The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 33, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 11, 1892 Page: 2 of 4
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•*. - . -
of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report
Baking
Powder
ABSOLUTE!* PURE
THE RE8ULT.
THE OOMET.
Ho Dangar—It is Going From Us.
Dr. C. L. Poor, of the Johns
Hopkins university, Baltimore, re
ferring to the predicted impending
crash, said that there was not one
chance in 10,000 that the earth and
the comet would meet. "All these
scares," said Dr. Poor, "were
caused bv a lack of knowledge con-
cerning the comet. As its orbit was
A special to the Fort Worth Ga-
ette on the 20 inst. gave the total
vote for presidential electors as fol-
lows :
Democratic electors; D. G.
i Wooten, 239,14s; J. C. Hodges,
236,800; J. F. Randolph, 23^,00^;
J. I. Perkins, 236,25b; J. S. Spinks,
236,513; P. R. Lockett, 236,309;
A. C. Owsley, 238,052; H. P.
Brown, 235,862 ; W. S. Baker, 236,- | not defined, it was almost an imp j beautifying the penitentiary grounds
- H. Word, 236,401 ; Lee
8TATE SEWS.
Two vear« ag > a $15000 company
was organized at B nham and a
splendid optra hou^e was construct-
ed. Last we^k the building wps
sold to a grain dealer for $7500,
and will hereafter be used as a ware-
room for the storage of feed and
grain.
The penitentiary board at Hunts-
ville has put forth a good deal of
energy this fall in improving and
T.
hanna * son,
DRUGGISTS.
ncfMAIN STREET.
j)bcker ft harris,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW.
m6 Mill Street.
I actio*.
Prompt, efficient and
QorriN ft zintgraff,
NOTARY PUBLIC,
Usmnua. Conveyancers,
Real Estate, Insurance
and Brokers.
Office t 6 Main Street.
■ -
I
i
yf T. BOOTH,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
■ 14J South Houston Avenue. Denl-
setteet
b.C.MURRAY, - - Proprietor.
Sunday, December ii, 1892.
«*n,T«
£ R. BIRCH,
PHYSICIAN.
1 at Haaaa A Son's prxtf sttwe, reai.lence
f || Waat Day • tract. Telephone.
BIG
, • sal'
OON,
R. C. COLLINS, Proprietor,
-Deals* In .
WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS
Imported and Domestic.
j-
E.
hth,
r
ATTORNRY-AT-LAW,
sot MAIN STREET, DENISON. TEXAS.
A. euper,
CowyscTtoNERY, Soda Water.
i
228 Main Street,
PINE ICE CREAMS A SPECIALTY.
(Mm taken for Parties and Pic-Nice.
c.
E. JOHNSON,
PHYSICIAN.
No. a 19 MAIN STREET.
JJ P. teague, .
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
denison, - - TEXAS.
WUI prompt personal attention lo
umee over oaitmcK i onuc oimt, nu.
m6 Main street.
^|HE CABINEjT,
BROWN ft jHCERR, Proprietors.
WINES, LIQOURS AND CIGARS
Deal only in the Best Goods.
T J-
WILLAMS, 1
1
proprietor
: ; EXCEL MARKET.
Am. Kinds ok Fresh Meats.
No. aoa W. Main St.
j
JOSEPH SCHOTT,
Ajichitk't and Si'pt. or Buildings.
a, specifications and estimitea made with
ckarpa reasonable; correspondence so-
icltad. Office with A. R. Collins, {13 Main Street.
fiugust UHLIG,
Manufacturer of
FINE BOOTS AND SHOES.
Shoo on Austin Avenue.
^ dorer,
Watchmaker and Jeweler.
DKALIH IM
watches, CLOCES AND JEWELRY—
No. at Maia Street. Deoison, Texas.
|[UNSON & ERO.,
Rbal Kstaie and Abstract up Titt.es
and Notary Public.
Farm and Fritt Land a Specialty.
1 tot Wood aril St., Mudsoo Block.
£TEPliEN FRENCH,
INSURANCE AGENT.
A.
otpick 114 main steet.
S. MOSELEY,
Attouney Sc. Counselor-at^Law,
Room* tj and 14 Munson Block,
over the Postotfice,
ISOW.
TEXAS.
M. nagle,
• * —
SPECIALIST
On diseases of
EYE, EAR AND THROAT.
«a MAIN STREET.
j^OUIS LIBBE,
Dealer
FOREIGN and DOMESTIC LIQUORS,
Kentucky Whiskies and Fink
Cigars.
STAR BILLIARD PARLOR.
M4 Mala Street, denison. tex.
YOCOM <fc KNAUR,
VI9LBMLI tALBRS IN
MaaA Corn, Oata, Bran, Hay, Etc.,
hard and soft coal.
I«. UN art «n Wart Cfctatut Stmt.
PR0DU0T8.
BY ELIZA LAMB MARTYN.
A free thinker! rare position!
A moht wonderful condition!
A miracle ot greatness,
To be envied by the gods,
Free to form one's own opinions,
Free to enter truth's dominions.
Free trom superstition's tetters,
Free from slaves, and free from clods.
a tree Ihinker! strange misnomer,
Name methinks without an owner,
Tell me wheie ^he human soul is,
That has reached a plane so high,
But heredity has found him,
Or environment has bound hlmr
And shaded his opinions
Without even stating why?
Just because one's disagreeing
With the general way ot seeing,
What the world's vociferations
Declare to be the trulhj
Is no sign one's free in choosing 1
This or that, or saved from losing
The purpose he has followed
From his very earliest youth.
Free to think, such Independence
Has not greeted man's descendants,
Quite in confidence I say it,
Whether Ingersoll or Cook,
Or a Huxley or a Channing,
All their thinking and their planning,
Was far from their controllings
As the rjmance ot a book.
Is it fact? Ah! who can doubt It?
What had Paine to do about it,
Whether born a brave agnostic
Or a Calvin, or a Pope,
Causes with'effects we're linking,
Those who boast ot their free think-
ing.
Are as much enslaved by causes
As the murderer by the rope.
Proud free thinker! I revere you,
You have made the masses fear .you,
Yet I give you little credit
For the truth that I adore;
Flood tides on the past's great ocean
Set your very thoughts iq motion,
And you simply stood and Voiced them,
You could do no less, no more.
Fitchburg, Mass.
A great many persons, who have found
no relief from other treatment, have been
cured of rheumatism by Chamberlain's
Pain Balm. Do not give up until you
have' tried it. It is only 50 cents per bot-
tle. For sale by Hanna Ac Son. dec
219; R
Riddle, 236,885; G. F. Burgess.
236,462; R. W. Stayton, 23,536;
E. R. Lane, 233,495; Alden Bell,
231,494-
Republican electors:—The high-
est vote was tor H. E. Taylor, 77,-
475; the lowest for J. W. Butler,
70. ISO-
Third party electors:—Highest,
possibility to compute in what direcj
tion it was traveling or at what
speed.
"When the comet was first seen/it
appeared to be about one-twentieth
the size of the moon. Some days
later he had grown to about one-
quarter the size of Luna. This
made many believe that the stranger
was approaching us, but white this
T. E. Martin, 99,688; lowest A. S. was going on the comet seemed to
. m — — a . J* I 1 __ ! A _ ^ U A WM . ■ k I ■ M n / ! l f a n % K o
Whiteside, 93,261.
Lilly White electors:—W. T.
Roach highest, 3949; lowest I- W.
Cafhart, 2845.
Prohibition electors:—R. C. Bur-
leston highest, 2163, lowest, A. M.
Bagland 2079.
The Dallas News gives the fol-
lowing figures as a close approxi-
mation to the result of the vote for
governor. They are based upon
the official court in most instances,
lose its sharp outline and take on the
form ot a haze or a light cloud.
"This was an evidence that it was
moving away trom us. An object
that bears a reflected light aiways
appears more brilliant at a distance
than at a near point ot observation.
This comet is a stranger and has
never been seen before. It was last
observed in the city on Monday at
the Johns Hopkins, through a 10-
inch telescope. It appeared as a
thin tog and many faint stars could
leaving out eleven counties whose J* seen shining through its mass
6 1 Should such a comet strike the earth
the experience would be oneof in
aggregate two years ago was 4549:
| Total i. -
Hogg - — 188,697
Clark ........ - ijo^i
Nugent 102,897
Prendergast 1.334
Houston ; .2,6.11
teresting pleasure rather than ot
alarm.
"The mass of a comet is tar less
dense than the air we breathe, and
we would pass through it without
Adding to the reported totpl of any danger. It we struck any solids
j 428,243 the last vote of the Unre-
ported counties named above; and
the total vote is 432,802.
IT'S JU8T THAT WAY.
"Are You Agin Us?"
they would be burned by friction,
and all we would see would be a
meteor
Referring to the discovery by
Prof. Freeman, of Brighton, Eng-
land, of anew comet within two
.n, ... _ • I degrees of the Holmes comet, Prof.
The Waco Globe is commencing p(for said: „Freeman's discovery
upon the course of the Gazette in I jg mej-e|y a coincidence. The two
fawning upon the man whom it de- bodies happened to be nearly to-
spised and long and loudly berated gether at the time he saw them.
before the election, goes for it as They ifre now far apart and they are
. I traveling in opposite directions,
follows: Profrfjohn Krom Rees, of Colum-
"Wi'h some people principles are bia college, says:
not like a boot, to be pulled otf and I "Too much has been said and
on at pleasure, and because th1? edi- I written already in reference to this
tor of the Gazette can change his comt.t, to my mind." I have
opinions as he does his shoes is no given my views in the Herald and
reason why he should expect others there is nothing to add further than
to do the same thing. 1 his zeal in j the fact ^at the comet is moving
behalt of a man whose vitals its I steadily from us in an orbit that will
knife was so lately searching, par- (ake from five to seven years to carry
takes too much of th£ character ot it around the earth. It will never
the individual, known in every com- come near US( anfj j cannot under-
inunity and respected by none,' who stan(j why so much fuss has been
fight* with the side he believes to be ma{;e over it.
the strongest, and yells with the side gince ;ts discovery three other
he knows to be victorious. He is comets have been found. The last
known as a moral coward, and is one of these will prove far more in-
more contemptible than his brother terestinff-^than any of the others, I
who is physically afflicted. If the think
Gazette would regain and retain any
of the respect of the public which its | Speaking ot the comet and the
Cincinnati South-West.
Are you with us, or agin us, In the com-1 shifting position has so rapidly for- I shower of meteors Prof. Smith, of
ing fight? feited, it should found its policy on thf> \varner observatorv savs the
Are you With us or .gin us In the wrong . /,eand8eek ,/a fi ht the Earner observatory, says
agin the right? r r _
Are you with u«, or agin us, in the weak eous end in a courageous way, no
agin the strong? matter how rough the course it may
Are you with us, or agin us, in the right be necessary to pursue
gin the wrong?
If you're with us, not agin us, then grasp
this honest hand,
No matter what the fight's about, just
take a. plucky stand;
There's many a man will fall In line to
help ihe cause alorg, . f nt
When he finds that you are with us in the Owen Scott, of Bloomington, ills.
Pass the- word along hoys, all adown the ot the^llfi'noiIfM
line,
summing up of the whole situation
seems to be in these words: "The
earth has recently passed through
the orbit of Biela's comet and so
An able newspaper man is a can- I mej particles of that comet in
didate for first assistant postmaster Qf meteors. The comet
general, and has good prospects for | discovered by Holmes is not
success. The gentleman is the Hon. j Bje]a's."
Are you with us,"or agin us? is the tell-
ing countersign;
Are you with us, or agin usj in the right
agin the wrong?
Are you with us, or agin usi in the weak
agin the strong?
at the time of his election a member
of the executive Committee of that
body. In 1S90 he was sent to con-
gress from the fourteenth Illinois
district, and introduced a bill in that
body known as the envelope bill
which passed and became- a law,
An honest swede tells his story in
plain but unmistakable language for the
benefit ot the public. One of my child-
ren took a severe cold and got the croup. I thus giving to the printers of the
I ■ <=
1 gave her one more. By this time she 000,000 envelopes annually, which
had to cough up the gathering in her
throat. Then she went to sleep and
slept good for fitteen minutes. Then she
got up and vomited; then she went back
to bed and slept good for the remainder
of the night. She got the( croup the
second night and I gave the same remedy
with the same good results. I write -this
one in the >ame need and not know the
true merits of this wonderful medicine.
Charles A. Thompsren, Des Moines,
Iowa, so cent bottles for sale by Hanna
& Son. dec
EBU0K8ED PROHIBITIOjr.
At the conference of the M.-E.
Church, South, held at Waco a
week ago, a resolution was offered I what influence they can exert in
denouncing the liquor traffic and its favor h's candidacy. It is of the uN
State of Ohio, City on Toledo,
I i i. ^ i* ■ I. J-U - VT Y.. ,.j
is the senior partner of the firm ot F. j
Cheney & Co., doing business in the
City ot Toledo, County and State afore-
said, and that said firm will pay the sum
of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each
and every case ot Catarrh that, cannot
be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh
Cc're. ■ FRANK J. CHENEY
Sworn to before me and s.ibscribed in
my presence, this 6th day ot December
A. D. 18S6.
A. VV. GLEASON,
/ \ Notary Public
\ 1
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taking internally
and acts directly upon the blood and mu
cous surfaces ot the system. S-^nd for
testimonials, free.
F. J. CHENEY, & CO , Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c. dec
vt—
J. G. Albright, editor of the A1
buquerque (N. M.) Democrat, is a
candidate for the appointment of
governor of the Territory of New
Mexico. He is entitled to it for the
Scott has done and is doing, import? I Democrat has been a steadfast friend
ant service in the interest of the to Grover for
legitimate newspaper men ot the fdremost pap
country, and they should all throw | \|r- Albright
and buildings
Track laying on the Rock Island
has reached the Missouri, Kansas &
Texas crossing.
An ordinance was recently passed
by the city council at Vernon pro-
hibiting boys under 16 years of age,
without a permit from their parents,
remaining on the streets of the city
after 9 o'clock at night. Something
of the kind would produce a won-
derful change in Denison.
Three brothers are confined mj the
Wilbarger county jail charged with
the thett of cattle.
A tenant farmer in Wilbarger
county has, with a team of scrub
ponies, put in 125 acres of wheat.
The land was turned well and the
prospect is most flattering.
A fair association has been organ-
ized at Paris.
A 50-ton ice plant is to be con-
structed at Waco.
At Seymour a few days since a
grain elevator, together with 1200
bushels of grain, was burned.
Mexia is the leading cotton center
in Texas this year. Over 20,000
bales have been received to date
Dublin, Erath county, }s putting
in a water system. The stand pipe
is in course of erection.
A new telephone line is in course
of construction between Dallas and
Fort Worth.
Nearly alLthe real estate boomers
and speculators have disappeared
rom the Rockport, Aransas Pass
and Corpus Christi country. Many
of those who remain are engaged in
gardening and truck farming.
The college building at Myrtle
/Springs, Van Zandt county, will
soon be finished. When the rail
road from the T. & P. is finished
down to the Springs Myrtle will as
sume city airs.
Sherman was full of Methodist
parsons and lay members last week
The annual conference of the North
east Texas conference was in ses-
sion.
Culen F. Thomas, of the Centra
Texan, of Waco, has leased his
paper to George Byrne, tor a perioc
of five years, and Mr. Thomas wil"
resume the practice of law, which
he sa^;s, is his life work.
Frank Brown, of Travis county,
announces in the Austin Statesman
that he will not again make the race
for county clerk. Mr. Brown has
held the office continuously for forty
years.
Tom Blousett, a colored parson
residing at Bryan, was carved up
quite badly Sunday night by a rival
who was enamoted of the same
damsel.
S. C. McMahon, a traveling man,
was found dead in his bed at Hal-
letsville Sunday morning.
St. Louis brewers are erecting an
immense brewery at Houston.
Gov. Hogg has remitted the fine
against W- C. McFall, charged with
disturbing public worship.,
Hubbard City has received over
12,000 bales^of^ot^tlyf ^SfdSna,
5u£iO&fS.unday evening by blowing
his brains but with a pistol. He
was a prosperous farmer.
had formerly been done by the gov-
ernment. He also introduced bills
relating to the transmission ot trashy
literature through the mails, and the
sample copy fraud as practiced by
because I thought there m'ght be some J so-called publishers. These bills
are now in the hands ot commitfees
and Mr. Scott will urge their passage
during the present session. Mr.
eight years, and is the
er in New Mexico
is a very capable busi-
ness man, and] a good fellow besides
eyils in which the declaration, "we
are a prohibition church," was used
An attempt was made to amend
by substituting "temperance" for
"prohibition" but it was voted down
and the resolution adopted as origin
ally worded. This action is liable
to cause a commotion in this power-
ful religious organization, if it is in-
terpreted by the laity as pledging
the church to prohibition as a politi-
cal issue. -
BUCKLES'8 ARNICA 8ALYR
The best salve in the world tor cuts,
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
"orns, and all skin eruptions, and posi
tivelv .'ure* piles, or no pay required. It
Is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction
or mon«y refunded. Price 15 cents per
box. For sale by Guiteau s Waldron,
Denison, Teta. 4S-tv
Honest and right thinking people
will cheerfully concede that the
trait most admirable in Jay Gould's
character, ne|ct to his unswerving
domestic devotion, was his entire
lack of cant and hypocracy. No
man oi the age seecned to entertain
a more thorough contempt for
Pharisaism than did the dead mil
l^onaire.
At Holly Springs, Mississippi, an
examination of the sheriff's books
disclosed the fact that many candi-
dates and others are disqualified
from holdiug office or voting at the
coming spring election for having
failed to pay their taxes in time.
The vofe in the Electorial College
will stand as follows: Cleveland
27S, Harrison 13S and Weaver 2S.
It
1
Should lie
House,
£
Every
. J. B. Wilson, 371 Clay street, Sharps-
burg, Fa., says he will not be without Dr.
King's New Discovery for Consumption,
Coughs and Cslds, that it cured his wife
who wa« threatened with Pneumonia
after an attack of "La Grippe," when
various other remedies and several physi-
cians had done her no good. Robert
Barber, ot Cooksport, Pa., claims Dr.
King's New Discovery -has done him
more good than anything he ever used
for Lung Trouble. Nothing like It. Try
it. Free Trial Bottles at Guiteau &i
Waldroh's Drug Store. Large bottles,
<oc. and $1.00.
most importance the that newspaper
fraturnity have men at headquarters
to protect them in their rights.
A church journal says that the in-
fidel sneeringly remarks. "Two-
thirds of the church members ot this
country are women." And the
same journal casually mentions the
tact that "out of forty-five thousand
convicts in the state prisons more
than forty-three thousand are men."
Now where should the sheer be
placed ?—Exchange.
Tnereis nothing in the, paragraph
calling for a "sneer," bjut an "infi-
del" at our elbow says jf the com-
parison is intended as a ' sneer" at
the infidels it is easily rebuted. He
remarks that carefully prepared sta-
tistics of our penitentiaries show that
nine-tenths of the inmates are be-
lievers in religion, and most of the
others are not qualified to form an
opinion on the subject. We all
know that when murderers are exe-
cuted they almost ^invariably express
an ^abiding faith in their salvation
through redemption. Infidels, en-
titled to the name, are individuals
who have arrived at their opinions
by long investigation and sober re-
flection, and persons ot that class
are seldom found in state prisons.
A recent poll of the convicts in the
Kansas penitentiary revealed but
one "infidel."
Paupers and criminals are over-
running Chicago, the despatches
tell us. Some of our readers may
think that this refers to the men who
"went broke" in the grain gambling
den and those who "won out," but
it doesn't necessarily. It may mean
simply that the gentlemen who were
educated how to vot£ by means of
that "Northwest Campaign Fund"
have spent all their "stuff."
"People have little idea," said
Mr. E. G. Piatt, of the U. S. Treas
ury Department, "as to what the
$2,500,000 in World's Fair souvenir
coins mean to the people in
weight. The corns for the exposi-
tion will weigh in the neigFTborhooc
of forty-five tons, which is five or.
six times the capacity of an ordinary
car. If these World's Fair coins
were piled up like cordvvood they
would occupy a cubic space of
about 12,000 feet. There is such a
dead weight to silver that we are
selddm able to carry more than
1$250,000 or $350,000 on a car, and
the maximum amount is $500,000.
At this rate it would take a train of
eight or ten cars to move the souve-
nir coins if they were carried in
bulk."
Electric Bitters.
A MEANS OF EXCUSE.
Excruciating.
Dudley Wooten received several
thousand more vote# in Texas than
any other man on the democratic
national ticket and he was an out-
spoken Clark man. Horror of hor
rors, this is simply excruciating.—-
Waco Day,
Mrs. Lease's presence in the sen-
ate will serve as a means ot excuse
for the occassional finding of a long
hair on a senator's coat collar by his
precious wife, or the discovery of a
hair-pin in his vest .pocket, two
things that make the average house-
wife hop and jump with rage. With
Mrs. Lease in the senate a fellow
would be liable to come in contact
with such things, and such a man
would have the sympathy of the en-
tire country. It is said that a wom-
1an can see such a small thing as that
■en her husbands coat collar a block
away, and it is bound to be of a
color not the le'ast bit like that of her
own. Imagine, if you can, the pre-
dicament of a poor fellow facing his
better half trying to explain away
the presence of such an objectionable
little thing as a hair, which has hever
been known to have escaped a wife's
searching look.—San Angelo Stand-
ard.
iSoiiMcl Liver Makes a
Well Man.
Are you bilious, constipated or troubled
with jaundice, sick headache, bad taste in
mouth, foul breath, coated torgue, dys-
pepsia, indigestion, hot drv skin, pain in
back and between the shouldeis, chills
and fever, etcf Ii you have any of these
symptoms your liver is out oi order, and
your blood is slowly being poisoned, be-
cause your liver does not act properly.
Herbinb will c re «ny disorder of the
liver, stomach or bowels- It has no equal
as a Liver Medicine. Prica 74 cents. S*W
by T. B. Hanna St Son. 47''7
THE EMEBSOH PIAHO.
These instruments have enjoved a high
reputation for more than torty years.
Are Brilliant and Musical in Tone, and
afford a most beautiful accompaniment to
vocal music—the tone having that rare
sympathetic quality which blends admira-
bly with the human voice. They are du-
rable, being constructed of the Best Ma-
terials, by the Most Skillful Workmen.
They have earned an especial reputation
tor Keeping in Tune, and also for retain-
ing in a most remarkable degree their"
original fullness of tone—never growing
thin or wiry with age.
The Emerson Upright Pianos especial-
v have obtained a remarkable success du-
ring the past few years, and have invari-
ablv received a high award wherever ex-
hibited. In all the essential qualities of
a First-Class Instrument they are second
to no pianos munufactured in the coun-
trs. tt
The democratic vote in the state
shows a gain over four years ago of
4265, and the republicans' loss 10,
S47. The increase of the total vote
of the state over that of iSSS is 64,
933-
The laws ot health are taught in our
schools; but not in a way to be of much
practical benefit and are never illustrated
by living examples, which In many cases
could easily be done. It some scholar,
who had just contracted a cold was
brought before the school, so that all
could hear the dry loud cough, and know
its significance; see the thin white coat-
ing on the tongue and later, as the cold
develops, see the profuse watery expecto-
ration and thin watery discharge from
the nose, no* one of them would ever for-
get what the first symptoms of a cold
were. The scholar should then be given
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy freely,
that all might see that even a severe cold
could be cured in one or two days, or at
least greatly mitigated, w"hen properly
treated as soon as the first symptoms ap-
pear. For sale by Hanna &[Son. dec
DURHMJJ
m
«f**M womo's ram
Sept. S.
BLACKWELL'S DURHAM
TOBACCO CO.,
Durham, N. C
Gentlemen:
We have Smoked up
all the Tobacco at the World's
Fair, and have unanimously
awafded the Gold Medal
for Smoking Tobacco to
BLACKWELL'S
Bull Durham
Congratulating you on your success,
we remain Yours truly,
COMMITTEE.
Denison Land & Investment
CHOICE PROPERTY FOR SALE.
1 1
CITY AND SUBURBAN LOTS.
A I>enimble Farm Close to Town.
To those who mean business we have rare inducements
to offVr.
Office* College Building, W. Main St.
BlackwelPs Bull Durham
Has been the recognized standard of Smoking Tobacco
for over 25 years. Uniformly good and uniformly
first. Bright, sweet and fragant—we invite the
most fastidious to test its peculiar excellence.
Black-well's Durham Tobacco Co., Durham, N. C.
Chase&Slater Law iClaims Co.
coALi
E. ROYCE
I o. T. chask,
j. g. slater,
j. h. rotmkrt,
k. n. hill,
| j. a. gkorgk.
918 F St., Northwest, WASHINGTON O. C.
Practice in the Supreme Court of the United States, the Court of
Claims, all the Executive Departments and before Congreaa.
Claims for Indian Depredations Collected.
Pension Cases Prosecuted. Patents Promptly Sedured. Careful
attention given to all classes of Land Casea. Liberal arrangements
made with local attornevaor for transfer of cases.
-dkalek in-
? Hard and Soft Coal, and Wood. ^
-LEAVE ORDERS AT-
518 ARMSTRONG AVE., or 40G W. MAIN ST.
COAL! COAL!
We Sell Coal! That is Our Business.
We handle the celebrated
Choctaw MeAlestar Hud aad Soft Coal.
FOOT OF WOODARD 8T.
t >
faFH«$! ||m1 yoilr&eUr$!
gity people,
ARE INVITED TO EXAMINE OUR, STOCK
AND PRICES WE OFFER.
EVERYTHING IN
Ifoetrks, Provisions,. ft§i,
REMIT
IN '-L'JbLJbJ WORLD.
@ora ]Jeep jJiBufaekrep^ "j^et fi {t"
^ ***** ^
NO CORN or CORN BEER PREPARATION®
are umc$<1 fu browing by ANHEUSER-BUSCH
BREWING ASSOCIATION. Their Motto la 1
"NOT HOW CHEAP, BUT HOW GOOD." Brew
Ing Capnolty ol Now llrowhouae, 1,800.000 t>t>l«.
por voar.
1' CHAS. BAUER, Agent,
, LOTSO & CO.
(SuccessorH to Waplks Bros.)
AT LOWEST PRICES.
I
KS^Speoial Inducements to Cash Customers,
Sash, Doors, Blinds,
Moulding, Etc.
LATHS, IJMS, PAINT.
Yards at Denison, Dallas, Port Worth, El Paso* Colo-
ratio, Big Springs, Midland and Pecos. -
s
Br
SAM. HANNA, Manager.
R. C. SHEARMAN, ALEX RENNIE, G. L. BLACKFORD
President. Vice-President. Caahier
E. S WALT.ON, Assistant Cashier.
STATE NATIONAL BANS,
Ol
This remedy is becoming so well
known and so popular as to need no
special mention. All who have used
Electric BiUers sing the same song of
praise.—A purer medicine does not exist
and it is guaianteed to do all that is
claimed. Electric-Bitters will cure all
diseases of tUe Liver and Kidneys, will
remove Pimples, Boils, Salt Rheum and
other affections caused by impure blood.
—Will drive Malaria from th£ system and"
prevent as well as cure all Malarial fevers.
For cure of Headache, Constipation and
Indigestion try Electric Bitters—Entire
satistaction guaranteed, or money refund-
ed.—Price 50 cts. and $1.00 per bottle at
Guiteau & Waldron's Drug Store.
150 Desirable LOTS*
Adjacent to the new M., K. & T. Yards, are now offered
for sale at Low Prices and on Monthly
Payments.
As the result of the recent rain-
making experiments at San Antonio
the Express sums up: "Science is
in the soup."
The failure to make rain is no re-
flection upon "science." On the
contrary, the result has only demon-
strated what every scientific man of
note in the country predicted when
the theory of causing} rain with
explosives was first seriously
broached.
An exchange has discovered that
the U. S. government maintains
something like three hundred cats.
They are distributed among some
fifty postoflices, and are iound to be
very useful in preserving mail sacks
from destruction by mice. The cost
ot providing for these cats is about
$S a year each. Postoffice tabbies
are lucky fellows. They never lose
their fat places on account ot a
change of administration.
Choice Acreage Property
In the Western Portion of the; City, near Ray Switch, will
be sold at a Bargain. Apply to
F1VT Y\Tnnri Office up-stafrs in the Mul-
• -U-1-* tt jler Block,^West Entrance.
W. C. MORRIS
, has started the
Ifsiertafein! ^ipiie^
at HO n. BUSK A VS.
S. A TT > manager.
Work Neatly and Skillfully Done. Prices Reasonable.
Embalming a Specialty.
Your Patronage Cordially Solicited at HQ N. Rusk AVG.
Paid up Capital,
Surplus,
•150,000
- 30,000
DIRECTORS <
Alex Rennle,
A. W. Aeheaon,
A. K. Collins,
R. C. Shearman,
G. L. Blackford,
J. C. O'Connor,
A. H. Collin,
8. G. Bayne>
TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS.
IP. Gr. PROAS,
lUnuhetvn ol thatlni Bnad
SUMMER GARDEN CIGARS,
. OUR GREAT 5 CENT LEADERS.
JSo. HO MAIN STREET.
B. N. CARTER,
MILWAUKEE BEER,
Office, Foot of Gandy St., at Railroad Track.
J. M. Ford, President, H. M. Spaulding, Cashier.
W. G. Meoinnis, Vice President.
FIBST NATIONAL BANK
IDEIfcTISOIfcT, TEXAS.
After the Mythological Gods.
Want of jcare does us more dam*
age tb*n a want oi knowledge.
There is an unwritten law among
astronomers that when new bodies
are discovered in the heavens they
are not to receive the names of their
finders, nor of any other person.
Without exception the celestial
nomenclature is taken from Greek
and Roman mythology—not only
the gods and "mortals enjoying this
distinction but beasts, from Pegasus
to Medusa, and occasionally the in-
animate things of mythological as-
sociation.—F.x.
An attempt was once made to
substitute modern names for the
constellations but it didn''t work, and
torday they are known only by the
mythological and astrological desig-
nations given them by our pagan
ancestors.
Tills lis Pretty Good J
Mr. Jol-n C. Goodwin, a carpenter of
Danville, III., writes: "About two weeks
ago a heavy saw-log tellj upon my toot,
very badiv crushing it, sk) that I v.-as un-
able to walk at all. I sent for a bottle of
Ballard's Snow Liniment and kept my
toot well saturated with it. It is now two
weeks since this happened, and my foot is
nearly well and I am at work. Had I not
used Snow Liniment I should ha%e been
laid up at least two months. For healing
wounds, sprains, sores and bruises it has
no equal. No inflammation car. exist
where Snow Liniment is used. You can
use this letter."
Beware of all white liniments substi-
tuted for Snow Liniment. There is no
other liniment like Ballard's Snow Lint-
ment. Sold by T. b. Hanna & Son.
SIXTY MILLION BUSHELS OF WHEAT
| A Bushel for Every Inhabitant of the
United 8tates—The Kansas
Crop of '92.
Never in the history ot Kansas has that
state had such bountiful crops as this
year. The farmers cannot get enough
hands to harvest the great crop, and the
Santa Fe railroad has made special rates
from Kansas City and other Missouri
liver towns to induce harvest hands to go
into the state. The wheat crop of the
state will be from 60,000,000 to 65,000,000
Dushels, and the quality is higti. The
grass crop is made ana is a very large
one; the early potatoes, rye, barley and
oa^s crops are' made, and are all large.
The weather has been propitious for corn,
and it is the cleanest, best looking corn
to be found in the country to-day. Cheap
rates will be made trom Chicago, St.
Louis and all points on the Santa Fe east
of the Missouri river to all Kansas points
on August 30 and September 27, pnd
these excursions will give a chance for
eastern farmers to see what the great Sun-
flower state can do. A good map ot Kan-
sas will be mailed free upon application
to John J. Byrne, 733 Monadnock Block,
Chicago, 111 , together with reliable sta-
tistics and information about Kansas
lands. tf
JOB FEIITOIQ.
CAPITAL, - -
SURPLUS FUND,
#150.000.
- 905,000.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
Paul Waples, J. T. Munson,
P. E. Fairbanks, J. M. Ford,
J. B. McDougall, L. Eppstkin,
E. H. Lingo,
W. G. Meginnm.
W. B. Munson,
T.
■ I I
ENGINES MO BOILERS CONSTRUCTED MB REPUREB.
Brass Castings Made to Order. Circular Saws Ham-
mered and reground. Gin Saws Filed. Pumps ot all kinds
Repai-ed. Electric Light Plants Machinery repaired.
Steam Jet Pumps and all kinds of finished Brass Goods for
Steam Fittings in stock. Belting, Shafting and Pullies.
Second-Hand Engines Bought and Sold.
(Joe. Owivgs St. & Chandler Ave. , DENISON TEX.
The, Gazetteer has the most
complete job office in North Texas,
and is prepared to turn out work of
all kinds, from a iady's visiting card
to a three sheet poster, promptly
and in artistic style. The prices of
any other office in the city duplicat-
ed anf* perfect satisfaction guaran-
teed.
Old papers tor sale at Gazkttxxr
offitt,
PROPRIETORS THE
327 Mill STREtt.
Ghoioe Wines. Liquors mad Cigars,
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 33, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 11, 1892, newspaper, December 11, 1892; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth313890/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.