The Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, July 11, 1902 Page: 1 of 12
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777^"/
A
Weekly
Paper
Devoted
to the
Interest
of the
Pan-
Handle
of Texas
4«b*
icritiion
Rat**
Per Year $1.50
6 Months .75
3 " .*0
I Copy .OS
IN CLUBS or riVE
To live different
addresses, $5.00
Ad-
v«rtliin¿
RaUi
Display, 25 cents
per inch. Nodis-
counts for ti-ne or
space.
Local retdin¿ no-
tices, lOcentiper
line, each inser-
tion.
TERMS, GASH IN
ADVANCE
Address all busi-
ness communica-
tions and make all
remittances pay-
able to
Th« Brand
Hereford, Texas
Entered April 17, 1902. as second-class mail matter, post offlct at Hereford, Texas, Act of Congress of March 3, 1879
/ol. 2
HEREFORD, TEXAS, JULY It. 190S
No. SI
A11 Over
the
Panhandle
Higgins is infested with a band of
Hclahoma petty thieves, says the
<eWS. ■ ; v^'v ' 4 _ ,_;i . .
Amarillo received considerable
amage recOtty *■ *****
nd hail stortnr
The ice plant at Amarillo has
een completed and the manufacture
>f ice commenced last week.
Rev. S. A. Ashburn will commence
series of meetings at Bowie Aug-
st 17 which will be continued until
August 31.
Memphis will have a ten days'
rotracted meeting, commencing
Lugust 2. Rev. R. V. Whitaker of
ule will preside.
Bowie was the scence of an awful
ragedy July 2, when J. P. Kilgore
illed his wife with a Winchester and
len ended his own life by the same
leans.
A stcrm at Goodnight July 2 blew
own the railroad tank, pump house
nd a number of telegraph poles,
i'he rain was quite heavy.—Claren-
.on Industrial West.
births.
To Mr. and Mrs. R- S. Oates of
liggins, a boy, June 28.
To Mr. and Mrs. T. F- Hum of
ligginr, aJjoy, June 28.
To Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Davis of
^marillo, a girl, June 30.
To Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Allen of
emphis, a boy, June 29.
' To Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Howery
t Bowie, a boy, June 29.
MA&X3AG .
Mrs. Blakney and J. A. Scott of
IbiWreer, July 2,
w
Miss Maude Ewing and Arthur
Vernon of Vernon, June 25.
Mrs. Fannie Montague and J. E.
Hawley of Floydada, June 27.
Miss Viola Holeman and A. H.
Kane of Amarillo, July 2, Rev. W.
A. Erwin officiating.
deaths.
MfetCaUie Cher y of Lockney,
June 24 . ~ w .
Mrs. A. £. AndersonofHlggins,
June 28
m ,
\ >'■, J. -c * ** i *,
Infant of Mr. adir Mrs. Beloay of
* ?'
Memphis, June 29.
v.f
Notice.
All persons are warned against
turning their stock in my pasture
north of town without making pre-
vious arrangements with me. $1.00
per month per head will be charged
for pasture.
21«4t S. S. Evants.
Hereford College.
The Hereford papers announce
that their college will be built in
time for the opening of the fall
term, September 10. The stone for
the building is being shipped from
Roswell, and work is now going on.
Randolph Clark, a brother of Dr.
Addison Clark of Amarillo, has been
elected president of the institution,
and announces that the college will
be non-denominational and non-sec-
tarian, hut will be thoroughly chris-
tian. The school will be far super-
ior to any sectarian school, and will
turn out broader minded, better
rounded and far more charitable
men and women than institutions
fostered and nurtured by any de-
nomination. Sectarian schools pro-
duce bigots, narrow minded and un-
charitable men and women. Show
me a man who has been educated at
a strictly sectarian institution, and
if he has ever broadened sufficiently
to be in touch and sympathy with
the great heart of humanity, it has
taken him years of labor and cost
him untold effort; cost him the un-
learning of the tenets of the par-
ticular sect from which he received
his un-wisdom.
These non-sectarian schools are
the necessary link between the de-
nominational schools and that true
school of fact, or science, which ex-
perience, research and connected,
consistent ao4 coustant thought has
btiildéd. Hereford is a< good place
a' school of the character indi-
cated. The push of her people, tie
climate, the distance Com other
schools and the character of the
citizenship all conspire to make the
school a success. And the presi-
dent is a man of life long experience
in school and college work; cer-
tainly his experience ñts him to con-
duct an institution of this character
successfully. — An Amarillo Ex-
change.
ANNOUNCEMENT.
Hereford College Will Be Open te
Students September 10, 1902.
HE HEREFORD COLLEGE
will open its doors for the ad-
*-1 mission of students on the 10th
f of September, 1902, in the
new, progressive and beautiful
little city of Hereford, county
seat of Deaf Smith county, situated
47 miles south of Amarillo on the
Pecos Valley and Northeastern Rail-
way, a branch of the great Santa
Fe System.
The following are some of the in-
ducements it offers to students and
patrons oi the Southwest:
• 1. An altitude of about 3600 feet
gives a dry pure atmosphere. This
with an abundance of good, pure
water gives us an advantage in point
of healthfulneM enjoyed by few other
institutions in the land.
2. A community of high moral
tone, exempt from the evils of sa-
loons, "blind tigers" and drunken-
ness.
3. Excellent material equipment.
The main building, now in process of
construction, will be a large pnd
beautiful structure of brown stone,
with large, well furnished and com-
fortable recitation rooms, laboratory,
library, auditorium and music halls,
easily accommodating 3S0 students.
A large, well heated and well venti-
late4 "Girls' Home," with all the
refining «nd comfortiqg influences or
a well regulatftti chítltíte home, is
offered for the care tpd" ¡protection
oHhe young ladies. . Fricar
struction in Hortictafetonwd Dairy-
ing, At the same time affording
young men an opportunity to reduce
expenses.
4. Thorough work by a well
trained faculty of University nwn,
5. A course of instruction calcu-
lated to make well informed men and
women, with the power and habit oí
thinking, as well as to thoroughly
prepare students to enter the junior
year of the greatest universities in
America.
6. Th* institution ii tD
thoroughly christian, but strictly
non-denominational and non-sec-
tarian.
The chief purpose of its founders
is to assist young m^n and wora?n in
the formation of character. T.: •
aim of the college is not to produce
intellectual giants, but well rounded
and fully developed men and women.
For particulars address
Randolph Clark,
President,
17tf Hereford, Texas.
Per Sole.
A few acres of resident property
for sale, good location and close ir.
Apply at this office fer par-
tiottltrs.
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Vanderburgh, F. L. The Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, July 11, 1902, newspaper, July 11, 1902; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth142305/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.