The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 10, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 11, 1905 Page: 3 of 8
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TEXAS REUNION POSTPONED.
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ROOSEVELT
iy
ie
e
Cleburne and local capitalists will
open a bank at Rio Vista about April 1.
President Green hi now In Now York
purchasing machinery for the new
Midland shops at Terrell.
he will now leave
4th or 5th of April.
President Moves Dates to
Later. _
Washington, March 8.—It
i
E :
<i
Jd
»n
iy
ot
lit
but
setly
d will
Irlt erf
f all
us, and
ted from
»ers and
Ian shirk
great na-
ts great-
Dther na-
must be-
dth such
1 other
attitude
vidual.
. by th'
bile ev<
•.
■frrer of
91th the
Id us to
»of well-
rus as a
Hay the
life In a
ihelrs of
| had to
| in old
he dead
bn. We
Hit for
ten race;
for the
Ihich the
I-wither
lions it
e failed;
lave had
l we con-
111 bring,
[ of vain
I abiding
has of-
bent of
nrs; *nd
pw that
, mighty
a as re-
mand the
Short
e dur-
lee at
loose-
Bh:
fl
Evidently Crazy.
Danville, Ark: James Ince, confess-
ing that he Is a quadruple murderer,
was brought back to jail here from
the scene of his crime near Whitely,
fifteen miles southwest of here, where,
confronted with the dead bodies of his
■wife And three children, the latter
ranging from 4 months to 4 years, he
broke down and confessed his guilt,
saying that it seemed impossible to
make a living for his family, hence the
act
4
■OarsareU
Forty Passengers Hurt.
Chicago: Overturning high in the
air, on the Lake setreet elevated rail-
way Tuesday a passenger coach with
eighty persons aboard barely escaped
being dashed to the granite pavement
below. One woman, Judith Strom,
was pinoned on the tracks within a
few inches of the deadly eectric third
rail, and though finely extricated
alive, was fatally Injured. Forty other
passengers were injured, but not se-
riously.
tlons of the
have as bem
respon
nrftiom
i i S'
If
■
being the murderer of their daughter,
Arts, and announcing publicly that
She would denounce him over her
grave.
a Week
i
of the war, An overwhelming disas-
ter, it is believed, will surely bring
Russia to terms, but anything less
might not break the stubborn resolu-
tion of the Russian Government. In
newspa- its bearing on the interior situation
the result of the battle is suggested, as
equally Important.
No exact figures are hazarded as*
to the losses, although it is evident
they will exceed those at Liao Yang 03
both sides.
so early date In accordance with
■ ' -fcx -it 'wtf**
Lumbermen's Meeting.
Fort Worth: Carl F. Drake of Aus-
tin, secretary of the State Lumber-
men's Association, was here Tuesday
conferring with local lumbermen of
the association with refernce to the
coming State meeting here. He was
given assurance that the visitors
would be given a royal good time, and
that no expense or pains would be
spared to make their stay here a most
pleasant and enjoyable one.
a flying column of Japanese.
v While some Russian correspondents
perhaps attach undue importance to
several minor Russian successes on
the southern front, which evidently
were simply counter-attacks and in no
sense real offensive movements, if Ku-
ropatkin has a plan for striking a real
blow, upon which. In the opinion of ex-
perts. his salvation depends, there is
no indication as yet of such a purpose.
The Commander in Chief has been
confining his strategy, as at Liao Yang,
to meeting the attacks of the Japanese
and accepting battle at places chosen
by Field Marshal Oyama.
Both sides are terribly exhausted by
ten days of continuous fighting and
all the correspondents at the front in-
timate that the issue must be definite-
ly decided today.
At t^e military clubs here Gen. Ku-
ropatkin is already regarded as beaten,
the only question being his ability to
execute a retreat. Those who believe
there is still a chance of actual Rus-
sian victory are few and far between.
The majority regard the fighting yes-
terday as in reality a rear-guard ac-
tion, entertaining no doubt that there
will be a heavy withdrawal during the
Nation
After takUl
Ing the inad
Washington jl
velt delivered
My Fellow Cl
No people]
cause to be 1
this is said I
of boastfulnea
But with gritf
Good, who ha
conditions wH
achieve so laf
being and of]
people it has j
foundations of
new continent^
the ages, and
pay few of tM
countries are]
hand of a by
have not bees
our existence 1
and yet our ]i
vigor and effo
manlier and h
away. Under
would be our <
and the succes
in the past, the
fidently believe
should cause in
glory, but rathi
realization of J
fered us; 'a 4ft
the responsibly
a fixed detenu
under a free J
people can thr
gards the thing
tilings of the a
Much has b<
much will right!
us. We have
duties to ourset
neither. We ha
■BEU
J
must be one of a
friendship. We mi
In our won*- *-*
wc are ear
Ing their m
them in a ■
recognition
justice and
In an Indi
shown not
strong. W1
from wronging othe
less insistent that n
ourselves. We wli
wish the peace of
nf <
we 1
we 1
acts
Thi»pw«« £»• Water
tag all bis positions. At the same time
he was drawing In and shortening his
line to the southeast. •
According t<] pports ah the concen-
trated Attacks of the Japanese to the
westward failed and the efforts of
Gens. Nogl and Kuroki to push the en-
circling movement northward aqd east-
ward .across den. Kuropatkin’s line of
communications was blocked Re.
Something Wanted.
A bachelor, old and cranky, was sMr
ting alone in his room. His toes with
the gout were aching, and his face
was o’erspread with gloom, no little
ones’ shouts to disturb him—from
noises the house was free. In fact,
from cellar to attic ’twaa aa still as
still could be. No medical aid waa
lacking; his servants answered bls
ring, respectfully answered his orders
and supplied him with everything. But
still there was something wanted,
which he could not command—the
kindly words of oompassion, the touch
of a gentle hand. And he said, as his
brow grew darker and he rang for the
hireling nurse, "Well, marriage may be
a failure, but this is a jolly sight
worse.”
was an-
nounced yesterday that the reunion of
the Rough Riders, President Roose-
velt’s old regiment, which had been
scheduled to take place at San An-
tonio, Texas, on the 13th instant, has
been postponed until April 7, on the
request of the President. To attend
the reunion the president had Intend-
ed to leave Washington on ths 27th
instant, but he found that he prob- Han
. _ w ably might not be able to get away „<
nightfall it was reported he was hold- ai so early date In accordance with *
the arrangements {tentatively made
, Washington on the
has ever cured Brightls Disease. »■
She wants her husband not to be
her supporter, but her companion, re-
membering that It is the kind word
that often brings her greater happi-
ness than a new set of dishes, though
1 S/
hr
I .
. .___.
Doing Great Work.
Ward, Ark., March 6th.—(Special.)
—From all over the West reports
come of cures of different forms of
Kidney Disease by Dodd’s Kidney
Pills, and this place is not without
evidence of the great work the Great
American Kidney Remedy is doing.
Among the cured here Is Mr. J. V»
Waggoner, a well known citizen, who,
In an interview, says: "Dodd’s Kidney
Pills have done wonders for me. My
kidneys and bladder were badly out
of order. I used many medicines, but
got nothing to cure me tiU I tried
Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Two boxes of
them fixed me up so that I have been
well ever s|nce. _
"Tell the poor kidney and
1 diseased people to take Dodd s Kid-
I ney Fills *nd get welt”
it I. rigw
fraid. No
fully and ;
se to fear
ould ever
us out as a subjec
gresslon.
El Paso County Wot.
El Paso: The past month has brok-
en the record for twenty-seven years
at the local weather station for rain-
fall by over ten Inches and the range
is in good condition and water is abun-
dant. The Rio Grande is rising stead-
ily and has been for several days, ow-
ing to the melting snow in the moun-
tains near its source, Induced by warm
weather. It has more water In It at
present than at this season in many
Won’t Turn Loose.
"1 insist on saying that Hunt’s Light-
ning Oil takes hold quicker and lets
go slower of aches, pains and sore
places than any other liniment I ever
saw. It just won’t turn loose till you’re
well.
"i never have a little ache but what I
slosh it on,
And ere I get the bottle corked that
little ache is gone.”
C. W. Jackson,
Marble Hill, Mo.
night. These officers, however, are de-
pendent upon practically the same in-
formation as the public.
Gen. Kuropatkin’s critics among
military men are increasing in number,
the burden of complaint being that in
every action he has shown a lack of
initiative. With defeat now, whether
disastrous or otherwise, they declare
his star will set. On the other hand It
is believed that Field Marshal Oyama's-
daring strategy, if successful In this
battle, will entitle him to rank as one
of the greatest captains of the age.
Politically, the result may determine
not »
I'«
L! I
.11
L
i 1
- u 1
E8IDENT ROOSEVELT.
Ml by Chief Executive After
of Office—Our Duties ae a
and to Ourselves.'
tury and a quarter of its national life
Is inevitably accompanied by a like
growth in the problems which are
ever before every nation that rises
to greatness. Power invariably means
both responsibility and danger. Our
forefathers faced certain perils which
we have outgrown. We now face oth-
er perils the very existence of which
it was impossible that they should
foresee. Modern life is both complex
and intense, and the tremendous
changes wrought by the extraordinary
industrial developments of the last
half century are felt in every fiber of
our social and political being. Never
before have men tried so vast and for-
midable an experiment as that of ad-
ministering the affairs of a continent
under the forms of a democratic re-
public. The conditions which have
told for our marvelous material well-
being, which have developed to a very
high degree our energy, self-reliance,
and individual initiative, have also
brought the care and anxiety insepar-
able from the accumulation of great
wealth in industrial 'centers. Upon
the success of our experiment much
depends; not only as regards our own
welfare, but as regards the welfare of
mankind. If we fail, the cause of free
self-government throughout the world
will rock to its foundations; and
therefore our responsibility is heavy,
to ourselves, to the world as it is to-
day, and to the generations yet un-
born. There Is no good reason why
wo should fear the future, but
there Is every reason why we
should face It seriously, neither
hiding from ourselves the gravity of
the problems before us nor fearing
tc approach these problems with the
unbending, unflinching purpose to
solve them aright.
Yet, after 1
are new
us
our _____
served this republic, the
which these t----
itci- all, though the problems
, though the tasks set before
differ from the tasks set before
fathers who founded and pre-
1 spirit in
tasks must be undertak-
— --:——
Buffalo Bill Wont Compromise.
‘ ’ dm&ha, ?
his deposition in his petition for di-
vorce WiJItam y. Cody declared he
could not accept any reconciliation .
Looks Like Another Sedan
Kuropatkin on the IVing
Soldiers Under Desperation of Starva-
tion Go Mad.
St. Petersburg, March 8.—That the
battle of Mukden will go down in histo-
ry with Liao Yang in the long list of
Russian defeats is the almost universal
belief in pessimistic 8U Petersburg,
which has forgotten the meaning of
the word victory. The War Office does
not admit that the Issue of the great
battle, which already exceeds in mag-
nitude of operations and losses that or
Shakhe, has been decided, although
it is positively stated in high quarters
that Kuropatkin has telegraphed to
szTm'hc Tm "wi"be'm-
possible to hold Mukden and that thq
withdrawal of the army northward has
already been begun.
Nothing from Gen. Kuropatkin later
than Monday has been given out, but
dispatches to St. Petersburg 1-------
pers and dispatches to the Associated
Press, dated at 8 o’clock last night,
Indicate that the position of the Rus-
sian Army after a day of furious fight-
ing is desperate, but not absolutely
hopeless, some Russian correspondents'
even predicting a Russian victory soon,
and one affirming that the extreme
Japanese left has already begun to re-
tire southward.
Everything now depends on'Kuropat-
kln’a reserve. While- the Japanese
hurled themselves forward at every
point yesterday their main energies
were behind the blow west and south-
west in an attempt to envelope the
Russian right and drive a wedgj
through the line at Madzyapu, but
Gen. Kuropatkin seems to have been
able successfully to change front on
the line of his scattered right, alien-
ing from northwest to southeast to
protect the railroad to Mukden; and at
The man who can truly say that he
doesn’t believe In luck has all the
money he needs. ,f
Earliest Oreea Oaloaa.
The John A. Salzer Seed Co., Ia Crowe,
WiB., alwaya have something new, some-
thing valuable. Thia year they off«
among their new money
tables, an Earliest Green Eahw Omon.
It is winner, Mr. Farmer and (ferdonerl.
JU8T BXKD THU H0TIC1 AMD Ifc-
2,000 blanching, ntttty Celery*
2,000 rich, buttery Lettuce,
1 000 gloriously brilliant
vegetable seeds and
ALL rox BUT 16o P09TA0B,
They who let their feelings govern
their frith generally let their greed
govern their gifts.
Sometimes what we think Is lack
ot inclination Is really lack of oppor- g
tunity. .
those problems faced. If our
Pto be well done, remains essen-
-Ally unchanged. We know that self-
overnment Is difficult. We know that
0 people needs such high traits of
haracter as that people which seeks
> govern its affairs aright through
ie freely expressed will of the free-
len who compose it. But we have
dth that we shall not prove false to
ie memories of the men of the
ilghty past. They did their work,
ley left us the splendid heritage we
ow enjoy. We in our turn have an
retired confidence that we shall be
ble to leave this heritage unwasted
nd enlarged to our children and our
Mldren’s children. To do so we must
IMX, not merely in great crises, but
I the everyday affairs of life, the
ualitles of practical intelligence, of
MNUM, of hardihood and endurance,
Ul Above all* the power of devotion
> a lofty Ideal, which made great the
MMt who founded this republic in the
MLxbf Washington, whidi made
ML the men who preserved this
Mwtlc In the days of Abraham Lin*
I—•
ance of the death of Hon. John H. Rea-
gan, who was born in that State.
Tuesday the Mardl Gras carnival
at New Orleans opened with an enoi*
mous crowd from all over the coun-
try.
..
Monkeyed Otego to Often.
Houston: A very large baboon cre-
ated a stampede at the Grand Central
where he escaped from a circus cage
on a train. The.animal attacked a
child, knocking him down and con-
siderably injuring him. Several women
fainted. The baboon ended by climb-
ing a telephone pdTe, swinging on a
wire, getting two thousand votts of
electricity. He fell to the pavement
limp, and was carried to his cage,
and later rallied.
The Art of Drawn Work.
Perfilado, or drawn needlework, 04
cupies the same place In Mexico as
lace does in Brussels. The city of
Matamoroe is the center of its pro-
duction, and large quantities of this
beautiful work are exported to the
United States. Women and girls are
employed in the manufacture, and
some of it is very expensive, for a
year may be required to make a single
piece. The linen or silk is placed in a
frame, the threads are drawn out one
way, and with a needle and the finest
spool thread the design is worked.
Perfilado is taught in the public
schools. Among the articles made are
handkerchiefs, tablecloths, bedspreads
and covers for chairs or lounges. The
work is hard and difficult, and the
earnings are an average less than a
shilling a day.
- i-'—
Neb.. During the course of
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Keeling, J. E. The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 10, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 11, 1905, newspaper, March 11, 1905; Grapevine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1277757/m1/3/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Tarrant County Archives.