The Daily Ranchero. (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, November 22, 1867 Page: 1 of 4
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VOLUME IH.i
\
BROWNSVILLE, TEXAS. FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 22. 1867.
{NUMBER 28.
E
NEW YORK.
'DWARD LAMBERT & CO.,
Ramkers and Brokers,
No. 8 Wall St., N. Y.
Dealers in Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Gov-
ernments,
STRICTLY ON COMMISSION.
Deposits received and collections made on
all parte of the country.
Specialite: Commercial Paper.
REFERENCES BY PERMISSION.
,Bank of America, New York; Hon. H. H. Van
Dyck, Asst. Sec. of Treas.; Col. James Taylor,
Newport, Ky. csep!8dlm
THE SCIENCE OF HEALTH.
Every Man his own Physician.
Holloway’s Pills,
AND
Holloway’s Ointment.
Disorders of the Stomach, Liver and
Bowels.
The Stomach is the great centre which influ-
ences the health or disease of the system_abus-
ed or debillitated by excess—indigestion, of-
fensive breath and physical prostration are the
natural consequences. Allied to the brain, it
is the source of headaches, mental depression,
nervous complaints and unrefreshing sleep.
The liver becomes affected and generates bi-
lious disorders, pains in the side, &c. The
Bowels sympathise by Costiveness, Diarrhoea
and Dysentery. The principal action of these
Pills is on the stomach, and the liver, lungs,
bowels and kidneys participate in their recu-
perative and regenerative operation.
Erysipelas and Salt Rheum.
Are two of the most common and virulent
disoiflers prevalent on this continent, to these
the Ointment is especially antagonistic, its
‘™odus,operand?’ is first to eradicate the ve-
nom and then complete me cure.
Bad Legs, Old Sores and Ulcers.
Cases of many years standing, that have per-
tinaciously refused to yield to any other reme-
dy or treatment, have invariably succumbed to
a few applications of this powerful unguent.
Eruptions on the Skin.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Dr. De ANDRIES’
PURE
Sarsaparilla Bitters!
For the Cure of all Diseases that
originate from
IMPURE BLOOD.
These bitters are highly recommended by the
most eminent physicians, and are well calculat-
ed to improve the appetite and invigorate the
blood.
They are also an excellent stimulant, for per-
sons laboring under debility. Dose—a wine-
glass full three times a day, taken before meals.
They give tone to the stomach and strength to
the patient. They are a sure cure for ail dis-
eases of the hlood and eruptions of the skin;
also, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Scurvy, Fever and
Ague, Chills and Fever, and all diseases of the
l blood.
I They are also excellent for children, in the
spring of the year; they prevent biles, by tho-
roughly cleansing the blood and rennovating
the whole system, imparting a beautiful soft
white skin to the child.
The Sarsaparilla Bitters are perfectly harm-
less, and are guaranteed to be
MISCELLANEOUS.
jPurely Vegetable.
All chemists are particularly requested to
analyze the Bitters, and make known to the
public if they are not purely vegetable.
The public are respectfully invited to try
them, that they may judge for themselves.
Your obedient servant,
DR. DeANDRIES.
E. M. RUSHA, Sole Proprietor,
Depot, Nos. <33, 65, 67, Girod street,
New Orleans, La.
For sale by W. MILLER, corner of Elizabeth
and 13th street, Brownsville. bmlltf
rpiEMANN’S LAUNDRY BLUE
For Family Use.
This Blue is manufactured expressly for
washing purposes by the well known Color
manufacturers D. F. Tif.man & Co., and bein°-
perfectly pure and free frem acid, it supplies a
want which has long been felt, a Blue which
will not injure the clothes.
It is put up in convenient form, in bottles; or
for those who prefer using the powder, in neat
wooden boxes. It may be obtained of grocers
and druggists generally.
J. H. TIEMANN, Sole Ag’t.
csepl8d&wly 240 Pearl Street, New York.
REMIlSr GTON’S
TjiTTSTn a n-niro
Sold by the Trade Generally. '
A Liberal discount to Dealers.
200,000 Furnished the U. S. Gov-
ernment.
Army, Navy, Belt, Police and Pocket Re-
volvers. Repeating and Vest-Pocket Pistols,
using metallic cartridge. Breech-loading and
Revolving Rifles.
E. REMINGTON & SONS,
csepl8d2mw4m ILION, NEW YORK.
Arising from a bad state of the blood or
chrome diseases, are eradicated and a clear
and transparent surface regained by the re-
storative action of this Ointment. It surpasses
many of the-cosmetics and other toilet appli-
ssssw&fir' a""'o,her
Female Diseases.
• n^etoh.etr, in,tlie young or old, married or
single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn
of life, these tonic medicines display so decided
an influence that a marked improvement is
soon perceptible in the health 1
Being a purely vegetable preparation, they are
.a safe and reliable remedy for all classes of
Females in every condition of health and sta-
tion ot life.
Piles and Fistula.
Every form and feature of these prevalent
and stubborn disorders is eradicated locally and
entirely by the use of this emolient; warm foi-
mentations should precede its application. Its
healing qualities will be found to be thorough
and invariable.
Both the Ointment and Pills should be Used in
thefollowiny Cases:
Bunions, Burns, Chapped Hands, Chilblains,
Fistula, Gout, Lumbago, Mercurial Eruptions,
Piles, Rheumatism, Ringworm, Salt Rheum,
Scalds, Skin Diseases, Swelled Glands, Sore
Legs, Sore Breasts, Sore Heads, Sore Throats,
Sores of all kinds, Sprains, Stiff Joints, Tetter,
Ulcers, Venereal Sores, Wounds of all kinds.
CAUTION.—None are genuine unless the
words "Holloway, New York and London”
are discernable as a Water-mark in every leaf
of the book of directions around each pot or
box; the same may be plainly seen by holding
the leaf to the light. A handsome reward will
be given to any one rendering such informa-
tion as may lead to the detection of any party
or parties counterfeiting the medicines or
rending the same, knowing them to be spu-
rious
*** Sold at the manufactory of Professor
Holloway, 80 Maiden Lane, New York, and
by all respectable Druggists and Dealers in
Medicine, tnroughout the civilized world.
09" There is considerable saving by taking
the large sizes.
N. B.—Directions for the guidance of patients
in every disorder are affixed to each pot and
box.
b®” Dealers in my well-known medicines can
have Show Cards, Circulars, Ac., sent FREE
OF EXPENSE, by addressing Thomas Hollo-
way, 80 Maiden Lane, N. Y. bjy27d«fcwly
___ [ Mr. A. F. CYKOSKI, having purchased Mr.
Lorenzo Castro’s interest in that establishment,
"^'7 ~|7> ]SJ J rU UJ U pQ 1 oflers his services to the public, as
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
t-ui cign ana Durpesuc
IpjtEGRAAF & TAYLOR, GOODS
| constantly kept on hand at
87 and 89 Bowery and 65 Christie Streets, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL,
i a reasonable patronage is solicited.
A. F. CYKOSKI.
JpRANK BEUTER,
U. S. Commissioner,
For the Eastern District of Texas. Office at
Brazos Santiago.
Empowered by Commission to act as
INOTARY PUBLIC.
ba9-lm.
JOHN P. KELSEY,
Receiving, Forwarding
AND
COMMISSION MERCHANT.
RIO GRANDE CITY. TEXAS,
AND
b66-ly. CAMARGO, MEXICO.
J^A MEXICANA.
MONTEREY, MEXICO.
Wholesale & Retail.
Monterev, January 29,1867.
bfit
NEW YORK.
have the best assorted stock of Parlor, Dining
Room and Bed-Room
FURNITURE ?
SPRING BEDS find BEDDING
IN THE CITY
Caaopy and High Post
BEDSTEADS.
Expressly for Southern Trade.
, , • . . , , , ! white, and have been completely restored to
Steamers and Hotels furnished at Wholesale their natural color, by using “SINGER’S HAIR
P™*3- RESTORATIVE.”
JJOLBEAR’S
Commercial College,
(Open constantly, Day and Evening,)
Corner of Common and Camp Streets.,
In the Elegant and Spacious Iron Building
NEW ORLEANS.
Founded in 1832—Chartered by the Legislature
of Louisiana, with Commercial, Agricultural,
Mechanical and Literary Departments.
This college has, by its own merits and
thorough practical plan of education, outlived
all the liberally endowed State Colleges of this
and the south-western States. It is the oldest
commercial college of the United States.
Every student who gives proper attention to
the instruction is qualified before graduating to
keep any set of books, it matters not what the
business may be, and do the correspondence
of any house. Students can attend the Com-
mercial Course, or the Literary or Agricultural
course, or to Penmanship, Arithmetic or Book-
keeping, or the EngUsh, French, Spanish, Ger-
man, Latin or Greek Languages, Telegraphing,
Phonography, Penmanship, Book-keeping, or
the higher Mathematics, etc., separately.
We have ample arrangements for One Thous-
and Students during the current year.
N. B.—Merchants, Planters, Lawyers, Steam-
boatmen, Builders, etc., canhere learn to open,
keep and close their books correctly in a few
days.
benefits of attending this college.
1st. The student saves much time and money
as there are special professors and apart-
ments foreach branch and all things are taught
and practiced as in business.
2d Penmanship is tought as a Science, (and
not by imitation) hence all can easily learn.
We have one of the most distinguished penmen
living, as professor.
3d. Our graduates are sought by busiuess men
and may be found, as Principals, Book-keepers
and Clerks, in a large portion of the Banks and
business houses of this city, and over the South.
They receive 1000, 2000 or 3000 dollars per an-
num. This education is the best fortune pa-
rents can give their sons.
4th. The diploma of the college is a passport
over the commercial world.
Gth. Young gentlemen who have entirely
neglected their business, can here be qualified
for business in a short time.
Gth. This college will qualify young gentle-
men to open similar institutions in all Southern
cities, Mexico, Brazil, etc., if they come well
recommended as to character.
7th. Crippled soldiers and sons of clergymen
will have a liberal deduction made.
N.B.—Those who write for Book-keepers
or Teachers should give full particulars. Those
who send young students should put their mo-
ney in the hands of their merchant or the Pres-
ident. The South must now educate practical-
ly or be for ever the toiling vassal of the North.
iMCirculars and Catalogues sent to all who de-
sire them.
Board—-Students can board with the pro-
fessors’ and other good families for thirty and
thirty-five dollars per month.
Health.,—For seven yearsNew Orleans has
been as healthy as New York or Philadelphia.
College Office, Room No. 8.
.retfftnfffanrp—leSSons not limited......$ 25 00
Book-keeping—double and single entry,
etc., a perfect course.............. 50 00
Arithmetic—including all commercial
calculations..................... 50 00
Lectures on commercial law......... 20 00
(The above constitutes the commercial course)
Stationery for commercial course, in-
cluding blank books,..............$ 10 00
Stationery for Penmanship............ 2 00
Diploma, for master of accounts....... 10 00
English, French, Spanish, German. Latin,
Greek—full course, not limited,
teachers’ course of penmanship, each 100 00
A life ticket in all the departments,.... 500 00
For any language; for drawing, per
month, each...................... 20 00
Higher mathematics—price depends on
extent of course.
English Grammar..................... 50 00
N. B.—A student having paid for a course in
any branch as above, is entitled to a life ticket
in that department. He can attend such branch-
es as he may desire. There are monthly gra-
duating classes. Students can begin at any
time.
Faculty.—Rufus Dolbear, President, lec-
turer on business customs, book-keeping, etc.
Rufus L. Dtlbear, Vice-President, lecturer on
commercial business, banking, exchanges,
book-keeping, and duties of employees.
Agricultural department, Mechanical depart-
ment, - Principal. The lecture on
Agricultural Chemistry—also on Political Eco-
nomy—and on Mechanics, etc., will begin in
October next. Commercial department, F. A.
Monroe, Esq., lecturer on commercial law,&c.
Mathematical department—Geo. B. Brackett,
Professor and lecturer on commercial calcula-
tions and higher mathematics.
Book-keeping department—J. B. Griffith and
J. W. Stearns, Professors and lecturers on
book-keeping, etc.
English department—Rev. George W. Stick-
ney, Professor and lecturer on English litera-
ture, etc.
French department—J. V. Serrureau, Prof.
Department for penmanship—B. B. Euston,
Professor and lecturer on business and orna-
mental penmanship.
Spanish department—Manuel Merino, Prof.
German department—Rev. A. F. Hope, Prof.
Latin and Greek department—M. Marino,
nev. a. r. nope, UroiesSors.
Students intended for this college should
bring this circular or special directions.
csep!8-d&w4m
That Trial.
! YEW YORK, MARCH 4, 1867.—This is to
I 1.1 certify that my hair and whiskers were
; white, and have been completely restored to
KMOCK DOWN CANE WORK
Cut No. 1 above is a correct likeness of me
«» T®R"BD POST besteads j liS
in cases,
All work guaranteed as Represented.
Our Facilities for manufacturing defy com-
petition. ba2-dw4m
Lacey, Meeker & Co.,
.Iso been very much annoyed with dandruff,
REV. THOS. DAVIS,
City Missionary, New York.
. “SINGER’S HAIR RESTORATIVE” (is not
a dye,) eradicates dandruff, prevents the falling
i out of the hair, wonderfully increases ite
growth, restores both the hair and ite color,
SPfiOULE, MEEKER A CO., “»drw.a't,ei'5'*te b,5t in“*
Recommended by Physicians, and sold by
Drnggiste, Fancy Goods Dealers, Hair Drescers
and Perfumers everywhere.
Principal wholesale depot, /•
NO. 7f> NASSAU STREET,
NEW YORK.
SUCCESSORS TO
Manufacturers of and wholesale dealers in
Saddlery and Harness,
27 Chambers Street, '
NEW YORK.
Importers of Saddlery Hardware. b!07-wdy*
And will be for sale in Erownsville by
csep25eodAwJm
JAMES CONNER’S SONS
United States Type Foundry
AND
PRINTER’S WAREHOUSE,
Nos. 28. 30 and 32 Centre St.,
Corner of Reade, NEW YORK.
The type on which this paper is printed is
from the above Foundry. b!07 wy*
^MIGRATE!—WHERE ?
Information for the World
BY
EDWIN E. OVERALL, Esq.,
OF NEW ORLEANS, LA..
L|te from British Honduras, Central America.
British Honduras Considered—A Book for all
.Southerners— Both sides of the subject fairly
Presented—In press, and s'norfiy to appear.
The above worn, carefully written and com-
The charges and specifications
against Proverb Nickels, Esq., of
perjury in registering, though no-
minally made by Dr. C. K. Lowrie,
Supervising Registrar, were indors-
ed by Major General Reynolds.
6 note this fact, because it was
generally supposed that no mili-
tary officer had encouraged a thing
of the sort, and because a rule of
military procedure requires that
charges must be preferred by a
commissioned officer. We are
right glad to know that General
ReynokU indorsed the. charge,
thereby curing the formal Refect.
Why vr%8 the charge preferred ?
Proverb Nickels, Esq., was doubt-
less regarded by the military au-
thorities as ratlier a prominent po-
litical character, and they just
wanted to make of him an example.
They wanted to establish the fact
that there was a rod of military
iron over this country; not that
they caied a pinch of snuff whether
Proverb Nickels, Esq. swore falsely
in registering or not. They thought
they had a case and were going to
make the most of it. Proverb
Nickels,' Esq. was unquestionably
selected for the Rio Grande victim.
Any court between Hades and
the breakfast stand would have
cleared the accused on the evidence
in chief, and the evidence for the
defense extinguished the last speck
of guilt. From first to last the
whole trial was an unmerciful farce,
and is a stigma, a stain and a re-
proach upon the American charac-
ter. It was a very mockery, and a
very base one.
The court for the most part con-
ducted the trial with fairness, and
like judgel-Fs deported themselves
responsibility was resting upon
them. The trial dragged its slow
length along for about two months,
whereas it should have come to a
prompt close upon the filing of the
defendant’s bill of exceptions. Those
exceptions were fatal. No fault
has been or will be found with the
court, and we have no idea that any
one of the members had aught to
do in getting the case up.
The United States district court,
a constitutionally constituted tri-
bunal for the trial of all offences
against she general government and
its laws, was expected to be in ses-
sion here by the time the military
commifflion could conclude this
trial. That court is presided over
by a learned judge, and there was
neithercause nor justification for
taking from it the very class of
cases, hr the trial of which this
court ms created. In other south-
ern Stites, persons charged with
perjury in registering, are prosecut-
ed before the federal court, and not
before llegal, unconstitutional, law-
defying liberty and government de-
etroyinj military commissions. As
a princple, it would be just as con-
sistent for God to appoint the devil
umpireof the guilt and innocence
of man as for the federal courts to
surrenler the offenders against the
laws oithe United States to those
—no tetter than drum-head court
martias—military commissions.
Thefe is not the slightest ques-
tion bit what Proverb Nickels, Esq.
had a ight under the law, as it now
stands, revised, explained and in-
tensified by radical legislation, to
register; and if such a thing were
Minorities Rule.—A million of
voters, and an overwhelming major-
ity, have declared that negroes
shall not vote. In the South less
than an hundred thousand men say
the negro shall vote, and that too,
in opposition to the will of nine out
of every ten of the white masses.
The time was when the will of the
people was supreme. The ,time is>
instead thereof, that by the chicanery
of the party a radical minority rules
the roost. Verily Jefferson’s teach-
ings and Payne’s political reasoning
were labor lost. What a pack of old
fools used to talk about American
Libe,tj,, Lave a special day
of thanksgiving and prayer that we
ain’t like we used to was.
Texas.
The Federal dead at Tyler, Lava-
ca and Hempstead are to be re -
moved to the Military cemetery at
Galveston.
A train of twelve emigrant wag-
ons passed through Waco en route*
to the city of Austin. They were
all the way from Illinois, and their
outfit was fine.
G. W. Wall, the murderer of R.
W. Black of Uvalde, has been ap-
prehended in Mexico, and will be
delivered up in accordance with the
extradition treaty between thab
country and the United States.
The Crocket Sentinel says that it
hears from every quarter reporter
possible, his right to register was
“I knows dat I cannot read nor
rite and cifur too, but den de hart
of dis chile is in de rite place.”
Such was the language of a colored
orator, not long since, at a radical
meeting held in our city Hall. God
in his infinite wisdom has always
placed the heart of men and beasts
in the right place. That fact how-
ever, does not settle the question
of bestowing franchise upon the
black man at the cost of disfran-
chiseing the white. As well tell us
that the heart being in the right
place is all that is required to qua-
lify a person to fill the shoes of an
Aggazzie, a Morse or a Webster.
The black man has rights perso-
nal equal with the white man and
he should have rights political
equal to the full measure of his in-
telligence. To give him more is to
burden him with that he cannot
bear to the country’s good.
.....—«■«♦»■ ►«——— —
Am Old and Well1 Tried
remedy Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing
Syrup for children teething has
now nearly all gathered, and it i»
considered doubtful if one sixth of a,
crop will be raised.
The Marshall Republican ‘‘is
driven to the conclusion that the
whites have a majority of at least
15,000 registered voters in the
State.” It opposes a Convention,
but urges the Conservatives to
bring out candidates and work for
them like beavers.
The Dallas Herald says that the
presence in that region of myriads
of grasshoppers, is giving the farm
ers considerable uneasiness.
lions of mothers can testily tuafTTTfs rinto tlm ImnTis
reliable and perfectly safe in all
cases. Relieves the child from pain
softens the gums, regulates the
bowels, gives an infant, troubled
with colic pains, quiet sleep, and
its parents unbroken rest. Price,
35 cents a bottle.
Be sure and call for
“Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,”
Having the fac simile of “Curtis &
Perkins” on the outside wrapper.
All others are base imitations.
Diarrhce, Dysentery and Cholera
Morbus are serious diseases, but
treated by Humphreys’ Homsepath-
ic Specifics, they yield like magic.
A case of these specifics in the
hand of any intelligent person is
sufficient to cure even the most for-
midable of these summer scourges,
and to vindicate the high character
and curative power of this efficient
remedy. Address
Humphreys’ Homoeopathic Medi-
cine Co., 562 Broadway, N. Y.
Madame Miramon.—A correspon-
dent of the Picayune thus describes
this lady on her arrival at Havana:
But there was none among all
that caused so much interest and
sympathy as Dofia Concepcion Lom-v,
bardo de Miramon, the brave and
chivalrous Gen. Miramon, who was
sacrificed to the thirst of blood of
of Juarez, Escobedo and other
butchers of human beings, at the
same time when the spirit of Max-
imilian was ushered into the pre-
sence of his Maker. Mrs. Miramon
was dressed in deep black. She is
about thirty years of age, very stvl- States.
ish looking and has a commanding ; ---»<«♦»>< -----
yet very prepossessing countenance. Richmond, Nov. 13.—Three citi-
She was accompanied by her three zens of Frederick county, who had
children, the oldest, a boy named i held the offices of magistrate, post-
after his father, about eight years > master and member of the Legisla-
of, and the tvfo girls of seven and ! ture, were held to bail to-day be-
still clearer under the unexplained five years of age. Mrs. Miramon fore the United States Court, to
The details about the accident by
which the Empress of the French
and her son ; got nearly drowned,
and which brought about the death
of the pilot, show that Eugenie’s*
self-willed obstinacy was the cause
of the whole accident. She refused,
to listen to the earnest remon
strances of the experienced sailors,
whom she told that she was accus
tomed to blind obedience. The
Moniteur had, as usual, entirely
misrepresented the facts.
The Austrian minister of Finance
has devised a plan for bringing or-
der into the chaos of Austrian fin -
ances, strongly resembling the sys-
tem created by Mr. Chase. Aus-
tria will henceforth likewise have
fire-twenties and ten forties.
Baron Yon der Heydt, the Prua-
of Fii
or some11 a^sMclratlo
looking swindlers, who proposed a.
game of ecarte, and fleeced him in
the course of an fhour and a half,
out of nearly nine thousand dollars.
He paid eight hundred dollars down
and gave a due bill for the balance.
The swindlers were arrested next-
day, but as nothing could be prov-
en against them they had to be dis-
chnrged, and Baron Von der Heydt
was obliged to redeem his due bill
Pending the late election in Vir-
ginia, the Richmond Whig was ac-
cused of having sold out to the ra-
dicals and niggers. Here !s~ what
it says after election:
The negroes (with some few ho-
norable exceptions, never to be for-
gotten) have raised their hand»
against the whites and threaten us
with ruin, simply because we are
white. They have embarked in a
wild crusade against all whites—the
northern white and the foreigner as
well as the whites of the South.
There is but one way of arresting
and turning back this threatening
tide of negro fanaticism and igno-
rance and that is by presenting to
the white people at the North and
abroad such inducements as they
will be unable to resist. No matter
where the whites shall come from
or what may be tneir antecedents,
they will make common cause with
us, for it is against their skin, color
Vnd kindi’ed that his crusade has
beei
m set afoot.
The Washington Star states that
up to November 1, the Union re-
publican Congressional committee
received over $37,000 from all
sources, and expended the entire
sum on the canvass of the southern
law and according to the Stanberry
opinion. But more than all this,
pii«d, containing the laws of the colony of Brit- show that Proverb Nickels, Esq.
fl a? I tad the remotest idea of swearing
the evidence in chief utterly failed pgns^ and under the care of the
left again on her way to Europe,, answer to the charge of perjury in
where she will reside in future, her registration.
children to be educated at the ex---><«—■><----
cotony Sin^e 1(370—Bioyraphical sketch of the
present Governor. John Gardiner Austin—De- ! falselv.
SCnptiOD ** thu cnnntev Mimata J__I *
*0veni<
^ fouls.
ount^ry. climate, soil, produc-
tions, dfsfofri--, etc.—Census report of Race,
religion, occupation-**shipping, etc.—The land-
Emperor of Austria.
A special Washington dispatch
, says the friends of Senator Wilson,
PMBppB chairman of the judiciary commit-
The treatment of yellow fever m j ^ttee, assert he will kill the im-
?]££! We sincerely hope the commis- Nef Orleans,this year hah been a!-. peachment project by his casting
he land’ll. 7,7 j together*a success. There must be ! vote.
hffidei* and ^ rion have found the accused guilty,'
ifor ever-f “* of rank despotism Oh.
New Orleans. La. • ly tends to hasten a nation’s deliv-
Orders for the above work must be addressed
to e. e. overall. 1 erance.
Merchants Exchange and News Room. -> <--
^ u .. . , „ , Orleans. La. j The best hoop skirt made, can be
ncc. two dollars and fifty cents per copy. , „ , , , , .
csepi8g i bad at Neale s store, empress trail!
a sovereign for this disease yet.
-----«»»■ » *-----
The total number of deaths in
New Orleans from yellow fever up
to Nov. 6, is three thousand and
twelve.
The Washington Star of the 8th
asserts that whatever there may be
ia.the story of scandal about Sena-
tor Sumner and his wife, they w(ll
return to Washington shortly and
occupy their elegant mansion.
/
^ •
&
0578
0
*
♦
#-
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Maltby, H. A. & Kinney, Somers. The Daily Ranchero. (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, November 22, 1867, newspaper, November 22, 1867; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth874096/m1/1/?q=%22civ-war%22: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting San Jacinto Museum of History.