Brenham Daily Banner. (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 308, Ed. 1 Friday, December 12, 1884 Page: 1 of 4
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: Dwyer Building, St Charlei Itreet^-Entcrd althc Posloffice at Brealiam, Teaaj, as second-clas, mail matter.
— i , -:r-r:~.-rt: rrr- —- '■" 1 —— alii !
VOLUME IX.
IJIfKNMAk, TEXAS, FRIDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 12. 1884.
' K1
$
renh
KHB
ftofibrh
of the city
» rwEis,
J. TRISltfA®,
dial! is—
DRUGS,
Medicines,
and MET ARTICLES,
(South side of public square,)
BRENHAM- THXAS
A full supply of all the popular patent,
medicines.
Toilet articles and fine perfumeries in ond-
I ess variety.
Physicians prescriptions carefully and
accurately compounded at all hours, d*y or
night. ltfi 8dtf.
P. R. DAWSON
. Inventor and Bnllder of
jiti. ii YiffyiV
AND FEEBfflS,
THE BEST IN THE MARKET,
ALSO AGENT V0H
Cotton 61ns, Feeders and Coitfn-
scrs, Steam Engines, and
Cotton Presses.
Filling Gins, Repairing Gin Bruahes, Brush
es made new, Feeder* arid Condensers
repaired. "Work guaranteed to
give satisfaction, and all
orders most prompt-
attended to.
BRENHAM. TEXAS.
W.G. WILKINS,
Wl
H.8.
Wines, Liquor, Tobacco,
Cigars, Crocker/ and Glassware
mm&mm ,W;STdeof S(juur.',
TCHBKS AND
sWittEW.)
*i •- iWi • : tJXMk X/J 1.4'XJ.. ■ 1
Corner of St. Charles and Quitman Sts.,
r BEEF
ii -taiiiiji)
a, Texas.
jwst market
m
3rice paid in cash
1 and SHEEP.
ifliHAM!
THE CELEBRATED
TONY FAUST BEER
si ABfftlVE]
H. FISC!
^WSff'AlCRtVEDl
SCHER, Sle %ent.
CAPT. H'A. MCCLUNU
Takes this method of informing the public
iqht hfe'trill cdfiHhue the Insurant business
at the office of the old firm of McClung &
Hdl&rton, ln the new (Mddings building,
where hp will be pleased to attend to the ln-
tfrta'ce wants of his former patrans.
' < ' "^—* —
FOE SALE.
of. cultivation, gqod residepca with eight
roomvtWgood cliterns, good bam and
other out-houses; a residence lot in Potter
and White's addition to Brenham j a 64ft
acre tract of land in Lee county, one. third
timber, balance prairie, good spring water;
800 acres in Brazos county, 9 miles from
Bryfcn, all timber; 1,000 acres in Eastland
wiffity, 16 miles from Eastland, plenty ot
timber for all necessary purposes, and well
watered.
All of the above property will be sold
cheap and on easy terms. For further par-
ticulars, apply to J. W. Wkbb.
AffliEt K 1>II Ll)l\i:
MARKET St.
J®),
Brenham, Texas.
15 eontsi 2
10 c«its;
Doalere In
Doors, Sash, Blinds, Pickets and Buliding
Hardware.
Yard near Santa Fo Depot, Brenham, Tox.
~ SCHMIDT BROS.,
—Dealers in—
GR0CE8IES, WINES, mm,
Ciiam art Country Prate,
brenham - - texas. *
Hig hest Market Price Paid for HiH^
Poultry, Etc,
colored free schools. Apply to the superin-
ftUSSI,
Contractu1)' and Builder,
MtNllAM- TEXM.
Is prepared to contra.*^ 'or
kinds, complete. Plans
iurnished upon application.* J
pared to manufacture moukHAJ*,
door and windo^ frames \»J
sawing a specialty. Lumber <* . .
planed -from ope-sixteenth of^m^.teM
nches thick. Shop on North Market Street*
Highest niarket prlce paid for Hides ur \
Beeswax.
B.
Next door, to
Brenham,
NOTICE TU TRE
JUisT.—One
dozen.
BAN
1.50 per dozen, fluting mclud-
"ofs, towels and stockings 35
Proprietor.
LONE STAR SALOON,
KORTHSTREET, (in rear of Opera House),
BRENHAM TEXAS.
The bar is always supplied with the finest
anh purest bodr, wines liquors, and cigars.
The lunch counter is supplied with all
delicadea, foreign and domestic, that can bo
had in the market.
IltER & S0NNENBERG,
Proprietors.
CttMED TEACHER wfflH
colored free schools. Apply to the supi
tehdent of public schools, Brenham, Texas,
DR.) 1). C. WILLIAMS,
I
corner
yeahiwpractioo in this
oodnty. '1&* TKRM8 CASH •
nift Saloon.
Charlie arid Sanay Streeu
Hrenhum, Texas.
ith the flnest li-
quors
cello
Champagne. TNi flu
oity. Patronage *>'
Hkhes to Worn* the
liana and vicinity thfci he nas
pCH^y AuSlhCfS?
ana tttfgny. All ow» wiw w
tended to at any hour, day or
city or country. ,
■MrTifnln-Ti diseases of women an children
it brandu of clgan In the
IIMANN Wonrlptor.
X
(At Walter & Bell's old stand),
'r-fiiALWUW—
PC/RE DRUGS
-and-
drug store.
Besidenoe: Exchange hotel.
Telephono at office and reelden I
BRBNHAM
BOTTLING WORKS,
BY RANKIN k LEVIN.
TERMSi
no r«uy, oue vokr,
'* o;n« inontb
ope week
F.O
15
!' r.lti.ral termt. toqnatjtriy and yisarlyaivi"
Local notless ten o«nu> a Hue tm-ti
l ienlMi. Tranilent adr«rtUement4 tv hie
in aiivanee.
ADVailTIBIHO RATKn I
iielLch, flrst li.serUon
Enoh 8tiWau«nt Thse".io.n.
' ■
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This
purity,
powiler nev#r
Btrvactfi >»(l
varies. ,Y
marvel of
»s. M .re
wholf.si
economical than the o«ltuaryn
cannot be' sold In competition ttith the
lo
I BP
al Baklmr Fovrder Co., 106 Wall# St
ipi
titude of low lest, snort
phophate powders. Sold
welL'ht,
only In
alum oi
cans. Koy
N. ¥
Inriiuible Architecture in a New Eng-
land Parsonage.
•'Yes," she aalit, "our children are Hiarrled
and Kane, and my husband and I wit by onr win-
ter Are uiuoh as wo did b«Jl'ore the little onps cluna
to widen the circle. Life Is «imi< tiling like a
spiral stalrca-e, we are a'1 ">e time ct>ii>lD«r
around oVeftile spot we Started from, only one
degree further up the stairs.''
•'That is a pretty illustration," remarked her
friend, musingly., Kazinx into tlie glowing coals
WHlch radiated a pleasant heat from the many-
windowei stove. "Yon know we cannot stop
tolling up the hill, though "
".Surely we cannot, and for invself I don't
lUul lault with that necesfity provided the ad-
vance In lite is nbt attended with calamity or
tifferlng for 1 hiu'e liad my share of that " Not
long siticfrmy health ntteily broke down My
system was "ill.of malaria. My digestion be-
came (boromthix (lisoiUeied and my nerves
wer« in a wwtrtfr'Bt'ite. t was languid; ate
lltrie, and that wTlliout enjoying ft, and had no
strength or ambition to perform even nvy light
household duties. Mescal treaniunt tailed to
reach the seat of the Iro ibie. Tlie <tise!i»e—
which seemed to be weakne S ^t' nil the vital or-
gans—progressed until I had several at.ack«
which my phj>ic!ain pronounced to be acute
eotigeslion.of the ^t«.ma,li. The laot of ihese,
was a desperate struggle and I was give'1 up to
die. As the cflsls had partially |iss« d, my
husband heanl of .the merits ot larket's Toi io
as an invigorant In ju-t mi Ii eases .n mine. I
took it and felt Is good etl'ei ts at once. 1 ap-
;ieared to prevade my body, as thoti.-:b the bless-
ing of new lite had come to me, 'huhjx no
other medieiue 1 continued to Improve, and am
now'ln better health than 1 have bten for a long
time." t
[Extract from interview with the wife of llev.
P. I'erry, pastor of Haptlst church, (joklbroi.k,
Mass.
*; eo
Sti
CELEBRATED
UTOJUcn
tem Is a (n« Wootl (
ie,;«itKi a sinierb anil*
butous speolfle. 'if rallies tlie failing energies ol
the debilitated, and check* ineihature decay,
me' atia ague, bilious remittent, dyspepsia
and bowaJooinplalntsaH among the evils which
it entirely removes. In tropical countries where
the liver and lft>w«lV»iM W«ans most unfavar-
' affected by the combined influence ot cll-
id irattri' lt :ls -a verv safeguard.
>d,l)ealers generall*.
To Farmers.
Under this head is the)following
bit of'rhyme which was many years
sigo published in the Old Farmers'
Almanac:
Neat be your farms; 'tis long
confessed.
The neatest farm is the best;
Each bog and marsh industrous
drain;
Nor let vile balks deform the
plain,
Nor bushes on your headland grow,
For briars a sloven's culture show.
Neat be yonr barns, your houses
sweet;
Yohr $aths bo clean and door
yards noat;
No moss the sheltering roof en-
shroud,
Nor wooden panes the windows
cloud;
No sink drains should above
grcunds flow,
Nor weeds with rankling poison
grow,
But flowfers'fcicpand, and fruit trees
bloom,
And fragrant shrubs exhale per-
fume.
Neatly enclose your garden around
Smooth, enrich and clear the
ground;
For if to taste and profit you in-
cline,
Beauty and use you always should
combine.
any reasonable man suppose
ilch cows aro paying while stand-
1 .>
MAOTTACTUM* Or
A complete atock ot 1'atent Medicines,
[fine Perfumeries and Toilet Articles con-
#%h/ Cdmpounding of PHYSICIAN'^
PEBBOBimONS cliptnialtv.
Corner North Ma in St.
Brenham - • ^
Sar»»p**u«»»<l Glmtw Ale.
V ; '.-jt
|g%J)oda Vountains charged at low figufel
W. IL MLfltl'Uy PaopwrroK.
to Htocli holders.
T' hi I)Mk)'fe^TltF. l^nFAlT A V
Compress Company R
sswiife
or after 8d of jfanutiry, tM6. liWidetids
will be, paid ,to partios In whoae narno too
stock stand/on the boards of '.W tympany.
No tnm^Wot stock \W!t lie piWe <>n thn
books of the Cohiponv between tin' 20th of
Doccmbcr anil 3d of .January. Stockhold-
ers must present fcrtifleuiot.
i J. N. Browk, socriury.
HJUi
' FlrM;6^rlMlM*ps«i !ft!O^A'«*le;6alvrston,Te*.
as, fully and freely indorse English Female Bit*
\v%.
Dr. T, C. Thompson, of the above firm, testi-
fies as (follows: "I have been handling about
fol k Tnoi s\ni> Dolla b s worth op English
FkmalS Bittehs fer ykaR <i'f several years,
and take pleasure in saying 1 never knew a med-
icine to give such universal and long conttn-
uitt satlsftctiori in alt my bus.nesg life. I hate
been selling it ten y«rs. and (he sales hat a al-
»|4&.(ccifl*ik 3nJ«rtJiiMl4-Jftort,to my cus-
tomers throughout the Southern States.
"I have conversed with hundreds of druggiats
relative to its merits, and have kiicvn of many
wonderful oures within nvy osvn pshsonal obser-
i eation, wfcith eeniitiH tae 4f !t» f t«!»*tofitT sa a
remedy for tlii cure of all Female Complaints SO
common among aUeliMes-
"I recommend it cheerfully and in confidence."
T. q,.THOMPSON, M. D.
, ; Of 'rtk>rap»»fc ft Qlistsiede,
Wholesale DruggisU, Galveston, Texas.
Visions of Bliss.
Nine millions of Kutpty Pill Boxes! What*
, ud commentary on constlpntiun and biliousncasl
What a vast storehouse of p llsil all were col-
' lected. And to think that all these drsstlc, nan-
pill, have been kindly solicited to enter
the stomachs of men sn.l women! Sickening
and disgusting to think of. No on* knows the
jw and aches, loss or time, pllci> and Inftamma-
tiona they have caused. You doa't need such
powerful medicine. Stop their use, and try
one dose of Bailey's Saline Anient, and visions
of bltaa will hover over your dejected hrowl It
relieves constipation, cures biliousness, sick head-
ache, heartburn, Ac* It is pleasant, effectual and
cheap, and well adapted to ladies use.
Large boUiei only 50 cents, *nd sold crmf
when.
Care of Cattle in Winter.
&
ing around in the mud and snow,
picking miserable' sustenance from
the straw stack, with an occasional
armlul ot fodder or a few ears ot
corn thrown to them? At this
very time, when butfer is com-
manding a high price, the owner
of such cows has nono to sell, or if
ho managos to scrape a few pounds
together, the insipid white stuff
can hardly find a market. Now
wcro these cows snugly housed
ana reasonably fed, their product
would add no small amount to
the farmer's income. If the far-
mer is in easy distance of the saw
mill a few loads of slabs can be
purchased at a vory low figure,
and an excellent shelter for his
stock can bo built with them. Or,
if he has timber on his place, he
will not have much difficulty in
gotting the owner of a portable
mill to cut down for him on shares,
and thus raiso many valuablo
buildings on his farm at a com-
paratively trifling cost- Let our
friends heed these remarks and
their #yes will be gladdened by
sleek, healthy and well-fed ani-
mals they will turn out to pasture
next spring. Corn stalks and
wheat straw can be most advanta-
geously used for the samo purpose-
—^Western Rural.
Tlie Profit' of Farming.
There aro difforcnt ways of look-
ing at the profitableness of farm-
ing, and the prospect is rosy or
gloomy according to the stand-
point from which it is viewed If
you want about the most lugubrious
opinion of this business that can be
expressed, come this way we will
show you whero to find it. Wo
will go to some place whero the
fences aro lying in tumble-down
ruin, the gates hanging by ono
hinge, tho barn a lopsided, leaning
pile; tho barnyard a reeking
swamp, the house a leaking, dis-
mal wreck, its windows stuffed
with old coats and hats—every-
thing devoid of paint or finish, and
nothing in its proper place or in
decent condition. It you can fight
your way through the curs around
tho door to the proprietor, ask
him, while he eyes you with strong
suspicion, whether farming pays.
If ho is not afraid that his answer
will give.you some opportunity of
cheating him, ho will tell you that
farming is the worst business in
the world. Then, when yon have
warily backed out from nmong his
dogs, we'll make another visit. Let
us try a farm—where fences, build-
ings and improvements are all sub-
stantial, neat and first-class; where
paint, window glasses, e:c., aro
abundant; where everything gives
evidence of thrift and industry. As
the proprietor turns from some em-
ployment to greet you frankly and
l^artily, ask him whether farming
pays. His answer is in his sur-
roundings. Such contrasts arc br
no means fanciful, we h '%
seen them quite shiy^, glafy/ri\
farms in the sain.^|fgM^k>t>od
possessing naturally van-
tages. It is a pleasure to know
that squalor is being rapidly and
steadily driven from progressive
modern agriculture, and that pic-
tures of the kind first viewed are
becoming more rare from yoar to
year. The farm is, as a rule, an
index to the character of the farm-
er, as well as an exponent of his
industry and his methods. Other
things boing equal, much of the
success or failure of' agriculture
!jes in the directing mind. If this
bo vigorous, thoughtftil, studious,
earnest, restilts may be depended
on to take chre of tfrcnuelves. The
bulk ot the Amerfoan people are
living'by farming, and the growth"
of the country's wealth issumcient
proof that' it- pays.—Pittsburgh
Statesman.
cu
A POSITIVE'
For Every Form ofSkin and
Disease, from Pimples to forofala.
I have had the Psorlade for nifre months
;?,aV , , ^'v;. ^fU'fccuter'B letter Uia.lu»
I hllailelphia l»ecord ai.il his case ),#rtectly &F-
sctlbed mine. I :il«l Hie CnUenra Remedies,
nstug t»o iMttles Resolvent and Intlcun*-;&<1
Cut. 111a Soap In proportion, and call iriVWll'
completely cured. ,
„ . , . I- >' B AUN ARi)',
_ H aterford. N ; ,
ECZEMA TWENTY \E.\RjT 7
Cured, Not a Sign of it* Ueitppcaranca..
YourCutlcura lia done a wonderful c\ire frtr
me more than two years a>!o. Not a hIkii «£i(S
reappearance since. It cuied me of a vdry r>ad
Kczeiua which had troubled me for more than
twenty yeare. I tduUl ulway# upeak well of li-
ttenia. I sail a great deal of it.
KltANKC. SWAN, DrugjjUt.
llAVRiutiLL, Mass.
Time to S op jt.
It's tod bad,'Sir or Mftditm, but dont a^t
frighten. Yotirliair is Inliiug off—that's ceij-
tain. A tcliuioo in tho'Mirror, or investigat-
ing committee of fingers tollthe dismal story.
Wo won't discuss tho possible cause- It is
enough that Parker's Hair Uasam used now
will prevent fttrtiier destruction. Is your
hair somewhat gray, too, and crisp? Alas,
yes. The Balsvm will give back the original
color, softness and gloss. Not a dye, not
oilv, elogantly perfumed, n perfect <l'rossing
"Aro you a judgo ef money?"
askod a citizen. "Not much of a
judgo," was the i;oply, "how much
have you got?" - "A $10 bill." "It
down't look right to me. You had
better take it to some bank. They
will know there." "Yes, and, if
it's bad, stamp it 'Counterfeit.'
You must think I'm made of
money."—Ex.
Avoid Farm Mortgages.
Money at seven ^>er cent, will
double in ten years if the interest
is kept invested. If the farmer
oarrieB a mortgage at say $5,000
for thirty years, it will cost him
about $35,000 for tho use of the $5,-
000. This enormous figure obtain-
ed by computing interest at soven
per cent, on tho amount pak', is no
more than a fair estimato of tho
cost of such a mortgage, for the
farmer can always invest his money
in something that will doubtloss
yield him seven por cent.
Therefore:-—I. Do not mort-
gage the farm unless it sooms ab-
solutely necessary. But, as a gen-
eral rule, it is loss valuablo than a
particular one, it may bo well to
specify by adding: 2. Do not mort-
gage to build a lino house. By so
doing you will have to pay money
for an investment that does not
bring money. 8. Do not mortgage
tho farm to buy more land- Where
there's absolute certaintyHhat more
can be made out of the land than
tho cost of the iA6rtgage, this rulo
might not apply. But absolute
certainty is rare, mistaken calcula-
tion common. 4. Do not mortgage
tho farm unless you are sure ot the
continued fertility of its soil. Many
persons borrow with an expecta-
tion of repayment based on nn ex-
)erionce of the land's virginity on-
y, which on failing, may leave the
and less productive, and the means
of rcpaymont thus be removed. In
this way trouble begins which may
result in the load ohhe farm. Keep
vory cloar of mortgages.
■ NOW, if you or anv ot your family arc suf-
fering wu-h Chills, kemiuent, intermittent
Fevei, Anting of the Konei,' Dullness, Irrita-
bility, Nervoasneis, Jaundice, Biltou^r.ess, or
any other system ef malarial poison, we carn-
e<fy solicit you to ttjr MOrLCT'S T-X h
AGUE TON K* for if ined acoordinjf tor di-
rections we know the remit will be success.
For sale by Carlcton A Nash.
A Pennsylvania girl sued a for-
mer lover for breach of promise,
and produced several of his letters
with jiositstt-ipt Containing promise
of marriage to Substantiate her
claim. The courtj however; threw
the letters out, inasmuch as it was
discovered that in tho postscripts,
when tlio personal pronoun was
neccssafy, a smfall "i" was used,
while in the body of the letter it
appeared properly as a capital,
shoeing that the two parts^ of the
(spistle had not been written by
the same hand. The young woman
lost her case, and will . probably
learn to write properly before she
tries that dodgeagain.
cUMfroW't'iliBls.
Pllos are frequently procedod l>v R-sonw ot
weight the.hiick, lotus aud lower pa^t pi
the abdomen, causing^tbe patient to suppose
some aflbctlon i Ofthe kidheys
BEST FOR AHYTHIN'Cl.
Having used yonrCnticura RRncnno. for efeh-
teen months for l etter, and tlnallv ciirml if, I
am anxious to get it to tell on coiwids-lon ' I
can recommend It beyond any remedies i have
ever used for Tetter, Uarns, Cuts, etc,. jn Jjc,
it is the besl medicinef hare ever titeJ for anv-
thlng. '
tt. 8. 1IORTON.
ifYM'LK, Miss.
SCROFULOUS SORES.
Jltad a rtoaen bad sore, upon my iwdy,- oad
trie.d all remedies I could hear of. and at last
tried voui ouxiccha Rkmrdiks and they liave
cured pie.
jno . uaskba.
Heb-on, Tliayer (kinntv, Penn.
44# '
Scaly, l'lmply,
1 il'd Contagious^Uvimors,
1'very species of
scrofulous, InfnritecT
wit, J.ogiofllair, wired by (Tncmu
tte new nlood I'uritii i l iternallv, a (ICdticuha
and Ca'feom Soap liie jjreat bkln Caree estnf-
nallv ...
Sold everywhere l*rico: < 'trtl«'**jO#beotei
Hesoi.vent, $1; Soap, 25geat». 1'otxrr Dkcq
aim OMesnoat Co?, Rost'.nf.ttalii.
•Oily
DCT A } tTV i^r Cl!«pp«<f atad
dtlr\u i y skin. ctmcaw,ao»i>
mmi mm\
head
fly>(
and eyes ulseharge
ex ceas iv» '.:Mfc4|l (leg
Wahlty^'J^tiKSl
S& 1a
KSfSk?
Wrl MWi
Acute ( atarrh. AWl ia
i r *t#n'ly * iW/wW
a single dose, and
ford1* radical curb for
One buttle Kalical Cure'one bo!(^ari$al
S^Vent, an lone Improved Inhaler, i
ase, may un'.v bo ha i of all dnggi -toiaM,**)-
Ask tor SANrOlf,)^ RADICAL CtOT®
iiieolflc we
best we have found In a
"Th» only absolute sueclllc we i
Med T'mcs. '"i'he best we hai
limeiime of snfferin^."—Risv. Or VVIgalns,
Boston.) "Afteralong struggle wltfcjfcjMairh,
the Radical t; re has corfquered.''—Rev. 8. \V.
Mour e. Lewijlun-g. I'a. "1 have opt I'owjrt a
case thai it did not relieve at onceAndrew
Lee. Mauolicster, MabS. i TO ll
POTOCB DRUU and CIIKMICAL.CO■ .^ostoo.
COLLI/Vj, ssxtswre
" 4 4**% " * " %
•iJX
mm
/E/MSWfV Malaria, anrt Epidemics,
PiA#0» tWiM i*»tw'»an
Electric, llattery combined with, a Porotla l'la.,-
ter) hurt latlgti iU i*»lr.. 2M)ivety#tiWt>, '
,l"n. Dyspep la, liver
f i f ctriA \ Complaint, BlHous Fwer,
"How I pity
the • poor, such a
night as thiB?" said Blande as he
sat in his comfortable aparthi&nt.
''Then why," asked Blbff, "tton't
you put on your coafc!»nd ^aut
and see it' you cannot; rentier,Attfte*
tance to some of them 1" "Xh V* re-
plied Blande. "then 1 shonl^A*^be
so t'dinfoTtaWo as I am iw>wj and I
might tbrqet tho poonand begiw to
pity myself. That would be sel-
fiBh. yomknow." ": kT
-J rr-i. r ,
A girl out west ia saict to nay®
refused a telegraph linerttfttf^hpM
times in «»' many month? boOduee
ho was "too hi neb oi'a wairfjerer—•
he should come Ijoijie he^d'hi Mp-
sulate' that he'd tliake one''s,Ifiair
stand up straight, and tharfe'dnfee
no end to 'batteries and
41U nuo HVV »»"V« w« » TWfc
he wandored from ;'#eie
and from 'blimb to cjim'
Tlils Idea (Ming ttwt
to Colorado or Mew Maxim fc^ft* pure Bir
to rclfeve CeMUmpiianJa a mistake. Anv
reasonable man would, use Dk Hosanko s
Poui^h and Lunt Bmtrf-for consnntpfibh in
all ius si^as. •
all rilses of coughs, tows, bronchitis, pain* in-
the cheat and m nfififctibira tHftt it^wil^Ser-
eii primat,v,to oougutoiptiwii FrlociM^and
$1. Hold by 'Carlctou.Si Nash.
-u—11 Mftjiifou i„i.t,.,,;')'»vo'i
or
organs. At tiHvei
s, sviuptoins of
ul cnt'V,1 uneffsi-
he iuid
neii , ..
inrngftsfion aro preseiit, a!s flatu
nesB of the stomach, etk-. I A lnoistum liko
uorspiriition, producing a very disayrMabJtl
itehing, particularly at night after gwtitig
warnuii bed^Ts a vSfv common atkfhdent.
BlinjL Mjs#
one# to.
Remedy. . ........ .. I.......
atfectedj absorbing tlje Jtutuons, allaying the
intense itching; and offMing a |>erin(uuyit
cure, wlicfoall ether riM'icUcs have-Mwl.
l>o nrtt delay iintil tlwdrain on thd extern
prodtile pertitnhenl dUAMlfty, hut tty it
and be cured. I'riit,50 cents. Scntpmpaid
oil receipt ol prii'O. Addre^', Tho Dr. Ro-
anko Medicine Co., Pfaua, .Ohio. Sold' bj
Carleton & Nash.
Saidag^d
OhiEuJvuBfcaiji
iemedv, whiefi acts directly upon the parts
monv aVa .
bund opposed i
cflcred spot, bu
say that, in eomiifigf hW'tJlI11!
eeived a hlosBing, ahdikntai
whett i« hyMhm,
li'Urblc8fi,pg- f
i-Ui I.I >, ■■
,.,Dia,\eB«e bftfciwqyntpfl!)
aho^,t
oijco betweau "a stock
a bu c k et-sHop?6 f"l
to'Vou.'5 Whew it1'
sajfai.-Tve madeiimoMey
^oek.c^eb#ag^j wb
#•''.»#!
French paper i3"
Joker,'
ii
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Rankin, John G. & Levin. Brenham Daily Banner. (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 308, Ed. 1 Friday, December 12, 1884, newspaper, December 12, 1884; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth483377/m1/1/?rotate=180: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.