Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 209, Ed. 1 Friday, April 14, 1916 Page: 2 of 6
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What part of an auto?
TEXAS NEWS BRIEFS
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WALT'S DAILY POEM
FROM ANOTHER VIEWPOINT
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
short-lived
nor
Probate of Mrs. Peterson Will
h
apt
GENERAL NEWS BRIEFS
Old Phone 99.
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GIVES THE PEOPLE
C. 1.1 AUDITORIUM
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April IS, 8 o’clock p. m
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Auspices M. E. B. Club.
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Admission 50c.
O. M. CURTIS
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porting a thousand carloads of sweet
potatoes last year. Any one of a half-
dozen sandy land counties in Texas, If
they wanted to do it, could produce the
That I might live among and learn
Their sweetness, and awaking
From touch of Death’s grey hand, with
me
Their purity be taking.’
Not wealth of gold,
power
For which to beg High pardon
Past Death, but if I might, a wealth
Of roses in a garden—
Of roses, pale and fragrant buds,
With opetals velvet tender
That I might stay among, and learn
The pure heart of their Sender.
No foolish power o'er minds,
Or woman’s hearts, I crave,
For such, I know, is traitor to
The soul beyond the grave.
the goods" in San Antonio as he has
done here.
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12.00
14.00
W. M. Federmann, a Leading Druggist
of Kansas City, Stands By His
Convictions
77
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to take
few* bee
seems M
di rectit
stiff do
let rias
in dsep hot Cottaiane.
of
the
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To a
work
------------T. B. DAVIS
Room 119
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How to make the
-"I you ever tasted
0, M. CURTIS
JEWELER AND STATIONER
Denton, Texas
DENTON
STEAM LAUNDRY CO.
UUiDERERS AND
DRY CLEANERS
WEEKLY ;
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7. ._________________________________
»T SMALxNl
NE.VGR BE.
SHAM. AtfERt
AA^MOAiTN j
AWAN WITH J
DYES /
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Bracelet Watches
at Curtis’.
Friday
were the dates set for
Files Application to Annul the 3,580 Employes of Standart
Probate of Mrs. Peterson Will oil Affected by Wage Increase
SKh1
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BRITISH MESOPOTAMIA
FORCE DEFEATS TURKS
u sF
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“The most England has done in this
terrible war has been to put up the
money and try to get other countries
mixed up in it.”—Rusk County News.
If England's end and aim has been to
get other countries mixed up in the
war over there her efforts have been
crowned with success.
b^lry Mio.
Father took too much for grant
Z PA | BuvGMT
f A DoulARiS WORTH
<7*a- XWS.S to Co«-OA
\ THCSG. &AXTG.R
\WlTH' HAYE YOU
anything' i
Doughnuts
pint of risss broad dough
in a cup of sugar beaten
with two agga and ana teaspoon
of malted Cottotena. Mix a little
nutmeg or cinnamon with one-
fourth cup flour} add this and
enough more flour to mske a
. Roll and cut and
half hour. Then fry
LONDON, April 14.—The detent
Turkish forces in Mesopotamia bv
British Is reported officially. In an
gagement on !he Tigris river the Ti
were driven back from one and a I
to three miles.
See the nice stock of Bracelet
watches at Curtis.’ I have fust re-
ceived an express shipment of high
class Swiss goods. Swiss watch-
makers lead the world in the man-
ufacture of small watches and this
shipment contains some very fine
examples of their work. Your girl
will likely want a bracelet watch
when she graduates this spring.
Hadn’t you better see about it to-
day?
-----------------1
MEETING FOR FRIDAY NIGHT
Another meeting of the Texas Uni-
versity ex-students now at home is to
be held at 8 o’clock tonight at the Elks’
Club rooms, the meeting to further con-
sider organization of Denton county ex-
students and graduates into a Denton
County University Club.
Students who have attended or gradu-
ated from Texas University other than
those given in Thursday's list include
Misses Myrtle Brown and Pearl Mahan,
and Charlie Francis, Lloyd Garrison,
John Hauslein, Jerry Fowler, Jim Inge,
Elbert Naugle, Kearie Berry, Mack
Hodges, Ned Rector, Homer Bruce and
Curtis Nichols.
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SVhat part of an auto?
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HOT AtTUMP V
DENTON, TEXAS, APRIL, 14, 1916
Bather a sad commentary
the cry of “No room!” is merely a
measure of defense and disapproval,
and that there is plenty of room in real-
ity, and to spare.
x-: <-v-■<*-
— ■■ ■■■ ■ » |
WHAT FATHER
J
W. M. FEDERMANN
“I have always believed," he said,
“that a druggist’s first -duty is to the
Parral of American soldiers and the
suspicions troop movements of the Car-
rancistas toward the interior and espe-
cially toward the .American lines of com-
munication.
There is apparently excellent reason
to believe the Mexican advices have pur-
posely minimized the seriousness of the
trouble at Parral, as private code dis-
patches received here state that several
hundred Mexicans were killed or wound-
ed when the American troops responded
to the fin? directed at them.
If these advices are correct, it will
have a serious effect in inflaming the
Mexican mind against the Americans,
making the Parral affair of much gravi-
ty oatside the mere conflict..
It has been evident for more than a
week that the Carranza government bas
been setting the stage preparatory to
requesting the American government to
withdraw its forces from Mexican soil.
The puzzling feature of the formal re-
quest is its statement that the govern-
ment had not yet fully authorized the
punitive expedition to cross the border.
The Cheapest Money—
•----Ever offered in Denton for building homes.
----Do you expect to build a home or residence.
----For rental purposes? I can furnish the Money.
AVAILABLE ANY TINE
Still buying and extending Vendor’s Lien Notos and tak-
ing mortgages on clear property.
■ -------------------
EL PASO. April 14.-T1
iiow that the Mexican
reached the “show-down” stage, their
belief being based on the coincidence of
|he Carranza request for the witbdraw-
CHIGAGO, April 14.—The Standard Oil
Company announced today it has given
a ten per cent increase in the wages of
3,580 employees at Whiting, Indiana.
This is the second increase within six
months.
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Rather a sad commentary on our
thriftiness that—the story of Texas im-
> ___u___ .•_______a___
. dooDNKZp
SAKE? r
Sy--
team here yesterday afternoon 8 to 2,
unexpectedly turning the tables on the
farmers and getting revenge for a pre-
vious defeat.
Batteries—Texas—M. Thomas and M.
Hart; A. <4 M., Olson, Munch and Rus-
sell.
I
thorough enjoyment by any one.
This is true of all foods prepared with
Cottolene, the Natural Shortening.
Arrange with your grocer for a regular
supply. Pails of convenient sizes.
Write our General Offioes, Chicago, for our
real cook book, “HOME HELPS”
ZFA1RBAN
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W1 C. EDWARDS, Editor. J” gpWARDS, B
MEMBERS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS.
Telephones (Old and New) 64.
Publication Office, 37 West Hickory Street.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
delivered--------------------------
by mail (Ln advance)--
mail (In advance)-----—---
WASHINGTON—Henry Morgenthau,
ambassador to Turkey, says he is con-
sidering resigning his post but will not
know definitely until after he has dis-
cussed the question with the President.
DENVER—A jury has been completed
for the trial of W. R. Slaughter of
Dallas, Texas, on charges of violating
the Federal banking laws. He was for-
mer president of closed National bank
of Pueblo.
CHICAGO—A. K. Hunt, a railroad con-
ductor of Dallas, has filed suit for 850,-
000 damages against the General Man-
agers’ Association. He alleges the Gen-
eral Managers’ Association is a trust in
restraint of trade and attempts to con-
trol the labor market. It is alleged
that the association has a rule making
the age limit for employes 45, and that
although he is in perfect health he can
not secure work because of being over
age. He also charges the blacklisting of
railway employee.
ney to Loan
NDS AND CITY PROPERTY. BUY VENDORS LIEN NOTES
SERVES AND QUICK ACTION IN MAKING FARM LOANS,
our office at 10 o clock and applied for a loan of more than
p. m. or the same day we gave him a check for the money. We
pers drawn in our office, titles examined by Sullivan A Hill,
gMRdaspectins your farm or messing with your title. Get our
Om Year (in advance)------ ------------------------------------WX»
Six Months (in advance)— ...................... ........
Three Months (In advance)— — —— .25
AU zubacriptions to the Weekly Record-Chronicle discontinued at expiration.
Weekly entered as second class mail matter at postoffice at Denton, Texas, under
of Congress, March 3, 1873.
Dally entered as second class mall matter, August 23, 1903, at the postoffice at
Denton, Texas, under act of Congress, March 3, 1873.
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, reputation or standing of any
firm. Individual or corporation will be gladly corrected upon being called to the
attention of the publishers.
Lydia Cole and husband, W. H Cole,
have filed application in the Probate
division of the County court, asking
to have vacated, annulled and set aside
the probate of the will of Mrs. Emma F.
Peterson, which was made on July 22,
1898, and admitted to probate on Jan.
30, 1899.
The copy of the will attached to the
application bequeathed to A. G. Peter-
son, husband of Mrs. Emma F. Peterson,
her interest in the community and her
separate property. The application filed
by Mrs. Cole alleges that Mrs. Peterson
was not well in mind and body at the
time of making the will and that she
was not capable of so doing, and that
the said will should not have been ad-
mitted to probate.
COLLEGE STATION, April 14 —Texas
U. defeated the A. & M. college baseball
_______________________________________________________________.
Few Details of Parral Fighting
; EL PASO, April 14-While further
■ particulars were expected today, up to
1 this morning details of the trouble at
Parral between American and Carranza
troops were very scant. Private dis-
patches said that 105 Mexicans had been
killed when the American forces used
, a machine gun after the Mexicans be-
gan shooting, but no estimate of the
wounded was given. Another report
was that only one American had been
killed, but an official message from Car-
ranza to his consul stated that several
had been killed on both sides. He tel-
egraphed his Embassy at Washington
to urge this trouble as indicating that
the situation in Mexico is getting be-%
yond control as the result of th,e pres-
ence of American troops.
The official Mexican report stated the
trouble began when a column of 150
Americans entered Parral. The comman-
der was notified by Mayor Herrera of
the inconvenience of the troops entering
the city and the American soldiers had
begun to withdraw when a civilian fired
on the soldiers, general disorder follow-
ing, despite efforts of the Carranza au-
thorities to quell the disturbance. One
American soldier was killed, the dis-
patch says, and several civilians were
wounded. The Mexican soldiers suc-
ceeded in checking the mob and pre-
vented it from following the American
troops out of town.
The note points out that the Mexican
government warned the American au-
thorities of the danger of sending armed
troops thru cities and that the American
government agreed to that provision.
The Mexican government deplores the
occurrence, but says it was beyond its
efforts to prevent it and insists that the
American government should withdraw
its troops from Mexican soil in order not
to give room for the disruption of the
good and cordial relations which both
countries are obliged to presene."
Dispatch from Carranza.
A later dispatch from Carranza to the
Mexican ambassador-designate said that
it had been impossible for the Mexican
military commanders to check the mob
against American troops and that the
fight had continued, and that many I
deaths had occurred on both side§ |
A Columbus dispatch says that many |
Mexicans have been disarmed by Gener-
al Pershing along the American line of 1
march on account of reliable informa- |
tion that a number of Villistas were in- I
festing the route.
“All honor to the Denison school girls
who came to Sherman and defeated
three Sherman High school boys in a
foot race. Those boys started in to
make a joke of the race, and, as i& often
the case, the joke was turned on them.”
—Sherman Democrat. • ■ < ; JHHI
The boys ought to have remembered healtb °f customers. I tell my peo-
the fate of those “who came to scoff" Ple frankly that a' safe, gentle, inex-
at the Village Preacher, in one of the Pensive laxative, such as Rexall Qider-
most beautiful story-poems ever writ- lies, kept in the home, will nay the big-
ten The race is not always to the over- gest dividends of any investment ever
confident, anv more than it i« siwava j auj uivesimeni ever
to the swift. As it is, the Sherman high J ITfOnU?“d * “ the bert
school boys aren’t the only ones who because it Is put up
are learning that girls aren’t to be sniff- 111 tMty arady tablet form that appeals
ed at. An exchange edited by a feminine *° men’ women and children alike, and
pers<in humorously recalls, in telling I 1® delightful and pleasing to take as
of the struggle women have had to win it is healthfuL"
work and recognition for their work in
the world, the ALice-tn-Wonderland
banquet at which the March Hare keeps
pushing and shoving and crying that
there isn’t room enough until Alice
shouts back that “There’s plenty of
room.” That the situation is typical of
the average man’s attitude to'the wo-
men engaged in the world’s work is
the argument of the exchange editress,
who plainly rejoices that woman has
been level-headed enough to find that
DALLAS—James A.Florer announces
that he will be a candidate for speak-
er of the Texas House of Representa-
I fives.
MEXLA—J. B. Yacham of this city
became a grandfather at the age of 32
years, when a baby was born to his son
on April 9.
NEWCASTLE—Fire burned the Geo.
; Whiteley grocery store and the T. J.
Rout on genera] merchandise store. The
loss was 825,000.
,t EL PASO—Felix Martinez, director of
. the Dallas Regional Reserve bank, left
an estate of 8800,000, much of which
was in El Paso property.
CLEBURNE—Anthrax has appeared in
a bunch of cattle near Burleson. State
authorities will be asked to send an
expect to take charge of the situation.
SAVOY—Capt W. J. Hood, aged 74,
a Confederate veteran, died Tuesday at
bis home near here. Funeral services
by conducted by Elder Warren E.
Starnes.
GAINESVILLE—Mrs. Elizabeth Dar-
win, connected with the State Pure
Food Department, will be buried here
Friday afternoon. She died in Dallas of
meningitis Thursday.
BROWNSVILLE—Jose Buenrostro and
Meliquides Chapa, alleged Mexican ban-
dits, have been sentenced to death in
connection with the killing of A. L.
Austin and his son, Charles Austin, at
Sebastian last August.
DALLAS—Mrs. W. W. Clawson, who
lives on Commerce street in West
Dallas, is in St. Paul’s sanitarium suf-
fering from a bullet wound in the head.
She made a statement in which she
said it was all her own fault and asked
that no one be held.
HARTLEY—T. F. Burke, who is prac-
ticing diversification, this week shipped
to Fort Worth a car of 72 hogs, for
which he received 81,721.98. He has six
more carloads on feed, which he will
ship. In addition Mr. Burke raises his
own feed, and markets large quanti-
ties of wheat, oats, barley, corn and
maize.
vote fol
lion June3. If we ca'
the livestock values of
expenditure of <7,000 or <8,000—and ex-
that is not
we
O
A really good doughnut is one of the choicest deli-
cades that can be set upon a table.
Doughnuts shortened with and fried in Cottolene
have an appetizing flavor and a wholesome good-
ness that cannot be equaled.
Cottolene is a real aid to digestion. Hence doughnuts that
are made in accordance with the accompanying recipe not
only look tempting and taste good, but can be eaten with
lion of the schools which have been
conditionally granted aid, but up to
Friday afternoon Mr. Cunningham had
not reported to County Superintendent
Edwards. Mr. Edwards had a letter a
few days ago from State Superintend-
ent Doughty saying that the inspector
would come to Denton from Gaines-
ville Friday, but it was supposed here
that he had been delayed.
The schools, have been tentatively
promised about 83,000 more aid from
the rural school fund, and on the rec-
ommendation of Mr. Cunningham as
to their having met the requirementss
will hinge to a great extent the date
of the actual granting of the money.
A SQtMDE DEAL ciean-up Plans Going Forward
The clean-up plans are going steadily
forward despite the bad weather and
threats of continual rain. Next week is
expected to be the biggest cle^n-up
week the town has ever observed, and
many are already beginning work on
their trash piles.
Yard beautification is also continu-
ing, and it is believed that when the
District Federation meeting is held here
week after next the town will look as
pretty as the work of willing hands
can make it.
sweet potatoes consumed in the entire
-rt stale.
perienced livestock men say thi.:
an exaggeration—why shouldn’t
make the investment required?
-------o--‘l
Signs multiply that the Oyster Bay Col-
onel la going to be the last resort of
the g. o. p.—not that they want 1
xelt, but that they want some!
with some chance to win. The sup>
port of the New York Tribune is an ad-RV™ 2.^ Ln .thP saiPe <11M?
ditional straw to point the wind’s di-
rection toward the Colonel, who can-
not be shelved and who will not be
squelched. The leaders of the g. o. p.
don’t want him, and many of the rank
and file are not enamored of him. But
there's one admirable thing about the
ff. o. p., as an organization—they’re
out to win and they’re mostly willing
to swallow their personal predilections
to teet a winner. , We don’t believe
Roosevelt can win, but we do believe
be can give Wflson a “hoss race” and
can come nearer to winning than any
other man the republicans can put up.
“A movement is on in the North to
eliminate grammar from the schools.
We suppose it is all right; they have
already eliminated spelling and arith-
metic to a very large degree, and there
is no occasion to discriminate in the
favor of grammar. We presume they
mean to teach slang in its place.”—
Henrietta Independent.
The school people in the North res-
ponsible for the movement have proba-
bly had opportunity to observe that
“grammar” is a culture which depends
on many Sther forces than mere school
time instruction for its retention, and
that in the cases where school time in-
struction is all that the students learns
along the line of correct speech, little
of advantage is gained. Grammar has
depended, and probably will in the
future depend, almost entirely on home
training for its existence; it is useless
to approach any attempt at instilling it
into the student’s mind without that
previous understanding. When we went
to school the book studied in the sev-
enth grade during one period was con-
sidered one of the best and clearest
ever adopted by the state. The depart-
ment teacher, now a college faculty
member, told us that its author was a
man who seldom used an affirmative
when two negatives would serve, and
committed other like barbarous as-
saults upon his mother tongue.He spoke
of the failing himself, she said, and ex-
plained it rather sadly by saying that
he had used such expressions in child- j
hood and had never been able to get I
Viere were several students who stood
ve^v high in class work and were fair
in written composition, to hear whom
talk was akin to punishment. It can
not be got away from, and the sooner
it is facM the better, by those who
would bettei the quality of English that
is used in spofren language—the quick-
est mind is slower to reason that the
tongue is to act, and what it has been
accustomed to sayihg will be said be-
fore a rule can be straightened out and
applied. The solution of the grammar
evil—or rather the lack-of-grammar
evil, lies primarily in the home, and
not the school.
--------O->-------
One of our readers dropped In the
other day who believed that this edi-
tor was also producer of the column
just east of ours. Our fellow-laborer
on this page declares it was a com-
pliment to' us, and we are fain to be-
lieve so—which ought to square our re-
marks of the other day on some con-
troversialists we knew of.
- — o
Let us all continue our effort for the
elean-up next week. The city adminis-
tration has proffered its assistance to
have the indestructible rubbish hauled
off. The women are doing all in their
power to make the clean-up a success
and oughtn’t the others of us extend
the little help we can to aid so good
• move? Think it over. Better, get
busy and clean-up your premises to
tve the rubbish ready for the haulers.
—■ ■ ■— u ■ —
k Denton business house has pul op
M| reading, in effect, that if you
Ilion the floor at home, feel at lm?r-
ico spit on the store floor. The pur-
Ise of the signs, we are told, is to
ake the man who spits on his wife’s
floor to feel at home—either that, or
F to make him think over and decide not
to spit on the floor of the business
house—the latter preferably. And the
signs are working satisfactorily, and
several men, with the mouths pursed
up for expectorating have caught sight
of the signs and gone out of doors.
»— ■ o------
Successful livestock men say that
one essential to Denton county becom-
ing a livestock county of the first mag-
nitude is the elimination of the fever
tick. Denton county is just beginning'
interest in livestock, with a
cattle on every farm, and it
us that those of us who aren’t
inteMted in the business
tel ^Zh^Llcfently concerned to
B^fckrt^dicatioi in the elec-
... ih add 8100,000 to
XJL f n^e county by an
I
I
School Inspector Not Here
and Saturday of this week
State Rural
School Inspector Cunningham to visit
Denton county and make final inspec-
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ I. M. D.
ENVIRONMENT.
I wish no riches of the sort
Men dream of, in their sleeping,
No gold nor silver, for know I
They tax their price in weeping.
SPORTS.
I watch the young men sporting, and
tussling, and cavorting, at divers man-
ly Barnes, at wrestling, Greek and Cor-
! nish, and boxing bouts tin-hornish, un-
til they break their hames. It gives
them satisfaction to get their forms in
action, to strain their bones and thews;
life in their veins is bubbling, no rheu-
matiz is troubling the feet that fill their
shoes. They have no gout or glanders,
ring-bones or yellow janders, no spav-
ins on their joints;.If vagrant pain
should hit them, they merely bid to
quit them, and promptly it aroints. I
see them strive and tussle, exerting
every muscle—they call such horse-
play fun; and in the shade I’m sitting
a-weeping on my knitting; my active
days are done. My joints are stiff and
rusty, my whiskers gray and dusty, I
creak whene’er I walk, and you may
hear me sighing when I am sadly try-
ing to drill around a block. Oh, Youth,
when Age is gazing upon your sports
amazing, and energy so fine, Age feels
its portion bitter, and says, “Though
not a quitter, I must take in my sign."
AdamTNemtMiMr’serrlc*
The captain of the High school track
team slated Friday morning that the
team has disbanded for the year be-
cause of lack of interest on the part
of the members caused by the lateness
of organizing. It had been planned to al of American troops, the sniping at
enter the county contests Saturday and
also to enter the Terrill School Ath-
letic contest May 1, but this has been
abandoned.
Wise County Chairman Finds
Conflict in Primary Orders
---—
DECATUR. Jfpri 1 14.—County Chair-
man Frank Ford finds that the executive
committee is inhibited by the Terrell
election law from complying with the
resolution adopted by the State com-
mittee, calling for a report on the pri-
mary votes by July 27. He says the
law provides for a canvass on July 29,
the Saturday following the primary, and
that there is no authority for an earlier
canvass.
FORT WORTH AFTER UNION DEPOT.
FORT WORTH, April 14.—The Cham-
ber of Commerce passed a resolution
endorsing the construction of a new
union passenger station here.
Denton friends of George J. Roark
will wish him well in his new position
f as Assistant Secretary of the San An-
tonio Chamber of Commerce, because
i»e has worked faithful.'y and ably m
the work here. The change is vtry
much in the nature of promotion, since
*t opens a much wider field of use-
ulness ' and advancement than was pos-
sible in Denton, and he is well equipped
for that advancement. As we happen
to know, the o«er came quite without
icitalion, after he had been re-elect-
here with an advance in salary, ami
same thru recognition of his ability
Secretary John B. Carrington, who
ommended Mr. Roark to the direc-
ate. Mr. Roark is a Denton-reared
•, who has made good despite the
idicap imposed on any young man in
--emi-pubtic position in his h nie
town, and we are sure he will “deliver
DOINGS OF THE VAN LOONS
f " AT THE. EASKR "j
PARADE, tu-mokrow I
WILL BE SEEM THE.
uATEST SHAPES HAiA.
FASHIOM THAT
THE LADIES WILL.
wear the/a
in VAMIOVS TiMT*’
the Most popular
WILL bb.
\ Alice Blue , nile.
I PURPLE. ANb VI0LE.ry
\HK -------------
“All Work Guaranteed”
T. C .U. GLEE CL
■ _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 209, Ed. 1 Friday, April 14, 1916, newspaper, April 14, 1916; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1239090/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.