The Fairfield Recorder. (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1892 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Freestone County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Fairfield Library.
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THE FAIRFIELD RECORDER.
----— -
L. 0. LILLARD, Editor & Proprifetor,
’ \ DEMOCRATIC TlCKEL
"The Fight Is to the Finish,"
1
'For President, .
OROVF.lt CLEVELAND.
Ftir Vice {’resident,
V A- *• 8TEVENHON.
For'Governor,
• . J. 8. HOflCl of Smith.
For Lieutenant Governor, *
M. M. ORAVF, of Jolimuui,
Foli Attorney General, v
V, A, CULBERSON of Dellas,
For Treasurer, '
* W. It. WnimiAM of Hopkins.
For Comptroller, »
» J.D. MoCALL of Travis.
■ For Lend Commissioner,
nr,(
W. L. MoOAUQHET oCHood.
For Hnp't of Public Instruction,
J. M. CARLISLE of Tarrant.
For Judges of Criminal Court of Appc
W. I,. DAVIDSON of Fort Bond,
E. J. HI WK INS of Navarro.
For Congress—1st district,
J. C. HUTQLESON.'
For State Senator—IBth district,
K E. STEELE. * '.
For District Judge,
RUFUS HARDY.
For Itistrirt Attorney,
JAMES KIMRELL.
CoiiBty Ticket.
7
For Represented*
*• ' G. W. WHITE.
For Coelity Judge,
’*> W. H. HENDERSON.
For County Attorney,
H. B. IlAVISS.
For Sheriff, j.
, J. N. HjlYDON.
For Couuty Clerk, j
' ' R. N.-CCMPTON.
For District Clork,
WALKER JEFFERSON.
For Tax Assessor,
J. P. OGLESBY. .
For'Tax Collector, ' "
L. O. 8ANDIFER.
For Treasurer,
JAKE A. WOMACK.
For Surveyor,
T. H. BONNER.
FRIDAY, HKPy./A
'• Wt'llgin lsoiffhe" "
got le cm toe finish. It is
simply democracy against bo I too
racy.
Judging by the way such men. as
Col. D. A. Nunn aud Judge H. Clay
Pleasants are lenviug tba Clark
ship, ha will need, in November,
all the help that Cuney can give I will n°l K° down.
No County Bolting. Democratic Record or^National Bank?.
Judge Clark mud at the time f>( j There has been considerable
Ilia »o nil|ed nomination that lie I piriilioul' juggling going ou in Fair-
i I it _tTt i il. Hast,I If .r I I in luul Auifk u, iux If si uliil
wwh *^in the figKl to the ffbwh.’^T fieli for the last »wo weeks, aud
That, manut until the ballots of the from a true democratic point of
people were counted in November.
The result ef the Fort Worth Re-
publican convention baa given
further, proof that Clark and’ f\is
counselors had mods* i doulations
fur in lbs future v. n be laid
down hie'implied challenge that
hr »n»-'‘iu the fight to the ficisiL”
The Republican putty, always.the
view it is all wncTllg. There are
no grounds for it uuld consequent-
ly no excuse whatever. None of
it has a “de|nuolutiC father,” for it
originated with the -enemies -of
tyue democracy. First, certain
Third party leaders or agent* Lave
"wprked”! the town several times
trying toj hud Democrats disloyal
airikunh to accept a place on their
unfinished
gaotny of organized. den^pracyt
v. ns glad to combine wiUi Clark's j uuAmshejl county ticket, or if they
bolting faction in a Tiefica auiTdu- j would m>t openly consent to that,
tsrraiued onslaught upiu the re(L I then to “^o behind the door" ami
oguized democratic purty. Clark
would, if lip could, also be ghid to
have Nugent ami his lieutenants
low er the flag of I heir organiza-
tion aud lead their followers into
the allied Clark-Republican;ranks,
in one common, more bitter and
determined tight against the old
time democratic party. j
Fuss it down the line, buys. We
might as well know it now ns later.
“The tight is to the finish.". It is
local iudepeudsiitism, Clark boltoc-
rncy, Cuney Republicanism aud
every other political odd and end
available against tba democratic
principle of majority fiile, local
self government aud fjie greatest
good to the greatest number.' Let
the Bag of pure iteinnoueoy wave
high and defiantly m the fuae of
its combined foes TheJ aause of
democracy to-day in Texas j&.Ute
tight of principle against political
anarchy and the overthrowing of
government to gratify the er.ds of
selfish personal ambition and cor-
porate greed. Let the fight wage., * well^Jiuowu^j
It was forced on - lit
Tn«h. Let it be for
principle, and thd right of 'the pBo-
-ple to rule iu the way that the fa-
thers of our government intended
th*y should. If the flag goes
down in'defeat in November, let it
fall in a bold,, brave, yncompro-
tnising tight for Ibe principles of
true democracy. - /
But the old dq^ocratic flag
f the patriot-
'agree to qualify" shqpld the
l'hiid party (with its expected re-
publican help) miruh-utally pull
them through uuh their spotted
piebald ticket., W|/have*beeu in-
formed that several lawyers 'aud
others pave been solicited aud
urged, at different times, by Third
party men who cams specially to
sec them, to “get the use of. their
names" fpr tile vacant places of
Couuty Judge and Couuty Attor-
ney. What success such solicita-
tions have met -with have not yet
been made publio. For a Demo-
crat to thus allow the use of his
name, with a tacit agreement to
accept an election, would be the
raukest treachery to his party, aud
.such an act should be considered
aud remembered agaiust bim
through all time, as “the unpar-
donable” political sin.
But that is not all. The- ranks
of our county democracy
|Corsicana Light.|
People's party orators aud parti-
san* claim that tli« democracy is
responsible for the national banks.
The record tells a different story.
We' givs below some facts that
cannot he gainsaid for they are
takan from the •> Congressional
Journal, the official record of all
congressional acts, apd their trpth
oau be proven. For OoavaniancW
nf <»i»r p»opi“’« J*firty friends, we
give date, pagA^ud sussing so that
they may inform themteltree-"Cor-
rectly. Read the record and sac
The bill creating national banks
passed' the senate, February ‘4<>,
1863, receiving 23 votes, 2 demo-
crats aud 21 republicans. Passed
the heuse February 20, 1863, yeas
78, 3 democrats aud 75 republicans
(see Journal third session pages
240, 441 and 433.)
supplement act passed the
lujgse Juue 3, 1864. Yeas 80, all
republicans, nays 66, sixty-fir
democrats and F republican. Pi
ed iu the senate May 15,18(1 ijy
30, all republicans. Six ua, ‘
democrats, 1 republican (sa^,
si first session, page IT"
A bill te' destroy mA national
bank system came nu'iu the house
January 19, 188jbVxteceived 135
yeas, 125 dem
and one uj^riibacker. Nays 8
democrats, 4^9 republicans ana 8
greenbapkjjAs. (see Journal Third
sessio^UAge 211.) /
rUe^/hime bill passi
Faframry 18, 188^.^ Yeas 45, of
ch 38 were ^letnocrutB and 7
. The Bolting Strength. £
In view of the fuel that allubj&n
i constantly being made l>y ibc
is constantly being made l>-^
bolters to (heir strength at Hyuaton
aud to tbe thousands of grdedi-
ociats there who no/mnalnd
George Clark, it may well to
restate t)ie fadts inThi^ase.
Those people uoAr-present at
Housteu have bn’-uajlJ to believe
that the regular gbiiveatiou was
spiii, wide open aaa that oua con-
,vei;ti5n was natff£n% r.8“thw oibwr. ■/
Every man Ux/Uopston saw eosi-r*
ly the ^erikimtiniiii/ strength of
the regular -parly, saw the sore
need of th«,^viirner Hall orgattfzv-
tiou when/Tthad to go' out/ with
life aud liAgin and with laige traus-
pareiiciM>, uuuoutico “lbs only"
deinociAjJc convention and add as
an iu^dtiou. "Oumur'Aipe, come
all."/t5ne and ‘ail yveut. Turner
liajd^ftn average asseaibly room with
atiug capacity of six or uight
udrod, was veiy well filled, but
'to compote it with the great wig-
wam with septs for 2500 ami stand-
ing room for 5000 more, wh|ch was
always well filled, is pitiable. It
can be p/oveu that, but tifty-t#o
whole votes out of uearly a thou-
sand, mied as a unit for the uoini-
indion of tpe bolting ticket- Bo
The W orld do Move I
AND WE
m 10*1*6 itIUHT ALOHG WITH IT.
/
threatened with assault from an-, republicans- N;i\s 20, all repiibli-
other direction. A drpuuner foj^ owns, (see Journal third sesefoj
him.
Mrs, President Harrison is dan-
gerously ill at Loon Lake, a sum-*
mer rosart iu New York. Bhd is
said to have consumption, and no
hope is entertained for bar recov-
ery.
It is a little suspicious to see
how offon Judge Clark has to-yo to
ht Lomy "on private business,”
during this campaigu. Caumvl
tbe mail aud the telegraph he trust-
ed this political year?
Hon. Roger Q. Mills will speak
at Corsicana on Saturday October
1st. It will no' doubt be a big day
. ju Corsicana for thousands will h*
in attendance to hear the distin-
guished Speaker on the great issues
of tbV day”
DQXSTft
the fight be on to the finish
.the preud democratic ban-
as must go dowum
}*t is z* dsss: ia a brave
fight for principle against the
whole combined opposition of it*
enemies.
San Fhanoisco, Sept. 9.—Wm. E.
bharon, member of the National
Republican Committee for Nevada,
has written a letter to M H. De-
Young, acting chairman of the ex-
ecutive committee, in which he
resign ae member of tbe committee.
Mr. Sbaron says that owing to his
vieWe ou the silver quest ip a he
cannot remain on tbe- committee
About three months before the
nomination of Graver Cleveland
lnet June, George Clark in a fiery
published interview denounced
Cleveland as “a charlatan aud a
<1 era agog ae." Now Clark's follow,
ers scattered over Texas aie er-
ganizing “Clark and Cleveland
Democrstio" clubs
The measure of a man may be
taken when lie asserts that R <,)
Mills should renounce principle,
platform and party to follow the
fraudulent Little Gyutit because
of.personal friendship That is
about the size of some men’s esti-
mation of patriotism and duty to
tbeir government. It is mean, it
ia contemptible,"ft is disgraceful.
----Cwiaacaim Plight.
lie sous of Texarf—the land for
which Bowie Wed and Crockett
died, for which Fannin and his
immortal 300 fell at Goliad, the
State which went into tbe great
sisterhood of our republic purified
iu tbe baptism of blood and fire at
San Jacinto—if the old mother’s
sons love Texas with s hollar, pur-'
er and deeper love than they
have for the personal candidacy
of a dictatorial rule or/ruin cor-
poration partisan, tben/tbe flag of
the eld Democratic {tarty of Jef-
ferson, of J/ackson and Calhoun
and others of its ^ illustrious de-
fenders will ngHHi/Wsve in triumph
oveY its foes next November.
--•fi* • ,
Nugenf «and' Clark.
A little ‘‘breeze" has sprung up
■ • ii"Mi.i Nugf nt ri -j
t the former claim to have
moutary evidence” (letters)
from Nugeut to Clark, saying that
the: now Third party leader would
support Clark's candidacy. But
Judge Nugoat, like all politicians,
has a getting.out place, and says
his support of Clark was cohdi-
tioual, (bat is if Clark’s platform
suited nun, After it was made.
He now says the platform did not
suit him in its commission'fen
turos; aud as the Third patty peo-
ple carav. along the road where he
was upon the political ftiuce and
wanted a leader, he concluded to
accept thc^' honor." Nugout says
he is’ in tho raile to stay, nnd no\r
the question is (ns thncorporations
are in the tight to down Hogg,)
will they induce Clark, who now
hah the transferable republican
vote >n his vest (>oe.ket, to come
dean, “on amount of his health,’
and let the Republicans and all
others that will, concentrate ou
sllort time ago
for political, not commerce
poses, He brought iir
a shrewdly designed emii)t^iticket,
with which he hoped fo.Start an
unwarranted Clark bqh, iu the
comity, from the regular, nomina-
ted county ticket K*b visit was
j ant II few days W»Ipl» the Full
Worth convention^ ihud he let it
out (privately) that"Clark had ev-
ery au^srauce, L(Um, of.capturing
the Republican ounveutiou which
be did. Be farphe Clark county
ticket has Ifnot materialized
aiftl it is hoped for the sake
of democratic honor anil political
consietencyTlhttt such a step will
not be. take|i in Freestone by men
calling themselves Democrats. If
a man really and honestly believes
he can ’ciiisistantly vota for Clark
and his State ticket, let hun do so,
but be knows there is no just
calqpe for an independent white
ticket in the couuty, for the prima-
ry election was fair and straight,
uiul not a single defeated candi-
date has ever alleged fraud, error
dr injustice in the election returns^
)Vbere thqu is the excuse or tdiad-
ow of fouudation for an indepen-
dent ticket? There is abeolntely
none.
Gentlemen, beware! Do not let
the song ef the deceptive Third
party-independent Syien draw
JBB th» <dd paths with the
promises of success. The Demo-
cratic party iu Freestone rs pussinp;
through a severe and cntichlTir-
deal. The light is much like the
old one in 1874. Then it was
against E. J. Davis republicanism.
To day it is against corporate pow-
er, with' disguised centralism. As
Lord Nelson told the Bntisii sol-
diery on the eve of the battle of
Trafalgar; “England will expect
Nugent. There are rumors in the , ., ,,, . ,
- ,i , , , temporarily, walked in,
air of another combination, aftd , . r
Judge Clarlf went to Ht. Louis on »>• mg escorted - -
"busineekV recently. We shall
see whnk wc shall see.
N*n YriRx, Beyt. 12.
ittgn '
Jlamee G. Blaine can’t vote ifi
aid’s Augneta
The Her
special says;
the
state election on Mondavi,
failed to register and ia the
dlMaalified Mr. Blaine '
tohd to adate from Blur
rad rngtotor, bnUheo^td^fie
It may be aetd Mr. _.
. torilj> dtofesMfcieed hlntwif, .
“"OtMlKUl-bt Main cap rotettolfto ho
•m , Th*re 'howl Mr. Bloiu*
jX rat of having to vote for
«MgkIaiU| mm toil!
I,#'0*1, vnt*. the orwinel to )
I nrmWe
" f*™" T. • •
“Behold bow ph-iinaiii it in for
brethren to dwell together in.uni;
,ty." Reiul ttnHfollowhig report,
from tire Fort Worth Gazette; of
the introduction iff the Third par-
ty speakers at IJ^cOlnat wcekt
"Thiritl jmrty orators, Copeland,
of the ilM|et>«pfient sovereignty oi
Bon Antonio, was introduced |>y
Ibis great fight expect tho Bailie of
every h ue won that staudp yhder
.jeav
Heuvaving hauliers.
Democrats, Look at this IficV
The night tliJit Georde j Chrk
spoke at the Ojiera Honsfi, In Dal-
las, Force IDII Judgs McCormick,
who knookml tfin ooiemfsaion out
nd while
by flic
County Attorney J. W. Taylor, an | ajlowei
enthusiastip friend of Judge Clark, cr
Wenld-be .sCongreasihan * Barber
woe preeeutid by Cspt. M. B.
Davie, staff correefsindent of Waco
(er Dele’s Siamese twins, and *ec-
totery of tlio local Clark otab,
while General Weaver woe
dneed ip glowing term* by
B. Mcarltommgli, who is chair map
of Judge Clerk'# county oathpaiga
eoaemittee. The Hogg pgoj
kbiok ,ttiey bav« dtaeoyered
to a weit
model Deuiocr it, l’at O iveefe, was
cheered to (ha echo by thn Clark
Calamity lu»wl«rs, wbo h id nseem
bieu to Lbiu iVfaiwicsn tal« «>f was.
These men assemble,Ins wh Demo
crate, but this isthe first time in tiic
history ef Texs.4, politics' that n
i'oypy Bill PepuMiceu was/ever
eloMiered over in thjs Btyle/by a
crowd calling theideol|«e / deu^s-
crats. Two years ft«m /how not
one mothers Aon of them,should lie
Tbe bill to recharter national
banks passod the house April 3/82.
Teas . 122 republicans 113, demo
crats 9.' Nays 63, democrats 54,
graenbackurs and two readjusters,
(see Journal first session 47th cou.'
grass,“page 867.) What more ceil
vincing proof can wo ask thair
the&s records? Is • it not a fact
that the third party poople are go
prejudiced that they will uot ad-
mit the above which tbey*know are
facte? Is k not strange that men
will b* led ehtrnv aud he blown
about as ,cli»F before tbe wind?
Let demoofattf stop HfuFttHAik and
not mgke fools of themselves by
believing every'- little cross road
politician they bear. . •
ponscious indeed were the leaders
Is, 9 republicans of the weakness of their strength
that the roll woe pever proseuhfd
to be called ou making nomina-
InSnA ,u ■ if ’ , ■ ( .
It would be well for thorn who
ho samite believe that a large ^^ud respect-
able minority, nominated the limit-
ing ticko . to. remetuber“ this, fact,
aud not be led to forget that lifty-
thC '‘thousands of good democrats"
who made the assault upon democ-
racy at Houstou/ll This assault
was pitifully, hopelessly uiiSucceis
fill there, but hopes by misrepre-
sentutiou and exaggeration to gaiii
strength among the people uusc
q nainted with the truth. —Houston
.
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' * .'.'-#4*', X •*. t
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BJ
X. 1
V
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THE PEOPLE SAY
V
Politics and Party Integrity.
The denuuciatiorf.of paiTy poli-
tics ia all.rot, Tliele is nothing
else iu fsight. I’artivs political
have existevl ever since the organ-
ization of the Republic, and will
be after these croakers me'in their
little tomb, tucked away finder the
wing ef tbe dAath augel. The ex-
istence of parties is indiepensible
in a popular form of government.
They exist in tke churqh aigl in
society aud in t|be circles of art
and ecieuce and in the medical
world as well hs in the political.
They are here to stay' and the
kickers aud croakers can make the
best of it -Gr*eiivi|le Heyald.
When you hear a luaiihlecrying
party organization *ud Party loy-
alty it is generally, mla to assume
that he is lacking iu patriotism or
lies hern, disappointed iu his ns
pit nt ions for polilioal preferment,
lir purty organization is the only
safely of. the couqtry. To thn
democratic petty the South
owes her present prosperity aud
freeihwn from ignornut nnd alien
Itxuu w ifi i O ----- ------- —
c^vo-y wan of us to do his daty,”^ftoierufo Wlieu a sectional party
so will the DerancratH: party in
L I
A Sheriff Assassinated.
| To the Fort Wsdh Gazette. |
GEOdoxa-uwN, Tex., y#pt. 11.—
A gloi|tn has lieen over tho city
since Farly this morning when the
news first reached here that Sheriff
John T. Olive had been danger-
ously and probably fatjdly wound-
ed at Ecfift m Dell county last
night by receiriuj tbe contents of
a shot gun iu the body while wait-
ing on tbe platform for the south
bound traju.
Great crowds of people have
stood .around the telephone, all
talking to parties at Taylor, where
Mi*. Olive now lies in a dying con-
We Beat
five mmm and wareroom
V
S I
iire filling np, mid by the 1st of September ev-
ery square iueli of tliese six rooms will he
tnxed to ueeouimodut^e our immense
■/
FALL STOCK.
Staple Department. .
i*X) pinwsi A mg OnMna, round
tores! atrip***, 3i cts a yard •
580 piscss fti-lmmit extra ipsafi-
to round thread plaids, 4 ct* yd
K> balsH best quality atasdnTrl lfijj cts yd
25 hales C. M. yard wido Sea 200 pieces best quality gilt shelf
Island eetton will go nt 4 cts yd oil cloth, 5 ets yd
5 ease* Nashville extra heavy 50 pi,oe, fHDCy ,|,M,
full J quarter .unbleached sheeting wtisuilurd colors, 2i cts yd
plaids, 5 cts' yfl ........1 c^Gfon Mills, Oquarter in,- 'T™ ^/‘-irtiog
j:,- h r 1 1 ,| 10 cVtfies/nrd wide *)ft fluhihed bleached Jfineting, 13A cts yd stsfidnrd quality, 4 cte yd
a!1 ?. J H, family has gone to bleached cotton, 5 cts yd __ 2 bales extra heavy spimlafd "*tr* «t»nd*rd fancy
bis lied side.
» cases Forfet Me Not stamlaid hickory, 7J cts yd
Johu X. Oliva js about forty j bleached e4Uon, yard wide, extra Beet quality full standard Ameo-
ysars ®f nge, and has lived in this t’n*’ *1 t-,H k*ag lnckary, !) cts yd
county siucu boyhood. He wo* bi^ehtT^oU.m ^*bwt"to thl'1 mm* - ^ 'Vf*t “Bidu etondard
-1—.-J -t-.-ier -« tl»iw county iu J’ '« '“»•*•
elected sheriff of
doeskin jeans, 20 els yd
100 pieces Eureka extra quality
74 cts yd
l£(84 und is pJi-cUid iuTBdfi In 15 bales standard quality Sea doeskin jeans, 25 cts yd
1888 he refused to make the race; I*l»«d cottiwv, 3J cW yd * 200 pieces best -faudard fancy
wiishgein elected iu 1890, and is
now the nominee <Jf the Democrat-
ic'party for re-election Perhaps
h* tins caused ni ne criminals to
' My
15 bales heaviest quality yard oil doth, marbled and mosaic,
d« Hea Island cotton, 5 cte yd ots yd
-r
pnnta, 4 cts yd
200 pieces Vxtra quality stand,
an! checked gingham* 4 cts yd
20 balsa Alamo standard 8
duck, 5 cts yd
150 pieces solid and fancy dress
ginglistns, g >od ^tylei, 5 cts yd
25 hale* Adams >t|adard eight
once Lowells, gn«|nnteeil full
weight, 6j cl. yd
___^1” .. u... t
be br-xaght to juaticn than
ua<Ml •!> ftp age iq ilia •in*".
Hog’s
Lard
reotk-f! Department.
50 dfiiz child's black ribbed.hosC, long hoSey7lc
I
J Cts a pair . 200 doz misses fufl regular im- ting, 860
corset, high grade sLf perfect fit-
llO*e,
Warner Bros. 11 fine French
saline, el«u*ant hUnf corset at 98
Ice Wa
lowedj to ifi n demo-
alto primary,' Texa#iles^uijtpy.
baggers and ctulawngs ifi the
South to ever-run and plunder the
reconstructed Staten the Demo
ernts of tho North cafiio to the rc«
cue; and the SoQth, taking fresh
courage, girded on thcif'^armwi'
and drove the vampires (tt>m tho
■tlesli pet.s. Single linuaea tlifiy
could havo done nothing but with
centplota organisation VtL«y wfifw
enabled to aceomphaii th>- aaiva- I
tion of the country. The SjuIIi i
is new threatened by a■ inoasun* I
which would restore, thn Condition
r«f things 11 quarter of a century
(ago, and put all mid to free eleo-
!\tiolia 111 lllia country. The only !
j Mb'guard Against tills great oUf* 1 ^
J rage ia tho democratie'pnrty, and’!
, every man who loves his country ;
• should give tho jwity his loyal f
Jaupflon; It it not tho tiup; f'lj'/
Third prtrty heresies, imlepcndont^
and baiters --Houston Post.
and not only
Be NO bYSPEl
dyspeptics can/
Pies, Cakes,
with it.
j there
IA.but
oat the
made
COTTOLEl
ia HEALTH1
and good Cook'S
BETTfeR than Lard.
100 doz ladies black base, 3c ported, tine gauze, dnrk
75 doz misses fancy striped hose worth 25c,-onr price 10c
extra qaality, 5c 150 doz ladies extra fine gauze, ,'LuT’ Will •„ -
....... ’*«* *r ,»“•
*200 doz lathes super, fine feat ' 4 Liamf** ni^ht ^owit, bno murtlin,
blaak liasC, li|c By special contract we'ato able ‘‘,“K«ntly smbrojdc, d, 75c each
2OO0I.Z ladies fast black hose, Mil* season to offer a high gfodn Ladies good q ility muslin
r”* corset, Wmnor ijrxjs make,-“‘()ur 'diemisse^ erabrwiils >d neck and"
s;e#' *‘a, 2">c_eaoh
ftor- fladiea mnslbi di vers, weft tin.
B pidr; H ^ra
K" J U'l! >S. F Warner Bros. Atra Lailios extra fiae »eebr»h)»rwil
extra tine , nation ^coiv.-t, nt 75c, /‘l)nfl to cliicieevs, Iw*hI uou. “ ' ' 1 1
160 doa lad lea extia super fell Cecils” at 48c
fashioned dragon black hose, fine 50 doz “Gem, well'Wmli
w rt t ■ e . •• t -A eei. 1 fififiw
fi*»* lU'llgp, 'Mil Il ‘ J'/O
( Vnr M ” tv......... n,...
I, well fihiali-
, 50 doz misses seamless
mixed, French ribbed,
heavy ho*jp, 7Jo
• 75 doz misses fast black French F125 . • L«die* tine whitrikirte, tnckeni
nol'c,lexers li^-y.'aefimlMw, extra .JVnnu'r ,1W Eclipse N^ai„n ^^embronlcr-d nt I each
Warner Bros.
■im . \ u | m
anything offered- in the Sfaris at- erfhit 50c each
Clothing Department.
i/)t 120 men's fancy worsted Lot l-Fp, 50 d--zj meti’s woollen 50 do/, imoi’a ties km
...... r.Bw **** r" ,.
---- n “ « • . . 1 l ' ' t lulu « Lllpe fli lljM!
jwnnrt
w orsted pants, IM.at patterns; 75c pants elepml styleL, 3(»-; ' ' ",,a" K"w* ,#l n' 15c a pr
Dot .195 1111 ii/ fancy striped cot- One lot aisoi*t'*o 4assiu)eri^">nits, '' qualitjAjB'ih-1 s knee-
ton worsted r issimere finiahad, el- 6no suit of a kind flom *6 to S-S.50 pants at 25c u pi t
•cant styles, 7«0 \ b» i-hild's kfd suit* at
Cent’s Furnishing’
Louis,
OfiiivasJs
&
Mfiifiaff . Aaob MM
- "Wrtiiii': iv' fay b
,pf!
m
«• t*y **m*0^
g« CUrk bdiitles the *pl«-
di<f Effort* of Houston to nnlertaiu
thfi/convfintkm Py w*Wf?s»:
ball a "stable affair, intending to
(mat odium iqMin It.~ Tit* Judge ia.
relninded that tlta greatest - man
jfi/er on earth was-Born in it stohls,
l “J"’ /Colorado Citi2eu.
‘‘.L®«fl»Mw rales to y»n. Aiekjrtto
have adfigjjmgl |13 (xtr oar sinca
u0», MaGotmipk injourfion wee
'4 granted agdhuit li** c.xiHiateaimt/’
twagitl......
NvK.lAjRBANK4kCO,
St LOURS, MO.
tepartrhent.
tOO iter, inmi'ii exSa qnahtjr. Ian-
1
M.
Dr. C. F. DROWN
25 d«z men’s plaid jumpers, 25c. drown drijl drawers, 19c
iJS-ft^tV....... )l" ^1?'*“’* ...........«> -k 5.^55
j 50 tfoz inmi'a light ootton under' 100. de • incu'a white seainleAs f .
shirts, 10c niritatien borne knit cotton *odu, 50 dok men s fiotplgimchfid drill
RXl do* men'* •xtva quality TJc ' , '- , . t
NCWWC
AftiiCAN
• Hw* imtium m;
11 t, i
rp^’-
Iwl
mM-'[ 1
'ii'Tt'?jjf*:?r '.' t 1
pifigl Wit#
-I- .' . e-MwoMwi,, ■
drawers, fifW
--------iitr-
.....
Stex
"V
\
'•^«
; Boot amdiSHoe De<jort|r^|t. ;j ^
20 dor ladies glove gmifi hub shoes.* -’/wAnktot* ’lintest’' ^^Mfii *|k; ap-eW y'rito &i« mrath 98«’
|pn*d shoes, solid leather,.Worked Soles, 75;i \ 60 doji ladies *xj x fin* gwitdoln,
■Imtt.ut holes, 50c. ’ 50Bor <d! solid calf ffl HQ kid bottmut spwial
25 tto* indies ,kid bntbmed bntlo|cd ^hoe.i, «ortw9l ^hvilfo i T^io** *hfo WirwtWf,! fii * ’
lilliliii.>>.LiMi4l.a. ----- * » ■ JI ■ . -;»-*■ . «; ; ; * I'**1 ^ a ■ ' .iw^LfL^WJm.
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Lillard, L. D. The Fairfield Recorder. (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1892, newspaper, September 23, 1892; Fairfield, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1119686/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fairfield Library.