The Democrat. (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 6, 1893 Page: 4 of 4
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-■il v
c •' ••
.rem Painful, ("refuse, 'Scanty,
f uppressetl or Irregular Men-
struation you must us*
BRADFIE-LD'S
FEMALE
REGULATOR
CAvnxitamxm, April 88,1888.
Tbia will certify that two members of my
Immediate family, alter having •uttered for
rear* lrom .Wenstraal Irregnkirttr,
f*ing t.eated without benefit by pbfilcliUt
trot at length completely curedbv one bottle
of BraSfleM's Female Reaalatar. Its
e fleet Li truly wonderful. J. W. rausoL
Eoofc to " tVOJUS " matkMl FREE, which coatalas
valuable I information on eli female dteesm.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO*
ATLANTA. OA.
JTOR BALE BY ALL D&UQQ1
CHURCH DIRECTORY.
CI MBERl-VND I RKsBYTERLtX.
Services every Sabbath at 11 o'clock
a. m. and 7:;w> p. m. liev. J 11 W©fiord,
pastor. Sabbath school every Sabbaih
at :3U a. m. superlntend-
Ut.
rilKSBYTKRlAN.
Services every Sabbaih at 11 o'clock
a. in. and 7:;K) p. m.. Rev. O. A. IIub-
seli paitor. Sabbath school every Sab-
bath at U:: 0 a. jb. 1'rayer meeting
every Wednesday night at 7:30.
METHODIST.
Seivices even Sabbath at 11 o'clock
a. ra. and 7:15 p. m.. liev. Kladgerpas-
tor. >abbath school every Sabbath at
0;4" a. in. l'ra\« r meeting every Wed-
uestlay night at 7:, 0.
christian*.
Preaching every Sabbath morniDg at
11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Elder
pastor. :*nnday school every Sabbath
to lh30 a. in. P. Harris, superintend-
ent. Prayer wtettag every W ednesday
night at 7:30.
baitist.
Preaehing every Sunday at 11 o'clock
a. ni and 7:45 p. m.. Rev. Sims pastor
Sunday school Sunday morning at
o'clock. T. C. Perry, superintendent
Calendar of District, County anil
Couimi.-<^i« iit*rH Court ol Col-
lin County.
It pays the road that hauls the grlin,
It pays the store that keepe from rain,
It pays the agents when they sell,
It pays insurance very well,
It pays the banks that make the loans,
It pays the man the mortgage owns,
It pays the shops that makes machines,
It pays the merchant all his liens.
It pays the tax, fed'ral and state,
it pays tbe trusts to keep up rates.
It pays ev'rybody so grand,
Except the wan who farms the laad.
Poes farming pay and people bless ?—
Of course it does Now all say yes!
—Exchange.
A>XALS OF ASIERICAX POLITIC8.
I
DISTWL
«l udge.
i'otirt conven
uary and .June i
Cot"JITV Col HI
Judge.
Court conve
antl probate bu iue s.
March ; 3rd Monday in
July :2nd Mon
Hon. T
J. Brown,
in Jan.
•it Mondavi
:u-h year.
M. G. Abernathv,
f<*r
uay 11
*nd Monda\ in
COM* i-monk
Mondays in 1
ami November
civil, criminial
1st Mood a v in
May; 4th Mon-
lav in Of t. Mid
I «*ccmherof each vcar
-Torin : Convenes 2nd
ebrnary, May, August
ot each vcar.
W
Mr-
M. 1
T. I
J. V
J. 1
.1 ohu W
JLS. Thai
W. II. Ta;
S J'. «'iar
County OtliciaN.
< ounty J udge.
rii t ii y
!ij?Uill,
Lit i t I i «
McKinin
nriler.
( ountv Attorney.
V. ou.it v Clerk
" Sheriff
Tax Collector.
Tax Assessor
County Trersurer.
< ountv Surveyor.
i i tjs r (
Board and
LASS
Lodmnj;
—A i —
Mrc.ffi.W Webb's
No. 5I*>. .lacl -on St.. < orner of l'ei 11
Unllm> , Tcirttrt.
i:ate$l.<*0 i < r Day. Nie% large cwJ
i.riv
room*
d b
BOTANIC
BLOOD BALM
A thoroughly tested Remedy
BLOOD and SKM DISEASES.
Tii - «t «n'5*rfl remwf'' }i* trXl.
Harrison, on the eighth ballot
Like tbe democratic, the
platform made the tariff the
sole issue, and their whole fight
was centered on the Mill's bill,
which gate them a great point
of advantage. Levi P. Morton,
of New York, was named for
the second place.
TLe newiy organized Unior
Labor party an offshoot of the
"Greenbackers" nominated A.
J. S.reeter of Illiuois and C. A.
Cunningham of Arkansas. Tbe
platform was an embodiment
of the "Greenback" principles
SNAP 8HOT8.
r Dallas News.]
The capital *T' and the lower
ease "n" are the work of man.
TEN ION II&
A troubleeome akin
■tol
a few days' use of 1
JL H. Wout, Upper Marlboro, Md«
Woman is abont to assume
the shape of an enormous hour-
glass.
* «
If things are going wrong
with yon tear yourself loose
from them
S
it
;rt *R-1 Kid-
i|K n
of
!jr
•T
■ Vrotuis. t Icfn. I >•/<• iii.i. Mki n
««• CrnpllMH. < Dlarrh.
Ilh-mnal'MD. S.l%«*r. kMw f an4
Sladrl*1" I i iaalc Wml> -
iit'u, etc.
INVESTIGATE FOR YOURSELF.
■ j {, : |'r R<;ok of I aliiahlr
• ururwadHn. -I > v','''T
cure* from tbe u> llit tuuctl y x-
a for :U1 knowi
I' i i, *,.j xliM* cpriiinM* testify «itb
, . „r ' , ;. - 1.1 • It. ;ar !<• Bl< I '1
j a, ^ •'k. <■' Kreat-
f-t r. -t |>'-werful Blood Further ever
knu o to tbf world.
rmct flfrnrfr bottle : r. for f. fcottle*.
For sale bv <lri irist.«: If not, aerd to u«.
Adcirris BLOOD BALM CO , Atl«nU G .
.1 t<
; «l«*r.
! 3.—.T ihn Hili,
uii AjtriS 14. ha?
r of Joseph I>^1-
tAVf £*. •N'- J • A'1!
secter.c d to L« iiu;=^e
cocfe^-e 1 to tie muni
11^ J. „ !,*« |!
sou. lit) Qt nv s ftis nrsi
was bircd by D-rncksie
essmc.
F.irmt r*' Alliance tlareliociM.
tory that he
> < wUlUlit tilt
Tacom
ers' Ailin
n hnge
frutn wu
gruiz.
ance wai
Elwcx
nnce of ?
fever it;
al.-. r ill.
In tbe United
little ditTct* nc
Kray uUxxt the
Race has a ir.
eltr I)r. d'Atibi
he i^M Ot in
\V - .. { ril y. —The Farm•
f ;i~\\ nprtcn ha.- locat*11
'•per.itive warehonse her*-,
t.:e i ieiu':?er- will«Lip their
i> tiif on y Farmers' A ill*
r.- in th*- northwest.
>l>otte l IVver.
I April 3 —Toe appear
• :\«i c. -of genniue spotteo
city have given great
GRAY HA!H.
ted Stat*--
-x api ear to mak*
.Mrn uiiil v. <>uien ipmw'
init; pcrioil in ii/e.
rke l infltience. The tmv
igay say^ that In many rears
nth America he never saw a
bold Indian nwl scarcely a Rrny haired c ne.
In men the hair and lx«ard rarely changfl
cqnally. The one is usually darker than
the other for several yaara, hut there aeemS
to be no general rule as to which whitens
the first.
The apt* where grayne^ b^ins diffeH
with lie htdiTirical. The philosnjihcr
QAnpmhanr-r began to turn prray on tha
tempies ami consequently funciwl a theory
that this i& an indication ot great mental
activity.
iy feeble persons and others who hava
ly, b«>th mentally and
net blanch a hair until past
without aasijarn
' coloring mat'
,rt u. sHSis
middle life, wuiie
A Brief History of Our Nation,
al Campaigns.
[ 1JT E. C. FOKBKS. ]
[CONTINUED FROM LAST WEEK,]
The retnrn of democracy to
power for the first time in
wenty fonr years was the
scene of great rejoicing among
he members of that party, and
if chargrin among republicans.
Li was tbe voice of the great
'najority of the party leader-
ship that the army of repnbli
can office holders, who had fed
tt the public crib for a quarter
>f a century, should be remov-
ed, and their places tilled with
lemocrats. In this particular,
President Cleveland disap
pointed his party by adopting
he policy of retaining officials
until charges should be pre
rVred against them, many ot his
appointees were, also, republi
•ans. This action caused
mu< h dissatisfaction, as did
♦lis declaration, in favor of the
iemonetization of the silver
iollar.
The congress, elected, was
l^mocratic, and Mr. Carlisle
succeeded himself as speaker.
An attempt was made to adjust
the tariff along the lines laid
iown in the democratic plat-
form. The bill introduced tor
his purpose was the work of
\lr. Morrison, of Illinois, ai l
was known as the
horizontal bill/' It
far, th♦* most just and equita-
ble bill offered on the subject
for twenty live years, but was
lefe-at^d by the disaffection ot
the * astern democrats," under
• h^ leadership of ex-speaker
Randall. The result was a
loss of confidence, among the
agricnltnal classes, in the abil
icy of congress to settle the tar
ifT question.
In tli* congressional elec-
tions of 188«. th* democrats
lost heavily, but still retained
a working majority in the
house, and Carlisle, for the
third time, became its presid
ing officer.
Another a'tempt was made
to reduce the tariff, by Mr.
Mills, of Texas, in a bill known
is the "Mill s tariff bill." I n
!ike the Morrison bill, it was
v«-ry insignificant, so, far as
the propped reductions were
concerned, and many of its
provisions were * extremely
vicious and unfair to certain
industries, u hilt others, more
prosperous and powerful, were
its beneficiaries; one of its in-
iqnitious features admitted
raw wool fret* of all dot}*,
which measure wonld have de
s*roved the wool industry of
America, in the interest of th«
manufacturers; and wouM
have given no benefit whatever
to the consumers.
The bill reduced tne total
revenues about $65,000,000 per
annum; it passed the democrat
ic house, but was met in the
republican senate by a count
er—bill, which reduced the
revenues $70,000,000 dollars
per annum. Neither bill be-
came a law.
The democrats made their
campaign of 1888 on the Mill's
bill, and ignored every other
issue. The national conven
tion met in St. Louis, in Jnne,
and Mr. Cleveland was unani
mously renominted. For vice
president, Allen G. Thurman.
of Ohio, was named.
The republicans met two
weeks later, in Chicago. The
candidates for the nomination
being, 0. M. Depew, of New
York, John Sherman, of Ohio,
Russel Alger, of Michigan,
Bdnjamin Harrison, of Indi-
ana, Walter (}. Gros* am, of In
disna, and Jeremiah Husk, of
Wisconsin. Mr. Blame was
urged to accept the nomination,
but positively declined; and
the con ten tion proceeded to
mate a choice among the can-
didstes named. The contest
wai a lively nw, and lasted
off
A scandalous secret is about
all the knowledge some people
have room for, and they will
so broadened as to embrace all j burst if they don t let that out.
needed industrial reforms.
The legislature will not ad-
journ aud the mosquito will
introduce his bill.
Women do not go to war
with guns. They use screams
and hair.
and bare had no
tarn ot tbe dis-
attended me
symptoms of vs
ease. Many prominent
and all failed, bat 8.8.8. did tbs work.
Pact. W. KtwtTMCK, Johnson City,
LANGUAGE OF THE HAND.
I
The Prohibitionists nominat-
ed Gen. Clinton B. Fisk of New
Jersey and Dr. John A. Brooks
of Missouri.
The tariff was the sole issue
between the democrats and re-
publicans. The democrats weie
placed on the defensive, and
were at a great disadvantage
throughout the campaign. The
general stagnation of business It does not pay to waste time
was attributed to the policy of despising anj'body.
the administration by republi-:
1 There are go away gowns
aud coming out gowns and
other kinds that it is not nec-
esssary to mention, but they
are all pretty.
Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis-1
mailed free.
Swift Specific Co.,
Atlanta, Ga. |
Cholera at M. rctcriDorg.
Sr. Petersburg, April 3.—Cholera
Circles on any line are unfavorable signs.
Red apota in the heart line indicate liabiP
ity to disease.
Broad nails belong to gentle, nervous,
bashful people.
A long liver line shows an excellent nat'
ural constitution.
Crooked nails are always an indication
of pride, even to haughtiness.
A damp, warm palm indicates a feverish
condition, often lung trouble.
A whole and clear line in one hand cmv
tradicts and corrccts a broken line in th-1
other.
The elementary hand is broad, hard nnd
with fingers tbe same thickness from rout
to tip.
When the plain of Mars l- wrinkled, tln
man will delight in controversy or Ft rife ol
some kind.
Very long fingers belong to the artist, the
designer, the man who plans better than hd
can execute.
Knotty fingers beloug to the slow work
ers and thinkers, to rensoners and person^
The club man is frequently
the missing link of the family
trace chain.
has msde its appearance agsin in this ot orderly mind.
City and it is known that fatal cases are Red spots on the nails show the man to
of daily occurrence, although the au- be of very choleric temper aud inclined to
thorities bare not resumed the policy ol k® quarrelsome.
last year of making a regular daily an- Pale lines on the hand indicate a revenge'
o«nc.> neni oi new cases ana ueaiiis. disposition, intensified by long fingers
- . , j". c^it. ..'«rh aRd a short thumb.
Dunmu 1 Mfc KJUTuuMTa.
The mon it of Mars is on the outside of
R. Q. Graham's new play is called "Th6! the hand, opposite the thumb, and indi'
Stock Broker/'
can orators, and the democrats
"vere accused of being in league
with Great Britian to destroy
American industries
The campaign was very ex
citing, and to the credit of the
managers on both sides, it was slipped at a state ball in Berlin
freer from personal abuse than and she fell into a foutain of
any campaign in years.
Harrison and Morton were i girl in the room,
elected by the following vote:; ~ _
Vvr Harrison-California 3,! Hld,nS ,he ba!cl',;t 18 U0'
Illinois 22, Indiana 13, Iowa ll>, I i
Kaufas D, Maine 0, Massachu- Criticism strengthens the
setts 14, Michigan 13, Minneso- wise and weakens the foolish,
ta 7, Nebraska 5, Nevada
Augusta Roche is reported as seriouslj
ill In New York.
Tbe estate of the late Henry C. de Mill*
amounts to #10,500.
W. F. DicksflB has a new opera which ht
will produce during the summer.
A discovery of 000 letters supposed to
have l een written l y Voltaire has been
made in a library in Geneva.
cates combat iveaess.
When the heart line goes across the entire
palm, the individual will have strong affec-
tions, but much jealousy.
The man whose fingers turn backward is
unjust, and the neater his I:and the more
mischievous he is likely to be.
Ijirge hai.ds give jrre.* t attention to de*
tail, small hands to the general effect; small
hands plan, large handb execute.
The thumb is supposed to indicate tb*
Reporthas it that Maggie Cline has been ^ . ... ...
«W«1 hy J. K. KnrnrtL will join th« \b<.
oomp.ny to April >""* .. t<-rn«d the mount of \ enu*
A new opera. .0 be entltle.1 "Peg A «« « of Jupiter
hu beeu compoeed by M. Jako «mbn on - ou Saiurn
bowski!thecompowrof ^ntiiDie 'and Ij ' w' ™ AT"®' nch""nd
^ on Mercury, businecs dishonor, on Mars,
AlRBANK&CO
))
I
i
DOW ELL & FIELD,
East Louisiana Street, - McKinney, TeXM
DEALERS IN
Agricultural and a ing Implements respectfully annoaooe U> pablla tiMt
they have opened for business snd kindly solicit your patronage. AsjtUlf In
heir line of business can be had on the most reasonable terais.
Roeiere.
The foot of a young lady j Because Annie Lewis disapproved soi
, • 11* n ,: ! specialtie* in the "Nutnieg Match'' ?
0« .L In a recent interview David Belasco stat
perfnme. She was the sweetest ^ thAthe
some
specialties in the "Nutmeg Ma ch*' sh«
withdrew without notice, and Li/.zic Evaui j
Is playing her part.
murder; on the moon, hypocrisy and i er-
fidy.—Cst. Louis Globe Democrat.
KENTUCKY HOUSE
. N. A.
SnlndlMl I urn tnrc >l< n.
Chicago. April 3.—Furniture dealers
was through with collaborating,! allege that they have bef :i done out of
and that in the future he would write aii'J
stage his playa alone.
Catherine Celeste Coggswell. formerly of
the New York Lyceum, has i>een entcagwl
by Manager Frank Maetler for the Law
rence Hanley company.
The 34 New York gentlemen who prom
$40,000 w«>rih of furnitnre by a World's j
fair talker nainel H. 11. Homes. He j
leas-d au < 11 building near tiie cxi o-
sition grounds, which was to he trans-
formed into a palace hotel. He secured j
nearly all tue furniture on credit,
moved into the buil img, and, it is al-
• >
The rest w<is
d stored in
New Hampshire 4, New York
3C>, Ohio 23, Oregon Pennsyl-
vania 30, Rhode tsland 4, Ver
mont 4, Wisconsin 11. Total,
238.
For Cleveland—Alabama 10,
Arkansas 7, Connecticut 6,
Deleware 3, Florida 4, Georgia
12, Kentucky 13, Louisiana 8.
Maryland 8, Mississippi Mis
sonri 10, New Jersey 9, North
Soloman is said to have been
exceedingly wise, but how
about all these wives?
——-
There's one thing we'd almost for-
gotten :
It h*6 been so long ago
Since we saw it or heard it sing.
And that i* the mosquito.
The violets aie running the
spring poet wild agaiu.
■ ■ ■#
You can be friendly to a man
lsed to put up $3^.000 s pt*ce for tbe Metro , ... , . ^
| poiitan Opera House have come to time, am! ^spot-e*! of $80,000 worth
the |1,<<OO.C*JO has paid.
Stuart Robson's production of Fhake<
•peare « "Comedy of Errors" next season
, will be fthorn of ail the spectacular effect*
t cl(aracteri«>tic of its former presentation.
of it
M'CTet
apartments m the old building and re-
covered.
WHIP AND SPUR.
2.-07W.
wer.rs r.
Morrison I CaroUna 11, South Carolina U. without tying yourself to him
was bv Tennessee 12, Texas 13, Virgin-
1 ia 12, West Virginia t>. Total
\oe.
port'LA It VOTK
Harrison
('If v^land
Str^et^r .
Fisk
If you do not approve
slander do not repeat it,
If vou wish to succeed you
. 5,438,157 y0ll mtipt go to work without
The pacer Silkwood,
boots.
Viking ami Waterloo, bo'h with records I
of 2:1934. are full brother?
Men who believe In the 2-mintite tr«ti*-f
an* becoming qviite plen'y.
After all that has been said atfaiu^t him,
Stambonl is the *tallton kin«.
The pacer Blue Sign. 24> 4, started in !"3
rsees la^t year and won Si 1,3*>.
Of the AH trott«-rs that won < r
t*-r during 1WJ. 5S> are 4-y -ar olds or ilbJt r
The chani; i"n Michigan mare IWie Vani
holds l he .V j «-ar-old race r c«jiti of the w rl<t.
Nancy lluuk^ciMt the !3tr> ttin(i aw> sa-
tions on whose truck *he apjifaretl in 1
fciSOOO
Thf pt.eumatic Mslkv has reached < «*r
many ami will oon bt seen on French trot-
ting tracks
2."H>, 1."?
, . The stallion Sidney, belonging to the Ya
rhe leading titiZ^n does not l^^n estate, was opprais*Hl at fts.ooo, but
Some are >lo>iug ft'alaoes.
4,Not many people realize
when they travel upon rail-
roads that the cars in which
they ride cosu in nine cases
m
out of ten, more than the cosy,
well furnished honses in which
they live, and for which the}
perhaps labored and econo
mized for years;" remarked a
well known railroad official in
always get there tirst
The gnat on the ox s horn is
in about as little danger as the
ox.
Man sometimes g^is the grip
and finds himself unable to let
go.
sold for fcTT.lMJ
Turf experts decisre that the pacer « ill
tie a mon1* important factor in race** next
season than ever.
Trainer Golden sayvthat two or thre*
•our apple* f -d to horses every «lay is the
best appetiser that he has yet discovered
Nine Derby winner* have l* en im^ rt«d
to tbe l uit«*l M*t♦- Diometl in 177V, >al
tram, 180o, Spread Eagle. 1*00. ^ir Harry.
1*4. Archduke. 1W; I-ap 1SJS. Hlu«*
Oown. 1881, St Blame, and Ormonde,
ins.
To Make l.i|;h(tiine Tin «-
Nfw York. April 3.—At a meeting of
the president* of the Vanderbilt r^-ads
it was deeded to beg u a fas>: train ser-
vice on April 30 to Chicago from New
York. The train is to^eave the Grand
Central d*>pot every day at 3 p. in. and
arrive in Chicago at 10 o'clock the fol-
lowing morning. Thi? makes its run-
ning iime 11* hours, or five hours less
than the faste-t train which is now 1
scheduled over any road It will con-
sift of five coaches, one buffet combma-
ti n coach, one dining coach and three !
sieei«er<.
Kurlhquitkr Slon k.
CaTaMa. April 3—A severe earth-!
qnake sheck frhtx«k trie village m the vi- j
cinitv of Mount vEtna. T^.e luaabitanta
fearing a destructiva outuurst of th^
v< 1 *ano \<i *-"*■ a calamitous sh-ck of
earthquake, tl^d fr« ni their home-i to
tin o]-en country and remaimd tnere.
awaiting in great t -rr<:r for wnat fur-
ther may happen. The earthquake al-
ready f' It wa« -evere enough to caU"«e
R>ncn damace to proiertv,
CHIPS OF THE OLD BLOCKS.
Lincoln "the gen-
■f Kan-as was a
WILLIS & SON, Prop's.
Are prepared to give first-cass ac-
commodations and respecfully so-
licit the patronage of the public.
TERMS:
Per meal $ 25
Board and lodgiug per day 1.00
Board and lodging per week 4.00
Board and lodging per month 16.00
Farmers, when in the city give
them a call.
FAMOUS TALL BEAUTIES.
aboard and in tbe
consumption. Will die befof*
The Kotnan matron Cornelia was tall and we r^ach St. Louis unless child
commanding. in restored. If has been
Helen, according to reports, was a Urge f,;U{ld, Send h *r tO Grand AVS-
woman of ^rreat !«eauty.
Zenobia, the wift* of 0 1« :u t
us, was tail
and «-*tremeiy handsome.
Dante's lteatri«-e was nobly planned and
of command 111K presence.
Diana de I'oitier*. the lieauty of Francis
I s time, was r«-markably talL
Mme Itoland des<r;lx-s Marie Antoinette
a.*< "larj<e and superbly mo^leled."
The poet Anosto loved Alexandra Stroz-
r.i. wh«i wa.> a Wautiful woiuau 011 a "large
aud magnificent scale."
A Noble Conductor.
When you ask some men
what they are doing these days
they tell you ''nothing." They
mean by this that their unfor
a pleasant social chat with a imiat** wives are either teach
Hkrai.p reporter yesterday, school or taking in sewing
On the same subject he w,2,ve
the following intej>tmng array
of ti^nres knowing the actual
cost of the dill'erent varieties of
cars now in use upon railroads.
from a Pullman paiace to au
ordinary tlat car: Pullman on government pay
car. $15,000 to $18.000; passen r°n® at fat 8alariefi a 9on' a
ger coach, $4,200 to $«,000, ex ^K^ter and a niece. These
press and baggage cars, $'J.(XHJ; 1 *&formera are thoroa^h they
postal, $5,000; box, 60,000| lea*e nothing for anybody
pounds capacity, 14.^: refrig-j^®^* Daily Herald.
erator. $1,000 to $1,200; stock . - i the World', fair
r^jOOO pounds capacity, $< 40; 'bar fatal political kleptoma-!
EXPOSITION ECHOES.
Colonel fngersoil cr.
tle?t memory of our w
Congrvasman Curti
jockey till he was 16 y« an« o
Dr Wielobyeki, president
for the Stmly of Inebriety in London, is IOO
rears old
Mr Gladstone occasionally smokes a ciga-
rette, but as a rule he prefers that it shall
be a "dry smoke,"
Senator ljuay 5 pur
In ita exhibit at the W orld's fa«rthe gov^ | in Washington will t
enimen* put rut office will show upward 01 dence casting twicp as much.
m «lei , many <. f them tfeing wtwking General Joseph Wheeler is the youngest
machines. 0f Confederate eomn andfrs of promi-
The national museum at Washington in nence who are still living, being now but 57
its exhibit at the World's fair will display years old.
a collection of cutos and other metal money j pmfawOT K E Barnard of the Lick «b-
'•allied at nearly $l,O0t ,OOU • ^j-v^tory often devotes 3U hf>iirs out of the
Viaitors to the World s fair who ar>- in* 1 24 to work nt the telescope and in the rom
firm, cripplefl or simply weary can do theif , put ing room during clear weather
sightseeing Ui the various buildings by jtfr w K .Vanderbilt has leased a man
making use of rolling chairs. sjoll jn Chicago to lai occupietl by his fatu-
Visitors at tbe World s fair vs ill have an dy and friends during the exposition. He
Strung Language.
Senator PeffVrof Kansas, tbe
well known People's Party
aDOStle has succeeded in l lac- | opportunity to Witness the publication of a ia to pay IIS.U"*) rental for sli months.
' • I ilailr m.irktiaio.r fn.tn tka Im^i niiino •/. t l.*l /-. « • t at « m
da:ly new*paper from the bv(cinuiiig to the
end of the work and in all it< branches.
The women of North Dakota have ar
Charles de Leeseps, in the Ma/as prison
Paris, is rrquiml to make his own bed,
clean up his cell and wash his dishes—dira
range* 1 a novel exhibit for the state build' grceabte duties for "a man of tie world."
nun in twitch engine, and No.
'2 w il i bt- Leld until she arrives
A few seconds later came tbe
reply ^Child found and ia
cfming "
In lese than five minutes the
chil i was in her mother's arms,
and those who witaesaed the
scene say it was the most pa*
tbelie that ever came smdsr
the-ir observation. Talkiag
Tlie following story of Con- with the writer of this article*
lucter Frank Sargent is told in few days afterwards, Mr. 8sr-
l# . „ , Ed Burrowes' inimitable style sent said :
>f the Society J •■ ««•
u the Laramie Republic : **I laid myself open to dio-
Conductor Frank Sargent, charge, for the incident delajsd
who a few years ago made La the traiu about twenty minntea,
ramie his home lor seyeral but I determined to taks tho
tuonihs aud ran a freight train risk. I was satisfied Uftftt on-
between here and Rawlins, less the child was recovered
t ut now running a passenger before we left Kansas City t^S
train on the Missouri Pacific, mother would never ssifltl
tietween St. Lou:s and Kausas the trip to St. Loois, sad hs«CS
Citj', recenily perlormed a lit- 1 accepted the chances of bftt^g
ile act of kinduess that shows dismissed.M
precisely the kind of a man Would to heaven there were
hat he is—one of God s noble more Sargeants running pas-
uien. senger trains in America to-
Among his passengers out of day.
Kansas City on ihe Missouri m • m
iti e of a 1<H
covered by a reel-
ing This consists of the cart in which the
first settler of the county brought his brid«
to Pembina
The la*t will aud testament of Qu«-en Isa-
bella. in which she mak*>s a number of r -fj
Eight men elected Rovernrrs of Maaaa
chusetts siucetieorge S. lioutweli held that
position have died. Mr. Bout well is as
•ictive and vigorous as he was 30 years ago.
When Dr Bro<>ks was "commanded," as
erences ^o the new world, will l>e a very im 1 ^jje phraae goes, to H|ieak before the queen,
d — U him, he has caught j teres! ing ^object in tbe Spanish exhibit al. one asked him if he was afraid. MNb."
he replied, smiling: '"1 have preached beforw
my mother."
Stock 40 000 pounds capacity lia, (ortaiten everything that S INTERESTING TACTS. Professor Goldwiu Smith was asked to
loosi*), disease which Carlisle,! — W «<«• —«" Wp to
^500; gondola, 60,<ma> pounds,
llat, $lf)0; caboose, £475.
—Greenville Herald,
^ m ^
ILLICIT DISTILLERY.
the St.
George's society at Toronto because he fa-
vored the annexation of Canada to the
United States.
Alex Kennedy of Blonut county. Tenn..
Largest One Ever I'tiearthed
Running in the City of 1'hila-
, delplila.
Girls over 12 can make valid wills undei
and one hundred and one other the laws of Scotland.
, j It costs the government $1,000 a day fof
democrats, in goyerument ser firing moniing and evening salutes.
vice has. \ es that kleptomania The average height of the human race is, resides in thi bon^e in which he was born
nrhioh rana^d f^nt/r^aa wriih for men- 5 ,wt 6 inches; for women. 5 feet U ;« years ago lie is the father of 2T,chil-
Wnicn causea V^on«^reSB wllu| inches. dren, all of whom grew tip to maturity, and
148 democratic majority, at the Seven American presidents have died in 16 <>t whom are now aiivo.
the month of July, and In that month Gar Oue of tht olde-t ollicers in her majesty's
field received his fatal wound. navy Is Sir Iiewts Tobias Jones, who is U3.
About 5,OHO words in the English Ian- Sir Lewis, who entered the service at a very
gusge have no rhyme totbero. These include ®*rly age, "s^ielt powder at the ball le
such important words as honor, virtue,
gulf, month and echo.
It is getting to be the fashion to addr s4
d«-ad of night, when all tax
payers were asleep, to open the
Treasury vault aud deliberate*
Philadelphia, Pa,. Mar. 31.-Iy steal $1,200 each for their
—Internal revenue collector i sons and daughters, cousins
Brooks to day seized the brew- and kindred ; and worse, they
_ .... ^ , . . . , _ .letter cannot be open«*d by an unautho Ixed
ery of 1 hiilip K.lein bi n a& left the hole open, so luat er^ person without the fact being detected
the result of a discovery made congressman hereafter can get
yesterday that an illicit molas- $1,200 for that same purpose
ses rum distillery of 1200gal- without trouble. Yes, aud that
Ions Qapat ity was being con-j same kleptomania, has spread
ductel therein. The discovery even to distant Texas, and a
was made by revenue agents | ®on a state offiv. al, has taken
who have been working on the j 30,000 acres of land away from
of Algiers in 1S14, where he was rather se-
verely wounded.
Chris Mageo, the Pittsburg politician.
and stamp envelopes on the back. With owps an estate from which he was often
the direction written across the folds the ! driveu as a barefoot l^oy In the rear he has
built a fine residence, but has k pt the front
of the bouse and the lawn as they were
many years ago
Henry Ward Beecher was subject to lapses
of memory, and he once made au announce-
ment from the pulpit ia this way: "Next
FIN, FEATHER AND FUR.
The docks on New York city's watef
front are inhabited by thousands of pigeons Sunday this pulpit will be occupied by—by
A gigantic tortoise two centuries old can mr "OO-in-lkw. I can t remember his
be seen in a court of the artillery barracks came just now, but we call him Sam."
of Port Louis, France.
case for four months, and who
forcibly entered an upper room.
A small quantity of warm rum
spirits was found and it was
evident that the larger qnanti
ty bad been run into the sew-
er through a rubbei hose,
which appliance was kept in
readiness in case of discovery.
The plant is valued at $75,
000 Mid tho illegal dUtillery ia
one of the Urges! ever unearth
ed. Phillip Klein, Jr. was
held is $1600 bonis by the
United States commissioner for
farther hesring. Phillip Klein,
Br, who Is over 70 sad confined
posterity, and banded it over
to land speculators, who conld
give him a little bribe of $500,
for his services. They should
all be hnng at once.—Gieen-
ville Independent.
m
C i %. • I
Democratic papers say that
Secretary Carlisle has hit npou
a grand idea. It is to repeal
the Shen an law, and then
meet the demand for more
money by repealing the tax on
atate banks, and give the peo-
ple a dose of wild cat money.
This wonld, indeed, be a bar-
rest for bank
golden ids* indeed.
A reptilo common to the Sacramento val-
ley is the blowsnake, which thinks nothing
of swallowing a half dozen eggs at a time.
A swimming tank is said to be a cure for
lameness in horses. In swimming the horse
exercises the same muscles as In trotting,
but with no injury to his feet or legs.
A blue shark was recently captured in
the river Colne, Essex, by a Brightltngsea
fisherman. It was 8 feet long and ita girth
in front of the dorsal fin 3 feet 10 inches. It
weighed between three and four hundred-
weight.
THE MOVING WORLD.
THE JEWEL CASKET.
Dovetail paving bricks are being made in
<H** are now made that will weigh the
flame cf a candle.
A papLT pipe has been invented hy a na-
tive ot St.
▲ lam sewing machine, weighing
as, is in use tnLecds, England It «ew*
The pin*
*<
There is a gnat fancy for ball watches; if
solidly in crusted with uiamonda, so much
the better
Silver skewers aro desired for the sort of
cooking men and women like to do after
theaters and on Sundays. These are for
dainty bits that people like to fix for them
selves
The queen chains have made themselves
unique a^ain by a new way of wearing the
watch. The latter is tucked under thecol-
lar, and the chain dangles in front as a
brooch.
The tender passion in jewelry is much in
evidence. Two hearts skewered on a dart,
two dovee billing and cooing on a branch,
the hearta suspended from a love knot, are
among the favorite*
The long, sections! gold chains punctured
with pearls that were introduce^ for iur<-
gnons and were appropriated for muffs are
now, it is said, Ming used ia tbe old
ioned way Cor watch <
A woman wbo pai«x fl.TOO for a
.could
Pacilic ticketed ihrou^h to St. Marriage.
Louis was au iuvalid wife and
iuother, who *as accompanied Calamity Citt, Tex.,
by her child, a little daughter April 2, '1893.
f 5 yeais. The poor woman Last Sunday night,
was iu ihe last stages of con- l*ame nature had sunken into
sumption, and was returuing slumber, and had drawn lbs
troui a partial tour of Colorado, curtains oi ni?ht across tkm
where ti.e had g« ne in hope western horizon. Mr. Hoi
that a change of climate would Dixon, approached lbs
he beneficial, but all to io pur- dence of Mr. John Smith.
pose. a few minutes waiting tbs
Just prior to the train pulling youngest daughter, Miss.'anis,
out of the Union depot the lit- quietly walked oat of tbs pu-
le child stepped from the lor door and met the waiting
coach to which her mother wasj lover. They mounted their
reclining and was soon lost in (torses and rapidly rode toUeUs
the crowd that strdlrd op and sa, where they took
down the platform. and went toBonham,'
With Conductor Sargent's were quietly married Monday
cry of 4*All aboard," the little at 8 o'cloc' . The happy p. kits-
daughter was mia=ed by tbe i turned on ike 2nd to bis bmh-
agonized mother, but the train ^er's, where they will ttes
was already moving and nearly * their home. Mr. Dixon Is a
a mile had been traversed be- noble, highminded
and it ia not necessary is
ment on tbe bride, for erery-
fore the conductor was appris
edof what had happened.
"Don't worry, lady," said the body knows hsr to be a
affable ticket puncher, whe *' young lady, and ws
the situation was explained to j that Mr. Dixon has won a
him. "Don't worry, for your
child shall be restored to you
before we ha?6 gone another
mile"
By this time the traia had
reached the Grand Arenne de-
pot, where no atop is made as a
rule. The belicord was pnllsd,
however, by Mr. Sargent, and
the train had not come to a stop
before he waa ia the teleprapb
office and sending the following
to
tbe
*
well worth the stealing.
have our best wiabss
pleaaant eail over lbs
nial eea. May God, in aft
their futnre steps, ittsal,
watch over, guide, nnd kssp
them, is tbe wish of their Mi
friend.
Every man is entitled
opinion, but he is Tsry
so ran off with
* *
m
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Thompson, F. C. The Democrat. (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 6, 1893, newspaper, April 6, 1893; McKinney, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth191773/m1/4/: accessed May 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.