The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, March 23, 1906 Page: 2 of 8
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I
tear business houses
are agitating
Star Is this early reviving
new county movement,
tha Guff Shore eitenslon will be
sted to Cuero by June first.
J?he first orate of new strawber-
ries was shipped from Alvin on the
10th. ^
J. M. Alderdioe of Ellis county is
a candidate for speaker of the next
legislature.
It la given out that there are 525,
424 persons In Texas w.ho paid poll tax
for last year.
The prohibitionists have decided
to pnt out a county ticket In Lam-
pasas county.
Humors are current that the M.
E. & T. will build a line from Pal-
estine to Dallas.
It is alleged that a banana trust
Is doing business in Texas with head-
quarters at Houston.
President Davidson of the Frisco
says the road will be extended from
Brady to San Antonio soon.
Harvle Jordan, president of the
Southern Cotton association, is to
speak at Temple March 26th.
The Confederate Home committee
is makiog an investigation of condi-
tions at the Home behind closed doors.
A Kerr has pleaded guilty to burg-
lary at Ballioger In two oases and was
given four years In the penitentiary.
Four new wells have been com-
pleted in the Humble field and
thirty-ooe wells abandoned during
the first half of Maroh.
Most counties in the state are now
getting from three to four per cent
on aounty funds deposited with the
banks under the new law.
Grave fears are entertained for the
safety of the fruit crop ail over east-
ern, northern, centra! and west Tex-
as. In many sections It-is known to
be ruined.
Mrs. T. J. Tanner of Zion City, a
member of Zion, killed herself and
infant child by throwing herself,
with her child In her arms, before a
fast train,
Judge Brooks refused the applica-
tion of the express companies for
writ of injunction to prevent the col-
lection of certain taxes under the
Kennedy bill.
After searching for his little nine
------
■4
old soon- Danny for two days,
oka of Houston made the
tbat the boy was drowned
y In the bayou. v m
James Hays Quarles, the fort
Worth newspaper man, has decided
not to run for flotoria! representative,
as be decided his candidacy Injured
that of C. K. Bell and W. D. Wil-
liams.
Frank and Frltx Lanham have
presented their newoomte bpera'The
Baker of Bung” to a large and de-
lighted, audience at Austin. The
Lanham brothers ate sons of Gov.
Lash*®)-
Miss Fannie Marcum, aged nine-
teen years, daughter of John Marcum
of Smiley, was burned to death by
her clothing catching fire while she
was assisting in burning prickly pears
in the woods near home.
Although little has been made pub-
lio concerning the matter, a well
known traction man is figuring on an
eleotrlo lnterurban between Temple
and Marlin. Preliminary surveys
and collection of data will be com-
menced soon, the necessary money
having been readily obtained for that
purpose.
Mayor Bice of Houston, issued a
call Monday for a special election to
determine municipal ownership of
the city water plant. Should the
proposition be rejected a thirty year
franchise extension will be given the
present company. It is believed that
sentiment strongly favors municipal
ownership.
T. J. Dantzler, a prominent jew-
eler and optician of Corsicana, died
in his bath tub about 11:30 o’clock
Sunday morning. When deceased
went to his bath .he was in apparent-
ly perfect health. At 11:30 Mrs.
Dantzler, thinking her husband had
been jn his bath long enough called
him, but received no response. She
Ihen went to the bathroom and hear-
ing no noise, broke the door open to
find her husband dead.
About 4 o’clock one morning re-
cently Rev. Ben Madole, who lives
near AshJ3witch on the Cotton Belt
railroad about six miles east from
Athens, found lying upon his gallery
an old man about seventy-five years
of age, in a dazed condition. Ile
was without a hat. nis head was
cut and bloody. How he got there
is not known. Madole carried him
late in the evening to Athens, where
his woun 1 was dressed and be was
sent to the county farm. He never
recovered consciousness sufficiently to
give an account of himself, but in
partially lucid moments said his name
was Moore, asked for his pocket book
and often said "Hill county.”
THE DUBLIN
GENERAL NE^5
Brevities of the Most Interesting
Happenings Throughout the
Country for the Week.
MARCH 23. X906.
Chauncey Depew is reported sc
riously ill in New York.
A negro was lyDObed at Plaque
mine, La., for stealing a yearling.
The price of a can of beer In Chi-
cago has been Increased to ten cents
A New York chemist has dlsoov-.
ered a plan to extract water from
mitk.
Former President Cleveland has
just celebrated his sixty-ninth birth-
day.
A snow slide destroyed a large
mine mill at Ouray, Colorado, Sun-
day.
Herr Most, the celebrated anarch-
ist, Is dead at Cmcinnatti of ery-
sipelas.
Ambassador Storer to Austria
Hungary will be retired by the
president.
An eight thousand barrel flow is
reported for a new oil well at Jen-
nings, La.
One hundred and four socialist
meetings were held in Berlin and
suburbs Sunday.
Toobtain license to practice law io
Ohio, one must be a graduate of a
literary college.
St. Vincents Academy, the Cath-
olic school at Shreveport, burned.
Loss was $60,000.
The fishermen along the coast are
being organized to have the occupa-
tion tax repealed.
Oklahoma is sendiug hundreds of
telegrams to Washington urgiog im-
mediate statehood.
The doctors have decided that
the suspicious case at New Orleans
was not yellow fever.
The Standard Oil company has
again advanced the price of gasoline
a half cent per gallon.
President Roosevelt’s attitude to
a third term is the topic of interest-
ing speculation at Washington.
The steamer Atlanta was burned
to the water on Lake Michigan
Monday but no lives were lost.
Major General Wood denies that
he unmercifully slaughtered women
and Children in the fight with Moros.
There have been no. trains into
Durango and Telluride, Colo., for
more than a week because of the
storms.
The divorced wife of German
baron von dem Bussche suicided
at Leavenworth, Kansas, by shoot-
ing herself Monday.
A severe earthquake ocourred at
Kagl, Formosa, Sunday. Hundreds
of holdings were destroyed and maoy
hundreds of people were killed.
The fuss in the house Over the
senate amendments to the statehood
bill Is said to be a hoax and that
the bill as amended will be passed.
Secretary Taft Is taking plenty of
time to consider the supreme court
appointment In view of the possibi-
lity of a nomination for president.
The Miners Union In session at
Indianapolis voted five thousand dol-
lars to defend the officers charged
with the murder of the ex-governor
of Idaho.
Frank Llnely, the telegraph oper-
ator at Swallow, Colo,, whoadmltted
that the Denver Sc Rio Grande wreck
Was due to his carelessness, has dis-
appeared.
Kansas farmers have deposited ten
million dollars In the banks In the
last two months as a result of the
sale of surplus wheat, new corn and
fat hogs, It is said.
On account of III health Lyman J.
Gage has retired from the
presidency of the United States Trust
company, of which he has been at
the head for five years.
Bias Molinet, the provincial treas-
urer of Cuba, has been missing for
four days. An Investigation made
is alleged to have revealed a shortage
In the treasury that will approximate
$30,000. He was bonded for $10,000.
The defendants in the Miners Fed-
eration case, charged with the mur-
der of the governor of Idaho, failed
to sustain the charges against the
foreman of the grand jury and the
motion to quash the indlotment was
overruled.
Andrew Hamilton, legislative agent
of the New York Life, has made a
sensational statement regarding his
connection with the company, saying
that the trustees knew well of the
matters of which fthey have denied
knowledge. / J
In a head on collision on a curve
on the Denver & Rio Grande road
near Florence, Colo., eighteen pas-
sengers were killed outright and
twenty were badly wounded. It was
the most frightful disaster In the
history of the road.
Rev. Dr. John Watson of Liverpool,
England, “Ian MoClaren,” author of
“Beside The Bonnie Briar Bush”
and many other books, is to be the
leoturer extraordinary in the Wes-
tern Theological Semiuary for a
course of lectures next year. V
Burglars last week broke iffto the
Frisco depot atChlckasha, I. T., and
dynamited the Bale. Both the outer
and Inner doors were blown entirely
off and the wood work Inside destroy-
ed. The burglars secured Over $«0 io
money and $1,330 in checks.
Loulp Nosserj a race track man of
New Orleans, locked bis wlfe*t a
bathroom last Friday and while she
was s prisoner there shot and kllkd
Miss Stella Reynolds of New Orleans,
an actress who was a visitor at their
home, and then killed himself.
Anna Valentina, the New Jersey
murderess, must hang according to
a decision of the supreme court just
handed down. Her application for
a writ of habeas corpus, which was
denied by the circuit court and
brought up on appeal was refused.
Colonel Joseph B. Killebrew, aged
seventy-five years, died at St. Thom-
as hospital In Nashville Sunday morn-
ing. Colonel Killebrew was secretary
of agriculture for Tennessee for a
number of years and was widely
known as a writer on agricultural
suoject8. -
The operator at Swallows, Colo-
rado, has admitted that he was asleep
and failed to deliver orders, whioh
caused the Denver and Rio Grande
wreck with Its known loss of twenty-
two dead and as many badly Injured.
Ile was doing both day and night
duty and says he was simply ex-
hausted.
Ed Johnson, negro, of Chattanooga,
| who had been convicted of assault
and granted an appeal, was taken
from jail at 10:45 o’clock Monday
by a molt of seventy-five men and
hanged to a beam of the county
bridge over the Tennessee river. The
j rope broke and the negro’s body fell
and the mob quickly riddled him
with bullets.
State Senator F. O. Butt of Carroll
county was committed to the county
jail In Little Rock for refusal to ans-
wer before the grand jury oertain
questions relating to the Investiga-
tion of bribery charges In connection
with the session of the Arkansas
legislature last year.
Married on a smokestack 222 feet
above the earth, with the American
flag waving over them, was the novel
experience of Miss Ora I). Williams
and George P. Lenfers at Evansville,
ind., last week. It Is estimated
that frtm fifteen thousand to twenty
thousand people saw the unique cere-
mony.
Leonard Imboden and James Hill,
convicted of conspiracy to wreck the
Denver Savings Bank, have begun to
serve their sentences of nine years In
the penitentiary at Canyon City. The
two men went to their fate with
smiles on their faces. If their hearts
ached, and they felt the hopelessness
of the situation, the fact was not
written upon their exteriors.
FORK
A t orpid L_
system,** |
SICK
Dyspfepsia, i__
riiu.ij.li, SsUa*
ii<cre Is no | ^
' ummondlit—
_ . "vr.RPiuTj
Take No ~
M-h
Woodwork, Pl^
and Hor-®
ASP E
All work
Hhare of your
solicited. Shoo
site Red Wa
HOGAN
Local Railroad
prl»co north hound 1mt«|
Written noiilh hound latrwi
i'on trul nnit hound
Central Hi»t bound Imtmu
Allens M^Jj
Moat onmplaU in tk«
msrrlm,
AM tmtillcaliona.
HouthwoaU.ru fin
Pi.u— • « K(>H
mm niiH mi
c4or.ir.si;
ROULEAU GAI
Equipped with tools, _
and competent help to i
the trade. Carries* h
AOXXT W
' irrna J
mftaim
mumi
AX.L WC
m
k
mi
GRASS.
"1
fe, Wv' ..
thLv- ‘t
ever notice how eagerly the corn-fed horse seeks grass In the Spring?
ause he’s hungry, instinct tells him he needs it His system demands
purgative to drive out impurities, and the young tender grass Is bis
medicine. All animal nature craves its particular “Spring Tonic” and
and none have greater need of It than the human animal, Man, because
»their digestive organs so much abuse. All men acknowledge nature’s cry
from Winter impurities, but there are thousands who do nothing to satisfy
i la the eai
ML ImCSZSa
’ a good
Itvltal-
Try It
DO YOU FEEL LIKE TK
*
Here is a Victim of Neglect*
Bad digestion was the starting point. He ignored
the warnings sent up by aa overloaded and suffer-
ing stomach, hence the disorder spread until it has
seriously weakened the entire digestive apparatus,
involving the kidneys, liver and bowels. It is the
beginning of a sick spell.
A person in this state o* health finds work a burden.
Strength and energy are gone, be can’t eat with relish, he is tired’
cross, nervous and dull—a truly useless and disagreeable person.
Ths worst part about it is that such person is liable to take any dan-
gerous disease that may be about. Pneumonia, Consumptio^Bright’s
Disease, Cholera, Typhoid or Yellow Fever, Malaria, Small Pox
would find in him an easy mark because his system is weakened by
impurities which are poisoning his very life-blood. In this coadi- ” 'w
‘”d re8'j!,l“r iB ->e«ded, and tor such purpose
remedy can oe found than the justly celebrated
Prickly Ash Bitters
a
A Remedy that Has Proved Its Value For Blood, F
Bowel disorders in a Brilliant Record of Cures Perl
• •
and regulator.^ It Mm”?,”! a oo to.* ,“<’h P“rp°"' “>• •’“t««**•■'blood Puril
with a genial regulating influence in th.'hTT'*1? * k'd“*, ato”***'
complete performance^! their dutie. £ *' U W,U greaUy ur*e the *iUl orgaD8 ^
the body. When the system has iJrfT 8trength and tone and restore healthy 1
purifying the , deared of factions and the kidneys resume
the eyes are brighter, the hoUow tlT “ UI>Wd turlL Appetit* &nd
» clear skin and ruddy glow The™ . **tb® ^P*6**0® loM* fchai aalIow’ mufldj.
living »nd internet in duties tha^t^et £
'
* " ASA i - *
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The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, March 23, 1906, newspaper, March 23, 1906; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth530739/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.