The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 32, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 7, 1884 Page: 2 of 6
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£tmdat» (Sazettm
SllVDAY,
Dr( EMRRR 7, 1SS4.
n. Ci MURRAY,
H^btonc Brown is now engaged
on the daily Galveston Record, of j
Galveston.
It is said that Dr. Tanner, of fast-
ing notoriety, has gone to Mexico
to live on a ranche.
Tolcas now has 2500 convicts in
the penitentiary—550 arc in the
Rmlrfcraneh of the State prison.
W, M. Connelly has severed his
interests with the Texas Rail and
Wir^ leaving Ed. J. Smith sole ed-
itor and manager.
Tho entire vote of Reeves county
was thrown oat on technical grounds.
Another election will be ordered in
Fcbrfary.
ride
Over 300,000, Englishmen
bycides and tricycles and 10,000
men fire engaged in their manufac-
ture. ___
Stonewall Jackson's old war horse
is to |c exhibited at the Maryland
State fair. He is thirty-four years
old b«t is in good condition.
It ie stated that the Texas mem-
bers of Congress are receiving5 nu-
meroas solicitations for support from
aspirants for federal positions.
Poor Freji Grant, his bunking es-
tahlisfirOenf wotfl t<* pieces in' New
York, and now he is begging Presi-
dent Arthur for^an office—“no mat- |
ter how small the pay.”
The oRIhell which mug out the
principles of liberty and American
freedom July 4, 1776, will probably
be taken to New Orleans- to hang in
the e|positi«n building.
Recent investigations of the office
of the ^tMlitSToP Virginia discover-
ed iithgUnfHsa* which promise to
foot up a shortage of something
like $30,000. "
It fc expected that jjcr
TEXAS T0PI08.
A representative of the Bulletin
saw Hon. T. T. Gammage, United
States Commissioner for Texas
Proprietor | *be World's Exposition, and ob-
tained some information relating to
Exposition affairs in Texas. The
Commissioner is now located at No.
241 Felicity street for the winter. In
substance he had the following to
report about the outlook for a fine
Texas exhibit:
Texas will have at the World’s
Exposition a grand display, one
commensurate with its grand area
and wonderful capabilities. That
he could not promise to exhibit
miniature mountain of silver ore nor
a gold brick of $500,000 in value,
but some things almost as grand
would be shown. In products from
the field and garden he would show
cotton competing with Mississippi
and other cotton growing States:
sugar and syrups equal to those of
Louisiana; oats from fields which
yielded one hundred bushels to the
.degress will
take a recess the middle of thif
month in order to enable members
to attend the opening of the New
(is Exposition.
Orlcais Exp
A deficit ha
A deficit haa-lwen discovered in the
state treasury; that is, the appro-
priations are inadequate to pay the
liabilities of the state as they become
due. | S \ ' 1 ■
Mr>. Raymond Howe, the hero-
ine who served in the federal army
acre ; wheat thirty bushels per acre ;
corn fifty bushels to the acre ; speci-
mens from the garden of a cabbage
weighing forty pounds.
A beet, twenty-six inches in ci
cumferencc and three feet long,
watermellon, weighing sixty-eight
pounds, and many other specimens
from the production of Texas soil as
wondrons.
In fruits he will display in larj
variety plums, pears, apples ar
peaches, of the latter will be di
played specimens weighing twenty-
two ounces.
Of tfmhers’not less than 350 v
ricties.
In grasses, native to Texas, 300
varieties.
In texidermy a collection of wild
animals and fowls sufficient to fill a
show case ninety-six feet long, six
fcetjiigh and three feet deep, which
he believes to be the best collection
andihc most excellently mounted of
any collection in North America
In entymology Texas will display
a collection of 75,000 specimens
beautifully mounted. In mineralo-
gy* geology, petrifactions and relics
the exhibit will be creditable to that
^empire State of the young South.
.The Commissioner'said he did not
wish to tell all he would have in the
Texas exhibit, and therefore would
withhold the list from the Woman’s
Work Department and many other
items that the newspaper men might
be the better entertained when they
shall be at Texas headquarters, and
from there be escorted through the
grand display after the opening. He
says he will have in all about fifty-
five car loads.—N. O. Bulletin.
Encourage Home Industry.
in m«
and
1.
OUK EXCHANGES.
Notes and Opinions of the Week.
The Seguin Times thinks that
the credit system is one of the main
draw-backs on the prosperity of the
cou ntry. It is true that the credit
system may be a kind of an **01d
man of the Sea” on the shoulders
of industry, but still, in the very
nature of things, it is an evil that
cannot possibly be avoided, and the
best that can be done in the way "of
reform will not lessen the power of
money to command usurious inter-
est.
The Fort Smith Elevator pub-
lishes a letter from Mrs. Twyman,
maternal aunt of the Younger boys,
who has just returned from a visit
to Stillwater (Minn.) where
they are serving life sentences in the
penitentiary: She was much pleas-
ed with the treatment her cherished
nephews received at the hands of
the authorities, and expresses great
pleasure at the positions to which
the boys have attained and the es-
teem in which they are held by their
fellow prisoners. “Cole, the older,”
said she, “is superintendent of one
of the mechanical departments, and
is turning his attention to preaching
to his fellow prisoners. Jim, the
next boy, is an invalid and unable
to do manual labor by reason of the
wounds he received. He is giving
as much of his attention to the studv
of medicine as his health will, per-
mit. He has access to quite a com-
plete medical library, and, if his
health will permit, will some day
make medicine a profession. Bob,
the youngest of the boys, keeps the
Wardeu's books, having risen to the
position by a faithful performance
of the work assigned to him.”
In speaking of the prohibition
problem the Paris Newsboy says :
Although a firm believer in pro-
hibition, we are at this time firmly-
opposed to making a party question
of it On the contrary wc, and we
believe also nineteen-twentieths of all
prohibitionists in Texas, are anxious
to have this question* settled by all
the people, regardless of all party
issues. Keep the question out of
the domain of partyism. I^et it stand
on its own merits. This is all that
prohibitionists ask on this question ;
it is all we want.
In speaking of Mr. Blaine the
Louisiana Democrat says:
Asa President of his party and
his section, Mr. Blaine would have
filled the position with admirable
skill and truthfulness, but at the
same time with a reckless hatred
and vindictiveness that must have
endangered the perpetuation of the
union of those institutions bequeath-
ed to us by a revolutionary ances-
try—from those who sealed their
devotion to principle and liberty
with their blood.
A writer in the Sabbath School
KEITUUKT’8 800UBGE.
People Dying by Hundreds by a Diaea
Superinduced by 8Uurvxtian.
The eastern portion of Kentucky ]
where the fatal disease—unknown
to the medical world—has lately |
been sweeping away the inhabitants
^t such a fearful rate, is perhaps the
most poverty stricken portion of that I
state. It is called “the backwoods
of Kentucky.” The people for the
most part, are cut off from commu- j
nication with the outside world and
depend almost entirely upon the
productions of their own section for
the necessaries of life. Usually
the inhabitants raise good crops and,
with thgir flocks and herds, get
along very well. But the crops for
1SS3-S4 were almost entire failures,
which had the effect to reduce the
people to the greatest extremities.
Added to this the severe drouths cut j
off the water supply and the cattle
and sheep died by hundreds. The
ground is litterly parched and
the hills and valleys where vegeta-
tion formerly bloomed luxurantly
at present nothing but decay. The
shutting off of the water supply is
said to have brought to the surface a
poisonous liquid which the constitu-
tions of the famished inhabitants are
unable to withstand and consequent-
ly they are cut down by whole fami- |
lies as the Neapolitans are slain by
the cholera microbe.
The resources of the country hav-
ing failed the people are without |
money to purchase food and are
therefore .helpless unless the govern-
ment and charity of the country give
them help.
A person who has not the com-
fort of good and wholesome food,* |
Nyarm and comfortable clothing and
houses, is much more liable to dis-
ease of any kind than a person whqj
has all those comforts.
In the region of Kentucky which of
we speak whole families have died off
within a week—whole neighbor-
hoods swallowed up in the grave.
A man survives to bury his family
and friends, then sinks down him-
self by the wayside to suffer and die
unattended. The first symptoms
are a violent griping and then a rag-
ing headache, a hot fever ensues
with the greatest imaginable amount
of mental suffering. Death gener-
ally comes on about the second day
after the first symptoms.
Copious rains have recently fal-
len in the district of the suffering I
and it is thought the disease will now
abate.
5"'
*
■IHCXU.AMXOCS tUVKKTISKMKNTS.
RBlJrQV MIT-I J
HARBISON & WILSON, J
The Wholesale and Retail
-r-LiTVE GROCERY DEALERS-:-
Th«y do not Publiii Their Prices, bat will not be Underbid by any House
the City Sailing tbs Sams Class of Goods-
*HE BEST YOU WILL FIND IS THE CHEAPEST.
Slop and Examine .Goode, Learn their Priee., and You will be Convinced of
t 5 What is Hera Told.
Remember the Place Next to Adams Express Office.
«6 106 Main Street, DENISON, TEXAS.
BKOWfl’j
IKON
BITTER!
WILLc™
Headache
Indigestion
Biliousness
Dyspepsia
Nervous Pros-
tration
Malaria
Chills & Fevers
Tired Feeling
General Debility
Pain in the Back
and Sides
Impure Blood
Constipation
Female Infirmi-
ties
Rheumatism
Neuralgia | 'ZS7a£'S££%a. PeniBon, Texas.
Kl-T^WoV1Ver ©*Bair» McConnell & Co
1IICBUAXMWS
7 PHIL. LEDEICK & CO.,
~ -DEALERS IN
Furniture, .* Queens ware,
House Furnishing Goods of Every Dcscrpition,
WK WOULD CALL KSJ-KCIAL ATTRWKON TO OUK STOCK i
LOUNGES AND LARGE ARM ROCKING
DENISON.
McDOUGALL HOTEL,
J. B. McDOUGALL & CO., Proprietors,
EAlTirA, PLATTER & HUGO,
(Successors to Hanna, Owens & Co.)
Wholesale Grocers,
d _ .
Opposite the Alamo Hotel, Main Street,
BEKI80S, - 71X18.
„ JPfl* **?**!• ***** °P««**d, is located at the Junction of the Mo. P. and H. AT.
C. Railroads, but a step from the Depot, and is aupoiied with all the modern ka
provements of a first-class hotel. All the rooms are well furnished and can ted.
*”<-1 h*.v* perfect ventillation; water is elevated by steam to every floor, and the
tables is ackcwledged to be the best supplied ol any house in the state.
OBO. B. LOVING-.
Formerly inaihaxvr of Texdd InvewCxM
JKB01CB. HARRIS.
PSranrtr MM*et • euAakwhxjl
W. B.
GEO. B. LOVING & CO.,
Ranch, Land & Cattle Brokers,
A. CUFF.
THOS. FOX.
Cor. Four-til and Hounton
"^7" OZEtTX'lEiL.
CUFF & FOX,
attention tn t
sin
-DEALERS IN
FEED, ••• PROVISIONS, .*. ETC.
Country Produce Bought and Sold.
Goods Delivered to Any Part of the
No. 415 Main Street, DENISON, TEXAS.
We propose to giw hi entire time and pen_____________
IMS to buy or sell Located Ranches, tiraain* Lamia, or anv number
or class ot Cattle, to deal through as. Wc has* relia-
ble agents in the priocipafcitiites at tho Uni-
tod States amt Great Britain.
List of Doslrabl® Pro] _
No- » , ,_ Oorreapondonoe from Buyer* and Sellers Solicited.
EHTAULHHED IIV 1873.
J\ .A.. EjTTDPEiIRr,
-WHOLESALE AND ESTA1L DEALER IN-
City Free. | Confectioneries, Plain and Fancy Gandies, Etc.,
Cakes, Pastry, Vienna Bread, Rolls and Pies.
THOMAS FOX. JAS. A. CAREY.
FOX m CAREY,
Wholesale and Retail
FIRE WORKS, FLAGS, LANTERNS. BALLOONS, CIIINAWARE, FANCY
GOODS, TOYS. ETC-
Parties, nails aad Festivals Supplied with all It tods ml Ice Croaa. Cakes. Pastry and . ancy
Confectioneries. Bread, Cakes .nd Rolls fresh every day.
___Miihi Ntre-Pt, DKNI80N. TEXAS.
Staple & Fancy Groceries,
PROVISIONS, VEGETABLES,
WEST MAIN STREET,
NO. 31S NORTH SIDE.
ETC.
GENERAL LAND OFFICE
A. R. COLLINS & CO
ERtnbllake^ In 187«.
Troubles
’For Sale by All
Druggists.
SUCCESSORS TO
3Dea.ler« laa.
The
Genuine hae I
Trade • Mark
And crossed
Red Lines on
Wrapper.
attire during the late war
twice wounded, is now lec-
turing in the State.
It i# said that President Arthur
hos expressed his willingness to ap-
point jBiaine's sou to a vacant judge-
ship in the Alabama Court of Claims
if the old night personally requests
it. !
Onjhe 19th ult., two young sis-
ters, Clcorgiana anti Josephine Con-
way, »hot two young men in New
Orleans whom they claim deceived
Icduccd them. The former
uD. Lagan and the latter
H. Devonshire,
rrutr;—
and
shot
shot
ft
In Bit
Mo.,
iC district court at Brownville,
| last week, Frank Jamcs^ an-
nounced ready for trial in the Otter-
villc traignokhvry cases. The State
was npt ready, and therefore put the
cases off anil required Frank to give
new bonds, which he did without
Icnvii^r the court-room.
A fellow down at Denton is said
to ha\|t> invented a horse shoe that
promises to rob Uie blacksmith of
the shoeing branch of his profes-
sion. . It 14 put ou without nails, a
only accessary to
fk. child can put it on
or tafor it off at pleasure.
single!
fastci»| i| 91
The penitentiaries seem to be
greatly suffering/here of late. Last
week we chronicled the robbery of
the New York prison, and we have
the intelligence that J. C. Puaey,
chief ejerk #f*the Kansas peniten-
tiary, fcns alwcoixjed with from three
to four thousand dollars of the State’s
funds,
Exhibits for the Exposition
fn»
are
going into Xcw Orleans at the rate
of to* car loads per day. All the
space allotted to Great Britain,
Frauu.-,.Kuau-ia, Belgium, Austria,
HungRQ-, Italy, Japan, Siam,China,
Turlafcf Mexico, Goa ten* la. Salva-
<k>r, Costa Rica, Honduras, Jamai-
ca anil
locate!
full.
British Honduras has been
with exhibits, and will be
ainon
Miss
i:
“She
it lent
same
Last week Miss Pearl Tyler, of
Virginia, and daughter of President
John Tyler, was married to a Prot-
estant! which created much feeling
the Catholics of that section,
yler, it is said, made a spe-
cial application to the Pope to be al-
lowed (this'privilege. Her request
was granted on the ground that,
cing tlie daughter of a pres-
the-l'iiked States, bore the
WTTBWfhTp to the church con-
stituency that the nobility of Europe
docs to the common people.
-0-t — —
On Oklahoma.!
Peter Hayden, formerly treasurer
of the Oklahoma society of Kansas
City, that the death of C'apt.
Payne, though a matter for sorrow
amoiijf hiw co nwRkers, will not in-
the progress of the coloniza-
eme. In an interview he
We are only waiting for the
of Congress in this matter
soon as we hear defi-
nitely from that quarter we shall
push forward. Senator Plum has a
bill nofr pending before the senate
committee for the forfeiture of the
f! jPfcific railroad' land
Mch4%
terru
tion
says:
action
and a$
■:
Atlantic
grant,' Nr
considered a neces-
sary preliminary to the
Oklahoma to settlers.”
opening of
Every one she uId feel a personal
interest in his own town or city, or
the community in which he lives,
and should manifest it by enebur
aging and patronizing home indus-
tries. The more money we can
keep at home the more there will be
in active circulation in local cir-
cles. It should be an inflexible
rule with every citizen never to
send a dollar abroad for such things
as we need if the same can possibly
be purchased of home merchants,
manufacturers or dealers. There is no
good judgment displayed in sending
to northern cities for dry goods, etc.,
when our own dealers can fill the
bills ordered. Suppose you do get
things a few cents cheaper by send-
ing away, you will lose in the long
run, because you send the money
clear away from the country besides
ignoring the business of your neigh-
bors. As a general rule the bus-
iness men of our city are strong ad-
vocates of this rule; they never
send a dollar4away from home that
they can keep here. Their expe-
rience teaches them that such is an
unwise method and greatly retards
the progress anil business of the
place. To illustrate: Speaking
from our own personal knowledge,
wc know that most of our mer-
chants patronize home industry so
•far as printing and stationery is con-
cerned. In some, instances it is
possible for them to save small
amounts by patronizing northern and
eastern printing establishments. But
the men whom .they would
compliment with their patronage
never spend a cent in Denison and
in fact have no interest with the
place nor its people. While on the
contrary, if the money is spent with
the home parties it is kept here He
lives here and spends his money
with the men who patronize him.
We are daily in need of each oth-
er's goods, wares and services, and
it is right to give our neighbors the
benefit of our patronage.
We have in Denison a class of
merchants that for good judgment
and liberality can scarcely lie sur-
passed. and who can always supply
the demand for any article of mer-
chandise the public may be in need
of. Again, we know the reliability
of our merchants; we know that
when we buy dry-goods, groceries,
medicines, etc., from them we get
just such things as they are recom-
mended to be. But if we send
away to strangers and sharpers we
are liable to be victimized and
swindled. So, in every branch, we
are in favor of encouraging home
industry.
It is thought that the 19th Legis-
lature will be urged to take steps to
establish a House of Correction for
the reformation of young convicts.
Such would doubtless be a step in
the right direction and be productive
of much good. The object of the
law is to reform as well as punish
offenders against its provisions.
Last Monday Congress convened
and proceeded to business. Among
the first bills introduced was one by
Senator Dawes, providing for the
enfranchisement of all Indians bom
in the United States and who have
voluntarily taken up their residences
apart from any tribe of Indians, and
have adopted .the habits and customs
of civilized life.
Sentinel says:
The first union of Church and
State in the Christian world was in
A. D. 325, by Constantine,, “the
good Emperor,” as he is sometimes
called. He appointed the first day
of the week to worship the Sun (not
the Son), and no Christian Sabbath
existed until then. Constantine
murdered his wife’s father, his sis-
ter’s husband and his sister's son; he
drowned his wife in a bath of .boil-
ing water, he murdered his old
friend Sopater, and slew his own
son.
The Austin Capital says:
The corner stone of the Washing-
ton monument was laid by James
K. Polk, and the capstone will be
laid by Grover Cleveland. It is fit-
ting that Democratic presidents
should attend to such matters.
A new and fatal disease has
broken out in Lee, Dickenson and
Scott county, Ya , and Hartand,
Lee and adjoining counties in Ken-
tucky. A Lynchburg dispatch
says:
Although the disease is unknown,
people call it cholera, and were it
so it could not he more dreaded or
disastrous. The symptoms are
described as like Asiatic cholera,
followed by terrible hemorrhage of
the bowels, and the persons attacked
die orTecover in about a week. It
frequently fatal in twenty-four
hours and sometimes in a few hours.
In most instances it has visited an
entire family and is considered so
contagious that in some cases the
party died alone. Their friends are
afraid to go to them. The figures
of the mortality are not known, but
it is estimated that 300 have died in
the counties named, and consid-
ering the small population and the
nember taken the percentage is large.
At the late election the number of
deaths considerably affected the
majorities at various precincts, and
thirty new graves were counted in
cemetery as the result. The peo-
ple are demoralized and local bus-
iness interests suffer. A like scourge
visited this section in 1854. It is
an extremely mountainous country
and of high altitude. Cattle are
also dying in some sections. There
has been a general rainfall in the
State for two days past and prob-
ably the drouth is over there.
In speaking ot the charges made
by northern Republicans that the
negroes of the South were denied
the rights of suffrage, the Terrell
Star pithily says:
So far as the Star has been able
to learn, the only intimidation prac
ticed upon the colored voters of this
State at the recent election occurred
in Smith county, where several of
them were knocked down and shot
at for expressing a determination to
vote the Democratic ticket. The
Tyler Courier of last week says the
war on the Democratic negroes
still continues there, and it urges
the white people to protect them.
The Cooke county Independent
asks:
Where is Peter Smith now? We
frequently hear of Fort Worth, but
Smith, oh. where is he? Is he on a
still hunt fori the postoflice at the
F ort.
The Rail and Wire asks:
Why wfll the Western Union not
abide by the laws of the State of
Texas, and allow the Baltimore &
Ohio Telegraph Company to erect
its lines unmolested and enter into
fair and honorable competition.
Doe? the autocratic Jay Gould
think he holds the dominant power
in this State.
HONESTY LEADS TO WEALTH.
The Bethimmg of a Millionaire.
Warwick Martin, the author of
several hooks on political economy,
tells me he lent Ralston, the Cali-
fornia millionaire who committed
suicide a year or two ago, the mon-
ey to pay his passage to California.
Said he, “Ralston was born in Vir-
ginia, on the other side of the river,
very near the Ohio line. He work-
ed for my brother for some time, as
a young man, and I acquired perfect
confidence in him. I was for years
a banker in New Orleans, and I
once lent young Ralston $7,000
without any security other than his
own honer. This was in 1S45. Ral-
ston had some interest at the time in
a steamboat on the Mississippi river,
and I think he used the money in
connection with it. When the Cal-
ifornia gold fever broke out he came
to my bank and took up his note
paying cash in full. He them said,
I am now free from debt, but I have
no money. I want to go to Panama
and perhaps to California. I think
there is something in the employ-
ment of Fretz & Garrison, at Pana-
ma. If I do not succeed there, I
wish to go on to California. Will
you lend me the money to pay my
expenses to the Isthmus and credit,
so that if I fail there I can go to San
Francisco? I replied‘certainly,’and
give him enough to take him to Pan-
ama and a letter sufficient for the
remainder of his trip if it was neces-
sary. A few months after this I re-
ceived a letter from him remitting
from Panama my letter of credit anil
the money I iiad advanced him. It
was twenty years after this before I
again heard from him personally,
lie had then become the great San
Francisco millionaire, and he was
one of the wealthy men of the na-
tion. I was in New York in 1S69
and needed money badly. I wrote
to Mr. Ralston and told him that I
was about to engage iu an enterprise
which might take $5,000 and might
require $10,000. It he could let me
have either sum I would be glad to
avail myself of his assistance. On
the day that this letter must have
reached San Francisco I received a
telegram from Mr. Ralston telling
me to draw upon Lees & Waller for
$10,000. With the telegram in my
hand I went to this banking house,
and on the presentation of it the
bankers informed me that this sum
had been placed there to my credit
by Mr. Ralston on that very day.
It is said that Mr. Ralston commit-
ted suicide, but the fact has been
disputed, and I doubt it very much.
—Washington Correspondent Cleve-
land Leader.
T/wceNoOtper
Thousands Say So.
Mr. W. T. Atkins, Girard, Kan.,
writes: “I never hesitate to recommend
your Electric Bitters to my customers,
they give entire satisfaction and are rapid
sellers.” Electric bitters are the purest
and best medicine known and will posi-
tively cure Kidney and Ltver complaints.
Purify the blood and regulate the bowels.
No lamilv can afford to be without them.
They will save hundreds ol dollars in
doctor’s bills every year. Sold at fifty
cents a bottle by Guiteau & Waldron.
Mrs. Dr. Walton’* Periodical Tea.
Mother Walton has prescribed this
valuable medicine for a great many years
in her private practice. It has proved
an unlading specific in the treatment of
the many disorders to which the female
constitution is subject. It is a sure cure
for the monthly troubles that so many
women suffer. Mailed on receipt of
price. 50 cents.
FRAZIER MEDICINE CO..
Proprietors, Cleveland, O.
Guiteau & Waldron, Denison, Texas*
Saratoga High Rock Spring Water, for
sale bv all druggists 34
Fruit Lands.
Cardington, a small town in Ohio,
is the chief egg depot in the United
States. For the spring of the year
when the hens are in good humor
and industriously inclined, that vil-
lage furnishes about 2,000 barrels of I
eggs per month.
N. H. L Decker has some fine fruit
lands near the city which he will sell
cheaply at suitable terms. tf
c. J. WALKER,
S IT iRATIEJirOIE^,
DENISON, TEXAS.
Orders through the Postoffice will receire prompt
HOUSTON & TEXAS CENTRAL
RAILWAY.
And Its connections. The only line run-
ning through the Central and best
portions of Texas.
PASSENGER EXPRESS TRAINS
......AND — —
Daily Fast Freight Lines
over tlie entire road.
Elegant Pullman Parlor Cars
(The only ones in the Ssate)
On all day trains between Houston and
Denison.
Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars
Each way. Daily, Without Change,
RptWPPtlGALVESTON *nd SEDALIA
OulvTuuli via Houston and Denison.
BptWPPilGALVESTON AUSTIN
DUl TV 0011 via Houston.
the shortest line
Between Texas, Kansas City, Hanni-
• bal and alt points North Si West.
The Favorable routes via
DENISON and MISSOURI PACIFIC j
R’Y to KANSAS CITY, HANNI- j
BAL or ST. LOUIS,
or via the
G. H. & S. A. SYETEM,
A LI.-RAIL THROUGH LINE
Via Houston and New Orleans to all
points in the United States & Canada.
Via the last named route, the day ex-
press trains of the
Houston & Texas Central R’v
Make direct'connections in Houston for
New Orleans for all points in the
Southeast Northeast and East.
Through tickets from or to any point in
Great Britain or continent of
Europe, via the
HOUSTON & TEXAS CENTRAL R’Y
And all rail to New Yoik,
thence via
North German Lloyd,
White Star Inman, State
Rotterdam and Italian
Steamship lines.
On sale at all important stations on the
line of this railway, and at
Galveston Cuero Victoria
San Antonio Marion Seguin
Weimar LaGrange Columbus
Flatonia Schuienburg NewBraunfel
San Marcos, Round Rock, Rockdale, etc.
For information as to rates of passage
and treight, routes, etc., apply in person
or bv letter to
O. E. O’M ALE Y, A. FAULKNER,
Agent Denison. G. P. A.
E. D. TRUE, A. G. F. A.
J. WALDO, Viee President and
Traffic Manager,
Houston, Texas.
DR. FELIX LE BETTE’S
<3-
^xexreaa-tati-vr-e glixcL Ovure,
For Either Sex.
This remedy being injected into the
seat of those diseases ot the Genito-Uri-
n*fT Organs, requires no change of diet
or nauseous, mercurial or poisonous
medicines to be taken internally. When
used
As A Preventative
by either sex, it is impossible to contract
any venereal disease; but in the case of
those already
Unfortunately Afflicted
with G. and G. we guarantee 3 boxes to
cure or we will refund the money. Pries
bv mail, postage paid, $2 per box, or 3
boxes for $5.
Written Guarantees
•siued by all authorised agents.
DR. FELIX LE BRUX CO.,
Sole Proprietors.
Sole Agents—Star Drug Store, Denison.
Texas. No. 49-17
8500 REWARD!
We will pay the above reward for any
case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia,
Sick Headache, Indigestion. Constipa-
tion or Costiveness, we cannot cure with
West’s Vegetable Liver Pills, when the
directions are strictly complied with.
They are purely vegetable, and never
fail to give satisfaction. Sugar coated.
Large boxes, containg 30 pills, 35 cents.
For uie bj all druggists. Beware of
counterfeits and immitations. The geo.
uine manufactured only by JOHN C.
WEST & CO., tSi & 183 W. Madison St„
Chicago. Free trial package sent by
mail prepaid 00 receipt of a a cent stamp.
Sold at b e Star Drug Store. N0.49-41 I,
Family Groceries,
EememToer Tliem.
Mala Street, STixlDaa? to Star Store, DENISON, TEXAS
JF. H. IMHIXllile
THE GILT EDGE
Millet Sleek iteeet
-~>£=:IS HEADQUARTERS FOIb$~
STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES,
PROVISIONS, VEGETABLES,
FRUITS, ETC., ETC.
Everything Fresh, and at Reasonable Prices.
1
In Real Estate, Merchandise, Bonds, Scrip, Eto., Etc.
And General Insurance Agents.
AGENTS:—Denison Town Co., Denison Improvement
Company, Domson Paciflo R* R. Lands, and Otty Prop*
erty, Gainesville Town Company.
Norwich Union Fire Insurance Company.
German American Insurance Company.
Queen of England Fire Insurance Company.
Western Assurance of Toronto Insurance Company.
Springfield Fire and Marine Insurance Company.
Phoenix of Hartford Insurance Company.
Girard of Philadelphia Insurance Company.
Niagara Fire Insurance Company.
Crescent of New Orleans Insurance Company.
California Fire Insurance Company.
Merchants of Newark Insurance Company.
Commercial of California, of California.
Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York.
Travelers Life and Accident Insurance Co. of Hartford.
500,000 ACRES
CHOICE FARSII8, GRAZING, FRUIT m MINERAL
Terms Time, Tracts Cut to Suit.
Taxes paid for Non-Residents, Maps, Plats and Abstracts furnished. S|
ial attention to Loans. Choice Residence and Business Property tor sale or r
Lots sold by monthly payments.
If your wish to buy a Retiderce, If you wish to Rent a Residence,
If you wish to buy or rent business property If you wish to bey a Farm,
If you want to buy a Ranch, If you with to Loan Money.
If you wish to Insure your property, If you wish to Insure your life,
If you with to Insure against accident. If you with • Business Opening,
.. . 134 Main Su, DENISON, TEXAS.
Always have* a carnage at the door to show property, free of charge.
The best investment—a home of your own.
BROWN & HCERR,
H. BAILEY.
J. E. HOWARD.
-PROPRIETORS OF-
Main Street, Opposite Opera Boast,
DEITISOIT, : :
KEEP THE BEST QJJALITY OF
FINE WINES AND LIQUORS,
-ALSO A CHOICE LINE OF—.
Foreign and Domestic Cigars and Tobacco.
letst sc
-DEALERS IN-
Drugs, Uedisines, Toilet and Fancy Articles,
Noap, Kpongou find Porfumory.
PAINTS. OILS, BRUSHES, GLASS, PUTTY, ETC.,
And All Klnli of Druggists’ Sundries
TTsvLeaisr Slept lxx as PYrat-Cl»M Dragr Store !
Our Prescription department is COMPLETE in EVERY PARTICULAR. —I is under lie m.
ol a THOROUGH and PRACTICAL PHARMACIST. ^5
1400 Main Street, - DENISON,
v.v
&c CO.,
-WHOLESALE DEALERS IN-
JOHN R. CARR,
Lone Star Lumber Yard
Dknison, Texas.
WAPLES BROTHERS,
Tiger Brand of Oysters I LUMBER MERCHANTS
W. J. Imps Draught, k Bottled Beer
-THE CELEBRATED-
Berwick Bay Oyster in Cans or Bulk for Family list.
FISH I FISH I WHITE FISH, BUFFALO AND LAKE TROUT.
Choice Cidery AlwnyH in Stock.
Prices as low as any one can Sell at. Depot on Woodard St., near Houston Avenue.
__CBOW&CO.
PARNELL SALOON,
OP. O-DOSTlTEZiL, I’xopri.etor.
Houston^venue, * * DENISON, TEXAS.
.-WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN- *-
WINES, LIQUOBS, CIGARS ADD TOBACCO.
cps constantly on hand a large stock of Pure Kentucky Sour Mash Whiskies,
ifornia Wines and Brandies, Tennessee White Com Whiskey, Peach, Apple
The Oldest Established Lumber Yard in Denison. Has on
hand the finest grades of Northern and
Native Lumber,
Laths, Shingles, Doors and Sash, Lime, Cement, Plaster % Hair
\ Best TwTI wwcS. Faints ol Spoclwlty.
SAVE -STOXJSt OliXJBItS FOR
THE DENISON NURSERIES,
T. V. MUNSON, Proprietor.
WHO EMPLOYS NO PEDDLERS TO WORRY HIS CUSTOMERS.
W.
GATE
A. HALLENBECK,
-PROPRIETOR OF THE-
CITY v BAKERY,
• •
Kee
Cali
v lilAMJi * vRLR, p Jl IO
and Blackberry Brandies, Guinness* Extra Stout, Bass* Pale Ale, Pure Penn-
sylvania Rye Whiskey, Belfast Ginger Ale, Key West Cigars, Etc.
, Etc.
IRISH AND SCOTCH WHISKIES k SPECIALTY.
aiHBHSSS m PA&HSLL WSSI YOU WAIT SOM!THUS 6009
POOL AND BILUARO MALL>« Den-
-** ----* nine ----
Keeps the fashionable SALOON. POOL AND BILUARO I
£7: The Monarch ant McBrayerWMies Fh^s
and Temperance people recommend his Pine Wines and Brandies.
-AND DEALER IN--
Fine Confectionery, Fruits, Mots, Toys, Notions ani Cab Omineits.
FRESH BREAD. CAKES AND ROLES MADE AND DELIVERED TO
ANY PART OF THE CITY EVERY MORNING-
SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALL ORDERS IN THE
BAKERY LINE. ICE CREAM AND SODA WAT-
ER DURING THE SEASON.
309 Main St., DENISON, TEXAS.
fctf-EVESYBODY 00 TO CTTTLEa’S FOB LUEZBBEANZ AHD JACEPOT CIOABS.*
Mr. Cutler and his clerks are so polite and accommodating, (and
1:^4 Anheflser Bascii Beer, always on
uine
Beverages,/
that it is
pleasure to visit
saloon.
Ilf Main Street.
1
Gh
Manuihctnrer of
±r
THE FAMOUS “PUFF” CIBAR
WholMAls ui BataD Dealer la
Liquors, Brandies and Wines,
Ho. 317 Main Street, DKNISON, TEXAS.
Js the Best in the market. Factory 49, next door
1 to Murray’s Printing’ House, DENISON, TEXAS.
■ “FIRST NATIONAL BANK,
Uenleon, Toxaa.
OFFICERS:—John Soullin, President,
Edward Pkrry, Vice President,
| i F. M. Adams, Cashier.
Directors :—John Scullin, Edward Perry, Geo. A.
’ Samuel Star, Jno. R. Carr.
Special Attention Given to Collections.
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 32, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 7, 1884, newspaper, December 7, 1884; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth571052/m1/2/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.