The Bartlett Tribune and News (Bartlett, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 11, Ed. 1, Friday, October 9, 1914 Page: 2 of 8
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9. 1914
Wo arofRJjat some-
bod v is makTWBfcv out of
hops, since sixTWBh of
toork choDS onlv rattlinHtt.in
X)ur watch pocket.
Since financial depression has
enveloped us in the rear and on'
both flanks, we are endeavoring
to maintain a moratorium witlft
conversational chatter.
The deer season opens Nov. 1,
land- for the benefit Of the various
Bartlett sportsmen, the Tribune
vill say that the limit is three
bucks each during the season.
Be careful, boys, and stay with-
in the limit.
The Chattanooga Times says
Tennessee is being nibbled to
death by the fee system. We
weep for Tennessee, because the
fee system is legalized tyocket-
picking and denotes retarded
civilization. Houston Post.
We had intended to reply to
the numerous attacks of the
press on the female suffrage
proposition, but the female suf-
fering in Europe has almost
closed our conversational chords.
We would be pleased to expand
on this master, but we fear the
result at
abroad.
tt
home" as well as
As an excuse for his Chautau-
qua lecturing tours Secretary
Bryan modestly informs the pub
lic that he can not live on
$10,000 per year and provide for
the necessities of old age. We
5itin,ilent mental mathematics
figuring how many thousand
tfrarfBrvan exDects to inhabit
eearth.or how long a mechanic
drawing $900 dollars a year, who
is blessed with a wife and nu-
merous children, can survive the
call of Father Time on his Day.
t
AND
real gemjine rnoney spying eveni; because eyery one who attended this sale has foind
even more than the advertisements had led them to expect.
Hundreds of people have thronged our store during the first few days of our sale, but our stock is so im-'
mense that we have plenty, of BARGAINS for those that did not get a chance to attend the first few days.
Every person,
&
ItrafiE mm
SAVE MONEY
$1.25
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Usual church services Sunday.
We thank our congressional
representatives for their thought-
ful interest in sending us the
Congressional Record. It is a
panacea for nervous prostration
and carries a guarantee to pro-
duce more genuine quietude than
an electric fan.
Somo wise gazzabo in a remote
pmuqd of history remarked that
"this life consists of one con-
founded and diabolical thing
after another." We believe it.
With the baseball bombardment
neanng its ciose, the football
fight looms large to those who
enjoy a massacre.
A Denton county farmer has
devised a novel method of pre-
serving his cotton without the
process of ginning. As fast as
the cotton is picked in the fields
he puts it up in a hay press, bal-
ing it as if it were hay. Keep-
ing cotton in the seed is said to
benefit the staple's quality and
appearance, and this gentleman
will have his cotton ginned at
his convenience.
Our European war correspond-
ents are nothing if not original.
By using caution, strategy and
one gross of lead pencils one of
them has uncovered the real,
cause of the' big war. Here it is
Five days before the Kaiser de-
clared war a German cook in the
kitchen of the royal family of
England was apprehended in the
act of stabbing a Swiss cheese
with a screwdriver, while the
king's soup became too cold for
internal bathing. The unfortu-
nate woman was discharged. The
German ambassador them be-
came limburger. He notified the
German war department to raise
the price of English stirrups for
side-saddles. This was officially
resented by England as a menace
to her foreign trafflce and a
stab at her internal organization
of naval supremacy. Then Ger-
many declared war if we are to
believe our correspondents.
The War on High Prices is on in Full Blast
t h e
'graggfflaEBaBrataBare8BCT"ririin-ff
WHY? Because the remarkable values offered are very EXTRAORDINARY; be-
e.use the assortments of bright new merchandise are large; because this saJe is at
Here are Values That 'Should I
in Baxtiett and surrounding to investigate and leaurn what really high cfc&.ss
merchandise can he had for so little money. " ;;
Below we quote a few of the many Bargains. Lack of time ancj ' v
Men's Work Shoes Tan. Black,
and Smoked Color Shoes $3,50
values, Sale Price at ffan It C
only W&cw
Ladies House Dresses
$1.25 value 4JUU I Pair to a customer ,.. UO0
value...
Twilight of the Uincs.
Before establishing hell on
earth tho pietistic kings com-
mend their subjects to God.
Seek the Lord's sanction for the
devil's work.
"And now I commend you to
God," said the kaiser from his
balcony to the people in the
street. "Go to church and kneel
before God and pray for His
help for our gallant armv."
Pray that a farmer dragged
from a Saxon field shall be speed-1
ier with' a bayonet thust than a
winemaker taken from his vines
in the Aube; that a Berlin law-
yer shall be steadier with the
rifle than a Moscow merchant:
that a machine gun manned by
Heidelburg students shall not
jam, and that one worked by
Paris carpenters shall.
Pray that a Bavarian hop
grower armed in a quarrel in
which he has no heat, shall out-
march a wheat grower from
Poltava; that Cossacks from the
Don shall be lured into barbed
wire entanglements and caught
by masked guns; hat an inn-
keeper of Salzburg shall blow
the head off a baker -from the
Loire. ,
"Go to church and pray for
help" -that the hell shall be
hotter in innocent Ardennes than
it is in equally innocent Hessen;
that it shall be hotter in inno-
cent Kovna than in equally inno-
cent Posen.
And the pietistic czar coal-
men his subjects to God that
they may have strength of arm
in a quarrel they do not under-
stand; that they may inflict
more sufferings than they are re-
quired to enduie and the name
of Romanoff be greater than the
j name of Hohenzollern, that it
I may be greater than the name of
JHapsburg; that its territory will
be wider and the territories of
Hohenzollern and the territories
of Hapsourg less.
The pietistic emperor of Aus-
tria commends his subjects to
God, to seek divine assistance to
T
Space prevents us irom naming many prices
Men'B Blue Chambray Work
Shirts, vve.ll made and full
sizes, 3 ShirtB for only
SI
Men's Union Made Overalls
$1.00 value sale price 2
69c
pair to a customer
crush the-peasants of Servia,
dragged from tho wheat field
when it was ready for the scythe
and themselves given to the
scythe. I
This is, wo think, the last call
of monarchy upon divinity when
Asmodeus walks in armor. The
kings worship Baal and call it
God, but out of the sacrifice, we
think, will come a resolution to
have no more wheat growers or
growers of corn, makers of wine
miners and fishers, artisans and
traders, sailors and storekeepers
offered, up with prayer to the
Almighty in a feudal slaughter,
armed against each other with-
out hate and without cause they
know, or, if they knew, would
give a penny which way it was
determined.
This is the twilight of the
kings. Western Europe of the
people may be caught in this de-
bacle, but never again. Eastern
Europe of the kings will be re-
made and the name of God shall
net give grace to a hundred
miles of broken bodies.
If Divinity enters here it comes
with a sword to deliver the peo-
ple from the sword. .
It is the twilight of the kings.
Chicago Tribune.
A party who knows how things
are running in this country tells
us that the farmers have a great
deal to contend with when they
depend on negroes'to pick cotton.
The negroes really work but 3
and one-half days per week.
Monday they feel bad from Sat-
urday night and Sunday's dissi-
pation and it's Tuesday before
they get down to real work, and
then they begin to plan for Sat-
urday and Sunday's doings. So
they really work about half the
time, as no work is done on Sat-
urday. Many of the negroes are
on the beat as they go along.
Sometimesjfarmers lose from $25
to $50 on negroes who get ad
vances and then skip the coun-
try. We need to tighten down
on them a little, Italy News-
Herald. v
L
OUI8
Men's Balbrigjyan and Pornis-
knit Underwear 60c value. Sale
Price, three garments (h i nn
Men's Vebour Hats in all colors
K.:.01...!:1! $2.45
You get back the original cost of your stove in the
fuel money saved each winter. Could you ask for more?
Here is the Guarantee "on , ' .
Cole's Original
Hot Blast Heater
Backed Up in Every Particular by the Makers:
1 A saving of onc-tliirti in fuel over any lower
draft stove of the same size, with soft coal,
slack or lignite.
"2 That Cole's Hot Blast will use less .hard coal
for heating a given space than any hasp burner
made with the same size fire pot.
"3 That the rooms can be heated from one to two
hours each morning with the soft coal or hard
- coal piU in the'slovc the evening before.
"4 That the stove .will hold fire with soft coal from
Saturday night until Monday morning.
"5 A uniform heat day and night, with soft coal,
hard coal or lignite.
"6 That every stove will remain absolutely air-tight
as long as used. i-
"7 That the feed-door is and will remain smoke and
dust-nroof.
!'77Tlmt thc Anti-Pu-fling Draft will prevent puffing.
"All we ask is that thc stove shall be operated ac-
cording to directions and connected with a
good flue
T,(Signcd) COLE MANUFACTURING CO."
Not Inc.
(Makers of thc Original Patented Hot Blast Stove.')
This Guarantee can not be made on any other heating
stove. h
If you want economy and real home comfnrr. mm in
. j i..
auu i us
Se the
ot each
HLlMtfi?!'.Av.i 113
The Oldest shop in town
Has The Best Equipped Shop in This Section
First-class Blacksmith Work'
GKIND DISCS, SHARPEN PLOW,! REPAIR WAGONS
mfwjyiMWRM nwifiBytjja
i
nduce
I I
50 pair Men's Low Shoes brok-
en sizes, Patent Leather, Vici Kid,
and Gun Metal $3 and $4 (Jj
yalue, Sale Price Q) fi
Hannan & Son
Shoes $7 value
JPlllliilPw
ii r . ? - -
sen you one or these stoves.
name ''Cole's" on feed door
stove. None genuine without it
Harriett Hardware Go.
WE APPRECI-
ATE YOUR TRADE
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Cates, R. F. The Bartlett Tribune and News (Bartlett, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 11, Ed. 1, Friday, October 9, 1914, newspaper, October 9, 1914; Bartlett, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth48895/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bartlett Activities Center and the Historical Society of Bartlett.