The Rebel (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. [1], No. 24, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 9, 1911 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.
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i." - V ■
v r
*p5
#w' tos
~r*.
'' ?!
Mm
$8* m
SfiffiSS |
is the
«
.«
refore, take- no
ht, saying, what shall
|r|^i or what ahall tri
iWherewithftl chill
be clcrlied! * , '
after all these
the Gentile sock;) For
Heavenly Father
oweth that ye have lieed
' 'X>t all these things.
:':*^"But .<• seek- ye fifst the ~
om of God, and his
;hteousness; and all these
.~*ng8 shaft he added unto
Matthew 6:31-32-3(3.
,tNow brother, you, as well as all
rest of our people, believe in
; taking* God's word to mean just
what it means. We must not add
anything to or take -anything
^from it. AVe there not some mem-
- bers of theehureh today whoown I in toe Angeles is a powerful 00%
large farms and ride in horseless I tingent of well-to-do citizens who
carriages! Ape they doing welljare not 'belongers'. They ra
.and faring sumptuously every
dayt Are there not many mem-
bers of that church who pwnjty tired of the 'unoo _
scarcely any property, and are al-1 only cures lor the ills of society
most destitute of food and cloth-I«W anti-expectoration laws and
ing and other necessities of lifefiieattcntlMr of the social tvft
Then is it not the drink, food,! Every labor-baiting paper and
clothing and all things that our I every big business land-giunb
only father knows that we | interest, and all the poli
ItiAUGBWSS
Bp " zmm
Edmund
PubB&:
tlhe following remarkable
article throws a flood of light
on the reasons why the big
business interests Of tos An-
geles came to the support of
the MoNama^aa. It should
be remembered that the writ-
er is not a Socdalist but is a
single tax democrat like Mr.
Pastoriza, the democratic
commissioner of Houston.
The article H published by a
democratic editor and office
holder. Thus from the camps
of the enemy do we expose
the great grafters who
ported the dynamiters in their
desire to beat the Socialists
in tos Angeles. Study It
carefully so you can under-
stand the greed that makes
big capitalists condone the
crime of dynamiting.—Ed.]
"Behind Socialists and tabor
£>EAD
1 MI'" j'flhi
CAESAJL
*■ * 'm n
£^83
HAMIL'
CASE. - THE &1
Three months ago Farm and
Ranch. the Semi-oincial organ ot
the Texas landlords, politely re-
quested the Rebel for an article
on the Reisers Union. We sent
the article-and remark*! t&ereiu
that the average farm paper tuat
comes to my desk was "as flead
as Julius Caesar and as clammy as
a dead man's hand." The Co-
Operator published at Fort Worth
took kindly exception to my
statement in a private letter from
the editor. Whereupon 1 wron-
Mr. Grant as follows: -
V December 4, 1911.1
Mr. A. w. Grant, Texas Farm
Co-Operator, Fort Worth, Tex.
Dear Sir: Your letjer, stating javoi
hat you noticed my statement ixi
the Farm & Kanch "all -farm
papers that come to my desk are
as dead as Julius Caesar, and as
clammy as a dead man's hand,"
received.
I was exchanging with the Co-
Operator, and if you can make
he above statement go double, I the
et it go. As far as the Co-Op-1 see
erator is concerned, it was dead "hi
from its birth until recent date, the
when Taylor McRae put a little quol
ife into it, then i commenced to my
have hopes.. to
What 1 mean by a dead paper is ag
one that talks about Scott bills, drep
L LECTURE
REAU.
itement fromr Hamilton.
des are inquiring con- \
the, Complaint made'
u«- at'^IMiipfli
thwest Texaa^ Conference el lecture bureau with a will isn£
y«ighing against the doc- a way that meansbig things in
The big cities of Texas are coffi-
S.m. at the recent session of 'n^ueing to take hold of The Reb-
agaii
discipline of the
The surprise and
>f the thing, being sorne-
jfttugether new in my «x-
le Hint not at all expected
stunned me for the time
|rt me as few things have
me. 8in<je I havtf had
think 1 have quite recov-
i'<nnjx)sure.
have need of, the very thing that | crooks and flunkies of the Plun-
Jeaus Christ has absolutely and 1 derimnd are gathering 'Good
positively promised SHALL he I Government' people since Harri-
added to all those who I man 'threw the scare into them.'
seek God's kingdom and hisIThey gather around the 'good
righteousnesst Is not this a fact! government' forces like an ana-
All right then, since a few of conda around a fat pig—with the
the qiembers of the church are 'goodness' inside. The 'good-
living sumptuously and enjoying Bess' is now hobnobbing, hugging
all those material blessings, at ] and conferring with all the crook-
the expense of eppressison, suf- ed elements that they have been
fering and privation of the weak (denouncing, fighting and reviling
er brothers. Then we are bound I these many years. Ujfea remark-
to admit one of two facta—they aMe sight, VOrityffef whit Francis
are: y : J. Bsbmj said A f«w weeks ago in
The church (it Matters I his famous speeeb*-not printed in
not what church) is not the king- full in any of the city papers, lmt
don^pf God or else, 2nd, Jesus.) delivered to theLoe Angeles Oity
<an
no self-respecting person would {hands immediately with all the
id viral
against at-
want to take such a character as [low down badness and virulent
a type to live by. . Now the; great] vioe in a mutual
trouble is the modern churches I tack on their
are-'not seek&g God's king-1 And so it is in this case. Th*
dom and his righteousness aslof Hearst, Otis and Earl of the
they are commanded to Jo. R«ad [ 'Exanrtnec,- 'TUnas' and 'Tri.
Isaiah 58th chapter. God tells us buns' hugging one another
to loose the bonds of wickedneiss, for mutual prOteottOH would pake-
undo the heavy burdens and let I Olympian laughter were it not for
the oppressed go free. To break the tragedy aad sorrow of ife
every yoke, to give the bread to for more than 10 years there
the hungry and when we see the has been developing here one 0'
naked that we cover him, and Ithe most magnificent
when we do this, says he, our
health shall spring forth speedily,
opr darkness shall be as bright as
the noon day, ad I will make fat
thy-bones in drouths, sayeth the
Lord and when you call I will an-
swer, and when, you cry 1 wiH
say, here I am.
Now, is not this in accord with
Christ's promise that all those
things shall be added unto vouf
;ill responsibility and!
ms speedy a hearing of I
iplain as will be con ven-
ule. He writes me that
>laint was a complete sur-
1 ii'Af ?
fmm®
TO
991 jK SI Si S iRMliR IR Kil EIVI
m
# OUR BEB8. ft
Si
Si SliS Si # Si Si SI SI
VMM-
tHe near future.
Local Waco through its sterl-
ing secretary Comrade Smith
write* us this week to send thenv
1,000 subscription cards. Tfyey
want twelve lectures by Hamil-
tou and The Rebel editor and bt>
lieV^ that 40,000 Kebels poured
| into the towurthat Hrnun maed
famous will work wonders. The
Steadily the subs keep climbing
Climbing the whole day long.
The Rebel's heart is never pin-
ing
As be listens to the circula-
tion song.
And as the sav dust king of Hat-
tie Creek says.
"There's a reason"
It, is simple; just this:
We are the great unmuzzled
warehouse plans, and things of I out.
that sort, and* ignores what Ale- Hoii those gentlemen know any
Rae has recently pointed out, that tbingjibout what I said in my
in Alberta, Canada, land held for ipeeotos in
speculative purposes is taxed I cou
• 1 < 't « .. I ukuiyua >1 in WIA uuuui ift, 1 iii'
1 t" T presicuug etaer, tile hocaj has nominated the indefat-1 With nothing to do but work >
^ \e:T°0W' alible V-Charley" "Davidson for And think of Bums the sleuth
mayor at the coming spring elec- j Nothing to print but facts
tion and believes that this Rebel
plan will help immensely in the
good work.
, .. . „ 1 Houston follows after Waco.
$?. M.'t «*" fc""* Thfir prORTemive Mer« ry wrl-
eue country he was not in L , 1 B ■
11 to know anything of *, ' f_ ' .
,ts of the case. Some of . p,8^01n' U '^R.8; f.e' '
l>''rs of the couference, it ^ Ke^1' HalUtUviUe T«a«,
'think that I have «aid „D™r,x;.0"ir ,iei I^ai HoMton
"ami cutting thing* ahont N<>- fj1 '?f,ru(; • "" ' ll™e
**m." One of ,hem y ">at it contraota for the lee-
tee as follow.: "I told P.1™ w,th .«« | W„ want Hickev and Hamilton for
, not t0 -iiow our children o{ 450 subscription cards. We >>e want mcaeyanq UamUton tor
(1 the Methodist church wish to begin work immediately, h2 l«ctures. Then oomes Comrade
I do Sf myeS yours for the revolution Treay, secretary of Houifon and
1 uo not want my cnii-1 |gayg. ^ four htmdred and
tJ .. , > t. . .. .fifty subs, we want your lectures."
H"d™ u„,thc bl« Then cornea Saratoga don In the
one to take hold. The able conn- oil fl(.I(lB with ,u^ e(U,n u
ty secretary, L. F. Rigby has got- Ri b d WBlcot
Taylor and Callahan ten oat a circular letter to be Knt qui y ,or 100# mo„ lf t
M one of the myeterlea,|to all Socaliata in Hardin Co.|lhtM oadDnmer011,otherainelud-
Nothing to write but truth.
And so we grow and put on
over 800 subs this week. There is
a lively discussion in Hallettsville
as to whether we will have 30,000
subs by Jan. 1. We will dr we
won't!"Just according to howyou.
tigure tlit* niattef. For Instance
Comrade .Smith of Local Waco
wrote The Rebel 4iJ honr* ago say-
ing "the local orders ltX)0 sul>«
We
112 lectures. Then Oomes Comrade
•ar such rot as it dished
eight times the land that adjoins foe noton<: of thfem «ver attended lit is a model of its so^t. Other 1^- an Oklahoma comrade named
it, which is being used and occn- one. Th< statement ahove attrib- secretaries might pattern after it. Willie Bonn^p whn w«nt«
pied. It is a dead paper that Uted t#" if I never made. I don't]Rigby wants 1000 subs and will.!gubg w rth * Wajnifton w« wtn
talks about chickens , and crops, know who says I eaid that, but get thein. Here is the letterr ke over the 30000 bv Jarf 1st
,i the wh<® he U, l°w, btM,| Comrade: We need a little help Mte i^JSa 5 au', c« d
s and infamous liar, a 1 from you. We want to stir up
and overlooks the fact that
farm area in Texas has decreased
16 million acree in the past 101 c
years, while tenantry i* steadily I d
increasing. Deader than Julius (sent
Caesar and Rameses the 2nd, is.
the farm paper that fails to talk I fouj
landlordism, With its third and 1 cate
half crop, wretched schools, mis- The
erable shacks for the renters, and co _
all the other conditions which are stand
the fruits of landlordism. More I which .they said,
hopelessly dead than Cain and |meet )K80ine day."
18 ™"T' "ora you. we wani io BUr up wiU hftve lfl(t thig office and
contemptible coward, a Hwdin coimty until it la wd hot int0 A reaponaible hSda
10 "■ ■ « whether, t«hni-
too
imputattoh. .. Imontha from #ow the old putieal^*h".ve a"right'w mm!
opponent «f Sodaliam 1 will have their candidate. out thera unti| the h their
a the open. As its advo-1 worrying every man in the coun- nftnpni wh«f ihs.w
;>m fighting ta the open.Jty to get his vote. Let us be onL&st' Any how w/htve thre^
time. 'weeks until New Year's and ws
.will send out several thousand
Marco. | cardg to old time Rebs who may
ie"cf*vens responsible for this the ground at the same tl
mplaint wer^ too cowardly to We are going to hold a
and With me when I fought that tion the first Saturday in
Fe've got to Now at that time we want to want
to
Abel, is that farm ■ paper that 1
causes the idea to spread through | *ho
the land that a man with his 160
acres has any earthly show of
winning out in the competitive
struggle, when 10 per cent of the
people own 90 per cent of the
wealth.
If Socialism [have Tom Hickey and G. G. Ham-1 or £
met until these fellows, | ilton give us six speeches each at „hort of card> If y
variomi points. They agree to overlooked Vnte y
come here, speak for one . week,
and/pay all their expenses, pro-
vided we get up 1000 subscribers
to the Rebel at 25 cents each.
Now this is the way we propose
to do it There are at least 250
four names, and
I county secretary.
send same to
If you can get
jthe moat magnifioent schemes or
'civic' engineering* for eoonomic
inder on the faoe of the earth,
mpetent authority estimates
that there is in ti|fct from $800,
000,000 to $2,000^000,006 of 'un
earned increment'—some $60,
000,000 of whioh it now being
'creamed off' from the sheep pas-
tures of the San Fernando valley
[ —all due to the aoqueduot mudd-
pal railroad and the harbor an-
And -now brother this is exact-1 provements.
ly what the Socialists are trying "For the aquednot there has ai
to do—to break the yokes off the ready been voted aad partly ex-
necfr of the down trodden and pended $28,000,000; and $8,500,.
SMpreesed. y 000, with $6,000,000 more ol bonds
wou will aavrbut all oalMfor right away. Most of this
Socialists are not professed be- lis expended for improvements out-
iievera as Christians." . side the%it7, whioh is bonded l(>
Yes, but we read in Isaiah 65 :1 jpay for them.
-That God says thai I-was . .— I To put ft briefly: $23,000,000
cflrthem that sought me not and bonded debt was plaoed on the
I wee made manifest unto them city with more to follow, to go 240
that ask not after me. Now jnrijli Iron the city to bring a riv-
brethren, I hope you will study er down into the Ban Fernando
over this matter and come into * I Valley some 2S mills from the
knowledge of the truth. Then I dty. Up to the present timonbth-
you can See everything in a new ling has been decided on as to the
flight, which seems to be in more manner of bringing the water any
J harmony with ,|he teachings of I further. 'The Harrows' of this
the Bible. Then you have resolv-1^va^ft Iflss a nfck to a sauoer tbn,
ed in your heart to be honest and is about 9 miles from the city,
be a man. The valley has an almost level
And I am willing now to give ftoo^r of some 180 square miles,
ywu all my hand on It that you | with a water shed of 602 square
Vill be different men from what
jgjju were when you stand with
nuuninon not by God. -- >
• 'A v'V'' A. J. Roeco,
^yflakoff, Texas.
trying to throw me out,
then it will never, be met
ear-old hoy with a corn
a lightning bug could
is hunch of ninnies clear
the state.
_ v. ( is here eaid is not intend- „ .. I
Now you can understand why | as S reflection on the member-1 active Socialists in thp- county.
I speak ef all the farm papers that ["hip of the Northwest Texas Con-1Let each one contribute|one dol-
come to my de&k, being "dead are m«ny fel- jlar, fill out the blank below with
Julius Caesar and as oiammy as a loW8 «'"«> ? them, hroadminded
dead man's hand." and, big Hearted. I am, merely
If the Co-Opcrator will forget into the bruah in an ef-
the landlords for a while, tarow tort to scare the skunks Into the
down the bars, and unmuzzle Tay | open where I can get a fair shot
lor McRae, let him write what he «t them. I am going to get them.
knows, then it will become a# I'll have the last of their cowarl-
live and fresh as the flowers that hideH before the roses bloom
bloom in fte Spring. ' again. There is much more that
Respectfully. | might he said here and now, but
T. A. Hickey ' shall wait until every necessary
Mr. Grant's reply will appear in fact is at hand. Though no names
The Rebel next week. The emin- h ve beea K*™11 rae- 1 think 1
ent corn doctor who edits the [hive spotted
Southern Ruralist and who fool-1 business, and
ishly tried to take a fall out Of us Pn bim now
on the question ofSocialism recent *hat I tpink,
us and
we will send you a batch. This
week was noticeable because of
the enormous number of small
clubs. The big chief is the re-
doubtable A. G. Maxey of Lorena
who gets the prize, a beautifully
bound copy of War—What For f
He captured 16 prisoners.
Amongst the most active rebels
sending in lists we notice:
C. W. Watson, 5; W. H. Silk,
you will not be out a cent
Name Address
State
the partiee to pay for the paper, Stap^H, 5; J. V Wntaon!
""" h' • 1 (juitman, 7 ■ ], N. French, Palea-
tine, 4; J. B. Gaunnt, Athens, 6t
John G. Burrows, Portales, 4; A.
H. Graham, Ling)eville, 5; J. B.
Triplett, Carbondale, 4; J. F. Col-
lins, Saint Joe, 8; C. L. Kirkpat-
1 Think what a vote we onght to l^ck, Loraine, 6; Isaac Bailey,
poll at next election, if we have Carbon, 4; I. J.' Rice, Colorado, 4;
1000 Rebels coming to the county Wm. J. Milner, El Paso, 4; W. J.
ly liw.Wuil,deoid. that «« WMSW
miles within its rim. This great
is chiefly composed of big
estates—one of 50,000 acres and
others scaling down. The 'sheep
ranch' of 30,000 aorei, which runs-
across the valley from Santa Mbn-
POTATOES AND PRIHCIIPIJ58. ica mountains to toe San Fernan-
■ , do mountains in three squares of
* Many a man thinka that it is 10,000 acres each, and on which
crime, when it is only his full were three ranoh houses wd not
stomach. On half allowance hemore than 100 men rajfloyedthe
• would be as ugly and knavish as year round, is the center of attrso-
axQrbody. Don't mistake potatoea tion, next to the 'Ban Fernando
for t)rincinle8 Land and Water Co.' These Ms
torpnnciples. as^ $20]ffacrfe«now
- ' I «elling town $SW to $1,000 per
1000 8001ALI8T8 OFFIOUM acre on the strength of tho inoom-
SLEOTBD. ing water. Of oourse, there is no
* The Chicago Daily Soeialiat lyl gnarn^ that th^r wm
Iras compiled a lilt of Sotialiata haTa tha water. bnt tha bnyara arn
elected to oflee. They number [not w Infomad mhi thay gnrit
1000 and therein not eWiawUtlfta to ttaOTt. >
per ofgraft in the air. Verilytbe fowtnllpgfe;
world In move and M getting bet-J—tad * aoytrad «a
tir (Mm and McNamara 'unearned increment of
ter evearif Otie and McNamara]
^eJl into each others |rms.
OC to
fmm
| "
Iffl
m
p
R I ■
,50,000,000.
AM they
arena. He now knows that there I ®e#nery would be good for him. • . .. ,
is much difference between Stote | Through all my^ troubles* the j W!lt -
Socialism and Socialism/1 as there}^dler haa acted the
is between a horse chestnut and P®rt,of a_broadguaged, liberal
a chestnut horse. The Soutttwes. h^ded (fustian gentleman, a
brother indeed. X believe in him
folly. M;:,
i - 'f . ;t!. G. G. Hamilton.
' '
week speaking to us/ A combln-1 away, TSvoli, 14 ; T. Jackson, Mi-
ation of good speak<
class reading matter is the only
tern Farmer has had ah attae k
of the doldrums, intellectual pel>
legra and the sleeping sickness,
since Frank Putnam resigned,
but there is hope for the poor
things yet
We have donned the robes of
optimism and are vain enough
to believe that we 1011 awaken the
sleepers before we are through
even if yyt have to drill a progrs-
sivc idea into the granite block
of Tom Watspn before labors
are ended.
And thus ended the first chap,
tor.
Will you Come in *jld *h£lp us
but. Be one of the Dollar Social-
ists who will put this thing
through.
; L. F. Rigby, .
<1 * / County Secretary.
J. C. Harrott, Joaeerand, 6; C. W.
Wilson, Beeville, 5; B, 8. Alford,
Patmos Ark., 12; R. A. Lee,
Rule, 5; J. H; James, Briggs. 10;
A. G. Maxey, Lorena, IB (prize);
L. L. Erwin, Loco, Okla., 4j B. F.
Alaobrook, Avoca, 5; J. W. Pres-
mPORTAKT AMIOTOCW.
will publish a ire- j
mendons write-up of the Los An-
geles Plunderbund next week,.. _ , .... . . . .
written by the editor, who haa ,ore "Pnug^bud. npen
been on toe ground in the past
and knows the beast of big hiz,
having observed him in his Mr.
Hie manner in which these God-
less greedjr grafters go to the
limit to' get their gold will be
,r lar, Ovalo, 4; G. W, Thompson,
We believe that intelligent well 19r<J?re^'^.' «
directed work of thi. aort will :No" tben Reb; ^ b„;y ud
bring results and little Hardin I ng how near that 30,000 you
county will have a glorious mes- can get by the time the great year
sage carried to her workers be- of 1912 is born>
The Rebel editor being full
blood Irish and Co'mrade Hamil-
ton a descendant of that Stock it
| is not strange that the next to ap-
ply for a Rebel course should be
in
le
the
beyond the taxing power of the
city, they pay not one mill in taxes
toward the oost of the
Under the
sent one of tha most
eoonomio object lessons
World today.
Hext in order come the harbor
increments with .$3^00,000 bond
appropriation made for its Im-
provement twenty-one miles a*ay *
Again come the increments at the
proposed municipal railway scat-
tered om thee* twenty.two miles.
8tUl more is the $3^00,000 bonds
for, good roads (county) that is
partly expended. Atfiial ~
vividly tola Hdw they have wed Malone He writes from
litorslly torn down the stars and I Mullin, Texas, Mills County;
stripes iaome years ago will be Mulling Texas, Dec. 3, 1911
shown fS the records. The al-1 Mr. Dan Gandy, Hallettsville, Tex
lies of
shbwn
lamiters must be i
!1 them off by the
| if we get up the deal for six dates
Be sure to put Us down for two
dates, subject to change if we
jean make the drive with the
county, and oblige,
Your comrade,
W. H. Flowers,
Flint Local No. 320.
Here is hoping he will get 1000
[subs in Smith county.
• i
,.F
white liglt Of' pure publicity is
the aim
ebel.
If youw
ORDERS.
to blast some of the
stumps of prejudice
and old piarty ignorance in your j
neighborhood send for some bf '-
Icctual dynamite t6 the Rebel of-
fice. We md it in bundles at half |
a cent each, order now-rfl0<' a
hundred. - ' -
Kind sir and Comrade:: Please
tend 250 rob earda for Rebel lee-1 Au other comrM. who are
tnre and wmple oopie. u per th(! Rebe, lMtare,
o«er for Comrade Hamilton and i wll, pleu, g(,t busy ^ onw. tbe
routes are being laid mt now;
Sc aeli
{Hickey for making lectures.
Sincerely yours for future pro
gress.
s W. F. Malone.
■expmditnrMl
Me $60,000^)00, Which,
show a
the of
the first lecture will fc delivered
by Comrade Hamilton on the 14
at the town of Hamilton. West
Texas must get busy as the speak-
The next in line is a. stalwart j ing starts there and the lectnrers
cant come back as they will he
in east, north, and south Texas
for tne remainder of the tour.
Enough has been |Sfcow*'* -tfce
official lettters prated'above to
cause all who doubt to' realize
that the Rebel lectures are the
biggest thing in the
iHtiiibs economic loot in
juaoBg the richest
■MMIJI a — n —— Ft
work* todiy..
n
from Flint, Smith Co., Texas. He
is a great grower and shipper of ]
potatoes and tomatoes, and. is now
going to produe eSocialists. He
says: " '*•' •
Flint, Texas, Nov. 30, 1911.
The Rebel, Hallettsville, Texsa.
We will take 250 Cards and sell I line ever undertaken in
them out for the two datee if we I Get in on it and h^p carry your
cant worfcnp^a six-date meeting {county in 1W2.
in the county. We can sell 250 DAN &|NDY,
or more here. WiB let you know I MsHagsr Rebel Le^Ure Bureau.
mn
•-fi
-m
I
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Hickey, T. A. The Rebel (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. [1], No. 24, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 9, 1911, newspaper, December 9, 1911; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth394641/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.