The Daily Hesperian (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 137, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 8, 1895 Page: 2 of 4
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ROSENPELD, SCHIFF & COMPANY,
Notwithstanding the advance in prices of leather we will sell for ONE WEEK only $5000 worth of Men's, Ladies', Misses' and
Children's Shoes at Sacrifice Prices to reduce our large stock.
One Hue
]*
HEZHZZJ] TP
One Hundred pair Ladies' Oxford Ties Patent Tips Worth 75 cents a pair THIS WEEK 37 \ c.
One Hundred pair Ladies' Oxford Ties Patent Tips Worth fl.OO a pair THIS WEEK 65c.
One Hundred pair Ladies' Oxford Ties Patent Tips Worth $1.50 a pair THIS WEEK 95c.
One Hundred pair Ladies' Oxford Ties Patent Tips Worth $2.00 a pair THIS WEEK $1.45.
Two Hundred pair Ladies' Button Shoes Patent Tips or Plain Worth $1.50 a pair THIS WEEK 95c.
Two Hundred pair Ladies' Button Shoes latent Tips or Plain Worth $2.00 a pair THIS WEEK $1.48.
Two Hundred pair Ladies' Button Shoes Patent Tips or Plain Worth $3.00 a pair THIS WEEK $2.00.
One Hundred pair Men's Shoes Worth $2.00 a pair THIS WEEK $1.40.
Seventy-Two pair Men's Russet Shoes Worth $4.00 a pair THIS WEEK $2.40.
□
*
ROSENFELD, SCHIFF 8i COMPANY
J>e JiesperuttL.
EHT1BLIHHKD IN 1869.
HOBKRTS & YATES, Pkopr'8.
telephone no. 65.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
lii»arl*bly In Advance.
rwelT* Month* II 00
til M< «tl>»
Three Month* 40
daily — delivered
<>»«. Month &0
On* Tear • 00
all paper* discontinued at
ifle expiration ok the
time paid for.
uook at printed label on your paper. The
date thereon *hows when the aubacriptlon
expiree. Forward your money In ample time
for renewal If you itatlre unbroken fllea. a*
we oaa not alwav* furnish back number*.
to all managers.
Ne I* authorised to aak tor farora on
aoaoant of the HurniiX except oyer the
•t^aature of the pr >prletor« of the paper.
Addraaa all community on*, of whatever
eature, to the HearBai.il>, Qalneavllle.Texaa.
rates given on application.
Satarod at the Poetofflce at Qalneaville, Tex
a*, aa teoond clasa mall matter.
THE HESPERIAN IS Iff ITS TWEN-
TY-SIXTH YEAR.
To Your Interest.
Have you lieen to Win. Killgoie's to inspect the magnificent line
of Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots, Shoes, etc.! If not you are not so
fortunate as some of your neighbors who have supplied themselves at
prices that would astonish you!
Bear In Mind
That we are headquarters on Groceries and can sell you at prices
that would make the average merchant tremble.
Don't Fail
To inspect our stock of Furniture, which is complete in every
particular. Bed Room Suits, Folding Beds, Side Boards, Refriger-
ators, Sewing Machines, etc., in fact we can fit you up with anything
from a Baby Carriage to a Coftin when in need of anything in the above
lines, remember we defy competition.
Yourt to pl«ase,
Wm. Killgore
PRODUCTION OF THE
MKT A LS.
The best attempt at argument
for the single gold standard is
that put up by the New York Sun
in the comparison between the
production of the two metals.
The Sun quotes from the direc-
tor of the mint and gives the pro-
duction of each metal from 1870
up to 1892. This table shows
that in 1870 the production of
gold was $106,850,000, and silver
was $51,575,000. After 22 years
of fluctuations the production of
gold reached in 1892 $138,861,000,
and silver went to ♦196.459.000.
The production of silver had in-
creased 300 per cent while gold
had only increased 33 per cent.
But even after all this enormous
increase the production of silver
only surpassed that of a little over
$57,000,000.
Various speculations could be
indulged in with these figures as a
basis. Suppose the gold mines
should l>e exhausted! Suppose
again that new gold mines should
ik* discovered that would run the
production of gold three times as
great as that of silver!
What would be the result should
all the world suddenly l>egin coin-
ing lx>th metals at a ratio of 16
to I!
If silver after increasing 300 per
cent in production and most of the
civilized world shutting it out
from the mints only fell 50 per
cent in value, what would its
„. PILE
_ _ __ people who rlalt the Invalids'
; » Hotel and Burylcal Institute, at IHif-
* faio. S. Y , are many who are aunt
there, by thoae who have already, from
peraonal experience, learned of the great
Triumph in Conservative Surgery
aohlored by the lurnoas of that famed ln*tf-
tuUon. Little baroic. or cutting surgery la
found MotmrT ■ For lnitinot.
TUMORS O'artan. Fibroid (Uterine) and
• waiwnw many others, are removed by
Baatrolysla aad other eonaervaUTe mean* and
tkanfer the peril* of outtln* operation*
TUMORS however large. Fistula
lUIHUnO, aad other dlaeaaea of the
lower bowel, ar* permanenUy oured without
pa I a or resort to the knife.
RUPTURE,
without pate. Truaeaa ean be thrown awayt
STONr '■ tb# Bladder, no matter how
OI wilt la—,, la eru*h«i. pulverised. waab-
ed oat aad aa£*jr removed without cutUn*.
STRICTURES 2
tiajr la hundred* of eaaaa.
value have been had they kept on
coining it all over the world!
It is by no means a one sided
question.
The Chicago democratic conven-
tion which met last Saturday de-
clared emphatically in favor of the
free coinage of silver at the ratio
of 16 to 1. This was not a hood-
lum convention either. Judge
McConnel, president of the rich
Iriquois club, presided over the
convention.
Tou Don't Have to Swear Off
says the St. Louis Journal of
Agriculture in an editorial about
No-To-Bac, the famous tobacco
habit cure. "We know of many
cases cured by No-To-Bac, one, a
prominent St. Louis architect,
smoked and chewed for twenty
years; two boxes cured him so
that even the smell of tobacco
makes him sick." No-To-Bac
sold and guaranteed by H. W
Stark. No cure no pay. Book
free. Sterling Remedy Co., New
York or Chicago.
Figured lawns worth 5c for 3c
at J. W. Mitchell's.
uarefe
fori*
and all
•tampe)
SMILES.
Mrs. Hicks—"How do you like
this little theatre toque! I made
it all myself.''
Hicks—"It isn't very big, is
it!"
Mrs. Hicks—"No-o, I made it
out of an old jet bracetet."—New
York World.
"Her parents are putting every
obstacle in my way."
"Your surprise me."
"They have even gone so far as
to urge her to marry me."—Town
Topics.
Pat—"Ye sez Oi'm not ez good
an Americin ez ye are. Begorra,
Oi'm a dom sight better wnn."
Native A. P. A "How is that,
you bogtrotting Fenian!"
Pat—' Beca.se ye wuz born an
Americin an' cudn't help yerself,
whoile Oi'm one uv me own free
will."—Brooklyn Life.
Trees, dogs and men cannot be
successfully appraised by their
liark.—Milwaukee Journal.
"Well, Maceo," said General
Joachim Maria, "I'm afraid our
revolution won't wash."
"I'm afraid not," said Maceo,
with a sigh; "but we're making
the other fellows put up a good
Income Tax Case.
Washington, May 6 When the
income tax argument was reopen-
ed today the bench of the supreme
court was tilled for the first time
for many months. Justice Jack-
son was on hand as he promised
to be and paid great attention to
the arguments which were made
by Mr. Guthrie, who was repre-
senting the side anxious for a
hearing. Only once did the at-
tention of the justice flag and that
was when he was hungry and
stepped down from the bench to
eat his lunch. It is the custom of
the justices of this tribunal when
they have impressed the lawyers
and visitors with black gowns to
retire behind the curtains which
hang at their backs one at a time
and there fill up on food brought
to them by servants just as ordl
nary mortals. Guthrie was talk-
ing on the importance of the ob-
servance of the organic law of this
country by the people and the ju-
diciary when Justice Jackson re
tired and partook of pie.
From the range of the argu-
ment indulged in by Mr. Guthrie
it is apparent that the whole case
s to be gone into and that when it
is ended the court will be as well
prepared to decide the merits of it
as it will be to decide whether or
not the case shall be opened for
reargument, that being the osten-
sible object of the present discus-
sion.
Both sides have been given five
hours each for argument and from
this fact it would look as if the
court wanted to hear arguments
on the merits of the case and not
on the question as to whether the
case should be reopened for argu-
ment on the merits hereafter.
There is a great deal of guess
work being done as to the position
of Justice Jackson. Some of the
statesmen of the country, such as
Morgan of Alabama, have ex-
pressed themselves on the possi-
ble stand of Jackson. Morgan
thinks that honesty of the mind
of Jackson will lead him to decide
in favor of the constitutionality of
the law, while there are others
who think that this same honesty
of mind will lead him the other
way. It seems that all who have
professed an acquaintance with
the mind of Jackson unite in say-
ing that it is an honest one, but
none of them seem disposed to
give a beseeching public definition
of what they mean by an honest
mind.
Jackson looks as thin as a wild
hog in a large colored settlement.
He does not have to give a certifi-
cate ot bad health as long as he
does not veil his face.
At the treasury department and
at the department of justice there
is an effort made to conceal the
fact that the officials are very un
easy in regard to the outcome of
tne matter. At the departments
there is that pride, and a natural
ene, which would receive a great
shock if an income tax were de-
clared unconstitutional before
hand. At the treasury depart-
ment the revenue which it will
yield is badly wanted.
no "chestnuts
In onr stock to attract "jays.
Not very elegant language, but
full of meaning—like the most of
slang words. Give Ed Coopman
a call.
Captain Sweeney, United States,
America, San Diego, Cal., says
"Sliiloh's Catarrh Remedy is the
first medicine I have ever found
that would do me any good."
Price 50c. Sold by Edwards, the
live druggist. 6
Weak Nerves
deal of Castile
polis Journal.
soap."—Minnea-
Indicate aa Barely u any physical
symptom shows anything, that the or-
gans and tissues of the body are not
satisfied with their nourishment.
They draw their sustenance from
the blood, and if the blood is thin, im-
pure or insufficient, they are in a state
of revolt. Their complaints are made
to the brain, the king of the body,
through the nervous system, and the
result of the general dissatisfaction is
what we call Nervousness.
This Is a concise, reasonable expla-
nation of the whole matter.
The cure for Nervousness, then, is
simple. Purify and enrich your blood
by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, and the
nerves, tissues and organs will have
the healthful nourishment they crave.
Nervousness and Weakness will then
give way to strength and health.
That this is not theory but fact is
proven by the voluntary statements of
thousands cured by Hood's Sarsapa-
rilla. Read the next column.
" With plaaMTC I will state that Hood'a
Sarsaparilla has helped ma wonderfully.
For several months I could not lie down to
sleep on account ot heart trouble and also
Prostration of the Nervee.
For three years I had bean doctoring, but
could not gat cored. I received relief for a
while, but not permanent. Boon aftar be-
ginning to take Hood's Sarsaparilla there
wa* a change for the better. In a short
time I wa* feeling splendidly. I now rest
well and am able to do work of whatever
kind. If I had not tried Hood's Sarsapa-
rilla I do not know what would have be-
come of me. I keep it In my houae all the
time, and other members ot the ♦yny
take it, and all say there la
Nothing Like Moed'a
Sarsaparilla. I have highly
it and one of my neighbors haa
taking it. I recommend Hood's
rilla at every opportunity." Has. S.
brad doc*, 404 Erie Av., WQUaavpart,
Pennsylvania. Be sun to get
HOOD'S
Sarsaparilla
S. ZACHARIAS
THIS WEEK==
Selection o! Bargains
ONE LOT-
LADIES' SILK WAISTS.
Latest styles, assorted colors.
Elegant fitters and perfectly
made at $3.50. Lower than cost
of material.
50 DOZEN LADIES' BLACK
SILK MITTS—
Good quality,at 15c per pair.
A great bargain.
ONE LOT—
Misses Fast Black Derby Rib-
bed Regular made hose $1.50 per
dozen. Are good value at 25c
per pair.
ONE LOT—
Best Kaike Wash Silk at 35c
per yard.
ONE LOT—
Figured China Silk at 2c.
ONE LOT, (40 dozen only) —
Ladies' Colored Bordered Hand-
kerchiefs at 37 'ac per dozen.
Another Shipment of Those Stylish and Popular Ladies' Waists.
They are going very fast. Come early before sizes and best styles are gone.
The only complete line of
Carpets and Mattings
Is to be seen at onr store.
S. ZACHARIAS
The Greatest Railroad on Earth-
Santa Fe Route.
Teachers and others going to
the National Educational Associa-
tion meeting at Denver in July,
should remember that the Sant;i
Fe offers as low rates es any bod \
else, with better service.
Special inducements to small
laage parties.
Tickets on sale July 3, 4, 5 and
6, limited to return July 12, 13,
14 and 15, except that teachers
and others wishing to remain long-
er in Colorado, can obtain ex-
a^nsion of limit by depositing
tickets with the joint agent at
either Denver, Colorado Springs,
Manitau or Pueblo, prior to July
16. Tickets thus deposited will
be available for return passage
any time prior to and including
September 1st, 1895.
Privilege of attending Summer
school, Colorado Springs, on re
turn trip.
Low-rate excursions into the
mountains after meeting is over.
For descriptive pamphlets, ad-
dress
W. S. Keenan, G. P. A.,
Galveston, Texas.
S. A. Kendiu, Agent,
Gainesville, Texas.
Most picturesque line to Colo-
rado.
Tor Bale.
A small farm in the suburbs of
Whites bo ro. Thirty acres, five
roomed house, good outbuildings
two acres of fine orchard, fences
in good repair. Will sell at a
bargain. Apply to the editor of
the hxbpxkiajt.
Subscribe for tta«|HmmtMUM
po GC
>
J. H. Collier
Takes up carpets and does general
house cleaning work, etc. Fixes
gardens, flowers and shrubs. Leave
orders at H. S. Sheline's grocery
store.
Attend J. E. M. Patterson's
special sale this week. Bee ad in
tbiapapWt
Tor Bale or Exchange.
A seven roomed one and a half
story house on prominent street.
Lot 40x182 % feel; honse in good
shape, title good. Will exchange
for farm, or for other city proper-
ty or sell on easy terms. Apply
at the Hespebian.
AdvwtiMin
n
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The Daily Hesperian (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 137, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 8, 1895, newspaper, May 8, 1895; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth504419/m1/2/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.