Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 1, 1910 Page: 1 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
WEATHER REPORT.
* NEW ORLEANS. La.. Best.
* 80.—Tonight and Saturday
* generally fair; cooler.
****»*#*«»♦♦»
HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX
l
a
71
/
I
'z M
Clothes are so very popular with such wearers,
name of Hart, Schaffner & Marx is recognized as
mark of highest quality, and latest style by young
everywhere.
the
men
Better see the new suit models--Shape-
maker and Varsity; and the new ideas in overcoats.
We Are Making Special Prices on These Suits
for a few days during our opening sale--it’s the best
time you will have to buy your Fall suit.
Hart Sckaftocv Sc Marx
Jarrell-Evans Dry Goods Co.
So
LOS ANGELLS TIMES
UNION LABOR CHARGED
SIXTY KILLED. THIRTY INJURED
AND FIFTY MISSING
AS RESULT Of EX-
PLOSION.
Exchange
National Bank
Next to poetoffice.
.NWMKWnMMMBMMW
Shucks
ton
■
THE ALLIANCE MILLING CO.
•WTWWHMWMNfNMVinMfMF
MMMKN
?!
1
r
I
IMRIMUkMWKMUhMKMiJhAlii^ur^liMKMSUMMadMMWMNUMMUMUMMi
tv-
ft
KKKJKMKb&^.SJKMMtih&MMUMMKMMQIaNKtlMKSi
tenton County'N.tlonal Bank |
TRY US. J
1
B. H. Deavenport, Cashier
R. M. Barns, Asst. Cashier
...
Offers good service for your patronage.
P. Blount, President.
E. Graham, V.-Pres.
B
Baled Shucks, $8.00 per ton, delivered.
Corn cobs, 15c per 100 pounds; $3.00 per
Phone your order and have some of the shucks
delivered to your home; they make excellent cow
feed. The cobs make good kindling.
k._
—
■
rs-' -188
Herbert and Maudena
- .
decidedly the
LONG & WILSON
UkJWWWWWh*-*.*
in an entire change of act
PRESENTING
The SoubreMe and the
Officer.
season the
; new can-
MWBM1WNNW.
v-4
JX’-1
PICTURES:
1. Wooing—“You Knee
2. Lost In the
PRINTZESS GARMENTS SET THE STYLE FOR ALL
Our showing of new PRINTZESS Suits and Coats for Fall is winning the enthusiastic admiration ofTali
visitors to our garment section.
The new models possess refinement of style and individuality to a marked degree and the wide range of fash-
ionable fabrics in which they are shown includes all the most favored materials.
PRINTZESS garments have always been famous for their good style and accurate fit, and this 1
new PRINTZESS PL1O CANVAS with which they are made is an added feature of superiority. This
vas won’t shrink, wrinkle or sag, and insures the permanent shape of the garment under all conditions.
When you consider the style, quality, service and modest price, PRINTZESS garments are
best values obtainable. 4.
an.
a?,Im
WWWWflMfMfMMWWWWW I FIRST
kMMWMaUMtM
BKMMKMMUNMNMMUhMNNMM*
MMMM
mw
Jb
I
'illl
REFERENCE:
More than two thousaiAl
satisfied customers.
College Men and Young Men Gen-
erally Are the Critical Buyers of
Clothes. That’s One Reason Why
Evers’ Stoves
BY
GALVESTON, Tex., Oct. 1.—That
Only
EXHIBITORS AT DALLAS
RECEPTION MONDAY EVE
Is
HABEAS CORPUS HEARING
hibii
FirstNationalBank
Denton, Texas.
I. 0. 0. F. OPEN MEETING
HENDERSON. Tex., Oct. 1.—Fire
TONIGHT
Your last chance to see
Majestic
Airdome
Courtesy,
Liberality, x
Prompt Service,
Reasonable Charges
(.Ytizeaa ot Town and Coanty Will
be Given Reception »t C. L A. to
Meet President and Mrs. Rixsell.
A very representative attendance
from the town and county iB ex-
pected Monday evening at the recep-
Denton Lodge No. 82 Will Initiate
Ten CandidaUfc and Give a Spread
Tuesday Night.
WILL COPELAND BOUND
OVER TO GRAND JURY.
PROMINENT BROWNWOOD
BANKER FOUND DEAD.
today destroyed the residence of
j Newton Blake, causing a loss of $5,-
FirstNationalBank
Denton, Texas
NEWTON BLAKT RESIDENCE
AT HENDERSON BURNED.
TAX ROLLS FROM
MILLER FRIDAY.
CHARGED WITH MAKING
OFF WITH LODGE FUNDS
to
to
In ..ddition to County Exhibit There
iU be Several Individual Exhib-
its at Fair.
fected, According
Dispatch, Owing
Demand.
875,000 from laukt
Assessed 5,432.
HaskeU for the Senate.
Gov. Haakell is being urged to
run for U. S. Senator to succeed R.
L. Owen, who is a candidate for re-
election.
Galveston
Decreased
In addition tp the county exhibit
at the Dallas fair, which promises
to* be even bet er than last year’s,
there will be a number of individ-
ual exhibitors from Denton county ta
the various departments. Among
those who will, it Is known, exhib-
it, are A. D. Turner with a car of
sheep, the owners of .the German
coach stallion McMahon, Arthur C.
Rayzor’a mare, Maude L, W. F.
Woodward with a 2-year-old and a
mare, and W. C. Grant with several
stallions, jacks and jenneta.
, Several of the local tournament
entries will also enter in the a’ata
tournament at Dallas, half a doxen
entries having been made there from
atnon- Denton county riders.
” J. J. McKnight, S. I. Reynolds and
others will also probably have ex-
' " Ita of livestock and Wm.. W.
Wrig&t will probably show some of
hi8 fine hogs in the hog department.
of the College of Industrial AFs
are to tender to Preaident and Mrs.
Blzzell. A general invitation has
been issued to all the local lodgse
and different organizations and
cluba of the city.
Denton lodge No. 82, I. O. O. F.
will give a special open meeting
Tuesday u ghl at thev lodge r.T.pg
ou the i r r;h ride t> wl’ru all meu-
bers, visl l.ig brethren and their
wives are invite). Ten candiliu*s
will be inPUted, ft Bowed by ’til-
th eon for ths members and »ive«>
are the cardinal principles
on which this hank depends
for success.
It is our policy to stand
by out friends.
- Evers Hardware Co
out wag deiareo <uo muig itxiay. .
Austin Friday night. The total val- Dishes. I ookingware.
nation. $18,777,735, is a decrease of
FARMER KILLS PROWLER ■•‘S.VX0
-----— I 611,116.7 acres of land rendered
George Jadmon, a Negro, Shot and for taxation in the county, which aro •
Killed by J. M. Kramer, a Farmer, j valued at $10,337,290. The eity
Near Bryan. ' property is valued at $177,555.
; The livestock rendered, with their
WACO, Tex., Oct. 1.—Application
for habeas corpus in the case of Mrs.
Minnie Streight, charged with the
murder of her husband, T. E.
S reight, publisher of the McGregor
Mirror, who was re-arrected and
jailed yesterday on an indictment,
is now prepared and will be present-
ed today. Mrs. Streight was out on
$10,000 bond. Mrs. Patsy Neff,
charged with being an accomplice,
s also seeking bail.
Mrs. Naff wag arrested in Mc-
Gregor an a grand Jury indie*irent
charging ner with being an accom-
plice to the act in the murder and
her bond was fixed at $5,000. The
woman Is a friend of Mrs. Streight
and is a widow. It la alleged that
wrote a letter to entrap Streight
Into abusing his wife and use the
incident against him.
HOUSTON. Oct. 1.—M. B. Pettl-
john was arrested here today wn a
warrant from Alexandria. La.,
charging him with embezzling the w
Redmen’s lodge funds a few days
ago. eP« ijohn was arrested and
charged with passing forged checks
but the Redmen’s lodge cams to hie
assistance and secured his release.
PettUohu waa an officer in the Al-
exandria lodge
SHREVEPOT, La., Oct. 1.—Su-
perinntendent Hearn of the Vlcks-
' tkwg. Shreveport and Pacific di-
vision of the Queen and Crescent
railroad today filed affidavit charg-
ing "he striking railway clerka with
a cowardly attack upon John and
Carlton Barksdale, traveling passen-
gen agent filling the places of the
strikers. This is the first suit to de-
velop in the s rlke.
V.- A C. »»
WITH
I KERS CHARGED . .
ATTACKING MEN.
000. The family narrowly escaped
in their night clothing. The blaze
la believed to have been of incen-
i diary origin, aa a pile of rags sat-
urated wi h oil waa fonnd in the
; barn where the flre started.
BROWNWOOD, Tex., Oct 1.—S.
R. Cogin. president of the Coggin
Nation#! bank, one of the oldest snd
weal blest citizens of Brownwood,
was found dead in bed early thia
morning. Yesterday he was well and
transacted business. He leaves a
wife.
newspaper H d ‘or . Many . Year*
Fought the Unions of Al Kin<1g
—Two Labor Union Men Ar-
rested with Ex-
ploding the Bomb.
A lifetime's expennnee has
us many things about stoves
Horses, 16.449 head, value, $8'’’-,
05o; cattle. 16,786 .head, value
$226,825; jacks, 143 head, value,
$12,280';' sheep, 5,177 head, value
$11,440; mixed, valued at $159,970.
The total valuation of property in
Denton county lg $18,777,735.
The first tax. or state tax,
amounts to $751,110: the second, or
state school tax, is $31,296.23: the
bird, or county tax. i8 $56,333.20,
special school tax. $14,165.94.
The total tax assessed is $109,-
300?.
The number of polls assessed la
the county is 5,432, the total poll
tax at $1.75 each being $9,506. of
which amount the county receives
$1,358 and, the state $8,148.
FORT WORTH, Tex., Oct. 1.—
Will Copeland of Dallas, charged
with the murder of Will DaviB and
with fatally shooting Roy Aden ini
a rooming house here Friday morn-
ing was given a preliminary hearing
in Justice Maben's court today, and
was bound over to the October
grand jury. Coun y Attorney Roy op
posed granting him ball.
LOS ANGELES. Cal., Oct. 1.—
Sixty killed, thirty injured and fifty
missing in a fire which broke out
in the Los Angeles Times building
this morning, following an explos-
ion of dynamite, according to Man-
aging Editor Harry Andrews, was
cuased by enemies.
The Times has made a long ftg'it
again* labor unions. A school of 1»-
strutlon for non-union men waa es-
tablished and the animosity of the
unions is blamed.
Two members ot local unions were
arrested, charged with exploding the
bomb.
For many'years the Times has
been almost the only big paper tn
the United States run by non-union
labor. It has wsred a bitter and
unrelen Ing warfare on trades un-
ionism of all kinds and the unions
have fougbi' back just as
methods. Gen. Harrison Grey Otis,
one ot he best known men In the
by undertaking bokcotts and other
West, U ’he owner and editor of
the Tribune.
With John . _________ , . . - .
rial nominee, the New York demo- the price of co ton will drop as a Assessor Miller and deputies
UNANIMOUS FOR J. A. DIX1 150,000 MEN LOCKED OUTjTAX ROLLS ARE APPROVED;
HELD SEVEN HUNDRED MANCHESTER < -OMMI88IONER8 RECEIVED 19IO
MILLS CLOSED DOWN
STRIKE AND LOCKOUTS.
The county tax, rolls upon which
have
three
England, months and which are required to
' -----""2 were
-nd shippers will be affected. Cable turned over to the Commissioners'
advices say 150,000 men hae lost conrt for approval Friday afternoon,
their positions here when rthe lock- by them approved and at once for- (
out waa delared 700 mills today.
____ = nation, $18,777,735, is a decrease of
Aa “Uadeelrahle" IAW.
Senator R- L. Owen in an Inter-
view at St. Louis gave out his list
of undesirable democrats, naming
- . - National Committeman Roger SuIU-
tion which the faculty^ and regenta T.. of Illinois. Charles F. Murphy,
Tammany boss. Malcolm R. Patter-
son, governor ot Tennessee, and J.
G. Dahlman. democratic nominee In
Nebraska for governor. "How can
the democratic par y expect win,
or if it doeg win a teir-orarv vic-
tory, how much does it expect to
progress, with sue* men In charge
of the organization?’’ he asked. Tin
democratic party must be purged ol
its undesirables before it can ex-
pect to make headway. The tariff Is
no» the first problem wnlch con-,
fronts thia country."
BRYAN, Tex., Oct. 1.—George ; values, are as follows:
Jackson, a negro, wag shot and kill-
ed three miles north of here early
this morning by J. M. Kramer, a
prominent farmer. Jackson wag ob-
served prowling about the lawn near
the window of the room where Kra-
mer's daughter Alice was sleeping.
Her father secured a revolver and
fired twice, one bullet penetrating
the black’s breast. No arrest has been
made so far.
NEW YORK DEMOCRATS 1--
LOk r^FEAST FO RTHEIR NOM-
INEES FRIDAY.
Senator Owen hag a List of “Unde- ITice of Cottton la Likely to be Af— Total Valuations of the County
sirabja Demorata," of Whom - - - - -----
Party. He Says, Must
Purged.
ASSESSOR
taught
¥18,777,735, a Decrease of about We Will give you the benefit of al
875,000 from tear Poli- our experience -and ask your
neighbors if we haven't about the
best there is made. All we ask i>
to show you. Prices and terms
reasonable.
the ■
be;
Dix th« gubernato-
• ( vaav J/IIVV VI w VVH WMt UIVJI tag n ------ ------ u —-----
cratic convention ende<T Friday in a result of the big strike and lock-out been *t work for the past
, love-feast. Only two candidates among the Manchester, ;—„---,
were put before the convention— mills is predicted here and the Texas be completed by October 1
. Dix and Congressman Sulzer, i---
, ne vote wag 434 for Dix and 16 for
Sulzer. Thomas F, Conway was
, nominated for lieutenant-governor.
t The platform pledges 'the New York
. democracy to the preservation of
i "the old nationalism" and con-
demns attacks upon the U. S. Su-
preme court. It declares for sov-
ereign states’ rights and for home
rule as far as possible for the cities
of the stat*. Th© republican state
, administration is denounced and the
. , tariff law is declared to have been
bitterly a breach of trust and responsible
for the high cost of living. Declar-
ation is made for the election of U.
S. Senators by popular vote and for
state-wide primaries. Declarations
were also made for the income tax,
parcels post an employers; liability
law, the preservation and conserva-
tion of resources, the restriction ot
child labor and endorsed the merit
system. Eternal opposition to the
“new nationalism'’ movement
pledged.
II
IF
I-
Call and see us as our loss is your gain.
Taylor Hardware Co.
a
NOTICE TO WHEAT
. GROWERS
We are overstocked on 14 disc drills
so we are offering for the next 30 days for
cash the Famous Thomas 14 disc drills at
the unheard of price of
$70.00
y.; •
1
-----
DENTON, TEXAS, SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 1, 1910.
. . . .
... .
■
. ..
NUM3I
OUR MOTTO:
Qenton Steam Laundry
Both Phones 8.
MADE BU1TH A MTSRUALTY
or to Record and Chronicle
BEN KEY,
TINNER and PLUMBER
■ ■*
. S. YEAGLEY
ipairs, presses and cieans clothe,
t on th* minute and by the best
“Good work and quick delivery.’’
Next door to Record and Chronicle
Offlc*.
BOTH PHONES W *
BOTH
No Need to Drive a Nag and buggy, single or dou-
ble, call us. Our buggies are-in $ood condition; our horses well
taken care of. Free goers. Carriage and transfer line. BOTH
PHONES. Calls made any hour. WE ARE PROMPT.
E. L«HOPKINS LIVERY STABLE, W. Hickory St.
RmMrflr
■Ml
0
■
BaOMOaMRSNROMHaaSMMaMMKNMMM
TALK TO MEN
” $18 to $30.
* M :
Not saying that you don’t dress well if you do
not buy your clothes at THIS STORE but wc ’do
say that we will sell you classier' goods than you
will find at most places. They doni cost any
more than the indifferent kind. Our goods are so
well selected from manufacturers who are consid-
ered the best in their respective lines you are as-
sured that things you buy are correct and buying
is made much easier for you. Some of the lines
we carry are
Stein-Bloch “Smart Clothes,
Eagle Shirts, $1 to $2.50.
Howard and Foster Shoes, $3,50 to $5.
Edwin-Clapp Shoes, $6 to $7.
Crofut and Knapp Hats, $3 and $4.
Stetsog Hats, $4 to $6.50.
Arrow Collars—17 correct shapes.
ASK FOR THINGS.
We will make it satisfactory in many ways for
you to trade with us.
THE WILLIAMS STORE
Known for Better Clothes.
x 1
I
I
I/
I
*•
w
i
r '
MB
******
MfWWWWWWMBW?
aUKNMKKM
X
-
I- J
r.'l
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Edwards, W. C. Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 1, 1910, newspaper, October 1, 1910; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1229612/m1/1/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.