Forney Tribune. (Forney, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 26, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 16, 1891 Page: 4 of 4
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In
some communities
• opposition to these com-
nn.ecFAw n,ii an +lin
an
Beef, Pork and
L. M. STROUD, M. D.,
good faith andhavo beeu properly
CONTIN
executed.
TEXAS
EOB NEY,
fl
old'stand; south side.
ONO
7
<
Fresh and First-Class
9 •
Beef, Pork, and Sausage
three to five months in
from threp to five out of # .hum
C. E. MEAD,
draw wcney, and so on til 8100.-
F.D.OLAREE,M.D.,
BLLOUIS,MO.
■YM^When i» St. Louis, visit its
it in the
r
THE
Si
education has been neglected into
In the Germanic states coinpul*.
L
T
tniddferof the sixteenth century.
iK
berg. Id 1787 this attndance
required from the fifth to the
' If half of all the cotton raised
W.H (
Pain
FORNEY,
TEXAS
I
0U
•1. i -
of it.
AND ALL POINTS IN
EI
Lonisiana, Nev Mexico,
’ Arizona and California.
V
4
FAYORTTE LINE TO TH*
4,,
your powers; a game in which
Will cure all
Northeast and Southeast
7
THE IRON MOUNTAIN ROUTE
oyer the preceeding year. Nof----<
2M99MSpeEA2BRksa
VVVIV*" COPVRIOHTSy etc.
9
"[HENSWNo7
gdNMa, aF
symy-
Stientific @mericau
■ r
ti
DR.KING’s
«—Austin Statesmau.
6
da
68
and
laws. However,
week.
’ )
1
I ;
s
e.0
tfili
>-*044
4
a
6
Patents
NEW
a/.
of the entire cotton crop, and we
believe it would take two-thirds
tions and to seek counsel in re-
sults, ne hs no need'to look- at
territorial limits to know that he is
passing from a canton’ in which
-'
Kir
' ol
GER1
IIF
A
and pays teachers, buys text
books and prescribes courses of
study. » « -
GIVES
PERFECT
SATISFACTION
Bad colds (who ever heard of a
good one) are very prevalent here
I al
Md, i
law, a
-e
always in stock.
_-------------0
Double Daily line of Pullman Palaeo
• * Sleeping Cara through to
—.SteLouis via
the crop raised by farmers on
•hares? .
ATTORNEY : AT : LAW,
* Forney, Texas.
omee over A. J. MeDowells Hardware Store
nor write. Ip all Germany edu- has the alfernative of patronizing
citioujs compulsory fromthe 7tb a private sehoolproviding said
to the. 14th year. The state erects school gives instruction in certain
or district in which be resides,
which time shall commence with
We will send you pre-
paid by Express or Mail this
Ladles Warranted
SOLID 14 KT. GOLD WATCH..
tention of a yopng man since she
was a child, it doesn’t' look, well
-
S. N. SMITH
' -DEALER IN
» union. With scarcely
au exception every state in thel
M..i
ingjob work or otherbusiness at-
tended to can find the manager in
the office any time during the
18
law iu Wisconsin was framed to
suit contending parties and is a
compromise containing many de-
fects. While in itself a poor Iw,
its imperfections will doubtless
teach the people a lesson and lead
"Muxernsnandsesighook,wieta,
n E---- T---------ntertain . ... .
* ;
I
’x- *
time to ' stop t’gch
is wheu ‘you see tW first
was 11 ween’the ages of 6 atid- 16, 134,
1000 were not attending any school,
Owen Electric Belt and Appliance Co.,
ST- louis, mq.
pasToRKohnrgg 2
RAILWAY
—--------2
Keep on hand at alldimes the choicest beef to be found, I solicit j
p> trouage. I am selling beef from 6 to 8 cents per pound and
age 10 cents per poundoFOR CASrSTRIOTLY.
r
withstanding this favorable show- 3
ingin the face of much opposition J
the law is far from being popular . 4
r
.
—ene‛
E and ta
I ===-
The
couten
our lai
on han
hence you see the per capita would
not be- increased $2.- Kaufman
Suv.
LAME BACK, BILIOUS FEVER, ETO.
THE OREAT
Li ver Stomach Remedy
■ - j
_& spENbE
r —-
L
l
IREARKE
bay zgain and send to the wre-
house and draw$64,600; buy again.
send that to the warehouse and
640,000; buy again, deposit and •
"of cotton. Margins wppldot hot h-
er him,and he copldhold so long
Up.- as he paid interest insurance and
warehouse dyes. in this way
of Saxony. In Prussia the first
i it has been
carefully cultivated.
Are infinite. Il has been played
Tor untold ngesjmd every one of
■sis one of the players in it.” The
rules of it have been made indepeu.
dently of.ns, but they are absolute
and we must obey them. Those
stralght linglevereucapemcst, chrorometof
balance qudeakcecgna dial, wih Mermod
Jaccara & Co. marked on it.
Specinl price, ea. Solo delivery
suarateed,
it watch is not entintactory, roturn tt at
wSer okPrSsaatou expenee and money
Should youwantanytlatocolse invur
line, send fl cents for catalogue of 1,000
engravings, using the following blank,
MERMOD AJACCARD JEWELRY CO.,
, 8L.Louis, Mo.
PTease send your catalogue to:
L
L
j ch* m, rizdatoneq
| wed, i. «. k
lmmme
bo?
to attend them. - ■ stitutin for the establishment of
Sweden Ims compulsory ednca-a system of free schools. Already
. 1“ 1862, but of 385,000 j iu ■ 24 states' and.
Sausage of the bes
Your patronage s
fs w
395 E
288
E,2
the school year, or as soon there
after as due notice shall be served
upon the person having such con-
trol of his duty under this act.”
The person controlling such a child
»in
r i
I
a more stringent
PERRY PINSON,
Physician and Surgeon,
e • orney, Texas:
Omiee at kogal & Spence’s Drug Store
N. B. SHANDS
Phys i c i an
and Surgeon-
Office at Shands & Co
a..
gathered shoy ah increase in
sehool attendance and a decrease.
acted. In the thickly populated' dhstnedindvhadxenKchrpdcbozembuk
' Nervous diacases (wither without dreams) or debility
. and loesof nerve poter treated acicntifically by new
methods with never falling success:.
MIDDLE-AGED Men aS
thelt Transgreasiona, Indtacretios or Over Bram
Work, may copsult with the assurance of Speedy Re-
her and a Permanent ure, if within reach st Human
A| am ■ whe Buffer from weskness will
OLD Men eganknaimascusdpcoa
PRINCIPAL OFFICE •
sW. COR.20TE-ST. &
'. PHILADELPHIA, W--
WHOLESALE BRANCNIHogo
I CHICAGO. ILL AnDOINNoINN--
--1--—nPAEM---e
THE WONDER OF THE AGE
omu» ooNBTPATON, HEADACHE. .
---Li_____ama__________i______
45 n‛33
2,289 sold n‛89
6,268 sold n '90
20,000
ruaea figures f t» the
SFSDArKotpe."Whor, one 1
othereteuw, end “we take wecoun
,r^:W
Wore com rj—JgW
i The Regular Old-Established
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
F ta ttUI Treating with the Greatest
SKILL and SUCCESS
-"8- --as
/ te - is suld Ror, g Rra I'M
(iti I yo1 vrit a
X8 waenarenfeM2
Nn irovue,8
5 22
written. A Notary'Public ahvhys in the office,
f ......
M
Tob
K
( Sta;
number for the safety of the state
and the goodof the people.” The.
result was the passage of a law
which requires' that "every person
having under his control a, child
between the ages of seveh and
fourteen, shall annually causesuch
child to attend for at least sixteen
for;the old folks to, raise ca.n”
because they happen to have
taken a liking to one another- ■
rugs,
Chemicals, Perfumeries,
Oils, White Lead, etc.
..
20
7"
K.ir2 h e n m a 11 c
I- tamba
#8-64 Nervous
I ‘veigsm. Aid-
iL’Trem bling,
• ha notion*
*■ . - ---1
DR. OWEN’S
See that your-ticket read* via the
Texas and. Pacific railway. For maps,
time tables, ticket rates and an re
quired information call on or address
C. r. FEGAN,
Traveling Passenger Agt., Dallaa.
. B. W MCCULLOUGH,
Sen Papenger and. Ticket Agt., Dallas.
10hn A. GRANT,
Gen* Mapger
suit th. old Doctor,
rlors private. Be
IR.C„ARKE, A
attire suffering and
life. Medicine and
or by letterfree. Co
.cured. Ofices andE
a year, foreconfiding your case, cosul,
friendly letter or call maysave
.74
mh2aa
Luir value fines on delinquents. In 1812 Ba-
varia enacted laws similar to those
DR. E. M.-FOWLER, .
Physician 8 Surgeon,
Omce at City Drug Store,
20 ' -2 - : ■
FORNEY, : ’ .TEXAS.
W. M. GARRETT, M. D.
Physician anH Surgeon,
Forney, Texas.
omce in T. H.. Heffner’s-Drug Store
Nottoe Atom I
I have 260 acres in boto
turesorent. A'W.Mvars
Whil
hasb...
pulsory measures and on the1 per
with the masses. The les intellia
gent have been moved by schem-
8V.d ufacture,phausene
E5. gqeyisd “S’
Hesg88zezzanadmek
f g.35532tdepgincer,ini
Sjj-ESEover6,oo6d2
*54 made on 61 dirferegs1
(9> of wheels, propillri 11
HV cial and therefor u
win, which were
defnitel many questionsiret
the prper cpeed of whedR
forn, angle, curvaturana
gall suriece,theresitaneg0.
rotation, obslructions in1II
such as near y
Sou, betor tiewhed, sb
utangaoubprhapg
» otor Company, tuntsurun
goods satisi ectorf oPI"
l .
I
i MeRUETc Q
Perfeetiy Weh v
"ur.Fugomong, Dubuque Co., I*., Sept., 1880.
Miss K. Finnigan writes: "My mother and
used Pastaf Koenig's Nerve Tonio for n.u-
riginaThdy are both pertectiy wen now and
neveted praising the fonic."
-----------
PRQFSS[ONAL‛'
. _---A--c -C~~~ASAA--A
•oiy,Question dates back to tho themto sanend it
Illinois has had a compnisory
lamon her statu: book since
only 130,000 did not attend school.
Au officer at Potsdam who exam-
ined new recruits, in the space of
, tyrelre years received only three
there is not one good quality of soldiers who could neither read
--
.HAAS" Scientific Amerlcan
for
Six
♦ Sped8
hafpa
..4BR)
Iwelv
Six me
. Wbere
county
ebarge
BY/
VOI
88
ng,. g223
•5 3263
e -52 •
_--------- #28
Nody,Mtemso । Eda I
Works sene evrtwhef#, secure from exposure
Hour,8to8; Sundays, 9 to rr. Address: ,
Statisties lately
THE KAUFMAN COUNTY ABSTRACT -COMPA
ESTABLISHED IN 1884. ■■ '
S. N: ADAMS, MANAGER, |
4 * — * • fl
(OFFICEIN coURf MOUSE.)
The only complete ’ Abstract of titles to lauds and town 17
Kaufman County. Deeds, releases and all manners of ihstmiJ
qnired to have their children at- vada, New Hampshire, New York,
hind school. Young soldiers must Ohio and Vermont had laws com-
[read,write and solve ordinsry polling the attendance of mchil-
froblens in arithmetic, or else at- dren between the ages of 8 and 14
end school at thebarracks. Only inclusive, at some school for from
it
Worast irrulatian ofan gcient if parerin the
- hhomd,Bg "WItsoue WeeH*80
ort.
With one-fnh that amount of mon-
es,. ■ ' • ~ '
/ Would the speculator get halrpanother into which
—_—---
ROYAL
y dyzpopsia Dian t get more tun this,
hours steep during my night> Ie offoct otFP28.
torKoeniga Nerve Tonte was-magical. I sjopt
sound and am now as well aszve? after tekino
only one bottle. ANN Nerve onia,
how hnrenlens it is, thimk • iwthe best iedicime
ever invented. 1 F. SHIRLEY.
J swnEumoAw, Wash. Ter., June, 1889.
it Swz8ney writem 1 muat cheerfniy sav
was out in , the warehouse,' how fourteenth year. In 1713—a-law
much would ths increase the perwas passed in Saxony making
-capita eirculatiou? school attendance compulsory
‘ How much would it take to from the tifth to the fourteenth
build, equip and run the ware- ear- 11 1804
house one year? a", was passed imposing heavy
rt. :- 2 ' • ' m-mngighen-p ' • ' ......
It would take one
1883. This law was a failure. In
! 1888, of 985,814 children be-
public or private. The leading
men of both parties saw thatthis
“number of non-attendants wits
too large a fraction of the total '
Bent cure.
WThe terrible polsons efSyphlis and all bad blood
and kin diseasea, domplctely Eradicated without mer-
cury. # Remember that thin am horrible disease.
M nsglecked or improperly treated, curses the present
sad mmtiona,
Ahaanancnesnzalaies2ages cured promptly vieh-
aNo eperiment. Both sexes consnit confidnti-
ally. WAga and experietica important.
SVltmakrena difference what you have taken or
who has failed to cure you:
Sus ifeenu MMage for Celebrated Works as
Chronic, NervonsanaDelicatepiscasea. Comsultation
335 Eg 77
FANCY GROCERIES!
Makes a specialty pf the best cigars.
rERRELI^,. : TEXAS.
DR. L. L. JONES,
Physician g Surgeon,
Office upstairs over Dalley &
. ■ McKellar Brick,
Eanovskepalta u-dbc‛arcs6y22s6 112
KOERiC ESED. CO,, Chicago, in,
BalabsDrucetstsats barlotete. ozres
-J*™*’™
175eGRat*ipsfewo
y. alttz,
—N~BO0T AND=2,- I
SHOEMAKER.
.Iwishte sdy to my ota fr..sas ana PS
lun aud to- wahile gonerally that I ••
sUU making tho baet Lous nna .
romonablopricu anq kuarantoe astiXa
ton. Fopnirine ione cv short
wize.___
- • ' ngc .. INJariek necessarily inefficient and often
the school age extends* from 5 to remain dead letters on the stat-
16 inclusive. Parents, guardans. utes As early as 1882, Conneeti-
and masters of trades alike arere- cut, Massachusetts, Kansas, Ne-
wori, Mermoi d yaccarifs, Broad-
way andLocKst, the lowest priced house
m America for fine goods.
A WONDERFUL OFFER Tras and Pacific
FOR $35.- T
Cor pinints,
General aind
‘bility, Cost-23-
KkT! wasex, -Ha K
#vH*%*8 i
acfazrzvo
i “Rrr’REE • i.LUBTK ATE« BOOK
280.""" 22.
Dectee per
iur the sab-treasri!
• It he has $60,000,000 he can 3c- heayy fines.. .
posit the entire crop, valued at in every canton in Switzerland of the northwest these laws are
. 8300,000,000, ‘ ' • education is obligatory.
How can the speculatrs do
this? '
000 would corne E #se0,0eo wort, Switzerland in 1865; says: “When - 1-
- one travels in this country, not to cited an unusual degree of atteu- U4
admire the beauty of the land- tion, and since they went into ef-—
scape, but to examine its instjtn- fect discussion, both for aud ■
agamst them, has grown heated; -____________ „
and even bitter. The Benhti, -cstiZSJi
—
— F
drea attend such achols. The Ver} recoutiy- illmois and Wis-
French school commissioner to consin have pased compulsory
1 laws. These enactments have ex-
B ore-thoting.
Solicits ydnr patronage and guarantees
all work. Shop at Pink Lews-
By having your clothes, cleaned
dyed and repaired at the > Terrell
Dye Works. I always kep a fun
I line of samples' to make suits from.
All work guaranteed.
■ Respectflly, , <
R PERRIX,
Terreli, Texas.
' Yes, for most of the cotton
"faisedbrenteisimortgagedto .
land opner or merchant, and if As early as 1649 attendance at
this cotton, got to the warehouseschool was made compulsory nn-
It would be after the speculator der penalty of fine in Wurten-
. ‘ hadbotght it.
school buildings, selects, employs subjects prescribed" by the state. । _______________
Thislaw passed tdestate senate Mennorf S Jaccard Jewelry Co.
without.au, opposing vote. In Broadway and Locustst
the house of 143 members, only 6 ST LOUIS MO *
voted against it. This law hasw’"
* Who devia mI the su-tr asury
system? It was eithera syndicate i
of politicians wa sndicate option. ________ ,__________________________
speculaiors^or avisionary schemer ]Swedish children, only 9131 were’compulsory laws have" been eu- j
Can a speculator deposit cotton instrueted. ' ” ' 2 ‘the,
in the sub-treasury? Yes. “ , Iu Norway and Denmark pa- states of the north andeast these
How many bales can he depgsit i ruts who do not send their chil- , laws have usually proved efliciet
■ -- —+"—-m- • dren to school are subject to! and beneficial. In the .sparsely
settled states and the territories
7. H
— —DEAL
Blacksmithing a:
1 '■peculators could corner and cou-
"trol 8300,000,060 wortl of cotton
H. H. WOODS •
~ ——beater—___________
I lowed with
I . .
ELECTRIG BELT
" AND SUSPENSDRY.
Patented Ang. 1K, 1887. Improved Jan. 13* 1S9L *
I ategsct
5kgevpskSg
, HO
F No. 4 Gent's Gelt. ,8
- ■' -
New Orleans
attempt at more regular aftend-
1 Half the crop is 4160,0,000, ahce was made in 1658. Another
sopercentofehsissiz,oco,000.attemptrollowedin1716.In1763, t . .
ineze are 65,cco,cco people, it was ordered that all children. weeks, at east eight weeks of
- between the ages of 5 and 14. in-1 W hh shall be consecutive, some
elusive be sent to school. In 1794 ■ public day school in the city, town
this order was revived and 1819 or district in which be resides,
v(; ------rr •- — ; flues were imposed. In 1864, out ____..
\ Yes, life is a game; a complicated of 3,006.000 children of school age the beginning of the first term of
■ game; a difficult game; a game ’ ’ - - ■■ •
which requires wisdom, diligence,
patience; a. game which vill try
Say every fourth or tenth couu-
t l a warehouse. Speknlars
wnb 1100,000 buy cot ton/wild it
. to the warehouse, dray 9,000.
ISEA
■
head or heart which will not. help
you; a game in which the forfeits
--are terrible, of which the issues
- The popular route between the ’ :
.. ... ' -
. ,2.
East and West;
now, andnoses are receiving es-
— ■»» ■■« vm """-"VVM-P-N VA D-MY . . —— 2577 " "TFHAN- in -vulM • '
made compulsery; by that system of public istrnction. This peoial attention. It looks like
t -- z ‘ | - i republic, is an lagrppe had returhed from
-being neither practical j Europe.__.....
or wise. Ip his republic the state - Orisp can never be president,
compulsory is supreme. The rights of the Ju- He was born in England while his
Scotland fol- dividual and the family are ah- parents were in that country on a
like laws in 1872.sorbedbyit. The child from the visit. -Greenville
; 4 . . .
DEALERS IN
' -grqqvp
v P
gE CONSTRU^]
fjazfa LIGHT RUNN"
AND
■“In Fiance,’’ says M. Duruy, _ I________
“compulsory* education is ancient^ been in operation two years. The
rules are the laws of nature, the and of npble origin.*, in ’ 1795 a year ending, June 1891, shows an
laws of health, the lawsofiutelect, compulsory law was inaugurated,! increase in attendance of 23,183
above all the moral laws of God. bu it remained a dead letter, as
The Kaufman Sun is weary see-' 80 mauuy other laws of that period.
•. ing fire-eyed parents rusiingUntil within the last decade at-
around over the cotrfry in pur. tendance at school has been very
2 - suit of . runaway.,.daughters who irregular, and consequently the
gac - have goner-of to marry.” Themasses have remained dangerous-
- " ------ ' thingly ignorant. While the eompulso-ing demagogues to denounce the
A. ' ry feature in education has been law as being an encroachment on
lom.” The Sun la right. Wien bronght before (be chamber of personal liberty. What t»e out- got; q"eeD.
a girl has been receiving the at- deputies at-several different times comeofthepresent clamor will be •‛e‛vi eM''eN-
by different men, t.'Othlug effectual is doubtful. 1 ,i
being accomplishei until. 1882'. Compulsory education “is popu- ‛
The German war and the coin- lar among the more 'intelligent j Mi»^4war~M»w
mune taught France a IcMon that classes. State superintendents ot! it being a common enstom for
i sha must never forget. In order every state iu the union, with a newspapers to observe Christmas g
to cope with the discipline and fewexceptions, are unanimons in we give notice, that we will issue . »
training »of Germaty andofherrecommehding and encouraging no paper from this office on Dec.
Jt isa very sate proposition that European nations she must bave the passage oTyom pulsory meas-30th. Our last issue for the month 8
ed^tora seldom “attack” a person a disciplined army and intelligent ures. Statesmen and educators will be on the23rd. Any one wish- 2
inhocent of wrong doing, it is still citizenship. Inorder to accomp- see the need of compulsion and
rarer for them to hold personsup lishtoatenv, educatio must be enthusiastically urge the passage
____J.."’ sir public scorn out of malice, gratuitous, compulsoryrand secu- of obligatory 1
The fact ihat. juries almost in- lar. By.thelaws of the 16th rof progress is slow. The masses
variably return verdict in favor of •June, 1881, primary education was approach such legislation with
. dewspapers eiied for libel does made gratuitous; by that of the' fear and trembluig..
not prove that a man. can gt ho 28thof March, 1882, attendance, Some opinions,
satisfaction from cditors, but programmes and.courses of study in Iwato’s Republic is found a
rather, ti nt the editors are nearly were i ____ -
always right. • . of the 30th of Qctober,. 1886, the system, like his
g '•----—— teaching force is to be entirely idalone-’
No man was yer convinced of. secular.
the error of his ways and won England passed
pror to tirty and moratity bylaws h. 1870, and
-
H1)
-Address-kEBuSkEN,L-L-Cmmeannl
* ( Save Your Money,
afum
I Editor aud Business Manager. | a iatorlea skerus,
1. J. McGEE, ASsociate Editor, Compulsory education is n9t a
-v- ■ ui. m-. yi" "■*.......* ’"'r ” - novel experiment of modernlimes.
“a wHaTIsASUB-TREasvar: lit is as ancient us Sparta and
A sub-t rebury is a warehouse Athehs. Solon and Lyeurgus cou.} .
Li where the firmer pawns Ids cotton.; reived and executed'systems of in illiteracy. ’
How much does the farmer get .public instructiqn. One of the1 Ju the United States the- pro- -___ ___
on his cotton pawnd at the ware laws of Solon provided “that every gress of popular ihstruction has EtablshSehn$1S g
house? " - man should have his son inatuet- been drifting slowly but steadi l -----18 ‛M° ‛oO "
* The farmer gets A out 9f every e‛m pusics ana gymnastics.” Lytly toward compulsion. The!
#5. eurgus instituted laws requiring universallity of education
’ Who gets the other 91, the far the state to take the education of is a corallary to the declare.
ynerfir the government? children from the My^uUi year on* tion of independence ‘ and gratui-
‛ The government bolds it to pas tirely iuko its own hands. tous instruction is an uuwrittei
for iuterest, •.insurance, loss of r the middle ages Charlemange lawofti
e-- weiglitdgiei prices of cot tout fqauded primary schools m* eDt- au exeepti,, ......
MUs. • • pelled thechildren of his courtiers/Uuited states provides in the con:
th is placed iu the
ablie nurse and is not
know its father or
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Adams, Walter D. Forney Tribune. (Forney, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 26, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 16, 1891, newspaper, December 16, 1891; Forney, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1426571/m1/4/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Spellman Museum of Forney History.