Halletsville Herald. (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 12, 1892 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
WW*-'. 5 ’■■■ ■ ......
7.
... V -
•?V”
*
t •
f
v.‘>'
It
Life In Yoakum.
Yoakum:, Tex., May 4. -The
heavy shipments of cattle of all
kinds "from the drouth districts
southwest of here have kef>t the
Progress of t he Country'-Town.
An eastern man traveling ‘ westward pens,
had occh-sion no.t long since to" stop over
Don’t tell lies, no matter what hap- I
You are sure to be found out
night in Springfield, O: Springfield has
a population not far from 112,000. To the
The University of Wisconsin is doing.,
more for.university extension than the
J * J.
Witting,
SMI™’
EL
Texas,
. „ , , -r, country but New York. Chicago or Bofc-
stock o the Aransas Pass t0n, as the case’may be, Springfield is of
road on a constant move for the course a mere rustic village. The stranger
man who thinks there is no city in this rich educational institutions of the older
states. • .• - ;
MACHINIST,.
R ONLY S2.
A book written by an American author
may qo\v he copyrighted in Germany
• Is prepared to do'a general ;1olil>lng business :n
the'repair of all kinds nf machinery.. S]k-cial '■•ar
■ A miftgeinents- have been made .to club- the
pasPinouth. The road is doing a Stepped into the street from his hoteliii; ..................... ..... H
, . ‘ , . *. tll , - the eveninn- Whit he did or did not an<1 tlje antllor secure his profit on it. temtion giv^if.to the repair of gin niseiiiweryi Alsa X-.
roBhrng boslness. All o^ayes, Bu.wtal - * home Bet it will »^,.ing ,i, ■■ V
wajrs be welt for the American author w ' • *'
first to see whether he can get any profit
on his book at home. > -
both olfl and new, are busy with
eypect-to he does not say
he did see was a city as
But whatji
brilliantly j
F • w
' '•
traiuload.after trainload of stock,* lighted as the finest streetsof |>Jew York
which pass through here daily. Itself. An “opera house," so called, was j
near by. He entered and found it as
elegant and splendidly appointed ';is
After the public lands in the west
. The fj^p is now doing a rushing
business. ^ many of the best eastern theaters. One] |iave <‘lT been taken- up by the boomers
The same condition 'holds 'good of the most popular playspf' the wim- ^ will, be time to, develop and occupy
ter in - New York’ was at ' that time
being performed upen its boards in a
manner which wm^fi have, been credit-
same
at the shops and roundhouse. Yoa-
kum has a fine brick roundhouse
of eighteen stalls opacity, and it,
ae well as the shops and repair.
some of the neglected land in the older '
states, There is enough of it to sustain
many millions mot e people than inhabit
t^ese localities at present. ■ . .• >
‘Ail stock with these A ' T - .
brairds nre the proper- * the1
ty of^ : •
August Schumaker, \;
SUBLIME, TEXAS. •
HERALD
£>■=
V
A-T .T , /VTP.T"’!
Atlanta Constitution
I * • ' . • .t .. .n '
j- ; * .■. r. , . /. : . :
At the low price of $2 per yea iv This gives an opportunity
as
tracks, is crowded with ’work and
workmem.
The shops have a steady force
of about 159 meD, and ^oakum be-
ing the central point of the road
and termipal point or four divis-
ions, it is estimated that about 150
more engineers. conductors and
trainmen make their homes in
Yoakum. ‘The monthly pay roll
of the Sap men paid off here’aver-
ages about $15,000 every mouth,
but on account of the present rush but
it is estimated- that the pay car will
leave over $20,000 here the coming j
pay day.. ; .
During the last strike a misim-
pression got abroad in regard to
removing the shops from YToakum
.The effort was principally made to
. getjle maiiy shops moved
The eastern man opened unde his eyes
in astonishment. How much had New
York to offer in the way of city advan-
tages that this country town out in Ohio j
did not possess? He has not answered
the question satisfactorily to- himself 1
ye t; ; '
Springfield is only a type of the grand
young towns throughout the countin’.
While New York was fighting over the j
bill for electric street cars many small
cities had already for years possessed a
spleAdid system of rapid transit of tliis
1 kind; Being newly laid out,»their streets
are not narrow, crooked and dingy, like
the older thoroughfares of eastern cities.
are broad, clean, and beautiful.
Every such town has its free public
library,. Where are' there such in the
older cities? ' • X . •
* •
Invention and moddbn progress have
•steadily pressed forward to the aid of
the country town. Village improve-
ment societies are making it a joy
forever Rdad.s .are becoming solid
Where the United States forrhs-with
a nation a treaty granting us the right j
to try our own citizens by ofirown laws
for offenses committed in that country,,
the foreign nation . can only deliver
American criminals to ouxeonsufs or to
our minister resident there.' This hap-
pened when Lieutenant , Hetherington
killed Robinson in Japan. He was tried
for the murder by the consular court
at Yokohama by what was said to be i i el,I,ua, v 3,1
American law and acquitted.
1 Will stand this, tlmr-
nnjihbi'ed stallion in
Hr»lletsvfHe dm-iDg -the -j . , . . '
wniinsyseason beginning j 'Of 0110.
Terms, ’per season, j - • •' .,
$13 insurance. (Jobd ! . ' *•'
to g-et a liv§ ]oc*al paper and the great wreekly of
the South for little more than the
■■AddA5/.'* Call on the Herald.-
pasturage furnished. V i .
.,___— . . . . ......... .. ' ■' ^
Litjfurd is sixteen hands high, light sorrel.. Seven
year-old th,e;13th ot.May, 3SSU. His,, grand darn i r
was sii^dbv* Lord Flannagaii’s hnportet). Anton. *
iiis iIhdi Avaltsiml Uy thotoghbrod Madiloxv-’ Laf-
lard was sired by Tom Wifliams i,m]srrtedlj 1 ebeoe.'
• llet'eT by permission t<> Xigk GrumieLs, Ay Urayy -
ham asd C. .Ji tmings ot Lone.Jark, Mo., in. regard
.to his breeding, as ;iil ol those jiarties ba' b his 1
pnlt4 » ' f'
.ItHIN F. HorciItXsi, • f
«. h:
'A' ‘
The Hebald has two good
and beautiful, noble trees line the
away greets of the coqntr>' towm, tiny parks
from loaiUiD., The mam shops in frmt of every d(x>ryard are br.l-
have hot yet been built either at! ^vith flowers In mam- vilbige
Y,oakum or elsewhere. The fight 6tr®^ts there is not so diuch as a scrap
was prioeioa.lv on prospective
ground and to get it deciued to as that of the great city. . Fruits and
build the main shops at San An- ! vegetables all come to the fnarket with
tonjo at some future day. It was 1 t^ie fre^h flavor on them. In towns of a
The present method of making news-
paper pictures, by what is called tlio
photo-engraving process, is- so '.‘universal
that we seem to ha^e always had it; yet
the inventor^of this boon to newspaper
picture makers’. Mr. Johii Calvin Me^ss,
was only fifty-four j-ears old when he
died in New York a few weeks ago.
He organized .the first company to work,
his process in 187U and that company
failed. Jle shortly .afterward started in
business again, and it has been withir
the past ten years that newspaper illus-
tration has had its boom. X,. .V
Notice. .' . •
I will stand n»v >talHou Dukb, A i.
half-breed Norman, also' my Ken-
tacky jack, Sidnev Jobnsoii,- which ;
Johrn .'Williams of Hackberry, owned
the past four yearS, also, a Very fifie.j ‘
young jack, at ray place, Gieekler, !•.
during the coming season. The sea-y
son opens March 1. and ends June 1, V- ,
1892. . ■" ’. ’
PR IXTING
PRESSES
■ . *
•And is well prepared No do all kind of-
A. Gueckler,
Gleikler, Texas.
i
JZE3Z:
V* *
\7n7”EIBB,
was;
never-thought the repair shops
now located here would be remov-
ed, as it is hardly posssihle for it
to be done except at ah enormous
expense to the road. The
shops, when they are' built, may
few thousand inhabitants .water works
supply pure water in abundance. Ere
long there will be electric lights in pn
vate houses. , ^
Each town has its own tasteful and
ma’ihi ^rtistic “bpora house.” Some of these
village public .halls are gams-of be;»titv.
possibly be located elsea-be«. ,ec,uW’ ‘be t0,*“rt'tho
are given exactly as they
are in the city The public schools are
better than they are ip the big city, fur
though the best information
tainable points to their being
doobtcdly located at _Yoakum, ii^are"^ or politics. .Modem invert-
whdQl, ,s generally conceded to be Uon has ^ tbe utJ. Vleld • iu ^
the most economical point for their
location.
Hoard in the St roots.'
A writer in the Boston Herald calls
attention to the vile and profane lan-
guage heard among boys in. the streets..
The evil i8 leasing. A refined ^raon': ,fe)d ctiraeusions »ud .*1.10 for a
■-PrinHpftl of-
SWEET HOME GRADED SBHOOL.
d S;ms U fuiffliii;:! Sate.
JOB PRINTING,
tv
his ears being assailed by a torrent Of.
words which affect him like a streafii of
foul water showered Upon him: The
Bill Heads,,
Note Heads,
—^uehas-
o5^w,vl0Xcolored plaii for a benntiFul flower 'J}ttSi]16SS CftldS,
lcnrnrl . ' • * . * ' ■
Blank Deeds,
Statements, , i
yard.. U‘Harmony of ’col(irs .insured
the entire year, VV.il 1 go. any where
on the 8; A. V A. P.
■Sdliiifaction. Goaranfeed.-r— :
L. Richter,
YOUTH.
Why is it so many grow old too
prematurely?
ures to the .country, and co-operation,
combination, is the magic that has
wrought it all. The village has the ad-
vantages of the city, and pnre air. blue
| sky ahd green trees besides.
young feprabates who thus shock de-
cency go out of their way to, lug in im-
proper language, apparently for rid other
reason than for* the pleasure of saying :
the most blasphemous and filthy words
they-know. T-hey have no regard for i c ■ r TT „> , •,
* any. human being. often us anybody b5‘J()P next door to E. H. Mltchel.
else it-isMelicate Und refined ladies thus
;insulted Ay them. It is not only the
newsboy's* aifd the young unwhipped
cubs bf.‘the lower 10,000,000 who thus
outrage., common decency. Often it is
the eijuallv unwlupped cubs who are the "TV /T" /K T"
e™s„f wealthy; parents, Vou f
that from their fine clothing, which ill Ov-Jv-d * O bnULb IVlAL/t
Letter - Heads,
-I *• * * ‘ -
Posters, Envelopes,
Visiting Cards,
Blank Notes,
Receipt Books,
, T -.',•*
V- *’
Pamphlets,
Boot & ShoeAND ALL KINDS 0F J0B •
V-
Said an old man: “If there is anything
that will make an old man feel young it is
Dr. John Bull’s Sarsaparilla.” Yes, there
is deal of buoyancy in a bottle of thia
excellent remedy, and if it was more gen-
erally used there would be fewer folks
growing prematurely old. The healing
and strengthening herbs that enter into its
composition make it one of the finest re-
juvenating medicines that can be com-
pounded. Said a young wife, when asked
how she managed to live so happily with
DO YOU
her husband, who was quite on old man,
“ I keep him youthful by giving him Bull’s
Sarsaparilla.” It is a good thine when a
feeling of old age or decrepitude creeps
into the system to rout it at once With
Bull’s 8arsa.pa.rilLa. It makes the old feel
young; and the yonng feel buoyant. An
activV old lady said she “couldn’t keep
up long when her bottle of Buffs Sarsa-
’parilla got empty.” It’s a good thing for
old people: Everyone, young or old,
should counteract the evil effects of nerv-
ousness, weakness, and debility by a use
of Bull’s Sarsapajril !a. I.t keeps the system
in fine condition. You will sleep better,
BEGIN TO
vomwili eat better, your food will digest
Deffer, you will feel better every way if
you occasionally use this great tonic and
alterative.
Ephraim Burnet, Smithland, Ky., writes:
“I am an old man, etgirty-lhree years of
age, yet I can walk five miles to town and
back, and feel none the worse for it.. Jivery
fprlQg I take a dozen or fifteen bottles of
Ball1* Sarsaparilla. It puts my system In
fine eond)tion, and I feel rood end agile the
whole year through. It has worked some
great cures in my neighborhood. A Mr.
Bon sail's wife lay bed-ridden
years. Doctors did her no good
bos baud to try Bull’s Sarsaparilla.
FEEL OLD?
■he is well and does her own housework.
▲ negro living on otar place had a bad case
of scrofula. Bull's Sarsaparilla cured him.M
you think your child has worms,
('b*nce. but give it Dr. John
Bull’s Worm Destroyers. They are nioe
Sandies, and never fall. Price, &> Cents.
*r* “All through the summer and fall I
was troubled with chills and fever. I
anally jot one -.bottle of Smith’* Tonic
Byrup, and it on red me at once."—C. H.
wella/ Midville, Oa. .
JoHif D. Park A 8ok«, Wlwlnale 'AgmAt, ■
175,177 and 17? Byeamore Ht, Cincinnati, Q.
HOT
--wewwa--—-
Yet another ingenions and important
i adaptation of electricity is a derice foiv
| leaking it ring the chimes on -church
bells. This seems so reasonable an/in-
vention .that, the wonder is nobody
thought ‘of it soonqr. However, G. F
befits the language of the-Wearers.
The thing ought to be stopped. So-
cieties for the prevention of vice ought
to take the matter up. Teachers es-
pecially could perhaps do more than,
anybody else to make these boys; cleaner
mouthed-on the streets. JAs to parents—
well, it Is their fault that the boys thus
TO ORDER.
Repairing' neatly and pTornptly
done.
Trains for Thought.
i;
Atwood, of Orange, N. J., appears to 1*
j tke first uian Who has. made the ideal outrage gyafi-irfu-mfers and good morals J
| practicable. Put into words, which do ;
not .tell a tithe of the trouble it has cost!
' ■ ^5afi attached electrical There aTe times' when it seems proper
wirbs to the-various bell* which ring the j to draw the line1 even on fashions in i
chimes. The other ends of tho wires are j women's dress, and the state sanitary;
attached to a keyboard similar to that of coanci1 of Hungary has drawn it 1
a piano or organ. The player sits quietly j It some time since prohibited the j
down to this keyboard, which is fixed
near the church organ, and plays the,air
to be rung out by the chimes. Each
touch upon the keys completes the cur
rent which acts.on the bells, and up in
the church tqwer they ring the air the
' .v*> „
■ 'm
■
I
$
wearing of long, sweeping trains ny i
women .walking; iu. the streets, for the j
reason’that'such trains spread infectious
diseases. The prohibition was 'obeyed )
in Meran, in the Tyrol.But the Tyrol |
is in the country, and in the mountains; j
■
Six Gre^t Books
For Rural Homes.
■ .7 ...
The Standard American Poultry Book,
' The American Live Stock Manual,
Everybody's law Book,
Condensed Cyclopedia of Useful Knowledge, , j
Modern Cook Book and Medicai Guide,
Artistic Embroidery.
Books of the Utmost Practical Use and Value
to every Farmer, and Housekeeper.
\
I
orgapist plajs uphn the kejs a hu::i.ru.i.r^lt/j,»noj So wpmeu wore trains
feet below A phonographic attach-
ment enables the playewto hear the bells,
playing, so that he can give the expres-
sion he wishes to the music. • 3
Read Oiir Great Premium Offer!
anyhow. The short, 'convenient peasant j
skirt is the vogue there among the ma
jority of the women, so it was no haril
.ship for them , to obey the order of the
state board of health. But in Vienna ir
was different. There the ladies openly
for tb re*
I 90V her
Now
Ttain, and did not make half the fuss?
about it. J.^S. Hoffman, at sea off CajH/
Cod, threw intQ the water a bottle con-
taining a note requesting the finder of
the bottle to communicate with him.
This happened June 14, 1888. The bot-
tle drifted eastward and eastward over
the pcean till at last, June 28, 1890, two
years and fourteen days afterward, it
was picked off the coast of New Bonth
Wales, Australia. The finder was Mr.
. James Jonathan Clafworthy, of Port
Talbbt, and he immediately wrote a 1
note announcing the fact to Mr. Hoff- f
man, who 'in due course of time re- j
ceived the letter at New Orleans, after
it had traveled after him through three
poetoffices. It is difficult for even n j
bottle jb be lost in our enlightened age.
DR. W. C. BAIRD,
We will send the gix Great Books fob
m Rural Homes, ae above described, by
.mail', postage prepaid by ourselves,also the Hadeetsville Herald for one
year, upon receipt of only SI.50. To every person in arrears who pay* up to
Dew subscriber who shall pay hi*
^oubSicrlpXibii hi advance, will receive these books. Perfect satisfaction As
guaranteed to all who take advantage of this great premium offer. Address
What it Meant.
A floating bottle containing,a note
Kirp,W '■!. defied the salary couacil aad swept
to go along <nth that of Ueorge Franus 4 the fasbiotmMo thorongbfares with their
flapping skirts. Then the sanitary coun-
cil applied to the imperial govemrnen
of AustroHungary for an order prohib-
iting these trains iu the streets.
The sanitary council set forth that tbe
trains sweep up the filth aud dust in the |
streets and convey it into the grandest I
private homes in the city, on the persons j
of the ladies. This dust and filth con-
tains the germs of all the infectious dis-
eases known to man. The microbes thus
j had magnific ent opportunity to produce
an epidemic uf any kind of' deadly ail-
ment. There was an alarming mena*e;
to the public health in these trains that
lap np infection at every step and convey
it everywhere; therefore 'the council
prayed that they might be abolished.
Smallpox bcales, typhus germs, the
sputa of consumption, the ^poisoned
saliva conveying microbes of tli^e foulest
diseases known to man are some of .thef
TEXAsTi.^llett6r8:
IIALLETSVILLE, , - ■ - ■
Qfflce-oppbsite Etaiikif wicz.' in 'RiemeoHelibdiiik'r
iniiidiicg, where Wean W 1'oumTin the- day- and at'.!'1 ' -v
his reiddeaec at nielit, a IVw bl(K-ks East «f the
Uathidievioirch; Dr, Laird treats; all female diA- y-
eases, and all Chrdplc. Diseases »f thd Lungs, j"• •
Brain,. Heart,'KidneyS.Spleen. Skin, Nerve, Blood.
Sore Eyes, CarhunkleS, Old Sores,- Ulcers, etc.
Call at his office and be examined free if j-on have f
any ailments whatever. Consultation in' English, '
German or Bohemian, and strittly eonfidentiai.
Medicine furnisliwl "frOiu ottice. '• 1
..;.
LEHMANN & DONOGHUE, Halletsville, Texas.
“The International Route.'
NEW MEAT MARKET.
S, F. Lee and T. II. Dnliier announce* that they ‘
have bought out the Etfcubergcr meat market and ;.
progfise to run a first-class market. ’-!'
1 jjv The patronage of the jiublic t.s solicited with
the assurance that they, will, give satisfaction to-1
everr customer. *
International & Great Northern Railroad,
. . Shortest, Quickest and Best Route to All ^oiuts.
The Direct;! Route to Mexico via Laredo.
V' F
alouo in the parlor with
man, and it’a nfter J1 o’clchck.
kick
Ur. Amelia B. Edwards waa sixty^onc
# . [when she died, and was doing her-best
Fathei of Family--Ma<lfttD, what work as a student of Egyptology. She.
doee this mean ? Our daughter is continued to study aud write ab<?irt aiy “j^tt^ra that these fine ladies gather, and
ajfyomtu cient Eg'^fup to the time qf kerhlenth: ' °ytr own dclica^ skin 4rul
I In this special branch of "learning sixe.j 1 !r e ua**f.; a11^ 'home with;
shall go right down and kick the ranked a&ive any other womafc of 'anv i - ' ^ 10 111 ’ ........ '
fellow Old. neribd. kniV*a* »Vfwhb?;pSfcaf
llptber ( quiotly i She came up — o. t , .....
abdpt half an hour ago and asked were. criX: iirc-d with those of the other fatf., lt 1S tIideed a menacc to public,
forriwo pair« of scissors. sex. v .health, tnis train, that .ianghs
D. C. ROSS,
: , , V;/*' • • , ; • ' Y •'
Physician § Surgeon,
Sweet Home, Texas.
I have removed my office to New
Sweet Home where I will be ready to
respond to those in need of nay pro-
fessional services.
Pullman Buffett Sleepers without change froir\ San Antonio to 8t. Louis
' • • ? Houston to St. Louis.
W. .'C-. EIG’GSBY, Ticket AgehttSait Antonio. I GEO. P. llUNTER. Ticket^Agenu Uoo«t
T' D. J, PRJCE, Assft Gen’f Passenger Agent,
Palestine, Texas.
- •. *v .*•: * ►**... uu ■ . • 7
y? i
4
J
V.’E TELL
rv
THE
period, and was one of the foremost of ; "llu: an of ^in *****
Egyptologists; when her. iacjbaevements I UI^n feet. a,y 1. ankles I
be fortu-
pairs
What in creation did she
want them for ?”.
•uslt lapp |
• —t- . up all nastiness. . A lady died not long j
The cgreenifrtJt ah-pted by Great Brit- since from bhwjd poisoning got from'
seals beyond tiie- jfiire
him clip coupons.
“Whew! I’ll go right down aud
lock the doors so he can’t get away.”
tn:h ' lirfirt by eiti- of fatal blood-. poisoning will Ifcinuiii-
1
zens of either nation while-the arbitra- bered by the thousand if this train]
tion is pending. # | wearing fashion continues. '
TRUTH
aboct S^eds. Wew'illsend
V.iU Frceohr Seed Annua!
VF-iu><)2, which tells'
tt.e whole
■n TRUTH.
/ We jiiustrate arid-give
. J rpces in this Catalogue,
Xf -X-x which is iiandsoraer thah
f ^ ''w. Tt tells U; . \ -
^ NOTHING BUT THE
TRUTH.
D.N".FERRY CO..^Detroit, M ich.
me CHflNCELLOB' BREWSTER i^BDBGY
1
'JjjL
Abso/ute/ythe.
|EST BU66Y1
’■'Not tti$ myney |
[ t- ever placed' ]
• on-the market.
Has No. 1 machine buffed fall leather tup and bark curtain, a
l
plated bead
plated I>ash Raj, silver played
Wheels bolted lx: ween c ery spoke.furnished with our patent
lub Bands. Sarven Patent
fifth wheel, by p-Uch king boit doeym pasa throngt. the akle.
In workniansr.jp aad fii ah it err, aoz-be ddrLcaied In the
market and supplies & long felt vrafit for a full trimmed boggy
at a raederate prict V rtto forNpoulal Prise.
We carry over. 60b Vehicles in <t»c* ol all klada,
and are //-n it, u4trter» fmr Hornets, We also
carry & full stock of h*v Parssts. B*UN« Tig»,
5**cri»«Ko Gulkv Rams, ?h» c*m«ms.
Teacrrco** EHaiNtsCSOROMUM Mitcasac Evafom.
areas write u» FOR VCuR w*«T». Address
PAN LIN & ORENOORFF CO.t*
DALLAS, TEXAS.
i
>■
v
4
.
•f- . 'Xu*;l
-a..-:
m
. ■
4
L
. • jA
-Y
;,;X
j,.: , ■ ■; /,
■
'
.
Vm
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Donoghue, J. M. Halletsville Herald. (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 12, 1892, newspaper, May 12, 1892; Hallettsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth995791/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Friench Simpson Memorial Library.