Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 254, Ed. 1 Monday, June 10, 1912 Page: 2 of 4
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DENTON. TEXAS. JUNE 10. 1912.
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Try phone 44 for your
r
Hardy
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k,
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vfl
JL
it would bn highly interesting
know just what tb*HBI^M
bath (Iran Lorimer cost, aad
sale.
McGregor
second coat of kalsomine.
—-----o------
The Record and Chronicle
Swat the fly—Begin* now
continues all summer
Dotft forget the dates.
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Williams
HA
Fr'l
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a
piano,
store.
253c
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Ws.' .7
Kill the Fly and
Save the Baby
grocery
have arrang f'onnection. We will always see that
of you
1
ai
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money. That is what appeals to
hotel visitor.—Dallas News.
Miss Roberta Bass will teach
summer class in voice and
Studio over Palmer’s mug e
Old phonp 70.
have
good
as a town
People who
-J (no re-
Denton )
•re poor,
salon of the place
^onur.imm the
anted by
Ie from
f fl
SUMMER SESSION.
Summer session of the
School of Oratory will open June 3,
1912. and continue six weeks.
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£. - •• • -=^-^
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j; John Sbkrp Williams says
costs the country $6 for each bath
tn the Senatorial bath house. That | busineCs-l ke, hut
•applies to the ordinary variety, but fancy hotel that
KL . » > a at a a. a. - a . 1- - I Hunnic Tliora I a
MAKES GOOD AS WRITER.
Clifford S. - Raymond, of the
Chicago Tribune, is one of the most
famous pol'tlcal reporters in his
state. He is a comparatively young
tnau who has had a long and rich
experience at the state capital, hand-
ling new8 of the legislature. This
material he s now making use of in
a series of dramatic, and at times,
comic stories of the inside workings
of a state leg slature, which he is
publishing in the American Maga-
zine. His s’orfes are really from
behind the scenes and have to do
with bribery, intrigue and political
finesse.
“■j get first class grocer es dellv
ered promptly and at the right
price. Phone us today. Phone 4 4
LONG 4 KING
Beechnut Peeput Butter ^in i
sizes. Wo havp some fresh.
TURNER BROS.
a wholesome room and well served
meals, and a temporary abiding
place that is run strictly on busi-
National ness, frankly for pay, and with in-
our tention to glve honest value for reaj
. . .... . . a
Fi ” 'Bur
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We Texans are inc'ined to view
with pr de our state & leadership of
the cotton producing states, but
there's mighty little satisfaction in
the lint yield figures as compiled by
the Department of Agr culture.
Texas led in acreage in 1911 with
a total of 19,948,000. But it was
• almost last ip average lint-cotton
yields with only 186 poundg to the
acre. Only Oklahoma with 160,
Missies ppi with 172 and Louisiana
wilt 170 pounds were below Texas
among the great cotton producing
states. The leaders, it ig wholly sig-
nificant, were such states as Virgin a
■with 330 pounds. North and South
Carolina with 316 and 280 pounds
and Tennessee with 257 pounds.
Missouri got 360 pounds while Cal-
fornia's Imperial Valley with irriga-
tion gave the highest of all, 39q
pounds per acre. Even Alabama,
which we left as a boy called a
“worn-out" state, is ahead of Texas
wifh 204 pounds. If Texas had pro-
duced as North Carolina did last
Pear—and who doubts that Texas
soil is vastly more fertile naturally i
than North Carolina's- the state’s i
■crop would -have fallen little short
Of 7,000,000 bales- 6,894.090 bales I
to be exact. Farms in those old
state8 were old when the first plow !
tickled the Texas so 1; for years they '
were considered worn-out. But the
Carolinas, Georgia and Tennessee
continue to show the way for the
richer atateg of Texas, Ixiuisiana and
Mississippi. Why, ie a pd tlnevt
question we'll hold open for some-
body better qualified to answer.
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Fly pbete copyright by National Oeograpnie society
Sumner complaint, which causes the death of manV
fount children every season, is nearly always the result
of germs tn food. THESE ARE OFTEN CARRIED TO
i OH
BACK TALK.
With better hotej facilities Den-
ton could take a front rank as a
convent on town. A number of the
smaller cities of the sta’e are get-
ting a bountiful lot of free public-
ity by going after am! securing con
vent one of various sorts, but to get
more than one successful convention
<town musthpve fcujrfiicient ho'els
to take care of the crowds Record
»Wd Chronicle. '
Same here, old friend. We are
naturally a hospitable people in Cie-
burne but you would not think so
from our present hotel fac lities.
Onr present hotels are all right but
I F* 1*“n' more ho'els and better
, hotels.—Cleburne Review.
Wl-h better hotel facilities Den.
ton could take a front rank ar a
A number of the
io!*1 *FF* Of ,he R'at* are Fct
♦ V 8 Jw”*nt*f®1 lot of free adver-
*o,n* af,“r an<f securing
conven’tons of various sorts, but to
.th8n °ne tmccessful con
• lown mu.t have sufficient
of crowds
—Record and Chronir.e
Leaders in city movements
hotel 10,1' «”* Mo ,h“' "
■otej is as fine an asse’
could pose b|y secure L
,BU> • ,ow» *nd find
nation what^vfT upon
the »•«*> kilties
■bO:**™’® • bad impresaf
*om th* Jump, t
town's hotel 1s reprehen
*?lari |ha>t 5.-- fnWB ‘h*
n^‘‘“i“ "“’X fOODS BY FUES. KJLL THK FLIES!
....... :-----
‘Chautauqua session—Begins July ! rooms. There js no plumbing,
■sv7:7 - I Ablutions are performed in a tin
. i wash basin on the back porch. as-
na i stated by use of a so led roller tow*
|ei and a piece of much worn and
I apparently petrified pink soap. If
a guest wants or needs anything, he
It must chase about and find- some-
body-anybody—wearing out his
I patience. In contrast, tbare is the
| business-! ke, but not neCessar[ly
>----*—.«._t caters to busy
to | people. There is no sewing machine
• ln the hall. There are no pet cats on
n I the writing table. If a visitor wants
m a’B0 anything he finds some one on duty,
the pending attempt to give him a to provide- it as a matter of business.
And when he next plans to stop at
that point he feels a glow of satis
has faction, knowing that he will have
made arrangementg for an espec al
iy good report from both the Re-
publican and Democratic
conventions, and we believe
subscribers will be more thgn pleas
ed with thp service given. In addi-
tion to the regular day report of
the Associated Press we
ed for a supplemental report
about 1.000 words from the conven.
lions alone. In still further addi
tion we have made arrangementg
to securg, illustrations of pertinency
to accompany the fresh daily dis-
patches. There is so much interest
in and uncertainty regarding the
out<-ome of both conventions that
we believe the heavy extra expense
entailed upon the publishers will be
well spent in that it will afford
Denton citizen* comprehens ve ac-
counts of what ig done each day at
Chicago and then at Baltimore. ■
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The proh bit ion question reaehe*
»o every state capita) and to ‘he
National capital. Men who would
go to th*’ Jegislatu-e and men who
would go to Washington must say
what ig their attitude toward the
liquor traffic. And yet the coward
ly polit ciang are telling us that it
is a moral and not apolitical ques-
tion. As if there were divorce of
morality and politics.
The1 Sheppard-Kekton bill, as we
understand t. would forbid the ship
ment of liquor from Louisville, for
instante, to McGregor. Mr. Wol-
ters won t go that far; hp says he
favors a measure forbidding the
shipment of liquor trim Louisville
to McGregor for sale. We can’t
imag ne who at McGregor would
bring liquor in there for sale, see-
ing that the penitentiary would be
yawning for him. But that’s what
Brother Jake favors, and likew se
the distillers and brewers.— Waco
Times Herald.
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Twelve O’clock, and All’s—’’
. ■
Hl.
Story
"Mrs. Owl
I
Here and there he came
The owl darted tu
"After that he «..*
an
I
CHAPTER XXII.
s
The Whirling of the Wheel.
V
> -
s
The Owl Thai
Stayed Out
Too Late
feet below
A sudden slackening of the rope—
Msurance that the car, at the end of
the line, had reached the loadings
p .... „. Bpot below without the fortifications—
elevator’ wheitain serfs or benchmen and th* man •tr^lghtenM: in
swiftly had ne steppco lowers me
wheel, when an object, taterveoing.
stirred; started to stagger to its feet.
At once was the young man’s first im-
pelling movement arrested; but, thus
forcibly drawn from his purpose, be
did not long pause to contemplate; bls
hand, drawing the soldier’s sword, held
It quickly at tbe hunchback’s throat.
“A sound, and you know what to ex-
pect!-
With the bare point at bis flesh,
’ com-
prehending, could, indeed, guess and
ward.
Upon him at the aperture, tkta night- include a bott
rapidly vanishing In the track of the
moonlight. A moment the onlooker
stood motionless; then, ere the figure.
a few moments later, hie call, sudden-
ly remembered, rang, belated, in the
drowey air: ‘‘Twelve o’clocktond all’s
well! A new day, and St. Aubert
guard us all!”
A (word and a blade;
A drab and a jade—
The words, scarcely begun, above hie
breath, died away on tbe seeming sol-
dier’s lips, as the watcher on tbe
bridge, looking down to follow first
the departing figure of the old custo-
dian, crossed quickly to the opposite
window, and. from this point of vant-
age, gaaed up after the young man
UvniaM. 19M. ky TU BoU»-M«nU Ca
broad, wide, broken by occasional
platfOrms, these steps, reaching up-
ward in gradual ascent, had designed-
ly, in days gone by, been made easy
for broken-down monarchs or corpu-
lerA abbots. Also they had been
planned to satisfy the discerning eye,
jealous of every addition or alteration
at the Mount. My lord, the ancient
potentate, leisurely asoending in ec-
clesiastical gown, while conscious of
an earthly power reaching even into
England, could still fancy be was go-
ing up a Jacob’s ladder into rehlms su-
pernal. Saint Louis, with gaze be-
nignly bent toward the aerial escalier
de dentelle of the chapel to the left,
might well exclaim no royal road could
compare dkitb this inspiring and holy
way; nor Is it difficult to understand
a sudden enchantment here, or be-
yond, that drew to tbe rock on three
pilgrimages that other Louis, more sin-
ner than saint, tbe eleventh of his
name to mount tbe throne of France.
But those stones, worn in tbe past
by the footsteps of the illustrious and
the lowly, were deserted now, and, f<vr
tbe moment, only the moon, which had
escaped from tbe cloud, exercised
there tbe right of way; looking square
ly down to efface time’s marks and
pave with silver from top to bottom
the fight of staffs. It played, too, on
facades, towers and battlements on
either side, and. at the spectacle—tbe
disk directly before him—the Black
Seigneur, about to leave the dark and
sheltering byway, involuntarily paused.
Angels might walk unseen up and
down in that effulgence, as. Indeed,
the old monks stoutly averred was
their habit; but a mortal intrusion on
the argent way could be fraught only
with visibility.
To reach tbe point be had in mind,
Me want your grocery bus nose.
We know that we must please yoo
to keep it and We will see that you
are satisfied. Call ua. Phones 44.
LONG * K “
a bottle of <
— - your
■r W’
voice, rough, snarling, Crew swiftly ms
glance toward a presence, intuitively
divined; an understand, grotesque fig-
ure that had entered the plate but a
few moments before and now appeaqyd
from behind boxes and casks where
he had been about to retire to bis
mattress tn a corner.
"What do you wantT’’ repeated this
person, tbe anger and viciousnesa on
his distoned features, revealed in the
moonlight from the largo opening, like ,
ie that of some animal unwarrantably Jacques, dully bearing, vaguely
* disturbed. rrebending, could. Indeed, guest
"You. landlord of tbe thieves’ innl” tbe fingers be had Involuntarily raised
And inaction giving way to movement to push tbe bright blade aside, fell,
on tbe intruder's part, a knife that had while at tbe same time any desire te
, or arouse the
swiftly guard, was replaced by an entirely dif-
ferent emotion in his aching brain.
Never before bad be actually felt that
sharp touch—tbe prelude to the final
thrust. At the sting of It, a tremor
ran through him. while cowardice, bla
besetting quality, long covered by
"The owl bad flown into'the tunnel where the \'e<» York nub way railroad
meets outdoors. Tbe children on tbeir way to a: boot were greatly pleased with
the uwL Indeed, they crowded around th- ticket Heller's window su that be
could hardly sell folks their tickets for the trains •
"'You see what cornea of staying out too late.' some grownup Mid wisely
to the children
" 'Hoot, boot" screed the ow I
'When the th ket seller went home that evening be took the owl outdoors
end let him co Yoq may ix* *ure tuat owl will lie <-aref<>l ,h>w be ventures
Into «t range acsin "
Here is a place for me to <-m« i into and go io sleep. ou doubt young Mr.
O« i said to himself
"You see. he waswtlil a lone way from t»>nir a trtlto tired after bis night’s
nately, however, was tbe path narrow;* outing, and it was rapidly growing daylight Owl*, you know, cannot see to
"A sword and blade
A drab and a jade;
—Ji’s one to the King’s men of the army!"
he began to bum softly, as with a
more reckless swing, quickly he went
up In the manner of a man assigned ___
some easy errand At the same time jj"or r^m^mrond'H
the patriarch slowly and rather labori- | controlled, had primarily t.. .
ously resumed bis descent, and just f llnk betwe<.n the sequestered dwellers,
below the bridge, without the bar of ■ and the ffegb.potg and materlal c0ln.
shadow, tbo two came together.
"Think you it is too late for bls Ex-
cellency. the Governor, to receive u
message?” at once spoke up the young-
er, breaking off in that dashing, but
low-murmured, song of the barracks.
"That you may learn from the guard
at the palace,” was tbe deliberate an-
swer, as. raising his lamp, the watch-
man held it full in bis questioner’s
face.
"Thanks! I was going to inquire.**
As he answered, at the old abbot’s
window in the bridge above, the face,
looking out, bent forward more in-
tently; then quickly drew back. “Good
night!” ‘
But the venerable guardian of the
inner precinct was not disposed thus
lightly to part company. “I don’t _
seem to know you. young man.” he | >ring"soiaco'to generaUoni"of IsXtM ,n*' But the ■»»’««««.
.K----- --*--*.--r. - only wlth a __
first stepped impetuously; then' f ---. — —-—
stopped, hardly breathing, to look over aud,w« droning of insects near tbe fig-
• • ■ . trees on the rocks, continued un-
left unfastened. An Involuntary ques- bro*«t>- An impatient frown gathered
tion flashing through his brain—the on hIa brow; mor« eagerly he bent for-
cause of this seeming carelessness— ward to gase down, if hen through the
found almost immediate answer in his a,r • dtatant sound—tbe low, melan-
mind, and tbo certainty that ho stood ShoJ? hoot of an ow^~w** wafted up-
not there alone—a consciousness of
some on* else, nqar, became abruptly
confirmed
“What are vou d«W aoUtorr* *A
( use had my lord, the abbot, been ever inK the dr- would conclude the wheel-
a enabled to keep full the mighty wine- rcc— — ... .
butts of his cellars; to provide good there
cheer for the tables of the brethren,
and to brighten bla cold stone interiors
with tbe fresh greens of Flemish tap-
estry, or the sensuous hues of i—“
and fabrics from seraglio or mosque.
Times leas ancient had likewise
claimed its services, and even In re-
cent years, by direction of his Excel-
EJ Daddy s Bedtime
observed, the watery, but keen and
critical eyes passing deliberately over
the other’s features.
“No?” 1---- - - - - - - -
glare of the lamp, tbe deeming soldier
smiled.
the Mount—even tbe soldiers?”
*’! should remember oven thorn,”
was the quiet reply
•Those, too, but lately brought from
St Data rd r
‘True, true! There may be some of
those—” imcert*i*’»
way, made an abrupt movement and
swiftly left the window and the pass-
age.
At the head of tbe steps, which j
without further incident or interrup-
tion, be reached, the Black Seigneur,
stepping to the shadow of a small
bush against the wall, glanced about
him; with knit brows and the resolute
manner of one who has come to some from home
j definite conclusion, he left the spot of instead of flying ba<-k to their owu hallow tree
however, no choice remained; the 'observation, almost the apex of tbe i Not ions • young owi who 'ire* in Van t'ortlaudt park, m the upper
steps had to be mounted, and, lower- I Mount, and plunged diverging to the I*rf «f New York city, was <>>> ri« way buote at any early hour in the morn
Ing his head and looking down, delib- right. From glint and glimmer to dark- , in* "ben he saw what looketl like a nhw dirk cov* lu a bank,
erately he started.
T'erfaap*. too. he may nave hv'j a m.tuto’ ur -pider ur lizard dart into tbe
‘■ave. and this would be enough U» temtit auy owl to follow it
"So in be went The eave Hc-iut-d verv ion«
ut'oii lights
"Suddenly he heard n n 4m- like tbutmer behind him
the nearby platform and tried to rtlru: to the wall, but It bad a smooth, shlny
Several times he struck against w’irfacs like chiua. and m> be grabbed r wtie and -itrnv there while a train
himself up; went on tbe faster, only, "After that he «.,* *o aj-afed that be allowed the man trom-ibe ticket
after what seemed an interminable offi'-e to take him dowti iti-j <-urry him ibto his bobtlg.s
period, to stop. J j
"Am I, can I be mistaken?”
But the single star he could see
plainest from the bottom of the deep
alley, and to which he looked up, an-
swered not the fierce, half-muttered
question; coldly, enigmatically it twin-
kled, and, half-running, be continued
his way, to emerge over-suddenly into
a cooler well of air, and—what was
more to be welcomed!—an outlook
whereof the details were in a measure
dimly shadowed forth.
On one side tbe low wall obscured
not the panorama below—a ghost like
earth fading into the mist, and near-
er, the roof of tbe auberge dee voleurs,
a darkened patch on the slope of the
rock; but in this direction the man
hardly cast a glance. Certain build-
ings ahead, austere, Norman In out-
line, absorbed his attention to the ex-
clusion of all else, and toward them,
with steps now alert and noiseless, he
stole; past a structure that seemed i
small sails des gardes whose window
afforded a view of four men nodding
at a table within; across a space to
another passage, and thence to a low
door at the far corner of a little tri-
angular spot, alongside the walk and
near a great wan. At once the young
man put out his band to the door;
tried It; pushed It back and entered.
Before him a wfde opening looked out
at tbe aky, framing a multitude of
stars, and from tbe bottom of this
aperture ran a strand, or rope, con-
necting with an Indistinct object—a
great wheel, which stood at one side!
trusive and his echoing footsteps to
resound louder No indication he had
been seen or heard, however, reached
him; to all appearances espionage of
!h!s movements was wanting, and only
1 the saint with the sword at the top of
the steeple—guardian spirit of the
rock—looked down, ac If holding high
a gleaming warning of that unwonted
intrusion.
Yet.- though he knew it not, mortal
eye had long been on him. peering
from a window of the abbot’s bridge
spanning the way and joining certain
long unused chambers, next to the
Governor’s palace, with my lady’s
abode. Against the somber background
of that covered passage of granite, the
face looking out would still have re-
mained unseen, even had the young
man, drawing near, lifted his glance.
■ This, however, he did not do; his eyes,
’ with the pale reflections dancing in
i them, bad suddenly fastened 'them-
| selves lower; toward^Biother person,
not far beyond the bridge; some one
who had turned in from a passage on
the other side of the overhead archi-
tectural link, and had just begun to
. come down. An old man, with flow-
I Ing beard, from afar the new-comer
; looked not unlike one of the ancient
Druids that, in days gone by, had
lighted and watched tbe sacred fires
of sacrifice in tbe rock. He, too guard-
ed fits light; but one set In tb« tall,
pewter lamp of the medieval watch-
man.
"Twelve o’clock and all’s—” he be-
gan when bls glance, sweeping down,
caught sight of the ascending figure,
and, pausing, be leaned on his staff
with one band and shaded bls eyes
with the other.
A half-savage exclamation of disap-
pointment was suppressed on the
young man’s lipa; had be only been
able to attain that parallelogram of
darkness, beneath the abbot’s passa<*e,
he would have been better satisfied,
his own eyes, looking ahead, seemed
to say; then gleamed with a bolder
light
•» found inside. Having thus In a meas-
, auu mo ucau-puts ana material com- une secur'' ?r’f »-~n Immediate
' Through its interruption wknout—lor anyone try-
—------ ; IviniKavusiy. auu, w me uosca-
An instant tbe intruder regarded the back obeyed, his crooked lege shaking
inert form; then, going to the door, in the support of hla mtaahapoa frame,
served as a latched and locked It with a key ho "into the wheel with you!”
"The wheel!” stammered the dwarf.
"Why—what—”
"To take a little of your own medi-
cine! Pardlt What a voluble fellow!
In with yon, or—”
With no more words the hunchback,
staggering, hardly knowing whft ho
did, entered tbe ancient abbot’s ma-
chine for hoisting. But as bo started
to walk in the great wheel at tbe side
of his captor, a picture of the past—
the times he, himself, bad forced pris-
oners to the wheel, stimulating with
jeer and whip—arose mockingly be-
fore him, and the incongruous present
seemed, in contrast, like a black wak-
ing dream.
That it was no dream, however, and
that the awakening would never oc-
cur, he well knew, and malevolently
though fearfully he eyed the rope, com-
ing in over the pulley at tbe aperture]
to be wound around and around by a
smaller wheel, attached to tbe larger,
and—drawing up what?
FT© be enn tinned'
flashed back in tbe hand of the hunch- attempt to call out.
barir, with his query, was i ” *---'
twisted from him and kicked aside,
while a scream of mingled pain and
rage became abruptly auppreseed.
Struggling and writhing like a wild-
cat, Jacques proved no mean antagon-
ist; with a strength Incredible for one
of his else, supplemented by the well- ' growl and egotism In his strength and
known agility of his kind, he scratched, hideousness to terrify, alone shone
kicked and had managed to get the, from his unprepossessing yellow Use-
other’s band in hie mouth, when, mak- j tures.
ing an effort to throw off that clinging ; "Ton were brave enough with the
burden, tbo Black Seigneur daahed soldiers at your beck!" went on a do-
th* dwarf’s head violently against the 1 termined voice whose ironical accents
—----- ------ ,
j A Train Rushed by
so vividly defined in shine and shim- t>.a qwI.
mer, had reached the top of the stair- i
I a*M) iheir n; v« jiiway* Interested Jack and Evelyn
■ m A pair had nested unar tbe bouse, and the children were hoping
. they might be a Me to rnnke friend* with the young one*
"You would better let them xlone." daddy advtaed
may not tike your coming about the Be*t, and. while owl* are generally
jieaceable birds, yon can t teh wti*l a frightened mother «wl way do if she
thinks you ore likely to tu.rio her IwMes »
"The younge- ow ls are ixd ».• wise a* ihe|r pureuta Vliey like to see tbe
world snd at nislit *ometin>e«. «v‘jeu they have tenrned lu fly. wander tar
When morning <-«>me* ttary '-rnwt into *ouie dark '-orner to sleep
dwellers, the Black Seigneur had
first stepped impetuously;
Unflinching in the bright j,fa shoulder at tbe door that had been
"Do you, then, know all at
room vat.ta. ci t’<;;t the dwarf slept
or in tbe store-house beyond—
the Black S-.lsrr ur walked to the ap-
erture, and reaching up, began to pay
out tbe rope from a pulley above. As
rugs he did 40, with feet braced, he leaned
over to follow in its descent a small
car along the almost perpendicular
„ planking from ths mouth of the wbeel-
lency,” the Governor^ had It occasional- »«YsnU hundred
ly been used for tbe hoisting of goods,
wares, or giant casks, overcumben-
some for men or mules.
Toward this simple monkish con-
trivance, the summit’s rough lift, or
had walked like squirrels in a cage to Mn <* attention, stood listen-
* - *— ----, Impregnated
only with a faint underbreath, the
faraway murmur of water, or the just
As be proceeded ness unfathomable! For some time ’
his solitary figure seemed to become ' be could only grope and feel hie way,
more distinct; bls presence more ob- ,after the fashion of the blind; fortu- I
S A JE Ul> ' Tv o ♦ ml v Virxxa-w-aa Stam n*fh nn**nw*^
although tortnoua, fairly well paved, fly about in tbe daylight
and no serious mishap befell him. |
even when he walked forward regard-
lesdly, in feverish haste, beset with I
the conviction that time meant all In
all, and delay the closing of th* toil*
and the failure of a desperate adven-
ture. r
the atones; once fell hard, but picked went rushing by
NCrritTC TO THE PUBLIC.
as* erroneous reflection upon the character, reputation or stand nr
et any firm. Individual or corporat ion which may appear tn tre columns
•f the Record and Chronic)* will b* gladly corrected upon Being called
«• tbe attention of th* publishers
Weekly entered e* **cond class mat) matter at postotfic* a fem on. lea-
m under act of Congre** March • 1873
Da!?y entered as second class mall matter Aug 23 1 yva. st tbe poeiot-
ftce at Deoton. Texas, under act oi Congress. March 3. 1878
ail eubeerlptloos to tbe Weekly R«cord and Chronicle discontinued at
ex st ratios
M PARAGRAPHS
SOME
J,
t
Wilson
1400
IL
Weekly.
v. Ars-.
I ’ Facts.’
I
T4‘‘
■
all
of
lliiMtrvciona by
MAY
WALTUtS
Dae y*at (ta advance) .... .
atx months (in advance) .
Three months (In advance)
4
The La
fSEBEaKB OF THE Ml
Mount
By FRED BRIC S. ISHAM
k AeTkere/ ,
^s. “The Strollers" A
“Under The Rose” //
reason
rejoice
hachie Light.
. 81 8®
6C
*Tront the miscreants it has smelled
out,” anpwered the bid man grimly,
but obeytad; stood as h engrossed in
the recollection his own response
evoked; then turned; walked on, and,
__________________: ” ■_________________________________________________________________________________
MJBaCKlPTlON HATER,
was meats* aenvarag
•tx meatha. by mail (in advance)
um rear, by mail (in advance)
RBCO 4 AND UHRONMTJC COMPANY
W C EDWARDS. Editor R. J EDWARDS. Business Mgr
MEMBERS THE AM -AMTATED PRH*
Telephome (Old and New) 64.
—
4fie W th bumper crops almost asstir
II fit t ed, and the chances good for tbe
1 election of Woodrow V.’!*™=. *—
! president, Judge Ramsey for
i ernr, and Morr s Sheppard
for
gov.
Morr s Sheppard for
Unitexl States senator, there is no.
why al| Texans should not
Come to Texas.—-Waxa
"No doubt! Bo If you will tower
your lamp, which amelia rather vlle-
Cotonel Wolters should by
j means revive the publication
— it would enable him to
reproduce the pictures of all the
great men »ho are support ng him
In bls race for United State* sens
, tor.— Waxahachie Dally Light.
4 0C I
Vi
f J
tSMMto
¥
To fully appnt iat® tl*« reft! - of -k ‘ k. bn? *• ■ -.1 ‘*f
Calumet and aa h test bake m UaU'h of bun u t*-
See bow light and wonderfully raided they r.»e trui.i thp
oven.
Theft brerk
The Delights
In Baking With
CALUMET
BAKIW5 POWDER
.
_______ of them onrn not»- bow tbonwisMy.
evruJy m;.G th« UoukL Lum n»kti
And the final text—tbe oac t!iat cvunu- bmtter «n«l tarts.
This test m ill prow (n ' thRt Cb!vh;* i> ths n! cattM*ad-
able Baknitf Powder tor ermry purvooe *
It will prove its ftconomr over |h* b vk vw? truM brands
a tad Mu great superiority over the big can kind*.
F r Calumet is highest 4n quality—ana modaratl in cost.
I^crtvod Haabett Award Warifa Pot Fwto Eapartltoft.
■vX
'V
L
ie Record and Chronicle
(Issued avery day except Bunday)
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Edwards, W. C. Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 254, Ed. 1 Monday, June 10, 1912, newspaper, June 10, 1912; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1229388/m1/2/?rotate=90: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.