The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, July 19, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
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' .Vvjw'.-l Vtee'ji
THE END OF LOR] HER CASE. !»♦♦»»»♦♦»♦♦»»♦♦♦ »♦♦♦♦♦»
IY1BY FRIDAY.
.1
4*—
CRT CIBCULATION
COUNTY CIRCULATION
Progress Bldg. Patrick aad R.R.
Iviiw I1.4M Per Year,
i Me. 3 mouth* 35c la advance
DALEY Publisher aad Yaaadcr.
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS.
■object to action of the Democratic
Prlmariee July 27. 1912.
Oar Congreaaman
O. W. OILLESPIE of Fort Worth
•Ur State Senator 26th District
C. O. FOUST
'Far Representative 96th Dlatrlct:
DR. W. B. OOODN0R re-election
C. C. MAYFIELD
•Nr Flotorial Repreeentatlve 97th Diet
C. D, SPANN of Somervell Co.
R. a WHITEHEAD of Hood Co
•Nr District Judge
J R KEITH
W. J. OXFORD (re-election.)
•Nr County Attorney
ALEX JOHNSON
W. H. GARRETT
VNr Sheriff:
DAVE DEATON (re-election)
•Nr County Judge
L. N. FRANK
A. P. YOUNG
•Nr County Clerk
HENRY OLARK (re- elect loo )
•Nr County Treasurer
LEE KBHJ.EY
W. O. (Green) INGI.EY
A E. (BUD) OATES
R. M BALAJBTINE
ELISHA B JONES
C. C. OLIVER
Vor Tax Assessor
HENRY BELCHER
J. K (John) BURNETT
EDD MEISENKEIMK.it
G. R. (Granville) FAGAN
WM. II. TAYLOR
'W. G. (Low) COOK
J. D. BIGGS
M. L. JACKSON
•Nr Tax Collector
TDM STINNETT (re-election)
Iffar District Clerk;
H. C. THORNTON (re-election!
■be Co. Supt of Public instruction
W. T. GRAVES
MISS CARRIE COMPTON
W. G. SEARS ( re-election t
For County Cotnm tea loner Precinct
H. E. HUDSON, ire-election)
R. S. POPE
•or Jtaatice of the Peace at Dublin
K. R READ. SR
®Nr Constable at Dublin
B F HOOD
JIM VAN
New Orleans Times-Democrat
After months of painful vacillation
and tedious delay, the Senate finally
closes the Lortmer Incident creditably
—by reversing its previous verdict
and ratifying the Judgment rendered
long ago in the court of public opin-
ion The final disposition of this
troublesome and wearisome case I* to
be commended, not because (t is popu-
lar. but because It serves somewhat,
roughly, perhaps, but not less surely
—the cuds of justice and accords
with sound public policy. The long-
drawn-out debate in the senate has
been to little purpose. Senator I.ori-
raer’s partisans made their defense
principally upon the theory that the
case against him, and the taint upon
his senatorial title, must be proved as ♦ good influence of his upright ♦
♦ A VALUABLE LESSON. ♦
♦ " / ♦
♦ A New York Judge gave his ♦
♦ son a thousand dollars. telHng ♦
♦• him to go t« college and grad- ♦
♦ uate The son returned at the ♦
♦ end of his freshman year without ♦
♦ a dollar and with several bad ♦
♦ habits. At the close of his vaca- ♦
♦ tlon the judge told Til* son that ♦
♦ he had done all he could do for ♦
♦ him.w If he had wasted all the ♦
♦ money that was to have taken ♦
♦ him through college, he might as ♦
♦ well leave home and make his ♦
♦ way in the world It was a rude ♦
♦ awakening for the young man, ♦
♦ but he Hoew that hi* father was ♦
♦ right. And so strong was the ♦
PRO COLQUITT.
My Reasons for Believing Colquitt
should He Re-elected.
p...............................................
Our Purpose Aluiuys
it would have to be proved In a crimi-
nal court, by technical legal evidence
and beyond a reasonable doubt
♦ father that he did leave home ♦
♦ and go to work in down right ♦
♦ earnest. He went back to col- ♦
It is not denied, we believe, that | ♦ lege, made his way through, grad- ♦
there were "strange and secret, do-
By Jake Hodges,
1st. 0 B. Colquitt is an honest and
open anti-prohtbRloniet He told the
people of Texas that If he was elected
governor that be would sign a bltl
submitting the question of prohibition
to the people, but that personally he
would take the stump tn opposition to
Its adoption. Every body understood
It. and all but the religious fanatics
appreciated his candor, sincerity and
open honesty. He did sign the bill—
he did speak against and quailed not,
before the demands of the religious
fanatics. He IS not for saloons and
drunkenness Whatever else may be
attributed to God, he is not a prohibi-
tionist The principle of prohibition
is not taught In the Bible. Colquitt
is an honest Bible devotee, but not a
religious fanatic: and he is a demo-
crat. He believes in self government,
jment other than self government and
] there is no self government other than
| local Colquitt is a local optionlpt.
I as to
‘the several
I conclusively
TEXAS IN BUST HI II NOTES,
the charge that Mr
Lo rimer's promotion to the senate was
directly brought about by corrupt
| means. But there can scarcely be two
j opinions regarding the shadiness" of
| certain transactions in that legisla-
ture. The peculiar circumstances sur-
rounding the ts'riiitcr election, the
confessions of sundry legislators, the
scandalous disclosures in general re-
garding its conduct, combined to put
an Ineradicable taint upon the Sena-
tors title
No amount of hair-splitting amt
'oehnical argument could remove or
glare over that taint The public
would neither forgive nor forget Mr
I airliner's usefulness as a senator was
dost roved The senate pself suffered
an appreciable los ,,f popular reapert
and confidence bv its early attitude
of complaisance The -censed senator
prejudiced his own case we think —
and made his retention virtually ;m-
iwissihie -lo hang.ng on ami refn« nt
'o seek ' indication al the hands o' Ins
own oort art truants who alone could
clear hie Tide Had he resigned im-
mediately following his exoneat ”i
bv the senate and Issilv ch-aMenged
his enemies to a con'esr before • n
vo’ers of Illinois, he m;g)n have os'
Ins seat, hip he must have achieved
a tietter place in the pubic esteem
Hi* own co-i.-se helped to make 1 po-
sition untenable and h;s retention l-i
the senile Impossible The •
has done the only 'hing that it o->u: I
do with justice • i its own reput o e
and to the public interest. The
imn'e which it has made of Mr I. '
met is ejee-slingiv painful to him m 1
! associated communities (to regulate
+ by their own votes all questions per-
il HIT A CARD WILL BRING.
! ♦ uated at the head of his cltuw. ♦
ing« In the Illinois legislature which ♦ studied law. became governor of ♦
elected him It bn* never been as- ' ♦ the state of New York, entered ♦ a,,d there i# no ««»°ct»tlc govern-
serted that he was in any sense the J • the cabinet of the President of ♦
choice of the people of Illinois for the!4' ,ht* United States and made a ♦!
place. Opinions mar differ sharply j ♦ record for himself that the ooun- ♦ . , . , .
Whether the testimony before1 * try will not let die. it was WU- ♦ bellev« <n the rl«ht «f and ail
committees established * Ham H. Seward
♦
talning to their mutual and local af-
fairs. but it is his honest conviction
that the saloon and whiskey drinking
- are better controlled by licensed re-
If you want to know about the Uni- striotlon than by prohibition He doe*
verslty of Texas, send a postal card not think that the churches should be
t<> the Secretary at Austin and receive dragged Into the political arena and
free tip to the ballot box—no man should
1 Bulletin 196, w hich contains the ever go to the ballot box as a religion-
stories of how twenty-five young peo- 1st. but as a citizen He does not he-
ple worked their wav through the lieve that preachers should be in po-
. 1'nlvorslt.v despite great difficulties liti-cs. and much less does he believe
2 Bulletin 212 —a book of pictures that polities should be In the pulpit
of University life and much Interest- and In (he preacher. He has said so
Ing reading matter about the Inst it t - all the while, and he Is right.
Tion 2nd Governor Colquitt has done
•i Bulletin 218—the annual c ita- more for the better establishment and
Iccue containing >2" pages. From the regulation of the educational interests
catalogue a prospective student may of Texas than any other governor
find a:I necessary information regard- others had not the opportune rospon-
ing entrance conditions, courses of nihility. He happened upon the times
study, etc , etc In addition to the col- ,,f the demand, and he failed not to
lege courses and the courses in law (1)e demands It was ho who
engineering and medicine and pbar- , becked the multiplication of qualsi
many, the new courses in domeeti* normal schools over the state, and
science. In architecture, and In busl- gave emphacies to the better estab-
riess training are fully set forth. llshment and equipment of those we
I’ut these three Bulletins into the have, lie called not an extra session
lands of txiys and girls and they may ,,f the legislature to quibble and ran-
awaken a desire for a college educa- K|P ,)Ver the rebuilding of the A &
non The University of Texas Is the M ,.0n,,KP but as the chief executive,
peoples school, created for them at (1nce asserted the fidelity and honor
maintained ^)v them Every patriotic „f the people and had the building re-
! exan should be familiar with Us placed. In co-operation with the sup-
: ’■
I« to render the best of service to our
patrons. We feel that nothing is too
good for them and we endeavor to
moot the requirements of a good gro-
oer by carrying the very best and
freshest of stock, placing prices at the
lowest possible margin and extend-
ing courteous and careful attention
to all patrons.
PUKE DELIVEBT.
PARKER & DEAN
TELEPHONE NO. #1.
LET US BE YOUB GROCERS
+♦♦ ♦ »♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ 4+ ♦ ............... M11 M t M!
crintimdcnt of public instruction ho
has placed the public school system
uiion a better working basis, and he
was right in vetoing the bill for fur-
ther extension of school age linvit.
Compulsory attendance Is far more
—-———- ’<> his fr’enls -*f course hi,* w :
The First State hank has tiei-n or- make for --.il'hi'-r petllioa; condi-
glttlzed at Denton and a charter ap- 'ions and cl an***- poUtica! in--: b<>ds in
plied for. The capital stock is |r>0 - and outside of Illinois
The postal receipts of the Fort
'Worth postolfice during June were
EM,636, as co<npared with $2« 3X2 for
the corresponding month last year
$70. not if)CO w1 s and operates over
six hundred five and fen cent stores lies
in different pa-'a of the roun'rv I
The value added by Texas factories Hi* legs is *, .
during 'he past six months was ap- group
A recent election to decide on the pyoxlmstely ISO.*>40 oot) New spaper And you bet they am
reports, which :n some Instance* lack
verifkxaf ion. show there have tieen
102 new factories opened for opera-
tion ;n i he state since the first of
January and forty are now under
dog around
Chorus
Square-Jawed and his face
Square-Jawed bull and he
houn .
elrae ,*f construction Twenty-seven Short-legged t>uli arid close
Ce Of 9K.M0 in bonds for street
Raring at Taylor was carried by a
large majority, only three votes being
cast against the issue
Postal receipts at Waco for quar
tar ending Jane JO. were |33 |7& *«
«MRf«rad With 130.162 for the
prrkxt U*t roar, and
QEyMRv or about 10 per cent
•h* MtMOuri, Kansas and Texas *d in San Antonio 'o promote an ir-
Rallway has purchased a seven story neat ion project which, when cum-
’MMBltg in Dallas Which wtll be used I’lete. will water an area of alsmt —
Os tbs ganaral offices of the line in sixty ’houwand o re* The land to b- j Houston I'hronlcle
work Write today and ask for Bul-
letins 196. 212. and 218
TlDIIl HULL DOG NO Ml.
in the window of one of the princi-
pal stationery stores in the Chicago needed than extension of age limit.
loop district appears the effigy of j 3rd He has shown himself a con-
a bull dog Hanging from his collar sistent friend of the laboring man He
is this version of Champ Clark s vetoed the eight hour bill that did not
Houn llwag song J allow the individual the right to work
Teddy * got a dwag, but be ain't no overtime, if he so desired He was
*,<,ui' right, for there is no calling, profes-
sure-jiwcd hull bis face Is siou or service that can be absolute
rtJun • i in regulation by so many minutes and
rt ami he s close to the seconds The personal liberty and
(rights of the individual are of far
kx'kln Teddy s , more worth than all other protection
southern chivalry of a true Georgian.
Is but the inevitable, while his own
devilish spirit writhes in jealousy
with no capacity to appreciate a high
settee of decency and honor—any fling
at O. B. Colquitt along this line la as
hellish as the imp who done it. For
years and years 0. B. Colquitt has
been a faithful member of the Method-
ist church. Be it granted that mem-
bership in a Methodist church does
not insure that one is a Christian, but
to be a faithful member is impossible
without being a Christian O. B. Col-
[ quilt is a Christian, and where Is the
smutted pot to call him black To
make prohibition a test of fellowship
Is un-American, undemocratic and im~
cbrlstian.
There does not live, man or woman
who can in truth say that O. B Col-
quitt ever failed in being a gentle-
man. A gentleman is a gentleman
anywhere—whether In a ball room or
in church—whether in parlor or In a
buggy fanned by the zepher breezes
beneath a moonlight «ky Honor is
the safeguard of all proper deport-
ment. and no honorable man is other
than a gentleman. O. B. Colquitt is
the father of a home, a family, well
filled with children,,and the fears of
a Roosevelt could never have been
warn** have been •!•• t:rev .*d by fire during
increase ,if ’b * period
> HI parr have been-orgainz-
Tw
groun
And v-,»ti be' they ain't kickin' Teddy s j
dog iiroun " Exchange
( IIROM( LINGS.
hull
Texas The consideration was Jton developed l.e* in Ftexar. Kendall ind
MO Comal counties Two dam* will he
Tile commissioner* court at Wax ■ on it me ed a-ro** 'he Cibola and
MfeMfct*, has ordered an election for ,,rx Coma! river* giving * total re-
Aaguot 10th to vote on the iaeuan.-e *"rvolr eapori'y of approxtmtelv
of good road* bonds to the amount, of - Soo.oot) cubic fee*
rn« hundred tlionsand dollars for * report issued by the crop re-
FVrls dlatrlct ;>*>r' board of ibe federal department which
The Fort Rtockston irrigation com •'f agriculture during June, snow* the r,>r R
He who lives well has mastered the
art of growing old gracefully
(The ten hour law for convicts is cer-
' talnlv questionable, since the state
Is rotiti ; persists In running all to farming
am t no \o farm or farmer can ever be a auc-
i ee«» where sterotyped rules of time
to the j limit is made absolute, and this has
hampered the Colquitt administration
4th. Colquitt has shown himself
jjealious and zealous as lo the honor
and safety of Texas citizens against
the outrages of Mexicans and maraud-
ers. It was he who Interviewed the
president of the United States and
claimed state rights of practicing by
the genera! government, and when the
An excellent practical rule of life t»(crltical moment came he revived his
M hen in doubt, don 1. arid when not j Andrew Jackson spirit by ordering
in doubt, do j state troop* to the border with in-
The matt whose thoughts. _ words j struct ion* "to shoot the devil" out of
and deeds are evil needs regeneration those greasers should they dare h.i-m
to* cannot get iinicps he asks a citizen of Texas " What Texan is
| not proud of our governor for hi*
aroused had all men and women been
as faithful in holy wedlock as Gov-
ernor Colquitt and the holy mother
of his children A cleaner, nicer set
of children does not exist and a more
faithful wife and mother never lived.
Religiously and socially, he believes
the home the unit of government, and
as with God hp believes obedience to
the authority of parental love to be
the fulfillment of law Penalty is
never fulfillment of law, and prohibi-
tion is never incentive of love and
obedience. To be a man within him-
self is the only true manhood. On
this principle 0 B. Colquitt has
reared his children, and there are
none more noble In the land.
7th. Democracy can never afford
to swap horses in the middle of a
rushing, rapid river. Well establish-
ed precedent Is (more potent than
written law where public opinion is
the arbiter of conduct and destiny, and
radicalism her* is the most danger-
ous anarchy There is something j:i
honoring the precepts and examples
of the fathers A divided democracy
Just prior to the war Invited the pow-
er of fanaticism at the ballot box and
America was drenched In blood. A
second term is the precedential law
in Texas as to the governor, and well
may our sons profit by the blood let-
ting of their fathers. It Is dangerous
to swap horses mid-st ream—it is dan-
gerous to break from honorable pre-
.■pement.
THE HIGH U08T OF LIVING.
In making the high cost of livta*
the campaign Issue during the presi-
dential contest, Texas is going to be
put m the limelight.
A plot of Texas land, a lltte energy
and a shower of rain will settle the
high cost of living here by providing
the household with fresh products of
the soil every day in the year, and
the more the subject of the high cost
of living is agitated, the better it Is
for ns in Texas. We have wrestled
with most every platform demand
that eyer confronted a free poople,
and a good soaking rain will do more
to settle political differences than all.
our stump speakers and a special
eession of a legislature combined.
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
Hfiny has started work on a project ‘>*«iltl<>n pf all crop** In Texas m t»» Christianity i* rh true and final re-; prompt zeal and action for the pro-
Mm Fecua coanty The reservoir to he be'tcr than fie surrounding states ' H*t«n because it reveal* God's self-iteetton of our honor and safe—
"OWiatructed will impound *uff'Cle*ii ,>n a !m*n of too point* representing sacrificing love the highest thing tn ugatnsi the greaser marauder*’ The
AffaUrr to IfrUmie twenty-five thousand average ron.Mton* Texa* ,re the universe 'religious fanatics may not he. Imt
iiippiminn a habit.
wrod Of land. .reported e< ink 12 point* or * !-2
The engineering ere* of th» (June »h "c the average »Mi«* rondi’ion* in
tofc. Acme and Pacific rallwxv * 'h>* surrounding «'a'e« are three:
Akmnch of the Frisco system ha* !*k * (•»!.»» 'Kirmxl
* NNI the field to locate a route *•>*- «' P*10 *l*te of Texas ha* c**.J.-d r,, tt,*
YWwcnJt The new route will he ,i,»'Unwed Ntn.e, governmenr. land* in:
mala line to El Paso and the Pacific Elli* Kaufman and Orange counties,
coast Which Will S'«0tual!v lie utillied for
Mi reported that the Missouri nsvlRotton p«rposes The EUI* and!
’Amm and Texas railway will con Kanfinsn tr*c» are for Trinity river
A ihvw depot at Temple to east hick »nd d.vm »i(*»s The land ceded
Work on the structure will I *** Orange county adjacent to
nett in the foJi and the build /be Sabine river where ,he f.*der*l ;
*01 be open for service In the govertimdii will widen and dee turn j
spring the Hwblne N't* he* , an*l
parties have purchased the1 A state geologtsi has been in Spur j *. r()w gn4).k jr
factory at HaWley and will | investigating the p»rtkle*,.f potash
the plant to Abilene In time to I which were discovered |n a well near
r: . .. .......,
j Itjr and if found in sufficient qusnti-1
ties will be worked extensively The
worlds production of potash is con-
fined almost exclusively to rtve^ mines
in Gertnsmy and the price !* very
high paused by the scarcity of the
mineral
Tbs sum of oao million, seven
snd electric roll- hundred thomsnd dollars Is soon to
be disbursed is Austin for labor aad
♦ The very title to this article
♦ suggest* the most Important
♦ thing for one to know about liap-
♦ pine** that it i* something (bat
♦ control* tut
♦ We can learn (o be happy, just
♦ as we can learn to be studious,
♦ diligent or neat.
♦ It i* like learning to ride the
♦ bicycle*. difficult snd fearsome at
first but When you have caught ♦ j
second ♦ Why
^ A ^ , chrHHtaim and AmerWuiix are
■ l>th Colquitt totes the "bat." while
the btvck* of our unfortunate brother*
are no longer beaten Into a Jelly and
bunk room floor* blooded by flood-
♦
♦
♦
^ ; Irig from women bared and beaten un-
4 der the awful laali in the hands of
^ brutal beast* called men Two years
^ before Colquitt, was el**-led governor
4. he express*:*! himself to me as against
^ the brutalities of the prison, and in hi*
^ Introductory Speech at M’lilchita Falls
4 two years ago commended ‘ George
a Waverly Briggs ami myself for our
flgbt against those brutalities, Just
he did not suspend .the "bst"
CITY BUILDING NOTES.
j Take vdvanlage of your advant-
j age*
Civic pride is ns commendable as
personal pride
A park system Is art essential to
any community
The race is always to the swift
wheu it come* to city building
You can generally <io as well In your
home town as anywhere else.....If you
try.
A town without a newspaper mid
commercial organization la like a
human derelict—no visible means of
support The newspaper to bo effec-
tive should show local advertising
pair*—
Chicago News
A bachelor girl is merely a girl who
Is unmarried
People who live in clean houses
shouldn't throw mud.
A man seldom generates any steam
with the money he burns.
If you can't lay up something for
a rainy day, salt It down
A woman never kicks when a mftn
compliments her tiny feet.
A woman's complexion can always
be adopted to any color scheme.
People who are thrifty are apt to
get a reputation for being stingy.
The proof of the political pudding
is In the distribution of the plums
Unless a woman is a flrst-clam
arllfft she seldom has a good complex-
ion.
Domestic troubles never bother a
man who lets his wife have her own
wny.
Keep an eye on your friends, vou
know what tn expect from your ene-
mies, (
It takes a silly woman to trust a
man who couldn't get credit for a
3-ccnt head of cabbage at the corner
grocery
Nothing disconcerts a girl more
than to brace herself to meet the shxhjk
of an unexpected kiss and the shocb,
fail* to show up
During leap year a great nmny bach-
elors of mature years get married-*
probably because of the many young
widows on the Job
It sometimes happens that a woman
worships a long-haired man, but did
you ever hear of a hunch of men go-
ing daffy over a short haired woman?
/
♦♦♦♦♦♦A ♦♦+♦♦♦» »44
NOTICE PUBLIC SCHOOL
PHINCIPALS.
fi
♦ nature ♦ *,K,n<*r 1 do not know. This I'know:
♦ It is not a matter of *.»»,». .♦(Ben Cabell ia the only one of the three
■m for the fall crop /*»ee» An analyst* of the turners! «. mwn| Anv tfvgt rM hfl_ 4 commlaalonera who was In favor of
Will have a capacity of *bow» the p*vto«th to he of good qiml- ^ ex**, Statwly contented If he will ♦ aoeP^wdlng It. and the voice of the
* ......... ........ '♦ H hi not a matter of cimutn- ♦ to W,»"4 tabollah) the
♦ stance* It doe. no, dejvend „po„ ♦ *■» '» reoponoe to a direct
♦ health, money, luxuries or any ♦
♦ such thing ♦
♦
♦
♦ ♦
♦ The Progr**s* Is especially well ♦
♦ prepared to deliver the best and ♦
♦ moat prompt ami accurate aer- ♦
♦ vice in the printing of achool ♦
♦ catalogs. The Linotype way ta ♦
♦ Ihe only uniform way of having ♦
♦ booklets of any kind printed and ♦
♦ the Progress plant i» equipped ♦
♦ with tbe only standard Linotype ♦
♦ anywhere along the Kritico mil- ♦
♦ road south of Fort Worth, ex- ♦ .
♦ ccpt at Brownwood, and any- ♦
♦ where on the Texas Central went ♦
♦ of Waco except at Stamford. If ♦
♦ you have not given the Progress ♦
♦ a trial on your cabling, do so tblg ♦
♦ year and see how well you will ♦
♦ be serxed. The price is a!way* ♦
♦ right ♦
♦ ♦ 4
se t
bushels per day ;*n*t will
thirty hands
ntost com »er vat i ve est:-
was approximately **11.
of foreign capital invesied
MrttMn thg atate during the month of
•mm ways tbe Commercial secretaries
an,outu'j
SAFE BARGAINS
No Sharp Hook Qjrcrcd By A Deceiving
Bait to Catch You.
requont of Governor Colquitt It 1.
not "aboUnbad,” but only suspended
material
public
enterprises Work on the Austin dam
h now under wgy and it will require
““ W eoMRUte It Tbe city re-
t th«e you " Z QlgStt ffltwytfaff^ySSam In thle
: : aartv-tt-r
♦ ou anyth lag out side of yourself ♦
♦ you ore foredoomed to Merry. ♦
♦ If you ore j^tug to bo *
ami * “ “
M ♦ wr
;♦* nm eecrot you muet oeek
♦ the am that «•«
♦ triumph error *11 that
yow m
wot r
.....jt-t /.Jiii
I fill. 0 B Colquitt tu a uobor clU-|
MO, a clean man.
and at the head
a.
aad
than beer, and the
t&ftt yigiitit tiki tlm©
was
1-2 gallon cup............. 6&c
2 9-loch 1*1* Plates.........Me
2 9-Inch Jelly Plates.......lie
1 I simp Chimney No. I or t.M«
8 plain White Plates........«•
I Flat Moot Dish ..........We
Mb Bucket Axel Oreauo... lie
y.lfit id at Tin Diak Paa
r**" *...............*■
Brlie’s Variety
i:
1 Teacher’s Bible. .........Ike
1 New TcaUunent...........IfC
Wash Howl and Pitcher. IIJW
’ 8 -asuBWI
Brass King Wash Board.. .f
i 4 Birta* Broom......***4H)^^
I ChUd's uroom ...........
wai,, , , wai^_- i
fiwr wvp •*••*<•••• *»«*•■
---
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The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, July 19, 1912, newspaper, July 19, 1912; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth543398/m1/2/?q=Camp+Wolters: accessed June 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Dublin Public Library.