Norton's Daily Union Intelligencer. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 22, 1882 Page: 1 of 4
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0 T
SUN'S
I NT ELLIS ENCEB-
VOL. VII
DALLAS, TEXAS, .JUNE 22, 1382,
NO. 44.
TO NOBTHEBN SuMMES SESGBTS.
Chicajgoto Waukesha, several trains daily.
This s the new direct WaukeshaIine„Trjr
it. It is the best.
Chicago to Milwaukee, tiye trains daily.
Chicago to Marquette, this is the direct
route.
Chicago to St Paul, two fast trains daily.
Chicago to Madison, via Milwaukee and
Waukesha.
Chicago to Sparta, two express trains
daily.
Chicago to Green Bay, three trains dai-
ly.
Chicago to Menasha. two express trains
daily*
Chicago to Green Lake, two trains daily.
No other road runs to Green Lake.
Chicago to Lake Mills, No other road
runs there.
This is the only line to Devil's .Lake,
Wisconsin.
This is the only line fro ni Chicago
Lake Geneva.
Chicago to all Northern .Resorts, many
trains daily.
All of the above are via Chicago and
North-Western
It alone runs Pullman Cars north of
[ Chicago. ,
It has Parlor Cars north of Chicago.
It alone ruiiB Dining Cars north of Chic*
I ago,
Go through Chicago when going north.
All ticket agents can sell you excurson
I tickets v^a the Chicago & North- Western
I Kail way.
It is the Pioneer Tourist Route, and is
I the best.
Try this new Waukesha line. It is the
Ishortest. m24-20t
IA
$245
f!30 sl'JAHE GBaN'D PIANO for ONLY8245
>IA$0 STYLE 3 1-2
IcoJ cuss, elozatitlv {nUM, 3 strings. 81.
ptaves^ul patent csntante agraffes, our new
Jtont QTjjjy8rn.Bg soale, hoautiful caved legs and
11, ho n'yjscipantitio and large fan'y fliouldiiijr,
Ij] irim "frame, Freich Grand action, Grand
VgmeiSi in tact, every improvement wktob can
[ aPV way t3n i to till perfection of the instru-
l;nt, nan been added.
|k3TGur price for shis inatmment, bosed
ia delivered on board cars at Ne^r York
(th fina Piino Cover, Stool
cook. Only
I'ducod from our late wholreul f ctory price.
dollavs, fur BO dey oily, to have tlsia beautiful
|inj lntroduoei, Xhiali now, livf-u, the groat
b ircaiu ever offered the musicM public. Un.
i ct lente 1 raoowtl l'remeadoua donandfur this
lit! Old- r at once.
fl'liri liaub will be sent on 15 <3aj s test irial.
:*e Send lefereiiae if you do not scud money
|d« Cash lent itli oruer will be refunded and
l iyiii charges paid by us both w»ys it Piano is
|t just us represented. Oner 15,coo in uso, and
Dtoue disaatlsged prTchwer ^nidsooie illu».
ktid Cauiogue, ruciled free, gi^tnjr the h'gho^t
jlncnsi.'da cv r awarded any , faciuver. Every
1.110 tdil warranted for five years, Sheet niUHeJi
licv cmai gue of 3.9U0 choice pie:e« for 3stamp.
| it.u " ohu rialuC;., lios 2ci>8, X. V.
milS.'S
NORTON'S UNION INTEL
LIGENCER.
"Thk old Reliable" Union jmper and
the stalwart advocate ot
national republicanism.
Commends itself to all, who are Hevot
d to the principles of the grand party
Pogrese ami Freedom-
It has now entered upon a new volum
nd asks at the hand of those, who profese
epublicanism that to which it is justly en
itled a liberal and generous support.
The Intelligences was the last Union
panel published in the states that attempt
<hi to secede Irom the Federal Union—and
couldn't.
The Intelligencer is the oldest repub
lican paper In the south. '
'J he ln-iellloenceh was for many years
he ot\l\ republican journal in the south.
The editor and proprietor of the Intel
ioencer has continuously kept the old
flag flvins" under the most trying cir-
cumstances—lias stood faithlul among the
faithless"—has passed through "the fiery
urnace" ot proscription intolerance <md
deadly hate" and
unaided and al0he
hag striven to upjS Id the cause of the
CONSTITUTION AND THK UNION
Teza*.
Haviag demonstrated that a republican
paper can be published in the old demo-
cratic stronold under the most adverse
trcum stances, and having made the in •
telliojcncer a
PERMANENT INSTITUTION
having speut his time and talents a.id
money, when friends were "few and far be
tween" having borne the brunt and bur-
tnec ol the tight; he believes that in tne
dawn of a better day oe has the right to
as«v those who "claim to be republicans'
to help exteud its circulation.
we shall continue
to advocate what we believe the right and
to advance the be*t
interest 0e texas.
lu our columns will be touudmuch use
ul information for the business man, the
armer and mechanic'and all classes of
community. We shall continue our ea
deavors tor
and order and oood goveknmk nt
The Intelligencer continues to advo
•:ate i'uDUc tf rte Schools, morality tern-
ierance and virtue-^-ehdeavoring "to
cheer the taste and cultivate the mind,
po "build up the waste places" and to ben
clit maukinu.
lo our old readers, it is not necesinrv to
cay more—they understand us, 'lo the
new, in our midst we say try us, or not as
you please I We have entered upon the IS
volum# 01 the weekly and are in the Oth
volume of our dail*. W't uave made as
good publications as our mtans would per
mit—unpretentious and unamingssu
hhoujfh our pai>ec may have been, we are
satisfied that, in our humble capacity we
Norton's Intelligent-
FfBLISHED DAILY AND WEEKLt
yV.p. J^OHTOJS 8f£o.
The
WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER
has the best circulation ot auy
paper published in North-
ern Texaa.
Terms of Subscription.
DAILV.—One year, $6 00; b)» months, $3 OC
one month, 60 cents; per week, 20 cents.
WEEKLY.—One year, in advance, $2 50; a. te
hroe months, $3 U0; after sis mac bs, $3 60.
ADVERTISING—WEKKt-V :
First Insertion, #1 60 per square or (right lines or
lees. Each subsequent insertion, 75 cents. All tran.
sent advertisements must be paid In advance. Au
AD.KRTlSEMEN'fS DUG on FIHST 1MS8KTION. liuUs-
Suable deduction made toxoarli advertisements
THK LAW OF NK W8PAl'K118.
1. Bubsnribera who do not give express notice to
he coutraiy aie considered aa •vishiug to coutiuuu
heir subsoriptions.
'i. If subscribers order tb'< ds.aeontlauanoi ol
their periodicals the publisher may continue to
send them until all rearranges h*ve been paid.
3. It subscribes neglect or rufuao to tatee their
recU'd, they aru held rosponaibleuntil they have
settled their bill and ordered a discontinuance.
4. If subscribers mo* e to another plaee without
Informing the publisher, and the papers areseu.
tj the lormtir directory they ate held responsible.!
6. The courts have decided that refusing to takt
perlodcals from tf e ulice, or moving and leaving
them uncalled for )• prima facie <>vi<lencu of fraud.
6. Any person who-erer receives aaeWspape and
make use of it, whither he ordered it or not is
s.iia to be a subscriber.
pound at the borne market, making
$110 each.
Garnet Journal: Monday last
our merchants shipped 4,000
pounds of butter to Kansas City
and the eastern markets. And let
[* be remembered tl»at this is only
one ot the many large shipments
that have been made by themdu-'
ring the epriag. Andersou county
foots up pretty well in the dairy
business.
There are eleven high schools
in this State which prepare pupils
qualified to enter the freshman
class of the State university. TLese
schools are located at Atchison,
Abilene, Beloit, Emporia. Juno*
tiou City, Lawrence, Leaveuworth,
Neodesha, Peabody, Topeka and
Washiugton.--Leavenworth Times.
B. Robinson, oil B>x Elder
creek, has dUcovered on his place
a mine of natural polishing stone.
It is an excellent article, being
equal in polishing qualities to the
fiuest ot the extensively advertised
goods of the kind in the east. We
trust there will be some money for
Mr. Robinson iu his important
Of the eighty-one organized \ discovery.—Rooks County Record,
counties of Kansas sixty'-seven | This boy lives in Dowup, Os»
have r.ilroads, and seven of the borne county, and the Cawker
unorganized cjunties are also tray-! City Free Press relates ol him tbat
ersed by lailroad*. ! the other day he stole his mother'n
The number of new papers that canary bird aud sold it to a woman
are starting into life all-over the j w'10 had just lost one for $2 and
State is amazing. It is a remark-; t',c> dead bird in exchange, and
able fact, too, that they bear St.jw.heu his mother was overwhelmed
Jo.in's name at their mast-heads j grief and gave it a tearlnl
invariably.—Harper Times. burial, he assisted with the money
Harper county will M Kansas' 'in8"°g p»cket.
this yaar in the average tr. her i Lmd is stiffening up in pri:e in
wheat crop, A finer pros!)e«t was Kansas, Our money-lenders re
port that the chiel call for loans
comes from farmers who want
more laud. They are raising 6ucii
j big crops and are so well satisfied
with iv iii-ias that they want bigger
farms. Lands wiil never be cheaper
in Ivan-as than they have been
Pimples, blotches, or sores disappear
under the intluence of Glenn's Sulphur
Soap.
Pike's Toothace Drops curs in one
minute.
Ladies
Do you want a pure, bloom-
ing Complexion! If so, a
few applications of Hawaii's
MAGNOLIA BALM will grat-
ify yon to your heart's eon
lent. It does away with Sal-
lowness, Redness, Pimples,
Biotehes, and all diseases ana
imperfections of the skin. It
overcomes the Unshed appear-
ance of heat, fatigue ana ex-
citement.
TH
It makes a lath- oi
TEN-
UITY appear but TV
TY; aud so natural, gradual,
and perfect are its effects,
that it is impossible to detect
its application.
KAWNA* ITEMS.
neyer known. The crop will be
more thau double that of any pre-
vious year since couuty was
' salt led.
The»semi»annual dieting of the
Ivinsas Wool-Growerai' p.n<l Siieep-
Breeders' Association \yill be held
at Manhattan, Kiley county, on
V/ednesday and Thursday, June 21
CELEaRATEO
goodj to otberd il they
mm ILSCTRIC SOAP
Lt is probable that nearly every family
I)allaa knows by this time the great
frit possessed .by this world renewed
'K-or it has been on the market for fif-
etl Kars. and has been brought to ihe no
:N, but is our advertising has es-
sd the <ye 0f any, and it no friend has
cave done Home
have not to us
Those who wish a fair, candid outspo-
ken journal that panders not to a vitiated
aste and bows not the knee to Haai are
nvited to enroll themselves upon our
ist and receive the weekly at tae rate ol
§2.50 a year, and the uaily at £(j,U0 pei
year. VVe have never had agents in the
held to canvass lor us, nor have we
collectors out to liarrass and annoy, eenl
the contiary, we have ourselves On
pressed for our biiis as many can testify.
those in this locality we would resuect
ully say that in navi'ig subscription
tney can rest assured that, a paper publish
ed in .Dallas when there were only thirteen
(i3j white republicans, voting tlie ticket
in the entire count;, can not fail when
there are thirteen hundred, anu
9I1ALL Nor
till there are more than thirteen tlonsand
UojliUUj. IJere we planted our libeuezer
years ago and here Nouxoy's union i.n-
KLLlGEiNCEit v^ili stHtid to uo square worx
Look uj/at tne lla^ aud behold it is livius*
and are now, b>t will certainly
rise iu valua.—reabody Gazatte.
n-.. , , / -,r . The feebie and emaciated, suffering framfc
I lie colored luei^ >. Jvansas put I dyspepsia or indigestion in auy form, are
and 22, 1882.
The farmers of Cowley countv 'll nominatiou, on May 31, Alfred ! advised, for the sak« ot their own boJil-
will harvest tte b«t wheat crop j fairf,* of Chautauqua oouuty.; ^ST^a^SSS*.
I e ;er raised in the county. It is a,^lone the congressmen at large. \ .lite t. = nstilHtion testify to itsharmlesswid
j great misfortune tiiat tiie acreage' Fairfax wus biii:: in slavery in r.rstoralive properties. Physicians
wis not larger, it being only about county, V a., March 15, J very where, dieted with the adulterat-
, ° ' . , n '^ J iiqiq ncj . „ i ] . ! ed liquors of commerce, prescribe it a* the-
| half aa much as ?n 18bi. j J^.^and in lbo^ \,ui sold to a : s;lfes,ta:uJ mogt reliable of all stomachics.
There is a project on foot to;Jjt,u,3,atia slaveholder, remaining a
biild a §50,000 flouring mill in | H!ave until m^de tree by the eman-
fcjoid by all Druggists aud Dealers
generally.
i Abilene. It is expected to tie run
! by water, and for that purpose the
! feasibility of putting in a dam a;
elind Springs and running a water-
cipanon proclaiualiou. He is »
Bjpfi.it preacher, unil preaches at
Parsons and Peru.
The citizens of Dodge Citv and
fcoap
14
m
)ker. of iki merits, please allow us to say imi,
it you will *<n(y hnd it to your interest j ihe
[try it, and seMor yourself how far su-*, sj
rior it is to any n<;er 8oa., uiade.
(llj
The
id Most Ecu.oiutial
The Worla*
four Grocer sells it.
Yours, resjuott'nlly,
x. x.. ok^aoin ^ CO ,
T. L. MARJSALIS,
Wholesale Agiut, Dal Us, tokis.
S way or ditch down to {lie city i. i opearville are a^iratiug tiie ccu-
bt-ing considered. Jitructiouof au irrigating ditch to
The sugar factory at Hutchin r'm froLi a point above Cimarion
son. Kan., is being pushed forward ! to Spearvilie, probably a distance
raj idiy and aboift sixty men areI of fiMy miles, the cour;e the ditch
ODv/ at work on it. Thay propo^ s would run. It is proposed to run
making as fine eugar as can be j this ditch upon the upland-*. The
j made anywhere. The cane <>fl o! j estimated cost would be £130 per
Iron Mountain 8,000 aorer. ot land is wanted for j "die, making the cost of the ditch j
" ' ' ra jnufac!uring. j^G.oOO. A ditching machine would:
Kansas pays about §15,000.000 j eosi iiOoO. The o-t ot the lateral j
a year lor lumbar, nea. iy ail ; ditches wouid be small.
which goes out of the Suite. If]
ll W. Harry & Bro's
STOVES
IWABE,
Tlx.
CKIili GLiSS, OB.
and Southern Railway.
The completion of tin- trains-co ccntral divUion
»f the Toxm si Pacilic Railway bjtweon Slu-rman
ninl l\x-arkiiua cQVUectiun at llie latter polnj on
iiouse Furnishing Goods,
JL &T,5.xr'l3, SLcm &c< f
m. 629 FLM ST.,
DALLAS, TiSXAS,
"HjT Galveniied Iron Cornice Windo*
Hnd Sheei iroM are
Louis. Iron Mountain an
< Southern Rail<cay%
, Maioethli the short, quiciand mas derlialle route
Leu 1st: 11c, Clocln.-'iiti, Chicago,Detroit, Cle.-L'Uu»i
Buffalo New Vork, 3oEton, B^ltioore
Washington, Obiiadeiph a, and al)
other principal Eastern tuid
Nortben. *>oinU.
Try this Naw Rout«
; Via Texas it- Pacific and the •
I StXcniio, Iron Slqnntaia &
aoatiiem Eailwa?>
DECLINE OF MAN.
opi tcnceof mind, linib, or Tital function, n;r
■ • veaknesa, MtMl debility &c, cured hy
)l«' Ucalth Keocwer. Al DrcMiete. Deptl
X 1/Atla*..
"BUCUBPAIBl",
New, quick, complete con traiary days, sfffe
tlona, riniiriiug, frequei-t or uiffiemit urioatioo
j kidnsy d keasus, $1 iirugsn'.i Drpct G*v>. T<
I Atk;t« L>i
V AND ALIA LIOME.
IT the SHORTEST and q UICKE8T Line
A ali important Eastern Cities.
people wtre wdiing to plant for-1 A Roman (^atholic priest, Fa
ests for the future and wait a reai* i ther Jaen, of Iowa, has brought I w , th . „ T , T.
l 4. • . ,» .i 111® the orly Llie Jhut runn Five Daly Lines *
"OllinC tin.6 lor returns .rotll flguinst bishop nBIinCSjOV, ot ■ I Pullman i'alac^ can frox fiu Looii Smu
investment, it would not b.^ long : Du'-uque, for the recoverv of i^40. : ST?„Tr.ttfk *"a vo lhe Bmiim ti»
i c* "'l • * , *• world.
OfclOie OUr k^'3fe niif^ilt become 000. A ft^usbble has been going I /TS TiCins are run wUha tvwtothd yre«te*L
o:i between the two for teu yearp,i •ccowmodaUon ;b« pabik.
— - - J * TfS Train* are rua with regularity, and pMieu
seiN.-upnorting in thi-» rfspect.
L. M. Jobnhou, of Junction
T.
* * * m% "* J' • • I
8o»a twelve head of fine grade Spriest of his parochial charge
steers that averaged 1,580 pounds, j the ground of moral unfitnees.
Some of them were less than three
years old and all were under 4
years. They passed for first-class
Li. JVi, Johnson, of Junction and the Bishop has at last bioiight j 1 kcr«ct.itiertforo b.»»s«ur»a >f'
(wn.-i'.iip, O-age countv. recentlv mutters to a crisis bv depriving thei 't»°f,**u,wu'err,:ia8-
«». 11 I % T . < . I ® 'jittployw are au^'tt to treat
»u twelve head of one grade I priest or hts parochia charge, cn i A t'u« gi -uet reaped.aud tofi»<
•nakibg coq
P*tron« witV
give them e?»t»,
onei we a.V-'U>!i.
All lite IiaproTcments
It is estimated that thf rnftnn v'"1 ''rP|i«'";•, known to mcidem skill in,
xi is caiui^ini m.ti me COItOU Vvn, )0j wtiieh letd 10 insuw Kapia Transit caf^
worm destrovs ^15,000.000 of the otued *itu ab^>i«« p#rfr«i •a/a
J . 1 . m ' I i ' »< : •- ■'* lo UK OU Uic itaudali* J■ au-u
export Bteers and brought <c j>er4cotton crop every year, 'u«Muv«i»n».
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Norton, A. B. Norton's Daily Union Intelligencer. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 22, 1882, newspaper, June 22, 1882; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth444014/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.