The Sonora Sun. (Sonora, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 25, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 11, 1906 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Borderlands Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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The Sonora Sun.
VOL. 4.
SONORA. TEXAS. SATURDAY. AUGUST 11. 1906.
NO. 25
NEWS OF THE WEEK
AN EPITOME OF THE MOST IM
PORTANT EVENTS AT HOME
AND ABROAD.
NORTH, EAST, WEST, SOUTH
A Carefully Digested and Condensed
Compilation of Current News
'terns, Domestic and Foreign.
SITUATION IN RUSSIA.
A report was current In1 Vlbonri;
that the Russian flotilla stationed at
llanyo, Finland, had mutinied, impris-
oned the officers and sailed to the as-
sistance of .lie mutineers at Svoa
borg.
According to latest accounts the mu-
tineers at Sveaborg had surrendered
after heavy bombardment by the war-
ships. The reparts, however, were
fragmentary and conflicting.
Trouble has broken out in a fresh
spot. Troops in the great fortresses
of Sveaborg and Skatudden. on the
gulf of Finland, the "Gibraltar or the
North,” have mutinied, and some hard
fighting has occurred between the mu-
tineers and the loyal troops, partici-
pated in by the warships in the har-
bor. The first mutiny was reportid
suppressed, but late dispatches indi-
cate that the mutineers held their po-
sitions and had possession of all the
movable artillery, including quick-
firers and machine guns. The situa-
tion was considered serious.
The public prosecutor at St Peters-
burg has begun proceedings against
tiie late members of the lower house
of parliament who signed the ViUorg
manifesto.
A manifesto to the peasants has
been issued by the revolutionary
bodies intended to Inflame them to
action against the government.
Fighting is again going on between
the Tartars on the one hand and the
Armenians and Russianson the othei
in Transcaucasia. A large force ol
Tartars was repulsed in an attempt to
enter Shusha.
A party of armed men forced their
way into the ltousset printing estab-
lishment, in St. Petersburg, and at
the muzzles of pistols compelled the
employes to print 150,000 copies of
the Vlborg manifesto.
A battalion of the Sevski regiment
m utined at Poltava following the at
rest of a private for frequenting a
place where revolutionists were in
the habit of meeting. Several were
killed or wounded by machine gun
fire before the mutiny was suppressed.
A court-martial at Sebastopol has
passed sentence upon a number ol
seamen concerned in the illuck sea
fleet, mutiny. Four were sentenced to
deal It. one to life imprisonment and
32 to varying terms of penal servitude
The constitutional democrats appear
to be afraid of compromising them
selves, and one wing is said to have
been won over to the side of the mill
lstry against the programme of open
revolution.
The printing establishment of the
Echo, in St. Petersburg, where thou
sands or copies of the Vlborg man
ifesto were being surreptitiously print
efi, has been closed by the police.
Cronstadt has been declared under
martial law and announcement mads
that meetings and demonstrations oi
all descriptions will be dispersed by
armed force.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Floyd Carmichael, a negro, was shot
to death at Lakewood, a suburb of
Atlanta, (la., after he h"d been iden
titled by Miss Annie Poole, aged 15,
as her assailant.
The United States government has
paid Germany the award of $20,000 In
the Samoan case. Great Britain paid
her damages in the spring, and the
mutter is therefore settled.
Baron Komura, the recently ap
pointed Japanese ambassador to Great
Britain, arrived at Victoria. B. C., en
route to London via Quebec. He ex-
pressed regret at his Inability, at this
time, to visit the United States and
renew former pleasant acquaintances.
The number of people receiving re-
lief in San Francisco has been re-
duced front 225.000 during the first
week after the fire to less than 17,000
at the present lime.
The battleships Alabama and Illi-
nois were In collision, during a fog,
southeast, of Brenton’s Reef lightship
ami several of the forward plates of
lie Alabama were dinted. Seaman
Corbett of the Illinois was severely
injured by the fall of a lifeboat davltt,
and b was found necessary to ampu-
tate one of his legs.
T. rrlblc heat conditions are report-
ed from the Myo county (Californiai
gold fields and adjacent desert, and
mining pro'-pi ctors arc said to be dy-
ing dally from the heat.
Secretary to the President Mr.
ha . written to Mrs. L. A. Kinney, of
Peoria. 111., In response to acommuni
cation, that the president lias nothelng
to add to the statement issued on the
night ol tin* election. In 1 !*04. His de
cislon mot to he again a candidate) as
announced at that time is irrevocable.
The state of Illinois has secured
judgment against lornter Stale Treas-
urer Henr> W'ulff and Floyd K. Whit-
temore, his bondsman, for $6,532.50
before Judge Creighton. In the Sanga-
mon circuit court, being the amount ot
fees retained by the former treasurer.
Emil Lesser, president of the Gi-
llian Immigration noctety of Alabama,
reporiH, alter u personal investigation
at Lockhurdt, that no trace of peon-
age exists in the camps of the Jack-
son Lumber Co.
The Spanish generals who were con-
cerned in the surrender of Suntiago,
Cuba, will reply to attacks in the press
by issuing a manifesto laying the
blame for the surrender upon the
politicians.
A movement is tinder way in San
Francisco to fix a charge of criminal
conspiracy on the insurance brokers
who have compelled policy holders to
accept less than was due them on their
losses in the great conflagration.
The commissioners of internal reve-
nus, In a preliminary report for the
last fiscal year, shows that receipts
from all sources aggregated $249,102,-
*:JK, an increase compared with the
preceding year of $14,914,701.
The total registrations for lands in
the Shoshone reservation in Wyoming
was 10,582. The drawings take place
at Lander, and the tilings at SUo-
shonl.
Mrs. William Thaw has yielded to
her son and will allow him to have
his own way in the conduct of his de-
fense in his trial for the killing of
Stanford White.
Gov. Cummins, of Iowa, was renom-
inated by tiie state Republican conven-
tion.
The detectives figuring in the Hart-
je divorce case at Pittsburg, Pa„ as
having stolen tiie alleged "love" let-
ters from Tom Nadine’s trunk, have
been arrested on a charge of burglary
and larceny.
The more the alleged ice combine
at Kansas City is probed, the more
patent becomes the fact that the con-
sumers have been preyed upon by the
big manufacturers and dealers.
Instead ot having in custody au
American bigamist known as "Ia>rd
Dougless." wanted in several states, it
looks us though the police of Portland,
Me., l ad arrested laird Sltolto Doug-
lass, ihe son of the late Marquis ot
Quaensberry, who was sojourning
there incognito with his wife and son.
The judge of the court in Paris
which is to heat the divorce case ot
the Countess Castellane, has granted
a petition of the count for the custody
of his children during a certain por-
tion of the court's vacation.
T. M. Campbell, the union labor
candidate, leads In the primary vote
tor democratic candidate for governor
of Texas, M. M. Brooks, C. K. Bell
and O. B. Colquett following In the
order named. The contest will hare
to be fought out in the convention.
N. H. Trask testified in the Kansas
City fMo. I inquiry, that he helped
to organize the first ice combine
there, in 1898, and was then frozen
out.
Miss Emma Scheel, of St. Louis,
aged 19, was drowned while bathing
in the Wisconsin river at Saulk City,
Wis., in company with two other
young ladies, who narrowly escaped.
Elmer Dempster, a 19-year-oid farm
hand, lias confessed the murder ol
Mrs. Samuel Pierce, the wife of his
employer, and her two children, and
the fatal wounding of a third neat
Canonshurg, Pa. The murderer was
saved from lynching with difficulty.
France lias forwarded to Washing
ton its regrets at the killing of Lieut
England, of the cruiser Chattanooga
off Chefoo, and has ordered an inves
tigution to fix the blame.
The German vice-conaul at Pensa
cola Is quoted as saying that not a
single German had applied for pro
tection or complained of peonage
against the Jackson Lumber Co.
Following a quarrel over money
matters, Samuel Deniont, a cripple
shot and killed his wife, at Union
City. Ind.. and then probably fatally
wounded himself.
While attempting to arrest Michael
Jol. an Italian laborer, on a charge ol
Inciting riot in a railroad construe
lion camp, near Shelbyville, III., Fore
man Ed Rolls and Constable Andrew
Wade were seriously wounded by Jol't
fellow-countrymen.
Gen. Oku. the victor at Nanshan
and Tiding In the Russo-Japanes!
war, and whose command succeeded
in isolating Port Arthur, has beet
appointed chief of the general stafl
of the Japanese army, vice Bator
Kodanta, deceased.
Tiie dead body ol Joseph Barden
heir, a jeweler of Madison, Wis., whf
had been missing a week, was found
in the woods throe miles east of Mad
ison. He had been robbed and mm
dored.
Mrs. William E. Corey, wile of the
president of the United States Steel
corporation, was granted a decree of
divorce at Reno, Nev., with the cus-
tody ot her 16-year-old son.
Lieut. Clarence England, navigating
ol fleer of tiie cruiser Chattanooga, was
shot and fatully wounded while on
Ihe bridge of the vessel as she was
passing out of the harbor of Chefoo.
China, by a bullet fired front the
French cruiser Dupetlt Thouars,
whose crew was engaged la stnall-
arnts practice.
Ooooooooooooooooeoeeeeooeo*ooooooooooooooaoooee«e«o«9 |
Farmers’ Co-operative
Union of -America,
6ooooooooooocoooooo*oooooooooooooooeo<xx>ooo(
Give the boys as good a clutuce to
develop in oilier lines as you do in the
one ot manual labor.
It now looks like we would have a
big crop ot cotton tills year. Hereiu
lies the opportunity of tiie Farmers’
Union to make good, aud It is the duty
of every I ndividual member to do all
he can to bring about the fullest co-
operation of all the intelligence that
the order has at its command.
Humanity and fellow helpfulness
is the gnat cardinal virtue of right-
thinking men every where, and since
it is the object of the Farmers' Union
to make the best possible iiuinhood
and woman hood that the human race
is capable of making, il is doubly the
duty of every member of the Farmers'
Union to look abottl him for some bro-
ther to help. It is tt privilege that not
every man has offered to him to help
ills feilowiuan.
The peach crop, lhat Is the Elberta
part of il has been marketed at a pro-
fit to all concerned. Those who know
the history of fruit and vegetable mar-
keting remember what a time shippers
used to have when Tom, Dick and
Harry shipped pell mell, just any
where and in all soils of sized and
shaped packages and put all sorts
arid sizes of fruits and vegeta-
bles ltt these incongruous packages.
Sometimes the whole output was ship-
ped to one market, flooding it beyond
all so: ts of reason, while other mar-
kets were entirely without anything
Under those conditions, the raising of
fruit and vegetables was a sort of a
"hit or miss" venture. Twenty-five
years ago the first effort to bring order
out of chaos was begun at Crystal
Springs, Miss., by the strawberry
growers. For several years they
fought it out with commission men,
express companies and what was
worse, with each other. Finally, af-
ter fortunes had been wasted, oppor-
tunities slaughtered, men ruined with-
out number, education in the hard
school of experience brought system
and with it co-operation, and that has
made the fruit business what it is to-
day—the finest organized business on
earth. This organization, education,
this co-operation has enabled the El-
berta peach growers of Texas to turn
a losing proposition into the best bus- to amnze and alarm the politicians and
Iness in this country. Now, to the "the interest*.” A parcel’s post law
point: What this education and Intel- is tiie next thing to work for. All to-
llgent co-o|>eratlon has done for the gether, and 'twill come.
BAD BUSINESS IN FARMING.
Again, I wish to state that he who
would derive the greatest profit front
his farm must use good business and
good farming methods combined.
They can not be separated. They
must go together. If a tanner should
mortgage his farm for any consider-
able amount, paying 24 1-2 per ceut
Interest, the chances are that ha
would go broke, aud if he did, scant
pity would be received for by his own
net if lie courted disaster.
How different is it If he buys a
plow or an implement or anything
else, giving his note for say, $65 dtta
in six months at 8 per cent interest,
when $60 cash would buy the plow?
That man is paying a little over 24 1-2
per cent Interest. Sixty dollars at
24 1-2 per rent Interest will not quit#
pay his note when due. As be ex-
pects to pay for it out of his coming
crop, he has to that extent practically
mortgaged his crop for that amount,
and It not infrequently happens that
his crop will not pay the indebtedness
incurred against it. The illustration
I have used is a conservative one.
Farmers who buy at time prices
pay rather more than less than 24 1-2
per cent—a pretty fair profit. If ha
could only save that for a few years,
even if he did not save anything more
he would bn (relatively speaking)
knee deep in clover.—Dr. J. F.
tel (n the Demeter.
MERCURY MUSINGS.
Say, brother, what are you doing to-
ward building that warehouse in your
county? Ate you doing your share?
An expert gives it as his matured
verdict that of all the products of our
packer.!, weiner is the wurst Next?
Reports show that all over Texas
Texas and other Southern States
warehouses an; being built, by the
hundreds. It is to be hoped along
with this building there is being cub
ilvate.i a sentiment In favor of sensi-
ble and business like marketing.
Warehouses without this are but a
waste of money.
It Is conceded almost universally
that free industrial alcohol was se-
cured as a result of the pressure that
was brought to bear by the farmers
of this country—a power so great as
fruit gtower it will do for any other
worker on farm, mine, factory or else
where. If the cotton raisers want to
handle their product to the best ad-
vantage they must learn all about cot-
ton. They must not only know how-
to raise It, hut they must know how
to handle It, and they must put trust-
ed and capable men in charge of its
handling Even the p-vekages must
be improved; its care and handling
from the stalk to the mill needs over-
hauling; the hundreds of wastes by
the wayside need to be remedied.
There is the very widest field for ed-
ucation In every department of cotton
raising and marketing, it the cotton
farmer would realize what is due him.
This is primarily Ihe purpose of the
Farmers' union. The Farmers’ union
is not at all ufraid that the world will
get topsy turvy some morning; II Is
not worrying about surh things; It Is
busying Itself with wnat the farme-
produces and what he gets for it.
The farm home is the palladium of
society. On this subject ex-Mayor T.
J. Powell of Fort Worth has well
said: "If we could remain a nation
of farm owners the ideals of the re-
public would hud and bloom In per-
petual beauty forever.
Tlnre would be but little difficulty
about fanners getting In absolute con
trol of their own Interests were it not
for the farmers who look at thing*
front other people's standpoint. Do
you happen to know a farmer, dear
reader, who never dares to oxpress
an opinion regarding any new move
The Plain Texas well says: "Af-
te* the warehouse for cotton and per-
haps in connection with It, may com*
the necessity for a cold storage for
veget.aides and fruits. 'Thousands of
dollars would In- saved the country an-
nually if all sum perishable product*
could be saved until there is a mar
ket at profitable prices.
Rome one soys: "What good will It
do for the individual farmer to learn
the grading of cotton, since his grad-
ing won't go with the manufacturers?''
And the echo comes back: "What
good will It do for the individual cit-
izen to learn the multiplication table
since his figures won't go with the tax
collectors?” Tiie Idea lhat It. isn't nee
ossary for the farmers to know any-
thing Is a pet idea with some people
but that Idea is going, going. Farmer-
Journal.
until he sees certain other men in
certain other occupations? When you
get a larmer to look at things from a
farmer's standpoint he becomes im-
bued with the co-operative spirit and
Joins Hie union at once.
The world needs a bumper cotton
crop. It needs not less than fifteen
million bales. Fifteen million hale*
may ho prodticeq this year. Let'*
never sell it below the minimum price.
Assist your unfortunate brother.
EVENTS OF EVERYWHERE.
The Indications are that Brown
County will harvest a v*ry large crop
ot pecans this year.
Robert Becker, a young man of 21
years, was drowned in Mud Creek,
near Sugden, I. T, while fishing with
several other men.
John Nelson, aged 50, wns drowned
off Ixtke Front, in Chicago, In an at
tempt to save George Wilbur, a 12
year-old boy.
John C. Hately has been nppolntcd
receiver at /Ion. His bond was placed
at $25,000. The adjudication In tha
bankruptcy proceedings against Dowlo
was set aside.
Top minnows are being propagated
in many localities for I lie purpose of
clearing standing waters of wiggle-
tails.
The Httblmrd City Board of Trade
lias at ranged for a trades day attrac-
tion to be offered there on the first
Monday of every month, beginning
with Lugust.
A. H. Burroughs, of Bristol, Tonn.,
known as the "marrying parson," last
weeek married his two thousandth
couple of runaways. He has made
this record in sixteen years.
The department of agriculture finds
Itself short of veterinary surgeons and
has called on the civil service of eligi-
ble veterinarians. The starting price
of veterinarian* is $ 1.200.
Dr. C. M. Drew, n well-known physi-
cian nnd Httngeon of North Fort
Worth, was thrown from his buggy at
about noon Sunday aud died a few
minutes later.
A. J. Black, minister of agriculture,
says more than 20,000 harvest hands
will be needed to be imported Into
Canada this ye.tr to handle the crop.
The harvest will probably be started
early in August.
Local Improvements to be made by
the Kansas City Southern railway at
Shreveport will cost $150,000 nnd will
mean the doubling of Ihe Shreveport
shops, while the yards will be increas-
ed by fourton acres.
Arthur, the 1 Smooth-old son of D.
Green, a grocer, at Muskogee, I. T„
died from burns received by igniting
his clothing with a match while piny-
Ing alone and was fatally burned be-
I fore the fire could be extinguished.
Disappointed because their parents
would not permit them to marry, Gus-
tave Kathke, aged 10, aud Ella Miller,
aged 18, died together some time
Tuesday by jumping Into Ihe Dela-
ware river.
A special to the Times from Bisbee,
I Aria., states that George Goldenbagen,
j formerly of New Braunfels Texas,
committed suicide at lhat place by
' hanging himself. He had previously
attempted suicide by slushing himself
with a knife.
The authorities aro Investigating the
death of Frank R. Reynolds, the St.
I^ouis bookmaker, who fell or jumped
from a window In the ntth floor of
Martin’s restaurant in New York.
Death was Instantaneous, the man’s
neck being broken.
Brldagdier General James Mcl^ear,
of Brooklyn, accompanied by a few
Grand Army veterans, are at Manas-
sas, Va„ to select a site for the monu-
ment In the memory of the member*
of the old Fourteenth regiment who
fell In the second battle of Bull Run
Twenly'lve passengers were Injured
two probably fatally, and over a score
or more were badly aliaken up in a de-
railment at Springfield, Mo., of three
coaches of the St. l-otils and Han Fran-
cisco train hound for St. Ix)uls.
John Black nnd Will llaglns, ne-
groes, were lynched by a mob of 200
men near Fort Gardner, Folk County,
Fla., Thursday night. The negroes
killed Ed Granger, a white turpentine
operator, It Is ulleged, without provo-
cation.
A man who receives other people's
money in trust ought to lie scrnpti
lously careful to make proper entry
of it in Homo sort of book or file, so
that not one dollar of It may be lost
track of. A man who not tiius car'
ful may be honest ami wcTl^neanlng.
but he Is too careless to lie entrust'd
with money that belongs to others.—
Farmers Journal.
Are all the farm lmplem-uts being
safely housed ?
Do not lot him drag you down by
dumping his products tin a market not
ready for them.
No man can deliver the Union vote.
Any man who attempts to do so "will
wish he hadn't." Union people aro do-
ing their own thinking. The guessM
the papers are muking about tha
Union vote Is rank balderdash.
It now seems that a hamper cot-
i mu crop 1* to be made.
i
The Bank of Rush Springs, at Rush
Springs, I. T., closed its doors and
Judge Dickerson lias named K. S. Bur-
ney as receiver. Liabilities are esti-
mated to be about $150,000 or more and
assets about $15,000.
The city hall of San Francisco,
which cost $7,000,000, was formally
declared unsafe by the board of pub-
lic works and notice was served on
the police department, that its station
In tbs building must find other quar<
tors.
ALL OVER TEXAS.
Nelson Barron was Instantly killed
and O. Hargon painfully briused aa the
result of falling from a tram at tbs
lower Lutcher & Moore mill at Orange
A permit to do business has been
granted to the New Process Roofing
and 8ttpply Company of East 8t Louis,
capital stock $100,000. The Texas of-
fice is to be located in Dallas.
Office of Assistant Attorney General
Pollard has held that a young man
born July 29, 1885, is entitled to vote
on July 29, 1906. He does not have to
have poll tax receipt.
The ex-Confederates reunion will be
held at Brownwood August 7, 8 and 9.
The place selected for the reunion Is
the Gun Club Park, which Is close to
town and a pretty place for camping.
Miss Louise Lizzie Kane, a young
lady about 18 years old, took fifteen
grains of corrosive sublimate and
died nfter several hours intense But-
tering.
Some months ago. In order to prop-
erly arrange the Independent school
district, the corporation of Roys* City
wns voted off. Saturday the town tvai
reincorporated.
Senntor Charles A. Culberson ha*
accepted an Invitation to deliver an ad-
dress to Ihe ex-Confederatea on Au-
gust 8, the first day of the reunion at
McKinney.
The First National Bank of Dick-
ens, Texas, has boon authorized to
do business, with a capital of $15,000.
R. D. Shields, president; W. A. Wil-
kinson, vice-president and cashier.
Charles H. Fllson, Territorial Secro-
tary of Oklahoma, Issued a charter to
the Kansas City, Lawton and Pacific
Railway Company to build a road from
Kansas City, Mo., to the Pucltlc Coast,
at or near San Diego, Cal.
It Is stated at the bureau of animal
industry that within the next sixty
days the fight against the Texas fever
tick under the appropriation by th*
recent agricultural appropriation bill,
will be in full swing.
The 20-months-old child of W. C.
Davis, a farmer, four miles from Waco,
fell Into a tub of scalding water and
died lo a few hours. Arrangements
were being made to scrub the floors
when the child fell Into the tub.
The Federal Grand Jury before
Judge Hough In the United States Dis-
trict Court of New York presented two
Indictment* against three corporation*
a* a result of Its Investigation* Into to-
bating In connection with the American
Sugar Refining Company.
Among the 182 bills of Indictment
returned by the Grand Jury of Smith
County were twenty-fix that charged
keepers of cold drink stands and pool
rooms with allowing minors to enter
and hang around their places and en-
gage In games. The penalty Is a fine
of not less than $20, nor more than
•10.
The cornerstone for the new Mason-
1c Temple at Cisco was laid Thurs-
day by D. D. Grand Master R. A. Bt.
John. The following subordinate
loges assisted In the work: Cisco.
Eastland, Ranger, Gorman. Carbon,
Rising Star, Nimrod, Ounslght, Moran
and Abilene.
Rev. Horace Bishop outdated la Ba-
sis Wednesday evening at the marri-
age of F. J. Smith and Mrs. Elizabeth
Hines, both said to be 86 years old.
One blow starts the trouble—and eo-
caslonaily ends It.
The Texas and Pacific railway has
begun the erection of a new brick de-
pot at Mesquite. It ie to be 30x120 feet
in size, provided with separate and
roomy waiting roontB and will be a
handsome structure.
Many a man's financial goose has
been cooked In a Jack pot.
The Palestine Gun Club has com-
pleted final arrangements for their
Ihlrd nnnttal shoot, which will be held
August 3rd and 4th, nnd which pronv
Iscs to be a greut event.
Senator Charles A. Culberson has
notified the committee In charge ot the
ex-Confedcrato nnd old settlers’ re-
union, to be held nt Paris August 2 and
8, that be will accept the Invitation to
address the crowd on the latter date.
Tom Brown, a woodhauler, was
sbet and Instantly Wiled In a wood-
haulers' camp at Lampasas. Joe Nix-
on was arrested.
Capt. Ed B. Willis, of Denton, haa
been appointed State organizer of the
Farers’ Union.
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Woodruff, D. B. The Sonora Sun. (Sonora, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 25, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 11, 1906, newspaper, August 11, 1906; Sonora, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1017765/m1/1/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .