The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 47, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 14, 1897 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 26 x 20 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
EVHERY LOAF of
OUR BREAD
Congress has passed a bill which
J G. COLLINS,
WATCHMAKER
AND JEWELER,
21B Main Street, Denieon, Tex.
Watchmaking, Diamond Srrr»o
Engraving a Specialty.
are taxed out of all proportion to provides tor the destruction ot the
other property. The percentage of °ld fort property so long used at
taxes to net earnings have increased Ft. Smith for the U. S. court,
since 1880 from 4.34 per cent to Thousands of Territory people will
11.37 per cent. Tyranical as rail- remember those old walls long after
road managers are this is not square! *hey are gone, for weary days were
dealing. spent there by many who were un-
Last year the Sue* canal earned fortunate enough to be witnesses.
$16,000,000. A farmer in the Washita V alley,
Large exports of leather are now Chickasaw nation, has computed
being made. ‘he cost of producing a bushel of
Cotton mills in China and Japan corn in his locality and places the
pay to per cent profit on the invest* hgures St 15 cents, while on a
ment. ■ Seven new mills with 335, bushel of wheat he estimates 28
000 spindles are being built in China cents as the cost to produce.
1 by foreign capital. lennison McClure was killed by
Large quantities of walnut are a freight train on the Santa Fe near
being exported from the mountains his home at Pauls Valley Saturday
of eastern Kentucky in logs. There morning. He had been playing
is one tree standing in that section 9 card* in ‘he town and started lor his
feet in diameter. home ahout 5 a. m. His body was
Georgia gold mines are attract discovered by the engineer on the
ing the attention of capitalists. ‘rain following the one which killed
Users of wood are satisfied that him. Both legs were cut off and
kiln dried lumber lasts longer than his stomach pierced so that his
air dried. A great deal of lumber bowels protruded. He leaves a
is being made at Southern mills. wife a«»d ‘hree children. McClure j
There is a great t^lk about the » ‘he man who killed Joe Paul
Peruvian oil fields. The Pennsyl- about ‘wo years ago, for which he
vania oil field is only 350 square was acquitted last November by the
miles. The Peruvian is said to be lribal cour‘ “‘ Tishomingo. His is
7.000 miles. Out of 49 wells bored, tbe ‘hird in • chain of tragic deaths,
34 are spouting oil, some of them J°« Faul having killed his father,
30.000 gallons a day, and Engl sh 8am Paul, at the Valley some years
capital is rush ng in. ago.—Purcell Register.
New industries are coming. The Washington, Feb. 38.—The
c*ton seed oil industry employs senate at 11 :ao to-night passed the
$40,000,000. The pith of corn Indian appropriation bill after
stalks is to be made into a material striking out all of the Platt provis-
that will have a stronger resisting ions excepting that relating to juria-
power than steel and be used as a diction of the United States court,
defensive material for war ships. An amendment transferring the
The steamship Fortuna will soon jurisdiction of the Indian courts to
sail from Philadelphia with 44 loco the United States courts was offered
motives for Japan by way of Suez by Senator Vest to-day and adop-
canal and Red Sea, 70 days to go. ted. The purpose is to let the
All. the cotton raised in the South Dawes commission go on with its
1 will soon be baled by patented work and comolete treaties with all
A WEEKLY SUMMARY 0F WHAT
TRANSPIRED TWENTY
YEARS AGO,
Passes under the eye of a scien-
tific bread balder. Hia skill and
knowledge has made our bread
the most satisfactory on the
market.
With Banning Commentaries When tbe
Incidents Suggest It.
litem* Klcaned Irom the Denieon DnllrNewe.l
FOR THE WEEKENDING MARCH II,
1877.
The News of March 4, stated
that Major Maughs, Major Winn,
J. M. Sheeder, Wm. Armstrong,
Joe Cottreaux and others had just
returned from a week’s hunt in the
Nation loaded down with game___,.
The News of the same date an-
nounced the death on March 3 of
Emma, the two year old daughter
of Louis Hirschfield____________Mrs. L.
P. Marsh opened a kindergarten
103 W, Main Street.
T. SUGGS,
Attorney at Law and Notary Public.
Collections. Depositions.
Room 6, east stairway, Muller Block.
This establishment is
well stocked with the fin-
est brands of pure Wines
and Liqnors. Will close
out tbe entire stock whole-
sale and retail.
GOAL
Celebrated for
its great leavenig
strength and healthfulness. Assures the
food against ilium and all forms of
adulteration common to the cheap
b and*. Royal Baking Powdkr Co ,
New York.
The best McAlester Coal at the
lowest prices can be had now
by leaving your order at 401
Main Street.
^LBXANDER CAMPBELL,
OLD RELIABLE GROCERY,
Fresh Country Produce a Specialty, and
always wanted.
Corner Mam and Burnett.
J. LEEPER.
B. C. MURRAY,
PURITY AND
EXCELLENCE
LUMBER, DOORS,
SASH and BLINDS.
Sunday, March 14, 1S97.
•RELIABLE DENTISTRY*
At prices within the reach of every-
body. A visit to my dental office
will' convince the moat skeptical
that I am doing the very highest
grade of dental work known to the
science of dentistry. Artificial sets
OUR PHILADELPHIA LETTER.
News from all Quartan Condensed—What
the Workers are Doing—Busi-
nea Prospect*.
Corner Austin Ave. and Crawford St,
Tbe finest assortment of Pure,
Un adulters ted Wines and Liq-
uors. procured from all parts
of tbe world, and especially
Watch make! and Jeweler.
deal an or---
Watches, Clocks and Jewelry.
335 MAIM ST., DEM ISON, TEX,
and no help can come till they are made
perfectly strong and healthy in both
and function which is brougth
about in due time, by the use of Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription.
Prescribed for 30 years by Dr. Pierce.
on metal or rubber. Gold porce-
lain crowns and bridge work. At!
work warranted. No assistants.
March 11, 1897.
Tbe new immigration law wil
shut out 99 per cent of the illiterate
people from Hungary, Sicily, Po-
land and Southern Itsly and will
encourage Scandinavians, Germans,
Irish and English.
An immense power house has
just been completed at Columbia,
S. C., costing $700,000, develop-
ing io,8go horse power from water,
for manufacturing purposes.
| The business men of the eastern
states see symptoms of a boom and
they dread it.
The bankers are now anxious to
loan two hundred millions on good
security, but refuse railroads.
Representatives of London and
Paris banking interests will arrive
I here in April to look up good pay-
HOLDEN,
SomoeoooeoeeoeoeoooQQsec
Dr.YeideFs
THE
HUMPHREYS
137 MAIN ST., next to Star Store.
Shop: 304 W. Chestnut Stxset.
to. 1 Cures Fever.
lo. 2 “ Worms.
to. S “ Infants’ Diseases.
to. 4 “ Diarrhea.
lo. 8 “ Neuralgia.
to. 9 Cures Headache. J
lo. JO “ Dyspepsia.
lo. 11 “ Delayed Periods.
to. 12 “ Leuchorrea.
lo. 14 “ Skin Diseases.
lo. IB Cures Rheumatism.
to. 16 “ Malaria.
lo. 20 “ Whooping Cough
lo. 27 “ Kidney Diseases.
lo. SO “ Urinary Diseases
lo. 77 “ Colds and Grip.
Sold by Druggists, or sent prepaid 00
H.T. WALKER, D.D.S,
made Mr. R. L. Modie a pair of
$18 boots in payment of a bet on
the result of the presidential election.
Uhlig backed Tilden________The
Sherman Register of March 5, 1877,
contained tbe following under the
head ‘'Singular:’’ “Lucy Chile*,
tbe mulatto woman confined in the
county jail
Also Cleaning, Repairing and Dyeing.
MTAJlwork warranted.
Tanks & Casey,
W. B. KNACK. H. S. HOWE.
. KNAUR ft HOWE,
Denison Foundry & Machine Shops.
Esecute all work pertaining to the bust-
HOICE
tribution of their effects.
A very remarkable diacovery was
made by a party of miners on the
north side ot Rich Mountain, yes-
terday. While at work tunneling
into the bluff an unusually heavy
charge was put in and when set off
it broke into a subterranean pool of
water, which gushed through tbe
tunnel, completely filling it, and it
was several minutes before the
cavern was emptied. The men
afterwards explored the new-found
cave and state that it was at least
500 feet in length by about 30 feet
Wines *+*
•-^•Liquors-s*-
t
and Cigars
300,000 more wheels than last year.
After all the wool speculation is
a myth. Cotton growers make
more out of a small crop than a
large one. Silk manufacturers now
turn out better silk than is imported.
The hosiery manufacturers would
like to organize and restrict pro-
duction.
As soon as times improve rail-
road excursions to long distances
will be gotten up on a large scale at
low prices to induce persons of or-
dinary means to take trips.
There are over a hundred schemes
to build long trolley lines this year,
and to all appearances there will be
a rush for material and equipment.
There are very little prospects of
any improvement in tbe rate of
I wages in any lines and organized
labor hesitates to make demands.
The bard times show that a half
: billion bales leas of cotton were used
during die last year.
Last year we exported $33,000,-
tbe charge of murder-
ing her husband, gave birth to a
child last night. She had been
confined alone in a close cell for
twelve months.”______The follow-
ing item taken from the Denison
News of March 8 will probably in-
terest Louis Eppstein: “The ten-
year-old son of Mr. L. Eppstein
met with quite a serious accident
near the public school building
about noon Wednesday. He, with
several other boys, was playing ball,
when one of bia companions acci-
dentally hit him wuh a bat, knock-
ing him down and cutting an ugly
i gash. He was picked up insensible,
! and Dr. Anderson was summoned
who dressed the wound...___About
3 o’clock Wednesday morning
March 8, J. B. McLaughlin, pro-
prietor of the Crystal Palace saloon,
waa shot in the right breast by a
man from tbe Nation named John
Ball, the ball passing half round
the body, where it waa subsequently
found and extracted by Drs. Wood
and Wilson. It was a dose call for
McLaughlin. Ball waa arrested
I soon after by Policeman Burch but
I turned loose supposing that he had
the wrong man__Capt. Dan
Webster purchased Mr. T. L.
Reber’s interest in the Reber ft
Armstrong stationary business
March 8. Mr. Reber went to the
Black Hills soon after, and the laat
heard of him he was in New Mexi-
co:._____Cock fighting was one of
tbe frequent attractions in Denison
twenty years ago________The follow-
413 to 417 W. Cautmvt St.
Late physician in charge of the
Keeley Institute, Hot Springs, Ark.,
and the Tri-Eliriria Remedy Co.,
Memphis, Tenn., has opened a
THE SHORT LINE
10 HEW ORLEANS, MEMPHIS
and rotmra w tkb
SOUTHEAST.
in width and the height varying
from 3 to 30 feet. There appeared
to be no outlet until tunneled into.—
Mena News.
IMPORTANT—CHATTEL MORTGAGES.
Be it enacted by the senate and
house of representatives of America
in congress assembled. That sec-
tion forty-seven hundred and forty-
two of Mansfield’s Digest of the
Laws of Arkansas, heretofore put
in force in the Indian Territory, is
hereby amended by adding to said
section the following:
“Provided, That if the mort-
gagor is a non-resident of the Indian
j Territory the mortgage shall be re-
corded in the judicial district in
which the property was situated at
the time tbe mortgage is executed.
All mortgages of personalproperty
in the Indian Territory heretofore
executed and recorded in the judi-
cial district thereof in which the
property was situated at the time
they were executed are hereby vali-
dated.”
Approved February 3, 1897.
WICHITA ALLOTTING AGENTS.
Washington, March 3.—Presi-
dent Cleveland to-day appointed
Geo. H. Mills and William P.
Coleman allotting agents for the
G. G. RANDELL,
Office in Muller Block, Main St.
Popular betenoe.
Scientists believe that Nebraska,
Kansas and a part of the Indian
Territory are situated over an un-
derground sea.
In Kansas whole sections of land
have suddenly disappeared, leaving
only fathomless lakelets to mark
Billiard and pool tables. Elegant bar
luipments. Everything up to date. A
rictly first-class line of liquors sold over
000 worth of lumber.
In a few years tbe five table lands
on tbe plateaus of the Alleghany
Also for the treatment of all dis-
eases that come to this great health
resort, such as Rheumatism, Neu-J
ralgia, Nervous Disorders, Blood
diseases, Stomach and Liver Com-
plaints. His home treatment for1
Alcoholism or Drug Habit can be
■cut to any point by express. Cor-
respondence solicited, and strictly
confidential. 44-iy
bama will be covered with summer , ^atfapm'
and health resorts. location.
The Galveston jetties constitute Tb* ho?e, when browsing is
one of the greatest engineering en- ^,ded ent"ely bY the no.tnls in
terprises ever undertaken. No tbe cbo,c* of ProPer food- and Wind
work ever required more stone. borM:* *re never known to make a
Laat year $35,000,000 were in- m,*take ,n their diet.
use spider’s webs to make a finer cre*bon’ MfnY b«et,e8 can hft»
silk than ever silk worms made. 1 we,&bt to 5«? times the
Tbe Madagascar spider produces 1their own bodies.
100 yards of thread per hour. These M,oths ma/ bc1k|P‘from fur* *nd
spiders are to be raised in enormous woolens, L mted States entomolo-
quantities, but tbe fabric made out P8* L’ °’ Howard concludes, by
of this thread will be *tupendously cold 8tor*ge during the aummer at
cost]v J 40 to 42 degrees Fahrenheit.
France ha. 350 glass houses cm- L Glowworms are much more bril-
ploying 50,000 workmen. There hant,.when * «torm » coming than
are over ioo glass bouses in Pitts- at otbe.r 8e“on8’ Like many other
burg alone employing that number. “*•**"“ of ,nature> th’! cunou8
North Carolina has beaten all tbe I c‘rcnm‘Unce h“ never been ”
states of the South in cotton manu- P a,ne *
facture. The frog barometer, used in
Boston capitalists have just paid I Germany and Switzerland, con-
$400,000 for gold mining properties *>«» °i * of water, a frog and a
in Alaska. A great deal of elec- wooden stepladder. If the
tries 1 machinery is being ordered to comes out and aits on the steps,
operate California mines. ra‘n *• expected.
Middle-class merchants are fight- There is a wild flower in Turkey
ing tbe tendency to the centraliza-1tbat 18 tbe .exac‘ floral image of a
breast is
fort Worth, Dallas f 8t. Louis
AND THE EAST.
l'llXS DIRECT LINE
TO ALL POINTS IN
MIES ICO. NEW MEXICO. ARIZONA.
i HliQON ««< OALDOBEIA,
THROB ill Polina Buffet SLEEPING CARS
-» ETWEE*-
Dallas, Ft. Worth and St- Louts.
Hmm Orleans sad Denver,
Bt. Louis and Ban Fiaaetaoo.
Pm rates, tickets and all intonnaUoa apply to
or address any of the ticket agents or
C.P.FSGAN, GASTON MESLIEK,
Trsv. Pans. Ag't. Gon'l Pant. * Ticket Af‘t
L. 8. THORNE,
Osel Superintendent, DALLAS, TEXAS.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
Rooms 3,4 and 6, Muller Block, east
Wichita reservation in Oklahoma.
The reservation is a strip of land
twenty by thirty miles, and there
are 600 to 800 Indians on the allot
ting roll. Tbe work ia'to begin
tbe New. of March 9: “About
two weeks ago married, in Sherman,
Mr. Frank Sherburne and Mias
Belle Abner, .ister of Mr. C. W.
Patton,” both of Sherman. It waa
two weeks before tbe aly couple let
tbe public know the knot had been
tied_______The city levied the fol-
lowing tax for 1877: Advalorum
one-fourth of one per cent; bond tax
one-eighth of one per cent; poll tax
one dollar___It is ju.t 20 years
since John McCall was executed at
Yankton, N. D., for the murder of
Wild Bill (John B. Hickok.) Mc-
Call wa. a young man of about 25
years and died game-A lone
highwayman held up a stage coach
18 miles west of Waco March 7,
1877, and relieved the passengers of
about $130. He also rifled the
mail bags of the registered pack-
ages.
1 as
soon as the papers can be made out.
Bncklen’i Arnica Salve.
The Best Salve tn the world tor Cuts,
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever
Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chil-
blains, Corns and all Skin Eruptions, and
positively cures Piles, or no pay required.
Itis guaranteed to give perfect satisfac-
tion or money refunded. Price 25 cents
per box. For sale by T. B. Waldron, it
a new way to
GET THERE
ai8 Main St
humming bird; Tbe
green, the wings are a deep roae
color, tbe throat yellow, the head
and beak almost black.
Pies that will fill “that aching
void,” Pies that are whole-
some and good. Wk Guar-
antee the Purity.
lion of business. Large numbers
of small business men are being
driven out of business. Old busi-
ness methods are being upset and
new ones are coming in. Whole-
sale merchants are finding combi-
nations among their customers by
which they can buy direct from tbe
manufacturers.
There is a great deal of bracing
up in business. Prices were never
so low. Manufacturers and dealers
and jobbers are offering all sorts of
inducements to make business.
One thousand men at Johnstown,
Pa., have just set to work making
switches for railroads.
In England the daily output of
piss is 56,000,000; France, 20,000,-
000. In all Europe the production
is 86,000,000 a day. What becomes
of them ?
To get an idea of tbe wood pulp
industry imagine a pile of wood 4
feet wide and 4 feet high extending
from Boston to Chicago. That
much wood it ground up every
year to be made into paper in tbe
United States.’
Five tons of peanuts make 235
gallons refined oil, 175 gallons
crude oil, 3680 pounds of flour and
meal, 3300 pounds of stock feed.
Immense quantities of peanuts are
carried to France.
Sir Henry Leppel Griffin, a
financial expert, estimates the loss
to the people of India irom the de-
preciation of silver to be $47,000,-
OOO.
Tbe life insurance companies of
tbe United States have a capital of
$1,300,000,000.
A train is to be run from New
York to Chicago between dawn
and dusk, 1000 miles. _
mi _____I_____• _ 1 m
Beginning January 16th, 1897, and
every day thereafter, a
Sustained His Reputation.
Col. Temple Houston is in Guth-
rie taking an inventory of tbe legis-
lature, says the Enid Wave. While
making a short address to the sen-
ate, in making a gesture he : inad-
vertantly threw his right nand back
on his hip to rest it. In an instant
every senator ducked down behind
his chair and Clerk Mackey jumped
up, saying: ‘‘For God’s sake, Colo-
nel, don’t shoot.” ,
will leave
PARIS at 5:20 p. m.
DALLAS at 8:5o p. m.
CLEBURNE at 10:50 p. m.
FT. WORTH at 9:40 p. m.
Passengers from Fort Worth will
connect with sleeper at Cleburne.
Arriving at
Ban Antouio 8:40 a. an.
via
G. C. & S. F. to CAMERON,
S. A. & A. P. to FLATONIA,
SO, PAC. to SAN ANTONIO
One change only, with direct con-
nections for coach passengers at
CAMERON.
HOW’S THIS?
Greear Ce.
We offer One Hundred Dollars Re-
ward for any case of catarrh that cannot
be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY St CO., Props., Toledo,
Ohio.
We, the undersigned, have known F.
J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be-
lieve him to be perfectly honorable in all
business transactions and financially able
to carry out any obligation made by their
firm.
West & Traux, Wholesale Druggists,
Toledo, O-; Walden, Kinnan & Mar-
vin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood and mu-
cous surfaces of the system. Price 75c
per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Tes-
timonials free.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Will be found at office day and night.
INSURANCE.
A Sound Liver Makee a Well Man.
R. BIRCH,
Are you Bilious, Constipated or trou-
bled with Jaundice, Sick Headache, Bad
Taste in Mouth, Foul Breath, Coated
Tongue, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Hot Dry
Skin, Pain in Back and between the
Shoulders, Chills and Fever, etc. If you
have any of these symptoms, your Liver
is out of order, and your blood is slowly
being poisoned, because your liver does
not act properly. Herblne will cure any
JM6IEB BUFFET SLEEPERS
-AMO-
FREE RECLINING
KATY GHM CARS
ST. LO u 1 s,
CHICAGO,
KANSAS CITY
Sarsaparilla
Is the original Sarsaparilla, the
standard of the world. Other!
have imitated the remedy.
They can’t imitate the record:
50 Years of Cures
The business portion of the town
of Leonard, Fannjg county, waa
destroyed by fire Monday morning.
Tbe loss will aggregate $50,000.
AIimoIui ely
THE QUICKEST TIME
between
North Texas and San Antonio.
W. S. Keenan,
u. p. a. o. c. * s. f. r’t.
disorder of the Liver, Stomach or Bow-
els. It has no equal at a Liver Medicine.
Price 15 cents. Free trial bottles at T.
B Hanna & Sons.
Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher, wife
of the great preacher, died Monday
at Stanford, Conn., after a pro-
tracted illnesa.
The Roman Catholic church does
not sanction tbe marriage of a Cath-
olic to a Protestant, but it does uot
prohibit it. A priest will marry a
Roman Catholic to a Protestant, in
the church or out of it, but he in-
sists upon a promise from the
Protestant tbat the children result-
ing from the union shall be brought
up in tbe Catholic faith. Matri-
mony is looked upon by the Roman
Catholic church as one of the most
bolv sacraments of the church.
nil la Tow Opportunity.
On nedpt of ten cents, cash or stamps,
a generous sample will be mailed of the
most popular Catarrh and Hay Fever Cure
(Ely’s Cream Balm) anffieient to demon-
strate the great merits of the remedy.
ELY BROTHERS,
66 Warm 8k. New York City.
Bev. John Reid, Jr., of Great Falk,Monk,
JOHN DONALDSON,
-ATTORNEY-
Washington, D. C.
Applications for Office Briefed.
Solicitor of Claims and Pensions.
43-81
Electric Hitters.
Electric Bitters is a medicine suited-for
any season, but perhaps more generally
needed in the spring, when the languid
exhausted feeling prevails, when the liver
is torpid and sluggish and the need of a
tonic and alterative is felt. A prompt use
of this medicine has often everted long
aqA perhaps fatal bilious fevers. No
mr icine will act more surely in couafom
east, mamnEST.
First Glass Meals
•an emphasise his statement, “It is a pari-
tive euro for catarrh if used as directed.”—
Bar. Francis W. Poole. Pastor Central Pros.
Church, Helena, Mont.
Wanted—j
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 47, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 14, 1897, newspaper, March 14, 1897; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth571951/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.