The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 245, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 2, 1909 Page: 4 of 8
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E
THE AUSTIN DAILY STATESMAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMMBER 2, 1803.
COMING HOME.
Let Us Show You
8
General and Personal Gossip of the Various Departments
j. 1906.
ft
that we sell better Clothes
Manager
WAIT FOR
MILLIONS
ENCOURAGE
Fall Woolens are on dis-, .
INDUSTRY
DECISION
INVESTED
play.
AGRICULTURE
OSCAR ROBINSON
to know what to do until I heard of
CLOTHIER AND FURNISHER.
HE RECEIVED A LETTER EFFECT OF ACTION REPORTS WERE FILED
1
704 Congress Avenue.
DECREASE
FOR QUARTER
At a meeting of the state board of
The department of agriculture is de-
Forty-two of the leading railroads of
encourage home enterprises.
OVER TEN THOUSAND
peens and Northern railroad.
Southern
Fort Worth and Rio
mays:
This’ action on the part of the
Ed
6 2
Toxas.
f
ROY ADAMS OF DEVINE JOINS
THE
HAS RESIGNED.
ap-
corner
TE
42722284
cently resigned from the service.
L,
(
Our
V
)
*)
Ing a hat of the current season. Even
(Continued on Page,5.)
/
1
G.
*3
ONE OF THE BANK EXAMINERS.
4
E
Name
Adress ...
Idea of relaxation from toll In a
Yo
For Sale by all Cracaro
rtment is sending
the department.
,ut-
2,
h.
i follows:
, $111,562:
Captain J. *H. Rogers, commander of
Company G. State Ranger force, yes-
If life
And
The 2
. United
will hol
the fall
Septeml
room ir
So tha
Who
His soi
His
NEW RANGER APPOINTED
BY CAPTAIN J. H. ROGERS
Then
Tp
For nc
Has
ALL CHARTERS OF
PROVED WILL BE
VERIFICATION OF
Suits made to order,
120.00 and more.
ROLLING STOCK OF THE RAIL-
ROADS OF TEXAS AGGREGATE
SEVERAL MILLION DOLLARS AC*
CORDING TO REPORTS.
Renew Your
. Rosy Cheeks
STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION DE-
CIDES NOT TO BUY ANY MORE
• OF COMMON SCHOOL DISTRICT
BONDS.
No tlimtflaf
your doctor
at a Ionic f
Shoule
And
Good on Puddings—
Good on Cakes—
Good on anything where
sweet sauces are used
The pure juice of the
Louisiana sugar cane.
Good Alone—
Good on Bread—
ft
1
ft
22
Or live
Migh
Ca relet
Since
Or cle
Or i
Or out
That
A sweet you can eat every
day without surfeit
WANTS COMPLETE LIST
OF INCORPORATED TOWNS
She
I Fill nut
"cjrartment
it does not seem to have hurt the
autmobile trade yet, eo possibly th
early stories of drouth and crop dam-
age in Kansas are not as much to be
credited as they once were.
BIG NORTH TEXAS CONCERN
WILL AMEND CHARTER
Mrs. .
mother,
week fro
the wint
This Will Throw a Large Amount of
These Bonds on the Market Pend-
ing Settlement of Question Now
Before Courts of State.
t
8 ------ --------------------------------------------------------------------- !
ftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftft
Mr. i
again,
where
partmel
Mrs. L
in Loul
500 We
$€5,325.15;
14204: Wei
STATE BANK CHARTERS
ARE AGAIN BEIEG FILED
CLERKS GONE OVER TO
GENERAL LAND OFFICE
NO DECISION YET BY
THE LOCATING BOARD
STRICKLAND HAS RETURNED
FROM A TRIP TO MARLIN.
;ed
gor
There Is a Heap of Solace in Being
Ablo to Depend Upon a Well*
Earnod Reputation.
Mrs. I
a deligh
derson,
Navasot
TELEPHONES,
ess Office ............
rial Rooms
y Editress...........
Austin Statesman
d Daily by Austin Stateaman
Company.
Hearne and Brazos Valley,
atherford. Mineral Wells and
-AK
—
THE STATESMAN ABROAD.
—
n112
l
end in view the depa
out a letter to the
a
I
Another day has passed and no de-
ciBion has as yet been reached by the
to the West Texas normal.
OHlc No. 718 Congresa Avenue
Austin, Texas.
___
A Q. Smoot
o
_________. . Order •
rated town. In Doze nfrou Your.
Ie. be furnished I Local Druggist
DALLAS INSURANCE MAN
CONFERS WITH GOVERNOR.
endurance with that of hl. own city.
It is good to come home to Austin.
Thin, impoverished blood is what
makes people pale and anaemic.
This weakened and common con-
dition demands prompt attention
to avoid the development ot a spe-
cific disorder-- At this stage
Pabst Extract
feBesFTonic
cannot be too highly recommended.
Combining the staunch vigor of bar-
ley malt with the tonic properties of
choicest hops, it forms a liquid food
that is rapidly transformed into rich,
red blood and rebuilds and revital-
izes the muscles and nerve tissues.
Insist U/on it Being Paht.
the person from Austin a charm and
erg are not able or do not grow suffi-
cient stock to meet the requirements of
the Texas trade. He is receiving many
answers to these inquiries. JI; .. I;,
receipt of a letter from one of the
largest florists of South “
Over One Thousand Widows Get on
the Pension Rolls That Were Ex-
cluded Heretofore—Amount to Be
Received $ 11.25 Per Quarter.
Kansas, $71,471:
Grande, $51,252.63;
and have a look. Our new
be convinced unless you
come in and see. Come in
Austin. Each is something such as can
be found in no other city of Texas and
rarely in any portion of the United
Statos.
grow to supply the homa trade, and he
has taken the matter up with the
Texas nurserymen and florists. Ho is
trying to find out why the home grow-
STATE BANKING BOARD .
APPROVED FIRST CHARTER
RECENT DECISION OF ATTORNEY
GENERAL AS TO NEW BANK
HAS EFFECT OF CAUSING SEV-
ERAL TO BE FILED.
The state department of health is
making an effort to secure the num-
ber of incorporated towns in every
county in the state with a view of
keeping up with the sanitary condi-
tions throughout the state. With this
termined to do everything in its • education held late yesterday after- lthe state, which embraces all the roads
power to develop agriculture and hor- noon the board decided not to buy any that have and own their own rolling
ticulture in this state, and especlallyitoymore independent school district or stock, with ft tew exceptions, have filed
common school district bonds pending , their annual statements in the comp-
a decision in the Hillsboro case. This troller’s department showing the
for less money. You can’t
tion means coming homo to pure, clear
air, pure clear water, high standards
of education and refinement and the
$18,804; Houston East and West Texas,
$405,577.80; Beaumont, Sour Lake and
Western, $9900; Gulf, Beaumont and
Kansas City, $73,859.06; Texas and
SUCCEEDING C. L. STONE, WHO Southeastern. $26,060: Wichita Falls
and Northwestern, $15,405; Wichita
Falls and Oklahoma, $16,095: Wichita
) • i
- . not prevail because the amendment did
Hiei8.1n vet get majority of all the votes cast
r ' -- 52 at the elction, while on the other hand
-exas, who it has Been held that the amendment
For months Austin readers have seen
the constant expression of praise for
Doan’s Kidney Pills, and read about
the good work they have done In this
locality. Not another remedy ever pro-
duced such convincing proof of merit.
Joseph Everheard, 10 Rainey street.
dian premier In many years. It is a
; sreat change it British policy and of-
fiolal View to sound an alarm over the
great and immediate peril of loss of
position as n world power.
Those poor Arab sailors who muti-
nied at Galveston because they had to
work Saturay afternoons had the
board wiileause a flood or school dis- i onuir, F951.3212 ana I
Great Northern, $2,711,550; Cane Belt.
carried because it obtained a majority
“I assure you that I appreciate fhe of all the votes cast for the proposi-
keeping the permanent school fund In- _...___ ....
vested to the Ihmit in buying these 24209; Weatherrorg.Mineral.Wel8 and
bond.. Indeed, (here are practcaliy no Northwestemn, 3178803 Fort Worthsand
fund, to the credit of that fund just . Penver. SIty. <1.2(C.97S: Cott on Belt,
nt the present time $1,402,192.20: Texaas Midland, $245.137.,
at the present time.___ rexas central. $292,599; Missouri.
• Kansas and Texas of Texas, $1,802,295:
STATE RANGER FORCE,
AAlerinFEiapa*’‘Texas.
! All Burkhart. Georgetown, Toxas.
MM K. I- smith, san Marco., Texaz,
I O. Michel & Co . Marble Falls, Texa:
B. K. Voelcke, New Hrauntels. Texas.
1 Ward’s Pharmacy. El Paso. tesa..
D. II. Randolph, iaredo, Texas
- Kestro-Maruid Drug Co, Marlin.
of the state capital and be free from
arrest. Strange how the Texas legis-
lature does these things that delight
the heart of Satan, Possibly the Wash-.
Ington Satan is a different breed.
’ gaged in the recent unpleasantness
about it are likely to be out of their
jobs. It is well to be right, but It Is
not always wise to jam your superior-
ity down the throat of your employer,
either personal or political.
Lord Beresford’s plain statement of
the vosltion of Great Britain is the
most slgniffeant utterance of a Cana-
New that the question of whether or
not state banks organized since the
new banking law went into effect can
do business before January 1, 1910. har
boon settled, and it has been held that
’Those who have seen the manuscript
of Harry Traw’s story say it is the
best argument extant in faor of the
verdict of the jury. Now if Thaw had
not been pronounced an incurable
paranoiac would the readers of the
stuff he turned out have discovered
signs of madness? It is a safe bet they
would hot.
a hardy aviator knows enough to avoid
needless perils of the air. The coal
ecuttie hat holds wind enough to upset'
any ateering mechanism,
LITTL]
A coat li
verge is 11
ilk collar
lmade with
' This patt
and 8 year
of 97 inch n
5s 10 cents.
TO CO-OPERATE WITH NUR-
SERYMEN TO DEVELOP GROW-
ING OF NURSERY STOCK.
various count
The board Tuesday intimated that It
would reach a decision yesterday, but
all day yesterday the hoard remained
hopelessly tied up and unable to agree
a reality that shall compare for long
Penick a Ford. Lro.
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
BOARD UNABLE TO AGREE ON
PLACE FOR LOCATING WEST
TEXAS NORMAL—WILL LIKELY
REACH CONCLUSION TODAY.
_ .... .... .. was sumelently accurate to show the
Coming home to Austin after vacan weight of a man stepping aboard the
■ - barge.—London Dally Mall.
TESTED AND PROVEN guuunununnnunnonununnunueneunununununues
NEWS OF THE STATE HOUSE^
Newton M. Smith of Dallas. • state
agent of the Northern Insurance com-
pany of Loondon,,was here yesterday on
business with the department of insur-
ance and banking. While here he had
a conference with the governor. While
the nature of the conference was not
disclosed. It is said to have been con-
cerning the appointment of the fire rat-
ing board. The governor yesterday
evening indicated that the insurance
। people had not as yet submitted a man
•that was acceptable toshim on the
board
’Louis’ Book and Cigar Co- San An
tonoatTwtern Advertising Agency,
fi Main street, Dallas. Texen. ■
. All Nawa Stands- Southwestern
Newspaper and Adverttains Aseney:
No. 3(4 Main street, agents, and two
.. street carte. Dallas. Txas;
All News Stands -Southwestern
Newapaper and Adveitisins Agency,
agents, Fort Worth, Texn.
-‘Braxos Hotel News Stand. .Houston,
Texas. M.
A G. Laner, Houston, Texau.
Tremont Hotel News bland, Galves-
ton, Texas. „
W. A. Wentland, Manor, Texas.
------- . the mountains are grand, but neither
Walter Wellman will be back in am- shore nor mountains can hold forth to
t s . pie time for the usual stunt upon the
shown upon the office calendar and
when the shore reaorts begin to give
attention to discourse* of the pleasures
of fall at the seaside.
After all haw been said that can be
said ot almost any town or city in the
entire country there is hardly one to
compare with Austin as a place of res-
idence. The climate of this city is su-
perb. It is hot here In summer, but it
is not as uncomfortably hot as it is in
New York city or even in far "down
east" Portland,. Maine. The heat is
tempered by the gulf breeze or made
tolerable by the dryness of the atmos-
phere.
Then when winter comes tho cold is
small and the days of dampness few.
Merely In matter of clear sunshine
and fine air there is no place in thie
country that has any advantages which
are not to be had in Austin as well.
Health always comes first, and when
it la demonstrated that Austin is the
most healthful city in the southwest,
and that the southwest is the mom
healthful section of the country there
is established a sufficient basis for al-
most any claim or cause of preference.
There is no place like Austin for
healthy homes; air, water and other
conditions being fairly considered, but
when that has been said the baais for
the claim that it is surpassing in fit-
ness for a home Is but partly told. The
and 10 "The Tribune" ---------- -
York City; Western Business Office,
110* 11 "The Tribune" Building. Ch.-
cag. The 8. C. Beekw*h Special
Agency, Sole Agents Foreign Advert
tiinr. ,, «
Aulltorlum Annex News Stand.
sirability of Austin when the time and
comes for the vacation season to end: ’ had a great deal of trouble from my
. , ,, „ n <- back and kidneys and was -at a loss
when the first month with a big R is
are a great necessity. They ______ ...
the same relation to man’s higher at-
tributes (the development of his mind
and soul), as all food stuffs stand for
the upbuilding and development of
man’s physical frame. To grow and
cultivate flowers, ornamental shrub-
bery and trees, means catering to the
highest attributes of civilizatlon and
i.. it a ax a pride of Austin Is its University and
Eastern Business Office, 42, 44, 45 “E"
and 60 “The Tribune" Building. Men iits capitol. Each is a part of what we
hard refers was given by him in 1905. .2.2,20 __
and was substantially s follows: ’ I DEPARTMENT OF
Judge Kone’s attention has been
called to the large importation into
Texas of nursery stock which ho be-
lieves the Texas nurserymen should
'shed 1871, incorporated May
With a tariff bill to his credit Payne
has achieved the highest, ambition of
a chairman of the ways and means
committee. He might hope for the
speakership, but friends of Payne think
that hi services warrant the senatorial
toga, and his campaign will shortly be
launched.
City, Mo. . L ,
B. E. Amos, Loos A ngeles: Cal. -
I. Welnsteln, Denver, Colo.
H. M. Harris. Man tou, Colo.
Hutchinson Statlolery Co, Shreve.
port. La.
Union News Co. St. Louis, Mo.
STATE HEALTH DEPARTMENT
TAKES STEPS TO SECURE THIS
INFORMATION BY WRITING TO
COUNTY CLERKS OVER STATE.
It is part of the loyalty of every
community tgdeclare publicly, no mat-
ter what may be said in private, that
there is no place like the home of our
upbringing or adoption. Some cities
and towns are peculiarly lackig in at-
tractiveness, but still have their ad-
herenta and these give the public their
sturdy "no place like home," even when
they say privately that the town is a
dead and impoverished one and that
if they had not money invested there
they would not live in it longer than
until the first train out in any direc-
tion was due to leave.
One is impressed anew with the de-
trict bonds to be placed on the mer-
ket, as heretofore the board has been
Valley. $18,732; Rio Grande and Eagle
Pass, $21,950: Galveston, Houston and
Henderson, $90,097: Texas and New
Orleans. $1,974,622.28; Galveston, Har-
risburg and San Antonio, $4,399,491 25:
Orange and Northwestern, $15,786:
Southwestern railway. $2635: Marshall
and East Texas, $33,630: Abilene and
Northwestern, $34,762; Texas and Pa-
cific. $3,284,892; Chicago. Rock Island
and Gulf, $525,300.
The above does not include the
rolling stock leased b- the varionls rail-
roads of the state. The comptroller has
written to those roads that are de-
linquent to at once comply with tho
law requiring these statements to be
filed.
L. S. DENNING, DIRECTOR OF
LONE STAR GAS COMPANY OF
FORT WORTH AND DALLAS,
HERE.
I.. B. Denning, one of the directors oi
the Lone Star Gas company of Fort
Worth, was here yesterday to see tha
secretary of state about a proposed
amendment to thescharter of the com-
pany which was filed last June. 1 he
amendment has not as yet been filed*,
This is the company which was char-
tered last June with a capital stock
of $2,500,000 for the purpose of con-
structing a pipe line for natural ga<
from the gas fields in Clay county, with
D. F. Strickland, clerk in the sher-
iffs department of the comptroller's
office, returned yesterday ’ from Mar-
lin. where he has been spending the
past two weeks for his health.
This Stock in Many Instance* Has to
Be Imported Into Texas When It
Ought to Be Grown at Home—Text
of the Letter on the Subject.
clerks, requesting that the number an
names of the fncorpot
their respective couhti
Governor Johnson of Minnesota is
saying that he was closer to the presi-
dency laet year than he over will be
again, but one does not see anything
of that kind presented as a saying of
Colonel William Jennings Bryan.
It will be noticed that no aviator
6 has had as a passenger a woman wear-
is the case wherein Judge Wear of j amount of rolling stock owned in the
Hillsboro, in restraining the. holding state of Texas. The time for filing
_ . ’ . . . 5.. . these reports expired yesterday, and
of a bond election, held that the con- j t hose that are delinquent, must not
stitutional amendment voted on at the delay in complying with this law or
last general election providing that they may incur a heavy penalty. The
, , , , ..__ . road that have filed their reports and
bond elections may prevail by a major- . the amount of rolling stock owned in
ity instead of a two-thirds vote, did i the various counties in the state are as
a state bank examiner is detailed to
make an examination of the assets of
such new bank and pass upon its as-
sets. Several new state banks were
chartered yesterday, subject to these
restrictions.
Gulf. Colorado and Santa Fe. $1,858,-
455.78. Kansas f’ity, Mexico and Orient,
$178,900; Wichita Valley, $39,441;
Texas-Mexican, $40,392; Texarkana 1
As forecast heretofore in these
columns, Pension Commissioner
Holmes yesterday afternoon announced
the apportionment made for Confed-
crate pensloners and their widows for
the next six months, or the next two
quarters. The amount appropriated for
the next six months for Confederate
pensions is $250,000, which is the max-
iinum allowed by the constitution. It
was found that there are now -10.750 ?
pensioners on the pension rolks, of
which number 2249 are new pensioners
and 1269 Confederate widows. Com- /.
missioner Bolmes said that nine-tenths • (
of these widows of Confederate vet-
erans. who were heretofore exclded
from the pension rolls on account of
the law. but are row eligible to pen-
slons under the new law. Of the num-
ber of pensioners 318 come under tho
provision of the new pension law,
which grants a straight pension of
$8 per month for totally disabled vet-
erans. and those totally disabled, be-
ing blind and unable to care for them-
.selves. The sum of $15,264 is appor-
tioned for them for the next six months,
and 10,432 of the other pensioners
will get $11.25 per quarter for the next
two months. This is 75 cents less than'
was predicted for the quarter. This is
because it was estimated there would-
be approximately 19.000 pensioners,
but it was found that there are 10,-
750. This is a very low sum for the
old pensioners per quarter, as here-
tofore they have been receiving frqm .
$15 to $16 per quarter. This decrease .
In the amount, as indicated heretofore,
is due to- the increased nrmber of .
pensioners and the addition of those P
totally disabled and the 1269 widows
most of whom are new pensloners.
der a much higher service in way of
excellence to their customers, and pre-
vent losses and disappointment.
"There are no choke roses and car-
nations grown under glass in Routh
Texas, and there is no good reamon
why they are not grown. Hence, let us
get after it.
“We should also learn something of
the common flowerg that can be grown
outside in the fall and winter months
for all-round purposes and can be
relied on as giving satisfaction. All of
them, except the alliums, shold be
planted 4 to 6 inches deep in the ground
else you will have little satisfatiop.
Alliums should he planted three inches
deep. If pot culture is desired plant
them in a four or five-inch pot. Have
the pots filled with good ordinary gar-
den soil three-fourths full; then put
the bulb in and fill the remainder so
that there will be five or six inches of
goll over the top of the pot; leave them
theresunthhtheyare everal inches
grown out; then remove to a shaded
place for a few days, then expose to
the light and they will bloom perfectly.
“Xhe following I© a list of the best
roses for all round purposes and are
for everybody in pur Routh Texas cli-
mate. Those marked • are the best
forcing roses undr glass and are
grown by the milkions in the north,
shipped in all directions, and lots .of
them come south:
"Bush Roses— La France, white La
France, Duke of Albany, Maman Co-
chet. White Maman Cochet, *Kalserin,
•Meteor. Helen Gould. •Bride, *Frides-
maid, ‘Killarny, •White Killary,
Pearle des Jardins, Duke de Brabant,
•American Beauty.
"Cilmbing Roses—Marechal Niel
(yellow), Climbing Kalserin (white),
Rlene Marie Henrietta (cherry red),
Climbing Malmaison (blush), Climbing
Le France (silvery pink), Lauri de
Natton (red).
•‘Hoping to see this branch of argl-
culture vigorously encouraged by the
Texas agricultural department for the
benefit of civilization, and to the Texas
horticulturists, is my wish."
| Roscoe, Snyder and Pacific. $4000: San
Antonio and Aransas Pass, $865,070:
Houston and Texas Central. $1,758,-
465.17; Trinity and Brazos Valley,
$897,672; Wichita Falls and Southern.
$19,650; St. Louis, Brownsville and
Mexico, $654,910; Gulf and Interstate,
association of those who study all
glasses of technical and business prob-
lems with trained brains and ample fa-
ciuttas for carrying their studies to
beat results.
Coming home to Austin is like com-
ing home to no other city in the south
or southwest. The shore is good and
with a little care, and very little pro-
tection in case of a norther. Ordinarily,
it is held by the masses of the people
that flowers are a luxury, hence not . . -
needed, except for the rich. This lo terday afternoon announced the
erroneous. As a matter of fact, flowers ' polntment of Roy Adams of Devine,
icessity. They stand in Medina county, to be a private in his
ompany. Adams succeeds Clifford L.
Stone of Henderson county, who re-
_
PAYNE FOR THE SENATE
TO SUCCEED DEPEW.
Washington, D. C., Sept. L—Senator
Chauncey M. Depew completes his
term in the United States penate on
March 3, Illi. The choice of his suc-
cessor is already interesting tho pow-
ers "that be" in New York state. A
lot of things can happen in a year ana
a half. President Roosevelt may de-
cide that he wants the place, but at
present there is a movement looking
toward the ejection of C. C. Payne,
chairman pf the ways and means com-
mittee of the house, as the recipient of
Depew's toga. The staunch fight
which Chairman Payne put uv for the
house bill has been directly responsi-
ble for this feeling.
It is being pointed out here that
Payne enjoys the rare distinction of
being the first ways and means chair-
man in a generation who has been able
to bring a tariff bill through confer-
ence bearing any resemblance to its
original shape. His reward, his friends
think, should be elevation to the sen-
" Dally, svery Day and stndaz:Seml-
I w ^J^T^
day and Friday._____
TEntrea at th. Postoffice at Austin,
TeAL, at fcond-claw mall m.tt.r.
THEGTATESMANIN TEXAS.
(The Auntin Pally and Sundav
Statesman is on sale every day in the
year at the following new. stand; ana
zd “"72*58
upon the management of Tho States
ran by notifying thb ofice?
'Ferdinand Haraw. Han Antealo,
It is not absolutely a startling prop-
osition of the Hon. Bird H. Color that
the various investigations in New York
city are largely for the purpose of
giving some favorites easy Jobe. That
sort of graft has been in practice in
the great metropolis for many years.
How long ago was it that Rosa Tweed
ran things in the big city? Was not
grafting as bold and as lacking in
originality before Tweed as it was aft-
erward and when Croker was the un-
crowned king? ___
Ships as Weighing Machine*.
How the load of a ship can e qaick-
ly ascertained without actually weigh-
ing it was demonstrated yesterday by
Ewrd Beresford at the Temple pier
by ekperlmontes on a 200-ton parge.
The apparatus used is known as a
porhydrometer, and consists of a float
placed in the water, which is admitted
up a pipe fixed in the center of the
vessel. As the load is Increased the
Vessel naturally sinks deeper into the
water, and the water in the pipe rises
to a greater height, and the float thus
raWed throws a lever out of balance.
A sliding weight enables one to bring
it into balance again, and the position
of the weight on a scale shows the
amount of the load. The porhydrometer
makes the grand old earth more habit-
able for our fellow beings. The people
that do this in every walk of life, and
those that do this for a livelihood are
ag a class and as individuals desirable
citizens, hence, should be encouraged
in every way to do greater things.
"The following plants will.be found
to give good satisfaction for the fall
and winter months, and should bo
planted or sown from September 1 to
November 1, for outside culture. Those
marked • will stand several degrees of
frost:
•Sweet peas, “pansies,, •daisies, star
phlox, nasturtiums, aaters, poppies
(single and double), •candytuft, •sweet
alyssum. •calendulas (in variety),
"larkspur, mignonette, •snapdragon.
All of the above can be grown from
sed.
Bulbs of easy culture for fall plant-
ings, suitable for Routh Texas outside
culture—time of planting from Sep-
tember * to December 1—are:
Daffodils (double and single), Roman
hyacinths, Dutch hyacinths (all col-
ora), Hilum harrisil, allium meapolli-
tanurn, snowdrops, narcissus (in va-
riety). ‛
"This is a condensed list of the best
Great sums of money are to be ex-
pended upon southern railroads within
a few years. The enormous traffic
from the south and west lo the north
and east, has outstripped the mechan-
ical possibilities of procuring rails and
track bed to meet the rapidly Inereas-
ing loads. No better proof of the ehor-
mous’gains of the south In industry
could be offered.
Tennessee has never been considered
a land otrutfians. Many of the best
peaple in Texas came from Tennessee
and the state of their adoption has nt
al times been proud of them, and the
claim. "I am from Tennessee" has been
a sort of hall mark of high breeding.
It is shocking to read that even in
Fennessee a ruffian has been found
eo mean ns to waylay and beat almost
to death a poor minister on his way
home from a revival.
Figures of the magnificent cotton
crop of a year ago are impressive, but
in comparing he yield of that season
with the present one we must not
forget that the price for cotton is about
50 per cent more than it was when
most of the 1908 cotton crop was sold.
The Increase is more than comparably
large, for the cost of picking is much
less this yor than when planters were
bidding prices up last season in the
endeavor to get hands enough for the
work..
That permtekity Washington Herald
has learned that the game of dominoes
is especially dear to Satan's heart.
And right herein Texas a man haa to
go into his bedroom and plug the key-
BANKS AP-
SUBJECT TO
ASSETS BY
mean by home when we speak of
Doan’s Kidney Pills. I procured a sup -
ply at the Van Smith Dcug.company,
and through their use found, prompt
relief. I know of many .other persons
who have given this remedy a trial and
obtained just as satisfactory results as
I did."
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co, Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name—Doans—and
tako no other.
r lecture platform. We should feel great
. resignation if this were impossible.
Tag day has rather languished dur-
ing the summer, but it will be alive
again when the theatrical season opens
0 and the box office man is getting tho
tan off,his face. I
endeavors of the department of agri- i tion.
culture to do something to encourage ’
the home nurserymen and florists. It
is a good work and will result in much
good. I speak speclally of our coast
country section. Our people are send-
ing to foreign and out of the state flor-
ists annually $200,090 cash ofr cut
flowers alone, and from $89,000 to
$100,000 for plants whieh we ought to
grow. Thig enormous sum annually
amongst our state nurserymen and
fhorlsts would make them feel quite
comfortable and enable them to ren-
C. R. INGLISH AND A. L. KELLER
GET POSITIONS IN LAND END
OF THE GENERAL LAND DE-
PARTMENT.
The land business of the state is
now being transacted exclusively at
the general land oflice, the change from
the treasury department having been
made yesterday. Severai clerks were
added to the land oflice force by the
change. Among them are C. R. Inglsh
and A. L. Keller, old clerks in the land
ofee end of the treasury department.
J. O. Garnett of the land office was
j romoted to be chief boqkkeepar of the
land end of the general land office.
they can, new state bank charters are
again being filed. This, however, un-
der this new law, is not all that is
necessary for such new banks to do
business, but in addition thereto the board to locat
state banking board must pass upon The board T
each charter, and if it is approved, then *
Austin, Texas, says: "In 1903 I told
how Doan’s Kidney Pills had benefited
me and at this timhe I am glad to give
this valuable remedy my re-endore-
ments."
The statement to which',Mr. Ever-’
g{ETTe, thatutholaim
22""g?EPoor Appetite,
•VM ■ ■ “bB’Sick Headache,
dK Indigestion,
Gaa*95 Dyspepsia,
2728 Costiveness
"/98,/*8 and Malaria
has,been- posi-
•A-dE*a5 tively proven
AMsedgh during its 56
28353 years befor
*220632*/ the public.
on the place and site. Announcement
■was made yesterday evening that the
board would likely reach a decision to-
day. Yesterday afternoon the mem-
bers of the state board of education
met with the locating board, and an
agreement was reached wherein the
board„ofFlucation has agreed not to
deduct any of the donations made by
those bidding for the institution from
the state appropriation of $50,000. The
locating board wanted to be certain
about this point before the location is
made.
Lieutenant Governor Davidson, a
member of the board, said;
"The wording of the statute govern-
ing this, selection, the great extent of
terr itory to be considered, the great-di-
versity of interest within that territory
and advantages and .disadvantages
presented, offer problems which it is
difficult for the. committee to solve.
The committee has labored diHrently
to find a .wise and reasonable solution
and the decision, when reached, will be
unanimous. The members of the com-
mittee are very anxious to have the
question settled."
in5onz1Da New. Ca., Tacoma, wash.
’ kickseoker New, Eland, Kansas
The state banking board met yester-
day and passed upon its first applic a
tion for approval of a bank charter.,
The board approved the charter of the.
First State bank of Honey Grov, suh-
Ject to verification by one of the state'
bank examiners. Bnk Examiner Hobby ’
was detailed to make an .examination
into the assets of the company. Com-
missioner love said that.thjs would be
the step followed in the case of eyery
application for the orgniztion of
state banks.
ro country, but they did not have the hole with cotton before he dares play
reeot numbers back or the idea, and a social game of seven-up,, but the
nat u tn reason they went to jail bruzen player of dominoes is free of
iwtoad’ ot having speeches made to any Iterterence and might even in-
em. duge la tho sintut game upon the «teps |
All But a Few Lines Hava Complied
With the Law and Filed Annual
Statements Showing Rolling
Stock All Over State.
Empire News Stand, Chicago, III.
Dagle News Co, Tenth and Main
Streets, Kansas City, Mo.
World “ews Co., Memphis, Tenn.
Hotaling’s News Stand. No, I Park
Row. New York City.
Hotallng*s News Stand.
Broadway and Vhrty-eighth street.
New York City.
Hotel Raleigh Mewe Stand. Wash-
Mobile is complaining that the 1m-
medinte effect of the prohibitory laws
in that state ls a large number of un-
i ; tenanted houses in Mobile and the de-
mand for lower rents by tenants of
. * the houses who are, qulk to see the
lesson of the empty buildings.
I < Benzoate of soda eeems still to be in
r' existence, but some of the people en-
—
Bu
*
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION
(In the City by Carrler.)
One Month—in advance..............
t Three months—in advance....... 2
Hix months—In advance.......... 425
One Year -in advance............ 3V
E . (y Mal 0s
one Menth-1n qdvance........... 9 2
One Year- in advene*............ 6-0
Bunday only, one year- <U advance 15“
iemi-Weekly. on« year............ 1,00
APPORTIONMENT MADE BY PEN.
SION COMMISSIONER BOLMES
for the ensuing six
MONTHS.
S.
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 245, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 2, 1909, newspaper, September 2, 1909; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1464138/m1/4/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .