Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 21, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 7, 1909 Page: 2 of 4
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IS
Chronicle LI
-
TD **X»RD AND CHRONICLE OOMFANY.
VAUDEVILLE FEATURES.
•UB0ORIPT1ON RATES:
'CL
i
Weekly.
(■onto f-
-
fl
leader
1
llhll)
they
£
any
with the biggest purse and donation
K
/
college.
- n
r
cl
x.
I
Just’ce Precincts No. 3an<i No. 7
r<i
By Harold MacGrath
, ...... V-v.
[and then build goo^ roads.
country.
the
But while their
V,
UULH <x VI up • CIB tu VUi UW11 11"
dividual crop, it presents a good pros-
Cotton was planted at and has
,s
Texas.
Some was damaged
orchids, etc., from Mexico.
, 0>
nounced the prospects good.
On
Are Your Titles Clear?
COUNTY. six inches."
OUJG
4k*w
Get busy. WILSON-WILLIAMS CO.
s,
/1
*
■r
■
■I
TENNIS GOODS
»,.t—-----
rd
W win, by mail (U advance) -—
•at year *y «all (in advance) —
’■I
Such a woman
To read of
______<0C
11.00
...$«.00
afZ,
size.”
The T. H, thinks they are running
One of the luckiest things that can
happen to a man Is not to count on bis
rent good land than we have land
to offer. Denton county has had a
large influx of farmers from other
before kowi.
ard of citizenship in these prec'ncts;
Himself. Band and Great Vocal
Artists Secured.
country
shown
that
for
an-
fields of both corn and cotton that
But how can cot-
Hicks* Capuatnc Cure* Sick Head-
ache. also nervous headache, travel-
ers* headache and aches from grip
stomach troubles or female troubles
Try Capudine—It's liquid—effects
immediately. Bold by druggists.
CmmA
tor*. fL_,----
Fo/W hit aJt'ut of
Hg‘.
<j That’s creative business
power.
11.00
.... so
.._ .26
l'exa.J,
I
X
1
%
\t 1
SAN ANTONIO. Tex . Sept.
The first contested application for
a saloon license la Bexar county was
refused today when Judge Shook de-, AD. rates are right
—CALL ON US
w—
ffcm. Po<mA«
rT,HIS ad. is directed at the
[ man who has all the
business in his line in
this community.
EV
Just received, fresh stock of
Tennis Goods, direct from factory.
Rackets $1.50
SALOON LICENSE REVISED
IN BEXAR
We have seen “good” farmers plow ;
as deep as the team could pull the
plow in dry weather. They never
realize how much of the root system
they are destroying, and how much
_____ mail matter at poatoftice at Denton
under art of Congress March 9, 1»7».
e^ity Mtared as second el*** matter Aug. 23 1»<>3. M
under act cf Congress. March 3, 18 • 3
'■•cord and Chronicle discontinued •’
eco
(Maaad every day «Magt BaaJay).
L',
anv erroneous reflection upou me cuarmiei. .-
in ’he column
Chronicle will be gladly corrected “pen being called to
attention of the publishers.
aS's
Just a short time now until the gates
Of the State Fair of Texas will swing
inward en the twenty fourth annual
meeting at Dallas, which Ircgins Octo-
ber 16 and continues s’xtoen day’
Not “Just as Good”—It's the Best
One box of Hunt’s Cure is unfa'l-
ingly, unqualifiedly and absolutely
guaranteed to cure any form-of skin
disease. It 's particularly active In
promptly relieving and permanently
Eczema, tetter, ringworm an 1 all
curing all forms of Itching known
similar troubles ere relieved by one
application, cured by one box.
A' ■ W
Bh
Kt’s-;
SPh''-,
| and Amar'llo had the call in the
„o, | “betting.'’ But a little bit of a burg
I e'ghteen or twenty miles from the
With two Americans finding the panhandle metropolis lands the plum
.-d-e , ' 5-
I
" ■’H
iti#’
I
Th* Surer Way.
“How can we interest her?”
“Tell her it's n worthy cause.” »ug-
' geste,| one. ,,
"Tell her it’s getting to l>e a popular
fad." lnter|H>s,-d a wiser head -Ianta-
rille Courier-Journal.
can t get anybody who saw them
' ’ i spoken has fight back in 1861-5 to say
favorable to Senator didn't know how to fight then
Culberson for the presidential nomi .
nation in 1913 Senator Culberson,
we know, can do no worse than Col
and up: Balis. 50 cents each.
Please phone me your order.
Number 52.
DENTON. TEXAA HEPT- 7.
I mencing to prefer younger men. One
I old patriarch,, grown gray in the ser-
Talk
And ;
you’lT find every woman in
this vicinity who has been
getting along with a rickety
washtub for years and years
will buy a new one from you.
7—I druggist will back up the guaran-
tee.”
O. M. Curtis recommends and sells
these preparations. If you are gray-
ha'red or your hair is commencing
to fade you can have the first bot-
tle of tJFBan Hair Restorer free—
simply call and ask for It. For Bale
by all druggists. Nod
I T. L. Peeler, industrial ajent of
I th» M K. & T. Railway company.
I will be present at the social session
• - Ml
■ '‘-^5
Ai^undown^asdydrcdTthinrpid^r^
nervous? And do not know what t? 'I
take ? Then go direct to your ccetcr. »
A»k his opinion of Ayer’s nth-alee ho1.- S
alM^awdic*!*m(- ie Sarsaparilla. No alcohol, no stimu-S
La asifV’’ AM’0'1 purifier, . nerve tonic, I
strong alterative, an ci 1 to digestion. |
NOTICE TO THE I’L’BLK .
anv •rroneou- reflection upou the character, reputation or standing
•>» «iiv firm, individual or corporation which may appear tu col..m>n
. ____a_l. Mill aia.lllr r.nr roctul H Ilf)
•» th* Record and
‘••w
For Headache—Hick’s Capndlne.
Whether from colds, heat, stomach or
nervous troubles. Capudine will re-
lieve you. Xt’a liquid—pleasant to
take—acta immediately Try it. 10c.
2Sc and 50c at drua stores
”My hoieat conviction, bhee i upon
by own experience and that of my
friend*, la that 'Hunt’a Cure’ will
cure a larger per cent of akin trou-
ble*, especially of an itching varie-
ty, than aay other remedy. Certain-
ly those affl'cted/with any form of
itch should try it.” J. O. Monroe.
Atchiaoa. Kaa.
It will pay you to read and use
Record and Chronicle want ade.
SAYS HE WILL RUN AGAIN
THE THIRY-NECOND
LEGISLATURE.
ure
There are enough uncertalnt‘es
about land trading without guess-
ing at the title. Better be on the
tsafe side; demand an abstract.
Duggan Acstract Co.
(Incorporated)
Denton. Texas
Tlie Read to Success
Has many obstructions, but none so
desperate as poor health. Success to-
day demands health, but Electric
B’tters is the greatest health builder
the world has ever known. It compels
perfect action of stomach, liver, kid-
neys, bowels, purifies and enriches
the blood, and tones and invigorates
the whole system. Vigorous body and
keen brain follow their use. You
can’t afford to slight Electric Bitters
if weak, run down or sickly. Onlv
56c. Guaranteed by J. F Raley &
State Fair will be like one of those Co.
bazaars of Bagdad, with the merchants
garbed in Twentieth Century clothes
Instead of the flowing garments of the
tradesmen of the East.
• m,
■ • • f,
Best f„ Existence.
; I sincerely believe all things con-
sidered, Hunt’s Lightning O’l is the
most useful and valuable household
remedv In ex stence. For cut®, bums,
sprains and Insect bite# It has no
equal so far as my experience goes’”
O. E. Huntington, Eufala, Al*.
-ma*- 1
A®
u
J®
Mu
It will
be the biggest thing for Aubrey anl
Lewisville fn their history. It will
ups (enhance property values over
and downs, with good crops and bad entire precinct and *’*H instill into
crops. But while their "ups” may lth« People an untiring energy never
(before kown. It will raise the stan-
never reach so high as in the inlus- !d of rltlze:)shlp Jn thege prec'nctg;
trial towns, their "downs” never sink |lt wllj double and triple these town’s
SO low. In dull timer privation and trade
absolute want are common, every lay
affair* in manufacturing towns. Few
people in the agricultural communi- 'and as is generally the case, the put-
Dr. Abernathy, the great English
physician, said: "Watch your kld-
neya When they are affected, your
life Is in danger.** Foley’s Kidney
Remedy makes healthy kidneys, cor-
rects urinary irregularities. and
tones up the whole system. Garrison
A Klmmlns.
The
fl Mr. Merchant—You say
you’ve got it all. You’re sell-
ing them all they’ll buy, any-
how. P'i^ at the same time
you wou. 1 like more business,
fl Make ’his community buy
more.
fl Advertise strongly, consist-
ently, judiciously.
fl Suppose you can buy a lot
of washtubs cheap; advertise
a big washtub sale in thio pa-
per. Put in an inviting pic-
A story of the most alluring character in fiction,
in real life often decides the destiny of a nation,
her is as interesting and exciting as it would be to meet her.
You will find the story fascinating from beginning to end.
We will offer |5 In K01-’ for «be
best piece of embro'dery work, white
or colored, dole with Royal Soc’ety
Floes, exhibited at next Trades Day
display. The work must have been
Hardware Company started after this notice Is published.
that he will be a andidate for the ground him: "Here I am doing as
legislature anj make a fight for to ' Rood if not better work tha-i I ever
win the speakership which he w-as
forced to resign last winter.
■o-----------
BACK TALK.
So Canyon City lands the West
w Texas Normal—a dark horse it was
Bryan. We believe he can do much to everybody. Abilene, Sap Angelo
better.
O. M. Curtis.
Drugs. Jewelry. ,
The Wilson 1
makes so charge for estimates on i
plumbing work.
Music Hsll Program at Texas Stat*
Fair, Wliich Open* October 16,
Includes Many Rare Act*.
Seventy talented musicians, twenty
great vocal artists and a grand array
of instrumental soloists in a series of
musical festivals, under the personal
direction of the Imperial Cornet Vii-
tuoso and Band Master Alessandro Li-
berati, is the splendid offering
the mansae-nont has secured
Music Hnll at the twenty-fourth
nual exposition of the State Fair of
Texas. wbi<!i opens at Dallas, Satur-
day. (>ct< er Ki, grd continues sixteen
days.
I.iberatl's band is one of the most
efficient musical organizations in the
Although the leader has truth, to our mind, than he did in
no inclination to sacrifice the
artistic side of his work, it must not
be understood that his programs are
without the elements of popularity, for
he has shown due regard for both sides
of the question. In technique he has a
way of handling his band which makes
it tar superior to the average musical
organization Ho gives ample atten-
tion to the requirements of his on
gagemeuts, and assures the Fair man-
agement that lie is preparing one of
the finest program of his career for
the State Fair.
Every morning, afternoon and even-
ing I.iberati’s band, soloists and chorus
will give free concerts in the Music
Hall. His corps of opera singers are
men and women with large, full-toned,
melodious voices. The chorus is
strong and well balanced and will be
1 splendid hall
erected by the management for the
purpose. I.iberati’s band is best in
its military and patriotic selections,
and selections of this kind are espec-
ially popular with State Fair audiences.
This famous bandmaster1 has had a
most. Interesting career and has been
a bandmaster on this side of the At-
lantic for thirty-six years. He has
enough medals to make him a suit of
armor If he strung them all together.
In addition to the superb band and
operatic attractions the State Fair
management has secured some of the
finest vaudeville artists on the Amer-
ican stage for its Music Haji programs. ,
Of the numerous artists that have been |
secured special mention should be
made of McGarvey, the world-famous
impersonator of the gentler sex; Galet-
ti’s monkeys in a farce comedy en-
titled "Green's Night Off,” and Mrs.
D. H. Kincheloe, a Kentucky woman,
famous as a whistler, reader, vocalist
and pianist. And then there will be
acrobatic stunts of a sensational na-
ture; a clov n act that promises to be
exceedingly popular and many other
features.
Bert McGarvey, the female imper- I
' citizens, who desire to rent a year
or so and then if Deuton county
meets with their expectations, they
intend to purchase. The Chamber of
Commerce gladly renders all assist-
ance possible grat’s. If you have a
farm you desire to rent, list it with
us and it may be the means of lo-
There is more catarrh in this sec-
t;on of the country than all other
diseases put together, and until the
last few years was supposed to be
insurable. For a great many years
doctors pronounced it a local disease ;
and prescribed local remedies, and i once visited the plant of a big pat-
by constantly failing to cure w’thient medicine firm.. On my way
local treatment, pronounced it Incur- ! through, one room. 1 asked one of
able, i
be a constitutional disease and there-
ofre requires constitutional treat-
ment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufac-
tured by F. J. Cheney & Co., is the
only constitutional cure on the mar-
ket. It is take3 internally in doses
from ten drops to a teaspoonful. It
acts directly on the blood and mu-
cous surfaces of the system. They
offer one hundred dollars for any
case it fails to cure. Send for circu-
lars and testimonials. Address F. J.
Cheney & Co , Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by druggists. 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for con-
stipation.
Put in an inviting pic-
ture of a washtub where
people can see it the minute
they look at your ad.
strong on washtubs.
greater tbe struggle is for the plant i
to get moisture after this severe
pruning.
The farmers we have been thrown
with all our life delight in elevat'ng
their corn, cotton, etc., on beauti-
ful ridges, with more beautiful
ditches i-j middles, which is called bs
the ditching process. Of course, we
know that land must be dra’ned, for
water standing on or remaining on
| the surface will ruiq crops; but this
I ditching process is practiced on the
I most arid hills. The most prevalent
way of farming here is the best way
I We could think of to dry the land—
I or bake it—and no better method
me. {could be adopted to a'd a drouth
efilertainer, musician, whistler Jn ruining a crop.
.. .. ..... . , . -j-0 return t0 the drouth with us
Her ' now. The wind has continued from
Senator Bobtailer says the sent! (you
ment wherever he has i,
bee* altogether 1--------— —
16. Mr. Peeler’s experience in in-
dustrial development is large and he
do doubt will give us all some val-
uable pointers. Every member of the
Chamber of Commerce should come
out on this date and bring some
non-member with you.
It has been conservatively estimated
that the value of the exhibits tn the
Exposition building at the twenty
fourth annual meeting of the State
Fair of Texas, which opens at Dallas
Saturday, October 16, and continues
sixteen days, will easily total the vast
sum of $2,000,000. Expensive gowns
and frocks from Paris, New York and
London, rich gold ornaments, dia-
monds, rub’es. emerald's and other
jewels, delicate machinery, Persian
carpets, shawls of Cashmere that can
be drawn through a ring, Brussels car-
pets, mahogany furniture, ivory Inlaid
tables of India, in fact all that delights
the heart of women and makes the
home beautiful will be found in this
great structure. And exhibitors are
spending thousands of dollars to make
their booths attractive and inviting.
There will be model bedrooms, parlors,
kitchens, etc., of great interest to the
housewife. In fact, this section of the
n
I
i
HOW TO FIGHT IHtOUTH.
Home and Farm.
No mor* diff'cult year to farm—
in the way we farm here in North
Mississippi—la 03 record. The first
"bad luck” was damaged stand* of
cotton by- frost. The second streak
of "bad luck” was too much rain
and plant Hee; and now it is the
drouth, which has been with us for
more than a mouth.
Is there not a method by which
a farmer can fa'm ana avo'd the
defects of drouth? Of course, it is
useless to ask this question, when it
has been demonstrated so many
times and whe-j so many able writ-
ers-—men who know what they are
talking about—tell the people all
over the country how to farm to pre-
vent such results.
Mr. Ergar never wrote a greater
-------------o------------- [ ___________________________
.y : It must be a grim travesty of a of the Chamber of Commerce Sept.
Labor Day celebration when, as was .
the case in Western Pennsylvania,
30,000 able-bodied men are out of
employment aud their families sub-
sisting off public funds. Sometimes
we have wanted to live in an Indus- ,
trial town, dependent upon indus- '
trial enterprises. There is no busier are eaCh considerably interested and
place when trade conditions are good are figuring o-u holding an election
and the industrial concerns are oper-
ating. But of all the Godforsaken
dreary places in the world, the worst We hope that each of these precincts
is the industrial town in a business (will vote on and carry the election
depression or with a lock-out, walk-
out Or strike la progress People in
agricultural towns have the'r
dined to grant a license to Fred
Folle. It was in this place that a
brother of Judge Shook was shot
several months ago.
to vote on a bond issue for bu idlng
i good public roads. This is the "do
■ it now” spirit that will succeed!.
Some will produce none
on thiq land; “other” some will
produce well.
And if we keep our eyes open, can
we not profit by remembering this
year’s experience by making notes of
the greatest mistakes? It seems to
us that such years in farming should
be remembered and pitfalls avoided
in the future. A situation Is never so
bad as pictured.
his last letter concerning “luck ”
In this section of Miss smppi, if a
man follows well established truth
in the line of modern farming, to
the best of his ability, and makes
a good crop, it is attributed either
to "luck,’’ a freak in showers, or
better land, whe-j other men on the
same land pronounced it jyorn out
it 's a well established fact and
easy to see that there is a cause for
everything happening as it does in
the world,. It is also plain why lots
of people will not employ better
methods of farming.
Having never use.i any commer-
cial fertilizer, we wrote to the ex-
periment station of this state, ask ng
for information Our intention is to
make one acre produce two bales of
cotton and one acre produce 100
bushels of com
If we fall short the effort will
not hurt us. but will prepare us bet
ter for the struggles next year.
The information received was to
the point and plain; secured only
for the asking. Why was the direc-
tor of this experiment station asked
for information on farming? Be-
cause he had conducted hundreds of
experiments, because he is authority
on farming.
Will it not be a good idea to break
the land this fall, burying all the
stalks, vines, etc., and break again
in early spring, deeper than fall
breaking, before preparing land f°r
planting.
If it is well broken only once this
fall or winter and ailowel to freeze,
will not more mo'sture be held in
the ground for a summer drouth in
I rase we have one.
' Then, if a proper seed bed is pre-
pared anl shallow cultivation prac
ticed, if the surface is kept fine and
'loose what is to prevent us from
|weathering a drouth?
1 In a conversation with a farmer
recently, we learned from him that
to make cotton there must be a
“bed” put to it. Now. the prevale it
way here of putt’ng a “bed’’ to cotton
is with a turn plow. To do this one
is forced to cultivate deeper than he
! report justify it. This is th<^ way to
{get the results, and continued ef-
I fort will eventually get the o!l. if
of ,we have it. and all supposed experts
In so far. without except'on. have pro-
some company he could have gotten
away with such talk, but, unfortu-
nately for him, he ma’e his little
"spell” in the presence of an aged
Confederate veteran. What happen-
ed then is best toll *n a Louisville
dispatch—
"A gray haired soldier of the six-
ties and a natty young veteran of the
Spanish-American war clashed in
gory battle in a local boarding house {
when John Hudson. Span sb war sol- |
dier, made the statement within the
hearing of Joseph Hallman. Confed
erate veteran that the soldiers of the
sixties never knew how to fight. This I
remark was a bombshell in the ear,i
of one of the South’s gallant de- i
fenders and Hailman sailed Into
Hudson with such fury that the lat-
ter was nearly beaten to death by
the veteran man of war before his
triendg could reecue him Hudson
went to the hospital and Hallman
to jail, but the latter wa« happv in
the heiief that the South had once
more been gallantly defendel.”
Th's young fellow is perhaps con-
vinced that these old veterans know
how to fight—now it not then. And
.........:
Thin? Pale?
Strange idiosyncrasies and. opin I
ions of some gray-haired people and
, those afferted with scalp and hai:
trouble.
1 New York'City sends out more
IN i salesmen, twice over, all probab l-
lity, than any other city in the world.
{At an annual banquet given by a big
firm to its salesmen there were pres-
; ent some two hundred gray-haired ]
and bald-headed salesrhen. It was |
M !a subject of mournful discussion ' luck -New York Press,
the among them that the finn was com-
House of Representatives, announc-
ed to friends at Denison yesterday I ViCe, remarked to several gathered
that he will be a andidate for the'around him: "Here I am doing as
legislature and make a fight for to { Rood if not better work than I ever
win the speakership which he was did in my Hf*; yet, because I am
commencing to show, my age, am
slated for the ‘has been’ division. 1
wish I knew of something that would
turn my hair to the color of that of
a lusty man of thirty.” “Why don’t
you use Q-Ban Hair Restorer?’’ sug-
gested one of his audience.
friend," answered the old fellow, “I
Denton county’s oil prospects con-
tinue to excite considerable interest
ities every suffer for the absolute ne- ting down of one well will be the
cessities of life and nearly always i means of^ others making an effort^
there is enough to go round and pro. i otherg near Denton are very much
vide at least sufficient for living and interested in the prospects around
for everybody. [Denton and it is being contemplated
—r—-------- {securing *□ expert, to look over some
Up at Louisville, Ky., the other-of the prospects with a view of de-
Jay a young whipper-snapjxr who veloplng them should the expert’s
took some part tn the Spanish- ;
American war undertook to dispar-1
age the fighting qualifications
the soldiers of the Civil war
SHERMAN. Tex., Sept 7.—A.
Kennedy, former speaker of
North Pole that stunt be grow-
ing common in * year or two. In both of jajl. We congratulate our friend
instances, did you mark, the first
news came to Denton readers in the ,„„
shape Of a dispatch to the Record that DentOn knows what the posses- heard clearly in the
. . . . . » t. _ i_ V] erected bv the man:
[to the material and mental welfare
_____ [of the town where'n it is located —
Old Politician in the Dallas ( go, then the gU8pen8e jg OVer
Times-Herald truthfully observes about the location of the West Texas
that “there are men offering for gov. Normal. Many towns offered liberal
ernor of justice-of-the-peace size.” .bonuses to get it and the contest was
spirited. Altogether it has been a
(great advertisement for West Texas
to qualify for congressional positions an<J wlu attract public atteat’on to
Under the prospective four or five that growing and enterprising section
new congressmen for Texas under °f th’s great state. Let Texas grow.
. —Fort Worth Star-Telegram,
the next apportionment.
i--------o (
Already students are coming here
for the different colleges and in
spite of the drouth which has pre-
vailed all over Texas it is probable By C. E. Scruggs.
We continue to have more ap-pli-
reduced from last year'rf high cations from farmers who want to
aggregate. Another (
thing that looks good to us is the
effort uow being put forth by the counties within the past sixty days.
Standard Business college, whose many of whom are £ood, substantial
advertising has already been begun.
A full page, most of it devoted to
advertising Denton, was used by Mr.
Lewis in Sunday's Fort Worth Re
cprJ. The city schools will be a cou-
ple of weeks late In opening, but the
indications are for an enrollment oV eating a good citizeq in our county
1500 by the holidays. Denton citi-[and secure for you a good renter,
sens should certainly appreciate its
•chools
sonator. who appeared several years i
ago iu Dallas, comes back as an at-
traction for the State Fair in what is |
termed the greatest test of “finesse” in !
his art ever seen. A wonderfully |, .
beautiful makeup, exceptionally grace- D1’eaKs the land,
ful dancing and with the world's most
sensational contralto voice, undoubt-
edly places him in the front rank and
in a class by himself. He is the most
vivacious and charming creature imag-
inable when gowned for his act and is
one bubble of life, magnetism and
beauty.
Galelti's monkeys are the most fa-
mous trained animals in the world.
Their absolutely human acts seem to
substantiate the Darwinian theory.
The monkey band, playing various
popular airs in a maimer perfect, has
astonished audiences throughout the
United States Alid then the barber
shop feature, where the monkey-barber
shaves, cuts hair, etc., js one of the
most laughable acts imaginable. They
appear in a monkey farce comedy en- |
titled "Green’s Night Off,” an act that
keeps merriment a rolling during the
entlre^time.
As an< ’
and warbler, Mrs. D H. Kincheloe has j
no superior in this country. '
whistling would put a mocking bird to (the northeast for two or three days,
shame, and the old southern dialect j which seems to parch things more
in which she recites “The Party,” 'than from other directions. What
ripples over with that sense of
tivity enjoyed by every
She is a very fine musician and is an
entertainer of an enviable i
; winvii seems io paiun iiuu
than from other directions. (
na- (will be the result, no man can tell.
Southerner. I Of course there are spots and even
_i auu id <n) ' f.. ...I. .....J, . V,>
reputation, (will produce well.
The management considers Mrs. Kin-itoq six to twelve inches high pro-
cheloe one of the star attractions of jduce a good crop? As to Our own ’n-
the coming exposition.
Another feature of the Fair will be ' pect.
the Flower Show- at which will be ex- > never been cultivated deep and the
hibited splendid plants, flowers and (harrow is being used in the middles
shrubs grown in Texas. Practically [Corn is spotted. Some was damaged
every flower will be represented and j by deep, wet plowing, the only al-
in addition there will be rare bulbs, ! ternative.
Terrill, who did his part or more to-
ward getting the. shooi, and we con-
gratulate Canyon City from the fact
and Chronicle? R. & C. readers get slon of such an institution is worth
the news first
■«•* year Ila advance)
»* seonth* (in advance) --------
• •re* month* (in advance)
••••cly entered as second class
second eUss mall matter Aug. 23. 1903.__*t the
t’ce at Denton. Texas. u__
» labecrtptton* te »he Meekly
ptration
|THE COMMERCIAL CLUB|
C* F QnFucrtyc Hftlfil'
that the attendance will be little if
any
record in the
by constantly failing to cure
Science has proven catarrh to ' the employers what they up up there,
institutional disease and there- 'Hair restorer,’ I was told. Well, I
want to say that among the employes
working i-q that room I never in my
1’fe saw together so many gray-hair-
ed and bald-headed people..’’ "All
right,” replied the other, "I have a
good head head of fine brown hair,
haven’t I? Well, my hair three
months ago. before I came with this
firm,' was a fine old iron gray, I
used Q-Ban Hair Restqrer, you see
the result, and the owners of Q-Ban
Hair Restorer agreed to refund me
my ynoney if it didn’t do a fine old
iron gray. My wife used Q-Ban Hair
Tonic and it has cleared her scalp,
stopping her hair from falling out,
) and I’ll bet it’s increased the length
(six inrihes,” "Where can K®‘
lit?” "Oh, at any drug store, and the
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Edwards, W. C. Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 21, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 7, 1909, newspaper, September 7, 1909; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235517/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.