The Austin Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 315, Ed. 1 Monday, September 16, 1912 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Austin American-Statesman Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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4
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English Walnut Offers Beauty
AMERICAN WOMAN IN PEN DUEL
ST
man
e
1/
MAKING MINING SAFE.
called for
more than
4.
ABOUT A.
TERRHLI.
I
-V3
H0
e
lature.
4
\
Far xample, a fan
mj,e
H
Wilson, enginer in charge of
2
ro
inereasing saety is
Prompt
Q,
hding the request for fnvor-
ree
db‘
had
improved
arrai
tion practiced by the 8wtas
90
housing conditions and
age of hts race.
Council,
ernment has decided to grant a con- dent of enough Tirst-ald men to give
era tn
a first-ald corps and
most ffective eervice"
The result is that about 80 per cent
and
iron business are foreigners of
in large
of record (
Grande" And for the benefit of
tronomle ignoramunes who have never
met aa
plained that the Herald meant this
to give the amounts contributed by the a compliment
imli
thelr ctmpaign contributiona and the
their
was linked wfth the ldlosyncrasies of
In the Federal
4
►
• danger at
Campaign Contribution Coupon
is
Houston
Austin, Texas....
....1912
service
consecrated
guished intellectuality.
To The Statesman: Enclosed find my contribu-
most readily transplanted
trees
tion of ...
LABOR AND TUR TRUSTS.
to the National Democratic Campaign Fund,
W
F
I.
re
555%
rot
Rio
Eas-
Leaf)
Woo
a eozoperative noole-a farm property U ralsed in value be-
an their putpose the l«H ot the tmprovement at the rail.
combinations of workingmen Is confi-
dently relied upon by the advocates of
• the varlous Cantons provtstons
made to taemntnte loans to farm-
power. to these times, the life of Alex-
ander Watkins Terrell has been part
of the history of the Sate, to whose
cheaper prices for seeds
re by purchasing those ar-
terateur and almost a poet, he pos-
sessed a mind so briHant and exqui-
Ileana? No list of contributots to the
Taft campaign fund has been made
each eager to keep his mills running
and to get orders which his recalci-
The Tel Verde County Herala refers
to Joe Boehmer of Eagle Pass as the
the thinge w
regretted wA
financial assistance rendered them by
the Cantonal and Federal Governments
in the manner prescribed la the fore-
going report.
of course, makes the mortgage a very
attractive investment
in the year 1911 the Federal Govern-
ment contributed 1,456,764 franes to the
of their administration. Read this res-
olution passed by the steel trust in
1901:
trial despotism- to enthrone monopoly
made good by law.
2.23
I’
There is plenty of room in tho Texas
cotton fields for all the Mexicans who
don’t like the way things are run at
home
yim
.lt4B
, 140
. 160
.1722
eecured by the
mortgage with
Mortgage banks
National
ur own
AGRICULTURAL co-OPRRATION IN
SWITERLAND.
M. H. nOWZEI, President and General
b cHmsEA T. CROWELL Managing
j Editow ____________ __________
OFFICE OF PUBLICATION
at the magical memory and bewildered
by the flow of gl'ttering English.
xp-z
NEW
changes
from tb
graceful
or givin
and ski
make th
piece d
collarles
cession
mer, bu
tinue th
wiEh u
not imp
adorned
has the
finish oi
broidere
conveys
to be de
lar that
happy h
blouse i
lects«foi
wardrot
these m
street. v
Iormerl
are bull
mooted
ing. 11
return i
to the t
questto
i1.
with th
With oi
V2j3
L -e.
.8
&
which are cantonal
—h are authorized
nera, against a
ro-thirds of the
the farm propert».
treat rivals could not accept, its de-
' mands would soon have been granted.**
The suecess of the German steel trust
1 appears to be due In part to this ■eme •
ability to frustrate the aspirations of
and Profit to. Country Estates;
Many Trees Are Being Planted 4A
in CraaraM Avenua
TiEPHONIC
naitoria1 Room, »M font ........
Mliortel Koon.•‘■•a,
Busineu okrie, both phones.....
Boctety xattor, old phont.........
FEkMs or SUBscHPEION.
(In lb, ety by carrtev
On. Mouth—in advance .........
On. Um—in advance ...........
Kncouraged by * reduction of more
than M* In number at deatha in the
coal mine, ot the United States in
Mil. as compared with the prevtous
year, and with the purpone at further-
In* the ute-saving campaign among
trtbution at M per ent ana the Ved-
eral government la grantine one of
M por eat (together 60 per eent to
which time he introduced
iges)” Such security.
their land as la tm in other coum-
tries.
« mny be ot tntereet to know ehat
the swiss Federal Government, m la
done by the «overnmenta at agrleut-
tural Cantona encouracen the raling
at cattle ter bremtng purpones by ap-
propriating .very year in the hudget
a conaiderable amount for premiums to
be siven at the cattle shows to the
day," In explaining tho trusts' "Im-
bureau in Pittsburg. Pa, Sept 23, 24,
25 and 26.
Since the bureau, together with the
American Red Cross Society and the
Pittsburg Coal Operators Association,
held a National mine safety demonstra-
tion one year ago in Pittsburg, which
was attended by forty first-aid ard
rescue teams of miners-from all over
(Mat tm muteer Mep-
with the best euts at beehteak wen-
>•» nt Mr a pouna, an tntereeting de.
xeloyment he appeared tR Kew Yrk
City There At nekgauy a tw butener
"hop- now wher• bee i. not at
•I owtnE to the faet Iba pr-
prieters "I4 *?* «”• tor roante
Of beet .nd .teka-Colifra
reau of mines as to the best methods
to employ, led to the suggestion of a
National conference, and this has been
welcomed by the mine managers, who
have notified the bureau of mines of
their desire to be present. At tMe con-
Aberdeen househeid, that guests of
Lady Paget had ‘introduced "turkey
trotting" at the recent annual ball.
prompt treatment Public exhibits and
contests stimulate the interest of min-
render the
Alexander Watkins Terrell, born in
Virginia eighty-four years ago, and
since IMS a distinguished and leading
citizen of this State, lies dead in his
home in Austin, having dropped dead
inIno managers. superintendents. com-
DUBLIN, Sept IS.—Society here is
considerbly- amused at duel of kit-1
ling in between the lines letters, in
"6 'Am
2• 55"1 3
3,0-kue 13
n-233A
$9 (S* 8338
242 %. * A 2404a2N
cantonal laws by
quantities, which are
ouses and can be ob-
d from the administra-
active local soclety.
NonoE TO THE PUBLIC.
Any erroneous reflectton upon the
character, standing or reputation of
. any person, firm or corporation which
may appear in tho columns at The
Statesman will be gladly corrected up-
on its being brought to the attention
of the publisher.
pany surgeons and first-aid experts to ______ _
moot at the experiment station of the suultvpte "theornia.
cases). Tn the Federal budget for the
year 1912 an appropriation of 1,500,000
francs is made for that purpose.
For lack of statistics it is impossible
The Democrats have made
•xample But how about the Repub-
ding to
Numerous inquiries made to the bu- York, In the spring of 1877 and they
grew steadily, making surprising
growths each year until now they
. i 4 sole mb function, of tho
Aberdeen* At any rate the two titled
of the
third-term party has followed
represented in the Swiss
for its
Furthei
contain
from ol
over a
ment w
•sr th.
losses
undoub
syndics
Tbs
trust la
trust, t
the tob
many fl
over oi
of the
commot
septi al
bat’les
provixi.
and sel
the cos
with in
and of
power :
erty -
There I
Demori
to Utaj
ening and hardening
Me mor. beauuful bhade tree i
known than tea Englsh walnut They
make bomparatively ne Utter, here a
euro while bark, very dongly ronemb-
line that of the white birch own bear
pubite a Kenvy folla«a with a nien, glow
leaf. hey ar. nimont '«»■■< rrom
immeet paata a certain alkali m» which
ine, pomen -erine to arie• away th.
paramite. wMck are ee ruinous «• tba
enestnut and neariy an otner frut
treen . ..
hia atsuin-
tl la rittine
carrted out with the fnanetal aid from
public authorities the proprietor can,
for bla ahare at contribution to the
maia tmprovement, have recordea ta
the around book < record at lana), for
the mecurity of hia matter, a Hen
which comes fl rat at all other debts
male and tamaie biosnome mature al
Iha .am. lima. ineurtng perfect ferti-
Ballon Under tararaki. qreumatancen
the trees will beer nuts qaree to nive
years from tranapiantine and increase
in yloM yeary. As a food, nuts era be-
comin tem a luxuvy ana more a
•tapis arthele ot mot Their rains is
belhg recogntmea ana they are beine
used more ana men as a wubetitute ter
moat, one pouna at waimut meat beine
el* to be egum to elunt pounds at
steak in nutriment
In transplantation, most growers
base found that two to four-year-ol
who poo-
Such a man must have been singu-
larly out of place in Texas as Texas
was in 1852, and for many years after-
ward It is practically impossible to
consider A. W. Terrell as a frontiers-
Owners of country •states and or-
chardists throughout the United States
are just now devoting attention to the
culture of the English or Persian wal-
nut. In fact, horticulturalists every-
where are tremendously Interested in
ichelada II shouid be
At this oge most of their growth has
been in roota, and removal eauses them
ts throw out additional roots, and thus
give Inereased vigor to the tree. Then
again, the smaller the tree the more
safety it may be parked and shipped
to its estinatien. •
The Eastern grower has many ad-
vantages over his rival of the West.
First of all, there is the A onsideratien
of freight charges, which on a carload
from Callfornia amounts to such a sum
known Judge Terrell long and well
H* w“ aitted "statsmnisuniucoir. -nich Lmdy arthur Paget away:
Minnie Stevens of New York, and the A*--a-
astounded that "Leftie
dealing with competing employers.
farmers is largely ppiltical.
Several years ago they formed an
associgtlon—the Swiss Farmers' Asso-
elation-and established a central bu-
reau at Bragg Tis assoelation is
Judge Terrell gf Austin, author of
the Tsrrell election law and ex-Min-
ister to Turkey, dropped dead at Min-
orals Wells Monday afternoon, and was
found at 6:30, having been dead sev-
eral hours when found He was out
riding in a motor car during the morn-
ing with Judge Swayne of Fort Worth
and others, and was feeling well at
the time, returning to the hotel shortly
before noon. The body .was shipped to
Austin Tuesday for burial. For a num-
ber of years Judge Tsrrell has been
prominent in Texas politics, having
been Minister to Turkey under Presi-
dent Cleveland's administration, and
was later a member of the State Legis-
site that even his enemies aknowi- .--g 2--—-
edged it luminoslts. Mi oratory was •' the fact that Lady Paxet. never .Ac-
convineine. hia manners capuvating. cepted aay of the countem. invitatiome
hla eonvetsatfom a dream. To those to become actively engaxed la any of
who pasooo uner its .poll tb. hour, ner pet harities. and because at n
seemed ss minutes and the long night < --------------------------------------------
as twilight His information was wide ; 1
and embracing Whether he talked of frulta of industrial democracy, but the
politics or history, of nterature or tho new party attar, them so s aubsUtHto
tins arts, or whether h. unroled the for industrial democraey. It asks us
tender tabrto at remintacence, the 110-1 to abandon Iha American ideni ot in-
tener sat entrancea, wonderine alike ■ dustrtal IIberty and to estabilsh th.
— -----—’--— —• *—14---4 German practice of benevolent indun-
Workers. Had the associatton been
in the zenith of his
treatment of injuries by persons skilled
in first-aid methods reduces the miner's
loss "of time by about 90 per cent
TRere is a corresponding saving in
wages to the worker ana a reduction
of damagee or eompeneation to the
operator Where mine operators take
aa interest in and manage first-aid
work a better feeling develops hetwen
the worker and ms employer, result-
ing In Improved hospital and sanitary
Lemons ar. reported hin; probably
du. to th. expeqted demana along
about Noy. t when vox pop will hand
em around rtpht reeklemiy.
nvine and
general aa-
ha must pay tnteren not on ths Mo-
«M. but on $,000 less 1 per cent.
Mowever, his atual payment is still
per cent at ths $10,000. Each year,
nowever, a iarger portion at thia 5%
par eent la tor amortisation; a aimin-
isning portton of It. as the amortization
continues. Is for interest, Im this war
the termer ultimately pay. back the
entire loan without having been bur-
aened with one big payment la aar
year as he ordinarily would have been
only th very rare oases are ths loans
mads by these mortgage banks on
term properties torectosed.
financtal assistance is rendered by
munietpal, cantonal sod Federal su-
thontes to all undertakinga which
have as their purpone the improvement
of the eoll or to taelitate its utilise-
ton
improvements at the soil which en-
joy the rinanctal eld at ths public
autnorities ere: Irrigation, drainage,
clearanee at the land, road making,
road menaing. boundary walls (tencing
in), and tha erection of stables (shel-
tors) on the Alps. Whenever a farmer
posmemees land of which the value could
be considerably increased through ths
improvement of the, soil, but can not
atfora the expenses for such work he
can make application for a cohtribu-
ton to the costa of ouch undertaking
to the Government of hia Canton
(State», ana through the loiter to the
federai Government, in many Cantona
(States) the municipal authorities do
not comtribute to an improvement ot
the coll If by ouch improvement only
one individual farmer would profit.
Whilst they contribute tn those Caere
where a number of farmers or a cor-
poration la concerned.
Aitor a careru examination of the
piano for the improvement by tech-
nical experta, the Bwiss Department pt
agrieuiture presents the request, with
its report, to the Federal Council; the
latter then docidea on the basis of the
report from the agricuitural Depart-
ment and the plans, whether a con-
tribuuen will be granted, and risen the
amount of ouch contribution within the
limits in the Federat law (maximum 40
per cent ot the total coate)
LADY anruUn PAGET, IM ELIZAMKTM nauss.
abieconaideratton. The cantonal zov-
ernment, after examination of the re-
ques and plana decides to grant a
coptributlohot 10 per cent to the es-
timated conta ot improvement and, at
the abate Uma Mt compliance with the
dedtre exprenned by the proprietor of
the term—ref era the request to the
Federal Government with Ite report
and recommendation. After due con-
oidoration of all the facta the Ped-
oral Council may decide to grant a HO-
tribution, stmilar to that ad the Can-
ten. namely, of 10 per cent to the totat
coata Now. since the cantonal gov-
public. 1. Mr Milieu to follow the
eoel.nl Repubiloan policy ot alienee
and morecyt
Though the great autterence in con-
aitions prevailing in Switzerland and
in the United States prevents the adop-
lien of many at the actual practice,
employed in that republic for the finan-
cial auststance of the former, yet there
to much in prinetple which the Amert-
can farmer at the brink of strensth-
ening ble positiom through the doc-
trine of co-operation, can learn from
the fanner of Switzerland Amerlean
umater Bouten has recently forwarded
to the Plate Department a report upon
ent wubsect •allowing hia Investigatton
la eonnectlon with P- olden t Tafto ef.
tort te establish ci operative credit
• the United States for the benefit
at the Amertenz tarwe.
The tarmers at gw .Harland are the
backsone ft the det son. The govern-
meme recognimea cha it le to the
hermers that the country would turn
if ever it became necessary for that
eotederauom to defend no independ-
tar. Winely the government has done
all in Ila power to aid the farmer, to
-uteen the backbone of th. nation. In-
oMeatelly. however, the tarmers have
taken tl hand tn the quentien of the
penne nmonfa looking u thelr welfare.
They have aaade themselven a strone
factor in the government- thet la the
at Mineral Walla last Monday
nine.
The editor .of the Republic
the workingmen, as shown by the fol-
lowing passage quoted in Prestdent
Van Hise’s "Concentration and Con-
women for some time past exchanged
a serie of stingingly polite missives,
which were finally concluded by one
in which the Count ess of Aberdeen
finally admitted that aha never gave
any credence to the rumor
. th.ih. . .. for this work Contra! Employment
by the discovery that the steel trust Burdau, CM Pennsyivania Avenue."
which had paid fabulous sums to pro- Th U tut aivut poz cent
moters and stockholders, worked many of the unskilled laborers in the steel
man He seemed beat fitted for "mar- 1 _ .. . , • . . •
Die halla” and for the culture and of Its employee twelve hours a day---------------------..... _
conrUteooa of palace. For thi fdimven.daxe,m the.wek.worked them, thene classes The ability of th. grant
gon he wa of tan mialudead and mi a- t 00, at such low wages that, even if a 1 combnations of capital to overcome
unA.mgt."a"wnHNIrAe"417man tolled hla twelve hours each of - --
earth, while he wa of the cloud a He the 365 days in the year, he could not
cared little for precedent" or precepts carn enough tpprovidea decent living
He did hia own thlnkina and he dared Cor a small family The doctrine of
to follow hia thoughi: it has often leralized.monopoly to per-
been aald that he once declared ‘con- petuate the cause which made such
Le5n-mditmtde-nceenso-condittons possible and which must
aesthetic point of view.
For many years the English walnut
rumor, sata to Hve its origin in tho
trol":
"Another advantage obtained by the
members from the existenee of the car-
tel (trust) la in deuling with strikes
and labor difficulties Whenever a
strike threatens the concern can trana-
Loute" and "Gyp tb. Blood ran as tar
ss Brooklyn. That certainly shows
they were scared Vndoubtealy they
thought it wee only a couple of
blocka turther on to Pon Franetneo.
Without industrial liberty the Amer-
lean Ideals of nodal ind industrtal jus-
tce are unattalnable. We fear that the
new party plan of legallalng Indus-
trial monopolies would unwillingly be-
come the instrument of industrial
(By mail)
One Mortb-in advance........... ”
One Year—in agvauce.....•••"■• ?28
unday only, one year, in aavance :0
goml-Wwkly, oo« year ...........
The ■. a Beckwith spectal AKeno
wole representauive for foreign naven:
Using, iastern office, 600.t. 207:
dlunive. Th. Tribune bunging. M ew
York City. Westere office. 2022. 1
1036, The Tribune building. Chicago-
Xanana city orkice, Rellance building
Addreea all bustnems eommounteauons
and make out all checks, dratta, money
organ and express ordere te the Austin
Btateaman Company. All llama .erU-
clea and communtcatloda ter publica-
tion -out be addresued te editor Aua-
Un statesman______________________
entered at the postotfice atAustia
Texas, as second-class mall mailer
A. W. Terrell was a progressive long
before La Follette had been heard
from. Jim Hogg, and even Bryan, were
merely echoes of Terrell. The latter
iacked the ability to follow up hla
proclamations from the stump, and
thata why he could haver go on to
the senate at Washington.— Waco
Times-Heraia.
trust aa one of the eavlnge of combi-
nation. Montaeue in his “Trusts of To-
atend fully fifty feet high, with a
spread te their branches of forty lo
fofty-five teet, and yielding nuts at
the finest quality and in great abun:
dance. During the thirty-five years of
growth where the temperature hue
frequently deer-ended tar below hero
they have not had a single setback,
maturu even earlier than the black
walnut or the oak.
The elder Pomeroy’s remarkable
success has attracted the attention of
nut culturtsts, hortteuiturtsts and pro-
greesive tarmers in aU parts of this
country and Europe. Nut speclallats
from California came Bast and ex-
amned th* Pomeroy trees, and were
wall gatiafiea that a hardy variety
for the colder States had at last been
found.
Resizing the yalue of his father’s
discovery, Mr. E C. Pomeroy, a few
years ago, set out wveral orchards sf
the variety which had thriven Bo won
end all thee, trees are now in a fine
varlous cantonal (State) governments
tar ike Improvement of farm land, but
It is certafm that the total amount con-
tributed by them wlU be nt least as
high as the Federal contribution
There are ne proviafons made either
etale of healthy growth, and are ,
known by nut erowere all over the <
oountry. Only the other day a promt- i
gent phyntelan in Allantic City, Juel l
returned from a tenr-et Austria, told 1
Mr Pomeroy at the tame which hle i
oroharaa enjeyea abroad. Aa m in- 1
atanao ad thta, the doctor mentioned ,
the name of an Austrian nut Erower, 1
who deeharea the Pomeroy nut to be i
the very beet vartety in the world ,
Those toll do not become rancid in
warm weather, having been kept for
several years in perfect conaition.
without cold steragt .1
So prontable has the outure at the ,
Mnenh walnut in the Kaatern and
Nerthern Suntes 11seam that ownera
od fefma sad wuburta traeta uro be
ginnine te de out tarpo oreharda, la
prepa^atten Mr the* immense demand
that te already betas shown tor thia
moot edible of all note
it la omi, a few year asm that thel
omittintien at the gaglleh walnut for
the market atartee la Qantornta and
today they are •hipped from shat ,
Male la ear red train loaAa To show
however, thel the mupply doer not be
in to meet the Aemen in thio coun-
try. it may be atated that th:. Mntad ,
States coneumee more Chan 50,000-000
pounds of Wnetieb walnuts a ymr. and
that about 21,006,000 pounds of then:
bare to be imported every year. And
when it la kaown that the price i
etoadlly nAvanetne. It will very
renany be moa that the ponatbanities of
commerelai uecem are unusually
great.
Tu Calffornia the nut Inustry Is r1V-
alng that of the otange; and even now
there are more dollars worth of nuts
shipped from tho State per year than
there are oranges. This statement !•
meant to Inclue all varleties ot nuts,
although the Engiish walnut figures
largest I" the proportion. .. _
Aa to ptanting and eultivating. Eng-
liah walnut trees seem to requtre no
particular son, but should notbe set
out where it in low and wot. The
trees ahould bo planted forty to fifty
feet apart each way. A cultivated
crop, such aa corn or potatoes, with
■mail fruit trees for fillers, ean-be
made to yleld an Ineome for the briet
period, comparatively, before the.wal-
nuts begin to bear. The pruning Bhould
be done between fall and spring, only
such breaches an would interfere with
cultivation being removed.
In planting on the lawn the groun
about the bane of the trees should be
kept spaded for three feet in elrcum-
ference, and after the first year some
well-rotted manure should be worked
into the soil around the trees. No cul
tivating should be done after the first
of August, as it would encourase-fur-
ther growth, and from then until win-
ter the annual growth of wood la rip-
that here ble duet ehall blend with
Mother Barth. In the shadow of the
dome of the Capitol, and by the waters
of the rippling river that he had loved
no long, mar he mleep well The Texas
Republic, San Antonio
House of Representatives, by many
prominent polltllans. One of the prin-
cipal purposes of this assoclatton ta
more or loea to fix and control the
market prices of milk and other agri-
euitural products in the interest of the
farmers.
Bimilar associations have been es-
tablished in the various Cantons
(Btates) bearing the name at Cantonal
Vermers Asnoetatton, whtoh are mem-
bars of the Swias Farmers Associa-
tion, with the name principies and pur-
poses an the latter Besides ths Fed
eral and the cantonal associationa.
there exist a great number at local
ralnera of the prtze-winning cattle--
bullocks and cowa
Large improvements were made la
recent rears with the financial aid
trw the Federal and Cantonal Gov-
ernments and much Interest is taken
by the public authorities in the wel-
fare and prosperitp at the population
in rural districts. It la remarkable
how the prosperity at the farmers has
tneranned in the bant nireeen yenra,
whieh i tu • weteat extent due to the
unions in mills where they do not now
exist."
Here is a steel trust advertisement.
"Wanted—Sixty-two house men, tin-
ners, catchers end helpers to work in
open shops; Syrians, Polos and Rouma-
nians preferred; steady employment
and good wages to men willing to
work, fare paid and no face charped
balance to be paid by the farmer of
only 40 per cent
Lot one assume that the farmer hae
invented all hia money in livestock and
baa. at the time, no eash to pay his
share of 40 per cent, but U obliged is
borrow this amount from a third per-
son. In Buch a case the Federal law
makes it easy for him to find each a
loan at law rates, beeause the new
Swias Civil Code provides: "Whenever
proved Position in Dealing With La-
gtatency to be the virtue of foola if conantons poss I De ana wmen must , bor." says:
he ever made ouch an assertion, be i breed similar evlla in the future. Ths, "By its preponderant Influence tn the
did not mean by it that inconktency cause is the huge, overweening power i business, the trust has an enormous
wn. n Haoif a virtue He merely of the great trusts, the inexhaustible advantage in its dealings with com-
meant that when a man becama con- i resources of organized eapital, which bined labor in I IM, during the smelt-
vincea that former "nnlonE wars enable it to prevent the organization era* strike in Colorado, the American
wrens that he Oht to Ant naw of labor and make the term ironmaster ' Smelting and Refining Company closed
"na nt ontimt, to rottarata tbs a reality. America must breed only 1 the mills in which the strikers had
oi4 ^g^ II- Leileve that "au0 free men. It must develop cttizens It been employed and transferred the
is Bros re set vs. and that new om085 can not develop citizens unless the i work to Ito other mills, the effect was
ahould follow new information, and hs workingman possesses industrial lib- , Immediately to break the strike. The
nad he moral neMrar* to fnilsw bis erty • and industrial liberty for the United States Steel Corporation had
dament. workingman le Impossible If the right similar sucess in HU with the Amal-
His genius wan constrgetive aa well to organize be denied Without the gamated Association of Iron and Steel
as decorative When othern haltad right 10 organize, short hours, high
he wm forward To him18„Ape0‛ wages and the boot of working condi-
more than to any otner man tions, whether Antroduced by legisla-
0 Eibte tor wr •plenaia anuMta jonor.bz.reweifarondepartmentcot
Capitol bunldime aa* Kar gnat vn-/5aN"mmporon,enado. no r
wAKnirponcontint buna harma. the
HS kamta Jhich POIW," L.°r PuD termination of organized labor from
would be worth more to tM tat their own works the fonndauion stone
the present election law He was not
ta the sightest degree responsble for
it. Ho introduced a Mil upon the sub-
fect, but after tt was mutilated and
changed by amendments he repudlate
it. fought it and voted against it, and
always bitterly denounced ft
Stretching from the time when 8am
The country was horrified recently
■etwee land of which the value could
be considerably raised by improve-
ment partly through drainage and
partly by clearance, but who has not
the money to pay the costs at such
improvement, can apply in the above
prescribed manner direct to the can-
tonal government or, if he prefers,
first to the municipal authorities It
may happen that the compune is poor
and, therefore, the local authorities
are unable to grant any contribution
at all; they wul. however, refer his
request to the respective cantonal gov-
ernment (government of the State)
terence, whieh will have the benefit
of the attendance of some of the res-
cuers of the bureau, there will be ac-
tual demonstrations of the various
methods employed in rescue work and
in the treatment of injuriea. Only
those methode which meet with the ap-
proval of the members of the confer-
ence will be adopted. Later the bureu
will lasue a circular describing tho
proper methods.
lb. mtmera then .bureau ot ”,n" hag ib. propagatton at IblBd.ltel.u. trull,
a Natlonal conterence ot bo|h Fom J commereial ana an
that naded to Ik* eomt at tb* rat- xerVituda, Amerien weka tor It work-
urany iMToaw the prtoe per pound inemen ahorter houra, higher wages
severe centa over tb. rart.tr grow, ana bailor worklag eonditiona •• the <
vncement of the mining mmdustry.
"Axperlenee indicatee that the beat
renute ar. etteotet by training la
nrstrata work at Mart one mln. workar
la mrr ten. Thta precaudion inaures
the premence near the piae at meca-
up and any they are not going to ree-
ogntue it — that la any extenmion at
EoncmnC7
gmegj
-se
ZHE AUSTIN DAILY STATESMAN, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 16, 1912.
the experlmeat station of the bureau
of mines, who will have general charge
or the conferenee, tecentiy said: "In
lending its support to this conterenee,
the bureau has in view the encpurage-
mont at methoda and appllanees best
adapted to preventing aeeidenta and to
Thus wafteth ths MrKinner Courier-
aeeette: -A panntng compear at Aua-
lla cenned 2,006,000 lino ot trut the
past fruit wensom And that too.
down ta a neetton whieh to not notea
for Ite trull preduetlon. if MeKinney
bad a eanmine piant, what do you sup-
vome H would have turnea out ehi
season 1 The heel hall erops to the
history of thta county were me*- tale
rear And more than that, raw orchards
are being planted all the Mme Lot a
have a cannery la MeKinnev"
quire ts
them ir
Such
figure
design,
shoulde
mensely
Long, s
roundin
’the Joi i
wuggest
gk'rt ol
evolop
nation
pin st
achieve
tor wit
compile
of fasB
ape b)
do
The co
Narrow
•ad thi
sharply
Narrow
Flark v
Uka
Gress w
Uon as
♦ ous
-erlal
eg wo
blue m
Other p
•Wiped
not flu
made li
•tripod.
in the East and placed in an Eastern
market.
A California grower of English wal-
nuts who recently visited an orchard
in Western New York declared the
specimens which he saw there to be
"the finest I have ever seen." “You
have a better flavored nut and you
have proved beyond a doubt that the
variety is thrifty and har y." were hla
exact words. This grower said that his
few acres of young California trees
gave him in 1911 a crop which he sold
for $10,000.
eIty s* whteh farmer covporationa woula be
mnrtgras ontitted to tunue bonds ta order to
I is prae- wear, money for th. imeprovement of
and had passed the Terrell election
law, which has kept him before the 1
public more or less since Ite passage. ;
Judge Terrell was an ex-Confederate ■
soldier and served in the Trans-Missis- !
sippt Department, taking an active and ’
conspteuous part in nearly all the heavy I
battles and skirmiahes. Judge Terrell .
also was the author of the measure do- ’
nating 3,000,000 aeres of land .lying in '
the Northwestern part of the State ,
to a syndicate for the purpose of build-
ing our present magnificent State Cap- I
itol building—a monument to Judge |
Terrell. The last few years of Judge
rerrels life was spent quietly at his ,
home in Austin among his books, but
he frequently made trips to different 1
parts of the State and annually to his .
old home in Virginia.— Honey Grove
Weekly Citizen.
When in the hande of private owner-
ship than when unoccupied publie do-
meine i."pznpip.b2n"„2m20.""6hout •Thar «. ar. unatterahty oppomad to
texime Kb bunsana."an".Pnn.ot . any ..t.rato. of .mo. tabor ana nd-
i. tb. tact that m. mm' : subaldlary companten to take firm
ib IbB tact trat bl, name positiona when iheme questtona com.
Countess of Aberdeen were the con-
testants, it seems to have grown out
a ".n ' t. < 00
" .-% ■ 33
*3, *n T
Sh.t0-n4 -+18:2)
PMh,4
the country and more ' than 20,000
miners as spectators, there has been
a wonderful development in both res-
cue and first-aid work at the mines.
While figures are not available. It is
estimated that at least 1000 mining
companies are now equipped either
with trained rescue teams or first-aid
teams, or both. These teams have,
during the year,, saved A sufficient
number at live* to make an appreci-
able decrease in the number of deaths,
but a lack of uniformity in the methods
pursued by the various teams has, it
la said, prevented them from saving
even more Hvm
the total costa, there would remain a keep them prepared
only very recently has a sufficiently
hardy variety been found to with-
stand the severe winters of the North-
ern, Eastern and Southeastern States.
The circumstances pertaining to the
discovery of an unusually hardy va-
riety. the Pomeroy English walnut,
may be related as follows:
The late Norman Pomeroy of Lock-
port, N. Y., whRe attending the cen-
tennial exposition in Philadelphia in
1876, noticed a species of tree totally
new to him. On investigation, he
found it to be an English walnut tree
of surprising beauty. It was the fall of
the year and the ground underneath
the tree was covered with nuts. These
proved to be equal, if not superior, to
the taste, to any of the imported
varieties with which Mr Pomeroy was
familiar.
Being thoroughly versed in arbor
culture, Mr. Pomeroy propagated young
trees from this acclimated variety, feel-
ing certain that from these he would
ultimately obtain an English walnut
of superior hardiness, capable of re-
sisting the rigors of almost any
climate.
He planted these young trees about
his residence in Niagara County, New
Well Con* Johnson and some other
lawyers can borrow money on the
strength of that Snead-Boyce shooting
ecrepe In Amarillo.
Federal government can make
ans to any of the above men
I aasociations or co-operative so-
h but it contrihntes annually an
ht of 25.000 francs to the ex-
s of the permanent central bu-
of the Bwiss Formers* Associa-
AUSTIN STATESMAN
Fubuanca dan Tb. austin Statea-
Judge A. W. Terrell, one of Texas*
moot prominent statesmen, died sud-
denly in his room at a hotel in Min-
eral Welle about 1 p. m Monday He ।
and Judge Swayne of Fort Worth had
been motoring. Judge Terroll com-
plained of the heat and went to his
room, and when a maid went to at-
tend his wants she found him lying
across the bod. dead. He was Minis-
ter to Turkey under Cleveland’s ad-
ministration and author of the Terrell
election law.—Morgan Mirror.
costs of improvement of the soil (til "enchalada stall
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Crowell, Chester T. The Austin Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 315, Ed. 1 Monday, September 16, 1912, newspaper, September 16, 1912; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1442911/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .