Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 63, Ed. 1 Monday, October 27, 1919 Page: 2 of 8
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’S ’5®’®
■
piwyow,*
Conflicting Thoughts
.E
Birthdays
^W\\\\\wA\CTg
n
T
1
Ilf
Him
$
If
really
>uidn t
wealthy
a ml
f a rnoiiM
ll.«
too
piut ure
Hr
MS
1.1
to
I
would
that
Thai
bill
Hr
IO UMt
If
hr
F"
, TEW. fMTOBEK 37.
I III 1»
him
from
s
adB 1>‘»
b»
wou hl
doubt
I hr
it
Hr
w ho‘<l
one
had
|V
u ho
g I veil
You
11 V < - M
mm
y our
labored profes
You
lln
a ml
Your
g lor Ira
(COnMtbO
whlrh hov
proaprr
you
THE GARDEN LADY’S STORIES
Education.
of
Bureau
a ml
II » •’ 11
ria Im
monr y
•mra when he Iihh
If
<
been
t hat
TROUBLES OF LOAFER
HOGW AI.I.OXX’ NKXXS
go!
Dunk Bott.
-M-
HVTII CAMERON’I ’IDE TALK*
you
it
the
hour
Mr
the sky.
TODAY’S ANNIVFHSAIIIKN
1
I’.GX I’T
Which Has
lAOTIh H
I
Italy
ry
in
the Greater Appeal?
Ont
Bui
say
in
OXK
th.
crossed
a ml
British
i. Fort Worth quoted corn Wed,-
Back Door X I.-
IN TUB DAY’S WKWS
■
Hurel
Secretary.*
J
al Bask,
a?
■
I-
B
IVy 11IVI1 IB > * v •• m.i » w
lould be worth if it had been reduced
proportion to the hog raisers’ pro-
•dvknc.)
zance)
a ml
I he
t(IMC<|
. t is
to
ini to
r
of
a ml
act res#
IIUIltM-
FIX THAT
CHICKEN YARD
they
w hr n
tell him
that t
Bui
had
THE CURTIS CO., Dealers
Denton, Texas
tires and tubes
because we do
of pleaeetl
,-aee many
Si 50
.NO
45
t here
take
. ie
il’i
brat
I
from
horse
off .
I uuk
A ml
\\ HS
w a m
a nd
Home
French under Gen. retain con-
Flanderx.
no
chance
other hr just
a bouI,
pop
of Rise
r brother
lit-
f a m
I hr
It ’
aided
. 1 an<1
words
I it
out
t hrough
* I) W R
t hr
it is
more
SO
zAti
5 uO
Little Benny’s
Note Book
Hr Lee Pape.
horse
it
It
a I nt
of
Tn
lay,
Office Over First
Denton,
a n
11 < r
hl#
Id-
in
to
It
RM
not
with
Roosevelt.
U.
a t
Lots <
about
for Mim
bra r
it.
1
J. B. WILSON 5 CO.
Live Lumber Men
next
i will
layer
W\V
Rippling Rhymes
By Walt Mason
tremendous losses that
I RECORD-OHM
AXD CHRON1CLM COMPANY
Just Folks
By Edgar Ou.at.
10#
g <
as it
stretches a
to it.
dropped
back
i P m r y
Wil la
TXeNEW EDISON
’T4« Pkftfrifk with a S»ul"
EVENTS AND COMMENTS
IM 11 t
J ml»i
a bit
ting tl..
a d de one
Hawaii f<
their heirs.
cavalry men
Egypt* early
in
the
plenty
j \ 11-
t w ent
born
Oyster Bi
of krpp
o. ho’
et up
and I
fame,
could
rrflU
crammed half a dozen careers i
Weekly
Ona Tear tin advance)
Blx Months (tn advance)
Three Months (In advance)
make i
all the •
ever the ..
the time
glory or
hool boy
IFICK Dill? IMF regulating mv ,
furnish the cauke for the
irice of hogs, it might
___j assistance to the pack
ln^ preventing its passage. The
I Sa v r
! any t li
t he
n
to 1 world.
garian |
1916—,..... .
Germany against violation# of Its nru
t rail! v
1917
tinurd successful drive in
,y;a. . ___
■I
The proposed coal miners’ strike will
not affect Hogville as everybody here
burns wood.
v.,_ , i« 225 deaths
in rxcewH of birth#. On the ether
part Hawaiians exceed
775 and at thin rate in
i there should be a new
i ace, a corunopolltan rare. ’
A’iptaln Cook discover *d the
’ “ iHted
To-
22 -
*000
prt*m
ity M
born
rtitt i) i
a »
couri I
rm prize that I hia man
clai m.
t hat
good
good
t hiN
up .1
U HM
hr
athrr them up i
it ih whn• Ih a
bring a
t lc h u n k
ph'...x
They
with
ten
a na 1 y «t
find that
them than
in where
l)»< 4W H ACK
:;>ry of Timothy Wise.
who ia known every
open we ran,
n instant or
at ound which w
rd and joined again with
and splutter,
big spat
ing the
that yot
• The
same way
>ry. where
tires are made for we are equipped to
do it with both man and machinery.
All work guaranteed.
Try ur.
The Yellow Front
S2 West Hickory
is as real as the singing or playing of the
artists themselves. In fact, if you were
to hear the New Edison alongside the
artist, you could not distinguish one from
the other.
You cannot appreciate Mr. Edison’s
new phonograph until you have heard
it. Convince yourself that there is only
one phonograph that does actually Re-
Create music.
Convince yourself to-day!
p'’’
He TH \
doll tded
h»*
popu
popu hi
•t reported
ml a
rrvflldcnt
York Cit*
Jan. 6, I.
winter and
the spring
the clover
You
been
We us«‘«l to be bold Io save tin
dimes and the dolhirs would take cart*
« That is all changed m»w
liars for a dime won’t buy
of fun
I x>afer
< Loaf
this
a n -
<u ti-
ll man
w omen
will find out
(I and become the
folks always
gs to look out
Hid leav«* him I
oil- I
amazing ad-
the old
a nd
co I)aid
of fol
veal residence
write English
of any more ought
mat li*r If t hey can
read write and cuhh in English It is
time to stop the importation of foreign-
Any’
We have
customers
more.
Our repu
irprlei
work
repair all
A fly on a wlndow-pano will crawl to
the top. fly back to tho bottom, and
crawl up again. TN. order la seldom
reveraed. It to on raoord a fly crawled
3SfC-K.“Ji “S»
i I
1 7
■- /
that
some
out he
Ford
the |
will I
la t io
nly mu
-?’ings of the
at Charlottes-
nyeii by fire.
Adelaide, OuchesR of
of Queen Mary, died at
thut both Houses and Congress ought
to give it a chance to make good on
the threat. There has not been a
more brazen attempt at coercion of
the notional Legislature in American
history, if the Washington dispatch
mentioned is true, and if the American
Federation of Labor can intimidate
Congress into defeating legislation af-
fecting it, it can also compel Congress
to pass Legislation desired by it—and
that is a situation not to be patiently
contemplated by the other 100,000,000
of the American people. We are very
strongly of the opinion that both labor
and capital should be made to give
some regard to the rights of the peo-
ple, and that compulsory arbitration —
which is one way of forbidding strikes
as well ns lock-outs—is a powerful
means to that most desirable end.
Ijibor can threaten and capital can
threaten; but it is to be remembered
that the great mass of people is in-
cluded in neither branch and that they
are not very much on threatening but,
sufficiently aroused, they are mighty
strong on acting when the occasion
demands it.
. WASHINGTON—Senator Mlles Poin-
dexter of Washington has formally
announced his csndldscy for the re-
publican nominutioB for the prealdtn-
made supreme both to capital aad to-
1
under the
somewhere
5ilght have
under that
noafvr
nil vi a ivviiasv «
month, and writes new Insurance al-
illv and is actually selling
of property • month must
have many worthy
w.;
i
A talking machine that reproduces
music in a cold mechanical way, or—
•The only phonograph that two thou-
sand representative music critics
Re-Creates music.
Music Re-Created by
up
Muwt
that
H<»
hat In
m I e a < I (
not get
that If
w on hl
m nd
that
hav»* i
toil,
men who have
MiotiM to learn
• vv ntruggled a ml Rtudlvd
burned midnight oil
feeble HUceeMHCH and
out to Stop
pret t y
I w a n t
1 w a« a
| kept sing
me feel I ...
up I |h*'y ski'k—
led *
life I
lannvd |
I the
town
thing
■r
rrW""
I;:sr
the
A. au-
..j en-
II, MUI "ill n|»pvai vsl th©
nf Oct. 29, at 8.15 in the C. I.
— may be reserved
zed f
► many
of ex-
it I y a h
i*nt ion.
led
hot Nenhoe <»n my vi a y
ycMthlday. being a hob*
a little hunk bro a k
e thinking, G, good
The Standard
Vulcanizing Works
Service and Quality
a large number c
ind expect to pie;
a bou t
farm movement
i n m 111111 o r
tain ’
torrent
flkie.M and
i < nt fill >
t lie fa ntodw
a I u a> m i hr y
h;uI a mF gio
of plumb
Talk about instituting a back to
the farm movement Jack InnjpMey ih
Nome InMtltutof hilum*.* JeHM Willard
Iihh bought a 79<) nctr farm in Kansui#
nd paid 117 5,000 for it.
DAD.WttAfSr
Pf COME Of
0VRLOM6 I;
HANDLED
RAKE ?
• VBSCR1PTIOY R ATI’S
„ Matty
On* Month, delivered
Mx Months, by mail (In s>i
On* rear, by mall (in adv
vy,
Governor of New
and an a < Itizen he
a nd
xleepy
t uh
Intended to
•py and then Rhe told
bout Raving water. He
waH net bothered any
about tTie time he had
i the third row and then
alarm crock and dreamed
that he waa at at
were ('ailing him for the
That thing kept
finally at I a Mt
He ll write all tlir bookfl ami he’ll write
all the playa,
H< II pHHM you all by when he MtartR
> ( limb,
all the i
»• praiae
e day <’<
foil ml
Mkool
Mlloo except
of one eml. n
< th. come with me
To the deep, deep R»a.
Where the wandering watera
Where the wandering streanm
Fulfill their dreams
In the great tide’s ebb ami flow’
Italia ns
Phi ve.
f* rench advanced five miles between
the Oise and the Serre
I’nited State# troop# took Bol# Bel-
leau. on the Verdun front.
of I
called
t me
ami the
Benny, if you
111 come up i ‘
you I wImIi I I
he would gr
and I laid the
io i' i < i f.« r, < > vx i v 11. ii«
Being pop atandin
a nkel
having
ing. It al nt my
fault. It must
flunk out of (he end of It
you I
merderer
port ed
t retnen<
alike
t rue
For, though Booaevelt had many and
bitter political enemlca. there were few
Ainerican# who did not like and admire
the man and among tho#e who followed
hl# fortune^ were thouMand# who##
feeling for hint, even tt*ouigh \they
never knew him Intimately, wa# mu in-
tense affection,.
And IhlM Is u nder#(aiidMbie becau#e
ItooMevelt had a marvelou# capacity for
for hulYufllng every Immuc he repreaented
and every thing lie Htrove for Uv
achieved with the vigor and color of
IiIh own personality He came of a
fairly wealthy and aristocratic family
ami lie was born Into the beat of New
Yolk Mociefy, yet hi# democracy whh
perhap# hi# most #?.Benl trait — a# it
was proved at Harvard, in the ranch
country of th«- went where he went
to build up his delh are youthful physi-
que; an«! througliout the m u 1111 ml iou#
political and literary task# which filled
the reat of lit# life
He once commended General Leonard
Wood, mm the “the man who getM thing#
"leynote of hl#
A# HMReinbly-
mimlMsloner of New
THE
Cheapest Money Ever Offered
On farm securities is now available.
Our Government in order to assist the
producer to own and pay for a home,
is offering per cent money to as
many as will accept their proposition
which is the same to all. It sounds
too good to be true yet it is a fact.
For further particulars see me.
If you want a farm I can assist
you in finding it, and at the same time
In financing the deal and taking care
of your Fire and Life Insurance also.
No hot air—everything made plain
and done according to first class busi-
ness principles.
An office that loans >100,000 a
tnuriLii, and wri
moat daily and
125,000 of property a month
' hy propositions.
iror of Fodoral Fam
portunity there will be a conflict on
big mchIc between
the English soldier#,
ca' Ir> men the
mined u*‘
think
blow
t roops
The
Egypt Ian
Zero Peek read in me paper where
Samual Gompvrs' fever got up to 101
in his recent lllne## TTero say's every
time he has a chill his fever gets up
1<i4 to lu# and he doe# not think
anything out of the ordinary; that
noon as it goes down he get# out and
time or two and is all right.
• ntrlHt ing
id you hnv
* * *ty Med pop
t rain
Lonfer
bed and start
ly Intending
riou#
thing hr
a hurry
thong I
eat hr
still t
just ns mooh ......
It hr rrinrmbrred that it was still
there, l»ut could not stop hl# foot In
time to keep that blamed tub from rar-
ing up and hitting him all oxer both
shin# and then climbing up and throw
Ing him down. Ever fall down in a
dark room w h< n you w as hurrying to
gel to a telephone? Awful things oc-
cur thru Loafer fell against the wall
and thru knocked over the stove and
finally ploweil into that blooming flow-
er pot that was full of fresh earth and
hopeful plants He manag«*d to over-
throw the whole raboodle. Then he re-
gained his equilibrium a.id grabbed that
telephone and as soon as he could catch
hi# breath hr swertl
Io" A sw eet voice ( I
bed in-
i t will
know n
bed
1 wet. noafvr went <
more earth and filled
• seem
ser m
of
pla
had
Bv H. F B
’I'lie I’nited States Senate is
••ring a law fur the .'rpott n t ion
oigiiers w Im after five
cannot speak, read and
Then the coming of ai
to !»«• stopped
a ml
>art Hawaiian#
i5 and at this
should be
coamoyolitan
Cook discover
140 years ago he estimated
population at half a million ’T'"
Mr. Lane raid, there are only 2
full-blooded Hawaiian# ami 16
______ IZ. . . 1 ns.
The Haw Milan Protective Asaocia
tion, said Mr. Lane, ha# been formed
to protect, educate, uplift and rehabil-
itate the Hawaiian race and the first
step is »o get the native# back to the
.‘<>11. He asked for co-operation in get-
...... through Congress a bill to set
p-tbird of the public land of
or the remaining natives and
II IHAlim SOON TO IIKCOMK
TIXCT.
HONOLCLU.—In tho next century
full blood Hawaiian will be ex-
tinct, declared firmer Mayor John C.
Lam. in a luncheon addre## here re-
cently. Mr. Lane 1# an Hawaiian and
one of the leaders of his people.
"Among the Ha waiians.’’ added
Lane, “the present ratio i^
yearly i.. .
hand births of
the deaths by
100 year#
Hawaiian i
When
I.si mis over
t he
day,
#00 ___ _
half- Hawaliar
H a w h i
sa id
THIS IS THE BIRTHDAY OF
THEODOHE KOO*E\ELT
October ^7, ISAM
Kipling learned of tho panning
he wrote a
the wonderful phiane,
died.” And those who
tliose who had sup-
my-Mlded man during hla
vital and active carver,
the words mm juflt and
Build concrete drink-
ing and fe e d i n g
troughs. Sanitary and
everlasting.
Build concrete floor to
the poultry house.
Easily kept clean and
does away with mites
and lice.
Just look about the
house and see where
you can use concrete
. and save repair billC.
The Phone h ONE TWO
What arc you blithering
ronfow ndrd mvrdvrvr? #»•<!
Th»‘ little hunk out of the end must
frum being lucky, I #< <1.
intensely »ntrl#ting you
t le assassin, how did you have it
Menod up there
With m
With a
trick# I c
hvddvdrst. g
go to skool
pop
And iiv gav<! me 4 fvarsv krack# with
his hand some place, me being lucky I
under the cover# hut wishing 1
under more. And I quick got up
StHlt'd to get dtcRKed. thinking
time I mite try a hofse sho<*.
without a hunk out of it. I>ut not being
it up
find a
non on
11 h t he I *'
hotel and that they
' four o'clock
thing kept ringing until
y hI last Jumfied out of
led for the tedephonv ful-
to sw ear at If. I »a rn <
how a feller will hit the v«
wants to miMM when he is
in the dark lanifer nt*’
ht of that blasted foot tub. Hon-
■ had forgotten al. about It II was
there. Ix>af( r knows it whs and
as hi# foot hit the edge of
remembered that it was
could not stop Ills
t hat blamed
him all
bing up
er fall •
i# cred 11 ed w I f h ha \ ing
population of In-trolt Ye#
btj credited with doubling
m. of h not lier eoiinl ry t ha t
supposed to lie the drieMt
-I hat Im if oilmmItig will
fellow I hcl
V
eney w a>
pin, 1 Med.
pin, of all the bone hedded
ver herd of. that# the bone
now out of that and
lern a little Menis, sed
n the slopes we ran. somv-
•ed for an instant or turned
asi<le bv stones, uiound which we part-
* ' joined again with a great rush
sometimes leaping over
ces, down steep rocks and mak-
• green ami white flying veils
>u call the waterfalss.
•n we i an ^n throug
woods and came out into meado
and smoothly sloping, w here ,
clover was growing*. The
you know Garden J.ady, t
children plant in their gat
fall, because the plants ho
ture—raindrop# like me.
YEAH AGO TODAY
THE WAH
done.” And that was t?ie ke
life—-he got tilings done. A
man. a# police
Yotk. a# asHistant secretary of the Na-
mn a soldier in the Spanish war, mm
ernor of New York, a# President
whs always h doer
and achiever of concrete results. He
nto one.
for though hi# politic/,? activities would
make a llfcwoik for most men, lie
was besid>t< a gnat naturalist, a
mighty hunter, an ahh' historian ami
a vigorous ami ti<neliant writer. Ami
at the time of his death the imtialM
meant Koosevelt to the whole
His love for and pride in
home a ml hi# family
'was not the least
qualities of that nm
abou mil ng
man man.
(Written for the I’nited Mates School (iurden Army,
Department of Tbs Interior.)
is su
good
We repair all tires the
they are repaired in the Factoi
made * ~
i both
VenCK TO THK PVBI.lt
erroneous reflection upon the
►ter. reputation or standing or
■£ Individual or corporation will
udly corrected upon being called
publisher's attention
of I hemsel \ •
yom <1
hlng no
great play.
It goes ■
tiie day
W hIle.
w oi king a nd just
feet at
so
It
poses
and t
use
up
Ills
sat Hnd rend until ’>♦
thought of emptying
enough he did and lie full
but lie wns sleepy and t
hint something about savii
went to bed and
until along >
started down
h«* heard an
1 >on't
cheerful view
Loafer has
r that we
.anil uini me nx/ur.e leaked somet
lawful but what he wants some fellow .. (inwl
who has had experience to tell him is *
how to explain abtw.it all that mud ’.Vi1,; » PA.
The water ran into where that flower
• • landed and Loafer has scrubbed
and tossed them from one
light# Prom boat# #hone
upon u# and flung long
or white streamers of
ht them like
waving and
hing
adv
color
t be fitted
y co lot I ohm w ord
t hly sick when \
log in a story. <
lit Ion of “he mm id .
I. tile author gets q
tills is one </f ill#
the mechanics
lu« k the
morning
times w
heering
called u1*
out of II..
and If I do you I w ish
ly meening he would
of knicks and I laid tliere a wil
er ke« ping on starting to get
the ferst thing I knew’ 1
agen, ami the next tiling I
body whh selling Owtch,
to blazes, owtch,
may occur to tills
I se
Attendance figures for the 1919
; Dallas fair show 814,078 person* pass
ed through the stiles, which wouldn’t
he so remarkable but for the fact that
probably 75 per cent of the total at
tendance came on the five fair to
middling days that occurred during
the two weeks of the meeting and that
probably 50 per cent of the total came
on the t hree good days the fair had.
The 1917 fair—no meeting was held
in 1918 because of the fair park being
in us as an aviation concentration
camp— drew 912,303. With even a
50-50 divide on the goo.l
weather the 1919 fair would have set
a new record for attendance—and our
own belief is that it would for the
first time have passed the million-
mark.
OK-
MO flint th»*
mht them
Im could
. them
and blowing smoke in the direction
• flowers, when he could
Then she told him somethli
washing his feet at least once
time or other he has forgot lust exact-
she not being
they smelled
how Loafer conclude
Beware <»f tlir menace
er# ami li«M
w over your head* hm
today,
For the thought
Timothy \V
To jump in and tase all your honor#
n ng
I am
MS
pper
diNdain. how could my
chilly because of wind
But when once t:. ~
t pours down from
I when l lie W i ml#
all tiie night
will come
have come, i
loomy, and sick
upon -- -
that they will strike
for it when all the
have been repatriated
cavalrymen .>elieve that
!.~:i revolutionists have iV
of arms hidden away outside the
lages This belief is based upon
cepsful raids by tl.e military towards
the Sudan in search of concealed arms
and munitions.
ly how long she not being here to no-
tify him that they smelled like lim-
berger. Any how Loafer concluded that
he would be real nice and bathe his
. ... least once while she was gone
he got h foot tub. He wondered why
I# called a foot tub anyhow ? Sup-
ot is because it I# a foot one way
Wo feet tiie other—l^oafer Ims to
it the other He filled that tub
with Water and proceeded to put
footsie wmotMle.s *nto It and then
and rend until -ie got sleepy. He
of emptying that tub sure
l.v
th
ng
bothered a
time he
m ml
months. Then in
it plowed under,
hum uh to the earth
I’ve sometimefl
,,,, ,, I did not spend the
winter, t ticked away safe In the kind
brown earth. Some of my friends did.
and they had the most amazing ad-
venture# and they met the old man
of the garden, the mole and they
heard all about the r.ttle field mouse
and her little underground home.
•• We almost went to sleep while we
were pa#sing througn the meadow-
lands. But still we heard the song
which had led us on calling to us
again—
Oh, come to the sea' The deep green sea
Where the waving seaw'veds grow
Where the wild sea creatures wander
free
Ami the proud ships proudly go.
went on. through broad.
pa Mt farms ami towns and
f.< i( in t v open country,
that great blue space that
• We felt something
■i ,
! Local meat market owners say that
while the price of hogs on the hoof is
leaa than half of what it was. the price
of pork products to them has not been
decreased anything like proportionate
ly. Pork loin, which at tne highest
point attained a price to the retailer
Of 34 cents, presumably when hogs
were bringing better than 23c on the
foot, is now quoted local butchers at
28c. which is 11c above what it
ghoul.
Gen. Christopher I'olumbuw Andrews.
<»iie < f the f> w surviving general of-
ficer# of the Union army, born nt
Hillsboro, N. H.. 90 years ago today.
Giovanni Glolittl, noted Italian states
man and former premier, born on Pled-
mon, 77 yearn ago today.
H<»n. Walter Scott, former
of Saska tchew an. born in Coun
dlrarx. Ont., a d m I n in 11 a t Ion, I
Detroit, 52 years ago today.
Viola Allen, long a leading
of the American stage, horn at
vllle. Ala, 50 years ago today.
The “Ongawas’ . the Japanese players
who were scheduled to appear
evening of Oct. 21. at the C. I. A.
ditorium were unable to till the
gageinent, but will appear on
evening of Oct. 29, at
A. auditorium. Tickets m!-^ ------- -
phoning 5S7. Reserved seats. 35 and
cents. Other seats 25o.
ge.
having quite MO
that medium <
you do not feel so keen I”
am about to me,.,.«
yop must have nlbbl
some of them.
godmother of language
t me three new words
• mv first wish. I want
means "he or she’’, an-
nifiiriM "III# or her” and a
meHns "him or her”
2 _ L Mo«4.
1 call these only one wish, but If the
(airy godmother were mean enough
to rank them as three, I think 1 should
still want them. Again and again I
have to recast a sentence In the at-
tempt to get around tiie lack of a
i common pronoun. 1 can well eympH-
thlze with a f» How sufferer who writes
in one of the contemporary magazines
i ousnei, a pnee tnat yieias tne grower
fair return, it ought to be possible for
Instead of
WwV , W I V. I O * IV\ <11 11 III I <1 I | ( I cx.llis
fieri, there is no quick turnover possi-
ble of a ( treater amount. Corn in most
K Worth Texas towns is quoted at 90c
BLte H and not easy to sell at that
/Yti/ktAzI r»/x»-vx \A’
iy at 11.43 for the mixed and}
for the white. Kansas City
51.42 to $145. Corn is the most
Me crop grown in the United
K and there ahould be as stable
rket for ft in every sizable town
MV* is for cotton or wheat. In-
ly to sell a product ie discourag-
the producer; it doesn’t take
rfltan an experience or two with
■tt..Ma stuff around trying un-
Hgtty to find a buyer to dis-
■p average man with that crop
flattinoM organizations m
Bgil work for the country’s
deep
ho ft
red
red clover.
Huch mm the
rdens in the
>ld the molM-
1<ti,__.......... ynu know
and keep the soil in place durian the
’ spring ' ‘ ‘ ""
W lieJ1
adds
iee. Garden I.a»
sorry that
Hint lie said it? He knows that she |
was not to blame neither was any one i
< Ise. It wns .Inst one of those mistakes
that happen. Anyhow Loafer hopes she I
knows how it is. Not that lie wants |
tier to ever step on tile edge of n foot j
tub t'o find out.
Loafer wended his way back to Ids
couch carefully and painfully. Strange
liow much more painful it is to fall
all over tile house after you get to
weighing about two six bits than was
when you were more sylph-llke in
your general contour Loafir ached all •■■mho umeen
r and inside. Next morning he got 1 n * .
amt looked at wnat had '‘ai’P’’"*'1- ‘ ‘ "ved^to and
have been a barrel of water In r."1?
. tub Why Im it that women will
off Mild IcMVe thc-r next to (he beHt
i a band box
of putting it
■l harmed,
f water ran
get all
got Home I..
flower pot. but the flow
bo diacouraged line
take the name
that It did before,
to tell .Mim. Loafe
HwfulleMt rain that
ami that the houae
I but
I mon* he amear# it around, lie tried to
I get John Smart, the drugglat to aw-ap
I room# with him one night but that
Iriahman la juat aa contrary aa he can
be He allowed that he w aa plum aat-
iMfied with hi# own room and that he
did not believe he would awap. Loafer
then tried to get hi# nephew to come
down and atay all night ho that he
could t»*ll Mra Loafer that he did not
know how it happened and then tell
her that the boy slept in the room but
that kid Moemed suspicious and said
he guessed he would stay at his board-
ing house.
That I# bad enough but on top of it
Loafer hnd some trouble in the kitch-
en and wants some advice about that
but Will have to figure on it
more. If he cannot find away <
w ill ask for help about that t< o
W. C. BDWARDS ...................... Editor
£ A MCDONALD City Editor
L W. BAIUDY ....... Buflneflfl Manager
> £ FOWLBlt Advertising Mgi
“ Tfllcphonc <4
taued at n w. Hickory street. Den
Vegaa. every afternoon except Sun
lay by twe Record-Chronicle Comps in
iMMBber ot Aaeocialed Preee. which !■
antiiM 4e wee <«r repub
StKli of all newe accredited to it or
Bet otherwise credited, end al»o th*
Kcal wewa published therein.
! Batered as aeeond-claee mail matter
at Denton, Texas
speaking to uh from it, as if we w’ere
kin
" The Nyu-H dropped their Images
down to us and we laughed and rock-
ed to and fro,
to other. The
and gleamed upon uh
red or green or white
lig.iit down to uh. We rang
boyn catch baseball and
dropped them a# we wvent laughing on.
We were to have the biggest adven-
ture of all!"—By Ethel Allen Murphy.
(To be continuedw).
I took it
v door, ony
nah* so I UMed a pi
m chair and
back of my
If I Niiddinly start
luck after this. Ill I
Wicli I dident hav«‘
rest
l'"l’
■ 11 hou t
him. i
hat
1 #19—Thomas Church Brownell was
consecrated third Episcopal bishop of
Con neet leut.
1 #5#—Theodore
sixth President of the
New York City. Died
N. Y„ Jan. 6. 1919
1 #91—Germa ny.
signed a commercial
1#94 — Appo’ ‘
lobv-Sehllilni
perlal <'hanc
1X95—A part of the bulldin
I’nlverHltv of Virginia * "
vllle was defltro
I #97— Mary
Teck. mother
Richmond. En^.
|h|4 — Destruction caused by German
bombardment at Rheim# eat [mated at
$ 2no.000.000.
1915—Russian fleet bombarded
port of Varna.
Dutch Government protested to
I the Texas consumer to
around $1.50.
dealers can L_, . --------- ---------
nia and sell them at a high price that I
yields to the retailer only a moderate ’
return, and apparently cannot pet Ar-
kansas apples that could be handled
on a 200-mile instead of a 2,000-mile
haul. Onlv a country that is enor-
mously rich could stand up under the
__„J__ 2____ I'...t the United
States has borne thru absolute down
i " ’
' it.
Ivn
HOME NEW WORDS 1 WANT.
Their are certain words I would
like very much to Mee added to the
English langua
Perhaps
st rugg les
presMlon .
I the defect# I
but I am sure
your pen over
If a fairy i
were to grant
this would lie
a word which
other which
third which
The AA ord
Loh fer Ik bn t ch I ng
bHti'hlng, but keep quirt
speaking of this matter
er. who is away might hear of
.statement and criticize it. Then
other thing women folks have
oum way of criticizing the way
keep# house You know how’
are If yon don’t you will find
when >oii get married
vassal of a wife of your
Why Im It that women
■II a feller so many thlni
foi when th‘.V go orf and leave
at home’’ Now Loafer is HerIously
Hidering a trip (o Mexico lust bee
Mum. Loafer told him to be <*iir«*ful Hr
Iihh been mo rarrfii-l that he almost rpadr
a crick In his back tiring careful She
told him mo many things to do and so •
many not to do that hr Im mixrd and is '
not real sure \\ hjel? is which. Whrn a
woman tells ii^XHIer to either drink or
not to drink'tip her fruit Juice that
has some kick to it and hr forgets
which It Im what Im hr to do? When she
tells him to either gather up the eggs
or not to gather them up and hr for-
get# which it Is wha? Is a pore feller
to do anyhow
Now’, when Mrs. Loafer left she said
something about being careful to save
water <>r something ritxmt being care-
ful about water Loafer forgets which
it was but it whh Momething. Anyhow
he was careful to bring in the flowers
that she wmm rooting mo that they would
not get too wrt? He sat them down In
the floor mo that he could keep the
insect# away from them by smoking
■ ‘ ’ of
think of
ng about
» in some
i rmsi\<; ia
I'HI.BK TEI)
SYDNEY — Australian
who returned home from ...
in Scptrinbcr predict another rising
that country. They say that all Egypt
is permeated with the revolutionary
spirit and that the first favorable op-
irtunity there will be a conflict on a
scale between the Egyptians and
According to the
... Egyptian# are <1« ter-
#tdf-government, and they
they will strike another
all the Australian
a boat
into
I pot landed and Loafer has scrublied
and wanked and grunted but the pesky
stuff persist# in looking worse the
i more he smears It around. He tried to
igglst
ight
following paragraph:
f the gentle reader has ever called
< club and waited to have a mem-
paged. it would be all too cruel to
uiniml her him of tortures that (#)
he would pt'tliapM prefer to forget."
‘tynonymn for “Snld"
ould like k >mi> simple
"said" True, there are
appt oximatt l \ take Its
utter.” "to toll " to de-
you analyze these care-
will find that they have
to them than "say'’ and
you want a
I 'ou t you
u are read-
of the eternal
"she * said
Ulte as sick
worst
of w r
by lea vin
Maid", ‘
oo loni
going
There's m ver a book that he reads,
but lie k now m
I he could write one
beat It a mile,
uld fen a
know how
Tiie (Imus of
done all the
coll Id stop
jet tie down
T’o using the talent# he claims to pos-
sess
There's nothing could keep
fame and rciiow'n.
Without any doubt he
mucccmm,
could teach men in Wall Mt
ways of finance
(>r outpreai h tin* preachers In lan-
guage sublime;
Against him there#
stand any
If somehow o
the time
Ninety years old today Im Gen. Chris-
topher Columbus Andrews, one of the
few surviving genet al officer# who
served In the I'nlon army In the Ameri-
can civil war. Gen Andrews was born
in Ntw Hampshire and received hi#
education at Harvard. In 1R64 he went
to Kansas and subsequent to Minne-
sota. He entered the Union army a#
captain In a Minnesota regiment. He
returned to Minnesota after the grand
review and remained until 1869, when
he was appointed United States Min-
ister to Sweden and Norway, In 1880
he was made supervisor of the census
for Minnesots. and two years later was
sent tn Rio Janeiro as consul general
He was in Brasil nearly four years.
After his return home he served for
many years as forestry commissioner
of Minnesota. Gen. Andrews makes hie
home In St. Paul.
i the
t<> Hi
pride in hi#
heirs for him
appealing of the
dynamo of
'iteriMely hu
.oohc velt.
If the livestock raiser can be;
to believe that the Ken-1
;«ndrick bills for regulat ing t he |
I. packers 1
I present low pi
| pe of powerful
I ere in preventing its passage.
difficulty is that the producer must
I be made also to believe that the pro
posed regulation of packers has not
nelped him a particle, and the irr-or
| sistency becomes immediately evident
I, —that the proposed regulation is beat
ing down the price the packer pavs
the producer, but not affecting the
I price the packer charges the consuni
---------0---------
; While here in North Texas the con I
I turner is being called on to pay $2.50
to $3.00 a bushel for apples, a couple |
of hundred of miles away, over in
Arkansas, orchardists are being sore-1
ly distressed because there is no out I
let for their apples, thousands and
thousands of bushels of which are
rotting on the ground. One of the
I great economic problems confronting
the people of this country today, if it
would make any progress toward
solving the question of increasing cost
of living, is that of getting some
means of communication between pro-
ducer and consumer, between the dif-
ferent parts of the country, whereby
producer is insured of a fair return
and the consumer is enabled to buy
his necessities on an eip..^.’’ L -
that he can afford. There
too many instances every
la nt# H«* mana»
wholo cxboodlc.
Iltbrium a.k! g
a# soon a# he
y whispered Hel-
Old not not Ice that
it was sweet then but later he recalled
that It was a lady’s voice) Imiuired:
"Im this tho transfer office'”'
Loafer wants to apologize to that
lady tor w hat he said. He is sorry now
home to n d«*
w couident
. in, getting U|
lia m riiei l ng it in w l
y hair blush, thinking. Now
dinly w start In having
r thia. Ill know the
rny mp« mIi I I
the day and
I me (<> get
• realizing I
4 th * t Biiiie
don t hop u p |
t lieu* a ft er you |
hadent Prober-
ive me a CUpple
“e lollg-
up and
was asleep
knew HUm-
Confound it
holey Miuoaks ow tch
..ig there holding one
account <>f the horse shot
foil down and hit it me sa.\ -
alnt my fawlt, pop, if aint my
it must be on account of tiie
Austria and
treaty
ointment of Prince Hohen-
gafuerst as German Im-
re fl or.
TIIE
Thi*b is the stor
Timothy Wise v.
w here
There i»n't a city or villa
But what Hii# remaiki
Im know n
l*t IlKM
fort uric
readily <
But Mlill there #
couldn t
ladd«*i
moil nt.
ong lit to
today
He can write, mo tell# um. in prose
or in rliyn r.
mid paint a ,
model in cl«v
But somehow' or
getM t line.
>air work on
ing to people
Next. I
synonyms for
words th.it
place - "to
clare"—but if
fully,
ca n no
perfect 1
get dva
ing a dia
j repe
I Well, tiie author gi ts quite as sick of
(or Gils is one </f his worst prob-
ms in the mechanic# of writing.
Some authors solve It by leaving out
the "he said" and she Maid". That Im
good if not continued too long. I>ut if
it is you find yourself going back to
the beginning of tiie c>»nversatIon and
doing an veny-ineeny-mlny mo stunt to
find out which said which. Other# try
to get away from the eternal “Maid" bv
inventing Hubstltute# There Im one
~ ! author w ho is so gainfully adroit in
' this **e#pect that 1 have given up
reading her. 1 open a book of her# at
random and this is what I read "Take
after her father.’ she flamed.” 'Well,
y ood nijht,' she beamed Eh.'
jumped the young doctor.” “Madame*
l.e bowed,—all consecutive.
Next I will have a word to use In
place of the conjunction “then."
Therefore" is the only one word
synonym advanced by the dictionary
but again I deny the identity For In-
stance Then you won't go." Does
"Therefore you won't go" carry Just
the same feeling'*
llprn the House to A
Itor
Last, I wish 1 could open the front
door of our language to a word which
has always been r back door visitor,
welcomed by the children but driven
sternly away by careful mothers—the
little word "alnt", I think we m«*d
that word as the contraction of “Am
I not " Rurflly. a people hs busy a# we
cannot get along without contraction.
Surely, anything so awkward as "amn't
I ' will never stand, and surely "alnt I"
is better than the absolutely Incorrect
'aren’t I". Why not lat it in, then, to
M rve In this one capacity? Other
languages have legitimised similar
>n tract Ions. Why need we alone re-
tain cold hearted to a word we really
' need Just because It wa« outside the
M ___ pale? -
• some
-------------of nat
MMketing alone with diatri-
Wh.n . _
of Theodoie JtoosevrB
poem containing
"41 rent heart hath
had opposed and
lliite niHii"
idously
echoed
THE AA OADIIIIFH. ADAF.YTI KEN OF
1 IHIADHOI*
Part T1(
.. ------1 thing*# and flow
j along our way were
.......... fro as we brushed by
thein, and they seemed to be reaching
...... Some flowers were ho
and had such sweet looks that
I wanted to stay with them, but there
was a song that all my companions
ing over and over that made
must go o>.. This is the song
/wr^
W
■1S™
right waste in distribution.
fife,;, ----------------o----------------
One big obstacle in the wav of di-
;■ Ywaified crops and one big reason for
the South’s dependence on cotton is
HggMHBsS that while there is :i I ■
for cotton in an-. :ie
,-iyny local factors .,f
teggaraSHteM p other commodities ;in(l
Bp certainty about prices I ■ >
A; an(] wheat there
i" fe’Wot ror corn ;.nd lia\ 1 . j •■.!
dozens of < ther pro.lu • ■-
it is too on. case that a few’ loads
p more than local demand
“““to the bottom out of the market
lusc. with the local demand satis
XX KXTHKR
All mood* urr due to weather, I
often sadly think, when the rain
clouds set together they put me on
the I.link They chafe my aiinny
spring so you'd with in« condole,
they freeie. or pretty near It. tin
cm rent of my soul. Outdoor- t’’1
raining, raining, with steady
and slow, the nlallt wind is com-
plaining of some tint liarted woe. It
tells of ahastly sorrows that Iona
dead people knew, and hints that
onr tomorrows will all l»e leinona.
Ami 1 liace grim foreboillnu
••yll Is In store, disaster, stern,
corroding. Is waltlna at the door
Hut now tlir dawn la breaking the
UKht lias Journeyed l,y and I from
sleep awaknir behold a cloudless
sky. Amt I am blithe and chipper,
and happy as can be. as I pour
down a dipper of wormwood tea
How could I lie so silly. 1 ask. with
criat disdain: how could my feet
1 a nd
more |the
leaden
abhor-
with sighs,
to me. HH
and I II lie
ami out
“ 'Ho we
flat lami.*.
cities. And
we knew
you call
Il II h'
ieh|i n t
death
ItooMevelt I
for and
and tl
a pm ..
IlZlng
energy, yet li
Theodore lb
equitable basis
are too,
________ year in
j which the consumer is being mulcted |
of exorbitant prices for a commoditv.
the i producer of which in some nearby 1
section is being compelled to endure
serious losses by reason of the fact
that he has no outlet at all. With ap-
ples in Arkansas selling at 75c a
! bushel, a price that yields the grower
puBSlul" , up a
let them at tier i
r* an ■wwu vx that, retail
buy apples from Califor-1
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 63, Ed. 1 Monday, October 27, 1919, newspaper, October 27, 1919; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235769/m1/2/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.