The Democrat. (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 6, 1890 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 26 x 20 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
FABM ANT) ROVft
ill
THE DEMOCRAT
I
m
KD1TKD AND PUBLISHED
By lae Democrat Publishing Canpanj.
SCMCKITTIOX
Ouc Year
etffbt Months,
l.OO
Six Months,
7«
Our AilvcrtUluif llatM>
One column 1 year 1100.00
Half column 1 year M.Ui
Winch tingle column $>00
Local actlMii 5 cent* per line foi
each Intertion. Obltuarle* of more
than 10 line* will be charged for at our
usual rate*.
All conirvu * ill be charged for In
proportion to the abo^e.
Address.
Okmoout Pia. C«.,
McKinnev. lexes.
EDITORIALS.
THURSDAY.
To the \ictor belongs the
spoils.
If knowleege is a power,
patience is powerful.
All is not lost when a thing
goes contrary to you.
Itend audJudfe.
We submit the following tu>,
u fair sample of political gall
which was placed before the
public on ?he eve of the elec-
tion.
whs. warden's action.
By the democratic campaign
co* jniittee. Tuck Hill, chair-
man.
Williams Warden's support
of Todd, as independent candi- j
date for shetiiT, against Phil-!
lip*. wh«: in lie pledged himeelfj
in the county convention to,
support, is a convincing proof
that the democracy of the couti-
ty acted wisely in not trusting
him as a "standard bearer."
The democracy of Collin coun-
ty is not haukering after such
"standard bearers." Mr. War-
den can't explain ont of this by
showing that Todd was not a
candidal at the time he made
the pledge. This very tact
would have been an all suffi-
cient reaeou for his not sup-
porting his son. Two years
ago Mr. W. took the privilege
of bolting the ticket, but did
not walk rough shod over any
such public pledge as that he
is now tramping beneath his
feet. Su< h conduct receives its
• but a abort time, president of the order, who has
was discharged as.just returned from a traip
been th
when lk
cured. A'heu she returned to 1 through the northwestern states
the infirmary she complained it has a membership in thirty
of being si-re, and upon investi- four state* of *2.000,000, and ex
cation ii a as found she had p.-cts to a id 500,000 more dur
been whipped. From head to ing the next year.
foot her body was black and It looked like a ie-union of
blue, covered with ruuuing the last administration in the
aores. She claims she saw supreme court room Monday,
many cases of such treatmer* .'ien Mr. Cleveland, Mr. Gar
while there.
Our Wuftlitiigtoii Letter.
Washington, Oct. 29,1890.
I met a short, heavily built
—I should call him fat if it
were not foi his sacred profes-
sion— genilemau this morning,
and the cordial smile which
illumined his good-naturod
well-fed looking face re called
many things pleasurable and
otherwise to my mind, and pos
sibly to his also. The gentle-
man was the Rev.
. .ud and Mr. Bayard stood in
a group, while Justice Lamar
looked a smile upon the three
ex's. Neither the size of Mr.
Cleveland's collar nor waist
band has been perceptibly de-
creased by the Joys of private
life.
Get a Home.
Get a home, a
your family can
place where
reside, and
adorne and make ii beautiful;
a place where }(ur wife or
John P. daughter can plaut tlowers, feel
Newman, D.D , whose official ancl know that it is for hereelt
title is now, if my memory is 'aud family and no landlord
correct. Bishop of Omaha. At
any rat9 he is a bishop, and
except in height his appear-
ance is just my ideal of a bish-
dare clulni u superior right.
Where every shade tree that
is set out, every fruit that you
plant is intended fur you and
yours to test beneath its
came iuto the postofflce, which G. W. Simmons and wife to
was in the back end of a gener- Jobu Spurgeon, 44 acres. M.
al store. She had a letter in . Hircb survey. $&54.
her hand marked "In haste." A- ttn'^
"Mr. Stnbbs," she said to the
postmasters, "won't a cent car-
op. If any mortal has had his
lines cast in pleasanter places boughs and pluck fruit from its
than Bishop Newman for the limbs, and where your children
just reward at the hands of an ! past quarter ceutury I don't play and feel joyful because it
indignant people. know who he is. He first came ig a home. A plat* where
John Johnson nominated I into national prominence while ever}' nail you drive, every
There is a breed of dogs in
Russia that cannot bark.
Yon are bound to hate a man
who knows you are a liar.
Twc-thirds of all the steei
made is used for railway lines
Georee Bancroft, the vener-
able historian, is ninety years
old.
In 1616 there w*re only 350
English people in all North
America.
Twelve" members of the
United States senate are na-
tives of New York.
A man's heart is blamed for
lota of things for which his
liver is responsible.
"Peace we want and peace
we will have." On with the
"pesseeshun."
The colored population is
fast learning not to be hum-
bugged.
"Pledging" to party bosses
has received its doom in old
Collin. Mark it. reader.
The agony is over. Let
work for the best interest
Collin county.
us
of
Blessed is the man that ex-
pected nothing, for verily he
hath not been disappointed.
The education of the public
is of prime importance; it is
necessary for good government.
The most interesting sugar
question is, "How many lumps
do you take f"—Philadelphia
Press.
Todd Warden for sheriff as a
means of winning "Old Bill" to
the mug ticket. Go with them.
"Bill," and don't stand |on the
order of your going. The dem
ocratic party
without you.
Bro. Williams Warden is
working for his son, Todd.
Todd is running for sheriff be-
cause Daddy Bill got beat in
the convention. That is more
paston f a Washington church board that is fastened ju is for
someth.ng more than twenty J*00 aD,3 yours; a place tbat
years t.go. At that time he enter without your
was President Grant's spiritual consent from which no mau can
adviser, .is well as chief cook drive you, a home though an
of John Johnson's gauzy trick-jment expense, underacommis
ing.
If Wms. Warden will waitj tor of I nited States consulates
until there is an aldermanic va- a position created for him.
humble t ne. to its owner, para
dise, a fortress, a place of
pleasure and stronghold
Though the acres may be few,
yet no rent is to be paid, no
moving from year to year.
Home is the place of happi-
ness. Let it be a permanent
sion fr m Gen. Grant as inspec-j one w'here the longer you re-
main the more endeared it be-
comes to the family. Ir is the
can get along and bortie washer of the fa-
mous "kitchen cnbinet," posi-
tions he kept during Gen.
Grant's two terms, with the ex-
ception of the time spent in
making a tour of the world in
a govei nment vessel, at govern-
cancy in the first ward, he will
have another good chance to
get left.
home of the nation tbat brings
i forth patriotism. With each
Watery lirave.
New Yerk. Oct. 31 —The cap
tain of the steamer Humboldt,
from South American ports,
who arrived here to-day, re-
ports that at 0 o'clock this
morning, 6 miles east of Bar-
negait, he sighted a wreck and
bore down to it. The wrecked
vessel proved to be the steam-
er Yizcaya, which sailed yes-
terday for Havana. H« saw
several persons in the riggin.
and sent a boat to their rescue.
The chief and second officer,
surgeon, one engineer and eight
of the crew were taken off and
brought here. The persons
rescued state that on the even-
Soon after Gen. Grant retired
the "political parson," as his .
enemies had dubbed Dr. New- i home stands linked the
man on account of ^s preach- >love of the country; the desire
ing politics, left Washington for its wel1 bein* and P">sper-
for New York, and in no long ^as an(l truly
time he was installed as pastor keen 8a^ by an American that
of a wealthy church in the me- *^e homes of American consti-
tropolis. It was from there ,tute ber 3tandin« a" y.—East
that Lr made the longest and ; Texas Progress
most expensive trip ever made I
by any minister to preach a
ry * his letter?"
"No, Mrs. Judy."
"Is postage stamps «down
any?"
"Just the same."
"Will you lick on the
stamp?"
"Yes'm."
"Its a letter I've writ to my
sister in Massachusets."
"Yes'm "
"There ain't no money in it."
"No'm."
"Its jest fum'ly aews, you
know."
"Very well."
"Didn't kn< w but it might
git open, and so I used paste
to stick it."
"Yes'm."
"When will it go out?"
"In the morning "
"An when'U she git it?"
4 In two days."
"Will you warrant it?"
"Can't o that, Mrs. Judy?"
"You cin't! Then what's the
us** o' uiy sending it?"
"Do you wish to send your
letter, M:s. Judy?"
"No! 1 don't take no chances.
She might ^it. and then again
she mought'nt. Samuel is
goin' down that way in the
spring and can take it himself,
and two cents don't grow ou
every bush. Jim Stubbs!"—
New York Sun.
wife to
Wm. Cooper, lout 8 and D,
block 34, towu of Wylie, $350.
11 H. Calloway and wife to
Waiter UiMlving, who
formerly worked In this office y
but for several months past <j
living in Decatur, is n the city. |i(i
Aki
i
McKiuney 4 Wood l a.'e
Wm Cooper, lots8and y, block I opened up a large saddle and
Snap Shat*.
funeral sermon—going to San
Francisco by special train, at
the request of Senator Stanford
to deliver an oration over the
.remains of the millionaire's
onlv son. He received a check
Polly wants to «?<sl^Myjoke.
The bad boy does not even
know how to do nothing.
The summer resorts will now
begin to bring forth fruit.
"I am down on him," said the
for £10,000 at the time for his youth's deeply dyed mustache,
trouble, and it is said that he The mad man argues with
owes his present position to the fool.
the Stanford influence. The whirlwind does ite own
Bishop Newman has always reaP*Qg*
^ Silence is golden, but who
cares for expenses i
As the barkeeper will tell
and
The chains of habit are gen-
erally too small to be felt until
they are too strong to be
broken.
Senator Standford says that
he came very near being a
newspaper man. As it is he
is worth but a paltry 1100,000,-
000.
ing of th- 30th inst. at 3 o'clock been thoroughly alive to the
the steamer was run into by a benefits to te derived from judi-
four-masted coal laden schoon- cious advertising, and uo newa-
er, supposed to be bound north- J paper man who went to him for
ward. Both vessels sank with- information was ever turned
in five minutes. One colored away empty-handed: copies of
boy was taken ashore by the his important sermons were al-
schooner's boat and landed at ways carefully type written ' down.
Barnegait. and furnished the press in ad- Go to the ant« tboQ slogeiml.
Capt. t'umill of the Yizcaya vance of their delivery, and he Consider her ways and be
was drowned, as was also part was never too busy to look over ashamed of yourself.
of her crew, in all about sixty- the proofs ; and on severai oc- can 8et niuch more into
one persons. casions he has been known to a huugry boy than you can get
The four passengers of the write spicy interviews on tem- 0Qt of him.
Yizcaya were also lost. They poral matters with himself and It is becoming necessary in
were a Cuban millionaire, his furnish them to his favorite re modem times to tip not only
wife and two children. porter ^r newspaper. He is as the waiter, but the proprietor
The survivers are unable to jovial and companionable a of the restaurant also.
give the particulars of its col- j man as one could wish to meet,
Being :t judge gives opportu-
nity for certain gritu pleasant-
ries which need not interfere
at all with the habitual gravity
of the bench.
A hardened criminal, con-
victed of a grave crime, said to
the judge.
"I'm not so bad a man, your
honor, as you may thinte. If
you'd only give me time for re-
flection and repentance"—
"Very said the judge:
"I'll give you fifteen years !"—
Exchange.
—
They are very proud at Dal-
las of their artesian well,
which is said to be almost a
rival of some of the many
deep artesian wells we have n
Waco. They call it a "geyser,"
as we do and crowds flock to
see it. The highest compli
ment that has been paid it was
by a country man, half cowboy
and half farmer. He gazed at
it in wonder and exclaimed:
'.Well, by jings! danged if I
hadn't ruther see that than go
to a hanging" What more
could be said to express his ap-
preciation?—Waco Day.
Additional Locals?"
you. a man may smile
smile and be % villain.
The candidate puts np the
drinks and the voter puts them
Bill Nye's wisest saying:
"Blessed is the who make his
mistakes early in life, regrets
them, and puts vaseline on the
sore places."
There is a great pleasure in
showing some other fellow up
as a fool. It takes away tbat
lonely feeling, as it were.—
Indianapolis Journal.
Autumn is here and the
leaves are falling. This is a
reminder of the fact that all
things when dead and useless,
fall. Even corrupt parties will
wither and fall before the winds
of justice and truth. Let the
true principles of independence
be upheld.
lision or its cause.
The Yizcaya belonged to the
Spanish line of steamers ply-
ing between New York and
Havana.
The steamer was bound for
De
and it is doubtful if any man
ever had more personal friends
friends in Washington than he
has had, and still has. He has
just returned from official visits
to branches of his church in
Havana, Santiego De Cuba, Japan and the Sandwich
Colon and other Central Amer-! Islands, and is being wined and
ican ports, with a general car j dined, particularly the latter,
goof merchandise. The cap- in a m/aner that must be pleas-
tain was Francisco Cunill, one ing to bis appetite, which is
of the most experienced and that of a- picure if not bene-
trnsted officers of the compauy. ficial to his digestive organs
A person's handwriting is
said to be an index of his char-
acter. This is certainly so in
the case of the numskull who is
too lazy to write it plain enough
to be deciphered.
We are exceedingly anxious
to know what the result would
be if an artesian well were
bored entirely through to
China. Which end would be
the bottom of the hole ? Would
such a tunnel let the center of
gravity spill out, or would it
The other officers were first Long live the rotund and jolly not? We live in Dallas and
officer Felipe IIazu3: second bishop , and may his shadow are naturally curious about
officer, Francisco Covas ; third never glow le«o. this sort of a hole.
officer, name not known; pur- Mr. Harrison intended to1 I'11® boarding-hotjse keeper
ser, Senor Dee6e: doctor. Val- have gone duck hunting this bothered a great deal
des Rico: chief engineer, week, t ut he has postponed the b7 delinquents. If they are
Francisco Serra ; second engi- trip until after the election. A turned off what they owe is
neer, Aguizula. The vessel facetious friend told him thai
was staunch and seaworthy aud b« supposed he feared the con-
had been entirely renovated ditiou of bis nerves might af-
and new cabins placed in her a f««t his marksmanshin.
short time ago. ^re Harrison hopes to be
— able to spend a few days at her
An Asylum Outrage. , , , . T j-
old home in Indianapolis be
Muncie, Oct. 31.—Lottie fore I he social season opens,
dead loss. If they are kept
and still decline to pay for
their nourishment the cogcern
most go down. The question
is, whether a lawyer, a doctor,
a preacher or a policeman is
to be consulted when one has
boarders of this kind. They
If there is a city in the world
exempt from evils of large pop
ulation, will some crusader j Johnson, a young woman about; but she do«r fi'£ wish to leave! *re worse than saa'lpox with
name it for the edification of twenty-five years of age, who here until the white bou >< in measles on th«*m.
this people. What cannot be has no home, was admitted to , apple pie condition, that is to' •jW'X'
done in other cities cannot be the Delaware county infirmary say un'il it dons its winter 1 c>l f,|,r *enF
done in Fort Worth. The about four years ago. The girl (dress. People wh > think that the
crusaders should ask St Louis was healthy in every way ex Great grgsflhoppers! No country is progressing at a
what it signifies to break np cept that she was subject to wonder the Farmers' Alliance j gallop never visit the
and All a city apopletic fits. On the 24th of is kicking up a rumpus in the hamlets, | was in
of private j August last, she was taken to political world. According toiiage
L. 1$. Polk, the national: other
Heal Estate Transfers.
H. K. Thomas and wife to G.
W. Wagner, 80 1 2 acres, R. R.
Harris survey, 12400.
John T. Carnth and wife to
H. K. Thomas, 170 acres, E.
Rightman and J. H. Wilson
survey,*1700.
Heideuhemer Bros, to A.
Heidenheimer, all real estate
in Collin and other couuties
owned by them, $1.00.
Nick Dudley and wife to B.
L. Sudiker, lot in Piano, |130.
L. O.Collins and wife to R. P.
Bills, 16 3 4 acres. D. W. Will-
iams survey, #00.
J.D. O'Brien to L. N. O'Brien,
45 acres, C. Hart survey, $250.
S. N. O'Brien and wife to
Wm M. Perkins, 45 acres, C.
Hart survey, $600.
W. B. Newsome et al. to M.
B. Bilyew, 50 acres, S. D. Terry
survey, 1875.
H. B Reeves and wife to J.
J. Wotnbls, 61 15 100 acres, J.
C. Neil survey, $527.
H. B. Reeves and wife to J
Woodall, 50 acres, J. C. Neil
survey, $600.
J. C. Shelby and wife to J.
R. Cantrell, —acres, J. Douthftt
survey, $774.
G. W. Smith to B. A- and G.
R. Smith, 1350 acres, Jaa. Hef-
fel finger survey, $1000.
J H. Nail and wife to E. A.
and G. R. Smith, 1350 acres,
Jas. Heffdfioger survey, $300.
R. M. Reid and wife to Joel
Li Aldridge, 46 acres, Wm.
Beverly snrvey, $$)0Q.
Wm. Cooper to Mattie A,
Cooper, — lots in Wylie,
$1.00, love and affection.
G W. Simmons and wife to
J. H. Betterton, 24 57-100
Mres, M. Birch survey, $147.43.
G. A. Foot® to Philips t
Barker, 40 acres. Calvin Boles
survey, $400.
G. A. Foote to R. A. Cambell,
34, town of Wylie. $45
A. Rhine to G. T. Armstrong,
4 acres, R. Sewell survey, *40.
G. A. Armstrong et al. toJ.
C. Erwin et al., 4 acres, R Sew-
ell survey, $40.
G. A. Armstrong et al. to J.
C. Erwin et al., 213 acres, R
Sewell survey, $3200.
W. T. Long and wife to J. J.
Munday, 76 1-2 acres. R. D.
Newman survey, $1530.
J. A. Crump and wife to J.
C. Warren, 100 acres, R Sew-
ell survey, $100.
W. M. Sanderson aud wife to
J. R. Saye, 58 8 9 acres. Ben
Clark survey, $1600.
L. T. Robinson and wife to
John Cook, IK) acres, W. F.
Weeks survey, $2000.
J. L. Lawson and wife to W.
N. Johnson, 20 acres, C. T.
Clift survey, $400.
J. H. Kemper to R. H. Lee,
21 acres, N. Atterberry survey,
$200
L. E. Sherwood and wife to
M. L. Keudail, 118 acre, Ed
Bradley survey, #250.
M. L and W. A. Kendall to
Mollie Shipley, 3 8 acre, Ed
Bradly survey, $300.
R. M. McCarley and wife to
J. M. White, 80 acres, Wm.
Boren survey, $1600.
A. Frazier and wife to A. H
Pollard. 60 acres H. E. Hays
survey, $1500.
W. 11. McCailev and wife to
D. A. McDonald, lotf 1 •3 acres,
Wm. Boren survey, $:?«00.
A. H Pollard and wife to A.
Frazier, 40 acres, H. E. Hays
survey, $1200.
S. J. Dobbs to Mary A.
Dobbs. 100acres, T. A. Rhodes
survey, $2500.
John L Cruce to W. N.
Watters. 1 3 of 80 acres, John
Phillips survey. $t>:i6.
W H Chapman and wife to
J E Bunkley, 40 acres, D S
Nelson survey, $800.
J E Bunkley and wife to W
H Havens, 40 acres, D S Nelson
surver, $997.
W H Chapman and wife to
W H Havens, 10 acres W H
Sankford survey, $25.
A C Worsham and wife to
W S Sproles, 83 74 100 acres,
Thomas A Rhodes survey,
$1275.
Houston Jk Brown to F M
Thompson 9 42-100 acres, F T
Duffaw survey, $153.
J P Hunter to Elijah Will-
iams, 15 acres. C T Clift sur
vey, $125.
John Johnson to Elijah Will-
iams, 30 1-3 acres, C T Clift
survey, $302.27.
A H Pollard and wife to
Aaron Curtis. 5-10 acre, M C
Dupsey survey, other lands
J L Labor and wife to John
I Webb, 27 39 100 acres, S M
Rainer survey, $45o.
J W Jones and wife to S P
Jenkins. 25 acres, S M Rainer
survey, $875.
T A James and wife to R N
Jones & J I Webb. 12 10 acres.
S M Rainer survey. $50.
S P Jenkins aud wife to Juo
I Webb, 25 acres, S M Rainer
survey, $70(5.
D A McDonald and wife to
W II McCarley, 12 of 111 2 3
acres, Wtn Boren survey
$1000.
W H McCarley and wife to
J H Akin, 50 1-2 acres, Wm
Boren survey, $1000.
J C J McFerren and wife to
J II Johnson, 53 acres, James
Fisher survey, $500.
L Wilson and wife to A J
Parish, 90 59-100 acres, J R
Saragent et al, survey $2500.
J W Soloman and wife to
Wm Press, 85 acres, John
Michelbarrough, Sr., $1700.
M A Jacobs and wife to J H
Warren, 50 1 3 acres, M. R.
Roberts survey, $1250
W D Cain and wife to G
Borchardt, 66 acres, M R Fos
tcr survey, $1190.
W E 8t. Clair and wife to A
R Womble, 154 acres, J C
Neil survey, $2217 60.
harness house in McKiuney.
Judge E. C. Heath of Rock-
wall, prohibition candidate for
governor, spoke to a fair-sized
and enthusiastic audience last
Monday night. Thejudgeisa
good speaker and seems to be
earnest in his work.
A Call.
Kiuney, Tex., N0
« atookhold«rs of
County Aliianc,
Ration are req
iu McKiuney t
17. Business
demands your h
ot fail to come
by order 0f
tu •
No
ain
Do
1><
of at rectors.
W. H. Bt
Pr
Ttn election it
let us build hitching |
CURBS
ANY
IHEKDAC
Wiii Ton flair
GOOD GOOD!
Biggs & Andre
NEW FIRM. NEW
AND-
Courteous Attentioi
tSTGoods delivered free. No 9 South Tennessee ntri*i, j
posite Bradley & Mclver's BarberShop, McKitiuey, Trj
$100 REWARD. $li
l«r£Tl the reward •(.
fcrt S aboet lor one cm if
PILES
Till 1 uMU can.
Tr**ta«et ilam ptialw
tfctj will
MEIER KETIBI.
■ tlM Car*
POLYPUS
FISSURE
and
FISTULA.
And If
two or i
tolloiriif
tomt wit
sod raiM
Would
the band.
JW ttt I
tw ie« i* I
Iwk HMIIMj
it* mi -J ik< I
(iHgL
V **a "r M my <h«t
I ™ MtNMI U.ai Hu> Mfiria J mat
. ju tll|>-lrai Kir.j,
*><I*— W«1 itKiwi nMi| >-4 <<•■£ tf IK. .
** it** utHcm —J > r*
KMint irfDt T C
I«ljt f S*ak*at
TmM. Jtr:
t-*y t> , tfcr? kr>«« HtftStng mj
t J
A H
i ti
!"**«> T«m , "I m nr'niiiu'ti m M<U? I* tSt
'V ~t f/t, M ih«t :n pU>*: g
I WM (a tb l utt Ing ncul «-< r Ikat 1 i V. >■ tiV
w t tfcjTfkMtucg ef *7 c t* t.Mnrii^iii T l.l
| •m*( — N.l. Ctu au
• ' Alia*, latau «s«aty "Far « o? *• T r I bar* ««*• < I
. . .. ■" *atk aii.tao! I aba ka.« r«< : *lc«« Ma ptlw • .•> •*« I
J™ "a**^*%!I lf"' ' R".') i' !;•!>< mm tram r <i la
. *!•? J- W TMwU art««,«f M?k." n «r. I vat . r* o> af> :>T u' .i>(
weili tj • tr«its«ft| h is attt' da&t ah but lulls asw 1"Ke b«M kmimst tell
W«e v- ee«i) cWniUss,"
t't^raf Nitj I .WJ U* lab* ara ah o.ao4 ^ :ar far tk« foaal th. I
-r*r *' ' I *•- at W o , „p„„ ny *. «• •
J* T*- * aaava i fr..*,1 J «,« h,* in my y aa Vjr imW
ih. .r ' "1** "•*! Mj «. « *u+~
"" " ' - "I'TC *a«fj "W
.1,1 ' r «" t '• ; • aa< • am' I
V ■ l" '* * *I'•**, « "I ■ u. - ! ... l>,.,.«^.. .« |U . >a<<
DR. T. C. REEDY, RONHAM, TEXAI
wherp I may b* fouud eirn- Satunlav. Will lx> jilevd to consult'
luffirriDK from liornia or ilupturv, u 1 kouw of a poaitiva cwro. S®
pay; ami do pay until cumt.
Program
For the Woman's Home aud
Foreign Missionary society of
the C. P. church Sunday eve at
7:30 o'clock, Nov. 9:
1. Song.
2 Scripture Reading-Mrs
Galbraith.
. Prayer—Rev. Mr. Milster.
4. Song.
5 Secretary's report-Miss
Alice Thomas.
0. Treasurer's report—Mrs.
Florence Perkins.
Song
40"!7' ? ,Bo'** BWm andUiM AHi. Thom I'
10. Recitation, "Christ at the
treasury"—MissCoppie Humor
11. Song.
to mi.-
•ions"—Miss Kmnia Webster
13 Song
Heidenheimer Bros, to H. C.
Overaker, 1 lot in Piano, $300.
D. M. W. Smith and wile to
*y. M C. Griffith, .T. W. Butler
survey, |)937.M).
S W. Jones and wife to J. E
Webb, lot 5. block 3. Blue
Noney to Loai
ABSTRACTS OF TITLE FTJRNIS1
Money at the lowest rate of interest, aad on long o*1
time. Interest annually or semi-annually. I have
complete abstract books in Collin county, showing all'
from the time the land was patented t>\- fh' «ttt« ofTexwl
present owu r When contracted f r a McKinney attori "
give a legal opinion on all abstract* t'uruislied by uc
wishing a $100t) loan or more will act grentlv to their owsi
est by securing the loan and abstract through " ■
Respectfully. M. il BYRNi
Of the Collin County Abstract Cos
- -i LJ-.J
■■■■■■■■' ■
1^-
t£T
THE GREAT
I CONCHO VALLEY FAIR
WILL BE HKLDAT
San Angelo, Tex., Nov. 6 to Nov. 12,
Take advantage of cheap exeuralon ratea to .ee thlt nimlfMt
and beautiful Concho country. We have the c-t mile track In tb«
can p ontile yoy aome fine racing. W 111 hav. .-rfat many atlrartloi
iSP sieltlnf yoplng conteata between tlie cbaiuplon ««xpeft* 1
l "HI round trip tlcketa for (*> from aof
their line In !>*« . and the other principal road, will ell at ore
round trip to Santa Fe point*. Kor (urttter information addre* .
CJIAS. F. POTTER,
Secretary.
Money, Money, Mom
J. 8. JENKINS has been making loans 1>
so^y 'or jwi, and he wishes tp sar to his d
nd others, thai he can make choice loans at nine
terest. No commissions. No attorney's fees. Yo#
amount yon contract tof. Office over H- C. Hemdsi
•tore, flil.000 to loan on gool perf onai secuiit
. XnAsoft, rraaldent, T.T. Smenoa, Vlca-Prest, T. H. j'
First National Bai
Or MoKlaaner* Teaaa.
Capital and Surplus, . •
itl
Wll
Wli
wil
Al
ay
ill
[ Tim I
**.( ■
I Ii >ii|
«a aof
I
on. r|
Over!
In Texl
haul's T
rear CI
for theI
It la ltil
IceptloiT
■ WOM 111 I
[ are tint
1 Try a f
J IK
Att'y
Grant
"It, (I
icine
Cures
all dr
nt
st
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Democrat Publishing Company. The Democrat. (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 6, 1890, newspaper, November 6, 1890; McKinney, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth191651/m1/2/: accessed May 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.