The Temple Weekly Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 28, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 27, 1887 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 44 x 30 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:
i
fm
wmi
•Tcf,#
Our stock for this Fall end Winter will cons
>5$
|»
I
K.:
I' ■
Iv
iS*'
w/
»k
rv
\P-
isr
w
to-
p
he cIlok
PJ HR
hwhi
i c
»
kets can afford. and our assortment in the line of Gents’ Fumi
and Clothing will he
plete as that of any in the State. Our Mr. M. Schram is one of the closest buyers in the
South, and as our goods are bought for cash we can sell them at such prices
as enables us to defy any and all competition. We have ONE
PRICE on everything guaranteed as represented. Call and see us.
SCHRAM, The Popular Clothier,
SMB
II
',jh
Temple.
YOU KNOW
%
That One Car of Stoves, and one car of Hardware arrived al
Riggins & Quarles, i
The 12th street hardware merchants of Temple. We have the cheapest and best line of stoves in Bell County and
largest stock. Ask for Riggins & Quarles’ store. One more car load of stoves to arrive soon.
THE TEMPLE WEEKLY TIMES.
Wm. D COX. Editor.
PUBLISHED EVEKY SATURDAY.
Blissed rain.
Stocxmbh are happy over the
rain.
Farmers are rejoiced that the
that bnrg voted for prohibition
and seldom a day passes that a
human soul is not ushered from its
detectable precincts into a broad
vie* of the whole domain of the
place from whieh that detectable
locality takes its name,
rain came.
Timfli real estate is valuable-
keep it so.
It is the saving that Democratic
administration efforts for tax-
payers that renders Republican
hopes futile.
Th* Austin Statesman nominates
Grover and Frances as its presi-
dential ticket for 1888, and says it
will sweep the country.
its
lx reading the Missouri Repub-
lican's comments anent Coke and
the possibility of another succeed-
ing him, it should be borne in
mind that “Rory O’Moore/' he
who lormerly fongbt Coke on the
Galvestou News, is on the edito-
rial staff of the Republican.
The president's substitute, who
served three years in the army in
Mr. Cleveland's place, after hu n*
ul
Another spasm of godliness has
has struck Waco and on last sun-
day, we are told, the saloons were
hermetically sealed. Is the law
leveled only against saloons that
every reference to the enforcement
of a Sunday law we are told bow it
affects these places! The letter of
the law makes no distinction as to
its violators, but demagogues of
the Tom Rlair type seek popularity
by this means.
0. S. Fowler, the veteran phre-
nologist, author and lecturer, died
at his home in Sharon Station, N.
Y., on Friday last after an illness
of but thirty hours, produced by a
severe cold. Born in the year
1809 be was in the seventy-eighth
year ot bis age. His death closes
the caf-eer of a very eventful and
useful life. Mr.
of catarrh when given a fair trial
Yours truly,
Sam. A. Coles.
Treatise on Blood and Bkin Di-
seases mailed free.
done the anti-prohibition ele
more harm than good. Ths Ms
ville Christian Advocate, a Mel
dist journal, strongly urges e\
preacher to do his duty, and
papers are talking in the
strain.
The Swirr Sricirio Co., _
Drawers, Atlanta, Georgia. ONE LIVED, THE OTHER D
Letter List.
Fowler was a Eleeton.Mata
graduate from Amherst College Rohan,’ l'e ^
in the class with
drafted, died a few days ago
consumption. Mr. Blaine’s sub-
Thb Gatesville Star warns
boyootters that the tables will
tarn some day and then the boy-
ootters will be boycotted.
A few more such catastrophes
as that at Chatsworth and there
would be no need of a war to dis-
pose of our surplus population.
In the opinion of Throckmorton
there is no alternative, and the
next Democratic State Convention
must declare against prohibition.
The flood gates of heaven have
been unloosed and have poured
out upon a parched earth their
long pout up tide, and we are duly
grateful.
stitute, it ii said, was killed dur-
ing the war, and it is, perhaps, the
Maine statesman's boast that his
bones lie bleaching on a battle-
field—by proxy/—Waco Day.
It is announced that the old
Knownotbing party will come to
the front with a full presidential
ticket in the canvass of 1888.
This announcement will revive in
the breasts nf many old politicians
memories of 1854 and I860 which
they doubtless would prefer to
have buried in oblivion.
The New York Star asks:
the population of the world bo
1,400,000,000; if 400,000,000 are
served by machinery propelled by
steam aud 1,000,000,000 work only
with the rudest tools, how can we
of 60,000,000 successfully compete
with them; the remaining 340,000,*
000 of the machine-using people,
for the trade of the 1,000,000,000
if wo refuse to receive their raw
hand-produced products free of
duty? _
Henry
Beecher. He started from
home in Stenben county,
LADIES LIST.
Hodge, Florence
Mays, Mamie
Stewart, Maggie (*)
j, . Schratbr, Minnie Hlckes, J W Mrs
Ward QUITS LIST.
Biddy, Jasper
Banks, Theo H
Culp, Andy
Henson, C W
u:B Baker, JnoJ
0,8 Brock, MC
rAftfth. Bennett, Bob
re&en- ^ w G
iug Amherst after a journey of
* Jn
XXQElEUUt TV
Hartln, Jno
nearly 400 miles ou foot, worked Mey^Jno g
Killlngsworth, N B
, J W
The rain came none too late to
do great good for the maturing
cotton crop but by far its most
grateful mission has been to sup-
ply long needed stock water.
San Francispo has a cosmopoli-
tan population. The voting citi-
zens of that city come from sixty
different political divisions of the
world, Egypt being the only coun-
try not represented.
1% are told that grand master
workman Powderiy is an aetive
member of the about-to-bo-resur-
rected Knownothing party. This
being »o what becomes of the vast
hordes of imported foreigners,
members of the Knights of Labor,
for whose real or imaginary
rights he has been so bravely bat-
tling!
While the small fry editors of
patent boweied sheets are mop
The Sam Jonss type of religion
don’t seem to have an overpower-
ing influence in Brother Scurlock,
of the Cleburne Chronicle. He
■ays: Sam Jonss has had his
brother John in training as an
evangelist. Sam says John can
come under the wire ahead of him
and at an early day he will intro-
duce him to a paying audience in
Arkansas. Sam and John with a
few Jubilee singers could do a
good business in Texas.
The political records of maoy of
these pie-bald demagogues who
are whining against being read out
of the Democratic party are
favored with reminiscences of
many political heresies antagon-
istic to true democracy.
The festive youth who has read
dime novels until he has a long-
ing to plunge bis trusty blade into
the heart of a real live Indian, can
now hie him to the mountains of
Colorado and camp on the trail of
Chief Colorow and his band.
There seems to be the opening
of a long and lively discussion in
Waco, a* suggested by the follow-
ing paragraph in the Examiner :
ping the sweat from their brows
and firing their puny pellets of dis-
approval at George Clark, that
great Warwick is comfortably re-
posing »t White Sulphur Springs,
sweetly oblivions of the total an-
nihilation these ;Lilliputs are pro-
paring for him.
An Iowa editor closes a rhapso-
dical eulogium of his State in the
following style: “When the roll-
call is sounded on the judgment
day, and the heavens are rolled
together in a sroll, and the reverb-
erations of wrecked and ruined
worlds peal forth the fiat of eter-
nal rest, I want to hang my weary
bones on the galley rack of im-
mortality and register in four-line
pica as mau trom Iowa.”
Henet W. Grady, who will bo
remembered as having gotten up
Low,
______ _ Mcduine, H J
for stndents and at odd jobs in the HcMiftan’jno"1* NoSn*^1 h J
neighborhood to pay his tuition, Taylor1 Vi
and graduated with honora in 1884. Person* calling for the above letters give
Though entering oollug. for th.
miimtry, in 1832, through reading ft®*?."*' J''p'oTt'uTw.r.
Spurtzheims k Combe’s works on Th. v-rdle, u,7n^7a.
phrenology, which Henry Ward W. D. Suit, Druggist, Bippns. Ind-'
Beecher loaned him, he became testifies: “I can recomend Electric
Bitteta as the very best remedy.
A woman formerly our slave i* now
rook. About eighteen months ago i
became sickly and bad cough and wa* W
fined to bed, and it was thought that *
had consumption. Vhe treatment by |
siciatrs failed to give relief. In Deoeo.
1884.a node or not the slseofa goose
formed just above the pit of the
which when burned discharged a
8 or? months. One of these also fin
under her arm, and three on her
which riisdurg'dmatter fora coo*__
bio time. For six months of this timers
was confiued to the house, and most <
time in had. The stomach often i
food by rejecting what she had .
She used » great deal of medicine,
failed to be cured. I bought on# hotu
your 4. B. B., made in Atlanta Ga,
gave it to h<-r and she commenced to
very much interested in their sys- Every bottle sold has given relief in
tom of meut&l philosophy, and was every case. One man 100a nix bottles
soon giving class room lectures *nd waB 411 ™d ‘{f Rh^wM'iMn of 10
o . Z ■ t ,i u j - . years’ standing.” Abraham Hare,
and examining tho heads of stu- druggist, Bellville,. Ohio; affirms:
dents. From hig remarkable “The best selling medicine I lmv« ev-
‘hits” in describing character he fr handled in my 2)years’ experience,
soon became quite a local celebri- others have added their ie*un<->ti> __________________
ty, and at the graduation, being that the verdict is iinnniiiiuue ' i n* ily cured—the other did'd-Tr t7ae~itond'd_
utterly destitute, he uturted out *T53l1
in sma.I adjoining towns to lecture halt dollar a bottle at T. E. Smith*.
and examine. His success was so Bro’e Brug Store,
decided aDd
prove. I then taught and gava bar
botth
let more, and she continued to in
and in two months’ time her ooux_
teased, her consthution stimgh>ne<L «
petit*-end digestion go d, all
orated a-dee or knots disappeared and S
went to work appeerently healthy and f
tened up great y.
This woman bad a married sister of l
same age who was affreted in precisely
same way and about the same time. '
had n -de or not on pit of atomach, U
e'c. She did not take any B B B. _
the nodr on h.-r sumach ate through tol
cavity. Si.e con'ioued on thedecliud i
wasted away and finally died.
These were to* terrible cases of blc
poisod,—oce used B. B. B. and was t|x
Wednesday's Gazette contained
twelve and one-half columns of
editorial opinions on the result of
of the late election. They were
as varied as the hues in Joseph’s
coat. We clip from tho list the
following from the pen of Uncle
Dan’l McGarey, of the Houston
Post: There are principles that
with the Democratic party are
fundamental, and one of these
principles is opposition to sumpt-
uary laws as violative of the in-
dividual rights of citizens, and an
unjust and unreasonadle inter-
ference with their habits and
social customs, and, whatever it
may metfn by the dictionary de-
finition of the phrase, by sumpt-
uary laws in political usage,
is meant the prohibition of
the sale of inloxcating liquors.
It is wise, xepedientand best, that
the principles of the party should
be declared in its platform; and
the principles of the party declared
in its platform ought to be support-
ed by the members of tho party in
campaigns and at the polls.
Bat the Democratic party is not
narrow, bigoted or proscriptive.
withal so profitable In a Mexican Dungeon,
that he determined to pursue it Galveston, Tex., August 24.—
rather than the ministry. Travel- Information has been leceived
ing as he „.d been fM tb. pa.,
forty years or more from Maine to the state of Chihuahua, Mexico,
California, from the Gulf states to and having large interests in Mex-
and through Can,da, there are
millions to testify to some new dungeon in Ojenija upon a trumped
stimulus to self-improvement up charge of fraud. During that
Which he, through an examination time has been unable to com-
, . , . . , Tmunicate until within the past ten
started in their minds. Like days, when it appears he smuggled
Greeley, Beecher and others of his out a letter. He is a brother of
early co-workers he died in the Asssistant United States District
i I4VL.-JL- Attorney Solon Stewart, a cousin
harness and has left behind him a to Col> /oe H. Stewart, of Austin,
name that will not perish, but be and a nephew of Judge W. H.
gratefully treasured ivi households Stewart, of Galveston. His prop-
.1, over our land for ,be booed,. SSL'S?
derived from his having lived, of obtaining a fair trial and release
Prof. Fjwler visited Texas several at the hands of the Mexican courts.
times and was here about three object of his incarceration is
,, ,4, . believed to be to obtain his prop-
years ago. Many people through- erty> n ls a ca8e which calls for
out the state have consulted him prompt and vigorous action upon
and his charts are to be met with the part of the American govern-
at every turn. ment.
something of a boom for himself It ,8 broad, liberal and tolerant.
by his speech on “the now south,”
last spring has grown tired of the
Thu schools will soon open again, j gloom and silence which has lato-
There seems to be a good deal of
■oppressed feeling againt Super-
intendent Gallagher.
A lively and luxurious crop of
ly surrounded him and now bobs
up serenely on the programme to
make the opening speech at the
Kansas City exposition on Septem-
libel suits is springing up out of
the mud and slush which was
Hung around in the lato campaign
her 14th.
Dick Liddell, ex-member ot the
James gang, writes to the Globe-
The editor ol tho Texarkana j)ernocrati jn resentment of the al-
Times is the latest and he wants
done his
legation that he was connected
♦26,000 for damages uunc »•" lbe recen(, Arizona train rob.
character by a former journa isdc bery He says newspaper corre-
associate. spon^ents who sond such dw-
are no better than train
While the great body of the party
moves proudly along on its line of
duty and, in Texas at least, always
overcomes its adversaries, it will
not drive out, or, as popular drivol
has it, “read out’’ from its ranks,
every man who fails, in some one
part'oular, to iudorse and support
the declarations of its platforms
In the selection, however, of its
agents and officers for the execu-
tion of the public trusts, it will
and of right should, give pre-
ference to those who aro faithful
in all things.
It is aJiout time that prohibition patched
mrnais hi
journalsbad quit slobbering over robbers^! ought to be punished.
Fort Worth as the center of Texas Dick ougl^p be good authority
Hell’s half tore,” in oq the char«!^pf train robbers.
morality
laStSBaft
mSh i
feealtar.
It is very peculiar that when yon
try Dr. Biggt-rs’ Huckleberry Cordial
yon will never suffer youiself to be
without ft again! It neVer fails to re-
lieve all bowel bffectiy^'’ Td children
teething. -’for thV
of this town.!
ours trulv. W. T. ROBINSON. 1
A SHERIFF RELEASED.
For a period of dx'een yean I have beeo
afflict* d with catarrh of the head wb
baffled the uae of a'l medi'-ine* used,
ingth*- alvertisemnt of B. B. B„ T
cha»**d and u«ed *ix or «even bo1 ties, aa4|
al:hough used irregu’arly have rece vad
treat relief, and recommend it a* a cool
blood purifier, [Sign,‘<l.]
J. K. HoLl’OMBE, JR., jf
Sheriff of Hamwm county, Ga. i
All who desire full inf *rmut<on about th
cause ami cure ot BUk> l Hoiton*, Bcroftalal
and Scrofulous Swellings, Ulcers, sons,’
Rheumatism. Kidney Corrpia’nU, Catarrh, >
Gone to Canada.
m
Charleston, 8. C., Aug. 24.-
E. Bartlett, cashier of the Sun>i
National Bank at Sumpter,
appeared this morning and it
subsequently ascertained he
absconded with about 820,000. 1
bank has suspended temporall,
can stand the loss.
M O NS ,
A Wonun'i Discovery.
A Certain Cure for Catarrh. 1 “Another w*»ndeiful discovery has
Trimbb, Tenn., Feb. 28, 1887.— been made and that too by a lady of
Gentlemen—For seven years I this country. Disease fastened its
have bad catarrh. Three years of clutches upon her and for seven years
that time I was unable to work. fd,e w*thsto d its severest tests, but,
Unfortunately, early in my afflic- ,ier, v*ta* '“r«an8 ,we.re Vnde»nined
__and death seemed luiraine: t. For
t on y b eath became veiy offen- t|(ree mouths she c mghod incessantly
sive. For seven years I could ttlld COuld not sleep. She bought of
smell nothing, and I bad no taste, us a bottle of Dr. King’s New Discov-
How offensive my breath was all ery for Consumption and wns so much
those seven years I need not tell relieved on taking the first dose that
What were my sufferings of mind she slept all night and with one bottle
at not being able to taste or smell ,1H8 been niiracalourly cured. Her
anything, can oe easily imagined. nH,"e Jf I?1!?' r"at,e”aiTnaB
I was treated . by physici.n, all
during that time, and I tried num- Saiiili & Bros I)kg Store. 4&T 'J
erous medicines advertised, 1 -■ -3* -, mAUldiNF
bought one course of treatment I Tennessee Prohibition campafp. a : .....
TORPID LIVER.
saw advertised for 816 that was Nashville,r5StN^ Xug.26^-The
not worth five cents. Last spring prohibition (yihpMgn dally grows
a year ago a pamphlet from the more excithg. The publication of
Swift Specific Company came nn an adfl-ess to the Democratic voters
der ray notice, and I determined of Tennessee from John L. Ver-
to try the Specific. Fourteen ^fh?!r,na4. of *,he Demo-
small bottles completely cured t?« has weatedagreatdSof^ommeDt
that spring and summer. Woi^ed Mr. Vertrees, in his address, asserts
in the crop for the first time n 4 Democratic party as an
yearn, and I have b.ea wW„g SZSSSlXSS
right along since without having m sumptuory legislation. He also
the slightest return of oatprli The “’D'ongly intimates that the
wonderful cur. ot metrs b^n tho weXlSTff‘Xr»ndZ:
means of bringing S. I S. to the state, and holds the denomination
successful notice of ttany neigh- responsible for the utferance&s ami
n"d 1 Trd ‘ d""
blood purifier, and a certain care and it Is thought the
la Known by the«« marked peculiarities.
1. A feeling of weariue-* and pa na intha,
limb*.
2. Bad breath, bad taste in tho mouth J
and furred tongue.
3- Con*itp:ition, with occasional attack* ;■
of diarrhoea.
4. Headache in the front of the head;
naui-H, dizziness and yellowneea
skin.
6. Heartburn, log-* of appetite. QM
6. Duren-ion of the bow ela and etoiuaoh .)
I»y wind.
7. Pepr -Bai rf of spirits and great melan-
choly, with la-eitude and a disposition
to leave ove'ytliing f-r to-morrow
A natural flow of bile from the liver til
eas-mial to good healih. Wh* n this i* ob-
Tetruted it r aulta in ^ a**w
neriou* diaea*-
e». Sjmioona L*v.-r R gulator exeita^a
moat f licious influence over every
of billoUdiieea. It retttor a the liver to pro- f,„
per working order, regulatoa the secretion, ?!
ofbilennd put* the dig-a ive organa in’
anch condition that they can do tneir work
After taking this medicine no one willl say w
“I am bilioua.”^^^^^^M
v
“I have been subject to severe sc
C01 g ati.m oftlie Liver, andjhave tv
the Laiiit of t king f om 15 to ‘20 gr ip
calomel which genera 11 \ laid ine uf
1 bree or four days. L itely I have her
king Simmons Liver r gu'nt *r,
gave me re i* f without any i teiruy
bu
juiineaa.”—J. Hvoo, Middiep rf,
ONLY
Wlfo Red on front ot Wr
CtttCAlUED ohlt nr
J H. ZEILIN & CO., Philal
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.
Cox, William D. The Temple Weekly Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 28, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 27, 1887, newspaper, August 27, 1887; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth584816/m1/4/: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.