Norton's Union Intelligencer. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 14, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 27, 1880 Page: 2 of 4
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HlflH ISBLLISEHClll
A. B. NOHTON, Edrtor and Proprietor,
W.N. NORTON, Associate tditor.
S it lulrreourse Willi Sviilnwassi.
Cariie biigsi'rs «i«l Xorlh-
cmi IScpuIrlit'itiis.
Thsil's >v!iat is now proposed bv
I lie lljod Comity Student in the on every hand. It
the citv wi:l
visitors
WASIIIVti 10,\ LEIIES. |A (IBOttUOF A 'l'UOlSASi3>.|
CAPITAL GOSSIP.
Wasiii.xuton, Nov., 1880. i How *» *" A;trao«d by Pointing j
Preparations for the winter cam,! Ciaa ai • Ifad-o*™ red oabbaga.!
The Best Farmers tn Texas
Washington, D. C. November
20-—The United Spates training '
ItY
p:ii;;n at the capital nr.Oeiug made j The other morning two gentle- jhip Poitsmouth ran around juat
1)11 every hand. It is apparent; mea were looking out of the win- j below Washington Navy Yard in
following article. Keud it anujl,ia' 'he city wi:l be over-run j (jow 0f a house on Market street, coming up the river this mora-
pity the poor lVllows whose minds!*'1'.1 v','lor< during the nexl when they observed a cabbage roll j iog.
Sara diseased and whose bowels 'j ?e"Vjm ot c<>»gress.' ,u ** fo},,,weJ j oft a market wagon that was pass- ( The funeral of Brigadier Genei -
! in March by the inauguration of .. i . _ . .
| are working over the recent do'eat! Hoc> James A. Garfield as Preei
%i/r< . •„ .
... -■ - j".
ing. Inftantly over a doaen well-
dressed and apparently sane per-
sons began yelling after the wagoD
— „ . as though the vegetable had been
north say the democratic party are I those made by C. (J. Willard, the a eojj watch or a one thousand
m • .1 I • . ! ..nlii.i I ,v S • I.. VI.Ul 11 > - - - — -
| of Hancuckery: | dent loi the next four years. Among
The controlling element of the! (l»« most uotable improvements are
not sufficiently honest to be eutiti- j genial proprietor of the , tj0jjar The driver stopped
ed to confidence and respect. That House. j .bout half a square oil, looked back
we are entitled to no political Assistant Postmaster General the cabbage, yawned and drove
rights, and shall have none. That j Brady reports that on June 30,; on>
the whole Democratic party are 11880, the end of the fiscal year, the j "What an absnrd fuss people in
, bad, and the south the worst part '• postal service enaoraeed 1,118
;M w"° dlm; < of it. Tnat we ate bullduz -rs., j railroad routes, at an aggregate J rcoeeSi» sai(i one ()f the gentle-
■ k"klu* and outlaws. The fjw j coat of >10,493,988. 1 he expense ra<,n -Now, I'll bet a silk hat
—' r:nli.;ais iliut are among us in tfce j l°r transportation over 9,833 "Star
RATCRlttY NSVtJIBER 27 ISSfr. 80Uth, doubtless hate us as much as!«iefvice routes aggregating 285,248
their party in the north do. (miles for the entire year wes $7,-
Sow what ought the southern | 821,449. I he rapid settlement of J yet not leave this room.''
people to do under such cireuni.-j the west has fjreatiy increased the "I take the bet," said his friend
al Zeiin took place to-day. After
services in the church the remains
were escorted by a large detach-
ment of military to the railroad
depot for removal to Pennsylvan-
ia for interment.
For the week euded November
20 there were distributed 422,987
standard silver dollars; for the
corresponding week in 1879,34t>,-j
the street make over trivial occur- 491 were distributed.
Director ot' the mint Bnrchard >
i'i.Vii tilt KETl SOU.
that I could get a crowd of live
hundred [>ersons around that cab-
bage inside of thirty minutes and
The Garden City Clipper Plow
: AJTD :
When tho multitude howl at a
roan for doing what he conceives
to he his duly, there will always
he found some true friends, who
entertain some regard and express
their sympathy for him. The pub-
lisher of a Union paper in the
South in 1861 knows all about ter-
rorism, and the publisher of a Re-
publican paper appreciates in the
fullest extent all kindly express-
ions. On our return f'.'oni the
north the first letter we opened
was the following from one of the
purest and best citizens of Travis
county, who was one of our sub-
scribers before the war and always
prompt in paying his subscription.
Would that we had thousands like
unto this good friend of Manor:
My Dear General: You will
please find inclosed two dollars
which be kind enough to place to
my crcdit, and continue to send
your valuable paper. We di 1 not
get the man we wanted at Chicago
but I hope ere you receive this thai
you will have heard enough to
know that Garfield is elected be-
youd a doubt, and if so invest thi6
amount in an eggnog for the boys of
the Intelligencer oflicer, and draw
on m j for another year's subscrip-
tion. Hoping wc may meet in tho
"Sweet By and Bye," I am voure
truly, Geo. W. Ma lone,
Here's to you, George Hr., and
may you Jive long and prosper—
"Were 't the last drop in the well,
And 1 ga*)iin|r on the brink,
Ere hit parting spirt fell,
Tis to thee, I would drink."
We have got a man who will be
stalwart and true, and to his elec-
tion the man we wanted and all his
deyoted friends contributed their
utmost. For our success we re-
turn on this Thanksgiving-Day
oar thanks to "God, the g^ver oi
all good."
The'first Dallas county man to
coll upon as was our good farmer
friend, Geo. W. Fleming, of Dallas,
who paid us $5 on subscription,
and was glad to gieet us. Although
not acting with us politically, vet
he knew us too well to believe the
base slanders of oar enemies. He
has known our course ever since
we came to Dillas, and well knows
that we '< v always aimed to ad-
vance the right, and to stand by the
o. prcsed
Oar Legion of Honor this week
•hows that the Intelligencer is be-
ing kindly remembered by the
best men everywhere.
stances? Fawn and continue to
lick thy foot that spurns them? It
is lime to -top this puppying down
to a ret of unprincipled vandals. We
should live within ourselves as a
party, do our own work; work
with our own tools; manufacture
our own goods, wares and merchant
dite; eat our own meat and bread,
and wear our own clothes. Declare
non inteicourse, commercially and
socially with tho whole tribe.
Those right among us should not
be an exception. They h it a us as
bad or worse than their northern
bretheru do. They are o;ir enemies;
come among us to live off of us.
Would trample our political insti-
tutions in the dust it they could.
They say we have no rights they
ought to respect. Yes, these tcal-
awaggers are tho worst of the god-
and-liberty party. And non-in-
tercourse should be declared with
them especially. Touch not handle
not the unclean things. We do
not mean non-intercourse with a
sentiou but with a party. When
radical merchants buy goods, let
them buy of their own party; and
when they ofi'er them for sale, let
no democrat buy theui. And let
democrats trade with democrats.
If we are to be proscribed, let our
money be proscribed with us.
Lanier In Peril.
tlwenri,
Knns.is And
Mnllwity.
Texas
Washington, D. C., November
20.— Internal Revenue Collector
Marks, at New Orleans, has for-
warded die Commissioner Raum a
letter received from deputy Col
lector B. II. Lanier, who has
charge of the upper passes oi
Louisiana, bordering on the river.
The letter is dated Lake Provi-
dence, November 10. and says:
"In consequence of my candi-
dature for Congress upon the Re-
publican ticket the spirit of iutoK
erance which prevails here, and
attempts which have been made to
assassinate me; the assassination
c» Dr W. B. Jones, editor of my
paper, because of his active sup-
port of the Garfield Electors and
myself, renders it utterly impos-
sible for me to properly discharge
my duties as Deputy Collector ol
Internal Revenue for this district.
In addition, I have to inform you
that I am at this moment a pri-
soner in my own house, and dare
not go out for fear of immediate
assassination. I find it also ne-
cessary to leave the collection die-
district, at least for the present, to
Becuremy personal safety: Please
advise mc what to do in the pie-
mi ses.
In reply Gen. Raum this after-
noon telegraphed Collector Marks
at New Orleans as follows:
"I do not intend to allow our
officers to be intimidated and
driven from their districts
ploy five competent
men
demand for larger postal service.
The subject of building a new
Congressional Library must come
before (he next congress.
A provision of an act passed
April 24, 1880, for removing the
U. S. Government from Philadel-
phia to Washington appropriated
§5.000 for the purchase of "snch
books as mny be necessary for the
use ol Congress at tho City ©f
Washington." That was the be-
ginning of the present splendid li-
brary. At that time Washington
citv contained less than 500 inhab-
itants and there were no more than
three public libraries in the United
States, embracing over 5,000 vol-
umes. In January, 1802, Congress
passed an act making $3S00 avail-
able for books for the library, reg-
ulating the use of books, creating
the joint committee on library, and
giving the President the authority
to appoint a librarian. Until 1815
the clerks of tlie House of Repre-
sentatives were the librarians of
Congress. Since that time there
have been but four librarians, viz:
George Waterson, appointed by
Janus Madison, served 11 years;
John 8. Meehan, appointed by
Gen. Jackson, served 32 years;
John G. Stephenson, appointed by
Mr, Lincoln, nerved three years,
and the present incumbent, Ains-
worth R. Spofford, appointed by
Mr. Lincoln in 1864, who hu8
served over 18 years. When the
British forces burned tho. Capitol
in 1814, they destroyed the library,
which contained but 3,000 volumes
la 1814, not a book was left, and
that year Congress voted the
money to pttrcluse the library ot
Thomas Jefferson, many opposing
because there were many more
books than would be needed.
Year by year appropriations were
made until 1857, when a fire de-
stroyed 35,000 volumes, leaving
but 20,000 lemaining. Tlie libra-
ry now contains 375,000 volumes
with shelf room for 280,000, leav-
ing 90,000 to bopiied in heaps on
the floor. Besides these there are
120,000 pamphlets, 9,000 bound
volumes of newspapers files, em-
bracing more than a century ef
American history, complete sets of
the London Times <>ince 1796, of
the London Gazette since 1665,
and of the Moniteur Uuiversel
siuee 1787, and nearly all the Eng-
lish and American reviews and
magazines. Two newspapers from
each slate, representing both polit-
ical parties, have been iakeu for
many years, and are kept for refers
enco.
How* Dntrknan Clot Even.
Once on a time there lived a
jovial Dutchman, whose name was
Hanness Von 8hrimpet§el. He
had a wife. He also had a lit-
Em-! tie grocery where beer and ench
courageous' personal property was sold. He
pulling out his watch. "Are you
leady?"
"Yes; give the word."
''It is now 11:30. Go!"
J3»eto"oppioSriVS'iEe'comagejFoor Pointed Cfcio Steel IcrceEutlcd Wire
of standard silver dollar can be|
continued fifteen years wiihout dis-
turbing the actual circulation of
gold is unauthorized. On tho con-
trary, he believes that the provi-
sion for issuing silver certificates
which invite circulation ol stand-
ard dollars and opposition of bank-
The proposer of the wager led ers and butiueas men, which drives
.1.™, , — ac- gave credit to a parcel of dry cu«-
compsny Deputy Collector Lanier | tomers, and kept hie book with a
in policing his division and en- piece of white chalk on the head-
laws. Instruct them j boaid of the beadstead
mr. a . men. and arm them well, to
This great enterprise is now 1
emerging from its former troubles.
and comes under the able manage- .
0». ,uy. Mrs. Sh.i.p.KH
zard. I will furnish )<)U brcech- a neat fit took it upon herwlf to
loading carbines if necessary." j clean the house and things, so she
| did and she cleaned the hsad-board
Gen. Richard L. ISatterlee, tl« gn<j w:th soap a.nd water settled the
army surgeoa, who died in New gjj raan'g accounts, wiping away
York, a few days since, entered the ev-y cbalk mark
Gould, as leading spirit.
meeting of the stockholders, held
at Parsons, Kansas, it was unani-
mously agreed to increase the stock
of this great corporation some j'25,
000,000, and to push the line
from WhitCnboro, in North Texas,
to Camargo, in southwest Texas;
thus adding over 500 miles of
railway to the wealth of Texas. At
Camargo, the M. K. & T. expects
to connect with the Mcxicaa sys-
tem of railways. The company
are al-o going to construct a line
from Mu-kogee, in the ' B. 1. T."
to Fort Smith, Arkansas. This
•will increase the mileage of the M
K. & T. to over 6 GOO miles of
road now owned and operated by
this grand corporation. The com-
]>any are also going to push along
his friend to the window, threw up
the sash, and taking a can9, point-
ed earnestly at the mud-covered
cabbage with a terrified expression.
Presently a hack-dflvrr noticed
the action and began to stare at the
yegetable from tba curb atone,
Then a bootblack stopped, then a
merchant.
"What's the matter?" inquired a
German, approaching the base of
his national dish.
"Dont't touch it! Look out
there! Stand back!" shouted the
gentleman at the window. At his
horror-stricken tones tho crowd fell
baek precipitately and formed a
dense cirele around the innocent
cabbage. Hundreds came rushing
up and' the exeitement increased
rapidly.
"Look out there!" frantically
screamed the better, waving his
cane. "Take that dog away, quick!"
Several stones were thrown at a
cur that was sniffling around the
cabbage.
"Take care!" said a car driver
to a policeman who was shouldering
his way through the mass. "It's
an infernal machine, nitroglycerine
—or something.
Meanwhile the sidewalk was
wcJl blocked, the street became im-
passable, women screamed and
rushed into shops, and a store-
keeper underneath began to tie a
bucket on the end of a long pole
with which to pour water on the
devilish invention. The crowd by
this time numbering over a thou-
sand, the two gentlemen moved
away from the window and sat
down. In a few moments there
was a hurried tap at the door, and
there appeared a man who had
been sent as a delegate from the
mass meeting outside.
"1 should like to know, gentle-
men," he said, " what the facts
are?"
"Why, what there is peculiar
about that cabbage out theie."' .
"Nothing in the word," was the
soft reply, "except that it seems to
be surrounded by about a thousand
of the biggest fools in town. Do
anything else for you?"
The man reflected a moment,
said be "guessed not," tnd retired.
Before he banded in bia report,
however, Captrin Short's wateh
dispersed the mob and clubbed two
hundred and eleven persons for
creating a disturbauce.—£km Fran~
citco
The Post Office department has
made arrangements with Southern
lines ot railroads for a fast mail,
to go into ffleet the 28th iastant.,
silver dollars into the Treasury
does aad will prevent their circu-
lation in this country to the exteut
that 5 irance pieces ciruuiate in
France.
At the session to-day of the
National Grange the Masters of
the State Granges reported that
the study, of elementary principles
of agriculture had been adobted
and with sucess in the public
schools. Mr. Hiiborn, Master of
the Dominion Grange, Canada, de-
livered an address, showing the
progress of the Order.
STOME <£ KEATIHa,
Wholesale oeiI Edai! Implement Dealers,
TEXAS
■ I , i . -
DALLAS,
Abont two weeks ago a white
man apparentely about 45 years of j
age giveitig bis name as N. S.Storre,'
stopped at Col. A. C. Mi'chell's
wagon-yard in Shrevcport la. He
claimed to be second cousin to
Emory Storrs, of Chicago, and said
he came from Kansas City. He
spoke of going into business and
seemed to be a thcrp shrewd mar.e
After remaining several days in th
wagon-yard he suddenly disappear-
ed leavirg his papers and baggage
Whether he has been fouly dealt
with or what has become of him
nobody seems to know, as he has
not been seen since.
Of lotteries, Chief Justi:e Wuita
says in a decision jtist rendered: —
"Lotteries are a species of g am-
bling, and wrong in their influ-
ences. Thty disturb the checks
and balances of a well ordered
community. Society built on such
a foundation would almost of ne-
cessity bring forth a population ot
speculators and gamblers, living
on'the expectation of what change
might award them from the
accumulations of others. Certain-
ly the right to stop them is govern-
mental, and to be exercised at all
times by those in
discretion.
power, at their
Good Men Make Good Hons
Ea.—A horse never vicious or in-
tractable without a direct cause.
If a horse is restive or timorous
yon mny be sure that the fault
Vises from defects in his education.
He has be«n treated either awk-
wardly or brutally. Commence
the education of the horse at his
birth; accustom him to the presence
voice and sight of man; speak and
aot gei t y; caress him, and do
not s artle. him. All chastisement
or cruelty contuses the animal aud
makes him wild. They are good
men who make good horses.
Railroad Accident Below
Rice.—A serious railroad accidont
_ . . occuriod between Rice and Cham-
by which one business^ay will be' ber9' creek, on Wednesday even-
faved bstween Boston aud New • j„g last at about ha!f past six, to a
service in 1821, and his first sta-
tion was at Chicago when Fort
Dearborn was ou the frontier.
Here and at ether western posts he wrought. Then he said:
Pretty soon before l*cg the old
vender of things came into his
Orleans.
Sixth Anditor McGrsw has snb-
initted his animal report to the Se-
cretary ot the Treasury. The on-
ly recommendation the report con-
tains which has not already been
published is that appropriations be
made for additional clerks, and
oue chief clerk at a salary of $2,<
100 per annun. In conclusion, he
vays. "The account ot the Post
Otlice Department, numbering over
vernier oi 14 000,00 and involving over |2,
house and saw what ruin his frati • ■ , . » . '
was on duty until the outbreak of
the Seminole war, when be joined
the statf of Gen. Z tcbary Taylor
in Florida. In that capacity he
served through the Scuiiuola war
and went into the war with Mexi-
co. He was medical director of
Gen. Scott's army during the ad-
vance ou the city of Mexico, and
during the occupation of that city, dismast. When she returned
Ho was stationc.i in New York city recovered the head board
to Fort Worth. lt *ss, immediate* | tiinjUgj, the civil war as chief med- marks,
ly, and thus conucct with Galves-
f'Mein Gott, Frau SbimpetiSel
what for you make a ruined man of
roe I guess not? You make wipe
away all dem name and fSguras
what I owe dem fellers wba'.'s go-
ing to pay me before they gat read-
y, and I lose more Zwci hundred
toiler 1"
His frau left the room in fear and
he
ith
special train carrying four compa-
nies of the Sixteenth U. 3. Infan-
try, Major Webb, commanding,
whioh struck a broken rail aud
four coaches were ditched. Up-
wards of filty of the soldiers were
wounded, ten of them severely.
Oue has since died and several
others sre expected to die hourly.
The soldiers wire from FortRciiy,
Kansao, and en route for San An-
onio. — En nil Review.
Official list of the missing and
dead inmates of the insane asylum
at St. Peter, Minnesota, gives the
names of twenty-seven. Eleven
are snpposed to have been burned.
000,00'J, have been promptly set-
tled, collections made and liabili-
ties paid, with aloes eo slight as
to be scarcely appreciable. Nev.
er since the organisation of the
Government have the accounts nf Heven were incapable of moving
the Post OXce Department been themselves. Others would not
movs. They seemed to tbiuk the
fire was an entertainment for their
beacfit, which they watched with
childish delight till the floor gave
away, and tbey were engulled in
as
in so satisfactory a condition
at the present time.
The Joint committee af thirty,
appointed to harmonise Republi-
can organizstioDS relative to ar-
ton direct, over the branch line cf
the "Texas Midland Route." The
ical purveyor.
Then "aid she: i "ngements for the inaugural cere-1 »he fhmes.
Catarrhal
POISON
Vat Ce Mayer's Treatia* ea Ca-
tarrh, cxpUinj th* f*Uo«ia« impumW
fccto:
1. Tkmt Catarrhal Colin •
pelioaani kfutlu, at Orel local, tei
ln*Ur •onatitutlo»a2.
X That, being Conntiin'.ioiiik!, lb* laho-
3ob la Ik* reach ef mar* laeal
rwosdiaa.
3. Thai ImpmrKlo* !■ •*« ooMrila. et*
nacwuarily swallowed into to* ■tomach
and Inhaled into th* luu&*, thaa'pot*
•omiaa th* 1)ifcfltiTf, RcJ:ur»torj aui
detito niinary ortani. f
4. That Catarrhal vlrws for -ws th*
bbucoob mcmbrac* rtuil oansta Daafbeta,
Draptpnia. Chronic Diarrhoea, BroaekltU.
LeacorrhcM, an<l Consumption.
5. That Sraohos, Dcachec-, Inhalation*,
m>4 Iasolubla SnuSt, oanmot paaaiUy
r*more iafcttioul iufiamiaation <r*ia tk**r-
taoe named.
6. That aa aattdete for CaUnfc »«it
poaaueaQ iaoonlativaaAnitr far, and th*
tualitr of bcjni obior d by, th* paralent
nueoua whararar lecatad.
Baaed npoa theaa jilala thesrlaa,
Dr. Wei D* Meyer's Catarrh Care
ha* proved to be infallible. It not onlr re-
lieve*, it aurai Catarrh at anj atage-
lloae teatimoar:
Cured I Cured I Cured I Cured!
W. It. Wood*, 4BT Broadway, H. T., B*ied of
Chronic Catarrh.
F. J. naaiaTT, 849 B'dwaf, K.T.,4 fn Catarrh.
O. L. Bncaa,4i3 B'dwaj, H.T.. 10 j'n Catarrh. |
S. Dmnmirv, Jr , Jeweler, 03TBro84waj.??.T., i
(lady frtend), eared ef CUrwiie llaj i'eter.
Mm Kan* C. tlewie, 39 W. Waablnftton
flqm&re. II. Y., cirvd of SO feara Chrouio
Catarrh. ®
Km.Qto. A. n*ia, l» Jay SI., Brooklyn. "It
raftered me to mjr lainlalnlal lebora."
Mar. Caaa. J. Jo«a«, New Brighten, 8. t,
"Worth tea tlmae lb* *oat."
BIT Arj*. Fnate, Caire, K.T. "It haawor!iad
woudcr* la all caaea In a.j parian."
L. t. Kuril**. St» rnlton St., Itravklja, eoi»d
ef 4 yeara Chroni* Catarrh.
Ha* 3. Swinr*. Jn., S00 Warren St., Jersey
City, *«rtd of 13 y*ara Ctiroui* Catarrh.
Ac. *«. Ae. *e. **.
A real ear* for thta terrible malady, la
th* meat important discovery f*r th* relief of
humaa iafforin(. siate vaeciaatisa. W at
Do Moyar'i Catarrh Care i* aold by all
Drain tat*, er delivered by D. B. D»wit
k Co.. 4S Day St., X.Y. for $1.60 a paekage.
Te dabs, six package* for Dr.
Wet Da Meyer'* Traatisa, with fun
*x*laaatbn>* and overwhelming proelh, tl
Paat-paldand unltr** lo aarhad#.
v . —- j
HALL A* SAL [ L] A I).
T. L. MAItSALIS
wrroi.K.s \LB
GIIOCER
23 AI. A3. . » B2KAS
9.3S.lv,
_L1(^kahn7~
P3!i.L3a 1M
Handmade and Eastern
BOOTS AND SHOES
ilati and Caps, Valines and
Trunks,
604 Elm Street, 604
DALLAS. TK3EA19.
fXSOTV'Y SK-WFET. MOBOSlt, JH
MOROWEY A CO.,
Dossier* ia BbeJf and Ifeery
H AEBWAEE,
Mechanic*' Too!*, Iron, Hails, Wagon
Woodwork, Agricultural Implements,
Etc.
637 Elia Street,
Dallas. Texas.
JOS. MEHC2EB,
Whe'teMlc aBfi R«tntt
GEOCEE,
W. a- UAMDALL Si BAO'B OLD 8TJL»t>
-—§"§
tlneore, t*r.e.y Orocerloe,
Tot>(W!ce, Prndur»,
Cawil Mijnor*, Provlmons,
Slk. w.il (Vr. Tea*, Wfodso Waee,
Imported ^oo-I» ordtt^e,!
Of ail kinda. Bte., Hte.
§°§
Onr will be strictly in »wcop«i»Doe vrith Ui«
Qnirk tfnlo# »n«l Profit*. We have
calculated our ratnll price® a small m-ypin abova
wholesale l'.tt, und rat-rely ash thecltiiens of Del
la* and surrounding cowntry a Wr and Impartial
trial to substantiate this radvortinereent With
pleimure we wlU show our goods; we art conad»n*
cur prices will p!c«iise.
W e hate a reputation; we will try to impro#
MlENCZSlL
6:M ? »
8;B0 a m
TOT
Tezas and Pacific
RAILWAY,
aad St* c«t>i»eelIoB» fena fHe meet diree'
■■d q«lehc«l line from all pHaW Is
TEXAS
—TO—
t, Leou, ChicR((o, Cairo, I*rfUa»(*.ll*,
ToWo, Memphi*, Kaahviile,
Loaiaville, Otalta^ooga,
Atlanta
—and el pjlote—
5orth, East & South-East.
Tvatoe Is art Dallas Btattoa, aa foHows:
WB«rf. BAtHL
!« J6 » ni No. 1, Wall and fcrpree*,
Ifo. 3, Mull and
a pn, Ifo. 3, AeftommodaWoa,
No. 4 Aceommodatioa.
CONN KC7 IONS:
Toxerfcarr*, wit?) all tratna on Bt. lx>0
, Jioartatr and Be. Kwy. for all prints North
• t «nd Bntith Kast
At Longrlew Junetioa, and Mlomela, with mi
trains on International H. R. for Tyler, Palestine
Klnuston. Anef.n. OaWeston and San Antonio.
It Dallne, with traina of ths Hon-ton la Tesns
C\ otral Rwy. fer Corsi^ans, Meila, Bremond, Wa-
CaWcrt, ttrran, Hompst«a>l, Hr«nhom and all
% jita la Middle and Southern Taraa.
At «!harman, with H. ia t. c. fcwy. forallpeials
op Ihe Una of that scad.
4t Fort Worth, with etaf«a for all points lo
Wtffltcrn Teaaa.
(VI Bhwport, with 5U(* Hi a a# Btaataasa foa
« Ovtaana.
I oilman's F*laee Sleeping Cars
—rtoa—
Fort Worth, Dallas and Sherman,
St. Louis.
Any information la retard w> rataa of ri*lfht
I rase age, Tiai»- and Cenaaol!
»—- ... tO
*1 Boat.. Marshall. Taxaa
►an m.
• ad tMsaflc, Tim** and ConaeoUona, will be efc*»»
fhlly fi^an «ia aaplli
tie*. Worn a, Ota
W.H. JftwuAa. <*»an krt. A^v t
W. II .T«ow**tf*. Jr..t>«n.P..w r.A.
Daniel Webster was
int:leaser! Mock lias all been taken j jle reaiarketl of the press, fi
anu Mr Gould prontisei to put tbe j j;, the »am required to patror.ixe *
"HannoM.joul.aT.maka lhtm ntc^of Pras-.d.trte1^ GarfteW,, H. Stephens, ol
— , .11 riRht again, don't it*" | met to night Jurfg. S..elUb.rg., ! ; hM hecn re.,lecle(] lo
right.when 1 ^inUarer frau, m.k. th.Pre9,d,"S- Alter two hour. (c reM h, 11.U41 .otes against;
Si<' hra,U 'figures. 11 rigft, but I put down,"'0". wer* °4,09,n- L- " 7 —
ft. MJIINKIDF.lt.
gCHN EIDER A DAY IB,
W 1101*18 A L.8
AUrftKIi DAVX
tiron It
HUEY tc PHILP,
•dbalxbm la.
Hardware
IRON, NAILS, STOVES,
Belting, Tinners' Stock,
Crockery aM Glassware,
Anil Munnfaclurersof
Tin and Sheet-Iron Ware,
BO'S 609 St 610 ELM STBEBT,
Dallas, Texas.
Soh; Agents for "Buck'a BriHi&nl"
ami "Charter Oak" Cooking Stores, anil
Allan**' Barheil Wire. Hooting, Gull wing
ami all kinds of Job Work Prompt'*
Executed. OclS-ilv
HW. Harry & Bro's,
STOVES
TS Si WAR S3,
CHINA, GLASS, QOSKSSWARE,
House Furnishing Goods,
LAL1P3, fc.'i
NO. 629 KLM ST.,
DALLAS, TEXAS.
1^" CiaWeniwd Iroi Cora ice, Wiiuknr
("a|w and Sk**l Iran War,.
OMttlt
Iter names .a d.tn old iel- i
18 kc.tt.ring. The presidential
1 I 1 .1 11 . .1 t | * . 1 ■ ! aome pvtier names as neui ou
work through with all ot the foree n newspaper: amply rewarded its j out!"
umi powers of hi>t wonderful orgnn patron, I care not how humble and 1 ———
inlions and combinations. He is unnretendinE the gazette he takes. It is the gosaip in \Va«hi
a that Gen. Il.irrv White,of Pennsyl- ol The counties b The 8(ate-
0 vania, defeated for election to Con- # rupriatej_ MU1CJ j.ckson,
e giesw, is a candidate fur the cierk- j()lmt.on anj Lt.e, He beat Gar-
I rote in his district was 10,386 for
izatious and combinations. li-» is mipreleiulin^ the gazette
certainly one of the creitcst and Jt is ntit to ini|»os.sible to fill
inosl remarkable financial m«-n of | priated shee". without putting into
(Mrfitld carried low. by 78,- Hancock and 4,600 for Garfield.
082 Tol.a o.sr Hancock. Ttie ln iwu countiea Garfield did not
hingtoo i_)cmoeratjc candidate carried but i rCCei.c . »oI«.
this age.— (Julrcston
Oammeref-
Journal o/, it fuiuething that u worth the
I subscription price."
! .-hip of the next hon«e.
! field
J. 11. Power?.fctol* WoostciOhio! Hon C. li Cooke,nged fiitj-cigl.t; George MeXuUy allocated iu a, VV
djuya^ed I'jr fit«. 'ci d alCvn Uir.ia kv.,
c» vcr
Da via
carried
icisder lank at l'ituburg.,
•ity of eight votes
County
it by a p
A htndwtne and wcalihy young
married lady, of Philadelphia, ;a
I» j paying (he petiaky of a foolish fl 1-
ur-i tation. It began on shipboard a-.d
will cud iu the madhouse.
OROCERS
>XII I1ULBM l>
Wiict, Lipi aai Tate.
CeratR .1 l-l« aad Lamar StrwtS.
• 1 DALLAS, TEXAS
PiaIlters, House. ■
8T. LOU 18, MO.
KELCET. k SlfTIOKEY.
llul i-OClf.
! ST.LOiHS TYFE FOOKBflY e
na*itTFi*a art.. !i
mnd CrnmmrwtJfi
TYPE,
FRTffTiKO PRES5rS, |
„ ■* Own, €%*»**, G*U*y»,
r ••• if
% fri(t5af l|arSi«»ry C,f»ra!ir.
1 n«elr*ty?lrg and glwwty»!tg '
_n won.
V. a. BOBIOS
Hesse. Sia aai Omaaailal P3iater,
US Sycissri St, kit. Main & Zla.
DALLAS, • TEXAS,
t9" r«pt llu^Bf iVwnWnf Dw«« MI
8lv<1 fr'otf c»s wt ullf
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Norton, A. B. Norton's Union Intelligencer. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 14, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 27, 1880, newspaper, November 27, 1880; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth444692/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.