The Houston Post. (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, July 10, 1908 Page: 7 of 20
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V i
HOUSTON MtLY POST:Ftt)AY MORNING JULY 10. 1908.
v i
'eSeVVwweMsVMVMsjeVsyjsf
THOMAS E. WATSON IS
FORMALLY NOTIFIED
Poptrfists Present ftim as Candidate for President-r Reviews
History of the Roman Empire and Likens It
Mail Oilers Filled Same Day
Received. Orders of $5.00
or Ovtr Sent Express Prepaid
If Youo Desire We Will
Store Blankets and Deliver
Them When You Want Ttetn
to Conditions of Today.
AMID
MM
ALE
. i III!
r ' I . i
ssslaCsi
I i "ir 1 7- 1
JT7 STOPS AT
V" " i C0R C0HSRE3S TRAV1J.
mri
NO MONEY DOWN
CLOTHING
For MEN AND WOMEN
A little ad. but it tells of
big bargains and only $1
a week.
19 ff LAMES' SUITS
-J Oil ud miixwuy
Bsrgaini in Summer Suib
Wash Waist. Silk Waits etc.
Biggest value ever in Men't
and Boys' Suiu bVit you should
come and see for yourself.
RENTER &0OH
1020 TEXAS AVENUE.
Store Open Monday Evening
Until 7 O'clock.
TAT HEN the weather's
hot and oppressive
Ljust watch the ice drip
away. Buy an
ALASKA
and see it stay. Alaskas
keep a block of ice longer
than any other make. A
daily economy some-
thing to think about
Best Ice Cream
FREEZERS
ARE
WHITE MOUNTAIN
MAKE
Bering - Cortes
Hardware Co.
Corner Prairie and Milam
ENGINES
"Murray" Corliss
and
"Ideal" Automatic
"The Money Savers"
Brings--Weaver
Machinery Co.
DALLAS
HAND
SAPOLIO
FOR TOILET AND BATH
It make the toilet something to be en-
Joyed. It removes ell stains and rough-
ness prevents prickly heat and chafing
end leaves the skin white soft healthy.
In the bath It brings a glow and exhilara-
tion which no common soap can equal.
Imparting the vigor and lite sensation of
e mild Turkish- bath. All Qrooere end
Druggists.
TERRIBLY SCALDED
Is something we hear or read about
every day of our lives. II urns and Braids
either slight or serious ere bound to hap-
en in your family be prepared by hav-
ing a bottle of Ballard s Snow Liniment
handy. It relieves the pain Instantly and
quickly heals the burn. Hold by all drug-
gists. V
"Jack Spurlock
Prodigal" by Cleorge Horace Irlmer.
1.0. By mail 11. SO. Buy 110.00 wortli
of our books at cut prices and we will
give you a set of American Orators
worth 19 W free.
L. RUTLEDQE
CO.
Phone 87.
1014 .
rslrlo Avenue.
SPECIAL INDUCEMENT! THIS WEEK!
On any IMsno In our etooV The Induce-
ments aiaso beneficent tlily will only he
msile known to cuatomurslwho call. We
want to see 'you In parson today or to-
morrow at
OLIVER'S
HOUSTON'S RKUABJLB 8T0JUD.
REFRIbERATOn
THOMAS E. WATSON OF GEORGIA.
Nominee of the Populist Party for President of the United States and whose
speech of acceptance was made last night In Atlanta where he was formally
notified.
(AttocJtrd Prtu RrPorl.
ATLANTA. Ga . July 9 Thomas E.
Watson was formally notified of his
nomination for president by the populists
of the United States at a mass meeting
held here tonight.
Mr. Watson arrived In Atlanta late yes-
terday and was tendered a reception ths
principal address being made by General
Coxey of Ohio and Qeorge A. Honnecker
of New York.
Judge Forest of Albany. N. Y.. headed
the notification committee. Mr. Watson
replied to the speech of notification and
the proceedings were closed with a re-
ception. The notification followed the
Georgia populist State convention which
selected a new State committee and presi-
dential electors. No State ticket was put
In the field.
In his speech of acceptance Mr. Wat-
son said:
One of the most fearful statements
that was ever made Is that "history re
peats Itself y Take the words lightly
and you stand appalled.
The clash of armies the horrors of
war the carnage which spared neither
age nor sex - history Is full of it and
when history repeats itself the slopes of
another Gettysburg will run red with
blood the fiery broom will sweep other
Shenandoah valleys and other Atlantaa
and Columbian will he fed to the flames
on some other "Sherman's march to the
sea."
The conquest of human reason by the
priest the reign of religious Intolerance
with its dungeons. Its rack. Its slake for
independent thinker history Is full of It;
and when history repeats Itself the world
will have once more lost Its liberty or
conscience will again hear the shrieks of
the victims of the inquisition will again
shudder with fear and horror as some
other Phillip of Spain slays his tens of
thousands some other Charles of France
fires the signal gun for a massacre of St.
Bartholomew.
ONE CLASS ROBS ANOTHER.
The establishment of the political oli-
garchy the Mse of legislative machinery
by one class to rob the others the ex-
ploitation of the unprivileged by the priv-
ileged history Is full of It. and when
history repeats Itself we shall again have
tlie rule of the many by the few. the
confiscation of the property of the un-
privileged under forms of law and the
giving to systematized pillage the sacred
nHme of government.
Let us go back to one of the tragic
i haplers in the Annals of the past it
may he that a study of that chapter will
arouse us to an appreciation of th.
dan-
geia which have come upon us
We re
turn to the year i before hrlst. 1 tie
aristocracy which had declared war on
Julius Caesar had been overthrown; for
si months this greatest soldier and law-
?lver of antiquity had been at work re-
ormlng the Roman system but now the
middle of the mouth of March had come
and the senatorial conspirators had de-
termined that lie should die All the
world knows the story. Dull Is the
Imagination which can not picture tho
scene- as Caesar goes without suspicion
to Ills soat In tho senate la surrounded
bv the assassins everyone of whom he
lHeves to be his friend is slashed and
pierced with over twenty wounds and
fails dead at the base of Pornpey's
statue.
REASONS FOR CAE8ARH DEATH.
Why did the Roman aristocrats kill
Julius Caesar? What had he done to
Rome that the Roman nobles should take
Ms life?
He liad abolished Imprisonment for debt
and by this act had deprived the Roma
capitalist of his power to keep his debtor
In slavery.
The long civil war had brought about
a great fall in prices for the rich had
hoarded their money Caesar declared
that no creditor should seise the property
of those who owed him. unless It was
taken at the same price it would havo
brought had It been put upon the mar-
ket before the decline In values set In.
In Rome the burdens of government
rested chiefly on those who got the least
out of It and most lightly upon those
who monopolised It" advantages. Wise
lust ami fearless Caesar levied a heavy
Import duly upon the luxuries of life
leaving the necessaries untaxed.
BOMF) OF CAESARS POLICIES.
In Rome there were usurers who did
nothing but lend money and collect In-
terest. They engaged In no other busi-
ness made no Investments paid no taxes
contributed nothing to the wealth and well
being of the slate Caesar wished to free
tho State of these pnrasltea. Under his
law the money lender was forbidden to
lend more than twice the amount he had
Invested In reuJ estate. Tftus the usurer
was forced Into the class of Investors and
taxpayers.
Grout landed estates cultivated by
slave gangs worn the curse of Italy.
Caoear compelled every proprietor to em-
ploy free labor to the extent of one-third
of all those who worked for him
Besides this he adopted a homestead
policy. He not only divided mit the pub-
lic domain among the ( itliena who had
no homes hut Inaugurated the policy Of
buying lands with the public funds for
the purpose of giving homes to the home-
less .
Roman cities were thronged fwtth the
till
ill
IMP
MP
unemployed; 300000 of the poor were fed
from the public granaries. Caesar cut off
160.000 names from the lists of free grain
distributees and said to them. In effect:
"fonder is a piece of land offered you by
trie state go to It and earn bread In the
sweat of your face."
Prut us was one of the noble assassin!
who cut Caesar down and Brutus was a
money lender who had heen fattening on
48 per cent Interest. There were many
of those high-born usurers and their
wrath was Intense when Caesar decreed
that the rate of interest should not ex-
ceed i; per cent and that there should
be no such thing as the compounding of
Interest
Caesar revived the law against hoard-
ing. Any capitalist who kept out of cir-
culation a greater sum than $3000 be-
came a criminal subject to severe penal-
ties. The idea was that money should
circulate that it waa created for no other
purpose and that whoever hoarded it
thus diminishing the Fiipply causing In-
convenience and loss to others commit-
ted ap offense against his f jllowman and
a crime ngajnst the state.
OH. FOR A CAESAR LAST OCTOBER.
Oh. that wa had a Caesar In the White
House last Oct her when those Wall
street rascals drew into New York oil the
available cash of the country hoarded It
and thus created the panic
. It was on account of his reform meas-
ures that the Roman aristocrats plotted
against Caesar; because they ha:ed the
reforms thev murdereid the reformer.
By way of parenthesis let me say that
Caesar was the leader of the political
partv whose mem! ers w ere called the
"populares."
The Latin word "populares" has the
same meaning as the two Greek words
out of which the name democrat was
coined. If sou were asked to put Into
English the exact political classification
of Julius Caesar you would call him a
democrat or a populist It beinu left to
yon to say which classic derivation you
preferred the Latin or the Greek
ROMAN AHlHE! HERE TuDAY.
"History repeats dtself" and today we
have in our own republic every abuse
against which the Roman "populares"
made war
Our public domain has leen preyed
upon by millionaire plunderers a:id land-
grabbing corporations until the American
people have been stripped of a territory
laii;cr than the Gwman emplio
Timber thieves apparently wlih the
connivance of the trovorninpnt. have Keen
allowed to so ravage and deMioy vast
forest areas Htat our losses direct and
Indirect defy human computation. In a I
directions the terrific encrm of the cor
porn lion has driven the public off the
public domnln. Our streets have bee:i
selxed Vv telegraph telephone and rail-
road companies. The Iron horse monopo-
lises! the main line of public travel and.
Instead of lielonging to the public as it
should the horse as well as the vehicle
and the road is private property. The
helph ss public is not permitted to l!j;.it
Its own cities. The private company must
be chartered to hold the light which en
ables tho public to walk the public
streets
The historian wishing to Impress us
with the wealth and extravagance of the
Roman aristocracy tells us that so largo
a sum as 11800 was sometimes paid for
a horse and the vsTst outlay of jav.oio
was sometimes made on a palace. We
are then given n list of Roman million-
aires and It appears that these pluto-
crats were worth from one to twelve
million dollars. Pompey the Great who
bad eouuuered and plundered provinces
linger than continental Europe left prop-
erty valued at M.&no000. Crassus. tho
i ichest of all Roman nabobs left a for-
tune of JU.0O00O0.
MORGAN'S ART TREASVRES RICHER
THAN RICHEST ROMANS
Suppose you compare the plutocracy of
Rome to that of these United Stat 's. J
IV Morgan has more money Invested In
art ti ensures alone than the richest of
all the Romans was worth. The "summer
cottage" of Cornelius Vanderbllt costs
IS.OOO. ' A to say nothing of the rand and
Ike furnishings. John D. Rockefeller's
yearly Income Is greater than waa the
entire fortune of the richest Roman
Krom one little radlroa the Central of
Georcja J. P. Morgan and a choice ns-
ortment of pai t trips t Ing Jthleves. stole
a laiL' M siyt than I asar wrung from
conqueied Gaul. The victorious Hylla as-
tonlshe 1 historians by levying a fine of
IS.iMii.nu upon the i Ich cities of Greece.
The suKiir trust le led an annual fine or
twice that amount upon this republic a
few years ago to recoup Itself for a con-
tribution of J5no.0ao which It had made
to the campaign fund of the democratic
Jiarty By Judiciously placing Its contri-
butions with both the old parties. th
strei trust gets the privilege to so ar
range our faiirr schedules as to extort
net profits every year ten times larger
turn the entire revenue of the Roman
epubllc.
ROBBERIES l)Y VANDEHHILT8
The Vanderbllt family through fran-
chise grabbing and stock watering opera-
tion have ronhl the American people
of a vaster sum than Alexander the Great
hatested by Ms i onquest of the Persian
jf empire.
Antiquity was shocked when (.".eopaira
dissolved and drank a pearl alued at
MOO. 000. Historians emafeaalie the s n
daious luxury of Lucullua V ho spent
But There's More Reason Now
It is a well-known fact that
seasons.
We bought these
were in need of was ready money and as we were in position to pay cash .we got every advantage that was possible.! -We
bought when the tide was out. It is now beginning to come in there have been several advances in prices3-
since and every day we receive notices of advances in the prices of all lines of merchandise blankets included. Sotv'
you can easily see the wisdom of buying now.
10- 4 Fine White Wool Blankets worth $4.50 for $3.00 '
11- 4 Fine White Wool Blankets worth $5.00 for $3.75 y
11-4 Fine White Wool Blankets worth $6.00 for $4.00 f
10- 4 Fine White Wool Blankets worth $7.50 for $5.00 I
11- 4 Fine White Wool Blankets worth $8.00 for $5.50 ' ' "
12- 4 Fine White Wool Blankets worth $9.00 for $6.00 f
11- 4 Fine White Wool Blankets worth $9.50 for $6.50
12- 4 Fine White Wool Blankets worth $10.00 for $7.50 f
1 1- 4 Fine White Wool Blankets worth $1 1.00 for $7.50
12- 4 Fine White Wool Blankets worth $12.50 for $9.00 -
11-4 Plaid Wool Blankets assorted colors worth $7.50 for... $5.00 V
11-4 Plaid Wool Blankets worth $10.00 for $7.50 -A:
EXTRA SPECIAL 50 pairs of Extra Heavy Fine Wool Blankets as-
v sorted color borders a blanket that is worth every cent (Rf. 1
of $7.00 as a leader at a pair. lJJT XJtJ
Mrs. Housekeeper This Is Your Time
N THIS SALE we shall sell the household necessities
agreeable. Look over
Bat We do not ask
comparison. We expect every
Be
I I 1 1 11
oarding house ani notei
i i f
are looking lor.
Everything
Table Linens
DAMASK 72 inches wide all pure linen
mercerized finish full bleached several
handsome jat terns to select from; regular
price 85c to $1.00 a yard ; limit of one L r
bolt to a customer; per yard UjC
DAMASK 72-inh full bleached all pure
linen heavy quality beautiful satin finish
new designs ; worth $1.35 a yard. AA
Special pl.UU
TABLE CLOTHS Pattern Cloths and
Decorative I inens including Scarfs Center-
pieces Tea Cloths Tray Covers and Doilies
at less than half their regular price.
NAPKINS Large size Dinner Napkins
size 24x24 very handsome designs; extra
fine weave all pure linen and a satin fin-
ish; sell regularly at $3.25 a fry
dozen. Special $LLD
$&00 on a fri'.
ran inilll'iriM
lnll roi.m l r
iltH'omitons i
frast of 1 .u
( 'li'"iutr;tf N
Murk Anti'i.
lrtTirc. Ki m
sm'i'tf- wtM
luK from 1 n
tin) "i''nil
iom was n
nat lire lr 1 1
lar t hHt poo-
t itlia ai-'l '
tltt'S Of Ml '
iirolu' I of r
RYAN AM
From tho t
if v Itvan i '
fr 11 mi 11 nlH
HhM Ins :
tluMan liir .
W.IIl. t V "f
To! -. Hi 1 1..
uKuhw. I i
Iut.I.- .Irii.
will I iv.- 1
lift 1 11 as-
When one of our Amor!
s Throws open 1 1 prHUtl
1 nlht of rovvlry th floral
-ii.' cost moro t':in tlm
is And w lien 1 1 1 "f
i.selnMed by ! 1 1
KiiRllah duke Itnl'M 1
'i count or 1 1 n-u.ir a .
e Thinks nothlnK "C -pi'inl
to flva million .i ...a
lj ( 'leotiat i n s ' -ely
a rasiml iiro.i
no.lern lnstfttirci t' 1
uhroail to py for f
-ter to tho deprave!
t r
ielK'1
M'J
.rallr dehauHiea N
A merlcan lahoi -vv s t !!
HELMONT PMtND-:K
u tlon llne-i of New Vok
Helmont liavf taken ureal
' plunder tha.11 Win ;mi
k from th prlnofc ot llln
Hritaln was atihusi at t:.e
1 .tKt Ingft. Her great 0-1 1 "in-
hrUlan. Tox uniefi
t th bar of the hon . . f
:ng hlru In lnKtntKo that
a" . Ilyan nid lielinont .1:.'.
foreign tnt n-T plmi.lor
rfrent trni as H ai I m r-
' d til e pooptf of their o 1
: WiHUPn of tho HMinrt Iii a
ii Y10 tinpeAtiuimn t foi bUl'
I 1 iidemeanora I. is hrovis;:.i
'ar of any trihunal wtii. U
pimlah. HawilnKH depolh-d
ii --f India grandowi who Iwid
I undered th Ii ow n people
II linont did not iunder s
No: they put their greedy
..f
lii Ilie '
til in. 11
theinsrU -rrllin'H
mi
them to t!
llB.S
t!ie Idle tl
t IlOfJlSI V 'Os
IUhm ami
Idle rich.
KPj
prices on all kinds of merchandise have been the lowest this
blankets when the prices were
your needs both present and
yu ' '-'0. blindly or recklessly. We want you to make a rigick investigation andl
article to tell its own story.
: . j.- .- -I
Keepers win eageriy partake in
is in readiness for the opening
Sheets
SHEETS Size 72x90 made of good heavy
sheeting seam in center; worth AA
SOc each. . . Special three for 1 UU
SHEETS Size 81x90 made of good quality
soft finish muslin seam in center; CA"
worth 65c each. Special at OUC
SHEETS Size 72x90 made of high grade
sheeting that will wear like iron ; fSn
really worth 85c. Special UC
SHEETS Made of a superior quality sheet-
ing; our best quality that sells for CAr
$1.00. Special at OUC
SHEETING pure linen Sheeting 2'i
yard wide bleached pure white fully
shrunk; sells regularly at $1.35 a QT-
yard ; in this sale 70
CRASH 18-inch unbleached plain tow-
eling all pure linen; regular 15c A
grade ; in his sale 1 UL
31
sibiiM
hand a upon the fcant earnings of mll-
Jlons of workmen and work woman of
(ireatrr N-w York and imastfd fortunes
for UuMiiS'ivea hy robbing the industrious
P .1 The i.tiHtah government tlirew Its
ili)ln pnwr agatrvst Warren Iajiting8
in the effort to nunlah him for erlm
1 tommlited against a forelgcn people of an
1 alien race and cred but wiio talks of
j 1 1 .diet !nK purh men aa Ryan and Pel
I moiit Who dreams of punishing mieh
erlir.iii.iN as Morgan and Hnrrlnian' MIs-
rrahle . owurds thai; we are. We oroueh
1 !nf ori 1 lie gigantic lawrtreakera and al-
j low them to run our government All
thr.t wf run do Is to punish s n h offense
I in i it! Irtreeny. lt the naked stenl
J oneitilng to wear; let the hu titer v Ftonl
I r-omethlng to eat; let the mls.rnh'e
I w ret. ties shivering wltTa wintry enld
pteal svmethlng to feed tJe fire and we
I .an pounce fiercely upon 1 liese Miii
umlnals and punish them with a rigor
ocking to rommon humanity hut the
I n o nwho steal rallrotids the irunt-huHd-
j fis who violate every statute in inn penal
I ode tn their inarch ihrovigh monopIy
I iiii.t to nillllona these are the men before
i whom we stand cowering ami helpless.
I There 1 not an Intelligent. 1Vt" Informed
niiten or ine country who ooen noi Know
1 m through the maxhlnery of toth the
id I'
tie these corpora i Ion law lre iki rs
iKht to bo behind the bars dh tate
hislatlon. shape our foreign and
;h- policy ana control our des-
ll' mi!
1 ln
NOT thlOM
wiTMorY
WITHIN.
BUT FROM
Thev talk fy.nnQf foreign foe and
some of our bUtiMmfst My QlMiUjr for
ATHER torrid weather ygg; but the prices are frigid-
the lowest known in years. '
There are still a few people who think it strantfe that
we should hold a sale of blankets each year out ot 8ea':
1 J ! f
son in midsummer. ?
T1! 1 i
l he best reason we know ot tor holding it is that therfr
are enough people who see the wisdom of buying blankets v?
early to make the sale a big success. k
And there s plenty of reason why people should buijrl
them in midsummer. Manufacturers are alwavs willinif '
to sell blankets at a less price
cause it keeps their factories
son and turns a loss into a
ing to ask much less profit
business during the quiet summer months but at the same "
It I i ii. '.. A
time alleviates some ot the
height in the fall.
at their lowest notch lhe
which you are most interested
probable make a list ot them
-J
xl lt' lL . " ... i.
mese ouenugs us it jusi
rush.
now
bieacnea
Dries the
u billion dollar navy. Hut. tell me what
great ei harm a foreign foo could Inflict
upon us t nan we a re suffering from the
foe wuhtn our gales? The entire loss of
Kranee In the Uerman Invasion of 1871
was not greater either In money or In
human life than our losses every five
years to our predatory corporations.
Take our own rh tl war. It was fierce
and blood. and It lasted four years. Yet
we huriod fewer dead and carried to the
hoapltalH f'wer wounded than we havo
lost during The last four years to the re-
morseless greed of capitalism. Count up
the vldlriw In mine mil! and factory;
count up tho human wrecks of the sweat-
nhops. count up the victims that have
ptrewn The lines of our railroads; the vic-
tims of the stockyards the sugar refin-
eries snd the smelting works; count up
what you have lost to those who exploit
child-labor; count up all these for four
years and yci will reach a frightful
total which exceeds the losses of our
civil war.
HAPPIKR AFTKR CIVIL WAR THAN
NOW.
Make the comparison from an economic
point of view This country as a whole
was In a happier healthier condition at
the close of the civil war than It Is right
now There were fewer men out of work;
there was not a shameful "bread line"
in America; neither In the North nor In
the Bouth was there a constantly rrowlns;
army of tramps dead-beats and humnn
rttjrcllcta. We had fewer abandoned farms
i r i i i ... i '.
for midsummer delivery be
running during the dull sea-
profit. The merchant is wilt
because it not only stirs uo '
pressure when business is at its
"
Than Ever1
year they have been in many?'
principal thing manufacturers!
in at prices which are most?'
4
and come to this sre. I
L . .1
sucn an opportunity as tneyvj
Towels
Hemmed Huck Towels soft quality largtl
size size 19x38; never sold for less Ag
than $1.75 a dozen; each 1 UCr!
Hemstitched.Llnen Huck Towels.size 17x34
art ivrntiAnal ub1h Vi caIIm n a -4 1 -'i
wnrai.aVaaA. S.AIO.1. D.1U lit I A '
regular way at 18c ; in this sale ... I j
An assorted lot of fine imported hemmed!
hemstitched and Damask Towels; extra ftn6
weaves; finish of the best quality; these anM
from our regular 25c and 35c lines; fXt 1
1 7 5
Bath Towels double thread terry size 21x45;'
perfect bleach ; sold always at $3.50 ijj
a dozen ; now each uO vl
The new "Dri-Well" Sanitary Bath Towels
.. t r. i a'2
Dy a new process son ana rouga g
skin instantly ; has a soothing ef5
ling ef
394
feet on the most delicate and
irritable skin; size 27x45; each .
X
1
then than nowK we had
practically
and t
beggars; we had few millionaires
few paupers. A vast amount of monT
W 111 III! UlttlUMI. I1U HUB SUUIIIMIIe.
currency waa ruRhlna; along the cnannert w
of trade like an elixir ot life; everywhere"
was hope confidence cities rising front
the ashes more resplendent than beftww:.
the war; farms were once again fleeoy't
with cotton or golden with Kraln.
Whet was It that turned hack tb.'
waves of (reneral prosperity and madeY
the lKlnnlng of oongestl wealth? Thev 5
destruction of nearly $2000000000 0. i
Iapwr money of the government; the erf .3
advancing ilematid of special privilege tit. I
constant Increase of taxation; the unequal j
distribution of the burdens and the bene-.. J
fits of government; these are the cause'
which have brought us to such a paM t
that the nonpro.lucer of wealth enjoy 1
fortunes never known before while the
tolling millions whose labor produces OMtt
wealth live within the shadow of poJ
erty and ore never certain this moath:;
that the next will not bring the wolt Ot 1
want to howl at the door. U t
TUB TH1STS AND THEIR WORtC
For several years a "big stick" pMl
dent has been engaged In the alleged Work ;
of triint liiutlng. Where's your buatA
trust? Which one of them ha been PMt
out of business? Tou can not name It.
How can a president who hM bee"
"standing pat" with the tariff stantfps -ters
do any effective trust busting! IU
mi ri rn-'J ri ririiWu.yyVWWVWir.r.lM-'lieMSjl)Syr "'
(Continued on Page Serenteeav) i.
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The Houston Post. (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, July 10, 1908, newspaper, July 10, 1908; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth605105/m1/7/: accessed April 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .