The Denison Daily Herald. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 15, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 31, 1906 Page: 2 of 8
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Er.tered at tb* Pnttoffloe at Oenlson ••
pecon4*' l^*« matter.
| still have
} nothing to
There are still some dozen owners of
business property who have failed or
Ksrs^==^^r=======r . ; refu8ed to agree to pare. The Her-
Ttrmm of ■ubwriptton—Dally: ! a|d does not believe Ir allowing these
One w^k "7!.............* -H l)r°P*rtJ' ow»ere to «tand la the way
One month’...!...................M of this muchly needed Improvement.
Three months Of paid In advanf).. 1S* why not pave the balance of the
the BEMl-WF.KKi.T herald. street and leave the etreet as It Is In ,btt °* ***• Judge, under whose
. front of these places? administration this system of county
c>r.r year .......................... It .OS ............- ........
„ _ _____ ________ _____-.........
subwrflwr. eesirtns tb. *» l WITH THE EXCHANGES
thrlr paper* rknvtei will £‘‘'3** *■'« •
both (h« oki and the n--« aMr’’M' •»»»♦»
are also places
grows sideling, t
evenness and not only i
tire of riding but leave
which the water will gather, to the
certain deterioration of the road bed
The attention of the connty board la
called to these things, and particularly
Toil's sot
Koh what you 8ur
• • •
A member of the Nebraska legisla-
ture was
in three
four days be was disabled from duty.
The veterinary took him la hand at
once, but made no progress. The limb
roads has been brought into existence,
and the suggestion made that before
their terms of office expire it would
be well to look into measures for the
1 perpetuation of the roads from which
[this county has drived so much bene - -- --..v, -nanlei Web-
Ilt. and pleasure as well. The Austin «»* “"d "‘S**-,;
making a speech on some >t>nf|fl (0 times Its normal sis
momentous question, and in cone u M(j ^ remedy was found to be of
ing said: ___ _| grail. More tlian a dozen veterlnaries,
In the words of Daniel Webster,
who wrote the dictionary. Give me
liberty or give me death!"’
One of the colleagues pulle* at hla
it is as easy as falling off a log to . ^ th„ Nacf>Kdoche8 road, the
denounce the tendency to make money pleaHan(on road> th* Hegnln road are
but the denouncers are the first ones. ln pr0bnhly the best condition of any
in at the death when there is a fat. ^ the roads, and there are
job being run down.—San Antonio, m,leg upoB milM „f thMe roads that.
Express. : require no repairs. 8orae work might
■ It’s always the other fellow whom ; be done at present with good result In
! most of us criticize. We seldom take i an economical way on
TUESDAY, JULY SI. 1506.
! these things home to ourselves.
road, and probably some others, for
: the ounce of prevention Is better
Ladies' than the pound of cure In keeping a
stcr did not write the dictionary; It
was Noah."
•Noah, nothing!’’ replied the speak-
er. "Noah built the ark’—Exchange.
• • •
A man whose house adjoined the
__.„ railway kept a goat tethered in his
the Blanco garden A friend asked him one day
Mr. Bok, the editor of the
in.....I! ~;.......r-rr-r--------r^a. j Home jolirna) fear, that thoughtless : ftood gravelled road In perfect order.
in,I ififr awhile we shall see what ,*ople may be led to believe that he 1 Bexar county hat pioneered the way
Arw au* iy the originator of a famous brand j for kood roads in n way that la worthy
of beer. Perish the thought!—Fort imitation, and if she also points
Worth Record. I,he way to k**l,inK these roads In con
Mr. Bok will be entering, suit for
iibel If you don't watch out.
we skull see-
gome men are known by the com-
pany they avoid._
The man with a taste for figures
is iu his element right now.
The uncertainties of this life are
xybut hrf|§ the grey hairs.
Some men never really know how
tiny Eland until they run for office.
Little things often have a wonder-
lul bearing on a man s political ca-
reer. ___
There are soma adrnifable' features
in the TeiVeil election law and some
damnable ones.
In the burly burly of the campaign
we have .entirely lost sight of llatry
Thaw. Is he still in the Tombs?
If the uext legislature does not
pruue the Terrell election
what was the use of the goat. “Use
of the goat!” he replied. "Man. that
goat keeps me in coals. Never a train
passes but the fireman throws a bit
of coal at It.’’—Glasgow Evening
Times.
* • *
________________________________ Mr. James Francis Burke, now Con-
dition for Indefinite years, she will1 gressman from the Thirty-second Dls-
truiy have filled the bill as the most, i trlct of Pennsylvania, in an address to
progressive county In the state, and
the one most worthy of imitation.
law the
members should be pruned themselves.
The man who deliberately sticks a
Inif# into his home town is in reality
guilty of the same net against nimseir.
gome authentic information regard-
Jpg that proposed depot would make
most excellent reading these warn
days. , - ,
Those Bell organs that had Messrs.
Colquitt and Brooks down and out
several weeks ago are doubtless enjoy-
ing the returns. *
[f the Republicans cut no ice In
Texas when they are united hqw much
Ice wilt they cut now that they are
hopelessly spilt up?
11 seems to the Herald that the cor-
ner «t Ml rick avenue and Main
street is about the best location for
the proposed federal building.
i gome men spend their lives running
for office and it takes all they can
make between elections to get even
and keep body and soul together.
,• The coming stale Democratic con-
vention bids fair to be the warmest
in the history of the state and Texas
has had many red hot conventions.
It will not bo long row until the
ugony will be entirely over and we can
all get busy, pushing our own business
and helping to develop tuc resources
of the greatest state In the Union.
F. C. Wrig,ht of Shlnery laike was 1
in one day last week and brought ns aan Antonio Light. _
a sample of his corn and onton crop. IMPROVED METHOD8
Ho had some fine corn which is al- inq.
ready made and onions that can't be
turned down In any county. Mr. Wright
has one of the finest farms in Stone-
wall county and when he falls to make
stuff it is a slim show for the other
lellow.—Aspermont Star.
That’s the kind of farmers Texas
needs. Corn, onions, vegetables, hay
and cotton go hand In hand when
they find the man who is disposed to
give tften an equal chance, and the
farm that grows them all is the farm
that Is most valuable.—Fort Worth
Record.
That kind of a farmer has a hank
account and is living on the fat of
the land. There is no reason why all
Texas farmers should not be In his
class.
OF FARM-
This is the season when the June
brides who left home In a carriage
and pair are returning on the street
cars.—Galveston Tribune.
Love’s young dream Is being re-
placed by stern reality.
There Is no occasion for anybody to
tell anything but the truth about the
resources of Texas, for the Iruth is
quite satisfying.—Baa Antonio Ex-
press.
Correct. There are many residents
of Texas who are by no means keep-
ing up with the wonderful develop-
ment that is going on in hundreds of
different ways. Texas is destined to
be an empire within herself. /
HERALD ECHOES.
The Herald is gratified to note that
the esteemed Dallas News is satisfied
with the position it occupied during
the recent campaign. It would have
been greatly pained to have learned
that the News was not pieasea.
Colonel Cecil Lyon is said to hare
the ear of the president Dr. Acheson
Intimates that the anti-Lyon move-
ment had Its inception at Washington.
It would seem to be up to the Presi
dent to say something.—Denison Her-
ald.
If Chairman Lyon has the ear of the
President he should be compelled to
return It. There Is no reason why the
nation's chief executive should be mu-
tilated In order that Colonel Lyon
may hold an emblem of authority
Fort Worth Telegram.
An attempt is going to be made to
pack (ho state convention when It
cornea to the selection of the delegates
at the county convention. Unless care
lul watch Is kept on this it may be
possible to once more defeat the will
of the people iu this state.
The people of Denison are behind
the race meeting and fat stock show
to Be given in this city in October
text and it is going to be a hummer.
Every man and woman in Denison
should appoint, himself and herself a
committee of one to help advertise it.
,TJ)e Herald doffs its hat once more
to Old Politician of the Dallas Times
Herald. Sixty days ago he announced
that the Bell following was long on
generals, colonels, majors and cap-
tains but woefully weak when it came
to the rank and file which it takes to
make a showing and secure results.
The returns Indicate that, the state-
ment was eminently correct,
The congressional race in this dis-
trict is a remarkably close one. While
on the face nf the returns there seems
to be little doubt but that Mr Randell
has the call in the convention it will
be by only the fraction of one vote
The Herald has never been able to
understand why county printing
should be sent outside of the county
when there are print shops in the
county that can do the work. These
printers are taxpayers and where
newspapers are conducted by the
same owners they are working con-
stantly to build up their town au<
county. Give the home man a chana
before you rush off to outside con-
cerns Is the policy that builds up com-
munities.—Denison Herald
No truer statement was ever made
than the above. As much as we regret
to say It, It Is a well known fact that,
some of our business men order their
stationery out of town, and not only
expect the local papers to stand by.
them, hat fight the mall order bust
ness and abuse the other fellow that
sees fit to go out of town to trade.
It has not been many days since some
of our Citizens sent a $ 15 circular job
to Sherman to be nrlnted, and when
asked why they did not give the lo-
cal printers a chance at it, made the
statement that they were too busy and
could not do the work. When the
truth about the matter Is none of the
local printers were even asked to
bid on the Job, much less print It.
Now, we are not especially grieved
over
did not get, but the point we would
like to make in this special instance
Is that we were misrepresented in the
matter.—Bonham Favorite.
It la, of course, only stating a tru-
ism to say that all business enterpris-
es and the prosperity of all the people
everywhere are dependent upon the
farmer. If seasons favor him and Prov-
idence jsmlles upon bis labors, the
whole world is the beneficiary; If
calamity and disaster smite his crops,
with electrical speed all the nations
know of It, "The farmer feeds them
all,” sententiously states an oovfous
truth, yet it is a fact that far lesB at-
tention has been paid to education
having reference to agrlciifthre than
to law, medicine, theology or litera-
ture. '
it is within a comparatively recent
time that practical instruction in ag-
riculture In colleges has been under
taken, and experimental stations are
yet more recent.
The value of such Instruction and ex-
perience is very great, and the scope
of the service and field of operation
of agricultural and mechanical col-
leges should be enlarged, but many a
Texas farmer could learn lessons of
incalculable value by a visit of inves-
tigation and study to, we will way,
North Carolina*)there to observe the
improved methods of farming.
Crops most bountiful are raised
there on land which not one farmer In
ten In Texas would put a plow in. On
light, sandy soil, and literally on red
clay, fifty to sixty bushels of corn and
one and a half bales to two bales of
cotton per acre are raised. This may
read like an extravagant statement,
but It Is hut simple truth, established
by abundant proof In many a field.
It may he said these results are ob-
tained by excessive enriching with
expensive fertilizers, but this is true
only to a certain extent.
Lands are renewed, or, as they say,
"brought up," from absolute worth-
lessness to great fertility by planting
broadcast field peas, followed by rye.
and that by clover. The rye Is plow-
ed under and not harvested, but the
peas, when pods are full growfa, are
harvested for hay. Formerly at! of the
vines and peas were turned under to
enrich the soil, but, thanks to scientif-
ic investigation and tests, It was dis-
covered that the element* which en-
rich the soil were deposited around
the roots of the peas, and hence turn-
ing under peas has been abandoned as
useless and wasteful.
There are thousands of acres of
land that need such treatment In Tex-
as. and from which if so treated like
results would be realized.
There can not be found le^the rich
e*t lands In Texas finer qpps than
can he seen from Chattanooga to
Washington. Cotton promises abund-
ant yield, and In moat fields Is grown
from Improved and selected seed, and
the fruitage Is wonderful, and all thla
on land that would not be worth In
Texas five dollars an acre.
The time to quit haphazard, care-
less farming In Texas Is at hand.
What is done In North Carolina can
be done here with more profitable
results.
. It takes not only plow*, hoes and
fertilizers to farm, but brains as well,
and the more brains and care and
study the better will he results.
Houston Chronicle.
Ust Friday the commissioners’
court, in fixing the route of the Cop-
pell intermediate road, passed an or-
der turning the line through Irving in-
stead of half a mile north, as the
old line run* It Is understood that
the graveling on,thls section will be
started In a few days and pushed rap-
idly through if teams can be had. And
it is claimed that now Is the oppor-
tunity for local teams and labor to get
road employment.—Irving index.
Graveling road* in Texas is one of
■ „ . .. „ . . the things that will contribute to the
out of forty-eight, tor a man who comlng * greatness and permanent
was practically unknown outside of j|ory of ,hl, state.-Fort Wgjgh Rec-
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
Their sins and the bill collectors
often find men out.
Bad little hoys look, upon good little
*’«= sr-i «ss XELTSEisa «
will invest In automobiles.
Fortunate are they who are run
down only by elevator men.
Death loves a shining mark; that la
why bald headed men do not live for-
ever.
Money you may bet on the mare
doesn’t always make her go under the
wire first.
A woman never has much confi-
dence in a grocer who doesn’t belong
to the same church She does.
We never realize how much nerve
we have until we have occasion to
occupy a dentist’s chair.—Chicago
News. ** 1 :*'‘-
GOOD ROADS.
REFLECTION* OF A lACHEkAR.
hi* own county Hr. Barrett made a
remarkable race and one that he has
every reason to feel proud of. The
Herald is, ol course, pleased over the
Driving over the county roads that
radiate from this city, one 1* Immedi-
ately impressed with the excellence
’*•' '' , ,
Nobody’s sins ever wait for , tfm
third and fourth generation to go.jfla-
Itlng with them.
When s woman buys a
her boy to swim In the bathtub It’s
an awful temptation to her to speak
of It as her husband's yacht—New
York Press, -----------------
the graduating class of a Pittsburg
•chool told the following story;
“The president of an ocean-llnet
company was taking a journey across
the water, and, when the ship enter-
ed a very dangerous channel, he en-
gaged in conversation with the pilot,
who, by the way, was a whiskered old
man of sixty-eight, with all the ap-
pearance of having spent most of his
days on the water. The magnate
remarked:
•‘ T suppose yon know all tne dan-
gerous places In this channel.’
"The pilot, looking straight out Into
the night, gruffly replied: ‘Nope.’
‘“You don’t!’ said the magnate,
very mnch surprised. ‘Then why on
earth are you In charge If that wheel?
What do you know?’
'“I know where the had places
ain’t, coolly replied the old pilot,
much to the satisfaction of the mag-
nate.’—Saturday Evening Post. .
• • *
A Kansas City man came up to a
lecturer In a hotel there, saying with
enthusiasm;
"Well, sir, I enjoyed your lecture
very much last night.”
“I didn’t see you there.”
"Oh, I wasn’t there.” «
"Well, what do you mean by tell-
ing me you enjoyed my lecture, and
you were not present?”
“Oh, 1 bought tickets for my girl's
father and mother, and they both
went."
The lecturer felt that he had not
talked In vain.—New York Tribune.
• * *
When old Uncle Weatherby was
a poor farmer he used to go up to
town and eat pie Alth a carving fork.
The people smiled.
'You don’t say!"
‘Then later on he began eating it
with a tablespoon. The people laugh-
ed.”
“I don’t blame them.”
"From that he changed to a ktlife.
They roared.”
"Great Scott! And is he still stick
ing to the knife?’’
“No. Since they found oil on his
farm and rated him as a millionaire
he eats pie with his finger* and every
body nods his approval and says he
Is bizarre."—Chicago News.
• • •
She was going away for the sum
mer and of course she wanted a new
parasol.
And as to the handle/’ she*mused,
“I want, something nobby. Do you
think the head of a bird would suit
me?"
The big husband looked up from
his paper and grinned.
"Most assuredly, my dear," he
chuckled, “ If the bird Is a parrot.”
She flushed deeply.
"Is tW so?” she retorted sharp-
ly. “Well, sir, I am going to get you
a cane for a birthday present and I
shall make sure that the handle suits
you In every particular.”
"Ah indeed! What kind Of a bird
or beast will It represent?”
"Neither bird nor beast. It will rep-
resent a lobster.”—Chicago News.
• • •
A number of years ago, when Judge
Peters of Bangor occupied the posi-
tion of chief justice of the supreme
court of Maine, a case came before
him for settlement that had occupied
the attention of the Penobscot county
court for twenty years.
Two farmers had a dispute In re-
gard to the ownership of'a pair
scales, or large steelyards, called
“beam." The case had been called up
at every term of court, to be con-
tinued. It had cost both farmers
their farms, besides many years
toll, anxiety and hard feeling.
After settlement had been made
the Judge gave them a short lecture,
full of good advice, and told them to
return to their homes and become
friends and forever fight shy of the
courts. After promising to do all that
thf Judge asked they smilingly shook
hands.
The much talked of beam lay on
table, having been brought In by a
deputy sheriff. One of the men to
the suit, taking his well worn hat, was
about to depart, when, seeing the
beam, he said: "Well, that Is my
beam and I’ll take It home."
“No," said the other,* “that Is mine
and I want It.” 1
The Judge's face looked as If he
would have an attack of, apoplexy,
and be said. In bis sternest tones:
**||r. Sheriff, send a deputy with that
have him sink it
bor."
And very soon the article was
peacefully resting upon the bottom of
the Penobscot—Boston Herald.
soldier aud citizen, had a look at the
horse before a final verdict wa* pro^
noun red, and all knew what the end
would be. and all pitied him. At the
end of three months the leg was no
better, and the flat went forth that be
was to !>« shot.
’ “Corporal Brixton and guard will
take the horse out on the prairie and
shoot him,” read the order, and the
colonel added verbally, “And do It as
decently as you would shoot a mau.”
When Eureka was ready to be led
forth to execution 300 men insisted on
gathering to bid him goodby. He was
everybody’s horse to admire and praise,
bnttk was only the battery men who
bad the privilege of rubbing hla arched
neck and smoothing hie^.velvet nose
and telling him that he should never be
forgotten, though replaced. Strangely
enough, the ailment had not affected
the horse’s general health. His eye
was Just «s bright and his spirits Just
as high as when able to more with the
swiftness of an antelope. He rubbed
his muzzle against the cheeks of the
men and whimpered for sugar, and
when he went limping away caps caifle
off and men felt a lump gathering in
their throats.
Hie cortege wound over the hill a
quarter of a mile away and then de-
scended into the valley, and the pace
was that of a funeral procession. When
It was out of sight of the fort Private
Dally asked of Corporal Brixton:
“Corp, are ye a man or a scoundrel?"
“I’m a man, I’d have ye know, and
I’ve proved it fifty times over,” was
tbe answer.
“And have ,ys got a heart in yer
bosom?”
“As big as a beer keg."
“And would ye murder a helpless
bafcy?"
“Cuss me If I would! I know what
you are driving at, and you leave It to
me.”
Half a mile across tbe valley they
came to tbe fringe of bushes and en-
tered them. Eureka had but the slight-
est use of bis leg, but be hobbled on
after a fashion and made no complaint
On the contrary, he snorted sad sought
to dance around at In the days of his
strength. By and by a glassy glade
vu reached. Here was food and wn
ter for a hundred horses, and the cor-
poral called a halt.
“Dally asd Henderson, listen to me,"
he said. "The erders are to shoot Ku-
ril hart u
in file first tklrmh
as Cold blooded |
• horse like this
Unde Bern to kick me out of I
and me own mother to go i
Make ready now «itn
The carbine shots rang
nofire did not startle th*
least, but it might bav«
at the fort by any oue lietmt*,1’
men bad aimed above »
their bullets went ringing tJSd
treetoDH.
"la he finished?" asked
as he turned bis hack on the I
hone.
» "He hi. sir,” answered dm
"Tben heaven rest hi* soul fW||
horse, and forward march.”
For four or five days '
men of the entire garriam
askance at the three men ig
away from them. They t>*
under orders, but they had ibotg
Eureka. They knew what «M|
comrades, but they kept their <
counsel. The report of the ,
was accepted without qoeifiaal
tbe incident passed into history.
Had Eureka been well iB g,
would have made his way back I
fort before dark. As It wig hi
and drank and slept. They hf i
him his discharge from tbs i
bad mode an outlaw «f bin, i
bad no further right ea the Ui»,
tbs sublet. He did not non i
the glide that day or night
midnight a btg timber wolf mtl
of the foothill* and circled umM|
and glared and growled, sad (Ml
rose up with painfnl effort <
reedy to defend himself wttht
hoof. The wolf did net attack,)
ever, and when daylight cam* hag
pie hobbled up tbe valley In i
a more secure retreat. That •
the last days of May. The \
net settled, and the horse tod hi
himself except for the few daw, I
le and wild horses that atrsyadt
s tonally. j
June, July and August cue i
went, sod one day early la I .
the better j was takes out (ir I
It had bed* at work for half ml
with evolutions when ft t
ed'lnto position, unUmhsndult
late action and tbe guas begat 1
boom. Of a sudden tbe mo Ml
wild cheering. Captain, I
Brat sergeants sat en their!
scowling wonder at such 11
discipline, but It was only 11
before the pussle was solved,
lug toward them down the sloybgl
aide, with mane and toll fiyft|bf
broese and Ms heels in the hr I
X.<
time, wad Eureka.
POINTS ABOUT PEOPLE
i
Amzl Smith, superintendent of the
document room at the capital, has a
marvelous memory. He Is familiar
with all the countless bills and docu-
ments for many aessions back, and
can get tbe desired one at any time
without consulting Indexes or file
lists.
Professor Milne, the famous earth-
quake specialist, was 24 years old
when Cyrus W. Field sent to the
Royal School of Mines. London, for a
roan to go out to Japan. The present
professor was the man selected.
When can you start?" On Tuesday?"
asked Field. The student responded
that the time was too short to get his
things together, as It was then Fri-
day. “Loqk here, young man,” said
Field, “It only took six days to make
the world, and if a whole world can
be made in that time your few things
can be got together In less. Leave a
note with my secretary as you go out
as to what salary you want.” On Tues*
day the young man was on his way
to Japan.
Lieutenant H. H. Rogers, Jr., son
of the oil king, is one of the “good fel-
lows" In the Twelfth regiment, nation-
al guards of tbe state of New York.
He Is much unlike his friend, John D.
Rockefeller,-Jr., In temperament. He
Is far more popular than Lieutenant
Cornelius Vanderbilt, of the same reg-
iment, for young Rogers Is one of
"the boys," while Vanderbilt keeps
mostly to hlmBelf. Rogers is a “scrap-
per," doesn’t shun a fight and goes
out with bis men just as though he
wasn’t the son of a multimillionaire.
Vanderbilt occasionally gives a little
“blowout” to bis men. but the affairs
are of the formal kind and usually
the officers only are invited. He
draws a line that Rogers never thinks
of.
Henry Clay Frick, the New York-
Pittsburg multimillionaire and former
partner of Andrew Carnegie, is fifty-
six years old. He was a farmers son.
Twenty millions is the sum accredit-
ed to Mr. Frick. He has one son,
Childs Frick, twenty-one years bid,
and one daughter, Helen. A year ago
he leased tbe Vanderbilt nouse at tne
comer of Fifth avenue and Fifty-
first street for which he pays $50,000
a year for twenty years.
Mrs. John Burns, wife of ihk radi-
cal member of parliament. Is a simple-
hearted. unassuming Uttle woman of
attractive personal appearanoe and
that privilege. When she *se I
cently presented to the king
queen this modfest little *<®*M
still does her own housework, r*
object of curiosity to the M
who surrounded the throw. a|
expected to titter over a hit
awkward spectacle they we«(
pointed. They saw a rather
woman, becomingly and
dressed, whose manner wai
criticism.
An enthusiastic young X«*
publisher had a brilliant Idea <
days ago. He called on Senator 1
as C. Platt and asked the old r
man to write his personal w ^
cence of politics for tbejj*i
century. The senator “'“““y
tlvely and then asked:
want me to write this htoMy
know it to be or »*
might Imagine it to be. tm
elastic person replied tnat s
the exact truth—not a thing r
over, not a touch of fw»
"My young friend,” raid
kindly, “come around $/**'
five years after I am dead-
be safe and proper to do
not now. By all means, r
After the publisher had
muqh disappointed. tta»
ogalstatesman said softly to Sy
“That would be quite »
woudn’t It? Thurlow WeN«l
tlons would be small
side of It" ^ 1
Senator Beveridge ha* ’
deal of legitimate funpok j
as the “boy orator, but w
charge that Beveridge ^ u
else than scrupulously
is more than could be
other members of ’he ^
eral years ago after M'
visit to Arizona and •
was sent $5,000 worm
thine in that section,
promptly returned tM
stating that be feU « *
proper for him to i
the sort. That M<W lS
Is now said to be valu* 1
Uon dollar*.
At YOU GATHERED^
How shall ! a
As the wife of a
ister Mrs. Burns is rolled
attend court
upon to
habit M-ra*?
Xi you'<1W the habit
As you fu*.
As yqu yielded- gtr»nd*J
Thread by ‘bread an4 *
AsUTweUbiod"d, stone tj ‘
We must toil-ubh^raro.
Till the W,
B&tS£'skg&‘
8S5JIS
BfeiSrSs&i
SHfegSgsr'
Krecentent or love ’
to
habit builds the
■ i
.
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The Denison Daily Herald. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 15, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 31, 1906, newspaper, July 31, 1906; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth572150/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .