Jacksboro Gazette. (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 20, 1904 Page: 4 of 4
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WTilfUMliJ Mill *i it 'Vtiii mil alii' ’ i-n—fi’irMHi—
$ OF TOWN
AND COUNTY.
xro charged for at the rate of 5 cents per line for every
I ahltanij notices and resolutions of respect published in the Gazette are
' } for at th# rate of one cent per Word, after the first 100 words.
for said notices must accompany each manuscript. All
• % '
poetry charged for at the rate of 5 cents per line.
.
1Z8ULMD TIME TABLE.
191 Passenger and Freight
Leave Bridgeport 10.00 a. m.
Berkshire 10.20
Vineyard 10.47
Greathouse 11.11
Jaeksboro 11.39
12.06 p. m.
12.87
12.54
1.15
Hess
Bryson
Dakin
Arrive Graham
jg*. 191 Passenger and
Freight
••
BSeE’ '
Graham
2.30 p. m.
Dakin
2.50
Bryson
3.13
Hess
3.33
Jaeksboro
4.00
Greathouse
4.26
Vineyard
4.49
Berkshire
5.33
Bridgeport
5.35
Public Speaking.
John H. Stephens, member of
congress will address the citizens
of Jaeksboro and vicinity, on the
political issues of the day, at the
court house, in Jaeksboro, on
Monday, October 24th, 1904, at
two o’clock p. m.
Let every one come out and
hear a fine speech, and have a
good time. It will pay you to be
present.
A special invitation is extended
to the ladies.
Don’t forget the date.
:m■
Tom Colvin of Keechi was in
town Saturday.
Dr. J. M. Quarles of Post Oak
was in town Friday.
Mrs. John T. Wilson spent last
week visiting in Chico.
J. E. Dennis made a trip to
value, least money at j posj. during the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. McCall at-
tended the carnival at Dallas last
week
F. S. Groner made a trip to the
Indian Territory last week on le-
gal business.
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Fitzgerald
«c**r SOCIETIES.
S?SSMhuv£:
Knox, Ed.
». O. kinder.
Jafcft M. Stephens next Monday.
7#ur tickets now for Billy
Arlington. -. . ,n
Glass, Queen, tin, and granite I
NEW THOUGHTS.
Are you growing more attractive as you
advance in life? _ _ _
"Given a healthy body," says Dr. R. V.
Pierce, the spcc'al-
ist in woman’s dis-
eases, of Buffalo,
N. Y., "and a
healthy mind, and
everyone can culti-
vate and enjoy hap
piness."
We must eat
prope rl y and di-
gest well to be
beautiful. It is a
fact that any form
of dyspepsia may
in a few days trans-
form a clear, white
skin into a mass of
pimples and black
spots A beautiful
woman has the
beauty of her stom-
ach
Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical
Discovery main-
tains a person’s nutrition by enabling one
to eat, retain, digest and assimilate the
proper nutritious food. I< overcomes the
gastric irritability and symptoms of indi-
gestion. and thus the person is saved from
those symptoms of fever, night-sweats,
headache, etc., which are so common. A
tonic made up largely of alcohol will
shrink the corpuscles of the blood ana
make them weaker for resistance.
*This ts to certify that I have used Doctor
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, think it s
the grandest medicine in the world,” writes Mrs.
V M Young, of Weir. W. Va. "I had dyspepsia
in its worst form. I decided to try your med
icine. I used five bottles, and now I am doing
my own housework. A number of my friends
also are using Dr. Pierce's medicine and they
recommend it highly. May God bless you iu
your grand work ”
Dr Pierce believes that a tonic made with
alcohol will shrink the red blood corpuscles
and make the system weak for resistance,
that is why he avoided the use of any alco-
hol or narcotics in his « Medical Discovery,
which contains the pure extract from roots
and herbs without a particle of alcohol.
Accept no substitute for”Golden Medical
Discovery * * There is nothing "just as
good" for dyspepsia or debility.
Biliousness is cured by the use of Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets.
Pp?x
mm
be
. .
_____ . vwW+Mfv’____» *
earts
rffj
Hy.'..
HAIXIE
ERMINIE
RIVES
Courageous
BOWENMERRILL COMPANY
G«4 you 14 disc harrow with
H. Foreman's.
'ttee every ax double | have been attending the World’s
> bit Callahan & Simpson.
Fa’va just received a large
•£ Liquozone. E. E.
Fair this week.
Miss Lucy Lynn of East Keechi
is attending the World’s Fair
having accompanied Miss Ella
Marks.
Berkeley Spiller came up from
Fort Worth and spent severa
market price paid in I days visiting his parents during
M. E. Atkinson for pro- the past week.
Foreman building. j Mr. and Mrs, J. H. Spivey vis
the best drill ever put on ited their daughter Mrs. J. T.
D, H. Foreman has Miller of Dallas, last week and
exhibit on west side of attended the carnival.
-4:J‘r£*W /
to hear John
next Monday at
i house at % o’clock.
i the Junior Leaguers
i *t their special
—night at the
; church.
plow and seed-
it.. T
the Lyceum
attrac-
ticket
V. •
I Mrs. L. E. Hamilton and Mrs.
Robert Hamilton of the West
Fork country were shopping in
town during the past week.
Joe Simpson of Beans Prairie
_________ was in town Monday. He was
H. Foreman, and put taking a subscription to build a
in and make money Baptist church in that neighbor-
is good price. hood. The business men of
14 years old and j *Jacksboro contributed quite lib-
school, any age, J erally to the building fund. We
hope the people of that neighbor-
hood will succeed as church build-
ings are needed all over the
county.
Mrs. Helen M. Stoddard, state
lecturer for the W. C. T. U.,
came in on the train Saturday,
according to appointment, but as
the arrangements for her lect-
ure were incomplete she thought
best to return to Fort Worth the
same afternoon without lecturing.
It is to be regretted that our peo-
good English Jp*6 bailed to hear Mrs. Stoddard
- x styles]at this time, as it will doubtless
He hasjk® roany months before she can
return to this part of the state.
Her reputation as a lecturer for
the W. C. T. D. is equal to that
of any one in the South, and we
repeat that it was unfortunate
for Jaeksboro to lose this oppor-
tunity.
reasonable amount of intelligent
care and effort, which will help
to brighten our homes and the
lives of their inmates, and which
in many ways pay us richly for
the necessary care bestowed. That,
so many homes are destitute of
shade of any kind, or even a
grassy yard, can be accounted for
in many instances by the fact
that they are not owned by the
occupants but only rented for a
short term, but to account for
the too great number we see oc-
cupied as permanent homes by
the owners is hard to do. There
are a great variety of shrubs,
vines and hardy plants which
can be had very cheaply and
which by a little necessary atten-
tion will transform a bleak and
desolate looking home to one of
comparative beauty and give it
an air of comfort and refinement
that would astonish many who
have not tried the experiment.
rates to the World’s
& Pacific Railway
agent or write E.
G. P, A., Dallas,
f -
*
with a weak diges-J
■rl
aey willdoj
For sale by E. E.j
, .
a woman ap-j
i a “good pa
ir pair Cloussf
Callahan
is gone, your
* ta
KTl’l i
I* 1
Among Our Neighbors.
Wise County Messenger: The
stock show next week is cai-
to teach everybody some-
attending you will be
of the beauty, the val-
H me contentment and happi-
sss there is in breeding superior
Don’t fail to go. There
be crowds there and gay
bright and edifying
about things of val-
The ladies can show their
they have previously
attending the live stock exhi-
next week.
Young County News: J. P.
Hack ley, the wide-awake hustling
mill and elevator man, of Jacks-
was talkjng flour to our
people Tuesday.
“Unde Zekiel” in Boyd Index:
Not every one can at will suc-
ceed with all kinds and varieties
rering and ornamental pets,
any one can grow suc-
at least a few such
about their homes and
bright spots on which
their eyes occasionally and
e the monotony of barren-
that characterizes the home
of shrubs, vines or
flowers. It is true that the pro-
dry spells, severe heat
ndance of sand and dust,
have in the Cross Tim-
make it somewhat difficult
many plants that thrive
in a more moist and cooler
there are many floral
beauty and merit
Some Seasonable Advice.
It may be a piece of superflu
ous advice to urge people at this
season of the year to lay in a sup-
ply of Chamberlain’s Cough Rem-
edy. It is almost sure to be
needed before winter is over, and
much more prompt and satisfac-
tory results are obtained when
taken as soon as a cold is con-
tracted and before it has become
settled in the system, which can
only be done by keeping the rem-
edy at hand. This remedy is so
widely known and so altogether
good that no one should hesitate
about buying it in preference to
any other. It is for sale by E
E. Young.
Fifth Sunday Meeting.
Program for Fifth Sunday
meeting to be held with the Lynn
Creek Baptist church at Gertrude
beginning on Thursday night be-
fore the fifth Sunday in October.
1st, Introductorysermon; J. R
Hicks; alternate, J. B. Pyatt.
2nd, When does regeneration
occur? S. Fulcher, W. V. Allen.
3rd. What is the first duty o:‘
the believer in Christ? N. M
Gladden, R. W. Smith.
4th, What should be the policy
of the Jack county mission board?
J. E. Robinson and C. W. Horsch
ler.
5th, Query box.
Everybody cordially invited to
come.
J. E. Robinson,
L. M. Ragsdale,
J. A. Jackson,
Committee.
\-e a.
HEALTH
INSURANCE
The nan who Insures his life is
wise for his family.
The man who insures his health
Iswlse both for his family and
You may insure health by guard
lag it. It la worth guarding.
At the first attack of disease,
Which generally approaches
through the LIVER and mani-
fests Itself in Innumerable ways
—
Tint's Pills
Ami nave your health.
•mat eves:®* tteaerai Moses H'azen (
sat in tils tent, the headquarters near-
est the firing line on the right rear of
the investing trenches, reading a close-
ly written note. The handwriting,
though unfamiliar to him, was that
of Captain Jarrat As he read and
reread it, lines of perplexity came into
his strong Canadian face.
“How was this brought?” be asked
his orderly.
“With a dispatch flag from the east-
ern redoubt, sir,” was the answer.
He was still perusing it when the or-
derly entered the tent to announce Colo-
nel Armand. The general swore softly,
crumpled the letter in his hand, hesitat-
ed, then nodded assent. His eyes were
sharp gray, inset, ami they fixed them-
selves intently on the officer as he en-
tered.
“1 am informed, General Hazen,”
said Armand, saluting, “that you have
In charge rite makeup of a column
which will storm the enemy’s tenth re-
doubt tonight”
“Yes.”
“I wish to volnnteer.”
The general’s keen eyes looked into
Armond’s steady ones. Then he rum-
pled his wig in thought
“I accept your services,” he said at
length. “Colonel Alexander Hamilton
will be in command. You will report
to him at the right of the first parallel
at dusk.”
As the other passed out the general
smoothed open the letter again. “And
yet,” he said slowly to himself, “Bene-
dict Arnold was also a brave man."
*••••••
At dusk in the muck-black trenches
lay 400 men, compact, wide eyed, wait-
ing the signal for storming. The earth
silence was profound, and through it
their breathing swelled like a ghostly
tide. The hanging sky formed a whit-
ish arch under which ail movements
seemed at a distance vague and form-
less. A spattering rain was dropping,
and fitful jags of lightning knifed the
low clouds. Prom the rear an occa-
sional mortar was groaning, and from
time to time a fiery rocket trail passed
with a raucous shrieking overhead—a
shot from the British batteries.
Nearest the open lay a little group of
twenty. It was the forlorn hope, vol-
unteers all, who were to lead the col-
umn. One of these was Colonel Ar-
mand.
At the signal the twenty rose as one
man and hurled forward on a run. A
hundred paces and a challenge rang
out; then the parapets opened in spurt-
ing gusts of death.
The handful stayed for no sappers,
but scaled the abatis, leaped the ditch
and rushed upon the works with their
-spoutoous. Above them, as they climb-
ed, were hammering oaths, stabbing
steel and leaning, thrusting forms.
The first point blank discharge had
gone to waste, and Armand, dragging
grenadier headlong down by the
shoulders, leaped the wall aud cleared
space between two guns with his
saber, a space filled a moment after by
the inrush of the supporting battalion.
The fight became a pandemonium of
cries, grapples and yellow flashes. The
bleeding shadows swelled instantly full
of a vast, red smoke, of yells, of curses,
of men trampled, struggling, grunting,
underfoot.
A-rmand, lunging, turned suddenly
upon a snaky form creeping in the
shadow of the gun. When seen, the
man pressed back into the human
surge. Armand trailing him panther-
like. To the latter’s saber be opposed
a sword and used it well, but gave way
steadily before the fury of Armand’s
attack, retreating across the space be- '
tween the rear of the redoubt and the 1
river bank, scarce ten yards in wid th-
an acre bow a melee of hand to hand
encounters with sword, clubbed mus-
ket and bayonet
“Surrender!” cried Armand.
For answer the other avoided a tbrust
and twisted to one side, and Armand,
with the rush, feeling loose ground
crumble under bU/fect, realized sud-
denly that he was on the very marge
of the high bank.'
At the Instant a new uproar arose.
Through and over the space plunged
the third detachment sent to attack
the redoubt in reverse.
The impact sent a soldier tumbling
at Armand’s feet as he sprang to re-
gain his footing, and, taking advan-
tage of the instant, bis assailant hurl-
ed himself upon him.
As they toppled in the clinch Armand
recognized his foe.
“Now, curse you!” shrieked Jarrat
Then they fell. ,
**••*»*
The rush had carried the position, and
within two hours tireless Continental
spades bad inclosed It wltbln% the sec-
ond parallel, a result which carried con-
sternation to Yorktown, where later in
Hie evening, in Cornwallis’ headquar-
ters—now Governor Nelson's mansion,
since the American gunners had tum-
bled his first selection about bis ears—
a group of aids were assembled dis-
cussing the situation.
With them sat Colonel Lord Chet-
wytide, lately arrived with messages
from Sir Henry Clinton at New York..
The conversation was interrupted by
the entrance of Jarrat, followed by two
Hessians bearing a stretcher. Ho ad-
dressed himself to Ixtrd Chetwynde.
“Will your lordship pardon me if I
ask a view of this man?” He pointed
to tho unconscious form upon the sag-
ging canvas. ,
“I am no surgeon.” said his lordship
languidly.
“Tie needs no treatment,” Jarrat an-
swered. “ ’Tis but a chance tumble on
the head. He Is a prisoner taken to
night."
“What the deuce Yorktown wants of
prisoners I can’t see!” drawled the otb
y
“Surrender I" cried Armand.
guns, a red coated rtrflmmer appeared
on the left parapet of the invested
town. He stood silhouetted against
the dun smoke clouds, beating a mes-
sage that was lost in the roar.
But with the sight the cannonading
fell silent. The smoke lifted, the mus-
ketry barked no more. Aud then the
sound came dear, as sweet as cool rain
in a fiery desert He was beating the
long “parley.”
When the distant groanings died
away in the air Williamsburg came out
of doors to listen and wonder and re-
joice. There in the afternoon Anne
met Henry riding into Duke of Glou-
cester street with a deeper pain than
she had ever seen in his dark face.
“What is it? What is it?” she cried.
“Ah, he was only reported missing—
missing! You are not going to tell
me he is dead?”
Then he told her as gently as he
could. One of Cornwallis’ messengers
had brought out the report that one
Louis Armand, captured two days be-
fore, was under condemnation in York-
town to die that night at sunset.
She heard him with wide, terror
struck eyes.
“To die!” she cried. “He was cap-
tured then. Let them believe what
they may, he is a Continental officer—
a prisoner of war! They cannot kill
him. Why, they are negotiating now
for surrender! I shall go to General
Washington. He will not let them!”
He shook his bead very gravely.
“Anne,” he said, “my poor, dea4
child! The genera! officers of the
American line know. They would not
interfere. Jarrat’s deviltry has won
at last. He sent a letter out of York-
town three days ago to General Ha-
zen, denouncing Colonel Armand.”
She looked up with wide, miserable
eyes. How could she explain it ail to
him? “There is no time—no time,” she
said with heavy lips.
He had turned away, but her voice
recalled him. “Where is Cornwallis’
headquarters? Tell ine, quick.”
“In the Nelson mansion,” he answer-
ed. “Hope not on that, though. Sur-
render is deliberated, and the earl is
under great strain.”
“But he will at least see me.”
He shook his head doubtfully. “You
have still an hour.”
Still an hour! How horrible to meas-
ure a life by minutes! Colonel Dundas
watched her go with a frown of pity.
War seemed more than stern to him at
that moment.
Then he entered the door and sent
for a chaplain to hold himself in readi-
ness.
A sickness had climbed into Anne’s
throat before she reached the house.
For a time she got no farther than the
outer door. At length an officer, doubt-
less by reason of her evident distress,
gave her a chair in what had been the
drawing room. Scores of times she had
sat in that selfsame room as gay as
any guest That she should be there
now on such an errand seemed some
hideous mockery of truth,
The British commander had before
him General Washington's ultimatum
as to terms of surrender—could see no
one. So they told her, but she would
aot be satisfied. Her errand was a
Blatter of fife and death— Concerned an
execution within an hour. Twice the
officer who.:iiad given her tire chair
went Into the inner room. The second
time be returned with a flush of morti-
11 cation on his face.
“I dare not ask again,” he told her.
She came out into the street at last
when the Sun was gathering crimson
to its fall, her whole mind numbed,
her body wrenching with nervous ag-
ony and with bruised shadows beneath
her burning eyes. Instinctively she
started in the direction of the barrack,
and as she walked with uncertain foot-
steps her fingers went twisting a slip
of paper they found in the pocket of
her gown. Some soldiers were boiling
a pot over a street fire of split boards,
and as she passed them with the look
of a sleepwalker she drew the paper
out and looked at it.
Instantly a great thrill went through
her to the tips of her fingers, and her
cheeks rushed into flame. It was the
hasty scrawl given her at Gladden
Hall by Lord Cornwallis the day she
had gone to him for John the Baptist.
This is what she read:
My Dear Dundas—I suppose we must let
the lady have lier prisoner. Just give
them passes out. CORNWALLIS.
THE
Iazettes
PREMIUM LIST .
Something for Everyone
7
We want to increase the subscription
list of the Gazelle to i500 by Jan 1st,
1905, and we believe that those most
entitled to a reward for advancing the
cause of our paper are the subscribers
who continually endeavor to introduce
the Gazette to new readers. Therefore,
we give below a list of premiums which
§|^ wejoffer in return for specified numbers
of yearly subscriptions. These articles
are just as represented, but in order
that you may know for yourself we have
left them on exhibition at the stores
where we bought them.
I*® ** CONTIHUED.]
Confessions of a Priest.
Rev. Jno. S. Cox of Wake, Ark.,
writes, “For 12 years I suffered
from Yellow Jaundice, I consult-
ed a number of physicians and
tried all sorts of medicines, but
got no relief. Then I began the
use of Electric Bitters and feel
that I am now cured of a disease
that had me in its grasp for
twelve years.” If you want a
reliable medicine for liver and
kidney trouble, stomach .disorder
or general debility, get Electric
Bitters. It’s guaranteed by E. E.
Young. Only 50c.
. Better Than Pills.
The question has been asked—
In what way are Chamberlain’s
Stomach and Liver tablets supe-
rior to the ordinary cathartic and
liver pills? Our answer is—They
are easier and more pleasant to
take and their effect is so gentle
that one hardly realizes that it is
produced by a medicine. Then
th*y not only move the ’.towels
I» t improve the appetite ard aid
For sab at ahe per i
Vahww *
igesuoin.
grow nicely with af beetle by E. E. Young.
er. "Colonel Dumlus is in charge of
the barrack. I believo. Why bring him
to me?”
“For your identification. Colonel Dun-
das wishes certain verification. This
man escaped, while under your sen-
tence, from tho Duchess of Gordon In
’7G.”
The other beat his eyes upon the
white face on the stretcher, theu looked
at Jarrat.
“Your lordship recognizes him?”
"Yes,” said Lord Chetwynde slowly.
Next morning a dispatch started from
Cornwallis to Clinton:
Last evening the enemy carried my ad-
vanced redoubt on the left. The situation
ct the pla-.e Is. therefore, so precarious:
that t cannot recommend that the fit--,
: i> j arn-r should run any gloat risk In ou-
deaVqftng to s* .« us
10 o' .lock on the tun-aim'
in die fb turner tile
CHAPTER XIX.
N little time Anne was mounted
and on her way jo the field of
Yorktown, where the allied ar-
mies lay awaiting the outcome
of that flag of truce.
Joy rested over all the wide camps,
but there was none in her heart. She
was conscious only of a dreadful,
numbing ache and a desperate neces-
sity to see him once more—to tell him.
i She had no further plan. The note she
I «arried from Henry brought her with-
i out delay to the officer of the day, and
the personal request it contained was
not to be denied.
The son was lew when she passed
the inner works and entesed Yorktown
between battered waUs aud gouged
earth mounds which testified to the
fierceness of the fire rained upon the
British by Ferguson’s and Machin’s
batteries. AU about her were honey-
combed streets cluttered with rich fur-
niture, empty knapsacks, books, frag-
ments of shells, iron caltrops, carcasses
of men and horses, and horrors beyond
description.
But she scarcely saw them. He was
to die this night—this night—and the
time was so pitifully short. The years
he had fought must count for naught-
all vanished before the weight of that
one long-passed Philadelphia afternoon.
Wbat should have been his hour of tri-
umph bad become his hour of shame.
And it was by her act!
The tbougbt made her shudder as if
with an ague. It seemed to her that
God must have been blotted from the
heavens—that there was no hope, no
good, nothing but a colossal fate wheel
which was rolling to crush Armand
and her.
Where were the prisoners kept? She
asked some one, who directed her to a
barrack at the northern end of the
town. Thither she pushed her way
over foul refuse heaps and fetid ditches,
through crowds of soldiers shouting
loathsome doggerel, who jeered and
caught at her, and past gold braided
officers who cursed them savagely 'and
made place. She noted nono of these.
At the barracks entrance she met her
first rebuff when a sentry barred her
way.
“You have a prisoner,” .she explained,
her breath fluttering. “His name 13
Armand. I would see him.”
He answered only with an uncom-
prehending stare. As he turned she
tried to pass through, but ho thrust his
musket across the door, with an angry
Hessian grunt. A knot of soldiers toss-
ed some German phrases to him from
behind her, and he smiled at them stol-
idly over her head.
Then she became aware of a more
kindly military face in the opening be-
hind him. A hand touched the Hes-
sian’s shoulder; he faced about, saluted
and moved off, and the knot of strag-
glers melted away.
“I am Colonel Dundas,” stated the of-
ficer in the doorway. “Have you per-
mission to see the prisoner?”
“No,” she replied pathetically.
“This is a special order. None save
the commander in chief can give such
leave.”
She sat down on the stone step, her
eyes half closed, shaken by a dry sob.
Not even to see him! It was ghastly!
Noisy People and Noisy Dogs.
Lillie Hamilton French, writing
on the manners of domestic ani-
mals in The Delineator, says:
“Noisy dogs invariably belong to
noisy people. Noisy people will,
of course deny this, but listen to
them some day when they scold a
dog for barking. Whose voice
is loudest? whose fiercest? whose
harshest? I have heard people
disciplining dogs for growling,
and I have been much more
frightened of the people than of
the dogs.”
$25.00 IN CASH
Given for 100 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks-
boro Gazette at 81.00 each
A good time-keeper, just the thing every boy
wants
Given for 20 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks-
boro Gazette, at $1.00 each.
A LADIES’ GOLD WATCH
(New York Standard movement) A watch any
lady would be glat} to possess
Given for 40 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks-
boro Gazette, at $1.00 each
A GOLD LOCKET
Any young lady would be jdeased to own
Given for 1 (^yearly subscriptions to the Jacks-
boro Gazette, at $1.00 each.
A SMALL GOLD LOCKET
One of the most attractive, things for a girl
Given for 10 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks-
boro Gazette, at $1.00 each
These articles are on exhibition at R. H. AOSTIN’S
A WRIST BAG
A convenient article a] ways in demand
Given for 3 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks-
boro Gazette, at $1.00 each
A PEGGY BAG
This Peggy Bag is the very latest style in ladies’
hand bags. Every lady wants one
Given for 5 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks-
l^oro Gazette, at $1.00 each
A SHIRT WAIST SET
In order to be up-to-date the shirt-waists must
be fastened with the shirt-waist sets
Given for 2 yearly subscriptions t6 the Jacks-
boro Gazette, at $1.00 each
These are on exhibition at A1NES DRY 600DS CO’S.
LARGE TRUNK
Given for 18 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks-
boro Gazette at $1.00 each
On exhibition at PERKINS BROS. & CO.’S
A lift
tit wt
A Love Lettei
Vould not interest you if you’re
booking for a guaranteed salve
for sores and burns. Otto Dodd,:
of Ponder, Mo., writes: “I suf-1
fered with an ugly sore for a!
year, but a box of Bucklen’s Ar-1
nica Salve cured me.” It’s the;
best salve on earth. 25c at E. E,
Young’s drug store.
A BOX OF FANCY STATIONERY
Nice writing paper is always acceptable
Given for 2 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks-
boro Gazette at $1.00 each
A BOX OF ELEGANT STATIONER/
Given for 4 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks-
boro Gazette, at $1.00 each
On exhibition at E. E. YOUNG’S
!
£’■ Wm
ROCK ISLAND
SPECIAL RATES
To El Paso and return for
$15.85, account National Irriga-
tion Congress, Nov. 15th to 18th;
dates of sale Nov. 13th; 14th, and
15th. Final return limit Nov. 22.
Return limit may be extended to
thirty days by paying fee of 50
cents.
.1
St. Louis and return $14.70 j
Tuesday and Saturday of each
week to and including Nov. 30th, j
also Oct. 10th.
Could not bs Bettor.
The uniform success of Cham-
berlain’s Colic, Cholera’and Diar-
rhoea Remedy has won for it a
wide reputation and many people
throughout the country will agree
with Mr. Chas. W. Mattisnn, of
Milford, Va., who says: “It
works like magic, and is the best
preparation I know of. It could
not be any better.” He had a
serious attack of dysentery and
was advised to try a bottle of this
remedy, which he did, with the
result that immediate relief was
obtained. For sale by E.E. Young.
m
5§
MS
\ -<)
A HANDSOME CELLULOID COMB
Would be ornamental to any toilet table, as well
as useful to the owner
Given for 4 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks-
boro Gazette, at $1.00 each
On exhibition at JACKSBORO PHARMACY
A METAL COIN CASE
Just the thing for girls to carry small change in.
Given for 3 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks-
boro Gazette, at $1.00 each
On exhibition at A, J. BIRDSONG’S
A NICE CHINA CHOCOLATE SET, 13 pieces
One of the many things every woman wants in
her china closet
Given for 18 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks*
boro Gazette, at $1.00 each
A HANDSOME CHOCOLATE SET 13 pieces
(Japanese hand-painted)
Given for 26 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks-
boro Gazette, at $1.00 each
On exhibition at CALLAHAN & SIMPSON’S
I* IB
s
*
A CHAMPION PLANTER, st*ei frame
Every farmer wants one. Nothing better.
Given for 50 yearly subscriptions to the Jaeks-
boro Gazette, at $1.00 each
Will be shown at D. H. FOREMAN'S
ONE CASE OF WHITE SWAN CORN
Given for 10 yearly subscriptions to the Jacks
boro Gazette, at #1.00 each.
On exhibition at E. D. BRADFIELD's
Colonel Dundas was struck with bar „ ., ,,
pallor. He was a gentleman anti fit]- DcU t fail to get one O* u'6 G.1-
litane. “The prisoi ,x wbo dies toaigbt j zcttc’s beauti ’u. VO’emL'm.?. This
ts not under a r> ^nt oondeuinat. m, 1 • ^ , , v - ______
..fiatress," be said » >t uukludljr. "And ' ' , ‘ , /
Tt!s said bo dow bo :• the laoli of cultv ■ r 0 SQpUrSS -.0
u-i in tin- M-ieri. a army. Mu., ari, - annual subscribers will gets.
Hie OontiuentBik wA'i yet make pro* 1 jy^jjjium 1
FV
any part fouls
ddr^&s J. N. R
-3 you ui
ay want to know call ou
■. GO., Jl
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Jacksboro Gazette. (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 20, 1904, newspaper, October 20, 1904; Jacksboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth729560/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Gladys Johnson Ritchie Library.