Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 283, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 10, 1909 Page: 2 of 4
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A
•wadaJ).
A-’O
AND OHBOM1CLE COMPANY.
topic
Weekly.
f»ce at Danton, Texas, under act cf Congress, March 3, 1873.
DENTON, TEXAS. JULY 1<>, l»0».
11
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be
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3
although
I
< alo-
i
Iti course of
Si
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as a pleasing variation from the rigor-
sir?”
imi ig
duke possessed
At the end of five month* he loathed
mentioned at all.
FARMING AT THE <5. I. A.
ambassador,
■
pable.
Presland,
5,000
Im
or
seine.
AN ALLEGED .H.ACKMALLER
’TURNS BACK THE TRAINS
itb
IK
..... .
1'3*
■ ■
11
II
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
—
The
us to
the
say
By GfORGE BARR
MCUTCHEON
standing
columns
Senate and House.
205 feet long and
names.
Through
.opportunity
You enn’t tel!
lm;>pen in the next six
<-
. ■ <
rfe- ■
It/
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Copyright, 1908. by Dodd. Me*d
<a co.1
I
*
FREE TO YOU-iY SISTER
4
& ’ ■
ING
TAKE
■be- r ■ _x.
/Trice 25c per box,
(NStan.
N
wea^mtot^aeomplate trialt aad If yea
Ssmmsm yawMBUsii
S4
wuLmalh tr'ea”ot
- -- - — - —-1 I n i .
women's ailments. I weal
---- i —yea, my n«
your mother, or..
"---------anselyse st
a caaaet un
we women
r than any d
it la a ante at
- ’ 40c
............. -....S3-00
„....|4 00
y.’wE.
CHAPTER HI.
1.V1HO11IT1.W HOLLINGSWORTH CHASX.
■HE excitement attending the
Skaggs-VVyckholme revelations
had not yet spread to the grand
duchy of Rapp-Thorberg, ap-
SF’.';
MW
-
, my beam trtob>
nay sufferer from
all women about
Or yourself, your
lister. I want to
w without
and wum-
r. I
•I
omen
BOYS. 5 AND 8, ON
A IOOOMILE RIDE
Chronicle TEXAN’S
AT N. E.
have
of ;
The precise location of the grand 1
: duchy in the map of the world has lit- ;
j tie or nothing to do with this narra- !
i tive.
' that
. Chase was new to the old world
i and Its customs, especially those rig-
| orous ones which surrounded royalty
was
’ way connected with railroads
.. His
army was a mere matter of taxation ;
Delicious marmalade 10c :t Cur-
ti»' Fountain. Try ’t.
under her feet if I know any- i
thing about the needs of English no-
bility. and I ll bet my hat she’s pack-
ing het trunks now for a long stay
in Japat. You have farther to go than
she, but you must get over there in-
side of sixty days,
what may
months”
“What do you mean ?"
“Well, it's i ssfble thnt you may be-
( | worthy design to earn his own way
Ing people whom Chase bad never
seen before seemed to spring into ex-
istence suddenly; the street* took on a
new air; the Imods played with •'
keener test, und i Ih» army prinked It-
self Into n most amazingly presentable
.shape Chase could hardly believe bis
success. He lifted up his chin, threw
out his chest, banished the look of dis-
content from hlx face and announced
to bitnself thnt Thortwrg was not such •
a bad place after all
(To Be Continued) 7"
I
-tl
I
ougbbred. n more agreeable chap, a
more polished vagabond. than Hollliign
worth Chase, first lieutenant In Dame ’
Fortune's army,
rnwboned. cheerful, gallant he
"It's as sound as th
President of College of Industrial
Arts Telia About Building
of Happy Homes.
a
1
L'?v :-■ ■
ly cures all
„ arnot see
’ *
3
a few weeks later:
“Ever see her? Well, you've some-
thing to live for. gentlemen. I’ve seen
her but three times, and 1 don't seem
able to shake off the spell. You’re .
never seen such hair. Gad, It's as
near like the kind that Henner painted
No Spoony Business.
For chills, malar a and biliousness
Cheatham's Laxative Tablets are
certainly very fine. No bad effects
as with quinine. Then they are so
conven'ent; can carry them in the
pocket and no spoon is necessary
They are an ideal remedy, 2 5c per
box. Geo. Westlake.
because of jtlgh water.
ar# also reported '•
5
■pr'. '
They Are Au Pleased.
"Ry experience I have found your
Hunt's Lightning Oil to be a grea;
pain and spra'n reliever, I am very
much ‘pleased with it.’’ C. C. Cook,
Halletsville. Texas.
25c and 50c bottles.
; . .1"
EDt’CATlON GF WOMEN
OF PROF WORK
Mr. Sargent of the Texas and Pa-
cific in the course of hfa remarks
the other night in decrying too
much politic* said that had all the
money and time spent in the Bailey-
Johnaon campaign of 1908 been do-
voted to advertising and l>oosting
Texas and seeking desirable immi-
gration, it would have brought 200,-
000 people into-the state in a year.
And when we look back at the re-
sults of that campaign, who would
not prefer jo have 200,000more Belt-
supporting families than to undergo
•uch another experience?
------o.........
Jftnfns 3. Lackland, bank presi lent
and millionaire, celebrated his ni je-
tielh birthday by doing his
work f ' ~
Cd hU seventieth on the *ame lay by
t- » gallon on
“pe-
tite
F- once
like
and site'll need a woman to tell her
troubles to, I don’t think we'll have
any trouble getting the British hefrs
to join In the suit to overthrow the
will. The only point Is tbls-the is-
landers must not have the advantage is a terrible strain, you know. Tuu
that your absence from Japat will give have to live up to your wife’s rela-
to them. Now. i ir- fives. If you don’t do anything else.”
emperor, who. in turn, felt obliged to to be good!
.... - ---- **-? bored.
It win Help You
Mrs. W. W. Gardner, of Paducah, Ky., tried Cardui and writeg:
•I think Cardui is just grand. I have been uau ir it for eleven year*.
I am 48 years old and feel like a different woman, since X nave been
faking it. I used to suffer from bearing down aina, nervousness
and sleeplessness, but now the pains are all gone and I sleep good.
I highly recommend Cardui for young and old.” Try it
AT ALL DRUG STORES
• *'11
■ O
1
It will pay you to get prlc.^Ksn
plumbing supplies aad pluuS'ag
work from Wilson Hardware Com-
pauy. .
> buy It. Rufus 3. I^ackland 's ;
and aa old man, a rich man and
tappy man. so far a* the outward
goes. Rockefeller t« seventy
K*ka a hundred. Is execrated by
men probably thau any citlxen
e world, and his billion *oes the
I Idas good than any pillion In
-----A4
- •WotroDamo,
IM ARRESTED at TVlAl. OK.
TUL8A, Okla.. July 10.—Charged
with Mlempt'ng to blackmail Mrs.
William Luckenblll and B. J. Maud-
lin to secure a large buss of money,
Roy Lewis, a young farmer, was ar-
rested by the Federal authorities to-
day. it is said J^ewls threat cue! to
dynamite their home If the money
was not forthcoming.
Fee* «e Yse and Kvsry Stotsr SeMwtaa
Fran Warnau** Alhnent*.
woman.
is™.w£sr“'*
y* i — ■——■————• — —
»hiii eure-yaa. my
vBQfuter* *“--------—~
toll you bow to ours
tha help of a doctor. I
enl aufferlun, Wil
partaaca, weknew bs
tbatmv boms treats
■
sit around town that swing
hoe. Be a
ancient and
sion.
come n widower and she a wfd”—
"Good heaven. Judge Garrett!
possible!” gasped' Bobby Browne,
clutching the arms of his chair.
“Nothing Is impossible, my boy.”
“Well, if thnt’s wtmt you’re counting
on you can cm nt ute out. I won’t
speculate on my wife's death "
“But. man, suppose that it did bap
pen!” roared the Jodge Irascibly. “Tou
should be prepared for the best—I
mean the worst. Don't look like a
sick dog. You go to the Island a»
Take your wife along If you
You’ll And her ladyship there.*'
; turbed—so severely, in fact, that he ' disdain; he had no real friends, no
was transferring his troubles to the : boon companions, and be was obliged
But to return. The advent of the
princess pnt fresh life Into the slow
going city and court circles t'harm-
The Man
From
Brodney’s
a chair h. whi h to colhipne.
it be siinibh‘ <l”
"It mivhi be an easy matter to prove 1 ancient traditions of the duchy.
Ing percepti>,!y ::s he looked about for I hie to the taunts of progression. L
“t’-can’t I people were thrifty, stolid and abso- j
I lutely stationary in their leyalty to th
Wai Hag.
-
«O WORDS « TIMER, SOc.
GEORGIA AND SCHOOL LAW.
ATLANTA. Ga.. July 10 —Asking
for the immediate enactment of a
compulsory school attendance law.
longest petition ever presented in
the Georgia assembly is before the
The petition is
contains
A*y mtoowou* reflection upon ins twaructer, repu t
•» any firm, individual or corporation which may appear
tions of a fellow countryman. Chase's
1 dare j conscience was even and serene, and
be was resigning his post with the
confidence that he had performed his
They weren't thinking obligations as an American gentleman
of anything at all. They weren't ca- i should, even though the pciYOrmance
Why didn't they consider the j Da<1 created an extraordinary commo-
possibility that things might turn out 1 lion
ni.v | orous ones which surrounded royalty
It looks to me as if they did not , aD(j denied it the right to venture into
i the commonplace.
Chase Irad been the representative of
the American government at Thorberg
for six months. The American flag
Coated above his doorway In the Fried-
richstrasse, but In all his six months
* of occupation not ten Americans bad
j crossed the throsbold. He was a vlg-
; orous. healthy young man. and It may
fever aores, eczema, saft
corns. 25®. Guaranteed by
Raley A Co.
THE HIGH WATER IN KANSAS
r»? aaeatk, delivered
vax moMUe, by Mil (1* advance) _.
•Me year, by mall (tn advance)
C. ~ ..
.me year Ga advance) 11 ■“*'
aa month* (in advance) -
rare* month* (in advance)
weekly entered a* eeconJ da** mail matter at poatoffice at Denton. iexa«,
under act nt Congreea. March », 187X.
nally entered aa eecond elaaa mail matter Aug. R8, 1903, at the P1*'
ftce at Denton, Texas, under act of Goagreee, March 3. HL J-
<11 sabecrlgtloe* to the Weekly ' ecord and Chronicle discontinued st ex-
p plration.
A Night. Rider's Raid.
The wirst night riders are
me), croton oil or aloes pills. They
raid your bed and rob you of rest.
> with Dr. King's New Life
They never distress or incon-
venience, but always cleanse the
system,, curing colds, headache, con-
stipation. malaria, _•><■ at J. F. Ra-
ley & Co.
GUTHRIE. Okla.. July lo — Th s
afternoon Temple aud Louis Aberna-
thy. aged five and eight respectively,
sons of United States Marshal Aber
nothy, will start on a 1000-mile
horseback trip through Oklahoma
Texas and New Mexico, their desti-
nation being Roswell. The boys will
make the trip for outdoor exercise.
What wonder, then, that
i communicate with the United States I the bored, suffering, vivacious Mr.
I .-----...u_ u._ ---- |jad j Chase seized the first opportunity to
leap headforemost Into the very thick
of a most appalling indiscretion!
When he first arrived In Thorberg to
assume bis sluggish duties be was not
aware of the fact that the grand duke
had an unmarried daughter, the Prin-
cess Genevra.
She was visiting in St Petersburg
or Berlin or some other place when be
reached bis post of duty, and it wa*
toward the end of bls fifth month be-
fore she returned to her father's palace
in Thorberg. He awoke to the im-
portance of the occasion and took some
slight interest In the return of the
royal young lady, even going so far as
to follow the dtowd to the railway sta-
tion on the sunnj’ June afternoon.
He saw the princess for the first
time that afternoon, and he was
bowled over, to use the expression of
his English friends with whom he
dlued that night. She was the first
woman that he had ever looked upon
that he could describe, for she wgs the
only one who bad impressed him to
that extent This is how he pictured
her at the American legation in Paris
Howdy!
How s your liver? Jf not iu first
class'Tnndit'on, doing full duty aid
giving entire satisfaction Simmon’s
4a lY-yilver Purifier will fix il so you’P
t it's gone—-Its trou’ le will be
Put up in tin boxes only.
miserable y,>uug i hams were racing away for the island as agent for great benip dealers In the , eyes ujm>;>
‘ a rille with the f lf? f "
; Boers In South Africa, hunted wild
! beasts In Asia and In Hottentot land. ' loathes Itiui.
I took snapshots tn St. Petersburg and j does. ■
J almost got to the north pole with one ' That's what she gets for being a graod
| nf the expeditions. Not tn a month’s
i journey wonld you meet a truer thor-
I she calltsl in a
’ doctor F . _ „
j her social duties (and they were many).
I Ignored her gallant admirers (and they
were many) and hurried back and
I forth between home and chambers so
j vigorously that his lordship was sel-
withont recourse to the $4,500 income
I from a certain trust fund. His plan
: also incor|K>rated the hope to save
every penny of that income for the
possible 'rainy day.0 He was now
thirty. In each of-several New York
banks he hail something like $4,000
drawing 3 pet cent interest, while bo
picked his blithe way through the
world on $2,500 n year, mors or less,
as chance ordained.
-When I'm forty,” Chase wns wont
to remark to envious spendthrifts who
couldn't understand his philosophy.
“1’11 have river a hundred thousand
there, and if I live to be ninety Just
think what I’ll have. Moreover, I
may get married and have to maintain
a poor wife with rieb relatives, which
You
How's This?
We Offer One Hundred Dollars
reward for any case of catarrh that
cannot be cured by Hall'* Catarrh
Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co . Toledo, O.
We. the undersigned, have known
F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years
and believe him perfectly honorable
•n all business transactions, and f--
nancially able to carry out any obli-
gations made by his firm.
Kinnan & Marvin. Wholesale Drag-
gists, Toledo, O..
' Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken in-
ternally. acting directly upon the
blood and mucous surfaces of ths
system. Testimonials sent free
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all
drugg'sts.
Take Hall s Family Pills for con- ,
stlpation.
Not so
Pills. '
Garden Sass ed'tor requests
publish the following from
1 Fort Stockton Pioneer and
("thank you;'
We take off our hats to the
maa 'v!'o raises a garden, and
thereby divorces himself from
the tin can. This man is a boos-
ter. He causes a bare spot of
ground to bring forth fruit. He
is the worst enemy of ptomaine
poisoning and stale groceries.
He is a foe to several great
trusts. But he is a hero—a ben-
efactor. He furnishes and ob-
ject lesson for others----to be-
come producers. He gladdens
the heart of those who are too
busy i-j other walks of life to
engage i-j the same occupation.
He shows up the worthlessenss
of the loafer who would rather
a
gardener—it is an
honorable profes-
Torture<l on a Horse.
' For ten years I couldn t ride a
horse without being in torture from
plies," writes L. S. Napier, of Rug-
Jess, Ky.., "when all doctors and
other remedies failed, Bucklen’s Ar-
nica Salve cured me.." Infallible
for piles, burns, scalds, cuts, boils,
rheum,
J,
For nervous, tired women, we recommend Oai
duL Cardui is a woman’s medicine. It acts spetdi
eally on the female organs and has a tonic, bmlditli
effect on the whole system. It contains no harmfy
ingredients, being a pure vegetable extract If yoi
Buffer from some form of female trouble, get Cardn
at once and give it a fair trial.
CARDUI
WETS WIN AT BRISTOL, VA.
BRISTOL, Va.. July 19.—By the
narrow majority of 32 out of a total
of S44 votes polled, the antt-prohibi-
tionists won (he local option election
here, following oue of the most hot-
ly contested elections of the kind ev-
er held >0 the South.
notice to the publu .
reflection upon the character, reputation or
_________ ____ ■ -n:. . )n fhe
Mt the Record and Chronicle will be gladly corrected »pou h*ing called to
attention of the publishers.
Old an'l True.
"For fifteen years I have con-
stantly kept a supply of Hunt’s
Cure ou hand to use in all cases of
itching sk'n trouble. For eczema,
ringworm and the like it is peerless
I regard it an old friend and a true
one.’’ Mrs. Eula Presland, Green-
f’eld, Tenn.
50c per box
DENVER, Colo.. July 10.—“Our
cities are filled with miserable wo-
men. heart-sick men and blighted
homes, due to a lack of instruction
for girls in the grammar and high
school courses ,in the fundamentals
of home economics.” This was the
statement made by President Cree T
Work of t:ie College of Industrial
Arts. De.iioi. i’ex.. in nn address at
the Nat enal Education Association
convention yesterday.
Tiie speaker in th,, address, which
was delivered before the department
of manual training, pleaded for the
more general introduction into the
public school curriculum of arts an 1
sciences related to home interests.
President Work recognized the de-
s'rability of vo-.-at onal schools for
women, but emphasized the idea that
the courses in such schools should al-
so provide thorough practical train-
ing in home economics, because
whatever the present ambitions and
occupations of the grls, they will
some day have homes to ’.irect,
"Our g'rls should know the ‘how’
ot' the art of housekeeping and home-
making at least fully as well as their
mothers, and the why- a good deal
better,” said the spea’ker. "The fi-
nancial problems of the home and
household accounts must be studied.
A practical acquaintance with the
problems of housekeeping adds to the
freedom of comforts of girls, and als
prepares them for tak'ng their part
in safeguarding the home against the
impositions of a conscienceless and
commercial world. Through such
training time and .opportunity are
gained for the all important intellec-
tual and social 1 fe of the home.”
The training of teachers, provision
for extension and demonstration work
!n home economics, and the further
introduction of industrial arts and
sciences into the curricula of our ele-
mentary and most important steps to
be taken for the preservation and
upbuilding of the American home.
—■. st
"You will have to fight il jointly,” i
said Judge Garrett after extracting the !
wheat from the chaff of Browne’s re-
marks. “You can’t take hers away !
*' THE LEV/1S SCHOOL.
The Record and Chronicle believes
little difficulty will be met in put
ting up the cash subscriptions for
scholarship* to the I^wis college to
-------------- -
»f a pagan,
he abhorred trade
He was an orphan and bounden to
no man No oue had the t ight to [
question his actions after his twenty- !
first anniversary. He went in for law j
at Yale and then prncti<-ed restlessly,
vaguely, for two years in Baltimore
under the jmtronage of his father's
oldest friend, a lawyer of distinction.
Tiring of the law Iw-oks and reports
In the old Judge’s office. tie suddenly
abandoned his calling and set forth to \
see the world Almost before bls
friends knew thrft he hud left lie was
heard of in Turl
time he served war correapondent
drifted (
world, taking I , .
a* anything homan could be. except
that it’* more like old gold. If you can
understand what I mean by that. Not
1 bronze, mind you. nor the raw red.
but—oh. well. I'm not a novelist, ao
1 can't halfway describe it She’s
Mr. Beck Tells of Making 40 to •’50
Bushels of Corn This Year.
To the Record and Chronicle:
Heavy manuring does pay in Den-
ton county on sandy lands. The old
cry about manure burning up the
crop is like the old time cries against
the free schools. It is out of dhte
Durtug last fall and winter we de-
voted all our spare time to hauling
manure of any sort we could find
and as soon as we had a place large
enough to plow we turned it under
with a big plow and two stout
horses. Well, all the winter rains
were saved and this land is produc-
ing forty bushels of squaw corn to
the acre, part of this corn has been
cut off and fed to iae dairy herd
and replanted in squaw corn in the
middles. This is up and looks good
for another crop.
The late piece of corn we planted
at the C. 1. A. is on flat, sandy land
where a crop of O.owpeas wereturn-
ed under last fall and 1 believe will
make 50 bushels to the acre. It is
aquaw corn and will run from three
to seven ears to the hill These are
not -large ears but it's good, sound
corn.
This ground has been irrigated by
Hooding from our sewage ponds, and
shows what Is possible when your
city sewage plant is in working or-
der, and the city sell* water rights
at so much per annum per miner's
inch of water. H. B. BECK
He was not a politician;
--------------- He
j was a real soldier of fortune In search
of affairs—in peace or In war, on land
or at sea. Possessed of a sihnll In-
come sufficiently adequate to sustain
life If be managed to advance It to the
purple age. but wholly Incapable of
supporting him as a thriftless diplo-
■ mat. he was compelled to make the
j best of bis talents, no matter to what
, test they were put. He left college at
i twenty-two. possessed of the praise-
11 ULLDOG NURSES CHICKENS.
MONTGOMERY, W. Va.. July 10.-.
Floyd Keller of this c'ty is the pos-
sessor of a bulldog which has assum
ed the care and protection of a brood
of incubator chickens. When the
chickens were first turned loose from
the Incubator the pup seemed to think
it was up to h'm to see that the
chickens were cared for and he has
proved an excellent provider. The
dog leads the chickens to the barn-
yard and there scatches worms for
them, or goes Into the garden and
gets them lettuce or other green
things.
DENISON, Tex.. July 10 — Mis-
souri, Kansas and <«** train* from
Kanaa* City were turned back today
Washouts
; > of small units which went to make
I a certain empire, one of the world
I powers,
i dained the world at large. I
I but little in common with anything
gasped , • i > I that moved beyond the confines of his j nmtic service began to appeal to him
tine Harvard I narrow domain. His court was sleepy, j as )( pleasing variation from the rigor-
t of manhood shrink ! lackadaisical, unemotional, impregna | Ous occupations he mid followed here
His tofore One of his uncles wns a con-
gressman. and another was in some
„j He first i
sought the influence of the latter am! J
then the recommendation of the for-
mer in less than «ix weeks after his
arrival In Washington he was off for
the city of Thorberg. In the grand
duchy of Rapp-Thorberg. carrying
Indeed, Were it not for the fact | with him an appointment ns consul
the grand duke possessed a ’ and supplied with the proper stamps
I charming and most desirable daughter | and seal of office,
i the Thorberg dynasty would not be j At the end of five month* he loathed
! mentioned at all. The grand duke's I Thorberjg; be hated the inhabitants;
I peace of mind bad been severely dis- i be smarted under the sting of royal
lit did not refer to the chance that |
lie was quite sure to come in for a
large legacy at the death of hln ma-
ternal grandfather, a millionaire.ranch
owner in the far west
At ter leaving college be •
pretty much over the
pot luqk 'Xlth fortune and clasping the
hand of circumstance. There had
been hard raadn to travel as well ns
easy ones, but lie’ never complained.
He swung <>u through life with the
heart of a soldier and the confidence
He loathed business, and j rather tall-not too tail, mind you-
tive feet five. I'd any -whatever that k*
in the metric system Slender and ’
well dressed—oh. that's the strangest
thing of art! Well dressed! Think at
a princess being well dressed! I'd say
she's twenty-two or twenty-three years
of age—not a mitiute older. 1 think her
eyes are a very dark gray, almost blue.
Her skin is like a- a—oh, let me see!
What Is then- that's As pure and soil
as her skin? Simiethlng warm, and
pink, und white, d'ye see? Well, never
mind And her smile! Aim! her frown!
You know. I've seen both of ’em, and
one s as attractive as the other: Site'*
a real princess, gentleiiien. and the
prettiest woman I've ever ItfW my
... ... to think of her as (b^
wife of tLit blithering tittle asa. that
nlucoiujHiop of a Karl Brabetx.' She
I'm sure—1 know »be
And sties got to marry him!
locate that institution here. It is an
opportunity for Denton that, we be-
lieve, means a permanent addition
to our school system and is one
"more step—about the only one need
ed, too—toward the goal of giving
in Denton every kind of education
that is required to round out a pub-
Uc school, college, industrial and
practical business education. Prof.
Lewis’ proposition seems to ue to be
quite fair— he asks for no bonus (ex-
cept a Bite), he offers to give value
received for the subscriptions to tui-
tion certificates and he offers to
safeguard local subscribers against
loss through any failure, which nelth-
, er he nor the citizens expect. To be
frank the directors of the Chamber
tf Commerce have been up against
o many doubtful propositions that,
before Mr. Lewis came and gave
them opportunity to see him, some
of them were rather inclined to put
hi* proposition in the same category.
But the man himself impresses one
as a clean-eut, clear-headed business
man who knows what he wants and
what he purposes to do; there's a
spirit of success about him that
makes those who talk with him have
confidence in him and in the success
of his project. Withal he and those
associated have more to lose by a
failure than the subscribers to the
tuition certificates. He is sure that
did he apprehend failure he would
not be risking his and others mon-
ey; he’s confident of success without
the slightest show of egotism. It is
simply because he understands his'
business and appreciates what is re-
quired for success in his line. The
Record and Chronicle believes Den-
ton will be securing not only a de-
sirable institution in getting the
Lewis school here; it will get a very
i.eslrable public-spirited citizen who
expects to grow as the town grows
and who expects to do his part in
making it grt w. And »•? '..era of (.nt.
Record and Chronicle know this pa-
per is not given to fulsome flattery.
---------o---------
MORE FROM WONDROUS WISE
Billie Edwards, director-in-chief
of that splendid weekly, the Record
and Chronicle, over in the little town
of Denton, writ a piece for his paper
last week which is calculated to mis-
lead the unsuspecting public. Editor
Edwards “kinder” intimates that
one y,ear way back in the dim and
ni’aty past the wheat crop of Den-
ton county amounted to more than
twice that of Wonderful Wise. That
"Intimation" is correct as far as it
goes, but it fails to reach far enough
to establish a Sure enough unassail
able fact. 1’he time the R. & C. re-
fers to was the year the wheat farm-
ers of this country were off for the
season at White Sulphur, Palm
Beach, Cape May and Atlantic City
‘'doing'' the sights, while their
$1,000 steers were romping oven-
their broad acres. That was one of
the holiday seasons over here. Be
fair, W. C. and keep the record
straight.^—Wise County Messenger
—- o--------
Oh, you Santa Fe—If we could just
get you into Deaton our happiness
right now would be complete. We
need you and we could do a lot for
you, too-o.
"But I don’t like the suggestion that
my wife will be obliged to die in
order”—
"Please leave all the details to me,
Mr. Browne. It may not be necessary
, for her to die. There are other alter-
natives in law. Give the lawyers a
i chance. All you have to do Is to plant
! yourself on thnt island and stay there
until we tell you to get off."
"Or the islanders push me off." lugtt-
1 briously.
Young Mr Browue went away at
dusk, half reeling under the responsi-
I bility of existence, and eventually
I reached the side of the anxious young
woman uptown He bared the facts
and awaited the wall of dismay.
“1 think it will be perfectly jolly!”
she cried instead and kissed him rap-
turously.
Over the optwsite side of the At-
lantic the excitement in certain circles
was even more intense than that pro
I duct'd in Boston Lord Deppingham
; needed the money, but hq was a whole
day in grasping the fact that his wife
! could not have it and him at the same
I time. The beautiful and fashionable
I Lady Deppingham. once little Agnes
| Ruthven, came as near to having hys-
teria as Englishwomen ever do. but
lawyer instead of a
For three days she neglected
just as they have?"
“Possibly they did consider it.
boy. 1
care a rap whether it went to their j
blood relatives or to the islanders. I j
fancy of the two they loved the is- |
landers more.’ At any rate, they left i
a beautiful opening for the very com-
plications which now conspire to give '
the natives tin ir own. after all. It's
necessary for both of you to he on
the ground according to schedule. You !
must go to the island, wife or no wife . wey presumed that Hie situation
and there's not much time to be lost DiJn p
Lady Depplnghnux won't Jet the grass . no niorp wag ’he an‘ „ffiCe‘^er’
grow
| and fortune.
' “But. hang it ail. ■ rest. 1 w. -.mbi t
marry that girl if i liad tile elncn-
I'd marry you all ■ t r again tod'.;.
I could," he had cried out to lu-r. 1 r
she wondered all all rnoon if lie re d
meant it. it never ■ u.ered her la-.tit t >
wonder if Lady D<-i pingham
or young, pretty or ugly, bright or dull.
Judge Garrett I .'d a copy of the will
in his hand. He iooked dubious, eves
dismayed.
"It's as sound as the rock of
tar.” he annmm ed dolefully.
"You don't t; can it!
Robby, mop; cig his
brow, itis ^i\ o ct
either of th old gentlemen to have
been ins i? the two of them to ! and not a thing of pomp or necessity,
gether make it out of the question."
"Ihirm d ntreasonable!'
"What d-i (<u menu,
nantly.
"i mean • a. < u know what 1 mean
- the conditions and all that. Why. the
old chumps ii.net have been trying to
prove tlndr g: ii'tiehildren insane whoa
they made ili.it will. Nobody but im-
beciles won, 1 marry people they'd tier
er seen
"But
months'
HAUK TALK.
A man brought a load of corn to
town the other day and,
the market quiotations were steady
at 85c to S7 l-2c, he sold his load
at 75c a bushel. his gentleman
was not a subscriber to a county pa-
per, we may feel certain, or he would
have known what corn was bringing
and would not have lost from 10c
to 12 l-2c a bushel. Figuring thir-
ty bushels in his load, this gentle-
man lost $;■) <'>—enougn to pay his
subscription to a county paper for
four years. It is probable, however,
that he'll never miss that $3.75 he
lost irretrievably, because he won’t
know he lost it. and it might ibe ar-
gued that where ignorance is bliss
'tis folly to be wise.—Record and
Chronicle.
If you were right sure he would
not see the piece about him in the
paper why didn't you roast him
good? it would have been a good
chance to tell him that Tie was deny-
ing his family the fruits of modern
civilization to deprive them of the
benefit of the local newspapers, and
that he was making a commercial
ass of himself by selling his prop-
erty without knowing the prevailing
price. There are a few in every
county who need to be told these
things.— Dallas News.
--- _ o----
JJfe 100,000 Years Ago.
Scientists have found in a cave in
Switzerland bones of men, who lived
100,000 years ago, when life was In
constant danger from wild beasts.
Today the danger, as shown by A.
W. Brown of Aiexaader, Me., is
largely from deadly disease.., “If It
had not been for Dr. King’s New
Discovery, which cured me, I could
not have lived,” he writes, “suffer-
ing as I did from a severe lung
trouble and stubborn cougu.." To
cure sore lungs, colds, obstinate
coughs, and prevent pneumonia, it’s
the best medicine on earth. 50c and
$1.00. Guaranteed by J. F Raley £•
Co. Trial bottle free.
duke's daughter Brabetx I* the heir
apparent to some duchy or other over
, there and is supi<osed to be the catch
| of the season You’ve hen rd at him.
He Wn* in Paris this season and cut
quite a figure n prince with real
money In his purse, yon know. I van-
j det why It Is that our American gms
can’t marry the prince* who hate
money instead of those who have none.
Not that I wish any of our girts sueb
bad luck as Brabetx! Fl! stake my
head he’ll never forget me?' Chaae
concluded with a sharp, reflectiva
laugh in which bls hearers joined, for
the escapade which inspired It was be-
ing slyly discussed tn every embassy
In Europe
But to return
■ V
tie- will provides for a m:.
courtship. Mr. Browne. I'm
sorry to say You might learn to love | ambassador, who, in his turn, 1
a person in less time and still retain j no other alternative than to take sum
your mental balance, you know, ospe- : mary action in respect to the indiscre-
clally if she were pretty and an heir-
ess to half your own fortune.
say that is what they were thinking
about.''
"Thinking?
— — •• ■•(- ■ onune s army. Tall, good looking. 1
i parent!} lost as It was in the cluster j rnwboned. cheerful, gallant, he was
------ ------- ------------> up the true comrade of those merry, reek
less volunteers from all lands who find
1 he Grand Duke Michael dis- I commissions in Fortune's nrntv and I
He had ■ serve her faithfully
i He was nearly thirty w hen the dlplo- !
John D. Rockefeller celebrat- ttii ik
DOtlcfag an advance of le u
tOMfftoe and the perfeetton of
trpleum butter." upon which
poor are axpected to taed whei they
\Ve i dom closer than a day behind in any-
, i s ' thing she did.
i There was a great rattling of trunks,
appeared. | a jangling of keys, a thousand good-
He had left bys, a castoff season, and the Depplng- • tor one of the great newspapers, acted
*. .. ... ~ .-w- ..... . .... ,, t — _ __ _ it,. £ no n iruti F V. <rro<i t lion i »-» ,Lei I I tv ♦ Vm
choking j of Japat. somewhere in the far south j rhllipplues. carried a
eon- ' seas,
him ;
a/
vi. k of Gibraltar.'
from her. and she can't get yours.
must combine ag;..: >r the nat
Come back tomorrow ; t 2."
Promptlj- at 2 I'-wwiie
eager e.ted and ner.ous.
behind him at lioi.u
woman with red e-s and
breatli who bemoaned the cruel
vietion that she >-ood between
wb*r* c*M*d by w**lraam* peeallar to oar ••*.
) IwanttoMBdyouaeMBpietetoaa^s’trartmat
oatlrel* tree to prove to you tb*t you e*a our*
younelt at borne, easily, quickly and surely.
Remember, tBM It will Ctot yea eatMag to *i»*U*
_______________ ____ouid wi«k to oentlaae. it will cost rou only afoaiii
eenis * week, or leeatbaatwoeeataatey. ItwUl not totertM with your won er oocuraifcn-
Ju»t wad aw year aaare and addne*. toll me tow you eaffsr If you wish, tod I will eend you the
treatment tor your caoe. entirely free, in plain wrwar, to return mil. I will also eend you free
el caat. my took-“WOMAN S OWN MEDICAL ADVISER” With explanatory Illustration* stow-
ln» wby women toiler, and how they can easily eur* tbamaelvee at boot Every woman abonld
bars tt. end learn to tMak ter bwaatt Tbea when tbe doetcr ear*-"Yoe meat bare aa ope,-.
Uon." you can decide for younnll. Tboueand* of women tov* cured tbemsalvee with my tome
remedy. It cure* eM. eM er yew* at Deaxhters. I will explala e simple botr.a
treatment which epeedlly and eBectaallX cure* Leuoorrhoea. Green Slakaeea aodPalntal er
Irregular Menstruation la Toanr Laidiee., Plumpnesa aad health always result from H* aee.
' Wherever you live. I can refer you to ladles ot your own locality who know and wilt *lad)y
tell any sufferer that this Heme Tri a tan st really cures all women's (Ueeasea. and make* women
wtill. Mvnnff. item* i*l||Ti— <*aat osadias ywwr nddraa. and tto free tan days’ treatment la
tour*, also the beak. Write todr-_-J »t
«RB. M. SUMMER*. Box H
a. a.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Edwards, W. C. Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 283, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 10, 1909, newspaper, July 10, 1909; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235790/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.