Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 169, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 28, 1924 Page: 8 of 10
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lion 11 but * minute traction of the
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well,
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Make This Dress Yourself
With the Aid of the Belrobe—
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a
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by leader* alone.
the
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RAISED
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THE WILLIAMS STORE
f
i.
4*
founded by
L
The Exchange National Bank
are policemen.
*
j
just
*
1881-1924
AN EVENING LAUGH
. ‘J
FRESH CAKES.
bring
t,.-A
BAKED DAILY
^vr_rT'_i
was
/
•*
•••
—
:
GUARANTY FUND SYSTEM
can give her
WILLIS GROCERY AND
4
CALL
pfk ■ ’• .
MONTGOMERY
m-4
( I
I Al
it ta the
J
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Cs':
■MtM
■
ao3
Ij
►A
young person
'1 a 1
UriHlNALD .Buetneo* N
SoNALD - Mansglng
IWLER -Advertietugh
end Editorial Office—
—ask for things
even to the smallest item-
latest
and
When company comes you’ll
find our cakes just what you
need to make your dinner
complete.
Our bank
to you in 1
your financial affairs.
u nd
the
niun
we
here
JIM’S BAKERY
Mrs.- Scruggs has now been of Butter Kruat Bread
.....- awi—> w«———n
NEW STYLES IN JACKETS,
CAPES, COATS, SUITS
DRESSES
He laid special stress on the ‘'inter-,
ference.” “You watch and see how
and
by
43
YEARS
SERVICE TO DENTON COUNTY
ANNIVERSARIES
1824—Emilo Blondin, fam<
Socialist
from
We don’t thiMc the SplffWer is by
herself. If we are any judge of the
matter, a person, either boy or girl,
of
the
Fresh Home-Killed
Meat
ra
BIRTHDAYS
Grenfell,
------------------------1---------
Human Interest
Editorials
By Wickes Wamboldt
—
.....------- ===S
the
Mi
the
the
is no
full
IVI!
_ *
I
head
before
With the
Exchanges
Little Benny’s
Notebook
By. Lee Pape
a
crood
those
-r-r-Er-
' A' *
'• i.
13
I
HMM
Rippling
Rhymes
By Walt Mason
h while i.
not only need t >
-..Vices;
and
our
builders
is n
(Copyright, 1024, by Edgar A Guest.)
THEYyUT*HER
Tiie weather lx a thing -which gre
Could never do without,
It’s something all society
Cun safely talk about.
406 favor it as i - - — -
ffte '" Port Worth
du ijj- Ji i , A-.
BKOBD-CratONICLB COMPANY
Editor
DENTON C9UNTY NATIONAL BANK
Our officers and employes J
are accessible, oourteou^and
efficient, and eager to serve
you. ' z ■ ..(J
Luck
Conductor—“Why
Conductor—“His
Seventh
block on
a
the ex-
it up—
t is
of the hardest things for many
people to accomplish-
lie leader*, nor can
thered
team t
the victory-
He has
at
puts in-
in one's
which
from beust.
It has no friend to answer back
Or even wear a scowl.
No oue yppr Judgment will attack
If you should call It font
Tf of the wefiber you sii^ara (cil
Tbe very worst you know.
And prove your dreadful tale us
No further .would it go.
Princess
took
TODAY’S 1
Dr. Wilfred T.
'.-I ri
They »ay if helium gas ever gets
. fbeap enough, Zeppelins with ca-
' r...
Telephone 70.
—........ ■ —I
As the rebels near Tabasco the
chase is said to get hotter.—Deni-
son Herald.
ments
have a
steering
work
■with
clear for the one who has tbe balV
lie said. Again and again he point-
ed out to the lad the determined
way in whiah the players blocked
the opposing players who were try-
ing to tackle the runner vritn the
bail, ■ - ■ . ~ . b ; . /
“Ah, that’* great team work,” he
would say, and the yourigster would
cheer lustiLy. “Team! Team!”
bothers
to pay
There
a world
ing No. 13
mustaches.
Another
bums,
force,”
did more for my country
n bluddy
kly, pop
nvri IB MU L A IIII11ULC JIRVVIVII vi
110,000,000 persons making up this c<
United States, and it is true that
the half-million represents mostly
those who have informal them-
selves on the merits of the peace
plan. But it also is probably true
that if the referendum could be
made general, the percentage
would not be greatly changed, for
PHONE 85.
Ask for Green Trading •. J
\ Stamps, — "
and
remain idle,
finished
; w ht-td
twenty-four I
a great deal
1 and
THE GREAT ONES
'Hie mighty Flrpo will return, before
tbU year la old, by pugilistic arts to
cam great stores of easy gold. In Italy
there dwells a at Iff whose friends be-
lk-Ve him graud ; bu oau impart • -deadly
"1>IIT, they say, with either band. He,
too, la coining Jo' onr aliores, to gain
abundant scads, ami leave some bruises,
welts and sores, upon our home-grown
lade. -Snd Rrnnrvv has divers iiuskv
boys, box lighters, valiant souls. Who'll
come to multiply our joys aud help de
plete our rolls. We bid them welcome,
one and all, these boys of bulging
briiwa, be they from far-off Senegal or
I rehlm of Prester John; they may be
I useless and absurd, superfluous and
isocialed Preeo~aiid Oufted Ptom
Mtber Audit Bureau ef Circulations, likely the ballota cast are from
jSawawuar. rub-L..-.^ w«J..,.. —....
imber T*ras Daily Prues Uwguw
Ntber Publishers' Buylug Gemru-
itarefl M^ueconfl-class mall matter
woTicB To rat fcblic
iy erreaeoue reflection upon the
acter, reputation er standing of any
, tudfridual or corporation will be
ly corrected upon being called to
pubitaherr attention.
-'h
-
■V
Mmm _
.irculatta. Dopa
Dally tanned at H4 Want Hickory
street, neutaa, Tana, every aftorneon
ricept Munday by tbe Roeerd-Chronicle
lESSN^eekly tamed Tuesdays and
wheels
could
.J very
steering- wheel.
nre here .in this
!-0
fully explaining the gume to him- hie feat in crossing Niaj
He laid special stress on the “inter-, f .oL.'
ference.” “You watch and see how ,n Lo’t,®n'. F«“. 22, 13»7.
the other -ten fellows keep tbe path f
ie Sim-
our government's h freak, sn age behind
| tbe times. They’ll not berate Our home
I made books, and score our Art with
goads, or aay our authors should be
-MH.ks, one eooka_be writing odes. Ah
' no. my friends, tbe brawny lads will
I think our bulwarks line, the inatitu- '
itions of onrs will seem to them ashine.
They'll gather up the bullion bars, and ■
suy, ns they depart, “Your justly lam-
ous stripes mid islms appeal to every
heart!"
We are not going to say that zep-
j.elins will not be as common ;ix
----—' --------—— ■■■“ Fords sonic day. In facty we would
is not wanted and he is invited to! not say that anything is impossible,
cloW his account immediately. He;’” ,he {^cv the—wnnderful ml- ,
i finds later that ctlytr banks in the
’ « » j________1____ ___1
in New York more than a
week’ selecting the
models in Millinery
Ready-to-Wear.
I -
Denton Co. National Bank Bldg.
Price GOc per page. D. L. Mooru.
Phone 105.
plan or me(vement calculated to
_ bring about permanent peace,
when they are i ‘ ,
~~I tisan politics and motivation.
„ , advance) _2 8.00 I
yuar (tn advance)------6.601
g«w>l-WMkly la Hasten Vauasy
year tin advenes) ,
months (in advance)------®'
__- ~ ~~ —~ ' ____
Heuil-Wenklj (butslda Dantes Ceunty)
-----------
I_____4®
it would
product,
department
hours
I of
Incntnl
-------------
Just 2*
Folks
By Edgar ▲. Quest
These style.* are better. The
cArly styles are no higher,
and in some cases cheaper.
Now pjittertts in. Ratine
and Crepes.
New Shipment of $5.00 Hat*.
They Are Dandy.
tfee best we have to offer in CO-operation and asaiat-
ance is yours for the asking.
So when to goxxlp you're inclined,
When something you'd abuse.
The weattiof, not your fellow kind,
Is always safe to -use.
--A-
■asmwMSBM
What is the Belrobe? A wonder-
ful dressmaking guide enclosed
with StandardiDeaigner Patterns
that shows step by step how to
make a dress. First, it shows you
how to lay out your pattern on the
least possible amount of material;
ijgxt it shows you with pictures
how to put the dress together;
then it shows you how to add the
finishing touches that are used by
Paris fh-esswntkers and tailors.
s
a
Buy your pattern and then visit
our piece-goods counter. Here you
will find all the popular spring ma-
terials— plain colors and printed
silks of the crepe family in beauti-
ful designs. Wool Crefye, Ratine,
Gingham, Voiles and Tissue.
Glad to assist you any way we can
in flUgnipg ,gnd offering, sugges-
tions for trimming.
S II I R T I N G-fi —
The mere announcement that our Spring shirtings are here will
be enough tn bring many women to this store for them. These.
women know what to expect because tney have been using our
shirtings. They know of the qualities and that the patte*s are
real shirting patterns. '80-square Percales at 30c. Woven stripe
Madras at 35c. Silk stripe Madras at 50c. English Broadcloth
nt 00c and fh----------------— - --------------------————
...... I.’
I
Dog Hill
Paragrafs
By George Bingham
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
“The Bank of Human Interest.”
-------—T--
■ I. . I .
_
Measles Epidemic Spreads
DALLAS- The epldcrfiic of measles
is spi4eading here and is in a virU-
tmt f6rm wiih deaths resulting
from.3,900 cases during the first 21
days of February- There have been
five more dealhs this week. "• ’ *
I io liwif, .. «.v f r. rr,., 1
THE STRENGTH OF THIS BANK
i More than 900 State banks in Texas, the only banka
operating under the
»l
1!
a———
-• - V nnecteeary
Fussy—"Here, waiter,
spoon for iny coffee.”
,, sir, but
them—the music
stirring”—Hudson ian.
in the United emw, ex- - K.
&.??** t?*1on nnV matter, ;t [ perspiration _____ _________
' hut there would be nothing but n
pile of steering wheels to show
for it and one could not get
well with
My littlf neighbor at the foot tall
has a wise father. ““ u“
valuable lesson
A Fine Lemon
I couldn’t help thinking what a
splendid thing it was for that boy
to have the desirability of “team
work” emphaaiaed for him at thia im-
pressionable period of his life-
It is’ one of the crying Lacks in
all organisation work today.
We are first, foremost and all the
time individualists, and it i» 'so
hard for us to repress that exces-
sive love and thought of self called
egoism, for- the furtherance of any
cause where we must play the game
as just one of the team, instead of
milking grandstand, plays.
AMONG THE ASSETS 8F THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
we count the confidence and Rood will of our many !
thousands of patjons as the greatest.
i - . - t
To merit that confidence and retain ;hat good will
keeps us constantly upon the lookout -for new and
helpful ways to serve you. .<
You will find .us. appreciative of your business, and
Isaac Helwanger says he believes
if he was punning for office he could
win by having in his platform that
I the winters are not growing mild-
USE THIS BANK R
Harness us to your plans.
“ v“_’ JOQwer is available
the management of WT
game
learned a
right age.
Tomorrow: Anything But^hi
pie Thing.
PHILADELPHIA FOUNDED
IN NEAR EAST
PHILADELPHIA.-A new city of
Philadelphia has been started In
the heart of the -Caucasus Moun-.
(tains, on the eastern slopes of
... ‘Mount Ararat, according to a C«-
gaod deed, w^ent i blegram recfived here by the Near
, ■, ' | East , Relief- . \
a good ideer, pon | „A mqdel Armenian village.^ in-
park,
No eager gossip, hearing y«u,
Would hasten to repeat
Tbe scandal you have 'started to
The neighbors down the street.
— v ■ - t
No lilUe woman's face would pale,
—Jf» wmtuffpff mfut yefiijr
That you had < r ushed Idin with your
tale
Or slabbed him Aith u He.
spiritual. Now,
tunning his
neglect any
idleness
The mnn who is spending his
time and thought from morning to
ing money 4a just like tbe
._________r ... . -
jnfring'i.g upon ber nation-d hover- ‘
eigntr und _ 1
ur. niiireo x. urenieu, vne
celebrated missionary tn Labrador,
born in England, 59 years ago to-
ons of the
Anierican-born
at * Melrose,
day
Geraldine Farrar,
most famous of
opera singers, born
Mass.. 42 years ago today.
Victor L. Berger, the f
representative in Congress
' The •Frfth Wisconsin -dioteiet,—born-
, . .. ugQ
t he
— -- . ------ that . „
77R ballots thus far returned. 475 - factory worked
**— x- . ' ’ the departm--*
against 69,372 op- ing wheels,
~ > paper
THE CRIME OF CRIMES
The greatest crime the world Is
commjtting, here and there, and
everywhere, is the crime of idle-
ness. Whoever we are. we are
. guilty of that crime to a greater
I or lesser degree. I ‘ can see the
! bristles arise on the fellow- who
'.r that he
the morning
ten al night,
as the vase
_____________
-SB-——------ . ■! I ' ........
■n>B «AMU . ♦ .
By Rutb Cameroa • “*•
“TEAM, TEAM!”
One day last fall at a football,
gume, a ten-year-old boy sat in Jront
of me with his father who was care-
We nre here ,in this world to
grow into as perfect and complete
We
our
J., ....._____________
I be- I of the ward committee, ‘'guesses she
Sjle Kildew stayed l«o or three
hours longer at the poatoffice today
than he aimed to, but he had on his
gloves and was trying to pick up a
slick dinic o»f the floor-
(CoiO'right 1924 George Matthew Adams
for
.a-w——Jfi on
a tight-rope, born in France. Died
in Loudon, Fab. 22, 1897-
1849—Emigrant ship Floridian,
from Antwerp to New York, wreck-
ed onAtia English coast, witn loss
of 290 Itaea.
4851—Samuel W. .McCall, reprt-
sentative in Congress and .three
times governor of' MaasachMotta,
born at East Providence, Ta- Died
at Winchester, Mass-, Nov. 4,-4923.
1869—Alphonse de Lamartine,
celebrated Freflch post, historian
a rd Statesman, died in Paris. Born
Oct. 21, 1790.
1886—Nearly 700 persons perish-
ed in- an earthquake in the Span-
ish province of Granada.
1899—James Madlspn Wells, the
Louisiana governor who was re-
moved from office by Gen. Sheri-
dan, - died at Lecompe, La. Born
■ there in 1808.
' T917—A German conspiracy ’to
1 involve Japiin and -Mex*co in war
with the United States was reveal-
ed.
11122—The marriage ef
Mary and Viscount Lascelles
place in Westminster Abbey.
. meh
American, ip he stops ! “ro
» anTyto hi* thoughts will not f.vr'®*"
Ln *4mh > Z Man ,r _____r
the physical, the mentnl
'. We could not
i thr-wonderful ad- ■
vances that have been made in J he '
i , ,, .V*'. (fields of science and invention in
PIy y**' htl business and rcfen{ years. Hut, as the Independ- I
thus he is estopt from claiming in- ■ ent says, we still need good roads, j
nocence in issuing checks on local probably will for quite
.hanks or Aliat-he. didn't know his j nc°
them after they are built ns well-
Hard
First Trolley
was Kelly fired?”
Second Trolley
cur ’ struck a man at~7
Street and carried him a
the fender. After collecting
nickel from .him Kelly, in
eitement, forgot to ring
and the man was n spotter ”—New-
York Sun.
one
puts
If an
so hard
DO YOU LIKE
GOOD SERVICE?
Then trade with J. A.
Co ok’s Grocery
through February.
We give the service
and make the price and
are very anxious that
you give us a chance to
show you our service.
J. A. COOK GROCERY
Phone 174..'
tF and servjoe.
‘ J X:-Z r . ■ '
flRST GUARANTY STATE BANK
THE BANK FOR EVERYBODY.
. a 541 .•T^’ i
on steering wheids. And his ulti- i
mate intrinsic results will get him
about as far.
The three departments of
should be run with equal care and
attention. We should give enough
time to the physical to keep
things going. We should make
money, we should eat. good food,
bathe ourselves, clothe ourselves,
take exercise ^nd recreation, and
make ourselves as comfortable a*
bur circumstances will permit.
We should give time to the mcn-
tai, and steadily improve ourselves
spins'er friend candid- | intellectually by choosing intelli-
gent companions, by reading good
literature, by attending worthwhile
1 so on-
We should, give enough time to
the spiritual so that all physical
mental, activities will reflect
.idealism which distinguishes
! balance—which in the past has
r teen hn invariable defense—and
his prosecution under existing
Jaws is a ery nearly certain to bring
about eonvietion. The result has
p teen that in that city “hot Checks”
[*". Are confined to out-of-town per-
r irons, and the man who cashes a
| cheek for such without some knowl-
j edge of -ita' character doesn’t de-j
I ■<*rv£ a great deal of consideration.
- — ,* ,. <M-----
■ 7 TO 1 FAVQRABLE.
The Fort Worth Star-Telegram j
tidnks the persistant ratio of. 7 to
1 which those favoring th, I’.ok
peace plan have shown ^irwe the
‘balloting’ Started is sifnifi.-ant and
cannot be lost sight of howexet
~ loud the cry ef -
be rai*C(l again.-t >t " (if th- : ;i'
MBHMW 778 ballot
more than a h.df-million in-
K-dividuals in the United States
---. . .
RMat be taken c« B fnlr)v r.p,, oh.
g; utive CHMs-sectHn „{ th(1 p.p,;^.
The 69,.l72 ballots gnpo;e>d to ■••• ■>. «>iu vue <o
Bbk plan demonstrate the read'- ' uround the country
a*®* of those opposed to entry by Un!,t «
K', * United State* into a world .,cace
Itlf.rT>n|t*ment to record their opposi-
average American, if be stops
fcwlste- kta At____ » . .a.
L 1® that the efforts of tie
InXnited States toward world peace
by the world, and that
EFtNTs Anterfok's duly to contr;but< 1
gftjat effort* in any way passible
injury to our own uational
-He will alao adout, if ta,
[is not prejudiced hcforelxml, that
-the oaly
practicable plan for such
HVWnraplfon He* in toise form of co-
gfi^ieration with the League of Na-
l, tio>is, «a *dea whieh not only is the
coinpoaita prodaet of the best -mrntfs
ef'‘he generation, but also is at-
. w The United Slates can give her
k ^'operation toward peace Without
■Shter averythinking American
Jcrtows it. We can make all the ros-
£ ervatioM we with. and. etill our ar
WAtataMa Will he valuable and well
deceived by the rest of. the world.
1,,-The naianekniiln pteprind.»»,iri<'> -o4-
♦he tavotable Tfffb Tfl The reffifAfT
'-.dum on Lhr H(.k plan re.e?ls the
true sentiment of the country Eveiy
Hnff.n! MRould be made VhrmoM thio
KjMBttsant hr the TOTmofhfHjf h u- I
■MSat election*, so that its effect
1o»t on the next. Ad-
MkrfniMration nd- the next Senate
Bffte MNter-fntete may, of course,
k ttet a half mil-
Merely Misplaced
“Johnny, you’ve been fighting
again and lost all your teeth."
“Naw, I’ve got ’em all in my
pocket."—Santa Fe New Mexican.
llOmAKTMCTlor
We bake daily, so they are
always fresh and delicious.
Phone your grocer or come
by our bakery.
ii
......
■■■■Pte——tan—■—
----------------------
This Date
in History
HIS CHILDREN TO BE
POLICEMEN (lent
PHILADELlTUA—A new record
was established "here when Lorenz
Betag, 67', of Cheltenham, Pa.,
father of 26 children,— embarked
for, thh third time on the matri-
monial sea and led Mrs. Anna M.
Reese, blushing bride of seventy
summers and twice widowed, up
the main aisle of the church.
Nineteen of Betag’s children are
al) his own; nine by his first mar-
riage; ten by his second marriage
His second wife brought him
three stepchildren and he adopted
every- four others. Seven of the children
“I did not raise my boys to be | therly
but to got on the police |
they bridegroom said. "I
ftr r.:;' than any
other man, for twelve of my boys
served in the army. Some record,
eh ?’’
Mrs. Betag has three children
by her first marriage, but (they
all died. She said she could “man-
^ige” her stepchildren, even if they
were old enough to work for them-
sclevs.
in Austria-Hungary, 64 years
today.
Changing T Cox, who mas an-
nounced his intention to retire
from jiublic life at the end of hls
| present term as governor off
Massachusetts, born nt Manchester/
N. . H., 45 years ago today.
Richard P- Ernst, United States
Senator from Kentucky, born at
Covington, Ky., 66 years ago today.
TN THE 'DAY’S NEWS
William Kelly, who has been
elected president *7.f the American
Institute of Mining and Metallurgi-
cal Engineers, is an engineer,
bunker and industrialist of inter-
national reputation Born in New
York, seventy years ago, he took
his B. A. degree from Yale at the .
early age of twenty and- then went
to Columbia university for a
course in mining engineering. Hls
first position was as assistant su- .
perintendant of a copper cotrgianyf
in Phoenixville, Fa. For many
years thereafter the Keystone.
State remained the scene of his
business and professional activities
Then he w»« attracted to- the rich
mining region of the upper
peninsula of Michigan, locating in
the town of Vulcan as general
manager of one of the great iron ,
mining corporations. In later years!
he has acquitad large inttfTests in I
various financial and commercial ,
enterprises in the same section.
New Klan Organization Reiiiilta
ATLANTA, Ga—A new klan orga- [
nization to be known as “Knlfchta
of-the MyvHr Klan,” was the -revolt
of the meeting of those opposed to
the present klan. Headquarters of
the new organization are to be at
Kansas City and it wHl be entire-
ly separate frohi the present klan.
------------1--x-.
The latest novelty displayed by
Paris dealers in footwear is even-'
ing slippers solidly encrusted with
brilliants, from the tips * of the
slender toes to the ankle straps nnd
base of the delicately-curved heels.
"As I was (Crossing the bridge
the other day,” said an Irishman,
“1 met Put d'Urien. ‘O’Brien,’ says
I, ‘how are you?’ ‘Pretty well,
thank you. Brady,’ says he- ‘Brady,’ ,
s«ys 1, ‘that's not my , name *
‘Faith,’ says he, ‘and mine’s not
O’Brien.’ ”1 ’W^VMl
"With that we again looked at
each other, on' sure enough it
was nayther of us”—Shevlin Equa-
lizer. \
! j BibtoTbffiMM |
For Tqday. |
) ■ ■*.-■■»■ , m y.j.
IF TRINE EflEMY ba hungry,
give him thread to eat; and if ha x .
be thirsty, give him water to
drinlte-PraVrba
4 Few can be archaelogists. but all
of ns ean get the* thrill of hard
adventura by digging • up th« rent A
mopey.
What we ean’t understand •«
why an executive need* an ata!*- "■*
tgnt when there is no decent golf
weather.
“ *TFtoW’ OnW there -wnw~*n -m«« -r—
had bean »o perfect »» • 1
boy that he didn't worry when hie
daughter want out with other boys.
Adam repented, but doubtless
there were diy» when he leaned
on the plow handles and thought —
about -how good the apple, tasted-
Correct this sentence: “Just step
into that pool room," said he,
“and yon will discover a score of '
men eager 4o find work.’’ .
y- (Protected- by Awseetated .Editors)—
'** The firit set of the “new ‘game
of lawn tennis” was brought to
tv ii - ■ • v i.i w America in kB76 by Mi»» Mary £•
•'K" ,“t-
INSURANCE
la the beet policy. We have twentf
big compnies and. write Fire, Life
and all other kinds. We alao make
dtv toaaB.' '
iiitiwn, ii»i imWslnilsin ii iWr -alBlCSa;w^r»,
RECORD-CWItONTCL R THURSDAY. FIB N. WM
uninteresting- xubject, to-say the
least of it. And, as a rule, they are
usually more or less worthies’ alontr
with it. Love is-a great thing; in
fact, it is said to be one of tho
greatest influences in the world, but
when a young person reaches the
foolish stage in a love affair hex or
she is usually more or less of a
nuisance to associates until he or
tween banks and business men has she “recovers.”
|« pretty nearly broken up the prac-
u Business houses not only no-, ^hBUp enough, zappelins w ith
tify the officers of bad checks giv- parity for one, two, three anil four
14,en them, but they also notify the1 P*"0"8 wj>> he as common and mi r
7 . . ., , . , , i cheap as Fords. Hut in spite of it
, ■ 9P which they are drawn. an> we wj|| still need good roads—.
J4CHhuc.l|ank* in tbe cdj.’ are gmariz- . Ijenrietta Independent.
- edTTso'o f raet? The resurt”Ts j ... .... ; L •<
t that the persistent driver of such |
— chocks is notified that his business;
lution?
to have taught us much.
There were rode and ill-natured
times, but they
realists.
Americanized
in ilea
where
degree,
ite* on _ _.
jwould reply picturesquely
j works from right in the
to five at night, or
or twelve at night,
f may be.
t It is not the hours
j it is the way -one puts in one's
! hours that counts. If an auto
1 ever so hard In
the department that made its steer-
let other depart-
not
The
might
a day
fuss nnd
anguish,
Slim Pickens fudged on
body 'tvhen he weighed himself the
lasl time, as he sneezed right hard
as the scales balanced.
bne cent. In, addition to its own reputation, your ac-
count at this bank, “the largest State bank in Danton
County,” is protected by the
GUARANTY FUND SYSTEM
1
J
Me and pop v.aa taking a wawk j
before suppir and a eupple of boye
scouts went past looking proud of
thoirselfs and 1 sad, Hay pop, 7 ‘
lleve Id like to be n boy scoi
bleeve■
Weel, it mite not be a bud ideer
nt that, nop sed. You better start
rite in and practice it by-doing a
good dwd every day, he : ed ■
Yes sir, Iv started allreddy, I did
a good deed yeBtiddaj- and I went
end did another one today. I sed.
Well well, you better tell me the
details before I start pinning med-
dles on you, pop sujl ■
Meening u-.at was the good deeds
r.nd I sed, Well III tell yog about the
( ne ye*tidduy ferst.
Yes, by all meens lets have them
in croniltigicnl order, pop sed, and I
| -ic4._Ser '.’ And_ he sed. Go ahed, Im
| lissening and 1 sed. Yes sir, well
i yestidday I vrns fighting with somr
frllovr and at! of n suddin I rentiz-
ed it was bad to fite so I stopped
and wouldcnt start ngen.
You came home with
nose if I remember correckly, pop
sed and I sed, Well, it was kind of
bluddy* but its bin bluddier and pop*
sed, 1 see well. I should say it was
prudent action rather than a
one to stop fighting under
1 conditions.
I Well III tell yow-about the good
deed I did today, I sed- I was wuwk-
ing along and I saw a apple set-
ting on some frunt steps all by it-
| self looking as if nobody dident be-_
long to it, and I quick picked it up
nnd jest then some kid rums run---
ning out of the house say it was his
apple, so I gave him the benefit of
I the doubts and divided it enual wjth
him. Thet was a
it? I sed.
-At Icest it was . iu
sed. You better keep on practicing j cluing houses*' barns, cattae sheds,
however, he sed. . community gardens and a park.
Wich I will if I get cry more f hlfs |)een erected by the boys’
good chances- I classes in home economies at the
Near East Relief Orphanage for
17,000 children," the cablegram
from Alexandropol, Arrnenia,
said.
“The village has been named
Philadelphia in recognitidn of the
relief work by the people df that
city. The name jn Armenian, how-
ever. is Yeghpniragon-Tser.”
This is the third town in the
Near East to bear the name of
Philadelphia. The other two, dat-
ing back twenty centuries or more,
are located in Palestine and
aeeond near Smyrna, in .Asia
nor .They were »
ancient Greeks.
: was (known in
as the “City of Bro-
and Ycghpairagon-
i* t,he Armenian equivalent
Let's see; We thought the Mexi-
can revolution was over. But may
be it is only that the oil scandal
has backed the .Mexican disturbance
off the front page. Anyway, we'd
lost track of the progress of af-
fairs fn the Southern republic, and
do not known whether the revolu;
tion referred to is the one that has
"been going on or another one has
broken out.
invention in
' “ ** ' Strict
ouapantine is hping enforced on all
who have not hud the disease when
they are exposed.
GIFTS FOR EVERY OCCASION
Tallied, Greeting Carda.'
Always give unusual gifts.
THE ART AND GIFT SHOP
408 North Ixxjust.
SPRINCSTYLES
Viewpoints , j
By Robert Quillen
-I-,. .r'1 "rt .<
»teien«ffi. — in»*.w..».a»»aei
aA • • ta.
Genius, after all, is just prdinary
ability wholly purged of lasinesa.
Example of ambiguity: ''You did
me good,” said the man to the
surgeon. • .
When a man goes broke, the
chap at the filling station is la»b
to discover .it.
^The law assume* that a roan
is iannewnt until it is demonstrat-
ed that he is broke.
Nothing in this world is cer-
tain except the intsntioas of a
widower who (toes a c6urting.
Conscience 1a the thing s rtst f rg
yos when mfanneii fails wu„
Vie expected profit. C—
’ lack of humor in
of young sheiks wear-
collar* and sixteen-halr
, street improvement
badly needed is the elimination of
orooka on Easy Street.
A normal husband is qne who
thinks he is about .all any woman
has. a right to expecL. __________
A village H a place where al
fluence consists in having a girl
to dean au ^hs~- house on Satur-
PACT EHTHT
Denton Record-Chronicle
BKOBD-CratONICLB OOMPANT 7
people in olden
were not called „
Hinterland is an ___.
alien word meaning forty
each way from the town
y<W Hve.
,. The old-fashioned family
who gsked the blessing _
meals hud maul* thst were worth
it.
Mr.
me a
\\ a i tor—-“Sorry,
don’t serve t'
is KO
young
esting thing on this mundane sphere
is a man hopelessly in love w>th
another woman .—Mineral Wells In-
dex-
stldh YtTdliiy dial rtbiRdd Area' and
from among so many different
walks of life that it falls little
short of constituting a cross-sec-
tion ef the whole people—a people
who are committed to the idea of
world peace and concerned in any vaft| bH< wmUWp»ta»tae eanstic
word that rends our hearts In twain.
They’n hire no bull In which to speak
isturbed hv par- u( our faults amt crimes, m.r nny
they may
Phone U7.
Our young t, ,
ly admits that the most disinter- ,
plays, lectures, concerts, tfnd
I We should, give enough t
hopelessly
located
near
They
. ....
Philadelphia
Quaker days i
! therly Love,"
Tser i_ -
for ‘‘brotherly love”
■UWLBU .lUW
One month ariloruT
lESilKSlftt
Three month's (In advance)-----
r1, ------12, --?— C------ ,
One year (in Mvance)----<1 J* I
Six menihe (lu a.lvsm-e)______M
three months (in advance)----- .45
The jAsoodated Press is exclusively
tutltled to tbe use for re-publlcstlon of
|11 news dlsput' lies . r.-dited to it or not
Otherwise credited in this paper and
tlso the local news published herein.
Denton, Texas, February 28, 1924
n-, - --——
F From a Roundabout notice the
L -Otter day it seems that tax collec-
F tors have a way of protecting thern-
b* Xilves from the “hot chetjc” artists,
, attaching the bad checks to the tax
f . receipt stub being sufficient to in-
E - validate the receipt. ThenT is,
I: one believes, no good reason why
U overy business house and individual
I j ahould not have *«ffective protec-
"f tion against utterers of such
K checks. It seems reasonable to be-
I ♦ lieve that a statute could be fram-
l ed that would attain that end witb-
> out undue hardship on those iano-
I. cent of any intent to deffaud, but
the fact remains that such a law i who is hopelessly in love is a very
hns mrtyet been evolved. .Persons
continue to issue checks agkmst
p- nonexistent balances and “get by”
k ‘ with it. One trouble is that the
: firm So defrauded is content to let
the matter drop if the hot check
writer will make good the loss. In
one Tegas city concerted action be-
womon as possiblo.
own architects and
too.
trinity composed
k ‘ „l Br,d
spiritual. We could not manifest
ourselves here Were ii not for the
physical. We could not function
here wrme it not for the mental-
And th'*re would be no reason for
tus to be here were It not Tor the
aniritual Now. the men who !S'
affair* in % way to
department of this
trinity i» guilty of the crime of
to |ust that erteiit.
who is spending
flight in the mne direction of mak-
ing money 4n just like tbe Beto
factory that is running lull time
“needaplumberF
If She Can’t Be Chairman— ,
The club woman gets peeved be- 1
cause she wasn't asked to head a i
certain committee—"not that she
was looking for the job, certainly,
not—and she’s sure it there’s some
one whom they Telt was better fit-
ted for the'job why all right, but'
pimuuLdan-’t. ask her to do anything
else for she really prefers to Irt
someone else take her place.”
And the woman in political par-
ty who wasn't asked to be secretary
tit, I I will get out of politics- It’s no place
I for women anyway.”
And ilia man who wasn't chosen
as delegate that Chicago conven-
tion says that wowi makes ' him
sick. They're an tangrateful, unap-
preciative buhch of snobs and he s
been thinking for some time of get-
ting out of that lodge and now’s as
good a time as any •
All Captain*. No Team r
To be sure there may be cause for
a real grievance- back of- ■eeme*of
these plaints, but more often it is
the work of the green-eyed mon-
ster.
To ' keep before oneself the
"cause” in capital letters, to work
for the good of that cause with mo
thought of | self-aggrandizement is
one of the hardest things for many
We can’t all
a cause be fur*
. It's the
that does the work and Wins
— —
r-i-'-sp At. r. -? < ■'
_
°______JI.
8 X
rifil
5“
? »*
1—4 4
V* k ;__J M- ■'
T________
n S:
S
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 169, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 28, 1924, newspaper, February 28, 1924; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1239325/m1/8/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.