Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 9, 1913 Page: 2 of 8
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L. Craddock & Co.
• Dallas, Texas. 4
The
Below
largest shippers of whisky direct to the ionsumer in th* South
we I a few of ot-r leading brands
Our Own Bottling.
4qt«.
12qts
Craddock s 8 7 _______|5 Oo
212001
O|d Crow 4 50
11.00
Craddock a 92 4 00
10.00 1
Melba Rye 4.00
10.00
R. Monarch .......... 3 so
9.00
Craddock5h quartette. 3.00
8.00
Canada Rye ........ 3.00-
8.00 !
Gentncky Cyclone 3.00,
8.00 1
WeatmorMand Rye 2 50
* 00 I
Nelson Sour Match 2.50
7.0 0 1
Cor*. Whisky ...... ro
7.00 1
Peet Corn . . .......... 3.0O
8.00 |
R<*k and rye 12.60. Pea chand
Peach and apple brandy each
Apricot brandv 13.50 and 14.50
f'allforn a wines 1150 and 22 50
on one gal costing 12.50 or more
Bottled In Bo.id.
honey |.i 00 per gal.
>■1 and $4 a gallon
per ga Ion.
4qts
12qt»
Gibson Rye ...
»« 00
tie 00
James E. Pepper
. 5 00
12.00
Green River
. 6.00
12.00
Sunny Brook
5.00
12.00
Guckenheimer Rye .
5 00
U.vO
Kentucky Club .
5.00
12.00
HUI * Hill ....
... 5.00
12 no
Penwlc k Rve
4 50
11 on
Lyn®da e .......
4.00
10.00
Duffy's Malt (4 bo'w, 4.00
10.00
Alcohol .....
. 3.5IT
10.00
Cocktail ............
. 5 00
13.00
per gallon 1 Express charge* paid
for case and bottles
Per cane.
Per calk
The egnreM
1 ipMia, eharw
accent |
reaches
dog back for bottles.
Wi do not prepay
— _ rw. W MV HUI
raonat eho.be zJS* " 7™^ "T
reonai. ehecki. Good, go forwar by first express after order
11 back ..._____________
*1 back for case and bott'oe
20c per CC
return rnr »'e. free
M-lilltx' Bottled Beer
4 dot pinta..... 15.00
2 dox. qt». ............. 4.25
10 dot. pta. ..... 11.00
—1 companies
________________________________________________ RECORD AM» CHRONICLE DEN'TOX* TEXAN, THURSDAY, JANI*ARY ».
—————.——————■ ■■ 1—■■ — ............
THE NEXT TEXAS LEGISLATURE ““
R. M. JOHNSTON 10
SUCCEED J. W. BAILEY
IN CHESAPEAKE BAY
Nabours, Montague.
E
n
w
w
n
Bailey. Houston
H
. Brownwood.
The
Johnson. Memphis.
was
B.
Stone. Henderson
<ttt<> Wahrmund.
legislation
autnont
E
nation
Mull n
w
Ah-xan
at Patton. Ratcliff
linnet-. Henrietta
r» !■
repri
bi i'
Tillotson. Sealy.
$300.
PARIS
od.
rt i:kis!|
they
Put that money back
burg.
troubles” for
^©©fOo^
H.
We’ve samples here for you
J B. Wilst n Lumber Compan*
*<**
i.
j.
B
R
T
H.
board
eases
with
of the best
the province
ft Is
the
R.
W
H
the
All
today declared that the condi-
of Adrianople is desperate and
its capitulation was perhaps on-
qu-stion of hours.
Fpljpwlng is a list of the senators
and representatives in the Thirty-
third Legislature of Texas:
the
a
Mini
the
Jan. 4.
drowned
tion that will sa\e you dollars—real
ones—on the next building you roof.
Find out about it today.
VIM. IMM’KEFELLER IS STILL
DODGING PROCESS SERVERS.
WIFE
AWING
HEM V X 11 I DRI ANOPLE
Wil l. Rl TlUN TO WAR.
SI BRENDER OF TURKISH
STRONGHOLD IS EXPECTED.
They killed
Iv injured
Greer. Wills Point.
Carter, Center
Warren, Terrell
Morrow. Hillsboro
of health Twenty-one
and eleven deaths Oc-
in the town of Dyer«-
Xine owboys
tet.l( v.ouuded
ate battle on
Jt'dpe Harper mentioned in
"oregolng Fl Paso dfgjmt'h. Is
former Denton county citizen.
•PENT “SORI-!’’; WILL
Bic NOMINATE GOETHALS
mBAHNAIMlR RETD N
BODY REACHES THE
Rickerson, Atlanta.
Rowell, Jefferson.
Furrh. Elysian Fie
PORTE INSTRUCTS ENVOYS
to reject* Ultimatum
s CAPTURE 2.000
I l IIKS IN CHIOS ISLAND.
as (online here to a bank for
'inn. The negroes refused
. :.d look only <asn.
S.MI GGLERS ATTACK HERDS-
MEN; LEAVE » DEAD.
Astin, Bryan.
Towns, nd. Lufkin
Collin.--, Beaumont
Chari.
R T
THIBETANS MASSACRE
loo CHINESE SOLDIERS.
in conflict
rinciple on
founded. '
.1 that during
would mean th
tilities.
guarding against emer-
gencies and overcoming
loneliness.
Now is a good time to
learn how YOU can get
this service.
f * f
Southwestern
TiltgriH Ml
T lit ph oh Co.
NIUS. • HI«|
BOISE, Idaho, Jan 2.—Publisher
Sheridan and Managing Editor Brix-
ton of the Boise Capitol-Newg were
found guilty of contempt of court
today and sentenced to ten days in
Jail and a 1500 fine each. This
was the noted Roosevelt case, in
which the newspaper severely criti-
cised the court.
Willacy. Portland
■ al. Kerri ill*-.
S. I!
E I.
John
Williams, Wa
cattlq-
-was
off
more
dead
STB “JULIA LUCKENRACH" (XIL.
I.IDES WITH STR. “INDRAKC-
LA”—CAP* AIN A?
OF “Lit KEN'BAl li
THE DROWNED
HARPER DRAWS LGNG TERM.
EL PASO, Jan 3.—In drawing
'of*. Judge James R Harper of El
!’a«o. Chief Jostle of the Eeighth
Court of Civil Appeals, secnied the
six.year term. Judge E . F Higgins
of Alpine got the four year-*<’rm an<j
'i dee McKenzie of Pecos tho two-
year term.
Bl LG ARIANS ALIxiW DRUGS
Hl BE SEN I INTO ADRIANOPLE.
of his
does so. m
compelled
Goodnhr. Dublin
Spann <; i n T
Ri- hie. Mmoral
rim of the smokestack
safe, but
the slac k
drowning
Geo- of
a band of
the herdehs
cash from
CHENGTU, China. Jan 2.—
Three hundred Chinese soldiers
were kilhd by Thibetans near Hsi-
Ang Cheng, on the borders of Thi-
bet. '-s' night. It ig reported that
the Chinese tr°ops refused to trust
their
t he
and
the
CONSTANPINOPLE. Jan. 4.—
Turkish minister* this afternoon
telegraphed instructions to the Tur-
kish peace envoys at London,
said the instruction* are for
Turkish envoys to reject the ulti-
matum of the allloa, which included
'he cession by Turkey of Adrianople,
Crete and the Aegean Islands
of Minlio, for
fug from fair
three herds of
for home with
by forty of his own herdsmen.
Early this morning a large band
of smugglers asbushed the
men. Murilbaes himself
wounded seriously and carried
the field by his men who left
than half of their comrades
or h. Ipless.
Al'STIN, Jan 4 At 10:30
o do k this morning Gov Colquitt
aiinoun<ed the appointment of R
M Johnston io succeed Senator
Joseph W Bgihy lor Hie term ex
SMYRNA, Turkey. Jan. 3. -The
Turkish sailing vessel Theodore was
blown up by a floating mine at tho
etitran e of Smyrna bay’ today.
v ASHtxfGTON, Jan J —Prn.1
ent IM* definitely announced today
'hgt he v ID not send to the Senate
fol Goethal’s nomination for gqv-
of
the
Ho
the
< becks
NEW YORK. Jan. 2 —John D.
Rockefeller today in an automobile
drove up to William Rockefeller's
Fifth Avenue residence, whbh sub
poena servers are guarding John
H was about to alight at the curb
wh*n a reporter recognized him. and
John D. hurriedly drove away.
G CQlJins. Gjand Prairie
O Craven, Pilot Point.
R
1> Rogers. Decatur.
H.
SOFIA. Jan. 2 A wagon load of
drugs frOm Turkish medical author.
was permitted to enter Adriau-
yesterday untfer the Bulgarian
s surveilianci'. No food ac-
orn panied it.
NEW YORK, Jafl.3 —In a
h«r sotting of rain and fog
British erpfser Natal the funeral
ship of Ambassador Whitelaw Ried,
bo died In Ixtndon, arrived in New
York today with an imposing con-
■oy of Hn-ited States men of war.
FWipAV IN OdNORKHS.
WASIHNOTON. 'Jan, 3— The
Senate adjourned today on account
->* th teeth of Jell Davis.
In the House Chairman Ptijo gttm-
-nonod the money trust probe* com-
n'ttoe to meet tomorrow to discover
f the House has any means of foyc-
”<* the entrance of Wil'lam Rocke-
'eller’a house to nerve a subpoena.
year old reputation behind every roll of
roofing that tecars the Peerless mark.
The makers have to make Peerless so it makes
good, because they can't afford to sacrifice the
prestige they’ve spent twenty years a’huilding
lOPi.E REPORTED
TO HAVE CAPITl LATED.
IEAMFD ON RAIL FRIDAY.
’NDIANPOLtfl. Jan. 3—The
Jndlanspolli Court of Appeals today
ordered tha ralaaaa nf tha dynalt.
mitara from the Leavenworth paal-
'•ntlacf ©n ball.
Dominbo. Portugal—
were killed and four-
■ sever, iy in a desper-
the. Spanish frontier
■ 'tween herdsmen and
smugglers who routed
and stole J90.000 in
therao.
Jose Murilhaes. one
known cattle breders in
weeks ha 1 be eh go-
to fair until he sold
bulls. He then started
$90,000 and guarded
the guard
RESIGNATION OF >ENATOR BAL
LEI NOT Rt-X EIVED Bk 4JOL-
<Jl ITT I NTIL 2 O < IXM K SA •-
I RDAV MORNING— MAILS
< RED1 XUAL*'.
\\
I!
Ed Kauffman,
' He
failure, of the Ottoman delegates to
is negotiations
timption of hOg-
<ommander’s knowledge of
country, becamu insut- dinate
confvs d. and that thereupon
Thibetan^ attacked them.
LONDON. Jan. 3.—Advices re-
ceived by tho Servian peace delega-
tion
I on
i liat
ly a
dai lb.ht robbery at
PHU-; NEGROES GET
ignores] and
ly during th.-
ulzer as dem
w York. All
> and display usually incl-
elent to such oc agions were dispens-
ed with at Mr Sulzer's request Mr
Sulzer stood on the front Steps of the
capital after his inauguration and
addressed the- thousands who could
not witness the ceremony. The pop
ular election of Senators was the
chief r© ommendation in his first
annual message- to the Legislature
will end them. The real quality that’s in the
material insures wear on the roof.
item. Put the “repair money’’ back in
your pocket. You’re not ^oin^ to need it.
7’Z/j- time, before you cover your build-
ings, you’re, going to investigate prepared roofings
and as sure as you do, you'lluse Peerless.
rushed howling through
here for hour or more,
one person and serious-
nine more before
were recaptured
Grandstaff, poolville.
Louis J. Wortham, Fort Worth,
H B Paddock, Fort Worth
Hunter P. Lane. Fort Wjrth.
Fred T. Vickers, Cleburne.
Sam J. Hunter, Fort Worth
W
R
R
his
M.c
Senators.
Hop' e W Vaughan. Texarkana
H L. Darwin, Cooper.
F M. Gibson, Bonham
S. B Cowell, Whitesboro
Ed Westbrook, Farmersville.
u. ( lav ton McNtalus, Dallas
J
11
d.Ji\c-red .-in . dilrt.ss intended more
for the country at large than for
('ingress itsdf And ' he added
I would noi now 'I* part from that
ed asHisran *• io the- sinking ship.
\ c-wM-l < ut Almost in Two
The name of th, reg-uing steam-
er was the Pennsylvania The Indra
hula was badly damaged and
beached for fear of sinking.
The Luckenbach was cut practi-
cally in two, sinking so quickly
that those- below the decks bad no
time to get out. Chief OfficerHunt,
one of the; survivors, said that Capt.
Gilbi rt made a desperate effort to
reach his wife who was below. The
last Hunt saw of him Gilbert was
swimming after the sinking steam-
er. (>ne seaman clanabored up the
stacks of the Luckenbach’s funnels,
thus keeping above the water as she
sack Finally he perc hed on the
seemingly
the steamed lurched and
broke off below tfte water
the seaman.
the highest winds of the
--( hs-.-ii nine up, driving huge waves
which t<re the clothing of the survi-
vors and tnr.de their hands oleod a
they clung to th rigging.
PARIS, Jan 3—-Sam Jennings,
q resenting Dotson Bros, of Sutn-
r was held up and robbed
Bin in cash by two negroes on
l.'iglu More Rescued.
Th-- ei.lit we,
steam- r Ussier,
bm k.-d
d by the
ludi-akuala
off after collision and tiie
Your money does more than its
share
LONDON, Jan. 4.—It is declse*.
-I at the Ottoman peace delegates
have absolutely made up their minds
rot to surrender Adrianople or the
tegean sea islands The Bulgarians
rtimaie that the allies may accept
the mediation of the powers
Telephone
for Aid
I'LVAS Portugal. Jan. 3.--Thir-
-five lunatics, freed from a burn-
ing insane asylum to save their lives
last night,
ATHENS Jan. 3.- A Turkish
earrison of 2.000 men at the Island
of (’bios has surrendered uncondi
orr>ro nr r»n|»ma bec&uM Of da»6
rulir opposition.
TOLEDO, o , Jan. 4 —A big tour-
ing car carrying three unidentified
persons i an through
chains at the Madigon avenue dock
and plunged through the ice to
bottom of the Maumee river
u.re were drowned.
SAILING SHIP
P.I OIIX I P IN SMYRNA BAI
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.— Senator
Bailey this afternoon Presented
lesUnation, announcing‘that R.
Johnston would succeed him
Ian 3 —It is reported I
tdrianople hag capjtulat-
II LIES MAY ACCEPT
THE POWERS’ MEDIATION
clendell. Austin
R. Orland'-r, A
p. Byrne. Smi
D. Huchcs Ge'
DodWrOi Burn-, t
Morris. Oglesby
('ox. Waxahachie.
Sullivan. Italy r
Burns, Irene.
Woods, Corsicana.
Tar't-r. Corsicana.
Chari, s T Mills. <
!L P Jordan, Wae1
1 OCRING CAR TAKES
THREE TO ICY GRAVE
McGregor. Austin.
Weaiert. Seguin
The DOCTOR, for man
or beast, is only one of
those you may summon
instantly by
Bell Telephone
Roofing. fhe moment your bi,:klinjr is
covered with Peerless, cz7/ expense ceases.
roofing is on for sood. You can forget your ‘‘roof
BAILEV RESIGNS22 “«F
SltAMERS COLLIDE
P! BLISlIER AND EDITOR
HELD FDR ('ON TEMPT.
MICH WORK IN SIGHT.
Washington. Jan 2 Repre-
itive I'nderwcvod and Senator
i'i. democratic leaders, rospe* t-
c-f the House and Senate, had
nierencc- yesterday over plans
democratic tariff revision and
evislative work during the bal-
lon that re-
'e plan of a< -
session wa>-
detnOc ratic
I’rc-tri
s as
Both
P no-
tion of leSig-
Mc-Askkill. San Antonio
MELD TO SAIL ADRIANOPLE.
LONDON, Jan 2—After tl>e>r
protrac ted ,dij lomatic ifkirmishing
rurks fiiialB capitulated to a
rity of ibe demands of the Bal-
allies at y <-«*t« rd y 's session of
t’LtvZARD AT DALIIAKT,
DM.twrp .hn A hllzzaro
re ! here jam night.
rze F Oliver, Center.
W King, Bronson
L Foster. San Augustine
| M. Stec
Cooper
Bruce
H. Kirby. Houston.
<l Haxtiausen Houston
Calvin, Houston.
Brown. Houston.
W. Campbell. GaBcgton
r-s 1* Mac-Gill. Galveston.
Mulcahy. Rosenberg
Roacr. Blessing.
Hill, Huntsville.
Nc c-ly, Anderson
I which we find curse
e< t to tie sc- questions,
•oni Hamilton.
MENINGITIS CAUSES DEATHS.
DIERSBI'RG. Tenn., Jan. 3.—
Sixty-one cases of cerebrospinal
meningitis have developed to date
in Dyc-r county, and of this number
thirty-five have died, according to
a statement by ti.e former secretary
of the-
of the
NEWPORT NEWS Va
Twenty-two persons were
whe the Steamer Julia Luckenbach
from Port Tampa to Baltimore was
sunk in a collision in Chesapeake
hay about 7 m lock this morning.
The vessel collided with th - steamer
Indrakuala
Captain Gilbert and wife of the
Luc kenbach were among the drowu-
eci Eighteen, including the- L'1‘k
enbach's second mate were resc ued
from the- rigging of the sunken ship
after th y had dung to it for six
hours in an icy gale Others were
iilimbed by the cola and dropped to
Senator Bailey
all these- books here to d"-
rim inles of a government
old. which have been the
and model of all free
practically all of the Otto
man empire's European possessions,
i xcept Adrianop1,- and the territory
l et ween it and Constantinople, to
(heir victorious neighbors. The
crins of the Turkish delegates pre-
-eiitc'd to the conference as a coun-
ic:r proposal to the demands of the
allies were:
The ratification of the Turko-Bul-
garian frontier by making the boun-
darv west of the line now occupied
I y the troops of the allies in the
vilayet of Adrianople.
The question of the- status of Ad
rianople to be settled by Turkey
and Bulgaria direct.
The cession of the- remainder of
I i-rop.an Turkey, including Janina
and Scutari, to the allies.
The Albanian and Cretian ques-
tions to be solved by the powers.
The Aegean islands to remain
Turkish.
The announcement o? these terms
was wrung from the- Ottoman dele-
gates with the- greatest diffic-uly,
nd came after the- allies had given
that the
London. Jan 3, it was an-
h-.iiinced todav tl at the Balkan peace
■ti'oys have d :d'-d to put the di-
rect question to the- Turkkish dele-
gates, asking w I.e ther the Turks
are prepared to i de the fortress of
Adrianople inns-diately or not Un-
less the answe r is favorable within
twenty-four hours the conference
will be closed
■ n
M
I! 4 oi.L-. It q.sk.
Reedy. Tyler.
I Bat, : k Hetit-v Jr Wichita Falls. ’
i li It 11 iinr h.- \ Tl. r-u !-; kmi-rton I
A
C
Robbins. Athens.
1 W
I Cojie. ('hildres--.
j?
A!
1 'rest 111:.n. 1; •. 1 Sa
’ . r, .
1 ' I
Hagjis' .Lav mn. ■
I'saery \\ urns!.ere
1 T I
Itarr'tt. Anson
> ! »■ ■ J > ■ * l » < f . : 11; ’ »
; ■’ 1'
Warn-'.". V I
. HiirKtt. Wn.ti'.d
i I >r
,■ (; •■!!. id1'J
1 . I . ,.
K
1;
I ■ I 1'
. A.- 1 “
Taylor. Mav . .
i,
Vex, < 'eov r
• 1; .-
1 ■ r' 1-.- Ba 11,1: r*. r . I
1 ’
\V
Di. kso'v I'ar.s
< ,. 1. r, .... .1, ■. •; 1 v - -. t
t
1 E I
1 D I.-
M< I >11 n iels. < 'oleman
on Harp Ban Angelo
■ ■
l..'i, n If.** - , Bro
• r-
Ma"
F V 11 ;8"ti San Sa ‘ a.
j.;
*
Mat, z u 1; 1 11 )•<■. 11 v ill*-
V M
Kennedy Kerrville
T
>
K'.i.'well Rockwall.
: II P
Hornsby, I'valde
J
Varfiroui'h. La-on.
J I >
Boehmer. Eagle Pass.
Webb. Tioga.
Ri« hard F Burgess El Pash
1 e
B
Reeves. Sherman
', N
Gentry, Pecos
1
M
Spradley. Alien.
John
W. Woods. Rotan
I»
W
1.1 e' ing. 1 (alias
T M
Bartley. Tehoka.
n
W Parks. Dallas
1 1 . '
Hunt, Canyon City
.i
1:
Davis. Mesquite.
! R L
T*-in t 1* ton. Wellington
w
1 ■
M. Kamey. Rc-nner
: <' 11
rl'ort Walker. Dajhart.
c
KelL . Kamnmii. R F
r ■:
! Lee
xil’ing'worth. Longview 1
■ 1
^■1
I
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DALIAS COONiy SETS NEW RECORD
fOII lilLllNCS -6/ BMC PAST IM
DALLAS, Jan 3 —With sixty- |
-seven killings m -Dallas county tor
the yeag> 1912, it is believed that
the record in regard to the number
who met death by the hand of their
fellow men or women for any twelve
months in the history of the county
has been broken. Fifty-six of the
killings occurred within the limits '
of the city proper, and the other !
eleven were in sc attered sections of ‘
tly- county and in the immediate |
vicinity of the city limits Places |
outside of the city proper where j
killings oc curred w«.-re Grand Prai-I
rie, near New Hope; at Rylle Prai- j
rie, at Elm thicket north of the
city: Cement CRy, two, near White I
Rock pumping station east of the i
city; convict camp No. 3, south of!
the- city; near Wheatland and near i
Lisbon Last year fifty-two were;
killed and the year before fifty-fiv -j
killings occurred.
wo
About the Races.
Thirty-nine of those- who met
death at the- hands of a feJlqw hu-
man were negroes, 2 3 were white,
and five were Mexicans. There
were 29 negro men and and two
negro women killed for the twelve
months of 1912. Eighteen white
men died violent deaths and five
white women were killed. All the
Mexicans slain during the year were
of the sterner sex
Those Who Biel the Killing.
Two of the whites were slain
officers and two were killed by
men Eleven others were slain by I
w hite men other than officers. One !
white, an officer, was murdered by i
a negro. White men were responsi- ;
hie for the deaths of five white wo-
men who died during the year from '
violence. The slayers of two white!
men are unknown.
Seven negro women were killed
during the year by negro men Ono
negro was killed by a negro woman, *
twenty negro men were killed by.
negro men and three negro women
were killed by ne gro women Sev- >
en negroes were killed by ol i ers,
and the_th.irty n:nth was kil'ed by a
white man outsid-- the city.
Of the Mexicans killed during the
twelve months, one was shot by an
officer while resisting arrest; one
wag killed by another Mexican and
the other was beaten to death by
a gang of negroes.
Weajiuntt Used by Slayers.
All kinds of weapons from fists
to shotguns were used in piling up
the toll of death. The ever-bandy
pistol was responsible for moat of
the deaths. The old fashioned re-
volver and the more deadly automa
tic are credited with causing thirty-
seven of these sixty-seven deaths.
Next in order came In the ordinary
pocket knife, this weapon being re-
sponsible for the death of eleven
The- shotgun was next, claiming six
victims Other weapons used by
the slayers of 1912 were target ri-
lle, one; brickl-at, one; Meek of ce-
ment. one-; butcher knife, one; bar
of iron, two. fists, two- smoothing
iron, one; fist and feet, b'»-
< aitses for Killings.
t'aiises for many of the killings
are hard to classify. Sudden quar
rels arc given as the cause of eigh-
teen of the homic ides, and jealousy
Hie cause for nine of the killings;
resisting offiiera. eight. Many of
thos- listed as sudden quarrels
werc- caused over women, and sever-
al of the killings marked unknovzn
are traced to the- same cause. A
number were killed as justifiable
homicides.
hillings by Months.
With nine killings in June this
month leads in the total for any one
month during the year- In the
month of January eight lives were
ended by violence. In December, the
last month of the year, eight were
slain The gentle month of May
shows less killings tbany any month**
during the twelve, only two being
credited to this month. August
and September tied with seven kill-
ings; November claimed six; Feb-
ruary. the shortest month of the
(ear, five; March, four. July, five,
and April and October tied with
thne each.
1~913 ’EASTER DATE IS MARCH TWENTY-THIRD
Dressmakers and milliners will
have to w ork this winter hard* r
than they have for many years in
*<!* r to got Easter gowns and“ bon-
tic-8 r'-ady for lluir customers on
time Not in ninety five years has
i..c-,'er rome earlier in the year than
i will in )9 U. and it will not. come
as c ariy again for another eighty-
seven vears.
It is not likely that many persons
now living will te around to bother
tvioui.a new hat or a new gown
«h n Eastc.i- conies again as early as
t «ili this year
The next Easley comes on Mar h
23, Not since Jkls did it arrive
earlier in the year in that year it
Cam*- on March 22. Not until the
Year 2,e(io will it come so early
again.
Sixty seve n years ago and fifty-six
years before that. Easter occurred
on the same date as it does in
1913. The next year when Easter
will pay an early visit will be !n
I lb. Vueti it will arrive on Mar< h
24. In 1815 Easter was on Marc h .
26. also in the years 1 826. 1837,
Ls>5 ami 1 894. It will . ome
.ERM AN K E.M ( I TED BI
THE Mi Nit IN HllillBALf.
SAN I'KAM'ISI'O, Jan U P. L. j
E cL-l I’ungo, a German who re i
• ricly made a fortune in San Fran-'
i isc o. was executed in .Mexico City
t'co w- .ks ago for I artje ipating in
the Din?, revolut'nu Friends here
of de! Fungo received news of the
< x cut ion today.
IN-AN I ( oNGIll sMl IN
|;ROM NED AT PAN AMA
WASHINGTON. Jan 3—Repre-
sentative W. W. Wedemeyer of Ann
Harbor, Mich , who went insane sud-
denly at Colon during President
Taft's Panama visit jumped over-
board last night from the ship he
was placed aboard at Colon. His
body has not been recovered.
i again on March 26 in 1967, 1978
and 1989.
The latest Easter of the Nine-
teenth and Twentieth centuries was
in 1,859, when it fell on April 24. In
1 84 8 and 19<*5 it fell on April 23.
Last Easter was on April 7.
Easter is ti.e most important of
al! the- movable feasts of the Chris-
, tian cEit.reli. as it determines all the
test. Hence next year Ash Wednes-
day tonics oh Fe-brtiary 5, Ascension.
Thursday, May 1. and Petencost
Mat 11.
Eas'ep never can come earlier
than .March 22, and the only time
it did, or could c ome this early from
the year 1801 to 2000 was in 1818.
This was made possible by having a
full moon on March 21. and the fdl.
lowing day being Sunday. This co-
inciden e does not occur more than
once in a century and it is only then
that the Feast of the Aacension can
occur in April and then on April 30.
Tiie rule provides that Easter
shall be the Sunday .that follows
that fourteenth day of the calendar
moon w bl- h falls upon or ne xt af-
ter .March 2 1. •
HI NAMITE CONSPIRATORS
MAI API’E-AI- THEIR t’ASE-*'.
INDIANAPOLIS, Jan 2—After
attorneys for the convicted dyna-
mite conspirator.' had withdrawn
their applications for a writ of gti-
; ers» deas, Fede ral Judge Anders'»
t*>dav granted their pray, r for a
writ of error Herbert S Hockin
w ill not ask for an appeal, however.
The granting of the writ of error
means that the dynamiters can take
their request f<>r supersedeas to the
c ircuit Court of Appeals.
Mlss|*stPPLIN III I S BIG TRACT
PLAINVIEW. Jan 3 —R. M. and
J J Ellerd of Plainview have gold
53.4 20 acres of land in Bailey coun-
tv for about $700,000 to I, C
Enochs of Jackson, Miss,, to be used
for land colonization.
1 he Court House of Denton County
Burned December 23, 1875. We have the ortly
Abst act of he Land Records that were destroy*
ed Abstracts made to all land titles in Denton
county.
lagoe Abstract Company
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Edwards, W. C. Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 9, 1913, newspaper, January 9, 1913; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1213912/m1/2/: accessed June 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.