The Henderson Times. (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. [14], Ed. 1 Thursday, April 3, 1884 Page: 1 of 4
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TKliMS;
■ T. niLlKR,
Kdlt«r and Fr«prlct«r.
VOL. XXV.
* 1
a-
Mm
"TOLERANT IN ALL THINGS| NEUTRAL IN NOTHING."
HENDERSON. RUSK COUNTY.-TEXAS THURSDAY. APRIL 3. 1884-
r
, - a >t
rfcf-ir fun.-
Inter-
«*r< a with ihrn-
wmknms,
•fj t<w>
« T x. IVy I*.
Wlthru)
VWtl
Term* «f ftwb«crtptl< n.
Oq^ copy 1 ye ir, 2 .00
6 months,
1.00.
Locals l. ccata per Jfcte for first int>er*.
lion. For a longer time, special rates
will be given.
Short, newsy correspondence solicited
from every part of the county.
No rejected manuscript* returned.
Rateit of AdrerliaiaK:
IG'olnntu, o*e ye*r, 130 00
1 « " " 75 00
14 m •• 40 00
1 S i«*re, " • 10 00
1 Column, six nfi^ths, 7* 00
12 '• " , '• 40 00
1-t •• " '• 25 00
I S(|u*re ••«•.. 7 oo
1 Colniun three months, 40 50
1-2 " •• - 25 00
14" " •' |5 00
1 Square. 5 00
HT" Payments quarterly, in advance.
AH communication*—bu-iuess or oth«.
tr wise—should be addressed to
Till. TIMES,
Henderson, Texas
J. H. IRBY,
Whalsssleand Retail Druggists,
Henderson, Tex. South St.
m
TRAOC MARK
REGISTERED.
*•'
U09
A1TEW TBEATHZHT.
F^.j-onsumpti'oa, asthma, bronchitis.dys
"*ja, catarrh headache dchilitv rheuma
atrura^gia i.nrt all chronic aa<i nervous
•sorderS.
' A CARD.
XSiv, the undersigned, V> vvag wcevvteil
■grest and permanent benefit fmui the nse
of "Compound Orygea." prepared aad
iidiniiistercd bv Dr*. Starkley & PaVen
f rhSariciftfcia, and '>eine natislied iliat it
^a new discovery in medical science and
that is claimed loi it, confldt-r il a du
\y which we to the many tlioft^wcls
ivh are suffering Jin mm chronic and so,
called w-curable diseases tw ik> all that we
c.in to make its virtues known and to in
sjwre the pcMrc with confidence.
tt e have |>ers« al knuwiedtre at Drs.
St vrkey & rales. ">kry *re educated, in-,
tc-niiceat andciHwcientVms [diysii-ianswho
•will not, we arc sure, make aay stiitemeHt
whicu they d« not know <ir l eTi«ve to lie
true Bar pulish aav testimonials or re^
ports at cases which are n*Jt genuine.
Win. D KdVey, \I- C from rhiiadelphia
T. ^rth ir. editor and puidisher 'Arthurs
II..me Magazine" rhiht V. L. Conrad,
•editor "Lutheran Observer,' rhtVa.
r.i&adelphia fa.. June t 1882.
In or<Se« to meet a natural inquiry In
regard to «nr professional ami per«onai
*taading and to g«ve increasetl confidence
In our statements and in the genuineness
of our testimonials and reports of eases,
we prijit the above cam from gentlemen
well aud widely known and of the highest
j>ersowal character. *
Our -Treitiseon Compound Oygen,'
contain wig a history of thy discovery ol
aiud in nit; of acttoe of ihis reinArkahle
curative agent, and a large record of sur>
prising consumption catarrh Neuralgia,
bronchitis asth 11a etc. and a wide range
of chronic diseases, will be seat tree.
Add rex* Urx Kiarkey & Palm
It##, 1111, Girard street Phil., Pa.
THEOHIT TEU3
IRON
TONIC
From the amount of abuse heap-
ed upon your humble correspon-
dent, one woald be led to suppose
that he was engaged . in an attack
upon the democratic party at
present in power, m Texas, in-
stead of lite fact, that I only ask
them to return to the true and un-
doubted fundamental principles
of their political life. Principles,
from which we have wandered
very far—\i would seem ignorant-
ly; for, do we not all say that the
best form of government is only
known where the whole people
have a voice in the choice of their
rulers, and controling the policy
of the government * This is now,
and has always been called, and
justly too, democracy! There-
fore, a man who advocates these
ideas is the best, and only demo-
crat. In proof of this, I beg that
your readers will calmly go back
a few years, and consider the his
tory of our party. The men who
risked their "property, their lives,
and sacred honor" for the cause
of American liberty, were in ev-
ery particular, Englishmen, by
blood, by sympathy, by naturg.
They only protested, as their
brethren in Britain were protest-
ing, against the tyranny of the
then British administration on
both sides of the Atlantic. We
being more happily situated,
through our remoteness from the)
seat of power, were able to over-
throw and mike an end of King
George's power. The British at
home had to struggle on through
al! the years of jiolitical agitation,
until they effected the same ends
by legal means, what we attained
by the quicker, but harsher road,
of rebellion against organized au-
thority, To day, both Britain and
American rejoice in the same de-
gree of self-government, and those
much prized blessings—the fran-
chise, a free press and free speech.
But all these things were not
contemplated by the men who led
the colonfes "out of bondage."
Few of the active leaders of the
Revolution but opposed the idea
of the rights ot the working inen.
Nay, I only remember one—Pat-
rick Henry—who always lifted up
his yoice in defense of the "men
beyond the mountains," who
were heartily despised by the
more aristocratic gentlemen of
the Virginia school. They were
English gentlemen, of the same
class as the smaller fry of lords,
who filled all the sinecure offices
ot the kingdom, and rode over
the crops of their poorer neigh-
bors, chasing hares and foxes
These were their ideal respectable
people who were, (:;nd they only,)
able to elect men to office, or occu-
py office. So we find, even after
the war which followed the Decla-
ration of Independence, which
fell, as all wars fall, on the poor
were armies so commanded, or a
state so well administered. All
this tended to prove that man-
kind were more equal than was
heretofore generally considered.
This was to be still further exem-
plified in France. Under the influ-
ence of the French soldiers who
had served in the American arm-
ies, and imbibed the love of liber-
ty, that contact villi nature is sure
to produce, the people of France
began to agitate for the removal
of the privileges claimed by the
aristocracy, and the high taxes
that were literally causing actual
starvation, and were necessary to
maintain the gaudy court that sur-
rounded the throne of Louis XVI.
All of this is now matter of French
history, how they succeeded, and
after they had made Liberty a
fact, allowed it to be snatched
from them by men, whom they
had trusted with the management
of their afTairs, who made them-
selves perpetual rulers, refusing
to surrender their offices, and al-
low the people to elect those
whom they chose to succeed them.
When the Revolution in France
was at its height, we begin to no-
tice the development of a decided
democratic spirit in America,
which struggled through the ad.-
ministration of Adaui6 and found
fruition in the election of Jeffer-
son, a man who would be to-day.
and wa6 in fact, then, denounced
as a demagogue, and a disgrace to
respectable people, who believed
that the mere fact that a man
earned his own living by hottest
foil, and did not exist as an aristo-
cratic pauper, fattening upon the
toil of others, was not theiebv* un-
fitted to occupy any position that
his ability might raise him to;
and so the democratic party of
America was boru; and sO long as
the race of Jefiersons shall find
successors, will live and flourish,
holding in its hands the continued
existence of our government; for
if we ever allow the principles
enunciated so openly by our sham
aristocracy—that a man who dares
to criticise the public-acts of puh-
Iic servants, is a demagogue and
panderer to the vulgar tastes of
the common herd, whose only ex
ed that the different departments
run themselves as jt—se«re; did
my fellow-citizens ever hear of a
publicoffieer guilty of mal admin-
istration from ignorance? I will
risk the assertion that you will
find the mis-approprfation of mon-
ey to cause all thetrouble; and
you never heard of & set of public
officers in the first term, uniting
to further plans' for public job
bing, or any other p}aif (endingto
hand over the public funds to their
friends or kinsmen, this is the sin
of all men who are continued in
office too long. This is our chief
fault agaiust the present national
administration ; the most earnest
democrat would not scruple to sit
beside Mr. Arthur without keep-
ing his hand on his purse, and yet
he would work anxiously to de-
feat him and all his party, in the
next campaign, as actively as pos-
sible, hoping he might be able to
induce a sufficient number of our
republican fellow-citiaens td vote
with him in the interest of good
government to secure victory.
Let us then commence by cor-
recting our county affairs; by in-
sisting on having a voice, every
one ot us, in decidiug who shall
be nominated for office, as well
as who shall be elected, * keeping
steadily in view the* principle
that the people sliall choose their
0*11 rulers. Nothinglelse will
meet the requirements^^ a pure
and simple Jjinocrac^^ny oth-
er plan by winch a fewSretend to
represent the whole, lirlthe con-
vention system in use nerelofore,
is not democratic, but ffcirety aris-
tocratic. "Jrxius.
I'A'fJ/AA'l 'ELECTION.
In the first place let us assume
that three precincts, A. B. and C..
hold primary conVentjons, any
other number would do, or all the
precincts would result in the
same proportion.
In the second place let us as-
sume that John Smith and Peter
Jones are candidates for the nom-
ination to the office <}f county
clerk.
In the third place we will as-
sume that at each of the three
precincts 30 votes are cast and re-
POVERTY IIILL.
March 21,1SSL
Ed. Times:—I again take my
pen to rite you another letter.
We is all gettin on nnty well
and cood do better, ef it wamt for
the peddlers; that come eyery
day, an when we think we wont
by tliar goods.Jthar take out thar
rinkled calicurs, and makes our
wives and durters think its sum
extra faslion, an we 110, ef we
want peese any more, for that
weak, or ef we want to git rid ov
the pedler we had better by thar
old crimpled calicurs at once.
Our Pervissions has run awful
short an I went down to your
town torhef day, to see ef the
merchants was redy to let our
peeple have, thar goods on time,
an I told the merchants that we
wood turn over our cotton to um.
They seemed mity sorry, an told
me thar felt for our foax, and sed
they wished thar cood do sum-
thing now, but sed it was unpos-
sible. Tha told me that every-
thing was gon away up yonder,
an was still agoin. Tha sed too,
that the men whartha git thar
things, had come down on um.
Tha seemed awful sorry, for we
foax, an told me that if we wood
give um a leen, on all we had, an
our crops too, an give um 10 per
sent, on the fase ov our account,
next fall, ifVha wood try to help
us after a while. 1 thought that
shod a mity kind heart, in um, to
be willin to help us at all. So I
told um, I no«lo iiiy nubors wood
all do that.
I see in your last paper, a letter
from Mr. K. Hoot, of King Corn-
er, a answer to my communica-
tion. Now, I wish to say, to mis-
ter Iv Hoot, in answer to ins ques-
l
TUB WAV TO RUiM'KElK
Many people of all nations,
tribe and tongue are daily labor-
ing in order to make a support
in order to produce something 10
subsist upon. In all of the occu-
pations followed by man it re-
quires a 3eal of industry and
economy to accomplish any thing
worthy of note. In some cases
we 6ee men in pursuit of wealth
and it seems that all they do and
try proves a failure; while 011 the
other hand, other men embark in
the same-business and meet with
success. Now, while this is true,
and the great mass of the people
will admit, why does such hap
pen ? Is it because some men
are so much superior to others in
their business qualifications? (),
110, this will not hold good as ar-
gument; because, very often, we
see men who are almost perfect
"in the point of theory, and can sit
down and relate to you what you
should do in order to succeed in a
great many things. When you
strike some men on the practice of
what they cau give you the theo-
ry of in grand style—in many in-,
stances they prove to be a "sound
ing brass, or a tinkling synible
in other words, iliey cannot put
into practice wiiat they teach.
We think one of the great—and
perhaps, the greatest—secret of
success is economy. It does not
matter what we follow it is neces-
sary fbr us to use some economy ;
for if we intend—-and most of us
do—to be successful in wJ^Hever
we attempt, to be industrious, j ed in
energetic, persevering, and above
all, economical. Observation has
taught us that this is one of the
surest means, or plans, by which
we can accumulate wealth. Well.
if this be true, and who will deny
il { we readily see why it is men
by the
■g-yg! '.L Hnstrters
\
tion, it I love lickor'! that H follow the same pursuit and some
makes no difference, how much 1. come out more than conquerer
maintain the national pauper
schools at Anapolis and West
Point, or our own college at Brv
suit in the election of 45delegates
cuse for being is to pay taxes and j to the county nominating conven-
tion.
Iii the fourth place, w will as
sump; that at precincts,./L'sftid B.
an; and University, so called, at
FACTS RECAKDINC
fir, Barter's Inn M.
i-win parity an.l enrlrh Itvc BLOOD, rcmilatc
LIVERKIDMEYB. nun ISEfTom. TUB
iALTK mdVldbKuf -TOUT!!: III «tl
rcunlring itcertshiaiul cfHciciitTONlC,
lit«cl«llr l > *w oC A| n«-lllc.lnd1ges-
L,,,. 1 .ark of ctc.4 !t <**•« is U arke«l
■IU liweiHale and wtAu'v.-ful reewtis. Reiiet*
" — gpfvi' new fofw. £ali\c«
Ural V«* V , .
SsuOvriii? iroiii all m«w!«I««s
niTUllar««tli«lrsex will Anil In
kartbsi X£ON Toific a «• r« HIMJ i«-.*<iy
*• • -1 <I,v r.mililf x UiTl.
! working people of this country,
i these better class people, includ-
ing lawyers, doctors, merchants,
school masters and large land-
holders, actively opposing. anv-
1 thing like an extension of the
frauchise to the mass oUhe Amer-
ican people, and we read in the
! history of the time, of actual re-
bellion in more^than one instance,
against the very goverment that
T?- Vrv;iCv'"i'.rvlrof1 i"n. ! thev had sacrificed their lives and
fcT3S«*uvn|m« r«i." ' "• « fri-.|Mi-]it llcnipt8
Ai ri vDterf«*lflnfcbavr only
fS.n.1 T ".r «1<lr«.<o'n nr. H«rt«r MrfjTo.v
9
' f
>
i
M
treasure tocreate, and which they,
with the instinct born of their
Creator, Ilimslf, knew they only,
could maintain—for no govern-
ment can exist long without the
fresh blood that only flows through
the veins of men who earn their
bread by labor, being continually
infused into the administrative
class.
To the close of Washington's
second term, every question dis
cussed in our congress was some
A Texas juryman snored so loud thing affecting the Europeans-the
in the jury-box that he woke the struggle between France and Brit-
jui'ge from a sound r.ap, and was | aju being a fertile cause of debate,
romptlv fined for contempt of i As yet, we had no original ques-
Wf* ;tion to contend about, and the
™ ,*• ' _ ; democratic idea had not yet got-
~ low^-It The gentleman who! ten much beyond the working
' wjtf, a re<j! men, who could do no more for
want of leaders to give voice to
<^'0^".' Mo„TTr' oar-iSltBAM _ BOOK
Fullof «tranK« and M'ul Information,Iree,
f\D harter's Iron Tonic 19 for Sale by all
Dru^sts and DtAtERs Eve«vwhep<.
"* The circuses are whitewashing
their elephants, and it will be a
queer show that does not have a
white elephant this season.
\ coat-tail fiirtat ion is the latest.
A wrinkled coat-tail bearing dus-
ty toe-marks means: "I have
spoken to your tat her.
Austin, with the crowd of cring-
ing slaves, who lick the dust from
the feet of those in power, that
they may be educated in the learn-
ed professions free, and .thus be
raised above those that supplyjhe
money to meet their wants. Then,
ask for an appropriation to build
two or three little school houses
in the tanning communities, and
listen to the howl that will go up
ta heaven from their over-buhlen*
ed souls. .Demagogue! Scoundrel-
ly office-seeker, etc.
Well, my dear'sir, if they think
to shut-' my moyth, or stop my
pen by this plan, I shall take de-
ligbt ni proving to them how bad-
lythey are mist akejn. 1 consider the
name, of demagogue no disgrace.
Demagogues were always rigM ;
no one deserved to have the epi
tliet applied to him, in contempt,
except he, who in his heart be-
longs to the enemy of the people,
yet pretends, for a selfish purpose,
to champion their cause. While
my intention is to criticise the ac-
tions of our public servants, espe-
cially in money matters,. I do not
say that they are thieves; this is
the province of the grand juries,
and if they have reason to think
that money has been misappro-
priated, they will act in the mat
ter, and punish the guilty. I have
planned to discuss the shams that
have gradually crept into Our par-
ty management, and show if I can,
that the claims of our own, as
well as republican office holders,
to remain in office continuously,
is destructive to the ver^spirit of
our government.
The democratic party came in-
to existence to prove men, how-
ever pure, should not hold office
each have 16 voters who would
support John Smith, and by a
careful manipulation of office
seekers would select 30 delegates
who would vote for Smith- at' the
nominating convention. Atrprg-
cinct O. we assume that the whole
'30 voters cast their • ballots for 15
delegates who will vote for - Peter
Jones at the nominatingconven-
tion. As the 30 delegates vote
for Smith aud only 15 f(T Jones,
it is certain that Smith will be
nominated. But by inspection
we see at the primary convention
that Jones got 58.votes, and Smith
only 32. Thus we see If careful' nt me to teech th;|r ,g
manipulation, a man may be1
nominated at the county conven-
tion who is not the choice of a
majority of the voters c*tI,P nr:i
mary convention*. > *
While all t^e above Srthtstrmud
it is by no means impossible ana
it may be very probable.'
Yours, respectfully,
Simon Muggins.
GOOD SPRINGS.
' March 24,1 SSL
Ed. Times:—Death has again
made his range among us and has
taken away Mrs, Jordan. She
leaves several children and grand
children to mourn her loss. She
died of pneumonio, last Wednes-
day evening, at 11 o'cloqk.
Yesterday evening, at 3 p. m„
Miss Ellen Henry and Mr. Wag-
one'* were joined in holy wed-
lock.
May their path through life be
all sunshine and happiness.
Our school is flourishing most
admirably. We were fortunate
in securing the sepvi^es of Mrs. J.
D. Goldwire.
Vigorous efforts are being made
towards fann'"8- Many have fin-
love il, I belong to the Temper-
ance and Goood 1'emplers too, an
a man what belongs to them nev-
er drinks any iutoxicating bever
age, whatever. No sich pizen
stufF, as he drinks, ever runs down
my gullet. I think, lvtrnel K.
Hoot, fur I no he must be a Ker-
nel, by the wa he talks, flops his
lips over a good deel ov that stim
ulent, we Temperance foax calls
alcoholic drinks. He talks like
Henderson College belonged to
him, and seems to be poetic about
it, an sez he has a grand proposi-
tion to make to me, an that is,"to
take chargeof Henderson College*
The Kernal surtenly nose I be-
long to that Grand clas of #teach-
ers, ov the old school kind, that
don't believe in hayin so menny
fool students in' school. I'm ov
the opinion still^that Reedin, Ri-
en, Rithinetic, is enttfT fur enny
town. An I don't believe that
gals has enny bizness laarnin Rith
metic, either. If Mr. K. Hoot was
to hier me too teech in the col-
lege, He wood want me to teech
all the foolish hiiluting studys, an
as hi
studys as thar boys, an then you
and then you see, we would disa
gree, an I wood quit rite off. The
Kernel says, that fellow what
come up to me, so. porlite was a
s>tty dood, or a cranio office
•ee er.^ The Kernel i3 mistaken,
there is no oflis seeker, all the
good people what's got offis, an
has the deer peeple at hart, what
he talks about, don't seek offis,
but lets the oflis seek them. Tha
wood not take an ofliis, unless it
was jist put on their, any how. I
want you to say to Mr. K Hoot,
that I don't think hard of him for
axing me if I loved likor, an ov
axing me ttf drink, but it is roug
to ax a edicated, an hi-tone man,
to drink, an specially, wun, what
belongs to the temperance sursi-
etys, Ef the Kernel wants anv
more
gaiuinga liltle almostd-tily, while
others, who appear to devote the
greater portion of I heir time to
it, instead of accumulatinga small i
amount annually, they are i'all-
[Spfcial Telegram to The Post.]
Washington. D. C.,—Mr. Hol-
man has little faith in the ability
of Congress to get away from
Washington before August. "Jf
we keep on at this rate," he said
to day to your correspondent, "it
will be well into August before
we can possibly get away from
here. Three months and a halt
gone, and not an appropriation
bill through both houses. It
seems impossible to control the
flood of talk. This is the largest
Congreis we have ever had, and,
of course, the most talkative one.
The larger the house* the more
tal^. It seems as if every man in
the House is under the impress-
ion tha^he alone is posted npon
the question at issue, and that it
is his duty to discuss and ro dis-
cuss the whole subject for
the benefit ot every body else,
the story is gone over and over
and over again and fime wast-
ed." *
"What is the remedy, Mr. Uol-
man
"It's pretty hard to answer,"
he replied, "One remedy, and one
which I should be glad to see *ap-
plied, would lie to eliminate all
prtvate business from the work of
the House. Congress ought not
to be expected or required to leg
islate upon private claims. - Ev-
ery claim which comes to us hero
is one which the law does not al-
low. If it did it would be allow-
the courts and not sent
here. A very small proportion,
ot the claims sent here are just,
and yet we are expected to spend
days and days discussing thelu.
Our calendar is numbered up
with them, and I he bills of a pri-
vate nature reported to the House
have begun to be numbered by
the hundreds."
"Do you look for this Congress
to pass any tariff bill before its
adjournment ?"
I think we shall," he said;
!* something, I don't know what it
mg short at the end of each year, j .
and the consebtience is thev are '" ^e' 'JU'' ^ think we shall agreo
compelled to abandon it aud try j "l1"1 sort ot a tarifT bill
something that they imagine will j ^ Hirlx \\ ill lie acceptable to al-
be a better business. It seems al- j most aI1 the '"bers of our par-
most a matter of impossibility to | ty, and pass it."
prevent the rising ofsome men fi
nanciially; while others never
fifcl or grasp the step that leads to
wealth. >
'JHie way to account for this
Rich People Who *re I,ov«m1,
It is instructive to note the diff-
erent feelings with which very
if1 j rich persons are regarded by th«
poor, and indeed by almost the
entire community, Mrs. Astor,
one of the weathiest women in
that while some men are laboring
pfe'ysically, they are also using a
gopd degree of head work. It is
not, all done by hard licks, or in New York, has been and 6till is
other words, they use a deal of! seriously ill. The news of her
management, as well as some j condition has been- read daily bv'
hard labor. j thousands of the poor in that
It does not look reasonable for | city with heart-felt solicitude, the
us to expect to gain wealth when j natural expression of respect and
we do not make any effort to! gratitude. It is not that she has
place our hands"""upon if. Upon
the farm, as well as in other occu-
pations, we neglect to do some-
thing for the purpose of doing
something else of minor import-
ance. Sucli management as this,
will almost invariably result in
failure, or in financial embarrass-
ment. The surest plan to suc-
ceed in whatever we follow, is to
always live within our income;
and at the end cf cacK ypur he
worth a liltle more than
been benevolent with her money,
but because she has been benevo-
lent in her impulses and energies
—has felt and done something for
the poor—that she is thus esteem-
ed. Airs. Astor has provided
homes in the West for many hun-
dreds of the waifs of New York,
directing the enterprise personal-
ly and employing her own agents.
She has in other ways done much,
in a personal and unostentatioun
a little more tlian we were
it the beginning of the 3*ear. j| ;'oaniier, to amelioate the condi-
we be cast among the poverty-1tion of ,he P°or ;,nd to assist thj
who are in trouble. And as a re^
suit no one rails at her riches;
the poor pray for Iier recovery to
stiicken and are not able to live
"high," let us dress and live ac-
cording to our ability. But when,
we try to go in such gland style— health. I'eter Cooper was a rich
when in reality, we are just sim^! ,,ian but he was not hated and
ply keeping up appearances, we env'e(^ as « any millionaires of
not ° ly act as hvpen ri es and pr,-.„
t ice deceit, but we are making too
the metropolis are. In case of an
iWU "pr;>sing, his house would have
great a strain to keep up with tl^^sA sa,'e. He retained his sym-
c ass ot wealth, and, by doingfP'*thies lor the working people,
thus, we prova frauds and fail-!a,ld did as a pure pleasure what
ures to tho#e around us. In all U,e lU(>«t of his class neglect even
avocations followed bt man it i* as a obligation. There are simi-
offis, an will let me no, I will do! highly necessary fortkem to use j,ar examples wherever the rich
mv best for him, boath by talkin I economy, in order to gain wealth
an lecturin. % . i It is the nianagemenFin this life
Hoping to he°r from you soon,'t,mfc causes some men to be so ,ol Herald.
I remain yours in the lemppr- j successful, and bad or misinan
ance Home. j ag?ment that causes others to be
Jamks R. Snoox. ! so unfortunate.
and the poor dwell together. The
moral seems to draw itself.—Bos-
Free
— — _ j There are various kinds of bad
grass to the demagogue management, and it iSnot ueCes
and bi«r land man is like a Hed sarv for us to
Some have j fUg in t he face of a bull. ^ j we would sav
re-elec-1corn up, and a few aje getting! . - ,, .. r~
j -FatME-Sttiith'^fs a railroad man.j-
Keeps the shoe store
head will return the upibrella of a j . .
young lady with whalebone ribs! their opinions. \ei there were a
•nul iron handle to the slate roofed great many among them who
grocer's shop, he will hear ofsome ! could discuss the great common- nou at certain u.xeu times, is u.. j, ■ r---- neighborhood ,,efr-v,n-fo ^ anotl,er road
ft,ins to his advantage, as the | wealth of C romwell; and how fnr nothing? Any ordinary man Ihe health of le nei^iiDoriiooI rur an(} F()rt ;V(>rlh
is Ihe "tttol a deceased men arose from lowly position, to! can learn the duties of an office'is'improving. i — —
the command armies and direct the | iu thl< government, for the rea-j Hurah far riuUi.vta. atM g«->od • A mai<le«i ^ih„t the that leap
' affaire of State; and never before'fon that the laws are so captruct- wholesome laws! St-cnis. I yc r pro, osal. ji.
forever. We make the terms of 'ished planting corn
office short, and require
tion at certain-fixed times, is this| read)' to plant •oU0'1-
Mow no- more,
A conductor on the "Branch,"
who was collecting fare,
lady and repeated, mechanically :
"Miss, your fare!"
mention,hem - but i ^\theyoungla.Jy
•hat- en 'v^r we S°TW
neglect to do that w,(ich #l "
iportanf, or profitable I • I , , hat ,he
then we ar^phcticing bad man 'j',1en Atchison ; but coming
agement, and tH«, U Z 'r a" nT
y l,e * *r"1 "n' . a|i! I your Uc.«M
P*
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Milner, R. T. The Henderson Times. (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. [14], Ed. 1 Thursday, April 3, 1884, newspaper, April 3, 1884; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth235282/m1/1/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.