The Daily Hesperian (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 172, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 25, 1896 Page: 3 of 4
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Your
Physician
Aims
The only drug store
in the city that is
open until 12 o'clock
every niriit
To put all his knowledge, experience and skill into the prescription he writes. It is an order for the
combination of remedies your case demands. He can not rely on results unless the ingredients are sure
and reliable and are properly compounded. Be fair to your doctor and yourself by bringing your pre-
scriptions here. They will be comoounded by careful and thoroughly reliable prescriptionists.
Wo deliver prescriptions anywhere in the city.
EDWARDS, the Live Drus^ist
(Northeast corner rniblic square.
LETTER LIST.
List of letters remaining uneall-
sd for in the po ;t')flice at (iaines-
vill<\ Tex., for the week ending
June 24. isotj.
\>
ntii
lUkcr, W
lln>* n. T
f\irr. J. i» »
I . \ O,
► lining, \ It
nlioiit r. Muy K
llatnU't. rimrlt'K
Mi nit Kito
.Iftmiim*,
I .♦•It'll
I5r i;»lcttn. Mri \\
111~:«1111 \ . «>t i.,»,
< t: . Mt> ! mr
Krvin.< I
Kor« < . Ii ii ry N
tiuhin. Mart
Molt. MrlLi May
\V M
mr* N.mn.i i hii«1, llm ry
Mm Kirl»o, Mr- Urai r
l.nilrtii, Ml** /.ami Mill* r, II It
Miller, K.ltfur Murt.n. >. I
Mil iter. It K Mo.Mr.rW
Nf * man. i • W J Cat;*'. J K
I'iUteritoii, (ire»'» Uohcrt*. Koy
ltttil>ourn, John >ptcr, Mr* Mary K
m»y»1»t. Joe Mrowd, Imiiiiih
Taylor. Ml** Ma^tfir Whitney, K M
Whitley, J o.\*
Those eallinj; for above letters
will pletise say "advertised."
F. L. (lk.ivks, P. M.
The Kuty will run a special
traiu to Dallas next Sunday.
Kate for round trip *1.00.
yields to the law and logic of the
situation.
Ktatk Pointing Company,
Publishers.
( The following announcement is
uiadc bv Kditor Senter:
IL.viug secured ttie full Satin-
I day night leport of the Associated
I Press, 1 will begin the publication
on Sunday, June 28, of the Fort
Worth Sunday Times, which will
in si/.e and quality rank with the
; best Sunday newspapers of the
LOCAL SHORT STOPS.
j boiling water and partially wrung j who has many other big financial
out between cloths. They are interests in the state, and her son
Pavement Paragraphs (lathered j rapidly ironed with as hot an iron
! as possible, and become beauti-
i fully stiff and glossy.
in the Rounds.
Along with other springtime
thoughts
Comes this one to our thinker:
The summer drink will soon be
drunk—
Likewise the summer drinker.
The Fort Worth Gazette.
The public is hereby advised
that publication of the Fort Worth
Daily Gazette has been discontiu-
state. K. G. Senter
—Correspondent Dallas News, j *n the novelty
— i man.
The conductors of the normal to
he held here, beginning June 2!»,
wish to say to the teachers of the
county and others that examina-
tions will l>e free, with the excep-
tion of the usual £1.00, whether
held at the close of the normal or
Friday, the third week in August.
Either arrangement will he just
the same to teachers attending
the institute. Of course only
those attending the normal from
F. L. Armstrong has opened up
business at Sher-
Don't Lie
Awake
when
nights coughing
Edwards'
Cherry Cough Syrup will
relieve you immediately.
large bottles
Put up in
HOc each.
KDWAIiDS, The Live Druggist
ued. Arrangements have l>eeu the beginning will have the above
made with the publishers of the j privilege. 25
Dallas Morning News whereby all
the unfulfilled subscription con-
tracts of the Daily Gazette will he
completed by that paper. Mr. E.
O. Senter has purchased the
Weekly Gazette and will continue
its publication.
Candor toward the public and
justice to ourselves ret) aire a
plaiu statement of the causes that
have induced this step.
After a persistent and patient
experience extending over a peri-
od of two years, the publishers
are folly convinced that a morn-
ing daily newspaper smli a* is de-
manded by the people of Fort
Worth can not he maintained here
without a heavy daily los*. A i
morning daily newspaper of the }
grade the maximum patronage]
ronld justify can not command
the support of the people. This
conclusion is veiitied by the uni-1
form experience of all our prede-
cessois, representing various man-
agements and ownerships of the j
Daily Gazette.
The rapid and extrordinary de- !
velopiuent of morning journalism
in Texas has forced ns to print in I
Fort Worth a daily newspaper
Mjnal to the best morning publi-
cations of Kansas City and Den-
ver. Our competitor, the Dallas
News, in excellence, as a newspa-
per, rivals daily the morning [ta-
pers published in St. Louis with
its half million population.
In the face of conditions that ]
call for exertion and expenditure j
in a city of 40,000 people that!
elsewhere have the support oft
from 150,000 to 250,000 inhabi-
tants in compact local patronage,
the Gazette has suffered a steady I
unceasing loss of such home pat j
ronage, which in seven years has |
reached the sum of about J? 15,000
year. Its outside business h is i
largely expanded, but with a re |
duced margin of pr lit. It is at |
last called upon to expend in Fort j
Worth two and me-half dollar.- |
for every dollar of revenue re-1
ceived from Fort Worth. It is I
also taxed for its mechanical pro-1
duction a sum equal to 50 per cent |
uicte than the cost of such service ]
in the large and prospeious city
Atlanta, Gil., and much larger
than its cost anywhere east cf
Texas. Profitable and satisfac-
tory results are impossible under
such conditions. We have no
comment to make upon them.
To the many friends of the pa-
per throughout the state whose
/.eal is chietiy the cause of thr ad-
vancement of its circulation to
first place in Texas daily journal-
ism, we gl'*e grateful acknowl-
edgment.
To the merchants of Fort Worth,
whose enterprise and self-sacrifice
constitute the mainstay of its
tin siness and hupe for future de
velopmcnt, we give the credit that j ,| |' I.V 3.
indue of preserving the Gazetlej ^
Ira Packard's sentence was two
years iu the penitentiary, $100
and all costs.
The Texas Fruit Palace and
Horticultural Fair will lie held
from July 8th to 22d.
The ginners report that from
the present outlook they will com-
mence ginning cotton in August.
July (>th will be welcomed by
the railroad boys—they resume
work at the shops again oil that
date.
Your stationery should be the
nicest you can get. Call at the
Hesperian and get samples and
prices.
J. J. Moon was thrown from a
cart yesterday, receiving injuries
that will confine him to his home
several days.
M. J. Dobbins has l>een awaid-
ed the contract for erecting a
house at the county farm. His
bid was ?\S25.
Tammany society celebrates the
one hundred and twentieth anni-
versary of the declaration of inde-
pendence July 1th, at Tammany
hall, New York.
The Groton Bridge Company
has been awarded the contract for
building a bridge across Elm at
Lindsay to cost $2750, and the
King Bridge Company of Dallas
will build one at Muenster to cost
!?t8S5.
George Bailey of the Dallas
News was happily married in
Fort Worth a few days ago and is
off on a wedding tour. x\ll who
know him wish him nothing less
than the full measure of the mar-
ital bliss.—Denison Herald.
The Association boys divided
up yesterday and played ball.
Capt. C. H. Smith and Capt. Jack
Ice cream social by the Ladies
Aid Society of Christian church
Thursday evening, June 25th, on
Mrs. Carman's lawn, one door
south of the church on North
Dixon street. Opens at 5 o'clock.
Ice cream, sherbert and cake at
usual prices.
PhRSONAL.
Mar Measurements.
Ill ;i juipir published ill The Astn -
I!r mix'lie Naehru hteu Dr. See shows
how, tiy a very ready method, determi-
nate 'i may l>e made of the absolute di-
me];«it'iis < f tin' orbits of bright and
rapidiv revolving binary utars by single
>']«< tr .seopir .measures of the mot-ons
in the line of sight of the component
stars, ai>u from the dimensions and oth-
• r know u data of the orbits the actual
n.s of the stars and their distances
from the ( aiih can be easily calculated.
Bnt perhaps the most important result
elaimed for this method is the means it
furiiidiesof testing the question whether
the Newtonian law of gravitation ap-
pli-. s to stellar systems as well as to the
solar system. Dr. See shows the manner
in which may be calculated the motion
in the line of sight iu all parts of the
binary orbit, these calculations being
based upon the law of gravitation and
a single spectroscopic measure. If such
measures t>e continued upon a number
of pairs while the stars complete their
ri volutions, ::nd the computed and ob-
s< rved motions in the line of sight- agree | Jamison presided over the game,
throughout, within reasonable limits of J There was some good playing by
error, it will be sirong proof of the uni
versalitv of the Newtonian law.
Miss Jennie Bush is visiting in
Ardmore.
Mrs. Quill Morter left yesterday
for Missouri.
T. N. Fielder returned Tuesday
from St. Louis.
Mrs. R. E. Philips is visiting
in Mansfield, I. T.
Rev. R. F. Fuller of Rosston
was in town Saturday.
A. J. Bnrkhead of Valley View
was in the city Saturday.
Mr. Humphreys of Valley View
was in Gainesville Wednesday.
Tom Randolph and family of
Sherman have gone to Europe to
recuperate.
Mr. and Mrs. Cal Robinson
leave for a short trip to Galveston
this morning.
J. W. Hughes and family leave
this morning for their home in
San Diego, Cal.
Miss Helen Stoner of South Mc-
! Aiester is visiting Miss Rogers ou
! East California street.
J. A. Thornbrough of Coesfield
is her financial agent there.
Among the delegates to St.
Louis was Edward Gieen. The
contest was taken before the na-
tional committee, where the regu-
lar delegates were seated, and the
liLily Whites" thrown out. A
negro barber got Hetty Green's
son's seat. Green, who is a Reed
man, was very wroth, and de-
clared publicly that he was told
he could be seated if he would
vote for McKinley. He refused,
and declared he would get even on
Mark Hanna, on whom he places
all his troubles, if it took all the
time and money he could scrape
up.
A telegram was sent Mrs.
Green by her sou, in which the
young man complained bitterly of
his treatment. It then developed
that Mrs. Green had out other
ambition beside the accumulation
of money. That is the desire to
have her son make his mark in
the political world.
The answer to Green dispatch
to his mother, it is said, was to
the point, aud encouraging to the
"Lilly Whites." At all events,
half an hour after its receipt there
was joy in the camp of the unseat-
ed Texans. Green issued orders
for campaign literature, and it
was declared by his friends that a
million dollars would be spent by-
Mrs. Green to resent the insult
put upon her son by the MeKin-
leyites, and to push his candidacy
for the governorship of Texas.—
Republic.
Do You
Card ot Thanks.
The ladies of the fair wish to
thank Mr. Henry Schopmeyer,
Misses Bostic and Carpenter, Mr.
j and Mrs. Chase, Mr. Rogers, the
| called Wednesday and renewed j Electric Light Company, Street
his allegiance to the "Old Reli- (<ar Company, Mr. Chevalier for
able." water, Mrs. Patterson for the use
Oscar \ aeth arrived last night: Gf her house, and the merchants
from Southern Texas. He will j and ladies who so nobly assisted
visit his brother, Otto, here ^ J the fair- by putting in displays;
Want to renew your loan?
Want to make a new loan?
Want to sell your vendor lien notee?
Want to buy a farm and have the
vendor lien notes extended?
If You Do
Call On Us.
We have plenty of money to loan
and are anxious to put it out on good
farms. Loans made promptly.
R.D.Bel]&Co
do 1.
nrw
Varicolored Plate ClaM,
* Motiiteor de la Cerumiqno of
rn ries an aecount is given of a
attractive product.
11
In 1.
V.
mid attractive prouuet, a
plate < f ditVeri nt colors—the manufac-
ture i f v.hieh is as follows: Upon a ta-
ble provided with sevt ral rolls a e« v-
lain quantity of jdass is poured, which
is levHi'd to the d> sired thickness , i-
tlu r t'v moving the table or the 1<av< r
roll, t'pon this plate, but txforc it has
cooled oi'f, another quantity of glass is
poured, which, leveled with its re-
spective roll, forms a second layer ad-
la riiij? perfectly to the first. If the two
glass snbstaticts are of different colors,
the plate obtained consists of glass of
two colors, one upon the other, and a
plate of more colors can be produced ill
the same way. L>y molding or pressing,
letti rs ( r designs of any shape or di-
mt lisiens can be represented, the im-
pressi"ii being accomplished either by j healthy,
the flatte ning roll or another one run-
ning liehind it, or, still better, by the
vertical pressure of an engraved plate,
or with cast designs and inscription.
Jamison's boys, but Smith's fell
down sadly. The score was 17 to
I s in favor of Jamison.
Miss Jeunie Bostick desires to
glass j thank the school board, through
the IIkispkkian, for so kindly
grunting her the use of the High
school auditorium for her class
recital Monday evening, June 22.
The PIpps case is dragging
slowly alojg in Judge Barrett's
court. The examination of wit-
nesses is consuming much time.
week or two and will then go to
Europe to visit his old home.
Restigouohe Salmon.
A novel question has been raisrd in
Forest and Stream which is of interest
to the fishermen who llsli in artificially
st. eked waters. For ;-.ome reason or
ollitr a fisherman got the notion that
tho salmon in the Rest-igouche river
were us it so game now as in past year:-.
Another of tlio Restigouolie fishers was
of the same mind. If there is anything
the sportsman angler docs not want ami
will not have if lie can helpit.it is
the det< rioration of the fighting quali-
ties of his fish. He would like to have
the fish go into training if possible.
What the fishermen want to know is
w'.uit is the matter with the Restigouclie
salmou? It appears that the stream has
been stocked to a considerable extent
during late years, and if this stocking
has taken the neivo out. of the salmon
every one who is interest eel in fish wants
to know the reason why, anel, more ye t,
the remedy. It is well known that the
hand reared English phe asants are in '
to be compared with a wild American
rnlVed grouse in any particular. If the
also the gentlemen for the loan of
showcases, chairs, etc.; and the
IIehperian, Register, Cooke
County Signal—iu fact to every
one who assisted in any way the
ladies say THANKS.
The man who is always telling
what he would do if he were pres-
ident is the same one who says
'•Yes, ma'aui," when his wife
speaks to him.—New York Com-
mercial advertiser.
Mother of Amateur Photogra-
pher — "What an idiotic guy
you've made your papa look."
Amateur Photographer—"Yes,
matuma, dear. But isn't it like
him!"—Punch.
"How do you pronounce f-i-a-
n-c-e!" inejuired the young man
of bis French teacher.
'If the
HALF K/YTK
To
CHICAGO
AND
RETURN.
I)o not experiment in so impor-
tant a matter as your health.
Purify, enrich and vitalize your
blood with Hood's Sarsapaiilla
and thus keep yourself strong and
Hood's Pills are the best after-
dinner pill; assist digestion, enre
headache. 25 cents.
young lady have plenty of money.
iridieial propagation of fishers is going j then you call her fee-ansay, but if
to result in taking the li^'ht out ofl ghe j>e very poor, then you make
American game fish, it will be a sad jt fig-an-say nothing," replied the
tiling to tho minds e>f men who fish for
fun, and not for profit.
nt a factor in the affairs of the
city, long after the conditions had
gone that called it into existence.
They have ever been its generous,
lithful friends.
With malice toward none and
charity toward all, the (Jazette
.11 LY 5,
Via SANTA FE ROUTE.
W. S KEENAN, U. P. A.,
Galveston.
Keep Kool
For Thursday evening any way.
The ladies of the Broadway church
will serve cream and cake Thurs-
day evening, June 25, on the lawn
east of Broadway church. You
and your girl can get cream for
25 cents. Everybody invited. 25
IX8TEAD of 8TA.kch.
In France, instead of using
starch on table napkins, after they
are washed and dried and ready
to be ironed, they are dipped in
The ladies of Dixon street M. E.
church will give an ice cream and
lawn social Thursday night, 25th,
at the residence of II. D. Cad well,
opposite North school building.
By order of Mrs. Frank Carlson,
Mrs. H. D. Cadwell.
Will 5pend a Million Dollars.
As extraordinarially as unex-
pectedly has come a development
of the fight in Texas between the
"Lilly Whites" and the "Black
and Tans." It is the formal an-
nouncement that Edward R. H.
Green, the son of Mrs. Hetty
Green of New York has decided
to run for the governorship of the
Lone Star state. Mr. Green, who
weighs 300 ponnds, and is a good
man, is also president of the Tex-
as Midland railroad and resides
in Terrell, Texas. The road is
practically owned by his mother,
astute preceptor.—Waterbury.
A Decided Success.
The ladies wish to state that the
fair was financially a success as
they now hold a check on the
First National Bank for a neat
sum. Socially it was quite a suc-
cess, from the fact that the already
strong tie that binds the ladies of
the Denton stieet Presbyterian
church has grown stronger and
the pleasant days spent in the
work will long be remembered.
Thanking one and all we say
Octol>er, 1897, is the date for oar
next fair.
The Brass Band Struck Because
They Had to Walk.
Chicago, June 21.—Dr. Toy
Sun Yat, famous in Chinatown as
a physician of rare ability, and
who died Saturday afternoon, his
compatriots say, of a broken
heart, the result of disgrace fol-
lowing his arrest for selling
opium at his surgery aud drug-
store, in the basement at 323
Clark street, was buried at Rose
Hill cemetery this afternoon.
Two bands were in. the proces-
sion when its front rested oppo-
site the late Chinaman's quarters
in Clark street. One was com-
posed of four Chinamen while the
other was made up of a dozen
Italian musicians. When the lat-
ter had been contracted with by
Charley Moy, the~Chinese master
of the funeral ceremonies, it was
agreed that, they would march all
the way to the cemetery
and play doleful muoic continu-
ously en roufe to the city of the
dead. But when the cemetery
gates were reached and the chat-
tering Celestials had left the carri-
ages to resume their march to the
open grave the Italian band was
nowhere in sight. Its members
struck when a point at Clark
street opposite Lincoln park was
reached, and refused to go further
unless provided with beer and
carriages for the rest of the jour-
ney. The Chinese refused to ac-
cede to the demands, and the pro-
cession proceeded, minus the horn
blowers.
The funeral procession was wit-
nessed by thousands of people in
the city streets and northward
through Lakeview.
P. P. P.
CURES ALL SKIN AND
BLOOD DISEASBS.
Phvsicians endorse P. P. P. as
a splendid combination, and pre-
scribe it with great satisfaction for
the cure of all forms and stages of
primary, secondary and tertiary
syphillis, syphillitic rheumatism,
P. P. P.
CORES RHEUMATISM
scrofulous ulcers and sores, glan
dolar swellings, rheumatism, ma-
laria, old chronic ulcere that
have resisted all treatment,
catarrh, skin die
P. P. P.
Cures Blood Poison
Base Ball.
The two nines that played yes-
terday at the Association grounds
will have a battle royal Friday
evening at 5 o'clock. This game
will be for blood, as it will be a
saw-off game. A large crowd is
anticipated.
A Good Medicine Is It
That Will Cure
Diarrhoea
Edwards'
Diarrhoea
Remedy
1» guaranteed to cure the worst case, of
Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, Sum-
mer Complaints, pains in stomach and bow
els. We guarantee every bottle or money
refunded. Price 25c bottle.
EDWARDS, The Liie Dntfist
chronic female complaints,
curial poison, tetter, scald head,
etc., etc.
P. P. P. is a powerful tonic and
P. P. P.
Cures Scrofula.
an excellent appetizer, building np
the system rapidly.
Ladies whose systems are
poisoned and whose blood is in an
impure condition, doe to men-
strual irregularities are peculiarly
P7P. P.
Cures Malaria.
benefitted by the wonderful tonic
and blood cleansing properties of
P. P. P. Prickly ash, Pok*
and Potassium.
$1.00 'o Dallas and
June 28th via the Katy.
train leaves about 7:30 a.
return,
Special
m.
The Hesperian is a favorite all
over town.
P. P. P.
Cures Dyspepsia.
Lippman Bros., Props.
Druggists, Lippman'a block, 8aJ
vannah, Oa. Book, on diseases
mailed free.
For sale by the H. W. Stark
Drug Company.
Releases from vendor's 11
•ale at the Hkhpsrum
tor
. t
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The Daily Hesperian (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 172, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 25, 1896, newspaper, June 25, 1896; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth501390/m1/3/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.