The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 50, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 18, 1886 Page: 2 of 7
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The Boeton Herald rays, the story
comes from Albany that President
Cleveland is engaged to marry Mias
Van Vechten, a young lady who
may justly lay claim to being the
social leader of the capital ot the
state of New York. The lady is
tall and most beautiful in lace and
figure, and she has many charms
and graces of manner, while the
circle in which she moves is one of
the most exclusive in the United
States.
doming News of last Sunday, has
Men carefully read. In this docu-
ment we had every reason to expect
to find some attempt at proving the
early origin and authenticity of the
rour gospels, and something at least
offered in substantiation of the claim
that these gospels were written by
men under the guidance of divine
inspiration. This is the character of
reply our article referred to by him
required, if any at all. But after
B. F. AVERY & SONS’
stantiation. He says, **1 feel that
the authority and origin of the gos-
pels rest upon no flimsy foundation.”
ndeed. That being so then why,
;»ray, not give this foundation, the
very thing the editor of this paper
baa asked for ? 1 his is followed
with the confident statement that ‘‘it
ias been fully proved, [by whom ?]
and is generally admitted [?] that
by the middle of the second century
i[certainly before A. D. 175) the
1 our gospels, as we mow hate them,
were generally received as sacred
books among the Christians.” And
yet Iren»us is the first writer who
names the four gospels, and Theo-
>belus (168 to 181, or later) is the
irst writer that quotes from the
evangelists by name! Davidson
building. Some of the city papers
placed the total number at from
15,000 to so,ooo. Several speeches
were made and we see in the list the
notorious A. P. Parsons, formerly
of Texas, a member of the legisla-
ture undfr the reign of E. J. Davis.
Everything passed of quietly with-
out the interference of the police.
A resolution was adopted denounc-
ing Gould for perfidity.
FerPa!o§rMlS£
SUNDAY, APRIL 18, 1886.
B. C. MURRAY,
This famous remedy most happily meets the de-
mand of the age tor woman's peculiar sad multi-
form afflictions. It is s remade lor WOMAN
ONI.T, sad for one SPECIAL CLASS of her die-
eases. It is a specific for certain dircemard condi-
tions of the womb, and proposes to w control the
Menstrual Fsections as to regulate all the de-
rangements and irregularities arner monthly Sick-
ness. The proprietors claim for this remedy no
other medical property.
Prof. Foster, a meteorologist, late
of Iowa, makes the following pre-
dictions through the Leavenworth
Times: “Great storms will passover
the United States in rapid succession
during the last ten days of April and
all shipping interests especially in
the northern states, should prepare
their property from heavy rains,
high winds, floods, sleet, snows and
extreme changes of the weather on
land and from dangerous gales ou
the lakes and Atlantic coast. The
heaviest ol these storms will be over
the Mississippi basin about April
25th or 26th, west of that earlier and
east later.” Mr. Foster was the
author of the prediction that great
storms would pass over the lakes and
northeastern states on February 25th
and a6th.
Up to quite recent times the great
prejudice existing amdng Christians
to cremation was no doubt due to a
belief in the final resurrection of the
body, but during the last century
the more spiritual views of Paul have
gradually engrafted themselves upon
,popular belief, hence it is not so
surprising that we read in the papers
that the Protestant clergy of Milwau-
kee, Mich , “are almost a unit in
favor of burning the dead.” The
question of bow We shall dispose of
the dead, in this scientific and prac-
tical age, is simply a matter of san-
itary well being. It the clergy gen-
erally endorse the reform, and it is
unquestionably such, it will not be
many years before cremation will be
generally adopted in the larger
cities. It has been the popular
opinion that the laity are more ready
Farm and Spring Wagons,
Aay tanner who will tend u» $ J .oo for
Um GABBTTBsa for one year, and pay np
past Indebtnese, if any, will be furnished
the Teas* Farm A Ranch one year free.
The Farm A Ranch Is a large and hand-
somely printed paper, well edited, and
)uet such a publication as every tanner
pught to read. Recollect the payment of
only two dollars will secure both the Sum-
day Gazsttskk and this excellent far-
mers journal tor one year.
Bradfield’s Female Regulator
DENISON. TEXAS.
Is strictly a Vegetable Compound, and is the
studied prescription of s most learned physician
whose specialty was WOMAN, and whose lama
became enviable and boundless because ot his
wonderful success in the treatment and cure of fe-
male complaints. Suffering woman, it will re-i
lieve von ol nearly all the complaints peculiar So
your sex.
Sold by all druggists. Send for our treaties on
the Health and Happiness ol Woman, mailed (free
which gives all particulars.
THE BRADFIELD REGULATORCO.,
Box a8, Atlanta, Ga.
was termed “scripture” before A.
D. 170, and “no collection of New
Testament literature like the present
one, supposed to possess divine au-
thority, existed before A. D. 200.”
{[Waite says a few years earlier.)
While the same author, Davidson,
says the Gospel of John was not
written before 150, the very date
when our Reverend critic assures us
it has been “fully proved” the four
gospels were generally received as
sacrecl books! Even Papias didn't
know ot the sacredness of these
books, (A. D. 150) for he held that
“the information which he could de-
rive from books was not so profitable
as that which was preserved in a
living tradition.”
“They possessed [[in A. D. 175)
probably 60,000 MSS. of the gos-
pels.” So says Rev. Mr. Cousins,
and he might as well have said 60,-
000,000, so far as any testimony is
concerned to substantiate it. Waite,
in his “Christian Religion to A. D.
Th* king of the Sandwich Islands
is in fashion—he has ordered the
Chinese to “git."
A “man with but one iden” lays
over the ideas of the majority of
mankind by just one majority.—Dal
las News.
Left* statistics place the number of
horned cattle in the Argentine re-
public, South America, at 18,000,-
000; sheep 140,000,000.
It is claimed as a recent discovery
that if the softest wood is subjected
to hydraulic pressure endways, it be-
comes so hard that it requires a cold
chisgel to split it.
The Fort Worth G axe tie is pub-
lishing the beat Sunday edition of
any paper in Texas (ouUide of the*
Gaxhttkkr. ) Its sixteen pages of
reading is the very latest and tike
cream at that.
A wing ot the Planters’ hotel in
St. Louie was partially destroyed by
fire Saturday, the 3rd inst. Four
sertant girls were suffocated by the
smoke before they could escape.
A St. Louis lady who discharged
her servant girl, was unable to get
another until she had made it all
right with the one she had dis-
charged, The boycott don’t appear
to go yet.
A woman who baa been voting
for eight years is sporting a fine
beard—on her chin. This is another
argument in favor of woman’s suff-
rage—or for bearded women.
O’Dair, McCom
Wholesale aad ]
G-mioici
Keep la Stock all Kinds ot
Staple and Fancy Gro
California Canned .Fruits,
Preserved Vegetables,
Prcseved Fruits,
Piokles, Plain and
accept it as that much proof, but
don’t say anything more about
“probable supposition,” if you
please.
To go over all of the objections
presented to Mr. Reynold’s article,
and give our own views fully, would
take more space than we can spare,
and besides Mr. Reynolds is abund-
antly able to take care of himself.
We will only say this in reply to
the query, “What do you offer us in
place of what you invite us to
doubt?” that we simply offer the
truth. If the gospels were not writ-
ten at the time and by the men in-
terested parties have claimed they
were, but long afterwards by no
one knows who, and consequently
are no more inspired than the writ-
ings ot Confucius or Mencius, it is
time that intelligent men and women
knew it. Never mmd the result.
Give us the facts. If we have been
deceived, let us be deceived no
longer. A good teaching is just as
good, if perchance it was taught
MADE TO ORDER.
-ALSO-
A Full Assortment
of Ready-Made
Custom Goods
constantly
on hand
AT LOWEST PRICES I
KEPT IN A METROPOLITAN
Denison, Texas.
W. B. Munson, President,
J. T. Munson, Vice President,
Edward Perry, Cashier.
W. B. Munson, J. T. Munson, T. V. Mud
John Sculiin, Jno. R. Carr, Edward Perry, Sam
OFFICERS
BUKOLEH’S ABHIOA SALVE.
The best salve In the world for cuts,
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevei
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi-
tively cures piles, or no pay required. It
Is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction
or money refunded. Price 35 cents per
box. For sale by Guiteau & Waldron.
Special Attention Given to Collections,
SAM HANNA. Vice-Prcs.
J. N. JOHNSON, Pm.
Denison City Bakery:
Austin Are., Resr Stax Store,
E. W. BIRKHAUSER, Prop’r.
DEALER IN
CotfeeiioMrics, Cake OrnwMQts, Etc.,
Tttsh tad hut Sited Dtlirtrtd Srttj Dtj.
Cakes and Pies Always on Hand and Furnished in
any quantity desired.
Try the New Bakery,
AND GET THE BEST.
tion ? Mr. Cousins seems to forget
that the formation of a New Testa-
ment Canon and the organization of
the Roman Catholic Church occurrec
at about the same period, near the
commencement of the third century,
and that as Origen tells us, “not
four gospels but very many were
written, out of which those we have
chosen and delivered to the
Irenaeus, (A. D. 19OJ
A French chemist claims that an
ounce of Citric acid will render a
half pint sea water drinkable. Chlo-
ride of silver ii precipitated and a
wholesome mineral water is pro-
*500,000
100,000
- 15,000
Authoriz d Captial,
Paid Up Capital,
Surplus Fund,
BEST ASSORTMENT
Guiteau & Waldr
cal AMnl A SB 11
Drug House of Deni
UNDER THE OPERA HOUSE,
No. 223 Main Street, Denison, 1
crRBcrroRS.
W. C. TIGNOR, A. W. ACHKSON,
SAMUEL HANNA, WILMOT SAEGE
B. W. CARTER, Tishomingo.
Transact a General Banking Business,
One million acres of grazing land
infMerceed, forty miles west of Sa-
bmt Pwk, on the Rio Grande, were
purchased recently by London capi-
talists. They will stock it with
20,000 cattle.'
From the evidence taken before
the coroner’s jury over the remains
ol the persons shot in St. Louis
recently, it appears that the first re-
port that the deputies filed without
Sffidtnt cause was correct.
were
churches.
Clement (A. D. 200) and Tertullian
(A. D. 200 to 210) were the fathers
who introduced the four gospels into
general circulation and laid the foun-
dations for Roman Catholic supre-
macy. As late as A. D. 430 Theo-
dolet, says he found himself “up-
wards of 200 such books [gospels[
held in honor among your churches
and collecting them all together put
them aside and introduced the gos-
pels of the four evangelists.” So
we see other books also were “valu-
ed highly,” and hence Mr. Cousins
can “decide for himself whether
these Christians were not entirely
mistaken” about these 200 books,
as well as the gospels; “whether
they had not all agreed to believe
something they knew, or ought to
know to be false, or agreed to pre-
father as a carpenter and miller
until fifty years old, when he entered
with his brotheis upon the manufac-
tu»: of stoves and plows. He built
his first scale in 1S30, and spent
many years thereafter in perfecting
it in all varieties. At the V lenna
Exposition he was made a Knight of
the Imperial Order of Francis
Joseph. Among his many benefac-
tions he at an expense of $200,000
built and endowed the St. Johns-
bury Academy, the finest institution
of its class in New England. He
leaves one son.
B. N. CARTE
Denison, Texas
WAPLES BROTHERS,
Lumber Merchants,
The Oldest Established Lumber Yard in Denison. Has on
hand the finest grades of Northern and
Native Lumber,
Laths, Shingles. Doors and Sash. Limey Cement Plaster % Hair
Best ^dClacodl Fasi.aa.-taa as Sjpffldaa-ty-
> A candidate tor magistrate in Da-
kota agreed, if elected, he would
charge only $1 as marrying fees, and
wait for his pay until there was a
“christening.” It is needless to say,
be was elected.
The “Master Workman,” a
Knights of Labor organ at Texar-
kana, run on the co-operative plan,
h*s been seised by creditors for past
due rents and closed out. The Fort
Worth Labor Siftings still holds
Aaheissr
ASSOCIATION
A recent copy of the Globe-Dem-
ocrat contained the following para-
graph in relation to Mr. Irons, which
will no doubt be read with interest:
“The chairman of No. 101 ex-
perienced a sensation yesterday quith,
different from those with which the1
strike has familiarized him, and yet
due to the publicity which the strike
has given him. lie received a letter
from a lady residing at 27th street
and Sth avenue, South Brooklyn,
N. Y., saying that she had seen his
name very frequently of late in the
New York Sun in connection with
the great strike, and inquiring
whether he was her brother, Martin
Irons, whom she had not seen for
thirty years. If so—the letter went
on to say—he was entitled to his
share of some money left by his
mother, who had died some years
‘ago At the time of the death of
the mother Mr. Irons’ whereabouts
were unknown, and his sister ap-
pearing to be sole heiress, got all
the money and invested it in the
house in which she now resides. She
wished to tell him that he was en-
titled to his share of the property
and could get it by applying to her
son a person may cure himself of
stammering by making an audible
note in expiration before each word.
A professional stammer-curer taught
his pupils to articulate “her” before
each word commencing with a con-
sonant, and his success was so great
he realised a fortune at the business.
LEMON ELIXIR
DEPOT * EXCHANGE
The Trial of McLaughlin.
A special from Fort Smith to the
Fort Worth Gazette, dated April
11, says the jury failed to agree in
the McLaughlin murder case. The
case will be tried again during, the
June term. The dispatch gives the
following particulars of the homi-
cide:
In this case it is charged that Mc-
Laughlin and James Wasson mur-
dered Henry Martin in the Chicka-
saw nation in November, 1SS1. Both
left the country, and were absent
nearly two years. In 1SS4 Wasson
killed Almirine Watkins, which
caused his arrest, the widow of
Watkins having given $1000 reward
for him. He was placed in jail
here, and being arraigned for the
murder of Martin, in conncection
with McLaughlin, was convicted,
and is now under sentence of death,
to-be executed the 23d of this month.
After Wasson’s conviction Mc-
Laughlin was arrested in Denison,
Texas, and on the trial just closed
the same evidence that convicted
Wasson was reproduced in this case,
and yet the jury could not agree.
McLaughlin is highly connected,
and he and Wesley Burney, of
Bumeyville, Chickasaw nation, are
brothers of Mrs. J. J. McAlister of
McAlister, Choctaw nation. Gov.
Burney was present at the trial.
A Prominent Minister Writes.
The New York Mercury recently
enlarged and changed forms and is
now one of the very best family pa-
pers that visit the Gazetteer office.
It il sixteen pages, four columns to
the page, is chuck full of, choice,
miscellanious reading. Every de-
partment is running over with matter
suited to every trade and profession.
A Commercial Advertiser’s Wash-
ington special states that in an inter-
view last week the Chinese Minister
said that unless the government dis-
misses Collector Hager for his ac-
tion toward the new Chinese Min-
ister China will cease to he friendly
toward the United States.
Dr. Mozley—Dear Sir: After ten years
of great suffering from indigestion or
dyspepsia with great nervous prostration
and biliousness, disordered kidneys and
constipation, I have been cured by four
bottles Ot your Lemon Elixir, and am
now a well man.
Rev. C. C. Davis,
Elder M. E. Church, South,
No. 28 Tatnall street, Atlanta, Ga.
LEMON HOT DROPS.
Cures all Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness,
Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Pneumonia and
all Throat and Lung diseases except
Consumption, which disease it palliates
and greatly relieves. 25 cents.
Lemon Elixir and Lemon Hot Drops
sold by druggists. Prepared by H. Moz-
ley, M. D., Atlanta, Ga. 48-im
Everything New and First-Class. Bar Supplied with the
Finest Winks, Liquors, Etc., to be found
IN THE WORLD.
TABLES^
A SPECIAL FEATURE *
Drop in and pass a few minutes while waiting for the train.
for it. Mr. Irons Was, of course,
greatly astonished to receive the
letter. He said its surmise to his
identity was correct, and he is now
—or shortly will be—richer by three
or four thousand dollars than when
the strike began.
Great as are the uses of advertis-
ing, the wonderful success of St. Ja-
cobs Oil has been due chiefly to its
power in healing pain. The true
secret of success, after all, is merit.
BROWN & HCERR,
of them or so much as mentions
them, notwithstanding the fathers of
the first century quote freely from
other Christian books as authority,
and themselves wrote epistles.
But, says Rev. Mr. Cousins, “the
earliest church fathers plainly re-
garded these writings (the gospels)
as of equal authority with the spoken
teaching of their writers [who were
their writers?] and therefore clothed
with divine authority.” This is but
stating the very question at issue.
The Gazetteer denies that the
“earliest fathers” even so much as
ever heard of our gospels, he affirms
they recognized them as of divine
authority. And here we again call
tor the proof.
Five cents Key West cigars at j “We do not find any real trace
Denison Caudv Works. Try them. * even of the existence of our gospels
I will dispose of my general mer-
chandise establishment at Fisher-
town, I. T., at cost. This is one of
the best stands in the Indian Terri-
tory, enjoying the trade as it does,
of a large scope of country. Stock
fresh and in good shape. Having
been in active business for more
than thirty years, I am now desirous
of retiring. All information cheer-
fully given. Address,
William Fisher,
41-4m Fishertown, I. T.
We see by the Dallas News that
the Dallas brewery which was form-
ally opened with such a grand dis-
play a year or so ago, has been sold
to satisfy the claims of creditors.
Mr- u. F Short, for Mr. P; J. But-
ler. bid $10,000, and was followed
by Mr. Wolfe of Chicago ^-ith a bid
of $50,000, who holds a claim for
that amount against the property.
It was knocker* down to him.
The Excelsior!—Hew brick,
Has Removed to the Elegant New Brick
Livery Building
Comer Main Street and Burnett Avenue,
Wall Paper! Wall Paper i!
You are all invited to call at
Guiteau & Waldron’s, and look at
the new designs in wall paper. Just
too nice for anything.
Astronomers are constantly study-
ing the movements of the stars. Red
Star Cough Cure movements are
prompt. It removes the worst cough
at once. Twenty-five cents.
a Specialty
ra.
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 50, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 18, 1886, newspaper, April 18, 1886; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth571953/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.