The Daily Democrat. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 204, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 10, 1883 Page: 1 of 4
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daily
the
TUESDAY
VOL.
FORT WORTH,
TEXAS,
VfiNING, JULY, lO, 1883.
As an advertising scheme the duel
of tho Texas SiftOr was not a bUc
OCBS.
i
V;
A v
[.man's1
V
Henry Bkrqu opp<>ttos angling
because it not only iacoratos tho fish,
butfenooui'ugcB lying.
GcvEtilfoR Butijcii was nog'acted
tit the Harvard commencement, but
got in bi work at tbe annual din-
ner.
• ■«
ip yi m i h
01 anything is the Clothing or Furnishing Goods line, don't
forget that in laying our clearing sale before Hie public, we
have made interesting reductions on the prices of our goods.
Our sale this far has been more than satisfactory to us, while
at the same time all our patrons have been pleased beyond the
power of expression. To those who haven't visited us since
the inauguration of our semi-annual clearing sale, we would
say here that enough goods are left from which to make a
satisfactory selection. The prices are "way down here."
HOSOH jo
IITUZJ
O'Donovan JIokha wains to drive
tbe Eeg'tub out of Ireland. Why
don't O'Donovan go over and take
a hand in tbe driving?
Jtfiac
seve^l women with illogitiiuato chi!-
dreu and many other immigrants
d no fi'iondrt in this country
HU9 of providing for them-
One .sl.ip brought 1C2 heads
llies and 2-13 children, whose
paf^o hiid been paid by tho British
govjiment, arid the other brought
^#>ple so assisted to emigrate
ihauestiun i« whether tho com-
mi^r:ers can makotho vosselsiake
back Iree, and place a strict
go upon pauper immigration
tor.
that J>e W . ..iiiinwffli trfe race fOr
speaker, and says ho will dNpute
with Carlisle every vole in the Ken
tucky doJegntion.
£x GovKitNoKKmitwooD, of Jowaf -
t v m
repudiates the ac i >n of the late r J
publican state convention) and says
the party invites defeat by its atti-
lude on the temperance question;
Since England is assisting heij
paupers to come to this country, it
would bo a fit revenge for thu gpv
eminent to assist ail our broken*
down politicians to emigrato thcro.
tb
tSUAJXTOWN, la
I.] J.I >■'
The at roe
, has recontly
fit of horse ear
There u o no nc*v developments
in Vermont senatorial contest.
lins' strength seems to be dribblinc m
away, and in bis defeat tho b
have received another rebuke.
*
'
.AW^i09S-!iV0aO1'1 C
said the 1,1
^iuhbor, "in a new house, too: you 11
"p.t a triip." She thought in-
-'^migse for ruts.—Hotel
•si •>>*
The treasurer of Iowa ha sj
paid the la^t dol lar of tho
and tboi-e is money in ihij trc
to meet thy outstanding^,,
co e, from the center of tho town
fair grounds. It is not thought
khero are "millions in it," bpt
course of time there may bo so
flkginess lor tho horse cars
, T©to passengers can enjoy the
lego of hanging on to a crowded
M ' iihaling tho smoko ot
^electable cigarette;
t till then, .will,.Kir-
lory as a i\ning metro-
loom up like a Dutch
Ti* *
in a log.
he bishops and peers of. Groat
B ain care nothing for pjjpillarity.
W y Hhon'd thoj?—since they owe
nt ling to the people for their po>i-
tnj*. Ttiey are independe^yiO
as the people consent to^gjjnp-
What Has Been Done Within
Past Twelve Years.
. Pnr!8 So^i> sh.vS: Twfelve tear.
iB Commune. mistress ot Km
Prh«8^«niP0n J'ktfUelwrloDi, while the'
Ir ,?,r, i ' ®"Ca'"ped round our cMuital
an ~ sras
onlv vesfer.i«ir*"' /ei 11 8eei *
Izou 'np-
istei',:; .7
sight of Parllf n:ay
uiidst of one great tire. -
compare that dark period
of a nohl^jnj, fellow, whb/ie father,
however, (been overtaken by genuine
iiitsfortmn The jrouug man wcht
:?, * al'fori and, having made fcon-
slderable utVi returned east to claim
bis tlanoeej. during his absellep they
bad beooijii„Plted. Upon calllHg, al-
uioHt rush til up0n the young lidy tl;b
young man ^ a8tonished to learn front
her own lip«iat she proposed to marry
somebody ej she did so, and now it
transpires thtlie married couple, who
have pafiAetlutich of their time la
Europe, urbbth on the verge of a
di'Hadftii stMinjl, the result of an 111-
aesorted iiiat^
After Seeing
at .Sedan ana
P1
present time to see that optimists are
often right, and that the ftiture belongs
to those who do not dlspalr.
Civil war desolating France after the
struggle with the enemy seemed to
mark the beginning of the end, the ap-
proach of a fearful collapse. We es-
pecially remember the period of the
siege. In which the Paris population
wan starving. Not only did a piece of
horseflesh fetch un incredible price, but
bread itself failed. People were coiu-
pelledHo wait in long rows outside the
bakers* shops in the snow to -secure a
piece of something black, which was
denominated the pain du siege, llut all
that was nothing; people put np with
material suffering. Our moraUsutterlngs
)le still; the heartrend-
Thehile of a Day.
The world feemed grand. I saw
beauty, glory, Iplendor In everything.
£<veii the old sleH I had so often railed
at for its darkens and gloom looked
bright and cleaTthat day. The rickety
fiati { i r >oked tops, the poor< thobuv
Uttltf *itrli>g-ro< ir-*U wwt-arj
holiday aitlre. And f was So
i J,°;l"orrow 1 wduld be the wife of
old ftu'ledge.- Ills wlte. So
• "* ""u"
with
were more terrlb
ing spectacle
Ing together
ing spectacle presented bythegather-
ogether of Mobiles wh6bau
never
experienced warfare, and who were
thrown badlv armed, Inadequately
^equipped and irrcgula;Xu&tJLfittHC..intf
^d, too, itnd
tifteen,afr1<uuuit unhappy day.u
with the world alone. " f rW* flftifcistg#
In a poor but respectable familyi My
forlorn position obtained for ine a few
music pupils; then life commenced. I
had never been able to reach far above •
the beginning. Pupils would come and
go. 1 paid inv way, dressed plainly,
and spent my tittle surplus in reading
matter and such musical events aa might
occur in cur little village. One day I
was hurrying to the house of one of my
pupils, when I tripped updn tire plank
pavement and fell. The ludlcrousnejs
of iny position struck me more forolbly
than the sliook 1 received. To add to
my discomfiture before 1 had ttraetO
rise a gentleman lifted ine front the
ground. I felt too embarrassed even to
thank him for his assistance and kind
solicitude for the mishap. With a kind
vil >
them, witiioutj. any furih
t
■e of a feeling that I had done (
KS2 \ a
1 mo
luwirut
Mil
.7aco.. l:r P-,n*
Nov10 leaves Gutosvillo... Sfi P* 1,1 ■
ives McGregor.. 5p P: m-
•ua'J
> 1 i
Toittrd'ObiiiiQi
arri
RAILWAY AND CONNECTIONS
Tba .jSfrt
ICO,, ft.
nroHts*
>«\r\o'\ -IS •lu0V"!
^Jeaiera in all Kinds of
u,0. <1 -.iWolW
"iffWRoSt-1. «
\ V'Ul
io aaj
' HUM fj }r wd"XV*r^
Afforded tho Benefit Qt a
STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES,
Provisions, Produce, Cigars and Tobacco,
58 Houston Street*
>■ i pi ^ii'
.!«(—ii'm
FIRST
NATIONAL
OF HOUSTON AND SECOND
BANK
FORT
CAPITAL
SURPLUS,
COltNHlt
WORTH.
DirkotOhs-—M B Loyd,
llnmert. .1 '> Heed
STUKETS,
TEXAS.
$100,000
_ - - - 30,000
Geo Jackson. D C Bennett. Znne Celt'. J S Godwin, S B
THE CITY NATIONAL BANK
ovidonco of Weakness in
cution.
— *
Some of the prohibition!^
are charging that tlieir cj
for goveriior is 'a sly druil
cruise they could, not cxpect
who drinks in a bai'-room to^
prohibitionists.
C'JUl
ikeV
FORT WORTH,
TEXAS,
PAID UP CAPITAL
suiu'Ltrs,
All matters pertaining to conservative banking recieivi
and careful attention.
A*
Jj^rompt
$150 000
J9,000
Fanny Miller lives at Sundu«y,
Ohio, and hus tho largest fuet of liv
woman in tbo world. Ilor right fpt
is one foot six inches long and
L< It one inch shorter. Iler shoes
eighteen inches long.
And now it is
Jones, a member of ihe
Drafts' Sold on the Principal Cities of Euro
mri
i
Josov
Hazlej
lervisors, has
mson, editor of
meet him on the field
and tbe latter bus accepted.
not love
naipBmi
vTOin
leei
in!th«
Consanghirnty is
not in the question at all. - It was
mfdo i|kg:il to marry a decoused
wife's sisier, or a deceased husband's
brother by a .stupid old regulation
which has no basis either in nature
oj" common-sense. There aro com-
paratively few cases in which tho
privileges would be asked, and there
are no cases where its legality ctmld
work anj' harm. . It is not a popular
demand, but it is a matter in which
the per pie have an interest because
there is no rea«(^^rhy tho right
should be withhel^^HTho pritico of
Wales and his broT^W and a few
dvocated tho measure; the
nd peers opposod it and tho
lords sat down on it. With-
largelv a popular demand
ular measure because it
dom, and its defeat has
inst tho bishops
President, A. M. I51{I'r^^.Pl.e?,dent) JNO
NICHOLS.
Cashier.
I.OMAX
V
TTT TTVTD •ljT-PTH1.
The Water Works Company
. in nf the above ffci on hand ajul are prepared to do all kin
and are prepared to do all
wot In that line.
Itisfaction and Pass Insra;
ItNDH OF ^
on S^Lcrt STotioe.
Have a M\ supply of the a
Work Guaranteed to Giv
Do
w A'IMQ.R WORKS co.
""rtiajr -^3368 by Toiegrapli. like. All the way on her jour..c
«rA some wnvs In whleh kl8slU[lujr|,i to Vienna, wherever the
'1 beware pleasing. telegraph station, the young
cart be done which It Is uierejjyY a kiss to Ik* sent to the'Uin
are other wasb u> « f. r wftys "
HETII AND MAIN ttTHEET
nve oin«>,« '- "j ^iu other ways \l often replied WHh telegraph.
"v0hichTtP!s absolittely and horribly jr^1? is too cheap and dry for a
Few peopli
Ttlosc who
.!w> rcallv know bow to kis yjie American girl who swings on the
people however, are not °™'wt gate these nkasiiig summer nights
.who do. now i , .v,oW linnuesU..„„„ muiy*ttt sueh stupid
by Wire. She knows of
i iniBi.' """ . . iiiid they unques
reatly to
really w*Tn^"^vVonld have tfr
It is greatly to ^ g ln hftVe
young king .^ffhe art of kissing,
never reaiu «= —
sinile sarcasi
i as kisBes b
worth ml,
ou^dn't ca1
ns of that roval kind
if tnoy iiaAiP
' !«Wb
V>ii
Sir fhe
e by telegraph,
'girl In her highest
veiii
co
li^gklssesbv:«ltrby^
not the p lrnni>rnrttei!l. It^'oulu
i/\capg gboald be trj who litid
-«'vb'rwM. of«-
Otice known wna* vuo
isses ot
by tele
-Unerlc
ncnt is an admirable judge of
is the popular thing to Iml-
ivs of royalty, but In this in-
girls and boys of this country
to be excused. Kissing by
.cannot be popularized even
and queens. — Philadelphia
Tub Chicago papers
ono another. When tho Herald lost \
$25,000 in a libel suit, aI%ho others j
throw up their hat6 and screamed
with delight; and low tbe No\ny[
wants Sartons to suo tho Times}
slander.
The Santa Fj
was bognn on
aneiont.city, which on its thi
drod and thirty-third am '
ok wiiUJMu
ucli youn^^Pummt
stown and Plymouth,
ossesscs a very cosmopolitan
arncter. Its pooplc include many
ations and rjt^, from Aalcc and
Apaches to ^^Ris, irom Spanish
Mexicans to^^^ uib Yanke
is difllcult to
^o public
^ep up itsce
thrco days,
set out to
Tiik ooaiiP'ut commissioners ..
emigration of New York have an in-
teresting problem under solution.
Two ships lately brought to Castle
Garden ahd landed a
emigrants, rtiaiiy of wh
edged that th'ey had beer?
of work-HotjSei and poor bouses and
hospitals, and hail beeit sent over by
tbe British govei nmeut.' There were
STATE.
fappened in Towns and
Texas Yesterdav.
Citie
nil j
ma
havewithdrawh thflir nai,le8 in P]/*?* ^6"Vo" raise his vatce ln un
r,,r,,a" ^ — 1 bellowings. No, my dear sir,
ilyl
-The Kabbi Seliul scamlal at
place does not seem to die out with
end of Hie investigation and deci«-
but rather Inclines towards another
er quarrel. Thirty of the most prom-
jit and wealthy members of the syn-
r?ry.8-?-tfl **>«-
The rabbi will proba-
.....g worse by suing some of
Utors for damages to his cbar-
„ _Bfamation,
biisiCANA-—'1'he district court yester-
,awarded a Mrs. Hbok, damages to
lunount of $2(KK) agrtinst the 1
a'l'exas Central railroad for t
it>f her son a few months p
Appeal will be taken.
icihta fai.m.—A twelve yeaTo d
siof Allen Parmer Avas drowned Jn
tl Wichita rivoE. yesterday evening
4 bathlnlJ«®body was recovered
aavlll 1
oin/,% -^ J^eould prevent
miratv^i been accomplished,
ransom b llve millirrds have beeil
—TO-
tresses, barracks, railways and schools;
France has patriotically resigned her-
self to pay OoO.OOO.OOO fr's, in new taxes
to meet her new burdens; In a few
months the chaos tff 1871 had given
place to a normal state of things; for
the army annihilated at Sedan and Metz
tiiere was substituted anew army which
was stronger and quite as valian.; and
that we art still regarded as a power in
Europe is proved by tbe fact that three
other powers have leagued themselves
against us. In a word, the bark that
stranded twelve years ago is afloat, and
is sailing proudly onward with the for-
tunes or trance. All this has been ac-
complished in twelve years, and even
less. Has Italy, who is anything but
unassuming, realized within that short
space of time so great a sum of efforts,
overootue so inajfy difficulties, and ob-
tained such iintn nse results?
Tho Office Boy.
Is tbe office boy idle?
No, he is not idle; he is frantically In-
dustrious; he is killing himself with
hard work.
Will it take long?
Unfortunately, yes; he is very, very
tough.
what is he doing now ?.
Rather ask, what is he not doing? lie
las the faculty of doing so many useful
filings at the same time, that it is 1m-
losslble to guess what he may not be at.
:Ie is probably at this moment engaged
in sweeping out, dusting, tidying up
the several rooms, going on a few score
of errands, and quietly omitting op-
portunities to make himself useful.
Does the office hoy make any unneces-
sary noise?
Oh, dear, no; be nev?^jBrii,i« yv warf
and other milliards have been expe'
to renew our material, to contract for- . r
Loavoriwc
and swefeVtr', f>Oo, 'U-t!( •
y Pi
me in his arms" fH<«~ J
whispered: "Two soulfl wUi, f''tt/ /lotfr
gle thought, two hearts thffi^^^O'i
one." Ours was such a sweet, drefr&y
love. The eventful morrOw came. Why
should I try to describe the different
emotions thar possessed ine? In a few
hours I should leave Agues Ward. witU
all of her fltfui dreams and ambition#
forgotten. Why try and tell you what
a happy, blessed woman I felt in ray
plain travelling dress, Btandlng by his
•Me ln the minister' privtte parlor?
Why tell you what a great Happiness
swept over me. when Harold, taking m
hand, said, "My darling little wife"
think that day fmui
of heaven. Till
would be husbOTti. "> o
g my
>P' X
f must have had a glimpse
'I'll, W .,1* ..
was
Wet nesday.
Thursday morning we took the cars for
,C., Harold's home and place of biftlness.
Perhaps because Harold was sitting with,
me, nature outdid herself In color, light
a><d shade, as the cars whirled past for-
ests, brooks and meadows. We rushed
from one beautiful panorama to another.
The sky was smiling, the trees bright
with green. Birds tlmv here and there.
Who once thought of danger?. A shock
—a crash—and the pleasures: j6y$;
hopes of fifteen lives were ended! \
poor, bleeding form, mangled and torn,
was my darling! Why did I not dtet66?
They told me f was hurt, and trted (o
take me from the lifeless form I loved, I
idolized. The morning smiled upon a
happy wife. Tbe cold dark mantle of
nljjht fell upon a "bride of a day"—'
fell like a heavy black pall, and thurst
the one bright spot of my life Into ob-
am,0£.2hI8- bWWHl Clara cT "
urady. '
nages to
Hf^Uin
,:V
year old
from
The
f^llL III VyUHllU
icer^^^Rs
Kthis evening
„ bov's father,
was itobert.
3ol. James A. Brltton, of
e'englneer^y theK^erno^r
Steeeo°uVfoer being obliged to ijalt
so lir for a decision at bis hands. Col.
Br on was a student of Cumberland
Ui ersitv, at Lebanon, fenti.. where
he aduated with high honors a short
tin previous to the war.
"that Influence has the moon bn fhe
tldj' tho teacher asked •'ohnrJI®1nl?'
AniJohn llenry nrtd it depended On
was tied; it It was a dog it made
vou have certainfy been misinformed, j
Is the office boy ever rude or dis-1
^NoViTbit of it. He Is courtesy itself.
His bumps of veneration and reverence
cover his entire bead. He looks UP,^
his employers as to a superior being. He
would sooner go wHH.ul ".lr'^fter ves
a week than to once omit "sir after yes
or no. or forget to return thanks for the
BUThentyou°tiilnk the office boy Is not
to be improved? ... .
Assuredly not. It w°uld be like at-
tempting to paint the lllly or gild re-
fined gold. No, sir; the office boy Is
the one most perfect thing in nature
Do vou love the office boy Y
(Jonsumedly. Without him life were
unlivable. The thought of having to
part from him Is tbe only thing that
darkens our way to tbe silent tomb
Oirla of nte Blue-Orass Region.
The women here have gorgeous na-
ture tobulU on and high art to Improve
it wlthi Ylhvn the Bona Dea, out of
her bouhlej>uBfi$8s. makes a blue grass ,
woman slif takes care never to spoil
tbe lob* I soft, white, warm body,
transluoest with divine light and eurv-
Inir to llnfc of beauty fls huturally as the
tendrils (f the vine, is tbe ground work
uDon whjcb nature limns the human
angel, fees softly bright, but lumin-
ously Infcnse; cheeks like tW« damask
rose, w h buttercups of dimples, In
whose toncved heart sly Puck of Ober-
on mlJt sleep; lips like oxbeart cher-
ries at/the center, but flexible as a
smokeivreath, and fading fcway Into,
the sofoheek like the heart's blood of a
strawlerry iritolnselons crtam; a chin
falrlyKshloned as the golden
apple
teblng Paris gave to Venus, who
I sfe-SI? '4
in answer. I only know that he s not sea hv .ph .s pearly
that I
trernl
wbi was imsu} """ "
hlmlowl, and If It was a gate I
it, Jfct. bs soOn as a cow or a young man
camlalong. It is Such things as this
CUll nun ii v* • — — ^
in the office. He is sq conscientious, you
know. Te absents himself fearing that
he mav disturb somebody or be In somet
boiiv's wav. But be Is never In the way.
oh" no, JoVnl I say hello! John! Where
in thunder is that boy now. I wonder!
i m
Romance from a Bummer City.
six years ago. one^of
i hyhph's peany ear, the wood
vmbh springy step—these are a few
f tbe harms that nature gives the
maldei of the blue grass.
•oeiety belles
tbatWike'sChool teachers want to ,l|e married sqmewhatl
iiS}S!3S?JKU <u «i
Some five or six years ago
NeWoort's pretty society bel
marked somewhat hntrledly,'or at least
ICUIJeVft v
ttenf. Previous
the attentions
To Contractors.
GerianSt. John'« Church will re-
ceive ids from contractors to build a
chnrci Plans and speeiflcat ions ean be
seen¥J. J. Kanes office. Committee:
will ielve all bids, and reserve tM
rlgbtp reject the ♦am«
"ofWoltb, July 111
nd reserve
■u
I#
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Hoelzle, C. W. The Daily Democrat. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 204, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 10, 1883, newspaper, July 10, 1883; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth233661/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.