The Fort Worth Record and Register (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 352, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 2, 1906 Page: 6 of 12
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:0ockaiia ♦
Bl
PLAIN TRUTH ABOUT BAILEY.
$
ey and in-
speclal engagement tar • speclal
When a charge
to* accused to aoguitted oQull blame
the standers which malice has Anvented,
B
D
eatherford Herald.
unanimous
Independent of the Standard
for Pierce and
2. That he became the attorney
railroad case.
Standata Oil interests in the Tennessee
s
.$1.00
«4
to believe that opportunity will not come again 16 he
Well, this morn In’ I seen her a-comi
of accommodation; that he never
Pierce, was an act
letter from Mr.
t
U
. 1036
svorced frm the Stanlard, anl that
)
the public mind, and they
enhance his standing in
known and under.
is repeated in T
SUGAR CONSUMPTION.
I
which some enterprising dealer will present for the
The secret
the time to protect them is before they
perform, and
There is a mistaken idea that
have all been killed.
Romance in Old China.
more than 70 per cent of the raw si
-
2
pounds.
care until more positive figures
find an excuse for raising the price of sugar, and it
-probable that any serious results will follow.
Howara Gould's sister-in-law has married a China-
In other words. Miss Ella
“Absent treatment.”
Fhock Yue.
i
4
President
Funston is the man wh
-
allow Taft to.be the
Palma seems to be content to
argument of the
%
the Trgest courthouse in the
• \
That bluff ought
I
N
A
V
-sr
A
railway rate bill: he wrote tl
railroads front haulng their
this affair.
pose or any
.1 W
. :75
L
f
I
1
0
1
1
1
will have that effect when they are 1
stood as he is making them known
and speeches.
tampering with trifles.
J. M. LEWIS. IN HOUSTON POST.
the fact that General Fred
captured • Agufnaldo.
azatnst a publie servamnt talis, the *r«W is *UU hed
accountabie tor the alleged crime. That seemis to be
the phllosophy ot the accusers of Senator Bailey.
ruling spirit In Cuba without any
question.
organized company was
OU company.
Winston Churchill was not. elected in New HamP-
■hire, but he secured a powerful line of free ad ver-
tising for his books. — ....
is. It is a well established fact that
any country do more good for the
al
ci
l
ei
u
b
ft
li
P
The balancing lassie and lad.
The scrape of the bow and the singing.
And all the world happy and glad.
. 7.50
Clemmons is now Mrs. Sun Tut but the Goulds per-
haps think a more appropriate name would be Mrs
Iving for Today.
There are many who seek to unriddle
the sphinx has concealed,
Friends No More.
"Do you believe that disease germs are
flowers ths* day? '
How she said she hoped she'd see us
as she druv away!
A Clean Rreast of I*.
Stensland took the cash away
And in Tangier he hid it;
And when the detectives caught him h
Confessed that Hering did it.
So let the sphinx hang to her riddle.
Or others go ponder the rune,
It's Ine for the scratch of the fiddle
And the world swinging round to a tune’,
It's me for the clasping and swinging"
Bridal Lore.
A January bride will be a prudent housekeeper
But give me a mellow old fiddle.
And if it is never revealed
I don't care. a darn. I'll be toeing
It off to the scratch of the bow;
OW. the days of the autumn are going.
Let's play ’em a tune as they go.
Let's. arms round the girls, go- a-swinging.
With hearts beating glad to a lune •
That the fiddles are screeching and singing,
Or, out ‘neath the light of the moon,
Go walking with some one beside us.
As glad as the season is glad:
When we're old then whatever betide us
Can't steabths good times we have had.
There's Mary, and Nellie, and "Mollie.
And Betsy. and Jennie, and Sue;
Oh, never a note melancholy
The lilt of the music comes through!
There's laughing and talking and sighing,
There’s teasing and chaffing and fun.
And calling across and replying; *
From sunset until the new sun.
with Brazilian 01a-
the wild birds ot -----
farmer than they do harm. and it is a mjehty penuri-
The cornerstone to
are obtainable.
w orid has KBeen laid in Chicago,
to work. » _
t — =-------—
production and the only concern now will be about
the prices to be paid for the products of the farm In
again, an* smiled
in:-dack, an’ Jim*
‘Ugac purchased in
‛Kr we Imported
- Buffalo hotel men complain of the great task In
cleaning up the hotels after the Democratic oonven-
tionithat’city. The Republicans, on the other band,
are boastg of the cleaning up they propose to make
way of antiques.__-
One of the romanTIccases in the history of China
sales was that of two old English women whose
china was Sold with some other effects at a well
known London auction house. It was described in
the catalogue as “some odd pieces of china, the prop-
erty of two aged ladles in Warwickshire. It had
come into their ppssession in some unaccountable way
and they had sent it to the auction rooms in hopes
that it would bring as much as 175 or $100, a sum
that in their poverty would have seemed -mothins
much liked.
An October bride will be pretty, coquettish, loving.^
but Jealous. " ...... . .
A November bride will be liberal, kind, but of a
wild disposition.
A December bride will be well proportioned, fone
of novelty, entertaining, but extravagant.
HardlyeEvet.
The band that rocks the cradle,
ft may rule the world, alack;
not can it close a shirtwaist
That,buttons up the back?
•r—
Bet Spain is mighty happy to think she got that
$20,000,000 in good American gold. .
Tariff revision doesn't seem to put implicit confi-
dence in its Republican friends.
man in San Franeisco.
==============
tofment from
himself for
order to secure a supply from Europe and the West . of agrculture for September, which have just been
Indies to make up the Cuba deficiency. published. The summary shows a slight decrease in
Cuba furnishes the United States refineries with I the original. estimate of the yield of spring wheat, but
: not enough to make any appreciable difference in |
---- ----------- . _ the general proportions of the bumper crops of all
from foreign countries 3,979,331,430 pounds of sugar. j other kinds of grains. With good weather It points
in this calculation the Philippines are classed as a for- I to an unparalleled com crop and to a record crop of
eign source, because there is a customs duty on all baries.’more than average crops of oats and potatoes
sugar brought into the United States from those ana a yield of cotton second to the crop in only one
islands. Practically all of this sugar is unrefined, be- . other year, r is certainly hard to see how the country
Ing classed under No. 16, Dutch standard of color, coula have been more favored as regards agricultural
to accept a fee; m.ally that Attorney. General Suith
gave the secretary, of state the same advice that Sen-
ous soul that will begrudge them the little that they
cost in the way of damage to grain and other growing
crops. They pay for themselves time over time in
the work of destroying insects which they constantly
Whea a charge against a criminal falls of proof.
This case is given because its standard of living is
in a class supposed to be comparatively high, and it
"Nobody Keers."
Hev,yer sold any matches. Billy? I guess it's no use
4 ter try—
The folks is a-hurryin’ home, yer see, an' atnct gol
no tme ter buy.
Four cents to all I’ve made today, an* I owe Jim one
o those.
Did I tell yer the bet I,had with Jim? Why, by now
the whole gang knows.
Ter know the beautiful lady, Billy, Wat give us the
foreign countries. In the last fiscal
TD MCOBO ox SALE. ... __
The Record can be found at news stands and hotel rend-
Thore is a good deal of foolishness displayed in the
alleged actions relative to the behavior of oppor-
tunity. It is true, probably, that if opportunity comes
to a man's house and fails to get a response to her
knock at the door she will not go to the corner saloon
to hunt him up, but if the fellow is away .from home
knew Pierce until he came with a
3: Or, if he did not. he accepted empl
corporations and thereby disqualified
the only good the wild bireof the country do is to
afford sport for men who revel in te practice of go-
ing out and killing them for tie mere love St putting
something to death—killing. Not one man in a hun-
dred has any need of killing quail or any other kind
of wild birds, and the quicker the laws of the state
are so framed as to curb his propensities in this di-
rection the better it will be for the man himself and
for the farmers and gardeners of the state.
Of these importations from all sources, Cuba furnishes
2,781.301. .380 pounds, at a value of 360.000.000. The
such as the Gibbs ranch libel, the charges are re-
dueed tu thane:
1. That he was the instrument of the readmtsslon
at the Waters-Pierce OU company lute Texas and
deceived the state in the representation that the re
A movement la on foot to protect quail in Texas.
Theodore Rufner of Houston, an ardent sportsman.
In yesterday’s Fort Worth Record says: "I shall en-
deavor to get passed at the next legislature a measure
prescribing a penalty for killing quail in Texas for
two years, and shall also endeavor to secure the pass-
--of another measure prescribing a rigid punishment
short of a winafall. c
But this china proved more valuable than they had
anticipated in their wildest dreams. Bids mounted
higher and higher until it was firaly knocked down
for $3,600, a sum that enabled them women to spend
their last days in comfort.
At an auction sale in the country a flower pot and
bowl, the latter of which had been used as a feeding »
bowl for a pet dog, were knocked down for 18 cents
and afterward sold by the fortunate bidder for 340*.
Not long ago a Sevres vase, an exquisite thing of
white and blue and gold. with a panel on which a-
Louis XV shepherdess, all flowers and embroidery,
smiled coquettishly on a handsome young shepherd,
was run up in a very few minutes to the fabulous
price of 320.000, a sunt sufficient for a permanent in-
come for a snial family that is not too ambitious,
while a Chinese vase, seventeen Inches high, with
green bamboo branches, blushing peonies and siivez
pheasants on a background of black enamel, was Con-
sidered a great bargain at 312,000. More remarkable
still is another vase, sold for 330,000, that had been
■ originally purchased by a dealer for 31.00.
Dutch West Indies stand second in importance, and :
..750.000.000 theLnitedStates.
practical illustration of'how the little and despisedtries be felt by the western nations if Japan
weakling, Spain, buncoed the United States and turned should continue to enlarge her circle of trade activities.
• over to Uncle Sam for the small consideration of * -----r— 1 ----
. $20,000,000 enough trouble to last him for the next ; San Juan. Porto Rico, has just felt a severe earth-
two or three hundred years, and now cpmes the sugar quake shock.' But it was probably only Secretary
trust and begins to boost the price of that very nec- , Taft putting his foot down on Cuba,
essary commodity on account of the effect the recent —-------------—■- 1 ~
The Collector.
There is probably more romance connected With
the history of old china than of anything else in the
Palma appears to.be not unmindful of
growers of the South have
you -
' ; on the market may well have I .
Bailey's personal friend, D. R- Francis. that Pierce
Secretary Loeb is about the only one left who I*
unutterably opposea to a third term for Rposevelt
----------------
New York highbinders surely give- sufficient evi-
dence that they know how the game should be played.
The Long-Suffering.
"Lmeolnzmouseznatonivonderturdeltetinthe .
patience of your neighbors.^ s"tznnettmoyou win ever have to buy one-
Time to Go. Mount Pleasant Eagle. .
••When my wife has a fit of temper I db not get
angry; I regard bad tempo/ as a
"But what treatment do you give it7
to rest ... _ _
If a woman finds difficulty in getting to sleep.,
warm bath just before turning in is quieting to the
nerves. And I know of no better remedy for sleep-
lessness than to sip—not drink—a glass of warm
milk. T . ...
Never go hungry to bed. for It is not only a bad
thing fof the health, but often is so annoying that
sleep is next to impossible, and when it does 99202
is not refreshing, because the desire for food makes
the Individual restlese. As tgshe dishes eaten be-
fore retiring, they should be othe llght-t-cracker?
and milk or a cereal and milk, but never salade,
meats, vegetables, cake, coffee, etc., for that is too
much of a tax oh the organs of digestion.
raising of the price of some commodity or other. The___ .______
country has Just at present been engrossed with the shows how Japanese competition with western indus-
he provision prohibiting
Iwn products, which in
effect requires railroads to part with coal mines.
Stensland will learn to make brushes in the Joliet
penftenttary. It they sweep as clean as he NWpt the
~ Chicago bank the squad guard should be satisfied.
THE CROP RETURNS.
The seal of confirmation is set on the reports that
the year 1906 will be the record-breaker in the out-
turn of the harvests by the reports of the department
stand,
in Chicago: At the Palmer House news stand and at
the Great Northern Hotel news stand.
In Hot Springs, Ark . At the C. H. Weaver CompanY
news stand, .. .. _ .
In Denver, Colo.: At Kendrick Book and Stationery Co. 8
anTat 1. Weinsteins.
In Atlanta. Qa : At the Piedmont Hotel
.st, Louis, Mo.: At the Southern Hotel news stand
andJnion Depot news stand. . .
In Salt Lake City, Utah: At Mrs. L. Lavin's news stand.
In Oakland, Cal.: At N W. Weatiey's news stand.
of Mr. Bailey's abilities as a lawyer. The complete an-
"uprising" in Cuba has had bn the crop. The re-
finers fear that the shipments for Cuba may be cur-
tailed, they say, and under these circumstances a
higher price would have to be paid for raw sugar ’n
.57 sepresentea to Bailey, a* he made affidavit to the
state, that his reorganized company was absolutely
Huencea by hl* employment In this case he had a „a.on
fine opportunity to render hl. client. . valuable legts- pn errand, of duty or of mercy, there 15 no. reran
the general markets.
----------r- Th.-report on cotton which accompanies the Sep-
while Porto Rico brings up the rear with 410.000,000"tember report of the agricultural department, though
'giving condition figures only up to Aug. 25, points to
if the contention of the refineries is correct and a decline of 6.6 points as compared with Aug. 25. last
the Cuban sugar crop should be greatly reduced, there year, ana
might then be time enough to raise the price, for it is ditions. It is. of course, far too early to make a
not likely that the insular posseesions or the output aerinite estimate of the yield this year, but on the
of" Louisiana and Texas Could be sufficient to make basis or 1ast year's results It may be said that a crop
'"up for the shortage arising from the decrease in the of 12 500 000 bales is possible. If the estimate does;
Cuban crop, I not Admit or 1ater change. It is evident that the cotton
Since the close f the war with Spain the commerce “ “ —----““
of the United States with Cuba has grown very rap-
idly, and it is to be deplored that any complications
/coula atise which will cause an interruption in the peFsity row ^peculating
development of that very valuable source of trade. F.core enu‛‛mn- aneit
or course the sugar trust is more than anxious to ' '
who would have been compelled to haul the oil of all
producers upon the same terms. A Standard Oil
Bailey aeclneriawyer who woula thus antagonize the interest of M.
client would not long retain his employment
As to the fourth point, It is a mere disparagement
curted no obugaton whatever; it wax indeed, rather
a trusteeship requiring legal counsel and ended awhen
the transaction was completed.
.A* to the third potat, Mr. Bailey I* not the retained
counsel of any corporation—railroad, oil or other-
wise. If his clients in theQfennessee case expected
anything more than the legal service for which they
contracted they were disappointed, for Bailey proved
to be th* most effective and insistent advocate ot the
Woman's Sleep. * ,
American Cartoon.
How many hours should a working woman sleep
out of every twenty-four? — -
According to a physteham who has specialised it de- .
popds entirely upon the kind of work she is doing.
If Abe is nervous more rest and sleep are required
than for n woman of phlegmatic nature.
rre body recuperates more quickly than the brain
and i mental work l« pursued more rest will be re-
quired than if the labor were purely physical, al-
though in the latter case the body* might be more i
wearied. ( .
A woman who is nervous needs tyo or three hours
more aleep each night than one who is not, especially
if her employment keeps her working at high tension.
Excitable persons hardly ever get enough .sleep, , —
It seemafpssible for them to stay quiet long enough
Rix Month, ........................................
SumpirntreaenAngG adares of thetrpanefehaneca
will please state I* their communication both the old and
the newaddresas.__. ---
“ SIOOU TZAVttl** aoz*Ts.
The following traveltme representative are autoriam
to receipt for subscriptioiis end ndvertisemenusinW, am
Fay kigsbury, Richard Potts. W. o Basford and -a »
ILHarrU.
Any erromeous refection on the eharacten, standtns
or reputation of any person, firm or corporasien wa
may appear in the column, of The Record .xi N EaaX
corecCa upon its being brought to the attention of the
management, --
2tt “ " •“ E
agent of certain stockholders. Including Pierce and zervice ' t I a Menator Thl» ought to be
x au • —- - -
of the stockholders, as he did to their entire satis-
■ - The Way to Work the Gate.
i professor C. L. Gault has' invented and will likely
patent p yard gate. The Mascot reporter called on
thepukessor at his residence and examined the gate.
buK refused to give any details a* to whether one
is supposed to elimb over or swatch under In order to
paw. so our readers will have to form their qwu con-
clusions.—Mercury Mascot, 3
timber lands, ste.. and confine themselves strictly to
the business of transportation. This operate* with
especial severity upon the Tennessee road, which is
strictly a coal property. If Mr. Bailey had been In-
nwg -. a- . and very good tempered.
farmer, own gouf twiriiomf: ifnd now • A Februaryrbridewi bea humane an* atfeotionate
wife and tender mother.
A March bride will be a frivolous chatterbox, some-
what given to quarreling. . .
An April bride will be inconsistent, not very intellit
.T 4A2S5"UXHise.
Oincecnt Fifth and Ruta IRiveta______
“Direetorstcarncoualey, aHSandegreInW.
Ssoonor A Maratng. winsam a Newby ana D E '
Fun Worth. R M Johnssom, Eougos N.2a secretarv
^Serrnmo Ousley. Prostatat. A- J- Randegsrd. geerotary.
lUst i led at the Postoktice at Fort Worth as tar4
« lass mail matter. _
zilian emperor.”
--------- , “I suppose it was adorned
only 6.8 points reduction Rom the 1304 con- monds."
lative service: on the contrary, he delivered them a
severe legislative blow. Furthermore. It was Senator
Bailey who fought for keeping oil comyentes ueer
this provision, and their exemption was effected ole
his vigorous protest and only in conference. If he
could have had hl* way. the Standard OU company
would have been compelled to part with ita pipe lines,
the chief Instrument of its monopoly, and those lines
would have passed into the hands of other persons
I III ■--“----^2^
Jort North Recor
faction; the power of attorney which he held was
merely the authority to act for the group of stock-
holders: neither the Waters-Pierce nor the Standard
Oil company had any connection, direct or indirect.
; with the transaction at any point or at any time that
employment was in no sense a railroad attorneyship
smpsis incoysistent with public service, but wasa
eaten and this family's food bill I* 153 a year. In
out of thesata, too. This l« in Kioto, Japan. The
pair ha a whole house for which they pay $10 a •
month and they complain that the rent is high. They <
have a servant, and *ha must surely be a jewel, for
she can sew and do- the washing th addition to being
a good cook, and her salary Is' 315 a year in addition
to a few old clothes. However, the Japanese laundry
is not a pretentious affair. There are no tablecloth*:
napkine, sheeta, pillow eases or curtains to be washed,
tor none nr* used. Th* meals ar* servea on indt-
vidusr-trays and each person carries in his sleeye a
paper napkin, which to deatroyea when used. The
Japanene take two baths dally whan opportunity af-
ford*. so their garment* do not become solled speeduy.
noth husband ana wife use tobacco; their fuel
coat* them $12.50 a. year: light. 35. and the «overn-
meht house tor to 36. The husband’s clothing Mil is
335 a year and the wife's, strange to relate. I* some-
thing less. Everything prepared in the kitchen 14
IknRew !g "i the Astor House Reading Room. 228
Broad wax: at the Hotel Mariboroueh ,Eadin5K.‛00T: ator Belle ygave.
Thirty-, Rix and Broadway : at the Hotel St. Penis Eed .
Ing Room Eleventh ana Bradwaxietie Hotel Norman:
die Reading Room, Thirty-eighth aha Eroadway: at the
empire Hotel Reading Room, sixty-third and Broadway'
at Tiotaline- news stand, located at Broadway and Thir:
ty-elghth streets, opposite the Knickerbocker.theater; at
No 1. Park Bow. opposite the General Postortice, and at
the Pennwylvania railway depot. Jersey City.
in New Orleans, La.: af-the St. Charles Hotel news
gent, but fairly good looking.
A May bride will be handsome, amiable and likely
to be happy. _
A June bride will be impetuous and generous.
A July bride will be handsome and smart, but •
trifle quick tempered.
An August bride wllllt* amiable and practical.
A September bride Gin be discreet, affable and
rptrns her call. John J. Ingalls has asserted that
be was the master of opportunity and if he was, sure
epough, he could have commanded a large salary as
the .writer of advertisements for the gold mining con-
cerns and other such institutions, but ths probabluities
are that Mr. Ingalls was simply overestimating his
pun. Opportunity recognises no master. She is the
whole thing herself when it comes to producing re-
suits and she likes the kind of people who recosoize
her merits in this Une. If there is anything, doing in
any locality she is pretty apt to be there as soon as
the real show starts, and she takes great pleasure In
boosting ths game if her helpers are of the right sort.
Opportunity to always around if there to any chance
for her to get busy.
And now Bishop Berry says the church bow must
go Titi* to going to be a pretty cold winter for
bosses. ..t
TELEPEONES.
Business Office ...................
zitorial Rooms..................
The physicians say the sultan of Turkey cannot live
more than a year. But there’s a chance to receive Another Internntionalidaringet,»
i ta I u«g. om are golng to get married, Bridget 7
many ultimatums in a year. ________ . | "§ns‛mom; Oim Koin- to be a duchess.”
— ■. . . ma A.,negs? You astonish me!’’
It seems to be a hard matter to get the people to •fis,qnom; Ol do be ndarryin th’ Dootchman thot
take either the Republican or Democratic platemskeepsth delicatessen store.”
In New York seriously.
, Some Back Jalk
.......— .....- > ..... .......—
Opportunlty. they say, knocks at the doorot eyer-
one, at least once in a lifetime, occasionally oYner:
Years ago, we are told, opportunity stood at tM door
of this city and knocked She recelved no welcoma
and turned away. After many years she has retred
and again today stand* before us, smlliexanabeckpn:
ingusto follow. She will not be turnecaway."
time. We have learned by sad experience the.xalue
of her companionship and we hasten, with outstretened
arms, to greet her. come, tot’s make the greeting
mie he seen her too. •
And' he say*. ."I bets yer flvs ter one as she neves
■peak* ter you."
Could I swaller that? Not much, Billy. I tol’ him hit
odds was took,
An’ l stood up straight on the curbstone there, an
waited for her ter look.
I »u goin‛ ter raise my hat, yetknow, like the sweW
dood* as yer see—
Titer’ was one with her then, an’ I thought, maybe,
as he'd take off hl*, ter me.
Just then the carriage stopped—she sald ehe'd some
flowers as she had ter get, -
An' she passed right clost an’ looked at me an’—well,
I tol’ yer I los’ my bet. -
A Bountiful State.
I ast year there were lots of farmers in West Texas (
who raised more than they could gather, and the same
win be true this year. What better country could a
man want than one that will produce more crops
than he can gather?—Roscoe Times. .
Always Bet’on Cupid.
An old maid of 80 years is announced as the bride
in an approacking wedding. Cupid was a long time
coming, but he gets there just the same.—Italy sur-
— Impossible. * prise. -
। "Yes; he has tobacco heart from smoking cigar-1 The Price of silence.
ettes.” - I The editor went over a part of the rpad where work
"Impossible!" hw been done with the-funds.donata.b the.people
1 - ----- Lrni round a great amount of work had been done
.wn,to bet on
macraiway. on ye won time, “* ”
I not the one that is going to win now. 1 . ----
._ -Ea mhe Atraction at Havann.
The Lerner Evil. . • The insurgent camp nearest to Havana was visited
I "It makes you sweat terribly to- push the lawn crowds of sightseers last Sunday. There to
mower." — ' Ino further reason for any enterprising peanut and POP-
“"Yes." , | corn concessionaire failing to take the next boat from
"Then why do you do it. „ I Orleans or Key West.—San Antonio Express.
| "My wif' makes me sweat if I don t. I ----- ---- .
, .— A | ' Impatient for Death. - —e
/ Sure Sign. I .m. nas elected former Congressman Rank-
I "What Ankes you think this is the soclal center ot.Au as an alternate United States senator from that
the town—toe style of afchitecture ofthe houses?"... Mena anA n. I. only awaiting the death summons of
I ••No; ths absence of children playing in the yar s. state. Senator Pettus or Senator Morgan ts step inte
J Au nis shoes. A queer Idea.-Taylor County Newx
I apostock’s apimal Show has advertised for a woman Coming Uncomfortably close.
who is absolutely fearless, to train Uons. - -There are 4w classes of citizens— the clans that
■There’s an opportunity for somebody a mother-in suTas SSidewaiks and the class that does not build
Ithem. The Ekst *» a help to any town, whHe the
. liattr falls to accomplish what it should. In which
. class do you belong - Trrell Transcript.
It is pretty hard to have anything happen nowaday* short, the whole expense for the"year easily come
tint cannot be used as a pretext for the argument within the lImit of 3250.
Otews’anDartetes
$ A ruovgurfoATHE DAX $
4 -Mntan every day ana beaone *
A with it, you Sav. one what yqu
A couta. Some blungena ana ab:
¥ aurities ereep ta; forgec them as
A soon as you can. Tomorrow will
¥bea Hew day: begin it well and
4 mwlr and with too high a spirit
4 to brcumberea with your old hop-
X senZSFNl- day le all that is good
4 ana fair it is too dear to waste
4. a moment on the yestergaya"
4 — Emerson
........ • .t
L-, RI
=zms OF suascarox.
rw Se.......
TMee* Mnthe dy mail If paijin:adianc)..
sjirsta "2
rwelve Mouth, thy mail....... ......--
KU Mouths 4 by mail).......... -*
Four Months (by mail)....................
BKMI -WEEKLY.
Twelve Months.............................
, JAPANESE ECONOMY.
’ It does not cost the Japanese family much to live.
The habits of those people are the personification of
the simple life. These habits are the result of a long
dourse of training, and they are unaccompanied by
any feeling of forced economy or stinginess and the
people are perfectly satisfied and happy with their,
lot. The case of a Japanese eollege professor is one
in point and shows what is dossible in the way of
cheap living in the realm of the Aikado, This pro-
. fessor was educated in America and he and his wife
haw acquired Amepkan tastes, but they live on a
malary of 3400 a yer and they manage to save money
Each section of Texas has advantage* and trovles
peculiarly It* own. Lan year Uvalde shipped 1.80%000
pounds of honey. Till* »enKon less than 100 cases
will be shipped, but the people of Uvalde will not
move Into a strange land to face a second failure.
Instead, they will remain in their present homes and
produce a splendid supply of the finest honey on earth
[next year, as the cotton planters of Red river are do-
I ing in that line now.—Clarksville Times.
I It is not reasonable to suppose that any one section
on this mundane sphere should be blessed with never
falling harvests and an uninterrupted flow of honey.
No greater calamity could befall a people than to be
furnished with absolute plenty all the “oebecause
they would soon fall into the chronic Yauft of in-
leratitudeto nature and Indolence on their own port.
"Some one has of the former | t^
more nearly satisfied when he knows that he must do
a little digging to reap the reward which he seeks
in the cultivation of the soil. Texas affords the most
transmitted I inviting field for this class of people and they should
by kisses?” be satisfied with bounties of the soil as they are pro-
"I don’t think they are.’.’ s..s.viaed.
“That young man who came to see me last night I -----
not exceeded reasonable has a theory that they are.” Peter sehutter, the millonaire wagon man, _has
"Don’t you believe it; he was just lying to yo t Inassedaway. but‘his name will live on—it has been
kissing him good-night - 1i8ea upon one of the useful implements of the
------- [world and to have one’s name perpetuated on a good
- Merely the Price. : wagon is worth more than any political glory that can
What Is the difference between a pair of pants ever come to a man—Wills Point Chronicle.
ana a pair of trousers?” , I Probably that’s the reason so many illustrious poll-
The colleges are not going to be so prosy this year, "About ------------- ticians are desirous of having their names on the
may be that -their anxiety in this line is not warranted e,",I Columbia students have alreadyhad Fcane | mhetong-Suftering -------- (bandwagon.
by the real conditiona And, furthermore now that in which several were insurea, one perhaps fa-
-this -country, ha* Intervened in the, Island. 1.L ia BUl- runh_______,___L — - -........ - ■■■■ ■-----------------------
'tally. - ' . . • ■
I ain’t no sort—I ain’t a-klckln’—but it kind o’ proves,
yer see,
As how nobody keers fer me an’ you, Billy, exceptim
you an’ me. ___ - ■ _ ____ _
But don’t go to teelin" bad. Billy—it don’t make no
diff us; ’
S’ long's I’ve got you an’ you’ve got me, we ain’t got
no call ter fuss.
An’ what with dreamin' an' plannin’—don't yer never
dream like me
Ot Wat we'll do when we grow an' the great things
as we'll see?
Sometimes I thinks as you're Presklent, an' me A
dook or A lord—
With a four-ram flat fer Jest us two, an’ a dollar
a day ferpoard.
Gee. Bill, but It's grandt You’d ought to try! Why. I
dremp—It was Jus’ las’ night—
As the beautiful lady an’ some friends, all dressed in
pink an’ white.
Took you an’ me ter the flower show, an’ a-sallim on
the bay—
An’ we had lemonade, an’ crackerjack, an’ peaches,
an' stayed all day!
But let’s go to sleep - now, Billy—fer in our dreams,
yer see.
There’s lots of folks keers for me an’ you, Billy, be-
sides jest you an’ me,
—Success Magazine.
service in the Jnited State* senate.
.a. Anyhow, that such employment was obtained,
not because ot ats legal abilities, bub because he was
a member of the United Stale* senate anahi clients
were seeking hl* senatorial. Influence Instead of his
legal counsel. ' •
As torde first, the records show, as he testified
berbfe the legislature. In 1301, that his service to.
able lawyer.
Now, these are the simple truths concerning a age of another measure prescridang a risiu pun......... ...
So far from implying any ulterior pur- fof any outside sportsman who enter* the state and
unfaithful conduct, they ought to further slaughters more quail than he can himself use.
. . . ..— Hamilton Herald. f
It is to be hoped that the effort to protect the quail
in his statements and other birds will bear fruit before the history of
| the slaughter of these little friends to the farmers,
which has-caused so much gret In the older states.
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The Fort Worth Record and Register (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 352, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 2, 1906, newspaper, October 2, 1906; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1494819/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .