The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, October 2, 1908 Page: 2 of 8
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l »■»♦♦■> H I I Hit I' llll»lf">"H<
| NEWS FROM LOCAL EXCHANGES
•28m
Item* Clipped From Newspapers From Surrounding Towns
’<$< IHIM I 1 I HmWWHW'l I I l l»>4»>»
TOLAH.
■Bmm me Stendarti «<=—»
Sept. 25th.-K. H. Hilburn has
written Mr. Deorlog that owing to
«ln tank ot lotormt and various other
things ho will gather a wagon load of
pumpkins. Ooe or the number
measures fifty-two Inches in cir-
cumference.
Edgar Mathis was in town one
'tenses ho has decided It would be [day this week and handed us a bunch
dpMKl palioy on it la part to drop the of etetlities on the culture of seeded
organisation of another bank here.
We base boon busy all the week
answering (locations about a monster
•potato left at our office by liosa Lee.
ribbon cane. "Uncle BUI” Turn-
bow planted 1 1-3 acres to seeded
ribbon cane of the goose neck variety,
and harvested thirty-two wagon loads
Sf V - Tax'Talk
Furl Worth, Teaaa, Sept 25th,~
Tho following statistics furnished
by the Teats Gommerclal Secretaries
Association, indicate the tai sources
of Tam and the amount ot revenue
which the vsrtout tea measure# yield
the state, alao the revenue derived
from the Mate, county and munici-
pal purposes. Th's association is
giving to the press a aeries of »rtl-
otea on taxation, and these figures
will serve to prepare the reader for a
clear understanding of this impor-
tant question. The nasociatino will
reproduce the articles lb pamphlet
form for free distribution. Write
the Texas Commercial Secretaries
Association, Fort Worth, Texas.
The state tax rate for general rev-
enue purposes Is 6*qo on the $100 as-
sessed valuation; school rate 16 2-3c;
has been wanton waste In our ’The F.st That Mad. William N.
woods. We are fece to fees with e Whluiey Famous,
lumber famine, whereas, a little wfl- in the early days of the exploitation
dorn, baaed upon education, upon of various milling machines a field
coal euoply In leae then 300 year*.
Thare lias been w
what might aaaily have been learned,
would hare mads our forests a con-
stant aourae of power and proOt.
Our educational system ia sulgen-
erla. In buildings and equipment
we beat the world In pay, no na-
tion teaches ua. It coats us more to
keep up our educational plants than
It ousti for nearly all the educational
plants of continental Europe com-
bined What Is put into armies
over there we put Into schools. We
pay o«r teachers dollars to quarters
paid by other*. • We furn'sh schools,
apparatus, books and instruction
free What is the result? When
It weighed five pounds and was a 0f cane and when made into molasses
|kmbo and no msliake. it was 4i>$ gallons of hoteyrup were moss-
grown by Wetter Williamson three I UIeo up Allowlcgone twelfth for!
kallea beyond Mambrlno shrinkage when oool, he produced!average county tax rate about 40c; |we want high grade workmen we
White hauling some oats Tuesday J three hundred and ninety-one aod a average city rate about $1 50. [have to go abroad for them. Very
Sait Jackson fell off the wagon when ! half gallons of tlue syrup At the | The artvalorera tax for general few 0f our boy* and girls graduate
■ear Dave Brooks, the wheel passing prevailing price of fifty centsagallon ; revenue amounts to II,367,300;aohool, | f,otn our colleges—fiuly one out of
ontirely over tils boriy The load this would approximate >195 This, #3 600.000; county. $8,500,000; city every 120.-J. C. Monaghan In Aroer-
waighed over twenty-three hunrded, was an extra good land aud is per- tax, 111,000.000 The state receives loan Industries for September.
yet Dalt catue out of the accident papa an extra yield, but It shows the from sources other than general ------
wrltih only a mighty sore spot advtsahillty of planting a variety of1 property tne following amounts: Wh»r* Bullet* Flew
Geo Wood last week traded the'crops. j Gross receipst,S700,000;t«DOhlse tax. j David Parker, of Fayette, N. Y., a
Blankenship farm near Rock church. $354,000; charter fees, *109,000; oo-, veteran of the Civil war, who1 lost a
valued at *3,500 to T P Hoyt for, A Healthy Family I nupatlon (mainly liquor,) *1,000,000; ! t^at,G»^burg, says: “The good
HI. place south of town valued at -Our wh.-h- family hascojoycd good [ poll tax, *350,000; miscellaneous re-VrorvUmn Hv(?huX‘d°dollarS to S
$8,380. Mr. Wold has moved to his health since we began using Ur. ceip(Si §244,000. Total tax collected r 8,K>ut mtlch monoy doctoring for a
mwly purchased place and has taken Kings Nevv t.i.e 1 His, tniv® ' In Texas from all sources and for all bad case of stoinacli trouble, to little
business Mr. i ^ .^.^Ar^'^.veie.ntl unroroea. about' *27,000,000 Of I'urpoee. I then trie) Electric Bitters,
charge of the water
Boyt has ocoupled the Hooper house an,| tone the system in a
Tuesday morning II C. ISroiles that does you good. 25c.
1.3 C! II. Sherrill, living In the Drugstore.
Brushy neighborhood quarrelled over
wo,' matter and tinallv Sherrill at
tacked Hrolls* with a target knock
1qg him down and stamping on him
and they cured me. I now take them j harness.
as a tonic, and they keep me strong
50c. ut Overton Drug
Sherrill then gave himself up and [ a girl.
h A. Bartlet, of rural m
route 1.Guilford Maine. They cleanse ! purposes
gentle way this total agriculture pays *7,000,
at Overton 000. town and city real estate $8,Sou,- and well.
!000; railroads $2,000,000; other prop- Store.
ertv (mainly corporation) *5,500,000; ---
[receipts from sources other than Indications of Prosperity.
property #3,000,000. All Indications point, toward the
fall and winter season of this year
demonstration, usually competitive.
«ni n inc'nwv)' occurrence. H. N.
Oasson In “The Romance of the Reap-
er" tells the following story of WIHlatn
N. Whlteley, "tire Charlemagne of)the
harvest field;**
II© was us tail ns a sapilrfg and a*
strong us a tree. As * professor In tho
grout school ot agriculture he has nev-
er been surpassed. Ho could outtalk,
outwork and generally outwit the ruen
who were scut ngalnst lilru. Ho was ft
whole exhibition In himself.
"I've seen Rill Whlteley racing his
horses through the grain and leaning
over with his long arms to pick the
mice's nests from Just in front of the
knife,” said an old Ohio settler. -
The feat that "first made Whlteley fa-
mous was performed at Jamestown,
O. , In 1807. His competitor was doing
ns good work ns he was. whereupon he
sprung from h|s sent, unhttebed ouc
horse and finished his course with u
single surprised steed pulling the heavy
machine, v
Ills competitor followed suit and sue- \
ceedod fully as well.
This enraged Whlteley, who nt that
time was as powerful ns a young Her-
cules.
"I can pull that reaper myself!” he
shouted, turning Ills second horsp loose
and yoking his big shoulders Into the
We live by our blood, and 0
It We thrive or starve, a* on
blood is rich or poor. There ii
nothing else to Hve on or by.
i by our blood, and on
1 as our
ilt
---------------J- ,
When strength Is full and
spirits high we are being
i reshed-bone, muscle 1
brain, in body and
continual
This is health.
When weak, in low
cheer, no springs
id steei
not rest and sleep is
wc are starved; our
poor; there is little 1
in it
Back of the blood
to keep the blood rich.«
it fails, take '
SCOTT’S
EMULSION
It sets the whole body going
again—man, woman and child.
, r>
R:!
Gf.iv ,
GU8TINB.
t I’oui Uw tin z»*t.
Sept Jtitb - Horn to Mr,and Mrs.
Jim Allen, near Gustloe, .September
was later released on bohri The
iojurod man is in a serious condition.
j as being one of the most prosperous
.1 E Meljuatters left Monday for
Hubbard City where he will spend a
couple of months
rEiSiMssrtsvt r*siKSits-:;'
an bad the quinsy. My throat was j here Tuesday to attend tho directors ,1 — w j Hftn ()t WaverIv,
ftwoiien no I could hardly breathe. I , meeting of the F & M bank. j Vh. ban used' Chamb.’-rlalus Cough
applied Chamberlain » Pain Balm j (y McCJuatters left Monday for Kennedy for years and says: "I
KErSa":;? “riuhL'’ Portales. N. M. wherejhehas accept- | firmly believe Chamberlain's Cough
In two days 1 was ail right. _»avs( ^_____ith 3, b Remedy to be absolutely the iwst
wrrn a oanK. on the market for colds.
How to Oars a Cold
'I he question of how to cure * <vM , seasonS that the southwest has seen
without unnecessary loss of time is
one in which we are all more or less 1 for many years —not a boom season
interested, for the quicker a cold is
«pr
<fvt
all right,'' says
ment and is especially valuable f‘>r ; Oozort left yesterday for Throckmor- Htul tll(,y all agree with me.” For
urns and swellings. For Sale by 110|) atJ() Kt)0I l:ity t0 out a ia-,. gale by Overton Drug Co.
ALEXANDER. J \V. Martin of Denver, addressed 1 » ,vn.
•rnmm UM> Advertiser the people of Gustlue on sooialism: As Blsmark believed, 1
Sept. 25th — Y A. < Inatott and Monday and Tuesday nights and or- , wont to say " Wer «.e ft 'hule hat hat
family have removed to their former k,an!zer| a club of anout ti'teen mem- i die Zukuoft," (Who has the sc u c s
iiome at Wilson her- 1 ha* the future), ll.a mau who wel-
John Bull h here from New Meii and Mrs W. W Tullus enter- etEP,re togetUer, ualriK •
oc on a visit talned the young people Thursday Hon iu the process wasia k-v-i
Mrs. Corby has moved to her resl- niKr,t at their home two miles north admirer of education. He )a r« at
dSDM In this city 0f town Ice cream and cake »ere'^°ry n* best, reveiat ous were
Mia. K. Haney of Cisco arrived served the work* of Its schoolmasters. it
Wedoeaday ou a viut to relatives in i r, \ Palmer has bought an inter !vva<' t,ie w0,k of ' ator ,a,'n’ ''tBrD
■she Rose community lest in Wataon Bros ft Co's store aod [arld %‘banolierst, as school masters,
J K Williams Itas returned from , |,a* oegun work there, although be ,hat ,iati ma(,e Bismarc , 0
Gorman where he had gone to attend !stjit retains his interest in the tele- j Moltke, the Kaiser and the
the sick tied of a relative phone exchange , xoBaro empire possible. They at
Jeff Hell happened to a painful ac- The stair way leading to the sec- prepared the blood and Iron out 0
ekient last week He was running a 0IKi stor. 0f tjle school building has [ «bich the empire was built and t ley
steer when his horse fell on him !teen removed and rebuilt on the in-'dld a b? ^eans of a spartan-liae ed-
ftadly brulsh.g his iep side of the building. This will make ucatlon ,n ‘IHciplIne The great
J. M. Lowry ha* groan a *«*eet1 u iafer )n ease of firei and will a|s0 chancellor was only partly right.
(potato on his farm that weighs elev g|ve considerable mo.e room In the NoM° th0 schoola alone' but
«• poutids Leo Jones will leave, tuiidritg I schools plus the raw materials, the
tnaiorruw for Keene to enter a p-i- _______ jfifeat natural rescurcc* of mines,
Would Mortgaga Farm :,arma' ff)re*ts’ ct0 • mu,t 0ne tUrn
A farmer on rural route 2. Empire.!for Permanent success hsrmsny
Oa., W. A Floyd by name, »»vs: | has the best Industrial and indus-
Bucklcri's Arnica Halve cured the two trial art school system on earth, but
worst soma 1 ever saw One on my [ UQ v at awount of natural re
hand and one on my leg. It lemon- nri.
than lt« weight lu gold. I would not sources The whole land Is not as
with inflated values, speculative
ventures and wlId-catting schemes
which are always followed by finan-
cial teactlon —but an era of good sol-
id business for farmers, merchants,
bankers, railroads and business en-
terprises of all kinds.
The crop outlook, taken as a
whole, Is good. If the predictions!
of the ‘‘experts’’ come true there j
may ba rather too much cotton —but
the ctop Is not ginned yet and boll!
Such 11 thing Imd never been done be-
fore amt line never been done since,
but It Is true tlmt In the pnssiou of the
moment Whlteley was filled with such
Strength that he ran (he reaper from
one side of the field to the other, cut-
ting a full swath, a deed (hat. had he
done It in ancient Greece, would have
placed htm aiming (lie Immortals.
That ten minutes in a horse collar
made #2,000,(XXI for Whlteley. His an-
tagonist, Benjamin II. Warder, was
filled with admiration for Whlteley's
prowess and at ouee proposed that they
should quit ttgluing and work In har-
mony.
"Give me the right to make your
reaper, and I'll pay you $5 apiece for
all I can sell,” saki JVarder.
"It's a bargain," responded Whlteley.
Send (his advertisement, together with name
of paper in which It appears, your address and
tour cents to cover postage, and we will sad
>mU a "Complete Handy Atloa of tlw World.”
SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St, New York
=
THE TRAPPED THIEF.
■ , r *
i
fi
: + Vc'
A Midnight Adventure With South
American Desperadoes. *. ’
In describing certain oqiertenee*
among the outlaws and dcKpcrtuRieg of
rfriulh America an English traveler
tells the following grjsly story:
"One night a farmer was roused
from sleep by hearing unusual and
stealthy noises about the place. He
got quietly out of bed and, after listen-
ing attentively, discovered that some
people outside were cutting n hole
through the door Host; to the bolt by
which It was held.
“It did not require any great amount
of detective talent to guess the object
weevl s. boli worms, frost and other i
things “may cut down Mm prbspect- \ Terrific Force of a Marine Upheaval
And so there arose the first consolida- of 'be operation, and the best way to
lion In the harvester business. ) foil It was suggested by a thong pf'1
--—---- I rawhide with a loop on it which hung
TUMULT IN THE SEA ' from a-b°ok 011 'be Inside of the deior.
fill school for th« ensuing year
Mary la Spradllog left W ednesday
Afternoon lor Coicyn in response io
a message nutting iliac his brother,
Or, Spradlins, bad succumbed to a
stroke of paralysis and was In a pre-
mriotis condition
Ooe day this week Ammon Turn 1 farm to get it”
bow was trying to extract the lead Drugstore._______
from s target cartridge when an ex
ptoaioo aasued, and after the smoke
aMosred away the lad was minus a
portion of a huger and thumb
be without it If I had to mortgage the
Only 25c. at Overton
CARLTON
from Vh« U«M»rl4»r
Sept 24th — Wav. fl
H. Gibson of
la divarsiScatluii as is evidenced by
Slie eleven varieties of truck he has
Sfrown on Ills farm Atnorg other
il
-“'ii;
t, "
DOCTORS M/ST71KES
Aiw said often to be bnried six feet under
jgftmfA. But many times women rail on
SMr family physirutns. suffering, as they
•lkM#ne, iwvr fmm dyspepala, annther from
ilteBfftdtoea'-e. aiiol t»-.r from liver or kid
fZ qga» $lsiswii«'. another fmm nervous pma-
atatkm. another with pain here and there,
a this way they present alike to
their easy-gotug or over-
fdoctrvr. separate diseases, for which
tug them U) he ayeh. prtWrTi!»•*
yotions. 1 n pTi 1 Hy. they ix ro
county missionary, organixed church-
es recently at Bee Brnncli In Coman-
che county and at Warren’s creek In
Hamilton county.
Mlsa Haifa Womble is Improving
from a recent Hints*.
Mr Holfomb of StephenvIHe was I
prospecting here this week
Section Foreman Webb made a
buslneas trip to Ft Worth last week.
T. M Gregory now occupies the
cottage recently built by Mr Hush
C. J. Campbell and family r«
turned Sunday from five weeks In
1P*’
return/doouji rau-UJy vuia uterine
the
jr»'*tment
•■ring
:merit, but probably wiyr^* A
Irine like Dr..TjerJ>hL Favor)tq
m tal to t/te ouimc woiTT
the west
Wm Reed cf lustine was here ! Every lun»*ehoid in Dublin .Should
Ust week. He formerly resided at
this place
The supper given bV the ladies cf
the Hoods Mlisioc Society ieel ted a
profit of i-’U 75
Jim Wallace cf the Falrvlew com-
munity la Improving from a severe
large as Texas, and by no means com
parable with California In richnesa
of soil or oharm of climate To Its
sobools it must turn, it it Is to con-
tinue In success. Here we have
everything the world wants or the
nations need. We are producing a
large part (20 to 25 per cent ) of
the world's wheat, of Its cattle,
35 to 40 per cent.of Its corn 80 to
85 per cent.
By the side of a superficial success
a waste is going on that is simply
appalling Education is needed to
stop that waste Whereas, we have
coal deposits good for 2,500 years,
at an output of 400 mlllloo tons a
year, experts like Mr. Carnegie,
Prof Shaler sod ethers are warn-
ing us that our wasteful habits
BLOCKADED
Know how to Resist it
The hack ache# because the kld-
Ive v eid coolsderably; beGdes the
“experts" are not infa bble by a
good deal and as often as not the
trend of the market may have a good
detl to do with coloring the lasses
of th<j gucsser. Prices for other
crops will in any event do a good
deal towards balancing any depres-
sion whteh may come from over-pro-
duction of cotton and If the farmers
use business methods lu marketing
cotton, as they are In better position
to do than they have been for years
before, there should be no very
marked depression in price even |
should the predictions of the ‘‘wise!
men’’ be fulnllid
Following the panic of last year
farmers this year were less inclined
to run into debt as a general rule
than In previous years and mer-
chants and bankers were less willing
to extend credit. in consequenoa
mortgages have been cut down and a
greater per centage than usual of the
output of this seasons crop will go
back to the farmers in cash. There
will be more rnouey to spend and as
a result more spending
The railroads have more cars and
are In a better posltiou to handle
freight promptly than they have for
some seasons past: there should be
less delay In getting field and manu-
factured products to market and re-
turns should be quicker
The fact that this Is a campaign
year, usually regarded as a disturbing
faotor In business, should have little
effect In the southwest. The nut-
come of the presidential vote in this
section is a foregone conclusion; the
primaries lave already practically
settled state and county results In
Texas and ot tier states.
Taken altogether the outlook for
good business conditions for the fall
and winter are exceedingly hopeful.
Farm & Ranch.
Off Cape Horn.
A sailing ship rounding. Capo Horn
was caught in a dead calm, something
almost unprecedented In that stormy
latitude. The sky was filmed with a
light haze, arid the sea was flat and lend
colored. About 10 o'clock on the morn-
ing of the second day the ship began
to shake violently, the masts whipped
and bout like fish poles, and every-
thing movable above and below eoinc
down with a chiller, it was like strik-
ing a rock, only the shock was less
pronounced at first, Imt increased In
violence during the thirty seconds it
lasted. The sea heaved In oily- swells
with a strange, hoarse murmur, and It
continued to be agitated after the
tremors censed.
Half mi hour Inter fish by the thou-
sands lagan to rise to the surface
until It was covered with them. For-
ty-seven vyhalos were counted, many
Noiselessly removing the thong, he
slipped the end of It through the loop,
and there he stood acnic l with an Im-
promptu lasso, ready for .action. ,
"It was mu anxious time wiitle the
farmer stood-watching the hole In the
door grow larger and larger until at
Inst it was of sufficient size to effect
the purpose for which it was made.
“The supreme moment arrived, and a
hand was stealthily inserted not only
through the hole, hut also through the
loop of the little lasso which hung
skillfully around it. With a sudden
jerk the loop was tightened around the
j wrist and the hand dragged lti us far
I as the aperture would allow, while the
thong was securely fastened to the
hook on tho back of the dodr.
“The robber wits perfectly helpless.
His companions canto to his aid and,
having Ineffectually dragged at the Im-
prisoned arm till they were tired, gave
up the struggle and prepared to depart.
"But they were prudent men, and It
occurred to them to save himself their
Dead
men, they thought, tell ho tales, no
they killed him."—Now York Mall.
wHhmtt ^
dreds. They were evidently stunned
with the force of some terrific marine|
upheaval, aud when struck with n'
pole by ouc of tho sailors showed only
faint signs of life. In twenty min-
utes after the first fish arose to the
surface they began to drop out of
sight like pieces of lend. Whether
they were stunned and. on recovering,
Immediately dived,beneath the waves
In a panic, seeking safety In tho
depths, or whether they died from the
shock and. Instead of floating as dead
fish do, were drawn under by some
submarine whirlpool, were scientific
questions too deep for the skipper, but
half a dozen of the smaller fish hauled
aboard by the cook for dinner were
quite dead when examined. The calm
continued twenty-four hours longer be-
fore the ocean resumed Its usual aspect
ami a wind from the southeast per-
mitted the ship to continue Its course.
—Non York Press.
):
A Maharajah's Revenge.
A muharanee of Nepaul committed
suicide In horror nt the disfigurement
which an attack of smallpox bad
caused In her features. The mahara-
jah, who was passionately attached to
her, first wreaked his vengeance on
the physicians who had attended her
In her Illness. Then he flew at higher
game. Out of the great temple he
brought the Idols, placed loaded can-
non before them and bade gunners Are
In terror at tho proposed blasphemy,
they refused. Thereupon tho mahara-
jah hanged several of them. The *ur>
vlvors then submitted, and the guns
were tired and the Idols blown to
nieces.—Leioslc Mlsstnnsblatt
HAWKIN3 MACHINES.
wSSssw
J‘ ting cemf'irt Instead of .........
' J4»aA6fyawcii *aid. spsfi "er slow re«er,
Begin nog irotertlsy trie 8 N. A
S. T. railroad put on an etirs freight
(• system tr*ln t0 aecu,n0(,aJ* tfT* increasing
ve American modlclnai trafllo
,ljyB | *l«*r Caudle left Saturday for
™*’< Wilbarger county to accept (deploy-
ment in a gin lb* remainder of this
a. B Edwards, a member
Cooi 1st mechanical staff sloca tea
first of January, is now with the
Carlton Drug 0$-
Mlsa Exile Blehbourg toft Monday
far Wmo, Wtero she main ousted as
l student of Baylor oolwwlty
neys are blockaded.
Help trie kidneys with their work.
The back will ache no mote.
Lots of proof that Doan’s Kidney
Bills no tnrs.
(i. L. illggln*. printer, Review
office, IIloo, Texas, says: "I round
through trie us# of Doan's Kidney
PI lie positive relief fmm a full, nog-
ting ptln over my ktdooya and an i»-
ate lamenOH throughout that region.
The least quick movement 1 mode
would send ehtrp twinges through
my book and my oodlitloo was such
at at$M$ that after sitting 1 could
hardly regain an nraot position.
Doan's Xidnoy Pill* white I procur-
ed, removed tho above named di«
oultiee and rautosnd both vigor and
energy ’’ Plenty more proof tin
thin km ***»■ win- Ceil at
Over too Drag Ge.aad ask what their
...... HI
Tlte Red Fern*.
“Slop tho anio!"
“But. Btr"—
"I think I saw come red ferns."
“Better lenin.e keep on, boes.” ad-
vised the chuufTcur earnestly. "Them
red Lerif* ia iiw me hi constable's whisk-
ers.”-Washington Herald.
Ths Open Window.
The best part of a modern house is its
windows. To keep these open day and
night and to make the air inside ap-
proach as nearly as possible the air
outside should he the first buslneas of
the housekeeper.—Good Health.
t Behind the Times.
Four artillerymen were looking
around the picture gallery In the Met-
ropolitan museum the other day. but
they did not Seem particularly Inter-
ested. When they got to Melssouler's
"Friedmod IK07" two of them, one u
sergeant, paused for a second look
Catarrh Sufferers are Nothing But
Hawking, Spitting and Blowing
Machines, Says Authority.
»9
Is It possible (hat In tlieso days
when cleanliness aud sanitary reform
The sergeant went close to the canvas j ** being preached In trie church**,
amt gsxed Intently ot Hie Old Ounrd I xcltbols and ut public gatherings,that
In the background. j thousand* of people will oontiou* tQ
"Those guys ore carrying old fashion-
-sd-Sprissftstt-TtSsc.” -snip
comment to made.—New York Sun.
A Precaution.
“Every man Is the architect of hi*
own fortune," quoted the wise guy.
“Tew but be wants to keep ootid with
the building Inspectors.'* added tho tem-
ple mu* Philadelphia Record ,
there Is only
w two beraas.
The Boiler'* Reatone.
Mother-Don't tease me, Jobmrte,
Can’t you urn I’m in a lot of trouble*
Tbo boiler has sprung a lank. Johnnie
—What makes it leak? Mother—Be-
cause It's my day nt home, your father
has treked two men to dinner, the cook
has left, end the butcher hasn't come
with the meat. Now run and play,
Brooklyn Life.
suffer from catarrh, when there is on
aUblut:!; certain resed; ns S&-
hard. * i
Hyomei (pronounced Blgh-o-m«)ls
a pleasant medicated and antUoptlo
'ij*4
A Bio Difference.
Mm. Crimson beak—Ree how nicely
that team of horses go along. Why
can t mau and wife trot along pteae-
a*«y together like that? Mr. Crtrn-
hlr. Breathe tt in and it will cure
catarrh It will stop foul brmth,
watery eyes and c rusts in the noas io
a faw days.
"I tuffared from oatarrh for two f
year*,tried numerous remedies whish
falteo; used ooe aod t half bottles of
Ilyomel and am entirely ouisd.—C. ,
N Llodsv, 407 But Tint A vs,
Mltohall. 8. D.
A oomplete Oyomei outfit,oaMlst-
iog of $ strong, hard rabher pooket
inhaler aod a bottle of Hyomei ooets
only one dollar aod eaua bottiea, if
afterward needed, coeka only fifty 4
cents sect). Overton Drug O* Mils
i Atk maUf
i
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The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, October 2, 1908, newspaper, October 2, 1908; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth543482/m1/2/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.