Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 23, 1913 Page: 4 of 8
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ROOSEVELT AND THE PARTIES.
SUBSCRIPT ION KATES
IMMIGRATION AND DISEASE.
the
the
even
•Beef
thin
32(0
34.(0
not
their
Wil-
(arched
notice.
These
150
2fi6
Denton
Reuben
Clovis
The
email children,
be among the
arrived on an
One year (In advance ....
Six months (In advance; ..
Three months In advance
the
iron
that
The
the ear-
Snow it
Ok., •»d
at
Valiev
Horn, t
hoy.
Horn, t
in Bento
Miss II
worth.
Mrs. V
most cor
A R F
at the C
H. 0. -1
diS-
MW
, but h*
political
Wilson
Honest
of Troy,
After
light.
i-on,i-
OAK (
and Alle
friends
home.
Miss M
ed Mr.
family f
Born,
6, a bo)
Born,
son, Oct
Rev. N
at Oak
John
Georgr
Mr. an
who via
land, ret
* SAN
every ii
Free
The
Hallov
J. M
Chai
more
Sup-
S., liver
R*v. Mr
Methodist
Turn Ci
PLAI
are bui
wheat,
new lit
The
and dr
vembei
Rennet
ant.
Worl
new r<
room '
Had
school
people
of the
indoor life
of cases of
A Syrian
in Chicago
fair in 1893
GOV. COLQUITT RETURNS TO AUSTIN
AUSTIN. Oct 22—Gov Colquitt re-
turned yesterday from a month’s trip
spent at Panama and In Cuba.
Kill M.
as here
Mrs V.
ing her
at llaske
Miss V
Danton.
Svlvest
doctrine. t<
has consist
since th.
f Presidon
Roosevelt,
Southern
the South
at Liltlr
Carrol
Dallas v
Mrs. I
been vi
ett, reti
Miss
Spring
and re!
Mr. ai
with a
Chloe i
their ne
John
yeaterdi
ArttHi
Mrs. '
ill and
who w
Mrs. J.
W H
HOW THE DM STEAM UUHNH HAH|,|[$
WH WORK ANO EBY CLEANING PROCfss
like sweet-
desert air."—Record and
is fully cognizant of the
be "sweetness wast'd on
It sremej to us
fr e fro n county
only one other
was in the same
right now. They will be at nome fu-
ture time, for the present cycle will
be repeated. The trouble is to get the
chance to vote a bond issue to eom*
synchronously with a period of bad
roads, for people are prone to forget
and to hope that rood roads will come
without personal expense or worry.
Oct. 18—Frank ad-
"grandfather clause”
Constitution was de-
the right of negroes
lathing si
do piere
fmd.il-d
of recent immi-
countries are par-
develop rickets,
.f immigrants from
•peciallv apt to b*-
De Wolf Hopper had a slight cold
one night and in a curtain speech he
refereed to'it in this fashion:
“I went to my doctor,” be said, “and
the doctor said 1 had been eating loo
much nitrogenous food, and must stop
and eat farinaceous food. Since then
1 haven’t been eating at all, for 1 don’t
know -what either word means.”
colored
and the
s coase-
gar-
Then after being
one may b«,
ut ai I fore-
,-y to secure a
when the hght-
surmount seem-
obstacles, only
vtiat appears to
n escape dete<
to be discove;
But
I he Department
e received a i
for !>.»12,“ sli.
ATTORNEY GENERAL BEGINS
PROBE OF COTTON SEED PRICES
the weather
grow worse
road drag ;a
many neigh-
insured Thinking about insur-
Give it th* first thought—we’ll
rest of the thinking, have the
made out for you, and your
FIRE AT WALNUT SPRINGS
WALNUT SPRINGS, Oct tt—Fire de-
stroyed the opera house and the stores
in It, causing a loss of 28,500.
DALLAS, Oct. 20—Frost was report-
ed throughout North Texas last night
but the fall was light and little damage
apparently has resulted.
CORM
The Reel!
corresP01*1*
",UDllyMu I
D(, RbOUW
nelghborho,
-Editor H*
NEW HIGH MARK FAR CATTLE.
EAST ST LOUIS. Ill , Oct 22
on the hoof soared to 29 75 per 100, th*
highest price al this time of the year
ever reported here.
CITY OF MEXICO, Oct. 20—With th*
elections a weak off and the assurance
of three candidates in the field for the
presidency, there appears to be no
noticeable interest on th* part nt the
general public as to who triumphs. Vo-
ters are lacking entirely in partisan-
ship. so far as can be outwardly seen.
There is no speechmaking, no parades,
no banners: only a few posters an-
nouncing the candidacies.
1911
1912
Th* i-
nteresting
h* demonstration
to hm disadvantage during the cam-
paign by those wtto will oppose fits
candidacy Indeed, if it were not for
high personal regard we have for th*
Record and Chronicle editor and ap-
preciation for the slight peevishn<i>s
which is due to hi- loyal support of a
friend we would report to another quo-
tation and say that it would be as
“pearls cast beiore swine” to endeavor
to bring him to our way of thinkin-*
The Herald has not committed itself
io the candidacy of Mr Mayes nor to
that of any of his opponents, prospect-
ive or real, but it tias commended him
for the splendid qualities which so
admirably equip him for high position
It may be that the prohibition enemies
of Mr. Mayes will not avail themseb<*
of a warped construction of the state-
ment that he is a local optionist as
well as a prohibitionist, but we shall
see what we shall see.—Denison Herald.
ilemoiistrution
part mental m.
average fur tti
MEXICAN VOTER* APPEAR IN-
DIFFERENT TO THE ELECTION
The Denton Record and Chronicle
says that ’Denton, the city of homes
and schools, population 7500; students
3000; county seat of Denton county,
the greatest diversifying county in
’ would be a good wording for
erected near the passenger sta-
There is no doubt that Denton
NASHVILLE, Oct. 20-First snow-
•fall on record at this season here today
The fall was heavy.
RECORD AND EURO MLLE COMPANY
C EDWARDS. Editor. R J. EDWARDS. Business Mgr
MEMBERS. THE Ah MKdATED PREbb.
Telephones (Lid and New, 64.
a si|
tion
and Denton county make a good show
mg—Houston Chronicle.
Philosopher Rountree of the George-
town Commercial moralizes:
Hon. W. P. Lane is now talking of
“boss-rule” and “partisan skull-dng-
glory the Commercial warned him that
glory The Commercial warned him fluff
■ mighty fall was coming. He rod*
high and fast. These hlgh-rollers are
EARLIEST SNOW RECALLED
FELL MONDAY IN SOITH
EARLIEST SNOWS EVER
RECALLED FALL IN Mil TH
HEAVY FROST AT PALESTINE
PALESTINE, Oct. 20—Heavy ft*
here this morning.
his da ugh
Corbett
Emmett
in Aubrey
Miss Eli:
mal visitei
Mrs Err
visiting in
Corbett
Brent Wil
Mr. and
gordo, N.
Mrs J F.
Mr« J
tfiat tl
ever e
of the
PRESIDENT AND SENATORS CONFER.
WASHINGTON. Get.. 17—President
Wilson conferred yesterday with the
three democratic members of thg Senate
Banking and Currency committee-Reed,
Hitchcock and O’Gorman—who ar* th*
only Senators whose position is regard-
ed as being against the administration
bill. Later the President said his in-
dividual conference with th* three
were satisfactory to him He reiterated
his confidence that the bit) would pass
the Senate before the December cession
WEALTHY COUPLE IN BUK’JDE PACT.
CHICAGO. Oct. 71—Mrs Wm. C. El-
lis was found dead in bed in her room
at a hotel here with her throat cut and
two bullet wounds in her body. Her
husband, a wealthy leather merchant of
Cincinnati, O, was staggering about the
room with his throat and wrists gash-
ed and suffering from three
wound*.
ed herself end that he had attempted
suicide as a result of a suicide pact, in-
vestigation by the police caused them
to doubt Ellis’ story and he will be held
pending further investigation.
NOTICE TO T HE PUBLIC
Any erronaous 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.
imm- dtite-
extract-
i rernov-
an im-
> scien-
■* when
hand of
■ou Id do
DENISON. Oct. 18—The cotton seed
investigation being conducted by th*
Attorney General's department was
transferred here yesterday and a num-
ber of witnesses were examined yes-
terday. An examination of the books
of a cotton seed oil company was made
by C. C. Holderness, an expert ac-
countant. The purpose of the investi-
gation is to determine if there is any
combine among the oil mill and gin
men of Texas to form a seed-buying
combine. Repeated complaints have
be*n Hied in the Attorney General’s of-
fice that the oil milts and gins pay one
price and there was no competition at
all. Mr. Sweeton, .Assistant Attorney
General in charge of the investigation,
says he will go into every corner of the
state in search of facts and that the
investigation has already developed a
lot of information.
LIGHT FROST FELL
THROUGHOUT NORTH TEXAS
ruitf of t
he Heidi,
iimage.
■f D'-nton
NEW YORK, Get. 1«—Mrs. Pels Po-
lack, the last woman to leave the liner,
Volturno, which burned in mid-ocean
last Thursday, on arriving here today
was met by b*r three
whom she believed to
: ieir own
these th*
be of lit-
those who
systematic methods the
work gives a practical
increasing crop
ATLANTA, Oct. »—The earliest
snowfall in memory of the oldest citi-
zens was experienced today in many
Southern cities. Flurries are being re-
ported from Atlanta, Birmingham,
Knoxville, Chattanooga, and Ashevill*.
October 28th, 1910, was earli'st previ-
ous fall.
especial notie*
ne-crop ceunti
publican Aldrich-Vreelsnd bill
democratic Glass-Owen bill is
fisting bill gives currency
chiefly to the banks and the
bill gives It chiefly to governmental of-
fleers. Therein, we suppose, lies the
cause for the caustle criticism of
former Senator Aldrich, directed against
the democratic measure, The Aldrieh-
Vreeland bill provided for the Issue of
emergency currency In a cumbersome
way that could be of benefit only to the
banka of the. East and big cities—which
Is strictly in accordance with the re-
publican doctrine of making the strong
GARZA, (
and t>>e fal
of it. The
again, havi
to dat*
AV B Al)
WPr* here.
Will Swi
Gotclnr an
Shades of Goi R. M Johnston and Col
Jake Wolters: What’s going to hap-
pen? Houston, the habitat of these
dought) and uoltmOwl colonels, has
n<: only voted overwhelmingly for the
initiative, referendum and recall, but
g >n* further and prov ided for fre*
school books and <11 kinds of municipal
ownershi;
BACK TALK.
In Back Talk today we publish a
comment from the Denison Herald,
which opines lhat Will H. Mayes’ dec
location that he is a local optionist
and statewide prohibitionist is going
to be like Banquo’s ghost in that it
will not down. We doubt if anybody'
really understood what Mr. Mayes
meant—that he was in favor of local
option when that is an issue and ot
statewide prohibition when that Is up.
Mr. Mayes, as we happen to know,
worked and voted for local option In
Brown county and he worked and voted
for statewide tn 1910. Our opinion
is that no explanation possible for Mr.
Mayes to offer will satisfy those who
do not want to be satisfied; nor
that he need to make any explanation
to those who think as he does, since
(hey knew perfectly well what he
meant in me first place. And yur
opinion is, furthermore, that any time
Maye* spends In giving further explan-
ations will be tim* wasted
n*ss on the
Chronicle.
The Herald
fact it would
the desert air” should we attempt to
prove to the/ Record and ChronicD
that Mr Mayes’ assertion will be used
you will be in a bad way, unless you
have been thoughtful enough to have
had it
ance?
do the
policy
property saved at the smallest reason
able figure Think and act now.
SNOW IN THREE STATES.
ROLLA, Mo., Oct. 20—Snow fell t**
yesterday afternoon. This is
ilest snowfall in this section,
also reported at Bartlesville,
a slight sleet and snow fell
Bluff, Ark.
W-ekly entered as second class mail matter at poatctBce at Denton, Texas,
under act of Congress March 9. 1873
Daily entered as second class mail matter August 23, 1903, at the postofilce
at Denton, Texas, under aet of Congress, March 3, 1873
AI! subscriptions to the Weekly Record and Ohrowcle discontinued at ex-
piration.
A cultured daughter, home from
boarding school, had Just been driving
fat and antiquated family horse, from
which all speed and spirit had depart-
ed some fifteen years before. “Mam-
ma,” she called daintily, though In
sudden alarm, ”1 can’t leave Dobbin
standing, ean I?”
The matter of fact mother replied
briskly: “You ean. Unless he prefers
to sit."
Throughout Denton county today
there is a deep feeling of the need for
better roads. Not in several years have
th* rodtis been so nearly impassable
Th* n*ed for good roads is aggravated
right now by its being in the fall with
cotton, corn and other crops to market,
and yet a half load is twice too much
over the average roads and a full load
is impossible except with additional
teams. Automobiles are almost help-
less in the bottomless mudholes that
are strong features of some of the main
roads, and with a continuance of the
wet winter forecast by
sharps, conditions will
rather than better. The
being used efflectually In
borhoops. But the drag even is sorely
handicapped by repeated rains Pike
roads, such as will never be built ex-
cept by bond issues, would be worth
countless thousands of dollars to Den-
ion county citisens were they here
• uiocr.
'■ ’’ his souther
lie nlislnwo.
Cannon vti.
Cob n> 1
easily cast
f.rospermis
One month, delivered............
six months, by mail .In advance
One year, by mail In advance
WASHINGTON,
mission that the
of the Oklahoma
signed to restrict
io vote as far as possible within the
limits of the Federal Constitution fea-
tured the argument in defense of the
clause before the Supreme Court yes-
terday by former Senator Joseph W.
Bailey.
Mr. Bailey appearing for the Okla-
homa election officials, contended that
while tfee state law discriminated
against negroes it did not abridge any
of their rights guaranteed by the fif-
teenth amendment.
It is dry it
k racks in
Tr‘* cuffs
placed u0
ated to ttte
is a specui
‘fonuut the
*nd cuffs, as
body of the
with flat_
is completed
sent to
tipped.
' to your
re treated
RECORD BRE AKING COLD ***?._«.
<<>XERN NOUTMKAgTERN STATw*
ATLANTA, Odt ti—The entire
east of the Mississippi «<yer, shi'*£
today In th* coldest *v*aU»re 'hf
corded at this season. _lheni
occurred in Tennessee and Nortne
Georgia and Alabama.
sores foilov
1909 .....
1910 .....
1911 .....
i means a lartte number of
pauper* for future genera-
car* for. tkrngr*** bas estah-
government station in Chicago
care and protection of newly
immigrant*. If the Federal
the stale and the local
unsatisfactory to th*
uld bring a
tut* De-
seems
OCCIl-
which
stronger and the weak weaker. Bonds,
upon which the republican bill would
provide “elastic currency,” are not
generally disseminated among the
smaller banks of the South or West.
Th* democratic bill provides for th*
issuance of emergency currency on col-
lateral such as practically every bank,
large or small, holds, and its benefits,
therefore, 'would b* general rather
t‘>’r ntin*d to a very few money c*n-
already preponderantly strong
,‘:r lingering doubt
Ow*n Oil. - designed
man rather than the
ina benefits to all c
Bout twenty, 1 guess.” said Reuben
“Twenty I Why, It looks to me near-
er 120. Come, i*vsr, can't you Increase
that a little? There are surely
than twenty acres in that tract,
pose you stretch that a little."
“Say, feller," said the fanner,
ain’t no rubber plantation."
W. T. Bailey & Co.
Old Phone 54 New Phone 120
G fluff' ail.i with-
The suit .- again
if any spri, per-
any nunOiM is
sigfit*dnt*r fi-r on*
soft place to ’ light,“
i ng time com*,* Men
ingly insurmountable
to Irtp, later on over
h»* only a shadow.
tion in big things onl;
ed in the det of some peccadillo
Philosopher Rountree is correct,
ns inevitable.” His advic* is good.
"Don’t l*t a littl* pow*r or money or
office make a fool of y/,u -jt’s danger-
interesting to
for example
are also first
, and all the
one washer
another. There is
quently no fading at ail of on1
m*nt into another
washed in the same manner as has been
described of the linen, they are taken
out of the washer and put into the ex-
tractor, exactly as has been described.
It wrings ail water out of the clothes.
Then they are removed from the ex-
tractor and starched. Now one may-
notice only the shirt. The starch is
prepared in the very best manner. It
is then placed in a pan on the starch-
ing machine. This slarcher has two
small rollers Just the size of a cuff
When the cuff is starched between
them it is smoothed and starcheil. One
of these rollers revolves in the starch-
pan In this way the shirt is starch-
ed only on the cuffs and not on the
sleeve above. The neck-bar.d and
front-band are also starched by this
CHICAGO, Oct. 21—A snow
here thie morning reached th* Pr< P
Ilona of a blizzard. Street traffie w»
delayed and six person* were >nji
in accidents cauaed by the snow
How a Garment I* Handled.
The piece in first marked with
respective gignature, so there is
danger off it not being sent baek to
place from which it came. Then in
case of a complete washing, the clothes
are assorted, and all the white ones
put into one washer and the colored
put into another washer. To see ex-
actly th* different steps taken in the
laundry it is well to notice a piece of
linen. After being marked it is put in-
to the washer. This washer is in a
cylindrical form and is run by a higti-
power motor. When the
plied the washer begins
getting constantly faster
In this manner the piece
oqgh cleansing, by a harmle
Th* children of newly arrived immi-
grants furnish eight t.mes a* many
eases of deformities caused by rickets
as do children of native parent*. Four
times as many immigrant children suf-
fer from deformities of the spine caus-
ed by tuberculosis as do native chil-
dren Th* children
grants from warm
ticularly liable (■
while the children
countries are >
come victims of tuberculosis. This in
.pit* of th* fact that the same Classes
and nationalities do not suffer from
the** t* ueir own country,
appear in an ar-
Hf .nchard of Chi-
appeared in Th*
t*dical '
... Seeor’ii1 -
4 in th* chai* •
■t vine that
•. *'*m<h-
‘ i an an
former Rhode 1?
be a big aSs- t to t
who ar* tlglitm.
measure tlirougt
but the Chicago-born
Syrian wom*n were at-
in extent that at one
• ie W) per cent nf the children had
riixefs of a severe type, producing
bow-legs, knock-knees, defnymitifs of
the chest and spin* and curvature of
the collar bones and bones of the arms
This condition prevailed for several
year*. Then as th*** people hecam*
adapted to the climate and diet nf
their new home rickets began to abate,
and in about seven years had pract-
ically disappeared from the Syrian col-
ony. The immigrant woman has nearly
twine as many children as the Amert-
can-horn woman, 4.7 per cent against
2 9 per cent. The Importance of this
question I* appreciated when It is un-
derstood that had deformities, curv-
ature of the spine and disabling con-
ditions due to elth*B rickets or tuber-
culosis in the young of these new im-
migrants
helpless
tion* to
lished a i
for the <
arrived I
government
communities could he arroused to the
necessity of caring for th* immigrant
mother for the first year or two in her
new home it would be a great saving
for the future.
furnish a Lire ■
tnhcrcnL.r Joint
deformities, Sixt
- ' rim itur* of
among
tti'i.i due t-
Ctiicagi. is
th* world •
ice and -now that !
immigrants from o
Topical count- .-•* ev
•r Roberts, So.
N*vv Immis ati'ir
’he United St.i’
'ri.'n Atlantic City
to t(i. northwest c-
! >r R t* 11« says ft.,:
m. rt-'ir* l>n ircTjif we ;,r(- glad
to publish eiw.-wli< re on this page a
re-ume of the bill, wtial it is intended
to do and tin means whereby it IB ex-
pected that the bill will secure those
results. The reauzue is m rather a tab-
loid form, yet it will afford a compre-
hensive understanding of Just what the
pending bill, about which there is so
much difference of opinion, is and wtiai
it stands for.
And yet too f.-w
ally concerned m
b**n content will1
it in forming u
A visit to the Dallas fair, one of
whose feature* is the Denton county
booths, proves, to our own satisfac-
tion, that the Denton county exhibit is
not only the best exhibit that has ever
gon* out of the county, but that it is
as good as any there It shows th*
wid* range of Denton county products
in a neat way, without gaudiness or
pretense, and the quality of the arti-
cles displayed is even ahead of the
tasteful arrangement
—and we tried to b*
pride or bias—that
county display there
class with Denton county, and we shall
be disappointed if Denton does not win
first or second priz*—the first, we hope.
Not only is the exhibit arousing the
prid* of Denton county people who
visit it, hut it is attracting much com-
mendation from ail visitors. The Al-
Ifance Mill booth is another Iienton ex-
hibit which by its novelty and go-.d
display is attracting a lot of favorable
attention. The C. I. A. exhibit ten:, was
blown down by the high wind of Sun-
day and gave no opportunity for Com-
ment, but President BizzelKand
McGinnis of the college spent the
Monday re-arranging the damaged
plays and even went to work with
and hammer when the dilatorlneiui of
the carpenter* on the Job showed that
th* tent could not be re-erected in the
dav without their help. The fair
good as ever—and that’s saying a
and in some .epartmenta shows
a considerable improvement.
The chief difference between the re-
and the
that the
control
pemilng
The Dallas * has adopted the
suggestion of a correspondent and is
daily publishing cotton s*ed quotations
from o-.er the state. A wide range is
shown by the first day’s report. Tun-
ing from :13 to *24 a ton. Corsicana
paying *14 is one of the Lowest. A study
< f (tie range makes interesting reading.
an<l the cause therefor is a matter of
interest and moment to every farmer.
It is a matter of satisfaction, too, here
to be able to say that the price in Den-
ton was among the highest. 822 a ton
The range of prices included the fal-
lowing towns: Corsicana 314: Gates-
ville *20: Hillsboro 216 to 22; Longview
315; A'.Yico 215 to 218; Greenville 21a;
Kaufman 214 to 821; Clarksville 320;
Cleburne 218; Temple 318; Waxahachie
216; Wolfe City 215; Sherman 324; Mex-
ia 318 to 319; Ennis 315 to 220, according
to whether or not picke dbefore th*
rains; Mt. Pleasant 216* Wichita Falls
322: Denison 318; Brownwood 323; Ath-
ens 314; Brownwood 323; Dublin 320 to
323; Paris 320; Sulphur Springs 216 to
220; Terrell 214.
Some of the variations were attribut-
ed to the difference in grades, much of
the seed offered having been more or
ire* damaged by rains.
in every town and city—they are every-
where. But in due season the ginger
will b* take® out of them. No man
is too great or powerful, at home or
abroad, that some day he may m**t
his Waterloo! It is the inevitable
Is.n't l*t a lit*.: ' power or money or
office make a fool of you—it’s danger-
ous.
The higher un* goes th* farther . n*
falls—when the fail comes A haugh-
ty spirit goeth before destruction am*
pride before a f
prosperous or •
: .-...tistics. Th*.r'p..r(
gratifying showing. 1
uiparison fur cottun fo
It.* first column being tL
(.Is per acre of seed *•
ry--.I ration metho'
•nuuieratwi. ami
■?!;-.« tlir- average pounds
p.-r acre ov*r th* entire
■ ................ 633 3 3
i) ................ 710 4 4
The child
infantile P-'
Bud Bern
from an at
A letter 1
mittee fron
west*rn 7
them that I
ing with tl
un, AAedn
B Smith
rout* to F
for street
The Gar
their first
ed the *er*
as instruct
Mr Trot’
tack of st*
W R M
S. S. Sipes
Burton 1
ter jury si
Fhe Record and Chronicle
(Issued Bvery da y ewsspl
Walla*.
rei *utl
*hC Aroer.-c
The exta
* > Dr Blanc..ard, i*
of climate amt tu;
these immigrants r ■
con**- *'**
analysis
i Jiicago
children
snow this too-murh -. -;n if
bio But Ju- * 9 - » of (he corn
in Denton cou- ; where we
ifely stored enough corn to do,
iv«- sold or on hapd th* biggest
crop and the biggest oat crop
in our history Think of that and then
.f the one-crop eounti'-s wh<-re th*
h* year’s labor are lying in
ami undergoing aereasing
The growth and prosperity
county have corn* chiefly
application of th* principle
diversification We don’t carry ’’all
r eggs iu one basket,” and therein is
>. ssius wh.-s* benefit., are brought
nditiune m
was not endowed with
dexterity shown bv President
H* was utterly devoid of tact
as the sun. fearless as Hector
strong as Goliath of Gath, he failed be-
cause it was not given him to manage
•nep. Gorman and Smith would
have played their (ricks and cut
capers and shines had Woodrow
son been president in 1894.
When the elections for 1914 are
it will be ’he democratic party on
trial. The country wilt then know
what that parly stands for and render
Ms verdict accordingly. The same will
b* true in 1916.
Th democratic party is not going to
sit down and fold its hands after the
enactment nf the Glass Currency bill.
Busy as has been th* called session
will have a heap more grist in the hop-
per. There will be an anti-trust bill
that will smite monopoly hip and
(high There will be a bill to strength-
en the Interstate Commerce Commis-
sion. There will b* a bill to perfecl
the pure food law There will b* a bill
fo extend the parcel post.
And it may b* there will be a pro-
posal to acquire the telegraph lines,
to th* end that Americans may enjoy
as cheap service as Europeans. And
then we may hear of a proposition
looking to the nomination of candi-
dates -for president and vice president
by the people and not by th* bosses.
There are jobs for Hercules awaiting
the democratic party.
Savoyard in Houston Chrenicle ’
Every moment of it* existence, from
1854 down, the republican party was
sectional. ->nd uod*r the proposed, ami
practically accepted, scheme the g o. p
is to be even a more oectionai layout
■tun ever. The representation of the
^•tlh in the republican council* is to
b* greatly curtailed and in some south-
ern statef virtually annihilated. That
is carrying out the h*re-*y of Thad
Stevens, that the South must have no
vo c* in American polities as a punish-
ment for h*r "treason" in 1861 Roscoe
Conklin, on* of fhe really giant intel-
lects of his time, openly advocated, in
the days of the southern “reconstruc-
tion," negro suffrage at the South,
though strenously opposing it at the
North.
Not the feast folly of the republican
party was the perpetration of the fif-
teenth amendment to the constitution
It was th* desire to turn the South
over to the negro, wrho would turn it
over to th* republican party. Th* ef-
fect of that amendment waa to give the
South additional power, and soon after
it was promulgated th* whites seized
every southern state, practically dis-
franchised the negro and asserted
themselves In congress and in the elec-
toral college. The engineer was hoist
by his own petard.
If it were not a part of the funda-
mental law, and if It were proposed in
the present congress, the fifteenth
amendment would not get a single re-
publican vote in either house,
Theodore Roosevelt has more politi-
cal sense tha all the g o. p. leader* to-
gether, and Colon*! Roosevelt intends
to be the leader of a party that is
national. Hence, he says th* republi-
can party niust not only sb ft its prin-
ciples, biit must change its name, so
that it may get a respectable lodgment
at the South. Just as Oliver Crom-
well longed for the countenance and
rhe support of th* Eng’ish Cavalier, so
half southern-r. pants for
approval. H* ha* courted
a hundred times. H* has a
Mining at the South among
and h* is not going to for-
■ »purt as the price
of Penrose, Gallinger,
Warren under his flag
Roosevelt's horoscope is
If in 1916 th* country is
and busy: if th- reform of
the tariff and reinodeilng of th* cur-
rency «4f»l) prove fortnn.it* and i-enefl-
**nt: if the other'poliei** that t(>* d*m>
administration has in view-
accepted and fb*y shall turn
w may look for Co! Roose-
velt to support th* democratic candi-
date for president.
All the time we have had party re-
sponsibility in (his country, but until
AVoodrow Wilson cam* in we n*v*r
had party governmen’ in <his countrv.
More than any other tariff ever enact-
ed th* Underwood-Simm' ns bill is a
party measure. And th- same is true
..f th* Glass-Owen banking bill Had
Mr. Cleveland forced the democrats <>f
fh* Forty-nin’h Congress to make th*
Morrison tariff a democratic measure,
tariff reform would have come to stay
more than a quarter of a century ago.
Hi- did partia'ly * icceed in making the
Written for th* Record and Chronicle
by Douglass Witt, Denton High
School student.;
A modern steam laundry system is
essential to the completion of a line
of up-to-date industries of any I own.
it is also equally as important to the
individual citizen, for when a washing
is s*nt out from a home to the laun-
dry,, the doubt arises, are conditions of
the latitidry sanitary and are
clothes treated carefully or do
workmen know how to wash and
a garment properly. The truth is
all laundries are nut modern, but
Denton Steam Laundry is the modern
system and is therefore sanitary in
every respect, and each garment is
handled by an expert workman.
To prove that the machinery is the
most up-to-date, and for the benefit of
the doubt as to whether the work done
has the very best attention, the route
of a garment is given here in detail
from the tim* it is brought into the
laundry until it is ready to be return-
21 0
acre or
11.3 bushels excess each year. Many
of the most successful farmers in Den-
ton county are using methods wh.ch
approximate those of the department
methfeis which there farmers tb'<n-
relveg ’.ave evolved from
practical experience. For
demonstration methods can
fie or no assistance. But for
follow no
demonstration
and concise plan
yieMs AVe believe that a majority of
th* D*nton county farmers who have
worked with Dr Craddock, th* Denton
county agent, this year, will bear us
out in the contention that they hava
been benefited by the assistance, which
is nothing more nor less than the ap-
plication of those methods evolved
from past experientt^».
power is ap-
to revolve,
and faster,
gets a thor-
-ss shak-
ing. After the piece has had the
proper washing it is taken out of the
washer and put into what is known as
an extractor. This extractor is an en-
closure in a basket form that revolves
when connected with power at the
rapid rate of 14,0OT revolutions per
minute. It goes so fast that th* waler
is wrung out of the piece, thus leaving
the linen dry enough to h
ly ironed. After being in th*
or for just a few minutes it ii
*<1 and ironed Th* ininer is
mens* pi<ce of machinery, st
lificall
ironed looks
an experienc
it. This ironer is
There are five long
ers that are heated
peratur* to do the
piece of linen goes
roller* and under th* fifth
ing through the ironer Hi* linen i
*d. put into a basket
wrapper, where it is
with your name, and
hick to your horn*,
followed by all plain pi’
The Route of a Shirt.
The different
clothes are also
A shirt is taken
starched clothes
*■<!, then marked,
pieces put into
White into
no
encio-
This
attached over a hot-air
scent of the gas, etc., is
the suit by the hot air, it
th* g«s is driven out nt
by an electric fan
Th* clothes are remov
tumbler perfectly dr
out a scent of gas.
looked over, to ree
chan**, remains, or
necessary. If a spot is found
suit, then it is laid on what i
a 'spotting table," and (( •
chemicals are applied to :t • »
til it is removed. Then ’! ■
readv to be pressed.
The American press is n- <
This press is the latest rmd*
pad is on the top side, so
no danger of breaking bu-' .n-
being pressed a suit is soft .m
Now th* cleaning and pressing
pleted and the suit is ready to b* re-
turned.
The workman in charge of th* plant
is an expert and thoroughly, under-
stands his business. Willow plumes,
kid gloves, party dresses and suits are
the specialty and all th* work is guar-
anteed to give satisfaction.
■ramped position,
large number
oi th* spine,
was stranded
of the world's
■xccilent illustration of the
tendency of the children of newly ar-
rived immigrants to become diseased
In Palestine these Syrians had known
nothing of rickets, but a few months
of changed conditions of climate, food
. nd habits pr .diiced rickety children.
Th* children born abroad did not de-
velop rickets,
children of th*
tacked to such
1912 ................. 30 9
excess of 45.3 bushels per
.. S62.4 618.0
e demonstration
* average during
1,030 pounds, an
< f 2>.2.i pounds per or.
n sent prices, about j, m*as-
m money standard in som* other
< th* results w-re even better, the
averages for all states showing th*
following compar sun
1909
1. W. BAILEY DEFENDS
GRANDFATHER CLAUSE
RAIN AND WIND IN EAST
SNOWSTORMS IN THE N®"™
BALTIMORE, Md., Oct. **--pr*e,^L
ly every town along the Eastern sn
of Maryland suffered heavy danw”
from high water last sight, a /un^h
storm of rain and wind driving
tide higher than It has been for twen-
ty years. No loss of life i« w
but many were rescued With difllcu
--
SNOWSTORM IN CHICAGO T AKES
ON BLIZZARD FIM»FORTION>
pit c*
• made that every p
better than tie
d housekeeper
known as a mangle,
whit* padded roll-
to the proper tern-
work right. Th*
over four of these
After go-
fold-
and taken to ftp-1
wrapped, mark’ d |
immediately sent
Thi
recorded tn
dispensaries, of
from deformities.
■ tuberculosis ano
perhaps the only
<ving winters of
irtu'C- 2* 0(10 n*w
* pii-.d or s*mi-
ry year Dr. Pef-
k *nt'tied “The
-cuts a map of
’■ a line drawn
i. and th*nce
* Mimicsota.
r c< nt of tin’
mirth and
include o,-.:.,
the country
1911 th* tug'.est immigration point
■ r>a*lied. with on and one-quarter
• 'I of new arri' tls in this coun-
T!i<- majority of these people
k to our large cities and settle in
P r*i ipia<icrs In 1911 there
• . ' • eago 84.&o now immigrants,
if "horn i-<mc from a hot
ntri these people rick-
is • runon in the first few
i o' > . ri*an life, the Italians,
- .nd svrians 'urnishing 80 per
i of sitcit eps's. The people from
■tli*rn Europe generally seek work
o and other factories
,v ,rk at home. They
s* together. They are
indoor people. Their
have rickets but they
share of the Cases of
disease, resulting in
tv per cent of a^l cases
r the spine is found
Jewish girls. The reason for
easily' explained. Jewish moth-
ers fear to let their daughters out Of
their sight The girls sew earlv and
late at piece-work, and th* long hours
of labor,
enormously
tuberculosis
colony that
at the close
forms an
o he.,. ... s, ia!l
sr; --theit giv-
>ss«*- should b*
r-. . d by th* rabid a**ack mad*
thereon by th* recen, i.os- of rotten-
borough Rhody, claim to fam*
re insecurely upon th* joint author-
ship of the most iniquitous tariff bill
s country of rotten tariffs ha-
*n ami upon joint aiitiiorsL'n
Aldrich-Vreeland
.as ben in effect
Starcher. After being .tarchM
shirt is hung on a hook rack and
ed into a dry room.
In this room the shirt is
dried by the steam coils i
both sides of the rdom □
electric fan placed in the <
the shirt is dried in a sanit
the coils and fan When i
is removed from the hoi.
the dry room and ironed
are first ironed. They *re
triangular pads that are he
proper temperature. There
piece of machinery for
bosom and the neck band
has been described. The
shirt is ironed by hand,
irons. When the ironing
the shirt is neatly folded and
the wrapper, where it is
marked and'sent out pron.pt
home. AH starched clothes ;
in the same careful manner
The Modem Dry Cleaning System.
In connection with the Denton «ta»m
Laundry, and under the same
ment, is a Dry Cleaning Depart,-r^t
The Bowser dry-cleaning system I* th*
latest model, and is said to be the
only dry-cleaning system that can be
insured.
There are five gasoline tanks, each
holding 175 gallons, that are buried un-
derground outside the house Oq» of
these tanks contains new gasoline or
gas that has never been used Another
contains distilled ga«, or gas that af-
ter being used has been disti’ltd by the
private distilling system and turned
back into the tank, clean and pure
The remaining three tanks ar* called
settling tanks After the gasoline has
been used it is saturated with the dirt
from the clothes and is then f ire turn-
ed back into the settling tank where it
is strained and left to settle, t< be used
again. After it settles in this way it is
perfectly clean, to be used aei n These
tanks are connected by pip>» with the
washers, etc. and are e ntr ,.*d by
keys on .3 switch-board
The Dry-Cleaning Prwe—.
To show clearly the way r:
the cleaning and pressing is <
this system, the route of 4
clothes is here given:
AVhen -th* suit is brought
examined closely, then mark’
put into the washer. This w,
like the one in the laundry. ■ v<
it is filled with gasolin* in-
water. After the suit is w..■.(,<
it is removed from th* w
put into the extrseter wti*r- ’(
line is wrung out by the rq .1
turns of the extractor AVI•• n
moved from this machin* - -
But in order that no **< t
is left on the suit, eitt* r
if anything else, it 1- [
is known
large, round
peiKimg currency
US W ho Should
its provisions
mere excerpts
r conclusions
hurt- of • th*
rn comparisons are equally as
ing th* first column for
averec and the
i><- ,.ge, ttie Texas
it seems to us that the British
tud* with regard to Mexico, as
d*nced 2k* *!i* British Minister
»*uting Ins creiieiitials I*. Mexico ou
ttie d..y following his assumption of a
dictatorship arid by Sir Edward Grey’s
statement that nothing had occurred to
change the British view that the recog-
nition of Huerta Was -'th* best poli-
cy,” is wholly
American program
spirited reply from our own
partmeot The British position
wholly- at variance with that
pi*d by other European powers,
s**m content to risk their rigtits Io
American support, and in strong con-
tradistinction to the position tha.
Americans generally have assumed to
be held by the British Foreign office.
President Wilson and his cabinet are
apparently determined on their stand
with regard to recognizing the Huerta
regime, and th- ; have intimated to the
foreign powers that the United States
desires a :** hand in dealing w ith th*
Mexican -itu.. 'on Th* British *>-ply
is a discordant note in a matter that
otherwise has appeared to be reaching
its own solution and it will not be well
received by American citizens who re-
call that once before a democrat!*
President had to deliver an exposition
to England of the Monroe
which the United States
ently adhered before and
■ Venezuelan etnbroglio <
Cleveland’s second term.
Agriculture
of Crop
com pari-
rag* (I*!;* oi)
CHARGED WITH FOtHONING BABY.
FORT WORTH, Oct. 22.—Charged with
poisoning a baby in Fort Worth Oct. 1,
1913, A. O. Fry was arrested and Jailed
at Seymour Tuesday, according to ad-
vlees received by Fort Worth authorl-
OSB.
The assessor waa doing the very best
he could, but .the farmer wbb shrewd
and wary "How many acres of farm-
ing land have you?" he Inquired wear-
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Edwards, W. C. Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 23, 1913, newspaper, October 23, 1913; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1214083/m1/4/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.