The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, March 23, 1906 Page: 3 of 8
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IPiM!
1RESS, FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1906.
f blood must be in
4 condition. You
A* know whnt to take,
t It-Ayer's Sarsa-
T|f you doubt, then
Luf doctor. We know
J vill say about this
family medicine,
irover 60 years.
bSwei, If fbfoluteljr
Keep jronr liver nctlve
jgr bj Ukltag lexatlva
RrjToSTrlowJiriiuIa.
ifnuftwturor. of
f HAW VIOOR,
mrc AQUBCUtE.
iClO CBEK8V PCCTOBAL.
ijpUN PROGRESS
p^7Sbli*h«r and founder.
^M A lililf id. law
K Local Notes.
^B»Cbl8mof Gorman spent
K,h friends in Dublin.
,s to be helrl at ('ar|'
«(Kturday of next week, the
Dabney of Thorp Springs,
by Mrs. Dabney, is in
isask. v
frank of Stephenvllle,
for represntatlve, spent
Dublin.
^__
I. -less Raker of Granbury was
here Wednesday mingling with the
voters before deciding whether or not
to enter the race for representative
from the flotorial district number
sixty-man, made up of the counties
of Erath, Hood and Somervell. Mr.
Baker is an old time citizen of Gran-
bury and has been engaged in the
hardware and Implement business at
that point for a number of years.
Be Is a «uoce8sful and oonsclentlous
business man and bears on his physi-
ognomy the stamp of rugged honesty
and democratic simplicity. He Is a
democrat of the original type and Is
of the class of men who command re-
spectful attention at all times and
plaoes. Mr. Raker says that he will
not decide for a few weeks whether
he will offer for theplape.
While Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Martin
were driving Monday evening, their
horse became frightened at some
camper’s wagons near the cemetery
and ran away. The buggy turned
over, throwing both Mr. and Mrs.
Martin out. Mr. Martin had an an-
kle badly sprained and Mrs. Martin’s
nose was broken and she received
other severe bruises upon the face and
head.... Willie Cole was thrown by a
young horse Sunday and was pretty
badly hurt. At first It. was thought
his hip was seriously Injured but he
will probably be fully recovered from
the effects of the jolt In a few days.
— Morgan News.
NEW WHOL^AT fr^,gDored’and W bc Dowie
--- j has thrown in her lot with tha ordl-
Rotan Grocery Co., of Waco Will'Dar* *0,,0W*M Zion. It Is claimed
Establish Branch Rouse
at Dublin.
county teachers In-
I be In session at Coman-
I tomorrow.
ill poi cases five miles
itlne, have all recovered
intlne has been raised.
Trustee elections will be held In all
the publio school districts in the
county on the first Saturday in April.
The Independent districts will not
hold their election at that time, the
date for the latter being set by state
law to occur on the first Saturday in
May. At that time the terms of
Messrs. J0 R. Waldo, B. W. Laller-
ty and J. S.Daley as trustees in the
Dublin independent district will ex-
pire. The other members of the
board are Messrs. John G. Harris, B.
B. Moore, J. D. Brock and S. H.
Prim. The terms of the last named
do not expire until next year.
i M. J. Woods’ cash store
rill tell you how to get a
ll, framed picture free.
ling up time now. The
back yards—and front
aid have a thorough
,Mulloy, practice limited
i of the eye, ear, nose
Office over the Grange
i|hoe8 for men. Queen
for Ladies and Iron
both ladles and chll-
lit M. J Woods’.
«y that the frost and
sight destroyed nearly
elt throughout the noun-
I ati and other crops that
r, manager of the
at Waco, was here
■log the appearance
Sarah Bernhardt In that
iToaday night.
—--
ire to have been delivered
> Bigot at the Methodist
Bev. O. P. Kiker was de-
ISeasonable date on ao-
>tot4 sod damp weather.
Trigg, formerly one of
with the Southwestern
Ifc Telephone Co. in Dub-
a place with the
mgeatGranbury.
B’S WARNING
-{Must Recognize and
Heed It
1 *ome quietly—myster-
*tQr* always warns you
i urine.
i kidney secretions.
s Is unhealthy—
tire settlings and sediment,
too frequent, scanty,
'then to use Doan’s Kid-
1 08 Bright’s disease.or
•“re done great work nl
N*, fanner, living two
J Dublin, Texas, says:
»getting Doan’s Kidney
it if00 Drug °°- 1 WM
than five years
kidneys. A dull,
the small of my
| ®och annoyance, cs-
ooped or lifted any-
kw 00 ^ 1 °*uffht
***“•1*1 causing too
,ecret,0°8 and
* brlok dust sedi*
LT"* ol Doan’s Kid-
** w»d in a short
Yo“ »re at Ilb-
h one who can
Pilla from
* %
Price 50
°0m Buffalo,
tt» United
Dr. W. II. Henthoine has Installed
a new dental chair, new dental appli-
ances, instruments and furniture and
almost a complete new outfit to take
the place of that recently damaged
by fire. He has not yet entirely fin-
ished the overhauling of his dental
parlors, but the work Is nearing
completion and when it is done the
doctor will have a very handsome and
thoroughly equipped dental office.
A reception and banquet was ten-
dered last Monday evening at the
Crown hotel parlors ty the business
men of Brown wood to Vice-Presi-
dent and General Manager Drake of
the Frisco, Col. C. H. Young and a
party of ladies and gentlemen with
him including Mesdames C. II. Yoak-
um, C. W. Strain, and JL; O. Wil-
iams, all wives of Frlsfio officials.
Cancer Is due to the Injurious ef-
fects of sunlight oo the human body,
according to the latest theory of
science. In New York, where this
most dreaded, because most incurable,
of diseases is increasing by leaps and
bounds, the experts In the laborator-
ies are eagerly discussing the view
just announced by Professor Jas.
Nevins Hyde of Chicago.
The court of civil appeals has re-
fused to take cognisance of a case to
reoover money from a Bell county
cotton exchange, furnished to buy fu-
tures, which It la claimed were not
sold according to directions, saying
that it was gambling and that such
debts were non enforcible and con-
trary to public policy.
The engagement of Prof. Cree T.
Work, president of the College of In-
dustrial Arts at Denton, to lecture
at the school auditorium in Dublin
tomorrow night, has been canceled,
owing to the fact that it was not be-
lieved that a justifiable audience
could be gotten on that night.
Mrs. Blrge, who has been cooking
for Mrs. Barbee, took an over dose of
laudnum Sunday morning and came
near dying. She had been suffering
with headache and was in the habit
of taking laudnum for relief. She is
recovering rapidly however and will
soon be all right again.—HJoo News.
The Rotan Grocer Co. of Waco
have deoided to remove their branch
wholesale establishment from Hico to
Dublin, the change to be made oo or
about the first of the coming month.
They have leased the Higginbotham
Bros, buggy and Implement house,
directly opposite H. A. Smith & Co.
on postoffloe atreetfor a term of three
years and will ocoupy both the upper
and lower atories of that building.
The building is provided with car
service by a switch from the Texas
Central road which runs dose aloog
the entire west side of the building.
Higginbotham Bros, have leased for
the same period the entire upper and
lower floors of the Cagney building
now occupied by the Maloney Mer-
cantile Co., with the exception of
the upstairs front rooms occupied by
IIenthorne’8 dental parlors and Judge
Conner’s law offices. As soons as the
building Is repaired from the recent
fire damage Higginbotham Bros, will
occupy the building with their stock
of hardware, buggies, and carriages,
the latter goods taking the upper
story to be reached by an elevator in
the rear and they will use the former
hardware rooms for wagons and im-
plements. The front rooms upstairs
will be entirely cut off from the rear
by a partition and Judge Conner will
extend one room of his-office back as
far as the partition to provide a room
in which to hold justice court. The
location of the Rotan wholesale house
here gives Dublin three first class
wholsale grocery concerns, all of
which are doing a prosperous and ex-
tensive business throughout all the
territory west of Ft. Worth and Dal-
las as far as Kerrville on the south
and El Paso on the west. The new
arrangement will also be of great ad-
vantage to the Higginbotham inter-
ests, placing the hardware and car-
riage departments in the heart of the
business section of town. The big
sale being advertised by the Maloney
Mercantile Co. for next week to close
out their fire damaged stock, will last
only the one week In order*to vacate
the building by the first in order for
the other changes tu at once take
place.
that Mra. Dowie haa said to her
friends that she haa been deceived
to the real condition in the church
and believed that millions of mosey
was available when there was no soeh
condition existing. Mrs. Dowie called
io brokers who made an Inventory of
the furniihiDgaof the Dowie home
at Zloo City, which is decorated in a
most expensive manner. She de-
clared chat she desired to sell every
thlog for the good of the church, and
that when the furnishings had been
sold, the house Itself was at the dis-
posal of the society.
• ----■ —A
Dr. Lewis will sell a few Norman
horses aod a few Durham sows.
-
Patrick, the condemned New York
lawyer has been again-reprieved to
May 18tb. _
The Frisco railroad system has or-
ders placed for eleven thousand new
freight cars and 215 locomotives.
Royal Blue shoes for men. Queen
Quality shoes for ladies add Iron Clad
hose for the ladies and ciidreu. All
at M. J. Woods’.
Why not ao active commercial or
a business men’s club in Dublin?
There are many opportunities for
such an organization to be of service.
A Cream of Tartar Powder
Made From Grapes
No Alum
The Dnfoo saloon at Hico was bro-
ken Into last week and a quantity of
whiskey stolen. Several arrests hav^
been made and the grand jury at
Hamilton has been reconvened to in-
vestigate this and several other mat-
ters. J_
Christian Endeavor Program.
Topic: Bountiful Sowing of Our
Gifts to Christ’s Cause. A Mission-
ary.—Luke 6: 38; 2 Cor 9: 1-15.
Leader—Lewie Davis.
Do I Regard the Money I Have as
God’s In My Trust—Miss Leva Rob-
ertson.
Am I Spending and Being Spent
for the Kingdom—Stella Evaos.
Am I Now Willing to Give up All
to 8ave the Heathen?—Gilbert Wil-
liams.
Solo—Loralne Maloney.
Dowie and Wife Parted.
“Apostle” John Alexander Dowie
and wife have parted, according to a
story printed in the Daily News, says
a Chioago dispatch. It Is declared
that a message of Mrs. Dowie to him
The Goldthwaite Eagle of last week
says that J. M. Baxley and family
will at once move from that place to
Hamilton whe're* Mr. Baxley will
have charge of the new ice and
electric plant.
Lawyer John E. McCarty an-
nounces this week as"a candidate to
succeed himself as city attorney of
Dublin. Mr. McCarty has been act-
ing in this capacity for two years
past and he has served the city
faithfully and well. He Is both,
oapable and reliable in every sense
and believes in prosecuting but not
persecuting.
Rev. P. C. Irwin of Poteau, I. T.,
was here Wednesday accompanied by
Rev. Gaines B. Hall of Comanche,
aod preached at the Presbyterian
church in this city Wednesday night.
It Is thought probable that Rev.
Irwin will be secured as pastor of
the church at this point. He is a
talented Ynd educated young man
and was a college classmate of Rev.
Hall. ______
The roller skating rink which had
been opened In the Witcher building
by outside parties, has been super-
ceeded by the new rink opened over
Mistrots by Messrs. Jim McKinney
and L. R. Mayfield. The new rink
haa a model location, a very large
room, brand new perfectly smooth
floor, etc., and the rink in the Wltch-
er building was unable to compete
with the conditions and has closed.
Rev. H. A. Boaz, president of the
Polytechnic college at Fort Worth,
is In the east, where be jias gone in
an endeavor to secure for his School
a part of the 110,000,000 “tainted
monev” John D. Rockefeller has de-
cided to give away for educational
purpose. It is the purpose of the
management of that school to make
extensive Improvements in the build-
ings in the event of a donation from
that source.
sixty olti-
Hlggln-
TOOTH50/VIE SALADS
Promote Health and Please Palate.
J. E. Bishop oame in last Friday
from Brady and left Tuesday for To-
lar, where he has the contract for
construction of a stone building.
Charlie Oates, who has been at To-
lar for some time past, weot to Bra-
dy to finish up a building there con-
tracted hy himself and Mr. Bishop.
A railroad rate of one oent a mile
each way Is announced for the trip to
New Orleans next month on aooount
of the annual meeting of the United
Confederate Veterans. This will
make the round trip fare from Dub-
lin about thirteen dollars.
“The Carlton Circuit Rider” Is
the name of a neat little four col-
umn folio church paper now published
it Carlton by Bit. M. C. Dickson,
pastor of the Methodist church at
that place. The fiat lpo« MPeared
under date of last »tardaj.
TO. ,011, <* M«fa> y ■-
Io of typhus fever and there nave
A lover of good living writes from
Chicago:
“The,favorite salads in my fam-
ily,” he says, “are prepared with
Grape-Nuts, according to your recipes.
We are also food of Grape-Nuts with
cream as a breakfast food, and use
it daily. “I was a great sufferer
for years,” he continues, “from
stomach trouble, which gave rise
to painful headaches, and I was at
last completely prostrated and bed-
ridden with uloeratlon of the stom-
ach and bowels. I suffered untold
agonies while the doctors were tiying
to cure my ailments with medicines.
“I could retain nothing on my
stomach but an occasional sip of cold
water, or a teaspoonful of olive oil,
and at last even these could not be
kept down. The doctors then gave
me up—said there was no hope for me
“In this strait my good aogel In-
duced me to try Grape-Nuts food,
and it may sound ludicrous to say of
the Initial experiment that the sen-
sation was simply ‘heavenly’ but
nothing milder than that will express
It.
“My recovery waa rapid and in a
very few days I was up and about,
and Io a few weefrs was a perfectly
well man again. And it waa all the
work of the Grape-Nuts food, for, I
as I have Mid, the doctors had ceased
to give me medicine, considering my
xase hopeless. .
“Slnoe then Grape Nuta has been,
and always shall be a staple article
DreS^SlS: —
There’s a raaaon. Read the little
baao 2,069 cases since ^October Brat
Several years ago some
zens of Dublin met in the
botham opera house and organized a
commercial club. Each of the gentle-
ment was supposed to have paid one
dollar into the treasury at the time
as a membership fee (the writer rem%
embers parting with that amount of
ooin at the time) and another meet-
ing was to have been held soon. The
other meeting was never held and
we have understood the money was
later used on improving the roads—
a good use but not the proper one for
those particular funds. Why not re-
juvenate the commercial club?
Santa Fe Railroad Extensions.
The Santa Fe railroad hils amend-
ed its oharter to provide for the con-
struction of an extension of its Pecos
ft Northern Texas Railway from the
present terminus in Palmer county,
through that county, Fisher, Jones,
Taylor, Callahan, Coleman and’Brown
to a point at or near Brownwood, a
distance of 350 miles. The charter
also provides for an extension from
Canyon city ' in Randall county,
through Randall, Swisher,. Hale and
Lubbock to a point on the southern
boundary of Lubbock, a distance of
125 miles.* >
Judgment Against LadiesHomeJouraal
A verdict has been rendered in fa-
vor of the plaintiff in the libel suit
brought against the Ladies Home
Journal(publiahed by the Curtis Pub-
lishing Co.) by the World’8 Dispen-
sary Medical Association, of which
Dr. R. V. Pierce is president. The
suit waa brought by Doctor Piarce
agslnst the Curtis Publishing Co.,for
making false statements fjtout one of
his standard family medicines. In
the May. number of the Ladles Home
Journal (1904) Editor Bok stated that
Dr. Pieroe*a medicines fionbklned al-
cohol and some other harmful ft
dianta.' This ai
Reflections.
The quality of the Inspiration de-
pends on Its source.
The biggest hat doesn’t always
cover the best Ideas.
To forget is a virtue—if we forget'
the things we ought.
A definite ambition never waits
for things to turn up.
Cleverness dwells in marble halls;
genius In an atticv_
The bill rendered by Experience U
ever subject to discount.
If all men were equally good this
would be a monotonous world.
A foundation of doubt means a
superstructure of uncertainty.
Simplicity is often passed by for
the glamour of superficiality.
Say your say with a silver toDgue
and wait results in golden silence.
The man who has Dever made a
mistake has never achieved success.
The fool’s folly is sometimes more
profitable than the wise man’s wis-
dom.
When inclination runs counter to
experience the siutatlon grows inter-
esting.
Follow the direction of a cork-
screw and you’ll find yourself in a
crooked path.
It’s always difficult to determine
whether a man with a pet theory is
a fool or a philosopher.—Profitably
Advertising.
This is to certify that on Feb.
13th I took out a policy In the Na-
tional Live Stock Insurance Co. of
Dallas, Texas, on nay mare “Maud”
for 9100. On the 19th day of Feb-
ruary the animal was killed in an
accident and in less than one week
after the accident I received the
company’s check through their local
agent, W. W. Eddleman, for the full
amount of the policy.—W. P. Ham-
mers.
Moral—Insure your livestock with
Eddleman. 43-3t
M. J. Woods’ is the place where
you can get those large beautiful
framed pictures.
Mother of Noted Naval Hero.
At the ago of eighty, Mrs. Abo E.
Gridley, mother of the famous cap-
tain to whom Admiral Dewey gave
the order, “You may begin firing
when you are ready, Gridley,” aod
grandmother of Lieut. John P. V.
Gridley, killed two years ago by the
explosion of the battleship Missouri,
is regularly at work as clerk in the
land office, a subdivision of the de-
partment of the interior.
Spry, cheery, and without a word
of complaint, Mrs. Gridley keeps the
regular office hours, and she does the
regular work of those in her division.
She has worked for the government,
almost continuously, for thirty years
Dutiug ‘Cleveland’s administration
she was let out; the records showed
that she had served as nurse in the
Union army. But President Harri-
son reappointed her, and she has been
in office since. Her salary is 9900 a
year. She reoeives a pension of 920 a
month on account of her services as
nurse during the war.
He is Joined to His Mol.
The farmer who has to buy corn at
a dollar a bushel is a farmer who is
speeding his way to the poorbouse.
“Cotton is king, ” Is theory that rings
out at all times Id the south. Trae,
but “cotton Is s tyrant.” The small
farmerrwho falls under its sway Is
lost. That la all there is about It,
aod the truth of it Is seen bn every
side. It has brought more m isery, .
to the lowly fireside than all else be-} into
side. It sustained slavery which,
with other things, cost the south the
flower of her people, and laid it io
ruins. And now, when its chains
are put on the small farmer, all hope
for his betterment departs forever.
What price of
of
gold seeker will hazard every danger.
The gold seeker loses all except for
the object of hip search. It appears
that cotton, the next thing to gold,
has the same effect. It is useless to
talk to a man who has this cotton
fever or mania. He is bound to the
tyrant and there is no help for him.
True, he can emancipate himself and
family by the simplest methods, that
is, by raising corn and other things
on which his family can subsist, but
he will not do it. His idol has him
completely in its toils, and all the ar-
guments and experiences of man oan-
not prevail.—Dallas News.
I have 110 acres of fine unimprov-
ed sandy land located five miles
southwest of Carbon that I will sell
at a bargain on easy terms. Also
eighty acres northeast of Carbon.—
J. E. Spencer, Carbon, Texas. 42-tf.
Another daily paper will be start-
ed Io Temple commencing April 1st,
but it is oot decided yet whether It
shall be a morning or evening publi-
cation. The venture is fostered by
the Temple Weekly Times, and is a
resumption of the dally edition they
discontinued several months ago.
Temple Wheeler of Dallas, but for-
merly of Beaumont, is actively inter-
ested in the new paper.
For plumbing or wind ml)] or
tank repairing see E. O’Brien. First
class service. If you need work in
this line leave word at Jordan’s
grocery store. 34-tf.
Many Reptiles In Kentucky.
Forty-two rattlesnakes, ranging in
size from six inches to five feet, were
killed under an old-fashioned hearth
at the farm house of Isaac Welborn
near Mum fords ville, Ky.
Mrs. Wellborn scalded the reptiles,
and with a pair of tongs lifted them
out and placed them in a row for dis-
play. For several weeks Mrs. Wel-
born had complained that the house
was haunted. Female friends shared
this belief and neighbors ceased their
visits to the Welboius.
M rs. Welborn Was oo the verge of
prostration when she persuaded her
husband to remove the hearthstone.
In a hollow place the snakei were
snugly awaiting the coming of warm
weathei.
OPEN PUBLICITY THE BEST
• GUN RUNTY OP MERIT.
When the maker of a medicine, sold
through druggists for family use, takes
his patients fully Into his confidence hy
frankly and fearlessly publishing broad-
cast as well as on its bottle wrappers,
a full list of all its ingredients in plain
English, this action on his part is the
best possible evidence that he is not
kfraid to have the search light of inves-
tigation turned full upon his formula
and that it will bear the fullest scrutiny
^ffikmiMiMffilffiffiBkfiffi [atlon.
or the
and the most, thorough Investigation.
‘ it Ion foi
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription for the
cure of the weaknesses, periodical pains
and functional derangements of the or-
special use, th
is not afraid to take his patients into
his full confidence by such open and
honest publicity. ,
A glance at the published Ingredients
on each bottle wrapper, will show that it
is made wholly from native, American,
medicinal roots, that it contains no poi-
sonous or habit-forming drugs, no nar-
cotics and no alcohol—pure, t *
glycerine, of proper strength
instead of the commonly emj.
hoi, both for extracting and: pi
the active medicinal properties
the room of the American *
employed. It is the only
women’s pecnlar diseases, i
gists, that does not contain a
centage of alcohol which i
run so harmful to woman’s <
ous system. Now, glycerf
harmta
byj
an
■m
- y
warnm
'
.
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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/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.