The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, July 2, 1909 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Dublin Public Library.
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mm
OBta,
Patrick and I
Mm per l««r.
th* 600. I months 26c In advance
4~--........—r
DiXW ItoMJsher and Foneder.
—
COCHTI CIRCULATION
—
CIYI CIRCULATION
the Chines* roommate at toon Chins,
the supposed murderer of Elate 8i*#l
la Near York, was himself the guil-
ty person and aUo may have killed
hla roommate. If the pictures of
Chong Stag, as published In the Dally
pr*s», are correct, there would pro-
bably be no trouble to fasten any kind
of a crime upon him.
The press dispatches state that Sen-
purchased a couple more
blue grass farms In Kentucky s few
days ago
iB W •gtaggftiggjtsssgiji
are a great many church
who think more of the
than they do of God. Their
is centered upon the wrong
Diversify. Plant maize, kaffir corn,
sorghum. June corn and such like
crops. Even cotton can be planted yet
and with reasonably late frost a full
crop gathered.
With sorghum seed at 61-501 a bushel
an acre of sorghum should return an
income of 660 besides the forage. This
Is more and easier money than can
be made from cotton
It is said that the stale pays the
campaign expenses of candidates out
In Colorado. In many cases the same
4httt* I* done in other states, hut
through a different method.
The fact that Captain Peter C.Hatos
is drawing hla pay of 6160 par month
as sn officer In the United States ar-
my while doing time as a convict
in a New York penitentiary, would
indicate that the red tape of the war.
department has been drawn into a
somewhat questionable situation. The
people who were in no wise concert!'
ed In the captains downfall are taxed
to supply his pay.
A bill has been introduced in the
legislature of Illinois which will make
life miserable for the "flue drinkin’
man." The bill prohibits any habitual
drunkard from marrying withiu that
state, and a ‘ habitual drunkard" is
defined as one who gets drunk twice
a year and oflener Auy man wishing
to lead to the attar the woman of
his choice, must, upon making appli-
cation for a marriage license, also
make affidavit that he has not been
on more than one real "spree” during
the year.
r
The veteran en route to the recent
reunion at Memphis, who threw his
pants out of the Pullman window,
thinking he was dumping them into a
glass door wardrobe, must have been
there before.
Perhaps the fact that Hon. 0. P.
Bowser of Dallas has been a member
of the legislature several times ac-
counts tor the fact that be wasn't
hurt by being run over by au auto-
mobile recently.—Texas Mesquiter.
In Sherman recently a man was fin-
ed a thousand dollars and a hundred
days in Jail for violating the local
option law. In nearly any court In
Texas the expense incident to a kill-
ing would have been less than this
m
The University of Texas turned out
fifty young law graduates last week
If there should threaten a time soon
when there’s nothin doing In Tex-
2m u
US’ It’S a fair surmise that this bril-
liant array of talent will make things
happen
The Cleburne Review remarks.
“BuOding good roads Is a kind ae-
knOw11* tgement to civilisation. I n-
civili < 1 tribes never build roads.
They do not need them.” Johnson
Sty la soon to vote on a bond is
» i ior good roads.
/ fortune is predicted for the man
W. j successfully introduce* Verba
Na.o” into the United Slates Verba
Mate Is a South American beverage
and ia a kind of near coffee, pos-
sessing the advantage. It i* said, of
being never Injurious
Within the past four weeks (Senator
Hailey of Texas has cant three votes
in the United States senate In direct
conflict with the Denver platform and
In the direct interest of three of the
strongest trusts in the country, the
lumber trust, the iron trust and the
print paper trust. The senator voted
for a tariff on lumber, on Iron apd
on wood pulp. He was the only dem-
ocratic senator who voted for the pa-
per tariff. Dispatches have it that
senator Hailey has purchased two
more blue grass farms in Kentucky
within the past three weeks.
Voters in various sections of latuls-
iatia are mad because the democratic
nu mbers of the Louisiana delegation
in congress voted as a unit for the
tariff on lumber end made speeches
in behalf of a tariff on many other
trust controlled products. Meetings
are being held to condemn the action
and at such a meeting in t'lalborne
Parish Saturday it is asserted in the
resolutions a* follows: "Our senators
aud representatives no longer repre-
sent the party that elected them and
they should forthwith tender their
rejog-iation*.''
"In my Judgment a tax print
paper to a tax on Intelligence 1
to a flue on knowledge, it eets a pre-
mium upon Ignorance and a penalty
upon learning. A tax on print paper
to a ekade on the lamp of enlighten-
ment and n cloud over the sun of
civilisation.
“It to as true ae It Is ancient
a free prees to the palladium of
erty. Tyrant*, air. have never been
able to thrive In that white light
which a free press shade upon the
throne. It to the sacred duty of the
press to speak truth to the king to the
hearing of the people and to the peo-
ple in the bearing of the king.
"The Drat recorded utterance of the
moat high God was “Let there be
light.” This baa ever been the battle
hymn of human progress. This has
ever been and must ever be the watch-
word of advancing civilisation. The
nation that forgeta this mandate must
relapse into social chaoa and intel-
lectual night. There are kindreds
among the sons of men who are still
thralled to the power of darkness.
There are Senators who seem to pre-
fer darkness rather than light.
‘Notwithstanding the first flat of
Omnipotence was, “Let there be light"
yet this senate, in defiance of the de-
cree, sets up lta puny enactment,
“Let there be night."
“Whether physical, intellectual, or
moral, light Is a blessing to be sought
and not an evil to be shunned. I would
not place a meter upon the eyelids
of the people and charge them for
the Joyous sunbeams. I would not
annul or defy the ordinance of the
Almighty. I would say now and for-
ever, "let there be light."
“The first word of the Deity should
be the first and the last word of hu-
manity. The first luminous edict of
man's Divine Maker should be the
first and the last precept of those
(o secure addi tional I migration,
linls rants that could be obtained for
a community that oppose public 1m-
provements of that kind would bo a
detriment rather than a help —Brown-
wood Bulletin
The Dallas Times Herald man claa-
sifles the candidate* for governor ac-
cording to the teeuos before the peo-
ple sc that you can take your choice
at once.
For Bailey—0. B. Colquitt. Thomas
H. Bell, William Poindexter. M. M
Brooke, N. A, Shaw. W. F. Rameey—«.
Against Bailey—Cone Johnson, R. V.
Davidson, H. Bascorn Thomas. Charles
H. Mills—4.
For Bailey and against prohibition
—O. B. Colquitt.
Agalnat Bailey and against prohi-
bition—Charles H. Mills.
For Bailey and local option—M.M
Brooks, W.' F. Ramsey, N. A. Bhaw.,8.
Against Bailey and for Local option
—-R. V. Davidson. H. Bsacom Thomas
L,- <h • '' . •
For Bailey and statewide prohlbi
tion—William Poindexter. T. H. Ball
—2.
Against Bailey and for Statewide
prohibition—Cone Johnson.
_;
fifcr
■
! V ; ,'.v ■/ :
A town peopled by knockers Is more
to be desired than one peopled by
slow, indifferent business men. The
knocker attracts attention, and If
there’s any merit in the town’s natural
advantages, the enterprising man will
see and take advantage of same, but
a set of plodders, a set of Indifferent
business men, absolutely repel all en-
terprising business men..%Give us en-
terprising, energetic, progressive men,
men who do things, for boosters. If
you can’t give us this class, give us
knockers. Whatever you do, O. busi-
ness goddess, deliver us from cold,
shiftless. Indifferent, non-enterprislng
men — Aspermont Star.
_ _
♦♦+e+++meee+*+*+eeeeeee<*e*->m+++H+e+e+mmee*
THU SOI L’S SPRING CLEANING.
Yes, clean yer house an’ clean ver shed,
An’ clean yer barn In ev’ry part.
But brush the cobwebs from yer head.
An’ sweep (he snowbanks from yer heart.
Clean out yer moral cubby-holes,
Bear down with acrubbin’ brush and soap;
Dump out ol’ Fear into the rain
An’ dust an easy chair for Hope
K'
Assuredly it is a wholesome work
to swat the house fly. avoid boiled
dinners and violent exercise, keep
cool, maintain » placid temper, see
that the drinking fountains are kept
in order and that cruelty to animats
Is duly punished Meanwhile the in-
sane are sweltering In Texas Jails by
virtue of the big blue pencil I.et
Texas growl — Ft Worth Btar, I----------------r
Texas certainly needs to grow it) j a ho were made
her Idea* of humanity sufficiently to
take at least as good care of the
unfortunate Insane within her borders
i as it is required that stock be t-nred
are fond of discussing f„r Tht, b|oe pencil which makes it
necessary for the insane to bear the
cruelty that is
Plant flowers in the soul’s front yard.
Set out new shade an’ blossom trees,
An’ let the soul, once froze an’ hard.
Sprout crocuses of new idee-
Yes, clean yer bouse an’ clean ver shed.
An’ clean yer barn In ev’ry purt;
But brush the cobwebs from yer head.
An’ sweep the snowbanks from yer heart!
♦
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Some people
'lb* question of whether the soil Is
Mlltog out or whether it is as pro-
ductlve as ever but no one denies the
evident fart that the farms ran be
made more productive with the »dop-
4toa of better cultivation methods
in (he divine image ’
He further said: "We expend $343,-
000,000 every year in the common
schools of the country for the edu-
cation of the youths of the land, a
larger sum, as 1 remember, than was
ever raised in a single year by any
placed upon them in ftariff law- ever enacted during the hls-
tbi* great and wealthy state, deserves
dissolut ion
v. ■■
Mi-..
A
A® MHnota Roy attempted
tout express train because.
F togas, a spark from one «r the mm
his
party's locomotives set fire t<>
vhMJMUr’s haystack This reminds us
Of SOU) I* of the acts of some of the
grown wen That boy will lx* in the
legislature some of these days Min-
eral Wells index
m
Through habeas corpus proceeding*
Harry K. Thaw will be examined July
6tb to determine whether his mental
condition ie such that his release
■would he a menace to the public
Doubtless when Thaw * money is gone
ha will be released from an imprison-
meat worse than death a* a penalty
for protecting bis home
The young man who cann<»t be de
pended upon nearly always becomes
* grown man who is entirely worth-
Ism to himself, to the state and to
society It behooves every young matt
t» aeidhnmlr guard himself in tht*
respect anil thus tend to develop
within him a higher eeny of honor
.lust bow au undersized amateur
I Ilk*- Haacom Thomas should get it
wreck into hi* coco that he I* sizable guber-
lie al- i natortal timber is one of the inex-
J plica tile mysteries of modern politic*,
j However, one may be permitted to
gue*s that hi* experience in the last!
legislature is the moving cause of
hi* present aspirations. He Is prob-
ably laboring under the hallucination
that the senate in kicking him out
of that body made of him both a mar-
tyr and a hero at one swift swishing
swing of sole leather. Had Bascom
backed up his charge* like a man j
this view might possess some merit,!
but the gentleman from
Springs did nothing of the kind On
the other hand he weakened and fluk-
ed and finally apologised to the Sen-
ate and got kicked out Just the same,
i which he deserved, for being such a
I nervate** numbskull, If for no other
| reason The people Of Texas will
scarcely honor a man with the high
1 office of Governor who possesses no
qualification therefor farther than «
blue spot on hi* anatomy to Indicate
where the sole leather landed -Ter-
rell Times-Star
lory of this country. We have 17.000.-
000 children enrolled and nearly half
a million good men and women con-
A kindly but illogical critic resid-
ing in a neighboring town farther east
was heard by the writer n few days
since to remark: "I can’t see what
makes Stamford grow, nor any reason
Why it should eoutinue to grow and
I'll tell you those people out there
are simply squandering their sub-
stance in bonuses for building a town
that’s already beyond what the trade
territory will warrant." Unthoughted-
secrated to the education of our child-! ly the critic right there voiced the
ren. Yet we Impose a tax of from keynote but overlooked the inconsis-
ten to twelve dollars a ton on the
paper that is used In the manufac-
ture of schoolbooks for our children.
We largely neutralize the benefits
and blessings of this taxation dedi-
cated as a sacred fund to the edu-
cation of the coming me.n and the
coming women of America, the men
who must fight our battles in the fu-
tency of his own argument. If Stain-
ford was to be merely a country town
dependent solely upon a small local
trade territory, then the force of his
remarks might hold good, but the gen-
tleman referred to admits that Stam-
ford will be a city and that at no
distant day, and he overlooks the fact
that Ft. Worth. Dallas and even the
ture and the women who must mother smaller cities of Texas like Sherman,
of unborn Amerl-
tbe generations
cans."
Texas Is unfortunate in the posses
Sulphur *lo» of on® senator, and he a demo-
crat. who voted, not ohly for this
tax on wood pulp and print paper,
but for a tariff on Iron and lumber,
in direct conflict with the interest*
of the common people and directly
In favor of the capitalistic combina-
tions of the country. Every one of
t cse products are controlled by the
f Sts and these trusts will be bene-
f *d to the extent of the tariff lev-
ied.
-5T5
i
,ure lour
hndruff
gM*
[Why? Because it is annoying,
ititly. And mostly, because
almost invariably leads to
loess. Cure It, and save
hair. Get more, too, «
•me time. All easily done
Ayer's Hair Vifor, i
formula. Stop
>n of dandruff!
tint thmf A* «4w*T fto *«*>.
V.
The day'ofliberalreligious thought
! is rapidly advancing even though now
and then some minister Is violently
attacked for th* expression of his
opinions a* was Rev. McCann, pastor
of Sit. Mary’s Roman Catholic church
at Elgin, Minute. last week, when be
j announced that he w§*. not opposed
lo Sunday base ball. Rev. McCann can
nee no harm in watching or partici-
pating in a game of bane bail on Sun-
day after he turn attended lo his re-
ligious duties He consider * Sunday
a day of rest and doe* not believe an
innocent pastime capable of harm.
He was soundly scored hy many who
were opposed to his view* but the
same day in New York City three
young men who emphatically dented
old time bettofe of the Preehyterton
church, were admitted to the mtoiet.
ry. They retorted the etory of Bee,
-duae «q> jo wed *WP Pupezdjetoi
tore# an allegorical They denied the
literal scriptural interpretation of
Christ * birth And of the reeurreettoa
as welt as the literal raining of La*-
■- : seta j.*— ,j—„^-i- 'WiM.tam nenO/.onvuul
mWPGH',,.„;'Wa|fW|f viw ws * priMi jttiiafwiw
men a* be-
The auto speed maniac l« getting
blah from ail quarters and the slgqs
of the times ail point to radical legis-
lation regarding the driving of auto-
mobile* unless he become* sensible
enough to call a halt of hi* reck-
lesaneas. The automobile has come
to stay, hut It is eminently proper
and In fact necessary to encourage
sarilty and Judgment behind the wheel.
Tyler, Temple, Cleburne and Oalnee-
vllle do not depeud upon a local trade
territory for maintenance. It's the in*
xtitutlons that are located in these
cities which supply a field for bual-
neea enlargement that no local trade
territory could ever become populous
enough to provide. The Stamford
country yet lacks much of complete
development, In fact the development
of this section la but In its Infancy,
yet Stamford cannot and will not pre-
sume to build a great city upon this
development alone. Only a country
town can be thua maintained and
Stamford has long since pasaed out of
the ctaaa of country towns and I* now
building for the great metropolis of
the central west.—-Stamford New*.
POOR OLD KRATH.
Th# comraleetoner* court of ISrath
county ha* called off the bond Issue
election
because it foresaw the Ih-
evltable defeat of the measure The
people of Krath county must be moas
hacks good and strogg. if a* good a
thing a* a rood bond toeu* wa* so
clearly foredoomed to defeat that th*
commissioner* deemed R useless to go
to th* expeaM of »» elect ton But by
and by. when progressive count Is*
like Brown have a thorough system of
good roads and the people begin to
deeert the sand bill* of ttrath to order
Newspaper Pres* r'er Hale.
The Stamford News has for sale al
a very low price and on easy term* a
five-column quarto Campbell press,
complete with steam fixtures, capable
with epectal chases, of printing a six
quarto paper, such as th# News has
been the past three months or more.
The paper has outgrown the Camp-
bell and has Installed a sew Babcock.
Bale must be mode quickly and a bar-
gain await# th* purohaMr. Write the
News, Stamford. Texas, or J. 8. Daley,
Dunlin. Texas.
Retire to Fabilxher*.
that they may live where they eaa um
from torn
hy the
clergymen
torn but the)
The Progress la prepared to do ♦
% linotype composition for th* trade. ♦
♦ price 2hc per thousand. 10c a ♦
♦ pound for the maul, the latter ♦
♦ price to he repaid to toll upon re* ♦
♦ turn of th* metal. Prompt and ♦
♦ good sorvlee guaranteed. Bead ♦
- us roar com
Something for nothing to velret.
There hr* people who make aaees
of themMiree for the money there to
In it end then toll to collect.
Later along, what the great politi-
cal world will want first will be an
armed revenue-hunter who knows
how to get Mood out of g turnip.
When n young man aspires to be a
literary light It Is a sign that he
will never set the world afire.
It does beat all how quickly a
sweet girl graduate can learn to fry
ham and eggs when she has to. ‘
It ton’t long after a young man lay*
his life at the feet of hi* loved one
until she begins to put her foot down
on him.
If a republican were always known
by the company he keeps some demo-
crats would have to be more careful.
Some do not seem to know tht
straight and narrow path from a
crooked hole in the ground. *'
Those who tell the unvarnished
truth do not shine In society.
Some of the greatest fortunes In
this country have been made by dis-
covering and capitalising the weak
neases of mankind.
2,r. sr-r.tr r,
tkra
................bsflaud*
Inwardly,
At th* door stood her nephew,
bowing automatically a* woman after
woman “Bassed to. Ail the women
glanced at the polU* toung man and
thought th* eauMlahment had secur-
ed a most courteous door opsner. The
aunt resound him from whnt would
have been a contlnuoue performance.
What could I dot" he pleaded.
“Thera was another lady right behind
you and I certainly couldn’t let the
door atom In her face. Behind her
■PM another, and they kept coming
so fast that I wa# kept busy bowing
aa they came In." ■' - J
Wholly Th# Trath.
Charles H. MlUa. eon of Roger Q.
Mills, ha* this to say: "Texas needs
less restriction and less regulation,
needs more lj,v*rallty. and more of
the spirit of optimism and lea* of the
. „ Bays Fortune at Auction.
Buying a small safe for $2 at s pub-
lic auction over thirty years ago, Ex-
Coroner Nathaniel Conway of Seaford.
Delaware, has come into a fortuhe.
At the time of the purchase Conway
stored the safe in hla stable. 'This
week he broke the lock with a ham-
mer. To his amazement, gold coins
of different denominations began roll-
ing from the safe. The noise attract-
ed a crowd and from the outside Con-
way could be seen gathering the gold
from the floor and putting it In bags.
Conway refused to say how much gold
the safe contained, but says he can
live-In luxury th,e rest of bis days.
Toe Polite For New York. *
He came from Georgia, a typical
southern boy. From his father, a
gentleman of the old school, he had
Imbibed his Ideas of deportment. He
came to New York recently to visit
an aunt on the upper west side and
was much impressed by what he re-
garded as a lack of politeness and
consideration shown to women by
many New Y’ork men on street cars
and in other public places. Even at
the risk of making himself conspicu-
ous he determined not to abate a Jot
hi* idea* of the proper way In which
to treat a woman.
One day recently his aunt took him
down town with her to a big depart-
ment store. There was an endless
stream of women passing through the
swinging' doors. With Innate polite-
ness the boy stepped ahead of his
aunt, opened the swtnglng door and
held it for her to pass through,
aunt had a purchase to make
aptrlt Of pessimism. She needs more
forges, more factories, more railroads,
more men to till the soil, and to fill
git the varied avocations of Ilfs. Lib-
eral lawa and fair treatment will en-
courage them to come here, and It to
equally eure that uuwlae law* and
unjust treatment will keep them away.
The thing that makes property of any
kind valuable Is the existence of other
men. Wealth is power in exchange,
and, of course, no exchange can take
place unless two or more persona ex-
ist to make It. As people Increase
in numbers and civilization, other
things being equal, the more valuable
becomes property. Let a man try to,
live by himself alone, and all Incent-
ive to acquire wealth as well as op-
portunity to enjoy It, Is gone. Wealth
U a creation of society.
"Let us pursue such a policy of Just
treatment and fair dealing as will in-
duce men to make their homes in
Texas. last us encourage others to
Invest their capital In Texas and guar-
antee them against lnjuslce from the
state or its laws In doing so. When
this Is done this state will go for-
ward with renewed Impetus to the a-
talmnent of its manifest destiny.”
Bend This.—Dublin .Texas: We have
sold Hall’s Texas Wonder for kidney,
bladder and rheumatic trouble for
years and frankly say we have never
sold a medicine that proved a greater
remedy. Sixty days treatment In $1
bottle.—Overton Drug Co. tf
Killed Mum moth Rattler.
Jack Thompson was In town Satur-
day exhibiting the skin of a rattle-
snake he killed about ten days pre-
viously. Mr. Thomas says the snake
measured six feet one inch In length
besides the rattles and 22 Inches In
circumference. He had thirty-one rat-
tles and a button, which breaks all
records around here for rattles. He
also says that he captured a big rat-
tler Just beyond the lake about a
The | month ago Just after his snakeship
at a j had swallowed a grown rabbit. It
nearby counter and swept ahead with-1 had sixteen rattles but no button, and
out looking behind. | was fully as large around as the big
Having completed her purchase, the I one killed on his place, but was only
aunt looked for her nepliew, but he i about three and one half feet long.—
was nowhere to be seen. She start- Thurber Journal.
• v
Bakrgedns!
There are two kinds of Bargain-, Genuine and lljpocrlle. OI’K BAR-
GAINS ARE REAL, NO HYPOCRITES WITH UN.
4 Cana Gian Lye...........25c
No. One Tub ...............50c
8 quart Iron Bucket.........15c
One Double Side Wash board 25c
Brass Wash Board .........40c
1000 Parlor Matches...... 5c
10 Post Cards ............'...6c
Two Pounds Carpet Tacks...5c
Two Mouse Traps............5c
Two Boxes Shoe Tacks.......5c
Two Boxes Blueing ........5c
Two Bars Laundry Soap.....5c
Large Bottle Extract ......10c
lairge Can Baking Powder...10c
One pound Pkg. Soda.........6c
One Pkg. Tooth Picks ......6c
Brite’s Variety
, DUBLIN, TEXAS.
Store
Save Your Buildings
from Lightning
Over $8,000,000 worth of property ia destroyed by lightning
•very year. Surely you don’t know that you can abaolutely
protect your buildinga against the lightning stroke or you
wouldn’t go another day without this protection.
Wo can gitm it to you. * We sell
'“Shinn'System" Copper
Cable Lightning Rod
Thletothe
•nee com;
ithaLIgbtnlngKod that is endorsed bv Ineur-
panto?* This Is the Lightning Rod wUh which
■ of buildings have been equipped in the past. 1
kou inat is u> yoa sna put up on your building* under s binding
ga?i
^ bitfLctary
y are well
’ of your buildings that are
t Shlau-Pool
graaec^sisfis; ssrsspa
oraaerctol agenda*. You i--------
i run so risk.
I* u»
tell you shout I
m.
W. B. WAX NXX a SON
la
Ik
\
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The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, July 2, 1909, newspaper, July 2, 1909; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth543857/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.