Jacksboro Gazette. (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 16, 1894 Page: 2 of 4
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The Great Chicago-Pullman Strike .^pj®’8p&ri* for ^Lanty
is a National Calamity, *ULa where
Our Extraordinary Reduction of
Prices is a Local Benefit.
------— - —--------— —- ~ ~~ v^''«■*** 1U1 tUCLLiOCi \ CCS
It is our aim to throw off unpleasant thoughts and What good can the Populists how much space it has devoted to
call your attention to the nice things in store for you. «*pect to accomplish by meeting the public interests of Jack conn- the year. They not only ask for
No house off of the rail road ever offered you as complete aut* Passin& resolutions like those 1 ty. Vv hat has it said to favor the trip passes for themselves and
&n assortment of high grade goods at the prices we above? T5iat may mean wel1’ no, improvement of agricultural and friends, but they ask for annual
ikrfiW ImI ■ 1 -k - An A will nrAAiimA tn /Irmltf hut hllRlliAfts inforaoto r\P + ® ----n , . - .
|9§
mm
xltUvj UvttCu v.1 Luaie uv»o'wvn iviun i ptioc ivu uu u ouiu rtii
Solid crinkle novelties former price 25cat 1G 2 3c
Striped and checked crinkle worth 16 2-3e at 11 1-2
Fancy outing cloth good value at 12 1-2 goes at 10c
New lawns sold everywhere at 15c closing price 12 1-2
New lawns worth 12 1-2 cents go at 10c
Meteor zephyr ginghams worth IS 2-3e at 12 l-2c
Plaid white goods, heavy weight worth 25c and 30c at 20c
Plaid white goods light weight former price 30e at 20c
Five cent challies for only 3c
Good standard calicoes at 5c
Fall width honest cheese cloth at 8c
Infants’ and childrens’ caps, fine qualily, at just one-half their value
Millinery goods at your own price.
Moire silks sqjid colors worth 90c at 75c
Fancy silks in patterns at prices to make them go.
Fancy light weight woolens in patterns, extra nice, worth $1 per
^ yardyreduced to 60 cents.
We also have special bargains in boys’ and men’s hats,clothing,
boots and shoes, and in fact, in every tine in the bouse and will gladly
show yon when you call. Cash customers always get bargains at our
honse. Daring the dull season we make good trade by advertising
real bargains and doing exactly what we advertise.
J. W. AYNES.
JACKSBORO GAZETTE.
S
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as second-class mail matter. ________
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Square, Jacksboro, Texas.
„™dt cash by Post-Office Money Order or
Bank Check at our risk, otherwise at the risk
Of the sender.
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DEMOCRATIC TICKET,
For County Judge,
F. E. Aston.
For County Attorney,
; * ; J. C. Hants.
For Sheriff1 and Tax Collector,
W. A. Massier.
For District Clerk,
A. A. McQnerry.
For County Clerk,
Thos. F. Horton.
For County Treasurer,
R. F. Owens.
For Assessor of Taxes,
J. A. Eouse.
For CO‘ Supt. Pub. Instruction,
J. M. Thompson.
For County Commissioner,
Precinct No. 2,
R. B. flight.
; r1?/
Sy. v
m
Culberson Nominated on the
Third Ballot.
<0spt.. Geo. Spil’er received a
message just before we went to
pr«ss that the convention had
adopted the majority rule, and
that Culberson was nominated on
the third ballot.
All who are interested in the
progress of Jack county should
work to make the county fair a
success.
unholy alliance with the Repub-
licans on a plank as strongly pro-
tectionist as ever appeared in a
Republican platform in any part
of the country.
People who approve of strikes
and endorse the strikers and
would have them spared from the
penalty of the law for their crimes,
in the destruction of life, and
property, would have 11s believe
that they are more in sympathy
with the “poor and down-trodden
laborer” than any other people,
but they betray the fact that then-
sympathies are with rjoting, incen-
diarism and lawlessness, rather
than with the plain, honest work-
ingmen on whom the hand of the
striker falls heaviest. Let the
state and municipal authorities beiter diffu£
put down all lawlessness, but if Iaa*10a ant*
they will not pr cannot, let the
general government put it down.
Is the Party Platform Social
istic?
In the Review of August 8tb,
the following paragraph appears
on the first page :
In the last campaign our plat-
form was denounced as undemo-
cratic, unrepublican and uncon-
stitutional.—'Now it ij .denounced
as socialism, communism and an-
archism, The former charge was
debatable, the latter is not. It is
of that ciasa of tactics resorted to
by a maD, beaten and defeated in
for Oklahoma and else-
, where and Democrats have gen-
—•**
a copy of this resolution to each !ie w'
member of the Populist State I Those who have read the Re-
Central Committee. view can answer for themselves
What good can the Populists how much space it has devoted to
a_ ’~u 1 p^lic interests of Jack conn-
W hat has it said to favor the
‘*UV ' V * AA 1* L AUWJI U‘VUU t T V. A 1 ^ 11U ‘—p* vr , vuJVUt Kf A 1 I L Ui L U 1 ill clTi Vi
one will presume to doubt, but | business interests of the county ?
while they promulgate s#ch prin- What hasit done in anyway build to
ciples as those set forth in their up educational interests of the
national platform, namely. That town and county? When didit ever
which tends to make men intelli- give any notice of the churches,
gent, moral and virtuous as sec- a notice that would.advance their
ondary principles, they are train- work in anyway, although it seems
ing men to be just what they now to have space to criticise what is
denounce in Governor Lewelling. said in the pulpit ? In fact, what
A pure stream can scarcely come has it done outside of preaching
from an impure fouutain, neither populism?
can a party, expect its adherents Is it not a recognized fact
to be of the highest moral char- among intelligent people that a
™---t.~_ „n *1-- —j.— paper is, to a great extent the in
dex by which its supporters may
and others. They not only ask
for passes good over lines which
are controlled by the officers to
whom they apply, but they ask
for passes over connecting lines
to distant and remote parts of the
country, good at all seasons of
the year. They not only ask for
trip passes for themselves and
them and had credited them at all
times with honesty and sincerity
of purpose.
WILSON AND M’MILLIN.
im
acter when all the prime princi-
ples of good morals are held sec----------
ondary. The Populists, in reality be judged?
are just beginning, yes, scarcely
beginning to reap the harvest of
their sowing. They may well stop
and ask “ What shall the harvest
be ?”
Easily Explained.
The following is what the Re-
view wants explained:
Jack county is no longer the
poor, thinly populated country
that it was a few years, ago, it is
now considered one of the best
counties in Northwest. Texas. The
varieties of crops that grow to
perfection and its stock interests
all combine to make it one of the
most desirable portions of the
state.—[Jacksboro Gazette.
So say we. Here’s our hand,
shake neighbor. But we shall go
further. We undertake to say
that the per capita of private in
debtedness in Jack county is less
than in any, or almost any other
county in Texas, that there is a
more general distribution of prop-
erty among ber citizens, and a
better diffusion of general infor-
intelligence than
among those pf any other county
of the same or equal population
in the state. Few people if in-
deed any are better informed as
to their rights and duties as citi
functions of government. Indeed -------j uuuuo ui
in opr citizenship are combined sum i® to railroad em-
the essential and material ele- P^°yes who were forced into in-
ments to make a happy, prosper- VOiuatary idleness, The $3§,OO0,-
ons and progressive people. We by workingmen engag-
do not mean by this that our peo- °dier lines of industry which
pie are prosperous, or that their were paralyzed by the suspension
property conditions are vbat they And the $26,000,000,
oiirtnia t’-- - 1 * T*r- completing the aggregate, is lost
by business men whose business
was tied up by wanton acts of
Debs and his associates.
Now for the comparison; In
tbe proclamation officially declar-
ing the strike off J)ebs and his
associates say that"the only salva-
tion of the country ialft the sup-
port by the laboring classes of
what terms itself “The’ People’s
Farfy,” hat what is more gener-
ally kngwn as the Populist party.
“The people,” says the Debs
proclamation, “are, in this land
of the free, the sovereign whose
What prosperity Jack enjoys is
certainly not to be attributed to
populism ?
Facts and Figures.
St. Louis Republic.
Comparisons are often odious,
but they are also often instructive.
A comparison which is both is
afforded by the recent proclama-
tion of the American Railway
Union and the figures showing
the total of losses by the strike
and boycott, which that procla-
mation declares at an end.
The figures are from Brad,
street’s, an unprejudiced and en-
tirely reliable source. They are
crushing, as showing an unwar-
ranted and entirely unnecessary-
waste of money during a time of
widespread and profound com-
mercial depression. They con-
stitute an indictment of the men
who forced the conditions which
made them possible. But let
them speak for themselves
United States Government
Kailroad earnings in Chicago
Railroad earnings, other points
Destruction of railroad property
Railway employes* wages
Loss in exports
Loss'on fruit crops
LoS to "j™0* COmI,anies
Loss to merchants on quick goods
AOt‘“ $81,000,000
Out of this enormous total of
losses more than two-thirds *or
They Say the Senate Bill
Beats the McKinley
Measure.
Washington, Aug. 13__Chair-
passes for themselves and friends, I ff.f.INGTON’ Aa&- 13—Chair
and no matter how many passes WUs0D’ author of
the Wilson bill, prepared for the
may be granted to a single indi
vidual, if a single request be re-
fused, the enmity of that official
is aroused and his vengeance ex-
ercised if he has an opportunity
to do so.
“I have known a member of the
supreme court of the United
States to apply for free transpor-
tation, the money value of which
in a single instance was between
$200 and $300. Governors of
states, United States senators,
members of the house of repre-
sentatives, members of every de-
partment of the state government
from the governor to the janitor,
ask and expect to receive these
favors. There is one state in the
American union whose constitu-
tion contains a provision prohib-
iting persons in the service of
that state from receiving passes.
That constitution in this respect
is a dead letter in the state where
it exists, and members of all de-
partments of state, including
therein all members of the su-
preme court and of inferior courts,
Associated Press at the close of
the caucus today a statement of
his views on the tariff situation.
The statement is in Mr. Wilson’s
handwriting and gives succinctly
his position on the action of the
house in accepting the tariff bill.
It is as follows j •
I can not see where we failed
to do anything we could do to
bring about a better result.
When I have done the best ac-
cording to my capacity and judg-
ment I must fall back on the con-
sciousness of duty done. The
difficulty which the country must
recognize is that on the tariff
question we did not;have a Demo-
cratic senate-und what had ever
been gained hq,g| been jested
from a protection body. I have
been willing to take any, even
the most desperate chances that
gave the least hope of success in
getting rid of the most objection-
able senate and would have fought
to the fourth of March with any
ground to stand on and any follow,
ing to sustain me. We have been
CLAIRETTE
Its Just as^ood the Grocer said
Proffering ariotber brand, -pure claip.ette soap*"-
JS Wbatwewant-, have qouanq now on band ?
W* ccrtaioluWje W other, we use none but the best,
And all shrewd dealers been it cu-o n0U behind the rest ?
H. A. WILLS.
ILfills $ IHood
PATENT
SCHOOL
find Book
A. O. WOE
receive and expect and even ask ! t YC ® b®en
for passes. A constituUonal pro- rants, rtUe
9*
MEDICINES,
BOONS,
Sellers.
$ l.OOu.OOO
3.000. 000
2.300.000
2,500,800
20,000,000
2.000. 000
2.509.000
1,500,009
35,000,000
5,000,000
IV luui a Li VI uuucc do U!U‘ - ~ vn Viuuuo UI
zens, or as to the just and proper $55,000,000, is paid by working-
---1------a men. Twenty million dollars of
should be. Far from it. We
know that their condition can be
liar-—done to abuse and insult. It un“er wise and just laws frugally
in tlio o nomniwl anil imnartiailr T>„ +
is the act of a coward.
On the 4th page oi tjfie same
paper we find the following, of the Gazette taken in
MU r-o nr> AAnU.,1 111 i OAntlflntmn a 1
m
M-
The Review must have forgot-
ten *11 about that nice little talk
it made a few weeks ago wanting
reason to have away.
The Jack County Fair Associa-
tion, at its last meeting decided
to open the fair to Clay, Wise,
Parker and Young counties. That
is a good move.
---
The Review is evidently angry,
; ie etriking at everything and
paragraph copied without com-
ment from People’s parly papers:
■ The Rocky Mountain News in-
terviewed a r ailroad builder, not
a contractor mind ycu, of New
Zealand, Mr. J. Jay. As a result
of the government ownership of
land, railroad, express, telegraph
mrni, ittiuoMu, express, telegraph r J .---i.vDvU„1Uv,b-WCaW
and telephone, he say s timee are i and goods box whfttlers. As a
excellent and that the wages of majority of the voters in Jack
nerdiv41 -tWS? ^ ^ 2,G° county are Populists and have
a *>7 *«-. *<« •»
what it does here. In other to anow aow ^ IS ibat tire county
and impartially administered. But
there is something in this state
connection with the utterances
of a Democratic leader of this
county,and some of the Gazette’s
articles of late that needs expla-
nation. It is this, This leader of
your party said that the People’s
party was composed office-seekers
vision on this subject should be
broad enough to make it a mis-
demeanor for any person elected
or appointed to any position in
the service of the public to ask
or receive for 'himself or any
other person free transportation.”
How Texas Does Not Decay.
if- Iwimijijc.
Texas is furnishing as many
shoe buyers to the St. Lonis mark-
ets as any other three States.
It has fui nished the whole increase
in sheep among the Southern
States since 1860. f
Of the 1,000,000 increase in
horses Texas has supplied 900,-
000,
Of the 13,606,469 increased in
cultivated acreage Texas gave
to the South 9,999,633
aergs,
Texas produces from one-fourth
to one-third of the total cotton
crop of the country.
Travders say that in two states Lum ini8 tae
e pride of the people in then-I measure which would become a law
home is conspicuous. California • * •
is proud of its climate; Texas of
progress.
And still a bloody shirt Repub-
lican organ in St. Louis tells the
world that Texas is in a condition
of decadence.
........ JLU UlUt'I
words, because the people do not
allow themselves to be robbed by
millionaires and other suc"fr-r-ep-
bas advanced and developed as
you say, and its varieties of crops
(requiring judgment and skill)
(everybody. _ --------------
.J. T. L. Annie, presiding cider of
the Weatherford district.
It is now after Rev.
That the Jack county fair will
be a success, can hardly be doub*-
«d, as the board of directors seem
determined that it shall be so, and
they are men who know what
>y are about.
Pops have always been
osers before the people,
party of the honest farm-
the farmers are now study-
record the Pops are mak
where they have gotten into
*, instead of listening to
talk.
etovi°s *> »“*••*» (<"«•*«■*
is needless to add that the
working people of New Zealand
are largely socialistic__[Coming
Nation.
industry) have made it one of the
most desirable portions of the
state ? It is a strange conduion
w , of things to exist among an idle
How .f the government owner, thriftless people. Please explain,
ship of land, railroads, express, i —[Jacksboro^ Review,
telegraph and telephone is such a 1 In claiming honors unmerited,
good thing, and the people are : the Review overreaches itself,
largely socialistic, why does the We have only to go back a few
Renew object to socialism and years to see what populism did
communism^ ffis theory of poll- j for Jack county. The same
tics leads to that condition and ! people with the same principles
if he does not believe in social- j with a different name managed
ism and communism he had better the county finances and county
abandon such a theory.
Don’t give your readers social-
ism on one page and deny it on
another.
scrip then was 60 to 70 cents on
the dollar, and it never improved
any until the Democrats of Jack
county organized and brought
J___ county organized and brought order without the least jastificii-
Why Form Good Resolutions? a change when Judge Ship tlon t(* £ive t° resistance the
Topeka, Kas., Aug. 6_At a man was elected. dignify of a revolution against
mass meeting of Populists of W ho, but U. L. P.s., alias Citi- nua«QS crnjueut, ft was against
Shawnee county held here tonight
the following resolutions were
adopted:
man was elected
Who, but U. L. P.s., alias Citi-
zens, alias Populists opposed the
organization of a county fair and
denounced it as the work of
Democratic State Convention.'
The Democratic state conven
tion was temporarily organized
by electing J. Fleming tempo-,
rary chairman.
Mr. I ieming called the after-
rtecsovco“ld °ot iie
Tke sovemgo people should mMee had been ,p tated wo„
whit 1; V, BU‘1 °n lhe “1 -k (hem
wnat sort of talx is this coming
from men who have robbed the
“sovereign people” of nearly a
Hundred million dollars by reck-
less imprudence? The greatest
force working for tyranny ip this
country is that of the Debses,
whose absolute powers in
control of labor organizations
lOiee those organizations, agalanst
the eoiisciepcp and intelligence
of the majority of their members,
into a position hostile to the rights
and interests of the* “sovereign
, people.”
*‘ Thc sovereign people should
assert their right to rule,” says
Debs. ^ They have asserted it.
They asserted it at Chicago, where
Debs and his associates had in-
cited violent resistance to law and
order without the least justifica-
to address the meeting. They
had consequently not been in-
formed and were not present.
However, Judge Reagan soon
appeared and was introduced.
He said he was glad to meet
with the re united Democracy of
lexas and after this greeting
, .•v.u,vu<iuuiV|BIUU(J
fiomthe beginning that have been
fomented from the senate and
the growing impatience of the
members to get back to their
districts with anything that
might be called a tariff reduction
bill, has made them unwilling to
stay unless premise could
be given of assured or most
probable victory. We could not
honestly give such promise, and a
man can not continue a battle with
his army ready and eager to break
away.”
Representative McMillin, one of
the Democratic tjquse conferees
gave a statement more in detail
as to the effect of the tariff bill
which would be enacted as a re-
sult of today’s action.’
He said:
“The effect of the caucus action
will be to pass the house bill with
the senate amendments. Whilst
the house bill is a better measure,
in my judgment, than this the
measure which would become a law
instead by today’s action is a won-
derful improvement on the Me?
Kinley la\y, Jt gives free wool,
free lumber, free hemp, flax and
jute, and reduces largely manifold
goodsinto whichall these materials
enter. To illustrate, the average
duty on woolen goods under the
McKinley law is 98 1-2 per cent.
This has been reduced more than
tmlf. There i§ considerable re-
daction in all schedules and the
average on all will be about 38 per
cent, as against about 50 per cent
under the present law and
addition to this are the very
great additions te the free list,
upon whioh no tax iscollected at
all. Tbe right of the president
to impose taxes without congress
is thrown away and given back
to the congress to whom it
belongs and whom it was
wrested by the McKinley law.
Much has been said concerning
the sugar duty. There is little
ue -uargest atocR in the County
| KEEP AND SELL EYERYTHING IN THE DRUG I
Quantity the Largest, Quality the Beat, Pricea the
‘Compounding of Prescriptions a
Don’t Bpy Comsicxed PianoS & Obi
i
- x iflnuo wit
These instruments are liable to have been on safc
roily select the best for SSSSBBsaK
•6ce,ia‘? Ybother instrument oSi
ft„plKreri;*to X
Ins toMrammU ou in.Wlm.nU dcm.nd not S Ln Sd Snt.SE
and frequently these notes carry an additional lO ner tent BS
, :j
; I
H
CUNDIFF HIGH SCI
This School will open September 3rd, 1894, and
nine Months.
Courses to prepare students for college or any grade ,
will be established. Music and commercial department '
Board cheap, Locality healthy, the moral and W^ctus
of the community very high.
For farther particulars and catalogue write to Use Fi in
___ J- 1. GREVES, A.
J. W. F^APER,
WATCH MAKER AND J]
yVtttcfo&Sf OZocJc&f dttiZ JTjtc&n
EAST SIDE SQUARE, (in j. W. Stark house) JACKS!
■m
-■ ,i
'M
TZtffZ manufacturer
N. E. ATKINSON,
ATKINSON & GL
MANUFACTURERS OF
All Styles of
Harness, Collars,
Assorted Stock
Repair work
iew wants to know why
Gazette does not pnblirai)
Democratic platform oftener?
always published it as often
iry. But that is not
ion. Why do you not give
tbe benefit of that
Is it because you
aid it will not take well ?
ding the Kolbites’
iento, that the Derno-
ed fraud to be per
in the recent election in
the Populists soy the
not tiuotnthel
III A l^ii uni tiifuiAuai.
-sr rx,*
Q ties of the first class, under dl- tnck ?
rect control of Governor Lewel- Who was it but Populists that
hug, arc organised to protect and j tried to do away with the office
encourage saloons, joints, dives . • . \ omce
and liouses of prostitution, and it j couutY superintendent of pub-
is also believed by the residents sc^l0°ls ifi Jack county, there-
of said cities that such encour- greatly impairing their usoful-
agenient is given in order that1 ness and depriving the mass of
SASlitS £ :T°a “f >*•«
dives and brothels for their own jtbe imWlc luc-ney ?
personal gain iu absolute disre- Has it not been’The Populists’
gard of the laws of the state and stock in speech to array the eoun-'
public decency and morality, and ] try people against the town, to
as an evidence of such general arr»v nf , .
belief we cite the letter of Asso- ‘ f p6°ple against
date Justice Allen to Lieu%naut jaaother c,a8S» to sow seeds of
Governor Daniels; thereforej'beit (ll8cord aQ(i discontent, thereby
Rob4#i By the Populists of demoralizing trade and injuring
e county in mass meeting j the home market for farm nroif-
id, that we demand the i acts f
State Central Committee! t> . ,
. I together and that said j + opuhsts have no data to show
r-mmiUeo take L. D. Lesreliing |that a majority in Jack county
j off said ticket, and that they sub- arc, or ever have been Populists
Urtitnte in his place some reputa- and we are told that a ]ar<*0 num’
kUlti man mm Hja liHiJiilnfa U.a h * .. °
---i vj
» IS® 3" tiielbJ "J T " Tf f»c umbers or ibei,
IDer °* Populists have left Jack I laimlres and for political adherents
suisgovernment,
such a movement of senseless
and causeless hostility to their
rights and interest as citizens that
the sovereign people” asserted
“ their right to rule.”
The cm-outery of m m respousi-
ble for such tremendous losses to
the laboring class of this country
as are Those of the Debses pre-
suming to advise workingmen
as to their line of political con-
duct is remarkable,
Tho Froe Pass Abuse.
G lobe- Democrat,
I J4JSident J036pU [X. Choat6
submitted to the constitutional
convention at Albany a letter on
t he subject of free passes from J.
T. Brooks, second vice president
of the Pennsylvania railroad, in
which he says: “There was a
time when public officials were
content to receive occasionally a
triji pass for tlieajselres- They
have learned'to ask for passes for
principles of the Democratic par-
ty,” said he, hare founded in the
declaration of independence and
the constitution. It has lived
through all these years and for
twenty years was regularly de-
feated. It lived because its prin-
ciples look to the rights of the
people,and fbejigUts qf the states.
We must preserve the rights of
the states if we'preserve the un-
ion.” The convention was wild
by this time. He said, “ We have
differences among ourselves, but
wTe ought to settle our differences
in the ranks of the Democracy.
These differences were found in
the tariff issue in 1876, but in 1892
we got a clear expression on this
question and vre won our victo-
jpy. ' He then touched upon the
silver question and spoke of the
railway commission, alien owner
ship of laud, the rights of munici-
pal corporations and railway com
pantes to issue bonds.
Mr. Oulbejson was the next
speaker, during liis speech Le
said: “I am opposed to Populism,
aud so in favor of the utmost ex-
tension of.the efficacy of t’he pub-
lic schools. On the silver ques-
tion I stand squarely on the
national Democratic platform.”
Ool. Lanham next followed, he
said he had made a consistent,
conservative, decoj;i^and Demo-
cratic campaioy “I have turned
loose no dangpons doctrine anj
have set adrift nothing injurious
to the party.” He then referred
to his competiton^^l declared
by this biff than by the McKinley
law. There is very considerable
reduction in this. Whilst, as
I stated in the beginning, the
senate amendments leave the bill
in less acceptable'shape than it
left, the house there is nq qompar-
ison between the merits of the
two. It should not be forgotten
also that the system recommended
by the house kaowu as the income
tax is retained in the bill and be-
comes a part of oar fiscal policy.
By this it is proposed to tax what
people have iu excess of their
needs rather than to tax what they
need aud hive not.”
Call and
Prices.
see us
You
Texas
firffla,
Aiwa;
Neat.
iGoodTsE^H
'JUUU HEALTH.!
Blood'*
HOME AND FARM,
Louisville, ky. 7
The Leading Agricultural Journal of tho South and Wes
Made by Farmers for Farmers.
by the fanners themsXeT Sc-£n£
m securing- a full account never^ffM?1
cess on the farm. It is distU.^4§ Urn
a „ FARMERS! OWN PAPER.
andIiJWrtSfSrte3 fora
r, . . ,T® L1ST OF CONTRIBUTORS
A HOME MAGAZINE,
IN ADVAt#
IMPURE, |
It yau are troubled withg
BOILS, ULCERS or
PIMPLES, SORES 9
£your blv ^ bad. A few bottles of S. S. S. willf
^thoroughly cleanse the system, remove all im-J'
ipunt^ and build you up. All manner of blem-^
5 “cleared away
eirthi
Rqf suffer ing no appetite, no enjoyment of life. Two bottles^
* iejight out. TTiere is no better®
s.s.s.
brought yment
remedy for blood diseases.
|Treatise oni blood
A SWIFT SF£C1FIC CO•, Atlanta,Ga.
BROWN’S HOTEL
THE MYSTERT OF THE NATION
BILL ARP’S LETTERS
^^srassarssrs
is its rtUrrmtiAx department
ssswsBassns
• Fair Trade gad Farmer.- R,^vt. -
LOOK HERE!
CHICO, TEXAS.
CENTRALLY LOCATED.
he had cast noaJ^kaioim mmn ' suW<lied with lhe best the market affords
r * j Clean beds, rooms airy and well ventilated,.
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firm in west Texas.
Or, Price s cream baking Powder m
WnrM’s Fair HIghe.t Medal and Diplnma.
THE Gi
WILL BE sfeN
FROM NO1
UNTIL
November lsi
l F°l
25 OK
If you feel weak
and all worn out take
BROWN’S IRON BITTERS
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Jacksboro Gazette. (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 16, 1894, newspaper, August 16, 1894; Jacksboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth730966/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Gladys Johnson Ritchie Library.