Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 4, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 19, 1919 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
bn III.'
I ii I
u.|
I In
\\
I s
I a |>ltl
Th.
«lol
11.1
I >.» I ’
I 11,
. .1
i I
11
a I l
i io
<1
11 i
<1 . .
< I. >1
11
Ml
I f
f
• \x
l i u«
i (
I.Hi'.I
M r
1.1.
n
I .
Im .1
M i
.1
4 f
Kill
xx .' i l< I
M
.1
I-
It i
i n.I
I. I I I I
I I
I I
11
Illi
XX . I
1 h
\
lid
I I
. f
W n
lit
r<.
I .Hl II I
XX Mill
know
i hi
ha
11i| II i I
I lull
• ' I
f i I I I
I • .1
Hid
B. H. OEAVENPORT
1.1.
I.
1 I .
I Mrii
» ii
I • i
i\si r \\< i;
. t
I >'•
11.
TEX AS
.i.
t h.
~<i
In IhisinrsM Siner INM.I
■ I-
I I Olli
11.1
M. I\ i n n«
th.
• I.
pi ..pol l lol
Moil II I
I 1
M i
• I
a l
1.1
\\ I..
4 11'1
. I
I -
I . II
I Io
. «l
. r
\\ Io
< linnixr* on
Ii i
M
I .
. .1
i •
r:
\ 1
\\ Il
I.
11
M i
It. .
M in
I I.
I ■ •
. . I
■f
<1
I.
I I
11
Il i
\l
\\ I. v I. I
.1
I I ft I.
lit'
I ■
\\ i
I I . i
hill
> I
11 h
fi
• Lili
11
( ol
I II
. Of .1.1,1
th.
I •
a nd
\\ a
I'
\\ i-b-l
"I
ill
I., i
■ • I
A iln
i:
w
t .i
■ i
• i
THE CLUB BARBER SHOP
i api.llv
I I O| .
I' ■
II
R
I1*
. .1
I . .1 ro
K
LAST CALL
fol
Send It to the Laundry
. <1
11.1.
fl'
We only have a few I/awn Mow*
11.1
I'm
•rs left
If you are in need
now.
th.
Lawn Mower and I lost1 bet
f
i,
a
tin
Itol. •
ter come by and see ours before
PHONE 8
all
buying,
befo
t hey
are
.hi
'ini
irone.
YOU CAN MAKE
Just received a new shipment of
Dry Cleaning Dep’t. Phone 800
GOOD PICTURES
. I
- WITH A KODAK
nioHt
I I » i a
I will
In IO
t 14 • • I
I4M|
1 I loll
-al t X
I .
II 11 ■ I
. II'.V
I I
I .
Fruit Jars and Syrup Cans
Charter Oak Stoves
t I. o
I" '
. <1
\\ I
. oil that
a 11 I h o l I .< >1
UN TED STATES NOW
SECOND TO ENGLAND
N ITS NAVAL POWER
i <; i i H.11
\ I .1 V I 11
fol
i. i
xx o 11 h I
loll- I
ii i; L, I I
of
f. •
I X
lion I
Ma x
I I. Illi.
that ii
ol ash.
I
for t'
in. < 11 ti u
a i ' I ■
rib i
. I •« I. I
nd po I »i I
. ..I dim
>..t h
f al.
hall Ir
If th
Ma I
M i •<
t h . a. • lx
I ’ nit • <1
li n
t I I.
f.-i
ti> ■
(Io i t
p tv. d
III. p
Ii h. '
lion.
I
i Imn
.'olid
call
•ii < bnirmnn
oil
I \\ P .
I X ■ \ XX I
Il II. • d th
adv. ills,
at th.
ino l. i n
1 I•li | I d 11
dt
II
th.
'' I
I < ■
,M
I llsll I
• uni v
a <’l Io
DENTON STEAM LAUNDRY CO.
MASTER CLEANERS AND DYERS
Ro-
lol
It 11 i
>\ ' I
dim:
'll' .1
t h s i o n
l a k f l)
M i
\\
\ t i .
th.
I I
II
llo r- l
I .'lid
t I Olli
had
I'»
I i
d. i
. I. d
I.i.Im
I \\ .' I .' III
! riin . t 1
1 t r<I ’n• i li
! I In- s<| II
I of •
foil..
Hill i|r
' foil
. < I i' > i'
l<> la , I I
IL' o I al:
.IIS Ido
• XX I ■ al l V
I. . I I I. .M|
llh foil I P
id. I < 0)4 I
'III. I uh
dll.
d i
F. B. ROSS RESIGNS;
ADVERTISEMENT FOR j*
BIDS POSTPONED AGAIN
11 I
I h. I
II .J.’
n the
o II II I X
I .ah
d
iiion
11
pt o |.
. d \\ .
f
I' . I I
li . n
.1 i pa n I
• . d Li
/ d.To .
i 111.. i
' ., f •.
t .miii.
< 11
I h i '
of all . 1.1
Willi II
< ' 11 \ < ’
I I’ i'» o
11*hd<*I • d hl
Denton College Graduates In
■ Faculty ol Vocational School
Idol V ill'll -
Office of Fred A. Jones Co.,
' interurban Surveyors, Will be ~ ȣ
> Moved to Bowie About Sept. 1 ; 1
tail'd H.
1 < 1 M1111 d
'hilt loan
old
ol
ion I
ihi
W|tb
y "H <»f
♦ 11. rn.'ou
I. Rohm t
in. inbvl «
oini* and
I
Mrs. Furpen Will Go Io Globe
Ariz, Io Bring Back Children ;■
News From Bethel
I Tl 1 I I \ m | s \ mi oi 1
(Hl, I t " I a l I I | | , . M ||a | | Ml I
I lll.lt
d th.
If Your $5,000
House is
Insured for
$2,000, You are
Betting $3,000
1 hat it won’t
Burn Down.
I fl
.. . •
loll fix.
k I II K f
II. nn. 1
Ko. li
\\ 1.1111
lifts
.1 > \
it Id
to I
I.. I
< of
to I"
i. II' a
I. 1 I I I.
aid do
h. . n
... d
I 1
I hr 1’0
f (loll of
| lllil J
11. .I Stat.
• ■.ding (h
II..
. I th
M l
!M 1
al out
111 th*
nd h<
is mg \\ . .In
I a la lid
n as th.* a.
11 pt.
hllng |
lent contemplated will require the inak
ling of Nix h connect Iciih on \V»»*t Oak
'Ntreet from the MipiMrr to the rtt> lint
n. North Loi’iist Mtrret from th. Mqi.air
• CoUi gr Hl 14 . I
nd \
mth I
adding 1
In pH 1 pl <
I1.....
Ill III.
id Max.
la I \\ .'.'I
1 f.. 1 m id.i Id.
1 • I’ 11r I a v1d
HI.-ship- am
M Mirri'IIELI,, Prop.
North Side Squiire
"Don’t l oru.'t the I'li.re”
I I u
I ..bll,
• - and
v pr l a I t I
'tap ft.
ha
\\ 1
I . a
h. |
"I I
\ . I H f . > I I I I < I
h In a <ld l I 1
at I. a I I
. -Hl I of II'.
I I 11 I O ' I I \ H
I I in I nd 1 ng a
.ship- li'.tr.l
ap Thh I. . .1
II I.-f h I pH in
1 a l '
tin' world nr»* under t'oimi met Ion
I flu. rutted Slates and « buttle erttl
ie autlioit«"d and will l.v emnplet.'l
during t he 11. \ 1
Iihn I t I.
. .duplet
t ii..
tod
l.c. .
Mr
U S H'
for I
idittk \
. Olli 11
X to
lol I
I \\
I t I. lit
r old I
■ r I 11 e
llP'detn
foi th
1 .1 I
I . d . a
I pt op. 11 \ I o.la \ . ih uihlrr-
I h'd lie. aitse ou IlcHI
less inaiii •mire than for
Iliells, hut because Sallies ha\t‘
p rent l\ iii< 1 fased
Wouldn't a little more Hartford
protection be a vihd| hii.stne.sK
11 id\ e '’
id inistjtkcH by having your
\\ t it t en by people
how
|»on«*d
r I.i.Im I < >1 1
d 1 y f 1 1. 1 \\ a
s s I o li II w
n ' t a 11 I 11 P. I
p" XX . I
Ip 01
Olli. I I
*''' '■
Hi i:
y
I. a I I I. • . • 111 m . 1
. 111 p m a m I h I ’
I 'I I. 1 I I I "h|i I p
I a 11 d 1
Iher. afi
-.'d at t
nst 1 11. 1 ton of .
built I > I h mi
la X O I < ' I llp<
. d l>
\ d \ . I I I SO nI
Ih. f t t- 1 p
• and a f I • r
.r to th.
her n 1 a 11. 1
fore the a<
l. of th. ye
I,' 11 II \x a M
Swift & Company, U. S. A.
O o O
0
o
Meats in Storage
Not “Hoarded”
Live stock is a seaso: al ciop — I ke
cereals and grains.
It is “ripe” and is marketed in larger
quantities in certain months. 1 hi.
causes a natural oversupp.y at one
time and a natuial shoitage at another.
During the time of oversupply Swilt
& Company places some of the meat in
cold sto'age, against the season of
short piouuction.
This is a necessity in order that the nation’s
ration of meat—58,000,000 pounds evei y day
in the year—may be forthcoming as the con-
sumer requires it.
This is not hoarding, not price manipulation,
not market control. It is mere common sense.
United States Bureau of Market’.’figures of
stocks of frozen and cured meats Ju y 1 are
being used as a basis for Department of Justice
investigations in many cities. When properly
analyzed, based on Swift & Company’s stocks,
these figures show:
From this it will be seen that “meats in
storage” represent unfinished goods in process
of curing and the working supply necessary to
assure the consumer a steady flow of finished
product.
62 per cent (approximate) is pork and
beef cuts, etc., cured and in pro-
cess of curing. It takes 30 to 90
days in pickle or salt to complete
the curing process.
12 per cent ia frozen pol l;, of which
more than three-quarters is to be
cured in the next few months.
7 per cent is lard. This is a normal
supply and only four-fifths of a
pound per capita, and much of it
will have to go to supply Euro-
pean needs.
19 per cent is frozen beef and lamb,
and miscellaneous meats, part of
which is owned by the Govern-
ment and was intended chiefly
for over-seas shipment. If this
were all diverted to domestic
trade channels it wouldbe only 2V2
lbs, per capita—a 5 days’ supply.
lOO'/o
THIS SH0WS^<
WHAT BECOMES OF \
// THE AVERAGE DOLLAR \
i RECEIVED BY \\
SWIFT & COMPANY'
FROM THE SAIF Of .MEAT 1,
AND Bt PRODUCTS
85 Cf NTS 15 PAID FOR THE |
LIVE ANIMAL //
12 06 CENTS FOR LABOR ]
i EXPENSES ANO FRFIGHT JJ
X 2 04 CENTS REMAINS #
'X WITH X
SWIFT & COMPANY X
AS PROFIT
' 857.
ToStockRtuer
0 /
/v
'o WTXiizriAUM
12:967,
Brit-
. On
cable
with
them.
1 th*
give
not
each
isanvl
gs)
Pet
.tins
.17.
158
.1
previous experi-
FARM AND CITY LOANS
HARRIS-BENTLEY HDW. CO.
About Honesty
YOU CANNOT BEAT IT
NUMBER 12.
Peacemaker has been the leader
PEACEMAKER
ALLIANCE MILLING CO.
NOTICE
BOYS WANTED
4
paying
Indebted to Us
a
PEOPLES HOME TELEPHONE
CO.
I
Simmons & Ely Candy Co.
. z. A .r
Brownie
Cata-
generation and is still in
the front rank of Flours.
Having disposed of our interest
in the Wright Co. Garage we ask
will please call and settle your
accounts.
The Groceryman has it
Tell him to send
All Parties Having
Bills Against Same
H. V. HENNEN
J. L WRIGHT
K
—------——--------
You Are Properly Sweetened
Ideal Waterman Fountain
Pens
W. J. McCRAY
I
THE CURTIS CO.
Soda, Candy, Cigara.
And by the way, tomorrow is the last day for payment of your
August telephone bill. If you did not pay it, the service is subject
to discontinuance without notice.
answering
She’s not
a line is
rnmu aivu uni
Ix>west possible rate Black Land Farms and City Property for sal.
See us before making your Loan or buying a Farm.
CITIZENS’ LOAN AND INVESTMENT COMPANY,
By R. P. LOMAX, President
Rooms No. 1 and 2, Denton County National Bank Building.
to present them nt once and all
parties knowing themselves
can use several
or ponies during the
One or two are
well
The Record-Chronicle
good boys with wheels
coming school session,
needed now to carry good,
routes.
Come early and get your names on the
Waiting List to be called later if you do not
want to begin now. We need one boy with
a pony to carry a route paying fifteen dol-
lars per month.
Ask for Mr. Whitehead.
DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
for a
In the first place “C entral” is a pretty busy girl,
from a hundred and fifty to three hundred calls an hour,
apt to make useless work for herself. In learning that
“busy,” she performs as many operations as she would in complet-
ing a call. It’s easier for her to give you the connection you want at
once than to put you off with the “busy report.
You’ll need no previous experi-
ence, no technical knowledge.
Step into our store when you are
in town and we’ll show you how
easy Kodaks are to load and op-
erate, how light and convenient
and complete they are and how
desirable they are in every way.
When you take your summer
cooling-off trip to lake or moun-
tain, a Kodak will bring back a
picture record of the trip which
will be invaluable. Now that
your soldier boy is back, get a
picture of him. See how much
taller and how much better look-
ing he is since he has been away.
He'll enjoy a new picture of you
too. That picture of yours, be
you wife, mother or sweetheart,
that he carried in his pocket thru
out the war, has no doubt become
faded and battle worn from so
much handling. Whether you
know it or not, never a day passed
that he did not proudly show it to
one or more of his buddies or
friends. So get him a new one—
he'll appreciate it.
Kodaks $7.50 and up.
Cameras $1.00 and up.
logue free.
When you get the Simmons-Ely
Candy Company’s Candy. Ask
your merchant in Denton or sur-
rounding towns.
Iler report, “the line is busy," does not necessarily mean that
the man you want is using his telephone. It may mean that we are
trying to reach him for someone else who called before you did. If
lie’s on a party line, it may mean that one of the other parties is using
the line.
In this chat we want to talk particularly to the man who thinks
the telephone operator sometimes “fibs” to him when she says “the
line is busy.”
t
r
oes n 11
II
ES
y
2 tie
Ear-
to a
urn -
dark -
\v i t h -
of the
of the
E
Aap?
in the
U fea-
i n n i n k
• < ■ i n 1 o 11
nade a
hit to
dagn< r
•re In '
turned •
The
tail'd.
MWTOM, MMORD-CMBONICIK. TVKIDAY, AKIOT It. IBl».
It is packed in strong sacks that are dirt and damp-proof, so
the flour can’t sift thru.
With food prices so high, bread should be baked at home.
The best Denton grocers sell it, the best homes in Denton use
it. Order your sack today.
DENTON MILLING COMPANY
ITS EASY TO MAKE BREAD WITH
VERABEST FLOUR
You can offer your family old-fashioned home-made bread,
sweet, crusty bread, the greatest luxury of the home table. It is
made from the cream of wheat. Instead of old-fashioned unsteriliz-
ed wheat, every grain we grind is sterlized. So
VERABEST FLOUR WON'T SPOIL
J]
1
u
ESjJK’nKTXVm
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. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 4, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 19, 1919, newspaper, August 19, 1919; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235275/m1/3/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.