Eagle Pass News-Guide. (Eagle Pass, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 4, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 13, 1910 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Borderlands Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries Special Collections.
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Eagle Pass News-Guide
By THE GUIDE PRINTING CO.
'EAGLE PASS. T~ :
TEXAS
The noblest study of mankind
Weather.
is
Evidently the law of gravitation has
Dot been repealed.
For 50 cents now you can buy either
R melon or a dozen lemons.
VACATION TIME
There, are few joy-riders back of the
lawn mower or mowing machine this
year.
Last year Great Britain cut its
liquor bill $54,000,000, yet nobody died
of thirst.
Keep cool and be cool. The mental
attitude has much to do with physi-
cal condition.
Bowling has been introduced into
England. It will now become popu-
lar at Newport. .
Since the comet has departed peo-
ple have to charge up to sun spots
Whatever they cannot understand.
Regarded merely as a peril, it Is
touch easier to dodge a coming aero-
plane than it is to dodge a motor-
cycle.
It is
said that a substitute for ra-
dium has been found. Some druggists
to the contrary, a substitute is not al-
ways something “just as good.”
WD0
mm
TO-D/
TRAIN AND AUTO C0LLIDElTEXAS ra,ns caused dhop in cotton
TWO WERE KILLED AND EIGHT
INJURED.
Price Carried Down 30 Points, but La-
ter Firmed Up When Facts
Were Known.
Only One Passenger Escaped Injury
By Jumping—Accident Near
Steep Grade.
New York.—Accompanying a report
that the Texas drouth had been brok-
en in part at least, cotton prices
broke thirty points Thursday. There
was a good deal of cotton on the mar-
ket at times, some of it from houses
who have accumulated big lines in the
Birmingham, Ala.—Two were killed
outright, three fatally injured and two'
others may die as the result of an au- last few weeks, but there was no evi-
tomobile being struck by an engine at I dence of demoralization, and when the
a railroad crossing near West Lake, detailed weather reports from Texas
below Bessemer Sunday.
appeared, showing less precipitation
Dead: J. H. Roden, chauffeur, kill- than kad been reported early, there
(Copyright. 1910.)
HAMON DENIES ALL BRIBERY CHARGES
For Four Hours Friday He Told
Okahoma Indian Land Deal to
House Committee.
Music an aid to dairy manage-
toent!” That’s an old story. Was there
ever a comic opera without a varia-
tion of the merry, merry milkmaid
chorus?
An airship passenger service be-
tween London and Paris is being
talked of. People who expect to take
that route should go to the trouble of
first learning to swim.
And now they say that either a pho-
nograph or a pretty singing milkmaid
furnishing music in the stall makes
a cow give more milk. The cow’s
artistic discernment is apparently not
highly developed.
It is estimated that over 15,000,000
words were spoken during the recent
session of congress. All honor should
be shown the stenographers who
stayed at their posts and listened to
avery one of them.
An expert at the National Educa-
tional association convention in Bos-
ton says that children are naughty
when they are ill. Will the old say-
ing have to be revised to read “Spare
the castor oil and spoil the child?”
The northern Michigan dairyman
who claims to have discovered that
music sweet and low from a phono-
graph wooes milk from his cows,
might try for ice cream by giving his
devoted animals the “cold shoulder.”
The dean of Norwich Indignantly
denies that King George ever had a
morganatic wife and adds: “King
George is a man who, with a wife of
like disposition to himself, has been
wont during his leisure to sit in his
garden with his young children round
him, just the same as any of us might
do in our own patch of garden.” Also
the dean might have told us how
the king’s tomatoes are coming on.
The poor should be remembered this
hot weather, for their sufferings are
considerable. Ice often means health
to the sick and pure milk life for ba-
bies, but these are luxuries for which
the prisoners of poverty must look to
their more fortunate brethren to sup-
ply them. There should also be gen-
erous public support of the various
fresh-air enterprises which do so
much toward ameliorating the condi-
tion of the poor in a large city during
the heated term.
The
discovery of defective armor
plate on the battleships Utah and
North Dakota after the ships had been
commissioned has caused agitation in
the navy department favorable to a
plan for the inspection of the plating
of every battleship in service. It is
fair to assume that if two battleships
could be provided with faulty plates
without discovery until the ships were
in active service there may be other
ships with poor plates that may have
escaped detection.
Muskogee, Ok.—With United States
Senator Thomas P. Gore reasserting
his charge that he had been offered a
bribe of $25,000 of $50,000 to influence
hie action in congress and with J. L.
Hamon, accused by the senator of hav-
ing offered the bribe, denying he had
ever done any such thing, the inves-
tigation of the Oklahoma Indian land
deals, by a committee of the house
Friday simmered down to a mass of
denials.
For four hours Hamon, former chair-
man of the Oklahoma republican state
committee, entered a continuous se-
ries of denials relative to his alleged
connection with what are known as
the McMurray contracts, by which, ac-
cording to Senator Gore, $3,000,000, or
10 per cent of $30,000,000, to be real-
ized front the sale of Indian lands to a
New York syndicate, was to be divert-
ed from the Indians in the shape of
“attorney’s fees.”
Hamon also answered Congressman
C. E. Creager with a denial. Replying
to the congressman’s charge that Ha-
mon had suggested that an “interest”
in the contract might be available to
the congressman if the latter helped
remove opposition to congressional ap-
proval, Hamon testified:
“It was just this way: I was down
here in Oklahoma attending to my
business when a friend told me Crea-
ger had said I had approached him im-
properly in regard to the McMurray
contracts. So I hopped on a train and
went to Washington. I got hold- of
Creager and said: ‘Look here, you
know I never said any such thing.’
“Then Creager said: ‘Now Jake,
that certainly was the impression I
got—that you suggested I might get
an interest in the contracts.’ I re-
plied: ‘You certainly are" mistaken.’
Then Creager said: ‘Well, if you say
I should not go, I won’t go before that
investigating committee down at Mus-
kogee and testify that you approach-
ed me.”
Among Hamon’s denials were the
following:
He denied that he at any time had
been closeted with Senator Gore in
the senator’s office at Washington to
urge the approval of the contracts.
He denied that he had ever men-
tioned Vice President Sherman, Sen-
ator Chas. Curtis of Kansas or Con-
gressman' B. S, McGuire of Oklahoma
as being “interested” in the contracts
as charged by Senator Gore.
CRIPPEN MAINTAINS CLAMLIKE RESERVE
Accepts the London Solicitors’ Ser-
vices and Keeps His Own Coun-
sel—Sergeant Mitchell Sails.
ed ouright; Miss Augusta Kiser, IS,
died after reaching hospital.
Injured: Miss Mary Fitzpatrick, age
15, skull fractured and fatally injur-
ed; Miss Mamie Crenshaw, age 16,
skull fractured and fatally injured;
Robert Black, skull fractured and fa-
tally injured; Miss Eva Lou Crenshaw
thigh broken, internally injured, may
was a disposition to buy back some
of the cotton sold before the forenoon.
Prices steadied up ten points' in the
afternoon on this buying, but there
was no aggressive support pending
further details as to the extent of the
Texas benefit from rains. New York
private dispatches took the stand that
nothing but a good soaking rain would
Don’t Persecute
your Bowels
Cat oat cathartics and rantatltea. TbqranlmJ
•—harsh---unnecessary. Try mn
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
Purdy vegetable,
toady on the Ei
eliminate bile, at
•octhe die delicate
membrane of
rathe bowel.
Cure Con-
•tio&tion
BflW’
Sick Headache and InJifertiia, as millions know.
Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Pries
Genuine must bear Signature
die; G. C. Dobbs, hand broken and- Permanently help the Texas crop and
Quebec.—'Inspector Dew of Scotland
Yard said with positiveness and irri-
tation Wednesday that Crippen had
not confessed to the murder of Belle
Elmore, his wife.
Jos. Morin, Crippen’s jailer, was
equally positive tha*- no word of con-
fession had come from the dentist’s
lips.
Attorney General Guoin and Judge
Langlier, before whom the man and
his girl companion, Ethel Le Neve,
were arraigned, said they had heard
nothing of a confession and they scout-
ed the idea that Crippen would have
made one to Dew without their knowl-
edge.
The foregoing details came on top
of vague rumors of unknown origin
that there had been a confession, al-
though Inspector Dew spent barely
five minutes with Crippen during the
entire day. This visit he made to the
dentist’s cell Wednesday to ob-
tain Crippen’s answer to Solicitor
Newton’s cablegram from London of-
fering legal assistance. To this Crip-
pen replied accepting and promising
to keep his mouth shut and not resist
extradition, conditions which were im-
posed in the solicitor’s cabegram of
last night.
Crippen’s acceptance of the offer of
counsel would seem further to indicate
that he intends to maintain his atti-
tude of silence. And the few words
that came directly from the prisoner
himself indicated anything but the
mood of a self-confessed murderer. He
told one of his keepers that he would
make no fight here, but was prepared
to fight when he came to trial in Lon-
don. An effort to learn anything about
the friends that the London solicitor
says are willing to pay the expenses of
his defense was as fruitless here as
it is said to have been in London.
Miss Le Neve did not figure in the
crop of ^rumors. She continues to |
spend her time quietly in the prison
infirmary, and is said to be improving
in health.
body badly bruised; Two Parron broth
ers, 10 and 12 years old, respectively,
badly bruised, not badly hurt; W. H.
Bennet, Jr., 10 years old, badly bruis-
ed; not fatally injured.
G. O. Garner was the only passen-
ger who escaped uninjured. He jump-
most of the commission houses ad-
vised the purchase of cotton on any
further break. One firm credited with
holdings of about 150,000 bales sold
upward of 60,000 hales during the day.
On the other hand, mill interests wer©
good buyers on the decline and it was
ed from the car before the engine said that spinners had taken possibly
struck it. The automobile retains a
regular passenger schedule between
Bessemer and West Lake, and it was
carrying eleven passengers to the lake
Sunday. The machine was struck by
the fast passenger train on the South-
ern Railway and was almost complete-
ly demolished.
There is a steep grade leading down
to the Southern tracks just before
West Lake is reached, and as the
highway is in a cut, it was impossi-
ble for the chauffeur to see the loco-
motive or for the engineer to see the
automobile.
The front wheels of the large au-
tomobile had just run on to the track
when the engine, running at a high
rate of speed struck it.
Ambulances' and physicians were
quickly summoned from Bessemer and
the injured were taken to a hospital.
250,000 out of the market during the
last week. The Liverpool market was
the first to reflect the reported rains
in Texas and sent selling orders here.
Oklahoma advices report rain both
in Oklahoma and Texas and there was
a drop in temperature which in itself
was quite a relief to those who are
apprehensive as to crop conditions.
SLUMP IN THE AUTO BUSINESS
Bottom Seems To Have Dropped Out
Notwithstanding Boosting Efforts
of Manufacturers.
The Most Neglected Organ
of the Body Is the Liver
Nowadays everybody treats the
stomach—but it’s the liver that
counts. If you suffer from consti-
pation, bad blood, half-sick miser-
able feeling—it’s your LIVER nine
times out of ten.
And today doctors are recom-
mending and endorsing
SIMMON’S
Liver Purifier
because it’s the one liver remedy
that energises the liver, brings
back its natural function strong
and young again.
Tell your druggist you want
SIMMON’S LIVER PURIFIER_
and nothing else; emphasize SIM-
MON’S (in yellow tin boxes only),
and insist upon it. It’s the on©
cIjre that cures—the liver remedy
that does its work without grip- i
ing or sickening.
. At All Druggists, Everywhere, 25o, and $1,
A- B' RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., Sherman, Texas
THREE WOMEN DROWN IN THE TRINITY
They were Members of a Picnic Party
From Batson—Mrs. Beaver and
Misses Kerr and Logan Victims.
Beaumont, Tex.—While at a picnic
on the Trinity River, about twelve
miles southwest of Batson, in Hardin
County Saturday, three young women
were drowned while wading in the
river.
Miss Mamie Logan, aged 14; Miss
Emma Kerr, aged 23; Mrs. Edgar
Beaver, aged about 28.
A picnic party consisting of about a , ,.
dozen people went from Batson in wag- | atlAon tai1isi year-
ons to the Trinity River Saturday and
the three young women and Mr. Bea-
ver went wading in the river. The 3
women were together, while Mr. Bea-
ver was a considerable distance fur-
New York.—Indications point to the
bottom having fallen out of the auto-
mobile business. The manufacturers,
it is reported in trade circles, are
making strenuous efforts to keep up
a show of continued prosperity, but
it is also said that they are not sell-
ing their product, bub are storing ma-
chines throughout the country at their
various agencies to prevent the pub-
lic realizing the true conditions of
the market.
Several large concerns are laying
off men and giving all sorts of rea-
sons for so doing except the state-
ment that they are overstocked. Two-
or three of the largest factories re-
cently closed entirely, ostensibly for
the purpose of taking inventory, but
the workmen were not given any def-
inite time at which to again report for
work, and it is not expected that
these factories will again be in oper-
A well-known automobile agent of
this city said yesterday that all cars,
would undoubtedly be selling at from
25 per cent, to 50 per cent, less than
present list prices within the next
6HASTLY FIND IN A CANYON
Mutilated Body of a Woman—Believed
to Be That of Mrs. Ira
Kendall.
KANSAS FIRM BUYS BIG LUMBER PLANT
Sawmill, Train Roads and 35,000
Acres1 of Land—Price Was
About $800,000.
ther down the stream. It appears that tw° °r three months- He a,dded:
the three women stepped suddenly in- “The trouble with the automobile
to a deep hole, and, while the screams business is that toe farmers and peo-
attracted Mr. Beaver’s attention, he pIe o£ the smaller cities and towns
was unable to reach them before they have not tal^en as kindIy to the idea
drowned. It was stated in some of the aS W'aS anticiPated- The farmers find
reports that the young ladies waded that the cost of keePing them in re-
into quicksand and were unable to pull pair and °Peration is more than the
themselves out and that Mr. Beaver °°St o£ keepin& horses to perform- the
The Wrong Sort.
An old Irish peasant was one Sun-
day sitting In front of his cottag©
puffing away furiously at his pipe.
Match after match he lighted, pull-
ing hard at the pipe the while, until
at last the ground all round his feet
was stBewed with struck matches.
“Come in to your dinner, Patsy^” at
length called out his wife.
“Faith, and Oi will In a ihinute, Bid- «
dy, said he. “Moike Mulrooney ha®
been a-telling me that if Oi shmoked
a bit av ghlass OI cud see the shpots
on the sun. OI don’t know whether
Moike’s been a-fooling me or whether
Oi’ve got hold av the wrong kind of
ghlass.”—Scraps.
Why She Brought It Up.
"Do remember,” she asked,,
“that you said once that unless I
promised to be yours the sun would
cease to shine?”
“I don’t remember It now, but I
suppose I may have said something
of the kind.”
"And have you forgotten that you
assured me that unless I permitted
you to claim me as your own the moon
would fall from her place in th©
heavens ?”
“Oh, well, what if I did say so?
Why do you want to bring that up,
now ?”
“I merely wished to assure you that
I’m sorry I didn’t shut my eyes and
let her fall.”
was unable to help them.
same work, and while there was, for
The predicament of two men with-
their wives who were held into the
Santa, Rosa, Cal.—The mutilated
body of a woman with the head and
legs missing was found late Friday
in a canyon near the Kendall ranch.
The body has not been positively iden-
tified, but it is the(igeneral belief that
it is that of Mrs. Ira Kendall, who has
been missing with her husband and
son since July 26.
Charles Denove, a Japanese and a
friend of Henry Yamagachi, who is
suspected of the crime, was arrested
at Mesa Grande Friday. He told the
officers he had seen Yamagachi in a
night.
Zt°ac,CtlT°fall"re °f house at Mesa Sandea
engine of their gasoline launch, and
who were rescued only after the wom-
en had sacrificed their skirts as
torches, should recommend the lash-
ing of sweeps on the decks of such
craft, so that men can help themselves
In emergencies. A pair of muscular
arms applied to a sweep would soon
re-establish confidence after accident
by giving the disabled craft motion
enough to creep toward shore.
And now a Torrington, Conn., man
is planning to walk to California.
Isn t it about time for some ambitious
California citizen to set out to walk
east to New England?
That bitter taste in the mouth expe-
rienced on first arising in the morn-
ing, says an authority, may be re-
moved by taking a little nux vomica
mixed with water. Should the experi-
menter. however, desire to remove all
taste from his mouth permanently,
this can be accomplished by adding
mors nux vomica.
Reserve Agents.
Austin, Tex.—The department of in-
surance and banking Saturday approv-
ed the following banks as reserve
agents for state banks: West Texas
Bank and Trust Company of San An-
tonio for Bello State Bank of West-
hoff. American Bank and Trust Com-
pany of San Antonio for Chapin Guar-
anty State Bank of Chapin.
Houston, Tex.—-The Glen Lumber
Company of Kansas City has pur-
chased from the Benford Lumber
Company the biggest sawmill plant of
that concern, located at Benford, Tex.
on the Katy railroad, together with
tram roads and all logging and mill-
ing equipment belonging to that plant
and 35,000 acres of timbered land in
close proximity to the mill. The sell-
ing price was in the neighborhood of
$800,000. It is estimated that the 35,-
000 acres has upon it about 200,000,000
feet of pine and 50,000,000 feet of
hardwood timber.
This sale includes only the milling
plant and other property mentioned
and does not mean that the Benford
Company has been sold. That com-
pany still owns two other important
sawmills and valuable timbers and
tram road properties.
The bodies were recovered Sunday a time’ a tendency among the farmers
night. I to invest in the machines, the demand
for cars from this class of buyers has
practically stopped, and I venture to
say we will not again sell to the farm-
ers to any extent until prices are ma-
terially reduced.”
Charbon Made Clean Sweep.
Orange, Tex.—A. F. Womack, who
formerly conducted a large rice plan-
tation in Orange County, came to Or-
ange afoot from Jefferson County Sat-
urday, and made arrangements to
move to the city of Orange, as a re-
sult of the charbon, which he savs,
had killed every mule, horse and cow
he had. Mr. Womack is one of the
many rice farmers put entirely out
of business, he having lost eleven fine,
big mules since the 1st of July.
Good Roads Carried.
Beeville, Tex.—The election held in,w . . . ..
justice precinct No. 8 this week f r Peen met bu£ tkere are Parts of toe
Refused to Accept Building.
Alexandria, La.—The keys of the
city hall were tendered to Mayor J. P.
Turregano by Sam K. Bland on the
part of the United States Fidelity and
Guarantee Company, through Mr.
Marvick, foreman of construction,
Wednesday. The mayor refused to
accept the building on the ground that
it is not yet completed. The mayor
says that all claims, however, have
The Nurse’s Opinion.
A nurse had been called as a wit-
ness to prove the correctness of th©
bill of a physician.
“Let us get at the facts In the
case,” said the lawyer, who was do-
ing a cross-examination stunt “Didn’t
the doctor make several visits after
the patient was out of danger?”
“No, sir,” answered the nurse. “1
considered the patient in danger a©
long as the doctor continued Ms vis-
its.”
Long Balloon Flight Ended.
Danbury, N. H.—Ending a balloon
flight of 350 miles, the longest ever
made from Philadelphia, Dr. Thomas
E. Eldredge and Welch Strawbridge
landed at Danbury, N. H., Saturday, af-
ter having been in the air eleven
hours. At one time they reached a
height of 15,100 feet.
the purpose of voting $25,000 in bonds
for constructing good roads, has been
carried by four votes in excess of the
required two-third majority, instead
of having been lost by a small vote,
as was previously announced.
Solid for School Tax.
Markham, Tex.—At a
contract that have not been finished.
Strike Negotiations Off.
New York—Negotiations with their
employes, looking to a settlement of
the strike of cloak makers in New
/oik were declared off Wednesday
after a meeting of the Cloak, Suit and
Skirt Manufacturers’ Association. The
The Motive Power,
“A western editor says nobody was
ever hurt while taking a ‘joy ride’ on
the handles of a plow.”
“That’s where he’s mistaken. Many
a good man has been kicked by a
mule.”—Birmingham Age-Herald.
tion to determine whether or no^a 'failure o£ the strikers’ committee to
tax of 15 cents on the $100 valuation
should be levied to maintain the
schools of Markham independent
school district resulted in a vote of
35 for the tax and none against as
the sentiment was for the tax
reply to the terms submitted to it by
the employers was given as the cause
of this action.
On a Stygian Ferryboat.
Charon was ferrying a passenger
across the Styx.
“Fine scenery for my toothpowder
ad,” cried the shade.
Thus we see the ruling passion sur-
vives.
Extended Twenty Years.
Washingtong.—The controller of
the currency Saturday extended the
corporate existence of the Beckham
National Bank of Graham, Tex., for
another twenty years, or until the
close of business August 4, 1930.
First New Corn.
Temple, Tex.—The first new corn
offered in Temple for sale arrived on
Thursday, toe grower demanding 60c
per bushel for the corn in ear.
Oil Land Suit Dismissed.
Beaumont, Tex.—By an agreement
reached by attorneys Tuesday the suit
instituted in the district court at Lake
Charles for possession of the heart of
the Vinton oil field was dismissed.
Cotton Is Moving.
Yoakum, Tex.—Cotton has begun to
roll into Yoakum right along now,
seventy-two bales being marketed on
Thursday. These sold for an aver-
age price of 14 1-2 cents a pound,
which, with the price on the seed add-
ed, made about $6,000 turned loose by
cotton buyers on that day.
$50,000 Fire at Orange.
Orange, Tex.—The saw mill and
planing mill of the Orange Saw Mill
Company, a branch of the Miller-Vi-
doi Company, caught fire Wednesday
and was destroyed. The fire started
from sawdust and shavings near the
Excitement Subsided.
San Benito, Tex.—The excitement
caused by the shooting of the rangers
-- I xi::
estimated value of the property de-
stroyed by fire is $50,000. It is un-
was fully
day has aoout subsided. The Browns-
ville rifles have been recalled, and
while there is a large force of rangers derstood that the property
thei e, no trouble of any kind is feared, covered by insurance.
Cane Crop Fine.
Abbeville, La.—From present indi-
cations the cane crop in this parish
| will be the finest in a number of years.
Charge Cattle Stealing.
Beeville, Tex.—Clarence Hall, a
youth of 14, wearing knickerbockers,
was brought to town Saturday from
the northern part of the county and
placed under bond on a charge of
stealing cattle.
Sterling City Extension Open.
San Angelo, Tex.—The first train
over the Sterling City extension of the
Santa Fe was run Tuesday. A large
number of citizens on the road took
their first ride , on the first train.
Timber Fires Are Raging.
Bastrop, Tex.—It is estimated that
theusands of dollars’ worth of tim-
ber has been destroyed by fire which
has been raging in the pine hills east
of town the past week.
School Election Bond Carried.
Center Point, Tex.—The bonds to
build a $14,000 schoolhouse carried by
a large majority Wednesday. A spe-
cial for maintenance also carried by
a large majority.
No Trouble-
A Saucer,
A little Cream,
and
Post
Toasties
right from the box.
Breakfast in a minute,
and you have a meal as
delightful as it is whole-
some,
V*.
Post Toasties are crisp
and flavour y—g olden-
brown, fluffy bits that al-
most melt in the mouth.
“The Memory Lingers”
POSTUM CEREAL CO., LTD.,
Battle Creek, Mich.
t
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Boehmer, Joseph O. Eagle Pass News-Guide. (Eagle Pass, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 4, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 13, 1910, newspaper, August 13, 1910; Eagle Pass, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1098167/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.