The Waxahachie Daily Light (Waxahachie, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 134, Ed. 1 Monday, September 7, 1903 Page: 2 of 4
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THE DAILY LIGHT
glMtihwl Rrery Day Except Sun-
by Thi Light Pttbushino Co.
O W. K/JNT Business Manager
W. A. O vkby City Editor
■ntered at the Waxahachie Post-
•0ce as matter of the second class
A rate of 2e a line will be charged
t«r all notices of church entertain-
■MDts charging an admission fee.
Offices of Publication 115 and 117
f}oil«e~e St. : Both phones No. 148
All obituary notices resolutions of
Mspect etc. containing 50 words or
Ims will be published free of charge
kit a rate of le a word will be
•barged for all exceeding 50 words.
Advertisers are requested to hand
lit oopy for paure ads. the day before
they are to appear. It takes time
to «et a page ad. hence the request.
All changes for small ads. should
b· handed in before noon
ID BBCR1PTION KATES
One Month S 50
Six Months in Advance 2 75
One Year in Advance 5 00
R tt TIM Κ TABI.K
M. E. 4 T. Nortn Boand.
M·"· -» . 1 1H » m
t·'· 68 & η
lUWTC· " ."<1 j= w
Sooth Boand.
M«M ' .H 1 »
UKH 6:54 ρ Π3
lmtm y ι ; ρ on
HAT. C.. West Bound.
Ν·. 86 leaves 5:33 am
do. 8N leaves Κ 57 pm
Be. 81 arrives 10 4o am —Does not run we?! Wan
Ha. tfJarrive* 55 pm— Does no; run «psi Wasa
fta. ι ni! led leases s fin am-Ha1 s except .-un
Kast Round
Re. 82 leaves d ί am—starts from Waxanachle
*β. 84 leaves lu St am
β» (f leaves pm -tart* from Waxahact »
(M. 86 leaves \> Δ Dm
Wo. >4 leaves 4 Λ! pm- Daly *xccpt .-uniiay
THE WOMAN AND THE HOME
We are beginning to swing baci
to old landmarks.
This statement is not made in tht
nature of a discovery but as the ex
pression of a truth which event!
have brought to th· surface.
A few years ago there was a rus!
of women to the offices and thi
•tores. Domestic pursuits w> π
Jaid aside and woman began tl <
•trenous life in competition wit!
lier brother. Domestic tastes n<
longer appealed to her; the door ο
the great wide world was open an<
•be must explore the unknown.
It was another case of Kve an:
the apple.
She stepped forth redeemed am
disenthralled from the cares and du
ties resulting from matrimony an<
became the secretary and -tenogra
pher of the busy business man be
.came the clerk in the bank in tin
law office the railway office and th<
newspaper office; she became th>
clerk in the great department stor<
living behind the counter ten hour
a day and in not a few instance
the traveling saleswoman sellini
everything from plug tobacco to ap
pie vinegar. She enjoyed her free
dam and boasted her ability to car
•for herself.
In fact she made a pretty fair sue
cess of the job.
8he didn't go out on a "bat will
the "girls'' she didn't smoke ex
pensive cigars nor "feed thekitty.'
True she indulged the ice ( rean
habit and would occasionally strau
the strings of her purse for a par
ticular handsome waist or skirt tha
caught h^r feminine fancy bat as ι
whole she was able to pay the land
lad y on Saturday night and seldon
had to ask a half holiday <>n aecoiin
of the "headache."
iiu· uiitiiiiaimiiiLy u;<
largely because he couldn't help it
man continued to love lier; to in
duitre her ambitions and aspirations
at the «tame time mindful of the in
evitaMe blow and silently sympa
thizing with l.er when it should fall
The blow has fallen atrJ there η
a scampering "f dainty feet and ai
absence of pretty petticoat* in tin
offices «>f a tfreat railway systeri
that is causing a sense of sadnesi
to the male employes.
The edict has /one forth in tin
Northwestern system that wumei
must leave trie service. They can
not be brought under the rules ο
civil service ifoverning the promo
tiou of employes; they can neve
rise above stenographers or fll<
clerks and therefore must %<> savi
the management. Was there sob
bin: .tt d scenes an t famtitiK ' No
on your life. The American #ir
isn't built by those specification'
any longer.
They immediateh began lookini
forhushanls: the domestic dutiei
that once *· · med commonest drudji
ery beuame attractive accomplish
nient·. Half a dozen trirl· in thi
C'hu a/·> office plunged into the worl
of lioUsek·" I III/ With the enthusiasil
and skill of v»-t·· ι ill m slid .· score ο
others are seriously consider iut
matrimonial alliances Ν oil can'i
outwit the American woman Shu
lier out from the office». where
in reality few of thein ever cared t<
fu and she «ladly returns to I ei
natural element the home ami the
home will b<· the better the brijfhtei
and the more systematic because ol
the knowledge she has trained iu th«
world.
Its home ι» the kintrdotii of the
I
American woman. She can make ' ]
her power there absolute; her will
law and she can more effectually
shape the destinies of men of af-
fair· and of étions from the throne
of the home than from the forum
the office or the counting room.
Napoleon said that the great need
of France was mothers. It is the
need of America today. Not to
bear children to be sacrificed to the
god of war; but to train and teach
the coming men and women their
duties to themselves their fellows
their country and their God.
America wants more mothers in
the home and fewer in the marts of
trade.
Newspaper paragraphers may be
disposed to poke fun at this act of
a great railway corporation but the
close observer of events will see in
it a turning back from the industrial
turmoil that brought Woman into ι
prominence as a factor in the busi-
ness world and replacing her in [
that position for which God en- j
dowed her and which her nature
character and nobilitv of ml u and
heart so eminently fit her to All.
And in the meantime the average
man has been brought to a better re-
alisation of what is.required of him
in building a home that should be
all the name implies. 1
ι ι
H. 4 T. C. Excursion Rates.
Hot Spring's Ark. On sale j
September 1 and 13. Hate $13.13. '
Limit 21 days from date of sale.
Palestine—On sale Sept. 14.1 Γ> and
l'i. Kate $0.20. Limit S»*pt. 20.
Houston On sain Sept. 10. Hate
fh.05. Limit Sept. 10.
Dallas —On sale Sept. 20th rate
$1.00. Limit Sept.'27th.
Dallas—On «ale Sept. 27th Oct.
4th :ttid 11th rate *1.00 limit to date
of sale.
Dallas < >n «ale Sept. 23th to Oct.
I II inclusive rat» -1 II.". limit to date
I following date <>f sale.
Dallas On -ale Sept. 23th t» Oct.
11th inclusiv» rate *1 ;MJ limit Oct.
12th.
Buffalo Ν On «ale Sept 5th
atid Oth rat·· t:!7.4o limit .'50 days
fr«>m date of sal»·.
Tickets on sale September >< to 14
inclusive
.Monterey . $ 17.."><1
Saltillo . l'J.03
San Luis Potosi 25.!*)
Celoya 29.90
Mexico City .1323
Monterey and Saltillo final limit
10 days San Luis Potosi Celaya
and Mexico City final limit «) days.
<>gden Utah. —On sale Sept. 12 to
14 inclusive. Hate 33.25. Ktnal
limit Oct. 15. Extension privilege.
Philadelphia. Pa On sal»1 Sept.
Π and 14. Hate $4.' ..V.. Final limit
Oct. 13.
Washington I). C. < >n sale Sept.
13 14 and 15. Half &SH.;Y>. Limit
Oct. 15.
T. H. Bakkow Agent.
Horse Choked lo Death.
Yesterday morning just hefur»-
daylight tin horse of Rev. W. M
Lane became entangled in a rope
and was choked to death. The horse
was a very valuable animal and
cost Mr. Lane $101) a few davs before
coming to the Wesley an celebration.
Yesterday afternoon just before the
lecture of Hon. H. W. Hall a collec-
tion was taken with which to pur-
chase Mr. Lane another horse.
Tbe Psychological Enigmas.
• Denver Times.
1 Josephine I>odge Ilaskam known
lia» it writer of etllldiwn'· stories ban
become the wife of a New York
ι man. She dotes on doll· anil dogs
• and has made » name and fame by
writing juvenile stories. Yetbefore
I consenting to marry she insisted
ttiat her husband s tw·· motherless
children should li%e apart from their
j fat'ier. Among the stories she lias
written ar»* "The Heart of a
Child." I he ' Imp and the Angel'·
and "Edgar t r. ·· t : ι ο i r Hoy Γη-
celestial.'
Said a I'! icago woman in court re-
' jcently: "l wiil kill my hahv rather
1 thati give it ui> 1 hated it before it
1 came to me hut now it is my very
life."
1 The woman's baby wan born when
ι its birth meant disgrace. It came
' undesired and unwelcome into tl.e
world. The father of the child made
' the girl his wife and now abuses
both her and the child. Her friends
' say unless she separatee from him
1 they will take the child from her.
Womanlike et.e clings to both hus-
band and child for the sake of the
1 t awakened mother love.
1 Strange psychological puzzle*. In
I the one raie the woman undoubted-
ly loves her husband but her love
' in not strong enough to induce her
to mother his two young uiothnriess
children. In Ihe other cast- fur the
»ake of her lovt* fur her child the
mother will bear the cruel treatment
1 of the husband and father.
Strange contrasting picture· from
the li\ es of tw women.
υκνυι kki»|hy worm*.
( hildren often cry not from pain
but from hunger although feu
abundantly. The eutire trouble
arises from inanition their food is
i.ot assimilated but devoured by
worms. A f^w dose* of White's
< ream Vermifuge will cause them
to ce»··· crying and t>egln to thrive
at once very much to tbe surpris··
and joy of the mother. 'Sjf at Hood
Λ Martin.
»
NNOCENCE VISITS WYOMING. |
Since my iaat letter I here trava-
iled through Colorado into Wyo-
ming. Manttou Colorado City and
Colorado Springs are practically one
:ity. It ta about six miles through
them and it is almost one solid row
of houses al! the way through. Col-
orado Springs is larger than both
the others put together and although
all the mineral springs are at Mani-
tou just as many visitors stop at
Colorado Springs as do at Manitou.
The water at Colorado Springe is
piped from away up in the mountains
from a lake on the side of Pike's
Peak. It is melted snow as clear
as a crystal and I rarely ever see
ice put in the water here. The city
of Mauiiau extends for a mile up
and down a canyon and at the upper
end of the|city starts the cog railroad
that runs to the top of Pike's Peak a
distance of six miles. Pike's Peak is
14147 feet above the sea level. I
have not yet ventured up there but
myself andbetter half stood at the cog
road depot the other day and witness-
ed three co.ach loads of people ^«t oft
who bad made the trip to the top.
Some few people get dizzy up there
others' noses bleed but the great
majority hugely enjt>y the scenery
snow and pure air of the peak. The
trip costs five dollars and the road
is kept busy at this season of the
year when thou sands are here from
every state in the union. We figur-
ed the other day that this road must
have taken in from KMX) to $2ôOU that
day. The cars »r«5 shaped 1 ik»- any
other cars except that they arc low-
er and the road has a middle rail.
This is the cogged rail and the en-
gine has attached t<» it heavy cog»
that fit into the cogs ot the rail.
The engine i> not at'ached to the
cars by couplings but simply push-
es the cars up the track so that if
an accident should happen t<· tl■ *
j engine the brakes could be set on
the cars and the engine allow-d to
1 go. This wonderful road has b>*en
I built fifteen or twenty years and
I only one engine has run away in
j that time. In this instance th·· car
whs stopped the engineer j imped
off and the engine plunged down the
: mountain into a gorge two th·* «ami
feet below the track where it i»
slid it still lies.
This ilocky Mountain range rin -
tlmost north and south through
Colorado and it is about fifty mile·
arrose it. The mountain· an· full
of (fold silver lead and coal and
although it has been more than filty
years since the first gold and silve»
and coal mine· were opened pros-
pectors now each and every week
are making new dtacoverie· <.f tii*
precieus metal» The hardy prospec-
tor takes » little burro loads on t<·
him a little bacon and beau· flour
and coffee atid taking hi· pick lie
drives hi- little loaded burro ahead
f him into the mountains and «η
»om* bench on the mountain* he
h tpples his burro strikes camp and
goes with his pick in search of gold.
Since we have been up here several
rich strikes have been made. When
this hardy prospector strikes α lead
men of money furnish him means to
blast into the rock and prove it·
richuess. I saw one man recently
who paid one of these prospectors
•κ'ι000 for one of his claims which
he !:ad just discovered The pur-
chaser snowed me a piece of rock
but liltle larger than my two fists
which contained fcl'iO in gold. He
said there w«re millions in this
mine and he was workiug thirty or
forty men taking out the rich rock
which is packed on burro· or else
a wagon road is built to the mine
and the ore is hauled to a smelter
where the rock is ground up and the
gold separated from it.
Denver the capitol of Colorado is
twenty-nine miles north of Manitou
and is a city of nearly 'J*··**) people
it is one of the prettiest and richest
cities on the continent. Mr. («lie-
son the general passenger agent at
Kort Worth gave us a ticket only to
Boulder nfty miles north of Den-
ver. I'phere I read of a roping and
riding conte.t with Indians and cow·
bo.vs to come off at Cheyenne Wyo.
outh» "J·. 27 and JMth of August. Mr.
Kisher is the passenger agent of the
Kort Worth A Denver at Denver
and as soon as we got to Denver i
made for Mr. fisher's office. 1 was
hoisted in an elevator to tiie top of
a nine-story building. Once up
there I showed him my Texas tick-
et and when he looked at it he knew
I was a lie wspaper man from Texas.
1 told him 1 wanted that ticket ex-
tended t<» i'hpvennn jf nLutieil
and h»· smiled Miid «nid "Innocence
Abroad. I cannot send you to Chey-
enne bill will put you into Greeley
tt« far u* my road 40e· and there
you will have to take the I uion Pa-
cific." I thanked him and three
minute· later I had a ticket io my
pocket to (ireeley. How Mr.higher
tfie if<-i e'nl ι a^eeiigir agent way up
tier· in Colorado knew my newspi.·
;er name I do not yet know. He
treated in»· nicely the few mo mer t h
i wit« up the cloud* with him and
H«ke<l me to call on him again while
in the state.
We 1.pent the night in thin mat
nitlceiii city and nest morning w*
; ulled out "for lireely on by Boul-
der where all our Texas school
teachers come Its the β«ι miner to
attend the I'hautauoua. We ue*t
utrike the fine farmlug section of
Colorado and pretty aoon our train
wa· crossing big ditches full of wa-
ter erery few hundred yard·. Some
of thl· water 1· piped from the
mountain· twenty five mile· away
and brought down I11I0 tin· magnifi-
cent valley of a» prettr farm· a· 1
ever taw They had juat cat their
wheat and now thousand· of acre·
of alfalfa began coming into sight
al»o corn and Irish potatoes fields.
<>ne thing that strikes all newcom-
ers as Η did me is the pretty briffât
up-to-date towns and cittea all over
Colorado and op this valley in
which we are now travelling are
aome lovely town· eurronnded by
a· fine farm· as there are in the
world with plenty of water to irri-
gate them Mid theee lands are
worth from $20 to $200 per acre and
thousands of them are not for sale
at all We left Denver after break-
fast and reached Greeley at twelve
o'clock. This is where nearly all
the Irish potatoes which we buy
and eat in Texas come from. It is
a pretty town of some jOtW or tiOOU
inhabitants. It Is located some fif-
ty or sixty miles from the moun-
tains in the midst of the finest farm-
ing section in Colorado and from
here is shipped out every year to
help feed the world fflWO carloads of
Irish potatoes. I told the citizens
there that 1 felt that I was partly
made out of this Greely dirt as I
had been eating their potatoes now
for twenty-five years and a part of I
this bone and muscle of mine was
formed from Greeley potatoes. I am
fond of them. Here we spent the
night and next morning my wife
was too near worn out from our
'long run to go further so she stop-
ped over. I bought a ticket for
Cheyenne in the heart of the wild
and wooly west. Leaving Greeley
we passed some beautiful towns
wjth ditches of water running
through them and ail over the j
country. Verv few oats up here j
are yet cut and corn is just in the j
roasting ear They cut alfalfa up j
here four and five times a year ».nJ j
it is worth in Greeley only il per ton j
there is so much of it raised. They j
also use it to enrich their lands. !
After leaving Greeley we saw hun- (
I dreds of acr»'s of stiver beets. This j
ι is comparatively a new indtistry
ι here and In Greeley they have a beet
I sugar factory costing one million
' dollars where they make these beets
ι into sugar and these farmers say
they make from $*0 t<> tli"i per arre
imi beets. After getting torty milee
from Grei-ley toward» Cheyeun·· we
! begin to reach high grmind rr<>««-
' ing the divide «τ mountain range
j too hIfcrh to get water on the ground
and it looks poor m-Jeed without
I water. A sandy gravelly land but
when th«y put water on this desert
■«oil it ^ri'W* vegetation to perf«<
\\ · :»rri·ν ·-· 1 at Chcyptiiif at twelve
o'clock .mil it wis on hImioiii About
Ι.'ιμι people wcr'· there from t'■ I"·
rati'· .Nebraska Montana N( »
Mexico Tenu and Wyoming. be
side* tourists fr·>iij "»hj section of
the I nited States and eo*b»vi
front all the states named. t'hey-
enne thirty five vara ago w>i« one
of t he greate»t ι «ttl·· markets II) th»*
vr»rld Ail th* beeves from Texas
and New Mexico «l'fc driven from
there to this place and told and at
otic time I am told one «tu hardly
out of sight or κ drove of cattle from
Texan to that city and many a
brav»· T'xas rowbny line buried In
Cheyenne killed by Indians on the
trail. After selling his herd the
I cowhov would _'· t Ms pay dress
I til m self up plunge iii to h saloon f · ' 1
ι fiitnself ou mean whiskey and ttieu
I he werii to ttiH dance hall* and gam-
bling dene and ther« thousand* of
them first and last died with their
boots on. And on thin "frontier
Day" they call it up here it looked
something like it did thirty fire
years ago. Cowboys with their An·
i gora leggings %n<1 row girls most of
ι them riding astride are riding In a
gallop at half speed all over the
'town and there are nearly «ne hun-
dred Indians brought .here from the
reservations. In this state nnd MonJ
tana and they t<n> some of them
! clothed in nothing but a breech
clout are riding here and there all
I over the town Once In a while an
unearthly veil goes up from both cow
'hoy and Indian. Wild and wooly'
! Well I reckon' It carried me bark
to Arizona where 1 lived for five
years and where I have before wit-
nessed aaeh scenes as 1 arn now gat-
ing on airain. Occasionally a cow-
! boy who never saw me before looks
i at me and calls me "Texas" and in-
' vîtes me to irrigate with him. The
I frontier show grounds are a mile
; out from the city and ther» I was
: permitted to take a seat with the
judges right lu among the riders
and ropers and they all cali lue
I I Hits as soon as they put eyes on
me. A royal welcome I got when
they had tint· to "otlce me. The
! riding and πψΐηκ was the most ex
ι citing I e\er witnessed and the In-
t dian racing and war dance was be-
. yond description.
More next time l'hls letter is
already getting too long.
My wife ane I are both improving
I i believe | am »hakiiig the grip in
this magnificent climate
A BOY'S WILD KID Κ ΚΟΚ LIKE"
WUh the family around expecting
Mm to < 11*» and a aoti ridiiiK for It'*·
IS miI#*h to get Dr King'· New Dia-
rovery for conaumptiou rougha anil
(•old·. W H Brown of Leeavtile
ind. endured dea h'a agonie· fr^ui
' Aithina; but thla wonderful medi-
cine gave imetaant relief and soon
cured hltn. He write*: "I now
deep aoutidly every night." Like
tnarveloua cur»-a of conauinption
pneumonia bronehitia roach·
«•old» and grip prove ita matchle··
merit for ail ttirsia! and lung » rouble·.
Ouaranteeu bottle· .VOc and 91.01).
Trial bottle* fre·· at Thorns· A
Moore's dru χ store.
Labor Day.
Labor (lay wm not generally ob-
served in this city. About the only
j<erc.*;>tible evident?'· that today waa
a holiday «>· in it.·· closing of the
banks cotton eichsiiie and the ob-
servance of Sunday houra at the
postofflce.
WHAT IS LIKE?
In the last aualyhia nobody know·
but we do know that It ia under
•trict law. Ahuae that law even
• lightly paiu reaulta. Irregular
living DK-aua derangement of the
organs resulting In conalipatiou
headarlie or liver trouole Dr.
King's New Life Pill» quickly re-
adjusts this. It's gentle yet thor-
ough Only Ac. at Thorn»» Λ
Moore'» drug store.
Q. ô C. Route.
Shortest Quickest Best Line to
Cincinnati New York
St. Louis Birmingham
Chattanooga. Knoxviile
Washington Philadelphia
Through Sleeping Care to Cincin-
nati New York and St. Louie.
All Meats Dining Car.
RIPA1VS
RiPANS Tabules
Doctors find
A good prescription
For mankind.
TT* pdukrt i* efHwith f «
in -rdm*rv OCCMkm Tv'*
t^mAy bu4t«e (prtcr βΟ ctAt*}
tvcuuaft * supply Ι ·* * ft*i.
Legal Blanks
Anything <J«»n·· in tlm name of the
I I «w khnulil look w» II an 1 Im· proj* rly
haudled It behoove· lh«* lawyer to
li»\" a printed line of Legal 8ta
ο tiny W e ran furniah
Warranty Deeds
Deeds of Trusts.
Release of Vendor s Lien.
Vendor Lien Notes.
Chattel and Crop Mortgages.
Legal Wrappers.
M mit' Id Papers.
1:: tmrl ju»t ih· rik'tit blank for
every transaction All of the above
we hev»· in »t..!-k and can »upp|y
l<>ii «moment'· uuil « H;·»* t«l
pa; —r· «juiràly printed and neatly
too .
Try u· with your nejt brief.
Our brief* »r>· fie beat and our
prlf··· the low· ·! If »·· haven't
what you want w»*'li (fet it fur you.
ΚΝΓΚΗΡΒΙ8Κ JOK Oh KICK.
Hoth l'houe» 14H.
————————————————
KODOL diftjU wha< you ML
KODOL clear.»»» purifia». tlren fheo·
j ———— and «veetaa· tha *tom*cn.
KODOL cuel !rid tf' 'n dy*pep*i· ·π4
— ·)Ι itcrr.» -. »rxj bcw«] trouble·.
KODOL •ccciert'ft ih« »ct:cnof th« [U
• trie t ' »» *i d jlw«» ton· »· the
digest: ve O'ftr.j
KODOL re.e*»s ·η o»ff» ffd »'orr.adl
cl ι t.ervij five» to
the heart · full fr«e and untrammeled
action nourish®· ihe nervosa «yw«rn »:.<1
fee α» the brain.
KODOL I» the wonderful remedy that t·
m»« i.{ v*· à / η Hf«opi· well
and weaV peep.· strorf by f v.nf to th«ir
bodies ·1Ι of the nounihmeU thai La con-
tained in the food they eat.
•cru·· ct.1t J 1.00 Su· fc<. JH iur·· lb· t/M
*u·. which Mil· for ic<.
.·!> Ir t C. 4 C·.. CIIUM.
Kind by K. W. heart·.
BAD
BREATH
**! h«»K »»·: η g ( 4*4 4ΗΠ* AOd M
i · IB 1)4 m<4 ff·" Uw ΤλαΛι*»· iTtf* *r* · 1*1 j* ! y «r«»o
dTfui My 4*ui)iWr m t I <**w U4k«Md vH·
J iicl itsaf·» »"'! "Uf krrith «M I«f) I>a4- Aft«f
I I»*::-* A f'-w d *·«· · f I'm»· ·γ*·« · W» h·*·* l»i r'»«J
f » kw*rful:> T).»f %r* · #r··» t— \> lu %4»« faMtiiy.'
Λ ι Mr mil* Pi«.|i
11*7 KlV*ruku*«- ht 1 .u- iiiiiAil Ullio.
r\w*τΛ. K»t*»>.u f T»·*· OoMl Do
Uuud N«t*r Rt'-kwu w*kà»o or Url|*· Ik Sc. >to·
OUHf OOMSTIPATIOH
ImiI. *·· V«r4. > > '*
•Τ.Γ
I0-T0-BAC ZlZtfïZ**4 ^
. lufcaueo llttll
Mo Trouble το answer question».
Τ :SP
PASSENGER SERVICE
IN TEXAS.
♦-IMPORTANT GATEWAYS—Λ
t. P. TURNER
I Ο&μί Pura ai ο T»t» »w«* "
D*LL*·. Till·
!c The
«' Midland
Midland-Frisco
THE coot AND PICTURESQUE
ROUTE
; "·"<
Interior Texas Points
It ►
EUREKA SPRINGS. ARK.
^n intrr.erar rr.tr ged i"> a« to
ι r.·» t *lth ' he M.d.aiHJ*
ai rriin»c train at Knn; » ill ic-
*ure the following:
Λ xwift nde "·»»*γ » tri .th f irnU)
ballaated. oil njrinkW tr»»k.
!n .4 tra:· r*-< ·] a ·.- >·ί the
ùnwet in the
Including cafe < ..r -nice di»pen-
ing meal* .4 ... 'art* at moderate
pnowt.
A ckïiM· c<mr.· um at l'an* with
th«· Krieco Line arid a daylight
rid·· thrfugt: the * emc f«jrl»»n
of that line n<>U*i for iu aariv-
alleil beauty
Reduced r;» . ■
throughout the year. ' |
™""—[
Further information can U· ul-
tained by apply icj^ to any agent.
I or
V U. Μ- Kay0. A
Terr* . Te\.4.«.
Nothing ha* ever equalled it
Nothing ran ev»r »ur|>a · it.
Dr. King's
New Discovery
Fof (%"&"· ·™" om! «
A Perfect For All Throat and
Cure: I-ung Troubles.
Mon·) 1>·1 k If ■« »».'·. Trxl tontMfrM.
:
♦ the
that
X Does the System
Good
Send
Dallas Brewery
53.50 for C3se 4'Jozen
Dallas Splits
$5.00 for case^4 dozen
Dallas Pints
f. o. b. Dallas Texas
We L>»y for the bottle» JOc per
doien and TUe e»ch for
the cm··.
ΓΛ «
ψ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼wwww▼▼▼▼ι
Better than ever before. Mutinee
Heptember 7.
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Ownby, W. A. The Waxahachie Daily Light (Waxahachie, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 134, Ed. 1 Monday, September 7, 1903, newspaper, September 7, 1903; Waxahachie, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1072158/m1/2/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .