you i 800D.sked Waxahaehie has1 ou ! season 7,000 balse of cotton. It is( oriACCSan- estimated that the crop is not yet the ! half in. Prices $8.40 to $8.70.• theJudge Charles S. West, latenoA1£3overSan-associate chief justice of the su-; Kvelothrindi preme court, died suddenly at his ! The home in Austin Friday of last week, jJ. Conrad was sent up for two„ j years and a half from Bowie re- j rjp j cently for an assault with intentii $6to kill.Up Dr. E. B. Sparks, a prominentaws ’ physician residing at Lone Dak, in to Hunt county, committed -suicidelast week by taking iporphinc.(Nlt;TheingArlington was dedicated Saturday a week. It is said to be the finest•ail-1churchkck Mt. Pleasant has received abouthatar-000 bales of cotton this reason.it,heA 1and it is still coming in at the rate of 75 to 100 bales a day. I be*1 \- and t]avi atMrs. Mike O'Conner, of Austin,gave birth to three weM developedchildren on Monday of last week,Lere j They weighed nine pounds each 3 a ; and are healthy and chubby and• |n‘; all doing well.Priiia^j Wool reached the higheest price . in the state at San Antonio on | (J\• ^ ! Tuesday of last week. The Dawson cliD from Presidio courty soldfor 22 cents per pound.At a meeting of the SouthernTexas Live Stock Association he is-fat San Antonio last week,' fifteen jdelegates were selected to attend :the coming meeting of the .Nation-al Cattle and Horse Growers As. j For;Aociation in St. Louis.Texas appears in the not far future to be destined to become the/y- great wheat-growing state of theUnion. With land as-V.Vbushels to the acre weighing 65 pounds to the bushel, with a much | Qmaking capacity thanXCalifornia for western wheat, wecare bound to outstrip that state I where fifteen bushels of lightvWe pofweight grain is considered a fair j return for the labor of the agTicul-, f t urist.—-ixr. i