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Mexia Evening Ledger Thursday, August 03, 1899,
Texas

Mexia Evening Ledger Thursday, August 03, 1899,
Texas

Mexia Evening Ledger Thursday, August 03, 1899,
Texas

Mexia Evening Ledger Friday, August 04, 1899,
Texas

Mexia Evening Ledger Friday, August 04, 1899,
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Mexia Evening Ledger Friday, August 04, 1899,
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Mexia Evening Ledger Thursday, August 10, 1899,
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Mexia Evening Ledger Thursday, August 10, 1899,
Texas

Mexia Evening Ledger Thursday, August 10, 1899,
Texas

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Decatur Daily Review Thursday, August 17, 1899 ,
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Fort Wayne News Thursday, August 17, 1899 ,
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Marion Daily Star Thursday, August 17, 1899 ,
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Middletown Daily Argus Thursday, August 17, 1899 ,
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Mexia Evening Ledger
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Mexia Evening Ledger

   Mexia Evening Ledger (Newspaper) - August 17, 1899, Mexia, Texas                               A Mad a Bottor Oao I. Big with the by lamed Copper a. In the The was made to Brooke took part In It Bter and guide par excellence late or kg generally He was six inches his frame was every muscle was i were as sound as an ante- tils eye had the power of a pe. and a rifle had been his 5 since childhood His father and his mother Inherited the bravery rant e of the old Canadian ith the knowledge of nd of the habits of of the JHU In lite seemed to be to his aggregate bag would that ol anj other in mm He kept a record only ears killed and that record reached eighty-five Mr. son of the late ho was one of our party called hunter in the powers of trailing game ir admiration He would ride jn his pom and occasionally jch remarks as mountain there or il deer and fawn passed along Is morning and we would look for a sign He would trail a an elk a and presently He over in those e enough there he would be He true Indian taciturnity about cess as a hunter Mr aba likes to tell the story OJt Bat's elk hunts HP was on a ith Gen Crook some years ic strolled off alone i foot When he returned at said Well did e Saw thirteen as the with an intonation to end the tiling you get Yes T got He slaughtered the whole if elk AVE Not He Hiding to recent of a lan the in that must or stand liable for in- resulting from to do Homo time ago the sates were at a in an dog in the vocation eluded the id the track at that point with an tain passed on but the lad to puked with a sponge suit the on mi to loi the taking off of his ed pet iho company ed it had its dun in shutting the sates and if the was so ill mannered 01 undei in aco ot MII h a desire to de him then the blame with I lie held it the of the to the dog off its Macks and ed experts to determine whether provided weie lated to prevent the of rv dogs repotted the defendant and after a to in canine to determine the value of the d the plaintiff was aw aided interest from the date of tha trophe f tko Tiny the Detroit F H. the Swain avenue boat list completed the hull of a gasoline launch for the SUtes government Though feet In length over constructed in exac imitation of Inele Sams men o war The is designed foi use t s lighthouse officials at the Soo is the of C chill of thr Soo direction the h wav built should he i battleship He pre- 1 plans and made the of thr Massachusetts shi is foi ihe wa all bo placid on a ud rail to the in the St Marys and lit tending and other nH The moulded depth s feet hei beam 6H feet She diaw hiee of At the she will be fitted with a power gasoline engine Is t built b-v the Shoie Iron of She will a wheel 24 in diameter it Is expected will be about n miles an hom flu total iost bp too makes me tiled said the joung these g to a person bookkeeping 10 But can't it be 1 on youi Whv I six months and a hundred rs to learn the art and what do suppose happened at the close of Brst Get voui figures Well T should i of between the book dinl no and my d to make U good while I hunted Job is V MEXIA EVENING VOL. NO. 112. AUGUST 1899. N. P. AKD DREYFUS IN What May Happen in Prance as a Re- sult of His It is no longer but Won Capitaine A toth hing story tells after notifying him in the He du Diable of the revision of- to him his captain s uniform again and he refused to it It Is a touching tale but unlikely Some say he must appear in uniform before the Rennes court martial Others clare he has no light to wear the uni- form II is a question tangled up legal difficulties In comparison With w hich the knotted horrors of the chose juge are clear and simple of his sentence fred where he was on the day of his appearance before the first court tn 1894 He fore today captain of in tive service with the difference that he has foui and a half more grade to his the ceremony of him to take his stupes until the day he shall formally be to his amid the flourishing of trumpets and the rolling of drums proposition seems ult because as the effaces the principal punishment the was an accessory ment ib wiped out with it Excepting that the is not at all an but an intimate and solemn lite within the bosom of the an nan the civil no he is i He has been a captain now that the Couit of Cas has said it he his a think of The Illusions of his are certainly dispelled He cannot still as ho has Im- all these that General is his friend and that his letters have at last touched the good heart of Ig- of the strange and terrible campaign is the most touching thing He thinks that time and diplomatic changes have permitted the great chiefs to do him Justice has letters shewed that he was though only to some great state sity He has begged General de a hundred times to lift the I can thank is said to have been his first joyous remark when the revision was announced to him Now I can thank Think of Even today has no Idea of the black felt for him bj the great mass of Frenchmen He will be if he does not learn of R through or a return trip to the accursed island' A fine old Frechman cultivated eous tall dignified and well a type from out the old aristocratic the Comte d an anti- The Rennes tial happend to be mentioned by a thoughtless outsider and the match set to the Oh will plv send him baik the count said at the start Phe Court of ion has said there was an in- formality in the first trial Then see ing looks of in some fares he blazed up indignantly Whi man sitting theie He had an a continually with his natural men of his own or else simply But a Portuguese young woman much in the high social swim you can hear talk like that all she said COUNT MILITARY PRISON rne LAST CH 11 THAT or nil Insult a Where a Mill Ii Now York World For a year Eugene Stanislas Kostia de lived at the house Not only did he eat and lodge as the guest of Charles the but he 1s said to have bor lowed money and when he until the guests warned Mr. Jaines against him don't know the Mr Jaines said la The had one of the best rooms In the house He gave card parties not euchre nor whist and his bar was a wonder Even the the barbei and the newsboy were foi considerable When the reached Mr Jaines pressed for a settlement The refused to stay at a hotel where the was so inconsiderate He moved out leaving behind a trunk full of frayed shirts and winter lot hing He went to one of the big summer re- sorts he is said to be living on- the fat cf the land Mr Jaines said he still had hopes of getting his money Count Miti was bom in Russia His Is an of- theie and his sister is the wife of a London capitalist haul to have on conviction of defrauding hotel keepers In London ago he was a guest at the Fifth Avenue this One as the stoiy goes he boil owed a diamond ling from Miss Julia It is charged that when it was returned the stone was found to be paste Then he mauled Caroline Lester of who died in 1880 as It was of a biol eji The biggest scheme was a Chinese banking conces sion In Pekin he got the right to a bank foi China modeled the Bank of England He talked too much one night in and the concession was canceled In the mean time he had convinced Wharton er and that theie weie millions in the and he was the social lion the season in Philadelphia New Yolk and Newport BEACE OF THIS Tor tke land's called out Drusilla Gladden to her husband be wiped his feet on a piece ot pet at the kitchen thought you'd never get in Guess who's sent a You'd never think in a month of Sundays It's from cousin Pa gave a smile ot Interest and bis I swan And what has Devy got to say for coming to Ohio to visit He'll be here next What dye think of Pa pulled off his boots contentedly won't be sorry to see We war In school What Is he doing but his wife's dead been dead two year or I bet vou t great he's on the And to think Angellne Culver's ing around here just and she's a It looks like the Of don't Mrs. Gladden smiled benignly on her and he on her They were love with each other and had been for twenty years truly replied It does Jest think how them two over three years wasn't I hold the split was all Angellne a fault f hat old man Porter nevei stayed where and got a to move to In- diana Her ma wouldn t let her stay here and that made Devy properly mad They It up for then Devy went out farther west and married himself to a strange After awhile Angeline gets fled we hears hei gone and she's a likely round Then we gets a letter Devy's has been departed two year's and he's Now don't that beat all' How plain you've made pa amed Mrs Drusilla It sounds like story papers You ort to have en a writer for one I often thought lolk loo who has a laige of pupils in voice for talks not singing women are clever Many of them are but only a few of them talk well The fact is American women usually talk too They are vivacious and M PETITJEAN I WHO n. v OF right to his paj Up to 15 1894 had everything coming to him nom that time until Jl of the same daj of the final of the rousell de Revision of he drew the half paj accorded to officers in de tention Coming into his again the day after the decision of the Court of Cassation he has a light to half pay from January 1 as if he had been in detention The stands Captain s half paj grade of less than falx yeai tiom 1 to September 1895 eleven at 4 fi cents av day 000 Captains half pay grade of more than six trom 1895 to June 1899 eight one at 4 fr. 75 cents a 1 fr a day for ment rent at the He du 1 592.00 Back pay due to Captain 844 00 From room in the military jail of he can now and heat jelli of wafted on the ot What ran Of though I don't want to Mit your feelings You can take It all out up the room and It air lucky An- gellne ain't been down here an- other clear Now hurry up the dinner and write Devy a him he must come right here we won't take no for an I'll hitch up the cutter and we'll go over to town engage Angellne tor the whole The two were excited as The letter to be strong enough to suit pa and was the labor of an hour for Mrs Gladden ere It suited Dinner they tucked themselves into a green sleigh and drove over to New stop on the said tha email and rosy nan feel so anxious to get hold of Angeline you questioned the demurely as our de- her pa's any Angellne Porter that visiting at old Dr. man's She and Cissy Norman had ways been close She came out to the to apeak to Mrs. She was quite dressy and bad on a pink house sack trimmed with white lace She had tied a little white over her brown was to go over to Dennis next she in her comfortable it you make a point of it I guess I can put them off Pa Gladden was so his little feet danced up and down In the we want you real bad next We been and we're set on It Do say you'll come believe burnt if you don't said his wife gets so set on anything I will assented the used to have good times at your house when I was a girl I never have forgotten Pa went through an expressive pan- behind her fetch jou on Sunday on Sunday morning waa the alB of the neighborhood for suddenly assumed sir ot funereal would converse no stalked silently out after meeting and climbed Into the sleigh k You've done whispered bar didn't nn dinner the parlor was the table spread for company aid Pa Gladden wrapped himself up to fo tor He was so happy hit wife's heart she you set loo much store by It. mar have other and may Wrt you think declared pa. air a hundred times tler that she Devy air a that settles it all Now do your Bart I've told you jest what to say to Leave Devy to me. Men understands He brought and her valises back In an Mrs. Gladden rejoiced In her ly She kissed her as tenderly as It she had been a young girl when she helped her In. face nice you've made everything for she like a Her face grew makes me think ot old just settle down and maM yourself at said coming in. have to be gone an hour or You and ma can have a good old A while later lie was limping off the falling snow on the platform of the station The express a usual A man alighted and pa met so eager be almost cried over him as he shook hands All pa's and sub- tle phrases were He was as nervous as a Finally he reined in almost In sight of the he always felt so sorrowful 'bout you Angellne Porter's You war so happy together when you was I've got Angeline here She air a she air a Oner woman on could gee In a day's It air the desire of my heart to bring you two er The man beside him grew pale then he wrung the Good Ma Gladden came out to the sleigh had forgotten her part She had been crying and broke down she said is there In the Don't you want to go I guess you needn't be The tall man strode past his own eyes The wedded left on the steps were not ashamed to kiss each other with tears and know the swine is guilty His family knows it knows The care nothing foi they would let him lot as a disgrace except they want to use him to anti-Semitism out ot I don't care anything about the Don t talk to me about the the old man began to I wait to hear is one condemned and sent back to his island by the Rennes court Shoot him hang give him to the Oi we asked old mans eyes flashed like a 01 the massacre I look foi ward to it You will never see the Next jear there will be no exposition But France will and you will see an- other St Bartholomew stab and them out of out the he his face transfigured by his fury the gutters urn with pig I the great the great day of the of We sat there in the silent and ished while the old man drew took his hat and Walked out Into the night you talk like I versatile and used to and they impose upon their They tre seldom good listeners and they say so much that what they say weight I lived in Europe for jeara and had excellent opportunities for studying national characteristics in conversation The French woman of intelligence seems to understand the art of conversation One can see how the salons were possible in France After the French the women are the most en- in and I found the Danish women very but that is due chiefly to the quality of their the French woman's conversational charm is more a matter of and may be acquired Culture Triumph for a The highest of the graduating ors at Cambridge In goes to a colored a min fiom from A Maryland law prohibits Baltimore policemen doing fw me er HE BROUGHT ANGELINE BACK WITH ain't It plum I don't want to miss none of it do How can we fix Pa was so appreciative of his wifes praise he tilted back in the rocker and gave the matter solemn we kin have this all to he you can hold out Devy's comin It will be bard work for but it's the only way Do you think you kin hold that news over and I tell you what he went on can Jus have the whole thing happen right if you don't tell Mrs. pleasant face fell wonder if it'll be fair not to tell the rest ot the she began be expecting a big come Asahel Gladden rose up In his socks I have Jest set my heart on managing the whole thing Don t you disappoint me I never had so as this In all my mortal I always wanted to do sech and and don't you say when find we held that asked h Is much ns went on Mrs the anow don't stay on he'll fetch you in the buggy Afterward Mrs. Gladden declared that pa spent the week of his life getting ready for that couple to be U never struck his warm and innocent heart that anything could go amiss He piled up special wood tor the he hovered around the two he actually had his finger In every pie and cake He went to the village store alone once or after the last wore an air ot the deepest Mrs Gladden stood this until the hour of she with a break in her you never had a secret from me In all your did The rosy man looked as guilty as It detected in a Re saw her kind eyes and his voice Never he I'm so afeard you can't hold this one over Sunday I'm bound not to breathe One dry sob brought him to It be tiptoeing over to air that I telegraphed to Devy to git here on the Sunday after- noon expresi tin ART ANP How MM Plato lato for the good old times when be to design a costume One of the cipal items of expense to a lady of oM Italy used to be the she to Da a or some other artist of note to furnish her with de- signs for her court other ot To-day who can draw Is given an by a Is. by some oak made or cut under some other customer's Neither studied or aught for or the other they are wiat they to do with such A assemblage of Ideas Is the a m and These Ideas and materials are beautifully and painfully drawn upon and draped upon atv female figure at least seven with head slightly a and a background ot palms and This drawing being reproduced thousands ot a Is with the name of the great de- signer In the left-hand the woman nearly every studies admires fee she lean or tall bar drew must be like that Perchance her dressmaker Jua not away and that special style to not adapted to her patron's particular but for her effrontery she may lose a That dress hat to be made in way and In A the was no respecter of plain speaking was a terror a purse-proud A Individual naked him In and what was the for font a disease caused by his luxuriant of on a- was the doctor's earn U done welt that is not kf  

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