The Albany News (Albany, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, January 24, 1930 Page: 8 of 8
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Stock Law Election
Some timr t petition w.i pr -t• t-ie < u nm - ;ion« •
Court .tskiritf t'nat in "lection !>«• call« «l to «!• t«*r nine a • • • -11• ' or not
Htock should ! «• p< nnitt« <l to run at lain- \ctinn upon t,,.t' | -;itio«:
the Coinrnihsioru i Court oril< rcf| an ••!«■••! ion to b" • «i Saturday,
January 2fith, l!>'0
Up until the pa t few years no hard ur!a< • <1 r i
SUite and there was not much traffi«* on tin* In/hwav
building of jfood roads and the coming of autom - i'•
at Iftrjce upoTfrlM* public road have r<i lit d in i i<>
as well as damajfe to propi*rt> I *n«l• • r tl |>
owner is re<|u i i *d to keep ni- land - fenced and t h • r«
were : n till >
. hut with the
i >(•]< running
>f many lives
the land
is no law that
prohibit., a ma'- from leUjn^f h -tock run at lar^e ,n tie t oun'y.
The purpose of the e| -etion t t> h> held Saturday i-- to <|et« i inin"
whether or not -tock shall he pet nittei! to run at lar/e in this Coun-
ty. There has been iom< «jn«• tic n as to whether or not, if tie -tock
law is adopted, a linn can take down his fence and if cattle get into
his field will the owner of such cattle be liable for the damage
caused by such cattle Frequently cattlemen in tni county drive
their cattle alon^ the public highway and the question i a>ke<| if ucb
cattlemen will be liable for damages if some cattle fcet into a field
that is not inulo ed. It has always been the law in this County that
a man in order to protect hi crop and lands from cattle -hould
fence his crops and lands to keep such animal out, It tin -tock law
is adopted next Saturday the old law will not be set aside, but will
be strengthened by requiring people to keep their stock from run (
ninjr ttt large Article of the lle\: • d Statut« provid' -
"If any stock forbidden to run ;it larg- shall enter tin
enclosed lands, or hall, without being herded, roam about
the residence, lots or cultivated lands of m\ person other
than the owner of uch stock without his consent -the person
in lawful possession of such lands may impound such stock
and detain the same until his fees and all costs occasioned
by suc'n stock arc paid to him; "
It seems, a fit* r reading Article fiOBfi. that if the land- are o nc I o -. d ,
and stuck entered thereon the owner of <aid land- could recoverj
damages provided the fence enclosing said lands would keep ordinary .
cattle out, further it would seem that the owner of a residence, lot or
cultivated land can recover damage-; if stock should enter thereon if
such nlook are not being herded.
It is belived that the dork law should he adopted and that if it .
adopted the cattlemen who drive their herds upon the public highways
will not be liable for damages done to land or growing crops miles-;
the cattle tear down and go over or through the ordinary fence, or
unless the herd of cattle i- not being driven by sufficient number of
men to ordinarily take care of such cattle
T.et ii all go to the polls next Saturday and vote "For tin Stock
Law."
—Contributed.
a
I
51
NOTICE TO THE VOTERS OF
SHACK El.FORD COUNTY
It i* a matter of uiging every
Republican and Independent voter
to pay his or her po I tax immed-
iately. The larI day on which
? In « an In paid I an iar\ ■>> 1,
1
Kvery Republican . hould be a
genuiin citizen; In should pay hi.*
poll tax or secure exemption and
should ee that all other who are
• ligible do the same.
la t n.- arouse more Texans to
an active interest in their state
and in national affair-.
Most sincerely,
R. I! Cie.iger, Member Repub-
lican Natioiin Committee
Florence T. (Jriswold, Member
Republican N'a.ional Com.
Kugein N'olte, Republican State
('hairman.
Orville Hullington, Kepu1 ' an
State Vice ('haii man
I' I. Thomson, Secretary Re-
publican State I Executive
Committee.
Oliver Palm, < 'ounty Republi
can Chairman.
ALBANY GIRL HONORED
Miss \nn Murrie, daughter of i
Dr. and Mrs. R. (I. Murrie, who is
a student in S. M. I", at Dallas, I
lias been elected Pre. hman Uejire- '
sentative from Snider Hall. This
is considered quite an honor, and
gives the one receiving it special |
privileges for the remaining part
of the 11W0 session and also tin-
first semester of next year.
|
HUMIiLK FILLING STATION
At east end of Clear Fork Hririgej
on Highway No. '2.T Also fam-
ily Groceries. Stop and see us, I
.-"t your gasoline tank filled and
buy your family groc-rie..
I) vey .Cox, I'roprie! or
Discovery of Vitamin*
Vital to Human Race
Tl;« ^rejllew! • I• evei ie> «if Iwlie
fit to |'ie linn 1: * Ii i.i«e Ii;in« t.i'i'ii
I lie result of . 1 e 1 dent. 1 olumhUH,
seeking for a mIim. t eiit to India,
stumbled on \niei • IVikiu,
se.areliitij^ foi 1 nie inw of produe*
In- Mriltitial «| 11 in 1 n«- Int upon ml
line «i\es When Japan mil Uiih
* i:i were ill the throes of a dentil
slniUjJe for siipreni;ie\ .1;.pun's
111 v \ \\ ,m heiii _ de< i 1 iled by hel l
heri 1 :11 « 1 i 11 „ in lind | reveiitn-
ti\e for the dive;|s; > tlnii was iiink
111 i_r the .fnpniie^e panic stricken,
vntiie uiie 1 • • 111* - r 11 i ii- 1 ei| iliiit a Dill eh
s.ientist disen\ereil ill tlillt
p i 'j eonv fed "ii poll"! 1 ed rice de-
veloped ji di^e.ise which had nil the
1 I: ii ,o iei is| jt - nt heri heri. Orders
were issued forthwith f" stop feed-
ing the sallois with polUhed rle#
and to suhstiliile the whole gr.'iln^
protnpll.v and wilhout dehiy. the
heri heri dis;ipp 1 red, Si ienl Isl s
In their elTorts to discover the
••why." us a fatuous author ex
pressed it. found the missing ""I*
that hinds food to health, happl
ness and achievement the\ came
Upon the vllatnine. It was this
discovery thai enables the human
family to keep from starving on
full sioinach.
Ancient Surgical Tools
Like Those Now in Use
Surgeons of 'J.IMHI \ i :irs ;il'o il-e«l
IllRtrillnelits si lui I.• 11' In sli:i|ie to
those of toi|;i\ Tills «;is shewn
by prohes mid foreeps iineovered
In t lie hurled . it \ of Pompfll, Hlld
reeentlj exhlhlled in l ouden. TltP
Inr^e iinniher of prohes In coin-
pnrlnon to other inslriiiiients of the
collection mimesis Unit cnttliiK
was II lni'«e part of surui• ■ aI work
before tile yenr 71 •, when the ernp
lion of Vesuvius luirled the city.
While the shapes of ihe instru-
ments In Mime cases are almost
Identical with those of the modern
surgical tools, their steel Is less
absence of saws
rlion Indicates am
rarely attempted,
of lack of l;nnwl
latlon of flic blood.
Science Monthly,
known to have been
..-pita!
bet: er
Id
United States Takes
High Rank in Healing !
At the heuiimiiiu of the Nine
teen111 eeui in",. at , ordlm: to hoctor
M-ler. there w re o|il\ llliee liifd
Ii a| hooK in | he I it led Slates
Mild only two general
0e111 > W ||M ill's, red
tion than tae> «•
call \ W ere f lived I
There w ei e 1111In a tew m«dii i!
Journals in iret-il. i i«ui in this
coiini r\ and alioo-%1 no \niei i« an
loedicnl honks had heon puhli^hed.
A round the middle of the • ••
inany new medical «chonN
founded. Inil Hieir >lainlai*ds
l« \\ and I he education they
as poor.
The reform;
\ a I'd shoril.v all
M ^s|| llici I olliee II
spread lo |h«
Stu
III* a
re«'ei\e lo-
ahroad.
irv.
w en
ga\e
^tailed ill
I'residenl
iMKi and «|iiiekly
l her medical s« iiools
liar
i: i M t
of I he . I 111 n I IV. ' 11 rin^ I belli :JI
to new Ii I•• iiul act i\ j| v. W e ha\ e
now so i. 11 « .♦ I ^e11«Mijv t.«jvn
era I Im-piialv and a medical lit
• i e i rich and \olumitiou* as
to be e111!i 11 ra-•sinu I --sje
■*.*'I II i lie I 'enI ur\ Mai; l/.ine.
linn " |
1
I
01 ..Mill? i* • !■
n/i
i ..
CLASS
le
11 a
Mi and Mr< II It. De Itoeck, tenrhers of Violin and Dra
matic Art, announce the opening of their Studio Saturday,
January 11th, at the home of Mr and Mr- Jay I)a\'s; both
private and cla-- instruction Knrollment between 1 Hi) and
5:00 P M
at i lie" ? ow n expense In i
h\ the I in id - ol Ihe -I i, i el y i I
'J I a til S ! I «•' 11 I i .1 <\ e: !i ii it'III and ii I
I lie >e • i ■ 1111 Insl a lire I. \ iee! >, > , - <
liver ed a nd i -j i - -ued under t!■ '
auspices of the Woejely. or hy pa i
pel I .Mil and ' ' 11 •' 11 ed ou ll j-e
riodical meet in
of 1'
YOUR 1930 INSURANCE
•• A /
i.'<
Grinding' out a lively note of warning' is just as much
a part of our job as selling (K )(>1 > Insurance!
why we keep right on singinv the same old tune
INSURE
.•i<,i<.aX)<:Xi!<Jv>:.. ;•(:OUK3flG>4
We will keep on issuing our note- of warning, but we
hope you won't need a warnim." to keep your property,
your life, your income, your automobile, and your Le-
gal Liability INSUKKJJ.
Albany, Texas
, 0
n r "t v,bu
Albany Nat'l. Bank Bltb
L
Marv.
The ;
phone I he ti
tain ir. hui h.s
tl'" "
phone the - •
si;:nal.s rut .
small contact |
ol
Ml
Holland * Indrpendrnce
\ || er rot o| I eii made i- lo >i ?
trihllle Dutch success In Ihe Will
for Independem e too much to W'il
II a in and to Imich pluck and en
durance Hot h these were Ine-
ilmahle lactors in the deleat ot
Spain I'ut William died 'Jo \ear-
Iii fore hutch independence w a>
rei o^ni/.ed and Maurice of < ran j«
and < ildenhariiN elt must holh he
yiven their due for their work all
er his death.
\'or ninsl Spanish ini'lliciein y nm
poverty he foryotieii. \ Spanish
captain once said "It <'• i had
to come from Spain we would he
sure of n loir: life." and twice I'hilip
luid to repudiate his tialioual del l
—New York Herald Tribune.
World War Hero Dog !!
Still Wire-Fence Shy <>
Ware, M:i-«. Itplilml tin*
bow lilskcreU, <pil//,lcal face of
i'uptuln, veteran war i|ok.
lurk memories of ravaged hat
Uefloldn tliat ten years of
peace luivp apparently left
untouched.
Cap, as hi* owner, HennU
F. Shea, Htale jtaine warden,
call* hi in. Ii a wire-haired
KdlToti and a native of
Krance. I'ap la more than
thirteen veins old.
II escorts member* of his
family to store or church or
theater -but doe* not enter
And he returns afterward to
see them home. All tills Cap
has learned, hut he lias never
learned to forget the war.
The horror of barbed wire
ami gas niaska Ik still upon
him.
Although barbed wire la
used liereabonis only to con-
tine <111ir> cattle. Cap refuses
to go near a wire fence, lie
still associates them with
sudden death.
11111; i-: i i 111111111 M !■
flexible
from 'lie ciillc
potations were
largely been use
edge about cin-i
says Popular
Surgery Is
practiced at an enrly date When
Alexandei the Ureal Invaded lands
east of the Mediterranean In
|>, c he found it being practiced
by the natives with great s|;|||.
T'-ere I- e\ 1.• ■ >.tl it surgery was
In use In l .-jypt as '-ai as ,i,0(HI or
tl.iHKi r, r
Cati Provided Mu«lc
(>ne of I lie -i rangest musical ( ?l
lli~i rillnents
i"ver heard of Is de I
Deposit of I i av i %| in
Uncovered in Florida
An ltd ii i y t :,a i tl"1 1 . 1 'a! ^.ikki
yea r- ago. ., i I win ! i I'll!: lies to
prodin e ureal weali I for Italy, Is
uniler iiiig de ,'lupiiii'iii in the
Iniled Slates |-M,.|,s.v« dep. is
Its of travertin In Maiiaiee cotttily.
I lorida, have furnished a new and
unexpected source of Mlpplj
It was traic tin that tie Koinalis
used III the <'i„-ouui mid other
utructures ot nnciciit time- which
stand toil..; In wi ile or III part.
Wherever destruction has taken
place It \ias tlic l .'ial of man niel
III It t la' I■; el11■ • I ■ s : i|i — I I'ol cil.
Ill i. t ei , .in . !, a I- Ir lie i ill
un 11 ■ - i.i lie.I to - , 11 . -tone
scribed In a hook written hy Wil
lenskl. lie stai,is Hint when Km
| peror I 'luirles V introduced I'hil'p
II tn the suh.lugaled Vetlierlande -
In 17i I', I there was ii processinn
through r.russels, in liii'li tiuur 'I
ii musician with an oruan \ eat
with it tail I ied to II ke\ WIIS I ill
prisoned In each pipe, nnd n« the
inilsii ia n si ri|.-I. a note the tails
Were pinci'. i| and the I :i|s .cl'ei chi ll
mill howled 11 si-i-ins 11.ii d1' ■ r. ■,I
;hle t" this age of sen- 1 1 it v
I'hi c u a S I'. I' A ill ll o.se
days.
After 45 You Slip
At forty tiic the iiverage man
hna more money tt in lie ever had
before or will ever have again.
The top of the money hill. In most
lives, 1s the furty-llftli birthday nn-
nlversarv I'roni then on It's nsn-
ally a down bill trip. And fewer
men have $HHI or more nt seventy-
five than nt twenty five, though
they've had fifty venrs for accumu-
lating. The average person Is a
money failure. Capper's Weekly.
Faith of Childhood
Who, if he is honest towards
himself, could say that the religion
of ills manhood was Ihe same aa
that of Ills childhood, or the reli-
gion of Ids old age the same as the |
religion of Ids manhood? It la easy
to deceive ourselves nnd to say that
the most perfect faith Is a child-
like faith. Nothing can be truer,
and the older we grow the more
we learn to understand the wisdom
of a childlike faith. Hut before
we can learn Unit, we have first to
learn another lesson, namely, lo
put away childish things. There Is
the same glow nliotit the setting sun
aa there Is about the rising sun;
but there lies between the two a
whole world, a Journey through the
whole sky anil over Ihe whole earth.
— Prof. Mux Muller.
Pie Making M Horn*
Industry Ia Pasting
"The mincing of meat In iiies Ni-
elli the grinding of Ihe
rrote Hacon "The devil
him No man's pie Is freed fnM«i9
Ins ambitious Anger," says Shake*.
j,en re in Henry VIII. As far back
as the fifteenth century tlia pit
was used as ii theme for i'Ofaa
dies. "The 'Me and Hie Tart," III
Kranee, and In biter years "Tli«
Dish" and the "Pie In the Ova
In Knglntid.
"The pie," wrote Harriet Beecksf
Stowe in "oidtown," "Is sn Kog-
llsh Institution which, plunted M
American soil, forthwith ran ramp-
hnt and broke forth Into an Incw4
1111 e variety of genera and spertaa."
The |iie, as a breakfast dish, la
disappearing from American tablsa
but remains in popular favor far
luncheon and dinner, Itut tlia bak-
ers of today are performing auck
feats with pastry and fruit, that tba
home-made pie of traditional deptk
and circumference, covered, opsa
face or with lattice work trlinmlogs,
Is threatened with extlnctlda.
Should It be banished, to Ita nc-
ceeeded hy the less difficult tart af
Jelly-roll, there will be lost foravar
a means by which the cook My
express her artistry In tracing pat-
terns with a fork on crust. Pl*>
making and (|ulltlng were two arti
ot the pioneer American woman.
Guard Aigaimt Icebergs
The International Ice patrol was
organized on an Internalioiial basis
iis ll result of the InternalIoiih! con-
ference for snfet) of life at sea.
In l.ondon. 1!>IIt resulted from
a universal demand for a protec-
tion of steamships against Ira-
bergs In the North Atlantic area
after the loss of the Titanic, (n J
April, mil*. The fulled Stales was J
asked to undertake the intiliaga-'
ment of this service, and agreed to
send two vessels to patrol tba''
danger area during Iceberg sea sol,
March 1 to July 1. Bach of tba
contracting parties consented to
bear a share of the cost In propor-
tion to Its shipping tonnage.
Phone 6
RICHT-WAY LAUNDRY
ALBANY PHONE 6
WE MAKE TRIPS DAILY
R.F.SMITH
REPRESENTATIVE
!:.■ ill II11 ief | j s
|M , < HlMl
3E
If. 'iSreekenridge
It's
Km
liei mil the II I ,
urns. I tut In I
si cad of the liu lidi'i I -c|i.i ra I c . .■
■Ill t con i hi it. 11 ions II.at the telc.oy !
can 11 in I e rs t ii 11 d, the telephone •
I oil! has place for ileal iy leu I ll j
lloll,
\ Ct even till ' '- a sum i •• liu
man brain exceeds The iiiiihIkm !
ol living in tie , ell- In the in-: ice J
than ll.iiOO.iKHUNX). II ii lie its
jt,'C'. a.>e;;t.a,a'a.i;.' :
; ,><•« i -■ .-!.<a'n'u.::.alk.k aitii.n.a.'ira.a n :«Jn'jOGiajBxji
Store-Wide Clearance Sale
Now In Full Swing
STARTED THURSDAY, JANUARY 23td
ENTIRE STOCK WINTER WEARING APPAREL
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY ARE OFFERED AT A
GREAT SACRIFICE.
1
X*
m
:i
ivv)?? ij nm iiifiL~i hi uj a
LOOK FOR THE YELLOW SALE SIGN
.. II ■ V',' : !(,« a it'll' <:); a'a I'll a 11,1. ):;« IIIIII IOI111; K a e'if r it'n li aXlifli (CKSCBOiBI
BENDER'S
brf.ckenridge, texas
pet
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■ tp mmm
„ Vti "'.-Ml
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McCarty, Richard H. The Albany News (Albany, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, January 24, 1930, newspaper, January 24, 1930; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth401569/m1/8/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting The Old Jail Art Center.