The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 26, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 14, 1900 Page: 3 of 4
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*•- •
i excursion train on th<
, & Ene Ry., on Aug. *8,
of to passenger conches. This
i Mud to be the heaviest pi
taken out of Pittsburgh by Clsra
am ever
* single locomotive.
Electric power is being largely
sed in Austria to ran mills and
j .actories. f At Roveredo 400 velvet
weaving looms are run by electric
motors. The only tube mill in the
world operated by electricity is
near Pittsburg and makes tubes 9
to *4 inches. The' dynamos will
be giants in their way. A Wisconsin
man has invented s 27-pound motor
j to push row boats.
A plow bas been introduced in
Germany which uses alcohol to drive
it. ||
* A free telephone was tried in a
Wisconsin town, a phone was. put
up and the public were told to go
and use it. It did Very well but
youngsters used it tor useless pur-
poses. A pocket telephone has been
invented tor use by police in large
cities. It weighs ij ounces. By
inserting s small ping in a tittle box
attached to s telephone pole con-
nection is made with the central
office.
The cities along the great Lakes
increase faster in population than
cities elsewhere.
The American Shipbuilding Co,
has 7000 men building 17 ships in
its MX yards.
The largest elevator in the world
is being built by the Peary Syndicate
at Duluth. It will be 222 feet by
204 feet, 125 feet high and will hold
3,750,000 bushels.
The largest cantilever bridge in
the world is being made by a
Philadelphia firm to span the St.
Lawrence River at Quebec. Cost
$4,500.000; 10,000 tons steel 70 ft.
wide.
The business indications point to
an extraordinary revival ot trade
•ffpMtiag
The pra
TJTlT’tiw
‘The de-
the Denison banks
Thn Fort
Territory, has this
cant meat
Tohnston:
1 easy gun shot and very nearly fifty per cent, greater than ^ Of all that has come out of the
from the largest a
it the ideal place for
■
PRfefiissBI 9§1
fit / -
Iti WiMjd Hm
PPH
trii
tame......The cold snap la bringing
UT“
*1 S.n
beginning with the close of the presi-
dental campaign. A rush of orders
is in sight. Prices of everything
having been pointing downward for
several months are likely to point
upward.
Many of the large clothing manu-
facturers are still loaded up with
last year’s goods will be' forced to
reduce prices before long.
During the past four years this
country has exported 621,000 tons
of fine copper. The demand is now
doable what it was in Europe and
new properties are being developed.
Almost every water-tall in Europe
and they number hundreds upon
hundreds, is being looked at by
electrical power plants. In a few
years industrial conditions abroad
will be transformed by the use of
electricity.
The demand tor ships to carry
American products to foreign coun-
tries has stimulated several ship
building enterprises one by the
Carnegie Company. The ship build-
ing industry will become a great
industry soon.
Yerkes, of Chicago, jvill build a
7-mile underground road under
London at a cost of $12,000,000.
An English syndicate is alter
25,000 acres ot coal for $4,000,000
north of Pittsburgh. The coal is to
be mined and shipped to England.
A wine factory bas just been
started at Lodi, Cal., that presses
rasa tons of grapes per day into
sue.
Ten of the largest banks in the
country have on deposit 616 million
dollars. The value of paper money
has increased $80,000,000 within
a year and gold $60,000,000. The
demand for money will soon
incredfc the rate to 6 per cent east
and 8 to 13 per cent west. There
hi far from enough money in the
country and the Government will
be obliged to increase die volume.
The only factory in the country
that turns out glass marbles is just
built at Stubensviile, Ohio, and the
productior is 150,000 per day.
The Window Glass factories of
the United States will all be in
operation soon turning out more
glass than ever before.
The estimated steel rail require-
ments for 1901 are *, 100,000 tons
and the otders for this quantity will
be placed after the election. The
railroad companies have now more
Thiers for steel bridges than ever
and there is a prospect that orders
wMLcrowd in all winter.
There is such a scarcity of sailors
on the Pacific Coast that vessels
cannot sail; vessels four deep are
tied up to the docks awaiting men.
One factory in San Diego, Cal.,
turns 500 tons of lemons a year
into toilet cream.
California produces one-fourth of
all the beans, grown in the United
States and Massachusetts buys nearly
all of them.
The longest wharf in the world is
at Santa Monica, 4,700 feet, nearly
a mile'long straight out to sea. It
cost $1,000,000.
California produces the best Eng-
lish walnuts in the world and the
crop is larger than all
States put together. The Monu-
mental Cross at the Golden Gate
Paris, San Francisco, has 10 blocks
I of stone larger dies any 10 blocks
* ed pyramids of Egypt.
mm__
largest olive orchard m the
in Ssnts Clara Co. and the
hop farm m the world Is near
Francisco. The largest ranch in
Southern California is the Saa
Joaquin (sraUrin) 108,000 acras of
which 35,000 acres were la barley.
There are 1000 acres in olives.
California is (he largest lemon pro-
ducing country in the world sod
San Diego County, the most favored
location. Lemons are picked and
shipped every month ia the year.
Eastern stock buyers are buying
large quantities of cattle in the state
of Washington.
Rich oil lands have been discover-
ed in Utah ; 50 miles west of Bluff
City, 8 of 9 springs have been
discovered from which flow all of
to barrels of crude petroleum carry-
ing 80 per cent of paraffine a day.
Western railroads are encouraging
travel westward by cheap excuisioa
rates.
The consumption of copper in the
electrical industries is exceeding all
record. England and Fiance alone
in 8 months used 150,000 ton*.
There are abundant supplies in the
United States to be called on.
The South is entering upon
unprecedented prosperity through
ioc cotton, which may possibly be-
come lie.
New Orleans promises to become
a mighty shipping centre
A great many people ia Ansona
are going into hog raising on a large
scale. They run wild like cattle
and fatten on alfalfa in the Salt River
Valley.
Prospectors have discovered 20,-
000,000 tons of iron in one pile
along the line of the road between
Salt Lake City and Los Angeles.
At another place 80,000,000 tons
are already exposed. It can be put
on cars at 15c per ton and this beats
Lake Superior.
An electric plant to cost $2,500,-
000 will be erected at Hanford
Cal., which will give 75,000 h. p.
Electric road projects are looming
up everywhere and manufacturers
of electrical equipments are overrun
with orders.
So far this year the exports of
petroleum have been 360,000,000
gallons. The value of oil exports
last year were $65,000,000. Oil
advanced m price 42 per cent over
last year.
A Latin-American Medical Cong-
ress is to be held ia Santiago, Chili
in December. The circular it
English and is full of laughable
errors.
South American merchants
studying the English language to be
able to deal more advantageously
with us. M
Three steamship lines will be
plying between United States ports
and South America by January
first.
The people of New York have
Saving banks $264,827,253.
ducks ia.
.We were fold at the
mill yesterday that they are
working 200 people and operating
14,000 spindles--Yesterday wet
en Ideal day, perfect fall weather.
The air was crisp and exhilarating,
Ilka a draught of champaign. The
sun was bright but not warm. Au-
tumn with its crimson and gold will
soon be here, the Indian summer,
the honeymoon of the year. If there
ever was a period to go to the
woods, it is right now. We noticed
e number of young people, mostly
boys, in trees shaking down hickory
and pecan nuts__The cotton seed
teed oil mill got up steam to-day.
Parries from the Territory in-
form the GAsarraan that pecans
are fyw end far between this year.
The Crop is almost an entire failure.
Quite e town A springing
up out at the cotton ml!!. About
300 people are living out there. The
cottages looking out from the open
poet oak woods are very pretty, and
give a delightful raral aspect to the
scene___At this season, considering
the number of men who stand
around on corners and talk politics
a great deal should be forgiven the
women for occasionally tying a rib-
bon around a sandwich and holding
a reception over it._—_The old
Ourand building opposite the Gaz-
kttekr office is being re-painted for
the first rime in about fifteen years.
It looks as if the majority of the
owners of cows and horses in Deni-
son turn them loose at night to
grace. II they would confine them-
selves to streets it would palliate the
nuisance, but they break into front
yards and do an immense amount ot
damage, and what is worse, make
Christian men and women swear to
themselves. J_We want .to say one
thing to Dr. Booth: chain up that
ferocious brute, “Toddler.” To-day
while pasaing the Doctor’s residence
“Toddler” put us hors de combat,
in fact, chawed us for two blocks,
foaming at the mouth and spitting
fire_Mrs. Kate Miller, while
engaged in cleaning windows last
Saturday, fell from a step ladder
and received painful injuries about
§0» yean ego,” remark-
a bank attache tods
)eaison man is said to have bought
too many cotton options for his
financial good_Tnere were thirty
bales of cotton on the streets to-dav
irotn the Woodville, I. T., district.
The county court convenes
on Monday.
A Thousand Tongues.
Could not express the rapture of
Annie E. Springer, of Philadelphia,
when Dr. King’s New Discovery
cured her of a hacking cough that
for many yenra had made life a
burden. She says: “After ail
other remedies and doctor* failed ft
soon removed the pain in my chest
and I can now sleep soundly, some-
thing I can scarcely remember doing
before. I feel like sounding its
praises throughout the Universe.”
)r. King’s New Discovery is
guaranteed to cure all troubles of
the Throat, Chest or Lungs. Price
40c and $ 1.00. That bottles free at
T. B. Waldron’s drug store.
Job Couldn’t Have Stood It.
If he’d had Itching Piles. They’re
terribly annoying; but Bucklen’s
Arnica Salve will cure the wdVst
case of Piles on earth. It has cured
thousands. For Injuries, Pains or
Bodily Eruptions it’s the best salve
in the world. Price 24 cents a box.
Cnre guaranteed.
Waldron draggist.
by, T. B.
The California wine trade is grow-
ing rapidly. /
1100 BEWABD (100.
The readers of this - paper will
pleased to learn that there is at least O
dreaded disease that science has been
able to cure in all its stages and that
Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is foe only
positive cure now known to the n edical
fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional
disease requires a constitutional treat-
ment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken
internally, acting directly upon the blood
by destroying the foundation of the
disease, and giving the patient strength
by building up foe constitution and
assisting nature in doing its work. The
proprietors have so much faith in its
curative powers, they offer one Hundred
Dollars for any case that it falls to care.
Send for list ot testimonials. Add
r.J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, Ohio.
bold by druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family
Pills are the bast. oct
400 boys from the South are
learning the science of textile manu-
facturing in the Georgia School of
Technology.
Bobbed foe (have.
A startling incident,. Is narrated
by John Oliver of Philadelphia,
follows: ‘ ‘I was In an awful con-
dition. My akin was almost yellow,
eyes sunken, tongue coated, pain
continually in back and side*,
no appetite, growing weaker day by
day. Three pbyaiciana bad given
me up. Then I waa advised to use
Electric Bitters; to my great joy,
the first bottle made a decided im-
provement. I continued their use
tor three weeks, and am now a well
man. I know they robbed the grave
of another victim.” No one should
fail to try them. Only 50 cento,
guaranteed, at T. B. Waldron’s
drag Mote.
WANTED— ACTIVE MAN
[?a«Sxr,SV* -
SSLSK3S. ....
say city.., Eacloss ssNs
OF GO"D
ia Tss
the back and spine._People teem
entirely indifferent to registration.
In a few day* the book* will dose
and if you do not register you cannot
vote._Tom McCarthy and
party of several others are getting
ready to go to the Commencbe
country in quest of land--Schlat-
terly, the “divine healer,” who
visited Denison several years ago
and was liberally patronised by
weak minded men and women,
reported in an eastern town drinking
himself to death____Fred Hibbarc
expects to resume his business duties
by the first of the year__Frank
O’Maley hung out a very handsome
sign to-day in front of his business
piece two doors west of the Gazet-
teer office.__The mammoth new
barn of C. J. O’Maley on Chestnut
street will soon be completed.
Cotton pickers are still very scarce.
TUESDAY, OCT. 9.
The grand jury has adjourned un-
til the 22d._The Gazkttkkr has
received a file of Honolulu papers
from Eddie F. Burson, who is en
route to the Philippine islands to
take a position with the government.
Eddie will also step off at the island
of Guam for a few weeks._Joe
Meadows sent in ten bales of cotton
from Preston Bend to-day. A
very light frost in that section last
night__Sam Joels has put oa the
road a wholesale wagon. It is quite
stylish._Parties from Dallas state
that a gang of thieves went through
the Oriental and cleaned np a num
ber of persons wbo were asleep on
cots. Watches, money and jewelry
were taken. The Dallas papers
failed to mention the occurrence
The Indian police ere after hunting
parties with a sharp stick. They
gobbled up e party the past week
from Fannin county. The Paris
Press aaya they also ordered several
hunters back to Texas trom the riv-
er___.There is atill a scarcity or
cotton pickers, even at the price of
75c end $i.oo per hundred__Up
to noon to-day 418 names bad been
registered. ...........-The interior of the
hosiery mill will be completed this
week by the Hanns Brothers. The
machinery is all here ready to be
placed in position._Sam Joels
bas three men oa the road ia the in
forest ot his wholesale house.__
Our old friend, Cariat, vrho has
farm west of the city, is very confi
no dent that he bas a flow of natural
oil. The Gazetteer man is going
out rids Sunday to spend the day
with the old gentleman and inveeti
gate the natural oil claim.-Quito
a number of Demaoniaas are turning
their attention to the zinc fields
Arkanaas as a profitable field for
Investment. A gentleman remarked
to-day that Denison capital invested
iwill amount to thousand* of dollars
Tne railroad building and the activi-
ty ia opening up great bodies
Mineral will cause a wonderful
It that
HOW KAILBOAD 00KPAHBB ABE
BKHVED.
E. B. Parker of Houston read a
paper before the Texet Bar Asso-
ciation which seta forth some start-
ling facts in reference to personal
Injury suit* against railways in
Texas. The figures he furnishes
make one wonder how the Texas
railroads can keep out the hands of
receivers. Grayson county is a
hotbed tor such litigation—that is a
great deal of it originates here.
All suits that originate here are net
filed in this county.
Mr. Parker in hit article states
that no matter bow deairous the
railroad may be to settle the injury
with the injured man fairly that a
damage suit lawyer or the agent of
one will beat the claim agent of the
company to the man or bis wide
and take a contract and file it in the
court thus preventing the railroad
from making a fair settlement. He
cites e case where the lawyer filed
a suit for death fiye hours after the
man waa killed and the widow of
the man claimed that she bad not
authorised it. She proposed to
dismiss it and the lawyer would not
let her. He tried to take ber depo-
sition and abe refused to give it and
he tried to get the notary ‘public to
put ber in jail because of her re-
fusal.
Denison ia the principal place in
Grayson county where such cases
arise. We are told that although
this if the fact that no Denison at-
torney appears to have brought one
of these cases at the term of court
ust begun. If this be so it is to the
credit of the Denison lawyer. The
aw as it anciently stood was a dig-
nified profession and the man who
went out drumming for cases was
held in contempt by the profession.
A Dallas and Fort Worth Bureau
for getting these cases is maintained
there and almost any day Sherman
lawyers and their agents may be
seen on the streets engaged in one
piece of strategy or another to land
them. It is said that it has got to
the point that rival applicants for
cases bid against each other for
them and the man paying tbe high-
est cash bid down gets the case.
This may be wby the Denison man
is shut out but we hope not. We
hope thet it is because he prefers
the more dignified course of the
professional^*
It is amusing to note (by the out-
sider) and a cause of regret to the
old line practitioner, the atmosphere
which surrounds the profession.
ed more favorable comment trom
tbe press, and all classes of people,
than the menage of Gov. Johnston,
of the Chickasaw nation, to his leg-
islature. Judging from the enco-
miums of non-ciriaen papers, one
might think it a set of resolutions of
adn-citiaen convention, demand-
ing statehood, and abolition of all
tribal institutions, instead of the an-
nual message of a tribal governor.
Much hat been written during tbe
peat two yean about this governor
of tbe Chickasaw*, and tori’message
gives him unquestioned rank among
the ablest statesmen of tbe five
civilised tribes, and there have been
many in the persons of Boudinot,
Harkins, McCnrtain, Ross and
?itchtynn.
Among other thing* tbe governor
refen at length to citizenship, and
prays the government, on behait of
hta people, for relief from tbe frauds
and wrongs that have been practiced
by applicants and citiaenship attor-
neys In procuring what purport to
be judgments of tbe United States
court admitting them to citisenabip.
He discusses this phase of the In-
dian question in a way that haa
never been done before, end hi*
disclosure* can but awaken sympa-
thy everywhere, end demands from
all, citizen* and non-citiseus, for a
correction ot these wrongs by the
government, before proceeeding
with the contemplated division of
tribal property,
There ia, and should be, e bond
of sympathy between our people
and our red neighbors on tbe west,
and this message of the Chickasaw
governor must certainly strengthen
this bond and shows up a condition
of affairs that should, in equity and
justice, be corrected. In its deal-
ings with the Indians our govern-
ment, while considerate of ell, must
be just, and especially ao when tbe
relation of guardian and ward exists
at in this instance. The message
will not only reflect credit upon the
Chickasew governor, but force such
a conrideration of the matters there-
in discussed, by the government end
its officials, as will result in good to
his people.
Is It the “Hissing LtekP’
The German biologist, Haeckel,
has been so captivated by the dis-
covery of certain fossil remains in
Java that he means to go out there
himself and institute further inves-
tigations. The bones referred tc
were found by Dr. Dubois about six
years ago, and were believed by the
latter to belong to a species inter-
mediate between the highest apes
and prehistoric man—in fact, the
“missing link.” Dr. Dubois called
this creature Pithecanthropus Erec-
tus. His opinions have been re-
ceived with favor by many scientific
men, among them Professor Haelk-
«1, who has neves ceased to advocate
the importance of making further
excavations in tha district of Java
where Dr. Dubois found the
nature can be had for refreshingly
low prices. Some of these I quote
that I may make heads of Eastern
families groan with envy. Water-
melons. notwithstanding that lever-
al hundred freight can of this juiey
fruit roll northward to Kansas
OMy, can be bought at any time
from July to cold weather for S
cents each, and these of a site and
unsurpassed. Muskmel-
ons, delicious as nectar, are 8 cents
a dozen, although these, too, are
away liberally in carloads.
Spring chickens are 25 cents 4pair;
10 and 15 cento; beef
and lamb, 15 cents a pound.
Grapes—alas, this luscious crop ia
nearly given away—1 cent a pound
for the beat The reason for this
humble price attached to ao fine a
fruit is that the crop matures and is
in its prime during the heat off Aug
ust end shipment is impossible ex-
cept in refrigerator ears, which me
toe expensive. And ao the whole
population revela ia delicious juice.
Analytical Fertrattare.
Francis Gal ton, tbe English psy-
chologist, has recently been making
seme curious experiments in an at-
tempt “to isolate the particulars in
which one portrait differs from an-
other”; that is, to secure, photo-
graphically, a tingle picture, rep re-
lenting the difference between two
facea. He attempted to do this by
a device which be cells a transform
n, consisting of a combination of
the negative and poaitive of the two
pictures. He photographed tiro
faces, each in two expressions, the
one glum and tbe other smiling
broadly, and was able, by means of
the suitable transformer, to turn
the smiling picture into the glum
one and vice versa; "but the trans-
formers themselves were ghastly to
look at, and did not at all give the
impression of a detached smile or of
% detached glumness.” He further
says: “I cannot yet make up my
mind whether or no the process ad-
mits of substantial improvement...
?... The most suitable portrait for
the attempt are such aa are popular-
ly termed ‘artistic’ —that is, with
blurred outlines and medium tints.”
We serve m tt
wWWj "wit
fttyb
alar <
. > a regal
ready at noon at the price of
$5 casts. We are prepared to
serve you in tbe very best of styles
Halleabeck &
St. John,
Caterers.
HOWARD & REARDOI •
Established In 1880.
They have tbe pick of city and
country property; do more busi-
ness than all other real estate con-
cerns in Denison.
HOUSES FOR RENT.
Fire insurance e specialty.
H.T. WALKER. D.D.S.
PAIILESS DENTISTRY.
Oatophoretlo AppHaeoee.
By the use ot electricity excava-
tion of the most sensitive teeth or
removal of live nerves is accom-
plished absolutely without pain.
Perfect success is assured where
all other medicaments fail.
Office, No. 210 Main St.,
(uj>-etairfl), Denison, Tex.
Colbert,
Silo, Durant,
Tishomingo, Lton,
Cumberland,
Manaaville,
Raysvilie, McMillan
Wilson, Reagan, Belton,
Connersville, Pontotoc,
Ardmore. Provence, Durwood.
Ofios hi Postal Telegraph Offlot,
204 Wart Ham Street
J. O. AMBROSE
Local Manager.
Good Newspaoers
| ^ AT A VERY COW RICH
XH® SEMI-WEEKLY NEWS (Galves-
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and Fridays. Each issue consists ot
e%ht pages. There are special depart-
ments for foe termers, the ladies sad tbe
boys and girls, besides e world of general
news matter, Illustrated articles, market
reports, etc. You get
104 Papers for Onlv SI.
(Less than t cent a copy.,
Sample Copies Free. Address
4. H. BELO 4t CO., htUubtn,
GALVE8T0B, TEL. or DALLAS, TEX.
Pat ENTs*
tram marks,
DEMONS,
OOFVWtOMTS a.
WMRweaiaMflaMWMaMM
Do You Trade With Us?
Purity of drugs, accuracy in
compounding, courteous treat-
ment,lowest prices, a legitimate
profit, well selected stock,
up-to-date goods. That’s US.
MATHEWS.
&
Premium Stamps.
323 West Main Street.
8CIENTIFI0 AMERICAN,
NEW SERVICE
PBOFE8HIONAL.
mains.
Bismarck’s Iran Hem
Was the result of his splendid
health. Indomitable will and tre-
mendous energy are not found
where Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and
Bowels are out of order. If you
want these qualities and the success
they King’s New
Life Pilla. tmfPTffp cents at T. B.
Waldron’s Drug store.
Leaden Sits en the “Frost Steep.”
Another American .idea has taken
hold in London, partly jRrhapa as a
result of recent exceedingly hot
weather there. In a fashionable
square the doorstep of a society
leader’s home was converted into an
outdoor sitting room one eveninj;
not iPf ago. Cushions were scat-
tered about in abundance, while just
inside the hall door stood a table on
which were cool drinks, ci|jm an<
cigarettes. These were lib®
consumed by the family and gucs
and the whole scene formed an in-
viting picture to peo^^acroaa tha
way.
As “IiMlitsr.”
This ia the name by which is da-
ngnated an andless chain elevator
In New York for carrying passen-
gers from the street to a station of
in elevated railroad. It ia unlike-
ly that this name will be in use long.
Already “scaler” has been suggested
is a substitute, and it is not bad.
The first one has been built at Fifty-
ninth street and Third avenue, on
the aide of tha track for downtown
trains. It is now ready for ser-
vice. The power that operates it it
electricity. The whole Second ave-
nue line is being equipped with
dectrical motor power, so that it is
Unite convenient to use it for the
'‘scalers” that are to be erected at
many, perhaps all, stations. It is
found that the labor of mounting
the stain to the elevated trains in-
duces many to prefer the surface
jars. This patronage, which left the
elevated line* when the surface sys-
tem was improved, the elevated
roads hope to regain by the new de-
rice. There is no descending
‘scaler” supplied, since going down
the stairs is a comparatively easy
matter; therefore, stairs are retain-
ed on one corner, which will serve
ilso for the nervous folk who do
not like to trust themselves to a
“scaler.”
Philadelphia's Basyl
There are many things peculiar
to Philadelphia that attract the at-
tention of visitors from other cities,
bnt scarcely anything else calls
forth more comment than the train-
gular shaped mirrors placed in the
second story windows of so many
houses. These “busy bodies,” as
they are called, belong distinctly to
Philadelphia. In no other city are
they known. Two men werV rid-
ing downtown in a Fifteenth street
car the other day, the Record says,
and they started to count the “buev-
bodies,” each taking a different ride
of the street. In eight blocks they
had counted 161, sixty-sight on the
east ride of the street and eighty-
three on the west side. A great
many of the houses weea closed, too.
P# LELARDOUX,
ARCHITECT,
Box 265. Denison, Texas.
J. T. SUGGS,
Attorney-at-Law and Notary Public.
COLLECTIONS. . . DEPOSITIONS.
Local Attorney Dun Mercantile Agency,
Room* 1-3, west stairway, Muller Block.
Phone 162-4.
MKT
r
AL*XANDER CAMPBELL,
OLD RELIABLE GROCERY.
Freah Country Produce a Specialty, and
always wanted.
SAN ANTONIO,
p* via
WACO, S. A. A A. P. and SOU. RAC.,
AND TO
Austin.
VIA ELGIN AND H.AT.C.
Through Tourist Sleepers
CALIFORNIA,
Vi* SAN ANTONIO and SOU. RAC.
JOHN HOLDEN,
BLACKSMITHING
GxnxeaL
Rzpaansa.
Hoksz-Shozixo
A SPECIALTY
Shop: 204 W. Chestnut Stkxkt.
w. a. KNAUK
KNA
Denison Foun
urt A
adrytt,
H. 6 HOWZ.
HOWE,
& Machine Shops.
Had to Withdraw Him.
The Rev. Mr. Alcott, of Elgin,
111., who knew Lincoln in Spring-
field, tells of seeing him coming
away from church unusually early
one Sunday morning. “The ser-
mon could not have been more than
half through,” says Mr. Alcott
“Hjg son, ‘Tad,’ was slung across
transformation in
•IMSTJ primitive
Kxaastaatlsa Baildiags.
A notable illustration of the hn
portance attached to examination!
in English education ia given in th<
fact that Bristol university collegt
ha* juet spent (30,000 on a buildinj
to be tried exclusively for examina
tion purposes. An American col
lege would think that the monej
could be better spent in many differ
eat way*. However, Oxford ipen
^jjUhi^feft arm like a pair of saddle
bags, and Lincoln waa striding along
with long and deliberate steps to-
ward his home. On one of the
street corners he encountered a
group of his fellow townsmen. Lin-
coln anticipated the question which
was about to be put by the group,
and, taking his figure of speech
from practices with which they
were only too familiar, said; “Gen-
tlemen, I entered this colt, bnt he
kicked around to I had to withdraw
him."
Lord Kssiril's Saltier Boy.
The youngest son of the late Lord
Russell sailed for South Africa early
in the year as a lieutenant in the
Royal artillery. The occasion was
marked by one of. those intimate
touches of family; affection which
•xcite universal sympathy. As the
great troopship swung slowly from
her mooring the lord chief: justice,
standing on the quay, failed to dre-
ary his son among the crowd'd faces
that lined the bulwarks. At last he
gave a shrill whistle, using his fing-
sre in a manner well known to
tehool-boy*, and the evidently fa-
miliar cadi quickly brought young
Suasell to the side of the ship to
wave farewell. The touch of na-
ture evoked a hearty cheer from all
who witnessed it.
Blood.
We live by our blood, and on
it We thrive or starve, as
our blood is rich or poor.
There is nothing else to live
on or by.
When strength is full and
spirits high, we are being re-
freshed, bone muscle and brain,
in body and mind, nrith con-
tinual flow of rich blOod.
This is health.
When weak; in low spirits,
> cheer, no spring, when
not rest and sleep is
sleep, we are starred ;our blood
is poor; there is little nutri-
ment in it 4
Back of the blood; is food,
to keep the blood rich- When
it fails, take Scott's Emulsion
of Cod Liver Oil.** It sets the
whole body going again—man
woman and child.
Execute all work pertaining to foe bual-
413 to 417 W. Caxsthut St-
Quickest and Bank Una to
MEXICO.
“KATY FLYER"
St. teas. Cheap, Hush City.
ALL TRAINS HAVE
FREE KATY CHAIR CARS and
BUFFET SLCCRCRS.
M., K. 4 T. THEE CARD.
MAIN LINE.
SOUTH BOUND-AXJUVX8 .
No. i----—........... ... 12:05 p. m
No. 3-----------; 2:20a. aa
No. w-------------- _ 4:15 p. m
No. s-----------5:00 p. ir
<J«HE DENISON PHARMACY,
322 Main Street.
^Prescriptions a Specialty.
Cbaet.es D. Kingston, Pkop’k.
JOE BRUTSCHE,
INSURANCE.
Office: 122 Main Street.
DEPARTS,
NO. I__
No. 3—
No. 15..
-12:45 p. at
- 2:45 a. m
- 5:20 p.m
No. 2
No. 4
No
NORTH SOUND—ARRIVES. *7
___i---2:ojp. m
---------3 :oo a. ra
16_______11: to a. m
DEPARTS.
No. a—
No. 4__
No. 60-
No. 6—
- 3:3«>p.m
- 3 30 »- m
_ 7*0*. m
.11:30 a. m
MINEOLA, GREENVILLE AND DAL-
LAS DIVISIONS.
g R. BIRCH,
PHYSICIAN.
OHce at Hanna A Son'*
Residence, No. 715 Weet Day
No. 6-
No. 32
No.
No.
&
SOUTHBOUND—DEPARTS.
-11:20 A. m
- 3»S P m
- 3:i5
_ 4:00 p.m
Store.
No. 31 _
No. 33..
No. 87-
kJ
m
r«>P- m
-12:40p as
- 2 .40 a. m
- 8:45 a. aa
t. M. STAND IP RR.
LOUIS D. RPPSTRZN.
STANDIFER A EPPSTEIN,
Attorneys at Law,
18 Main St., up-stairs, Denison,
Texas.
GAINESVILLE AND HENRIETTA
DIVISION.
No. 68, east-bound, arrive*- 7:45 p. m
No. 67, west-bound, departs—
SHERMAN BRANCH.
No. 21-
No. 23-
No. as-
Take your laudry to the Denison
Steam Laundry. Yon will be
4TO415 Peart Sntt, Mew Teak.
janaRdtuK _
ATENTS
- 7 -44 «• m
-.11:25 a. m
- ***5^*
- 3:3o P- m
No, 27-
5:>5 p.m
NORTH BOUND—LEAVES SHERMAN.
No. 22---------- 10:30 a. 1
jC. A. SNOW A CO.
B06K+BIDDING
No. 24-
No. 26-
No. ;
No. 30-
No*. 31 and 33, south bound, sad Nos.
32 and 14, north bound, run through
Greenville, Dallas and Wsxshschie, be-
Deniaon and Hillsboro without
-12:05 p. 1
*••45 P-m
4:20 p. aa
6:05 p. m
H. * T. 0. TIME QABD.
No. 1-
No. 3-
No. 13-
D STARTS.
No. 2.-.
No. 4—
lo iop. m
-it -.k a. m
6:30 s. m
3:i5pm
izlz
-1235 p.m
SAM HARGREAVES
wmmmm. .allab toab!
Ptatttn
CUBAN OIL cwrea
■
~.;y
TO:; *
tfcfililgfc
Mi
AS®
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 26, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 14, 1900, newspaper, October 14, 1900; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth571459/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.