The Frontier Echo (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, April 20, 1877 Page: 3 of 4
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EJ5CIIO
, W. KlIIISON, I'akll.krr.
TKXAS
IN.
if Joy-
:
e< earth's (Ac Una,
"UrtUnlkw
jaar, ur'pua ud laars
iaSiSw.^.
>4*eV e stole
iWm
in 1834, and worked on a farm until be
WM "go. He wu afterward* edu-
cated at Hiawaule College, and, hav-
ing tudied law, wa* admitted to the
bar of Chattanooga. Here he prac-
ticed with auooeu until the breaking
out of the War. In 186(> he served u a
Presidential Elector. When tho War
came he took the aide of the South, and
commanded a regit, ant in the Confed-
erate Army. After the War he was
fiardoned by President Johnson, and in
889 he was a member of the Tennessee
CoaatStatiomal Convention. In 1870 he
•toted Cbaaaeior of the State,and
176 he was appointed United States
Senator to All the unexpired term of
in 1878
Senatoi ,
ex-President Johnaon
JOHJf IVIUAV,
the new Secretary of the Treasury,was
born, at Lancaster, Ohio, in 1888, was
well educated, adopted the law as a
profession, ana reoeired lloenee to prao-
tioe law in 1844. He took an active In-
terest In politics, and In 1848 and 1862
war* delegate to the Whig Convention.
rtz.tr.
,.c|g
bK;-'
i aiaaotaam-
aad whioh
JlahsrUk,
?3£*.
sals inn
'i. L *
la*
t... •
it
s, at the test.
where he
jMrlaOaafr-
1 to the bar in
I ArUtm-
the Ala-
IB 1876
r which he
lis
lew
with credit,
jM 'BBtorie^y by
> in the new d -
npSi1 in
j Qreeley-
i hod been
r, he has kept
. _ rty-
toarth Congreee. wee re-elected to the
Thlrty-flfth, and again to the Thlrty-
•ixth, at which he was the Kepublioan
candidate for Speaker, and came with-
in two rotes of en election. He was.
however, the ohalrman of the Ways and
* In 1860 be was
and in the
___ . m Senator
toflQ the an&jpfead term of Salmon P.
Chase, who was appointed to the Su-
preme Bench. In 1880 he was re-elect-
ad to the Senate, and again in 1878,
•erring on aeraral important oommit-
teea with great credit to himself and
satisfaction to hU State.
OBAKLU DKVKXS,
the newly appointed Attorney-General,
wy bom in Massachusetts about 1885.
in a prominent
IsptituAs for iht
fwen every op-
nent. After be-
. , lor improvement. .
admitted to the bar. ha rapidly
aad with hooorft
tiled a number of local and
State ofloe*. On the outbreak of the
rebellion be espoused the cause of hi*
*-> aadrakod the 16th Mamaohu-
whioh behaved with
Mmgmmi2ZTE
BaH*a Bluff, Col. Derens ooo-
wlih mob Intrepidity
. . . . , _ .With wwn skill
was at mm made Brindier-
and was oompUsaented on his
At the eloee at the war he
etviim ,aad returned the
of hie prahwlou. -JBe was
mad* At*oc—M ieraI of
tta, toWDMi be
for a
A.lnr CaUMi Iedntry.
Amaanfaotoryof a new kind of belt-
^tawhtoh thJ
'W aaadia
Mfcafc"
Sa.aSj
on the Oontinent it hae far yean been
made by the wtakiuen themselves in
quaatitlaa sufficient only for immediate
Jtara building haa been ereotad
* the abattoir for tho purpose of
this belting lor the
thoroughly cleaned aad then
• of brine, whore they re-
'irefiot ^l&Sar&r'
i cotton twine, and will mu-
tton pound*. Tho
■•of msnufso-
urad material
to be
the Are
, red in rib-
belt* are
and the round are of
sixteenth of an
tfeld
•even tons and is
ton years. The
^tohertown to the
when it to
but
H*sB<t-
1866 and
and St.
too short-—
-ijj, til
.. ....
Pfijfaa K. Momio*,
received the Portfolio of the
W""
A FATAL PANIC.
Partlealara r tha Had Affklr at th.
i Vi..*' "• Xttlu, N«w
lork I'll jr.
Nkw Youk, March 9.—At the time of
the alarm la«t evening in 8t. Krunols
Xavler's Church, which resulted so dis-
astrously, Father Lanciaohe was preach-
ing on " Hell, and the Horrors of the
Damned," and perfect stillness pre-
vailed. Suddenly, as the preacher was
picturing the torments of purgatory, a
young woman in the northern oornerof
■he west gallery, overcome by her feel
Inge, fanned, and gave utterance to an
hysterical scream, startling the wor-
shipers and oausing them to spring to
their feet. The nelt moment some
reckless person cried "fire," and this
?*** rU? to t'le panic. Father Lang-
ache, who was nearing the end
sermon, stopped and implored the peo-
P . to,^eeP MaU, as there was ab-
solutelv no cause for alarm. Father
aenriok, the pastor, heard the screams,
into the sanotutry. He
tiallysuc
tired to t
solutely no cause for alarm.
j the
and rushed into the sanotuary.
called upon the congregation to
n THBI BEATS,
as there was no Are and no oause for
alarm. The sexton also endeavored to
stop the panic. These effort* were par-
sucoessful. Father Laugiaohe re-
the vestry-room, ana in a low
moment* returned, attired in hi* oope,
and uttered the benediction, dismissing
the congregation, and tho organ began
to play. The women in the main body
of the ohuroh and the weet gallery
paaaed out in an orderly manner, ana
not a single person in the portions of
the ohuroh last named wa* injured.
The people occupying that portion of
the gallery where the oommotion had
begun and centered listened to neither
priest*, paator, sexton, benediction nor
organ. They rushed toward the exits
from tho gallery, and, almost erased
with fear, pushed and fought their way
into tho narrow stairway leading to Six-
teenth Street. The stairway is M>t four
feet wide, and within three or four steps
of the bottom make* a sharp turn be-
fore it reaohes the vestibule.
Tan cnowD or iusdbid women
rushed down stairs, and would proba-
bly have all reaohod the street in safety,
but at the bend in the stairway an aged
and very stout woman, in her eager-
ness to reach a place of safety, fell
headlong down stain. Before she
could regain her foot the frantic orowd,
pressing on toward the vestibule^oame
upon the proetrato form, awWoWm
the foremoet rank* fell npon her. In
a moment the passage-way wa* choked,
and a scene of the wildest confusion
and most intense exoitement ensued.
Tho orowd, in fear, passed on with al-
moet irresistible foroe, and nothing
could bo done to stop their advanoe.
Tho erased woman fought their way to-
ward the ehoked-up stairway, trampling
upon thoso Who had fallen In front ani
crushing the life out of
screamed and
.aplggi
Harrieon campaign of 1840, and in tho
Itad to OongroM-
tLiS^STwlve part ln
f^g4
mSm
, TraMportlag Potevknm by flpe*.
Winans, of this city, with a view^ot,se-
curing his aid in UtiBg an cutis* of a
petroleum pipe lino near the Spring
Gwrden*. The line in question to sur-
veyed nearly all tho distance from the
S2ri£E
eligible than Philadelphia, andcoase-
asntly they have determined to make
r^tteVndnuso* tho lino.
[re ana Iin im their plan the estab-
ihment of large oil tanks, with force
power at oertaia distances aloag the
Une7*o a* not to depend entirely on the
natural force that wfll re«ult from tho
declivity of the route. A pip«'^ fe,,t
In diameter la to be need, aadtMrpi o
Of operation devised to very similar to
that of bringing water into oitiee where
of ita own foroe U rwhes the u
pectod thata oentlnooa* l>W ot oil in
bipee ean bo aocurod between the
mountain* of Pennsylvania and the
wb-^BaWmo". %
moot 041 aould bo out on
them. They
hey w
; life'
rOCOBT LIKl!*AinA ( >■/ W1
and every effort to hold them baok so
that the stairway could be cleared was
of no avail. Father Why to and sever-
al other priest* who wore in the ohuroh
parlor* at tho time the panic oc-
curred rushed round to the front of
the ohuroh, and, assisted by patrolmen,
by main foroe dragged out some women
who were lying on the stairs. 4 num-
ber of women were then got out, and
only slightly injured. In the struggle
for life they were almost denuded of
their clothing. A* the priests aad po-
lice, aided by a nuufl
made their way up the
found lying On the steps four other
women ana a small boy.
taken out to the open air, but 1:
extinct. One woman, Anna Forbes,
brought out alive, aad apparently
not muoh injured. Sho walked, with
the assistance of a policeman, to a drug
store on 8ixth Avenue, near Sixteenth
Street, where she exptred in a few mo-
ments. The assistant sexton says he
distinctly
muM A on*3ffpm, «V n'
but did not see who'gave nttoranoe to
it. A gentleman standing outside of
the ohuroh informed Sergeant Douglas
he saw a man in the vestibule of the
ohtmsh put his head inside tho door,
and heard him cry "Fire!" Father
Whyte and other priest* oonnootad with
the ohuroh are of tho opinion that tho
ory of fire was given by one of a gang
of plokpockete with the intention of
oreating a panic, during whioh they
oould ply their nefarious vocation. Fa-
od the front of the ohuroh he was al-
most crushed to death while endeavor-
ing to extrio*te some of ^he women who
were in imminent danger of losing their
live*.
nunns roa the dead.
This morning, a^ St. Xavier Church,
where the calamity of la*t night hap-
pened, solemn mass of jiequlem was of-
fered for '
The £ thetleo of Htase-Furatohlng,
The last of the series of lecture* by
Donald G. Milt?hell before Ihe Yale Art
School on .lOsthetics of Kvery-day
Iji'o" wa* delivered on the L'5tn ult.
The speaker said:
,To speak understanding^ of the
adornment of interiors, we must have
a wetl-deftaed idea of the disposition
and collection of rooms. In this matter
convenience is the first law. Whatever
yrangement sacrifices this, no matter
for what effect. Is bad. Instead of a
stark, narrow hall, with only a -hat-
stand to weloome the visitor, ihould be
a good breadth of hallway, whioh al-
way* carries with it a weloome. The
spaoe so used will be far more effective
there than when put into a little-used
parlor. It permits also a partial
meat with suoh fixtures a* book*, pic-
tures, etc., as shall tell at the outset
something of the taste of the occu-
eants. Stairs play an Important part
i our domestfo economy, and are not
to be slighted. They should give a free
ir miy be
inoonvenl-
year been in-
to on auguiea. xaey snouia gr
and easy passage to whatever
above. It is amazing what in
enoe has for Tear after year I
posed by only four or five feet of need'
leu curtailment of spaoe and the fail-
ure to throw off an inch or two from
the rise of home stairs. It to a barbar-
ism which women, had they been archi-
tects, would have remedied long ago.
The spaoe needed—and this would
make all the differenoe between
great majority of case*, be scoured
without interference with other wants.
In regard to the general arrangement
of room*, in view of the limitless variety
of the demands whioh different oondi-,
tions impose, little can be definitel'
said. But oertain large rulings, whiol
can be borne out by good sense and
good taste, may be made. First, we
should order our divisions and parti-
tions for the comfort of our own fami-.
lv, not for the benefit of outsider*. In-
dividuality may express itself a* charm-1
ingly and piquantfy in the distribution
•fpartaa*in the exterior or furnish-
ing. If oondition of life and taste* in-
vite to the bostowment of large hospi-
talities, or if we love domestic quietude
and modest hospital!Use, these should'
be respectively provided for. The^ij*
friends whom we invite will have a
stronger relish for those appointments
Whit a -are moot characteristic of our.
•to. Outaido architecture should
be declarative of purpose, while tho in-
side admits of pieaaant and grateful
surprises, and should not be so arrang-
ed aa to be read from the outside. Fin-
ally, with respect to interior division,
the mtotres* of the house, in nine cases
out of ten, to the best Judge, and to her
should be given the Judgeship, if, in-
deed, she doe* not of her own aooord
take it. The host planned of all houses
Are those whioh have grown up under
the suggestion and supervision of a
§«wdj raaolute materfamllia*.
The speaker here began to consider Jt
the arrangement* of a house in detail,
starting with the vestibule. Passing
from this he took up the matter of
floors, and *aid: Floor surfaces w«
find oovered with woolen carpeting oil
every tint and figure. This to agreea-
ble to the foot, however galling it may
be to the eye. But it to a reservoir of.
dirt and dust, no matter how vigorous
and aggressive the housewifery, and to'
wisely giving way to suoh use of it as
demands, In the proper
to no soft wood ahorid be
used. Georgia pine to excellent, and so
black oak and ash, though the lab-
i strong support.
honortgr ana simplicity and
th and straightforwardness and
nesa lie at the bottom of all
Jnevomvat in thto direction;
that with these held ooura-
n our work, though we may
thing* wo shall do no bad
when onoe we have learned
doing* of bad things, in
what concerns tho withetios of every-
we (hall have made a long
< i1
:<*~AN«wYork;
cand-"
ri fiiiot tbelhottto, if nte
tor may be disposed to sliver." No light
snould have a * '
aav
a wash of solnltion of aaphaltam. There
wood i
Tints ma\
the dead, and prayers aaid for
the speedy recovery of the wounded,
KVf
t'< t
The nervous disease which broko out
among the car-horses of Brooklyn on
Friday last oontlnues to prevail, and
very little hope 1s entertained of saving
the live* of the afflicted animal*. The
numtyr now siok at the Gates Avenue
stable to forty, fifteen hones have
died sinoe Friday last at these-stables,
and even if *omo of the present siok
ones should recover they wUl probably
be worthless. The animal* die in about
84 hours after the first symptoms mani-
fest themaelvM. It is.aald by too vet-
erinary surgeon* Who art Attending the
siok animals that the disease resembles
the oerebro-spinal meningitis, from
whioh human beings suffer. The dl*-
ease i« thought to Be caused by an an-
healthy atmosphere. The Gates Av-
enue stables are old and Inferior in
many respects to the other oar- tables
in tne oity, whloh accounts, it is said,
for the large number of siok horses.
There have been four cases In the Reed
Avenue stables, but no deaths. Tho
drlvors say the disease is generally prev-
alent at this season of the year.
The reported mortality among hor*e
in Canada, caused by a new and terri-
ble eplsootlo, ooupled with the preva-
lence of corebro-splnal meningitis In
the stables of tho Brooklyn railroad
companies, has created alarm among
the owners of horses in this city. As
F8*
rew
to the Fourth Ave-
pany were attacked
•ambling the menln-
ve now recovered, and
ttion that it to llkoly to
tent.—Ntw Tork Hcr-
should be a distinct border with miter-
ad angles having tints of their own. A
diagonal arrangement to effective. Ex-
treme polish and shining surface in a
floor are to be avoided. Naturally,
parion. reception-rooms, chambers,
ahd>ev&Mtf«ot>ms will demand their
modicum, if no more, of carpeting in
our winter*. But a border of flooring,
darkly tinted, with it* mitarod angle*,
will make the happiest possible setting,
and do away with that poriodio moving
of heavy furniture, whloh to a haunting
nightmare to housewivos. Respecting
carpet materials, taato long ago declar-
ed against thoaeflamboyanoiee of figure
which our grandmothers loved so well.
While a gala-day ohamber may be
strewed willfdatoVeo for the weloome of
to much
flowery
arabesque*, which merely hint at floral
prowth, will be more fitting; or, per-
iap*, hotter *011, *uoh a fine, oonfused
mingling of tints aa shall suggest noth-
ing but *oft daUianoe with the foot.
The subject of ceilings and walls was
now taken'up. Tbertadea not seem
to be any well-devised method of evad-
ing tho usual plaster treatment Plas-
ter ornamentation in heavy oornloes
and stupendous eentral rosettes to hap-
yet, however, neither of these soourge
nas made Ita appearance here. A foi
animals belonging
nue Railroad ti
with a disease r*
gltls, but thoy hi
tnere is no Indlo
prevail to any «:
aid.
—Moody to in Boston}
" hearts rod-hot with love."
calling for
all
A* a large
majority of the Boston girls wear oyo-
- — — ~ il it '
place in any floor,
be varied and made fast by
' redisposition. Ambitious engarland-
ing of walls in fresco may be well done,
but there to danger that ft will kill all
the home embroidery whloh we love.
The same rules apply to amblnou* pa-
per-hanging* of whatever aont; there
exists the additional objection that it
brings to surfaoes new mechanical obl-
ors, with their stock of adhesive mix-
tures. Managers of our metropolitan
hotels run to garish ornamentation of
their walls, thereby feeding the appe-
the more aubdued styles whioh would:
revive the old notion of home feeling
• pub io hostel-
rios. But from all wo fall
In connection with our
ub io hoste
back upon
simple tinting of plain mortar (not
plaster) surfaoes in kalsomlne, as se-
curing at least oost and least hazard
of cleanliness the best range of effect.
The arttotio effect of an interior will
depend largely upon wood fixtures-
doors, wainscot*, etc. Muoh better
than paint to the plan of showing the
natural graining of variou* woods.
While thto treatment to oalled 11 hard-
wood finish,'* hard wood is by no
mean* euential, nor are costs nocossa-
rily greater. Butternut and cheatnut
are irol more expensive to work than
pine. And, fortunatoly, our pino—tho
atrobus of the botanists—has lost, by
reason of its very oommonnesa and tint,
that appreciation for Interior finish for
whloh It is worthy. The natural grain
and tints of all woods are much fuller
and rioher than all thedead, dull paint,
with ita tatfny yellow of oils, of the
decorators. As to the extent of wood
In walnsoota, every man's home and
wants must make the law. Conven-
tionalities and unyielding ediota of enr
penters and architects are to be distrust-
ed. The wainscot is a oharming way
walla. U the home be suoh
to
tho walaMol thraiH
to i
startling in the tints. They mny lie
varied almost indefinitely. The lectur-
er had used, with pleasing effect, suc-
cessive snips of walnut, butternut,
chestnut, asb, and yellow pine, repeat-
ed iu oompantoa, and tied to their place
ed iu oompante*, ana uea to tueir place
by a longitudinal fillet of the dentilatcd
Venetian molding. Naturally, the fire-
place and mantelwill next demand at-
tention. Fire-place* are great promot-
Amsden Peach. KTVift,
rich in thT w"d! Ort,tn.ud .1 l;;W. •
•our*. Specially l«r<"l I" Mt*T"ir!:. iv."**,*"'1
I *oatliwe t. lllirliljr recomaWMl"1I—.
ry. Warder. Ilunf.nn. HertkniaM •nit ull.cr k- ]
lax fruit-afrowt-ri. For fairhlitonr and price „f irra,
audrrMJf>HN WAMfl.Kll. C«rUia«f. MImobtI
er* of health, as they secure
"ffdrent
re great ven
tilation. Of the difforent varieties, the
French pattern, uncertain of draft and
starveling of heat, and the British style,
well adapted to bituminous ooal, are ex-
celled by the old New England fire-
place, whloh to broader and wider, and
well adapted to generous wood flros.
The equipmoDt of the mantel to a mat-
tar, of first importance in giving expres-
ful'stud'1 r°°m' W><i U <UMrT'n< 0t°are
Finally, the general
rangeptent depend* on thto: T
fulness of too muoh rigidity,
homo taste should everywhere find ex-
pression in a thousand delightful ways.
The central and best adornment of the
' ' home to the blaao from the flro-
imblage or ar-
The dread-
and that
OOCXKXXKKXXXKKWCOOOOOOOOOOiMXXKMKXX)
jjBllKliLJRS KOAIPLUSSBD.
O The andmlgnwl tec Invented I Mule Machine o
O thai may be inatantlj nlUcbed to door* witbout O
O the nld of nell, Ixilt ur aerew, nod whh h will me- O
ilr 1 - ' '
mO
three for* ®®nU. ^A^atoO
o tranoe. * (>rnameutal «e well aduedful. Bent on O
O receipt di;ii> rente; three torU cente
5! '!-S4v.
O CALVIN K. KKAHH.Tror. Vnr Tart. o
ooooooooooooootioooooooooooooooooooo
BOinumR'l IWRiHT
—AID—
SE0T10N auiETS 8HIDE,
•VJe. The decorators, with all their
art* aad all their vermilion and gilt,
oan aot match it.
in
We might well a pare
r aireotion* for
other
full of
eeping i alive tho flarne^ so
obinotM*. so
Jovoua^ioss and cheer. It to the wisest,
nuleet, fittest, and richest of all the dec-
efalive adjuboteof a home room. It re-
mmrtyof equipment. It sheds
caeorfui illumination over the scantiest
•f floors. The lecturer closed with
toeac words: In the little I have said, I
nave tried not so' muoh to follow out
the line of progress laid down by rcoent
art writer* on the subject, as to stimu-
U e# ijUnking for oneself. Indeed, 1
have run oounter to a great many views
Which' have strong support. But 1 be-
,mvo;
of'7 to ohargea by
" i htr almost
icr. house and
Pre* Prru.
t lotro her
up on her
' slippen,
. and the ttre-
I-scuttle, and the
dtod to, <#m* that
rvoa^a mtoerohle
and beyond the
>rl A boyii-or a
jlfor that-r-oau never get
■sssfssaffii!!
*
-Bald-headed' men art so numerous
in Chicago that an audience to that citj
to said to ~look<% wKWl viewed from
above, like a cobble-stone pavement.
r.J.' !i ■ ■*<-—hi .i —
A Tosititb C'cbb for Rheumsttsm—Du-
;'* Jtheumatle Kenedy. Bend for clr-
" " "ey, Washing-
c^oa«lp|>ea.tlne
Puiailit fiaVoantfl KxMUovs are uted
the best hotels, confeetloa
first families in the country.
st H'-im
Bdicmatish cured atoneebv Dr. Durans's
HtaMaaU* Remed?. fiend for circular to
^yl^hsiiaUn* A Be^^ey. Washington. D. 0.
toCtoUmn.
OT never falls
r all druggists.
... DUBAXO'S
to tare rheumatism'.
PAlHMiats tod Inventors Ihoold read •dve^
_ vaaariiia a eoinsaaad
Vegetine it Sold by All Druggists.
A8S and Indl
retail to a f renter
Fefulat-
Ita notion, health it nl-
it Inrartabtf secured. In-
Mtlon or want of notion In
Liver caeeee Headache,
hetlpatlon, Jnandloe, Pain In the ■bonldera,Couj(li,
isalneea. Sour Btomncb, bad taste la the month,
. ... - a... - -■ - • - dopreaalon
'%yss;
. - — ... thece ail-
ments. It aats mildly, effectually, and. htlninslmo
pie rejtotnblo compound, ean do no Injury In any
* " - - ia s nr * *
qunntll
kjtotablo oompotind, ean d<
IUeatliat.lt may ho taken, ..
wnyi 11 has been rib tty years, snd hnndreda
erery wnyi
or the good nnd $
Will Touch fr>r Ita virtues, flu
hanuleaa Iu
| *reat from all
.ria ortheeountn
. ..on. Alexander H.
filer ens, of tieorcUl Bishop Pleroe. ofOrorf U; Jno
Olll Shorter, Fx-GoTornor of Alabama.
|Gen. John B. Gordon
IU L^MutUofC^oluai-
bus, Ga, are amonif
the hunlreda to
whrm we can refbr
K-at'iS?
Manufacturtd only
r.H. Kellln ft Co.,
Kxtract ol a lelti>r from lion* Alexander II.
Btcv.-ns, dated Maroit 8, 1871: "1 < ernslonally
nse, when mpeondltlon requires It, Ilr. Wnmious'
Liver KeauJator, with Kood effect. It Is mlbl, and
suits me better than mureaetlve remedies."
|(Jg RtME0Y
" I ean rtwoniiuend pi
Ian (flcacloun run dr for
Idlseast* of the Liver.
|lfearthum,an«l Dynpep
lain, filmmons* Llvei
llteirnlator. Lewis (•
hViiudtr, Chief Clerk
IMilladclphla Post Of-
I flee.*'
REGULATOR
HERTS WAITED £
la MM P.
aMmy,l
AnnaDaT. BOW TO MAKE it. B
suJabU. COM, TONQMM CO.,
• Honrs,*
-, Cfcleaae,
MMna Mm
Am
$20 fsr 2,
aaa ^ IfKHKIn yonr own town. Terms and H
#00 outflt free. II. IlALLnrr 4CO., Portland, lla
TL ® QlW • to A cents. 910 Outfit rrti
moo hVMI'.O VlCKKlir, Augusta. Maine
Miiaio Revolvers. Prlees reduced. Address,Grent
allflo Western Otin Works, PlUrtwinK I's.
, Sample free. 81 pa*.
rinieber,Il l>ey-si,N,A
S26*-0AY-l?.«.-lr
||4aBsy *t Agents wanted. Ontfl
#1* and terms free. TUUK A CO., Augusta, Ma.
a ycftr In Aircnta. nn-t n
SU.4 '• "I J.tr. 1,1-II.H I..I-
drc«;t, J, Hi fA«f i\ ., st.i
$2500
WANTED^
en to aril to Merehantn
POamnntb Atrsv Igss
psld. (Jem Mfg. Co..8t.l<ools.lls
;Nomatter bow slUhtly dlsab'ed. In
mv\i m*m
r sllsbtlv dls
.Jag s
eulverU,
road
FARMS AT 1 8ACMF1CB.
CaApH5Ml.0U'S ?i,.VrrI-"' ""
Iuwi'SSJeo)8100,1 K*rm' " •**".■•••'"- Dodsa.
no acna. wall ImproTod. a I roam Maraash II. I mttea
(mm Onakai iltinOi worth i;.vparVcn.
IM^r-,^.. 1,'ora Karm Is Mlaaoarl, Id Maa
, Onr of th. Iwat Stork Farm, in Kaaaaa. l.tUacna.
' fint+lSiTrS
two dwellings. 14
>18 acres Imnr
son Conn'
J eO. r^ (^aVx.MW>afi. ll A,
thr^fl? $$£&'WlSfdT^e*tt1nmV|^eaInnsU
Jar*:' WimdJuTl" UO«1'
_ -B. P. HtlTCHKISl * CO..
^LanlS ftrttSRfSXZ SWrT1* ^
ADVERTISERS
momiMMMa TO MMACM
TicREAD!BS sf THIS STATE
CAN DO SO IX TBI
Cheapest and Best Banner
ur APDUNive
3BL. mu mvr<Mk
IN IffllNMt Mrssfp M. lenisi Mm,
VOrdcrs rocelred for any Weatern State.
SB ts sioresafcyroCTssrsg
mimtiUAmmJ
tm&SA
I WOUwt*•grssledUMNiissbnmof snrelrsntsi% ws
■ will send yen a CSSMOMO H8 SILT WalK,
aad a ts-pegs, S4^ Ju n |«r«r WWEB for
'issjmxts^sxL.ts^
ax elusive foryov
required. Qtnai
addressing *Jaa.
flBOOT
npwtrr/tv «w4mm Mim iw o«u«ttsa "
UtiXIVlUA lutoMS.bfUie CMsrtpeaM An
tv ril nrf. tllMlMtwt otiMtaTC Hmt ftw
PATENTS
Assat% lit a llrset, Waabtngtse. IX a BataUlabad . 1*84.
9m altar alleweaes. Olrcalar ef lastrsrtlons. etc., Saul tree.
PARTLY MABEgHiRTs
kyadirtas.
—
18 suoh aawll
oleest la tbe world—Importers'
aa.va Largest CohtMny In AmerlcnT-
article—plsaaee everybody—Trade contlnual-y
easing—Agents wanted everywhere—best induce-
^weuTI'J ia*v.
leer
lions, and*
Jects. Just the
any newadealer or hj
Kaaaaa SU Haw
_ JOCRBAL gives«
ana new pieces for professional ai
-—L— ileeoa for school
PATENTS
««JrW,?lSk?r ^hiW.phirt c"
PROCURED
^'«55
WARLWAR!WAJ?J
'* War Claims'1 (IfJustU entitled)orou a^e SVRK to
get If yon address (with atamp) Wm. B. Proaton,
Army nnd Navy Claim Agent, Cleveland, Ohio.
THE DEMORB8T
QUARTERLY J0UKRAL Ol rAIHIORt.
Entertaining, useful, and large flrst-clsss Family It-
last rated l*aper. Price A eta, j yearly, 19 cta.,poswree.
,^?.Tinf.r.O,nMmla .l....
With 88 years' experlcnce ielltng what to plant.
Waiiave, by actual oonnt. over forty different prop*
aratlona for cough. Including all standard itiodlcineiL
old and new, catlt'd fcr In tills section. We have sold
Hatch's Universal Cough fiyrup for flva years. With
no newspaper advertising, this remedy has hsd a sale
larger than any other, it sells ate-idlly. sud main-
tains Itaelf, and our rustomera snrak unm rinly In Ita
fkvor, aa a asfosnd otllclent medicine of lis kind.
CAUI'KNTKU A ItAHUKLL. AUdon. N. T.
Sold by Meyer Ilros. A Co., 8t Louis, Mo.
Iyer & sows
\ I'omplHrguldoloadvnliiM'Hi. /InrrnJni rniil.—
A nccfKMivto all wb. sdtrrtl^.
- Tho iinmt ioinpl.-ln nod ridinble work of Uit« kind.
tVi>■>• ><* - Hi-mi free all whosdtortiwj,
M \A/ A V K I* k'Ut+fnmt 1 I «F.H Ml'ILUlXtJ,
N.W.AJhoN AilKNTaH, I I'll 11. MUSLIM 11 a!
lafilTFD KKM «> >ranl and Mil M
l^faad lama Sala
Sub.
scribe
t!2F1 ?'°P; f0'-— M.t>K
S . I'rfluoi wMirattdil
karat Gold Pens, from Ns. I Ih^|h to So. 8 oommaf.
n^i.^AT.'miiKr'i'* 5T' •t01"" cowwaa-
QAEWTTE for ft weaks, win lw s«ni io th«
ua BS.OO. Addrei
RICKSR a TlloMiS. ot wam„t.:.. i
$200
ttsryef CHARLEY Roan
tsarcs}
Tli. lllaMralad
atitun?*-
"r.U-rr arrltrn br lil.
>ka wD al a
low*ST FaiOES. ""
MUbBollai
Sa4hrPaafkM.ru.
Addma,
IN T^ewSD^tates
AmmwJw't
SS.000 or tn
aa^ artida aatQ
jam ban oar
Great ndactloa
la prices. Frae
wmn a oo,
Sopplr Bonss
A IDCBATIVE B9SINESS.
xm udutt
, Clicao,
to ft ta Mm. lit Ink * 1m StisMt. U
cl
4 08naengrat
TREESI PLANTS I!
h> 1.MI
Bloomlngtoa Nursery, McLean
Ike Jikntii
Baffler
PENSIONS
Joty, ts i
TUBE*if but slight, fivesa
pension. Disease of LUS|I
discharged for wound, jnjt"M8
or rupture, you get fhll boun-
ty. Sr8end O stamps for
copy of Pension and Bounty
nft'siEr
V. S. Claim As.nt, Indianap-
ells, Indl, aa-On all Icitera
m«-V P. O. Bo* 0*-^*
The Enemy of Disease, the Foe
of Pain to Man and Beast,
la tha Grand Old
MUSTANG
LINIMENT,
as
W*ANO
aenncis ten e* ca
K.OtUWCKe.CO
ttm
10* TUN
- tHKl
ltM 8 L.
* ADVERTI8EB8
Who desln* to reach country readers can do so lv
tho heat and rlicap. at manner by uatn* on« or mor*
aivtioua oi Tiik tlna^T NgwaPArKit At mi.mux
I.ihm. Apply to E.K. PRATT, lU.lscka .n «tn-ei
« li «"i*o.
MEBIDEN CUTLERY CO.
Reoalved the HIQHgST CCNTBNNIAL PRIIB.
(E "Patan IroaT' Baapta . j
TABLE CUTLERY.
leTnalMaferTofThe I1ARI> Rt>SttKR IlAW.
tKltJ_CO._Mj'n;lie l'la'lr. NN^anlrd an«1 aoM^by
MANUFACTURE ALL KINDS
Kscluslve Makers of the •• PATEB.T_JTJ^j
lknlfcLtha most dnrablo Wll
rn. Tlie oldest in snu far Hirers
srava call h f " Triute >lark"
In cutlery, and by the !NKR
iren to re
praise to
or
•s In America. Orl/rtn
CO.. ia Chant.™ Klntl. New V
Beantifal Premiums FrMto Xrary Snbeoribar of thl* Paper.
ibllshlng Company have Jnst Issued three beautiful color Chromatic Works of Art, In
,fooriic*ryi ■'•wr"trfl
sold
raver, while to hei
•oft
nv
Phe centrsl
" id - '
,.w,....... right sre two larger chili
irtgronnd of the entire motto Is a heauttr
.OUJJ IS MV SIIKPIIKKIMs also In old^
type, beantlfhlly embelllahrd with vines and rosea
-st Viler, "G,*1 Is a mother teaehlna nc twoehl
^ ... . i siagti
Ith hesntlfnl Sowing n bslaslng
_.j«apaSeenh, repri^entln
Ingllsh trpe, besutifnlly euib
jjr tha l.ord ss s shepherd.
r„, « aa.u u™.
•wmiidim
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Robson, G. W. The Frontier Echo (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, April 20, 1877, newspaper, April 20, 1877; Jacksboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth233843/m1/3/: accessed May 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.