The Daily Hesperian (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 240, Ed. 1 Friday, September 16, 1892 Page: 1 of 4
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GAINES V^E, TEXAS. FRIDAY HORNING, SEPTEMBER 16,18927
NO 240
^ HOME OHEAI^
In a healthy, convenient and well located part of the city?
r .
If you do, look at the
[Vlontgomery
- - Addition
C ' : r
To Gainesville.
OLD REPS. RESOLD
/ \ Jw\f
They Have Principles anft Pro*
«m to Assert Them.
kCuney Carries the Day—It
Means lOtoOOO Votes
foB^Clark.
Ittee on platform snd
the state republi-
»tion at Fort Worth re-
following, which
was
It lies on the highest ground in the city. The street railway runs through a part of it.
|rhe North School Building
c..
It located near the center of it. Weaver street runs on the east side of it. It ex-
tends from Rockweli itreet on the south to the driving park on the north, and is the
highest, dryest, prettiest ground in the city, and convenient to the roundhouse.
Many nice residences have already been built and more are building. Look at it
if you want a home cheap. Stop paying rent and buy a home. Easy terms,
E. P. BOMAR, Hesperian Building.
COAL
Genuine McAlester $G Per Ton
Briar Creek $5.50 Per Ton
(Delivered)
All lumps—No dirt, slate or slack. Weight gnaranteed.
"SPARE
Gainesville
Light and Fuel Go
Office— California and Denton Streets.
the advertisement
and 8POIL the
business."
This is jthe course adopted
during warm weather by
thousands who would not en-
joy being informed that they
were anything but clear-
headed managers.
It is, however, a fact that
those nervy men who use
advertising space in abund-
ance during the summer
months secure business
which would not otherwise
be theirs.
TO SLEEP
LOTS FOB SALE
EAST GAINESVILLE
^>eeial Inducement
Will be offered those who
will build.
For terms and prices see
Capt. Schoppmeyer.
MAX ROT
—DKALKR IN—
Gold and Silver
Watches,
Jewelry,
Diamonds,
Spectacle®
Eye Glasses
<Hi» senile
away all June ,
July, August and Septem-
ber seems suicidal nonsense
It may be the old-fashion-
ed method, but business
certainly should not be done
ncrw on any such antiquated
basis. Live men are learn-
ing pretty fast that those
who advertise obtain the
trade, and those who desire
to secure trade all the year
round must advertise in the
summer as well as during
the balance of the year.
rat Sale.
A good farm twelve miles sooth
east of the city, 120 aeres under
fence, sixty aetee In cultivation;
sixty-seven aerce timber outside.
Two booses, one of them a good
four-roomed frame. Good orohard
and outbuildings, Price, $1^00—
$400 cask, balance on easy in-
stallments to suit purchaser. Gall
on tae editor of the Hbsprrian
'or particular *. ^
For Rent.
The upper floor of my building
over Ross & Boa's and Williams
& Brown's.* Possession given
August L Also my store room
now occupied by Pooket and
Hickson; would like to rent for a
term of years from August 1,1892.
Apply to B. P. Bomar.
If your spirits need elevating
smoke High Spirits cigars. The
best 5 cent smoke. Try one at
Jt B. Cobb's.
Thevo
resolut
can oo
poite<7 the
adopted:
To the Hod. B. B. Hawley,
chairman of the republican state
convention of Texas—Your com-
mittee on resolutions would re-
spectfully report the following;
* We, the republicana of the state
eflfcxas in convention assembled,
pointing with just pride to the
reoord of our party, declare our
allegiance to its principles, as ex-
pressed in the national platform
adopted at Minneapolis. We
heartily approve of the action of
the national convention in the
nomination of President Harrison,
whose pare, able and patriotic
administration of affairs had de-
fled arraignment even at the hands
of the democracy, and we pledge
him and his oolleagne on the
national tioket, Whltelaw Held,
the solid vote of the party in
Texas. We arraign the present
administration of Texas because:
1. It has arrayed labor against
oapital, to the great injury of both,
and has intensified olaas prejudice.
3. It haa, in effeot, confiscated
property and praetloeily denied
to the owners there* the right to
be heard In the oonrta.
3. It has by intolerance, pro.
sorlptlon and Intemperate ex.
preesion driven maoh capital out
of Texas and prevented the oom<
ing of much more, and thereby
raised the rate of intereat and
increased the hardens of all ex
cept the money-lenders.
4. It has unsettled land titles
and depreciated taxable values.
5. It has robbed the laboring
men of Texas, because by driving
out oapital our industrial enter
priaes have been paralyzed and
the value of labor diminished.
6. It has attacked the decisions
of courts and tried to bring into
contempt our very citadel of lib-
erty, our judiciary.
It haa disconraged immigra-
tion, thereby retarding agricoltur
al development, thus robbing the
farmer by decreasing valnes and
the state by restraining prodno-
tion.
8. It has prevented the organi
Ka'ion and upbuilding of new in-
dustries that would have em-
ployed large capital, given profit-
able employment to many labor
ers and increased the values of
farm products.
9. It has favored nepotism and
prostituted a aacred trust—the
appointive power—for persona
ends.
10. It has relfishly and corrupt-
ly used the power entrusted to it
by the people as a means to per-
petuate its existence in office.
11. Its ignorance of the consti-
tution, as evidenced by the ap-
proval and attempted enforcement
of the alien land law, the uraury
law, the railway eommiasion law
and other laws, has been a jnst
cause of complaint and imposed
vexations burdens alike on the
people and the courts.
12. It, for aelflah purposes, de-
prived the publio treaaury of
large moneys that should have
been placed there to the credit of
the state by refusing to sccept
the bounty on sugar due Texas
from the federal government.
13. For a aelfish, if not oorrupt,
purpose it hss invaded and be-
gun to deatroy the common beri
tage of the children of Texas, the
sacred school fond, bequeathed
in trust to them by their fore
fStbets.
14. By unwise legislation, by
threa'a against capital and reck
less disregard of sacred rights it
has paralysed capital, prostrated
industries and depredated farm
values, and by false promises 1m
possible of fulfillment hss canned
Strife and dissatisfaction among
the maaaee.
15. Its future policy ss out-
lined in the Houston platform
gives no promise or hope of nay
relief from the evils complained
of, but rather confirms the belief
that they wilt be Increased and
intensified if it receives indone-
legislature comply with the con-
stitutional requirement and eHtab-
ish a branch for the oolored peo-
ple of the state university.
The republican party demands:
I. Perfect equality before the
aw; equal rights to all and special
privileges to none.
We are oppoaed to all sump-
tuary laws, and believe la the
largest individsal liberty consist-
ent with good government.
3. We favor the» regulation of
railway corporations under such
restrictions ss will insure equal
ustice to the railways as well as
the people.
4. We condemn all forms of
communism and state socialism,
and view with alarm the existing
war in this state upon property.
6. Our sympathies are most
oordlally extended to all laboring
people in their efforts to better
the condition of themselves and
thoee dependent on them.
6. We oondemn all revolution-
ary methods and violence on the
part of oar citizens, believing that
an appeal to the law beat protects
every citizen in the enjoyment of
his rights.
7. We oondemn all legislation
calculated to drive oapital out of
the state or turn immigration from
us.
8. We favor the enactment of
suoh lsws as will secure to as the
introduction into this state of
money at a low rata of intereat
0. We demand that the coming
legislature ahall provide for the
oollsotlon from the federal gov*
ernmsnt of the boantv on sagsr
prodnoed on the state farms.
10. We demand that the state
legislature enaet such lawg as will
protect the ballot of every citisen
In aeoordaaoe with the demands
sxprssssd in the elect!?* plank ef
the national rspabltsaa platform.
II, Ws demand the passage of
saeh laws as will farther the
building and kdfeplng la repair of
a system of interooonty publio
roads and to tkie end we demand
the employment of penitentiary
oonviots, thus procuring for thsm
profitable employment without
bringing them in competition
with free labor.
After the platform was read
and passed. Judge Makeneaon of
Georgetown offered a resolution
recommending the republicans to
vote for Hon. George Olark for
governor.
After several speeches were
made the debate was closed by
Collector Ouney, and the resolu-
tion was carried by a vote of 579*
to 179}. All the delegatea, or
nearly all of them, agreed to stand
by the action of the convention.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report.
)
Baking
ABSOLUTELY PURE
Cotton Ginning Plant for Sale
at a Great Bargain.
Situated in Spanish Fort Bend
about 12 milea northwest of No*
cons, Tex. Thirty-five horse
power engine and boiler; direct-
acting steam preas; 2 70 saw gins;
corn mill; Sailor seed cotton ele-
vator, etc^ etc. All comparative-
ly new; put up laat fall. Will
sell at a great reduction. Apply
to J. M.
Cleaves &
Tex.
Lindsay, assignee of
Fletcher, Gainesville,
For Bale.
A four-roomed house on Morris
street. New and in good repair.
Terms easy. Apply at this office.
You can get a beautiful gold
watch and mantel "clock free by
buying Jersey coffee. Ask your
grocer for particulars.
MM!
xm n-ouae can cqpe.
jmi&cartvaahfer c%s -
Jo pafedaoji alie tejwa
Clairette Sow
N.h TAIRBANK&C0. —S—St
HAMBURG STEAMSHIPS DSTAINED
Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 14—
The Spreckle line steamship,
Lochelive, from Hamburg, having
on board rags, glassware, eic.,
was detained st Federal quaran
tine, Delaware breakwater. The
Oataria of the same line, with su-
gar, was also detained under simi-
lar circumstances.
-TH3
Gainesville - National - Bank
Capital and Surplus, $328,000. ,
officers
C. C. Hemming, Pres. J. R. Stevens, Vice-Pres.
G. R. Edwards, Cashier.
directors:
Geo. Y. Bird, G. Schiff, J. L. Simpson, C. N. Stevens, H. &
Sldridge, J. R. Stevens, Joel Gillenwaters, C. 0 Hemming,
G. R. Edwards.
Notwithstanding the large capital of this bank is in itself a snbsten*
tial asruranoe of protection, yet as a measure of
extra precaution we carry our deposits
Fully Insured Against Burglary
And take no risks whatever not justified by careful andeon*
senrative banking.
FRIGHT IN CINCINNATI.
Cincinnati, O., Sept. 14.—News
of genuine cholera in New York
aet the health officer in Cincinnati
to devising quarantine for Oiacin
nati. He proposed to send oat
sanitary inspectors to meet inoom-
Ag trslns snd prevent the srrival
of immigrants or any infected ma-
terial.
The Sunday Hesperian will
be delivered to parties in the eitj
at one dollar and a half a year to
euvered
at 25 seats a
advance. Or it will be d«
If you waat to reac* the pso)*
advertise la Us
ment in November* apd we there-
fere arge upon the people of Tex
as the impeeative necessity
placing the Seal ef thtir
condemnation upon the
ie
IMMIGRANTS FROM HAMBURG
Chicago, 111., Sept 14—Immi-
grants from two HamRug ships
reached Chicago today. A r!gi<
investigation failed to disolos
evidences of cholers infection
and the passengers were allowed
to proofed to their des(1 nations.
The passengers were from half a
dozen steamers, among them the
Slavonia and Kaiser Wilhstm
from Hamburg, and ths Dabble-
dam from Potsdam.
CRITICISING.OUR PANIC.
London, Sept. lir—The
ard says: The Fire island affair
was s piece ef savagery more
worthy of oentral Asia than
America."
The News says there wee no
intentional barbarity in the treat-
ment of the paaeeagere on the
Steamer Nor mania, only muddle-
headed incapacity and it
The Globe, commenting on the
scare in the United Statee, says:
"Seldom if evar hss panto,
elwsys is, tsksn a more cniel form
than the Ametiear n
Smoke High Spirits the be#
5 cent cigar. Fragrant sad pler.a*
lor- M. E. Gooding keepe them
PREHISTORIC
AMERICA
If you would like to read
something on this subject
that will interest yoo, you
should not miss, our great
story,
I Golden FImmlT
'IT WAS A WOMAN, BCAUTIFTTL At TU
DAWS Of A SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
MORNING.'
i A \! T A I — M 1 fW
1 Q > ' i M L. i j i J I
the lew which
lest " colored
epetf the oeasty eehoeti
of examieciess elese (ef
We demand tha*Tm
The opening chap-
ters of "The Golden
lyill be
this paper In* i
days, u a « s / n i: **. 5
The
Golden
Fleece
' Julian Hawthorne's
Masterpiece
Tale of . . •;
Low, Romtoce, Tragedy.
.COPYRIGHTED. ' '
[Fkm» "tl» Golden FWecel
" TOU BPOK'KN TO MX, KNOB?"
His hoi Spiuiish blood reseated
he considered a slighting remark
they decided to duel to the death.
its-. JI • ' ? '
It will soon begin in
4hls paper-,'
WftTCH
■ i. ti is i ■ I ■ '..isle ratiiii Iml ,m
Bring jour job
EpsmiAl office.
work to the
if you Wtfntiol
penim
**.■1
*4
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The Daily Hesperian (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 240, Ed. 1 Friday, September 16, 1892, newspaper, September 16, 1892; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth505366/m1/1/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.