Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 39, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 27, 1916 Page: 4 of 6
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SAYS BARON BEYANS
< 1-
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feel like your smoke past
thousand-dollar bill I It's worth that in happi-
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ness and contentment to you, to every man
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of
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of Military
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of Photog-
Wireless
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It is more difficult to place a man f»-
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re-
Now, that may sound terribly silly,
hal
and now Roumania—she will
sustain
NEWS FROM Si
in
were
I
J
HUNTS
Beginning Sept. 29th
Morris & Collier
let us
Vial.
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2
fi
dinm®
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hskmz---r*
rfXLKS
K CAMERON
Painting
and
ORDERS
ML
BE
FILLED
6t Baseball,
of Christian
And so the Easter lilies came.
-Bewail Read.
8WEET ENOUGH FOR YOU.
A LITTLE dream of white
"■Y And a little stream of blue.
And that's the Easter bonnet
That is sweet enough for you.
A kiss beneath that bonnet
Is as sweet as honeydew,
And the ribbon blue upon it
Tanglee all the heart of you.
' —Atlanta Constitution.
rrMna
I w
■
■■
• / —" -
Of Mrs. Chappell, of Fhre Years'
t
wl
because men’s clothes are more stand-
ardised.
s
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MaT
ii'lRl
color
* -
Ices
IO
’ Most of the quick -sales and rentals
of property are made through classified
advertising.
SEVERE PUNISHMENT
a -
Present or mail to this
paper three coupons like
the abore with ninety-eight
cento tocover cost of hand-
w
M (/,
oto Get It
i Mars Nominal Coot of
mtom «n4 DistH'larisa
I- '
! 5 I
I
It-
•EATING THE WEATHER. '
TT rained. The skies
A Were dark and drear.
But still his laugh
Was full of cheer.
Ho did not growl
Nor rail nor pout.
And just for that
The run camo out.
—Houston Poet
on a lazy liver. Liver ills are back of
c«»ated tongue, bad breath, biliousness
and muddy, sallow complexion. Insuf-
ficient flow of bile leaves impurities
in the liver which poison the entire sys-
tem. Po-Do-Lax is Nature’s remedy. It
stimulates the activity of the liver, in-
creases the flow of bile, and by its lax-
ative quality carries off the waste and
clears the complexion. At your druggist,
S>c. < Advertisement.)
HOU8ECLEANINQ DAY.
f I SHINGS about ths house today
i Are not just as they were
A week or so ago^ because
X The furniture’s astir.
The sofa’s piled with bric-a-brac.
My easy chair is where
The dining table used to be
And all the floors are bare.
My footsteps echo through the halls,
A deep, sepulchral sound.
The books I used to love to read
Are nowhere to be found.
The pictures that adorned the walls
Adorn the walla no more.
Tfte clock has left the mantel and
la ticking on the floor.
The beds that yesterday were where
All decent beds should bo
Have been removed, so I am toM,
For sake of purity.
The smell of varnish's In the air.
And in her eager search
For-garma and flies and things like these
From off Its lofty perch
The lady of the house has knocked
The cooing dove of peace
And given unto happiness
An absolute release.
X sat me down today to dine
Close by the kitchen range.
Mid pots and pans and other things
Equally as strange
To one who'd never learned to cook
Or do a scullion's work.
And ate such odds and ends of food
As in all larders lurk.
I hope that some time I shall live
Forever and for aye
Where time is never marked by what
We call housecleaning day.
—Unidentified.
f
I i
I r I—
f i
_________________-I
OF HIGH PRICE SEED
i MIS.
lA'vje. pH'y
in!
noticed his shoes, of light yellow, cheap
looking leather and made with that su-
per-accentuated box-toe and lavish per
forations. They were not free from mud
_______ Molly looks chiefly at mouths. She j and they were topped by striped stock-
her part of the burden of the war to the i rejected one unconscious suitor because
very end. Belgium will come back to] of the full lines over the mouth that
her own, in her place In the sun, and are apt to spell sensuality, and another
to complete freedom and independence.”
bU Temper From Bad Liver.
i
side of the Allies. Belgium has shaped
her course, and with the powerful sup-
port of her allies—England, France,
A
sw Universities Dictionary
RECORMHRmE
/
*
in
THE NATH
■ new ufi
THE 8PIRE AND THE CHIMNEY.
a SPIRE unto a chimney spoke,
/V "Tou must not stain me with your
Z__> smoka.; .
"A- wondrous beauty in me ilea
I point the people to the skies."
"Tour carven stone Is always cold.
But warmth like human hearts I hold.
"By day I show a rolling cloud.
By night a fiery pillar proud.
"And when men truly understand
f lead them to ths promised land.’’ .
—New York Bun.
Davie of Denton was here.
Charlie Gray is no better.
Bart Blagg and family visited her
father, Mr. Gregory, near Aubrey.
a___ , . - _ • . Mrs. Bina Clayton visited her sister,
A 8Pfrlt *00d- Mrs. Walter Beaird.
Fred Wilson and family were here.
Joe Grissom is ill.
Roy Gray narrowly escaped injuries
Saturday when «his buggy top caught
against a telephone wire.
Grandma Stephens is ill.
George Owens and family
Hemming.
HOW EASTER LILIES CAME.
rT^HEY grew beside ths carven
I tomb—
I Great, gorgeous flowers of
X tropic gloom.
The sunset blaze mirrored
there
Within their petal's dainty flare—
Rare sangs de boeufs in floral bloom.
That morning, when pale Mary
came.
The first sweet Easter day, in shame
And sorrow for her master's scorn.
Her tears, like pearls, how sadly
bom.
Washed whits those regal flowers
of Arena.
feeling and of confidence prevailed, so
far as we were concerned. I have rea-
son to know this, as I was Minister.at
Berlin up to the opening of the war,
and had opportunity to observe the mu-
tual relations existing.
“Germany had sought to spread the
legend that Belgium had a secret treaty
with England relating to Antwerp. But
that is faise. There is no such treaty,
and never was such a treaty. Certainly
if such a document existed I would
know of it, and I affirm to you, on my
honor, that it-does not exist. No. the le-j
gend of the secret treaty is a pure in-
vention set up to justify. In the eyes of
the world, the crime against Belgium.
“In refusing the demand of Germany
to cross Belgium, we were simply per-
forming a duty. We were bound to act
toward our German neighbor to the
East just as we would have, done to-
i ward our French neighbor to the West,
for our duty and all our interests tend-
ed to maintain the same attitude to-
ward the powerful neighbors on our
iwo frontiers. Suppose France had been
the one to ask the right to cross Bel-
gium and to attack Germany. We_would
have been bound to refuse it. And bad
such a demand ever been made, and ev-
er been granted.-what would Germany
have said? It would have denounced ais
as violators of a treaty, and as false
and dishonorable. Doubtless the world
would have agreed with this view, had
Belgium taken such a course.
No French Designs.
“But, happily, this contingency did
not arise. France never sought to enter
Belgium. Yet here again Germany has
sought to set up a legend that French
designs on Belgium led to the. German
Invasion of the country. But that le-
gend has been abundantly disproves.
No, Germany's course In entering Bel-
gium was purely a strategic military i
operation, carefully planned long In ad- 1
You’ve heard many an
F patented process that cuts out bite and parch i
smoke your fill without a comeback! Stake your 1
SANGER. Sept. 26—The Denton Coun-
ty Fair opened here Monday with a
large attendance that was estimated at
anywhere from 6,000 to 7,500-people. The
exhibits are excellent and there are
many attractions with more to come
including a balloon ascension, fireworks
and other things. The big parade Mon-
day opened the weeks’ fair. The float Moreland,
bearing the Sanger Queen, Miss Grace
McMurtry, and princesses, Misses Ora
Gentle, Grace Koons, Bess Rice and Al-
yne Duncan, was awarded the prize, here.
Several of the neighboring cities and
towns had princesses in the procession
and these included Misses Rita Beyette
and Corinne Bottorff of Denton, Mias
Smith of Aubrey and Misses Harrell End
Scott of Denton. The knights wre
Messrs. Fred Hansel, Rom Hampton,
Frank Elkins and Herschell Andrews.
The parade is planned again for Fri-
day.
Mrs. Roland Crowley of Valley View
is visiting her mother, Mrs. J. M. Perry.
Miss Bonnie Wood of Pilot Point ia
visiting her father, Jno. A. Wood.
J. R. M. Patterson. Mr. and Mrs. Law-
rence and Miss Ruth Young of Gaines-
ville were here.
Mrs. Frank -Newton and Mrs. Clay
Newton of Valley View were here.
Miss Laura Clack of Era is visiting
Miss Nora Echols.
Mr. and Mrs. L. Morter and daugh-
ter of Gainesville, Mr. and Mrs. Best of
Burkburnett Luther Burnett and fam-
ily of Burkburnett were guests at the
McMurtry home.
Lee Echols of Valley View was here.
George Atkins of Gainesville was at
it is very probable with the high
price of seed wheat and to the fact
that it is almost impossible to
»cet desirable seed at any price
that a large part of the wheat land in
Denton county this yetr will be planted
to oats or some other crop. Good seed
wheat cannot be bad for less than $1.50
where it is bought from local sources
and the better grades are bringing 11.60.
There is a very small quantity to be had
at these figures through this section
'nU° ’"J4 w111 cost a bu»hel
- w* VAVA V«-*
tant.
Several instances have come to the
attention of local parties where former
large wheat growers of the county are
planning to reduce their acreage anoth-
er year and others are arrangirfg to
plant other crops altogether should the
present prices continue. It is impossible
to get an estimate now from local men
generally well informed on the situa-
tion over the county as to what the
probable acreage for the year will be.
In different parts of the county the
breaking of wheat Jand has started but
so far as is known there has been little
sowing yet. A goodly number o*
those who will face th* high cost of
seed in -the expectatipn of getting a
high price for their crop next spring
j a re expected to begin planting by the
first of the month in places where the
land has been prepared. Figuring the
planting of seed at 61.50 it would cost
now 1750 to plant a 400 acre tract aside
from the preparation of the land and
drilling.
In case special seed was used, which
costa about a dollar a bushel more than
the market wheat, the cost for seed
for that acreage would amount to |1»-
250.
. I
Rednced Prices en Dry Cleaning
The following prices will prevail until further
notice—
V^Dry cleaning ladies and mens suits $1.00
Dry cleaning ladies and mens coats $1.00
Ladies and mens suits dyed $2.50 &. $3.00
We have as well equipped dry cleaning and
dyeing plant as needed to do first class work.
Give us a trial.
in prices fi
■
411
s
a ’
Tie a string around your finger then you wen’t forget the
Record-Chronicle
to readers at a mere cost ot> handling . .
The New Universities Dictionary
The Importaoce -of this great diet ionary to the public cannot be overestimat-
ed. We urge those of our readers who have not yet done »o, to at once avail
h*SMrfves of our generous coupon ^jff» r.
Used ad a guide ia bustoem and social rorrespondenre. The New Universities
mdlonary provides a complete education. It is the only dietionyy in extet-
«jee that givea the definitions of thousands new words. You need it too keep
B - fa step with progress. Get oae U>doy. - w
“There is a time for sympathy." “Yep,
but when a fellow’s just missed a two-
foot putt is not the time for it."—De-
troit Free Press. - «
-
Side
RUTH
■
L V
STOP THOSE
PAINS
AT ONCE
RHEUMATISM
Neuralgia-Headache
*rh fame of this remedy
has traveled from Snyder,
Okla^ to Boston, Mass.
i Read |he following letter:
*1 heard of Hant's Light-
ning QU from a friend of
mine Uving in, Snyder.
Okla.. R. F. D. Na 2. Her
name is Mrs. Bowland—
She write. ‘If you once use
| Hunt's' Lightning OU1 you
will never be Without it,!—
and neither would L It is
invaluable for Rheumatic
pains, especially for hold-
ing the heat with a. flannel
Application,*’—writes Mrs.
B, H. Everett, 581 -Massa-
chusetts Ave., Boston,
Mass. Especially fine for
Neuralgia, Headaches and
the like, Cutawnd Burns
are instantly soothed.
HUNTS
LHinilG OIL
Sold and Guaranteed
cany ly
f
All Druggists
i
ings.
While a man next him in a slightly
shabby suit was marked 0. K. when wo
took stock of his shoes, of a darker
leather, made on long plain lines, im-
maculately polished and topped with
thin black lisle stockings
You Can Often Tell a Gentleman hy His
Nails. .
Carefully kept nails, too, denote the
gentleman even in shabby clothes.
My pen runs away with me. But t»
was such funt And such harmless fun I
Now were we smug enough not k>
wonder what criticisms they would
have passed on us had they chosen to
play at the same game.
TSL5W
frjr red tta. and In
Jar fact, evary Prince
F Albert package, haa
a reel meoeece-to yaw
an its ravarae aide Yea’ll
read:— Preceee Patented
Inly mth, SWT- Thetweane
that the United OteteeGov.rr
tnenl hat granted a patent on the
proeeee by which Prince Albert le
made. And by wAtocb taagae brte and
rhmaf parch are eat oaf/ Kvery
. whore tobacco la odd you’ll And
Prince Albert awaiting you
intoppy radbaea.Sc: tidy
'.d tine. Ibelhandeom.
dNF V pound end half-pound
\ tin humidors and io
B* 1 that elever eryetal-
% glaee humidor, with
YR, \ oponge ■ moisten er
\ lop, that hMpa the
vSkw \ *"*7Z^o’? *"eh
vance, and without the slightest justi-
fication of being a defensive move
against French designs. Against that,
out* King and government took the only
path open to them—the path of honor.
There was nothing remaining but to de-
fend onr freedom, sword in hand, at the
price of the nation's best blood—a free-
dom that the Germans, after defeating
France, would have withheld from us
all the more scornfully had we be^n
west enough to listen to them and cow-
ardly enough to obey them,
- “But Belgium will have her compen-
sations when her complete indepen-
part of the peace settlement and an ad- j raarry if we had to choose from the We ,ound shoes were one or the
equate indemnity has been provided for; specimens of the male sex there die-'be8t indexes. You can tell a high-class
her and the time of reckoning is fast i piayed. 8hoe n?ore »u«Jy lb«n >?»> c*n P,ac«
approaching. Roumania is the latest to j Now’ that may sound terribly silly.'
speak and cast the weight of her influ-; but you can’t imagine how amusing and
ence and power in Jhe balance on the I interesting it is until you have tried it.
gives an impetus fa the study of fa- “ ~~
ces as indexes to character.
poll vi iin aiuca—nsUBit&uiA, rituuc,
Russia, Italy, Japan, Portugal, Serbia, -Molly Looks at Mouths.
IUU« IHIUTB, rviuprrir ana awwwiuir.y w,
tfaaal offer ever made to newspaper reader*.
...
the S. P. Echols b««. few,--. •
Hugh Corbin of Valley View was here.
Mr. and Mrs. John Cxktwell of Gaines-
ville were here.
Misses Mary Jane Rector,Corinne Bot-
torff, Rita Beyette of Denton were at
the George Hughes home.
' Mr. and Mrs. Ed McNeil of Dalias are
attending the Fair.
Mrs. Jim Bright and little daughter
of McKinney are visiting Rev . Mr.
Mrs. J. W. Douglas and daughter are
here.
Mrs R. P. Head of Valley View was
Mrs. Zoe Vaughn of Gainesville was
here.
Herman Recd and Hugh Butler were
here.
Misses Given Chambers am
Robinson of the C. I. A. were
Mrs. Ruby of Dallas to
Mrs. M J. Nance.
Mrs. Wm. Wand of Gain
the guest of Miss Ella Vai
Mrs. Bruce of Krum visl
kin.
Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Mil
Annie, Nr. and Mrs. Slau<
and Mrs. Beyette of Dei
the Fair.
Mrs. Tatum of Sherman was
of Mrs. E. L. King.
Miss Elftabeth Storrie of
here. -
Mr. and Mrs L W
are visiting Mi
Mrs. Gillam
Lois were her
J. B. Wells
Lois are bare.
Mr. and Mrs.
tended the Fa
rs. Jim McBride.
^and Mtos Ida Gillam of
Tod Miss Cecil Wells of
Lidkey of Gainesville al-
25 Special Dictiea-
aries ia Oae
Dictionary of Football.
Dictionary of the Au-
tomobile.
Dictionary
Dictionary
canisms.
Dictionary
Weights.
Dictionary
Dictionary
Names.
Dictionary
i.’lOO pages
Bound Like a Bible
m ~ ~ . Stamped in Gold
MONFA BACK—H not Mithfied bring back the book and this paper will
fnad your money.
FuH Limp Leather. Type all neV. Thousand* of New words.
Bert Hlustraied Dictionary in the World.
GBEAT COUPON OFFER ALMOST MAKES IT A GIFT
■ Price UM-Yours For Only ONE COUPON and 98 Cents,
today's Cnupen From Pape
who knows what can be
gotten out of a chummy
jimmy pipe or a makin’s
cigarette with J
Piince Albert for £
Dicljoi
Addi
Dictionary of Golf.
of Lacross. •
of Lawn
Mt. Airy, N. C.—Mrs. Sarah M. Chap-
pell of this town, says: “I suffered tor
five years with womanly troubles, also
stomach troubles, and my punishmtuil
was more than any one could tell.
1 tried most every kind of medicine,
but none did me any good. .
I read one day about Cardui, the wo-
man’s tonic, and I decided to try it 1
had not taken but about six bottles until
I was almost cured. It did me more
rood than ail the other medicines I had
tried, put together.
My friends began asking
looked so well, and 1 told
Cardui. Several are now tai..„
Do you, lady reader, suffer
such as headache, backache,
Gems In'Verse
———————————-(>
NEWS FROM TRINITY
TfUNITY, Sept. 27.—Lawrence Sims
of Lone Oak visited O. B. Sims.
Guy Gunnels and Allen Wilson nar-
rowly escaped serious injury Saturday
when their team ran away with them.
Mrs. Walter Beaird is ill.
Miss Annie Tigert of Aubrey is visit-
ing here.
C. H.
K Uncle
me why I
them about
it”
of Polo.
of State
I Names and Meanimcs.
| Dictionary of
I Telegraphy.
' Dictionary of
of Like and Opposite
Meaning.
Dictionary of Yachting.
of Aviation.
df Amerl-
Dictionary
Dictionary
Tennis.
Dictionary
and Naval Terms.
Dictionary of Most
Common Abbrevia-
tions..
Dictionary of Music.
Dictionary of Noted
Characters in Litera-
ture.
Dictionary
raphy.
Dictionary
Dictionary
' ■ * -- - ----------•- ■■■ '■ !-----------‘
Fann Loans—Stock Fanns and Ranches.
“Lowest Possible Rate.”
"epayment Privileges Unequalled.
Will appreciate any business entrusted to us.
stract office in connection. Efficient and guaranteed
service insured.
Luoan and Investment Co.
ton County National Bank Building. R P. IAJMAX. President. Rooms 1 and k
of Classical
Abbreviations.
Dictionary of
mercial Law.
DlclTdnary of Everyday
Allusions.
Dictionary of Foreign
Words and Phrases.
mary of Forms of
Iress.
HAVRE, France. Sept. 27.—“Belgium
will come back to her own, to her place
‘in the sun, and to complete freedom
and independence.” said Baron Be ye ns,
Minister of Foreign Affaire of Belgium,
in the course of an authorized interview
given to the Associated Press.
Baron Beyens is one of the notable
figures of the present war, for up to the
beginning of the war he was the Bel-
gian Minister at Berlin and went thru
the crisis culminating in the first blow
at Belgium and the immediate entry of
England, France, and all Europe into the
seething struggle. Then, leaving Berlin,
be entered the Belgian cabinet and has
since directed the foreign affairs of the
country, finding time also to write a
book which graphically describes “the
week of tragedy" at the German capi-
tal when the British and French am-
bassadors and himself made their last
attempts to prevent the European con-
flict.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
where Baron Beyens was seen, is in-
stalled at Ste. Adresse, a suburb of
Havre, in which the Villa Hollandais, a
rustic chalet occupied in ordinary times
of by seashore visitors, but now bearing
NEWS FROM SUNNYDALE
SUNNY DALE, Sept. 26.—-Mr. and Mrs.
, Harve Starr have moved to McKamy.
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Baker,
Sept. 17, a boy.
W. T. Whybum and family of Lewis-
ville were guests of his sister, Mrs. J.
W. Stuart.
Mr. and Mrs. John Sealy of Corinth
were here.
C. Chapman is bn the sick list.
The Ladies Missionary Society of the
Cumberland Presbyterian church met
and elected Mrs. J. E. Elrod as delegate
to represent the society at Presbytery,
which meets at Pilot Point the latter
part of the week.
Mr. Lindsay, J. W. Stuart and daugh-
ter, Miss Aline, attended the Baptist as-
sociation at Hebron last week.
I ————————————
“What is Gertrude Gader’s latest
fad?" “Prison reform.” “Along what
lines?” “She thinks that every convict
ought to have a canary in his cell."—
Birmingham Age-Herald.
on the outer gate a small placard read-
ing: “Ministers des Affairs Estrange-
res de Belgique." A foreign offle^ usu-
ally suggests marble halls and big di-
plomatic rooms with ambassadors sit-
ting among oil paintings and mahogo-
hy furnishings. But the Villa Hollan-
dale has nothing of this kind. Three
small pine structures have been put up
in the garden for various diplomatic
and consular branches. Inside the villa
there is the simplicity of a summer cot-
tage, but everything is scrupulously
well done and effective.
Appreciates American Aid,
Baron Beyens expressed at the outset
the deep sense of appreciation felt by
Belgium toward the people of the Uni-
ted States, and. In particular, toward
those who had directed the work of
sending food supplies to Belgium.
“I am always glad to meet an Amer-
icanU’ said he, “and to express my grat-
itude to your people In general and to
those who have literally saved our peo-
ple from starvation. It is difficult foe
me to say how much we feel indebted
to Mr. Hoover, head of the Committee
directing the relief work of Belgium. He
has proved himself a man of great re-
source and great ability in the gigantic
task of providing for a whole nation
which found itself suddenly threatened
with starvation or at least with cruel
privation. It was a task, moreover, re-
quiring much diplomatic tact as well
as business knowledge, for the Relief
Committee was obliged to deal between
the German officials on the one hand
and the Allied officials on the other..
But all this has been accomplished
with infinite skill; obstacles which
seemed at times insurmountable have
been overcome, and practical results
have been realized which are of the
highest importance to Belgium and the
Belgian people.
“The American Minister at Brussels.
Mr. Brand Whitlock, has also w;on our
unbounded admiration and respect in
performing a work of colossal magni-
tude under most trying conditions. Re-
maining at Brussels while the govern-
ment was constrained by circumstan-
ces to establish itself temporarily out-
side of Belgium, the American minister
has been, with his courageous Spanish
colleague, the bulwark between our cit-
izens remaining in the invaded regions,
and the German military and civil au-
thorities temporarily in control. Out-
side of the horrors and atrocities of
w’ar which have been committed,, the
ordinary administration of civil affairs
has been carried out with an iron hand
and with rigorous harshness. In all this
Minister Whitlock has stood between
our people and the rigors of the German
military administration, and such len-
ience as we have received has come
largely through his energetic and dis-
creet intervention.
“But," added the Minister, “the
names of’ Americans who have shown
this good-will toward Belgium in very
nractical ways is almost unlimited—Dr.
Watson of the American Church at Pa-
ris, and Mrs. Watson. Mr. Bliss, tt^e
American Charge. d’Affairs at Paris, and
his wife, Mrs. Wharton, the well-known
American writer, and many, very many,
others. To all of them Belgium is deeply
thankful."
Was Not Hostile to Germany.
Turning now to international affairs,
in which he has taken snch an active
part at the debut of the war. Baron Be-
yens went on:
“We had every reason to remain St
peaye with Germany. Belgium had no
hostility to Germany. We had many
Germans among us, as you have in Am-
erica. And many of our people spoke
it proves out every hour of the day.
fSf Prince Albert has always been sold
j without coupons or premiums. We
F prefer to give quality!
There’s sport smoking a pipe or rolling
your own, but you know that you’ve got
to have the right tobacco! We tell you
Prince Albert will bang the doors wide
open for you to come in on a good time
firing up every little so often, without a
regret! You’ll
has been wasted and will be sorry you cannot
back UP • fresh start.
. You swing on this W-ao like it was a tip to a
THE SONO OF THS PLOW.
T CUT through the furrows,
I The brown loam springe high-
I The sunlight is golden,
X Ths blue of ths sky
Brings promise of summer.
Of fruit and of grain.
J cot through the furrowa
It's springtime again.
I cut through the furrowa
The flash of my steel
Is swordlike, but peaceful.
How happy I feel.
Ths winter fas over.
The summer is near.
I cut through the furrowa
For springtime is here.
I cut through the furrows
As if tn a dream.
I see the corn waving
The faint golden gleam
That blooms in the summer.
I hurry and hum.
I cut through the furrowa
The springtime has coma
I cut through the furrows
With joy In my soul.
I wish the whole world
Might be happy and whole.
I wieh that the swords
Of the nations might be
Just plows—and the springtime
Might come, o'er the sea.
—Margaret E. Sangster, Jr.
I
NATURE'S EASTER.
y^ROPHETIC morn! Glad herald of
I X the day
When nature, throbbing with new
X Ufa will wake
To robe herself in delicate array,
With broidery of gud and blossom and
will make
All hearts rejoice for beauty's sake.
Bhe'U woo the birda whlsp’ring of leafy
g>41a
Of hidden home la sweet, sequestered
lane
Thon husband, will listen, as her call
obeyed,
A thousand voices sweU the glad refrain
Of unseen choirs in her wide domain.
SWU waken rfll and stream from winter ma*c,n8 tbe co®t of seed exorbl-
sleep.
With merry, laughing voice theyll •»-
— 5 slM.
thicket and o'er rock they'll flash
In many a wild os ere its and waterfall.
Rejoicing at her Easter call. v
Each sleeping, dreaming floweret she'll
wake
And. gladly springing from its safe re-
treat.
Its fragrant Easter toilet ft will maka
For April showers and sunshine it must
moot
Its springtime beauty to complete.
And thus will nature. In her wondrous way
Make glad response to call of Easter day.
—Sarah Martyn Wright.
. smokes into
Slip a few Prince /
1 • a
Don’t Get Soaked—
: '■
But provide yourself with a :
sale. Beginning Sept. 29th and I
giving free with each suit c
800 suit patterns to select from n
SCOTT TAILORING CO.
Phones 40. No. 4 West Court Sq.
very end. Belgium will come back to: of the full lines over the mouth that
because be shut his mouth too tightly.
“That means the kind of bad temper
__ ________ ________ that he shuts in for people outside of
You can generally blame your grouch |the family and lets loose on his wife,"
she said.
I consult rnduths, hut I look at eyes,
too: I like io see if they are warm or
cold. Then if the man is old enough to
have wrinkles, I look for humor wrin-
kles radiating from the eyes outward,
for two of my ideal requirements are
a sense of humor and a sense of justice.
Of course the financial standing of
these unconscious applicants for our
Molly, the little stenographer lady,' hands came into question,
and I amuse ourselves on a tedious trol- " e J*4 -
Mu-1»‘MS
_ . - In each of the successive cars we aak-
denee and freedom are established as ed each other which man we would
pr»»*4 rkF nonea oAltlomanf a nr) an arl_ ’__—te
equate indemnity has been provided for j specimens pf the riffle
j.— .. .
approaching. Roumania is the latest to j
cnoaV find racf thp wpiirht nf hpr infill- I
there dis-'be8t iodexes. You can tell a high-oian
any other article of male attire. One
man whose financial status had been
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 39, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 27, 1916, newspaper, September 27, 1916; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1240312/m1/4/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.