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Bryan-College Station Eagle from Bryan, Texas • Page 6

Location:
Bryan, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

mm The ryan agle u. aOOTH. SI AN. TEXAS tonkwall acksom has ap Ailed for a pension as the widow of i Mexican war veteran. he Minnesota twins are now called some of the papers.

Buch a combination Is enough Apolis. tc ew y'OKK seems of the opinion tad Columbus known Chicago would get the i'air he have discovered America. A STORM lower is to be erected at the top of Mount Penn, overlooking Reading, Pa. It will be l.lOtJ feet above the sea level. A stTKNTisT says milk can readily be reduced to a powder and that it will be greatly superior to condensed milk.

here will be a new element in the population of the next census. I he Chinese will be enumerated for the first time in this country. ord ui wer lit on this superb aphorism: fresh mind keeps the body fresh. Take in the ideas of today; drain ofT those of yesterday. A mateur harpists are inoroising a1 a great rale in New York fashionable circles, and there are indications the accomplishment is to be a North arolina has quite a wai burden to carry.

In the state 1.20C disabled soldiers draw pensions and widows. This Is an example local patriotism. A COLORED BRUTE Assaults a White Lady and is Riddled with Buckshot By a Mob of Citizens Who Take the Fiend from the Sheriff. A Rain So Terrific It Stops the Passage of Trains in West Texas. Texarkana, April 2 5 Monday last a hurley negro went to the home of Mr.

Silas Jones, a respectable mill man living near Cameron on the Cotton Belt, clsht r.illes east ot here, during his absence, entered the house and made an assault on Mrs. Jones. gave an account of the affair and a description of the negro. The alarm was at once given and bands of determined men were immediately scouring the country in every direction. Several neirnKis were arrested and taken before Mrs.

Jones, wlio them not the one. Tuesday evening late, however, a negro answering her assailants description was captured by the officers and taken Into her presence. This last she at once declared to he the guilty person. Know ing the temper of the locality the officers at once hurried him off as they thought without the knowledge of anylKsly to a schoolhouse remotely situated, where they placed him under guard to await the next south-bound train, uiwn which it was proposed to bring the prisoner to the jail at this place. At about 9 Tuesday night, however, there was a crash of firearms outside the schoolliouse window and the fell to the tloor dead, his head and breast literally riddled with buckshot.

kuh of Yakima county, Washington, has sent to Japan for a large quantity of tea cuttings. He intends to see what can be done with thal plant in his own country. ev hk a Beli.e, minister o. agriculture of the dominion of anada is the only Roman catholic bishop in the w'orld holding a cabinet office un der a secular government. he curious discovery has beet made that every governor of Iowa since 1859 is alive, and hale and hearty, and the only democrat among them is the present executive.

Mr. ladstone new daughter-in law, Mrs. Henry Gladstone, is noi only young and handsome, but accomplished in music and languages. She is an admirable performer on the violin- A ll of the bank note currency of the Italian government is engraved and printed in the United States. 'I he notes are neat, but small, resembling somewhat the fractional notes issued in war times.

rince ugene ot Sweden hat passed two years in Paris studying arl under the direction of M. Henri Ger- vex. The latter has just had conferred upon him the Cross of a Chevalier ol the Order of St. Olaf. ne of the exhibits in the Paris Sa loon this season will be the portrait Minister Reid, by the artist G.

P. A. Heaiy. It is said to be more flattering than many of the portraits drawn ol Mr. Reid in this country.

Heavy Storm Out West. Bio April of the severest rain storms ever seen in this locality cecuned Wednesday evening about six The town was Utter- ally flooded with water. Ilailroad bridges were washed away and cellars were filled witli water. The east-bound passenger train is being held here and the westbound passenger train is Ireing held at Colorado until the bridges are repaired. This is the first rain since last October that amounted to anything.

Thursday a peculiar funnel-shaped cloud passed in sight of tow and was witnessed by hundreds ot peoi)le and no one seems to know definitely what it was. It extended from a dark cloud that was passing to the ground, and a great volume of either smoke, dust or water followed in its ake. No reliable information has been yet received as to what it was or as to any damage being done by it It created quite a commotion until it passed beyoiul the town. 7000 gallons were saved, the loss Deing estimated at alKiut 13,000 gallons. The cellar was flooded and the men worked knee-deep in the oil.

Three of the ployes, n. Hoffman. G. W. Reeves and Percy Carter, were overcome while endeavoring to save the oil, the fumes seeming to have the same effect that an overdose of laughing-gas would have on a patient Mr.

Hoffman is still confined to his house. When the break occurred, one of the gentleman compared the sound to that of a rnshlng train. Appointed Master In t'liancery. El Pa.so, April 28. the United States court A.

B. Robertson of Colorado City was appointed master in chancery to sell the property involved in the suit of Gregory, Cooley A Co. vs. Nunn Bros. Wilkes.

Mr. Robertson is reciulred to give bond In the sum of 8100,000 The Texas Pacific passenger train which went east Wednesday returned at 10 oVloek yesterday, being unable to get past Big Springs owing to the washouts. There has lieen no eastern mall for two days and no prospects for any for several days to come. It is said to he impossible to transfer passengers and mails. A Keifiilar Ilattlc odd ity April young men were out in the wrxids shooting at a target.

One of the bullets glanced and seriously wounded a negro in the leg who was standing 150 yanis from the boys and unseen by them. The wounded man went to his house a short distance away and soon returned with four other negroes, all armed, and throwing their guns down on the white hoys crdered them to throw up their hands and surrender. The demand was not complied with and a regular battle was averted only by the presence of mind of one of the white party. It is thought that sei-- ious trouble will be ihe outcome of the affair as some of the parties are swearing vengeance. Kye KnockPil Out.

aihd April difficulty occurred at the farm of John K. Lee, six miles northwest from Baird, Monday afternoon between John Lee and Calvin May. It seems that a stick or club played a prominent part in the fracas, ami by its use John Lee lost an eye and was otherwise bruised. The eye, however, had lost its sight from the effects of fever during the war, but in the trouble the eyeball w.as knocked completely out The trouble seemed to have been caused by a cow that belonged to May getting in field. Lee is in town now under the care of his physicians and resting miMler- ately well.

An officer has gone out to Mav's house to bring him in. THE 1)()0M-8EAEERH. The Earthquake Starts Excitement Over the Prophecies. A Wife Bought in the City of Salt Lake for One Hundred Dollars. A Number of Arrests Grow Out of the Walton Express Robbery.

an FiiANCTsro, April eaithquake shocks Thursday morning caused great excitement among the in this city and Oakland. In east Oakland whole families rushed from their homes in tlieir night robes, prayers an i ran tow anl liigh grounds. A numlier of women fainte.1. Tillie Jensen, a giri, broke her leg in jumping from a second- story window. It is not Ini- probahle that the Utile eartlxiuako will restart the whole excitement over the piopheeies again.

A of persons are reported to he leaving their homes and the mimbtM- of passengers on outgoing trains is oonsideralde greater than usual. John riiillipson announced this morning he had had a revelation in regard to the prophecy. Yesterday shock he said was merely the first symptom of the upheaval that is sure to come. He says ik I will not now reveal the time for the destruction of the cities and that the only way to escape is to leave Nan hranclseo Oakland and never return. one of the Colebrook furnaces.

There were four reports in quick succession. Buildings were shaken and windows rattled. The jacket at the furnace stack was blown out and the sheetiron root blown Into the air. Wm. P.

Wright, engineer, was knocked and severely burned. Thousands of people ran to the scene of the disaster. The fire department WAS called out ami soon extinguished tlie flames. The damage to the furnace will amount to several thousand dollars. ort Apill 28 Gnay, a cool miner from Huntington, was run over and killed by the north-hound Frisco passenger train at 1 yesterday morning.

He was asleep on tlie track on the outskirts of the city. Two negriHcs. father ami son, named Joe and Adam Banks, and a negro woman named King, were lodged in the United States jail at this place yesterday morning charged witli tlie iiiunler of the woman's hushaiiii, who disappeared last June and whose hmly was recently found In a creek that ran near his home in the Cherokee nntion. Tlie against them is said to be strong. WIT HUMOR.

CMllforiiiii Earthquake. an FuANnsro, April of the severest shocks of earthiiuake experienced here for a long time was felt in this city and negliborhood a little after 3:30 yesterday morning. Buildings were shaken perceptibly ami persons aroused from their sleep. Plastering fell from walls in places but no serious damage has been reported yet. The earthquake was general in this section of the state.

The was very sharp ill this city, hut no serious damage was done. Walls of houses, inehuliiig tiie United States building, cracked, ami tlieiv was considerable alarm felt by persons who were aroused from sleep. The most serious damage is reported from Pajaro, where a railroad uridge was thrown two feet out of line and the aiiproaches damaged. Gas mains were disjointed at Gilroy and many chimneys thrown down in the neighborhood of Watsonville. In some localities as many as a dozen distinct shocks were felt.

A absolutely well bred man will not smoke when walking with a lady is more particular about those ol his own family than any others. Thi that shows itself in courtesies to strangers only is a very poor sort Veneer. ecently the jail at Moulton, iowa, liad a hole torn in the roof by light ming, through which five prisoners Nothing providential aboui that. They ought to thank God all one of caught again. ome of the most recent new uses electricity are for purifying sea watei and sewerage and for improving distilled spirits.

An English electriciac found that electricity softens some wines by removing the excess of bitar- irate of potish. KuKlug Trinity. D. vllas April rains of last week culminated yesterday in one of the largest rises of the Trinity river of which there is any record. At 0 o'clock last evening the river had ri.sen feet wUhin twenty-four hours, and was then sixty-live feet above its bed, within two and a h.alf feet of the greatest ilse on record, that of 1S88, and was still rising at the rate of two inches per hour, in the morning it rose four inches an hour and at noon three inches per hour, the des(ending ratio being an inch an hour.

Mr. Mercer, the signal service observer, saiil last night that the river would not reach its maximum Ix'fore to-day, and hence tlie was that the rise would reach if not go above that of 1880, hut during the night it began to fall, to the gratification of many who were driven from their homes in the lowlands. liijunctloii Denied. El aso April important suit has been deciiled by Judge Maxey in the federal court, the suit of the K1 Paso water eomtiany vs. the city of LI Paso.

The company ashed for an injunction to restrain the city from issuing bonds for the purpose of raising funds to have artesian wells bored and Imilding waterworks. Judge Maxey refused the basing his decision on Bren- liam vs. water ooiiipany, Texas, as conclusive against the The company appeah'd to tlie supreme court. The city will proceed at once to erect its own waterworks and Imiic lor water. A SlinotlHt.

I ndian April special from Brazil. says: Yesterday forenoon while the pupils from room No. 3 school were on the phiy-groand at recess a lO-year-old Iniy, Ben Corlioy, produced a revolver and shot little t'ora Bruhach, about the same age, the hall taking effect in the hand and the side of the face. The wound is not fatal, hut hied profusely. The reason for the is that the girl had previously given the teacher information of his misconduct He left the ground at once after the shooting and the city marshal is in pursuit.

There is one thing every must have, and a blow Ikratd. you fond of Wagnerian opera. Mr. I never cared for a Time is money, but a good deal of it is about as valuable as Confederate Speech is silver, and silver is likelj to mean in Congress this session. Courier.

Poverty may not be a crime, but it gets more jmnishment than crime 'hiladeIph ia Inquircr. Most of onr but the lawyers worry if they any. yonkers Statesman. Adam wa.s the only man who had a wife made to order, and even she turned out a mistit Inquirer. First Moth yon there, neigh- Moth how' do 1 look in this new dress Statesman.

A woman is never so badly in love that slie does not try to liiid the cost of her engagement ring (Hohe. T'hose who say that woman lias no sense of hmnor have eviilentlv failed to notiee how a mustache tickles Boston (kmrier. There is more billing than cooing in the household where there is an extravagant wife this season of the Boston Gazette. The man who know where iSliot at a itall. onoview April Borrow, succeeded in putting a bullet in the back of his rival, Alf Addison, Saturday night at 12 The trouble had been brewing during a dance, at whioh the dusky damsels were displaying their charms, arousing the jealous rivalry of the dancers.

Borrow left immediately for parts unknown. The wounded man is doing well and it is thought he will soon recover. StaitOeii by a Neiiio. odd ity April 8 Saturday night Levi Martin, a negro, cut and seriously wounded a white man by the name of Dan Winis. An artery was severed and for a time it looked like the man would bleed to adeath.

The cutter was arrested and locked up in tlie calaboose. The wounded man is resting easy, hut it is impossible to tell how serious the wound is. storm. itti Koru, April 2M. Gazette Cotton Plant special gives an aecoiint of a destructive wimt and rain sluriii In Woohruff cminty at an early lioiir Saturday.

Yorkville, a village a few miles sontliwesf of Cotton Pla.it, was almost entirely blown away and the disaster is very great. Houses, barns, fences and structures of all kinds were taken up by the wind and carried some disuince. The store of D. C. York A was conqilete- ly demolislied and tlie stock of goods destroyed.

Two houses were overtnnied liy the force of the wind and the families narrowly escaped di'atli. Hniulreds of cattle are rejiorted killed, hut no liunian life as far as can he learned. A rainfall of four inches added to tlie damage verv considerahly. hose who like to be moved waves of pairiolism will be glad l( learn that the first American Union flag was unfurled on January 1, 1776. over the camp at Cambridge.

It had thirteen stripes of white and red, and retained the British cross in one cor ner. recently A I'RLSONKK in Bohemia constructed a watch eight centimeters (aj inches) in diameter, with no tools or materials exwpt two needles, a spool of thread, a newspaper and somt rye straw. The wheels, posts and cogs are of rye straw; the watch runs six hours without winding and keeps good time. he great monsters of mcchanica skill and genius call for the eacrifici of a great life and limb in their con The greater the ongineer- feat the more extensive is the losf In the construction of Eiffel Tower for instance, twenty-sii lives wore lost, vviiile on the the great Forth bridge in a list ot fortj Hires lest has been published. Farmers Up with Their Work.

odd ity Fannin April in this section are pretty well up with their work, which is a very fortunate state of affairs, as the continued rains of the past week have stopped every- erythlng in a farming way. All eastbonud trains passing through Dodd City since last Saturday have been loaded down with witnesses, jurymen, officers, bound for the federal court at Paris. Judge I.yiirh Holds Court. an A uox stine Te.x., April Judge Lynch held a dark lantern session of court Tuesday night. Result: Sim Garrett and Jerry Teel were found guilty and executed on the spot.

The jail was torn into atoms and Sim Garrett and Jerry Teel are now haiiKiiig in front of the butchet shop, and Col. John H. Brooks and family no longer apiueheiid any danger of being iioisoned by them with arsenic. Uusiiirss Liiiliire. leuurne April firm of Murdock Whiteliouse, boots and shoes, yesterday filed a deed of trust upon their entire Inisiiiess.

making C. L. Heatli, cashier of the First National bank of Cleburne, trustee. The preferred credilers First national bank of Cleburne, II. Femiey A 82,2.59.10.

Total anioiiiit of liabilities, assets estimated at about 811,009. Honey, Ice and Kaln. iheenvii le April annual meeting of tlie Texas State association lias been called to meet in this city on tlie 7tli and 8th of May. An interesting an entertaining programme will be carried out. The ice factory is completed and about ready to begin operations.

Heavy rains still contiune preventing farm work. stricken With Paralysis, effeu son Mc- lleynolds, an old and liighly respected citizen of this place had a stroke of paralysis Satunlay evening and has not licen able to speak since. His entire right side is affected and fears are entertained for his recovery. Heaviest Hall Siorni on Record. iUASDiNGTON, April signal oflice furnislies the following report from the signal service ob.server at Baltimore, 'I'lie heaviest hail storm on record at this station passed over Baltimore from the northwest to southwest between 3:45 and 4 p.

m. yesterday. Many thousands of in the city were broken, the damage being confined iiiuiuly to the western exposures. Many runaways are renorted. Some horses and carriages were abandoned in the streets, their owners leaving them to seek shelter.

It is probable that a number of people were injured, as the stones were very large, some measuring more than two inches in diameter and weighing more than four ounces each. The extent of the damage has not yet been ascertained, Imt it must have been very gieat. Dynaiii.tc Kxptosloii. i avax April exphe of dynamite in H. R.

drug store Thursday niorniiig conijiietely wrecking the hiiildiiig. l.ivakiiig windows in stores a block away and kiuR'kliig tlie cnpalooff tlie sclioolhoiise two blocks distant. The roof of the drug store was btown into the air and of the four men in the buikiiiig two were liadly hurt and two perished in the H. R. Doanes and an nnkiiowii man who ippened to In: in the store at the tiiii of tlie explosion Only the lieavy fire walls prevented a great eoiifiagrafion and for a time there was great excitenieiit lliroiigh tlie city.

IvcH Arrcsteti For Forisery. ai km April warrant was issued yesterday iinirniiig for the arrest of (ieo. B. Ives, ex-assistant district attorney, on a cliarge of forgery. Ihe Hiiiouiit is said to be and names lorgeil of l.in- coln ami Fabian.

It is also stuletl Ives has useil his estate of about and the Johiiatliaii Blaney estate, of wtheh he was trustee, to the amoiim of The money, lie says was useil in extrav.a- gant living. liis next dollar is to come from alwap send.s it where his last Philadelphia Press. Dai.la.s, Ajiril of tlie large tanks at the Waters Iheico Oil company works sjirung a leak afternoon alKuit 3 These tanks have a capacity of 20.000 gallons each. By the prompt action iihout Karrouiii SDilibiiig AiVrajr. aris April Price was seriously stabbed in a barroom brawl yesterday by Price Dillard.

Price was conveyed to the hospital where the physician in attendance pronounced him in a very critical condition. Dillard was arrested and jailed. Hoy Kills Fattier. aris April McDonald who was shot by his son Monday died Tuesday night. The boy had been iii.sano for some time and was kept confined, but managing to escape lie secured a loaded pistoi, and when his father came within reach gave him its contents.

Had Leg Hrokcn. randon April 2.3. News reached here Monday tliat while rounding up some yearlings about two miles south of this place Mr. J. C.

horse fell on his leg amd broke it in two places. The accident, though not necessarily prove fatal. Farincrs ei kf i April 23. nearly every day for the past week and fanners are jubtlant over the prospects for good crops. Karly wheat was uam- ageit some by the dry weather, but it is coming out well ami will make a crop.

WHsliiiiKtoii asiiingt (. tive of 'Ucxas yesterday from the house comtiilltee on Judiciary without aim-mtiiieut the senate aiiti-trust hill with report recoiiimemt- liig its passage. The pre.sideiit has -igiied a joint reso lution of congress passed yesterday ap propiinting 8150,009 to enable the secretary of war to rations for tlie relief of destitute peoiile of the district overflowed liy the Mississippi and its tributaries. The Is Ready and U'illiiiiir. Pn Ajiril F.liza I-ins, a wi ijw who resides In West liell- vue, county, Wednesday entered suit to recover 820,000 damages from Kdward Minlck for breach of promise.

alleges that an engagement was entered Into Oct. 1. 1888, tliat since tliat she lias remained single and unmarrletl ami Is ready ami willing to marry yet; tlie defendant absolutely refuses to keep the contiAcL Mr. Miiilok is amaii of wealth and tlie suit 1ms caused a sensation. The Ualtoii omrlat April 28.

of Walton, tlie express messenger wlio stole from tlie Pacific Kxpress coiiipaiiy and was arrested at St. Johns, N. with part of the stolen money his possession, has now acquireil new interest by the arrest yesterday morning of Frank Brady and Aggie Aston and Leard, a gainliler, who accompanied them. Tliey arrived from Hot Siuiiigs, and were at once taken into custody. Brady is the man who was paid 82000 by Walton for helping him to escape, and the other members of the party are supposed to have Imeii implicated in making away with the balance ot the money which was never fouml.

Voiiiii; l.aily Deatl. (iAi.F.NA, 111., April afternoon a party of young ladies started out on foot for tlicir liomes in Kinsinwa Mouml, Wis. After spending a pleasant day witli a friend at Hazlegreen, in the midst of a lively eonversatioii and mucli merriment, Murray, one of the most vivacious of the party, smhleiily stopped, threw up her hands ami tell dead in the road, it is suiiposed she ruptured a blood vessel while imlulgiiig in a tit of laughter which a hiinierous remark of her com- imiiioii had provoked. Tinny ThoiiHiiiKl hhoi'f. ew ork April 28.

W. Davis, first deputy sheriff of F.sscx county, has bci'ii missing Momluy ami it is row state I iiis arc short over 830,000. Will Siiiullutr Fire. Wy. April has been decided to smother the fire raging in the Union Pacific Ntt 4 at Rock Springs, ami hundreds of men are at work closing the entrance.

They will remain closed for at least four noiiths and should the fire not then be sulHlned the Riine will be tUMHled. Of tlie fifteen men injured by the first explosion, all but two will recover. No further loss of life is reported. Some twenty ('hinamen are imprisoned in the mine. Wife SelDiiif ill Luke t'lty.

Salt I.ake City, Utah, April Henry Strausse of Gliioago Thur.sd.iy a wife of Fritz Lander of this city for 8100. Mrs. Lauder and Strausse were sweethearts in (iermaiiy. but became separated by circumstances. The happy couple at once took a train for San Francisca I.ander is a saloon keeper an I says the niuiiey more than eonipensutes for the loss of his wife.

Heflin. ew ork Ajnil oonrl-mar- tial of Bowman H. McCalla of the Kiiter- prise. United States navy, began at noon at tlie Brooklyn navy yard. The charges preferred are tlie ones reiiorted bv the court of iiKiiiiry ami include severe and cruel treatiiieiit and violations of for the goveriiiiieiit of the i ranon A)ii-il 6 gyyj yesterday iiiorniiig the tiiroughout the citv Wire by an ex))losion of He 26.

Heiirj W. King, ex-periect of the Peiin.sylvanin InstiUUioii for the Blind, was last week convicted of crimes of a giosely iimiiora! nature at the institution and was sentenced to five years in the Kasterii penitentiary. I.iike Itmfkloirii Nashvii.le, April the sale at Belle Meade yesterday the celo- hrated sialiion Luke Blackburn was 1 to Gen. Jackson for 810,000. verv monotonous to be rich, but there is about beinfj; poor that sometimes makes one Philadelphia Inquirer.

Professor and handsome) Flirtey, decline Miss Flirtey sir; I accept Lawrence American. When you in Russia you are all the Steppes. 'I'lie most coninion dance now is the t'a-ehoo-ea. Puck. 'Uhe revolution in Brazil will make eoffeo scarce, but the abundant clove crop will to help out between the acts.

Boston Herald. has a crest thoujih his father was but a who has a belter right to a coat of S. Y. Sun. The troulile with theologians is they think nobody can gel into heaven who doesn't have a Burlington Free Press.

Hashfulupss is very becoming soiue- tiine.s to a young man, but it is well for him to get over it if he is going to lioard. Journal. F.very man ought to be as good as his woih I. Nothing is expected of those who never have a word for Grleans Picayune. After a man ha.s finished putting up his the family parrot has to be kept out of the room hen the minister eall.s.

Yonkers Statesman. Larkin record beyond suspicion, suspicion! I should say it We can prove the N. Y. Sun Mrs. Brown prompteil that iiold voiiiiir man to ki.ss you at the t'ora ma.

I think he ncetieii any Y. Sun. Dobson Buwser may be a miser, but lie lias the heart of a spring Blobsou do not think him as old as lU- publican. 'I'he small bov may occ.asionally faU In other but you can depend upon it that there is one thing he will iways to a show in Atchison Globe. Waiter (at the club) ia lady outside who says that her husband promised to be home early All (rising) me a moment Budget.

It is our proud boast that tlue United States has no standing army; but look at our bars. 'I'here is an army of men standing at tliein every taking theii drinks. ijh ngs. what were you talking long about itli Mrs. Brow t).

we were talking about the ladie just as you ami Mrs. Brown talk about Blatter. wonder how the expression arm of the llarrv (with a tender look) somebody noticed that it hugged the Knterprise. Michklehan was viewing one of the pagan figures in India when by means of a mechanical appliance it began to weep copiously. he exclaimed.

idol Judge. Wagner has had no successor. The world was for this sad event, however, as, during llie production of all his work.s, there was never a hint of an air American. Seedv my face good for I do not think it is. I think if they got togetlier whisky would get he worst of Haute Express.

In comes ir. that you commitleil a robtiery in so crowiled a street in full your Honor because I had laid oul some other streets for tlie Fliegende. Blatter. Jones, moving rhe landlord told me this house had all the conveniences, but lie deceived me. looked the place all over, Out I found it convenieiit to pay the rent Transcript.

Jagg.s—“I think I am entitled to is your my feeU mgs were hurl by several peojile calling me a coward because, I wouldn't en- Inquirer. It was charged lluit a Brooklyn Alderman wnis an escaped State prison bird, but the paper making it has been conipelied to apologize. As a matter of fact, lie served, out both Ids Detroit Free Press..

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About Bryan-College Station Eagle Archive

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Years Available:
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