Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 104, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 13, 1923 Page: 2 of 8
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thought" it' iiiiiiirt ytenjywt||qf“Vppd
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of
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News
of Comiherce in
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♦
THE WILLIAMS STORE
1/
N’T
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
i
__
r-v
•■N
I
They
—
*
not a single
A
>
Mid-Season Hats
of the cheaper kited.
f.
14
III
!
r"A
■ .
E;" /
l
.
K
t '• ' <
M1KET
Phono 8S.
I'd make the mini
How good n hoy In
Wc will be glad to show you this beautiful car and also talk
with you about taking jour Id ca» in on the deal.
This County
Organized in. 1882 as a National
io largest State bank
by the
Dock
cur-
, aristo-
one
eurl- ”
mare
seems
change
iper Pub- « «®
League.
is like that kind
i realize how bad
----- I Ma m
Made with attractive
I
f operating under the
i
'i
- 1
v|
E’-*^’boned
• or quite in
A
ALLIANCE MILLING COMPANY
Manufacturers of Mill Products.
PEACEMAKER FLOUR
Everybody Says It Is Good
2 The more t
Kr-r ~
STUDEBAKER LIGHT SIX SEDAN
|<J r I mom |J
ON THE FLOOR NOW.
Farthing, Lord
______________—, Jl'orn 'la Cin-
cinnati, O„ 62 years ago today.
Dr/ A. Lawrence Lowell, presi-
dent of Harvard University, barn
i~ n—, at------*—•—.
M.ij. -Tien
I
they' T
■ooaosrr
■■ la Ike alate,
•f wealth Im
eeouetoy. It la a great rsseuue”
—Cleora.
If .you do not eave a part ol
your today’s earnings, your effort
has been wasted as far as to
morrow la concerned. Burt an ac-
count with u* and eaval —
'Wests to Help Thooe Who try*
EXCHANGE NATIONAL BANK
e«“:t
■ , >*’ 4 ,: -t~ tJLgi
TTTf in— .2*'*'
EVANS BROS.
/•- Opposite the Post Office.---------
Service Station at Sid Smythe’s Garage.
I
. - f. k'FUWLIJ
I Editorial Office. r-t
Department »■ «■».. . W
ed at til West Hickory
ia, Texas, every afternoon
j bilk* Record-Chronicle
ly iacued Tueodaye and
Prose and United Press
Alt Bureau of drcalatlons.
Louis Rubenstein, president of the
A ma tens- Skating Association of Can-—
ada, has held office in -that organiza-
tion continuously for 30 years. •
When 1 was young, to
In what 1 had to,do, and be
Of greater credit unto me.
■ J__*
"I could have made myself," I'iii
A reputation to endure;
__________ ____„_______ -_______ I thought'tt' kiiiart wReu _
TKlia~ nKgLiif^r twice or tl»Hr>, and then 11 To edit ns l^fae as I CuuUL
••Ton tntr I son tr nt!TMUty.
L
, mom-
Tng. We are glad to note • that he
is again getting active.
11., OKI 40.-
Texas and Ar-
a arrested
----a fugitive
Texas,
you
of
it
, could
ly mother does.
wasn't ■At.^ttal 1 'lUllt myself a
hut nAWTf- tba vlUage ponnd, and
when jit evr th* doors were shut, there
TihppluesH 1a found; it is u hutulHe
dwelling but U” lAbdlord comas around.
To other dmirs the lomUord goes, to—
bone mon foe the rent, and rain and
“Go at tome job you’ve been dM
ing and get it'done.
“Go >oul andXnke a walk..
“’•Do. something nice for ‘lomccg
And Af myself obeys (which
gWiera1|j' does), I get rid of that'
diculoua sense of depression.
Maybe the sam» ndviecjwl
your self. '
THEY’E DIFFERENT GIFTS
PHONOGRAPH SHOP
219 W. Hkkory SI.
Dealers in Edison Phonogrsphs
--- Bg)Ajil« Piy».;
NEW DRESSES
■
Just Received A
A lot of now styles in
SILK DRESSgS OF THE
BETTER KIND.
(y GOOD.rYEAR
' • ’. it-ti
Are -^vsn with each casM pur
of 10c or mon as a token c-
appreciation of your patronag
WILLIS GROCERY AND
Copy right 1W1 George htettbaw Adams W23. by Kdgar JL' Guest.)
THE LANJJLORD ,
'Hie landlord is a genial gent, a man
of .barm ipul gface; and when be a«k»
■)g,„-«dornii his
‘'tnm'h Is dls-
With the
Exchanges
. . »y L, A. M.
Why Not Give
HER,
A RALDWIN PIANO
For Christmas?
“I wonder if sister's old could
anything more sericua I don’t II
the way it bangs on And I henrt^
two cases where ’ ’
_____14MJ ditlli’t m&kfi
choosiiurthnt new wait p
be tharthe lighter shad.
l:_. L3. -*________
wouldn’t have some Wttle worry II
_________________..
Now do you know Of anyone m
that tp sadden him, if be let it, eve
minute of his life? •
| TAOhtt- ” ______________
4f clouds of that aiv are to cov
our sun, then we shall never bat
a glimpse of it. I
Which Is what I say very severe
to myself when I have found whn
in the bottom of my mind. j
My Advic- Ta Myself J
-.1^411 nonsense," 1 tell mySelf "Y
Bi
Rippling
ifoymes
By Walt Mason
z J
rr *
’ THE BEST
"If I were young agsm.” Mid he.
“Whatever rd_»et <u)t to be—
Traife or proTeaslon—I’d uot seat
”Hm"was-rale<r with lb4“K«fr.
“Were I an offlee hoy once more,
Or running errands for a at^re.
Who hired toe sec
is Iiaii iu mv.
... •
denton lLPBCgMBKR u 1>tt
--------
Just ’
Folks
Ry Edgar A. Quest
it i^Bb afford to meet the demand
from that direction and that the
offering of regular college courses
is about all it can do.
Cities find it very satisfactory
and not overly expensive to com-
bine the last two years of high
aehool with the first two years of
college work in one institution, fit-
; ’ ting students for senior college
■work ‘culminating in their bach-
i elor's degree. -—---- '
■t'
ty loans.
Will appreciate your business.
Telephone 76.
W. T. BAILEY & CO.
First National Bank Bldg.
P K. to Hotisckeepers—Wc have a neat little booklet. ' TRACE-
MAKER RKCRETR," containing io reel pea that hnVe MMT thoroughly
tcated and tried. Drop ua n card or call No. l and We’ll eend you a
ropy.Jto help you make better bread, cakes and pastries.
A PRETTY LACE COLLAR
or a collar and cuff set is one
of those personal gifts that
ariy woman would appreciate.
These of recent arrival were
bought with gift-giving in*
view. Or make a vestee and
puffed cuff set. A Mt of tfir-u-
i aertion, a strip of organdy, a
laee edge finish—and you
p, ». «v*» the chuntiwt
imaginable.
RIBBON NOVELTIES—
Boageraft novelties made of
ribbon and lace are unlike any
■ * others in that they are so
-- nicely made even to the min- -
utest detail. There are cor-
— sages, lingerie sets, nosegays,
i sachets, baby pins and baby
. . supporters.
•- » I T v
First get reliable ihforma- I
tion from your bank, at will >1
cost you nothing.
_____
lint many tread the aelf aame way!
Tnnnrercnt t<> the task oJTesl.
They aeldotu try to du their bent.
’ ---------------... 7- -
“Oil, buy of mine, whate’er your plii. e,
Whatever duty you KliaU
Let no man aay, wbiite’er yoil do.
Tli«d he’H hired better boys (ban you."
Ui
■"'"OfTmirMr, you need mrt think
—-r from this that tax-aupoCted c ham Vert
Mk of commsrsa haye aaiy sailing. They
“kava limitations because they rnn
hot spend tex money for entertain-
ment. M*H ebambera *bo have de-
velopment programs that are larger
than ths money available; so they
are generally in need of money.
But the tax plan is far better than
than the subscription method-
No city in Texas has received
tpore substantial benefits from an
——Mtive chamber of eommeree than
has Amarillo. One possible reason
/or it io that, supported by taxes,
t-—every taxpayer in the eity is a sort
of ex-officio member, interested in
its yielding benefits and concerned
, Luke Mathgwsla sajp -‘she-
lved with Ltiie now for more
than 50 .yearn and hga great ’con-
fidence in hint but that when she
announced this week that she would
not live much longer she caughL
Luke looking at an advertisement
which guaranteed to dye hi» whis-
kers black.
I
1S
I
. ■ “ --"-“-.J
TOWM-H-i i ■ ■ ii mi.inr; *-w
. • . '■ • •• ■: ■ .
; ’ • ... -
I ney.
The idea will continue to grow
| and every sizable city, ambitious
educationally, ultimately will have
I one where the situation warrants,
r One reason for their increase is
the fact that the State, which has
had some junior colleges of its own,
is-getting away from the idea that
■ ' '■
/ <-J. ......
Record-Chronicle
~ aROCHUMSBONICLK COMPANY
Good Showing of CoaU
S. & H. Green Trading Stamps Th«‘
y come in and select yours
mouse now. • f
ok pur
The Associated Press is exclusively
MUtiod to the use for fs-publicatton of
-ail news dlspatcbea credited to it or not
*”-iewi«e credited in thia paper and
the Iwal <wws publisbed herein.
iton, Toxas, December 13, 1923
B^fe-'Lij! . J .....
JUNIOR COLLEGE IDEA
Wiehtla Times notes that
the junior college idea is spreading
in Texas. El Paso establish! the
' first eity-supported junior college
-JWStn.er jejght years ago. "Wicb-
£ -Ate Falls watched and studied this
‘ innovation for a number of years
"and took the action that has result-
«t An the eatablishment of a junior
collage course and the erection of
a magnificent high school and jun-
ior bdUding.”
Hillsboro at about the same time
as Wichita beghn the junior college
fibd the latest addition is McKin-
Dog Hill
Paragrafs
By Gsorge B|ngham
JJMBRELLA8-----
Ones made of the old-ti
famous Fruit - of - the-Lo
«| cloth are interesting—«
»»nly for thefr wearing qual
but for their good looks ’
well, 22. _T
“ rmg, strap and loop hand
and have bakelite femti
and ttps. Children’s 18 a
20-inCn site $1
Women’s size I 8*1
KYOTA UMBRELLAS—
Short handles and ferrules
that are of large dimensions.
Handles are carve^ and cpl-
ored in novel designs. Tops
—of good quality silks in black,
navy1, purpl® H”d red. |7.W
to >15. C
•-torn . '«*>L-XSM31 / ngSMUMpaMMl
bulbs And bowls— I
We have Atveral bowls with
bulbs already started and will
bloom about Christmas.
SLIPPER TREES—
To be decorated. A hit of
ribbon and a knack at doing
it and you 'have a cuffifififf
Rift. .
10c a pair or 8 for a quarter.
____ . ... _ .. , ._-.~ ‘^Bkn If L mse to tee A
«A< li uaje iuouU. 4»f.|»«urv<i iin<l merry I’d nev. r Hllafil Tim leb'of »blrk:
l’<! !><• no jha)ftway. I'lerk. but oul
That people could depend uia*n.
: ...... - > tiike more |,r|,l(. t tttjf-rtL
Modern form: “Getts mat_„.
Tho crossing of Che Red Sea
doesn’t seem so .miraculous' after
one- gets accustomed to croaatng
Main Street. ; - • ,»
American reverence for ,
*1*1- ’ siskle O1
contains arT^=
v &£
. gl k. -- f .- |ra. ...I' "F *| ... . .p
The price of cotton has reached a
point beyond thirty cents per j
in Gainesville and that is something
U ----- ' . ‘ *
crop and fair prices- to make the
— - -9 even in G'nineswlie.—Gaines-
"vnie • Kegirter-..... /.;x. r .■ •'
yfiw Corpora- „ A rinri «t H go<„| price
I mall matter “makes-the mai^ go” all over Texas-
, This State seemV to he better adapt-
‘ ' t than any other
money <;r«n and It is during such
•falls as the present one that we
surely da “ait pretty ” We BWteve in
"Jiversiiieation, but we also believe
in every farmer who has the right
kind of land raising some cotton as
a’ part of that diversification. Raise
I he 4ood and feed at home and coent
the cotton money as profit.
The Express hopes the street pav-
iqg tnoya now jOn foot will mater-
lajjxe, as everyone knows they are
certainly, needed. W’ith the bqsineSs
district paved er—piked, V
htpre the appearance of a little city- ... ^ . , . -----
And good streets mean there busi- jejnpty 'uulps hr th rows, with twit and
ness, increased property Valuations*"'.------ i-’-'—• - »----- ----- •-------■■■
• add a more desirable place1 in which
to,‘live- — Venus Express.
Even the smaller towWs are talk-
ing of paving now—and a good,many
of them are "puttflng it over.” Why
there are as many large towns in
the State with very little paving is
hard to understand, when any one
with any experience In the matter
can easily see the great benefit that
accrues therefrom, Not only are pav-
cd streets a great indtctment ttL.sf.-_
-fer new citizens and also affect a
saving in the cost of oberatihg ve-
dttcies. but the comfort and satis-
faction of living on a paved thorough
fare worth all that the paving costs
and more. Any mnn^who lives In any
town can well trf/ord to pay half oCKwn
the cost hnd his neighbor across the
street The other haTE'fbr the pavlhg
of the street in front of his prop-
erty, and why so mat. ‘ ;
not see It that way fs the mystery.
The sut4l,f,,<’t’on m the relief from
■dust and mud that, comes from pav-
ing ean hardly be denied by any
one, and the only reason we can see
for some folks to oppose such im-
provements is simply because it
means progress.
7 " V
( Human Interest .
litorials1
Ickee Wamboldt ■*
risk your money in unknown
investments until you Are |
sure they are safe.
With several of their brightest
stars missing from the line-up, the
■University Of Idaho, twice winner of
the J’tjciflc Coast Intercollegiate family,
basketball eliampTonslhp, t* -none too tfce uowree’
hopeful of repeating this senson.
Honesty
INSURANCE
Is the best policy. We have twenty
big compnies and write Fire, Life
IN THE DAY’S NEWS
Dr. Walter S._ Adams, who has
been awarded tjie Valz medal by
the ParlsAcadefiiy of Sciences for
thi inoet valuable contribution to
astronomy during the past year, is
a distlngttlehW astronomer who
-----„ — ---- has served for some time as 'di-
tell whether~EF is loaf- reetor of the^Carnegie Solar Obser-
vatory on Mount Wilson, near jPax-
tutena. Dr.“ Aq&nts was born, of
American parentage, in the stjclent
city of Anttoeh, in Asiatic Turkey,
in ‘ t876. After -receiving hts A- H.
degree- froYn Dartmouth College in
1H9H he pursued his studies at-the
Un&eHity bf Chicago and the
University”'of Munich. Deciding to
make astronomy his special field
of study' and rdaeArch, he obtain-
ed u position as assistant on the
staff of the Yerkes Observatory.
'SterC 19frt he hai been connected
with the Mt. Wilsop Obsgpratory.
In addition to the latest honor
which^haa come to him from the
Paris academy, the first of its kind
ever won by an * American, Dr.
Adams has received the gold medal
of the Astronomical' Society of
Great Britain and the Draper med-
al Of “the National Academy
Sciences.
89C
We cannot promise how long the quantity will last, so
we advise that you net promptly and supply your needs. .
There are six styles in the lot.
To this community it is a friend la need, a bank
where you are always welcome. Come in and talk
over your business and financial problems and be
sure of every possibl»aid consistent with sound'bank-
ing. Your money, if deposited in this good bank, is
absolutely safe. Do your business here.
buiuor blent: bot^nnn wiy t re n wire
rbrxt he 10owh he*li never drrfw a eent.
.i ’■tea \' .
VMABteteBte* XmeMteMMaMteteWAtoMASMte
j Little Benny’s
Notebook
1 By Lee Pape
-J-—”1. hSUlfiJ 4WL "li
1 ahould not think it pwaaibte that
you'were »o silly,«lf it were ndt that
jij the years go by, 1 ifllve become
more and mpre convinced that each
man’s hear ts the pattern of the
wairerae. J-.1 —
.Maybe that’s what that ver/ cryp-
tic verrt iw’ficctesiaiites means: ”Mr
ho. He hath, set the world in their
hearts.” ■ / ,
Sometimes when this depression
comes oven me. I stop what I am
doing and liay, "What the Dickens is
the mattef' Wnh yotrhWT*’ nonsense i wu mvscu
And theh I hunt and I find -ome^
thing like this is jn the batinm at - --
my mind:
"I don't th^k that Jane realty lik-
ed iny new hat, not that she said sq,
. __ but she certainly wasn't as enthu- -i
Mason It. Patrick^ U. siastif as she usually is. 1 wonder
if it renlly Is ^becoming?”
“I Talk Too Much"
0r„ "I shouldn’t ' have said that
about Mrs. Green’s children. It may
get back to her. Serve me jolly well,
fight If it did. I talk tod much and
I've known it all my life,'and stTD
I go on doing it."
at all at this cate. - ............-
“Snap out. of it! \
“Smile—even it you danU^ICM
it. -m?T-
' "-'J
The more that we notice the trou-
bles of Chambers of Cotnihorce in
cities throughout the Southwest, the
more that one ton believe in the
Amarillo plan supported by a rmali
tax. Amarillo was the originator of
YMaplan in Texas. Many cities Jtavc
followed the'taxation plan, and it t»
doubtful whether a single one would
be willing to go back to the old
, ---
As a tax supported chamber of
Commerce, the ofiSceji,jmd.jpterested
persons can devote th«ty timjgjtqjggiL-
Otructlve wwefc—for the dt?. wsually
the voluntarily supported chambers
hr? aponding their time tn trying to
get enough money to pay current
i-SiSK'AiX-z
a odvanee)---«_
reh'f Wswtse Oeaptt
SSsgsGE
I wonder if you ever f«l »4iUle
undercurrent of depression in your
mind without knowing just what
causes It?
And I wonder if you sometimes
stop and hunt about in your mind
ter the cauae?—............--
And lastly, I wonder if you are
as ashamed ns I anmetinies am to
find how sfiiell or how distant a
trouble has put the sun of your hap-
piness uryler a cloud?
I Know You’re Much Like Me
tion.
Entered as second class mall Blatter
Bt<>emoa, Texas. -
i TtLTHK PUBLIC ** ,o r:lilTnS cotton
oas retoctmn upon the ---------- '•
station er standing ot apy
A •UUSKfJS «
i’ attention. ♦
RIM-ION RATKA
.» .«>
riar
. 5.50
■L. _
-"S
assiv you for the rent a *
4 ftn-e; ’(would grieve hl
nound t',,nl,'n* whmibl In your heart have place
, He'd ece Ute tenant» blithe and gay
in when Io. mum, to t^ door; he fate'
.re^ . . . ' . . —i.-: .v. Kuirtil «ee yon-romp and play about
yuur cottage floor; and yet the cola he
■ beerH away Will come to you no more
The landlord uacd tu teak tuy^shack as
< ' .7
fluip and (Jjoerful crack he Altered
tliroiigli hl« bcaril; add yet lie made my
arkles neeiu blai'k, hia footfall much I
feared. The selu he took, t Utoil te.aet’il
to bay thing* at the store, fo Titty a
helpful book to rend, u couch on wbleli
t<> snore; 1>« took away my. clileltenfeed,
nnd-H <'fll»c l>in'h no, more The land
!<>'■<! caiue to get the price with mnnners
luvat benign; nlas, his bearing cut no
Are. nof did hla j^rehHug. line; I bong lit
f
PVERY sensible
Ea driver knows t
that a skidding cur
is an extreme peril.
That’s why so many *
sensible drivers see
to it that their cars
have the benefit of
the powerful, slip-
leu, non-skid trac-
tion of the Goodyear
» All-Weather Jread.
That famous tread
> is your best insur-
u omceof safe,efficient
* and economical tiro
performance.
1 As Goodyear Ssrvfrs Station
I Asoters uw aati and rscom-
mand rhs not» Condrtnr
jf - Cord* srt*A fha torefed AU.
IVsaiAsr Trand nnd bark
them an tnith atandard
Goadyaar Xsrsire
Alatno Storage Co. ,
Go^n^rtAR
Mi ■, i i h.^5
.......;7rtT- 4
■
Viewpoints
By Robart Qttltlon
—--“MW —^^1
Tt’s 'a YMr aivMIflig/Jtmeyica Bas
the flying records, and Europe has
the flying machines.
The concert of nations seems to
have degenerated into a French
solo with n"vil accompaniment-
Samson waus 'blir;d when he pull-
ed down' the temple to ruin hie
enemies. Baris papers please ropy-
The ideal hueband ie the one a
woman uaee ua a standard while
voicing an 'opinion of her Wond
one.
As *• general thing, t8e *
former who says the fo
Ara, oppo6iBg''hIra is
iiffasft.gL-T-2
The happy homes are run on
(lee give-and-take plan. The hus-
bands give up ana ’the wives take
the reink “ -
Qld-fasliotiftd.term!' "May J. pre-;
1 tux introduce nty^elf, SWT*
Modern form: "Gotta match?”
This Bank la a Permanent Institution in
The lady who runs the Tickville
Millinery Emporium has - returned
from the market where she got
hew ideas. She wdre orte of them
herself last . Sunday " and.
Hocks says some ideas Are
4ous looking things. < U- -.
Poke Eazley sneezed this
tng. We are gl
is again gettlil
Come to this styre yvith the f
oxpsKtation of firming the an- * I 1
usual, the uncommon of the \
original—in gift selections. »
In a variety that you;, will
v agree is entirely sufficient. rl
£ Com^ before tM assortment^.- 74
L> — are pickod over^ . - A -
■ ..wT; , ■ , ■ ... ■- —
WNS--
r
We try to Make it the BEST by using oply the 'best selected
wheat, milled with extreme care in a mill equipt with every
modern device for the making of better flour.
Every sack guarantee#; yoy^to spy whether it is satisfactory^
M. __,________________________________
| . fa Its activities. Another,ad van-
tage that may not appear at first
glance la that every non-resident
ns well as every resident taxpayer,
} fbe railroads, the other corpora-
tions owning property in the city,
nil are contributors to its support
. BfiL. , **n proportion to their local hold
. ingi,.--Awd*aipee any benefits re-
ot from the activities of a
iber of Commence are Tappor
among the citizens largely
£ • or quite In proportion to their prop-
erty holdings, they are called upon
to contribute to its support accord-
x ing to the advantages accruing.
Which cannot be said where the
gL support of sueh organizations de-
volve* upon ^he willing who always
•re voluntary contributors to any
HL movement fpr the upbuilding and
betterment of their home city.
K ‘ NOTICE
E 1 Write fire and tornado tasurance
tn town or couptry. Also automo
j£ „ bile and life iusnranca.
1. B^SHAVER
■--------- . o ' ----------
C. OF C. SUPPORT.
Noting the’ difficulty of a neigh
was »moaking*to himself J
anu I wax doing my lessins and 1
waa reeding the letter that
Hrfw TE5M my Ant Tanriy today, 1
saying to pop, That baby of _Eaa- J
ny’s J* .getting to be quite a noble I
curSMer, according to 'Fanny.
Yes, and according, to Mr. Gil- ]
ette theres a cyrta|n brand of
safety, razor thata got all the
oUTum-backed the map, to use
t^a .slang Expression for face, pop
Now”' Wiilyum yeure pfejudiced, ]
.... ma eed, and pop sed, I a<lmit it,
1 d4‘n't' *cu how eny Laby named i
Herbit can have eny reel nobility
of caracter.
Well then jest listen 'to wat I
Fanny rites, ma sed. She rites, I
You have no ideer wat a wonderfill I
nature little Herbit is developing I
for himself. He is the sole of I
generosity and wenever he has a I
stick of .candy h« all ways brakes I
it in peaces and offers ^me the I
biggest peece. Yestidday jest for I
fun 1 pretended 1 was going to ’
accept tt wen he offered it to me .
and you never herd sutch a ,
screeinjng and carrying on in all ’
your life, and I thawt it did him
grate credit because it shows he
knows even at his age wen some-
one is trying to take advantage of
him. ——
Haw, haw, ixcuse tjie wile I laff,
pop sed.
Well lissen to wat she rites, ma
sed. She rites, But one of bis u
beet, tadiiiHsona et cifoaeiar is 'hie-
kindniss to dum animals. If he r
happens to be pulling the dogs tale,
for instants, he allways stops im-
meeditly if the dog terns erround
and looks at him \jn a certain way
and shows his teeih, which proves
that he reely wouhtent hert the
dog for .the werld and he must
have a very simpatbeffic streek in
him. And then qny lk«t hlu he
picked up his bowl of muk and
offered it to a perfectly strange
cat. Of corse the cpt Was outside
of the fents and out of reetch,
.but the principle is the same,
Hclp„ aid, sucker, pop sed. And
he got behind the sposwting page
and stayed there', Mo ma hwdt' to
reed the rest of the letter to her-
self. > - . —* \
Main Street. I-
cracy is waning. -Not
of Ute ndw novels cot
with the gout.
Civiltyed Jixan h
of egg- Yotr don’t
he is .until adversity crocks the
pretty shell.
4 Woman’s mind develops
’rapid ly than man's, which
to indicate that frequent
encourages growth.
A destitute country Is one in
which the few have all themoney,
so that the many must defend on
Uncle Ham’s charity.' ...»
The country must be in pretty
good shape when candidates look
ijrtvgin for. a grievance big enough
to/M a campaign issue.
“Steam benefits the complexion,”
says a doctor columnist. This is
especially true Of the steany •aris-
ing from u wash tub,---.
- Itte isfactqry Job is thwt 1
of the efficiency ex
never can t*'1 — *-‘*“i~Br 1—*
ing or JJiinking. .... ~ —_.
If the buyer is to he held equally
guilty with the bootlegger, why
jlpt hold the suctFr equally guilty
with the stock swindler?
Matrimony doesn’t settle down
to bormal comradeship Until he is
ready to tell* her what he really
paid for the engagement Ting.
Jugo-Slavia hes expreaeed“a He-
sire to pay what she owes Uncle
Sam. This kind of naive simpnetty-
mast seem very amusing to Hrtinee.
—‘Correct this sentence: -“Jtrft kemp
yqur seat. Dear,” urged the hus-
band; “I know where to find my
shirt studs.”
(Protected by Associated Editors)
TEXAS OIL OPERATOR ARRF.ST-
ED IN LOS ANGBLES
I? riiQS ANGELES, Cal., Dec
'AEe“t.evihson, former Text
kansas oil operatori was
here last last nighf'-eo-
warrent from Fort Worth,
where according to-' Federal agents
W is under indictment for misuse
of mails in a scheme-, to defrautf.
-.......
Bible Thousht J
• For Today.
THif SPIRIT OF TRUTH:— Kv*
the Spirit of_truth; whom tl
world cannofreoelve, because
seeth Jtlm net, neither know*
him; but ye know him; for ,
dwelleth with you, a ml shall
In you.—John 14:17.'
B us. •
DENTON COUNTY NATIONAL BANK
------------.^T-
THESTRENGTH OF THIS BANK j
More than «00 State banks in TexU, the only banh|
Btoj..... , •*
GUARANTY FUND SYSTEM
; ►—are proud of the fact that dtoring the past 18 yean
not a single non-interest-bearing depositor haa lost
one cent. In addition-to its own reputation, your ac-
count at thia bank, “the largest State bank in Dentan
County,” is protected by the
1 p - • 1 ■- ■ i
GUARANTY FUND SYSTEM x <
We Invite yoUr business with assurance of si
ty tend service, . , * «
FIRST GUARANTY STATE BANK "
* THE BANK FOR EVERYBODY.
-to.to'S.2. . .. --
'Xi-
““ 7 __U8E JT NOW 3-
When r*was a young fello* my
chum and I went on a hunting
and camping trip. Among the var-
ious good things to eat; that we
took along was a large jar of de-
licious baked beans—the kind that
is nicely browned on* top,
know, with a delectable piece
pork. My mother cooked them
pecially <ter- the occasion and
seems to me ifSbody. ever
bake as niy mt'.___
When we reached our camp site
in a great swamp at the'head of
*"FfmrHn rivw, • w ■ eygff flibtr
beans ^hungrily. We were passion-
ately fond of beans, my chum and
I. So much so. that we voted t<r
save these beans until our stay in
the woods had whetted our appe- ‘
tites to the keenest possible edge.
Each dfiy that 'passed found us
hungrier for those beans. At last
we decided the crucial moment had
arrived./We opened , the jar and’
found the whole business had spoil-
ed. _u -■
. We had waited too long. We had
Welted until the thing we prised
bed lost ite usefulness. People do
that sort of thing many times and
in many ways.
L-I knew a young sales-manager.
He ha<J wurhed out a system for
running his business that he eon-
aidereffunique and valuable. The
firm with which he was connected D1„ colnuulva UI1U WIltD x nv.
rink theirn b"”„ ‘hl‘ 5y’km anti all other kinds. We aloe mak.
r’na i Tn one. oi their branch offices in -
another section of the country. He -C,XJ
refused because he did not want
Ins methods copied, and thereby
incurred the displeasure of the
firm. —, •--
Within six months he had grown ——
out .of his environment and en-
tered n larger field of usefulness,
ft was then that he looked back
with rather a feeling of self-con-
tempt for the smallness of vision
that had led him to think he must -
safeguard the little he knew. We
do not need to worry too much
about our little knowledges of the
minute. If tm arc going to grow
a, we ought to grow, they will be
kindergarten stuff to uM in twelve
months,
Writers sometimes think of
idea which they feel fs t„
and too rich to be employed in the -
teamflt“**" ----'*-----
stdtT
great!
they
vanta;
i
I
nn
too big
Hate circumstances. They
It away JealdUsly until the
-wrorpent shall" arrive when
kah use it to the best ad- a
Then, when time has roll- ”
ed««ten, they dig up their carefully-
buried thought treasure and , ffnd
it is shrivelled and worthless, They
then wish they had used 1t when
it looked big to them ahd was big
ter them.'—
- When things «NHF t6 8s 1' .,
had better be used, else we find
thefr time has passed, like last
year's calender,
Manna is to be freely u«gd, as
freely piven. Whets hoarded the
worms e«t it. —• ? '•
«3. ■•,.>► ........ .,
Tn the 21 years of intercollegiate
cross-countey competition, Cornell
has been victorious 17 times.
“■ . i
-r| -rwr■ y>■iRyreffouws-sL^..,
7a, »""’BUNG BL^EXjyEB NEXT TO
l’11' 181®- Mary Todd, who becanto! | wnM|av if Vr>n ,v,r fasl a.iitilo I Hl Si’ll
the wife qX Abrahem Lincoln, born
nt Lexington, Ky. Died «t Spring-
field. ID., July 10, 1882.
18eb—E. B, Kennedy, the Aus-
tralian explorer, was killed by the
natives.
1878—Samuel Nelson, former as-
sociate justice of the Supreme
Court bf the’United States, died at
Cooperstown, N. Y Born at He-
bron, N. Y., Nov. 10, “1792. a
thing, tile re- 1880—The Thames Embunktnont
the forces'of hell in Londo’n was first lighted by
1898 -Sir William Vernon Har-
court resigned the leadership of the
British Liberal party.
' 1902-Mrs. Julia .Dent Grant,
widow of resident Grant, died in
Washington.)n Rt. Louis,
Jan. 28, Itstob. '
1905—-Tku- Engagement of Miss
Alice Roosevelt to Congressman
Nicholas Longworth was announced.
1920—Assembly of the League of
Nations adopted a plan for a court
of international justice.
TODAY’S~BIRTHDAYS
Rt. Rev. John C. Farthing, Lord
Bishop of Moptrjsal, J><
cinnati, O., 62 years
Dr.’ A; Lawrence Lowell, presl-
In Boston, 67 years ago today.
Maf. -Uen. Mason 5J. ratrica,
S. A., chief of air' service, born
at Lewisburg, W. Va., 60 years ago
today.
Edwin F. Ladd, United States
Senator from North Dakota, born
at Starks, Maine, 04 years ago to-
■day. ‘____________________• ,
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 104, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 13, 1923, newspaper, December 13, 1923; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1239105/m1/2/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.