Temple Weekly Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, February 27, 1891 Page: 1 of 8
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yoL x. no. 31
TEMPLE TEXAS. FRIDAY MORNING FEBRUARY 27 1891
11.So A YEAR
W ater t
PRETTY WOMEN.
D» They Regard,the PnM*« AdW**#^
tlon Bestowed Upon ThemT YY;'#
“I have many times Wondered, 'gjjPH
/he observing man, “what the
of the ordinarily attractive woman Iff?
upon finding herself the center of iw
respectful but evidently admiring pWjS
of a number of men unknown to he*, m
During several years of daily travel W ' *
the surface and elevated cars and the .
ferryboats of this metropolis I have
struggled with this problem in vain. I |||r
have studied the faces of women under
these circumstances, and have even cau-
tiously led up to the subject or asked it ^g.
fair and square of those of my charming |
■ ,
*fe(, % : ,
r.ueir
$ic,oo:
B&' M •
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m
HHfl
ft-- ■
lo
%/r
mJr L. ■■
M&-' •
§;
W. * f
9B~
m
experts , for
this stork be/ <
1 hi* s a si
goods a cost (o
before.
me-
h of boots and shoes at cost
■v ten per cent added to pay
7 60 days only, to close out
spring goods get here,
sh transaction. Cannot sell
Every pair warranted as
ED. VIEW,
Avenue D-
fair ana square or xnoso ui ^“w*~~**
women friends with whom I have been ®
on terms of sufficient freedom. But l $■
MB'SUAZnWlM
Bm
IP
VV. Goodrich Joni- h, re^dci<
C. A. Brand, Vico President
iii
LL..,
ft: '
te
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W. a. Bahclav 2nd Vice Pi ■*.
. S. Howland, Ass’t Cashier.
TEMPLE NATIONAL BANK.
CAPITAL, - - - - $80,000-
DIRECTORS,
J E. Moore, C.U. Yancey, C. A. Brand. & ■ Goodrich Jones.
The only Bank in Beil County where German is
We arc operated under all tiie mii< guards piovided by the Nut.otinl
Bank Act and are under inspection o tin U S Government Bank Ex-
am.ner. The management and line* ot credit ut this hack are uh >er in-
spection of the U. B. Comptroller of C 1 rency, E.S.Lacey,at afchington.
We have the D'ebold Steel Burglar-Proof Bafe,Fire-Proof Vault and 1
Yale Time . ock. , 4 , . . , 1
v\ e are here to last as long as tio- U. B Government, and to help j
build up Temple ami Bed County A . are here to live and let live,and
hence we ask your business ami frl udsiiip; we will treat you in an bon-,
orabie, straightforward, and stricJy ousinesa way. VVe refer to anvj
customer of this bank lor recoinim odaiion. Depositors’ accounts and,
business ot customers held as strictly confidential. ’ j
Valuable paper of cus .omrrs taken on safe deposit without charge.
Letters of credit given to ravellers a hich will enable holder to cash
cbe-.-ks on us in any oarto ttie United States, Money remitted tf> Eng-
land. Ireland,Germany, France, and all foreign lands at small ei>st.
Special window for-lad'-s and private business. Money loan' out
on *ime for capitalist friends of the hank.
Business for the Temple Building and Investment company trans
acted through us.
j I Small Deposits Solicited 11 i
We pay no interest on deposits which are payable between the
hours of 9 a. m. and 4 p. m.
PIEL1) &‘JFNVKINS
Havejthe bestjstockjof •
FH1I)ILV GHOCBKIBft
in; TEMPLE,
un ici lua w ----
know practically no more now upon the
question than I did five years ago, when
t first appealed to me as an interesting
mbject of study. I can explain myself
better by a practical example. Thi?
horning I was riding on a cable caron |
Washington Heights. There were seven
men in the car and two women. The Jjg
men happened to bo all well dressed and
very gentlemanly in appearance and
bearing. The women were exceedingly
plain and poorly dressed, and one was
positively homely, 'the men all kept ,
their faces studiously buried in their
papers. At One Hundred and Fifty-fifth . m
street a woman of about 25 got aboard
I’heyjsell Queensware 'Glassware,^Crockery,"FincjCutlery,'.Powder >nd Fuse M the lowwtjprices.
—0-
THEY CAN BEAT THE BEST.
Give them a call.- 10* Street TEMPLE, TEXAS.
Square Dealing,»»
«-<Promptness,fc-»
•*«4Thoroughness>»:
.*««◄•*« Accuracy,
VV ith our oil! Customers, the past will be a
guaranty for the future. Uttiers are assured
C. L. McCAY, President.
HENRY.D. KONE.;Cashier.
W. L. ROGERS, Vice President
FRED L. McDOWELL, Asst. Cash
K
Th.e Bell County National Bank,
tl.j > aim to suit our patrons in all transac-
tions from their inception to their close.
Uurfcilities for the best service are un
in company with an elderly woman. She
, . i i 1 ... .1 . .. a l.iimtoHn onn
'1
OF TEMPLE.
CAPITAL STOCK $50,000.00 s
Transact a general Banking business. Collections promptly made
DIRECTOR,
L.'F. Paulus.
W.‘L.|Rogers,
Cj L. McCay
jno. R. Jacksc~
Henry D. ,Kone.
surpassed. a.Dd busiuess entrusted to us will al-
ways receive prompt and faithful attention.
Soliciting your patronage,
Respectfully Yours,
DOWNS BROS., AGENTS,
Insurance, Real Estate and Loans.
Office over First National Bank.
Uravit Churchmen Demi.
The year which lias just closed will be
memorable in the annals of the Chnrcb
of Rome for the loss of Newman and
Von Dollinger; in thoso of the Church
of England for the loss of Lightfoot,
Liddou, Hatch, Littledale, Oakley, Henry
White, Canon Cure and of the dean of
St. Paul’s. The deanery of St. Paul’s
has been held by many greater men than
Dr. Church, but never by one of more
stainless and beautiful life, riper culture,
more untiring devotion, completer self
forgetfulness. The story of his life
would be little more, however, than the
story of his friendships with most of the
brightest and most fruitful minds of hie
generation.
He was a severe judge of himself, and
shrank from anything like “leadership,"
even from that of the London head.
His affection for Newman was unbound-
ed and reciprocal. It was in the quaint
old house under St Paul’s that Newman
played on his favorite ’cello for the last
time and put it away forever. He pre-
sented it to the daughter of his host a1
the time.—London World.
in cumpnujr —- - -
was neither a blonde nor a brunette, and
was in no respect prettier or handsomer
than fifty young women you might see
any afternoon in upper Broadway, She,
was attractive chiefly because of her
mobile, womanly face, her pretty, vi-
vacious manner, and her dainty way of
handling herself. She was tastefully
and neatly dressed, and looked every
inch a refined woman. She was instant- »
ly attractive to a refined man, hut no *
moreso than hundreds of women in tb#
streets daily.
“But her entrance was the signal for
every man in the car to lay down hii
paper. The next moment every man
looked guilty for this breach of man-
ners and picked up his paper again. A
block or two was traversed, and I no-
ticed that all the men began casting
covert glances at her over their papers.
You see I was primed to observe these
things. I was expecting them. As I
said, the men were all gentlemanly, and
as a consequence their glances were
eminently respectful. They would wait L
till the pretty woman was looking an
other way, and then allow their gaze to ^
rest full upon her. In evory instance
these glances expressed both admiration
and fearfulness. The admiration wa»
of the sort that would be complimentary
to any woman. The tearfulness wae
evidently twofold. In the first place, ,,
it indicated that the men were afraid *
Y‘i
II
J
J
I
I
F- F. Downs, President.
Geo. . vvillcox. Vice P reds ni
F E. SANFORD Cashier.
■ FIRST NATIONAL BANK
7ELEGRJFHIC
I
OF TEMPLE.
Capital Paid Up.............................................$100,000
Surplus.................................................................. OOO.
Geo. E. Willcox,
F. F. Downs
-DIRECTORS:—
J. B.^Nuuneley,
Otto K. Burwitz’
E. B. Baggett
F h
i nford
I’ L. Down
MOYER’S GUN STORK
Ihe Times’ Daily Summary or toe
Latest Teleoahtc Hews.
A special trorn Lufkin, Tex., says:-
Lufkiu was^thrown into excitement
day before" vestei day by a negro
u&ined west Windham, who gave
the alarm that some one was robbing
Mr. Abnev’a residence,■■in the north
part ot town. The negro had his
pants and vest badly cut and stated
that it was doue in trying to save the
house, t. bout fifty men rushed to
the bouse and it was soon found that
the negro had gone through the house
hunting for money, and afterward be-
c mmg scared, cut his own clothing
and gave the alarm to clear himself.
The tacts were soon established, and
he was put in the lockup by marshal
Jones.
— | Z have, an& will k • j on hand a line of I I
-{ GUNS, REVOLVERS, *. /[MUNI I ION,
And Sporting Goods,
And respectfully solicit your patronage My business will be strictly cash.
all goods will be marked in plain figures, with one price to all.
I will have in connection a GUNSMITH SHOP and have employee
Mr. L. Assman, of Austin, « expert gun and locksmith who will repair every-
thing in that line, and mak tnd fit keys, reppair trunks, umbrellas, and almost
anything. One door abov irst National Bank, on ioth St. Call. No trouble
to show goods JESSE H. MOYER.
J GR GORY & CO,
REAL ESTATE INSURANCE,
And Abstracts.
A special from Austin says: If re-
ports ar true the alliance members
of ihe leg.Blature and v olouel Sledge
ana Henry Tracy, the alii nceleghla
live steering committee, don’t work
together iu h rmony. Ever since the
legislature convened me members and
tho committee here have had a card
time in agreeing upon what legisla-
tion the interests of the farmers de-
mand. They first split upon the re-
peal oft e coal oil inspection law.
The alliance members were a unit in
favor of the repeal of the law, while
Tracy appeared before the committee
iiuii rgueil ms level oest in favor ot
luspeeiiou. This is a sample of the
(idlercn es that exist. So tar from
coming together, the breach ha-
tv deued, amt now it leans out that
ar tho • lliauce caucus lastuight it was
decided to send a memorial to Presi-
dent Evan Juries asking him to with-
draw Sledge aiul Tracy from further
attendance upon the legislature, giv-
ing a-, a reason that their presence
rather hurtful than beneficial to ueen-
ful legislation. Whatever President
Jones may do iu the matter, it is
cumstances over which she had no
control. Her father, Samuel Neely,’is
a miller in Lawrence county, Tenn.
She had a sweetheart who had en-
gaged to many her and left mean-
while to better hie lortunes in Texa .
He went first to Felden, Tex., and not
liking it, came to Waco, where it ap-
pears he found agreeable employment
at any rate, he wrote to the young
lad', inviting her to come to Waco,
and sending her money to defray ex-
penses. She ariived on the 2d u.timo
anil according to his instructions went
to the Cain house. He met her there
aud the youn g lady relates a story of
perfidy rather appalling. She say- he
told her that he had ascertained that
they could not get, married undrr
Texas laws until six months had
elapsed after her arrival aud that
meanwhile his means would not en-
able him t* support her except as
man and wife. She therefore, he sug-
gested, had better consent to live with
him as his wite, and att’ e expiration
of the six months he would carry out
his promise. The young lady tear-
Wnpopnlai Kmprem FreiJerln*,
The Empress Frederick lias excited tb<
clamorous protests of her son’s subjects
by commissioning a London firm of up-
holsterers to decorate and partly furnish
the future residence of Princess Victoria
at Bonn. It is certainly a strauge belise
on the part of the empress, who did ex-
actly the same thing when the Schlosa
of Charlottenburg was redecorated dur-
ing her husband’s brief reign. What a
general roar of execration would have
been excited in England if the Prince
Oxnsort had sent for Gflmans to decorate
any of the royal palaces.—Loudon Truth
that the young woman would notice ; Jfi
m
Til
A Woulthy School Ma’am.
One of the queer things noticed in this
metropolitan town is the sight of a
young lady teacher in a public school
who is driven to the school door daily in
her own victoria, with blooded horses
and a liveried coachman. The yoang
lady, too, is an excellent, faithful teach-
ar, and earns her salary as fully as do
any of those dependent upon it for
bread. She is the daughter of Lawson
N. Fuller, and teaches in the new gram-
mar school at One Hundred and Thirty-
fourth street and Lenox avenue.—New
York World.
their glances and be offended. ■ Second,
it showed that they were fearful that
their fellow passengers would notics
their weakness. To a perfectly impas-
sive observer, us I tried to make myself,
the situation was amusing. I was sit-
ting on the same side of the car as the
young woman, so presently I got up aud
sat down opposite, so I could observe how
she took all this implied adoration. She
apparently did not notice it. She did
not allow her eyes to fall onoe upon a
single man in the car. She talked to the
older woman, who may have been het
mother, constantly. Her color height-
ened, and she became more vivaciou*
and more charming every minute. I
could not help thinking that this may
have been due to her consciousness of «
the general admiration she was provok-
ing. But who could tell? At Eighth _ ' ■v*
avenue both women got out. The young |
erone looked at no one as she walked
out in a dignified manner.
“This is ouly a single example of what ]
yon can see a dozen times daily. Do
pretty women, or do they not, recogniao I
the admiration they arouse everywhere
they go? If they do, how does it affect
them? No pretty woman will confess to
her dearest masculine friend that she
notices the sensation she makes daily
any more than she will show her un-
known admirers in the streets by glauoe
or smile that she is aware even of thou
existence.—New York Sun.
Women'* Work In Son Franclwjo.
Mrs. Sarah 3. Cooper is the inspira-
his promise, me young i»«j icm- tion of the Golden Gate Kindergarten
fully declined and he went his v* ay,. association. In the last report she state*
« * ___J___a .1 ~n.wl ati rneniv. I A nVillilron llRVA fill-
All Business entrusted [jto our care will always receive
PROMPT ATTENTION
t,
The only agents in Bell County that adjust and settle losses in less
than ten days after fire,
Jones may do in the matter, it is ap- aH to Teracity. This worth
parent that the steering committee ]adv ifi in 8afc hands and has
have litileinfluenco with the alliance > the ruin wl
but returned next day, aud on receiv-
ing her final refusal told ’'er he inus’
take her to a more secluded place, a
private hoarding house kept by M rs
Aui.ie Fetors, where the rates would
agree better with his means. H.- got
her to consent to this and often visit-
ed her at Mrs. Peter’s, but Miss Neely
finding that he did no* intend niar
riage, and meanwhile having discov-
ered the address of a frioud of her
parents, Mrs. Busan S. Jenkins, a re-
spectable widow, at the :oruer of
Franklin aud seveuth streets, remov-
ed there and is now engaged with
Mrs. Jenkins temporarily as house-
keeper, in which occupation she is
proficient. Bhe lias turned over to the
officers her correspondence and is
awaiting the arrival ot means to re
turn to her parents Bhi told l.er
storv as related, and as she promi°ed,
gave documentary evidence provlug
all her statements above any question
This worthy young
not tai-
tliat 6,000 little children have liven en-
rolled in San Francisco since 1880, anil
$100,000 spent on the little ones in whom
lies the hope of the world. One of the
schools is controlled by Miss Marwedel,
whose classes are made up entirely of
the stray children and waifs, between 2
and 10 years, picked out of the. gutter?
and alley? of San Fiuncisco.—Sail Fran-
cist' UiW.
members.
A Waco special says : Miss Fannie
Neely, a young lady of neat appear-
ance aud iu all respects attractive, ap-
pears to have been the v.ctira of cir-
len a victim to the ruin which was
evidently plotted against her. She is
about 18, has a common school train
ing and is very industrious. No one
• » 1_____1 nnnll llOafi
John Bancroft, a man who was a
tramp eight years ago, aud who died re-
cently at Portland, Ore., bequeathed ull
liis property, estimated at $15,000, to a
woman in Sacramento, Cal., who once
gave him a night’s lodging and break-
fast and $1 besides, together with some
good advice. _
(Impended by m Finger.
One of tho most singular accidents on
record befell Mrs. S. Hardy, of Madist.i. ^
one day recently. She went into the S
stable to see about her hens, and step.'!
ping upon the feed trough in one of t •>* jj
stalls, reached up with her right hand |
and drew herself up. An iron gar I ;>
rake hung there, and she placed her h'uia
on that. In doing so her foot slipped
from under her and she fell, catching
one of the teeth of the rake into tin-
flesh of the second finger, above ti .Kj
joint, and there she hung, just hi.,I, <
enough for her feet to rest on tho floor
In this trying position she concluded she
might die beforo any ono conid come-.to |
her assistance, but with rare presence “t i
mind she caught the handle of a hoe
which hung beside the raki with
left hand, drew herself up so as to un
hook her finger aud fell unconscious to a
the floor. After a time she recovered .
and went into the house.—Banuor News .
I
William Archer’s criticism <n. Mrs.
Langtry’s Cleopatra is everywhere pro-
nounced to be the most severe on rec-
ord. Here it is: “Purple patches of
Shakespeare swimming in a prismatic
scintillant maelstrom of spectacle.”
m
What we know as peers of England
are not the only hereditary functionaries
in Great Britain. The court of queen’s
lJ Your Hous ‘s on F-re
You pul water on the burning tira'A
iiei>, noton the smoke. Aud
have catarrh you should atta1 k tn-JI
disease en tho blood, not in your no»$l*
liemove the impitro cause, am* tftj
cal effect subsides. To do ttus-
..... ..... IiIuoH
Hook’s Sarsaparilla, the great
n»u*.o.,.-r.....c d
ing and is very industrious. No one j 'b“enoh j,aH jURt been led to decide that j’””!1 curescatafrh. It “l8° »treDgth||
having heard and seen her'could con- there are a certain number of hereditary ^ 7 rveSt |j0 sure to get until
tmuo to reserve a doubt oi the girl0j pawnbrokers. Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
honesty and virtue. 1
T
iSL
Met
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Crow, J. D. & Bitzer, J. H. Temple Weekly Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, February 27, 1891, newspaper, February 27, 1891; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth585422/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.