Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 1, 1910 Page: 3 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.
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$
-
A. P. Duggan
■fl
FRESH
OYSTERS
LAREDO. Tex., Oct, 1.—Tha>t Ute
Milling
SERVED
25c Per Dozen
are
CITATION—FINAL ACCOUNT.
AT
FuRHUIT.
The Lash of a Fiend
Lone Star
1—Today’s
Restaurant
Lod V. Robertson
SWARMS OF BEES
MISCELL 4 NEOU®
Will
By W. R. Orr Deputy.
new
(
ty of this practice to discontinue it.’’
TIME TABLES
YARD
FOR
come from one who has lived with
35tfcd,ltw
tr.
TABLE
I
tj
r»
in
SALE.
STRICKEN BY PARALYSIS
rendered.
For 40c you can get 10 words a
Weekly—CLASSIFIED.
G
Convenient!
Whole
try
will
w
1 ing work.
.. *or*» • times »oe—Cl amine*
LAZY LIVER
trains.
ears or
■
MN
•W
I
•5.. '
■
Si
With Jasper & Jasper.
Next Door to Exchange Baah.
at No. SS South
phone SAS.
the
me.
RING >40 WHEN IN NEED OF
groceries and especially charcoe'.
FORD CRAWFORD 140 Old.
DR. ADA KINCAID. OFFICE 44
West Highland atreet. Both phtmea.
llitfc
WHEN YOU NEED A CAR PEN-
ter telephone the McCullar Lumber
company. Both pbonee. SOltfc
Alliance MIMii
brated it*
anniversary Saturday,
four years before, <_
that a visit io the Fair will be tn the
roach of all.
To the Sheriff or any Constable of1
You are
A bargain—The Daily at 40c a
month.
FO1
date
LOST—SMALL PURSE AND 830.
U Denton. Finder please return to
thia office for reward.
■— - "■ ■«1 s 1 -
SALE—AS I AM GOING TO
Xctober IS. I will sell a few
CALL STRICKLAND A PINCK-
ley of you want the best McAlester
eoal. Oct 1*
A Real Remedy
Ml COLDS, GRIFP, FBVKUSBNUS
AND ACHING.
ty. Home '
I be
retai
liver and headache,
arets Candy Cathar
S TEXAS AND PACIFIC.
Southbound.
No. 31 (Ft. W.-Texarkana) 3:50 pm
Northbound.
No 32 (Texarkana-Ft. W.) 10:20 a m
-W
THE MAN WHO PUT A JERSEY
Hifer in my pasture wee me at once
G B. COLLINS. 4 Ip
GOOD MILK COW FOR
Phone 2TB, new. .
FOR WATKINS’ GOODS PHONE
274 New. 808tfc
ANYBODY WANTING SCAVEN-
<er work done call No. 807, either
none. tfc
D.
and
Drug
| t® WORD® « TIME®. etc.
per lb.
10-lb
90c,
THE
7
■
DENTON,
quotations:
Liverpool—
uct.-Nov. ...
Nov.-Dec.
from All Over
Coming Twen-
Were Bet-
I
■—__
llw
ily
..........—.................. 3Oo
, one week 40c
f
P®
lb
10.'
i.
J
I
f
!
f
during
for 1
j Say Re-
torted Finding of Leon Ling, New
York Murderer, Unfounded.
WANTED—BOY WITH HORSE
to carry papers. Apply at this office
None under 14 yers old need apply.
official
■ National
lights. Situated la one ot Denton’s
moot desirable neighborhoods. Price
SB,750. |1500 will handle It W. J.
BLOUNT. ' 62c
A A. ANDERSON, MAY BLDG.,
N. E. corner square. Harness and
shoe work of all kinds.
__________________ _________________ I
If you are weak or run- MISSOURI, KANSAS AND TEXAS
Southbound.
BEST TABLE CHICK E N S.
Black Langshan* eggs, 11 per set-
ting 1 alto Crystal White Orping-
ton gockrei* for sale. Mrs. M. S.
Stout. s. 68c
Livestock
HOGS, per pound, gross—Light 6 tr.
7c; heavies 7 to Be.
COWS, per 1b 3 3-4 to 3 1-2c
I
Poultry.
HENS, per lb. 8c.
FRYERS, per lb. 13c.
OLD ROOSTERS. 10 to 15e.
GUINEAS, per dos, 11.50
DUCKS, ner .10* It
TURKEYS, 10c per lb.
SALE— MODERN
room house, two
ith sewerage and
BALED SHUCK8, BRAN CHOPS,
bran, com chops, wood In the cord,
stove wood or heater wood delivered
to you. Phone us your wants.
We salt our shucks as they are
baled; they are better; cotton seed
hulls and meal.. ARKANSAS MILL.
J. O, HESTER, Prop.
The store which advertise* is the
store a-ead. Mark that.
time for business, or for
if you inten
or th rough Chicago
will appreciate thfa
vice. Darth retervs
©PT-
CALL KINCAID
transfer ana trunk*.
UP TO
stories,
eleetrlc
A. it. McGINTIE RENTS HOUSES
I* North, Bast. South and West,
* City of Denton. Phone •• w*th Egan
Land Co.
M. L. MARTIN A. B., M
Disease* of Eye. Ear,’ Nose
Threat Office over Raley
Store. " •
MIm M. Greenwood Hardy, School
of Oratory and Elocution. Studio.
Southland University Chapel, resi-
dence 1*2 W. Hickory. O. P.
27*. 46c
L ...
k
FOR WOOD, FEED, POULTRY
or eggs telephone McGinnis A Sims.
Prompt delivery. 376c
Chiness "Disgrace Society.”
Chiang Kang Hu. art <
Pekin, Ims originated the
I
!
Prominent Farmer Southeast of
Town. George Durham, Stricken
by Paralytic Attack Saturday.
That combination rate of 4c a
word for the CLASSIFIED—a week
In the Dally a^d a wee.. In, tbe
Weekly—offers you just what you
have wanted—a chance to reach up-
ward of 3.000 families—15.000 peo-
ple at a very low cost. Tr/ it.
FOR SALE OR TRADE—RUB-
ber tire bugjy. almost new; one
sewing machine. R. B.- RICH. 41tfc
J. W. Jagoe, Jr.,
Abstractor arid
Land Mortgages
Denton • Texa*
FOR SALE—2-STORY, 7-ROOM
bouse on Weet Sycamore Street
Modem improvements. Price 1500
eash and rest payable like rent. W.
J. BLOUNT. 5<)c
WANTED—FIVE OR SIX NOR-
mai girls to board nice rooms, good
board 113 West Hickory. Mrs. W.
A BFASHEXR9. - 48p
FOR SALE—THREE EXTREMIl-
ly well-bred coming three-year-ol'*
colts. All broke. See J. W Simmons.
46c
FO
move r
of my White Rock chickens, young
and old stuff to pick from. Come
and see °r phone H. C. Holmes, or
phone 28* old phone. etc
MRS. ROBT. HASKINS TEACH-
er of plano and voice, “choral and
choir’’ training * specialty, great
care and attention given to teaching
beginners how to practice. 37 years*
experience in teaching I am located
at No. 88 South Elm Street. Old
Up
THE RED BARN—MOREMAN A
Luster, proprietors—Nice stylish sin-
gle or double rigs at all times. Ring
us for all kinds of feed delivered.
Both phones 35. tfc
J W FRALIN. DENTIST, SOUTH
•ide square. Middle of Block upstairs
i»“nton. Texas. tfc
SEWING DONE—C. I. A. SUITS
a specialty. Mrs. Ola* East Syca-
more street.
LOST—WHITE ENGLISH POO
die on Ponder avenue. 13 reward
will be paid for return to Robert
angley. Ponder, or notify T. M. Rip-
py, Denton. 40c
We want to be your grocer. We
’. wan' you to see how well we can sat-
isfy your wants in this line. Phones
44. LONG A KING.
LOOP—BERKSHIRE MALE PIO,
about six weeks old. Return to W. P.
Lambert. 4Sc
MATTRESSES—WE MAKE 'EM
to fit your bod. Wo do upholstering
at the very* lowest posaielb price we
can make. Call ns—Nsw phone *4—
and let u* figure on your upholster-
ing work. We can make your old
bed as good as new at about half
what a new bed wilt cost. HICKS
UPHOLSTERING CO. 74 North Elm
Street. 13c
WE REPAIR LOCKS AND SEW-
ing machines, make keys to fit any
lock MAGILL A SHEPARD. tfc
FOR RENT—SOUTH ROOM
furnished or unfurnished. 47 West
Sycamore street. 43
FOR RENT—TWO FURNISHED
rooms, or furnished 5-room cottage
with bath and sewerage connection.
*8 Weet Hickory street. 43c
W. E. MeCABE,
sn and surgen—I
[collar to women;
__
IF YOU WANT FRESH MEAT OR
good poultry, phone 98. CHAS.
WELLS. E. McKinney Street.
. . -. r ■ n~ ' - r
PHONE STRICKLAND A PINCK-
ley for new cotton eed hulls and
|msal. Ocl*
(tjpR CHOICE OKLAHOMA HAY
Strickland A Plnckley. Ocl9
writes Fire, Cyclone and Ac-
cident and Live Stock In-
surance. He writes them
all in good, reliable Com-
panies. See him and get
a policy before it is too late
To "Be Avcfided.
“There's Wilson! Let us turn ba<k.
I’ve no desire to meet that fellow
again! Last week I asked him to lew*
me five pounds.''
•‘Well, he certainly might have dene
so; he has plenty of money.”
“Yes, I know—and—be did lend me
tbe fiver!”—London Mail.
ALWAYS ON TIME—NEVER
miss a call. Denton Transfer Co.
Both phones. *tfc
repeated engagements
It la offered with a genuine desire
to please the people and lead them
happiness which
He goes in, ghounda for all lovers of Nature
At tbe approaching twenty-fifth an
cures Headaches of all Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy for 1
v j .. perfect success.”
canwd by heat, writes Mrs. M. I. Buford, Pools-
FOR RENT—8-RROM HOUSE
.ad barn, first door of Baptist
ehurch.-J W. COOK. 25tfc
.. ’V -'4 ■
Why Bern* Raees Ar* Forbidden to
Look Into * Dark Pool of Water.
The Way Donald McKay Managed to
Escape the Clutches of tho Devil.
That mysterious counterpart of a
human being which lengthens with
the day,and dlaappeara with tbe sun,
to reappear more faintly with tbe
rising of tbe moon, wbicb we call a
shadow, has always struck the imagi-
nation of man. It has played a promi-
nent part In primitive superstition and
in later folklore. Shadows or shades
was tbe elaMical name or figure for
tbe spirits of the departed which still
remains in use. --
This idea is not confined to civilized
races. Among the Zulus tbe spirit is
the shade Bishop Callaway, whose
knowledge of Zulu beliefs and modes
of thought was unrivaled, says that
the Zulus connect the bodily shade
with the future disembodied spirit.
They believe that the shadow cast by
the body will ultimately become tbe
“itongo,” or spirit, when the body dies,
and they say that tbe long shadow
shortens “as a man approaches bls end
and contracts into a very little thing.
When they see the shadow of a man
thus contracting, they know be will
die. The long shadow goes away
when a man is dead, and it is that
which is meant when it is said, 'The
shadow has departed.’ ” There is, how-
ever, a short shadow which remains
with the body and is buried with it.
Tbe long shadow becomes an ances
tral spirit.
Identification of the shadow In any
mysterious or spiritual way with the
person whose body casts it, naturally
leads to respect for the strange second
self. To tread on tbe shadow of n
chief is an insult to the chief himself
In the Institutes of Manu, the ancient
Hindu law giver, the law runs:
“Let him not Intentionally pass over
the shadow of sacred images, of a
natural or spiritual father, of a king,
of a Brahmin who keeps house, or of
any reverend personage, nor of one
who has just performed a sacrifice."
There are traces of the survival of
these primitive ways of regarding a
man's shadow In the English country
feeling that it is unlucky to cross the
path of a newly married man as he
leaves the alter;, and in another rural
belief that It is unlucky to cross tbe
path of horses ploughing when tbe Sun
is shining behind them.
Association between shadows and
mirrored representations of the human
form is obviously natural, so it is not
surprising to find superstitions about
tbe shadow mingled w ith widely scat-
tered versions of the Narcissus legend.
The atory of the beautiful youth w ho .
became enamored of hte own Image. wTediw^^ctosure \rith* full
aa he saw it reprinted in the Writer, bWe of flfty thousand live and active
not be without them. I waa troubled ■
great deal with torpid liver and headache
Now since taking Csacarets Candy Cathan
tie I feel very much better. Ishall^cen
the best medicine I have^ewrteen."
Osborn MUI No?T£u Rh?er, Mass.
George Durham, a prominent cit-
izen living southeast of the city
was stricken by paralysis Saturday
forenoon while at the home of a
neighbor, W. H. Edwards. He was
perfectly well Saturday morning ap-
parently when he went over to the
neighbor's. Mr. Durham Is 58 years
old. Lsrer Saturday afternoon he
was reported to be resting fairly
well.
LOST—BERKSHIRE SOW PIO.
Finder please return to R. L Knox st
th< Nicklq Store for reward. 32tf>:
Commissioner J. M. Gary said Fri-
day:
“I wish you would request people
not to throw their debris In the'
ditches along the roads. Near Den-‘“
ton thej^ has been considerable an-
"noyance a fid'Th d*r trails frfftnirgtd by '
thus stopping up the ditches and
making the water cut across the
LOST—BLACK GILT 8HOAT.
Reward for return to J. G. Hester.
Sltfc
PROTESTS AGAINST PUT-
TING TRASH IN DITCHES.
from all points in the Southwest. Ap-[
predating the va^t importance the
State Fair of Texas is in the develop-
ment of the Southwest, general pas
•eager agents of Southwestern rail-
roads have assured the management :
,» week Jn tb)& Daily and a Week in the
Poultry fanciers of the Southwest '
Will find much of interest in their di- ;
vision at the coming State Fair of;
Texas, which opens at rgillas October
15 and continues sixteen days. Tbe
premiums in this division have beet
considerably Increased over last year
All th<i_lat< st developments In the in-
dustry will be exhibited. Superinten- j
gent Van Winkle Is now in the North I
attending shows In order to become j
acquainted with the latest In the poul- i
show respect
No. 281 (to Dallas) ...12:05 p. a
No. — Mixta (to Dallas) .8:00 a
Northbound.
No. ?‘>6 (Flyer) .9:42 a.
No J 12:32 p. ■
No, Mixed \from Dallas) 10:00 p. ■
Xo. 182 (from Dallas) . . .4:25 p. a
No. 210 (Limited) ....9:04 p. a
No. 4 10:20 p. *.
•Arrive.
takes hold upon bls life by weans of
his reflection in tbe water." Some
such idea as this was probably the tbe past five years of great agri
cultural fairs and horticultural expo-
FOR SALE OR TRADE—ONE
good second-hand buggy. one sec-
ond hang delivery wagon, good as
new. See A. W. Sears 35tfcd,ltw
Dlarrohea is al way* more or lean
prevalent during September. Be
prepared for it. Chamberlain’s
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Ress-
edy anrt castor oil. It In certain
to effect a cure ang when reduced
with water and sweetened is plean-
ant to take. Na physician can
wV B r —■ I . . .. prescribe a beter remedy. Fop sale
J 7' , " ' ‘ ~ > which their national disgrace with n view *11 druggists,
opens at Dallas. October 15 and con- to awakening and stiniulatliig their
„. —- ._ .u It is intended to
Bake exceedingly lo* round trip rates build a tower lit which will be exblb-
■ Skll tfvo ^nitlhwanl Aw
tted relics or pictures nf events and
incident* which have brought China
to her present cririeal position
A Strategist
“That fellow is a gn ter strategist
than Napoleon ewr was.”
"As 13 howT'
“He got a two •' liar raise of salary
a year ago and hasn’t told his wife
about l» yet.”—Pittsburg Post.
WANTED—BOARDERS. FIRST
claa* rooms and board. 141 Waai
—Highland street. 41p
open Close yest.
... .7.23 7.27 7.2*
., .7.1* 7.24 7.25H
Spots 6 points up at 7.67d; sales
7,OOo bales.
Naw York— Open Clone Yea’.
October ... 13.60 13 60-1 13.55-7
December ..13.78 13.82-5 13.73-1
Spots unchanged at 13.75c; sales
5,333 bales.
New Orleans— Open Close Yest.
October 13.59 13.62-3 13.54-5
December . . 13.64 ,13.70-1 13.60-1
Spot* 1-16 up at 13 9-16; sales
200 bales.
Galveston—
Spots 1-8 up st 14c; sales 0.
With a hundred and fifty bale* of
seed cotton and a hundred In the
lint Saturday's receipts of cotfon
were probably th* heaviest of any
day of ths year. Top prices were
18.40 In tbe lint and *5.08 In the
seed, with most of that sold being
around 85.05 in the seed and 313.-
30 in rhe lint. Cotton was msrkstsj
here from eighteen or twenty miles
sway, the good prices of th® week
having drawn much cotton to town
from other markets. Some cotton
came from almost to ths east coun-
ty line, some from the west county
line, some from fifteen miles nortn
of town and some from that distance
southwest. One man said ths>' 84.90
waa the best price he had been of-
fered this year for ««ed cotton and
he made from three to five dollars
a bale by coming to Denton.
With Saturday s receipt* Denoon’s
total receipt* for the year approach-
ed the 2.000 bale mark. The gins
all running over time and Sat
urday sfternoon, all three had their
ya'-ls full wafting to g«r their cot
ton ginned.
NO COTTON SLUMP YET.
ExpectatioOa of Bear* for a Decline
•W* Not Realized Today.
October 1—Today’*
OUR STANDARD REMEDY AND
Mother's Salve on sale at Long A
King *. Mr*. Nelli* Austin, Stats
Agent 46p
15c;
cans, 81.80. 5-lb. buckets
bulk, per 1b. 18e.
-.»S, r»r lb. wholesale 2He, re-
tail 4c.
Yalta
50c
. It’s posl
tively guaranteed by J. F. Raley *
Co.
The Alliance Milling company j
quietly celebrated its twentyfourth story sent from here last night that
,. Just twenty- a Chinaman held here 1* *u»pected of
on October 1, I being Leon Ling, the murder of El-
1886,'he mill first started up and *ie Seigle in New York, was un-1
with very few intermissi ns it has founded and that the Chinaman in
run continuously since. The plant .no way resemble* Ling is the state-'
ha* been greatly improved and con. ment of immigrwion officer* today j
cidortehlv stenlArfr’gzri <■* that firms* ■■, ....... ■■
Depan
oanue, oz zxiraiana in., writes: '
“That I did not bre k down, while No 209 (Limited) 8:7 >
nature and drank deep of her in^pira enduring a most severe strain, for No. 1 4:25 p. m
No. 205 (Flyer) .7:13 p. tn
siderably enlarged in that time and I
the plant’s most enviable record in
the way of winning prizes remains
yet *o b« duplicated by any min In I
the world. Denton County, Greeting’:
hereby commanded that by publica-
I tion of this citation at least twenty j
> in some newspaper regularly
• . puL/unuru m veutvu uvuui;, xwao.
cough I you give due notice to all persons
interested in the estate of D. L. Hill,
deceased, that S. McReynolds, ad-
ministrator, has filed in the county ’
court of Denton County, Texas, his
account for f'nal settlement, togeth-
er with his application to be dis-,
charged a^ such administrator of
said estate and that all persons in
terested In said estate are required
to appear and contest said account
and application, if they see proper
to do so, at the October term,, A. D.
1910, beginning on the 17th day <X
October, A. D. M)10f at the court
h use of said county in the City of
Denton, Denton County, Texas.
Given under m> hand and seal of i
office, this 23rd day of September,!
A. D. 1910. W. T. BAILEY,
Clerk County Court, Denton County
By W. R. Orr Deputy. 3Sat-10-8
Don’t Break Down.
Severe strain* on the vital organs .
like strains on machinery, cause.
break-downs You can’t over-tax
stomach, liver, kidneys, bowels or
nerve* without serious dangsr to
/Ourself. Ix /vu wo**, or run-
down, or under strain ot any kind.
S. B. RANDALL riAS MOVED
bls shoe shop to W Hickory street.
In rear of Ainsworth Hardware
store, where he will be glad to see
hl* customer*. «0c
ProthK*.
HUTTER per lb., conntrv
sale 20 to 30c cash or trade; de-
livered to private residence* o<
hotel* and boarding houses st 80
to 80c; creamery, per lb. 30c.
EGGS, wholesale, 16 to 17Ke casn
or trade; retail per dozen 20 to
20c; scarce.
SWEET POTATOES, per hu., whole-
sale. 11.60; retall per pk. 40c
whole-
retail
ditches
-wu >u<. .... ....... nouey uw». ausomteiy wnnout protec . . - ----- across
has its origin in the belief that trouble ! tion against stings, and puts hl* insect y08*1’ a“d 1 wa®* to warn those gull- [
follows from lieholdlng the watery j friends through a vaudeville perform ,y or s Pract‘Ce to discontinue It.
nf th<* hirhsMif fvrw» With «* hot.
“Let him not look at his own image
in water; that t* a settled rule,” com-
mands Manu. tbe Hindu law giver.
The reason for the prohibition is to
be found in the beliefs of man in a
primitive state of civilization.
Melanesians of tbe Pacific, says
learned observer, say:
sires to enter the pool.
dies, and is eat a* by tbe great beast
which inhabit* it. So, says Bishop
Callaway, “men are forbidden to lean Dual meeting of lite State Fair of Tex
qver and look into a dark pool, it be- j
Ing feared that their shadow should be
taken away."
Thpre are other ways in which a
DR. C. LIPSCOMB SR., HAS
moved his office to the Alliaoa Phar-
macy on the West Sid*. 3 2 tfc
DO YOU NEED HELP’ ALL
kind* of dray work ana household
good* moving done. Phone aa. HES-
TER, LESTER A BROWNLOW. New
phone 11*. old phone 3l«>. tfc
FRANK WILKINSON, MEAT
market. Our dally alm la to furnish
you with fresh, tender meat*. Let
u* have your order
SHERMAN STEAM LAUNDRY
Co., Beat laundry work and cour-
teous treatment. C. R. HAMILTON.
Agent. Old phon* 184, new 3*2.
* R B. RICH, REPAIRS. IF YOU
have any sort of woodwork on your
carriage or buggy that need* to be
d'-e: rubber tiring; steel or Iron
work; horse shoeing, call oa us.
NOW the distance to Chicago is mater-
ially shortened by the convenience of
the service—
Through Sleepers to Chicago
are in daily service on
The Katy
via the Katy to St Louis and the Alton.
New Pullmans with all the comfort*—
electric lights, electric fans, dental lava-
tories, sliding screens and more com-
modious dressing rooms for the ladies—
add much to the pleasure of the journey.
Then, there is no change of cars —you
go right through without a bit of botner.
Morning arrival in Chicago in ample
‘ ’ all connecting
Intend going to,
predate this’ J
BETTER THAN SPANKING
Spanking does not cure children of
bod-wetting. There fa a constitu-
tional cause for this trouble. Mr*.
M. Summers, Box W, Notre Dame.
Ind., will send free to any mother
her successful home treatment, with
ftffl Instructions. Send no money,
but write her today if your children
trouble you In this way. Don't
blame the child, the chancee are it
can’t help it. Thia treatment also
cures adult* and aged people troub-
led with urine difficulties by day or
night
take Electric Bitters, th« matchless Number
tonic medicine. Mrs. J. E. Van de
Suda of Kirkland HL, writes:
wizard named iKrnald-Vulvnl McKay. |
Donald went to a school in Italy where |
tne Diac* art was raugur oy me uevii, ,
who sat in the professor's chair, and
at the end of each term claimed aa bi*
own the last scholar to depart. Break-
ing up at this academy was naturally
a scramble, none wishing to be last.
On one occasion Donald was really
the last, but just as the dtwil was
about to seize him. the resourceful
Donald pointed to his own shadow,
which fell l»ehind him. saying, “Take
thou the hindmost!" Accordingly, his
shadow was seized, while he himself
escapes, and after bls return to Scot-
land was never seen to have a
Shadow!
A companion illustration of "de ll tak
the liin'most,” from Aberdeenshire, is
a story of a witch helped laird watch-
ing bls reapers, whose shadow was
seized by Batan, and who was ever
after shadowier*. In literature Cha
mlsso’s famous tale of “Peter Schle-
mlhl" Is a well known example of
the stories of the shadowlesa.—New
York American.
_
orocertes
huOUR. per l<*0 lb*., first and *oc
ond grade,' wbolessde, 82.70 to
4a.»6 retail 10c higher on 100.
HARD WHEAT FLOUR, per 100
82.80 to 82.99.
-GRAHAM FLOUR, per 100 lb* . re-
tail 68.50; 12 1-2 lb. ■ack* 60c
CORN MEAL. 36-lb sac*, wholes*!'
66c; retail 70 to 16c Half sacks
wholesale 33c; retail 40c.
RACON, retail, dry salt extra*,
lb. 17c; smoked sides, per
18c; wrapped bellies, per lb.
to 22e breakfast bacon lb. 26 to
33c; hams wholesale 1* to 21c; re-
tail per lb. 21 to 23c.
'.ARD. country, wholesale
kettle
FIRST CLAB8 WALKS AT P.E A
•osabl* price*. J M Gutter,
*b ■* 847- bln*. 186tfc
— —V --- --- w KUtHJt I !■ assivuMj <l
man may lose his shadow. There was ed and 1R equipped with the latest In
., <u . *cuuui iuiiibbmiu**. This exhibit Is
by those who were for- • encouraged by the State Fair manage
- --—*>..<_ I ment in order to assist In the improve-
ment of the conditions in the rural
schools It is the stand of the manage-
ment that the children of the rural
districts should be given school ad
vantages equally as good as those who
a merciless lung-racking
that defied' all remedies for years.
“It wa* most troublesome at night,”
he writes, “nothing helped till
1 used Dr. King'* New Discovery
which cured me completely. I nev
er cought at night now.” Million*
know It* matchless merit for stub-
born colds, obstinate coughs, sore
lungs, 1*grippe, asthma hemorrhage,
croup, whooping cough, or hayfever.
It relieves quickly and never
la satisfy. A trial covninces.
81.00. Trial bottle free
MILL’S 24TH BIRTHDAY NOTHING TO LIN(
in* Co. Quietly Cele- Immigration Authorities
Twenty—fourth Annl-
ver-ary Saturday.
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK.
FORT WORTH^Tex. Oct. 1.—Re-
ceipt* ■’oday: Cattie 8000; hog* 3,-
0*0.
Steers—Steady; top, 85.10.
Cows—Steady; tops 83.
Calves—Steady; tops 85.
Hogs—Higher; tops 8*.30.
-------------- .,
MARKET QUOlATIOXA
COTTON. 13 to 13.40, In seed 5 t*
5.08.
COTTON SEED per ton 822 to 826.
WHEAT, per bu. 81 03.
CORN, shelled per bu.. 67c; ear 55
to 58c.
COTTON SEED MEAL retaK per
ton. 83* at car; 81.60 per 100 lb*,
per 100 lb*.
COTTON SEED HULLS, per ton ai
car 610; 810.50 at barn; 55 to 60c
per 100 lbs.
CORN CHOPS, per iOO lbs., whole
sale 81.40; retail 5c to 10c pel
I no lbs hl/her.
BRAN per 100 lb*, wholesale 81.20;
retail 5 to 15c higher
CHICKEN FEED -er !*»•
wbtdeeal* *1.40 to 8145;
l*c higher
BALED SHUCKS, per ton. 8«
PRAIRIE HAY. per ma wholesaU
814; retail per bale 60 to 65c; per
ton 815 to 816.
JOHNSON GRASS HAY. wholesale
per ton 810 to 810.50; retail per
bale 45 to 50c; per ton 812.50.
BALED OATS, per ton. 87.50
38.
BALED STRAW, per ton 85 to 86.
OATS, wholesale per bu. 26 to 37 Kc,
retail per bn. 40 to 45c.
COLORADO POTATOES,
sale 81.20; retail -1.85;
per peck 85c.
LOCAL MARKETS.
DENTON, Oct. 1.—Lint cotton
topped the market today at 13.40
with mo*', of it selling from 13.80 to
13.35. In tbe seed prices ranged from
5.05 to *5.08. The miscellaneous
market* are about unchanged.
BRING YOUR PMILTRY AND*
egg* to McGinn!* A Sim*. McKinney
8t.. for highest cash prices 376c
W. E. BOTTS, VETERNARIAN—
Of Southwestern Veterinary college.
Dallas. Office: Brock’s wagonyard
Phones 43 (new) 3*6 (old): resl-
idenee 2»S-Blue (now).
............ .......................-
LOST—PURSE WITH ABOUT
*16 or 83* in s®ver and currency.
Liberal reward for rd: urn fo this of-
fice. 41c
three months, 1* due wholly to Elec -
trie Bitter,” Satisfaction posi-
tively guaranteed- 50c at J. F.
Raley A Co
9100 Reward, glOO.
The reader* of this paper
be pleased to learn that there is at
least one dreaded disease that
science hag been able to cure in all
its stages, and that is Catarrh.
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only
positive euro now known to the
medical fraternity. Catarrh being
a consti'utional disease, require* a
constitutional treatment. Hall's
Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system
thereby destroying the foundation
of the disease, and giving the pa-
tient strength by building up the
constitution and assisting hature In
doing its work. The proprietors
have so much faith in i’n curative
power, that they offer One Hundr d
Dollars for any case that it fall, ty
cure. Send for list of testimonial-
Address: F. L CHENEY A Co.
Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c. ?
Take Hall’* Family Pills for con-
tinuation.
elk TnOrvvAly*<40cn *
__'____________;_______
ter Today.
Suit Over Your Land Title
Well, that is too bad surely. Only a flight flaw in your title that
might have been corrected had you known it before. Now it involves
your land and costs considerable to fight the case. Wouldn’t it be
better to ward against this case—know that your abstract is good. We
will help you to this conclusion. Protect your home by consulting us.
Duggan Abstract Company,
— x-.cuu uuu __ ____ ____________
would hav* been about as welcom • [ days in some newspaper i ._
<o A. Cooper of Oswego, N. T.. aa published in Denton County, Texas.
I
as, which licgius at Dallas. October 15.
and continue* sixteen days, visitors
will have an opportunity of Inspecting
a model rural school building The
i model school house Is already erect
a temple of Jupiter in Arcadia which, J school furnishings,
if entered I
bidden to d«> so. robbed them of their
shadow,.
In the north of Scotland there nre
some quaint legends of folk who lost
this usual attendant. In Sutherland TBlll„(.R F„
they tell more than one story of a [ ,h_ ialE(> ..ities ,■ ------
wtanl named Donald-Vulval McKay. ”’e , D^ice society, which is designed to
___22 ~ ‘I For the twenty fifth annual meeting keep the Chinese people In mind of
tbe black srt was taught by the devil, , of the State. reaas’ .-----<----
1 .(ggpWMSU «• V *ew*«**»w, — 00*00* wm *v <«*«■*■•« «»■
ttaucs sixteen days, the railroads will desire Io reform
Frank G. Od*ll, Noted Expert,
Lecture at Fair.
Dallas. Texas. — Introducing a
feature In popular education, the
management of the State Fair of Tex
as, for the twenty-fifth annual meeting,
which will be held October 15, and
will continue sixteen days, has secured [
for the Apiary Department Frank <1. <
Odell, master apiculturlst, writer and
entertainer. Mr. Odell is the origins- j
tor of one of the most novel and at- ’
; tractive series of entertainments ever ■
enters • wrbCneirenclosure with a full
—” —;«saw va a«a«j t ii<re*<»cs(*u «»w <*4IU UVliVY*
and languished thereafter till he died. ■ honey bees, absolutely without protec
*«*<« tsu ,-x0v4«v4w« Is* t laz* ItAlfaaf • Yv • t 1 I a i a a ‘ u +4«-iav., nnj amsaSaB klrt
lieholdlng the wuterv
jance of the highest type With a hat
full of bees swarming all over his
! head, hundreds on his bared breast,
j creeping by thousands over his person
and sifting them through his fingers
I like grains of sand, his audience is
[ kept in eager expectancy as he un-
The | folds to them the wonders of tbe In-
a sect world and its importance In agri-
w “There is a , culture in rapid fire lectures abound-
stream in Saddle island, or. rather, a (Ing in refined humor and eloquence ot
pool in a stream, into which if any I that charming style which can only
r ... gwavwsA fs-axm who Hast llvoxl mrlfh
one looks be dies; tbe malignant spirit ,
tion.
This attraction ha, been shown dur
root of the Narcissus legend. ‘ ‘ “
The Zulus explain why it is ill to sltlons of the country to over a million
look into the water of a pool by a story , delighted hearers and Its Instant auc
of a great l>east in the water whk 11 , *8 attested by constant recalls for
can seize tbe shadow of a man and
when his shadow is gone a man no I ...
longer wishes to turn back, but de- t ^to^’tbe"wealth of
I The time, AXurday night; th* Cascsreta w> good th*t l wouW
place, High sRrool auditorium; ths
attraction,-the best entertainment ot
the season.
I “I have a world of confidence in
kinds, i.-.cludlng sick or nervous head- hav* used it with
aches, and hc«dach*s caused by bast, writes Mrs. M. I. u_vru, rvw.»
coW’ °* Mo’T>a£h disorders. | vlUe, Md ,For sals by all dr*g-
UnpuJine h liquid-*-sasy,snd pleasaat gists.
to take—acts immediately. 10c., 26c. SlM --------—— . ~
Me. st drug Stum I tt WORD® • TDCBft. M)c.
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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/m1/3/?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.