The Comanche Chief. (Comanche, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 25, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 14, 1881 Page: 1 of 4
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COMANCHE, TEXAS^SATURPAJT, MAY 14,1881.
V
!*T0
OuKU.
In a oonverMtiOn, prompted J»y s
ontion of Jeff l)avP§ fbrttcomiii
ncmoirs, a prominent officer
jitefioothern Con:
rrcprcsenjative
SpecWti* the Uultmton New*.
Little. Jloek, May 8.—At Fort
SniiMr yesterday Judge J.U. Parker
decision inthe case of tho
David L.
jmPBPwmsiie of w
the New- Yorfc. -land in the Indian
subject to white aettleinerjL^rtPIn-
(llanii JtoWing tljB-^pri^rietorship
absolutely afld without re-
Tho opinion is very lengthy,
a thorough review of
aws and ti-eaties mode for and
Davi’s forthcoming s5W^y«Btertlay Judge }.<
- »«-,“'«■» u::trH,«Jrr^ °
infetJeraCy related to Paymv declaring that non
of tlie Now York land in the Indian Territ
line, the folloveing-remmiAcoiices
'the War:
«r was,” ho said, “appoint
i Foreign Affairs Cojjumtfee by
Confedcratettmgn^H-. I voted
tyajjjpiMOnot slavery t|,e Indians from their flfat
'rnilitsry necessity', hut
supported by a Jbyt< membora
I the border states, which had a
^ it lit the matter. A
• oemiuitti o mot over a con-
store Richmond, The
in or it was Atkihs, a mom-
> of congress from
i time we had a scheme to make
the'whole Confcdor-
a committee was sent to the
•p to see Lee. When they hail
sition he said: .
thoir prpposi
mttemoo, 1 am
“(rentiemeu, I am so hard pressod
the dutiee I now have, that if
y more duties wore added, they public shntimont changed
id break me down. So great use aild the j&fcng along Ute border now
(iangor,
” night
I can
to to koep from asking God to bring
ay responsibilities ana my
hat when I My my prayers
nd morning, it is os much
•y aoooui
the ball that is to close
nubility. ‘There is no
ng to eat wherever J may go. The
wtntiy is cinpty^rputy of iuon,
1—*- of food ’ ■'T
- before
ersouni
ktnpty of food,
L Jest before our lines'wcrc broken
Petersburg I took dinner -with
DVCral Officers, And General I <00
}here related that-Mr. Davis had, the
sy before, sent him a message to
gve his army and go over to Kieli-
ond, a journey birth way*of ^'day
hr nearly so, to have a conference,
e replied that the necessities of
r army every moment^.were such
, he could not go away ; that he
BCted an attack every* moment.
Po this, answer was returned that
Davis still insisted. iOQ seeing
that day. Lee replied that he
rouM not be responsible for what
opened in his absonce; that only
i very gravest . occasion would
kustify his going. Davis inflexibly I ration thui no attaint
replied that Lee must come, 'anu' disguise it; that is, It
■aid Loe, tolling this story, ‘when we merits, for what it is-
together.there was no business
r question of any more moment he-
wn us than might bring tw’o old
omen together. Mr. Davis had
ly determined that I should
me, no-mutter whst the conse-
enoes were/ ..... .
A report has been circulated in
issouri that Genora! Grunt offered
its services to Stealing Price and
31ait Jackson against the Union.
Now at that period I was the scc-
story of both Jackson And Price:
slept with Clait Jackson during all
that period proceeding and about se-
cession. J wrote his proclamation
is governor of the state. If Gen-
unu Grant had ever written a letter
Bring his services to Missouri the
tter would have come to mo, and
nover was any such tetter, and
have so replied to inquiries ad-
to me. I have also said
there Wiis"jkWant of responsibility
in the parry making the statement.
Sterling Prioo was one of the 'best
soldiers in the United States, lie
fast Lyons at the military game and
filled him. No man loved fighting
more than Prico. I can liko him to
nothing but one of those freight lo-
comotives you sec standing in a de-
pot with the fires out, an, ugly mass
of metal, stupid to look at, and with-
out apparent lito or power until you
** * fire under it, and then it will
wmk of cars over mountain
fops. That was General Price.”
TIE OKLAHOMA
wffrfl. Court! ______
Indian Territory i« Mot Hub*
Ject to White Settlement.
servq,
and et
all-
oc-
pution of tho Territory
cision is gonoraHy aoceptoiJxA con-
clusive, and will havog-dfmdency to
chock further inyasttms Of the coun-
try. A nupibCr of prospective' sot-
tlersu
rdci* awaiting judicial*action
to decide their right to enter the land,
have begun a mignitioii-^dscwhesc.
Payue is severely denounced. For
a long time he had strong sympathy
throughout the southwest, hut when
it became evident thut the- railroad
companies wore using him as a cat's
{iaw to farther .thou* own selfish
fig nlong the border now
is that Judge Pqrker’s action has
frustrated the designs'of k welt or-
ganised band of land-grabburs.
* ■ . — a. < —s-
One of tho latest inventions in the
way qf a beverage is coffee made
out of dates. By means of A French
patent process, this fruit of tho paint
tree is dried and converted into what
Is said to be an excellent substitute
for coffuc, and tasting so much like
the gd#uitiC articlo, that ohly by
analysis can the difference be de-
tected.1 Manufactories of this new
preparation have been started in1 Al-
geria and Indiu. where dates can be
obtained for a small price, and, for
the comfort of the consumer'll hi to
condition
rought to
now
ght advisable to mix
two-thirds oi the date" coffee with
one-third of the genuine berry, thus,
in a certain sense, making it a' sub-
stitute far chicory, an adulterant
that is use'd Hindi more commonly
than most drinkers of coffee imugino.
It is to the credit of this new prepa-
pt is made to
ds floTd on Its
Into coffee;
ami, ns it can lie retailed -at about
halt the cost of first-doss coffee, it
is quite
with a
Mi
posed Schemes of Messrs.
Gould, Grant A Co.
New York Sun. 1
Boernk, Texas, April ZO.—Htmur It wduld b» «tiH
tancously with thb announcement, nnhianod
by tolei
of "
ition
z
io cold race
Grant in the city of
>, and that his movements wo
regarded with approhonsions,
a private letter fropi a genUor
liaredo, which indicaUMffatthfs ai
prcaonsion is npp^onfinod to
capital of tJ)**^ountiy. The writer
ot this Jotter, who is wel) acquainted
6 Mexican Bide of the ltio
rando, says that tho aati-Amen
party is receiving great
and that the baildingqfrtTbridge at
any phint on thb>t«r Grande would
be an impossfarlity on account of tho
fear of iayasion of that country.
Mexicans, though very igno-
t, have sorqe acquaintance with
the history of the past, and they can
not remember any port of it more
vividly than tho history of the revo-
lution in Texas. The present move-
ment Mexicoward resembles the
gradual invasion of Texas in many
particulars, and has additional ter-
rors to the unlettered native, in that
tho railroads now buildipg toward
the border may be utilised to bring
filibusters'down by the thouMnds.
Reflecting upon this unpleoMut
phase of the question, it is no won-
tler that the aiiti-A merican party is
increasing. ' This Tfeeling will he
turned Ifa ^ advantage by tho doma-
gouges of the land of “God sod
North America,
going
any part
C*. tend thorn who contemplate
there would do well to taka
i
of persons '
possible that it may
largo demand. Tho advanta-
ges claimed for it arc that it has the
stimulating without the heuting qual-
ities of pure coffee, is easily digested,
is not an astringent, and is not liable,
to ho spoiled in the making. If theip,
virtues can Ixi substantiated, it might
prove an ngrecnblo substitnio for the
execrable conqiound, called coffee,
which is so commonly consumed io
our western and southern states.
Chawing Ban*.
New York Hun.
“Of lolto years,” says Mr. Joseph
who does a lucrative busi-
ness
Lnnnoir, April 26.—A dispatch
from Berlin to the Tfates says an-
other audlciou* address to the esuf
has boon issued by the Nihilists
pointing 0nt (hat the indiscriminate
execution of thnao concerned in the
•""•Miifation of Alexander II. has
only served to strengthen the ranks
of the Nihilists Uy driving many
lake-warm uialcouicula into the cx-
treme faction of the party. *-
e M'
Bruton, wfn
in selling snuff far chewing pur-
», “I have abandoned selling
tobacco or snuff far tho nostrils^ I
confine myself solely to the clio^Bg
snuff, und this keeps mo alnuuit Ai*
stunt hr drumming in the'South.
Not that snuff chewing is altogether
unknown in tho North and Fast*
In Ncw York city more than $100,-
000 worth of yhcwinjt snuff is used
yearly, every ounl‘o of which ia con-
sumed by women, and iqtho New
Kuglnnd factor}' towns upward of
$600,000 worth of snuff ischewctl or
‘dip|i«d,’ n« it is'called, by tho wo-
men employed at manual hibor.
• “But nil this is nothing to tho^qi-
tent to which chewing snuff is itsed
tn the South. The mdu chew it
freely enough, hut tho great bit Ik that
wc send there (far dll, or imiriy nil*
from here) is consumed by
fc
Liberty,” and will, In all probability,
he strong enough to overthrow the
present government and place tho
reactionists in power. Should a rev-
olution, occur the adventurers now
in Mexico and on tho bordor will be
more than willing to participate if
any prospect for. plunder ia visible.
Two muqh-talkcd-of occurrences in
this state within the last fauit.yekre
incline me to think: the Ifoxieans
have just cause for their anti-Ameri-
can spirit. The first was tho unfor-
tunate difficulty in R1 Paso, which
resulted in the killing by Judge
11 owanl of lomis Cnrdis, and the ex-
ecution of Howard by the Mexicans.
Thoro. was nothing in this result of
ffcud of long standing to cause an
invasion of Mexico, hut -Governor
Hubbard was undoubtedly favorable ! uj fr0m
at tlietimo to using the United States
troops And state rangers in Yotalia-
tlOtt, instead of waiting for (ha Hex
ican government to punish the mur-
derers. But it was not tho govern-
or’s opinion alone, but that ef men
of all classes und politics, and noth-
ing was talked of far day§ but chas-
tisement of tho Greasers. Influen-
tial newsjmners, too, insisted that
the Mexicali hud forgotten tho past.,
and ncedod a sound thrashing to
quicken thoir memories. _
The other indicative straw was the
the
■ WKo
■ try and* the people,
rely upon the reports of
managers and speculators.
temporary
of the hog
anu
Cincinnati Trade LUl
Notwithstanding
decrease in t‘
products from Philadelphia
'ng porta consequent upon
efforts in parts of Europe to
prevent their importation on tnd al-
legation of their unhealthfallneM,
made by Dwwea,
n 11 iuIimI|[| Iks lillH llisl by so
soaociatoa w°rt> |
over the
fight
•h he
and character j
1m> yjj
tare jwclThre of the |
doing it upliclr
silting a quo*'
ncq_Aorthe fa-
ivcrnmciit, as
tho right of the
>5$prlH
been
two
inn in
ground moai in <
ear corn, Hi
meal increases the flow of
WASitMTOToie, May 4.—Acnate—
The Vice President Inid More the 5ff***’
Mnate tlu unfinished hdalhosa. beimr t u' H.0<
senate the unfinished bn»iiiei*s, iK-iiig
the resolution for the cloctiou of
senate offleera.
Dawes took tlie floor am) proceedod
to give a brief history of tlie action
of both sides on the senate resolution,
prieea have kept up remarkably well. He said tho senate hod DoV ^boetf
We My temporary decrease in tho permitted to express itt own jadg-
outgo of these products, tor the rea but had been paraly»ed. If
mo products, for the rea-
crusade against them ia
i. We agrc® with .the
ihip List that, under*tho
outgo of theao prddactf, for
son that the crusade agai
unwarranted
New York 8hip
thin guise of an efforh to preserve
the public health, European exclu-
siveness is just now taking its wofrt
possible form—a form that may
prove more harsh and oppressive
than the old English
whose abrogation made the
Itichard Cobdon. Th
the senate
tv a desperate
the government M a whole could be
blocked in its Amotions in tho Mme
way. He characterised the opposi-
olution-
tending to weaken and undor-
J
Occupation”
Dairymplo,. In
“Grand Army
scheme of Colon , .
which the commander'of the Texas
militin, General James, was suspected
of being Interested- Certain it iB
that many of the militiamen wore pro-
pared to move at a moment’s notice,
and that ciHbulars were scattered
blfandcost over this state, painting in
glowing words tho riulws which
.would he the rownrd of the conquer-
ors. This was to bo nQ vengonneo-
ioh would scorn to be in-
spired by tho instinct of self-preser-
vation. They are acting in aelf-de-
louse. As long os they could flood
out non-comnetitive markets with
their goods, tne
tootion were
as our food _
markets at rates that startle compe-
tition, quite an other and more alarm-
'ing problem is offered for solution.
It is unfortunute that if England
and France stand in need of protec-
tion, they cannot devise some other
schome than the taking of food from
the moutlis of their poqrer clauses,
and that, having resorted to the fool-
ish expedient of trying to dam up
the American sources of food supply,
their statesmen do not, with manly
sincerity, declare protection, and not
the preservation ot health, to be their
real motive. Our caltlo raisers and
pork packers have no sontiinontal
desire to teed the poor of Kftrope.
They pursue thoir business purely as
a matter of individual profit, Looked
ut from g -higher standpoint, how-
ever, our country occupies to-day
the position of the world’s almoner.
Hhc hr doing a benificiont work in
fhrnishing cheap and abundant food
to a class of people not hitherto well
nourished, and it will not make the
the hungry masses of Europe more
contented or more pliable to author-
ity to interfere with the meat traffic
on the slonder pretext of preventing
diseases Which are of European ori-
gin, mid which have found their tow
victims on this sido of the ocean
amoni
ary, tending to weaken and u
- mine the government. It devolves
con, law’s, ojjAhe republican party to maintain
the fame oi4* republican ana a rapreaentative
e efforts to government io this couutry, and
lonsibillty. F$r himself’ not speak-
ng for others, he declared that ho
would continue to the end of the con-
test for that resolution, not'for what
contained, but because of the
and becanse
this and belidving tho republicans
would bo strengthened by if, ho
would move that the senate for a
short time address itself to other
eonios
women. Among the working poop
it is done openly, hut in highw* so-
ciety they are a little ashamed of it.
“Do 1 think ihat chowing snuff is
an ‘injurons * habit? Well that is
hardly a fair question; but I never
do it 'thyself except iu Dmv way of
business.”
wreaking invasion, but simply a
campaign for spoils. The Moxicuns
are well seqemnfrd’With these facts,
and, for one, I can not but sympa-
thise with their apprehensions.
Simple-minded and accoslomed to
robbery under the guise ot religion,
they are unnblo to soc anything in
the philanthropic measures of
Messrs. Gould, Grant and others,
except a desire to appropriate thoir
lauds. They do not understand the
feeling which moves the compassion-
ate Gringo to substitute for tneir
Hoilrtcratching wooden ploughs and
thqir gralnt(iruehi|ig goats the im-
proved machinery ofc-thb people of
Yankeedom.
An enterprising man, who ha<]
looked with pity upon tlie Mexican
mode of threshing grain, conceived
the irlea that a vast fortune cmrid he
made by transportirig a throshcr
ovor tho mountains, ami charging
a heavy toll for threshing the graiu
of thc’dHinlcd Mexicans. After he
hod put up his machiira on the farm
ng a naturaliaed class, who have
brought with them the habita of
thoir fatherland. ----—
. . m, ,9,m_ A,..:., of a fallow American, tlie village
Thu beifas whiih withdrew priest,who MW fhe Inci ilftlilu effuct
i.«nliiiton 11 u 1*1 ii<r the neiniencv oi i, ’ - *
- Her Rights.
InduatrislUt.
A girl iius a right to an education
as precisely aduptod to a woman’s
worlcws tfio- boy’s preparatory to the
man’s work. Hhe has the right to
study her own organism ana Amo-
tions, to understAiid^the condition of
her health, and to he forewarned
against tho inexorable penalties of
ignorance, folly or ovCr-taxation.
She has a. right to instructions res-
pecting the proper caro of the sick
—for a mother’s watchfulness and
wife’s tenderness, when intelligently
directed, arb more iiotont than drugs
in the struggle ef iloath. Not that
sho is to rocoivo a physician’s educa'
tion, for wc arc not s]>e»king of phy-
sician’is work, hut a woman's educa-
tion, for that divine work which
woman bos always performed in
every race, and will so long us there
are moaning children to soothe and
fevered brows to cool. Mhe has a
right to instructions and*practice in
the art of making and cutting hor
own clothing tastefully; in the art
of cooker}-; in the art of setting
table, brightening a room, lieautil
ing u garden; in short, to all t
knowledge which rotated to sciences
can contribute to hor intelligence,
deftness and eflfofoney; in the great-
est purast ot womanly arts,' tho art
llt-
at-
Tv* BkWti.
Js('k«onvilla (11L) Advocate.,
The “greenback” is the rag baby,
2* “haiikbark” ia the black Jfcfor.
r*g baby fed and clotheil the
‘‘Boys la Blue,” and hchl up their
hands-while they saved the Union.
The bank baby; -when the flog- was
nred upon, draw its kilkeu robes!
fta.worfhldsB form, and wc
*ufa » Wo and drew tKc- wlioh
tUforit. ^ ^ '
ciiTulntion during the |>«ijdcnoy
the FuihOm Bill have maifa' depos-
its for new circulation amounting
to $3,H47,Q50. lit her bunks which
did not cqiitraql'their issue, have
dt-fsisiUsI 1h»uIs for increased citfrwi
lalion amounting to $",2f 1.500., The
total amount of ’'hanfc yirculation
now oht standing |s $847,867,55b
llcury J). Spain, who killed John
of ob enlargement of his parishon
era’ understanding, quietly put tn
his oar in the aha|*e of a sc*rtnhn, dc-
uoundng the thresher as an inven-
tion of the devil. As a result As
goats continuwl to trend out the
grain of the Mexicans, who stood at
n reSpeCtfaCdistunce from tha clat-
toj ing and diist-provokingi thn
anathematising ii as'Tumiy dlAi
Tho sharp fallow waa bankrupted, as
t purest of womanly arts
of making home brighter io tho
tie on^s than, the streets, more
tractive to its adults than mI
■ * lljHrtl; k____________________ ______ _ ^
•nfanrf.ta wortl.kV for^gml went Simian. ApriF[0?b jmU.cosl AffirhoniuHif BMn, to truu- ' gend-ul faf uc
wwi ™****gi .tn ^ ^ ^ ni«|c .,vcr dk-r. '
a quiet hook whence the pilgrim of
three-score and-ten tioards the ship
(hat sails oat into eternity's ocean
-»*»-■ —f|- mm ■1" 1
Th(* t’nited .States naval force of
enlisted men is 8260 men and boys,
and the}* havo over them 1564 offi-
cers, or ohe far about every five mft"-
This is almost as hod a com of two
, ■a thwt of Vrwt surla.
thoiglrtTf this*
irould beOomc dry.
-mng to most she immediately
ered her former flow of rqilk.
3EMr effect was to striking as to
somewhat astonish us. The cow ia
rapid!}' that wo
utiiiuod ah* won!
faturnin
fliHj years old and in goodeondHion, - -^7
had ,»,•<<i, naralvasd ir and no lUraBOB why the '|MBV
could be t&s wlSysod «»>»>• ^ ^
porate opposition Tere, ^ •°».
sent as a whole could bo
(m ibnitlSniiH in thn madid - •iHJtl* IllilC'h ntO€K.
priciplo involved in it,
it would determine whether or not
► sonato*should perform iU legiti-
mate Amotions. Ho Mid that the
republicans, while maintaining tho
authority of tho senate, could not
omit to do its duty elsewhere. There-
fore, recognising tho neccMity of
uid helith in
bnsiuess, nover losing sight of the
prim iplo that it had been fighting
for, but coming back to It in order
ig i]
to provide for the needs of tho
tho gov-
roceed to
eminent. Ho moved to pi
the' consideration of executive busi-
ness.
Beck eollod for the yeas and nays.
Pendleton requested Mr. Dawes to
withdraw his motion for a moment.
Dawes declined.
Bock said he hnrdly thought it de-
corous for Pendleton to add anything
to Dawes’ Aineral oration.
Dawea retorted that he trusted] in
it would be a funeral oration over
the opposition of Bock ami his party
to legitimate husine*.
The yeas and nays
and resultod in 68 yeas
gut ivc. _ i _
fslM «alT(M ■miles.
Indisnapelis Herald.
Thank heaven I there is ! goodly
number of pooplc who smilo because
they cau’t help it—whoso happiness,
bubbling up from their hearts, runs
over in smiles at tlieir lipn, and bursts
through them in jovial laughter.
And there is a difference between
the false and the true symbol of joy,
ibscrvor rcod-
woro
and
called
no no-
that enables the keen ol
ily to distinguish one from the other.
a natural expression of doliglit
varies with the emotion that gives
way to it, but the eouhterfoii smile
is a sterotype. and tho tono ot a by
pocrite’s laugh never varies. Tfa
crocmlih*, if the scaly old hypocrite
he is represented to be, should be
credited with smiles ns well as tears.
False smiles arc in fact more com-
mon than false tears; it is tho easi-
est thing iu the world to work
smile, while a few gifted individual*
have sufficient coihmaud of their
eyes to weep at will.
Few great tragedians, oven have
the knack of laying on the waters
rtf affliction Impromptu; but whp
over mw a rfupernumernry bandit
that could qot“smile and smile, and
be a villain,” or a chorns-singcr,
a ballet-girl, that did not look a
she hail not been newly tickled across
the lips with a straw.
Of artificial smiles there .are
greater number than we have space
to cfaMity. The countess of, Bel-
gravia has her receiving smile, a sa
perb automatic effect. * “Count
Faro, ’ the distinguished foreigner,
shuffle the cards with a smile that
distract* ever} body’s attention from
hia flit
ts Hiigcrs.
I Mis* Magnet, whose heart and lips
dissolve partnership in very early
I Ho, make* such a cupid’* bow of the
latter whenever on “eligible match’.’
approaches, that fortune* flutter
around-bar like moth* around a flame.
The Hon. Mr. Ydrisopht, who
p-ant* to get into Parliament, culti-
vate* a impulnr smile; in short, smil-
ing i* a regular business accomplish-
> Inert g J ii nc •Jllh.
where therv arc 32,1090gt‘nefais,OlAittnrUMnds of iM-ojdr, whose
4rly o^fjrY lHiVU^c Imvw ho U’w^pjjpRt’ ^vBSbuwi*
>. uithfattr lipB4ii—--
f.-'
»tried
ay not be true of otbar mifaheows.
iy Autner would be
by feeding meal
r. Wu have, win-.
er after winter, poured into their
troughs a pock or more of small earn
at a iced, and gave thorn hay and
foddor bosidee, and got only a email
flow of milk. Several winters in
succession we fad crashed com and
oobo, which gave an increased flow
of milk, and our stock did well. We -
then oonvincod that H paid,
, rot the little experionoo above re-
errod to indicates to ns that com
meal, ground reasonably fine, is much
better feed for milch stock than ear
com—oaough so to justify the ex*
of a cheap feed mill on the or-
penso I
dinnry
■ised farm.
e-
.ea ef Xaw. ^.......~
Five dollars in nickels will pur-
chase as much bread or other things
for our families as a five dollar gold
piece; hence it answers our purpose
ns money, os well os gold. But the
five dollars in nickels have only -
ghty-flve cents of intrinsic
value. Tho other four dollars and
fifteen cent* aro a creation of law.
The de< rensT in The public dobt
during last month was exoeoding
$U,600.000. This is at the rate of
about $120,000,000 per annum. To
continue at the same ratio the entire
dobt could be llqudatod within about
fifteen years. This Is a Arm evidence
that the government k on the high
road to prosperity.
Dr. K J (fltlm* the inVefttOtf
of the famous gun bearing hk name,'
was reared, the Buffalo Courier mvs,
a rough littlo log cabbin in the
heart of the North Carolina back-
woods. What in timo became the
Gatling gun is said to have sprung
from a boyish attempt to make a
corn-planter.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
rp C, ALEXANDER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, ,
OOHANCIIK, .... TSXAR.
At Htepheiu' old office on last Bids Square.
| JILL, HOOltK A LXJ,
BANKERS
AS II
DEALERS IN EXC1IANGK,
COMANCHE, TEXAS.
Ifehsnuw Bought sod. Bold on sll 11
prtncl|Ml cities fa the United HtSM*.
/.Lrunnra j.M.MOoas e.t. milajasd \
.pLKMINtl, MOCKS * HILLIARD,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
KASTLAND,, ~ e '
TEXAS.
fjl L. MUTCII1BON,
ATTORNEY and COUNSELLOR
AT LAW,
0OMANCBX, • • jt. TEXAS,
Will prsrtiee fa sll the enurtr of the elate,
■9*Lend litigation a eperfalty.
OfflZw ‘ *'
i wmt ride public M|iwn>.
10-tm
M. OAIHKR, [xotast rvsLic,]
ATTORNEY AT IiAW,
COMANCHE, - • ; TEXAS. . i
Will give prompt hcnonel attention tu all
buirfm-Ko entrusted trt hi* care—civil, rrimfa-
al, probate and wdfectfan*. _ ■*
P L. HHKOPBMIKK.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
COMANCHE, ... . TEXAS.
PrsctkWfn all the courta fa thb end «ur*
roundfag cotintinl. Apcrtst stti’iilhui prtt
to lend ntigation end hillecpona. , 96
^AND YOR BALIf
TITLX OOAXAXTXXO TO TXX rVXtmAXXX
• POURTKgM (MMU> FARMS
Cell improved, with from $B to 100 acme In
a Imrtsfa "f euMvatUs^ oituafad In good
neighborhood* la difaroot portion* of Co-
rnenche county.
IllmL ”1 wIRIwpVvfWrmHEB^m^
tract* faun 1«0 to WO acre*.
Apijyi* W.L.BARTWW4
-
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The Comanche Chief. (Comanche, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 25, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 14, 1881, newspaper, May 14, 1881; Comanche, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth904337/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Comanche Public Library.