Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, September 26, 1919 Page: 2 of 8
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B
OLE10
Birthday*
/
I®
*
V
or
to escape
me
HS
V/
7/
Kl<
nd
r
labor
were known—a century ajo.
IN
ONE
of
WHH
MTHKKTH
U OMEN
NOW
"hg
mi#
h.
KITH CAMEHON'S «IIDK TALKS
HOGWALLOW NKWU
Dunk Bolt**
TO OUR LAUNDRY CUSTOMERS
t.v
be.
are ‘
R5
with
Saturday A. M.
Friday P. M
same
■M-M-K
TODAY’S A NN IVKRS AltIKR
that
HR
<»l(l
A nd
I ‘resilient
I
occupied
the
Phone 8.
i
o
y
e
/
ft
^2
V *
/.
*
4
,?il
w:
BJ^p
•z
X
M-
L':.
ut,W“j
Iiiiiieoii
•■••••••
I
ft
ft
ceived
the
1 st the following schedule of collections
effect:
we earnestly solicit the coo;
change, which is being made solely 1
Saturday P. M.
Wednesday A. M.
------------x)-------------
♦♦♦♦♦»+♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ i mum
IN THK DAY'S NEW S
Wednesday P. M.
Thursday P. M.
DENTON STEAM LAUNDRY COMPANY
MASTER CLEANERS AND DYERS
Entered
at Danton.
the
of
LIKE
that
led
nd
f •PHNL.uLS
IRENEl
6.VE.LY N
NINA -
YAARX> TO
reigning king of
gen. 49 year"
nine
four
INDUSTRIAL DEMOCRATIZATION
(New York Time*)
A manufacturer of jewelry Is
Terms of
hist Britain
started
tour.
nr w spa per
. ItH
It"
100.
earn
novelist
Shakopee.
COLLECT
Monday- P. M.
Tuesday P. M.
nd a
livers
his
'da y
«'d i
7
oj
DELIVER
Thursday A. M.
Friday A. M.
a i
0
Little Benny’s
Note Book
Hr Lee Pape.
on
ex-
ng-
Just Folks
Hy Edgar dilMt
I
IT. 8
while
Iklyn,
9
po-
the
sp-
lix
ied
Rippling Rhymes
By Walt Magon
Beginning October
and deliveries will be put in
, WST
.1
b
. Jour-
c\neny
Rer-
with
drafter of
Hogs!
■'* «' . L-, ’ ; .
rle day
> we
his
lenos
l‘f UMP
Hilf
iy-
----det
make
wou
Britli
HE
ular
i yearn
Wnltei
and
71
P<>P.
t he
pent it
......... ....... ,if--------
be tough on the baby
| 65THCSR -
I1 KUTH -
VWlOcdB-T >
1 pr<
“t 1M
K ore an
ol led
j each
”t lie
i her
iaem>
HRHOChlted
nssentlain
Sum ming
York.
iHReHH
test,
NAMF5. — MA8'( ANN
MAMq'ARfcT
KATN
L_
all” are like blieep.
we a I wnya will be
new
nd. Im nl.xo hn
ut at 19,
vent I
... there
Infected by ti
War. at
from I
to be
a lune
little
•ell g I \ «
M he
After the little
to school
ac-
yeara before, but
him to be cop-
i friends had <ilf-
princply cargc
.ty-two fathoi
contain
am id-ahi ps
by ita
bolt ’ ’
) our
Far
nd
going
home
Salvaging $35,000,000 Gold
From Steamer Sunk in 1917
Boone
died
• ’ha 11vj4
< 'oil n t \
\V
Insisted
The
they had no
Judgments oi
man o.~
In fact
rept
t hev
So
foe
bi liner f
y you
would
the I
long
Veil
blit med
|l f»o '
.KO 1
justly -
mill owners.
< BA-a*.'
-4W=sw""
Bill Barlow says
Bear Ford neighboi
<lo.Mv inspection
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Dally
On® Month, deliver®* „..
Six Month®, by mall (In a<ivi«nce)
One Year, by mall (In advance)
I
for my fame,
sold;
---task
r°,
rite on reeding
if he dldent k
Weekly
One Tear (In advance)
Rix Months (in advance)
Three Months (in advance)
Hays <
iut one
dime,
go to
• f M|
the new
and Japan
who Im being i
of- United S’
w aa
the dai
her mot
it in a
which
_ h-.d'
th® laurel wreath 1 own
.Inae that men deelre,
which men deserve,
their dally care
will to serve.
w lek er
Mary?"
r hav
•They
-........-g|
ever could
ow caught
be proud
bout it.
A'.
kv
Bk.
UiKier wir iirmiiug, avwiy n vm»vu-
day of Sport®,” the Sherman courier
■ays that ‘‘Eugene N. Foss, former
The
of twei
I bullion
t chamber
lli® |
i
I
I '
1
ta
Hr
ANO IN TH
MEANT.PA
W <'I !<•I
""3
Kr>. /
There is no town with an interurban
l.ut declares them a big help to the
material advancement of the town.
They unquestionably help the big
centers; but it seems equally as true
that they help every small town or
small city they reach as well. Denton
needs an interurban a lot worse than
some towns that have them, for among
towns of its size Denton is in a class
to itself in the way of passenger
traffic.
----‘ 1 ‘-■u"rrr.,,,rr^Rk*- .
U this keeps up be tou
rOPHBUA -
I c-UCIUl.g -- 1
VdV CANT KV£fS I
THe R.IQHT KIND k
A NAM&,
’-N THE Books
D«I_CK!4A -
ButABiirH *
JANE — -
s
' .. ..
i
■f
MW1 Bl
H
barn were
ichea thick and____
nd weighed about twen-
Js. For days not one wh«
were
me a d ini
. told me not
or 2 days, and
plr, and aft
to go
etts and is seeking a fourthmaking
him some racer in a political way?
- .......... o-------
With fair-minded people the steel
mrbsi //7/^uujhb i
OUS K<»n-
• home (f
Mo. Born
1733.
for 20
senator from
) Pled
1«97
Including
arrested in
Telephone calls from Oak Street and Nor^i of Oak Street re-
on Monday, Wednesday or Friday by noon will bp picked up
afternoon.
umbrellas
paper And cost
INEZ. )
elean or -I
M.N BUT IT'5 I
cHooj r a >
—> NAME,
9
Telephone calls from Hickory Street and South of Hickory '
street received Tuesday, Thursday or Friday by noon will be picked
up the same afternoon.
vote
every vote, no
votes are cast in
necessary. In order
Council to become
United States should
treaty be-
mad e
■i |>uuiimh*a1 in a town that
first interurban in Texas,
DOINGS OF THE VAN LOONS
/ t ULAI 1A OH >
/ EUNICE WOULDN'T \
I BE BAD oA ,
MARCELLg
/iwhm? iiii
l / HoK-rss.NSSi
_/ //'s a ojooD ,
Il is believed that the driest“nlac®
in the world is that portion of Egypt
between the two lower fall® of th®
Nile. Rain has never been known to
fall there.
■t not seek me for
>w me for ®elfi®h
easy task
i that I hold,
■elfish man
race accursed.
h my renown
IiIh service first
■VCCMBB
I bring them gold who seek me not
Por what 1 bring of gold alone;
I bring them fam® who strive to claim
More than the laurel wreath 1 «—“
I bring all things that men desire,
And every Joy
If they will bear
And labor with a
PORTSALON. Ireland, Sept. 25.—Sal-
vaging 135,000,000 worth of gold in-
gots and bullion the White Star liner
Laurentlc is reported to have carried
when she was sunk the night of Jan-
uary 25. 1917, off Fanad Light, one of
tile northernmost heartlanda of Ireland
at the entrance to Lough Swllly, Is be-
ing conducted by the salvage ship, Kn-
Amerlcans and French began new
attack on the Champagne front.
Canadian Division reached the Dual-
(’ambral road.
Bulgaria applied to British Govern-
ment for an armistice.
Angeles
Wilson
. . ... ________ _ Nation
that Senator Hiram JoWnson ha’
....... -si.. ...Hl. 4^.^. 1
“a
field to
and glory hm your
ilarvo for lack of coin
aare of angel i
meet a
w here
Ii a \ c
t r I < • k h a
Wo c I a r
ace throughout
bloody fray and
th** police to take
boon away
DB1VTON, TJCXAM. KEPT. IIHO
picture to make even
lHra<lih<* paiihe But it
' llatened to It all and then
Nay. but we will have a
tha-t we may be like all
An fng(*nloua contrivance conalHting
• •f a framework of bambou tubaa Im
faatened to the bodlea of carrier-pig-
eon* In China. During the flight of the
bird** the air paaatng through the fuboH
producea a ahrill whittling acuind which
fright«‘riM bird* of prey and keep* them
at a (Jlatance.
■ ... .. his
In order to increase the efficiency of our plant and enable us
to furnish our patrons with uniform and better service, we are put-
ting into effect a new schedule of collection and delivery of laundry.
i .
Id go tonite,
felloWH ha
Im that m<
tug the
i'kihIi, (ha
And I
would y
1 give
Morning
a ptixxel
u aarnt.
taut
Bel
POP l
< h>Mh
the I
\nd I wed. I ap< nt that
I dldent know I wanted t<
movies tonite or I wouldrnt o
ThatM tuff luck. M«»d pop.
Yen Mir, I Ned. And I went out. and
pop kepp rite on reeding the Npoa’t-
ing ag*> mm If hr dldent know a hint
herd on<
Alexander Moseley says doga
i ot very profitable, but one gets lota |
of pleaaurr out of having them around ;
fefc.....Shsb
Dont you wish you waa
•p, like me, ho you could
lew for a nickel?
you mention It.
thing to wish,
wishing I waa
t up In street <
sed pop.
reeding the aponrt-
thlnklng, G, I gess the
are covered with
about tetr cent*
YRAR AGO TODAY
THK WAR
. 50 |
12.80
,5.00
p In the setting
irtiiig page, me
If he can take
DEUTON RECORD
■■CORO AND CMDON1C1AC COMPANY
J’ JCBD^RD?™rB'usin®s® Mi'nU’r
Elias.®..
Telaphon® •*
Imu®* »t «7 W. Hickory •tr®®t. Dea-
ton. Texas. ®v®ry afternoon except Bun-
day by ths Record-Chronicle Company.
Member ot Associated Press, which Je
exclusively entitled to see for republi-
cation of all news, accredited to It or
not otherwise credited, end also the
local newt published therein.
as second-class mall matter
, Texas. .
More Plcturraqur Einmple
rrmr.mbrr the chapter In
where the iMrarlltra asked Sam-
< king*’ Samuel told the Lord
the Lord told Samuel not
;vm. but to "protest sol-<
them" and to tell them
would be
does just
he gi
of the
will
MohammednnN do not wear Milk Am
it is the product of a worm, they con-
sider it unclean
y at a depth
The gold and
in the strong
ndered almost
thick steel walls
i. At first por-
s decks werj*
ade
the
They must
Nor folloL ---- —
They must not ask an
To gain the treasures
For I shall spurn the i
And leave him by his
But I shall crown with
The man who ranks h.
-------------0-
It is Rood to know that New Jersey J
democrats have definitely rejected ex
Boas James R. Nugent and nominated th
Bdward I. Edward® of Jersey City',];'
as the democratic candidate for Gov-1 g,'
ernor. Nugent’s principal plank was »>><>»■
his “wetne®®,” promising that if he,1"*1
were elected New Jersey would never1
be dry regardless of the Federal dry
amendment; his principal handicap
was that President Wilson was i ‘ ;
least unfriendly to his ambitions and
that the President’s New Jersey
friend® were openly fighting his nom- ... ,
{nation. Governor Runyon, governor i'»'<q>"R' 'i
thru elevation of Governor Edge to j “
the Senate, sought tb«‘ republican noin-1
{nation on a dry platform, but the re-
sult shows that New Jersey i® very
far from being dry insofar as selecting
its candidates go, for Governor Run-
yon didn’t run fast enough to get
warm, State Comptroller Bugbee, a
Wet, beating him handily. Nugent
was one of the bosses of New Jersey
when President Wilson was Governor
of that state. He lost out when he
fell out with the then Governor and
was ordered out of the executive of-
fice. He tried to rehabilitate himself
on the ultra-wet platform and failed.
„ One thing nbout Theodore Roose-
velt about which there was no dispute
was his unswerving Americanism. He
played politics frequently and he was
pretty much of a partisan always.
But he was for America first every
time, and when America was an issue,
one knew every time where to put the
Colonel. In 1917, while the war was
at its height and with America just
preparing to go in, Colonel Roosevelt,
considering the suggestion of a league
of nations, wrote this;
“The only prominent move for ob-
taining peace which has yet been sug-
gested with any reasonable chance of
attaining its object is by an agree-
ment among the great powers in which
each should pledge itself not only to
abide by the decision of a common
tribunal, but to back with force the
decision of that common tribunal The
groat civilized nations of the world
which do not possess force actually or
immediately, potentially, should com
bine by solemn agreement in a great
world league for peace and righteous-
ness.”
That Senator Johnson and those like
him put partisanship above Colonel
Roosevelt’s idea of Americanism and
its pa rt in the world league-all the
while citing Roosevelt as a sturdy ex-
ample they fain -would follow— is in-
dicative of the caliber of him and
those others who for partisan reasons
decry the league and al) it stand for.
1820—lbinl..|
tuckv pioneer,
hi* son in
in Hucks
IM27- Daniel
yr-HTH a United
Indiana, born In
in W aslilng ton.
1 R!H —Sev
»na n v pa i i y
Vienna
I9»»5
t Wf'f ||
pu bl ir
1907 — I ’residen t Koosr\ el t
cn his Western and Southern
1910 Sever;.I Xnieriean nf .. . ...
men'inJut ed in Berlin in riots hetwe
strikers .nd the police.
1911 I; umsIm i, s t roopM
< itv <»f PriemytL
Berlin ndm it t ed
western front,
line remained i
Tm nsy I va nla
-A. DlATiMGTIVG NAME'
rAUiTIMA IJ D' i
uaqvElUNS mbJht do? >
OR PCRHAP5 , r—
k C4AMBNTIh&., J
SMOKE <
LONDON
1ZINDON, Sept. 26
liiK anwinif
in« vari*‘d
h woman I
(igar It
bigr
p« naive.
Another development of Hnioklntf by
women Im street Krnokin.K and fre
(juently one may Mee a girl at the lunch
hour in the city aauntering along en-
joying' her cigarette while during the
evening young iwinicn may often be
aeeri Minoking In the Went End Mtreeta.
r» is to have but one
nltrd State*. The Council,
pointed out. "originate*
while the Aaiiembly la "r
and hot an executive bo<ly":
"not an independent voting
Wilaon, to make it clear
a*
Empire
tak -
I the
says:
The <<tnstmetl<m nf the interurban
line will mean mo much to the peonlfi
Denton and all the people living
th*» line that after it la built
will wnnder how they managed
get along ho many years without
Il is mighty handy to be able to
town from your home in a few
minutes, take along the produce
meds to be marketed, yet in not
Mufficirnt to Justify a trip that would
take all day It Im n great convenience
all round and the railroads that ref
to extend a<c(»rn moda t ions and i
flcient NOrvic'- will find themNelv**M
fit ! not ed by the public after the In
‘ urban gets started Nom of the town*
now on Interurban lines wou^i wish
hack
line
long
George McAneny-, who Im tiring talk-
ed of for the post of* United State*
amhiiMsador to Germany, was formerly
I rraldrnt of t'»r New York board of
aldermen, and has aince been bualne**
» xecutlve of one of Mie leading
nals of the metropoll* Mr Me*,
ha* a remarkable record of civic
vice am an officeholder, negotiator
public utility corporation*.
municipal organic law and of civil ser-
vice rule*, and mm president of the
City <’lub Hr also nn* been highly
useful in city planning and architec-
tural betterment, local and national,
and for the same ha* received honor-
able recognition from several coun-
tries S» vrral years ago hr was prom-
inently mentioned as a candidate ror
(he New York mayoralty on the fu*ion
ticket.
U»d.r U,. h..d™, -Tel.,'. Ckn-.
(•(inst rud ion
will mean mo i
a nd
line
wni.drr
HO
hty han
. oin
Uten. take alon
be mark'
to Justify a ’
\ It Im ii gn
nd the railr<
a'G’ommoda t ions
ROUTE
Oak St. and all North of Oak St.
Hickory St. and all South of Hickory
Street.
Oak St., and all North of Oak St.
Hickory St., and all South of Hickory
Street.
All of Denton.
The Postmaster Hay* he ne
understand why when h folio
a real nice fish hr could not
enough of it to tell the truth a
LLU 1/
Pop gav» me a d ini yeHUddAv morn-
ing and told me not to ask for eny
more for 2 day*, and I spent it all be-
fore Hiipplr, and aftir suppir 1 wunted
a nickel to go to the movie* with the
fellows, and pop wa« U|
room reading the *poa
thinking, I wonder
hint
And I Med.
1 2 yeer* old. po|
get In the movl
Well, now that ]
not Hutch a lad
much better than
ho men would get
and give me a Meet.
Ami he kepp on
Ing page. m<’ ____.. _
hint waaent strong enuff.
And I *rd. if I had a nickel 1 bleeve
go tonite, pop, some of the other
ve got a nick**) to go.
io? ned pop keeping on reed-
? npoartlng page. Me thinking,
hat awt to of bin strong enuff.
I wed. If you was me. pop.
you go If you had a nickel?
n It up wata the anaer? aed pop.
he thawt 1 was asking him
innted of a queMlon, wlch !
. and I aed, Aw gosh, G, pop.
1. pop?
Ing the biggfHt hint ho far. and
H(*d. Cant you wat? Me thinking,
i. I dont bleeve he wuntH to take
hint.
1 aed. 1
know
Who have a
moved from
last year. An
Home distance
lighter had
ther put up
very dain-
had
or Beach, born In
Jtolnir an sdventur-
to Paris and found
connected with
_______ the excitement of
our Civil War. st the sire of 20 he
came over here and enlisted under
the name of Le Caron. Three years la-
ter he married a younK lady who had
helped him to escape from some Con-
federates.
A year later, through r. comrade in
arms, he was brought Into contact with
Fenisnlsm. a form of Sinn Fein-istn
and learned of the plots against Can-
ada. These he mentioned In a letter
home to Ills father, and Beach showed
the letter to his local M 1". who In
turn showed it to the Home Secretary.
The result of this was that Le Caron
acted as military spy for England, for
many years. Ills services enable Eng-
land to take measures which bought
about the fiasco of the Canadian inva-
sion. For 25 years he lived In Detroit.
In danger of death every slngh
He died a natural death, ho”
In middle age He had given up I.
five work some five years befor.
It was necessary for him to be
stantly guarded—even
flculty In seeing him.
Senator Johnson, not making the
proper distinction between the identi-
ties and functions of the Assembly
and of the Council of the League of
Nations, has led the unwary to believe
that the British Empire has six time"
the voting power of the United States
In the League President Wilson un-
does the tangle to the understanding
of the simplest mind and show's the
fnllncj- of the Johnsonian propaganda.
The average business man, cm-
jiioyer or employe, will average per
haps sixty hours' work a week nt the
smallest. Very many business men.
employers and employes, will average
even more thafi that-—some of them
indeed Will get in seventy hours or
more a week, which is too much for
began working twelve hours- entire
anybody to labor. Skilled labor, which
ly too much for physical or mental
well-being at hard work—finally re-
.. duced its 1 hours to ten, then to nine ami
then the whole labor work! set thell
eight-hour day as its goal on the prin j<
ciple of a third of the day for work, a
mHknd for recreation, a third for sleep I
-—A division that was claimed to be |
ideal. Today the eight-hour day pre- I
. rails in practically all the really skill J
"industries and in all the organized
undtilled, and the goal set several
Mjtn WO has been reached. But the
bnited Mine Workers of America
1B*W® B®t an entirely new goal, and
there are increasing indications that
the demands of the Mine Workers
Ethey succeed—will be made also
ly other well-organized unions The
>Dm Workers adopted unanimously a
■ailMrt recommending a six-hour day
* and a five-day Weak with time and a
half for overtime and double pay for
K week on Sundays and holidays In
• addition, that they might be able to
h.-Jw just the same pay for less work i
L- ...
A manufacturer of jewelry Is con-
fronted with a demand for a 25 per
cent Increase In wages, coupled with
a thirty-nine hour week. Under his
present high wage scale he Is able to
make only a 10 per cent profit. Tired
out with eternal bickering, he offer-
ed to divide this among his workmen,
but they refused. He then proposed to
turn over to them his factory to be
run on the Soviet system, offering to
give hl® own services free for six
months to Induct them Into the mys-
terious of business management. After
that he would retire. Again they re-
fused. No doubt they had heard of what
happened in Russia to Sovetlxed fac-
tories.
The authors of the Plumb plan ask
no Greek gift such as that offered by
the manufacturer of jewelry. If the
brotherhoods run true to tne Soviet
form, their wages continue as usual;
but the deficit Is borne by the stock-
holders and bondholders—who are re-
imbursed. if at all, at the expense of , ,
the public.
fn mo
at the
< ’ount v,
Pa.. Feb II.
State** ......
Btl t ’er < ’oiiTi t V, O
D? U. April 10.
. i So cIa 11 m t s
191.1- Berlin admitted Kains
lies on western front, but
German line r< maim’d intart
IMIfi Transylvania paHseM r*< apt liv-
ed by_ the Roumanians.
1917— Manv riirmv aliens arrested
' urtu ral round up in Greater New
WE ALL. LIKE SHEEP."
How Htrt»ng is that instinct in hu-
man nature which makes uh want
things not for th* ir own intrinsh* util-
ity or beauty hut just because other
people have timin’
Some frlendH of ours
nine- year-old <1 a light* r,
y to the country
untry school
her homo and
gone all day,
ch and packed
wicker hask**t
n her one (’hrlHtmas.
Prererrod A Lnrrf Pall
■ girl had been i
a few days, she came
one noon and said Hhe didn't want to
carry that wicker basket any more.
Why not. Mary?" "Because none of
th** other girls nave them/' What do
they have?'’ 'They all bring their
lunch In five-pound lard pails and I
want one, mother. I don't want to car-
ry that old basket "
Could one have a more picturestiue
example of the herd instinct which
makes a perfectly good garment ugly
to Its owner the wecond s«ason. which
helps create best Hollers and mobn the
dance halls and skatjng rinks and
goodness knows what els**,
I should not have thought one could,
but last night I came upon an example
that is quite as picturesque in its way
—and in contrast with th**Hv, even
mon* ro,
NOTICK TO THK Pt’BLIC
Any erroneouji refUction upon
eharacter. reputation or etanding
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to the publisher's.attention
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We earnestly solicit the co-operation of our customers in this
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Christian X.. thr reign
Denmark, horn in Copennai
sgo today
Brig Gen. Evan M. Johnson, I
a A., who was badly wounded i
lighting In France, born In BroO'
N. Y , 58 years ago today.
Eleanor Gates, successful
and playwright, born at
Minn.. 44 years ago today.
Irving Bacheller, author of numer-
ous popular novels, born at Pierpont.
N. Y . 60 years ago today.
Henry Walters, eminent Baltimore
capitalist and philanthropist, born tn
Baltimore. 71 years ago today.
»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•»• ! I
AMMKMBLY AND <’OI NC’lL.
(New York Time* )
i speech at Lo*
night President
some League of
on Interurban lines
to wee th»* lines taken up
to t he old mi yle of 1 ra I
ihoiihl have been'
Urn neither yellow gold nor fame.
Nor days of eaae. though all 1 firing.
I'm just the man ’and greater than
The Jeweled crown which murks (he
king
I am the will to be of use
Whate’er the place man may poi
Who doe* his beat shall meet the
A task well done is real aucceM.
In
Satur*
pla ine
11 r V S I tin t •■■■mu wssssrsNris
been smartly juggling with to tool
the unsophisticated, a game in which
he has had confederates These gentle-
men have torn passion to tatters In
protesting against the plan by which
the British Empire has six votes In
the Assembly of the League sf Na-
tions and the United States one. In
the Council of the League the, British
Empire Is to have but one vote, llks
the United States. The Council, as Mr.
Wilson pointed out. "originates all
notion." while the Assembly Is "a de-
1flfig Is M* * ® SNrv* as st C V ..ml ♦ 4 Ua 1 kz.al NS ’ * -
moreover. . .... _______________
body.” Mr. Wilson, to make it
that the United States would have
much to say as the British
when there was any action to be
en, anything momentous to be done,
made this exposition:
In every matter on which the As-
sembly can vote along with the Coun-
cil. it Is necessary that all the nations
represented on the Council should con-
cur In the affirmative vote to tnak®
It valid; so that in every vote,
matter how many votes are cast
the Assembly. It is
for the vote in the
valid, that the Un
vote aye.
Mr Wilson asked his hearers h<w
Canada. Australia, New Zealand, In-
dia with her millions, and the Union
of South Africa could fairly be denied
representation in the Assembly of the
League If Panama was to have •
vote It lias been well said that
six votes which se«*m to Increase
(Great Britain'*1) voice In the Ahi
bly really mean that her
dominions are claiming the
of sovereign independence"
up. the President said:
The vote of the United States is
tentlal to prevent, anything that
United States does not care to
prove. All this nonsense about Hix
I votes and one vote can be dismissed
and you can sleep with perfect quiet.
" lor Johnson, not making
distinction between the id
nd functions of the
t the Council of the 1
has led the unwary
British Empire has
'Igarette smok-
Ixtndon women Is now be- I The princplv cargo, la
t>y the occasional sight of of twenty-two fathoms,
in a restaurant smoking a ( bullion were contained
.. Is not a big, fat, cigar, for a chamber amid -slilps ret
fat cigars In laindon are very ex- impregnable by Its thlc
land heavily bolted doors
’X tions of the Laurentlc's decks
I blasted away and a passage was ma
clear for the divers. On June 20, t
retrieving of the treasure began
The first bucket send <tp contained
only copper pennies and a few silver
coins. Then for several days, bucket
after bucket containing three or more
gold bars, each worth more than 15.000
were hoisted to the surface and durnp-
| ed on the deck of the Racer. The first
of these bars brought lusty cheers from
the crew of the salvage ship, hut toss-
ing fortunes about soon came to be
j the farmers and the fishermen—like-
wise decide that they will not work
over six hours a day, thirty hours a
week—1,560 hours out of the 8,760
hours in a year? Somebody would
starve to death simply because of in-
sufficient food to go 'round!
-------o—------
Noting a Record-Chronicle para-
■h and the trouble in Penn-; graph that actual beginning construe-
__ 1_________U - A - . f Al... ___A....
* the Widow of the j
i hood doe* not bear
Do you
SanHicI w!
u**l for i<
about It and
to .refuse them, hut to "protest
* innly unto them” and to tell
whst a king would be like
So Samuel dors Just that In eight
vivid verses he gives a very feeling
description of the goo*1 old atyle of
king "He will take your sons and
appoint them to be hi* horsemen” "And
he will take your daughters to be con-
fectionalres and cook*." "And he will
take the enth of your seed and give to
his officers.” "He will take the tenth
of your sheep and ye shall be his ser-
vants '
It R*‘emed a
the obstinate
wasn't. They
they said, "Nay. but
king over us (tha>t
the other nations/’
The Supreme Advnntnue
y didn't expect to be better off,
had no reason to »*xpcct better
nents or laws than Samuel,, the
of God gave them; they expected,
t. no advantage of any sort
the Runiprcme advantage*
would be like the rest,
this instinct which Is as
my nil.*‘-yrnr-ohl frien
as the day of Samuel,
Truly "we all” are
suppose
merely another form of manual
to these sallormen.
Most of the gold
inches long, two in<
inches wide ar ’
ty-eiffht pound, ._________ ____ ____
found as many of them were hurled
clear of the wreck by the blasting ne-
cessary to make the strong chamber
accessible. Several feet of sand have
been washed over these scattered bar*
and neath masses of twisted steel and
it frequently requires hours of patient
labor to pry them loose. The record
day’s haul so far had been forty-sev-
en bars—worth approximately .$360,000.
Thu* far several million dollars worth
of treasure has been salvaged.
The Racer carries eight divers Their
"tricks” are so arranged that one diver
is at work throughout the day. Each
works half an hour and then must
spend thirty minutes In coming to the
surface as otherwise the sudden re-
lief from the tremendous deep-’water
pressure might cause partial or com-
plete paralysis. They are brought up in
ten-fathom “hauls,” with ten minute
"rest” intervals
When the day’s work Is over, the
day’s "catch”, if considerable, is dis-
patched to London with an armed con-
voy.
When first built the Racer was a
square-rigged man-o’-war—one of the
"Wooden Wall* of England." a* the
ships of the British navy at that ti^e
I I*' ■
THIS IS THK BIRTHDAY OF
HM14HI LE CARON
September M. 1*41
Henri Le Caron, whose real name
was Thomas Miller Beach, followed
the romantic and exciting career of a
a secret service agent. His book "25
Years in the Kecret Service." caused
an Immense sensation when It came
out. .
Ia; Caron or Beach, wm:
England, but
oue soul, he
ein ploymer.t
America. '
•'•■r Civil
over
j or to have more funds for recreation
pernor of N’assachu.-tts «nd candi-1 J^r ^r^ime, 0^
date for the democratic nomination I« In other words, the miners
w" l5r7K‘nAVer"On kV*. want the same pay for thirty hours’
V!" de8t,n*u"’’’e‘l dT*™‘?|work a week that they got for forty-
birth that was so sporty as to ment , j () of on„.thir(l fgr
being put in the sports calendar or < * one-third for play and one-
was it the fact that he has served jnJ-for 8, th one.fourth
three terms as Governor of Massachu !f k thrt>e.f()UrthH for play
Sai «Aaklrin<w a f iilirf h. .ni U k I n ir ' . . ■ grst
i and Bleep! Tne miner* are one of
three real producers in this country.
' What if the two other producers—
strikers have gained ground by the |
action of the Pennsylvania state i
police in trying to prevent them from
holding meetings to discuss the prob .
Isms confronting them Whatever
one may think about the justice of the
testeike, one cannot believe that it is
Ur right to deny the strikers their in ,
alienable right of public meeting and
free speech
sylvania—there
tion ar.
the strategic
because the
.___ ____has bee no such ac-1 tion of the Dallas-Denton-Wichita
anywhere else—has redounded to I Falls interurban was a possibility of
itrategic advantage of the strikers ! the next forty five days, the Sherman
police action, whether | Democrat, published ‘----- “•**
er not, is charged against the , had
wners. savi
j The
I'/
HALCYON DAYS
The happy days of war ars gone
and pence's frlghtfulnese is her®,
when we aesemble on the lawn and
cues the ding-donged profiteer. In
war we struck for noble things, to
undermine the tyrant's sway, to
overturn the thronee of kings and
now we strike for higher pay In
war we loathed the foreign foe, and
chased him on his cheap John shorn
and now, alas, us all men know,
we louthe the man who IIvsh next
door. In war we all united were,
we had one purpose and one end;
but now we fill the ulr with fur.
the fur of neighbor and of friend
I look back on the day" of war,
that bitter war of four Iona years
I wonder what we stopped It
to usher In the profiteers. Fat
better on the field to die. with
fame and glory », your bed. than
starve for lack of coin to buy
"burn of angel cake and bread,
better meet a atalwart
peri"li where your L.o;
than hate a hoarder !uy
with trlokw a Holdler v.
spine We clamored for
of peace throughout the
>ody fray and now we
fib
low.
d«-
boon
n nd
for
old
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, September 26, 1919, newspaper, September 26, 1919; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235374/m1/2/: accessed June 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.