The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, August 26, 1910 Page: 2 of 8
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" A-'-t-f-.'?’
PROGRESS
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UBL1N, TEXAS, AWOtJiT fir41
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fAKflEST (TlV ( I ti’t'L ATittK
'psiBMT »or STY (IKtllMlOX
;<)RU>e Progress, Rldg. Patrick aud MR.
N«b#crl;>ii(>n Price CM* Per Year.
,ts months 6tte, Si month* SfSe in advance
SY Publisher ..ml Feuoder.
What Hut harvest shall b« will de
'pend owtlnly on what wv nlam mull
SSs
'/"V HS
m
-A toaRpy Mtoe m within the reach of
•every family, if they only choose to
stoke k.so. ■
II
There to so much Rood In mot., men
■«i*d *o little had, that it alu,old not oe
‘ tpdlflksult mutter to find their good
v wwllttee.
mmate
THE AD l« THE THING
ho understand* advertising
; “No lady wishes to be locked
upon as a shopping «end; ah* dues
hot oare to go Into a store aud have a
merchant show all hi* stock In ord>*
to And out whether he keep* what she
wishes to purchase and whether the
artittle is sold at a price Hhe cau af-
ford. It 1# much easier and pleasant-
er to look through the advertisement*
of a paper titan It is to bore the
clerks and waste her own Uxnc v Next
to the local n*fm items, the advertise-
■nMMnMMi
" •, _. __ _____
F-- A TWltTHflrL- ASEBRTfON.
The wont habit that bay* can fall
into Is that of looting around on the
street* at night. It I* then they oast
their lot In slippery places when at
any moment they are likely to fall
front grate. AH good and nobte lew-
sons taught them by their mother* are
there counteracted and nullified They
leftrn nothitlg that is gm>d--but every-
thing bad The boys who spend their
evenings In the saefod precincts of
home, with good book* for their odtti-
panions are the future hope Of this
meats in » paper, stati-its articles for! republic; they will till our legislative
sale with prices, will Reep much of j and congresstonul hall*, and sit in
the nunvey bhat goes to the large <-H- judgment upon men and measures.
les at Immev -Crundall liter:
l While the boy* who run the streets
To this the Dallas News makes this will till pur penitentiaries. a> nuthouses
comment: Buyers are now practical- i and lunatic asylums Parent* who are
ly everywhere educated up to the ad- responsible for these broken.,laws of
vor Using method, and store or
oilier decency will have broken hearts and
np ]|| ■
' This season
has umpi'-si inii.ilil.v
■pRflM the wisdom of crop -n
jHHHpRdnMdtt. The one-crop farm is
j^JjpnjjlSlr inn ~ldn |1 safe in uut-.tvoi-
: goasoun.
I bowed down heads in the awakening
! years that "ill inevitably follow.
too much of a tendency to bring the
young man up In Idleness to tssch
him that labor la not noble. There Is
too much attention five* to making
ineffichmt doctors and lawyers of
young then Who would make bettor
ditch diggers, aud tot* many fond par-
ents see a merchant prince In their
sou. whoqould not trade marbles with
out getting e boated. Then, again,
there is the young man of the street,
who Is looking for* easy money. He
has been brought Within the Influence
of those who are simndor*. and. who,
is rhaps. are not particular about the
wav In which they get their money,
lie sees other* wearing good clothes
dining ot the beat restaurants, and to
A model cotton farm has been estate
fcd;':liaii;rpa<fs of Texas uhteii ate
» Opt agricultural tr.iin.- over
fet "Iheir’JInes to teach better agriculture,
a deserv^the oo-v>perai ion of ev to-v ioyul
jjro ’’ the common wealth
me.
|> citizen y
Wheneyar businer:* men vil farm
'•re arorti^together for Ho- advance-
Went Of agriculture w *-ich i mtr emef
•'“ggarrs of wealth, then tile sou. '•( w**st
H|<# prosper and rural V "ill lit-
fast Itself '
hast! tuition* w hich depend for their
patronage and success ui>on the gen-
eral public find it more difficult with
each succeeding year to sustain them-
selves without the use of printers'
ink. A burines* that cannot I*»y rea-
sonable advertising bills Is a poor
burituw*. and It is natural, even hi
wrong, for people to prefer trading at
successful places. The time has not I will do on the farms of the producer*, j
yet p«*»ed when a small merchant j ——-
cannot succeed in a suto.ll way by de- of course you have kicked about j
pending wholly npmi chance trade and I ipjs („» weather and you don’t like j
til! outward appearances not exerting
tkenfselvee over much ttttd lie begin*
io I mi u I rn how it is done. He devotes
hinmrif to learning the ropes of the
spender* and graduate* into the peni-
tentiary, where he may be .taught ai,
useful trade, but often this comes too
1,-it.- He has learned too well the lee-
1 Inked In the Infield of the fair ground* i of how to get through life without
at |kuia*. "here during-the fair, cot-1 work. So-called society is responsible
ion producers can witness a demon-
stration by'uolrd cotton picking mu-
ch i n e* gathering cotton just as they
1 talented he nwty
fur many a youth going wrong, be-
, ,iu*e it has no recognition for the
man with overalls, no matter how
be or how useful a
citiiten in his line."
the favors of his personal friends, but
big merchant* would a* soon try to
do without show -windows us without
newspaper publ idt y.
|P__
Wl^fflWt borne circle may be -ought in
Ipt .- be—tihe nest charming ami delightful
K. P
place on earth, the cmier of ihe pur
•St afheotlone aud uiou <|e*lrab'i s-
SOciate*. as well as the most atirne
thre and exalted beauto* to tie roumi
tikis side of Paradis.
.................
The voice of duty is never rttill It
Htblsper* to us morning, noon ,«iel
^| evening. It reaehes us from tin- roar
of the wild the sigh of the
BKis/ ' •’ tHMHf wind*. Che soft, gentle imir
mar of the wayside iirook That '-till
small voter will not be hushed
The world would be happier if the
people were a littb more generous
with their praise. There is too imieh
flattery, but a word of Jmn apprecin
lion woo l A cheer the heart and
Strengthen the hand* of many a dts
m
couraged worker In the home. In the
•cbool. In the church and In the world
m.
Wtiat volume* our faces say' ttonie
apeak of love and kindness, mum of
»ltg*r and hatred, others of pride and
rebellion, and other* still of seltllsh-
neas. We can’t help our fat e* talking
but W« can make them say. pleasant
things and all should try to have
them do so
©if-
IPA’,' ■
e*. ■;
r-
If we iooh only for crooked tree* in
the Umber, we will find pdenty ,d
Cham; bat we will pass by many
•tntfgfct. beautiful tree* and never me
«ta* thorn. So. too. If we look only
for Watalshes in Che charseter of nth
era, m Will Bnd them, but we mav
notice tAe many gisid qualities
that they mmr posoeas
We up barbarians. (Mvilittation has
put clot lie* on vis and smeared very
thin veneer of culture underneath the
rag we wear. Savages eat broiled
t-oe. Savage women wear rings in
their noses, our women wear rings in
tnelr ears. We plan railroads, devise
laws and political schemes, and seek
to save the souls of the lost, bill a
dog tight will break up any railroad
meeving. political speaking or pro-
tracted meeting in the i’nlted States.
If the two greatest orators on Ameri-
can soil, such a* iTyan and Bailey,
should engage in joint debate, and
should go into training for months,
the newspapers would give the affair
conspicuous space and attention but
no seats could Is1 sold at $100 each
and few at even $5 or $10 and there
would lie no intent and eager throng*
at bull “Yin boards anywhere to re-
ceive the rounds with cheers and
groans And yet. when a negro and a
white man out of the slums engage In
a beastly and brutal tight, the wires
of the country close to all commercial
messages and rush the particulars of
every punch and bloody hammering
of these men to waiting millions We
are still savages Not a hit of doubt
.itsnit it. -t'oiuamhe Chief.
about its being so dry ; and if we re-
member rightly you kicked just ns
hard last winter about the cold wet
weatlter. iri fact were you ever -satis-
tied with the weather, but does your
kicking do any good What is the use
in howling shout, things you cannot j
help in any way.
lie IVImt Your Mother Thinks You Are
Whilst walking down a crowded city
street the other day,
I heard a little urchin to a comrade
turn and »ay
say, Chlmnty, lemrne tell yqurse l‘d
he happy as a clam
I: I only wus! de feller dnt nm madder
i ink* 1 am,
She t’lnk.s I am a wonder an' she
knows her
To Save Expense use
TEXACO ROOFING
vh3T«
: r..
wfe:
The most rconomte.il rooting mode -
nerd* less repair nml lusts longer than
other rooting* on account of It* dura-
bility and the stability o< the material*
of which It Is composed •
Information cheerfully furnished
write for It. '
For Rate by all Dealers.
MADE OM.V HY
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The Texas Company
General Offices; Houston, Texas
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versification of crops. That wlH, of
( onrso, mean more meat in the smoke
Letter from (ten. Lee to HI* Non.
The following letter from lien. Itnht.,
K. Leo to his son. (ion. (!. W. Cuntin house, moat that was raised at honto j
late, til the time, we believe, a cadet j instead of being bought from the gro-
at West Point, Is so full or wise ad-1 cer or froni the packer of another
vice, and reflects so clearly the exalt-1 State., ft means that, in time the
,.(! character of the writer, though I Southern farmer will realise that td b«
published before/can never be rwd j really prowperono ho must live at homo
too often by people who appreciate ! and board at the same place—that 111,
■ ‘lUi
i;}
Scli.-t th* heat type of cotton pintits knows her tettie lad
frum w hich to save your seed for the j Could never mlW'.wit’ nnttin’ dal wus
seed plant next year. Plant*, like tail- i ugly, mean or laid. *'
mals. very con-sideralde. and there is* j t )?i. lot* o times 1 sit an t ink how
:t wide difference imt ween the yield of- nice t'vvould be. gee whir!
plant* of the same variety. To use j II a feller wus de feller dnt his mud-
ueed from all meyns that the low yield \ der t inks he is!
■ ng plants will predominate. Stelect | My friend, be yours a ’ life of toll or
your seed front the plants that show a I undiluted joy,,
noble sentiments:
"Arlington House, April 5. lk52.
“My dear Son:—1 am just in the act
of leaving home for New Mexico. My
tine old regiment has been ordered to
that distant region, and 1 must hasten
to see that they are properly taken
that he
hominy
press
must raise liis own hog and
iit home--9an Antonio Ex-
tfi
n
:4
Twelve Reasons IVliy Saloons Should
Lite—
Tills fine bit of irony is being used
of I have bti! little to add in j with good effect in a number of non-
reply to your letters of March 2(1. 27
and 2k. Your letters breathe a true |
license con:cats.
1. Because of
high yl(Ad if you w ish to Increase the
yield of the crop.
Ion still can learn a lesson from this
small unlettered boy.
Don’t aim to he on earthly saint, with
eyes fixed an a star
.lust try to be the fellow that your
mother thinks you are.
—Will S. Adktn.
L-.l
ii
jMy
Thera fal nothin* that 1* eo cheering
to a mailer’s heart, and such a rich
Hi istpnoet for all ebe hoe sacrific'd
MMl endured, m five kind, effecttonste
jKte of her children There
that can adorn man or wo-
M»rr Ulan the tenderness and
care they manifest toward*
•ed parent* as they totter on
filers of another world.
-
riOFKHNIOYAI. MRKCTOET.
-m I. Thom pent.
W. H. Onrrstt
UK/:'' T*0»PSO> A laRRKTT
Attorneys at Uw tttepheaville. Tex
Prompt attention given to
Business In the court*
mTITT wi*t««r.
Phy stelae and Wsrgeoa.
W' Ran. Telephon-- i«5. office XI
la connection with general practice
OPS Sport*! work on the eye. ear. nose
and throat Leave call* at Overton
BStW Company, resid-'tice tele),hone
- l«f», office it, Dublin. Txi.. _
ill; Office over ntRcfla' Bank. Telephone
D«R. d^RRY-YR.
No l«fl; Dr. fleesums. residence phone
No 49, Dr. Bryan residence phone No.
«9t. Unve rails at Du Min Drug Do
f* J* FAHMICK*
fifslrlsn sad Nsncees.
Dublin. Texas.
Office over Dublin Drug Oa. Hsal-
dxmoe. Oraftos tt. Teleplwac lit.
Lsove call* at Dwhlln Drug Cos.
WOT MOMRR. RBWlrV W».
nt Rim
> IRKED,
NEAT
f I P-TD-DATE,
AND NEWLY
OFFICE.
j«a* hr hydraulic
Instruments modern.
No danger of blood
Free exemlnatton and advice
years In Dahlia. Graduate tdasa
Kn. All ins
Co!leg» of Dental Surgery
iasr“e?.,srr
No use of getting restless or nervous
over the dry weather And It Is fool-
Mhneas. pure and sitnpXr u> become
alarmed and make a sacrifice In order
t,v remove elsewhere If you will ob-
*erve the really pr«>«t>ertHia and con-
tented citWn you will see that he
does not make » practice of getting
unduly worked up over a drouth, hut
stay* st his iw>wi of duty and when
prosperity return* he is in the proper
shape to set aalde a good share for
htmeelf But not *• with the man
who- m»m away He usitally re-
turns. but to Bnd hlmetdf gresxtly han-
dHapped in regaining prosperity Re-
ally tt look* like Wait Texa# never
fully forgives the cltlxen who forsakes
her when the testing time comes, and
never forget* to reward the truly loyal
citizen who stand* bravely by her
through adversity as well as through
prosperity.
Wonder if that shot in the hack of
Mayor Oaynor's head will land him
to the White House? Stranger things
have happened The shot of a dast-
ardly assassin ended Garfield's life. -■
split tlve Republican party, elected j The Spirit of the Smile.
Cleveland and changed the political ! The spirit of the smile; it's a sweet,
history of this country for quarter of I sweet way
a century. Gallagher's bullet In place, That the soul comes down to the heart
spirit of frankness; they have given j the community.
its moral uplift in
of shooting out the lif#* of New York s
energetic mayor may tphoot him Into |
the Presidency.— Baird 'Star
The republican party of Texas has
come to the assistance of those editors
who have been wanting the anti-pass
law changed so as to permit railroads
to exchange newspapers transporta-
tion for advertising space. The demo-
cratic party triad.- no such demands,
and the party of tihe atate wants no
change in the anti-pass laws We com-
mend this republican platform to the
editors who are so anxious to have a
free ride with the railroad* Childress
Index.
to play.
And it sings to the dawn,
And it sings to the dew'~~
If you smile on the world
It will smile on youl
f
The spirit of the smile; it's a bloom,
it'/ a light
That the world sees by when it walks
through the night
And the heart cries back
As it walks there through--
If you smile on the world
It will smile on youl
When a store advertise* It shows
that It values your trade enough to
ask for It; your cotvvenience Is rnn-
awtered to the extent of making it
easy for you to know what Is offered
in needed goods the store show# Its
willingness to go on rscord In its
statements shout Its sunk »»d serv-
ice. the advertising of nr article as
being of » certalp quality, and at a
stated price is In a sense a contract
bwrween tbs seilwr and the prospective
buyer; the prices of advert load goods
must be so law that competition can-
not ntaet item; advert 1st ns increases
•ale*, enabling Che More to t eept
smaller profit* These #;•# some of
the reasons why you mhoiild buy from
stores that advertise. There are othar
reason*, sod although not stated, you
profit by them. *
*
Governor Campbell called the spec-
ial session at the legislature on July
19—die week of the primaries AH
that week the legislature was demora-
lised The next weak the county con-
vrnitkma mst. when *91 the machine
politic were engaged in flxlng up dele-
gatas to the Mate convention st Oal-
vmtton Then followed this week the
State cooveotioe and the aaaate ad-
journed oesr until yesterday. Thud
about Imm been Mtaandered.
all a« iwvount of partisan potittea.
Frantically three day* work has been
arctanpHshed by (Am legtalatnrc and
the aalarie* and expenditure# hav#
been going on at the expense of the
tax payers We have too much poli-
tic# In Teas* and not, enough <* buol-
Cotmnerrtal.
We wfll not eowrh for the tratMMI- aetartra and
neaa of th* «b9Iow1»« atory. hnt R Id
too good 1» keep: One of our suite
ecftbere says hr was tending through
(ha court house yard one night rte
When we see a man whose family is
existing on the bare necessities of
life, and he goes about crying hard
times, and then we sec him come out
of a grocery store with a plug of to-
bacco a foot long In one pocket, and
a I tag of smoking tobacco In the other
our compaaaion for him drop* 40 de-
grees below the point of sympathy.
The matt needs to barn life's lesaon
over, that, "He that spendeth hits mon-
ey for naught, shall come to poverty,"
and in ninety-nine cooes out of a
hundred. It 1* the poverty stricken
class unit do K.—Hamilton Herald.
Babies are great things They are
tittle human morning glories that
spring from the soil of love, climb up
the trellis work of affection, entwine
themstevm about the heart* of the
parents and send out the little feelers,
the little elingers, that reach from one
heart to another, drawing tine two
closer, twining and intertwining about
them til they become one common
mao* and are indeed two hearts that
best tut one. liable* are the light and
life of the home. Their ceaseless prat-
tle and gentle cooing All'the gap that
no other living mortal can accomplish.
They truly reign supreme and are
monarch of all they survey.—Bonham
Chicago !um. os a part of its public
school system. SSO kitchen# In -which
household arts ora taught and finding
this number Insufficient. It is prepar-
ing to add 176. We gums they are
needed In Chicago sod other large
cities; and. indeed, a need of them Is
growing up In communities that era
not to be compared with Chicago It
used to he that the household arid
ware taught at home, knowledge and
eager henc# of them handed down from
mother to daughter. But If pres -nt
tendered as continue to grow. K Is *vi-
dent that we shall taste to have re-
(smiroe to artificial expedients If cook-
ing and taHMdkaeplag or* not to te-
cum* numbered among the lost arts.
It In very hold to toy so, nevet-thotels
we con not puitc rid oarsslws of tbs
•neptrtoa toad the high cent of living
to any nothing of other Ills that tJwr-
1 time, ere
■uhntd arto.—Dktlaa News.
ImS
exchange eaya thsre ora man
jfe «k |a the penitentiaries of
The
spirit of the smile; it 1* love In
her home
On the lips of the bloom where the
wild bees roam
And *he sings and she sighs —
It is true, it Is true.
If you smile o« the world
It w11 smile ou vou!
—The Bentztown Bard. In the Bal-
timore Bun.
tilth the Jokesmlth.
“Oh, John," cried the farmer’s wife,
so Punch avers, "I'm afraid I’ve ta-
ken Chat dreadful new disease!"
"What makes you think so, dear?”
he asked, alarmed, gathering the frail
little woman into his arms and strok-
ing the thinning hair, as she sobbed
out the story of her fear* upon his
broad shoulder.
"Well," she explained, "after I have
gotten up, dressed myself and the obll-
dtshes. prepared the children for
school, strained the new milk and set
It sway to cool, churned
the butter, swept aitiEdus
and worked
dusted, done the
Ironing, given baby his bath, cooked
dinner and washed the dishes, sewed
all the afternoon, cooked supper and
washed the dishes, undressed the
Children and put them to bed. and at
dsrwn for evening I am too tired to do
any darning! I never used to feel so.
It moat be hookworm!"
Tony had been away from school
about a week, and when he showed up
one morning toe teacher asked him
where he had been.
“I ran sway." said Too) [
“Ron away? What did you do that
for?" asked the teacher.
“My tatber was going to tick me, so
I thought i d run sway.” was the re*
PlF.
The teecber by further questioning
brought out the tart thet Tony for
noma trifling dereliction had been
threatening with a beating and had
stored sway from home the beet part
of a week.
"But your father has the right to
wMf yoe." said (he teacher
“Vs# he may." added Tony, “but I
was bora In this country, and 1 don’t
want n« foreigners to Itefc me.“
A Runday passenger on a Statsn In-
land tarry boat studied out A com-
mm. .............- -1
•to ••
*.■
dock bend and directed Me
mm
banted of a
ton
the
mvself and your mother great pleas
ure. You must study to be frank with
the world; frankness Is the child of
honesty and courage. Say what you
mean to do on every occasion; and
take It for granted that you mean to
<k) right. If a friend asks a favor,
you should grunt it, if reasonable; If
not. tell him plainly why you cannot.
You will wrong him and wrong your-
self by equivocation of any kind. Nev-
er do a wrong to make a friend or
keep one; the man who requires you
to do so is dearly purchased at a
sacrifice. Deal kindly but firmly with
all your house could proceed with its
duty. There was quietness in that
man's mind—the quietness of heaven-
ly wisdom—an inflexible willingness
to obey present duty. Duty, then. i«
the sublimest word in our language.
Do your duty in all things like the old
Puritan. You cannot do more; you
should classmates; you will find it the
policy which wears best. Above all,
do not appear to others what you a-re
not. If you have any fault to find with
any one, tell him, not others, of what
you complain. There are no more
dangerous experiments than that of
undertaking Co be one thing before a
man's face and another behind his
back. We should live, act and say-
nothing to the Injury of any one. It
is not only the best as a matter of
principle, but It is the path to peace
and honor.
“In regard to peace and duty, let
me, in conclusion to this hasty letter,
inform you that nearly a hundred
year* ago there wa* a day of remark-
able gloom and darkness—a day when
the light of the sun was extinguished,
as if by an ellipse. The legislature of
Connetticut was in session, and as its
members saw the unexpected and un-
accountable darkness coming on they
shared in the general awe and terror.
It was supposed by many that the last
day—the day of Judgment—had come.
Some one in the consternation of the
hour moved an adjournment. Then
arose an old Puritan legislator. Dav-
enport of Stamford, who said W the
lost day bad come he desired to be
found at his place doing his duty. and.
therefore, moved that candles be
brought in so that the never wish to
do less. Never let me or your mother
wear one gray hair for lack of duty on
your part. Your affectionate father.
"R E. LEE.
•‘To G W. Custis Lee,"
—Fairfax Herald.
The Hmskehoaftc at Heme.
Referring to the Increased acreage
In corn and other cereals in the South
the greatest diversification of tanning
operations generally and Improvement
of live stock, a Northern contempora-
ry suggests that when the South rai-
ses, Instead of buying the meat for Its
plantation use, Its present era of proa
perRy -will be looked back to as only
a beginning.
When the South glvee more atten-
tion to raMng corn and other feed
■tuffs It will raise more meat In re-
cent yearn the South has been gating
farther and tarther away from cotton
ns *« PxrtWlve crop The termers
have learned that however profitable
their money crap may be It does not
pay to ralee cotton to buy meat and
brand.
Letter!? there have been bag train*
traveling through Texan intended u»
encourage hog raising or the term*.
On one of these trains, which covered
the country along the line of travel
from North to flonthetot Texas, there
wo* a succeesfnl hog raiaar who de-
llvered lecture* nod govt- (teuuniotr*
9 flwsnsM *%•* ^ ghaatek^aa^gEmi im mA esmstoEEftta seK
raising, thsre woe mother apeak-
er abroad mho Mid of Ike waiting mar-
ket for all the porkere that may ha of-
fered. no mutter how externalv# Uw hog
raising industry may oe engaged in.
2. IteoaiiHc of its purifying effect on
politics
.'!. Because il is such » law abid-
ing institution.
t. Because its patrons get so much
tor (hell- money.
f,. Because drinking helps one to
get u job and to keep it.
G, Itecwuwe it makes business—for
the courts and county agents.
?. Because drunkards—the saloon's
finished product—make such good hus-
bands and loving fathers.
8. Because saloons make a city a
safer and better place for boys and
girls to grow up in. » •
9. Because all righted fathers and <
mothers pray that their boys become 1
saloon keepers.
10. Because it raises revenue by a
tax on what the poor people drink so
that the rich may dodge taxation on
what they possess.
11. Because to close the saloons
would cause such an increased sale of
home comforts that your children
would be run down fn the streets by
delivery wagons.
12. Because without sulooivs vice,
crime, pauperism, graft and eorru., ,?
tion would be eliminated and unspeak-
able Injury would result to the public
In consequence.
: ggw
A Symptomatic Crime.
Gallagher's murderous attack upon
Mayor Gaynor is symptomatic of a
deep-seated disease in the body poli-
tic. as Gulteau's assassination ijf Pres-
ident Garfield was; for, In the one case
as in the other, the assassin could not
nope to change the genius ar.d policies
of a sovereign State, but struck down
a Chief Executive with no higher mo-
tive than -the lust of office. Brutus
and his fellow-conspirators imagined
that they might save the Republic, by
slaying the man who was felt to incar-
nate the spirit of empire; RavaUlac
draw the dagger to the heart of Hen-
ry IV. under the Impulse of religious
frenzy; Booth slew Lincoln to help
the Mouth’s cause. Gallagher, on the
other hand, was stirred by blind rage
over the loss of a sinecure and of the
emolument* which, though small 1n
themselves, mean so much to him.
The country is full of petty placemen
of this type. Indeed, the "rlnge”
which spoliate our cities would not
last for a year If they had not a hoot
of these hungry henchman at their
beck and rail. It Is zealots of the
Gallagher kidney who stuff ballot
boxes, pad registration lists, forge
m
V'V
Ii
work when the "machine” la in peril.
—New Orleans Tiroes-Democrat.
i of tbs
Newspaper Is Pahllthed al Ne*.
The circulation of the Canard Dally
Bullotln on Uie steamship Lusitania I*
over 2.000 a day. and has reached t JOO.
This journal has thirty-two pages. It
is exoedlently printed on line
paper, and arils at 6c a copy.
It |o*a &
to press al 1 a. m.. and la rsady tor the
breakfast table like the newspapers
■shore. Many passenger# have It de-
livered to their berths, and rmd the
day * news before they get up Prac-
tically everything of news value in too
whole world appears in the ocean dally
■a soon ss It is printed In the dailies
on land:
For instance, oa the voyage during
the English general election full re-
turns were printed every rooming of
the results announced down th# previ-
ous night. From Reuter's London
wireless service the ocean drily editor
gets ptewy or material. (Rook ex-
change quotations are
ly, AH notable events
given vary ful-
ao« theroave- '• 7;
w «■* mnsuir events *oa me move n
mi-nt* of teams people are recorded.
Spokesman-Review. /
I
“There was a young Indy f raw Htaro
mi
Who sou to her tom named Maw,
/ Yaull
$j$ I
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The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, August 26, 1910, newspaper, August 26, 1910; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth543438/m1/2/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.