The Fort Worth Record and Register (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 267, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 10, 1909 Page: 1 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Fort Worth Record and Register and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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4
NO. 267.
VOI, XIII.
WHITELAW REID
TAFT OUTLINES
HOST OF ROYALTY
ROUTE OF TOUR
TO CONFERENCE
--
1
Leaving Beverly Sept 15,
Senate Amendments, 840 in
/4
Seattle Will Be the
Number, Disagreed to
and Dance
En Bloc.
First Stop
4
SOME TIME ON COAST
THE SCENE IS SPLENDID
THE DEBATE IS LIMITED
C
I
lib ‘
House Spends But Hour and
a Half on the Matter.
j|W
N
A LONG LIST OF NOTABLES
TO MEET DIAZ AT EL PASO
THE DISCUSSION IS SPIRITED
W}
»
1
►
a
►
#
t
►
fb*
►
4
ei
ee‘
2"
r
)
in
I
country a
SWELTERING HEAT
one or the most brilliant af-
ner
I
GRIPS SOUTHWEST
I
Their
into Ari
MERCURY GOES. SOARING
it remaining terri-
FIGHT IS DESPERATE
V
Le
Farrourt
Mrs,
-
sprang at the face of the woman sev-
KILLS ARMY OFFICER
eral times an fastene it
The thermometer registered
F
LAMAR LOCAL OPTION
y
COUNT IS COMPLETED
HAD AVERSION TO AUTOS
)
t to the White Hcuse,
and
RIO GRANDE IN FLOOD
w and a ।
Water Near Top ef Levee at Browns-
W
Long, U. H A. (retired), wan run down
Ining hall
The
With
ays previous.
all
tem
SHAM BATTLE TODAY
pe
Ih reality
Mifiea ■<
€overnor
4
1
critical • ime with com.
rala the crop woul i be past al} danger
11g
but if the
iarper
conti n ne passase
home
ANTIS WIN:HARDIN
Several other ladies
I of Horiston today.
days on account of the heat.
a
a suit to test the constitutiorality of
of twenty-four
precinct.
reef parv 9
with Am- 3
Precinct one wras
CULBERSON TO REST
SHOOTS SELF IN HEAD
W. 0
WEATHER FORE AST.
-(Spa."
Iariingen, Texas, July 9,—As a re-
mult of floojed streams
ebrnted Hlowe
un
made rat#
Several briges are reported to have
here
gay adrpted whe
}
1
zu
of the eight precincts in Lamar county
were dry under separate precinct elec-
tions held at various times during the
kept op her fiht with the broom han
die and rinaily had her mad toe nner
hundred and three degrees Was the
maximum reached by the thermometer
•tilt
and
Grande valley today have assumed more
alarming proportions than for several
at the month,
hie shotgun ti
Worl
eans.
Koi
The I
1 1
si
which
went
several days with his sister
From Los Angeles he will
Gee, ain't it 8lzziing?
Old Sol was sure on the job yester-
mometer left fot thirty minutes in the
sun registered 110.
dry very long tho whole corn crop will
be ruined.
Hon,
t enrt
! wouia wmaeh and burn every automo-
! bit. tn the Dimtriet ot Colunbia."
7
)
)
1- not- dr fG
e the house
the terrace
1
hottest da) of th" ,y*»r Kar.
AMATEUR CHAUFFEUR
)
left open,
shrubbery
tyrla4 or
* Cava hot himselt with a n -
today at his ranch. fifteen mhe-
Function Equaled Only by
Court Affairs.
Democrats Hold Up Majority Party
to Scorn for Having Violated
Ante-Election Pledges.
prohibition was
ther in precinete
King and Queen of England
, Guests at Banquet
MAJORITY FOR rnonTrTON is
OrFICIALLY GIVEN
AS T5.
.
President Will Then Swing
Into the Territories.
MOST SEVEIE WEATHFR OF TIII
SEASON IN TEXAS AND
OKIAHOMA.
Messrs. Davis of Minnesota, Good of
Towa, Granna of North Dakota,
shaw of Nebraska, Haughen of
• NI ,
connties.it cannot be repeated by legia-
1at Ive enaetment.
Oppressive at Gninesville.
Gafnesvme. Texas. July 9,— {Bpecjal}
The heat has been very oppressive here
the past few days but today proved the
hottest one of the year. the thermome-
ter reaching 102 derreen-The heat hav
almost wusnended bueinees during thi
past few days.
were, which
and the delf-
It was ptecisely 12:02 o’clock when
Clerk crockett of the senate appeared
in front or the speaker's rostrum and
1M at Tulsn.
Tulsa, Okla., July {SpeciaL)—One
go to San
-Isons and
cing.
hous
the
Only • Few Days Before Victim Had
Exprensed Desire to Deatroy
Ktnry Car in city.
face, hands and legs hefore she cnuld-
get into the yard and beat oft th? ani-
th terrace
rw* a 12'
X
. h
En
and melting snows in northern Mesic*,
together with the recent -jeavy stom
here, has so overtaxed the capyetty of
the Rfo Grande that it has overflowed
phere 'round about him was sufficiently
balmy to blister the bulb to the century
mark.
Anyway. It was the hottest day of
the year and everybody seemed to re-
102 at Kepperl.
ppert. Texas. July 9.— (Bpectal.)-
thermometer registered 102 in the
Kight
liar
Mrs
4,8
44
permitting
htbition tei
helds that
Nw
CN
-6
THE FORT WORTH RECORD
and REGISTER
the Rio
Diego, and then go
New Mexico, the Tast
MAJOR J. W. LNG RUN 0WN
AND FATALLY INJURED IN
crY OF WASIINGrON.
Mrs Burch • atu
nugh the windo
444
(8.e.
—
•bad* here today at
Mr. Broussard of Louisiana was the
only Democrat voJng with the Repub-
licans for a oonfernce.
At 3:26 p. m. adjournment was taken
until Monday noon, when the joint
resolution providing for the submission
to the several states of the income tax
, (Continued on rage a.}
IB? U» 170 in favor of prohibitlon The
electton passed fit quietly throughout
the county.
Major Long Was a native of North
Carolina and appointed to the army
ner tonight with the
Rifles st thetr camp
ouvis, Rnucher. Meei Aecideutnk
Denth.
Antis, However. May Question the
Constitutionality of the Elec-
tion Held in 1904.
throw her be by into the housa. When
weather remains hot and
dal.) —- Flood conditions in
saloone in local option pro-
rritory after July 11 He
k
Mra. Joeph (hamberlain.
San Antonio, Iouston, Austin and
Dallas Down on the Itinerary
for Brief Stops.
One en
the only
108 nt Ardmore.
Ardmore, okla, July 9.— (Special)- ;
The local weather bureau reports a
fatter maximum temperature of 108 here to.
hger. Ae,, the —ictac“ --—t “h- -mtc* U.S.
Mex- I ment of a
enough exhausted
at the local weather station today Por » from Iowa. He was formerly nupern-
----* ------- --- ----- --- tendent of the Michigan State Soldiers
votes for the antis
.0 a 9 enor,
teeth and rolu
TARIFF IS SENT
day the same thermometers registered gkamnmga gAr pA
zo2uormwoapizneproprereurwxaprnnenei WOMAN BATTLES
m gat net the closed fe
pros, being a majority
for the antia Ths
laughter.
"I propose” responded the majority
leader. 'To give myself the benefit ot
U— avui. -..1 vote aga’nst all of them.
of ngland and many Ameri-
the 1904 electton. At that time seven
ahot entered
right ere, and
The Conferees.
Messrs. Payne of New York, Dal ze 11
of Pennsylvania, Mecall of Masnachu-
setts, Boutelle of Illinois, Calderhead
of Kansas, Fordny of Michigan, Re-
publicans; Clarkce of Missouri, Under-
wood of Alabama, Griggs of Georgia.
Democrats.
Th- follow rig eighteen Republicans
in t\e house voted against the special
rule sending the tariff bill to confer-
ence :
precincts which now are Ary.
Mr Connor differs from Mr Vincent
of Sour lake on the Fitzhugh law
Mexican executive about Oct. IS. the
meeting depending of course on the
President's ability to make the western
lntertainment at Anrrian Pmba-sy
Is One of the Most I laborate of
london’s Soial Seasn.
Don has been shifted from both, houses lender, -to gi
of congress to a conference committee, the doubt and
dour Lak*. Texas July-(Spectal)
The returns of the local option eleetion
Washington, July 9.- -President Taft
today, while en route to Washington,
gave an qutilne of the tentative plans
for his western and southern trip this
fall. The President hay abandoned all
idea of visiting Alaska this year owing
to the fact that Mrs. Taft will not be
able to go with him.
As soon as the tariff bill has re-
ceived the action of the President, Mr.
Taft will leave Washington for -Nev-
erly. He will remain there until Hept.
Mercedes I* t
this (Hardin 1
Kirby i covered even
— cstely tinted
the thermometir went as high One here today by an automobile, arried
| death from heat occurred here^ E. L to the Russian embassy and died thret
Scott was suddenly stricken while he I hours later at the Emergenoy hospital
The continuous rrtne 1 was walking along the sidewalk. He | The automobile was driven by J. W
। was taken to the hospital where he Tawrence, who was learning to operate
died won after. J. E Green was also ... Andrew y prnai. , a
overcome but will recover Th* weth- | the Andrew ) Ham-*. 2
er forecast locally is for continuea Washington lawyer, and Galan Oremne
Washington. July 9-Major J
voted prohibition themselve=, they were
thereby segregated from other parrs
of the con uS and ha no further voice
on that quption. This is the point he
will rsise if the antis conclude to go
tto court aud if his position is upheld
many Texas pountise will have wet
county show 707
r and 683 for the
Paris, Texas, July a—(Specia1.) —
The commissioners' court has completed
the count of the vote in the local option
election held June 26 and found the
majority for prohibition to be 71S. The
rumor that the court would be asked
to set aside this election on the ground
of alpged viclation of the electton law,
appears to have not been well grounded.
Lamar county has been dry since April.
1906 an election held in August, 1904,
having been tied np in the courts dur-
ing the intervening time. Another elec-
tion was held on petition of the antis
in January, 1907, in which they lost,
as in the last pne Hon. E. S. Connor,
one of the attorneys for the antis in
previous litigation, stated to a Record
reporter tonight that he knows of ne
intention to contest the last election,
but he states that he has under advise.
najesties were recelved at
l he srran stairway by
and Mrs Reld anirithe
he American embansy and
Temperature of 108 Degrees Re-
corded at a Number of Places,
one Death Reported.
cornelfus Vandertilt. Mrs John Jacob
famed hand playe d d
7/
was called by the pins and the county
wpnpreenetHrconynar, Kax. rignt' th. eltsygwaer arqukht -
""S--t " •ne :ukrerzhhrere- " "
219
2
northward High’
stopping at Wl
Richmond, Va.
wan the hirgest in the co
66b0besese -8-823-000
"AF/)
(ninesville, Texas, Jut f - Bpeciai.)
Mrs. W. w. Hur h and her a vear-/
meet the approval of the
large: a bill with which we
t he foot of
Ambasnador
members of fl
July 9.- (Spe- the hottest since 1901. when in August
; though his plans for the summer, ftez |
adjorhment ot congress, are not ma-,
tured. It is probable that Kens tor Cal-
berson, following a needed rest wili l
WIFE SCARCELY ANY DEBATE THE HOUSE SENDS TARIFF BILL TO CONFERENCE
to take time ‘ to
Fuesta n.^.s are raging torrenth.
Railway traffic north of Mercedes has
been abandoned owing to washouta.
it, hin fifty-second birthday, when he ,
hopes, if Mrs. Taft continues to Im-
prove, to begin his western journey.
The President will head direct from
Beverly to Seattle. After visiting the
exposition there the President will
swing down to the southwest, stopping
for a time at Portland, and proceeding
thence to San Francisco. Leaving San
Francisco the President will go direct
to Los Angeles where he will stop for
Serenos report.”
The Ice having been thus broken
Messrs Pavirison of Wisconsin and
Dougias of 0l two other Republicans
were, if anything even more outspoken
in their oppowiti n than was Mr Mann
The Ohlo men*er wan especlallv Fan-
(agonistic Jie WOwjd oppose the bill
as amended he decared. Should it be
defeated, he said. here would still
remain the Dnrley law Messrs, Ran-
dall of Texas. Pou of North Carolina
• nd Henry of Texas, characterized the
measure as breaking the Republican
pledges to the American people. Their
remarks arouned Mr. Smith of Lowa
who declared that the Americen people
461 no5idereet * Democratic revision of
WAhout specifically mentioning the
ate the
After one and one-half hours of de- which utterance mmenseky pleased the
bate the house today, by a vot. of 178 Republisans. II wa: for the.hoxmeai
. , _ i 11 Ae 4. when it passed here," he added, amid
to 1H. made a rule whereby all otheishouts ot Republican applause. *ang l
240 amendments of the senate were dis-|am yet to be convinced. as to the Im-
agreed to and the conference requested 5 provementa that have been mae upon
by the senate was granted. Eighteen it in another place." M.Payneex-
, 2..... .L. a. i pressed his desire for a full and free
Republicans voted against the rule ani, conference, “that we may bring before
one Democrat for it. i the house finally a bill that will meet
When the house met at noon interest the approval of this si e of the house;
was at ever heat. The leaders on both that.wi
same rations eaten by the soldiers, but
a great many extras were also pru-
vided
Mrs. w o Br-ediove. wife ot ap-
tain Breedlove, and Mis* Julia Blum
New Mexico---Fair Safurday and •
sunany- •
Wemt Texns-- Fnir xaterday and .
Sunday. a
(klehems—hnsershowere Sat- .
urdaya Sundny fair. d
Gioes Wet by Majerity .of 24
WILL BE NO CONTEST
•In. Norris of Nebraska. Pickett of1
Iowa Poindexter of Washington and
Woods of lows.
london, July
i .25 - -y
‘mental unti he has regained hi* mifitfa compajy igade aL.better #howt= leath t
strength. Notwithstanding his somye . than the Fort Woril Fenihlea 00 2 r ins 1 * ’
wht fmteirea F zltb Knator (uiber- c’aptain I H- MaxB ill’ lli 1yi5 1 '
sen has -ratained his attention to of- | bearing of hoth and men la thejapr Ken
ficla! business. subject of much fpvomubie coomeNt 4 taril--
INFUNIATED ANIMAL ATTA KH
AND MANGLES A LIr-
1 TLF G1RU
\3y
ooA/a
—-2., f
--27 .< '
• Sunday; light
_------ -- - - -S— . — — dwinds,
heen carried sway and several cenais ; r„n Worsh nneVieinity—Nntnr- .
broken. The river at Me Allt n !* rig: . — . . -
ri -• wide Th* derrage so far re-e ”
rorted will reach $100000. eebb0be+dstevevveves
1*11*11 aa a n An nA- falrs and out wide of ro) al < ourt • prob-
WITH MAD TOM CATaolanaipromnsnonersrczranan
, whe Im luded besiden the royal xuesta,
the leaders of the politicat and jovial
ville.
Brownsville, Texas.
I had my
Washington. July 9.- The tariff ques-
on both sides all along its course, caus-
ing damage which cannot be estimated
until tbs waters recede.
The railroad on the Mexican side
from Matamoras to Monterey has ten
or fifteen miles of track washed out
end no trains have been runnlag this
week.
The St Louis, Brownsville & Mexico,
on this side, also has several bad wash-
Senator Culberson 1
tp---- - - ------ ---- day and worked at it faithfully all
i TRtter nt stop at El Paso the Prest-i day. Me hammernd at Old Mercury un
ighen of Iowa dent will visit San Antonio. whore he til the latter's ire was so aroused that
S ~ 2". ““
nsitasatadsonrsof M IXatrPemtat l'BultinP° waxed hot both down
Murdock of Kansas. Nelson of Wiscon- 'present importance. After visitng Aus-; and when the victor went to rest in Hie
ErpendtnpphaTexraitaayRronidenewestern horizun, ola Mere was sun
ranch owned by his brotet, Charies fuming. Indicating that the atmos-
P. Taft, at Corpus Christi, near the
town of Brownsville.
Continuing east, ths President will
Iraten Down With Froosstick. the
Animnal Htoturus Again and
Again to the Atiack.
warm weather over Saturday. Consid- ; who was instructing Iawrenm, were
anderabie apprehenston I, bring felt .h. o,ner ocuaanta Oreen and Law.
among the farmers. Just now is a
report on print papei &na on woou
pulp in the interest of theirstates and
gainst the interests of the Consumets
of paper and the manufacturers o”
paper in the rest of the nation, no far
as I am concerned T shall swaiowriny
desire to stand with the organisation
uf the house in my desire to prove preceding ten years
xedrthecnpancgnt.angainse Enfwone one. An election tor the entire county
pretty hack-
.me allowti
•h atr The
Srene Is One e
grand shlon aw
were utilize fe
• beauty Derch
ned n » ■ ■ ’ 6
%
Nww/
ear go before (he people of the United
States with confidence and disappoint
the gentlemen on the other side who
are qoking so enviously for some of
the seats occupied by better men on
this side "
When the laughter and Republican
applause that greeted fhis utterance
subsided the vote was taken on the :
motion of Mr Dalzell for the previus
question. Previous question wits or-
dered— yeas 179, nays 158.
On the aoption of the rule, the roll
again was called The vote resulted ।
Yeas 178, nays 151, and the amendments
aocordingly tere all rejected and the
bin sent to conference. The speaker |
announced the fclloving as the con-
free:
100 Degrees at Mumkegee,
Muskogee, Okla., July 9 - (Special,»
The government thermometer went to
100 degrees today, the hottest record
of the year Extreme heat is becom-
Ing dangerous to crops and unies
there is raln within forty eight hours
the damage to the corn crop will De
heavy. Itepurts tonight from Fort
Gibson. Buyton, Yahooia, OkrnulKee. 1
Checptah. Porum and other point*- atntn,
that corn has commeneed lo curl MD
in the fields and the finent prospect
for a corn crop that ♦‘astern Oklahoma
has ever seen will be destroyed unless
there is rain soon.
contritutec solos, while (ast-
merit with other counsel the filing of
Marble Falls Tosa"- J0l¥ 3
lai.) -w O. Davis, a prominent
the past.
Fort Worth is well represented at the
encamp \li,-i R H
bam. formerly of Fort Worth, hi f’
cornmiesary; Major F’hil M, Hunt.* ,,
brigadier Adjutant MajorCarroli O F.!,
Fllott; Fourtn infansry. Captain O, E. '
return to
--------------------------------------- ---
FORT WORTH, TEXAS, SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 10, 1009.-FOURTEEN PAGES
nuston were guest . of Company
outs and no trains are running. The L---------------- _ .
bridge nzar Mercedes is expected to go,a week the mercury has stood about
out any moment and the town itself is! 1 00. Man and beast and all orops are
almost surrounded by water. The large suffering for want of raln Eusinens
canals are still intact and only two or 1 is at a standstill and has been for tsn
three of the smaller ones in Hidalgo ‘ “
country are damaged, but most of the
farms along the branch line are more
or less inundated. The arroyos and
drainage channels are all brim full, fn-
eluding the Arroyo Colorado, near Har-
lingen, but the bridge over the Tatta _ _ ___.
stream I, not conmdered in any qanger.lday.ihesighest since the estabiah-lin
At Brownavinea portion at th, Mex-lment of a weather xtation la aramorel
lean pettiement ket—aon th, nver and in 1902- Th, extreme hot -eather l,
th, railroad 10 under water, dur to isuring th, corn crop
breaks in the levee, ad the rise la ..
within a few inches of the ton of the waret or
railroad grade By pasing this point! 1 . ,
another farge portion of ths town will I Weatherford. Texas, July 8. "Fpe-
be flooded and this seems likely to ‘ etol.)-—Thursday and today have been
harpn.nThe,river.anand "tn " erai by at east three aegre hotter st thi,
inchernt A zortr9 of And t nt!: 1 pott tangat any time thi. >.,nn
J brM«T.lt, 1. uiKrwLwX fhursday.Fe. htzhentpointrecoria by
‘ ‘s water ard light plant is at-1 thermometers here wa* loi. wHue to-
FmRinKar,
ded him ‘on
Austin, July 9 (Special, f -Governor
and Mrs. Campbell, the Misses Camp-
bell. Mra Harper Kirby, MiaHmith of j
Longview and several others took din-
Mexiena Tows Water Bound.
claws In her shirtwaist, but Mr* Burchevenine and aino fo
mierbera of the rnyal family at present
in London, were guests at torrhester
house tonight on the oreaslon of the
dinner and dauce given by Ameri-
can Amoussador ane Mrs Whitelaw
■Heid in honor of the king ami queen
and Princess Viet ■■ was »he
•*■ ond time ninee Mr HtM's ineum-
beme y that the king has dined with
him, but tonight for the first time
Queen Alexandru aud Princess Vitoria
aocompanied his majesty.
The danqe which fot towed the din.
tories which soon are to be ndmitted
into the union, according to the admin-
istratien’s programme.
Coming out of New Mexfco, the
President will stop for a time at 21
Paso where he expects to meet Presi-
dent Dias of Mexico. The Mexican
president wrote recently to the White
House suggesting a conference at El
Paso, and President Taft replb d too ay
that he would be delighted to meet the
With a good rence were arrested on the charge of
- : manslaughter and releaned on bond.
Major Long had an aversion to auto-
i rrob ties and two days before the acci-
t the tent wa
reen being th
-,4
9
- &*-k A 2
stop at Houston and go to New Or-
leans to attend the meeting of the deep
waterways congress, the date of which
""Ater"utdnding"tje congreiepckr alize it. Th. thermometer regiatered
Taft wants to stop for a time in 'he 1 80 degrees at 7 o'clock in the morning
Bayou Teche country of Louistana, the1 and the rise was steady from that time
land of Evangeline and Arcadia. From [ on until the high mark was reached
there the President will proceed to about 2 o'clock.. Wednesday the heat
Jackson. Miss., thence to Montgomery.' registered 98 degrees and Thursday it
Birmingham and Macon. From Macon rose to 100 degrees Fort Worth,
the President will go home to Augusta | though. Isn't the hottest place in Texas
to have a game or two of golf on thejand residents of the Panther city mu/
links whore he spent so much time last be soothed by the thought that other
winter. | 4 ities Are suffering worse with the
Leaving Augusta, the President goesheat.
to Savannah, and from there begins his The weather man gives HUle promise
of any cooler conditions in the near fu-
ture.
Pierpont Morgan t’otonel G
Mi l* wod Mrs Owie
Pr ede r ie k v 3 nderhiit
toll was erected
nd iaun This
• tent, but so
at it reqenrbled
Tngrog4 min-
ceing.
hat was almest
meet the pproval of the majority and
tpjcenntry at large. His appeal was
ilmington, N. C.,
today surrounded by water on three
sides The arroyo Colorado and Li
One Dend at Oklahoms City.
Oklahoma City, July 9-r(Special.)--
The city had 99-egree weather today
when at 1:30 o’clock the thermometer
registered that in the shade. It was
■nntnr M tn Prohably Come «• Teana
#ummer.
Washington, July 9 --(Spicial,)—Al-
Lord ftevelatoke.
baby girl had a fight for the c jihe
with a mad tomcat at M 2. nom
twelve tulles southeaet of here, neat, Dorchester houne which is well fit
Mount Bpringw, yesterday The baby ! ted f ar barge eniert inm ente wasbecH-
wu piaying in the yera neat a window | WE! sarnntda ""21; and
where Mrs Burch sat and she "AW the in the scheme which prove most ef-
big, red-eyed cat approach and spring ’ feet ive Dinner w u perved at two
upon the child and terribly lacerate Ms l farxe tables 4ei ked with every varieiy
1
-1 ,Iw! 8 a fraf ■ r it hester
sln6 ent ertainmenta w im o1 even
grander scale then ususL Mre, Nor-
dies and John MIrc’nrmick. the Irish
senate, Mr Smith, facing the Demo-
prat side said that hany Democrats
*eisewhere"" than in the houne had
been large!y instrumental in placing
tha in creases in the bill This asser-
tion elk Med loud Republican applause
Mr. Harrison of New Yor said that
Ilf the Republicans did not join with
ths Democrata in defeating the blit ths
majority party will be repudiated at
the pols at the next electcon.
Mr. Morris of New York. jo.ned his
insurrent Republican eolleague and
protested that the Republicsn party
would not be true to its pledg ■ if the
bill in its amended form should become
law
in pleading for the opportunity to
vote separately on the various amend-
ments, Mr Bartlett of Georgia, a
Demecrat. declared that he Ws in
favor of the amendments providing for
free cotton bagging and ihe drawback
on cotton ties, but as to the corpora-
tion tax, he said it was a subteruge.
-. pretext, a sham, placed Id the bill to
defeat the income tax.
Clark is Snremstie.
"Great God Almighty, eight hundred
and forty-seven amendments." Was the
exclamation of Mr. Clarke o' Missouri
the minority leader, as he closed ths
debate on his side.
It has often been charged, he said,
that the Wilson MH. contained 600
amendments, but at last, he said, he
was able to thr . w off that burden.
The bill, Mr. Clarke eaid, when it left
the house was b .1, but "the Aldrich-
Smoot bill is worse, and. tudgmg the
future by the past, the resul of the
labors of the conforence committee will
be worse than all.**
Mr. Payne of ew York, the najority
leader. In closing for his side pleaded
with hia colleag es to send the con:
' ferees to the ••note unhampered by any
vote or instructions.
Mr. Paj ne oppoE- the Democratic
plea for a vote of instruction. He as.
tonishe his hearers when he asserted
he was unable to tell whether some of
the amendments raised or lowered ths
Dingjey rates
Wouldn’t it be all right for you to
give yourself the benefit of the doubt
and vote against those you do not un-
derstand**’ remarked Mr. Clarke amid
dent declared- "If
madztone ane the child will not be
taken to the Pasteur Institute.
Marble Falls. The
towed mmedtatelv. The sho
Id to hare beeh acidental Mr-
id iusf re’rruee from \uetin
Antonio He lenven a large
I
sides had notified their respective
forceato be on hand in anticipation
that the tariff bill‘would come over
from the senate. The summonses were
respondee to almost without exception.
Manyo the members showed by their
tasned faces that they had teen so-
journing durinj. the hot spell at the
seasnore restorts until called upon to
• te present at today’s session.
msg wax.d warm and*
। dlsclosea the fact that there were some
r n epublicans in addition to the so-called
"izsara- ats" who were yet to be paci-
s chna bfore they would give their votes
onthe final passage of the MH-
. J bemocrats held up the majority
party to scorn for having, as they
cn-rzed, violated ante-election pledges.
Areature of the discussion was an
appeal by Chairman Payne to his col-
lengues to send the conferees to the
aenate mmhamperea by instructions. He
promisd to rigidly exact an explana-
tion oz every amendment made by the
I senate in order that the house conferees
misht report back a bill which will
mil with a broonr handle The cat
throwing.
dazzl ing Th
by row ufter
-484
PASSED
king, and queen and the memhers of
ene royal family Or e upe with thelr
host* and frfends the enter table*
from Mouaton are exoeeted to arriveimnmmne .t t:— » "ht arranged in
tomorrow Th* blu event tomorrew l maK, ner w-re for , t«M»*
w1 be th, sham baitie which wilt beit.non 5", man or pme c,r^.
by fur th, mont wpsctaomlar eer nernuzm"twd with * "
• camp Mabry, fhoumanas or roudda|"ieme"Wg wn
nt emrirdge, will befifa and the ari.He” k n* - K h. "
tner will partteipate Th« regularlatztnun«ma
artiery will take a l*»lin< pari an -J'’
will give a titter exhihinion nt qrmaovx5
work before the sham battie opena pr" 2 ... r » kna
I Heunton and Austin companten atsicarmam"Hn"gemmer
rival, at th* -neampment tar driulapn.onmn.2uxrp*mFu
ienora. Th. Monton Men Go. rd. -r. ia.plome1ak1mKn2Pa3 he ^1, "n
ficfally known Sa Company A of Tetas IF "1. 1. „.ln
is tbe oldest National Guard organi- । joyihe «» th
zation In camp while the Harper Kirby, -,,",,8" X- v
HifU auatih erack military eom-l!un.2.10.2P4. . “
pany, !• on of the youngest T) - ht«ad r sad ".ri
[ Houston comnpany has shown wonderful,
profielency a’ the encamprent this
| v ar, fullowing up Ha a nievement of i
# ■ *
which many guests came in.
The king and queen mingled freei}
with those present AmonK those at
the dinner were the pr|tn v arid prfncesa
. of Walew, the duke nd d . hess of
the child was jerked from the ground Connourtt and Tat Ci4,.52
tn. rat agafh tiadn a leup at it and cut sW"nPEB‛ pr" I"P E.Ae2
a long Ka6a om H. «B •• I' wax thrown Ionder or T..k Count Piee Chrtmto-
Into Th- ri •1, Hntose th. friuhtened , puer of Ore- the dok- an i duche <
woman couid *.t into th- nou- and ,, t-, . 1- aukee ot Aibany th. span
clowe the oor th. mat had again fnet-tsh an.1 Italian anbas dors th. dune
ened It* iAws in her (iMrr ana <MI ae6. Uf wanmuton th* duk.
' *>»' ■- with H , but game
out with . it a ton upon ... weir mif . - ovi..
"Mppmhanomzww*a, th!' ' eIrT. "h” EA% * “» "nnem «»
naJ wep,a 1.
honee, to find the sat .till umpine dr a. "Wra1 ’ Martin K'
if-rail- Burden Haldane, ssere-
_ _ of war Rt Hon Henry
loud of'burkjhot'pnt an ena"toiblchaplin Mr and Mra '.f.lur iww
du-l. IMr. ata MrR- arthaar lain*. Mr. an?
Mr Long. IIving n*at Valley yiew,lMre winlar iame M , ,,! Mr. 1
applied o. madstone to the Wouude 1 k < • ^< " «l1 ’ aDd ‘
on th' child and ft aiere a nusnher
of tires Mr Burch thinks the pnfaon
WAn al} drawn from the wounds by the
2 o'clock. The
l heir wives They were eseorte to the
i{brary, whrre the gueets were fermallv
presenten These ineluded Count
Ytenee kendorf. ituestan emhanur te
Great Eiritein and deuntera jeneck-
eodofff: lue Austrian ambasnador, the
prince and princess of Plesa; the duke
aud duchess of Roxburh. Premier
and Mrs. Asquith the Purtuguese and
Danish iinfaters: lordand lady lane-
8 announed that the senate had passed
the tariff bill
Tro minutes later, on mottou of Mr.
k Payne,the house took a reccs until 1
* omieck to permit the committee on
sules to meet with a view to deciding
upna a course of procedure.
' Noneoneur la Amendments,
, When the recess had expired Mr.
iDalsell of Pennsylvania of the commit-
1 tee OU rules, was at once recognised
to offer the rule providing for non-
cuneurrence in all the amendments and
, agrerieg to the cdsterence requested
by the senate. He supplemented the
rule with a motion for one hour and
a half for debate. The motion was
adopted.
After explaining the parliamentary
situation affectiug the .bill M . Daizel
declared his belief that he voiced tne
sentiment of every member of ins house
and of the entire citizenship of the
country when he said that what was
needed now wes a speedy deposition
of the measure.
While sharing in the view that the
members and the oountry were anxious
to dispose of the bill at the earliest
possible moment. Mr. Underwood _ of
Alabama contended he did not believe
it was their desire to do this without
the most careful consideration. The
bill as it came from the eeuate was
condemned by Mr. Townsend of
Michigan.
As it left the house, he said, it com-
plied. for the most part, with the He
publican pledges ”but now,” he de
elared, ‘you Would hardly recogniZe it
if you m*t if in the road.”
Mi Townsend created a. stir wheo
he declared that in the course of the
debotes in the senate the house Wa}s
and means committee had been in-
sulted. The MH. ip the opinion o'
* Mr. Fitzgerald, who opposed the rue,
as ekout as bad a piece of legis.a-
tion as It would be possible to make
in any legislative body.
Revolt os Republiean aide
The firs’ open evidence or an in-
tend-xl re volf on the Republican side
« Uto; from Mr Mann of Illinois, who
protested vehemently against $ the
amendments filing the duties on woou
pulp and print peper.
• "There ahe hut two states which
would benefit by such a protection,
declared Mr. Mann ""4 give notice now "
he exclalmec, "that it these two states,
write th* provision in the. conference
aring the
dance for
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The Fort Worth Record and Register (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 267, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 10, 1909, newspaper, July 10, 1909; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1505361/m1/1/?q=Simon+P+Holmes: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .