Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 53, Ed. 1 Friday, October 15, 1915 Page: 2 of 4
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11.00
GRAND LEADER CO
imw
Southwest Corner Square
DENTON, TEXAS, OCTOBER 15, 1915
One of the Good Features of National Clothes
That’s what
distinction
known that
THE NATIONAL CLOTHIBIS
mans
Both Phones
2 MILLION BELGIANS
GENERAL NEWS BRIEFS
FROM ANOTHER VIEWPOINT
I. M. D
zone
while
DENTON 23 YEARS AGO
COL. HOUSE MAY BE BEST MAN
OSDO
04.00
to an empty
alarm what
y of the nation
Greek people. It
LONDON, Oct. 15.—At was official-
ly announced here today that Serbia
has declared war on Bulgaria.
DALLAS—S. M. U. football team de
feated Hendrix College of Conway, Ark.
by a 13 to 2 score.
long
fish,
WAR; CLAIMS SERBS
ATTACKED BULGARS
fni Mn Asks Cut Ml to
Rnuu Father's Comrictto.
"Philadelphia won; so did we—just
an awful little— not nearly enough to
be sinful—hardly more than enough to
keep the frog in our throat from crok-
ing itself to death after the shouting.”
—Corpus Christi Caller.
Philadelphia won what’—oh—er—yes;
she did—to be sure.
WICHITA FALLS, Oct. 15.—The joint
city and county hospital of Wichita
Fails was to be opened to patients to-
day. The hospital board of this institu-
tion is composed of two physicians,
two laymen and one woman.
DALLAS, Oct. 15.—Governor James E
Ferguson is to be the chief speaker to-
night at the annual dinner of the Dal-
las Laywers’ club. Attorneys from sev-
eral Texas cities were expected as
guests of the Dallas lawyers.
crowd sur-
"Hurrah for
shook their
AUSTIN, Oct. 15.—A new policy in the
organization of farmers’ institutes in
Texas is to be adopted by Fred W. Da-
vis, State Commissioner of Agriculture,
which, he believes, will increase the
efficiency of the work of institute lec-
turers. The plan proposes that those
lecturers shall live with farmers in ru-
ral districts and keep in closer touch
with their needs and also be in better
position to organize institutes. Hitherto
these lecturers have resided in Austin
or other cities.
GREECE "LOOSENING HER SWORD.”
ATHENS, Oct. 15—"Greece to merely
loosening her sword," declared King
Constantine to the .Associated Press.
“She menaces no one. But she eannot
permit that events shall constitute a
menace to the lot
or the freedom of
is my duty to preserve my country
from the danger of destruction thru be-
coming Involved in the general Europe-
an conflict. I hope to do this at all haz-
ards—if it is possible."
♦ AU Kinds of Plumbing and Re- ♦
♦ pair Work done Promptly and ♦
♦ Satisfactorily. ♦
♦ FOX BROS. A CO., ♦
♦ W’eat Oak Street ♦
sixteen
dreadnaughts
The President
today on the
Governor Ferguson Addresses
Dalles Lawyers’ Club Tonight
filed to
Reichinan
city offi-
the pro-
PLAINVIEW, Oct. 15.—All lakes in the
plains country are now covered with
millions of wild ducks and hunters are
having fine sport. Sportsmen from
other parts of the State are here to
shoot ducks, which have not as yet
moved on south in large numbers.
of your
savings
,’ whose
—London
♦ GARAGE AND PUBLIC SERVICE ♦
♦ CARS ♦
♦ For trips anywhere. ♦
♦ FOX BROS. A CO., ♦
♦ West Oak Street ♦
5,(MM) BELGIAN CIVILIANS KILLED.
PARIS, Oct. 15.—A Havre Havas dis-
patch says that over 5,5000 Belgian ci-
vilians have been killed by order of the
German military authorities since the
war began.
NEWARK, N. J., Oct. 15.—Members of
the Freshman class of the New Jersey
Law school were greatly relieved today
when Dr. Calvin McClelland gave a de-
cision illustrative of the law of pos-
session, that a baseball thrown by a
pitcher is still in his legal possession
when it is midway between the pitcher
and the plate. The decision was made
on the ground that the ball had not
at that point been intercepted by either
the catcher or batter.
A FIXED PURPOSE.
Let fortune smile her sweetest smile
On me, and line with gold
My lean and hungry purse, still I’ll
To one fixed purpose hold,
I will not wear a hummer shirt;
Whatever sum she leaves,
With my initials, I assert,
Embroidered on the sleeves.
Let fortune shower her gifts on me
And smooth my troubled way,
And leave me absolutely free
From care and want each day.
To this 1’11 hold until with me
Old Charon’s ferry leaves;
No shirt of mine shall ever be
Embroidered on the sleeves.
—Detroit Free Press.
county. The
miles and
program, including
fighting ships—ten
six Hattie cruisers.
Secretary conferred
tribution of the program for the
years, on this point depending whether
or not the combined army and navy es-
timates for this year approximate 9400,-
000,000 or 932,000,000 more.
ATHENS, Oct. 15.—The Bulgarian
Minister notified the Greek government
that Bulgaria yesterday declared war
on Serbia because a Serbian column had
attacked the Bulgarians near Kostendi,
in Southwest Bulgaria, killing 70 and
wounding 500. A Sofia dispatch says
King Ferdinand has issued a manifesto
calling on the people and army to de-
fend the national soil “violated by a
perfidious neighbor and deliver their
brethren, oppressed beneath the Serbian
yoke.”
Advices received here are that Ger-
man skilled workmen have arrived at
Varna, Bulgaria, to assemble the sub-
marines shipped there in sections.-
NEW YORK, Oct. 15.—George F. Stack-
pole, the Long Island lawyer who was
stricken with anthrax, a human form
of charbon, several days ago, died this
morning from heart failure. Animal se-
rum, which had been injected in large
quantities into his body, had given
hope of effecting a cure, but the serum,
heretofore used only on livestock, evi-
dently caused too great a stimulation of
his heart.
The determined struggle made by Mr.
Stackpole, who is seventy-one years old,
and his physicians, and the unusual na-
ture of his disease, common to cattle,
but very rare among human beings, at-
tracted attention thruout the country.
A large amount of animal serum was
got from the Bureau of Animal Hus-
bandry at Washington for use in this
case.
rienced. It was a great success from every stand*
undreds of people took advantage of this opportunity
THE HAGUE, Oct. 15.—Arrangement
for provisioning 2,000,000 Belgian civil-
ians in East and West Flaqders has been
concluded by the German staff with the
American Relief Commission. The Ger-
man authorities have requisitioned at
fixed prices cereal and root crops over
a stated allowance for each family and
these will be turned over to the com-
mission for distribution. In place of
oats and rye the Germans will furnish
the commission with wheat. In ex-
change the commission undertakes to
import wheat sufficient to make up the
deficit, together with the usual ration
of bacon, rice, lard and fodder.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 15—Suffrage
leaders believe that the Administration
support of equal suffrage will bring
them much new strength in coming
campaigns and while disappointed that
the President and Secretaries McAdoo,
Garrison, Wilson and Redfield did not
go farther than announce their support
of state amendments, believe that even
this will be a material factor In the
national suffrage movement. The sup-
port of former Secretary Bryan Is also
counted on to aid the movement.
BOTH SIDES’ SUBMARINES ACTIVE.
LONDON, Oct. 15—Submarine activ-
ity continues on both sides. Seventeen
German ore steamers in the Baltic are
reported missing and are believed to
have been sunk by British submarines,
according to a Stockholm dispatch. Dur?
ing the week ending Thursday four Brit-
ish steakiers were sunk out of more
than 1,500 that entered or left British
ports
and giraffes get by? They’re all antl-
odactyl ungulate mammals of the rum-
inantia varitey, which is what cammiles
are.
New County-City Hospital at
Wichita Falls Opened Today
Plains Country Lakes Covered
With Millions of Wild Ducks
"We point with pride
city jail, but view with
may happen before morning."—Corsi-
cana Courier-Light.
If you had been an eigth grader, with
instructions to use two certain well
known (and well frayed) phrases in
a sentence illustration of their correct
use, you couldn’t have done better.
There’s the making of a political speak-
er in you.
FORT WORTH—C. L. Holbrook of
Sunset was killed by a steer which he
was trying to rope falling upon him.
PARIS—Ca! Burket, a 25-year-ohl
farmer, fell in the Sulphur river while
running a trot-line and was drowned.
FORT WORTH—The grand chapter ol
the Eastern Star closed Thursday, and
Corpus Christi was selected for the
1916 meeting.
GREENVILLE—Gas was struck in a
test well at Cash, ten miles south of
here, but it could not be learned in
what quantity.
FORT WORTH—It is announced that
cattlemen of this county will soon cir-
culate a petition asking for a tick
eradication election.
TERRELL—J. W. King escaped from
the insane asylum and was struck and
killed by a T. A P. passenger train In
the west part of the city.
SHERMAN—A message from Amarillo
says that David Pearson of Sherman
was drowned there, but the particulars^
were not given. He was 88 years old
and was weH known here.
EL PASO—Representatives of armed
Mexicans in Chihuahua have demanded
of the management of the Corralitos
Cattle Co., whobe ranch is in Chihuahua,
950,000 in gold, under threat to kill all
the cattle on the ranch.
SAN ANTONIO—An effort to have the
Legislature amend the county library
law so that libraries under trained li-
brarians may be established every-
where in Texas will be made by the
Texas Library association.
FORT WORTH—The state rested in
the Tom Cooper case, and the defense
has begun the introduction of tesil-
mony. Henry Vaughn, former police-
man, testified that Cooper did not be-
come aggressive until Coffey drew his
pistol, and that he did not know who
fired the fatal shot.
DALLAS—Announcement ^as made
here by representatives of one of the
largest railroad systems in the tSate
of the probable construction of a line of
railroad from Ballinger across Run-
nels county west to Bronte and Robert
Lee, county seat of Coke
extension will be forty
through a rich country.
AUSTIN—It has become
German agents offered to buy 1,000,000
bales of cotton through the State Ware-
house and Marketing Department at 3c
above the market price, if the govern-
ment would protect the delivery to
Bremen, Germany, Gov. Ferguson re-
fused on the ground that he did not
wish to embarrass the National gov-
ernment.
AUSTIN, Oct. 15 —For the first time in
its history’, according to officials here,
the State Court of Criminal Appeals has
been urged directly, through a special
delivery letter, not to reverse a case
now pending on its docket. Equally re-
markable is the fact that the writer, a
young man, pleads with the court not
to reverse or interfere with the judg-
ment of the trial court in his father’s
case. The father, the court records
show, was sentenced to eight years’ im-
prisonment for shooting his wife—the
mother of the writer of the special de-
livery letter. The young man points
out to the court that his father has
threatened to kill the entire family;and
for this reason urges that the verdict
of the trial jury remain undisturbed.
rave around and paw the dirt: for
every time your temper rfces, you do
your system grievous hurt. Go ask the
doctor, If you’re doubting the truths I
hand out by the ton, and he will say,
“You bet I You’re shouting! For an-
ger shortens lives, my son." Oh, when
with senseless rage you quiver, you
heat your blood, oppress your heart,
disorganize your patient liver, and quite
upset your applecart. Not only that,
but when you’re frantic, and rant
around and Jaw and scold, the people
note your curve and antic, and say
your head should be half-soled. Em-
ployers, too, will not desire you, they
will not like your hothead style; they'll
try you once, and then they’ll Are you
so hard you’ll bounce for half a mile.
How does the fair immortal Lillian
preserve her youth, while others slip?
She says she always counts a million,
before she lets her temper rip.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. W. Y. Fincher,
a (daughter.
N. H. and Dock Rector drove 1,000
sheep in from West Texas.
Captain W. G. Veal, who only a few
weeks before made a speech in Denton,
was killed in Dallas by Dr. R. H. Jones.
John Thompson and William Hard-
castle were the champion cotton pick-
ers of Willow Springs community.
Thompson 411 pounds and Hardcastle
408 pounds.
Two thousand eight hundred and six-
ty-three bales of cotton up to date.
Three hundred bales of cotton were
brought in Tuesday.
WANTED: A CHANGE
I wish I were a nightingale
So I could sing a song,
And only have to eat all
And sing the whole night
Or else I wish I were a
So I could flop and play
Out in the nice, cool, salty waves,
And swim around all day.
Or else I wish 1 were a lamb,
To gambol on the green
Like lambs do do; Tho not that I
Such lambs have ever seen.
But oh, most anything to change—
Just anything, to be
Some other thing a little
And not just always me.
Now comes the announcement that
the President’s daughter. Miss Margar-
et, Is to be married soon, probably on
the same day the President and Mrs.
Galt are wedded. Miss Wilson’s groom-
to-be, according to the report, is a 42-
year-oi< Widower of Chicago, head of a
publishing company. It’s some marry-
ing family
A. E. TABOR, Mgr. North Side Square
WE DO CLEANING AND PRESSING.
and he, if
bring some
conditions.
DODGING AN ISSUE.
“Do you know wher^ I can buy any
counterfeit money?" inquired the man
with a suitcase.
“Are you looking for trouble?"
“No. But I'm against the tipping evil
and at the same time I want to go
through the formalities and avoid be-
ing made uncomfortable by the wait-
ers.”
“Dishes the Boys Like," reads a press
headline. Who ever heard of a dish a
boy didn’t like?'’—Austin American.
Nothing except one of the empty va-
riety. 0
“The writer was befuddled the other
day at Temple for a reason why the
Ringling Bros, circus exhibited no cam-
els. He had never seen any sort of a
big circus minus at least a few camel.
Investigation developed the fact that
it is impossible to ship any breed of
cud-chewing animals on account of the
foot and mouth disease. Most states
are quarantined against this disease,
so the camels are left at home.”—Nav-
asota Examiner Review.
When the sacred prerogatives of the
wandering zoos are being encroached
upon by anarchistic laws, It is time to
call a speedometer. It is simply with-
out our limits to picture in our imag-
ination a circus without a cammile, as
much as it would be to think of a par-
ade without the elephant chain, or the
side show without the throaty gentle-
man and the tribe of tom-tom per-
formists, and far, far more than to call
up a mental vision of mince pie without
cheese. In fact, mince pie without
cheese would be minor calamity in
comparison with the awful tragedy of
a circus without cammiles. Really,
such a circus woud be one to which
the admissions should be confined ex-
clusively to adults, to guard against
such poignant woe as must follow on
the part of the little folks who have
been brought up, and educated, as it
were, to expect the ruminantic animal
with the hump as an inseparable ad-
Juct to the tent. It was at the circus
on an unloading day, when a line of
camels poked thefr noses or their heels
out one side of the long dun colored
tent, that we gained our first real ap-
preciation of certain descriptive pas-
sages in the “Light That Failed”— and
other of Kipling's tales in which the
desert traveler frequently figures. It
isn’t fair to make the cammile stay at
home because of a silly disease regu-
lation. Whoever heard of a sick cam-
mile? Nobody ever saw one that wasn’t
happy and red-blanketed. And any-
ways if the cammiles couldn't come,
how did the oxen and sheep and goats
and antelopes, llamas and chevrotans,
LONDON, Oct. 15.—Retaliation against
Germany for “the cold-blooded butch-
ery in the dead of night” by Zeppelins
was strongly urged at a mass meeting
yesterday. Two members of Parlia-
ment were the principal speakers. The!
sending of at least 200 aeroplanes to I
drop bombs on Cologne, Coburg and
other German towns was urged as a.i
systematic policy of reprisal “as the
only effective means of putting a stop
to Zeppelin raids on London and other
towns.”
NEW YORK—The keel for the new
915,000,000 superdreadnought California
has been laid at the Brooklyn Yard.
NEW ORLEANS—Frequent earth-
quakes in Salvador during the past sev-
en weeks have caused the death of 200
people.
NORFOLK—Six warrant officers are
missing from the interned German ship
Kronprlnz Wilhelm and search is being
made for them.
WASHINGTON—Arnold Shanklin,
consul general in Mexico City, has re-
signed to accept employment by .an oil
corporation in Mexico.
ST. HELENA, Ore.—W. E. Stout kill-
ed his divorced wife and her sister,
Mrs. S. M. Todd, and then set his house
afire and killed himself.
CHICAGO—The voting control of the
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific, in
the hands of a receiver, passed from
the hands of the Reid-Moore interests.
MEMPHIS—Suit has been
remove from office Sheriff
of Shelby county and the
cials for failure to enforce
hibition laws.
MIDWAY ISLAND—The crew of the
scooner O. M. Kellogg, which was
wrecked on a reef Sept. 25, have been
rescued after being afloat two weeks in
two small boats.
WASHINGTON—The Department of
Justice has had under surveillance for
several months Max Louden, who was
reported to be gathering information
for Germany about forts and arsenals
in the United States.
NEW YORK—Charges have been made
against Dr. Newell Dwight Hillis of the
Plymouth church (hat he make quick
and fabulous profits through selling
British Columbia timber claims to min-
isters and other friends.
ANDERSON, S. C.—Congressman Le-
ver is not surprised at the decision of
Judge Hough of New York declaring
the cotton futures act unconstitutional.
He expects the United States Supreme
Court to reverse the decision. ,
NEW YORK—A representative of a
large oil importing firm of Copenhag-
en is authority for the statement that
the Scandinavian countries will now
look to America instead of Russia to
supply fuel and lubricating oils.
Will Have Farmers' Institute
Lecturers Live Among Farmers
WHATS THeU
HAN'T Mil
IT'S AS DIRTV
Report of Texan’s Prominent Wedding
Part Is Renewed.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 15.—It is again
reported that Col. E. M. House of
Texas is to be best man at the Presi-
dent’s wedding to Mrs. Norman Galt
We have not found ourself in accord
with the strenuous Colonel on the war
questions, not to mention others, but
Ng strictures on hyphenated Ameri-
cans and his ideas of their constituting
a serious menace to the permanent
welfare of this country are not only to
be commended, but, if possible, to be
put into effect. An excerpt from his
LONDON, Oct. 15.—In a note to (be
British government, Greece has an-
nounced her definite decision not to
intervene in the war in behalf of
Serbia.
LONDON, Oct. 15.—The British public
is considerably perturbed over the re-
port that Berlin is openly boosting of
a secret treaty between Greece, Ger-
many and Bulgaria. King Constantine's
demeanor and altitude are causing in-
numerable surmtare as to the real in-
tentions of the Greek government, and
while it is almost impossible to believe
the Greeks will Join the Central Em-
pires, unquestionably there are some
indications In support of the idea.
Italy’s seizure of islands in the Medi-
terranean has caused some feeling in
Greece, where Italy has aaver been
popular on account of conflicting Inter-
ests.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 15—With increas-
es in arrny and navy budgets on the
basis of “preparedness" and with other
governmental expenditures, especially
in the State Department increased by
the European war, the estimates for the
coming year for the Federal govern-
ment will probably reach a total of
91,240,000,000—the largest peace appro-
priations in the history of the United
States. To provide for this enormous
expenditure, Congress will be obliged to
provide for additional revenue or the
executive branch must issue bonds. Es-
timates of the revenues range from
9700,000.000 to 9750,000,000 at the outside,
and there is a deficit of 933.000,00 for
the current year.
Naval Program Decided On.
Secretary Daniels, in agreement with
the General Naval Board, has practical-
ly decided on the 5-year construction
capital
and
and
dis-
five
SUFFRAGISTS EXPECT
MUCH BENEFIT FROM
PRESIDENT’S SUPPORT
whereby they
and to war?
every right to
its citizens, be
V. ; 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
attention of the publishers.
absolutely certain way of
Is Nation to ruin, of pre-
possibility of its continu-
Nation at all, would be to
become a tangle of squab-
lalities, with an intricate
Jerman-Americans. Irish-
FEDERAL BUDGET FOR
COMING YEAR TOTALS
OVER BILLION DOLLARS
be able to
the present
increasingly
of the canal
the difficul-
ing a halt, be his hyphenation
whatever name or species.
GROUCHES PUNISHED.
At the present moment in Rome If
one Is not In sympathy with “the great
national sentiment," it is better to hold
one’s tongue.
On a recent evening in front of a
newspaper office, where some moving
pictures of soldiers on the march were
being shown, a well-dressed man re-
marked :
“Ah, our poor children!
they’ve come to!”
Instantly an indignant
rounded him, shouting:
the Italian army!” Men
fists at him.
Suddenly a herculean workman ad-
vanced and said: “Where are your
children? Are they fighting?”
The well dressed man was obliged to
admit that he had no chidlren.
“Cursed alarmist!” shouted the peo-
ple. “You’ve got no children, and
you’re making all this fuss. “We’ll
teach you to complain!”
They were about to give the “alarm-
ist" a rude lesson when another man
pushed his way through the crowd. He
was a tall, well-built man, and is well
known in the capital.
“Don’t touch him,” he said. “Leave
him to me.”
Then, turning to the condemned man,
who was white and trembling, he com-
manded him to give up all the money
he had on him.
The other hesitated, but the order was
repeated in a tone which convinced him
that he had better obey. He handed
over about twenty shillings.
“There,” said the recipient, “there’s a
couple of shillings. Take a cab and
clear off quickly. The rest
money will be placed in the
bank for these ‘poor children
fate you've been lamenting.
Daily Mirror.
Wednesday’s night's raid brought the
total announced casualties from Zeppe-
lin raids to 640, 177 of whom were kilL
ed. The censorship is so rigid that it
is difficult to get figures as to losses of
property, but the mass meeting Indi-
cates that the damage has been much
heavier than has been officially admit-
ted. The Germans claim to have de-
stroyed at least one warship In the
Thames by Zeppelin bombs and to have
inflicted millions of dollars’ worth of
damage by incendiary bombs.
-—
Advertising, we have long known, is
good for almost anything, but a New
York woman has put it to a new and
poreetofi1! use. She and her daughter
were victims of idle gossip of the wo-
men of the town, according to a New
York dispatch, so she bought space in
the local newspapers and printed a
straight-forward warning to the “wo-
men who stood over their gates all
day and peek over at their neighbors
all night to see what they can find to
talk about next day." "Gossip," says
the chronicler, “has been stilled in that
town."
ever ex
point
Year (in advance)--
Months (in advance)—
Subscriptions to the Weekly Record-Chronicle discontinued at expiration
may return to Europe
The United States has
the undivided loyalty of
they by birth or adop-
tion. We believe, for that matter, it
has that undivided loyalty among the
overwhelming majority of the foreign-
born or of foreign-bom parents. It is
not our duty to question
sympathy with his fatherland or even
that of his forebears—’tis perfectly
natural that he should feel that way.
But when that sympathy becomes so
misguided as to undermine his loyalty
to the United States, it is time for call-
French-Americans, or Scandinavian-
Americana, or Italian-Americans, each
preserving its separate nationality,
each at heart feeling more‘sympathy
with Europeans of their nationality
than with the other citizens of the
American Republic.”
Immigrants to this country presum-
ably came over here because of better
opportunities for growth, mentally,,
physically and spiritually, saying noth-
ing of financially. They left the older
countries. It may also be presumed, be-
cause they were dissatisfied with con-
ditions there. And, admitting the two
postulates, doesn't it seem, as Oswald
Villard so emphatically expressed it,
that if they are dissatisfied with Amer-
ica and peace, there are still routes
The Court of Criminal Appeals, re-
iterating Its former decision that the
local option pool ball law is constitu-
tional, merely continues the anomalous
legal condition of one court of last re-
sort upholding and the other denying
the constitutionality of the Legisla-
ture’* act. The Criminal court goes
further than reiteration, however
(with Judge Davidson, as usual, dis-
senting), and declares that the Supreme
i wrong—expressing the belief,
r, that the Supreme Court will
it* error if the matter is again
K*»ef°re it- A man can operate
in territory from which
Is- have been voted out, but he
ct to prosecution and punish-
conviction. The Criminal Court
als will uphold his conviction
lower courts. But if he has
it means to take the appeal to
>reme Court, it will, in the
previous actions, grant a writ
as corpus for the pool hall
elease. We have, then, in ef-
i law that a poor man violating
r must take his punishment,
ta>better-to-do, by appealing to
can escape—a condition
mMed to bring both the high-
>1 disrepute among laymen
■Tunable to understand just
‘law Is not a law, nor how a
Mw tn one high court and not
another.
REPORT OF GREEK
TREATY WITH TDRKS
DISTURBS BRITISH
Weekly entered as second class mail matter at postofflee at Denton, Texas, under
entered*as^second class mail matter, August 23, 1903, at the postoffice at
Denton, Texas, under act of Congress, March 3, 1873.
Ready-to-Wear and Millinery will convince you that this is the
greatest anniversary sale ever put on m Denton.
Our Store is FHiU of Good Bargains.
—You may expect from us a grade of clothing which ex
emplifies the greatest degree of character
in tailoring.
NATIONAL CLOTHES embody those style points
of superiority and style and construction that are neces*
sitated by our high standards.
—WE offer you a choice of new Fall Models of Suits and
How serious is the earlii-slide at
Panama is definitely shown by the an-
nouncement .that the reopening of the
canal to traffic cannot now be said.
Flral it was thirty days, then not until
January I and now an indefinite closing
of the canal. Col. Goethals has with-
drawn his resignation and announced
lic< will remain as Governor of the
until the trouble is over,
anybody, will
order out of
But It begins
to look as if the opening
was premature, and that
ties due to the topography and location
■elected are not yet over by any means.
To be of maximum use, there must be
no uncertainty about the canal being
open constantly to traffic. To date, the
opening has been followed by a series
of stoppages, of which the last is by
far Hie most serious, and it will not
require many more such mishaps to
reduce the expected benefits from the
canal to a very small minimum.
FIT—ANOTHER IS STYLE-AN-
OTHER IS TAILORING and the
other is PRICE.
STACKPOLE SUCCUMBS
TO ANTHRAX ATTACK
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 53, Ed. 1 Friday, October 15, 1915, newspaper, October 15, 1915; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1213787/m1/2/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.