Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 27, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 13, 1916 Page: 3 of 6
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U. S. S. KENTUCKY LEAVING FOR CITIZENS’ TRAINING TRIP
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DROP, Sept. 12.—Farmer* are taking
NAVAL TRAINING CRUISE
United States Battleship Kentucky leaving Brooklyn, N. Y. with a large num-
ber of men from business life to learn ffre art of Naval Warfare. J. P. Mor-
gan’s son and other well known families are represented.
ing from strenuous exercise, Sloan's
Litniment gives quick relief. ,'2~ . _ .
„ on hand for emergencies. At your drug-
- •» As Maa. I
w
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Restart
for any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by HalTs Cxtarrh Medtetne
Hall’s Catarrh Medicine has been takec,
by catarrh sufferers for the past thirty-
five rears, and baa become known as the
most reliable remedy for Catarrh. HalTs
Catarrh Medicine acts thru the Blood on
the Mucous surfaces, expelling the Poi-
son from the Blood and healing the dib*
eased portions.
After you have taken Hall’s Catarrh
Medicine for a short time you will see a
great Improvement in your general
health. Start taking Hall’s Catarrh Medi-
cine at once and get rid of catarrh. Send
for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHENET A CO.. Toledo. Ohio.
Telephone No. 7—both phones—and
you’ll get the best grocery service in
Clear Bad Skin From Within.
Pimply, muddy complexions are due
to impurities in the blood. Clear up the
skin by taking Dr. King's New Life
Pills. Their mild laxative qualities re-
move the poisons from the system and
brighten the eye. A full, free non-grip-
ing bowel movement in the 1
is the reward of a dose of Dr. _
new Life Pills the night before.
NEWS FROM SUNNYDALE
sflNNY DALE, Sept. 12— Miss Ella
l
SSH
Jno. Goodnet was here.
Audie Hodges and family of Decatur
visited Jno. I. Wilson.
Jim Knox was called to Ballinger by
the Serious illness of his sister.
Mrs. W. 0. Cleveland is visiting her
son in Grayson county.
Claude Minneriy is attending sehool
in Ponder.
NEWS FROM AUBREY
AUBREY. S*'pt. 12 — J. Brewer was In
Denton.
John Raichford was in Denton.
O. Wilson was In Pilot Point.
Joss Smith was in Sanger.
Ben Whitley of Pilot Point was here.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. L. Nation, Sep-
r IS a boy. .
Misses Kemp and Ixa Johnson were in
Pilot Point.
Roland Pipelinan was in Dallas.
Cecil Rhoades was in Pilot Point.
Miss Pearl Tate of Denton Is here
visiting.
Mrs. Tom Mullins vlisted in Dallas
with her daughter, Mrs. L. Gordon.
Willie Lanford was in Sanger.
John Pielman was in Dallas.
Mrs. la. Holman was In Denton.
Mrs. 8. Wright was in Dalia*.
Mr. and Mrs. R. Caldwell were
Collinsville.
Hugh Tobin was in Denton.
B. Edwards of Pilot Point was here.
Mr*. R. Looper was in Sanger.
Mrs. John Morgan was in Denton.
Cecil Rhoades was in Pilot Point.
Doc Pipelman was. in Ft. Worth.
Mrs. 0. Wilson was in Sanger.
Miss Bertie GhildreSk of Celina visi-
ted here.
W. Mullins was in Dallas.
NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given, as required by
law, that on Sept. 25th 1916, bids for the
School Fund of the Denton City Inde-
pendent School District will be opened,
and the person making the highest and
best bid of interest on the average dal-
ly balances for said fund, to be the
Treasurer for said fund, for the year
beginning Sept. 1st, 1916, and term of
office to expire August 31st. 1917. Right
is reserved to reject any and all bids.
By order of the Board of Trustees. ■
could not do me any g
io give ft up. We trie
but he did not help me.
At last, my mother advised me to take
Cardui, the woman’s tonic. 1 thought
It was no use for I was nearly dead and
aothing seemed to do me any good. But
I took eleven bottles, and now 1 am able,
to do all df my work and my own
cashing.
I think Cardui is the best medicine in
(he world. My weight has increased,
ind 1 look the picture of health. ”
if you suffer from any of the ailments
----hr to women, get a bottle of Cardui
Delay is dangerous. We know
help you, for it has helped *0
, thousands of other weak women
a the par* “---
At all <
1 We deliver your eggs in Star Egg Car-
riers. You have no broken eggs and
J, H. Wright and family visited in
a' Mrs. T. M. Judge was called to Deca-
tur by the serious illness of her. moth-
A new ropm has been added to the er- >
school building and it is expected the W. H. Cope and family visjRd in Jus-
Forget Your Aches.
! Stiff knees, aching limbs, lame back
make, life a burden. If you suffer from
rheumatism, gout, lumbago, ■ neuralgia,
get a bottle of Sloan's Liniment, the
universal remedy for pain. Easy to ap-
ply; it penetrates without rubbing and
soothes the tender flesh. Cleaner and
more effective than mussy ointments or
morning Pouxes. For strains or sprains, sore
r King's niuscles or wrenched ligaments result-
At ing from strenuous exercise, Sloan's'
your druggist, 25c. (Advertisement.) <^<* relief- KeeP »
■■IIMMMM
E -
ft 4. . ,
gk
, I _ W. H. Cope and family visj^d in Jus-
trustees will employ two teachers this tin.
_ Jno Goodne> was here.
Will Christian says-he Expects- to
make 30 bales of cotton from sixty-five
acres while G. L. McClendon is
pecting thirty or forty ’ bales
eighty acres.
Tom Miller has built k new-
house on his farm.
Mrs. Robert Young' visited her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Grubbs, of
Sanger.
SHADY GROVE, Sept.
Mrs. George Robinson _
Mrs. Mood Gann and children visited
her father. Mr.. Smith, near Stony.
Mr and Mrs. William Bishop visited
here.
Mrs. Lillian Thomason was in Ponder.
Miss Eunice Thomason visited here.
Lloyd Parr is visiting his brother
here.
Henry McClary was here.
Mrs. Luther Parr and children visi-
ted in Justin.
Luther Parr attended Tra^-s' Day si
Justin.
Mrs. George Robinson was In Ponder.
Mr. and Mrs. M<>od Gann visited in
Ponder.
Mr. and Mrs. Crouch of McKinney vis-
ited here.
Ray Swafford visited in Justin.
Mrs. Sanders and
here.
Mrs. Sanders and
here.
Clarence Faughtner visited here.
Mullins of Denton visited here.
J. W. Stuart and daughter, Miss Aline,
George Ryan and sister, Miss Ruby, and
Mr. Lindsey were delegates chosen from
the Alton Baptist church to attend the
association, which qvets at Hebron.
Mr. Lane went to Denton.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Stuart have moved
into their new home recently erected.
There will be Surviay school at Alton
Sunday morning.
Miss May Taylor of Corinth visited
her sister, Mrs. Anderson.
There was singing al Mr. and Mrs. J.
W., Stuart’s Sunday night.
Mr. and Mrs. 0. L. Bryan visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Garrison,
near Corinth.
NEWS FROM LOIS .'I
LOIS, Sept. IL—J. B. Wells has com- ■
pleted a new house for Richard Weeks advantage of the nice weather and are
and is making improvements on the old gathering corn and cotton,
house. -* ‘
Cotton picking is -in full blast here. Krum.
The yield is expected to be about
third of a bale to the acre.
HEWS raw SHADE DROVE*'
Utui
II.—Mr. and
re in Denton.
Ready, Ky.—*' 1 was not able io do
anything for nearly six months,” writes
Mrs. Laura Bratcher, of this place, “and
was down in bed for three months.
I cannot tell you how 1 suffered with
my head, and with
womanly troubles.
Our family doctor told my husband he
od, and he tiad
another doctor,
aS
..2
■
NEWS FROM CORINTH
CORINTH, .Sept. 12—Mrs. Lewis Grif-
fith, who has been ill for sometime, is
mueh worse.
Messrs. George Th ah on and Carl Gar-
rett left for Fannin county.
Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Carpenter and Mr.
and Mrs. L. T. Fowler left in the Gar-
!• •-ni er car for Sunset to attend pres-
bytery.
Miss Matilda McCraw was in Denton.
Miss Ruby Bounds entertained about
1 forty-five friends in honor of her fif-
I leenth birthday Saturday afternoon,
Mr. ahd Mrs. Will Fowler have moved
into one of Mr. Carpenter's rent houses.
| Among those - in Denton Saturday
I were: Messrs. W. A. Bounds, J. P. Gar-
rison, W. H. Wiley. J. W. Crubaugh,
R. L. Fowler, Harry Henson and Grady
Yancey.
Miss Ollie Scotl, who attended Ihn
Teachers' Institute in Denton and who
has been elected assistant teacher In
the Corinth school for (he coming term,
visited here.
The families of Messrs. Homer Coch-
ran and Jim Trotter attended services
at Garza.
Mr. and Mrs. 8. T. Thomas and daugh-
ter, Miss Artie, were in Denton.
Mrs. Nora Pender and children of
Gainesville visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. G. H. Henson.
Miss Ruby Fowler has been suffer-
ing with a badly infected foot.
Miss Mae Taylor visited Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Anderson of near Club Lake.
A number from Sunny Dale al tended
singing at the Christian church Sunday
night
T. L. Mitchell and family visited near
Frisco.
Mesdames Verge and Mary Bennett
and Misses Mary and Vera Bennett of
Garza visited Mr. and Mrs. Bud Bennett.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Smith and family
visited at Center .Point.
SAVES DAUGHTEB
Yn, Bnok Up Yppp
Washboard !
Dtapt ft teMk rww to
HWiAU M-. W
Aa4 bg waft pasfta mm
a
DE
(gr RUTH
CAMERON
Denton
visited
GONE FOR GOOD.
want
untried
an
7
I
Send your soldier a
I
Our
1
Bad Cold«i From Little Sneezes
Many colds that hang on all
start with a sneeze, a sniffle.
NEWS FROM MAY.
MAY, Sept. 12.—Among those in Den-
L--
Results That Last are What Appeal to
Denton People.
Kidney sufferers in Denton
more than temporary relief.
They want results that last—
'Results like Mr. Clark tells about.
His was a thorough test.
Three years Is a long time.
Doan’s Kidney pills have stood the
test and stood it well.
Why experiment with
medicine ?
People here in Denton have shown the
way. .
R»sad Mr. ClaTk’s story:
J. N. Clark, carpenter, 48 Stroud St.,
Dentan, says: “A sharp, cutting pain in
my back disturbed my rest at night. On
getting up in the morning, I felt sore
and lame, which made it impossible for
me to do any kind of work. A feeling
of languor also clung to me. Doan’s
Kidney Pills are the medicine I always
use whenever I have such trouble from
my kidneys.” (Statement given January
18, 1912.)
On April 23. 1915, Mr. Clark said: “I
still have unlimited faith in Doan's
Kidney Pills and recommend them just
as strongly as I did three years ago, as
they gave me a cure that has lasted.”
Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply
ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s
Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Clark
has twice publicly recommended. Fos-
ter-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.
We bought heavily last spriug when
been broken up. For that stuffed-up
feeling, tight chest or sore throat take
a dose of Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey and
prevent a wearing, hacking cough
dragging through the winter. At your
druggist, 25c. (Advertisement.)
You will appreciate the h.< ; j-like fla-.
vor of Stone’s Cakes. A shipment fresh
from the ovens at Dallas by express;
every day. Six varieties—each a dime.
Order of Long A King.
—
tX all the innumerable kinds of sel-
fishness I think there are few less ex-
cusable than keeping to one’s self the
complimentary things that one thinks.
; It’s such a dog-in-the-manger trick.
You don’t get any pleasure out of keep-
ing them, while the people to whom
you should have given them would
have gotten 1 great deal.
Last night when I was brushing my
hair I remembered how lovely my sis-
ter’s hair had looked when ’She came
Mown to breakfast in the morning.
Hair and Finger Nails are Health Bar-
ometers
The hair and the finger nails, they
say, show a lose or gain in vitality the
most quickly, and her hair had shown
her Improved health by heightened col-
or and Increased life. Moreover, the
damp morning had produced several
charming little eurls and a chance fe-
licity ha the placing of the coil at Just
1 the right angle gave the finishing touch.
That was what I had thought.
And what had I said?
Not one word.
| That Queer Cm^tnint is Being Nice to
Those We Love.
/- F .don’t know. I think someone had
L’ distracted my mind by asking what kind
I of cereal I wanted. Or perhaps that
I strange constraint we are apt to feel
I about saying nice things to those we
| Jove best tied my tongue. Anyhow I
, didn’t speak and the whole matter slip-
ped my mind until the act of brushing
I my own hair brought it back.
I 1 if we could only manage to clear
I away the 'rubbish of carelessness or
I '1 constraint or whatever it is that chokes
I I the passage through which a thought
I (compliment gets Into words, what a lot
» . —w«——
ton were: *G.’ W. Tuley, Alvin Reed,
Cub Gray, Jim Sims, Jack Sims, Mack
Wilson, Joe Grissom, Mr. and Mrs. J.
M. McCrary and Wallace Clayton.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Blagg visited in
cr-"n Valley.
Little J. T. Sim§ has been sick but is
better.
Miss Nannie Wilson was at Cooper.
Armond Anderson of Cooper Creek
was here.
The following were- at Mr. and Mrs.
Sallie Carpenters' Sunday: Misses Eva
Lynch', Susie and Grace Gray, Stella
Wilkerson and Grace Griffith, and
Messrs. Clyde Wilkerson, Charlie Gray
and John Welsh.
Mr. Evans of Little Elm was here.
Elbert Dell is here visiting.
E. Stover was in Trinity.
The health in this part of the county
is very good.
Miss Gladys Mercer entertained the
young folks with a birthday party Sat-
urday night.
G. W. Tuley was in Little Elm.
E. Stover was in Little Elm.
Mrs. Ethel Blagg and baby and sister,
Miss Euna Lynch, were in Denton.
Mr. and Mrs. Richey of Lloyd were
ehre.
Bud Wilkerson of
Charlie Castleberry.
of happiness we would add to the gen-
eral fund!
I am sure many unhappy, or just
not happy marriages would become ac-
tively happy If the parties tried this.
How Much Better Brothers and Sisters
Mould Get Along.
And think how many households
would be more harmonious if broth-
ers and sisters thought this worth
while.
We all know the warm glow in the
heart, the sense of something pleasant
having happened that permeates our be-
ing and lights up the whole day when
we receive a sincere and unexpected
compliment.
It makes one more good-natured,
doesn't it, and more kindly disposed to
the person who gave it. And by that
same token it oils the whole machinery
of daily life.
A spoken compliment is twice blessed
—it blcsseth him who gives and him
who receives.
Vest Pocket
Autographic Kodak
This AifWent little lure-maker
is Ifte Soldier’s Kodak. So small that
ba e«a we«r it, so meehanlealiy and
photographically right, .that results
| follnw as • matter of course.
VEST POCKET AUTOGRAPHIC ItODAK
Pine-Tar Relieves a Cold.
Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey contains all
the soothing elements of the pine for-
— - , ~ esL- It heals the irritated membrane, I
prices were low^r for our fall supplies an(j by ,ts antiseptic properties loosens
and we. are giving our patrons the bene- <he phlegm, you breathe easier, and
fit of the savings. Compare our prices what promised to be a severe cold has
and then remember Turner Bros, ser- j - .......
vice. TURNER BROS. Both phones 7.
St. Charles Coffee—the best coffee
sold in Denton—at Turner Bros. Both
phones 7.
To Drive O A Malaria
Aad Build Up The System
Take the Old Standard GROVE’S
TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know
what you are taking, as the formula is ..
printed on every label, showing it is
Ouinin^ a nr) Irnfi in a form r
y ■
11
Grow,
winter
, a sore
throat, a tight chest. You know the
symptoms of colds, and you know
prompt treatment will break them up.
Dr. King's New Discovery, with Its
soothing antiseptic balsams, has been
breaking up colds and healing coughs of
young fnd old for 47 years. Dr. King’s
New Discovery loosens the phlegm,
clears the bead, soothes the irritated
membrane and makes breathing easier.
At your druggist, 50c. (Advertisement.)
NEWS FROM TRINITY
TRINITY, Sept. 12.—A good rain fell
here that will help pastures but it was
not sufficient for stock water. 4- <
Mrs. Joe Grissom was In Sa.; .er. '
Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas of Vernon
are visiting here. 4
Bill Blagg and family visited Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas of Gribble Springs.
John Welsh, Mack Wilson and Joe
Grissom were in town.
Roy Gray and C. H. Castleberry were
in town.
• George Owens and family visited in
town.
Mr. and Mrs. Miller of near Denton
visited Mr. McCrary.
Season tickets with reserved seats on sale at O. M. Curtis’ Drug Store, October 2, $3.50 and $4.00, or two
tickets to one person for $6.00 and $7.00, respectively.
LV
'^*5
CLIFFORD DEVEREUX AND HIS COMPANY
“The Taming of the Shrew”, 75c.
“The School for Scandal”, 75c.
“The Fee Unexpected”, 75c.
Twenty-five of the best artists on the stage.
A car-load of scenery. Forty trunks of artistic costumes de-
signed and made especially for the plays in which they appear.
she possesses the means of expressing varied emotions and sentiments
by felicitous variations of its color.”—Richard Aldrich in the New York
Times, October 29, 1915.
“Miss Peterson, in addition to a charming personality, possesses a
voice of remarkable beauty. It has dramatic possibilities and also is
effective in lyric singing. *It is powerful, but also capable of being used
with fine effect in pianissimo work.”—New York Herald, October 29,
1915.
“♦ ♦ * Voice of great purity and evenness of timbre. She used it
discreetly, yet when the time required it, it showed ample power and
brilliancy. Her use of mezzo-voce was especially commendable and
throughout the program she gave evidence of a fastidious taste and a
just perception.”—New York Tribune, October 29, 1915.
COU]
■
GIOVANNI MARTINELLI
Tuesday, October 17, 1916. Single Number, $1.50.
Mr. Martinelli is generally recognized as the second greatest tenor
in the world, and by many is ranked with Caruso.
“His voice is that rarest of vocal treasures, a perfect tenor.”—Phil-
adelphia Bulletin.
“Mr. Martinelli sang Rhadames in Aida, winning in the Nile scene
a veritable triumph.”—New York Tribune.
“He is easily the most important addition to the roster of the Metro-
politan in a number of years.”—New York Journal. -
truly musical timbre. One can listen long to such a voice, especially
when it is used with interpretative skill. That Miss Peterson has such
skill she conclusively proved in her German^and French songs. All
were well sung, with variety of mood, with delicate coloring and tone
and with intelligience. * ♦ ♦ New interpreters of songs equipped so
graciously as Miss Peterson are indeed rare, and one who shows some-
thing of poetic imagination, together with warmth of feeling and a sense
of humor, is doubly welcome.”—W. J. Henderson in the New York Sun,
October 29, 1915.
“Personal charm Miss Peterson has in abundance, and for all we *
know, she may be an excellent actress. But what was even more sig-
nificant yesterday, she revealed a voice of exceptional beauty—a high
soprano—pure, limpid, expressive and admirably equalized throughout
its range; a command of the technique of vocalization that does honor to
her distinguished teacher, Jean de Reszke; artistic taste, intelligence, in-
sight and a keen feeling for dramatic values. She proved, in short, that
she is not only a singer of unusual talent, but a finished artist.”—Max
Smith in the New York Press, October 29, 1915.
“Miss Peterson disclosed a ; oice and style of unusual beauty and a
truly artistic nature. She is young and her voice has youthful fresh-
ness and brilliancy. Its texture is well equalized throughout Its range.
Its timbre is often of great inherent beauty and sympathetic quality, and .
MRS. PERCY PENNYBACKER
Monday, November 13, 1916. Single Admission 50c.
One of the foremost women of the land.
Four years National President of the women’s federated clubs.
May PETERSON
Single Admission, $1.00
The best and ablest critics in the East have this season hailed May
• Peterson as a genuine success.
“Miss Peterson’s yoice is beautiful. It is a rich and full bodied so-
nrano. of which the whole medium scale is even, well paced, and of
COI_.I_.EGE OF INDUSTRIAL ARTS 1916-1917
..-V » - • W.. . '
**
■
The College of Industrial Arts last year set a new record in Denton entertainment by offering a course in which there was not a single inferi
number and by giving a series of Sunday afternoon sacred concerts for the benefit of its students and the Denton public. The College fully appreciat
the patronage and the good will of the Denton people and believes that they appreciate what the College has done, and will continue to do, for tt
community in the way of providing entertainment which educates and refines the tastes and the ideals of cultured people.
The Artists’ Course of the College of Industrial Arts for this season is composed of numbers which are ranked in their respective lines as being
at the very top, not only in America but in the world.' The students of the College and the people of Denton will give support and patronage to an
Artists’ Course of such excellence and commanding merit. They will get value received for their money and will not go away in disgust and disappoint-
ment as if they had attended a cheap fourth-class performance, which neither educates nor elevates. The people who purchase season tickets to the
Artists’ Course will be admitted to the Sunday afternoon sacred concerts and have the same seats reserved.
The College is especially proud to be able to offer this superb list of world-renowned artists to its students and the people of Denton.
____________________________ ■ ■
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 27, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 13, 1916, newspaper, September 13, 1916; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1240229/m1/3/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.