Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 45, Ed. 1 Monday, October 6, 1919 Page: 2 of 8
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ONDAY, IXTORER
-
Not Get
Birthdays
i
beneath
I
stand
men
run
and
write
upon
their
of
very
honest Joy beneath God's
to him the Flag
I
A
thia, the
vr
here they
that
know
n
the Koala they aeek to
I
7
nr
HOGWALLOW KIRVIN
Dunk Malta
IT
I
IbiimillliiTT
<i
TROUBLES OF LOAFER
Mil.
END
OK
<
++♦♦♦
West. M
ted States Congress ended.
pieces <
broken.
EDISON SAYS
FORD OWNERS
POULTRY HOUSES
IN
Get a 17-inch
Walnut Wheel
In
Chamois Skin
WAGON PAINT
peered.
Mud Chains
>8
(•
Tire Lock
or
For that rear tire.
Motor Meters,
Spot Lights
SAVES RUST
Bumpers
I
We
1
to
FOR SALE BY
IM—*'
'lUlUlIllIIIIII
I
I
Just Folks
By Maar OuMt.
ropubH-
the
NIW EDISON
“ The Phonograph with a Soul**
**> ***♦♦* 1111 *** *♦♦♦♦♦♦’>
IN THR DAY'S NEW*
♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»••♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
> RUTH 4'AMERON'* SIDE TALKA
•»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦»•♦
TODAY'S ANNIVERSARIES
How to Reduce the
H. C. O. L.
i
Ht ?
All sizes.
Get a
Gov-
exem-
For your
Ford Steering Gear.
Ix>oks better and is better.
and
rnoHt
L
iffer surer bllaa
i ull men can ro-
ver herd
going
LYON-fiRAY
LUMBER CO.
to rf|l<*F
Tpxhm, I
t he
bet
production hy
.t. wr
i to feel that
y. Im over.
people
thin
i over
you can
~i pao-
bid
Illi .
fon<
w he
J K ATi’HbEV,
Com ml hr Ion of the City
Vxhm.
farm imple-
come.
zealous
though
in
be
or
or
or
bite
oye
or
• 1 50
io
......45
Little Benny’s
Note Book
By Lee Pape.
hand
Sam
have
... hand
rays of
Rippling Rhymes
By Walt
(!$K
'J*L.
rn
th Im
the
Thia morning _1
wan t ‘
If
story
York. A
ai.
doing
irned
claim
a, iaia.
, , , Alli, mi ■ I— .....I
_ II III lllll lllllllll
very
i he
“i caat up-
lelr spatters
intended by
< 'I tv
1>
♦♦♦«M »»♦♦** I *>*♦♦♦»* 11*
I ONK YEAR AGO TODAY
THE WAR
___inoef ........
advance*
In advance)
You cannot expect normal egg
production if you do not properly
house your chickens.
A favorite wedding-day in Scotland
Is December 31. so that the young
couple can leave their old life with
th® old year and begin their married
life with the new one
S Z,
.ttaln
i way
who live beneath Its splen-
writing. white agitator among negroes; he is
?tion and * * " J *"* *“ “i,~*
II.”
popular
after
ed I tai
too
nd ahri
the king
inith,”
Call us and let us show you
plans.
For washing cars, in large and
small sizes.
Have a good stock
Now is the time to see that
your poultry houses are warm
and dry.
I sed. iind Him sed
And I
ts. an- t!
the four,
matter.
The Hin-
■■j- 'met
and the
In
oil.
ill
lOUt
Hue's
Hello,
rong.
here for no good and he is entitled
to no consideration at the hands of
either white or black citizens who
have the best interests of their race
ant! their country at heart.
-......... o ' ■ ■ ■. ■
•♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦•♦♦♦•♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
Look over your wardrobe, pick out the garments you wore
last winter, then phone 800 and we will do the rest.
You will be surprised how well that suit, overcoat, wrap,
sweater, felt hat, etc., will look after being given our expert service.
Perhaps you are tired of the color. We can remedy that too.
Our dyer is an expert in his line and will change the color to suit.
We guarantee his work.
SSift
and
lereln.
DENTON STEAM LAUNDRY CO
MASTER CLEANERS AND DYERS—PHONE 8
DRY CLEANING DEPARTMENT PHONE 800
from
_;a w
ease of
led to the bug ------ -----
In ancient time*
i the foot of the
Denton s
a diaaRler. But
ng recoK,
dry ones.
i till Riir isrii.
.. 1 waited ab<
nd then Ant
Maying.
WMtM
, .J'.?*
The Arkansas race rioti
there have been probably
sons, white or black, see
to
thea -
m are
■anion
elude
.liven
or
and Hui
lilted a
fee In char
dances at disorderly houses,
and places of like characte
without fees * - • •
Section Th
two precedl
to markets
to sales of p
fore 9 o',
burial
papers,
sending ol
sages at
• .. 7 ' .. ...
War many
exercised
the war
great
,‘i to fame
scrolls
lous records
““
and decay.
Ask ONE TWO about it.
have the best.
ie Garden Da-
ta now one of
-y and he has
changed its name to Rainbow's End.”
(The End.)
Ml
advance).'... |L00
"He ran In and brought
one of those t
to h la
ar Savlr
rllttered
born at Day-
lay.
” president of
born at New-
iled of Me-
iw, Seot-
19. 1813
captured
>rn In the
the hat-
ter
*X ’'■Mt*
|,|i|B|i|jrnBai«M
THE CURTIS CO., Dealers
Denton, Texas
Rear and Side Tire Carriers
for Ford Cars.
i
I
■
THE GARDEN LADY’S STORIES
(Written for the United States School Garden rtny by Ethol
Allen Murphy.)
-City Editor
been waged by Chambers of Commerce
and other organizations to get the
masculine voters to pay their poll
taxes, it probably would not be amiss
for the women to consider some organ-
ised effort to get the women voters
to qualify themselves.
>t 01 W. Hlekory street. Den-
L every afternoon except Sun-
» Record-Chronicle Company
of Associated Frew, which Jo
IrtSft .“aXSn'S S’.".*
wtae credited, and also i
I pabliShed
as second-elaw mall matter
"Z
I •
■
Inn to
from
have b
f
n
Mmsrrow. texas. Octobers._t»ra;
J‘ 8‘ & CO. FOWLHI MITO SUPPLY HOUSE
felt .
on it.
NOTTCX TO THE
Any erroneous rafl~~
Saracter. reputation
SUBSCRIPTION RATHS
Daily
One MontM. deliverer —
Six Mentha by mall (In advance)
One rear/by mall (In l--------
Weekly
One Twr (In advance)
Alx MontMTfta
Three Months (Ii
->t ths
._Uon,
throw
with the
» of the
I In his
Benny.
Hli'K
and
against the amendments
.— — .rhlsky crowd managed to
defeat woman suffrage, but they could
not have done It without the aid of that
claw of men who thought women did
not desire the ballot. By far the ma-
jority of the men of the rank
and file of cttlsene who opposed woman
suffrage were laboring under the old
delusian that the majority of women
themwlvw were Indifferent about the
matter.
Vet the women once convince this
do not
; the
full suffrage for
The New Edison R1'Creates the human voice
and human'played instruments with such minute
accuracy that there is not the slightest deviation
fropi the original There is nothing strange, forced
artificial about it. It's just as natural as life
itself.
And when 2,000 celebrated American music
critics tell us that this is absolutely true, we place
the utmost confidence in such statements. Ask us
for the interesting brochure “What the Critics
Say” and see for yourself just what they did say
about the New Edison.
God nllence tongue* wherever they muy
be.
Male of
Ii I bi 11 UK
amuse-
pro-
thiM
DARK DAIS.
Theer la trouble everywhere. *a
the day’a dlapatcheo ehow. dlacon-
tent la In the elr. every fellow h*a
hie WW. From our homee in Eeay
atreet we come charging forth,
each day. aaklng. in the name of
Pete, for all kinda of higher pay.
In our gaudy care we ride, up and
down the crowded pike, roaring
that we are denied luxuriea enjoy-
ed by Mike. Ir our etlken ahlrti
and eocke we denounce the pluto-
crata. who lutve gathered In more
rocka than we've hoarded In our
flata. All thia dlacontent In view
la an after-war dlaeaae; It la like
the Rpanlah flu. which but lately
made ua aneeie. And the flu. hr
you've been tcld. ran Ila courae
and flaaled out, giving place to all-
tnenta old. rheumatla and mump,
and gout. And the prevent ailment
dire, which la Rearing ua todny,
raging like a houae afire, Roon will
wilt and fade away. Soon well
gather aa of yore, chewing topic*
aafe and aane, gather at the Blue
Front etore, talking of the need of
rnln; and we'll analyse the crope
till the theme baa made ua hoarae.
when thia plague of craxy ynwpa.
like the du, line run It* courae
several
Juat iin
Im that
o( yet been
aa they
It I* that
re for
he ar-
jnapector
of hia tri pH
Poatmaater
have
Today'a annlveraarlea
1744—Jamea McGill, found
(HU Unlveralty, born in Olaago
land. Died in Montreal, Dec.
17**—Sir laaac Brock, who
Detroit In the War of 1912. hoi
Inland of Guernaey Killed at
tie of QUeenetown. Oct. 13. 1*12.
1*44—Samual Dnvla. famoua Confed-
erate apy. born In Rutherford County,
Tenn. Executed by the Federal* Nov.
17. 1**3
1**2 — Canadian - Australian cable
completed from Vancouver to Fanning
Inland, a distance of 3.45S mile*
1*14—Japanese ckptured .Taluit
land In the Marshall group
1*17—Special War aeaalon of the Vnl-
“Peoplc have to put up with many strange things
in music.”
Perhaps with some phonographs but never with
Sir Thomiin G. SlinughneHay, . chair-
man of the board of the Canadian Pa-
cific Railway born In Milwaukee, 6(1
yearn ago today.
Joseph W. Bailey, former United
Staten senator from Texan, born in
Copiah county. MIhh.. 5« years ago to-
day
Maj. General Joseph T. Dickman, who
commanded the American army of oc-
cupation on the Rhine. ‘
ton <>.. #2 year* ago todi .
Dr. Prince D. Campbell,
the University of Oregon,
market, No.. 6* year* ago today.
UouIh Baird Duncan, member of the
Cincinnati National Ijeugue *>a seball
team, born at Coalton. (>.. 28 years ago
today.
TNK FL AD OF OPFORTl'MITY
AU that I need or shall need while I
The "starry Flag of Freedom walte to
gfve
1 oan become the man I hope to be
Beneath the glorious banner of the free
There la no Joy the heart of man may
crave
O'er which our Flag In beauty doee not
No dream of future greatneea which
he hold a
But can be won beneath Ito radiant
tolds.
Earth baa no need of falrar flag than
thia,
No banner new can of
Ours I* a Flag, which
a pact,
Beneath Its folds all
erect,
Climb high
life's -•
The glorii
souls.
There Ih no
•kies
Which man
denies.
Germans retreated on wide front
Champagne region.
, £lr l‘rV' tietitles. Flrat Lord of Brit-
ish Admiralty, arrived In America
Several hundred United State* sol-
dier lost In colislon of transport and
merchant ship off Scottish coast.
. ■
copies of thi
den Army
them for ua
School Garde
" 'Ye*.' sa™
dreaming ab.
Ing to make
next year, wl
I PUBLIC
'lection upon the
> or standing of
er corporation will
_ upon being called
attontloe
•n editorial that every Texas
who believe* in her right to
ahould read:
Woman suffrage leaders of Texas
are wise In urging the women of the
State to pay their poll taxes.
The law which granted women the
right to vote In the primaries still
stand* and while politicians who fear
the women may may undertake to
have this act of the legislature de-
clared unconstitutional. In all probabil-
ity the women will vote again In the
primaries next year.
But whether this law stands or not.
the women Could serve their cause In
MO better way than by marching to the
tax collector's office and claiming their
right as citlsene. pay the tax that is
demanded to qualify voters. There are
women tn Texas who are po-
tential voters and tf half that number
would pay the poll tax it would consti-
tute an expression of the sentiment of
the women of the State that only the
thickest-headed politician Would dare
IMF-
By combing
last year the t
■M.
can say
Any
of the provisions
shall be deemed
bls
Charles S. Barrett, who Is to repre-
sent the farmer* in the national Indus-
trial conference called by President
Wilson to meet In Washington today
to discus* relations between labor and
Industry. Is president of the National
Farmers’ Union, an organisation espe-
cially strong in the South, which Is not
to be confounded with the more radi-
cal organizations in the Northwest and
West. Mr Barrett Is a Georgian, who,
for the first part of his life, was a
general farmer and school teacher Im-
pressed with the need of unity among
the farmer* of the South, he set about
building up an organisation that In the
course of time came to have much In-
fluence In Georgia and later spread to
other part* of the country. Mr. Bar-
rett ha* served on several important
Federal comml»slons and has repre-
sented the United States at agricul-
tural and other conferences abroad.
RYAND1IY AND THE
THE RAINBOW
Part V.
rr.r. -r™ taught out a
grenade, one of those that Uncle
In giving to his children who
bought War Savings stamps. The
grenade glittered In the low
the sun like gold. It Jingled as the Boy
bounced It up and down.
"See! ’ he said, 'it's our savings bank.
And look here;’
"He took fro
books each w
touched with
'Some pot of gol
“Taiok! The
I fast! It 1* almost
where we came
i place is the other
Ohl let's go back
"Mr. Byandby
stumbled. He bump
Homething hard. H«
" 'Come look at toe ruinovw, incovr,
called Patience'* sweet voice. 'They say
Saves expense when applied to
wagons, plows and all farm tools.
It is cheaper than wood or iron.
Paint your
• PLOWS,
BINDERS.
MOWERS,
WAGONS.
and in fact all your farm
ments before winter rain*
A VICTORY TO WIN.
oney that one I* able to
that one I* npaster of a
..! power
In Toronto. Canada, where It I* not |
yet prohibition a monkey was placed In
jail because he attempted to rescue hi*
master from the police and when a
prisoner saw him he developed a gen-
uine case of "monkeys” and had to be
carried to the bug houae ward of the
city hospital In ancient time* a tur-
key placed on the foot of the bed of
a cltlxen of Denton almost caused ns
great n disaster. But why recall tor-
turing recollections to the throat* of
the
._ l. . J1JI11LR.W ......
The Standard
Vulcanizing Works
Service aa* Quality
W« have a large number of pleaeed
customers and expect to please many
more.
Our repair work on tires and tubes
le surprising to people becauee we do
good work.
We repair all tlrea the aarne way
they are repaired in the Factory, where
tlrPe are made for we are eoulpped '
do It with both man and machinery.
All work guaranteed.
The Yellow Front '
at WeA Hlekory
Home month* ago h lottsr to Mr. and
Mrs. .1. D. Bull of this city written from
the Philippine Island* told of a boa
constrictor which crawled Into th»
electric light machinery and put the
whole district In darkness is equalled
t,y a story that conics from Ithaca.
New York. A snake crawled around In
the plant and then started to leave
and In doing so fell across two wires
and burned out every fuse In the
power house thus putting the city and
the whole district in darkness. Loafer
recalls the time when he waked up
and found a snake In his bed. It was
dark that time and that small snake
did not bother a* many people as did
ones mentioned but you can Ju»t
that It caused some commotion in
the immediate vicinity of the place of
discovery. Whew! Loafer shivers yet
when he thinks of how that snake
when he placed his sleepy hand* ;
t
Those chesty White Sox have lost
i three out of four at thia
“Pride goeth before destruct
a haughty spirit before a fall
k;' ■ ——-o-----
Governor Robertson of Oklahoma
gives his outright approval to the
•glfing ot Senator Reed by an Ard-
more crowd, declaring that “when an
occasion such as happened at Anjl-I
more arises, I say, ‘Go to it.* *‘ ^
ernor Robertson is the high
plar of Oklahoma in the enforcement
of laws, and whatever Reed's offend-
ing, it was not within a legal pur-
view and he waa entitled to protection
of the law. As a matter of fact, we
rather suspect the Governor’s atti-
tude and a good part of the Ard-
more crowd’s display of feeling was
aimed quite aa much at Senator Gore,
absent, aa it was at Senator Reed,
present. Gore is up for re-election
the coining year; there’s a field of
influential men in the race against
him. And Gore unquestionably has
diapleased a very considerable ele-
ment In Oklahoma if he has not act-
ually misrepresented a majority of
his constituents by his attitude on
the peace treaty, opposition to the
League of Nations and his sentiments
thruout the war. The eggs
on Raed sent some of their
on Gore, and that was i...
the crowd which refused to let the
Missouri Senator apeak.
--....... o--------
Under the heading, “Women and
the Poll Tax,** the Houston Post prints
an editorial that every Texas woman
vote
A A (IRIIIAAMF.
An ordinance prohibit Ing the
certain koocIh on Sunday: proh
certain placew of buRincHK and
rnent to be kept open on Sunday: 1
tiding for certain exceptlotiM to
ordinance and providing a penalty:
Be it ordained hy the City (’ominiK-
slon of the ('ity of Penton. Texan:
Section One: Hereafter it Hhall I
iii«r it i herd |»op unlawful for any merchant, grocer
Hello, hella, who Is dealer In wares or merchandise
-,ny huainrRH whatsoever,
tor of any place of pub)
. or the agent or emplo.
icb prrnon, to Mell, barter
j place of bUNlncMM or place
amiiMemvnt to be open for
•urpoRr of traffic or public ainune-
’ X
The term "place of pub-
„;.~!l be construed
theaters, variety
amusements as
for which an admlsi
nd shall also Inel
low d
. with
The Postmaster has juat gotten a
letter from the poatorflce department
which hss to do with an
catching him asleep on one
here last spring. The
thinks the Inspector must have had
a devil of a time making them believe
It. as they were so long writing to him
about it. The letter only said It was
"very unbecoming." The Postmaster
says if that Is all he does not care. He
realy expected at the time ho got
caught they would try to dismiss him
from the service.
The Deutschland
•ighty-seven or
rlnes surrendered
the a mini lee an
naval au’horltlei
where the rainbow ends there's a pot
or gold. An^ look here. Here are some
* 'ie United States School Gar-
Manual. Our teacher got
from the United Stales
in Army.’
said Mr. Byandby. 'I’ve been
about that. I think I'm go-
’;e this a first-class farm
.rith corn and potatoes and
such. There’s moniy tn It and you shall
have the best land for your garden.’
"'Wei, that s tine!’ said Patience,
'but we must begin to get ready right
away.’
"And they did." said th,
dy. "Mr. Byandby’s place '
the finest In the countr;
was among the
more German nubmn.
hy Germans after
nd delivered to British
■•a tn English ports.
putting on my
ir* and going
g room and calling
and 1 stayed there
minnlts. and the
Did you get your
.om under his arm two
Ith a baby bond In It,
gold by the sunlight.
Id eh?' he laughted.
Rainbow Is fading
gone; but back there
from, just over our
• r end of It, still bright,
k!'
started to run He
lied his head against
e sat up in his chai r
the rainbow, father,’
wit
pot of E"
10k! The
1 wonk up before It
time to. and I started Io wonder
mv cuxxln Artie was awake yet,
thinking. G. 1 know a good Ideer to
find out. I'll call him up on the tele-
fone.
Wich I started to do i
Indlun rnockasln slippers
down to the settlor
up Arties number,
waiting about 15
telefone gerl sed,
number yet?
No. not yet.
ring them ngni
10 more inlnnll-
voice came to t..
hello, wat* the
hello, hello.
Hello, Ant Sue, Is Artie there? I svd.
Wy. Its Benny, for goodnlss sakes
wat on erth sics you. ware are you?
sed Ant Hue, anil I sed, Itn home. Is
Artie up j
Wat. til
sertei
'H th* South, has not definitely
* Some attribute it to
■ to another. But the
X, that the r
MBMAHINK DKI'TKCHLAND MAKES
TUI 'll OF ENGLI9H i'OHTN
LNDON. Oct. 3.—Since the surrender
of the famoun German cargo subma-
rine Deutschland, which created a sen-
sation by her trip to the United States
In ISIS, and back to her home port,
she has been overhauled and now ts
beginning a tour ..of British coast
towns Hhc will be open to Inspection
by thte public In aid of King George's
funij for sailors
Alterations have been made so that
visitors can pas* into the interior
without having to descend the steep
Iron ladder from the conning tower.
Her guns have been dismounted.
1*.
vet
( half puss 5 In the morning,
serteny not. are you out of your sent-
se*. this Is a prttl v time of the morn-
ing for the telefone to he ringing like
mad and searing people neerlv out of
their wit*, wat on erth do you wunt’
I Jest wunted to know If Artie was
up yet. I sed. And 1 hung up the re-
seeVer and went up to my room and
took my Indian moekusln slippers off
and prttty soon the telefone rang
kepp on ringing. Just when 1 all
I better anwer It. I h
It. saying, Hcno, oc,..., ...
ts all the IXciteinent—O I* this
I* enythlng rung?—Wat* that,
doose he did. wy 1 nevi
a thing, he must be
decided I
anserlng
this. wnt.
you Hue,
that, the
of sutch
kraxy.
Proberlv mcenlng me. and prltty
soon I herd pop coming up stairs, and
I keep my eye* shut like a persln
that had bln asleep all nite, and pop
came in and looked at me a > lie, say-
ing to himself. Wat nottsents. she must
of had a nite mure.
Proberly meening Ant Sue. and he
went down to bed agen, and the ferst
thing I knew I was asleep.
•nd and then
ie one sees gom
m v.ii n t n n t
the money
Who would defame the banner of the
Free!
Withhold the hand* that seek tp tear
It down
And from the brow of freedom snatch
the crown!
Teach them to
may al
In honor's
gain;
Teach all
did fold*
To catch the vision of the Joy it hold*
ing, in which
r -v thirty per-
sons, white or black, seem* to have
jp... been bottomed on the dissemination
of rabid propagandist literature
among ignorant negroes, making al)
sort* of promise* if the negroes
would arm themselves and rise
against the whites. One white man,
an outlander, has been arrested, sus-
pected on being the renegade sowing
disaention among the negroes, and if
he la guilty much harsher punishment
should be meted out to him than to
the ignorant negroes whom he misled.
Much literature was seized by the
posses and troops. Just what is back
' thia racial feeling, this unrest
' 5B*0?* We n,>Proe8 °Y many section*
ap-
one
- RUS’
5’ ■■’♦••• • •• ,R K •" -n£ ^at the soviet
t prepay from oversea* has fall-
&A ■: uron fe negro race as fertil"
f j >• upon which to sow the seed i
of '. ider.t unrest and the Russiar
• Bol«'.ovists, setting out to corrupt th>
y:. .. * concentrated their efforts
In A ri ultaral America, on the most t
•o’-.5. rr.iar.t of the black belt. The ne-(
feaf.j c’ti..en of intelligence knows that
'iteresta and welfare are indis
Bg? hi'1 J bound up with those of his
• ’‘ j neighbor. The white citizens
L. <,f intelligence appreciate the good
Lts'CTO citnen. But the trouble is due
negroes or bad whites, who al
ar* ar* in the minority if the good
(itisens will take prompt action.
JTfc«r* ta no plac* ta the South for the
‘ smx.
Urge class of men that thi
only desire the right, but
right to vote anil f_" t __
women will aoon be extended In thia
State regardless of the fate of the Fed-
eral amendment. An avalanche of wo-
man poll tax receipts wll snow the
opposition under so deep that it will
never be-heard from again.
When we recall the fact that for
many year* bi-ennial campaigns have
OTHER 4-OMFANIES ANNIH NCK I I T
CRUDE
WICHITA FALLfl. Oct 4—The Sin-
clair Pipe Line company today met
the Texas Pipe Line company snd
Gulf Pipe Line company reduction
the price of Burkburnett crude
cutting the price to *2 a barrel.
On most voyages ->f « first-class
ocean steamship about three thousand
pieces of crockery and glassware are
Chairman Uity
of Denton, T<
ATTEST:
.1. W. ERWIN,
Secretary of the City of Denton,
:xas
THIS 18 THE BIRTHDAY OF
LOUIS PHILIPPE
October *. 1T7*
Louis Phllllppe, king of the Freenob.
supposedly kin* by popular choice,
was In reality a decandant of the royal
family of Franca, and directly, son of
the Duke of Orleans. He was 1* st f"
outbreak of the French Revoluth
and along with hla fathar,
himself whole-hoartedly in v
revolutionists—this, In spite
conservative Bourbon blood
veins.
He posed at least, as a
friend of the new republic,
he waa caught finally In a plot
overthrow It and had to leave France
In great haste. He was destined not
to return for 20 years. For a time he
was s profeasof—under an aHsumad
name—In Swltserlaild For a time he
lived In Philadelphia, and later toured
New England and the Middle West.
Napoleun's downfall got him back
his estates. ipid the revolution of
1830 brought him his kingship— sup-
posedly by popular will, but really as
h compromise of two opposing parties.
For a time he lived simply, and tried
to become popular With the middle
classes, but after a little the Bourbon
blood asserted Itsilf and Louis Philip-
pe assumed too much authority both
at home and abroad. Paris rose against
him, and the king and queen, as "Mr.
and Mrs. Hmith," were smuggled Into
England without a penny tn their
pockets. Les* than two year* after
this, the "king” died.
WE HAVE
To have my
spend, meiin* tl
certain kind of ,
But to have money that one I* In a
position to spend and then not to
spend It, because one sees good reasons
for not doing no, mean that one has
double power—over the money and
ovi r oneself
During the war many people of
high Ideals exercised this double
power. Hlnce the war Is over thei
has come a great relaxation In
respect. People seem
need of living simpl
But Is It?
There are unquestionably
causes for higher price* But
unquestionably, one <»f them
while full production ha* no?
lesumed, people are buying
never bought before. The resu .
there are so many more hidden
every artlqle that the price of th
tide automatically goes up.
.Mae Million Lost Days.
Perhaps you do not realise how far
under normal our production still Is.
You know that hundreds of thousand*
of soldier* have not yet been returned
to their places In the industrial ma-
chine. But do you know how tremend-
ously this strike business Is reducing
our stock of manufactured goods? It
Is said that there were nearly G.otto
strike* In the United States reported
In 1917 In the state of New York alone
during an etght-months period in 1918.
there wire 328 strikes Involving a
quarter of a million people and caus-
ing a loss of 9.681.183 working days.
Besides thvsi out and out strikes,
production has been hampered as
much. If not more, by the 'ratrlka on
the Job"—a pleasant little devise Of
the I. W. W to hamper Industry by
advising the men to remain on the job.
but to try to annoy the employer by
doing as little and doing It aa badly
Ms possible
Like lllddlaa at an Anetlon.
As everyone know*, conditions have
grown worse since then
Now when you realise how much
les* stuff we must be manufacturing
than under normal conditions, yo-- —
readily see what happens when
pic rush Into the market and
against each other for this reduced
amount of manufactured.
We all want the good old times
back. One way of restoring them Is
to help In production by doing oUr
share of that Another wav I* to re-
duce consumption by not buying the
things we don't need. v
It la the highest kind of distinct lorn-
to live simply by choice In these days
of rash and vulgar spending.
Not Personal But National Eeonoaxr.
in one of the Hnest families I know,
they are still keeping up the war-time
simplicity of living. For Instance. If
they have egga for breakfast, they do
not have bacon and vice versa. And
I happen to know that the motive Is
not personal but national economy. .
In another family the motto (wltji
the same motive) I*. 'Do not buy any-
tblng you can get along without.”
"We have a victory to win "now
Just as surely as during the war—a
victory over high prices and unsettled
conditions. Are you helping Io win It?
■e a
. ordi..
of the (
.. jetton
■■nla w f it I
■aler In
trader In nn;
the propriety
amusement,
of any sue'
permit Ills
of public
the pt .._____
ment on Bunds;
Section Two: , ,<■
lie amusement" shall
mean circuses,
ter* and such other
exhibited and
rged; a
dlaordei
f like charactt
for admission.
ree: The |>rovi*lons of th*
ng sections shall not apply
or dealers In provisions a*
of provisions made by them be-
I'clock ,a. m. nor to the sale of
or Rhfouillng material, news-
ice. Ice cream, milk nor to the
>f telegraph or telephone mes-
„ any hour or the nay. nor to
keepers nt drug stores, hotels, board-
ing houses, restaurants, livery stables,
bath houses, or Ice dealers nor to tele-
graph or telephone offices.
Section Four: Any person violating
any of the provision* of this ordi-
nance shall be deemed guilty of the
provisions of this ordinance shall be
deemed guilty of a misdemeanor And
upon conviction therefor, /hall be pun-
ished hy a fine of not less "than Twen-
ty (120.00) nor .more than Fifty (150)
Dollars.
Section T'lve: All ordinances or
parts of ordinances In conflict herewith
■ re hereby repealed.
Section Six: This ordinance shall
take effect and he In full force and op-
eration from and after Its passage and
publication
Passed this the 3rd day of October A.
D. 1919.
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 45, Ed. 1 Monday, October 6, 1919, newspaper, October 6, 1919; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235861/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.