Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 81, Ed. 1 Friday, November 16, 1923 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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this paper
?8>
pOKt
. OVERCOATS—
;«r?
I
I
com-
an J
♦d »M I I I »♦»*♦♦+♦♦♦»♦♦»♦♦
V
OTHER
EDITOIUALS.
pop
'
w f
he
you
I
appearances,
feel
well.
*■
Final
The Williams Store
FASHION PARK CLOTHIERS
<1 \
L
i
i
i
DENTON COUNTY NATIONAL BANK
M.
Closes Saturday, Nov. 17
•»
»»■»
vi
—
(
..|?J
SPECIAL
GUARANTY FUND SYSTEM
VALUES
7
ARRANGED
I
(
....
GUARANTY FUND SYSTEM
-OBEY THE IMPULSE
■■ \
*•**
T.
-
i
r
■■
FOR
SATURDAY
I
I
We want men to know more about the desirability of
wearables we sell for them.
union,
labor
seeing a show that
patronized for 200
u
no. worse thin
coat that serves both as
Look at these coats. $30.
I
)
Human Interest
Editorials
By Wickes Wamboldt
IS
at
of
We have a new Gabardine
coat at $27.50 that is a bet-
ter value than we have had
in many a moon.
I
I
L r
■&<'
With the
Exchanges
By L. A. M.
Just
Folks
By Edgar A. Guest
At
as
‘*A*k tbu e
cy about
- -s
is
a
of
a fid
ing,
he?
Im
——
*—
Viewpoints
By Robert Quillen
..... »«„ ,r u.
■>
fill of a
of a
Wat,
sed,
next
ex
•_i‘ ■’wv’* ■’•■’■'•r' '7
1 Rippling
1 Rhymes
By Walt Mason
•It is again time to talk tr<*e-plan‘-
ing, for the season of the year when
trees should be put out i« approach-
1 written about
heautifier.% and
inexpensiv trim,
a
vest
bet
my
and
sun '
l»r<»wn
The girl** :ir«‘ gon**.
you4k*JiiiH left
r»‘ withered oa
'dead! and brown .
stw in t<
Some
shore
IF-'
kGE TWO
Notebook I • I
By Lee Pape | |
••
thinking Copyright 1023. George Matthew Adams
the floor doing
' 1 wasent,
The
, 'f
'■» ! wi'H w( . ..." "<■
' —4w»r
Er-'
A DAY IS NOT 80 LONG
From dawn to think Im not no king
When it is spent in mirth and hour;
Night B wifely fiilN to the day
l li.it N fcee from < are and rich with pia)’
The hands upon the eloek turn fast,
I h»» happiest hours are Moonewt past,
hut oh, the leaden feet of care
__Muko long the time of our «lvspalr,
And grief and hurt and shame and
wrong
Make every troubled day win long
Denton Record-Chronicle
BBC0RD-CHR0NICLK CO MP ANT
THE STRENGTH OF THIS BANK
More than 900 State banka in Texas, the only banks
operating under the I „ t
■ . • , 2i. • . -jS
DKNTON EECORn-CHBONTCLE, FRIDAY, NO1
All Dresved Up and No Place to Go
• -
escape.
K.
^.-■sbsswJiSSj
-------------4
(Copyright. W23, by Eagar Ar Guest.)
...
understanding.—Pk
munn Twsh. e»»“ Sfternooij person has been able to hide be-,
I the Texas “homestead law’*
to the extent of nullifying the ef-
forts of his neighbors to do some-j
toward civic beautification i
and improvement of tiheir home I
city.
uu-
. Bos-
ISiM.
I that are about equal with wheat
; which. at a heavier planting cost,
, ^aldom yields more than 18 to 20
We invite your business with assurance of safe-
ty and service. y. ’ ... i Jj
.....! " -Ki
ony
over
sed.
rite
it
eny-
i f you
discrip-
h i m.
‘—are proud of the fact that during the past 13 years
not a single non-interest-bearing depositor has lost
one cent. In addition to its own reputation, your ac-
count at this bank, “the largest State bank in Denton
County,” is protected by the
’• ..V.'S
I,—it A McDonald ..Mannaia* Kditoi
I. a FOWLKK Adn-rtUiug
« Telephone*
V'BmImm and EdltbrUl Office.—._____SI
E^.UtcmlMion Dapurtuifiit -----------1S4
twined M 214 We«t Hickory
if gome felt the Ra*n they
| thoughtlessly give to others they
i would never feal wall.
This Date
ip History
1
It
k’
H
/
/
LL
I Dog Hill
I Paragrafs
| By George Binchum
KNIT-TEX Coats are made of a knitted fabric that haa bean
treated with the Cravenette process that renders them shower-
proof. Of medium light woiglft anti a
a light weight overcoat and a raincoat.
|L____ O0e year (fa adrati<-ej ------------|l..rsi
Wx months (In advance) --------
Three months' (In advance)
The Associated Press Is exclusively
I i entitled to the use for re publication of
f M^aewa dlspatchMi credited to It or n.i
• StbSywlae credited In this pa|>er uud
r also the local new* pubiiabed herein.
Denton, Texas, November 16. 1923
^■■■■■■■MMunaAj-aaL. — um n T— ■
Your last opportunity to obtain qual-
ity merchandise at Sale Prices during our
Fali’Clearance Sale.
Sale
AN EVENING LAUGH
the'^trnetery at So ith
Pennsylvania, that this
I b7m. I
| F« Today.
M.MI J
GET THE 'rtlLTH-—Buy the trutl
and sell it not; also wiidom and'ini
utruction und ~J
erbs 28:28.
j Little Benny’s j
m y i
to
► got
«e<i.
Artie nn.*
detec kt i\ r
Not l»»ng the day when laughter rlngn.
Not long th<* day wli<ih phHMure bringM,
Nor longer In the day of woo
I I* but lunu'N thinking ho niakcH It ho.
Then let urn, though 1 Ninlle or grieve,
K»*ep fuith with all from dawn till eve.
Let me each day, through every test.
With courage hold to what In bent.
Tomorrow ^aita—blue Nklex or gray,
I have but to be true today.
Might have been the mi-
gration southward of great
drovea rrf- butterflies that
caused men to believe th it
there will be much over-
coat weather this Winter.
At any rate, something
has prompted them to buy
overcoats earlier than us-
ual1 and already we have
ha<l to replenish our stocks.
This week, we received
some of the heavier types
of coafs in the medium
loose backs without belts
as they are the newer.
Some have plaid backs in
bright color*. $27.50 to
$50.
One year (in advance) -----
“ mouths (In advance)
ae month* (la advance) —
I-Waskly (Outside Deuton County* i
JtU <1# Utlvijneej ..J1.5U I
apontba (in advance* M* | J11* *”’’
■A rnwuautha' /<n ..twa.xsak ,45 | Roscoe 1 lines.
____ D<wtu.realue that the time
dtstro ed?’
-----exlferts'of ibis agen-
it the actual protect-
ive power of a few dollar*.
B. H. Deavenport & Go.
DENTON, TEXAS. -
■11 II I......
Board operation. His
the labor world is ns a
It was due to him
dockers barred strikes
war and made possible
and muni-
a hitch.
all
i (h'snrli’d,
wrra.v bea rd.s
uwa.v the
days of yore,
and
over*
most
in
‘ Irish einl-
of 40 years is in chief
passenger
Men hunt
having re-
to adminis-
ter the United States Lines under
Shopping Board operation.
I fame in the labor world
conciliator. It was due
j that the dockers barred
' during the
vast movements of men
tions oterseus without
he
was
eye, pop
going to
youre jest making
pop sed. Well
you cant, deny thnt
meet a man of that
tion you'll certeny recognize
Wich I proberly would.
Beautify your prenuses plan'
trees. There is tin way to beautil'v
the premises about the htnie easier
or better than by planting trees.
Trees are inexpensive and with the
splendid season we have now there
would not be a better time to plant
them. There is 'season—xuough to
give the trees a good start and ilf-
have a good start Ifhey
hard to kwp growing—
to
one
eur 1
Aw G,
that
Mdre L
are here. Men of all ages
f as well as boys have learn-
ed that there is a distinct
need for some kind of
sweater. Young fellows
like the heavier, shaker
• stitch coats while older
men or rather nfen in bus-
iness like the light weight
coat that they can wear
at their place of business.
EVERY MAN NEEDS k
SWEATER.
Bradley Sweaters
RUSSELL-GRAY-JONES CD.
____—-----*-----T-----------—
. ‘ **J^i ; ‘ SU.... ..
value as well as
erty Plant
be too many.
1702 Lord Cornbury wax up-
I pointod governor of New York and
New Jersey by Quoen Anne,
riots
au a
Local conditions hf<‘ always mor.»
less pyschologicul • 'VV<» can think
I n e v c r
pearing
hope I 41 ever do
the ferst
kers on <
black on
enuff, his mustash was
pale yello color, and
place
When the Shadows g
Lengthen!
Do you want to wander happily to-
ward the setting sun? Peaee and L
contentment and independence? A J
life well-lived? I
Then you must start waving now.. fl
There is no choice—“as ye sow, so * S
shall ye reap.” Start at this Bank Z
Today I . ■ J
easy
sutch a
in my
a gen,
I pla<*w- he
one sidex <.
i the otnt
mustash
t hat,
I yeers old |
»•• • ■ J w 11 h - i
2 crutches ' ,n>r nt
remember
why some-
I give him
IL
That this theory works out in
pru.cjtice, at .least t6" a considerable
degree, there is little doubt. Close
observers have noticed that when
everybody talks hard (imv.i and
thinks hard 'times, times are hard,
put on the other hand when they
I talk and think optimistically there-
is abroad n'~fceling of prosperity and
This matter
in
of ;
TODAY’S HIRTHDAYS
Ur. Lemuel H. Murlin, president
of Boston University, born at Met.
cer, Ohio, 02 years ago today.
Thomps H. Ince, prominent as a
producer of motion pictures, born
at Newport, K. L, 43 years ago
today.
fit. Rev. Joseph P. Lynch, Cath-
olic bishop of Pallas, born at St.
| Joseph, Mich , 51 years ago today.
Edward Morgan, postmaster of
New York City, born at Mar-
.hall, Mich., OS years ago today.
ing. .Much has been
the value of trees as
yet, despite* their, i
there are many whose property needs
trees and yet who will not plant
them. Trees can be put out at very
small cost, they reqlnre little atten-
tion afterwards, and they add mueh
beauty to any prop-
trees—there can never
le t me He true for Just today,
Whatever waits along my way!
Surely from diryliceak until ulght
I can be faithful to the right;
t'an face one dny of blunderlug rnln
And bitter cnbl.*aiwll *v»t «'<HU|«h*i*i
Wlmt tbougli I fare.to work or play,
I In lianged's the measure of the dny.
The bright hours do not faster go
Than those which bent the freight of
woe.
in Not-
result of
labor-saving
leuhT Is
• ''»••!! ; l.iri
hr,r and
detecktivi-A 1 rr..> that <>nuo
for i ’onirer play.
■ »r two, mu!
••very mortal thing in
• >r lrlii< k or mny.
the boys nn* gon<^ all
the town: t^U<; .H»wera,
tin* lawn, tiif*Vrtv'v fir- *
and all the buildings s<m in to \mwii
broken down. Some denial
walk the shore and talk
time, and fell old tales of
■, of diMani port and flhne;
very diij t«» them s a bore, and ,
night a < time. A wtr.inger gnx 1
the place, would hnvo a pallid i
grin, and miiv, ’ ft surely run Its ra< e
it’s iiHHlitled within; Ii’m dejol to love
linesH .uni grace. It is too dead to wklii
I’.iit wulf a few- brief months, I pra\. and
soe the town DUO' more: and Yon will i
And it twice as gay us e’er it was be-
fore. the lulls will ring, the biin(4«*“«will
play, the pea< hes hunnt tin* slmre.
•ire* ■. «'
«' * 4 •
----------js
American continent, is showing
great expansion, says a CfiloniaT
report. The output of diamonds
rose from DOT,200 stones weighing
102,603 caruts of a local value «Hl
$L«45,OeO in 1821, to 816,857 stones1
weighing 163,640 earats value $4,-
165,01*0 in 192'2. The Increased out-
put attracted the attention of dia-
mond dealers in Europe and Amer-
ica, with the result thnt between
20 and 30 foreign diamond buyers
opened places of business ip the
colony, causing a rapid advance in
prices.
tired tracts wta* TY'TM btlkh-.W t<»
| the .ere, which seems very good
K when it is known thnt the crop
went 66 days without a beneficial.
L. join in the very worst part of the
L ! sammer. Corn making 50 bushels
■ in a year like-the one just closing
t would have made probably 65 bush
K ela with better conditions that of-
| * ten prevail in North Texas, and
i even a 60-bushel corn crop is a
remunerative investment at prices
Let us explain the protective
power of a few dollars.
People who prefer to run
risks rather than pay insur-
ance premiums usually live to
repent their false economy
Remember, the cost of insur-
ance is never butaa mere frac-
tion of the wealthit protects
and is always a fair measure
‘ i* .riak that confronts
oil if you separate," -
Who cun say that South Carolina
is wrong in having no divorce law?
There are some conditions that arc
worse than divorce- But at best it is
a major opCnition so dangerous that
where it curves one it cripples a
thousand.
There is no mention of a efime
wave, but there well could be men-
. t km of a “bank robbery wave,” for
Dot in many years have there been
aa many bank robberies as during
the past few weeks. In Kansas
and Missouri alone there have been,
eight bank hold-ups in 10 days.
Some of the recent robberies have | and talk hard times and bud busine.s's
HOmb mwt spectacular in that the'cr,,Bt‘- just the condition
K’ •* ..h®. we think exists. On t he other hum!,
|.. bands comprising from 10 to 20lw<l ,hink and talk aloni, opli.
UMM terrorized good-sized towns.4 mistic* lines until wo get the whole
looted the vaults and made their ' community doing the Same way un i
_«*■ > x. - , - thus create a much better condition
ewn*« further fart that few I w^uld otherwise exist. Or .it
if any of them have been captured: least that is a very pretty iheoiy and
'later bodes well for further simi-1 helps one wonderfully while try
’ •> • ill uig it trut.- Mineral Wells Index.
Ur incidents in town* where the |
Wf possibilities look good.
* ----------o--
K$.’' The fact that eight of the 16
entries in the corn growing con-
test exceeded 50 bushels is demon-
* ' strative of the possibilities here
for that crop, for the season of
j. 1923 fell far short of being ideal
K for the production of corn, the
drought that began in June and the
| •xceSbive and unusual heat that ,od <lf dt.prcssion whlch he
Ki. came during July having a v^Fy j pointed out that when people hep in
rft, effftet on the corn, talking harxl tim*?i employe** wh>
ptants. The best yield in the meas-j‘’“‘•“’y un<’ <-
BL a.wh-.u *rt!‘.tr'H ■
how altogether or come much
every-
LOVE CAN’T live on UKELELES
HONOLULU—One divorce for ev-
ery 4.49 ilinrriagirs was the new
high record established in the ter-
ritory of Hnwuii during 1922, ac-
cording to fijjures compiled by the
bureau of vital statistics and the
territorial supreme court. The
number of’ marriages pel-formed
during the year was 2,493. and the
total divorces granted were 555. In
addition to these twelve applicant#
were refused divorces.
0
V B2WCK1PTION KATK8.
I. ' - »»«iy
OM month, delivered $ 5C
te^monthn by mall (4n advance) 1.5*»!
E 6 months by mail (ih udvuuce) 3.<*d
Obs yoof (In advance) .— 5.5*1
Soanl-Weekly in Deaton County
- - - ..... ............|] (M)
.*»■
..35
A MAJOR OPERATION
During the past week 1 have been
trying to keep a man out of the
penitentiary I am not sure thnt it
was for the best. I'he n-.a,n may need
the lesson of a prison sentence, for
all 1 know But his mother appealed
to me to set forth certain facts to
the Governor of the State tn which
he was arrested, with the idea if
keeping him froW" being extradite I
hy a foreign government where the
alleged felony was committed-
This man’s case drives home a
powerful lessen to married peop'e.
Thd father arid mother separated
thirteen Vvnt-s ngr> when this man
was a tl*,y of fifteen. Ho whs at
that time unusual;- thrifty and in-
telligent foj- a boy of his age. He had
earned and saved four hundred dol-
lars.
Through the sept-rat ion of hi; par-
ents he wont to like with some rela-
tives. The affair was a great shock
to him. It hnd the effect of Working
a complete change Tn his character
He tiemvme rerttrse and tniTifferent
and began to drift. He wandere I
about the country from place to
place. He developed into a tramp and
finally landed where he is now.
And the father and mother -how
•lid they turn out? When they sep
ar.ited they hail an eight hundred
a< re farm. They were prosperous and
re'pti ted in their community. The
mother i now an elderly woman d >
mg house work for a few dollars a
week and her board. The father ceas-
ed to prosper Hr writes me, "My
I arm is heavily mortgaged. 1 will
lo»e it some day. Perhaps the time
is now, for I must stand back of my
boy ”
The mother writes, "I would work
my fingers to the bone to save my
boy." Had th* se t*wt beeyi willing 13
yekhs^a^; have piit up with a frac-
tion Kf.'wh**t they are'enduring now,
the lives of nil three would have beeu^
different ...
Ums Het- -X-L"___
fii a father afilj tftbtjicf,,ARhoaf {u-n-
nUvsa. in their pld age. fifiRtbig-indv*
pendently and pr shnWy . fuSitely , 1>
save their son from the j>«niteli«‘
tiary .
And that is the way divorce usual
ly works out. it is not conducive to
suceeoe and it is hardest on the chil-
dren. i -
Some time ago I Wrote to a wo-
man \rho has contemplating such an
action, “No matter} what yafcr pres-
III. difficulties, the chances are ouo
huMradUo one thnt you and year
<>*•» husband will wt*. be nuuh
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ,
i ,t - . <
' ' i
THE KESORT TOWN
Th<* crowds urc gone from Bullfrotr „
Bench, the • tn* is yn«l ihhI drear; no [ -
more wc see rhe Idoonihiir |*cu<h ini
buthinK toK* m>|M‘ar; (be hungry mph ]
birds whII mid •*< hmh li. mid no reilrf is |
Incur. The town is dead, no noisy band
I grinds out the nigtfine ixinc. no hoi d«»g
at limn! to <npture th*» doub-
tli»Tc is <»nly *«>ggy sand, Id
dr!P .’Hid dune Th»* lw
u is blur, tin* wuvrs no
but
FIRST GUARANTY STATE BANK
THK BANK FOR EVERYBODY.
. . ’ ■ ., x . .-1. •_
—.................-
When the beauty ductor
through with her. tin- in the perfl^^H
image of a middle a. cd woman tr^^H
tng to look young.
Adverity i« a pretty good thini^M
The persimmon < n’t so annoyinyl^M
aggressive after 11 Riis’ induFe^T^H
few frosts.
When a man says all women arew
“easy”, he means thut he hasn’t been E
privileged to associate with any 1
other kind.
There seems to be a growing bF- 11
lief that the < onstitution guaran-
tees every man the inidiangbla 11
right to hold u public job- -
Correct this sentence; “The fine
thing about these slippers,’U boasted
the clerk, “is that they will hold
their shape.”
DIAMOND MINING FLOURISHINQ..
LONDON The alluvia! dinmonki
industry in British Guana, the onh
>y British possession in the houthi
because
out the aid
and a umbrella
wondering at the
body dident get
a seet, pop sed.
gen re I
seet, pop
Discribe his
I sed.
Well tiyits
saw
man
Many of his acquaintances
r ..nX Wfrvtffcas# yfi tHrttW. e ,
» M|xX Pfikehle Stmj* grew. Ja& jfi
ih ths* fnett'tasCSundey when-she jit**
*■ idvntally m^aiinUtered an ’ dvcwRme
A-W a^noinHw*ment. which affords
her many friends much deliffltT is (*»
the affect thnt Mias Hostetter
Hocks has just comploated her lat-
est poem entitled, “An Ode to the
Dying Weeds." But ColuMbus All-
sop says if she had of looked right
over the fedee in the next field ahg
eould have written a column in
tea.
’Tin faltering faith nml henry doubt
Whl< h MfiiiM io Ntretcti the inornlngH
out,
If |il»,HMurv,'H dny mo Nwlftly tiles,
F<>r one »1hv cmi 1 not be wine?
<’mi I nut fiol* one tiny of cure
Anti brnw the henrtutiip of dexpnlr?
Have I not <’ounigi' aiern enough
Oue^hiy to bear with life** rebuff?
'I’hough long It M^cinx to troubled heiirts.
Even the <lny of grief departs.
glad you asked
must of bin at lecst 101
he couldent stand
of a vane,
and I
time ’
up and
Pop was setting i
and I was on t‘
lessins and wishing I
.» suddin pop sed,
gun.
pop, who? I sed,
The Jjird thut was
to me in the trolley
up a
we’re
we tan
and get the 5
sad, and pop sed,
stranger things
F seldom yields more than 18 to 20
btnhels on an average.
------0------
SYMPATHY NOT SO ONE-
' SIDED.
Kt ’ , Texanc are rather inclined to
| sympathize with Oklahomans and
aympathy is doubtless due in some
r*.' instances. But there arc some lines
Bp*—Tw Nrntch the sympathy is in the
F other direction.
For instance, Texas cities which
Jtried to protect res|j|yntial sections j
by barring mercantile and indus-
trial establishments found them-
i aolyas up against some kind of con-
■K atitutional inhibition, and various
J zoning ordinances enacted by Texas
Igt'WMMipalities were knocked out
Km • But in Ardmore the City Coiumia-
aion, acting presumably with knowl-
t . edge of what happened in the Texas
L-*—courts, has passed a zoning ordi-
nance which requires not only that
alt bouses must be built ityonform-
ity with adjoining property but
that persons desiring to locate mer-
- cantile or industrial buildings in
the residential districts must hav<
Mk petitions signed by owners of ad
jacent real estate. In other wonfS,
it is possible in Oklahoma to inter-
F' fdte with “puasonal liberty" not
only to the extent of preventing a
nta» putting up a “shack” residence
-. in a desirable residence district.
iX'li*' of compelling him to sevur*
the written consent of adjoining
property owners to be able to build
a store building, garage or other
’ business place.
And still another direction of
ciwic Improvement wherein Okla
r horns towns have an adr^Atage
■v j orsr Texas towns is that v^hen »
j£ majority of citizens along a str< et
—-want to buftd walks and curb* and
eta or to pave, the city has the
wrtty toKave it done, the prop-
' owners paying for it on a 50
taisid. and if they fail or refuse
comply with the order, the city
Kta hare I the work done and then
HmMOect from the property owner
^■whether jt is a homested or not,
lian being practically or quite
on the* same logal footing w a tex
which takes preccklenci
bill gone
and Id be
5 that
i of a
G, pop,
got
and
It is in
Bethlehem,
sign appears.
"Persons are prohibited front
picking flowers front any but their
! own graves."
—American Lumberman.
' IN THE DAYS NEWS
Few men in Uncle Sum’s federal
servne have had a more romantic
career than T. V. ()'(4tnnor, who
now (ills the post of vice-chair-
man of the Shipping Board. Mr.
I O'Connor came to America as a
boy front Ireland. For ntailY years
he worked at his trade, finally
emerging as national leader of the
| dockers' union, one of the
| powerful labor organizations
the country. Today the
I grant ef 4" >"
ntand of tjie de luxe
Meet of the American
Marine, Mr. O'Connor
contly been delegated
and
standing
— ------, car com-
ing home this aftirnoon. Theres
5 doller bill gone front i
pock it an*! Id be willing
another 5 that that birds
'I he sun t*f a gun, pop
Well G, pop, t'uzzin
ine jest got up a new
agency and we’re the
and maybe we ran find
you ami get the 5 dollers I
I sed, and pop sed, Maybe
can, stranger things than
have happened, m fairy tales.
Meaning he doubted it, and I
s**la ■ get my due Look,
hl-re, pop, will you anser some
questions if I ask you some?
Shoot, pop sed. Mcening go ahed '
-ad ask thmrt. Wich I did, say- I
, About how old a man was
| 1811—Weavers'
< ting hum, England,
I the introduction
i machinery,
I 1 **40- Henry H. Markhum, gover-
, nor of California 1891-95, born at
Wilmington, N. Y, Died at Pasa-
dena, Oct. 9, 1923.,
1^, 1873— A ConatltutTon was decreed
I in, 8luin> '
j 1887 A statue was unveiled
Lexington, Ky., in memory
'John C. Breckenridge.
1895 -Samuel F. Smith, the
.thor of 'America,” died, in ,
ton. Born tpere, Oct. 21, TO
1911 New York Cotton Exchange
. reopened after sueiwnsion of fifteen
weeks on acrouiU of the war.
1921 Marshal Foch received an
honorary degree from deorgietown
I aiversify.
enuff, because
genrel ap- |
life anil I
pop sed. In
had red wis- ,
side*, of his face and
otner, wile, oddly
... a sickly
ih the 2nd
he hail a very peculiar thin
ixaetly the shape of the figure 17,
and to cap the climax
had one eyebrow and that
hij* eur insted of his
pop, 1 aint
down,
up, I sed, and
way
ever
-- ♦♦♦♦♦♦
THAT'S VERY TRUE
One' pushing, advertising merch.mt
does in >re to bring thrift into a com-
munity than fifty who sit in the
shade on n bench or under an elee-
I trie fan a id wait far business to
be brought to them by the energy of
someone else. A dozen live business
si-rnp it dreary round men reaching out into the by way*
•marling, drift uwnv; and and hedges for business can make
view 1* brown “"I town htl!n w,th Prosperity and
I the town owj?i them much f >r the
i hustle and bustle within its^bor
I der< Dorut be a sponge and dimply
absorb; show a little yt h>^pftaim
I'iM'thF'WVh tVhePd'Toti 1M» amP'o
some extent join hand* with other*
in keeping the town to the front.
a very kgnk cause that must
quote Lincoln otj Wah*»ingtoh to jus-
tify tteetf.
An efficient woman cun do almost
anything with a htirpip except make
a man of him-
Still, the cabbage smell in
boarding house la
that in the smoker.
Europe may have a finer culture,
but she hasn't our high degree of
f livveriaation.
, An altruist is a wheat farmer who
can be thankful that corn is fetch-
ing such a good price. - .
In the old days, making faces was
simply making facer. Now it is call-
ed registering emotion.
Modern automobiles have all nec.
essary cnnVeniences except a muf-
fler for those who like to drive from
the back seat.
A realtor is just like an ordinary
num, except thut he thinks of cbw
pastures in terms of suburbs.
Once in a while you get acquaint-
de with u chap who seems very im-
portant until you meet his friends.
Very little of the complaint about
inadequate parking facilities comes
from those ^ho drive to church.
Tbes’hiek-town man doesn't feel so
inferior after
Broadway has
nights.
A true American is one who feels
hjs importance in exml proportion
to the amount of money he it
spending.
It’s an awful thing to say, but if
may be that she is called the village
belle because she has the most ring*.
Every family should have .enough
chairs to sit in while the best ones
are pinch-hitting as wardrobes.
him
ba*-.
you
that
all other liens.
That is the reason that in Okla-
homa one never-finds the conditions
found in so many Texas cities—
of breaks in the paving where some
Mt, Denton, Texes, every afternoon pars*
Rnnday by the l<e<-ord Chronicle I hind
tadWeekly Isaued Tuesday* and
moHated Tress and United Press' thing
ember A ml It Ilnresn of Circulations
Miter American Newspaper 1’tib-
er*' Association. 1 >•
ember Tvxas Daily Press League
ember Publisben' Buying Corpora
OMMd •* gecotid-class mail matter
teuton, Texas.
NOTICK TO TMK PVBLIC
gy erroneous reflection upon the
htctgr, reputation or standing of any
a IMlVldntil or corporation will lie
11* corrected upon being called te
publiabera' attention.
hope for the future.
was foreefullj’ shown in a small
way ih the statement of a moving
picture proprietor here during a
i period of depression in which
. . . I » « .1 .. . . . I L .. A . - I. .. -
I have s
|| dr;rt
his show altogether or come
less frequently, while when
body is talking prosperity these peo-
ple comedo his show regularly, when
as far as finances were concerned
these people were not afraid in eith-
er instance as they make the same
money all the time. But when other
people nre feeling optimistic, and
spending these spend freely; when
otliefs have the blues and talk pes
aim ist ically, they quit spending.
Whin the bigger per cent of the peo-
ple of a community feel prosperous
anil have faith in the future, that
town is sure to grow. If the oppo-
site is the case, growth is stopped
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 81, Ed. 1 Friday, November 16, 1923, newspaper, November 16, 1923; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1238914/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.