Brenham Daily Banner. (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 186, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 12, 1894 Page: 1 of 4
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DAILY BANNER
VOL. XIX.
BEEN HAM, TEXAS, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 12, 1894..
r "
• rxUtittm J. ■
NO.tW-
SODAI
HERE'S
The Daily Banner.
Terms of Subscription.
One copy 1 month 50 cts; 1 year $6.00.
IT WAS WONbERFUL LUCK.
A Smelter Han Who Won Out Over •1,000
on k (1 Stake.
"The most wonderful run of luck I
' ever saw a man have was in the Com-
bination at Butte, Mon.," remarked
Phil Cusick of Billings to a party of
gentlemen who were discussing games
of chance.
' 'An employee at the Boston and Mon-
tana smelter came In, and, holding up
a $2 bill, winounced that he had a big
note to meet in Jim Murray's bank and
was going to win it out He said that
it was for $888.88, and he was going to
play the eight spot at faro and nothing
else. He seemed to be well known, and
everybody smiled. He put a copper on
his $2 bill and placed it on the eight
spot. It lost on tho turn. Ho let the $-1
stay, and again the eight lost. He
knocked the copper off, and the eight
won. He put it back, and it lost.
"Mind you, this was the result of
four succcssivo turns in tho deal. Tho
player let his $32 remain on tho dead
card.
" 'Ain't you afraid somebody'11 cinch
that for a sleeper?' inquired the dealer
jocularly.
" 'Not much!'was tho reply. 'And
I ain't going to touch it till yon make
mo draw down or I win what I want.'
"The dealer looked at him, thought
of the chances of splits, I suppose, and
quietly remarked, 'That goes.'
"Tho very first turn on the next deal
tho man coppered tho $32, and the eight
lost Ho didn't tako the button off, and
tho eight lost out. Mister man had
$512 on the card. Tho dealer got up,
and another took his placo. Tho man
never turned a hair and was as cool as
a cucumber.
"When tho cards wero put in the
box, every ono expected to seo him
knock the copper off. IIo didn't touch
it. The top card was a king. Tho deal-
er's fingers trembled as ho pushed it
,ont, and you may break me if the eight
.of hearts wasn't right under it.
" 'I'll go over and pay that note
now,' said the smelter man, and ho roll-
ed up $1,024 In a big wad.
" 'Pretty good winning on a $2 stake,
ain't it?' ho remarkod as ho went out
I was told that his name was Bob Rey-
nolds. "—Chicago Times.
THE ARAB AND THE JEW.
CELEBRATES HIS OWN FUNERAL
After Solemn Mui Over an Empty Collin
All Adjourn to a Banquet.
An up to dato disciple of Charles V
of Spain has held at a village of tho
Yonne department, in France, a kind
of dress rehearsal of his funeral whilo
yet in the land of tho living. For tho
past year gravediggers and masons had
been engaged in preparing the gentle-
man's tomb, and he had surveyed tho
work with loving care. When every-
thing was ready, ho had a handsomo
marble slab put up, with the date of
his birth and tho list of his titles and
distinctions, winding up with the com-
forting assurance that he "had been a
good father and a law abiding citizen"
inscribed thereon. On his ninety-fifth
birthday all his friends and acquaint-
ances were invited to the rehearsal.of
his funeral. A solemn burial service
took place at tho church, and his empty
coffin, placed under a catafalque and
surrounded with wax candles, received
anticipatory blessing. To cheer up
his guests, whom this lugubrious cere-
Hjy must haW ■wuwtot depressed,
he then bado them repair to his house,
where a grand banquet took place, at
which the beadle, the choristers and
tho priests who are to officiate at his
real funeral wero present Each guest
pledged his word in a bumper of cham-
pagne that if he wero still living at tho
time lie would not fail to "assist" at
the funeral ceremony of which tho re-
hearsal had just been gono through.
Tho real event may not come off yet
awhile, for this imitator of the famous
emperor is still quite halo and hearty
in spite of his 85 summers,—London
Telegraph.
An Oriental Critic's View of Two of the
Weekly J'Apers of New York
A Jewish professor who is versed in
tho oriental language* looked over two
weekly papers printed in this city, one
0f them in the Hebrow language, with
Hebrew characters, and the other in tho
Aisabic language, with Arabic charac-
ters!. "Look," ho said as he placed the
two pretty sheets together, "at tho
peculiarities of the typo used in them.
Tako notice of tho power, breadth,
depth, rectangularity and solidarity of
the Hebrew type. Tako potico of tho
Saracenic delicacy, the ornateww, the
subtlety, Ingenuity and curvedncss of
tho Arabic type.
"Tho contrast between them is very
suggestive. Again, tho render who
studies tho stylo of the literary compo.
siflflns in tho two papers will notice
that Hebrew thought is broad, strong
and upright, like the Hebrew cliarac
t-ers, whili tlw Arabic thought is siuu
pus, tenuous and ornste, as tho Arabic
characters. The differentiation of tho
HeL.T®w from the Arabic, iioth In tl.o
forms C* the type (UJtl in the expressions
of tho mfnd, will strikfl rvery crit •
who places the two papers together, looks
at them closely and makes a study of
their contents. Yet both the Hebrew
and the Aral* belong to tl10
raco and are monotheist*. History and
circumstances must be taken into ae
count when tracing tho characteristic
differences between tho two brnnclies of
tho family."—New York Hun.
The Poor German Novel.
While tho number of second and
ihiTrt rate novels increases, those that
descrvo to bo labeled A1 are as undoubt-
edly on the wane. The pitiablo state of
the German book market is partly an-
swerable for this result, sinco it has
driven some of tho ablest contemporaiy
novelist*, such as Sudermann, Ger-
hard t 'flauptmann and Voss, to turn
■aside from their original and obvious
••vocation In order to write indifferent
dramas, because theso prove to bo more
remunerative than first class novels.
Veteran standard authors liko Freytag,
Dahn and Spielhagen, who have
before the publio for three or more ^
cenniums, seem to labor under the delu-
sion that whatever they now write must
necessarily be worth reading, and that
a writer who onco has achieved famo
has nothing further to do in order to
keep it up but to go on producing with
clockwork regularity a certain number
of volumes per annum, whether or not
these books are distinguished by any of
those qualities which made the reputa-
tion of their earlier works.—Black-
ivood's Magazine.
Hospitable. *
It is customary on the continent of
p- Tope to charge extra for heating a
ul'j. -om, no matter how bitter the
- war.. but it remained for a New
England hM *ecP«r to,ch"f donble
tavern
is -Tloato civilisation
that "Uncle Tom's Cabin i«the>nly
theatrical attraction ever .
who bid for custom by advertising^
"Special rates for theatric^ compa-
nies. Little Eva and tho dogs free.
Youth's Companion.
Mr*. A>tor's Coronet Comb.
Mrs. William Waldorf Astor wore at
the recent drawing room the historic
diamond coronet comb of which she has
lately become possessed. It is the one
that Louis XIV gave to Mme. de Montes-
pan, and our wealthy countrywoman,
his said, paid $100,000 for it-London
Standard.
Don't Tobacco Spit or Smoke Your Life
away is the truthful, startling title of s little
book that tells all about No-to-bac, the won
derful, harmless guaranteed tobacco habit
cure. The ccsl is trifling and the man who
wants to quit and can't runs no physical or
financial risk in using No-to-bac. Sold by
K. K. Lhun.
Book at drug stores or by mail free. Ad-
dress tho StorhneKemedy company, Indiana
Mineral Springs, Ind.
nr. Holmes' Autobiography.
Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes is report-
ed t<> have said recently, apropos of his
autobiography: "I work at tho memoirs
an hour or two each day and am mak-
ing satisfactory progress—that is, I have
about one-half completed of all I shall
write. Then I shall place tho manu-
script in the hands of my publishers,
and they will keep it in their safo until
I shall have passed away. My belief has
always been that a man's memoirs
should be distinctly posthumous, and I
shall carry out that belief in my own
case."
I
Written In Slang.
Matthew Henry's commentary on the
Bible was written for the common peo
pie and in the slang of the day. In com
menting on Judgesix he says: "We aro
here told by what acts Abimeleck got
into the saddle. He hired for his scrv
ice all the scum and scoundrels of tho
country. Jotham was really a fine gen
tleman. The Sechemites were tho first
to kick him off. They said all the ill
they could of him in their table talk.
They drank health to his confusion."—
Exchange,
Sure to Keeula^e ttfe |5i>wel».
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has
beeu used for over FIFTY YEAKS by MIL-
LIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILD-
REN WHILE TEETHING,with PERFECT
SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the CHILD,
SOFTENS the GUMS, ALLAYS all PAIN;
CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best
remedy for DIARRHCE. Sold by Drug-
gists in every part of the world. Be sure and
ask for "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup,'
and take no ptf}<:r kind. Twenty-live cents a
bottle.
Another Italian Hank Scandal.
Another bank scandal is threatened
in Italy which may put even tho Banca
Romana into tlw shade. Tho rumors of
fraud, corruption and bribery, upon a
huge scale, in connection with the
Credit Mobiliere, which have long been
current, have now taken a moro con
crote form, a group of shareholders hav
iug formally presented a petition to the
tribunal at Turin, bringing the gravest
charges against Signor Frascasa, mana
gcr of that bank, and demanding a ju
dicial inquiry. Should such an invest!
gation bo authorized astounding revela
tions will follow, for Frascasa is believed
to have had in his pay some leading
politicians in Rome, including ministers
and one ex-premier and nearly every
journalist of repute or influence
Rome, Turin, Florence, Naples and
Venice, spending millions of lire an-
nually in subsides find for concessions.
—Romo Letter.
In the Depths of Misery.
Though endowed with woalth "beyond
dreams of avarice," the wretched sufferer
from chfonic dyspepsia is plunged in the
depths of misery from whic • he or she seldom
emerges even for a day at s stretch. There is
a way to down the imp. Invoke the aid of
Hostetter's Stomach Bitters and he departs.
Keep uiing the medicine, and the relief you
promptly experience finally becomes perma-
nent and a thorough cure is effected. Heart-
burn, flatulence, uneasiness and sinking at
the pit of the Homach, nervousness, insom-
nia—these are symptoms first relieved and
finally cured, with thetr cause, by this mefta-
bly reliable specific. Liver complaint and
constipation, brother tormentors of dyspep-
aia, are also sent to limbo by the Bitters. So
are rheumatism, malaria and kidney com -
plaint. Use this helpful medicine systemat-
ically, not by fits ana starts.
„ noy InMilit Itoyalty.
A great sensation has l»een cansed in
Austria by tlu> imprisonment of a 14-
year-old boy on the charge of leze ma-
jesty. The little fellow, Eduurdo prro-
lessi, was arrested in Trioet a few
weeks ago, charged with making im-
proper remarks regarding the Austrian
emperor. Ho was tried in secret and
condemned to hard labor in prison for
two months. The public prosecutor pro-
posed to banish tlw boy from the coun-
try, bnt the courts wotild pot uphold
him in this. Ercolessi, who is a school'
boy, U said to be the youngest person
ever imprisoned for such a ''crime."
ine language denofes' tlie man. A
coarse or refined character finds its ex-
pression naturally in a coarse or refined
1 phraseology.—Bovee.
When the mercury hns riacn, I
I like to hear the ii/./.in
Andllovoto hear the slzzln of the soda
water mill.
Oh, thero is music in its elngin
And a mem'ry to it cllnRln
Which oftentimes Is Ijringin thoughts that
linger with me still.
Thoughts of nectar and vanilla.
Strawberry and sarsaparilla.
Thoughts of soda that would fill a boy with
visions of delight.
And, though many years have fleeted
Since the Juveniles I treated.
There's a sentiment deep seated that good
soda's out of sight.
Let others prate of whisky
That makes a fellow frisky,
I5ut alcohol is risky stuff to monkey with
at all. ,
Let stagestruck guys make merrj
Over mugs of Tom and Jerry,
Sing tho praise of Ellen Terry, Miss I.anj;-
try, l'auline Hall;
Let sapient dudes touch glasses
To tho health of buxouUtsses,
But soda nulte surpasses all the drinks that
make men tlgW.
It's a beverage Urf,'s clicerin,
Unpretentious Rppearln,
To humanity endeartn—aye, it's clearly ot»*
of sight. jf'r'
—Michael J. Donnelly in St^Phtii Globe.
PRINCE AND^PbE'dP
Some Things at the Eisteddfod Which Made
English Visitors Very Weary.
"After 000 years tho Princo of Wales
comes home. " So sang Lewis Morris in
an ode read before tho royal visitors to
the eisteddfod at Carnarvon. Tho odo
was read in English, and the Princo of
Wales audibly protested to those around
him that the chronological statement re-
ferred to was not finite accurate, as h
had been in Wales before, though cer-
tainly not in a public manner. How-
ever,"tho odo was fairly good, and as it
was in English and lauded tho Princo
and Princess of Wales in tho fulsome
fashion that might have been looked for
from an expectant poet laureate, a ver-
sifier who aspires to succeed Tennyson,
their royal highnesses thoroughly en-
joyed it and graciously accepted a
bound copy of it.
Lewis Morris ranks as a Welsh bard,
but he was tho only ono of that mystic
and, truth to toll, somewhat ridiculous
body who wore the clothing of nine-
teenth century civilization. The others
wero decked out in quaint garments and
Drnidical trappings and were evident-
ly the cause of violent delight to the
Princess of Wales its she and her hus-
band sat among them on tho platform
in the eisteddfod hall. The Sun report-
er who attended tho gathering is now
sorry ho did so, us he has lost all ven-
eration for bards and a good deal of
respect for tho eisteddfod institution it-
self. Welshmen thoroughly enjoyed the
whole business, but to tho English visit-
ors, royal and plebeian, it was weari-
some work listening to a long succession
of bards reciting poems in an unknown
tongue. Tho poems, in their translated
form at any rate, proved in nearly ev-
ery caso to Imi sad doggerel. Bard Eos
Dar, however, created much appreciated
diversion by «ii:giag or chanting in fine
style a "pcnillion," which ho subse-
queutly turned into English.—-London
Cor. New York Sun.
SEVERE ON AMERICANS.
Hon One of John Hull's Watchful Orpins
Sizes 1 i> Some American Muljeets.
Except a Yorkshireman there is no
moro self conscious person than your
untraveled American. He knows every-
thing. You can't take him in. Ho
comes from the biggest country in the
world. His smartness is proverbial. He
does not continually exclaim,
Yankee, I ain
waves his flag
The Nervous System the Seat
of Life and Mind. Recent
Wonderful Discoveries.
No mystery lias ever compared with that of
human life. It has beeu the leading subject
of professional research arid study in ;,!l aces.
But notwithstanding this fact It Is riot gener-
ally U i ii w II
that iIn' scat
of 1 if<• i- Uh-i\>
t<-<l in t!•«' up-
prr part of tin-
spinal cord,
near tin* Iwse
of t lie l> r a I n ,
and so srn.si-
tivi- Is this
port ion of tho
nirvoua sys-
tem that even
the nrlck of a
needle will
cause Instant
death.
Hecent discoveries have den.onsti at. d that
all the organs of the body are under i; • n-
trol of the nerve centers, leg ated .1
the base of the brain, and that when 1 •• re
deranged th#organs which thev supp > * oh
nerve fluid are'alao deranged. When it 1- u-
meinhered that a serious Injury to the ; -. .I
cord will cause paralysis of the bodv 1« !■ *■
the Injured point, because the nerve foi« e ,
prevented i»y. the Injury from reach'ii- i.e
Saralyzed portion, It will be tinder>KH;<l
I»e derangement of thenev.e center- s i l
causethedWW|giiine*it «*>p various oj
which they roppry with
Two-thirds of Chronic diseases are due to
the Imperfect action of the nerve ceuteiN at
the base of the brain, not from a derange-
ment primarily originating In the organ it-
self. The great mistake of physicians in
treating these diseases is that they treat the
organ rather than the nerve centers which
are the cause of the t rouble.
Dlt.rilANKI.IN Mm.Kv the celebrated «-p»
clallst,has profoundly tidied this suhj« ct fm
over20years, and ha> made many imiMiria-it
discoveries In con nee t ion with it, chief a inun.'
them being the facts contained In the a'-ic. e
statement, and that the ordinary method- «.f
treatment are wronir. All headache, di'/i-
ness, dullness, confusion, pressure, blue-,
mania, melancholy, insanity, epilcp-y, sl
Vitus dance, etc.. are nervous disease-* r,
matter how caused. The wonderful success of
Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine is due to the
fact that it 1s based on tic foregoing principle.
Dr. Milks' Ukstoiiativi. Nkuvink Is sold by
all druggists on a positive ^ tarantee, or sent
direct by D11. Milks Mkom ai, Co., Elkhar.
Ind., on receipt of price, >1 ner iHjttle, six
bottles for $5, express prepaid, it cout&ii.'
either opiates nor dangerous drugs.
FOK SALIC BY ALT. DRUGGISTS.
VIRGINIA COLLEGE
For Young Ladies, lioanokr, V a.
Opens September 12, 181)4. One of the leading
Schools for Young Ladies In the South. Mag-
nificent buildings, all modern improvements.
Campus ten acres. Grand mountain scenery in
valley of Va., famed for health, European and
American teacher*. Full course. In Art and
Music unexcelled. Pupils from seventeen states.
For catalogues address the President.
W. H. HARRIS, I>. D., Roanoke, Va.
MI am a
but he metaphorically
in tho face of an effete
civilization and trails his egotism bo-
fore the (lAued old country all the time,
you bet! And it in done surely and per-
sistently. Every whipper snapper of a
sneak thief has him. Notwithstanding
the stalcness of the confidence trick iu
his own country, he is a prey to the first
American ,IC H"3 tuii"
tator of tlxMrnnkee methods whom ho
meets in stri ct or barroom. The paper*
lately have contained several instances
of tho successful practice of the confi-
dence tiick oji Americans. The wonder
is that any ono can be rieecect so easily.
Imagine any sane person being in-
duced to hand over his watch aild his
purse to 11 total stranger and letting
him go put pf sight to t'-st his ffii111 in
the said stranger-—'to show his confi-
dence" in a man ho does not. euro a but-
ton about, and whose acquaintance ho
has only just made. This happened tho
other day in Holborn to an American
gentlrmapi who parted with watch, ring
and note* to the valftt) pf nearly £!100,
The story began by one of two confi-
dence men spotting hint for an Ameri-
can in Holborn and asking him, "Say,
stranger, is this a new street?"
The two men were Americans; they
came from Virginia; the dupe was from
New Jersay. Of course they all ad-
journed to the festautaiU ('» hflVB ft
drink. The first Virginia gentlemen had
come into a large fortune and wanted
to give a lot of it away, but not to Brit-
ishers—oh, no—but to his own country-
M
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Clctnccf and beautifies the hair.
Promote® a luxuriant growth.
Never Fails to Restore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Cures ncalp diseases k hair tailing.
fiOc,and fl.nt) at Druggists
Um Parker's Ginger Tonic. Jt curt* the worn ( ouph,
We»i Lungi, Debility, IndiR' stion, i'am, ltiKc m tune.u0cm.
H1N D E RCO R N S. The only «t.r© cure for Corn«.
fitop« *uD»in. lie. JJnJiiKists. or 1IISCOX it CO., N. \.
Hll AAA in money: also other valuable
IP||||||| premiums to goo<l ^uesners.
■ ml III III KASK HALL KiitliusitiAtH,
U Iv UU this 1h vour opportunity. See
offer HOlttANJ C0UNTB7 MAGAZINE. Price '2.V,.
All Newsdealers; or 5.1 Kast 10th street,New York.
THINACURA
FOB THIN
PEOPLE
It makes tliin faces plump ami mmul mil tin-
lljfure. His the STAN OAK I) ItKHKDV for
leanuess, containing no arsenic, ainl
guaranteed absolutely
HARMLESS.
Pi-ice, prepaid, $1 per liox, ii lnr #3.
nphtet, "ilUW* TO UKT KAT," free.
The THINACUKA CO.,
Wft Broadway. York.
ramphle
Root
lakeslh* home olrc
Don't You Believe a Word of It
-3SS1IF ANY ONE SAYS THATMag
BROCKSCHMIDT &
ain't in it, for we have one of the Largest and Best selected
Stocks that evei was seen in Brenham, and you ought to see
Line ^iLSpring Goods in the way of Dress Goods,
'i I;
White eoo
and Embroideries—They are Beauties.
Ribbons, you ought to «oo them. The W. B. Cornet was awarded tlie First
Prize at ihe World'*. Columbian Exposition. Try it and you will never
wear any other. Kvoryone guaranteed or money refunded. '*¥wMTe am
elegant line of Lace Curtains: come and see them. When it com«s to Shoes
For wo carry somo of tho Best;
Makes—Hamilton-Brown, Sachs'.
Ladies' Fino Slioes, Fargo's $2.501
Men's Shoes. It' you want a nice!
fit, solid eomiort and k'ood quality,!
try us. Clothing—wo have a lar^o j
You
ou:;ht!
line, nice and cheap.
to seo our Jersey Suits ior Boys.
ii
Groceries.
If you want anything in tblt
lino, don't fail to Bee us (or
WE ABE IN IT ALL OTIB
If |wo can get you trade on the
merit of fir.j goods, honest <!•»<
ing, good attention, and
Close Figures
We would like to have it, for we appreciate your trade as
well as anyone,
And Make Your Dollar Swell to the Size of a Car Wheel,
in spending it with us. Won't you give us a trial? Trust-
ing that you will, we are yours truly,
BROCKSCHMIDT & HOHLT,
Main Street, Brenham, Texas-
SHE KNEW HER BUSINESS.
Tho Jersey g
undertake the
ful to tho mil
tod for a time
great bundle of
IM •»"
van lnduoc<l to
uy lord honnti-
ld was permit-
poHsession of a
spurious note*. Then,
to show his oopfldenee in his new
friends, he handed over all ho had about
him, and they presently decamped with
his money, "jewels, cash and plate."
He had to go home before the police
could catch the masquerade™, but on
reaching New York ho will be asked by
cable to keep the promise he made that
he would return and prosecute thero if
the dull Loudon detectives could lav
hands on the astute operators from Vir-
ginia.
And this kind of thing is going on
continually. The credulity pf people ty
general says a great deal for the trust-
fulness and sympathy of humanity as a
whole. Cynics would say that it may
be taken as still more indicative of its
greed. It certainly says little for its
caution. The most transparent swindles
of the day in the direction of compa-
nies, partnerships, offers of fortunes for
a few pounds, successful systems of bet-
ting and speculation catch their dupes
day by day, anil Monte Carlo is extend-
ing its palatial halls.—Newcastle (Eng-
iwd) Chronicle.
iolrele complete. This
great Temperance Drink given pleas-
ure and health to every member of tne
family. A ihe. package mukon 5 gul-
loua. Be sure and get the genuine.
Sold everywhere. Made only by
The cms. Rifirw Co,*, Phllada.
Send u iU»» 9* bqttttlfrl rUtBf Cards a&4 Boofc.
UCLAS
THE BIST,'
NO aauiAMNo.
♦5. CORDOVAN,
rAINCHA enamelled calh
H.vwfhecalf&kansaroi
9 3.w police, 3 soles.
SENO rod CATALDGUE
W'U'DOUOLAS,
BROCKTON, MASS.
on it VV. L.
we *r*5Sn"rge ''manufacturers o»
the bottom which protect! you against high
prlcesandthemlddfe-aa's,profits. Our.h«.
equal custom work ta etyle, easy ®t!!n5 *2!?
A. & H. HARRISON.
°roRD 121 CentS
Monroe, La,, Feb, 2. ls'j-t.
For days and nights 1 Buffered the iv^o-
nies of the damned, with Neuralgia of the
Ku«o Joint- One application of
Dr. C. F. BROWN'S
S0UNG
AMERICAN
relieved n^ font bottle
cured mo. 1 make this statement hop-
ing some other person may be relieved.
Tell it to the people.'' C. BRYAN.
IT1C TUC VIII fl that cures Fain of every tort.
II !) I Ilk KIHU that has been In use 3S years.
Don't b« deceived by substitutes.
At 0rujfli»t». 28 cts. *»<!« only by the
t F, MOWN CHEMICAL CO.. 72 John St.. New York
Where Are You Going, My Pretty Maid?
UI am going to J. H. Ouebe's, sir," she said. "My ma says 'tis
the Great Store in the City, where goods are fresh and never are
gritty, and Pa justly admits that our troubles were over the day
we began trading at the City Grocery Store," and the little Maid
tripped along blithe and bonny and singing her song, the only
answer she ever made, "I am going to J. H. Quebe's, sir, to
trade, where I can get
20 Pounds of Choice Sugar for $1.00 and 40
pounds of fresh Grits for $ 1.00, and Soda
Crackers 4 pounds for 25 cents; Tomatoes,
3 cans for 25c; Corn, 1 ea l 10c; California
Peaches and Pears per can 18c; choicc Sal-
mon, 12 l-°c per can; French Sardines, 12
l-2c per can; American Sardiues, 5c per
can; choice Parched Coffee, 25c per pound;
choice Tea, mixed, 50c per pound."
WE HAVE GOT THE
WOOTM WOOD!
Sawed and Split (or Stoves and fire place
delivered to any of the City at $4.50 per cord
r*ah or. delivery. Yard near Central fre.gh
depot, O. A. LINDKMANjf
Largest Assortment of Groceries
In the City and will se)l them Cheap. Only
good goods for the least money. Call ealry.
Very Respectfully,
J. H. QUEB33,
City
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Brenham Daily Banner. (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 186, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 12, 1894, newspaper, August 12, 1894; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth481821/m1/1/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.