Norton's Union Intelligencer. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 280, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 7, 1885 Page: 2 of 4
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' -•*-■ Hinmill in
Morten's Cnl n Infdlll geacar
Who aaid tnv the s»an> an put bnnn»r war# dim
That their b.»vly b;td faded »w«y ;
Look up and beholdl how b Ighi. through each fold
t"h«y art fl.tstinx ai.d to-dity.
If,
i«" I
A. B. KOKTOX ,
Editor
TUESDAY. APj.UL, 7, 1835
kikdand considerate arc the citi-
zens ol'the sub irb* when elections
*re being hcM foroffiucrs of the city.
Mose Harris of the Mail, George B.
Loving of the Gazstte, Fort Worth,
and Oliver of the Headlight, Lcwis-
ville all come down to the center to
help elect a Mayor and othor officers
in which their neighbors are so much
interested,
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The election passed off quietly—a
pretty full vote polled. Candidates
were busy and their friends very ac-
tive. The offices of Dallas are nice
sugar plums for the Democratic taste,
ilepublicans after having elected
8tone their Mayor and haviuyf boQji
trampled upon by the powers that
rule have become indifferent and in-
disposed to trv any more for supre-
macy where thrjy are cheated out of
their men they elect!
Aeaseforthe Mayor, and Police.
In the Ilora'd appears the statement
While I was makiu.' a political
speech last night some on« calif J otri
fiom the cro wd ainl said I was n G—
d d ■ ■ u liar irotoistatements I made.
All I said wr.*s from the record, and
the mau .vho made the assertion is a
■ liar aud a paltroeu. My office is No.
' 215 Main street, whore lean lie found
ttt auv time, and am respotisihlo for
all 1 have Haiti.
D. A. WlLLtAMS.
< Now where were the police?
1 Whar was the Mav&r? Whr make a
1 • , *
I pretence of piety bv lining poer dev-
j ils who use "cut words" iu eonversa-
1 tion to emphasize th s truth and let
8 such terrible prui'aiuty loom up iu a
't public place.
° TOIIAO TUIN.
Tns Voltaic 1;ht Co.. nf Marshall,
JMich., otter to tend their celebrattd klkc-
tro-voitaic hki.t and other Eiacrnic
n-, APl'LIAJfCxsoii trial for thirty days, to men
Vt <roungor oM voided with nervous debli-
*• tv, loss of vitality and manhood. and all
kindred ttouoles. Also tor rheumatism,
neuralgia, paruiysis. and many other div
Ij eases, Complete" restoration to heath,
vipor and manhood guarunted. Mo risk is
incurred as thirty davs' trial is trowed
Write them ntoiice for illustrated pam-
phlet free.
J".
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cc
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to
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John M*nrs, aged 14 years, was in
the stable on Dougherty's ranch,
near Castrnvilhj. In turning a stall,
one of the horse* kicked Jiini oh the
head, fracturing the skull. Thirteen
pieces of boii* Tv«rewuove<l, and the
boy died.
-*se
[Continued from li| pege.]
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Sill
i'o —
Fiom 1875 In 1884 the South made
To A |ifaiol 85 >Hrroent, while the gaiu
j)y. lor the rest of the couutrv was onlv
62 per cent,
- ■ ... i f ■
Th« m« sp crop of Florida is worth
more th: u its cotton crop. Every
Vomit? in the State produce#, it and
5 the demaud*is far ahead of the sup-
ge* plr.
thr '
da! Wa-tietl«')iit Hair.
g:" There is a sort ol p.ittid chalky compjex-
,f. ion which the noteliata call a "waslied-out
*"■' complexion.'* It i* ghastly enou^li, and
no mistake. W ashed-out, faded, dl*"olor-
ad. or pnrti-coli.red hair is til moat ns mpul-
MveHud in ■limchol v. I'ttrkei'a ilair B?»l- j
nam will restore your hair to its -orliriaal
color, wbntever it whs; hrown. aut»ur» or
Mck. Why wtar niom on your b?ad.
^■e^n t ou may eaeilr hare lively, ablning
Mir.
honeysuckle had taken posse«aie« ef •
peach tree, and wrapped it from trunk
to topmost leaf in sweet, amosous iolds.
Here mv grandfather lived, and leaded
his garden, while his hir»4 help.culti-
vated his fields that spread out all
around. Here i frequently came with
my mother from the stilling existence
of town to the breathing fife of the
country to find the most wltoleeome
food, the most bracing air,. and earth-
room enough to give me a new route
through farms and dense weeds every
morning of the year.
And here I also found a good grand-
father, whose pride in my father and
mother concentrated in me; for surely
he loved me with a rare devotion, and
prophesied for me a happy and glorious
future. 1 beliove every grandfather
casts his last affections upon one grand-
child of many by whom he may be sur~
rounded. His heart leans toward one
little form, in which he sees the germ
of manly strength, in the shape of
whose head he beholds the tokens of
all worldly wisdom, in whose bright
and starry eyes he descries valorous
courage, from whose infant lips fall
words of wondrous meaning, ana whose
actions bespeak a hoart full of the u<v
blest love and a sonl devoted to high
and noble purpose. What a great
world this would be did such fancies
ripen into truths!
This stick is hard as flint It is
sound as a dollar of gold. The wear
of time has served only to polish its
surface and to make it look more
bright and new. But the hand that
took it from its native wood is long
since folded over a careworn breast and
put out of sight forever. The brave
old man it once bore up is mouldering
away in his grave in the garden, while
by hira lies the wife who with him trod
the path of life, and With him seronely
walked into the limitless expanse of
eternity. # .;v 1 '
• he house is deserted. Its doors are
open, but no tenants are! there.
Through its rotted roof the rain comes
down and flows over a hearth whose
tires have loiiz since ?one out and will
never burn atrain. The rude windlass
whose cheerful rattle awoke me at day*
break as it in quick whirl sent the old
oaken bucket to the bottom of the well,
lies broken on the ground. Marauding
kiue have destroyed the althea bushes*
whose dead trunks stinport lifeioss
limbs that clatter a ghostly clatter as
the wind shakes them. The peach tree
has fallen to earth with its clinging
freight, which forsaking its suppoher,
ilinzs in
hopeless desperation to the worm-eaten
palings aud tottering posts of the gi
den fence. The njulberrv trees alone.
ar-
survivc, shaking their stalwart branfhea,
higii in the air as if defying fate, a^dr
overlooking tields now owned and
ed by stranger hands. 1 *
I love this stick becauso it was py
'jTandfather's stick. It serves to keep
his memory green within me. I con-
jure you to care for it w hen I am gone;
for it tells you of one whose life was
spent in lowly places, but whose soul
soared to the iutiuite. He was ot those
p.oueer* who make possible the civili-
zation we are supposed to en|oy. He
worked and prayed throughout a long
aud laborious life; and whenever you
find yourself forgetting your duty to
man and God, 1 entreat you to hold
this stick up before you and call toseri-
otis memory every word I say hore.—
I'hil t'arrwlay, in Arlmntaw Traveler.
A (>ARU.—To sii wno are sutiering
from errors and in llscrctions of vout
nervous weakness, early decay, loss ot
manhood, &c., 1 will aend a recipe that
will cure you ,FKEE OP CHARGE. This
!»reat remedy was discovered by a mission
ary n South America. Send self-addret>sed
envelope to llrv joskcu T. inmam, St
tion l>. New York
^
A Downtown .tlerchaat.
Havlntr passed several sleepless nighta,
disturbed bv tlta agonies and crieB of a
sutiering child, and t>ecomin£ convinced
that Mrs. Winslow's soothing Syrup waa
just the article needed, procured a sup-
ply for the ehiId. On reaehing home aud
acquainting his wife with what he had
done, she refused to have it admitiictieied to
the child, as she was strongly infavor of
homeopathy. That night the child passed
in sudering, end the parents without sleep.
R 'turniug home the day following,
the father found tlje baby still" worse; and,
while contemplating "another sleepless
night, the mother stepped tmm the room to
attend to solne domestic duties, left the
father with the child. During her absence
lip administered a portion of the fioothinir
Syrup t»the baby and said nothirr. Thi.t
night ail hands slept well, and the little
fellow awoke in the morning bright and
happy. The mother Was delighted with
the siidden and tvonderful change, and al-
though at first offended at the deception
practiced upon her, has continued to use
the Syrup, aud suffering, crying babies and
restless nisrh s have disappeared. A single
trial of the Strup never yet failed to relieve
the baby an/overcome" the prejudices ot
4 the mother 4old by all dxug^ints 25.
ccntsUXtel.
%
In oases ot dyspepsia, debility, rheuma-
tism, fever and ague, liver complaint, in-
aotlvlty of the kidneys and blaider, con-
stipation and other organic maladies.
Hostetter's Stomach Bitters is a tried
remedy, to which the medical orJli' rhood
haveTent their tprofesiloual sat* tion, and
which as a tonic, alterative hi d household
speciiitt or diaorders of Uie stomach, liver
andbowelahaa an unbounded popularity.
For sale by Druggist am! Herders, to whom
applv for Hostetter'a Alminaa tor IHMn.
TH$ formula by which Mishler's Herb
Bitotrt is compounded is ever two hun-
dred years old, and of German origin.
0* entire range of proprietary medicines
omnot produce a preparation that en-
joy* so high a reputation in the community
where it is made as
It is the best remedy for Kidney and
Liver Complaint*, Dyspepsia,
Cramp in the Stomach, Indiges-
tion. Malariat Periodical Com-
plaints, etc. As a Blood Purifier,
it has no equal. It tones the system,
strengthening, invigorating and giving
new life.
Tbabtta Judre Hayes, of Lancaster Co., Pa., an
' abU Jurlit and ati honored tititen, once wrote:
. " Ml rider's Ilerb Bitters is rery widely known,
»sad haa acquired •rfpq»t reputation for medi-
4nai aad enratlve properties. I have used myself
and in my family several bottles, and I am satis-
fled that this reputation ip not unmerited.'*
UltfHI/ER HERB BITTERS CO„
686 Commerce St., Philadelphia.
barker's Fleuant Worm Bymp Nevsr Fails
WlUtPFn—Ladies and gentlemen t»
WAHluUtRke light, pleasunt em-
ployment at their own homes (distance n»
objection):work sent by mail; to $6 a
day can be quietly mt.de: no cauvassing.
please address at once,
GLOitV: MFQ" CO., Boston, Mass., Uux
MU.
CONSUMPTION
t hav» aftMlttrs remedy tor the abore <Usea.se; by Its
• lho«iso(1so(ekti'>of the worst Kl.iJ an J-of fans
swnainjrharsbMneareO. Iniecil, »oMronarliim«raltii
tn ItseflUscy.thitt I wl 1 surd TWO BOTTUvS
loptUia* with » VILUA BLK T KUATIS^ om tl:Is diaouse
to oaf Sttff'rsr. GlToeKprens nrnl p O.pdd- f«;
dm. t. a. 8LOUWU. 131 Pcsr.bt., .Nov Tor*.
■ A J>adln*i^ondonPhy-
ln aiotau Establishes an
IU „Oflloe tn New \ ork.
■ BT From Am. Journal of Jied.
"Dr. Ab. Meeerolej who
■mmakeg a specialty ofEpfrpsy
Klbis without doubt treated
WW and cured more cases than
pSyuataa. His nucet«s has simply
j; we haTs heard of cases of over OT
«curedbrhidi. HeguarenteeeaOTi«.™
ud Treatise sent. froe. Gtve JP.O. a>A
LB, He. 96 John St., Kow Voskr
» ,n fMTT Ijiifti ,rl ;
* M
BUBINESh CARDS
J C. BIUUER,
A TlORNKt it VOUHbhLLOh Al
LAW
Dallas. T#ka«
M. T. C ON NEK,
Attorney at Law
ID^LXjA-S, TEXAS.
Will attend falthfnllv to business entrust-
ed to nim in any of the courts of the county.
DALLAS BUSINESS.
D M VCKIY M I)
Residence Corner Austin and Po k
Streets, ( puosite Windsor Hotel.
J. C. KEARBY
ATTOtlNEY-AT-LAW.
T. L. 5IA38&LIS & Co.
WHOLESALE
G R 0 C E R S
OAXJuA^i.
TEX &
•:o:—
€08 Main St.
i \IJsAS TEX A 8
N K.WRIGHT, •
OONTEACTOB & BUILD* Jf
Na 1S8 gyaamore Street.
0vf t.Afi, TKXAS
Jobbinr ef all kind prompt ly donp.
Parker's Tonic
A PURE FAMILY MEDICINE
THAT NEVEIlINTOXICATES.
If you are WHstlnjr away from ajre, riis
sipation or any disease or weaKn-.«Hb and re-
quire a stirnulant take lV.rner'a 1 o 11 ti at
onee; it will invigorate ami bniW you up
from the firit done but will ne>«*r intoxi
cate. It has saved hundreds of lives. It
may save voura. "
If you aria lawyer, minister (tr business
man exbauated by meiitd ptrrtoi or an-
xious cares do not take intoxicatlu^ »;iia-
ulantH, lmt u»h Parker'ti Tunic.
11 y.»u are a meehanitj or farmer, worn
out with overwork. \*r » mother run dow u
by family or household'dntit s try Parker's
Tonic.
11 yoh hs^B DyMH'p«ia, Ubenv^atisTu,
Kidney or. Urinary €ompftunts,orlfyou are
troubled wiih.aji)- jdisnnlor ot the lun^s.
stpmacb. b»w«-1<. blm^rl fr nerves you can j
be cured' by IVfker'a Togic.
IIIM Ol &
IOS wihihim Wtrect. >t"r York.
SOc- and "t "nil alers In medi
«ioes. Orirataavlrv nyiug flolllur
s t
JEFF WORD, JR.
atiorsey-at-law
-:ot-
Offloe 313 Main 8t-
DALLAS - - - TEvak
WUI p»aatta« in the District Courts of tha
Psyentb, Hlgbtti and Bleventi: Distriots and of tha
Pupretr. and Fedaisi Courts at Austin, 1'yiar
VTseo and Dallas
J. M. JtfcCormiCK, Eugene Marshall
McCORMICK & MARSHALL,
Attorn eys-at- Law.
Olkee: 72S, Elm Street.
dallas TKXAS
■ ()
Will practice in the various oourts of the
State; and the Federal courts at Dallas,
Waco and Graham.
A. B. & W. N. nuRTON
Attorneys-at-Law.
Off ICE: 2nil FLOOR, NORTON 8 tUILPIKQ
DALLAS, TEXAS
l$2?*Praetiee In All the Courts aad Be-
fore tbe Departments at Wash-
iugton~^«
Prompt Attention Given to Colleetiam nd
Other Butintur ike State Over.
The Intelligencer Office
A. B MORION & CO.
La?, Laul and collects Aleuts
DALLAS, TEXAb.
Prompt Attention Given to Busines The
State Over.
peccuteln Fed.irni and Btale "ourta. P'oscn'e
claims ai( nst tbv governuiet.t* and
be'ere tbe no a rtoicnts at Waablneton
Lands ond Script bought and fold
Ue.-ord kept of land for sal>'. /i dvertisu-ncDis in
sertad lu the intklIjIyiencbs at reasonubla
rausa-
Uiisines** Hon !es. I>wellie^ Houses and
Farms for Sale or Kent.
Pensions Patents Gliaioed
U S Land Warrants Bought and Sold,
General Aveots ioi
Hl)Ok^l Mayaziller. Etc
BORICH&RY AN.
flie. Sip & Ornamental Paiuttr
SycaxQors St.. between >. aia & xn
znerce.
DALLAS. - TEX A
Hanntnff an! pap^rlps and cat no tun i uk Don
fwISOBGE KICK
*. .
lfaotureiapd Wholesale and retail dealer n
' —aLL KINDS OF— '
No. 730 & 732 Elm £t
^ Texas.
i
fr^sc io a tilt theTlmea. Call-and Examine vl od
Jiet*re Purchase!na Slsewliero
it ,f . .—
Carter& Gibson, Co'
413 ELU ST.
BOOF; JOB PRINTERS
BOOKBINDERS
Th« Meet Comotete Establish-
ment in North Tetcas
£>timatea aad samples of work funished on
application
julius buhukidkb alfkbo davig
^OHiJEIDEK* DAVIS
whoi.e8alk
^ROCER &
AMD DEALEhw IS
BAOOTMO AND TIE3,
DALLAS, TEXAH
Hiss, Lmirs ant Tnb?ccos
olS and 315 Elm Street,
eoplc. fend
and we will sstd
vaiu-iDte sam
will pu t you in
making more money
da>* than you ever
tborght psslble at any business. Cnpitnl not re-
q\iirtiri You onn Uve »• boms a >d work ii spare
lime otil«- or uli tbe time AH of both texts, of
all f jos, icrandly successful, la e«nts to S6 ea^Uy
earned every evening. Th >t all who Waal wore
cau uat tho Outineos. we make those unparelisle
ofiers; To al! who are not wall sa'tsfled wa wl 11
send SI to pay tor tbe tronbl* of wrlttiif as. Ku-
pHri'caiars, ^IrccUons, ate., se*t freu. Immac
psy abso ui»ly sure for all wbo startat a
I)cn'i delay xdaress Sriaa^a * Co Portland
M&iaa
11.11. w.lv.
«1« Retrnrd-will l>c paidorthc He-
teotion ot thieves **no liave l>een atealin-
fencing and i»osts and the gates fl oin pas-
ture lot uear Krewlmantown. S?ome oi tLe
thieves are know ami before eoinnieneing
prosecution Information as to tlie others is
needed. Call at the Intelligencer ofllo« and
money will l>e paid ana protection guar-
anteed.
Geo. D. Barnard ^ CO
' socoKaeoiia to
Van Beek Barnard & Tinsley
Wholesale Stationers
lithographers, ruix'j
KliS, AND BLAhK BOOR
MAI* UFA CTURERS,
421 & 423 North Main ntreet 8t.
louh Mo.
GLOBE HOTEL.
NEWLY BUILT AND FURNISHED
sample kooms for drummers
W. M. SULLIVAN, Proprietor.
Congi ess St., Corner of Austin,
HOUSTON. - - TEXAS
All modern improvements—Cuisine unsur-
passed. *•
FRKK 'OCS TO AND FROM ALL TRAIN'S.
BATHS OX KACU FLOOR FREE TO GUKbTS
Termb, sl.tK) jt $2.00 [»er day, according
Kootn
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Norton, A. B. Norton's Union Intelligencer. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 280, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 7, 1885, newspaper, April 7, 1885; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth443773/m1/2/?rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.