The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, September 17, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
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BHHESmmSSH
PROGRESS
l'KII>AY.
? CITY CIRCULATION
COUNTY CIRCULATION
-.......—.......’--
sssssa
Patrick and R.R.
«1A* per Year.
S month* 25c In advance.
h 9. PALE Y PahMsker »ad FwiOr.
Kftsy mo»*y ft the htrdtst to keep.
■'■ ^...........*' .......'■........
It is all right to be selfish with
to »uch an
reduction
MAXIMA.
Now that the price of cotton 1*
greater than twelve cents and with a
tendency to go some better, the far-
mer who is fortunate enough to have
a fair crop will have a smile coming.
yotnr troubles.
-
The man who fails never claims to
be a self-made mao.
v atesss
pj ; There are a lot of people hunting
trouble out of season.
Budding genius is seldom found be
Wnd a blossoming nose.
v®5&*-r:
The man with a cheerful disposition!
life- . -id
“•,'.3 ■
Tha only chronic kicker who accom-
plishes anything is the mule
Radium has been put on the tree
list and the bottom has fallen out of
the market. The frugal and economic
housewife can now purchase this
household necessity at 22.000.000 an
ounce.
The bee etlng cure for rheumatiem
is again coming into prominence. We
should imagine that a few well direct-
ed bee stings properly applied would
do wonders in limbering up stiff mus-
cles for the time being at least,
V and a sunny face is never lonesome.
W&i
Don’t carry your Christian Science
so far that you imagine your troubles.
la these physical culture days some
people display great agility In dodging
taxes.
ss
If there were no loafers to this old
Love, sunshine and common sense,
thoroughly mixed In the proper pro-
portion. beat all the patent medicines
on the market as a cure-all for the Ills
of mind and body—and no alcohol Is
needed as a dissolvent or preservative.
"Children cry for It.”
it’s best to do the work given us to
do, no matter how distasteful it may
be. Just as well as it can be dona,
not mechanically, but with the whole
heart. If it is a round of similar du-
ties day after day, make It pleasant
by scattering gleams of sunshine all
along the way. It really doesn't cost
♦ enormous waste.—Rev. W. Uns- ♦
♦ worth.
♦ — . ♦
♦ exactness In little duties fa a ♦
♦ wonderful source of cheerfulness. ♦
♦ -F. W. ruber. < ♦
♦ - ♦
♦ Folks who never do any more ♦
POLAR LANDS.
even honest, and he may break the
♦ rules of morality and honesty In many
many ways without coming within
reach of the statue.
But Mr. Rockefeller says.that the
people have no right to share In the
earnings or "legally honest” accumu-
lations. It will astonish that worthy
♦ than they are paid for, never get ♦ gentleman to hear It. but this la flat-
♦ paid for any more than they do.
♦ Hubbard
+ ___
♦ One need not strain himself to ♦
♦ be useful; he can not help being ♦
♦ useful if he la cheerful and brave. ♦
♦ if he Is bright and true, if he 1* ♦
♦ clean and honest .-Charles G. ♦
♦ Ames. ''9k
\ world, the police court* wouldn't have I much to be happy, if »e only know
.?
much to do.
how.
I
pij Deopte who are always harping on
Alulr troubles don't dispense a very
high grade of music.
A Missouri man has been put Into
Jolt tor having married thirteen w ives
IpIf/MMe1* not a criminal. He's a lunatic
Cooks get better wages than school
•teachers. -Brain food don't have to be
*• well prepared us that that von put
in your stomach.
There ore many different terms for
chauffeur. Some of teem will readily
come to mind about the time you get
bmpped by a machine.
JL'
Jt is asserted by politicians in Ok-
lahoma that the republicans will make
a desperate effort to elect a republi-
can governor in the new state at the
next genera! election, even at the cost
of defeat on every other state and
legislative office. A republican gov-
ernor to support a constitution so re-
cently and so radically opposed by the
republicans would be a peculiar situa-
tion. to say the least
LEGAL HONESTY.
John D. Rockefeller is quoted In one
of the Sunday papers as having said:
“When a man has accumulated a
stun of money within the law. that la
to say In a legal and honest way, the
people no longer have any right to
share in the earnings resulting from
the accumulation."
It is striking characteristic of a man
of strictly personal morality that he
has never been able to see the dif-
ference betwen legal honesty and mor-
al honest^. It is also to Mr, Rocke-
feller’s credit that he defines the me-
thods whereby the Standard Oil. com-
bination and all which It Implies were
created as being “legally honest."
They were certainly morally Indefen-
sible. Here Is the remarkable case
of a man who la a good husband and
father, benevolent along large lines,
personally humane, pious rather than
* footed nuarchy. The accumulation was
♦ made with the sanction of the people.
It could not have been 'legally hon
eet" save that society made It legally
possible. So far from owing nothing
to the people. Mr. Rockefeller owes
everything, after a fair deduction for
his very fine brains and administra-
tive ability. This la not aoctallsm. It
la the practical working law of good
morals in fetation of society to the
Individual and the reciprocal oblige
tion of the Individual to society.
It te curious the richer a man gets
the more be hates paying taxes. Mr.
Rockefeller does not want to pay an
Income tax. No doubt 4* would not
be the richest man In America now if
he had not made It his rule through
life to pay out as little of that kind
of money as possible. This is all his
arguments to. but we are indebted to
it for a curious piece of self-revela-
tion. It shows us a sincere desire to
do well, accompanied by a moral con-
ception hardly more than embryonic.
Wall Street Journal.
Have your standard and, live up to
it. Set that standard according to your
own Income and your own judgment
of what is best for you and yours.
The trying to live up to the standard
Dr. Cook's reported discovery of new
lands In the neighborhood of the pole
has given rise to much discussion
as to their prospective utility. In
the Deutsche Revue, Prof. Otto Nor-
denskpold writes Interestingly of the
latent possibilities of the island, or
more properly the Island group, of
Spitsbergen, apparently the most
available of all circumpolar tracts of
land.
The Spitsbergen group. <30 mils*
north of Norway, consist of three Is-
lands whose area Is 16,000, 4.000 and
*.500 square miles—about the site of
Maryland, Connecticut and Delaware,
respectively, or, taken together,' they
would include an area about one-half
♦ The Builder*. ♦
♦ All are architects of Fate, In the elder days of Art. ♦
♦ Working In these walls of Time; Builders wrought with greatest ♦
♦ Some wtth massive deeds and greal.
care
Some with ornaments of rhyme.
Each minute and unseen part;
For the gods see everywhere.
Tbs former prime minister of China
has wen sent the yellow cord—which
la a polite way the Chinese have of
him to g« off and Osier!re him
1 tod
man who Slips on a bausqgf peel-
'was
t *u arises and without'waste of
Xgffted tamper removes the
tHMf So that others may not slip
It. is a Christian
The Bailey question now appears to j
be practically dpwn to that of Bailey 1
and the republicans against deoioora-1
cy and democratic statesmen The
political adherents of Mr. Bailey who)
have so loyally stood by him and have j-
been responsible for w hat measure of!
success he has maintained during the j
seyansl recent troublous years, are j
Xapldly leaving him to the fate that
finally must overtake him and all [
who attempt to measure their conduct j
as he has and does
♦ Nothing useless is. or low;
♦ ■ Each thing in its place is best;
♦ And what seems but idle show
+ Strengthens and supports the
+ rest.
Let us do our work as well.
Both the unseen and the seen;
Hake the house where gods may
dwell,
Beautiful, entire and dean.
♦ For the structure that we raise,
♦ Time is with materials filled;
♦ Our to-days and yesfVrdays
+ Are the blocks with which we
♦ build
Else our live* are Incomplete,
Standing In these walls of Time, ♦
Broken stairways, where the feet ♦
Stumble as they seek to climb. +
Is It that ninety-nine times out
1 hundred the friend* who borrow
» yon are fellow s you could* t get
a • >ket from if you wanted to borrow
m rsslf?
Without half trying the cotton crop
of Mm prase to year has been reduced
CANY FOOD
• Ready Far I a* taut Use Hit best leak-
tag.
T
'Almost everyone like* » cereal food
Of some kind at breakfast and sup-
per, but the ordinary way of rooking
Mrsals result* In a pasty mas* thst
to hard to digest, and if not properly
digested the raw mass goes down
tat* the latest Inal tract where g«»
is generated sod trouble follow*.
■roryon* know* that good food
proparty digested keep* t he body well,
whOe poor food, or even food of good
te. *’ s5 ■»
Cook and Fearry are both sailing
home to engage In a scuffle w hich for
siren uonsness and unpleasantness
promises a greater trial than that
which Wits encountered In the discov-
ery which both men have evidently
made The conquest of four centuries
of effort ought to provide plenty of
glory for both the explorers. A dis-
graceful scramble such a* followed the
victory of the American fleet at San-
tiago wilt not add to the laurels which
both men have earned
+ Truly siiape ami fashion these;
♦ t-eave no yawning gaps between;
♦ Think uoi. because no man sees
♦ Such things will remain unseen
Build today, then, strong and sure. +
With a firm and ample base;
And ascending and secure
Shall tomorrow find its place.
*
s&i
f33
quality that is poorly prepared and
not digested. 1* sure to bring on
mom* kind of disease.
Tbs easiest food to digest la this
Mae Is Qrnpe-Nut*. made from wheal
.toad barley, and cooked thoroughly at
; the factory, seme 12 to Id hours being
consumed in the different processes
of preparation The food, therefore.
IS rtody for Instant service and the
starch mo* been changed to a form of
sugar, so that U is pro-digested end
teddy for almost immediate absorp-
tion. - .
A Chicago young lady writes that
the suffered for years from Indiges-
tion and dyspepsia front the use of
food that was not suitable to her pow-
er* Of digestion She say*:
tore I finally decided to try the food,
confess to having had a prejudice at
first, and was repeatedly urged be-
fore I finally decided to try the food,
bat l have m>t known what indiges-
tion is since using it, and have never
stronger or in better health,
have increased In weight from 19#
W H Thompson, president of the
New Orleans cotton exchange suggests
that every cotton planter market ten
per cent of his crop each month for
ten months and says this would create
a stable market for berth buyers ami
sellers. No doubt Mr. Thompson is
correct In his surmise, but the prac-
tical Impossibility at thts time of the
farmers la general being able to car-
ry ihetr crops In this manner Is a
feature that would greatly Interfere
wtth any scch plan If the farmer*
had been able te do this through the
union such a plan would long since
have been adopted
+
e
+
+
+
+
Thus alone can we attain
To those turrets where the eye
Sees the world as one vast plain
And one boundless reach of sky,
—Henry W. Longfellow.
•>+**++4-e++<..C“M.+.0. *♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦•!>♦♦♦♦♦+♦♦♦+*'*•♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦+++++V
;
can be well, practically wtth*
HP*, "ft ttwr Will adopt scientific
*t»d leave off the indigestible
a Reason " |
food is crisp and delt-
tsste Jt should be serv-
l It soases front the pock-
wwwm
Quite a number of the friend* of
Col. F B Bat it io have mentioned him
favorably as a suitable candidate for
the position of lieutenant governor of
Texas. The Enterprise desire* to join
these good Mends of Col Batlllo In
a testimonial of hi* qualifications to
fill this office of the great state of
Texas creditably »»d honorably Got
HaiUio is a gentleman who ha* made
numerous friend# ail over Texas who
tore him for hi* strength of character
and his sterling worth No man In
Texas would make a .better lieutenant,
governor. He could preside wtth dig-
nity and fairness over the senate and
to the absence of The chief executive
he could guide the affairs of state suc-
cessfully. If the Colonel will permit
his friends to use his name the En-
terprise wfM now and here pledge him
It* support.-Cleburne Enterprise,
The Mirror glAdiv seconds the nom-
ination, os hundred* of other newspa-
per* In Texas will do, and If Cot. Bail-
Ho will consent to enter the race his
many personal friends. Including this
one. w«l do all he can tor him in «
iraonal way —McGregor Mirror,
Cot. B1H Bterrott of the Dallas New*.
Jim Lowry of too Hooey Grove Sig-
nal and' Col. F. B. Bail Ho of Texas
can got anything they want that Is
religious, in many ways a most desir-
able citizen; who yet cannot see that
there is anything morally wrong la
an action which the law docs not pun-
ish
It would be impossible, moreover
to make Mr. Rockefeller sec tha dif-
ference, and that not from any for-
wardness or prejudice ou bis pan.
but from a kind of morad myopia
which blinds him to the facts most of
u# find #elf-ev*d*nt.
It is probable that law does not
directly influence, sanction or control
more than five per cent of the actions
DON'T EXPERIMENT.
of others is what destroys the happi-
ness of many homes. Families with
an Income of $1,000 a year often make
a desperate effort to live up to the
standard of those with $1,500 and
those with $1,500 try to imitate those
with $2,000 a year. W# often have
such a foolish fear of what our neigh-
bors will do or think, or say. We
have not the moral force to fix our
own standard and live up to it as we
ought. The courage of one's convic-
tions, the independence of one’s sense
of what is best for one's individual self
and family are valuable possess inns
of this age of artificially and striving
for effect.
Will Maks Ns Mistake if You
Follow This Advice.
Never neglect your kidneys
If you have pain in the back, urin-
ary disorders, dlxsiness and nervous-
ness. It's time to act and no time to
experiment. Theas are all symptoms
How seldom people think to bestow
praise upon those with whom they are
ia dally contact. Your employes,your
associates, your children and your
wife would find their loads lightened
by a word of commendation now and
thou.
of kidney t rouble, and you should seek I. i
We all like to brag of our ancestors,
remedy which t. known to rare the** ,or*« “> »" 80 *¥*
'4d»ey# 0ttr ^•'’^Aants can do the same
Doan's Kidney Pills is the remedy >
in use No need to experiment It
to* cured many stubborn cases in
th;* vicinity.
t an Dublin resident* demand fur-
ther proof than that contained in the
following testimonial?
Mrs. T. I. Coffins, of Comanche. Tex-!
as, says. Doan's Kidney Pills rer- j
tatnlv proved of benefit to me. Rev- j
eral year* ago 1 was a victim of kld-
A LITTLE NONSENSE
Hewitt—"Figure# don't Me." Jew-
ett—"That's what I tell the people I
meet to business, but they won't be
Have me" Hewitt—' What is your
business?'' Jewett- "I'm collector for
an electric fight and power company,'
—Down and Country,
Circassian Girl—"Bo you were held
n*r trouble sod had pains to my back up> j*r Whjf th, higL.
and sides. At tiine* when I stooped, j omjnmpti to spare youf Living Rkele-
everythtng became dark before me and djg h# said. Wott are
»y Hoad ached severely My house-' ^ • -
work had to be neglected as my
strength and energy fsllad mt and al- “Why. I remember your wife p*r-
tbaugh l triad remedy 'alter remedy,
nothing relieved me until I procured
Doea s Kidney Pills. They did me
more good than any other remedy I;
hod previously need. Sine* then when-
ever I have felt the sltghteot Indica-
tion of kidney diaotder*. I have taken
Doan's Kidney Pills sad they have
within tbs power of to* press of Tsx- [ never tolled to give me too some sad*
Price M»
toetly—the daintiest, prettiest Utile
thing; SO aesthetic and all that! And
I beer she's turned out a fine rook!"
Turned out * fine cook! You bet
she has Why. toe ha* turned out at
least ton to to* lost four months'
Discovered by the Dutch in 1598. the
interior of tho largest island was
probably unvistted by any whit* man
tilt Sir Jiartln Conway crossed It Just
300 years later. It was from this Is-
land that Andree started in 1897 on
his fooLhardy balloon voyage toward
the pole, and mors recently It has
been the theater of Walter Wellman’s
much advertised and, no doubt, ex-
cellent intention trip with his arlrehip.
There are no permanent inhabitants,
though there are traces of former hu-
man occupation around the abandoned
shafts of coal mines, and recently
there has been a resumption, on a
small scale, of the mining industry
during the summer season. In 1896
a weekly service of steamships from
Norway to these mine workings was
inaugurated, and one of tit* large
transatlantic companies now makes
a feature of pleasure tours|| to the
Spitsbergen group In the summer
months.
The highest point of the Islands
Horn Sounds Tinder, has an altitude
of 4,560 feet. The temperature ranges
from 10 degrees below zero in Feb-
ruary to 37 degrees above to midsum-
mer. “Northeast Land" Is covqred
with an Ice-sheet; the other two is-
lands are almost free from ice, and
not less than 130 Species of flowering
plants and-ferns find lodgment among
the barren crags. The reindeer is
fast becoming extinct; there are plen-
ty of polar bears and foxes and the
walrus Is still to be met with fre-
quently along the coast. It vised to
be a wonderful whaling ground.
"There were, first of alt. the great,
easily destroyed Greenland whales,
with their abundance of blubber.which
are so valuable even today. Then a
veritable invasion followed: whole
fleets gathered there, and localities
were founded, some of which had
several thousand inhabitants during
the summer. Tills glory, however,
lasted only about fifty years. The
hard-pressed whales retreated to re-
moter parts and the seals were not
valuable enough to enttee such large
numbers of people. Very lately hunt-
ing, now for the hump-back whale,
from permanent base has flourished
anew. But it almost seems as if this
would not last, and it is very doubt-
ful whether it ia economically profita-
ble, It appears as W Instead a vast
field in an entirely different arctic
sphere were to be opened today for
this sort, of whale capture, and that
Is the antarctic regions, * * * Since
about ten years ago hunting whales
from the southern poiad of South
America has been; resumed. Since
they are very numerous to the south-
era seas and permanent bases are
scant, the danger of extinction is Still
remote there. The same may be said
of the seal* of the South.”
The ownership of Spitsbergen Is un-
settled; geographers general}' assign
to Russia a paramount cleim.but there
Is shortly to be held a diplomatic con-
ference to settle the question. Until
lately, when the value of the cool sup-
ply became known, Spitsbergen was
not considered worth contending for.
Next to Spitsbergen In commercial
Importance among the lands around
the pole, and such greeter to extent,
of course. Is Greenland, which 1* an
appanage of Denmark. Dr. Nordens-
kJoId waxes enthusiastic over Its na-
tural attractions and commercial pos-
sibilities. , *
"Mid a 'splendidly wild nature,' In
a narrow strip lying between the
greatest, ice mass or the northern
hemisphere and an ocean almost Ice
free for many month* of the year,
reside# a group of the only polar
people of the globe—the Eskimos.
Belonging to Denmark, really and not
only In' name, since for centuries com-
petition from outside its* been strictly
debarred, the object of this seclusion
has Indeed been obtained. Thanks to
it, perhaps, the Eskimos continue to
eg)*t today; at any rate, they owe to
it their comparatively pleasant^ mode
of life How tor U has benefited them
economically Is s different question
*
T. J. FARMER
Physician and Burgee a.
Dublin. Texas.
Office over Dublin Drug Co. Resi-
dence, Grafton 8L Telephone U8
Leave calls pt Dublin Drug Co's.
m-i.A
m
M. J. Thompson.
W. H. Garrett.
THOMPSON 41 GARRETT
Attorneys at Law. Stepkenvllle. Te*.
Prompt attention given to
J
business in
' V • 'h
the courts.
DR. J. t. MULLOY
Specialist
******
•WMi*:
■
Treats diseases, defects end Injuries
of tbs eye, ear, noss and throat. Of-
the stxe of the state of Pennsylvania flee ovsr Grange Store. Dublin, Texas.
■
i
—
R. F. E. BUSHING
Specialist. “ia#:
Stomach and Inteatinea.
Suite 503 and 504 Flatiron Building.
FORT WORTH. TEXAS.
Hf
DR. E. S. WINTERS
Physician and Surgeon. *
Rea. Telephone 105, office St
In connection with general practice
does special work on the eye, ear,
nose and throat. Leave calls at Over-
ton Drug Company, residence tele-
phone 105. office 81. Dublin, Texas.
E. E. SOLOMON
Attornoy-nt-Luw.
in
Will practice In all the courts to
this section and to the appellate court
Land titles examined. Legal papers
drawn. Dublin, Texas,
K >.'3u!
DR8. SESSIONS * BRYAN „
Physicians and Surgeon*
Office over Citizens' Bank. Telephone
No. 148; Dr. Sessions' residence phone
No. 49, Df. Bryan residence phone No.
271. Leave calls at Dublin Drug Co.
D R.
FRANK IIRT A N.
Dental Parlors
Over Higginbotham Brothers.
DUBLIN, TEXAS.
are found in large herds and their
meat Is edible they, too, are profita-
ble to the hunter. They and some oth-
er kinds of animhls were eagerly hunt-
ed long after the golden days of the
whale hunt had ceased. Although at
present the chase has considerably di-
minished, the huut for the arctic fox
and the collecting of ederdown are
still continued, while the polar bears
and the walrus have shared the fate
of the Greenland whale, and except
In the extreinest north are rare visi-
tors to the coast."—Philadelphia
Ledger.
NEWS SNAP SHOTS.
When a man hasn't any ideals to
live up to he can still live up to his
income. .
The fool who rushes in where an-
gels fear to tread usually goes head-
foremost.
When a man is a good providerltis
wife thinks she could have dearly
loved a post.
The most of those who like to ar-
gue about nothing have heads adjust-
ed to the task.
A girl thinks her > lover Is sweat
enough to eat os long as he tells her
she shan’t cook. ^
The first time a girl Is asked for
a kiss she always refuses either be-
fore or after taking.
The kind of man who doesn’t know
ariy more than the law allows hardly
ever accumulates any more.
After a woman gets Into the hahit
of losing her temper she puts in moat
uf her time looking tor her husband.
.Mrs. Peevish say* that the reason
she Is glad her baby I* a girl la be-
cause It cunt grow up and be mistak-
en for .Mr. Peavlsh. *
f i
3fK
", iMfsy
. - . (Lm'juimmro ..... . •
♦♦♦♦♦4+4e»e«44»»ee+.»++++j
♦ KEEP YOUR MATTRESSES IN ♦
t
Ss ^
m
A SANITARY CONDITION
■ ;■'
3'
♦
*
t
RH|KhB
By doing *>»» } ou promote per- ♦
■ I'wwwwr ■» - xeeum. t Iff*.If***. *'* takrtta. Oar ♦
*'«“ vrs* *>““ : 538? JSSSLfSft!
■
Lee* Hero* Rack Trip f*r Rays.
Loot* and Temple Abernathy, aged
eight and five ynara. respectively have
mneked their kmnda «
‘ a trie oh
ha* organised s special tariff with
the native*, buying th* products of
the country to exchange for clothing. .
utanal!&pj9*vi*toD*. The. trade 1
usnd to be qujte profitable but at
si "
renovate, old mattirs***, makes ♦
t tfc*“ *fi» *1 germs and as geed ♦
Prices Y*ry
♦ TBR DURUM
K!
fcmi
Si
■ ' 3-
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The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, September 17, 1909, newspaper, September 17, 1909; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth543238/m1/2/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.