Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 6, 1917 Page: 2 of 4
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I
ranuia mt
E
day except Sunday)
•The
the
• d their phy
Reject
d'»*: mayb<
o
postofflee at
ti
March 3, 1873.
denton. rex vs September «, um
R SIBLINGS BY THE LOAFER.
th*
k
Alex-
arid
• 11 i "
Heap big mileage!
pi> >' i'«n
n- »
t
n
have
Til*
suiur*’
M
We Are Still Doing Business
It
11 i»-\ rd
ins
net
board.
he
»»♦♦♦ ♦++♦ ++++♦+ ♦+++ ♦++*
TEXAS NEWS BRIEFS
*
litorial col
■ n>
Hid
did
I
a
Felt Hats
get
d.
re-
$1.23
Sept
Still he thinks that a lot'
J. B. WILSON & CO.
the
=
But then Father isn’t used to this sort of thing
❖
JUMP ACROSS
7
©
it
■
’ - '
ESQ
N
&
front
i or
and M0rr
Acaosi__
at the same old stand on
East Hickory Street.
200 Mexicans Drown in Gulf
of California; Barge Sinks
CHINESE TROOPS TO
GO TO EUROPE; WILL
JOIN RUSSIAN FORCE
New We Know Who Started War;
Or. Michaelis Tells Suspicious
World "Kaiser Wanted Peace"
Watch for the
red Savage fign
The House of Service.
Lumber Too.
Denton Marketing Association,
B. C. DUKE, Sec’y.
GEO. FRITZ & CO ,
Denton. Texas.
th.- r
off) n~
......tic
40c
*? on
1,00
NEW YORK—Just where th? games
of the world's series is played will
• to be decided later. New York
Tim Tw»n-
corps,
t
CLEANED, BLOCKED
and RE-TRIMMED
Tim
reftM
are that
I tirnips
ELI
DANGER
Ol'
If
you ?
And yet. in regard t" people she likes,
she is far fr«im that.
in.reas.
th” (trice.
Ami ttiat
I
—
**
ttn I lie'
I' e* y- .n-
Normal,
secund
“Anoth'T thing i want I »
..I.. . .'.» and roads down
DENTON STEAM LAUNDRY CO
Launderers and Dry Cleaners
Phones: Office 8, Dry Cleaning Plant 800.
< h rm »n
♦I
I l.r*'''
■ n- Hi m
\\ h * 11 I *
I- !•> slip
NV, .Ilh
..IM »m'_
j, . • 1
CfoMEL?
OH?
Savages are “keyed” by means of serial num-
bers. And are distributed by our own organiza-
tion, not sold to middlemen in huge quantities
and carried in stock sometimes for a year or
more.
We know just where a casing is and how long
it has been there. The minute a tire reaches the
the doubtful age, the point beyond which there
is possibility of deterioration, it is replaced by a
new casing.
You are always sure of getting live tires, full
of “pep” and miles, when you buy
SAVAGE
TIRES
it’d
"d
noiiHi'i iii'-nt *f its
.•artlilx
Win.di
II"! iti.at I
*'Tib'r*
■
We throw away ashes
We raise dogs and buy I
We groxy weeds and buy vege-
e of many fire dan-
t no good housekeeper
.nHll^i
<>llth"U>'‘. |
instead
n Herald
isn’t anythin^ to -
t W"re SU["TllU"l|*
hard to sink the charity
include from ! furniture because it was out of style
as never tieard of.
(n fact it was not the high cost of
<!' Hl
r.t' d I
having
some
■If
' Hamil'
Th.-r.-
gratified. never!Indes.s. and !
made hopeful at finding th" following I sympathy t
In the alwayd-interesting editorial cid• i'‘"'dd
hie d"ith when
umn of the Herald
J If Dallas’ advancement
tty is based upon Hie lie. n>"d
t..
,nd
•■•Zfev,-.
•4®
I'"
f.....I or
gani/.a: i
W iVes
York
i> j wilho
x id ions.
. | fu>>.* t" plow
lie has built
etisl th it
m.*lid ms
ir r' turii
- British
|standard
I standard
trying t<
a ?! ’ "
add i .
I doll"
W
yard
pistol j
found
He was succeeded bv .]
. held the po
anyon” els.'
The styles
not chang
a®
^■1 i
■w <
sent to
These will
board later and
of the quota
that date,
r cent, xvill
com ntcwr)
UP HfeJMS J<
SAN FRANCIS,’.it. Sept 6
ty-foudh Chinese army corps, ?om-
i posed of 15,000 picked troops from the
DOINGS OF THE VAN LOONS
I WAt LAMiHWL-’
IS BXACTLV
I WAV rv
S OvXlHT TO Be
1 VOUVL
COME AA-ONC ,
WrtH M& )
I I'M. SHOW /
I VOU THAT /
< I AM I
Hid |'ro>i"T-
I sal" of
liquor then the sooner the public under- i
Stands the situation the better it xvilij
be for the public. But vw do not be-1
neve It. Dallas would have dexeloped
into the metropolitan citj that it i> if I
a drop of liquor had not been h satlx
gold within Its confines in twenty year-
Denison is just as good a town as it
Would have been had it been perrnirted
to continue the licensed sale of booze |
—better perhaps in
gtawy corrected upon bein« called to the
xttentjon of the publishers.
? I M D
SOMETIMES THEY DO.
tort that former Senator Jo- i
lailey xvould_come t,, Texas i
tie StaF* Senate has '
--------------x
Lmh.i. /jmewux -------
, / doAMd AHV »-tmTR«..
ILa \ I OH S6JCOISO
Van J work ts __, /
come from the fact
near-sighted), she say
"he is always tumbling around.
’ y»ui-u
t>&AK seers , THAT
•yeu A»a uot
MAKHNC TSE W/ORK
UP THe*US. AC
COR'D ITO ,
SPEC. PICATiONS • „
•T S all wronc*
AND Vou'uu HAVE
TO TEAR it down
AN5 MAKE «T
RtCHTb-ZT-"' i
Thru Their Piejudice.
Don committee might be doing some-j that.
thing better calculated to help Dallas
Og- - - - .....
CAMP FUNSTON, Kan., Sept. G.
There is to be no delay in the training
of the. new national armies, a part or
which is now mobilizing at Camp Fun- i
ston, and this morning the 400 or more !
men who had arrived were being put i
thru light preliminary drills.
The men have been assigned to quar-
ters and their uniforms issued. With
additional arrivals today it is expecl- 1
ed that 2,000 men will be in the camp I
by tonight.
savage f RAFI NITE TUBES
The only tube* th»t hare graphite vulcanized into tha surface
Prevent* detenoraUon. sticking, friction and heating Make*
*oap«tone unnece**ary Lengthen* the life of the tubes.
.
o close its .
Biiiner.
'Tve as 'a ;
Ific.al sub • i
xv i *ting i
now. ’
LOS ANGELES. Gal., Sept. 6 —V-!
r.Lr.g to a telegram received here I
, Mexican soldiers vvero |
drowned last night in the Gulf of Cal- i
ifornia as the result of the sinking of
a Mexican government vessel.
Advices here said that the soldiers i
were from the Guaymas garrison and
were being transported by barge xvith i
a number of horses and a quantity of >
military equipment from Point Eliz-1
aheth ’o La Bolsa, Sonora. The barge i
was in tow of a government tug.
cording to
today 200
ga*".* Newipapcr Servloa
Our record will show what we have done in the
last few years, since cur organization, towards
making Denton one of the best Poultry end Egg
markets to be found in North Texas. Ask anyone
who is familiar with the poultry business or who has
noted the progress we have made since our organi-
ation. When you have something to sell in the
poultry line give us a trial. We also ship livestock
and when you have some to sell come in and talk
with us about it.
ErM Hid
> >n lh»
for ’li.-ir
• bfinih-lx
Many rooms have to be
touched up for the occupants
that are coming.
Remember that varnish and
stains are easily applied and
add much to the appearance of
the roorfi.
Look around your house and
see where you can use a small
can of varnish or a small can
I of paint.
MARRIAGE LICENSE REf.lSTER
H A. Thiedc and Mi— Ex* Miller,
qwlsville. Route 1.
paper has succumbed to
Hickey is a socialist
Hebei,
have
WEEKLY
fi One year (in advance) ._— 11.00
months Hn advance) «fle
Three months (in advance). ..-..35c
All matt subscriptions to the Record-
; Qtronicle discontinuefl at expiratlonf
Weekly entered as second class mail
matter at poalofflce at Denton, Texas,
under act of Congress. March 3. 1873.
Daily entered as secon.j class matter
August 23. 1903, at the postotfl.e at
esent at ions prejudice against Dal-
in th" agricultural counties from
eb comes the bulk of l»all.,> husi-
I snpport.
+ 4
+ NOTES ON TODAY’S WEATHER ♦
»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ > » I »t
The Weather Man has acted really
nice about the weather if he makes
j good on his promises. He says that ,
I tonight and Friday are to be generally
fair. Now B is to be hoped that he
i knows what he is atxout when he
Ipromis's this. The, rains have been
gratefully received and were needed,
but even a good thing can become mo-
notonous. The people of this country
are go used to sunshine and bright-
ness that a few days of cloudiness
makes the populace sigh for their old-
time sunshiny weather. The man with
the fall garden and the man with pas-
tures are now abundantly satisfied, so
But even the most are witting for the fellow with
I the cotton crop and the man with hay
usenola needs the t0 MV(’ to have an inning.
♦ A CORNER IN BIRTHDAYS. ♦
♦ Tomorrow the following Den- ♦
♦ ton citizens will celebrate their ♦
♦ b‘^y o. -v ♦
nori hern provinces, is being mobiliz-
+ GENERAL NEWS BRIEFS ♦ , ,‘,i in a lJl|nese city for immediate de-
+ parture r»ir Eur»pt*, according to a ca-
♦♦♦»♦ ++++ ++++++ +♦++ +-M-+ blegram reecix-! h.-re by th". Chinese
the | Daily World from its correspondent at
to - •
the
Dr
- in
G rant
stationed
’ to town for th" sch
„t,r. her no. but
| lio n rejected on physical examination > later >n I did.
Hie cantonments. To be sure that I four box
* net quota is filled the board will 1 daughter,
possible out of this;
: :r cr.7“r s>'-1 :
■ ■ ' • i Aljiance
to fill the quota will be certified into I years
at once, those further down 1 * *
ing I
J oldest
; xvllile
corps
Ganada. near where hi* raner was
Kramer, the young.-s*. is al San
with the Texas gun.I f.>’ee<
exempt ion
to 2
1 I xv
I until they
took them t
that | repaired
[coats dl
I the same suit until it wore out.
hat was ample for the winter time for
i mutual n.-ighbor had fall, n | ttie fair ones of the home and one for
In many cases the people who
xx.-re one top of the social plot did not
buy new cloth, s until the old ones
were worn out and the remodeling
hal>it xv.is universal.
The idea <>f discarding perfectly good
and.-r
I overheard
Hiei very decided tones.
- a
J 31 Years tn
TION
cost
I wears out five times
AMSTERDAM, Sept. 6.—That Russia
began the war and that the “Kaiser
wanted peace" are key-note statements
in an interview given out by the Ger-
man Premier, Dr. Michaelis, and he
points to the disclosures at the trial in
Petrograd of Russian General Soukhom-
linoff as substantiating these claims.
Michaelis declares that it is now ir-
refutably proved that it was not Ger-
many which chose the time of starting
the war, but the Russian military par-
ty surrounding the Czar, who was un-
der the influence of France and Eng-
land. The Czar. Michaelis says, also
wanted peace and that he had cancelled
the mobilization order, being thwarted
by a couple of criminals who disre-
garded his orders.
National Army Men to Begin
Training tor Service at Once We have brushea too_enam
6— | el for the iron bed.
* -
I think a great many people arc like jnv XVP g-,, |(1 [|1P grocery store anti pay
in the Ditur" than arousing by its mis-I pf^that "pcrjudk’e" ' " "' ' I pa'
If the person disliked does Some
I kind act they search jaundio'dly for an '
i iinlovclv motive.
; If h" ” ' ' " ’ ’
(able they fall,upon it xvith delight
j peat it, exaggerate it.
Sonic Caii'-tic t'nnmialde Comment.
When they hear somethin^ that
1 o-'ittier good or bad
■ th" *.
■ caustic, unamiable comment to
It is strange to see what good, con-
! scienti >us.
thems**lve«
prejudice.
\nd the wor*t of those blue classes i
I is that one gets used to them s.. easily I „ ..
. that one does realize on.* is xx.-aring ner RfMhers, sole agents,
them.
mg finger-
il probabl
nw ’lit* little a'ddre
i the streets
mill wore
. ago than they
Of Mr. Grant's four s
. in the army
j'.in
son.
Mfr-'.l
and
n-ar
the ji.' .pie xv h
unn.i liiral
ni" in by
Shanghai.
The dispatch, which had been cen-
sored and deleted, indicated that the
troops xvuuld be taken thru Siberia to
the eastern front where the Russians
are being pushed back toward Petro-
grad. The dispatch hinted that gaps
in the Russian armies would be tilted
by Chinese troops and possibly aisi
by Japanese.
The Txventy-fourth corps is said to
include several companies of engineers
commanded by Chinese graduates from
American colleges, notably Stanford
University and the University of Cali-
fornia.
An aviation corps trained by Ameri-
cans md French will accompany the
troops, it was also indicated.
that the "li.anire
I remember ti.at
when I went to church a
came up and shook hands wi'h
asked if I was a stranger. I
a granted l that I was and she asked roe
District board on industrial I come
I claims, appeals approved and certified , • •
I men rejected on physical examination ; later <n
at the cantonments. To be sure that ! four box
thi* i , .
get as many as j .
call, preserving lheir order in the
In reply to lectixe draft, and only those necessary J
L .in I | 11 fill V II a , Til Al i XX • i 1 I F* . * /»*»»»♦ t r* i .**
service at once, those
the list being held in reserve.
Ninety-eight men will he
San Antonio on the 19th.
be selected by the
represent 40 per cent
called into cantonment* on
The (bird call, also of 40 pe;
tro Sept. ,70 and the remaining 15 per
cent some time in October as soon as
the army authorities are ready for
them.
Exemption Claim*.
Preliminary claims for
were filed by the following up I
o’clock Thursday afternoon:
Hardy F. Burke. Denton.
Harry T. Couch. Sanger.
Joseph Bauer. Tioga.
Genera) Lee Brown. Pilot Point.
Sam Dorman. R. 3. Denton.
James F. Rayzor, Denton,
.lake E. Blanchard Deni on.
John E. Choate. Hebron.
Toliver A. Hill, Frisco.
Callie F. Leuty. Justin.
Herbert L. White, Justin.
Roscoe B. England. Pilot Point.
Chas. A Montgomery, Denton.
Wesley E. Nix. Aubrey.
Charlie Howard, Sanger.
John Less Farr, Denton.
Walter F. Kirkland, Denton
Thomas C. Allen, Pilot Point . j
Adolphus E. Grace, R. 2. Lewisville.
Physical Deficiencies
Those discharged for physical defic- j
iencies were:
Jesse P. Webb. Krum.
Wm. W. Gresham. Roanoke
John H. Sharber. Denton.
Floy H. Ezel], Sanger,
flaud C. Thompson. Hebron
Getting Ready
For School
like the news of
i „vio' tin tin.i -m. i nl,i oe couiu go on leinng oi l
; . . .. .1' ' INn-s .......... . «hA|..
Hickey*
tto- in.-vitabie.
<nd his jKiji. r was named the
tai department seems t
*omewtiat and th"
I* existence withoi
purpose
ireer."—Greenville
p.iragriph rn ay ■
n to seine of Hie
I nel" *am isn l
I of ver anx rebel right
Rut she doesn’t I and buv soap.
------ ' ' ' ‘ hogs.
tables and brooms. We catch fish with
85 tackle and go out hunting for ten
rabits with forty-dollar guns
i hundred-dollar dog. shotting five-
.... I... Instead nf getting a gallon
of corn and making a bushel of hom-
We appreciate any and all business large or
small. Our motto is “Treat the People Right” and
we live up to it.
You will find that we pay the highest market
prices the year round for all kinds of produce.
We are working for the interests of our com-
munity.
We are a clearing house for the farmer.
We are not working for personal or individual
gain.
We are working for YOU.
Denton Record-Chronicle
toued every *by except Sunday) ' J**** ♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦
JM9 AND CHRONKXE COMPANY ♦ R|()M <NrtTIIKW VIEWPOINT ♦
C EDWARDS Eq it or .--- -
I. EDWARDS-. . BusineM Manager j
MBFH OF THE ASROvXATED Pltt>'* a^ph W.
tm AMnri»b‘dPreM la exclusively ami aid in the defense of Governor;
tied to the use tor republicatioD Ferguson before tie State has
Hl n»wa eredlted to it or not other- been nrotnptlv repudiated by Senator |
a Xtlited in this paper and also b.<11"j himself ft-plying io a Houston
local new’s published therein. fri.-nd who wired Mr. Bailey,,Um for—
Unbone 64 L -lN
st Hickory Street
SI BM RIPTION RATES.
we*k (in advance
i month, delivered
months, by mad in adv mce
year by mail m advance
‘if which. tlfo.-w .Tll'.r UOP,,,F* «,.<«• .
honest facts and not legal effulgence I
will hav" th" last word in the impeach-|
ui"iit 'rial al Austin, are probably also |
h .ping that Mr. Bailey will not fin./
there •* more money in th" world than
thought at the Urn.’ he mad" the
*lat"in nt quoted above.
<till.
f
till in the front
When it was filled in
proceeded to have it sowed
The late rains have brought
th" turnip* and prospects
neighbor will have
■wpx>ition
H car-
premium from til"
manac'’rp."nt of
Hrant and his
* ' X
ar
b.’H-'r '!
are n .w
-n- th
and th" four
Brook-
lh" M
i* in '(.■
now
h i*
♦+♦♦ +++++* ♦♦♦+ ♦♦♦♦
AUSTIN R. B. Bitmion has resigned1
as first assistant to Commissioner
Doughtv of the Department of Educa- ;
tion to take charge of the Commerce!
'■----' S. H. Whitley, who has been '
isistant, succeeds Binnion. E.'
G. Grafton, who had charge of the !
rural school department, succeeds
Whitley, while E. L. White of McGul- j
loch county succeeds Grafton.
FARMERSVILLE-While Mrs J
Bunch was talking across the
fence to a neighbor she heard a
shot and running into the house
her husband dead with a pistol by his
side. He leaves a wife and three chil-
dren.
FORT WORTH—Fifty-five prominent
business men of Fort Worth who have
always been anti prohibitionists have I
signed an agreement to support and
work for prohibition in Fort Worth in
case Dallas goes dry in the election
next Monday. The agreement has been
left at a local bank for the signatures I
of oth"r business men.
ili-fy hint.’’
j.atriot ill right, even tho he re-
fhe man’s garden, for
new home on North Lo-
an ornament to the street
md in j.r.’parinv ^rounds fur his horn"
il was necessary
yard with soil.
Alexand"r
in turnips
up f
Loafer * n.'iizhhor will
groen.-’’ galore.
*' gL-
..ur fri' tid
1 II. raid was i \H<T
an antipro
I . A IS w.
..•<•)..ir-
Gr.iii:. th"
lied corp..
ix ia I ion
a* Toronto,
father was
I might use
for I
m the schoo
-t I.
result
is right Everybody ought to !>>• forc-
ed to - d everything eheaji th"s" d iy.>. | Loafer's inquiry as t
Ev'-ryl.'lv hut ns " Clarksville Times.
DisF'sndinv your facetious final",
|.-nd lh" w.-ight of our ajipr .val to
pre.-.■dins' stat.in nt. Everybo.
‘,t . ft.- f .ri’. d t" sell tilings at n
normal j.r"tit Hiese dav
expensive, it is re.ison-
>ose that tl'.lir is less I'X-
.■ons.-.ju.-ntI\. tliat iir-' id
Loav.-s of bread that for-
ly sold for five cents, and were
dniost beyond the reach
j sell now for exactly
mu'ti If wheat is down,
tes should ""III" elo.ser to tile
of th" hungry. t»f
w ..li t: w" aren’t .
b ss with any
instead of pity-
.tunes which
that h" is very
< unamiably that | cent
- I and < o,oi<.
They See Everything Those People Do (.,.nf qIicIIs.
H AR L1 NG EN— F i re des I roy ed
Gulf Coast Marketing Co. stores here
and caused a loss of 820.000.
tie raids
..nix ~;jghtl\ '
"liger Ills’ll t>
, be .AJ.eeted
r and lars’.’i'l
"Med idea that it will help bring it down,
is t" know
British |
wlnl'
..•■ late-
Paris Is
NOTH E TO THE PUBLIC.
Any erroneous reflection upon the
eharacter. reputation or standing of any | p,.
firm, individual or corporation will be
keep up. Then a
once a year was
i dress the head of the house
me hat lasted him a year and per
five, tine pair of boots lasted
or three years and he wore them
were worn out. Then he
the I’otiler and had them
in coats and over
p style. He W or"
i in.
imt Job; That’s
What I. Grant, Head Miller
at Alliance Mill, Has Done
Thirty-one years ago Thursday A. i
Grant arrived in Denton to start the!
machinery for the Alliance Milling j
company. He at once went to wa.rk
on the job and today finds him s'ih
holding the same position, that <f
head miller. Mr. Grant’s comins l<> '
Denton grew out of a contract Joun i
Noyes of Buffalo. N. Y., had with Hu j
Farmers Alliance of Denton county, i
; Noyes made a contract with the f»rm-
| era to build a mill and start it run-
| ning. He bound himself to make cer-
tain graiks of flour and certain results
from the grain. Mr. Grant, who iiad
formerly worked in Buffalo, but w is at
that time employed in the Euip'r.’
Mills of Dallas, was sent Imre ’>y the
Noyes pe-.plc to start the n"w mill.
He started It on Friday, tlct. 1,
and the first flour ever ground in 'he
new mill went to Peter Fields. The
first carload ever shipped-from th’’ mill
went I" Roanoke
Mr. Grant says that his flrat impres-
sion of th" mill was that all th" tim-
ber in the county was being cut into
cord wood and stacked ab.m' the mill.
The whole country down I'rd wav
was covred with cord wood. The far-
mers had evidently been paying for
their stock in cross timbers currency.
"I did not Intend to stay !|..r,> when
I came" said Mr. Hrant, “being, as I
thought, on my way to Californi.i. but
the first Sunday 1 was here 1 went to
church and I saw a young lady (here
and d*’cid"d I wanted to stay and g’t
acquainted with h. r I did and she
has been looking after me for thirlv
years now. She m,s> Haiti"
I Smith Ulen, hut she was Mr*. Haiti”
Grant just as soon as I coul n T*iiade
her to believe that Hie <dianv" was
good for ber. I remember ti.at dav
ao .d iady
i tae and
I '"Id her
if I bad
.Is I b'ld
t'. ’ .elio.il*
hav • educt.aed
I* tie;- • md one
J WALT MASONS RMMB POEM. J ZUU HtHt HJK Ul
BOARD'S EXAMI
Ttte vforld will be a better place
when kaisertsm meets its doom,
for then the well known human
race will see true liberty in bloom.
For years the kaiser's been a
threat, e’en when he talked of
peace the most; be made the whole
world go In debt for ships and guns
and armored host. If some on"
lives next door to me, of whom I
live in ei.ns'ant fear, I may be
nominally frae, hut freedom of ttiat
sort is dear. I have to keep a
bulldog pup, a loaded shotgun and
a creese, a large stuffed club to
beat him up. if he attempt* to
break the peace. 1 never know
wh**n he may com", on some ex-
cuse, al) fun ,,f fight, to knock my
plexus out of plumb, so I cannot
sleep at night. It's vain to tell me
I am free, that laws protect me.
and police; while that man lives
next door to me. all empty is your
boon of peace. Thus to the world
has Kaiser Bill a menace been, a
nightmare threat: while talking
peace he yearned to kill, and soak
the globe in carnage wet. Because
of him the nations bore a load that
sapp’d their strength away, an/1
manufactured tools of gore, instead
of tools for baling hay. When kai-
serlsm is suppressed, when it goes
down with" siek’ntng thud, the
world will have a long’ sweet rest
from all this talk of war and
blood.
WASHINGTON—Viscount Ishii. t
ambassador extraordinary of Japan t
the United States, in a sp”"ch to
House of Representa’r.es said that hi*
country was ready to fight by the side
of tho United States :o gain th" end
desired. He assured Hi" t aiinlrv of lhe
support of Japan in ar.v v ty that that
country could serve in lhe common
eau-e of exterminating auloei’aiy from
the earth.
WASHINGTON—Eleven militant suf-
frageties were given sixty days each
in the work house for violation of 'he
anti-picketing regulations at the White
House.
AMSTERDAM—Two fading Hunga-
rian newspapers have endoraed Pres-
ident Wilson's reply to lh-* Pope’s
peace note. The Maygi" Drizag says:
“All real pacifists must !■” grateful tn
Mr. Wilson He. who from th" stand-
point of peace, condemns Mr. Wilson’s
note does n.d wish p*ic'. From the
Hungarian viewpoint, therefor”, h” i*
lhe enemv of peace.’’
WASHINGTON—Investigation of the
defective ammunition fu’’ni*hed to
General Pershing’s army will h» made
by three members of a committee,
two of whom are civilians and on? a
member of th" army.
WOODWARD. Okla--Tiie Chamber
of Commerce has decided to commem-
orate th" names of everv man who
goes from this county io the war by a
\ voting m .n m Florida di.-cov"red I ' 1,1
rood way to "scape I,lie draft net. I
receiving his notification to ap- ■■
before the exemption hoard, he 1 .
[ suddenly disappeared and was after- | ‘.n'"'\r 1
i wards found i>y Ins father hanging in '
I Hl outhouse, having d".'id'‘d to kill , ,, ....
i limiself instead of uoing to war.’’- d'>H.ara when th- outfit was new
ami [><
about it. deed
.... it’s I !,|e
human I tp,‘
the level of a mind which "''L
luntarily ehoo>e a dishorn 'ra-
in honorable
most, obstructs the pathway.
Most of the 200 draft registrants call-
ed by the Exemption Board were on
hand Thursday for physical examina-
tion and questioning by the board in
regard to exemption claims. The bunch
of young men present constituted a
very fine-looking body and members of
the board expressed the belief that
from it would be secured the largest
proportionate amount of certified men
of any call yet mad".
Drs. Wray, Copenhaver and Fullin-
gim were overrun with the applicants
for physical examination and Chairman
Wright suggested ttiat one or more
physicians be secured to expedite the
work. The board expected to begin
about noon in questioning the men
accepted on physical examination and
to certify acceptable men for service.
Some of the men certified at this
examination may not tie called into
service in the first army increment.
The county's quota of 245 m”n is net.
Chairman Wright explained, and the
county must furnish that number af-
I ter all exemptions have been
the District board on i
i»king fh" qu"*-
;i off -n-1x j" ■
■ • British
• nights
j-.i-t'-.|
bakers will
and cut
>f lower xvlmat price*.
L Everybody ought t
x.-rything eheaji th"
but ns
x our
.•iglit of
brass tablet on a drinking fountain or
other monument.
SAN FRANCISCO—Silver reached
dollar an ounce on the market here
when New York market reached 95%c.
This market is always five cents above
New York. Much silver in th? form of
coins is being brought out of Mexico
in spite of strenuous effort* on the
part of lhe government of that coun-
trv to stop such shipment’.
NEW YORK—New York virtually
knocked Philadelphia out of the race for
the pennant when they took two
. games from them here. Tais gives
| labor. We spend our substance in ef- New York ten games the lead on Phil-
i forts to get out of work and to keep adelphia.
Five men had been certified
fop service up to 2 o’clock Thurs-
day afternoon, hut three of these
had *ought exemption on Indus
trial grounds, giving notice of ap-
plying Io the District board on
Form No. 161. Those accepted
were.
Ben Lewis Smith, Denton.
•George Kirby, Aubrey.
‘Elmer J. Swafford, Justin.
Herbert J. Patton, Lewisville.
'Elisha JI. Sparkman. R. 2. Sanger.
t omparativrly few had compirt-
. . , al examinations nt
Dutt hour, however. Twenty had
li'ed claims for exemption on the
ground of dependent* and five had
lieen discharged for physical de-
fect a.
'Exemption claimed on industri-
al ground*.
______ r . 1 some respects. But
then, we are not going to fall out with
the anti committee for making xvhat- j
ever showing it can by statistic* that
are as unreliable a* the argument the
Committee ph’sents
There may be some j>eop|e in Dallas
~so simple as to be deluded by argument !
about the saloon-made prosperity of I
Dallas and the retrogression of the dry
counties about Dallas because of xoting 1
out the saloons: but any man with!
ability enough to reason from cause',., ... ,
. . , . , , I Ilk? that man and. so. ins
•O direct can see ttiat one factor i^kr him for his misfort
of Dallas' growth has been the ad- j
I rancement and prosperity of the rich;
agricultural counties surrounding it.
and the Dalias county Ant i-Prohobi-
"lt’* hard limes, nil It’s Hard times."
in old song that Loafer used to
, hear the ' .J.-ck hands’’ on the river
boat* sing when he was a kid H" has
been hearing that song ever since that
good day and has exp.Tieneed soni"
of ttiat same sort of times. In fact h"
has experienced no other kind of times
H" lias learned some xaluabl” lessons
by this sani" teacher but these lesson*
| corn.’ very late in life. Some how Loaf-
' >T has a sneaking idea that we are th.
authors of our own hard times in most
cases. W" all try to live up to the
of our neighbors and that
is rendered more costly b\
get by with things that the
dher fellow has toit which cost us
I more Ex.-r stop to think of the wax
j it cost you to live'.’ i ih y.-s you have
’ that but did you ever stop to
think of the things you have to have
you never thought of having
twentv fixe years ago? Some of u>
are Tfid enough to remember that far
k and others of us are getting old
'i to have a starting [mint. Then
w>‘ thought that the fellow who had
a horse and surrey that cost three him
ibly in that day cost one bun
year to keep up was on top of
pot He used th" hors" to jilow
garden and to run errands on he
; sides driving him for the family out
I ing. That follow was u[> some in so
> city. Now if that fellow keeps in sight
| "f lhe procession he must have a car
| that costs five times that much and
fast and costs
4. i fixe hundred to a thousand dollars a
♦ RUTH CAMERON’S SIDE TALKS ♦ year to keep up. Then a fifteen dol-
+ Hr <uit unv a y<iar was amp|p ami
plenty t
BLUE GLASSES
T'l judge peop!" by their deeds jslU'lPS
rishi and natural
To judge Is by
i do them is wrong and
Do vou know what 1
I last ?
Let me explain by illustration.
I told a neighbor of mine 'he other
dav that
down and sj.rained his ankle. I spring
“He’s llway* Tuinbling \rmm<l.”
"Is that so?" she said. "And it wasn’t
1 nn.re than two months ago that he 1
fell down stairs and bruised himself ;
all up. He’s always tumbling around.’’ ;
You would certainly co
that response ttiat my neighbor was a'w
unsympathetic person wouldn’t I ...
| living that has struck us but the cost
; of high living
I 3 British pa|»
if the
L^grarn ha- s
^and jjjk. tt •
vgt raids <>n
unusuaD x
German fly.
"4as th" b'sis
many seems
doned th" Z> pp"iin
its energies on th"
planes, and there i-
that late German airpl .n - r
been successful ill t“dl.
cssualitjes and in making th-
flights witti immaterial 1 ■—
anti-aircraft gun def. n>-s ha'
singularly fuRle in pr. v. n'mg
’’and the British airplane' •
.more effective and III" h
J Of the fail and winter max
soon to permit of longer
raids It has always b. • n
puzzlement to many .,bs. n
fe just why air raid' over tli.-
G) Capital have steadily mcrea'.-d
?■’ raids over the French eaj.it,d tia'
ly been virtually abandoned
» much nearer the enemy s lin. ' Ilian
London, but Haris of l it" has Ir.-.-n I
? bothered but seldom while London lias j
< suffered ami is suffering severely from
lhe enemy’s air squadron*, with f d.d-
at Ghat-I
juadruii*. w
Hies steadily increasing, ttiat
ham one night thi* w>"k being,
recall it. the in
man airplanes hav. y.-t a.
_ -.—— n------
■f We used to Hunk Hi d
Henry Ellis of the Deni' .n
about as "unreconstrm b <1
hibitionist as exisit.’d in
have not noticed, f .r that matter any
■formal announcement of (ns i-li.ins-
heart, if indeed, there lias t>". n. But
we were gratified, neverlle’le
Rebel has ; ♦ ♦
it due an- I »4■»+■*■
Loaf t has a neighbor in th? person
of .John Alexander, vice-president and
managT nf the Alliance Milling com-
pany! The other night Loafer was vis- ,
iting for a little while on Alexander’s j by
front j.'Tcti and the phone rang. Alex- 1 ”la
went to the phon" and Loafer
him saying, “N". sir!’’ in
He cam" back and
sat down and said. “Do you know that
follow wanted me to com? over and
plow his garden for him.” I .
‘o whether or not
h" told th" inquirer of his mistake, h”
was informed. "Naw, 1 did not. 1 told ,
him tha! 1 could not come. That ought 1
ly | t" '.ili'fy him” This same Alexander;
That is. they get prejudices
against certain people and then view
everything they do thru Hie blue glass
of that perjudlce.
If the person disliked
for that old fashioned adjunct to hog
killing (ime on the same basis that we
”-y for lots of other things that we
could make at home and save two-
thirds of ttie price. Instead of buying
our coffee green and roasting it at a
•. ,, , • . 1 saving of half the price we pav th?
■M'Zo 1\“ /1:.‘.,;tllLn'h'rice for inferior stuff and save th"
Publication Office. 37 iner Srnah
. tnonev m
. that
1 leavei
th"
zet te.
n do.-*: maytie it does. The
w .rd' that fail from men’s lips, how-I
"\.t, .r" more j.rone than pieces of
Kold’t" provide themselves wings and 1
il. bey'oiid reach even of their mem-1
-m-v. Thjj’e are men of honor and cour- j
TgL-w+rT' have uttered speeches in their t
ha-.!" which wera repented—'and re-
pudiated at their leisure. Mr. Bailey
I* a silver-tongued orator who has
s>-nt the plans of mice and.men agley
more than once, and who could prob- !
ably come nearer painting His Honor, 1
I th" lie’ll white ttian any other man. i
1 'hould he choose to do S". Because
Denton. Texas, under aci of Congress. »f which, those who are hoping that*
— . —I...,,.^» t ,t _< «*rx/l nr.A jt’fcT.il ♦* IJ llC**nCC >
born.
Beni I
D. J. Eddlenian was th” first presi-
dent of the mill and Pat Liveiv wa* the
, s.’caond. He was succeeded by .1. \V.
Cook, who held th” position po-*ibly
* longer than
Under the supervision "f Mr Groit
, the mill has made a most en* i dd” rep-
; utation. having won seventeen gold j
1 medals in some of th” l. a.iing fai'-s-erf
I lhe world, including the expo'ition at
Paris France, the Buffal
and th” >1 Louis World’s fair
1 ried otf th? first
; Dallas fair until the
j that institution barred
I j.roducts from competing
Mr. Grant is receiving th” congralu
lations of his friends on the mn ver
. sary.
, H.’plyinj
friend vxfio wired Mr. Lan-,., *«■-- io.-
id There is not enough |
world to employ me in i
Mr Bailey’s language 1
no doubt a* tie his attitude in I
rna'’ ’r.” -McKinney Courler-Ga-
.idMi.tiAi . in. .."J, but 'he re-
sult in the American league >s in
doubt between Chicago and Boston.
1 Just where the games of the series is
to be played depends on the results
I between these two cities.
WASHINGTON—Additional loans of
S100.000 000 each have been made to
Great Britain and France. The total
advanced to the two allies ia now 82.-
266.400.000.
f the
I w ic"
those
• reach-
■ "'irse, I md
d'diver- ■
■ delud- i
Th" only thing that will do that- the;
only thing that will ever act as a pro-
'■ mtroliing factor for unreasonable I
ri<-'’* will be a nali'.n-wid" or-!
i"U "f Housewives Til'' House-j
Leagues in f.liic.go and New
md other Eastern cities, as yet
1! th" full courage of th"ir Con-
or th" j.oW'T lo have those
conviction* accepted, have had their
say” very effectively in one or two in-
-tanees within the pa.'t year or two.'
I I'h" trouble seem> to be that th" ni"in-
ll>"rship i' too largely fr.ni the fam-
of Hi" w.’ll-to-d". Hi" women of
po T'-r families, and strange to *
those most needing til" protection
t damaging ttiat i.»r-;*ueh an organization, refusing to
| lhe weight of tti"ir organized s'cength
• t" Itl" League.
j abreast of the other follow. Now Loaf-
! <t does not expect to start any reforms. „
But he could go on telling of the other! have
make I waste iop a wnoie column I seems to have th? championship cf lhe
land tie is just as guiltv as the rest of j National league cinched:
lovable people will permit Is‘iH |?G think" ~ -------- '
t" wear the blue glasses of j "r l( ls ,1arn phoohshness.
The housewife who discriminates
serves St. Charles Coffee and Tea. Tur-
j lures are now abundantly satisfied, so
i the’cotton crop and the man with hay
ttion of a pol-
TFORD FIRE
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 6, 1917, newspaper, September 6, 1917; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1229531/m1/2/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.