Tie S-
.ve> n Hi" hours
THE BEN GREET PLAYERS
C. I. A. Wednesday, May 12
TEMPLE—Little hope is >
for the safety of-T. J Silva <
who is believed to have gon
the Lusitania.
Those centipedes that seem so
numerous about the courthouse
must think they are entitled to
run with the courthouse bunch be-
cause of their (the centipedes’'
that is) numerous legs. But there
is DQ centipede or millipede either,
for that matter, which can run in
the class of the courthouse bunch,
which is made up of “some run-
ners.”
i have 'em killin' pesky tilings
Hi d ain't a note o' honest word
stead of te.irin' arms and legs
\nd blowing humans off the cart!
BIG SANDY—An unknown negro, al
leged to have shot and fatally wound
ed J. A. Philrnon, a car inspector, w^i
taken from jail and banged by a mob.
The twenty-one “outlaw" in
suranct* companies that skurried
out of Texas when asked to in-
vest a proportion of their Texas
premiums in Texas securities en-
joyed a gross income from Texas
policv holders of about $10,(XX),-
000 a year. Now they want to
come back ami invest $6,000,000
a year for four or five years if
we will open up the $16,01X1,000
field to them without charge for
all time to come. And, in this con
nection, it is good to see that the
firett skirmish in the Legislature
resulted unfavorably to the effort
at amending the Robertson law to
suit the “outlaw" companies. Let
tMem come back on an equal foot-
ing with the companies that, re-
•raained and those which have
organized, or otherwise let them
jfitav out aiid let us invest that
000,000 a year with companies
Willing to invest the bulk of it in
. Texas loans and Texas securities.
Tn 1913 the seven companies
which succeeded to the Tobacco
trust' after its dissolution spent
$23,500,(XX) for advertising
against $11,000,000 in 1911. The
aggregate profits of the successor
companies,
•Teau report
191'1 and that was
net T>rofits
1911, albeit
ness showed
crease. But
A few minutes of easy work
with Stainflpor will give the
floor a clean, bright vamiah
gloss, and make the chair as
new and neat as the day it left
the store. In One simple
operation ypu can re-stain
and varnish floors, woodwork
CONSTABLE’S >\LE OF RE\I EM M l
Stat-’ ■ f Texas Cmint) of Denim)
JuMi'-e's Cmirl. Premnct Ni
xirtue of :fn execution issued
•cinct N'<>
Texas, by
County, St
Cormick, .1
Prcincf. on
court on It
Dr. Doxvl ing of the Louisiana
State Board of Health estimates
that the 5,(XXJ,(KX) families in the
Southern states spend $28,750,000
annually for medical attendance
and medicines. Five dollars and
■eVenty-five cents per annum is.
he estimates, the minimum per
family, and he uses the minimum
in making his,estimate
tivel.*]'
ern Sociological Congress at Hous-,
he told of one Southern city in
which in 1914 there xvere 1087
(-deaths from tuberclulosis; ty-
phoid fever alone has cost the
state of Virginia $3,280,950 in five
years. Malaria in a Louisiana com-
munity caused a net economic loss
in diminished productivity of 25
per cent. And yet tuberculosis is
classed among the preventable
diseased, while typhoid fever and
malaria are due solely to infection
that care and attention to sanita-
tion can certainly remove. The
^mfignjtion of the fact that enor-
mous economic losses are every
year due to diseases which proper
safeguards and care could elirai-
i nate will go a long way toward
securing those safeguards and
care. That is largely the factor
in the present efforts at cleaner
cities and towns. And the health
| department of every county and
i city as well should have not only
s authority to inspect uncleanly and
| insanitary premises and < issue
warnings, but, if those warnings
are disregarded, to go in and
condemn the premises as insani-.
according to the Bu-
, were $29,755,958 in
decrease in
f $1.250,(XX) from
ic volume of busi-
i very material in-
i $30.(MX).(MX) profit
ori an investment of $250,000,000
is a right neat little dividend for
all that. And the successor com-
panies, estopped from being a
trust, are using a powerful weap-
on to control the business by the
use of advertising space on a huge
scale.
flat gTiHinil having
from the w. t winter
that on the higher g
best in every fle|fl. S'
brought here .Monday from the \V
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ I. M. D ♦ ♦ + H
PERMISSIBLE WARFARE
I wish that Germany would lend
Dne uf her great big guns to me
I’d blow some firty-milliien flies
Rigtit off into eternity.
date and title.
iphic kodak you make the
almost instantly, on the film
lime the exposure is made,
lutograpbie feature has been
to almost the entire kodak
1915, and autographic backs
! obtained for most all old
models. Make ;
iphic. H may be
at a small cost
ra charge for autographic
offer for sale at tin
in Ilenton Count. T<
of June, im,5, same I
day in. said month.
\l flic Princess.
"The Wishing* Ring.” presented at the
Princess Theater this afternoon and to-
night, features Vivian Martin in a most
fascinating role. Sally, daughter of the
Parson of a poor church, steals flowers
from the garden of old Annesley to put
in Itie vases of the church. Annesley
is annoyed at the disappearance of hi$
flpvers and quarrels with the garden-
•f. for which lie receives the latter'i
apron in his face. Giles, son of the
gouty Earl of Bateson, is expelled from
college and escapes from he private
tutor and old Annesley gives him tliri
job of tending his flowers. There Sail^
and he met and the remainder of the
story deals with their romance and thri
tinal happy marriage.
Don’t wait, don’t delay
INSURE NOW.
Wi )RTH—Preliminary
he forty-second grand
f the Knights of Pythia
held Monday forenoon, the grand lodg>
sessions beginning in the afternoon.
public auction to th“
for cash in hand. Hie
•cd real estate, to-wit:
and interest of the de-
tpalding, in and to 134
County of Denton
situated about 1’2
of Denton,
the James
survey of
Certificate
known as
palding homestead; said
real estate being levied upon as (lie
property of Emory Spalding and to sat-
isfy an execution issued out of said
Justice Court on the 4th daf of May,
1915. tn favor of Fox Bros. 4 Co., L. T.
Fox, sole owner,
Sp. 11 ding
7 his, the 8th day
The wise housewife knows
Rogers Stainfloor because its
use saves money on furniture
bills and prevents hours of
weary scrubbing on worn and
battered stirfaces.
There’s g use for Stainfloor
in your horme this very minute
-fake a can home with you
Calumet
goes farther
than other bak-
ing powders—
and it’s moder-
ate in cost.
Insist on it
at j our grocers.
RECEIVED
HIGHEST
AWARDS
World’* Pure Food
Exposition, ChicacOe
IlUnou.
Paris— —$ .
France, klarcii, 1912
I like a big torpedo shell
Tn blow them into little hits,
they'd stop buzzin’ roun my chair
And givin’ me a dozen, fits.
It is sujre in
perfect leaven-
ing and raising
qualities, in
w bbl eso ineness,
in purity.
Per fectly
raised, mcltiug-
ly tender bis-
cuit, cake^ muf-
fins, griddle
cakes,are bound
to result from
its use.
Your orders are delivered promptly
Give me i trial.
FRANCIS M. CRADD0CK. JR.
Between the PESSIMIST and the OPTIMIST, regarding property vi
Denton and lands in Denton County. We sold two farms last week
le city property. I told you it was coming,
late—investigate these RED HOT BARGAINS.
:k only— .■ , > ! ■ > Tf
100 acres of lard only 822.60 per acre.
»-room house near Normal, only 83,250. It will sell for 84,500 before Oct.
Let me tell yoa about them.
Th'1 committee in charge
ronin are mailing an effort
a small eirciillating library
room, and ar( asking f(< donations of
children's bo^ks and of standard or re-
cent novels, Or any other fairly-well
bound books in good condition
Those having works uf fiction which
tlioy have read and do not care to keep,
tlerni for this
ay it, the eom-
iidates for st^ge honors on
week and this is how he let
•f the would-be funny rnen
“Your songs won t do for me. I
can't allow any profanity in my thear
ter,” Said tie.
'But I don’t use profanity,” was thf
reply.
QUEER PEOPLE. ,r .
There are some bdtows in this land
whose doings Lxwt't uhderstand. The
chaps who ait.’mund playing rwnls,
when spring inspires the lilting bards,
when sunshinil
except when Xi
when there are
12 00 scents which
84 00 gents; how can mon sit, In folly’s name,
and play a stupid, dreary game * They’re
sitting in a musty
room, enshrouded in
i-ix kinds of gloom,
-■ and as they shuffle,
cut arid deal, the rob-
wri ins raise their glad-
Hmw spiel, the hum-
J 7 ming birds come
forth and hum, and
Nature says to man-
kind, “Come, enjoy
the beauties of the
spring, the
BJN tenor thrushes sing,
enjoy the catbird's
mellow tune, which
doesn't cost a picune The world just
now is sweet and cleat), with skies of
blue and fields of gr»*eti, so come, en-
joy it while ye may; the springtime
soon will pass away.” And still those
fellows are on guard, and still they ply
the greasy card, the air around them
dense with smoke, until a crocodile
would choke. Sane, healthy men are
hoeing beans or picking chinchbugs
from their greens, or planting bushes
in their yards—but these queer guys are
play ing cards
are requested
purpose i m Tv
mitlef will mpk
vas among cl|ib members and as many
others as lin y can visit on that day.
Titos.' tiavifig bowks to give, are re-
quested to hajvv them ready for eolb'C-
14on. it will be impossible to canvas
tire entlr^ toxyn, and the committee re-
hat afly one xvhem tiwy may fail
.xho lips books to donate to ttiis
flioiildi either take them to the
• m or telephone some member
•ommilltee to call for them.
mmfttee are Miss
Mrs. E. H. Smith,
Irs. J A\’. Pender.
Do it
YOURSELF
with
The important photographic
dex eloprnent in tyo decades is the
Autographic kodak
record anther
lions: When
Where. w«s this taken? Every
negative worth taking is worth
such a date and title. With the
Autoyr^
record,
at the i
The I
added I
line for
may b(
folding'
That’s what
you want, and
tliat’s what Cal-
umet is guaran-
teed to give
you—
Walter Wilson was brought here from
Thomas, tikla., [Monday noon by Sheriff
Gallafher, under arrest on a charge of
seduction filed against him in Justly
Court pending the action of the Grand
Jury;. The prosecuting witness is a
young woman of the Green Valley com-
munity. It was thought at 1 o’clock
Monday afternoon that when his ex-
amining trial was called, which will
probably be some time this afternoon,
that he would xvaive examining trial.
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 230, Ed. 1 Monday, May 10, 1915, newspaper, May 10, 1915; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1213638/m1/2/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.