Brenham Daily Banner. (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, January 25, 1889 Page: 2 of 4
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THE DAILY BANNER.
1
BfffJ
• ^
J. G. BANK IN, Proprietor.
O. H F. GARRETT. Editor.
Friday, January 25, 1889.
ou86 of representative, shows what
a convenient stepping stone to fame
the field of journalism offers to the
deserving. He graduated at Dart-
horse car manners.
Br
prisoWKS".
h tber
with
the amended pistol law im-
;t is to be left optional
rial jury.
Lacking in BCmumtb, and YTomtu
Who Are to Some Extent XUapomible.
11VOT1, ti-_ b., "The manners of people in Brook-
mouth college in 1880, and at once hSnSahK^K
went to Boston and applied for a j man who stood «n the rear platform
position on the Advertiser. He was i ?,r *<*ner <lay-
^ . , . . , J I am a traveling man," he continued,
offered 95 a week and refused, but "and have had occasion to make a
in two years he was offered a place
on the same journal at his own
term3. He is only 30 years old.
This Canada annexation boom, like
the premature booms of some of the j I* this wonderful age of enlight-
eandidates, seems to have died of enment and modem development
inanition. jan<1 progress there has
j greater improvement in
of
study of this subject. For instance,
just take a look inside this car and you
will see what I mean. First you will
notice that while several ladies
are
standing several men are sitting. That
you wil
is it in
say is nothing unusual, nor
our cars. If, however, you
will look a little more elosely you
The substitute tariff bill has
passed the United States senate by j
a strict party vote. It is needless to
say that it will not pass the house.
not been must notice that if some of the k($es,
any of the j * suppose we must call them by that
appliances than in the processes
photographing objects. By the in
! stantancous process ritle bullets in
I motion may now be photographed,
It is estimated that the next cen- J and by a recent improvement it is
bus will show that there are nearly claimed that photographs of per-
if not fully three hundred thousand sons will soon bo made more realis
native Germans in New York City. tic by reproducing the color of the
"iTT tie nil
The people want to hear no more
of "Southern outrages" from the re-
publican sheets in the North until
whitecap lawlessness is suppressed
in that section.
name, would move along a little there
would bo seats for at least three mere.
Do they move? Not by a long shot,"
and the elderly gentleman stopped a
moment to wine off so mo big drops that
had trickled down his back from the
projecting roof,
average New York
The Times Democrat is stirring
up the state of Louisiana on the
subject of free schools and charges j
that sufficient attention is not being
paid to education.
The city council of Richmond,
Ya., has passed a resolution denying
employment on the new city hall to
anybody who is republican in poli-
ties. This is dealing in politics with
a vengeance.
Mn. Rider, a wealthy Englishman
in this country, being recently asked
by a syndicate of his countrymen in
what section of the United States
they could make the best paying in-
vestments, recommended the South.
It must be admitted that the
present "spell" of weather is very
trying to one's patience, and most
of all to the farmers. But the spirit
of resignation is a blessed gift, and
it will abundantly repay us all to
cultivate it.
The fate of the early, premature
boom is illustrated in Senator
Coke's case. About eighteen
months ago certain papers were
making a vigorous war on nim and
were boosting Hon. Roger Q. Mills
to succeed him.
Hox. Ricuakd Coke was unani-
mously re-elected United States
senator for the thud time at Austin
on Tuesday. The anti-third term
sentiment which a few papers tried
so hard to work up a year or so ago
was not heard of.
Rt:v. Abe Mulkky, who has been
' «
calling sinners to repentance at Cle-
burne, says that he is a redeemed
mercantile thief. He has something
better to offer now—religion—which
he recommends as worth 100 cents
on the dollar.
Dallas News: "It is suspicioned
that the Haytian and Samoan
troubles have been shrewdly incited
to distract Editor Shepard's atten-
tion from his contemplated invasion
of the South." "Suspicioned" is
good, but "suspected" would have
been better.
Germany possesses the first army
and fourth navy in the world, but in
case of a war over the Samoan im-
broglio Uncle Sam could better af-
ford to tackle her first-rate army
than her fourth-class navy. This
isn't very complimentary to our
navy, but it is true.
Speakino of the changes in the
methods of education, especially in
reading and spelling, by which it is
no longer necessary for children to
be taught their letters before learn-
ing to read, the American Agricul-
turist gravely asks: "Is not the
'practical' idea in education, which
places all knowledge on the utilitar-
ian, bread-and-butter basis running
.riot?"
FARMERS' INSTITUTES.
Some time ago the Banner noticed
briefly a proposition made by the
Texas Farm and Ranch, which is
published at Dallas, to organize
farmers' institutes in the state. Since
hen the proposition has met with
uch favor among the farmers and
„he movement has progressed to
such an extent that the first "Farm-
ers' Institue for Texas" is to be held
at the state capital, cqmmencing on
the 7th proximo and lasting three
days. These institutes are to be
simply local gatherings of farmers
to discuss the various problems and
conditions of farming under the di-
rection of a state officer and a few
special lecturers. They are in vogue
in other states and have brought the
most satisfactory results. The main
ooject of the first meeting will be to
secure from the legislature some
sort of recognition commensurate
with the neeels and importance of
agriculture and to develop plans that
will be a practical value to the farm-
ers. The Farm and Ranch, which is
one of the widest awake and most
thoroughly alive papers published
in Texas in the interest of the farm-
er classes, was the first to suggest
these farmers' institutes. The wide-
spreael interest in the subject which
its suggestions have aroused and an
almost universal desire among the
farmers to know more about it, have
induced the management of the pa-
per to undertake a special edition,
which will contain about twenty-
four pages of information about in-
stitute work. It will also contain a
complete programme of the Austin
meeting and much of interest be-
sides. The work is undertaken pure-
ly as a labor of love, and free copies
will be sent out to all farmers inter-
ested in the movement, on applica-
tion, whether they are subscribers
or not.
standing at some little distance from
me, and I tried to attract her attention
The election of a United States
senator at Austin the other day pre-
sents a prima facia case of fraud.
The Texas papers—notably the
Fort Worth Gazette and San An-
tonio papers—that have been wont
to extol the "rare climate of this
state, may now take a back seat.
The Boston Herald of a recent date
says :
"Down in Connecticut a young
lady picked a bouquet of violets in
her garden last week, and another
young lady gathered a fine bunch of
dandelions. An Ansonia man is
pulling the weeds out of his straw
berry beds, expecting them to bios
som in another week. In Milford
the crocuses and the early lilies have
blossomed, the pussy willow buds
have begun to swell and burst, and
the robins and the blue birds are
chirruping in the green meadows."
The Hillsboro Reflector observes
as follows :
The St. Louis Republic accuses
the Dallas News of purloining the
Republic's Washington specials.
Perhaps the correspondents of the
two papers utilize the news columns
of the same Washington evening pa-
per. The Washington Star, for
instance, furnishes a great amount
of material for specials.
It is no doubt a case of the pot
calling the kettle black. The Re-
public is, itself, a pretty good hand
at clipping its "specials" from
other papers.
negation a
In a sermon to his cc;
Presbyterian clergvman in Phila-
There were three republican^ in the tlfc]pilia made tbe following allusion
house, and yet the returns show j tke jews;
that Coke was unanimously elected.! «Wby' arc the Jews the purest-
In the interest of a free ballot and; blooded, the longest lived, the most
fair count the Banker demands that j lawabiding most successful and, ac
congress lose no time in sending for j cor(iing to their number, the most
, powerful nation on earth? lou who
persons and papers. )persecute the Jews had better loo£|
The brilliant career of Wm. E-'out! TLe3' God'8 people. With
Barrett, editor of the Boston Ad ,aI1 rou?b h"udii^ a. bi&ote<J
j world has given the Jew,^ it not I
vertiser, who has recently been i wonderful that he has no more i
chosen speaker of the Massachusetts faults?"
"The manners of tho
or Brooklyn wo-
man, but more especially those of the
former, are disgusting," he continued,
"and they are responsible to a large
extent for the impoliteness shown
them by the men. Now in Boston you
will never see a lady standing in a car,
while a gentleman is sitting. Why ?
Well, in the first place, there is much
more politeness practiced in tbit city
of beans and culture; men are not so
hardened there as they are in our
larger cities, nor is the population so
cosmopolitan. We are suffering in a
great measure from the lack of good
manners due to the great preponder-
ance in our midst of foreign elements.
Moreover, in Boston conductors are
constantly upon tho outlook for the
comfort of their passengers. If there
is a chance to make more room they
will do it. I have only seen one or
two instances of this supervision on
the part of our conductors. Even in
Chicago the better class of foreigners
and the native Americans will almost
invariably give up their seats to
ladies."
"What mado me mad, the other
day," chimed in another passenger,
who had listened to the conversation
quietly up to this point, "was this: I
was on a Brooklyn car and it was rain-
ing even harder than it is now. The
car was jammed and many of the pas-
sengers were women, young and old,
many of them evidently being shop
girls, for it was tho hour of the close
of labor in tho stores. A delicate look-
ing girl, who seemed very weary, was
' ijj at some little oi;
in order to give her my seat. I could
not catch her eye, so 1 finally arose
and reached over to touch her. I had
no sooner left my seat than a spindle
looking dude, with a capo coat on,
slipped into it. W::s I mad? Was I?
Well, 1 should say I was, but what
could I do? I hate a fuss, so 1 quietly
slipped out on to the platform and let
my mad cool olf. I'd have given a
ten to have punched thai dude's head,
though, if I d have had him in a more
secluded place."
"That's it," said the elderly gentle-
man as ho stepped nimbly to the edge
of the platform preparatory to jump-
ing off. "Well, theVjre an
enough heaven know^sOrood
and with a quick jump I
in the darkness.—Brookl
The Blludman's Do;;.
The street lamp on tho corncr of
Broadway and Twenty-ninth street is
the nightly business stand of a blind
man and a dog. I watched them last
night, having become interested in
them through the stories that had
come to me of the dog's intelligence.
I heard the man ask the time of a gen-
tleman who stopped to drop something
in the box. He was told it was 10
o'clock. Tho gentleman walked on
and the man called out to tho dog:
"Come, Tom, it's 1CL and time for
us to go home." Tho little dog
therea himself together, held up the
ox to tho man, waited until ho took
tho money out and put it in his pocket,
buttoned liis old coat, and then stood
on tho curb and examined the cars
coming along. Finally a green one
camc in sight and tho dog drew the
man out into the mud and stood until
it camo along. Tho driver evidently
knew them, for when he came to
where they stood ho pulled up and
they got in. I was assured that it was
a regular tiling, and that tho dog has
a remarkable faculty for faces. It is
said that he even knows tho people
who give alms to the old follow, and
never fails to greet them with a dem-
onstration of pleasure.—New York
Star.
Coontiug tho Motes.
Counting tho dancing motes in a
bar of sunlight sounds liko ono of
those hopeless, never ending tasks
with which malignant fairies delight
to break the spirit of little heroines in
the German folk stories. Something
more than this, however, has been
achieved by modern science, which is
now able to count tho particles float-
ing in any given portion of the at-
mosphere and determine what propor-
tion of these are dangerous germs and
what are mere dust. Dr. Frankland's
curious experiments have shown us
how to count the micro-organisms,
and now John Aitken, of Falkirk, by
a totally different method, has been
enabled to take stock of the more
harmless but hardly less interest-
ing dust motes. Thirty thousand
such particles have been detected by
him in the thousandth of a cubic incn
of tho air of a room. In the outside
atmosphere in dry weather the same
measurement of air yielded 2,119,
whereas, after a heavy rainfall, the
number was only 521. That this
power of prying into atmospheric
secrets will eventually yield very im-
portant results must be obvious to all.
Among the most curious discoveries
already made is the direct relation be-
tween dust particles and fogs, mist
and rain.—London Daily News.
There has been consecrated in Phila-
delphia a church for the exclusive use
of the deaf. It is the first and only
place of worship in this country, if not
m the world, that is managed entirely
by deaf mutes.
i
%
Hp
-■v
wad Onto Getting Iwm.
A serious dancer that threatens
duck shooting is the manufacture of a
new glue in Canada, which relies for
its quality upon tne albumen con-
tained in the duck's eggs. Tbe birds
go north every spring and make their
nests in the Canadian wilds. For-
merly their nests were not molested,
and they were allowed to raise their
young. Now that tho eggs are val
uable the nests are robbed by tho hunt-
ers, and thus an immense quantity are
destroyed. This materially reduces
the supply of young ducks which
should corne south for fall shooting.
Many other causes have combined to
make duck shooting in tho Mississippi
valley scant sport, and unless tho
st atns pass tho proper legislation our
wild ducks, like the buti'alo, will bo
decimated. Every sportsman will tell
.you the difference between duck
shooting now and five years ago.
Tho complaint is general that ducks
iu this vicinity are scarce. Many pro-
fessional dud; hunters, who used to use
swivel guns on the little lakes over in
Illinois, find their occupation gone
and have laid away their parapher-
nalia. There has been too much wild
duck shooting. Tho prices asked by
the game dealers would alone prove
that. Thoy will tell you that where
they used to get more than they could
handle, they now cannot always fill
orders. The wholesale slaughter of the
past few years has diminished the
llight of birds. Our supplies in pass-
ing northward or southward are shot
by the sportsmen of Texas, Mississippi.
Louisiana,Arkansas, Illinois, Missouri.
Iowa, Wisconsin and Michigan, ana
none of these states seem willing to
pass prohibitory laws as long as the
citizens of other states are allowed to
bang at tho ducks while passing
through their territory. If one state
would act now others would follow,
for all sportsfcien recognize tho dan-
ger. Something will undoubtedly be
done at tho next session of the legisla-
ture, as the game dealers are aroused.
Why, if the present lax system con-
tinues two years longer precious few
wild ducks will be seen iu this vicin-
ity.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
If You Are Sick
With Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism Dyspep-
lia, Biliousness. Blood Humors, Kidney Disease,
Constipation, Female Troubles, Fever and Ague,
Sleepleamets, Partial Paralysis, or Nervous Pros-
tration, use Paine's Celery Compound and bo
cured. In each of these (he cause is mental or
jhyslcal overwork, anxiety, exposure or malaria,
t'.ic effect of which is to weaken the nervous sys-
tem, resulting in one of these diseases. Remove
the cause with that great Nerve Tonic, and the
result will disappear.
Paine's Celery Compound
Jas. L. Bowew, Springfield, Mass., writes:—
" Paine's Celery Compound cannot be excelled as
a Nerve Tonic. In my case a single bottle
wrought a great change. Sfy nervousness entirely
disappeared, and with it the resulting affection
of the stomach, heart and liver, and the whole
tone of the system was wonderfully invigorated.
11 (HI my friends, if sick as I have been, Paine's
Celery Compound
Will Cure You!
Sold by druggists. Jl; six for $5. Prepared only
by Wells, Kichardson & Co., Burlington, Vt
For the Aged, Nervous, Debilitated.
Warranted to color more goods than any other
dyes ever made, and to give more brilliant and
durable colors. Ask for the Diamond, and take
no other.
for
IO
Dress Dyed
Coat Colored
Garments Renewed j cents.
A Child can use them!
Unequalled for all Faaoy and Art Work.
At druggists and Merchants. Dye Book free.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Props,, Burlnjjton, Vt
HEALY.
■ DEAXiEE IN —
General Hardware
FARMING IMPLEMENTS, FENCE WIEE,
PAINTS, OILS, VARNISH, WINDOW GLASS, IKON PIPE
rumps, Steam Fittings, Rubber Setting, &c.,
West Bandy Street, BEENHAM, TEXAS.
9
5»»5
Tho
I'.OTrardlng; Employes.
propri
dryecK
ietor of ono of tbe largest
fCto.il drygoods stores iu tho city, in
whose employ are over 700 people, tells
tne that ho keeps a clerk especially
employed to figure up exactly what
every person who stands bohind a
counter sells a day. This amount is
placed nlongsido of the wages they
earn and the relation of each consid-
ered. If it is found that a certain
girl, for example, is not selling as
much as she is expected to do it is
quite nrobablo that sho will be re-
minded of that fact. If she can make
sufiicient excuse she will undoubtedly
retain her position, but, failiug in
this,, it is not unlikely that her serv-
ices will be no longer required.
Such a rule may seem to many a
very strict one. But if an employe
loses his or her position through
ncglcct of duty they arc re-
warded quite as liberally on tho other
hand when it is observed that they
are attending strictly to business. The
gentleman of whom I speak spends as
much as $25,000, if not over, in vari-
ous amounts among his employes at
Christmas time.
''Thcro is ono lady in my employ,"
said be, "to whom I give a present of
$1,000 every year. She Is a buyer,
and everything that she docs buy, so
judicious are her selections, never"fails
to havo already sale."
Accordingly I should say that if my
friend is more or less strict in certain
directions bo is quite lenient in others,
and I am sure that no people who
work in retail stores in this great city
are as well treated as thoso who work
for liim.—New York News.
1"
hi
Tho Invalid's View of Things..
The invalid, like the poet, and like
all acute sensitive beings, is remark
able not for seeing differently, but for
seeing more than do tho rest of the
world. Ho endows everything about
him with personality. Cold, hard sub-
stances arc his avowed enemies. The
soft, tho yielding, tho woolly, fill him
with gratitude and delight. The arm
chair invites and embraces him. The
tiny teapot and ewer are eager to do
him service and the gruel bowl dis-
plays a fairly maternal solicitude.
His cane is a Fidus Achates, his
>et pillow a Nancy or whatever
is childhood's nurse was named.
As to the bottle% arranged on bis table
only the doctors who prescribed them
can surpass their marked and individ-
ual interest hi their charge. A glow
of genuine affection fills m6 when I
glance at Tonic, so many times has he
proved worthy of the confidence re-
posed in liim when the "lamp of life
burned low." Liniment's unctuous
sides are nearly bursting with officious
good nature. Fine Old Bourbon has
an irresistible bacchanalian leer.
Stout Camphor needs only spectacles
ancf a bag to make an old fogy of him
Sly little Morphine, hiding behind the
rest, has a sinister, suggestive, Mephis-
tophelian look, which at once attracts
and repels.—Harper's Magazine.
To Whom It May Concern.
The cleverly devised ttfiebine? that
cut into checks the numerals repre-
senting the amount for which these
checks are drawn, do their work well,
and so prevent any tampering with
tho figures by the bold. Dad 'i
of checks. But the cut out figures
come in the way of the indorsement
This could be avoided if the amount
of a check, in all eases, appeared in
numerals placed to the right in-
stead of the left of tho useful
and desirable bit of paper. Then
the trio of important facts —the
signer's name, the date and the
amount of tho check—would all a]
pear at the 'same end of the cb
and the work of the bank clerk
accountant be simplified and facili-
tated. As it is, he must turn to the
left end of the check to note the
amount, and if the figures are cut out
by the check protector, the openings
interfere with aproper writing of the
indorsement The labor saving check
appears occasionally, but only often
enough to stimulate a desire for a gen-
eral reform.—Pittsburg **""^*1? «
TRADE
MARK.
PUEE, STRONG HEALTHFUL.
The most reliable powder in the market. It is
rapidly superseding other brands wherever intro-
duced. Dealers are authorized to guarantee it in
every respect, and to refund purchase money if un-
satisfactory. C.M.S«;jtrARD,S.W.Agt., Dallas.
J T. SWEARINGEN,
Attorney-at-Law,
Brcnham, Texas.
53" lias a complete abstract of Land Titleso*.
Washington county.
BEAUREGARD BRYAN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
GRABER BUILDING,
Brenham, Texas.
w. w. SKARCT.
w. i!. garrett.
Searcy & Garrett,
Attorneys at Law.
0feige over biddings & biddings bank
BRENHAM, TEXAS.
LUMBER!
On hand a full stosk of Rough and Dresso !
DOORS, SASH, ETC.
Calfliell laps, ill Sizes.
Cypress Cisterns.
Improvefl Buckeye Hovers.
Barbed Wire, Houston Brick,
Lime, Cement and
Fire Brick.
F, W. WOOD,
Near Oompress.
L. R. BRYA.K.
j. d. campell.
Bryan & Campbell,
Attorneys at Law,
Brenham, Washington Co. Texas.
Will practico in all Courts of Washington
and adjoining connties. Have a complote
abstract of titles of Washington county.
OFFICE ovkr OI&disos & OTDDING3 BANK
. W. H.VINSON.
Lawyer, Land Agent
And Notary Public.
I have valuable farms for sale, al n desira-
ble residences in the city.
3>&. J. M. ROSS,
SURGEON aid PHYSICIAN,
BRENHAM,
TEXAS.
Special attention given to
Chronic cases
G. F. FROUWEN.
neBidentDentist.
BRENHAM, TEXAS.
Office ov* Carlcton & Na*hV Dro»j Store
Teeth extracted without pain by use o
LAUGHING
Pennington House,
Corner Main afid Donglase streetfl,
BRENHAM, TEXAS.
ASA. PENNINGTON; Proprietor
Board by the day, week or nontb on re»
sonab'« erm* Ve»ls 26 cents.
LUMBER YARD.
We carry a complote stock of
RODGHanflDRESSEB LUMBER
Shingles, Windows, Doors,
BLINDS and MOULDINGS.
—AGENTS FOR—
WALTER A. WOOD MOWERS
Kentucky Cane Mills, Evaporators
Studebaker Wagons,
Glidden Fence Wire.
W. A. WOOD & CO.
Brenham, Tezas.
Health is Wealth!
BILALM.
treatme
Dr. E. C. West's Nerte and Brain
Treatment, a guaranteed specific for Hys-
teria, Dizziness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous
Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration
causod by the use of alcohol or tobacco,
Wakefulness, Mental Depression, Softening
of the Brain resulting in insanity and leading
to misery, decay and death, Prematuro Old
Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power in either sex,
Involuntary Losses and Spermatorrhoea
caused by over-taxation of the brain, self-
abuse or over-indulgence. Each box con-
tains one month's treatment $1 a box, Or
six boxes for $6, sent by mail prepaid on re-
ceipt of price.
WE GUARANTEE! SIX BOXES
to cure any case. With each order received
by us for six boxes, accompanied with $5-00,
we will send the'purchaser our written guar-
antee to refund the money if the treatment
does not effect a cure. Guarantees is-
sued only by CARLETON & NASH, Bren-
ham, Texas.
How Can Ton Most ProttaMy Ewdoy
the next tbree or four months? By earning
small wages? or by fitting yourself for a
higher usefulness and increased salary ?
l'he highest duty of plant, animal and
youth is to grow and mature well. The
J.d. HARRIS.
INSURANCE AGENT,
Over Hermann's Furniture Store.
Brenham, Texas.
AND GERMAN-ENGLISH ACADEMY
Austin, Texas, offers now school facilities
superior even to its own record of tbe past.
The proprietors. Profs Anderson and Neu
maim are educators, thoroughly trained for
their businAs, and have many years experi-
ence, and only first-class talent is secured to
assist them. Its excellent facilities for a
Business education, Penmanship, Short-hand
and Type-writing are made more valuable
E" ee access of ousiness students to a corn-
course of English training, German
ch and Latin. The College and Aca-
demy work together for the best interests of
each student. Rates of tuition for dav and
night classes are low enough for any" who
wants and values a thorough, praciical edu-
cxtion. Special discount for scholarship till
January 1, 1889. Write for circulars and
specimens of penmanship.
ANDERSON & NEUMANN*
'dm
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Garrett, O. H. P. Brenham Daily Banner. (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, January 25, 1889, newspaper, January 25, 1889; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth486808/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.