Temple Weekly Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, September 5, 1890 Page: 3 of 8
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TELEGRAPHIC.
“•■ft of Interact from all Oyer the
Country.
that he bad been a party to bw imlling
the city of Lruievilie out of $18,000
by false weight in granite, bcott
which had been refused. There had
been a strike in coplcuiplution, but
tho company nippod this in the bud
A dispatch from Huntington,W.Va.
\ <*>£: The famous Ilatflcld-McCoy
fejpl is at an end. Two men were
Wen on the streets here conversing to'
^gather fn a friendly manner. One
Was a brother-in-law of old man Mc-
Coy and the other a son-in-law of Ause
Hatfield. They spoke freely of the
failfons feud, an<| laid that by com-,
mon consent it would 4jb allowed to
cease. All coacert.erf*lgl!ve gone to
work, and propose to live quietly. A
^ number of tho members ot both foc-
11 tions are still under indictment for
l murder and lesser crimes, but will
prob :bly not now be bothered bv the
authorities.
The feud has -been in progress near-
ly twenty yeans and in that time near-
ly a score of the Hatfields and Mc-
Coys have been murdered. Only one
member ot either side has been legally
punished. Thnt was Capt Hatfield,
who was hanged at Pikcvillc. Ky.,
some months ago for the brutal mur-
[> derot Alma McCoy, a young girl,
I whom ho shot down as she was trying
I t« escape from her father’s house
Newman, contractor here, brought by cutting down the hours of work
suit in the common pleas court for and pay Tho men were surprised,
$100,000 agaipst the sumo parties for but not entirely displeased. They are
the same publication. formulating a petition for presenta-
The Marlin quarantine matter re- lion nskiug to have an advance in
niaius about the samo with the ex-
ception that now tho marshal has the
sheriff under arrest, and vice versa,
upon complaint being made charging
Sheriff Ward and deputies with intcr-
foriug with the enforcement of quar-
antine ordinance. Mayor Shelton
this morning issued a writ for their
arrest and !n a little while tho -berifl
and deputies were under arrest by
Marshal Coleman. The matter is in
s greater muddle now than ever.
Judge Wilson has been telegraphed
for to hear the habeas corp"8 c.ise of
* »*}’ Marshal Coleman. If the courts
decide in favor ot the city^ council, if
it is deemed necessary at that time,
the quarantine will certainly be en-
forced and very rigidly. If tbe court
wages. The Company’s ofllcers an-
nounce that the low rates now in
vogue for transporting freights de
rnand that there shall be a retrench-
ment of operating expenses, and that
the reduction of honrs was deemed u
better method of reducing expenses
than by dismissing men from employ-
ment.
A dispatch from Dallas says: One
of the Spillman Him milk wagon dri-
vers arrived In the city this morniug
and reported that late last evening as
lie was returning borne from the city
lie discovered an obstruction in the
road wheu six uiles out. He pro-
ceeded to remove it, when a disguised
man approached from his hiding plcci
they both climcil up in It and wts
driven of! at, a rapid gait.
Of course it is not known that tl 0
girl traced by McKee was the miss-
ing daughter, but this was the only
thing like a trace which could 1 e
found. About 6:80 o’clock, it is said,
the father got in his wagon and start-
ed home. /,
Constable Good came in on the
Atlas road, reaching tbe city abont 6
o’clock, but met no such parties as he
came in.
Big Min3r.il. about eight miles north
ot this thriving little city, is a won-
der. Tho well was bored by Mr.
Weldon while in the employ* ot the
Sherman coal company prospocting
f >r coal. It is the largest in the state
It is about ‘2700 feet deep and when
its full power is on, throws Jwaler
through u 5-inch pipe twenty feet
high and requires about 1900 pres-
sure to stop it.
ttich the liatticldc bad fired.
I .
cil they will submi* chceriullv.
A dispatch from San Francisco says
the barkeutine Catharine Suddo r has
arrived at Port Townsend trom Sibe-
ria. Her commander, Capt. John
Thomas of that city, gives a descrip-
'ion of the Russian convict system as
witnessed by him. He describes the
brutuljsccne Which he witnessed on
Loghalien island, a famous exile pris-
on. A large party of exiles of all
ages, heavily mauaclcd, wpre being
taken to the island. A few old men
whose strength gave rut fell from ex-
haustion. Tho brutal- driver, acting
causing it U explode, killing the j tbe unfortllnalo men and’‘removed
youngest, qf/out two years old, and | trcir cbain8 No mercv or d5serimi.
badly burning and wounding the | uatiou wng 8hown_ wim gftw the5r
near by. and with a drawn revolver
shoutd decide against the < itv conn- j dcrnanded the money from the ensh-
News reached Ccutrcvillc vestc:
day of a shocking accident that oc-
curred near Russel!, aliout twelve
miles cast of Centrcvilie. While Mr.
Snell and wife were absent- lrom
home three of their little children
/ T
were playing with s(//te powder just
outside the house,r ouriug it from a
bottle into a hory A larger brother
of the little oncf walked up, smoking,
jluu uiuuti' uriver, i
and a spark Popped Into the horn, J muler orderg ,rom hig 8uperior>
others. The two next youngest are
reported to be latally injured. There
were several pounds of powder ex-
ploded, and the flames from the ex-
plosion burned tbe leaves on a tree
overhead rifteeu feet from the ground.
City Marshal Farmer, who has just
returned from Chicago to Fort
"Worth, saw cx-Mayor Pendleton re-
■J%eutly. lie says Pendleton is iu good
health and spirits, and gives no sign
of mental trouble, lie is at work
pushing several patents he is inter-
ested in.
husbands killed before their eyes,
mothers saw their daughters out-
raged aud insulted, The exiles were
driven like cattle, heavy whips being
used to urge them on. Prison cells
were filthy and the treatment barba-
rous.
A dispatch from Austin says; D. O,
Stavely, who was shot some weeks
ago by John Teague, died tins even-
ing aud Teague, who was out ou
bond, was arrested. Stavciv was 67
box in the wagon, at tho same time
tiring a shot. At tiiis the team took
fright and rail away, demolishing the
wagon, and scattering the milk-cans,
money, etc. over one halt-mile of the
road. The enraged robber then pur-
sued the terrified driver, tiring the
remainder ot the loads ol his six-shoot-
er at close range, though without
effect. He made good his- escape.
A dispatch from Dallas gives the
following: One of the most horrible
murders-or assassinations ever re-
corded in the history ot Dallas coun-
ty was enacted four miles cast of Fer-
ris last night. In that neighborhood
resided David Dougherty, a wealthy
farmer sixty years of age, who enjoy-
ed the confidence ot his neighbors
and was most popular. Nearly all
his life had been passed in Texas and
he« as one of the piourers of the
state.
At tbe hour of 8 last evening, at
his country home, surrounded by his
wife and children, with not a known
enemy in the world, he threw him
self on a lounge in the family silting
Tbe jury in the case ot Mrs. Sarah
Randolph, alias Mrs.McGiuty, charg-
ed with soliciting tho murder' of W.
S. Foltz, president of the First Nation-
al bank of Ncwca tie, returned a verd
ict of guilty this afternoon, She was
remanded for sentence. Within five
minutes of the time she received the
sentence her only son, Williarfi, a
married men aged lortv, while wav-
ing to som lriends a snapping-turth
he had just coiight, fell under a pass-
ing train. He will die belora moru-
ing.
In the case of the Alabama G. S.
railroad vs. Thomas, tried oil appeal
iu the Alabama supreme court, the
court held that where a railroad com
pauv receives live stock l'or shipment
over its own line and agrees to act as
the agent ot the shipper in forward-
ing over a connecting line, aud
changes the stock to ollnr cars at the
connecting point, it is bound to pro-
vide suitable bedding for Uic stock,
partitions to keep the cattle apart,
and exercise proper care in not uu
duly crowding the animals, aud if, by
reason of negligence in these matters,
the stock is injured during transit
over the connecting line, the ship-
piug company is liable lor damages
resulting therefrom, though, by the
bill of lading, it limits its liability to
“gross or wanton negligence.”
A special from Fort Worth says:
Shortly after 5 o’clock this afternoon
near the corner of Second and Taylcr
streets, Fort Worth added another
tragedy to tbe year’s list and tbe vict-
im is Farris Mosely, of tho grocery
firm of Mosely Bros. Ho was killed
by Ed Kennedy, a sporting man.
There is only one story ns to the kill-
ing, nlthough a number of persons
were intosviewed about it. Ed Kene-
dy tells it himseii: He, with a com-
panion named Davis, were walking
by Mosely’s residence. Just as Mose-
ly was got ling into his delivery wag-
on, with the words “1 told you to let
bo willing to face death in any shape.
There are n great many people who
talk like they are prepared to re-
spond to tho call of the trumpet wh-
ering them into that shoreless eterni-
ty where all mast go sooner or later,
but when the death angel comes
around in the shape of a contagious
disease, their actions do not aocord
with their talk, neither do they want •
to see or keep* company with such a
trumpeter. Such a feeling ig natural
I suppose, and guess old Hamlet’s
head was leven for soliloquizing so
long over suicide that he got oat of
the notion ot dying as long as he
could prevent it. Man will cling to
lite with tho tenacity of Josh Billings’
mule, but while living they ought to
do like Paul betore Fcstus, speak the
words ot truth and soberness.
C ttou picking has been arrested
by the rain. Cotton opening has also
been stopped. Mr. Modely has giued
something owr one hundred bates of
cotton and Mr. Punchard abont the
same number, a great deal of it came,
however, iroin other communities.
Young cotton is about one-third open
while the old cotton is about three-
fburths.
Jftmuers hero are complaining
my wife alone and you wouldn’t do
it.” Keueby drew his revolver and ! about the cotton buyers being col-
commenbcd to shoot. Two balls took leagued at Temple to their pecuniary
effect and Mosely hardly survived a
miuutc. He fell from the wagon to
the ground a corpse. At this junct-
ure Jim Mosely. a brother of Farris,
came upon the scene and opened tire
detriment, and have divined thecauso
to be a spirit of retaliation iu conse-
quence of their refusal to carry their
cotton to the compress. Some of
them have taken their cotton to Hoi*
ton ou aecot lit of this, while others
are threateuing to carry it to Rock-
ou Kennedy, who responded until his I dalPi It ftl),)eftr<8 to me that such ae-
wcapon was empty and then ran to- tions are suicidal to both parties in a
ward the Ellis hotel with a bullet in !tl,,am:ial l,oiut of vievv"> besides being
,, .. . • , 1 diametrically opposed to that moral
hi, Unj.b. Here Kenedy iva, «rre.l-, illjlln,.lion ,0|,ieh declare, that “nolle
1
A dispatch from Auburn, Cal.,
says: The Georgetown stage was
stopped yesterdsy near Greenwood,
while on its way to Auburn, by a
masked highwayman and robbed.
He secured a Wells-Fargo express
box, bnt it is not known how much
.the box contained. One of the pas-
sengers named Thomas Stevens bor-
rowed a gpn and Btarted after tbe
robber within a few minutes after tho
robbery, but with what success Is not
known,
-•-—:_
A dispatch from Paris, Texas, says:
Dixon Erwin was tried before Com-
missioner Lee to-day tor bigamy, and
committed in default ol bail. Tbe
evidenco disclosed that at present
Erwin has four wives, all living, and
ft-om neither did he have a divorce.
Itttjjso leaked oat that the latest Mrs.
v Erwin alias Sukey Roebucke, had
three other husbands liviog and un-
dlvorccd. All the parties hail from
the Choctaw country.
A Mangum, Texas, dispatch says:
Court adjourned this evening, having
been in session three weeks. The
only convictions had arc Charles and
Sam Snell, charged with murder, sen-
tenced ior two and seven years, re-
spectively. They .killed one .Toe
Whitcficld last spring, by cutting him
with a pockelknife, the result of a
quarrel over a gate.
room to rest.
Ten minutes after he had lain down
,, . , , he was a dead maD. A window
yettr, old .ltd bad married Teague', krMd of lhc build, ,
U year old daughter, cretins the tlle couch rad on ,
trouble. Stayelv was shot m the arm, ... , , .. ,, ,
• ’ range with his head. Ou the outside
was a murderous assaasiu, armed
with a shotgun, awaiting his time and
his place, and placing the muzzle of
the gun almost on the window sill
he pulicd the trigger. His aim wes
true and when the smoke cleared
away and the members of the tamily
recovered their presence of miua. the
soul of David Dougherty had depart-
ed; the old man had been shot
through the head with a charge of
buckBhot. The farmers rallied and a
posses wese sqnt out m every direc-
tion to hunt down the murderer
He had, however, planned his
work well, and no clew remains that
can lead, so tar as ia known, to un-
earth and bring to justice the man
who fired tho fatal shot. The opin-
ion is geuerallv expressed that an old
enemy, the participant in aDjold feud,
committed the crime.
The deceased was married twice;
he espoused his second wife, who is a
young woman, about a year ago.
Threats of lynching are heard if
the murderer is caught. * ,
livoth to himself.”
Rev. C. E. Aaulo preached two ser-
mons last Sunday, locating the causes
of church and community poverty
where it reasonably and rightfully
belonged. Cause, not enough of God
Pan.
ed and taken to jail by Ofllccr Sebe
Ma Ulox and a physician was called
to dress his wound, a painful one but
not dangerous. The trouble was in-
dicated in Kennedy’s words to Mosc-
ly proceeding the shooting, of domes- j iu the hearts ol’tiie people,
tic origin and grew out of Mosely’s j ~~ ~ : "
acquaintance with Kennedy’s wife, Wlll. TiinSf mtmasteroflda-
whfch seems to have dated from flic , vine. lud.. writes: “Electric Ritters
Maitest ball last spring. This ac-1 has done moro for mo than all other
quaiutanco was continued alter the \ medicines combined, for that had
ball and destroyed Kennedy's domes- f««lil“K aiding from Kidney and Liver
" ' . trouble.” John Leslie, tanner and
tic peace. Matters grew worse, and stock man. of samo place, says: “Find
ou the 22d of. July Mrs. hccnedy tiled ],;i)l(.tl.jc Hitters to ho the best Kidney
her petition for a divorce from her and Liver medicine, made me feel like
husbaud and left him, taking with her a new man.” J. W. Gardner, bard-
a little T-vcar old girl to wr.om the ■ Bam° tu'v!'’ Bft>s:
Electric Ritters is just the thing lor a
at the lime was not considered dan-
gerous, but the arm had to be am-
putated and tne old man succumbed
lina ]y
Chaptered to-day: Llano telephone
company. The charter of the Llano
improvement company was amended,
increasing the capital stock permited
from $50(^000 to $3,000,000.
The permanent school fund state-
ment made by the comptroller shows
Sept 1 on hand $2,922,033 in county
bonds, $204,880 in stats bonds and
$176,891 in railroad bonds;, total $6,-
724,150. In addition to |his the per-
manent school fund has about $13,000,-
OOOJof land notes and 26,000,000 acres
oi land.
The lunatic asylum board met to-
day and accepted the resignation of
First Assistant Surgeon Preston sud
elected to the place It It. Walker of
Paris, Texas.
A dispatch from Belton says: An-
drew McEwau aud Taylor Mayes,
two boys, were riding a horse ycstcr-
kay eveniu/, and wheu near town the
horse became frightened and ran
away, throwing the boys. McEwsn’s
head struck a stump, and he was in
stautly killed,
hurt.
Dr. I). B. Raines of Mineral Wells,
spoke his mind politically as follows
in an interview with a reporter:
“I have never voted any other than
the Democratic ticket, but I must con-
fess that the Democratic party in
Texas is now absorbed by the Far- _ ______________________ „ ...........
mers’Alliance, and as a Democratic j ^hor "as uiuch attached. Alter the . Iliau ^vlio is all ruu down aud don’t
nartv lias ceased tn exist I lind separation Mosely’s visits to Mrs.! care whether ho lives or dies; he found
Lri, all the liberal cl.-s of'th,Iking: »«"> — »<* ™ if
men in ,„y mtmty who formed, |:h“vu *7“““* {ml, n "botlle, «l !i! t Smith &
voted lhc Democratic ticket to think r‘ quessetl Mosely to let Ins wile alone , jJro-8 Drugstore.
iu this way. The organization now I unt^ alter the divorce was granted,
is internecine in its embodiment, tor ^l0 reason that he did not desire
with a pandering to a communistic scandal to cling to his little daughter
A dispatch trom Paris, Texas, say:
The following additional circumstan.
ces have developed supposedly in re-
Maycs was slightly gard t& tho runaway girl, Cordelia
_:________ ! Mullins: Officer McKee was given the
From Joshua, Texas, we have the ' case to look up by Shaukiin. A rc-
! following: Last evening about eight1 "i rk made by Lee DeShoug about a v,.uau». .....*...... 1 ants of Cm nl dav. A great
! o’clock a young man by the'name ol j white girl ami a negro going off from With Jolm !.. L«o $10,000, in tin: ltd- dft|il j; ;s h|, ,‘u said and (U)I11, U) (^h,u
j Rhodes, iu company willr some ethers the Texas Pacific depot, together re- | lowing compi nie:. City ( I" I.omlou, | tbo |j, :n .]|(1 ^ ()j- (||(,
sentiment that aims at the destruc-
tion of property rights.”
“That is verw strong language.”
“Well, I have said that before, aud
I mean it. I think wo ought to purge
the party of this elemont, so poison-
ous to Jeffersonian principles, as
without so doing the party will be
destroyed ultimately. I attribute the
existing state of affairs to Mr. Webb
Finley’s ruling on the question of
who were entitled to vote in Demo-
cratic primaries. I think that with-
in two years Mr. Finley will see the
folly of his ruling.”
It is reported lrom Belton that tho
fire is still burning in the smoulder-
ing ruins of the roller mills. The
firemen threw water ou it for soveial
hours yesterday, but did not succeed
in totally extinguishing it. The
burning ot this mill will be a »erinus
loss to Belton as well as to the own-
ers.
The insurance was $21,000, as fol-
lows: With J Z. Miller, Jr., $11,000,
in the fo’lowiug companies: Royal,
North British aud Mercantile, the
Commercial ot California, Western
Assurance Association of Toronto,
Cauadn. and the Michigan of Detroit.
Weak Women,
Tho more sensitive nature of tho
According to Kennedy’s statement, j temale sex renders women much moro
Mosely promised to cease his visits ! susceptible than men to those uumer-
but did not. )n Saturday the -Mh i harmony in the system. The ner-
uitimo Kennedy saw Mosely aud j Vous system gives way, sick headache
warned him at the labor ball. At the is frequent, the appetite is lost, and
pavilion last monday night Kennedy j oilier ailments peculiar to the sex
saw Mosely and his wife dancing to. cause great suffering Hood’s Sarsa-
J, ... i .. , paril a is peculiarly adapted tor such
gothcr. Ihej whirled by him au*l i ensc-s, nud has reeeiyetlthc niostgrati-
Mrs. Kennedy, seemingly happy, did j -ving praise for Jho relief it has al-
not notice him. Kennedy savw (his1 forded thousands ot women whose
was more tuau he could stand, uud if S ver-v nc,! hetore taking it was
: only misery It strengthens the
nerves, cures sick in aiachc aud indi-
gestion, purifies aud vitalizes tbe
bloo'.. and gives regular and healthy
drove him to desperation. To what
extent Moseiy’s intimacy with Mrs.
Kennedy went is unknown, but it w as
sufficient to nerve Kennedy to the
point of shooting. Mrs. Keunedy is
at the residence of Charles Wright
aud refuses to make a statement.
Both Kennedy and his wife nrc well
connected and came from Denison
to Fort Worth.
Cenienmal Homs.
Surely the Lord has been more
compassionate with tho disciples of
ADuanias and Saphira than ho was to
them for the manner iu which extrav
agant talkers have reported Temple j
concerning :lie "smallpox question"!
sugge-ts the conclusion that the re-
cord ot the biblical liars have been ;
I completely eclipsed by their deseeml-
i ants of th
. "A'l'ort Worth telegram says: Far-j was coming into Joshua horseback j currcd to McKee, ho went to the pe-
ris Mosely, who was killed by Ed When about, one mile from here.1 pot at once. DeShoug’s retoilectiea
Kennedy, was buried to-day. There young Rhodes" horse commenced run of the girl whom he hud noticed ju.-t
arc no neiv developments .u tbe case.! uing with him and lelt the road mu!! before the train came in tallied a
Southern lnsur.iiiee <'om> any of New
Ed Kennedy has been resting quietly
at the jail, and bis wound is getting
along ail right, llis brother, Robert
Kennedy, arrived from Denioou this
morning aud had a long conference
with him. M>-s. Kennedy is emphatic
in declaring that her relations with
Moseley were not of a criminal char-
acter, and that she has always con-
ducted herself with propriety. She
is bitter against her husband, and sees
no reason why he should have killed
8 Mosely. She says that her petition
foj|^ divorce was the result of cruel
treatment on the part of Kennedy,
and she alleges this in her petition
( generally and specifically.
A Louisville, Ky., dispatch savs:
S. Oj'/Vurd, the granite contractor ot
Little Rock, brought suit in tho ted-
* erat court against the Louisville Do si
-Uoivsi'iipei'
ran into an old well by the roadside good deal with that giyeu by Hie
some forty feet deep, which had been j father. DeSkongj thought she had
dug a year or two ago, and, there be-
ing no .water in it, had been covered
over with brush. In the tall the young
man got loose from the horse aecl
caught on the well about 15 feet from
the top, thereby saving himself from
a horrible death. He was speedily
taken out and found to hayc received
injuries in the arm aud shoulder, but
not serious. Nothing cheeked the
horse until ho reached the bottom of
the weij, where he died before lorce
could arrive to take him oul.
_•_
The machinists aud boilermakers
employed in the shops of the Pennsyl-
vania railroad were considerably sur-
gone to a house south of the Passant)
mills. Inquiry there developed that
she and the negro had passed on out
the Atlas road walking very fast, aud
Mclvcc struck out following them;
at the farm house near the old fair
grounds he was told by a man driv-
ing a wagon that a pair of bay horses
attached had passed there occasion-
ally stopping and loitering as if wait-
ing for some one, that soon after he
pass -d down the lane, a negro and a
Orleans, the New Orleans Assurance i
Association, the t 'oaiiiienlid, the)
Home lnsirr.ir.ee Company and the]
Firemen’s Fund Insurance Company,
Both the agents here declined to
give the amounts insured in each.
tl V (oil. th; t
epidemic iu
dead weiv
A dispatch from New Orleans says:
nmiipox hud Income an
Tciiq le, iinii that the
being interred between
| Suns to screen the truth. \i w-
reached us some time since that phy-
sicians and merchants were seen upon
the streets seriously engaged in eon-
versation under a low toned' voice.
Lightning Killed three men and and all that could lie gleaned from
wounded one on Lake Fields iu La I their actions demonstrated the factj
Fourehe parish Saturday. Henry that t he infection could not bo ques-
Verdniu ol LaFourchc and three Biot
brothers of l’oint-nu-Clique iu SI.
Marv parish went out iu aperoguo or
skiff to kill alligators iu Lake Fields,
just back of the town of Lockport.
They had killed several oi the snu-
rians when a sudden and single Hash
tioued. I have been creditably in-
formed that some of Cyclone’s citi-
zens called a mass meeting for the
purpose of taking under advisement
the danger of going to Temple as
well us permitting strange persons or
action to every organ in the body.
CHILDREN
Are always liable to sudden and severe
colds, to croup, sore throat, lung fever, ete.
Remedies, to be effective, must be admin-
istered without deluy. Nothing Is better
adapted for such emergencies than Ayer's
Cherry Pectoral. It soothes the Inflamed
membrane, promotes expectoration, relieves
coughing, and induces sleep. The prompt uso
of this medicine lias saved innumerable lives,
both of young and old.
“ One of my children hnd croup. The case
was attended by our physician, and was sup-
posed to he well under control. One night
I was startled by the child's lii.nl breathing,
and ou doing to it found it
Strangling.
It had nearly ceased to breathe. Realizing
that the child's alarming condition hud be-
come possible in spite of the medicine it had
taheji. I reasoned Hint, such remedies would
lent on avail. Having a part of a bottle of
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in the hoi.se, I gave
tin- child three (loser., at. short Interval c and
::a\ioiis!y wailed resells. ITum the moment
the I’ecioral was given, tho child's I reatMng
grew easier, and ill a short I hoc il was .sleep-
leg i;i:!<-!ly i.iid breathing rnlurally. The
child is alive and well to-dav, ami I do not
hesitate to say that Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
saved its the."—C. J.'Wodldridge, Wortham,
Tex:
J if For colds, coughs, bronchitis, asthma,
i'.ii I the early stages of consumption, take
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral,
PREPARED nr
DR. J. C. AYER & CO„ Lowell, Meat.
Hold by nil Druggists. Price (I; six bottles,
Remarkable Rescue.
Mrs. Michael Curtain, Plainfield, IU.
makes the statement that she caught
cold, which settled on her lungs; she
. . was treated for a month bv her family
any one who went there to fUter j physician, but grew worse. lie told
Y0*1 nlo' win to crirl lioisdprl rni • • ” j jiiiymi mils Hill Jfrtw I1C
. i. -i H . i gir‘jof lightning struck the boat. Ray- their premises, ami many ether couu-, her she was a hopeless victim ofcon-
was described as rather young, hair i moud ivui^liL who was ulso hunting cils composing smaller groups, haw- sumption ami that uo medicine could
cut,short, light iu color, wearing n anigalorg ,u a 8k,tVsomo distance off,1 been hold to whiug upon a similar , Ler druggist suggested Dr
blue dress aud a straw hat and noth . , . . . , . ! iin, . Kings Ntnv DiscoverylorConsump-
,,nu« ootd - saw the accident, hurried to the re- -ubleit. The impression has getter- tioiifslie bought.a bottle and to hbHfe
rue House dcf 0f tbo men and found three dead ally gone out into th * world that Bell 1D ’ ; lured herself benefitediVomfirst
were walking rapidly.
prised to find notices posted stating
that hereafter the nine-hour day jstau(ls riKbt 0,1 »’oad and tho oc- i ;u tbc bottom of the boat and one of: c0unty Dfeoplc* were a bpartan kind dose
would be adopted at the same com-1 cut,Wi1s watched tho staango pair and ! them one of the Biols, badly wound- iot tt D«siylc, that feared uviihcr nmu, j[’•
pensatipu per hour m before. The |at. lh« timc noticed tbe man uud i cd. xue hitter may recover, ! benst nor death, but the effect that au - -.no'v » hou8e-
nuii cm|Joyed in 4be -boHe: nwd ma- wa^>o4ind JtaUoti severs! hundred-i
Mte coumiucd its use and'after
four", herself sound
damages for ullodgcd libel. The citino shops Had presented a pctillou I yunU dowu the lane, and wheu the A telegram from Potlsboro, Texas, i certainly would warrant tho couelu- erv at T. K Smith A lit q’s Drug bto*
roccntly published a statement tor nine hours with nav lor ten hours I „..,i _;_i . .......... u-i... „.„u „„ I . ... „ .. — ,_l _____• ... ____,...»
i
l fftp iiinn Vtmira w-Ul -14 1 I * »...... •» mv-m iui j « / iui liiu tuiibur uiv a. i,. • mini iv lfiifc i.
d io umc uoins wtttt pay mr ten hours I U0gr0 aud girl c#meup with it I «.ays; The grtesiau well, located on 8i0nthaU powerful few oi“cm” would i large bottles 50c. and $1.00,
-I
h
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Crow, J. D. Temple Weekly Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, September 5, 1890, newspaper, September 5, 1890; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth585502/m1/3/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.