The Dallas Daily Herald. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 246, Ed. 1 Friday, September 3, 1880 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
.
i
I
THE
DAILY HEBALB
C0X10MDATED WITH THE )
DALLAS DAILY COMMERCIAL j
DALLAS TEXAS FRIEyir SEPTEMBER 3 1880. TOL. XXYH SO. 216.
f ESTABLISHED IK 1849.
1 PIC HVC GIKT.
DALLAS
ALWAYS
E. M. Kalm (I Co. -Clothiers.
AS USUAL
The First ! Field
fir. K. II. KA1L has been in the eiv York
and Baltimore Markets for the past six n ecks
and evidences ot his immense purchases are
beginning to show themselves at his Mam-
moth Establishment Corner Elm and Lamar.
Several bills of goods have already been re-
ceived and more are rapidly following.
We shall show this week a magnificent a
sortmeut of Bi)Y$aiidClIILUIlEXS SCHOOL
SUITS of all grades and prices. ;
It is our intention to offer you the finest
line of CLOTHING ever brought to Dallas.
E. M. KAHN & CO.
The CLOTHIERS
COR. ELM and LAMAR STS.
CRYSTAL
CHINA AND
2E5 TSfiL 3P O
726 ELM
19 THE PLACE TO
Cups and Saucers for
Plates - -
Goblots -
Tea Service
1 doz. Ice Cream Shells
Fino Lamps -
Fine Wash Bowls and Pitchers decorated
Pine Water Toilet Set
Fine Decorated Chamber Set 10 pieces
Fine Decorated Tea Set 44 pieces
Fine Dinner and Tea Sots ICO pieces
Water Coolers $3 and upward.
Bird Cages $1 and upward. 1 '
Baby Carriages $G.50 and upward.
Kefrigeraiors 80.50 and upward.
Clothes Hampers $3 and upward
Now is the time to furnish yourself with goods at lower
prices than ever offered in the City of Dallas.
Examine these goods and prices
they speak for th'mselves
R.L.HermanV
72Q ELM
AHEAD!
Wit I
:all Styles!
DALLAS TEX.
4-
PALACE
GLASSWARE
EB 3E TO" EtfE
STREET
CET A SET OF
50o
50o
50c
50c
50o
60c
$100
$2 00
$5 00
37.00
$17a85
Crystal Palace
STREET.
STATE SPECIALS.
TEXAS TOPICS BY TELEGRAPH.
A Negro ft hot and paliifrilly Wounded
Hear Coraicana Ail'alra Hi Kim
' Antoulo-Thla Year' Cottou
at Brenliam Etc. Etc.
Spolalto tin Herald.-
Corsieans Sept. 2.-At Colluuj's farm
about six miles from town a negro named
Columbua Watts was shot In tbe hand aud
badly hurt. It sooms that a negro by the
name of Bill Grigger had been living with
Watts' sister and the having left him ami
gone home thought that it was her father
that had persuaded her to go so he went to
Watts' houso with the intontion of shooting
bim and tried to execute his intention but
was prevented by the son Columbus who
in defending bis father received the bullet
instead. Grigger escaped.
C.J. Hanson's sons aged respectively 1(1
and 17 borrowed two of his horses last uigl.l
and left for parts unknown.
Boll worms are eaid to be very bad about
Spring llill and tho farmers foar that
they will not realize more than half a crop.
Cotton receipts up to date reach nearly
800 bales and everything in that line 13 look-
ing lively.
Cottou al Ureiihimi.
Special to the Heruld.
Brenham Sept. 2 The Morse compress
was completed and tried to-day. It worked
I satisfactorily compressing bales to twelve
iuchos. Rogular work will begin to-morrow
j Men owning cotton platforms don't like it.
I Bankers advance no money to shippors un-
; less the cotton is at the compress. A con-
! tract was made to-day for tne shipment of
2000 bales of compressed cotton to go nll-
i rail via Quincy to Boston aud thuuee to Liv-
erpool by steamer.
I Politleiil Kpcukiiitf ut Qnlvewlon.
j Buer.lal to tlio Herald.
Galveston Sept. 2. The joint political
; discussion at Artillory hall betwoen Jones
' and Shopard has just closed.' Shepard
opened the discussion and oloquently defined
the priupiplos and policy of the Democracy.
llo said that it was a party of the people and
1 for the peoplo opposed to centralization and
: in favor of stato rights lie graphically re-
j viewed Colonel Jones' political career and
; claimed he was inconsistent. A largo crowd
; was in attendance. Throckmorton Hum-
man aud Brady wore present.
j Affairs at Suu Antonio.
Special to the Herald.
San Antonio Sopt. 2. In the twenty
ninth senatorial district to-day Stephen
Power of Cameron county was renominated
! on the first ballot. The rod wing Democrats
: of Cowen were not admitted to the conven-
I tion.
J The International railroad is coining this
way at the rate ot a milo and a half a dav.
and passenger trains will be at San Marcos
by tne zutn inst. i
A movement is on foot among the cotton
operatives to snip direct to jNow Orleans.
FOREIGN AFFAIKS.
London Sept. 2. Oldham limited) com-
pany's representing two millioa spindles
have decided that thetate of tho cotton trade
j renders advisable the lessening of the produo
tion of yarns by resorting to short time. A
general meeting of the limited company's and
private spinners will be held shortly to con'
aider the matter.
A train on tne .midland railroad going
from Liverpool to London ran off the track
just outside ot tne central station at Man
Chester. Two carriages were smashed and i
number of passengers injured.
The British steamer Hardwick from
Odessa bound for Bristol laden with barley
shifted cargo to-day and foundered and all
on board were lost with the exception of one
liremen.
GERMANY.
A Berlin dispatch to the St James Gazette
says it is understood mat navai operations m
Turkish waters will commence about the 15th
inst. It is calculates that by that time all
the vessels detailed for the service will be
able to reach Ragusa.
SKRVIA.
Belgrade Sept. 2. The Skuptschina will
meet at Kragujovatz in September. The
government will introduce a bill for the
final settlement of the Jewish question in
coniormuy wun me weaiy oi iierun.
ORB AT URITAIK.
London Sept. 2. The prest association
tayt it it authorized to state that the govern-
ment has received no Information of the plot
to attack the powder mills and barracks at
Bollincollig.
BCSSIA.
London Sept. 2. A dispatch to the daily
News dated Teberan. savt it is rumored
that General Skobeloff in cQmmand of the
Tekke expedition has been tummoned to St.
Petersburg.
SPAIN.
Madrid Sept. 2. Violent sales and thun
der-storms have done muoh damage around
Madrid. All trains are delayed. Tbe rail-
war near the Etcurial it destroyed. Similar
accounts are received from the northern and
western provinces.
A wooden bridge over the river Ebro
near Tagron fell to-day while a
battalion of troop was crossing. One
captain and three lieutenants and tixty-fonr
men were drowned.
SWITZERLAND.
Geneva Sept. 2. A waterspout at Sig to-
day caused great destruction of property.
Several persons were killed.
AFGHANISTAN.
London Sept. 2. A dispatch to the
Standard from Chaman dated Sunday says:
"General Roberts marched from Khelat-
Ghilzsi for Candahar on the 25th inst. Be
took with him all tbe British garrison and
hauled over the fort to the ameer's officials
lie expecti d te reach Candahar on Monday
and attack Avoob Khan on Tuesday. He
hat tent a plan for combined action with
General Pbayre if the latter can reach
Takht-i-Pul (thirty-five "miles south of
Candahar) on Monday. This however is
impossible in consequence of the searcity of
food and forage and wbolosale desertion of
drivers."
Fael.
New York Sept. 2.-Gutman & Sons
manufacturers of shirts 860 Broadway
hiled yesterday making an assignment to
Marx Rothschilds & Bros. in lieu of S.
Gutman. Liabilities about $300000.
BANK MESSENGER HOODED.
A Neat Affair to Phtladelphia-Tbe
nunnera Enrau.
Philadelphia Sept. 2. Theodore Marsh
messenger of the Girard bank went to the
Lulled States tub-treasury to-day and drew
$1500 in.bills for the bank. He placed it in
an inside pocket with forty-three dollart In
jaiall bills and itartod for the pott-office
wun tome money orders. While going up
stairt to the second story where the money
order department it located he met throe
men. One of them pretended to ttep aside
ostensibly to make room lor the messenger
uul insiea i oi uoing so stumbled and
fell against Marsh who was roughly pushed
around me tnree men. So nicely wat it
done mat air. Marsh thought It all was an
incident until he had gained the top of the
siairs wnen he discovered that the money he
l ad drawn f.-om the sub-treasury was miss
ing men it began to diw upon his mind
timt the atl'air on the stairs was a put-up-job
t rob bim and he ran down stairs but the
u un had disappnarod. lie gave notice to the
Siarsh has been an employee of the bank for
u.an v yuars.
Ntttionnl Board of Mteani Oavliratlon.
.Norfolk bept. 2. At a meeting of
the National Board of Stoam Navigation to-
day a letter was read from Surgeon-General
Hamilton United States marine hospital
service urging the passage of a law com
pelling the examination of all seamen before
shipment. He further suggested the estab
lishment of a national snug harbor for wor-
thy seamen and officers who are permanently
"-aoied. Kosolutionswcre adopted recom-
mending the eitablishment of tuch refugo for
disabled seamen as the surgeon-general sug
gested and lavormg the encouragement of
a regular system of training for the navy as
well as national encouragement of our mer-
cantile marine so that our own shipping
may bo commendable with the dignity and
nobds of the country and so that our own
ships may bo commanded and tailed and our
guns manned by Aorerican seamen. In tup-
port of tho last resolution a lottor was road
from Naval Lieutenant Chadwiok who
stro. fc'.y urged tho necessity for the oslab-
lishn entol a marine training school. The
oxecutiv committee was instructed
to proparo a memorial to
congress embodying these resolutions.
Mr B. Osborne offered a perils of resolu-
tions which were adopted favoring tho
passage by congress of a law to regulate a
compu' wy pilotage on coastwise vessels and
to establish a uniform system of rules and
regulations. A resolution was also adopted
setting forth the danger to ship in New
York harbor from the practice of towing
unlighled oil barges at night by a hawstr
an . ijuusiing tue secretary of tho treasury
to .w.-tigato the matter with a viow to the
cor action of the evil. After tho transaction
of . ntiinr business the board adjourned
until tc-morrow.
It. .Y. Uayea attoruey-nt-Lnw.
vasnngwn &pt. z.A. suit was com
menced yesterday by Josephine A. Corly
executrifyf Francis P. Corly against Judge
John . VV right on a Missouri Judgment
for $M2-il6. Tbe original suit was begun
in Indiana in January 18o8 and was for
$107799. Among the papers It an answer
filed by Jude Wright in which he stated a
setoff to tbe extent of $127182 in the form
of a olur.noflhls against B. M. Corwin.lt.
B. Hayes and W. K. Rogers which he had
assigned to Corly in 1876. This was origi-
nally $91550 being an amount collected by
vne nrm or uorwin xiayea ana rtogers In
September 1S59 but not paid till 1875 when
tne interest raised It to tne largest amount.
: A Diatresslnf Case
Chicago Sept. 2. Mrs. Martha Moller
and her daughters Hattie and Sarah aged
seventeen and eleven years respectively were
found in Lake park this morning in a pitia-
ble plight having been obliged to spend the
night In the park in a pelting rain without
food or shelter and almost destitute of
clothing. They fled from a cruel and
drunken husband in Wayne county Ohio
and wandered to Chicago in search of work.
The mother was employed in a restaurant
but becoming sick and having no money to
d&v for lodirW. thov were obliged to won
der in the park. The police booked them at
tne armory as destitutes.
Alleged Forgery of Railroad Tickets
New York Sept. 2. The tensational ttory
that the tickets on various western and
southern railroads has been successfully
counterfeited by parties in this city and that
the forgeries were extensively circulated is
pronounced by the police as abtolutelv
eroundlejs. The story it stamped at a cheap
sensation totally devoid of bottom. The at
tempt to fiddle the police with the responsi-
bility of its circulation was declared by In
spector Byrnes es infamous as well as ridicu-
lous. "Ko such rumor ever existed until
the story wat printed" he said. "I author-
ized .the statement as an antidote that it it
maliciously false from start to finish and a
weak invention." .
fitnadnrri Silver Dollart
Washington Sept. 2. The following I; a
comparative statement of the standard silver
dollart 1st ued by the United Statet mints Is-
sued from the United State treasury :
Weekending Angast2.1 179 8180.197
" " " w ........... z.yvw
H " 11 lSfW SS1W4
" iM 18SO W7ll5
The treasury is sendine to every member
of congress copies of all circulars relative to
the passing out of the standard silver dollart
In order that they may be fully Informed on
the tubject. .- -
Two Hen K1IU4 on the Railroad
Toledo Sept. 2. Two men were killed
here this morning by the cars. One Frank
McCarty wat thrown under the train while
coupling cart receiving Injuries from which
tie died an nour later xno utner waauuun
Morton who was thrown from the top of a
Wabash freieht train directly under tie
cars killing him instantly.
Fraudulent Penaloner.
Chicago Sept. 2. A Woman who appears
on tbe pension relit at Catharine Nolan bat
been continuing to draw pension money since
her marriage to one Mulligan. She was ar-
rested and taker before Commissioner Hoyn
who hears her case thit afternoon. It Is be-
lieved that she has frauduently drawn more
than $1600. v
PARTY PLAXS.
A BARBECUE AT ALBANY. NEW YORK.
General HanenCk and Hon. W. H.
Eat-llnh Invited to be Preneut
But Uecline-Thelr Replica
to the Invitation Etc.
Albany N. Y. Sept 2.-A barbecue wat
hold at the fair grounds yeate'day. Speeches
were made by Hon. Samuel J. Randall S. 8
Cox ex-Governor Walker and others. The
following was received and road :
Covaiison's Island K. Y. Hahhou )
August 27.
To F. M. Danolier olialrman. ir.o Albany
Dear Sir I am compelled by my en.
gagementa to deny myself the pleasure "of ac
cepting vour invitation to a Dolitical harhn.
cuejot the Nolan association in Albany on'the
lit of September. I regret rav Inability to
be presont as the occaslun will I am sure be
one oi great Importance and will furnish an
Illustration of deep and a tive interest the
peopio teel in tne cause we have at heart.
Thanking you for your letter of the 20th
nub. a am yours truly
WiNriiLD S. Hancock.
IsniANATOLW August 81 ISsO.
To V M. Dauclior Albany:
Diar Sir It would afford me pleasure to
accopi your aina invuauon to attend the
political barbecue to be given by the Nolan
association on tho Ut of September but
circumstances would hardly admit of my
leaving this post of danger at that time and
so I am reluctantly compelled to decline
your invitation. We are count nir eonC
dently upon the vote of the great Empire
oiaie -or uancoca ana angmu and will see
that tho vote of Indiana is cast for the same
ticket. Very respectfully
William II. Enolisii
Nominated for t'ouKreaa.
Chicago Sept. 2. Daniol Evant was yes-
terday nominated for congress by the Dem-
ocratt of tho seventh Illinois district after 124
ballots.
IOWA.
a n t- i . . .
o o. r arweu was nominatea ror ooncrcts
ujr vuu ttujjuuiitaus at iavenpori lowa.
Dei Moines la. Sept. 2. The Democrats
of the fuventh congreional district yestor-
day nomlnatod Hon. S. S. Molloy of Lucas
county for congrost refusing to ondorso Gil-
lotte Greenback nominee and present incum-
bent by a vote of 48 to 11.
NE1IKAHKA.
Lincoln Neb. Sept 2. Tim Republican
state convention yesterday nominated E. K.
Valentine for cengross by auclamatlon.
OEORQIA.
Maoon Ga. Sept. 2. General Phil. Cook
Democrat was nomiuatod by acclamation at
llawkinsvillo to-day to represout the third
district in congress
MINNESOTA.
St. Paul Minn. Supt. 2-The Democratic
convention ot the llret congressional district
hore yesterday nouiiuated tlonry K. Wells
for congress.
DAKOTA.
Sioux City. Ia. Sept. 2.-rThe Republican
convention of Dakota yesteiday nominated
R. F. Rethgrew for delegate to congress.
MARYLAND.
Baltimore Sept. 2. G. W. Covington of
Worcester county wat to-day nominated for
congress by the Democrats of the first dis-
trict. Baltimore Sopt. 2. Hon. Milton G. Miner
was ro-nominated for congress bv the sixth
district Republican convention of thit ttate
to-day.
NEW JERSEY.
Pattorson' N. J. Sept 2. John Hill of
Morris wat nominated for congress to-day
by tbe Republicans of the fifth New Jersey
district.
South Carolina Republican.
Columbia S. C Sept 2. The Republican
convention met at 12 noon. All the coun
ties in tne ttate were represented except
Harry mere were contesting delegates
from Beaufort and Union counties. E. W.
M. McKev wat elected Dermannnt chairman
and Harry Noah secretary. A committee on
credentials was appointed and a recess taken
until o ciock. un reassemb ns the com.
mittee on credentials not being ready to
report the convention laid on its
oar until 5 p. m. The committee
then reported recommending that neither
delegation from Union be ;admitted which
wat adopted. In the case of Beaufort the
committee recommended the sitting of both
aeiegauoni wun a voteeacn. Une of tne
contesting delegations from Beaufort was
headed by Robert Smalls ax-member nf
congress and the other by J. Whipper both
colored. Lively tparrlns? ensued resulting
in the outting of the Whipper delegation.
Tbe convention then on motion of H.
L. Shrewsberry went into secret session on
matter of vital importance. The indications
are mat a ttate ticket will be nominated.
Such apnea to be tbe desire of the colnrad
aeiegates.
A Republican Sued for Libel.
Bangor Me. Sept 2. There It considera
ble excitement in political circlet here over
what promise to be quite a sensation. The
Baagor Whig on last Saturday published a
very libellous article on Alexander Troup
editor of the New Haven (Conn.) Union
who ha been stumnlnr thit state in the in-
terest of the Democracy. To-morrow Mr.
Troup will bring suit in the United States
court against Cbas. A. Boutelle editor and
publisber of the Whig for $50000 damages.
The paper have been drawn up and Mr.
Troup hat retained General Butler at coun-
sel fiania Republican.'
Topeka Ka. Sept 2. The Republican
ttate committee met her yesterday. Gov-
ernor St John was renominated for governor
and D. M. Valentine for associate juttice of
the tupreme court Resolutions were adopt
ed supporting the Chicago platform and
candidate; condemning tbe solid south
secured by Intimidation and fraud at the
polls by the Democrats and congratulating
the country upon the prosperity following
resumption. -
Jfebraaka Rebnbllcane.
LinoMn Neb. Sept. 2. -The Republican
convention last evenicg elected Chariot A
Holme chairman.and nominated presidential
electors and alternates. E. K. Valentine wat
re-nomlnatod for congress by acclamation
Albemis Nance was re-nominated for gov
ernor and E. C. Cams for lieutentant-gov-ernor.
'
Fernando Wood III.'
New York Sept. 2. Fernando Wood is
dangerously ill at his house in thit city.
A ftlGK FROM IIC A YEN
The Lltbtuluc Tear m arfleld and
Arthur FlaV lu Tatter.
Nashville Speolal totfu Courier-Journal.
The awfulnest of the fate which it now so
imminently pending over tbe Republican
party In Tennessee and in the uuion bad a
frightful illwtntlon direct from heaven thffe
morniug.. Acro41 from the Colonnade build-
ing Cherry ttreet between Cedar and Doad-
erick hangs or rather did hang till thit
morning a fine large American flag labelled
"Republican headquarters-For president
Janie A. Garfield of Ohio; for vice-president
Chester A. Arthur of New York."
To-day about noon another of those splen-
did showers which have characterized the
weather of this latitude daily for the last few
days commenced to fall and refresh and cool
the air and earth. But just before the rain
the electricity commenced to play and a
small portion of it being attracted to one of
Watts' copper telephone wires made several
explosions where the wire touohed others
and the current reaching a point on the wire
under tbe tlag where the. breeze had lodged
It on the wire took possession of the bunUnir
and literally riddled it 'splitting it into amall
strips and scorching them until the color
were scarcely recognizable. Thit remarkable
freak of the lightning was witnessed by
several Democratic and Republican negroe
and others. Ono negro Republican laid
"Well I guest we guin' move our bead-
quarters now" to which a Democratic negro
responded 'Better jine de Democrats; den
you be saift." Those who witnessed the
curiout doingt of the particular bolt of light-
ning lay the subtile fluid was to deliberate
and methodical about it that one necessarily
concluded the lightning took t special pleas-
ure in tearing up that Hag. si
Benuett'a Jeaunette Ctlveu I'p for
Loat. . . ..
San Francisco Sept 2. A dispatch from
Victoria tayt the bark Malay eight day
from Oundaska brings no tiding of the
Joannette and report that at Oundaska the
Jeannette it given up for lost on account of
the severity of the winter.
Children PolNOiied. ' .
Petersburg Va. Sept 2.Three children
of Charlos Wilson a prominent farmer of
Surrey county were fatally polsonod last
week by eating berries of a deadly nature.
Thfl flp.t Anil vnltnrrnBt AiaA 1u.fr T)t h.4
the second oue Sunday night and the third
and the only remaining cbild on Monday.
The case is without ft n-.rnllnl In thi. ...(-Imn
ot the country.
Clirla Drowned
Buffalo Sept. 2. Mary Boyle teventeen
years of this city and Nellie Hulbert nine
years of Rochester N. Y. were drowned in
Niagara river this evening while rowing a
boat. . . .
An luoniie Murderer
Wilkesbarre Pa. Sept. 2. Geo. Miller
wat arrested to-day on the charge of killing
Frank McCoullough. It it supposed Miller
is insane.
Delayed
New Orleans Sept. 2. The cracking of
Hermand shaft will delay four the day the
teamsbip City - f Mexico which cleared for
Vera Uruz yesterday.
Call Board.
St. Louit Mo. Sept. 2. Tbe cotton ex
change instituted Its call board yetterday.
PERHOMAL AND OESERAL.
A reunion of Gen. Garfleld't regiment
(forty-second Ohio wai held at Ashland .
Ohio yesterday. The attendance wat from
8000 to 10 000. Tbe welcome address was
made by Rev. E. Prrsons of Athland and
the response by Gen. L. N. Sbeldon of La-
grange. Gen. Garfield and others ' made
speeches. Gen. Garfield was elected presi-
dent of the astoclation.
The Rev. S. F. Smith who wrote "My
Country 'Tit of Thee" is still living in New-
ton Mass. He sayt he wrote tbe verse on a
waste scrap of paper one dismal day in Feb-
ruary 1832 while at Andover Seminary and
"had no intention nor ambition to create
anything that should have a national repu.
tation."
Senator Sharon recently gaye t banquet in
San Francisco at which were present Sena-
tor Jones ex-Senator Sargent the banker
Albert Ganol James O. Flood D. O. Mill
and other prosperout men who represented
millions upon million of dollart.
Mr. Thomas Hughe member of parlia-
ment and party arrived at Newport K. L
from New York yesterday morr ing. They
are the guests of Mr. Franklin W. Smith of
Boston. They will leave for the west in a
few days. .mj
Miss Dudu Fletcher author of "Kismet"
who went from Italy to London to superin-
tend the publication of her new novel "The
Head of Medusa" is said to be again serious-
ly HI.
Chester A. Arthur William H. English
and the governors of the other sta'ea Dave
been invited to attend the grand tri-state fair
to be held in Toledo O. on next Monday.
Maurice Koechklin sixteen year of age
deaf dumb and blind ha passed success-
fully hit examination for the degree of bach-
elor of letters at Lyons France. -
Bey. Mr. Caldwell a Catholio priest wat
thrown from t carriage near Loretto. Pa- a
few dayt ago and received injuries which
will likely prove fatal.
General Valentine Baker it reported to be
on hit way to Constantinople from Erzeroum
whither he went on t special mission for the
porte. . V
Rev. Dm. O. H. Tiffany' of Philadelphia
and J. O. Peck of Brooklyn prominent
Methodist preacher are at Martha' Vine
yard.
Mr. Thurlow weed ayt for the flrt time
in Lit life hi appetite hat failed him and
bit ileep at night it interferred with.
Mr. W. D. Howells. it is renorted. will ac
company President Hayes ana family upon
tneir overiana trip to tne i acne '
The Marniiin nf Ti-no. ia hi tour of the
ivillzed domain under hit vice-royalty hat
reached Prince Ed ward't island.
Camnanlnl. It ia lUtfld. will Droduce the
opera of Hamlet from a ipeciaHy prepared
text in flew lork next teason.
A dean of the Church of England I com-
ing to thit country in October to officiate at a
wedding in New York high life.
Maggie Mitchell' father who i with her
at Long Branch it halo and hearty and.
seventy-eight yean of age.
f i
t
fit
FV '
H
I
if
'Mi
)
V 'i-
V
I
( 'i
I.
IS V
f
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.
Matching Search Results
View six places within this issue that match your search.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 Dallas Daily Herald. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 246, Ed. 1 Friday, September 3, 1880, newspaper, September 3, 1880; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth281523/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .