Dallas Daily Herald (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 67, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 29, 1873 Page: 1 of 4
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VOL. 1.
THE DAILY HERALD
ri'M-lMKD KVRRT (NOININa (koHDATI MUEmo)
JXO. W. SWINDELLS & CO.
Terra f Mabarripilaa.
On year.. ... hhhwim ..... 510 m
An muni ........... ..... e no
Three mnnih ' 4 On
IV week (delirrrtd by carrier)... an
TYr month 1 do
Adrrrtiaiaa; Rate..
On Square (ten lino of th Is slz. typel one ni.r
.tlun tl. Each tuksoijiient insertion 60 cuts.
Snwi.l Notion next to rmnllnr matter.fl M) Bar
squire each Inevrtiou Local Nntlceslh reading or
editorial coiuiuna so cumber line auctiMKerllon.
naTSrteclal reduced rates made for longer narloda
iMTAdtortiiieiitente payable In advance nnlesi
wilkthu. doing rugular buslnm under contract
THE .WEEKLY HERALD
U rUlLIIUCD KVKBT IATHBDAY 0I!I1N0.
Titaas. II W p.r annum" r $1 to for tlx
nuiull" In advance.
J.W. SWINDELLS CO.
JKO. W. SWIltnELLS. T) u'cALKB
BY TELEGRAPH.
The id ouisiana Troubles
Kellogg Backing Ills Appointees
with BletropoUtans and
; Artillery.
Stvtn Persona Perish in a Burning Railroad
Increasing Troubles in Spain
NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD
Thirty Companies of Soldiers to
Protect its Operations.
Latest from the ITIodocs
8000 INDIANS ON THE WAR
PATH.
Xxxx'taox'ta.xi.t Suproino
Court Sooiaious.
POIrVttSI OF THE I.Etilml.ATlUE
Special to tlia Dalla Herald.
Austin April 28.
House Judgs Sabio introduoed a reso-
lution whioh passed both Houses to-dny.
It makes the absense of the litigant or
leading counsel in oivil oauiei in the Log-
- islature auffioient oause for the continu-
ance of said cases.
A bill passed amending and incorpora-
ting Waco. Bills were introduced to pro-
note the quick construction of a canal
between Sabine Lake and Oalveston Bay;
for Ibe improvement and navigation of
Trinity river; organizing the county of
M Mullen.
Bills were passed incorporating the
Hook and Lalder company of Jefferson !
authorizing Lamar county to issue bonds
to build a courthouse. Th Houso passed
a concurrent resolution from the Senate
recommending the use of the University
cries of school books.
Charges were preferred against Judge
Chambers First District. A resolution
was introduced to appoint a committee to
investigate and ascertain if he should no
bs impeached. The committee consists
of Ceeke Rymcs and Watts.
A resolution was adapted that after the
81 of May no new business would be tran-
sacted. Adjutant General Davidson drew $391.
680 for police purposes. ......
Sunate Th bill redisricting judicial
district was made the special order for
Thursday. Several railroad bills wero
Bade the speoial order for certain days.
Nothing further of interest to you.
GUESS.
Asencstl l'reas Diepatclira la she Dal-
' lae Dalljr Herald.
Wshikotuh April 28 The Curt of
Claims awarded Eugene Diekelman $18-
000 for loss caused by detention of the ship
Essex by order of Gen Butler while com-
manding at New Orleans. Tbe Court ad-
journed till next Monday then it will
clear th docket of cotton eases and ad-
journ to October.
SUFBRIIB COUBT DECISION. .
The agent of the Southern Express
Company of th city of Habile decision is
affirmed and tax levied by Mobile sus-
tained PlanUrs Bank of Tennesson vs.
Union Bank of Louisiana. The remlttao-
es and ooll.otlons due Ik Plantar Bank
r paid by tba Id ion Bank to th mili-
toJ..by order at 0nral Banks. Th
- Court held that Hi Under f Confederal
"easy when eueh money had no valu
did not extinguish tb debt. The Supreme
Court ruled that General Bank had
right to nrder lb debt t be paid and
that obedienc to that order did not exon-
rale the Union Bank. ' 1
Justice Bradley dissented holding that
Congress having intervened to proteot
General Banks and other officer. I. .1.1
ar slrcunstaaoes for rasponaibillty for
vumiuanu eoioroea tj military
V . . """vrnmeoi SOOUia ttsiohd te
th lnlurd nartr. ..
W hen on an insnranee cms tk court
eoonrme the deoision of a lower
ouri giving insurance money to a suiol
dars k.iri
i.T'l?C4'!r 4iurBd ' Thursday' hn
niii aujuuru term. . w
TUB HO DOCS
Bin Fbahcisco April 28-Tk Modoes
ar eorinned at tk base of the mountains
near the lava beds. Naarlv all th oav-
try uorsej nav in epltootio.
' ' 6i IHB WAB AT.' -''
Fort Geart April 28.- Maalloba die-
patches report firing between .Americans
and Blaokteet Indians. A large number
oi Amsnoans nave been killed. I
. There is trouble 1b the Blackfset eoun-
tryjin oniequenerof which 8000iin.
dians hav crossed th line and threaten
settlers. .... ......
COTTON SBir BlIBNIO.
Nsw York April 28. A private dis-
patch from Liverpool received her yes-
terday announces th burning "of the
British skip Southampton while on her
voyage from New Orleans to Revl. She
had a cargo .of 8.QS4 bles cotton. !
Ma-arms April 28.-TkV tiling f
Stanton on th MemphU & Charleston
railroad has been destroyed by Ire.
ORNITHOLOGY.
Cincinnati April 28 Fifteen hundred
singing birds from Germany were uncag-
ed yesterday by a looiety which proposes
Americanizing them. '
BURNED TO DEATH.
' A' station-hous' crossing en the New
Albany & Chicago Lake Shore railroad
was burned. A father daughter and five
children perished in the flames. t
New Yore- April 28.-Post Master
James pronounces suspicions of defalca-
tion aga inst the Cashier in this post office
unfounded.
IIOTKL BURNED.
The St. Charles Hotel Pattersoii.burued
Th guests had a narrow escape leaping
from the upper window to adjoining
buildings. One was fatally and two seri-
ously hurt ; . :
TURBULENT SPAIN. : . j
London. April 28. A dispatch from
Madrid says the search for members of
the Permanent oommitlee continues. Bar-
rono and Figueros have been arrested.' ;
A monster meeting of the Federalists
was held yesterday and gallant speeches
made. i
The LancashlreCb'a carriage work were
burned in Manchester. Fifty locomotives
and 120 coaches were burned. Loss
$1000000. . . ;
LOUISIANA. .. '' -- I
Baton Rouoe April 28. A detaohmeqt
of 125 Metropolitan police; armed with
Winchester rifles and a pieoe of artillery
arrived here last evening from New Or-
leans and left this morning for Port Vin-
oeut for the purpose of installing Kol-
lagg appointees. They were met at H ar-
row's Ferry Amite river at noon by a
oommiltee of three parsons representing
tho Port Vincent party. It is presumed
matters will be adjusted without blood-
shed. ENZOOTIC !
San Francisco April i!8. Noon The
horse disease paralizes business in this
oity. . ... ....
' SPANISH ADVICES. '
The Herald's special from Madrid saye
tbe Ultras demand the establishment of
the Commute and are huutiug members
of tbe Permanent commission.
Sogosta was surrounded in the street by
armed men the leader bearing th Phyri-
gian oup on his bayonet. Burro was ar-
rested in Serrono'e mother's house. "The
increasing fury of tbe Ultras iid'cates
massaore as the monarchial volunteers
are disposed to fight against the docree
disarming them. j
Washington April 28. General Soho-
fteld telegraphs that thert is no doubt that
some of th Modoos have esoaped and that
should tho threatened Indian outbreaks
in Oregon ocour reinforements will be re-
quired.' Paris. April 28. The Catholics carried
the Department of Morbibern. ' Result of
tbe eleotion as follows : lloyonet iiadioal
105000 Count de Rumesat 135000.
Baron Stoffel Conservative 278000.
Rumesat wag Theirs' candidal.. Th Re-
publicans oarried tbe Department of Cor-
ney Juny and Morn. ... k . j
St. Petersburo April 28 The Em-
peror Wilhelm arrived: 111 arrival was
attended with great telat. v '
tub northern rAcirio. !
Washington April 28. A special order
has been iesued from th War Department
assigning thirty companies including all
arms with all machinery and supplies fr
an expedition to proteot operations on th
Northern Pacific Railroad. It is tb heav-
iest expedition aver sent out in time of
peace. The expedition leave on tb lftih
of June and remain in the field until th
15th of Otober. ;.:... j
DOXR to commodore aulick
Tbe Secretary of th Navy direct) th
naval otfioers and marines on duty her to
appear in full dress at Commodore Au-
lick s funeral. Army offioor ar invited.
Aged 84.
Paris April 28. Th election of a Bar-
onet to the National Assembly-from this
oity will probably lead t modification
of the Ministry as it is probable that
Count De Remnstat Minister of foreign
affairs Lyorsay Minister f finances and.
Jules Simons Minister of publie Inetruo.
tion will resign. Cossimer Perirer for-
merly Minister of tb Interior and M.
Gravy' late Prefident of the Asssmbly.aro
talked of as possible member of th new;
Cabinet.. r
London April 28 Consult 00) ; 6s 80
Paris April 28.-Rentes 66 and 27. j
Liverpool. Auril 28 Noo. Cotton
opened quiet' and- ittady ; uplands Did j
Orlnt 9Jd.' LaterCotton easier but
not lower: sale of 12.000 bales; special
xport 2000 bales; from Savannah and
CharUsUn April 9Jd April and May
9 1-18! April delivery 9d May 9 1 -18.
d .i-f .I'trfc At'i'I i
UIV.UUUB . " . ....
NW Urlbam -ApruX8..riiiur.iJ
euperun.9o:uvouuDi. u;4ufir.ui.pj w i-vu
family J'. to 10. Corn quiet; -mixed 661
yellow 68. wbit 60. Oats quiet at 46
. DALLAS" TEXAS TUESDAY MORNING APRIL
Bran dull at 86. Hay dull; prim 25
choice 28. Pork dull: mess held atS19. Drv
aalt meats dull at Tj 9) to 63. Bacon dull
shoulder 8 to 1SJ; for clear rib and clear
nams it io jo. Lard refined scare and
IB demand; ticrc 9J keg 10J. Sugar dull
common 61 good to fullr fair 71 to 81
Molasses nothing doiug. Whisky 89 to
08. Coffee 17 to 19. Sterling 27 sight
preunum. uia Uj. totton in good
asm an 4 easier; sales 6000 bales; good or-
dinary 15 to 16 low middlings 171 to 171.
middlings 185 to t81roiidlinrOrlans 181:
receipts 4085;exports Liverpool U660; other
loreiRn pert ttt new lorfc 88; StOCa:
iiuui oaits.
1 e
' t ' i. yr"llr HPri
" PROBABILITIES.
Washington April 28. The itorm area
now .xienaing irom in uiilo valley to
Tennessee will probably move northeast-
ward ouite ranidlv. Far the aonthw.at
Teaoesaec and tk Gulf 8tates exempting
"wwtwi riu tv-Bignt eiauuy ana ariv-
ing weather southwesterly and north-
Wesiertv Wintla. anil allrhll diminiakari
temperature. ;For tho South Atlantic
otaies .rain lo-nigni iouowea By cloudy
and partly cloudy weather with eouth-
weaterlv and aarlhweatarlT wiodi. In.
creasing preseur on Tuesday.
TIIE IADIAIV QUESTION
af FULL AND COMPLETE EEVIEW
Gen. Sherman an Ih Treatmeni aftlw
Bavagea-Paraonal Expor trace la (
Indian T.rrliarr-Tha Army Shoald
llavti Charge ol the Trlkre.
The following letter from Gen Sherman
written to a friend in Washington will be
read wi'.b the deepest interest it th pres
ent moment: '':
Headquabter )
Abut or the United States L
Wnshinqton D. C April 17 1873. J
Dear Sir: I have your letter of this
date and am unwilling in a private letter
to express my opioious on all the ques-
tions you make. ' .
Tbe army hai no "policy" about Indians
or anything els. Ithaa no voloe in Con-
gress but aooepts the law as enacted and
the interpretation thereof by tb' proper
officials and executes them with as much
intelligence fidelity and humanity as any
other body of oitliens.- From the organi-
sation of th government up to 1860 the
Indians and Indian bureau were under tbe
war department that nearly all the oiv-
ilization and ohribtianiiatien of the Indi-
ans thus far accomplished oocurred under
army supervision. ' ' .
To-day in case an Indian suffers a
wrong I believe he will be tuor likely to
appeal to the commanding oflioer of the
nearest military pest than to his own
agent ; for in the one ho sees with his eyes
the evidence of a force to compel obedi-
ence whereas In the otber nothing of tbe
kind lu like manner 1 believe the an-
nuities to treaty Indians would reach the
parties in inierest quite as surly through
army officers as through civilians. And
when Indians have committed dopreda
lions as io very common and tbe annui
ties are chargeable with the amount of
damages such stoppages could more safely
mad by a commanding oflioer having sol-
diers at his back than by an agent afraid
of bis life as too many of them are and
have reason to be. Th present Indian
agents as a class are very good men ; but
they l no It the force tue power which sav-
ages al.ne rospeot. .
The existing polioy usually called the
peace polioy is to gradually assemble the
wandering tribes on reservations with
boundaries dearly defined and then
through oiviliana to lnstruot them in ag-
riculture and tbo ruder arts and diioato
Ibem as far as possible. To this I think
no arm V officer ohiaota. And. further arhan
the Indians leave their reservations to
steal murder aud plunder they fall under
me jurisdiction of the army. This is the
theoretical condition of things but it
would require ten times our present army
to make a cordon around tb reservations
so that murders ar don th stealing of
came nones as perpairaua ana tue
Indian quickly escape to their reserva-
tions where the troops oannot follow them;
so that in fact these reservations help
then in their lucrative business. '
I am safe in saying that half th horses
and mulos now owned by the Kiowas Co-
manches Cheyennee Arapaboes Sioux
&o."-all treaty Indians all at peace with
agenoies and annuities have been stolen
from the United States or from oltiiens.
I have myself seen at tbe Kiowa and Co-
manche agency and at several of th
Sioux agenoies horses and mule brauded
"U. S." led up to be paoked with annuity
goods and I never beard of an agent de-
manding the restoration of on for that
reason; and though murder are of so fre-
quent oeourreaee I do not hear of th
murderer being surrendered a is re-
quired by the treaties. Again tbourn tb
tiioux and Cheyenne are at peace the ar-
my has to send escort with all train and
parties of surveyors who go rightfully to
work within th borders of such Stales as
Kansas and Nebtaska as though actual
war existed. . . .. .. ; .
All I will venture to assert is that the
army has muob mora difficult task now
than if we were actually at war. and
could antioipate depredation and follow
th perpetrator to their very camps a I
did in the east of the Kiowas two years
ago. Then the Texa people were con-
stantly eomplaining that th treaty In-
dians were depredating on their property
killing their people and taking refuge on
their reservation. I would not believ it
until I went in person and was actually
atar oy wnen eantanta killed (even poor
teamstsrsin Texaa on of whom was found
burned tied at th wagon-wheel and a
few days after he eame to tbe agenoy at
Fort Sill boasting of the deed. ' With the
approval of tb agent Mr. latum I ar-
rested him and tw other and sent them
to Texa for trial: Now I am told that
Bantaat 1 to be turned loose again al-
inugn a Deueve ne nas committed tuty
murders and baa notoriously " violated
every promise hitherto made.
No general rule will auswer for the
government of every tribe but eaeh must
treated Meording to their eouduot and
l Intnl. tne army officers are better Quali
fied to judge than the average of oitizens
though I am by no mean anxious that
this disagreeable duty should be imposed
oa us. If th Christian agent oan better
coatrol tb wild savages 1 wish them all
success; but surely th whit people who
ventur Into th wilderness to labor and
(oil ar entitled to tbe protection of their
lives and property; and it is natural that
they should feel the greatest Interest al-
though it is the oxclusiv privilege of Con-
gress to devise the best mean to secure
this end.
Many good people residing east f the
Alleghenies mistake the character of (he
emigrant population who have of late
years brought millions of acres under ouU
1 1 vat Ion and produced fifty er sixty mil-
lions of gold and silver where twenty
year ago a white man dared not venture.
These people are of the tarn kind as set-
tled in Ohio Indian and Iowa. They
are a good as we are and ware we in
their (lead we would sot just as they da
I know it because I have been one of
theai. " They new pay their full (hare of
taxes and contribute to our national
wealth and power. As a rule th emi-
grant do object that th Indian should
foreverremain non-producers beggar and
robber if not worse. If th Indians an
willing to work as they used to In tb
gold mine of California nobody will pre-
vent them. : So to-day if the Oheyennes
Arapahoe and Kiowa will utilise the
beaut ful poet oral land aaslgntd them in
raising ntpek they will seon become the
richest people in th southwest.' But this
they havsj not done and H looks a though
they never will.
And the question will surely arise and
that very soon how leng must the govern-
ment continue to olothe and feed them
without any assurance of self-support 1
Tbe pressure of white settlements on tb
border of Indian reservations is nothing
new. It has gone on for two hundred
years and must go on and the Indian
must conform. In some instances they
will do it without resistance in other
tbey will resist and in some cases injus-
tice will be done; but surely our govern-
ment oau never admit to'prsotioe the prin-
ciple that one wrong justifies another; aad
a greater that because tbe soldier In New
Mexioo chase and kill a few Cheyenne
near Fort Baseom who ar more than a
hundred mile off their reservation to steal
horses they can go and kill tbe surveyors
near Camp Supply engaged in a lawful
survey; and because "Whistler" has been
killed by some murderer on the Republi-
can they must demand of the government
anl Indemnity In money else hi death
must be avenged on any stranger. These
are not supposititious case but cases so-
cially pending and illustrate bow far w
have thus far progressed in the great
work of oivilizstion.
The affair with th Modoc is not re-
garded as an exceptional case nor bas il
any connection whatever with tbe affair
of tho Apaches Sioux Cheyenne Arapa-
boes and Kiowas that wander over a re-
gion of country four or five timej a great
as Ike whole state of California. Th
Modoos are a small remuint of what usid
to be called the Pitt river Indians or
Rogue river Indians with whom tbsr
hove doen several wars. They are famil-
iar with tbe habit and custom of tbe
whites and have seen fold dug from tbe
canyons of lUeirJmountawis and have par-
ticipated in it; have seen the wild val-
leys where they used to fish and hant con-
verted into prosperous farms and ranohti;
but in this they seem not to hav imitated
their white neighbors.
Whether they have sustained wrongs or
not is net in question but Ibey hav taken
refuge in a natural fortress have defied
tbe civil and military agents and lastly
under a flag of true killed Gen.Canby
who was their best friend; and this was
not an isolated fact for about the same
time tbey deoeyed Lieut. Sherwood within
reaoh of their rifles at another and dis-
tinot part and also stealthily attacked
Col. Mason's camp on the opposite side
from that where Gen. Cauby and Jhe peace
commissioners were abet. All tb Modoos
are involved and denot pretend that tbe
murder of Gen. Canby was the individual
act of Capt. Jack. . Therefore the order to
attack is against tbe whole and if all be
swept from the faoeof the earth they them-
selves have invited it.
The place 1 like a fortress aad during
an assault the soldier oannot pause to dis
tinguish between male and female or
even discriminate as to age; a long as re-
sistance i made death must be meted
out but tb moment alt resistance cease
thafiring will stop and the survivors bt
turnsd over to tbe proper Indian agent.
This whole matter must be left to the offi-
cers on 'th ipot and these must be shsN
tered against the howl such as followed
Major Baker after Ibe Piegan attack and
General Custar after hi attack on Black
Kettle's camp. There is not much dangir
of too mush harm being don. T be ef-
fective and exemplary the blow must in-
volve the terrible; enough to impress the
kindred tribes of Klamaths aud Pi-Uter.
I believ th oivilians aad soldiers wish
the earn and and in fact d net differ
much a to tb process. . All Indians must
be mad to know that when th govern-
ment commando they must obey aad un-
til that state of mind is reached through
peisuasion er fsar we cannot hope for
peace. i am yours wun respect
W. T. SHERMAN General.
Rig i'HtfSSi
gig B asgsi
si
29 1873.
A WORLD'S Fl 1 IBS
. THE! GEE AT NEW YORK AND NEW ORLEANS
ZOOLOGICAL AND EQUESTRIAN EXPOSITION
To Visit TosceS.
Kialkltln In tin larira towns on th. lis of the Il.uilea Texas Central Great Nortatra ea4 la-
rarnailoaa) RaJIroatli.travtliiii only aud aaclualv.ljr bj rail and nqnlriag a special Irala of 17 ears I
tramport It tooach polut of niiibltlon will .xbibtta!
P ' lrWMW& I II .-I
DALLAS THURSDAY MAY 8TH 187 3.
How ou Its annual tour ami ltl)jf Hi. larnrat
Mgrac'llon oritanlwil and ninliipnl wiwlallr for tlm
an acr. of ground ar. miuirxl to axalblt Its many
vim iieounuMue rvuiiiaaanu cuuoiiai uircua .aniumuu. .
TII3Q IV! IS TNTlO-33 riXDEQ
.... i
Contains a T.il 1 putiaa Kleptiant a.Msaimoth Afrln Tailr a pair afBojal Btniral Tlsars a drore ef Bu.
trlan CaiurU a urld of elinttrrliiK Monkwya aoafft nUuow wlilt. Cai-kaloits Lianas Jaguars Ocalot aad
litter of ul Afrlran and Aaiatlr Znhra flnu a Myl liana Mounoa Ohamola Ichntunioa OaitllM Kaaga.
rma IIik Mondrillt Chlmninntlr fonrlarg. Xilunn.a Lioumi Riirh's (Wowary King Valtarw Bacnd
Cattl. While Peacock (pair) (ioirllla l'orcuplu. Haaalo. Korgaaaa lu all our Iwo kuadral sBeelauaa
' . r v- Tina oinotTs
Eai)racH oTr fifty artists (for compiet. list aa. prorantinM.) . 0. Davis' traa.f MnoaUd Dofa and
Monkeyit.a stiul of thuruufthltrad trli-k ami tratuoi klauag. Iloraaa sohoolofaluaatwl aoalas a sallat .f
ehlldren Prof. Conklinauil hit ilMiof perfuming Lloai. At 10 a. at. then will appear oa th slrwtsa
Mot Gorgeous and lalraiitl Street Pageant.
First tii. magnlncnt awiiu luind chariot drawn hy a nor.l Uant of ten dromadartM ftillowU hr the
large open ileu of aiilmala liK lmllng lions tlgara and Lanarda rhia la a larg. and poWM-fal dm pM a
lha tides and eipoawt to view fuw t. all. (NOT K Not th. lightest danger ud a. HRrak.ndaa as aHslag
fran Ihlt truly wonderful fiat an the traluer has Ilium uad.r uarnct control! followed h lli.cavaltava.a(
ladlM andgeiitlenMn u horaelckandofalldr.D oa iionl.s. then tk. long reinin. of aalataj dsns erlaaaaa
and g.ldinoiilor.wlth nags banner! aud nlieranlianalla l Inn o.lndlK with the taafnaed faratHaMl
jletor. .och day's exhibit leu a grand t.rlal aseention ou a aJugl. wire frota thagreand to tae to. .f
lb. parlllon or.rtwoUunarmllMliumiilalr.bj Mils. Uhrltliaa. . . . ; .
llm!L''il'll'!'Jitam!! '"lowl'f P'"?"" !"rrIV- AP' ! ntln April 28th; WoD.de April IMh
llnmitead April With Bryan May lnt; Harlln Slay!: Waoo. Uav S.I Calvert MaVsth- M.iliii aik
Coraloana Slay 7 till Dallas Ma th; Mr Kinney. May XwTi' 7 ' '
romA.rhfr 'iruT" fti? !' "" rlr'1" aiuoh extra oar. to their trains runalagt. aad
roiu eacli town on the ilay ot exhlhltlon toacconnini ale il.lt.r. ti. n.nH ..n.ii. "
ADzazsszozir i.
TVialra ansa t 1 nnl . a.
G. T. KIMBALL Geuerul Agent.
ALLEN i CO.
DEALERS IN
ITALIAN & AMERICAN MARBLE
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
Galveston - - Texas.
da.12.ly
JOHNM. STEMMONS
A.ttox"xvoyt 'ZjaNWira.
Dallas ... Texas
Will practlc. In all tho courts ol tli.Htli district
andCnitad Slatts Oourla. Office over Clark A
Bryan's. - nl-vl-dly
JCE I ICE ! ICE I
Fnre Icecan be bad at the -KIIiTt'CKY
LIQUOU AND OKOCEBT STOnit
Corner Vain & Market Sta..
From 6 in th. morning till 12 o'alork al night.
47dtf
.ALL AS CITY"
Pleasure Garden
n auurrniaaoQ nae llin iinuiin UJ HODOODCa I
Io th cltlxena of Dallaa that ha baa ernt
l his GARDEN for the summer months. Lad IV
and anilemen ara Invllod to call. Th. stride li
order will al all time be enlbrowl and p'lt?
rs R.pi in attendance in. warden wfr '
Tuesdars Fridays iV
ml -i va nt 1 P
UUII.IJN 111 i r.
ana on 8 BP
Admlssloa KrejAL
r Tixas . . i
Tl
dtid.lm
NO. 67
and Dnwt taat has .ne vtsIM Taxaa. k ssaaawotli
wo f 1073. TlirM Immtne. Darllliiaa. eo.rla
dena of wild beasts savage atonittra kriat-latafM
CHILDREN UNDER TEN SOcti.
Performanft one hour later. 1 ;M
W. K. IIAYDKN Press Agent.
.- LJgH
jpEED & SALE
STABZiD
ilta!5s W1r I "l oar aad
lion to stock left la niy charge My molt a) t
1 Don't Qivt Salitactitn ( my Pttrtnt
. 1 mats no Charft"
. Corns to th. well-kn.wn
SAIiE AND rEED STASZtB
On Market b.t. Main sad Rim Its.
Dallas ' - . . Tixai.
U28d6m ..;.(. W. F. COtll.
FAMILY GROCERIES AND
PROVISIONS.
Tb. undersigned has this day .pened .tl r ad-
dition to his
PRODUCE $ PRO VISION B VSIKgSi
A well selected Stock of "
FAMILY GfiOCERIES
Which wilt be sold at bottom trliiraa for sash. 4
good supply of all kinds of EATABLES esaslaatly
on hand.
Country Produce Bought and Sold.
II. 8.8CHMIDT.
Main St.'oppoait Odd Fellow' Hall.
62d3t
or
MEMPHIS TENNESSEE. "
JEFFERSON DAVIS Presideit
GEN. WAD HAMPTON a J. T. PETTITT TICM
PRESIDENT
WILLIAM M BBOWKE aseretary. .
ASSETS $1100000.
Insures on all the Impwed flan.
KATES AS LOW AS ANT OOOD OOxriXT
iV
LOSSES PAID PKOMPTLT.
Haflag hwn appolatad Ganaral Agnt if thla
ny wr norira-ra inu aaa taa inane Twn-
reeeaimend th. Oarollna OaDaut.aU aav
id irl.nda aud the oltlr.nu f this Btaugnavallje
M '""I a Mie and Billable Boutliera Mmpaa
m. Veltalrkl. W.L.OABlLlT
General Agent tor North Taxes lav
ttca aa Klin ritreat. over fltMali A fk1- B.h-
JOSEPH PUTZ ' .
Proprl.taL . T
i ;
H
i:
s
r
Ua iluaUvJ.
A
trlcot Iiiim in Uad ai
'ljSja'mv
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Dallas Daily Herald (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 67, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 29, 1873, newspaper, April 29, 1873; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth279761/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .