Jacksboro Gazette. (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 5, 1907 Page: 1 of 4
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JACKSBORO GAZETTE.
' J
i
VOLUME XXVIII,
JACKSBORO, TEXAS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1907.
NUMBER 14.
CONSERVATISM
COURTESY
PROMPTNESS
THE JACKSBORO NATIONAL BANK
CAPITAL, SURPLUS, PROFITS, AND LIABILITIES $55,000.00
IT IS SATISFACTION AND AMPLE GUARANTEE TO OUR PATRONS to
know that they are doing business with a STRONG INSTITUTION with THIR-
TY-SIX ®f Jack County’s most SUBSTANTIAL CITIZENS behind it. OUR
INTERESTS are mutual. Our Officers and Directors are men of sterling char-
acter and unquestioned business ability, and we are in a position to hanoje any
banking business you may have. We are exceedingly proud of our splendid list
Of customers. We appreciate your business.
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS:
W. A. Shown, Pres’t Ellis Mitchell, Cashier A. G. McClure J. J. Perkins
E. W. Nicholson. V. P. J. H. Timberlake J. W. Spencer J. H. Walters
J. G. Mullens, V. P. E. A. Gwaltney S. Castleberry
WEATHERFORD COLLEGE
AND TRAINING SCHOOL
Thorough preparation for best colleges. Co-educational,
Home influences. Rev. and Mrs. E. V. Cox in charge of
Girls’ Home. Principals live in house with boys. Superior
advantages in Art, Music, Expression. Terms very low.
Session begins September 10th, 1907. For catalogue, address
J. R. FISHER, M. A. 1 pHncioals
W. T. ROWLAND, M. A. J rnncipaI3’
PRESIDENT NEILL
TELLS FARMERS’
UNIOIV MEN WHAT THEY
MUST DO. MUST NEI-
THER SURRENDER
NOR RETREAT.
Trade Day at Antelope
EVERY THIRD SATURDAY.
Anyone wanting to Buy, Sell,
Trade Horses or Mules, come
to Antelope the Third Saturday.
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New Livery & Feed Stable
On 1st West Street.
John Nichols will open the new Livery Stable on next Monday
with Good Rigs, plenty of corn, hay, oats, chops, cane and
I everything that goes to make up a first class feed stable.
| Phone in stable and at residence.
YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED.
m
JICKS60R0
for they have turned
only pay for what you
ERS,
« ,
CLEAN STATE,
TEXAS SLOCAN
DR. BRUMBY TO ENFORCE
REGULATIONS FOR
SANITATION.
It is declared that should State
Health Officer Brumby enforce the
regulations for the disinfection of pub
lie buildings be carried out, sanitary
conditions in Texas will be revolu-
tionized and Texas will be one of
the cleanest states in the union. These
regulations will become effective Sept.
1st. Dr.Brumby says he is determin-
ed that these provisions shall be car-
ried out.
During the past week the depart-
ment has sent out thousands of cop-
ies of these regulations. The depart-
ment is sending them to mayors, city
I councils, city and county health of-
id Col.
Abstract of Jack County
id Titles.
Jack Co., Texas.
fleers, sheriffs, county judges and to
Public, Im,nister8'
1 A maximum penalty of $200 is pro-
vided for a failure to comply with
these rules.
Among the places which have, been
construed as public buildings which
are to be properly disinfected are:
depots, office buildings, club houses, I comes
In his address on the occasion of
the fifth anniversary of the organi-
zation of the Farmers' Union, State
President Neill said:
There can be no doubt but that the
birth of the Farmers’ Union will in
future years be celebrated in joy and
and thanksgiving by the farmers of
America, like unto the celebration of
the day that commemorates the birth
of America’s independence. July 4th
will continue to be celebrated because
it marked the beginning of civil and
religious liberty among mankind, but
the 'birth of the- Farmers' Union will
be celebrated because It marked the
beginning of a new and glorious era
of justice, equity and the application
of the doctrine of theGolden Rule in
earth, as it will become one of the
greatest forces in spreading civil and
religious liberty than all things else,
because it will removethe vicious sys-
tem that .retards the right of men,
by giving to every man and woman
their industrial and economic free-
dom. ,
The Farmers’ Union has been be-
fore the people live years, and almost
a nation of farmers have been con-
verted to a new method of market-
ing their crops.
The chief object of the Farmers'
Union as incorporated In its charter
was to assist each other in mar-
keting and obtaining better prices for
all farm products.
Acting on this bold declaration the
Union has grappled the problem in
a business way and is pressing the
question for settlement.
We held from the very beginning
that the key to the farmers' suc-
cess was organization and education.
This done, the plan must be applied.
Farmers must be taught co-operation,
so '’as to utilize the .power and force
of the farmers.
The old vicious system of dumping
all their fine crops in a very few
months after harvest had to be aban-
doned. The new revelation of con-
trolled marketing, and minimum pri
ces, had to be taught to the farmers,
and now we have millions of farm-
ers converted to the new method.
In the beginning this great army
had to move slow. The members wer
only repuired to hold one bale in
five and even some hesitated to do
that much. Enough, however, did
hold to demonstrate the plan a suc-
cess, and since that time thousands
of new Tecrults have entered our
ranks, and this increasing strength has
renewed our courage and fidelity, and
no longer are the doubting Thomases
in our way.
We have waged the battle for prof-
itable prices, starting at 10c as the
minimum basis for cotton. We have
won victory after victory, until we
passed the 11c mark, and then on
until today 13c cotton is a fact and
15c cotton is an easy and an early
possibility.
Another advanced Btep has been ta-
ken. The State Union of Texas,
which recently convened at Fort
Worth, with the largest representa-
tive body of farmers that ever as-
sembled in the State, boldly declared
for 15c cotton.
The highest authority has spoken and
15c has been fixed as the minimum
price for the 1907 crop, and It be-
our duty to plan a vlgor-
cent of all the cotton In the world.
In order to get the splendid bene-
fits of this great army of farmers let
ns proceed to draw them up in line,
and make a charge with this mighty
army against the marauding forces of
gamblers and speculators who have
committed untold wrongs upon our
class and are yet seeking to perpet-
uate their diabolical system of organ-
ized despotism over the affairs of
the farmers.
This is a proposition of practical
co-operation and unity that will mob-
ilize the loyal farmers of our fair
Southland and rightfully enthrone
them the “kings of the world.”
The spinners are knocking at our
doors asking for agreements so as to
eliminate the common enemy of both
the farmer and the spinner—the cot-
ton speculator.
Every farmer must be given the
confidence necessary to control and a
definite knowledge that every farm-
er all over the country is holding for
the 15c price will add to that in-
creasing courage.
Let me say to you that the pros-
pects for winning 15c cotton is far
more bright and rosy than when we
first made the stand for 10c. Our
membership is educated and trained,
our organization is more complete and
reliable, our means of information is
quick and effective. In fact, every-
thing is propitious in our favor, and
we have only to act as one man to
win a decisive victory.v
You must not dash your crop on
the market at the speculator’s price.
The union is able to take care of ev-
ery distressed bale of ’cotton and ad-
vance you two-thirds of the market
value, if you need such advance.
Where local warehouse exists you
have the means at hand, but where
no local warehouse exists, then ship
your cotton to the Farmers’ Union
Cotton Company at Houston, E. A.
Calvin, manager, and he will take
care of every distressed bale of cot-
ton and see that it is held for the
minimum price.
There is no question but that early
and rapid marketing of the cotton
crop will result in injury to the farm-
ers.' We hold the situation in our
hand, and all farmers are requested
to adopt judicious marketing and the
victory will be won.
Call for Meeting Executive
Committee Texas Press
Association.
NEW RICHMOND IN
DEMOCRATIC FIELD
LEWIS 3TUYVESANT
CHANLER IS BEING
GROOMED FOR THE
PRESIDENCY.
Washington, Aug. 29.—The friends
of Lewis Stuyvesant Chanler, lieuten-
ant governor of New York, have set
out in earnest to push his candidacy
for the Democratic nomination for
the presidency. It is needless to say
that the Chanler following consists of
that element in the Democratic par-
ty that has come to believe that Bry-
an is impossible.
Newspapers and correspondents fa-
vorable to the Chanler movement have
enthusiastically seized upon the sit-
uation to say kind things about the
New Yorker, the following panegyric
being perhaps the best summing up
of the Chanler case thus far in the
movement.
“Probably no man discussed in con-
nection with the Democratic nomina-
tion invites more agreeable attention
than this young lieutenant governor
of New York, whose race against
Hughes’ ticket excited a surprise and
admiration which has net yet abat-
ed,” says one writer. “That Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler is forceful of char-
acter, strong of intellect, of careful
and sagacious political training and of
a firm hold on the hearts of a ma-
jority of the voters of New York
are no less evident by reason of his
remarkable campaign for lieutenant
governor on the Democratic ticket and J
his subsequent bearing as the discharg
er of the functions of that high sta-
tion than other attributes contribute
to the rounding out of his personal-
ity.
That Mr. Chanler has a strong hold
on the hearts of the people of his
State was amply demonstrated by his
race, when he carried New York last
fall fer the Democracy for the first
time in a decade. That he is a splen-
did specimen of wise and careful po-
litical training was shown by the
manner in which he conducted that
part of the responsibilities of the cam-
paign imposed upon him as a candi-
date, and that he can be trusted with
JACKSBORO, TEXAS, July 8th, 1907.
We wish to announce that our stock is complete in all of
the different lines that we carry and we will below mention a
few of the many articles that you may need to make life more
pleasant. The first thing we call your attention to is:
The Guerney Refrigerators—the best on the market. - -
The Frigid Ice Cream Freezers—save one-third of the cost of ice.
Charcoal Ironing Furnaces—the thing for hot weather.
Perfection Oil Stoves . make cooking a pleasure in hot weather.
Fly Pest—makes milking the cow a pleasant evening outing.
Moon Bros. Buggies—ride as pleasant as a palace car.
Charter Oak Steel Ranges—never fail to please.
An elegant line of Silver Ware—to select from.
Singer Sewing Machines—are what you are looking for. *
The Standard Sewing Machines—always please the ladies.
*
We could go on mentioning the numerous articles we |
have that you could use to a good advantage but space will
not permit, so we kindly ask you to come to our store as most I
of you are from Missouri, we can show you better than we
can tell you, and there is nothing that pleases a customer
better than to see what he buys.
We are very respectfully,
E. A. GWALTNEY & CO.
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tended the more money a man had
the more votes he was entitled to in
an election. Mr. Chanler said,‘one man,
one vote,’ and that issue won.
“The impulse that moved Chanler
then moves him now. A millionaire
himself, with hundreds of ether As-
tor millions behind him, he has al-
ways been with the under deg in the
fight.
“When he resumed the practice of
law in New York it was the poor and
lowly that he reached for. He noti-;
fled the judges In the criminal court
El Paso, Texas, Aug. 27, 1907.—To
Members of the Executive Commit-
tee of the Texas Press Association: A
meeting of the executive committee of
the Texas Press Association is here-
by called to convene in the city of
Dallas, Saturday, Sept. 7, 1907, at lb
o'clock a. m. in the auditorium of the
Dallas Commercial Club.
The special committee appointed at
our Galveston meeting to investigate convention the
that provision of the anti-pass act
■ that he would defend any one charg-
the execution of vital official trusts > ed with crime without compensation.
has been well established by his un- j q^ere are a great many unfortunates
questioned loyalty to Governor Hughes who get into the foils of the New
whose chief claims upon popular ad- | York orIglnal law who are nct reaUy
miration are due largely to the fact j gui]ty
that he has taken a courageous stand |
Since assuming the duties cf lieu-
for many of the reforms for which tenant governor, Chanler has grown
TIE GAZETTE
Mm
party had
prohibiting the exchange of advertls- :
the. great Democratic
pledged itself.
“Notwithstanding the great hulla-
balloo kept up by the President and
his political lieutenants, tending as It
does, to keep public attention focus-
ed upon the administration and the
probable outcome of the next national
feeling is gaining
ground that with a clear-headed, Vi-
jrile man at the head of the ticket,
ing space for railway transportation I and with New York and two or three
is ready to report, and it is deemed J other pivotal states lined up with the
advisable that immediate consideratioi soUd South the would have
be given this report. The executive a sl>lendid chance of wlnning the
committee alone has authority to act, presidency. That Lieutenant Govern-
or Chanler can carry New York 4s es-
I tablished, and that he could carry the
and early action is required if any
substantial benefit is to obtain, in
addition to acting on the report of
this special committee, consideration
will be given to arrangements for the I
,i
immensely in public favor. As pre-
siding officer of the senate his rul-
ings have been always fair, He has
stood by Governor Hughes in all meas
ures that tended to promote the pub-
lic welfare. When asked why he sup-
ported a Republican governor when
the governor’s own party was agains.
him, Mr. Chanler made this charac-
teristic reply: ‘The governor is try-
ing to carry out some of the re
forms we Democrats called for in our
platform. As long as the governor
advocates Democratic policies he will
have my support.’
“This actionvhas made Mr.. Chan-'
ler strong with New Yorkers.”
Is the paper that is
needed in every family
in the County, as it is
through its columns you see ail the impor-
tant local happenings, and announcements
of all kinds of educational, religious, business,
social, political affairs. Everyone, from the
farmer and business man to the base ball boy,
is interested in some department. If you are
not already a subscriber you are missing
much news of
interest to your
self and family.
I State as the nominee of the Democrat-
ic party for President there would
seem to be no doubt. It is argued
next annual meeting at Mineral Wells that the necessity of the Democrats
P. SIMPSON,
LAWYER,
Civil, BUSINESS ONLY.
JACKSBORO. TEXAS.
buildings containing moving pictures, I mm campaign in order to accomplish
opera houses, hospitals, public sanl- tfllB object.
SSS9BS!
-
an i browns
BARBER SHOP,
Next door to Post Office.
Shaving aid Hair-Catting,
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
Oriental Steam Laundry basket leaves
every Tuesday and returns Friday.
tariums, hotels, boarding houses, res-
taurants, eating houses, lunch stands,
lodging houses, and houses where
rooms are let temporarily for pay,
jails, prisons, slaughter houses, and
houses where animals are killed for
I food, meat markets and butcher shops
There is no question about the 15c
price being fair and reasonable for
the present crop. When we* consider
the Increased cost of making, and the
hazardous work the farmers have had
| to perform, the increasing value of
feedstuffs, horses and mules, and the
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SUMMER TDBRIST MIES
Chicago, Kansas City, St Lou-
is, Memphis, Denver, San
Francisco, St, Paul, Buffalo,
and to all resorts in the East,
West, North and Southeast.
LOW RITES Mill
to Jamestown Exposition. One
way via Niagara and New
York if desired.
g«s .a Sommer Resort”
sent free.
(or write
bakeries, confectioneries, manufactur- j devastated condition of the crops all
ies of food stuffs, schools, churches, j over the country and the unprecedent-
railway coaches, and sleeping care, ed demand for cotton and cotton
lumbering cami>s,ral!road construction j >?oods, there can be no doubt as to
camps, boarding cars, pleasure camps j the fairness of the union price, and
| or resorts, or so-called open air health 1* an easy possibility for the co-
resorts. I operating farmers to again win a
The breaking out of the dengue fe- victory and give the world another
ver in the State, notably at Browns- demonstration of the power of or-
viile, Laredo, and Corpus Christ! will I ganization.
| no doubt prove the necessity of dls-
I infection. Dr. Brumby Intends to
personally see that these rules and
regulations are complied with and in-
spectors will be named in the cities
and towns.
r..-.. re.-.
Yon ca
Phil A. Auer,
G. P. A.,
Fort Worth,
Texas.
The Gazette does not stop to think
I about the dry spell to add to its ca-
| pacify for giving the people of Jack
I county the best service possible, and
we hope our many subscribers and
| friends will do by the Gazette as i'
is doing by them.
The fountain of youth is work
woe to him who hesitates to plunge
{therein.
Patents
Yon can do without a number of
ether things better than you can do I
without your home paper. It is in it
that you learn of all local happen-
Xow is the |
the Gazette, a
<aper interested in the!
every home enterprise, i
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This is a time when no farmer has
any cause for fear. This is a time
when courage and fidelity should char
acterlze every union man and every
local union should be opened and
closed in a blaze of enthusiasm and
glory.
As the president of the Texas un-
ion, representing farmers that produce
almost one-third of the cotton of the
world, 1 frankly announce to you that
I have a perfect faith In the loyalty
of my brother farmers and with
firm hope in the final triumph of this
mighty movement. I present to you
a plan of united action that will give
courage and confidence to farmers ev-
erywhere.
The power and force of organiza-
tion must be used to destroy the
cowardly power that robs the farmer
[of a fair sized reward. When the
problem Is analyzed It Is not a stu-
pendous task at all. Think of a mill
Ion co-operating farmers being able to
guarantee their help to each other.
Think of the power and influence of
a million organized co-operators who
are pledged to each Other with a def-
inite obligation to stand for a prof-
itable and fair price. Now, we
have a strong organization in every
State with more than 20,000 local un-
ions and several hundred county un-
ions, and they are farmers who pro-
duce and control more than 60. yer
and to such other business as may
properly come before the committee.
This meeting is of special importance’chanlgr jn
to every newspaper publisher in the !
State. By an act of the legislature
we have been denied the right of free
contract and the imputation of brib-
ery put upon athe profession as a
whole. Contracts made In ’good faith
the beginning of the year have
been ruthlessly abrogated under pen-
alty of fine and imprisonment if ei-
ther party thereto undertook the ful-
fillment of the terms thereof. The ex-
change of values, by a simple clause
inserted in an act demanded by the
people, and which has no connection,
apparent or remote, with the body
and purpose of the act, is made a
penal offense. It rests with this com-
mittee, representing the Press Associ-
ation, to take such action as will de-
termine the validity of existing con-
tracts and test the power of a leg-
islative body to abrogate legal con-
tracts entered into prior to the en-
actment of any law prohibiting such
contracts.
Every member of the association and
all interested publishers will be wel-
come, and their suggestion and coun-
sel is solicited. The newspaper fra-
ternity of the State is confronted
with a condition of no small import,
and concert of action is necessary if
we are to preserve, undisturbed by
further legislative interference, the
rights of an untrammeled press. Al-
ready we have been threatened with
other burdensome and hostile legisla-
tion, until the issue is about joined
between the rule and the people and
that of machine politics and ma-
chine-made politicians.
The attendance of a full committee
is urged, and a large number of
the membership. Write me at El
Paso Immediately if you will attend.
W. J. Buie, President
Texas Press Associ'n.
Attest;.
T. B. Lusk, Secretary.
DESPISED FREIGHT CARS
What.is called luck or fortune
only the gift^f recognizing when our
hour strikes, of not taking the hand
from the plow untt! the Angelus
sounds. \
carrying New York in order to win
next year and the popularity of Mr.
that State conspire to
give him the lead over all other can-
didates before the nominating conven-
tion.
“It is conceded that Mr. Chanler
could unite the now estranged ac-
tions of New York Democracy and line
the boys up for a typical old time
Empire State Democratic victory.
Even William R. Hearst and his fol-
lowers would give him earnest sup-
port. The cry is often made that so-
and so would make a good race for
President if he had the money to meet
the fundamental requirements of a
national campaign and would not be
heard of if the' choice of the con-
vention fell upon Mr. Chanler. He is
what is generally termed ‘big rich’
is without any of the vices that so
often are the career of men of money
distinction. He is as modest in the
use of his wealth as he is unaffected
by the consciousness of the gentleman
ly blood that warms his heart. Be-
cause he is a scion of the famous As-
tor and Stuyvesant families, being a
great-grandson of the original John
Jacob Astor, no more stiffens his neck
in his relations to his fellow man
than the millions behind him is al-
lowed to manifest itself in course of
vulgar dei>ortment.
“The inheritor of a Vast fortune,
Mr. Chanler, instead of a life of non-
activity early dedicated his efforts and
his wealth to objects worthy the aims
of lofty ambition and his splendid rec-
ord both as a lawyer and a public
official attest in the highest degree
the measure of his success. Educat-
ed in the public schools of New York,
Mr. Chanler graduated from the Co-
lumbia law school at the age of 21
and being too young to enter active
practice he was sent to the Cambridge
university, England, where he took an
advanced course in international law.
While at Cambridge he was elect-
ed president of the Cambridge union,
the great liolltical institution of the
university—an honor never before or
since conferred upon an American.
“In the contest he took up the fight
for the liberals, who were trying to
elect Sir George Newels to (>arlia-
meut. Chanler gave the liberals the
Issue that made them successful in
that campaign in the rallying cry
Backbone of the Whole Rail-
road Business.
Send the Gazette to your friend in
some other state aind let that tuduce j ‘This is a battle of man against inon-
This is a story about freight' cars
—box cafs, flat cars, plain, ordinary,
every day freight cars. It is the
freight car that makes the Pullman
possible. It was the freight car that
last year earned fifty-five milliccs of
dollars for the New York Central,
as against an earning of twenty-eight
millions to the credit of the passenger
car. It was the freight car that last
year earned one hundred and ten mill-
ions for the stockholders of the Penn-
sylvania, as against an earning by the
passenger car of thirty-one millions.
And it is because the homely freight
car means so much to the big sys-
tems that a new rule has gone into
effect whereby a railroad that holds
the freight cars of another will have
to pay a penalty of 50 cents a day
for every day it does so, instead of
$1 a day after the first thirty, as here
tofore.
The new rule is like an improved
time lock on a big safe. It discour-
ages the car thief. The rule forces
him to the conclusion that It is cheap-
er to play square than to tinker with
time locks. This story of the confis-
cated freight car belongs to no par-
ticular place or class. It coneefns
steel in San Francisco, tlse box car
the flat car loaded with structural
rushing across the continent with or-
anges for New York, the empty gon-
dola on a wharf in Boston. There is
hardly a person that does not enter
into the story in some way or anoth-
er. The sufferers are nct confined to
the big contractors putting up sky-
scrapers in lower Manhattan or the
Southern mill master who sees his fab-
rics lying idle in his warehouses because
he can not obtain cars £q bring them to
market, The burden falls as well on
the owner of a Newport villa who can
not open his ballroom because the dec-
orations have been delayed in transit
and the new arrivals in the Bronx git*
ting miserably in an unfurnished flat
because their household goods are de-
layed somewhere between New- York
and their old home in Chicago.
Railroad men do not like the term
“car thief,” As they saw it, one rail
road may take the freight cars of
another and use them for an in-
definite time. As they put It, the oars
are absorbed," or ‘'detained,''
have been spent in devising rules to
end the abuses and cause the pulses
of traffic to beat more steadily. There
are penalties, demands, elaborate
methods of detecting delinquents, and
anally the boycott that spells ruin
to the offender—therein lies the ro-
mance of the stolen car.
To fully comprehend the significance
of the stolen freight car it is only
necessary to picture the ebb and flow
of traffic through the country day by
day. A New Yorker takes a fast ex-
press train at Grand Central Station
for Chicago. He passes scores of
freight trains unheeded. It is all so
much a matter of course that he can
not realize that the locomotive that
draws him and the grimy, snorting
engine which pulls the freight trains
travel, on an average, 33,400 miles in
a year. In ether words, if the engine
could go straight ahead, it would jour-
ney around the world and retrace
the journey nearly half way back in
365 days. Every mile he travels
means at least a quarter dollar spent
in the engine cab. Every fifteen miles
covered means a ton of coal burned.
Rushing forward in his luxurious
Pullman, the New Yorker believes
that the railroad's passenger traffic is
the only part of the road that is
worth while. As a matter of fact,
the freight and passenger trains are
acting over again the old fable of
the tortoise and the hare. The slow-
moving freight takes a siding to let
limited express pass. The freight
train only makes the passenger’s
speed possible. Freightless, and with
only the passenger traffic to depend
on, there is hardly a railroad in the
country that would not quickly go to
a bankruptcy court within a year.
1
AT THE
j
GAZETTE OFFICE
We are prepared to do, on
short notice,
Real Estate Folders
School Announcements
Type-Written Letters
Bill-Heads,
Letter-Heads,
Statements
Envelopes
Posters
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BEAUTIFUL
PICTURE FREE
Farm Progress, a big monthly ag-
ricultural paper, devoted to the in-
terests cf the American farmer, his
home and industries, is giving away
free with 1 every three-year subscrip-
tion a beautiful fruit picture, size
22x29 inches, entitled “NaturalFrpits.
This is a beautiful picture, in six
colors, and makes a handsome din-
ing-room ornament. Send 30 cents for
a thrc-e-year subscription or three one-
yc-ar subscriptions teday. Address all
orders to Farm Progress, St. Louis
Mo,
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MAGAZINE
READERS
The largest cave in the world Is the
Mammoth Gave cf Kentucky. Its
length is ten miles, though to ex-
plore its avenues, grottoes, galleries,
domes, rivers and cataracts would en-
tail q journey of 150 miles.
SUNSET MA6AZ1RS
beautihtlly illnmmad, good atones
•ltd interest mg arttcWt about
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a monthly publication coBtcining
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photographs and pictures.
ROAD OF A THOUSAND
a book of 75 pages, i
picturesque spots m California
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$1.50
$0.75
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Jacksboro Gazette. (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 5, 1907, newspaper, September 5, 1907; Jacksboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth729600/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Gladys Johnson Ritchie Library.