Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 2, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 15, 1917 Page: 4 of 6
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VI
CIGARETTES
15c
/
/
IT
Adama
1
oentox TEXAS. AUGUST 15. 1917
Z//
end. contribute much to entente^
f
6
r’rf,
_ *
'l,
z.
t
/
Nolan Dudley and sister are vsiting
♦ RUTH CAMERON’S SIDE TALKS ♦
4
There’s
1
cigarette than taste
!f
AT DENTON THEATERS
V
$
IV
$
in.
Wrapped in glassine paper
&
PAINT
THAT
Panama Hats
of the
$1.50—
J. B. WILSON & GO.
OC course Mother is a privileged character
• and
* DOINGS OF THE VAN LOONS
For Oats
TIMELY HINTS
1
. M
A.
»
-
■■■
r-
a-
*
•K
•s
4
Manager
» PRESS
Office. 37
Apply it yourself
Makes them look new.
2Oior
io*
The House of Service.
Lumber Too.
gin A
nacle,
____
vlvallsta, in charge of the servie/Thc
i use*
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
erroneous reflection upon the
iter, reputation or standing of any
individual c. —„—" i
corrected upon being called to the t
ion of the publishers j
that will no doubt be
r which you are now
r grata. But you tan-
> hold grain al the pres-
lees without fire insur-
e us any lime, day or
. j
J
DENTON STEAM LAUNDRY CO
Launderers and Dry Cleaners
Phones: Office 8, Dry Cleaning Plant 800.
i
If
Next time, if you want that new
"Sotufr" feeling, say Chesterfield*.
Wilson were
ie old settlers
/
u (
in th”
1 hat
It will make it look like new
and will cost but little.
Effecto Auto paints do the
work.
rt Tri-
. Jack
___ _ Barney
“...... " “_____’i and Dorcas
Matthews are in the supporting cast.
i^1 Williams
Greater
Williams in
tragedy of
You bet! Because Chesterfields,
besides pleasing the taste, have
stepped in with a 6ramf-new kind
of enjoyment for smokers—
Chesterfield* hit the smoke-spot,
they let you know you are smoking
—they “Satisfy”!
And yet, they’re MILD I
The blend is what doe* it—the
new blend of pure, natural Imported
and Domestic tobacco*. And the
u__j
w
fl
w
NEWS FROM CORINTH
CORINTH. Aug. 14—Those in Denton
Uris week were as follows :,L. T. Fow-
ler. Will Hill, Yewell Kiger, Robert
Pockrus. Other Robinson, Nolan Dud-
ley, Paul Span, M.r and Mrs. J. W.
Moreland, Carrol McElhaney, S. Car-1
penter. Ewin Oliver, Rupert Oliver. T.
L. Mitchell. S. L. Carpeuier and son.
Colt. Ed Shahan and son. Clyde, .Miss
Otha Hill, Clyde Carpenter, Alyne Car-
---- ' ' ' ■ ' —-------~l
■ 1
l
I
w
♦♦♦♦♦ ♦+♦♦ ♦♦♦♦»» ♦+♦+ ++++
♦ A CORNER IN BIRTHDAYS. ♦
♦ Tomorrow the following Den- ♦
♦ ton citizens will celebrate their ♦
♦ birthday: ♦,
; ♦ Chas. Smoot. ♦}
HHHtMHHIHHIIIIIin
I
M3UPT1ON RATES,
a advance)------
delivered--------40c
by mail (in advance)_.|2.00
y mall (In advance)14.00
WEEKLY
ur (in advance)-----_Voo
mtha (in advance).................60c
months (In ndvaane)..^..........35c
Mil subscriptions to the Record-
tele discontinued at expiration.
Uy altered as second class mail
1 at postoffice at Denton, Texas,
set of Congress, March 3, 1873.
f entered aa secono class matter
t <3, IMS, at the postoffice at
L Texas, under act of Congress.
3, 1873.
Mr. and .Mrs. Ocie Wall of Nocona,
woh have been visiting his brother,
Arvel Wall have returne home.
G. S. McReynolds was in Aubrey.
Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Thomas and dau-.
ghter Zella Pearl are in Dallas.
Miss Susie Russell is visiting her cou-
sin, Miss Cora Dean of Ziom
Mrs. G. S. McReynolds is visiting re-
latives at Parvin. ~
Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Pugh and fam-
ily of Antioch visited her brother. W. i
H. Russell and family.
Airs. L. C. Norris who has been very
ill is reported' better.
Miss .Myrtle Cody of Oak Grove was
here.
Homer Pugh of Denton is visiting
relatives here.
Mrs. L. S. Nix and children. Zelun
and Oran, attended the moonlight picnic ;
at Garza.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wilson spent Fri-
day and Saturday with Mr. ana Mrs.
J. H. Jeffcoat of Denton.
“Grandma” Wright who has been 111
is able to be up.
NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given, as required
by law, that on the 27th day of
1917. bids for the school fund
be opened a*nd the person making the
highest and best bid of interest on the
average daily balances for said school
fund to be the treasurer for said school
I fund for the year beginning Sept.’l.
I 1917. and term of office-to expire Au-1
i gust 31, 1918. ■ I
; all bids.
By order of the Board of Trustees
of the Denton City Public Schools.
316c W. L. McCORMICK. Secy.
‘ Bv advertising now yoi create a mar-
I ket for them by the time you are ready
! to sail.
of IMPORTED W DOMESTIC
-^*^1 tobaccos—Blended
CLEANED, BLOCKED
and RE-TRIMMED
IK
>2.50 For Wheat
..........— ■■ i—■■■ ' -------
fo also very nwlcrtally lemeoed by the
' fact that he made i io move so long as |
Germany could see a chance • to win.
f but that now, with the all Ira alow ly
closing In and getting ready for a fur-
ther crushing of German military pow-
er. he makes the offer that the entente
would very likely have accepted ear-
lier, but which the leutons would not.
We are yet a long way from peace,
at least insofar as outside intervention
goes.
Iran oamrai*sion< r* aar> *' that so lone
ag be holds out there is neither danger
that Russia will make a
'nor that be w-ill fail to
•Rh '
i ngers of Denton visited here.
J. P. Roberts was in Bonham.
NEWS FROM LLOYD
LLOYD. Aug. 13—The litle rain which
fell Friday and Saturday cooled the
atmosphere but did very litle good as
the ground was so dry.
W. H. Russell and Ray
in McKinney attending th>
reunion.
W. H. Russell and son, John and Ar-
vel Wall were in the Dickson commu-
nity. . .
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean and family
of Zion visited W. H. Russell and fam-
ily. '
Several from here attended church at
New Hope Sunday nf
the sumer Normal has returned home".
I Those in Denton this week were: Roy
. I Pitts. B. R. Wilson. R. S. Thomas, Ce-
Right’ is reserved to reject -any and ‘ oil Bowlii^^Ray ^W"
By order of the Board of Trustees “ ‘ “
Ol
■ '• •
3*;
For the soldierboy who has been
called to the colors.
Safety Razors
Razor Blades
Kodaks
Him
Shaving Brushes
Military Brushes
Combs and Brushes
Fountain Pen
Watches
Jmazor Straps
Razor Hones
Washburn at Princess.
‘ The Man Who Was Afraid," a stir-
ring theme that compels interest. Thru
the influence of the girl he loves, a
slacker becomes a tiero. Bryant Wash-
burn is "the man” and Margaret Watts
“tiie girl." "A Day at Camp Funston”
will be repeated and a Pokes and Jabs
comedy will also be shown. <»
Thursday—Louise Glaum is starred
in "Love or Justice," a five par’
angle drama of the underworld.
Richardson. Chas. Gunn, J.
Sherry. Chas. K. French
pan
Miss Lucy McElhaney
brother at Grandbury.
Mrs R. Hill, who was bit by a cop-
perhead snake is doimr fine.
Joe Moses is visiting his Grandfather
| and grandmother, Mr. an 1 Mrs. Moses
i at Aubrey.
Miss Velma Moreland entertained a
number of her girl friends with a
birthday social Monday afternoon and
I refreshments were served to the fol-
■ lowing: Misses Pearl Milch-1!!. Leia
! Shahan. Aline Carpenter, May Taylor.
; Olive McElhaney, Rubv Milcbj!l, Hazel
■ Webb, Esther Rounds. Mrs. Bart Ma-
1 loney and daughter, and Mrs. Annie
I Anderson
I V - • — ... ■ 1 ■
in Oklahoma.
Mrs. Claytor and Miss Effa Moore,
who have heen visiting her daughter at
Lloyd have returned home
L* T. Fowler is preparing to move
to Denton.
Those in Garza: S. !.. Carpenter. E.
A. Garrison. Melvin Garrison. Henery
Garrison and son, Francis.
Jim Trotter and family visited rela-
tives at Garza.
A number from her1 attended the
picnic at Garza Saturday ntght.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Duggan and Mr
and Mrs. Roscoe Duggan are visiting
I relatives in Colin County.
Clyde Carpenter visile I relatives in
Denton.
THCRe H6 IS
/ izsuAL-,~STaoa2u>'4C.’
I 0X4 T*4Ck I_ovh4qe ’
PA GfeT UF>
I “TVWS MINUtely
■ «ssw* a
er called him
raid, "My boy, you’re drafted! An
instant Jim looked rather sick .jier-
haps he thought of mother and all
’ the family of Brick, the sister and
the brother. A sweat stood out
upon hto brow. I saw bis f ale Um
quiver, "and thought, Alas, this
voung man, now, has got a chick-
en’s liver.” A moment Jim looked
full of care, then raised a cheerful
holler: “I’m glad I’m called to do
my share, you bet your bottom
dollar! So for this day my labor
ends—the news this fact determin-
es—1 want to go and tell my
friends that 1’11 be potting Ger-
mans. I want to tell a certain girl
that 1 have been elected to make
the kaiser’s whiskers curl, and
make the prfnz dejected." I hand-
ed Jim a bunch of flowers, and
said. "Go do your playing: I’ll only
dock you seven hours when comes
the time for paying." When he
was gone my eyes grew dim with
patriotic fervor. “The country a
safe while boys like Jim," I said,
“are here to serve her!"
at Dreamland.
Vitagraph presents Earle
“The Hawk.” the heart
a man’s soul buried in ini-
quity, but resurrected by his faith in
a woman. This picture Is adapted from
the plav of the same name.
Thursday—House Peters and Louise
Huff in “The Lonesome Chap.” a
story which relates the romance of a
bachelor who becomes the guardian of
the little daughter of an old friend,
falls in love with her when she grad-
uates from school, but decides to give
her up to a younger rival. But she
loves her guardian—and they- lived
happily ever after.
Classified Aos get results. 'Try them
Kerenskv s confidence that Russia [
....... .......— ■ ----- ------- — I MTS. >. A. IWtllKHis uuj i-iuiy <•;
■tand up und- r its bunkns-and, in ,)niJ annnany thereafter the paving vvIlPcatur are visiting relatives here
end. contribute much to entente L ag pPrrnnn,,nt p,. reason-! Misft Emerine Jenmngs of Ih-nton
►ry I* encouraging, ami the Amer_l bly a#lkP<1 West Dak citizens met and!
' appointed a committee, but the matter| it™!
■ scents to have stopped there for the [ ^•jj] patereon at’ Ada
separate peace I tjmp )ikp t<( lhP chairman ofj
try 1° •!" his that committee call together his mem-
‘ in the entente push against the | |)Prs and ht>trjn a < ...... -
'..Central Empires M Kerensky’s paral-l property owners concerned to the end)
M between the Russian and thej p|P ,.j(y may make it an improve-, b.r an’(| family,
ment district to compel the few who-
no improvement to lin’j
The, same
pi-opoM’ion holds good to the property I
of other main streets of Hie
as we understand it.;
no time limit expressed or implied ■
about th.- offer. But with less than)
; two miles of paved streets. Denton will
have to hurry if it is to maintain the
hoped-for rate this v>-a.r and there
j should tie no lapse betvv.-n the comple-
i tion of the work now <>n and (tie be-
ginning of more.
f cLee. • ~nMe4K •
I MN COulaSA, AMO
NBCKTIE. ON THB
| UOVMC*.’ THAT WoulO
NOLVBEf*. Oo! » mlnt .
\ A’O BACK. AMb d/srri
lonary camp meeting of .
Jiureh at Pilot Point will b«-
t 16th,* under the big taber-
_______ Mr. Wm. and Mrs. Annie
May Fistier of 8a* Antonio, Texas, jy-
muslc and street' services will be con-
ducted by Evangelists Tony and Far-
mer with their band of six young peo-
nie.
Born to Mr. and Mrs.’J. R. Windle,
August 9th, a son.
B. T. Selman of Birmingham is a
guest In the home of his brother, J. C.
Selman.
Mr. and Mrs. M. K. Bond have re-
turned to their home at Beeville after
a weeks stay with relatives in this
city;
John B. Garret has returned to his
home in Houston, after a month’s visit
with his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
G. Fisk.
Victor Fitch and John Gray attended
a state meeting of the Farmers' In-
stitute at Austin last week.
Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Street of Tioga
were in the city Monday.
Mr. an<i Mrs. A. C. Bryant of Aubrey
were visitors in this city.
H. R. Wilson of Denton was a visitor
in this city Friday.
Dr. T, M. Harris was in Dallas Wed-
dcscIa V*
Miss Myrtle Estes of Tioga visited in
this city Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Bryant of Ector
are visiting here.
W. P. Ratchford and J. F. Tobin of
Aubrey were in this city.
W. F. Craddock of Denton was in the
city Monday and assisted in the orga-
nization of a local poultry raisers as-
sociation. the meeting being held in the
K. P. Hall. F. P. Boemer was elected
president of the association, with J.
M. Smith, secretary. The purpose of
flie organization be.ing to create a
greater Interest in the co-operation of
marketing the same.
Mr. J. F. Till is visiting relatives In
Yoakum
Mrs. W. A. Wagner and daughters
of Durant, Oklahoma are guests in the j
N. M Peters' home. ’
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Klinger of Plain-
view are visiting here.
Mr. and Mrs. W T. Wilson of Au-
brey were in the city Monday.
The report came to this cMy from
Gunter that the gin at that place own-
ed by the Pilot Point Cotton Oil Mill
Company burned Thursday night. The
origin of the fire is unknown.
Mrs. W. D. Simmons of Tioga was:
Hie guest of Miss Jessie Johnson for j
several days.
Mrs. J. N. Rayzor of Denton attended
the funeral of Mrs. A. A. Bridges in this
city.
R. J. January and daughters. Misses
Pearl and Minerva of Denton visited
here.
Mr. and Mrs. H. H._Neilson spent sev-
eral days in McKinney.
Miss Annie Pearce has returned to
Denison, after a week’s stay with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Pearce.
Mrs. Scot Milam of Dallas is the guest
of Mrs. J. L. Hensley near this city.
Mrs. George West has returned to
her home, in McKinney.
Mrs. Joe Rogers and baby of Denton
visited in the home of her father, W.
E. Kight.
Miss Adele Ragland is visiting her
sister, Mrs. Chas. Thompson at Crow-
ell.
Chas. Cohen was in Gainesville.
Prof. j. R. Rrooks of Denison was in I
this city.
Rev. H R. Long closed a revival
meeting at Mustang last Sunday and
reported a number of conversions.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Graves and two
sons of Melissa visited L. J. Eddleman.
Miss Laura Moulder has returned
from a visit in Gunter.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Looper and Mrs.
Ed Coffey of Aubrey were in the city.
Misses Mary Eddleman and Tom
Jones spent several days with friends
at Melissa and McKinney.
Mrs. J. G. Powledge and Miss Dora
Ratchford of Aubrey attended the fun-1 ,
eral of Mrs. A. A. Bridges.
Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Graves and Mrs.
J. F. Wood went to Denton to visit i
their sons Clyde Graves and Jake
Woods, members of the National
Guard.
Hon. Chas. H. Morris of Winnsboro
candidate for governor, spent Wed-
nesday in this city, going to Celina
Thursday to make a speech.
W. H. Sparger ant! son of Durant,
Okla, home are guests of relatives in
this city..
Acie Skinner spent Sunady in Van
Alstyne.
Mr. and Mrs. N. M. Peters, Mrs. W.
A. Wagner. Misses Eugenia and Lena
Wlagner, Vivian Peters, Mavis McShan
and Hugh Dunn motored Io Dallas
Tuesday.
Harry Elliott, Pete Riney. Clyde
Graves, Bernice Clark, Mike Amen, Jake
Woods, ^ess Moody. Buyron Autrey and
Ed Seivally. of the National Guard
spent Sunday with homefolks.
Miss Anna Lois McFarland is visit-
ig in Denton.
The second Monday Trades Day drew
the largest crowd that has been in the
city for several months. All business
houses enjoyed a splendid trade.
Raymond Gee of Fort WoRh has
been guest of his uncle, A. H. Bee.
Miss Vera Bryant was in Dallas Tues-
day.
Rev. E. E. Gore of Gainesville preach-
ed at the Apostolfc church Sunday at
11 a. m.
On next Saturday afternoon, J. E.
Clayton, colored, of Manor, Texas, a
special representative of, the State De-
partment of Agriculture will lecture
on the square and the white people aa
well as colored people are invited to
hear him. He is educated and is quali-
fied to handle the subjects assigned
him.
Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Crossgrove are
now jft Long Beach. California.
F. B. Davis of Gunter was in the city
Mondr
Joe
Rev.
Hope Sunday night.
Nat Wilson, who ahs been attending
the sumer Normal has returned home.
Those in Denton this week were : Roy
Ray' Wilson. Hugh’ Da-
... _____and Misses Eula
Pittil, Beulah Mae Russejl and Mrs. Ray
Wilson and children.
Mr. and Mrs. Arvel Wail were In Au-
brey. . ,
A seventy-five pound watermelon
was raised by Ray Wilson of this com-
muni’-
THE “YAP MIND"
"The condition of all development
is not to be content with the present
but to have the courage to ask how
everything can be made better and the
good fortune to find a riuht answer tn
this question in thought or in action.”
— Ellen Ke>\_
In a newspaper discussion on the
justice of women’s wearing wedding
rings while men do not, occurred the
following:
“I am one of those who believe that
whatever is, is rigtit’; and the fact
that the wisest men of the world for
tholusands of years have thought it
best for women to wear wedding rings
an>l for men not to, is sufficent for me.
1 am not so egotistical and vain as
to imagine that I am wiser in such
matters than the wisest men of the last
hundred centuries."
Ttiat is a perfect example of what
the Authorman calls "the yap mind.”
The .Mind That Lives On Formulas.
What he mean§ by Hie yap mind is
the mind that is never used to think
thinks out but merely accepts formu-
las and repeats them.
Reading those sentences over makes
me feel like a war horse smelling pow-
der.
For there is no sentiment
world that exasperates me like
that "whatever is. is right."
How far would we ever have ad
vanced in civilzation if everyone had
held that theory?
Do We Want To Stand Still In Future
Progress.
Don't we wan to progress in the next
thousand years? And how shall we un-
less we are willing to have the cour-
age to ask how everything can be made
better."
J Someone has said Qiat if a custom
has endured a thousand years that is
a proof that theer is something good
in it.
That is one of those half truths that
do more harm than lies. A custom
may have somebthing good in it and
yet ileserve to give way to one that
has much mored good in it. And again
the custom may have been perfectly
good when it became a custom anil
conditions may have changed now so
that what was good once is now rot-
ten to the pore.
I Hope To Help Change Something That
Is.
Before 1 die I hope I’ll do something
to better the. world by helping if ever
so slightly to change some custom.
Of course, this does not mean that
one should go off half cocked and trv!
to change everything. The people who I
do that do as much harm as the "stand
patters."
One has got to use one’s mind and
one’s self control and one’s patience as
well as one’s courage if one wants to
help and not binder.
And of course one does want that.
/HAVfcN T » V,
C4®T mwvCH ra
no withwt
TO WASTS. MV
\^ygy up? —
more to this
the Russian and
French revolution, too. is pertinent.
Wben the French had overthrown Hi” (will agree t
Bourbons chaos ruled for a much long- [ up w ith their neighbors.
♦T time before any semblance of order
was reatored than has been in the case I owners
of the Romanoffs downfall It was icily, and there
out of the revolution, as w>- all know.,
• that sprang the little Corsican, who
made all Europe tremble before him
I and who spread th” glorv of Fp nch
arms by appeal to th” Paris sanscu-1
lottes and proletariat against the best
trained armies of Hie then exisitiqgl
■ powers. It must be admitted ttiat no
figure comparable to Bonaparte has
appeared on the Russian horizon: even <
the wonderful hold that M Kerensky <
evidently has. or his ability as re- ,
markable as it is. is not to be compare <
ed with either the military genius or
the the personal magnetism of the Cor-
sican. But, since the Russian revolu-
tion lacks many of the sanguinary
characteristics of the Pans mas.»acres
and since the world has gone much for-
ward since the close of the eighteenth
rentury,. It is not improbable that it
will require less of a genius to mold
Russian forces into a coherent fighting
strength than it did wield the di-
verse French together for Napoleon's
march across the world's political ho-
rizon. Kerensky’s task Is infinitely less
than Napoleon’s, anyway, for while
France fought the world and won for
nearly a quarter of a century, Russia)
has the assistance of the greatest na-
vies and armies the world has ever
seen—the Teuton empires instead oc-
cupying the place that France then
held. America is hopeful that M. Ker-1
enaky’s confidence is well founded and)
that presently Russia will be actually
eontributing somewhat of the force
needed to crush German militarism
The restoration of Russian strength
means shortening the war and more
eertain victory for democracy—both
Ek**f them ends devoutly to be wish-
Ks-M for by the whole world
—»—
£4; TY»e Pope's peace proposal will like
ly result in little toward restoration of
peace. The allied nations, we think,
will never submit to the restoration
of Germany’s colonies, at any rate until
they are actually heaten in the strug.
I' and we very much misdoubt if
Germany has been brought to the stage
where It Will consent to the restoration
of Belgium under complete indepen-
grg| deoce, or of Serbia ami Roumania and
the erection of a real Poland out of
mic as well as’Russian territory,
ait which there would be really
|HMt nation. There Is some justi-
r>® In the Pope’s claim that all of
•elllgerents have suffered so tre-
endously that thought of money rep-
*ation is ImpossRse, but the hope
! financial indemnities has been a
loving factor in German's continuance
( the war and not Impossibly in the
Ltltude of some of the others, and if
ermany relinquishes that hope, not
Bly would it encourage the others to I
ersist in carrying the war further but
> would very likely result in trouble]
t home for the Hohenaollerns. The
Woe of the Pope’s intervention now
Wanted 1.000 old casing at the Ed.
wards Tire A Vulcaninzing plant.
Notice is hereby
by law, that on the
Denton Independent School district will
1. _1
highest and best bid of interest onjhe
average daily
f___; ... ;;______________ _________
fund for the year beginning Sept.*!,
day of August,
—---o—--
The West Hickory paving will soon
be completed; it would have heen com-
pleted before now but for the delay-
in material shipments. The time is
here, if we are to continue the good
work regularly, for some other street
U» begin preparation for using the
city's street force just as soon as they
get thru with the contract now en-
gaged in. A very great majority of
the people on West Oak are anxious for
_______________the work to begin there; the city's
1™<ffi?tA°)?cdWto tb”! proposition of doing the work at 50c a
running foot with gravel (not crush-
ed rock as erroneously has been stat-
ed) and oil binder « very reasonable
and street men say that with an oil
treatment once every six month at first
of the publishers.
penter R. L. Fowler and Dave Yancey.
Mr. ami Mrs. R. Hill, who have been
visiting their son at Santa Anna have
returned hi me.
Mrs. S. A. Rankins and family of De-
Miss Emerine Jenn.ugs of
was here.
Jim Burns and family of Garza vis-
" ’ I G. Trotter and family.
S. H. Paterson is visiting his son,
Ada. Okla.
Carl Patterson of Fort Worth is vis.
iting his uncle. Bud Bennett.
Ed Shahan and family visited r<la-
solicitation of the ] fives at Argyle.
™Pr„...i tn fl.....n.il W ». Diller and M. H. Jacks.m of
1 Hollis, okla are visiting ?. L. Lacpen-
’ BilT Stiahan of Young County is vis-
iting G. W. L. Shahan.
Born to Mr. ami Mrs. W. H. ^niith,
j Aug. 6. a boy.
Carrol McElhaney, who visit • >iin Li-
lias returned horn’.
is visiting her
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 2, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 15, 1917, newspaper, August 15, 1917; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1228011/m1/4/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.