Halletsville Herald. (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, April 16, 1915 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Hallettsville Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Friench Simpson Memorial Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
L*
m
-« H
‘W- *
*~V-
HALLETTSVILLE HERALD
The Hallettsville Herald
Published Every Friday Morning
I ■ , * ■. . - ‘ » ■ • ■ i. v --i Iz" f*.
-BY-
TTF.RAT.Tt PUBLISHING COMPANY, Publishers.
-# HOLY FLAG OF MOHAMMEDANS
,,t m K*.
{RECREATION IS THE titeEDlife;
Many of the Men of Today Have FoK -• LI 1 I Lt lIHul lUUl % 3 Unfurling of “Sacred Banner'* May
gotten How to Play; Others r J ? « Have Dire Effetft Upon the Na-
Never Knew. - » * * • tions of the World.
H. J. Strunk,
President
James Howerton,"
Secretary and Manager.
HALLETTSVILLE, TEXAS, FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1915.
Commenting on the statement made 5 2 .In the inmost precincts of the oid
recently by a New York Y. M. C. A. seraglio at Stamboul (Constantinople)
physical culture difector that of-the t^ie t^ie prophet is kept in
men he examined many exhibit at 7 safety. Only' on proclamation of a
forty the symptoms of senile break-
down proper to seventy, the New York
press, says, editorially:
The director's advice to these men,
.T . PfiPe-t s- ndic-aft.) . ■ holv war is it unfurled to the eyes of
tf°" tte firs, morning of the .New „ referenUal multitude ot beli;v.ers.
■OlNiOHI
[LA B E L>
People You Know.
• . Mrs. Meta Thulemeyer has re-
turned to her home in Shiner af-
ter spending several weeks in
Kenedy as the guests of her
daughters, Mrs. A. F. Kauffmann
and Mrs. Pauline Grasshoff.
—Kenedy Advance.
Material is being placed on the
ground for the construction of
a number of new concrete s1:ore
buildings adjoining the postoffice
on depot street. The buildings
will be owned by Hoff & Dunn.
—Yorktown News.
Messrs. B. B. Atkins & Son
shipped a carload of hogs to the
Houston market this week. The
car comprised sixty-two head.
This shipment made the sixteenth
car since January first by this
one firm.—Beeville Bee.
School Notes.
staff is closely set with golden nails
and covered wjth green velvet. The-
CHANGE IN THE RURAL HIGH
Last Thursbay Agent C. H.
Potthast recieved another oar
load of Ford automobiles, all of
which were sold by Saturday
night The war in Europe does
not effect the sale of the Ford
Besides Friend Charlie is a rust-
ler, and believes in advertising^
Tils business and bis stuff he has
for sale. He expects to sell [sev-
eral carjoads of autos during the
summer.—Weimar Mucury.
r ry. r • . .* • y
- The Moulton Waterworks Com-
pany this week put up the new
twelve thousand gallon water
tank. Moulton has an abundance
of water, and one of our progress-
ive young business men informed
us several days ago that an effort
would be made to get a strseL
sprinkler. Moulton needs one
badly.
Charles Johnson has purchased
7 acres of land of Mrs. M. ' A.
Scovel at Old Moultpn, the consid-
eration being $350.
A deal was consummated this
week whereby W. F. Oehl be-
-c&me the owner of the j. A. Eason
place, the south-half of block No.
32. The price was $2,600.—Moul-
ton Eagle.
, «* * * ■ *. . •.
John B. Janecek of this city
and Miss Amanda Kempe were
married at the home of the
bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Kempe, at Lenz, Tues-
day morning at 10 o’clock. The
wedding was a very quiet affair,
only immediate friends and rela-
tives of the contracting parties
being present Mr. Janecek, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Janecek
of Charco, is' ope of this city’s
modt popular ydung men, being
the genial salesman at Slavik’s
and also an officer of the Fire
Department We are not per-
sonally acquainted with the bride,
but understand that she is a pop-
ular and accomplished young lady,
and one whom any young man
would have been glad to have
won for a life’s mate.—Runge
News.
SCHOOLS.
The revised rural high school
law passed by the last legislature
makes the president of the county
board of trustees president of
the trustees’ association of the
county. It requires the president
of the county board of ti astees
to hold one, and, if possible, two
meetings during the year. Here-
after, the voters of each commis-:
sioners precinct will elect; their
own member of the countylboard,
that is, each precinct will elect
one member of this board and
one is to be elected by the county
at large. Heretofore, they were
all elected by the county atla^ge.
DIPLOMAS of HONOR, n
- .
Last session the Vienna School
lead all others in honor roll pupils.
It had seven. This session it had
a few strong competitors* for the
leadership. As a result, the Vi-
enna school has twelve pupils
who received diplomas of honor,
the Beasley will have twelve, the
Pleasant Grove will have twelve,
and the Pilot Grove has ten, and
two who missed only a small
fraction of a day.
Diplomas of honor were award-
ed to the following pupils of the
Vienna school on April 9, when
the school closed: Otto Grune-
wald, Mary Grunewald, Mata
Grunewald, Louis Arnold, Floyd
Whitley, Minnie Teltschick, Willie
Harvey, Olive Harvey, Fanny
Harvey, Monroe Harvey, Eunice
Harvey, and Casper Brown.
The Beasley school closes on
April 24. The following pupils
will recieve diplomas of honor
when it closes, if they do not
miss from now until the closing
date: Emma Gloor, Hattie Gloor,
Otto Gloor, Janie Mladenka, Gus
Mladenka, Charles Kasper, Selma
Kasper, Alice Kasper, Elvira
Douglass, Vlasta Mikeska, Adolf
Harabis* and, Stazzie Harabis.
The honor roll pupils in the
Pilot Grove school are: Inno-
. *~ v •- , J * ^ ‘V -*»
cence Smolik, Isidor Smolik,
gravis Redmon, Fritz Quasi,
Gustav Mozisek, Elsa Roth, An-
nie Roth, Agnes Polloch, Annie
Polloch, Lillie Quast Hollie Red-
mon and Leslie Shumaker miss-
ed only a*part of a day.
Other schools that were award-
ed diplomas of honor recently
are:
Shiloh.?- Max Langenburg,
Willie Lor fin g, Victor Spiess^and
Louie Conrad.
Pagel—Lillie Rother.
Komensky—Paul Jurena, Ag-
nes Janak, Wm. Klapuch, Ladi^
mir Pesek, Frank Klapuch, Aug-
ust Janak, Alois Janak, Julius
Bucek, George Bucek, Edwin
Bucek.
Mt Olive—Vlasta Hajek and
Mary Stary.
Lights Chapel—Maggie Hud-
geons, Gladys Hudgeons and
Myrtle Reagan.
Year Dean ’Richmond had awakened. tJ h withdut beine removed
to find a small fclack lciitdh; j>rotffing U g removed*
inquisitively about I>e.r Siudio horne. ; ' 1S
But It would have been better If ^ « onde^ : flafr°f gtee* S^lk is richly embroidered
Lhad received it and had acted upon it . ,.5 Tf , ^ ' in gold with mystic scrolls and texts
20 years ago. Dean li\ed a.one ^in tne Bor.emian from the Koran. According to tradi-
Ptay looks so easy that most, people ; sectl0n of th® 021 y; ^as edlt0^ tion the silk material originally served
assume it comes naturally. It doesn't. ' ddf°“e; of. better majtazmes,-and . as eurtalfi to.the tent of*Ajsha, Mo-
lt is a lamentable fact that many per- stadlQ eacu mormng »,.arp; at hammed’s; favorite wife. Thence if
sohs have forgotten how to play. It ®:oU 0 °Jock- ' was treasured by the Ommajades in
is still sadder that others never ; The kitten;, which Dean Called First1 Bagdad, and brought to Cairo by the
knew. ' . Foot, was sleek and a daintily clean ; Abassides.
■ Inertia isn't play. Plav is initiative, littfe; lady kitten. It would not hav« in the year 1M7, when Sultan Se-
Dr. Frank Kent
, , "; Angelus Hotel
SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS
EYE. EAR. NOSE AND
THROAT
V * WILL VISIT
Hallettsville, May 6
OFFICE DR. LEDBETTER
It means setting out deliberately to do.
something. It means doing It with ,
zest. At its best it should be competi-
tive, for th^n, to the average man, the
zest comes naturally.
Now, it is not easy for a man of
forty, say, to walk into a store and
buy a set of golf clubs,' and then gp\
outf,on a link and make a show of
himself with. them. It takes courage
for a man of forty .to climb aboard a
life-size horse and take his chance of.
sticking there.
No. The-time to do thesh things is
in youth. It Is then that habits of .
wholesome, outdoor Hying shodld be
formed, which will endure so long as
haleness is granted one. It Is then
that the habit of play should be
formed, which may change in its man- ,
ifestations as life wears on, and adapt
itself to the limitations of advancing
years, yet which will never wear Itself
out, but.rather increase as the require-
ment of the responsibilities of. life
gives greater opportunity for its en-
joyment.
■ —■ ■, ■> ■■■ - -
WARS ON CARELESS REMARKS
been difficult for her to find lodging? . iim I conquered Pgypt, he transferred
.in the Bohemian' section where black r it -to Damascus where the throngs of
cats were considered the best of luck, . pious pilgrims^^on their way to the sa-
The little collar with. which Dean cred shrine could do it homage. Mu-
immediately made her ownership cer%4. rad III, invading Hungary, carried it
tain wa.s black leather. The name in-
scribed on the tiny silver tag was
“First Foot,” since she* had hCen- the
first little, visitor to put foot over
Dean’s threshold in the new year.
First Foot had been A part of the
studio life for some five weeks be-
fore she brought down the wrath of
her mistress' upon her own sleek
head.'
'Upon picking up the kitten for her
evening nap in Dean’s lap the *girl had
smelled tobacco. Upon examination
the midst of his army to inspire
urage. The mosque of the seraglio
me its- depository in 1595, fn
charge of Sheik ul Isam, the religious
head of Mohammedanism,
It was last unrolled in 1826, when
Sultan Mahmud planned the destruc-
tion of the Janissaries. Neither the j
RussorTurkish nor the Balkan wan
of recent years gave cause sufficient to
the Mobiem church elders to assume
the responsibility of proclaiming a
holy war,” Its unfurling arouses the
Bagby & McCutchan
Lawyers«
> •
Will practice in all courts.
Office in Lay brick building
west of Mitchel’s store.
Phone No. 32.
she'made the discovery That her pet fanaticism of all believers to frenzy.
wab seeking of the noxious fuhies.
“You disgraceful little lady.'’ ad-
monished Dean while she went to the
kitchen for brush and soap and toilet
Every Moslem, then must fight—fight
a outrance: . \ . ,
Young or old, well or ill, rifti or
poor, married or single, busy or idle,
water; “You; have been visiting the you' muSt obey the call. You.must
J leave home, children, wife; all social
relations are set at naught, all qbll-
gations ignored; you must follow
den of some gentleman.”
“They 8ay“ Stories Are Prevented
From Spreading by the Trace-
It-Back Club.
•jki
That probed to he only the first of
the visits, for each night Dean found;
her erstwhile perfumed pet reeking of
tobacco smoke. There was no good j 1
in scolding. Dean finally accepted the
tobacco as a part of her troubles. She
did, however, tie a huge pink, bow on
the neck of her cat and saturated it
From Albany, N. Y., is reported a
Trace-It-Back dub*. : Some men ha^
been listening to a “they say” story,
and.one suggested that were the story*
traced back to its source, not much
of it wquld be left. Another pro-
posed to . trae© it back and see. The
result was so striking, that the men
at once formed themselves into, a club
for the purpose of tracing sneh things
tp their source and so preventing much
serious mischief from, careless and un-
founded statements. The club now
numbers many members.
A club of that sort could find em-
ployment and useful Woflt to .in
every commiinlty.
The great Fiesta or Battle of
Flowers will be held the week of
19th to 24th of this month. All
readers of this paper who come
to San Antonio to enjoy this su-
perb occasion will be welcome to
the large offices, both floors, of
the San Antonio Business College
on Alamo Plaza, where the finest
view of the gorgeous parades
may be enjoyed. Special tuition
rates during the week.
Members of .the
Albany club are exceedingly careful
now about what they Bay. ’ Just a
hint of doubt about the matter and
they appoint someone to investigate.
This is sufficient to cause the recall
of all that one was not poskively sure
apout. Rash, hasty talk has been the
cause of untold misery. Tt is wise to
make no statement without having
valid reason for believing it true. It
would be no bad plan for everyone to
be as careful of his speech as If *
Trace-!t-Back club were going to in-1
with Wild Rose scent. >*■,.-
/'The guilty man may take a hint ”
was her inward hope.
But the guilty man did not take the
hint. Each day when the small black
cat came silently Into his den he
arose, stroked her head and felt that
the day was well begun.
When John Rogers finished a par-
ticularly good story and determined
to try. it on the editor of the “Good-
year Magazine,” he dipped First
Foot’s paw. into the inkstand and
made her Imprint pn his manuscript.
So that when the story passed through
thd handB -of the readers and found
Its way to the editor of the “Good-
year,” Dean Richmond found herself
smiling at the Imprint of a cat’s paw
on the manuscript awaiting her Judg-
ment.
In the evening »he found herself
examining First F\>ot’s paw. Her
amazement was very genuine when
She discovered that her pet's foot was
sticky and that close scrutiny revealed
dried ink on the. little toes. *
where you are led, go where you
sent, do what , you are ordered. No
other consideration holds. It means
a life-and-death struggle engaged in
by nearly 200,000,000 men throughput
Asia, Africa, even ip Europe. *
vestigate his statements
it;
^ ■
. ' t.
;.;Y
■V'
- 'Ut:
Mossy Grove—Ethel Stockton,
Harry Spencer and Mary Spear.
Sweet Home—Gertrude Rich-
ardson, Julia Munsch, William
Culpepper and Reta CulDepper.
Herbert Munsch missed one-half
day.
Monserate will have three hon-
or roll pupils: Algeria Thigpen,
Burtha Thigpen and Fly Thigpen.
County Surveyor W. H. Koe-
ther, Wm. Koch and A. J. How-
ard came over Tuesbay morniug
from Shiner to spend a few hours Mrs. Patton
Clean-up, Day.
The president of the Civic
League Club requests the mem-
bers of the club to be on the
square in their buggies at 9
o’clock * Monday, the 19th of
April, to . begin cleaning the
town. The Mayor has kindly of-
fered his help. The treasurer,
reports $78.20 in
ftoms’s Colossal Fish Pond.
The duke of Sermoneta who is acting
as president of the committee formed
in Rome to promote the Independence
of Poland, ranks among the greatest
landowners in Italy, Fogliano, his es-
tate near the Pontine marshes, .extend-
ing to 80,000 acres, mainly under
grass, for the duke owns vast herds of
cattle. The most productive portion
of the estate, however, Is a lake sev-
eral miles long and about a mile in
breadth, which, from the time of the
Roman empire downward, has sup-
plied fish for the market In Rome.
Whenever there Is a flood by rain on
the hills the lake overflows through
a narrow chafinel into the sea. The
sea fish find their way through into
the lake, and remain to fatten In the
fresh water, and then are captured on
their return by an ingenious labyrinth
constructed of 'reeds into which they
swim. They are of the best kind—
chiefly gray mullet.
"So,” mused Dean, “thb person who
blows tobacco smoke all over my
lovely'kitten and the author of ‘Stag-
nation’ are one. and the same being.”
She fell to speculating as to the man’s
personality. ”He assuredly is human
and I would say—rather charming.”
When John Rogers received the lit-
tle black visitor that/.morning he
glanced amusedly at the'extra large
pink ribbon on her neck. « 4;/*
v “You have an extravagant mistress,
little lucky lady,” he slid. "She would
.never do for the wife of a struggling
author.” if the cat disagreed she
could not say so. Rogers petted FSrst
Foot and dislodged /he note Dean
Richmond had concealed in the bow.
“The plot thickens,” laughed he, and
WHEN THE RANGE IS FOUND
■ —-r—* • ’
Correspondent Write* of the Effect of
Shett Fire on the Ranks of
the Enemy.
Crash! a roar from out of the rum'
ble, a puff of white, smoke and a rain
of lead on the very men I had been
watching! The Germans had found,
the range exactly, but the distance
was too great for me to distinguish
what execution they were doing among
those stirred ranks. ; Then came a
long siren whistle screeching through
the air from the distance. Again a
twinkling flash against the blue, again
a puff of rich, fleecy smoke, and an-
other shell had scattered death on the
men helplessly ^siting below.
• Fascinated, we watched thos* little
twinklings of flame and puffs of white
smoke Whence cam* they, w© won-
dered, and by what Weird skill were
they made to burst squarely over their
intended prey? Was it the science of
man or was it, as we half believed, the
cajolery of some demon glonting over
the. helplessness of his victims? Again
the azure was broken by a little white
puff—%gale we .wondered—whence^
Click >r* click—-click—dick—click—
the murderous machine gun was start-
ing its music. What an engine of de-
struction! Nothing in the world seems
so heinons as the snapping, clacking
rattle of the machine guns spitting
forth its rain of bullets.—Arthur
Sweetser, In the World’s War.
GUSS WERNER’S
SALOON
FINE WINES,
LIQUORS AND
CIGARS.
Fresh Beer Always on Tap
Courteous Treatment
\ dast Side Square
* Restaurant in Connection.
OPERA HOUSE
Saloon
J. E. BUSS
ie b<
allettsvUle. Call oh
One of the best and purest
aces to get drinks when in
Lunch room'ip connection.
Fish and OyBteri every
Tuesday and Friday*
BEST OF A<
TIONS GUJ
H. L Haverlah
BLACKSMITH and
WHEELWRIGHT
Special attention given re-
pair work and horseshoeing.
Full line of Standard* Mo-
line and John Deere imple-
ments in stock.
i
Hunting on Lower Colorado.
/ To the hunter of game, both large
and small, the Colorado will appear
; most notable as being the gateway to
K9UQHTS mi PYTHiAS
I CASTLE HALL
Hallettsville Lodge*
No. 156
Meets every Friday
light at their halL on-
lot adjoining City HalL
brethr
invited to
Visiting brethren are
cordially
tend.
’ 'vv.
Storied Jail; Is Jailed. •
In .an effort to extricate her son
Chester from Jail by force, Mrs. Alice
Rollins of Tappan, Rockland county,
opened the, letter. "The. editor*-of i-what is undoubtedly the best ■ easily |
'Goodyear' will see you tomorrow at reached shooting ground in North]
ten o’clock,” he read aloud. ‘Tm America, the delta country about the I
hanged! How Jn thunder—!”’ Rogers head of the Gulf of California In Mex- j
ran his fingers through his hair and iC0. Here, besides a wealth of bird
gazed questloningly at First Foot, nf© that is equaled by few regions In
who only wpnt to sleep, having de- j the world, are to be found wild pig or
llvered.her message. j javelin, deer, mountain ltoE|' jaguar,
^It .was the perfume that reached wildcat, coyote, antelope and moun-
Rogers’ senses while they were dls- tain sheep. The delta country, with
cussing the merits of his Btory and^ its hunting, Is generally the objective
the. size of the check he was to get- ] of- the Colorado voyageur in any case,
‘You, he said suddenly, and it, and far one whose time is limited the
seemed accusingly, "are the mistress most expeditious plan will be to outfit
of First Foot.” at Yuma and float down the river to
but how do , ^e end of the gulf from that point.
tt, SACCAK
K. of R. ± S.
C. 4. young:
C. C.
‘I am,” laughed Dean,
‘I
NejW York, was locked up herself and
sentenced to 30 days’ imprisonment j scent,” he told her.
in that village.
When the jailer refused to liberate/ baeco,” flashed Dean,
her apn, Mrs. Rollins gathered rocks r Rogers flushed guiltily,
and other ammunition and opened fire. I is rather strong.” Then.
With plenty of time at one’s disposal,
yoii know?”, .
The kitten reeks of that same ^ will be worth while to make the
I ^ent, he told her. • . i Needles the point, of embarkation, as.
‘fi SI'S reeWns the stretch between there > and Yuma j
. . ‘i offers a rare combination of fine
“My pipe scenery with safe going that is equaled
„ , , . . . . . JP.., ........ , , You must] by few streams in America.—Outing.
She gave a correct imitation of the ] live near, very near to me,” he added
bombardment of Dixmude and re* quickly, and there was a shameless
duced the glass in the jail windows to suggestion of joy in his eyes,
fragments before she was arrested. “Yes—it is stfange, isp’t it?” ■ ' j
The son was committed to the hrouse^: ■. “Dellghtfulty strange,” agreed Rog- value of paper clothing for winter
of refuge for burglary. erB. r ”I:wish Fitot Foot knew the ex . we®f* The Paper, which is made fiom
F. & A. M.
Murchison
Lodge No. 8fr
Stated meetings
Tuesday night orv
or before Ahe fulb
moon of each,
month Visiting
brethren in city
*re invited to <attencL Hall in second’
■story of E. H. Mitchell building.
Chat. Pillar, Secretary!
J. W. WARD. W. Pi.
Soldiers' Winter Clothing.
The soldiers of Japan have learned
tent of the luck she had bcpv«bt:me, *»uIberry bafk, has little sizing in it, j
Porto Rico Sugar Industry. ‘ ,■* I sell a stofly for $250 and realize that
here on business. Contractor
Howard is building a brick busi-
ness house at Shiner for Mr. Koch.
the bank, part of which can be
used for the work. By order of
the president.
> Mrs. L. E. Moore.
. The important part played by the
sugar industry in the material welfare
of Porto Rico is shown by the figures
of exports. Out of a total valuation of
exports amounting to $43,000,000 dur-
ing the fiscal year ending June 30,
1914, sugar alone constituted over $20,-
000,000, .This was the lowest sum real-
ized for sugar exports in five years.
Under normal conditions sugar con-
stitutes two:thirds the total value of
all exports.
1 _ h$ve aneighbor whom I—’’
“I am very busy.” Dean said swift-
ly. trying to • overcame, the timidity
and is soft and warm. Between two
sheets of the paper they place a thin
layer of silk wadding, and then quilt
the whole. It Is something of a draw-
back that clothing so made is not
washable, but in a winter campaign a
soldier baB other thing* to think of
than the dirt on bis uniform.^Youth’s
that had swept her lashes down.
Rogers only laughed and watched
the color sweeping stealthily into the
cheeks of the editor of “Goodyear,”
“First Foot is a lucky cat’” he ru- Companion.
minafed on the way home, “and I ■'.?*--— -
oncp informed her that her mistress Good Rule to Follow,
would not make a good wife for a Judge Gary 6f the Steel corpora-
stfuggling author. Humph!” a soft.. tlon said to a Pittsburgh audience:
BLACK
LEG
(r
priced, rresh.
W<
BiMKtH
reliable; pwfwwj bgr
tMt where e*1
Write for booklet and
10-tfew pkte. BlMktat PHI*
50-deee »k»e kleekle* Pllle «.M
Uw my Injector but Outter’i beet
The «ip«rtortty of Cutter preducti ie due to erer 13-
j c*rs of sMfliUzfaif In eaeeleee Mid mm eely.
. Infitt on Cotter**. . If unobtainable,.order----
The CUTTER LABORATORY. Berkeley,, i
Hopeful Mission.
If even one of those 300 commercial
travelers who have gone to South
America succeeds in making a South
American see a United States Joke
their toil' will not have been in vain.—
Cleveland Leader.
WgH *.
whimsical
ers’ lips,
tlon:
smile played about Roz-
A smile of self-contradio
si
Worth Cultivating. *
. ; • c
Ohe' of the most charming things It
girlhood' is serenity.—Margaret E
Sangster. '•* ;
“A young man should be thoroughly
honest, frank and sincere. When he
says anything he should tell the
truth.” Also, it will not hurt the
young man to keep on doing these
things after he gets older, when he\.|
may be surprised to find less competi-
tion. . *
Are You in Arrears
THE MONEY*
•■vw
WE NEED
I
■ ■ . m ■
1
4
.4
1
■.-J
w
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Halletsville Herald. (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, April 16, 1915, newspaper, April 16, 1915; Hallettsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1037590/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Friench Simpson Memorial Library.