Daily Texarkana Democrat. (Texarkana, Ark.), Vol. 10, No. 77, Ed. 1 Monday, November 6, 1893 Page: 1 of 4
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VOL. X.
jjjEBESI ROUTE
uijrwiCE*
({gpliio <sd Southeast
. ’ j le o' the South—the
.• i Birmingham K.
rn.'» sl ' IJ J?'.' .-h . .-n-mr trams dally
!> 'hast’" 1 ; BirmiiiKham mak-
— -"-‘'Vhd
.< /^ea.' beiwen
train- ! ‘ :i ’ ' 1 Mmmeos. v m At-
ffi<hiu-’t" (in connection
nil j).mvio< it. It.) the
“iihllia Rk "■ • i ime and the only
y-;;- :-Xtw.-n those
taT.iiiin"- ■■ : vn ■ Paine ' Reclining
i>' lV iJV-... t. Iml.ler; of lirst-
Cli'. li '. :; '" i.r.;.u.'h between
X titC.v imdj’uii-
i? TLi -'. ' manvnves he
fe» 11l : t |‘ Hr tit' ho tonntfr II gas-
|tort'“ 1 ..Hints in th" '.as
Sorb' 1 !' 1 .. . •; .... his and all
ind ■■: air! the West
mints in •. ~.v ;; ..1 g new and
»d N'"' lhw ‘.7''. .. <via this line
lirst<i :l ’; -j. • : j;et ot'dees.
on sis'” ■ .* . ... . ;.itio'i for oirge
F'.n’atb I '■y" ;.>i..r. add:-"'.'.
W 'i:idr"h > :<-V:K)l>.
;>■! I’. Ag't.
Kansas City.
30 O OCS iDO3?TI r
CONTRACTOR
and Sign Painter
' TOP.
n Wor'.-- Guaranteed.
Office nt Let'.ly'- ! mug Store
nxvta.'-" ■ •
ifinte Boarding House
H$ " ‘i" tIH.
Cor Hazsland Clinton Sts.
te.karkan a. ark. . j
Largo airy room weli fiini. in ■!. I able i
ouppli 'd with I th market
affords ’i ■ ■•. ■ . • isonable.
HENRY PLATZ.
M and Shoe Maker
t!i 'ji j|i ill ICl’hl’lill nfkl
ALL WORT . " Vt ■ N L'iTED FIRST ;
CLASS AN'ii • c; ASON ABLE.
w. r. tuincix . i.ke ;:ct. s
HIEITIMS Sc ESTSF
AttorneysatLaw
Office In Hi-nry Building Opposite
Benefield Hotel.
TEXARKANA : : TEXAS"
Old gold and silver bought al Louis
Hfilliron’s. tl.e ■ ■eu elor. ts
H 7HJ r s Y you owe yourself and fam-
H Vl* e f l ~’e .’ e Hst value for your money.
H w i O i l k ’ ze s<‘"r fooluear by .Mirclinsinff
H k>. o M n! ’ Shors v/hich represent the
■ Will testify ° l Pl lC< H nri tl*O“» au<s
I
I M.OOjB M 2.50
I 43.50 >42.00
■ $2.50 (ft pi $2 00
I 42.25% '3?... H 1.75
I 42.00 75 \
I (K-
I w. L. DOUGLAS!
I Eh^'EV
■ theJJn m J 4l I'f’IALTJ ES in footwear are of
■ far K rni o and represent a money value 1
■ orirnnV.?!.;.? 10 P rl(p s charged. See that nam® and
H Feearostamped on bottom of each shoo.
■ Wl il Ak E &<» SUBSTITUTE.
■ ”• L Douglas Brockton lUhhh. Sold by
I O’Dwyer & Ahern.
I J. F SHAW
■ COUNTY SURVEYOR
fl For KE. ARKANSAS.
fl "iH 'hi sin \ in . ||i.|)(.y l .|. culled upon
B | ll " ls Vl ' llsilllill| le. Prlvut.e parties wimt.-
■ "‘l< lines rmi |„| |„ f | is|) | lt( W |l| |>e
fl •'educed lutes. Address inn nt
fl »WS postofllee 2-7-9:.’.
I Mlratie-maiis Design P?’»nts Copyright*
fl ill Patent biutlnraa c< sluctcdtor
I moderate fees.
fl " ’ riu “ l '°" nnd advice elven to In cntorl without
■ ch "S«. Addrcu
fl PRESS CLAIMS CO.
fl JOHN WEDOERBURN
H Managing Attorney
H °* Box 4R3. Washington D. 0.
I u!o^J'» ." f Conr:my ’ n managed by a combination of
■ United st- t" lU ' noMt n '' uculal nowapaperß In th®
■ ln < thr|'" f ° r lI "' oxprco of protect-
■l f "i taoonm ." nMrrlb|| * B nwunßt unicrupnloua
H Mntlmthu i" 1 l lUcnt A « cn t«» »n'l each paper
I blUty an.i i vorMao »ncnt vouche® for tho rcaponaU
■ ’ “>» •‘lilU.tanaingcr tbo Preu Claim. Company.
>•
■■
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly used. The many who live bet-
ter than others and enjoy life more with
less expenditure by more promptly
adapting the world’s best products to
the needs of physical being will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas-
l ant to the taste the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax-
ative ; effectually cleansing the system
dispelling colds headaches and fevers
ana permanently curing constipation.
It lias given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession because it acts on the Kid-
neys Liver and Bowels without weak-
ening them and it is perfectly free from
’.very objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug-
gists in 50e and $1 bottles but it is man-
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only whose name is printed on every
package also the name Syrup of Figs
and being well informed you will not
accept any substitute if offered.
THE FACT
That AYER’S Sarsaparilla CUKES
others of Scrofulous Diseases 1
Eruptions Boils. Eczema Liver and
Kidney Diseases nyspepsia Rheu-
matism and Catarrh should be con-
vincing that the me course of
treatment will CURE YOU. All
that has been said of the wonderful
cures effected by the use of
AVER’S '
Sarsaparilla ;
during the past 50 years truthfully |
applies to-day. It is in every sense
The Superior Medicine. Its cura- (
five properties strength effect and
flavor are always the same; and for
whatever blood diseases AYER’S 1
Sarsaparilla is taken they yield to i
this treatment. When you ask for j
AVER’S
Sarsaparilla ■
don’t be induced to purchase any of
the worthless substitutes which are
mostly mixtures of the cheapest in-
gredients contain no sarsaparilla
have no uniform standard of ap-
pearance flavor or effect are blood-
purifiers in name only and are of-
fered to you because there is more
profit in selling them. Take *
AVER’S
Sarsaparilla
Pri.pnre.l !>v Dr. .1. C. Arnr&Co. Lowell Mi>m.
gold by ell i uulfi-■; I’rli'i.s•; kx botil. H $».
Cures others will cure you
i \
Vats
® JmL
i „ y
LOUIS D. VANDERVERE
Ono of tho host known fastness mon in Chicago
representative of tho groat Bradstreet Co.
HEADACHE SLEEPLESSNESS NERVOUS
PROSTRATION.
Dr. Matt Medical Co. Elkhart Ind.
Gentlemen: I take pleasure In Informing ynn
of tl?o°?ery beuifldal rciulis which havofollowM
the wof D . M'tf*' P'W OR Nf* a e yoarV'J
I D F n troubled with sleeples-nc'a.
UUnLUi i Nervine was highly
recommended to me. y of
iintH that 1 bad no confidence in tn® < im " >
my headache wm removed; my.pmtsana.'
r«v thousands
®(1. I SOON - wu.a AfPURRtO
|IMM “B._VANb«V«HV
Sold on » Positive Guarantee.
Dr. MI LES’ PI LLS 50 Dotes 25 CTfl-
Orwjarii m SBIIR and Whiskey Habits
omce IW*S Whitehall BL. Atlanta. U»
TEXARKANA ARKANSAS MONDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 6 1893
IN THE TOILS.
Two of Tho Iron Mountain Train
Robbers Captured and Jailed.
According to telegrams received by j
Chief of Police McMahon of Little I
Rock yesterday two of the Iron
Mountain train robber) have been ;
captured and are now safely lodged
in the county jail at Batesville Ark.
The capture was effected without
bloodshed by Sheriff Pattersou of
Woodruff county at the little station
of Jamestown thirty five miles from
the scene of Hie robbery. Money and 1
jewelery were found on the persons
of the men and every indication points 1
to them as members of lhe desperate !
band who plundered the train robbed
the passengers and murdered the 1
brave conductor at Oliphant on Fri-
day night last. One ot the men cap-
tured has been almost positively ident-
ified as the notorious assassin Jesse
Roper who murdered Sheriff J. W.
Byler of Baxter count) this State
about a year ago and for whose cap-
ture rewards aggregating in the sum
of $1500.00 have been offered. The 1
first authentic news of the pursuit 1
and final capture of two of tne gang 1
was recivod in Little Rock in the 1
shape of a special dispatch which
reads as follows:
Newport November 4.—Two of
the Oliphant train robbers were cap-
tured at Jamestown thirty-five miles
from the scene of the robbery at 5
o’clock this afternoon. They are now
at. Batesville. One of them is said to j
be Jesse B. Roper who shot and kill- <
ed Sheriff Byler of Baxter County ‘
a year ago last June aiid for whom (
there is a reward of $1500 dead or
alive. It is believed the other five i
will be captured before morning.
The Rolling Plant.
There is an extraordinary plant i
which grows in the Kansas valley. A 1
more curious specimen has never been
observed by the naturalist.
It grows in the form of a ball its j
stein being extremely small in propor- :
tiou to the size of the entire plant
which varies in size and form a foot (
to four feet and a half In diameter.
W hile growing it is firmly fixed to ils
stem which in its turn is rooted to
the ground; but as soon as the plant 1
has arrived at maturity the stem
shrivels up and then a gust of wind
is quite powerful enough to set the
ball rolling across the prairie.
It. rolls leaps bounds sometimes
even jumping over bushes impelled
by the force of the wind. When the
winds rise high it is impossible to
imagine anything stranger than the
sight of these huge light and elastic
balls which appear to pursue one
another skimming the surface of the
soil with extraordinary rapidity.
It is related how two hunters
overtaken by a violent storm of
wind and dust described some cu-
rious objects bounding towards them
which nt first they thought to be
wild animals. On coming nearer
however they were found to be
none other than the rolling plants of
Kansas borne before the wind.
School Notes.
We desire to thank our patrons for
the interest they are manifesting in
the work of the Public School. The
hope of ihe home of society of the
church of the nation is in the children.
Every interest of your home your
business your ambitions your prav-
ers center in your children. There is
no sacrifice too great no drudgery too
oppressive no suffering too painful
if it will promote the happiness and
welfare of your children. This being
so you cannot do too much for your
school. It is the greatest institution
in your town it is there that your
children acquire tastes habits and
ambitions which will determine the
course of their lives.
When you send your child from
your cherishing care and loving coun-
sel to have his plastic mind and soul
moulded by us you demand a great
deal of us. If you place such great
responsibilities on your teachers how
heartily should you co-operate with
(hem; bow faithfully should you hold
up their hands; how many kinds words
of encouragement should you give
them; how earnestly should you coun-
sel with them for the good of your
children; how sparing you should be
of unfounded criticism: how pleasant
should be the relations; how dose the
sympathy; how deep and loyal the
bond of friendship between the par-
ent and teacher. You can aid us in
many ways. A very Important uuxil-
-1 iary to school work Is a select library
■of good books where pupils may be
inspired with a love for good reading
1 which will carry on tboir education
after their school days have ended.
One of the highest duties of the
• school is to introduce to the minds ot
i the young good books stimulate a
| taste for good reading and to guide
it to higher levels.
The impoitauceof an early acquaint-■
aucc with good books can hardly be;
overestimated. It has been said that
the future of the youth of fifteen has I
been blocked out in precisely the lines ■
indicated by the literature he has
been taught to enjoy.
The library can bo so managed as ;
to interfere in no way with the regu-1
lar school studies and will utilize
much time usually spent in idleness
on the streets.
Recognizing these truths we have
organized a Library Association
among our pupils the condition for
membership being the payment of the
small sum of 25 cents. This money
will l>e invested in good books suita-
ble for children to bo used by the
members under the direction of the
teachers. To secure the privilege of
taking books home and reading them
it will be necessary to contribute the
25 cents. The school needs the books
your children need them. Can you
not help us and encourage them to do
so? The teachers have have nothing
to gain but. extra work and expense
the pupils will gain much: Help us.
Again thanking you I am your
friend.
J. T. Cowling.
A Widely Prevalent Malady.
While it is perfectly true that
swamp vapors morning and evening
mists along the banks of slow wind-
ing turbid streams and the effluvium
exhaled by the sun from moist and
decaying vegetable beget malaria it
frequently breaks out where no such
conditions exist. It is in fact a mal-
ady widely prevalent of which it is in
many cases impossible to discover the
origin. But though its causes arc of-
ten obscure the testimony profession-
al and public of the inhabitants of
America and other lands leave no rea-
sonable doubt not only that Hostet-
ter’s Stomach Bitters uproots this
tenacious disease when fully develop-
ed but fortifies the system against its
first attacks. Chilis and fever bilious
intermittent dumb ague and ague all
yield to it alike. Liver trouble al-
ways present in malarial disorder
dyspepsia constipation and kidney
complaint succomb to the Bitters.
Those Wonderful Kings.
F. L. Schuster tne well known Tex-
arkana-jeweler has secured a con-
signment of those wonderful rings
said by those who have tried them
to be an mfalible cure for rheumatism.
Mr. John Buron and others of this
city are ready to testify as to their
virtue as a certain rheumatic cure.
Call and secure one of these magnetic
treasures. F. L. Schuster
No. 208 State Line Avenue.
f-a-f.f
What is a Guarantee?
It is this: If you have a cough or
cold a tickling in the throat which
keeps you constantly coughing or it
you are afflicted with any chest throat
or lung trouble whooping cough etc.
and you use Ballard’s Horehound Syr-
up as directed giviug it a fair trial
and no benefit is experienced we au-
thorize our advertised agent to refund
your money upon return of bottle. It
never fails to give satisfaction. It
promptly relieves bronchitis. Sold by
Smith Drug Co. 1
For Rent—l wish to reut.fi rooms
of my residence to small family—man
and wife. Apply to
Mrs. Kate Cooley.
10-20-lmo 224 Hazel St.
Bear in mind that the Texarkana
Ice Co. have all kinds of coal which
will be delivered to any part of the
city tree of drayage nt lowest market
prices. Telephone No. 25. 10 18
Men and brethren: the Stuarts again
rise to remark that this fall and win-
ter they will be strictly in it;” that
they always know what they arc here
for ami never forget where they
are at.
We. are displaying an unusually
attractive line of toilet goods.
10-12 Smith Drug Co.
Wanted: —Traveling salesmen who
desire tine side line.
Boquet Cigar Co.
10-24-lmo Lynchburg Va.
Every quality and variety of line
French candles can be found at C. 11.
Barelle & Co’s. (Bigger’s old stand.)
10-7-ts.
SATISFACTION is guaranteed
to every consumer of HOOD’S
Sarsaparilla. One hundred doses in
every bottle. No other does this.
Sharpe & Jordan Fashionable hat-
ters. Specialties in soft roll crush top
Stetson’s and Roelof derbys; sole
agent for Yoiiman.
C. 11. Barelle & Co. have Just re-
ceived a large assortment of tine im-
ported French candies. Give them a
call. 10-7-ts.
Favorite Cream is the most elegant
preparation for chapped red or rough
skin.
10-12 Smith Drug Co.
New neckwear new handkerchiefs
new suspenders new shirts complete
' stock of half hose and underwear in
• silk wool and cotton at
i Sharpe a Jordan’s
I Hutters and Furnishers.
AT WASHINGTON.
Attorney General Olney on the Chi-
nese Exclusion Law Just Passsed.
Attorney General Olney has just
forwarded to the United States Dis-1
i trlct Attorney at Los Angeles Cal. j
the following instructions on the lat- i
1 est legislative enactment concerning
] the registration and deportation of re- - -
1 tractory celestials:
! ‘•Excepting Chinese felons hereto-1
tore convicted the act just passed by j (
Congress discontinues ali pending <
proceedings taken under the sixth
section of the Geary act as orignally
enacted. Chinese felons heretofore
convicted and now subject to deporta- .
slon for non-compliance with the
sixth section of the Geary act as .
orignally enactedare to be deported
under said act as amended by act
just passed upon any appropriate
proceedings now pending or to be
hereafter instituted. Yourself and •
Marshall should immediately act un-
der the law in both classes of cases 1
thereby covered.”
A similar order wasalso sent to tho 1
District attorney for the Northern
District of California. The Stale |
Department has it is said received
assurance from the Chinese Minister
that he will induce bis countrymen
now in the United States to comply
with the Geary act as amended and it
is believed that the law will secure j
the moral support of the six compa-
nies.
A Suspect Arrested.
J. R. Lemon a switchman formerly 1
in the employ of the Iron Mountain i
railway was arrested in Little Rock <
on Saturday and locked up pending 1
further investigation into his suppos-
ed complicity in the Oliphant train (
robbery. Lemon’s arrest was brought ]
about by himself he having sought
out the chief of Little Rock’s police
force and made him a proposition to
disclose certain facts in his possession
concerning the robbery provided he (
was allowed the share the reward in
the event of the robbers’ capture be- (
ing effected. The chief at once bus- ;
pected Lemon of knowing entirely too (
much about the affair for an innocent (
man and ordered his arrest. On be-
ing searched it was found that tho .
prisoner had in his posession a lady's
gold watch chain and a certificate of
discharge as a switchman. He is now
In jail at Little Rock as a “suspect.”
Lemon claims to have arrived in Lit-
tle Rock direct from this city but
other evidence indicates that he came
from the opposite direction and must
have been at or near the scene of the
robbery when same was being perpe- 1
t rated.
Homeward Bound.
After laying in state at Cook’s un-
■ dertaking establishment in Little
’ Rock on Saturday the remains of lhe
i late Conductor W. P. McNally were
escorted to the Union depot in that
t city by an escort consisting of thirty
Knights Templars of the local com-
mander}' of which deceased was an
honored member and there placed on
board the north bound train to bo
conveyed to the old family home in
Cleveland Ohio for interment. The
body was accompanied on its last
Journey by local delegations from the
Masonic and railway orders of which
deceased was a member. At Cleve-
land the remains will be awaited by
Mrs. Kale Sheehan an only sister and
so far as now known the only Imme-
diate relative of the deceased. Aside
from the handsome property which
he had accumulated Conductor Mc-
Nally had only a short time before
his untimely death taken out an in-
surance policy on Ins life for tho sum
$20000 all of which together with
his worldly posessions will go to his
sister as ids nearest of kin.
Quick Work.
Washington Ind.Nov. 4.—Today
at noon James E. Stone pleaded
guilty to having murdered six mem-
bers of the Wrattan family In Harri-
son township this county Sept. 18.
The case was submitted without argu-
ment and the judge instructed the
jury briefly. Twenty minutes later
they brought in a verdict of guilty.
■ The judge sentenced Stone to be
1 hanged the 16th day of February
1 1894 at Jeffersonville prison to which
place the sheriff took him this after-
■ noon. A motion for a new trial was
■ overruled.
i •
Cotton Hoed Oil Mills.
I. The Texas and L’acilic freight dc-
I partmciit has issued in convenient
form a list of cotton seed oil mills
located on tho Toxas and Pacific rall-
* way and connecting lines in Texas
’ and Louisiaun. There are sixty-six
I I of these mills in Texas and eleven In
| Louisiana. These figures arc Impor-
’ taut iu view of (lie fact Unit a few
years ago there were no oil mills in
the state. Os tho sixty-six mills in
Texas the daily seed capacity of all
but live is given. The daily capacity i
of six'y-one Texas mills is 3411 tons.
The mill with the largest capacity is |
that of Sherman 400 tons. I
Ono of the next largest mills is t
that of this city which has an ex- ;
cellent record for years past. ;
The largest river is the Amazon. 1
It rises sixty miles from the Pacific
Ocean and traverses the whole width
of the continent a distance of 4000 8
miles. It is navigable for large-sized
ships 2200 miles from its mouth. In *
the last 300 or 400 miles of Its course *
its width is so great that front one
<
shore the opposite bank is invisible. (
The strength of its current carries its
e i
fresh waters a distance of more than |
200 miles out to sea.
The Modern Jack Horner ‘
“Little Jack Horner sat in a corner '
Eating a Christinas pie: f
He put in his th until and pulled out a plum r
And said ‘What a good boy am II ’ ” (
But little Jack Horner became a deep i
mourner (
When older he grew and a glutton.
For his liver I'll state wus like a dead
weight I
As he drank wino and ate too much <
mutton. i
Poor Jack's time of grief however was ’
brief i
And of sickness lie ceased to bo fearful; (
For n boon friend said “Well lot's try
Pierce’s I’ollets"
And with good livers both are now ’
cheerful. I
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets absoj t
lutely effective in cases of sick head- |
ache constipation indigestion ami all
derangements of the stomach and
bowels. Satisfaction guaranteed.
SSOO reward for an incurable ease |
of Catarrh by the proprietors of
Dr. Sage’s Remedy. 50 cte.; by drug- (
gists. _____ 1
Huddleston’s New Stand.
The popular market Huddle- |
ston Bros. desire to inform their pai- (
rons and the city trade generally that (
they have moved their market j
into the new Crow brick next door
to their old stand on East Broad
street where from today forward (
they will be ready to welcome their
friends and the public. They have
completely refitted their market and (
have on hand every delicacy in the
market line which the season and
country afford. They invite the peo-
ple of our city to give I hem a call at
their new stand.
The only music house in Texar-
kana. Over $2000 worth of new mu-
sical goods just arrived. New styles
in guitars banjos mandolins fiddles
accordeons tamboriues strings find-
ings etc. Sam 8. Falk
After Breakfast
To purify vitalize and enrich the
blood and give nerve bodily and di-
gestive strength fake Hood’s Sarsapa-
rilla. Continue tho medicine after
every meal for a month or two.
Hood’s pills cure constipation. 25c. 6
To the Ladies.
1 have Just received a nice lot of lite
latest style Now Home and other Sew-
ing Machines which will be sold on
easy payments; I will also repair any
kind of machine and guarantee satis-
faction. My office is at I Ito Reeves’
Furniture Store.
C. M. Johnson Agent.
-
Epilepsy cared br Dr. Mlles’ Nervin''
SSOO Lost
While walking down Broad Direct.
Stop in and have your watches jewel-
ry clocks typewriters music boxes
repaired by nn expert J. W. Casteel.
Sam 8. Falk
The Jeweler.
No Misrepresentation.
All goods warranted as represent-
ed or money refunded by
Sam S. Falk
Jeweler.
ELSCKSMITHS. ATTENTION.
Smithing coal in sacks ol
150!bs. for SI.OO F. O. B
Texarkana Ice Co.
The headquarters for sporting I
goods guns knives; scabbards biUys
knucks boxing gloves cards dice
dominos lottos cartridges etc.
9.4 Sam 8. Falk.
Dr. Milos' Norvn »n<l Llvnr I’lHr. BO dowin SB ctn
Men’s slippers pump calf cordovan
patent leather and enamel shoos just
received at Sharpe a Jordan’s
Hatters and Furishcrs.
The ladies of tho Episcopal church
will give a Thanksgiving dinner next
mouth so hh to enable them to pay off
jheir indebtedness on the now church
carpets. Bt-ew-lmo
The last Chance.
Times aint hard when you can
liny 8 day clocks for $2.80 mid 1 day
clocks at $2. Strikes hours and half
hours. Sam S. Falk
Jeweler.
Il
NO. 77.
SILVER TRUMPET SOUNDED.
The populist members of Congress
at Washington including Senators
and members of the lower House
prepared and are broad-cast
through the country an address on
the silver question and appeal to the
people of the nation regardles- of
political affiliation to take up airiis
in bohiilf of the White Meta]. It is
significant that the name of Senator
Jones of Nevada appears among tin •
signers of tho document. The ad-
dress began with a statement of tho
aggregate debts of tlic world and of
the gold and silver in existence calls
attention to the fact that the arts re-
quire almost the total gold produc-
tion and says tho decrease of die vol-
ume of this metal caused by hoarding
has caused it to appreciate 40 or 50
per cent. The address continues:
“The repeal of tho purchasing clause
of tho Sherman Act destroys si ver ac
a money of ultimate redemption
and reduces that metal to credit mon-
ey to be floated only by redemption
in gold. Tho $1100000000 of paper
and silver now in circulation must
rest upon less Ilian $100000000 of
gold in tlie Treasury available for re-
demption. The only reason for de-
monetizing silver was to enhance the
value of gold and obligations payable
in gold. It is surprised to sell bonds
of the United States and buy gold to
strengthen the reserves In tho Treas-
ury. The Natioual banKs will use the
bonds for banking and issue their
notes upon which lhe people must
pay interest as well as on the bonds.”
AMUSEMENTS.
Milton Nobles and an exclleut com-
pany appeared last night at the opera
house in a revival of his pid success
the Phoenix. This is tho play that
made Nobles famous the American
continent over and now Hint it is
dished up again alter several years of
peaceful repose it shines all the bright-
er. It gives Nobles more oppoituui-
tles and like the phivuix ho aspires to
represent be rises from tho not alto-
gether satisfactory work that has
attended other plays of his and en-
dows liis old time favorite character
witli rare personalities and excellent
presentation. I have on several oc-
casions taken exceptions on Mr.
Nollies’ work in oilier characters and
oilier plays but I am free to confess
Hint in his Phoenix bo is pleasing
ills work is smooth hix presence not
in the least affected mid his general
presence both attractive and enter-
taining. He is fortunately surround-
ed this season with an excellent com-
pany embracing among the number
Miss Dollie Nobles Miss Blanche
Hillman Messrs Charles Winans and
C. Joy Williams. The last named
representing as lie does “the member
from Jerusalem” does most excellent
and effective work in the comedy end
and is second to none hi quality and
finish.
IjOst nights audience while not
very large in number was still above
the average end was certainly strong
in their approval of Mr. Nobles’and
the company’s work.—Austin Daily
Statesman.
tn Olden Times
People overlooked the importance of
permanently beneficial effects and
were satisfied witli the transient act-
lion but now that it is generally
known that Syrup of Figs will perma-
nently cure habitual constipationwell-
informed people will not buy other
I ixntlvcs which act for a time but fi-
lially Injure tho system.
Lost.
Somewhere on Eeast Broad street
on Thursday aflcrnoou a pair ot gold
rimmed spectacles.
Finder will he suitably rewarded on
leaving same at tills office. It
To tho Searcher: When you are
searching for a genuine Slicker Rub-
ber Coat or Mackintosh warranted
n nter-proof for men or boys call at
Stuarts’ before purchasing.
1
Pure
' A cream of tarter baking powder
Highest of all in leavening strength.—
Latest United States Government
. Food Report.
1 Royal Baking Powder Co.
100 Wall St. N. Y.
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Gardner, J. W. Daily Texarkana Democrat. (Texarkana, Ark.), Vol. 10, No. 77, Ed. 1 Monday, November 6, 1893, newspaper, November 6, 1893; Texarkana, Arkansas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1644202/m1/1/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Arkansas State Archives.