The Democrat. (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 6, 1889 Page: 2 of 4
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THE DEMOCRAT I mo avail. The passionate men
1 ""ah to the front. The fatal
KIUTKH AXt I't Hl.lhllKIt
St-MCKirnoN B i
Our \> r. ..
Ki«tit Moitih*.
Hit Mouths.
fUrcr "
4II.AO
I.UO
75 I
40
Our A« % «•!•(
CJfc>c column I) cur...., flume
Half column 1 year
1-Iik'Ii ilnirlf column *•""
Local ii(tic«-t. «■«tits |«r lin«* lor
Hob Inaartlxn.
All coiilr icl v ill lie clmrifwl fef
l>ro|>ortlon to the nix t .
Aildrv^i
(>l Mill I. A I I'l II < o .
Mi K Itincv. I c«ct>.
m
THl RSDAY, .H NK «, IhW.
l.UITOlUAI.S.
she called out, and I heard bar,
although ! could no! Ma her.
shot is fired at Fort Moultrie, j And tha ' all, except thai the
The foundation of our govern- roof was torn « lt and 1 floated
meni trembles ui its center. A oil on it ami souie Italian*
tiijIIion in«*it grasp the iwuhi *avfil no* at kearuville sixteen
and tho mmket The tramp, miles from here."
tramp of eon tending ermine i« "And *h« children, Mrs.
heard. In the midst of chsh | Kenn.' 1 hope they all escaped."
ing swords, the roaring mil* "NVe have found two of
—— ketry , and tti«> booming art11 them. dead, Uessieand (Jeoige.
H«i«* .ilery, «-mii b hoard the pries und there is not a mark on Bes-
aii«i groans of the wounded and *''' s lure. Oh, 1 am so tired,
dying only to I* mingled with Thev are all gone, ev-ry one
the sohs* wafted from the <>f them, eight of them, and 1
breasts of widowed mothers am going home to Virginia af
and orphans. The smoke and ull these years to lest and
din of battle has cleared away try t< think.'
and we walk amidst its ruins ' Who « imagine a more
What do we sen r Here is a critical period in the life of
dead comrade a mangled form a,,y human being than the
There is another, who. in his,above? Here was love demon-
latest breath, is trying to whis strated is it right to say?)
per a message to some loved equal to the diviue.
one. the memory of which j <bie by one the precious
crowds into his fevered brain, darlings was torn from the
while upon every hand can be mother's breast und made vie-
seen and heard the piteous ap tints to the cruel, dark and
peals coming front parched and surging billows, until sweet
dying lips. JiVJUle four year old liessiu was
After all. what shall we do ? j reached ! Lo&k at the little
What shall we say ? Shall we darling as it turns its anxious,
"forgive and forget ?" We can innocent face to its mother
and should forgive, but never and says, "You know you said
j forget. It would I •• cruel to (jod would take care of meal
. - WW?::
1
speaking of our new
and corn tuill say :
"The North Texas Mill aid
Klevator Co., McKinney, Tax-
as, J. A. Hughes manager, hate
erected all elevator of 130,000
bushels capacity and a will
capable of turning out !U)0 bar
rels of meal, grits, hominy, ete.,.
per day. McKiutiey and the
surouuding couutry will, by
giving this enterprise the prop-
er support, be greatly benefit
ed, as it will afford the farmers
an opportunity to hold their
grain and receive an advance
on same instead of beiug com
pel led to sell on a depressed
market. Texas does not raise
enough wheat for home con
sumption, and where farmers
can hold their grain they are
certain to obtain a fair
price for it.
oompany,
most badly rna down, aid waa
entirely at tha mercy of Jay
Gould, and was than bald un-
dent ninety nine years' laase
by the Missouri Pacific com pa
right for aaa pound offl >ur ««d
two pounds of wheat bran!
And now how many of us to
day will sell ourselves to the
Juta bagging trust for a few
®ents and agaiu allow theae
aoulleae corporations to again
ny, ami was operated by the j place the yoke of Egyptian
Maid Missouri Pacific and Jay j bondage on our neok-f 1 hop
there are none. 1 kuow feheiv
Spring Disorders
—^ ^ luifc tt.-Hl two W H of viwr P Ml
vi. ry i hi«|*>iiimI. him! H la &_*£!!! s"*
liMt ik>u all ,iii|«-tlM'r uli't N'""
Mm akhkkk, Wat.rlow*. tittkuw.
*
* *
The Corsicana Observer in a
Gould who drew aud delivered
his check In payment for the
deed of the Kast Line road to
the Missouri, Kansas and Tax-
ax company. Again, about the
tir->t act after the sale waa to
cover the poor Iirtie East Line
with (mmi por mile bonded
mortgage debt due by said
Missouri, Kansas aud Texas
load, and make It dance up its
proportion equally with the
big road, paying, interest on
#:«>,<mo instead of $7,000 par
mile. Its principal office was
abolished: its local agents and
ofllces discharged; its tickets
of!
ask
she
the Southern
stands besnb
mother, as
a ruined
In plorkiDK from ih. Ur*. .. h(J„lt. (u n>rKt.,
knowledge be eur* ami (Slither, lira>>ly hnred his !«,«. > in .1-
the best fruit.
ways, mamma. W411 he take
care of ute now r" But on roll
ed the dreadful current, carry
ing with it the helpless little
| fettse of the "lost cause." It
moment of ecstacy express*1* sold, freight bilis signed and
the following: trains operated by Missouri
"Texas in the zenith of her Pacific officials; its pay rolls
agricultural glory is the de went to SedaUa and St. Louis,
light of all who truvel through
her vast expanse of territory
from which points alone dls-
bursemeuts, eyen for dead
Wonders never cease and the cows, were all made.
way ol somebody else
Don't nneasj when you
meet a man who will not cotide
je or uie -tosi cause. u RMS8i
The best way to help build' would be equally cruel to ask
up a town is not to stand in the the Northern mother to forget
her own darling one whose
bones lie bleaching beneath the
hot rays ol a S uithern sun.
Let iih clasp hands across
scend to speak to )ou. H j|((i mj,j niingleoui tears
may have swindled you in tune jn t,H1 l)lwmh. MllvJim |<)>t llH
past. Consequently you are erajje hafe(1 ^a8un ail<l
better without his friend-1 jxon line. Let uc have no
biggest wonder of this great
commonwealth is the magnili
cent crops that grow, spread
and Hourish. Texas will mar<)h
out of the wilderness of debt,
hard times and old ruts this
year if the crop prospect con
tinues."
The News says: "By the
sale it has fallen into hands
are soma who have never join
ed the Alliance that will stand
by us in^his fight.
Whenever the farmer at
tempts to throw off the yoke of
oppression, mch subsidised pa
pels us the l>eiitoil Times call it
a boy cot, a delusion and a snare
and heap all kinds of lualedic
tious upon those that dare to
adv-ivate justice or equal rights.
If any one can see one seusible
remark in the Times ofWt dues-
day, May l&J, 1889, in regard to
Jay Incapacity Corndodger Sim-
mons, will they please point it
out. A North Louisiana bull
dozer would pale into insiguili-
cauce by the side of such a
slanderous cuss.
J. 1. Simmons.
Shilob, Denton county, Texas.
Additional Locals,
all
are Uw natural uut-
nmclo Um> Kprtna. A
UMolk'tui' intM be until,
aod ftoUitiiif tH|ualti
Calne'a iklxrjr CM-
Maine's
Celery Compound
ua you (MUtM
Uvlp bfllevlUK a **"-
IctvMmI |iwt|.
i n • uii.-r u. r .t W. I. unx^lrai HurUm;
loll M„ wm. : "I liavi' IHHil l *lu« HiU-rjr
lii itr.-ai m« (I • • n^iioiw1
mnuml wd 1m. uuuyh «*ru*ck l wuilur^l iw •"uiwi'ti'.
|KHUML lav Mil oimm tn * I.' in**—T ^
aaa tairiuv* in.*. 11' iu. iiiirh will «!• • all Uial la
■ l.itUi- 'I l<* II. • •" H lilt" ulM' *''' '4UW
l|Uk*kl> II Illll' K VI.U u|l
Purifies ths
. —- - _— Kiiif iuvi.ttniH if wottihirfttl ' Umi* iuxl lw
I ••hi| .UD.I DOI w ii-rat aiMl alwa>> . .11 ■ i ..'||. m.i. .II.-IIH *
«tataaanMawi saw I *£«-^J — —
'I au UitUii lumlt' in<- fr.i Uki< a in * man. ah
a r-iHTMl umli' and w|Hlntf incdlrlnr I d not
ku«w o( tla mual "
iti' k itxllilUk' like «■
It.iW. Hit lur f.vmi Ui uflfWa.
Wm.i 'i. KiriiAi'laaiK A C«t., HurtHnfl.m. VI.
CUw A
IT n £M¥ TO on WITH 0I4M0H0 DYES Wt'ialianift.
Atteiition, Everybody
J. P. LEVY,
I'KAI.KIt IN ST A I'l.K AN)- F.\N< V
A Texas Kallrond.
t h. cruel fate, how long will
I you continue to weave your
chain oi' pain aud woe' How
long will it be until we can es
cape Irom the an^rt) surging j jreneral of the state and the
waters of despair iuto the placid | U|Uj Hiver rail-
ocean ol love' i road as the subject matter for
\\ e cry aloud for help, but im leading editorial. It is to
no kind answer comes. "We
All the tire boys who wish
to order shirts are requested to
disposed to repair the road!lawyer W. M, Aber-
and meet the requirements of uathy at once.
its customers."
If that be so, why is it that
after nearly ten years of un-
GROCERIES
PROVISIONS, Etc
Wi> luvilo ftrryliwl.v to vlall our new rntulilUlimtiit irppfthltt t lie I'uftnl
In lialltlln^ roriiii'i ly <M*cit| i«*«l lij Fitxliuuii X t'tur«l>, on
East Louisiana St., - - - McZinney, Tc
l^'tJood.- delivered free to any part of tin* city
controlled possession, those
4,hauds" have never added a
mite of track, aud have so lit-
llie ballas News ot 1'iiday, telly failed to keep the old
May ih selects the attorney I |rarfc j„ repair that after years
of coniplaiuts aud of suits,
ship.
A drynken man accidently
shot aud killed a sewiug ma
chine agent at Atlana Tele
grai h Items.
There are people who will
read the above and slill vote
oi prohibition Houston 'Iti
bune.
North, no South, no Hast, no
lieftr nothing but the echo of
West, but one and undivided our wailing cry.
country, "now and forever.
A Mother's Love.
"A u omaii and two < hildivn
were floating down I'11• moth
er * aught a rope and 11 ied t«•
hold if and hei baby I'
impossible and with a look <>|
anguish she reliniptished the
hold and sank with her two
little ones i lasped in her artttH.
They wert* soon jelievt
However, let us believe in
spile of all doubts, that beyond
the veil of the night of death,
I idle I Jessie will bask undei
I he smiles of ,t liiol hel s love.
many thousands of dollars
have been recovered from those
, "hands" for dauiuges resulting
be surmised that some employe froni defective track aud cars.
Tell the gwxl new* to the aun'eriiiK—
At laat h renifily la routul.
Which uilght hiive a«ved, IihiI thev
known It,
Many who're under the ground.
J'ell of the "Favorite Preaoriotlon,"
Kill hop«loea women lie glad—
Bear the irood newa to poor creature*,
Heart-Rick, dlaoouraged and and.
.'Female diseases," so terri-
ble in their effects, aud so prev-
alent among all classes, can be
cured by the use of Dr. Pierce s
Favorite Prescription.
of the Missouri, Kuksus and
Texas railway receivership fur
In one case that of Tetro
vs. Railway Company—$15,000
uished the few lacts stated damages were affirmed by the
supr 'me court. Those hands
actually getting their eugiucs,
from which the startling con
elusion is reached that "law-
yers. receivers and tlie attor
ue\ general are to reap a line
in wet weather, stuck in the
mud und have suspended the
Kti^lltim allium: our Kxt liaiugc*.
b\
tii
If you want to show true
manhood.'just walk down the!
street and speak a kind word to f
the first poor, ragged individual
you meet. It will, cause the j
b^lims of joy to lighten his own death. Tlin Uullas News informs us
sad heart ami such words «i!lj 'above clipjn ■[ tiom | jhat " loe Howard, the veteran
patches of the late Johnstown
1 lie Fat in and Itauch can
rest easy for ihe jirodticers of
this county know how to apple
a good I hill;;.
blossom into a wilderness ol
flowers above your grave
Pa., flood, is only
man> incidents of
one of the
life, which
As we go to press the late j jroes to prove the strong at
reports of the Johnstown. Pa., tachmeiti of a mother io hei
tiood are ladetted with increased j loved ones. Here was this
horror. It is now estimated | poor woman being dashed
that not lews 111a11 I.*«.(hhi people j uiiiuercfullv alon^ by the
are drowned. President Har- i aogry cui/ent. she < lusp
i tiewspajiet man, is discussing
uhelhet hell exists oil tllis
! earth or in the hereafter; He-
man he believed that it existed
in the hereafter. He is in
doubt now." flood' That is
Otir eXpei ielice
risen has contributed to the
sufferers and it is< \p cfed that
each connuuuit> will com rib
ute liberaliy for their relief.
<)n the night of the ;id iust. a
severe hail and rain storm
swept ovei North Texas, caus-
ing considerable damage in
places by blowing dwelling
houses and barns from their
foundations. Cronsofall kinds
ed the darling < hild to
her bosom. while anxious
friends threw a rope wi.'hiu her
reach. Finding that she could
not save herself without releas-
ing the child. >lie utihesitat
ingly went down todeathin the
cruel ami seething toirent vsuh
the idle of her heart pressed to
the bosom of love. The fol
lowing is also one of these
said n ail as its text, the News
says: There may have been a
W a *
time when the Fust Line and
lied Hiver railroad company
was struggling to maintain a
separate and independent ex-
istence, that presented an op-
portune occasion for the help-
lore he became a newspaper > interference of state author-
ity. For then the road had
run down and was not perform-
ing its contract with the state "
And then, before any at
tempted stile, the News con
The Houston Tribune says eludes wus the time to kindly
"Natural gas was struck at | help the road by resuming its
M'tnico, t nt., at a depth of charter on the sole ground that
li'i.'i feet. You can get natural the road had run down. The
g„'!j in llounton on striking the writer, speaking as one of the
liist man you meet coming people living on the road,
downtown. Jt'sa steady How. would like to inquire of the
too. but !> hasn't much force. News how it made the remark
What about the quality fur-! able discovery that "the road
uished by the Tribune. Is it had run down" at any time
not rather wvak < j when owned and operated by
its chartered Texas company
business, to the destruction ^'f | ruimitiK of all trains for weeks
tde people who pay freight j tt time on parts of the road,
charges. ah which was fully prov-
After taking the recent judg on tli*^ late trial at Austin,
incut forfeiting the charter ol Hhows a strange disposition to
repair aud meet the require
ments of the public.
I see recently "tin appropra
tiou" by the foreign Missouri,
Kansas and Texas receivers of
$;fi,000 to build a depot at
1 >allas; also orders to build
additional road to Waxaha-
• hie. It is but a necessary iu-
f'eivnce that the earnings of the
little Hast Line must go into
the general treasury of there
• ■ejvership to help build Dallas
and Waxahachie. which are no
more on its line or tributary to
it than is Kamscatska. Per-
haps by waiting till the East
Line helps to finish those great
works then said "hands" may,
after years of promise, widen
the gauge, ballast the track and
give us a second-hand train of
old passatiger coaches. It is
to be hoped that the supreme
court will sustain Judge Key
and the attorney general.
were badly damaged by hail. J heart-rendering incidents :
Many people were crippled. A* "Mamma, said the eldest j . BVHV.W,
Mr Frost, who lived two miles obiid, a girl, "wouldn't it be j °11'- °r ,,ur exchanges sug■ ' Or at any time prior to the sab' nipped from the For; Worth
to go outside and die in j lhe ^'Howing : ! an,'1 t" merging in the Missouri, i U||Zette
"Never hold a book near the1 Ktiusab lexas company.
The dwelling of Prof. D. K.
Stokes, colored, was burned
last uight, in the southwest
part of the city. Cause, sup-
posed to be an incendiary.
For a uice rocking chair,
call at T. J. Nate's. Opposite
postofflce
A great many are criticizing
the cow-boy preacher without
hearing him. Uo to hear nim;
acoept that which is good aud
reject, the bad—this is fair.
■ —— " —
'The tetter-board of life gocn up,
The tetter-board oflife goes down.'
Up and down, up and down—
one day a millionaire, next day
"dead broke"—ono day buoy-
ant in spirits, next day gloomy
as a fog—one day in seeming
perfect health, next day ''laid
out" with a bilious attack or
your stomach "on a strike."
This is the way the world wags
now a days. If you are bilious,
melancholic, dizzy headed, dys
peptic, want appetite, or have
torpid action of liver, kidneys
or bowels, take Dr. Pierce's
Pleasant Pellets—purely vege-
table, perfectly harmless : one
a dose.
rnrm
■
CARRIAGE* HAMESS iMiitACIURINti
K.n-n 111- ygr aoltl Uy *g ntw lift" *e*«tra|
Mlaf frtilmltc tit* mii Mla* t«m r'"ii
A w arc oianufAVt uwr* ami Iwii '
\tf« nn. r « •> % r . hare danlt
v. |||, 111 . cmmtiiei w •iiipaii).
Ullll • «Jf* tt
W We pdjr /trtuhl rii'i/M o v« if null
Instv tory. H arriitti rv«*r«iliiuii fori
vi lli*. An* one dial ran writ.* « an
' • Hu|« «r iUm«4H. fr*«ni u « «* wall sal
■•ax loaoiiK* middle tunn io'; U r,
for Un'in. giftao a
ONE PRICE,
Ko.1*
rail Klrkrl III
<umill null lm>« .
ONLY.
I'lttllurin^l oioblniitloii. n.l
.1.M|trlny Wmmonn^Slul"
H nth*** M4I •! SB Top II Mil I'll
annul m af flit. OmihiiSI
itn* m mil hit |I4ii I'ltnrlun., R
WHnMulM ll.init C*rl .
an.
b > und doll.rroti e«n In hUklwrt.
HARNESS
Oar llttrufiM. •« nil No. I
M'tUSAr";;
M imfff IIIi" FrMI. I
Addn-w, bffflATT, SM'y,
ELKHART. INDIANA.
I.i t
o
i
• v/ • * art*.
sioo
b'tiao
r<
pari the needed freshness a
strength tti their style. T
mau who wields the pen st
cessfully should T>e as dari __
and elite; prising as (he inKjflJ
with the sword. BMl
Mr. ,1 Smith, travclil
sulesiuan foi Hei ford, Cli|
northwest
killed.
of Greenville, was
Fori Worth. May 27. lwt.
At a meeting of the commit.
tee of arrangements for the
Farmers' Alliance, the follow I children's
ing resolution was passed to- j and opened it. She
be tter to go
the open air
"\es dear," said the mother;
"we'll make a raft and till go
down together."
.She fought her own and her
way to a window
caught a
tng.
wit
"Resolved. That this com
mittee extend to each and ev«
ry Farmers' Alliance, in the
state ot Texas, an invitation to
visit our (it) duting the Spiing ,,c ||,t, waves Six tinier wen I lie Nacogdochen Sun seems
Palace aud to take part in our lmU ,ftlks rr-igfiied with Jhave advanced far as to
precious cargoes and argosies , relusi- to clip from its contem
of pious trust. The children poraries. W. note ihe follow-
were friglifeiied, but obedience ing :
"Then
j piece of plank and on it put
the eldest child with a
hasty kiss and "tiod bliss
you!" Then she let it tloat
away ill the darkness and roar
of the waves Six tunes were
lire. j The true fa."ls are (of which 1
"Ne\«*r drop a book upon the j doubt not the .News is pro-
Hoor. jfoundly ignorant, .H®.it came
"Never iuiii leaves with the from Galveston and apparently
thumb. then cared nothing either for!
\* • * 1 " '
"•>ev.'t lean ot rest upon un the roads or the people
open book." Northeast Texas ):
What is the matter in keep- 1. That when said road was
.Ikkkkkson, June I, l&si).
From J. I. 8lminoas.
Kditor Monitor: Six weeks
bind twine was quoted
j at 2'J cents per pound, but to-
j day at If).
Why i Because the Alliance
ing one's eyes open while read- built twenty miles from Jeffer threatened to get a substitute,
grand parade .lune 1 fi.
G. W, Al.KX ANl)Kit,
Secretary of Committee
son in IKTii, it at once began to I or
pay niori
pi'USes
•J. 1 >111 ing the four y«tars it
was operated under this char-
ter, with Texas owners and its
principal oflice at .lellersoii, in
no waste basket in | fact, and not merely in name.
adopt cotton twine. Ten
• than operating ex Idays ago jute bagging was
iquoted at cents per yard;
today at l cents. Why this
The Shei man Herald seems
to doubt our statement by rea
son of others'fault®. It Rays.
not only never was "run
down," but every mil- of it was
built and equipped to Green
ville and McKinney, and it al-
ways paid, and paid well un
the $7tMio a mile for which it
was then bonded.
:t. It never missed n trip or
had a serious accident while
owned and operated by the
charter company.
•t. Its funds were collected
The Hlue and flic Graj. wurt purl of their creed and they i
made but little protest Now our oflice, and we seldom clip.
It is with pleasure 'that we came the time of the la--t child. S'*nd us a communication."
note the forgiving spirii that is Bessie, four years old. One Well, the Sun is a good pa-
being exercised by ex Confed- cun fancy what it meant. The I"'1 an<' if vvt' are treated with
erate and ex I nion soldiers, hist and dearest. There was Mi'e"' contempt, we propose to
I he doth of May having btien scarce breathing space in use our clippers on it. We al
set apart by our government the room now and if wuys accept the good, no mat-
for the purpose of paying haste was not used Ur from what source,
homage to the dead heroes of death would come at oaee. To V*
the late unhappy struggle, on a broad plank Hessie was fast-
Thursday last in every nook etied secure and was blessed as
and cornel of our laud, loving had been the others.
hands tenderly laid the rose "I love them: oh. I love them
and the violet on the graves of ail"' said die mother, "but I
both the blue and the gray. had two kisses foi for ney." So say* thai paper, aud suit for debt or
Standing on the threshold she was Toms favorite and so do they
of the present our minds wan was such a good child. She Sherman . cl, for Itseir history.
derback to the beginning uf put her arm* about my neck claims the proud distinction of Let t!.-News inquire of Col.
ttelcruel strife, we hear the and said : being "the leading paper." 1 W. M. Harrison, president of
votoe of the orator on either "^ou know you sai l God That's right ; claim everything the company during aif the
■ide of the vexed question of would take care of me always, and lake what you can get." four years Ut can reach him by
the hoar, appealing for sym* mamma. Will he take cui> of \V • propose to prove our as- telephone), and find out how
paihy—for aid to substantiate me now?' seriton and further, you needlfar this "run down" statement
the principles that ure dear to "1 told her he would, and not doubt l>ut what we will! is from the truth.
fcfal own heart. While the rep-. she need not fear, und she was "take all w« can get." I The facts a little further
reaantative of reason pleads for carried away.
"Subscribe for the 1>kmocuat: nd disbursed in Texa*. and no
lie leading pap-o- of .Mi-Kin complaint was ever made, or
damaged ever
nil hiv ,\i| the filed during that period of its
decline in the prices i Because
the representatives of t';« Al-
liance met in the city of Bir-
mingham, Ala., and adopted
cotton to wrap their fleecy sta-
ple in this year. What I want
to kuow is, how many so-
called Alliance men are there
who are ready to swallow bait
thrown out by these soulless
corporations, called trusts, and
thereby cut the throats of their
true friends, the manufacturers
of- the cotton bagging ? Some
will do this 1 know from o
ration.
* When the Alliance mill* was PIIm! IMhwl Itrhlnv Hlwi
h„m «l lM.nto.1, thi fnnn« hn.l KJ
,u Siv, 00 pm.n I. of «h«« for &X2i'S£L
My stock is all uew and
fresh. I am here to sell and 1
am going to sell. Call oppo
site postofflce. T.J. Nalk.
Esq. Roberson, of Weston,
was in to see us last Saturday.
The judge is one of our ear-
liest settlers. He moved to
Texas in 1854. For a number
of years be was surveyor of this
county and during the war, and
some years after was its judge.
He is to-day over seventy years
old. At one time he knew
everybody in the county, now
he knows comparatively few—
what wonderful changes have
taken place ( The solitary
woods and the wild prairie
have yielded to the Irresistible
march of civilisation, and now,
day its wealth is unsurpass
ed. May the judge's declining
years grow brighter tinder the
guiding star of hope.
Fruit cans and Jelly glasses
at T. J. Nale's. Opposite post
office.
Any one wishing to obtain a
commercial education can pur-
chase a scholarship at this
office, which will entitle you
to enter the best college in Pie
the state, namely, Lawrence's
Commercial College, Dallas,
Texas.
New Fashions lit Writing.
We take pleasure in re pro-
ducing the following from the
Atlanta Constitution :
It will not do to condemn
everv new writer w ho leaves
Xhe beaten track, merely be
cause we liud him striking
out for himself along an uu & <ju ; rhicago.'had^ ilie misf
traveled road. tune to'sprain his w rist m
Literature Ins its fashions; severely. "I was suffer
it has its periods of peaceful pain, he says, "and
, wrisi was badly swollen: a
monotony and it Ims Ha revo- ,/f clmlubOTlllU
lotions, hvery new thing is pHJn [ja|m relieved the pi
not necessarily bad or crude and reduced the swelling in^
because it is new and strange, night, and in consequence tj
Oncein awhile a revolt against )v,"k uml business waa not,
. ten note I. rot which I am v
constitutionality is genuine ura,(.j„| | nin
progress.
The lrouble with most Amer-
ican writers is their tame imita-
tion of foreign models. Kn
slaved by the critics of the old
world, lhey hare learned in de
spise the material around
the in ; they have been ashamed
of every original idea, and
have considered it beneath
theiu to write of
recounts
Pain
Ih
Chamberlain's
from personal experionc
Sold by Bristol Bros., CJ
City Drug Store, Johm
Hlock, Mc Kinney. Texas.
m
iM
A
te
u
hi
Alt old lady at Burke, To
who had been troubled w|
chronic diarrhoea for over
teen years, says that Chaml
American land's Colic, Cholera and Dij
things nan sensible, indepen- ' rlio™ Hnwedy did lie., lid
. . ... „ good than all other tuedicl
dent American would write of 8l)H haii ,,Vf.r U8ed Mr
them Treadwill, the leading merj
There are signs of a revolt of ^ut of the town, vouches
>V
c
w
ir
our writers against the tyran-
ny ol corventionality. At first
the new departure is not prom-
ising. Some of the elforts made
by our most earnest reformers
iu this line are coarse, slangy,
erotic and cranky. But out of
ull this agitation something
good will come. Publishers
may igttoie and critics may de
nounce the experiments of our
ne« schools, but publishers
and critics cannot suppress the
man who has a message to de
liver
Has anybody taken the pains
to get to the bottom of the pop
nlar fancy for dialect wri'ingf
There is only one explanation
The people want Am ric.in j
life, written in the Ani iicai
style - they want som-t! rig
unconventional, with a t-
of nature and individ*. r
Dialect, however, is n t
only form of unconve
literary expression.
thoughtful observer wh-
lows Etnersoa's advic- .mil
lives in tho streets will iin I in
teresting types of cliarae.. r te
sides the negroes,mountabre •!>
and crackcis. and wh • h
comes to writo what ik i hi-
mind he will produce A i. i
lit. s it are.
One thing is certain . >
er wi'l have a distinct;v
• J
ill '
ina!
I'h.
f I
the above slateuieut. For
by Bristol Bro's City Di
stole, .Johnson block,
SmaMaSi
Th Chief IUiwmmi for Ik* (ml i
Itond't Hsrm^arlll* U found In tha fact
SfoHt Winn. It I* tbn Imst Mood pnHAorl
•ftu iijr .T'>in|.ii iiP« ii that u elaiiaatf fnf
CtafMad w if ojr c. t. Uoo4 a C#. Lowatl, I
tf any djfali r % y* ha Him tlia W. I* 1
RhorK wfOiniit unni.. antT prim i
the bottom, nut him Sum aa 11
Im
tc
nc
m
it
mora form, which often lil«>ril ami ulcer.
lSDUnds of flour, and the Mc. becoming vnry nor**. SW.xySKK'S a'Ui" of our owtl SO III
* . tllNTNKNl II till Hi Ihn lli'liini/ unit t>lc<>il . «
W. L I
$3 SHOE
movement, bat to I " 4I am
not afraid, mamma,'
The
« •
in 1801 when the attempt*
«nd iianch iaiod sale waa made
to tk*
D,...Ji!2rS!Bgr" d ,d' 8
PhlMolphla,
New kaaadry.
- t . i , ...... *j iui n.. OlNTNKNtatojm the Itching mt Wwnl
COttSUUier had to pay a4.tH per tnf. heiila ul«wratltx« *n l In niont
hundied for his Hour. To day wuiovMihe tmnon.
we can get 34 pounds of Hour
and 8 pounds of bran at the
AUianoe mill for 60 pound* of
wheat; and that aoalleae cor-
poration, the Millers' trust, will
give 33 pounds,of flour and 10
poands of bran.
many Alliance <*,
sa urate nursel.es
w It
of J' I
wri'eis Our only w.v
n'n what is in our mi Is,
I ....' it with no thought oi :>
Mir, N. A. Jarrell will do all I g understood and anprcciut d
kind of lauudry work at rea- outride of a circle of American j MRxAmtaM w., f, w
prices. Call Md see or Kenilfmcn ami ladlea.''
A little boldaesA is what our j * FOR SALE BT
writers need, It will carry { C
tl
tl
ai
b(
ci
h<
St
D
\^l
-ve
.In
ttl
tot
IU
la
ol
CI
fa
sonable prices. Call and see
her. Healdence weet of Scot'
w" nSto ***** *,d#
Oil
«i > 11
I
b
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Democrat Publishing Company. The Democrat. (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 6, 1889, newspaper, June 6, 1889; McKinney, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth191579/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.