Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 134, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 17, 1923 Page: 4 of 8
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«*
■>COMD-eWWOMCT.E, Wednesday. jaw, it HIM__
>
; ■
,1
11 EAGLES WIN FIRST
R. '
(
1
J
mulit
P
aii-
tan be.
(
I
I >•
Dal by
■
of the bund
buying farm products upon
______a i____t__v_ _ —
right guuvtl
Eure
the farmer of the moderate
tree
time
to
TOWN
Nome
Jump
State and Federal
I
/
H
F< iJtT
came
fol
LOW HEEL FOOTWEAR
FOR SPRING IS HERE
f
nuviv. trtltn JI 13 &11UWII L/C 3UUUU pWIiCJf, U al tut BAUIt. SIA.S|/VV* IU V 4 a-m Ifc. »-*•»- —
;es, prices, consumption time most helpful to the general ^System to denounce the purchasers
situation, to reduce the surtaxes to of the bonds as public enemies.
K
PERSONAL MENTIONS
j
FROM SUFFOCATION
PHONE 8
&
here
FOR LAUNDRY SERVICE
PHONE 800
FOR BUY CLEANING
(
DENTON STEAM LAUNDRY CO.
MASTER DYERS AND CLEANERS
(O'
SIGI
r
C
at
Brent Jn* kunn'R baby
$4.00 to $10.00
COURT HOUSE NEWS
Mra
Emory
and
Ml NR
R
M a
t
J
Garrett* baby li
Hardin.
Ne wt on.
Penton,
P
WE AT
SHIRT SALE
NEW SPRING NUMBERS INCLUDED
4-
<1
Will
Mr*.
A
7mil
Bud Wat
KI.
City
NALL BROS.
THE BOSTON STORE
201 E. McKinney St.
Phone 526
SELLS FOR LESS.
-a
vt
p- ♦
__l
. l; i
I
.■
**■>*«•
1
lil
• V. \
2Z
Tax-Exempt Securities
Tax-exempt securities issued by
any
part
Autographic Kodaks
$6 JO up
—You find a combination of quality, style and
genuine value in our shoes at all times; a price and a
style to meet your requirements.
the industries, and they are
all being benefited.
i conditions, the
is excellent. .
1 industries have all the business
tight they need to have to make
W’l f«« in of 1h jrrlppe
Mr* \V.liter Taliaferro * baby
Mrs. J. 1. Andrraon, who hnn been
critically ill for ncwth! <1h)h. In no
better.
and
sou t h
GAME FROM PIRATES
BY 28 TO 19 SCORE
Floyd Johnson (Inset) advanced another step toward his opportunity
to face Jack Dempsey for the heavyweight title, when he defeated Bill
Brennan, veteran war horse, in a IS-round bout in Madison Square Gar-
den, New York. Picture shows Brehnan slipping to the floor in the fifth
round. . ....
$4.48
$5.48
CONCERT FRIDAY AT
C.I. A. ANNOUNCED
be assured that you have not had
these.”
BUY DENTON MADE BREAD THIS WEEK
HELP THE AMERICAN LEGION
A. J. Rnah?:-
nicely at the
Marshall,
operatl< n
w ere removed
Hr ■ I den
ALVIN 1
THE CURTIS CO.
Wholesale-Retail Drag*
SOUTH SIDE
I
I
B
I
K. H. Eitan went to Dallas thia
morning.
Dr. L. A
HEI.IMTHATIOKI
Penton.
Pl-
ot
where
aaid
tiny
K
E
r
WORTH—4* F
i •omni insjont- r
J
I
1/ ■>
I
I*.
h
RU&ELL-GRAY-JONES CO., ING.
All Shoe* Sold Shined Free.
Current Business Conditions
By GEORGB E. ROBERTS \
h
object
■ Ices o
aft
a 9 J
city Thin bund of boy* han been
organized not quite eighteen month*
and we have not lo«t a member • x-
cept those few who have moved out
of town.”
IlrijjTO.V
I Iowa Heavyweight Beats Brennan PROGRAM FOR BAND
pnnnrnT rmniv a*
ic* tjoiin*
Hl LU
“THE SUPERIOR WAY”
Will Make Your Hens Lay
x
X. _______'
Saxophone Quartet
in tiie
1^1
' Os
I '
. of
Copenh ver of Aubrey 1
The Industrial Balance < ‘ '
The workers in the textile indus- the Federal and State Governments
—. . r->.. • . I _ _ _ I 1 —1, al Ite* a« a n n H
Southwestern Pirates
Adams 10, May 6.
SATINS
PATENTS
CALF SKINS
PUMPS AND OXFORDS
iroducts in October, 1922, dodgers quotes Secretary^ Mellon
’'I was as t ’ ’ ‘ ‘ nAA
P Griffin Ik III
Went Onk Street. D'
1
II
i
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________;
tJSTOCKtPOUlTRYfEEDsIli
"The first tiling 1 think of when
telephone rings at night Is
they want me to go now."
-Sheriff James Goode Tufa-
afternoon. "and It is a good
fe ling on second thought to know
that I will not have to <{o to some
distant part of the county to en-
e the law,”
LANCE.
Day Phone 2a
Ni<ht 701 or 10.
_ •
f
i I-' tfrlptw
dir street. 1* ill
_________________________ <.
Tlullas,
to honor*
National
Refriger-
only
honor ha*
ft
are too many mem-
bers who would rather go
high
Fog-Crash
f^~7z
_ ......... i
. Al
L •
, also devoting
I pruning.
J
'Ji
lai
|
T
B 4^
Ik ^27
Ak JI " J
... . ,JF ,
■1^ —>
1
r
L ..tfwo
I
ruling aecured by Tax
H. Barnew Wednesday
the State Comptrol-
and itiner-
rue
• d
r\
in-
i' 4'
—The new Spring styles are here—you will find
them in our Shoe Department now.
—Something different—awaits you and yoi>may
be assured that you have not had a pair "just like
Our Kodak counter is
complete. Come in and
look it over.
■'/z
A gaping hole was torn In the
aide of the freighter Went Caluinb
when ahe collided with the freighter
I Western I’Uin in fog shrouded
II New York harbor. She barely made
a Brooklyn dock before settling in
1 * the mud.
I
4 j
/ j
1
Kodak pictures—time
exposures, snap shots—
are clean-cut storit? that
grow priceless in value
as the years speed by.
And they are easy to
make.
O' ■ ■ ■
[
KODAK
1 J-
He insists on plucking
discords and borrowing
your clothes—yet you
wouldn’t trade him (for
, h
other room-mate or
with the Kodak
pictures you make of
him.
W- '*ne*d y.
Ixuie and Grace Clymer
:u h r vls*tfng t elr niece, Mrs.
Bob No’insn
A I TGWjlHIl.K
157,051 H II
Ford truck
157 064— U W
I 'edge.
Superior is the name of the best balanced
ration produced, and sold in the Southwest.
Demand the Superior line of Feeds for
your chickens, cows, horses and hogs, be-
cause of its Superior feeding quality.
We carry a complete stock of Suprior
Feeds, but if you desire to order from your
grocer be sure to demand "Superior.” Ac-
cept none of the so-called "just as good”
feeds.
Get the Superior feeding habit for super-
ior results. *
-3B
TrXA<» TO mm *’HW> A"’
HrtWWK. MTMOaiAL
>H»O. Ml...- J.n. IT—------
t»x*> Ugl.uur. wtu b« Mlwal for T®®™-
.'<isdn toi th< »r' tlon of om monn«B»nt YOBT worth. J.n 17—M J Mur
•4 VbH.t..rr N.tbm.1 Park. <h. pby w«. rrMhwl to dMtb wb.n be fell
«i>‘.ct belag to eo»®e»or*te tta ■-"» • <«*><•“ ‘*e ?/ ‘V I
______ >
K . h'ldren of Mr
TrifiM'li ni* ill l" gripf*.
IjRiir® Heed U til
F Sbarber, Hann Avenue, in
Whatever one’s opinion may be
of the policy of maintaining the
present exemption*, it certainly is
a strange situation when citizens
MIkk Julia Jone., Hnllvnr Street, han
la ttrippe
C. C. Smith. Currier Street. Ik III of
lUtiUelO’.l
Mi- V U '
R..l>. Il’Jl' *
o* la prij'pe
Ml«* Myrtle Brown. West Oak Street.
I. (lek.
W
Mtke Marr Hunt
' aiek.
. ;i v
I’ARO WANTS TO SKPAKATK
< ITS AND SCHOOL TAXKS.
KI, PASO, -lab 17 K K lanaka. rep
■ > clintr the eltv aebool board, haa pre
M-iited to the city council for approval hi. bed
t,'ll »..ey n, to make an independent
school district of the city of F.l Paso,
rocking it* *ehdol board a tax levying
X IT X I. MTATISTK *
Birth.
Mrn Torn Maynard,
la wiBVille. Jan 10.
DFMOLAY WON I HOM
' HIGH UK TO «
, The practice game Tuesday night
Some 18 states have of- ■ between the De Molay Chapter and
j for the purpose of
paying soldiers’ bonuses, but *c-'
MXXItlAt.K LICKNSE
King, Aubrey and
the family of Doc W ienie Jones. Sanger
[ . Mr* J
e• i - «dck
h s-'j H B Haynie, we*t of Denton, is
___Mr* It J Tljirrvntiue <» sick
Ti e b-ibv of Mr and Mr*
noth West Svoeinore. t* III
Mr* Chan. L«cy of Argyle la *k-k
1j. L Fry I* recovering from »n *t
lack of acute Indigestion
The hshy of Mr* A Nall, Went Hlek
I *• B’ °f hronehitia.
" Mt nnd Mr* Ro LAney'a baby 1* nick
I ■'' V
IOHNB. SCHMITZ
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
Th. BAIUOAV cmsnrr-OR iillid in COMPLETE EQUIPMENT
NEW LIMOUSINE-AMBU-
>hows thaf the slack has been
taken up and this means that the
’ level of 1920, from . terestiu^ character is the denuncia-
iave recovered about tion of Investors who buy the tax-
' . Congressman
his phillipic against tax-
"It fa n violation of the tralh"
regulations ter anyone to back an
automobile «on the square farther
than to clear the car on the left In
backing out from the curbing," said
City Attorney E. O. Hooper Tuesday
nft. rnoi ri In reference to a report
j to him that some have been try-
I Ing to evade driving to the end of
the block to turn by backing around
a corner. Hooper said the provision
1 against movng against traffic also
made,. It a vollatlon of the traffic
regulations to save the extra driv—
"TtierP Is no way to get iiroun 1
ttlie regulations and avoid going to
the street intersection to turn,’ be
said.
•ver,------- ----------
ktage, there is danger that addi-
tional preoure will start a cycle of h .
rismg wages and prices, always un-
healtJfful and temporary.
every period of either depression J*'"*
or activity business is likely to
(wing past the point of balance in
the other direction. This should
be avoided as far as possible. What
___ are
Ux exempt The responsibility is
with the legislators who not only
. . . . thj situation to exist in the
K . a JJiBScrs, who tor the most part are While the probabilities are that CMe of the government issues, but
z J?* wage-earners themselves and the deficit anticipated at the begin- who go out of their way to create
-V "»* fanners. ning of the fiscal year will not be other tax-exempt issue*, like the
Wage*, Price* and Employment
It I* nnnounrvd t.nt <WM> arv
pected In attendance tonight
prayer-meet Ing ut the First Bap-
tist Church In the "loyalty month"
campaign
TKXAH OFTOMFTHIHTS
ORGANIZE
BROWNWOOD. Jan 17 -The
West Texe. Optometrlcal Associa-
tion organised here, comprising all
territory west of Waco, and nam-
ing Mrs. M. W Armstrong as pres-
ident.
the Denton High basketball teams
resulted In a 2? to « victory tor
the De Molays. The Denton High
team has been In training only two
weeks and as there was no team
last year the training thi* year is
more difficult. The De Molay tram
includes several former collegia
stars and men who played with
various teams at the Normal Col-
lege last year.
"There Is piuch Interest in ter-
racing now," said County Demon- I
stration Agent G. D Everett Tues-
day morning H> has been spend
Announcement of the provisions
to be recommended for th., ne" city
charter will not be made until th.’
draft has been compb-ted. it was
staled by members of the charter I
commission. A meeting was held
Tuesday afternoon and <o veral pro-
posed provisions were discussed.
The commission has until March
1 to complete the draft and effort
Is being made to complete It by Fe i.
20 In order that the city attorney
will have time to prepare necessary
ordinances for action by the city
commission by the first of the
following month.
Suggs and daughter of
Fort Worth were here Monday
night.
Henry Stewart of Argyle was In
Denton Tuesday.
F. Heard of Bolivar was here
Mr and Mr.. R. Wynn. Mrs S. J.
Stewart, and Mrs Pearl Roberts are
In ballas this afternoon.
Mrs r Ola Price is In Dallas
day
11’ J
v. a h
Mis.es
h r
the Im-
part jn
"I continue to see Improvements
In Hie Record-Chronicle, especial-
ly In connection with the'new fea-
tures yj>U add from time to time,"
says a letter from W E. Brown of
Fl< ydada, former Denton citizen
"You jra carrying fei’.tures that I
fall to find in any but the very
best papers of the large cities. You
are certainly to be complimented on
your effort and success In giving
yom ptitrons the very best In a
newspaper.”
entirely overcome, the Secretary Fe<jera] Farm Loan bonds, for the
does not think it necessary at this -------- -----
This attitude on the part of the tiale to ask for additional, taxes.
wage-workers is due to the com- T'-- Z , ...
mon habit of thinking of wages as total revenue from all the surtaxes from taxation is much more at-
~ " ‘ ‘ employer
. __higher
fixed the better for the
. e. Neither assumption is ,
correct, viewing the interests of enues.
\ Ik, ■ B ' 1
liustments may covcrcd by the investigations of curities be
hen the indus- j|lc National Industrial Conference to^ the sta
wic •»«; «>,•••*•“» --.7 or Boara were iw per veur uigiici »•» —--— - , ,,
Io the limit of their labor supply September, 1922, than in July, 1914. that it may not be practicable to
•hey c»n do no,more, except as Q , other han<t the farraerl •ecu« by thc re<lu‘re4
methods may be unproved More- took #n almogt perpendicuiar re. number of States.
Jml duction averaging about 50 per cent Another development of
- from t0^ •
iways un- jy per cent and lhe avcrage pur. exempf securities,
'nr.ibnn chasing power of -the principal Frear in his philli’
r .‘-...I products in October, 1222, :— 2-------
was only 65 per cent of what it was as estimating that $10,000,000,000
in 1913. has gone into tax-exempt securities
be avoided as tar as possible, wnat For organized labor to demand doJfe t)^”-aid”^as ”
1* wanted is stability, permanent the re-estabhshment of the high- tary actually said v
emnlovment regular wages and eJt wages of the boom period while were estimated to oe
»“2dy prices buying farm products upon the of tax-exempt seeunUes outstand-
Aside from the threat of ijifla- present level will be an effort to
tion, and with a reservation as to perpetuate an unfair advantage and
European conditions, the ouWook deprive t..i t..c---c—e .
for 1923 is excallent. The princi- gam he has made in the past year, them so.
pal industries have all the business
in sight they need to have to make
a prosperous year; the only ques-
tion is whether it will remain in
industrial costs move
higher. The margin of profit upon
which employers are ’---’---
however, is very small. In most
Chamber of Commerce Notes |
meeting of the hog breeder*
of thc county n ft- w.Ihv* »g<> It wax
clechieil to call a meeting of the
livestock breeders to be held Satur-
day. Jan. 27. Every breeder in the
county w ill be j ask' d to be present
for nt that meeting preparations
and plans ter work this year will
be discussed and officers elected to
be Installid at a banquet to be held
nt a date decided at that meeting
The meeting will b,. held at 1:30 to
2 o'clock at thc <'h ikpher of Com-
merce. K*
$1.50 Grade <*8c
$2.25 Grade $1.48
$3.00 Grade $1-98
White, Tan, Gray, Striped, with and with-
out collars and collars to match.
$6.50 Silk Shirts
$8.00 Silk Shirts
White Jersey, Striped Silk.
SUITS SUITS
All wool, hand tailored, priced to sell $15 to $25.
WHY PAY MORE?
»
Homer Cook. 2
«. boy.
GOODE'S TEAM M IKING GOOD
HTAHT IN DISTHir-T
Buck Goode, former Denton High
and Normal College football star.
Is making a good start In bls <11”
trlct at Estelline in basketball. Tin
first three gi'mes played on th'
charpplonshlp schedule have been
victories for bls school The la*i
victory was a 39 to 36 defeat of
Clarendon High, a school with sev-
eral times the enrollment at Est’l
line. Th ■ football season was short
In the district a nd ' basket ball » ns i
started before Christmas with Ifii
result that Goode's teAr.i woft nine
straight pre-season games
This is the first year
t< 'lln school has taken
athletics.
ews five children die No Announcement to Be
Made Until Draft of New 1
IN NEW YORK FIRE Charter Has Been Finished I
very purpose of attracting this
class of investors. They must know
The Secretary estimates that the that a five per cent bond exempt
Mi-.
Mr a
Is. Al' K.
Mr nnd Mr*
lift** h< rHpr ’n
’fb* infant <»f Mr. mid Mfm Turn Hill
Sn ill of la grippe
Mi"* Anna Carter is 111 at the Normsl
Sanitarium
Miss Mary E Milton. Bernard Street.
Is aiclt
The Infant of Mr.
Wilkins Is sick
Three mein hers of
GWrriaon are sick
Mr and Mr« F,
tn.
, Miss Mary Ford, of Coofier Creek is
sick.
Mla« Nancy J. Mere. West link Street.
I* 111.
Miss Gleen Bt.vd, West Oak Street, 1k
111.
Mis* Jetmle Yndhorst Is sick.
Mr. and Mrs W H Whitley and baby. 1
Ltjl/. fRrei t, are ai< k.
B. A Ilacenport. West Oak Street. In
What thc Secrc-
actually said was that there
estimated to be $10,000,000,000 I
x-exempt securities outstand- !
ing; of course, they are all exempt
from taxation, whoever owns them,
because the laws of the land make
VAI.LEV VIEW PIONEEH FOI'ND
DEAD IN HEP
GAINE8VIULE. Jan. 17—P. H
Neal, 80. resident of Valley View
for many years, waa found (lead In
wife to Minnie
of Chas.
3537.50.
to B F
f>. Jasper's
Sept 18. '22.
Iv
W bite's
Jan 16
i: R
I. Amen.
Smit h
John
Crawford, lot
addition to 1
3650
J W Fades end wife to J P,
Ke-cnon, 163 1 acres of Henry White
northeast of Pen-
ton. 33,000 and other consideration.
I.OSK M.tMSI.Oiro 4 8 HE*I LT
OF DECISION
WICHITA FALLS. Jan 17—Miss
Frances Ann Saunders.. 14. of thia
city, may lose $3,000,000 as the re-
sult of the recent decision of the
V. S. Supreme Court on the Red
River boundary dispute, the young
lady holding titles in Texas to oil
wells given In the decision as north
of the boundary line
lead.
battle is anticipated' f"r
when the Eagles and
clash in the second game
The Eagles will
tier rgetow-n Thursday for San Mar-
cos to meet the Bobcats in gam-s
Friday and Saturday.
Edwards scored nearly twice as
many points as all the temivlpder of
thc Eagle squad secured.' For Hie
first time In two years Knlfiht fail-
ed to score but played an excellent
game in assisting and giving oppor-
tunities for Edwards. Hapdlgree re-
lieved Knight In last of the sec-
ond half and scored 2 points.
The line-ups:
Denton Eagles—Edwards, right
forward: Knight, left forward; Per-
ryman, cente) McAllister. 'right
guard, J. West, left guard.
I Southwestern Pirates —• Camp.
I right forward; Adams, left forward,
May, center. Kidd, i.„... ------
Skipworth, left guard.
| Points scored:
Denton Eisgles--Edwards 18, Per-
ryman 2. McAllister 4, West 2, Har-
digree 2.
' Southwestern
Special to Record-Chronidey.
GEORGETOWN, Jan. D— Denton
Normal College Eagles tnadw a fly-
ing start of their road trip wfi<n
they defeated Southwestern Univer-
sity Pirates here last night 28’ to
19 in the first game of the four they
w-ttt piny away from home.- The
game was hard fought and clone
throughout and the first half end-
ed with a score of Denton 10, South-
western 6
The Pirate* rallied In the last
half and for thp first ten minutes
the score was 15 to 16 In favor of
Denton but with ten minutes to g<>
the Eagles showed a sudden spurt
of speed and had good luck ;, from
there out. terminating the game
with a nine-point
A hard
tonight
rati s
the series.
Stories (Fox Trot) .....
Marple an<l Partington
Star Spangled Hanner.
The management
state*
"This band comes to you as an
inspiration to every boy In Den-
ton. There are no professional musi-
cians In It, but boys from over one
hundred families In Gainesville.
They are taught music, punctuality,
attentiveness an<l application They
are all willing members Any boy in
Cooke County has the opportunity
to enter this band w ith his parents' |
Nearly every one of the
have a different Idea as t<>
he will use his rnusiii some
to go through eolbge, aunia
Tbr It. P. Lomax houxehold Is
convalescing after an attack or
ptomaine poisoning Monday night.
All except Mrs. Lomax and her
| mother, Mrs Suifgs. are well now
Th,* marring? of William Stell of
Foit Worth to Mrs. Elizabeth Ebner
i of Dentori took place Monday af-
| ten non In the office of the Justice
the peace, who officiated.
(From the Monthly Bulletin for January Issued by The National City Bank of New York)
HEAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
Th ■<> 1x“d ■! by sheriff to Mrs Lil-
Moore, part bl<<k 1 aquarr 7,
addition to Pilot Point,
’23. 1300
Banka and
lot 373x*3« feet
aurvey. Jan. E, '2 3.
Herron and wlft* 1
t f>. block
1 ten ton.
rc|»ortr<| dolnsr
T P. Hospital at
where he underwent an
Sunday and three tuniora
from hla atomach.
17.—Huddled
clothe* prcRH
aoutfht refuse
children of Mr
Koek.t lla dh <1 of suffocation to-
il ay
Firemen who penetrated tnc
flame* found the children who
had been cut off from their par-
ents and were forcetl to arnaah
the preaa to get to their bndlea.
Joale. eldest of the title Rroup
whoae ajcea ranged from 13 o 2
yeara. had propped a < hair up
against the door Ln h vain ef-
fort to keep the amoke out.
Flamea had licked their way to *
the preaa which waa ^hnrrrd on
the outalde but within It waa
evident that all the children had
died from breathing the heavy
amok e
.1.-- - ”1 » minimum of not over 25 per cent
If the compensation of which would mean a combined '
• • • ' *--------- including normal tax
i and surtax, of not over 33 per cent
nauu u .3 It is not likSly that Congret* will
.. few industries alone, the adopt the Secretary’s recommenda-
ill be to curtail employment tion as there are too many mem-
Industrie:. bers who would rather go through
The upward tendency of wages the form of levying high taxes on
and the prospect of another coal large incomes, notwithstanding
S’om giv«Wthem as'lLBOO.OOO.OOO strike are features of the 1923 sit- convincing evidence that the taxes
over the value for the year 1921 uation prompting the business man arc not paid.
This means so much additional to operate with caution.
purchasing power to be expended
snwnj tl— *u"
al! being benefited. j ne worncrs m me icxmc n»wu»- ms » —-- — ------ ,
Thc year ended with the best trics odtgjde of the Southern States and ths political sub-divisions and
holiday trade on record and with jiave taken only one general reduc- agencies of the latter are the most
practically full employment for the tion (rom the top wages of the outstanding avenue of escape from
available labor supply. The tend boom period, of 22% per cent, in the surtax, accord 1'g to the becre-
•ncy to higher wages and prices December, 1920. They arc now tary. The debate in Congress up-
shows that the slack has been movjng for its recovery. The av- on his recommendation that a con-
taken up and this means that the eraRe hourly wages of all labor in stitutional amendment to stop tur-
Situation is nearly as good as it fWfnty-three leading industries ther issue of these tax-exempt sej
can be. Some readjustments may covered by the investigations of curities be adopted and submitted
be desirable, but when the indus- tbe National Industrial Conference to the states, has indicated that
tries are operating at capacity or Board were 108 per cent higher in substantial opposition exists and
two ofr’FK i:kh «.i :t i>. m. m. at
MA> %\TO>IO
SAN ANToNlo. >an. 17 Llt-uten-
ant Colon*! Harvey Wil ha mu, as*
I HiMtant chief of Htaff o» the nois-
dlvlftion uroup of organised
norve TronpM. and Emmett
' Addin, MMMiMtant < hlef of Mtuff
intelligence, second dlvTmon. i
'awarded dinting ulwliftd nervhe med-
dulw for d nt i n pushed service dur-
ing the World War
■ .
Vnitfd rrf»» I) Im pat ch
BINCHAMPTON. N Y. Jan.
together in a
where they had
from fire, five
hikI Mfr. Joaeph
Tn Mi
I mileR
girl
To Mr and Mfr
mi leu weg( McCamey. Jan
llrntka
Annie Marie, 3 day-old daughter
of Mr «n<i Mrr. Tom Maynard. 4
mileR south Lewisville, died Jan
' 3 . a< ut« Indigi Mt i< n
A Npecia)
Collector J.
morning from
ler states that peddlers
ant merchants, w hether th< y auction .
th« ir wareM or not, are .subject to .
the state and county occupation tax I
of $15 for carb county in which they 1
opt rate The ruling was asked for
| a man selling army goods w ho
| claimed he should pay only the auc- |
I tion license of $1.25. He was notl- j
fie.I Wednesday of the ruling an I
instructed to make settlement be- |
fore he continued his buRlnesR. I
consent. Nearly every one
boys have a different idea
how he will use his mushi.
plan to tfo throuffh 4«4»JUg*,
plan to be soV6t«ts. some to be pro-
ifeMk ionalft, some leachera*. Kjpme In
I hom^ orche^ras, and then w»- have
the lais bunch, but the largest per
! central present i» furnishing orches- | F‘>.HT WORTH F Leffler,
tras to nearly every churc h in our'| convention’ commissioner of the
This band of boys has been Fort Worth Chamber of <’*,mmerc'*,
, plans to stage i'’O con vent i<>ns here
In 11*23"~Turing 1M22. H9 organiza-
[ thins held annual m»-» tings here, he
I said.
The program for the Gainesville
Boys’ Band concert to be given Fri-
day evening at the C. I. A. auditori-
um haH been received. The program
will be opened by the Denton Am-
erican Legion Band with throo
numbers, which have not been an-
nounced. ft will be the first appear-
ance of the newly organised band
and only the new members will take
part In <he throe opening numlmrk
There will be about fifty pieces fn
the Legion Band.
About twenty members of the le-
gion band, who have had previous
erperienco and who will not take
part In the opening program, will
be with the Gainesville band in ren-
dering the main program of the
evening
Following in the program as
nounced for the Gainesville band:
Huyal Decree March- K. L. King
Fall of Jericho (Descriptive
Overture) J. B. Mailllcohond
Tomorrow (Foy Trott)
Turk and Robinson
Call Me Back Of Mine (Trombone
Kong) . H. I>ixon
Princess of India (Overture)
K. L. King
Lonesome Mama Blues (Fox Trot)
B Brown
Selected
Three O’clock in the Morning
(Waltz) J. Kobrtdo
Supvrba (Grand Selection) .
G. W
i M’* C A Wllltam* I* Ul
IK,;’’ Sta* Mnitalln* Brown I* (11.
f ’> ’ Mr. finff Mri T J j’r’c*. A*1’ | —----—----- — - —
i' ’’ •■■r.’wi, tn* both reiwirt M 111 of p«*u itm'rtv lnd*pm<l*nt of the city rolmlnl*
Iruinta ■ 1 trot Ion. *n<l If th* hill Ik *p prowl It
. . . -.4 .» - prMM’nto'1 to th* Logtilatur*
FOR Isimodtately.
Miss Ruby Register, of
Texas, haw been elected
ary membership in the
' Association of Practical
ing much tlrn/» this year In giving pitlng Engineers, being the
ft t racing demonstrations In various j woman upon whom this
communities of the county. He is been ' conferred
Prospective Revenue*
The Secretary reports current inve>tOrs, nor are they responsible
aggregate about $350,000,000, and
on the other hand decreased ex- „
penditures of about $200,000,000. permit the
While the probabilities are that CMe of the
HE most important feature of lated, the f»Hacy of this Ides will
.. ----------ry during be seen. It the compensation ot
been the all groups could be raised together, maximum,
MI1U bUllMA, UI UUl VVtl k'"* Ml
It is not likkly that Congress will
nobody should have bought them.
There is nothing clandestine or
irtegulsr about the action of the
,— —y- ---- . ne jclicuij itputu investors, nor are tney rcspoiis
power of a portion ot the consurn- gajns jn the revenues promising to for y,e fact that the securities
tax exempt.
Report of Secretary of the
Treasury
In his annual report to the Speak- cannot respond to the solicitations
er of *f’e Hou»« °f Representatives of their own State and Federal
working Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Governments for funds without be-
most of W- Mellon reviews the debt-pay- ing subjected to scorn and denun-
the industries goods cannot be sold *nK an? refunding operations by cjation. Sor
today on a replacement basis. Such ’bout fered bonds
profits as there are result from $7,000,000,000 existing when he payjng soldi^.- ---—
making up materials bought at came into office has been placed cording to this line of comment I
lower prices than are now prevail- *n 8 more easily handled form. nobody should have bought them,
ing. This is so because certain in-
dnstrial costs have been maintained
at a hi^h level after the buying
mg public has been reduced. 1
der such conditions every increase
in costs must be passed on to con-
sumers, who for the most part are
I the business recovery during be seen.
cultural products, tending to re- the other hand if compensation is
Store the normal relationship be- raised in a -----------. —-
’tween these and the products of e,iect W1 . , .
other industries. The final esti- tn those industries,
snate by the Department of Agr’’
culture upon the value of W22 >
rv,WA’ -------------
1921 uation prompting the business
wholly a matter between
and employee, and that the
wages ars C. *
employee. Neith c. ,
with respect to the business of the tractive to an investor who is sub-
taxable year 1922 will not exceed ject to the high surtaxes than to
$350,000,000^ w|)kh is pply abojit 10 an investor who is not subject to
‘fler ceht of the totaf ordinary rev- the surtaxesL It is scarcely con-
----, --------„ .— He believes that it would sistent for Congressmen who
labor as a whole. When it is known be sound policy, and at the same helped to create the Land I^ank
that wages ' .... • - • *------
and employment are all closely re-
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 134, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 17, 1923, newspaper, January 17, 1923; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1237496/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.