Fort Worth Daily Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 70, Ed. 1, Tuesday, October 11, 1887 Page: 2 of 8
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PUBLISHED EVERT DAT
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1 OEMOGRAT PUB CO
Fort Worth Tox
Uranch Offlcao of Tho Gazett
Dallas 607 Main Sreet J M Rorex Man
SvACOTom O Plunkett Manager
Balpoubism will soon be a thing of
the past in English politics
BROOKLY > the city of churcheshaB had
its name prominently mentioned One
of its bank cashiers has gone
12000
wrong for
From present appearances it may be
assumed that Prance and Russia will
have to join hands and whip out the rest
o Europe
The Germans did not like the King of
Samoa so they carted him to the shore
put him aboard a ship and paddled him
out of the conntry
Garrett can struggle for the circuit
all he desires but Gould has got the
heels on him and will successfully
claim lt as his own
The anarchists dont mind bsing hung
but when one of their friends is not per-
mitted to set em up they feel they
have a right to grumole
man
Garrett says that some of the stock-
holders worked the rabbitfoot on him
while he was on the briny deep They
do that on Wall street sometimes
The Grand Duke Nicolas cousin of the
Czar Is honing for a row between
Trance and Germany so the bear can
plant his ponderous paw on some more
of the earth and claim it as hia own
A
jftarit
Governor Frrz Hugh Lee attended
the wedding of a colored couple not long
fiince and the newspapers think the mil
lenium is near at hand It must have been
a case of young masr seeing a worthy
man launch his boat
boatii
ii ii
It is a mistake to suppose that the
Grand Army of the Republic is an associ-
ation organized for the sole purpose of
looting the treasury There are many
members o that order who are not cry-
ing for government psp
Jacob Sharp is a great criminal has
been tried found guilty sentenced to the
penitentiary for a term of years and still
he does not go there Mr Sharp is not
an exalderman who spent all his boodle
in seeking reelection he is the gentle-
man who claims several millions
Some womanhating editor expressed
the opinion recsntly that women are
never as successful as men in their call-
ings whereupon a Pueblo paper with
true western gallantry came to the res-
cue of the fair sex with a bold denial of
the assertion and instanced one lady in
the neighborhood whose voice could be
heard a mile
The voice of the politician is no longer
heard in the land When the rain de-
scends making the roads muddy and
when the barbecue vanishes and the pic-
nic is not tho politician hunts his hole
fleds it and crawls in We are all pa-
triotic but we never realize the blessings
of free government so fully as when the
picnic orator retires his mouth on half
pay
FBU1T QBOWING IN TEXAS
The article printed in another part of
Tee Gazette from the pen of Hon W
S Herndon of Tyler on the subject of
fruit growing in Texas is well worthy of
perusal as it contains the observations
of an intelligent and practical mind That
Texas needs a diversity of crops has
long been a recognized truth but
that diversity was possible few
could realize King Cotton has so
long ruled the south that anyone
weakening in the customary sturdy alle-
giance to this domineering monarch was
considered a traitor of the deepest dye
Cotton Is the only thing that will bring
money has locg been the cry and the
fleecy staple has been planted regularly
every year and every year has brought
less and less money The fruit
interests have been neglected and
if interest can be aroused
in this important industry it will
open up new channels of industry new
sources of gain and relieve in a measure
the overcrowding of the cotton raising in-
dustry Tne territory mapped out as
suitable for fruitrai6ing by Colonel Hern-
don is large enough to furnish the south
It is equal to the famous California lands
which have enhanced in value to S1200
an acre on account of their
capacity for raising fruit The
rush to California from Texas has taught
us that the Golden Slope had the advant-
age of us only in the enterprise of her
citizens who have realized the various
sources of wealth and provided at once
to develop them The climatic difEer
ences amount to little We have a climate
in Texas as enjoyable as can be found
anywhere we have natural advantages
in abundance and a soil of unwonted fer-
tility All that is necessary is for our
producing and farming masses to liberate
themselves from the thrslldom of the
fleecy king and direct their efforts to
some of the many more remunerative
crops Eruit growing has made Califor-
nia famous and rich The same industry
can do the same thing for Texas
GIVE DONNELLT JUSTICE
The time is drawing near when the
great Cryptogram will make its appear-
ance and the reading public will be per-
mitted to look through Ignatius
Donnellys eyes and discern whether
or not the world has been bestow-
ing reverence wrongfully for three
continuous centuries upon William
Shakespeare the bard of Avon Mr
Donnelly is a scholarly gentleman who
has long since won his way to lame in the
literary world He has antagonized the
accepted belief of his fellowmen on a
given subject and denied the truth
of what has been taken on
trust therefore he is a crank
He has made researches which required
the expenditure of a vast amount of labor
and learning and has incurred an ex-
pense in the collation of his data and
the preparation of his book which an
author of less ample fortune could not
bear and he has consented to risk his
reputation upon the statement that he
has discovered the key to the true author-
ship of the Shakespeaftj plays But his
time his labor his research
his money spent and his liter-
ary reputation amounts to naught Born
critics gentlemen whose chief delights are
in faultfinding and the belittlement of
the labor3 of others have condemned
him without a hearing and judgments in-
numerable have been pronounced upon
him before his case has come up for trial
Somebody said that Shakespeare wrote
all the dramas ascribed to him and no-
body contradicted it Shakespeare him-
self never claimed tho plays as his own
but they have his name and peo-
ple believed they were his No
one at the present day can tell
why ho is so firm in the be-
lief that Shakespeare is the real author
farther than that somebody else has said
so and people generally believed it To
dispute an accepted dogma is at all times
dangerous bnt to deny a matter of com
mon faith which in effect is telling the
s iS
rsgpg
learned and the wise of the past and
present that they have been worshiping
before an empty shrine and bringing
myrrh and incense to mythical idols is a
sacrilege which calls down upon the
guilty the severest penalties And here
is the Tory in all natures The English-
man of common understanding with
grufi and hearty good nature or
scoffing incredulity will pooh pooh
at any idea advanced which is not a hoary
and time honored article of his grand-
fathers creed Nothing new nothing ne-
cessitating a change or an upsetting of
the present order of things can be tole-
rated innovations and advances sre per-
nicious in themselves simply because
they are innovations and nothing is worth
having and worth practicing only what
has come down to him from generations
long gone He did not acquire his
faith it grew up with him impercepti-
bly and to change it in tbe least
particular would require a new start and
a new growth from childhood to man-
hood We laugh at him and congratu-
late ourselves that we are more impres-
sionable and open to conviction but we
toohave our idols end our prejudices we
have our ideas and our beliefs basedjupon
nothing mere than an unquestioning faith
in what bis teen taught us by those who
professed to know and these beliefs are
so crystallized and brittle that
revision or innovation shatters
them into fragments The American
Tory if he is a Democrat will listen to
no proposition coming from any Republi-
can and vice versa Ii the proposed
change comes from one who is neither
Republican nor Democrat it is hooted at
and denounced by both It is so much
easier to drift with the tide so much
pleaBanter to have modes of faith
ideas beliefs prejudices and pas
eions ready made by some one
else where nothing is left but to
put them on and wear them without the
mental exercise of devising them that
few people take the trouble of inquiring
into these things further than to satisfy
themselves that such is the popular way
Mr Dsnnelly ha3 had the awlul temerity
to invade the quiet serenity of accepted
belief with the startling assertion that
Francis Bacon Is the real author of the
Shakespeare plays and he has the coun-
try about his ears like a swarm
of hornets Laarned and labored disqui-
sitions rie published by men who assume
wisely and argue convincingly that Hr
Donnelly is wrong because they believe
and have long believed otherwise and
witty and smart things are said to prove
Shakespeares claim by small wits whose
only reason for saying anything is a de-
sire to make themselves appear familiar
with the writings of the great
dramatist A money making scheme
say some who are incapable of
a generous thought 3nd who
Imagine all embitions like their own are
aroused by a lust for gold while others
dismiss the subject as a troublesome in-
truder and return to the quiet repose of
the old theory There is no one who
really knows whether or not Mr Donnel
ly has made the discovery which he
claims and no one can know until the
book is published It is neither just nor
generous to condemn him beforehand
Given the educational advantages afford-
ed Shakespeare the average man could
not write a bill of sale for a
brindle cow much less those immortal
dramaa which have aroused and instructed
the world It is possible even probable
that the butchers boy has given the
world this transcendental exhibition of
genius but it must be admitted that there
are many things in his life to negative
the claim and none to prove It The
author of Romeo and Juliet would
scarcely return to the unpleasant details
of wool stapling or the author oj
Hamlet would eDd his life in a drunken
bout Frances Bacon may not have writ-
ten a line In the plays accredited to
Shakespeare but candor must compel the
acknowledgement that he was the most
likely the only man of his day and time
who could have written them Mr Don
nelly is doubtless honest in his efforts to
prove the authorship of the works much
more honest than his critics He should
be given a fair trial a patient hearing
and let the judgment be based impartially
upon the facts Foul play and prejudice
crucified the Nazarene
Keeps tho Lead
Blanco StarVindicator
The Fort Worth Gazette still keeps
the lead on the road of progress Suc-
cess crowns its every effort
Tho Convention Hall
Sodd City Spectator
Let The Gazette attach her towline to
that convention hall and the next
Democratic wrestling match will come off
in the rustling Fort
Deserves the Honor
Franklin Texau
A great many papers in the state a s-
urging Fort Worth as the place for the
holding of the next Democratic state
convention The Fort is a great little
city and deserves the honor
i US
Wants a Now Building
Atlanta Journal
Fort Worth is a plucky town They
want all the big gatherings such B3 state
conventions etc and they prepare to
accommodate the visitors They are now
agitating the subject of building a mam-
moth hall for the accommodation of con-
ventions If she builds the next state
Democratic convention should be held in
the new building
Tho Ladles Snffrage Committee
New York Oct 10 The ladies suf-
frage committee having been informed
that many women desire to register and
vote has announced that all who call at
its headquarters will be informed how to
proceed according to law
TSfTvC
a te
J ss < b OfcfVP S x
ZAYALLA COUNTY
Something About the Advantages cf that
Part of Texas
Correspondence of the Gazette
BATEsvuxETEXOct 9 Zavallacnun
ty of which this is the county seat was
organized in March 1S84 and has a pop-
ulation at prenent of about 2000 The
town of Baesville is perhaps the small-
est county seat in the state It has about
200 inhabitants two stores one hotel a
fair school building a blacksmith shop
and a livery stable They have a very
neat and commodious courthouse and r
comfortable jail both built of brick and
costing 13000
The total valuation of taxable property
in the county is Sl200000 The rate of
taxation at present is 97 cents and the
total indebtedness of the county is
S12000
Farmers in the county have made
very fair corn crops this year
though owing to the fact that so few are
engaged in farming cora is worth at re-
tail 75 cents per bushel but could be
bousht cheaper in quantities The lands
appear to be very flue and the county
only needs proper development to make
it an excellent farming country
The grass is magnificent and all kinds
of stock are in splendid condition The
lands are generally level though in paiis
slightly undulating andtaken altogether
presents more attractions for small farm-
ers and stockmen than any county over
which your correspondent has traveled in
Southwest Texas and he has been over
most of them
The county has had lccsl option
from its organization and the
people are so weil pleased with
its workings that when some one made
an effort to get an election ordered on
the subject sometime since enough sig-
natures could not be obtained in the
county to order the election
They have good schoods in both town
and county Professor C S Bailsy f Jr
merly of Mississippi is teaching the white
public school in town and Professor W
H Robinson the Mexican school
There is not as yet a church building in
the countybut the various denominations
are very well represented as to organiza-
tions
The county officers seem to be very
pleasant gentlemen indeed and this scribe
is under special obigation to J B Roes
district and county clerk and C C Akerf
sheriff for kindness shown him
Persons who may be seeking for good
lands fine grass good water and a pleas-
ant climate in Southwestern Texas could
not do better that to visit Zavalla county
S
Mr
HOUNDED BY A WOftAK
Blalnea Apurtmentn Invaded by a
French Female Reporter
New York Oct 7 A Paris cable to
the World says Mr Blaine is taking
Paris quietly He has become stouter
since his trip to the Garman watering
places He is out of doors nearly all
day although the weather is far from
propitious Yesterday morning he drove
about the city visiting various points of
interest and in the afternoon both he and
Mrs Blaine took a long walk on the
boulevards He has left the Hotel
Vendome and has taken a suile
of rooms in the Hotel Binda which is the
American headquarters Mr Blaine is
very shy about speaking about his Hom
bnrg experience and of the Prince of
Wales incident No definite decision has
bee a arrived at as to where the winter
will be spent although Nice is locked
upon with the most favor Mrs Blaine
keeps to her room a good deal and al-
though improved in health is not well
Mr Blaine has been besieged by reporters
since he has been in Paris but has
refused to grant anv interviews
One reporter a young lady ob-
tained admittance to the Blaine apart-
ments they believing her to be a milliner
She opened a whole battery of questions
on Mr Blaine the first of which was
whether he wanted to be President She
was courteously requested to retire and
her zeal proved fruitless Today the
Figaro devotes two columns to Mr
Blaine reviewing his life from a decided-
ly democratic standpoint The Blaines
will remain m Paris some time
AN IOWA VIEW
Tito Administration Blamed for the Evic-
tions
Chicago III Oct 10 A special
from Des Moines Iowa regarding the
eviction of settlers by a British syndicate
from the unearned land grants of the St
Paul and Sioux City Riilroid says the
general government has by correspon-
dence as well as by decisions of the
courts given the settlers encourage-
ment to take up these lands though titles
were in dispute The state of Iowa has
no right to interfere save as it can assist
to recover through the federal courts the
lands which the railroad did not earn and
give them up to the settlers who
have gone upon them in good
faith trusting to the promises
of the government This AttorneyGen
eral Baker tried to do and have Attorney
General Garland stop these proceedings
In the state courts long enough for the
government to determine if it had not an
interest In them which however Presi-
dent Clevelands administration has re-
fused to do and as a result evictions
have gone on accompanied by ecenes of
hardship terror and brutality
li i i > mm
EL PAO
Preparing to Banish Thnps and Thieves
Gate of Foul Flay
Special to the Gazette
El Paso Tex Oct 10 The tramp
and thugs are beginning to arrive from
the east to winter in El Paso and the re-
sult is that lawlessness Is greatly on the
increase At least four men were
knocked down last night and robbed of
valuables Several other persons report
being stopped in the street by suspicious
characters The Council meets tonight
and will increase the police force
The decomposed remains ol a human
body was found on top of Franklin
mountain which overlooks El Paso It
was impossible to identify the victim
but a bullethole through the thigh bone
proved that lt was a case of foul play
DOUBLED ON STAMPS
Charges Against a Fromlnent Republican
Lately Removed from a Fostoulcs
Ears Penn Oct 7 The Investiga
tion of the management of the postoffice
at Lundys Lane this county has devel-
oped what is alleged to have been a sys-
tem of fraudulent reports of stamps can-
celed covering a period of almost sixteen
years The office was held during that
period for fourteen years by Hon Thomas
r t arwagfe
THE QtkZETTEiJfORT WOBTH TE3AS TUESDAY OCTOBER 13
X
Osborn now a member of the Pennsyl-
vania Legislature and since his election
to taat position he was succeeded by his
aeputv George W Baird Tne reports
show that they doubled the number of
stamps actually canceled until the salary
reached SS0O just double what it ought
to have been The amount fraudulently
drawn by Osborn and his successor
Baird amounts to S5000 Prosecutions
will follow in the Utitsd States courts
Osborn holds a high position in social
military and political circles and is aj
the present time a member of Governor
Beavers staff The investigation fol
lowed the tranafar of the office to a Dem-
ocrat
COPFISS MillE IF IAPJiK
Soma of tho SToval anii Inganions aieHioda
by Which F p < r is Helnc Utilized
Now Torn Mail and Express
of
Eerror of Being Its Slav Necessity
5Piiei c K wi f KMffflsrwri Fl
i
Hero is a very neat style cOu m
> qyj v
remarked a maaafactnrer of such article
to r reporter yesterday afrcraoon l
is the latest thing out and is really qrHW
popular 4JF
The coffin did not seem to be different
from the ordinary kind oi casket It wss
plain in style and finished in rosewood
beautifully marked The handles were
of solid silver and the inside WA3 hand
somely covered with cushioned trimming
of white silk neatly quilted It was evi-
dently a coflia that any modfst man of
simple tastes couid cSir no objections to
being buried in
What do you think of it
It is a very neat son of coffin but I
dont see anything remarkable about i
Lift one end of it
The reporter arched his back grasped
the handle firmly and put his strength
into a great lift The casket rose as
though it was made of painted air co
light was it and the experimenter nar-
rowly escaped falling on his back
It feels as tnough it wore made of
psper How do you make them so
light It i3 made of paper answered the
manufacturer compressed paper I 13
cheaper than wood can be compretssq
into shape is mere durable and caa be
made much more quickly and easily The
veneering is of another piece of paper
very thin which i3 painted to resemble
wood by machinery When the coflia is
put together it is varnished and trimmed
and then it is ready fur cccupancy
How did you happen to invent it
I didnt invent it but almost any one
ought to have done so Paper has been
U3ed for car wheels for years past Doors
are now made of the samd substance
Two thick paper boards stamped end
molded into panels and glazed together
with glue and potash and then rolled
through heavy rollers are coming into
use They are be ter than wood in that
they will not shrink swell crack or
warp They are made waterproof with
a mixture
Boats are also made of paper con-
tinued the manufacturer and for cer-
tain kinds of raciDg they are better even
than ordinary Kinds of wood and far
cheaper
You will soon ba making your whole
coffin out of paper suggested the re-
porter
We are not far away from that now
replied the maker They are making
window glass from linen or cotton modi-
fied by chemical action When the glass
is made It is dipped in a preparation of
camphor and alcohol which gives it the
character of parchment It can then be
molded and cut into transparent sheets
that are remarkably tough and can atan <
double the strain of the ordinary glass
Yes sir it will not be long before not
only coffins for the dead but houses for
the living can be made from the founda-
tion to the roof entirely out of paper
Who says we are not an inventive race
MORPHIA
of
Being Its Victor
Nineteenth Century
Watch r morphia habitue deprived o
the drug The first slight unessiness and
sense of discomfort gradually passes into
extreme restlessness accompanied by the
most profound depression the stomach
becomes so irritable that nothing can be
retained and there is nausea and a dis-
tressing sensation of emptiness and sink-
ing The whole nervous system which
has been working so long under a deaden-
ing weight abuses Its liberty and runs ab-
solutely riot a breath of air which would
bring relief to an ordinary sufferer is
painful to him so sensitive is the skin
that a touch distresses and even the eye
and ear are incapable of tolerating the
most ordinary Ptimulation To these
troubles is added sleeplessness the pa
tient can not get a moments rest or if
he should close his eyes in sleep horri-
ble dreams and an indefinable terror take
possession of him and make him dread
that condition which others look to for
consolation and relief Incapacity to
take food prolonged sleeplessness con-
stant sneezing yawning and vomiting
painful acuteness of all his senses and
other troubles sink the sufferer into a
condition of prostration and despair
only to be relieved by morphia Who
then can wonder if the wretch yields
again to the drug which has so long en-
slaved him Hovering between a long-
ing to be free and a feeling of
an incapacity to endure his ago-
nies he asks reproachfully whethsr
it is true that science has discovered no
means of reliefno substitute for morphia
which may be given him until the storm
be past No we have no means at our
disposal which will do more than alle-
viate these Bufferings and if the morphia
habitue will be freed he must place him-
self under such control as can prevent
his giving way under the trial as he al-
most inevitably will if left to himself
But severe as the ordeal Is he has this
consolation and this great inducement to
submit to it namely that it is short A
few days will see him through ttfe worst
and although he may not bs comfortable
for a week cr two his discomfort is en-
durable and becomes less and less until
it gradually passes into ease and health
Circus Elder Hurt
Special to the Gazette
Paris Tex Oct 10 During the per-
formance of Sells Bros circus this after-
noon in a racing scene one of the lady
riders horses stepped in a hole which
threw her with great force to the ground
The horses of the other riders ran over
her She was badly hurt and was taken
out unconscious At last accounts she
was reported not severely hurt though it
is believed that she was
Ranera of America
Special to the Gazette
Lampasas Tex Oct 10 Colonel
Henry Exall has just left for Pittsburg
Pa to attend the annual convention of
the Bankers of America as a representa-
tive of the Bankers Association of Texas
v
CLASSIFIED MITEMSSHEMS
All persons seeking tnploj ment toJiocanrct
crd to pay may advert in fits column for itlu
tlons free of charge
MTIAKCIAEi
iru3
iS ii
WajSTSjipT propxrad to lcnmonsy In as
jtSatifa lrsd on pastures iaprovod faxes o
tfaohss Will sIeo buy venders lien iefc
SOMMSSVILL CHASS
60S Matorrsa FortWoxtk
tViftM 5TV to sttoftpastarestarxnsbaelnefs
VlU XA > rtjrop crty and vacant lots Newtcs
H LasUltoriwyorcorFIf th and M inF W orti
w
W XTJEDAGKHTB
ANTEI > nUetfnlt 10 00 OJ o os K
leaay Someihlnv pw sr wa < cs ma < k
ally Ilemli s enefs o the two inderbll
Corncfcl nn1 BUitSEafttftrng how they ma < te >
tographlc I
awWamlly
lUtii mcBi nnjabrons booS fcver issjipd
fTTASTED
E llrst lloor
WjT
WAaJEDa3iM t L K
Voeien aid child eo can sell ICOa daj fifteen
fonts pets a oamDle county rlghs given 1 ce
l oyd Tab ishlnKComiany Boston Mass
trANTEU For 1 rt ttcrtn atffcvlclhUy s
VY young or mdcle agcttjiady fo oanvasa for
holiday boots oar fipfllMpare the lcdst saiabe
In the market aild tho coaimi alonSL we give
are verj llbeml tKnTlnc n tha business 1
netiwj5ntlal a we give fall InstructlonTCE Ad
TrTss Perrv Pnb ihtm Pomnanv DenvetxiM
VAttiEDSITOASIOKf
WAXTED By tvrorespectable girls sltua
tlon tocool and do honsmvora
nlalyrafsr ncee Address
Fort Worth pcccJHce
can far
Clara and Bessie
WANTED ryj sfwnite woman
SlTUATUCpr cooking 2Cvliffor other house
worfcfyAddTtga S L caro jOt Gazotte <
iu
p
TJ757AXrED Pjm ancrt poslUOttWlUa 1
V office as stenogrnpher ajioSfcvpe writer
who has one ve xeSfeXperlencc In sar
same
one
Ad Jress Msj Limn iklnson Bowling Gtatn
Warren iott tr Kentucky
law
A womjuucooKfbrsectionkoup
sixteen intte3 > frCin ho Fort Apply at ljn
Malnjtreer t
Y riAKiEO A girl tvr general housewors
YVBafeicnces reqalrcQ < Sbod wages Cal
at BuSinesVCollego or ai Msldence airs F P
Prenmffj u
VyikSfEED QiALlS mSLP
300 men on exteniontQftheFbrt
WANTED
Worth and Denver City RaUwny Track
men teamaieia
y applying at
and
sarapcr
oflicejiof the road
Worth transporta ion cs
fare
worAppjttfQaans
the wor
UOE S
holdtrs
at fort
be obtained at tail
to S Minis or out on
are rooks
iurDisliea < rbora u ne on the
Apgly fo Win Norrltt ctt 41
corner Foanhttna Grove twitys f
Nicely fjTmMhed south roomi
FOBcRENT secoudHoors at Mr Masses
310 Lamar street aifo day board Transient i
per day
BUSINESS CLUHOEift w
lO LETforimUing up 100 to
CONTRACT
200 tons of hay Apply to Thos Roche 1 on
W orth
TWR SALE Thfttnirilltle Suthj fcitrrs
juj oeeco andartfbargaln IfrpoTrt bdfo e No
vemherlfc Address M C osrergAt tte
RENT O SA JS A good farm I < >
FOR luoniilVitlori about ten miles north-
east of KottWdrth Apply to Dr JjJhn R Wal-
lace teller Tex S <
OLD PAPlSS SK
zette otlta5Vcry cheap
CHEAP I BS tS
In Clay Archer Jartona xonng counties in
tracteoi fronr 32 to 5 > 0 acres suitable for
forming juidssfizlj purposes small cjsh pay-
ment balance on long time and low rate of In
tamest Address O S Kennedy Fart Worth
Tex C E VcIiecVy Dslljur TASi orlT J
Chltwood Antelone Jsck ceuw Tex
OUXBJdPERS
zete < 03BgC very cheao
SALE
the Ga
FOB 3ALE
At tha Ga
XITAlipJSlViSTcrycody to call at C H Ed
Vtvardo Music Store G0S Houston aad sea
those line pianos
XL KoategneTara jjieohil > r < ratoast < f
so hftU and commenciiftLltfffSlon
y Xagrfr fcarcoe Tessa q
T > OBERT A ROGERS j T
SXi Attorney ar < LGcTihaelor at Law
UpatSiya Opposite the Posiofflce
ifeVer i > if in ii tfj > j arllMy llk A
FOR RANCHES JWffE
wild land jasfl crty property address or call on
A DeverBnx Co up stairs corner fri Fifth
andM in streets Fort VortbiZPex Rranch
office Decatnr Wise connt Tcx
GEQ ELLIS GO
607 Mattfstreet Dallas Tex Re MSsme nd
Cofrecting Agents Loans aiegouatca on city
farm and ranch r rr > nerjTi
171V1AM A tiHilili general iana uiu aT
V lootloa agents
exasfTascocB Tos
Igz the 2maac0
W G TCEfflE CO
GeneraUandigenfo311 Main Fort WbrtbTex
Dr Harris Letter Endorsed
Weatherford Tex Oct 91S87
To the Editor of the Gazette
I have j ist read the letter which is in
todays Gazette written by Dr Ira
Harris concerning Jerusalem Last
spring I spent several days in that city
and vicinity and from the deepest depths
of my heart I endorse every word he says
and most earnestly commend his missive
to the careful perusal of every Christian
If persons would only read the writings
of such truthful and impartial men xhey
would soon be convinced that all of the
tales as well as most of the sacred
spots and objects of Christianity are
frauds dark and lurid frands born by
mercenary priestcraft and fostered only
by superstition and credulity Very
respectfully John L Jackson
ig
Robbing Indians
Tucson A T Oct 10 The United
States grand jury in session hare has
discovered that orgauizad CAttie thieves
have been stealing cattle from Indians on
the San Carlos reservation during the
past year Several very prominent citi-
zens are Implicated Tne white men who
stole the cattle changed the Indians
brands into their own which had been
purposely made to closely resemole It
is now thought that mnuh cf the Iadian
trouble is directly due to this cattle
stealing
Salem Baptist association
Special to tho Gazette
Daingerfihld Tex Oct 10 Salem
Baptist Association has been in session at
South Union church since Saturday last
and a number of prominent ministers of
that denomination from various parts of
the state have been in attendance They
adjourned this evening after attending to
considerable amount of routine business
Air Oompteaaor Explodes
Calumet Mich OcL 10 The air
compressor at the Calumet and Hecla
mines burst yesterday causing a loss of
25000 Work in the mine will not be
interfered with
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Fort Worth Daily Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 70, Ed. 1, Tuesday, October 11, 1887, newspaper, October 11, 1887; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth85585/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .