Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, September 3, 1909 Page: 2 of 4
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HOWE V K R.
SUBSCRIPTION RAW:
F'
pOStOf-
By Harold MacGrath.
pl ration.
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TO
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1HSNTON, TEX, SEPT.
3.
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one
A Fascinating Romance
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f.
By one of the most popular novelists of the day
begin at once in getting up a list of
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must
Illustrated by Rider
i at least a dozen pages of
1 t X" ncuv r i f t oil niattar thii v»ln
Action in every line of this story.
«■ /
Mr. MacGrath has won
West
interest.
F
DISCUSS t'HUIUTI UNION.
re
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lia.i
knowledge
Lure
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of the
Only
25c.
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ference between bolting one's food
Feverishness
pudine.
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CaiiyoB City Was Relieved a Dark
Horse—Former Renton Boy Di(]
Much for Canyon.
fe ■
.that both pastors and congregations
are quite favorable to consolidation
results.
you are “butting in.’’
of
pas-
A. McLeod and
ANNOUNCEMENT,
CAUSED KURPRISE.
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writ-
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make
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pleased.
PALMER.
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TRE RECORD AND CHRONICLE COMPANY
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MB montbs, by mall (tn advance)
jme year, by mall (tn advance)
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Meekly.
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tic
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obody would
Good Samar-
•re it not for
Our Saviour’s parabio. Be the
home folks’ Good Samaritan,
Mr. Merchant; make this pa-
per your commercial bible;
write your own parable and
put it in our advertising col-
umns.
liver material difference.
(onstipat'on < " "
---------,--o--------
Although Fletcher’sm
October 9th will be Denton s next
trades day. This d'splay will be open
to toW-i aid country, to the whole
of Denton county and an effort will
.be made to offer larger and better
Go with a Ruso.
The demand for that wonderful
stomach, liver and kidney cure. Dr
King's New Life Pills—is astounding
Raley & Co. say they never saw the
like. It’s because they never fail to
cure sour stomach, constipation, in-
digestion. biliousness, jaundice, s'ck
headache, chills and malaria.
J. F, Raley & Co
LA-.,- -‘-f ' twaf-x h ■>“ .
and Chronicle NORMAL LOCATION
■■■PltASTONTON
In conversation with a citizen of
a West Texas town, he mentioned the
fact that a former Denton citizen now
a resident of his town, had developed
into a first class booster This gen-
tleman while a citizen of Denton took
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. from the fact
that, in a magaziae of national cir-
/■ . .Jj- '
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hits,
CAMERON \I TO CO’S
AGAINST 111 ICk
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Fl : i
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1
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. 41.00
60
26
. ,, mBn matter at poetotflce at Denton, Texac
aider act ef Conrreaa, March V, 1«7>-
2 hi-----".---1 at the
nee at'Denton™Texa>. under act vt Congrees, March 3. 1878
people for his living. While we are
willing to grant him his opinion and
judgment, we are unable to ualer-
• oie
■^ ¥ itl
r
r that cornea from a strong tonic. Aak
your doctor all about thia.
1 9.7SO.OU9.
deduct 3.-
t the
[North that the negroes filled H the
South—producers of feed stuffs
without which as Savoyard says an
army cannot f'ght. This leaves the
numbers 16.547.590 against 5,870.-
706, or a ratio of 2.82 to 1. instead
[of 28 to 6. But was not this an over-
whelming preponderance. Constlering
the topography and the famil-
iarity with roads, etc., it certainly
• Xi
r
-
TRADE MORAL—N<
have known the Good
itan’e kind act were it not
A... _____»
|THE COMMERCIAL CLUB|
tftVttf By C. E Scruggs. ttWA*
The collection of the subscriptions
to the Chamber of Commerce has
been all that could be asked In the
[ month of August we lost one mem-
f .5 ‘ • •
tr-'
• f
. —------------- - -O-------
So Canyon City lands the
Texas Normal—a dark horse
to most everybody.
Angelo and Amarillo had the call in
the “betting.” But a little bit of
a burg eighteen or twenty miles from I
the Panhandle metropolis lands the
plum with the biggest purse and
donation of all. We congratulate
our friend Terrill, who did his part
or more toward getting the school
Canyon City j
Denton knows [
“The
every help and assistance to that
■ general public increases his chance
■‘•iw
■!«.. i I
1
*
■v?' ■ A
... .M|
They Should.
'My honest conviction, base] upon
by own experience and that of my
friends, is that Hunt’s Cure’ will
cure a larger per cent of sklnztrou-
bles, especially of an Itching varie-
ty, than any other remedy. Certain-
ly those affl'cted with any form Of
itch should try it.” J. O. Monroe
Atchison. Kas.
■Ke-
■
H-
.
|.j;.
W ;' ■
1.1 the district court
county, the Cameron
company, of which R.
■3
I
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PI
..
“The Grey Cloak,”
present forbiddingly bad year. It co
will have only to do the best it can doubt.
circumstances
Rev. Heitman Comment* on Proposed
and we congratulate Canyon City , VnlOn Knn|s"
from the fact that Denton knows ; On August 30. at Ennis, commlt-
what the possessioi of such an in- (tees representing the two Presbyter-
■titution is worth to the material an! , *an churches U. 8. and IL 8.,
mental welfare of the town where’n
it is located
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIl.
reflection upon the character reputation or
•, auy"tlrm. individual or corporation which may appear in the
•t the Record and <---------- ---- -
attention of the puhltshers.
opment of the town, a fact which we i
related to our West Texas friend.
He explained that the citizen who
own
country f-j West Texas would be os
i tracised and barren from the social
h.,._in. u He fur^er stat-
ed that in West Texas the ireoplc
Hicks' Capudlne Cures Sick Head-
ache. also nervous headache, travel
ers’ headache and aches from grip
stomach troubles or female troubles.
Try Capudine—it’s liquid—effects
immediately. Sold by druggists^
Prejudice Is passing Chris- |B]j debts, claims, a-d rents due the
estate of George Kincaid, deceased,
must be paid to me as the executrix
of said estate, and no other person
has authority to rollect such claims
or create any deots or liabilities
against the estate without my
tne authority ai d that I will
assessed wealth of the seceding j
state as $3,951,262,742, of the non-
Healtli and Beauty Aid
Cosmetics and lotions will
clear your complexion of pimples and
blotches like Foley’s Orino Laxative | West Virginia will not
for indigestion, stomach and
trouble and habitual
high rank as a fictionist.
“The Lure of the Mask” is rated his best.
We^mention this matter again so
~ ‘ —J framing
pictures for folks here, and every-
l.. . . 18 weI> pleased. Probably i recognize any piyments to or debts
■M ®ftewfng It until It disssoles and you’re next. PALMER. created by others.
' This September 2. 1909.
ADA KINCAID.
Executrix of the Estate of George
K’ncaid, Deciased. 2td,4tw
Dally aatarod M second elam mall matter Aug. 2S. 1903
of ('AHErftA* Mirfh
ail subscriptions to the Weekly '’ecord and Chronicle diocon'inued »t
nl rat Inn
NOTICE.
The public is hereby notified that
of
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' ’ ■'"•■'’'■4 1
1
<>r its own vol tion trickles down
one’s gullet But in proof of it
there is Fletcher of 60 and the re-
membrance of Fletcher at 10 and
the statement of the why aid the
The means for wherefore of the change.
making this exhibit are limited. Vet |
if it is done as well as Denton coun- I
[and business world.
' p l O>Gt <_ T
helped those who helped th ' public
it was ’ '
Abilene, San
ufacturers.
mentioned, the said Buick concern
desired that plaintiff accept the Tex-
as agency for the Buick car, discon-
tinuing the sale of all other cars
which the plaintiff had up to that
time handled in connection with the
Buick machine. That the plaintiff j
accepted such agency and devoted his |
time exclusively to the sale of the |
Buick car up to August 31. and the I
Buick company as aforesaid renewed
the agreement, the pla’ntiff to have
the exclusive sale of the Buick car
in Texas except in the counties of
Cochran, Hockley, Lubbock. Crosby.
Dickens and King, the contract to
last until October, 1909.
i Knocks Him Out of 870,000
The plaintiff further affirms that
if the defendant had carried out its
side of the contract he could have
cleared $70,000 before the t'me the
pact had expired. He says that he
was the sole agent in Texas until
Jan. 1, 1909. That the '— day
of January the defendant caused the
Buick Automobile company to be or-
ganized in Texas, with headquarters
in Dallas, to act as the agent of the
Buick Motor company of Flint. Mich-
igan: that on Jan. 28. 1909, the
defendant refused to supply plaintiff
with any more of its cars and noti-
fied him that they would further
decline to permit him to purchase
any of its manufacured articles for
sale in the state of Texas. Wherefore
he demands $50,000 damages. Lewis
T. Carpenter f8 the plaintiff’s attor-
ney in the matter
Denton county still has a chance for
the black land experimental station
W© could have secured it without a
had we made the proper ef-
under prevailing circumstances to fort at the right t'me, but as repeat
make a showing that will open the
eyes of communities and counties
less favored by nature.
posed, r : 2_
tian toleration is coming
, to see more of Christianity and less
It (of churchianity.”
«»m iaar (in ad vanes) ..................
MB4MBUU (la advance) --------------
raree months (la advance) --------
weekly entered as second class i—"
A**.-
H
K
g'„ . ■':
While not directly Interested in
the outcome of the contest for the
location of the West Texas Normal
Denton folks took a great Interest in
the decision indirectly. Ever since
the locating board has been In ses-
sion at Austin many inquiries nave
been received b ythe Record and
Chronicle as to what bad been done.
The dispatch i j Thur- ’ay’s issue
was the first knowledge that the
location question had been decided,
and the announcement of Canyon
ity landing the plum occasioned no
little surprise, as it had been consid-
ered rather out of it on account or
its being one of the smallest c‘tie>s
applying for the school. Even at
that, though, Denton generally was
pleased at Canyon landing the victo-
ry, particularly from the fact that
a former Delton boy. Editor Terrill
of tlie Randall County News, di.t so
much toward securing the college
The location of the school at Can-
you, howeer, mea-s almost inevita-
bly that the next Legislature will
establish another similar college or
perhaps two more to be located in
Central West Texas, which will give
Stamford. Abilene, Sa-a Angelo, Dub
lln, Brownwood, Ballinger and oth-
er towns of that section another
opporunity. I
In its report the locating boar!
recommends the establishment of a
second normal west of the 98th me-
ridian, and perhaps two. It also de-
nes the report sent out from Austin
concerning the attitude of certain
members of the board toward certain
towns and also the statement that
Governor Campbell had anything to
do with the decision or exerted an>
influence wdth any member of the
board for any town.
The committee will visit Canyon
City soon to arrange the final details
with the local committee and will se-
cure good and sufficient bond for
the carrying out of the contract. The
locating board will then make its fi-
nal report to the Board of Education
who will attend to the contracts for
the bull lings, etc., which are to b<- seceding states $8,133,297,263, or on |
completed and in readiness for
eration by October 1. 191".
Latest Hit in Fiction
edly remarked before, a little money
was necessary to secure it, and we
, were not successful in raising that
amount of money.
-----------o------------ ; ----
The doctor s mistakes never come [
home to roost; they go to the ceme-
teries. The lawyer s never arise to
smite him; they go to the peniten-
tiaries or to the poorhouse It is only
the poor newspaperman whose mis- i little interest in the industrial devel-
takes are glaringly open for all the
world to see. Wherein is found
probably the reason for the belief , would not assist and help his
in the great fallibility of the news-
paperman.
Through the popularity and merit of his earlier litera-
“Arms and the Woman,” “The Grey Cloak,” “Half a
Ayer’a Sarsaparilla is a tonic. It does
f X not stimulate. It does not make you
JL%UH JLSULU fl I feel better one day, then as bad as ever
the next. There is not a drop of alcohol
44 afoot Xi’e'j Sarwo- in it. You have the steady, even gain
rrtle. EtAtnit ftut fmu jkahtl. A **-"-----‘--- . ..
Attend to Your Uwr.
No organ in <the human body can
gigye as many different kinds of
trouble as the liver when it is "
right. S'mmMa’ Liver Purifier
makes it right and keeps it ao.
■'■ ' e * '
■ I'.'.1' . 1 I V-
-■ •• : •■LX Si-...- ■
uce the farm crops, the fruit, the
vegetables, the horticultural articles
and everything else indigenous to citizens
(iwood every day esoept taaday).
=====
For Feveriehncw* and Aching,
whether from malar ous conditions,
colds or overheating, try Hicks’ Ca-
It reduces th* fever and
rel eves the aching. It’e liquid—10,
25 and 50 cents at drug vtorej
1
1
4
I
1
1
ins in this Paper Soon
Presbyterian body.
We are one in faith and hope and
practical work. Our creedal differ-
ences a id property holdings may with
... .J a
generation. United we might be
more efficient in Denton as well as
in scores of other places There are
s between our
Rogue,” “The Man on the Box,”
of Dallas
Automobile
L. Cameron,
formerly of Denton, Is manager, has
filed suit for $50,000 damages
against the Buick Automobile com
pany of that city, for alleged breach
of contract. In his petition
a voluminous one, being made up
’ closely
[typewritten matter, the plaintiff as-
serts that up to June 28, 1908, he[
had spent thousands of dollars in j
advertising the merits of the Buick
automobile, and handling their ma-
chines; and made considerable money
by the'r sale for the Buick Motor
company of Flint. Michigan, the man
That at about the time I . “ .-----’n l ” ’ -----"
was not. Any military man knows
the immense difference those things
make
It will always remain a disputed
point as to which side received the
greater aid from the other. Of course
we must consider the aid renderel by
the people of the seceding states to
the North. It was great and there is
no desire to disparage it. On the
other hand, we must remember
the border states sent thousands of
brave men to jo'n the ranks of the
Southern army. There is still one
very important item that Savoyard
entirely overlooks. I refer to the aid
rendered the South by the citizens of
the non-secedin states. Much can be
said on both sides. t.en. Grant, whom
hardly any one, least of all so fair
a man as Savoyard, will accuse of
unfairness, and whose means of
judging were certainly far better
than any man of today, said the
North would have been numerically
stronger by 100,OvO of them had
they been in Confederate ranks. That
is more than Mr. Savoyard claim?
on the other side. As to the navy and
blockade it is only necessary to re-
mark that these were necessary con-
comittants of the war. They do not
concern the realtie strength of either
side at the outbreak of the war, and
that is the only really essential
things The North took advantage of
them and succeeded: the South neg-
lected to do so and lost, and that Is
all there is to it. It will also re-
main a disputed point as to which
side received the most effective aid
from Europe. We all know that Rus-
sia was the only friend the North
had. Everyone knows, too, the aid
rendered by Great Britain to the
South In the matter of te Alabama
and the other kindred cases.
I fully agree with my gifted op-
I ponent that it was a concatenation of
| its that defeated the South. If it
had not been for the navy, if it had
not been for the blockade, if it had
not been for horses the soldiers
rode, if it bad not been for the
mules that drew the wagons, if It
had not been f°r the wagons that
carried the supplies, if Grant, Sher
man, Sheridan had been killed and
Jackson and Johnston had not, If ev-
ery bullet fired by a Confederate had
hit and every one fired by a Federal
had missed, there is no doubt that
the result would have been different
, J. J. MAT1..EW8.
keeping a man there during the two [ gentleman has committed an error
weeks of the fair The Chamber of
Commerce is supported by Denton
business men. Denton will reap no [
more benefits from the exhibit than
any other town in the county, for it
will be a Denton county, not a Den-
ton-town, exhibit. It does seem.
therefore, that the men who prod- premiums than ever before. We will
begin at once in getting up a list of
premiums and want suggestions and
assistance from all public spirited
All can help and ’t takes
Denton county would be willing to the collective effort to get the best
donate a small amount of their prod- i
ucts to enable their home county to
Denton assistance.
; i ne lest oi coi i impartial uures.
The number of soldiers on each i
'side can only be approximately esti ;
ACTION [mated The only really fair test is
CONCERN [the relative strength of each side
at the outbreak of the war. Does
Savoyard think it fa’r to call the
ratio what it was when Lee's army
was paroled at Appomattox? He
seems to; but even then the ratio
is not so great as he says. The
census of 1860 gives the white popu-
iation of the North at
whtch*7s ls l>lain that W(*
of 1232,419 to take the place in
DENTON COUNT) S EXHIBIT AT of its
THE DALLAS FAIR. "ne's
Citizens of Denton and Denton
county are not taking sufficient in
* terest in the Denton county exhibit
at the Dallas fair ’.— -------
The Wlbon Hardware Company
make* no charge for eatimatea on
plumbing work.
-A ' r ■
• ■
•a *
'1
■- a
staii'llng
columns
Chronicle will be gladly corrected upon being called to
any erroneous
w/ '-•■Il f |
it will certainly be a credit to the ,
county and compare well with that
of any other county in the state. |
Some other counties are purposing
to spend two and even as much as .
three thousand dollars preparing an ' j)er who had agreed to support the
exhibit and carte blanche has been [organization for one year, but as he
given in some instances to get the explained it he had as yet not re-
,, , • ceived anything from the Chamber
stuff. A small donation o g of coinmerce anj that he would can-
products by different producers Ce| subscription. This gentleman
would cost them little or nothing. |i8 a merchant and depends upon the
In the aggregate it would make a ,
wonderful display of the resources of
Denton county in this year of the 8tan(j how any man, especially
most adverse conditions in history. > depending upon the general public
The Chamber of Commerce is fur- [ for his income, fails to real ze that
. ... every help and assistance to that
nishing funds for ent g e Q | general public increases his chance
ters and will defray the expenses of . to do more business. We believe this
* _ _ i ... __. x . « V. . zx iron ♦ L> wn
f nan uvuiiinii.r u au viivzi
and cannot foresee a successful busi-
i ness career with such narrow fore
1 sight.
i
Don’t hestitate or feel that
JMU «1C UUIL4UK III. This is ’’our’’ [
show and we will thank you for any
assist a nnn
make a creditable display. 1
county need not take off its hat to I
any county in Texas, even in this
present forbiddingly bad year.
MATTHEWS REI’IJES
SAVOYARD.
To the Record and Chronicle;
In your issue of Aug. 26 appears
a-j article from Savoyard that is not
only misleading, but very inaccurate
He starts out with the well known
military axiom that an army cannot
wage war unless it is fed. This is
very true, but all through h’s article
he utterly forgets the very element
that, himself being the judge, en-
abled the Southern armies to fight
Of course 1 refer to the negroes. By
the census of 1860 there were 3.232,-
419 negroes in the seceding states.
No one will deny that these, as a
food supplying element, were of
great strength to the South. They
were, in fact, of as much benefit to
the South as the same number of
whites were to the North. Of course,
1 am aware of the fact that the ne-
gro, things being equal, is not as
good a producer as the white, but
things were not equal. In the South
labor to produce feed stuffs can be
carried on nearly all the year. Ask
any progressive Denton county farm-
er if this is not so. It is not so in
the cold and inhospitable climate of
the North. Thus one of Savoyard s
main points is -wept away at
blow.
He is even farther wrong when t
comes to wealth I am aware he
uses the word money; but it it-
wealth, not money, that enables a
people to carry on war Now, the
census of I860 gives the aggregate
’ wealth
op- ly two and one-half times as much
[ By the same census the actual wealth
I is given at $4,708,262,21 5 and $11
[4 51,35::. 753 respectively, or less
tha-j two ami one-half times as
much. A reasonable allowance for
any
another
of Savoyard's points vanishes under
Cleanses the system and is pleasan' jthe test of coll, impartial fiures.
to take. Garrison & Kimmins.
seems difficult to believe that the
MMllMince between invalidism and
wonderful strength is merely the dlf- yon won’* w® are
body is well
• next.
. A
as the Northern
and Southern—held a joint session
and discussed the consolidation
the two congregations. The two
been ’ors are Rev. W. A. '
talked about by a few folks for the ^eV- ^Qlt^lmers KHbourn. It is said
past ten or a dozen years, it seems,77 ,
are quite favorable to consolidation
only aow to have come into general and that it is a matter of t'me until
Another tribute to ad- details are arranged.
vertlsing ft is, too. from the fact I Rev A F Heitman was asked by
<„ clr. I- tv°E"ns:
(dilation, Mr Fletcher is detailing his churches He replied:
exper'ences as the discoverer and I “It is a matter of time until we
leading exponent of Fletcherism ,8ha11 8ee tlle unlon of ,hP Presbyter-
Wonderful to it must be- a man ^^VrSyt^i^ a^d V Un.Xd
who at forty was a confirmed dys- [ Presbyterian, an.l perhaps a number
peptic, prematurely gray and his life of the smaller bodies in a National
despaired of now at sixty an athlete Presbyterian body, it oug. t to be.
hale and hearty and healthy. The
vast difference between the Fletcher
of 40 and the Fletcher ot 60 he patience and love be a 1 justed in
ascribes solely to his discovery that generation. United we might
‘ Wa“ dUe ’aCk °f ^"JtlJr Sees"
maat cation. his present strength to less creedal differences L .
the principles of Fletcherism, which denominations than Is popularly sup-
in brief is but thorough and contin-
uous and persistent mastication of
the food put into his mouth.
I rejoice
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Edwards, W. C. Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, September 3, 1909, newspaper, September 3, 1909; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235812/m1/2/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.