TYLER RECORD Copyright. All rights reserved. http://usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm Sat. Aug. 13, 1892 ABE HARRIS (big advertisement) DAGLISH HARDWARE CO. J. J. Dagllsh & CLYDE YARBROUGH. South side Square, Tyler. BLACKWELL'S DURHAM TOBACCO CO., DURHAM, N. C. (BULL DURHAM) BERGFELD & Co. For best Wines, Liquors & Cigars. w. J. LEMP'SS, Milwaukee Beer. Southeast Corn&r Square. Tyler. A. OLFENBUTELL & CO. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF TYLER. Capital - $200,000 H. H. ROWLAND, Pres., Surplus - 40,000 H. G. ASKEW, Vice Pres. J. D. MOODY, Cashier. Directors: 0. LOFTIN JOHN DURST A. P. MOORE A. OLFENBUTELL H. H. ROWLAND W. G. CAIN E. P. SMITH J. D. MOODY H. G. ASKEW Dr. R. H. TERRY, DENTIST. Office over Whltney's Jewelry Store, North side Square. T. 0. WOLDERT & CONE JOHNSON, Attorneys at Law. Office on North Broadway opposite Telegraph Office. Dr. W. F. STARLEY, Office et LATHAM's Drug Store. I. J. RICE & STUART SMITH, Attorneys & Counselors at Law. H. J. MCBRIDE & JAS. MCBRIDE, Dentists. Offices over ABE HARRIS' on North side of Square. G. W. CROSS, Attorney at Law. Office over BELL & SMITH'S Drug Store Northwest corner of Square. WYRILL & WHITE, Iron, Tin, Copper, zinc Plate Workers. E. ALBERTSON. Dry Goods & Groceries. East Side Square. GOERGE BENTINCK, The Butcher. North Spring street. SHERRILl & SHUFORD. Dealars In Horses, Mules, Cattle, etc. East Erwin Street. TYLER RECORD Sat., Aug. 13,1892 McKAY & ADAMS. Druggists. BONNER & DOROUGH, Insurance Agents. Office upstairs next to Post Office. SMYRE & CO., Fine Liquor & Cigars. Corner North Bro8dw8y & Square. GRIFFITH & ROBERTSON. Drugs, Patent Medicines. Northeast Corner Public Square. TYLER CAR & Lumber Co. West Erwin Street. Mfgr's of Texas Cane Mills & Cook's Evaporators -Ames Engines & Boilers. ROBINSON & ODEN., Livery Stable. East Erwin street near The Opera House. LOUIS EXCHANGE. In the Old Sam Brown stand near P. 0. Hansomest Saloon in East Tex8s. LIFE, FIRE & ACCIDENT INSURANCE. R. B. LONG, Jr. Over First National Bank Northwest Corner of Square. LINDALE HIGH SCHOOL, Lindale, Texas. Offers excellent advantges for the education of your sons and daughters. If you have children to educate see what we can offer before going elsewhere, by applying to H. L. Tate, Sec. School Board or Prof. D. C. Lake, Principal. EXCHANGE CLATTER: WACO GLOBE. Tyler has been having a horticultura1 fair, which the papers pronounce a success. Tyler is pretty good at anything she undertakes, from politics to peaches. AUSTIN STATESMAN: The Tyler Record remarks: "LIttle drops of water and fewer grains of sand is what Texas needs now in her business." The Record might have added "and a little less of Hogg." DALLAS NEWS: A Cuban feeder says he wents his country annexed to the United States In order to escape-the Spanish tyrant end the native revolutionist. Bless your soul you'd get little relief here. We have an implacable tyranny of tariff protection grinding our toes off breeding e host of revolutionists to blow our heads off. Besides, in Texas we heve Jim Hogg. SAM HOUSTON'S will written April 2,1863, is in this paper. PERSONAL:- City Marsha1 LATHAM knows his business. MARSHALL MEADOR is meking Tyler his home now. W. M. KIDD, of Swan, was in the city Monday. Mrs. ANNIE FORD is in the city, a guest of her brother GEE'S family, in South Tyler. Mr. AB. DeSHONG has been retained 85 head usher at the Grend for the coming season. Mrs. L. L. JESTER leaves in a few days for Topeka, Kenses, to visit her sister, Mrs. C. W. KOUNS. WIll DONLEY, county attorney of Cherokee county, was in the city this week, visiting relatives and friends. Miss BELLE GRIFFITH is visiting her aunt Mrs. Y. B. CAMPBELL, on South Baxter street, and will remein a week or two. Mr. THERON BROWN, of Chattanooga, Tennessee, and P. P. BROWN, of Temple, Texas, are in the city, visiting relatives. THE TYLER RECORD Aug. 13,1892 Judge FELIX McCORD, was renominated for district judge, at Mineola Tuesday, and Judge GORDON RUSSELL, of Van Zandt, was nominated for district attorney at the same time. The following is the personel of the grand juty for the September term of the district court: R. E. GASTON, W. J. KAY, J. W. OGBURN, U. C. HAR6ROVE, W. M. L. BLOODWORTH, J. C. GIBSON, J. S. STONE, T. J. DICKSON, LEM BUTLER, M. STARNES, T. J. INGRAM, W. A. POPE, JULE SMITH and R. H. SMITH. Will French Bill attend the Houston convention? Fine line of hosiery, laces, tinware, corsets and hankerchiefs, at the Racket Store. These fellows at the Racket Store keep most anything you want and will surprise you with the low prices. Our mineral water--rather DICK RIVIERE's--promises to see thet Tyler is a fashionable wetering place at no distant day. The RECORD job office, under the supervision of our talented artist, Mr. GEO. P. McNEAL, is doing the fine job of work of this part of Texas. The OAKLAND HIGH SCHOOL, situated et Swan, this county, opened Monday last. This is an excellent school, and has a fine faculty, and the coming term bids fair to be the most prosperous it ever had. 808 LUCAS "came through" at a colored revival the other night and says he loves everybody. Nobody needed religion worse than Bob and lots of it. We hope Bob will make as good a Chrlstlan as he has made a ______,and if he does, his seat in the amen corner will not be questioned. The season at the Grand Opere House opens in September. A fine list of attractions are booked and the coming season will be highly satisfactory to the lovers of the play. See list elsewhere in this issue. Our old friend, Mr. H. V. HAMILTON, senior editor of the Democrat- Reporter, is, we are glad to say, able to resume hls work. Mr. Hamilton has been a great sufferer and all who read this will be glad to learn of hls recovery. DICK RIVIERE'S mineral water is a wonder. Everybody is using it and everybody is well who does. Mr. Rlviere has arranged for a quantltave analysis, which will tell the world whether he has the panacea we hope for or not. It will no doubt seem almost impracticable to those who live beyond this great fruit country to hear of large, juicy peaches, some weighing 1/2 to 3/4 of a pound, being sold for from 35 to 4O cents per bushel. Yet such is true. Our canning factories consume the fruit which is not in demand In foreign markets, and this season Tyler has packed many thousand bushels of this delicious fruit. We will very soon rival if not surpass California as a fruit packing country. One of The RECORD members is Indebted to Hon. JOHN M. DUNCAN for two elegant cigars brought from Chicago, costing $1.00 each. They are wrapped In gold leaf, and made of tabacco. We will take a lay-off, buy us a pair of carpet slippers, borrow a mantle upon which to rest our feet; then, closing both eyes, we wlll light up, go into dreamland, and imagine we own steel works and that our life is in momentary danger from cranky strikers we have refused to allow in our factory. We will not enjoy this blissful delusion long but, Judge, 'twill be you we owe for the dream of importance. FAVOR GERMAN:- On Wednesday evening the young folks met on the beautiful lawn of the hospitable mansion of Mr. H. H. ROWLAND and participated in a favor german. Everybody was cool and happy and danced as they seldom do at this season. Mr. and Mrs. Rowland were with them and as happy as the young folks, and all was beauty, grace and solid enjoyment. The favors were very handsome, the premium favor being captured by little Miss BROWNIE BROWN, one of the most attractive young ladles in Eastern Texas. The successful and most popular gentleman dancer was Mr. ROBERT LINDSEY, who took the shaving cup, which he will use when the wind blows through. The following contribution beautifully describes this happy events "To brisk notes in cadence beating, Glance their many twinkling feet." "The silver-footed queen of night" arose in all her brilliancy on the night of the 10th, and never did she look down upon a merrier, fairer assemblage of youth and mirth than at that time. The dancing pavilion on the beautiful lawn presented a gay appearance. Beautifully tinted lights gleamed here and there among the foliage. The night was cool and balmy; breezes wafted the soft, sweet notes of dreamy music to the listening ears of the festive young. The germen was gracefully lead by Mr. MORRIS, dancing with Miss DeSHONG, and many beautiful figures were introduced. The souvenirs of the occasion were exquisitely beautiful, the lady's prize being dainty and elegant photo case of silver and chamois, the gentleman's prize a handsome silver shaving cup and brush. At 1 o'clock the good-nights were unanimous in declaring it one of the most pleasant entertainments ever enjoyed. All then bid "To all, to each, a fair good night, And pleasing dreams and slumbers light." ANOTHER NEW COTTON FIRM:- Mr. JAMES R. IRION, of Overton, who is one of the largest dealers in the "fleecy staple" in the south, was in the city Wednesday and has rented elegant apartments in which he will conduct a cotton business slmilar to that of J. H. BROWN & CO. and W. W. ROBERTS. Mr. Irion is brimful of vim and energy, as for capacity to make things hum, none can doubt. He has recently returned from the City of Mexico, at which place he made valuable correspondents for business purposes. Mr. Irion is also one of the largest merchants in East Texas, making the purchase of bankrupt stocks a specielty. He is known throughout the state as the "Bankrupt King." Tylers latch string hangs on the outside for such men. COUNTRY PRQDUCE:- GEO. P. BROWNE pays the highest price for country produce. Next door to OLFENBUTTEL & CO's. dry goods store. BIG LAND SUIT FILED:- HUNDREDS OF ACRES IN SMITH COUNTY INVOLVED--SOMETHING OF THE SUITS. Two big land suits have just been files with the district clerk of this country, which involved hundreds of acres of Smith county No. 3667." The first suit is styled "James Denison et al vs. A. J. Swann, Thos. C. BARRETT et al; suit No.3667." This suit involves 1250 ecres of land in this county and part of a one-third league of land granted and patented to DANIEL MINOR. August 27, 1861, by the state of Texas. Plaintiffs are JAMES DENISON, of Clay County, SUSAN E. THOMPSON. NETTIE F. JACKSON. STONEWALL ELIZABETH B. ROBERTSON, HUGH ROBERTSON. SHERMAN THOMPSON, JESSE LEE THOMPSON and others. Defendants are THOMAS BARRETT, ROBERT W. BARRETT. N. C. BLANCHARD, F. A. BLANCHARD and her husband, of Caddo Parish, Louisiana, surviving heirs of W. W. BARRETT, deceased, LAURA. JOHNSON, ADDlE JOHNSON. and other children, heirs of PERRY JOHNSON, deceased, LAURA JOHNSON, ELIAS JONES. GEO. R. PHILIPS. BURRELL B. RAY, HORACE H. ROWLAND. BENJAMIN H. ROWLAND. A. J. SWANN, and J. Y. SPICER, all of Smith county. THE second case is that of MARY M. LEDBETTER et a1. vs. BRYAN M. BELL et al.: suit No. 3668. The plaintiffs are Mrs. ELIZABETH MUCKLEROY and her husband, MIKE MUCKLEROY. of Colorado county, Texas, Miss MARY M. LEDBETTER, Mrs. MARY E. WINSTON, Mrs. ElIZA A. PHIlLIPS and her husband, C. M. H. FARRAR, J. Q. A. BRYAN, of Coffee county, Tennessee; MARTIN V. CAMP, MARY VAN CAMP, E. CAMP, Mrs. LIZZIE JERNlGAN, of Lawrence county, Arkensas. The defendents ara FRANK M. BELL, GEO. DAVENPORT, I. N. GEORGE, JOHN J. GOODMAN, WM. J. GOODMAN, JULIA GOODMAN, PARMELIA GOODMAN, SAMUEL V. GOODMAN, W. M. HORTON and D. S. TUCKER, of Smith county. This suit is for the recovery of 960 acres of land in this county, patented to SNEED LEDBETTER on January 11,1853, by the state of Texas, being patent No. 496, Voi. 6, certificate No. 9651, class bounty, issued by the secretary of war, November 24,1840; being situated about five miles northwest of Tyler. THE GRAND OPERA HOUSE:- And some of the Attractions for this season. THE BOOKINGS so far have been very satisfactory to the management of the Grand, and Tyler will be visited by some of the best attractions before the Amerlcan public, and when they come we have the house to accommodate them and the management see to it that we get the show in full. The skeptical public often think we do not get the entire performance, when really it is almost impossible to cut and alter a programme on the moment. Occasionally the performance is hurried through due to the insufficient railroad accommodations in and out of Tyler, but never cut, and when they do the management of the Grand will see to it that they pay dearly for their indifference. The opera house is now corresponding with several expert musicians, and if possible will give the patrons of the house an orchestra worth listening to. Below is a partial list of booking for this season; the full list will be published later: DUNCANB. HARRISON'S little Tlppet: Lost In New York. (Real water scene.) Breezy Tlme: After Dark. (original tank show.) Men and Women; Lizzie Evans, Barlow Bros.' Minstrels, Fest New York cast.); Charity Bell, Charity Ball; Cawthorn's Little Nugget, German's Minstrels; Sadie Scanlan; Jane; Around the World In Eighty Days; Karl Gardner; The Black Detective; Little's "World"; Paul Kauvar; Katie Putnam; Old Homestead; Daughter of Dixie; Al. G. Field's Minstrels; Mr. Potter of Texas; Stewart Robson; Larry the Lord (Greenwell's); Friends; Milton Nobles; Royal Pass; Clay Clement; Klmball Opera Co.; Old Homestead (Denman Thompson's) GALVESTON EXCURSION:- On August 13th, the I. & G. N. R. R. Co. will sell excursion tickets to Galveston, Texas, and return. For partlculars call on nearest ticket agent, or address, D. J. Price. A. G. P. A., Palestine. Texas. On August 13th, 14th and 15th, the I. & G. N. R. R. Co. will sell excursion tickets to Galveston, Texas, at greatly reduced rates. Stop over at Houston will be greeted to a11 desirlng to attend the democratic state convention. FOR RENT:- The building on West Ferguson street now occupied by L. A. Starley is a book store. Apply to John Durst & Co. GROVER CLEVELAND:- He Responss Heartily to Congratulations from Ex-Minister HUBBARD. Gray Gables. Buzzard's Bay, Mass.. Aug. 4,1882. Hon. R. B. Hubbard, Tyler, Texas: My Dear Governor--I beg you to accept my heartfelt thanks for your extremely friendly letter of congratulation. It gives me pleasure to say to you that all the reports I have thus far received from the canvass are most encouraging, and our friends in New York, who are well informed, seem to apprehend no danger of losing that stete. I am aware, however, that much may happen between now and election day, and I by no means consider the battle as won. On the other hand, I believe success will only wait upon our efforts if they are constant and harmonious.. Very truly yours, GROVER CLEVELAND. TO MY FRIENDS AND PUBLIC GENERALLY:- I desire to say that I am now in the family grocery business, having bought out the Irion stock. My piece of business is on the west side of the square, second door north of A. Olfenbuttel & Co's dry goods store, where I will be permanently located. I claim to know something of the wants of the people in my line and shall use every endeavor to carry such goods as will please the most fastidious buyer. I shall conduct a nice, clean business and nothing will escape my attention which will in any way please my patrons. I will give prompt service in the delivery of orders and guarantee everything which goes out of my house to be first-class, or the money refunded. This business will receive my entire time in future end I respectfully ask for a share of the patronage of the people of Tyler and Smith county. Will always give market prices for country produce. Very respectfully, Geo. P. BROWNE. Telephone No.7. SUNDAY EXCURSIONS:- Commencing Sunday, July 31st, and continuing during the year, the Texas and Pacific Railway will inaugurate the sale of Sunday Excursion Tickets at rate of one and one-third fare for the round trip between local points on its line East of Fort Worth within a distance of 100 miles from selling station and will be going and returning on Sunday only. The ticket agent knows all about. Ask him, or address, GASTON MESLIER, G. P. T. A., Dallas, Texas. BUSINESS LOCALS:- We buy corn and country meat. Place, West Erwin Street. VERNER & RICE. XIX LINIMENT cured my wife of female trouble when I thought her incureble. Jas. L. MOODY. STATE lecturer Farmer's Alliance. Sold by McKAY & ADAMS. I will pay highest market price for choice fruit. A. B. RELLY. BOB CLARK keeps constantly on hand the best wines, brandies. whiskies and cigars In the city. Ten Thousand Bushels of Fruit wanted on A. B. REILLY's STORE, 208 West Erwin Street. Everybody goes to BOB CLARK'S when in search of good liquors and cigars, the best always on hand. Prettiest Job work In Tyler done at THE RECORD OFFICE. Try us. Are YOU having aches and pains? If so buy a bottle XIX liniment, use it according to directions, internally and externally, and it will cure you. It cured JUDGE GEORGE CLARK a cramp colic in 10 minutes. Sold by McKey & Adems. THE TYLER RECORD Aug. 13,1892 Fancy crackers, cakes and Jumbles, vanilla wafers, etc., R. M. IRION & CO., Telephone No. 5. Smoke the celebrated Metropolitan cigar, sold by 8OB CLARK. A. P. MOORE. WHOLESALE GROCER, TYLER, TEXAS THE TYLER RECORD: JOHN DURST & CO., Proprietors. Railroad Time Card. Internatlenal end Great Northern. No.16, North bound...9118 p.m. No.8, North Bound...9118 a.m.; No.7. South Bound...5145p.m., No.15, South Bound...6t588.m Tyler South 88... Eastern. North Bound...6,00p.m., South Bound... 71008.m. ST. LOUIS SOUTH WESTERN. No.1, South Bound, arrives...4115a.m. departs ...4.25a.m.; No.2, North Bound, errives ...1138p.m. Departs...1148p.m. COUNTY DIRICTORY. County Judge......B. B. BEAIRD; County Aftorney...Jas. M. EDWARDS sheriff...........BRYAN MARSH Collector.........Ed. B. WIGGIN County Clerk......J. M. RUCKER District Clerk....S. J. MORRIS Assessor..........IKE NOLAN Treasurer.........J. D. LOWERY Surveyor..........IRA ELLIS. CITY DIRECTORYI- Mayor.............R. B. LONG, M8rshal...........C. H. LATHAM; secretary.........JNO. M. ADAMS Collector.........J. M. JESSUP Treasurer.........W. L. CAIN Attorney..........D. V. GAINES St. John's Lodge, NO. 52, A F. and A. M. Regular stated meeting second saturday night in each month at Masonic Temple, West Erwin Street. Visiting brothers cordially invited. H. J. MCBRIDE, W. M. H. LOEBRITZ, secretary. TYLER CHAPTER 0.24, R. A. M. Regular stated meeting fourth Saturday night In each month. visiting companions cordially invited. Dr. W. F. STARLEY, P.P., H. LOEBRITZ, Secretary. ASCENSION COMMANDERY NUMBER 25, KNIGHTS TEMPlAR. Stated conclave first Tuesday night in each month. All visiting fraters cordially invited. J. CLARKE, E.C., A. F. REECE, Recorder. ANNOUNCEMENT:- The Record goes to press at 12 o'clock M. on Friday, and all communications must reach this office not later then Thursday morning, and as much sooner as practicable. ANNOUNCEMENT:- FOR CONGRESS:- We are authorized to announce Hon. C. B. KILGORE a candidate for re-election to Congress from the 3d congressional district at ensuing election, subject to the action of the Democratic party.