The Daily Cosmopolitan (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 253, Ed. 1 Friday, June 12, 1885 Page: 1 of 4
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XOhHt.K o. 11bmcatjo.v— iCra ¿rniyct, flitown'ivru.k, I'iisas. Extkukd at thk Postomicf at ERowNsrnx*. Tkxah. as SKOOwvüLAai Mattkii.)
MK VI- liliOWNSVILM.; CAIMKI'OX t'OVXTV, TEXAS, FUIDAV, JUNK 12, 1885.
XUMliKU. 2f>3
^ HB6B & O '-
MD IMIIIFACJM01S OF
itOWBRg
ASP
lTHERS,
IfK BBflADWR HEW YORK.
tbe Market Price for all
LfBWikins, Egret, White Crane,
iFlawtg'iltc' S^'P Dire0t t0 New
^ wiy largo quantities. Ex-
i must he prepaid on sam-
my27 3m
F. TILGHMAN,
i House Broker,
"RESENTS ALSO
lilh Bros. & Co.,
M'SKWOIt LEANS. LA.
e, 1311a Sí- near liCiee.
Ulloriern promptly attend
In, Quods sold at bottom
<124
ilprrmxat, Jit Mus R. I'itkonap.
SIT, Jr., 16i
I (^¡owsHorfl to J. L. Putcgnat.)
IUL!NK OF DllVCfS
Im.UICALS PEHFU-
mi', GARDEN
SUED. PA 'IENT
MtiD/CJNE>\
mSEHYd: FANCY GOODS
ALWAYS OX HAND.
cription* Compound'
eij at all liour*.
¡«Re for Battery l'ark Railroad ami
wto* ready mixed paints, white lead
Mull, turpentine, varnwben.
Rustían hess,
Dealer in
ted Groceries,
rdware,
Crockery,
í^ l <ÍC; itc . <£c.
n ISABEL, TEXAS.
1
-THE
BEST TONIC.
??• c°®,hi,n.iW Jrnn with pnro
SEfi 9 jjkly and com nietc! y
iSrfa i ? • Wealtne.* -
j*|JI«uarlui,ClillU uid Fever*,
i'i !í"i|/ejnc<ly fnr ^aaesoft.l'o
pcnillnr to
«¡dcntary lives,
«coMtiMtlnn ,V'cfusc h« dache,or
"""iiiSl líSüT' £ lron Mliewr* <tn.
i iid« ti .th?,Wood, itinnilntcs
■««ttnín i«3 "«imilation of food, re
tó/íSt1"8'nnd ltren8tu'
Uck "
M wX'i onh ^a,>,>ve M^0 rk nnd
Ms-S;
j'1, ^ M- H. Cronus
'^ors.o Vivier A Crow,.)
:^&c!0(lB,BootB,ahOH8'
P^l hm'Il STREET,
Oville, texas.
also
A|-
lib" >lr^Dl° Sl" botw6#r
i /.«ore:
WK.* ÁRR!BR(,s.
1 ' MBZIW,
fail ^flsmopolitan.
PI SSMS1IF.I) U.ilLI
(Except Siindiije )
TKRÍM8 OK Sl BsrBll'TIOlV.
btibtci iption in ndvunoci, ^nI
Uiooey, per month $1 25
Subscription ppr year, dnliv*rw<i
by carrier or sunt by mail fn
part ofrth© U H. or Mexico, $12 U S
Currency, or $14 etigle money, pay-
able iu advnnc«.
AMUl'MSIM lUTKN.
One iocli, por month
li'ipui uo(io«ja, for rotular adv«r-
ristre. per lina f)(.,s
'f illusion t locáis, por lino lOets
Special position, peí line 2G«ts
Subsequent insertions of locals,
titer lirst. insertion, one-half lite
tibuve rutbs.
A.I1 transient «ds o<I loenls priya
Mo strictly in advunco.
All olechotyues of ndvcrliflfincnfs,
ante, etc., for publication in this pa-
;ier, mus' be moulded on molnl
:ia-es, uud not moie tlmn thirteen
-md pica, or two inches in width, d
iutotidrd tor n sinale column.
over liia «tinging criticisms of
his gnvoruuiotit's uiaiiaKomont
oí' the Afghan disputo, nu<l
they .lemantl that ho rcpudinte
them or be punished by some
signal mark of the displeasure
of the government. Sir Peter
Lumsden's friends sny ho meaus
every word attributed to Itini
in these interviews and that
he will not repudiate a word,
lie believes, his friends «rgue,
that the government i>u rnged
the eoimtrv and disgraced the
Afghan boundary commission,
and he will abandon his oflice
rather than retrart any of his
CrÍtÍ(!ÍSI118.
Advertisements, to be inserted in
bis puper, should be sent iu not
«tor Ituij 11 a. m., on day of pub
i''al ion.
Ni.TiCEi—S'jbKtíiiborfl v/iio fail t<
••ec(iv« i ho pi>ptr reguhrly, will
•oidor a fuvor bv informinp tiio pub
ihiiets of the fact.
news by mail
St. Petersburg, June 5.—
The Neovosti, a newspaper,
annnuuees it has been private
ly informed from the Cauca-
sus th 't I ho ameer of Afghan-
istan, Abdurrahman, had been
murdered by his suite It is
*i.id that the murder took
pluoe in Persia, where the
atneer was at the time travel
ing, and thnt Ayoub Khan,
the deposed ameer, will be
his successor. The report
causes much exeitement.
London, June (i.—The Pall
Mall Gazette soys it is fjlad to
be able to state upon the high-
est authority that the long
standing question of difference
i between England and Russia,
concerning the northwest Af-
ghan frontier, has been satis-
factorily settled. A definite
iigreciiient has been arrived at
on all questions of principles
The commissioners will forth
with couiiiieiicfe lo mark pre
eise y the delimitation of the
boundary. They are now on
the spot. The Gazette be-
lieves that the above might
have been agreed to laft week
for tho difference of opinion
concerning a more preciso do
finitioii of the frontier east of
Zullicar. The Penideh inci
dent, will be referred to the
King of Denmark, who haw
intormally agreed to accept
the oliice of arbitrator. The
arbitration will he rigidly con-
lined to the interpretation of
tho sacred covenant of March
10th.
London, June 0—The re-
ported murder of the ameer
of Afghanistan is doubted in
official circles here, as the gov-
ernment had received no in-
formation up to a late hour
this afternoon tending to con-
firm tlie rumor.
London, June C—vSir Peter
Lumsden, recently in charge
of the British section of the
Afghan boundary commission
has arrived here, *
The outspoken denunciations
of the condnr t of the govern-
ment toward the British Af-
ghan boundary commission,
reported to have been made
by Gen. Sir Peter Lnm*den
on his way home since hi* re-
call, have induced the British
war office to ask him whether
tli ' newspaper interviews pub-
lished are accurate reports of
what he lias said.
Sir Peter's answer to this
interrogatory is awaited with
interest. The authorities in
the war office undoubtedly
sympathize with Sir Peter
Lumsden. but tho members compromise. The majority of
of the cabinet are exasperated J the cabinet support ¿ail
London, Juno 5—In the
House oí Commons this after-
noon, Mr. Gladstone stated
that Russia and England had
come to an agreement con-
cerning the points of differ-
ence between them, which
are to bo referred to arbitra-
tion. Ho also stated that tho
governments of the two coun-
tries have likewise agreed
upon tho arbitrator, but, at*
the person chosen for arbitra-
tor has not yet been formal I v
asked to accept, ho was unable
to say anything further on tho
subject now. «
i *■
London, June 5—Tho cab-
inet today discussed Irish
coercion for two hours, but
failed to reach an agreement.
Karl Spencer, in an interview
with Mr. Gladstone, yesterday,
stated that an irreducible
minimum of coercion he con-
sidered indispensible for gov-
erning Ireland. He showed
by his absence from the coun-
cil today that ho was deter-
mined there should be no
Spencer. Mr. Gladstone is
anxious that there should be
no disruption iu the face ot
the general election, and.asked
Mr. Chtinhcrlain and Sir
Charles Pi Ike to accede to
Karl Spencer's full demanJ for
one year. The council was ad
journed until Tuesday. The
excitement in ministerial cir-
cles over the crisis is intense
It is said tint Sir Chirles
Dilke and Mr. Chamberlain
intend to resign.
London, June 5 —The Pall
Mall Gazette, in an editorial
article, states it can not be
lieve that Mossrs Dilko and
Chamberlain will f: ee the
odium of causing a disruption
of the cabinet on the eve of a
general election. Earl Spencer
will be content if he gets the
powers he urgently need for
tho next year. The Home
rulers will, however, oppose
the one-year term of the crimes
act as a measure of coercion,
while the Conservatives may
coalesce with the Home rulers
and oppose the bill as in-
adequate and a temporary
make shift unworthy of the
imperial Parliament. By ac-
cepting the compromise sus -
goHtod, the crisis may be trans-
ferred from the cahiuot to the
House of Commons, although
there is apprehension of great
difficulty in keeping the forty
to make the party together.
It may not bo insurmount-
able.
London, June 5.—An offi-
cial dispatch from Serinagur,
Cashmere, gives tho number
of killed ami wounded by the
earthquake there on Sunday
and Monday last, as follows :
Killed, 87; wounded, 100.
The official reports have not
been received yet from other
points in the vale of Cashmere
affected by the earthquake
shocks, and until these come
to hand tho full extent of the
calamity cannot he known.
London, June 5
The Ga
official an
zotie makes the
nounceuicnt that tiie districts
of Niger, iu Africa, have been
formed into a British protec-
torate. This protectorate com-
prises the coast line between
the British protectorate of La-
gas and the western bank of
the Kio del Hoy, the territory
on tboth banks ^of the Niger
from its confluence with the
river Henne at Lakojo to the
Pond; also both banks of the
Bonne to and including (be
London, June 5 The Times
in an editorial article this
morning, says that. United
States Minister Phelps spoke
at the lord mayor's banquet to
to the judges, on Wednesday
evening, with a grace of dic-
tion and an oration of tou«
which prove hint fittedJh iiIt
Mr. Lowell's place as welt
socially as officially. He will
he the medium toward bring-
ing English and American
bars and benches together i it
other modes than by their
partnership in Jaw books and
axioms.
London, June T> —1« ,th©
House of CointnoiiR thi* after-
noon Mr Gladstone announc-
ed the following as the order of
government business in thn
house : The second reading
of the budget Monday next;
the consideration of the Scotch
cioftors bill, and the hill for
renewal of the Irish criiu-e*
a«*t remodelled Thursday next
and the introduction and con-
sideration of an Irish Uud pur
chase bill as soon am possible-
London, .lime 5.—Cardinal
Manning writes to the papen
in advocacy of devoting tbe
Gordon memorial fund to the
founding of a similar memo-
rial in Congo state.
llerliti, June f>—An inter-
view with Mr. Kaiue, the new
United States corn-oil, is pub-
lished in the Tageblatt. Kaine
says he has undertaken tha
task of reviving the commercial
relations between Germany
and America. "Depression in
trade," says Consul Kaine,
"will soon convince tho Amer-
ican people of the necessity
for abandoning their policy of
the past twenty-tiv« years."
Mr. It tine believed them
would be "no difficulty in re*
moving the points of difference
between the two countries."
He denounced as a falsehood
the report that he wrote in
his German newspaper, in
Baltimore, in 'disparagement
of German v.
Palis, June f> —A letter
from the bishop of Tonqiiiu
appears in the Toulon Mi«.
sions Cutholujiio announcing
that the Black Flags are ra-
vaging the provinces < l Son-
tag, Poughea and Lnypnqua.
Although these province# aro
occupied by French troopa,
the inhabitants, fleeing from
massacre, have taken refuge
in the French garrison. Thirty
Christian villages have been
destroyed.
Paris, June 5—The scene
in the Chamber dm ing debato
yesterday, was exceedingly
stormy. Many angry person-
alities were indulged in.
Several duels have been ar-
ranged in consequences of in-
sulting epithets,' which wer«
freely exchanged. M* Flo-
quet, timudnnt of the Chain*
ber, wag powcrlo** to preserva
order >• lid threatened to re.
si^n, lmt has been persuaded
to remain in office
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The Daily Cosmopolitan (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 253, Ed. 1 Friday, June 12, 1885, newspaper, June 12, 1885; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth178023/m1/1/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.