Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 10, No. 262, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 27, 1912 Page: 4 of 8
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PALESTINE DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1912.
Palestine Daily Herald
entered la the Palestine, (Tax.) Post'
office as Second-Class Mail Matter.
Published Every Afternoon—Sunday
Excepted.
W. M. and H. V. HAMILTON
Editors and Proprietors.
Telephone 4-4-4
“The Hamilton Boys, You Know/
Subscription, 15 Cents the Week—By
the Year, $6.00.
NOTICE T% THE PUBLIC.
Any erroneous reflection upon the
eharacter, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation which
may appear in the columns of The
Herald will be gladly corrected upon
It being brov^ht to the attention of
the publishers*
she be given that more respectful
hearing which loyalty to the democ-
racy deserves at hie hands of every
delegate here.
“The progress of human govern-
ment. like the cou-se of nature, does
not move in a steady stream, but by
impulses. The blood does not course
through the veins in a constant flow,
but by heart-beats. The tides out
yonder rise and fall. Night comes af-
ter day and men sleep, but awake
again. When Jefferson was elected
president it was a new blow struck
for the freedom of thought, the free-
dom of speech and the freedom of
religion. The rugged figure of An-
j drew Jackson stood for the supre-
macy of the law and the majestic
constitution. The gaunt form and
pathetic face of Abraham Lincoln
speak the downfall of human slavery
and perpetuity of the republic.
“Tariff oppression called to leader-
ship the gerat patriot Grover Cleve-
land, the swelling tide of trust crea-
tion and the riot of ill-gotten wealth
| arouesd a voice from Nebraska s
| plains and Bryan led a revolution in
thought as lasting as the republic it-
self.
“The tide is coming in again. It
is the high tide of democracy. Its
roar was heard in the election of
1910 which restored to us the house
of congress and would have redeem-
ed the senate. It is the cry of res-
toration to the path of democratic
| equality.
“It is the cry of toiling millions
not to be robbed of the work of their
,, , . +VlQ i own hands, the cry of the American
1696—William Pepperrell, wno led the . . .. .. ,
expedition against LouisOurg consumer against the theft of repub
in 1745 and was the first |««“ •»"«»• ot r,ase af ^
. ^ „ the shameless purchase of seats of
American to be created a,
power for privilege, the sullen roar
THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1912.
•% ♦ •> •> •> ♦> »:♦ •> ❖ <• •> ❖
WEATHER FORECAST.
♦ For Palestine and vicinity: ♦>
❖ Tonight and Friday, incre<. ring ♦>
❖ cloudiness. *>
• ♦
JUNE 27 IN HISTORY-
baronet of Great Britain, born
in Kittery, Maine. Died there,
July 6, 1759.
1778—Congress, which had been in
session for nine months at
York, Pa., adjourned.
1794—Prince Kaunitz, the famous
chancellor of Maria Theresa of
Austria, died. Born in 1711.
1843—Great celebration in Charles-
town, Mass., to mark the com-
pletion of the Bunker Hill
rmonument.
1852—Lemuel H. Arnold, governor of
Rhode Island 1831-3. died in
Kingston, R. I. Born in St.
Johnsbury, Vt., Jan. 29, 1792.
1862— Gen. Thomas Williams began
to cut a' . canal across the
peninsula opposite Vicksburg,
to change the course of the
river.
1863— Kingston, 13 miles from Harris-
burg, entered by the advance
of the Confederate forces un-
der Gen. Ewell.
•1876—Harriet Martineau. noted his-
torian, died. Born June 12,
1802.
1911—Joseph. Caillaux became prime
minister^of France.
of the people that government is be-
ing wrested from their hands to be-
come the instruemnt of their oppres-
sion. We must not loiter on the
snore, but boldly put our ship out to
sea and that of the republican party
be lost in the scream of the weltering
tempest of a nation's just rebuke.
“This contest here is not one be-
tween men. I do not stop to in-
quire who brought on the clash,
wether it was Mr. Bryan by interfer-
ing when he ought to have been si-
lent or whether it was the act of the
committee in forcing upon the con-
vention one who in the eyes of the
people is conspicuously reactionary.
This is one thing I know, and that
is enough, the fight is on, and it is
a fight with Bryan on one side and
Wall street on the other.”
there was a litlte matter of costs:
each of the captors were entitled to
$1.50 in witness fees—$45 for each
man to compensate for the dangers
and discomfort of a night spent riding
ii rd on a bunch of Mexican navvies.
The prisoners agreed to everything
“Si, senor,” they vociferated. But
they had no money; not a dollar of
the Americanos did they possess. The
resourceful Mr. Parker came again to
the rescue. Work on the Cleburne
line could not go on with the work-
men in durance. Representations
were made to the Stone-Webster com-
pany and the money was advanced to
the men, turned over to the court and
justice was altogether appeased—also
her officers. The men were leaded
on a work train and transported
back to the scene of their labors
and there will be much quarreling as
to which thirty was guilty and which
fifty-nine innocent, and therefore not
liable to settle with the paymaster.”
Compromising justice to get thirty '
men to plead guilty that fees and ;
fines might be collected does net en- j
courage one to think, that courts are j
firmly entrenched behind the Golden |
Rule.
The question arises: If there were j
no fees in sight would the officers \
spend their valuable time herding
nearly a hundred "Mexicans to jail? j
When a petty offender enters some j
justice courts his fear and trembling ;
is not caused by the probable amount |
of the fine but the size of the fees.
CTze^
Onlooker
W1LDVR D..NESBIT
--------= »
Tbulktbtf
And what has become of one
Joseph Weldon Bailey? He certain-
ly is laying low.
East Texas is attracting attention
now because the news has gone out
that we have the best crops in the
state. And our fruit and truck crop
is coming big.
William Jennings Bryan continues
to be the central figure in the Balti-
more convention. Bryan is one great
man who always seems able to
“come back.”
m
of
m
m
Kfjf?
as?
c'Hf
cc 7
Help to make Palestine a better
town, better physically and morally.
One way is to clean up your premises
and keep them clean. Another way
is to stand for those things that make
a better citizenship.
“FEEING” THE PETTY OFFENDER.
CONE JOHNSON AT BALTIMORE.
The Herald ha# been telljng its
readers that Cone Johnson would al-
ways be heard from when he shows
his head in defense of a principle. As
the head of the Texas delegation at
Tarrant county officers broke into
a gang of nearly a hundred Mexicans
employed as interurban track laborers
last Saturday and arrested them on
i the charge of gaming. The Mexicans
■ were in the country at the time and
;the nearest house was 200 yards
away, it is said. The officers, Satur-
day afternoon’s job netted them a
neat sum. The Fort Worth Record
gives the following account of the
affair:
“Yesterday morning the wheels of
justice were oiled up and put in "mo-
the Baltimore convention he made- tiop. It being obviously impossible to
the hit of the first day's proceedings,
in the following speech. Read it. and
see if you do not agree that it is a
master piece in few words:
“The forty delegates from Texas
(demonstrate individually who of the
greasy mob was guilty and who not
guilty, a compromise was effected and j
Some people's ideas of political
peace is to let the interests walk off
with the country or have their own
rotten way. But there are more peo-
ple waking up every day, and "^ten
men get to thinking this “peace” talk ]
rot fades away.
If you read .yesterday’s Herald you
got all of the news of the big con-
vention that was really news twelve
hours ahead of the time when the
state papers brought it to you. The
Herald is ir member of the Associated
Press, and that is. the greatest news
gathering agency in the world.
Bryan, in all probability will*not be
the deomcratic nominee for persident.
but he is going to hav'e a great deal
to say about the man who does get ! Lullaby— Lullaby— low.
Lullaby, lullaby—dear little eyes
Close, for the Sand Man Is going his
round:
Cuddle your cheek on my breast where It
lies.
This is the Kingdom of Sleep we have
found.
Soft little hands that are weary of play.
Tired little feet, you have earned all
your rest—
Here Is the Land of the End of the Day;
It Is the sweetest and gladdest and best.
| * ,
Lullaby, lullaby, soft and low:
This Is the. song that the fairy horns
blow;
Dreamily, dreamily— faintly—they—play
Out—of—the—Land—of—the—End-*of—the—
Day.
justice satisfied—or. at least. con-1
tbe nomination. If the Herald fras
to risk a prophesy yi the premises it
would say .the convention will nomi-
nate a progressive, since the Bryan
wing of the party- can absolutely
tented. Mr. Parker was eloquent and '
block the effort to no;
represent. twenty democratic con- taetive, justice was outraged and ob-
gressmen and senators at Washing- durate. Justice would accept a pie^
ton and twenty electoral voter for of guilty -from thirty of the prison-1
the democratic nominee for the pres- ers. Which thirty? What matter? I
Idency. All that Texas asks Is that Thirty times $20 would he $600. Al<o I
ite any oth-
er kind of candidate, and the Wa 1
street element will hardly wreck the
j convention in. its effort to prevent the
nomination of a progresisve.
a
RiC
THEATRE
ON MAIN STREE1
(With the White Front)
TONIGHT
4-REELS -4
We Give Coupons for the J. D, Smullen & Co. Auto Contest
ThK MOST THRILLING DETECTIVE
PICTURE EVER 5HOWN
Nick Cart
The Great Detective, solves th, $100,000 Jewel
Hystery. 3200 Feet of Film. 3 Full Reels.
ALSO THAT ESSANAY WESTERN
“AT THE END OF THE TRAIL”
Matinees daily 3:30 to 5:30, 5c to Ever; Jy.
Prices Tonight: Adults 15c, Children 10c
Where
(coffee
*
The Panama Hat.
The panama hat is a thin straw af-
fair. with an inherited propensity to
blow off the head and go Careening
down street.,
It never blows off until it can pick
out a nice, muddy stretch of a hun-
dred yards. It can do a hundred yards
in ten secondsfflat. going through both
mud and water, and making all neces-
sary turns to cover at least eighty per
cent, of the possible mud puddles.
The panama is so called because the
United States is digging a canal across
the isthmus, and so many eminent
statesmen utilized their hats for era-
torical purposes before the canal was
decided upon.
The panama ranges in price from
*$1.85 to a king’s ransom. All panamas
marked $1.85 are solemnly guaranteed
to be the genuine.
The panama comes in-a variety of
shapes, and assumes as many more be-
fore the season is over. When rained
upon it is not damaged in tl^e least,
according to the genial salespeople. It
j is not damaged. It is onlv given a de-
gree of elasticity unsus^E^ri] ic any
vegetable fiber. When worn in the
rain for half an hour it grows large
enough to furnish material for eight
or nine^hats and also lapses into a
mournful, heartbroken, pessimistic ap-
jiearance, as though it had lost its best
friend after lending it five dollars.
The panama is easily cleaned at
home, when it acquires a beautifully
streaked look, and curls its brim into
more flutings and scallops that there
are on an old-fashioned porch cornice.
Housework Drudgery!
Housework is drudgery for the weak woman. St.e brushes, dusts and scrub*, Of
is on her feet all day attending to the many details of the household, her back ach-
ing, her temples throbbing, nerves quivering under the stress of pain, possibly dizzy
feelings. Sometimes rest in bed is not refreshing, because the poor tired nerves dA
not permit of refreshing sleep. The real need of weak, nervous women is ^atisfiev
by Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, and as Mrs. Piriggs and others testify:
It Makes Weak Women Strong: and Sick Women Well.
This “ Prescription ” removes the cause of women's weaknesses,
heals inflammation and ulceration. It tranquiiizes the nerves,
encourages the appetite and induces restful sleep.
Dr. Pierce is perfectly willing tc let every one know what
his ** Favorite Prescription " contains, a complete list of in-
gredients on the bottle-wrapper. Do not let any druggist
persuade you that his unknown composition is “ just os geod”
in order that he may make a bigger profit.
Mrs. Brazill Briggs, of 529 N. Washington St.. Delphos, .
Ohio, writes: “Having taken your ‘Favorite Prescription,
for & bad case of intestinal disease and constipation with
woman’s ills, for which I was almost unable to do any-
thing, I think I am safe in saying that there are no remedies
in the world like Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and
‘ Purifying Lotion Tablets.* Iam
j i j/ health, and thank Dr. Pierce for
x which have done me a world of good.’-
mm Briggs. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Peilets regulate liver and bowels.
avorite rrescripuun auu
now enjoying the best of
his wonderful medicines
WHY
SWELTER'
%
Lullaby, lullaby, dreamily low;
Novy come the shadows that drowsily
creep
Up from the sunset, and sway to and fro
While we are drifting away into sleep.
Pigeons are cooing high up in the mow,
Wee little lambs have come down from
tfle hill—
Baby must journey to Sleepytown now
For all the world has grown peacefully
still.
Lullaby, lullaby, soft and low.
That Is the way that the dream fairies go;
Hither and thither and here
With wonderful dreams for the sleep of
my dear.
Lullaby, lullaby, low.
See all the lanterns alight In the sky.
Hung for the Sand Man to show him his
way;
He w-ill come back from his task by-and-
by—
Puff out the lanterns, and it will be day.
Pussy has curled In a ball on the hearth,
Towser has found him a bed on the
floor—
Listen, the Sand Maan tiptoes through
the earth!
I hear him saying “Goodnight” at the
door.
Lullaby, lullaby, soft and low;
O, the dream fairies, they glimmer and
glow.
Silently, silently, hither they wing.
Laden with little-folk’s dreams they must
bring.
Lullaby, lullaby, low.
€©©L €©L01AP©\
affords numerous pleasant hotel,ranch, camping
and fishing resorts which may be enjoyed at moder-
ate expense, and the undersigned will gladly supply, free
of charge, such illustrated and detailed information
regarding them as will greatly assist in decid-
ing your point of
VACATION
The Great Colorado Chautauqua,
at Boulder, opens July 4th. with
an exceptionally strong
SIX WEEKS PROGARMME
Palace Electric Lighted Sleepers between Galveston, Houston, San Antonio,
Austin, Waco, New Orleans, Dallas, Fort Worth—and—Trinidad, Pueblo, Col-
orado Springs and Denver.
For low rates, sleeper reservations and special information call on Ticket
Agents of the Trinity <St Brazos Valley, the Mo., Kans. dc Texas, or the Texas
dc Pacific Rys., or address :
*A. A. GLISS0N, G. P. A., “The Denver Road” Fort Worth, Teras
Hi
TO THE FRIENDS AND SUP-
PORTERS OF JUDGE RAMSEY.
There will be a meeting of Judge
Ramsey’s friends at Houston July
2nd, and at Dallas on July 6th. All
friends and supporters of Judge Ram-
sey are urgently requested to attend
one of these meetings. It is impor-
tant to have as many of his friends
as possible attend these meetings.
Jno. R. Moore,
Chairman, Anderson Gountv Ramsey
Campaign Committee.
HARRY K. THAW.
E=Z Dye
for home use
Is most convenient for the housewife.
It is put up in tubes, making It econom-
ical, and cleanly. Use only the amount
required, save the rest ^
The Only Cold Water Dye
No toiling or boiling with E-Z Dye.
Simply dissolve it In water, dip the
garment, rinse and the work Is done.
No steam and odors, no staining of the
hands or vessel. You can dye your rib-
bons and laces with E-Z Dye In five
minutes' time.
One Dye for all Fabric#
Do not rip a dress or suit apart to dye
the pieces separately. E-Z Dye Is guar-
anteed to dye wool, silk, cotton and
mixed goods with equal success and per-
manency. This makes It a time, labor
and money saver; a purchase of Jnst
one tube, one dipping In the one bath.
For Home Art Work
E-Z Dye is uaequaled. Stenciling with
it may be learned in a few minutes
time by any novice. Public schools
everywhere endorse E-Z Dye for water
color painting, wood and tilo staining
as well. See our display of E-Z Dye
stenciled goods.
. Get a tube of E-Z Dye today. With It
you can equal the best work of the
professional dyers. The best results are
guaranteed,
J. D Smull&n &. Co.
The Cartercar Co.
desirable territory
agents, and solicits
Harry K. Thaw Is making another
attempt to regain his freedom through
proceedings to determine hit sanity or
insanity.
has considerable
• pen for reliable
correspondence with parties interested
in securing the ager.cv for this well
kr.ovin Automobile. We have the best
pio; • sit ion on the market at this time
to offer.
We are delivering several carloads
eekly noft and the territory is being
tied up very rapidly. Don’t delay.
Write at once
*
Cartercar Sales Agency
of Texas
Port Worth, Texas
Read the many ads containing
bargains in today's Herald,
THE HOME OF INDEPEND-
ENT MOTION PICTURES.....
TONIGHT, JUNE 27
IMP KEEI-S
— I “WOMAN ALWAYS PAYS”
Askit—So Kwarrell and his wife wilif i«i ■ ■« i 1 ■ v ■ flaw
have been reunited. How was it j With ASTA NIELSON, the greatest Motion Picture actress in the
world playing lead.
brought about?
Tellit—Pensil, the artist, drew them
together.
NESTOR
“There’s
WMM'
■« *• treason';*';.
A Give-Aw.ay.
Teacher- IRw many pounds In a
on of onal ?
Anri Tbracite fwhose father sells
coall— It ail depends or, ike weight* of
the driver.
DRAW A
“tier Indian Hero’
Dorothy Davenport playing lead.
DOUBLE AUTO COUPONS TODAY
Matinees Every Afternoon 3 to 5:30. Admission Tonight: Children
3 to 12, 5c; Adults 10c. Doors open 7:15 for tonight’s shows
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Hamilton, W. M. & Hamilton, H. V. Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 10, No. 262, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 27, 1912, newspaper, June 27, 1912; Palestine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth991705/m1/4/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Palestine Public Library.