The Frontier Echo (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, December 15, 1876 Page: 3 of 4
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fflK
THjK ECHO.
0*0. W. UOlUOS, rubllakvr.
OIU), - ■
XKXAH
BMW MOOS.
Iwwm shonl.lrr,
I WUeWiBa Mlrrwl lay breast.
I •boulder
MMI,
Kjtirn,
I QMS
fllueroil
ahoalder
I that with ol mine.
county and
troop of gentry
riotous gathering of tius hop-
Although these trouble* were
epressed, a great deal of an-
> Weal la
inn,
Nellie blosb below,
iSMST'
i W
ABITBMS1W.
J
fli**
.. . ■ fifejili'*.''. i.
tNWM,
n ;
vez-
t-tp-'ti
' •
is
n
|p$p
iv it
wk :;r f;
i,^<
s«>:
ut Bir Williaui Richardson'a honae. He
appears to have lief n a rather auntere
l'uritun, and no doubt connected witb
the Hampden atook of Wnrwickahiru,
for be figured oxtunaively in what were
known aa the " bop troublea" of that
year, taking aidea vigorously agitinst
the common people of the oou
himself leading a
ugainat a riotoua
pickera. Al
speedily rep
uoyanco waa inflicted upon the land-
owner* for a long time after In revenge,
and m om ever Buffered m*e than the
Uampdena, At tUia «we, a ruse the
flrat atorles of the "White Woman of
Watford." ^ They were regard-
ed m the 0iiporstiUou* legions
ofthe eammon people gener-
*"J *nd no epeoial significance waa
attached to them, until Sir William'*
barn waa one
al of til*'
waa a*ton
of Wafnnt|!
upon by the elder Hampden that it was
ooBttnieet myth upon Which theae
sopla foisted their own mischief.
vwkh a love of mystery,
ite woman.
long after con-
and the re-
Le-
dome
. , beau-
at walked the bank* of the
In Sheldrake'* " 1
f.l' Heif /we co
tradition of a bei
1*§
auli* may be
Si.Xy
UMnMtlk
Wye at night. She waa teen by belat-
ed traveler* returning through! the
wood that bordered the Hlchardaoi do-
who had Jut ridden over from
ha had spent the
.... inded bride, waa
his keeper that he had teen
HTOmaa of Watford," and
two of the riok* were burning.
With his usual promptitude the old man
ont to punish the outlaw*. They n
soured at Intervals with clouds. They
Wye, which
i paste* the
„ Parks. On
. at the foot of the
while in a loaeeome
ha *aw the White
iraffirm
Np
could
His
peculiar! ilea. There ia in
iuk Ku
lierlUtl her
the " Warwio\ Kugiatcr " of aaueueed
ing yeitr a ourioui aooount of an Soci
dent whioh befell a lady living upon tbo
border* of Warwlokahire. Tier nude
body waa fopnd in a neii
grove, one morning, and the post-
mortem examination decided that ahe
died of fright. This was the daughter
of Lady Hampden. In preparing the
paper* whloh weru subsequently pub-
lished under the title of "The Night
Bide of Nature11 Mrs. Crowe far some
ressep n|eoted one whloh, ia attempt-
o^wCtoni/' bSouMht to
the surface a number of extraordinary
facts.
Thl* paper, prepared by a physician
who has sineo become eminent in psy-
cologio science, was afterward read be-
fore tbtj British paeum tologlo l socie-
ty, and b at ptaMnt a part of. their ars
chives. It purports to show that the
origin of the stories of the White Lad:
of Watford and the cause Of the destl
of Lady Hampden's daughter are to be
found not in apparition, nor yet In som-
nambulism, but in what he calls ou-
tlmania, and he proceeds to give a
number of oases similar to that already
narrated, in whioh an Irrfsistible desire
(amounting of ton to disease) to Ma the
body from its conventional covering,
has given rise to the most ridioolous
and unwarranted atoriea. He also de-
clares .•'-*1fcatjt:i.' IwbUe this
nia has ofteneat maifeated itself
in women, it Is not necessarily associ-
ated with immodesty. It I* an organic
impalte which Is some way oonneoted
wituth* "
(the health of the
way oonne
Individual,
and
further.
will be on
farther inoexute i
heaven, and the
to (till
Hampden, who bs-
I n wraiths nor fairies,
put a bullet Into the
' her.*)
•when they
"We are bewitched," he *ald; "look
you!" The moon pound its silvery
light through the; vista, and they say, or
|ht they saw. the figure of a wom-
•• .IrtttTtl*.
•a boronf «.
i gun and fired.
™ jSp
, they set ont to
" ededfar,
I. This
distance, and
_ against a tree,
it' daaed with its
only of the party
cover any
re any thing, and
.and when
he boldly dl
the otherH
whereabouts
its existence,
nuns
i£
thqy believed a wUd-
•t so .Hampden; he
he
too tong a mystery
.. ,rri.uyfl...
two parties, whloh
thestream aha
let ont onoa more.
foun
ridden
rokanloose
oe of
. his wife
^jplMtdsla
i sent as a '
grbt proved
birth to a
returned
later, with
from public
iHere-
MJPj
: all
all
certain
neither edu-
oonld eradicate
id and refined,
I love of froe-
i passion for the
i county boil Id as-
i hills as she. and often
i<M* oompanion found
t a mere child, worn out
l^thft aitooet lnaocesslble
rmal sqlt was
dock Uarap-,
aooner bad M*
hews* struck dumb
—, ,i« d horrorrft*,iying
wound about her a* If to shield her.
wa* the danghtof of Sir William and
the womanO* wa* to make hie wife.
For a momant hebalieved hlauelf to be
the victim of *otae oruel incanutWn,
but the voloe* of the approaoHing tII-
lagor* warmed him- In a few moment*
v would be upon him. With the
ority aad murage of a 'd1<k* ghUaht,
hi* lnstinot wa* at onoe to asre her from
exposure and danger. He lifted her up-
on hi* horse, "stripped himself of what
olothing would anawer the purpose,and
idraped aadguar<to4he ledhU preeloua
but tuwonaotoAi burden notafle*alyaway
Twloe the panning partv oatne so
-near4hau that It waa only by the moat
adroit maneuvering that he oaoaped.
Ha heard them shouting hi* name
through tAi wood*, trot he passed on
and anocXtod in Attlng Wa charge
safely homa and in JreeenriiuW thase-
ont from the word. 8h«tW after-
ward they wen married, and t Astoriea
of the "white ladv"grew, and, *pread-
lng, attracted the attention of the
ohronloler*. >
Th>* in *ubetanoe I* Forse'* narrative.
Lna it ha* pleased the world to acocpt
story of somnambnllam.
" the current legend, and
>m an old mlniatnro the
tha Lady Hampden. For
■ tow
ii Bdt
It a* a
excursion*, and that they did not at-
tempt to intorfen with them, but mere-
ly took Sfaohprecanlions a* prevented
her exposure. Thl* read* curiously
enough, but, when the dootor declares
that she oonld not have lived if she had
not been allowed to take thl* bath of
freedom, or astonishment is softened
into pity for the eocentric invalid.
How far the misadvwta# ip
savages la tha Marquesas d
fluoneed the progeny of the Hampdens
can safely be toft to Dr. Oliver W<
Holmee to determine In fiction.—New
York World,
ated gMatmctttemant, but, fOrtonateiy,
no one was, Miionsly injured.
TMftjWriaafflini WUUa
Price, *on of tha Hon. Hiram Pi
both of Davenport. They lived at a
large double brlok house. The north
window of the back parlor it of
bay form, four *ashet In width, two
'•MMHHwk ■
pa«rof|
previous
and Mi«s Louisa
from New Orleans, who
dow wen raised all this time, ana noy
person oonld have had full view of the
parlor and Its ooeupant*
Oh£uh
a young lady
visiting Mra.
fapUy hit bett opportunity Wis when
they mra thus seated- - about
their hearth ^enjojio^ b PW
it of tita
Was the ob
Isf betur
hta
hid
stepped to tha , „ .
room all lighted behind him,
edeaohof the window fattening*. So
at that tCpia, ten mlnutea; past eleven
o'clock, nobody waa lurking about the
am Price as an ob;' '
df vengeanee. During the
however, the .servant fdrl toll
Prtoe she did not like tha actions lb
maa she sawlstanding kt the rea
the Ichuroh and engage! Inwatol
their house. Bin. Trioi said It
prayer-mtettnfffltahk na ^h* girl
spofll
thought no more of the Oonvenatlon
until tha terrible ooeumnoa, hour* af-
ter, recalled it. Tbe room direotly
over the nar parlor had been oocnpled
by Hon. Hiram ,frloe an^ wife
September^ 'When t^iey v
former realdenM for It*
Now, fortunately, they wore In St.
Louis, though whethff ihe yillalns who
attempted the destruction of the house-
hoidittrtw It far not la m question whloh
he people of this oily. ,
the ifadmy IMS retired asfauv
25? Ei
stairs, when a terrible explosion fol-
lowed. The neighbors Mhed^ipt,qf.
their bouses, and the or} of flrt Was
Tfjmfem TOW bWWTJWP
but they wen soon extinguish-
ed, and on searohing the fragments of
n six-pound shell were found. It had
rolled under a sofa after crashing
through the bay windew£M|B<fai'
this sofa that prevented tfcJpSwi frbtf
crashing thrcugtotho oeillng and killing
the oooupant* of the chamber above.
A two-mlftuUm fuse had been used,
which gay.e the assassin time to eeoape
before' tht ciploaion. A reward of 91,-
200 has beeq. offered for the arreat of
the offonder.
■ ilin ,|, r<i .[••.'
The ChlMM. Csmmander-In-Ghlef,
Tbe new Commander-in-Chief of the
Chinese army, -Li-Hung Chang, has al-
mself tha actual iovereien
Ho is regarded a* the
emy of foreigners and the
t of progress. Ha was
ive brothers, sons of a
poor literary tnan. During tbs Taiping
rebellion he offored his servioes to the
(tovornmont, and, besides rising rapid-
ly in military rank, he gained much
imperial favor. Although accused of
tho foulest treachery in beheading the
rebel king*t whose live* be had guar-
anteed, after the fail of Sooohow, he
was created a noble, and Invested with
the yellow jacket, tbe highest honor in
China ' for military achievement. In
1864 he founded the Imperial arsenal at
Nanking, and suppliod it both with
skilled wdrkmen and ail tho apparatus
nccossary for making guns, torpedoes,
rockets, shells, and other war Imple-
ments. In 1860, after tha fall, of Nan-
king, he was made Governor-General:
In 1H66 he went north, and put an end
to the Nleufll Insurrection; In 1870 wa*
orderod to fight tbe Mohammedan reb-
ela in Shanslu and Kansey,
ready made.l
of the Kmpl
implacable
leadii
the sedoni
A KOXANCE IK IlEAL LIFE.
The Vihrlaub Cinir mf ■ V—.
K-alUh «o«..u «hi Bicrau • Ttalr
*«l'fr *«!• with Wklakr-u.r
TubauiiH a,m u rrUoa fcr n
Tnn>
(From toe Nsw York TIbm.]
A oase of extraordinary interest, con
talnlng all tbe elementa of an absorb'
ing romance, waa brought to trial by
Assistant Districd^Utorney Horace Itus-
aell, yesterday, if Part II of the Court
of Geasnl Sessions. It appears that
about three y^ars ago a young woman
with whom she had become Infatuated.
It appear* that this Reynolds was the
illegitimate son of an English noble-
man, who had, married on*, of his fa-
ther's servant*; asd was forced to obit
bis old haunts by reason of having
fprged tbe parental name pretty exten-
aively ln order to obtala money/ Rey-
nolds and tbe lady referred to lived to-
Sither in poverty until the arrival of
e wife and oh&dren of the former,
who had heard of his whereabouts
and followed him. The appear-
anoe of the family of Rey-
nolds caused a separation between
him and his victim, and the latter, un
fortunately for herself, fell Into the
power of one of Reynolds's associates,
a -wasthleaa fellow namad Umtf "
Lewi*, who knew the sec re , of Mr
neotion with Reynold*, an 1 uied It to
aocompUsb his own baae p tpo*es. ile
was a specimen of tho disi patod Irish
gentleman who hod become so degen-
sratod'BS to be lost to all idea*of hMor,
and bad oome to this country to indulge
his habits in obsenrity. He was a man
bfgoad appearance, unusual pon rota-
tional powers, and oouummato impu-
dence. He had been a Lieutenant in
Harh^saty'* 11th Raglmaht, andq^ke
frequently of his aoquaintanoes amon|
the Bngllsh nobility, and the Immense
revenue* of his parent's estates in the
County KUdare, Ireland, whioh were
oolleotad for him by a trustee. His
one of the oldest in the oonn-
. his anoestry extend-
T a dheot line to tho ancient
ih King*. None of the revenue* of
tbe vast aetata* of thl* solon of nobility
found their way to this "oountry, how-
ever, and after exhausting all his in-
' ' tha eflbii to obtelit food^ r,
loved more, whisky, ha ips
an Ward's IslwMu,v>i-,
.ring this
out <
ad
_ over
m to live wll _
employment ttikvc
" " hit lady-like _man'
habltq hadsdisom-
he
hi* Bottle, an
and w4oome
mended her to
had Invited har
baoamaafnqm
of his family. 1
for liquor waa almost
ter ln>rntl|aq]y mjkifher, ting to
her
to anpplyhlm wftfi 'money; and. *he,
fearful that the secret of her miserable
Ufa would be diaolo*ed, wa* oompelled
hi* demand*. - Out.of
Tiring of tho monotony of thl*
view (write* a lady oorreipondent of
the Loulaville Courier-Journal), I ad-
dramed myself to the two lady paaaen-
ger* who were my oompanion* in the
•leeper. There wen only Ave paaaen-
gen ia our oar. and the lady nearest
me. was a teacher from Georgetown,
Colorado, is routs to the Centennial.
She was going for rest, she said; she
was so run down she oonld not sleep at
night. - She waa of middle age, had a
•tern oountenauoe, and had forgotten,
if she ever knew how, to look pleasant.
Tha Othes parte; waa a slender, Una-
eyed girlof le. Har cloths* wan (light-
ly countrified, but her faoe waa Intelli-
gent, and har voice low and tweet.
There waa a homealck look about her
that I never like to *ee on any faoe,
especially a young, fair one. I walked
over to her and *at by her aide, and
found her very'Interesting. Would you
beliefs* Vour young people, who, at 16,
ban exhausted thepleasure of travel,
and find the world Mate, that this younj;
girl Was now taking her first Journey '
She had uevar before been 60 mile* from
home, bnt the brave little thing had bid
her father and mother good-bye at their
raaohqdtqwe gate near tyutta Fe, New
Mexico, and had entered the atage and
tftveleu aldne'Stx dtjrt and Bights with-
■out re*Uqg, aad at Denver waf mat by
her father'* friand, General Smith,
uiider Who** eare she waa now gohij
to Ohio for a four-years' struggle wit!
the home-*tokne*e and strangeness of
the wwd,:«nd thorough school-books,
M ope of our ooMagos. >t Talk of hero-
ines; I will ventura not one of you trav-
eled glrlt would Undertake such a Mat
a* that? jBl^ dan. ahwq l ♦ '
coach. TonrdeUoate nerve* wi
all unstrung iwlels thsre happietiad to
atcoinpoeed and graoafal as
ihnghSwMter
iKSlf
of right 4ol
the j
iS- hM money to pro-'
not onljbeiX and'
m him 61
nato connection* .with Reynolds and
WauNHf. iSho finally, under pnapqmof
s. consented to steal «n order
to sapph 4lsdamawl*, andith*.<««Mm
for whisky; but, not oontent
with this, •'he pawnsd every shred of
his luakless victim's olothing, not ex-
cepting even her lsst article of under
... -. jjk ill-tSoatment
came si unbearab
oooaa ons, bad 1
Magistral > and sentjl
At 1 «t Ahe da"
submit to him i
& I
.M.
on tha islabd. ft'was
ing this term of confinement that Leiris
carried ont hts oft-repeated threat of
'itg his vletlm, and actually did
ite to her employer, Informing him
ohaneterjtnd denounc-
ect was in-
to^ imrft^ill&toly, add the whol^
matter was discovered. A large quan-
tity of stolen property—the prooeeds of
the woman's foroed thefts—were found
lit her foou, aifd she madaaifall con-
fession of the facts as stated above.,
The woman and Lewis w«S botb-ln-
them to be stolen. Tbe case wa* taken
longer, no
.might
1 Elussell, who Inveatigated it th'orouo ,,
Aid became couvinoed that Lewi* waa
a scoundrel of the deepest dye, who had
compelled the unfortunate woman'to
teal In
tployer tlso booame
order to gratify his wishes. The
woman's employer Mao booame oon-
that,Bho was tho victim of an
iffaktos rascal, and still rotolned
fnll oonfidenoe in her integrity. ' .
The climax of the romantic story was
reaohed yesterday,when Lewis, the vil-
lain of the plot, was placed on trial be-
fore Judge Sutherland for receiving
stolen goodti! j Assistant District Attor-
ney Kussell used tho woman as a wit-
ness for the prosecution, and ber ap-
pearance on the witness-stand, as sne
told the tale of her checkerad life, elic-
ited the sympathy of her bearers. < She
is a young woman of prepossessing ap-
pearance, and gave her ovidence with
the air of a lady of culture And refine-
ment. She WaS-subJooted to~S trying
cross-examination by the counsel for the
defonse, and when closely pressed in
rotation to her illicit intercourse with
the prisoner and his companion, broke
down oompletaly, and was removed
from the court-room in hysterics. Lowis
took tbe stand In his own defonse, and
admitted having seen tho woman bring
home the stolen urtiolos, but doniud
that he had over induced or compelled
her to (teal them, or that he
knew the property was stolon. Theae
assertion* were repeated by his counsel
in an addrott to tho Jury. Atsiatant
District-Attorney Iiusaeli, in hit sum-
ming up addressed to tb* Jury, threw
all the eloquence at hi* command into
the oase, and In an argument of rare
ability aonvinoed the Jury that tho pris-
oner waa the rile sooundrol ho had pio-
turod him.
Without a moment's hesitation the
Jury found Lewis guilty of tho oharge
in the Jndictment. Judge Sutherland
to the highest penalty in hb power to
inflict—five years in the State Priaon,
at bard labor. At the requeat of Mr.
Huaasll, a nolle ^roaequi was entered in
the caae of the woman, whose name
and address, and t host of her employer,
have, as an act of justioe to the parties
themselves, been withheld.
A Teaac
Girl's Flrat
World,
View of Ih
imp oj Sugar.—To 1 pound of
crushed sugar, put 1 pint of water; let
boil slowly 10 minutes; skim well;
squeeze the juloe of half a lemon In itt
beat the white of an egg up very light;
add to UI gill of cola water, and stir
it gradu illy Into tha boiling sugar;
strain through a fine cloth. f .
. Soiled Apple Zhmiptttuw.—Take 9
ripe, toof apple*, pari and c
gnotlqna
ppwder,
ip of lard, enoUg]
to make aoft dough; roll ana ont In
9 piece*, cook your anplee, atiok them
with a fork; bake, boO, or atoam them.
OmeltUt.—A Cup of milk and a hand-
ful of flour; beat tbe whites of 4 eggs
to a stiff froth, and the yelks by them-
selves ; add to the .yelks a little flour,
aud a part * of the milk, with pepper
t; add remainders* milk aad
M beaten white* last; fry it In
batter or part lard; muoh of the light-
qesk aud delleaoy of the. omelette de-
pend* upon the thorough 1
**JhiaU k rfum Pudding.—4 pound
read orumb*, i pound currant*, 4
pound ralshu when Stoned, i pound
brown , tugar, • oweaa aue «: '
Sne, S ounoea candled lemon-]
citron if lemon-peel I* aot to be
i, juloe of fa lemon, 4 teaaa
onala ofsoda, 1 tablespooafnl of
• hmm: yx'S.. jj i; ■
It Vfat the most exciting moment of my
life when I saW the gnat .steam mon
aterw
What
Could . . _
sSS^sT'S.; f,
thl* laa*«td ifovtofi! ,^a w«rid
"T ' " ' ——
it wa* decided t ahonld go' Eaat' to
attMk
SS.1iU('SE&M£S||^S
how to act when I gtt H)
they will do firatP Atnol
So I told her all my exi
lege life, and especially
■fuT, funny thingi about
•chool, and, of ooqrse, *be
out h*r duali' her MSnbol-jj,
who would not have a thought that was
not shared with her. and I asked her to
write me hmr ahe jot Along, and de*
scribe h«rd«uieet Mend to me when
she met her, as she sunly would. So
w ffflt-a aortof worldly god-mother,
to whom alettor will eome much quicker
than to Elanta Fa, and I have taken to
ft'hsfrt' a Wu uyd proteg*. who U as
house one stoty" Wgh, vilh; poroh all
It. The flww* an only mud,
icy have veltet earpetii laid
ovet < he . hwjd . idirfcji floor*,
and ahe hae a,.yew ^ good
piano, add plenty of books, and often
girls cataa hut from Santo Fa to spend
weeks with her, and she ha* a black
Mexteaagpqqy namadO0trlte,Mid par-
rota and lot* of strange pita. When we
; a VtVer on a fine railroad
mpulslve girl caught my
ilng: "There is a steam-
it one I ever saw." Sure
a smklt steamOri was'rounding
tsand-bar,.and bearlngdoiwnupon ua.
She watched it a* lone as the a moke
oould be teen. So all along she Was
ying something new, asking me qnet-
jnuwldah-often 1 could not anawer,
teiungi.mai thing* I did qpt know, and
at one moiheiit- lurprialng me by her
ignoranoe, and the next moment anr-
irUing me by her deep thought and
inowledge of utricatoMence. A won-
derful little Woman she I*, and twloe as
Charming to mti ** A rough diamoad,
than ahe will bo when polished and
smoothed by school training and put in
the regulation gold-setting of society.
tartar, a plaehof ,
ening into tha lonrt
rifted this and tha
ut In the *oda
the milk—just Wff
into a pact* law than half aa
Cut Into aquana, and. lay in I
of eaoh a tart
When oan the
have gonef I a
John Oakbunta
dayJaC
faot fellows
buckritln.
tnive* are
tt*\'
_j'of sold
ihlooka o£ It la teuuAa ariaerof
nr love* whisky andoards and wom-
bat, aa oompand with taa forty-
bridge, the
hand, exetaimlng: "Then Is a
<m,- ' ■ '
The Order ef Indlgnaat Barbers.
The whole city is laughing over the
woes of the Knights of tnoluzor, .who
have recently formed an organization
called "The United Barber* of New
York and Vicinity." They held a meet-
ing last week, and the proceedings,
which should have been sooret, were
printed. Their object ia to keep up the
price of shaving to a minimnm of ton
oents. It will be news td most gentle-
men, who have boen paying 20 cents
fonr a shave at tho up-town shops, that a
>od shavo can bo had anywhore in
b oity for 10 cents 1 However, tte
barbers are in oarnest, and it seems
they an resolved, if possible, to extir-
pate a nnmbor of shops whore the price
of a shavo had been reduced to five
cent*! The statements raado at tho
meeting were rich. One iqpinber ex
hibitod a circular whero
fered for five cents, and
thrown in! Others oom
story,'but the climax of tonsorial con-
tempt and diagust was reached when it
was made known that one of the so-
called "rat" shops had sunk so low in
barbarism as to offor a shampoo (usual
jrioe 36 conta) and a "sclwonor" of
agor all for five cents. Apparently, in
the estimation of the indignant bar-
bers, there is no lower level than this,
and resolutions were adopted debarring
all journeymen who worked at the flv*-
aent *hop* from future employment by
the regular*. No amount of lavender-
Water, scented *o*p, or
eradicate th* *talnupon
" tha low-priced
—N*w
a maun ai mo
tie member ex-j
i a shave was oft
id a]free oigail
oonflrmad thiJ
SEASONABLE RECIPES.
Rice-Corn Bread.—For a half-dozey
persons, b egga, 1 pint aour milk, 1 pint
cooked rioe, -U teaspoouful of salt, 1
teaspoonful of soda, oom-meal sufficient
to make a thin batter; bake three-quar-
ters of an hour.
OatinudUt.—Beat np 6 eggs and add
all the flour they will take, so that yon
can roll them oat In a very thin sheet.
Hang over a towel on a small olothee-
horae before the fire, turning often un-
til the paste is quite dry, then out In
fine threads.
Ukiehon Balad.-^boi\ two ohlokens,
ileiy
desire, take half
WANZS£f££3
urruijaun um raaam.
bone, ohop fine; chop aa mnoh
aa chloken, or, U you da*
oelery and half cabbage; boll 10e
take the yelk* only—onam ihem, add
I pound of butter, a little vinegar, mua-
tard, salt, and pepper to suit your
$80
mil PATEIT MAia CIIMKIS.
£2S£S5£S2S2&
P5
nMttJBtr.'ga
^ tl s_ ^
yon fitfi
hot, sweet
■V , #
The Black HUls
shirts, no
of tha flfty-nln*r of
aad.aiu
* wmth whan out
' Carved Legs Kteeasary.
The San Franoitoo ffmai Letter toll*
apleaaant tale of a farmer'* Wife from
Blind Gnloh, who want tq town to buy
muaio-box or something of tha sort,
for tha glria at home. She had «00
up In a handkerchief and attached
e bn-banda whloh formed her bus-
« . After aha had looked ata dosen
or" more piaaoa sbe romarked to the
&
ilanners as ha* got kjnoath lm like
hat. I'il have 'em oarvfd Ul
first." The astute manager
to
clerk: "You can't
' 8* '
wa. ... . , .. , .
astute manager signaled
a musician to try a richly carved
square grand,?' but#h*proteated that
she didn't want funeral mnslo in'her
house. Then waa « ohang* of Instru-
ment, and, what wa* mon important,
new tune—" The MtfllganGuardt."
The old lady waa deUrihted. It was the
"kind of box a* would suit the gal*."
She bought It. *
A Cenala, C«M Of aore thraat,
Bequirra iinmadlate attention, and should
be checked. If allowed to continue, Irrita-
tion of the Lungs, a puraianent Throat affec-
tion, or an Incurable Lung disease, la often
thoreanltt " BnoWjfi Buoirtmin-TiiocliB^"
having a direct Influence on the part*, gtva
Immediate relief. For Bronchlila, Asthma,
Catarrh, Consumptive and"Throat Diseases,
Taoonsa art wsad alwajit with good uux—.
8av* Vouu lUin.—If you wlah to aav*
your hair and keep It etrong and healthy, us*-
Bl'IINETT's COCOAISB. - ''' ^
a pocket roix or nbmrr
aaioaots to UUIe who* bcslih Is bob*. To enjor IMk,
(tood sppoillc. sound dl*i' ilon sad clssUe limb,,
lsll6TtTT,* rills. Tlien, If TOU an poor, tod *U1
be hsppyi If rich, joa oan ta)of your moasr. All
DruKKl'is krep thwn.
THE "MIW AUTOMATIOr
BUlohorTenalon. Wi
mm*
WOLOOX a OIBBB t. M. Oo, Uadrit
ADVERTISERiS
DHtalKO TO BUA0B
THE READERS OF THIS STATE
uiwanna
ChMpMt and B«ct liutr
s. I. BCM, M« WatBBt atnat, at. taata, Ua.
S25 sdiy^^r^.uX^Tf
8!20
865 Z $77 rtrVfeMSRiSSffifigg:
ij for si6 iffi, wijfiaanci. f
itw fork l\n — ~T.
Tke Euemy of DlaeaM, tka/M
•f Pain to luuU BMal*
la Oaa Bnai OM
MUSTANG
^eHttibcsK
J. & P. COATS
ksriMsb amiMaMal aat WH«-
asa SI tha Cialiaalal Bifsswiaa mm*
asasMBMkr*! Jadgesmr
"SUP
EXCE
ERIOR|STRENGTH
LLENT QUALITY
—or—
SPOOL C0TT0IT."
A. T. eosaour, Mnatar-Osasral.
J. B. IAWLKT, m*.
Auu.B. Biiibbbb,SsstiUryrnum.
aa
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Robson, G. W. The Frontier Echo (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, December 15, 1876, newspaper, December 15, 1876; Jacksboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth233826/m1/3/: accessed April 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.