The Gainesville Daily Hesperian. (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 282, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 3, 1891 Page: 4 of 4
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TIME CARD.
ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF TRAINS
HTMOOai. KANSAS A TKXAS.
ruonoia.
hobth, Eaut akd eouTH.
mo. W, L* *SOa m
Ho 78, Lt JiCpm
WW
Ho. 17, I.T «;M p m
Ki> 77, L» 130pra
No. la the f«Mt«<proM train tor City
St I^Mila, aa<1 the K*at«n potnm.and
mak<>a ilira t eunnoetlonn at White* bo ro with
the through Mcmphla train unit tlx aotitheant-
era (xninwlinai. At Oallaji for points to and
via Slirev^port, New Orleans, Houston ami
Ualveaton.
1o. 7H makna dlre-t connection* at Whltea
boro wtili through tr*ln for Kort Worth, Waoo
Austin, San Antonio and Amnua fa-a and
point* In Southern Texas, connect* with
through "Chicago Limited " at Denlson, carry-
•ug through Pullman I'ularc Buffet rtleeplrin
ears. Improved coaches and chair cars for
Kansas Cltr, St Louis. Chicago, (without
change) rt Smith, Uttle Rock and Kamta*
and Arkansns po'ntu
No. 17 m *s«a direct oonn action a at Henriet-
ta for Panhandle point* la a through train
to Colorado, Uall'ornla, Washington and all
H'- .nla w«a\ making direct connection wltl'
the fsat through train at Henrietta for i*nehlo
and lienrer.
A perfect psi«*enger serrf>e and all that per
tains to quick and comfortable trmujorta
tlon r>«tw"«n OalneMvllle and Denlton, Par
anas, rt Scott, Sodalla, Chicago, St. 1-oul
and Kanitaa Olty and between tisJnenvllW
and Dallas, Ft. Worth, Austin. San Antonio,
Memphlx, Shreveport and New Orleans.
I>otihle dally train aeryloc, Pullman Buffet
sleeping cars.
Tor cheap rates, sleeping set vice, map* and
Ime cards, Addreee,
K. H. Main, Ticket Agt.
FAST TIME SANTA Fe Route
Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe R'y-
'North~I 1 J *>uth.
No 10. | Bound station, ] NoT
| l« >vh i anlft
l*ia»e j II 30 am1 OalT»«tou in U pm Arrlre
5 Vi am! J 10 pm Teim>le 1 50 p u !» ;ki pn
11:45 am ft 10 ptn PortWorth ft :$0 an. iM pir
J:*) pm 10 so pm|Gatnesvlte 6 l.S am 11 V) air
ft:V) pm 1 00 am Purcell j 1 M am leave
S 00 pni Kansasolty i ft to am 7 45 am
| Arrive Leave I
j ft.V) ami Chicago | 6 00 pm
Arrive j
I 7 am I St Tx>nl<
(Leave I Arr^v*. )
.1 15 pm Temple I 1 40 pin]
... Arrive Leave ■
1 50 am Shn Angelo 1 10 am I
The shortext and <jinckext route t.> Hie in.riii,
south, east and west Cheap rates to Callfor
nla, Oregon an<l Washington To I)«nver lr
K hours. San Francisco In ft4 hour* and Port
land. Oregon. In 102 hours.
The fant veatlbnle express between Kansa*
City, Chicago and Denver are the haudaomeet
I n the world, and their »«rvloe ta acknowl
edged to he the completeat, safest and most
comfortable- ~~
Pullman Palace Buffet Sleeping Cars be.
tweed OalTeaton am' Kansas City on trains
Moa 1 and 2, and connecting at Kans City with
the Santa Fe Fast 1 Imlted Vestibule train for
Chicago. The quickest time from Texas tc
the north and east is made rla thla poptilat
line. All elsaaea of Rnropean ateamahlp tick-
eu (ontward or prepaid aold at lower rates,
and all Information furnished "n application
F J Oates. Ticket Agent Gainesville
H O thompson, a. P and T Agent. Oalves
ton. Texas.
GOOD MEASURE.
¥m, food nicaauir, preased down
•oil running over.
Some of these little proprietors of sarsa-
parlllaa put up In half-pint bottles are en-
vious of the increasing popularity of Dr.
John Hull s iiaraaparilla, put up as it is in
large .juart bottles, and intimate that theirs
is more concentrated This is as false as
deceit can be. A teaspoonful of Hull's
Sarsaparillu contains more concentrated
medicinal virtue than a tablespoon ful of
any other sarsaparilla made. A bottle of
I)r. John Hull's 8ar*apftrilli» contains six
times the curative virtue of a bottle of any
other blood purifier made. No exception
1s made. Now an invalid wants Ins
money s worth. He wants pood measure
Therefore, unless misled through ignor-
MCCe, when his system needs a blood puri-
A GOOD
TOU 1
tA* til
fler, when his system needs a tonic, when
his system is breaking down from blood
impurity or some wasting disease, he will
demand of his druggist a bottle of Hull's
Sarsaparillit, and on no occasion be per-
suaded to take anything that may be off-
ered in its stead as being "just as good."
There is no other remedy so good as Hull's
barsaparilla for such diseases as scrofula,
syphilitic affections. salt-rheum, itch, ec-
terna, pimples, sore*, rheumatism, lame
back, swollen joints, aching muscles, nerv-
oua weakness, nervous debility, loss of
apjietite, loss of Mesh, loss of stre ngth,
•fecplessness, premature old a^e, etc.
T. u Woodruff. Jetlcrson ville, lnd., wrltee:
"Forten years I had been an !n\alld. I be-
came a chronic medicine Inker. There l's
not a blood retneiljr or a tonic advertised
that I did not try. From none of them did
I derive any permanent good. 1 became
discouraged. My system was full of blood
Impurities. My skin was covered in place*
with brown patches and little sorea. My
INVESTMENT.
muscles had lost their strength. I wue very
weak. My appetite and digestion were mis-
arable I kept growing worse and worse
until I began to use Dr. Bull's Sarsaparlila.
I then began to rally at once, and grew
stronger and stronger 1 have now used
firobably 30 bottles, and my Improvement
n looks and f»*H;>g Is ao great 1 seem like
another person I am now well and strong,
and give the whole cre<|lt of my recovery to
Dr. Bull's Harsaparilla."
WYonr ch4ldren will be more healthy,
happy and pretty. If you occasionally give
them Dr. John Bull's Worm Destroyers.
Try them. Price 25 cents.
When you have chills nnd fevsr, If
ou want a sure cure ami one that does not
had, take Smith's Tonic Syrup.
will please you boater than quinine or any
other chill medicine.
JOHN D. PARK A SONS, Wholesale Agtrta,
175,177 and 179 Sycuuiore tit., Cincinnati, CX
i u J
flold by Garner, Williams & Co
Carsats. and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat-
ent bnslnesj condarted for MfXlera'e Fees.
Owr OMee is OppesHe U. S. Patent Office.
and we ran seen re patent in less time than those
remote from Washington.
Bend model, drawing or photo., with deecrlp-
t'on. We advise. If patentable or not, free of
'harge Our fee not due till patent Is secured.
Bar^e
|>a
anrphlet. "How to Obtsin Patents," with
names of actual clients In jour State, county, or
town, sent free. Address,
C. A.SNOW&CO.
OppesHs Patent Office. Washington. D. C.
Flair all gone, scalp covered
with eruptions, and pains in all of
his limbs, a dreadful case of dis-
ease, yet P. P. P. remained master
of the situation, a care was affect-
ed, and the patient, the marshal
of Monticello, Fla., says his hair
has grown ont, and that he is a
well man. This care spread far
and wide, and now the drug stores
of Monticello buy P. P. P. in
large qnantities.
Try Morgeaon'a tasteless Chill
Tonio all we ask is a trial, yon
will be convinced. It is parely
harmless, every bottle guaranteed
or money refunded. •
Blank notary's acknowledge
moots at the Hkspebian office at
one dollar per hundred.
COPYRIGHTED*BY AMCWCRN^H^^ASSOq/ITlfiKili'''
no toogetr at nts watcn; it was ten
minutes yet to train time; he could reach
the station before she was gone if he
could find a carriage. He hurried into
the street again and looked in every direc-
tion. Then he weut to tho Pulaski House,
hoping to find a bus or cab lingering
there; but the fates were against him.
An hour later a colored boy brought
hi in a note from Mr. Roosevelt, who
wi«hed to see him at the office. He went
as ^ A A M a «
immediately and found there Mr. Largely
also. A conference had been agreed
apon with Sir Edmond Kane, and this
meeting was for some precautionary
consultation.
Julian's mind was more concerned
with Rosalie than with business. His
first inquiry of Mr. Roosevelt was about
her. Had she gone alone? No, her aunt
had accompanied her. They had a special
car. Mr. Roosevelt had sent his oldest
and most careful railroad man along
with them.
"But what is this rumor wo hear of a
fight between you and Ellis?" said
Largely, who was highly gratified to
learn that the mountaineer had at last
"run against a solid header," as he
termed it.
Julian explained without explaining.
He did not hint of any connection Miss
Chenier's name had had with the affair.
"I regret all this very much." said
Mr. Roosevelt; "Ellis comes of a fight-
ing family; he will challenge you im-
mediately."
"If ho does, I'll have him arrested
forthwith," replied Julian.
Mr. Roosevelt straightened himself
stiffly in his chair, and gazed at the
young man in utter disgust.
"That would be just the thing," ex-
claimed Largely. "It might have a good
educating effect on the young men here-
about if we'd make an example of one
by landing him safely in the state
prison. What do you say, Mr. Roose-
velt?'
"I should think a gentleman would
get dry comfort out of such a proceed-
ing."
"Yes, ha! ha! ha!—yes, you're right,''
chuckled Largely: "a gentleman would
feel queer in the penitentiary."
Julian was not so obtuse to Mr. Roose-
velt's meaning. He saw at once that
Rosalie's uncle held strictly to the old
code of honor, and lt flashed across his
mind that she, too, might do the same.
Next morning he rose from his bod re-
solved not to fight a duel, let the result
be as it might. What cared he for south-
ern sentiment and custom! Ho owed his
allegiance to Chicago and not to Savan-
nah.
When he went into the breakfast room
he found that Mr. Roosevelt had already
gone down town, having been sent for
by some one, the servant said. Later it i
transpired that it was Mr. Largely'^ ,
message, and the business in hand was
to consult over a sudden turn in railroad
affairs. In short, Ellis had sold out all
his interests to Sir Edmond Kane and
party. This simplified matters, so that
an adjustment of the Florida muddle
proved quite easy. Mr. Roosevelt and
Julian were greatly surprised. As for
Mr. Largely, he swore roundly that Ellis
had some devilish scheme in his head,
and said that he felt sure no good ever
could come of the fellow.
To the further surprise of everybody
Ellis disappeared as soon as his sale was
consummated. Julian received no chal-
lenge. Days slipped by. A letter came
from Mrs. Roosevelt announcing the
death and burial of Mrs. Chenier.
Julian's mission was ended and Mr.
Largely was ready to return to Chicago.
"I haven't seen enough of the south
yet," said Julian, by way of excuse for
not accompanying his employer on his
northward flight; "and I think I shall
linger awhile in Atlanta and some of the
smaller mountain towns. I want to re-
visit two or three of the battle grounds
over which I charged when a soldier
lad."
"All right," replied the millionaire,
"you know your business best, but I in-
dividually have got about all the Bouth I
shall ever care for."
Edgar Julian's departure from Savan-
nah was abrupt. He read the following
personal item in The News and left on
the next train:
"Mr. Francis W. Ellis, who recently
sold his railroad interests in Florida to
the English and Dutch combination, is
spending a few weeks among the moun-
tains of the up-country near Calhoun.
It will be remembered that he formerly
had a large distillery in that region, the
capture of which by government emissa-
ries caused great excitement at the time.
It was rumored that a duel was pending
between Mr. Ellis and a noted Chicago
lawyer, but the matter has most prob-
ably been amicably arranged. Mr. Ellis'
career here has been short but brilliant.
It is understood that he netted about
$500,000 on his roads. Pretty good for a
little less than three months' work!"
In Augusta he tarried for a day, but
why he did so he could not have told.
That he was dreaming of finally making
his way to Rosalie he admitted, and at
the same time he did not purpose to see
her at all. Love is always thus para-
doxical. He knew that Ellis was up in
north Georgia on no other errand than
to be near her, and he could not bear to
think of any one, much less Ellis, seeing
her oftener than he; still he wasted a
day in Augusta, idly strolling in the
streets and thinking of what an unpar-
donable thing it would be for him to fol-
low Miss Chenier to her home under such
circumstances.
When he got to Atlanta he stopped
and loitered. He found much to inter-
est him, many reminders of some hard
fighting and exciting adventures. He
went and stood by the blackened founda-
tion stones of what had once been a
spacious mansion on an airy hill over-
looking a broad plantation in a fertile
valley. He remembered how that house
came to be burned. It was situated
about two hundred yards from the
Western and Atlantic railroad, and from
its high hill commanded the track.
Some rebel sharpshooters had taken
refuge in It, and were galling the com-
pany to which Julian belonged. The
order was given to charge the hill and
fire the house. Julian, then a mere boy,
Wm tfee flrct to reach (he spot Be at-
tacked Uie aoor witn tne Dutf or tus gun
and broke it in. As he did so a young
woman fired at him with a pistol, the
ball lightly creasing the top of his head.
He was enraged and rushed at his fair as-
sailant with leveled bayonet. She retreat-
ed and escaped, but not before he had
slightly wounded her in the arm. He
theu lighted a match and set fire to the
house.
Now, as be stood gazing at the ruins,
pathetically clothed in their wild bram-
bles and half buried in ashy debris, he
fancied he could hear the thunder of the
fight rolling away toward Snake Creek
Gap. Below him lay the valley, scarcely
less a fenceless ruin than when the army
had left it charred and smoking after
the battle.
He turned away, wondering what had
become of the unfortunate family, and
especially the young woman.
CHAPTER XVIII.
at the old mill ao aim.
4 YEARS AGO
Prof. W. O. Atwatcr wrote
from his chemical labora-
tory Wesleyan University,
Middletown, Conn.
• I believe that a combination of
Beef Suet and Cottonseed Oil—
nothing else, not even coloring mat*
ter—would,provided the ingredients
off themselves, of course, are per-
fectly pure and wholesome—make
a valuable addition to our food
products and be very desirable."
HERE YOU ARE!
FAIRBANKS *
COTTOLENE
Compound of purest deli-
cately refined Cotton Oil
crushed from sound select-
ed seed,together with choic-
est Beef Suet This perfec-'
tion of cooking fat super-
sedes lard for ail cooking.
USE ONLY HALF
the quantity of Cottolene
that you would use of lard.
This does the work and
saves half your money.
Casaday
The only plow that will do the work in th3 BLACK
LAND in all conditions. Turns under the sun-
flowers and weed and will plow when all other
plows go to thfi fence corner.
A
bright head
hands.
between
Manufactured only by
N. K. FAIRBANK A CO.,
St. Louis, Mo.
It would serve no good purpose to de-
scribe the sad scenes at the old Chenier j
mill, where, atnid her humble surround-
ings, Rosalie's sweet and patient mother
died and was buried. Mrs. Roosevelt
and her niece arrived just in time to re- i
ceive the last words of the poor, wornout
woman. Just here the veil must fall; j
we shall let a week pass after the burial i
before we again approach the thread of
our story.
Some days passed before Rosalie
thought of showing her father the cross
Julian had given her. She told him all
the young man had said about Provence 1
and Chateau Chenier. He listened and I
became absorbed, holding the dull gold
cross in his palm the while and gazing
fondly into the sweet, saddened eyes of
his child.
"Since I lost my limb," he said in a
melancholy tone, "and have been able to
do nothing else, I have longed a great
dral to go to Provence and see for my- I
self."
"And shall we not go someday, papai"
she inquired, slipping her arm gently
around his neck.
He shook his head.
"Too poor, dear, too poor," he replied;
"it requires a great deal of money to
travel."
"But, papa, I am not poor; Uncle
Roosevelt has settled an income of ten
thousand a year on tne in my own right!
Colonel Chenier raised his head and
gazed incredulously into her face.
"Yon will let me take you, won't you,
papa?" she sweetly continued; "Aunt
Marguerite says she will go with us."
He conld not answer, but he took her
bright bead between his hands and
kissed her forehead. Her voice was
more than music in his ears.
"It is a long, long way, and I am
growing old," he presently said, "but I
do not regard this as my country now; I
should like to live the rest of my days in
Provence, and at last mingle my dust
with that of our ancestors."
"We will go," said Rosalie earnestly;
"wo will go and see, even if we do n"t
stay. Mr. Julian says he sat upon an
old wall at Chateau Chenier and saw the
moon come up from behind a hill
crowned with olive trees, just as it is de-
scribed in the troubadour song you
taught me. Mr. Julian likes all my lit-
tle French songs."
Colonel Chenier looked calmly askance
at his daughter and wondered if this
Mr. Julian had touched her fancy.
"I wish I could see your young north-
erner," he presently said; "yon have
made me like him; is he agreeable, is he
handsome, Rosalie?"
"I hardly know how to answer. He
is kind, affable, polite, and I am sure he
is honorable; but one can hardly call
him handsome. He's a great big, strong
man, broad faced, deep eyed, and, I
think, remarkably intellectual."
"How does he feel toward southern
people? Is he a radical?"
"He seems liberal; he and Uncle
Roosevelt have grown to be great friends,
and you know Uncle Roosevelt cannot
tolerate a radical."
"Has he made a very warm friend of
you, Rosalie?"
"Oh, yes, I like him very much," she
said with emphasis.
Colonel Chenier smiled; it was the
first since the death at the mill.
"You haven't let him ccfnvert you to
the Yankee idea, have you?" he inquired,
toying with the cross and throwing a
little touch of pleasantry into his voice.
"No, not that, but I like the north,
especially the west, and the people up
there are delightful; they are so much
in earnest, bo thrifty and industrious,
and yet so kind and hospitable. You'd
like Chicago, papa, 1 know you would,
and you'd like Mr. Julian too."
"Perhaps, perhaps," said Colonel
Chenier in a tone of doubt. "1 suppose
he is too young to have been in the
Yankee army."
"Oh, he was with Sherman all the
way to the sea," said Rosalie quickly;
"he remembers all the little towns along
the line of march; he spoke of Dalton,
Resaca, Calhoun, Kingston and Mari-
etta; he was a mere boy, but he went
through it all."
A grim, ashen shadow settled over
Colonel Chenier's face as her words called
np.tht menjory of ^if burn^d up
anu uevastateu plantation, nis slaves set
free and his fortune dissipated by the
breath of that army of Sherman's.
"He was one of the house burners and
woman insulters then, perhaps."
"Oh, no, he wouldu't do that; he's too
much of a gentleman to ever have been
guilty of such acts," she quickly ex-
claimed, her voice full of earnest faith
iu the young man's innocence. "He is a
proud, honorable, conscientious man, not
at all wliat I imagined a northerner to
be; but, iu fact, papa, all the northern
people are different from what we have
thought them; they are really charm-
ing."
"They were infernal vandals when
they marched with 8herman, no matter
what they are now. Why, don't yon
know that one of them stabbed A delaide
in the arm with his bayonet?"
"But he was some low down hanger
on of the army, or some foreigner; he
could not have been a representative
northern man."
"They were all of a piece: they stole
with one hand and carried the torch in
the other."
Colonel Chenier was growing excited,
and Rosalie artfully changed the sub-
ject of conversation. She inwardly re-
sented having Edgar Julian classed with
the common vulgar soldiery; but she
did not wish to antagonize her father.
She felt sure that if Julian could have a
talk with Colonel Chenier he would win
a way to his respect. A sense of high
duty urged her to present the young
man to her father in tho most favorable
light, but innate maidenly modesty for-
bade any unseemly haste to become his
defender. It would l>e hard to discover,
and still harder to define, the amount of
advantage that the simple fact of Juli-
an's visit to Provence gave him in hold-
ing his own in the estimation of both
Rosalie and Colonel Chenier; for, al-
though the latter had never seen him,
the cross and his words at second hand
from Rosalie were sufficient to win for
the young man a favorable prejudice in
the old soldier's heart. Still there was
a great barrier to pass.
Colouel Chenier nursed an implacable
hatred against the men whose acts—in
his judgment altogether unjustified by
honorable rules of warfare—had ren-
dered him almost a pauper. The chains
of poverty galled him and kept alive his
enmity toward those whom he habitually
called Sherman's thieves. Against them
he charged up fill the toil, privation and
humiliation of these "reconstruction
years" through which he had dragged
himself, a pitiable and despondent crip-
ple. He often said that the man who
shot him in battle, if he could ever find
him, should have his forgiveness and
friendship; but the vandals who burned
his house and assaulted his daughter,
who devastated his plantation and en-
ticed away his slaves, should never be
recognized as fellow citizens by him.
Aunt Marguerite used Colonel Che-
nier's season of grief to the effect of
bringing about a reconciliation between
her husband and her brother. A trouble
had arisen between Mr. Roosevelt and
| Colonel Chenier over political differences
i many years before. One had been a
Whig, the other a Democrat. They had
! come near fighting over the question of
the war with Mexico. Mr. Roosevelt
ardently opposed the war policy, Colonel
| Chenier just as fervidly defended it.
The result was a rupture. So, after
j the great calamities of personal dis-
figurement and hopeless poverty had
; fallen upon Wilton Cheuier with the
| ending of the rebellion, Mrs. Roosevelt
had labored hard to bring these two fool-
| ish enemies together. Her husband
finally consented, but Colonel Chenier,
her brother, rejected the offer. Now
she had adroitly approached the latter
under cover of his domestic bereave-
j ment, and had reached his heart while it
was laid bare. Rosalie added her sweet
I influence, and the stern man was con-
i quered. In short, the result was, as we
| have said, a reconciliation.
TO BE CONTINUED.
Sold by the agents,
Cleaves & Fletcher
P.P.F.
Physicians endorse P. P, P. as a splendid
combination, and prescribe it with great
satisfaction for the cures of all forms and
Btages of Primary, Secondary and Tertiary
• p p p
Cures scrofulA.
Syphilis, Byphilitio Rheumatism, Scrofu-
lous Ulcers and Sores, Glandular Swellings,
Rheumatism, Malaria, old Chronio Ulctrs
that have resisted all treatment. Catarrh,
Skin Diseases, Eczema, Chronio Feranlo
Complaints, Mercurial Poison, Tuter
Scald Head, Etc., Etc.
P. P. P. is a powerful tonic, and an ex-
COAfcl COAfc!
Genuine McAlister
Per $6 Ton
Briar Creek Coal
PER TON, DELIVERED.
Gainesville Light and Fuel
OFFICE—California and Denton Streets.
Co
Cures'rheumatisM'
cellent appetizer, building up the system
rapidly.
Ladies whose systems are poisoned and
whose blood is in an impuro condition due
CURES
ALARIA
to menstrual irregularities are
benefited by the wonderful tonic and bl<
cleansing properties of P. P. P., Prickly
Ash, Poke iioot and Potassium.
W. W. HOWETH
R. B. HOWETH
HOWETH BEOS.,
a.
C3- 3ST ERAL -A.G-IE1 tSTTStf-
M
a
JL K.%. A JU
North'Side California Street, Scott Block.
UPPMAN BR0&, Druggists, Proprietors,
Lippman's Block, SAVAKNAH, GA*
Fold by Garner, Williams & Co
ewaitt dstachablk
LINK
The Best.
BELTING.
Now tiie Cheapest.
REDUCED
PRICE LIST
of drive l*-lt V other u ics f\>r K1 tin turn %Canrcyi*mdt
Marl.in- ry f.>r h.-«ri<lh ^ * >> riut-t-i t«tl iu it'll \ or juirk&ftp.
link bfi.t macrinkuy co.. Stork ram (ml
by MCA8DLE & StNCLAia, Art*. NVw Orleans, 1^,
Send
THE MIND CURE.
The theory of one of the mind
cure may do for some hysterical
cases, but for chronic bowel trou-
bles, croup, colic, diarrhoea and
dysentery, Dr. Biggers' Huckle-
berry Cordial is the snrest and
best cure for it. Keep it
If you feel weak
and all worn out take
BROWN1S IRON BITTERS
Dr. J. E. Gilcreest.
Office over P. O.
Office Honrs Utol2a.m.&nd 5 to 6 pm.
As a mild, pleasant and reliable
cathartic Cheatham's Tasteless
Oastor Oil is without a parallel.
No .trouble to take it; no trouble
to administer to children. It is
•imply great. Price 25 cents.
The direct line to SDrereport and New Orleans
to Texarkana, Metnpbia, St. Loula the
North and East, and to a<) points In Texas,
Old and New Mexico Arizona, Colorado,
and California.
The faTOrtte line via Sacramento to Oregon
and Washington
Only line offering choice of routes to points In
the aoutheagt via; Tetarkana, Shreveport
and New Orleans,
Take "The St. Louis Limited"
Between Fort Worth and
St Louis
The fkatest time between Texas and„ the
North and Bart*
Doable dally line of Pullman Palace Sleeping
ears through to St. Louis via the
IRON MOUNTAIN ROUTE
Through sleeping cara bet ween New Orleans
ana Den rer and St Louis and K1 Paso.
Tor rates, tickets and all information, apply
«o or a Idreaa any of the tlckat agetta, or
0. P. Feg-in, Tray. Pa» Agt.
A. W. MeCTULLOUGH G. P. and T. A.
JNO. A. GRAHT.Sd V Pr«»
DALLAS, TEX.
EITY AND SELL LAND
On commission render and pay [Have abstracts to all lands in
taxes. Loan money to individuals Cooke county. Have for sale im-
and for loan companies. Buy and proved and unimproved city and
sell land notes, make abstracts j country property. Excellent bar-
intl examine titles, write deeds ; pains in farm and ranch properties
md all otli< r kind of instruments, in Cooke, Montague and Clay
iiui take at kno\N ledirenn n1s. | counties.
T2IE
XAJf
STEAM PHLNTING HOUSE.
!12 CALIFORNIA STREET. GAINESVILLE, TEX A
.etter Reads
Catalogues,
—•ALL KINDS OF^-
SletfE-nts. Price Lists,
Pfcffiphlets, Lai Rrlefs,
Shipping Tags,
Rcte Heads
Tisitlng Cards,
Circulars,
Bill Heads,
Hand Bills, Ete
lis ffigbl Style of lis Art!
Subscribe for the Hssfbbiak
woman's health and life
Depend more on regularity than
on any or all cases combined. An
actual or living death is the re
suit of derangement of functions
which make woman what she is;
immediate relief is the only safe-
guard against wreck and rniu. Iu
all cases of stoppage, delayed,
painful or other irregularities
Bradfleld's Female Regnjator is
the only sure remedy. Sold by
all druggists. 3
For the purest, best and al
ways lasting extracts and colognes
do not hesitate a moment but
come right over to Morgeson's
drug store, where you are sure to
get them, beyond a doubt
To live or not to live is a ques-
tion which annually confronts the
residents of onr low grounds and
swampy distrists. Take Cheat-
ham's Chill Tonic and live to die
a nobler death than by a common-
place chill. For sale by all drug-
gists.
•por dyspepsia,
Indirection, nnd Stomach disorder*, M
uuown'i ikoiv BITTERS.
>11 dealers keep it. £1 per bottle. Genuine baa
trade-mark ami crut*ea ml Hues ao wrapper
Wealth is supposed to give
ease, but what if the possesor hap-
pens to have chillsf Why, he
should simply exchange 40 or 76
cents of his wealth for a bottle of
Cheatham's Tasteless Chill Tonio
and his ease will be restored. It
always cures chills. Guaranteed.
'k • ■ -r&r :
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Roberts, W. T. The Gainesville Daily Hesperian. (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 282, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 3, 1891, newspaper, September 3, 1891; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth503773/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.