Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 22, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 9, 1924 Page: 2 of 8
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esa
ANY
71)
IT
run
tto self-
'Ami
14
mt.
F:
ing Ai
.st
never
been a
mule" cocktail to that one can taste
Or
$7 as
i con-
his
A
finds
Wasn’t This Cruel?
Will have a mystic counselor for his
the
>
Bonded and Insured
f
&
This is. the preachy kind. the tightwad, cold
, ",
e'a
Tcai
—9
!
In Alexiendria, La.
two women
foughr
over a man with knives, and
he probably wasn't worth it.
18
I
,,2
/
3
)
=
1
‘ i
shortcomings aired in public.
1
That's
Fasti
+
z
*1
di
town.—Deaton
gave them
i
»
l
i.
1
tion
$1.50 to $2.50
and I borrowed
them this
1
Fowler Auto Supply Go.
t
218 W. Hickory Street.
Galllat'Mark
Garge r* -
ee
l
Pdi"aj
it
4
And ma litt the cigarett and start-
Phon® 841.
I
bm
m
A
P,
■
mmee
,.1
< 4
LI P. COX
' E.
if
i 9
•Vy
t
v ' 223
E
a’
X •
th oyster tris ,
8
1
FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETA-
e*
*;
tn 8
y
dt
* "Nun
2
erd
RStm mdev sm i
$
I
01
WMg
% Manahxyng
Agmbroeudn
....... ■■
on in
lot ion
400 per cent in
cash dividends.
LUGGAGE
CARRIERS
this year, which must be
season for the G. O. P.‘s.
room
“You
—z
a 2
p
of
it
I’mh srorer aaka.divorce been use
she threw eges at him, pleading, of
eourse. 'hut she juwt egged him on
—-—
John Bert Graham of Waxahachie
republican nominee for State Land
mf there were mark
I G. O. P. nominee
a cigarett from one
afternoon, and beer
fiz
M
ge 4
7r,"3
we may as well expect a vs-
on from them this fall and win-
dubble
wares
Heer
*1
»
N
7
Auto fenders don't-knew anything
ebout the law ;
e and.
g;1
it my
toon
All the world is a Mage oh-which
there are many trap doors
Born fools seldom live long enough
o outgrow it.
r:
e‘
J
ac-
to
Dawes mas never be sworn in. but
a preacher in Florida has cussed him
vol
Also we have justreceived
a car of < d
as a matter of
+ 62 „ < »
95
Clothes will be hewK in style again
m’afew weeks."much1 to sfw dtagust
of bathing teach yjueens
-
X F
Notebook
< By Leo Faps
19 years 'for sales as he did.
The things that moye resiatless-i UM
ipromT
42- 4
A 3
- - - - •ne ■ •
YEARROtTND ZEPHYR $
FASHEEN
‘Ce
■ 4
05a.
Ht
tone: ’
Who gives an hour to silence, hands at
I » I
(6 I
she sed.
Yee gods, do- you wunt to make
ycurself sick? pop sed, and ma sed,
We would hate to he Coolidge and
have two other men trying so hard
to get the house Where we live.
n hi"
NwPaper Fubi
zmjomu
eln,man matter
make thjngs sure, _
to mobilize iembryo whr
quaintance always remembers
call her children out of ear shot
“Do you think," his mother was
asking in a loudly pitched voice,
Athat a boy - who tots hit mother
bring up the coal win make A good
scout! I'm wondering, too, if you
will let a boy into the scouts who
H o
r •< der
1 + 'io
• J
THE HAND-BA
— boasts MI ad
iv new hags.
profiteers. ।
It isn't common "sense our legist
lators need so much as a common
catse. ' ' 1, f r, ' . )
As a rule ofieials are safe jinfime
of. peace unless they tanglettelr
id
Tpmpa
-
4 I
What the country needs ne much
is anything- else is half-hour park-
ng limits on country lanes.
Trouble with a political job Is-your
eeling#, get. hurt gwhen yu lose it
nd have to go toAwork.
. V *---- t
Pirm thing you know it wonrbe
ery long before Christmas again.
The silence Ms w
Aid whtspers
I
-mz=tzeae==
» • • a3ak,. Aa,2 . .2,220 .4
FORS
We have for sale
“CO?'S
The new tm.
%
"sow;
have a daj
gift of ven.
Words never 14
flyea
Unto his soul all nature will recit
Poems of beauty Milton couldn't
- write. ’
Proas to erelusively
for e-publication of
i credited to it or not
h* bo.
The big,‘fres
1 HERB-
. , Aa.
Strange messages which cones to man
alone
And hint oft worlds beyond our
-. mortal ken. y< -
Spoken no softly be scarce bears,
and then
Lost in the babble of life’s barsher
A:*
5
I
i
the first time we ever knew that
it was difficult to get candidates
into the field for almost any job. It
may be that the Republicans have
given Up and joined' the Democratic
party. At least the latter must have
picked up some members from
somewhere, judging by the enormous
size of the vote cast in the run-off
primary of August 23.
2 k.
gs3u
- "1
Bepo-u
Republicans of Texas don't seem
paunnu-acla u
tear, and. ask me fort
mightrebuke thibuman
small wad I'm atortag.
The trouble with Iosina a fortune
is you can't get anybody to help
you find another one
Everybody gnows exactly how to
rate ehidrenekcept/the people who
see raining them
Ml*
==2
— I-5nag
"u2 39
*
rpl
forlorn hope in the November elec-
Texas. In Dr. Butte the
interest in new styles and fabrics.
In our early.shipments, the accepted ‘fashion ter
the season are clearly revealed. Apparel in newest 1
ensemble costume si.
Dog Hill
Paragrafs
By BMWBOBihgham
A MEDIUM SIZE TRACTOR •
of standard* make,5 in* gdod running order. ,
.n
FEED AND FUEL
hundred g
paid for « । ।
DIVIDING UP WITH AONZo G.
VIWHVIAI
aE
,ee.twite, tem
AUT U M N
* a H
----EBANK
, Ky'
saying to one of the officers came
to his lean and he listened in
Human Interest
Editorials
to WIoMm wapmis
is, give me a match, Willyum,
an ofi-
Wouldn" it be an original idea if
komebody. who finds himself about
to be disgraced because he is
eleaning up too much money would
any. “By golly I'll reduce prices?"
We never thought of that before,
did we? Well how about it? Hasn't
the idea merit?
Hezes, snakes and fish sleep with
their eyes wide open. __________
Gasoline That Makes
.Hd.d
ights beyond tM
laugh at me and they're just glad,"
he raged.
The mother who has the, best
results in discipline with her chil-
ss the
ater rthes
_Mto WM 'V
rest, '
His mind released rom petty care
and fear ’ ‘
—are, two fabrics that are
equally adaptable to th® little
kindergarten frocks with'
frills and ruffles as well as
straight line frocks for high
school ages. You’ll love tto
Also 1
yancement of the
Record-Chronicle.
Every school town
-
t
-
< '
4 (
Soathweotem Life Insurance Co.
7 - Phone 430-.
3,*+2As
XA.
in Texas is
$444,4 5, • •' “"22,.
B A G S P E C 4 A M <
A few to be closed out st substantially reduced prices.
ffa5 1 -A. .
Regular $1,004 Gener. Bring or
send wrapper from one an of
Frisco an< a coupon
know not when my iron men may-van-
ish down 4 erater, for fukers waitt be
fore my gate, tagetme noon or inter;
promoters come with fife and rum.
aud pipe dreams great and gweater.
And if some moraf find I’m shornlof
all my hard earned stuaciers, and ifeel
the need, ad oa I speed. of chunka of
cheese and erackers, may I not meet
in lane or street the sternly moral'
ciackers. May some fat gum hand me
a pie, as I hand pies to drifters, as I
baeco got into your mouth? ma
sed, and pop sed, You call up the
fire departmint.
Now jest for that Im going to
blow smoke out through my nose,
ma sed. Wich she started to do and
then began to choke like enything.
The Prince’of Wales’ ‘ vimit M
America dpdng Leap Year proves he
is the bralest man in the world.
/ . — . •
l ter. There will be those with le-
gitimate schemes and articles for
eale; there Biao-will be vendors of
other things and. workers of more
dr lass'shady schemes whereby to
f separate the folks from their mon-
; ey, These folks have a nose for
4 prosperity: not excelled by their
clever salesmanship, and what with
» the money from the. City of Dalia's
and the prosperity from other
• squrees, Denton County offers “rich
pickin’s”; they’re coming after
_ some of it.
he turned to her stormilyi
men e ' y
found ip any books that I have
Your Cary
Go, Go, Go
You often find gasoli» that seems
Uto some piople—lazy, pepless,
undependable. But our gasoline is
lust the opposite. It has stored in-
side a restless energy that is anx-
ions to he about its maip job of
making cars whiz along at top
speed. Com® by and let us fill the
tank.
LUBRICATING OILS, TIKES
AND TUBES •
ERESCBI FUIN6 STATON
-Intelligenfinurance
Str*
agency of the Hartford Fire
Insurance Company makes it
a business to keep carefif
:wateh over the interests of
its clients.
A telephon® call will put at’
your disposal advice based on
experience end thorough,
Bknowledge.
- 1
opliftres.
little ixample myself,
in wat way. sutch as
saying,' Willyum open the windows.
They are open, I told you you’d
get sick, pop sed, and ma sed, Im
not sick enything of the kind,’ I
may be a trifle dizzy but Ive bin
. 11 I r Tip mi
I »
rule that should be
How Would You7 Like
■ ।
a Dandyookook? ।
m "*jn
B“FOR1Oc
* known; f
to be hankering after political jobs give cakes to dusty Jakes, and foum-
" lug Volstead snifters; may 1-not find
then something his mother was
modern one buys a pistol.
Mars must understand that ithose Marnh
who tried to pry into HerruffairaM"Il
were unomeinl observers. a . ..
20% (> v
dren of any friend of my
new printed detigBe.
conles' in plain colors.
to washing. 50c b yard: 1
*
219% W. Oak St.
--------------------------A
Enthuniasm is very often -mietaken
or ignorance
Copyright. 1924, NBA Setvice Inc)
Kaufman Boy To Recover
KAUFMAN—Billy Chaff It was
injured several (mentha ago iu u
fall from ■ n diving board and it
was thought he had broken his
nek and was sent to a'Dallas sani-
tarium with ’ the lower part of his
body paralyzed. He is now regain-
ining une of his limbs end special-
ists say he will completely reov-
ing Hay. take it eaky, for the
love of Peet.
Wy should I, if ' a things werth
doing its werth« doing well. wat
do you do wen little pieces of to-
Life Insurance
„V Tde
a"
jaa
FIRST GUAR
’ Whhew hkuke
nSims
Charles Dickens looked upon Fri-
day as his lucky day.
But within 80 minutes af-
ter you have read this notice .
it may be THERE; in a fry- 7
ing pan, in your kitkben; .
’ turning to a thick, brown- I
<1 usted delicacy. lust phone
26 or 925 and have fresh oys-
ters for supper.
TURNER & GRAHAM
t
* 1,
willing. I might be wise and moralize
morallsa to pilgrims darkly Faring,
wheff. they Mraw near wit* "
ed to see it constantly poring out
oi yours. Some of the ladies that
belong to the DAwters of Cleo-
patters, smoke during the meetings.
' and she quick put the cigarett down
how? pop
Now undoubtedly Mr. Nash's em-
ployes did their part in making this _
business prosper. But after all,1 enraged volcano the way Im foret
where did the profits come from?
They came from the pockets of
what to do with them?*
We have become so. accustomed to
iigh prices and/tremendous profits
and to the idea of making Alon? G.
-onsumer pay all that’the traffic
will stand «hnt we have completely -
overbloked this aqueezed-out, dried- ed to blow out big puffs, pop say*
but poor little devil when 'magnani-
mous plans are being made for
philanthropic distribution of the
cash that came from his pockets.
%
WW H
—is always eagerly heralded i the world of “What-to-Wear."
The first crisp day, the ‘first coloring leaf, arepignals tat fresh
Full and -the annual - yarn about
mqurrels staring golf boils “for nuts'
Are both due Sept 23.
-
a1+- e
if -*2* jr •
dANews of the several .
" thousand dollars to be paid for
Denton County land by the City of 1
Dallas has been well scattered
EL—clever salesmen over ITexas, 1
_ at MarkWaldripGar
mNorthElmStre
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
000,000 a year and during that pe-
riod declared dividends totaling - -
addition to large sed, and ma sed, Sutch as by
smoking a cigarett rite in frunt of
you so you can see the smoke por-
ing out of my mouth like an
bf the others when she has any
scolding to do.
. I think it has a good deal to do
with her success as a disciplinarian.
Tomorrow—Sifting Mt the Unlit
in Cincinnati a tailor named Nush!
finds his profits rolling up to fast;
that he faces the alarming prospect
of being a multimillionaire.
To prevent this catastrophe he
has announced his intention to.give!
huge sums to his' employees, who,
as he says, I helped to make his
business grow and prosper.
Now that on the whole, is a com-
mendable thing to do. In fuct_wei
find a good many nowadays, look-
ing dubiously on the great surplus
wealth they are accumulating, and,
wondering what they had best do!
with it. »
They wince at the thought of be-
coming vulgarly rich. They would
dodge that odium. The thought per-
colates that they are more or less
the custodians of ifoney rather than
the owners of money. And that is
as it should be.
It certainly is encouraging to see
men turn millions of dollars over
to this andito tha,t and give largo,
sums to their employees, and 'do
all sorts of big things that-call for
big money. It shows that a splen-
did spirit of philanthropy and gen-
erosity is abroad in the land.
But isn’t there somebody else
who should be showh’ some conaid-
eration when it comes to dividig
up—somebody who has been entirt
ly overlooked heretofore? . Isn’t
there somebody else whig has help-
ed to make bifsiness prosper and
juicy dividends accumulate! ’ There
■certainly is.' '
His name is Alonzo G. Censum-
er. In the final anayisis he is the
boy'who has come actoss with aN
the kale that has been piled Up by
the men whovare embarrassel with
it. Wouldn’t it ba a great idea to
let Alonso G. have a little of that
money!
Our tailor friend - in Cincinnati
says he ferls that he would be an
arch fiend if he kept so much
money. Well, perhaps that is true,
but instead of turning it all oyer
to- his emloyees, how about giving
some of. it to the follow he got it
from!
Durmig the last four years the
company owned by our good friend
Nash, jumped in 'volume of buei-
nets from $182,400 a year to $7,
Commissioner* has resigned his
nomnation.. This makes the third
nominee to resign from the ticket,
T. P. Lee of Houston, candidate for
Governor and Miss Elizabeth Baker
of Dallas, candidate for Superin-
tendent of Public Instruction, hav-
ing resigned several days before.—
Mt. Vernon Optic-Herald.
ifr# . dee j
-H."Am-Acontaos
2 ■ 3 e l . . : • t
7 In these days of woman im poli-
tics, it wouldn't, be a bad policy for
a man to consult his wife before he
assumes a political position of im-
portance. When a Democratic cum*
paign manager has a wife who is
bobsting for the Republicans, he
Wy should I get sick eny more
than you, wy should there be eny
. 90
good McAlester lump
coal
Let us have your next order gB. Hi Deavenport & Co.
for feed and coal. I ' • N
is. yee gods, pop sed.
bo a factor in the November
m. As things are he "wi
to vote of his own party, the
ndependents and several din
ed Democrats, but the Dem-
bunominee will roll up the us-
I® aeok- Famous mmhzinarv lines- The
egrmn equator anqbfaazavwis line.
y V J - so livegchat W need nerer I
through the annoyance ofa mi
trial, a « I . - » '■ et
The chief lobjectionMo a “white
„ mp2ai
.0
B3g p3 jeg . .
2 V
Isaac Helwanger says when some
girls marry all they get is their
name changed.
% ----------------
The Fresh Oyster
2 2
iClei Shaver’s wife is writing Re:
publican pieces for the paper. May"
be there’s a reason for Clem’s taci-
turnity— Balias Newa. }
_L.
Spamk MgeeA n
BIMON HAND STALL TIMES. .
--.TMr' ' ■
mn,
• ' ‘ t
Egla
Mbition a^ success if jit makes Him ‛Ego55medbmzoritedismsor"2
to'S’-ti^/boy who wished to I hi, gey W““W 6 •
bea,terrorlearned./tochewj -the ™ ' •- -
to’ Fnt Motor Uht
BIRTHDAYS
Viscount Lascelles^ the husband
of IPrincess Mary and brother-in-
law of the Prince of Wales, born 42
years ago tday.
Josef Stransky, celebrated orches-
tra conductor of New York, born in
Bohemia, 52 years ago today.
Marguerite Snow, widely known
as a film aertess, born in Savannah,
83 years ago today.
Victor F. Lawson, prominent Ch-
sego newspaper publisher, born in
Chicago, 74 years ago today.
IIMHtHillUtetebiHM
• BACK TALK ♦
144447
CREDIr FOK DENTON 8 GROWTH
-Denton is growing. It isn't “beam-
ing ’ or anything like that but there
is a steady, substantial growth that
is evidenced in every part of town.
Denton is growing because it has
come to be one of the most at-
tractive small cities in Texas, and it
is the progressivve-citizens who have
had the vision and the ambition to
aepire to better things ead whga
havo-mnade the fights to secure these
bettethings to whom credit is due.
.The improvement of our educa-
tfonal facilities, the paving of our
streets, the construetiion of our
good roads system, the betterment
of our stores ead our business in-
stitutions generally and the growth
ot the colleges here these are the
major contributions to the solid ad-
The new four-inch-width Mirador Linens in new ideas '
belts are here in black and are here. Bridge and lunch-
brown suede. - eon sets and napkitis.
as to we the new,thinka. g ,5 1
THE WILLI AMS STORE
•» L MHHANDoww, .a
doubt, will buy him kraut, as he goto
sadly drilling; when I am broka some ofeials, a <
friendly folk will stake me thus, God- rm Kapp
‘EXCNANGENATIOML8ANK
' / W*'.. - .1
-2E
feorayraona
I J Su
triE,g8
M - , ' 5
2
GNN
But
s TBn" Aetta
7t 3
1 y ,.1
^rexaaf Septemiber 8, 1824
s Repuhlicaps have nominated for
Governor a man against whom
naught can be said except that he
ia not a Democrat. He has long
5 been one ofithe most popular as
well as most highly regarded mem-
W bars of the Texas University fac-
ulty-and while Democratic Texas
Ezes will not vote for him, there
* will be none.but will have a kindly
feehiag toward him.
Dr.} Butte very probably would
“ have been president of the Univer-
H sity but for the fact that he was a
Republican. The Regents consid-
eeredhjmfor the place and only the I
3 charge that he belonged to the-mi- |
nority political faith, from AAustin
M dispatches at the time, seems to
E have determined the case against
s hhim. U is not impossible that this
4 action of, the Regents had sofise-
I' what to do with Dr. Futte’s report-
5 edg intention of aceping the Re-
publican nomination .
SaThere simply aren’t enough Re
F publicans -and independents in
M t Texas to, constitute more than a
■ - -------- ---- - owner,
and capitalist. He entered politics
in IBM, when he sat in the terri-
torial degislature. He presided over
the Consitutional convention of
1910 and was influential in king
the produet at that tody’s lators
hems of its more original features.
As governor he hak revealed many
bympathies with the people that of.
ton Mo hidden by erecutiyes in high
political oflice and has stood for a
humanitarian concepti of state-
eraft, penology and industrial man
ugement Ho has been especially
prominent in his championship of
. newer theories of penology ana has
" berwed as president of the Anti-Cap.
3 ital Punishment Association of tM
United States. L
- t “ . ANNIVERSKRIEs $
that she is‛‛a woman.
German seientist sass tea con-
tains more kick than beer. Voice
from Grandmother’s room: "Sh."
One reason why, a hueband ihutes
to shop with his Wife is because he
can't stand the erain whensthe
saleswoman- talks about “slender
lines.” , e ■
• No one will take Conrod’s '-place
until some author is willing to 'wait
•4.
13 .
After HUppir pop was smoking
with u injoy able i xpresi ion and
ma was reeding the paper, saying,
Willyum, did* you see about this
old man that jest passed his 106th
berthday and says his long life
is due intirely to the fack that
he has never touched tobacco in
eny form? Think of it, Willyum.
105 yeers, ma sed.
It must have seemed more like
205 without a smoke all ithat
time, pop sed, and mu sed, Now
Willyum, if you cant lern from
the ixamples of others Ive decid-
ed Im jest going to give you a
mxrengwoigove,
Rw- » u. upa o “ smemaalon “
samekman, merchant, mihe
Fleteh Henstep reports that he
has lost his hav. somewhere and the
finder may keep same if they wt-
return the' two postage stamps in
the hatband.
d 227BMX22 ■ ie
will give j
thing will
hatwai
■ " t adare
- ■■■ W . " - ,Aebg
ida • P oi ■ ./ i gxv ' -
1841-President Tyler vetoed the
Fiscal Corporation bill, in conse-
quence of which nearly all the men-
bers of his cabinet resigped.
1850—New Mexico and Utah ter-
sitories were organized.
1894—Link Waggoner, a notd des-
perado, was shot and killed by a
mob in the parish jail'at Minden,
Ln. - - ' '
1909—Edward H. Harriman, rail-
road magnate, died at Arden, N. Y.
Born at Hempstead, L. I., Feb. 25.
1848. ■
1913—Fifteen people drowne in
the wreck of a Zeppelin airship
which met a hurricane and sank off
Heligoland.
1019—Beginning of the great
strike of police in Boston.
1922—William T. Cosgrave .was
elected President of the Irish Free
State by the Irish Provisional gov-
ernment.
Moa or ttanangrot My
runs away with other boys and
goes swimming after his father
has forbidden it. I think I ought
to tell you, too, that he tries 'to
He out of things when he gets
caught and that he is awfully lazy.
I don't know," with a broad wink
at the scout master, “whether you
would care to have him in the
scouts or not.” —
' The culprit stood with his head
hanging, a painful red color surg-
ing over his face and neck, pulling
nervously at his hat. If only he
could drop through the floor or
die or something. All those peo-
ple listening to his mother and
those scouts laughing at him prob-
’ly.
Then the scout master spoke.
. "I think we'll be able. to fix
I things up all right. Suppose you
leave Bill with me while we talk
over arrangements for joining and
all that sort of thing and he ehan
eome home later."
She Would Have Hung Her Head
+ I don’t know just what the scout
master said to the boy to bring
baek his self-respeet after the
mother had gone, because he didn't
tell me that part of the story, but
' I’1 do know what he thought of the
mother who bo cruelly flayed the
boy before the people whom, above
all, he was anxious to impress fav-
orably. If she could have heard what
the scout official said to me about
her I think she would have been
the one to hang her head in emj
barrassment and humiliation; 'and'
I think it.; would have been a very
, good thing for her to have heard
him, for it would not only have
opened ?her eyes to aee the injus-
tice she had done hengboy but
she would have had a chance to
< learn how it feela to hear one’s
nay how soon be may be traluing with
the busted; she bank mar fail to which
his kale be unwiuseig trusted: shia.poole
«t oll-may sour aud spoil, and leave
his sate disgustea. Fro seen the plute
hmscir in rathet am-etabaras- 206. . ............ ...
il^tion at times ■ uloaming. I've meen him strive to find horror and Shame with the eyes of '
a fire, his cast-of garmenta eombing, those scouts upon him.
I've seen the great knocked out by _____________a >
Cate, and set to bootless rouming. 4 I
■ is’to nelectnas
Bedtal leader a common men who will stand
. A chante with 'uncommon men at
Waahipgtonita "y r4 . - - JTai
iRuropenn eroyal ybloodsaet A-
dayashupersI rheyshadheen .
"ent amith thatahey might have
told thein old jeto iape
Cerreetrthis sentence: Pl am for
him,” toi dther voter; “Md Mart 1
1 ’ /C
V’ .3s.
----------------2
Little Benny’s ,
guest (
Whose speech- ts loot upon I
cominion ear. r
inF"Kidi Boots.”
werbags. 2 2 «
— cevA
n i
1. . i
written large in a parent’s calen-
dar of "don'ts." Don’t scold your
children in front of other people.
Mad Instead of Sorry
In the first place you’ll get scant
attention, for the child's chief
thought will be that someone else
is Phearing you, and his chif re-
notion will be resentment instead
of compunction. ,11
A mother ones told me of the
incident that opened her eyes to
the fwtilny of this sort of thing.
She had occasion to correct her
oldest son,' a boy of 16 for some
minor misdemeanor and he took
the correction in very poor part.
When the other children left the
ehance to
- M.L. MARTIN, M. D., Vice President
W.CQRR,Cashier
RSWLBSS,-ASstashier
JNO.aCRAIN, AAsbt. Cashier n
< • •
W Pae2sEBs, C. SMITH ?
of trim, 1-------- ..
of th® outstanding features at the MMfl tost------ g
Autumn fabrics in all their beaut v of weave apd.olorigs, -
are shown, as well as costume accessories of marked originality.
Things for Autumn wear are now ready for your approval
• ■ . • . ... ‛0efiEAEI6.1
VISIT CL’R RE4DYT0-WEABDEBARTENL"
n ■ " Ai..,"
standard of getting siek,
the match,?
____* ■ / _ pw2
upw wodo YOU ukk
RM mother .-eiime-date Scout
mfogp
BCD On
‘A Lincoln, Neb., pastor preached
to a congregation which included
f John W. Davis and Charles W.
Bryan. Later he found his pocket
8 had been picked of $45. What
might have happened if Calvin
-Coolidge and harles G. Dawes also
; had been present ’ .
PThe Violin ts almost as hard to
earn to play ns poker
The har vert moon will makes
nany an alleged woman haler see
wings in an entirely ‘different light
We have a complete line of
HORSE, COW AND
CHICKEN FEEDS
jm
on hand for you. 1 Our feed
is the befit quality to ba had
and our prices are low. - g
,*ch
old son a«Mm she wk
roifih thelssociation.Beides’th
two atenogruphers and two* scout
“ ‘ . couple of acus in uni-
form happned to be preht, and
the boy looked enviously at their
khaki trappings. Pretty soon he’d
be wearing one of those uniforma,
and he'd have that firstkclass pin
for his Mt before tong, and then
the merit badges would begin to
appear oil his sleeve aad elimb up
and up until at last M waa eagle
scout. He’d show them! But just
a trifle dizzy all day. And she
wawked over to the window holding
on to ferniture on the way, saying,
For goedniss sakes, I dont know
wich is going around the fastest
ine or the room. O well, if that®
the sort, of thing you get out-of
smoking jest go rite on. being min.
zerable if it gives you eny pies*
zure, but enyway you should of
warned me, she sed. . ...
11 Ha ha. ixeuse lay unfeeling mirth,
pardon mif l laff, ,pop sed.
~Wteh l» did.
PRINTING
Rom Printing Co.
Alonzo G.— that's where they came
from and Alonzn must have been
charged quite liberally too. And
why shouldn’t Alonzo get u little of
it while it is being passed rund.
Whr net reduce prices to him a
little and not make such big profits
out of him that one dope not know
re-^to Lord
lor; no good
id from thm
-P»glni 84:11.
ly forward withbut taking accout
of maa are Destiny and fiye-tom
trueks.
S 4-1,
--anarm:2zi2==s="asdr9
Jefferson Potocks took allof his
children on a sght-sehg expedi-
tion to Tickville Saturday, but they
couldn’t see very much as they
were in each other's way all the
time.
% tbi^ :
MM pemataba OMM From
Ecwes ' ——o---
Another Texas editor of more
' than local fame went to-his reward
» the other day when Albert A.
v Wortham of he Corsicana Sun
Hdied after a lingering illness that
Metended over many months. Wor-
them came of a noted newspaper
family; his father was pioneer own-
er of the old Sulphur Springs Ga-
zpte, from which came Louis J.
Wortham of the Fort Worth Star-
MTelegram and Albert tA. -of the
Ban. Albert Wortham was a cap-
Mi newspaper man; he and Lowry
2 Martin have made the Sun one of
: the most valuable and profitable
small-city dallied in Texas. His
place will be hard to fill; albeit his
MB, Lynne A. Wortham, following
in his father’s footsteps, is the
very suecessful managing editor of
the Bub, as to has been- for th®
past,severaf years
; " . ----------0----------
THE G. O. P. NOMINEE.
Dr. George C. Butte, dean of the
Law Department of the State Uni-
versify, will lead the Republican
pfopering far beyond other towns
of hike size and environment that
have no schools beyond the public
ones. Abilene is a school . town,
offering superior educational ad-
vantages; Brownwood is in the same
elass, as is Commerce,-Texas, and
many others. A study of these
should convince any community the
value of building Up along educa-
tional lines. Therein lies an im-
portant object lessn to Mineral
Wells. It is with communities as
it is with individuals: • “We must
educate, at must educate, or we per-
ish."—Mineral Wells Index.
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 22, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 9, 1924, newspaper, September 9, 1924; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1467527/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.