Fort Worth Daily Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 70, Ed. 1, Tuesday, October 11, 1887 Page: 4 of 8
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W H Masters General Freight Agent
of the Gulf Colorado and Santa Fe was
in Fort Worth yesterday
ie
M C Hurley one of the contractors
building the St Louis Arkansas and
Texas llillsboro extension was in Fort
Worth yesterday
The past three dajs have not been fa-
vorable for building railroads but the
forces on the Fori Worth and Denver and
Cotton Belt put in every hour they can
between showers
Since the reorganization of the Texas
Traflic Association it takes cognizance of
rates to and from Mississippi and Mis-
souri river points to and including St
Louis and Kansas City
The Texas and Pacific has received
seven new cabooses out of twenty order-
ed not long ago from the Missouri Car
and Foundry Company The new cars
are really elegant in their way
Col Peter Smith received yesterday a
lengthy and interesting letter from a
prominent railroad official in Chicago
and a meeting of citizens was to have
been held yesterday afternoon but was
postponed until today In the fullness
of time the contents of the letter will be
known
All the railrosda centering at Fort
Worth are more or less affected by the
recent heavy rains The Santa Fe is a
sealed book north of Gainesville the Mis-
souri Pacific has trouble on its Houston
extension the Fort Worth and Denver is
stopped at Pease river the Texas and
Pacific has trouble both east and west
and the Fort Worth and Kio Grande is
suffering considerable delay the train
due here yesterday at 1030 not arriving
nntil late in xhe day Such rains jn3y not
again occur in ten years and the rail-
roads while anxious for rains at the
proper time do not take kindly to floods
The Gazette seveial months ago said
that the Fort Worth and New Orleans
road would be the great iron road for
Fort Worth and from what was learned
yesterday there is no reason to change
this statement Some time ago Mr Tom
Roche found a considerable quantity of
iron aloag the line of this read and his
taken great pains and spent some money
to discover what the find amounted to
The iron was sent to several places for
tests and yesterday Mr Koc ae heard from
the assay made in Chicago which pro-
nounces the Iron firstclass The Fort
Worth and Eio Grande will bring the ore
to Fort Worthwhere It will bs made into
pigiron
>
The Railway Age says The straight
smoke stack for locomotives has been ad
vo cated so zealously and convincingly for
a few years past and has been so widely
adoptedthal it seems veryjstrange to heari
that the Union Pacific company lias ded
cidedto abolish it and that as fast as
IAX JL ROAI3 S3
LOCAL TIME TABLE
MISSOURI PACIFIC
NOKTH BOUND
BOUNDArrive Leave
Laredo and St Lonls 710am 745 am
San Antonio and St Louis 900 p m 920 p m
SOUTH BOUND
St LouJ8aid Laredo 800 pm 820 pm
St Loula and San Antonio 815 am S0am
TEXAS AND PACIFIC
EAST BOUND
No 2 dally Z2am
No4dally S0opm 910pm
WEST BOUND
Noldally S00pm
No 3 dally 30um 840 am
TRANSCONTINENTAL
NORTH BOUND
Fort Worth Whltesbiro and Arrive Leave
Tcxarkana 710am 745am
Fort Worth Sherman and
Texarfcana 900pm 920pm
SOUTH BOUND
Texarkana Whitesboro and
Fort Worth SC0pm 820pm
Trxartana Sherman and
Fort Worth S15am S40am
FORT WORTH AND DENVER
Northbound 855am
South bound 420pm
GULF COLORADO AND SAWTA FE
NOKTU BOUND
BOUNDArrive Leave
Nol 740pm 800pm
No3 1055am
SOUTH BOUND
No 2 925 am
No4 403pm
FORT WORTH AND RIO GRANDE
Arrive Leave
Fort Worth 1030ani 400pm
Granbury 630pm 800am
All the above from the Union Depot
C D Lusk Ticket Agent
HOUSTON AND TEXAS CENTRAL
Leave Arrive
Express trains 350pm 1055pm
Expresstralns 445 am 1110 am
Depot near corner of Jones street and Dag
gett avenue City office 405 Main 6treet
if A MILLEB Ticket Agent
THE EAILE0ADS
A Diversify of Opinion as to wnfcli Com-
pany Will Build I bo Port
WortU Western
The Fort Worth and New Orleans tlio Iron
Road for This CUy A Let-
ter from Chicago
Homo Notes
J M Steere of the Santa Fe spent
yesterday in Fort Worth
engines coming into the shop they are be
iDg furnished with the diamond stack in-
stead The indictment against straight
stack it seems is that it causes the de-
struction of fireboxes and is therefore
more expensive while in no respect bet-
ter than the oldstyle diamond stack So
much testimony has been presented from
time to time to prove the reverse of this
that the opponents of the straight stack
will have to show good reasons for the
lack of faith which is In them before their
views are generally adopted
Tne Fort Worth Western is still a great
theme among all classes of citizens of
Fort Worth Jtcksboro Springtown and
other places on the proposed route All
agrees that the road will be built but
just when or by what company is not eo
easily settled Many believe the Fort
Worth Western will build it and operate
it as an independent line Others say
the Cotton Belt Rock Island or Missouri
Pacific will build the road Colonel John
R Hoxie is very enthusiastic over the
project to have the St Louis and San
Francisco put the project through and
yesterday it developed that several citi-
zens are strongly of the opinion that
tne company that will build equip and
operate the Fort Worth Western will be
no other than the Fort Worth and Rio
Grande and they say the road will be a
Fort Worth institution with head-
quarters main offices roundhouse and
machine shops located here The Fort
Worth Western will be built
The sentiment in favor of diminishing
and as far as possible abolishing railway
labor on Sunday has not ceased to exist
although it has not attracted very much
public notice of late With those who
consider the matter the feeling grows
that a great reform in this respect is de-
manded The following from the Indian-
apolis Journal is a straw in this
direction
In a quret manner a general move-
ment is making to do away with a large
per cent of work on railroads on the Sab-
bath A number of roads have expressed
a desire to take a firm stand in this mat-
ter if competing lines will favor such a
movement The Bee Line eighteen
months ego issued an order to
the effect that as little work should
be done as possible on
the Sabbath especially in yards
and it has an excellent effect on their
men and their business has not suffered
thereby General Manager Beckley on
the Cincinnati Wabash and Michigan
does not allow a wheel to turn on that
road on Sunday and when the IvesStay
nor syndicate proposed to take control of
the road he distinctly gave them to un-
derstand that should he continue general
manager of the property the Sabbath
must be o bserved
Major Ysnaton Worfclng
Correspondence of the Gazette
Newport Tex Oct 10 On the 1st
at night a railroad meeting was held by
the representative men of Newport and
vicinity Major Vanston made a boom-
ing railroad speech all in the interest of
the Dallas Archer and Pacific Rxilroad
Company
Railroader Married
Correspondence of the Gazetto
Yellow Prairie Tex Oct 9 Mr
Charles H Jordan of Taylor an attache
of the Missouri Pacific Railway was mar-
ried today to one of our mos estimable
and beautiful young ladles Miss Mollie
Chambers Mr Jordan and lady left on
the noon train for Taylor where the hap
pv young couple will make their home
Mr Jordon is well and favorably known
on the Santa Fe where he formerly was
conductor
The First Transcontinental Railway How
the Prospect of It was Welcomed Xwenty
Five Years Ago
The editors of the Alta California have
been looking over their old files and have
found an interesting reminiscence of the
days when the first Pacific railway was a
blessing hoped for but not yet enjoyed
Now that the builders of that pioneer
transcontinental highway are being sub-
jected to ungrateful abuse by demagogues
a reminder of the feeling before the road
was built is especially suggestive We
quote from the Alta omitting a number
of the matters which it gives
Probably the one event which twenty
five years ago engrossed more of the pub-
lic attention in San Francisco and in the
whole state for that matter than any
other more even than the exciting inci-
dents of the fratricidal strife in which the
country was then plunged was the pass-
age of J the Pacific Railway bill The bill
received the signature of President Lin-
coln on Juy 2 1862 and
the news flished across the conti-
nent by telegraph was saluted
with salvos of joy as the commencing
point of a new era of prosperity for the
state the prediction and promise of
which has long since been verified The
event was considered of so much im-
portance that nothing short of a grand
torchlight parade in which all of our
leading citizens took part was thought
sufficient to properly celebrate it and
the celebration itself was styled the
Pacific Railway Jubilee
The Drocession and parade took place
on the night oi July 101862 Every fire
company in the city then composed of
our leading merchants turned out with
their engines the myqr and board of
supervisors headedthe procession
every bullding in the cityNwas brilliantly
= vrs
t t r t
illuminated in testimony to the general
joy In the several divisions of the pro
cession were carried transparencies bear-
ing the following mottoes
Wakennl Dont yon know the bill
has passpd Finally passed on June
241862
San Francisco The completion of
the Atlantic Pacific Railroad will make
San Francisco the king city of the
world The railroad completed California
is impregnable against foreign foes
A union of lakes a nnlon of lands
A union of Btates none can fever
A union of hearts a union of hands
And the railroad unites us forever
San Francisco the jumplngoff deDOt
This far and you must take to water
The waste places shall be made glad
The wilderness shall blossom as the
rose American iron only to be
used Cheap homesteads along the
great route Alternate section beside
the railway only 125 per acre
Long live our Republic The govern-
ment gives 80000000 toward the build-
ing of the grand transcontinental rail-
way The cable proved a fable The rail-
road is sure When built it will endure
JLittle Indian bov step out of the
way for the big engine
No monopoly possible under the pro-
visions of the bill
Honest old Abe in his youth he split
rails in his old age he lay rails
Now time and space are in the race
San Francisco in 1862 100000 in-
habitants San Francisco in 1872 1000
000 inhabitants San Francisco ih 1SG2
S45000000 assessable property San
Francisco in 1872 500000000 assess-
able property
The iron of the east painted clasped
hand The gold of the west
Westward the march of empire steams
its way
The locomotive his prow is wet with
the surgefoam of either ocean His
breast is grim with the sands of the
desert
The bill is passed Steam is up-
Time From New York to San Francisco by
the Horn 1G000 miles By the Isthmus
GOOO miles By the railroad 3000
From New York to San Francisco by
tae Horn 100 days By the Isthmus
twentyfive days By the railroad four
days The Pacific Railway Uncle Sams
waistband Hehas grown so corpulent
that he would burst without it
The transcontinental railway its con-
struction no longer promised to our ear
t3 be broken to our hope
No monopoly two transcontinental
telegraph lines
It follows the track of the buffilo
Along twilight when comlug west
a quick daybreak when going east
Score up your longitude Mr Conduc-
tor
Caoe Horn be blowed Salt Lake
City the haltway house Brigham Young
Esq major switch tender
Married In June 1862 by the High
Priest of North America Mr Atlantic to
Miss Pacific all of the same nation
In one decade the road is made
From season to season on the same
parallel a thousand miles areas one day
Steam that wonderful working agent
and the frail electric wire both con-
necting distant places ever toil and never
tire
A pleasant round trip Across the
continent and back and visit ones
friends in a month
Steam the Archimedean lever that
moves the world
The locomotive that makes the first
through trip we cant pay too much for
its whistle
Twelve years for the railroad we have
prayed In ten years hence the railu will
belaid
Fifty dollars for the through trip
What enterprise equals this in its
benefits to the nation and the world
A good bill Provisions for free
homesteads in every alternatesection
Railroad trains The shuttles that
weave the web of amity between the
statesqf the Union
The road pays the national debt by
increase of commerce under present
tariffi
The American girdle From which
the fires of civilization and progress will
incessantly flash
How immigration from the east will
pour through the Sierra Nevada tun-
nels One thing peculiarly noticeable in the
foregoing mottoes is the forcible manner
in which they bear out the claim that the
pojected railroad was at that time re-
garded more than anything else in the
light of a necessary link in the chain that
was to bind California to the eastern
states and make her an inseparable and
inseverable part of the Union That idea
seems to run through them all Even the
80000000 of the United States subsidy
is spoken of as a gift and the railroad
is looked to pay the national debt by
the natural increase of commerce
Careful Work
San Francisco Chronicle
What would this great country do it
the government were as careless in the
management of things as private individ-
uals are Few people know how abso-
lutely careful the ofiislal departments of
the nation are and how close the atten-
tion is to things that the public would
not atop to consider Of course the
larger organizations such as the post
office we know by experience are remark-
ably handled but nobody I believe
knows except the officials them-
selves what thorough work is
done by the less prominent
frequently despised departments Now
look at the fish commissioners We
know that they have done excellent work
in their line but they have never got any-
thing like sufficient credit for it all Per-
haps you dont know that even such a
small thing as the water for the fish to
live in is carefully analyzed and by a reg-
ular firm of analysts who hand in their
certificates on the subject practically un-
der oath Yes I met a man the other
day who used to be with a firm who bad
this duty to perform They always got
well paid for it too
And you had to analyze the water
Yes
And how did you do it
We kept three or four fish When the
commissioners sent in the water te be an-
alyzed we put the fish in it If they died
we reported that the water was not good
If they didnt why it was all right
Change of Venue
Special to the Gazette
m
Texarkana Ark Oct 10 Judge Mc
Lean today granted B T Pittmana
change of venue to Cass county Pie
man is charged with accessory lrtfthe
murder of Woods near DeKalb 3 jSv
Blocker the other principal in this ctse
while was convicted and given a life sentence
last week
THE GAZETTE FOST WOBTH TEXAS TUESDAY OCTOBER 11
E0EEIGN AFFAIRS
Tim Healy M P Chafes a Newspsper
Reporter and Dresses Down the
Landlords Ireland
Religions Ceremonies Suppressed in TaTjs
Au Austrian anrt BAvarlan Steamer
Collide with IjOBS of IAf e
France
RELIGIOUS CEREMONIES SUPPRESSED
Paris Oct 10 Today for the first
time since the revolution of 1793 the re-
ligious ceremonies connected with the
festival of St Dennis were suppressed
STRAKOSH DEAD
Pars Oct 10 Maurice Strakosh the
trainerof Mme Patti is dead
Austria
STEAMERS COLLIDE
Vienna Oct 10 The Austrian
steamer Hapabnrg yesterday collided
with and sunk a Bavarian steamer on
Lake Constance Many passengers in the
cabin were drowned Two bodies have
been recovered
Ireland
HEALY ON LANDLORDS
Dublin Oct 10 A League mass
meeting was held at Longford yesterday
During the proceedings the platform
collapsed and the government reporter
was injured Mr T M Healy M P
chaffed the reporter on his first ex-
perience on a plank bed Contiauing
Healy said that there soon would be no
landlords left in Ireland He will deal
with landlords in securing their rights as
he would in drawing rats from a hy
stack Landlords were more bothered
by the plan of campaign than they were
by the killing of bailiffs The deadliest
place to hit them was their pockets He
hoped that the mortgage Lord Genard
weuld not leave him a brass farthing to
bless himself with The Irish were
strong enough to subdue the loyalty
crew
iiiTP
The President Trip
Madison Wis Oct 10 Mrs Cleve-
land and Mrs Vilas tock carriages at
830 this morning and drove to the rail-
road station the President and Colonel
Vilas walked The special train left for
St Paul at 9 oclock There were a few
hundred people at the station to bid the
citys guests good speed but there was
no demonstration of any kind Skies were
bright but it is cold and steamheaters
of train are in full blast
AT LA CROSSE
La Crosse Wis Oct 10 The Presi-
dents special train reached La Crosse at
1 p m A salute of twentyone guns was
fired as the train entered the station A
throng of people numbering about 8000
awaited the arrival of the train and loud-
ly cheered the visitors as they alighted
and crossed the platform to the carriage
The station and principaljbuildings of the
city were tastefully decorated with bunt-
ing The party were escorted through
the main streets by the Governors
Guard The Mayor and the President of
the Board of Trade accompanied the
President in his carriage The entire
population with many from a distance
were on the streets The train stopped
twentv minutes
WACO
Sk Bloodhound
Ranch Fined
for Cigar
Sailing >
Special to the Gazette
Waco Tex Oct 10 George OglSsby
of this city is growing bloodhounds or
sale He has already one of the finest
kennels of that breed in the United States
Increasing frequency of acts of violence
and multiplied instances of stagewac < j
train robberies causes a demand fortne
cless of animals named which en
courages Mr Oglesby to hope th r f
if the noble work shall pro-
ceed he may find his nogranch
a better thing than an African
ostrich farm Mr Oglesby is certain that
if the sixshooter law is repealed occasion
for the ubc of his acntenosed dogs will
become so frequent that he will have to
open 03 a much larger scale Oglesby
has had large experience as a deputy
sheriff and penitentiary contractor in
tracking prisoners and says hounds sre a
necessity in Texas
Several violators of the Sunday law
were up in the Magistrates courts today
charged with selling liquors and cigar s
on Sunday Not one escaped the clgaiy
sellers coming n for a fine of 320 and
costs each the same as the liquor
WOULD BATHER DIE
menB
Frazlcr Expresses Sorrow Because the OAT
cms Did Not Kill Him
Special to the Gazette
Fort Smith Ark Oct 10 Bill Fra-
zier the wounded outlaw brought in from
the Territory yesterday is in a more dan-
gerous condition than was at first sup-
posed An artery broke in a wound in
his left wrist today and in order to pre-
vent his bleeding to death the arm was
amputated below the elbow The oper-
ation being performed this evening He
stood it without flinching He says he
is sorry the officers did not kill him as he
would rather be dead than stand the suf-
fering and punishment that now stares
him in the face even if he should recover
from his many wounds
now
Bbv Donald McGregor Dtad rf <
Special to the Gazetto jfys
Houston Tex O t 10 Rev Donald
McGregor pastor of the Second Presby-
terian church of this city died today
He had been ill for about two weeks hla
malady being flax In addition to his
pastoral duties in this city he was an
officer of the Presbyterian College at
Sherman Tex The deceased was aixty
nine years of age
Given Two Yeara
Special to the Gazette r
Bryan Tex Oct 10 The jury inihe
X
ORAJSD AUCTION SALE OE TOWN LOTS IN
iibwlnjr wells ofcart eslan water easily obtained at dppth f 300 reet snpeib elevaton
trees
three mile 0f gratfcxlfibd traveled streets ample park and other facilities reserved so1 sand
In a BUlwankre School
Pecks Sun
At a certain parish school up on Jureau
avenue the children are obliged every-
day to commit to memory some piece of
news that has appeared in the paper and
give it out before the school Oce young
American who having neglected to look-
up anything of interest was feeling rather
down at the mouth when happily
he chanced to remember of hear-
ing his father tell his mother
that there were some men to be hanged
in Chicago but lry as hard as he would
he could not think what they were At
last his turn come and in reply to the
teachers question he arose while a des-
perate glitter shone np in his little brown
eyes For a moment his thinker thuak
for all it was wortn and then it all came
back to him like an electric shock and he
sane out at the top of his voice The
Amethysts are going to hang The
teacher fainted
f w
Look out for clever Imitations of > alvalon
oil Its unprecedentI success provokes
counterfeits W 5
aQp
Among the religious notes of a New
Mexico paper the following paragraph re-
cently appeared You must not go
down to church tomorrow evening with
less than two bits in your pocket You
cannot expect to get a good sermon tine
music and see the array of Kingstons
beauty and fashion for less than 25 cents
The old nickel dont go It is u twobit
ante
Garrett Talks ARHln
Baltimore Md Oct 10 Eobert Gar-
rett said to a reporter today with regard
to the stories published in New York pa-
pers about the Baltimore and Oaio Tele-
graph deal No reporter or any other
person has been authorized to say any-
thing coming from me and most of the
statements which I have seen are either
false or are much garbled versions of re-
marks made by me in accidental private
conversations As to making a state-
ment with regard to public matters
affecting himself and the railroad com-
pany Mr Garrett said that af er he had
looked into the details of the various
matters he would be willing and desir-
ous to give an account of the companys
affairs present and prospective and he
hopedit would be satisfactory to his
friends h > public s l concemed
Ctomftry Grocers
case of the State of Texas vs Smith IIm t vFia Te d oat Groats
nson for an assault with intent to mur
der Charles Shelton on the 10 th of
tember 1887 returned a verdict to
of guilty and assessed the punisienX
Uwo years in thfg ie penitentiary
Stq
< ghB We jc
8250
ice cuftainif
M fElNDALL CHAMBj S CO
mnhm
centgFXor 25entsjT
t
KisDA C CHA BERj C6v
fc
V y
>
i Af8tffis Gheeec
We carryjpbth imported and domestic
Swiss ndwonld be pleased to have yo
sample tjjfc rnyy We Iso hlfte on hand p
all timesX other ohfese tuchas jpdkwfr
creamffSap4ig pin ppie Parjnasan
and Roquefort in glass
Ftfl fQur incJMtrlpedyand checkered
suiting worth sj5 for 5 fcents >
R4ft QnAMgsms Co
ALj
Zebehr Pasha who has jtfjjfc been re-
leased from a tnree years imprisonment
in Gibraltar has played an imporlant
part in African politics for twentyfive
years past He has been an English
prisoner ever since his capture by Gen-
eral Gordon over tenff years ago He was
qn parole in Cairofdr eight years until
rhis intrigues is behalf of the Mahdi
oblige the IJaglijfe to shut him up at
Gibraltar
duce Theyt ar > retfelving it inirfarge
quantities eyery few d ys
Iens ytool sui jwortb for 00
ft RA A4 J0 MBjn Co
There are a good many peopleIn Mon-
treal who dont like the notoriety given
to that city 88 the refuge of crooked citi-
zens of the United States The Qj enlajj
as a wellknown and esteemed cbmnier
cial traveller from this city was walking
in a street in Montreal carrying a hand-
bag he was spotted by a number of boys
who at once began to sing a burlesque on
Yankee Doodle beginning Yankee
Boodle came to town A ridinl03 adny
It is folly to bnycheap adulterated
goods when votf fan always get the best
at the EofFWorth Grocer Cos
j
French ComblnaiitjrT Patterno Slaught
iBbveiv TariM n cormnation ooes
iforth 3 0 foig759 f
RANDALL
ebs Co
Francis Power Cobbe is a joman of
To the City of EOUT WORTH TEX
OCTOBEEif 28 EMCUO SO 1887
This addition
Jtiiaul lJ
untiring indnstry and energy Bering the jtStfjaraJu o p
last twentyfive years in nririittoo tfer yKIs a m ti30 p
great amount of time spent in pbuan
thropical work she has written fifteen
books about twentflve pamphlets on
roi g2 womens rights vivisection
etcy and an enormous numoer of articles
fopthe magazines and newspapers
jsthe ntWbeaulifnl suburb o Fort Worth Well shadedwith large native
toamTreTfro Sfe und gardens lying ImmedlaU 5
adjacent to ikfrtFaVtern limits of the city one mile from tne business center and wllh good ap
vioachesiWcnr8lon rateo to and from the sale from all points within and special excursions
from principal points without the state
< 6EIiMS OF SALE One third cish balance In one and two years at S per cent Interest
Anyone desiring a good profitable investment should tare adnantascor this opportunity
J A H KOSACK Auctioneer EAST FOaT WOllTH TOWN CO
g rre
ISSOURIPACIP
lio
the tr de Kt pripe ifis fford tlie re-
tailer a good profit
Fort Worth rocebkCo
New crop of Loniaiijii noiS s at To
Tne Oneapest of MJi iW
CpMGti iffitf W rM Weekly Gazxtts only jl a ysar
v Wjr eamm w ° mrv 1 t t miVJ MPZ3ZTTVlm l tllTSRT
j offT rfi te8
S5 prEt 910 am Corsl cana
350rtr4 Morgan
820 prri 1000 am Waco
105 J ml250 pm Hearno
235 am
550 am
S20 pm
805 pm
Arrlvo
1025 am Austin
207 pm jBzenhara
505 pn Houston
725 praiG3lveston
805 amN Orleans
Arrive
io 2
940 am
930 am
94np5ii 255 pm
l2Gam pm
pmm
m
m
M and Sol Tfooi Line
i
In the Thorotrj > thtro of Travel betvrao
Central and Southwest
TgAs to All Points
North East and
West
Double dally service of elegant Pnll
Buffet and Sleeping Oara batweon San Antua
and Kansas Olty and St Louis
Dont ho deceived but call for your tickc
via the Missouri Paclflc Hallway
For any daalred information tiefcat rcxi
foldern etc call on O D LUSK
Ticket Agent Union Depot Fort Worth
JAKE ZUIJN Ticket Agent City Oilics ccjeta
Maln and Third treats
H O ARCHER
Northern Texas Pass Agent DrH Tcs
BW MflOULLCrtJGH
Genorsl Para aiu Ticket Aff t
The Great Popular Bptite Batweee
m
Mthe west
Short Line fo New Orleans anc
Ai Points in Louisiana
Uff Mexico Arizona
and California
Fatorite Line to the Norih3
T and Southeast
1120 pm
1105 pm
945 pm
825 pm
No3
Kan City
til wwli
Temple
Brennam
Houston
Galvestn
ouble dally Una of Pullman Palaco Rlsops <
x through to St Louis via the
See that your Hereto read via Toiaa anil Fa
clile Railway Tor mapa time tables tckfiU
rates and all required Information cull on-
O D LUSK
Ticket AKcntTJnlon Depot Fort Worth
JAKE ZTJRN Tlcfcct Agent City Office corner
ilplnand Third Htrceta
yf0 ARCHER Traveling Passenger Agent
TDallas
Si yf HcOULLOFGH General FaMGngnraiii
TltjBot agent Dallas Tex
JNO A GRANT General manasoi
iZ
ffousicn and Texas Centra Ry
THE ONL ALLSTE3L UHS Ift THE STAT
Double daily tralna es ca way Throngs
Sleepers between Ot Ixffila and Corsica
na on Trains 1 and 2 and bfreen StLoalo and
Galveston on Trains 3 and 4 via Dallsi
Denlson and Sodalla Sleeper between Houa
ton and Austin Through Tickets to all polnta
Quietest route to Noy Orloans and points Is
the Southeast Oholflacf routes via Denlecs
and St Louis or Houston and Now Orleans
Steamship tlcketa fa or from any point lu
Europe j y
Going South
Leave
No 4 No a
DAILY DAXL1
3T LOCAL
iTIMS CARD
300 pm 4QSamDanlB0n
323 pm 42fam Shermtia
i 45 pm 522 arn HKinney
630 pm 705 amDallas
350 pnii 4t5 Ft Worth
am
vlj pxclSilO am Garrett
Going North
Arrive
No 1 No 3
DATLT DAILY
1159 ara
1135 ara
Itf 25 Z2
915 ars
1055 Dm 1110 ars
652 pm 750 aK
600 pm 645 arc
1030mC
515 pm f 710 as
255 pm
515 pm
100 pm
1000 am
725 am
720 pm
Leave
310 arc
730 axc
145 aia
1000 pa
735 pas
715 aE
Leara
P A MILLER Tidies Agent Fort Worth
E R ROBINS T P A Fort Worth
A FAULKNER ften Pass Agent Koquto
SANTA FE ROUTE
Bnll Colorado aM Santa F Railway
Mere Miles of Steal Rail1 than any Llna
In the Siala
w
Through sleopera en trains 1 and 2 between
Galveston and Kaas as Olty No change of cars
of any class Qqfckeot routo to Houston and
Galveston
SOUTHWAIU TIME CARD NOKTllWAKD
Jfln eflcct Aug 143887
No4
No 1
615 nm
230 am
i30pmi 7l6amGarne8Vi 120pm 1020pm
403 pm 930 a m Ft Worth 10f5 am 8 00 pm
555 am 2 35 pm
115 ara 1035 aon
910 pm C10am
a05pm 600 am
JAMES S CARK Genl PassAgt Galves
tonJJ
JJ MTJTiLANETicfcnt AtentCty Office
W H WILLIAMS Ticket Azent Unloa
T > HT > ot W i tW
DAVID L BLACKMON > J3wTsC0TT
BUCKMOJW COTT
Too mwtoMnnot be said in praise otkrdAWIERS anB AND AGENTS
A 3 ± m 5 CO sioaii Texas
titles to lands In
town lots Special
attention given to Commercial andLaalftlga
tiOK Abstracts to land furnlshedoi Tiortno
tta Office on Beaton streetv
J N Bbowsing fs fL s G Sentek
BEOWNIJf SENTEB
Attorneys trair iaw Mobcetie Whcsler
county Tef Wlll practice in the coorlfftirTfiO
PanhaBjKe the Federal Supreme wsaAppel
lata gqrtB of the Btate v3tffc
MAXcojLj i rfeorrGAJLE
Iwbxk
Office with Meesrs
xt Worth Tex
sar
Templeton Oar
j
mzmL t
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Fort Worth Daily Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 70, Ed. 1, Tuesday, October 11, 1887, newspaper, October 11, 1887; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth85585/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .