The Rebel (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. [1], No. 34, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 24, 1912 Page: 3 of 4
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Mf
pitlal
*.the last'.',
||ke Socialist
mously .&<
day in Feb
old be 8$t-i
fever found
,• ■
invention
> it WM Ull-
that the last
each year
by Socialists
purpose
Pun
mouth
an
or the
debate on
^U, Walter
dues for
will be
MiiM
Of celebrating the progress of the
sex in all that the terra implies. It
further decided that this day
shall be known as Woman 's Dav
I «n
him. v
The
egitea to
resulted in
hundred 1
jut
of
instructions
t earn-
So
r Jo hear further from
for del-
Convention
of one
names. w \\\
I _ IpPPi
Sout of tliat bunch, for this ywy
important work.
Notices have been mailed out to
all nominees and your acceptance
mU8t be in office by March the
4th. No one who "baa not been a
member in good standing for at
least one year, can become a can
didate for delegate.
We are requested by the Go. Sec-,
retary of Fisher County to
nounee thaf thera will be a
meeting at Roby, that county, the
9th, at 10s50 a. m. to elect county
officers aud make arrangements
for getting Jimt a c&unty ticket.
The comrades of Haskell covuity,
are going into the campaign with
strong hopes Of wresting their
tH)iuily JfeOjn'|fae r«le of the rob
ben, They believe that the ma-
jority of the people of that coun-
ty want justice aijd right. They,
will prosecute a vigorous .litera-
ture campaign, and undertake to
prove to the people that Socialism
Mtanda for just that, nothing more,
nothing leas.
Local Princeton sCnds the fol-
lowing for publication: Resolved
that we denounce the action of
Viute%on of the court
tiveW.J. Brirns,
jent against "him, for
kidnpping and demand congress
; to,institute proceedings looking
to his impeachment. Signed by for-
ty members. - • *
The comrade* of Houston an-
nounce their man meeting of Sun-
da? Feb. 11, a splendid success.
Every local in the county rep-
resented; and the following busi-
ness trsfliacted: ■ '
"DeflJtWCto form a stock com-
pany for the purpose of establish
ing a .printing and publishing bus-
iness, with the purpose of launch
ing a Socialist newspaper in Hour-
ton at an' £arly date* Eleeted a
press committee of seven, and t
finance committee of twelve mem
bers to look after the money end of
the deal. A picnic committee of
seven, was elected to Hectare
(grounds, speakers and arrange
unentsi for a grand picnic in the
coming summer. We gave out pos-
I' 1tive information to'the public that,
a full Socialist ticket will be placed
in the .field in Harris county as
soon is conventions can l>e held,
and the campaign duly opened.
Tlie Post, the Chronicle and the
Galveston Ncwb all gave us a fair
write up." • r v ;
The comnvdes of Cooke county
have employed Comrade R. W.
Rayel. to Jw^in a systematic or-<
framring literature distribution
campaign in that county. He
works under the, following instruc
tioas: First, do not miss a house
op voter. Second, do. not *to" ot
argue. Third, secure new members
when possible; Fourth, onranire
locals wherever possible. Fifth
urge every. Socialist to Join the par
ty,so as to be useful in gettins on
county tickets. Sixth, maKe ueek
ly reports to literature committee
They exfcft ^o keep the comrade in
the field every day' till the election
next fall!
There ^ill"be a Six days encamp
ment held, in ihis county this sum
merr several eotton patches platil
J*1- and jMNtjfi#* o| monthly. picnics.
known as Woman's Day
and will be celebrated this year
f® The 'Rebel' goes to press.
it is a slgnificent sign of the
imes that the Socialist party is
the only party that holds such a
celebration just as, it is the only
>arty that comes out flaf-footedly
for yornan suffrage in its national
jlatfortn. It lias been said that
while man is a slave, woman is the
slave of the slave and true to its
record of eternal opposition to all
slavery, the Scialist party takes
his advance Step.
On this last Sunday in February
he Socialist meetings from Cape
Cod to Cape Nome will send fra-
ernal greetings and messages of
sympathy and love* to the women
who are struggling against the ex
ploiters in Lawrence, Mass. Wo-
men who have seen their gentle
off-spring taken away to other
because they could not sup-
wrt theifl througl) the strike. To
ie women who suffered from rie-
erosis of the jaw contracted in
match factories; to women who
have to work as core makers in
the dust soil).dirt of the machine
shopf/ of the East; to the women
who are condemned to inhumanly
'ong hours in the textile mills of
he South; to the women who toil
in the cotton field ;to thft waitres-
ses in the big cities; the stenogra-
phers in the oil ice buildings; the
sweat-shop workers n the tene-
ments—in short, to that mighty
army of seven million women who
are exploited in the commercial
marts of today, the Socialist men
send messages of fealty and hope.
Let us hope before many years
go round that we will have suc-
ceeded, in building up an amy of
emancipation that will seixe the
political power on a ticket that
•as sworn to regain a world and
establish industrial freedom,
hereby building a system where
the home shall be placed on the
rock and our wives, mothers, sis-
ters and sweethearts can remain
therein, the guardians of the
race.
1 ^
the capitalistic liars shall not keep
♦he people of Milam county fooled
i'PV
•>n M**eb 5tb« ballots will be
* of thi*'office for th(
^ f delegates to the Nation
' iv«t t!6n. Tltfrty Says will He
balloting. If yon dan't
: " ballet* by the 10th, «r Ifftlr.
( t'iir, office and they, will be
J im mediately.
-"V Milam4 county mass meeting
r<- rV|. 17th, at' Rockdale; was at-
\ M by about two hundred uir-
^"" •omiairic liberty loving fight-
'Tlrt ReNC The .town as usual on
^ •tnrldajr was infested bv the re*
'■l** of *mu<r-smiling. hand-
«hakin , W«ll fed. Dewoeratk pie
hantera. However, ttM(r were look
fwt
. ™ ^ m#t IHf tbe
i of inteUifeuee pinned on fti
4 '■ ■ *.-> , *"
God speed the day.
lapel of .their coats, showing to
this gentry that the further admin-
istration of their dope of content-
ment would be impossible. ' Tl e
meeting was a success, in every
sense of the word, and our cam-
paign will begin immediately am
be fought out to a finish.
' The comrades of Coleman coun
ty, Held a mass meeting -i.j, Fvh.
10th, which Was well atteadedny
Socialists from all ports of the
county. A county Secretary, chair
man and committee were elected,
end the 1912 campaign formally
opeiyd/ Each local in the mijn
tv agreed to plant a eotton patch,
The proec«ls to go to dafj-ny the
expenses of the county campaign
A full ticket will be put in the tick
Arrangements have also been made
with their leading county n.tper
(The* Coleman News) for two -'ol
um'ns to be edited by Comrade J
\j. Hic^s of Abilene. The News
save this space to the comrndo
free of charge, which shows thai
there is at least one local paper ii
Texas, that is not owned body ant
Soul, by the dirty political rintr,
and the narrow-minded mortgage
mongers.who infest every town in
this state.
1 am notified by the county sec
retarv of Eri'th county, that Com
rade Dan C. 0rider, is making svh-
te.natic school house campaigns in
that county now and will speak on
the following dates at places named
fjowclt, Monday Feb. ' 26; School
W117-TiwWky;;Feb.• 27Mt.•• Zibn.
JeJd ead month, beginning u ^8th: Bunvsn. Feb. 29: LinglevlMe.
March. We are. .determined that
HOUSTON.
wfrfc
After.
it week of this
editor visited the
city of Houston
of listening to a
remarkable subject of
low to get Houston out of the mud.
In thtf%>H3$d #100,000 build-
ing 2500 pedple sat for four hours
i staring to a discussion on what
methods of taxajtion should l)e used
to secure the money that would
take Ilouston out of the mud that
made her a joke if not a tragedy,
accordmg tq your point of view.
Eight men participated in the
discussion. On one side was top
capitalism, represented by the no-
torious labor exploiter and home-
wrecker, John H. Kirbv and "the
suave, smooth corporation lawyer
and chief protagonist of the pro-
ybition fake, Thomas II. Ball. The
Other side was represented by pet-
exploiters who were satisfied to
ceep Houston in the mud indefin-
itely so long *8 their pocket books
were not attacked, end thus did the
eadirig intellectual lights, the so-
ciety .the culture,the refinement of
Houston, jaliber over mud for four
SOurs before the multitude. <
into the dull brain of not o)io
parasite that engaged in the discis-
sion did a thought of social con-
sciousness come. Their whole idea
was to get the best of the other fel-
low, do him or he will do you;
gouge or be gouged. |
While walking out of the build-
ing with Frank Putnam, he turned
to me disgustedly and said: "Oh,
yon Rebel, what do you think of
it? "I said: "Frank, it's a mix-
ure of farce comedy and tragedy ;
here's Houston almost sfr the gate-
way of the Panama Canal and her
leading citizens are so blinded with
>etty dollar marks that they fail
to realize that our nation can split
the backbone of a coneinent, unite
the oceans in marriage and there-
by give the markets of Houston a
short cut to the markets of the
orient and yet ^n their narrow in-
dividualism thev'have to fight half
the night on the absurd question
of how to lay some sidewalks to
get Houston out of the mud.
And this was'a few days before
the fire. /
m-1
m
OF THTEOAD,
MI
?^fci)zen, State ■Sce.Trcas.)
r
lh all chartered organ-
y sub^nit weekly reports to
ncc of their activities. *
|, • • •
[time is near at hand when
Jots"should be in the state
st for or against the new
it ion. The last- day is
; fifth.
• * *
fate press is still discussing
union. Frank Putnam
Muendons broadside in the
|u Chronicle of Feb. 21. It
published in next week's
Tha
the
has
I
w
M
®, m pnw
" mher the resolution pasf:-
in ously at the Waco con-
vention <l<'claring for an increased
tax on land values held for spec-
ulative purposes. The Renters
Union > iion partisan. We only
expert that adherents of the va-
rious parties will see that their po-
litical organizations have a chance
to talse action on this subject that
is of *uch vital importance to our
membership
4-
That splendid worker, A, J.
>#C0'0f Kustace sends us this in-
tcresting letter:
Jfcistacc, Tex., Feb. 13, 1912
Comrade'.J.|#. Stone and myself
will begin a speaking tour to
mow#*. The dates are arranged
as follows: Trinidad, Monday,
night : Feb. 19; Mapkins, S. H.,
Tuesday night, Feb. 20; Payne
>rings, Wednesday night, Feb.
21; {Jtear ('reek, S. H., Thursday
night* Feb, 22; Ham, Friday
night, Fell 23; Edstaoe, Saturday
evening 1 ;:J0 o 'cloek, l|pb. 24.
An Irish miner in ftbhe. Aria.,
wl«> possessed tf good di al of that
fluency for which the ( elfic race
is famous determined in 1908 that
he would make a soap bo,; trip, back
Bast and tell the people why they
should make the tall locomotive
fireman from the Wabash the
president.of the Cnited States. As
the railroad fare on the branch
road is five cents a mile apd,there
aw many miles of desert between
Globe and Kl Paso his first speak-
ing point, he decided to take a
side door sleeper aud travel to his
first apffflintment " on his card"
\ friendly brakeman told him to
;et off at the smelters two mile®
rom town. As lie clambered up
the embankment he ran into a high
collared dude who was clerking \n
the big works. After mutual apol-
ogies he climbed on l oard a trolley,
landed down in the heart of the
city, t oolr a bath, chrtnged his lin-
en ait J spick and span he mount-
ed the big Iwx to speak at 8 p. m.
Fn the midst of a vitriolic attack
on Btyan he caught the eye of the
dude he had met that morning.
Thevoung man was filing over
With rage b&ause he was an en-
thusiastic Bryanite and he deter-
mined to break np the meeting if
possible.
"Can I ask a question!" he
yelled.
"Sure thing, fire it," said the
speaker. -
"Didn't you come into town on
top,of a box car this morning?"
Quick as a rifle flash came the
answer: r
"Yes, sir, 1 surely did. And
.Jesus rode into Jerusalem on
Jassaek that looked like you."
And they do say that some of
the crowd is laughing yet.
fKKKKSSRKSMiftftHIB
m . in
OUR REBS. Jfi
RSXifiS
Friday. Me^cb 1st: .Pigeon, Sat.
Mar"h 2nd: Huckabny, Sundav,
Sunday, March 3rd: Hannibal,
Mondnv. March 4th: Exrav. Tues-
day, March 5th; Dilla^. Wednes-
day, March 6th; Sap Oak. Thurs-
day,, March 7th; Petilo. Friday.
March 8th; Yipan. Saturday
March 9th; Big Sundav. Sunday,
March '10th; Morgan Hill. Mon-
day. March 11 th; Center Grove.
R. H.. March 12th; Oakdale, 8. H.,
March 13th: Hog Springs, March
14th; Rocky Point, S. H., March
15th: jpilot Knob. March 16th ;
Elm Btott, March 17th; Seldon. S-
H., March 18th; Sappers " Cap,
"JL . .9 9 4--...—-
A half .dozen blocks from the
auditorium down in a hollow is
Houston' 5th ward. It is largely
made up of sorry wooden sliacks
and the well-posted man visiting
the city would immediately rec-
ognizelt as ttre IfOlneHTTf ®e WH6
do the work of the city. A great
many of the striking railroad em-
ployees live in the ward. In an
empty house in the ward some
tramps took shelter from the
cold; they lit a fire to keep thpip-
selves alive and in their natural
carelessness, they set fire to the
wooden house; the fire communi-
cated itself to other wooden houses
and with the assistance of a strong
wind, a mile and a half of the city
was devastated,' thousands were
rendered homeless, factories and
compresses were burned down,
thousands of tons of hay and 55,-
000 bales of cotton went' up in the
conflagration. ' ;
Not one of TSe. lead-
ing intellectual lights that
took part in the big auditorium de-
bate has realized that the scourge
of fire that swept Houston is ap-
plied, by Providence to these dull
witted ones who cannot understand
the Panama Canal illustration out-
lined above and cannot under-
stand that this is a day of interde-
pendence; that the typhoid in the
5th ward will ravage the palace on
the hill; that the fire in the 5th
ward will lessen the pocket book of
the plutocrat in the palace; that
poverty produces the plqgues thai
hurt all classes in society; that otir
tremendous economic development
of today points to the immediate
necessity of colle<#iveis«i.
When thjs truth is realized then-
there wil be no more fires in the
5th ward, because there will be no
5th ward as we know it now. The
nation that can build Panama Ca-
nals and turn th&t fire-swept, dis-
eased-ridden plague spot into a
beautiful summer resort, ca*1
cfean up "Houston from jnud and
fires and plagues.4 even.if while
doing,so tbey have to clean up,the'
KirbyV the Ball's and the idiotic
Dr. Reisig's.
And that's the lesson of the fire
in Houston. - * ~ •
Beoond Watk.
Macedonia, S. H, Monday night
Feb. 86; Cottonwood S. H., Tues-
day night, Feb. 27; StaOard, Wed-
nesday night, Feb '28; Farris
Grove, S. II.,'Thursday night, Feb.
29; Oakland, S. H., Friday night,
March 1; Malakotf, Saturday ev-
eu& g,T:W o'clock Mrch 2.
I am arranging for a tour now
from Eustace to Kaufman, from
there to Terrell then to Grand
Saline, then to Mineola and back
to Anient). k
1 would like to begin on this
route in a few days. 1 have al-
ready received calls for nine dif-
ferent appointments. As soon as
I gal emyHilny arrsngett
1 will turn the work there over to
Bro. Stone and start Out. Would
like to hear from you before I be-
gin this tour ip respect to the
pass word.
I am just in receipt of the cir-
culars. They are all right, you bet.
Enclosed find 50 cts. to pay ex-
press on another thousand for
Bro. .1 L. Stone, as per my last
letter.
, Fraternally,
; A. J. Rasco.
March 19th
ile. March
th 21st;
22nd; Indian Creek
dfeth
va®u
8. H , Marek
IS
A SAD MISTAKE.
Philadelphia, Feb. 13.'—T3ie Ik-
Namara brothers should lie listed in
history beside John * Brown.
General Sherman and President
Madero of Mexico, declared
Thomas P. 0'I^olge.r, millionaire'
and instructor in English at the
University of Pennsylvania, in ari
address to a class in English in the
college department yesterday.
"These men were driven to des-
peration by the stem measures of
Harrison Gray Otis, the owner of
the Los Angeles Times," said the
instructor.
DEATH OF CAVlTAimi.
riie Capitalists came down like
the wolf on a fold,
And their minions were many
many and bold;
And the numGer of their voters
were many that day,
When the president was elected,
of the IT. 8; A.
jike the soldiers of an army when
the battle iB begun,
. That host on election morn greet-
ed the sun;
Liike soldiers of an army, ot vie
tory shorn,
That host on the morrow were
defeated and torn.
WSiimi
WmSmi'
h. .
"mm
mm
For them, the augel of defea
spread his wings over the
land
And gripped the hearts of th
millionaires with an icy
hand,
And the hopes of their leaders
waxed deadly and chill:
And their ambitions but once
rose, and forever Krcw still
And there lay th^elephant with his
- nostrils all wide,
But thru them there rolled not
the breath of his pride
And the "big stick" of his rider
. day broken ou the field,
And no loijger to its power will'
the government yield.
And there lay the rider distorted
and dead, ' •
With tglasses on his none and a
cavalry hat. on his head;
And the papers were all silent,
and the candidates alone.
The speeches unmade, the
trumpets unblown.
And
of Gotham
GET TOGETHER.
, * '
Socialist Editor- Lockwood of
Kalamazoo, Mich., says to his fel-
low editors: ■
- "Come out of your shell—if you
arc in one—and let's get the bunch
of publishes of radiciri dhoib : 'l
little doaeg tog^sr. Ws haivea't
beguii to rmefa the people yrt—
properly—why quarrel about 'ter-
ritory f' 1W is plentj 4f Men.
WOW Ip A Ml.
- The Irish millionaire educator
makes a sad mistake when he
blames the deeds of the McNamara
boys on Otis. That bombastic bour-
geois boodler is only a small cog in
the prcnt vfftchine of plutocracy
Just as the supreme court of Cal-
ifornia is another cog. The great
governing halls on the engine of
explotation is the plutocracy that
owns the capital of the nation. Mr.
O'Bolger would l>e nearer right if
he said: "When the Supreme
Supreme Court of California wrote
the decision in the case of Ames vs;
S. P. Railroad that without equivo-
cation declared "the rules and reg-
plation oi the Southern Pacifice
are of greater potency thrtn the
ii<t- • n' fim tp* d " ♦hft RR
'■* '1 ,> fnr-> f> . t^e
Tr.A .-(yj • ^icS'i-
mnr> '> made was that they did net.
joki the Socialist movement; seize
rv«lit:«f>1 pnjJ fplrp ibC
capital out of the hands of the plu-
tocracy to be used for the benefit of
all the people. It is either that or
more and still more dynamite un-
til society, is blown to pieces m an-
other resolution, beside which the
French Rovolution will look Uke a
May-day celebration. Get wise my
Irish friend.
gone
V
the grafters
londly cried
For their Novation was
when, capitalism died.
And the government of the esp.i-
talistB, unwept' and un-
wrote, :— -\
Vanished like snow hefoce the
Socialist vote. 4
Oscar St.nthall,
bfi !K S Ifi X S £ « X S
>(•1is. the limit.
ifi Nat Ij. Hardy in the Dai-
Hi las Laborer sizes up tilings
ifi in a statesman-like way. In
ifi a recent issue he said i
W '' Som« Socialists.we not
ifi good sixtrtsf when filings
IR
ifi
ifi
ifi
m
ifi don't_go like they want them
ifi to go they act like a naughty
ifi little boy aud try to start a -ifi
ifi fight. Tut, tnt. Comrades ifi
ifi we've got plenty of fighting Si
ifi to do to 'properly attend to !fi
Ifithe old party politician so let's®
ifi all get busy and not quarrel ifi
ifi among ourselves. None of ifi
ifi us ever have even-thing go- ifi
ifi ing our own way." ifi
ifi ifi a « « « a « « « « «
BUNDLE ORDERS.
Frank Putnam's great write-up
of the Renter* Union published In
ths Houston Chronicle this week
wm hasM of a number of the big
%
his week we approach the 20,000
mark.* During the zero weather •
our Rebels were unable to meet
•heir friends and neighbors which
caused our weekly average to
slump slightly. However, with the
first warm days of the past week,
1:he subs are commencing to flow
in steadily and give promise of
reaching Niagara like proportions
when the flowers are blooming in
he spring. We are rather proud
of this weeks' number. We wish
you would alt read it carefully as
it is one of the best balanced num-
H«rs we have produced in months.
You will all notice that, for the first
ime in the South the democratic
party will bo compelled to go on
record on a vital issue, In fact thrt
sheep will be separated from the
goats. In every issue of The Rebel
rovn now until the primary we
shall play up this subject. You
may swear that there will be a
great running to cover by the old
mlitical deceivers, hence we would
ike to see a tremendous sub list
rolled up to the end that, the great
question of land tuay be properly
landled. The editor has made
arrangements to go out and look
lis fellow rebels in the eye and
xave a heart-to-heart, knee-to-knee
talk with the men whp are doing
things. For a long time, the edi-
tor hesitated to take this step be-
cause the rush of work in the of-
fice almost compelled him to de-
cline the many pressing invita-
tions and stay at home, hilt the
previous trip haar shown that he
can sehd the hot stuff in from the
road and the thoroughly compet-
ent force at home under the gui-
dance of Mcitzen, will enable The
Rebel to come ont stronger thaa
ever. Now will each Rebel take
off his coat and send in a list of
subs at once. Do as good as Cor-
sicana is doing; 'that comrade,
Goode by name, and good by na- ,
ture wants 3,000 Rebels tp be seat
to 3,000 farmew in Navarro conn
ty for the Hiekey meeting sf
March 24th.
The following are among the
principal sub-getters this week:
W, S. Noble, Ranger, 17 j W.
J. Howelle, Wein^rt, 13; T. J. Mc-
Knighf, Kingsville, 10; R. H. Da-
vis, Thalia, 9; H. M. Diekard, Tha-
lia, 8^ Robt, G. Martin* Stephen-
'ville, 7; W. E. Ramsey, Tona, 7;
W. G. Argenbright, Vandervoort,
Ark.. 7; H. H. Kelly, Ft. Worth, 7;
D. J. Holly, Kemp, R5, 7: J. F.
Drieschner, Tolbert, 6; J no. K.
Gholson, Atlanta, 5; W.. T. Wal-
ker, Center, 5; W. H. Mitchell,
So. Bosque, 5; H. F. Hause, Deni-
son, 4; A. Poiack, Hamlin, 4; W.
B. Duckworth, Blue Ridge, 4; J.
L. Cloghoni, Forney, 4; W. W.
Wood, Midlothian, 4; S. T. John,
son, Alexander, 4; J. T. White,
Ovalo, 4; C. M. Flynn, Bateeville,
Ark., 4; S. A. Moore, Comanche,
4; T. M. Blount, Claytonville, 4^
Geo. Ni Van Zandt, Taylor, 4; M
C, Smith, El Campo, 4 j'It, A. Lee,
liule, 4; 4. F. Johnson, Newljern.
Tt*n., 4; J. G. Cortese, Temple.
4; J. M. Aday, Olustee, Okla,, 4.
Press Fund. > |
I lie Kebs ke q> hammering away
on this fund .-
Previously received $159.23
This week ' ■ 42^i5
♦201 " 0
k
in Mo. 8^ next walk's is.
your ordan in now. OOe
Wanted to Pnrchaaa—(.Tiickeos
egg* and other produce direct
from the producer. The Proctor
Restaurant, 136 Procter St., Port
Arthur, Tex . 2m-a6
is ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi £ « « y; S y; s
in GEO. CI4FT0N EDWARDS ifi
ifi Lawyer £
* 3*Uai Texas ifi
in Practice in all courts !fi
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Hickey, T. A. The Rebel (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. [1], No. 34, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 24, 1912, newspaper, February 24, 1912; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth394458/m1/3/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.