Sherman Daily Register (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 183, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 25, 1887 Page: 3 of 4
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, •.
IPIiM
iMKhé^SMSamm
'&MS0m
wvm tm
Í...IH.I-MH
SfsSSf
¿W
what ñadí the chimney a««epT
"d why did the codfish bedl*¿ '
why. oh, why did the pesas
And what makaa the tj
And w
t make* the
«wringer pop?
UQWT
doe* the tcrrílílibed i. ,
does the anddle-horae flyf
KjSUgBCS
W
li
r .. w . ie wind ftn^&ifl
you tell me what make* tbesuow ball?
' what make* a chimney foul?
fir BLOOD Ap IBON. <'
;,§
why ehould the old
Or why did the raspberry Jam?
a tree bark?
m
m
m,
SIb
. >■*
my
up I
tl
'■<«; 'A^1 ''' ■,1
Wallace V. Reed In Atlanta Constitution.
John Blair came to a sudden bait
;
he ásked, or loaf abont in the sun-
shine?" • ••
• Although there was no one in sight,
he spoke aloud. £ jS||
"What do I eare lor old Parson
Drymanf" he continued. "He has
frightened ail these timid foots 90 that
they have turned bypoarltei
the wrath to come. Well, I'll
chances." • ^ipf
Sturdy, broad-shouldered, with
bullet head, a square face, massive
jaws, a resoluté mouth and cold gray
eyes, John Blair looked the very Incar-
nation of strength and courage.
He stood still a moment and glanced
np and down the narrow Country
road as it meandered through the
brown and barren fields and rocky
woodlands until it lost itself fat the red
hills.
The dilapidated rail fence by the
wayside attracted his attention.
"Just like neighbor Morris," he said
with a grim smile. "Dick is a fool, of
course, and with such land as thatbe
couldn't do much, but he could do
better. Look at my place. It1 was
almost as bad, but 1 have turned it
into a gafden spot."
, John Blair leaned over the rotting
fence and critically suryeyed the
landscape. The patches of half cleared
land visible in the stunted foreets on
the rocky hillside did not promise
much.
• "A# I am not going to old Bethel,"
*said Blair, "I'll do a little explor-
ing."
He cautiously climbed the fence and
started with a swinging stride in the
direction of the hills.
Two hours later John Blair struggled
up out of the ravine with abrownliimp
in bis hand. His face was ae white
.as a sheet, and his eyes blazed with
excitement. He swung his hatarpund
his head. i"
"Gold! Gold! Gold!" he shouted.
Then with a scared look he crouch-
ed down in the grass, still holding the
brown lump in hiB hand.
"What a fool I ami" he whispered,
uwbody heard me. 11 is Sunday,
afrd my gpuft neighbor Morris is at
and with
a few
lump.
mP
W";
m
fy
IfÉ
1
church
He. pulled out hiB knife,
the stout blade chipped off
pieces from his mysterious
These he examined closely.
"I was right," he almost gasped,
with a sigh of relief. "This is iron and
nothing else. My mining days in
t Pennsylvania taught me something. I
know Rood ore when I see it." .
Taking the specimen in both hands
he threw it with all his force against a
rock and broke it. He scrutinized the
framnents.
"It is iron," he repeated, "and that
ipeans gold. Yes, gold!" he exclaim-
ed, again giving away to his excite-
! talent. *
Blair sprang to his feet and looked
about him. There was no one to bo
eecn. Gathering up the pieces of his
specimen he walked rapidly down to
a little creek at the foot of the hill and
threw them into the water.
■ .--yVII... • ■ .
Dick Morris thought that his luck
had changed when John Blair made
himan offer for his far hi.
There was very little haggling over'
terms. Morris was glad to get any-
thing, and when he carried home a
thousand dollars in twenty dollar
gold pieces, Mrs. Morris and the three
tow-headed children were so much
agitated that their , first impulse was
to sit up all night. * They finally com-
promised by going to bed and remain-
ing wide awake until daylight.
Th«Mt>iri&S packed up their house-
bold goods and lost no time in trans-
ferring themselves to the west. They
were glad to leave the old red hills
where they had known nothing but
poverty and toil.
Honest DiCk M
could not 1
Morris felt some coto-
JttS of conscience, although he
tot see Where he was to blame,
and before his departure he hunted up
¡¡Wfiy. ■
I
John Blair.
"Now, John," he said apologetically,
"I hope you are satisfied with the
trade?. ■ & M'i 'éM
"Oh, It will do," answered Blair,
u -Jiufflng away at his cob pipe.
\y* "You know I never bragged about
the place, but then you know it is as
well asido or better."
"Just so," assented Blair, shortly,
"1 know it as well as you do or bet-
tar." • efaAftft ¡T -i
«'Then I am satisfied," said Morris.
"Good-bye, old fellow, and may the
good Lord prosper you and yours."
•The other took his hand, and look-
ing down at the ground, said:
"Good-bye Morris. Take my ad-
vice, and stick to the west. There is
a chance, there for you. There is
none here, as you know. As for rty-
" I am a good worker, and can
;•* living where you would fall."-
" good friends, and the
v'kr
got to
¡mm BK rftPSR
was until w _
we get«ettled and be-
I shall ■HKjtnd per-
iimto come put aud -jo)a us."
Dick felt thjp weighty money
belt around his waist, and beamed
" over with good nature and gratl-
I ÍÍw,!Í'/íí;•'H \
lit
The growth of Ironboro was almost
magical. In the region around It noth-
ing like it had ever been known.
When Blair -found that big brown
lump he had found * fortuna
Blair «as nó ordinary farmer. lie
had a head fdr affairs. He ornamz*!
a company and controlled it. Capital
was obtained, and he controlled that
too: He was so strong-willed and
clear-headed that few men were hi«
match. They recognized his gift o1
hip, and yielded to him.
Ironboro was laid out. A rail
road was built from It to one of th«
main transportation lines. Furnaces,
rolling mills, steel works and kindred
Industries were soon in full blast.
Stately structures ol granite and
brick were erected. In five ytnrt
Ironboro was a flourishing little city.
In ten years it was an important in-
dustrial center. In fifteen years it wai
spoken of as a metropolis.
So much prosperity had its natura'
effect upon John Rlair. Theiron kins;
be .was called, hád always been cold
' l success
hot change him for the better,
proudest man that ever step-
ped," Said one of his acquaintances in
"The
«peaking of hlni, and his appeat ahcr
Justified it.
If John Blair loved anybody It wa
his daughter, a beautiful eirl just
blooming into bellehopd. She wait
motherless and perbana this had some-
thing to do with her father's tender-
nets. *
It was to dream of his daughter and
plan a birthday supririse for I er that
the millionaire took a stroll oil aquiet
Sabbath morning in ths sa ftl
Ironboro.. He answered the
salutations of his fellow-
townsmen with a curt nod and
proceeded on iiis way. He could not
afford to shake bands wit h any human
creature unless he represented a coo!
million at the very least.
On and still onward the ric h man
walked, until he was out of s¡¡|ht ol
towers and «tooplps and mansard
roof*. But the unusual c$ercM
fatigued him and finally he threw him-
self upon a moss-covered rock in a
shady covert and gave himself up to
bis thoughts.
"Jennie would like this," tie «aid, "J
must bring her ant |iere. The very
place tor a summer resort,"
Then he thought of his.dnti«liler'g
birthday, and his hard face softfiied.
What woe that? It seemed like a
Stealthy Step in the bushes.
Blaii glanced around him. His kt-c.n
gray eyes had their oldea^le'like ran^e,
and they took in pveryrhm^.
"ft was Boniethbia," said n* Iw
reclined on his elbow, and prmwdM}
to build more air-ci^tles for Jonula
and himself.
Another rustle among the dead
lea ves. Was it somebody or was it
,an animal. The loneliness of the place
put Blair on his guard. He was abso-
lutely fearless, but fls the Iron Kiite,
he felt that it was bis duly to take
care of himself. His apprHhenstotiK
however, ii be bad any, vanished wbeiv
he saw a (¡ráy-baired, ieeble-looklnii
man, in tattered garriients, em ." p
from the depths of the !orest and
stand before him. ^
The newcomer paused and looked
Blair steadily in the face.
"Moveon!" coniiuandifl f/be latter:
Th« tramp did not stir. His thin,
yellow face bore the Hues of care and
sulfeiing, and his garb showed that lie
had traveled far, and had been expos;
ed to all sorts of weather,
"This is no place for trttWps," said
Blait coldly, "vou must move ou,"
"John Blair!". . V
The millionaire started.
"What do you mean by addressing
me iu that way?" he shouted. "Leave
at once."
«'John libilr, have you forgotten
me?".., ... ¡
The other looked steadily at the
man a moment. , í
"I do not know you, was bis re-
^ "Í am Dick Morris."
Blair assumed a sitting posture
and grasped his walking stick with n
mMMj)* j ¿ Mil,1.'' -
"Well," ho remarked carelessly,
"you seem to have had a rouvh ttiasei
with the world. Such is life; some go
up and some go dowm 1 have gon«
UP-".. ■ s 1
Morris remained silent and his im-
passive face expressed no emotion.
"But you should have stuck to the
west, Dick. Ha! Ha! Aereat country
Is the West'. There was room for.yoc
out there. I am surprised tp see yor
back here."
"John Blair," replied Morris, "j
my appearance surprises yon,
What do you think my surprise,
must be? I left this place a wil-
derness. I find it a great city."
"Just 80,' Dick. It is a great city.
And 1 have made it. I own most ol
it. 1 own moat of the men and wom-
en in it. Why, l)iek, those hirelinu*
over there, whether they wear broad
cloth or jeans, are my slaves, Th«n
run at iny beck arid call. They bask
in my smile, and are wretched when 1
frown. The Lord has been good to
me, old fellow."
"Arid what lias made you so rich?"
asked Morris, fiercely." ■
'^Brains, friend Morris, brains and
hard work." *
■'Why not say robbery?"
"See here, Dick Morris, you must
take yourself off, growled the Iron
ut it was robbery," was the an-
swer, "I knpw the whole story. You
King
took advantage of my ignorance .and
ipidity. Ydu prowied about onipy
land, and discovered iron. Then yob
stur
m
stuffed me with western fabies, bon jbt
my property for a song, and pur.-uad-
ed me to try my luck beyond the Mi
swindlers *ot most o^mj
money; I tpTled hopelessly with mj
wife and children year after year, bu'
to no purpose. 2¡Phe deadly awami
fever carried off my family onebyona
and left me the wreck of my tormei
WBpjmMall the way wwe,
and What have ¿found? Happines
and wealth |l^l> ¿Should have beer
resumed its every day hard look.
iil®lll!K'what are you going to;dc
about it?" he asked. "The law is ot
"The ¡aw!" sneered Morris. "What
Is the law worth when you ..have an
utterly desperate man to deal with?"
The millionaire turned pale. What
km the law worth. In such a case? H«
grasped his stick more firmly
Wmmt SSÜ
"And your object
■■SaflUa Ani .
allow me heref'1
■HIHl
he asked.
d your pi
"To kul y^ul
Blair raised his stick. Morris stepped
back arid drew a pistol.
"Ho}d, my friend*" said the threat-
mend moig "you don't meari to say
that because I gpt the best of you in
a trado you are going to murder irief
The iron is mine."
"And your bipod Is mine," cried
Morris, sockittjiiiis pistol.
For God sake, Morris stop! We can
make some arrangement. Think ol
my daughterl"
, "Your daughter, you robber!
was my daughter's fate?"
With the desperate fury of a
man at bay; JBlair rushed fc
with upliftc4 Stick.
What
esperate fury of a bravi
man at bay, Blair rushed forward
with
A sharp report rang out, and the
Iron king fell heavily to the ground
. wlth^a bullet through bm brain. ^
Bláir's tatehada mystery connect-
ed with it that the Ironboro detectiv*
pould not unravel. A .pistol was found
by the dead man's side. Was it mur-
der or suicide? Tl:e disappearance ol
an unknown tramp gave color to the
ninrder tbeory. but the fact that the
dead bad not been robbed made It
doubtful. The truth was not known
till moritha later when a dying tramp
In a hospital, in a distant city told the
story ot the crime. He expressed no
regrets, And with his last breath ex-
c'a'iueu:
"I had to take his life to get, evsn.
It took his blood to pay tor myIron!"
Lincoln at the War Department.
! From "Recollections ot Secretary
Stanton," by a clerk of the war de-
partment, in the March Century, w«
quote as follows: "In the days ol
which 1 write, Mr,-Lincoln was a par-
ticularly wofi-begouo figure, it was
One of those periods of war when the
whole, situation, military, financial
and political, Was one ol almost un-
relieved blackness. He spent hours
at a time shut up with- Mr. Stanton,
*11 business and speech mainly boihu
j>^(; asjde, $q far jv«, outsiders could
judge, while these lonely communions
lasted. Was it riot the gloomy au-
tu rini days of 1804, that the tearful
secretary had in mind vwhen he
spoke those pathetic words as he took
the hand of the just expired president:
'Alt, dear friend! there is none now to
tío lile justice; none to tell the world
pi the anxious hours w« have spent
together!' Even before the autumn
had well set in Mr. Lincoln had began
to wrap himself in the familiar plaid
shawl, and, with his hat well pulled
down in front, be would scurry alona
the hulls' of the war department and
jnto the retiring-room of tbesecretai y;
•idticlnfl fVri'l srionking to nobody.
At time-) he would sit in the retiring
room with the door Open between that
and the a partment in which the Secre-
tary walking about, as was bis wont,
was transacting business with the de-
partmental officers and clerks or
visitors, prolonging bis course, cvefy
few minutes, into the adjacent room
tp h°|d. converse with his chief. It
was an interesting find n pleasant
sight, that of Mr. Lincoln seated wltl)
one lona leg cióssnd upon the other,
his head a little peaked, and his face
lit'up by the animation ot talking ot
ÜBfpf.jng, while Mr. Stanton would
stand sldewlfee to'hito, \yit|) onti b«bd
resting lightly on the back of a chair
in the bribf intervals of that everlast-
ina occupation of wiping Ills spectacles.
But if, while in hucIi proximity, Mr.
Lincoln should happen to rise to his
fpet, farewell to the pict'.iraKpieness of
thosoenü, for ib(> striking difference in
height and girth at onoe stjggestcd the
two gendarmes iu the French comic
opera."
Rig Circus Pay Holla.
Boston Horn lil. ' I
The salai-y hat Of a good-sized circus
runs anywhere' from $300 to $1,800 a
Jay. . Fj?xepjmgh'i pay_ro!l callé for
the later amount, and the list of the
Barnum show is claimed to be even
higher. These figures include the pay
pf performers, agente, hostlers, can-
vassmcn, urooms and tralnmen, or
"razor backs," an the latter are lace-
tionsly called. Of course the pér-
formers get the moat money. Laat
season the Barnum people paid an
Erialisb trjo pf the trapeze perforriiers,
Lolo, Lola and Sylveeter—tlia latter
a man—$250 a week and theirákperis*
es. Forenaugh pays William Showles,
the bari'baclc rider, $250 a week,
and yet hsis some equestrians
in his employ who draw as low
as $25 or $3f) w et
— " paid when their act
di
kly. Acrobats are
when their act U
i ver tina. They general-
al ways íyell paid
ieefuj
ly travel in teams pf t*p and threat,
aracefu) arid
ly travel in ..
and do what is known a* "brother
acts." The three Lamartine broth-
ers, for instance, draw $150 a Week
from Forepaugh's pay clerk. Many
of these porfori|jers do two or three
acts, and, indeed, they wdl tagMe al-
most anything, from a flying trapeze
to a hori/,en tal bar, while nearly all
are #obd tumblers arid leapeis, easily
and advantageously used In "tb«
grand tumbling and finale" so familar
to circus goer , iliere are many
sronps of performen who turn them-
selves into "fauillien," and doing •
daring act of some novel kind are of-
ten able to gat $200.pp |30Q a week.
Clowns are exceedingly plentiful, and
may be engaged for as low a* $20 a
w«*k4;; 8tt% good jesters like Billy
Burke, Johnny Purvis, Charley Mi
af **"'
'MS®#
mutm,
fW'wW „
MMia
H«RE and THERB
..Vtíí?!" " 11
In -Welxter cuuutv, West Vlra*lal«, ssltssA
•tWi bwrel. Tt «W is Dot • railroad la Um
#t Klncntrm, N. T.," kwti
whleh tl
from Ucr chll
TUer« I
iW^wta^WfCoui^lt
«elrirtal parte oí Ohltmnlm , which I kuilni
SíeblUlri-u In larjco uumbci-e.
0, Tifteen te twvoty «.lie. ot mow ebede wll
he bnlU by the C«na.JlM PecMe rtAwsy tht>
euminer la tb« vicinity oí Donald, B. C. t
Sewlug «flrls Iu the east end otl^udoo ntak<
ahlrU r r 4 eeata e.ich, attd fuml.U their owe
thread. U/ hard labor they esa msks' at)
shirts a day.
With a Tlew to protecting the fisheries of th
provlnee. the Manitoba Kleh and Qane Pri
tectlou society is trylnjt to get tto export o
Usb prohibited, •/
A tree cut near Oakland, Md., made nine
teen Iors, nine of which were twelve feet long
«W* tblNie, fourteen, and four,
'•Ight'; It moMured live feet la diamoter,
A paper peseh basket, whlcboan be mea
factureU for about 4 cents, has been 'Invented
by a e* ?orker, and, U Is thouxht will set-
ppje question of "free baskets" tor petabe*.
Oao of the costly eraros In society rant la
the direction ot Ivory miniatures, Theb
painting la almost • forgotten art, but will
revivo with the demand. A picture of tbli
k: d uqw costs from #300 to WOO.
By the collMjae of the famous "Coal-Dele1'
last week, LomUm Is at last rid of a Alsrep
«table rwort Uiat has existed for Marly 1
century. Iti the eaWy days plea«ure>seekeri.
hi "making a night M it" always paid a vtall
to thlt plttCW. 1 ^ . 1 l" .
A countryman w<u alrolUug along Thsraout
row, Huston, one day -recently, whea he was
stopped hy a member of the T. M. a A., whs
w«e Inviting passers-by to go In sad worship,
who said; "Step right up-staini,. my friend!
yon Will find a cor,ll*| welcome." "No, )-er
ÍAo't) yer can't |4*y any of yer <x)nfidenos
games on mo. Pro hearn tell loo much
about yoú iéllers to be caught before betu'
IU the city two hours." a, .
Country newspapers nufortunately often
hare to depend upon sebOoMeachert tor news
from various localities Tfu .Vew Y^rk Jlmg\
Hotu can cull to mind several such corre-
spondents who could not write atingiesen-
teflce pf good Bngllsl^ and whose spelling
defied all the laws of orthography. * One of
these corrospoadente bag one ot hU letters
in this manner! ' I halut bin abe! to git to the
rlllage this week •) I cá'nt send yuinutch
news."
While the fond parents of tie school children
St Ashbury, N. J„ have been reetiug easy over
the thought that their offspring "were fast *e-
nulrlng a praetlcal education, the youngsters
have been allowed by their teacher, A. B.
gorilas, ¿ cripple, aged 97, to paas tlj« ^tef-
Boon session In playing cards, checkers,
dominóes, and other games. Corliss gave u
bis reasons for the strange Innovation that he
eould not control his pupils. He has
discharged.
,, A curious phenomenon is often witnessed
|n the .moft#' ou* districts <^f Neysde-
Mourttslnoers call it "pononlp," snd <Íe«ofll o
it as being a sort of frozen fog that appear*
sometimos In winter, even on the clearest and
brightest of Jays. In an Instant tbe air It
filled with floating needles of lee. To breátk
tlie p 'gonlp Is death to the lungs. When It
comes jicople ru li to cover. The Indians
dread It ss much as the whites, ft appears
totacansel by the sudden freealng. in the
air ot the m >lature Which collects about the
suminlts'of the high peaks.
Lower California is In pretty bad straits, no
rain having rallen for months and the people
being threatened with fsintiie. The govern-
ment has lucreased tbe distress ot the people
by grsntlng as monopolies to a few capitalists
the mp«t Important InduMrlea—the pe^r) Hab-
erles, tbo cultivation and exportation of or-
chllla, and other branches Of busluesa, which
were the chief resources ot the people. The
expectation was that these- contracts would
develop the country and benefit the laboring
c!a e«, b it the grantees, with few excptkws,
have d me nothlug, and , the people aro° de-
prived of the uuaus of subsistence. .
A rare Instance of canine intelligence is thus
related br The Sounytl: Mflie,
P.'e budues^ callei bins, oaf ..of town ofer
nlifht, luavln.* his sister alone at home as
housekci-psr. In the afternoon a lady friend
called, and durin#the conversation remarked!
'Are you not afraid to remain bere alone oyer
nlgbM' 'O no,' said the sister, 'nota* long as
f have Flash beside me.' Now, Flash'* bed
wa* In the ce'.lar, and at the usual time in the
evening be wis accustomed to take a drink of
water and retire.. On this occasion, however,
the sister found Flash lying In the hall up-
stairs,'close by tbo door of her room, and there
lie remained until unrulng, though not unotl^-
cr word hs4 bu'iu spoken on the tubject."
One of the. snecdite* with which. Boston
tlul) t«T| Is enlivened nowaday* i* the tale
ot a wlifknotrti South-end isaa whose name
is prominent In sporting circle* ana concern-
ing all whom all sort* of adventure* are re-
lated. He lia* recently found blm<Mlf *ome-
what straiten'd iu hi* WUi'so, too fond a deto>
tlon to the poker-tabla baring depleted hit
hU fmtun*. He thought over the situation,
and at length concluded to dl*cun It with
bis wife, Who bad more than once remonstrat-
ed with him for bis dissipated haolts, and
who woa mwectalty bitter in regard to ht«
habit of betnic out every night until the hour*
were of the smallest. "Wlfy, dCar," he SSId,
f thlnk-we ought to got something. out ol
Ihi* great linuse, It Is'.too large for just yon.
and me, anil I tblnk we bad better take in a
!«w lodgers.""Ye*," she returned, with a cold
und awful glitter in her eye, "we wlU tftks In
• lot of milkman, It will be *o convenient
to have men who will be going to their day'*
work Just * you get home from your*.''
Jacob McCall. an engineer, and Terrsace
MeMaiiU", s brnkeman, were employed 00 *
snltch-eiiglue In the yards of tha Pennsylvania
railroad t Philadelphia. La*t Wedneiday,
whlje making up a train, MeCall wa* In the
oub and h * brakemau ou tbe little step which
icrve* as a pilot. As the engine nsared the
oar* Mi'Msnus wavpd his hand back to the
engnleer snd. the latter put on the brake. Tha
brake did not work. Iu a moment shltter and
freight car came together, not. no usual with a
{huiSP, tjut with a sickening buffet >f Imman
Beth and bloo4 botiruen wood and Irou.
Brskenmn MeManus, caught at the groin, was
flattened Into « *liatiele*s men against tbe
end of the car. A track hand leaped Into' (be
cab snd shptited to Engineer McCall, who
stood ctock still with bia hand on the leven
•Hever ? y<~ revurse I" Kuglneer UcCall
made no response. The track band (book
lllm and-found be wae dead. The railroad
wen found when they took hi* body to nts
home (hat be bad been subject for a long timé
to heart disease, and the doctor sa'ii that the
brakemas'a awful death before Ills eyes
for salo, audi
• .,T-frr.Tf ^7^1" '- r——r.
TC-'-j--' ¿ Wi;-
^ ^ _ ^LXj,:
... ....
BAOGAOK CgKCKKD AWD TAfcKN
«ipi
SURGEON DENTIST ¿¿Li
Nitróa <Wd PabtlAii 'E«*H«
Sherman>y^^|^^M
[L. ' '
ilnillfl
iSBlill
All work gawanteed to be m
resontod.
Orders left ak W. M, Dick's
g in sume from $800
to aoy amount. Apgjy to
M
STAR BAKERT
HAHBOM1 00., imp' .
A Drenb «apply of Broad, Cnkea
'""i , etc,alw«ya«n
BOÜTH t 1'RAyiU r fTRKKl'.
SSMENlSwtA r
I
C9HEB TMIÍ5110 UÜLBER.1T SIS.
Imii
UMI ■ f *
DRESS MAKING.
'1" -■■'wtiffs..•!
M. I*. Soott aud Miss Eu-
Ijeoie McOuistaiii bave oponed dress
making with tbo firm of R. G. Hall
& Bou, and respectfully solicit tbe
patronage of tbe ladies^ of Sherman
dery.
—.
J. H. Glasscock, M D
PHTSICIll AID SURGEON.
Ofiico up stairs, 1st door «Mt of
• Marsball's Drturatore.
Residence at J. ft. Cole's, ¿. Travis
G. 6. STEEVER, M. 0,
OfBoc ovor Taymun A Berry's Drug-
TELEPHONE AT
t. m. Taylor, m. d./
«rKOULTV-Olnan, ot CMn. Tlinw
. and Nose.
Óffloe Ifoars—O to Í3a. m.and > to b~p."ia.
OVE It ItlOfl ARD'H DRUG STOltK,
Sherman, Texas,
RANDELL & RAN0ELL,
, Attorney at Law,
NORTH SIDE SQUARE,
Sherman, -1 Tex&s.
SZE3ZE3
" " ■' "i •
ill!
H|
Tbe Daily RsailnrcB Printing House
respeclfully invites the attention of
business and professional meu to the
quality and price of job printing now
being turned out from its office at
No. 116 East Houston street, Oariy
ing a Very large aod flrst olasa assort-
in out of stationery,and ei' '
first class workmen,.:®^^.^.^^..^
do work in tbe very bígbést s^le of
art at as low prices M any office in
U,..oroirJ.8.™.rao,Ck,. OTp
mmr
t VUji I ' v
B É..
ffliScsK iswSMSaiHffl
r!
•n • • '
. .
vF lili JCiJti'K-J
íbp|Í5 '
The Oroát Popular Routo:
' . > '
ry-PT-m TnAdsrr j
mmm
izonift and Oaliforma.
kana) and Dcmigg, N. M.;
ort Worth a«d New
CHICAGO,
WÉNmmb
WASHINGTON,
CBALTWOBK,
i MHH
biMMi
P.«* and the W<
pMmmW' ' ■ ",virá'i
'Wr.WmWJiM
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Sherman Daily Register (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 183, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 25, 1887, newspaper, June 25, 1887; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143260/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .