Halletsville Herald. (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 12, 1892 Page: 3 of 8
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Pears
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There are now more men receiving
pensions for seiwices in tlie last war
than there were soldiers in the first' clay*
Of the war.
Soap
\vi
rhy is Pears’ Soap—the
Jbest in the world the soap
with no free* alkali rn it—
sold fof 15 cents a cake ?
* It.was made for a hospital "'
Soap in the first place, made
by request;- the doctors
wanted a soap that would
wash as sharp as any and
do no harm to the slyin.
That means a f soap all
soap, with no free alkali in
it, -nothing hut soap ; there
is nothing mysterious in it.
Cost depends on quantity; *
quantity comes of quality.
# - All sorts of stores sell .
it, especially druggists all
sorts of people use it, espe-
dally those that know what’s
wjiat
: Franklin seems to have bcen^m epit-.
ome.of all modem invention. It is now
■ proved that he wrote and -labored a con-
tun.- ago for smoke consumption and,
actually suggested the (^own draft-, sys-.
tern; which has only been applied in the
past fifteen years.
■ . P
■ JxS ■: .
: - s . - ,
| Millions of buffalo, or, as they are.
:more properly called, American bison, a'
generation ago roamed oYef o'Ur wester:) • . '■
plains. Tlie latest buffalo census shows
thatr there are now. alive in the world
onlyr 1,067, and half of these are kept in.
captivity in .parks ^nil menageries. - A}.
.wild herd. 300 strong, is protected; by-.'
the United Stafes .governfftCnt'--' in Xelvjf'.'
lowstone park. - Thus the Behring-*' sea ; ’
seals will vanish before -the white mauri ! •
cruelty,and greed unless-they are quick -j. t-
3y protected by. law, - V •••'.[ [ ,
m
Had
f
trr
F
A Gi Watch is: W>
* That is what every Agent re-
■ ceites who gets up a club on oar
$1 per week plan.
|[. cx Our 14-karat gold-filled' cases
are warranted for 20 years. Fine-
Elgin or Waltham movement
Stem wind and set. Lady’s or
Gent’s size. Equal to an}' $-30
watcb. To secure agents where voe
have none, we sell one of the Hunt-
ing Case Watches for the Club
prices S28 and send C. O. IX .by
express with privilege of examine- .
l-. tion before paying for same.
Our agent at Durham/X. C.,
writes:
S r “Our Jewelers have confessed
they don’t know how you cau fur- j
nished such work for the mouey.
General, Edward \V. Seircll‘ has. ih-
•rentril ‘a ^yrfteiii of electrical coast and
bhfbof-ydefcnee's which is- -noteworthy.
Tlie deyict? is so arranged that,if. a shq
crosses, the electrical path at the im
traueb-of n'.harbor it will atorceTeeph
a*trei:iendous blow, which will shiver t '
to Jtoxns. The blow will be equal tr
•50,060' tons, and not. .much .is knowr
about it except that it will' come froir
overhead. in a flasfi as -of lightning
This is very fine ftr. harbbr defenses,
and .we hope it is true- All the same', ir
our jjidgment. the person who can abol
ish mosquitoes will be more of a. belie
factor of. his race. ' ►
j The Christian L mu:; . ^ luul .. i . " American Hurner.
j '-he state where race hatreds were strong . The humor of the‘stage Yankee has
j est—Louisiana—the color jfcne has la-en passed away. .The next .phaae of Aiheri-
brokem TTie lottgry -^yar diJ.it can .humor was that developed in the
~ 7 7 west. All our later humorists have
Franklin discovered the identity tot been of thi^weiterU type. Bill Nye, M.
.lightning and electricity bv k^e Hying Quad a.nd Mark Twain are notable ex-
A man with an original mind is n^w But this school, too. seems to
• bring; to see whether powerful kite, : ^ passmg away. It is . not apparent
may uot l>e used to oarr\ safet} rojw> ■ that any new type of humor is appear-
and relief to ships in distress, and so t-e-
corne useful appurtenances of the lire
saving stations. ...
V-v
J-X
cvtnr WOMAN THAT HAS ANY SIN5E,
And many there be we hope,
_ Mk^ CENTS FOR A USERJLCAKE
L0f FAIRBANK’S-CLflIRETTF -SflA P.
.,*
P
New States,Yet to Corn/-.
At most there are five—New Mexico.
Arizona’, Utah, Oklahoma ftfid Alaska.
This closes the list, unless Irtdian Terri-
tory should desire to corneas astute and
be one of us ip course -of time. In that
case there can Vet lie six ne*?.* state*.
Alaska is out the question at present,
-however, owing tq reasons which may
prevail permanently. New Mexico, is the
. most promising candidate for statehood.
It has bow a population of marly 33n.
000, containing more people than- the j
states of Idaho and Wyomingcniidhubd. j
New Mexico 4;us magnificent prospects !
in many directions-sagTicuiture. ”
~~ ---------------------— - | --- ------.- -wgjUUUUUl', live
One good reliable agent wanted stock, mining and manufacturing. Tlie
for each place. Write for partien
lars. Empire Watch Co.,
New YorL
Ptition McCord,.
V 7 •
8WEET HOME.
Shop on north aide. Shaving 1'v cents, ]>aii <-trt
ting 2Scenta. * .
DK. OWEN’S"”"
ELECTRIC BELT
AWD SUSPENSORY.
Patented Ang. K.SdST. tapr»>Ted Jan. JVffiSL
i3
Bk
4 fient's Belt. .
mongrel greaser |K>pnlation. which used
; to be set down against its account is
rapidly being transformed <l>efoi*- tlie j
i all conquering Anglo-Saxon.
j Utah cannot come in bocatisoof-hei
| polygamous religion. Otherwise she
; would make a good state. -Then there j
j is Arizona, with a population qf-“O.OOtt:' f
• Arizona Jjas been ah orgaidzdd territory ;
■ h t thirty years, and a year ago adopted
. a state oui-titu*ion'. Wlien ifyigatiofi.']
plan* are in ilpej at ion' Ariz'.-iui will be a
j fine stare:, Okla'homa has dTt.OOi) p jpn- "
, latioin, ahjsa.iy-r-ti, young giant—and !
want* • i But hex boundaritg- 1
have not Vet finally been settled. Uoii-.'o
< S1?8* may add. more to her Square miles, j
It is not likely*, however, that, auv t-crri-1,
f tori-s will the'.put. t h ro ugh mi: gro's as j
• states tii V the. presidgntutl eiectiOn is J
i over.1 . • - ;v;
TRADE5/AAN:
m wim,
‘J CIRCULATE^ IN THE HOME?
1 Or PEOPLE: BUYING THC Y
ittND OrQOODiYbU Mfi/l'
MAvt. TQ SELL .
^VvORAL:
ing to taka the place of that exemplified’
by writers now in the field. Are we to
have no more fun? • y - ’
Pw But the exquisite humor of this type
, An electrical tuning box has been :y now passing ia incomparable. 1 .ipcrUn
vented for the use of orchestra leader- had it, and Tom Corwin had it. It bob-
Now if souiebody will invent a means u> bles over from the thoughts of m<5n leas
; P^t a lit.leelectricitydntocongressmeft-s known but equally humorists in their
and , other people's speeches, a long f t way. . 0f theBe tU laU Emory Storra,
want will be supplied. Why not? It . ofChicago; was a marked example. Jbl^
j to* been successfully used to give added fiy,. careless, gifted, he was a typical-
j speed to horses. American of the -west. He was, besides,
. ~T 7 7 1 , . nearly always in pecuniary difficulties.
.Sulphate of soda forms with carbolic ’• When' ^ chief Justice Coleridge vis-
«4 a •*"»>«“ ““Pooni Therefore iwd Amerita, Mr, Stom ^ .
when a person has^ boeu poisoned by in Chicago that a prudent
Wnug carbolic acd into his stortsch ajgh, have felt honored • to ahare. A.
have him. at once drink a strong solution ::n3uaI, Stom ,was ieep defct, bot ^
of sulphate of soda. It will never fail fife did that trouble his light heart
but .may lie classed as a reliable antidote Justaathe distinguished party wereto
to carbolic acid poisomug. n is claimed, f do.wn to the b,nqnet. howeyer, came
mv. •" . , v . . j a thunderclap, • The sheriff levied on the
xhenerf lands td !» opened to settle ^ iWt. At the dming room door he
Th V L,':U jttl his mini'one stood like a fiaming'
These lands, ponged to t ,e soutbeni Bword guarding the entrance topag
a t a n ^rTn?n?'al' hT''What waste be done? Hi, high
teen «nally mtafied. the Und he mightiness. Coleridge, could not Jt
801,1 ™ .snttesi. The sheriff was implacable.'
acre. Then there irtl be one s<>u,e of the millionaire gueate
history of,be conutrv. were obi, ged to go down into their own
;." ■; j .. - pockets and haul forth to© money toy
rv . • satisfy the man of the law. Then he
Prfifessor Barnafi’. of the. Lick u
j servatory. made pome strange disot
! eries in connection v^ith Swift's cfclnet.
visible to-themakhd eye as a small, hazy
star xvithont a tjiil. The Lick telescope
however, discovered tails enough—a j
j whole system - of tails. From time to |
| satisfy the
ih parted {leaceably and let the merry
fieast.go on.
Nothing daunted though was the
t, xneiTy soul of Emory Storrs. In the
i very midst of the dismay and confusion
he remarked coolly. “The sheriff -has
4 5-1
,
4
■
, time diring the preaenhmonth “T*7
Baroanl l.» tech ^iing-.tbe cd„«.. ®*' ^ 1*v“'1 00 th* W*
, He found that it had not only tailk. wu t Enpper’
j k._ * . \ .7 ■ ‘-v '*
- ‘\*
• . • ,. . - • - ' « ■ 7. i.~ ~ r r
forked tails, with curves in them. ‘flo
succeeded in photographing the remark-
able phenomenon, and the picture will :
be one of the most striking ever obtained
in the fieid of astronomy. The telescojK-
| showed three principal toils.'of which
!- the southern one was niost'di^inet.- fbe _ ____________ H
j naost feifiarkable thing was,1 however, Lord and of Gideon, according to
, that this tail grew .JO/eo6/od&. of. mi leu, j report; He censured spiritualists in 1
t in twenty-four hours, as observed’under measured terms, and hinted of dark d
4Wk>Si.l______ ■ • 1 1 • • , . . - __ , .
The Ilights of a Pastor.
An unusual question came up recently
before the officers of a Methodist con-
gregation in Rochester, Ind. The pastor
of the church was opposed to spiritual-
ism. He. attacked it fropa his pulpit
with", as it were, both thte Word of
7 "
the telescope.
Sf- e»amtjir.r
Behanzln.
France may have to take seriously t his
ugly black brute and wipe him out.' He
warned France that if she wanted-to
T - - x
ing in dark circles. fThe spiritualists
of Rochester felt outraged. There* are
now a million spiritualists in the world,
fcnd a considerable number o< them are
found in every town and village. Often
they are among prominent citiaens> as
i
Realizing; rite ’ want.
Halleisvilk*-’ a is* fd a(R tdof
J. M Kuykendall X Bro.,
Ha\e oticuwl qp in the J. I. E.lstivef building willj a large stock of
Hay, Com & Oats
! fight hun .he was ready to pit his little happened in'the Rochester case. The
j pocket handkerchief kingdom of Daho- editor of the Rochester phper is an out-
ruoy ag.iihst the whole French nation ! spoken spiritualist, and his fellow be-
■] tie has 13.000 warriors, 6.000 of tfiejn lievers naturally found their spokesman
the ferocious Amazons, who are the in him through the columns • of his
world's phenomenon in these closing paper.- The result was a fight It col-
days of the Nineteenth’century* minated finally in'the pastor publicly
Behanzin is enraged because he sees announcing ‘that certain Methodist
as the Indian of America saw 300 years
ago, the white man's civilization closing
in on him and forcing him to adopt its
ways or pressing him to extinction. The
proximity of the white man means to
ia’qias who were spiritualists would be
dropped henceforth from the roll of
membership in his church. The outcry
was then greater than ever. ■' "
May spiritualists, for the reason that:
J
-
. - •'*Vi * *■
; graph a star, which it did hi l>3u. It i,
•. V ' V I a If /A * 1. J. /-I-.. a. A " _ a .1 I a
Women A»ai*onomcrs at Ifiirvai-d.
r!:“ Harvard a.-treimmu.-al 'ob-trvaJHH
Aory was th.- fits; in t]7 v : M luja/. wl^icb they are offering-to-the public at prices fis low as tlie state of tlie
• -• ' - ? *-V fl ' a ■ a if ^
~ ^ | ' a *v-r* wo x vtaCXJii liial
Behanzin that he can no more mak< they are spiritualists, be dismissed from.
ulootl V mi (Is OTl flip OrAnnd I f^Vinoflon —— ---■ 1-----v- e n__cl. _
______w
■nil ear* *11
Com plain t«, L n nbaee,
WrM«rnl ttnd Nervou* J»«-
blllt-jr, C 0 * t- —S~T IvtnfM, Kid-
»*-T »!•«•»«•, Tre nbllnz,
"»-■»> E * - hanitlhn,
Waillijol Hndy,Di««a.e
ea*««d by In. '/V J dl.t-retl«n In
» OMth, A|tr ’ 1 JlarUedop
■lnrl« Life. Alio XLECTRIC TRl’NH
And BELT cnmhhied. ftENO 8c. POST-
AOCfor TREK ILLCBTRATED BOOK
•X *•<> Pimn* which will be sent in n pi 'in
•eale4 enrwlwpe. Cwrre*|iawlence In En^i.sfi
and Otbm.
Dcetrl« Incoles, SI per
Owes Eitcfric Belt and Appliance Co.,
*» North Broadway, ST. LOUIS, MO.
MSTIo* (Mis earn
-J W. H. LANCASTER M. D
Moulton, Texas.
OSce LH L*nc*j»t«r Sl Kotzebue's drua store]
-j also the first to give to the world a reg- i •'
oJarly trained corps of women astroao-
t laers. ’The work: on which the Wiles j
j are engage<l is described in the New
i England yiagaziift by ^elr-u Leah Reed; j
j - ,lz includes three classes—computings
original investigation and. third, the
; Henry Draper memorial work.and font- ]
| other branches of investigation shpilar j
i ^ the Draper work. For twenty years I
i women have l>ee:i employed in making
; nmthernntical computations' for the ob-
■, serv at<n’y. It -i> iound that thev- are
! quite as -!ci!lfnl as the men computers,
and they are paid the same. But there
is another kind , of investigation for
•j Nvh’rcq women are peculiarly adapted,
j TerfH‘)'p» <d>s>;rrations at night are not
«o iquch'dn their line, but after tlie star-
-market jnsfiliep.
j.’.;
i*.:
The!t^stock will be replenished from time to time so as to meet
the wants of the trade.
Ellrich & Co.
llEALEIJ.S IX-
DRUGS, ; MEDICINES
FOH SALk
; —.v, mit.mci uiesiui.' - — 7 iuuitizjjc »mi uorKing Women. oui pruuiems oi cnotignt.
f- .photographed the women, by tlie aid ^Medicines, Oh emi cal s, SI a tion ery, Toilet Articles, and anything else carried ln London one-fifth of. all the women There is no time even for reading. The
pf niagnif.\ jnirtrlasses. r)iw• rl -y*—in that line of .business.—,--! Vbhwio,, i-ka •.* ritv ra«n slrim* h.a ------ ^ . »■ ..
My homestead place atMoultou In-
stitute, consisting of good residence
of six rooms with two stone chimneys,
good bsrn, buggy house, smokehouse
sod other out bouses; good well of
water; yard and garden paled fn;
good orchard and vlueyard with
twenty-five acres of land in cultiva-
tion. Figures reasonable and terms
eagy. For further information apply
to present owner, Mrs. Roxje A.
Franks, or to Dr. Lancaster.
-SiAncJ * Toilet * Artjoie©.jg-
Pure Fresh Drugs,
bloody raids on the tribes around hint
for the purpose of capturing slaves to
sell to the traders. It means that be
.can no more behead or torture whom be
\rill and that he can no longer offer h«
man sacrifices. Behanzin has therefore
grown desperate, and moves on unwit-
tingly to'his own destruction.
England proposed to France to enter
into a convention whereby these two m.
tions should prevent, as far as possible
the sale of firearms to Belianzan. But &fdinary mortals a little let up frpnt
his soldiers are already equipped with the W all that can be expected,
best modern rifles of German make. >u k - bis can be obtained nowbere so affectv-
that the aetjon of’ France and England as in country life. * .
might have liftLe effect. It i^nnfortn One may be either cm the farm or in a
nate indeed that savages can Always ol>- irna^i toyrn. but in any case here is Hie
tain from the white man both firearms 111051 healthful, restful life that can be
Christian church membership? Further,
has the pastor the right to expel mem-
bers from a church for this reason?
Here are two important questions.
-------
1 The Pleasantest Lift.
Probably Teal happiness is too much
to expect in this life. At any rate the
only happy individual is the one who
has his happiness in himself, then noth-
ing can make him miserable But far
ordinary mortals a little
and firewater to an unlimited extent
The trade in these 13 the first to be
opened and the last to be suppressed
Marriage am] Working Women.
lived. It is a fact that those among __
who read mdst and think most are the
country people, in the fevered rush
and scramble of the city there is do time
for working out problems of thought
pf riiagni£\ i*iggla.sses, examine the plate.* (
and dvscriiie them. For'-this task they
seem p culiaTly fitted bv tl.nir q.,i,km-4 - w -
-xcz[
^rescripticarLS Specialty,
m
A
from their photographs, Plukography
has brought the stars into day Light.
Since the application of photography
to astronomy, that tscience lias changed ■-
greatly, arid a new department hits {
j growq. ^call' d astrc>-physu:s. The won- |
derfnl method of sp**ct'ral Analysis is ap- |
! phed to the -light of theAir as photo- i
graphf'd. By this means jr lias actually,,
bet*.fine |x#s.-rble to det*-nnine. the phys-,.
.leal fon>lih:ti<»n of.a star f
Tho gtiporipteiitTenfcpf the Drapvt ’Me- ‘
morial w>rk is a woman, Mrs. Mina I
Ihngalore open every ni^bt.'es
Jos. <& A. Jezek,
between the ages of thirty-five and
• 1 forty-five are single. In all Edgland
•’j one-siith of such women are single
. This, being so necessarily, apparently,
j since there; are not men in Great Brit-
•j ain to. g6 around to. pro vide husbands
and a maintenance for them. Clara E
( Collet, writing in The Nineteenth Cen-
city man skima his paper to catch the
local news and that which concerns his*
particular business, whatever It Is. In 1
the country the man really thinks. Our
greatest, most gifted men and women
in every walk of life hare been almost
without exception born and bred in the
Country. There, too, they retire to
‘
Blacksmiths and
Wheelwrights.
SWEET HOME,: TEX AS.
lA
ULI, 222, TJB, 41
/ I^LN
Devall & Adams,
Halletsville, Texas.
Fleming. . Sheiia* added to astronomic’! C>ri(.t»<i!. Tll'if.l-Lm'ifbbi/. /J *.i ’ indifferently a few years, merely for
knowledge the dracovery-of a tojethod ‘ (^U1K‘ With . and (lisj)aU’h..1 enough money to buy. clothes and for
whereby variable stars of a certain tvnirr +r it DJ ;i sjH'CRilt V. nishq-iocket inonev/ They do not take ■
/x __ I • I 11 3 • ' l>aiius to’ learn anything well, because *
S^Ou work (1()I10* PriC6S rOciSOllcibIC tUeyexpct soon not to be obliged to
t .T , . —T-;—■ _ —-;_ - eaffi money at all. Many of them never
. os, , ze - i.h 1 in enter of t)ie latest. Improved silver mbuntod. .bits 1 marr.v--v-Tb^y have not trained them
■selves.to any^ occupation, consequently
tury, urges that some sj*stematic prq- f think out their noblest thoughts, to do
vision should be made wtiCrebv they best work for mankiud.
m%v earn their own living and be inde- | Apart from greatness, however, when
pendent After the age of thirty-five we considcr the mere pleasure of liviqg,
i the chances are almost certain that they it is outside.of the great city that most
.will never marry. of it is to be found.
Miss Collet finds a rather curious fact, c ■ -- '
in the course of her investigation. It is* Hi the famine districts of Russia 34,- .d
that the expectation of marriage really people are without food. The stu-
works against, girls * industrially. |f pontlousness of the problem before the
: they look forward to getting husbands C2ar aD^ the world thus become apparent,
to support them, they may perhaps wprk a number of people greater than one-
■ .1 _ OT - — 4 1 ir. 1 m f K T ♦ V» a *otUa1a *1 ■*— i ■ ■ 1 M
whereby Variable stars of a certain type
niay-te .pp.>yed variable. Mi.-3. Maury
.-h%5 di-.-vATred tiuit the .-btr' kirbwi, ;e.
Beri AurigaO; is a u-l-r*?;. -binary, . Mi-e.
; Byrd anil ijjfiss Whitney obtained ;fid
f difference in longitude l>*nvi7n
j Smith «bll. ire and Harvard obseryaforv.'
j Mlss Whi-:;. y i> noj>- Maria .Mitchell's
successor;at; Vaseax. and Miss-Byrd is
I Jtrectof of Smith college observatory,
j ^omen who are accomplished mathe-
| maticians are quickly sought . for as
teachers. ;
Finally Miss Anna Winlock has made
AUG. UKHBOI.O, ‘
House and Sign Painter.
Paper hanging anil Graining
-——^ , a specialty.
the.stars about., Fi„t cUm -ork «Ok4
the north pole. • J o««d. E*tftnat«s given ob any work *n mv line
L«ive eni»r» »t D. B. Howerton k Co. .
Dr. II. E. Gaedcke,
DENTAL 8URGE0N,
halletsville, -
TEXAS.
i.
Ofllce npst«irt in the Mitelieli bniMm*.
their lot in after life is a , pitiable on|
-The remedy, Miss Collet says, will be in
• carefully , training all. women of the
poorer and middle - classes- to some oc-
.- cupation’ She writes: ;
If any one Cbjects that n omen who are*ia-
tonseiy mtereSted in work which *1*° enahiee
them to be self ev^porting are lean attzactire
then they would othcrwwe be, I can make no
reply except that tear pec t » hundred wom*u
to derote their energies to attracting fifty men
»ema kltithtly ridiculous.
third of the whole population of the
United States. The czar is doing all he
con to feed them, but what can he or
anybody do? Still, more gloomy is the
fact that the famine is caused largely by
irnpiA ..rushment of the soil, so that there
is little hope for the future.
- —^ f ' .. y a *
One thing that can reconcile an artist
to the piles of cotton flowers upon ladies'
bats this spring is the fact that while
the flowers are there the birds will be
spared. When flowers are in, birds are'
out
-
.’ ■ ..... ...—r—. ; , ; r .
Bonheur, turning into her swv-l
Buty-fimt year, doing aoraeot’the strdng-j
set, j&nest work of her life, is pleasant t»>
think about ,
t '
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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/m1/3/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Friench Simpson Memorial Library.