The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, January 13, 1911 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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MM,
uhltlon Would v ■
^^siftsstjsrs
every cttlien in the United States
™;h3
desires a. happy, prosperous hone,
profitable Investment and remunera-
tive employment
Much of the land In Texas has not
felt the modifying Influence of human
Un"«1 an? aP'.n^cS taSE*!*^'
tended to farmer* to move into the
state and help cultivate our 141,000,-
000 acres of undeveloped land
During 1010 eighteen hundred car
loads of freeb tomatoes were market-
ted from the course, he
e out part of the mental
V* are fortunate In having
director In our school*,
the gymnasium, but think
n build a cheap out door
111 be quite aervlcable.
pleased with the follow-
Fraxier, Lenora Frasier, Cora Gra-
ham, Nettle Higgins, Lorene Jones,
Wortham Lacy. Opal McClesky. lama
Reed. Mack Welch. ***
Room Five; enrollment #2.—Gladys
Holms*, Wilma Spencer, Mary Lee
Witcher.
Room Nine; enrollment 55.—Vena
Bateman. Juanita Bradley, Roberta
ped to points In the north and east.
The tomatoes put *1,400,000 Into the
pockets of the farmers who produced
them, with practically no extra cont
for cultivation, as In moat caeca they
are planted with other crops, there-
by requiring very little extra work.
The one dark spot on this bright ag-
Dorts Latham. Molene Norwood, Wil-
lie Payne, Martha Lewin Read, Eugene
Richards, Gladys Riddle. Maud Rob-
inson, Florence Sheehan, 11a Strick-
land. Raymond Warner.
Room Ten; enrollment 51.—Ret
Bradley. Edith CarpeuteY Anna Dur-
ham, Creasle Frasier, Swan Payne,
George Sltton. Corttelius Stanford.
er unlees the spirit and devotion are
pretent. A teacher must be a con-
stant student and not depend on the
knowledge she received during her
nchool days to meet* her requirements.
School sanitation received much at-,
tehtion. ’-i
It was a representative from tba
San Angelo schools who said that they
regarded the feather dueter aa a relic
oR barbarism. They scrub all their
rooms twice per year, and disinfect
regularly every thirty days with
formaldehyde gas. It has been live
tact that theee tomatoes were shipped
to the canning factories of Maryland
and other New England states, only
to be shipped back again for con-
sumption by Texan* who have to pay
the freight both way*.^Kh a pro-
duction of over a milll&MKMds of
tomatoes alone, not to tnWtldr thous-
ands of cars of other trtfcqmnnually
and with cheap fuel in abundance, and
all other requisites for the building
of factories, the Shipping of our pro-
ducts to other states to be canned In
not In keeping with the spirit of pro-
gress which is manifested In other lht-
** of Texaa Industry.
Texas furalshe* her prorata of
fruit and track to the market* of the
world and then some, during the year
Just dosed, according to recent re-
porta which show that 19.490 oar
loads of truck and fruit were markets
ed la this state during 1910, which
hrought a net yield to the grower* of
(ICAMMUI THU I. KVa nil •<> nun.
40,000,000.
See Btephe
of tin work.
8XALL ISLAND MW,
ED UP
Strickland. Neha White, Jesele Whit-
field. \ '
Room Three; enrollment 49.—Lur-
llne Armstrong, Rivera Cline, Walter
Leather wood. Tommy Pope. Edwtna
Shelton. Ruth Whitfield.
Room Two; enrollment 52.-Floss1e
Arrtagton. Mabel Bays. T. J. Farmer.
Grace Floyd. Marjorie Harrel. Fran-
I15.000.uoo.
nmimMwMm «r ■
Waldo. aa K l*s$
mSt” Utaw McSy^ertholdltafey. X
Rena Epperson, Charll# Fine, Gladys create si
Herrod. Ora Jonea. Ray Keith, Oco ot th, ,
Martin. Thelma McLaughlin. Percy th« prod
Neal, Corinns Overs, Josle Belle playe<, ,
Smith. agrkmltt
Our total enrollment for this month ^ to tv
wss Ml. an Increaae of 41 over cor- ipn and
responding month last year; number That i
of pupil* attending thl* month 592. h„her p
an increase of 5« over same month *ute ln
of one year ago; 25* pppUs came each tatMt „
day during the month; last year 171 #wr,
were present each dalr; we )md fewer grown p,
tardies than w* hi
last year. On the
interest In the wo
—J W. Dunlap, 8
__._ii
that frequently the Janitor would
to Rupt. Burnett. HI* salary In <75
per month during school session and
*35 per month during the summer.
One of the treats of the association
wtw the lecture of 6r. Wlllian Phelps
of Tale. He waa extremely Interest-
ing. W# shall not soon forget the
definition he gave for happlneaa. It
la; "The happiest person Is the one
who think, the most Interesting
occurs to
enjoyable
Ills want to he
nk the
better.
ty-eight other
rn freight
a ride on
He told a
to go up
at os* to be barret
i feet that Taw*-
the highest In c
it In quantity Is a
■».....
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HM V •
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3MSM
wimpfi
Ml! j**!
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The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, January 13, 1911, newspaper, January 13, 1911; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth543485/m1/3/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.