Brenham Daily Banner. (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 111, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 11, 1886 Page: 3 of 4
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. VMIUI CO., BALTIMORE. Mil.
I'oitOll
Absolutely
I'reo from Opiates,
SAFE.
(SURE,
PROMPT.
at Davoeurs Awn Dkai.ers.
TMK I'haklkh A. totiklm C0„ BALTMOftt. WW.
FORc§S®fiSW.tHO
TAYLOR'S
Cherokee Remedy
OF SWEET
Tho «west (rum
fXmo name, growl
the Southern 8Ut__
pectorsnt principle
riuclm *
the o)ii
MULLEIN.
• tree of the
Hi
In
the Southern States. contain* a sUnimating ex
runt principle that loonens the phlegm pro.
it the PMlr morning cough, una stimulates
Hid to throw off thefaise membrane In croup
whooping-cough. when combined with tba
"iijs
i.bijf
WhooplL
table, an;
Mist
ieept .
uresw charges on
the U. 8. oj
mullein
JAYLOH'8
AND MCL-
:t of the Old fl<
i the finest known remedy for Cough*. Croup,
' -cough andoon iium ption tandso pala-
druggist Jorit.
not keep It, we
rges on 1mm sl*e hot
%sm£ko
, ,, , ,
rr.c.,5&?.»
*111 par. for one time only, ex-
«Wrgg gue bottle to aojr part of
)&Atlaala.Oa.
ELECTRIC BELT FREE
To Introduce it, we will for a short time give away in
each county, to those likely to make good agents, a
limited number of ourOei—■ lil »«■<■* Walwusle
Niupcuory BrlU, a positive and unfailing care
for Nervous Debility. Weakness, Varieoeole, Loss ot
VII,-or, Rheumatism, etc. $600 Reward paid if every
Belt wo manufacture doe* not generate a genuine
ctectrto current Address at once, OEBMAX
JBKJLT AGENCY, P.O. Bos 17S, Brooklyn,Kew Toifc
of all Mmmm.
Hjr K. Ul aPHRKTS, ■. D.
BIOIH,YBOIMIHN
[CLOTH and. GOLD
asuita rasa-am snar.
die...
ltkt or ramana m ctmxa
ilElf**5"'- In<l?ram'
*1 Worms, worm Ve*er, Worm
. in* Colic, or Teething of Iiifanu. .3
arrhea, of llhildren orAdnlt* 1
iterv. Uriping, Bilious Colic....
ra Wor^JomiUng
30
Ovxpcpsla.
Wr±r,
teWipig... ■
Cntarrh, Injluenr.a, (into in the Head
p§r
Nervous
Urinary
Cowhs.
tty.Phyaloal WeakneiM
L'WitUii
2SSS
SPECIFICS,
pl5SSBHHi33SS355
For Halo by N. A.WtlJiam* Jt Vo.
PARKER'S TONIC.
A Pare Family Medicine that Never
Intoxicates.
If von are «lawyer, minister or bustnssa man,
•- or anxhmt
stimulant*,
exhausted by mental strain or anxion* caves, do
not take intoxicating * -
Pahkhi's Tonic.
If von hnve Dysj
or Urinary Complanits, or if y< u aie 'trt jubletl
with any illsordfrof the Innga, stomach .bowels,
itlooH or nerves, you can be cured by Pmkm's
but
'*
>)>sla, Khflnmatl.«m, Kill
Toaic.
1II8COX & CO.
163 William Street.
New York
Client* and Inferior Poron* Plaster*
will Inevitably disappoint you. aud are not worth
cVer, the few cents aokeft fur them. Among ih*
numerous poron*
Bon's Carclue
lttler.ee. They
with (lie (irople, and gained the
donemeni of the medical
equalled curative
When purchasing
ess Imitations tinner fuisieaaing names,
such as "Cajwloln," "Caiwlcum" •Caw^n,''
"Caiwlcine," etc., as certain liuckstering
jJru.mKlsU may try to palm them off on von In
iilarl or the genuine. "
with none but I
druggiete. A«k tor
liears the "lliree Seals' '4raile mark and bat the
♦void Capelae tmt in the centre
Among the
»u* plasters offered tor sale Ben-
Plaster* itfone merit implicit onn-
' have ww their great popularity
id gained the voluntary en-
Klltial profession Dy their nn-
uow«, and by (hat only,
be tn voiir tninnl inibNl
worthless imitation* under ixlsleadlng names
such as "Cannioin." '•Capsicum'' "CfMIIll,'
., as certain liucksterinf
to palm them off on von In
line. 2t is beMfttto d'ftl
reputable awl honorable
r Benson's, and see that K
All that Mftnce and Skill
oat-
could do to make Benson's Otpcine Plasters the
best porous plasters, and also Ota best general
e\tenia! r< medv in the world, hj|s Umu done.
W heuever itoselble to Improve them uja dune.
Benson's Planters are not made to impoee upon
the credulous, but to cure disease, lhelreml-
uent success has piocurpd tor them tbe v<rtnn»ary
endorsement of «wi physl«iaas, pbarm^etsts and
druggists throughout toe i
s|»ikeu preference of the iai
are prompt, powerltal, oieanly
oure where no others will even
imitations styled "Capeioin,' _W
or "(iipudn" plasters Keputable druggists
only. Hie •'Three Seal*" trade mark on thr
genuine aud tbe word "Capclne" cut I • the
center of the plaater ' ,i
There are a Few Druggist*
who care mor* to make a large proBt on a worth-
Um article than to wait tor tlie " "
i.Ulmately result* from honest i
are the n.eu who, when asked for
Capclne Planter, will recommend
>tn4 trashy substitute or Imitation,
Sometimes there'll)
'Capsicum,
i prosperity that
dealing We
tor a Benson's
.t.ri -P*.semi cheat
i trashy substitute or imitation, saying it Is
- 'Jart*s good." Sometimes ther *11) do up and
.^clt tfce numerable imitation without remars, al
lowtngt1>e .:n«tomer to suppose he has "lleu-
«un's." It Mi* valueless plaster U returned,
Cb epVohii win sav he madea mistake: if not.
DAWK SIDE OF THE QUE8TION.
•offering* of Wyoming Cattle la Winten—
How Many of Them Perish.
I am abont Ured of reading the highly
colored and exaggerated description* of
the delights of a cowboy's life in the "far
west," combined with the glowing array
of figures to prove that the cattle buni-
»ess is the business, particularly for
Wyoming. The country Is not what it
was a few years ago, when cattle could
find feed on every hillside, even if the
snow was a few Inches deep. The busi-
ness has been boomed until there are
more cattle than feed, and still the stock
papers keep up the cry that Wyoming is
the place to invest in.
The life of a cow in the west is one long
continuation of hardships from the time
the grass starts in the spring until the
next spring. Aliout, six months, in the
year the cowboy keeps them constantly
on the move, and the storms run them the
rest of tiie time.
When the storms are raging the worst
the cuttle drift with them until they find
some sheltering bank or clump of bitshea
that will shield them for a time. It is a
common sight to see them struggling in
tbe snowdrifts, and many of them never
get put. For days at a time they are com-
piled to go without food or water. Tho
snow covers up what little grass there is,
and they have to exist on sage brush until
the wind kindly carries it into the gulches
or piles it up around the country. The
stock papers contend that snow answers
the same purpose as water, which is ir
correct, for I have frequently seen large
droves wandering along a frozen stream
lowing and trying to get at the water.
Some outfits this winter keep the ice
broken in the stream, but this is the first
winter in my experience that the practice
has been observed. Those cattle that do
not get water are poor and weak, and a
large percentage of them never get
through a winter. When the snow is
deepest the coyotes are happiest, as they
can run around on the frozen surface,
and when they find a cow fast in the drifts
or too cold and numb to protect its calf,
one or both become victims to their insa-
tiable appetite. The coyote is not the
only animal the poor brutes have to fight;
the wolf and mountain lion follow them
around and devour a calf or yearling
whenever they feel hungry.
It is impossible to describe the suffer-
ings the cattle undergo during these fear-
fully cold and long winters. The only
wonder is that so many survive.—Wyo-
ming Cor. Chicago News.
The t ry of the Itelieaded.
The "MiLad >'s' lord high executioner
sings: "Oh, never shall I forget the cry, or
the shriek that shrieked he, as the saber
true cut cleanly through his cervical ver-
tebras." Nicholas (iiirnot was guillotined
at Mezieres, in France, recently. As
the saber true cut cleanly through his
cervical vertebrae he uttered a terrible
cry. The execut ioner snys.it was the most
appalling shriek ho ever heard on the
scaffold. In 1871 at Le Mans the victim
gave a shriek that froze the blood of those
within hearing, but the cry of Gurnot is
on record as lieing, next to that oi Xanki-
Po, the most bloodcurdling one ou record.
—Dotrolt Free Press.
Sanvity of a ltevpuup Cuptnin.
The statement that Gen. Hancock, In
the crisis of a great battle, addressed his
soldiers as "gentlemen," calls to mind the
fact that a captain in the revenue marine,
well known on tho Boston station, was
once equally as courteous in giving or-
ders. lie would order a boat's crew to
"give away, gentlemen; lively if you
please, gentlemen. That will do, gentle-
men; port watch, go below, if you please."
As a consequence he acquired the name
of "Gentleman F.," and always had the
beit crew on the station.—Boston Trans-
cript,
Penmanship of a Business Titan.
Although a banker and one of the best
bi&iiivss men in the v, ol id, t'.te late lord
mayor of: Loudon, Sir. K. X. Fowler,
writes »o atrocious a hand that a sentence
which he intended to be read as follows;
"I rvj si 'i the conduct of the government
in tiijs matter its absolutely inhuman,"
w:i£, owing to the inability of the I't inter
to decipher what was meant, (t-auf f'Ttned
it) t^'pe into "I rarely can compass a tale.
My grandmother is the best narrator ot
amusing incidents."—New Orlcaiia Times-
Democrat.
A New |!*e for Silverware*
Englishwomen who have worn mor«
plate than tho butler can lake care of use
their queer little salt and i»epper casters as
foundations for velvet plneu&hioue, and
hide their rings in the hollow. Decanter
stands are also made to supply pincush-
jplja, and possibly in time the big salvers
»1H )>a employed as baby baskets. The
citko baskets haya already been made to do
duty as holders for large cushions.
—Foreign Letter.
A Theory of Coal Formation.
M. Breton htm propounded a new theory
of the formation of coal. He believes it is
produced by the sinking of floating
island*, like those which now occur op»
many lake# and rivers, and which are
conspicuous In the Upper Nile. These
Islands are composed chiefly of turf,
which, being swallowed up bythpwattp,
l*v>me fossilized »t the bottom.—Ex-
change.
The Manufacturer's Frank Confession,
i Health Kefomer—Now, tell' m«
truthfully, are there any injurious in-
gredient* it) your cigarettes!'
Manufacturer—We}}, yes. There la
one very injurious article iu them
Health Iteformer—Ahl I thought a#t
What is \U % '
Manufacturer—^Tobacco.— Philadelphia
Call.
Milk as a Cure for tba Goat.
It appears that French doctors are plac-
ing patients afflicted with gout ou an en-
tire milK diet with success. The venerable
French statesman, M. Barthelemy St. lit.
laire, has lived for yean on milk, lie
fines at 5 o'clock, never wears an overcoat,
walks from l»i« residence in Pasay, a
suburb ot Paris, to th* senate and insti-
tute and back.—Boston Tran»crl»fr
She'd Wait for the Mustaoh*.
*0ll, mamma, what do you think?
Johnny Wilkinson hacked me to marry
him when he grows up!"
"Well, what did yon tell him?"
"I said I'd have to wait until I saw the
mustache to know whether I really loved
him or not-'-Puck's Annual."
Wag®* Paid by English Magaalnos.
Never mind what George Kliot made by
ber novels, or what Miss Braddon received
for her latest effort, yoqng lady, What
do yon think the Knglisb magazines par
their authors? Ten shillings a page, on
the average.—Boston Transcript.
mm
horemuhd&tar
FOR THE CURE OF
COUGHS, COLDS, DIFFICULT
BREATHING & ALL AFFEC-
TIONS OF THE THROAT,
BRONCHIAL TUBES
AND LUNCS,
LEADIN6 TOJJONSUMPTION.
SAVE IMPERILED LUNGS
THE IMPORTANCE OF TIMELY
MEDICATION.
A cougli should neither bo trifled with nor
experimented upon. Imprudent exposure,
neKletit of medication, sutldou changes of
temperature, tho adoption of an wholesome
remedies, are all causes ot the sjteedy de-
velopment of lung nil* bronchial diseases.
It is of special importance thai relief should
be sought nt once and from a rolfnble source.
Materia Mud lea contains no liner specific for
throat and lung complaints than HALE'S
HONEY OF HOBEHOt'NU AND TAK. the
most highly sanctioned and popular jiroprl-
etary cougli medlcluq^ot tho day. it. is not
a mere palliative for a cough, like go many
empirical nostturns alleged to p.,ssoss pul-
monic qualities. It. Is composed of ingredi-
ents which chemically harmonize mid do not
disorder the stomach, has no disagreeable
flavor, anil affords relief Willi a promptitude
which ofton astonishes those who use It.
This groat remedy lias been counterfeited.
Ask for II llili'M IIOXHV, Ac., and take
no substitute.
3 Sizes, 25c.,50c., $1,00 of all druggists,
COLDEN'S
LIQUID
Beef toimsc
GIVES HEALTH &. STRENGTH
TO THE DEBILITATED.
TniY TTTTX ANY ONE RTTTFER FROM CORNS
5,iXC!UHSfi?.a bottle of the "liEiSMAii
C011N Rl'.MOV
GLEliYS SULPHUR SOAP IMPROVES TKE
/'//,■•»IvoUttt* Uv Di opfi Cure in 1 is'
lfiDN S7n!r and Whisker Dyf%£*<> OhN,
(ifi'ttit*:f suf/thitv s*jttp for the f'ow
C'-r;a »:v G#;i Ser UIU Oa/ttfi and Bsdon:-.
DOCTOR
WHITTIER
617, ST. CHARLES STREET
Sf UGVI5, MO-
A Regular fclrndunie of three medical col-
leges, has been longer engaged in the treatment
of Chronic, Nervous, Nkln and BIimkI
Dlneasea than any other physician in Amer-
ica. Consultation at office or by mail, free, .nil
Medicines sent bv njail or express everywhere,
securely parked tree Irom ohnorvntioii.
Nervous Prostration, Debility, Mental
and Physical Weakneif, arising from
Indiscretion, Kxeess, Kspoanre or
diligence, producing some of the following
effects: Nervousness, Debility, Dimness of
Sight, Defective Memory, Pimples on the Face,
Aversion to Society of i« em ales, Want ot Pleas-
ure in Life, Unfitness to* Marry, Melancholy,
Dyspepsia, Stnntcd Dev elopinent,! ,oss of Power,
Fains in the Back, etc., are treated with unpar-
alleled success. Safely, privately,
A Posltlvi Written Guarantee
jfiven in every curaslb cas* ; where doubt ex-
ists it is franltly stated. Complete symptom blank
enabling you to property state your case, sent
free. 30 page boolt; either sex, one stamp.
Blood Impurities and Blood Poisoning,
Mercurial and othtr Affections of Tttroat,
Skin and Boms, Blotches, Eruptions. Old
Soros and Ulcers, Painful Swellings,
from whatever cause, positively and forever
driven from the system, bv means of safe timk-
Turren ksmsoiss. .Stiffand swoixen joints
and rheumatism, the result at blood poison,
positively cured. No poisonous drugs used.
Catarrh, Throat, Hose, Lung Diseases,
CSMtttnilensl and Acquired Weak-
■esq#!* of both aexea, treated successfully.
Afe and **|MHlliinre arc important; tfie
proved good remndies of ail age} and cuumrles
are nsed,and knowing what to give, no experi-
ment* are made. On account of the great num-
ber of cases applying, the charges arc kept low;
often lower than Is demanded by others.
mm j»
Ilegant cloth and gilt binding. Sealed for 50e
in Money mi stamps. Over fifty wonder-
ful pen pictures, snowlngSvhe may w's,r>,
not, why. Proper age to marry. Who marry «rst.
Manhood. Womanhood. Physical decay. Who
should marry. How life and hupp' *
'ncrcyedf Th°»e married or sboi
•houid read Ui istrw
thinking man an
, iness may be
•out to marry
4*4 fijirrtst end value to every
id Wi'msd. fnpniae. caitimi.
Address Bj. #Brmfc»
SMITH'S
/^vmwi
Vg> One 1
pte thssys
{Sick Heidschs In FotirMtr*.
ve» Keurslcla. They cure ar-1
s* Nver, Sour *temach ,<■ Bad
kin, Tone the Nerves, and (jivs
Philadelphia's City Hall is still
unfinished. Upwards of811,000,000
havo been expended upon it since
the laying of the eorner-stonc, in
1872. It is the largest building,
finished or in course of completion,
in the United States, and is esti-
mated to cover over 2800 more
sqeare feet than tho Capitol at
Washington, The tower on tho
north side will bo suroundod by a
statue of Penn, and its extreme
height when completed will be 535
feet. It has now reached a height
of 270 feet.
Start for the Train or Boat
Iti good season, aud don't forget to take
with you Ho«tetter's Stomach Bitters, whkh
will revive and benefit you when fatigued;
will nullify the hurtful effects of water con-
taminated witn zinc from tho ice cooler, or
stagnant or brackish; relieve indigestion pro-
duced by meals of uncertain wholesomeness,
hastily bolted at odd times in railway sta-
tion?, and protect you from tho influence of
vitiated or malarious air and thorough
draughts. To the traveling public, this ad-
mirable safeguard and specific is tendered in
a convenient and agreeable shape. An ordi-
nary ship's medicine chest contains no such
comprehenrfsitgfofttnd reliable remedy, a fact
well understood by mariners. The commer-
cial traveler, tourist, emigrant, miner and
western pioneer, all appreciate the value of
the Bitters. It cures dyspepsia, costtiveness,
liver Complaint, malarial disorders, inactivity
of the kidneys, and is a fine nerve tonic.
Glen H080 Citizen : Tho farmer
is blind indeed who cannot see that
the toilers must pay the costs of
strikes and all increase in wages,
and yet there * arc farmers who
hanker for coalition with certain
wage-labor organizations for politi-
cal purposes. "Walk into my par-
lor, said the spider to tho fly."
White teeth, sweet breath, a fragrant mouth,
There are no charms surpassing these;
Abroad, at home, east, west, north, south,
These three prime charms are sure to please.
All those who SOZODONT apply
Will have these charms—take need and try.
Personal Comeliness "
is greatly enhanced by a fine set of teeth.
On the other hand, nothing so detracts from
the effect of pleasing features, tine eyes and
a graceful figure, as j ollow teeth, 'i hat popu-
lar toilet article SOZODONT checks their
d cay, and renders them ns white us snow.
Ex-Senator Bradbury, of Maine,
who served in the United States
Senate with Daniel Webster,
though 82 years old, has a firm
step and bears few marks of great
ago. He was a college mate of
Hawthorne and Longfellow at
Bowdoin.
Ail of One Mind.
I)r. It. Wilson Carr, of Baltimore, says he
has used Kosadalis in cases of Sciofula and
other diseases with much satisfaction.
Dr. 1.0. l'ugh,"ot Baltimore, recommends
Kosadalis to all persons suffering with dis-
eased blood, saying it is superior to any
preparation he has ever used.
_ Lev. Dabuey Bail, of the Baltimore M. E.
Conference, South, savs he has been so much
benefited by the use* of Kosadalis that he
cheerfully recommends it to all his friends
and acquaintances.
Over ?1,500,000 in drafts and
cash were lound in the 2,843,000
letters sent to the dead-letter of-
fice last year.
Two Dangerous Seasons.
Spring and fall are times when so many
people get sick. The changes in the weather
are severe, on feeble persons, and even those
naturally strong are apt, as they say. "to be
feeling miserable." Then they are just in
condition to be struck down with some kind
of fever. A bottle or two of Parker's Tonic
will invigorate the digestion, put the liver,
kidneys and b lood in perfect order, and pre-
vent more serious attacks, Why suffer, and
perhaps die, when so simple a medicine will
save you? Good for both sexes and all
ages.
■ —
The negro probiom just now is
how to lift a one hundred and fifty
dollar mortgage from his mulo
with a forty dollar bale ot cotton
and have any mulo left.—Macon
(Ga.) Telegraph.
W'ho does not remember Shakespeare's
apothecary ?
"Culling si mples, meagre were his looks»
Sharp misery had w*rn hini to the bones.
And in hi* peedy shop a tortoise hung,
An alligatpr stuffd, and other skins of ill-
shaped fishes."
How drag erores have improved since the
days of ill-starr'd Romeo! Brown's Iron
Tonic is the finest thing that adorns the finest
drug store, ^or i-ale by Oarletou & Nash.
iiis
hm so
v.w.uaam,
Thou*h pstoftal sad
•baffled the efforts of science am.
^1^? *HKUMA
^vvvwjwwvwtisii, and la heartily en-
dorsed by many of tbe Leading Physicians.
TOE SALB BT ALL DRDOOISTS,
S. C. WoiUUUK. *. D„ 1
"H»*« Kfnm Tokoauh*«
the best ranody I hsTsemr'
PRICE ORE DOLLAR
A. HIEILIIR, Mn Proprietor, 709 sad Til 'WASIIIXGTOH AVKHUE, 8*.
BV.DATO,
HEBER STONE & B
(8uc0ks80b4 TO
BOBSKSOH,)
-I
c£ssmit&t3l8fc"
Representing the following Old and ReUable Companies:
N cw York Underwriters Agency Fire Ins. Association of London.
Merchant* Ins. Co., of N. J.
N. O. Ins. Ass'n of N. O.
Sun Firo Office of London
Western Assurance Co., Or,
City of London Ins. Co., Bnirlaml
St. Paul, of Minnesota.
Pennsylvania Ins. Co., of Phila."
Crescent Ins. Co.. of N. O.
Sun Ins. Co., of Cal
Norwich Union of England
British America, Ca. ~
Southern Ins. Co. of New Orleans.
Accident Insurance Co., N. A."
It can be seen from the above list of companies that we represent non
but the best compacies of undoubted security. For
FXRS/MAKXnra and AOOX&SNT XNBV&ANGB
call at our office, over Reichardt & Hermann's furniture store, sontk
side of the courthouse. We are also prepared to insure cotton gins at
tho very lowest rates. Call before insuring elsewhere. All claims ol
Insurance and imssea adjusted at our office, in
Brenham
Ijtlpt
Texas.
LOUIS BRONENKAHT.
-AND-
JEWELER,
W est Side of Square
BRENHAM - - TEXAS.
'tlTM-**
■J.
WOOD & LOW,
-DEALERS IN-
Kentucky Soriin Mills and Evaporatini Pais,
Walter A. Wood Mowing Machines, Reapers,
Steel Tooth
n.alK.e«, £to.
Gullett's Gins, Feeders and Condensers.
Horse Power, Steam andl Hydraulic CottonlPressas.
Straub Corn Mills,
STATIONERY AND (PORTABLE STEAM ENGINES AND BOILERS.
GENUINE GLIDDEN BARBED FENCE WIRE.
LUMBER |g|
Lumber, Shingles, Sash, Doors, Blinds.
Moldings and all kinds of building
material.
Brenham,
WOOD & LOW
'
1
Texas.
mm
il
HERMANN FISCHER,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN
MPS!!
L,
Sinco 1870 Alaska has paid jnlo
tho United States Treasury over
500,000 from the seal lyr fran-
chise alone.
About throe years ago
Acker's English Remedy fir»t wtlled"
jd«br~ r
;o the agent tor
, _ v .. y ^ at ilia
tow»i M>a since then the number of testimo-
nials that have been sent in to Carlton <fc
Nash concerning the merits of tho
Reiaouy, and the many cur?*
ed surprises them. TW wish it
to be thoroughly umierstoo t that tor all
colds, hoarseness, asthma, croup, whooping
cough, all phthisical troubles, they have
never Known Stf equal, and positively cutif'
inteeft. r ^ *
General iogan reoently informed
the senate that he was brought up
to labor on a farm.At a month,
— •*-*<-«
■Mrs.M'insiow's toothing STrnp.
R*v. SvtVAJtes Cobb thus writes iu the
Bostox Chribtiax fkatman:—We woitljj
by no means rocomm^nj %ny kind of medi-
cine which w« did not k now to be good—par-
ticularly for infants Hut of Mrs. Wlnslow's
' from knowl-
prowd a
STAPLE Al FANCY GBBCEBIIX
Imported and Domestic
Western and Texas Produce, ^
WINKS, LIQUORS, OIOARS, TOKAOCO,
l)«lioac.'o8, Candies, Preserved Vegetables, Froit, Meal
Hfch, Fiokles, Can nod Fruit, Nuis, ote.
BRENHAM TEXAS.
Sole Agent of Aahaoatrl Celebrated St. lotJi Beer
tar ICE IN QUANTITIBS AT LOWEST RATES
WLowest wholesale prices to the trade! Pays the highest marks!
prioe ior Cotton and other produce.
Wmk'
m
'mm
ill!
——
mi
II
II
Ml
h> mea
i wtucl
Soothing Syrup we can apeak
edge; in our own family it has
blessing indeed, bvgiyiijg an intant"lRn,blei|
with eoliti pa|os, quiet steep, and I"
unbroken Best at nifiht Most ~
LIVERY, FEED AND
1MMIUMK
1 never be i
I them.
I the parents
parents can
anpreeiatc theso blessings. Here is an arti-
cle which works to perfection, ai d which
is harmless, for tho sleeps which it afford#
the Uiftmt U perfectly natural, and the little
cherub e.wakrs as "bright as a button." And
during the process t>f teething, its value is
incalculable. We have frequently beard
mothers say that they wouldnolbe without it
Near Mela tyre Boom, Main Street. BRENHAM. TEXAS.
O. R. POTTER, Proprietor.
My stable'!* now supplied with new Bngries, fee Saddle and
prepared to furnish transportation to any part of the State.
boarded by the day, week, or month onliberal tarns.
I have added to my Li very Stock a ineM
assortment of UNMERTAJtJtttfSGOODS
Iconsisting of BURIAL CASES andOAS-
KKTS, and all articles requisiteforinter-
inents. ■ I have also, TWO flNE
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Rankin, John G. & Levin. Brenham Daily Banner. (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 111, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 11, 1886, newspaper, May 11, 1886; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth480923/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.