The Weekly News=Boy, Ed. 1 Friday, October 10, 1884 Page: 1 of 4
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JASPER, TEXAS, FRIDAY,
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A KISS.
The mockiug bl rd trllie I low a tremb-
ling HOK , ■
Of liquid sweetness from lite swelling
•throat;
J tu ned Hid looked within lier Jeep,
dark eyes—
Looked lon-j—until her heart neat up
n flaw ■■
That dyed her pale chcek with a crim-
son fclusii. —
I prisoned In my palm her flntrer tips,
While i lose 1 drew hor rounded,yield-
ing form.
That thrilled my being in It's contact
warm-
Then bent and told my love upon her
lips.
—Ex.
HON. BILL NYE.
He Addrawes the Young Ladies
the Land on the Female Suf-
frage Question.
at
K%<
kp
Stooping over to pick up a
fair lady's haudkerohiof Uwe its
joy when it sacrifices a suspender
button.
si
boss
Un-
Cartcr Harrison is the
rooster of Western politics.
like Blaine, lio will fight as well
ms crow..—Houston Post.
Referring to Blaine's trip to
Ohio a paper says: "Blaine is
going west." If the paper had
been properly dMpoesd it might
have said: •
"Blaine is going, h-l I, west and
crocked.—Age.
A ten year old boy in Dallas,
recently bad his father arrested
dor coining home late at night,
furniture, aud|«gfaghlfk at^ responsibility, -we
driving he and his mother out
,of the house. A warrant was
issued aud the old man was cor-
ralled.
H
"The Flechsig inqUesJt that ho
{been dragging on in )he GqJVes-
.ton courts for the last ji£" days,
has at last been bright to a
.close, with thefii*fhig of ^June-
man, Allen^^rter and Weyer,
guilty pjHnurder, being aided
an<-' .abetted jty Ivuehler and
Brown.
« 't
m -
Gibba' salary as Lieutenant
Governor wiH amount to only
three Jnuidred dollars m two
years--the Congressmen get ten
thousand for the same time, yet
hone of them js canvassing as
much as Gibbs.—Dallas Times.
But Gibbs is on the ascending
sealo, and will probably go high-
er than some of those who are
no.V aboye him. He has ambi-
tion and ability.—Age.
1
■The National Democratic
committee are receiving consid-
erable money in response to
their address recently issued.
The remittances are mostly in
email sums. A clergyman, who
"is"the pastor of a sftjall parish
iji a Western state", .sent one
dollar. In his letter he said he
was opposed to preaching poli-
tics from his pulpit, aud adds:
"As a citizeu, however, I have
and claim my right to express
my political preference, which I
*lo this year, not so mueh for
Grover Cleveland as against
James G. Blaine, in the candi-
dacy for the chief magistracy of
our beloved country. President
Arthur I could and would have
voted for most gladly, as I did
for Garfield four years ago. But
I think now that eyery God-
fearing citizen, not party Wind,
must join me in the fervent
prayer—may God in his mercy
avert the day whon the majority
of the American people shall
have become so lost to honot as
to prefer for their chief ruler
James G. Blaine whose only ti-
tle to their suffrages is his bad
preeminence among his fellows
in corruption."—Marshall Her-
ald.
Fair one, in whose eyes the
light of hope and youth and joy
I see, you ask what I think of
foozle suffrage, and you desire
totkuow how it works in the far
west, where it hus been tried. I
answer that it works all right
enough, but it doesn't tear up
the pplitical greensward and pu-
ff the.. bti^te9pBiM,Yon might
come here, however, and sit
near me, and look into my deep,
earnest, violet eyes, whilo tho
other people are engaged in dis-
cussing our young man and our
boy—while the great world, too,
has its eye on everything else
except the gentle gazelle with
the to 11, pointed hat, who is to
be the mother of future congress-
men, it will be a good time tor
me to buzz in your pinkest ear.
, Female suffrage isn't what we
need to raise the price of wheat
so much as some other thiugs.
In this land of tlie brave and
home of tho free, me own native
land, if you please, eaeh name
represents tho labors, the trials
and victories of a lifetime.
America permits every infant
born under tho star spangled
banter—long may it wave—to
begin the work of making him-
self or herse[f, as tho case may
be, something or nothing. Is it
not true, Ethel? Blood and
lineage high don't count much
here, Ethel. I'd rather have
good, .vigorous blood in America,
Ethel, than to have royal blood
with trichina' in it. With a
pure heart and a liver that will
may accomplish mucTTr S^ITTs
not, after all, the pedigree or the
prerogative which is to make
Rome howl, fair maid.
There are men in this great
land, Ethel, who swing their
hats-and howl and get drunk
and vote who do not kuow so
much all their lives as you forget
when you are asleep. So it's
not a question of qualification,
you see, but—let us step into tho
conservatory a moment while I
murmur into your ear a thought
which came to me several years
ago. Which would you prefer>
Ethel—to run the government
or to run tlie man who runs thd
government?
I see by the tell tale color
which,comes and goes in your
cheek, and by the manner in
w&ich you .struggle to swallow
your fan, that you twig.
Mind you, I do not say that
the object of. a joyous being like
yourself should be to marry a
man and run him; but I say
this without fear of successful
contradiction, that tho over-
whelming perce jtage of my own
sex enters the marriage state
during life. Continuing the ar-
gument from this premise, I am
led to say, and still without feari
of successful contradiction, that
in each case, where I have look-
ed up the data, I have found
that these men have married
one of your sex.
This leads me to say that
while marriage may not be an
object toward which "wo should
struggle, it is a condition of
things which is certainly alarm-
ingly prevalent.
And that is why I said that
female suffrage need not rack
your gentle miud. Let that job
out Be the natural, noble, un-
reasonable, irresistible, hilarious,
tearful, comforting, sunny pack-
age of strawberry-and-crcam con-
tradictions that you aro now,
only try to be sensible and use-
ful, and you will be solid with
the masses.
So live that when thy sum-
mons comes to join the matrimo-
nial caravan that moves toward
the connubial goal, thou go not
like the half-paid hired man,
bogging potatoes; but, sustained
and sootlied thy common sense,
approach by doom like one who
wraps tht cellar door about him
and lies down to pleasant
1 dreams.
The District Judgeship.
Though the Times favored the
reelection of Judge Ford before
we knew who would be a oandi
date for the office, after it be-
came known that there would
be no nomination—but a free
race—we thought that wo would,
be silent, leaving aspiranfii
on their own meriil not that
our views ha^ chfl'iiged, but for
the reason that we have a
regard % 1^ ( Candida]
of either would resort to any un-
fairness in ,the campaign. But
the friends of Mr. Norvell tell
us that he is endorsed aud sup-
ported by all the lawyers of the
district, and that they are tho
best judges of tho necessary quel-
ifieutions and that there are ob-
jections to Judgo Ford's decis-
ions and rulings. Now then,lets
see abput this matter. Is there
a county in the district that has
an over-crowded docket? No,
we believo not, and right here,
is probably the kernel of the nut
producing those legal objections
and the presumption of lawyers
to say to the people who is the
better man for their votes. It
isn't such fat picking for the
legal gentlemen when the dock-
ets are kept so clean. We have
"known Judge Ford since we
were school boys together, and
have never heard of an act to
his discredit. Wo have seen
him on the bench, and besides
the characteristic of cleaning up
tho docket, he has a mild way,
when these limbs of Lycurgus
swell with self importance to
such an extent as to forget due
respect to the court, of request-
ing them to sit down, and they
generally ncoejti tho ,i«vitatian,
though some of them turn very
red in the face in c oing so. This
is perhaps more of the kernel.
We regard this proposition that
the people should be guided in
their selection of a judge by the
choice oflawyers, to be nothing
more or, less than tho acme of
presumption and arrogance. Ad-
mit this and it will soon be so
that the people will have to
yield the reins of all public af-
fairs into the hands of these
immensely learned and "saga-
cious geutry. No, gentlemen,
the people are not ready, just
yet to surrender their own judge-
ment for tho gratuitous advice
of the legal fraternity in this
matter. Until the commence-
ment of this campaign no ob-
jections wero ever brought
against Judgo Ford; but on the
contrary, he was highly compli-
mented for the manner in which
he discharged the duties of his
office. And though we enter-
tain the highest regard for Mr.
Norvell's legal abilities and
doubt not he would wear the
Judicial ermine with credit to
himself, we aro opposed to any
such electioneering influences,
as we ha c cited.
We wish the candidates to
stand upon their own individu-
al merits, independent of per-
sonal preferences of class or class-
es and go before tho pec pie up-
on their past record.—Sabine
Pass Times.
FittRoober's I
"Great gash! Fits,
you'!" cri<5d plunkett in'
as Fitzgoober came rush i|
ly dowji tho street, "yoa
like you'd seen a ghcvst!'®
"Do, hoy ?" gasped the ?:
felloy, lonhiftg against .i,
keg, "kkjtt kinder
i?" ' ■' % Kv*'
"YouSerial; Jy do;
.row?"
trying ordeal that I ever dream-
ed of."
"What was it?"
"Just before J left home,"
whispered Fitz, gazing around
in a terrified manner, "my wife
made me—holy snakes, Plunkett
you don't know anything." He
paused a moment, and then con
tinued:
"Before I loft home Mrs. Fit:
made me," and he shuddered
"Made you what, Fitz ?"
Lowering his head tho tried!
man whispered: ,
"She made mo draw a bucket
of fresh water, and—and—youl
needn't believe it, Plunkett, but]
thosightof that stuff puralvze<f
me."—Atlanta Constitution. /
After all said and done, a
man's consequence in this world
is measured more by the hum-
ber of real friends he has created
for himself thau by tho wealth
of the mnn or tho wealth of his
friends. A true friendship in-
dicates a Worth that no other
possession can give: Few men
seem to bo aware of these facts,
yot they aro worth the attention
of all. A true friendship for
one's self is the only foundation
for a friendship for others or of
others for the individual
An cthcrlal maiden cJlod Maait
Was Huspected of nelug a fraud,
Soarcely a crumb was she able
To eat at the table;
But in tliu pautry—Oh Luvrdl
—Ex.
aple don't know the
f here it is
ell: Freegroas nieans
tho cattle kings of
ii of the
ires
IV.'jr.yfrlcmlx and fellow ctti
Ffrit JtHIU'Ia! District.
The commission of J&rfW o and
as on the grass that p6nsefjueutly thfWiminal baniueuK
tt school lands, free; fd this district has so Steadily ttnd
rda to give the bul- continuously dccroasotl, tliut the
compc-iuiiitiou allowed by htu to
i©, district alfeornoy is aejinjioly
sitfficieiil ^piitytmt#Hng ox-
pense ^ver the district. Miiu il-
luat^uti'oir'of this tho la#t grand
ier cfiuuty presented
imlifttruent, ouo for a
free;
bul-
% grnss aud tax the
m to get the mostly to
nttvr.
feeond-ClaK* Mail
If. II. HIRli, rtnprlrlur.
j ■> rmtu, i'ubikhvi:
OH, T;
ip ]
ii
"Come heah, Gawge Washing-
ton. Whaffur yo' gwine stei l
dem chickens?" screamed an olli
colored woman to her boy, wlo
was slipping around , the house
with something under his eoafc
"I nebbah stole no chickens.
Who tole yo' I done it?" replied
the boy facing around and twist-
ing his coat well toward I his
back. j
"Nobody done told me. Qau't
Ieeo dem yaller Juigs hanging
down behind y.ok'loat'l,• -~y.
"Yessum yo' kin, but fiftlTEiah
stole 'em." |
"Come heah. I'se talkip' to
yo' now. and i wants to know
how yo' got um efyo' didri't steal
urn." I V
"Why, mammy, I buy4d um,
slio's yo' live.'
"Go 'way chile. Doan lie to
yo' mammy. Dcni chickens
'longs to Ma's Jones. I seed um
in his coop yistiddy."
"Dey's mine; I buyed uto from
Ma's Jones hisself."
"Whn'd yo' git the monoy ?"
"W'y mammy I tuck it outen
his drawah when lie wuzn't
lookin."
"Yo'ain't Jyin1 now, is yo'
Gawge Washington?" -i
"No, I ain't mammy, sho."
"Well, Gawgo Washiit'ton I'se
powahful glad yo' didn't steal
deal chickens. I'se ben mighty
kcerful to fotch you up right, an
when I seed dem yaller laigs I
wuz sho yo* Wuz forgettin' my
teachin' an' wuz follerin in do
footsteps of yo' po' ole foddah."
—Merchant Traveler-
The Chinese havo a realistic
belief in a future state. The
other day tlie Chinese in New
York celebrated their feast of
tho dead, an annual rito which
they never neglect. They re-
pair to the cemeteries where
their dead lie buried and place
meats and fruits and viands on
the mounds and see that tho
graves aro kept green. They
make a paper figure of tho dead
person, pin a letter to it and
then apply a lighted match to
the paper, which is slowly con-
sumed; they believe that the
letter is thus carried to their
friend in heaven; assuring him
of, their continued remembrance
an«i affection. It is 4 Coremooy
of simple faith. In the evening
they return to their homes, and
feast and tell anecdotes and re-
count the virtues of their dead
relatives and friends, whether
they rest in tho soil of tho flow-
ery kingdom or under foreign
sod.—Brenham Banner.
Effect of an Effete pan.
"George, diskr," cried Eveline,
"do you suppose heaven is as
nice a place as pcoplo sii}' it is?"
"Well really, Evelie,as I have
never been theri I cannot say;
but from wliat I hear, the socie-
ty there is very select."
"Everything is bright and
gjiden, there, isn't it, George?"
"Yes, darling. The streets
there are paved solid, with gold
blocks. Golden bricks make
tho houses, and only specie pay-
ments are allowed."
"Well then, George," archly
Said the maiden, as she nestled
closely to her lover, "if every-
thing is so golden, wlrf don't
the gilty get in." .„
But the answer came not. He
hadgono to be a cowboy.—Life.
"I think it's outrageong," said
Mrs. Sf.arrOwgras«. "Here it says
in the paper that St. John lias been
nominated for president. It's bad
euough aiiiking fun of live people,
bat when they begin lugging in the
apostles it certainly is too much".—
Boston Post.
Then 1 cry, wildly
'Oivc mo real or
V I^et mo sleep.
But a (lemon iierclteif
Yes! a demon with a pit'
Hoarsely shouted, "never, nuvj
Quoth tlie devils, "hardjjr .«■
I'lu.i t'je joke, h\!4rtleiH ja%j,
Stint:*)! inn and I uwoku,
Awa,e lu pain,
Half insane, "
And I said, simply said,
•0u i tfrvtun or am 1 d a.'?
llavd<4 Allien ««t'of b«d
From tlie gloom there <ww« reiJy;
n-
■i£
V- .
en, then
ie gr
on it belongs to them as much
so as tho timbor, snd these lords
of creation havo no more right
to it than they would have to
tho timber. We say, mako them
pay for it by leasing it to them,
and to this extent lighten taxa-
tion upon tho laboring man. Un-
der the. law it does not work a
hardship upon the actual settler
as all lands leased are subject to
settlement, and this right is re-
served by the state.—Laborer's
Champion.
If you are failing, broken, worn
out atid nervous, tiso "Wells'
Health Rcnowcr." $1.
When a Philadelphia father
eluded his daughter for allowing
a young gentleman to kiss her,
she replied with some spirit:
"I can't help it, pa. After he
kissed mo the first time I told
him to stop and lie didn't mind
me at all."
And the next day, when her
father brought home a baso ball
catcher's masque and told licr
to wear it when her young gen-
tleman friend called, she was
mean enougn to call him a hate-
ful old thing, and to declare that
if it was not for the fact that it
would make a good bustle sho'd
mash it to atoms.
Worse and worse. Blaine
says in his letter that he did
not doubt the legality of his al-
leged secret marriage in Ken-
tucky for six months after it
occurred. Now a bond of $1000
up%n which Blaine and one
McKitn aro sureties, given to
the county clerk of Bourbon
county for the marriage license
of a fripnd, turns up hs signed
by Blaine only three months
subsequent to the dato of his al-
leged secret marriage. In heav-
en's name will the extent of the
fellow's rottenness never bo
reached?—Houston Post.
ty misdemeanors, while the
jury of Newton county ut the term
of court just closed there, present-
ed only two bills, one for a felony,
tho other for a misdemeanor. Ami
it is this way nturly uli over the
district. Ia view of tlie above
facts, in jubtice to myself I will
havo to, and do most resjiecttully
decline reelection to the office, and
withdraw my namo as a candidate,
f feol that it is better to withdraw
now than to have to resign the
office afterward, should I be elect-
ed, and in this connection I will
si<y I have not now, nor have I ev-
er had any fears of reeleotiou, hav-
ing tho warm support of a large
'lumber of the most influential cit-
izens in every couut\, which could
not fail to give me a flattering ma-
jority wcro I to continue as a can-
didate.
Thanking my friends for their
zeal in my behalf and returning
my grateful thanks to the people
of the district for their liberal sup-
port in tho past and congratulating
tliem pn the spirit of law and or-
der that prevails throughout the
entire district, 1 am respectfully,
J. P. LANIEU-
Sept. 20 1884.
Pear TieesIPear Trees!!
SPf'SS!
§'
:A]
Persons desiring to purchase any
of tins splendid and reliable LeCon
tc Pear trees, for transplanting
next, fall and winter, can be ac-
commodated by leaving their or
ders with the undersig led, or with
Rev. P. D. L. Kimmey at Jasper.
The trees will be delivered at Mag-
nolia Springs and Jasper without
udditioual expense to the purchas-
er. For full particulars concern-
ing the tree, its nature, habits,cul-
ture &c, apply cither to Rev. Mr.
Kimmey or myself.
Respectfully,
A. J. McKinnon,
Maznolia Springs.
Jusper Co. Toxas'
"Shot gun for sale. Will take
corn in exchange. Apply at once
at the Texan office." Humph!
Gutsj tlu-y haven't g.it a "Thing'
anywhere around Jasper. Bet if
they had, that fellow would hang
oil to his shooting iron, even if he
had to go without his corn bread.
—Houston Journal.
Political Speakiag.
Hon. Chas. Stewart will address
tho people at tho following times
and places, on the various politic-
al topics of the times:
Newtou, Wednesday Oct. 22nd.
Biirkevillc, Thursday, " 23d
Jasper, Saturday " 25th
Senator Coke promises t<i be with
him ftt the following appointments:
An onglish clergyman, dining
one day with a poor family of
his parish, asked tho little 5-year
son to say grace, He said tho
following, which was impromp-
tu:
0, Lord be merciful,
And keep ns all alive,
Theao's ten of u* for dinner,
Aud grub for only five. *
Orange,
Beaumont,
Sabine Pass
Woodvillo,
Hon'. W. L.
address the people,
times and places.
Tuesday, Oct. 14
Wednesday 15
Thursday 16
Saturday, 18,
Douglass will also
at the above
Kecly, the celebrated motor
man, professes to havo at last
achieved that for which he has
been experimenting during the
past seven years. He claims
the ability to produce a projeet-
ivepoworthricegreaterthan that
of gun-powder, and that there is
no limit to this force.
Bill Little's wife ran away
with Jeff. Moore in Arkansas
tho other day, not because sho
loved Bill Little, but because sho
loved Jeff Moore.
China desires 30,000 feet of
space at the approaching Expo-
siton, in which to make her dis-
play.
Convinced.
Mr. U. G. King, foreman of the Ut*
tonia Democrat, Leetonia, Ohio, write*;
" Dr. S. B. Hartmak, Columbuv, Ohio,
Gentlemen: Some time since, I had occa-
sion to doubt the genuineness of most of
the articles that appear in difl&ent papers
in regard to your wonderful Pkruna, and
my curiosity was so great that I deter-
mined to write to one of the many people
that claimed to have been cured by this
medicine, and accordingly wrote to Mrs.
J. W. Reynolds, of New Lisbon, this
county, and received the following reply."
" I received your letter this evening, and
in reply would say that Pkruna, I be-
lieve, saved my liie, and I can not recom-
mend it too highly: for all complaints it
is the best medicine In existence. It
seems to help you as you swallow it. I
would advise any one suffering from my
complaint to take Pkruna and be con-
vinced. Yours truly, Mrs. |. W. Rey-
nolds." Now, that's her cord, word for
word, and as I am well acquainted with
the lady, I do not believe she would lie.
It is truly wonderful how your medicine
does do good. - .
JTames L, Mooney, Prospect, Ohio,
writes : " For the past ten years I have
been suffering from constipation and
dyspepsia, and all the evil effects that
accompany them. I was treated by a
number of doctors, all to no efftct. I
used several patent medicines, which did
me no good, and about three years ago I
was seized with a severe nervous trouble,
and was obliged to quit farming. I
thought my days would soon be over, but
last winter I received one of your pam-
phlets called the " Ills of Life." I at once A
tried your Pkruna and Manalim. -
They helped me right away. I used nina
bottles of Pkruna and threeof Manalin ;
and now I am quite well, and able to
resume farming. I also had a little c)iild
which was attacked with a severe cramp
in the stomach; we thought it would go
into spasms. I used nothing but Peruna.
We gave it an injection of Pkruna and
warm water, and gave it a teaspoonfhl of
the medicine internally fvery half hour.
It was relieved in one hour, and has not,-
been bothered since. I have also u*
with as eoodrefiect In ease of «**
colds. I know that it is a wdi)l-i a'
medicine, and recommend it to all wikr?i
are in poor health. The above statemeqt
I am willing to swear to."
W. M. Plants, Deep Valley, Greene
county, Pa., writes: " Please send me
your book'on the'Ifls of Life.' I have
used one botUe of PsRUHA, and am great-
ly benefited."
AS IXTRlOttDlVlltf OFFEB.
T All Wasting E ploinnt.
Wo want Live, Jjiieigetic and
Capable Agents in every county in
the United States and Canada, to
sell a patent article of great merit,
ox its merits. > ii article having
a large side, paying over 100 per
cent, profit, having no competition,
and 011 which the agent is protect-
ed in the exclusive sale by a deed
given for each anil every county ho
may secure from" us. With all
these advantages to our agents,
and the fact that it isan article that
ca:i be sold to every houseowner, it
might not be necessary to make uu
" extra okdin ak v opFKit" tosecnre
good agents ut once, but we have
concluded to make it to show, not
only our confidonco in the merits
of our invention, but in its sulabil-
ity by any .gent th t will handle it
with energy. Our agents now at
work are making from tl50 to$600
it month clear, and this fact makes
it safe for us to make our offer to
all who arc out of employment.
Any agent that will give our busi-
ness a thirty days' trial and fad to
dear at least $100 in this time,
above ai.i. expenses can retnru
all goods unsold to us und we viil
refund the money paid for them.
Any agent or General Agent who
would like ten or more counties
and work them through sub-agents
for ninety days, and fail to clear at
least $750 above all expenses,
can return all goods unsold and
get their money back. No other
employer of agents ever dared to
make such offers, nor would we it
wo did not know that we had agents
now making more than donbte the
amount that we guaranteed and
but two sales a day would give
profit of over <125 a mouth, and
that ono of our agents took eigh-
teen orders in ono day. Our large
descriptive circulars explain onr
offer fully, and these we wish to
Solid to every one out of employ-
ment who will send us three one
cont stamps for postage. Send at
at cnco and secure tho agency in
time for tho boom, and go to work
on the terms named iu our extraor-
dinary offer. We would like to
have tho address o^all thu agents,
sewing machine solicitors and car-
penters in the country, and ask
any reader of this paper who reudji
this offer, to send us at once the
name and address of all such they
know. Address at once, or you
will loose the best chance ever of-
fered to those out of employment
to mako money.
RENNEK M AN t'PACTt'RIM! Co.
ICO StnithficlU St. Pittsburgh Pa.
I
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Brooke & Robinson. The Weekly News=Boy, Ed. 1 Friday, October 10, 1884, newspaper, October 10, 1884; Jasper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth235858/m1/1/: accessed May 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.