Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 174, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 3, 1917 Page: 2 of 6
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I
DBNTON, TEXAS, MARCH 3. 1917.
s**r\ »*s
wort h.
FROM ANOTHER VIEWPOINT
r»’-
‘Pretty soon a •.vhoh* work will be
a
ma
of
u
I in
most
t ami 3.2S0 feet in a mile.
A
JUST CALL ONE TWO
•
Hye
ABILENE— W.' F. Whaley, formerly I
nil
A
TEMPLE—Dr. H. R. White, chief sur
Denton Steam Laundry Co.
blow inf the revelation that Germany
small boy but he was happy. He had
LAUNDERERS and DRY CLEANERS
J
Better luck tomorrow, ma:
RACK TALK.
WANT
it
OR
MKH
1
». ■■ ■ ........
AVOID MISTAKES
______11.00
______ .30
____.25
Record-
the great crisis now
country-
d
t. for
A CORNER IN BIRTHDAYS.
Tomorrow the following Den-
ton citizens will celebrate their
birthday:
until its framers would hardly n’cog-
Dlze it now.
Office Phones <S
Dry Cleaning Plant Old Phone 300
----------o----------
Those folks who regard precedent
❖ RUTH CAMERON’S SIDE TALKS. +
GUUD TASTES VERSUS GOOD TASTE
“You Know I've always had things
FLY TIME
Is Coining Now.
Ma
“Row do you expect to
with an ui~
order to
principle
LONDON—Lord Northcliffe, in an ad-
dress before the American Luncheon
club, said that Britain could finance the
war I “---’ * * “■** * ,J **“
k‘
i
He ; 1
IIJLM 111’ Mpvil UUUALl UH UlIKl'; . . *
and bought one thousand bushels ; 1’7* Pl
at £2.23 per bustiel and wiiii , that is f,m
■ ■■ ■ | about [
;h<ir pride tn
Gourier-Ga- ‘
ted with oil-millionaires and the
wmild be millionaires that its aristoc-
degeneraling. we fear int
of mere money-seeking humanity.
up, the
wrong, |
.Congressman-elect Wilson lias gon> to
Washington to quaiitfy and in some an-
ticipation of an extra sesion
sop, who is a very strornc supporter
the President of the sum’ name, suc-
ceeds Mr. Calloway, who apparently is
opposed to anything the President
stands for, and Mr. Wilson's success-
ful race hinged largely, on that diff<T-
ence.
With Good Tastes.
1 suspect she was making ttie mistake
that a great many people make, that of
good- taste with expensive
the stuff that was used a hundred y- ars
ago would be useful now.
lustration: Nobody knows
constitutional lawyers and
judges how the Constitution >f (he fni-
ted.States has undergone constant mod-
il
J. 8. WILSON i, CO.
Screen Wire and Doors.
Xlways have ttie goods and deliver ti
IlHlHMiniHMIHMH**
LIGHTNING CHANGES
Ttie morn was fair; the balmy air.
suggested .May or June; I look my way
downtown that day, to buy myself a
prune. My wife exclaimed. “The eli-
‘ C«r shifts and
ou’d better don your- ulster.
BUS?
If you keep the first flies out
iof your house the rest will go
(easy. We have the largest
I
i
.1
Ttie Girls Canning Huh of Dallas
lunly is to raise bajf a-flyiie vf pennies |
Denton, Texas. under act of Congress,
March 3. 1813.
map in a poultry way. We are not in-
terested in the meetings of the buyers
except to watch for results, but we are
ail interested in the meetings of the}
raisers.
Dow it
»«■»♦+» ---- ++++4-E
Evidently “Agin” Us.
“After all, Wilson is probably a safer
man for president than we would be. if
Germany had notified us that she in-
tended to hold Jim Gerard until assured
that Von Bernstorff was safe, we’d turn
Bernstorff over to the first policeman |
we met to be held until Gerard landed
in Washington.”—Clarksville Times.
Then where would you be at * And I
where would Gerard be at, which is
more pertinent. You would have ac-
complished about as much real lasting |
good or the cause as Peter did when he j
cut off the High Priest’s ear, and all I
that Peter accomplished, in thus reg- i
islering his protest agaipst the arrest of i
i|
uay, “and i simply can’t bear cheap
things.”
That remark was the preliminary to
giving an order for an expensive piece
of goods. “1 know 1 ought to buy some-
thing cheaper,” she added, after she had
given the order to “charge and send”
and turned away from the counter,
“but I couldn’t bear it. 1 sometimes wish
1 didn't have goodtaste.”
Poor lady, as if good taste were ever
it’s a satisfying thing at the mo-
ment, to senselessly indulge our imagi-
nation, but the satisfaction is too limit-
ed ‘.-Z zzz^z. if the handling of Am-
bassador Bernstorff with gloves and red
tape was necessary to insure the safety
... . ----- . ..... j be
_____________ _______ . Be-
cause beyond all shadow of peradven-
“When you come home !|mue collector with headquarters at Ty- j *eat q out.’
A boy in
are I the race was on.
f depravity in the boy but it is a very
vident sign that tie has “took” after his
.....; ... 1...... A man wants
ibis boy to take his own part and if the
who can en- bp’jSpdLtb e obi man will natur-’eu out io iaiK aooin now l,*ci f|.,.
<>r cheaper. gome j(|p jn tha( bruised op-i boys are but he happened to think i
.. • ... .. . —i. _ . ------n.. .... ’back some years and he has com 1 tided
• that they are not worse than he and his
friends were.
I t» • i z z
C* NOPt, Hb U5L P
- 5Lppihg fiefle - SS
~ A SMARI AtECK ~ /
- Livts C (
' . I CAM TEU. B3 >- Jn.
THAT x. 1
cT /SR
/CHEAp /
t Hell !
iunt> are to be among the stockhold-
Better not make it a state bank
\ negro named Alvin Westbrook was
lieve that the persistent reports If the ■
activities of German agents in con-
spiring against a neutral country have
been well founded: that ttie pleasing,
rj^reeable Von Bernstorff. for whom
many of us entertained a very iiigh
ard. was the principal in the anti-
lerican plots; and that there is n<>
thod too devious or too low for Ger-
ny to use, if its government believes
ise methods contributory to consum-
tion of the German dream of world-
la domination. Even “Machiavellian”
hardly fit to describe the diploma**
» come and bury his father i
I Next day he denied that his father was
1 dead and as a consequence got a line
of ?i00. Some street work in that fine.;
John Lane of Dallas and a siwinj*r
got into an argument about the possi- i
an
<>ne
ibat one.
instance
i tic although he mat- not vocally ap-
prove of the course of his hopeful prog-
eny. Did any of you old fellers ever
move into a new neighborhood when
ivou were a boy. If you did you know
'iiow° it is. They tried you out and you
j.ittier had to scrap or back down and
'then yeur life was miserable. Loafer
: knows—his first, school was the scene
. <>f his getting a beating every day for
Mr. Wil-1
,f i
•<l j;nj t 'ixN’5 tn pn.’Ttu i ,i . |
| -train an<l milk producing qualifications. d’
I It. ii . ...... 1 1 I 1 r hCPd <111
“And if the war should close, what
\< use would we have for the boosting
i’ prices on everything to eat or wear ’’’
Terrell Tribune.
.lust exactly as worthy an excuse as
we have now.
SftMdard Oil's net profits were only
100.15 per cent of its capital slock last
year. No wonder gasoline is so iiigh.
-------o----
Villa again "eliminated." says a head-
line. One of ttiose starlling-lf-true
items that infrequently break into the
public prints.
At the most, they are only distantly
' ‘ if at all. For good taste is
I bred out of love of beauty by good judg-
d ment, whereas expensive tastes are bred
p_ out of love of anything expensive by the
desire to outshine one's neighbors.
I happen to know a man and his wife
who perfectly illustrate ttie difference
war and who is to stay home before the
popular vote Congressman Calloway
suggests is taken. We guess he
wouldn’t have to fight anyway; itsn’t
tie a Civil War veteran?”
sesned of the earmarks of truth and I handled with gloves and red tape.
further substantiated by previous flap-! )un; a|| Bemstorffs and gloves and
penings now sequentially recalled, and i red tape in the world aren’t worth as
. . . . mimh tie a uintrlp Amprinan ffpntlpman
our dispatches yesterday indicated that
mere is cuiipiaun men* iiium suiriv t
be some ground on which to base that ;
complaint. It is not mahiral for m»n
to take their products a greater dis-
tance from their homes than they could '
get a market unless there is some
ground for the extra hull. When a man
pulls a load from 'wo to ten mil'-s fur- i
ttier ttian he could find a mark’t with- ’
out lie thinks he is>i1 tie benefited. I
Xo man is doing -w Inn is best f »r him- |
self and tiis country when he sends out i
of the country for bis merchandise. 1
Many a town has hem ruin’d by just
such practices and when the town is
hurt the country is hurt. • tn the other)
hand it is up to'the merclian’s to make
their market so attraefiv-’ that it will
draw instead of repel. Th? sin is not
all on one side.
in Dallas an Irishman and
to an argument about the j
■lice were hurrying there |
bort time. White Pat was
a torn shirt sleeve prepara-
aeeompanying ttie police, Io
............. ... • (Sixteen pennies I headquarters the German was explain-
It was a eresttallen quar- | jn a and 5.21*0 feet in a mile. How ing that lie was a stranger to I
j by amdtier I j(llIcb money do ttie giris have to raise? I opponent
In Holland ttie Queen is severely crit-
t Seized because she goes skating when
---=■ jn America wo
our president can play
few hours' 1
WARDS_______■.___Editor
f.ARDS____Business Manager
, — ~~ AT.ER___A'hertlsing Mgr.
A. McDonald _____ Circulation Mar.
EMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Telephones (Old and ,New> 61.
ubllcatiun Office, 37 West Hickory St.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
ne Month, delivered ..........-............ »h
ix Months, by mail IB advance *2 Oh
oe Year. by mail (in advance) .... fi00
WEEKLY
De Year (In advance)—...........
lx Months (in advance
hree Months Un advance; ......
Q mail subscriptions to
Dronlcle discontinued at expiration.
Weekly entered as second class mail
matter at postoffice at Ix-nton. T- xas,
under act of Congress. March 3. 1X73
Dally entered as second class matter
August 23, 1903. at ttie postoffice at
A .Mobile Judge granted a man a con-
tinuance of his case because tie was the
father of twenty-eight children. We are
Wondering What he would tiave gi.cn
the mother if’her case had been called
to his official attention
ffsR-'- J < -------o———-
“He senes his party best wh
the country best," said President Hayes
tn his Inaugural^ address in 1K77
.^vhlch fnig+uX
lea^rjl^nthe
--II-------—
The State is threatening l<> sue Fort
Worth for running its sewage into the
open Trinity. Up here in Denton, it
isn’t the state but some others who are
doing something more tangible than
threatening—they are suing I tie ,
albeit the city haa endeavored to
move complaint by running its sewage
thru a septic tank.
“Mayor Preston .of Baltimore is doing
ore good than in .st mayors or many
others would do, or have done. 1'
went into the open market ttie other
daj c_.: :.
of pwiatijes
sell them 1
(I’e llie5
lhe I
z.elle.
Maj
rai 11 out.
1 A hoy in a Chicago movie theater
who had been reading up on fire eat-
■ .. .a a £ o a ; 4 ■*£ ♦ ■«« 4 F» o
The practice stunt
Ttie stranger
h c. Poe is to in* the head of a large The very latest in screen doors,
thank to be organized at Temple am* it
........... i is reported that some of the most in- i
ordered and soon they were | tiu'-ntial ami wealthy citizens of
r’-
times I havejers
______ _________ husbands are 1 ‘
The man in the case said j hanging around pool halls and told by 1
l that " this was only his third venture the police to get to work. He struck I
all his wives were living. The j a citizen for thirty-five cents to phone i
>m said that he "plum forgot the bis mother to come and bury his father j
? Alvin'Hill.
r • 'rri, d
| pers, gets even worse the further she
: goes, a little below, in the the same col-
■•nn, we accidentally discovered this:
"Mr. Sam Fryar of the Clarksville
) Times hopes that there will be a written
against the United States and 1 .
to embroil it with other nations as al
matter of German defense, and the as-1
founding story published to the world I
Thursday exemplifies German diplomat-
ic and military duplicity to the nth de-!
gree. With confirmation apparently + 4 + + + +,4 * « ♦ ♦ *
supplied officially, one cannot but be- j ‘
has stood here a hundred years; there-
fore, let's give it a kick in the ribs to i
find out whether it’s still alive, or only !
a mummy.”
Taking it by.and large, the radical!
Way, Of course, is the more fnlelljgt nt
>—especially in politics: for if any polit-
Ical arrangement was good a hundred
years ago the rational presumption |'
would be that it is not good now St pj'
into a museum and notice how tilth' of |
known many things impossible for the j^jy, wbo bas evidently been reading
public interest to give out in detail; | the'Bonham and Honey^ Grove niewspa-
and that already it had brought con-I
fusion on the oposition. Nobody in this! umn,
country—let us repeat—wants war: it —
is to he avoided if honorably and rea-) understanding about vvlto Is to go to
sonably possible; but we believe ttie' ~ ~
President was absolutely correct wri-n
eh declared that, with all its horrors,
there are worse tilings than war, and
that the amazing intrigue now revealed
ts virtually an act of war against a
country that has worn out its patience
condoning and overlooking affronts and
indignities jtiat, with one excuse or an-
other, have been piled up on this coun- nice,” I heard a woman say the other
try practically ever since the great ••-« < ■ - .......... • -»■
war began.
j much as a single American gentleman
I to the government of the United States,
kt was bringing Congress into line to 1 —Record-Chronicle.
support the President, who all along has! isn’t that just like a woman?
... . .v. I But that isn’t all. This same young
Lniitxii manv Thincra 1 mmiueih 1 o fur tnu ' > ___v _ x. 1 - •• •
I ilumiture,. harmonious hangings and
! freedom from cluttering brie-a-bric, is
one partect example of what good taste.
|ean doNvith limited means. Her <’h'ld-) ( n‘bp'onp"”f “(b,;' “ntf
;'.;n^cVi,hu fpel their s"ns
; lb M’s the Most Maddening Thing About
Them.
She had reason to be proud of her ;
taste. Her husband should be ashamed i
1 of ft.is. And yet, I’ll wager he has the
That is the most maddening thing
’LX7»n’51
■ hire a twenty-five cent !l‘r chean.-ri ......... ,
stocking.
They always do.
She. on the other hand, is too busy;
v .'vising her good taste to be vain of
And there you are!
The man is what he himself calls “fas-
; tidiohs.” He has been used to having
things “just so" and he likes them that
wav and no other. As a bachelor, he hail
income which was comfortable for
and he snent it almost wholly on
Result, expensive tastes. For
he will not wear a
nair of stockings that cost less than
fifty cents, a fact of which he is very
proud.
His wife, on the other hand, has never
had a chance to have expensive tastes,
but she has accomplished miracles with
it. Her home, with its restful wall paper
low lights, inexpensive but well chosen
. ' "’as ;
moighfy fair, way of becoming ac- '
" ing
,?7,n£r screen
tiilities of lhe war. 'They took Lane to vanized
the Emergency hospital. ---------1
must have escaped.
: A HOME FOR A BABY
; their books.
I tet ttiat slipped back home . _
iway and told their mothers lies about]
how it all happened. Now Loafer start- ,
ie.i out to talk about tivvv bad the■ R-C , C(,,1Iltrv is in perjl. .....
; are but he happened to thmki.(..(> u|ae| lllir pr,.si,knt fan pl, v ! quamled w id me.
■ golf for a few hours' relief from tlicj
i strain when his country is in peril.
f--w hours’ realxation is good for anv-
1 one and ttie Dutch who are so quick
1 to criticize should realize this fact.
i \ woman went to the court house
• fn Fort Worth and asked through lo r
T j escort ttiat license be issued to them.',
• If | >»’<I.»»»..zl on,! cr*/ir> ! hov xx- •r.x I
,________ .. After the ceremony she
_ marked. "This is seven
i been married and all my
! living, too.” —■"
........^^r“'EVENTS AND COMMENT
I door and the two windows in ttiat
;____: .fa nest and
It lasted for almost
• Mcreiigious invasion should n ceiw . Sltn(. without the diseoveray of a new
some inspiration from tliis from Hie S.<t-' 11 I""’1- —;i -”1..... ,r .......1
1 bunch of million.li.’es............. .
urday Evening Post; (ing dull in Wichita Falls."--Wichita
There are two broadly typical ways i Times.
of looking at a precedent. The eunser-]
and methods of which the German gov- J,
ornment Is now shown to have been
guilty. When Von Bethmann-Hoiweg
w^l declaring that the United States
bad “brusquely and unreasonably” bro-
ken off relations with Germany, be
knew of the Zimmerman 1 __________________________ ,
moreover, of the many deUils that led .spring has to stayMJie joyous
... : wrt?tMi tiusA ~
up to that letter. VS h^n he and Dr. Zim- • roundelaytn spring attire I took my
merman, professing the sincerest friend- lyre, and paced the viHage street and
i. . .r 1- u • «... a chirped and smiled like a wayward child
ship for lhe I nrted States, listened t" ) and danc,.j on buoyant feet. Then from
Kmbassador Gerard's “most cordial re-; tfie north a blast came forth that smote
me thigh and hip, ami since that morn
my frame's been torn by fourteen kinds
I of grip. So many twists, so many
grists of climate here are sprung, I
wonder why all’ men don’t die while
. _ — - 4.—~ 1 No man can
patory of American objections thereto, 1 say, at break of day. just what that
had sought to minimize that <
by seeking to entice Mexico and Japan
into making war on America—poor, fee-
bl , strife-broken Mexico whose only
chance for salvation lies in the friend-
ship and support of the United State,
and Japan, a member of the entente al- j yasb>r( was t0 make the High Priest
liance and with nothing to gain except mad.
national dishonor from betrayal of that 1
alliance or from war on this country, e’d in i’ts scope,
its greatest and richest customer. It is r
an amazing and astounding story, pos-1 oj Ambassador Gerard, he should
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
Any erroneous reflection upon the
eharacler. reputation or standing of any
firm, individual or corporation will be
glady corrected upon being calk'd to the
attention of the publishers.
The
’e referred to the g. o. p.
' present Congress as a
suggestion for their line of action in
confronting this
We
his late stock of screen wire in the city
Irishman, land can furnish you with anjd
i width in any quantity. Mold!
and staples for fasteniflH
Remember that gal-
wire lasts longer—sol
much longer that it is cheaper.]
»♦♦< <»»»♦»>»♦< »»♦♦»«♦♦»»♦»
Loafer believes in patronizing home 1'
industry. Believes that it is best fori
everybody concerned and also believes
that ft Is due to the home rr.an Wo mer-1
chanl or laborer to have a fair and rea-1
'sonable wage or profit as the case may .
be. He knows that the merchants dis-
courage buying merehandiso In their
lines' from foreign houses yet these i
same merchants are the principal of-
fenders of this rule ra some instances.
Not many days afo Loafer kn*‘w a man j
who is a mechanic and produces a, pro-
duct as good as any in Ins line that '
was called into a business house by the I
proprietor and told to fig ire on some 1
work. “Now if you can do this as cheap r
as 1 can get it in Chicago or S:. Louis'
I wil give you the job. if you cannot i
I will send it off.”
The mechanic had to figure against i
all the mail order houses in his line j
and if he got th* job had to cut all the '
profit out of it. Xet that merchant i
would be very Indignant in his heart if t
that mechanic should send off to mail I
order houses for merchandise in his
line. Merchants w hose famtllles go to j
Dallas and For' Worth to buy all their
supplies in other ones thus taking it j
ewuy from,peop:" who are jn business
in Denton are pot few.
Merchants are often rnlpanle in not I
trying to «atisfy-the wants of customers J
w ho need somethingregi 1 tarty car- j
ried in stock by inerti-i'mdttie matter
of procuring it for the mm* who needs
jt. He is told that they do not carry
it and that the merchant dots not know
where he is to get it. This ®tives the
man either to do without it W else to
order it from a mail order house.
This is one side of the mail order
matter but there is another. The man
who orders his supp'i-vs away from
home is robbing his own community of
just that amount every time be does it.
He has some excuse in some cases [
when dealers refuse da attempt to make !
a price that will in r.ume sort compete |
with the prices made, but still lhe buy- *
er should investigate before tie sends
his money out of ‘.lie town in which he j
lives. The Denton/m’reliant who ‘old 1
lhe mechanic that .f he Would meet the
price of the Chicago mat! order nouse '
he could have the business added :m- j
petus to the mail order business in that |
mechanic's mind. The man who wants I
the highest price for his own products '
should always be ready !•» consider :
carefully all the angles of the ether'
man’s claim to his trii1. The farmer]
who expects to market his products in |
a town should consul?r as carefully as I
possible the viewpoint of ihe merchant j
before he sends his monev off to a mail-
order house fur merchandise.
Denton has aceordirig to reports that ■
reach this Loafer failed lamentably in I
providing a cottomnarket that is not ]
1 controlled by specula'»rs whose sole
aim is to buy c.otton for the prof-
it that can be made < ut, o'" it. A mar- I
ket should be provided that will enable i
the farmer to get all his product is I
worth. Now Loafer does not know that '
the Denton market has been bad in the I
past but he does know that farmers
have complained >f i; and ’hat where ■
there is complaint there must surely
.......... ............. ...... Wichita Falls is beeoming so thickly
vative was Is to say: “This institution. I
or.J>olicy, or custom has entured so '/
many generations; therefore, it must ' ls
. be the final embodiment of human wis-
rom, and we should be bound by it.”
Tile radical way is to say: “This thing],
uil pool, and th< miking of a new
Things are get-
♦
♦
♦
»»'l' 1 IF I M D »»»»»»
"If people in the North, where dairy
conditions are not half as favorable as
Hu y are here, can raise feed for their g hardship to any one.
'•ows ,ind produce biiiter at a profit, Many People Confuse Expensive Tastes
why c.ui we not do it nere?”—Brvan I " r'—1
Eagle.
Very simply answered.’ The people
in the North, who carry on the dairy confusing
industry under unfav rabie conditions tastes,
"id p IV top prices f >r their feed, are
not rich enough to invest it and mam- I
Tnev buy registfr-^
map in a poultry way.
watch for resu
lhe ini
| to England ------ „-------- . . ..
I per correspondents, vvhtv would send out j ing.
I military information written in invisible ! man
he has to tight for it. ’—Dallas Times-I ink.
Herald.
.vnd it can’t be denied that the Pres-
ident is six feet uf lighting m^erial.
male’s famed for sudden
rrnany, ue ‘rkk^; “Nix! The
letter and are blue, the winter’s through, the
and setting hens send up their
r
The R-C boys who deliver the daily ,
are individually a good bunch of boys I
but collectively they are a bunch of j
hard Hombres It is a queer phase of)
boy nature that when you let a bunch ,
of them eongregate for a long time that!
they grow into a kind of clique. These!
R-C boys are no worse than other boys :
but they have run together ami tussled!
together .until they are. developing into !
a bunch of “Unholy Terrors.” A day I
or two ago the Ross had to get up and
go out on the street to stop them from I
assaulting another boy. Not one of]
these boys would have been guilty of
such a thing individually but when they :
are all together they have the gang spir- i
it and that spirit makes it awfully hard | —
for a strange boy that chances to cornel
along. Bovs are alike and a small bunch ; yelled _
i is just the same as a large bunch. Let i run. It was in time of
a strange boy come to town and he has them mountain boys came
to show What he is made of Hcfore he door and the two windov
Mothers of building like hornets out or
1 no vs who leei inai incir SviiS are the race was on. L --- - ... , ...w. «■ ......., -.......... ---■
little gobs of perfection would be hor- a mile, when it ended it ended most ig-^to pay for a player-puaoo/or the club I < •• rnian got mt
rified to see their beloved son mixed up ; nominously for Loafer and his com-j jj((.bpn w<nntin uf the County { war and the p<>
'in a scrap on the street or in some I panions—they were caught.and incon 1-; r>'d'’rat ion of Women'# is to help i in a very sln.r
! back lot With a lot of other fellow’s ' nently pitched head foremost into the | and a j)an,ls |)lisinesg inam» to give one I pinning up a t<
round refereeing the mill. It is no sign < creek and tlien allowed to go home | f,lOf ,,f pennies to ev< ry fifty that the I lory tn acco
! of lienravitv in the bov but it is a very I While the school boys went back to,gjr|s rajse There are (Sixteen pennies headquarters 11
said that he did not.
j him at all. “Weel.” said the L.
"whin ttie policeman got here yez
l in a i
‘^‘ington and Jefferson and Monroe on ev-
ery problem that tiaseome before them.
-Quoting Confucius w.mld be almost
as much to the point. Washington and)
Jefferson, at least, were not blockheads.
They did not derive their policy from the
'precents of Solon, but from the situa-
of America and Europe as it was
In their day.
WhaX somebody else had thought on
^Swe subject under the different condit-1
fona of a century before would I..,.: ,
"ftkTontrd them little. They had recently
been engaged in a very extensive smash-
ing of precedents.
-------o-------
Pacifists and pro-Gennails in ttie Uni- ...... -......, U1T. vaic
ted States have received their hardest j without your assistance?’’—Waco Tim- blows and orphans. • i.’OU
-Ikrald. NEW YORK—An elaborate German
We don’t know, but we should say I spy plot here is charged in indictments ;
nglendPunder the guise of newsf>a-! hal to repeat that advice nor the tvarn-
, -L- ------d______- ■. ]/.„. In fact he overstepped her limit
“The President wants peace even if ’ military information written in invisible ’ many a time afterward when he “egged"
s- link. Three men have been arrested. on a fight or started one himself where
, ----------- j he thought he could win it. He njatch-
CGPENHAGEN—Germany is )*onflscat- | ed several that did not win. Hd also
ing church bells fore war purposes and remembers the time when he and some
aluminum cooking vessels are also sub-j other boys passing by a school house
♦ ♦ jcct to confiscation I back in the hills in East
.ations" speech, they and probably otb-j^
ers present knew that Germany already I (,f‘
had decided on resumption of its cam-
paign of ruthlessness, and that, antici- |bey are and young.
..... (lay will bring; soft winds may blow,
uiHictmj | (bere raay snow, we may have Fall
or Spring. And so we strive to keep
alive by taking pills and dope and strain
our gaze for better days, for while
there’s life there's hope.
CHICAGO—Another 13c drop in
eggs or Hie ; Pri<’e of potatoes was noted Friday
witlihohi his produce from tbe buyer
past the natural time for marketing.
Morally speaking it would
i‘er to go as a I 1 .
have' few tim s, until a universal demand
can remedy the situation, than endorse
any such
‘ practicing it.
pay top pric.
Good taste and expensive taste are far
- n; - ---from identical. >
■in scrub cows. Tnev buy registir-'
or keep m|y cows of proved]
Down South we nuv any oil kind of
I cows and tend to hem any old Kind o”
[way. As a result, the NorCmrn far-
mer realizes, on an average, about five
times as much mil* >vv’ fitvv the fig-
ures' as the Southern farmer, at ttie
same outlay of moaey in feed. And as] between these two.
a still further result the milK is richer) \nd He Spent It on That One.
and the five times as much milk pro-, ........
1 duces about six times as much miller,
sacrosanct and any deviation therefrom ; I’r on which the moral is easily deduced,
or from the "word of the fathers" as 1
a sacreligious invasion should receive
............ . 8ENERAL NEWS IN BRIEF)}................
1 two weeks because his mother bad told |
the; him that he must not fight. He tooki'rrVIQ KiSVUC
fol- the beating tiecause she said not and at i IrALA rarVfA Il'a nnirr
'that, time his mother’s vvord'was law. lll-VIW 111 wiiia.1,......
has int the edn of that time he went home ----— i and
’ day with the same old iaie of woe ABILENE—\V.< F. Whaley, formerly I xroom said that he “plum forgot me
tell—the same boy had beat him up assistant chief of police here, has been monPy f,ir the squire ” but told him
. . . i__._---u. ,_ ,----His I appointed deputy division internal rev- to come down to his restaurant and
were living. The
.the board of claimants announces the tomorrow night if you have not whip-Her. _
>vstem of wickedness by-i receipt of *300000 from Mrs. Willis • ifd that boy 1 am going to whip you. COLORADO—Jewell Hagerton’20, was I
by ‘lMded WM”here andliK,S';rxira'>''*
-!'.■ -11"?!.'’' I Un
e." Loater came homejitenly here from heart trouble. He
somewbat disfigured for; 47 years old.
iu »*»<= ...........j | We d(>n t knoW but we should saylspy plot hero is charged in indictments ; a small boy but he was nappy. He nad FORT wok in—Marriage license was
has been constantly engaged in plotting'that the voters have had enough prac-iby the grand jury. It is charged that it] no older brothers to help and he just i issued here to Alonzo Jamison of Pros-
agaBut the United States and trying li< '* <hat very thing to tiave be- I w as being planned to send German spies.lha(J to fight. _ Loafer's mother never per and Miss Cecil White of Sanger. •
custoin.-rs at cost Ble:
ttiat provide food at
hungry."—Me Kinney
For <>n>’ il-i
better than :.......
Federal I .Mayor Preston’s solution is only tem-
iporary, however, an.: while it may '
____ .............................. ... ... |>erve Io help se.eral thousand people I
ification from the dav it was adopted, | “^ Baltimore temporariiy , it only pro-1
- vines a still greater market fur ttie tood ,
uuv> . speculalors and trusts. We wouldn't )
Kttntly'they have been quoting Wash \,hi
e. , ,, . ,, tie open market made on potatoes'
at s2.2.> per bush. I.
in (tie storage of food by lhe speeula-
i tors in older to force prices up, Hie
I whole principle of which is v r- "",
; whether q is a metropolitan high finan-
cier who gets a corner on < ~~ “ ' ,
Southern cutton and wheal farmer who ) lowing the boycott.
" 1 NASHVILLE.' Tenn.—Gov. ... . ..................
_ ..igned the bill abolishing the fee sys-lone day with the same old, tale jn woe
-- — seem bet- in Shelby county, the largest in [to t "
lamb to the shearer a | the state. ' 'and took his marbles from him.
'1 CHICAGO—Dr. Joseph B. Hingeley of | mother said.
i tli-v hnortl rdaimonta ann« itinppti thp •
________ _____1 Mrs. Willis ■ pe<. ______ . . ______
i lames of New York, completing her mil- )l»n’t ever tell the teacher on
I lion dollar cm........
ORT WORT Marriage cense_ a r|fy wbb r,.d
blood and nothing yellow but its name
the U. S. authorities have arrested a
whole bunch <>t citizens on a charge of
selling booze.
_____________________________ The butter, egg and poultry buyers
war'to the end, but that he would be jin Texas have been holding a meeting,
glad if .America would show some of its; In Denton county the butter, egg and
historic sympathy with France by bear- poultry sellers held a meeting -some
mg some of the crushing financial strain years ago that had for its effect a move-
Tennessee imposed on her. | ment that has put Denton county on the
Tarr wrtr
an wa ,
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Bl HAVING YOUR INSURANCE WRT
V •' BY PEOPLE WHO KNOW HOW
B. H. Oeavenport & <
BY
X Wi
n Record ~ Chronicle
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< CHAHCes Hea*-.
Z// Oyw*/ V’’**
NSCHA ELMAN
T
Under the auspices of the
NORTH TEXAS
State Normal College
Normal Auditorium
Saturday Evening, March 24.
I
I
the world-famous Russian violinist
will appear in concert at the
iLlman played with a soul on fire and .swept the au-
dience before him.—Philadelphia Ledger, Nov. 6. 1915.
After his wonderful performance of the Bruch con-
certo he was recalled again and again, pandemonium
reigning in the house.—Philadelphia Record, January 1
1916.
One of the largest audiences of the season attended
the Mischa Elman recital in Symphony Hall.—Boston
Journal, Feb. 7, 1916.
There is something elemental—compelling in the
Coming to Denton
The
es with silky softness, it thrills with hot passion, it soars and sings rfnd whispers,
all violinists. 1
interpretations.
For this recital all seats in the NORMAL AUDITORIUM will be
RESERVED, and TICKETS placed on sale SATURDAY, MARCH 17.
Price, $1.25 and $1.50, according to location.
LINES THAT SPEAK VOLUMES
tempestuous sweep of his temperament. His dexterity
is forgotten in the sensuous beauty of his irrestibly ca-
ressing tone.—Chicago American, Feb. 28, 1916.
Thousands of music lovers flocked to Carnegie Hall
to hear Mischa Elman’s third'recital.—New York Herald,
Feb. 13, 1916.
His exquisite tone, his marvelous purity of intona-
tion and his astounding technical skill were all raised to a
higher power in the Ernst concerto. His playing must
have left the violinists who heard him well nigh breath-
less.—New York Tribune, Oct. 31, 1915.
three greatest Violinists of the world is afforded the
and vicinity, because the Normal management was suc-
then available in his southern tour. Mischa Elman has
the globe, and the sensational success that first greeted
he captured that musical centre, has been duplicated
On this his seventh tour of the United
' . New York alone is to hear
During February and March Elman plays twenty-seven eastern
Wichita,
This rare opportunity to see and hear one of the
people, students and music-lovers generally of Denton
cessful in securing early in November the only open date
to his credit a series of positive triumphs extending round
him in New York in 1909, when as a youth not yet twenty
in more than seven hundred concerts between the Atlantic and Pacific.
States and Canada the Russian genius will give more than one hundred concerts,
him a dozen times with orchestras and in recital. ]
dates and themtravels south to New Orleans, Houston, San Antonio, Austin, Denton, Oklahoma City,
Indianapolis and other western cites.
Elman has made over fifty “Red Seal” records for the Victor company and the wonderful music <»f these
records has made thousands anxious to hear him and see him in the flesh.
Elman tone” knows*Yio equal; it is human in its inflections and colors; it throbs with red blood, it cares-
His technical skill is the envy of
His insight is of the keenest, and no artist ever combined such life, vitality and sheer beauty in his
MMM
MBDM1
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 174, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 3, 1917, newspaper, March 3, 1917; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1232747/m1/2/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.