Fort Worth Daily Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 70, Ed. 1, Tuesday, October 11, 1887 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : illus. ; page 15 x 22 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
fft
>
FIrfirtJrtids It Is the reat
All wort Sclentlflcallv done Tel
rAWTpEPA tKIEiT OF
WASHlNtitfi UNEVERSSTY
5rvATio ior ad sncod standing Mojtdax Oct
E5 Tttire connt Jriay bo completed in two or
Jb Ss afoBion of stdont Diploma admits to Bat
1PS f beannum fw Catalogues etc address
1417Lne3lace St LOTJISiaO
mefafeSijl
BUFINBSS JjM
aqrhoolof Shorthd Typewriting Tele
An anwloUbf Dallas Tex holds the
and
ITctfttLi H26 rocdil and diploma for
bestbuslues col
rractlcil Bnsi
wJtfUee of Texas and LEADS ALL OTHERS
Xe Star State and the Southwest
Virn and equipments fine lllns
mcthois
Mo dJroUcRe Journal aui specimens of beau
STUDENTS
tiful BY THEIR
in Ecssfen fourteen years
BUSINEJSt LLEGE
ls iecognizGd through
rrS1 lfantthe land as an open
C L L ZmsPwt to success and
nZS young men and ladles
marcol S fromcvet Snaitor Write or
ctp
5 lfee journal befrtre going elsewhere
SkHUI President WacoTex
3 pi r 1j Lrpro = y > iapeflicoase which is considered
ru ue biiUtyKTs yielded to the curative prop
0f Swifts Specific now known all over
lq worfilas S S S 3Irs Baiky of West Somcr
oite 3s3 npar Bo < rton vas Uuk ked several years
ybvrl this hideouj black eruption and was treat-
ed by tUe best medical talent who could only say
ftst the di ea = c was n species of IEPBOSY
ed coikm < ntly incurable It is iiiipo tible to d
cie rt wittonnss II r body from the crown of
b > r h ad to the to cs of her feet was a mas of de-
cay the fiesh rotting oil and leaving great cavities
Berfmsrcs festered ard several nails dropped olf
atone i i ie Iler limbs contracted by the fearful
acer non and for j eai s s > he did not leave Utr bed
Ber < htwas reducer from 125 to 60 ib Some
faint idea of her condition can be glcamd from
the fact that three pounds of Ccsmolinc or omt
aurfve o u = cd per week in drcung her cores
Fm y the pi ci < Ians acknowledged their defeat
by t s Btek Wolf and commended the fcinTercr
tohral useCreator
II r h jiiuiid hearing wonderful reports of Swifts
Specific S S S prevaika on her to try it as a-
la t rcnrt She began its use under protest bat
econ found that her system was being relieved of
ihe po on as the sores assumed a red and healthy
color as though the blood was becoming pure and
active Sirs Bailey continued the S S S UDtillaet
February evtr > jore was healed Bho discarded
chair and cruchc aud was for the firtt time in 12
y ars a wei w onian Her husband iir C A Bai
evism busmcis at I7 Blackslone Street Bos-
ton and will take pleasure in giving the details of
this wonderful cure Send to us lor Treatise 03
Blood aud Skm Biueasci sailed iree
The swift srKciFic Co Drawer 3 AtlantaGa
u Sii 5yaF
K
RVGGST5 se
23J0 a4l 3 per boUe
WlOPfAND MIDDLEAGOM
A SURE CUBE
Tbc a vfrjl effect of early vice which brings
orjranc weakness destroying both mind and
hody with all itt dlrpfal Ills
PER AXEKXJLY CURED
Palpitation of tho heart timidity trombllaJri
nervous discharges so much to be feared Mw
gettulness laet of ideas 6adnesa ipf pmls
ugly imaglringediallke io soclaliifQ dbrood
in
Married men or toaajrrrTfering upon that
iiappj life aware oLpUyel cal debility excita-
bility of the nevye drganlc diminution or other
irrcsularlMQsjtfulcxry assisted
Xo mlqers nscd Young people losing their
hoalthaaSpending time with those unskilled
nd < ufttpialiutfi causing ratal disorders to the
js > thettd throat ncse liver and lung6 stomach
K and bowels speedily cured
Let not false modesty deter you from calling
at once on
DR WA S8ERZUG
Consulting Koome 734 Elm Street
JT IfrlA PRITTACK 25ATTS3S CURED
ompt at ntiQn la given to all correspond
r c statasyroptoiiiB and medlcino wlU be
jr eeaf 0 0 J cvfirywhere
Dp Waiferfns is a regular graduate of IS
yean jgc tico diploma in office and has
pra6tlcf > d in Dallas fpj over two years
cf tfeloi nlarsed anil sfrenyttSaed Full artlc
SlcdjTfrccv EE1K H Spi4JnCalo N Y
xs ni muskets
j3ve dstofllce
wxra jro Aluminum Plates a Spt
ff cllty
S = S uoe Nitrons Oxide gs for pi ft
UUTiegg extraction of teoth
JAMES WUHWWNE
OfficaOTSfffira itetionalbani fort Worth
f >
z 4
THE GAZETTE EOKT WOETH TEXAS TUESDAY OCTOBER 11
LAND EEFOEI
Michael DwIM thlrr > li Patriot PJc
teres Erins vfoesand Wrj > fig8totlio
Minnaapohs Knigisis o Labor
IrlBb Cnblno are Wrrcked by Crowbar
Bilgadoe Tattering Age ana Helpless
Infancy DiAven In the StraelB
MR DAVITTS ADDRESS
When quiet was restored Mr Davitt
Bsid
General Master workman Ladies and
Gentlemen I thank you for the honor
you confer on me in the privilege to ad-
dress this General Assembly of the
Knjghts of Labor In according rae this
EfRftmission you speak in advance the
good will which I hope will find official
expression from this convention toward
the people and the cause which I repre-
sent There are many reasons why we
should obtaiu for Ireland a fric dly pro-
nouncement from the most potent labor
organization in the world Our move-
ment there is practically one of labor
against monopoly
The chief source of employment In
our country ie agriculture and we seek
to obtain the full rights of industry fee
our people in trying to substitute for the
practices of landlord robbery the princi-
ples cf agrarian justice We are endeav-
oring to obtain a land system which will
be more in accord with the dictates of
justice and political humanity tbsujj with
the laws of monopolists or the cold cal-
culations of political economy and we
believe that it is the Irish people through
the means of an Irish Parliament who
can bee > t frame such land laws for Ireland
IRELAKD AND THE CAUSE OF LABOR
In making these efforts we are not I
think seeking for anything which ia in-
consistent with the principles of yoar
great oganizatlon Moeo er I am
e3pted to assert tnat this Irish move
ment has rendered some substantial ser-
vice to the cause of reform outside of
Ireland Our attack upon land monopoly
have directed keen attention to this great
economic evil everywhere English
Scotch and Welsh workingmen have rec-
ognized this to our credit and have
thereby become friendly to our demands
for home rule
Public attention in this country has
also been drawn to the danger of allow-
ing some of the evils of Bnglanos land
system to steal Into the United States
Alien land grabbers find it far more diffi-
cult today to seize upon the soil of
America than they did before the Irish
Land League was formed Kailway cor-
porations experience more trouble now
in filching away the landed patrimony of
the people than heretofore and I claim
gentlemen that to this extent at least the
working classes of Amerlcs are indebted
to the people for whose cause I am
seeking the expression of your moral
support
THE MASSES AND THE CLASSES
Upon many other grounds we cculd
aho base a claim for your sympathy The
struggle of the masses against what is
known in Ireland and Grea Britain as the
classes is about the same everywhere
The aspirations for a higher and better
social existence is common to the indus-
trial community of every civilized land
while recognition of tne rights and the
full protection of the interests of labor
are fast becoming the chief problem of
modern statesmanship
Viewed in this ligflt our Irish move-
ment assumes more or less Jof an inter-
national character for in proportion asit
successfully asserts the clinia of labor
and wins concessions to tne cause of
justice in Ireland is it fighting the
battle of industrial humanity in every
country
IRELANDS DECREASING POPULATION
One of the chief national or what aou
might possibly call selfish objects of the
Irish movement is to keep our people m
Ireland We want to stem the tide of
what is practically j forced emigration to
this and other countries We are anxious
to retain the Irish people at home Ire-
land has room and resources for 15000
000 of a population At the present time
there are less than 5000000 people in the
country though there were more than
8000000 forty yeai3 ago At thi3 alarm-
ing rate of depopulation our race
would be driven out of its fatherland in
the lifetime of the present generation
I hope it will be deemed pardonable
on our part if we most strenuously object
to being got rid of in this way Ireland
may have become a name synonymous
with poverty and discontent her people
at home and abroad may have many
faults to answer for in the opinion of na-
tions who have not like us had to pass
through an ordeal of centuries of oppres-
sion but while admitting our defectswe
assert that as our country has not sinned
against civilization in fighting to be see
and as our people have no record which
can accuse them of ever having commit-
ted a crime against the cause of human
liberty we tbink our race has a claim to
universal sympathy in its struggle to
maintain its position as a distinct nation-
ality in its birth laud
ENGLANDS CRUSHING RULE
For the lnst forty years England has
systematically carried on the work of
our expatriation Her purpose is per-
fectly clear We are striving for a
national existence which is inimical to
her policy of subjugation and demand-
ing agrarian reforms which menace the
existence of her territorial aristocracy
both in Ireland and Great Britain These
are our crimes Refusing to acquiesce in
a cowardly subserviency our people are
reduced to poverty by the operation of an
infamously administered land system and
other sources of employment having been
swept away by laws expressly passed for
the destruction of our manufacturing in
djjs pi s emigration becomes the meanB
b whict Eaalands policy of extermina
tlSi is carried out
This policy you will admit is atro
cicuiiy ujjjust as it is infamous and cow-
ardly Conine part of a great government
likeiatof England toward a weakna
normal condi
it > RCOJ
jgfirtags
bhomSfenecessity existed for a reduc
Corigr Fcurth a4aialaHaKVe Crtfee Brown ihT ge xttct reverse of these conditions
ingsdxugtiosfi a ctilafca iition giyen i lts in Ireland No country iin the
Chrome Diseases the U
cation of that labor which is iorceout
of it than Ireland does Her millions of
graded pauperism of an Irish workhouse
and emigration
KORCEH EMIGRATION AND IMPOVERISHED
LABOR
Landing in this condition they ate
compelled to seek employment in your
Eastern cities and to settle down where
they are forced by circumstances to com-
pete with you in the ltbor market of
the Atlentic seaboard Gentlemen I
want you to consider how compulsory
emigration from Ireland is thus made to
conflict more or less with the interests of
the working classes whose protection and
whose good your organization has at
heart In the policy of fcrced emigration
from Ireland England Is killing two birds
with one stone She is riding herself as
rapidly as she can of a Celtic national sen-
timent near her shores which she consid-
ers a danger to her imperial supremacy
while at the same time she is doing her
best to reduce the wages of American
workingmen to the low level which ob-
tains in Great Britain by throwing upon
your shores hundreds of thousands of la-
boring hands every year
IBEI VNDS CAUSE I VBORS CAUSE ALSO
Gentlemen there are other grounds
upon which I might appeal to you for
your support The champions of the
cause of labor on the American continent
cannot be indifferent to the fortunes of a
similar cause in any European country
but especially in that unfortunate land
whence large numbers of your organiza-
tion are drawn aud the exiled children of
3
n
Habitual Constipation
share to the building up of the liberties
and greatness of this republic A victory
for the monopolist in Ireland would
stiffen the backs of the enemies of the
labor cause everywhere On the other
hand the triumph of the movement in
which farmers laborers and mechanics
are contending for true economic liberty
in this Insn struggle could not fail in ex
ercising a corresponding benefit upon
movements such as yours in this and
other lands where the working classes are
striving for the full measure of their legit-
imate rights
Your great organization in its col
lective capacity as well as in its units is
as loyal to the constitution of the Repub
lic as any other body or class of men
within the confines of yxur continental
commonwealth The spectacle which the
Knights of Labor organization presents
to Europeas workingmen is therefore
one of singular interest and expectancy
An organization which has grown almost
to the dimensions of an executive gov-
ernment exercising vast influence within
the commonwealth without in any way
interfering with the general government
of the country or being interfered with
by such government give3 piide and
pleasure and hope to your less powerful
and less favored brethren across the At
lantlc Not however to the classes and
Interests which seek to keep the cause of
labor down in Europe These view with
alarm the enormous influence which the
Khights of Labor are wielding and the
solidarity which your body exhibits to the
world in the varied industrial pursuits
of your members
LONDON MONEY POWER
In no other part of the habitable globe
have you greater enemies than in Lon-
don London is the head center of the
money power ol the world London
money is felt in every land under the sun
where labor can have its vitals drained
for the gain of English vested interests
Armies and fleets have gone forth from
London to force upon the people of China
an infernal drug in order that English
speculators migat grow rich upon the
mental and moral ruin of a nation Two
hundred millions of human beings are
held in political subjection in India for
the profit of English capitalists and the
benefit of aristocrat officeholders Only
a few years back the city of Alexandria
was bombarded by the British fleet its
buildings destroyed its people butch-
ered and a popular move-
ment crushed whose leader Arabi
Pacha is still imprisoned by England
because the interests of London bond-
holders demanded the continued enslave-
ment of the E Uahen or laboring classes
of Egypt It is the same power gentle-
men which has robbed and ruined Ire-
land This power fears the success of
the Land League principles It dreads
the solidarity of the working classes of
Ireland and Great Britain even more The
mortgage mongers and monopolists of
London have therefore again induced the
government of England to resort to the
congenial rule of coercion The eight-
ieth time in this century liberty is struck
down in Ireland The right of public
meeting is curtailed freedom of speech
all but abolished trial by jury entirely
swept away for political offeuces and the
rights of the press circumscribed by n
state of siege And all this in the interest
of Irish land monopolists and London
money lenders
DESOLATED IRELAND
Irish cabins are wrecked by crowbar
brigades tottering old age and helpless
infancy are driven at the point of Eng
lands bayonets from the shelter of lowly
cottage homes in order that an idle aris-
tocratic class miy continue to grind the
faces of the Irisn poor People are shot
down as at Mitchellstown and popular
leaders like OBrien are imprisoned be-
cause they stand upon the fundamental
rights of our common humanity and re-
sist the mandates of legal robbery and
injustice
Gentlemen against a government
which can thus trample upon the first
principles of civilized role and that can
become the destjoyer instead of the
protector of the people ruled we Irisn
nationals are justified in striving to excite
the indignation of right thinking men
throughout the world In England
Scotland and Wales we have won the
sympathy of all generous and un-
prejudiced minds The working classes
of Great Britain have almost expoused
our cause as their own and I am confi
dent that you also representing tne
laboring masses of America will con-
demn the iniquitous system by which all
political liberty is sought to be strangled
and labor enslaved in Ireland and that
you will extend to the Irish people in
their struggle against oppression your
sympathy and moral support
When Mr Davitt concluded he was
loudly cheered A A Carieton a mem-
ber of the general executive board
warmly thanked Mr Davitt for his re
jbubSss and moved that a vote of th
be givfri which motion was carried M
Re
< Aud kidney and liver ills depending on a
weak or Inactive condition of the kidneys
liver or bawels are successfully and per-
manently cured only by the use 4 > f the
ntl yet effectivejsxative and > dlaretic
employment which is denied it hp ie
t 5 When this labor reaches your > shbres
week after week from year to year it is
reduced to the condition of impoverished
libor Our peoples resources are sys
tamitically exhausted before eviction
c impels them to chcose between the de
to theHnost delioip system and uly
beneficial In effecfi Eor sale irr BOTrcents
and l00 bottlea by Milton King drugj
Fort Worth
gist
Those flaked groats ar j mply splendid
at the Fort Worth GrojtrXfQfl
IT READS LIKE A EAIRT TALE
A Georgia Farmers Benavoltnce
Ka
warded by a FB > of Money
New York Herald
Atlanta Ga Oct 5 A pretty little
romance has justreached an interesting
culmination in Rabun county At the
base of the Tiger mountain half a mile
off the main road leading to Clayton re-
sides a sober old farmer named George
W Dillard who has a wife and two sons
Early last summer Mr Dillard received a
letter from his wifes brother whom he
had not seen since 1849 At that time
James McCurrie was a young man as was
also George W Dillard The news had
reached Georgia of the wonderful gold
discoveries in California Among those
who were full of the excitement were Mc
Currie and Dillard They had peuected
all arrangements for going thither and
were bidding the family gcodby when
Dillard filtered The tearful eyes of Mc
Curriesyonngsister touched his heartes
pecially as she was weeping for him and
not for her brother Throwing down his
bundle he declared that he would stay if
the girl would ma y him To this she
cheerfully agreed so Dillard remained a
Georgia farmer while McCurrie jumped
into the stagecoach and was borne away
Since that time he has never been heard
ofIt
It was with mingled feelings therefore
that Dillard read the letter from his old
which land have contributed no small comrade McCurrie stated that he had
worked against adverse fortuuedeclning
to write to the folks at home until he
could strike it rich but every year found
him growing poorer and now old feeble
snd poor his great wish was to look once
more upon his native hills That he
could not do so unless he was sent money
enough upon which to return Mr Dil
lard read the letter to his wfe and sons
We must send him the money said
the old man So a cow and a mule were
sacrificed and the money went on its mis-
sion across the continent Several weeks
time brought another letter in which the
old mon pxpressed his gratefulness for the
kindness done him but he was too ill to
undertake the journey After that no
more was heard from him
On Monday Dillard received a letter
which recited that James McCunie was
dead that he wished to test the fidelity
of his sisters family that their prompt
response to his appeal had moved him
und that by his will his property in Cali-
fornia valued at 1000000 was willed
in equal parts to his sister her husband
and their two sons
The two young men passed through At-
lanta tonight en route for California to
take possession of the property which
they hope to shortly convert into cash
wnen they tv11 return
mliJ M
TEE CRAZY ROHANOFFS
Tho Montftl Dlseaso Which Afflicts the
Rn8lan Imperial Family
London Society
In the recently published memoirs of
Count Vitzthum of Eckstadt proofs are
given of the heriditary character of the
mental disease which afflicted the
Imperial family of Russia All the sons
of Czar Paul I like that unhappy mon-
arch himself who was murdered in 1801
became subject to fits of insanity Paul
I had four sous Czar Alexander I the
Grand Duke Constatine Czar Nicolas
I and the Grand Duke Michael Every-
one of them after his fortyfflth year ex-
hibited undoubted signs of mental de-
rangement This was not fully discov-
ered in the case of Nicolas 1 until after
the Czars death An English physician
however the Count says noticed the ap-
pearance of the hereditary disease in the
Czar as early as July 1853 and he then
predicted that the monarch had not more
tbsn two years of life before him This
he stated in a letter to Lord Palmerjton
The Emperor Nicholas died in March
1855 about four months earlier than the
date predicted The Court appears to
have no doubt that the Crimean war so
far as it depended on Nicolas was the
rash act cf a ruler whose mental equi
pose was disturbed None of the four
sons of Paul I lived to be sixty years of
age and every one of them suf-
fered from concussion of the brain
after reaching his fortyfifth year
Alexander died at fortyeight
a miserable man moody and despondent
as Prince Mettcrnich has painted him
tired of existence His brother the
Grand Duke Constantine though not
manifestly insane gave frequent signs of
mental disturbance of which he was him-
self so plainly conscious that he did not
think himself fit to be trusted with the
reins of government His conduct in
the year 1830 at the outbreak of the rev-
olution in Warsaw will remain to prove
his mental unsoundness He had to be
intrusted to the care of his wife the
Princess Lowicz who was cautioned the
same way as is a physician in charge of
patient having intermittent fits of
insanity He died in his fifty
second year from congestion of
the brain The Grand Duke Michael was
killed by a fall from his house at the age
of fortyeight Some year3 before his
death he had exhibited signs of undoubted
mental disease and his physicians de-
clared that he was on the road to certain
Insanity The events of 184S52 were
not calculated to allay the hereditary dis-
positions of the imperial family of Russia
but to excite and intensify them There
is something terrible in the contrast be-
tween the outward position of the Czar
Nicolas upon the bent of whose will tne
fate of millions inEurope was depending
and the alleged diseased inward condi-
tion of his mind
BRUTAL HEGROES
A Bralcemaa on the Transcontinental
Stabbed and Beaten by Blacli Srarnps
Special to the Gazette
Paris Tex Oct 10 Yeiterday morn-
ing about 3 oclock as a freight train on
the Transcontinental Railway was pul-
ling out from Paris to Texarkana the
conductor noticed two negro tramps in a
stock car He notified the brakeman
whose name is N M Allison and told
him to put them off at the water tank
two miles east of town When the train
stopped at the water tank the brakeman
went forward and ordered them off The
two negroes assaulted him one with a
knife and the other with a pistol and a
regular hand to hand fight occurred dur-
ing which all three fell out of the car
In the meantime the train went on to the
next station before the brakeman
was missed The train backed up to the
water tank when Allison was found in a
pitiable condition at the side of the track
He was stabbed in the face back and
shoulder and had a pistol ball in his
thigh He was brought to this city and
medical aid called His wounds are
considered very serious The negroes
are unknown and have not been cap-
tured
A
8
aM >
I
00
Senatorial Fhilotopbyof a French Savsnt
A Ghastly German Figure
Toronto Week
M Bonne in his history of Germar
dancing and its future obesrves
only knows dancing the
count because it has no psychic impul-
sion Why do we dance he demands
90 per cent do so for amusement 9 to se-
cure a substitute for a vapor bath and 1
for the love of esthetics But dancing is
also a marriage broker a sort of matri-
monial agency However the dance is
also a civilizing agent
With our ancescors nature meant only
music and dances which too were at-
tributed to the gods The author suites
the old Germans were a dancing people
modern Germans are not and that you
can travel two months in Germany with
out perceiving a waltzer whereas voyage
but eight days in Spain fandangos will
be visible everywhere The demon of
dance seizes the Spaniards in the street
on the public places under the porches of
houses The first musician who arriyes
and can touch a guitar will compel the
servant to throw away her broom tae
watercarriers to lay down their pitcheri
the muleteers will abandon their mules
and the innkeeper will quit his dinner
to dance all with soul and body Tne
Spaniards have always a foot in the air
ready to spring so had once the
old Germans and so much so that their
bishops had the greatest difficulty to pre-
vent their flocks dancing In the churcnes
thus imitating the early Christians
However sacred dancing was only a form
for expressing great joy Renan main-
tains dancing never figured in the
Christian liturgy and M de Pressense
agrees for once with Renan Indeed the
church had much difficuty to suppress the
old pagan dances Bishops and princes
thundered against them but their
votaries up to the twefth century held
their dances at night in the cemeteries
where they had the stimuli of mysteryji
the fear of being surprfsed jtod m 2oJ
feeling that they were doing wrbng i
In the sixteenth century Germany jsadj
a singular desta dance Executed t
wedding Darties Lots werea wn to
find the individual who was to diejithe
doomed one then stood in the center of
Mistress Maggie bring a little Sipolio pnd clo3n off this spot i
Maggie Yesm Aside 1 knots wiiat brought it there that
SAPOLIO
It works like a charm
A Real Luxury
t What may be done atJny time is done at no time
will clean the house in
Looking out over tho
wall
tended beau of lier3
o it at once
Try ifloake of it
manj homes of this country wo soe thousands of won
iea
wearing away their lives in household drudgery that might bo nlarerially lessened
by the use of a few cakes of Sapolio If ai hour is saved each tim fecak is used
if one less wrinkle gathers up < > n tho face because tho toil i light n she musti
a foolish woman who would hesitate + < > make the experiment and he a chd i i
husband who would grudge the few c r v Inch it costs n0 is rCopyrightii < liV i
HOWARD TUXJLiY
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
SO1 Efouston Strsot E ort WorCl
>
THE GSLEBBATED PATTI SOSA GIGAE
rSOlxe BEST > Ce3xfc Cieras in tlie SXaxLtet
3Toxt
Tgcftth
State Agents
FORSALE BY Cabinet Saloon JefT D Fields Co and F A Kruger White Elephant
Saloon t on Worth LaskI Aaronean 1burne Hutchison Mathews Arlington JA
Younger San Angelo S L S Smith San Angelo J L Block Snns AVIchita Falls iJ
RollnB Lee Levey Gainesville Ii T Adams Co Weathorford J M Cartwrtabt3Decfcur
Moore Mallion Alvord Rlchstettc Co Granbury Z T Lowery CWBowle J M
Bailey St Joe T IJ Balrd Henrietta 5
I I I I I I II II If n
S D BATBMAN
u
Ml P
Established I8S5
uu
Hs lT418 M18 West SecoM Street earner SSredmorroa
Fort ToTrfcii JPcvscjfasa
BRUSH WITH INDIAN
azincrs Have a Fight with Marauding Ked
sklno
Special to the Gazette
El Paso Tkx Oct 10 A letter was
received here today from exLieutenant
Britton Davis manager of the Corralitos
Mining Company in the state of Chihua-
hua giving some startling information
about the Indians Davis writes as fol-
lows McGrew had a fight with In-
dians at Santa Maria lake at 1
oclock this morning October 3
He says we exchanged about seventy
shots with the red devils and recaptured
nearly all our horses and some belonging
to other parties We saw seven Indians
One of them seemed to be an American
or Mexican He was verv brave and
did all of the fighting The Indians had
only six or seven horses left I have
sent our horses to Ascension they being
nearly all broken down We gave them
a long chase I wait here for help then
will follow and confidently expect to
overtake and capture the la3t one of them
The Mayor of Ascension has sent me
twenty men Mr Davis winds up his
letter with the remark I suppose the
military American and Mexican will say
there are no Indians out
con i
WH WE DANCE
at
Mftrf
bear does 5ot
mothers Smiles are the Sunlight of Horns
There would be e wer clouds and
brighter sunshine inj many households if
every dispiritea tffering woman real
jgedkwbat ab o1iiDr Piercers Favorite
the room the ethers danced round and
the individual after a while staggered
fell became deid All stopped then the
dancers chanted a pretty dirge a funeral
hymn If the departed was a man each
girl came one by one and kissed him on
the forehead and vice versa if a woman
with the last death kiss he rose the
muoic played a gay air and the triumphal
rocde surrounded the resurrectionist
The real creators of that queen of
dances the waltz were the Viennese
and they monopolize it still It is thus
that Musset wrote I would like a
French Duches3 to be able to dance as
well as a German cattledrover M
Bonne believes dancing is dying if not
dead The workmen are debilitated by
factory life and soured by socialism The
sons of the rich are worn out by excess
by hotbed lessons and examinations
educational pressure perhaps Pietytoo
has departed for true piety made no per-
son sad wine and beer are adulterated
people do not now get intoxLcated but
poisoned In fact the moral health of
moderns is less good than that of their
ancients who were most patient uuder
suffering more brave in the struggle of
life oecause less egotistical We are de-
voted only to ourselves
lady who givesuhls wonderful rem ldy a
trtti3rfii be dlsappolnte d by > the result
It ndifcniy acts promptly upon alt func-
tional derangements but by its rare ner
vine and tonic properties strengthens and
repairs tho whole feminine syster Pr cs
reduced to SI Ey druggists >
gin
The Cooking of Grouse
London World
That story of a great cooks advice to Jt p
grouse eaters wnicb is always disinlsi w
red about this time and has been once
more going the round never so far as
I know appeared first in the chatty
notes of Mr Augustus Sals but was
published five years ago in the pages of
Bailys Msgszine as part of a contribu-
tion to thaS periodical by one of my cor-
respondents who speak3 of Alexis Soyer
as an old friend Briefly the great cooks
advice was as follows Ah sir grouse
to be well enjoyed should be eaten in
secret and take my experience
as your guide do not let the
bird you eat be raw and
bloody but well roasted and drink wih
it at intervals a little sweet champagne
Never mind your knife and fork snek the
bones and dwell upon them Take plenty
of time that is the true way to enjoy a
game bird Some gentlemen here Re-
form Club think they can teach me the
mode of my own art I hear them but
they are as mere children in their meth-
ods of eating they follow the supersti-
tions of their fellows Bah Soyer
seems to have bestowed much attention
on the cooking of grouse One of his
modes was to wrap the bird to be roast-
ed in slices of fat bacon and sprigs of
heathejr well steeped in This is
whisky
grpjdse la Rob Roy jgfejr
Co
ed cshs re a shades
d 35c At 15c aft ac g g
JNDA2J2 Ch SlBEE
CO
5
44j BnyWhBtYouEat C
iLtifcie
V
Grocer Cos wbereJIsL
Ejdrt Wqh c
y q netiffr fail > get freshes prcducg MN1
aid t6breF tiiaU < 3 orjdr Droa4 ev r r
eSi
J
Cr
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
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/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .