The Daily Print. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 87, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 19, 1882 Page: 1 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 23 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
1"
Y PRINT
*
15 CENTS PER WEEK.
bout
ATTACHED.
Her is what Lawrence Barrett says
a
3S
plan
its
SAND!
S
when brokers and railroad
to the witness stand.
- 6
• 1
‘EH]
WALKER
175 MARMET STEEET,
New Store! Nev Ms!
GRAND INAUGJRATION
OF THE-
PAVILION
SKAIINJRINK
man.
#
The Sunday Law.
N. Y. Journal.
McKee Rankin, the actor, is to build
a theater in New York at the cor er of
Third avenue and Thirty-first stre et, to
1
it ls
kBbe
king
much arrest for the poor and too little
arrest for the rich.
ELOLDAYS-
BROTHERS
N
a
might thus be reclaimed is 624,805
acres.
By the newly revised pharmacopa;
the doctors have banished the old-
fashioned synonym, licorice, and sub-
stituted that awful word of "Doctors’
Latin,” glycyrrhiza. ,
Chinese Wall Next.
Nashville World
If the young manufactories of the
South shall succeed in keeping up the
plundering rates of the present war-
tariff, it will not be long before they
will be asking for a Chinese wall of
protection against New England. The
latter section will then be for tree trade.
. >ne of these belongs to the butler of a
friend of mine, whose faculty of dis-
■ riminating was only equaled by his
ve of rule. My friend is an eminent
_ irgeon, at the head of his branch of
Professor J. H. Campbell reports to
the governor of Indiana that he has
surveyed the Kankakee swamp lands
for a distance of eighty-one miles, and
finds the average slope to be one and
CROSSMAN it SIMPSON,
UNDERTAKERS.
95 Postoffice street, between Twenty-third
and Twenty-fourth.
Metallic Burial Cases, Caskets.
A Matter of Raw Whisky.
Peoria Transcript.
By all means let Congress give us an
investigation into the sources from
which campaign funds are procured by
both parties. No one will object ex-
cept, perhaps, the liquor dealers.
------------------------------------------'
‘ ‘If a comparison were made between
the while people of the South and the
white people of the North,” says the
Columbus Enquirer-Sun, “the educa-
tional statistics would be decidedly
favorable to the South. The South has
made a wonderful progress in educa-
tional movements within the past few
years, and it will not be many years
before she will outstrip the North and
carry the burden of illiteracy among
the colored people besides.”
The Rink will be open every afternoon
and night until further notice. Open at
10 a. m for ladies to learn and practice.
Office Hours—9 a. m. to 10:30 a. m.; 2 to
3p. m.; 5 to 6 p.m.
Have received and are receiving a large assortment of Fine Hosiery for La-
dies. Misses and Children, which they offer at low prices for the holidays.
A Full Line ©f the Latest Patterns in Dress and Lace Goods.
CALL AND SEE THE NOVELTIES. •
A Discriminating Butler.
London Correspondent N. Y. Tribune. .
There are some find minds left here.
The Ohio Idea Revised.
Ohio State Journal.
Any system of civil service reform
examinations which does not embrace a
probationary appointment of a few
months will be found to be sadly ineffi-
pient.
MONOGRAM WHISKIES,
Specially recommended for family use.
SCOTCH AND IRISH WHISKIES
AND
Jeffrey’s Ale and Porter.
The best in the market. For sale by
CHAS. DALIAN,
No Press.
Owing to the wires being down we
are without our usual press dispatches
to-day.
2
d
Petitions are in order. One signed by
about twenty citizens is in existence,
asking that the City Council give the
capitol syndicate right of way along
Congress Avenue; another, signed by
probably three times as many business
men and property-holders on the
avenue, asks that this right of way be
not given. A third petition is said to
be receiving signatures that right of
way be not given along East and Col-
lege Avenues. It was guessed yester-
day that this last petition is being cir-
culated at the instance of those favor-
ing the Congress Avenue grant.—
Statesman.
A True'Definition of Luck.
Richmond State.
“is there any such thing as luck?”
asks a correspondent. There is. For
instance, if you go home at 2 o’clock
in the morning, after promising your
wife to be in early, and find her asleep,
that’s luck, but it isn’t to be depended
on.
his pure young face wreathed in smiles.
“What success?” asks Bertie.
Aristides does not reply at once, but,
stepping to Bertie’s side, he leans for-
ward and whispers in a low, agonized
tone, “She was bluffing without a pair. ”
At Last He Inferred.
It is related of a wealthy Philadel-
phian, who has been dead these many
years, that a young man came to him
one day and asked for help to start in
business.
“Do you drink?” inquired the mil-
lionire.
' “Occasionally.”
“Stop it! Stop it for a year, and
then come and see me.”
The young man broke off the habit
at once, and at the end of a year again
presented himself.
“Do you smoke?” asked the great
advertisement for their claret.
-------------
TOYS! TOY&X
Call and see SANFA CLAUS, and the Best and Cheapest Toys in the City.
W ood Cases of. all kinds on hand and made
. to order.
ROBES OF ALL SIZES ON HAND.
five years,”
To Arrive:
Ex Bark Ibis,
1000 bbls Rosendale Hydraulic Cement.
500 bbls Diamond Brand Plaster Paris.
Ex Schooner Frank Watkins,
800 bbls Rosendale Hydraulic Cement.
20,000 lbs Plastering Hair.
Ex Schooner Fannie Whitmore,
4800 bbls Rosendale Hydraulic Cement.
Ex Bark Fama,
2000 bbls White Bros.’ Portland Cement.
ALSO, IN STORE:
Rosendale and Portland Cement, Plaster,
Marble Dust, White Sand, Roofing Paper,
Asphalt, Lath, Nails, Drain Pipe, etc., and
All Kinds of Building Material.
Discount on large lots from wharf.
GEO. H. HENCHMAN,
Importer & Dealer, Galveston. I
MISS A. M. PRALL,
No. 216 Center, bet. Postoffice and Church,
Fashionable Dress-Maker,
Cuts and makes Ladies1, Misses’ and Chil-
dren’s Dresses by S. T. Taylor’s system,
which she guarantees, a perfect fit. Paris
fashions always on hand. Country orders
solicted. Knife Pleating done.
M. HENNESSEY & CO.,
THE GALVESTON COMMERCIAL DE-
TECTIVE AGENCY AND HARBOR PRO-
TECTIVE POLICE.
Ofice: Corner Meckanic and
22d Streets, Galveston, Texas.
, All kinds of Detective Business attended
to in Texas and Southwest. Information
relative to fugitives exchanged with relia-
ble agencies throughout the United States.
All business strictly confidential.
acquirement. For natural, inborn and
enormous conceit, I have never kown
DR. W. I. DUCIE,
OFFICE AND RESIDENCE ,
Politeness.
Politeness is a commodity which is
not quoted in the market or stock lists,
but it has a distinct value. So a dry-
goods clerk in New York has discov-
ered. The other day a plainly-dressed
elderly lady, who had waited in his *
store for some time without being at-
tended to, was observed and approached
by him, and was rewarded for his atten-
tion by the sale of one of the largest
bills of goods purchased that day. On
the next day he was surprised by the
receipt of a letter complimenting him
for the attention and courtesy he had
bestowed on the customer, and present-
ing him with twenty shares of stock in
the Whitelatch Park Gold Mining Com-
pany, of Montana, the par value $100
per share. The lady to whom this gift
is attributed is an entire stranger to
him, and he is at a loss to account for
so unexpected a remembrance. If the
Whitelatch Park Company has any ex-
istence except on paper he will be scarce-
ly less surprised, as he has not yet been
able to obtain any information respect-
ing it. From this fact, and from the
signature to the letter, ‘ ‘Lydia Pink-
ham,” it is gradually beginning to dawn
on the amicable young' man that he may
have been made the victim of a practi-
cal joke.
-----••e-----
Positive Treatment Necessary.
Buffalo Express.
The real cure in this country, as in
England, for political assessments and
for all of our other administrative diffi-
culties which can cured by law is the
adoption of civil service reform. When
we make our officeholders dependent
only on their own abilities and good
behavior for their places, we shall need
no law to tell them whether they may
or may not pay political assessments.
They will then be free moral and free
political agents, not at the mercy of any
political influence, and they may then
be trusted, as other citizens are trusted,
to do as they please on all matters of
opinion and belief.
this year are said to be $20,000,000, is
a regular visitor during the evening
hours at the Windsor hotel, NewYork,
four-tenths feet to ‘the mile, with a
mean eievation or ninevy feet above
Lake Michigan. The territory which
No Immediated Danger of It.
Rochester Post-Express.
It is not likely that Congress will
pass a civil service reform bill over the
President's veto. He won’t give them
a chance.
Census Statistics.
The English statistician, Mr. Giffin,
has been studying our census returns,
so far as they relate directly to popula-
tion, and concludes that our numbers
will go on increasing hereafter at the
same pace as heretofore. This does not
look very startling until it comes to be
expressed in figures. During the first
hundred years of our national life our
numbers have increased sixteen fold
and doubled every twenty-five years.
Now, if Mr. Giffin thinks that we are
going to increase hereafter at the same
rate for another century, he must think
that we will have a population of 100,-
000,000 in 1905, of 200,000,000 in 1930,
of 400,000,000 in 1955, and of 800,-
000,000 in 1980. Or, if he thinks we
are going to increase sixteen fold dur
ing the century, he must put us down
at 900,000,000 in 1980. Taking the
larger figure, we would have a popula-
tion of about 300 to the square mile,
leaving Alaska out of the account—
250 taking that hyperborean possession
into the account. This latter figure
looks pretty large when we come to
take account of the extensive areas of
lakes and uninhabitable mountains,
swamps and deserts. Taking a com-
mon-sense rather than a statistical view
A Gift or a Fee?
Few more curious cases, says a Paris
correspondent of the St. James’ Gazette,
have ever been brought before a court
of justice than that which was tried at
Bordeaux the other day, the plaintiffs
being the heirs of a well-known claret-
grower, M. Larrieu, and the defendant
a painter of some repute named Roybet.
The plaintiffs asked that M. Roybet
might be compelled either to pay them
£400 or to paint for them a picture of
equivalent value; their contention
being that he had received from the late
M. Larrieu a hogshead of Haut-Brion
upon condition that he should do him
a picture, but that he had drunk the
claret and not painted the picture.
They also asked that M. Roybet should
be ordered to give up to them a musket
and some javelins which the late M.
Larrieu had lent him to sketch. M.
Roybet’s answer to this was that M.
Larrieu had sent him the wine as a
present, and that no kind of promise
was ever made about his painting a
picture in return for it; and that as to
Electric Light.
P. LALOR & CO.
Market Street, between 21th and 25th.
racked.
Bertie Cecil, to whom he had spoken
the words with which this chapter
opens, was seated languidly on a
fauteuil, a cynical I-have-been-in-Osh-
kosh smile playing lightly over his
face. He was one of those superbly fly
men to whom the rapid civilization, of
the nineteenth century has given birth,
and as he ’ sat there in all his insouci-
ance and striped pants one could see
that though his life had been a gay and
reckless one, it had held for him much
of disappointment and sorrow.
“ So she refused you point blank?”
he asks.
“Yes,” is the reply. “She could
never bear to leave her dear parents,
and the little brothers and sisters whose
lives were wrapped up in hers. God
knows I love her though”—and the
strong man turned away to hide his
grief.
Bertie was by his side in an instant.
“She told you nothing else?” he
asks—“gave you no other reason!”
“No,” is the reply; “none whatever.”
“Then go back to her,” Bertie says,
“and plead with her again,” and he
seats himself in the chair and awaits
the return of his friend.
J.
C. W. POTTS,
DEALER IN
STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODS,
NOTIONS,
Gents’ Furnishing Goods,
Boots, Shoes, Trunks, Valises, Etc.
223 MARKET STREET,
Between 20 and 21, Galveston, Texas.
N. B.—You will do well to give him a call
before purchasing elsewhere.
Stoves! Stoves!
WE ARE SELLING
Cooking Stoves at from $6.50 to $45.
Just Receiving-
CARLOAD HEATING STOVES
At $3 and Upwards.
Also, a full line of
House Furnishing Goods,
Which we will sell cheap.
D. A. KEARNEY,
Opposite Tremont House.
Louisiana State Lottery Comp’y.
A splendid opportunity to win a fortune.
The grand Single Number Drawing will
take place monthly. We never scale or
postpone. Extraordinary Semi-Annual
Drawing, Class M, December 19, 1882, un-
der the personal supervision and manage-
ment of Gens. G. T. Beauregard and Jubal |
A. Early.
Capital Prizes—1st Capital, $100,-
000; 2d Capital, $50,000; 3d Capital, $20,000;
two prizes, $10,000 each; four prizes, $5000
each, twenty prizes, $1000 each, and others
too numerous to mention/
For further information address M. A.
Dauphin, New Orleans, La., or
J. D.. SAWYER, We Only Agent
IN THIS CITY.
Ill Market Street, Galveston, Texas.
W. B. DENSON,
Attorney and Counselor at Law,
Gomer Strand and Twenty-second,
GALVESTON, TEXAS.
shown in a museum, instead of
■ the place of an artist in the dram
—
Old-fashioned country dan e
ing revived, including the july
reels, which leads somebody to
that perhaps fashionable bai
future be less suggestive of e
the pieces of arms, they were at the
_______________________ disposal of M. Larrieu’s heirs whenever
In a few moments Aristides reappears, they liked to send for them. The
” " " court took M. Roybet’s view of the
matter and nonsuited the plaintiffs, who
have nevertheless obtained an excellent
. 1o"n,
- . ’ -
Mr. W. H. Vanderbilt, whose ] rofit
from operations in the stock market
Edmunds Might Go West.
Peoria Transcript.
Senator Edmunds, in 1880, said
“ none of us will live to see a presi-
dential candidate taken from any State
east of the Hudson.” It is a pity, per-
haps, that Vermont is not west of the
Hudson; or that the senator does not
live in this section of the Footstool.
Heart Disease.
Dr.Alonzo Clark says: “ It is an old
error to suppose that persons who have
cardiac heart disease must die suddenly.
They may and others may.” He also
states, in connection with one of the
most dangerous forms of valvular
trouble: “The number of instances in
which persons die with this lesion sud-
denly, compared with those who die
a lingering death, is small.”
Spare Us. Good Lord.
Trenton State Gazette.
What this country wants is a perma-
nent tariff commission to adjust the
tariff tothe constantly changing con-
ditions.
Open Day and Night.
E. T.. ceS-TETON eE co .
CORNER MARKET AND TREMONT STREETS. . .
Pure Drugs, Soaps, Toilet Articles,
ETC.
PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY.
©pen Until 9 ©’clock Every Night. Only Toy Store Tit by
cost $200,000. The* ideas for th
general design and equipment w ll be
a distinct step in advance of pre vious
structures.
generally about. He sits in one of the
reception rooms and receives his inti-
mate friends. . |
The new Penal Code of New! York
puts husbands and wives on the same
footing as other witnesses, excepting
only as to confidential communications
made to each other during marriage.
When Edward Hovey was lately ar-
raigned for murder Mrs. Hovey was not
allowed to testify; but since the change
John Bell was tried for attempting to
murder his wife, and the wife wascalled
said the professor, wth a
smile, “I will be able to answethat
question, providing, a sufficent fo he is
men are
Special Prayer.
Arkansaw Traveler.
Nine times outen ten, pra’r is de out-
pourin’s ob selfishness. I neber could
see what good a man is doin’ de human
race when he gits down on his knees
an’ axes de Lawd fur suthin’. My idee
ob praisin’ de Lawd is ter’show him dat
he didn’t make a mistake when he
made yer. De Lawd is great, an’ de
’tempted flattery ob a poo’ mortal doan
soun’ no more like music ter him den it
would ter a judge what sets on a bench.
In my humble mind, a ruler what is
constantly axin’ an’ demandin’ de praise
an’ flattery ob de people shows a weak-
ness. Folks believe dat constantly
tellin’ de Lawd ob his greatness an’
power, an’ prayin’ dat his will may be
done on earth as it is in heaven, jes’ as
dough de Lawd’s will doan prevail
eberywhar, ain’t got half so big a idee
ob de Great Master as I is. De man
what merely axed God ter be merciful
unto him, uttered de bes’ pra’r what
was eber prayed. De mercy ob de
Lawd includes eberythin’ good what
can come from de great white throne;
an axin’ fur more den dis is a wastin’
ob de bref. Work is, a mighty good
thing ter mix wid pra’r. De man what
prayed an’ den went ter work in de
field, raised a crap, while de man what
got down an’ prayed all de time ’caze
it was easier den workin’ didn’t hab
nothin’ at de elos’ ob de season.
g----
Lead Poison.
N. O. States.
. The sudden death of Miss Cassie
Troy, in this city, from lead poisoning,
has excited considerable alarm in
theatrical circles. There are recounted
numberless instances of actresses who
have suffered from the over-use of cos-
metics. Several years ago Lotta was
taken sick, and treated for consump-
tion until it was discovered that she
was suffering from the same cause.
When Miss Alary Anderson began her
career as an actress she was very igno-
rant of the use of the proper materials
for the stage, being the daughter of
Western people whose knowledge was
limited on such mattess. When Miss
Anderson went to Paris three years
ago, and met Sarah Bernhardt the lat-
ter gave the American girl her pre-
scription for make-up. It was as fol-
lows: An application of cold cream
over face and neck, then cake rough
applied with a deer’s foot, and Sand-
ford’s face powder. Nothing else ex-
cept a slight penciling with China
black round the eyelids. Miss Ander-
son has used this ever since, and says
she has felt much better in health than
she did before. She now attributes
the trouble she suffered from the
j poisonous cosmetics, the ingredients of I
which she was unacquainted with.
her equal. She is no actress, b
simply a curiosity. She ought 1
About 240 of the Southern matrimo-
nial and natal associations have Been
placed on the black listcf the Post ce
Department by order of the Post/ r
General, and postmasters at the ,. 9
where these societies exist haf . A
instructed to return to sende/n ’ X
orders addressed to the associspmmmm
are the result of long study and >bser-
vation on the actor’s part, and it is be-
lieved that ■ the new building n
of Mrs. Langtry: ‘ ‘I haven’t a vord
to breathe against Mrs. Langtry Vs
lady; but Ido say she has no bus nest
on the stage. I have seen a great deal
of self-consciousness in my profes zion,
but it has been generally a matter of
the profession, very wealthy and fond
of entertaining his friends. His butler
was of the old and faithful retainer
variety and knew his work perfectly.
When his master told him he was
going to have company to dinner he
cooly asked who the people were.
Then he would recollect that Mr. X.
liked codfish, or Mr. Y. curry, and
debate the menu by items. The only
difficulty was about wine. The master
has a magnificent cellar and likes to
give everybody the best of everything,
but the butler did not see things in
that light. When his master had
ordered certain wines from choice bins
his zealous custodian would say:
‘ ‘ ‘ Ardly, sir, I think, the ’40 or ’47
port to night. The company won’t
understand it, sir. Something fruitier
would suit them quite as well.” This
would occur whenever no special con-
noisseurs of port wine were coming, and
was well enough, but sometimes the
butler went too far. One day the eminent
surgeon was giving a dinner to his as-
sistants and dressers at a hospital, and
ordered a fine dinner with the best
wine. • The port was protested against,
“For them young gents, sir?” wag
asked in an appealing tone. The point
was yielded, and the victor then ob-
jected to the champagne.
“Perrier Jouet tres sec would be
quite throwed away, sir. There is some
of that lot you bought the other day
would do just as well.”
“But what the devil,” roared the
master, “am I to drink? I can’t give
my guests wine I won’t drink myself.”
“Which you might pass it, sir, for
once,” was the reply; “champagne ain’t
good for you sir, leastways every day.”
This was trop dezele, and my surgeon
friend parted with his chief butler, to
my profound regret, for the new man
knows not Joseph and will allow all
the best bins to be wasted on women
and boys, instead of reserving them for
viveurs accomplis.
-------
Nearly a Bluff.
Chicago Tribune.
“ Higher than Gilderoy’s kite.”
The words came with mournful dis-
tinctness from the ashen lips of Aris-
tides Mulcahey, as he stood within the
ask 26Eal
precincts of a vine-embowered cottage,
his handsome face pallid with grief,
while the nervous twitching of the
ge xu/w, wim a riant mouth, that was overhung by a
Inevy feet abev ■ drocping ahoustache gnowed howbit
- ter was the pain by which his soul was
at a wake.
A Washington reporter went toFro-
fessor Harkness, the director on the
Naval “Observatory at Washington and
asked for the result of the observ: tions
of the transit of Venus. “In
Dr. Crosby approves the Sunday law
. because “it insures a rest for the poor.”
Unfortunately under our laws it’s too
A Disappointed. Georgian.
The Atlanta Post-Appeal tells the
following anecdote about Governor
Stephens. A countryman came up to
a fine-looking gentleman in a train in
which the governor was, and, shaking
hands with him, said: ‘ ‘Governor, can
। I have the honor of shaking hands with
you ?” “ Certainly,” was the reply;
“but I am not the governor; here he
comes now.” “Is that him?” “That is
Gov. Stephens.” “Well, I’ll be derned!”
"What did you remark?” “I’d heard he
was a prodigy; but if that’s the biggest
man they could trump up for the gov-
ernor of Georgy, I think we’d better
leave the State, for the country’s de-
generatin’.” “We don’t estimate a
statesman by his physical development;
it’s the brain. The governor has" the
greatest brain in Georgia.” I don’t
care nothin’ about brain; but the idea
of a man bein’ governor that’s got to
be carried aroun.’ like a bundle o’
clothes !”
E.OTTES S56ETEED"2",
(PEONIX SAND MAN.
Will, notwithstanding the railroad monopoly, furnish Sand to any part of the city on
the shortest notice at 80 cents per cubic yard. Try him and be convinced.
Orders Left at J, D, Sawyer’s will Receive Piwt Attention.__
E. S. WOOD & SON S.
(ESTABLISHED 1840.)
STRAND, GALVESTON.
IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN
Foreign and Domestic Hardware.
Agent for the Celebrated CACTUS 4-pronged Barbed Wire,
BUEEAT.C ScAT.Ts, etc
Jus; received, a large and most complete stock of Shelf and Heavy Hardware.
FEEGTETT ANTA
AN ELEGANT SET OF .
GENUINE DIAMOND EAR-RINGS AND LACE PIN, VALUED AT $475.
Every purchaser who shall purchase from my establishment goods to the amount of
$10, or more, at any one time, from this date until the 5th day of January, 1883, shall be
presented with one ticket for every $10 worth of goods purchased, each ticket entitling
the holder to a chance in the Grand Raffle for an Elerrant Set of Diamond Ear-
rings and Pin, which will take place on January 6, 1883- This magnificent gift is
now on exhibition at my store, No. 110 Market street, under Opera House.
Holiday Novelties a Specialty.
JUILUS SOCHA.
of the matter, one would say that we
were likely to number less than 400,-
000,000 rather than as many as 800,000,-
223 Market Street, Up Stairs. 000 ormoresacentury.fromthistme.
“Yes, now and then.”
“Stop it! Stop it for a year, and
then Come and see me.”
The young man went away and cut
loose from the habit, and after worry-
ing through another twelve months
once more faced the philnthropist.
“Do you chew?”
“Yes.”
“Stop it! Stop it for a year and then
come and see me.”
But the young man never called
again. When some one asked why he
did’t make one more effort he replied:
“Didn’t I know what he was driv-
ing at? He’d have told me that as I
had stopped chewing, drinking and
smoking, I must have saved enough
money to start myself.”
Alexander Pope must have had the
Keely moter stockholders in his mind’s
eye when he wrote:
“ Hope springs eternal in the human breast;
| Man never is, but always to be blest.”
VOL. 1. NO. 87.
put to work at computing the ob erva-
Livery & Boarding Stable Ltion.” There is nothing like being
prompt in these little matters.
THE DA
' - E kg . • -
—'----— “ ---- ;
GALVESTON, TUE UNING, DECEMBER 19, 1882.
* .
'' -• - '. -rlo
—==
AFTER DINNER C .
SAND! SAND!
Mr., Fallon’s Widowa
“Seven cities warred for Homer dead,
who living had no roof to shield his
head,” and two women who allowed
Michael Fallon to die in the New
Haven almshouse are now contending
for the right to wear widow’s weeds on
his account. The explanation of this
latter state of affairs is that news has
recently come from Ireland that Fallon
was heir to a considerable properly
there.
---•••---
Two Actresses.
Chicago Times.
Bernhardt came over here with a very
unsavory reputation, yet she conducted
• herself in a way which gave no rise to
scandal. Mrs. Langtry came over here
with a reputation as a woman of high
breeding and refinement, and how has
she conducted herself? However, it is
possible that they manage these things
better among French women.
--------- © :---
Marriage Associations Black Listed.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Daily Print. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 87, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 19, 1882, newspaper, December 19, 1882; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1438335/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.