The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1905 Page: 7 of 8
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THE DUBLIN PBOGBESS, FRIDAY, MARCH 17. 1905.
'
Wmm
.
Wk
IALL00N VOYAGE
aeronaut’s Successful
rom London to Paris.
SHED IN SIX HOURS.
LARGE ATTENDANCE.
Moonll«ht Jonr.tr
(he E»HUk tU».tl Se-
lf uktl.clfi - ol
(public's C.fH.1 MUtnkea
U.w.-itt' of ■ New
Guide Rope.
Faure and Hubert La-
tently lowered all bulloou-
t>y their trip ucross the chau-
jiulou to Paris In a little
in, owe their journey not
own cleverness, pluck and
[ but to the curious opposl-
aet with from authorities
jmce and England, says a
ppondent of the New York
opposition prevented them
their original plan, which
less audacious one, into
: place, when they arrived
i du Nord, in Purls, the rail-
refused to register their
fthe ground that it was too
r took with them a par-
of car provided with a
| motor, to try which was
object of their expedition.
|e custom bouse authorities
allow them to ship to
jhe ground that they would*
jck Into France through the
is escape paying the duty
aufactured machinery. For-
Fuure hud brought an or-
ivith him, unprovided with
|d with this he was allowed
of Hover had promised,
as It turned out, to pro-
meters of gas needed to
on, but Ills introduction to
r of the local gas works
value, for this gentleman
rited or religious objection
uud refused' to allow the
be charged at his works,
rrench aeronauts then de-
sk on to London and spent
ing day In laborious nego
h the management of the
ee, which finally gave its
the balloon ascent being
the palace grounds.
I^oh reached the seu in an
enty tive minutes, and then
etermined to make a first
Ibe lierve “stahilisateur,"
I special application of the
I j^H principle. lie declares that
*^^“-ance surpassed nil liis ex-
aud that the moment it
waves it righted the bal-
rnost extraordinary way.
, as so strong that they made
kilometers an hour, trip-
the surfuc#*of the sea in
lightful fashion under a
and in absolute solitude
wo mall steamers going
actions, whose path they
hose crews cheered them.
time from leaving the
they passed over Dieppe,
ree hours later a hand of white
*-'® the horizon made them think
1 moment that dawn hud come,
s impossible at 1 in the
then, to their intense de-
azement, they discovered
ere approaching Paris.
>f blowing up their balloon
;reet lamp they decided to
a little distance outside of
. Denis, and this they did
tie success, and while M.
led the night in a hoeplta-
hard by bis Companion, M.
t soundly till morning in
r. When dawn came they
lr airship, dispatched it on
is, jumped into a bassing
took them to the for|lflea-
nce drove In a cab to the
Fully Twenty-Five Hundred Pereons
Were In the Tabernacle.
Waco. Mfirch 16.—Fully 2600 person*
attended the Woodmen convention
Wednesday. After electing E. D. Hen-
ry of San Antonio head consul, John
K. Sticker Jr., of Waco head adviser
and J. W. Blake of Dallas head banker,
the other officers were chosen a»,fol-
lows: Harry Bloodworth of Clarksville,
head clerk; Joe Verbert of San Angelo,
head escort; Henry Sloeneker of Plain-
view, head sentry; William M. Spence
©f Honey drove, head watchman.
Mrs. Emma B. Manchester, supreme
guardian, address the Women’* Circle.
TERRITORY WOODMEN.
Elect Officers st Oklahoma City and
Meet Next at Muskogee.
Oklahoma City,-March lB.-^The con-
vention of the Woodmen of the World
closed with a banquet. Muskogee, was
selected for the next place of meeting,
and the following officers were elected:
N. Morgan of Ardmore, head consul;
J. S. Oort of Bennington. Okia., head
escort; L. A. Shaw of Blackwell, head
banker; D. Munnell of El Reno, head
clerk; B. O. Jones of Tishomingo, I. T4
head watchman; R. ' 8. Boar gill of
Spiro, I. T., head sceretary and treaa-
uerer. Managers: T. W. Smith of
Altus, Dr. Brown of Chlckasha, Wil-
liam Mitchell of Caddo, J: Wheeler of
Wynnewood and P. Harris of Byron,
Okia.
MOORE ACQUITTED.
H* I* Dsc'arsd Not Guilty of Having
Accepted a Bribe.
Aurtln, March 16.—Warren W. Moore
was declared not guilty on the charge
of having accepted a bribe of $12,600
to dismiss the anti-trust suit against
the Kirby Lumber company. After the
Jury had returned it* WM’dLt Mr. Moore
arose and said: ■’Gejitlemen of the
Jury, my wife and J shall be grateful to
you as long as we live.” He then
walked Into the district clerk’s office
and met his wife. It was an affecting
meeting. The verdict was received with
applause and it took some time to
restore order. Jury was out one hour
and thirty-five minutes.
,A change-of venue was asked in the
case agalfist John H. Kirby, f'o action
was taken. ^
t THE BUSHIDO.
GENERAL ELECTION BILL.
Captured Two. ■ •»
Enid, Okia., March 16.—The Helena
State bank of Helena. Woods county,
west of here about twenty mJies,5 Was
entered by- four men and the safe ruin-
ed by a charge of nitro-glycerine.
Only the oil ter floor was blown off. and
the robbers feWere frightened Away.
Two were^fner caught.
I
House Put In Most of Wednesday’s
Session Discussing It.
Austi.u March 16.—House put in
most" of Wednesday’s session discuss-
ing the general election lffw.
In the senate Mr. Holland Introduced
a bill to authorize the" formation of
corporations to build bridges or cause-
ways across bays, lakes, lagoons, etc.,
and to charge foils upon' same.
The railroad commission has A num-
ber of petitions from railroad employes’
unions protesting against a reduction
In the rates upon cotton.
WOMEN’S MISSIONS.
One Hundred Delegates Are In Attend-
•- *-*■' ance at Houston.
Houston, March 16.—Tho .Woman's
Missionary society of the Texas
conference of the Methodist church,
South, Is Ir cession, i One huhdred del-
egated from ov^r the entire eastern
portion of the state are In attendance.
Miss' Belle H. Bennett, the president
of the board of home missions-for-the
Meftipdist Episcopal .church, %outh, ‘of
Richmond. Ky., Addressed the dele-i
gates. '■+*," ■■■■"-v
.. Miss Tina TUcImr of Nashville, Bible
reader and evangelist Spoke.
Mrs. L. P. Km'th of Dodge..City land
a number of.other ladles prominent in
Methodist.circles .over the'entire coun-
try, ar» present.
Moral Doctrines of the gam a rat That
Rale la Japaa.
“The bushldo” means “the moral doc-
trine* of the samurai,” and they are
obeyed by all the statesmen, soldier*
and scholars of Japan of the present
time with as much holy respect as the
Christian’s reverence for the Bible
and Its teachings. In Japan Buddhism
Is the popular religion, but Buddhist
teachings are not respected by educat-
ed men or soldiers. In fact, most of
them are atheists or agnostics, who
do not believe in any religion but tbb
doctrines of “the bushldo.”
“The bushldo,” for Instance, teaches
a man or woman to have the courage to
perform the liara kiri If he or she com-
mits a serious ofTense. The spirit of
this doctrine Is that the offender should
kill himself instead of waiting to be
executed by the law, which latter is
considered In Japan as one of the most
cowardly thing. “The bushldo” also
teaches that the life of a Japanese Is
a gift of the holy mikado, and if the
country needs the lives of her people
tl»ey should be given gladly, for that
is Only to return to the mikado what
they have received from him.
To dff on the battlefield is the only
key for a Japanese to find his way to
his Shinto heaven, and the soldiers
who were not killed on the battlefield
are considered unfortunate. It Is main-
tained in Japan that 1# a man gives
yoli a favor or money or pleasure you
should return It with more than what
was given to you.—Hydesaburo Ohashi
In Leslie’s Weekly.*
“LONDON IN 1700.
When. Traitors’ Heads Adorned Lon-
don Ilrldjtr find Temple Bar.
London in'1700 was a comparatively
small city of about <100,00Q inhabit-
ants, the rough aa.d ill kept main roads
to liich had been but slightly-improv-
ed Since Tudor times,. ‘The ghastly
spectacle <tf many of the frees on the
Southwark r.oad bending under their
burden of hanged men had indeed been
slightly modified, but none the less the
GENERAL NEWS
Brevities of the Most Interesting
Happenings Throughout Jhe
Country for the Week.
A coach containing about a dozen
passengers on the Arkansas West-
ern railroad ran down an Incline near
Waldron and crashed into a train,
fatally injuring one man.
Governor Vardaman has made a
strong address to peace officers of his
state, declating that crime is ram-
pant in all quarters of the state and
urging them to begin a crusade and
clean out the dives of the criminals.
One important action of the Okla-
homa legislature recently has been
the passage of the measure which
quarantines against the shipment
Into Oklahoma of cottonseed from
boll weevil districts.
Under the impression that he was
being hypnotized, James Gordon, an
insane mao, jumped frem the fourth
floor of a building at Chicago and
received Injuries from which he
died an hour later.
Upon Utah’s investigation, serious
allegation has been brought against
the managers of the Woild’s *1fair.
Fraud Is charged in the merit awards,
and the legislative committee says
awards were openly sold for adver-
tising purposes.
While Joseph E. Schaenberg, a
wealthy New York merchant, and
| (anally are travling in Europe their
’ house has been broken into and rob-
bed of about fifty thousand dollars
worth of silverware, paintings and
other valuables.
It is thought that the great storm
which raged along the southern coast
of California is over and as a result
but one fife has been lost and the
total damage scattered over a broad
strip of territory is estimated at
to spend upon —
ive him higher
literature, give him
give him science, and if he
anxious about it, give him Latin
and Greek, or whatever the courae he
intends pursuing—Christian Ob-
server.
"’a,hTw
Clubbing Rate*.
The Progress and any of the fol-
lowing newspapers will each be
given one year for the prioe named,
amount payable in advance.
Dalla* News, semi-weekly... . .$1,75
Ft. Worth Record, semi-weekly. 1.75
St.Louis Republic,semi-weekly.. 1.75
St.Louis Globe Democrat......1.75
Atlanta Constitution, weekly.. 1.75
Bryan’s Commoner.....!.....1.75
Southern Mercury............1.75
Tom Watson’s Magazine........1.70
Atlanta ConsitutiOD, Sunny South
and Progress, all weekly .... 2.00
Fresh Milk Cows for Sale.—Jer-
seys, Holsteins and Durhams. The
best in Erath county. At my home
one mile south of Dublin on Proctor
road.—Mrs. Fannie Wasson. 44-tf.
decd*'posif|ft‘heads of "traitors” still ! half a million dollars.
4
WOMEN WORKING.
Cavein FataL
ComstWcfie; T. T, Xlarch’ 16.—Elder
P. XI. White, former pastor of the
Methodist, ohurph' here, .was killed by
a dugpui on *?TT* farm, thirteen miles
northwest of here, raying It} on him.
The rest of the family escaped unhurt.
PROBABLE ACTION.
It la Thought a Charge of Murder Will
Be Made.
Honolulu, Xlarch 16.— It has been as-
certained that some action probably
will be taken at Pan Francisco, after
the arrival of detectives detailed there*
to fnyestltwite the recent: death of Mrs.
Stanford at this city. Captai’fi Cal-
Uindan, when^asked If this acton would
be along (criminal lines, replied that all
w%rk of detectl4jfs were along crirnl--
nnl lines. Both detectives ' faovV he«w'
when Interviewed stated they had In-'
st ruction s“ not .to talk about the case.”
This caution * wits ‘ prNbaWy received dhe Styrvwnee ■dfvf-sloh’, la^t fall. In or- l^jull baiting, dog fights and boxing
<5«r to'avoid fu.w'W trtwble, the right I m9t(.jJps wtre attended even by royal- ' thousand dollars from an unknown
Of way has been changed and lwte asJS20, and five years later |man wh0 admitted that he has de-
.....-Vd .Lv_.AJ-JIIalI the "dandies” in London were pay- | frauded tjie government of money
ing high prices to stand in the carts was returning it four-fold. The
tnillory pelted
RSiUIy included
were evi-
dently not overparticular, about sight
Cutting timber, Sawing and Stacking! and "HUdls,. They w^re accustomed
It on Rtqht of Way. V i to set? nfen 8lttin* ir! ,
^ ^ with rotten eggs awl pnssmly
Denison, Tex.. Mafch 16.—Score* '9<,U,nj0ng theft* immediate- circle not a
Women are w-otsking aionjg the XIls-l few wj10 been deprived of their
sourl, Kahaa's and-Texas right of. way j'Htoses and ears for expressing too freer
the Shawnee division cutting tlm-
’fcer. sawing apd’ stacking ij. The Katy
from San Francisco. Both refuged to
discuss Professor Jordan's oplnlbn that
Mrs.. Stanford's death 'Was not due to
strychnine poisoning. It Is now be-
lieved that if her death'fhad been dat-
ura! this conclusion would have been
announced In due course by the de-
tectives. and .their .attitude and replies
to questions indicate strongly the pos-
sibility that a murder charge will be
made against some one.* The detec-
tives cabled a long message to( San
Francisco. *
filled the atmosphere about London | \ Chicago woman became so ab-
brkige and Temple bar with myriads soj-j^d jn readiDg “Inferno” that
| bf banef'il tj^crobes. she allowed the wick of the lamp by
i Our immediate forbears were evl- whjcJ) ghe wag readjng t0 burn int0
the oil causing an explosion. The
woman was fatally burned and her
husband received serious injuries.
it is to be war to the knife between
tire big five of thft beef combine and
the twenty-six independent concerns
in Chicago, when uie federal grand
i*ff«g3lJft»C Improvements at T.yfplq, 1,‘ditlon. The hmuiperaldtf churchyarasxj^y 8*^eetS1 doUa»‘ has
where jhe South, Ipanhdiajj, river j were so full of coffins that they often j fun 1 Of th^ee mill.On dollars t a
washed ••aygay many feet of track on projected through the turf ^ Bear and : been raised tc carry on the hghl;.
‘ “ ’ Secfttary Shaw has received twelve
ly their opjnions.'politlCal and religious.
■Tll'e‘drains were In an appalling eon- | inVv - irs
ditlon. The Innuiperahlt! churchyard*. }11-y ,
woode<l with oak. The timber can not
be used by the Katy a,t the present |
time, a» a large force-would be needed
to clear it away. ^Irhe road nt-eds the
.space and has offered the wooj to the
neigh) orlng inhabitants If they will
clear u away quhskly.
round Tyburn to behold/twenty-two of
their fellow creatures hanged for inis-
amount h^s been deposited in the
TERRIFIC CRASH.
One Passenger Fatally Injured, Dying
In a Short Time.
Fort Smith, Xlarch 16,—A coach corf-
tainlng about a dozen passengers on
the Arkansas Western railroad ran
down an Incline while switching was
being done near Waldron, and crashed
with terrific force Intel a train standing
on th ? main line. D. C. Cowling of
Regers. Ark., was thrown against a
stove with such force that he was fa-
tally ‘njured, dying a short time later.
John D. Prelss, of Wlster, I. T„ was
seriously injured and several othet
passengers received minor injuries.
Pythian* at Temple.
Temple, .Tex., -Mprch 16.—The locat-
ing commit tee* of the Knights of Pyth-
ias wldows and drphans’ hqmev consist-
ing of W. A. Abey of Fort Worth, C A.
Summefs of Cuero and W. B. I>e Jer-
nett; of.. Commerce was here for the
’purpos.- »of receiving propositions for
the, location of the home antLinspecting
the sites offered. Tht-yt were taken to
Midway, between here and Belton, on
the" interurbnn line,'and shown, its ad-
vantages.
- Sister M. Alext* Dead.
Texarkana, March 16.—Sister M.
Alexis of the ^isterhoovr of St. Rose of
Lima, died at the convent here. She
had resided here for man.y years, and
was greatly loved by the school and
congregation. s '*
HURT AT HONOLULU.
ON OSLERISM.
oetor Is Right, Mentally
■g, Says Fighter.
leffriea, ebampjon of the
s been playing in the m’elo-
y Crockett” at Richmond,
oken, says a special dis-
New York World,
you think of Dr. Osier’s
jut a man being no good
be was asked.
Iialf right. A man don't get
[physically after be’* forty.
Ick then, but a man don't
[intelligent until he’s past
|*ts experience after that
paler is right, mentally be
For the Illinois Senate.
Governor Sherman of II-
Rl doing odd and original
a Springfield (III.) corre-
the Chicago Time*. He
k stir in the senate by bav-
kors remove tbe big leather
|ed for the presiding officer
and flubatituting an old
Ir. Pereh-
ude seat, be preside* over
ktlon* of the senate, un-
|the sarcastic smiles worn
lonnglng In their con-
niving leather seat*.
Admiral Whiting Falls From Car and
Sustains Scalp Wound.
Honolulu, March 16.—Rear Admiral
Whiting of the United States navy re
celved a severe Injury by a fall while
alighting from a moving electric car.
He sustained a scalp wound and was
unconscious two hours, but recovered
after being taken to a hospital. His
injuries are not likely to prove fatal.
New Trial For Nan Patteraon.
New fork. March 16.—Nan Patter-
son will be placed on trial again April
10.
WHITECAPS AT WORK.
Iflabatttnta Far Tobaeeo.
Jtarr of the University of
been experimenting with
i class ■ upon g - substitute
a dried plant fropi Mtxl-
»go dispatch. It has h
upon*jhe ijw of the
him doable to ***-
ad Mm. 1
Taking Negroes From Their Cabins and
Severely Flogging Them.
Nashville, March 16.—Whttecnppera
have made their appearance In Mar-
shall county’, this state, and the ne-
groes are panic stricken. It is re-
ported that at night raiders have re-
cently gone to the cabin* of several
negroes, taken the men to the woodf*
and severely flogged them.
Fourth Assi'stsnL
Washington, MoreJv 16—The presi-
dent sent to' the senate the nomination
of Peter V. De Graw as fourth assist-
ant postmaster general. Mr. De Graw
Is a telegraph operator. He has had
much experience In newspaper work
and Is one of the most rapid press
senders ftv the country.
Sues for Divorce.
New York. Mhrch 16.—Mr**. Alice
Webb Duke, through her counsel, has
brought suit In the supreme court for
a. Separation from her husband. Brodle
L. Duke, on the grounds of abandon-
ment and non-support.
v .. * ‘
-----
At Hot Springs.
Hot Springs, March 16.—It Is report-
ed here that the spring dates allotted
to the Little Rock dub *111 be min off
“HUMPTY-DUMPTY” DEAD.
Famous Clown Who Made Merriment
For Thousands Passes Away.
Denver, Xlarch lo.—Practically pen-
niless, with only his devoted wife to
watch and mourn. Mons. Niblo, famous
circus clown and pantomimic, has died
in this city after fighting for months
the ravages of tuberculosis. He came
here in December .a physical wreck
Arodl has never been able since to leave
his bed. Niblo was fifty-three years
of age and for thirty-five years had
performed before the public. He was
the creator of the part of “Humpty
Dumpty” In the play of that name.
demesne^ which in our time would be | treasury to the credit of the con-
punished with a few days’ imprison- | science fund.
meat*—Saturday Review. j The confederate war cemetery on
——--- j Johnson's Island has been bought by
the Robert I'atton chapter, United
Daughters of the Confederacy of
Cincinnati for twelve hundred dol-
lars. Johnson's Island was one of
the war prisons of the north during
the civil war.
Mrs. Phoebe A. Iierriap, reputed
to be worth $500,000, widow of Sam-
uel Berrian, is dead at her home in
Fluishing, Long Island. She had
been a recluse since the death of her
husband nearly twenty years ago,and
it is believd that the woman had
literally starved herself into a gener-
al breakdown which caused her
death.
■Nineteen persons were burned to
death in a fire which destroyed a five-
story tenement house in New York.
More than fifty-five were injured and
very few of the sleeping inmates es-
caped unhurt. Nothing so pitiful
and of such proportions has been
seen in New York since the Slocum
disaster when nearly one thousand
women and children lost their lives.
Mona Like Lavender Water.
The old theory of animal liking for
scents denied them any share in such
pleasures unless „ they suggested the
presence of their food or prey: But
such a reason can hardly be alleged for
a lion's liking for lavender water. The
writer, wishing to test forj himself the
reported fondness of many animals for
perfumes, paid a series of visits to the
zoological garden provided with bottles
of scent and a packet, of cotton wool
and there tried some harmless experi-
ments which apparently gave great
satisfaction to many of the inhabitants.
Lavender “water was the favorite scent,
aud. most of the lions and ^leopards
showed unqualified pleasure when the
scent was ponred on the wool and put
into their cages.—Spectator.
Carnival Ilnncln*.
Among the most picturesque" of tbe
carnival festivities of Europe must be
classed that of the Gilles, or dancing
men, of Binche, in Hainault. These
men. 200 strong, in their remarkable
headdress of tall ostrich feathers and
their lace decked costume fringed with
bells, dance from ah appointed place
to the town hall,'bombarding the spec-
tators with oranges as they go. Ar-
rived at the town hall, the public joins
in the fun, and soon some 5.000 per-
sons—men, women and children—may
be seen gnyly waltzing around the
Grande place.
Anvil Spark*.
The cellar in the Bank of France
resembles a large warehouse. Silver
coin is stored there in eight hundred
barrels.
The loss of so many cattle on ac-
count of the extreme cold weather
gives the beef trusts another oppor-
tunity to plead justification in rais-
ing the price.
Young man, do not hug a delus-
ion. You can do better than that.
There is one time that a woman
can feel miserable and look pleasant
—when she has on tight shoes.
It is noticeable that the experts
are now silent on that string which
last summer declared cold weather
killed the boll weevil.
It costs on an average of two
hundred dollars to put out a fire In
London and seven hundred to ex-
tinguish one in New Yortf.^
Little traits of character are the
rittle flowers or weeds that will over-
run the garden.
It is easy to forgive when you have
lisen to the understanding that the
man who wrongs wrongs himself the
most.
Hope is an asset which Energy
realizes.
A nuisance is the frazzled end of a
novelty.
It will soon \>e time for the gentle
violet and the vigorous carpet microbe
to come out.
From seeds of kindness grow seeds
of usefulness.
“To thine own self be true”—if
you have to lie to everybody else,
says a ragtime philosohper.
A pessimist is one who would ad-
vise jumping overboard as a cure for
seasickess
Most people look Into mirrors
with magnifying glasses.
There are some beasts with only
two legs.
The safest fort is that out of
range of the guns.
We should cultivate calmness as
to our own misfortunes and eschew
serenity as to those of others.
Members of the Califoinia senate
are overwhelmed with shame over the
proof that seven of their number sold
their votes for $350 each. At this
cheap rate the business will soon be
ruined!
The Vienna police are about to
experiment with a phonograph in tak-
ing a prisoner’s answers to the ques-
tions asked in the preliminary ex-
amination, so that when the actual
trial takes place there may be no
dispute as to what was said.
.....— — 1 " ■-rii-a
MINOR MATTERS.
General R. S. Benson is dead at
Carlsbad, N. M.
Wise County Bank of Paradise, Tsx.,
has be*un business.)-
Dipping station at Elgin. Kan.,-will
be In operation Aoril 1.
Lockwood Meggett, a prominent cit|
lzen of Houston, Is dead.
Direct, the 'noted pacer, dropped
dead near New York City.
Two white men were fatally1 wound-
ed by negroes at Dudley. Miss.
Jake Howard. & negro, was killed by
a Cotton Belt engine at Shrtvsport
Cyrus W. StTain has been appointed
general passenger agent of the Frisco
road.
Four lobster packing houses of
Portland, Ore., have pooled their In-
terests.
A project is on foot to build a rall-
at Oak Lawn track in this city. M. road between Eagle Pass and firowns-
Nathnnson will act as priding Judgs
and secretary and Ag,.!*: Dade will
handle the starter's flag.
villa,
Case of-Fred Manning, under death
sentence at Dallas t
5«v*raed'hy ~ cnnnna.n*-
*
A Real Miser.
They were seated at the supper ta-
ble. •
“Say, mn," queried little Dolly, "what
Is a miser?”
“A miser, my dear.” answered the
diplomatic mother as she glanced
across the table at her husband. “Is a
man who thinks his wife's hat should
not cost any more than his own.”
Costly Pointers.
.Miss Fancier—A pure blooded terrier
about as costly a dog
Jack. Her Escort—No.
There Is one that is much more expen-
sive, the Wall street pointer that a
friend gives you.—Puck.
.Miss Fancier-
THi^-Buttona Is
as Is, Ji
Cause For Alarm.
rennlbns—Poor Scribbles is worried.
Inkerton—What’* the trouble? rennl-
bus-He’s afraid be has lost his cun-
ning as a humorist. The English maga-
zines are beginning to copy hi* Jokes.—
Atlanta Constitution.
What ail Boys Should Know.
Don’t be satisfied with your boy’s
education, or allow him to handle a
Latin or Greek book^ until you are
sure that he can—
Write a good, legible hand.
Spell all the words he knows how-
to use.
Speak and write good English.
Write a good social letter.
Add a column of figures rapidly.
Make out an ordinary account.
Deduct 16M per cent from the face
of It.
Receipt it when paid.
Write an ordinary receipt.
Write an advertisement for the
local paper.
Write an ordinary promisory note.
Beckon the interesj^gjf- discount on
ft for days, months oefeirs.
Draw an ordinary baDk cheok.
Take it to tbe proper place in the
bank to get the cash.
Make neat and correct entries in
day book and ledger.
Tell the numbef of yards of carpet
required for your parlor.'
Measure a pH* of lumber in your
slicd* ^
Tell the number of bushels nl
Family Objections Respected. . ,D your JargOSt bin, and the
Old Friend-Why didn’t you marry ourrent rates. ^
Mr. Nicefcllo? Sweet Glrl-HI* father
objected. Old-Friend—I shouldn't
shilling.-
S2**»*
ent day-
_________ &fc3
A CONFIDENTIAL CHAT.
•It’s perfect nonsense, Bessie, for you to
talk of Deinu laid on the shelf. Why, it all
depends on ytmrself. Forget your worries,
your aches snd ailments ; ao as I did, take
plenty of out-of-door air, cultivate happi-
ness W not allowing your mind to dwell
on the trifles and the worries of life* I sent
thirty-one cents in stamps to Dr. R. V.
Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., for his ’ Common
Sense Medical Adviser,’ and found it con-
tained much useful information about ton
aooui my aier, cxctctsc
advice is free to everyone end I'
don’t write him at once. It didn t j
many month* to regain my go*
Ever since I was fifteen I have
untold agonies periodically but
free from pain, worry and ond.te*
coaionally I took Dr. Pierce’s
Pellets—this for the
stimulate the li
Pierce’s Fa
a day for
I told
iM
;
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The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1905, newspaper, March 17, 1905; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth530839/m1/7/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.