The Weekly Herald. (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 24, 1913 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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-*«K
+ * ai ui» Pouomcv at Weather- amendments.
•w -r-.ftp. *» Moood class sutler, ployed and Kennedy started a cam-
■ttj' ,v-——--— paign of misrepresentation and abuse
st«r) laars.taj oj
- -vAILM
•1
[ERALD thl8 P°lltlcal mountebank would have
been found workfhg on the side of the
But he was not so em-
Forty-two congressmen, senators, a
rice president (dead), a?former post-1 Thlsrrictus from the Arlington Jour-
master general, a governor of a great nal:
state, a present ambassador, arc com- j "Mr. Bryan tries to soften the blow
___ that rang the state over. The voters prjBed jn the list of men's names sub-: to the "plain peepul” by saying he will
■ KRR4ID PUBLISHING and taxpayerB 0f Texas will pay for | mitted to the senate investigating earn the needed addition to his J1,000
• it York Avenue this man’s duplicity, mark these j committee by “Colonel” Mulhall as a month salary to enable him to “live
11 -.............. 1 ~ words. They who follow false proph- being men be had found “approach-'comfortably” by lecturing during his
*«Dar • lear la Advasse- ets in age must pay the price In- &bie” wbne he (Mulhall) was acting' vacation. He evidently thinks the
— Bunimmy curred- ln the capacity of yellow cur for the people will object to his taking time
In saying this the Herald is not a National Manufacturers Association' from his desk as secretary of state.
J
TEn'.r'dONBS: growler. The majority, a vast major- tbat was shaping legislation inimical But he is mistaken. What the people
NMnaweetern. SW Independent 4b-B lty, of the people who voted last Sat-j t0 tbe people's interests aad friendly are “kicking” about—>1 mean the kind
THURSDAY, JULY 24, 1G1S.
urday, have spoken against the meas- t0 tbe interests of the manufacturers of people Mr. Bryan has always spec-
ures that the Herald believed to be themselves.
correct, and that the Herald still be- i \**bat Mulhall has said may not be
lieves correct. The Herald is not one 'true We all bope It ia not for the
♦ PVitlGR VPHICS. ♦ of milk80p kind because the Ba]je 0f our common country. But the
^+ + + + + + + 4. + + + + + + + + majority has spoken, stands back and appearances are that whatthis moun-
_ |folds its hands, to joln\the pack ih'tebank, void of honor among thieves,
cry. The Herald does not hesitate to bas told is true, and that much more
Clifford Backham of Fort Worth
was one of the Forty Immortals that
desired the position of United States
District Attorney given Jam.es C. Wil-
son.
tally appealed to, is that he actually
acknowledges that he cannot live on
$1,000 a month and that he just must
lecture to make up the difference, so
he can “live comfortably." Great gune
and shades of the simple life of Jef-
ferson.”
Cheerful , idiots are, as Artemus
Ward used to tell us “real amoosin’.”
The cheerful idot takes it out in apos-
tell the people who have eyes to read lies behind what he has disclosed. If
that they were wrong; the Herald !it be true> what will be done about
does not fear to voice its opinions and ,t? If it be true, will we read the
Woider if he is as good a Shep- H dares t0 8ay what U Said bef°re the headlines, scan a few editorials and !trophizing the shade of some departed
pird man' now as he was a year ago? eleCtion laSt Saturday- that *he Pass on to the next sensation as we great one, with whom the c. i. has
—Dallas Times-Herald. amendments were measures sore > have been doing, or will we take thejnever acquaintance save by hear-
If it cannot be so said, then could needed by ,“d.?ftt tbCre 7? situation in which we find ourselves j^y history. Had Jefferson lived in
It have been the right sayso before no corruption behind them, no cat in jnvoived, with serious aspect when Ujjis troublesome year of 1913, perhaps
Jim Wilson's appointment. You “das- the meal bag, no bug under the chip, we g0 t0 the polls hereafter? he would alB0 have learned what Bry-
itn’t” tell it D<) Ethiopian m the^woodpile, and that j will the people of this country, as
the people of Texas, when they have a whole, continue to tolerate the con-
come to their soberer senses and are ditions in their political life as may
longer influenced by the smooth, be proven if Mulhall • is telling the
HARDIN
LUMBER CO. ,1 *
New Clean Stock at
.N V
ROE LBR. C0. OLD STAND ■
WEATHERFORD,§ TEXAS
rsHSr-Sri rarrs
view of previous appointments Morris
.06.—Dallas Times-Herald.
His average increased to 300 plus
when he landed J. C. Wilson. Pluck
the journalistic huckster, will awaken j ever put the scoundrel in public of-
to the wrong they have worked upon QCe where he can no longer do harm.
, their own state and will regret it. j ••m fare8 the land, to hastening ills
j A citizen of Texas, a good man who ; a prey> Where wealth accumulates
is no doubt sincere in his opinions, j and men decay,” wrote Oliver Gold-
an has learned about the cost of liv-
ing in Washington. Try it, all you
cheerful idiots. Try living on the sal-
ary you are capable of earning at
Washington and see if you would
make any better success.
Jefferson never had to pay $4,000 a
year for. a house to live in, and peo-
ple themselves lived the simple life
in thpse daf§. We had not reared the
CAN NO LONGER INTERFERE IN
WORK ON RESTORATION OF
THE ALAMO.
. _ , ' ' ... ' . said to the Herald a day or two be- smith lone ago. when England was . j „ . , T »
Colonel Theopbllus Gooch; ae „^ .., know Mllt Ken. aerg0,ng1 \ ln„tlon ,och a8 „ »r “°b* Jel,CTS°” 0"e
pluck tte Dorn trom out thin. eye. nedJr. , ^ he wh0 8 N„ lruer wort, were CTer
zr: KSSsH
m il
r..
ilw
J k
m
4 ■
If
1 tfv
the announcement that he wants to
Mil hlB property in Texas.—Cleburne
Review.
Merely swatting Bryan from an-
other angle. William J. is used to it
—against the amendments.” The sad- Wealth has accumulated in this
deBt portion of the defeat of the ^ country until it is confronted with its
amendments is that the very class of own undoing that also threatens the
people who would have been most national existence through the decay
. . . .. ^ benefited by the bonding features, are <,f its men and women. This business
by now, anyhow.-Austin Statesman. Qne8 ^ yoted against of corrupt ltglslation. corrupt legis-
When to sell. He has heard about tb« whole timber. These tfre the far- lator8 and the corrupting force that
Texas’ prosperity and realizes that
prices for land will be high thlB year.
“The worst that can be said about
Texas newspaperdom Is, there are too
mere. They voted heavily against the ue8 behind it all, is traceable directly
very idea they and their organizations to the doors of the quick-rich fraction
have been preaching and advocating 0f the population. What are we going
for these many years. But when good to do about it?
men, such as our friend just quoted, I Are we, Americans, proud of our
! &:
!■1 •
wm*b.
K* ■
know. With a libel law such as Texas _ .... . . ____.
. ... _ . , , . Conditions in Mexico, according to
has, a paper with any financial stand- ,. . . . „„
. . .... , .. . press dispatches, are-1 rapidly ap-
ing would be committing suicide to
publish all it knows.—San Antonio
Express.
Thats why the Weatherford Herald
is so careful about printing items and
the items it does not print. Quien
Babe!
-»
'il
JYHAT KENNEDY HAS DONE.
s fcWs tribute to A, M, Kennedy is glde are rapjd]y nearing the point of
I'' H°ney Grove Signal: being unbearable, and unless there is
"A. M. Kennedy has made Urn fight qu,ck rellef(, actual 8uffering will
natiop if we continue, or will we
bring a change that will make impos-
sible such conditions as those we
proaching a crisis in that much-trou- j have been reading about, and which
bled republic. The rebel forces seem : we have every reason to believe exist
to have occupied nearly all, if not |n reality and not merely on paper
quite all the strategic positions in the 1 and in newspaper headlines? What
country and are harassing the Huerta 8hall we do; what may we do; what
gvernment so severely as that it is are we going to do?
questionable whether that desperado
and assassin can last more than a few
weeks longer. Conditions in the cap-
ital where the despot and traitor pre-
that infests America now. The “pee-
pul” themselves are bo blame. The Ar-
lington Journal man is like all the
rest of the bunch. He’s out for what
there is in It, and one of the means
employed by his kind of buch is to be-
rate and scold atr everything that may
seem to put him in good with the plain
"peepul,” just as the rest of us are
doing. In this instance it happens to
be Bryan, a man with whom the Ar-
lington editor never had much truck
anyway. As for Bryan, he evidently
bears in mind the old seconr reader
rhyme:
“Go to the ant, thou sluggard;
Consider her ways and be wise:
Which, having no chief,
Overseer or ruler, ,
Provideth her bread in the summer
And gathereth her food in the har-
vest.”
And for the Arlington Journal man
we would advise:
Wisdom is the principal thing;
therefore get wisdom;
Yea, with all thy getting, get under-
standing.”
By Associated Press
Austin, Texas, July 21.—Sitting in
chambers, the supreme court, through
Chief Justice Brown and Associate
Justice Phillips, granted the applica-
tiqp of the state made by the attorney
general for a writ of prohibition and
temporary injunction directed against
the Daughters of the Republic and
their attorneys restraining them from
the institution of any further suits
seeking to interfere with the judg-
ment of the supreme court in the case
of the Daughters of the Republic of
Texas vs. A. B. Conley, state superin-
tendent of public buildings and
grounds et al. The writ will be is-
sued Monday and made returnable at
the October term of court, and the
Daughters are cited to appear to show
cause wSiy the Injunction should not
be made permanent.
A bad taste in the mouth comes
from a disordered stomach, and back
of that is usually a torpid liver—a
condition which invites disease. HER-
BINE is the remedy needed. It cor-
rects the stomach and makes the liver
active and regular. Price 50c. Sold
by Cherry-Akard Drug Co.—Adv
TWENTY-ONE BOOTLEG-
GERS SENT TO PEN.
__ v , ,\V
Austin, Texas, July 18.—Ben Cab-
ell, chairman of the state prison com-
mission, was in the capital today and
stated that twenty-two convict* were
received at the penitentiary, twenty-
one of whom were sentenced for boot-
legging from North Texas prohibition
districts. Twenty-seven out of’ fifty-
five received at the penitentiary rec-
ently were sent up for the same
reason. .i
PLAN AID FOR AMERICAN
WATERWORKS COMP ANT.
Chicago, 111., Jul ylik—Lpcal finan-
ciers are planning to aid the Ameri-
can Waterworks Co., which has plant*
ln one hundred American cities, and
which was thrown into receivership
by the Pittsburg bank failure.
The Daily Herald—40e Per MsntK
T
PARISIAN SAGE
FOR THE HAIR
If your hair is too dry—brittle—color-
less—thin—stringy—or fallfhg out—use
Parisian Sage—now—at once.
It stops itching scalp, cleanses the htir
of dust and excessive oils, removes dand-
ruff with one application, anjjpnakea the
hair doubly beautiful — gtff»1luffy-«
abundant. Try a 50c. bottle to-aay.
}t will not only save your hair and make
it grow, but give it the beauty you desire.
CHERRY-AKARD DRUG COMPANY. 'W
A WORTHY INSTITUTION
agaipet amendment No. 18. He has
follow. The disturbance seems to be
That is Doing u World of Good in
Parker Cognty.
Nine years ago last April the iiu-
tual Life Insurance Association of
mad# » great fight, and if the amen !- ^ wide8pread and violent than at Parker county waB organized. Since
*- *------— ■ " in be dnj . .. . . . , .that time the association has pajd to
“ Ume ln lhe M*“ry " tha‘ n"hap- 'be.etoi.ri.. „t policy bolder? .p-
Kennedy was ousted from the speak-',,.,, f1.„ Pan!^i ; jl - AarVi ,f:0UI1^y people, but the money
8* ,ltas
Hjs
m
ment ip defeated the defei.
anybody Lay m 9f Ml It Ken edy, | ^DCi°“4rhe4‘^ TngTato Tnd^rmined proximately *200-000 for hfe lnsur-
S^ter* InThe stoto. ^When T se£ 'P
tr---a.. —e. -—- « • 1 fcounty people, but the money haa
been kept In circulation. It has sav-
iib t3 lold this writer he be,-; bring"eight pesos, or four dol-> many * wido" and °rphau Clf
back at the next session of t 'q ,n American coin. In plain words dren a ,th.at “ glf ° herWf ”
islature fighting his enemies wi .U ;:ew,Kuerta ,8 ab3Ut t0 get hlg> and in all have been l08t to the famlly' afteT
strength. We didn’t bellove him, but porbability the same fate will be met-
he came back just, the same with a ed out to that u8urper that he gave'to
big majority to his credit. His h alt': the iU.ftted Madero. There came an
failed him and he rroved to a scuth- gnd tQ the bloody reign of Weyler in
western county. He had been there Cuba There wlll be an end to Huerta,
scarcely a year when he was elected Then who wlll be the next butcher to
to the Legislature. Kennedy is now a arlge in power?
♦ictim of “tuberculosis and is but a -*.
the death of the husband and father.
This association has added 1500
members since January 1, 1912 when
Mr. R. L. Bains became president. It
now has 2100 members, with $2,100,-
000 insurance in force. Among the
1500 new members added, not a death
has occurred, which goes to show
fc-fi-
“ir ", r?5L. “
•till scrapping. At the rress Associa impeccable Senate of the United States
tion two months ago he said he was hlthertC) cold and distant and austere.^
then making a fight for his life, and, delegatlng t0 Itself powers and privl-
trail ». h. w», b. Mlud bo r^ftb.t It denied lb, Ho»«. nnd •hl* da“- ™«>b.r.hlp will only
going to .lb. But while Pghtlng tor t0 ,uel( a,oot„e„ rronuhe ^ required lo p.y every other de.tb
his Ilfs he has also made a great f»ht Q}ramon -peepul” Is getting its aural ca
against the adoption of a oonsiftn- aFrandagea to the ground. In
tlonal amendment.” !and vulgar, but nevertheless expres-
Mllt Kennedy has his faults, along gjvc i .nguage, the august Senate is
With the rest of us. But he’s all the gett; ? E(,ared of ltB job.
Blgnal says, and then some. Kennedy hat tle common people, are from u w ,
la a persistent and consistent fighter, nQW c_ ,0 have a llttle 8ay ^ t0 who county* y°u «hould be, for
an adroit parliamentarian—the bestH^han f 0 tQ the Senate. it will nDt be wav
We believe, in Texas, and he not only a]1 Jeft tQ the iegi8iatures to pick out
fghts gamely but scientifically with the man wl(h the biggest bunch of
every blow touching a tender spot mat money the biggest grafter, or the
ln time becomes raw. We have agreed ||tt|c feu v w(th the prinkest, cutest,
institution and endorse its methods.
Mr. Bains, the president, says from
plaint Mr E Rutledge Isythe field ag-
ent and when Charley goes after new
members he gets them. If you are
The people not a po,'cy holder in the Mutual
Life Insurance Assdciation of Parker
in this
way you help keep your money at
home.—Adv.
Crystal Palace Mills Co.
* ,
WEATHERFORD, TEXAS
OUR LEADING BRAND
ir
i
p-
■ §
A BISCUIT
FLOUR
A PASTRY
FLOUR
; j.
i«st week,
/bis brother, who will
) future home.
,' Beven year old son of
ht, got badly'burned last
e foot and leg while at-
to kindle a fire,
w returned to his home at
this week.
ty pond has sold his farm at
WEATHMD, TEXAS.
EYERY SACK GUARANTEED
Mlffitl is a longer1 tasiT'l,,^“*fc%'*r' _
r . ,,i . ________ imembers he gets them.
[than he will be able to Accomplish. 'ot & c ^
What a regretable thing that we have I
,, . Life Insurance Association
not realized earlier where we were . . * “
. ... county, you should be, for
going agriculturally. . . . ’
way you help keep your
It Is unfortunate that while Our home._Adv^
farms were new we forgot they could i ___ . , -j-
be eib.u.ted aa well ae our bank ac-;TRXAS SAN„ ANn gKle1[ ‘1
being $2,500. Mr. Portcl will
May Extend G, T. A W. Ry.
J. J. Jermyn, a native and resident
with Kennedy on some things and dls- " 0” arlgt ,cratlc handful of whiskers 8cranton, Pa., is the president and
agreed with him on many. But we’ve tQ repre8e a 8U,te> but the voters practioally the sole owner of the Gulf,
not seen the day since wh’ve known them8e|ve8 wjli get a 8nCe of the pie, Texas & Western Railroad, with a
him well that we haven’t restfccted and have m.Tf to gay aB t0 the distri- »ne from Saleaville, Texas, to a point i East Texas
his courage, gameness and. above all, bution of tho graft jf there is any Bome distance beyond Seymour, mor4e protracted meeting will begin
his unswerving loyalty to his friends. Mftny yeanj , Jay Gould tB reputed tfaan 100 miles. It is the intention (inesday night before the first
—Denton Record and Chronicle. ^ have ga)d thaj be'wouid not attempt Mr. Jermyn to extend the road soutilday in August Mr. Fltxgerald of
“Nothing succeeds like success.” It to fauy up tbe peop,e of ^ gtate; that |east to Dallas and northwest Ibto thltherford will do the preaching.
Is to wonder what kind of tune would ,t waf cbeaper to deal with a few rapidly developing territory of thf little child of Larkin Meeks, liv-
have been sung had Kennedy lost in men ,n legislatare. We will now Texas Panhandle,
bis fight agalnat the amendments, the haTe a cbance to see whether Jay
measures that he, as a member of the QOU]d wu wrong or wrlght
legislature, voted and spoke for, and' _.—
-htoh, before the campaign opened, tor SALE—One piano, $65 cash
count
V
Joe Barham, the consid- doing things, a culture will come.tarded and delayed because of
is~r r
* b®
In addition to hi1
railroad, Mr. Jermyn is the owner <
a large amount of Texas propert j
principally real est-te. T> spe-4!
or much time in that state, and is enthii
inedy wanted to work for, to write will trade seme for one good coy or oiastic over the outlook for its rapij
If, the State University horse. Cell et W. L Hell’s, 3 miles —* ♦>, development —Manu
rest, Pesster star rout*. lurers Record.
near Peaster. was buried here
rday. ^
R. and Bernard Taylor spent
week In Palo Plato netting.
Steed Operatise WeO.
er Sykes wee operated
been willing to employ
Young man.'here is a task for you.
In working out the restoration of the
farms
old
and In planning new ways
REJECTED BY GOYI
The progress of the federal l^j
ing construction work is being.
to you and your character will be
strengthened, just as the new country
made our parents.
In a future letter 1 will tell of some
fact that the architects have re]
ed all Texas buildin
far submitted by ttioi
samples of local
of our farmers that are making good, first rejected, and
The protracted meeting season wasjteAs brick, manufactured i
begun by the Christian church. Rev. ton, wire turned down, nelth<
Mr. Hlghsmlth of T. C. U. is conduct- ing up to the required
ing the meeting and attentive crowds jThis necessitates a ver
are ln attendance.
The barb of T. N. Jordan was burn-
ed Friday. Mr. Jordan barely suc-
ceeded in rescuing hie valuable bores.
Mrs. F. A. Simmons,
lay in the progress at
the contractors have
many dealers aad,'
.to ascertain what
with little
oper- jbome of t
ifiil Utm
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The Weekly Herald. (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 24, 1913, newspaper, July 24, 1913; Weatherford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth586226/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .