The Dallas Weekly Herald. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 14, 1881 Page: 2 of 18
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Dallas Herald and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Texas State Library and Archives Commission.
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FOUTS, ELLO
announcement.
TY OF WACO,
CEL
is
tsscinnametor the Ireatiosor S
The University of Texas.
A:? W * P X m . Toch
• czoncerinai s merident that use Jh=P
interests of the state are Ioimrense. Say the*
5229722297-,=
Beret
mhaind dhneny ouanune wewo
are not apprised of the secual expenses o
* Works company, but •
by. one having
the
- pound de solfomt tuS *
. more than two million and A bail, eWy ln
mana nuaben ss 000 000, w brought into
De *%,% (ucomn 11 7
By. becnoee the dcks are inerenting iosum.
berg and the grade of sheep being improved
by probing the coarser kinds and their
progeny with full blood Meriones. Before
the war there were but, very few
Merino sheep in the state. A year
or two before the war began, here and there
in Geltern a sheep
herder who way introducing. Merino bucks
income is now something over 835 000, de
rived from sources about • follows.From
. cmouey, si w Damn
437 50, making a total receipt of the sum as
aforemsie. - Not knowing the expense of
securing this, as before remarked, we are not
prepared to may whether the net sonuel
pro fi: is or is not a good thing for the Water
Works company on its capital stock. As.
“....sueauha*
N Perrine hemes
on HE - ‘
no
WOY l
H-PEt
represent the annual outgo. An t there te-
mains a net result of some $17 800 Now
k s dated that the stock of the company
was $10,000. that is to ssy. it cost a this
.tun .uu ... ...__,___sum to produce the revenue as shove
and putting them wi b his docks of Mexican indicated. Irthis be .to, then there bes
sheep, and here and there you would Bad s sonual yield equal to nearly 45 per coot.
sheep, and here and there you would dad a
few Cotswold, and Soubdowns. The war
coming on the sheep internet was to some
extent neglected—at least sheep breeders 1
. were unable to impost the Aser bod ==========
ewes for the improvement of their docks. decide that it shall own its own water works.
As soon as the war was over, however, this
interons began to revive, and as tepidly s
they were able to buy them, the sheepmen
would supply themselves with full-blooded
Merino bucks and ewes, and they have gone
on thus idlnow a very moj-sity of st - .
the sheep in the state are of high grade, foot as to the status of other cider in the
having been bred up . from matter of water supply. Very full,
Mesienn edo with Merino bucks. accurate and deflolte inform-
Every breeder has his flock of thorough-tion can be readily secured by the opening
bred Merinoes, growing larger every year,
and there are some breeders in the state who
give their attention exclusively to rising
full-blood merinoes, depending more for
profit on the sale of young bucks and owes
77 than on the wool.As the state becomes
mho ya more ana more populated, and uron dhonk ue by the enp lu-at. or wall,
the vast pasture lands now sustaining mil- road companies, manufacturing and general
lions of sheep are encroached upon for agri- commercial industries, oe well a by an mn-
2 Ant
---oe-swa
produced r in the state, it will not *
duce the income from that source,
for the difference in price in favor of
pure Merino wool, over the graded wool
i will make up for the falling off in the ag
gregeni of pounds. Ithes been but a llile
monte mpun known it amein
Col. David Humphreys of Connecticut im-
ported one hundred nuro Morlicoes from
Se in in 1802 and 1810 and 1811. Consul
Willem Jarvis, of Wenthersheld, Vermont
and others introduced many more: In fact
during the year from 1810 to 1811 some 20,-
treating with the geeomp
in hop heraord minuet. Dos theother hand,
to =-*============ H--t
existing controvert, then have
hand uko - men
la all busine-s transactions a government or
a private or any publio corporation should
be treated and shou d tre l M an Individual"
bound 1,
one case as in the other. A government
swindled means nothing mor------ -
its citizens swindled, for it is the latter from
whose pockets come the expenses of o
former. By pwiy of reasoning, a govern home a
meat, or a corporation should treat as fairly 152RLS--
nd et honorably a * person. Our din
moul-cinasey shall mc-h
largest amount of bonedis at the lowest
fe-smnable out The reverse of this rule
wordbe : confiscation,either through
superior power or surpassing shrewder
Whabie desirat is a fole, reasonable, pro
figure for each parity to give, or to n
This L centimlyh
mensrineprelsoe teuesseimea w woie
True, then the eitg would do an excellent
day’s work when its representatives shall
they have
has been males in which the cly in ke
corporate government capacity, and the
citizens as individuals, are very deeply con-
cerned. Inquiries should be at once put on
’ 51 ■
ye
1
P
indable than the “But
E 22=
as
wi
-,
, K.
13
I4USIG
ary.
nst
********
, sop v-argwn a
GnoP , . porduuh try an
P==5
PU,95
Dal
1
eCT
oennciergpey
#t’Cxinceoy’orepepatianest so
1 Mi-tae "Pont
1 is secured as d
w“
is Korthnern res.
.1*7
ratt
A # re
OS
*
WA-esnseemn
*% at 5-es
Y9
=========
1D.....", Pe r n eq
L J
and 02.60
reodi
■ of Oiere Bent et
1 ** "0000 PARSE EIA ASCE
pfenenntaed -puns-spins mcg phomh
liahment, service pipes, laying theveme, eur-
seat expense, efe. Dalle terosing mpid
ly and very soon a large amount of water
win be required by an i finite number of in-
to the matter in hand with
tso a company, we and that
the question al loue is whether 9’5 per
annum per lamp shall be gild as proposed
by the council, or 810 osoffered by the com-
puny. If we mistake col sere are now jut
100 lamps in the city s this is a difference
0 $500 per annum for the total somber ot 1
lights. Now if $10 per aubom L
fair figure for each of the contracting pattle 1 1
======= =
mas m a mALer OI CA prime necessity WI ware secured by consideration of the vary-
the keeping of the city clean and free from log lengths of the sight, the phase
Alch by s constant # soding of the gutters in of the moon, the siste of the weather, one.
the summer time, and of such vhal import-f A dire foot burane would therefore consume
ancually 11,000 feet. This, at So per 1,000
- Mol An P ,” •
cuymopnets
puny, as we understand the
=2em"
n Tosa
1X2
TA, 1
Pest
2
road companies, manufacturing and general
creasing population. Should it take even on
investment of $100,000 by our municipal
5wannl nattier ,.--,
would not only leave the city without any
pores. Indued we are firmly of the opinion
Sat in a matter of such prime necessity as
wn.o.nenonoe.treiyeen county.
1=======
----======= we |
RIH
Ee * "M "IN 1
ETt
ance as an oustinted quantity always ready
for use for the fire department, a chy
should itself solely own and control
water works in the event of such an insti-
tution of private character becoming pose ,= -. --
seeded of exclusively by an obstinate direct- to truth to theeity, s
1 tmppented from PpNis ™4 2 "", " .E P iem
----eeeerreteen.Tteeeetesens
ashes * ***** H Me WNS throw win
ssente
should not like ste a cost.
94
000 head were imported from PPA,and
they comprised selections from all the best day enru
and moat celebrated of the’old Cabanas ormight, for is
Blocks of the migratory Ticks of that coun-
wry ai the beesing out of the French and
Spanish ware.at this time there
ware the foost and choicest wool pro-
duclog sheep F in the world., having
been preserved with—The greatest
cure and some had been allowed to
leave Spain except now then as a royal fever.
Theviclesliudesof war and the eondlunton
of estates, however brought many Cabenas
thto market and hence it was that the Cal
wootirem * "2 4
“narm mer eneucteise, some Sure
in size and constitution, some in the size of
shelf deece and some in the quality of their
wool. By judicious crossing of these vario-
the, the American breeders have been enel
bled to produce p Merino combining jall
these qualities, and the result is the there eisl arrange
hos beeo an increase in the quality of the ee the eng
wdor nda in the weight of the diece from crest and m
shrenid live times that of the original ia the hte
importations. It is the descendants of theeeba quiekly
loportatione, procured from the eastern and-
2 lenbemo periods of the union princenu len
======
=*-2:2:“5m
torsarethredhundrea nna any registered
shfold
is
the
VIPSESAA
E5
pager
n-mnunen, EXAN
soLFAcEN T s.
naw-Z—Foromns w ms 2eE •
will abort re-5m
mere one nuu re 2a
| ebuia. S Reuse o 20,745
lock of frost
LD
5 1
so
11
robele
if th
We
a
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19
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Vee CUE
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The Dallas Weekly Herald. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 14, 1881, newspaper, July 14, 1881; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1671072/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.