The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, August 17, 1906 Page: 2 of 8
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IP
AUGUST If, »•»«
• - *" _ • '
nt> urrwcT court.
against F. P. Barnett,
Waldos, charged with •*-
found guilty and sentenced
> years la penitentiary.
Barker, J. W. Baser Jr., Jaa-
Oook and Oliver Cook, charged
salt to rnnrder, continued
for Ibe term.
The oaeee of L, M, C. Johnson,
two charges for forgery and one of
putting forged instruments, and the
Mesa of Mol Basham, seduction, Byl
Morton, murder, and Belnie Bostic,
sotting and Injuring f#noe, are set
for this week.
The Jury In the M. A Ivey
charged with murder, brought in a
verdict of not guilty, thereupon
Judge Calhoun dismissed the John
Finley ease and released the special
veniremen summoned. Finley and
jllvey were charged with the murder
Of Walker at Carbon.
SOMERVELL COPHTT C’OCBT.
The following business was trans-
acted in county court at Glen Bose
last week:
Jim Donalds, gaming, continued.
Ernest Baker, unlawfully opening
gate, verdict of not guilty.
Levi Herring, drunkenness In
Office, two cases, continued.
Jim Parker, unlawfully selling In-
toxicating liquor, continued.
John Parson, gaming, tried by
court and verdict of not guilty.
Will Trammell, theft of property
under ISO value, verdict of not
guilty.
The three cases against the
Wleaers were dismissed on motion
of the county attorney.
Clark Garrett, unlawfully selling
Intoxicating liquor, tried by court
and verdict not guilty.
Ueorge Connolly, unlawfully sell-
ing Intoxicating liquor, three cases;
two cases continued, one case tried by
oourt and veidlct, of not guilty.
HAMILTON DISTRICT COURT' Jt'RORH.
Following Is the list of grand jur-
ors and petit jurors for the first
and second weeks of Hamilton dis-
trict oourt which convenes at Ham-
ilton Monday, Aug. 27th:
Grand Jurors—J. T. James, H.
H. Alexander, I. B. Byrd, B. A.
Briley, W. T. Newman, W. E. Mo-
Anelly, J. R. King, Jasper Pool, W.
H. WaddaP, C. T. Bowman, B. J.
Brown, W. B. Brannon, E. L. Mc-
Kinley, 8. D. Donahoo, T. P, Stam-
ford, D. F. Smith.
Petit jury, first week:—B.F. Cox,
J. H. Wolf, M. E. Morton, G. N.
Staton, J. F. Ellis, W. F. Bullard,
J. A. Lace well, fi. F. White, W. P.
Barnes, Lat. Beekman, S. M. Kil-
Jloo, J. B. Orman, 8. D. Felt, G.
W. Eudaiey, J. M. Cropper, J. Q.
J.
B. L. Smith,
Joe W. Stovall, T.
A. Troott, W, S. Stiles, Lea Carter,
J. W. Autrey, B. McPherson, J no.
Simpson, R. I. Merritt, W. M.
Bratton, J. W. Smith, W. H. Sharp,
J. F. Covey.
Petit Jury eeoood week—J. M.
Yates, J. S. Whlttentoo, J, L.
Baird, B. F. Moore, W. L. Eddy,
A, H. Manning, E. E. Doggett, C.
L. Brooks, W. MoFaddeo, C. E.
Grisham, R. L. Clark. C. B. Wal-
ker, J. C. Phillips, Henry Dennisoo,
J. C. Williams, W. E. Simmons, W.
C. Jones, R. K. Rodgers, W. D.
Chumney, 1, G. Mobly, Jess Cole, D.
G. Howell, J. H. Good, J. C. Oerter,
E. O. Wlswell, E. S. Paddock, Gao
Lloyd, G. H. Glover, L. Haynes, A.
A. Clemmer, E. R. Prult, D. C. Bur-
row, W. E, Blood worth, C. G.Sexon,
J, T. Mundey. A. D. L!nton.
BROWN COUNTY ’COURT.
Sid Green, charged with vloletlog
local option law, acquitted.
Nelse Allman, who had three local
option oases against him In the coun-
ty oourt, entered a plea of guilty In
one case and had the other two cases
dismissed. The court gave him the
minimum penalty In the cess which
la a fine of 125 and twenty days In
jail.
MeChristy A Crums vi. the Ger-
mania Insurance oompanv, verdict
for plaintiff end Judgment given to
the amount of 1760. The suit was
brought to.oollect an Insurance policy
on the stock of groceries belonging
to MeChristy A Crums that burned
about eighteen months ago. There
were aeverel Important points of law
that came up for decision.
Miss Esther Stanley, charged with
aggravated esaeult upon e renter on
Mra. Stanley’i place near Savllla,
acquitted. It was claimed that Mias
Stanley held a gun on the man while
her mother attacked him with e
buggy whip, but the evidence would
not connect Miss Stanley with the
charge and she was promptly ac-
quitted. The case grew out of trouble
between Mrs. Stanley and her renter
and a companion case was filed
against Mrs. Stanley, but It wa* dis-
missed when she plead guilty to a
simple assault. _
Galvsstsa’s Sea Wall
ea
irt, who bad the
baby Incubator at the stale fair leal
year was si the office of Secretary
Sydney Smith yesterday, says the
Sunday Tlmet-Herald, to sscore
space for the comlog fair. Speaking
of the babies he had lo Ms nonary
at the fair last year he said: “The
girl baby whish at that lima weigh-
ed eix pounds, wea on my ratorn to
the north adopted by a family in
Cleveland, Ohio, aod rhas a good
home. She la in fine health, and the
last time I heard from her weighed
twanty-four pounds. Tit# two boy
infanta died soon after 1 took them
north—one with pneumonia and the
other with spinal maolngitla.
“A baby which was bon
28th, 1906, and which owes I
my Inoubator, had a birthday party
InJCevaland the other dey. When
born this baby weighed one pound
and five ounces. Oo the first anni-
versary of Its birth It weighed
twenty-two pound*. There were at
this party eight babies, all about a
year old, and all born prematurely,
and none at birth weighing more
than three pounds. They were weigh-
ed at thli party and one weighed less
than twenty pounds.
I expect to have at the fair this
Tvstlgate the matter, and may ill op
a claim for damages. fp/v:—.:
A correspondent
American Review for Aogoat, hav-
ing v let ted the scene, My*:
/'The chencee of regaining control
ohht Colorado rives have been ren-
dered still more remote by the effects
of the summer flood. Although the
engineers at the Intake works had
confidently predicted that they would
hold the river before this flood, they
failed to do so. In mld-Juna the
Colorado at Calaxica was ten mile#
wide, and this vest body of water
was pouring down Into the Salton
tee by the new river channel. The
lake r<oe from June 3rd to the l»tb,
as shown by the government guage
,at Salton, from 43.78 feet to 62 02.
or more than eight feel In fifteen
days. At this writing (July let)
the lake la only two mllea away from
the prosperous settlement of Mecca,
which will soon Inevitably be oblit-
erated from the map of California.
But the most serious result of the
great summer flood has been the
“cutting l*ck“ of the river bed
from the lake toward the intake.
Weil.
On Jot Gaik's farm near Branham
Mr. Booth hse been engaged during
the peat week boring a well, and at
a depth of one hundred feet the
pump brought up a quantity of frogs,
perfectly, white aod without any
eyas. After they bad been exposed
to the light for eome time they
changed to the dark oolor usually
worn by land frogs. Mr. Booth has
bean boring walls for several yaara
and has turned up eome strange
freaks of Mother Earth. He has
found gas pockets, the bones of mas-
todons, curious rocks aod sheila, hot
this la the first time he ever struck
live frogs that evidently Inhabited a
strata deep down In the earth.
Csasssssary Expat*
Aeilt* attacks of colic and diarrhoea
come on without warning and prompt
relief must-be ...obtained. There is no
necessity of incurring the expense of
a physician’s service In such cases If
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy l» at hand. A dose
qf this remedy will relieve the patient
before toe doctor could arrive. It has
never been known to fall even In the
most severe and dangerous casos and
no family should be without It. Fori
0\ - -* ■ ~ '■
heai
INSI
fte
wise for his |
The mas
hi<n»k if h**
You may,* ,
‘tlswwS",
A‘ the first attack,
V'hlch general
Jhrpugh ,h. Ll&
r«r“"
And save
A receding waterfall has been form
ed on which the fine aandy loam can by Overton Drug Co.
oiler no resistance,* and a canyon has J
been cut, a thousand feet wide and ! Texas Central Excursions.
year at least, half a dozen babies, «r»d | tfilrty feet deep, right through the! Galveston, ticket sale Aug. 26th,
to ahow some Improvement In the
methods ot taking care of them. ”
1 ‘Maks Hay Wkilethe Sod Shim* ”
There Is a lesson In the work of the
thrifty farmer. He knows that the
bright sunshine may last but a day
and prepares for the showers which
are so liable to follow. Ho it should be
with every household. Dysentery,
cholera morbus and diarrhoea may
attack some member of the house
without warning. Chamberlain’s Col-
ic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,
which is the best known medicine for
these diseases, should always be kept
at hand, as Immediate treatment is
necessary and delay may prove fata).
For sale by Overton Drug Co.
DON’T BE
A PHYSICIAN SAYS
Children
Thrive on Grape-Nuta
and Cream.
A Massachusetts phyalolau has
found a aura for constipation In
e#iildr*D-*citlng ofteen oases—by
feeding than Grape-Nuta.
“■ooMtlme ago," bo writfs, “I
became Intonated in your food—
Grape-Nuta—as a curs for oonatlpa-
Uoo lo ebildron. Having triad it
In any own family, I have advtsad it
In fifteen mm lo which all aoScrcd
with ooostipctlon non or loos se-
ven. The rceult hoe been abeolute
relief In all.
“1 write thii that other ehlldno
may be benofitted."
Bow mooh better it Ir thus to
briog about a healthy actloo lo the
bowels of growing ehlldno by natural
means, than to feed them with Im-
proper food, requiring some kind of
cathartic at Intervale to overcome
constipation.
Grape-Nuts gives energy to the
entln oervooa system, including the
nerve* that cauae the Datura) eon-
traotipn and relaxation of the bowel
that propel the food man
dsnwe
pndlgeated also, and the
atslly absorb* the food ae It
the body, itorlng up
t and font for the functions
Children especially, should get
> right curt as to habits of llvlog.
should grow Into bright,
cheerful men aod womeo.
solve* the question of
a wholesome appetite will
it.
tooth on benefitted by
f Grape-Nuta alao. Your
toll yon that a certain
in chawing firm
to grow it rang,
theism#
makes life now as safe In- that city ai
od the high uplands- E. . Good foe.
resides on Dutton street, Waco, Texas,
needs no sea wall for safety. He writes:
,T have used Dr. King’s New Discov-
ery for Consumption the past five
years and It keeps me safe and well.
Before that time I had a tough which
for years had been growing worse.
Mow It’s gone.” Cures oronic coughs,
la grippe, croup, whooping oough,
and prevents pneumonia. Pleasant to
take. Every bottle guaranteed by
Overton Drug Co. Price 60c and *1.00.
Trial bottle free.
Hides.—Cash paid for hides, wool
and beeswax. Scrap Iron twenty-five
cento a hundred.—H. K. McCully. 8tj
The Source of Happtaess.
The one thing above ell others
moat desired by human being* and
that which money cannot buy la
happiness. ,
A little over a year ago William
H. Beloher was the honored mayor
of Patterson, N. J. He had friends
and a happy home and would have
been content but for the mistaken
belief that happiness was to be
measured by the amount of money In
a man’s paaesalon which he enter-
tslued.
He took from the funds of the
olty and borrowed from hia friend*
1130,000 and mysteriously disappeared
oo a trip of happlncaa.' Search for
hla whereabouts were unavailing.
Hi* home was destroyed, bis wlfa
was placed under suapleion and sor-
row was the portloo where once con-
tentment had reigned.
The other day Beloher came creep-
ing book to Patterson. He wes
broken in spirit, wild-eyed and fev-
erish. He did not seek the home
where he knew that ruin reigned,
but dragged himself to the prison,
where he had sent many a malefactor
for leaser crimes then his own, and
begged the Jailer to lock him op.
Out of the 1130,000 which hla theory
of happiness had prompted him to
aecure by fair means or by foul he
had but *17.60—a pitiful sum to re-
mind hlo^of hla failure and hla ut-
ter wreck. He only begged for rest
for hie weary body and the relief
from ramorae for hla foolishness
which a prison ceil affords. Within
• few days the courts granted bis
request end lie will have twelve
years of undisturbed contemplation
of the truth that happiness I* of the
heart and not of the purse or the
animal passions— Fort Worth Record.
A Santa Fe passenger train out of
Fort Worth was ordered to detour
by the Rock Island ou account of
the floods. By mistake the train
got on tha Kety road and was quit*
a distance ont before the aaietake
was discovered.
Mrs. E. M. Smallwood wee run
The Salton Sea.
No phenomenon of nature In re-
cent years has attracted more wide
spread attention than the newly
formed sea In the Salton basin In
Southern California, Just across the
line from Arizona.
The great Colorado of the west has
lieen deflected from Its course toward
the Gulf of California, and 1h pour-
ing Into a great valley three hundred
feet below the sea level. Already a
lake covering nopre than four hun-
dred square mllea, one of the largest
In the United States, and which is
rapidly increasing, has been formed.
This great sea come from an Insig-
nificant cause—the Colorado river
skirted the Salton basin, only a nar-
row wall of sand Intervening. Ad
Irrigation oompany cut a small ditch
through the sand, the swift current
rapidly enlarged It, and It was im-
possible to check It when the dsnger
was seen.
The Southern Pacific railway track
has been moved liack several times
from the advancing waters, and un-
less the inflow can be checked, the
road will have to seek a new route
or bridge the new-made aea.
Already a company Is preparing to
put a Hoe of steamers on the lake to
compete with the railway.
The problem has Intarnatiooal
complications. The Colorado Is an
Important navigable highway after It
enters Mexico, and Its waters have
been largely used for Irrigation. The
diversion of the flow to another chan-
nel has ruined the river for both
purposes. The Mexican government
hie appointed a commission to in-
Imperial country. On June 30th this! limited to August 28th for return at \
turbulent edge of turbulent waters rate of 16.06 for round trip,
swept the small Mexican town of State encampment, Austin, Aug. j
Mexicali, Just across the border from |6th to 19th, ticket sale Aug. 4th to
Calexico, out of existence. The cut- 17th Inclusive, limited to August 21st R^)Ut . ,
ting back toward the Intake Is con- for return at 17.oo for round trip. . ! . ^ 0r
tinulng at the rate of nearly a mile Special excursion to Austin for M Rt 1 ,M
a day. If the old river lied lelow state encampment. Aug. 16th, tickets ^e are in the meat
Yuma Is reached and subjected to on sale Aug. 15th, limited to Aug. sell you a pound of
this process, all attempts to change j 17th for return *t rate of 14 for round of chops, now ami
the river from Its new and deep dug ! trip.
channel may lie abandoned. Even! Kx-Cofederate reunion and nold-
the government darn at Laguna Is .summer carnival at Hlco, Aug. 15th,
endangered, for the cutting back, l«th and 17th, ticket sale Aug. 15th
unless checked, will go right up the lo 17th, limited to Aug. 18th for re-
river to the Grand Canyon, and the ; turn at rate of 75 cents for round!
Laguna dam, an explained In the [trip.
article rests simply on a lied of silt _^_
being constructed to resist flood
cure aud hold your
To that end we
best aervice all
modt-ht about iminting
JONES 4
WOMEN’S WOES
Dublin Women are Finding Relief
„ at Last.
It does seem that women have
more than a fair share or the aches
and palna that afflict humanity;
they must “keep up," must attend
to duties In spite of constantly ach-
ing backs, or headaches, dizzy spalls,
bearing down pains; they must stoop
over, when to stoop means torture.
They must walk aod bend and work
with racking palna and many aches
from kidney ills. Kidneys cause
more Buffering than any other organ
of the body. Keep the kidneys well
and health Is easily maintained.
Bead of a remedy for kidneys only
that helps and cures the kidneys and
is endorsed by people you know.
Mrs. N. F. Carr, living three
miles west of Dublin, Texas, save:
"1 have no hesitation In recommend-
ing Doan’s Kidoejr Pills to anyone
•offering from weak back or kidney
complaint. For more then two
years I suffered off and on from
backache and kidney trouble. The
•aerations from the kidneye were Ir-
regular and caused met great deal
of aoooyaooe. I also had headaches
and dissloeas and the least exertion
tired me. I read about Doan’* Kid*
ney Pills and procured them at the
Overton Drug Od. I began their use
end In a abort tint I was much im-
provod. l oooUnued taking them
by an loterorban ear at 10th _
* Oak Cliff, and killed. She and tney completely relieved’ me of
was nagging tha ear, which she ml* '
Price 60
Co., Boffalo,
® . .
water above but not the scooping of
slit from below.'’
Children in Pud
never cry «» do children who are mif-
ferlng from hunger. Much lx tin-
case of all babh-a who cry
ami arw treated for sick ness when
they really are suffering from hun-
ger. This is caused from their food
not liejng assimilated but devoured by
worms. A few . doses of. White’s
Cream Vermifuge will cause them to
cease crying and begin to thrive at
once. Give It a trial. Hold by Over-
ton Drug Co.
mmm-ssmammmmiraBnaamaMMi
Bitten by Gad Dog.
Velma, the little nine jear old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
Southall, who lives about five mile*
northeast of town, In the Hill Creek
community, was bitten by a mad dog
last Wednesday evening at about «
o'clock. A number of doga and some
cattle were also bitten by the dog.
Mr. Southall was In town Thursday
and Informed us that tie had killed
the dog and he left Thursday eve-
ning for Austin with the child to be
placed In the Pasteur Institute foi
treatment. Although there Is little
doubt that the dog was mad, Mr.
8outha)l severed the lieed of the dog
•or* will have It analyzed at Austin.
It’s action* were that of a mad dog.
We underetaod that the dog was
shot In Mr. Southall's house. Two
little gfrla were returning from the
field wheo they were attaoked by the
dog, the larger girl succeeding lo
knocking him off. The little glil
was attaoked and bitten on the arm
before assistance reached her.-Wal
nut Spring* Hustler
A Mystery Reived.
"How to keep off periodical attacks
of biliousness and habitual oonstlpa-
tlon was a mystery that Dr. King’s
New Life Pills sol veil for in**,” writes
John N. Pleasant of Magnolia, lud.
The only Pills that are guaranteed to
give satisfaction to «veryl>ody or
mon|^ refunded. Only 85c at Owr-
ite le Only a Printer.
“He is only a printer. ” Such was
the sneering remark of a leader In
a circle of arlatocraoy-codflsh qual-
ity. Who was the earl of Stanhope?
He waa only a printer. What was
Prince Edward William and Prince
Napoleon? Proud to call themselves
printers. The czar of Rumie, the
crown prince of Russia aod the duke
of Battenberg were all printers, and
the emperor of China worked In a
private printing office almost every
<!*y. William Get zoo, the father of
literature, was a practical printer.
Whet were J. P. Morris, N. p. wil-
lid, James Jarkar, Horace Greely,
Charles Dlokeoa, James Buchanan!
Simon Cameron, Schuyler Colfax?
Printer* all, and practical ones
Mark Tftln, AmcwJ. Cummings’
Bret Harte, William Dean Howells,
Ople P. Read and Joel Chandler
Harri* art plain, practical printers.
“J Artemua Ward, Petroleum
V. Nasby and Hut Loving wood
Heoator Plumb of Kansas ana Janiea
8* Ho**, ax-governor of Texas, were
*5/2555!? ,Dd-th# lM4" of science
bolftisrsl!7 ihia da| mA* *>*•
i Country are to be
- “5
Hurry up
that STj
io u.a.n iikes to 1
“itsr” in h;s pocket
ert.uk treat in every !
tatisfuct’cn that
aundard thtw.
r without 41
. There!
a v.hok
made “Star1!
STAR
PLUG CHEWING TOBA<
Just as chewing ij the mo*: economical
which tobacco is user!, ro • the most ci
ical chewing. Thmmh the bcr.t the
market affords “Star” \z the cheap
est because it is mace in f !1 16 oz.
plugs of choice, r.vcct, bcat-bodied
leaf. It makes a m rt c!atti: and
lasting chew than ike C.rr.< v, tender,
light-bodied kino tha: “chew up”
so quickly.
Increasingly pop.!,tr f r forty years
and to-day the standard chew.
/jo,000,000 joc. pieces
sold annually.
In All Stores
“CUT IT OVt
•ays the doctor to many of hla lady patients, boo***
know of any medicinal treatment that will positively curs
ovarian troubles, except the surgeon’s knife.
That auch a medicine exists, however, has been
wonderful cures performed on diseased woman* I®
cases, by
CARDIII
WINE
A OF ■■■■
Woman’s Relief
It has saved the Uvea of thousands of
rescued thousands of others from a
nlc Invalidism. It will cur* you, if you will only f”
Sold at every drug store In $ 1.00 bottle** Tv _
Hast minds lo the
whtk us a jumst
frmly *ed frankly, la strictest ceoA-
dmee, telling es all your treeklse.
We wtu and Free Adrlee (In |fate,
a). Address: Ladles'
Dept., Tie
___. - ,
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The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, August 17, 1906, newspaper, August 17, 1906; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth530901/m1/2/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.