The Henderson Times. (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 21, 1884 Page: 1 of 4
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T. MLLt2TJ&j&; &siitgr and Proprietor.
"^fOLERA-NT IN ALL THINGS, NEUTRAL IN NOTHING."
TEEMS": $2.03.
VOL. XXV.
HENDERSON. RUSK COUNTY. TEXAS THURSDAY. AUGUST 21. -1884-
NO 84-
'IVrms) of subscription. /
Oij j ropy 1 ye.ir. . 2 00
" " ti months, 1.00.
florals 15 cer.ls per line for first inscr-
ti> n. For a longer time, special rates
Uritt t>^ i;tvca.
IN FOREIGN LANDS.
The lame of the Swiss Alps is
so great that the word Switzer-
Slv>r".. newsy correspondence solicited land has become almost a svno-
ErVioi every part of the county.
N« ir<-jectcd manuscripts returned.
II Jtrs ofAdvcrtbinjC:
' 1 olit.na, oue year,
I 'i
14"
1 S pi ire,
1 <'.•!.i.*u, .sis months,
1 ■)
I 1 " " "
1 " "
I « three months,
1 '!
14"
1 Sfpure " "
j legend. WilliamfJTell ; and al-1 Another and another icy crest is
Ithough the modern historian may [lighted up, the golden orb begins
(x-rc^ o^ro^T^rrespo^ae^t.) Prononnce Tel1 a "'.vlh, these as- j to appear above the horizon, the
sociations arejdear to every Swiss I rays descend to the valleys be-
heart and are cherished with a J low and on the memory of all is
tenderness and pride which j stamped, never to be effaced, the
speaks volumes for their love of beautiful picture of it sunrise on
country. We pass a massive
rock rising from the lake, bear-
ing an inscription in honor of
nvm for grand, majestic and beau
tiful mountain scenery; and yet
j we must remember that all of
; Switzerland is not devoted to J?
130 oo
- I«T Payments quarterly, in advance.
the Rigi.
We descend the railway, which
by the way, is a cog wheel again,
75 00 | snow capped mountains and seas I !LF5*Jerick Schiller, the Bard of j similar to the Mount Washington
40 oo j ofjee, but that the northern por- jlelK A little farther on a small i line, having in some places a
J® oo 'ion of the country, comprising a j ehaPe,' marks ,he sPot where Tel1! -rade ot ane 1,1 lbur' and at Vit"
" znau again take the steamer for
Alpiiach, where carriages are in
wailing tor (he journey tK
Brunig Pass to Brienz. 'l^L road
over the Brunig is a niaVvel of
engineering skili and many times
the rocks seem to effectually bar
all further progress; but by wind
40 00 ! large share of its territorial ex-1 j" s,ai.tl to have leaPed from Gess"
2* $ )' has no high mountains, but i ,ei'f b^L. m,le« f™m ^
4f; W' H occupied by broad pfams, loW !c" ,s wiie-re I ell per/orni-
""J hills and fertile valleys, with ed ^nb-e feat of archery,
thriving cities and villages and j f of himselt andjson mark-
ing the supposed location of the
fearful test, Returning from Flu-
15 oo
5 00
densely populated rural districts.
All eomniunicatloiio—Im-iness or otle ! The government is Republican in
er<¥i:«*—iiiou!d tic addressed to I form the
1'iii.tinek,
Henderson, Texas
.JUDSON H. WOOD,
\ttorney at law,
Heiih-rSV^b
J. Ht. fRBY,
norm, ine twenty two cantons,
with a population of about three
millions, being united under a
constitution. Although we fre-
quently hear of the "President of
the Swiss Republic," there is real
elen, we land at Vitznau. at. the
Rigi, and take the railway to the f iabout the mountains, along
summit. I the edge of precipices and beneath
The Rigi is not. a single peak, overhanging rocks, amid wild and
but is an irregular shaped moun- lovely scenery, with constantly
tain whose base is washed on j changing views as we ascend and
Texas. ; ly no such office jr officer h, ex '',ree 'Wes^.v 11,e water, oflakej descend the pass. Lake Brienz is
istence; no chief executive beinsr Loc<'rne- Allhoogh a meredvvarl at last reached and we transler
elected hv the people, but the so- "TrT? 7. "uce more to a steamer, and cross
, called "President- being sunplv ° ^"S being; the lake to Olessbacli, where we
and Detail Rnuwkt 1**™ by the legislative bodv to °"'-v "bou r?el > '!? l'",alio" i f«J> V*w boU:'5 see Jr***'-
nnfliebaiC ona H6Iall UlUgglSI, j v., . ; is such as to give from ltssumimt I tail oi the same name. 1 he lit
Berne, the capital ot the Swiss
confederacy. It has a population
of about 45,000, but possesses lit
tie of interest to the tourist. The
bear, the heraldic emblem of the
city, is 6een everywhere, carved
iu wood, cast in iron and even
stamped on the pats of butter at
the hotels. The tower clock,
which rivals in the ingenunity oi
its figures the Strasburg clock,
has bears for puppets, and a small
den of live bears is kept at the
public expense. Fountains are
numerous throughout the city,
(ae iu £nct iiiiieorl^ alL
cities.) and many of the designs
are both quaint and curious ; one,
the "Ivindlifresper," being sur-
mounted by a figure in the act of
devouring a kicking, struggling
baby, and having in its pockets
an abundant supply for future
lunches of the same sort. Berne
is also noted for iis manufactures
of music boxes, cuckoo clocks, etc.
and has in its cathedral one of the
finest organs in the world.
1TEW Y0SK LETTER.
Mr. Cleveland, he did not select,
y .1 , „ ... as a partner to the amour a mid-
ho. Iimes.— Iliinkiug that class, but rather, ho a,.
few I,nes might be acceptable !o | lecled am| .
your,elf and readers, from a trav j whom u af,,rJrd,
eler, I will steal time enough; ,mke ,iU n„j fse,„(,)l
Iron, bis iabbalh day s sight see-, him wi„, an
ing, to give your readers a few ,„onl/,s j*,,. 'riiw
dots only on the political situation
in New York.
When I left Texas, while I, of
course, was a strong Cleveland
man, I had no confidence in his
election, for the reason that the
republicans were in power and
could cOntrcH an unlimited amottnH "
of money to further their political
schemes. But now, after making
as good a canvass, as one could in
three days, of New York, my
whole ideas are chanced, and 1
never felt more coulident of any-
thing earthlv, than I feel of'Cleve-
land's election—for, if New York
holds the balance of power, victo-
ry in November is surely ours.
Henderson, Tex.
South
£
Csr,
<V*S
I diers
I «•
THE ONLYTRUS
lies known to historv.
Zurich, where we left our read- {lact the liigi is celebrated almost
ers in our last letftr, is one of the , as
most flourishing of the Swiss cit-1 •
much for its togs as for the
views obtained in good weather,
ie>, its man til act u res ot silk and aU(j many are the disappointed
cotton being especially impor- j tourists who make the ascent and
New York City to day, is a dem-
Twenty miles south of Berne if. j ocratic stronghold, and news is
Fribourg, with another celebrated ; continually arriving of other
organ and torty miles farther on j towns and counties iu the state,
we reach Lausanne, where, at the i many of whom, have lu rjtoforej
Hotel Gibbon, in the garden of' been republican, falling into the!
ascending the moun j bach Falls, makos a total descent which the great historian wrote Cleveland ami Hendricks line, j
his Decline and Fall of the Ko ! and the democrats are now only;
iiia". Knipire, we stop to re ar- j waiting lor the nominees* ietfer.sj
! range the outline ot cur lUilimi | uf accrpian^e, when the City and1
Cjms. L. Noble. | Si ate will be iu a grand uproai of
anticipated success, and ratitica
illuniiiiated with different color--! tiou meetings will be held through
ed Bengal lights, and the "illumi ' 1 'Ie following letter from Mr. C. out the Slate.
nation ot the Giessbach'1 is the j Xxieliartlscin, of Henderson, to! The prominent men of New York.
'1 presKje over its deliberations. On; „ , . . „ .
... i v .. . what is the huesl viewm Switzer-: tie stream which forms the Giess
St.! a war footing, its army, m spite of *, , ^ ! ■
-• ulation numbers ■ °n ascending the moun . bach Falls, inakos a total (Jeecen.
II w hile Swiss sol- i ,ain*_w'e loUHd, although it was j „f nearly 1,200 feet to (by lake:
, .„r centuries been I Ute f""e*fa snow'*,urutPr<> i b,,t ",e ",al1" simply a. seriw*
'found in the armies of almost ev. r1^3 at,he top' «i(habout four j eascadee, varying in high! from
ierv nation in Europe, tliev being' J1." ° snow already fallen, and j ten to one hundred feet. , At tour.
I among the few faithful mercena-1! «o thick as to render it mg|lt the principal cascades are |
i impossible lo see more than a
| dozen yards in any direction. In
it ich a it uso vs t, irr ri: it.
IRON
TONIC
(ACTS RECMOINC
Sr. Sartsr's lion
• ,ni''esand It0111 lhe cit,\ ma- visitors book the following bit ot ten minutes bv rail brougitlus to ! During the last four years I pro-; New Laborers supporting Blaine,!
principal attraction of the mam Mr. B. Iv. Bloomfield, ot this coun- bv a lar^e majority.aredeinocratic
inoth hotel located there. Our 'V, explains itself: j—that is to say. are for Cleveland ■
opinion of the Swiss waterfalls j Mr. B. K. Bloomkikiu : and Hendricks—many of themi
was not improving however, and! According to promise. I give i having previously been republi j
IIEAXTH and VIGOR of YOUTH! In all those I j| y
f«! t;cl;ilJv msi «-|*la. Wanl.oi'Ap|K'lil«ulmIlKe j \
llou. L.n-k oi i s iim- Juarked ■
..... i. . T .. . . .1 I 1'...... i. - _
l.int. 1 he lake at ^ Ihc loot ^ oi return in despair. Oue ol the tilt-' we took the next boat for the foot yon my experience with Boa Ara- > caud tliishow! that we have heard
w lie lit.oc.ite . i^ twenty five lucky ones, years ago. left on the : of the lake, from which a ride of I chnifera, or Texas Iilue Grass.; so much of, iu Texas, about the
visitors" book the followimr bii
be ob
i hiu, iii Mrt-iiarin, ils tw is marked
JiU'l Ho4<«k-rllil reunite. 1U.I1I-S,
mu-* — %«•> rei-fkvr !•«■** Lnkiwuit
Inc Bwlu •
« ritip 11« Hi Mil t'OTI^tkilUtS
A U| CO {;•-« viinr M .\ vrlH in
"D^. BARTER'S IRON TONICn fc| « e«ly
It m\ rs a clear iitiu livalthv fow^lexioii.
Tlitf slriinii^t !i'>iIm«► > to tin- valut- < 1 Hit.
II \i:TK.jt's IrtitN Tosir t la I Iruijiivni attcii:i ts
nl riMint«-rf. Ilinir ■- < nl> j'ii*1 | «n nlnr-
ll V i*l tlii* o i?«it:il~ II ji.ti ih ^i"« li« ;«Itl
«to nut in«• • —if« t ln- < "tici.v a L AM' IJlst.
(Sfid i «r aililie** •• *! lw i>r. fJx/tcr Me*l.Co.^
Sf. .Mo., for «wr ""DREAM BOOK." I
Fu!l« f «truupv nnd io:ornmtlon,fiei.W
Dr. Harter's Iron Tonic is for Bale by all
Druggists and Df*lers Evf.rywhep*-
oW'n9
i
- ^v ■
beautiful views may ue uu inspiration:
lied, while from tfie Uetliberg, „. .
^ •Whoever saw the suii on Kigi set ?
!cel above ll'.ti laLo and j «hocvcr ss* l! ri«-7
; about five miles trom the city, a Tiic man ihat says tie saw tlicm botli,
■ more ex e ided prospect is gain j Upon mv soul, lie lies,
; eJ ! Three njlstv ilays anil niiseraitle night-
s Leaving Zurich, we pass the lit- i L>m l,lis u,"unt:li" xvc I'^^t,
tie lake Zug, onW nine miles in ^ ^ ibe son, n r moon, uor surs ,
, , . . . , . , iiut nils v miatry.
lengih hv uiree in brradth, aui!
hortlv after reach Lucerne, a i We hoped for better days, how , i ts
! Interlakeu. • | cured one dollar's worth of seed, i is just 18 Karat Bosh, for the prom !
As its name itn'dies iuteilakeii w"ich planted 3 rows about IS feet inent labor tneu of New York
! is l-ciiccen the lakes of Hrietiz ami 1l(m?'w" ra,he1' Pt)t,r « "'>' an«J,} laugh at «e idea, and say lliat
; Tuun ; and as it is not otilv a de i wi' h SOI,,e tri jvcl >'• The grass | when Cleveland lo-es one vole ;
i lightful spot itself, but also a coil iou said plant is now IS inches ! from the laboring classes, lie will
i veiiient rendezvous for excur- high and lias been grazed down gain two liom the republican col-
i sions into the Bernese Oberland, every tall and winter. No manure uuins.
; it is a very popular place for tour- l,5ls ever been used on it. Ber The republican political slan |
About twelve miles distant ! >uda sod is on one .-He ot the der mongers have attempted to;
walled town, situated at the w'es ever, and after t wenty-four hours i and easily reached by carriage, is j ^'1U ');,s held it at; bespatter our standard bearer
t in extremity ol 1 ike I ucerne °f H°t patient, but very impatient I Orindelwald, near which place ^ yeais, and in^ as linn bod as with a lot of vile slush and mud,
whose cutlet, the Ileuss river J! wailing, the clouds lifted, the i are the Orindewald glacicrs, | Bermuda. It goes Io seed . but the rap given was too hard- j
clear dark stream flows tlirou'dJ "'ists rolied away and .ve were re- j flowing down from the Bernesei about the 1st oi May alter the first it forced the mud and slush too)
1 ' * • • " - - - •• We visited the "upper gla | year's planting. I sent some of high, as it passed over Cleveland.
much interested iu i l'ie blades of^ this plant yesterday I and is beginning to descend on
crowd ! to a gentleman in Mississippi, that Mr. Blaine—leaving our
is the muddy tale which is being
given lo the public now. and be
lieved. 1 give your readers a few
lines of poetry on the subject, ta-
ken from the New York Evening
Telegram,and is entitled, "A Wo-
man Liars the Way."
a woman bars the way,"1 (to Wb
presidential cuaih.)
In Guicicd fctt'elv stands.
Backed by aiidacioug triends,
Tiie man whose unrleiiu handm
Have w i ought to unclean ends.
His "magnetism" sways—
His t ! nd, impressive mein ,
Men stand in silent praise
And think "what might have been."
Eisrtit years of promise lost !
Alas ' .hat Fate pre ('arcs
A burden of such cost
To ben 1 us unawa:e->.
But now propitious smiles
Sliall lirurhtcn all the path ;
What heed that wrong deli lei.
Wliat heed the coming wrath !
The gate is open wide,
The way shows many a flower ;
He walks, wuh sltaidv stride.
To Wealth and ltank and I'uwcr.
And we, his faithlul slivea.
Who crinire f cfi)re itix laee,
Each, one among, us braves
LHshonor—lor a place.
But halt' the road is closed ;
What vision bids turn stay '?
What witness starnis oppiwed ?
A Woman bars the way !
Now tiemble. Caitiff kna«-e !
For memory tries thy bouI.
Thy baud—magician, wave—
The Coward I'ast unroll !
- Now you who dig the dirt
To smirch good men af.d true
Shall feel the shame ami hurt
When the uiuii bespatters you.
Let coward conscience free.
Oh ! man with mar and stain !
And Ktand where alt may sec
Your noisome past again.
A Woman Kirs ihe way.
All Women's wrongs to right.
To lash with feorn to-day
Tac recreant "I'lumed Kni^lu '
"Call off your dogs" of war—
Who would not see yo .r god
Low, where bis followers are ;
Low. groveling in the sod.
A Woman bars the way—
Avoid the hateful theme,
I.est to the light of day
Wc uuveil the torturing drca.u.
the cil v. Two oi the four bridges «'ardetl by seeing one of the most Alps. We visi
.which span the river are very old magnificent panoramas ever cier" and were
and quaint, the roof of the one spread out to the eye of man. On it. Ihe vast tio/en tlood,
iu>-iro«t 11.#> l-i!-* lici.Kr rWV.r^t^l U<he norVli. just at the foot of the j ed down ihe gorge in the moun- ; were o feet 1 n r. Ihe eld ot, ,-lean pure, while I he "l linn
" "mountain, fies lake Zug, bordered jtaiu by the immense weight la«i January,land 48 hoursot sleet j ed _ Knight" is being i;.i.-K- be-
by low hills, with a broad p'ain ice and snow above, crumbles | did not affect it in the least, but sprinkled with lilth. j
saints o< the place, while the oth , >'<\v"'id stretching away toward ] and melts as it reaches the val
ornamented in the same'1'16 ^orest in the distance, | ley and drops its burden of rocks j !y
with the "Dance
wilh more than 150 pictures, illus-
trating the lives bf the patron
killed some oats and wheat entire
It should be ulanted from
of
Eastward the low peaks ot the J and other debris into the termi {Sept. loth to Nov. 15th, then again j itig something by which lo black
Lest wrathful foes reveal
The Cold and .. er. il. s~ ta'e
And let the "i'lumed Kniirht ' feel
'I liat those should not (ling mini
liel'O 1>'lose past morals and manner* « ill not
bear inspection, and wl.o lire ii^^gla.-s
houses—which are always frail.
The Press of New Vurk aIt-i;. t.jr
We presume your readers are ; Cleveland with the exception ol
a dirty Cartoon sheet called tho
"Judge,,, the'•T^•iblll]e,, who are.
aware, that the republicans,seek
. Ri i are seeen, with an occasional mil '-moraine." Front the base ! m the latter part of February till | en Mr. Cleveland's name, in their republican, and the''Sun, which
Death; reptesenting the S,lin ; of lakes I^owerz and Lu- flows a small stream, almost asl March 15th, and see that it is not efforts of despair—al finding nolli 'tli,ilus to democrat ic. but in
id ii irnr >ic tiro^onf in orortr nm i n ^ i . . . . . , it i' if •.. ..rn. t • > i«11 * .
mesuenger as present 111 every em
reality it is continually stabbing
i cerne, with a background of for- i white as milk, which, after wind-1 overrun by grass and weeds the' ing—took up one of his amours, 1
plovment and pleasuie of lite.i mountain and vallev Far-1 i"g about among the mountains i first summer. Blant in rows 2 feet! of younger davs, and put if into1 Cleveland iu the dark, and is re-
Ihe great altriictloii ol the lox™.^ son(h ^ of |hc | ,illllUy rea,.hes I,ake Hr,cnZ. At apart aud cover shallow as .lie the ha.als of one Bov. Ball, ol : .r o|'l'««i„s liullor. Tho ,le-
nUmJuulJul which re™e«nis i"Fo««l Sea" is visible, with thei «« l «nt a grotto has been cut|seeds are very line. 1 pro,,agate llullah,, a „l exceedingly ^ y^^r^vchml'^d Ic!!'
a lion pierced by and dying with precipitous peaks ol the Bernese i 'liteutly into Ihc lace of tho gla J with sets m I-obruarv as well as quest,enable nnnislenal charac- <•
ilricks men, and all ol ihe pronii
durimr tfie fall
I put them out j ter, and a known, paid republican \
r CffNEVt^ OUT Or ORDER.
, in 1792, and is cut into the sol
id rock of the mountain a shori
list a nee from the lake. It is one
of the grandest and most impress-
ive works of the kind which ever
I he city of Lucerne and another j thickness, is a most lovely blue,
port ioti oi the lake appears in the land ihe liu;ht transmitted through
west, arid just south of Ihe city j't throws a ghastly pallor which
rises Hie storm fcroWned head of f is almost alarming over the faccs
Mount l'ilatus,where the legends
came from the chisel of the sculp- I s;*>* ,he sJ,irit of Pontius Pilate, in
Ko EO^
GHACHIHEG
of visitors. On either side of the
glacier, facing outward rises a
mighty wall of rock, thousands of
heard bets offered here, two to
mris*
f 30 UNION SQUARE NEWYORK
ill. MASS. GA.
TOR SALE BY
tor-and as a memorial to the ft ! despair at having permitted the mighty wall ot rock, thousands ol i J . , ,, ■ ,
tor, ana as a memouai to ute n . l >■ ti foot i.. i.;,.bt .^.findino- m < of down 111 my meadow in tho win- (icneral King, to Kullalo to inves
lelnv and courage of the Swiss 1 <leath of took rduge. lhe 'eet 111 lnght, letrunding one o' lV ,.J .......... i .
py the space which it will do the; been guilty of, without the loss of
first year. 1 have a plenty of setts an iota of public or self respect,) 01,fl> ''Ult kcllcy supports Cleve-
at 50 cents per hundrod, and a ] u vile, lllihy slan.lc-r, un.t giv.-a i. r land befolo tile 15tll of September.
lew seeds at GO cents for euough j to the press. This slander so fh'tlci s following, it i b.ou, «m
to plants rows 30 feet long. I shocked ihe Rev. Henry Ward ]'c 'awn lioui I ic upu
calves and mules eat it I Beecher, that he sent his friend.:1,can re jL
setts, and there, the democratic
let my
—J — =•' 1— | . . . , , , | ,i.„ i..!,.. • iwit iter and take l hem off about the tigate the matter, and after a . -
-oldier in foreign lands, as well as. western horizon is bounded by j the olt.v clifls of losemite, but | , , . to let it seed.i tlmrou-dt e\ it.ii.i it.on (Joneral My views are changed as to the
a. j. :....i.. thodfirk hi tie of the J nra rantre. on the other side of the valley the : •' . i . .. 1 .. . ,i;,.n t'.m.l t t- rilv if
vole will do us no good.
lor its artistic merits it is iustlv ' tlark blue of the Jura range. < Ihe other side of the vallej
mi m .luiBtit, JUS"> , , , ,. , iron11tr h i.d- nil JSermuua lor summer aim lung leiegrapnett .ur. *_ ieveianu
pointed to with pride bv Ihe citi- and wherever the eye turns it ,s j mountain slopes gently hack,: .=• ^ jiiv
-ceiis of the cit*. ! cantivated bv new and ar.uarent covered with small farms and I oa lor winlei c can ha\c l that lie had made a full in\t. tua
Lake Lucerne, or the "Lake of
ILE SELF-CURE
A prr<«rr)ptlon of on<* of th«
Uio ; not#-l ir l In
Ithjw retire-I r«r iSr rtirr ofA'rrrow* D'hiliti/,
Mm*iAaM. Wmkn+aa nnd JK*0vy.8«ut
|A pUia calr ! enreluiKr/^#.l>rnrfliUc«mlllit.
, AddffM PR. WAWP A CO. LiHikiiM. Mo.
Fire at Colorado City. Texas,
de-iroved buildings valued at
ol ilie propeller Mamie (il.tss, at
Madison. Indiana. Ceorge Keiler.
rnpiferr. was instantly killed.
a:ii another man was lo>t in the
nvt. r.
captivated by new and apparent , , .. . , . , . , , , ..
ly greater attractions. Three! dotted with hundreds of eotta-; Pellia' '°bj of grass all lie >ear. tion of the tale, and asked .Ir.
,, t- •• , . ., ... hundred miles of'mountain, piaiti. ges. On our return from Grinds-, C. b. Kuit vki> js,
the boilrforest Cantons,' as it is . , ,, . , , ' M , •, . ln She bv Sentinel.
• forest and valley, with thirteen wald, we made a detour ot a tew .111 oui'oj enune^
i lakes, are included within the i 'les lo Lanterbrunen, lo see the
There are now seven regularly
lar famed Staubbach waterfall. nominated Presidential tickls in
1 like the true man he is, "Tell the
I am not
most beautiful of all the charm ...
ing lakes of Switzerland. Deeply range ol vision. . - —-— uunuuai™ -
set among the green slopes of the A sunrise from the Rigi is re ! l,ie opportunities lor a waterfall Lj,e field, but Gen. Binjainiu 1-. wj,0i^ world to know the truth.'"
mountains, wilh their snowy garded as one of the most wonder- at l,"s P0i'lt arc certainly ample; Butler'ss naine appears on two ol ^|(C (ni,j, |,as jjeun (o]j
peaks rising high in ihe distance, • till spectacles in nature; and at 'heclill beini; nearly 1,000 feet iu (iiein. They are the Democratic, vvor|tj aluj Cleveland today
dotted here aud therewith culti hall past three next morning, the bight; but the supply ot moisture Republicans, Prohibition llouie
valed patches aud pictures(|ue doubtful melodv of an Alpine is so extremely small that we at 'Protection, American Prohibition,
* "■ ~ chalets, it is a gem of indescriba , liotn was heard through the halls once suggested ihe advisability of National Christian, Anti Monopo-
ly t lie explosion of 'he boiler b|e loveliness. It has no islands ol the hotel, a warning to the1 sending a man to the top wiili a ly and Or e back L*feror. The
of iiuportauce. but this deficiency sleepers that "now was the time bucket ol water wilh strict orders names oi the noiiHTices i«.i i i-to.
i more than compensated for byandthis the place" to see an A1- to throw it all over at once li dent in the^ >r:lt'i n«nict. aie , < >io
the extreme irregularity of its pine sunrise. In a few moments was hardly satisfactory, but amid vert leyaand. James «. Llaim,
shore line, its arms reaching out the guests, a motley throng, were the grand and majestic scenerx JohiVji • St. John..Samuel i ouu
winch we are surrounded, t
situation, (aud I verily believe if
Ceo. Smith and Web Flanagan,
would stay here a week, their
Cleveland, if he should give the views would be changed,) and so
! result of his investigation to t he I am 1 uv"r ,hat 1 lod'
publicMr. Cleveland replied
if my voice could be heard
throughout the Nation. I would
and clasping the I
e guests, a money inrot>g. were
>ases of the .isscmbletl on the highest point of by
It is ru^lMin among a certain
rjnt ol Hindoo^ lo cut oil" at the
lir I Joint of the tbird and loiirth
lingers nbout to utarrv. 'f'liis
... .• i 1 i ' , a
> t I > iittiv. It ii >■"!' t HC fltlil }•«••(
lt:.4 power of a lliii loo woman
and renders her grasp upon
er«: evir'-jnii; \\ lir
I ti 1 sail of about three hours. Ma
the nv points on the lake, as well a.
every direction, the mountain, a few rods from the
it the western ex hotel. The moon has goue down,
the stars have faded and far away
* tk i j i. i «/•!*• £ •« - •:•#*>*— *. •
mountains ;n
From Lucerne.
tremity. to Flueleii. attheea-t
laius of St, Gall come "the streaks
of the morning light." Now a
was impossible to critiei-o severe-
ly aud ^ ith the feeling that it had
been a day spent well, we return-
. f . ( ...I !• . ..
A short lide by rail to lake
Thun. steamer down ihe lake and
ruy/ .lonathau l'lanciiariL
l>^ :jaiiiiii I". Uutler.
and
I lie Keadiuu ilailroad tar
\\'li ' *l ljictory at Lli/abetii. N.
J., was burned last week.
The Washington monument at
handle of a bruom. t.wcdinglv Ihrotighotit ibis entire region, are beam ki-ses the silvered top of
uncer*a:ii. * ' asso-.iaiid with that hero of Swis- the .uour". lilt fat to the su':th.
raii again for L* miles brought ti- tl.e national capital
hour the next duv ",o feet
ii -tl.
is without a peer, in New York
politics.
Hnt the spatlerins: of mtid goe-
oil, iiini .i> I liave s««!i| Mr.
.mito I lit* reci|>!t*nl
of the mud spattering-, and iu a
way that all good people, both
democrats and republicans dep
recate, still the republicans coin
ineiiced this mud In.-ines . and of
course, under the circumstance*.
ihe dcilio'Tats can only say. "let
tne good (or uau.; wotu go brave
ly on.
The muddy story is to the effect
uo'-v C>1) that Mr Uiaine once had, in ills
1 \ ouug day-, jl ax'jur, i ut un';i;e
afraid for lhe .likeU' -et« l°l' .01 ",u ,aIlesL
building in New \ork, and givo
to the '',rcv prolonged. Hurrah's
for Cleveland au<l Hendricks.
Your Friend, II.
We are ruined not by wh it w.
really want, but what \v*i think:
w e «h,i: Iherelon* never uo abroxt
in search ol your wants; if they
are real
home in
who b iV-
wants, they will coiiih
search of you ; tor aim
w hat she does not want-
w dl soon
buv.
v\
i ii I u hat she call uoti
A horrible stoiy is publis'ied
about the lireelv party while in
the Arctic re-iiotis. It is stated
life was sustaiued by members of
the party feeding on the llesh ui
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Milner, R. T. The Henderson Times. (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 21, 1884, newspaper, August 21, 1884; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth235283/m1/1/: accessed June 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.