Brenham Weekly Banner. (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 9, Ed. 1, Friday, February 27, 1880 Page: 1 of 4
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WEE
ilwK
-XVr
BEEjSTHAM WASHIGTOjS" COUNTY TEXAS FRIDAY FEBEUARY 27 18S0.
NTHMBER 91
iBsBr"Hiy k-h-MB AC'W m-i-MT I in
KLY
BANNEM
iSJSJld JliUtt
Dr.TUTTS
Expectorant 1
IN 23CTS. AMD SI BOTTLES;
Its properties aro Demulcent Kctri-
tlv BajganUo. Boothing ajid H"-lr
CooiMiUna- alTtheca g-OAlltlfrj it U thm
ractt efToctlTB IATNO BALSAM mr
offeree "to- nffrerfc ixoir pulmonary?
dlgoaaaa.
DR. J. F. HAYWOOD
OC 2f cw -York voluntarily ladonea U.
-READ WHAT HE SAYS:-
Ifc.Tcrri KT-k.fpuw.isn.
Dw bl-Dan&c tan pr I v. Led a d kutlroa
r-tMMfJliagdWtfM lath lWW VhRU tb
kkwedijnMtMtHrw)1pt)r.udwtUt neb
hapiTffectft. ItituUnUraabdawllMnaATlolaal
EU cf rtmh.nc and f nwi&blj card U- dM in
Ihd4)i IcAtfTfttUrindorMUkStlM bast loai
"'"'""S.UiClSHATTrOOD.M.P.
A NEWSPAPER PUB. WRITES.
tulnln 2 J lidff tfl vd
tor ti cnrael loI i-wibfd tofmr.nhubl
bsui biwidvm
KBOVMl IB SOQa
jutC4ii.wrjrGLE:
Had torriWelGHTISWEATSi.cl
UBpOMDi4UtUil.
Dr.TUTTi Sif-IMvbaJtariBfflariMuirtv
nm wit t Mitf antra ATboa 1 cosuwocd U
kiar r hipctnnt 1 was rdcd t ot hasdrftd
S
haul triMl
wtTTtbfact t4 tatnhl nicht cwi
lultdoawkottlei. TtMnifblnti
cwaahL I ! tki
tien-i--1i ku dppud ftd IbftviftiMd fiftwtt
nifiilnwtthAra UK m.
IMPORTANT 8UESTIGMS.
Itaaaer. tiara y6ttvg&tfccfr&f Arj-cac
ftUfatorajjMlfaopfaksniT lUrtr yen an lniu-
boa in tba UiruatT A
1 ot ppprcftsioQ wa
lit
ot gUJag pa jytafttaWr A- inuryJpftJa
Dowaudloj latlaeresioaol! Um bfrV thocl-
Atfiawibacfct U fca or JLirif t xak at
voce dog of Tatt1 Erpectortat; yoqwUJftoott
faabtotoTlatiwiityg.liia fcoaf'tteai"'
lMx?ctorftiiLpUteabotiroatoUiafctftk
twootl'aalim. Yon win rooo fU Into
pkftitnt idewp and trafcg np in thm morning
coohKoa iaogm working freely ; caT fcreatb
Jog and tha bowida roortDg in a pataral manaerC
to prcrcut a return of Umee tymptonn w tb
3rpeqorant aeTeral dayt " ' ' ' " '
0fl.ee 35 Murray Street N. Y.
TUTT'S PILLS
CUBE TOBPIB L1TEH.
T.UTTS 5fPiyisH
TUTT'S
PILLS
t-pms-oomTrjt
TIJTT'S"PI
B
TUTT'S PILLS
CUUK KICK. HEABAtBH.
TUTT'S- PILLS
.tuijEgiLtars colic
TUT-f?S PILLS..
TttWTOiarf
CtRtPILBV r
tutt's mum
prwKrtaTHliilor.ietalafenrtaow)y. aad I
MUumtaMaivriaitvmUr. bold brXtTOOTtttj er
MatbroxpnMMTclp(eiL
Offlcp 35 Mtfrsy St New York.
WHOLESAt&RETAiE '
Western Produce;
m-YWWsW& M
LIQUORS
TOBAGCOS-
- 'CIGARS
fg&Gj&C;
Erick -Geitractor
Hrwrat?.
m iGtt&Wl
SuperiorBRICKS oahanffai
all tjniesnVoderate'pnees.
CONTRACTS SOUCITED.
Jtt Office : Corner' Mala' and Donj
lau streets BncVrard four blocks eaj t ol
Courthouse. octi7tf
Pennington House
Comer Main and Douglas streets
(Old Crnmplcr House.)
Thecn&r&iclciTlDC inaaeiuiclsiou
lo andjdtted ihU binR knoniUKasct tU
now prepared to accommodate regular and
traxueient quests at the following
T RICES:
Einglemeal 5 25
Booidper day-.rti .f.f...r.? -ixo
Board per veek.v.. f.'?!ir-ii.- 4-5C
Boardper month...... .......... iSCC
Day board per month icxo
JfflThe: taUea atitimrfarpIi5J
pa'ENNlNGTOJ.' i
awjd&wu" S H S S Propcctor.
- f 5 1 8 in
YIUCJUI ST. IU REAR OF HEALT'S STOKE
JIUGSItAM. TEXAS.
G$jfoWAUJ...
ja: vmxj
....
'.K."W"rH
..:...! of
" nefk
... 40
June 6-iUr. J MJSmiliE rroprleloir;
OEBASTIATJ" VORDERKUNZ
. HORSE SHOER
AHTD ilACSCSMITH
Shop on QmtmanstreeinjTaro.
Asbcck IIeineckc& Bros.
Is prepared to do all lunds of cenera.
bJacksmKhiaf and $tys particular attention
to horselshoeiacl nov2dd&w3ni
c a. cAnrwax.
CEO. A. CIPDI3TC.
CAMPBELL & GILDINGS
DEALERS IN
-IStapTclaLdancy?
GROCERIES
Sand Street west of Ihe Opera I louse
.- . BREKIIAHTEXAS.
E. Goods delivered fkee to any part
. Ohe ntrt sept lev '79-d&-iy.
Pire Insurance.
- BURKT
Oftice 53 Sandy Street Brcnblm Texas.
t ms
vr i
'-MLi 1
"TrlpP. -
1 i P 4-SflJUl
MlBubtE reusip
rulill.hr J Dally anil TTeekly.
UANKI" Jt LEVlJf ri.prletora.
'uCrreat Circulation of any Paper pub.
1 'Ushed In this Senatorial Dlitrlcti
Rates of Subscription!
$.100
tea
I- lVtuy. one copy one year....
Transient ana Leeal atlrrrtlennMiM lnert--lat$U0perwuat
ror flwt Inrtrtlon. ami
73 cents per square for each subsequent Inser-
Marrlare an". OMtuarr nntlres ewedlnc-
litht lines hairprles. tutorial nollreo or
purrir linslness character 10xnta a line eadi
nsertlon.
OFFICE OF rDBUCATlON :
Valines burf "inj; 'St. Chailes street be-
tween Sandy and Quittman sts
Brenham Texas.
Entered at the lstoEce at'Brenaam.
Texas as second-class mail matter.!
I i EDITORIAL BKETTTIES.
The Maine muddle cost the
people of that state 520000.
THfiproduction office ison.IV""-"- JUUB s"
WvLefnNorth Carolina i ?"Psd to run for state sena-
:the increase in-North Carolina.
It will cost $3000000 to
Ltakc the census of the-United
OKICS.
Gongress i t is thought will
give the Isthmus canal project
thegoy.
The Georgia remiblica'htate
convention will convene at At-
lanta. oa-thelJlstot April. ?-)
TiiE''Giddings Lone Sat t?j
st weelc contains a lengtny
obituary notice of Gapt James'
Shaw".
The Galveston Arw .does
not seenvto have unbonded con7'
'fidence in the. .re-election of
GeSI GRANxand.' party; yee.
to have been-tendered a recep-..
jtionatthe Cityrof Mexico (on.
Monday yesterday
BELEviii.E'ii-nbw a railrda'd:
Jlownand has received its first'
shipment 01 .goods by Avay -of
thj: Santa Fi road!
' ' ". C. T
' Iris estimated that the state-!
01 Texas laioosini; from eight
Xo ten thousand-dollars; per
month Jnjm its revenue By ih'e
.'bell punch.
Will . the .democracy tjf
Wash'inetorr co'untv hold axro'n-
vpnlion.and send;delegates to
the Galveston convention to. he
field April 30th?- ' -
'DcijcG the pastten days; no
ic uiaii vnrcc 1 cxas veterans.
ness'in fhis v.orid.
'THEegislaturepf 'Kentucky.
naspasscaj wc- wmppmg-posr
bQl andjllinbislriilks of ' doing-Jhe-
sameithingijj rTexas. jne;eds-
theisamftlavTand needs'jtbad-.
ly-tobi .d ; -
W.'K;'F6otr has left George
town and gone to Round Kock-
to establish a newspaper and
the Georgetown paper'seem to
uc puu io suip ro5icroverxo
Hie hew town. .. '
Til manufacturing of clothe
ingVurChicagb gives employs
mentto 30000 people and the
vale ofgopdsmade is 515006-
000. This industry has "doub-
ieu in lour years.
.i j..
The Bellville Times reoorts
the vote of Bellville as follows":
(JCenney 56V Homan is;:Mc--
JAdoo 18. Fretty good for Mc-
Adoo after he. had been retired
from the race two or three
daysV
Tkbt ttos&n-Sfataman claims
tohayesa-ed ihe state bCTexas
S2;oo6ooo. The Stafestnauis'
certainly entitled to the thanks
of the people of the state. It
has done better than any ol its
confemparies.
The wicked men oh the
Rockdale Mdsutiget fires a
heavy shot at.ourold iriend
Bartow.-late of the. Ttlegravu
Bartow Is a good newspaper
man.butis slightly inclined to.
be-aggrrssive.
Georgetown merchants have
displayed good sense"'and liber-
tality'in' subscribing over' $6obk
towards buildingjtnd repairing
roads leading to" their town.
Merchants of Brenham have
never done a thing of this Jcind.
The' Methodist . preachers
no"w in. bo'nvention in' Cihclnnati
are nearly alT for Grant. There
is a sort of idea that if "Grant
gets to be'Emperor he will unite
church and stattfand give the
Methodists the first chance t
it
Interviews with 25 14 demor
era ts in 42 counties..of Indiana
result'in-a tally of i"soo "for.
Hendricks as. first choice for
president. Of 2734 republi-
cans in the same counties the
count stands 1285 for Blaincto
559 for Grant and 551 for Sher-
man. The Atlana (Ga.) cotton
mills are running day and night
ancf arcvstill unable to fill of-
ers made upon th'em for goods.
As an evidence of their pros-
perity it is only necessary to
stale' that they arc paying a
devidend of 28 percent.
The Evening Post is the
name of a new daily paper just
issued at Houston by Gail B.
Johnson the first number of
which is at hand. It is a neat
attractive and newsy sheet and
merits a liberal support. We
wish it unbounded success.
The Belton Journal says.
"Let the office seek the man is
a very true and very sound
doctrine." The fact or the
matter is that the office is of
much .more importance than
the man consequently the man
has to start out early to seek
the office. That is all the dif-
ference there is between the
man and the office.
Quinine manufacturers arc
said to be very urgent in their
demands for re-establishing a
duty on quinine but it Is hard-
ly probable that their demands
will be gratified as the people
arc in no humor to submit to
other and higher taxes direct
or indirect.
The LaGrange Joutnal is a
new paper which succeeds the
defunct Rccoid It is publish-
ed by the LaGrange publishing
company and edited by R. H
Phelps who has had some ex-
perience heretofore in Fayette
county journalism. The Join ri-
al s quite ah improvement
on the Rceotd.
Judge McADOO.has ben ac-
cused of running for senator in
this district. He has done no
small thing. He is county
judge and has made .a good
tor duc concluded to come
down.
The Castroville Qnill is one.
of the' most independent papers
in the state in its religious
views and we are afraid that' it
will be ruled out of the church
altogether. The Quill ought
not'to jjo quite so heavy on" its-
UiufCh tnends. Churches do
.an immense amount. of good in
any community:
The Marshall Heiald wltlrJ
its usual enterprise demolishes
"Still Russell in a three column
article. The Galveston tinos
hadlRusseHihterviewedand the
Heiald goes for the News ex-
tensively. We do not think
that the ifrdiV will be able to
read "the News put of the inde-
pendent field of journalism.
Give all the boys a chance.
1 ' The republican convention
'oftfie Kref assembly district1 of
New. York which metalTJfica
or( the 17th for the election'of
delegates to the statecoitveni-
ftori: 'split sauarclv1 ir "two a'nd.i
-chose.a double delegation.j-one
Tieaded by Roscoe. Conkhng in
person ana me ouier unaltera-
bly pledged against any third-
term "president?" ' ' -
. At the: d?resideats reception.
of the diplomatic corpse; inX
nvsimjj;lon I'trs. jonn jacoo
Ast'o'r. " nf-Tpw"' 'VnrV' -ivntfT
58oo;ooOj y;ortht of "diamo'ns
Aiiu.wtiA uuieiuiiy guaruqa -oy
two policeman. "Each -solitaire
earring was valued at Sso.ooo.
hiakiog- ?ioorxiolin- diamonds-
on net ears-'al≠ 'besidesthe.
necklace -nngs-'iand sprays' in
ner iiair -.
James Q.Broadhead of Mis-'
souiSTi'p'w-'engaged'irl' having
115 111c puoiisnea -in ayeanmg
New. York pipefr '"tfroadlfead-
was in the iays oFradicalism -In
Missouri elected United -States 1
senatorrorriithat--state. Since-
that time heias never been.able
to obtain; political preferment
of any. kind. He';like all.'other
southern radicals is politically
dead . .
Belt county" has again" tried
to establish her reputation by
attempting to make-a war on
the sanctificationists. The.best
.thing to do with the .sanctifica-
tions is to let theni' alone; they
do -no harm unless opposed
Fanaticism hardly "ever is suc.-
;cessiui; sanctihcatiomsm is a
species of Fanaticism that must
'in the course of common sense
"wearltselfout.'
In all professions of lifethe'ie1
is roonrat the top of the ladder
butcomparatively few men ever
reach it they go down in the
great malestfonrpfcdispairthat
swallowsiheniiSip -jvith a vora
city that seems to insatible.i
The successful are always heard
of i the; unsuccessfulaieverj uri-J
less they commit suicide and
make an epheramal. "existence
that is here to-day and gone to-
morrow. The Galveston Ness always
.sound and conservative rnves
;the Bell county fanatics.a good
reoulce. aimpiy Because men
happen to differ In. opinion Is
no reason that .they sfioiild'be
abused for only opinion's sake.
The sooner men become "reas-
onable in their views and try to
convince by' argument instead
of brute force' the better it will
be for all parties and the sooner
harmony will prevail in the'
human family.
Just at this time there seems
to be a war between the news-
papers and the preachers. Bob
Ingersoll is now engaged in an
effort' te erect a monument' to
the memory of Robert Paine in
Chicago and Mr. Penn' hasjust
made a very reckless assertion
in Houston. He has said that
nine-tenths of the ycun ladies
who indulge in a social dance
go to ruin. In this he makes a
wide mistake and has justly
been censured.
TnE Banner the other day
heard a gentleman of much
more than ordinary intelligence
saythat he 'was "so much dis-
gusted with politics that in all
probability he would never vote
again. The man who made
this assertion is well educated
and should certainly know bet-
ter than to forsake his privilege
of voting. He like many oth-
ers charges that political parties
are corrupt and would encour-
age corruption by staying away
from the polls and taking satis-
faction in abusing the politic-
ians. In the purity of the baliot
box is the salvation of the peo-
ple and the more intelligent
must exercise the right of suf-
frage. The Dallas republicans held
a convention on Saturday last
and .elected delegates to the re-
publican state convention to as-
semble Austin March 24.
STATE SEWS.
Seguin is to have a cotton
factor-.
Hay is selling at S20 per
ton at Austin.
Mrs.
Houston
W. R.
is dead.
Baker of
The Waco cotton factory
has resumed operations.
Galveston is now agitating
the subject of an artesian well.
Away down at BastropJCan-
sas corn is advertised for sale.
The Rusk penitentiary has
room for 1000 prisoners two in
a cell
Several horse theives have
lately been arrested at Pales-
tine. Corsicana is soon to.have
a new courthouse and a public
school building.
Col. Templeton secretary
of state will be a candidate for
attorney-general.
RunnelU county contains
more cattle than any other
countyjn the state.
' Six prisoners escaped
from the Halletsville jail on the
momnig of "the 19'tli inst.
' -i Gol. J.- 'L. Barnes of the
Barncslipiise ofHouston is out
as a candidate for mayor.
OiTe hundred negroes have
in the last few weeks left .Bur-
leson county forKansas.l
The Dow brothers sanci-
ficationistSj'ha've been declared
insane; by ajUry at Belton.
The colored convention
which has been in session at
Dallas'lias'-a'djourneH sm die.
r A. German in De Witt
county lias a crop .of cotton
sufficiently advanced to begin-
chopping .ouK
Lee county's commissioners'
-court-has- made -arrangements
to establish a-county .farm in
that count-. :
'Propefty'in Hill fcounty
shows.an increase jiti value to.
the Extent r6fS55t;55d''in the'
year just ended.
-Mollie Ellsworth' another!
unfortunate: took .a; . dose of
morphine at-.Dedison land .was
.saved by a. kind doctor.i'
' Republicans It'cld a county
conye"nion1at';VVac0l!tO select
delegates' tp-ttie state conven-
tion na. Instructed fp'r ' Grant
'DascibalLisa.'-big- thing in
Burnet 'count'. It has got therei
dndithe Bumet Bulletin devotes
a column to the- first match
game. ;
1 -.;A .specjal .to the News
from Dallas'saysthaV.a fight oc-idurred-inthePanhandlecountry
betiyeeh.'j two .Indians and a
white -man. .
. J.. J. rICaufman a citizen pf
Houston got in a little good
work'byshobting a burglar who-
appeared.at his house at an .un-
seemly houcof.the night.
There is a ypung. man in
Denisqn-wHosemu'stache meas-
ures fourteen and a half inches
across and' he has not another
hair pnhis face.
In'Harris' county the canvass
for-cbunty offices. has opened
and' 'the Telegram publishes an
announcement of a candidate for
anofficeat the coming election
in the fall.
1 "The champion 'buzzard
hunter of Texas"lives near "Nel-
sorivilfe Austin count'. He
wentrsquirrel'huriting and cap-
tured nine buzzards' squirrels
.were scarce.
The organization of 'Run-
.nells county has been effected
by the election of a full set .of
officers. The location of the
county seat is the next question
to be decided.
The Galveston Mai-fest
Association are beginning' their
preparations for their next
Mai-fest celebration which will
take place on the first and "sec-
ond days of May;
There" seems to have been
a good deal of feeling exhibited
at Houston in the habeas cor-
pus case of Captain N. P. Tur-
ner" 'for the posession of his
child. The court-granted Cap-
tain Turner custody- of the child
an interesting little boy.
The power of wealth in poli-
tics is well illustrated in Don
Cameron. He never made but
one speech and that was only
two minutes long. What he
has done or can do is attribut-
ed solely to the length of his
purse and the Cameronion style
of"doing things.
Hon. Webb Flanagan has
been interviewed by the Gal-
veston News. Among other
things Webb is of the opinion
tha't Judge Ballinger could be
elected governor if he would
only come out for it.
The greenbackcrs of Dal-
las have elected a delegate to
the national convention in St.
Louis who is instructed to vote
for Cliase of Maine for presi-
dent and G. Wash." Jones of
Texas for vice president
The dead body of W. W.
Gwynn was found about six
miles below Columbus en Fri-
day with two bullet holes
through it The deceased was
a herdsman in the employ of R.
E. Stafford. The murdircr is
unknown.
At Austin on Friday a
man named McMillan was shot
to death by one Eanes in the
presence of his wife and chil-
dren while eating dinner.. The
seduction of Eanes sister is the
alleged causi. Eanes and his
brother arc in custody awaiting
an investigation.
The attorney general gives
the comptroller his construction
of the constitutional exemption
of farm products from taxation
and thinks wine and fruit-growers
may manufacture tiicir
fruitslntowines and
h.1 .in1".!.- '.f ..
wic sameAJ
of the
their ahnvfw
dit
quire
The comptn
saw will maKe a mo
blehoiviafr of the
hnance?
clearlv indicating.
beyond
doubt that unless all deficiency
warrants are retired no -just
cause could be given for the.Te-
ductior. a the school appropia-
tion. The treasury has a large
cash' balance and current ex-
penses are" promptly paid.
An Austin special to the
Galveston. News says: The
governor stated to persons who
have asked him about it thct
he does not intend to be a can-
didate for nomination unless the
people unmistakably demand if;
that he has projected measures
which he would like to fully de-
velop but that if he-was elected
governor again it would be with
a'purpose toremain governor un
til his term expired at Austin
among his friends. Aussuran-
ces which may be considered
authoritative are given that he
does not have his eye upon
Maxey's or Coke's place but is
really anxious to. perfect" and
carry into execution his plans
for reducing the taxes increas-
ing the school fund by sales of
land and improving the system
of public schools and finance.
It begins to look as though
Setli Shepard would succeed
Wash Jones in congress from
the 5th district. The Journal
is elated at the idea. Belton
Journal.
Mr. Shepard isa very worthy
citizen of our city and nothing
t would please the Banner more
than to see mm get tiic nomi-
nation. We feel particularly
anxious that Mr Shepard-be
nominated but do'notwant'to
see him sacrified by Galveston
and Austin as was'done at the
Brenham convention.
The .Gainesville. Registei is
accused "of threatening to bolt
if Roberts . is renominated for
governor. Thei?2W.lias-aI-ways
been a sound and con-
servative democratic paper and
it certainly should not imitate
the-.example of the Waco Ex
aminer and get ready to bolt.
without any provocation. Ihe
democratic party is the only
"sound one in the south and if it
should ever' lose its suprem-
acy th"e safety of the coun-
try is gone. The fact is that
so far afc the. interests of
the country at large are con-
cerned the republicans of the
north'and the democrats of the
south are" but little apart The
two parties represent the re-
spectability of their respective
sections of the country and if
there was more freedom of in-
tercourse people would under-
stand each other better and
there would be no feeling pf
bitterness such as exists at the
presenttime. In the northern
states a man has an idea that if
he.was.in the south and it was
known that he was from a
northern state he would be shot
on general principles. No idea
could be more wrong and north-
ern men living in southern
states are the first to find this
out if intelligent and unpre-
judiced. The North Texan published
at Paris and a well editea and
thoughtful paper thinks that a
little more disgression in the
election of legislators and also
contends that a little more pat-
ronage in public advertising
would be a great advantage to
the press. The press should
not besubsidised but at the same
a reasonable amount of legal
advertising would be of great
assistance to many county pa-
pers. The legal advertising of
Texas is perhaps poorer than in
any other state in the union and
is a great disadvantage to the
people at large.
Joe Echols of -est Point
Miss. committed suicide in
New York city the other day.
He was found dead in his room
with his throat cut from ear to
car with a razor. He was a
graduate of the University of
Virginia and like many others
with nothing but' the benefit of
a most liberal education he had
gone to the great metropolis of
the western world to earn fame
and wealth; in this he found his
fondest hopes blasted. In this
case he like many others has
sank into utter oblivion without
more than a passing notice
from the newspapers of the day.
The Atlantia Constitution
the sphnyx that unravels the
mystery of the coming Chicago
republican convention. It gives
the nomination to Grant by a
majority of thirty-two. It says
Grant will have 394 votes.BIainc
120 and Sherman 224. It gives
to Sherman all the Southern
states except Arkansas Mary-
land Missouri and Texas
which will go for Grant. Illinois
Indiana Massachusetts Michi-
gan New York and Pennsyl-
vania are given to Grant and
Iowa and Wisconsin to Blaine.
I tacvftJl
HftK-?-ft
szzmmr VB
ulllllaLLLiiLLLLLRbrO
i!24ftBRlBBH
a ci'taftftftftpr
cr ?naaaaaH)00
i0ftKf-
(JESEUAL SEWS.
The New York Herald Irish
relief fund is crowding $200000.
A ;S3000 Jewish synagogue is
being erected at Jacksonville
Fla.
An Arkansas Spartan recent
ly married a woman who had
puricd thirteen husbands.
Mississippi has given Sioo-
to its Agricultural collesre
ithe education of cadets.
linncsota's great farmer.
Dalrymple will cultivate
acres of wheat this sca-
e excess of exports over
imports for the twelye months
.ending Deccmh- 31st was
It is announced that the Ger-
man government intends levy-
ing a'tax on advertisements in
. newspapers.
- If is said that during the year
lS"fp Vanderbilt cleared S30-
000000 Gould $15000000 and
Keene $8000000.
There: wiU-be no nomination
for county"officcrs in Franklin
county Alabama this year.
The field is opeixto all aspirants
to omcc. -v
-The Americaa"Su-iday-School
.Union' has .organized .in the
southwest since the war 2796
new Sunday-schools with' II 3-
606 scholars. "
The publishers at New Or-
leans have asked the Louisiana
representatives in congress to
have the duty on printing pa-
per chemicals and materials1
used in the manufacture there-
of removed or reduced.
A bill is now before the Wis-
consin legislature prdviding for
pensioning the judges of the.
supreme couri who retire atthe
age ofseventy. Thepayofthe
judges is now $5000 perannum
and the bill proposes that the
pension shall be $2500 per an-
num. Track laying on the Santa
Fe railroad has now progressed
from Bellville 'to .vards Brenham
for two ormore miles. The road
is coming this way.
Toutics for the muncipa
election at Galveston have com-
menced getting' red hot By
the first day of April the thing
will be quite interesting.
Are we a tomatoe eating na-
tion? It would' seem sbr as
there were canned last year 19;-
96Sooo cans of which New
Jersey put up 5592006. Your
healthiest fruit grown is ye to-
mato. The Westminister Review;
estimates the indebtedness of
the wprld.at $35000000000 of
which$24ooooooooois natioh-
al.debts $6000000 municipal
debts and $5000000000 rail-
road debts. This indebtedness
is constantly increasing at the
rate of 10 per cent a year and
already consumes $17000000-
000 a year in the way of interest.
Nearly 300000000 postal
cards were used in the United
States last year. They are
made at Holyoke "Massachu-
setts by- a private concern under-the
"general supervision of a
Government'officer. The work
is nearly all done by machinery
even to counting and putting
them up in packages of twenty-five-.
The use of postal cards is
said to have driven many makj
ersof writing paper and envel-
ops out of business.
Grant Mnst Fight toTOn.
One thing the Pennsylvania
convention has made clear.
General Grant cannot get the
nomination without a hard fight
for it. He had been credited
with the declaration that in the
event of a unanimous. call from
the republican party he might
perhaps consider the question
of acceptance. His near friends
asserted that under no other
circumstances would he take
the nomination and that on no
consideration would he engage
in a scramble for it. Through
his friends at Harrisburg he
served notice on the party that
he wants the nomination and
means to get it if possible and
he could only win it after a fight'
aontrancc. Sherman and Blaine
are in the field and neither will
yield an inch because Grant has
entered the lists on his own ac-
count Cleveland Heiald.
The Cameron Triumph.
Kan-tas CltyTIme.
The New York Mai! Repub-
lican estimates that there is not
a single 'hurrah" in the Cameron-Grant
Victory. It says "all
the .republicans in Pennsylvania
who arc not. pinned to Camer
on's coat tail ought to gtve him
a serenade with a Gatling gun.
He is a smooth bore himselu
When New York follows Penn-
sylvania and Conkling and
Cameron go to the republican
national convention with the
votes of their two states in their
pockets then the millinery
newspaper editors of Harper's
Weekly and the New York
Mail can whet their appetite for
one of the jucicst dishes of boil-
ed crow ever spread out. There
are also some indications that a
liberal sample of the same diet
will be passed around among
sundry distinguished editors in
Kansas.
Anson D. Stephenson a clerk
in ltoston on several occasstons
befriended a young lady who
just died leaving to Stephenson
property valued at $50000.
On Gen. MoUke's staff is a
Captain who is Btion Von
Munchausen.
TWrru
Fatieace.
Men a a race fire sc-t o patient as
women. Perhaps one ol" t!le principal
caus.es is that a man is more selnsh' than
his gentle and amiable counterpart. Thus
men grieve most at their own misfortunes
while women with the most generous
movement of their souls and the pliancy
and ductility of their gentle hearts are touch-
ed mot with the distresses of other people.
Because women do not suffer so much as
men it must not be inferred that they do
uui icvi su uiuui iiu vuc civi tci Mkuani 1
Vl
women .of an unfeelin" stupidity. .-The
fault if anything lies in the opposite- ex-
treme an over-refined delicacy. Jfow
sensibility uheihcr of joy or borrow arises
in proportion to our ingeniity or delicacy
of mind. And no one has ever yet doubt-
ed that man's mind was of a coarser te-Uiire
than woman's. Afflictions therefore-fe'l
not soheavily on him as they do on -the
mott refined disposition ofwoinai"2Clnr
how often is one of the opposite sex fondl-
ed by a fine dLtres that a man never faets!
Thus the same ingenuity and deticacof
mind which sheds such lovely IttreVotind
every thing in her days of prosperity and
imparts such an exquisite refi-ui to every
joy when she does .rejoice casts deeper
sbodoM- on her soul in adversity ancTgives
a teener edge to grief and mucry. -JUrfc
her when visited nytany calamity. How
violent are the first stages and saltfes of her
griefl But how soorwaikr adversity with
its slow encumbering morons and its foul
and nigged footsteps haitrodJen-ovetthe
smooth and pleasant surface of.her soul
deadening its aoivities'lnd malini all its
powers stand stil does patience ' trans-
mitting its Lindly'and enlivening beams
comfort her spirit and so soothe it as to
make it discontinue in us course of grief
and even become serene and briqht; so the
tender grass beaten down upon the earth
bf the near? faUimrofa shower of rain.
w ill again spring offiU blossom by the dear
shining f the sun.
Wtea are Woam Lerely?
Loveliness in women though it may mry
'In its character and manifestations at differ
ent-periods of. life is not the property of
youth only.' Thereis'a great and underna
me cnarm in a iresn Deamy-oi eigrtteen to
'which .inexperience and early romance
lends perhaps additional fascination. A
pretty-girl of that age who has1 been un-
touched by care and who knows of the
world through imaginaion only is a very
delightfbl object and many men wish tbey
might take captive her first affections.
Between eighteen and twenty-one the chan-
ges in a girt so far- as the charms of her
fer$on go" are not likely to be great; hut
a that time by longer Intercourse with so-
ciety and by natural development she
may get more companionable for men of
'maturity- and he. carriage and self control
occome ocner ana greater. 1 nose are im-
portant years in a youns woman's life the
which in our climate the ma-
; (-ex1 are married. And vec
from twenty-two to twentv-five or twentv
six a maiden may and generally does still
further aavance in attractiveness and add
to the store of her charms. She is sti3
young but 'she -lias outlived some'' of the
youthful fancies and feels some; of the
dignity of womanhood. No better' ages
than those in l maiden's life and never is
she lovelier. But why stop at twenty-six!
What fairer women arc to be' found than
many of those between twenty-six and thir-
ty and even older! Girls of eighteen may
look on them asunsourht old maid? and
yet they are in their womanly prime acd
nwy capture neans inai nave oeen steeled
against girlish fascinations. Oftentimes
thev make the best of wives and men find
a solace-and communionship in their so-.
aciy waicii immaiuniy cannot give iney
have the advantage of experience; and they
have learned the lessons tautrht bv lon?cr
contact widt the world while still they may
not be aTerse'to falling in love
Xlor aal "Wait.
No man should be discouraged because
he does" not get on rapidly in his calling
from the start. In the more intellectual
.professions especially it should be remem-.
bercd that a solid character is not .the
growth of a day that the mental laculties
are not matured except by long and labo-?
rious culture. To refine the taste to fortify
the reasoning faculty with its 'appropriate
discipline to store the cells of the memory
with varied and 4ieful learning to train aU
the powers of the mind symmetrically is
the work pf calm and studious years. A
young man's education has been of little
..' tT 1 t..i .rt: : .tu.
eager haste to drink the cup of life the de-
sire to exhaust the intoxicating draughts
of ambition which is characteristic cf
Young America. The motto- of Gideon's
fatigued but determined troop. "Faint yet
pursuing" should be that of every earnest
man when baffled by hindrances and dis-
couragements. Let him bide his time
steedily and conscientiously doing his dally
work that when a. great occasion comes.
xic may dc cquat 10 iu 1 o Know now 10
wait is the great secret of success. Of all
the lessons that humanity has to learn in
this school of the world the hardest is to
wait The grandest results can not be
achieved in a day; the fruits that are best
worth plucking usually ripen the most'
slowly; and therefore everyone who would
gain a solid success must learn "to labor
and to wait."
Ths Eamia K laafactory.
A man may eat and drink heartily all
day and sit and lounge about doin noth-
ing In one sense olhe word; but his body
must keep hard atWark all the time or he
will die. Suppose the stomach refused
to work within ten mraules after a hearty
dinner the man would die of convulsions
'in a few hours ot cholera or cramp colic
would. iacK ana wreac mm. suppose tne
pores of the skin meaning thereby the
grandular apparatus with which they are
connected shotrid ro
a '-strike" pc
would inannonrbebcrningup with fever
or oppression would weigh down the sys-
em and soon become insupportable;
suppose the liver became mulish appetite
could be annihilated food would be loath-
ed torturing pains would invade the head
of the back and the head would ache to
bursting. Suppose the kidneys shut up
shop an 1 dangers more imminent; suffer-
ings more unbearable and death more
certain would be the speedy and inevita-
trli result. If kthe little wprkspsvof the
eyes
shut
c soouio. Close in an nour nc couiu not
physical force.
and in another hour he would he blind; or
if those of the tongue should close it
would become drv as a bene and stiff as
steel. To Jvcep suph a' complication of
machinery in working order for a Iifetirae
i a miracle of wisdom; but to work them
by the pleasures of eating and drinking is
aTniracle of beneficence.
Frienoilup.
What sacred memories duster around the
world! There are the fewest number of
persons who are capable of making a true
friend. Selfishness enters more or less in-
to all of our actions; and in a certain qual-
ified sense is commendable. When all of
our acts toward others spring from that high
motive for the sake of the pleasure we
oursdves derive therefron mingled with the
desire to make others happy then here is
an exhibition of selfish friendship which
is as exalted as it is ennobling.
lie who is your friend simply because
he can use yon as any cpmmodity out of
which to make money or to gratify his de-
sires or passions without any reference to
your happiness degrades the sacred name
of friendship ; and yet how few ever have
any higher conception of the term.
Even where the sacred relation of friend-
ship exists in reality we arc too apt to be i
prodigal wuh it and to presume too much
upon the richness the depth or strength
01 mc ajicuiuii iui i u-iiiiuuuih.--.
A jest an idle w ord a very slight mistake
has the power to part friend from friend
foreer. Then let him who has friends be
careful how he treats them; they are too
few to spare one from the number
Once sever the sacred chord of friend-
ship which "binds the soul of friend.to friend
the heart U left dcsolute and deserted and
the human soul becomes a dreary waste
a fit emblem of a dreary hearth stone in
winter upon which is scattered the dead
ashes nf extinguished fires or a bleak
e"ert--lufting sands give no evidences of
busy life.
In New York the brewers are
demanding an increase of one
dollar more per barrel for beer.
They base the demand on the
scarcity of ice and the rise in
the price of hops malt wages
etc.
At Batesville Ark. on Friday
last there was a very destruc-
tive fire resulting in serious
damage to property and loss of
life.
ixrrxE 11.-oo.-nKs.
I.ove sees as God sees and with infinite
pardon.
There is nothing truly original cicepling
original sin.
I cap year docsnt amount to much the
men ore so coy.
The heart ought to give charity when
the hand cannot.
Whoever learns to stand alone must
M aIonc
It's meet and drink that u depriting
many a family of food.
A man of numerous desire? i of all te-
ins the most dependent.
He who waits at .the gates of by-and-by
enters at the gates of never.
It U not right to raffle. Though of
cour-te when a church needs money that's
different.
Despair and postponement are coward-
ice and defeat. Men were born to succeed
not to fcil.
Impoliteness U derived from two sources
indifference to the divine and contempt
for the human.
AYhen a man dies men inquire what he.
has left behind him; angel inquire hat he
has sent. before him.
They that mill not be counseled can-
not be helped. If yon do not hear reason
sae iu rap your knuckles
A man should always breakfast with his
family and ft good man will always do so
provided he gets in season.
A good deed Is never lost; he who sows
courtesy reaps friendship and he who
plants kindness gathers love.
If you boast of a contempt for theworld
avoid getting into debt. It is giving to
Bii m uic 1 a g 01 Tipers.
In this great theater of life it is permit-
ivu w vu ana uicRngcis 10 oe spectators
but all men-must be actors.
BlerroasgoMe- staffed -with oniony
wnere love is thin a three-dollar dinner
among young bloods down tow n.
1 j 'better to wear a poor rest with a
royal heart behind it than to wear a royal
vest with a beggars heart inside.
' The temperate.are the most truty lux-
urious. By abstaining from most things it
is surprising how many things wc enjoy.
A thorough man of the world is ons who
can shake hands cordially with a friend
whom he has just black mailed at a dub.-
Ambition olten put men upon doing
the meanest offices; .so dimbing Js per-
formed In the same posture as while creeD-
1 the Same posture as while creep-
n&
Nothing is nort saddening than an inef-
fectual and proud intercourse with those of
whom we expect sympathy and'encourage-
mcn.
Great men do not .consider themselves
above everybody else; 'tis only those igno-
rant little runts who wear stand up collars
and sport canes and who refuse to pay1
their washing bilk tha't think everyone'"
beneath them.
"What would we !e without women!
ask$ a writer. Irs hard to determine which
way the majority would drift but some men
would be outordebtand out or trouble
and a good. many more out of the eat of
their breeches.
"Do you know that Prof
the moon is iust as cold "
Procter say
Is it though
really said sheas she leaned -very pleas-
antly on his arm. -Then don't let's try to
get warm or any :onger. Lets go-in
and sit by thcfiid"
ThU being leap year a .Main itrcet
young lady thought she would make a pro-
posal and -she did: She proposed to the
young man who had been keepingher cp
nights that he dear'out and give some one
else a chance and he took the hint- and
deared.'
It U very difficult fo pne to see the -rir-tues
of others unless he. has some virtues
in himself. The bad matfalways suspects
others of falsehood and overreaches Jhtm-
sdf; while the good man- is apt to trust
everybody and so cets cheated. It is a
funny world to live in and yet we are an-
xious to stay.
She hung upon his arm so lovingly and
beamed up in his face with all the radiance
of those nale blue eves- Her heart would
sperk and yet ihe tongue refused its utter
ance nut love anp admiration Droke the
spdl and from the rapture of her soul she
breathed fourth. "Your mustache is begin-
ning ti grow George."
"Pomp when your master died he
left word in his will that yon should be
buried in his vault." "I thanks ma'am"
said romp "I thanks you for that arj
but I'k rather not." Rather not Pomp
why!l" "cause' missus Tm feared that
when the devil cnm'c for old mxssa he
might make a mistake and take okl
Pomp."
Tia Seduocr of Virtus.
In the course of his' remarks over the1
corpse of poor-little Frankie Woodward
the wayward child who committed suicide
with.her lover the other day' in Oakland
the Rev. Thomas'Guard in his doquent
address -said;
"I do not envy the feelings of hira. who
had won he- trusting heart and led her
estray in fte nrsrplacc What are fallen
empire fallen churches fallen states be-
side a fallen soul? To what depth of de-
pravity must the heart of man be fallen who
can thus crush the lovdy Sowar of woman-
hood and cast it aside to be trampled in
the mud and mire of the trecti And yet
the betrayer walks arrogantly through the
saloons of society pcttci and encouraged
by thoughtless worldly'rnbthers to plack
another victim and treat her as he did the
first He is welcomed with smiles and
bows to the homes of innocent girlhood
when he should be treated as'a blight lep-
er. The woman who has trusted and been
betrayed is sneered' and spit upon but
who thinks to cast the same contumely up-i
on the ten-folc guiltier man who has ac-
complished the fearful wrong!"
CITATION.
THE STATE OF TEXAS.
To the SheriiT orony Constable of
wasnmgton county wiccun-j ;
Yon are hereby commanded that by
makinir publication of this dtation in some
newspaper published in the county of
Washington if there be a newspaper pub-
li-died in said county tor lour weeKS pre-
vious to the return day hereof you summon
IohnA.l. koss wno is a transient person to
be and appear l-efore the district court to
be holden in and for the county of Wash-
ington at the courthouse thereof in the
dty of Brenham on the first Monday in
March next th-m and there to answer the
petition of Anna Ross filed in said court
against the said John A. B. Ross and al-
leging in substance as7ollowsto-wit: That
said Anna Ross plaintiff is an actual bona
fide inhabitant of thq State of Texas and
is now and has been for and during the
six. months next preceeding ihe filing of
this suit a resident of Washington county
and that defendant is a transient person.
That on to-wit the 13th day of July A. D.
1S60 plaintiff was legally married to de-
fendant and has lived with him until March
20 1S79 when defendant left and aban-
doned her. That plaintiff has performed
her part of the marital contract but that
deirnitant nas on me lotn nay 01 Decem
ber 1870 commenced a course ot malig-
nant and tyrannical conduct towards plain-
tiff has btcn habitually drunkard has mal-
treated plaintiff hxs insulted her aud alms-
ed her daily has failed to support plaintiff
before and after leaving her has on to-
wit the 20th day of March 1S79 broke all
of plaintiffs furniture and has also then
made an assault upon plaintiff w ith a dead
Iy weapon and addicssed to her language
imputing a want of her chastity all of
which insults cniducs. harrassing and as-
sault w ere made at plaintiff's residence in
Brenham. Washington county Texas. That
since said 20th day of March 1S79 defen-
has been continuously away from plaintiff.
Whereas plaintiff asks for judgment dis-
solving the marriage between her and de-
fendant. Herein fail not. but have you then and
there before said court ibis w rit with your
return therwJn showing how you have ex-
ecuted the same.
Witness J. L. Moore clerk of the dis-
- -n trict court of Washington coun-
T ty- Given under ny hand and
j seal of said court in the dry of
Brenham this 30th day of Jan- :
uary A. D. 1SS0.
febtw-rt JT.L. MOORE CD.CW.C
I hereby certify that the above and fore-
going is a true and correct copy of the
original dtation. now in my hands.
J. II. HUTCHINSON Sheriff.
Will r.GARnETTDeputy.
Citation:
TJE STATU OF! EX. fl
To the Sheriff or any Cotuulle of Wash-
ington county. Greeting:
Whereas at the term of oar district court
for the county of Wsihingtou hoMen on.
the utdayof Sept. A. I. 1879 iiwas $.
rested m -open court that Sarah John-ten
dtf&n&nt in a certain suit therein tiendtsc.
w herein C Mtnkwiu was plaintiff tndthe
aid Sarah Johnson it a defendant has de-
parted this life and it was ordered by lb?
court that a writ of Scire facia do issue U
the representatives of thenaid Sarah John-
ton wneu; known; and it appearing by the
p titionof the said C. Minkwitx filJ--J)
the 27th day of Jaiu A. 1). tiSo ttaia4
lie Willie Mollie Lowry Myra Johnson
Elizabeth Gordyjutd husband M T Cor
dy and Charlotte Gordy and fcusl and
GoiJy are the sole representatives cf the
said Sarah Johnson. --And whereas said CL
Mtnkwiu has made affidavit that the resi
dences of the said Hyra JolifRon Ulia-
beth and Charlotte Got dr and their said
husbands are unknown to ninw -;
You are hereby commanded that by mak-
ing publication ot thUcitsn inwana
newspaper published in the. omory-c.i
Washington if there r-e'a.newparr pub-
lished in said county-but- irnoUthetMt
any newspaper published in bSc 31 jsdtdal
district; but if there ben newtpapcr pV
Ushed in said district then In some news-
paper published in the "nearest- distriet to
the said 33d district for four consecutive
weeks previous to the 'retern dar hereof
yon summon Myra Johnson Elizabeth
Gordy and her huslcnd SI T Gordy and
Charlotte Gordy and herhusbnd: Gor-
dy whose residences are unknown to bf
and appear before thedisnlctcourtv'to be
holden in and for thetcoenty o Washington
at the courthouse thereof on the first w on-
day in March next then and there to show
cause if any th.y each have why they
should not be-made' parties deienoimtw
the said suit and to answer the petition of
said C Minkwitx filed in said court against
. $he said Sarah JoS-nsot and alleg-ng in sub
'sacc5a.i6ttSjo-Wit: - -r-T
t Thaton July 5th 187s haran John-
son recovered a judment by defendant -agahu
him. in the district court of Washing
ton county for the recovery of a lot of land
known as lot 91 in the city of Brcniam 'be-
sides costs of suit said cause cumbered
5496.
2. Petitioner was then: and is ncwUhe
owner ofa part of said lot being the north
end thereof and adjoinirtg It remaining
rwrt claimed bv Thomas. Dwycr.
3. retitToder paid the sunt of Tw-o ; HuM
dredand twcnty-five2dolIars:forMdUcd
and received a conveyance thereto ffnTtl
Emerson and Julia Blood; Dec 4th. lS6?..
Al J. Gilderconveyed same to. Jntia -Blood:
John Kl-Weir conveyed ;the same--to A. I.-
Gilder. and said Sarah. Johnson then the
owner of said lot ot executed ami deliver-
ed a general warranty deed in fee simple
fr.r ihsrmiTi-. trir-aid Tohn It. Weir; al .
ofthedeeds.wtredf record save tiie deed
. 4. Said siiitNo.5496 was against petitioner
'and Thomas Dwycr for. ihe .whole of lot
91 of whichDwj-rr claimed wcr
and hadTaroable irapVovcnfenU crcctet..
Petitioner's part was unimproved. Satis-
fied of thdr rood 'title they agreed to rfc-
Tend the suit Dwyer promising to 1 employ
Mtmwl tw. make defense for both to first
:ien
term of. conrt; petitioner to'r-'X his propor-
tion of expense. '. -' .
'Dwyer told petitioner that hayles: and
Bass- tr counsellor 'SaraS JohnMn had
agreed to continue the cause at said Jcly
term of court and petitioner saws' p-jblica
tion in dry papers of propelling bf the
bar association of which said attorneys are
members announdn;r-'the continuance of
all rivil cau.-Jesfor thejuly term 1S7&. Peti-
tioner believed the cause continued until
about Sept. ist iS78 the- 'sheriff came-to
him witha writ of possession and execn
tion for costs of suit when he; dt-xovered
that judgment as' aforesaid had. ieea ren-
dered against him. .
5. Thomas Dwjer traced. up ?.-
from Sarah Tohnsoa to. Joha.R- V or and
received the same about June 5th iW.
and War's affidavit to this fact u attached
and markediExhibit A... Dwyer fraudu-
lently concealed the fact from theTttionerr
and to save himself attorney fees fraudu-
Ientiy sacrificed the rights' of I-"--";
That he showed said deed to the attorney"!
uj q.5mi5suic aui -- - .
edlhemto take judgment for aul Sarah
Johnson bT de'autt against . wuuuntr.
frandalenuconceaE-S the fact from ; p-
Boner andieadtog him tobehne tUa.the
caicjvas continued.
- 6v Said Dwyer refused to confess to pe-
titioner that said deed from J-
Weir is in his possession and refused to
make an affidavit concerning same in Uus
suit and refuses to produce tame
7. Petitioner has a ff?tdefcaeeRS
suit; andtiesaidSaraSa?nfe
she had no vS
veved said lot of land to sl John R- at
bTwnty deed.in fee ?&
said idling oa the atotbe
lad becQst J&B to
proved up and she colluded with Dwyer to
defraud petitioner in we recovery cr said
judgment.
o. On August 2otiv 1878; the derk-of
.said courV issued Trot ot possession on
said judgment and execution ; against peti-
tioner for eighteen dollars and twenty cents
costs of said suit. Petitioner applied for
an injunction to the judge- of the .district
court but not1 hearm? from Urn he paid
said ccsts and then tiled lus petitiuon for
new trial.
9. That petitioner will have no remedy
on his warranty and the said warranty u
insufficient in amount to indemnify bhnr
lie prays for dtation and for new trial and
to have said judgedent annulled and for
costs and general relief said petitiooj ver
ified by affidavit
And petitioner has filed his application
In writing to the clerk of said court rep-
resenting thatthesurvivieg heirs of said
Sarah Johnson are SalSe Willie and Mollie
Lowry of Johnson county Texas: and
My Johnson and Elizabeth Gordy at d hus-
band M. "T. Gordyi and Charlotte Gordy
and husband Gordyi whose residence
are unknown and praying for Sdrc Facias
to them to show cause why theyshonld not
be made parties defendant to said suit.
Herein fail not but have yVuf then and
there before said court this writ ith your
return thereon shewing how you haTe ex-
ecuted the same.
Witness. I. L. Moore clerk of ihe dis-
trict court of Washington conn ty -
Given under my hand 'ami sea! of said
. . court m the "dry of Brenham
L;S Vthisthe27ihdayof()nuaryf A.
r " JJ.I550
J.L. MOORE CDX.W.C.
A true copy of the original writ now in
my hands.
I. tl.UU liJiiiid'Jiijncraiv.L
By .M. M. Bainc Deputy.
January 2710 1535.
janzow
BRKKDLOVC St EWI3CS-
tto3rxiovs-atXc xr
BrtAhaiiOVxas !
"pEN S. ROGERS
-r-
Attorney-at-Tjaw
Cliappell II 11 Texas.
W.
C DAIRD M. u;
Phjsltlin and'Snrstop".
mchs-tf.
VV-"eyTei--
r H.BEAUMONT.M.D
--
ur.
Practicing Physician.
BrexiiAm. Texas.
tSy Can be found at his oIKce north ol
tlie square in real estate huiUinj; Juring
the daj and at his residence at nfeul janlbw
FMATCHCTT. M. D.
Surgeon and ftiysl-lau
Brenham Texas.
nwetffulr-- Inrorms Ma oU friewta ol this
dry and vicinity that h has rwumf 1 pratloe
oBlcalthelntral lluuaf mara.
CITY
Mattrass Manufactory.
The undersigned is now prepared. to fill
orders for cotton hay and moss mattrass-
es at reasonable rate. Old mattrasscs' ren-
ovated ar-d made as good as new. Orders
sotiated and satisfaction guar-nteed.
fc.bi5d.3A jT. KERR Proprietor.
1
Jl
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Rankin, John G. Brenham Weekly Banner. (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 9, Ed. 1, Friday, February 27, 1880, newspaper, February 27, 1880; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth115418/m1/1/: accessed May 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .