Daily Bulletin. (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 143, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 4, 1911 Page: 2 of 4
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The Daily Bulletin
■atm tumn co, h<H
Catered at the Brewaweed Postefflce
u Seeead Clua Ball Batter
TUESDAY, APRIL 4,
1*1*1.
■U“
The road bond laede electloa at
Comanche failed to carry, but thoee
favor Inc the plan are not d lac en rac-
ed and will at one* act on foot plana
for another election.
• • •
The Abilene paper gets personal
when It asks "What kind of a town
would your town be If every man lu
It were Just like you?" Suppose you
ask yourself the question and be sure
that you answer it honestly, *ven it
you don't feel the need of telling us
the ^answer.
• • •
The Denison Herald In boosting
for Its candidate for Mayor says that
the paper has had a representative
at every council meeting for the past
twenty years and ought to be In a
position to know what kind of ma-
terial is needed for the office’of may-
or. Yen, we think so too.
• • •
The San Saiba Star man Is just
now enjoying some of the pleasures
of living in a railroad town. Last
week he got out of town for a day.
getting as far away from home as
Lometa. When he got safely home,
he put at the head of his editorial
column "Even Lometa has street
lights.”
• • •
4
The country printing offices are
receiving with considerable satisfac-
tion the news that the ally printing
offices have, after consultation, de-
cided to advance their price 20 per
cent If they mill now keep together
on this agreement and will not lower
their’price* on jobs gotten in a coun-
try town which the country printer
can do as well as they, there will be
more harmony among printers and
more money In their purses.
Great responsibility carries with It
Innumerable worries and many sacri-
fices. Men of position are envied by
those striving still at the foot of the
hill, when, if they knew the effort
that it cost to attend to the arduous
duties high position carries with it.
they woul be content with a less
modest position. Nature generally
, places burdens of life upon sbonld-
ers strong enough to bear them, and,
If ws have climbed only a part of
the way up the ladder at the turning
of the lane, we should accept the dic-
our best in the
sphere where we then find outsetves
i permanently located.—Cleburne En-
terprise. J I
• • •
COME TO FORT WORTH-
% ■* | I .1 * I V ,.
.First Annual Indoor Track Meet and Military Tournament
----APRIL 10,11, 12,13,14, AND IS, 1911
Ft Worth Jobbers and Manufacturers’ League Extends to you a Hearty and Cordial Invitation to Como and See Their 2 Big Events
Something Brand New In Texas
APRIL 10TH, 11TH AND 12TH
First annaal indoor track meet given by the Amatedr Athletic Association of Ft.
Worth under the auspices of the A. A. U., to be held in the mammoth Coliseum,
seating capacity, 7,500 people. All kinds of athletic sports.
50-yard dash 880-yard run. Running high jump.
100-yard run. - One-mile run. 12 lb. shot put.
22Q.yard run. Pole Vault. 120-yard hurdle race.
440-yard run. Running broad jump, j One-mile relay race.
Lusting Thres Nights-Evsnts divided Into thro# classes, Junior, Intercol-
legiate and Interscholastic. Track and Athletic teams from the following
schools, colleges, stcn ars to participate:
.Fort Worth I’ghmlt), Fort Worth, Tews
Polytechnic College, Fort Worth, Texas.
Y. M. C.IjL Fort Worth, Texas.
T. C. U, Fort Worth, Texas.
Carlisle Military Academy, Arllmrton, Texas.
Dallas University, Pallas Texas.
Pallas High School. Pallas Texas
Waco High School, Waco, Texas
Bowie High School,- Bowie, Texas t
Mineral Wells High School, Mineral Wells Texas
Beaumont High School, Beaumont, Texas
Beaamont Y. M. C. A„ Beaumont, Texas
San Antonio Y. M. C. V„ San in ton lo, Texas.
Marshal Training School, San ;\utonlo, Texas
Peacock Military Academy, San Antonio, Texas
Handsome prizes In all avents— Coma
San Antonio High School, San Antonio, Texas
Cisco High School, Cisco, Texas
Penton High School, Penton, Texas
Pcnlson High School, Denison, Texas
Allen Academy, Itryaa, Texas
Galveston Y. M. C. A, Galveston, Texas.
Daniel Baker College, Browawood, Texas
Howard Payne College, Browawood, Texas
Simmons College, Ahilene, Texas
Peeatar Baptist Colic**, Peealnr, Texas
A. A M. College, College Station, Texns
Texas University, Anstln, Texas.
Austin College, Sherman, Texas
Cooper Athletic (Tub, Cooper, Texas
Tharher Athletic Clnh, Thurher, Texns
and m« the home boys win. *
APRIL 13TH, 14TH AND 15TH
First Annual Military Tournament.
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0 *: • I ‘ i 1 • .
Our Own Boys—The Texas National Guards, 2,500 Troop*. Competitive drills cf
all kinds*-Company drills, guard mount and shelter lent drills--Extended Order and
Field Work.
Handsomt Prizes In all the Competitive Drills.
FRIDAY, APRIL 14TH, 1911
3 O’clock p. m.-Sham Bottle, v at Moms’ New Baseball Park.
The Most Realistic Spectacle Ever Produced.
• . i* I \ . . , • A • ■ 1 | "* ■ * l .r . ' '
Come and see how our own state troops would act if called
on to take part in the movements now in progress
on the Mexican border. • A.
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Cheap rates to Fort Worth from all points in the state; ask the railroad agent; on Friday the 14th the railroads will sell tickets at
popular rates from points within 150 miles of Fort Worth good until Saturday
ty night for return; these
Come and be with us.
rates
are lower than the one way rate.
FORT WORTH JORBKRS AND MANUFACTURERS’ LEAGUE.
WM. MONNIG, President. 1 t AO. McCORMACK, Secretary.
burglary, of banks is being flagranti.’- born who can write a better prescrip-1 The Ladle,
and openly violated, and since It HAOMhI.
.seems Impossible to enforce the law,' Renfro and druggists
the Bulletin respectfully suggests
AiMli Avesse
guarantee HYOMEI to
or money, back. A complete outfit
that jt be repealed—Brownwooil Hu!- whirh consists of a bottl^> Qf HYOMEI
letin. a hard rubber Inhaler apd simple.In-
Pardon us for a suggestion. Would «tructions for use costs ionly $1. Sep-t
Presbyterian ( liurrh Cafeteria Sapper
everywhere * Where—Building adjoining A. P.
cure catarrh j Jones Book Store. »
• When—April 4th from 6 to 8 p. m.
Prices—Popular ones. dl43,
. - r
A PATRIOT
You don't have to go to war to be
patriotic. Improve your locality, up-
hold your town, enlarge its interests
and lend a hand to progress, and
you are a patriot—a lover of your
country—as truly as the soldier who
shoulders his musket. —Comanche
Chief.
Brownwood needs patriots of the
ybove kind. It takes them, in fact
to make a city such as Brownwood
plans to be. Are you doing your part?
9 • • j *
It Is amusing to some publishers
and a tit disgusting as well to the
average publisher of even a small
publication to observe the msnv and
varied methods that are adopted to
secure publicity through the press
* without cost. The world L- at last
realising the value of advertising and
It matters not what the proposition
is the promoters are dead anxious to
get It before the people by means of
printer’s ink and if the publishers
are foolish enough to. give the space
they can always be supplied with at
least enough to fill up on—Sweet-
water Reporter.
Practically every day the Bulletin
receives a proposition to trade* its
space, its time and Its labor for the
good will of some firm In Hong Kong,
Chicago. Des Moines or some other
place as remote. And just as often
these requests ft>r free advertising
are consigned to the waste basket
• • •
PROHIBITION AND BURGLARY.
For s long time the pros have ar-
gued that the fact that prohibition Is
not generally enforced la no argu-
ment against It, though some of the
more reasonable advocates of sump-
tuary legislation must have at tlmea
wondered why a dead-letter law
should be placed on the statute books.
The following three paragraphs we
find in n paper whose editor is pre-
mm*d to know that he la not draw-
ing a fair comparison:
~ that the Utn against
it not be better to let the precinors j
and counties vote on the question to
insure “local self-government?**—
Denton Record and Chronicle.
If our ultra local self government
advocates are correct this latter is
the proper solution of the
Bonham News.
These papers lose entire sight of
one important fact: The law against
burglary and theft, its companion, is
based upon one of the command-
ments. which Says, "Thou Shalt Not
Steall” The State cannot keep burg-r
lary and theft from being a crime.
The State cannot keep murder from
being a crime, because God haH made
it a .crime against himself. .God has
never said, “Thou shalt vote the pro-
hibition ticket.’* God has forbidden no
one to make, sell qr drink, because)
the comparisons drawn by the Brown-'
wood, Denton and Bonham papers
miss the point entirely. The state-
ment Is credited to Mr. Hiackstone j
that: “No law of man is a law at (
all unless it is also a law of God "Wo
believe Blackstone is generally cre-
dited with knowing something about!
the'subject.
So far as we have been able toll
gather no man or woman will e
inhabit hades as a punishment forj
selling liquor. Why should man pie-1
vide punishment for a thing which
the Almighty does not regard-as suf-
ficiently sinful to fqrbldL? Will the
pros contend that the Afl-Wtse Crea-
tor forgot something when -he’ made
the list of things that muat not he
done?—Denison Herald.
(19 E BIG FOOL
arate bottles of HYOMEt If afterward
needed cost but 50 cents
i
FOR SALE
Young Jersey cows easy milked, good
condition, all year milkers, without
latte,_| blemish that are now producing more
rich milk every twenty
their weight. K.
F’hone 120. Brownwood
days than
LOW.
Texas, dtfr
I W. F. PIPER,
l adertaker and EmHalmer.
Mi ( enter Ive. I’fcoae It*.
NOTICE.
For the convenience of the public
Wells. Fargo A CO., have established
a branch money order office at Hal*
lum & Langtry's drug store. The
Brownwood National bank will sell
you our Travelers money orders.
L L WHITE. Agent
WHITE LILLIES.
I have white Lillies In bloom—give
me your orders, gee me for hanging
baskets and porch baskets Bedding
plant's of all kinds.
Mrs. C. L. 8TEFFIN3.
Big basket Hall game Friday at 4
l» nu at Daniel Baker park. Cham-
pionship !.ampa«as Girts Irani urnlnsf
Daniel Baker*- undefeated girls team.
Admlasloa 25c. t ome oat. d115
JUDGE HUGH SMITH
SUFFERS BROKEN IE6
- K^tBLE CAKE
Pound Cake, layer Cake, any cak«
any one can bake, may be found lu
our well stocked showcases We bake
cakes wad pies to order. Give us a
trial aad you willteot be disappointed
ICE CREAM
for dinners and parties delivered to
any part of the city.
EAGLE BIKEKY.
M’hone 80.
Beat of service at
Laundry. Phone 234.
Sherman
dlSSo
THE
FAMER.H COXTEHT I
IM j ATTR ACTING ATTE
9TI09.
space to
mkch about the farmers content
Bnt He Doesn’t Live In Brownwood
Nor Bead the Bulletin.
A man in Connecticut gave a doc-
tor, a specialist ip catarrh, $50 to cure
him of this common yet obnoxious
dlneaae.
The specialist gave him a bottle of
medicine and told him to use it.
The fool took the medicine home,
took one dose, put M on a shelf and
made no further effort to follow in-
structions.
Three months later he told a friend,
that the apecialist was a fake; that
be had paid him $50 and still had ca-
tarrh.
HYOMEI (pronounce It High-o-mq)
won't cure catarrh If you don't breathe
It; U will If you breathe It regularly.
Furthermore you don’t need to give
a catarrh specialist $60 to cure yob of
catarrh, for the specialist la yet to be
f
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OWN A
HOME
t ,
Instead of Rent
Receipts
$100
cash makes first
payment on a small home
dose in, well located,
and the balance like rent
KIDD & BELL
Land and Insurance
We haven't had time or
mmm
( lately, but that fact has not prevented
J 1 the farmers from putting In some
Vi good work on same. V’otes. you will
remember, are-secured/'by paying
rash for goods purchased at certain
stores, by which you get 25 votes for
each dollar purchase, or 5 votes for
esrh 25c purchase. Aad at the Bul-
letin office we will issue 100 votes for
each dollar paid In on subscription
to the weekly Bulletin In addition we
will give 1000 votes for a five year
subscription, and for $10 we will give
a Ilfs time subscription to the paper,
and issue 2500 votes for the farmer
of your choice. This contest closes on
Saturday afternoon, April 29th at 6
o’clock and that does not leave much
time in which to work, so It behooves
you to get bnsy. A thousand votes
may mean that you will get the wa-
gon. Inasmuch as you have entered
this ^contest you should work as If
you meant to have the first prlte. for
that Is what It will take to-win. If
you are not a contestant but have a
friend among the list of farmers why
not send the Bulletin to a relative or
friend for a coqple of years and In
that way not oijly keep your friend
or relative posted about Brownwood
and Brown county but at the same
time help your farmer friend to the
extent of a coupjle of hundred votes.
"bile Out I ry Inc Yew Bleed Hound-
Ill- ll«»r-e Fall- and Pinion*
The Limit.
Temple, Te*a*. April 4 —Justice of
jth** Peace llurh Smith was the victim
of a Itad fall t*f bis horse Sunday af-
I temobn,Sn which he suffered a brok-
en leg.
He - and Const able Ham were out
trying some ^io wl hounds they had
purchased on approval, and which
reached Temple early Sunday morn-
ing It was wmle giting the dogs
a trial run that the horse ridden by
Mr. Smith got tamcled! In a' wire
fence, and fell with the rider's leg
pinione<i beneath the body.
The Injury severe within itself,
if unfortunate in that Mr. Smith had
twice in-fore, suffered the breaking
and spralulng of hla other leg, which
la still lame, and on «hirh he can
not Hear his weight without very
careful balancing of the body. It is
feared that If the recently Injured
member should not make a good re-
union of bones, that there would be
serious permanent lameness
At Daniel Baker |tark 4:15 or lock
Wednesdays tier noon will be a bat-
tle royal between Howard Payne and
Daniel Bakt-r hall teams. Come see
the best game of the season.
Quinine, calomel. caStor oil. tinc-
ture of Iron, opium a|d brandy. In
the order named, are the medicines
most- used in the tropics.
COZE IM»WJr TO
HAYNIE’S
STORE FOR BABGAI98
Better Groceries at a lower comt to
the consumer. That has always been
out motto and that is the reason why
we have the enormous trade we have.
Our goods are the best that cold cash
can buy and we give the consumer
the benefit of] every bargain we get
hold of. Here are Just a few, make
out your list and send it to us aad
Will have it on the way immediate-
ly
Elberta Peaches ..j 4........$1.75.
Olives the quart ...... 50c
10 ounce bottle........ tic •
Best California can peaches ....25c-
Apricots, Gold Leaf brand . .....Uc-
12 lb*, fancy raisins .. ,t....... $ v©0*
Pie peaches, 'the can.........
or $1.00 per dozen
10 lbs. Misletoe lard.........s $l.5Sr
10 lb*, compound lard... .jN .$1.15,
12 cans 3 lb tomatoes... ......$1.20
Ji/st arrived, a new car of the Fa-
mous Blue Ribbon flour. Nothing bet-
ter on the market, the sack ... $1.50*
F’hone your orders or come and!
make your own selection. We deliver
the Food*, always phone 218.
See the “Clarlnda” lawn mower at
our store. Two new features make It
the easiest grass cutter on the mar-
ket One is the 1$ Inch wheel; the
other the arrangement of the knives
ao that I blades Are constantly cut-
ting when mower Is in. motlqn. The
blades nr* divided and 4™ so arrang-
ed that the grass Is thrown to the
center of the basket Instead of aide.
This mower is offered In the II Inch
else nt $11.10. It makes n pleasure
out of what has heretofore been con-
sidered work. Call and let ns explain
Its merita.
Weakley-Wataon-MIller Hwd. Co.
*5.lu. v
Ft. Worth and return ticket*
on sale, trains arriving Fort
Worth 11-12-13-14. 1 before
noon; April 14, limit April 17.
*«.#- *
Dallas and return, tickets on
sale April 10-11. Final limit
April 14.
*5.10
Fort Worth and return, tickets
on sale April 18. 19. Limit April
4WJI5
Dallas and return. Ticket* on
sate April 23. 24. 27. Limit
April, 30.
*05
Dallas and return Tickets on
sale April 24. Umit April 28.
*12^5
Texarkana and return Tickets
on sale April 1$. 19.
Limit April 25. >,
L. C, VOELKKL
Phone 59 2 rings.
MOVE TIIE MTAYDPIPK 09 THI
HILL.
I-ast night for several minutes the
fire boys had to tight the big blase
without pressure.
It seems by the time the pump is
started and all the main* are filled
up enough to get good pressure, the
fire has made such -a headway that
the house is destroyed before the fire
can be extinguished. We say move.th^
standpljve at once on a high hill ao,
we will have a high pressure all th»i
time. Just think how bad It would 4>e
to have Kaneaster’s Kandy Kitchen
burned. The town would -be out of
that dejiclous Ice cream t|re make.
We want more protection and morn
ice cream customers.
KAN BLASTER 18 KANDY KITCHEN.
The biggest and beat ball game of
the season will be played at Daniel
Baker park Wednesday aft.moon be-
tween Daniel Baker and Howard
Payne. You can’t afford to mtsa 4t.
Howard, Payne will make a supreme
effort to defeat their rivals
PAUSE FOR \LAKM.
teacher- had gone bach to the
brave day* of old Tor his reading se-
lection for the day and read the aton
or the Homan who swam acroas the
Tllver three times before breakfast.
Oue of the boys giggled when the
•tory was Hnlshed. and the teacher
turned to him.
'You do not doubt a trained swim-
mer could do that, do you, James?”
he gsked.
No, air," answered James; "but I
woudered whr he didn't make It four
and get back to the side his clothe*
were on ’*
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Mayes, Will H. Daily Bulletin. (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 143, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 4, 1911, newspaper, April 4, 1911; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1005962/m1/2/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.