Jacksboro Gazette. (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 17, 1887 Page: 1 of 4
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& the Ft. Worth Weekly Gazette, one year, for $2.0Q
Entered at the Post-Office at Jacksboro,** “second class mattei’.
SUCCESSOR TO THE RURAL CITIZEN,
ESTABLISHED IN 1**0.
“A Government of the People, by the People, and for the People.1
Subscription 11.50 per anum in advance.
JACKSBORO, JACK COUNTY, TEXAS, THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 17, 1887.
VOLUME VIII. NUMBER 20.
DYSPEPSIA.
thought the people crazy but after
all, I believe I was the only idiot
the^e. Had I taken the infection
California and Texas Contrasted.-No
Money for the Poor Farmer
- on the Pacific Coast.
Having recently returned from
the various “lands of boom,” I have
A Washington I ady Sings the Charms
of the President’s Wife.
Says a Washington correspond-
ent of the Minneapolis Tribune : I
really believe the whole American
people—men, women, children, Re-
publicans and Democrats—have
fallenTn love with Mrs. Cleveland,
and if she could do the impossible,
she would pull her husband through
ie coming campaign into the
White House. The women think
sh e is the sweetest thing on earth
and the men are scarcer than hen’s
teeth who will raise a question on
that score. She is about the only
woman living, I reckon, who can
cVfRR $
I denly become aware that we posse** «•
diabolical arrangement called ft stomach.
The stomach is the reservoir from whlct,
©very fibre find tissue inust be nourished,t
•nduny trouble with Itis soon felt through.
out 1he whole system. Among ft dosen,
dyspeptics no two will have the same pro-
fim
I Non# renulne »n1<
Lumped with the »b<
>r coat
Don’t waste yonr m9neT9
SSKittBSSirS££&3SS£k
to gloomy forebodings. Some dyspeptic*
are wonderfully forgetful; other! hftv*
great irritability of temper.
Whatever form Dyspepsia may tax*
•ne thing is certain,
The underlying taut <# \
in the 1LIVER,
gad one thing more is equally oertaln, ns
SC 5$. -zf- Q?‘
Surveyor & Notary Public.
SPILLER 8e EASTIN,
acksboro, Texas
Land and Collecting Ageney,
one will remain a dyspeptic who will
It will oomsli
, Acidity of the
Stomach, _■«
Expel foul f**M,
Allay IrritetioH
I Assist Digestion!
and, at the sam«
time
Mart the Liver to working,
. when all other trouble*
soon disappear.
“My wife was a confirmed dyspeptic, _ Some
three years ago by the advice of Dr. Steiner, oi
Augusta, she was induced to try Sinsmons Livei
Regulator I teel grateful for the relief it ha.
given her, and may all who read this and aw
afflicted in any way, whether chronic or other-
wise, use Simmons Liver Regulator and 1 fee;
confident health will be restored to all who wili
be advised."-Vs, M. Kkrsh, Fort Valley, Ga,
See that you get the Genuine,
with red on front of Wrapper,
-- __ONLY BY
Jacksboro
00 **•??
Buy, Se an r d landg and pay taxes ir. all parts of
X st“mpertct titIo8 and famish abstracts; and adjust and
attended to.__
PATENTS The Western Settler’s Specific.
tamed. sad all Patent Bast™- attended With every advance of emigre-
promptly and for moderate fees. tion into the far West, a new d€r
maDd is created for Hostetter’s
than tho*e remote tromWashinoton. gtomacj1 Bitters. Newly pecpled
^,tult;r^rrgchsrlee; ITS regions are frequently less .dn-
brions than older settled localit.ef ,
or more and they give a preu
rect picture of the situation.
contrary, I believe she can never ]
become ugly, or unamiable even, *
no matter how uninviting or un- i
pleasant may be her surroundings ]
when she leaves the White House.
She will always have plenty of i
friends. American people are too i
appreciative of true women of
worth to ever forget or neglect her,
and I make the prediction that she
will convince every one, by her de-
j votion to and care of Mr. Cleve-
land, should it become necessary,
that their marriage was truly the
result of a love affair as was any
marriage ever consummated.”
The Anarchists.
The last act in the terrible Hay-
market drama has been concluded
by the execution of the four anarch-
ists. Their crime was a great one,
and their punishment has been as
severe as it is possible for human
law to inflict. They have been
justly punished under the law, as-
j sumirg that their trial and oonvic-
an idea. In fact, she thought it tion was fair and just, and the les-
horrid in me to insinuate that such i^on taught by their fates will doubi-
a great, coarse, grained* society Ji** warn others to beware of dan
biting man as Cleveland could pos-[ger ind depend on constitutional
sibly be the means of adding any- means for redress of grievances re-
tiring to the charms and popularity suiting from oppressive laws,
of his bride. And when I insisted There are few who do not regret
that it wasn’t Mr. Cleveland, but the stern necessity of taking the
the office he occupies, or rather the lives of men who, perhaps, had ed-
My trip to (Oregon did not im-
press me favorably with the country.
There are lands as rich as I eveT
saw, bat they are pretty generally
known that she existed, and that
where she is now applauded and
thousands of elegant things are said
and written of her she would never
be mentioned except in the journals
that recorded her demise; that we |
pass on the streets every day just
as beautiful and accomplished wo-
men, without its once occurring to |
us, “Isn’t she lovely?” and that if
the title of “first lady” were con-
ferred upon almost any young wo-
man just out of her romping, rol-
icking school days, she would be
courted, petted and spoiled just as
the President’s wife is being to-day.
But the lady wouldn’t listen to such
Office. Washington. D. C.
T. D. SPORER,
LAWYER,
TEXAS.
the only sure protection again* »<
malaria, and those disorders of the
stomach, liver and bowels, to which
climate changes, exposure, and un-
accustomed or unhealthy water or
diet subject him. Consequently,
he places an estimate upon this
groat household specific and pro-
1 ventive commensurate with its in-
trinsic merits, and is careful to
keep on hand a restorative and pro-
moter of health so implicitly to be
relied upon in time of need.
The New YorknElectloa.
from N^w York aie
JACKSBORO
will then be valuable for its timber
when .ransportation is available.
In the towns, as in California
towns, a southern immigrant must
cease to be a southern man. If he
Robinson ATVest,
attorneys at law.
J acksboro, Tixas.
W.K.TAYL! iK. HARRY- N. BKLL.
Taylor <fe Bell, j
Lawyers,
JACKSBORO, TEXAS.
rJIcC#cpoll’s Drug Store.
WR SrjOYfiS,
■ht & LA HD AGENT,
fe farmers and stock men
For vacant land in Harde-
lldres, Cottle, and other
along the line of the Fort
Denver R. R. Office at
L Hardeman county. Cor-
>nce solicited.
long side a greasy negro, and if he Without seeing it no man can
lon’t like it he can get up and leave, realize this county’s worth. I reac
Fhe ways of the people are not our in the papers that the drouth wan
vays and itis hard for southern peo- broken; a friend in Winchester
>le to adopt thorn. As for me, 11 Tennessee, showed me a copy o f
bund nothing in the world to induce | the Voice and after reading it Y.
ne to stay and hence you find me i remarked: “That fellow is taking;
jack in Coleman, where I have at lessons from the newspapers o f
ast concluded to make my perma- Southern California; he cannot fooi
aent home. me, I have been there.” Subsequent*
I assure you that I did not come ly? at Palmetto, I saw letters front
to this conclusion because I became j residents of Coleman county to
tired of running around and deter- their friends, advising them to come,
mined to settle at last just because I Surely, I thought, if these people
happened here when tired out.are friends, they are not deceiving;
Nothing of that sort; I would get their kindred: I will go and see the
up and leave to-morrow if I believed j country again,
there was a better place in the In conclusion I will say: This in
Union for a man in moderate cir-1 the poor man’s country. Not foir
cumstances to make a start in, than j paupers or tramps, but for thoso
Coleman county. who are able to buy and improve n
I have been to Birmingham, An- homestead at moderate figures; anil
niston, Chattanooga and Atlanta, who are willing to labor as thn
ibnnd the booms there to be like farmers of Old Kentucky do.—[R,
the California booms, simply specu- L., in Coleman Yoioe.
lative. The people are all hopeful - Children
for better times to come, but they nee(j gome safe catharticSI*!
have not yet arrived, and the best t<mic t0 aVert approaching sickneei
of farmers are more or less behind- Qr re}ieve colic, headache, sicli
hand. I find the same state of 8tomaCh? indigestion, dysenter;
affairs, but in a less degree, in E ist- ftnd the complaints incident to child
ern Texas. Even in the counties hood j.et the children take Sirs
where they made the very best crops mong j^ver Regulator and kee]
ice ov
q The returns
very gratifying to the Democrats,
With so many ticket* in the field, the
situation was of a complex nature,
and few of the sages could tell what
the outcome would likely be. The
George vote, fortunately, did net
cut as much figure in the contest as
was' expected, and his weakness
was Democratic strength. Almout
everv vote that deserted from tt e
inence, she said no station in the the principles they advocated were
world coaid add anything to the } just, and who were laboring for the
adornments and graces bestowed advancement of the human family,
upon so lavishly by nature. in good faith. There is a sort of
“I have known her,” said the la- sympathy felt for them owing to
dy, almost since her birth. As a the peculiar circumstances that sur-
child she was queen among her rounded their cases. It was not
companions, and beloved as I nev- proven that any oue of the con-
er knew a child to be in my life, detuned were guilty of throwing
She had none of the ugly, selfish the fatal bomb, or that they were
ways too common to children, and connected with the one who did
was the most genial, jolly creature | throw it; in fact the real culprit is
you ever saw, always pitying unknown and his identity has nev-
those of her companions not as fort- er yel been discovered. The con-
unate as herself, and ready to share demned were executed for inciting
her last penny with those who by incendiary speeches ahd publi-
needed it. She always wanted the cations others to violate the laws
dolls, the prettiest baby carriages and commit murder. It is unwise
and playthings, but was over will- to test how far American liberty of
iiog for other children to use them, speech extends, because if the ex-
\i they took good care of them, and j perimenter ventures too far he will
she made many a poor child happy have to suffer the conseqaences of
{ by saying : ‘You may have this if I his rashness, be those consequences
, you want it, and mamma will get what they may. The execution of
L a new one.’ I doubt if she was ever these criminals will have one salu-
j naughty as a child, and she was tary effect. It is the death knell tc
. never punished. As she grew old anarchy in this country. Those
a er those beautiful traits of charac violent apostlos of destruction will
0 ter I have referred to becamo no- gee that their theories are not pal
f ticeable because she cultivated them, latable and are unwelcome to th<
Q and when she merged into the t* ens j people of this country. The argu
e ho advanced was she in everything ment of brute force will no longe1
e that makes one of her sex lovable be believed in by deluded and ig
j. she was called‘the little queen of norant men, and the unscrupulou
^ hearts.’ She had more lovers than agitator will know that if he load
n any of her schoolmates, but the his blind followers too far that h
r girls seemed to think it was all will be punished for it. The theo
0* right, and none turned up their ry that these men “will proae
. noses or said disagreeable things more eloquently dead than living
about her. Sometimes they would is not tenable. Let them preach
r* . i , ' . , thov will, but they cannot preac
d- 1*as,nK|y say: ‘O, yon little flirt,’ th; lftwB 0f the eonntry, ar
)n or something of that sort, but she ^ t^e anarchists should attempt r«
, would goodnaturedly
)JSS0R1AL AM1S7,
>r of eriuicultural, abscision
liological tripsis, also pbre- ra„k8 0f the learned theorist r>3-
l hair entter and hydropath-1 tnrned ^ 8tr6ngtheD the Democrat-
beard. Aq work phys-
r executed.
ic column. The 63,000 votes given
George in the race for Mayor dwin-
dled down to nothing almost, and
left him stranded. The power of
Mr. George as a political factor is
evidently no longer felt or feared.
His theories and the novelty of his
campaign, attracted many towards
him when he was a candidate for
mayor who would not, on reflec-
tion, endorse his candidacy for any
other office, at another time. B e
has not helped his cause any by rns a-
tucky farmer, but my wnoie capuai
would not have secured me a foot-
ing in that vicinity, nor bought me
so much as a respectable garden
patch.
S HOOPER,
jVELER,
|k St.. Ft. Worth.
lock Spectacles
>ods and worx aw
ated. Fine Watch
g A SPECIALTY.
There are some lovely places here
and the climate is delightful, but it
would require the means of a first-
class absconding bank cashier to
purchase a little farm. The people
are all rich or very poor. The large
landlords, orchardists and vineyard-
ists make money—they are engaged
in packing or are interested in the
fruit packenes, and where they are
not so interested their gardens are
for pleasure than profit
ing into the maelstrom of politics,
Til If” mini* ing into tne maeisnu^ ;
jjUE bUKp Those who have given his doctrines
rTTtV-F *■ careful consideration and who be-
adache™
a Headache so promptly as
i Cure. It cleanses the stom-
iion oi the liver, and purifies
U you to perfect health.
f!nr# Will
of Malarial
s the power
run more
and are ready to bo sacrificed any
town
'log Malaria from the
d FEVER yield at
the cure is permanent.
day to a speculative paper
site. They tell me there is money
in some of the great wheat farms I
passed through, and also that there
are frequent failures; but there is
no money for the small farmer at
anything. At best he is scarcely
paid for his labor, for he is at the
mercy of syndicates and gets just
WANTED
!ief and a speedy cure for the
illious Colic la found in the use
p,t Cure. As a radical cor-
llous Disorders It has no equal.
HCEA or FLUX
»a, and all Summer Complaints
ciipcked aud cured in ft few
_ . a ___ ToV T*r.
Agents, either sex, in every town and county
of the U. S. to sell our new book
Earl Sea id Sir
Published in English and G erman. By Hei -
rv Davenport Northrup, D. D. Contains 8t>4
nages and 829 illustrations. 8 books in one.
5. or Address
ST. LOUIS, MO.
pages anflo^y illustrations, o owm
A vast treasury of all that is wonderful i a
Earth, Sea and 8kv.
Agents are making from $20 to $oOpir
week. Nearly 20,000 copies already sole..
From 500 to 1000 copies will be sold in every
countv. We give lull instructions so that no
one can fail to succeed. Circulars and terns
are Iree to those writing in good faith. W e
are headuuarters for bibles, Album*, Gut
Books and all Standard W< rV:*. Address it
>ial farms.
No gardner or farmer in the old
states could live at the price paid
here lor produce and yet this pro-
duce comos off ol land rated and
taxed at a valuation of $200 to $2000
per acre.
The poor farmer will be poor
always in California.
I took a trip down to San Diego
just as the boom was getting well
under way. I thought the people
there were all crazy. They were
all booming and I could see nothing
to boom. But I could see that land
>ply: ‘How
can I help it if the boys do like mo ?
][ don’t try to make them fond of
me, as I know some of you girls do.’
I think myself she was a little too
much inclined to make every boy
who had paid her any little atten-
tions feel that he was rather a fa-
vorite, although she was perfectly
innocent about it. And she hasn’t
lorgot those modes of conquest bn
her more mature years. She win
hearts end affections just as natural
spring of 1886, before the ellcct of
the drouth was felt.
Since my return I have prospect-
ed over your whole county. Never
have I seen such a hay crop of native
grass, never such natural pastuiage,
never such an abundance of fall for-
age crops. Land that revives and
produces such crops so rapidly after
such a drouth have no equal.
country that tne majority ui peupic
thought an he did. that moment the
opposition was aroused and his
supporters deserted him. The re-
sults are that Georgeism in its pres-
ent form is a thing of the past, anc
that the Democracy is safe in Naw
York and will be in the n« xt presi-
dential election. Cleveland's nom-
| ination and re-election
one* foi
11th & Olive SU.,8t. Louii,Mc
for the JACKS-
ETTE and NEW
are
HTORLUy both for $2. gured.—[Fort Worth Gazette.
8 m from oet 1$
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Rogers, J. N. & Rogers, Alice M. Jacksboro Gazette. (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 17, 1887, newspaper, November 17, 1887; Jacksboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth834729/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Gladys Johnson Ritchie Library.