The Houston Daily Post (Houston, Tex.), Vol. XVIIIth Year, No. 225, Ed. 1, Friday, November 14, 1902 Page: 4 of 10
ten pages : illus. ; page 20 x 26 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
5 y 3 J3 wdifc
I4
VW
i
W
Wa H r nli
s Jx >
P
j
v y jjoX
V Jlft
m HWST0N DAILY POST
> rBY THE
HOUSTON PRINTING COMPANY
R M JOHNSTON EtJ3eB
G J PALMER Vice rr ident
OPFICE OF PUBLICATION
JO net noji ies nor and 1109 FrinMln Ave
Znttrti at fc Pettefct at Houston Toxin ot
StcendClest Mail MMtr
SVBSCRtPTlONS BY MAllrtn Aivanc
On Six Three One
Ye r MonthJ Month Month
TfHVt AKB pOiroAV8ee 4J
fowpjr jo
St jV riT joo S
TRAVELING AGENTS C S K Holl na Audi
tnri AW Palmer B B Tbfoop J H Barton nJ
5 N Gibion
FOREIGN OFFICES txittrn business offiee J
V4i 7 Tribune butldinir New York The
P C Beekwlth SpeeJil Western °
Agency V
Tribune buMln chlMBOKTheS C BerkVUh SreeUl
Ajenct Office of Washington Correspondent Room
ifAmci building M o G treet N V
CORRESPONDENCE of any description tvhtlktf
tnJn d i fr Euslwtst or Editorial Dtfartmmt
should beoddrtssid to The Houston Post and not
to any individual end all thtcts draft
orders tte medt payable to The Houston rrinting
THE CITY Thc Post Is delivered to ny P rt ot
the dtv by carriers Mr Theodore Berln has charge
of the city circulation and collcctins Messrs Then
rfore Bering Charles Lett Henry Stamm and A w
J > are the authoriied collectora of all city o > J
S ° vvertslna and subscription and no money
should be raid to any one other than those named
unless special written authority signed by the business
msnaper is shown All accounts of any site should be
raid by cheek In favor of The Houston Printing
Cemnany Subscriber falling to receive The Post
regularly will please notify the office promptly Every
Mpcr is expected to be delivered not later than
ojjo a m
Houston Texas Friday November 14 1902
THAT CONTEMPT CASE
The people of Houston have been treated to
some redhot articles in the newspapers there
because of a contempt case wherein the editor
jf the Chronicle had to pay oo for disobey
ing the judge of the criminal court The Chroni-
cle has the worst end of the controversy but
what it lacks in reason it makes up in vim The
difference between the position taken by The
Post and the Chronicle is the difference tn
the age of the men who manage them Colonel
Johnston who has been in the business lone
enough to be conservative and careful realiied
that the court had the right to forbid the publi-
cation of testimony even though it was unjust
to the public The youthful guide of the Chroni-
cle had heard somewhere that the court had not
the right to do anvthing of the kind and has-
tened to dijobey the order of the court with
the result that be got off with a very light fine
for which he should have thanked the judge and
let the matter drop The unfortunate part of
It Is that the discussions are misleading and
the result is thrt the press of the State begins
a fusillade against the courts without fully un
derstanding and appreciating the situation
There is no paper > n Texas that more fully
prizes the liberty of the press or is more jeal-
ous of its rights than the Enterprise We are
also just as desirous of keeping inviolate the
rights of the rourts as we are our own for
after all that is the last resort for the rights
of every citizen ii corporation In the Beau-
mont and Houston contempt cases the publishers
were both wrong The editor of the Chronicle
Was evidently deprived Of a rightful privilege by
thecourt but he tould not remedy it by putting
himself in contempt There was evidently a
remedy at law but not by violation of the law
If we expect the public to have respect for the
courts we must obey the court orders If they act
unjust and unconstitutional let tis appeal to a
higher authority The Beaumont contempt case
over which the press of Texas has pawed the
lir so much was one deserving of more severe
punishment Judge Martin was accused of mak
ing known in advance what his decision would
be in a certain case If Judge Martin had done
as the Journal claimed that he had he was unfit
to hold the position that he occupied Instead
of trying to prove that Judge Martin had done
as the Journal claimed its editor went into
court and tried to show that his articles were
In defense of Judge Martin Without under-
standing the situation the press of the State has
written all kind of slush about the nutter with
the result that confidence has
public been weak-
ened so far as the integrity of the courts are
concerned when there was no reason for it
Beaumont Enterprise
As tho Enterprise says the discussions ot
tho Houston case are misleading As a
matter of fact Judge Gillasplo did not pro-
hibit tho newspaper reporters from taking
tho testimony and tho statemont that It
was obtained from court room attendants
was a silly subterfuge Tho Judge express-
ly declared that tho testimony could be pub-
lished In caae a verdict was rendered In
such event he wanted tho public to have all
the facts
Put tho local conditions were exceptional
Tho case on trial was a notorious one
What the court thought of It was shown by
his refusal to grant bail after tho jury had
failed to agree and evidently ho anticipated
a mistrial In that event he wanted the
testimony withheld from the witnesses who
were under rule and would be called upon
to testify In another trial
Besides It Is difficult to get men to servo
on Juries In Houston This Is a busy placo
and business men dont like to give up
their time Many are prono to Imagine a
bias based on reading newspapers and to
thereby disqualify themselves for Jury serv-
ice The judge wished to prevent such
excuses by men who are otherwise qualified
There has been a carnival of murder In
Houston the most of which has gono un-
punished mainly because of thoso very dif-
ficulties viz the prompting of witnesses and
the evasion of jury oervlce by tho best men
Under theso circumstances the Judge
thought it would best servo the ends of jus-
tice to prohibit the publication of tho tes-
timony until after a verdict was rendered
While The Post did not fully agree with
him It nevertheless recognized the good In-
tent of hla position and yielded to his Judg
mont
That is the molehill of truth out of which
ifl been fashioned a mountain of sensation
THE PLAIN TRUTH ABOUT IT
ffco following editorial analysis of recent
action results from the Memphis News
is Q thoroughly In accord with The Posts
spinlon that It its given full reproduction
here
The plain ant simple truth of the matter
is that tho pushing of the tariff question to
a front place In thin contest was fatal to the
democratic chances of success Wo do not
eay that It should not havo had a prominent
placo for all that A partyWes It to itself
to stand by Its principles at all times and
patiently abide the time when circumstances
shall favor the truth But if the party had
Yheen thinking only ofvictory la thla cam
1
StXmVAill V
palgn a moro Inopportune tlrao for facing
tho tariff Issue could hardly have been
choson Tho country Is prosperous but still
quaking from tho awful panic from which It
but recently emerged That panto la be-
lieved by thousandB and tons ot thousands
to havo been precipitated by a democratic
victory and tho prospect ot tariff tinker-
ing
Republican orators and newspapers havo
boon cultivating this sentiment for years
and they were particularly active In doing
bo In the lato campaign Moro tariff tinker-
ing another panic that was the ono and
practically tho only argument on tho repub-
lican Bide When tho domocrats sought to
appeal to tho antitrust sentiment they wero
met by voluminous promises from Mr rtoose
velt and others that they would deal with
tho trusts without touching tho sacred
tariff
Disguise It as wo may and desplto tho
growing dread of the power of tho trusts
thero could hardly be proposed at this time
a moro unpopular policy than that of making
deep and radical chang6s In tho tariff It Is
not so much a position of faith In tho benef-
icence of the protective system as a blind
dread of tariff tinkering It must bo ad-
mitted that thero Is a basis for this appre-
hension for when business has been ad-
justed to a vicious system there must be
more or less disturbance when the system is
reformed It Is only whon It becomes mani-
fest that tho ovlls of tho system aro work-
ing greater hardship than tho remedy would
cause that public sentiment will support the
reform The opportune time for such an
Issue to bo made is not a time ot present
prosperity with the memory of a recent
panic fresh in the mind
The attempt to give tho question of tariff
reform as it is cautiously designated by
Mr Cleveland and his followers a special
prominence In the campaign seems to have
boon made rather with a view to calling that
statesman back Into political activity than
for any other purpose We can not think
that the manner of his appearance on the
scene was at all beneficial to tho democratic
party His tariff speech with Its volumi-
nous quotations from his message of 1887
was simply an exhibit of himself as the
personification of tariff reform Mr
Cleveland had been ono of the strongest op-
ponents of the Philippine Infamy and nearly
all the members of his cabinet had stood
with him He Secretaries Olney Carlisle
Herbert Smith and Attorney General Olney
had written and spoken voluminously
against a policy which they charged to be
subversive of American principles and full
of danger to tho country But circum-
stances made Mr Bryan tho leader of tho
opposition to this policy and Mr Cleveland
and his followers could not brook the thought
of playing second to Mr Bryan oven to save
tho country So they quietly dropped out of
the fight and to all Intents and purposes
went over to tho onemy If Mr Bryan bad
not been there Is no doubt that Mr Cleve-
land and his lieutenants would havo been
foremost In the fight against Imperialism
and all tho antiBryan newspapers would
have been with them As it
was a number
of them such as the Nashville American
and the Chattanooga Times which started
out vigorously against the Philippine policy
went over to tho other side rather man be
found with the democratic party
Now a word as to getting togethor
The democratic party will never get to-
gether under the leadership of men and
newspapers who never speak of the demo-
crats who havo stood by the party in all its
battles oxcept In terms of insult and op
problum who havo been more vindictive
than the meanest republican organ in revil-
ing and misrepresenting the democratic
membership of the senate and houso and
who will not recognize any man as a demo-
crat unless ho supported tho republican
ticket In tho last two campaigns
There is an old saying that it is only three
generations from shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves
but the party which is trying to civilize the Fili-
pino thinks it can hring them in half a generation
from shirttAl to standup collars
The Beaumont oil exchange seems to be ceas-
ing to gush
Or course Molineux is innocent the jury has
said so but be is very fortunate in having had
plenty of money back of him A man might
better be guilty with money than innocent with-
out it
Ir England only had a Funston the Mullah
would have reason to be
Our ambassador to Germany was banqueted
in Berlin When one remembers that meat is
44 cents a pound over there one can begin to
understand how much Germany really loves us
David is being blamed for the way the New
York grangers didnt vote
Wacoites who wish to see a real automobile
can see a whole procession of them by coming
to Houston for the NoTsuOh carnival j and our
real pavements will be a revelation to them
Tut Waco flower show is now on and bloom
much in
ers are very evidence
ounterfeits
Tuere will be other races besides the white and
colored at the carnival next week
TiiE stabbing of that member of the London
da for a man when shes stack on him
Qrakab was very considerate in not pulll
a ijiootzenfest while the Chicagoani were
the town
Tjurb is no charge gainst Marshal
nbr ha he broke the latvs but hell eJ
just the same because well juit bt <
A a result of the Ust el d Ahe
nl
fSllfl aM J
t FilialIt J tried
stock exchange before hundreds of his asso M etlno
dates by his sweetheart shows what a girl will on requests
the
= Sis vH
threatened ouster to be served on George Green
by Eddie Green republicanism in Texas looks
decidedly green
Mouneux Is frees but It has cost so much
more than he thought It would that he will hardly
repeat the experiment
Havino the Fitlplnos murder the school teach-
ers we send them is a great deal like throwing
a potato at a goat and having the animal turn
round and cat it
Reports of Mr Brewtons death were exag
gerated The gentleman so far from being shot
was not even half shot
Ctiv Sealer Wilson should have been a mem-
ber of the Old Guard He may die but he
will not resign He hangs onto office just like a
republican
The rubber ball will not be tolerated at the
NoTsuOhj but visitors will not be debarred
from tossing the high ball
Bottler Bros hart the honor of beln the first
to decorate their place of business for the car-
nival There will be no honor in being the
last
The truck growers convention at Brenham has
struck dismay to the heart ofthe boll weevils
of that neck of the woods
Those who wish to become acquainted with
Texas resources without coming this far South
can do so by being in St Louis in 1904
Cannons position on the tariff is conserva-
tive and safe Thats just the kind of gun
the republicans want for speaker
NOTE AND COMMENT
Sixty experts will install a system of conserv
ing the forests of South Texas the work being
undertaken by the largest lumber
company in
the South The preservation of the forests has
long been a matter of theory but the rapidity
The new governor of Nevada is a nativeascs sores cuts
fexan Texas can furnish food fuel eolonelslfi u2as thine
and governors for every State in the Union andne B u aeC c 0f
day she
some tylU furnish them a president L nF U5 h
Congress will meet this year December I the
first Monday of the month falling on that date
which does not often happen As both houses are
fully organized says the Washington Post they
wilt be able to proceed immediately to business
With nearly three weeks of clear sailing before
them prior to the holiday recess it will be no
surprise if considerable work is accomplished
There are a few matters pressing for action
this winter outside of the supply bills and it will
be necessary to dispose of them speedily if at
all The senate will have several reciprocity
treaties to consider if it is so disposed The
house will very probably have three or four
appropriation bills out of the way before the
statesmen hasten away for the festivities of
Christmas
+ + +
Teller is not a democrat and never was a
democrat Yet the democrats are determined to
reelect him if they can They have no thought
of trying to elect a real democrat but are tied
up with the political fortunes of Teller But
while Teller is not a democrat the republicans
are as earnest and active in their efforts to
defeat him as if he were a radical democrat
Nashville American
Senator Teller has voted in the senate with
the democrats for several years now claims to
be a democrat and for the past four elections
has walked up to the polls and voted the demo-
cratic ticket How much further could he go in
proving his party standing
+ +
A Connecticut pastor forgot it was Sunday and
was reading in his study whilehis congregation
was patiently waiting in the pews This is what
comes of not taking a Sunday paper Other-
wise he would have known it was Sunday At
lanta Journal
This calls to mind the Houston citizen who
having read the church notices in The Post
Saturday morning put out and proceeded several
blocks down the street on his way to church
before an incident jogged his memory We eat
and sleep and work and worship in a hurry in
this country
+ + +
On the day when we were getting the election
news our silver dollar was worth less than ever
before The New York World says that on
the day mentioned our dollar looked like 36
cents The 540682817 such coins outstanding
on August 1 which have just been declared legal
tender by the supreme court are really worth
i946 58i4 a trifle over 346037000 less than
their face or fiat value The 36cent dollar will
hardly figure again as an issue in politics but its
legacy of more than five hundred millions in fiat
money remains a disturbing element in finance
and business And yet we are told that demo-
crats who in 1856 and 1900 refused to be parties
to an effort to make the white metal the standard
of our money foreswore the party betrayed
it to its enemies etc Chattanooga Times
Have you any silver dollars you would like to
dispose of at 36 cents a piece Thats what you
say they are worth
+ + +
J ond
thom a few weeks I
th
nobody who believes
fair play and straightforward dealing in pol is
will regret it They deserved that fatcl If
ever did In tni is world Cheek okdTo
may be looked for
In the polite game and It lomttlmu wins but
Juit < uetfft > dliplir of that article u wu aMdi
1
CC yi ifkgyvV i < g V a > ft > E
HOUSTON DAILY POST FRIDAY MORNING tfOVEMBER 141002
by the men who rganized and led the lily
white movement u the campaign just closed
has seldom been witnessed
Some had prevfoiisly been democrats but had
come out of thiVemocratic party as they claimed
because of iiih in the republican National
policies Thy were sensitive on the subject
of their asficiates and stipulated that their
local allies rpst all be white men The benefi-
ciaries for jars as they frankly confessed of
violence and fraud at the polls they now stood
forth as tin champions of respectability in
politics andhodestly offered themselves as lead-
ers in inaugurating a new order of things A
little weary n the ballot box stuffing and the
falsified tallj sheets which had charterized local
elections fojso many years and in the fruits
of which the had willingly shared these superior
spirits now emand a change of parties for the
South Butof all things it must be respect
able
Strangely nough among those who responded
to this rematable call were a few men who had
all their liv heen republicans had never apolo-
gized for tjir affiliations had been active in
the advocacyof their partys principles and per
sonalty hadprofited by their activity They
had advlsedhe negro and often to his advan-
tage and uptting as a citizen had accepted his
support andittained some distinction at home
But now tbi were willing in an effort to hold
on to what negro had helped to bestow upon
them to cuhis political acquaintance unite for
future workvith his open and avowed enemy
They graspe the hands of men whom they had
repeatedly eioUnced for all the crimes in the
political calidar and by whom they had bceit
in turn asoundty denounced and soaped up
and declare ostentatiously for respectability
The wholthing of course got to be riotously
absurd T more that thoughtful people re-
flected upos t the less use they had for it and
what they id to it when election day rolled
around is minously displayed in thtf returns
from Virgia Alabama Mississippi Louisiana
and NortlCarolina where the stupid little
comedy waenacted The Southern problem is
difficult ar unfortunate The best friends of
the South lay well wish for a change down
there But is certain never to be brought
about by I alliance between hypocrisy and in-
gratitude
am 1 I
RERKS ABOUT THE POST
The Hcton Vest of last Sunday was forty
four pagel It was a credit to Houston and to
the journtm of the State Denison Gasctteer
The Hdon Post notes that a man at Climax
was cut ting a religious discussion Tn this
enlighteneage the man who hasnt any more
sense thato engage in a heated religious dis-
cussion dnt deserve much sympathy it mat-
ters not vt happens to him Greenville Herald
Have j seen the Sundays edition of The
Daily Poof fortytwo pages or 294 columns
This wajo special but regular issue The
Post is arnmer and has no equal in the South
Mt yen Herald
If Jud Iortimer Lewis really wants to write
poetry leiira visit the Waco flower show
Waco TilHerald
Want indeed I Does the Waco editor
mean to mate that Colonel Lewis is not writ
ing poctr El Paso Times
The Hton Post is to erect a fourstory build-
ing witmsement in the near future The
structure to be fire proof Three machines
have beadded making eleven in all Sher-
man Dcyat
The ecAct for the construction of The Hous-
ton Postjew home was let last week and calls
for its cdetion by the 15th of May 1903 Th
building j to be four stories high Monltot
Eagle
breeding pens
specluii118 to
111 jirrvall
eOnd hlhcst
t muring pen
oeohd hlgludt
ghost scoring
socond high
third highest
1
ennfi highest
ghest scoring
cconil highest
ghe t scoring
he world and
lilidfor Ily
1 Damlnlquo
n trtKlinrn
sh JUIiiorcM
jrklngs curnu
tle or these
for turWovs
iinonil blnli
hare industry
In this cIrhs
les which arc
re bucks nnd
oso acd duck
oultrj prlzos
with which the tifiber is being taken from all ° wouldonIy
the districts make imperative the work now un P ° rQes of
dertaken Texas is taking the lead in this as
it does in all thework of progress in the South
Dallas TimesHerald
Theiifis nothing of more importance in which
the Texas people could engage
+ +
The Texas university is already a great school
but not as great as it should be It is alto-
gether fitting that the greatest State in the
Union should have at least as great a universi
ty as any Of course this can not come now nor
in a dozen years but there must be a gradual
working to that end Right at present there is
a pressing need for additional buildings to ac
commodate the ever Increasing number of
students Fort Worth Telegram
The Post hopes to see the time come when
the Texas legislature will take a more reasonable
and generous view of our great institutions of
learniner
good advice
am G8 years
lous Illness
fp bus jbceii
nrly dlscov
Ithy was to
rating bran
ou tho con
elite oruvos
ours I have
1 or two of
r each meal
h for n man
use of Stu-
mp to uso
ro perfectly
patent
t St Uouii ineUlrlne but hT
it eontainml > n ntura
Tearaof
prat UwHj w peptones dinrtus nuu nfto
nod
Innumerable
i Vie one pcrrvvt
utrlnc It la tho
ioljtf malt ana
ot extract matter
t of alcohol oeiuir
intoxicating
to krfp tho
Is notncces
ulo or bill of
makes a
log that cor
ust bo laold
havo never
StLi eflv belevo tlio habit of I taking
Stuarts Iy jeisla Tablet after iJeols ll
ul W hl > bt because lIlS uso
bring health tho ilclT and X J
preserves health to tho well and string
Men mid women past fifty VwiriTotVo
tmim of
1 n Mfo dlcestlv iiftor inonli
to tusiire
C S
Sndho if iKi0 Vf1 0 wml off dl
°
5wiftt u nna mst wmo
r
Tlipy are found In
lwml xorZ wpII regulated
rJ2t 0 rn Mn1 to CoHrornlu udln
if2i r 1 am lustrnlln arc rapid y
pushing their way into
All drtigirlst
Tablets
and for
popular favor
fitunrfs Dyspepsia
full slwd pnekages at r > cents
a weak stomach n fifty cent PUCK
good ago will often do fifty dollars worth of
Mn eiiAnrriB n irAxponD
fJ ntlclpatlofl is olwars v
nmong tho playgoers of this
Sjinoiineemciit is iure
Black Eyea for Lily Whites
From the Washington Star
Administration Rem
T h
e liIyn whiM of Ue Souh w e oun
drubbed n J
on Tueiday and
Greenville Herald
unusuah
and pleasi
advertiser
liriiM a d hls Bnetlc pernor
bridging the centuries which lie
i TWlp nT K horn PctriK
iioTh ifV0 lctr < m exploit
footllphts in n country which In
28 was ret to
1 1
aT
Jntnlv h fnltJ for humanizing
Ilanfnril to a j lovers of the class
tSttB that Shakespeare an lri SS
so far fn
a dreary lesson Is source of cntei
S J810 tJwai n l highest sensi v
Menluled in tbepasl and a ca
Mrs Marie Drsfnali as leading in
Jfcs a performanre that will bo
every detail
AT TIJK OLD CrtOSS ItO
Captious critics carp upon the
of the popular taste of the draf
careful annlisls will tbow that
good survive Farce coined
and burlesque may have their p
P o < l Wholesome
story of
will bo found to earn tho mnV
actual occurrence
HucU a play Is At the nii r >
which will be presented
hewn
houso torn gut mntlnce tomorrow
morrow night In precisely the
that It was presented ai thcMlS
house New York Cltr lnI C iW
Since the announcement that there is a famine
In sleeping ears one may expect to hear that
there it lack of sleeping room in dining cars
Teeses Up
Austin Sunday Clipper
Our morning paper was ji little off on tfe
Buffalo Bill howj but ihu c t 0fJ Vm
time wilu J
V t
I Washington Gossip
taUe
Prom the Washington Times
After the expiration of the present congress
next March the senate cloak rooms will no more
be enlivened by the sharp wit of George Graham
Vest or the quaint humor of John Pcrtival
Jones Fqr more than twenty years these vet-
eran statesmen have been the best story tellers
in congress Good health or ill did not affect
the spirits of either Rach has been a leader
on his side of the chamber and a tower of
strength to his party in State and nation Sena
tor Jones is as deeply grounded in republican
principles as Senator Vest is in those of the
democracy and one is as strong a partisan as
the other with this difference that the Nevada
senator quit his party for a brief spell on account
° h currency question but went back to it
when bimetallism was no longer an issue where-
as the Missouri senator would as leave become
nn apostate to the Presbyterian faith of his
fine old Scotch ancestors as to raise his hand
against the democratic party
Both have sedulously avoided posing before
the public as raconteurs mindful of the fate of
nearly every public man in the United States
savcd t0 amuse as well as instruct
his followers But when ensconced in a favorite
corner of their respective cloak rooms and sur-
rounded only by their peers they have reeled
off stories from their experience and fancy that
will keep their memories green when they have
joined the great majority Each retires from
the senate on his own volition They will be
missed by their colleagues more than any other
two men of their time
Hon George L Wellington refuses to be
pacified I shall not retire from politics when
I leave the senate next March declared the
Maryland statesman the day after the election
I have still one mission in politics That mis-
sion is the ruin of McComas When thats done
I shall cheerfully leave politics Mr Wel
lington added by way of explanation of the
republicans of Maryland under the leadership
of Hon Louis McComas carrying four con-
gress districts that he wan very much occupied
with business matters during the campaign and
couldnt give much attention t6 the fight
But McComas is done for Mr Wellington
hissed in his wrath You can certainly print
this if you want to I expect to have a reckon
ing with that gentleman He is certain never to-
go back to the senate I dont know whether the
next senator will be a democrat or a republican
but whoever it may be it certainly will not be
McComas It is believed that before the next
campaign in Maryland opens Mr Wellington will
have wholly renounced republicanism and allied
himself squarely with the democrats He stumped
the country for Bryan in 1000 but was rein-
stated in the republican caucus soon after the
senate met last year Whether he will be per-
mitted longer to cooperate with the republicans
will be determined when the short session of
congress begins
The unlookedfor victory of Hon F Burton
Harrison in the Thirteenth district of New York
which had been cut out by the republicans as
safe ground for them was due in no small degree
munily
By J M Lewis
JUST ONCE
1 want one time
Jest once I do-
Ter git down yere
Next th old byou
Where th grapevines hang
An theys lots o sun
An be all alone
Where they aint no one I
Where thaint no one
Jest me alone
An I kin feel
Like the
worlds m own
Where garfish swims
An the goggleeye
LI snap right quick
At a big blue fly I
An I wanter set
Jest set set set
In a halfeyed way
Till I plum fcrget
Thet the world aint mine
Ith its stacks o pelf
An think Texas blongs
T my own ol self
+ +
° H BLE IN T HE MENAGERIE
Ww
maUer hC
Kr r XVRr J Sf ZCbra aSked tHe
BSSS trf Sfnee 1 h
> ve with a gnu woman
About Nothing at night nt t plled the PeIicm
hotiFo Monday November 17 And the baboon
Sg s ts numb ha ii StUCk U > = sat on
with each ensuing season tin lne Porcupine
splendid scenle equipment surpi And Mr Simian
P AP vhir iSrbee rihim cara e MyS hiS Wifc raak a > monkey of
DYEING
I am dyeing mother dyeing
So the maiden softly said
And held up a dripping garment
Don t you like this shade of red
+ + +
A THREATENED EPIDEMIC
The most peculiar thing about the kidnap
ot that actress in Atlanta
getting kidnaned now
mg
> the
very obvious
WSS 0t d ° ne f ° r dw ng Pu
poses
St rfat are made by accident
theyll 0Cnt
alt be
f +
Whenever eleven students shall be
fathered
gether there shall a football be
found in the
idst of them
+ + +
JrkedrtJ ° h WCek
Sif d
or
hour ° ver i
le boy before they
uld get a penny that had lodged in his thr
JMell Sage
have to much
fny < e dV S V H the v era ° n wt had only recently
r wi Mt5enTsbee Grandfather I am proud tLV
+ +
No said the football
his face out of the mud payer and wioed h d 8
it on he
grass it isnt highballs thSt
this bring a
+
roan to
gS iWs ate Jrhv suffr
I
K WW f
one of the best knowe lltctarv Ji
of the
country Of course
mans triumph largely w tlle > W
the unusually heavy on V
vote develZft1
but it is also true that hiit h
of h s mother
among the
would have been defeated vote l
She >
cs as sometfmes is done LTS
hy
English politics but profitm pt
of Mrs Potter Palmer who lt
elected to office in ChZgo ruAV
receptions at her home and S
parts of the district j nl Vri
It is estimated that she indi Mk
as vo tc or Mm a n
specl 1
Mr Harrisons wife u
i 1
Crocker family of San F <
pected that they will maintain
in Washington when he ente
from now that will add much >
of the capital la e 1
The First congress district of t
represented for the remainder of T1
and m the next by Hon Mor r
i
will be one of the Wmgu n S S
pard was elected to fill out the
of his father who
died after C-
only a few days ore the a 8 1
iM
electa
ij
long term Thrtl
also chosen for the
who represented tin
EXCHANGE INTERVIEW
of
district 1Vs
in
congresses have died within f a
John Cranford died in office Z
ed by the father of the l
seat in December Hon DSW
father of the senator and fo iV
of the recognized leaders of th
fame to this dtstrict and died StV
while a member of the commissi
United States statute He
an n
Kinley though belongng COm
were close personal friend
andTh
invitation of President McKinl
> < WWWS V AA AA l A A AA < e AAAA V AAeVS
berson accepted a plare on the m
he had retired from public IfT
pard thus has a hood J
reputation to sustain
+
No more
interesting question tii i
now engaging attention in WashinZ
freely said in high circles
that the president probably prior 1
around for a new secretary of tletrJli
congress met Reports to the
wide currency in the country e
frequently felt called
uponto deny
rumor that he was to resign
° repated 1m ret
i ff le
Washington from his campaignm tefl
West That is if he has
hee o
with the few da
past > he ha M
it for
publication
Whether there
is or
cause atm
between the president and his keertr
exchequer is
not dcfimtly known W
tioned on this point Saturday
a high jfc
ton official
facetiously replied in thefea
cautious village stateman Some mi
and some says there aint It is saidt
president is
not altocetber pleased r
secretarys quick and frequent ctunicstf
during the
to the valuable aid of his clever mother who is
recent
ff
A Chicago girl chased a thief twatul
then knocked him down with one Won efi
Uitcago dames are experts at giviorftf
hand Austin f
Statesman
That thief was doubtless glad thiitiJ
get the large foot
f + +
The Blue Ridge News has unfurMl
on the journalistic sea with Judsoa LBJ
editor at the masthead Success to tUal
tura
McKinney Courier
Ahoy I Judj come down on deck
t +
The Troupe Banner invite the Seetxdtl
over and see a saloonle Tvter ai fej
thought it would be a disappointment H
situation does us an injustice brotltr I
jotce with you in your victory but cntri
we Were surprised that even Smith wl
av nothing of the citv of Tyler wait tl
hibition Indeed we rouid not coattntf
saloonlcss Tyler until you shots
Nacogdoches Sentinel
But you didnt say youd go over
+ + +
It would be interesting to hear Eta
of Dallas toll why the Baptist genmltj
tion
just adjourned was a perfectly Iwf
body Waco Telephone
Thats easy they were harmoato
they didnt scrap Scuse our butt it
+ t
With a Hebrew being yesterday fcfejjL
the high office of lord mayor ef w J
greatest city in the world and ST-
able Disraeli Judah P Benjamin theK j
pf the financial world and others oFFl
in business politics and society it fjl
the time had gone bv for speaktrj
as a man without a country W
Herald
It would also be difficult to mention tlit
without a Jew
+
A Northern visitor in Fort Worth I
rather criticized the men of the citjrt
dont nil wear spiketail coiti to
There is justice the criticism 1
in
ought to put on their glad rags > 1
every evening and regulate their tawl
afternoon clothes to the hour
we would if tbem The ml
we had
nished sad truth is that there ar
teen evening suits in town and tn rl
tion includes six Tuxedos worn by ttf
Dickey bird crowd What is ta KJgl
Iresentable dress suit with tw MfjJ
tachments thereunto takes al the bean 1
dred dollar bill Fort Worth TW
That being the case their u e l
fined to newspaper men for some liffle
+ + +
El Paso is holding the center ° JI
now All of the large metropolis JI
publishing stories of the S1
long
piracy to murder and swindle fjfl
the trial of Richardson and Muon
Bt Peso Times VF
Thats good advertising from d > e j
point
Nacogdoches officers can hardlyJ
not having gathered in the wofflini J
It s mighty hajrd to locate a r J
pOQket HouJt < in Post 1
GrteiousI What ignoruncc
Well then Smarty where ifr
+
+ + 41
The saloon keeper at BeaMMg j
robbed while jsleep was served J5 i
keeper th
thut can go to sleep in t > t
to be robbed Lockhart Post
usrt1
We always understood that Bt J
keepers were kept too busy to fcrtTj
going to sleep t
t 4
In
laMl
Ml
tnMr
Jjo
am
1
ui
101
A
oft
ini6
itx
Con
re r
two
by 1
L
Oi
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Houston Daily Post (Houston, Tex.), Vol. XVIIIth Year, No. 225, Ed. 1, Friday, November 14, 1902, newspaper, November 14, 1902; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth83524/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .