USA > Texas > The Standard blue book of Texas 1912-14 > Part 6
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Young, Mrs. J. B. D., res 3122 Lemmon.
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95
The Standard Blue Book of Texas
ALICE PARSONS FITZGERALD (Deceased)
It is not fitting that we close this section of the Standard Blue Book in its edition de luxe of Dallas, without giving some space to the memory of Mrs. Alice Parsons Fitzgerald, founder of Beau Monde, and wife of Hugh Nugent Fitzgerald, of the Dallas Times Herald, as the City of Dallas suffered an irreparable loss in the death of this most wonderful woman.
She was indeed a wonderful woman, with all the graces of womanly womanliness, coupled with her ability in the field of art and journalism. Nature gave her that rare thing, the imagery powers of a poet, the temperament and personality of an artist, with a well poised business head.
She believed in the forward march of civilization, in the great uplift movement for humanity, and saw in the future the dawn of the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of Man.
Fifteen years ago she founded Beau Monde, which was assured of success from the start, as it could not be otherwise with her powers as a trained journalist, a well known and able critic, and her belief in a God-given mission, and that this was her mission. It was her creation, and no human being in all the years of her career dictated or was permitted to dictate its policy.
Under her guiding hand, analytical mind, and splendidly equipped pen, this journal which she conceived and made a power, ever championed, and still champions, what she believed to be the best for the advancement of home and state, and re- mains an indestructible monument to her ability and her goodness.
Mrs. Fitzgerald departed this life on Tuesday, December 13th, 1910, and though she is no longer in the midst of her friends her spirit still lingers, and her work still lives, and prospers, and will continue to live and do good, indeed a monument worth while.
Mineral Wells, Texas
THE SOUTH'S GREATEST HEALTH AND PLEASURE RESORT
Mineral Wells is in a class to itself as an all-the-year-round Health and Pleasure resort-it is some- thing different and better. For a quarter of a century it has been popular as a health resort. It has more tourists and health seekers annually than any city of its size in the world. The number having passed the hundred and fifty thousand mark several years ago.
The city is situated in the mountains of West Texas, at an altitude of 1400 feet, where malaria and climatic diseases are unknown. The scenery in and around Mineral Wells is as picturesque and beautiful as Nature ever placed before the eye.
The resident population is about 6,000, and the city is modern in every way, having concrete side- walks and crossings, street cars, electric and gas lights, parks, golf grounds, many beautiful homes, · churches, modern schools, clubs, stores, banks, office buildings, etc. There are seventy-five hotels and boarding houses, with ample accommodations for 10,000 guests, and the rates are lower than in any first-class resort city in America. The public drinking pavilions and bath houses recently built are the largest and best equipped buildings of their kind on earth.
The waters from the thirty or forty different "wells" which is used is all clear as crystal, sparkling, and pleasant to the taste, which makes it, aside from its wonderful medicinal properties, the purest and best drinking water on earth. The chemical analysis of each of the wells is different, hence the great value of the waters in treating different diseases.
Mineral Wells has the greatest variety of life giving mineral waters in this country; it has been tested and thoroughly tested, for a quarter of a century, in the treatment of many thousands of chronic cases of Rheumatism, Insomnia, Nervousness, Constipation, Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Female Dis- orders, and all forms of Kidney, Liver, Bladder and Stomach Troubles, and the great number of cures credited to the waters has made it famous as "The Best Water on Earth."
Physicians throughout the country endorse the waters and send thousands of patients here to take the hot mineral baths and drink the waters. The bathing facilities here are the best in the South. However, the best general results are obtained by drinking the waters fresh at the wells.
A well known peculiarity of the water is that it destroys the desire for alcoholic stimulants. Recent discoveries show unmistakable proof that the waters are radio-active, in addition to having the properties that make them the world's greatest and best solvent for uric acid.
Hundreds of solid cars of the waters are shipped to distant points in the United States annually. Total shipments for 1910 was more than 3,000,000 bottles. The water shipments from here is greater than from all the other wells and springs in Texas combined, and it is the largest mineral water shipping point in the South or Southwest The shipments of condensed water, crystals, and mineral oils, made from the natural waters, is a large and growing business. Orders are received from all parts of the United States for these by-products.
As a place to spend a vacation for rest, pleasure or health, for Southern people during the Summer and early Fall months and for Northern people during the winter and early spring months, Mineral Wells is the most popular and largely patronized resort in the entire Southwest. It is a city dedicated to tourists and health seekers, and there has been provided here a combination of "good things" un- equaled by any similar resort in this country. The summer nights are always cool, and there are no mosquitoes. This, with the famous "sleepy waters," makes Mineral Wells the ideal place to rest and thoroughly enjoy a vacation.
After a thorough investigation of various cities throughout the South, from Atlantic to Pacific, Chas. A. Comiskey, President of the Chicago White Sox Baseball Club, selected Mineral Wells as their training ground, and after training here for the first time in the spring of 1911 he said, "I have tried California and I have tried Mexico, but the most favored of all the spots in these two parts of the world cannot rival Mineral Wells."
The words "Vacation and Mineral Wells" are linked together in the minds of countless thousands, so that they never think of going anywhere else for "repairs" or a vacation. You will always feel that you have "missed something" until you come to the "City of Radium Waters." Come now, and in the future it will be a habit with you, as with many others.
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The Standard Blue Book of Texas
99
Social Directory
Mineral Wells, Texas
ander, Dr. and Mrs. R. C.
u, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene. an, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. hn, Mr. and Mrs. M. H. ley. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. , Dr. and Mrs. B. R. ham, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. well, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Mr. and Mrs. P. E. man, Mr. and Mrs. F. M. in, Col. and Mrs. W. H. coe, Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Main, Rev. and Mrs. W. E. n, Dr. and Mrs, J. Duff, Jr. g. Mr. W. J.
man, Mr. and Mrs. Fred. well, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. pbell, Mr. J. I. sle, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. ngan, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. oman, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. , Mr. and Mrs. W. V. ₭, Mr. Ernest E.
a, Mr. and Mrs. Max. man, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. ford, Mr. J. D. cher, Dr. J. W. on, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Fitt, Mr. and Mrs. C. B.
Dickinson, Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Downs, Rev. and Mrs. James W. Durham, Mr. and Mrs. I. B.
Eastland, Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Eberhart, Judge and Mrs. F. S. Eldridge, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Frost, Mr. and Mrs. H. N.
Galbraith, Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Gerstenkorn, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Green, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Gross, Judge and Mrs. W. H.
Hazlewood, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Hazlewood, Mr. and Mrs. Anson. Hedick, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Hedick, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Hill, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Hitt, Mr, and Mrs. Arza B. Holt, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Howard, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Howard, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Howard, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Hubard, Dr. and Mrs. G. W. Hyde, Mr. and Mrs. R. W:
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Jones, Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Kearns, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. King, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. B.
Lattner, Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Lawrence, Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Leiper. Mrs. M. A. Llewellyn, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Mallard, Rev. J. Hardin. Massie, Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Mayfield, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. McAfee, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. McCracken, Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Mccutcheon, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. McGinley, Mr. and Mrs. M. McGuire, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. McNew, Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Mincey, Dr. and Mrs. J. N. Moore, Mr. and Mrs. John T. Moore, Miss Elizabeth.
Norwood, Dr. and Mrs. R. R.
Oliver, Mr. and Mrs. E. D.
O'Neall, Mr. and Mrs. E. V. O'Ncall, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. O'Neall, Mr. and Mrs. J. F.
Pangle. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Penix, Judge and Mrs. W. H. Pollard, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Poston, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Raines, Dr. and Mrs. C. B.
Register, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Richards, Mr. and Mrs. Frank. Ritchie, Judge and Mrs. E. B. Rountree, Dr. and Mrs. W. C.
Seaman, Mr .. and Mrs. L. E. Seamster, Dr. and Mrs. Lee. Smart, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Cicerd. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Walter I. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Lycurgus. Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. C. J.
Tarr, Dr. and Mrs. A. J. Thomas, Dr. and Mrs. W. M. Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. A. J.
Thompson, Dr. and Mrs. A. W. Turner, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. E.
Vaughan, Mr. J. H.
Wagley, Dr. and Mrs. H. F. Waldron, Col. and Mrs. E. J. Wilson, Mr. C. W.
Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. I. N. Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Philip. Wood, Mr. and Mrs. W. J.
Yeager, Dr. and Mrs. Robt. L. Yeager, Dr. and Mrs. C. F. Yeager, Mr. and Mrs. B. A.
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VIEW OF DRINKING PAVILIONS AND PROMINENT CITIZENS OF MINERAL WELLS TEXAS
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Partial View of Mineral Wells, Texas, and a Few of Its Prominent Citizens
1 Mrs. J. N. Mincy
3 Mrs. P. E. Bock
Mrs. B. R. Beeler 4 Dr. Lilly Roberts
10 N. E. MII01
6 View of Drinking Pavilions 8 C. J. Stewart
Dr. J, N. Miney 9 L.yourgua Smith
11 Col, Juok Campbell
اسم الصدد والا
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101
The Standard Blue Book of Texas
McKinney, "The City of Home Builders"
Although one of the oldest towns in the state of Texas and for many years one of the wealthiest, Mckinney has slept upon the. rights and privileges which the bountiful hand of nature had so freely bestowed. Blest with a surrounding country whose soil is the richest within the confines of the state, and at the same time partaking freely of the natural growth of Texas, Mckinney should have been today a city of similar proportions with Dallas, Houston and San Antonio instead of a city of 10,000; but because of the lassitude which follows the contentment of prosperity her people have left her to struggle along as best she might and to gradually sink in the census scale until, several years back, she ranked with the smaller and more inconsequential towns of Texas.
Now, however, all this has changed. A new life is throbbing through the little city and she is rapidly coming to her own. One bitter struggle made the next easier until nothing is out of reach. The Sherman-Dallas interurban offered itself as a grand opportunity for advancement and with a her- culean effort the bonus was raised, the road built and McKinney became known as an awakening town.
The Texas Cotton Mill, fostered and promoted by local capital, was the second great stride, and now this magnificent mill, with its 5,500 spindles and over 600 looms, great modern buildings, the best machinery obtainable and a capitalization of $200,000.00 stands as a monument to a progressiveness second to none in Texas.
Beautiful residences abound in Mckinney-solid piles of masonry which would do credit to any city; cozy cottages which bespeak the thrifty nature of the inhabitants, and the still more humble "cot" which Burns has vivified as the home of labor and love. But the great thought of it all is that in Mckinney everybody owns a home, hence the city's appellation-"The City of Home Builders."
A need has been felt for a higher institution of learning than our splendid high and ward schools. The people, in an earnest effort to overcome this need, have raised a bonus of $75,000, which they have tendered the State of Texas on condition that a branch of the State A. & M. College, with an appro- priation of an equal amount, be placed in Mckinney by the legislature. This measure is even now on . the calendar of both houses awaiting a call.
Mckinney is the home of J. P. Burrus, owner of the justly famous Burru's flour mills of Fort Worth and heavy stock holder in the Collin County Mill and Elevator Co. of his own city. Mr. Burrus, with his fellow home-building townsmen-of whom there are a multitude in Mckinney-is always ready to assist in a financial way in establishing new enterprises in Mckinney.
Looking at Mckinney in the light of these and many other great movements it may be easily realized that the erstwhile dormant town is rapidly becoming the type of "live wire" town so commonly associated with West Texas and very seldom thought of as being a part of North Texas. Therefore, we venture the prediction that Mckinney-"The City of Home Builders" -- will soon become the cynosure of all eyes, and that the homeseekers from the crowded sections of the North and East will pause to investigate the great possibilities and resources of McKinney before they go on to invest in land or homes where values are uncertain and results are a mere conjecture.
Social Directory
of Mckinney, Texas
Abernathy, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Abernathy, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Abernathy, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Abernathy. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Abbott, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Abbott, Dr. and Mrs. C. N.
Abbott, Dr. and Mrs. S. H. Adams, Mr. and Mrs. G.
Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Dick, Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Alsup. Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur. Andrews, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Barnes, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Bell, Rev. and Mrs. J. M. Brannon, Mr. and Mrs. Fred.
Bristol, Mr. and Mrs. John.
Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Robert.
Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. P. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. John.
Bryant, Dr. and Mrs. A. F. Burrage, Mr. and Mrs. Richard.
Burton, Dr. and Mrs. E. L. Burton, Mr. and Mrs. N. A.
The Standard Blue Book of Texas
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Social Directory of Mckinney, Texas
Continued
Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. W. B.
Perkins, Mr. and Mrs. F. D.
Heard, Mr. and Mrs. S. D.
Perkins, Senator and Mrs. Tom.
Bond, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
Heard, Mr. and Mrs. John.
Price, Mr. and Mrs. Walter.
Provine, Dr. and Mrs.
Heard, Dr. and Mrs. W. T.
Powell. Mrs. Maude.
Hedger, Dr. and Mrs. F. G.
Purnell, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Queseinberry, Mr. and Mrs. Benge.
Couch, Mr. and Mrs. Jos.
Hill, Mr, and Mrs. D. C.
Crouch, Mr. and Mrs. L. W.
Hill, Mr. and Mrs. W. R.
Crouch, Mr. and Mrs. J. P.
Davis, Mr. and Mrs. H. L.
Hill, Prof. and Mrs. J. W.
Dillow, Mr. and Mrs. I.
Houston, Dr. and Mrs.
Houston, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace.
Dowell, Mr. and Mrs. J. S.
Howell, Mr. and Mrs. Walter.
Dowell, Mrs. J. P.
Howell, Mrs. Sara.
Sliff, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn. Smith; Mr. and Mrs. Howell E.
Doygett, Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
Hynds, Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
Elliott, Mr. and Mrs. L. L.
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. B. F.
Emerson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank.
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. John.
Emerson, Mr. and Mrs. Fred.
Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin.
Emerson, Mr. and Mrs. Cliff.
Kistler, Mr. and Mrs. H.
Emerson, Mrs. Thos.
King, Rev. and Mrs. E. E.
Erwin, Dr. and Mrs. J. C.
Kirkpatrick, Mr. and Mrs. E. W.
Estes, Mr. and Mrs. Ben.
Largent, Mr. and Mrs. Joe.
Everett, Mr. and Mrs. T. F.
Love, Mr. and Mrs. R. G.
Ferguson, Mr. and Mrs. John.
Love, Capt. and Mrs.
Field, Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Lovejoy, Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
Truett, Mr. and Mrs. L. J.
Finch, Mr. and Mrs. H.
Massie, Rev. and Mrs. San
Fincher, Rev. and Mrs. E. B.
Matthews, Mr. and Mrs. W. S.
Waddill, R. L. Warden, Mr. and Mrs. Henry.
Fitzhugh, Mr. and Mrs. J. G.
Mathews, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
Webb, Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Franklin, Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
Mathery, Mr. and Mrs. Sam.
Wesmian, Mr. and Mrs. S.
Fcx, Mr. and Mrs. Geo.
Merrett, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence.
White, Mr. and Mrs. P. Less.
Garnett, Mr. and Mrs. M. H.
Metz, Dr. and Mrs.
White, Mr. and Mrs. Henry.
Gerrish, Mr. and Mrs. Will.
McAuley, Mrs. E. N.
White, Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
Gibson, Dr. and Mrs. J.
McClelland, Rev. and Mrs. H.
Graves, Mr. and Mrs. L. V.
McDonald, Mrs. H. H.
Wiley, Dr. and Mrs. T. W. Wilcox, Mr. and Mrs. Geo.
Greer, Dr. and Mrs. J. C.
Newsome, Mr. and Mrs. W. B.
Wilcox, Mr. and Mrs. Frank.
Goodner, Capt. and Mrs. T. L.
Newsome, Mr. and Mrs. E. A.
Wilcox, Mr. and Mrs. Jim.
Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. W. B.
Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Geo.
Parvin, Mr. and Mrs. H. M.
Pearson, Judge and Mrs. J. M.
Younger, Mrs. Frances.
Waxahachie, Texas
Waxahachie, the County Seat of Ellis County, is a city of 10,000 population, and one of the most enterprising cities in central Texas today. She has four banks, more and larger gin plants than any town in Texas, 3 cotton oil mills, one cotton goods mill, which weaves 5,000 bales of cotton per year, and one of the very best water and sewerage systems in the entire State.
Waxahachie has one of the best equipped libraries in the entire State, has one daily newspaper and two weekly papers, and a high class printing office. She is mainly a residence and college town largely supported by agricultural resources.
Waxahachie is the seat of Trinity University, which is the property of the Presbyterian Church of the U. S. A. branch. It was formerly located at Tehuacana, Texas, but on account of its inaccessi- bility there it was decided to move to a better location. After careful consideration it was decided to accept the $80,000 bonus and move to Waxahachie. It is a co-educational school and the courses of study are equal to those maintained by the best colleges and conservatories in the country.
Burrus. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Bush, Mr. and Mrs. Walter.
Boyd, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Church, Judge and Mrs. John. Clifton, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Coffee, Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Coleman, Prof. and Mrs. T. A.
Hill, Mr. and Mrs. John. Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Ben.
Rhea, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Rucker, Dr. and Mrs.
Scott, Mr. and Mrs. S. O.
Scott, Mr. and Mrs. L. A.
Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred.
Shirley, Mr. and Mrs. Mort.
Ditto, Mr. and Mrs. W. E.
Sims, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Albert,
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Harry. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank.
Smith, Rev. and Mrs. Oscar.
Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. O. C.
Stiff, Mrs. J. D.
Suttle, Mr. and Mrs. W. P.
Thompson, Rev. and Mrs. W. D. Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. K. D.
Greer, Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
Mckinney, Mr. and Mrs. Giles.
Oneal, Mr, and Mrs. Geo.
Gough, Senator and Mrs. J. R. Hammond, Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Plummn.
Heard, Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
Hill, Mr. and Mrs. F. M.
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The Standard Blue Book of Texas
Waco, Texas
By MISS ELEANOR WATSON
There are larger cities in Texas, and those which have more manufacturing enterprises, but there are none better located than Waco, the county seat of McLennan County. She is the center of the black land district, which is composed of fifty-two counties in Texas, and one-fifth the entire cotton crop of the world is raised within 200 miles of her. McLennan County contains 6,000 farms on which are raised corn, wheat, oats, melons and potatoes, and Waco is the distributing point for these articles. The city is enclosed by an elevation which tends to ward off cyclones and dangerous storms. It is a notable fact that there has never been a destructive storm in Waco.
HEALTH
The city is divided by the Brazos River, better known as "The Mississippi of Texas", which alone would furnish sufficient water supply for a much larger city than Waco. Her artesian wells are numerous, one having been reached at a depth of 40 feet, which flows a million gallons per week, containing such properties as will make Waco one of the biggest health resorts in the United States. She has the lowest death rate of any city in the South. Within three years' time, by actual count, there has not been a single death by consumption. Her winters are mild, her summers pleasant.
WEALTH
McLennan County's assessed valuation is $50,000,000 and the valuation of Waco in round num- bers is $25,000,000. The live stock of the county is valued at two and a quarter million dollars, and in one year her farm products reached the value of over three and one half-million dollars. She has six insurance companies, one bonding company and eight banks with deposits within the neighborhood of $10,000,000.
INSURANCE
Waco has the best fire protection in her district and at the lowest rate.
GROWTH
Just a little over fifty years ago Waco was an Indian village; today she is a thriving little city, whose population is estimated at 30,000, with a twenty-two story building rising to the sky. She is rapidly becoming a railroad center, already having the tracks of four railroad companies, and several others under advisement, and when the Brazos River is made navigable from its mouth to Waco (a distance of over two hundred miles) her growth will be more rapid than even in the past.
CONSTRUCTION
The progressiveness of a city is determined by the number of buildings erected in a given time, and in this line Waco stands near the front. Within the past three years buildings to the amount of $2,655,000 have been erected, those to the amount of $475,000 are in course of erection, and those to the amount of $780,000 will be erected within a short time, making a grand total within four years of $3,910,000.
OPPORTUNITIES
The manufacturing field is open for cotton seed oil mills, knitting mills, cloth mills, flour mills, grist mills, cereal mills, elevators, breweries, iron foundries, steel manufacturies, planing mills, wood work, cheese factories, packeries, medicine manufacturies, brick work, sewer piping, lime kilns, granite works, twine mills, and all kinds of manufacturing. On account of the favorable graduated mileage freight rate, Waco manufacturers are able to supply sister cities and states at lower freight rates than they obtain staple articles from New York. Waco has the only woolen mill, manufacturing wool cloth in central Texas, and has one of the best equipped glass works, both plain and ornamental, in the South.
SCHOOLS AND CHURCHES
Waco is sometimes called the Athens of Texas, on account of her educational facilities. She is the seat of Baylor University, which has an average yearly attendance of 950 students, several denomi- national schools, well equipped business colleges, and a public school system second to none. She has several beautiful chapter houses and a handsome Carnegie library. Her people are religiously inclined, having builded 60 churches and a handsome Y. M. C. A. building, thus lending a moral atmosphere unequaled.
The Standard Blue Book of Texas
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Social Directory of
Waco, Texas
Abeel, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred, 517 N. Fourth St. Ashburn, Mrs. E. J., 1221 Franklin St.
Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Jas. B., 903 Columbus St.
Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Jno. W., Jack Bill Lou.
Baker, Mr. and Mrs. W. S., 703 Washington St. Black, Mr. and Mrs. L. B., 1003 Columbus St. Boggess, Mr. and Mrs. Albert, 1715 Columbus St. Bolton, Mr. and Mrs. E. R., 1223 Austin St. Bollinger. Mrs. C. D., 1430 Columbus St. Brewer, Mr. and Mrs. H. K., Seventeenth and Columbus. Boynton, Mr. and Mrs. C. A., 1324 Austin St. Boynton, Mrs. J. F .. , 1515 Austin St. Brooks, Dr. and Mrs. S. P., 1024 Speight St.
Cameron, Mr. and Mrs. Wm., 1715 Washington St. Cameron, Mrs. Wm., 1223 Austin St. Carroll, Mrs. F. L., 705 Speight St. Cartwright. Mr. and Mrs. R. L., 1922 N. Sixth St. Caufield, Mr. and Mrs. Thos. A., 510 N. Twelfth St. Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Irwin. Clifton, Dr. and Mrs. W. R., Jefferson and Third Sts. Clifton, Mr. and Mrs. Albert. Clisbee, Mr. and Mrs. C. M., 2120 Washington St. Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. J. B., 1624 Austin St. Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. M. A., 1801 Austin St. Cowan, Mr. and Mrs. A. B., 517 S. Fourth St.
Davidson, Mr. and Mrs. W. R., Seventeenth and Morrow. Davis, Mr. and Mrs. J. Lee, 1728 Franklin St. Davis, Mr. and Mrs. W. W., 1700 Austin Ave. Dennis, Mr. and Mrs. R. T., 1923 Austin Ave. Dockery, Mr. and Mrs. J. M., 1324 N. Fifth St. Drake, Mr. and Mrs. E. F., 2122 Washington St.
Eddins, Mr. and Mrs. D. S., 1009 Washington St. Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. A. A., 1904 Columbus
Forman, Dr. and Mrs. Frank, 1603 Washington St. Fort, Mr. and Mrs. F. W., 503 S. Fourth St. Fort, Mr. and Mrs. W. F., 1215 Franklin St. Foscue, Mr. and Mrs. G. B., Twelfth and Columbus. Foster, Mr. and Mrs. W. M., Thirteenth and Columbus Friend, Miss Kate, 525 N. Twelfth St.
Geer, Mr. and Mrs. W. L., 903 Columbus Ave. Gross, Mr. and Mrs. t., 1709 Austin Ave.
Hamilton, Col. and Mrs. Chas., 1521 Austin Ave. Harrigan, Dr. and Mrs. Jno. T., 1313 S. Eighth St. Hays, Mr. and Mrs. T. D., 1311 Austin Ave. Hays, Mr. and Mrs. W. B., 1103 Jefferson. Hengst, Dr. and Mrs. P. R., 1808 Austin Ave. Hill, Mr. and Mrs. J. S., 1921 Columbus. Hirshberg, Mr. and Mrs. S., 1425 Austin St. Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs. W. H., 1813 Webster St. Hutcheson, Mr. and Mrs. B. L., 1009 Columbus Ave.
James, Mr. and Mrs. F. K., Sixteenth and Morrow. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Jno. D., 1504 Columbus Ave. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. W. H., 1910 Austin St. Jones, Mr. and Mrs. W. H., 1512 Columbus St. Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. H. P., 2021 Austin St.
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