Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 30, 1923 Page: 2 of 8
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less than two. wlioops.
—ask for things.
THE WILLIAMS STORE
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PUT ON THE RIM.
$L50
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Threes an argu-
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HEAD TIIK t I.AMMIFIKD ADS.
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bank.
TRADE WITH US
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any
uur
has
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BACK TALK |
■'Wsats Te Bala Thaaa Wks T»»*
Phone 841.
Phono 71.
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LET US SHOW YOU |
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If he
l hu t
O,
$1.00 PER BUCKET
have
no w
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except
entry
"fe»r-
FISHING
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Building, just
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FrosTaag WttM eras
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Our stock of electrical fix-
tures, electrical appliances
of all kinds. ■ JVe would like
to figure with you oh your
wiring if you are planning
to build.
PURE'COUNTHY
SORGHUM
Mb MM* thfagsi
.thru the page
fists over ttot
> wheat,
complete
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FIRST GUARANTY
STATE BANK
J. A. COOK GROCERY
PHONE 174.
.■
I
the
aay
I be
1 to
include the seveml from tl
ty coat who the same
time*
tho
of a great eruzt-
<e, which caused
the loss of over 2.000 lives.
t
k
of
I lie
con -
feet
Crepe
FWa
and wl
Today’s
Anniversaries
JNO. PRICE
GENERAL AUTO
REPAIRING
210 East iloKinaey St.
Phone 515
QUICK DELIVERY SERVICE
FRANCIS CRADDOCK
■ft
DOG WIL PARAGRAFS
B» doorao* Blnahaao
GOLDEN & BROOKS
DRUGGISTS,
DENTON COUNTY NATIONAL BANK <
i
MO Sift OriNt Ml Rttril SIJQ
Lrites’Sift Cleaned antf Pressed Sts
i
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PLENTY OF •BOATS.
r more
______„ finan-
cial drain that also annually is
growing heavier. ,.uUl
. _ : — O i' «—,—-
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7
■ VMM
=—=
vjCJI
BLACK ELECTRIC CO.
ANYTHING ELECTRICAL
North Side Square.
V
=
Cricket
st e a
pel*
Tho dog in his .playful way
Had struck at a fln'i” ring thing,
And there on the ground it Jay,
A bird that wopld never sing.
Frohiansfy statutes
cured uk of nearly all of our vloes
that of giving advice.
1 ’
z' ;7z/' •
—w»
--—
' » t, .1 ........ . _z. . ....
of TTofk
ainl ton
Wr" > T
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it kF
K*,;
Last year 759,846 babies, wcra
byrn in France, which wouH* indi-
cate that they made littlu effort
to avoid trouble.
I* .- __^7..- -........
fcr but has the kindliest feeling for
Denton and every onoe in a while
L there is visible proof of it The
reason that entertainment was so
T successful was, mainly, that every
w... . - citisen of Denton made it part of
his duty to help make it so—fur-
fc — .ther proof of just what Denton can
do when all of its citizens work to-
gether and pull together for a com-
fer;- ■
balancod in
7 FJuropoan
neglected by
— I'M •< *» Brio W M
* eOIUSM’8 VIWWFOINT
i By R. Q.
American
enjoying 1
■Isolation.
1
''. Wb Delivor.
An ideal candidate is one rad-
ical enough to win the grouches
and conservative enough not scare
Wall Street.
Wo are. Pelton agents for
' *** A * r
Hoover Vaqmm Swaeperf,
Hot Point Electrical Applj-
^^jances, Westinghouse Fani,
Mola Washing Machines.
t
EL,
R.
».* ■
1 pillowed it in my hand
And they watched as it gasped for breath;
Came a slight little tremor—and >
The children bad looked on death.
We sell nothing but tho best grocer-
ies—fresh, high quality merchan-
dise that brings you back asking
for more.
Lx
[ T
L ’
-
—-
eoufity for medical or si
tention ip hospitals whe
Tltvie .of you. whcuMMsy * day’s
outing will find Club Bike close and
convenient—only ten minutes' drive
from the square.
Brief was your span of breath,
Poor bird, but could you know
Yours was a royal death
• To be mourned by the children so.
ittle
I
KT
■■
—
■r '
I w.
II »hig the merger of that organ iza-
|L tian and all other similar organi-
L rations into one bi|
inclusive of all. T
ton County, where the cow and the
pig and. the hen have been the
chief source of maintenance dur-
ing these lean years that have been
too numerous of late in North
Texas, but one would like to have
the Denton County statistics to be
' quite certain that it isn’t.
M
■
j
— Wh^n- tlvc -new baby arrives; itt-
tlc Willie discovers that hi» a<nr
iority rights are worth something
’!•«*' r ?i s
B.
■ I -
a©riBS-r== a
toMetated Press u •xcisMvelx
1 «^t"h«f°4<»aS“b,,CatR* **
Lsrlia.'»’.xJ‘isr-
Bi- ____ Oatei. »>. w»
A resolution before the Veterans
. of Foreign Wars was one propos-
I
KCONO1CT
«ke faasUy, ■■ la <b« state, the
beat sooree of wealth la eeoaonsy. It
la ■ great reveaee.”—t ieero.
If you do not aavo^v part of your
today’s earnings, your effort has
been wasted aw /ar aw tomorrow 1g
concerned. Start an account with us
and save!
The Exchange National Bank
LADIES
’ BEffll MD HESW WUR. YOUTH AND BEAIfiY
By using the new and popular
Dorothy Porto® Toilet RriuisUM-The CoHep Um
f DOROTHY PERRINS SAFEGUARDS YOUR BEAUTY.
We Have It.
IwfL
|v
■
We try to. mrik* everything as homelike as pos-
so that nd WfBBeed have any-hesitation about.
making known hts wants,
1 '
■ . A., ‘ I
MH UmiUltMIK 1
1
In former times it was reaayded
ns very unlucky to plant u tied or
Slitse <>• eib't »>* ’Ac person
doing ab, WSald probably die in the
course of the next' twelve months.
THE L
Ipaint andpaper
• . \ STORE !
MORRIS & McCtENDON
*
Denton Record^Cmn
UCORD-CHRONICU OOMPANt ’
K " ■ MmBmn ’’■ '
The drew pictured is
bright colors,
off with black
chtoited Gingham pipta
nt neck, cuffs, pocket ai
belt • •••.••wabM.ateeese.aeae^e
Another is of solid cob
Japanese Crepe with
touch of cOk * '
There are «
styles in ifrL,_ _
v from $1.95 to Mjo.
VISIT OUR READY-TO-WEAR DEPARTMENT
Now offering for'your approval. Fall and Winter selections
our »Uk dresses, cloth- dresses, coats and outer knitwear. W<
you .view them t
J. DOBBS HATS aro die only I
ceived.
-
"J.i.
__fve of all. There has been I considered, that a city-county hos-
no reason, so far as is permitted pita! would be the answer to a prob-
those on the outside to see, why lem that is growing annually
tht American veterans of the world serious and the solution of a
war could not join into one organ-
ization instead of separating into
He vend. Thu. purposes behind, each
organization would be helped to-
ward achievement if all would co-
alesce into one.
Must you start anew
to save for a home? "
Think' of the sacrifices you made
nt order to save enough to-build a ]
home. If fire should destroy your
home tomorrow would it mean that 1
you must begin economizing and
ras'f’WMMMML juiving alLovor again!
Fire insurance is thes^ly certain
.^protection against the Toss of th a ]
.savings you have invested—and a
policy in tho Hartford Fire Insur- f
ance Company is absolutely de-
pendable, as your banker will glad-
ly testify. It costa no more to so-
cure the bpst-
- For safe and a lire
x insurance, - call
idtariums Is Delia*, 1
Ij. Denton is getting now and will _
continue to get for a good many maintain
yean some «btk*AbMblft tr AMI AM
successful entertainment of the
gP:' ‘--- fiFexas-Press Association last year
There isn’t a newspaper man In
Texas who attended that meeting
Pettlnsr t’artles are modiTn,
c<niri|f. but Delilah originated
teea. - ---;--------------—
Engraved Stationery, Carbon Paper
ROSS PRINTING CO.
tlllVr W. Oak-
is a
k!v,> bin; a
doesn't work.
1730-—Jonathan Belcher became
Kovernor of MasaachuBettx and New
Hampshire. *'
1802—John f'hllde, who Induced
ConKi’ess to pass the first grant of
public lands to benefit a railway,
born at West Boytston, Mass. Died
at Springfield. Mass., Feb. 2, 1850.
1831—Karl Ludwig* Harding. Ger-
man astronomer, celebrated as tho
discoverer of tho planet Juno, died
at Gottingen. Born 1765.
1 854—Tbe first Kopublican eon-
Kt^isslonal, convention in Illinois met
•dr Reek ford.
1*62—Gen. Klrby Smith defeated
the Union’ troops at Richmond, Ky.
1870*—A part of the army of Mar-
shal MacMahon was defeated and
driven uerbsx ttie Metiye by the eQr-
;mans under the Croivn Prince of
Prussia.
1877—Tqrks defeated in a desper-
ate aortic ‘by tho Itusbians at Plev-
na'. .,
1902—Beginning
tlon of Mont Pe,le
t 11 A IllWu i i V • > r* i
Any town
of tho mud
lr._r on
of tire sard
get
mzny »»f them meaning at a fur-
ther' sacrifice to the scH«t.
The main point is that the co-
oIteration of Denton buaineaa inter-
egla mark of the <iay n real success-.
The fieravnal advertising given it
nien "fl1 on*y
Hp- -.
■
X * •*[ - • . ' ’ a
■b”
s
' —are the Directors of thia L
f i rhOAilr. '
-
It is a principle with the First National Bank as J
well as a polioy to majM all depositors, largo or small, 1
feel at home in its various departments.
I
Its constant growth shows that people like the
Lfl&fc anfL»ft:apnaHty which greet them i
pere, ~ 1 I
early
"pep" into
of. summer
have been
-----7 heat
of the yalnlc»s days for more than
two loi« months. Tho lower tom-
paraturo has made life seem worth
living again to those whose
strength had been sapped by the
Ions, dry summer. It again exem-
plifies the wisdom of tho plan of
sesaons. When one is wearied of
wintry blasts he longs for the
summer when he can get out-
doors without bundling himself up
so he can hardly get about, but
after summer's heat has hold
sway for a ‘time he again looks
forward to winter. Me tires of
one season, but coming and
_ j as they do. he. always has
taoHlething to look forward to. Af-
ter all it would be rather ditil-
qult for man to iiuprgve nature's
»ays. , ' i>
B. H. Deavenpori & Co.
dknton’ tbxab - _______
_________________________■ _____________________________________________________________________;_______________________b -__-
The cynic, thinks mankind i.« rot-
ten. and he would be right If all
mon were cynics.
naans Mfi -iiiTgii.il Irflliiroil
ICopffrikht 1MA ft fcdg«r A. Gutet.)
THE DEAD FLEDGLING
I havg qomd in from the yard,
, Called there by the children's cries,
And ob but they take it hard •
When a fledgling robin dies!
Commission has sus-
peuupu uic uuuieu parsing ul front
of business houses on the square
“because there were objections to
it” Those of us who were here at
the time will easily recall tbe Ab-
jections that were raised when ail
livestock were barred from wagon-
yard rights on the square, but the
♦‘objections'* net nowhere. So f
u congestion goes, there B.the
aakne objection to unlimited park-
ing on busy streets as there was to
Morte-drawn vehicles. Except on
the possible score of cleanliness
the wagonyard is just as sightly as
the garage, and requires no more
space.
!f br calls other men hyimcrit'M,
he means that he ha» lost lh<-
to fret shame for hia-
pwn sins-
UKKTON Hilt OHP-CHROyiCLR, THI HHII4Y, AVfi.
Troublesoihe mdlcal.
toft snap l(
try soft soap.
t
—Their wide experience,
skill and business prestige
represent a vital; asset of
this bank.
*-■ 211 Cedar Street.
!*■
It appears Im
and splendid
I\ TIIK OAVS NEWS
Geo. H. Moses', who is mention'-d
«m tho moat likely successor to. John
event of the nomination of I’reM-’
dent Coolidge by the next Republi-
can national convention. Im one of
tii<- preMent representatives of New
IlanipHhide in tb& United Status Sen-
ate. Atthougl) lie never filled elec-
tive office until he entered the sen-
ate in 1919, Senator *s no’
without experience ln‘practicnl jsol-
ItlcM. Jle han been active in public
affairs in New Hampshire ever since
he wan a student at Dartmouth Col-
lege, when he was the private sec-
retary to the Governor of the
State Later, as a newspaper mon,
he came In close touch with Gran-
ite State politics. He wps appoint-
ed Minister to Greece and Montene-
gro. in 1909. by President Taft, and
remained in Athens until 1912. He
has always been an ardent Republi-
can and haw a wide acquaintance
among the leaders of that party.
IrnDd-tetoak* Il UmR, but it bIskT1
■ msny'- °f the personal
fcquxmtamc and u knowledge of ,
Ci buairteaa men and farmer?.,
the personal touch that is so euan.
1^,—Mat-la. *eBMy- helpfai frtendatop. -
7 . • -------o —ia - i
OPERAT1ON8-SJ
' A man whb watt I
tbc other day went
cqitnly whteh -the R
pubiMMB every weal
< ' s -**■
As our mcv'DII) artd lust
for th<* Bok ptauu prizu
K»'Mt aliolftiuh <»f the ' word
iisHrnrr ’•
lii'-ks i^ettow going to
young lady’residing oh up-
per Gander creek. He made his
hirst visit there fest'Sunday, dur-
i ing which time bp lAiti tl>» foun-
I f..- i,..r admiration by tell-
ing her oil about hTI) good quali-
ties. and how popular he is with
the other girls, bhe acted like site
believed i Vt ry word of it
Luk<- Mathewsla says if the
r<uds wore all straight, there,
couldn't be any lltFt< st in won-
dering what was right around-the
next bend.
Tears for the spirit fled
Came into the children** eyes,
Such tears as would grace the bed
Of a monarch when he dies.
3flXlt-2 CASING
■St ■
DOLLAR DAY A SUCCKSS.
■ The first mid-week “Dollar Day’’
K.. .• ♦ Denton merchants have ever trieii
E.y was 'a. BUCCC68, as every merchant
p. .. who took part in it will agree. It
BEL was placed in the middle of the
pH 1 week and—-with the colleges closed
I down and hundreds of local people
away on their vacations—at what
is always the dullest time of the
year in Dented. This year, morc-
over, tbe early opening of cotton
made it a very busy time with the
coltomgrowers.
It was because of this last fact
that the crowd didn’t seetn so large
ac* some other crowded days. Many .
to'.. came early, did their shopping and
, People know flivvers are cheap
because of great production,, and
ya| wonder why laws no longer
Inspire respect.
OOMPAMT
--
Worth or somewhere ilae for ex-
aminations, treatment or opera-
tions. The examination did not not |
_ the coun- I
.. > week were
taken to' sanitariums for the same
purpose, Tbe number is not un-
ueuajffor there isn’t a week in the
year peawv* but the Record-Chron-
icle carries reports of from 20 to
go Denton County citizens being
taken to'hospitals somewhere.
In other words, if the count he
made is really an gvefttge—and
probably it is—there are 1,000 per-
sons from Denton County every
year being taken outside of the <
eoufity for medical or surgical at-
; 2 here the fa-
cilities are better than those the
usual home affords. Th®; cost of
these sanitarium visits is Heavy
It is impossible to believe that any-
body can go to an out-of-town hos-
pital and get even treatment for
less than |100, including traveling
expenses and the numerous inci-
dentals that have so heavily in-
creased the expense of tying ill.
It is not improbable that the aver-
age Cost to these 1,00© ; persons
will not be nearer ?500 each. Den-
ton County, then, is sending else-
where every year somewhere be-
tween $100,000 and >500,000 for
hospital treatment and still cannot
see the advisability—indeed, the
to K •» _«y* necessity—of having a hospital here
panse sae at home where not only would the
cost of transportation be eliminat-
ed and the other expenses corres-
pondingly reduced, hut tho patients
would be accessible to their own
people.
Denton County needs a county
hospital Denton town needs a hos-
pital It would seem, all things
that fails to get out
,, and stay out is
far sleeping on It* own, rlghta Hut
the one of tile said features of many
moves to get oat Of the mud is
’the fact that? tbe towns do not
stay out. Tiwy pave streets and
then permit | them for want of »
little attantLn, to be Worn out
and ttostroyoM and are then back
'where th«y atarted. with nothing
bat a 1 debt hanging over their
heads arid sad memories of their
experience!. Pave streets and then
»vw«*i m t al ij m is the right poll-
'Tl
dissatisfied with anything but d< -
elsions favorable to*lt; the ixecu-
tivos likewise seek their own Inter-
ests: but 'when a majority of the
B<*aril render* a decision that satin-
flos the public, it is reasonably
sure to be a just decision. The
public desires its own Interests pro-
tected, which is perfectly proper,
but always the public as a whole Is
ready and willing to give labo£ and
to give the roads just as fair n
deal us is possiblc.^—Bonhnm Favor-
-------f
SWEETWATER-Tho h« < <^>.1 an-
thih! poultry rIh>\v ,<if th. \ohin
County Poultry AsMOciatIon will
held in Hwortivati r T). < is, if»
• and 20. Plana ar<* l»< intr nuul • to
harp 1.000 birdn on rxhlbl I ion.
PRINTING “
•tTtHllHH thing
Rtill, if none t>ut high-class im-
migrants are admitted, some of
tho native born arc due to have
some humiliating experiences.
You can't tell by the way Ford
nets whether he is Republican or
X>rnioorat. And nt times it is
equally difllcult to label tho par-
ties.
i- "The bacfcbbne of summer." a»
'the scientific niea say. has been
brolcen by rains and cool waves
sweeping nnist of the country this
work. Tab widest August weather
•In years. In some sections tho
'•oldest its the history of weather
bureau Hooords for that month,
sent chills' up and down the spinal
oolumiua of newspaper readers
Wednesday whidn they learned of
tire cold wZrves and the impending
coal strike' just ahead. Reports
that teal' dfucks sre winging their
•way south ward indicates an. early
winter'and’ will be good news to
»i>e hunters in this part of Texas,
tlie duck footing season having
been advanced several weeks ear-
lier than In prevlifiis year".—
Gainesville Register.
I
I Leaders in
(he Community
THE LONELY ONE ” - •
I walk through the streets of the village, and list to the
tVoice Of (he .throng; the fanner is talking of tillage and proves
that the wedther is wrong. The merchant is talking of taxes
which rob him of all he can gain, and bitter and wrathful he
waxes; it’s grievous to hear him complain. The statesman is .
talking of dangers which threaten our lives and our. rolls; to
safety we’re bound to be strangers, until he wins out at the
polls. And everyone’s talk is devoted to him and his little con-
ctfns; no voice in the clamor is noted discoursing of Shelley or
Bums. I long for an earnest discussion, when tired, at the close
of the day, of Tulstoi, the thundering Russian, of Shakespeare
or Bertha M. Clay. I’m tired of the .things that are sordid, of
men who get rich in a night; I’d like to hear merit accorded to
Miltqn and Harold Bell Wright. There’s no one to talk of the
sages, of Hugo and A. Conan Doyle; but men, in their fatuous
rages, are talking of wells shooting oil The lawyer is spiel-
ing of leases the copper is drooling of crooks, the uncle is cuss-
ing his nieces,- but no one is speaking pf book's. And so 1 am
lonely and friendless, I’m bored by the twaddle I hear; the talk
of the people is endless, but it is a grief to the ear., '
DENTON, TEXAS.
W. E. SMOOT’ Erod.
W. C. ORR, Vi&Fres. and Cashier
R. W. BASS, Am^ CaaL.-^
JNO. W. CRAIN, Aast Cashier.
“THE BANK FO* EVERYBODY"
These cool nights and
morning* are putting
the listless throngs
••stay-at-hoineg” who
sweltering in tho blistering
John Fields, editor of the Okla-
homa Farmer, told a Dallas lunch-
eon club the other day that 25 per
cent of the farms in Dallas County
k do not have a cow, 37 per cent do
not have a pig apd 11.2 per cent
do not have a chicken or other kind
of • poultry A One doesn’t believe
l;1 that percentage would hold in Den-
Thcrr Is something singularly
pathetic about a man searching
vainly for a drink and growling
that Prohibition can’t be made ef-
fective.
itH doing
Willyum,
ail that smoke
i and still have
me sco that
pot*, m <1. I’ve
now. do you
you som«thingf
I Th« r, Im *<)"|;K talk
I irricks. our blai ksmitli
j Moria! artist, bel'iif'appolnteij jus-"
I lice of tie l"Jn h'-rc. This would
I to a spit ndi.) appointment, as h«
I could look aft'r tho lawlessness
I without jicgieetiug his more impor-
tant business affairs.
How are budgfets
llttlp out-of-the-way
countries that are r.
th* tourists?
Cermet this eantatmar. '"Yus. 1
rsan.lhe book.* coaMaaerf tho Pu- I I
titan: “hut I skipped all tbs.JJ
naunhly PUTts "V '.-/Ar
1 HOME DRESSES WITHOUT I
■A r THE HOME-MADE LOOK-
— .11 . - —- —.
T These very attractiv
dresses for home and
/ neighborhood wear card
- vMMutl Style and woniei
rd
' of del
IIIIIHH*
X WITM THIS ■XCHANGM i
X’ - By L. A. M. ♦
"Laredo G««s Out of tile Mud,"
reads a hcatBine. A total Of 11.-
•500.600 has ibeen spent in that
uronperoUB Texas city on a better
street tnovepmnt. Laredo is to be
-commended for her civic develop-
ment.—McKUme.y Cauripr-tlaxc.tto.
* i '
, ’r<)I»AY*M HIKTIIDAIS
Sir Ernest Rutherford, one of ths ! datlon for her.
most eminent of living physicists,
born in New Zealand, 52 years ago
joday. > .
Fritzl Seheff. a favorite of tho
musical stage, born in Vienna, Aus-
tria. 4.1 years ago today.
L'lwri'nce C. I'hlpp.M, United Stat-
es senator from Colorado, born In
Washington county, i'a., 61 yeans
ago tn day. —- -
Marion Lc Roy uftrton. president
of t.he university of Michigan, born
ut Brooklyn. Iowa, 19 years ago to-
day. \
Henry F Hollis, former United
Sates senator from New Harnpaliire,
born nt Concord. N. H, 54 years
ago today.
MOTOR MARK (JARAGE
111 W. Oak St EARL GARRETT, Prop. PhoM 2M
Friends.hip is a funny thing. The
bee has mbi-e friends than the
wasp because ho ‘collects seme-
; man can frisk him for.
In a little whfle now Daughter
will go back to school, and then
poor old Mother will have nobody
to play the piano while she does
the dishes.
(Protected by Associated Editors) ]
TtSnSnw
Lwxr
Two's company,
ment.
Birds of a feather knock togeth-
er.
A rolling stone gathers no moss,
but a man who keeps his nose too
close to one docs.
It often looks as if talk Is the best
policy and honesty too cheap.
Old debts would bo uasy to pay
if it wasn't for the new ones
Almost time for the friend to re-
turn the lawnmower and start bor-
rowing coal.
One thqig yoO have .that is hard
to get is a phone'number.
Hot weather kickers will be cold
weather knockers in a few weeks.
Be careful how you net. The
nut-gntherlng season Is coming.
Fewer babies are born tn sum-
mer. We dont1 blame them.
New dance steps are awful. They
barely move., And move barely.
Tho only ture for freckles and
uunburn will be out soon. Very
reliable. It is winter.
Moro women are driving autos.
Perhaps changing the gears Is wliat
appeals to them.
. If ths farmers don't get help soon
this will become tho land without
a country.
Difference between movie* and
vaudeville is in movies tho audi-
.once does the talkng.
First sign of fill Im alien tho
frost is on tho pumpkin and the
shock Is In the price.
A wise man never stands out In
tho pUn or trip* to open a can with
a pocket kntfa
***t Mi*
□u
Secretary Morrison of tho Feder-
ation of IxxtMir asserts that the
Railroad laibor Board is "packed"
against labor because it has throe
men representing the public in its
makeup. Rome of the railroad of-
ficials have Indicated that they-also
wort; being dented a perfectly
square deal by the Board. It’s alto-
gether In tho viewpoint, for it is
to he doubted if any part of the
Informed public will agree with
either. The Railroad Labor Board's
decisions to date have been reason-
trtily fair to all the parties ut Inter-
est—and title parties at Interest cer-
tainly incltnlc tho public whether
the other tw... «s»n see it that way
or not—R'bcord-Chronictr.
<>n the Labor Board the^n are
tlireo , members representing labor,
three representing the railway ex-
ecutives, and three ri projentlng the
nubile. That the public tw the only
party not cSmpTtUfiTng iwrlhualy at
tho. action of the Heard is pretty
strong evidence that Its decisions
i have been sa just as,, could he
isnlld ho reached. 1,abor would h*
1’op was heading the paper and
smoking and looktng satisfied and
’ fna 'waa setting flic re look in g u t
him sad saying. Willyum. wen 1
see all that useliss smoke com-
ing out of youv mouth It .l*Mt
makes mo thing of that mutch
money going-up in steem.
Pop jest keeping on reeding the
paper wrd- smoking +ett not look-
ing quite so HiittiHfied and mi Bed
—And then Willyum. wen 1 think
of wat its doing to your sistem.
because Willyum, how can you
pore ail that smoke into your
sistem and still have n perfect
sistem?
Sistem is as siittem docs, pop
«ed- I was Jest reeding uu grtiel
hoer in the papc.- that awt to hr’
Of intrlst- to you. hr red
Wats tluit? ma Sell and pop Me<1,
Its about wlmmin putting row*!, r
o- nLhetr faces and all the dani-
inidge It causes.
-—Wy. Urats Trrrtrrkffrs. mn srerf. t'"~
!)in using face powder ever hints
I can rdmember and I dont no-
tice any dammidge yet. she srd.
and pop Bed. Ail. thnts .wat makes
It all tho more dangerous, as this
article says. Its jest because yon
dont notice it that it gets in it
its ipoMt dedly werk. This article
says tiia, common or ordinary face
powder When Ixaniined threugh
a tnykrojieope shows the gcrins of
dtetfthcrla. scarlit fryer, small pox.
ch|okit) - pox. hooping Rv ff. ‘
bleed and roomstizim, ainung
other things.
Wy, thats utter nonsents. some'
crazy perain must of ritten that
and besides I always use ‘mport-
ed powder, ma sed. and pop sid.
Thia article says imported powder
Is tho wc.rst. bi'cauMe it also
tdlna the germs of swollen
and baldniss.
Willyum Potts, let
article, ma sed, and
terned the ‘page, o
wunt me to reed
about Fcerpo the wild bull of th?
pampa as?
No thanks, ma sed.
Wich he dident.
appMtiate the
o* wwkmanzhip to
makeup. A variety of
* sirable fabrics are i
R and yon can Ret most evl
LX* erY **»s color in «acl
rtyto.
Any virile people, by practicing
war. can in time conquer almost
everything except Its own appe-
tite.
The City Commission has su/-
pended the limited parking in froftt
took advantage of the dollar day
.. bargains aed hurried back home to
r«k to work on tho cotton. The
atoroif w«rc crowded as early as
' 8:M in the morning and they had
Wv • steady business all day lonfc.
E .. Many of the dollar day offerings
werv exhausted tiajy beoawe the
J.' rush was bigger than had been ox-
pocted, but in a number of storas
other dollar day bargains were
L riade up to avoid dmapjMMntinent,
■r — —• - — - •
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 30, 1923, newspaper, August 30, 1923; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1239188/m1/2/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.