The Alvin Sun. (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, November 20, 1914 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brazoria County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Alvin Community College.
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THE ALVIN SUN. ALVIN. TEXAS
TURKEY TAKES THE PLUNGE
I
NOW ON IN TEXAS
BY THE GOVERNOR
1
»
S’
S'
-■
r■ j
Texas with
(Copyright.)
Texas Directory
PANAMA CANAL ZONE
TEXAS FARMERS TO RAISE
DURING EUROPEAN WAR
HORSES FOR ALL WORLD
He make th me to lie down in
"3. He ri
WINTER GARDENS IN
THE SOUTHERN STATES
goodness and mercy shall
SCORED ONE ON THE HOTEL
in the house of the Lord
States, and in harmony
of thanksgiving
municipal.
ex- i
said Rev.
adopted
com-
Good News.
sa-
and all of the ails following and he
Saturday.
County,
grass.
open house,
Robbers Get $3,900 at Navasota Depot i
XI*.--1 ivuviivn uk. nciiju
’ Goss, inventor of the printing press
that all
well
N
3
for a few days to help Na-
ture restoretheseorgansto
strength & healthy activity
AVOID SUBSTITUTES
HOSTETTER’S
Stomach Bitters
Alvir
Alvin,
Two German Aviators Captured.
Petrograd.—Russian cavalry operat
the
the
Quotes 21st Psalm, David: “The Lord
Is My Shephird, I Shall Not Want,’*
Etc —Thursday, Nov. 26. the Day.
dared in
woman
morals fo
mum wage laws.
named:
H. Pugh
Steve J
ton. Boll
Penelope
Neese;
Packing Plant at Flatonia.
Flatonia, Tex.—The turkey packing
plant
though
•Ella Froman. a lit-
was instantly killed at Dre-
of
the
Vegetable Can Be Easily Raised in a
Small Home Garden, and in Variety
That Will Be Welcomed.
There were 15,000 pounds bought on*1
day, one firm purchasing over 7,000
pounds of that amount.
Great Gasser Brought In.
Corpus Christi, Tex.—The enormous
Crothers,
Clinic.
Boston Herald.
“I nevcj tell
The doctor who nas tried Postum
knows t lat it is an easy, certain, and
giving.
The proula nation follows:
There shot Id be, and always is, a
Beason of jo '
the course ol
experiences
It is a
tempted
Child Is Killed at Crossing.
Esthcrweod, La.
tie girl
son Sunday when she drove a buggy
in front
railroac
killed.
hough I walk through the
e shadow of death, I will
for thou art with me;
thy staff they comfort me.
preparcst a table before
iresence of mine enemies;
MADE IN GERMANY.
“I chanced yesterday,”
Vs
¥
formationfurnished on request
PEDEN IRON & STEEL CO.
HOLSTON SAN ANTONIO
nevertheless
to us.
sorrows and
can say as t
.‘‘The Lort
not want.
“2.
.•X
?
The loss on the building
i congratulations and their promises of UP at auction. Only one was sold, and
, cooperation in making the system a i ^at brought but $5. “When you get a •
' commimlfv.” who nr»tlv romoT-b-c, "—I.. 1
Austin, Te: .—The annual Thanks-
giving proclamation issued by the gov-
ernor of Texas, following that issued
by the president, has been issued by
Governor
find a copy on the train of one of the
most carefully written reviews of so-
cial movements In this country, and
equally true
seasons of
sorrow and
have the poo
year of our
of war in
statesmen o
uir has gone dry. Preparations are
Lug made to try to bring it in
‘some education!’”
told further, “is a
with steel works, smelters, etc., a pop-
ulation of working people ard a good
PROCLAMATION OF THANKS |ttTTlE QUARANTINE
ISSUED
' enced
Body of Young Woman Is Found.
Murphysboro, III.—The body of a
young woman, to which a 60-pound
O. B. Colquitt,
Governor of Texas.
addition to the crop already
sow Sudan
Pecan Yield Heavy Near Floresville.
Floresville, Tex.—During the past I
week something like 25,000 pounds of |
be unable to get along without their I
beer, yet according to the papers the
number of saloons has decreased from
140 to S5 in the last ten years.”
Simeon Feed Telia How He Once En-
tertained Guest With Lively f
Sense of Humor.
“I hesitated for a time, disliking the
idea of having to give up my coffee, but
finally I got a package and found it te
be all th* doctor said.
er peculiarities; written under the in- i
bills and
written:
“ Does this apply to false teeth?”’
physician of Prosperiown, N. J.
One of his patients says;
“During the summer just past I suf-
DOCTOR KNEW
Had Tried It Himself.
“Paw.”
“Well?”
“When I promise to marry him. do
you want him to come and ask your
consent?’
“No; not my consent, but I would
like to I ave him trot in and tell me
the good news. I sort of feel like I
needed heering up.”—Houston Post.
gw Wz \ •
green pastures; he leadtth me beside
the still walers.
itoreth my soul he lead-
eth me in tLe paths of righteousness
for his namps sake.
“4. Yea,
▼alley of tl
fear no evif;
thy rod and
”5. Thou
me in the
thou anoint »st my head with oil; my
cup runnet.1 over.
“6. Surely
follow me all the days of my life; and
I will dwell
forever.”—Twenty-third Psalm.
Now, the ’f fore, In accordance with
the proclamation of the president of
the United
with custom, 1. O. B. Colquitt, govern-
or of Texas, do hereby des.gnate and
proclaim 1 hursday, Nov. 26,
1914, a da;
Lord Almighty for his goodness and
loving kin< ness. 1
the day is
all places
j success.
43 !
in er-;
GENER AL HARDWARE
AND SUPPLIES
Contractors’Suppl les,Builders’
| Hardwarj,, Etc. Pricesand ln-
I do
(Conduct *•<] by the National Woman**
Christian Temperance Union.)
T. U. Favors Suffrage.
Ga.—The importance
suffrage as an aid to
for national constitutional
was emphasized Tuesday
wrote he,
Tha*
But presently Mr.
... v. up amazinglv and
communiczrttm fn
connection
European war and praised
estal lishment of more than a
>eace treaties het ween the
Cotton Sells at 8c Per Pound.
Houston. Tex.—King Cotton is “com-
.ng back.” Spot cotton is selling at
Sc per pound—a full cent advance
over a week ago—and the trade and
movement is fast returning to normal.
fluence of cocaine they have still an-
other distinctive literary style. “The
; writer who depends upon alcohol for
inspiration,” says the doctor, “uncon-
Capital Punishment Is Lost.
Portland, Ore.—Complete returns
show that the bill to abolish capital
punishment in Oregon carried at ths
recent election.
of an oncoming engine on the
track. The horse also was
Canal Pilots Must Swear Off.
Panama.—Colonel George G. Coeth-
als, gov ernor of the Panama zone,
signed in order this week providing
persons employed on the canal
who have marine licenses must ab-
stain absolutely from liquor.
W. C.
Atk-nta,
won;a u
movement
prohibition
by speakei s at the general convention
of tha Woman’s Christian Temperance
Union. Resolutions
mended P esident Wilson or his neu-
Ttlaity proclamations in
with the
the
rscore of
United St tes and other nttions. Sec-
retary Da liels also was lauded for his
barring intoxicants from the United
States navy and the convention de-
avor of national prohibition,
suffrage, a single standard of
men and women and mini-
special attention must be
paid to the Stomacn and
Bowels for the}’ have a di-
rect in luence on each
other. Y on will find it a
good plan to take
^/i
which bears his name, died Tuesday-
aged 67. He was born in Wales.
Shipment of Turkeys Purchased.
Flatonia, Tex.—A shipment of 300
lead of turkeys was received Satur-
iay by a packing plant from a mer-
hant at Waelder. The turkeys sold
or 9c a pound.
farm work and the breeding stable,
and they should take advantage of the
opportunity. No phase of farm life of-
fers the pleasure, relaxation and in- j
terest to the farmer as does the breed-
ing of a few good horses from his
farm mares. The young colts are a
Porfirio Diaz, former Mexican presi
dent, died Friday after a short illness
He was 78 years of age und had been
prominent in military and political
ife in Mexico.
AUGUSTA BANQUET.
The press dispatches had the follow-
ing to say of the banquet held in con
section with the recent meeting of the
Georgia Shriners In Augusta:
"The banquet is the first of its kind
ever 1 eld (by the Shriners) In the his
tory of the world, even dating back to
the days of ancient history, since it
was the only one without spirituous
or malt drink of any kind ”
President’s Proclamation Issued to
Supplement Existing Regulations
Regarding Belligerents.
Colquitt, setting aside
Thursday, Nor. 26, as a day ot thanks-
Washington County Holding Cotton,
j Brenham, Tex.—Washington Conn- j
ty farmers are holding their cotton. I
In the various warehouses in Brenham pecans have been sold at Floresville
•' over six thousand bales are stored and
; over six thousand more in the county ;
; waiting an advance in price.
McCANES DETECTIVE AGENCY
louston, Tmu. operates the largaat force af
mala and fen ale det-ctivea in the South. 3g
years* experience. No charge for • nswermo
Questions or letters. Rates on application.
w
To Amuse A
Lazy Liver |
Printing Press Inventor Dies.
Chicago, 111.—Frederick Llewellyn '
Good Roads Ordered.
Goliad, Tex.—The commissioners
, zourt of Goliad county made an im-
portant contract this week whereby
some 250 miles of line graded roads Many are intending to
are to be constructed over the county. '
many foreigners who are sjpposed to
fered terr bly with a heavy feeling at
the pit jf my stomach and dizzy feel-
ings in my head and then a blindness
• would come over my eyes so I would
: have to sit, down. I xreukl get so nerv-
' ous I could hardly control m^XeclIngs.
“Fina ly I s poke to our family phy4><
cian about it and he asked if I drank
much coffee and mother told him that
I did. He told me to immediately stop
drinkin ; coffee and drink Postum in
its pla<e, as he and his family had
used Postum and found it a powerful
"Since drinking Postum in place of
coffee my dizziness, blindness and
nervou mess are all gone, my bowels
■ are regular and I am we’i and strong.
I That is a short statement of what
sciously writes down the evidence of
the spirits he is using and their sin-
gular influence on his brain.”
5.000 Men Return to Work.
Chicago, 111.—Five thousand men
who have been idle since the outbreak
of the European war returned to work
Monday at the United States Steel
Corporation mills at Gary, Ind.
General Geronimo Trevino.
Laredo, Tex. — General Geronimc
Loose T ee!h,
Bleeding Bums, foul Breath, Prevents Decay
and liigqs Di eases. All mouth troubles are
relieved by /Jr. James Morris’ Mouth Remedy.
Mr nivtho Home Twofmttfotily >1 money order. FrttAdoia
•’** I’lyvnv, aud particulars for 2c stamp for postage. Write
Dr. James Morris, Dental Specialist
Desk r,9!2 a Conareee Ave., Houston, Tex*
ulvrt Stock Sanitary Commission
Takes Action Against Foot
and Mouth Disease.
: White Point field, eight miles north of
■ Corpus Christi, continues unabated, i
' The gas issues forth with such force 1
i that it has been impossible to meas-•
i nra tho nrndnrtinn nvpn in a rough
way, but drillers have estimated that
---------:------------ I New State Bank.
~ • ““— • “ ~ • j Austin, Tex.—The state banking
Navasota, Tex.—Emmet Garvin, who' board Monday granted authority to
do bi I'ness to the First State hank
of Big Wells, Dimmit County, capital
stock $lo,000.
jegun operation Monday. Al*
the turkey crop is short this
year, the plant has been running full
time s nee it opened.
Will Stage Fruit Show.
Tex.—Converting its streets
into orange groves. Ah in will hold
offering entertainment
and enl ghtenment to the people of
South Texas on Nov. IS, 19 and 20.
fruit show of a kind not at-
before in that section.
lished a brief review of the results of
a study, made a little better than a
year ago, under the direction of the 1
German government, with a view to
bringing before the German people the
injurious effects of the use of alcohol.
The commission decided that what
was called a temperate use of alco-
holic drink—accounted generally innoc-
j uous—was positively hurtful. It in-
evitably works harm, the ccmmission
says, and is especially hurtful to those
engaged in any employment which de-
It was
a sober, keen analysis of a very thor-
ough investigation made in Germany.”
LICENSES GO BEGGING.
Evidently in Pueblo, Colo., the
loon agent Is not looked upon as the
advance agent of prosperity, says Ellis
......... ’ „—- Five
licenses which had expired were put '
Posiriasters Are Designated.
Washington.—The following Texas
fourth-class postmasters have been
Arno, Reeves County, Clara
Hutchins, Dallas County, l
Ayres; Brandon, Hill Coun- I
ty. Robe 1 M. Blocker; Bynum, Hill I
County, Mary B. Rankin; Ma'.one, Hill
County, Ada H. Worley; Osceola, Hill
E. N. Maddox; Pearle, Cor-
yell County, George P. Oney; Pendle-
County, Rose M. Wyland;
Hill County, George E.
Jottsville, Hamilton County,
A. G. W littenton.
Phoenix Has Severe Fire.
Phoenix, Ariz.—Nine business es-
tablishments were wiped out Monday
by a fire, entailing a loss estimated
at $300,0i)0.
FIELD OF INVESTIGATION.
“Considerable literature of the pres- '
ent day is the direct product of brains
I working under the influence of spirits ,
and drugs,” says Dr. T. D
! writing in the Ixincet and
i Study of the effects of alcohol and ■
other narcotics upon the Drain, he tells ;
us. reveals the f?ct that bocks and rebuild* r and delicious food-drink.
I articles written under the influence of i
: spirituous liquors have certain marked
characteristics; written under the in-
fluence of beer they show certain oth
Pueblo, we are I
little Pittsburgh, ' prescrib‘8 it for his patients as did &
Palo PintdL County Gees Dry.
Mineral Wells, Tex.—Palo Pinto
County voted prohibition Saturday by
284 majority. This is the first time
i in eighteen years the county has been
dry.
A $103 000 Fire at Houston.
Houston. Tex.—The big three-story
brick building in the heart of the busi-
ness district of Houston, housing the
shoe store of Krupp & Tuffly, was
completely destroyed by fire Monday
morning.
and the shoe stock will reach prob-
ably $100,000.
Postum has done for me.”
Name given by Postum Co., Rattle
Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Well-
ville,” in pkgs.
Postum comes in two forms:
Regular Postum — must be
boiled 15c and 25c packages.
Instint Postum--is a soluble pow-
der. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly
In a c ip of hot water and, with cream
and sugar, makes a delicious bever-
age irstantly. 30c and 50c tins.
The cost per cup of both kiuds is
about the same.
“There s a Reason” for Postum.
~sold by Grocers-
;--------------,
community,” she aptly remarks, "edu- ’
; cated to the point where a man isn’t '
| willing to risk more than $5 on a chance ! r
to sell drinks, it is. in the vernacular, pleasant way out of the coffee habit
some education!’” Pueblo, we — 1 J ” -* - *•
r and thanksgiving. In
life every human being
tie agreeableness of love,
sunshine, ease and abundance. It is
that we all experience
lepression, despondency,
disappointment, and we
• with us always. In this I
Lord 1914, the Giver of
All Gifts has blessed the people of
un abundant harvest; our!
country is li erally flowing with milk
and honey, yet their values have been
largely destioyed by the misfortunes
i staer countries, and the
our own land have not |
taken the pains to care for their own;
the Lord has l»een good
He h is enabled us to bear our
disappointments, and we
if Psalmist David said:
is my shepherd; 1 shall
Fort Worth, Tex.—The quarantine
forbidding the importation of cattle
from all states and sections in Amer-
ica, north and east of Texas, except
Oklahoma, Kansas, Louisiana and Ar- ;
Icaiisas, is officially established and
wili be maintained and enforced by
the live stock sanitary commission of
Texas, with or without the indprse-
tneif of Governor Colquitt, according
to W. N. Waddell, chairman of the
commission. A copy of the proclama-
tion establishing the quarantine was
forwarded to the governor Saturday.
“I have refrained from commenting
on the power of the commission to es-
j tablish and enforce a quarantine
without the indorsement of the gov-
ernor,” said Mr. Waddell. “However,
we have accorded him the courtesy of
requesting his indorsement of the
quarantine and an official proclama-
tion indorsing the quarantine desired
by the commission.
T am sure that the matter of decid-
I?;; whether the quarantine is desir-
able and necessary will be left to the
commission, because it was for this
kind of work that the commission was
instituted.
T am going to do exactly what I
think best and proper to protect ade-
quately the live stock industry of Tex-
as from all danger of the foot and
mouth disease. The quarantine is be-
in? enforced.
“Many local and visiting cattle men,
including several officials of the Cat-
tle Raisers’ Association, have in-
dorsed my efforts to continue the
work of tick and scab eradication in
the Panhandle.”
Postmaster-Merchant Is Killed.
Sublime, Tex.—A. O. Miller,
years of age, postmaster and
chant, was found dead in his home
He is supposed to have ac-!
cidentally shot himself with a Win-
chester rifle while preparing to shoot
squirrels.
MA
Washington.—At the direction of
President Wilson a proclamation Mon-
day was issued to supplement the ex-
isting regulations for preservation of
neutrality in the Panama canal and
the Panama canal zone during the Eu-
ropean war.
The proclamation extends its prohi-
bitions to air craft, public or private
of belligerent powers. It also forbids
any use of wireless telegraphy by
belligerent vessels’ within zone jur-
isdiction except on business in con-
nection with the canal.
Belligerent powers are forbidden by
the proclamation to embark or disem-
bark troops, war munitions or warlike
materials in the zone except in case
of necessity due to accident.
Belligerent vessels are not to re-
‘ main in the canal zone territorial
: waters longer than twenty-f. ir hours
at a time, except when in distress, and
the old requirements of twenty-four
hours between departures of opposing
; belligerent ships is retained.
I When opposing belligerent ships
are simultaneously present the twen-
ty-four hour rule must be observed
between them, order of departure to
be determined by order of arrival, ex-; world, both of the kind required for
cept where circumstances make exten- ■
j sions or stay permissible. A belliger-
ent vessel must not leave within twen-
ty-four hours after departure of an
adversary’s private vessel.
Passage through the canal is to be ;
accorded only upon written assurance
of commanders of observance of regu-
lations.
Brenham Has Big Fire Loss.
Brenham, Tex.—The Farmers’ Union
warehouse Tuesday, containing 3,000
bales of cotton, was burned at an
: early hour Tuesday morning. A few
bales of cotton stored on the outside
1 of the building were saved, but
; 3,000 inside were consumed with
1 structure.
Field agents of the department of
agriculture are now urging upon farm- :
e -s in the Southern States the need
of winter gardens to supply their fam-
ilies with fresh vegetables through the
fall, winter and spring. Farm fare
To Sacrifice Valuable Herds.
uuivuv Boston, Mass.—Forty-eight cows, |
Trevino, one of the generals undei : valued at $43,000, in municipal herds ing in the vicinity of Plock, fifty-eight
- ... • on Deer Island and Long Island, in miles west of Warsaw, captured two
Boston harbor, where cases of foot I German aviators and repelled the ef-
and mouth disease were discovered I fort at rescue undertaken by two com*
Thursday, have been killed. panics of German infantry. Engine
-------------------- trouble forced them to descend.
NOT WORTH WHILE OR SAFE.
In the Saturday Evening Post, Sam
uel Blythe, who after 20 years of tip
pling decided to get on the watei
"agon and in his book, “Cutting II ■
Out,’’ tells us why he did .o, recently
wrote upon the question, “Is it worth ,
while to drink moderately, or is it
not?” Basing the answer upon hit ■
own experience, he says emphatically
that it Is not.
’ It is my unalterable conviction,’
states Mr. Blythe, "that alcohol In any
form as a beverage never did anythin?
for any man that he would not have
been better without.” Contrasting the
“old game with the new," the physical
gain, he says, “is so obvious that even
those who have not experience*’ it ad-
Demand for Good Animals Is Here
Now and Will Continue for a
Long Time to Come.
To Plant More Acres in Oats.
Leander, Tex.—The farmers of the
Leander section are preparing in earn- j
est to reduce the entton acreage for ■
J 1915 and gone to so' ing more oats in '
addition to the crop already sown.
seal of state to be affixed j
;he city of Austin, Texas,
tables in tenth-of-an-acre gardens the
' t gents are recommending that a plot
cf well-prepated land, 50 feet long by
' 10 feet wide, be set aside and that the
rest of the garden be planted with a
i winter-cover crop. In the reserved
t rea about four vegetables should be
raised—spinach, lettuce, radishes and
(auliflower or cabbage being among
the most desirable. In all the lower
rections of the South lettuce, rad
ishes and spinach can be grown
throughout the entire fall, winter and
Simeon Ford, who accomplished the
extraordin iry feat of running the
Grand U lion hotel and being a
humorist if nation wide reputation at
the same time, and, now that the
! hotel is defunct, is presumably turn-
i ing his v hole attention to the con-
vulsing o' dinner guests over their
I coffee, expressed himself with much
i modesty la reply to a quest’on of the
James J. Keane, archbishop of Du- ; Boston Herald.
. buque. speaking at the Niagara Falls : “I nevcf tell stories,”
{ convention of Catholics, “I chanced to : “nor can 1 remember them.”
looked damaging.
I Ford bri) htened
. finished his c—
! way:
“Here ;s a bit of humor, however,
and a true hotel happening.
“Our steward had printed on the
bills of fare the following notice:
“'All a tides brought into the hotel
and used at the table will be charged
for as though furnished by the house.’
“Some one mailed me one of these
under the notice he had
New Well Goes Dry. •
w w . Sulphur, La.—The splendid flowing
weight was attached, was taken from water well at the high school at Sul-
the river Thursday. The body has not p>”r P^namUnna nr«
been identified. jb<
or in the ransaction of private and
public bus! less.
In testin ony whereof I have here-
unto signe 1
caused the
hereto at
this the 13th day oi Noi ember, A. D
1914.
A. D.
to the
Everywhere in Texas the cotton sit-
uation occasioned by the European
war has caused our farmers to con-
sider the diversification of farm prod-
ucts and has especially directed their
attention to the necessity of raising
more live stock. Land owners as well
as the real tillers of the soil have
come to a recognition of this neces-
sity, and the fact makes the bright-
est outlook for the future of Texas
and its preponderating agricultural in-
terests.
We have had too much of King Cot-
ton. Formerly, before the all-prevad
ing sentiment in favor of raising cot-
ton exclusively as a money crop pos-
sessed our people, one of the chief
industries of Texas was the raising
of horses and many breeding farms
for the production of thoroughbred
sires were established, but the one-
crop idea of recent years has well
nigh destroyed the opportunities for
breeding good horses and many of the
breeding farms have gone out of
istence.
Texas farmers have now, and will
have for years to come, excellent op- '
portunities to breed horses for all the j
aiit it, and those who have expert-1
It comment on It as some
miracle of health that has teen at-
tained”—and he goes on to f'.escribe '
In detail some of the remarkable
physical gains.
Mentally," he continues, “I have a
clearer, saner, wider view of life. I
am afflicted by none of the desuitori-
ness superinduced by a!coho’.
not need a bracer to get me going or j
a hooker to keep me under way. I
Ai d, now that I know the other side
of It, that the chief mental effect of
alcohol, taken as I took it, is to induce
a certain scattering and casualness of ■
mind. Also, It Induces a lack of defl-
nlteness of view and a notable fail-
ure of intensive effort. A man evades |
and scatters and exaggerates and
makes loose statements when he
drinks.
“Taken as ? took it.”
be It remembered, was never what is
known as an “alcoholic;” he was a
“moderate drinker." When we think
of the number of men among our na-
tion’s leaders and lawmakers in whom
the moderate use of alcohol “induces
a scattering and casualness of mind,
a lack of definiteness of view and fail-
ure of intensive effort," we do not
wonder that so many national prob-
lems remain unsolved. If anyone
needs to “cut out” alcohol, t is our
government officials, national, state.
For any person holding a
position of trust, moderate drinking
is not only not worth while, but it is
' not safe.
Due observance of ; mu, winter ana spring, rarm lare
respectfully requested in | during these months is often dry and
where the people may be I monotonous, and the crops that can
gathered t igether in public worship ' easily raised in a small home gar-
den will not only provide a welcome
I variety, but, it is said, will db much to
' remove the demand for spring tonics
my name off cially and ( aild other medicines.
k rr. i ,po merabers Of gjriS’ canning clubs
I who have been growing summer vege-
Federal Reserve Banks Opened.
Washington.—Although the twelve
federal reserve banks began business
only Monday, the federal reserve mands „f them physlcaI labor
board already has before it plans for
' widening their field of operations and
• increasing their store of cash. Tele-:
I grains began to reach the treasury de- j
partment shortly after Secretary Me- ,
Adoo issued his formal announcement !
to the banks to open their doors. '
They continued to arrive all day long, • .
governors and federal reserve agents Meredith in the I nion Signal,
of all the banks telegraphing their J * 1
! handles the night express for Wells
Fargo, was held up Saturday night by
two masked men and robbed of $3,900.
i pring. In the more northern regions
and in high latitudes hothouses or cold ure the production, even in a rough
frames must be used during the cold- i
est months. | the flow will average about 50,000,000
---feet per cf'iy.
that number, to my gratification, pub-
lishpd a hriof fpvIow nf ♦bo
source of perpetual interest for every |
member of the farmer's family from
! tnt day they are foaled until in their
i old age they find themselves in the
far off breeding stables. Through all {
gas flow in the well of the White j the vicissitudes of a thoroughbred
Point Oil and Gas Company at the colt’s life the pride of the producer
never wanes.
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Bailey, Ammo. The Alvin Sun. (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, November 20, 1914, newspaper, November 20, 1914; Alvin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1249598/m1/2/?q=%22Places+-+United+States+-+Texas+-+Brazoria+County%22: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Alvin Community College.