The Denison Daily Herald. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 76, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 11, 1906 Page: 1 of 8
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DENISON, TEXAS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1906.
NO. 76.
C. a. COBB, t. 3. M'ALEBTKR.
President. Vice-President.
K. 8. LKOATB. Ca«hler.
P. J. BKENNAN. AMt CurtUs*
National Bank of Deniion,
DBNIBON. TEXAS.
CAPITAL .. f 100, S0«
BUKPL.U8 and PROFITS.. 100.MM
Dlreciorc
J. J. MoAlaatar. H. Hecfni bur««f,
W. B. Munaon, C. S. Cobb.
A. 8. Burrows, P. J. He nn«o
J. B. McDoupill. R. 8. I>aat*.
C. C. Jlnke. W. B. Iflblxirfl.
NO INTEREST PAID ON
GENERAL DEPOSITS.
* *'? C- '
'
* University ot
The Library V1 ,{£.
University ol lex
iutd5
For Fall
Rl
1'
'-j.y :.«z<
Kvrer In the history of our business hare we had such a suc-
j*nfal millinery season as this. We feel doubly proud for our trade
jgr^
*JUi our sister cities has more than doubled any previous season,
models which bear a high class feature are being received
SPAIN'S FIGHT
ON THE CHURCH
GOVERNMENT AND VATICAN TO
CROSS SWORD8 ON A8SEM-
BLINQ OF CORTES.
HISTORY OF NEGOTIATIONS
Points at Issue Are Control of Ceme-
teries, Civil Marriages, Public Ed-
ucation and Question, of Relig-
ious Congregations Not Includ-
ed in Concordat of 1851,
1
ADDEN'O
it PRICE-CASH THE PUCE TO BUY SHOES VJ
ONE
HILTON WARD ELECTED.
War Veteran Makes a New
York Man Commander.
Iton, Oct 11.—The United
.^aerlcan Veterans yesterday
_l Capt Hamilton Ward of Buf-
, n, Y., commander-in-chief; Hen*
I, Michigan, vice commander*
father W. H. Ireany, chap-
ilef. and as chief signal offl-
rC. Parker of Georgia was named.
_ chief mustering officer Charles
.fltrtwl of Ohio was selected.
[ Oklahoma City, Okla., was selected
i the place of holding the annual
at of the organisation next
BRO TRAVELER8 COMPLAIN.
Equal Rights with White
pis When Traveling.
Oct 11.—Representa-
I negroes of the South, on behalf
fthelr nee, have complained to the
Commerce Commission of
nae by railroads ■ of the "Jim
ears In the South for Inter-
to pawengers, and have requested
i commission to Investigate the
and on development of facts
an order compelling the rail-
not to discriminate against
.on account of color.
[ The petition Is signed by Thomas
"More men have been
by schemes than by bad
y. I guess there la
mors uncertain than a
""*• When I hear one of
."£*■' 8eP«rators I be*
t ♦!.! w cal1 them> trying to,
Hr . ?ys etore to put
wvings into some lobster
1 Proposition, I feel like
I one of these cannon fire-.
« under hjra and setting
j % Wben a fellow has
.. * a few hundred dollars
talk Ka17 ,n,ck®1 represents a
VktW* Instead of a ride on
Stofc S and evcry dollar
,„°.r ctgara he didn't
j th? „*bo!r" he dl4n,t •«.
lb he wants to fight
« h blonde Invest-
WLmTT- Thor® ar« "torfs
th«r JU y that put ba,t8 in
ind thf.n ',1 0 *et y°« Inside
Kot" jton som"th'n*
But k ^rth,y ,l8e to yoti
I. ' 48 KOO<1 as you
J* H8vJ«,*""■ T,ho Wootton
tnu^J 8 r* "ells only guar*
ftotU nn°!
•*ferrt S2?ln£r
in ^ Y0" tah® 110
*M fiirn votu' clothing
ro ,tk*« Ml the chancer.
Oliver and W. D. Johnson of Missis-
sippi and about a dozen negroes. It
says In part:
"Under present conditions colored
Interstate passengers are denied
equal privileges with white Interstate
.passengers. Colored interstate pas-
sengers are compelled by the rail-
ways to ride In what are commonly
known as 'Jim Crow' cars, which aro
usually filthy and uncomfortable, and
are denied the right to eat in railway
dining cars and occupy berths in
sleeping cars because of their color,
all of which Is a violation of the Hep-
burn railroad rate regulation law,
which Invests your honorable body
with power to force equality between
colored and white interstate passen-
gers holding interstate tickets on the
railways of the country."
The petitioners say they have no
funds with which to employ counsel
to argue their case.
Brilliant Wedding at Newport.
Newport. R. I., Oct 11.—Newport
had a brilliant International wedding
today as a fitting climax to one of the
most strenuously gay seasons In the
history of this famous and fashlonablo
resort. The contracting parties were
Miss Evelyn Blight, youngest daugh-
ter of Mr. Atherton Blight, of Phila-
delphia and Newport, and Mr. Mahlon
Alanson Sands of London.
The. fashionable summer colony—
many members of which have tarried
by the seashore longer than Is their
wont on purpose to attend the wed-^
ding—turned out in full force for the
marriage ceremony, which was per-
formed In Emanuel Church by the
Rev. Emory H. Porter. The Interior
of the church was gorgeously decorat-
ed with rare plants and blossoms.
MR8. DAVIS' ILLNESS.
Cold Not Yielding to Treatment and
Condition Critical.
New York, Oct. 11—The condition
of Mrs. Jefferson Davis, widow of the
president of the Confederacy, who'
has been 111 at the Hotel Majestic for I
several days, is now regarded as se-1
rious. She was stricken with a se-;
▼ere cold and the Illness has not
yielded to treatment
Heavy Frost In Kentucky.
Cynthlana, Ky., Oct. 11.—A heavy
frost, with freeze, occurred In all
parts of this country last night, which
will destroy all tobacco now in the
field. This Is tho first frost of the
season.
Full
Strength
Drugs
The drugs In our stere are all
as specified—full strength. Any
that have a tendency to lose
strength with age are watched
more closely and never used
after they show signs of any
weakening. This onfe fact alone
Is enough to account for the
good reaults from prescriptions
filled by us.
B&'L ... ';:':'
■>—
Madrid, Oct 11.—Uoon the reas-
sembling ot the Cortes, Oct. 20, the
Vatican and Liberal government of
Marshal Lopez Domlnuez will cross
swords over the church issue. While
the actual question of the separation
of church and state in Spain, the
stronghold of Catholicism is not to be
Immediately raised as in France, tho
democratic program of the Liberals
is distinctly anti-clerical and if it pro-
gresses successfully is sure ultimately
to lead to an open fight for the sever-
ance of the ties which bind the Vati-
can and tho Bourbon dynasty.
Meanwhile the political world is as
much interested as to whether the
Vatican merely wishes to fight for the
re-establishment of its prerogatives
which It has allowed to fall more or
less Into abeyanco, or if it has a deep-
er plan to precipitate the downfall of
the Liberal cabinet and tho return of
the reactionary.
The Dominuez cabinet found an
excellent pretext for Joining battle
with the Vatican, in the shape of tho
question of civil marriages and the
control of the public cemeteries. The
Count de Romanones, Minister of tho
Interior In the Dominuez cabinet, is
of great strength of character, at once
put up a firm attitude with the entire
assent of his colleagues and he re-
plied to the papal note demanding the
re-establlshment of the above men-
tioned powerB. To this the Vatican
answered by presenting a note couch-
ed in a more peremptory form pre-
senting the same demands and pro-
testing against the attitude of tho
government. The ministry confined
itself to making a formnl acknowledg-
ment of the note. A brief glance of
the history of the transactions be-
tween the Vatican and the Spanish
government Is essentia! to a clear un-
derstanding of the present situation.
Up to 1868, Spain tolerated no wor-
ship but the Catholic for Spaniards.
In 1868 the revolution of September
proclaimed liberty of the press, prop-
aganda, public meeting, education
ed. The decree hits hardest the
schools kept by the religious orders,
where many of "tho teachers are for-
eigners, neither properly domiciled in
Spain nor provided with Spanish uni-
versity degrees.
lu addition to all these measures,
the Dominuez cabinet makes no se-
cret of the fact that It Intends to open
the quetslon of revision of the concor-
dat and make all religious associa-
tions amenable to the ordinary law on
corporations.
Tho present cabinet has the unani-
mous support of the Liberals and
even the Republicans, in wishing that
clear, precise and severe laws should
oblige the religious congregations to
submit themselves to tho supremacy
of tho civil power, and to cease to be
a reactionary and ultra-montane mili-
tia at tho beck and call of the papacy,
a militia which, as in most Catholic
countries, has not been looked on
with invariable approbation by tho
secular clergy and the hierarchy.
CUBS WON THE SECOND.
Chicago Clubs Now Tied In World's
Championship Series.
Chicago, 111., Oct. 11.—With tho
thermometer hovering around the
freezing point yesterday tho second
game of the world's championship se-
ries resulted in a one-sided victory
for the National League team, the
score being 7 to 1. The batteries
were as follows: For the White Sox,
White, Owen and Sullivan; for tho
Cubs, Reulbach and Kling.
FAST TRAIN IS WRECKEQ
ACCIDENT NEAR CITY LIMITS OF
8T. LOUIS.
Engineer Is Killed and Fireman Prob-
ably Fatally Hurt—Train Was
Making Up Lost Time.
St. Louis, Mo., Oct 11.—The Tron
Mountain's fttst train, which was late
in leaving the union station today,
jumped the track while making up
lost time at the city limits, killing one
and injuring ten other persons. The
dead:
ENGINEER JOHN CASPER, forty-
five years old, St. Lotjis.
The injured:
Fireman Peter Rafferty, St Louis,
internal injuries and broken bones.
A'hil Clerk J. H. J. James, broken
bones; serious.
M. Jewson, St. Louis.
E. G. Martin, left arm broken, inter-
nal injuries.
J. P. Wooster.
W. P. Tate.
W. J. Howe,
W. W. Ottis.
R K. Acanary.
N. P. Coleman.
The accident occurred a short dis-
tance from where the same train was
similarly wrecked last spring, when i
tho engine and three mall cars rolled
down an embankment. Fireman Raf-
- . . . . ..I! i ferty was just out of the hospital
and burial. This regime continued In | ^ y recelvJ,np lnjurtoR lu the former
spite of protests of the Vatican, until wn?ck He wl], probably die>
FAVORABLE TO
THE DEFENDANT
PROSECUTION IN FAMOUS BROU-
WER CASE MADE POOR PRO-
GRESS YESTERDAY.
TESTIMONY OF DR. CATE
Was Expected to Be, Damaging to the
Accused Man, but Instead Com-
pletely Absolved Defendant
from Certain of State's
Accusations.
the end of 1875, when the Bourbon
restoration caused a reaction, reli
gious as well as political, which effne-
HAS IT.
Piano Couple Married.
McKlnney, Tex., Oct. 11.—Claude
ed the progress and conquests of tho Mat)iew8 nnd Miss Amanda Weaver,
revolution. The constitution adopted ; two p0pUiar young people of Piano, i
by the Cortes of 1876, gave back all W(>re marrjC(j at that place last even- \
its rights and privileges to the Catho-1 t |
lie Church and re-established it as the
state religion, giving it at the same
time considerable influence In public
education.
Ever1 since 1876 the dynastic cabi-
nets have, little by little, especially
under the auspices of Senor Sagasta,
given back to tho people with univer-
sal suffrage, the majority of the lib-
erties and rights introduced by the
revolution, bin up to the present, no
ministry has dared to attack the con-
stitution of 1886 as far ns liberty at
conscience with its corollaries, sec-
ularization of public education ami
liberty of discussion and criticism are
concerned.
The points at Issue between the
Vatican and the Spanish government
are tho control of tho cemeteries,
civil marriages, public education (all
matters which have been settled by
the ensuing legislation) and tho big
question of the religious congrega-
tions not Included in tho concorat of
1851. The church opposes the muni-
cipal control of cemeteries and de-
mands that the rractlce of allotting
portions of the cemeteries to Span-
iards and foreigners who do not sub-
scribe to the state religion shall be
discontinued. In respect to the ques-
tion of civil marriages, the church
wishes to have it laid down that civil
unions between Spaniards are only
legal when celebrated according to
canon law, which Is absolutely oppos-
ed to the actual system. Before, dur-
ing and since the revolution, civil
marriages always have been held to
be legal. Further, marriages between
Catholics in Catholic churches and
chapels must be registered In the civ-
il registers to have*any legal validity.
Consequently, the clergy are forced
either to do this or to have a civil
registrar present at the ceremony.
Births and deaths are also registered
by the civil authorities with wonder-
fully improved results as far as the
preparation of statistics and the prop-
er maintenance of records are con-
cerned. c .
The minister of education, Dr.
Jlmeno, a leading member of the Ca-
nalejas group, has taken the Initiative
In secularlratkm of education with-
out waiting for the papal nuncia to
force his action. In a circular, he
a k« all the 'educations! authorities.
primary and secondary, to forward to
the ministry within a month a list of
all non-offfrlal educational establish
Toms River, N. J., Oct. 11.—Today,
the fourth day of the trial of Dr. Frank
Brouwer, who is charged with slowly
killing his wlfQ through the medium
of small doses of poison, finds tho
case of tho prosecution well towards
completion. The expert medical testi-
mony will bo given and then witnes-
ses will be called in which tho prose-
cutor expects to bring out a motive.
The witnesses who have already tes-
tified were produced ih an endeavor
to show that a crime had been com-
mitted and how it was accomplished.
Tho testimony, taken as a whole, was
largely circumstantial.
The proceedings yesterday, l>r. Brou-
wer's attorneys and friends said, were
favorable to the defendant. Dr. ^L H.
Cate, who was expected to give dam-
aging testimony, practically absolved
tho doctor from any wrong-doing In
connection with the issuance of the
death certificate. It had been stated
that Dr. Brouwer Induced Dr. Cate tp
sign a false death certificate, but Dr.
Cato testified that this was not true.
He testified that Dr. Brouwer did no^
ask him to sign the certificate which
stated that death was due to Brlght's
disease and ho further stated that Dr.
Brouwer did not even know he was to
sign the certificate.
Dr. Cate, it will be remembered, dis-
appeared soon after Mrs. Brouwer'9
death and this, at the time, was deem-
ed to have significance in connection
with the case. Dr. Cate, In answer to
t*he r prosecutor's questions, said that
his disappearance had no connection
with the death of Mrs. Brouwer. He
said lie went to New York and that
was tho last he remembered until ho
came to Goshen. Dr. Cate also gave
his reasons for supposing that Mrs.
Brouwer had died of Brlght's disease.
The cross-examination of several
nurses who attended Mrs. Brouwer
was also deemed as having developed
a number of points favorable to the
defendant
Dr. Brouwer. at the close of the
session, showed by his face and man-
ner that he believed the day's pro-
ceedings had been favorablo for him.
He was brlt-hter than ho has been at
any time during the trial, and his
fare showed the relief he apparently
felt.
Women form a majority of the spec-
tators at the trial. Nearly three-
fourths of those in attendance yester-
FARMERS ASK REDUCTION.
OVER 11-CENT MARK.
SIDNEY ELKIN
WE CONTINUALLY ADD NEW
THINGS
to our stock, m*py things that
have never been introduced In
Denison, for the convenience of
our trade. Today we offer for
the first time
BYSSINE THRE^I
Looks like silk, wears as silk;
in all colors, black and white,
good soft finish, 200 yar
Price
♦ **
We are selling agents for Ml
Call patterns.
YOUR MONEY RETURNED
IF NOT 8UITED.
PHONE8 1.
Your Fall
Suit, Sir
You can't put oil the purchase of heavier
clothing any longer. The time has come for you
to lay away the suit that "invites the breezes."
"Nr. Breeze" is no lonfer on your invitation list.
If you have never boufht clothing of us we will
be more than pleased to show our line to you. We
are sure that alter you have worn one suit that
you will be a lile-lonf customer, provided style
and wearing qualities is the ruling spirit with
We are showing handsome fabrics in chevi-
you.
all non-ofnclMi educational estnmisn j
menu which are not legally author!* ji
ots, velours and worsteds, priced from
$15.00 TO $30.00
These suits are made by America's best
tailors, of the best material and in the most up-
to-date manner. We guarantee onr clothing. We
Invite your inspection.
"No Clothing Fits Like Ours."
James !3oijdr
'. f;V,'
day were women. Later iiTthe after-
noon two school teachers came in
With about 25 girl pupils. They re-
mained Interested spectators until
court adjourned.
Secretary Peters Writes Letter Re>
gardiny Pullman Car Rates.
Calvert, Tex., Oct. 11.—E S. Peters,
secretary of the freight and transpor-
tation bureau of the National Fann-
ers' Union, has written a letter to
the Railroad Commission, suggesting
a reduction of Pullman car rates. He
has received replitv* from Commis-
sioners Mayfield and Colquitt, the lat-
ter stating It as his opinion that the
commislon has no power to take ao>
tlon in the matter.
THOMAS CLEARY DEAD.
He Was the Highest Salaried JsnltoP
In the World.
New York, Oct. 11.—Thos. Cleary,
formerly an alderman and said to be
the highest salaried Janitor in New
York, if not in the world, died last
night of Brlght's disease.
As caretaker of the Equitable Life
Assurance Society building at No. 120
Broadway, Cleary received a salary of
$26,000 a year. This fact was brought
out during the insurance Investiga-
tion;
Bull 8upport and Frost Boost New
York Cotton Prices.
New York, Oct. 11.—The cotton
market opened firm at an advance of
21 to 29 points, which carried all
months over the 11-cent mark. Ag-
gressive bull support and reports of
frost caused the advance.
Getting Ready for Pythian Conclave.
New Orleans, La., Oct. 11.—Charles
F. Shlveley of Richmond, Ind., a sti-
j prame chancellor of tho Knights of
Pythias, arrived In New Orleans this
1 piorning and established headquarters
| for the national conclave of the
i Knights of Pythias to be held here
! ne?d week. The supreme chancellor
j Is enthusiastic over the outlook for
the cpmlng conclave, which he e*«
pects to be the most largely attended
in tho hjstory of the order.
1
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The Denison Daily Herald. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 76, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 11, 1906, newspaper, October 11, 1906; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth199738/m1/1/: accessed March 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .