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The
Bastrop Advertiser 1910s PURELY
PERSONAL When
you have a visitor, or contemplate making a visit, or know something of local interest,
please ring No. 136 and give it to the Advertiser. We'll appreciate it. Miss
Eunice Moore, of Temple, is visiting her cousin, Mrs. D. H. Bell. Constable
Smith from Smithville was in town Tuesday. From
Elgin on Tuesday the following gentlemen were in attendance upon the meeting
of Commissioners
Court: Capt. F. S. Wade, Judge C. W. Webb; J. D. King, Rex Stewart,
Chas. Gillaspie, John Puckett, Dock Christian. Mesdames
Lundell and LeSueur of Hill's Prairie, were guests of Bastrop friends
Tuesday. Mrs.
Chas. Watterson and Katie Lee, from Red Rock were in town Tuesday. Jay C.
Powers of the firm of Jay C. Powers & Co, colonizers and town promoters, was in
Bastrop Monday. John
and Hugh Barton, in their fine new car, were in Bastrop Tuesday. Miss
Adelia Kesselus left this week on a visit to Holland. C. C.
Cunningham, with the Union National Bank at Houston, is visiting at the old home
for a few days. Messrs.
A. T. Morris, W. E. Goodman, T. E. Lynch and T. W. Cain have returned from
the meeting
of the Imperial Counsel of the Mystic Shrine at Dallas this week. The
attendance was estimated at over 100,000 Shriners.
Perfect order prevailed and not an
accident occurred during the four days meeting. One of the four was offered
the position of Chief of Police of Dallas, but we refrain from being personal
in the matter. Mr.
Fred Schuelke is visiting his brothers, Olive and Frank Schuelke at
Smithville this
week. Mrs.
Don G. Petty, Don G. Petty, Jr, Miss Ella Petty, Sherman Petty and Frank
Petty, of
Mansfield, LA; Mr. And Mrs. Cates Ford, of Orange; Mr. And Mrs. C. F. Petty, Gibsland,
LA; Mr. And Mrs. V. A. Petty, V. A. Petty, Jr, Dabney and Olive Petty and
Petty McDonald, of San Antonio; J. E. McDonald, East Texas; H. K. McDonald, of
Shreveport, LA; Matt Reynolds of Mansfield, :A; A. O. McLain of Orange; Miss Parie
Nabors of Mansfield, LA; S. H. McDonald, of Austin; H. K. McDonald Jr, of Warren,
and Frank McDonald, of Bon Weir, were in Bastrop Wednesday to attend the
funeral of Mr. Don G. Petty. Mrs.
A. C. Boethe and little son are visiting in Smithville. Mrs.
F. G. Woehl and Mrs. R. Gemeinert attended the funeral of their brother, Mr.
C. Wolf,
at Austin, Wednesday. Buy
your Rubber Hose from The Home Hardware Company. They have several kinds to select
from and their prices are right. NOTICE: The
Mothers Club will meet at the Library Room Wednesday, May 21st, at 5 o'clock.
MRS. FANNIE CUNNINGHAM. 1913
patterns of Linoleums just received at Rabb & McCollum's. BASTROP
LOSES. In the
game of base ball in which Bastrop lost to Smithville by the score of 6 to 3, in the
later city, Thursday. Captain Tom Haynie and Luke Robinson had the misfortune
to sprain their ankles. Captain
Haynie's was quite seriously sprained and it is feared he will be out
of the game for some time. Refrigerators
for looks, but Ice Boxes for service. Come
and look at our box in the store, filled with 200 dozen eggs, 100 pounds
creamery butter, mince meat, ham, sweet and sour pickles by the barrels. ELZNER
MERCANTILE CO. THE
INVITATION Is
extended to all to view the marvels of the Goldsmith's art as depicted in the window
of the "Palace". Even Boston, New York and Chicago have contributed
their numbers this week. Don't
fail to see a display of LaValierres, etc, never before seen in Bastrop,
and second to no other city of the state. L. R. ERHARD, PROP. PURELY
PERSONAL Mrs.
H. D. Orgain has returned from a several days visit to Austin. Mrs.
John Middleton of Smithville, visited her parents Mr. And Mrs. Sam Higgins. Mr. A.
C. Harvey, a prominent merchant of McDade and President of Guaranty State
Bank of
that thriving little city, was a Wednesday visitor in Bastrop. Mrs.
James Moore, of Texas City, is visiting her parents, Mr. And Mrs. Alf Jung. Mr. E.
O. Randle, of Cedar Creek, was in Bastrop, Saturday, en route on a visit to
his boyhood
home and other points in Tennessee. The
Advertiser and many friends wish for him a pleasant visit and a safe return
home. He was joined at Bartlett by his son, Prof. Coy Randle. Mrs.
Ben P. Templeton was among his many friends in Bastrop several days this
week. Mr.
And Mrs. Jim Smith, of Houston, are on a two weeks visit to Mr. And Mrs.
Richard Starke. Mr. J.
M. Carroll and son, of Hubbard City, are visiting Mr. And Mrs. W. T. Higgins. Mrs.
D. E. Roe has returned home from a visit to Taylor. Mr.
Elbert S. Orgain was a visitor to Austin this week. Judge
Paul D. Page visited Smithville the first of the week. Mr.
And Mrs. A. J. Robinson and fine little son, of Galveston, are visiting Mrs. Robinson's
parents, Mr. And Mrs. Theo Griesenbeck. Mrs.
Mary Hasler left the past week on an extended visit to Lentzberg,
Switzerland. Mr.
And Mrs. Cleveland Chumley and little son, Gerald, left Sunday last for the
reunion at
Chattanooga, TN, and will also visit relatives in Alabama, Mississippi and New
Orleans. Mr.
And Mrs. T. M. Rector visited Austin the past week. Mr. Rector returning home
Monday. Mrs. Rector will remain in the Capital City for a while under the treatment
of a ear specialist and we are pleased to note is improving. Mr.
And Mrs. Shelton Adrian of Austin, are visiting Mrs. Adrain's parents, Mr.
And Mrs. T. M.
Rector. Mr. Adrian will shortly begin the erection of a new residence for Mr.
Rector. Miss
Vesia Craft left Monday night on a visit to Mineral Wells. Mr. W.
A. Hasler and family and prof. L. A. Koenig and family are spending the week visiting
on the Colorado. Mr.
Jay C. Powers of San Antonio, promoter of the sale of the Bastrop Town tract,
was to the
city this week, accompanied by the following parties who bought nine tracts
of the land. H. Galtney, of Fort Sam
Houston, S. C. Burbridge of Peoria, Il, Dr. C. L. H. Hutchinson of San Drift;
Ezra Estes, of New Bransfels and Ed Crowley of Crystal City. Mr.
And Mrs. Olive Schulke, Mr. And Mrs. Frank Schuke, of Smithville, Mr. Henry Schuelke
of Austin, Mr. A. C. Botbe, of Fort Worth; Mr. And Mrs. B. J. Schulke and
family of San Benito, and Mr. E. Prokop of San Antonio were in Bastrop this week
to attend the funeral of Mr. E. E. Schulke. Misses
Mabel Keiser and Kate Fitzwilliam of Smithville are visiting Misses Nellie
and Grace
Fitzwilliam. Mrs.
Chas. Schauerhammer, of Bellville and Mrs. James Dunnway, of Smithville, were guests
this week of Mrs. A. A. Elzner and Mrs. P. Haynie Miss
Mattie Chalmers, who has been attending Radner College, Nashville, TN, is expected
home next week. Miss Mattie is with
the Radnor party on a trip through Colorado and other points of interest in the
United States. CITATION
BY PUBLICATION The
State of Texas To the
Sheriff or any Constable of Bastrop County, Greeting: You
are herby commanded, that by making publication of this Citation, in same
newspaper published
in Bastrop County for eight successive weeks previous to the return day
hereof, you summon R. B. Shipp, and the unknown heirs of said R. B. Shipp; E.
Billingsley, and the unknown heirs of the said E. Billingsley; E. H. Miller; Thos.
Cochran, and the unknown heirs of said Thos. Cochran; Mrs. Betsy P. Cochran,
and the unknown heirs of the said Mrs. Betsy P. Cochran, whose residence
is unknown, to be and appear before the Honorable District Court, at the
next regular term thereof, to be holden in the County of Bastrop, at the Court
House thereof, in Bastrop, Texas on the 16th day of June, A. D. 1913, then
and there to answer the petition of Claude T. Wynn, tried in said court on the
16th day of April, A. D. 1913. file Number
of said suit being No. 5779. Plaintiff
alleges in substance, as follows, to wit: That on the first day of April, A.
D. 1913,
he was the owner in fee simple of the following described property; situated
in the State of Texas and County of Bastrop, and being more particularly
known and described as follows, to wit: A
tract of 160 acres out of Abstract No. 143, originally granted to Thos.
Cochran, lying
on the waters of the West Yegua, in said Bastrop County, "Beginning at the
SW corner of the J. W. Alen Survey.... LIST
OF LAND, LOTS OR PARTS OF LOTS TO THE CITY OF BASTROP FOR THE TAX.. Anderson,
Josephine fraction of farm lot 36 east... Adams,
Isabelle estate fraction block 47 east main.. Barnett,
C. L. fraction block 45 east main.. Buchanan,
Mrs. M. S. fraction block 9 east main Brooks,
Jennie fraction block 26 east main Brady,
Ellen fraction block 88 east main Bedford,
Margaret fraction block 101 east main Bryant,
Pyrmias fraction block 13 east main Batts,
Mrs. H. F. fraction block 16 east main Buchanan,
G. W. fraction farm lot 5 east main Byers,
Mrs. Albert discontinued territory 300 Crumplin,
Calvin fraction block 61 east main Craft,
Anthony fraction block 58 east main Colter,
Tom fraction block 69 east main Do
fraction block 9 east main Davis,
Sarah estate fraction block 136 east main Do
fraction block 165 east main Davie,
Andrew Bastrop town tract 37 east Do
Bastrop town tract 37 east Edwards,
Green fraction block 116 east main Flemings,
Mark estate fraction block 165 east main Do
fraction block 142 east main Fittger,
Mrs. E. estate fraction farm lot 18 east. February
1910 Smithville
Times Mrs.
Kate Brenan from Orange is visiting her sister Mrs. M. E. Maney. Miss
Della Boehm is taking sewing lessons from Mrs. Y. D. Taylor. Mrs.
Joe H. Riley will leave Monday for several weeks visit in Oklahoma City. Miss
Shepard of Brenham is in the city visiting her sister, Mrs. E. G. Winston. R. J.
Saunders attended the district meeting of the banker's association in Austin this
week. Tom
Spear has disposed of his interest in the Smithville Grocery Co., to his partner,
D. A. Payne. Mrs.
Bert Smith and children left Monday for an extended visit to their old home
in Zanesville,
Ohio. Moore
Bros, will occupy one side and the moving picture show the other side of the Racket
old stand. Mrs.
Mattie Jenkins left Monday for a short visit to her daughter, Mrs. Harvey
Snow, at
Bartlett, Texas. Hugh
Lee Smyer, at one time engineer on the Katy at this point, but now of North Texas,
is here visiting old friends. Mr.
And Mrs. J. M. Perry went to La Grange last Saturday to attend the funeral of
their grandson,
Selden Perry Maxwell. Miss
Della Boehm, sister of Mrs. Benno Hoppe, is here taking lessons in vocal and instrumental
music. If the
citizens of Smithville do not "get rich quick" it will be because they
are slow to take advantage of the many alluring prospects held out to them by
solicitors for schemes of all kinds. A.C.
Rice of Mt. Sterling, KY, is here on a visit to Mr. And Mrs. M. S. Hudnall,
Mr. Rice
brought along a sample of Old Kentucky tobacco, which was a treat to some of the
Old Ken Tucks. The
"norther" now rampaging around these diggings has put several hydrants
out of commission. It also put Walter
Moore's gasoline engine, at the gravel bank, out of service, the cylinder
froze and burst. The
Progressive Club gave a dance Wednesday evening, that was well attended and
at which
every one had a good time, although the 'norther' made nome going in "the
wee, small hours a cold deal." A team
belonging to Moore Bros, Livery Stable ran away from in front of the Jackson house,
Thursday afternoon and dashed into the front of the stable, breaking a window
and wrecking the vehicle. Although
the boy who was driving the team was in the hack he escaped uninjured. Dr. Adams
reported a suspicious case in the Negro section of town Thursday and Dr. Guy
Jones was sent to investigate but the case was not sufficiently developed to
show if it was small pox. The patient was promptly isolated and no chance will
be taken. Mr. L.
R. Taber, who has been spending a few days with his parents, Mr. And Mrs. A.
R. Taber
returned from a short trip to... ------------ March
1910 Smithville Times Rev.
A. M. Lumpkin lectured at the M. M. E. Church Wednesday night on
"Strange Sights
in Foreign Lands." The gentleman wore the different costumes of the foreign
lands and spoke most entertainingly; There was a good attendance. Mr.
Virg Croft, aged 90 years, died at his home near Winchester, Wednesday
morning at 4
o'clock and was buried in Winchester cemetery at 5 pm. Deceased was one of
the wealthy and prominent
men of that vicinity. Hon
Roger Byrne is in receipt of information to the effect that a strong company has
been formed in Chicago to build the Aransas Pass-Smithville railroad. So, it seems
that our new railroad proposition
is not dead, yet. Wm. K.
Smith, aged 88 years, a confederate veteran and one of the pioneer veteran
and one of
the pioneer citizens of this county, died Wednesday morning at the home of his
son-in-law, Contable W. C. Walker, of this Hills Prairie, neighborhood, and
was buried in the Oliver Hill Cemetery. Mrs.
Walker is his only surviving child. Marshal
Carmichael arrested Henry Cephus, colored, Tuesday, wanted at Waelder.
Contable Jeff Tomlinson came over Wednesday and
got him. Mr. Tomlinson serves under the oldest justice of the piece in Texas,
Justice Zeke Walker, age 86, who has filled this office so long that the "memory
of man runneth not to the contrary" as the lawyers say. Mr. Tomlinson
has been constable for 14 years. ---------- July
23, 1913 Bastrop Advertiser PURLEY
PERSONAL Dr.
and Mrs. J. H. Combs, of San Marcos, are visiting their son, Dr. H. B. Combs
and wife. Messrs
W. B. Bryant and Will Schanhals, of the West Side, were visitors in Bastrop
this week. Mrs.
A. J. Reynolds, of Temple, is spending the week in Bastrop. Mr.
And Mrs. W. E. Maynard are spending the week in Galveston. Mrs.
L. M. Hood and daughter, Miss Myrtle, were Elgin visitors this week. Mrs.
J. P. Fowler has returned from a visit to Lometa. Mrs.
T. J. Trigg returned the past week from a several weeks visit to relatives at Haskell. Mrs.
Joe Jung is visiting her sons, George W. and Joe F. Jung at Galveston. The
clever Gus Jung was in town from Red Rock this week. Miss
Annie Prause left this week on a visit to Waco, and will be with Pearcy & Booth
in dressmaking department August 15th. Messrs.
G. W. Davis, Earnest Hasler, C. P. Luckett, O. B. Johnson, Lee D. Olive and Robert
Davis were auto visitors to Austin this week. Mrs.
Frank Prokop and son, Merl Arnold, are expected home from a visit to Fort Worth,
today, Friday. Mrs.
S. J. C. Higgins is visiting in Galveston this week. Mr. H.
G. Haynie, of Dallas, was a Bastrop visitor during the past week. Miss
Ella Duval, of Hubbard City, is visiting at the home of Mr. And Mrs. W. T. Higgins,
Sr. Mrs.
W. J. Schewe is visiting friends at Granger this week. Mr and
Mrs J. T. Kellum, of Taylor, were guests of Bastrop relatives since last
issue. Mrs.
C. Gels, of Denison, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. A. L. Hoppe. Miss
Olivia Schuelke, of Denison, is visiting her cousin, Miss Lillian Hoppe. Mrs.
Mollie Porter and Miss Marguerite Staack are visiting in Taylor. Miss
Bertha Staack spent Sunday in Taylor. Mrs.
J. W. Pledger and baby girl and little Miss Ruth Craft have returned from a
visit to
Brownwood. Mrs.
A. G. Bean, with her little daughter, little Miss Ruth Johnson of Giddings,
are welcome
guests of her many Bastrop relatives and friends. Mrs.
J. H. Comer, of Jarrell, is visiting Mr. And Mrs. Hartford Jenkins and Mrs.
S. L. Brannon. Mr.
Ross Ruthland, of Bartlett, is in town for a few days. Miss
Leray Alexander, of Bastrop, is visiting friends in Georgetown. Louis
Eilers, Jr, of San Antonio, is guest of Worth Burleson and other Bastrop friends. It is
matter of sincere regret of many friends to know that Mrs. Powell Perkins and sweet
little daughter, Ruth, are both quite sick, and all unite in wishing for them a
speedy recovery. Miss
Ivor Humphreys resumed studies in the Bastrop Normal Monday morning. His
many friends rejoice to know that Master Ralph Price is up and well after a recent
attack of sickness. Miss
Myrtle Pledger is home from a visit to Manor. Mr.
And Mrs. B. Pledger, of Manor, visited Mr. And Mrs. J. W. Pledger this week
enroute to
Galveston in their car. Mrs.
Gus Wallace and children and Mrs. H. N. Bell and son, Master Henry, left Thursday
on a visit to San Angelo. Mr.
And Mrs. Alf Jung left for Galveston Thursday. Mrs.
J. R. Carpenter and children, of Austin, are visiting their parents, Mr. And
Mrs. S. W.
Wood. Ride
comfortable and look pleasant in one of our John Deere Buggies, Elzner Merc. Co. Just
received big line of Men and Boys Saddles, Bridles and Blankets. Get our
prices before
you buy. Rabb & McCollum. The
Fort Smith Wagon is guaranteed wagon. Elzner Merc. Co. Mr. K.
M. Trigg made the homecoming of his wife and daughter, Miss Annie Mae, an exceedingly
pleasant one, by having two valuable presents awaiting their arrival;
A fine new auto, seven passenger Caddilac and a magnificent piano, a Baby
Grande. Two
cars of Wagons. For sale by Elzner Mercantile
Co. At the
pleasant party given by Miss Luella Craft to her friends Friday evening last, Price
O. Jenkins gave his friends the first opportunity of hearing him sing since
his season's tour in south western states and it caused them to understand
more fully the most excellent write ups of the ovations he received.
All present were enthusiastic in
complimentary expressions. Sick
room Sundries at New Drug Store. Buy
your Cotton Sacking from J. M. Holt & Co, 12 1-2cent per yard. Eat
cream with the ladies Friday of next week. M.K.&T.
Special Rates Cincinnati,
Ohio, Grand Lodge Loyal Order of Moose, July 28 to August 1. Rate $35.45 Dallas,
Texas, State Convention Knights and Ladies of Honor, August 11 to 14. Rate $7.50
Fort Worth, Meeting of the County Officials Association, August 7 to 9. Rate
$7.10 Fort
Worth, District Couference and Epworth League Conventions and West Texas Conference
of M. E. Church, Aug 5 to 10. Rate &7.85 Corpus
Christi, Encampment State Epworth League, Aug. 4th and 5th, final limit Aug
20. Fare
$8.35. Lampasas, Baptist Encampment, selling dates July 29 and 30 final limit
Aug. 30, fare $5.35
Galveston. Cotton
Carnival, tickets sell daily, July 23 to ..... PICTURE
OF CHIEF IRON TAIL (Sioux Indian) whose profile appears on the nickel, with
101 Ranch
Real Wild West, in Bastrop Thursday October 23rd. 11/1913
Bastrop Advertiser E. J.
Smith, Practical, Watchmaker, Jeweler, Optician. Eyes carefully tested and glasses
fitted. Work guaranteed. Located at the "Palace" Special. "In
the Bishop's Carriage' at the Quality Theatre Monday night, Nov. 17th. You
should see it. "The
Soul Kiss" a musical comedy at the Arion Opera House, Wednesday, Nov. 19th. For
Sale One Oxford Phonograph, with 75 records, for $40.00 - Gus Keil Just
Arrived, Roll Top Desks and Office Chairs. Rabb
& McCollum Store
to Close. Our store will be closed Thursday, Nov. 27th, for the entire day.
J. M. Holt & Co. Do not
buy that Cooking Stove until you see a "Jewel" at The Home Hardware Company. A. T.
Morris added several new rigs to his already well equipped livery this week. Bring
your Prescriptions to S. L. Brannon. For
Sale - One
Champion Riding Planter, used just one year, will sell real cheap, come and
see for yourself. Gus Keil. Big
shipment to Mattings. Rabb McCollum. Work
has progressed rapidly this week in putting in the concrete gutters on three blocks
of Main street and when completed we will doubtless have one of the best thoroughfares
of any little city in the state. The
pretty home of Mr. And Mrs. W. A. Hasler on Chestnut street is nearing completion,
and workmen are busily engaged in the erection of the handsome two story
residence of Mr. And Mrs. J. C. Orgain on North Pecan street. The
finest motor car in the county a "Winton Six" has just been
received by Mr.
W. A. McCord. For beauty of color
and gracefulness of lines this car is certainly a premier in the motor car
line. The car was delivered by Mr. Gunsalus,
the traveling representative of The Winton Motor Car Co, of Cleveland,
Ohio, through the local agents, The Home Hardware Co. Look for it on our
streets, for you will not be able to hear it. See
the Home Hardware Company for Keen Kutter and Blue Grass Axes which are
guaranteed. Bastrop
is very prosperous this year than at any time within the history of the old town.
Our banks show by their heavy deposits the excellent condition of our people
financially, while the increased trade received by Bastrop merchants, as well
as all other lines of business, proves beyond doubt that our little city is on
the map as the best trading point in this section. Mr.
John Allen was in the city from the West Side, Wednesday. On the road from
town to
Nash.. Mr.
Eugene F. Brieger and the formerly Miss Nell Chambliss of Fresno, Cal, are visiting
relatives in Bastrop. It has been
ten years since Eugene left Bastrop and there are many changes in the old town.
Advertiser wishes for the newly wed
couple health, happiness and prosperity through life. Mrs.
Shelton Adrian, of Austin is visiting her parents, Mr. And Mrs. Rector. By Eva
Hill Lesueur Karling Looking
back into the past we sometimes thrill to the sublime sactrifices and
purposes of
lives that perhaps at the time seem ordinary and common place. Look back with
me now for a little while to a
faraway time when Hills Prairie lay in primeval beauty passing luxuriously from
season to season, from year to year. To the
east the Colorado wound its swift southward course. Cedar Creek with it's
tributaries of Sandy, Walnut
and the Spring Branch, fertilized and refreshed the land. Cool springs
bubbled up here and there, furnishing
pure, clear water for all its wild inhabitants. Herds of buffalo and deer
drank unafraid.
Flocks of wild turkey roamed through
its under growth. Droves of wild
mustang led by a wary leader grazed upon its abundant pasture. Wild bees
stores their nectar in the cavities
of trees and rocks. Wild pigeons,
quails and doves were here for there where none here then who called it
sport to kill God's creatures. There were
many native fruits, vegetables and nuts. And
just as wild and free as any of these roamed the Red Man through its fertile
bounds. The
Tonkaway tribe of Indians claimed this as their own Magnificent specimens of physical
brawn and build, they held it through many hard fought battles with other
tribes, for this section was coveted by Cherokees, Chickasaws, comanches, Karankoways
and others. They all made pilgrimages
here at intervals. From the plentiful
supply of flint rock which lay along the creeks and river they prepared
for warfare and hunting by making arrow heads; hickory and bois d'arc supplied
wood for their bows, the skins of deer, beaver, fox, bear, squirrel, and
buffalo furnished their robes and bedding. In
this way the centuries passed. There
are still many evidences of their camps to be found and many arrow heads
from the tiniest to the largest have gone from here to museums, schools and
colleges. Then
the white men came - saw its beauty and desirability and adventurous and courageous
ones staid and built their log cabins on land allotted to them by the
Mexican Government. The first we have
any knowledge of who built their stronghold in this prairie were Elisha M. Barton
and Edwards Jenkins. Authorities seem
to differ as to which plowed the first furrows in the valley. Barton's league
of land included the Clif Hubbard
farm. His cabin is where their home
now is. Edward Jenkins built his cabin
near the Spring Branch and with his family cleared a patch for cotton, corn
and potatoes. Two years later in the
spring of 1833, John Gilmer McGehee with his brother Thomas G. McGehee,
prospected through
Texas. They were so enthused with
the beauty and fertility of this section that they returned home and John G.
McGehee organized a colony of 140 Georgians and Alabamians and they started at
once for Mina, reaching San Augustine in October, 1834 and Mina in January, 1835.
Mrs. John G. McGehee was Sarah Hill
before her marriage. When they reached
their destination they at once began to build houses and forts for protection
against Indian depredations. Life
for them was full of interest and excitement. Indian raids became more
frequent and many
times women and children for miles around were housed for days at a time in
the strong
stockade while the men went out to regain their stolen horses and cattle.
Several times they recovered captured
women and children. Thomas B. J.
Hill and Middleton Hill, brothers of Mrs. Sarah Hill McGehee bought land east
of Mina, which was later known as Lower Hills Prairie. After a few months
they returned to
Georgia. Their younger brother, Wylie Hill
was so thoroughly infatuated with life in this new land that he determined to
cast his lot with these other adventurous souls. He bought 2220 acres of land
from Mrs. Sarah
Jenkins, widow of Edward Jenkins. The date of the transaction as
recorded is July 7, 1835, State of Coahuila, Dept. of Brazos, Jurisdiction of
Mina, in the Colony of Stephen F. Austin. Then
came the Massacre of Goliad and the Fall of the Alamo. Quoting from early
settlers written
by the Hon. George T. McGehee of San Marcos. "The
storm was gathering in the land of the Montezumas. The mutterings could be
heard; the Butcher,
Santa Anna was marshalling his hosts to sweep these brave pioneers from the face
of Texas soil. His emissaries were among
the Indians, exciting them to plunder and murder. Every full moon witnessed
their forays
in the valleys of the Colorado, Brazos and Guadalupe. Early in 1836 it was
known that
the armies of Mexico were on their march to the Texas border. Organizations
were formed and
hastened to meet them. John T. McGehee had been severely wounded
in the battle of Concepcion in October 1835, and had not fully recovered.
He was the only mature man left
in Mina. Wild consternation seized the
people who had concentrated in the strong stockade. Not able to go out to meet
the invaders, John McGehee bent all his energies to getting what transportation
there was in shape to move these helpless women and children to a
place of safety. With only a few hours
to prepare and pack what few belongings they could take with them, the
memorable "Runaway
Scrape commenced. Through rain,
mud and cold he hurried these panic stricken people east. Couriers rushed
along the road
each day with information that the Mexicans were in hot pursuit. Despair and
fright seized
the people, but the cool head and the indomitable energy of this man who had
induced so
many of these people to cast their lot in this distant land, triumphed, and
the whole caravan
reached the Trinity River where they were in comparative safety." Thomas G.
McGehee (whose wife was Minerva Hunt, of the family for whom Huntsville, Alabama,
was named, joined Capt. Jesse Billingsley's company and was put in charge
of a company near where New Braunfels now is. It was his duty to notify the
settlers of
approaching danger. When the sound of the first cannon came booming over the
hills, he sent
couriers to warn them. Then he and other companies were ordered... ...he sent
couriers to
warn them. Then he and other companies were ordered to concentrate on the
Brazos, so asa to
form as large a defensive force as possible. Mrs. Minerva Hunt McGehee in
relating her
experience of the "Runaway Scrape" said: "One
evening in camp, I was weary and heartsick - my husband perhaps in mortal danger,
far from home, most of our provisions and all of our money gone - I felt
that only death or worse than death, capture by the hated Comanches, awaited
me. As I sat thus with my two helpless infants and a slave, apart from the
other campers,
I heard horses' hoofs, and looking up saw a splendid specimen of young
manhood approaching.
He stopped as he reached me and
asked if I were the wife of Thomas G. McGehee. On hearing that I was he
sprang from his
horse, saying that his name was Wylie Hill, a cousin, and he was hurrying to
join Sam Houstons
army. This meeting and his kind, encouraging words were as the balm of Golead
to my heart. He
divided his purse with me and hastened on." (In
the battle of San Jacinto a bullet passed through his cap) Gen. John R.
Baylor and Gen.
Buck Hardeman, who were with him at San Jacinto, said of him in after years, that
no braver soldier ever went into battle. When the
news of the capture of Santa Anna reached those refugees on the Trinity, we can
imagine what shouts of thanksgiving and praise ascended from their camps and
with what joy they turned their faces homeward. But many found their homes
and possessions
destroyed. And life in this wilderness had to be started almost anew. Miss
Ann Jenkins of Bastrop says that she remembers hearing her father, John Jenkins,
say that they all lived for a time on peas left in the pea patch of Mr.
And Mrs. McGehee. In the
winter of 1836 Wylie Hill returned to Georgia and on February 10, 1837,
married his
sweetheart, Evaline Hubbard, the eldest daughter of the Hon. Robert Hubbard of
Lexington, a member of the Georgia Legislature and former Captain of Militia in
that state. With a good number of slaves given them by both his and her families,
they embarked for far away Texas on Feb. 16, 1837, he just 21 and she 19. A
gentle slip of a girl, she had known
no hardships or privation, I marvel when I consider what courage and love must
have animated her heart. Some
writers and sculptors have depicted the pioneer Texas women as hardy, brawny, and
rough. There were some of this type of course. But the pioneer women mentioned
here where in this, or any other period could there be found more refined,
cultured women, higher types of Christian womanhood than the Hill, McGehee,
Hubbard, Pope, and Caldwell women, Dr .Thrall, the historian says of Mrs.
T. B. J. Hill, Mrs. Wiley Hill, Mrs. Middleton Hill and Mrs. John Caldwell,
"They are elect ladies." It
took them nine days to cross the gulf from New Orleans, La., to Columbia, Texas.
There the entire company remained
in camp two months, waiting for water courses to subside. Then the slow,
toilsome trip
by ox team to Mina, and it was the middle of May before they reached the home
of Mr. Hill's sister,
Mrs. McGehee at Hills Prairie. How
foreign was life for her in this new land and how she must have longed
for her home in Georgia! But building and planning absorbed the days and the
country threw its glamour over her, too, for in spite of anxious days and sometimes
nights of terror, she wrote glowing accounts of the country to her relatives.
She was a wonderful manager. Among the slaves given her by Mr.
Hill's mother was a little six year old girl, with the admonition that she was to
be brought up in the house and trained as a maid and seamstress and Mary Ann
did credit to her old mistress's foresight and interest and to her young mistress's
instruction. She was taken back
to Georgia on several trips during the years and attained a dignity and poise
that was remarkable. She lived to a good old age, will be remembers by many
Mrs. Hill
told of a time when all alone except for some of her slaves and her two year
old daughter,
the frightened Negroes ran in with the startling information that Indians
were coming.
She was sure they were friendly Indians
but they were Indians! And so they barred the doors and window shutters,
but she sent a Negro through the brush at the back of the house for Mr.
Jesse Holderman, and then to calm the frightened Negroes she sat down and took
up her sewing. One Indian called to her asking for whisky. She told him she
had none. He said, "Maybe you lie."
Just at this time Mr. Holderman galloped up with his gun and told them
to "vamoose" which they did. When
they were gone it was discovered that they had taken every bright colored
garment from the clothes line in the yard and she found that in her excitement
instead of sewing, she had ripped out every hand run tuck she had so carefully
put in her little daughter's dress. (This
Mr. Holderman had married Miss Harriet Creaft and lived where the Cliff
Hubbard home
now is. Mrs. Holderman after her husband's death married Mr. Campbell Taylor
and was the mother of Mrs. R. B. Wilkes and grandmother of T. P. Haynie and
Mrs. Lizzie Owens) (In
1838 John G. McGehee died in the prime of a most useful manhood) The
first religious services held in Hills Prairie were those by Rev. John
Haynie, Dr.
Thrall and Dr. Ruter in the Hill and McGehee homes. In the spring of 1835 a
Methodist church
was organized in Mina. Mrs. Sarah Hill McGehee
and Mrs. Minerva Hunt McGehee were charter members. In 1842 Bishop Morris drove
up to the
Hill home bringing with him Rev. Josiah Whipple, a young minister sent from
Illinois to
Texas as a missionary. Bishop Morris left
him with this family and told him one of the big trees which surrounded the
house would make a fine place for him to study. He must have employed his
time well, for no man
who has come after
him has exceeded him in wisdom and knowledge and zeal. When he was an old man
I heard people
lament that his knowledge would have to die with him. A
wonderful man, gentle and courtly, full of wisdom in the service of his
Master, walking unharmed where a less consecrated man would have been ensnared.
He traveled the Austin Circuit
two years, swimming swollen streams through Indian infested country, enduring
hardships and privations with undaunted spirit. "He was a great gospel
preacher and it was
said that when he prayed the very portals of Heaven seemed to open up."
In 1845 he married Mrs. Sarah McGehee. Perhaps there was never a more
congenial couple, but
only five years of companionship were allowed them as she died in 1850. Her
grave was made
under the big tree where he had loved so much to mediate and study - the
first grave in the
"yard of the dead" by the Hill homestead. In
1853 their only child Wilber, was drowned in the Colorado River at Camp
Ground Ford and was laid by the side of his mother. The Texas Annual
Conference was in session at the
time in Bastrop and it adjourned and attended the funeral in a body. Bishop
Paine conducted the service. (These items I take from Thrall's History of
Methodism and Phelan's History of Methodism). Phelan's History gives an
account of the dedication
of the new church in Bastrop in 1851. "Quiet and
unobserved in the congregation sat the man to whom more than to any other perhaps
than to all others - we are indebted for this beautiful temple, I mean our
energetic and talented Elder Whipple." He asked to take no part in the
public service as his
beloved wife had passed away a short time before. She
had willed him a large part of her land holdings and he ever used his
means and talents for the good of humanity. He occupied every important
pulpit in the Conference,
was presiding elder for many years, was elected to General Conference many
times and
died at his home at Austin when eighty years of age. An old faded note
written by him in 1846
to Mr. And Mrs. Wylie Hill gives them many expressions of thanks and love for
all they
and their home had meant to him through the years. In
1845 and
addition was built to the log cabin of the Wylie Hill home of real lumber, sealed
and painted, and Mrs. Hill said that she was proud of that addition than she
was of the big house which was built in 1856 and 1857. There are many
interesting innocents
connected with the building of this old colonial home. Mr. Adolf Jung who
came to
Bastrop in 1855 was the brick mason who built the four tall chimneys at each end of
the house with fireplaces upstairs and down. While he was at work on these
chimneys his
twin boys, Alf and Gus, were born. In 1885 one of the chimneys
was repaired by those twins, and Mr. Gus Jung said that they tried to do it
as nearly like their father's work as possible. The bricks for these chimneys
were burnt
on the place. Mr. Hancke, of Lockhart, who was born in Bastrop,
said his father with Mr. George Orts and others were at work for eighteen
months on the house. Every piece
of lumber and timber put into the house was inspected and hand dressed.
One cabinet maker made all the blinds,
stair railing, doors, mantles and window frames. He afterwards became a great
Methodist preacher and editor o the New Orleans Advocate. Between
1845 and 1850 Mrs. Hill's mother, Mrs. Nancy Hubbard, and her three brothers, Miller,
Gus and Robert, and her sister, Damarius, who later married John W. Pope
of Austin, came to Texas and settled at Hills Prairie. With the coming of
these and other
families, such
as Major A. W. Moore, Mr. R. J. Price, Marsh and Lance Trigg, H. K. McDonald,
the neighborhood developed into a cultured and aristocratic community,
known far and wide for its hospitality, wealth and refinement - a reputation
that endured for many years after the close of the civil war. In
1845 Texas
came into the Union and everything was bright and prosperous. The small
patches of corn and cotton had spread
to wide acres of beautiful cultivated fields, and such yields as they produced!
For the land had been storing for
ages the elements for their production. No
weeds were allowed to grow even in the fence corners, for slaves big and
little, were kept busy and while they worked their voices floated over the fields
in song and chants. In 1843 Mr. Hill
installed the first cotton gin. The
best school advantages obtainable were given the children. First among the
outstanding teachers
was Prof. Morgan and woe to the child who did not know how to spell every
word in the
"blue back speller.", multiplication tables and the capitals of the
states. The school house was built near
the Spring Branch and children came from miles around. Tom Anderson Hill, son
of T. B. J.
Hill, and Jim Oliver, nephew stayed in the home of Mr. Wylie Hill and
attended this school.
Prof. Wise was one of the teachers highly spoken of. Mary
Parks Hill, the eldest daughter, graduated from Georgia Female College at Madison,
GA., in 1855. She returned to Texas
with her sister Sallie who had also attended college in Penfield. In 1856
Mary Parks Hill
was married to Dr. John
Watson of South Caroling, whom she had met while in college. The "Old
South" was now in its
heyday. Parties, dinners, infairs, was the custom. Relatives and friends came
from miles
and there was always room for every one. In 1859 Sallie Hill was married to W.
C. Powell from Holly Springs, Miss. Mr. Hill gave these daughters large farms
and slaves
as bridal presents, besides
mules, horses, cows, etc. How little did they dream that the dark days of
strife were drawing near and nearer and that these glamorous and prosperous times
were to be only memory! Dr.
and Mrs. Watson's children were Eva, L. W., and Robert Watson; Mr. And Mrs.
Powell had
but the one daughter, Sallie, who married Mr. W. A. McCord. RobertTheus
Hill, eldest son was a student of the Bastrop Military Institute and of Rutersville
College. When the first call was sounded for the southern soldiers, he
enlisted at the
age of 20 years in Co.
D. Terry's Texas Rangers, and was Second Sergeant. Bob Hill as he was called,
was captured
in battle and was exchanged. The captured again
and confined in the prison of Rock Hill, Ill. There he suffered every
discomfort of cold
and hunger that can be imagined. After the war was over and the
other men returned home he was given up as dead by all but his mother. She
said, "No, Bobby
is not dead, I feel that he is alive." Then a rumor
reached them that he was not dead. Mr.
Wylie Hill rode up to the John Caldwell home to tell his son't sweetheart,
Lou Caldwell, what they had heard, for he knew that her heart was aching
over her lover's absence. But the
months lengthened into almost a year and he had not returned. One day the family
were at dinner and Mrs. Hill jumped up suddenly from the table exclaiming,
"Bobby has come!" And it was so. Her mother heart and ears had
heard his quick
step on the walk before anyone else had heard anything. He had been released
from prison,
sick and weak,
and with no money and it had taken him months to make his way home. He and Lou
Caldwell were married in October 1865. He was
a steward of the Methodist Church in Austin for many years. A farmer and
stock man on a
large scale. He died in 1896, his wife in 1924. Their children are Charles W.
Hill of Austin,
who married Miss Tinnie Burleson, Walter Hubbard Hill of Dallas and Mrs.
Annie Hill Snyder and Dr. John C. Hill, deceased. The second
son of Mr. And Mrs. Wylie Hill was Augustus Middleton Hill. When the war broke
out he was only 14 years of age. He
continued his studies for two years in the Bastrop Military Academy.
When the call was so urgent he enlisted
at the age of 16 years in Walker's Division, De Bray's Regiment, and was
later transferred to Terry's Texas Rangers. In the battles of Mansfield and
Pleasant Hill
he had two horses shot
under him and he was sent with other wounded soldiers to the plantation home
of John Holmes of De Soto Parish La., to recuperate. There he found a welcome
indeed, for
the Holmes, Hill, and Pope families were related. There
one of the war time romances had its beginning. He fell in love with the
eldest daughter,
Sarah Elizabeth Holmes. After the war was
over, through six busy years, they kept up a correspondence, while he attended
Baylor University at Waco, the University of Virginia and took his medical
degree at the University of New York, serving a few months as interne in
Belview Hospital. She was a student at
Mansfield College when the war came on. The school was closed and used as a hospital
after the Battle of Mansfield. After
the war was over and the school was opened again, she returned to Manasfield,
graduating there with honors. On
1870, October 27th., they were married in her father's home amid festivities
to which were invited all the neighbors near and far, including also
the employees of his lumber mills and store. A sumptuous banquet was served
to all. From
Shreveport they sailed down the Red River and the Mississippi
to New Orleans on their wedding journey to Texas. From New Orleans to
Galveston on the
Gulf and
from Galveston to Bastrop by rail and stage coach. After a three months visit
to Dr. Hill's parents
they returned to Louisiana and settled at Keichei where they lived two years.
In 1873, her father having passed
away, they returned to Texas and resided at Hill's Prairie until the spring
of 1908. Dr. "Gus" Hill
endeared himself to hundreds of families scattered through the sparsely settled
communities and isolated settlements, riding horseback in response to calls
of sick and wounded at all hours of the day and night and in all kinds of weather,
often swimming the swollen streams, carrying in his saddlebags not only
the instruments with which to perform every variety of emergency operation, but
also the medicines with which to fill his own prescriptions - for drug stores
in those days were few and service had not so much as been born far between
and modern delivery in anyone's imagination. "Much obliged to you,
'Doc', until you are
better paid," was the usual reward for services, though this was
frequently supplemented
by a load of wood, of which there was abundance on every hand. Between
Mrs. Hill and Dr. Hill's mother, who made her home with them until her death
in 1894,
a deep and tender attachment grew. Into
this home seven children were born. In the midst of her household duties Mrs.
Hill found the
time to edit "Home Tidings", the official organ of the Texas
conference Woman's
Missionary Society, to edit also special columns in two other periodicals,
and to contribute hundreds of articles on woman's suffrage, rehabilitation
of prisoners, prohibition of the liquor traffic and of the white slave
trade, and other phases of social reform. At the age of eighty-nine, Mrs.
Hill resides in
Bastrop and is greatly loved by both old and young. Of the
seven children born to Dr. and Mrs. Hill, only two survived the ravages of those
malignant forms of malaria with which the low lands along our rivers and creeks
were then infested. On
August fifth, 1900, I was married to Charles N. LeSueur. In 1908 he died. Our
son, Tylie Hill
LeSueur was married in July 1932 to Miss Mabel Dawson,
daughter of Mr. And Mrs. W. B. Dawson of Bastrop, and they reside in
Bastrop. In 1915 I became Mrs. David Karling.
My brother, Benjamin Ogilvie Hill,
became upon his graduation from Southwestern University in 1907 a missionary
under the General Board of the Methodist Eposcopal Church. South, in Cuba,
where he served for twenty-two years, during fifteen years of which he was president
of Pinson College at Comaguey. In
1910 he took as his bride, Miss Ethel Star Ellis, a teacher in the Eliza
Bowman School, at Cienfuegos, one of the mission board's schools for girls,
a daughter of the Rev. H. J. Ellis of Atlanta Georgia. Since their return
from Cuba in
1929, they have
been at the Lydia Patterson Institute, of El Paso, Texas, a school under the
auspices of the Board of Missions for the training of young ministers. And other
Christian workers, where my brother is dean of the department of Theology.
Their two daughters, Harriet and Sarah Elizabeth, are respectively Mrs.
James P Turner and Mrs. Emmett Reese, both of El Paso. OLD
FAMILIES OF HILL'S PRAIRIE Eva H.
L. Karling (In
another section of this paper there appears a complete history of Hill's Prairie;
the following is a supplement to this story, dealing principally with the
more outstanding settlers of Hills Prairie in the pioneer days fome of the descendants
of whom still reside there.) I
often wonder if there is as much interesting history in other communities as
there has
been enacted at Hill's Prairie. It is impossible in the brief time and space
to do ought but touch it in high places. During
the years of 1839-40, Mr. Wylie Hill's two brothers, Middleton, and Thos. B.
J. Hill
returned to Texas to live, and settled in what became known as Lower Hill's
Prairie. There were other relatives
and connections, as the Olivers, McGehees, etc., and a splendid community
was established. Mrs. Hill's three
brothers settled in Hills Prairie. When
Mr. Miller Hubbard's wife, who was a Beavers, sister of Mrs. Adolf Erhard, died,
he married Miss Mattie Price, a sister of Bob Price. His eldest son, Bennett,
and his daughter, Mollie,
who married Judge B. G. Neighbors of San Marcos, received good school advantages
and were splendid people. Mr. A.
M. Gus ubbard had four lovely daughters, and two sons. Anna, the eldest
daughter, was the
second wife
of Maj. A. W. Moore. She only lived
two years after their marriage, leaving an infant, Woddie Moore, who grew to
manhood, and died in Houston in 1906. The
next daughter was Emma, who married B. F. Wamble and lived at Waco many
years until she passed away. Lizzie
was the next, known for her beauty and gentle ways. She married E. P.
Robinson of Round
Rock, and
after his death, was married to W. Y. Penn of Georgetown. She is also dead.
Martha, the youngest
daughter, died when about 20 years of age, leaving
two heart broken lovers. I do not
know the after life of one, but the other lived and died a bachelor, making no
secret of the fact that his heart was buried with Martha Hubbard. The eldest
son was Robert.
He died in Forth Worth several years ago. Cliff Hubbard lives in the old home
his father
established in 1845. This house is one
of the historic places of the neighborhood. In the Colorado River overflow of
1869, the
flood waters entered every
house in the valley except the Wylie Hill and the Woods Moore homes. Into the
Hubbard home
it came, and climbed nearly
six feet on the walls. After the overflow,
Mr. Gus Hubbard came to Bastrop and bought a clock, which he put on the
high mantle. During the overflow in 1913, the flood waters again entered the
doors of the old house and climbed the high mantle and stopped the clock at 2:20
am, showing the family at what hour the water touched its pendulum. Into this
home Clif Hubbard brought his bride, Miss Agnes Tuttle of Flatoino in 1883.
Their living children are Clarence
Hubbard, who is at present in Kerrville for his health, which was impared
during the World War, and Miss Lizzie, who keeps the home for her father,
who is now nearing his eightieth year. Harold
Hubbard, whose tragic death just before Christmas left a widow and
daughter, Virginia Ray. Mildred is Mrs.
Oscar Jenkins, and has one son, Elbert. Mr.
Robert W. Hubbard's wife died in 1872, leaving him with three children,
the youngest an infant. His widowed sister, Mrs. Cynthis Lawrence, came
from Penfield, GA., to help him care for his family. She will be remembered
as a pretty old
lady with
beautiful, natural wavy hair. She never
ceased to talk of Penfield, and it gave rise to the saying of the younger members
of the family that they could go to Penfield and know half the people they
met, and find their way around, from hearing her tell of it all. Mr.
Hubbard's oldest daughter,
Mary, after attending
school in Bastrop spent two years at Weslyn Female College in Staunton,
Virginia, and married Khleber Trigg, living in Hill's Prairie a good many
years. Col.
Thomas C.
Moore, brother of Judge Dyer Moore, came during the first part of the fifties
with his family, and lived for several years in the Prairie, moving to Bastrop
and later to West Point. In 1851,
Major A. Woods Moore moved there and lived until his death in 1888. He served
the county
in the Senate for several
terms. His children, were Worth Moore,
who was for many years a business man in Galveston. Maj. Moore's second son
was Thomas
K. Moore, who married Miss Olivia Grady of Hill's Prairie in 1871. Their
children are Mrs.
Forrest Reed and Mrs. Mary Long of San Antonio, Mrs. Sigur Jordan of San
Marcos, and Jim Moore
of Gonzales. Dan Moore, the second son, is
dead, leaving a widow and four grown children all living elsewhere. James
Moore died in Galveston
in 1905. Mr.
Marsh Trigg died in 1888. His children were
Mrs. Sue Green and Mrs. Chester Erhard, Mr. Jones Trigg and Mr. Khleber Trigg. Mr.
And Mrs. R. J. Price made a home in Hill's Prairie which for a number of
years was one of
the ideal homes of the community. Mr.
Price was a member of the Legislature for two terms and was a man of high
principle, a steward in the Methodist church. His children were Mr. Bobbie
Urice, who married Miss Bettie Trigg;
Tom Price, who died while a student at A & M College; Joe, who was Judge
J. B. Price and was District Judge for several terms; Charlie Price, died in
1912; David Price was a merchant in Houston for a good many years; Worth Price
of Waco married Miss Mary Leigh Burleson of San Saba; and Col. Wright Price, of the
United States Navy. Maj.
Moore's daughters were Beatrice, who married Leigh Burleson of San Saba, and Abbie,
who married P. J. Gill. These have
all passed away. Dr.
John Watson died a few years after the close of the war between the states.
His widow with her three childrenmade
their home with her father, Wylie Hill. The daughter, Eva S. Watson, after
attending Miss McKay's School in
Bastrop, spent three years in Virginia at school. She afterwards studied art
in New York and Chicago, and became one of
the foremost artists of the state. She
married Maj. P. M. Woodall of Taylor. They have both passed away. L. W.
Watson and Robert Watson received their education in Bastorp, Sweet
Home and A & M College, Robert Watson married Miss Vollie Owens and after
living many years in Hill's Prairie, moved to Bastrop four years ago. Mr. H.
K. McDonald came from Mississippi to Texas. He
owned the Ferry Boat across the river for a few years while living in Bastrop.
He sold it to Sidney Green. It was he who donated the land for the Christian
Church in Bastrop. He moved to Hill's Prairie where he bought a large farm
and lived until his death in the nineties. His wife was a Gill. Their
sons were Tom, who married Miss Ella Petty, daughter of Capt. Petty
who was killed in the Battle of Plesant Hill; S. H. who, when he was a little
fellow, named himself Sam Houston. One day he was on his father's ferry boat
and General Sam Houston was crossing, and asked his name. When told, he gave
him a big silver dollar.
Hugh McDonald another son, died in
Shreveport, LA., in 1930. In
1880 Miss Ida Holmes came out from Shrevesport, La., to visit her sister,
Mrs. A. M. Hill.
She went back home after two years stay, engaged to Sam McDonald. One
year later he went ther efor her, and they were married. They lived for about
16 years in
Hill's Prairie,
adding much to the community in church, school and social life. They then
moved to Austin.
They had six fine daughters, Mr. And Mrs. McDonald
are both dead. After Mr.
Lance Trigg's death, his wife married Mr. Bill Young. Mr. Young was one of
the pillars of the Baptist
Church in Hill's Prairie. He and
his wife are both dead. Their living son is John Young, who lives in the old
home. His wife was Anna Pierce, a daughter
of John Pierce, who was a gallant Confederate soldier. Capt.
Jack J. Moncure and Mr. Walter Norment, though not living actually in the neighborhood,
sent their children to school and their families attended church in
Hill's Prairie. Capt.
Dan Grady was a Captain in the Mexican War of 1845. His wife was Miss Sarah
Lester, a niece
of Judge James Lester who represented
the district of Mina in the Council of San Philiipe in 1835. Capt. And Mrs. Grady
had two children: Him, who
died in the service of the Confederacy, and Olivia, who married T. K. Moore in
1871. Capt. And Mrs. Grady made their
home in Hill's Prairie until 1885, when they moved to Bastrop, residing there
until Capt. Grady's death, after which Mrs. Grady lived with her daughter in
Hill's Prairie until her death in 1903. In
1883, the Oldfields came from Mississippi. There
were related to the McDonalds. There
are none in Hill's Prairie now, but they were so ling identified with
the interests of the neighborhood, that a history of the community is not complete
without their names. Mrs. Anna Oldfield
who was always to be found where there was sickness or sorrow, giving comfort
and aid, lives with her son, Malcolm, in Bastrop. Mr.
And Mrs. Jim Craft, with their children, lived for several years in Hill's
Prairie before
coming to Bastorp. Mrs. Craft was
Miss Della Trigg daughter of Mr. And Mrs. Lance Trigg, and a sister of Mrs. Bettie
Price and Mrs. Willie Jenkins. Mrs.
Willie Jenins and her husband, Charlie Jenkins, both are dead. Their son,
Ernest, married
mrs. M. A. Craft's
daughter, Winnie. Leslie Craft and
his mother are residents of Hill's Prairie. Mr. Wallace Craft and his family
live in his father's
old home. In
1897, Mrs. Bettie LeSueur, a sister of W. C. Powell of Bastrop moved to Hills Prairie
from Mississippi with her son, Charles. Tom and Henry LeSueur, two other
sons, had been in Texas several years. They
bought the McDonald farm of 400 acrews. Mrs. LeSueur died in June 1908. Charles
LeSueur died in August of the same year. Henry died in 1915. Tom is still
living. In
1887 the MK&T railroad laid its track and ran the first trains through
the valley.
Jay Gould and other notables visited
and inspected the Prairie during the construction of the road. Dr. A. M. Hill
built a
store near the tract, and
secured the post office and ticket office and R. A. Watson was clerk. T. K. Moore
and P. J Gill built a cotton gin, and several small houses and a blacksmith
shop composed the village. On
Saturdays during the cotton season there were sometimes as high as 200
tickets to Bastrop sold. That was in the Nineties. In 1905,
Joe Taylor of Todedo Ohio, bought the old Moore homestead, repaired and renovated
it, and brought his bride there. In
1910, he sold the place to J. C. Lundell and returned to Ohio. After living
there seven years, Mr. Lundell sold the place to Dave Reed, of Austin, and he
moved to Dallas. The
small store, now owned by Lee Alexander, and the gin is practically all of
the present
Hill's Prairie. There is no ticket office, only a flag station, and very
few passengers from there ride on the train to Bastrop. There is no post
office; the mail
is delivered on a rural route from Bastrop. There
have been other fine families who have resided in the community for short or longer
periods. After the war of the Sixties, and the slaves were freed, many of
them drifted from place to place, and the planters could not depend on them to
finish a crop they had begun. Quite a
number of white familes were brought out from Alabama, and most of these people
afterwards bought small farms in adjo8ining neighborhoods and were good citizens. How
different now are conditions, modes of life and even the appearance of the country
from that of the past, and it brings an ache to the heart when I think of all
the splendid people and the lovely homes which are now only a memory.
And I close with this little poem,
written several years ago. Little
Granmother By Eva
Hill Lesueur Karling Oh! Little
Grandmother - with tender eyes, I
remember your wise and quiet replies To my
childish questions about the sky,- And
earth and heaven - and why folks die! I
remember well all your gentle ways A halo
lingers about those days! And
often in memory I hear you repeat True
maxims to guide my unwary feet. Dear
little Grandmother - so fragile and frail- How
bravely you followed the pioneer... ------ 6/7/1914
Deanville, Texas. Bastrop Advertiser Sunday
morning, 8 o'clock, 1863, this day just fifty-one years ago, we charged over the
breastworks at Milican's Bend, on the Mississippi river, and stormed the enemy
who were mostly Negroes and were in the ditches. We had marched hard nearly
all day and
most of the night Saturday, and rested on our arms a few hours before day
with nothing
for our bed except mother earth and the canopy of Heaven for our roof.
While wrapt in the sweet embrace of
silent repose and dreaming of our loved ones far away in our bright sunny homes
in Texas, and just at the dawn of day we were called to arms by the shrill
note of the bugle and muffled roll of the drum, which meant prepare for battle,
a sound which the ear of every well drilled soldier knew was onward to the
front. We had to cut our way through
a thick hedge of boisdarc which compelled us to condense our forces, and
before we had time to deploy columns and make a charge, the enemy fired upon
us. They were well drilled and fired
by file along the line. It was not
yet good day light and it was a beautiful sight, although alarming to see the
red flashes as they belched forth from the mouths of the muskets and sent their
deadly and withering mistles in our ranks. But alas, poor Negroes, when we
made the charge to death or victory,
and went right over on them in their ditches the contest was of short duration.
Within less than one hour we had
killed seven hundred and fifty Negroes and blood was several inches deep in places.
There were but few that got away,
and those that did were their white pals and they saved their anatomies by
skiddooing to their gunboats. The
only men we lost were killed before we got to the breastworks, but we lost several
brave men, the names of whom I will give, especially the old Bastrop county
boys. This battle was led by the gallant Henry E. McColloch. I was a member
of the 17th TVI. RTP Allen was our Colonel and the immortal Wash Jones our
Lieutenant Colonel. Those killed
were Tom Beavers, Frank Dabney, George Smith, Louis Harris, Tom Beaty; the
wounded, Colonel Allen, O. G. Coulson, Jim Rowlett. The above were all
Bastrop County boys and perhaps
there were others whom I can't call to mind just now. Now I
will tell you who I am. I am the eldest son of Judge Thomas H. Mays, who was among
the first men to settle in Bastrop on the Colorado river, about 35 miles below
the city of Austin. The savage red
man stalked abroad at night and stole horses and killed and scalped any and all
helpless victims who chanced to come in their pathway, and when the howl of the
wolf and the scream of the panther, in connection with the hoot of the owl, sent a
chill of terror to us children as we would huddle closer around mother's knee
for protection. Now if
this don't find its way into the waste basket, I may wright again to the old Advertiser.
If any of the old boys should
see this I would be pleased to hear from any of them. T. F.
Mays ****** 1914
Bastrop Adversiter Mrs. B.
A. Elzner and children and Mrs. O. E. Faubion are visiting at Austin. Mr. H.
J. Eskew was among the visitors in Bastrop Friday. Mrs.
Clara Mayes is here from Santa Fe, New Mexico, visiting her nephew, Mr. T. M. Rector
and family. Mrs. Mayes is the only surviving
member of the Cope family. She is
a daughter of Mr. Samuel C. Cope and a sister of Mr. James B. Cope.
Mrs. Mayes' husband, Mr. Jon W. Mayes,
served in the Mexican war and was amoung the lucky ones who drew a white bean.
A brother of Judge Wm. Eastland was in
the war with Mr. Mayes and drew a black bean at the same time and was shot.
Mr. Mayes was kept in prison for a
period of six months. Mrs. Mayes' son,
Mr. John W. Mayes, resides at Santa Fe, New Mexico, is a prominent attorney
of that city and was recently made a 33rd degree Mason at Washington City.
Mr. Mayes is 74 years of age and a most
interesting concversationist. Best
Just received a carload of Blue Ribbon Flour. Hasler
Bros. Co. -------- The
following is a transcript of a copy of an August 6, 1910 issue of The Bastrop Advertiser
found in a trunk that had belonged to E. Roy Jones. This
copy was yellow and brittle, with parts torn
and unreadable. (Missing) is in place of torn and missing sections or holes. Spelling
errors are noticed in the paper and are left as printed: The
Bastrop Advertiser Office-Bauhof Building,
Main Street Thos.
C. Cain, Editor and Proprietor Entered
at the Bastrop, Texas, Postoffice as Second Class Matter. Established
March 1st, 1853. Vol. 56 Bastrop,
TX, Aug. 6, 1910. Ad: T.
A. Hasler & Co's Dry Goods Store. Ad: E.
Erhard & Son, Druggists Ad: L.
W. Olive & Son (grocers) PROCEEDINGS
OF DEMOCRATIC COUNTY CONVENTION OF BASTROP COUNTY, TEXAS: The
Democratic County convention of Bastrop
County convened at the County Court House, Saturday, July 30th, 1ff10, at 2
o'clock p.m. Judge Paul D. Page, Chairman
of the Evecutive Committee, called the Convention to order. The
Hon. S. L. Staples, of Smithville, was
elected Temporary Chairman, and Van L Taylor, of McDade, Te(missing) (missing)ary.
It was approved and seconded
by the delegates from each precinct elect on of their number to act upon
each of the following Committees: Committee
of Permanent Organization, Credentials and Platform and Resolutions.
The motion was adopted and said
committees having been duly made up, retired and prepared their reports. The
Committee on Permanent Organization made
the folowing report: To Hon. S. L. Staples, Temporary Chairman: Your
Committee on Permanent Organization beg leave
to report that we recommend that the Temporary Organization of the (missing)ation
be made permanent. (Signed) J. L. Wilbarger, Chairman. Attest. J. B.
Watson, Secretary. Upon
motion said report was adopted by the
convention. The
committee on Credentials made the following
report: To Hon. S. L. Staples,
Chairman: Your committee on Credentials hereby beg leave to report that
the following named delegates are entitled to seats on the floor of the convention:
(Here follows the names of the delegates from the different precincts
with the number of votes to which each precinct is entitled which is here
omitted for lack of space.) (Signed) Chas.
Gillespie, Chairman. Upon
motion the said report was adopted by the
convention. The
committee on Platform and Resolutions made
the following report: To Hon. S. L. Staples, chairman of the Democratic County
Convention of Bastrop County, Texas: Your
Committee on Platform and Resolutions
beg leave to submit the following: The
Democrats of Bastrop County, in convention
assembled, extend greetings to fellow Democrats to day, in convention
in every County of this State,
and congratulate them upon the splendid condition of our party in Texas and in
the Nation and rejoice that the returns from our late Primary show conclusively
that a large majority of our party are loyal to the principles of Local
Self Government. We
endorse fully the positions taken by Senators
Bailey and Culberson upon public issues rejoice that our State and Nation
are served by men of this distinguished ability. We
congratulate the Democrats of this District
upon the fact that their Representative in the congress of the United States,
the Honorable A. S. Burleson, Of Travis County, has been faithful to every trust
committed to him and we fully endorse his position in public affairs
and appreciate his zealous and earnest efforts upon behalf of his
constituency. We are
gratified to note that the returns from
our late census show that our State is rapidly forging to the front in wealth
and population and that we will likely gain in the near future at least seven additional
Congressmen, all of whom
will of course be members of the Democratic Party. We
declare that as the issue as to whether or not
a Constitutional amendment shall be submitted to the people of Texas, prohibiting
the sale of liquors within this state, has been passed upon by the people
at the polls and the returns showing that a two thirds majority of the Senatorial
and Representative Districts of the State have declared in favor of submitting
said amendment, that we as Democrats and firm believers in the doctrine
of Local Self Government hereby instruct our Delegates to the State Convention
to vote for the insertion of a "Submission Plank" in the State
platform and we hereby instruct our Representatives in the Legislature to vote
for the submission of said amendment. Having
declared in favor of submission we further
declare that we oppose the calling of a Constitutional Convention at this
time and do hereby request our Senator and Representatives in the State Legislature
to oppose the calling of a Constitutional Convention and to use all honorable
means to defeat the calling of same. Respectfully Submitted,
(Signed) Paul D. Page, Chairman. Hon.
Roger Byrne states to the Convention that
the above had been adopted by the Committee without a dissenting vote.
Upon motion the above report of the
committee was unanimously adopted by the Convention. It was
moved and seconded that the Chair appoint
a Committee of three to select delegates to the various conventions which
motion being adopted, the Chair appointed the following upon said Committee:
J. B. Price, Roger Byrne, and T. A. Moore. The
above committee made the following report:
To Hon. S. L. Staples, Chairman of the
Convention: We
your Committee appointed to select delegates
to the various Democratic Conventions beg leave to report as follows: We
have selected the following as delegates
to the State and all other Conventions: Paul
D. Page, S. S. Sayers, J. L. Wilbarger,
B. J. Hasler, W. B. Ransome, Woody Townsend, B. D. Orgain, H. H. Alexander,
Jack Jenkins, Richard Starcke, W. A. McCord, G. W. Davis, C. Chalmers,
Thos. H. Parks, T. W. Cain, Lee D. Olive, M. H. Young, H. P. Luckett, J. S.
Jones, W. P. Culp, Charles Gillespie, Max Hirsch, T. B. Taylor, G. T. King,
W. O. Straus, R. Roermer, Howard Rivers, Thos. Pfeifer, John G. Chiles, W. L.
Martin, Thomas Nairn, L. P. Gatlin, R. L. Wilson, J. W. Jackson, C. P. Sowell,
W. R. Gillum, Walter Keeble, J. B. Price, T. A. Moore, R. Byrne, S. L. Staples,
W. M. Cobb, Aaron Burleson, J. A. Hewatt, W. R. Curham, T. O. Hill, U. M.
Carmichael, E. H. Eagleston, Joe Leshikar, Joe Psencik, D. S. Shade, Sam Standifer,
C. B. Calahan, W. L. Moore, W. D. C. Jones, F. T. Chase, T. N. Powell,
T. R. Bain, E. P. Curtis, E. G. Winston, J. H. Jones, Fred Morgan Sr., R. A.
Watson, Charley Jenkins, R. L. Williams, Otto Wamel, D. R. LeMaster, S. L.
Brannon, Van L. Taylor, Mat Zimmerhanzel, Col. Corbell, Gus Jung, W. J. Smith,
B. F. Catchings, Frank Maduna, Tom Rolston, Perry Winston, H. J. Eskew, C.
Fishbeck, Hugh Barton, J. W. Taylor. Upon
motion the report of the Committee was
adopted. Roger
Byrne, of Smithville, moved that the
delegation be instructed to vote as a unit upon all questions and that there
be further instructions to vote on any and all measures that might be offered
in the State Convention in the interests of the Hon. O. B. Colquitt.
Said motion voted by a unanimous
vote adopted. Upon
motion the Convention adjourned. (Signed) S. L.
Staples, Chairman Attest: Van L.
Taylor, Secretary METHODIST
CHURCH: Preaching
Sunday morning at 11 a.m. and 8:30
p.m. by Rev. C. M. Myers, of Fulshear, Texas. You are cordially invited to
hear him. The
fourth quarterly conference for Bastrop
will be held August 22nd, Rev. Nat B. Read presiding. JOE F.
WEBB, PASTOR. CHURCH
NOTICE: Sunday,
August 7th, will be communion service
in the morning and service in evening. Both
services will be in German and both will be conducted by Rev. Theo. Havekost,
district Superintendent. All that
can understand the above language are cordially invited to attend. A. D.
MOEHLE, Pastor. EPWORTH
LEAGUE PROGRAM August
7th, 6;30 p. m. Subject-God's Unfailing
Love. Leader-Mr. Joe Leath. Hymn-489:"He Leadeth Me." Prayer
of Thanksgiving-Mr. Pearcy. Scripture
Reading-Hosea XI: 1 to 9: John XIII;1. Leaders Address. Song-My
Price Jenkins. Open Meeting of Testimony and Praise, led by Miss Maude Normant.
Prayer-Committing our all to Him.
Mr. Ernest Carter. Song. Program. Benediction. -W. M.
Andrews and Alf Griensenbeck bought the lots on which the cotton yard is located
and will in a short time have erected modern residences. And still Bastrop
grows. -Watch
for Miss E. Lister's advertisement next week. -The
building on the lot recently purchased by the Citizens State Bank next to the
brick hotel,
has been torn down this week, and work will begin at once on the new home
of the bank, which will be one of the finest bank buildings in this part of the
state. -Watch
for Miss E. Lister's Premium Offer. -City
Secretary F. A. Orgain handed in promptly the proceedings of the regular meeting
of the City Council held Monday night, August 1, 1910, but owing to its length
we are forced to defer the publication of same until next week. -Don't
cry for Honey next winter, get it now, one hundred gallons for sale. LOUIS EILERS -At a
recent meeting of the Farmers Union of Bastrop county in this city, the following
officers were elected; Wm. McWilliams, President; P. W. Harris, Vice-President;
Sam Floyd, Secretary and Treasurer; W. B. Taylor Lecturer; W. F.
Cruse, Chaplain; W. J. Weber, Door Keeper; W. T. Callahan, Conductor. -Allen
E. Wynn, who was arrested on the charge of assault and attempt to murder Roy Wilkes
in this city Wednesday of last week, waived examination and gave a $1,000
bond this week. J. P. Smith, who was
arrested in connection with the shooting of Wilkes, gave a $500 bond and was
released. Wilkes is recovering rapidly
from his wounds. OFFICIAL
VOTE OF BASTROP COUNTY TEXAS Table
showing number of votes each candidate received at each voting box in Bastrop County,
Texas, at the Democratic Primary Election, held July 23, 1910: (Precincts: Bastrop,
Goodman, Smithville, Jeddo, Rosanky, High Grove, Cedar Creek, Kenton, Elgin,
McDuff, Live Oak Grove, Alum Creek, McDade, Waterson, (?), (?), (?), Upton,
Kovar, Total, Plurally, Majority) Total
Vote: 234, 24, 339, 25, 80, 56, 77, 29, 393, 56, 35, 75, 179, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, 54,
2021 GOVERNER: William
Poindexter: 27, 4, 52, 3, 2, 7, 13, 6, 80, 17, 0, 21, 43, ?, ?, ?, ?, 3, 1,
317 James
Martin Jones: 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 1, ?, ?, ?, 0, 0, 5 O.B.
Colquitt: 124, 5, 177, 14, 68, 17, 22, 13, 136, 11, 34, 31, 64, 32, ?, ?, ?,
9, 52,
981, ,36 Cone
Johnson: 34, 3, 46, 1, 1, 22, 22, 4, 123, 21, 0, 7, 40, ?, ?, ?, ?, 2, 0, 372 R.V.
Davidson; 41, 12, 46, 7, 7, 8, 15, 5, 34, 1, 0, 12, 16, ?, ?, ?, 10, 1, 241 LIEUT-GOVERNER, A.B.
Davidson: 145, 10, 175, 12, 59, 15, 32, 20, 165, 17, 31, 53, 53, 2, 5, ?,
161, 10,
15, 2, 994, , 132 A.S.
Hawkin: 15, 3, 36, 1, 3, 26, 6, 1, 29, 12, 1, 8, 15, ?, ?, 7, 2, 0, 0, 1?? H.
Bascom Thomas: 46, 8, 78, 7, 4, 10, 27, 7, 130, 33, 1, 6, 73, 1, 3, ?, 10, 2, 4, 0,
483 James
T. Hammons: 4, 0, 5, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 7, 0, 0, 0, 1, ?, ?, 2, 0, 1, 0, 28 J. H.
Webster: 9, 1, 21, 1, 7, 1, 0, 0, 25, 1, 1, 0, 9, 5, ?, 12, 0, 4, 52, 148 ATTORNEY
GENERAL: Jewel
P Lightfoot: 230, 24, 327, 24, 78, 51, 71, 25, 37j0, 53, 35, 71, 164, 45, 98, 154,
16, 23, 54, 1872 STATE
TREASURER: Wm.
Winningham: 21, 1,
35, 5, 27, 8, 9, 6, 67, 9, 1, 14, 48, 11, 10, 20, 1, 5, 0, 298 Sam
Sparks: 194, 23, 274, 18, 49, 46, 61, 21, 290, 39, 33, 57, 103, 42, 90, 109, 15,
18, 54, 1536 FOR
COMPTROLLER: Bob
Barker: 60, 10, 104, 9, 29, 12, 14, 15, 98, 13, 14, 27, 38, 23, 47, 57, 12,
3, 1, 591 B. F.
Teague: 107, 11, 102, 11, 30, 27, 24, 1, 185, 31, 13, 30, 52, 16, 42, 42, 0, 10,
53, 787 W. P.
Land: 22, 0, 25, 2, 2, 2, 25, 1, 38, 3, 0, 6, 26, 3, 2, 1, 7, 0, 168 D. C.
Burkes: 10, 1, 33, 1, 3, 9, 5, 4, 25, 3, I, 6,
12, 5, 3, 11, 0, 3, 0, 135 Edwin
Waller: 19, 2, 41, 0, 12, 3, 1, 6, 97, 0, 0, 1, 10, 3, 2, 14, 3, 1, 0, 215 R. R.
COMMISSIONER: J. W.
Blake: 55, 4, 68, 8, 29, 7, 15, 10, 96, 7, 19, 21, 31, 12, 26, 68, 1, 5, 3,
455 L. T. Dashiell:
15, 4, 32, 0, 36, 12, 5, 1, 44, 5, 3, 8, 10, 4, 6, 4, 0, 3, 0, 192 Allison
Mayfield: 109, 12, 162, 12, 47, 31, 41, 12, 121, 33, 10, 28, 21, 20, 59, 37, 13,
12, 0, 781 Theodore
G. Thomas: 25, 2, 43, 3, 45, 3, 9, 2, 68, 3, 2, 10, 85, 2, 8, 36, 0, 3, 51,
400 R.. R.
COMMISSIONER: William
D. Williams: 225, 23, 333, 25, 69, 53, 74, 25, 373, 52, 34, 72, 159, 41, 101, 158,
15, 24, 54, 1919 LAND
COMMISSIONER: J. T. Robison:
211, 24, 228, 18, 63, 50, 51, 17, 264, 45, 30, 60, 118, 35, 83, 108, 15,
17, 53, 1490, , 1161 Charles
W. Geers: 7, 0, 28, 1, 4, 0, 3, 2, 21, 1, 0, 2, 7, 5, 3, 3, 1, 1, 0, 89 H.
Ellis Hill: 5, 0, 47, 5, 9, 6, 10, 7, 60, 5, 3, 8, 26, 11, 10, 22, 0, 6, 1,
240 SUPT
PUB INSTRUCTION: F. M.
Brally: 226, 24, 331, 24, 77, 53, 73, 27, 373, 52, 34, 73, 161, 49, 101, 153, 16,
24, 54, 1925 COM OF
AGRICULTURE: Ed R
Cone: 225, 22, 330, 25, 77, 52, 71, 25, 371, 57, 34, 71, 156, 47, 101, 15,
24, 54,
1910 JUDGE
COURT CR AP: A. J.
Harper: 71, 9, 150, 15, 39, 23, 21, 14, 204, 14, 29, 24, 7427, 24, ?, 6, 7,
1, 841, ,
293 Felix
J. McCord: 117, 13, 103, 2, 6, 10, 14, 8, 70, 26, 1, 28, 46, 18, 47, 13, 10,
6, 0, 548 P. A.
Turner: 23, 2, 52, 6, 21, 20, 33, 4, 72, 12, 3, 20, 25, 7, 27, 0, 11, 53, 415 ASSOC
JUSTICE SUP CT: T. J.
Brown: 230,
22, 328, 25, 78, 54, 71, 27, 369, 54, 34, 73, 161, 49, 198, 156, 15, 23, 54,
1921 CHIEF
JUST CT CIV APP: W. M.
Key: 220, 24, 323, 24, 77, 55, 71, 27, 370, 54, 34, 73, 157, 48, 100, 155,
16, 24,
54, 1806 ASSOC
JUS CT CIV APH: B. H.
Rice: 225, 23, 314, 24, 77, 51, 68, 27, 360, 54, 34, 71, 157, 49, 98, 15, 23, 54,
1877 ASSOC
JUS CT CIV APP: C. H.
Jenkins: 219, 24, 329, 24, 76, 53, 68, 27, 365, 54, 34, 71, 156, 15, 24, 54, 1897
U. S. SENATOR: C. A.
Culberssn: 226, 24, 329, 25, 76, 52, 71, 24, 368, 55, 34, 73, 158, 49, 101, 158,
15, 24, 54, 1916 CONGRESS
10TH DIST: A. S.
Burleson: 225, 24, 330, 25, 76, 54, 73, 28, 378, 54, 34, 74, 161, 50, 101,
158, 16,
24, 54, 1939 DISTRICT
ATTORNEY: J. S.
Jones: 233, 24, 337, 25, 78, 55, 73, 27, 377, 54, 34, 70, 167, 51, 102, 159, 16,
24, 54, 1960 SENATOR
19TH DISTRICT: Q. U.
Watson: 214, 20, 307, 25, 78, 50, 68, 28, 340, 54, 34, 72, 137, 50, 102, 154, 16,
24, 54, 1877 REPRESENT.
58TH DIS. J. E.
Faires: 50, 4, 55, 3, 4, 30, 28, 7, 172, 21, 3, 8, 86, 6, 37, 37, 0, 11, 0,
558 Roger
Byrne: 173, 19, 268, 21, 74, 23, 41, 21, 185, 30, 31, 60, 71, 45, 65, 103,
17, 18,
54, 1324, , 766 REPRESENT.
59TH DIS. Miles
H. Hill: 74, 16, 119, 16, 10, 37, 54, 15, 175, 33, 3, 18, 102, 30, 43, 27, ?, 13, 0,
791 Walter
Keeble: 143, 8, 181, 6, 64, 15, 17, 13, 195, 20, 31, 57, 65, 22, 55, 102, 8,
8, 54,
1064, , 273 COUNTY
JUDGE: J. B.
Price: 230, 24, 337, 23, 77, 51, 74, 29, 374, 55, 34, 73, 171, 48, 103, 145, 17,
23, 54, 1942 COUNTY
ATTORNEY: J. P.
Fowler, Jr.: 64, 8, 77, ?, 43, 44, 15, 213, 18, 8, ? ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?,
?, ? Jack
Jenkins: ?, 15, ?, 5, 46, 12, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, 7, ?, ? DISTRICT
CLERK: Thos,.
H. Parks: 174, 13, 180, 21, 29, 18, 19, 11, 179, 38, 19, 45, 42, 26, 44, ?,
12, 4, 51,
934, , 88 Oscar,
H. Chamberlain: 52, 8, 136, 3, 47, 31, 55, 17, 181, 19, 14, 29, 116, 24, 54,
?, 3, 20, 3,
896 COUNTY
CLERK: H. H.
Alexander: 100, 13, 212, 14, 74, 56, 66, 22, 213, 45, 8, 38, 106, 49, 87, 58, 10,
20, 44, 1235, , 484 W. T.
Grimes: 130, 10, 116, 11, 4, 0, 11, 7, 170, 11, 27, 37, 71, 6, 18, 102, 6, 4, 10,
751 SHERIFF: Woody
Townsend: 200, 24, 336, 25, 79, 50, 72, 28, 381, 55, 35, 74, 166, 51, 99,
160, 12,
22, 54, 1923 TAX
COLLECTOR: G. W.
Davis: 224, 24, 339, 25, 79, 51, 72, 29, 386, 55, 35, 72, 170, 41, 100, 160, 13,
23, 54, 1952 TAX
ASSESSOR: J. H.
Jones: 226, 24, 335, 25, 79, 51, 74, 29, 385, 55, 35, 73, 174, 42, 97, 132,
17, 23,
54, 1960 COUNTY
TREASURER: J.
Daniel Byers: 24, 1, 37, 3, 9, 9, 6, 0, 54, 2, 8, 10, 36, 8, 14, 64, 0, 3, 0, 288 Lee D.
Olive: 79, 15, 129, 4, 54, 33, 36, 18, 107, 51, 4, 10, 41, 32, 32, 39, 16,
13, 2, 715 C.
Chalmers: 129, 8, 159, 15, 16, 14, 34, 11, 224, 4, 21, 54, 95, 15, 54, 56, 1, 8, 52,
970 COUNTY
SUPT: T. N.
Powell: 53, 9, 222, 24, 63, 50, 44, 18, 197, 28, 13, 30, 87, 36, 73, 78, 2,
13, 11,
1051, , 123 Hartford
Jenkins: 177, 14, 112, 1, 16, 6, 33, 11, 188, 29, 22, 35, 85, 19, 29, 82, 15, 11,
43, 928 COUNTY
CHAIRMAN: Paul
D. Page: 228, 24, 332, 24, 77, 49, 77, 29, 378, 57, 34, 73, 162, 53, 101,
149, 17, 24,
54, 1942 COUNTY
SURVEYOR: Sam
Higgins: 87, 3, 21, 1, 48, 0, 0, 18, 0, 0, 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 0, 0, 5, 0, 202, , 162 C. L.
Moncure: 0, 0, 5, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 3, 4, 16, 0, 0, 0, 0, 4, 0, 0, 0, 0, 32 J. S.
Dunbar: 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 5, 0, 0, 3, 0, 0, 0, 8 For
Submission: 75, 14, 134, 11, 22, 32, 53, 12, 232, 41, 1, 34, 89, 24, 46, 34, 10,
17, 2, 883, , 82 Against
Submission: 117, 6, 142, 10, 56, 14, 11, 12, 88, 4, 33, 29, 55, 16, 54, 88,
1, 3, 52,
801 Precinct
Officers. County
commissioner, Precinct 1, Bastrop: C.L.
Moncure 171, P.A. Hanson 59 Pin
Oak: Moncure 16,Hanson 19 Alum
Creek: Moncure 37, Hanson 38 Paige: Moncure
50, Hanson 109 Moncure's
majority, 49. County
Commissioner, Precinct 2, Smithville: Andy
Meuth 79, F.H. Tally 252 Jeddo: Meuth
20, Tally 5 Rosanky: Meuth
78, Tally 1 Watterson: Meuth
49, Tally 6 Red
Rock: Meuth 76, Tally 29 Upton: Meuth
16, Tally 7 Kovar: Meuth
52, Tally 2 Meuth's
majority 67 County
Commissioner, Precinct 3 Goodman: Ira A.
Wright 15, J. D. Alexander 9 High
Grove: Wright 30, Alexander 22 Cedar
Creek: Wright 37, Alexander 39 Kenton: Wright
17, Alexander 11 Hill's
Prairie: Wright 13, Alexander 2 Wright's
majority 29. County
Commissioner, Precinct 4 Elgin: O. S.
Snowden 91, J. W. Jackson 293 McDuff: Snowden
12, Jackson 143 Jackson's
majority 346 Justice
of the Peace, Precinct 1. J. N.
Jenkins. Bastrop
215, Goodman 24, Hill's Prairie 17 Justice
of the Peace, Precinct 2 W. L.
Moore Smithville 333,
Jeddo 25, Rosanky 77, Upton 23, Kovar 54 Justice
of the peace, Precinct 3 B. P
Simmons High
Grove 53, Cedar Creek 74, Kenton 29 Justice
of the peace, Precinct 4 Elgin: W. A.
Livingston 8, J. E. B. Laird 143 McDuff: Livingston
43, Laird 12 Livingston's
majority 124 Justice
of the Peace, Precinct 5 Perry
Winston Pin
Oak 35, Alum Creek 72 Justice
of the Peace, Precinct 6 Geo.
Milton McDade
167 Justice
of the Peace, Precinct 7 T. R.
Mobley Watterson
53, Red Rock 100 Justice
of the Peace, Precinct 8 C. E.
Lindner Paige
159 Constable
Precinct 1 J. F.
Nash Bastrop
222, Goodman 24, Hill's Prairie 17 Constable,
Precinct 2 O. B.
Smith Smithville
321, Jeddo 23, Rosanky 77, Upton 19, Kovar 54 Constable,
Precinct 3 High
Grove: J. L. Reid 12, Rives R. Johnson 41 Cedar
Creek: Reid 56, Johnson 21 Kenton: Reid
21, Johnson 7 Reid's
majority 20 Constable,
Precinct 4 Elgin: John
Sowell 310, H. L. Potts 68 McDuff: Sowell
26, Pots 31 Sowell's
majority 237 Constable,
Precinct 5 W. C.
Walker: Pin Oak 35, Alum Creek 74 Constable,
Precinct 6 McDade: S. L.
Chandler 68, W. C. Rutherford 106 Rutherford's
majority 38 Constable,
Precinct 7 J. B.
Watson: Watterson 50, Red rock 97 Constable,
Precinct 8 Paige: Chas.
?perster 49, J. C. ? 4, G. K? 23 ?ter's
majority 22 Public
Weigher, Precinct 6 H. W.
Freeman: McDade 174 Public
Weigher, Precinct 7 P. W.
Harris: Watterson 52, Red Rock 90 Public
Weigher, Precinct 8 Paige: P. B.
?erner 163 PRECINCT
CHAIRMAN The
following Precinct Chairmen were elected in Saturday's Primaries: Precinct
1-Tig Jones Precinct
2-C. W. Hemphill and W. E. Goodman received one vote each Precinct
3-E. G. Winston Precinct
4-J. D. Hallmark Precinct
5-M. Zimmerhanzel Precinct
6-W. H. Ingram Precinct
7-J. C. Randle Precinct
8-E. G. Templeton Precinct
9-Max Hirsch Precinct
10-Hugh Barton Precinct
11-John Brahm Precinct
12-N. E. Morris Precinct
13-Van L Taylor Precinct
14-C. H. Wallace Ad: Peoples
Cash Gro. Co., A
CARD. Bastrop,
Tex., Aug. 3, 1910. To the people
of Bastrop County. I desire to express
my sincere thanks for the loyal support so generously tendered me by any
friends throughout this county in my recent campaign for the nomination for County
Clerk. That I was successful is due to
them and I desire that they may understand that their friendship is appreciated
to the uttermost. While grateful
to friends everywhere, I especially appreciate the friendship and good will
of my old neighbors and friends in the Cedar Creek and High Grove country where
I have spent my life up to this time, and I trust that the future will show
to them that I am not unmindful of the loyal and unselfish support that they
have given me since I have entered politics. Respectfully, H. H. ALEXANDER. BASEBALL San
Angelo vs. Bastrop, Next Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.-Close of Season. The
fast base ball team of San Angelo will be in
Bastrop next week for a series of three games, beginning Wednesday, August
10th. San Angelo has defeated every
ball team in West Texas and comes to this part of the state to take the pennant
from Bastrop, Taylor and Granger. The
series of games will close the season in Bastrop and every fan should
be there to encourage the all-home team of Bastrop to a triumphant finish
of a most successful season. PUBLIC
TAKE NOTICE. On
Tuesday night, August 23, 1910, at the office of W. B. Randsome, at 9
o'clock, the
City School Board will let to the highest bidder, all the School funds for the
next two years. The successful bibder will have to execute a satisfactory bond
to the School Board. By highest bidder
means, the one who will pay the largest amount of interest on daily balances.
T. P. HAYNIE, Secretary. LOST-At
the Woodmen Barbecue in Bastrop, May 20th, a small gold chain with a heart attached.
Finder return to this office and
receive reward. A
WOLFF. I
solicit your patronage for my new and up-to-date establishment, which I have opened
in the Ransome building, next to the bank. We carry a full line of Dry Goods,
Clothing Shoes and Hats. Please call and get acquainted with the new store,
the new goods. Respectfully Yours,
A. WOLFF. THE CIRCULAR
STAIRCASE by Mary Robert? Rinehart. (Fictional Story not transcribed) AT THE
STATE CAPITAL LEGISLATIVE NEWS, WHAT IS BEING DONE: Austin,
Tex-To the accompaniment of applause from many of those who heard it,
Governor Cambell's
sixth message, in which, among other things, he suggested the subject of
more restricted liquor legislation "and such other legislation relative to the
liquor traffic as the welfare of the state demands," was read to the
special session of the Texas legislature Wednesday. (message not transcribed)
(subjects were bond
issue for the construction and maintenance of causeways, viaducts, bridges and
approaches across any rivers, nominations of candidates, strengthen statutes
regulating the granting of liquor license, provide agricultural and mechanical
college with funds, pure food inspection.) Ad: Make
the Liver do its Duty. Carter's Little Liver Pills. Ad: Paxtine
Toilet Antiseptic. Ad: Restored
to health. Doan's back pills. Ad: Scratched
so she could not sleep: Cuticura Remedies. FOR
SHORTER TERM. GEN. WOOD FAVORS SMALL PERIOD FOR SOLDIER'S ENLISTMENT. New
head of the United States Army Talks of Air Machines as War Craft-Prefers Dirigible
Balloons. New
York.-Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, the new chief of staff of the United States
army, thinks
the term of enlistment of regulars should be cut down and favors younger men
for Uncle Sam's fighting forces. "You
know I have recommended, in formal
reports, that the term of enlistment should be cut down," said e.
"this would serve to turn back into
civil life a larger proportion of men who in emergency could be called upon.
They would constitute a reserve.
How to arrange that they would be
subject to a call to the colors for occasional maneuvers is a mere matter of detail. Further
than this General Wood would not comment
upon what he would advocate when once he has taken up work as chief of staff
of the United States army. His
recommendations of a shorter enlistment
would send back to the population 20,000 to 30,000 men a year. the plan would
cut off a greater part of the "retired
pay" and a greater part of the pensions. The United States standing army
is now practically
a veteran army. It appears to be
General Wood's idea that it should not be an army of men of ten to fifteen
years' or twenty-five years' service. Younger
sinews are required for spirit, dash and efficiency, he believes. "We
need extra officers," the general
said. "There are just officers
enough for the present army. In
time of war the army would be stripped." Twenty
officers of the army of the Argentine republic
are coming to the United States army to be trained. This is one consequence
of the official visit
of General Wood to the centennial celebration of the independence of the southernmost
nation protected by the Monroe doctrine. The significance of this was not
alluded to by General Wood, but from
other sources it had been learned that the circumstances was important, as Germans,
who have been frequently reported as unsympathetic toward the United States
policy regarding European ambitions in this hemisphere, are now instructors
of the Argentine army, and Germany, next to England, holds the largest
share of the Argentine trade. "Would
you, " General Wood was asked,
"go that far into army questions as to say what you think of flying machines
as an adjunct in war?" "Yes,
I will say that I think the smallest dirigible, one that can carry
the engineer and four or five men, is going to be important, especially when
we can get them with a reinforced envelope able to withstand the required pressures.
Their utility is already assured
for reconnoitering. "Our
army's front is now twenty or thirty
miles long. If we can put up men who
can swiftly skip along over that and see the enemy's lines of communication,
his field works, bridges, etc., obviously the information would be of
enormous assistance. "I
don't think the aeroplane will be as
useful as the small dirigible until it is made large enough to carry at least
one man besides the driver. They should
also have a duplicate engine. But
they are improving aeroplanes so fast that I don't predict-I only speak
of the present moment, when I say I prefer the small dirigible." Trial
by Ordeal In Japan. Tokio-Trial
by ordeal still exists in some parts of Japan. If a
theft takes place in a household, all the servants are required to write
a certain work with the same brush. The
conscience is supposed to betray its workings in the waves of the ideographs
written. Tracing an ideograph
involves such an effort of muscular directness and undivided attention that
the service often leads to the discovery of the guilty party. The test is, at
all events, more humane than the
ordeal by boiling water, to which accused persons were formally submitted in
Japan. Purchase
Expensive Snuffboxes. London-the
craze which sometimes possesses the rich people to obtain curios was exemplified
in London when seven snuff boxes brought $20,000 each and the other five
averaged $10,000 each. None of the articles
was worth very much intrinsically, their value resting in their age and
associations. Ad: Cure
your weak stomach. Hostetter's Stomach
Bitters AD: Bowel
and liver medicine. Cascarets' 10C a box. AD: Hed-Lyte
for headache and neuralgia. AD: Defiance
Starch. AD:
Wintersmith's Oldest and Best Tonic; for Malaria and Debility. Contains no
arsenic. AD: Faultless
Starch. AD: West
Texas Military Academy, San Antonio, TX, Angus McD. Crawford, M. A. Principal. AD: Iced
Postum relieve fatigue and sustain one. Postum Cereal Co., Ltd. Battle Creek,
Mich. AD: Mrs.
Winslow's Soothing Syrup. 25C a bottle. AD:
Dr. Pierce's
Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Do not gripe. AD: WALL
PAPER AGENCY. I have the agency for the Western Wall Paper Co., of Kansas City,
and have a complete line of samples of the newest patterns of wall paper.
Your orders will be appreciated with
samples at any time requested. J. H.
DAVIS. AD:
MR. CHEWER-When
you want a chew, don't buy "Brand"-buy Tobacco. Ask for Virginia
Tobacco, sold by Elzner Mercantile Co., T. A. Hasler & Co., Peoples
Cash Gro. Co., Louis Eilers. ----- ***** Bastrop
Advertiser, June 1913 PURELY
PERSONAL When
you have a visitor, or contemplate making a visit, or know something of local interest,
please ring No. 136 and give it to the Advertiser. We'll appreciate it. Miss
Eunice Moore, of Temple, is visiting her cousin, Mrs. D. H. Bell. Constable
Smith from Smithville was in town Tuesday. From
Elgin on Tuesday the following gentlemen were in attendance upon the meeting
of Commissioners
Court: Capt. F. S. Wade, Judge C. W. Webb; J. D. King, Rex Stewart,
Chas. Gillaspie, John Puckett, Dock Christian. Mesdames
Lundell and LeSueur of Hill's Prairie, were guests of Bastrop friends Tusday. Mrs.
Chas. Watterson and Katie Lee, from Red Rock were in town Tuesday. Jay C.
Powers of the firm of Jay C. Powers & Co, colonizers and town promoters,
was in Bastrop
Monday. John
and Hugh Barton, in their fine new car, were in Bastrop Tuesday. Miss
Adelia Kesselus left this week on a visit to Holland. C. C.
Cunningham, with the Union National Bank at Houston, is visiting at the old home
for a few days. Messrs.
A. T. Morris, W. E. Goodman, T. E. Lynch and T. W. Cain have returned from
the meeting
of the Imperial Counsel of the Mystic Shrine at Dallas this week. The
attendance was estimated at over 100,000 Shriners.
Perfect order prevailed and not an
accident occurred during the four days meeting. One of the four was offered
the position of Chief of Police of Dallas, but we refrain from being personal in the
matter. Mr.
Fred Schuelke is visiting his brothers, Olive and Frank Schuelke at
Smithville this
week. Mrs.
Don G. Petty, Don G. Petty, Jr, Miss Ella Petty, Sherman Petty and Frank
Petty, of
Mansfield, LA; Mr. And Mrs. Cates Ford, of Orange; Mr. And Mrs. C. F. Petty, Gibsland,
LA; Mr. And Mrs. V. A. Petty, V. A. Petty, Jr, Dabney and Olive Petty and
Petty McDonald, of San Antonio; J. E. McDonald, East Texas; H. K. McDonald, of
Shreveport, LA; Matt Reynolds of Mansfield, :A; A. O. McLain of Orange; Miss Parie
Nabors of Mansfield, LA; S. H. McDonald, of Austin; H. K. McDonald Jr, of Warren,
and Frank McDonald, of Bon Weir, were in Bastrop Wednesda to attend the funeral
of Mr. Don G. Petty. Mrs.
A. C. Boethe and little son are visiting in Smithville. Mrs.
F. G. Woehl and Mrs. R. Gemeinert attended the funeral of their brother, Mr.
C. Wolf,
at Austin, Wednesday. Buy
your Rubber Hose from The Home Hardware Company. They have several kinds to select
from and their prices are right. NOTICE: The
Mothers Club will meet at the Library Room Wednesday, May 21st, at 5 o'clock.
MRS. FANNIE CUNNINGHAM. 1913
patterns of Linoleums just received at Rabb & McCollum's. BASTROP
LOSES. In the
game of base ball in which Bastrop lost to Smithville by the score of 6 to 3, in the
later city, Thursday. Captain Tom Haynie and Luke Robinson had the misfortune
to sprain their ankles. Captain
Haynie's was quite seriously sprained and it is feared he will be out
of the game for some time. Refrigerators for
looks, but Ice Boxes for service. Come
and look at our box in the store, filled with 200 dozen eggs, 100 pounds
creamery butter, mince meat, ham, sweet and sour pickles by the barrels. ELZNER
MERCANTILE CO. THE
INVITATION Is
extended to all to view the marvels of the Goldsmith's art as depicted in the window
of the "Palace". Even Boston, New York and Chicago have contributed
their numbers this week. Don't
fail to see a display of LaValierres, etc, never before seen in Bastrop,
and second to no other city of the state. L. R. ERHARD, PROP. PURELY
PERSONAL Mrs.
H. D. Orgain has returned from a several days visit to Austin. Mrs.
John Middleton of Smithville, visited her parents Mr. And Mrs. Sam Higgins. Mr. A.
C. Harvey, a prominent merchant of McDade and President of Guaranty State
Bank of
that thriving little city, was a Wednesday visitor in Bastrop. Mrs.
James Moore, of Texas City, is visiting her parents, Mr. And Mrs. Alf Jung. Mr. E.
O. Randle, of Cedar Creek, was in Bastrop, Saturday, en route on a visit to
his boyhood
home and other points in Tennessee. The
Advertiser and many friends wish for him a pleasant visit and a safe return
home. He was joined at Bartlett by his son, Prof. Coy Randle. Mrs.
Ben P. Templeton wa among his many friends in Bastrop several days this week. Mr.
And Mrs. Jim Smith, of Houston, are on a two weeks visit to Mr. And Mrs.
Richard Starke. Mr. J.
M. Carroll and son, of Hubbard City, are visiting Mr. And Mrs. W. T. Higgins. Mrs.
D. E. Roe has returned home from a visit to Taylor. Mr.
Elbert S. Orgain was a visotor to Autin this week. Judge
Paul D. Pge visited Smithville the first of the week. Mr.
And Mrs. A. J. Robinson and fine little son, of Galveston, are viiting Mrs. Robinson's
parents, Mr. And Mrs. Theo Griesenbeck. Mrs.
Mary Hasler left the past week on an extended visit to Lentzberg,
Switzerland. Mr.
And Mrs. Cleveland Chumley and little son, Gerald, left Sunday last for the
reunion at
Chattanooga, TN, and will also visit relateives in Alabama, Mississippi and New
Orleans. Mr.
And Mrs. T. M. Rector visited Austin the past week. Mr. Rector returning home
Monday. Mrs.
Rector will remain in the Capital City for a while under the treatment
of a ear specialist and we are pleased to note is improving. Mr.
And Mrs. Shelton Adrian of Autin, are visiting Mrs. Adrain's parents, Mr. And
Mrs. T. M.
Rector. Mr. Adrian will shortly begin the erection of a new residence for Mr.
Rector. Miss
Vesia Craft left Monday night on a visit to Mineral Wells. Mr. W.
A. Hasler and family and prof. L. A. Koenig and family are spending the week visiting
on the Colorado. Mr.
Jay C. Powers of San Antonio, promoter of the sale of the Bastrop Town tract,
was to the
city this week, accompanied by the following parties who bought nine tracts
of the land. H. Galtney, of Fort Sam
Houston, S. C. Burbridge of Peoria, Il, Dr. C. L. H. Hutchinson of San Drift;
Ezra Estes, of New Bransfels and Ed Crowley of Crystal City. Mr.
And Mrs. Olive Schulke, Mr. And Mrs. Frank Schuke, of Smithville, Mr. Henry Schuelke
of Autin, Mr. A. C. Botbe, of Fort Worth; Mr. And Mrs. B. J> Schulke
and family of San Benito, and Mr. E. Prokop of San Antonio were in Bastrop
this week to attend the funeral of Mr. E. E.
Schulke. Misses
Mabel Keiser and Kate Fitzwilliam of Smithville are visiting Misses Nellie
and Grace
Fitzwilliam. Mrs.
Chas. Schauerhammer, of Bellville and Mrs. James Dunnway, of Smithville, were guests
this week of Mrs. A. A. Elzner and Mrs. P. Haynie Miss
Mattie Chalmers, who has been attending Radner College, Nashville, TN, is expected
home next week. Miss Mattie is with
the Radnor party on a trip through Colorado and other points of interest in the
United States. CITATION
BY PUBLICATION The
State of Texas To the
Sheriff or any Constable of Bastrop County, Greeting: You
are herby commanded, that by making publication of this Citation, in same
newspaper published
in Bastrop County for eight successive weeks previous to the return day
hereof, you summon R. B. Shipp, and the unknown heirs of said R. B. Shipp; E.
Billingsley, and the unknown heirs of the said E. Billingsley; E. H. Miller; Thos.
Cochran, and the unknown heirs of said Thos. Cochran; Mrs. Betsy P. Cochran,
and the unknown heirs of the said Mrs. Betsy P. Cochran, whose residence
is unknown, to be and appear before the Honorable District Court, at the
next regular term thereof, to be holden in the County of Bastrop, at the Court
House thereof, in Bastrop, Texas on the 16th day of June, A. D. 1913, then
and there to answer the petition of Claude T. Wynn, tried in said court on the
16th day of April, A. D. 1913. file Number
of said suit being No. 5779. Plaintiff
alleges in substance, as follows, to wit: That on the first day of April, A.
D. 1913,
he was the owner in fee simple of the following described property; situated
in the State of Texas and County of Bastrop, and being more particularly
known and described as follows, to wit: A
tract of 160 acres out of Abstract No. 143, originally granted to Thos.
Cochran, lying
on the waters of the West Yegua, in said Bastrop County, "Beginning at the
SW sorner of the J. W. Alen Survey.... LIST
OF LAND, LOTS OR PARTS OF LOTS TO THE CITY OF BASTROP FOR THE TAX.. Anderson,
Josephine fraction of farm lot 36 east... Adams,
Isabelle estate fraction block 47 east main.. Barnett,
C. L. fraction block 45 east main.. Buchanan,
Mrs. M. S. fraction block 9 east main Brooks,
Jennie fraction block 26 east main Brady,
Ellen fraction block 88 east main Bedford,
Margaret fraction block 101 east main Bryant,
Pyrmias fraction block 13 east main Batts,
Mrs. H. F. fraction block 16 east main Buchanan,
G. W. fraction farm lot 5 east main Byers,
Mrs. Albert discontinued territory 300 Crumplin,
Calvin fraction block 61 east main Craft,
Anthony fraction block 58 east main Colter,
Tom fraction block 69 east main Do
fraction block 9 east main Davis,
Sarah estate fraction block 136 east main Do
fraction block 165 east main Davie,
Andrew Bastrop town tract 37 east Do
Bastrop town tract 37 east Edwards,
Green fraction block 116 east main Flemings,
Mark estate fraction block 165 east main Do
fraction block 142 east main Fittger,
Mrs. E. estate fraction farm lot 18 east. ----- 10/14/1910
Bastrop Advertiser DEDICATION
OF CONFEDERATE MONUMENT Friday,
October, 14, 1910 was an important day in Bastrop, a day that will be kept in
memory for
years and years to come, for the hoary headed and the little children
together entered most
heartily into the exercises of the day. At the
appointed hour a host of friends and neighbors with many of the surviving
confederates of
Jos. D. Sayers Camp and others and the members of the T. C. Cain Chapter of
the Daughters of the
Confederacy gathered on our beautiful court house square, where a platform
had been erected
for the speakers, and seats placed on the lawn for the veterans, the
Daughters of Confederacy
and their friends. In front of the platform and to the right were two posts
about twenty
feet apart, from the tip of each of these posts a rafter was extended to a
middle post. The
posts and rafters were wrapped with red and white, At the tops of the outside
posts were unfurled
flags of America, while at the top of the center post was a large silk
Confederate flag
which was the gift of Mrs. Blanche Garwood Page to the Joseph D. Sayers Camp
many years ago,
when she was the camp's sponsor. Across
the apex formed by the rafters was a banner bearing the words T. C. Cain
Chapter Daughters
of the Confederacy, and beneath this sat the members of the chapter.
Immediately in
front of the speakers platform, the flower girls, Margret Jones, Wilmer Page,
Addie May Murchison,
Grace Robinson, Lulu Pfeiffer, Nell Rose Schaeffer, Una Craft and Catherine Holt
were seated. Judge
Paul D. Page acted as Master of Ceremonies, and did it well. He called the
audience to
order and the exercises werw opened with prayer by Rev. Joe F. Webb. The
teachers and children of the public school then sang America. The
address of welcome was delivered by Mrs. E. H. Jenkins in carefully selected
words, wrought
into beautiful sentences and well rounded periods. The address was well
prepared and
delivered in most excellent style. Following
the address of welcome, Mesdames Garwood, S. J. Orgain, Robert Gill,
Josephine Anderson,
William Grimes, Hutchison, Burger and Turner, members of the T. C. Cain
Chapter Daughters
of Confederacy, accompanied by the flower girls, who were dressed in white
with red
sashes over the left shoulder marched to the monument some twenty yards from
the speakers stand
and there forming a circle about the monument, Mrs. Robert Gill untied the
cord which released
the veil and brought to view the granit shaft which stands as a silent
witness of those
years when Bastrop's valiant sons did service for their beloved Southern
homes, and when
our aged fathers and mothers, young and old stayed by the old home, passing
many days and nights
of anxiety and sometimes suffering, while the deadly battles were being
fought and sad news
of the death of loved ones and friends were expected at any hour. After the
unveiling the
flower girls above mentioned placed baskets of flfowers at the base of the
monument. As the
ceremonies of unveiling were closed and the committee returned to their
place, "Bonnie Blue
Flag" was sung. At
this point the Master of ceremonies in well chosen words introduced Mrs. B.
D. Orgain, President
of the T C. Cain Chapter, U. D. C. Mrs.
Orgain on behalf of the Chapter presented the Monument to the citizens of
Bastrop and Bastrop
County. She has been the constant inspiration of the movement from the
beginning. She
sacrificed time and energy keeping up enthusiasm, when otherwise the movement
might have failed.
Her address was one of deep feeling evincing her love for the South and its
soldiers of
1861-65. She paid high tribute to the soldiers who went out from Bastrop
County. It is
with some pride we congratulate this noble spirited woman and her associates
for the interest
they have taken in preserving the history of Joseph D. Sayers Camp of
Confederate soldiers
as well as that of the whole Confederacy. County
Judge J. B. Price received the Monument for the county. He addressed the
daughters of the
Confederacy, veterans and friends of the cause in the spirit of the young
manhood of the south
as it is today. His message breathed the spirit of charity to all and hope
for the present
and future South. He paid deserved tribute to those who lived and many of
whom suffered
and died for the love of their country in 1861-65. His address echoed words
of peace
to our nation, bright hopes for the future and unity in effort to make this,
not only the
land of the true and the brave, but the land which through struggles
victories and defeats should
stand at the front in the history we are making today. His speech was filled
with good
common sense and was appreciated. Next
on the program was Bastrop's well known orator, Hon. W. E. Maynard. He
received the Monument
for the city, and it was well done. His tribute to the old city at the foot
of the pine
clad hills and beside the gurgling waters of the Colorado, and to its
cultured, refined people
was splendid. In most eloquent words he spoke of the times of 1861-65, and
how that the
sons of Bastrop and of all the South, fought for their rights. He praised the
daughters of the
confederacy of Bastrop for their untiring zeal in erecting the Monument and
then discoursed
on what it represented. It
words of hope and good cheer the speaker called the attention of his hearers
to the fact that
old Bastrop had taken on new life and that you could hear the buz of the saw
and the sound
of the hammer on every land. He was an inspiring address. Ex-Governer
Joseph D. Sayers beloved by all the people of Bastrop, and who spent most of
his life
amont its people was introduced, and on behalf of the Confederate veterans of
J. D. Sayers
Camp he read a resolution expressing the gratitude and appreciation of the
veterans to T. C.
Cain Chapter, U. D. C. for their labor of love in erecting the Monument to
their comrades
who sleep in their graves and those who are still living, many of them being
present. Gov.
Sayers was orator of the day and he spoke at length of the timejust
preceeding the war and
the years of 1861-65 and the days that followed. He spoke from the view point
of one who
nlived in sixties and fought in the war. He grew eloquent in speaking of the
sacrifice of the
Southern soldiers and of their families. With great earnestness he talked of
the honesty and
integrity of the men of the South- the Old South. He said he hoped that the
ruling principles
of the Old South would not be surrendered, and that modern commercialism
might not brake
down the old ideas. In bitter derission he spoke of the graft of today and
said you never
heard of graft in the South until the past few years. He held up the ideals
of the Old South
and deprecated the fact that men were talking about a New South. He expressed
deepest sympathy
for the veterans, the sufferings they endured, and commended them for
preserving their integrity
through it all. In low and sad tones he spoke of the comrades of the camp who
had fought
their fight and had gone to their reward. He urged his Comrades present to so
live that in the
end they too, might say, "We have fought a good fight." "Sweet
By and By" was sung and the benediction was pronounced by Rev. Giles J.
Leath. Thus ended
a day that will go down in the history of old Bastrop. It is
with a deep sense of appreciation the Advertiser makes this record. The T. C.
Cain Chapter
having been named for the senior editor; who, if he could call back ten
years, would have
written this occasion up as he only could. His enfeebled health prevents him. We
have drawn the bow at a venture, if the arrow has now and then gone astray, you
may charge it to
a poor memory. If a name is left out that should have appeared, forgive us,
for we have
not intentially neglected a single person on the program. It is
worthy of note that the Public School adjourned its days session at 1 pm and
marched to the
courthouse square in a body and took part in the exercises. At
night a large concourse of veterans and their friends gathered at the
hospitable home of Capt.
B. D. Orgain, where they spent several happy hours in coversation, smoking,
telling war time
stories and having a good time generally. The
years that remain to the old veterans are few and may we appreciate the fact,
and make their
days beyond the hill top and near the valley below happy as opportunity
affords. We
were all glad to see Mrs. Harriet Taylor present. She is now in her 93rd
year. Her husband was a
Mexican War veteran. --- 1914
Bastrop Advertiser .....Mr.
and Mrs. P. W. Tummins this week. Mrs.
W. E. Fowler and little son, of Goliad, are visiting at the home of Mrs.
Fowler's mother,
Mrs. T. M. Martin. Hon.
C. C. Highsmith and wife, of Houston, were visitors at the old home during
Christmas week. Mr.
and Mrs. Brown Robbins and daughter, of Austin, came down in their handsome
car Saturday, returning
Tuesday. Mrs.
R. A. Wogenstahl of San Antonio, is spending the holidays with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. W. M.
Knowls. N. E.
Morris and children, Luda Mae, Emma and Jessie Lee, were visiting Bastrop
relatives this
past week. Mr.
and Mrs. A. W. Morris and two children of Texas City,.... Mr.
and Mrs. Borden Highsmith, of Austin, spent a portion of the holidays with
Bastrop relatives. Mrs.
Andy Townsend and daughter, Miss Kattie Watts, of Austin, visited Capt. and
Mrs. W. A. Highsmith
during the holidays. Mrs.
Ben Grimes, of Cameron, was with her parents during holiday week. Mrs.
J. D. Crow and little daughter, of Uvalde, are visiting Mrs. Crow's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Jenkins. T. K.
Moore, Jr., wife and little boy, of Texas City, and Woods Moore and wife, of
Galveston, were
among Bastrop relatives the past week. Mr.
and Mrs. A. C. Erhard..... |
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