The Daily Hesperian (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 103, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 2, 1897 Page: 4 of 8
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THE GREAT
WOMEN WHO HAVE DONS MUCH FOR TBNNBSSVJR'S CMWTBMNIAL. KXPOfllTTOW.
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TRMIIIG THE RACER.
THI THOROtOHBHKD'S KDWATIOS
BEGINS AT HIS BIRT/I.
it is
The Expert Trainer St*»dl*» Each
Hone Individually and Map* Out
a Syatem to D«»«1°M H1" Best
Faint*.
them are entered in the big two-year-
old stakes for the year, but by next
fall some of them will be earning their
feed in a more bnmble capacity than
racing amid the plaudits or the multi-
tude. And many of them which now
giro the greatest promise will prove
the rankest failures, for the untried
two-year-old Is about the biggest gam-
ble connected with horse racing, and
difficult work. „*»,«„.
trainer is comparatively easy. He
knows their dispositions and the con-
ditions under which they can race to
the best advantage. He knows In
what company they should be entered,
Just what weight they can carry, the
_T,„. or—ThiR is the distance that suits them best, and the
NEW }ORK._AprUt28. inia k(nd Qf tra(>k wh,ph w,n ^Te them
the "
AMTHIII Mr l till AI in while in this same condition she could
vtdiypt imvxhii read books by rubbing her fingers over
■1 I nHllhr IUvnLILIi th« printed pages, her sense of touch
U I linilUL lllini-IU» w aeute that 8he cooia follow
the lines of the printed letters.
Of her mediumlstlc qualities she
MOLLIS fakcher, BHOOKi.YS'i now never speaks, not even to her lu-
FAHOts SLEEPER, i« wast. tlmate friends, because of the doubt
cast upon them by outsiders. That
| she possesses some strange, occult
in bed thirty-oneyea r
Friends who have died or met with
accidents at a distance she knows all
BROOKLYN, N. Y., April 28.—Mollie about, almost at the instant of their
Fancher, the famous Invalid, who has occurrence. This has been proven
been a medical wonder for the past
three decades, and who has time after
time refused to make a fortune for
herself out of her strange affliction, is
said by her friends to be in want.
They are arranging to give an enter-
tainment of some kind, the proceeds
of which will be the nucleus of a fund
which they hope In time to make suf
season or the year tnat tries 'J1®118
souls on the race tracks. The training
season is at its height, for in less than
a month racing will begin in the met-
ropolitan district, and all four of the
great tracks—Morris Park. Oravesend,
Sheepshead Bay and Brighton—are
now alive with thoroughbreds every
dav in the week. The horses which j
will earn undying fame by giving
their owners the rich stakes attache"
to the Brooklyn, Suburban and Futur-
ity handicaps are already well along in
their work, but from now on until
the season ends in the fall their train-
crs will not know an easy moment
Training a race horse is not run.
Neither is it work that any man can
do. A man must be born withi a si- ; ^ uit
ent for it. Just as the greai p tllig p0jnt very accurately. Clifford is
and the great pianist are f i n grandson of Bonnie Scotland, and
talents for art and music. all tjle pr0geny of that famous sire
horse training has almost were gross horses. Navarre has Leam-
vated to the plane of ington blood in liim, and all of the
few really expert trainers horses of that type require hard work
try can almost be: counted on the nn to bring tbpm to thpir bpst
most speed. He is acquainted
with tlieic individual good and bad
traits, for the clever horse trainer of
to-day does not handle his string of
charges as one horse. He has no set
system for treating all alike. Each
horse is studied Individually, and his
training regulated accordingly.
For Instance, the great horse Clif-
ford is at his best when on the "big
side." that is. when he carries an
abundance of hard, muscular fat. His
old rival, now retired to the stud,
Honry of Navarre, was just the re-
verse. He had to lie trained down to
the finest possible point to do himself
Justice. Clifford always weighed a
good 250 pounds more than Navarre.
The breeding of a horse determines
many times. Receipt of the news
through ordinary channels may • not
come for days and weeks afterward,
but all of the details invariably corre-
spond with what she tells.
For many years her house was
haunted by numberless superstitious
persons, who were willing to pay al-
most any sum if she would read their
ficlently large to Insure her proper sup-' fortunes. These offers were always
port for the rest of her life. I spurned by Miss Fanchcr, her aver-
The needs of Miss Fancher, it is
said, have become so pressing that she
is in danger of eviction from the little
home in which she has lived the last
thirty-one years of her strange life.
Nothing has been said to her about
the beuetlt; in fact, the straitened
condition of her financial affairs has
sion to making money in this way
being most intense. Once when she
was totally blind a wealthy skeptic
called at the house and said that he
had a thousand-dollar bill In his pocket
which he would give Miss Fancher if
she would correctly read its number
by employing her sense of touch. She
been kept from her as much as possi-j declined the offer, but immediately
ble. She has always been strongly
averse to anything smacking of char-
ity. or to money getting by means of
her malady.
Twenty years ago, when she was
talked and written about all over this
country and in Europe. P. T. Barnum
saw what a tremendous money maker
she would be. and he sent one of his
agents to her house with this message:
"You have the power to make two
great fortunes; one for you and one
for me."
The proposal of the circus man was
after he had left, at her request, her
physician placed a one-dollar bill In
her hand, and she deciphered its num-
ber in less than two minutes.
One of her strangest gifts when her
only power was the sense of touch was
her ability to make wax flowers. She
had never been tatight the art. but her
work was of exceptionally high order,
the formation of the buds and the
blending of color being perfect. Years
afterward, when questioned about
this, she said that in visions she saw
the most beautiful gardens of flowers,
;ers of the two hands. The fact that
-"»uie of them receive salaries of $10.-
<>00 per year and a percentage of the
stable's profits
often amounting to
With a batch of untried two-year-
olds to handle, the trainer first studies
the pedigree of each and then maps
out a course of work, changing it as
» . orMpnpn uui n course oi wo;
twice that sunt, is suffieien. t the horse develops. This plan often
of itself that the renlly gr a fails, however, for full brothers and
The common method
sisters of the greatest race horses often
turn out worthless. This was the case
with most of Hanover's kin. and the
same can be said of the wonder King-
ston and of a host of others.
TENNESSEE'S CLOD!
fw
I Tl
0°OOOOOOOOOOfIJl3
omen having charge of the wor'.r. ! Johnston of Memphis.
I
KVEUVTHIKi RK\nV FOII OI'EM'NG
OK t<KIt EXPOSITION.
rile building itself is of the colonial
style, with just a suggestion of Creek j
motives In many respects It is a
| counterpart of the "Hermitage," (Jen-
; era I Andrew Jackson's famous home. !
• Kight imposing columns support the j
! portico roof, and an observatory sur-1
[rounded by ornamental columns sur-j
I mounts the structure, affording a mag- j
FINE BUILDINGS & EXHIBITS. | nitlcent view of the exposition grounds. '
j \\ itIi 1 ii doors a rotunda extends
1 through the two stories, with a grand
staircase In the rear. Fountains in j
the rotunda will shoot their cooling 1
i sprays high into the air, and palms!
| and statuary give additional splendor i
NASHVILLE, April 28.—On Sunday,(to the scene. To the left of the main!
May 1. the great centennial»entrnnee is a largo hall for public!
exposition commemorating the 100th meetings of women's clubs and asso- !
birthday of the admission of Ten- ' Nations.
nessee Into the Union of States will U> j ()ne of the attractions of this build- '
opened and for the following six 'n^ be the sitting room, which ts i
months will attract visitors from all itu 1)e an exact reproduction of an ol.l
a leader
hut Is now a
of society In
Th
Women of tlir S»n«e Will MnWe
« Howlm of Kxorpttonnl Merit,
lien alien of Their HuHtllng*.
resident and
this city.
Miss Ada Scott Rice, the secretary,
is a handsome and talented young
woman, with an exceedingly level
head In business matters.
Among the women's exhibits are
some splendid collections of tapestry,
paintings, church embroideries, fans,
laces, pottery, elaborkte drawn work,
artistic Jewelry, bent iron work and
miniatures enameled on Ivory and por-
celain.
I fhis''sonlidarsVandard' "the successful
horse trainer towers above many a
man of world-wide eininence ln tals
fortunate class are such men as Rowe.
! Hvrglns. .Toyner. Jennings, W alden.
Miih-r. Birch. Byrnes. Lakeland. Camp-
: bell. Rollins and Stuart. They are tl.e
'premiers of their kind, and few of the
great stakes will fail to go to some
horse in their respective strings.
The training of the race horse begins
almost at the hour of its birth.
the first it is taught to lookupon man j sum Jo,m Taylop
as its best friend and the b^ers^ho
men in the
have adopted this rule are the most
successful. When on the home farm
the little foal is always kept in the
society of men and boys, to break it of
| its natural shyness and. sometimes.
' savageness. A little foal that w ill rul)
I up against a stranger, providing it .s
j well bred, has thrice the promise of the
youngster that scurries away like a
whirlwind at the approach of a visitor.
As soon as the foal has been weaned it
j is the custom of the most advanced
| breeders to place some light weight on
its back, to accustom it to the presence
of a strange burden.
| While thrs part of its education is in
! progress it receives its first schooling
I with the halter, and later with the
bridle and bit, great care being taken
It is not generally known that many
of the Pullman porters running East
and West out of Pittsburg are worth
considerable money. Only few know
that one in particular, who runs be-
tween Pittsburg and Philadelphia, can
sign his name to a cheek bearing fig-
From I ures c,ose t0 tilf> $100,000 mark. And
this fortune was built out of a trifling
one of the most
Pullman service,
possesses the fortune. The story of its
acquisition is unusually interesting.
A little over fifteen years ago Taylor
entered the Tullman service as a por-
ter. Today bis coat bears the three
stripes which signify that term of ser»
vice. On the first run he secured In
one of the most prominent brokers in
Philadelphia a friend who has since
stuck to him. On the same trip and
from the same friend he secured the
original quarter. Others appreciated
Taylor's attentions on the road, and
soon he had a neat sum laid away.
Then the Philadelphia broker advised
him to invest It, and his small fortune
soon doubled and tripled. Today he
is worth $100,000, but still he dallv
in using the latter to prevent Injury to j dons the Pullman uniform.—Pittsburg
the mouth. There is an old saying i Times.
quarters of the land. For two years
or more the patriots of the State have
been laboring to make the exposition
the premier of its kind, and It promises
to set the standard for all other States.
Its managers had the advantage of
profiting by the experiences of the of
fleers of the World's Fair, at Chicago,
nnd of the Georgia Exposition, at At-
lanta. last year, the result being a
magnificent array of buildings and a
vast collection of exhibits covering
; house in Cambridge. Mass.. once the
| headquarters of General Washington
land afterward the home of the poet
Longfellow. It is now the residence
[of the daughter of the latter.
; Mrs. Van Leer Klrkman. the presi-
dent of the Woman's Department, ex-
erted herself to procure features that
are out of the common line, and her
| efforts have been crowned with great
success. Women painters from all over
: the f'nited States and many from
Plants that grow near the sea have'
thicker leaves than those growing in-:
land. Apparently the sea salt is the|
cause of this phenomenon, as plants,
cultivated In artificially-salted soil!
yield thicker leaves.
"Belinda, how do you treat a stupid ,
man who admires you?"
"Really. I don't know; when a man
admires me I never do myself the in- j
justice to consider him stupid."—Chi- J
cago Record.
among horsemen: "No mouth, no
horse," and it is deeply respected in
all training stables. A horse with a
sore mouth can't eat. and a horse that
can't eat can't work or race.
When the youngster has become
"bridle wise" a saddle is strapped on
and he is led about for half an hour
twice a day until he becomes fully ac-
customed to the innovation. In the
meanwhile a small boy has been placed
on his back every day for a month or
more while the colt is in the box stall
without bridle or saddle, if he takes
kindly to this the colt is led about with
boy and saddle on his back, always in
Mrs. Ilunnlker— I'm really discour-
aged about our Will. I don't believe he
is destined to be a great man, after
all.
Mr. Hunniker—Nonsense, nonsense!
What's put that Idea Into your head?
Mrs. Hunniker—Why, look at this let-
ter I've just received from him. He's
been in college two years now. and his
handwriting is still so good that you
can read it right off, about like print.—
Cleveland Leader.
"I've got something nobody else has jthe company of a staid old horse, who most impossible to distinguish
<*ot." said a wealthy New Yorker who ) does wonders in teaching the young- son from another in a room
every possible subject within the ken |"',rnail are represented by their work
of mankind. I'n portraiture, landscape and genre
One of the greatest beauties of the j propositions in oil. as well as work
exposition to the stranger Is the loca- ®n st°np- One room is filled with mod-
tlon of the grounds, the immediate!f>lH °r various devices patented by
surroundings of which present a happv j "omen inventors, and there are also
mingling of the Southland of the past j fxli'bitions of embroidery and educa-
and present. The site itself consists •t,onaI appliances of all kinds. Three
of 20O acres of bine grass land. In the i rf>oll1s «rP "s<*d alone for the exbibl-
■uburbs of the city. The grounds are Itlon of arts au<l handiwork of
elevated and shaded by great trees of iwomen of Turkey. Egypt. Japan
considerable age. The park is easily
accessible from the heart of the city.
has been experimenting with raising
fancy fowls over in New Jersey.
"What is it?"
"1 bought a $17.ri Incubator, put $25
worth of eggs in it. and hatched out a
blue bottle fly. I've got the only $200
blue bottle fly in this or any other
country."—Texas Siftings.
the Journey by any of rne electric lines
and Russia.
The Russian cottage industries,
under the special protection of the
consuming about five minutes, while it (Tsar, will be very interesting. A part
can be reached on foot in fifteen min- jof this display is also under the super-
utes. l vision of the Princess Schakovskoy
To the west of the exposition park j an,l the Countess Pogosky. Cooking
are groups of magnificent modern resl- lessons, free to all. will be given In
donees, while to the east are many this building, presided over by the
"There's one thing." remarked Wil-
lie Wishington, "that I have made up
my mind to do."
"Really?" responded Miss Cayenne,
with languid interest.
"Yes. 1 shall never be a man of one
idea."
"Don't say that. You are still too
young to be discouraged."—Washing-
ton Star.
stately old houses, typical of the ante-
bellum South, when ease and luxury!
abounded. To the north Is the Van- '
derbllt Fn* erslty. founded by the old i
connnodoni Cornelius Yanderbilt. To ■
1 be sou tint est lies the famous Belle!
Meade Stock Farm, which has turned '
out more famous race horses than any
other breeding farm in the country, j
and It Is safe to predict that eight out '
of every ten visitors to the exposition
will not let the opportunity to see the '
beauties of Itell<> Meade slip by.
«>f the exposition buildings and the i
exhibits little can be said, as they ;
comprise a subject which would require j
many columns to d(f them any thing l'ke ,
Justice. Nashville Is called the "Ath-
ens of the South," ami very appropri-
ately nearly all of the Important ex- !
jmsitlon buildings are founded on ;
Greek models. Thus the exposition
park harmonizes with the city itself. I
where many of the dwellings and j
buildings, notably the State House and J
the Court House, are of Grecian arehi-1
tecture. The Fine Art* Building Is an |
exact reproduction of the Parthenon. !
and Its numberless columns of glls-!
tenlng white staff. In representation
of marble, makes It one of the moat
attractive In the entire group. The
chief departments arranged by the
management are Fine Arts. Architec-
ture and History. Commerce and Lll>-
eral Arts, Horticulture and Farm Im-
plements. Transportation. Machinery.
F.leetriclty. Geology. Minerals and
Mining. Forestry and Forest Products,
Live Stock and Pet Animals. Poetry.
Education. Military. Women. Children,
Hygiene, Medicine and' Sanitary Ap-
pllaocea, Negro. Besides, many of the
State* have erected Individual build-
ings and the United States Govern-
ment has erected a building and fnr
nlshad an exhibit.
The Woman's Building and exhibit
are certain to attract more attention
than, perhapa, any of the others, owing
ot the clever and nntlrlng labors of the
most celebrated authority on the sub-
ject In this country. This will be
given in connection with an exhibition
and demonstration of the most modern j
cooking appliances.
The women who have done so much
for their part of the exposition form
an interesting group. Mrs. Klrkman
was a Miss Katlierine Thompson,
daughter of Macon Thompson, wheso
father was Jacob Thompson. Secretary
of the Interior under President Bu-
r-hanan. Much of Mrs. Klrkman'*
early life van spent in Cuba, and then
she lived two years in Paris, where
her education was completed. Later
she traveled extensively through Eu-
rope. She was wedded to her hus-
band. wbc >s a descendant of Anthony
Wayne, oi Revolutionary fame. In
1SS6. Mrs. Kirktnau's home. Oak IIIll.
in the suburbs of Nashville, is almost
palatial, and. as the mistress Is an
ideal hostess. It will be the meeting
place of all the distinguished women
visiting the city during the exposition.
Mrs. Jsmes Pierre Droulllard, the
rice-president. Is connected with sev-
eral of the notable families of the
South. She was an ardent Southerner
during the war. but. nevertheless, she
had a tender spot in her heart for the
Norlh. too. for In the last year of the
stniggle she married her husband, then
an offlccr in one of the Union regi-
ments.
Mrs. J. W. Thomas, the viee-presl-
dent-at-large, is the wife of President
Thomas of the Nashville. Chattanooga
and St. Ivouis Railroad, whose im-
mense shops are close to the exposition
grounds. * y
Miss Mary Temple, vice-president
for East Tennessee, la one of the hard-
est workers of the managers, and has
labored unceasingly among the women
of her section of the State to make, a
good showing.
Mrs. R. F. Weakley, the treasurer,
has shown herself ts be a capable
financier. She was formerly Miss
'Taw' Say. Paw!" little Johnny be-
gan.
"Now. what do you want?" asked
his suffering father, with the empha-
sis on the "now."
"Will my hair fall out when it's
ripe, like yours?"—Cincinnati
ouire»\
ster proper manners. Of course, the
colt does some tall kicking and pranc-
ing about the first time be finds him-
self out in the oir with a living burden
j on ids back, and the luckless boy gets
the doubtful benefit of it.
It takes some days to school the colt
to the bridle, bit. saddle and boy. and
if he be fractiously inclined many
weeks elapse before be is ready for the
next step in Ids education—that is, a
canter on the exercise track.
Here the old. good-tempered lead
horse is again brought into use. and
the youngster sees how he should be- !
have under the new responsibilities
forced upon him. His tail has already
been banged and his coat Is made i
shiny and sleek each morning, giving
him something of the look of the real
racing thoroughbred, and as by this i
time he Is approaching his second
birthday, the day is drawing near
when he must sober down and join
the ranks of the bread winners.
There are about 500 horses at just
this age on the metropolitan tracks
Tobacco smoking," said a traveler,
"is so common in Holland that it is al-
one per-
full of
smokers.
"But supposing you want to speak
to some one present, how are you to
find him out?"
"Ah! In such cases a waiter Is sent
around wth a pair of bellows, with
which he blows away the smoke from
the face of every person present until
the right one Is found."—Golden Days.
Beatrice—Did you notice the loud
color of that blond young lady's gown
at the reception last night?
Benedick—Notice it! Do you think
I'm deaf?—Truth.
Fond Parent—I cannot interfere,
Bobby. Your teacher writes me that
she thrashed you on principle.
Bobby—Well, she didn't. Don't you
think I know where she licked me?"—
I Life.
Hobson—I've seen a drop of water
run an electric light plant, mill—
Dobson—Where did you see a
En-1 just now, and they are giving their i of wafer do that?
trainers a world of trouble. Most of Hobson—At Niagara Falls.
drop
THE RIVA1: EQUINE CRACKS Oi'' '37.
tlm&QHKr
\
I
MOLLIE FANCHER, THE FAMOUS INVALID.
bo offensive to her that she lust com-
plete control of her temper for the
first and last time during her affliction,
and she ordered that Barnum's agent
be thrown out of her house.
The accident that injured Miss Fan-
cher occurred in June of IStiO. when
she was in her 17th year. She was
stepping off a horse car and her gown
caught In one of the hooks on the plat
form. The car started suddenly, and j stricken. The room is kept darkened,
she was dragged over the stones a dis-; as her eyes cannot stand strong light,
tance of 200 feet before she was dis-1 Nevertheless, her sight is excellent, as
covered. She seemed to recover from she does the finest kind of embroidery,
her injuries, but on Feb. 1867, she 1 and the sale of this gives her a small
was seized with frightful spasms and
became paralyzed. While in this state
she fell into the memorable trance, in
which she lay like one dead for nine
years.
About a year before the street car
accident she fell off her horse wldl-
rkllng In Prospect Park. and. although
she did not seem to suffer any great
injury at the time, physicians who
have attended her say that the first
accident unquestionably helped to
bring about her curious malady.
It was while in the nine years'
trance that medical experts In all
parts of the world l)ecame Interested
in ihe girl. It was the first case of
its kind, and the uncanny powers
which came to her defied all explana-
tion. Scientists studied her. and left
bewildered. She displayed wonderful
medlumistlc powers, so strange, in-
deed. that the outside world refused
to l>elieve them. During these nine
years she was blind at times, then
deaf and dumb, and later she lost the
sense of smell. The one sense of touch
never deserted her. and the powers of
all the lost senses seemed to concen-
trate Into the one that was left. Of
her nine years' trance Miss Fancher
remembers nothing, but her physicians
>ful m
Tennessee Preparing for the Great Event.
and attendants made careful memo-
randa of everything she did.
At one time when she bad the sense
of speech ami touch two photographs
were handed her by Dr. West, whose
school she had attended. She was to-
tally bind at the time, twit by rubbing
her knuckles over the pictures she
identified one as Dr. West's photo and
the other as a portrait of Mrs. West.
and it was easy for her to form with
her fingers what her mind so vividly
pictured.
Miss Fancher can now see, bear,
speak and do everything but walk.
She lives in the back parlor of her little
home, the same room that she has
occupied for more than thirty years,
and she rests on the same bed that
supported her when she was first
income. She reads the newspapers
and all the new books and keeps
abreast of the doings of the outside
world. She is now 48 years old, and
but for some deep lines which long
years of suffering have marked in her
face she would not look her age. Her
hair is tinged with gray, is worn short
and parted on one side. She is not
emaciated by any means; In fact, she
is quite plump, and her complexion is
as clear as a baby's. She suffers pain
all the time, but to her friends she
says that she does not mind It, except
sometimes at night, when she is un-
able to sleep. One attendant cares
for her and the little bouse.
Some of her friends have told her
that It was foolish not to employ the
power she possesses to earn money,
contending that the ordinary means
of living are denied her and that she
should make the most of whatever she
could do. This advice is always Ig-
nored. the Invalid saying that she
would prefer life In a public institution
to doing anything that would expose
her to the charge of charletanlsm, in
which class, she says, nine-tenths of
the alleged mediums belong.
Old Lady—I'm afraid your story of
your sudden bereavement by your
wife's death a fortnight ago and your
children's illness is not quite the
truth.-
Tramp (hurt)—Not true! Look 'e
'ere, lady: I've been in this unfortu-
nate persition for more nor five year,
and 'ave said the same thing 'uadrsds
of times, and you're the fust as ever
doubted my word afore!
SaohaaWi'i Smkllpox Problem.
The council of Snohomish, Wash,,
has been for several meetings wrestling
with the question as to whether the®
city ought to furnish all smallpox
patients at the pest house with as
much whisky as they wanted at $7 per
gallon, the latter being the price
quoted on all bills thus far rendered
The feeling prevailed that the small-
pox epidemic was not l.kely to end
while the city fnrnished 17 whisky in
unlimited quantities.
> new woman go*
,S , .
Onoe upoa altim* the w
together and abolished mtiU.
Of course It Was qmtea Job to abolish
but it Wis a far biggwr job to get
her. That is another #te*y.
"thave no use for-man,*' the nsw
an obssrved haughtily.
In >Uie,fullnes8 of time the
wanted to excel in the dramatic art.
"I must have a dlvoroe," she said.
Then she started violently mid kicked
herself bitterly, but it was now too late.
—JX^rqit tribune.
1 ■'*££.,
ry- 1
? -
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The Daily Hesperian (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 103, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 2, 1897, newspaper, May 2, 1897; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth503719/m1/4/?q=music: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.