Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 4, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 18, 1920 Page: 4 of 6
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4
1 ' -I. ’ T '
r •
—
——
■r
"1 '
BMWaye
• «&■•■.
A
W 1^9^
tog the lUoerJ-Chreetole C®M-
Among
Xnoth<
4
■LATBS
advance) 44••
*
TWO
summer
A4aaM
the
iXTOM. TKXAR, AVOVHT IM.
at
/
reg.
THE WILLIAMS STORE.
GORM
GET YOUR CAR READY FOR
THAT VACATION TRIP
In
ELECTRIC SERVICE GARAGE
./
SUBLETT & McGALLIARD, Propa.
of
BRAND NEW 1-TON TRUCK
AMERICAN CAFE
nnawALLOw nbw«
Dunk Rett®
peace
Where Most People Eat.
J
BELL & CO.
20 Bars 1
WE ALWAYS HAVE
Denton, Texas.
FRESH COUNTRY
WATERMELON
SSL
me
ON ICE.
/
ri
la!
(
I
W. T. MORRIS
TRY US ONCE.
V
CHRISTAL &
Successors to Teasley & Sons
PLUMBING REPAIRS
GASOLINE
GOODYEAR
If you have a hurry-up job
PHONE 856.
SERVICE
We’ll be Johnny On the Spot.
Drive By Any Time.
I.
HESTER PLUMBING CO.
KELLER & HILL GARAGE
CONFIDENCE
Have You Tried the
TIRES AND TUBES
PHONE 234.
4. ■
NEW NORTH SIDE GROCERY
FOR SALE
Or lack of CONFIDENCE—That’s the Question.
ALAMO STORAGE CO.
E. S. COGHILL
STORAGE BATTERIES
Phone 91
115 Colleve Ave.
BREAD!
.j.
Henry Ford went out on the I
Prosperity is
at Your Door.
1
Harris-Chambers
♦ . • . ■ ■ ‘ ■
4
I
of
I'
..-A < ■
Ml
A
M.'vT
f
I
bT’i:
I
i
X
so
st
d city «mhX
..-Advertlalag Mgr
setosM es
HOKE. U1EY fc HOL
Offtae avgr First Nations^ Baaif’
Rfrilting Rhyn
By WaM Mmsb
ae eeeoad aiaa. asall M1
t-
I
I
Complete New Stock,
New Building, Good Service.
I
One-Minute Electric Washing Machine,
Garland Range,
Diamond Gas Stoves,
Primrose Cream Separator,
International and Titan Tractors,
Silent Alamo Lighting Plant
iweepi
ind ho
jround
Ah
St. Johi
Save the Surface
and Save All.
See me before you make
your purchase.
Give m
order foi
will order
market and bought Batteries of
every make and tested them
the
wan
have said,
ourt to eW
r«»ad can
that
this
num-
none
omit
the farm
Bailey
his
and
A man i« old
Think of the part bread
played in winning the war.
Value it aft yotlr most im-
portant food.
Pure Bread is really deli-
cious in addition to being
really nourishing.
Ask your grocer about it.
Bread is your Best Food—
Eat more of it.
Eat.
Have c
sale, clos<
H. F.
401 E. H
i
: ; Weakly «■ !>»•«•• C®waty.
• Tear (In advance)--------—
4 Maatha (la »dnnc)....--------
M« Monika (tn advance)------
Loans
On farm and city property at as
cheap rate as can be had.
PHONE 76.
last
labor
con •
be*
ac-
B. H. DEAVENPORT & CO.
Insurance
ROYAL
PRO1
jSg
Insurance
Of all kinds just as good as the ;
best and as safe as the safest
BERT FOWLER, Prop.
PHONE 28
Phone Lyon-Gray Lumber Co.,
No. 57
Residence Phone 886
Shop 311 N. Elm St
>enton, . Tew
In BtUkdM Stow IttJ.
. I-
SideTaB.
(By Math ns—res)
For si
Art hi
the th
below is ons thst will
be best for the work
you have in mind.
!
H
i ■
A
resent
h»in
ivory cUm ef
Needlework, f.—
breads described '
charging them continuously
until they were dead. Just like
your battery is used on your
ear.
To Trade For
HAY OR MILK GOWS
FRITZ & M’CRARY
Grain Feed and Poultry
Phone 616—We’ll send a buyer.
Market Square Barn.
HOBAC
THOM-
' B h L O’
A I Al. /.'
C — -
College Maid Bread
‘Ths Bread That Builds.”
223 W. Hickory Street.
HORSES OR SHEEP
We have installed
a new Gasoline
Filling Station at
Our new shop.
Painting, Paperhanging and
Interior Decorating.
out by charging them and dis-
charging them t_._2.-__.
We have—7-room_ house, 6
acres I
5-room
$2,500.
e x t r.*oi •Tina rlly 1
Nohh had t hr « |
There I
p.i I ria r< hs. Daniels three
Were thrown Into the fiery
and be himself was three davs I
lion
£
Every slice contains a big
measure of nourishment.
Think of the pure food
products that make a loaf
of Bread.
■"I
&
If a man, or an article, has gained your Confi-
dence, it is because past performances have proven
their reliability.
We are willing to stake our reputation on the
following Implements because of their Proven
Quality. ‘
MIC—NOTE
YKAKN
Aug 14 —An tin-
shekels in silver
cent annual
Brock Mineral Wells Water for Bale
Fox Bros, store West Hickory.
BHWlW >’
-
pnee.
is as
the ■
■XJP hon<
Keep It there. Don’t takg
chances with insufficient
fire insurance. See that
your property is fully cov-
ered. It’s vital. Think of
the way property values
have jumped—then figure
how many hundreds of
dollars short you are on
fire insurance.
in
K
None but the best is
good enough for your
work Use Royal Society.
RINGS
I have a large assortment of J
Rings in Emblems—Signets,!
Tiffany, Wedding and Dig-
nionds.
You can’t expect to start out on a long trip without having
your car in tip top shape. Bring it to us for repairs.
After that drop around.
This agency represents the
tried and true “Hartford.” .
MONOSELLE is for initials and French embroidery.
Comes in white—sixes 12 to 40.
« »f ▲sMctatad PreM. wMcto
tvoly oetlUsa to «— ttor ro-
— of all aowa. eoere41t»4 t»
»t ,th,rwU« cr»4<t*4. aad ala®
*1 eaws yukll.h®d th.r.in.
I bepind for Hell and this la
| (lucemmt for the re*at of uh t
somewhere else.
AU of Hogville is now going to make
a -strong effort to go to heaven. The
H»ar Ford preacher in a roundabout
way same as said Bill Hellwanger was
a great In-
o want to
Second Hand Dodge
and Buick Cara.
i FRITZ & RALEY
Phone 119 215 W. Hickory
BALL FLXJ8S in 4-piy can be aplit. For dainty
work. Highly mercerized.
ROPE and INDIA in a complete range of fast
colors is suitable for all kinda of embroidery.
SATIN FLOSS ia boil-proof. Is • 6-strand flow.
Can be aplit and one or more strands used.
CORDICHET is the ideal thread for Tatting and
Crochet work.
National platforms,
mtiidn one of a thoughtless
who tries to put the little
sleep by warning against the
l of
Unted I
8tate» cannot escape either the direct I
or Indirect results of the conflagra-
Our Grocery store is as close
is your phone.
We are prepared to take
are of your Grocery wants.
We can make any sort of re-
pairs in the Plumbing line.
1 Od M *14 W. Rtokery atreM.
U.- —- -4— ovary aftareow aaoapt
toy th® Boo®r«-Chr®atol® Osa-
roast bef and
ate lam stew and
I
I
land, close in, for $5,000.
house near Normal
7-room residence N.
Locust, $5,500. 5-room, Bolivar,
$3,250.00. 4-room, Oakland,
$2,750;00. We have residences
from $1,160.00 to $12,000.00.
Also some interesting business
propositions, and all kinds of
farm and ranch propositions in
Texas and Oklahoma to sell or
trade. L
Hardware Co."
1
‘ li
5*;
| NpW Vo
■i report* in
It ment* by w
I th« Anglo-1
L at maturity
i fiubatant ia)
I'till* obllgit
l American t«
located near
Congratulation* are due
|eorge Ney and associates in the Ban-
—w -Pfrss and are hrrrby
maKptfari-...... - —■ —__„
> i Th. Commissioner's
- Thursday to
^Vtlon on
CELESTA ia a perfect aubatitute for all embroidery
alike for uae on white and colored materiala.
TWO-PLY CROCHET COTTON ia a aoft twisted,
highly mercerized thread. Suitable for Crochet,
Slippers, Bags, Towels, Bed Spreads, etc.
a
court meets
consider some ac-
the east and west road, which . in buying food and clcthlna at a litifh
the court and Advisory Committee con -
aidered at aome length recently wlth-
4haee of the suijzestlons submitted
for procuring—or setting aside—the
important
and it is squarely
think, now to pro-
feasible plah
the building
importance
RVBMGBKBN
You'd say I'm In th® yellow leaf.
If you should count my years; but
I don't travel much with grief, or
•Ieoh weoand tn tears and so I ‘
work a gorgeous bluff that's bas-
ed on seemly mirth and people
say I'm young enough for any-
thing on earth. I have all kinds of
pea green pains along my legs and
back; but when a lot of Jakes and
Janes are calling at my shack, on
maladies I waste no words. I don't
discourse of woes: I talk of hams
and hummingbirds and cheerful
things tike thoae.
when he begins to talk of ailments
dire, to sigh all day and toast his
shins before a fitful fire. A man
grows old when he is prone to
boost the vanished time, to view the
present with a groan and swear
it is a crime. If I should live eight
hundred years, composing helpful
rhymes as Noah and such prophe-
teera hung on in ancient times. I'd
still be young as I am now, tho
outwardly defaced, with heavy fur-
rows on my brow and whiskers to
mv waist For when I see what old
men do. I do the other thing, their
vain repinlngs I eschew and whoop
around and sing
UamMewaantee
u —
B*"****■»■**•!
Ttot. tn tto® totrrto—y ef
JMW kllMLL
Aasai IB. 1TM
John Russell. British statesmen, and
for many years, tho storm canter of
Kngllsh politics, was born in London
on the 14th of August. 1741. Ho camo
of «n English family which has been
politically prominent since tho time of
Henry VIII. A liberal education and a
great deal of travel prepared him for
the important part ho was to play. Hie
first political attempts wore failures,
and when ho was 15 he seriously
thought of withdrawing to private life.
He was persuaded to make still an-
other attempt and from that time on
his career was a brilliant success. He
succeeded th® famous Str Robert Peel
as head of the political affairs of the
empire, and fgom then—which was
about the middle of the l»th century
—he was the “Stormy Petrel" of poli-
tics.
He was foreign secretary at the time
of our Civil Wax, and it was his sym-
pathy for th. Northern cause, com-
bined with the brilliancy of our own
Adams, that restrained England from
taking side in the conflict.
For 10 years before his death. Rus-
sell led a retired life, preparing notes
ft>r a ponderous volume of recpllec-
tions, which h. finally wrote. He died
when he was n4
BTtoaMy Ontstd® ®f !>»■«•■ Coeaty.
to Tear (In advance)------------$1.40
JfcMM (tn ad vane®) ....------41.10
•M Months (In advanc®)------ -40
f tion. Promoting the world's
I' promoting our own peace
--------o-------
K. The cornerstone of the Brenham
* * BAnner-Press building was laid the
other day. marking the beginning of
a 410,000 home for one of the oldest
B- small-city dallies in Texas. The Ban-
■tt nor was founded in 1866 by Colonel
John O Rankin and became a dally
Alne years later From the days of
P j* Colonel Rankin onward it lias been a
powerful influence thru that part of
tho state'—one of the earliest develop-
5^1 ’d sections of Texas, the old capital,
~'f---TWhlngton. having been
■JT ~3renharv. Congratulafloi
E L. VANNOY, Jeweler
219 West Hickory.
OUR PHONE NUMBER AMERICAN CAFE;
IS 174 .
cilable attitude toward those docu-
ments, proves that the Missouri democ-
racy is standing- back of the adminis-
tration that is and for the democratic
nominees In their fight for the preser-
vation of American ideals as exempli-
fied in their determined demand that
the United States d<> that which is best
for itself because it is best for the
whole world as well. The democratic
party is irrevoe-ably committed to the
League of Nations and the Versailles
peace treaty nimply because an c
majority of democrats
right. Govenor (’ox's
( h makes the treaty and
tiie paramount issue
whelming
lieve it is
uvptatme
the Leag-ue
tliis campaign*
Major General Gerald Francis Elli-
son, one of the prominent British com-
manders in the World War. born 59
years ago today.
Bishop Francis J. McConnell of the
Methodist Episcopal Church, born
Trinway, O., 4M years ago today
Hamilton Holt, prominent New York
editor and journalist, born in Brook-
lyn, N. Y . 4 8 years ago today
Jack Pickford, well-known photoplay
.star and brother of the famous Mary
Pickford, Lorn in Toronto. 24 years
ago today
I nominations wore
Wilson, for the V*r-
r and th« League of
Nations and against Heed s irrecon-
l< EM I >1)5
IM’All) MHM>
PHILADELPHIA,
paid note for four
hearing forty per cent annual inter-
est for nearly four thousand years re-
cently was found among the clay tab
lets at tile University of Pennsylva-
nia .Museum by Dr. I^eon Legrain. The
note, was given *by a man named Bur-
Mama to 11 Sinnetum in October. 1962
B ('. tiie ’year in which King Rim Sin
occupied the town of Dur-Damigilishi."
There were four witnesses to the
note Instead of signatures the wit-
nesses placed their seals on the docu-
ment and were not liable for payment
unless it was shown they knew the
character of Hur-Mama was bad when
they swore it was good
Although comparisons are difficult.
Dr Legrain said, a shekel of silver at
the present time the note was made
was equal to about >100 at ttve present
time
We have on the floor a brand new I -ton truck.
This is a first class truck equipped with pneumatic
cord tires and will give better service at less expense
than any truck on the market within $500 of its
$1460 Buys this Truck.
•VMKBUPTION
MaMy
A‘ M®Bth. 4®liv®r®4...........—— 4®
M®Btk®. by Mil (In akvnnc®) 4144
. Tear, by mall (in advance) 44 •*
Exide wa8 still working
when the rest of them were all
dead. That i* why he selected
the' Exide Battery for his car.
And he paid >3.29 more for the
Exide Battery than he could
■7 have boufhtthe next best Bat-
tery in the test Now that
ought to be enough proof of
the Exide’s ability to stand the
I rough use of every day’s
....
he gut up and wa.Jke0 out, me
following him. and we went to a
eler resteraunt .Mid pop ate a plate of
noodle eoop and roast bef and mash
potatoes and ! ate lam stew and Ice
ereem
GET IN TOUCH WITH US
if You Want to Buy or Sell
City or Farm Property.
f wotiob re thb pr»Mo
_Aay •rr®a®»»* r®n®ction up®n th®
MBatar. reaatatlon or •tan4inc of
* era. teStvUaal or eorpoiation
« too BlaSly oorreot®4 apon b«l«g
get to tho Betotiahora* attention.
. -I................ , 1.1
UMk Benny', Note I
Last Batidday I vet town town to
meet pop go ho cotild bu> me a new
eoot. wich he hatrt mo a ppotetty cheek
soot with elanty pocktte. aayia*. WM1
Benny, how do you fbol now!
Hungry, I eed. and pop e®d, do do I,
Im as hungry a® a bear, I think th®r®e
a reeterant tn thio nayberhood aome-
ware.
Wich we started to look, and after
a wile we came to a little wit® place
with a sin® on it aajring. Tho White
Rabbltf, Heels served.
Ah. heere a place, sod pop. And w®
went in and sat down at a little bl.
of a table, on account of all the ta-
ble* being little bite of ones, and a
waiter lady came over and pop sod,
Wats good today?
Well, you can have a stuffed egg on
lettuce, theyre nice, or you can have a
sardeen sanwitch with a alio® of lem-
mfn, theyre nice, sed the waiter lady.
I sippose they are, but Im hungry,
s®d pop, and the waiter lady sed, Well
you mite try a tomato filled with
chicken salad, thyere very nice or elt*
a lettuce sanwitch with mayonnaise,
theyre extreemly nice, and pop eed.
Lettuce, lettuce, now 1 know wy this
place Is called the wite rabbit, good
nite gerl, wen I sed I was hungry I
dldnt meen I was a hungry rabbltt.
Its none of my bixneas wat you ment
sed the waiter lady, and pop sed, well
do I look likH a rabbitt?
You mite to some peepla, eed
waiter lady.
O. Is that so, do you eat heer your-
self’ sed pop
I certeny do. sed the waiter lady,
and pop sed, I thawt you ears looked
kind of long, can you wlggl8 your
note ’
A nd
the suggestions
procuring—or setting
money necessary for this
road's construction,
up to the court, we
vide some other f-
,-will result in the building of
” road, which lr: importance and
ber of people served is second to
in the whol® road ^jiytem To
th® east and west road would upset
any possible scheme for a system of
county roads' it would leave the east
third and west third of the <ountv
wholly without a highway to s. tye as
Ole basis of a system of lateral roads
Omlssloh of this thorofare. indeed can-
■’Gnol be contemplated and if none
the plans suggested are acceptable
' the court, it is, as we have said, up
to the members of the v
some plan whereby the
provided for
a nd
their dinners at
lowed so much
tiers and at first
vited out to dinner (as they were ..
| good deal' they spent the extra money
week or on some other luxury But
on grander meals for the rest of the
ewek or on some other luxury. But
they soon began to face tile necessity
of returning these Invitations in one
way or another and that hit their
budget so hard that they reorganized
Instead of spending the money releas-
ed by being entertained at dinner, they
put it into an entertainment fund
Maybe this will strike you as sensi-
ble and maybe it will strike you as
cold-blodded Anyhow, it Is a mani-
festation of the fact that one does not
get something for nothing and that In
the long run it is folly to wish or ex-
pect it.
Don't Be Too < arefol.
I have known people who were
afraid of accepting favors of any sort
lest they be called upon to pay at an
Inconvenient time or In some coin that
they did not like to part with
..... ..v. ..... ... « ...... | a,l,t
I price, supposedly, according to Attor- 1 *° railroads
ney General Palmer, to filch from tiie J persons
retail murchants and consumers mil- i
Huns of dollars Does Mr Bailey at- I
tack these profiteers In his speeches' I
Not yet Under a State law which Mr |
Neff helped to pass the interference
by fort-e of any cliuts of labor with *
laborers of another class is prohibited I
The evidence of (his Jaw Is shown by
the courageous action of Gov Hobby It.
starting your products to move I
Galveston to every port of every .
Certainly you will not east your
on Aug. 28th to kill the goose
lays the gold, n egg Talk to
neighbor farmers about this important j
question, calmly Your interest H at I
Make and that of the Nation
world both be-
welfare of
because the
American people are big enough and j
unselfish enough to be concerned with
the welfare of the whole world. The
' world at war means that the
Hl'UAH SHORTAGK TI HM CANJAHc
AN FARMERS TO SUGAR HEFTS j
WINNIPEG August I I —Shortage wfT
sugar, with accompanying high prices,
has turned the attention of Canadian
farmers to the profi’a >( sugar I eet
production ’
Sugar beets grown In Canada and
used in the manufacture of sign- in
1918 totalled 204.317 ’onr The crop
sold at the sugar factories for (2.593,-
715. .or 11 2 22 a ton. '-anadi had 18.-
000 acres in sugar beets that year,
which averaged over tieven tops to the
acre The average In I'Hil was 2l,f.on
anti the average yield was 9 80 tons to
tiie acre. Sugar |> clc.-s were around
11 cents a pound in '.!‘l.i. They recent-
ly touched 28 cents.
Gntarlo has pi.elu. e l tie bulk
Canada's sugar be. tn tn the past,
ports declare nowever, that agricul-
tural conditions ar- 'avoeable to U’elr
cultivation In many par's of Western
Canada The financial possibilities of
Western sugar be. t production are • »-
peclally Interesting Just now in view
of the recent decisloa of the “Huttson's
Bay Company to lose out to farmers
all its remaining lands in the prairie
provinces A cooHl.leral 1; acreage Is
being planted In beets in these pro-
vinces and in Britlsa Columbia
brought to the home of the far-
both landlord and tenant higher
prices since the .beginning of tiie war
until this time than has In the
half a century Tin- prices paid
has enabled this great class of
Hutners to buy food and clothing las
been the cause of these returns to the
farmers. The open shop or the elos. d
shop <loe« not affect the farm work- | go
ing condition as Mr Bailey would i
haye you believe. If his contention I 1
should be realized and class hatred
tabllshed, the sure result would be the
re-action to lower prices
The flKOr,, three IS
prominent in the Bible
, j sons and Joi, three fr iends
' i Were three
to j compa.ni<'ns
I furna.
in th
I
TURN A FAVOR UPBIDK DOWN AND
FIND—
You never gat something for nothing
Ev®ryon« wants to, evsryon® fan-
cies now and thes that h» Is accom-
plishing it, and no on® ever does It—
at least not tor long.
Some frifnds of mine were telling
Jubilantly this Spring of having been
given circus passes for the whole f^gn-
Uy by a newspaper man they knew?
They evidently felt that here, for
nee. they were reall ygettlng some-
thing for nothing and even the pleas-
ure of going to the circus was greatly
enhanced by that feeling.
That’s Gratitwde
A week or two ago I mot these same
friends agsln and Invited them for a
week-end in the country “We'd love
to come," said the wife, "but we have
an engagement we simply can’t break.
Tou know that newspaper man we told
you uf who gave us thoae tickets to the
circus. Well, his flAncee is going to be
in town and we felt we ought to in-
vite them to dinner, wtie isn't at all the
sort of person I care about, not half
so nice as he Is. but of course we sim-
ply had to do it I wish we'd never gone
to that old circus I haven't been Out
of the city a week-end this
ami I'm crazy to get away "
That’s gratitude.'
It Is also human nature
When we accept favors we think of
them as so much velvet. Then the time
cornea when we perceive that we must
either be thought boors or make some
return And It is so apt to be an in-
convenient time, either for our engage-
ment or our purse.
A Rualnreallkr Arraeaemrnt
I once knew a young couple who.
when they were first married, did
light housekeeping, getting their own
breakfasts and luncheons and taking
restaurants They al-
a week for their din-
wtien they were in-
fas they were a
HKENfeeactlon is as dangerous as bol-
•hevtem. in tiie opinion of Governor
.--.-XjIUjBoe M. Cox, democratic nominee for
-presidency. "We have two very
RjflFwBBicn 1 movements." he said in an ad-
last year of conditions in the
’^■'United States. "Bolshevism is one and
another movement. equally as
Bkngerous as I see it, is the radicalism
of reaction. One radical movement says
F mill not wait for things to work
r»’. Agri, we will destroy tiie institutions
lEyof government • • • • Tiie reactionary
radical says we will make no change ” j
Nominee Harding tells the world ,
M that he prefers peace and tranquility
home to peace and tranquility the |
" Iworld over The statement arouses ap-
Iqw plauee among republicans, and per-
TtoBlia syn.pkthy among others who fur-
Iftot that the United States is a very
IsnROftant .part of the world and that
It is inevitably concerned in the peace
and tranquility of the v«.
cause of its effect on the
(he United States and
SUtta^'.'. „ e.a.
| Dan Hocks, who does blacksnilthinK*
on week days and barber work on Sat-
urdays. has bad his wife make him a
of farm pro- white jacket he can stand in the
- ducts and aK**n the pilgramaKe of j door and look like other barbers in
landlesR tenants would resume its sad I the larger towns
course hither aiid thither over the —--- ■ ■ ”
1 earth. The great body' of intelligent | DALLAS—The railroad cornpanles
farmers and business men do not want »*nd not the Pullman company will pet
► to return to these sad days As w«lthe 50 per cent surcharge for sleeping
write this message to you the dis- [car fares under the new rate increase
patches tel 1 us that great manufae- I effective Aug 26, W. G ( rush of th*
(UrTng concerns are closing down their mltinfraet "irrmouncrrt trerr. The
phrnts. rtiVr*,Tgsvfrt -for-a time -»tW^MM*>w-*uu»pau.v ’-Ua. sur®
* thousands of woikmen to remain idle eharge. Mr. Cruah *h1d USluch is 50
■ and to consume aJl present holdings cent additlo-hal to Yhe present Pull-
jmnn fares and l»irn the mouuy over
I ♦«. t»».. v<x Ji really a tax on
------riding in sleeping and parlor
earn and is intended to bring Increas-
ed revenues to ‘•the railroads by pen-
alising ‘luxury’’ travel.
A MORI) TO FAIIMERN
• MeK inney Examiner)
In view of the fact that an appeal
is being made for your votes on a false
issue an appeal to class prejudice that
; for its presumption upon your ignor-
ance. is rarely’ equaled in audacity and
insidious design. We have in mind the
open shop issue, raised at a late hour
' that supplants the greater issue of
patriotism an<^ loyalty to the National
administration and the demands of the
Mr Bailey re-
parent |
child to
. ... bear in t
! the closet or under the bed to the tuna
■ f The Goblin's will get you If you ,
i don't watch out ’ He must know, as
| you do. that the products of the farm
I have
The nomination by both democrats
and republicans in Missouri of candl-
dates for governor who made their
race on the proposition of law en
f , forcement, epeciftctiHy the prohibition
i>w.' proves the revolution that has
come about tn Missouri since prohibi-
tion wa* put into effect and upholds
the contention that there are more
prohibitionist* now than there ever
were befor© simply because more op-
en-minded men have had the te»portun
Ity to st* Bud appreciate the wb. nefits
co tn irV from eliminating the saloon
* The fact that the successful demo
cratlc candidates for both gubernator j
UU and senatorial
-----BUtl-lteed and pro-’
f mlllea peare treaty
es ♦
by
Hobbv in
from I
• I’ me
r \ ot<‘ j
i th.it l
your j
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 4, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 18, 1920, newspaper, August 18, 1920; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235605/m1/4/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.