The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 225, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 13, 1910 Page: 2 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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A
THB AUSTIN DAILY STATESMAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 111®.
=
YOUNG WOMAN
COUNTY BOARD
U
FRIGHTFULLY
WRESTLES WITH
" g
BURNBDBYOIL
TAX PAYERS
SENT HER POISONED CANDY
0
HOME AND CONTENTS BURN LARGEST PAYER IN COUNTY
a
Edited by MRS. FRED SCOTT.
Old Telephone No. 66.
01
TO THE STARS AND STRIPES.
1
/
HIS KISSES UNWELCOME
■
OUR FASHION PATTERN
i
%
1
4
625-
/
MIss Maggie Holton has returned
Texas points.
C
Name
HOTEL COMMITTEE MEETS.
Address
MARRIAGE LICENSE.
n 4
visited friends In Lockhart.
Miso Theo. Nichols of Corsicana, who
(
1
g
19
I
...
Bended Parses la Mew Designs
$
Fanitipia
Records
The One Incomparable Musical Instrument A
Perfect Library Table, a Perfect Phonograph
king >
cuss
j
) •
the kerosene, and the equipment includes
a slender spouted flagon for filling the
from
weeks
By Kubelik, Anselim
Bond, McCormick
and Others
Mrs. D. A. Lane and mother, Mrs.
Calloway, have returned from a visit
to Manor.
Van Smith Drug
Company
OPEN ALL NIGHT
Dr. and Mrs. 8. A. King have gone
to Milwaukee for the rest of the sum-
mer.
I
c
gone to Waring to spend the remain-: 4gp01
der of the summer. -nim*
Columbia Grand Opera Records
By Cavalieri, Lehman and Others
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Edgar and fam-
ily are camping at Deep Eddy.
Mrs. McCarty Mias gone to Corpus
Christi for a two weeks' stay.
i
Misses Allene Cabaniss is spending
a week in Houston.
Treat Yourself at our
Fountain to a
FIRST DEMONSTRATION
IN AUSTIN
MANY COMPLAINTS ARE HEARD
BY EQUALIZERS—TWO OF THE
LARGER PROPERTY
OWNERS APPEAR.
This instrument will be demonstrated in our
store from 2 p. m. to 6 p. m. today
ANOTHER THROUGH HER LUNG.
GIRL CRAWLS OFF TO
DIE.
. |
> 1
5
(
The county clerk yesterday Issued a
license to wed to Ram Rayford and
Frola onmore, colored.
MISS LENA 8CHEADEL ATTEMPTS
TO FILL A LIGHTED LAMP
WITH KEROSENE—DISAS-
TER FOLLOWS.
ONE HUNDRED MEN AT MISS TU-
MEY’S HOUSE READY TO WREAK
. VENGEANCE SHOULD
SHE DIE.
Columbia Double-Disc Records
THE VERY LATEST
Joseph Nalle Renders Total of >148,000.
James H. Robertson, $90,000- Some
Raises Stand, Others
Drop Back.
Fill oat blank and sent to Pattern
Dep artmien: of this newspaper.
ENROLLMENT FOR AUSTIN
BAPTIST ASSOCIATION.
spent most of his time in San Marcos Sxe
and San Antonio, while Miss Carrie :
Talley, Manor; J. L. Huggins, L. B.
Fverett, C. A. Everett, John Taylor,
Rev. C. A. Taylor, Burnet; W. T. Hath-
Much Cotton at Cameron.
Cameron, Texas, Aug. 12.—One hun-
dred and seventy-five bales of cotton
have been sold in this city up to date.
perfume was in stick, or crayon, form-
like the lip-s ticks sold by the dealers la
cosmetics, and the crayon of delicate per-
fume fitted exactly into a metal cartridge
having a top that screwed on tightly.
Each lady at the cotillon received one of
these formidable looking little cartridges,
which were gold plated and contained
crayons perfumed with various pleasing
odors like violet, heliotrope, azurea an
the like.
Once more we hall, you, flag with fore-
head bare.
Guest of the honored air.
God has unfurled you, as He has the
day,
To light with gladness happy Free-
dom'e way.
0213
—
C
Columbia "Regent Grafanola
--------------------------
ozen*e*e*ns
durp:,
,93, -1
u
ae.9 .
German Family Resids Near Del Valls.
Mother and Two Brothers Badly
Burned—Physicians Arrive
Late.
her home in Temple after a pleasant
visit to Mrs. A. M. Gribble.
r5 .
r pau rwo
--
1e
Madrid,
break
Spanish
•Ion to
troubles
MInistei
•xtreme
lom for
its hand
• ration
labor tr
iplaces.
At Co
1‘rontter,
ilesperat
«n the
their co
lona, the
Renpral i
3
(
There was an informal meeting of
the Business league hotel committee
Thursday afternoon, at which the sit-
uation wag talked over in a general
way. It was announced that one of
the hotel builders with whom the com-
“Cherry Cobbler”
Good to look at
and good to eat
-—
5
at Coleman and other West
tons a the side front, which gives the
becoming dish shape.
1 This pattern is cut in four sites, 6,
Mr. H M Little and children and 6%, 6% and 6% hat measure. The pat-
Mrs. B. E Wright and children have 1 tern rqulres * yards of 36-nch ma
• ’ 2. Price of pattern 625 is 10 cents,
No. 625,
)
11
-
I
I _
Little Things of Feminine Interest.
WHEN THE ORDINARY CORSET IS
Marble Falls, Texas, Aug. 12—The
enrollment for the fifty-third annual
meeting of the Austin Baptist associ-
ation is aa follows: Mr. and Mrs. C. C.
Pugh. H. B. Miller. W. J. Bugg, J. M.
I Wolf Mr. and Mra. I. J. White, George
B Butler, C. A. Cosby, George W. Bea-
ver. D. A. Porter, Mr. and Mrs, E. M.
Franets, Mia. Angla Broline, J. C.
the brim is lined with blue, and blue is
used to bind the crown. The brim but-
8505-
923535
of several
has been visiting Miss Cretta Johnson
for some time past, has returned to her
home. Miss Johnson has also gone to
Karnes City to spend some time with
relatives and friends.
Aforetime with that accent was not
heard
The high inspiring word
Down all the four winds blowing glori-
ously;
The prophet’s word, the people's—Lib-
erty I
—--— CHILD’S HAT.
Miss Willie Pruett has returned to j A pretty little hat, made to wash an
iron easily. The crown and outside of
the brim are made of white duck and
The street so far traversed by the
track is sald to be in much better con-
dition than ever before, being leveled
and graded, and the track is perhaps
the best in the city, being rock bal-
lasted and thoroughly well constructed.
A PRRFUMI THAT LOOKS DAN-
GEHOUS, BUT ISN'T.
Ah NE of tbs most attractive of tbs
■ B cotillon favors at an out-of-town
W dance given on the evening of the
Fourth was a little gold-plated affair
filled with delicate French perfume. The
A CHAFING DISH THAT BURNS
KBROSENK.
4 HE familiar whiff of wood alcohol
4 seems so much a part of the friendly
welsh rarebit that It is hard to Im-
agios kerosene forming a part of tbs
flavor. But here comes a new ehafing
dish with which ordinary kerosene is
used, making. It is claimed by the sup
porters of thf new style of rarebit bull-
er, a much botter deme than the old
alcohol lamp arrangement. Blazler And
hot water pan nt directly over a little
flat stove, which looks like an ordinary
gas plate; but at one aide of the flat
stove there is a small tank which stereo
Why Is Sugar Sweet?
If sugar did not dissolve in the mouth
you could not taste the sweet,
GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIO
is as strong as the strongest bitter
tonic, but you do not taste the bitter
because the ingredients do not dissolve
in the mouth, but do dissolve readily
In the acids of the stomach. is just
as good for Grown People ns for Chil-
dren. The First and Original Taste-
less Chill Tonic. The Standard for 80
vears. 60c.
Keeqi, Z 722
Z4}p4g
New Extension is Finished to Fifteenth
Street—Work Still Progressing.
The new extension of the street rail-
road was finished yesterday to Fif-
teenth street and San Jacinto, where
it will make connection with and fol-
WORN WITH HVENING DRESS.
PHERE are special cornets which
( come for wear with extremely decol-
* lete gowns, but these luxurious cor-
sets are rather expensive, and few wo-
men who are not constantly occupied
with social affairs care to 1nvest in them.
The ordinary corset may be made to do
very satisfactorily with even an extreme-
ly low cut gown if four or five eyelets
st the top are left unlaced. Thia makes
the corset much lower busted in effect and
prevents the ridges of flesh at the back
and the high busted effect in front which
are undesirable with a low-necked gown.
With the laces beginning low and near
the walstilne, also, the back of the gown
may be cut lower than the front—a smart
fashion just now.
Mrs. W. M. Brumby and children
are now in Galveston.
propped and bolstered in order to make
it reasonably secure. The lumber stock
had been increased from $20,000 to $40,-
000 on general principles, but Mr.
Nalle, who alone knew the facts in the BULLET THROUGH HER MOUTH,
7 I HAT a love ot a frock," whis-
A 4 ■ pered one woman to another, as
l> third woman tripped into a
V smart restaurant at la Mb eon
hour the other day.
a delightful stay
J. J. Young.
Cameron, Texas, Aug. 12.—The fun-
eral of J. J. Young, one of Milam
county's oldest and most respected
cltlxena, took place Thursday from
the home of his daughter, Mrs. C. C.
Kirtley of this city.
Mr. Young died at the home of an-
other daughter at Jones* Prairie,
twelve miles from Cameron, Wednes-
day morning.
Ramie linen handbags, decorated with
bold embroidery or with stenciling or ap-
pliqued motifs, are also .very effective,
and these bags may be mads at home and
afterward mounted in the correct manner
at small expense. Panama and raffia
bags are liked by some women, but they
are not so dainty with white frocks as
tbs linen and ramie sort.
Some very beautiful bags are illus-
trated. all being Parisian models intended
for use with gowns of the mors elaborate
typo. The bead embroidered purses are
particularly handsome and show the new
shapes now in favor and the long cord
handles which have entirely replaced the
metal chains once so fashionable. One of
these bags is beaded with white crystal
oblong beads or paillettes combined with
pale green noqulns and the frame is of
green gilt in sn antique repousse pattern.
The handle Is of pale green silk cord
matching ths sequins. Suh bags are
carried at the French races with tbs very
elaborate lingerie frocks now in vogue.
The black beaded bag is a eombinntion
of dull and pollshe jot with a silk fringe
border and silk cord handles. Tills hand-
some bag has a dignity and elegance of
chareeter that make It well suited for
the woman of older years and its rich-
ness would enhance soy cot turns.
Two handsome leather bags are also
pictured, kbese bags being of hetype
used to accompany smart afteroon cos
tumos of cloth or silk. The smaller bag.
of pin seal in a delicate Dresden blue
color, has deep side pocket* on either
■Ide of a dull allver frame and across
tbs bottom of eaoh pocket is a metal
orpamentaton In Anlshes of root and
reen gold with the dull silver. The
other bag, of violet buffed calf, has a
very rleh frame of bamnered sllrer on
which it a mistletoe vine pattern In
freon gold with berries of baroque pearl
Amethyst cabuchons are set beneath the
clasps and t ma Her amethyst jewels ap-
Pen at intervals in the mistletoe pat-
Very practical women's motor bags of
morocco or pigskin are fitted with
brushes, coabs, mirrors and other toilet
MAelee
tank. Chafing dish, flagon and a large
tray come In hammered copper and make
rather an attractve set
bridge party, where all that is necessary
le a gilt or beaded purse big enough to
hold one’s handkerehlet and perhaps the
trifle of money that will be lost in the
Eame. But when it comes to the fine
gradations of handbag nelection, many in-
consrultlee are been, and even otherwise
smartly Aressed women make the mistake
of carrying inappropriate bags and purses.
There is a crate thia summer for bright
rod leather belongings, ths Chanteclor fad
having set the pace with its flaming
cockscomb red. Red morocco handbags,
purses and belta, matched by bright red
parasols accompany stald Ittle frocks of
gray Hoon or rolls, and with the little
morning drenas of gingham* or cotton
VdK for street WMF, red leather belong
Ings are immensely chle. Sometimes this
rod note npvears also in scarlet silk stock-
Inga, whieh are very chic when worn on
slim ankle* above dainty varnished leather
shoot. Tbs squtro red morocco handbag
has a frame of dull gilt and just beneath
the frame, in the center of the bag, are
three very email initials in plain block
Laurel Del., Aug. 12.—A hundred
angry, grieving men are- waiting
around Miss Loletta Turney’s home.
Should she die it will fare hard with a
jealous admirer of her, suspected of
having sent poisoned candy to her.
Miss Loletta, 29, is the belle of
Blades, a small town near here. She
received a box of chocolates today from
an anonymous donor. She ate three
pieces of the candy; her brother one.
Almost immediately both were taken
violently ill. The young man recovered
soon, but Miss Loletta went into con-
vulslona, became unconscious and so
remained for hours.
Dr. Fleetwod of this city says she
has a bare chance to recover. Her
beauty and amiability have made her a
general favorite and loud threats are
uttered against a suitor of hers should
she die. Coroner Griffiths remains at
her home ready for any eventuality.
style. These bugs are lined with rod
silk, shirred into little pockets Into which
are tucked coin purse, memo pad and
other small belongings in orderly and con-
venient fashion.
Ths paisley bigs, with the red tone pre-
dominating, are a trifle more dressy in
character than the leather ones, and
these gay paisley bags and purses are
suitable for use with white afternoon rot
tumes or even white restaurant dinner
frocks. Even when dining out with a
man friend, nowadays, one carries her
bandbag, or some sort of receptacle of
thia sort, in which are stowed handker-
chief, powder muff, a bit of cbangs In
case of a posslble needed tip to a wattlog
room maid, and—if tbo bag li large
enough- little folding fan.
Paisley bags are squnre and circular in
shape, and have very dainty mountings,
tbs handlon being usually of silk cords
with tassels falling over tbo bag. Velvet
bags with theso long eord handle* have
been a recent fad In Parts, and this sum-
mer fashionable mondalnes have been
observed at the French races with these
velvet retiule hanging from tbo arm
on long cords and velvet parasols—enve
the word—to match. Beg and parasol are
of black velvet with lining of white stik,
and the parasola have handles of purs
white Ivory
The notion of matching handbag and
parasol la a mnost satistactory one and
always adds a decided touch of smart-
Dens to a simple costume, and when pat
aeoL bandbag and hat all match, even the
plainest little cotton frock will pass mue-
ter as a costume.
For use with the all-white costume a
spec’al bag should bo purchased. The
leather bag med with the street frocks
every day boon acquires an Inpalpable
layer of grime, whkh readily transters
Itselt to the burtace of the Immaculate
white linen or mobair suft. Dainty rotl-
eulee of eyelet embroidery, hung on white
cords, are ready for use with the white
lingerie gown, and there are eretonne
bags prettliy shaped and mounted on metal
Irames which are very pretty when hat
and parasol show tbo same color effects.
h
Willis Kubitza.
Brenham, Texas, Aug. 12.—Willie
Kubitza, the 16-year-old son of Mr,
and Mrs. Raymond Kubitza, died Bun-
day morning of typhoid fever, at the
home of his parents near Burton. In-
terment was had Sunday evening at
the German Evangelical cemetery,
neir Burton, Rev. H. S. Schulz offi-
elating.
mittee hopes to make a deal will be .......
here about the 20th of this month te erly, R, S. Styleb, Elgin; Lulu Lee, Mr.
confer with the local people. "J. C. Stowers, Manor; Mrs. Jack Har-
wMAal
8" A
nu.,, S 19
*uk £ X-
Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Avery and daugh-
ters are visiting Mrs. Avery’s mother
in Round Rock.
afternoon at his home near Manor, was
afternoonat his home near Manor, was
held Wednesday afternoon at 3 o’clock
from the Baptist church. The services
were conducted by Rev. J. B. Arm-
strong, pastor of the Baptist church of
Manor, of which Mr. Eppright hid been
a consistent member since he was quite
young. Ho was born near Manor,
March 2. 1853, and was, Therefore. 57
year sold. In his death Mandr has been
deprived of a good and useful citizen,
whose work In the chool, the church
and all things pertaining to the good
of the town will be greatly missed. He
was married to Miss Nannie Harris in
1880 and to them were born fourteen
children, all of whom are living ex-
cept one son, who died on July 24. The
pallbearers were T. H. Barrow, Theo.
Westbrook, H. H. Raven. J. W. Grooms.
D, B. Payne and G. G. Petty,
Mistrial in Barrs Case.
Palestine, Texas, Aug. 12.—After be-
ing out since Wednesday afternoon the
jury in the John Barre assault case was
discharged today by District Judge
Gardner, a mistrial resulting. The jury
stood nine for acquittal and three for
conviction. Barra’ attorney will try
and secure his release on a writ of ha-
beas corpus.
Forth on the proud and boundless four
winds blown,
Hold us, nor us alone,
Stiff to the struggle for the right, the
true;
God count your stars with His in yon-
der blue!
—John Vance Cheney in San Diego
Sun.
Mrs. O. B. Colquitt has received a
letter from a daughter of Mrs. D. A.
Nunn of Crockett, in which she writes
that her mother, Mrs. Nunn, has just
undergone an operation at ths Seely
hospital at Galveston, and her condi-
tion la improving. This will be good
news to the many friends of Mrs. Nunn
not only of Austin, bt all over the
state, Mrs. Nunn having , been at one
time president of the Texas division of
the Daughters of the Confederacy.
This la ths seventh of a series of 26
letters that will appear In this space.
These letters, properly arranged, form
a sentence. The first person who
brings us this sentence, made of let-
ters cut from the paper, will receive
a $10 goldplee. Each of the next five
successful contestants will be given
a coupon worth $1 at our Soda Foun-
tain. The contestant must bring with
his answer our 26 ads., which are
printed In connection with the series
of letters.
Cut Out the Big Letter Each Day.
case, assured them that the Invoice
would not justify the increase.
The Avenue hotel, which is rendered
by Mr. Nalle, was increased from $30,-
000 to $35,000. The two lots just south
of It were Increased from $14,000 to
$16,500. The First National bank
building, rendered at $50,000, was
rafsed to $60,000. The Hancock hotel
was Increased from $15,000 to $20,000.
Lots 1 to 8 of block 61, the property
occupied by the planing mill and lum-
br business on East Sixth street, was
raised from $20,000 to $25,000.
In the case of Judge James H. Rob-
ertson, he succeeded in having most
of his values restored to the figures
ns he originally gave them in. His
total rendition is $90,250. The largest
Item was the Sutor hotel. including
lots 2 3 and 4 which he had rendered
at $40,000. The board had Increased
this to $60,000, and as finally agreed
on it was allowed to stand at $42,250.
The Gilfillan building was raised from
$20,000 to $25,000. The building in
which the judge has his office was
raised from $5000 to $5500. The re-
maining five items, including the
building occupied by Radkey at $6500
were permitted to stand as they had
been rendered.
' i >00* 11 * » »»»»« WM t8 » »I'
MORTUARV. •
♦ ♦ ♦
0e0000000*60000000044000•
Mrs. Madoln Basil,
Mrs. Madolen Basil, aged 65 years,
died at her home, 1616 East Third
street, at 7:80 Thursday evening, and
was burled from pt. Mary's Catholic
church at 10 o’clock yesterday after-
Doon. Interment in the Catholic ceme-
tery.
Mrs. G. W. Fulton, Misses Elinor
and Jewell Fulton, Mrs. J. W. Hoopes
and little daughter, Elizabeth, leave to-
day for California.
a
65
As the result of the attempt of Lena
Scheadel to fill a lighted lamp with
kerosee last night at about 9 o'clock,
she was horribly burned, her mother
was badly burned about the feet, one
brother had an arm fearfully scorched,
another brother was more or less bad-
ly Injured, and the family home, near
Del Valle, was burned to the ground.
Such was the report brought to the
city by a gentleman who happened to
be passing the place at the time.
This party stated that owing to the
fact that no physician lived near the
scene of the disaster, none had ar-
rived up to the time when he left. It
was thought tht there was small
chance for the young lady’s recovery.
It seems that as she poured the oil
the flame caught the stream and found
its way Into the can, causing It to ex-
plode and covering the unfortunate
girl with the flaming liquid. Every-
thing else in the room was at the same
time ignited. Screams quickly brought
the mother and brothers to the rescue,
who In endeavoring to tear the cloth-
ing from the young woman received
their own injuries. The house was in-
stantly blazing, so that by the time the
girl was stripped of her garments it
was necessary to flee to the yard. Not
a wheelbarrow load, it was said, of
the household furniture was saved.
The estimated worth of the house was
$1200 and of the contents $2000.
The people whom misfortune has
thus befallen are a respectable and
well-to-do family of Germans, residing
Rome ten miles from Austin in the
De Valle neighborhood. The young
lady’s mother is Mrs. Ernest Scheadel.
low for a short distance the present
Blind Inatltute line. Work of laying
the new track has been taken up at
Seventeenth and Brazos, to be carried
on to Thirtieth and Duval.
Took All His Money.
Often all a man earns goes to doc-
tors or for medicines, to cure a
Stomach Liver or Kidney trouble that
Dr. King’s New Life Pills would
quickly cure at slight cost. Best for
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Biliousness,
Constipation, Jaundice, Malaria and
Debility. 26c at all druggists.
PROGRESSONCAR LINE.
------
gp
2852
381g.
rls. Mrs. Zena Thorp, Round Rock; 3.
A. Heid, Taylor; C. D. Daniel, Waco;
R. E. J. Berkroath, Round Rock, N. G.
Campbell, Florence; B. T. Clinkscales,
Round Rock; R. H. Coleman. Stand-
ard; Dr. V. M. McConnell, Dallas; Mrs.
R. P. Stokes, E. C. Booth, 8. C. Banley,
San Antonio; J. B. Lid well, Waco; H.
D. Heath San Marcos; O. B. Ball, Abi-
lene; Robert Hornberg and wife, lib-
erty Hill; J. B. Paugh and wife. Spice-
wood; Carl F. Lindberg, Del Valle.
The association will adjourn Satur-
day morning, but a number of dele-
gates will remain over Sunday.
The county board of equalization
heard quite a number of complaints
yesterday, among which were those of
two of the larger taxpayers. In fact,
one of those, Joseph Nalle, is said to
be the largest taxpayer in the county.
His total assessment as it stood after
he had appeared before the board was
$148,000. All of his renditions ten
items in all, had been more or less
raised, but he succeeded in convincing
the board that two of them ought to be
allowed to stand as he had renderod
them. These,* items wre his home on
West Sixth street and his lumber stock.
The home had been raised from $12,500
to $20,000. but Mr. Nalle explained that
the house was not what It looked to be
from the outside, but that it Was inse-
cure on its foundations, undermined.
Mitchell, Mrs. M. L. Mercier. Mise Etta
Luck. W. J. Terrell, I. M. Mayes, Aus-
tin; W. T. Davis, Waco; J. H. Daugh-
erty, B. B. Blaylock, Miss Tina Holden,
Nat Q.° Henderson, Georgetown; Mrs.
R. E. Price, Miss Vesta Cratt, Bastrop;
George W. wehrung, Hutto; J. O.
Heath, Round Rock; Sam Stewart,
Alice Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hill,
Dol Valle; Misses Eula and BOulah
Hefner, Liberty Hill; T. J. Dunaway,
Fairland; M. A. Gray, Pilot Knob, J. A.
LINGERIE PINS WITH LACE
COVERS.
(A ANY women who use the sman
I ■! gold Pitted "baby pins'' to fasten
■ ■ A the corset corer or other details
of the underwear, dislke the fleam of
the metal pine through sheer frocks; so
some clever neeleworker ha* thought
of making HttI* jackets of Irish crochet,
which nt over the rounded back of the
small pin exactly and are sewed with
tiny Btitehes to a bit, of white lawn
which fits underneath. The white lawn
la clipped out to allow the pin point and
hinge to slip through, the sewing being
done afterward with orer and over
stitehes. Once on the crochet cover stays
on, the pin being made clean by means
of a brush dipped in boap and water. A
set of these little pins makes a dainty
shower present for the bride-to-be.
■ •
25252828728-
■ )
dfagfp
Mi"wNsky,gs
-xmc
Dr. John E. Hill and his daughter,
Miss Carrie L. Hill, have returned
from a short vacation. The doctor
Lockport, N. Y., Aug. 12.—Ruth
Richards, eighteen, daughter of a
farmer at Warren Corners, N. Y., was
dangerously wounded by bullets fired
into her mouth and left lung by Frank
Ranney of Buffalo.
The girl and Ranney last evening
went riding on Ranney’s invitation.
They quarreled, he said, and he ac-
cused the girl of attempting to break
of their engagement to marry because
of her fondness for a rival. Ranney
confessed that h then put his arm
around the girl's neck and tried to
kiss her, and when she resented he
shot her first in the mouth and then
through the lung.
After the shooting the girl, afraid
to tell her family, crawled to her room,
where she was found. Ranney drove
to Lockport and gave himself up to
the police. He confessed that jealousy
was the cause of his crime.
"But look at her handbag." ritielsed
woman No. 1; and sure enough, lovely as
waa th* effect of tbo pale lavener musiin
frock with a huge leghorn hat banked
with violets, it was entirely rulned by a
shabby blech patent leather handbag of
shopping proportions which th* violet lady
carried nnder one arm.
There are time* and place* for all hand-
bage, and th* carefully dressed woman
eees to It that her email belongings of
this character esprees the coetume she
wenra. The leather handbag or pocket-
book in tenured style, however correct they
may be. do not hetord harmentouely with
the elaborate callins coetume, or with the
alnty frock for roataaraot or theater
wear. Ope would not think ot earrying
a.buge nutomoblle handbag, stoeked with
all the fltiiAM and belonglnge needful
for an extended jaunt, to an afternoon
Judge and Mrs. Simpkins and Miss
Elizabeth Simkins, are enjoying an
outing at Rockport. .
If you have not heard a "Regent”
x you have not heard the best
e i
I Scarbrough & Hicks
J. H. Boatright.
J. H. Boatright, aged 7s. an old Con-
federate who servea in a Missour regi-
ment of cavalry (Company G. Third
Missour cavalry), died at the Confed-
erate Home at 6:30 yesterday morning.
The funeral took place at the home
shapel at 6 p. m., conducted by Rev. J.
W. Long, pastor of the South Austin
prethodist church, assisted by Rev. P.
b. Graves. Interment was at the State
bemetery.
6 , -------------
Funeral of G. J. Eppright.
Manor. Texd* Aug. It.—The funeral
Tutt’sPills
Atterenttag, pereonae! ebtllous habit
will derive great benefit by taking one
of these pllle. If you have been
ORINKING TOO MUCH,
thoy will promptly relleve the nausca,
SICK HEADACHE----—-
and nervousness which follows, restorg
^Wn^^ctt
take No Substitute.
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 225, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 13, 1910, newspaper, August 13, 1910; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1464483/m1/2/?q=%22United+States+-+Texas+-+Travis+County+-+Austin%22: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .