Newspaper Page Text
EW ERA.
NUMBER 10.
K e '
V
► V
lls
WASH8NOTON & RUSSOM,
Dealers in
Groceries, Hardware, Staple Notions, aiul
Fancy Goods.
WE BUY FOR CASH
WE SELL FOR CASH,
WE BUY CHEAP WE SELL CHEAP.
They are Hood Goods,They are Cheap
Goods.
They worn bought at Headquarters. You are cordially invited to
coino and sco for yourself, anil know that wo have tho cheapest
line of goods ever offered in Dallas,
lint they won’t tumble lo the Racket unless the cash is paid on the spot
So don’t forgot your Pocket Hook, l&r no on9 call get etc lit here
We are after the Hard Cash. If you havu got it we will give yen
Lots of goods for it.
ili hot rtheir color equal to ,
' ling nilvcr gooi?tt hiuI will ,
t only About onj-quatter ,
thr. prict*< of solid Bterlinjj ,
•ilvcr. The fionda are sold by ,
a^cnis ouly and we warrant ,
them tj v*nml the test of ,
year* or reiuml the moi ey, a ,
nu i r.--. >• .11 jjo v ith - ch ,
doxen am bar\«d tip by on ,
old veil d»lc company which ,
out! making ,
on the market. ,
o » reeicpt of 25 ,
. 1 we will for- i
1 r wc« nnd dia- ,
n.». A (rents <
u 23 dollars per ,
ni Upson & flait Co.
Rnlonvlllfl, Conn.
&adz
\ / D I
USING\/ USING
SILURIAN
SPRING WATER.
NATURE’S
GREATEST
CURE
115 brinp the bene- l
0 , tits ottliis wond- l
GREATEST ** erful water to I
your nome—bottles or I
barrels— retaining all I
of its purity and cura- <
. live power’s. I
62 PAGE BOOK Dyspepsia,Bladder, I
MAILED FREE. Kidney or Urinary 1
0 WEAK, NEK\
>U>, DEBILITATE]
who in folly and iignoi nn
a 0 trilled away ■
or ot JIODY, MINI) an
U.V NIIOOO, eausing tciTil>lo\1 rains iijioi
lie wells of life, Headache, * paeknehe.
Dreadful Dreams,“Weak less of Memory.
Dimples upOJl the face, and all tho effects
h ading to oat ly decay, ('om-uinption o
insanitv. sold for HOOK. OK LI FI*!
scaled) free with particulars of a I101111
cute. NEuro No l\iy. DID DARK
ER, d 10 N T . Cherry, Niislivillo, Tenn.
troubles immediately
relieved and cured by its use. It is a
mild alterative, purities the blood, renews
strength and enerjjy. l.ndoraed and re-
cuumcndcU by the physicians of America.
Silurian Mineral Spring Co,,
WAUKESHA, WISCONSIN. t
Itasoeescseo neeMNHtN
ej
VALUABLE PRIZES, FREE.
Wo aro just i:t receipt of a very
attractive) Almanac for 1S93.
which, whilo it contains rome
very instructive reading, and all
the almanac information for 1893,
also contains a very unique and
interesting contest, i:i which the
publishers propose to giro 192
valuable and useful article.; tc
the successful contestant •. The
plan of the con test is to find sr-.v n
superfluous figures scattered
through tho almanac, and make
up a number which i; t) Lo the
same s.'i I ho number which tin
publishers Lu c- ndooic and i
maqo i > ;
nbgv > :-i :
will iinu i
pub.-: he-.--,
ilio i .;l a
mat ion. .
Vh -• -h,'.
ajut-is ra, ..
. TOU
i;u r . Th
v*u with
iry i ai’o:
; ■' r.
, Cb.ai.
,Oh’T
When you can have SUFFER
immediate relief, a per- w w 1 B 1-1
feet, speedy, and per- yyijH THAT
remedy which dries
instantly and soils
nothing by using.
CORN
LIEBIG'S CORN CURE.
For the en
tire removal
of hard or
soft
Corns,
Calluoses
and
Bunious
And other
indurat ions
of the skin.
Cure Guaranteed or Money Returned.
25c. at Draff Stores
Mailed for 30c.
J. R. HGFFLM & CO.
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
WOMEN who luivo Head
minis, Hackaclms, Neural-
gins, Scanty, Profuse, and
I’aiulul Menstruations Dis-
tU-m, ami • isplftceniGntB
• of tho Won*!* ami Sccual Organs, Ear-
c .m-ss, L« 1 C < t hma, H<\, t hotild solid
■or WOM.v:/.s TOOK OK LI EE,(scaled)
me with particulars for home euro. No
i (hire No Pay. Sticniilic Qualifications
Unlimited JExperionec. f’aroful Diagno
sis ami Honest HeproscntalioiiH 'ara tlie
.corol.s of our success. Address,
(1. \V. DARKE it M. D. f BIO N. CliniTy
\i shvilL*. Tenu.
I DEFORMITIES
Cni88 Eyes Hair Hip, Curvature of lb
! p*no, (M ub Feet, Hip Joint Disease, and
I l deformities if the Hinds, Arms
I Hegs, and Foet radically cured.
DlSFKi 1 t. K.t; ENT’S,
Superfluous Hair,JWiuc Marks, Moles,
I et<\, painlessly and perfectly removed
i -'ciul for valuable treatise on tlie ahov
] Address, C . \V I* AUICE it 1)
| Cherry, Nashville Tenn.
jC N DOWN men an
women su'd triad
from a.i.» Mm off IIKONIC R!D
EASE, c«j» bevv.ie a valuable wo:k, on
their alTln tion (sealed) free, and leain
bow they ran bo cated at home, liy wri.
mgDlL PAUKEU«& Co. i’-io North Cher-
>-y Street, Nashville. Tenn. Bettor write
o day, delays ro dangerous. Please I
state your trouble and liow lung afflicted I ed, they woul 1 bo !c.
A NIHILIST TRIAL SCENE.
In tlie gray, dull light of tlio ti]>-
I prouchiug morning th« com-tioom
looked strangely oppressive. Six
candles, in silver candlesticks,
g imme ing upon the judges’ table
gave it a lugubrious, 'funeral as-
| pect. Tlie closely packed people
j were almost silent. From tii ■
pi i oner i’ box a hum of suppressed
voices name, The prisoners knew
I hat after the sentence they would
be sip acute 1. They ti led to profit
by the short time ih*y were to lie
together. ’ .fudging by their un
broken, rapid tula, tlioy w.re in
good spirit.. Hut tlie public could
not see any of them, as they sat all
six on wooden benches, surrounded
bj twelve gendarmes with drawn
swords on their shoulders. The
crowd outside the building, which
th ■ sleepy and exhausted police
men now left to take care of itself,
was neither so patient nor so calm,
they rofpras.ntpd tho most turbu
lent Motion of t!io population. As
a part of lho loiterers, tired by the
long waiting, withdrew, these were
brought, into closer contact. A
handkerchief’was raised at ono o.
the windows. “Thu verdict!’’
shouted a voico in thu crowd. In
stantly all noise ceased, and the
crowd piossed forward.
Within, tho voico of tho usher
was announcing tho hist scene of
he shameless farce The tribunal
was about to enter to road the :o.i-
ieece. Rising to their foet ns one
man, III • people stood in breatlde s
expectation. A silence as of death
ell upon the miiny-h aded crow I,
Or.e could almost hear the boating
o so mirr. hearts some in ftgooy
'I' feu. smile in thu excitement of
Iramatiu t us:ou. ()ne by-one the
six momb rs of the tribunal np-
eared upon tho platform behind
he 1 mg till le lit by tlio six can-
lles. Their troubled, worn out
iooks were suggestive intlicr of a
peat villainy just committed, with
t.ll knowledge, than of a uter i
hough |si:iifiil duty fulfilled.
All cy vs w uv rivellej upon Hie
tiosid.ng judge, who, with
i while sheet of paper
| i his hands, was about
> utter th-■ fatal words. In a
voic..> raised lo an unusually high
pi-eli h read the preamble, which
i cd to last mi eternity. At
last the first words of the sentence
re uttered, sending all electric
thri I throughout tho audience,
flic mini; of I’or' a c^nio first, fol-
oived hy aloiigmmnhlingto which
nobody paid attention—it was the
numcrati n < f his offenses. Then
a short pan si’ an l tlio sentence—
d.-utli! Though no ono expected
im to be spare I, the word fell up
on strain ’.I nerves like the blow of
hammer. Vasily's name follow-
with. :i mumbling less irksome, for
it was suoi'tor, and thou anoLiior
low of tli - hummer—deiifli! Tlio
erves shiver but hold go wl. The
;Vnd in tlio roll is Zina, whose fate
a I been the mos discussed, ln)-
iui.se tho m st iinccr a n, Tho si-
hi : e iloe; cued. Life or death?
ife or death? ill asked in tlioi,-
hearts, whilst the mumb’.ing went
on. 1 he t ixatc.linghamulor rise
higher and higher, then s -.spence
:u d i gain it f Us with a (rash—
death! A sigh, gathering into n
- roue, iv. n Llnoiigh tlio ball. All
even the mos prejudiced, turned
their eyes with umnuod sympathy
and awe upon that young, nobl •,
lieauti id wo ran,stau mg so calm
nominal punisnmont. The mnm-
bling allixed to Hotclinrcv’s name,
which came next, wai such as p
lull the inattentive audience to
complete tranquility. Most people
ceased to listen altogether, whe,]
suddenly a suspicious quivering in
tho judges’ voico, nshort pause,and
the sentence—death!—resound a-
midst univcr.-id stupcfuot.on. A
wend ring “ha!’’ escaped from all
lips. Men looiced at their noigh-
hors to use >t tillu whether tlioy had
not misht aid. “Many tlianks.gen
tlemen pi ’ges!" the voico of the
condcuincd mini resounds, nit cor
iugly. The judge had not the
couruga to call tlio prisoner to or,
dor, and protended not to hear,and
luistonod on to tho following name.
It was that of the eider Diuioroy.
Thistimo tlio public followed with
strained attention all th,,
circumlocutions nnd wimllings
of tho clumsy si,mining
up of offenses. There was the
same treacherous prolixity and ab-
struseiiess in the statomtmt of mo
lives. Some phrases soiin led ug
ly—doubts, alternated with hopes
irritating moil’s nerves to the ex
tremity. Tlie hammer was hang
ing in tlio air—now rising, now
sinking, and then rising again.
Thou tho b’oiv was strucK, it was
— lea'.li!
Tlio suppressed passion burst
forth oil a sudden. Shrinks, hys
terical cries of vvonion, groans ami
curses filled tho air. People jump
upon their seat , shouting and ges
ticulating wildly, as if timy had
gone mu I on a sudden. I(, was a
scene of disorder such as had never
before been witnessed within thus
walls A go > I lady in lit. • -• o id
ow —tho wife of /he chairman of
llm hoard—fainted from her ox-
-iti-mout. Up.m tlio lieni’li tin
li order and eonfusio i were luirdiv
loss than mmmg tlio public. Tin
presiding judo , tlie paloncss o|
ill .mo on hia f e’o, slrovo lo fact
the storm, lie failed completel,.
lie wished that th ■ public . Innihl
i-ciimiii ami li ten to tlio end of by.
paper, which tremb.sl in Irs hand.
Th ■ sixth o' llm prisoners, Lhe
youugor o. t ie sisters Uudoro/, in
, oiisidoration of lu-r youth, was
•oinl’mil d—not lodeatli, as the
pro cent >r ha I ask d —h i: Lo lit’ -
teen yean’ penal s i-.itude They
had ofEe.od this sop to their slai ish
eo isci u -es, and they wi bed tlini’
act of courage to be made known.
Hut in the general uproar nob >dy
could catch one word of what was
read. A yom.g man n one I the
window, a id, leaning out, shouted
CO the people in tlio .>treul; * iu
death! All sen'one.d to death!’
A threatening yell was hoard from
tho c,ow l b ■ ow. Some among
the representatives of tlio ‘ loyal’’
element thought (hat tho crowd
w. s about to storm lli ■> jil iee, and
that they wonhl be massacred
wholesale. In a lit of panic they
bega i to shriek and yell on tlicii
own ace ami. The police ollieers
app iinte I to wat li outside rushed
to the judge, 'i liey confabulated
for a moment, ami tho policemen
ran out by the back way. Tb„
Presi lent had ordered troops to be
called out. Tlio judges slipped
out of sight, hiding themselves in
the inner roo us, while the police
men b gau (o clear I he hail. /<Vo/«
'IIn 1 I ''IiT' r nf ii A'H, Hi 1,111/ Stepni-
a/.-,
Brooklyn Hoy—'‘Are the world's
Pair building very big-:’’
Chita 1 ' i Boy—Hig?
HEART IVTEMORIES,
UV CARK1K I1IU.LE OAOl.E
A golden day, so wondrous bright,
A song of love borne on the brcc ;e,
Within my heart is joyous light,
Horn of the sweetest melodies
That moonlit eve.
A joyous evo—upon the floweis
l he dew impearled like frozen tears,
Unto my heart the sweet, sweet hours
Hew by, nor left one ling’ring fear
That moonlit eve.
t )h, but the world was. fair and gay,
For Love had opened unto me
A vista bright!—nor in his sway
Had left one Saddcnel memory,
That summer day,
Oil, lie *rt so lone,how passing dear
Those happy days—so glad,so free!
Within the breast a burning tear—
For life and love was lost to me
One suinmei day.
Pale roses dying on his breast,
The still hands crossed so peaceful-
>y.
I’hc wand’rlng feet had found their
rest
Far, far beyond the Jasper Sea
One summer day.
Alone, alone, the waves of time
Roll o'er my heart with heavy tread,
And youth aad life and love sublime
I'll know again in that glad clime
When graves give back their dead,
Some summer day.
—Woman’s Work.
Mr. Albert Favorite, of Arkansas
City, Kan., wishes to give our read
cis the benefit of his experience with
colds. 11c says: “I contracted a cold
early last spring that settled on my
lungs, and had hardly recovered from
,i when ! taught another that hung
'ii all summer and left me with a hack
ing cough which I thought I never
would get rid of. I had used Cham-
m f.a!r. a l‘. Remedy some four
teen years ago with much success,and
oncludtd to try it again. When I
had got through with one bottle my
■migli had left me, and I have not
Miakred with a cough or cold since. 1
have recommended it to others, and
ill speak well of it." 50 cents bottle,
for sale by t.’onnally & Connally.
Largest Latin, in tlio World.
ly and nio!estlv. .Most ha I ex t .
poet, it that as a woman s' e would TIk ^' \ *0 Huirnmny
be , itved. T. c three reminingr tl ' ,L > on U> !ouk t,vro "8 I:
were so little cuuiprovnis-
II yvilli u
■V
nsone
pile wrong;end ot a (qn.’i-.t-glass toi
[see em.”
Tin- largest iron lat'.io in tlio
world is now finishing ono of the
Uvo immense barbette* f >r two re-
ently cqustriicted Government
ironclad cruisers', That lathe is a
part of tho equipment of a HulTnlo
.V. V.) factory, tlie Lake Erie En'
ginooring Works. Not even the
great works of Ivrupp, tho ganma
ker of E.-sen; tlio Woolwich arsenal,
“r tho United Stales Government
0 tablishmont* c aid turn these
barbette a
A barbette, it may be explained,
>s tlie tubular basis of the turret of
tho ironclad. It rises in tlie middle
of the ironc'ad, and tlirough it the
guns ai'u raised from the gunroom
below, where the loading is done
to tlie turret, from which they are
lir.'d. '1 hose barbettes, when fin—
ishisl, will bo twenty feet in diam.
utor. Tliey aro rolled in quarter
.sections, each weighing twenty
tons, and four cars are required for
tlio shipment of the entire barbette.
Tho sections have to bo worked
down to a specified weight,polished
and molded for putting together,
and the greatnosk of the taste may
lie imagined from the fact that it
will require she weeks yot to finish
the first barbette. Yet these busy
works run day and night, with on-
111 heiiv’s stoppage for tlio
'nincry at noon and an hour in
ATjui OWoxaft
VJ.f-
hy