The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 250, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 7, 1910 Page: 1 of 8
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T
4-
The Austin Statesman
FULL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SERVICE
SECOND OLDEST PAPER IN TEXAS
AUSTIN, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1910.
WHERE COLONEL ROOSEVELT DELIVERED HIS AFTERNOON ADDRESS IN SAINT PAUL
I
AT
STRING AGAIN
MIMS GET NINETY-EIVE MILLIONS MORE
S
HEAVEN WILL
NG.
NEVER
TICLE LIKE
IO
AS PEOPLE
o
I
EER
i
at the
ANTONIO.TEX.
428 000 last
DURANCE
MH ffl OB CAR UUTGOMMISSIONERS ™ “
tional
ABE WELGOMED
GUNSERVATION
(Continued oh Par* 3,)
Mr.
2
)
CLOUDY.
orders that no Bovthern Pacific cars
PARKS FOR PALESTINE
SUMMARY OF NEWS
were to he run into. Central shops
WEATHER FORECAST.
GENERAL
there were
DOWNSTAIRS
eml
members of the diplomatie
Temple, Texas. Sept •.—While
en-
members who formerly had been re-
rted to be strongly in favor of vin-
restraint of trade.
things t
soon be
STATE
X
$
stum
LOCAL.
Dstrict
Judge
of
disqualification
re’s a Reason"
Road to Well villa,”
the cause.
(Continued on Page 3.)
was manager.
aast Year But High Price
iffsets the Deficiency.
ROOSEVELIT 01
0SAWATOMIE
Mexico City, Sept. I,— Commissioners
to the Mexican centennary celebration
ion it has paid 966
Lob.
d in the courts nine
Loo.
LIMELIGHT IS
DUE BALLINGER
GARFIELD, BLANCHARD AND PAR-
DEE SPEAK TO SMALL AUDI.
ENCE. BUT MAKE SOME
INTERESTING AND
NEW POINTS.
784 and under that of 1907-09 of 962,-
208.
TheBe, Colonel Hester says, consti-
tute the face of the figures. but con-
The report of the crop In the prin-
cipal statew le given aw follows:
STATE
SERVICE THAT 13
UNEXCELLED
REAL
w
(
e Company
ERN PACIFIC REFUsES CALL
TO QUIT WORK PENDING
ADJUSTMENT.
cts many aches
caused by coffee—
COLORED MEN FLYING
AHEAD OF IT.
present toi
bers, staff (
. in the black land section.
Heavily armed posse near Parti is
hunting tor Tucker, charged with kill-
that occasion
lay aj! of the
officers of the
Sidney Smith
Ing ground to
trafn.
(Heating the secretary were inclined to
modify views previously held in this
i here
clear
AS "NEW NATIONALISM"
noon.
Governor Blanchard of- Louflana,
fcrmer Governor Pardee of California
and James R. Garfield delivered' ad-
d reeses favoring national control of
natural resources.
stant the throng of peopl
4 their feet waving their hi
cushions into the air and
defeating roar of welcome
The colonel talked for I
on good citizenshipi He #
growers.
president Dias receives commission-
era of several nations attending cen-
tenary exhibition.
Roosevelt speaks before Conserva-
tion congress at St. Paul.
Report of committee upon Ballinger-
Pinchot affair Is likly to be made
ee
lx escapes ba- , months iconsidering, the evucunc4
under moving taken during the extended hearing in|
I Washington.
Florida. 66,000 vs. 75,000; Georgia, 1,-
.... ________________ 972,000 vs 2.118,000: Lobisiana, 282.000
renters, the south for the third con- vs. 485.000: Oklahoma 566.000 vs. 704. -
secutive season manufactured ----- “■ ----------- -------
tion. It was said, but
parant authority, that
NONE OF STRNIERB (1 J0UTH-
respect, Tvtit to what extent wks not
determined.
The roinprity report, which will be
signed by Senator W. F. Purcell of
North Dakota. Senator Duncan A J.
Fletcher of Florida, Representative
Ollie M. Jamies- of Kentucky and Rep-
public at once.
Special commssioner finds the Har- por
vester company a trust and combine in dici
Alabama 1.078.000
CITY VOTEE TO CREATE TWO BIG
BREATHING PLACES AND
TO IMPROVE THEM
ADEQUATELY.
settlement of the J. J. Dimmit estate.
This special term of the court was
New Orleans, Sept. 6.—In spite of a
abort crop year the south obtained
mors money for its cotton during the
past season than ever before in its his-
year; Arkansas, 718,000 vs. 1.05*!.000;
PRESIDENT DIAZ RECEIVES IN
FORMAL FUNCTION PERSONS
WHO REPRESENT MANY
nations of the
WORLD.
DOCTRINE ENUNCIATED IN HIS
KANSAS SPEECH MADE MORE
CLEAR IN DISCOURSE AT
ST. PAUL
the 1ead which It held tast season. South Carolina 1,784,000 vn. 1,298,000;
Today’s Hester’s report contatns A ‘ Tennessee etc.. 314,000 VR, 4 28,000
detailed account on the crop which Texas. 2,476 000 „ 1,819 n00. Total
was put out at the close of bustnesst crop 10 810.000 n. 13.87S.OOO.
Grandstana at the etale fair grounds in BL Paul. In front of which the former president of the United States epoke to thousands who weta at-
tending Minnesota's annual exposition, conceded to bo ue greatest of its kind in the United States. Presbeent Tatt spoke at the same place the
day before.
DBErER
GiT A
MBREMERA
Pacific except -at Ran Antonio and
Alglers, where the car repalrers and
inspectors are not amlated with the
Brotherhood of Railway Carmen, Vice
President Lewis hs asked the super-
cabinet .me
army ahd
corps.
• Dimmit Case on Trial.
Taylor, Texas, Sept • — A special
term of the district court for the
Twenty-sixth judicial district of Texas
is in session at Georgetown this week.
importation for aeon-! from the United States, Honduras,
ference to go over the points/it issue Austria- Hungary, Costa Rica, Halva-
of the Brotherhood. If all the repairers ‘ credent la la to Preslent Maz and Were
Washington, Sept. 6.—East Texas—
Partly ctoudy Wednesday; fair Thurs-
day; light variable winds on the coast,
west Texas—Cloudy and unsettied
Wednesday; Thursday fair.
INVESTIGATION COMMITTEE IS
LIKELY TO MAKE PUBLIC IT8
FINDINGS AFTER REPORT
IS PRESENTED AS
COMPLETE.
Palestine, Texas, Sept, g.—Ths prop-
erty tax payers of Palestine today
voted to issue bonds for the purchase
of two parks at a cost of $17,000 and
fire fighting equipment to amount q
$9000.
One of the parks contains twenty-
two acres, the other twenty. and they
are situated north and south .of the
railroad. Two thousand dollars of the
money. voted’will be spent toward the
improvement of the parks.
DROUTH LITTLE FELT.
orfieiat Repor at Taylor Show. Crope
Ar. Good, Pospite Aain Deficieney.
Taylor. Texas. Sent~6—The alapta-
bility of the black land r 1 of William-
son county to withstand long periods
of excessive drouth and Mill produce
good crops is best shown by figures ob-
tained from the local weather bureau
service, giving the annual rainfall at
Taylor for the last eight years. The
average normal precipitation at Taylor
is given by the observer at 85.47 inches,
and. the average for the last eight
years, since the service was frst en-
tablished here in 1902, is 82 08 inches.
Last year (1909)- the precipitatlot
was only 20.72 inches, showing a de-
ficiency of 14.75 inches. For the first
eight months of this year only 10.85
inches have fallen, showin a deficiency
no far this year at 14 ihches and an
accumulative deficiency tor last year
and this of 38.75 inches to date.
With 34.32 inches of rainfall in 1908
Taylor received 32.800 bales of cot-
ton. and last year with only 20.72
inches of rainfall th# receipts at Taylor
reached 26,600 bales.
The annual rainfall at Taylor for the
Houston, Sept. •.—None of the
striking icarmen on the Southern Pa-
cilice returned to work this morning
and it is stated that the call will go
forth tonight railing out every man on
the Atlantic division of the Southern
convening yesterday, for the purpose
of trying the camse of Dimmit vs. Dim-
mit which is in reality three cases
co nebldated into one and involving the
----- ------- more 000; Missiesippi, 1,712,000 vs, 1,673,000;
cotton than the north and increased North Carolina, 676 000 vs, 747.006;
without ap-
the republican
Car repair men on Southern Pacific
remain ‘but. •
-Statistics prepared at Taylor show
that drouth has little effect upon crops
and wherever the jurisdictions overlap
neither should withdraw, but by co-
operation provide for such regulation
as wW prevent private and special in-
terests from escaping the effect of pub-
lic regulation and supervialon.
"For example, the proposition to
transfer the several public lands adapt-
ed to the use of reservoir dam sies is
absolutely wrong. It is ot an in-
fringement of the rights of the states
for the nation to keep and provide for
the use of such land* but would be a
flagrant violation of duty if the nation
gave away its power to safeguard the
public interests against the conserva-
tion of special interests that are seek-
ing to monopolise the water power of
the country,"
Herbert Knox Smith, United States
commissioner of corporations, also a-
dressed the convention.
• Governor Blanche rd of Loulalana
August 31. That report placed the crop
for 1909-10 at 10,609,688 bales, a de-
crease under that of 1908-09 of 3,215,-
_________ _______ _ __________ Greenville, Sept. •.—William Deaton,
took a decided stand against the theory aged 17 years, was fopnd dead in the
of states’ rights as applied to tbe con- |street here at 5 o'clock this morning,
servation of national resources. "I/He war killed by a live wire whigb
fully endorse the address of Mr. Gar- I snapped during an electrical disturb-
fleld," he sald. ? There was "a time} ance last night. The body was badly
when th* question of state rights w«x burned.
under the homestead .aot, water power
reservoirs taken as mineral interests.
Such cases as thee* can be prevented
only by vigorous executive action and
never ceasing vigilance of executive of-
ficers.
"Exactly as the cry of executive
usurpation was raised, so now the
ghost of states’ rights is dragged to
frighten the people. There li no real
conflict between nation and states in
dealing with the public lands and the
use of natural resources, Each juris-
diction has got interests to safeguard,
duties to perform for the common good.
-jority repot to be made by the repub-
licans is not known. It is reported that
the decision has been reached to vin-
dicate Secretary Ballinger.
Contrary reports also were in dreuia-
SAFE STARTS
WITH FOUR
resentative James M. Graham of
Illinois, wMI. It i8 said, approve of ths
nuntng mr rucaer. cnareed wan K1- ccursu of Gifford Pinchot, former cheir
Mr., Bettte White at Hou.-
ton remele unexplained, but probably Eiavrs, the AlCNare chief of a Held.
",TU« o he” se.ox.drusheon h.. ' drvislon or the generat land omen
Inez BoX. who wanderes from har ThB detail, of the minority Nnsng»
home.‛n.Hounton."aiiniwiskoundwer not dlnclosed, bul there 1. no
rixteen.miles away, havine walked farjdoubt that the report will condemn the
in .04 Su. man vwea 3 n„_l action, of the seeretary. ot the Interior
„Greenzitleuzouns.manxniec.byip2ara Nie part In theaiapute
wtre "hchhad fallen Into a street dur | Repregentative Kdawrd H Madison
safe ram down stalrs at Templelor’Kansan a.republicansinsurzent.will
a.A AAe-n. wW, wAr. nrvrn. it support the democratic members in the
and,fatsanr"Te whow"dre P ! to be mad- »’ the senmon tomor:
Temple mayor mako, war upon auto I row.oyer arancinton,to,maw puhusat
-nA m’nrvci -weeae,u ! once trie findings of tn* committee.
rtSSSSTVotesTi ”»e two targe mhet nhe '«»'< wi there l.
parka and also "Appropriates money to i nttie doubt, unlos the republicans de-
put them in shape. J elde to the quorum.
-- t ncidentally. Mr. Madison has pre-
| pared a separate minority renort. .
The nature of the independent find-
Dintrtet courts down to work. Ing of the Kan... member could not
Austin bankers oppose reduction of be learned, but it can authoritatively
•Ise of 35 bills t be stated it will uphold Mr. Pinchot. .
Directors of Business eague meet. The democrats plan to introduce nt'
Arthur Keiser is at She point of tomorrow's pesston a resoluton a"-
death at Seton Infirmary and George thortzing the committee to make
Kern is in Jail charged with assault known as soon as poszle th* decsion
to murder. +ef the memberH whe have spent
Minneapolis. Sept •.—Democratic
members of the Ballinger-Pinchot in-
vestigation committee which will re-
port tomorow, practically have agreed
on their report in the notable con-
troversy and at tomorrow's session
ana fraud. NEGROES JUST "BBAT IT
have been perpetrated under the guise _______ -
of technical compliance with lawn
which in fact did not apply to the char- ( MONSTER IRON
acter of the land obtained or the. use
to which it was put For example
timber and coal lands have been taken
Char’** A. Wicox to pass upon IL A
nnmbr of jurors from Taylor are in
attendance, and 11 is thought-the entire -
wenk will be consumed in the trial of
blT RETURNS FROM
RK PURCHASING TOUR.
t returned to the city St-
froi New York and other
es, where for the past six
ha been busy selecting new
he fall and winter season
dlt.& Davis ladies' store.
[ say a his purchases for the
on In point of quality and
ar surpass any previous
being especially true of the
Temple, Texas, Sept 6.—Mayor Fred
P. Hamin has inaugurated a vigorous
crusade against reckless and fast
driving of automobiles and motor-
cycles and as the result of orders given
the police to arrest all such offenders
the drag net was spread yeeterday and
five offenders taken in charge. One of
the cases was tried and resulted in a
conviction, the experience costing the
party about 830. Th* anti-speeding
ordinance will be vigorously enforced
hereafter as public complaint has be-
come so clamorous that it will require
heroic measures to give satisfaction.
When he appeared on the platto
the people who first caught sight
him began to cheer. The cheer t
<aught up by others and in an
Let Schools Open. j
Texas, Sept. 5. Burnts
the Burnet high school and
e high 8 hool, opened this
h a good attendance. , (
amed is-fn charge of Pro-!
| Brown and the latter of
previous day. As on
Hester’s Annual Statistics Are Far From Dry and
His Deductions as Simply Illumining as
to Chief Product of Texas Lands.
a real ismue, hut it seems strange to me ————----
as a southern democrat, that now there ; Rosebud Light Plant Sod.
comes a report from the west that con- Temple, Texas, Sept. .-I J. Nath-
fervaton must be abandoned by the; an who controls the ice factory and
central government and turned over to . el trie Hgh plant at Marlin has re- -- ------ ----- --——
.the tener mercles of the western1 centy acqufred the Rosebud electric । celled for In this cause because of Ihe
states. light plant which he will improve and
a..______ "All the people are owners of the I continue in operation. It is the inten-
3 spent; national ’domain, not merely the peopl* tion to add an ice factory to the plan,
evidencel who. happen jo lve in the alatea in The latter was formerly owned by a
• j --------------- stock company of which M- M. Kemp
gaged in moving an iron safe weighing
3000 punds from the sidewalk to the
second floor of the Masonic building
yesterday with the aid of a block and
tackle and crowbars, four negroes were
compelled to do gome fast and fancy
sprinting in order to prevent their be-
ing crushed under th* safe. The Imn
monster got from control as the kind
wheeele were being lifted on the top
landing. A tearing and fending sound
conveyed a hint to four negrose work-
ing with crowbars behind the safe,
which was sufficient to make them all
of onemnind and there ensued the wild-
est scramble for safety that each had
ever known. By putting on ful) steam
they managed to keep a streak of day-,
light between ' their heels* and the
pursuing iron monster, but at the
windup had very little margin to
boast of. -
Outside, of a comphete fright admin-
istered to the darkles and several
Broken steps there was no damage
done. _______
BOY FOUND KILLED.
Greenville Yot Caught by Live Wire
Some Time During Night.
The Amerloans received were Con-
gressman David J. Foster, chairman of
th* commission; Lee H. Overman, Sen-
ator Coe I. Crawford, Representative
Gcorge W. Fairchild. Representative
James I. Slayen, Justice James W.
Girard, General Harrison Gray Otis
and Colonel Charles A. Rook.
Special ambassador to the centen-
nary from Spain, Captain General Ca-
milo Polavleja, and other members of
the Spanish commission, arrived here
tonight from Vera Crun, as did mem-
bers of the Venezuelan commission,
Eudoro Uraneta, Carlos D. Cubillan
and D. H. Pinango LAra, and the Por-
tuguese envoy, Vicente A’t*. minister
from Portugal tn ths United States.
D. R. Marques e Asededn. naval at-
tache of the Rrzlltan legatiqp in
Washington, headed the Brazilian com-
mission. which also arrived tonight.
A novel feature of the parade nf
school chlldren was the repeating by
them in unnon as they gathered in
th* plaza before the president of th*
following form of ozth: .
'Oh flag; Oh three-colored flag: oh
flag of Mexico. In this year and in
this month in which the republic has
complete her first century of inide-
pendent life, we promise with all our
hearts to evrr unite around thee as the
symbol of our native country, free, ever
victorious."
for repairs, thus keeping the line
of disputes with the men.
go out over 1200 men will be involved. I formally welcomed by him at noon to-
The HouMon and Texas Central issued. day.
Immediately preceding this cere-
Government Central of the Country‛•
Natural Resouroes Instead of State
Control la One ef Hie
Chief Demands.
mony a parade of 60,009 schol chird-
ren was reviewed by the chief execu-
tive who, surrounded by th members
of his cabinet oceupied a balcony in
th* national palace.
The presentation of th* commission-
era was carried out with al] the for-
mality which characterised th* recep-
tion of th* special ambassadors on the
St. Paul, Minn., Sept. President
Taft monopolized the conservation con:
home his policy for the conservatl<m of
natural resources. The crowd tor the
most part followed him to the stat*
fair grounds, leaving a meager audi-
ence, half of whom were women, to
listen to the addresses of the after-
1. M. Barton, __
lohn Kane. Galveston.
kind coats. The nev
dally and will
spection.
— 5
Total of Bales IsB5
for This Pro
' MAYOR HAMILL CP TEMPLE OOM
OUT WITH DRAG NET FOR
AUTO AND MOTORCYCLE
CRANKS. \
St. Paul, Minn., Bent. «.—The oc-
trine of "new nationalism," which for-
mer President Roosevelt enunciated in
his speech at Osawatomie. Kan., last
week, was set forth still more clearly
by him in his specch today before the
National Conservation congress here.
He declared for government control
of the country’s natural reaourcea, and
ir doing so placed himself directly
against the advocates of "states’ ,
rights,” whose opposition to the prin-
ciples which he laid down has furnished
the liveliest debates of the conservation
congress,
"If it had not been for corporate in-
terets, especially those whioh may be
described as predatory, we would never
have heard of this question of states"
rights,” hie declared. And later bo
said:
"It is not really a guestion-of states
against nation It is really a question
of special corporate interests against
the people."
He eaid the corporations were anx-
ious to have the states take up the
work that they might escape all offec-
tive control.
Throughout his speech Colonel
Roosevelt mphasize the need of giv-
ing over to the national government
the task of carrying on, in ths main
part, the work of conservation.
The outbursts of applause which
greeted Colonel Roosevelt as he deliv-
ered his speech in the auditorium were
as long and loud aa any he hae kwacd
daring his western trip. The people of
Minnesota demonstrated that they can
be as enthusiastic as the people of
Kansas when Colonel Roosevelt comes
to town, Minneapolis and t. Paul
dropped work for the day and turned
out to see the colonel. Every where
he went about the twin cities there
1 were masnes of people lining the xtrer an
to see and cheer him. Thousanda
cheered him as he rode by and bonds
played.
Colonel Roosevelt arriving at the
capitol, a salute of twentyone guns
was given him.
Colonel Roosevelt arrived in Minne-
apolis at 7 o'clock this morning, and
• he reception committee was ready for
him to take him to breakfast. After
breakfast ne come by automobile to
St. Pasi, made his speech at the con-
servation congress, had luncheon, and
then went to the state fair grounds,
between this city and Minneapolis. At
the fair grounds he addressed the larg-
eat crowd of the day. Returning to St
Paul, he went to the house of Frank
H Kellogg for a rest and then attended
J dinner by Colonel Alexander O.
Urode of the Rough Riders. He left
tonight for MIwaukee, where he is to
spend tomorrow.
Colonel Roosevelt made a number of
additions to the speech which he had
prepared for the conservation congress.
Most of his inter potation a were made
to emphasise his statd for '"new na-
tionalism.”
In speaking of the federal control of
corporations, he said:
"I should like to see the people,
through the national government, give
full justice to the corporatlons, but I
do not want the national government
to depend only upon the good win o^
• he corporations to get justice for the
pepple."
In regare to the control of water-
"ax? by rallwaya. Colonel Roonevelt
"We people must not ill by mad lot
the interesta gain control of the hoat
Ines and then say that the men at the
head of the railway, an vary bad peo-
ple, if you, Inara It to them to dot
control of the boa* linen, wome of them
are wure to do IL and it la to your In-
ternet that the bent and ablest among
them should do so. But don't let any
or them do it, except under the con- .
aitigns which we lay down.
"tn other words, when you of your
own will permit ehe rules of the rams
to be such that you an absolutely cer-
tain to mt the worn of >t at the hand*
or someone else, do not blame the other ■
man. Change the rules ot the game."
The colonel advocated Arainge of
swamps and 'overflow lands chiefly
through the activity of the federal nor-
ernment. He defended the work done
to extabiish the national forests and
recommended the establiahment o ,
federal bureau of health.
When he came to apeak of the na-
tional conservation committee he made
what ww interpreted here as a sharp
rue4* Cohgrossman James <
.W 20. Colonel Roosevelt reached th*
•lets fair groundn he found what he N
said was the largest crowd he had seen 9
on his western tri waiting to hear hl* - N
"peech. The grandstand, which hold* A
an Immohse crowd, was oiled end the 28
eround in front of it and to both side* ‘ "3
of the platform on which the colonel H
stood was crowded with a throue 1
which extended beck further than the i
colonel's votes could be heard.
"I thoroughly enjoyed my trin Ma
throuzh the west," he snia. “But this 3
is the most extraordinary audience I
have yet even "
■last etghe years is given as follows;
Tear. Inches.
1902. .................. 22 13
........................28.24
............. >2.91
103.................... 34.19
9/22202222212022235
ioap
1910 (eight months)..........
Cotton crop of the season just closed will make an effort to secure authority
was short of predecessors but high to give out immediately the findings of
price made it more profitable to the the whole committee.
While the exact nature of the ma-
Touching on th* cotton consumptton
by .southern mills the report says:
Th* spindles in the south number
11,583.359, including old, idle and not
complete Three years ago Consump-
tion in th* cotton states was ahead of
th* rest of th* United States 220,000
bales: last year the excess was nar-
rrwed to €0,000 ard this year it finei
again inereasea to 170.000. This refer
to America. The north used nf foreign
cotton this year the equivalent in this
year’s American weights or 138 ano
bales, while the south used the equiv-
alent of 15,000, hut even with these
added the south is ahead in both
American and foreign cotton to the ex-
I J. Richey, teachere of
putationF, and who have
conduced these fnstitu- /
Lumber of years. The pu-
hers of each school and A .
r nf patrons gathered at? t
hool auditorium where ad- L
1 made by feachers and »
itizens Everything points
ccessful term.
tory, according to the season-end sta-
tistics put out today by Colonel Henry
G. Heater, secretary and statistician of ________ _ _____________
the New Orleans exchange. sidering the falling off in weight, which
The money value of the crop, not in- 'averaged 6 68-100 per bale there ia
eluding cotton seed products, amounted . an equivalent of 138,000 bales, or a
to 5771,884,085, showing that while the ' crop equal to only 10,472,000 bales of
quantity of cotton marketed was. in • last year's weight.
round figures, 3.315.000 bales less than According to the report th* grade of
last year, better prices for cotton re- the erop was good, averaging practi-
suited in its bringing,$95,099,601 more: tally "strict middling middling," a
The nearest approach to this record I hare shade under last year, but not up
was made in the season of 1906-07; to the latter in body and strength and
when the total value of the commercial length or staple. The average price
crop was 3716,352,265. of middling cotton for the year is
When the value of the cotton seed, place at 14.37 rents per pound, and
$124,000,000, is added, the actual t the aerage commercial value of the
wealth-producing capacity of the bales at 873.41. against 349.48 last year
southern cotton lands is shown to j and 858 for the year before.
have been 8902,894,095 during the past' The report places the actual growth
season. at 10,389,000 bales, anu says that as
During the previous season, that of I the result of the high prices the In-
1908-09. the value of all cotton pro- I terior has practically been swept clean,
duced waa 888X794.494. and the cotton ' farmers having little nr no cotton left
seed was valued at 892.000.000, making • over and southern mills’ stocks having
a total of 8775.794.494. Thus during beeng materially decreased,
the past season the value of the cotton
and cotton seed combined surpassed
the previous season by more than
•125.000.000. _
According to complete reports from
both northern and southern milling
c-.-
Hotel Arrivals— E. P. Phil-
li; Charles G. Johnson and
bort; Carrie Johnson, Rocky
Davis, Oklahoma City; MIm
L Beaumont; Mrs. C* A. Lord,
I Mattis Perry, Cherokee,
Lie May Kuykendall. Chero-
[Davis. Aubrey; Mrs. T. I.
| son, Uvalde; P. R. Ander-
ptown; C. H. Lemuel, Lam-
W. Needham, Burna; J. L,
oustin; J. E. Moran, Waco;
hell, Victoria; L. M. Wood,
I H. Wood, Victoria; T. D.
[Victoria; R. H. Wood, Vic-
. Linstrum, Georgetown; G.
| reedmoor; J. P. Lockhart,
|ll Traweek, Mason; Vela
lion; Gertrude Btuard, Ma-
ifth. Mason; Mrs Ed Smith,
|1. Henderson, Fort Worth;
orough, Goldwafthe; E. B.
Saba; J. R. Chawning, San
V. Dean, San Saba; F K.
■wife, Taylor; R. E. Flir-
ESTABLISHED 1871—VOL. 41, NO. 250.
mciM
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 250, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 7, 1910, newspaper, September 7, 1910; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1533265/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .