The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 7, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 5, 1898 Page: 2 of 4
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■
rPridk
r »t Law and Notary Public
OLD
GROCERY.
js&sasss^susL
The largest .ingle check ever
drawn wa. drawn on the Bank of
England the other day by a repre-
sentative of the Chinese
W.
are shipping I
London.
teTobto,
and sheet
IATIOT DAT.
to be
nbity, as well as by a
of people than ever
11 °“*o!aaiiVM-
say the Dally Com*
- a fortune la
We all
twelve years ago
But mo
and profitable than the
of these, is that of the
girl who actually found a
about fortune ia her ear.
girl
a little squad of This young lady has been a real-
fathered at their | *,#nt °* State for fif-
a Specialty, and
always wanted.
W.I *****—
—
LUMBER, DOORS,
SASH and BLINDS.
Comer Austin Ace. and Crawtord St.
|p DORER,
Watchmakei and Jeweler.
OSALSR ut.
Watches, Clocks and Jewelry.
st$ «•* dsnmon, tux.
JOHN ftOtSlN,
BLACKSMITHING.
Horss-Shoring | Gwulal
- Jtaulag toettm
B. C. MURRAY,
Propristor
for -jBgtjWasgM
semauve ot tne Chinese government kbinery from India, Venezuela and
for t° pay the Ch.ne..SouthAmeric..re coonngln
war indemnity to Japan. I A 4001 company in Wavnesboro,
loo.ooo spindles at Fall River, p,-«» »hipp>ng large machine tools
Mass., stopped work last week. to Rotterdam and London. An-
The largest saw and shingle mill °*^*r m*chine tool making concern 1 old veterans ------- ---.- „
r *D wAine* is 'now* used ertl *«!• manufacturing centres in cluster around the old flag, voice trainers in (be entire west
in all armies'. It weigh, from So to} England. What would King marched to the cemetery, and there Her personal attractiveness and un-
George III say of this if he could solemnly and almost alone perform- vivaoous tern per wneot has,
6000'volts will soon operate th>ceremonies sppropHat. to the
largest hydraulic works in Brooklyn. occa,,on- [position. To look at her bright,
A surprising activity is in progress The procession was so small that rosy, girlish face, one would sup-
in expanding our manufacturing it would almost have attracted ridi- P°** that her life had been one of
<*P*city. , , cule had it not been noticed how P^P***1 """bine, and that she bad
Comparatively few person* know ___, . , , . never kown a moment s unhappi-
hat a blast furnace It is a gi- tnd h°W ‘olemn,r ness. No one would for an instant
It swallows iooo to |old *°*dier» were performing a re-1 surmise that this same girl bad for
too
from drouth this year in /Australia
where' rain has been unknown for
months.
The biggest ship yards of the
world have all the work engaged
they can do for two years to come..
The meaning of this is that the peo* w"**
pie of the world are going to spread 18,nt,c thing.
Sunday, Junk 5, 1898.
A SlWCIALTY.
Rarairing.
Sums: so. W. Chestnut Strut.
pOLEY THE TAILOR,
to* Main Street.
SUITj^M A?2fir- rtf ORDER.
Ahra Cleaning, Repairing and Dyeing.
The Little Wife at Home.
1 well-nigh dlspalred,” said a sailor
bold,
In recounting a shipwreck sore,
"And was tempted often to loosen
hold,
And go down in the crash and roar;
But a dear, tweet image before me grew,
Star-like o’er the running foam,
And I still hung on, as eras only due
To the little wile at home.
“A roof of my own, a leisure hour,
And congenial tasks have 1,"
Said a noted person of mental power,
"My alms have been pure and high;
Bat t fancy that, with much to win,
I had still been lured to roam
Amid barren ways, if it had not been
For the little wife at home.
’Tie a sentiment one to often hears,'
In manly confessions free,
As to deem it to almost all careen
The mysterious master-key.
The merchant, his clerk, skilled labor,
unskilled,
The sage In his thought-crammed
home,
BEER AGENCY.
The two largest and best brew-
eries in the world. Nothing but
the best of malt and hops nsed in
the manufacture of these two most
popular beers.
___ to 1200 tons of limestone, iron ore I ligioua duty. Perhaps an occat- I nearly to years been tbe^rictim of a
quarters 7n "citiesand towns nT E~u-1 *nd coke or ro*> P«r *4 hour* and I ions! bystander-would givs vent to a I formentor that came near blasting
jsaL.’rs; <" si ssrjrzsrt:
The Russians have big balloon* I _ I peopl. have the greatest respect for I perietjees.
dy destroy the | The nut year these old soldiers 11 took no notice ot it at first, said
pletely derai
Beware of Ointments for Oatarrk
Oontain Mercury.
in a circular area of 500 yards that I ^ merc
a newspaper can be read. | wnte of imef[ mnd
The nut yur these old
d.’x.t. E^r^d.- b.d ***,1 sex I .~i «..
ok out, sn advance is prices is I the mucous surfaces. Such articles should of tbe ladies and the children, for roer!. . "P^*—»l but In a week
1sz&z scad --w» i"-* ■» - «*—r -p’l.'ie’ ~
will do U ten fold to the food you | cull flowers and weave them into | nuntls. one by
FRANK PUGH, Mgr.
. M 00 1: 1
never
from 1
Their mothers.
laeamoaoemm
look
threatened.
An English cotton yarn trust with Cheney ft Co., Toledo, O., contains no the hands of those who bad carried ,"em to COOB# contact with me. g|
ts&asssisjstst
(pinning. | Catarrh Cur. be sum you get tFe ge«-|h.v, K«.n ^en for enlisting the | were called in gave a different
photographer
towwtoaawtotoWtoaatoaaaBwii
did not want I w Artistic Photos, -f 210 Main Street •»
toes in regard to cotton spinning.
The movement of
women
“All work wanted. 1 WS? ““
w. a. RNAU*. H. G. HOWR. j The^iM; »* jour choice as forth you
KNAUR A HOWE, I Oh, youth, on the world’s broad tide,
Denison Foundry A Machine Shops. | It’s the brightest breast-jewel that man
Knwute all work pertaining to the bust- j “ft if*v^lhoose aright,
On earth or in starry dome.
413 to 417 W. Caestnut St..
^•HE DENISON PHARMACY,
333 Main Street.
■^Prescriptions a Specialty.
Charlx8 D. Kingston, Prop’s.
JOE BRUTSCHE,
INSURANCE.
Office; 122 Main Street.
BIRCH,
PHYSICIAN.
And a treasure of beauty and joy and
tight >
Is the little wife at home
Written after hearing a sailor’s tale-
from home.
Lcs Vrrxon.
WHD, OILY WHD
| What will the patient airship float,
What wafts along your pleasure boat;
What needs the preacher and the choir,
I What it H fills your rubber tire?
Wind, only wind.
hat is the talk you give your wife,
I What it It gives the breath of life;
What to the poor do rich men give,
[ On what do editors oft live?
Wind, only wind.
I What gives good draft to kitchen fire,
I What turns windmills and asks no hire;
What cools your brow when days are hot,
j What blows your house from otf the lot?
Wind, only wind.
Sold by Druggists, price 73c. per bottle.
Hall’s Family P1IU are the best. Jun.
hi. (MM.* mu.
If the following report of Capt
Concha of the Spanish cruiser Juan
de Austria which was destroyed st
the battle of Manila is reliable it
detracts considerably from the mar-
velousness of tbe victory achieved
by Admiral Dewey. It comes
from I Jong Kong:
The Spanish commanders were
quite aware tbst fighting was hope-
less, but were forced to it by the
state of public opinion at Manila.
The officer wished to steam out of
tbe harbor to meet the Americans,
but Admiral Montejo forbade that | both the
move. Capt. Concha says the
Spanish fleet was in a disgraceful
condition. Tbe engines of tbe Don
Antonio de Ulloa were broken; the
Castilla was leaking and needed
engines to keep the water under;
Tbe Don Juan de Austria had only
two guns that could be fired; the
Marquis del Duero had only one
gun, while the Isis de Cubs and tbe
Isis de Lusen bad only their decks
protected. He declares, however,
What helps the broken sell their stocks,
Office at Hanna ft Son’s Drug Store, whst blow* the ship upon the rocks;
Residence, No. 715 West Day Street.
A. A NOaaLST. R. ]. SMtTB.
MOSELEY & SMITH,
Attorneys at Law--
_305 Woodard Street.
(Mwwoa Block.'
NOTART public or orricB.
For want of what will you go dead;
| What put these lines into my head?
Wind, only wind.
—Geo. S. Rowley.
Mr. Rowley was a pioneer citizen of
Denison, George, however, never courted
the muses here.
1. IS. STANDIPRR.
LOUIS a. BPPSTRIN.
STANDIFER & EPPSTEIN,
Attorneys at Law,
Ha Wanted to Change.
A young matron on north Nevada
I avenue was putting her five-year-old
I son to bed the other night during a
terrific wind storm. When she was
about to leave him he objected vo-
ciferously against staying alone
I while the storm raged.
‘But, dear” said the mother,
AGE,
PURITY,
EXCELLENCE.
‘you must not mind the storm,
a 18 Main St-, up-stairs, Denison, | Remember God is here and protects
Texaa. | you even while you sleep.”
This assurance quieted him tor a
while, but presently a terrific gust
of wind struck tbe house and made
it rock on its foundations. There
was a pit-pat on the stairs, and the
little fellow appeared at the door,
his face white with fear. Tbe
mother took him back, and again
DR. YEIDEL is in receipt of I'^mforted him with the assurance
a shipment of Anderson CountyGod * Prefnuce’ but *he h»d
Ky., Sour Mash Whiskey, which h«dly regs.ned thes.tungroom he-
wn distilled in 1888. This whiskey fofe ™>d struck the house sn-
has reached the acme of perfection other ternfk b,ow- A**‘ Pf***? °“
and is undoubtedly the finest ever » wee voice came from the head of
— - 1 the stairs:
"Mamma, mamma, if you come
up here and stay with God, I’ll
come down with papa.”—Colorado
Springs Facts.
this market.
Doctor’s Bar.
It will be
broughtto
sold at tbe
Alike to All.
Tbe patrons of tbe “Dispensary”
will certainly appreciate the Doc-
tor’s efforts to serve them with the
very best the market affords. A
cordial invitation is extended to the . c . .
public to call, examine the original | wlth a buJ cold which Kttled on
lung*; cough set in and finally termi-
in Consumption. Four Doctor*
you get the gen-
uine. It I* taken internally, and made |
... . . . 1 In Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney ft Co.
many cities and towns of the coun-1 Testimonial* free,
try to not buy Paris finery is more |
deeply seated than it looks. It
takes a mighty sight of patriotism
for a woman who can afford a Paris
bonnet to go without it.
Money continues to pour into the
pockets of the American farmers.
By June 30, American exports
will be $600,000,000 ahead of im-
ports. For first quarter oi tbe year
the amount was $150,000,000. In
Great Britain for the same time im-
ports were $231,000,000; France,
$66,000,000. Austria excess oi
imports, 20,000,000 florins.
A census of the world is proposed
in 1900.
Germany will spend one million
dollars on the 1900 International
Exposition at Paris.
Fire proof buildings and auto-
matic sprinklers have greatly re-
duced fire risks in all iarge build
ings. Some mutual insurance com-
panies in New England are drifting
receiverwards because they insure
too recklessly.
The panic of 1S93 involved three
billion dollars worth of property.
There were nearly 20,000 commer-
cial failures in that panic, involving
liabilities of over $500,000,000.
During all that time not a life in-
surance company failed.
The Philadelphia mint ia coining
$14,000,000 a month in gold. Col-
orado yielded last year $36,000,000
precious metals. New York
banks had at last count $175,000
000 nearly all gold.
Ships are the symbols of national
power, national wealth, the noblest
product of human industry and skill
and the invariable accompaniments
of civilization, enterprise and prog-
ress.
Once cotton was our great ex-
port, up to the opening ot tbe civil
war, the South having a monopoly
of it. Then grain. Later grain
and meats. Now, all these, with
manufactures, metals and ores add-
ed in. We are beginning to enter
the markets of the world with a lull
line in our pack. Great is our
trade, may its growth increase.
Enormous shafts 37 inches in di-
ameter are to be made in Bethle-
hem, Pa., for the power house of
the Metropolitan Traction Co., N.
$8,000,000 ia to be spent to build
an electric underground road in
Paris, 2% miles long.
A large number of immense ele-
vators will be needed and they will
be made nere.
A very large silk mill ia to be
erected at Patterson, N. J., that
will take a 500 h. p. engine to run
it.
A steel flag pole weighing 2^
tons wn made at Pittsburg, to be
118 feet high, 10 pieces, 14 inches
have been
ladies and children in their caaqp is 1 opinion as to what-my trouble
the (act that nose but a good cause b,ood Poiaiooing. Lung -feTmTm 17
•“ «■;- ** w~r- I QUA1,TITY
when they turned out en masse and tbeir diagnoses. My suffering was
asasisted in all tbe services of | intense and I began wasting away
Dreading the
oaomsemansoassmaeemnmTeoeaneaaamemsoaoMQsaM
A Harrow Escape.
Thankful words written by Mr*. Ada
-packages and sample the good old
stuff.
Dr. YEIDEL.
The
Diamond
Bakery
nated
| gave tne up, saying I could live but
I short time. I gave myself up to ray
Savior, determined if I could not stay
with my friend* on earth, I would meet
mv absent one* above. My husband was
advised to get Dr. King’s New Discovery
for Consumption Coughs and Colds. ]
j gave it a trial, took in all eight bottles
It ha* cured me, and thank God I am
I saved and am now a well and health
I woman." Trial bottles free at T.
j Waldron’s drug store.
Regular size 50c and $1. Guaranteed
r price refunded.
Memorial Day, the question of its
popularity was settled, and from
that time forward these services be-
came an established institution.
Year by year they have grown is
interest, year by year the attendance
has grown larger, uatil as before
stated, it has taken precedence over
every other holiday in the whole
year.
On this occasion there was an
to a mere shadow.!
solicitude and sympathy which 1
could plainly read on the faces of
my friends, I secretly changed my
boarding place. When they found
my new address I decided, by tbe
advice of two physicians, to go to a
private Sanitarium in Indians. My
journey in tbe cars, continued tbe |
young lady, was a terrible ordeal,
tor, aside from my physical suffer
ing, I saw that, although 1 wore a
___ _ vail the passengers avoided tbe seat* j
.dd* uii a-a. iiiteTJSSM Sttg
exerases were participated in by talked about my hopeless condition
blue” and the "gray” on I and disfigured lace.
governed by tbe demand. Demand rapidly increasing.
QUALITY
governed hv tbe reputi
ton- Reputation established by
QUE8TION:
Quantity and quality of what ? Answer :
“WHITE SWAN’’ GOODS.
eoeoHos
m&tmmammamxnw
Beside* tbe horrible skin dia
an equal footing. Both sides
represented in the speaking, in the I ?**’• go* comsumption, and its go-
r .. . T mg to kill her, poor thing. It al-
marching and in tbe Crating, | „** kiUed my Wtcr. remarked
and the graves of Federals sad I l»dy, in an audible tone, to her com
Confederates were decorated with panion across tbe aisle,
the same ceremonies. I shuddered as I heard my doom
the Spanish war had I Pounced by careless lips, and
Your Uncle Proas.
Watches and JeWelry on Sale
Money Loaned.
CHBoe Three Door* Above
I ir t: vr.s.T. z
war came on it set our whole peo- name of the discovery which the I
pie to thinking, and we found that lady said had saved her sitter's life,
that had the Americans not with-1 deep down in our hearts there was I h*d met with so many diaappoint-
drawn by 1 o’clock the Spanish in- . ____,... . .___, meats that I almost courted death,
tended to steam out and die to the b"1 °n* “d fe*1,n* .nd it was a relief to get within the
last man. •fter *"» *nd th*‘ » th“*our govern-1 sheltering walls of tbe Sanitarium,
ment and our country are tbe best and bear tbe encouraging words of
in the whole world and they must I the proprietor and his attendants.
But all my hope vanished when,
... _. . .. 1 after eight weeks' treatment, I was
tbe services on Monday tbe >#ked f*r the -(JdreM of mj nUliret
customary program was followed. #nd friends, I knew then that these
There was speaking at the park, doctors also considered my case
interspersed with music mnd flag hopeless. Tbe mental agonv I en-
drills by the school children, for dured b™**ht my journev on the
.. . ..... . . cars back to me with vivid distinct-
there is nothing that can draw out so Bnd ,uddenly the name of the
1^ «hT 1., ih.i!"*’.* "°*d “ ‘ >»«*•*H-WT’ »*
shore. But the guns could not
Main Street, Denison, Tex.
Before Dewey.
Manila has been taken before. | be *ustained.
Tbe English did tbe job over a cen-
tury ago, and a pretty tough task
they bad. The fleet numbered
fourteen ships; they were heavily
armed, and the moment they enter-
ed tbe bay.they got to work. So
did the typhoon. Covered by the
frigate’s guns, a detachment ot artil-
tect them from the waves, ^’he I *Pect*cul" Pl»T performed by
surf took them, tossed them and
churned them, and, while the shell*
shrieked over them, against each
&
MAKES THE
Best Bread
In Denison, and the peo-
ple will tell yon that.
Bread sales more than
doubled in thirty days.
Try the.........
Diassti Msy Is Briid.
ra your pianos,
Mlf household
The wealth ot John D. Rockefeller
has now reached the sum of $244,-
000,000 and furthermore ia increas-
ing at the rate of $1,500,000 a month,
or $50,000 a day, or $2,083 an hour,
or $34.50 a minute, or 57 cents every
second of time, day or night, Sun-
days and holidays. John D. Rocke-
feller steeps eight and a half hours
every night, retiring at 10:30 and
rising at 7. Every morning when
he gets up he is $17,700 richer than
when be went to bed. He sits down
to breakfast at 8 o’clock and leaves
the table at 8130, and in that short
half hour his wealth has grown
$1,041. On Sunday he goes to
church, and in the two hours that he
is away from home his riches have
grown $4,164. His nightly amuse-
ment is playing a violin. Every
evening when he picks up the in-
strument be is $50,000 richer than
he was when be laid it down tbe
previous night. These little facts
Lowest | give some idea of the constant
at base, 4 inches at top. Tbe flag
was raised on it last Saturday.
~ A Pittsburg concern has just se-
cured an order for 8,000 kegs of
nails for Japan.
An English electric motor club
has in it many of tbe dignitaries in
government, law, literature and
commerce. Recently 18 vehicles
made a long tour. French engi-
neers are manufacturing a good
many petroleum motors. Steam
motors for roads to pull heavy wag-
ons are becoming quite common in
England.
A gigantic 16,000 candle (lower
search light has been erected at Fort
Hamilton, outside of New York
harbor.
Much of the rise in wheat in New
York to $1.90 was due to the sus-
pension of tariff on wheat in France.
Japan has just ordered 38 loco-
motives at the Secnectady locomo-
tive works.
The whole German people are
being educated technically in the
arts and industrial production.
Nowhere in the world does manu-
facturing become so nearly a pro-
fession as in Saxony, for in this
small kingdom there are no less than
M1 technical institutes; Prussia has
200 such schools with only 12,000
pupils; 35 of tbe schools are for
painters and decorators, 16 for tail-
ors, 9 for shoemakers, etc., other
trades having at least one school.
Tbe government appropriates $600,-
000 annually for their support and
the various towns and cities give
liberal subsidies, Berlin alone giving
$70,000 per annum. Baden, with
1,600,000 inhabitants, spends $280,-
000 a year in technical schools.
Hesse, with a population of i,ooo,-
has 83 schools of
BURTON, LINGO & CO.
(SacceMom to Wapleb Bros.)
Sash, Doors, Blinds, Moulding..
Laths, Lime, Paint.
Yards nt Deninon, Dull an, Fort Worth, El Paso,
Color*lo. Big Springs, Midland and Pecon.
bold them together so well, as some passenger mentioned
' saved her sister’s life,
beautiful young ladies and misses.
as having
began ring-1
ing In my ears. Somehow I could
, ... . not drive it from my mind, and by
ipeaker* were hi* honor #n a]mott superhuman impulse I
Mayor Lebrecht, Mr. H. Tone and | was impelled to secretly send a note
accor- j
first few
Surplus, 930,000.00
created. Tbe whole coast was
aboil. Tbe frigates had the palsy.
They danced like epileptics. But
over the boom of the waters was
the boom of tbe guns. Through
waters another detachment was tent,
a second, a third. Spaniards, na-
tives, tbe elements even joined to
repulse them. Yet still the guns
persisted. In the bastion a breach
was made. Through the crumb-
ling walls the English poured, and
presently Mani’a had fallen. It is
related that tbe Spaniards fought
like fiends, that many of them re-
fused quarter, and rather than sur-
noon the graves at Fairview were longs. Tbe second bottle gave me
decorated, Rev. Lile officiating, and more strength, and the eruption 00
in the afternoon the graves at Oak- *b'n *>e*an *° d‘**PPe*r'
wood cemetery received the same
attention at the hands of Father T. I almost well. I knew it was against
K. Crowley. The procession to the rule of the Inststution for
the cemetery was made up of the | patients to take any meJicioes ex-
dty officials, tbe
with its apparatus neatly
and decorated, several secret orders I his own medicine untouched for
with tbeir flags and banners, a com- weeks, told him that I had broken t
pany of soldiers carrying their arms, *1^*, r*1**. ***?• Di. Pierce *
_ , , i “ , __* Golden Medical Discovery, which
and half a dozen floats decorated . #,ter doc.!
render three hundred drowned them -1 with bunting and filled with beauti- tor- had failed. Mv cure is a mat-
asluwe m fltA sas ^HI\a eanaAsa . * » . . - . . * t • • • .
con-
D Of
titude to Dr. Pierce and his woo-;
lerful “Discovery” and in order
R. C. Shearman.
President.
OFFICERS :
Aux. Rxnni*.
Vic* President.
G. L.
WE SOLICIT YOUR BUSINESS.
made up of the P,t,en£^ ther nd l '
fire department c>[*le(j the chjef physician to my
seatly burnished I room< abowcd him th.t I had left
rtortitrou rns
selves in the sea. The ransom
which Manila paid was four million
dollars. That was dirt cheap and
would be triple to-day.
Why She Didn’t Hollar.
A young woman from the country
as suing her ex-sweetheart for
breach of promise, and the lawyers
were, as usual, making all sorts of
inquisitive inquiries. “You say,”
remarked one, “that the defendant
frequently sat very close to you?”
“Yes, sir,” was the reply with s
hectic flush. “Howclose?” “Close
enough so’s one chair was all the
sittin’ room we needed.” “And
you say he put his arm around
you?” “No; I didn’t.” “What
did you say then ?” “I said be put
both arms around me.” “Then
what>” “He hugged me.” “Very
hard?” “Yes; be did—so durn
hard tbst I came party near hollerin’
right out.” “Why didn't you hol-
ler?” “’Cause.” “That’s no
reason. Be explicit please. Be-
cause why?” “’Cause I was
afeered he’d »toP-” The court
fainted and fell off the bench, and
had to be carried out and put under
tbe hydrant for the purpose of re
susitation.—Texas Siftings.
STATE HOTEL BAK.
W. T. OaoUey Proprietor.
Billiard and pool tables. Elegant bar
equipments. Everythim* up to data. A
strictly first-class line of liquor* sold arm
the bar. ft-tf
Planer*1
HUMAN Tf Ac
ful girls who sang national airs and I ter of record, and I cbreerfuUy
waved national flags as they psaeed. sent to its publication as a tok.
Tbe music was furnished by tbe
famous 6th Regiment band. Tbe
whole affair was most pleasant and
creditable.
KS0988
s
Perhaps you have made1
up your mind to take1
,, Scott’s \
fi Emulsion
this summer.
Then look for
this picture on
the wrapper, a
man with a big
fish on his back.
Do not let anyone talk to
you of something “ just
as food."
when you want cod
liver oil and the hypo-,
phosphites you want the
very best. You will find
them ia only one place,
Scott’s Emulsion. <
There is no other emul-1
skra like h; none other
does tbe same work; and;
no other has the same
record of cures.
mJSSS»SSt^
I
E
that other woman man be rescued
from agonisine suffering and un-
timely death. I have resumed giv-
ing rouic lessons, and as you can see
with your own eyes, added the
voung lady to the reporter, my skin
is smooth and dear, and my health
ia perfect. II I bad sot beard those
two young women discussing my
case in tbe cars, I would not be here
to-day tailing you of my wonderful
recovery. My hearing that conversa-
tion proved a fortune to me.
The above case, reported by tbe
Commercial, is by no means an ex-
ceptional one. Many thousands
have given their voluntary, written
testimony in support of tbe wonder-
ful curative and new life giving
powers of Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery. Many of these
have asked that tbeir experience* be
made public for tbe benefit of other
suffers. If, as it sometimes happens
in long neglected and seriously com-
plicated case, tbe relief and cur
afforded by this great “Discovery*
does’t promptly follow. Dr. Pierce
will, upon being advised by letter,
tend, free of charge, such straight-
forward, professional advice as
will enable any suffers from similar
disease above described, to cure
themselves at borne, pleasantly,
painlessly and permanently.
Bait t Palace
3?7 Mill SHEET.
Gkoio* Wines. Liquors snd Oigxrs.
Denison ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
Crystal Ice Co.
—DIAU
or—
Pure
Distilled Water Ice.
FA CTO fir: Foot of Woodort St A A. A. TrrnA
_ _____ _ ______. __ .... ________________g _ __________ _____ _r
Tbe National Bank ol Denison.
C. S. COBB, PiaMml
J-J.
R. S. LIGATE, I
. I. Me Alerter, Me Ale star, 1.T-, J. B, 1
c. S. Cobh, ft. a. Legate,
Mrs. Emms Thompson offers her
| services to the laches of Deniaoa at
J- *
» i
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 7, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 5, 1898, newspaper, June 5, 1898; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth571524/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.