The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, September 3, 1909 Page: 8 of 8
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“If i^MPpM>ack &mrris Co. has it
mi- Utterback & Hama, Co. has it, its Right”
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We are receiving new goods daily. It will
pay you to spend a little time in our store decid-
ing just what you want for fall.
Our Millinery and Ready-to-Wear depart-
ments will be especially strong this season. We
are already receiving some very interesting
things. New and pretty goods to show you in all
departments.
Will be glad to have you call and let
show you.
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sews brief*.
A, L. Sharp, a well known Frisco
,lwr Is In St Vincent f aanitarl-
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iB Fort Worth. suffering (row se-
mb Mia. Ilf la said to )m* gat tilts
Ml Of 4«tt» nicely. with every Indira-
* f»a of foil rero'.ry
Saw Badgctt. a well-known new.
paper man founder of the Bell New*
and for several yeara editor of the
Collinsville Time*, died at Bell* Tue*-
day afternoon He la survived by
hi* widow and little eon.
Bitter Henrietta, a Catholic nun,
died at the convent at Sherman Tue»-
day n I ({tit after quite a protracted ill -
aess. She wa* ra year* of age at
the time of her death and had beett
hi the service for twenty yeara.
The 5-moutha-old eon of Mr and
Mr*. J. B Taylor of Sherman died In
Mb mother * arm* at the I'nlon pa*
Beeper atatton at Deatoon Tuesday
a&g afternoon a* Mbe waa about to take
tlw train for a vialt to her parent* at
Okk*. Ok. The child had been III
before they left Sherman, but waa
hot supposed to be dangerously so
Nagent Vannoy, it year* old and
unmarried, died at hts Tenneeeee col-
m:?
Hi
ooy home near Palestine. laat Mon-
day from toaa of blood Vannoy waa
aronnd a gin etand and hia
• caught In the saw* The
t dragged Into the *aw* and
cut off and horribly mangled Before
medical attention could reach him
ba died
Lea Hall, the main academic build
tag of the New Mexico Military ln-
trtHute at fit-well. N. M., wa* deetroy-
*d by fire of unknown origin at
o'clock Tuesday morning The It
4a lJS,#ttO; Insurance ft She# Re
building will Mart at once. Tempura
ry arrangements will be made and
____w; School will open in full force next
HP' “*y
Worried over a charge pending in
.......the county court alleging threats to
H< take the Ufa of a road overseer and
take the life of
the recent tone
of a
o(
a prom*'
total farmer of the Village Creek
neighborhood, twenty tulle* south weal
Of Fort Worth drank etryckalne and
from the
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i ‘ h
af the
Lynch, the *1-year old
mtipt#:,
M eon
Wa. .1
Uively identified as Mr*. Susa Banta,
a dressmaker, who disappeared from
Her home at 31* South Alamo street
about three weeks ago. The body was
identified by the woman's husband.
Albert Banta, who ha* just returned
from El Paso. where ne has been con-
fined In a hospital after having both
legs cut off In an accident.
The t-year-old son of Werner Guyer,
a farmer living near Denton, died
Thursday of diphtheria, contracting
the disease. It Is not known where,
laud week a child died eouth of the
city from the same cause, who is be-
lieved by the attending physician to
have been infected with the diphtheria
germs from a sick cat with which It
had been playing, as the cane was
sporadic and had been nowhere where
it existed.
Walter H Spooner, a prominent res-
ident of Bcltuate. tyxas, died Tuesday
at the age of fifty-one years His ear-
ly life was spent in the west and
south, during which time he was one
of the leaders In the establishment of
Beaumont Texas Into this venture
be put all hia capital and all the
money he could borow. His foresight
was justified, *
Due to the faithfulness and the in-
telligence of a regtatered bulldog. 16
months old. Mrs Henry W Gamble
was saved from being burned to death
at Houston Tuesday, At 2:30 o clock
in tbs morning the dog. named Joe
went to the bedside of Mrs. Garnet
and caught bold of b#r nightgown and
pulled her out of bed. When the lady
awoke ah# soon realised the house
was a mass of fire and she gives all
credit to Joe that she is alive today
. At Oraadvtew last Thursday t> K.
Mabry crossed the street, toward where
J. D. Chastain was sitting and made a
motion as if be would strike the lat-
ter. Chastain dodged and seised a
short piece of Inch piping, threw it
at Mabry, At this point- J. A» Chts-
tata. the father .of J. D. Chastain, look
part fa the flgk and grappled with
Mabry in an effort to take from him
of piping la the straggle
the left nipple,
was smarted at
11*..._e Hlfrmfh tttia Ja w ssasisim —— a—_____
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Latest Thing In Tanks,
The Texas & Pacific Tuesday start-
wi the building of a large water sup-
ply tank composed entirely of con-
crete and steel. The new tank, which
is one of the first of Its ttind In the
southwest, and is intended to furnish
the entire water supply of the road at
Port Worth. The outside of the tank
Is covered with corrugated sheet iron,
with three inches of concrete on
the Inside. There will be no insid*
metal lining, atul the strength of the
concrete will withstand the entire
pressure of the water. In reinforc-
ing the tank, cold steel twisted Irot
bars, three-fourths of an Inch in size
and enmeshed with Iron wire are used.
The idea of using cement in the
construction of water tanks is a new
one. and ia regarded by engineer* at
an experiment. G. M. Hall, the engin-
eer in charge of the work, believes,
however, that thi# method of con-
struction wjU prove more satisfactory
than have tanks built of wood, la
speaking of the matter, he said:
"The concrete construction elimi-
nates all possibility of decaying wood,
and the enormous toss of water occa-
sioned thereby. The new method will
also prevent evaporation, since the
concrete will resist the sun's raya
entirely. We have not even used a
wood flpor on which to build the base
of the tank but a half-inch steel plate
Covering the entire area of the base.
:i this the concrete Is laid, and the
rrugated Iron bolted to It."
the order of the city council. In his
reply be called attention to the fact
that he bad declined to tear down the
signs and the porch aud the attorney
for Miss De Zavala had also declined
to give permission to have these ob-
jectionable things removed.
*®k*a
t stabbed to t
Jtttt below
eon sect ion
«to*.r ,
at whoee Weatherford last year
Panama Discharge Indemnity.
Through the state department, Act-
ing decretory of the Navy Wtnthrop
has received IK,000 from the republic
of Panama, paid by It a| Indemnity
In thecanmi involving maltreatment of
American naval officers and seamen
at the bands of the Panama police. Of
this amount f&JKKt la indemnity In
what la known as the cruiser Colum-
bia Incident, when eeveral officer* in
uniform were nr reeled, locked up and
roughly handled An indemnity of
••.(MM will be paid to ths relatives of
Charles Hand, a boatswain's mate on
the efwtaar Buffalo, who was killed'
In Panama, and ll.ooo will ha given
to Joseph C lallft. a Bailor of the same
Will Sot Sell Cotton on street*.
In connection with the recent action
taken by the state executive commit-
tee of the Farmers’ union at the Gal
veston meeting in regard to the hand-
ling of cotton through the local ware-
houses, President limderinitk says
there Is one thing that he wants dis-
tinctively understood, and that Is that
it is not the advice or intention of
the committee to have the cotton sold
on the streets.
In speaking of the issue Tuesday he
said that the matter had not been
made exactly clear in some sources.
It is the advice of the committee, says
the state president, that alt cotton be
held and handled through Inland
warehouses that can possibly be stor-
ed there and sold through said Inland
warehouses, as the central selling
agency
Continuing. President Ijoudermilk
said;
"But where there ia distress cotton
we advise also that this be held in the
Inland warehouses. If possible, and If
the cotton csnnftt be financed in home
warehouses by home people we would
then advise that they ship the cotton
to Galveston and borrow money on it
rather than sell on a depressed mar-
ket However, we do not advise that
It be said on the streets."
Schwab Invest* in Texas Land*.
It is reported that Charles M.
Schwab and his associates have closed
an option on 36.000 acres of iron ore
fields near Hughes Springs, In Marion
County, Texas, and that he also holds
options on other tracts In Cass and
Upshur counties.
It is also said that on the promised
development of these ore lands about
2,000 acres of mineral land In Chero-
kee. Rusk and Harrison counties will
be taken over by another syndicate,
composed of Texas capital, but in
which some of the independent steel
concerns will have an interest.
Another report states that a steel
mill will be erected at Port Arthur
with John W. Gates Interested. Also
that a Duluth syndicate will build
a steel mill and ore docks at Texas
City.
Another report Is that Port BoMver
Is to be made the concentrating point
for the Ores. It seems that there are
two or three different syndicates at
work, and the whole scheme seems
to have been brought to a head by Mr.
Rchwab'a recent vialt to Texas.
and all other kinds of agricultural
work. They will be asked to do the
carpentering on the new structure at
Otlsville.
Notorious HorttelMcf Caught.
Frank West, alias "rank Perkins,
the leader of the notorious gang of
horse thieves which has been operat-
ing to Oklahoma and Texas for some
time past, waa ufken to Hereford
Tuesday by Sheriff Connell The gang
is said to be the largest and bent
organized throughout the eoiithweet.
Meet was captured tost Saturday nt
Childrens when ho was cut off from
« wagon in which was bis weapons.
-■
authorities at which vessel, who »*» Mobbed at the time
—- - * wae HUM. I "Tji
S;
Stale WB» Net Pay.
•abile Buildings
c *tar at Austin, in
Ctork Peed Prist of-
mm
Forbid* Plating Pennies.
rW
tof of th*
vies. His
■r the federal law pro-
mutilation of Cnlted
toe .lew Uoeoln me
may be gold plated
#kb*: t twx -■ sttwiihi
Ql V*B grit* ta*
for
to, pay. i
ITS tar
nm i*v i
Woman Naves Boy's Life.
After the boy's father had been
sucked down by the whirlpool and
drowned in the Grand river near
Wagoner, Oklahoma, Mrs. James I,
Rooney, a Texas woman, swam into
the treacherous current and at the
peril of her life rescued the six-year-
old son of James Livingston, a weal*
thy cattleman. Livingston was the
only man with a party of women and
children, and swam Into the centre
of the stream with the hoy on hia hack
and suddenly he was sucked down and
the boy was left helpless, floating In
the whirling waters where he was
rescued by Mrs. Rooney. Livingston
was forty-five years old and went to
Oklahoma from Texas several years
ago. He was a member or the firm
of Uvlngaton Brothers, extensive cat-
tle shippers. Hia body waa recover-
ed Saturday.
___
Hard Wert Per Tuberculosis.
Following an inspection of ennlu-
riuma ia Switzerland and England,DZ.
M. M Biggs, chief medical adviser to
“...........1 ‘healtiii
and a
for toe
the course of
" ptatayof
......,Bat bow tb#.— —|
have to go to work, and Mi# harder
Financing Cotton Crop.
President W. T. Laudertnilk of the
State Farmers Union has returned
from Galveston, where a meeting was
held with members of the executive
board to determine whether the Gal-
veston plan will be used In handling
the cotton crop of the present year.
in addition to President Laudermllk
Vice President Peter Radford and Ex-
ecutive Committeemen J. L.McConkey,
M. C. Field, F. I. Townsend and Tom
B. Taylor were in the conference.
With reference to the policy of the
new administration In the handling of
union cotton, President Laudermllk
aajd:
"We have decided to handle our cot-
ton through the local warehouses to a
greater extent than last year, provid-
ing It can be financed at home, with-
out the accumulation of a large s *
amount of distressed cotton In the
Galveston warehouses. But we will
not entirely abandon the Galveston
plan, and will use It as emergency
may require, In the event we are un-
able to finance the crop by local
banks in union warehouses."
tensu* Machine Hill Have Millions.
The contracts for the purchase pf
100 tabulating machines and 300
counting machines for the census bu-
reau, which are expected to result in
a savin* of nearly 11,000.000 to th*
Government, were signed Tuesday by
the acting secretary of commerce and •
labor. The Shaw * Chase Company
of Newark, N. J. the successful bid.
ders, will be required to have the ma-
chines Installed by April 1 next, and
have given bond In the aum of $61
as a guarantee tor the perfonbatMif
Of toe work.
The machines are to he built in
accordance with plans and «
Hons prepared by the census
The main savlug will be to su
tog electrical power for hand
Sheep'*
SIDr. a
i j£j
of fresh air.
Vela
Doyen on August 8th -----------
^T^ftatapiantod a vein from a liv-
tog Rom arterial aoaurtem. The cir-
Outation thus wae restored and Um
patient has now completely recover*.
The vela transplanted waa tan Inctma
transplanted waa taa Inches
0O,*“- *h« to attending
topttart,
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congress at Budapest will
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The Dublin Progress. (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, September 3, 1909, newspaper, September 3, 1909; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth543718/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Dublin Public Library.