The Dublin Progress (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 45TH YEAR, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, October 27, 1933 Page: 2 of 6
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The Dublin Progress
CoMtructton M tb* ntw b*rr*ck-
•I < ant|i CoaMily wan IMHMnrilr
balt*4 till* w«fk dll* to (ho taoMlity
o( tb« contractor to famish tha ro-
qnlrod lumbar Om of lha building*
baa boon practically romplotod With
tha aicaptlon of flooring, Tbo noo-
ond building lacka tbo flooring and
tbo roofing Tbo now barrwcka ar*
Inflnitaly bat tar than tbo twat* and
aa tbo floors and roofs ora
Hub Barber Shop
■y\fa offers p
Tonsorial Service
That Pleases
Particular People
aa soon
InaUllod tbo assn will bo moaod In
Mrty-ali now aarolloas worn Uban
into tbo camp during tbo gnnlwoak
Twanty-oaa man wars snroHod froci
Brown county, nlaataaa Irons Ool»
nun county, flftaau from Csmnarho
county and alason from Rnanals
county With two man haring bosn
discharged In tha maanttms. tbo total
number of anroUara in tbo rampant
stands at two hundred and ton man
Aa soon as tha snrclnattaM and ty
pbotd shots sr* grins thaaa will
ha placed In the field on ragutar dot)
It will tab# about two or tbra.
weeks of Intensive training to con
quer the tdlosyncraelsn paculalr t«
na* mrn taken from the forks of the
creak All have them, and It J««
lake* pat lance lo Iron out Ibe roogl
spots aa.1 bring ibe n.wcomom Int-
Mne mu S* is done by the Old»-
enrol Ires tbatnseives Tbara ts »
general . hsnae of allituds neewnanr
before a group can work fogotlHtr and
tt»a together under ink condllloe*
as are found In lha < amps RtsfHtr !
individualism cannot and wttt no
•nrrlrr under group control All t»
BIG DAYS OF SELLING
November 1, 2, 3, 4.
Man may lie the ruler of the earth, but there are a lot
of things we don’t know yet about the other animals that
share this sphere with us, and they are constantly surpris-
ing us by taking charge of things themselves.
For instance, we read in the pajxrs the other dav that
rabbits have again become a plague in Australia. Years
ago some English settlers i»n|>orted a few rabbits, which!
multiplied so fast that they became a serious menace to
crops, and the Australian government had to jsty si byg I
bounty to get rid of them. But enough of them remained
to start it all over again.
tort that mines from !
Even more surprising is tin _
New England of a great migration of gnu squirrels out of V(r M ,, >v»*k«. *:>«•«« r--j
Connecticut into the adjoining states of Rhode Island and of,d»t w j<.m> t detaw th
Massachusetts. Thousands of them, in huge droves, move »*** swp»Tt»t*nd*»« »t <•«** o»
in straight lines, letting neither mountains nor water di- *>«. *•**»» appoint** y*r> *«
vert them. Fifty drowned s.pnrrels were found m one ^ |H|1T*
small pond; Connecticut River boatmen rc|»ort hundred* ^ ^ Mr k, «n«»s4tt"
elinihing out of the water on to the Imats. All art' gaunt and ,flirlMII «* iw seat*
ami half-starvetl. Tin* answer scents to Is* the failure of k*t* w* wt«h «r no*v» *a •» tk'
some relied-on food supplv, impelling the squirrels to seek >•*■* •* '*• ***M •*4 ** *** *****
new feeding grounds. fc ,T * ^
This episode is similar to the storv of the lemmings.! tw it M cawowrt *w
the curious little furred animals of Norway, who every •***> •» '*■»* CmmRt. k« ’**“*"
few years march across the eountry in droves of millioits, P^* J^Tsaotyos* mtmtrru tv.
until they reach the aeacoast. There they do not stop, hut fUM mt„lr wck mmi tswo
plunge into the sea and drown, seeking nobody knows kM< < «*■«*<— *
what ancient refuge, long since submerged, to which some j,ba>«*».«* w »*d*. wsim '** *****
tribal instinct tlrives them in time of want. ;*•**"• ** ,h* »#»ib,r* "*'*• ui,r‘
I to th* MOUMt «*04«c puyoro *
We hear of liesvers coming Isn k to Massachusetts af-limbim ^
ter vanishing for a hundred years; of deer becoming so im-1 a n«ai >•«*'»' •• ,k#*u^*1 '
men*us and fearless that they eat the growing green stuff “»m '*• ‘ ° _
WNAT It TNI ONI CINT tAifT
MHkwan-tRap Ws 11»| I < tfc»Usriri Bfb»
MbiiSoriiokbli liwli t. iJtb.
NOT FOR U8 TO WORRY ABOUT
“And when ye shall hear of wars and rumors of war,
be ye not troubled.”
That seems to us as gtssl advice to Americatm today
aa it was to those to w hom it was spiketi nineteen hundred
years ago.
Great excitement is l*emg raised over Germany’s re-
cent withdrawal from the league of Nations ami the I>»%
armament (Conference, billowing Japan'* similar action
sons* mouths ago. Tl»e sensationalists are husilv trying to
promote another war in Europe, a war between the United
States ami Japan, other wars l»el ween other nations.
We do iKit believe that wars are so easy to start as all
that. Nor do we recall g war that was heralded by such a
volume of preliminary publicity. War preparations are
not made in the ofieu. No nation which proposes to make
war on another sends out notice in advance. In other
words, we think that m«**t of the war talk ia bluff.
We remember the last great war. We remember bow
the people of America wen* swept off their feet by what
we now realize was largely ins pirn! pniikagunda. We do
IU COTTON
...........MU niiamajjaiiBiil^
• .J** •* ■ - > * ^ •''OfliWiitSHsa amumeAMKX. .1.
-W/V’ T.4
. .
SAVr ON HUNDRf D*> 0» ITt MS YOU MID IV! WV D
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The Dublin Progress (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 45TH YEAR, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, October 27, 1933, newspaper, October 27, 1933; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth559794/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.