The Dallas Daily Herald. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 242, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 28, 1880 Page: 4 of 8
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THE DALLAS HERALD SAT UK DAY MORNING AUGUST 28 1880.
THE DALLAS DAILY HERALr
PFOUTS ELLIOTT St HALL.
Mttered'.at thelfost-offlce at Dallas Texat ft
Beeond-cUtss matter.
TBS DAILY HERALD.publishedcvcrymorn-
ling except Monday. Terms by mail.postuge
paid Jl.Ou a month. City subscribers served
bvenrriers.a w'if a wet payable to car-
run. TBM WEEKLY HERALD published etery
Thursday. Terms by mail postage puid one
copy one year
PBRSOyS WISHiya to subscribe for a longer
neriod ean se'id in their orders or any length
tf timejor either edition at above ratts.
SEWS AGE.VTH enn be supplied with THE
HERALD direct Jrom our office at the uniform
rate of 2H cents per copy postage prepaid.
BEHtTTTAXCES should be made in Fvstoflce
Orders or Registered Letters.
ADVERT18IXU RATES reasonable and will
be made known on applicath
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
District Clerk.
We i:e Am-uimizEi) to announce
wM A II YUWOOt) as a cuiididuti' i n
ieettoi ioth" fie ol UUtrlet Uk at tu
ensuing Jiovwnber I'luctlun .
County AHuehnor.
WE ARK AUTHORIZED TO ANNOCSCL
R I). RAWUSS a a candidate 1T re-
election to the office ol'Cnuuty Aiiexnr
County Clerk.
WE ARE AUTiIOUlZED TO ANNOUNCE
A 1 UtWOil. as n cundidiite f.ir n
action xo ttooillee of County Clerk t 1U
eoanty. -
WE AUE AUTHORIZED TO ASSOVSCE
B. WAHKEN STONE as t. inmli-
dale for County Clerk at the ensuing Jiuvhii-
br election.
Jiidth-e of the Pmce.
WE ARE AUTHORIZE' XO ANNOUNCE
W. M. EDWA11DS in a candidate fm ru-
election totlm "nice of .lm.tled Hie lice
Tax Collector.
Allv AUTHORIZED TO ANNOUNCE
W W?n HJATHEit as a candidate for
FMUotYon to the office ol to collector for
Dallas county
WE ARE AUTHORIZED TO ANNOUXCE
ROBERT B. sEAY its a candidate for
re-elwtlOD to the office of County Attorney ot
Dallas County.
County ContuiUHloucr.
WE ARE AUTHORIZED TO ANNOUNCE
W. J. KELLER as candidate for re-elec-"
ion as Comity Commissioner from l'reclnet
Ro.l.
FOR MA YOU
JOHN J. GOOD.
Election Scplcmtjcr 14.
IKDICATI0K8.
Stationary barometer ami tfmprrturr;
southerly winds: partly cloudy intither; lueul
sains.
"What ii the matter with the paper mails
between Dallas and Palestine? Our papers
re sent regularly and promptly daily from
this post office and yet complaint after com-
plaint is made hy Palestine and other points
in that section that they do not reach there
until the day after. Will the authorise
promptly look into this mattor ''.
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT.
Yesterday was a memorable day for the
criminal annals of Texas. Three tet execu-
tions for the fatal Friday was an unusua-
callenilar. Two hangings under the law's
provision! and one suicide to avert them
ought to constrain even our bitterest
traducers to allow us a more than valctudinl
arian virtue in the matter of attempt-
ing to suppress crime. Capital punishment
is the extreme penalty of the law and
has been applied from the earliest history of
man dewn to the present day in some shape
or another. Whatever may bo its merit it
has'been frequently reprobated by jurists.phil-
osophers and phi'antbropUts many of whom
most peremptorily deny the right of any
person or tribunal to impose it. Among the
more barbarous tribes it is a punishment in-
flicted for certain offences but as in the case
pf the Hottentots without any regular form
of trial. The object of the penalty is two-
fold first to exterpate the ollender as is the
case with the ruder stages of civilisation and
second as a warning to others. The ques-
tions to which the subject give rite may be
classified under the headings of 1st as to the
right of society to inflict it; 2nd'as to the of-
fences for which it ought to be decreed; 3rd
as to the expediency of the punishment; and
4th as to the method or manner employed.
On the first question it appears that it has
been in vogue from the time that Moses the
law giver first proclaimed as a part of the
theocratio polity ''an eye for
n eye and a tooth for
a tooth" down to this moment among the
most civilized humanity said to be carved "in
the image of the Maker." In a state of
nature it Is urged men have the right to
repel force by force upon the principle that
self-preservation is the first law of nature.
This being so society which is but an aggre-
gation of units must have if possible a
greater right from the fact that there has
been an admission and authorization by each
member of the social system. Reversely it
Is contended that as life is the gift of God no
man has the right at his will to terminate it
and if the individual has not then logically
the aggregation of individuals or society can
have no derivative right and it certainly has
no inherent one. This if we remember
rightly was Bentham's view. But in his Essays
on Crimes and Punishments a very forcible
writer the Marquis Boccaria emphatically
denies the right to government to thus punish-
He argues that the notion of consent is mere
theory and ;bas no foundation in fact as in
the case of a foreigner coming into a country
and committing on hit first entrance what
the laws denominate and what he does not
Know to be a criminal act as for example an
American entwine Zulu land. Drin from
this aoctrlna of consent the upholders of
.u nw base it upon the rightthatsoci-
lyhai to purlihthoiewho seek to over-
throw Its yrtera. At Jt i( . mot
v s-wion and whilst a Valerian ritdditr
W Rovernme-nt Insists upon the institution
the more humanitarian feelings of an im-
proving civilization seem to discountenaner
It and at least secretly wish for its extirpa-
tion. As to the offences or crimes these als.-
are matters of discussion. Tho Uebrows in
Moses' time punished by death such offenct s
as idolatry blasphetry disobedienco t
parents desecration of the Sabbath etc. The
laws of Greoee and Home were not far re-
moved from these in their severity as in-
stance the case of the pure and noblo Socra-
tiB who was condemned to dio by drinkirii!
the fatal hemlock because he was charged
with not believing in the gods. Montesquieu
in his admirable treatise Esprit des Lois telli
us that under tho Roman decemvir regime
the penalty of death was denounced against
the writers of libels and pools. Even as late
as tho last century in this "land of the free
and home of the bravo" old women were put
to death legally for witchcraft and for
"nnnointing themselves with rooster egg oil
for the purpose of converting themselves into
witches.' And so Into as tho era of the
Georges in "enlightened and mcrrio England"
people "who could not rea l wero to bo put
to death without benefit of clergy." Only a
few days ago wo read somewhere an extract
from one of tboso laws viz: "Stealing in a
dwelling house to the amount of 40 s; stoalipg
privately in a shop of 5 s; counterfeiting
stamps used for the sale ofperfumory and
hai" powder for cither of thosn otlences tho
penalty is death." We of to-day are
amused disgusted or indignant at these
things but who shall say what the peoplo of
the next century will think of our laws.
Humanity of former ages was as conscien-
tious and as serious as are we now. Thee
reflections givo us pause and shako our faith
in the soundness of tbo arguments urged in
behalf of capital punishment. To this add
the consideration of the trials in all tho de
fectiveness of their processes and procedure
from indictment to final disposition from the
Draconian code to the comitia centuriata
from the German wehrgeld to tho English
statutes and we can all tho better appreciate
the magnitude of tho responsibility the pro
ciriousnss of the justice that sends a
brother's soul into tho othor world. We
have opposed Govornor Roberts on lwany
subjects but wo have ever respected the
views feelings and acts of tho ex-chief justice
asd tho present repository of the most
sacred of humanitarian trusts. In the
tab ninjal of his own bosom let his
decisions bo forover sacred. Thirdly :
But assuming the right what if
the expediency of capital punishment? This
question too has its pros and its cons. That
it had no effect on tho offend- r is disproved
by the fact of his commission of tho crime.
That society by being rid of his presence is
better off is debatable If in confinement
for life under a proper penitentiary regime
he is made a producer of values in excess of
his quantum of consumption or exponse is
not society at least as well or mavhaps
bettor off? Let us supposo that hangings
wero of daily occurrence would not the fre-
quent spectacle have tho effect of hardening
and indifference? Familiarity would then
deprivo them of thoir horror. AU history
shows'that the bloodiest codes are not those
which have most effectually suppressed of-
fonoes. Again.where the alternative is present-
ed to an enlightened jury whether convic-
tion to death or acquittal or a conviction
with imprisonment for life we apprehend
that the latter will much moro frequently be
recorded. It ia the adequacy and the cer
tainty of punishment for a crime not the
excess of it thnt will always provo tho more
effective rule. Imprisonment for lifo has-
another effect in a humanitarian point of
view : it gives the offender a chance not
merely for death-hour rcpentanco but for
life-long reform. And suroly this is a much
It is said that Frederic the Great required
all death judgments of his courts i) ba writ-
ten on blue pnpor so as to bo constantly re-
minded of thorn as they lay on his table
among other papers and so as to distinguisb
them. Fourthly as for tho mode or manner
of punishment this has been infinite in va-
riety as it has been ingenious in the infliction.
Among those with respective nations wo ro-
call the tearing of the criminal to pieces
starving to death burning at the stake roast-
ing by a slow firo crucifixion disjointing by
the rack poisoning breaking on the whool
quartering hanging guillotining or behead
ing dripping of water on the head
strangling bloeding shooting etc. etc. Of
all these wa know no one now held more in
famous than hanging. It is tho mode prac
ticed in England as woll as ia this country
the guilotine being tho instrument used in
France and the garotlo in Spain. It has
been the desire of civilization however to
render death thus imposed as speedy and as
painless as possible. Of the three kinds just
mentioned hanging is supposed to host attain
these results the cause of death .hereby be
ing ordinarily suffocation from tho tighten
ing of the rope about the windpipe. Those
who have survived a case of hanging by the
neok report delightful experiences "the
brief moment of discomfort" they say
"giving way to beautiful sensations of varied
lights and colors and charming visions."
Henry IV. ot France once sent his physician
to an escaped criminal who had been bung
but not to the death to consult him and
then to o'er the man a pardon
whsn the lattar coldly answorod that
"it was not worth the asking." But
public executions are not only detestable and
disgusting but uttorly fail of the object pur-
poieti. They tend to brutalize and not to
reform. In England it was once the custom
to hang tho bodies of certain malofactors in
chains after the execution; tho bodios of cul-
prits wero disomboweled or thoir heads were
put up and paraded on poles or posts those
of pirates wore strung up on the banks ot
the rivers etc. But all this it now discon-
tinued and discountenanced and for the same
reasons publlo executions should be A few
yean ago an act of parliament required that
these should take place within the precincts
of a prison In the sight only of certain offl-
cialt newspaper reporters and othori spocial-
ly invited to be present. This presence in-
sured that the execution actually and properly
took place onthecondemnel person. During
Marat Danton Kobespiere and the others '
purchased Dr. Guillotine's patent head de- j
otpitator we aro told that the executions in '
Paris wero onjoyed by crowds and crowds of
women and children Jacobins who used to go
with their knitting needles to witness
tho bloody wotk. A subsequent
law prohibited all this. One week ;
a;o to-day wo set forth our spooial reasons j
for opposing these public executions theso '
flings that make tbo culprit the hero of tho
hour before the thousands who attend from
a morbid cuiiosity and becomo hardened by !
t o great familiarity with the spectacle. The i
ltw of this state requires that these hangings
shtll be private in tho jail or jail yard if
possible. Let tho rext legislature of Texas !
strike out the last two words and it will have :
takon a step forward in the interest of hu- i
manily in tho cause of civilization as well as
ia tho detergence of crime.
Throut Cut.
Yesterday afternoon B. F. Cook who
lives in Tarrant county just beyond tho
Dallas county lino in tho west fork of the
Trinity river ia a difficulty beyond tho rivsr
had his throut cut but not dangerously. It
seems that nt tho city end of the turnpike
beyond tho river three men wero standing
be.-ide the road all of them under the in
fluence of liquor. According to Cook's
statement thoso men were uttering insulting
remarks to every person who passed ty. lie
and some friends went by thorn and ono of
his friends taking umhragn at the remarks
they made went back and became involved
in a difficulty with thorn. He went back
then and when tho fight took place
ho rushed in to separuto tho parties
and ono of the three men in question hit him
with a rock and he then knocked thn man
down and on the second one's making a
demonstration at him be knocked him down
when the melee became general and during
it ono of thorn cut his throat with a pocket
knife. The wound while it reached aro ind
his throi.t is a slight one only going skin
deep lie bled profusely and coming to
town Dr. Childress dressed his wound in a
skillful manner and made hiin all right.
Cook showed nerve and grit all the time and
refused solicitations to go to tho hospital
where ho could bo under tho able and skill-
ful mantigcment of Dr. Childress saying
that be hud been there before had been shot
and knew how soro wounds got and preferred
to go homo nt once where ho could be under
tho nursing and tender care of his family. Ho
is all right and will shortly bo well.
MATTERS II Y MAIL.
Commerce With China.
Washington Aug. 27. After an investi-
gation it is found that China does not dis-
crimin it') against the United States in the
mntter of duties etc. therefore the president
will issuo his proclamation permitting the
Chinen steamer now en route to San Fran-
cisco to enter that port on a fooling with the
mos. favored nation.
M'ECIAI. NOTICES.
53".sOTlCE t' Stockholders Dallas Wicli-
Uti Hullron'J Coni)iony. a meeilnu of the
Kuckholders of the Dallas & Wichita railroad
C'liirnny will be l.eld at the general ofliceof
Biiii) comimuy In tlie city ot DalluH statd of
Texae on Monday the 27th day of Sejtm-
litr a. D. 1-J-0 for Die purpose ot determin-
ing whether a mortgage shall be executed
upon the franchise uud corporate property for
tli t purpose cf oonatructiug completing ami
iiuprovln:' Ha rn'.lwiy.
U'il SOS D. DENNETT
"( M i !. A Wichita HiillTou I i onnary.
Tut- !ihi:itM and Host JEa-
i u J 1 1 e t ' I ; i s f 1 1 e an e
Fragrant VANITY FAIR
7 FIRST PRIZE MEDALS
"MIl.D"-TSare old Virginia.
"HALVES" Hare old l'eriqne and Virgin
Special Concsslon by the French Government.
Sold lu all Civilized Countries.
WM. S. KIMBALL & CO.
Peerless Tobacco "Works. Rochester N. Y.
Seven First Drlze Medals awarded Vanity "fair
und Krat;rau Vanity Fair.
An Fll'oi l IteluK Millie to Incorporate
Wills I'olnt-KuviiKOH ! tlielloll
Worni in Uvvgjs mill Ilnrrl.
sim Counties r.te Etc.
Fou r won i ii.
Correspondence of the Uernld.
Foiit WollTH August 27 lMi.
A month ago a dog bit little Elberton
Harvey. A mad-stono and other remedies
wero applied and seemingly with satisfactory
results. Last Sunday nigbt however tho
boy showed signs of hydrophobia. He waa
taken to the hospital. Though somewhat
improved he is suffering considerably.
Major ii. K. Fly delivered a lecture last
night at tho court-house to a small but
appreciative audience subject "Mexico."
At Birdvill? yesterJay a gentleman with ono
arm crippled and tho other off was cowardly
attackidby a burly countryman but tho
countryman retired to parts "unknown con-
siderably worsted. It is reported that Bill
and Taylor Johnson and their sister Maud
who left here on the 15th inst. have been
killed by Indians on the road between Forts
Concha and DhvIs. As yet tho report is
doubted. B. F. Barkley'ha a field of
eight acres of cotton said to be th-' best in
this neighborhood. Three men rodo up
to tho jail last night saying thoy would chop
tho door down and lot out Davis and Poole
who was incarcerated yestordny for
lighting. A Mexican who was the only
watch just then at tho jail planted himself
with'a shot-gun and tho would-be liborators
retired. Dr. George of Lexington Ky.
arrived last night and will preach at tho
Presbyterian church next Sunday. An
other bale of Tarrant county new cotton is
on tho markot to-day. Tho Waverly still
holds its own as a tlrst-class place lor a man to
rest rat sleep and bo hospitably treated.
ijocai upuon aionarcn reigns supreme i vuo
Fort and McIJraver nlavs woll its part. Thev
aro favorite brands and aro to be had at tho
Local Option saloon presided over bv the
genial Chris Kintloman and Charles Hiller.
Tho imbibinc of eithor and a few whiffs from
a Pacific Railway Improvement cigar is suf-
ficient to make tho grand duke smile.
Continued on Heonil piigc.
.Jeme Grant Enifiiseil.
San Francisco Aug. 27. The engagement
of Jesse youngest son of Goncral Grant to
Lizzie daughter of W. I. Chapman a
largo California land owner is announced.
The marriage takes place at the raiace liotci
next month.
TERMS OF ADMISSION
To the Claanew of tne Dnlla Femnle
College.
AN ORDINANCE ESTABLISHING TDK
office o! "slop coiilrm tor" mid ddliinig
hmuuty anil rerfulatlniMheremoval of slops.
He It ord -tilted by the cliv council uf the city
of Dallas:
! Miction I. That Die office of "slop con-
tractor" be and Ishereliye tiillihod uud the
i."ty council of tho city of Dallus ehalleach
year elect tointipcrnoii to till the omen of nlop
contractor who ahull hold said olllce for one
i yi iir or until bin succe-sor is elected. Fro-viili-d
lliat il Kiiid s!opeoiitract')r!-liall fall to
diM'hiirKc the duliraol his office to the hmIh-
fHctlon ol tlit hetlih office ortlie committee on
1 Iioi'plinl. it el t ii 1 1 be the iluly of the city coun-
cil upon tlie written request of the health of-
lieer orof the committee on lioupp nl to luuiie-
ilmtely diM'hare aaid nlop contractor und elect
! toiueoni! in 111 Mteiid.
1 Cue. 2. It Hiutll be the 'u'y of tin- hlop cop-
triflor whenever re(iie!-t''tr. lo leoiino nvd
carry out ot tiio city ii.l rl..p3 an 1 h-v.i e riVnl
eitiinted in Ibi'i-ily ulid piunrrd for reuioviil
us h-rcliiafier lU-oKr.a'ed.
ffKo.'l. The wov l Moh ns une.l ii till ordi-
nance me ns nil Mlliie Hunt I' km! unices
whether vegetable or iiiiln. il '.lnown out o.-
rejected from the kiicheiis or liou-ei of the
lnualutauiMif Hit- ciiy.
Hav. 4. All i-l is and ho'ise offal ixiept
nshe chilli he d.-p iiod lu K-dtablo ver . id
ti'ou or woi il and Kept In convenient phice
e.syof accees ntll .lir.en. to be taken 'tivuy
by thei-lop contractor and wli- u so ken iliv
are prepared tor removal u stlpu iitnl lu sec-
tion .'of this ordinance
Skc. I. Kliiill he unlawful fornny person
to allow slops to remain for more tlinutwentv-
four hours upon the premises or upied by
such person i'rovlded that It shall not be u
violation of this section If such kIoik remain
on uud premises through the nexlect uf the
slop contractor after having bieiiriuistc I to
remove Uiema e.
!kc 15. The Blop contractor shall in every
txuticaliir comply with all the prov'sloi s of
the various city ordinances and rtues pres-
scribed by the heilth ollleer reKulutliiK the
time and manner of removing slops and illlh.
Sec ". Any persou desiriui; toe service! ol
the slop Miitraclorniay obtain tlie same by
leaving H wrltleu i'eiliest with the keeper of
thecal.iboo e or Willi the health ollleer glv-
iuA strtet and number of house.
Sei (-'. As compensation the ilop contract-
or shall receive such sums as the council mar
by rusolullou determine ; and one oopy of said
resolution shall be left with the keeper of the
ciiabonse ami cue copy Willi the health olll-
eer for ihe inspection by and Information of
all persiiiS intere.-ted therein.
Sko.'.i The compensation shall lie paid In
all dues by the person or persons having the
wotk done and any one einplovliiR tlie slop
contractor and failing to pay "him for work
done shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor
and lial' e to flue at hereinafter provided.
tii'.c. lo If tho slop contractor shall full to
carry ( u" any slops within twenty-loin lioure
after having heu liotliled to remove tliesiini-
tie shall be guilty ofa misdemeanor unit liable
to line a hereinafter provided.
Sue 11. Persons may eoutrnct with slop
cont.'acttir it j tin wed; or month or year for
the removal of slops from the premises occu-
pied by them niid if the slop contractor shall
during tho term so contracted for fail to visit
Raid promises nt least ono - a day and remove
the slops ilieit from he shall be deemed Riillty
of a misdemeanor and liable to flue as herein-
after provided.
sue. l-j Kiu-h day that slops shall he al-
lowed to remain on im v premises after theex-
piration of tlie time when by the terms of
this ordinance they should have been re-
moved shall be deemed and held to be a tep-
arate olTauif and punished accordingly.
isKc. 11 The slop contractor shall iiave Ills
cart or wpu so arranged that the swill find
Blop will not he snilled and said skips ehail be
carried suillcleutly far lroiu city limits so as
not to be offensive.
Sec. H. If the slop contractor or any other
person shall violate any leetlon ot this ordi-
nance he shall ha deemed guilty of a nils lo.
ineuuor mid lined In any sum not less than
live or more tliun twenty-five dollurg
8ec. 1.1. Tuat this urdiuanco take effect
from passage. ami publication.
Approved this 21st day of August 10.
Attes : L. V. BOll.N Y Mayor pro tern
i J. il. Heiikfohd City He'iretiry.
BRT GOODS.
ELECTION NOTICE.
Pi lmary class per month $2 M
Preparatory class first grade per month li so
Preparatory class second itrade per mo. 4 00
Collegiate class per month 5 00
Musical vocal orinsirumeniaiper iiiomn o eu
Use of Instrument for pruc ice per month 1 D
F.locutiou 2 01
Board per week 4 00
Itills are cavabla monthly are due when
ill iiupll la enrolle I and are expue'ed to be
pld by the inlddls of each scholastic month.
fiipuswiii not oe aiinweii ic ihkc pun 01
their course In the colleee and a part from
tuimhen that have no connection with the
college.
The Little Boy' School will bi tiucht by
Miss Cotey of whose rare ability und
efticlency a n teacher our patrons alresd
have knowledge Home of the higher cluso
will also recite to Miss C'otley
The Little Ultis' fclmol will continue under
the direction of Miss Juliette A. Smith. This
department could not bo in better hands.
The music classes will bo In charge ol Miss
ftollo Ctraves accomplished In her profession
Industrious and faithful In her work.
Mrs. Lynch a learned lady distin
guished as a tuacuer aud formerly teacher
of Latin and malhomntlcs In the Weslcyan fe-
male institute at Staunton Virginia will be
first assistant lu the collegiate classes.
Twci.va Uot.D ManAi.a are ottered this year.
The Dallas Hkiiald oilers one in Kagllsh
grammar and one in geometty; Colonel J. B.
Impson one for belt essay on cooking; sen-
ior class of last ear one In trigonometry;
Rev. Mr Shea one In penmanship; J 8. Wit-
wer esq. one in Vocal lutisloi Dr. F. E
Hughes one In physiology Miss Cottey one;
M. H. Hlokox one lu chemistry Dr. K. E.
Hughes Colonel Junes It. Simpson JiuIko
B. llarksdale Colonel J. O. Ebllu Colonel W.
L. Crawford T. 8 Miller es.p and Hilllp
Lindsley esq. two lu elocution; the presldeut
of the college Hire- one for highest griule In
th senior class and two In Latin. Other tiled-
til and prizes will be offered.
Number of matriculates last year two hun-
dred tnd sixteen.
School begin Wednesday September 1st
1SS0. MARSHALL McILHANY
President.
IN ACCOBDAXCE with a resolution of the
City Council and by virtue or the author-
ity vested in nie as Mavor protein. I hereby
order a special election to beheld in the City
of Dallas on the 14th rj ay of September A. 1.
ir-ou n uetng me second iiifsitav In said month
for the purpose of electing a Mayor of said cliy
to fill tliu unexpired term now vacant. The
polls will be opened as lollows: In the First
ward at the Court-house; in the econd ward
at. L. 1!. Uark'e 8tre on Caiun street; In the
Third ward at Marble vard on Elm street op.
poslte Buck Horn corner and In the Fourth
ward at Young's school house. The judges of
the election will be as follows: In lite First
ward C. M Terry ; in the Second ward W W.
ltoss; in the Third ward John Henri- Blown
aud in the Fourth ward John J. Eak In.
In testimony w hereof I have hereunto set
my hand olUclally this August 13d A T. IStO.
L. F. BOH NY
Attest: Mayor pro tern.
J. 11. IlEiicroan City Secretary.
DISSOMTIOX NOTICE.
BEIT KNOWN THAT I HAVE THIS PAY
sold my entire interest in the buslne s
known as tho Trinity ( Igar Factory lathe
city of Dallas Texas to L. S. Kuliu. tne said
L. S. Kuhu assnmlDg all liabilities and col-
looting all outstandliig'ilebts. Mr.L.H.Kuhn will
henceforth alone conduct said buslne"" nnd I
earnestly and heartily recommend him to all
old and new patrons as a Just and honorable
merehent and I respectfully solicit for him
fullest measure of public patronage.
the I
Vtrr reanttntTilll v vrtnra
- . I. POPPER
Dallaa Texas May 4th 18j0.
Calling attention to the above notice of ills-
inlml.m t ... r.. 1 1 r ....
eolation I respectfully ask for a continuance
of that patronage with which the Trinity
Cigar Factory has heretofore been favored.
tsmmtalnv a. I !. .. i r - .1 . '
. f wcumi miii mii tile ueaiings
of the house will be conducted with that
promptness and integrity whlcti has hereto-
fore characterised it.
Respectfully
L. S. KUHS.
rraprletor Trinity Cigar Fuctory.
Great Clearing Out Sale
.
E. Mittenthal
A.0 Sc
Are now running off thoir iramonee stock of Summer Goods at ruinous
prices to make room for tboir full stock which Mr. A. Mit-
tenthal is now buying in Eastern Markets.
600 Pa'r LKdies'Cloth Shocs.at cot'.; 10 Dozen Mcns'Iow quarter Shoes at costjeur immense
Line of liriliiuMincs Piques and Lawns; also their famous stock cf Laces Em-
broideries and Trimmings positively at 10 per cent less than the regular prices.
THEY HAVE JUST RECEIVED
A fine lino Press Silk? Trirarainij Silks Satins; also un elegant assort-
ment cf S-ilk Velvet. They linre besides ft largo stock of
Cu-j ets and House Furnishing Goods verr cheap.
ESPECIAL INDUCEMENTS TO THE WHOLESALE TRADE.-!
A. & E. MITTENTHAL - 606 Elm St.
ISTA-SjLISHIEID 1874.
T E R & GIBSON
PPJXTERS BINDERS
n
BLANK BOOK I
URERS
Corner Elm mid Lamar StreetM.
IE TOT R IM J 3 "CJiESrS
ALL KINDS!
a.rui MfffMliiiiSi mm$n t&
:F!: J! 'v1 k. .Si
W - ' - - - MM- " " u j 1
l i i l I"" J:
mm
Chairs
Brackets
looking CHanse s
Lounge?
Matresees
ii Child's CarVes
Spring Beds
Etc. Etc. Etc
JLT
NEWPHICES tM
f... '....'ni:''
BOTTOM PBICES
T. BILLING-TON
701 Elm Strtet Cor. of Col!
Hallas .Texas.
JEHT'I.ltY.
KWEPFLY & SOB .
THE NEW
K e3L
-s Jm
-. !J I t3?3
4?
Hi
IN
PATENT DUST PROOF GASE
ZaSanufaoturors of Jowelr
AND DEALERS iN
DIAMOND ROODS WATCHES CLOCKS
Spectacles Silverware Etc.
6U MAIN ST. - DALLAS TEXAS
DALLAS PAPER WAREHOUSE 407 MAIN ST
C. E. YREELAND
WboUeale and Retail Deainr lu all binds or
Paper and Printers' Supplies
Paper Sags nud Wrapping Paper.
CASH PAID FOR RAGS AND PAPER STOCK
Opposite LeGrand Hotel - Dallas. Texas.
BOOK AND PAPER HOUSE
Wholesale and Retail.
NEWS AND FLAT PAPER!
Also a gmi-iU line of Printer' Goods a idneral Platlorirvi alsostrtr ran. Alirf rhl(h
Will be sold at redsotd prions being col' iitireii!iie In n'n'latrlr. o. n r Mi.n ft.Lollas
J. E" 5ERRY Aeent.
ALWAYS BLACK.
TEXAS IIVES.
Uannfsornred by
QK .8. "WORLST . . DesiacnTet.
J. II. PIKE.
FURNITURF
WHOLESALE and RETAIL
US Elm St. Dallas Texas
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The Dallas Daily Herald. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 242, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 28, 1880, newspaper, August 28, 1880; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth281518/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .