The Daily Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 9, Ed. 1, Wednesday, July 13, 1892 Page: 1 of 4
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51
V
vol 1
T f XVf C
Government commenced in
aisnrpation and oppression liberty
and civilizatiqn t present are
jiDthingeteetlmn the fragments of
jightfl whicliitlie scaffold and tlic
sUike have wrung from the strong
guilds of the usurpers very step
of progress fce world has ever
made has been from scaffold to
scaffold and from stake to stake
It would hardly be an exngeration
to say that alUuegret truths re
jath g to society and government
have been first heard in the solemn
protests cif martyred patriotism or
In the loud cries f qruahed and
rving labor The law has always
been wrong Government began in
tyranny and force began in feuda-
lism of the soldier and the bigotry
of the priest and the ideas of jus-
tice and lmmarHy fba vebeMC fight
sTjng tlifiir way like a thunder etorm
sigaitiit the organised telfitflittess of
htuaan natute Wendell Phil
jlij5
Cwtlo Mont tribune
Frank it M Ue of alisp Jl4 is
probably the busiest muo in ion
iniis lie its making preparations
far Mi exhibit at the Worlds Fair
that will jpwvo to bo one o the
iiit interesting features of that
jukibitinii lle has soured Curs
AlUrd o herd of buffalo ard will
istko about fifteen hd e j ot Ii >
JiwB He goea to Chicago iin < a
ehorl time to srenre k lo Mtiou it
will taka abyt forty acres of
jcronnd to pioperly display the
biifaiues and Indians Xt JFll re
quire a large amount ot motiey and
will be a colossal undertaking kit
fr Miles isfniiy adequate to lha
utk before him It will take tltU
> iy two cars to transport the XHitfi
it Chicago as the buffaloes cannot
ibe shipped the same as cattle
Traveling by rail is entirely foreign
to their nature and they will re-
hire the mosjt delicate handling
They will be shipped in parlor
jiorec cars Bunch grass wilj be cut
nd baled and shipped to Chicago
The greatest gold mine in the
vwld is owned by the Juachoea
company in Chili It pays annuals
lj 6000000 in dividends The
wine i6 500 miles fs n the coast
and is T Qo6 feet aboya water
level Coal at the mine costs 150
ton being packed 100 nvles on
Amies twenty five hundred men
re employed at 1 to35XTper
J ay The width of the pay ore
pariesfrojp three and one half to
ixfest he daily pjpdjjets is
Jght tons Averaging 2100 per
j ton OrejOt ecfl value goes into
jUbo dump
fcwttJWKOfant Tribune
f > party of trayelera dtUined In
irtis city by rtjieflood wer jpithei
pwiuaj t pjn Uo wk iiotel
flyt nighty jfng itqcMriMig
Uieir K iS
rknoe
y wei and improbable take
ltd to > pais jwejr ft long
T
hours was theifollowiiig told by a
Chicago man
Away up among the Bage brush
of White Pine far removed from
the shriek of the locomotive and
only disturbed by the occasional
prospector is a strange silent city
Quce more than 35000 people car-
ried on a 11 kinds of traffic Ah ere
jkvjvas during the phenomenal rash
to White Pine in 1867 Many
hundreds of buildings were erected
U was a wild new city which
never slept und where were enact
ed all the scenes which in the tell
jug nude Mark Twain and Bret
fjart famous
Now if yon go there 7 said he
you see only a few of those build
nigs formoat o them have alien
in and decayed Scattered log cab
ius pet remain where mountain
sjjnirrels 6kurry to and fro at the
sound of manVfootstepe But it
is not of this X ttarted out to tell
you but of a second silent city
whmi hundred of men Ue burried
and where scarcely a headstone
markd their last renting plaee
Xlw head stones where there
were any at all wore ot wood and
they qickly rotted away The
formation all Viit th rei8 largely
oi lijuijtfMotie Water percolating
through it partakes of the nature
of lihe and this in ninny cases has
pciritjod the bcUes So if one
werotj dig heie and there in the
grgat graye ard ho would find on
uyery hand petrified nujn
In many cases they are petrified
so sompletely that the cnlUa ro
tnaitis even down to the features
are jiract The quiet graveyard
Aijtrptehing over manv aaes num-
bers anoug its sluepers all classes
There arc those who died in mid
1
printer of pneumonia and typhuid
icycr for in those wild times men
fould not take care of thciuselves
Desperadoes are thero also Nunu
berle8 persons of alj degrees who
died with their boots on
Jie men who came here on fo
tutuo ijenjb embraced ail classss
Thcrii was the hardy prospector
wd the tenderfoot tho irofes
Xojihlman thefarmer for the tfrat
time turning hia ttention towards
mines and the gambling adventur-
er Death settled upon ithem
high and low alike Many an east
tern familyperhaps to this day are
waiting for the retorn of father
son or b o ber They have drop
ed out for ever and thore caught
by the underground elements and
turned to stone they will be till
the end of time
It is a lonesome city now bat
twentyfive ers ago it was a
humming roaring place not un-
like Creede at lie present time
only larger It looks uncanny now
and I do not often visit it but
nfeea I do I am constantly im
pressed with the uncertainty of all
human affairs The old wooden
Iieo0 jfoiej are xccdiugly sug
geture WGrcat Falls Tribune
To te ch aclass is as much more
m
Jrg j JSgMit
ik iS
Mr ET tr r Mar
chestra is more inspiring than to
porfqrm q i M e Jovshap L
F
GAEDS
B GopDnwjn C H Ma
pOOriiIQII MAPvJS
ATTORNigySATL4UW
DEAJEB8 IN BEAL ESTA K
Complete Abstsict9 of Cameron
County Kept i The Office
BEOWKSWILLE
irst mmi BANK
TEX
TOO J KLEIBER
ATTOENEYATLAW
Office oyer First National Bank
JBrQwnsVille Texas
Will practice in any of the
courts of tin State when specially
employed
vy u mXson
ATTOKHEY AT LAW
1
Office Corner Leyee and Slev
VjftithStreei
BCOWNSVrZLLEI
TEX4S
A S THUKMOND
XL
ATTORNEY AT LAW
and General Land Agent
VICTORIA
J R ItoNttOE
TSXAS
A O Steuke
MONKOE STERNE
Attornejs at Law
UIOGRA DE CITY 1EK
o OF o
i
BGOWNSVILLE TEXAS
CAPITA 50006
G M IUphael Wm Kelly
President VicePres
JD AjiDEusoK Cashier
Dibsctors
< J M Raohael Wm Kelly
Robert Dalzell M B Kingsbury
Emile leiher J J Anderson
a pSS points iPromptly
aae ndvemtted BillsQfex cbanga
drawn direct on all principal cite3
AhrVJEliOut the worid
4C
t 4 v
r iforl
X
< v r
i
Brownsville texas Wednesday evening mm is i892 hir pages
ifl53
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Wheeler, Jesse O. The Daily Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 9, Ed. 1, Wednesday, July 13, 1892, newspaper, July 13, 1892; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth61127/m1/1/: accessed May 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .