The Daily Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 31, Ed. 1 Monday, December 2, 1912 Page: 6 of 7
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DAI, DEC. S, 1911
TOE DHL! BULL ETUI
TEXAS AHEAD IN RAW MATERIAL
SAYS BTNI.AP.
Christmas
Goods. \
Notice to Stockholders.
According to a resolution passed by
the stockholders of Brown wood Oil
& Development Co. the subscription
Sunday School Commit-
tees and Early Purchas-
ers of Christmas Goods
should come to the
1 will positively be closed at
:lock on the evening of Dec. 5t]
All stock not paid for on that da
ARCADE
For a look boforo buying
NOTE THESE PRICES.
will not be issued. There still re
mains about $300 stock to be sold
Parties wishing same please call a
Animal Tenpin* __________She
Soldier Tenpin* .........../<••• -•*<*
Boy Seoul* en Camp. ____...... We
Color Boxes Air k Hie
Alphabet Block*..... i. 10, U k Sir
Slone Block* ......./,.....Soe
Toy Brum* ....... IS, 23 Sie A #1.00
Doll* of all kinds from ie to #1.00
Magic Lantern* ......iOe
IVagent ...... ii. 20, 2A, Si. Sie
Toy Plano* .......,.,/s...... #1.00
Friction Tops. In tin and. Iffd*
......................... 25 to 7ie
Meeliiinleal Toy* ...... 23, Si * 50c
Stores in tin and Iron. 20, Si k 50c
j Waxahachie. Tex.. Dee. J,—Mr. O.
K Dunlap of tiila city was’chairman
of the committee on the establish-
ment of eottim mill* and the fabrica-
'tion of cotton Into cloth, appointed by
,tho Texas Welfare CoiiunUnion for
'thai purpose of otictHir&Klng this line
of Induatry within
or Phone 314.
H. A. Car
Land Co
*t*te Mr.
! Duhlap has practical knowledge of
tho business and hla Investigation ha*
thrown much
Th»‘ ^r»«i»ort
flftox-n cotton
my native langtmg* beyond the eea i yc^ ;* tnoirn aa the “Living Tow-'
ia a music to my eara beyond the rich- gf5 (iayg a writer In the Wide
eft atralna of Tuacan aoftneaa or Can- world Magatine) aland# on the very
' Mian majesty.* lummlt of a hill more than two hun-
i I am not—I need not say I am not— dred fett high at camp Meeker, a
per annum. The condition# doerrlbed
by Mr. Ihinldp aa nec^esarv factory
condition# ar|it cheap ‘money, cheai
labor, cheap ^uel and aib-quate ’rans-
po'rtation facilities. The New Eng-
land states have the advantage ovei
Texas in all jhese important factors,
but in ta>W njaterial Texa*- *’ir|k.»*sea
dll state* in. tp-- I'nion.’ We produced
4,297.b0O l»a!H last year and con-
sumed less than one j*-r cent fr
uritins the Iqdarlorvof 1 more cpttou
daziled by her rtchea nor awed by ner ifortlla^ jt waa captain Meeker, an
power. The scepter, the miter and 3id pioneer, who first conceived the
the coronet, atara, garters and rib- |dea 0f building a tower on the very
bona seem to me poor things for great lummlt of a hlgh wn near hla hotel,
men to contend for. md while looking around one day for
But England la the cradle and the g gultable site, be found four young
refuge of free principles, though often Pedwoo<i tre*s standing about twelve
persecuted; the school of religious fe#t apart representing a perfect
liberty, the more precious for the iquarP ^ treeg wero each about
struggles through which It has- passed; 5ne hundred and fifty feet high. Fifty
she holds the tombs of those who have fw>t of each top wa8 iopp«.d off. and
reflected honor on all who apeak the ±e work of bulldlng tix stories whs
English tongue; aho la the birthplace ,hen commenced. From top to bottom
of our fathers, the home of the Pll- ,he UT,ng Tower aaa one hundred
grtms; It la these whioh I love and feet higb. Each floor Is about twelve
venerate In England. by twelve feet, and rests ou strong
I should feel ashamed of an enthu- lltnbors the ends of which are se-
alaam for Italy and Greece did I not curr,y attached to the four trees by
also feel It for a land like this. In menri of atee, and td*. go
an American It would seem to be de- ,t , waa eTery braced that
generate and ungrateful to hang with fhe wholg atnjcture does not move as
pasalon upon the traces of Homer and mueh a8 onfl wou,d auppo.e,
Virgil and follow without emotion the pven vheQ rocked by heavy wind.-
nearer and plainer tootxtepa 0f ,Q lhe bulld,ng great waa taken
f#, ^ 6 , k ^ the workmen to cnt only the
hlnk him cold In love for hla native Qrancbe. growlng on the lnilde cf the
land w ho felt no meltih* -In hi# heart ^ tha trppg were not chop.
Next to Postoflfice
Interesting Facts About Oysters.
An oyster la wonderfully prolific.
A single oyster In a single season
will produce 30,000,000 eggs. If these
all survive and In turn had normal
families. In a few years many great
bodies of water, such as Long Island
Sound, Peconlc, Gardners, Narra-
gansett. Great South and Chesapeake
bays would become filled up. Navi-
tfue*tion •4>on*litutionality of Law
Thai Mould On*or Pres* Thru
KetrulatJou of Mail*.
Washington, Dec. 2.—An unexpected
turn has been given the legal fight
over the constitutionality of the
"newspaper publicity
law by attor-
neys {0i the Journal of Commerce and
A^ommeccial Bulletin, Hobe/t C. Mor-
rlk and Guthrie B. |Mante filing with
the K^itea \States Supreme Court an
option of Attorney General Wicker-
sham as their aiiewer to Solicitor Gen-
eral URIlitt'sNargun^ent in favor of the
.law, James Doc ^'Attorney for the
Lewis Publishing company of New
York, also attacked law in a jrlef
filed today. The, easeH* set Tor ar-
gument today. . N. ' f\ /
The Solicifor General's defense of-
the luw was built on tbe theory, that
the law established ne» conditions
regulating the admission of newspifc^
pers to gecond class mail. *
Attorney Morris aud Plante, in re-
ply to this argument, refer re# tho
court to the opinion of Attorney Gen-
eral Wlckersham sent to Po*ttnaster
General Hitchcock, Sept. 2.*>, in which
RUSKIN A GREAT TEACHER thr Attorney said
-- •' "Provisions of -The statute under
HE RAN AFOUL OF THE LAW
FIGHTING TO GET PRIZE PICK-
AGE: FIND DF\D BABE.
S;,n Antonio. N'ov. 30.—Battling ov-
er a package which fell from a gtrr-
baee wagon. • a half dozen Mexicans
were Tightened, speechless when the
body of anj Infant rolled from the
bundle*. , j
The bodjr.tuul first been wrapped In-
clean wh'je paifer. Ttym It was ptac^
ed in a paper carton. Around this
^u>re paper was wrapped
pH#to appearance led the garbage pjck-
yri to battle.
T The hqdy had been thrown Into a
irash rr9>«*ptacle in the Seventh, wan!.
• known as the blue stlk stotklng sec-
tion of the eltf * ii
This is a funny little town of ours,
Heavy Coal Producer*.
the Cincinnati Tlmes-Stars New York -phe concentration of ,thd anthraclt
correspondent writes. Things happen industry of Pennsylvania Into stroni
here that couldn't possibly happen and relatively few units la showu b
anywhere else. The other night, for the fact f ' ---- ■* -
example, a man whose name may b* CenL of the mlnea were phoducers c
set down as Jim Smith was awakened ,
by a tinkling noise In the front room
aftr. Smith rose, pulled on tho conven-
tional pants, took his six shooter and
went wtalklng a burglar. I'
that tbdfridual packing up the sliver
"Throw up your hands!" said Mr:
8mitb. of the total output, and tha^ 168 mines -
that In 1911 ne*rly: 75 pe#
------..1. i <«
more than lOO.ooa ton# each And that
all but 3 per cent, of the total produH
tlon was from this gdoup of mtnes^
According to tho geological survey^
Ho found tha anthracite mines exclusively In that ____ __________
those ^producing over Know How to Load tho Child, Youth consideration should
and Msturo Man and with this of the *ts
Woman. sefond-claas mail m
production of 414.697 tons each. In What a teacher Rusktn was! Ho 1 <"• attorney* add
1910 there were 157 anthracite mines gave himself to those who came, en- |,lru** °n gi'**n tho i
In the 200.000-ton class and their sv-l terjng geenly Into’the young delight neJr (;<,neral ha* bee
erage, production »«a 419J135 tons |Q ^e perception of new truths and Postmaster General
each; to 19<>9 170 mine* had an nver* -^beauty, knowing how to take the men! of the law ar
Good Modal.
* Ha waa somewhat eaten up with a
mistaken consciousness of hla own
Importance, and when he was making
hla great speech in the MuddlecotObe
mock parliament, he noted that one,
Of the local pressmen appeared to
When tbe "housa"
ba, sketching him.
— adjourned he buttonholed the artist
Floating Dock Risks. fl believe—aw—you were—aw—
At Lloyd s of late there has been an sketching me; lan't that so—aw?" ba
unusual amount cf business In connec- Inquired/
;:tlon with the Insurance of floating "That Is ao," replied tbe artist,
docks. Two of these huge structures— “Well—aw—would you—aw—tell
one of them with a lifting capacity-of me what nooapaper you—aw—repra-
32,000 tons,' built at Birkenhead, and sent—aw?" f
another of the tame size constructed don't rspraaent any newspaper."
at Wallsend—afle now, to thd great re- ' answered the artist. "I design comic
lief of underwriters, at tbelr destlna- postcards."—TldblU,
tlon, Porisnioutt» and Sheerness,' re-
spectively. The risk on both was
$2.$0<k000. and during the towage of BUND SPOT IN EVERY EYE
The house of Ilohenzo|lern. of "to the humblest In tbe
whlrh I* the present emperdr of Oer* xieorge. ;
mahy, hulits origin In. Thnallo, who f tq the , sensitive. Ire
buIlKthe castle of Hohfln*oll«|rn about Stature of childhood he <
the year 800. In 1-017 Frederick of *|nood of artistic critlctsn
Nhrembevg, his descendant via* made |ik y,.arn to draw and pai
Elector of Tlrandenburg Tb^ Prince |he delicate tracery of ti
of HchehxolWn abdicated |n favdV latch the varied tints <
of the King °f Prussia qn 1849. -lake, or cloud"; whil*>h
Ron of Cn^rlu* Antniny, was lan.’U'sB unconpciinitloii
elected I’rince of ifoumania llh TPC6. iroxe us to' strive for t?
HI* brother, Leopold, wws nckpMted | To the growing youth
for the throne of Sjutln'ln 1570,'Lut (uch a keen perception ol
withdrew- on account of the *, excite- i. as made us desire to
inent of the time, brought onl.by tbd |^ie ideal in life, to en
Franco-I'msslan difficulty. l/\ 1 *>me pursuit with a pun
It Is Located Just at the Point Where
the Optic Nerve Cen-
ters. '
LAND OF OUR FOREFATHERS
1
Edward Everett's Tribute to England
as the Cradle and Refuge df
Free Principles.
presence of thiB blind spot. For ex- 1
ample, cover the right eye with the
hand or a bandage and! gaze with the
left steadily at a point on tbe wall or
screen abont seven feet 'distant. Let
another, person be seated against the
wall on> your left-hand side, In such
a position that his forehead Is on a
level with the point at which you are
Tearing, and his nearer cheek about
twenty Inches distant from It. Do not
turtv your eyeball, but gaze steadily
as at first, and his face will entirely
disappear, and the wall will seem to
be perfectly blank. If you spread a
sheet of paper on the wall and note
the points at which a pencil moved
back and forth by another person ap-
pears and disappears, you will be able
to make an accurate map of the blind
spot as projected on the wall. An-
other experiment Is performed by
painting nine large letters In three
vertical columns of three (otters each,
upon a sheet of paper at such a dis-
tance and In such a position beford v
the eye that the central letter of the
square falls within the blind spoL/
ASK CLEAN LANGUAGE LEAG
SPANKE0 HIS WIFE
Mrs. Cy H. Robertson left Sunday
for ru>tb6n. where she will spend g
few days with her m«H er.
Kansas City Men Ar* Working on
Plans #lmllar to Those of
Chicagoans.
Kansas City, Mo—Kansas City Is
to have a new organization to work
for ends here similar to those being
striven for by the Clean Language
league In Chicago. The organisation
Is to be perfected by the local minis-
terial alliance In conjunction with the
Young Men's Christian association and
other associations..
Committees were appointed by the
Methodist Ministers* alliance and the
preebyterUn Ministers’ alliance to be-
gin active work toward crystallising
tbs plans forwarded by persons Inter
estrd in making efforts toward rena
Mtin# the lencuage of the city’s
For myself I can truly say that
after my native land I ^feel a tender-
ness and a vreverence for that of my
fathers. The^prlde I take In my awn
country makes me respect that from
whlgh we nre sprung. The wound pf
8. R. Nueske of Chicago Is Oef*«
In s Separate Maintenance
Action.
Gas at Small Expense.
In some parts of Holland the farm-
ers have taken the hint from nature,
and as the result have their own gas
plants. On the drained marshy land, '
bill of Mrs. Grace Nu- Me sea level, natural gas ia
Itemard R Nueske, filed plentiful, and plants have been
r court Nueske Is said Installed to put It Into practical use.
come of 16.000 annually Th* Installation comprises a well,
work for life Insurance into- which water from the soil fil-
ters, with a gas generator placed |
treatmeot of her began herein this extracting the gaaeoua
r their wedding. June I. Pr°l>,'rt|p* fron> Me water and ooa-
mils, as they ware about ducting Mem to a reservoir containing
aln for Chicago on thslr , * •uPP»y «he house. The gas thus
Ip, the bill says H# be obtained provides all the wants for
tecause her mother and •o°hlng. heating and lighting In the
> th. depot to see them ho'i" or *** **»#r !>•« of the fame
grow I and quarrel and w,Aftv1r ,he plant ts once Install-
Ip w»a *bandoe~* *he ‘‘d’ *hlch Is at a small expense, the
cost Is absolutely nothing, and the
quality of the gas Is said to be par-
ticularly *po<4 7/ j
Choice Sealshipt
OYSTERS
l'XBTLY H BMSHED
Five-room hpn*r:
< owner retnin*
► ; one room
L ,fMil geiikke J
\ Rental .AuL /
\ l*hor<> /
\ /
Sold in bulk or served
in any style, at
I Short Orders on short
* notice, in Spanish or
J American style.
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The Daily Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 31, Ed. 1 Monday, December 2, 1912, newspaper, December 2, 1912; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1025944/m1/6/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.