Typed as spelled and written
Lena Stone Criswell

THE MARLIN DEMOCRAT
Eighteenth Year - Number 47
Marlin, Texas, Saturday, November 2, 1907
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SHORT NEWS COMMENTS.
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Items of Current Interest in State
and Nation.
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       S. J. Small, president of Commercial Telegraphers' Union, has called off the strike.

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       An export tax of 3 cents per bunch of bananas will be effective after November 1, in Honduras.

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       Inorder (sic) to reduce his weight Judge Peter Kiels, of Aurora, Illinois, whose weight beams at 565, lives on peanuts for 60 days.

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       Governor Campbell is booked to open the Austin fair Monday, same at Brownwood next day and at San Antonio the Saturday following.

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       Amount of payment of interest on school lands, $115,000, was received into the state treasury in one day, which is a record breaker.

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       Secretary Root will probably be elected president of the Central American Peace Conference to be held in Washington, November 19.

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       D. A. Keys, a switchman on T. & P. railway at Fort Worth, Texas, was taken from beneath the ponderous wheels of a heavy loaded car, lifeless.

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       The train, bearing the king and queen of Spain, ran off the rails just before entering Cherbourg, from Paris.  None of the royal party was hurt.

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       A team of cadets from the annual husbandry of the A. & M. is at work judging the stock at the Dallas fair; also another team from the same college is there to judge corn.

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       Mrs. Roger Q. Mills, wife of the former United States Senator, died at her in Corsicana at an advanced age.  Mrs. Mills was in her time a woman well known for her many traits of heart and mind.

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       A quarrel at Cardenas, Mexico, between a drunken conductor and the chief dispatcher is the cause of the strike now pending.  Not a wheel is moving on the Tampico division of the Mexican Central.  After this fight, three Americans were taken to prison, the entire operating force walked out and refused to work unless they were released.

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       William J. Payne, president of the Newport News Gas Company of Richmond, Va., while on his way from Washington to New York, lost a leather grip containing $14,000 in bonds and stock certificates.

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       Gen. Von Moltke, said to be one of the most sagacious war-generals alive, has just been beaten by a newspaper man in Berlin in a suit for defamation of character, and also the general was assessed the costs of the trial.

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Copyright permission granted to Theresa Carhart and her volunteers for
printing by The Democrat, Marlin, Falls Co., Texas