Halletsville Herald. (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, May 1, 1914 Page: 7 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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IN T«E FLAMES OR THE PYRE NOVEL THAT PLEASED DUMAS i WHAT FATHER DID AND DIDN'T!
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Disposal of Brahmin Dea<$ a Mattor pf Great Rbmanper Had Given Hla.Name Writer After a rCiew Expresses Dfr.
*/ w*^n*tO Pathos to the Retatiyes to Book That He Was Unable cided Preference for the Thtnga
1 • " X ^Who Watch Rites. . j , to Recoanize. . of Present Day.
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. Byen to we came opposite, ttfa bear-;,; When the younger Dumas read-the The pies and things that mother used
era lifted one of them, all cool and manuscript of “Camille’' to his father, to make may have been better, bub
I dripping, from the river, and laid that great, romancer was tnuch moved when I think of what father did, why,
i it, the slim, small figure, so quiOtly, jjy this' evidence of the genius of I say give pie the things of the pro**
I'j content, on a half-built pyre, his son; ‘‘Alexandre,” he is reported ent day, says the writer of a letter to I
Brushwood and fagots were built oyer to have said, with tears in. his eyes ' the New York Sun.
it, and at head and foot, and sides ^and great solemnity in his voice. Father used to make us sleep in.un-t
the fire was applied. A j Brahman, di^ ^ygu have composed a work that will heated bedrooms and take a bath once!
rected the -rites, and ojicc. as the [{ve ft8 long as my .own!” ' a week in & oedar tub in the kltohen.
flames # mounted and aspired, the in this connection one is reminded Father used to make us ride in street
brother, who was watching, clutched of the period in the famous story tell- -cars drawn by horses and lighted with]
at his heart as there appeared for a er s care©r when, at the height of his kerosene lamps, cars that ran off Uiej
moment, at the top of the pyre, a vogue, he could not turn out his tales track about every three blocks
girl’s face, with closed eyes, and, fast enough to satisfy his claimoring streets never cleaned In winter and
mouth that seemed to smile; then the 'publishers, and it became necessary not overmuch in summer and that par-
radiant veil of flame shrouded it again. for him to employ collaborators, to haps were not paved at all. The s*de-
The smoke rose in gray whorls jmd wlJom he sketched the plot, perhaps, walks were of brick that bubbled dP
streamers against the ataltfless and leaving them to do the rest- Among when the frost came out In the sp4£*
tender blue of the sky, and still the most distinguished was Paul till they were as uneven as a nutaiig
brother watched, quiet again and eom* >f0urtce. grater.
[poked; be had given only that one Thus it came about that Meurice Father didn’t give us any elevators,
11 sign to show that he loved her whose • was the author of one of the most but made us climb. He didn't give ns
■ ashes now lay among the charred 'amusing novels of Dumas, “Las Deux any telephone. He made iis ride in
and . smouldering logs. .Or rather it . Dianes.” Dumas when traveiihg railroad cars with link and'pip coup-
was -only for the moment that, think- fm¥,(] thjs n0vei in a hotel, and opened lings . that jolted the life of ua
ing of days of childhood and dawns it To pass away the time,. He began every two m<* and that were hauled
hy the riverside, he forgot that lt was reading it seriously, got interested in *X\ woo<h burning locomoUves that
not she who had been consumed in it and was amused. Presently «ome kept us cobbing t^e dnders
the flames .of the pyre. Then he re- orm came-to-, hip-room anl fcuncTiifm.. ouflialr all; the time. He didnt glTd
f membered again, and looking up from ! with “Les Deux Dianes’" in his hand, us moving pictures, nor flying mm
I the pyre to the dazzling river, h^jiaw “I am reading" said Dumas, In re- chineB, nor meat grinders in tk#
qu^tlon,.“a novel of my , 75SSk|2S £s&*
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man; and: smiled’ to him
Heart of India,” by a
the Century.
ftProm “The 6wn whieh I did not k'now; and which eb&m tor men and handsome go
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to-himselt “I am n«TM. bored When My one of a thouwnd contort, and
•j l h.v. m.- Atfn mmiun* Th« s„n. conranieiico. now shwsd by »I1 »n4
EFFECT OF LON6 ASSOCIATION *aha™ '-Tt‘9 s“
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ALGERIANS NOT ALL ARABS
Bit®*IP |
I Marked Facial and Other Resenm
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blgnces Noticed Among Those Who
Have-Been ^
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^ That persons who live-together for lowers of Islam, Have 'Different
a very long period not only acquire the
same mannerisms, but grow a strong
;: ;1 Two Kabyles. While They Are Fol-
whlch wo couldn’t think of doing with-
out, things which tn his day wew
'quite unknown. v
K.ftft' —- .
EELS AND SNAILS AS FOOD
Three-Pronged Fqrk Regular Thing to
Use for “Homed Things'’ In
Proper Ceremony.
kfaet Bvt it is little known that .the consisted entirely of Arabs; but this i _ . „.. . . M . .
same condition often exist* ! among may give an entirely false idea of the Daymen may hesitate to nay hoi Ur
It,mistress and servant being associated population add characteristics of the j Leviticus bu bei9“=^°pt^ “to *
together, for a long period:Of years,'country For though they are all fob, Uwr ®f
There lausuallv a strona desfTe on the iAwm Tauvn Aa nnt hainnff tr» peculiarities which suggest that tt has
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' Characteristics
facUl resemblance is an established i bkve spoken of Algeria as if tt
f There ia usually a strong desire on the
' part of ;most servants' lape their
“V.™ * belong to probably ^enadopt^totoacottirti,
.i tbo same racb. Roughly.there »re two j ^ the p„jBdl0, of m
Scot against eating eels, and also shall-1
fish. There is no more obvious reason
why an eel should look more like that
York state two unhsual laatances.oi ;gest an. entirely different origin. Some j S^obieS
this kind, Two "Widows By* there, ehch | phople pven insist that they are large-4
Of whom has been attended by a worn- iy .qf that Roman race which for so on. . ........
mistresses, and this, added to the fact great races tn Algeria, the Arabs prop-
of constant nearness, often extends qriy so-called, and the Kabyle's.
% tacial ; resemblances. » The Kabyles are a curious race, so
; There are in a small town in Nejv different from the Arabs as to sug-;
an servant for more thaA ^fO^years. long was: master df aU North Africa, j ‘^i^v^hlth^M Md
•In both cases the servants haVp be* | Their lknguage is quite different from tlcus ““
come* so like their mistresses that Arabic'; though they are Moslems,
scales in the waters, in the seas, and
in the rivers, them shall ye
|they are often mistaken ter them, Mdj their conception of Mohammedanism . .. .. . ’ .n
- tbeir eases baye attracted iatotloo 1 1» «, different from tbo,e of the Amb. wbU« all that more to the
., — ---—. - attracted attention i© so different from those of the Arabs
► t far and near. Their voices over the'- that they may well be considered
| { telephone are so alike that friends heretics, and their racial charaoteris-
I ’ of the women have given up thii tics are even; more (Afferent than their
h method pf communication. ;
Growth of Submarines.
out fins and scales shall be an abom-
ination.
Col. Newnh&m Davis has described -
... , , ,__ .. the ideal conditions of
blood and their creed from those of Price’s,” he writes, ‘S
-0ie Arab population. thing is eaten with proper
„ .... v;The Arab is lasy, the Kabyle to'in-■ ^ a gUvef' howl, with n rtlver threw
I It was the diving bell, that first sug- dustrious. The Arab is a spendthrift,, pronged fork as a means of opnveylng
gested the idea of submarine' hbats.i the Kabyle is thrifty. The Arab is ^he alleged dainty to the month, the
The first submarine on record waa more reaetlonary than the Kabyle. It I long, black gelatinous things an
constructed In the seventBrenth cen* . eV,d®Bt tliat the French will have brought to the table, very hot, and
4tury by a Dutchman named Cornelius a less difficult problem In assimilating: swimming in a sauce in which lard
^Drebeli 8he was propelled by oars the .Kabyle- :than in assimilating thg^ ^ onions and garlic seem to he the
Land was tried in the Thames. The Arabi—T. P.. 0 Connor, in T. »P. s nrlnrinal mmnonents. Soeared on th* S«
Occupants pf the boat wore enabled Weekly.-,
•*
principal components.. Speared on th*
fork, the snail goes Into one's mouth—
and then comes one of the critical mo
ments of life!”
to remain submerged by means /of a
J composition of a liquid which restored V . .. Silhouette and Painting.
vitality .to the air when itVbepama The art pf painting begins inevit- -------~
; unfit for respiration. The secret of the a.bly with drawing—with expression Cordelia Has an Unhappy Momoiy
composition was lost. Several other: by means pf the goint—the resultr “Speaking of outrages,” stated Cor-
attempts were made between that line. This every teacher and academy delia Killjoy, “when my cousiu Fos-
time . and 1800, when Robert Felton.. and has' to realize. More; dick, who used to play the concer
an American, constructed, a boat In eveijy great school of painting has tina so affectingly, died,, two ruffianly
- France, and by the^^ use of compressed^olv^d it. But this use of the1 brothers in the lodge came to sit up
air for respiration remained -teur point, or drawing, soon reaches iU tb0 body, bringing along font
hours under water In the ttfver Sein-^ iinrititiot>s, ^ab(f hplisb itemands m0re of the same sort to keep them
V-
propelling the boab in any1 direction, mass, or perhaps 1^ Is more oqirifiebt td j company. They tramped mud all over
. The modern submarines have now at- say that mass demands the brush; The' my clean floor and yaw-kaWed In tha
tainc-1 a staee of nerfection : which fln&tin^ nf. mAAses on to-oanvas or
tained a stage of perfection which floating of- masses on to canvas or most raw-cuss vway late in the night
makes them a formidable force in paper, with its edgeie holding the out-| Wh0n they thought I was asleep. TbOtf
naval 'warfare. They range from 68 iio0 of the form, is silhouette. Silhou-' the extra four went home, leaving the
to 200 tons and over in displacement -ette, iu other words, is the basis of all other two ruffians to entertain each
'sad" are equipped with most modern mass impressions; without a sense of other, With,funny stories till morning.
, ’ ♦ . | silhouette we can utter no large and
3 •
■machinery.
—
Next day at the funeral here they $
came again, bringing a lot more ol -
iiii’ ... ... .1 their ruffianly ilk, and tramped mors
rwhat Londoners Forget/’ is the the teaching_ of the art of painting tn. mud all over the how. And al
What Londoners Forget
• - j sublime moods. Yet, strange to sdy,
/•:; . ! the small part given to silhouette in
dUe of an article in the London Daily academtes^indeed, more oftop the ut though that was seven years sgo.Mt . ..
Mirror which shows that the people ter lack of if—has always struck mej » word of denunciation of the outrage
of that great city are in the first ranit- ds extraordinary —Haldane Macfall has been uttered to this day except
- jn T« Dte IVnnlrln I^nilnil 1 _I__4 1 1______IJ*' PIH. fltar
of the careless and absent-minded. A ^ P.’s Weekly, London. j what I have said* Kansas City Star,
report from the commissioner of po . j ’ 6 43- -J
Uqe Shows that during ,one .year 84;87l Profits From Old Coal Beds. Not a Naturalist.
lost articles were sent to Scotland The presence of coal in the tertiary, Gervangeline was very angry.
Ydrd, including 10,164 bags, 3,42$ lake beds of verdant valleys in west- 4 That morning she had received f
purses ami 32,250 umbrellas, an aver , 0rh Montana^ has been known locally1 letter from the young man who im-
age pf 8$ umbrellas a
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port .of, lost umbrellas
r*
da’y Thia re- for many years, says the Ck>al Age. agined he bad captured the affeettottt
is/not consld- Some of these localities have expert- of her heart. He was supposed to b«
rt ered by any means complete, as Scot ©need short coal booms, mosf of working hard on a rubber plantation
/•lapd Yard probably gets no more them vhich, howefler, died before the min- iQ Africa, busily getting together th€
half fha Inat ahnwor sMrks fl iT__V - ...«4 « » tv,n n.aaant ____-»ka ll-rU Knma ”
'ir.
,hilf the loot shower sticks
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eral was developed. At the present money to start “the little home.1
■HJPjMK* J time, however, systematic* mining Is ,»jf jje thinks I mind his rudene
p He’s Entitled to “E” in Strategy. ! being carried qa neat Miflsoulg, j lg making a xreat mistakeT' m
A small boy whb aderifis the Ash-1 Coal of 0iedjT* teuitd tp tMs restblii she. with conceatratett MttWW#V
land school and is not overly, high in has. until recently, been though^ "Why. what has he said, - dearV*
\ his classes submitted his report card worthless.' because only such fuel h* asked her. mother, mildly. **
for approval to his parents, says tbs would coke or stand shipment without -0h Qothing *uch—but I Suppose
! Kansas City Star. The report of ths slacking was considered of commer- he thlnU Jt l8 tvnnjl He says that
j teacher is made with letters—B, ex. ctal value. In this part of the West bag jU0t 0{|Ot a ten-foot-long croe»
i. cefient; P. poor, etc. This particular where high grade coal is scarce, where ' diie> aan that as sooa as he gels S'
‘ report card was lettered P after near- the cost of wood has reached |6 or; otbbj- ke will have a pair of silgptkt
iy evei7 study, but the lad was equal more per cord, and soft coal imported m&de for m« out of the sklas. Runny,
i to ^he occasion and .informed hta for domestic use sells for about $8 isn't It?" <+■
/Mother that P was perfect? At tbs per ton, the demand for cheaper fuel
next meeting of the Parent-Teachers’ is great, and the development of these
association the mother proudly exhto heretofore unused low grade coals is
jtoftd the card, and nobody there hadt becoming profitable.
vthe heart to tell her the awful truth. ’
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1 ’ When Bryant “Came to Town.’*
When Bryant came to New York h«
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The Recessional.
found no literary man, notvan edltoa
who was living bJ bia pen.^Both Ir
rteg and Cooper had begun to be mo
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' What She Didn’t Understand. ______________
—“Here's a curious item, Joshua!" ex- , ceesful. it is true, but botk of ^
It may be recalled that Rudyard claimed Mrs. Lemington, spreading ‘ bad some little hereditary fortaee sa*l
Kipling’s poem, “The Recessional" out the >BiIlevill0 Mirror in her ample > another calling.' Verplanck and Saa0i
• ("Lest We Forget”) was never copy* lap. “The Nellie E.. . Williams of: i were lawyers, Halleck was in the bmp
righted, but was a gift to Britain, the Gloucester reports that she skw two pantile business, and Drake wee a
empire and the world. . It was pub* whales, a cow and a calf floating off > physician-druggist. No one wm dew
fished 4h the Lohdon Tipihs at the dla- Cape God the day before yeetefday/' perate enough . to follow Brockdes
;mond jubilee, and a check for $600 ' “Well, ma,” replied old Mr’ Lemlng- j Brown's example^and attempt to Uva
was^sant in payment. :.Tb1s,qh.eck he tonr "what’e the matter with tha.t?" i | by literature, although the city new
returned, saying he would accept ‘'Why, it’s all right about the two I numbered nearly 11M00, and the einw
nothing for his poem, which he dedh whales, Joshua, but what bothers mo tlc Broadway had unrolled as far as
cated to the nation, so; tfyat it Ms open fa how the cow and calf got way out ! Canal street.—Algernon TMeln, it
pbr^afi- the world to print and to use. there.'’ ' Bookman.
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Halletsville Herald. (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, May 1, 1914, newspaper, May 1, 1914; Hallettsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1037392/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Friench Simpson Memorial Library.