Brownsville Daily Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. NINE, No. 128, Ed. 1, Thursday, November 29, 1900 Page: 1 of 4
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TOLv NINE.
CONSOLIDATED
DIRECTOK:
STATE OFFICERS.
feeverndr . . .--. Joseph i. Sayefrs
Liout. Governor--. .-. J. 25". Browning
Comptroller.. R. W. Finley
&and Comrtussioner. .-. Cbas Rogan
treasurer vJohn W. Bobbins
Attorney General . ..... Thos. G. Smith
Supt. Public Instruction J.S.endaJl
DISTRICT ASD COUNTY OFFICERS.
Congressman 11th. district. ..R.Kleberg
-State Senator 27th district. . .E.A. Atlee
foeprelfentaiives -I -J. R. Monroe :
fb. district . . . "Wm. J. Russell
iJounty Judge. .Thomas Carson
County Attorney. . .Robt. B.Rentfro jr.
County Cltfrk v v. .Joseph Webb:
Sheriff . E.G. Forto!
Treasurer v. . . Aug. Gelaya
Assessor. .-. Ezequiel Cp.vazos
'Gollector. Damaso Lerma
Surrey or - . . . .-. M. Hanson jr.
Side Inspector. Vicente Tamayo
COU5TY C05D4ISSIOKERS.
?Precine't No. 1 . . . Atfcnojenes Gribe
Precinct No. Jose Gelaya
ecinct No. 8. . .E. B. Raymond
Precinct No. 4.-. S. P. Chamoion
Puttee Pestce Precinct No. 2
. j. I. P. franklin
'Cotmty court meets for civil criminal
?fead probate business on the first Mon-
aayain March June September and De-
sxao9r. 'CITY OFFICERS.
$ayor Thomas Carson
Chief of Police - -. . .L. H. Bates
Trsasurer. . . .Geo. SI. Putegnat
"Secretary ..Clemente Martinez
Attorney S. A. Belden jr.
urreyor... .S. W. Brooks
assor and Collector .S. Yaldez
U.B. DISTEICT COtJBT.
The following ire the officers d and
Sie times and places of holding court for
foe Western District of TeSas:
District Judge T. S. Maxey
Attorney... Henry Terrell
Oleii '..D- H. Hart
fclarshal . . . .Geo. L. Siebrecht
Court oontenes in San Antonio on the
&nft Mondays in May and November
In Austin on the first Mondays in Feb-
'nairy and July.
In Brownsville On the first Monday in
.January and second Monday in June.
In El Paso on the first Mondays in
&priland October.
TWBTYIGHTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT.
- District Judge. . . . . Stanley Welch
Pistrict Attorney. .-. John I. Kleiber
district Clerk Ifcuis Kowalski
District court meets as follows:
'Cameron County First Mondays in
February and 8th. dayof October; con-
tinues in session five weeks.
Hidalgo County Fourth Mondays af-
ter :the first Mondays in February and
September; ccfcitmues in session threp
weeks.
Starr CountySixth Mondays after
the first Mondays in February and Sep
tember: continues in session three weeks
Nueces County Ninth Mondays after
the first Mondays in February and
September- continues in session six
weeks.
U. S. CUSTOM HOUSE-.
H. "Maris. -. CoiieoiOr
A. Ttanham. . . .-. Special Deputy
A A . Browne. Chief Clerk
& K. Goodrich. ...... .-.Entry Clerk
MEXICAJ CONSULATE.
JvftimAl Barracan Consul
Summer E xcurswn
TIPS TASLE
OF THE
On and after Jane loth. 1900 re-
gular passenger trains will run
...Us follows: ?
REGULAR TRArtt.
leaves Brownsville (Daily) at p. m.
Arrive Point Mbel at 6:15 p. m.
Leave " at 7- m
Arrive Brownsville at 8 115 m.
JOSE GELAYA
GENERAL MANASBK
ffio Grande R.
BROWNSVILLE TEXAS THURSDAY NOVEMBER 29 1900.
XS tzVPhY. H8S WITH THE DAILK COSMOPOLITAN WHICH WAS PUBLISHED HERE FOIt
i . ummmuLiinii in iiiiin miiiiin 11 n i mi in 11 j i iiiiim ii ii I hi hi
PROFESSIONAL GARBS.
J AMES it. WELLS.
-ATTORNEY AT LA W". '
Office Second Floor Rio virtinde Railrod
Building
E. H. OOODRICa. E. K-. GOODRICH.
E. H. GOODRICH & SON.
Attorneys at Daw.
Dealers in Real Estate.
Complete Abstracts xf CameTon'Cunt
kept in the office.
BBOW.N4VILLE. TEXAS
j() FIN BARTLETT
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Will practice in District State "in-1
Federal Counts.
0f32 wltft Jbk. B. WellB In Rio Grfciidft Ri o
BrpwnsVille ----- Tex
J.S.McCampbell R.W.Stayi'on.
W.B.McCampbell
McCmpbells I St ay ton.
Successors to McCampbells & Welch
and MciJampben5 bon
Law ana Land Office-
Practice in Supreme Civil Appeal Fed-
eral and other State Courts .
Special attention given to litigation in
the Connties of Aransas Cameron
Duval Hidalgo Nueces Starr andSan
Patricio.
Abstracts of land titles furnished and
titles examined.
tfain office Corpus Christi Texas.
Branch office Rio Grande City Texas
S. L BIH
(SticceBBor to Bloombprg &
Rapliapl )
09HEB IN
Staple Goods
Li nensHosiery
es
Hats Shirts
Notions e c.
ELIZ&8LTH STREET BROWHSViLLE
Q H-. THORN
DENTIST.
3ttlce Hours: from 8t to" i2i-- 4n
iiuuiwi from j to 5 p.m.
Go
iner s
BB0WJJ8VILLE. TEXAS.
R. IL WALLIS.
PHOTOGRAPHER
Its introducing new and select styles
ot work at his parlors. Also hew style
of fancy card mounts.
dojig and enlargements in crayonC
pR R. P. ANDFRSON
ft DENTIST
Gradudta Vanderbilt Dental College
No charge for examining teeth
Office Sours JSJAft"11
Office 9th street. One block from P.O
BHOWSBVIfcLlfi TEAB
flm r.nndc
Ui f UUUUJ
J
Boo
s and S
posile
CHARLES A. BOUTELLE.
The Dvin enter Congressman's Life
aud His DauhWr's Gentle .
Wavprly Mass. Mftd bnt noT
folHflfceti is Congressman "Charles
A. BouteHe of -Maine-. .Byno means
forsaken since his seutiiuental
constihients of Bangor have re
elected him to-ins seft'tin the House
of Representatives in the hope of
thereby aiding in the recovery of
his reason and incident almost i
not quite unique in the history of
politics.
But this generosity brings Jno
no'inf rt to the afflicted statesman.
The very njws rjf it can not pene
trate the clouds that darken his
once vigorous mind. All that he
cares about ail that he has to
lighten his distress is tiie compan-
ionship of his daughter.
Miss Grace Boutelle drives every
day from her lodging to the Me
Lean insane asylum intect on de-
voting all her waking hours to her
afflicted father.
If it is fine they start for a long
drive and the patient skips to 'the
carriage clapping his hands and
laughing aloud. If it is showery
they watch their opportunity for
cautious excursions into the gar
den.
Again and again she repeats a
few simple words expressing one
simple idea. If he is in a docile
mood and that is tnost often his
condition when he is allowed to go
out with her he repeats the words
after her .sometimes haltingly
sometimes fluently with a flash of
the old oratorical effect.
But the idea it is impossible al-
ways to tell whether it fastens it-
self on his consciousness or not.
Sometimes it does- but only to be
detached the next moment. Some-
times he seeks to reply rationally
but weeps to find himself uttering
the reverse of what he wauts to
say.
Through all trials and failures
and fleeting successes his dangbter
exhibits the protecting care of a
mother striving' to develop the in-
telligence of her child.
One idea he stubbornly refuses
to entertain. He can not be made
to understand that he is still a
Congressman that his consti-
tuents have re-eleeted him iu spite
of his mental affliction. Such a
triumph of sentiment in the harsh
world of politics is beyond his
comprehension. And sohepnr-
pose of that amazing act of gen
erosity on the partoi the people'of
Bangor is defeated.
Congressman Boutelle became
insane in Washington ten months
ago. He has been in the asylum
ever since. False reports have been
circulated to the effect that he was
recovering and would soon be able
to resume his seat in Congress.
The truth is that there has been no
imorovenient in his condition.
New York World.
TAKE ONLY thfe beat when you
need a medicine. Hood's Sareapa-
rllla is tie best blood purifier nerve
and stomach tome tfet HOOB'o
THE POLITICAL
ISSUES IN fiAWAIl.
Race Question Had Nothing to do
With the Recenx Result.
Chicago til.. Nov. 5. "Mnch
misconception has gone broad as
to the objects of the native .party
of Hawaii and the victory tbey
achieved in the recent election"
said H. T. Marsh a business man
from Honolulu who was in Chi-
cago today.
The impression has gone abroad
that the victory of the natives in
electing Wilcox a native to Con-
gress and in ejecting majority
of the members nf both houses of
the Territorial Legislature makes
theVace issue the predominating
issue in the politics of Hawaii. .
"The sugar planters have ex-
pressed tears that the natives
would use their power in the L?g-
islature by passing measures in-
jurious to tbeirinterests and many
forebodings have been expressed
in correspondence from the is-
lands. "The face question had no more
"to do with the last election for
President than to influence the
natives to Vote together in order
to get their proper representation.
There is none of the feeling be-
tween the whites and the natives
in 'Hawaii tneh as causes a iace
problem. The average Hawaiian
compares well in intelligence and
morality with the average Amer-
ican. "The leaders of their party are
men of intelligence and education
arid I consider that the result of
the election placing the natives in
power as it does Ts as satisfactory
as could be expected and it will
not be Surprising to many If the
action of the Hawaiian legislative
bodies shall be snch as will class
the Hawaiian people higher in the
opinion of Americans than at
present.
"I do not believO they' will take
advantage of their power to pass
class legislation. Their sole ob-
ject iu forming the party is to gain
the representation which was deni
ed them nnder the old republic
and the future existence of the
party depends on the attitude of
the Democratic and Republican
parties toward the natives who
are iu the largest majority in the
islands."
DALY WEALTH AT
CLARK'S MfeftCY.
Chicf.go Chronicle.
Butte. Mont.--Senator William
A. Clark of Montana has the pow-
er to force thegreat Amalgamated
Copper company into bankruptcy
and squeeze the fat of the Standard
trust's moLSter sponge. Oddly
enough the senators's old enemy-
Marcus Daly furnished the power
that gives Clark the mighty hold'he
t V.n non t rv r-i T-i J a flip Amnlcrft-
ciauu uc ;
nforl smelters into his own uaili-f
wick. The lever is hewn from the
millious of feet of lumber that the
Anaconda company is charge with
taking from United States land in
Montanfl. Iu ten years past CInrk j
NUMBER 128
jj..mj'm;mjj i
SIXTEEN YEARS-.
i i hi ii.i ih mil n mi i i uTiTi iT
contend? $1000000000 worth
of timber has been cut oif'to sup-
ply the A'uaponda-Amalgamatecl
demand hi defiance of Federal
laws.
For the first time In his lifo
i Clark has absolute control of
State polities and his re-election
to the United States seimte is as
sured. He is pledged Uy his owii'
words and the utterances lothi
paper the Butte Miner to pr'ose
cute the Federal claims against thajy
case is clear. He points to
mountain sides shorn of. trntft
forests to the great Saw mills
'owned by the Amalgamated mines
at Butte the smelters at Anacontfe
the vast tract of coal minest Belt '
where the lumber is used- as t
evidence to base his charges. &is
complaint before the senate will
chnrge the Amalgamated Copper 'If
company with purloining young';.
growth thus p'recipiinting'drcutby
injuring sheep raising and making
placer mining impossible. Dam-: -ages
accruing from the alleged de t -
predations will be set at $100.
000000. A
AFFAIRS IN PORTO RICO.
Some Crying Needs of the IsIanlV
Poiuted Out In Report. T
y-
Washington D. O. Nov. 25." '
The commissioner of the interior
for Porto Rico William H. Elliott-
In his annual report to the Seere- - -
tary of the interior says that most
'expert manipulation as well as 3e .
tective ingenuity will be. needed t0
untangle the mass of cross tiplesv
duplication and tapping of grants f
and concessions and unauthorized .
occupation of the public lands thafc
have grown with the centuries "of
rule in the interest; of the favored
few. -
The first crying need of Pirjt6
Rico the report says is good road "
The productiveness of the soil i
so great and the necessities for ex-
istence so inexpensive that 'peopl . i
can and do live and multiply ' .
mountain districts but remaps
foreVer poor and ignorant. PeY
manent roads it is predicted wiiljf
work out the sadly needed reforms-
in education. The commissidnelf .
proposes to suggest to the Legisla
ture that a loan be floated large
enough for building the mostneed
ed roads at once'. '
CUBANS REJECT SBARETTI
Havana Nov. 25. At ameetin';
held in Havana to-day byMHeQP"
ponents of Mgr. Sbaletti bishop .
of Havana General Gomezpresenfc
ed a resolution that all the raunicy
ipalties' shouid send JheisKbp4
telegrams informing him. that? he-
was not wanted bv the Caban5 and
asking him to retire in faror of a
Cuban eclesiastic. t
All the speakers accnseO jx
Sbaretti of being too much of an
American in .his Point of view and.
of favoring annexation to.tounit-
d stales
STOPS THlCOUGtt
aud worfe off tUc Cold. -Laxative
BrOmo-Quinine. Tabled
cure a cold in one day. No Cur-
No Pay. Pri & a
'
I
4
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Wheeler, Jesse O. Brownsville Daily Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. NINE, No. 128, Ed. 1, Thursday, November 29, 1900, newspaper, November 29, 1900; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143964/m1/1/: accessed April 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .