The Standard (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 12, 1888 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.
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Crowding To The Battle-Field
Gettysburg, J*a., June 28.—Although
the great celebrations are two Hays away
Gettysburg ia packed to-night far beyond
its capacity. It baa been raining stead-
ily for two days and the roads and streU
are in a frightful condition. But the
weather has not deterred the people
from coming. The people like the r-iin
have been pouring into the town for two
d'iyn. Sixteen thousand ticket* to
Gettysburg have been sold from Boston
and Springfield and from the ap|ieurance
of things the holders of the<H> tickets
arc already here with thousand* of oth-
ers heaide*. To-night it is impossible
to get a room in any one of the hotels
and Major Coleman of the Spi ing<s Hotel
says he has refused over ten thousand
applicants for rooms witbin the past
wwk,
Three Governors of Status and a score
of major-generals are in town to-night.
Gov. Ormshee and his staff and Lieut.
Gov Fuller, of Vermont in to night at
7 and went to general headquarters i«t
the Springs Hotel. Gov. Green of New
Jersey and bis staff, with Gen. Herriue
commandant of the Jersev troops and
his brigadiers Sewell and Steele arrived
an hour later. Gen. Sewell encamped
in his private car which) was drawn up to
Round Top so as to be near the Jersey
militia who are encamped in the wheat
field. Gov Green at fiist proposed to
sleep in a tent but concluded that it was
too damp. Gov Beaver and staff enter
ed the town with drums heating and col
ors flying about 7:30 and proceeded to
the camps of the Theological Seminary
where he will make his headquarters dur-
ing his stay. President Cleveland is ex-
pected on Monday. Gov. Rusk, of
\Visconsin and 500 Wrscosin veterans are
due at midnight.
As usual the facilities here are exe-
crable. The train that was advertised to
reach here at 5:30 tonight was over an
hour late. The Pennsylvania Railroad
brought all its passengers to Harrisburg
on time but the management of the
Gettysburg and Harrisburg road was not
equal to the emergency. Nor are the
telegragh arrangements any better. The
bingle wire from the Springs Hotel was
cut off from the world in the m:ddle of
a sentence at 8 o'clock to-night and
while the local staff operators are do-
ing all that can be expected they were
swamped by 9 o'clock by press dispatch-
es.
The vicinity of the Springs Hotel bears
a very warlike appearance to-aight
Eight batteries of regulars and two
troops of cavalry are oncamped at
Willoughby's Bun within a stone's throw
of the hotel and the white tents
and tnmpfiroa are gleaming in the
night.
The programme for the anniversary
occasion is as follows: The First Corps
-will hold a reunion at the statue of Gen.
John F. Reynolds on Sunday at IP. M.,
with addresses by Gen. Abner Double-
day and others. Monday, July 2—10 30
A. M., Meetings of the several corps
•>rsanizationsat places to be designated;
8 P. M., general reunion of the "Blue
and Gray" Bt tne Rink; presiding offi-
cer Major-gen. D. E. Sickles, U. S. A.,
retired address of welcome by (Jen.
James A. Beaver Gouernor of Penn-
sylvania who will be introduced|hv Gen.
J. B. Gordon Governor of Georgia; re
sfionsc by Chaplain James McCal>e of
Petersburg, Va., who will be introduced
bv Gen. Sickles. Tuesday, July3—3 P.
M., Oration by George William Curtis
*nd poam by George Parsons Lathrop
<n the National Cemetery; 7. 30 P. M.
Banquet at the Rink.
Detroit, Mich, Jnly £—S. Keiter of
this city recently imported an English
bull dog warranted to never open its jaws
when oncathey had closed on an enemy.
Keiter was very proud of his purchase
and exhibited it frequently to a select cir-
cle of triends. Recently the dog was
given a corner in a stable where Keiter
at*> kept a fast pacer horse. Yesterday,
Keiter locked the two animals in the barn
and went away on and excursion. When
!i«- returned and opened the barn door in
tfio evening he was horrified to find the
horse on the floor nearly dead, while
hanging to its under jaw trom which the
lU'sb had been torn, leaving the bone al
most bare, was the bull dog, alive bnt
i>;idly braised. Keiter called in his
u lends and at once set to work releasing
t he horse of his terrible antagonist. The
clog was choked, kicked, pounded, burn-
ed with a hot lorn and a wedge was driv-
tvi into bis jaws but all to no purpose.
Finally an axo was produced anil the
<ing*shead chopped off. Then it was
<.Iriicalt to loosen the grip. The horse
w; lifted to his feet and an examination
H-U8 made. He will probably die. His
skin was torn from his body in many
places where the dog had evidently tritd
t<> ration his teeth, and be was scsrred
fi lm head to feet. The dog had evident-
ly one hold on the horse's br< a*t, for
there a large piece of flesh was torn out.
11 bad been a battle royal. Probably the
dosr. after breaking his rope, had wan
dered into the pacer's stall and coruing
too near h:< heels had been kicked. He
retaliated with his teeth and the fight be-
t'.in. There was hardly a whole bone
left in ihe dog's iwhiv and tin- horse will
not be go d tor anyth'ng it he iiws.
New ^ ork. June —A ivginnntor
I woof men on the down-town exchange*
have an odd hundred or two to bet on
t'levelind and Tbnrtnan. The prevailing
odds aie £100 to ijUiO on the IVniwr'ii'
candidate*. The republicans do not re-
spond ivadily.
Tired of the Telephone
The telephone has had a long rest from
Women and Umbrellas.
I am a flrm believer in woman suffrage.
Women preachers edify me, womem lec-
tures delight me, women doctors thrill
me, women telephone clerks enchant me,
and women barbers arc to me a source
of titteen-cent joy. Woman's rights
should be respected. In the pulpit and
tights, before the bar and behind it, wo-
man must have her place. Against one ■ family up at your house?"'
thing, however, in the name of humanity I "No."
and eyeballs, I must protest—The right j "Well, I'm going down to tell tbem to
of women to carry umbrellas. To the take mine out right away."
abuse, bnt its turn has come again.
"Have you got a telephoned" said one
man in the car to another.
"Yes, and I wouldn't be without It tor
anything. It's the most useful,
most "
"Hold on. Got any family
Hoop La?
maniac who never goes out in a rain
storm (except when it- may be raining in
London and dry here) this may seem ab
• >ird; it may even be the unhappy cause
of illumining the tace of some drum-brain- home. I have wanted
evening with the boys
ed pessimist with a smile; bnt sensible
democrats will agree with me.
On a raining day a woman with an um-
brella is a terror; on a drizzly night -he
is a fiend incarnate. This innocent and
useful contrivance, once placed in the
grasp of a woman, becomes a hideous and
deadly weapon.
In every well appointed rain storm you
may observe that sheolian combination—
a woman with an umbrellar. Unmind-
ful of aught but her Sunday bonnet. She
rushes madly along with the rain protec-
tot before her face. She knows not.
neither does she care, who or what is be-
fore hor; but is, alas! too well aware that
undisputed monopoly ot the sidewalk is
here. Presently the victim appears. lie
is a misguided mortal laboring under the
delusion that he has rights on the streets
—womanjor no women. Harmlessly, aye.
aimlessly perchance, he comes along. He
perceives the woman's approach but does
not leap in the gutter, or plunge wildly
in a friendly doorway. * They meet
Why?"
"Can't get away trom it. My wife has
succeeded in gettiug at me everywhere
I've been, and I've always had to go
to have a quiet
for some weeks,
but every time 'ting-a-ling.' That con-
founded telephone. Always some mes-
sage. You see, I'm too honest. 1 al-
ways tell her where I'm going and she
catches me every time. She has [used
every possible experiment a telephone
could pos-fiMy carry, but she has over-
done it, and no more telephone."
"What has she done?"
"Well, last night I made up my mind
I'd take a holiday from the family, so to
speak, and when the telephone rang I
went to it prepared to face evey argu-
ment she could make. But she got me
— she got me. I had to go home."
"How did she get you"
Hang it, she put the baby up to the
telephone and pinched it till it yelled bine
murder over the wire.—San Francisco
Examiner.
We cannot let Mrs. Cleveland out of
the campaign. She is at once its inspira-
tion ana its argument. I do not hope
to descibe her to you. The pointing out
rf her excellencies is a task fiom which
I shrink. Why if the bees of Hymettus
were swarming on my lips and my
small i sPeecb and soul soaicd a-the eagle soars
when with unquaihng he looks into the
sun and mounts higher and higher until
he dai kens the burnished ceiling ot the
sky with the shadow of his wings I could
not hope to interpret to you the sweet
and gracious courtesy of the first lady of
the land.
We need not further discuss this pain-
ful scene. It is enongh for us to know
that the victim takes a free ambulance
ride and finds his left optic demolished
and his nose out of place.—Life.
Dominee (to hotel clerk): "I s'posc
yon have special rates for preachers?"
Hotel clerk: "No, we treat everybody
alike here. All we ask is that he behaves
himself and respects the rules of the
house.—New York Sun.
A relic of the revolution has lately
been found in Washington. It is the or-
iginal doenment given to pass Mai-
Andre through the American lines when
Benedict Arnold had resolved to betray
West Point into the hands of the British".
The pass is signed by Arnold as major
general, and is countersigned by Gen.
Gage. The possessor is a direct descend-
ant ot Pauldiug, one ot the scouts who
arrested Andre when he attempted to pass
the picket nnder the name of Anderson.
—Chicago Herald.
While the 14 year-old son of J. W.
Curnette was hoeing cotton, near Bon-
ham, ho was bitted on the leg by a large
copperhead snake. It is thought the bov
will die.
Pretty Good for Texas
Necessity is the mother of invention
and discovery. The old idea was that
Western Texas was only a good grazing
country but the country became over
stocked with cattle the gras* gave out
and the price of cattle went down.
There was a necesity for a new move-
ment. It was made; the ground was
plowed up and planted and we harvest
twenty-two bushels of wheat,seventy five
bushels of oats, fifty bushels of corn and
three quarters of a bale of cotton to the
acre. Some farmers will plow up their
wheat stubble and plant cotton; others
intend to sow corn broadcast on wheat
stubble ground. Two crops is the idea
now from one piece of ground. lJrctty
good for "only a grazing country,"—
Fort \\ orth Gazette.
Chargles Burke, the little son of Mrs.
Burke, proprietress of the Burke house
at Decatur, was killed while swinging
onto a moving freight train. His head
was entirely severed from his body.
Governor Ross offers a reward of §300
tor each of the murderers of Peter Wal-
ker, an old colored man, who was killed
while escaping from his house. The
mnrder was committed in Van Zandt
county.
Mr. Jim Blevins, near White Rock, in
Hunt county, killed a very large chiken-
snake a few days ago. and noticing the
snake's body was unusually large and ill-
shaped, made an incision and found it to
contain a large cow horn and in the horn
a praire rat. It is supposed that the
snake chased the rat into the horn, and
to secuje the rat swallowed the horn.
Women. Delavs Are Dangerous.
Madame Revere'-; Female Piils for
never fail to always give speedy aud
certain relief. Satisfaction guaranteed
or money refunded. Sent by mail, se-
curely sealed, in plain wrapprr, foi One
Dollar: three boxes for Two Dollars.
Particulars in letter for four cents in
postage stamps, Address
Mrs. E, Revere, Box, 283, Jersey
City, N. J. 12
There is much more truth than poetry
in the following taken from an exchange-
The coat will fit many a man not a thous-
and miles from Denison; "We like to
hear a man refuse to take his home paper,
and all the time sponge on his neighbor
r the reading of it. We like to hear a
man complrin when asked to subscribe
for his home paper, that he takes more
than he can read now, and then go and
borrow his neighqor's or loaf around un-
til he gathers all the news from it. We
like to see a man run down his home pa-
per as not worth taking and now and then
beg the editor for a favor in the editorial.
We like to see a man run down liis home
paper and then try to get a share ot the
trade which the newspaper brings to
town; we like to see this; it looks econ-
omical thrifty, progressive and cheeky.'
—Denison News.
It is said that Hon. J. W. Ba'ley of
Gainesuille will go to Indiana to aid in
the canvass there. Texas should send
words of encouragement and good cheer
to the strugling Democrats ot the Hoos-
ier state, and from no tongue could they
fall more gracefully or with more honey,
ed eloquence than from that of the gal-
lant young orator ot the'eounty of Cooke.
—Fort Worth.
Morton, of New York, may open his
barrel, but Gov. Hill is our sentinel on
the watch tower and can be counted on
to carry our majority in that State away
up above fifty thousand. We count as
confidently on New York as we do on
Mis sissipi, Arkansas or Tennessee.
The reputable character of the tickets
placed in the field by the Democratic and
Republican parties respectively, removes
their personalities from the field of dis
cussion. The attention of the voters will
therefore be directed at issues and not at
men This is as it should be.
Chicago, July 2.—Mr. Blaine is >ooked
for i speech in Chicago the second week
in Augu-t and the Blaine club of this city
is making extensive preparations to re-
ceive him here.
Waco. Tex.. July 3.—A convention
of independent voters of Falls county
will meet in JJarlin on the 21st inst. W.
It, Robinson, ot prohibition fame, will
be nominated for Congreso against the
H .n. R. Q. Mills.
Walter Blaine Harrison is the name of
a child that was born on the day Mr.
Blaine was nominated for the Presidency
and died on Monday, the day Gen. Har-
rison was nominated. The American
Life Insvrance Company paid a claim
yesterdny to the little fellow's repiescnta-
tives.
The New York Sun is saddened at the
loss of McKinney as a candidate. There
was a kind of youthful inspiration in him.
but wo are douhtlul if it would have
buoved np the tremendous load of tariff
he bore on his back.-
Doctor's Bills*
Mistress (to applicant)—"Have you any
followers?" Applicant—"Purty well
tuum, for a gnr-rl phats been lauded bat
six months."—Harper's Bazar.
Any person whose blond and liver U in
g-iod condition is all right even in the mid-it
of epidemic. This can lie noticed in the
life of every one. If all would avail them-
selves of the advantages of restoring and
maintaining the health of the body there
would be fewer doctor's bills and much less
sorrow. The one thing needful and the
one recommended above all others is fouud
in Simmons Liver Regulator, prepared by
J. II. Zeilin & Co. The testimonials are
counted bv the thousands and its merits
are unbounded. J
.Something Handsome: Lady (to floor
walker)—"I want to look at something
very handsome in the way ot striped silk
stockings." Floorwalker—"Yes' madam.
(To saleswoman), Miss Parker, will you
show this lady that new line of windy
weather goods?"—New York Sun.
The Duke of Rutland, accompanied
by the Euchess if likely to visit America
this Summer. The Duchess is a popu-
lar magizine writer in London and un-
til her husband's recent accession to the
dukedom her signature was frenuentlv
; at the end of Ion? aitides in the Lcn Ion
Queen on social topics for women. One
object of the American journey is it is
believed to enable the Duchess to widen
her sphere of otaervation inio feminine
life in large cities.
The remains of Beethoven were exhum-
ed, on the 20th, and placed in a new
coffin. They were conveyed throuugh
the principal streets of Vienna on the
2'2d, and entered in Central Cemetery.
The grave is marked by a handsome
obelisk, on which is inscribed simply the
name Beethoven.
Prince Rupert of Bavaria who was
sent to Barcelona to represent his coun-
try at the unveiling of the statue of
Christopher Columbus ran off to Paris
and had a lark. He has now been ban-
ished to a secluded and remctc village to
repent and reform. There is little prob-
ability that ostracism will regenerate the
giddy Prince who is only nineteen and
who had never before been in Paras
The Berlin Post declares there is no
foundation for the idea that a change
will be made in the Germau policy ad-
verse to Russia. French fears, it says
are also baseless. Emperor William has
telegraphed President Carnot of France
thanking him for h is message of con
dolence on the death of Frederick and
expressing the hope that thegood rela-
tions now existing between France and
Germany may continue.
"Her voice was a cross between the
hum of a cyclone and the screech of a
locomotive under full steam It trembled
away in cat-like cadences and rose again
like the wail of a hound in distress.
Again it rose in mellow tones not unlike
the wind dallying over the uiouth of an
empty jug. Stopping only long enough
to take wind, she rose slowly to her tip-
toes and with gyrating arms and heavy
chest gave a fair imitation of .the roar
that foretells a Dakota blizzad. Old
Jim Bakers pet panther chained to a
post back of the opera house heard some
of her high notes and they skeered the
poor beast out ot a year's growth. It
was the first time our town was ever
visited^by a genuine femal calliope and
we hope'she'll come again.—Custer City
Chronicle'
After Mr. Crawford had chatted with
Mr. Blaine away over in Scotland last
Suuday night be cabled over to the New
York World that Harrison would prob-
ably be nominated on the following day
The outcome of the balloting tallied
pretty closcly with this prediction. If
anybody supposes that Mr. Blaine didn't
have his ear pretty near to the ground
last week and that he wasn't in pretty
close connection with his managers
he must be a very innocent sort of
person
Aunt Nancy Thurmaii sent a batch ot
pies to the wretched, starving Confeder-
ate prisoners at Camp Chase, and for this
the "bloody shirt" is shaken In the face
of Cleveland and Thurman. The party
that would raise such an issue and such a
cry can never again control the- destinies
ot a greut nation-
Kansas City, Mo., June 27.—Sunday
night John Duncan, living just across the
Texas line Iront Bonham, beat his wife,
and Lum Crump, twelve years old, his
stepson, lushed upon him with a scythe
and cut him horribly, kiilin "dm. The
boy's mother attempted top uiish the lit-
tle'fellow, when he hit her twice with the
scythe, one blow cutting her scalp open
and the other almost severing her lett
arm.
The wonderful editor of the Chicago
Staats-Zeitung, a German newspaper of
some conspicuity, has been placed in an
awful and soul-thrilling predicament.
He announces that he is tumble to sup-
port in his newspaper either Cleveland or
Harrison. 11c should obtain a leave ot
absence and quit the country until the
blows over.
.Luxuriant Hair
Can only be preserved by keeping the
scalp clean, cool, and free from dan-
drufi, and the body in a healthful
condition. The great popularity of
Ayei-'s Hair Vigor is <lue to the fact
rhat, it cleanses the scalp, promotes the
growth of the hair, prevents it from
'ailing out, and gives it that soft and
silky gloss so essential to perfect beauty.
Frederick Hardy, of Roxbury, Mass.,
gentleman fifty years of age, was fast
losing his hair, and what remained was
growing gray. After trying various
dressings with no effect, he commenced
the uso of Ayer's Hair Vigor. " It
stopped the falling out," he \vrite3;
"and, to my great surprise, converted
my white liair (without staining the
scalp) to the same shade of brown it
had when I was 23 years of age."
Ten Years Younger.
Mrs. Mary Montgomery, of Boston,
writes: "For years, I was compelled
to wear a dress cap to conceal a bald
spot on the crown of my head ; bnt now
I gladly lay the cap aside, for your Hair
Vigor is bringing out a new growth. I
could hardly trust my senses when I
first found my hair growing; bnt there
it is, nnd I am delighted. I look ten
years younger."
A similar result attended the use of
Ayer's Hair Vigor by Mrs. O. O. Pres-
cott, of Cliarlestown, Mass., Miss Bessie
H. Bedloe, of Burlington, Vt., Mrs. J. J.
Burton, of Bangor, Me., and numerous
others.
The loss of hair may be owing to im-
purity of the blood or derangement of
the stomach and liver, in which case,
a course of Ayer's Sarsaparilla or of
Ayer's Pills, in connection with the
Vigor, may l>e necessary to give health
and tone to all the functions of the
body. At the same time, it cannot be
too strongly urged that none of these
remedies can do much good without
a persevering trial and strict attention
to cleanly and temperate habits.
Ayer's Hair Vigor,
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Must.
Sold by Druggists and Perfumers.
BRADFXELD'S ,
EMALE
R
EGULATOR
An intensely red dress can now be
worn without the idea of loudness says
a fashionable journal. This shows
the popularity of the Old Roman's ban-
dana.
I
I A SPECIFIC FOR I
WOMAN'S
piSEASES
j^te AJTO IRREGULARITIES.
if taken during the CHANGE OP UK, 0NM
■ottering and danger will to avoided. HF" Sena for
book, "**wuo to Womi," mailed me.
bbamhu rcoolatob Co., Atlanta, Qa.
W holts-ait <i Kcthii by
* J.L. REED
A PERFECT COMBINATION
Of harmless vegetable remedies that will restore the whole system to healthy action, is
absolutely needed to cure any disease "for the disease that affects one organ weakens
all." Paine's Celery Compound is THIS PERFECT COMBINATION* Read the proofs!
troubl"
I have suffered terribly from ncrvcHisness unci kidney
I bought two i>ottk'S of Paine's Celery Compound.
ar.«i oh, how it «H<1
medicine, for I kinvwJJn
Ontario Centre. N. Y.
me! I have so much faith in your
&at it did for me."
Mrs. j. j. Watson.
PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND
"For five rears I pnffjred with malaria and nervousness.
I tried l'niiic'S Celer? Coini'oiuiil, and lean until fully say
that five Itoitles completely rami inc. i theerfu'.ly recom-
mend it. for 1 know ir to be a good lnodli inc."
ciias. u Steakns, l itter Currier, rintiou b, Brooklyn, r*. y.
CURES ALL NERVOUS DISEASES,
Neuralgia, Rhsumatisrn, Paralysis, Biliousness, Dysoepsia.Costiveness, Piles, Liver Com-
plaint, Kidney Trouble, Female Complaints, and all diseases arisir.gfrom Impure Blood.
f 1. rfx for $">. WrLi^. f.'ii'H vrt>.
s< k k • '-o.. i'vop*-. JSi!rlinwrt. u, Vt.
$1. hx l « r See that each In it-
tin o. .it * ! <> <'el.*ry tssde mark.
$1, six for
son k Co.,
[5. Wells. Richard-
roi*., linrlm
For the Nervous, ; The Debilitated,
m.arton.Vt.
The Aged.
Children Cry
FOR PITCHERS
Gasleria
Centaur Liniment is the most wonderful Pain-Curer
the world has ever known.
Public feeli02 in Berlin distinctlv
favored the holding of a post-mortem
examination of the Emperor Fredericks
body that when m ide would prove be-
yond the shadow of a doubt that cancer
hns exi-ted. The friends of l)r. Mac-
Kenzie state that he knew the cancerous
character of the disease from an early
period but took the best covrse possible
with the patient.
A great ileal of anxiety is felt in Eng-
land as to the result of the emancipation
of slaves in Brazil as it is estimated that
over $.*>00,000,000 of English capital is in-
vested in that country. The general
impression is that the results will be;
favorable as free labor prior to the abol-1
ition of slavery was it is said actually !
cheaper than slave labor the two kinds j
of labor being neaily equal.
In speaking of Texas the Dallas Land I
Journal puts the whole argument in a j
sentence thus; -'No country on topj
of the green sod having such wonderful j
variety of interests and resources can j
show laws as favorable to the home- j
seekers with children to raise and edus ;
cate,"
| You can no more tell when sweet cider
| becomes sour than you van tell when a
j b°y becomes a man or when a pig be-
comes a hoc. !
A powerful preparation so con . itrated that a few drops applied to tbo surface will penetratv
to the very bone, and aim.. * , istantljr relieve pain. HAS NO £llCAlj for CUBE of
Rheumatism, Koaralt;.'.^, Sprains, Stiff Joints, Braises, Cramps, Lame
Back, Too . 'u-ache, Sore Throat, Pains '.n Iambi.
Or in any part of System. Will not soil clothing nor discolor the ski*. It has been
Inconstant use by Physicians and others for lu yeart. A -it your Druggist for it. Price, 50o
1837. ESTABLISHED 1837
BOARDMAN & GRAY,
GRAND, SQUARE AND UPRIGHT
PIANO FORTES.
;s in Toie, foil, Material and Workmanship
You are cordially invited to call at the
to hot1 ;t
Address.
M'imen Instrument.
L. W. NORCROSS
Manufacturers Agent, Fort Worth 1'
Raleigh,N. C„ J11 I v 2—There is consid-
erable excitement in the northeastern
counties over the continued depredations
of the Virgma ovsternien on the public
beds in North Carolina. Governor
Scales has written a letter in regard to
these tresspasses.
The Staunch Old Democratic
Newspaper.
THE MISSOURI
CHATTLE MORTO AGE S
An approved form with plenty of room
o description: for sale at this office.
Has changed the name
of the daily issue to
-THE-
St. Lonis Bepiic,
And reduced it subscription
rates.
One Tear, without Sunday 88.00
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THE REPUBLIC, St. Louis, Mo.
tm
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CHICAGO
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ORGAN
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THE STANDARD
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lis Machinery is com-
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WORKING GLASSES
ATTENTION
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Boys and girls earn nearly its much as men.
That all who see this may send their address,
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particulars and outfit free. Address (jeorok
otinson&co. Portland Maine.
Those ( locllent organs are celebrated f<*
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COMBINED, MAKE THIS
THE POPULAR ORGAN
Instruction Books & Piano Stools
Catalogues & Price Lists, on application, free.
The Chicago Cottage Organ Ca
Corner Randolph and Ann Street!,
CHICAGO. ILL.
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A Co.,Portland, Main*,will reeefva
full information abont work which
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VEGETABLE COMPOUND
A PURELY
Our Safe Family Doctor. A Safe and Reliable Remedy in all Cat
A Complete Family Medicine. Perfect Substitute for Calomel.
The Greatest Remedy of the Age for Bilious Diseases.
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PERFECT SAFETY
AND
LIVER
REGULATOR
to children or adults of any
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It has been used with most wonderful
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Colds, Bilious Colic, Cholera, Bilious Fever.
Malaria Fevers, Diarrhma, General Debility.
Rheumatism, Loss ot Appetite, Headache, Ic.
Manufactured only by the Medicine Co., Lake Charles, La. Sold in
25c. and 50c. packages by all leading druggists. This medicine costs les3
than ons cent per average dose. It should be kept in every family.
For a FREE TRIAL PACKAGE *end a 2-cent stamp to f
MEDICINE CO.; LAKE CHARLES. LA.
MERRELL'S FEMALE TONIC
?4 prepared solely for ftp care of eosaplslnts
VrliicH afilirt all nonsnkind.
1 tj;i ve tone aud ktrrngth to th« sterlsesrgsna.
and rorrrds ail dangerous displacements aai
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It Is ofgreat value is change of life.
Its use darlngpregnancy will greatly relieve the
pains of motherhood aad innnre a speedy recovery.
It Is pleasant to the taste* and nay be taken at all
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Fall lnstraetlon riven In Merrell's ftanltary
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Merrell's Female Tonic is REcommeeded by Doctors.
I ran say for your Female Tonic, that I hare bren using It In my
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treated a case of Lteriue Hemorrhage of 15 years* standing, and
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bold by l>ru?gists and Dealers, price, $1. A
J. S. HEBBELL DBFO CO., Bole Proprietor*,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
BAYLOR UNIVERSITY
ta
WACO. TEXAS
This Well Known School Will Open its 42nd Session on
IMIoncLeiy, Septembei "I ©tli, 1887
THK ADVANTAGES F THIS SESSION A.!*E:
GraDd New Buildings. New Furniture. Apparatus. Beaotiliil and KfoltMol Location.
Ziaxsc nnd Sxperlenoed Faculty
This Univr srity will iip alile In accnminount^ iikni (.indents This schf*>l|is th<* pion eei
eo-«diic:u!iin. Tl:r r <• I : s i" ••'•'it nihi*r.
BOTH Iv^^LIEJ^lNriD AI.E
Every department in u< m1 hands and doing good work.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT not surpassed bv any t'.ir thorough, practical work.
Our"IA)NE STAR SCHOOL OF ORATORY" i* he leading school of elix'iition ill
1 tiited States For information address
A
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The Standard (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 12, 1888, newspaper, July 12, 1888; Clarksville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth234581/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.