Typed as spelled and written
Lena Stone Criswell

THE MARLIN DEMOCRAT
Eighteenth Year - Number 52
Marlin, Texas, Wednesday, November 20, 1907
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GENERAL NEWS.

       Some of the best towns in the state are losing the prestage they once enjoyed because of bad roads.  It costs the farmer just so much to haul at (sic) load to and from market over a bad road.--Central Texan.

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       In the time when the roads are bad is the time to lay plans for their improvement.  When the weather clears up is the time to fix them.  The split log drag saves time and makes good roads.  Try it.

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       William J. Bryan has ended the protracted suspension of hte public by saying that he will not ask or seek the nomination for president but that he is willing to serve and that the people have a right to decide who will run for president.

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       A fine piece of work--the figure of a Confederate bugler calling hsi comrades to arms, which is of solid bronze, eight feet high, standing on a granite pedestal--has been placed in position in the public square at Corsicana to serve as a monument.

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       The farmers of Lamar county are fully aroused beyond any doubt that it is up to them to make change in plans for the future.  They have combined themselves to plant less cotton, more corn, more wheat, extra crop of peanuts, and if cotton is to be resorted to, the long staple will be the variety to be used.  A good example for any county in the state.

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       The merchants of Belton have adopted the following plan to keep the money in circulation:  At the end of each day's sales the merchants turn over the cash taken in during the day to some one of the cotton buyers, taking a check on the bank.  The cotton buyer uses this money to pay for (cotton), thus keeping the money in business channels.--Rosebud News.

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       The Cyclone editor has said and written so much in the effort to create an interest in the building of small factories and establishment of needed enterprizes in Kosse, and without apparent result.--Kosse Cyclone.
       Don't forget that it took Christopher Columbus only twenty years of bitter disappointment and despondency to find himself perpetually famous.  Don't give up your commendable effort yet.

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       Judge Joseph E. Cockrell of Dallas, who was a prime mover in the organization of the Texas Harvester Company, after the International Harvester Company had been forced out of the state, is out in a statement stoutly dennying (sic) that the new company is in any way connected with the old company, or that any officer (or) stockholder of the Texas Company ever held any stock in the (I)nternational Company or that (the) latter company holds any (s)tock in the new company.

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Copyright permission granted to Theresa Carhart and her volunteers for
printing by The Democrat, Marlin, Falls Co., Texas