The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 20, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 14, 1890 Page: 2 of 4
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THB OLDRftT CHARTIMID COMMERCIAL SCHOOL
IN TEXAS.
Tgpswriting, Shorlbsnd sod Telegraphy. Leads
JR Sooth lo actual business ami office training.
Tuition, board, furnished tpsm, light and
nMn* ia private family, three months 963i »**
months $115. Fine College jotunal free.
•I tf Address. [. W.MAHAN. President,
t. i. how,
Minufictyrar if >nd D.al.rIn
J’wtdag feetten:
B. C. MURRAY, - - Proprietor.
Sunday, Sept. 14, 1890.
Forty-one years ago a druggist
in Maine inserted an advertisement
of his business in the first issue of
the local paper. It has appeared
there without a single omission ever
since, and, is is hardly necessary to
say it, the druggist is rich.
During the warm weather yon
need an apetizer and strengthened
Try Cheatham’s Chill Tonic. Sold
by Guiteau A Waldron. 15-tf
It is claimed that Secretaries Win-
dom and Tracy “do not speak as
they pass by,” because of the as-
signment of a naval office by the
latter against the wishes of the for-
mer, to certain duties in connection
with the light house servicer
W
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
Ill Mail it. DEH130B. TEItS.
WHAT
icon s
EMULSION sr“
PI ID CP GOLDS
WUHW Wasting DiaiMM
Wonderful Flesh Producer
Many have gained one pound
per day by its use.
Soott’s Emulsion la not a se-
cret remedy. It oontains the
stimulating properties of the
Hypophosphites and pure Non*
wegian Cod Livor Oil, the po-
tency of both being largely
increased. It is used by Phy-
rlcL
h
aicians all over the worlt
PALATABLE At MILK*
Sold by all Druggists.
800TT * BOWNE, Ohemiita, N. 1
For sale by Bailey Si Cllpepper
-Denison, Tessa.
CAUTION 2
■ta bin EEme so
AOO-
qi-im
W. L, Dougina Hhoea are
wamBtei Bud every pair
nd pried Nlnmped on boitom.
000
*2^00
*0R
§8
Hi,
W. L DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE GENTLEMEN.
Ftsd Cm If Bad Laetd Waterproof Grain.
TBd oacellence and wearing qualities of this shoe
eaBaot bo letter shown than by the strong endorse
Bioata of tt# thousands of constant wearers.
*M*00 IImiIm Hand-sewed,
O atvHah dress Shoe which ©
lA»CO Hand-aewed Welt. A
^ unequalled for style and du
No Quinine, no Arsenic, no Stry
chnine, no Cinchanidia, no Mercury,
no roaring or buzzing in the head
Try Cheatham’s Chill Tonic. Sold
by Guiteau & Waldron. tf
The expenditure lor pensions for
the year ending June 30, as now
officially stated, amounted to $109,-
357>534* 1° th« previous year we
paid $87,644,779.11, while in the
year before that we paid $8o,zSS,-
SoSTT ______
"For summer complaint,” says
Ben L. Bear, a prominent druggist
of Los Angeles, Cal., “I know of
no remedy so sure and safe to use
as Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy.” Mr. Bear is
not alone in entertaining that opin-
ion, as, wherever known, the Rem-
edy is praised by all who use it.
For sale by Guiteau & Wal-
dron, and all druggists. ____37-tt
It is remarkable that in this coun-
try of boasted religious liberty,
Christians use the civil courts to
persecute other Christians who in-
sist upon obeying the btble by work-
ing six days in the week and resting
on the seventh. Men have actually
been fined and imprisoned in Ar-
kansas and Tennessee, by Christian
judges and juries, for this.
» . .. ■ , -----------------
A clear, beautiful complexion can
be produced by the use of Casca-
rine. 13 im
The Sherman Register says the
Gazetteer “out of natural spleen”
and to “display its wanton mali-
ciousness” stated that there were not
over twenty-five people in attend-
ance when Talmage lectured in that
burg. There is where the Register
is again off its base. The Gazet
tker only stated what the Denison
Journal said.
ah elegant and
1 oommenda Itself.
—^i M *... A fine calf 8ho*
a.
•3-" ‘d‘pte<i
All mad* In ConfiMa, Button and Lace.
*3 & *2 8HOES A,
Bat* been moat favorably received since Introduced
tou^ib^Ml(llftFthV*m*ntajrnake them superior
Aak your Dealer, and IT Sr rannot supply you lend
S!SlS5S^I«ki'"‘ln* “,”rt,*eS or •
w. L. DOtTll.AH, Bracktaa, Maas.
FOR SALfi BY
BKIRNE A STENSON,
DENHON, - TKXAS.
To oure Ulllou*ne*a, Sick Headache, ( onitt-
patlon, lialarut. Liver Complaints, take
the sale and certain remedy,
SMITH’S
BILE BEANS
-^•4SMALL Nine (Ml little Beane to the
Route). They a he tiik most l-onvamiat.
•ullable lor nil Ana.
V»R» Of either aiae. SSe. per Swill*.
KISSIN6i;i;l7-,° »W8tif
• • A* “** ,or 4 rts.-tsappsrs or sUatpkk
J.faMllTII4l8.llaAer»ar BHJtlilkANa, tT.itll M8
When the liver is not acting, the
entire system needs cleansing.There
is no medicine so well adapted to
this purpose as Cascarine. It is
mild, pleasant and certain in its
action. 13-im
A verdant fellow wrote to the
Marshal Star tor information where
he could purchase a “mineral
prong,” for discovering treasure
an instrument similar, we presume,
to Tom McCarthy’s “bob.” The
editor recommended the fellow to
employ a bologna sausage, as being
equally as effectual as a “fork” and
attording the advantage that it could
be eaten after he got tired of pros-
pecting.
Families not already supplied
should lose no time in procuring 1
bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Choi
era and Diarrhoea Remedy. It is
the only remedy that can always be
depended upon tor bowel complaint
in all its forms. 25 and 50 cent
bottles for sale by Guiteau &
Waldron, and all druggists. 37-tt
Representative Breckenridge, ol
Arkansas, has been illegally and un
justly deprived of his seat in the
house, but as he expressed it in the
closing words of his speech, “I take
an appeal to the people, regardless
of party, in the district I have the
honor to represent, on ffie broad
ground ol common honesty, and in
November they will reverse your
conclusion and rebuke the methods
by which you reached that conclu-
sion.”
TENTS
s
JJL and Tradv-Mark* obtained, and all Bat
Balnea* conducted for Madtrait Fact
F ** re°T^*n* InJmftlmMhan 'bow
from HI ashtngton.
toad model, drawing or photo., with demerit*
** Bdvltie, If iHitrntahie or not, free ol
r«e. Our fee not due till patent i* secured
|L PmmAM* “How to Obtain Patent*." with*
oe* orart rial client* in your State, countv,'or
Add re*#, J -
.C. A. SNOW & CO.
W Oppoiit* Patent 01* c«. Washington. D. C.
J. P. 8ABGEHT.
J. P. Sargent, the much talked of
head of the Brotherhood of Firemen,
was born in East Orange, Vermont,
in 1851. He has had a very checker-
ed career. He started in life as a
photographer, but drifted, later on,
to Arizona, where he enlisted in the
United States Cavalry, in which
corps, however, he did not remain
long, as he was honorably discharg-
ed. We then find him in the ser-
vice of the Southern Pacific Rail-
road as a wiper. He soon became
fireman and since 1882 he has
taken a prominent part in many
labor conventions. He now rules
over 20,000 men. organized in 3S4
lodges.
People who live in new countries
are liable to be prostrated l?y
malarial fevers. Inhabitants of cities,
by reason of bad drainage and un-
wholesome odors, suffer from simi-
lar diseases. Ayer’s Ague Cure is
warranted a specific for all malarial
poisons.
KAH8A8 DEMOCRATS AND BE8UB-
, MI8SI0NI8T8.
The democrats and resub-r.ission-
ists in Kansas have united on a tick-
et and adopted a platform. The
convention met at Wichita Tuesday.
Ex-Governor Charles Robinson, re-
publican, was nominated for gover-
nor by acclamation, and the remain-
der of the ticket are democrats.
The following resolutions were
adopted:
Resolved, that we, the represen-
tatives of the democratic party of
Kansas, in convention, declare:
First—Continued opposition to all
paternalism in government, state
and national affairs in consonance
with personal and political freedom.
Second—We deplore the tenden-
cy manifested by preacher politicians
who pose as leaders of the republi-
can party in this state to make belief
a test of eligibility for political pre-
ferment.
Third—We declare the federal
election bill the legitimate offspring
of the party which filched, the presi-
dency.
Fourth—We favor a tariff law
based upon public necessities and
not upon the greed of capital.
Fifth—We favor free coinage of
silver.
Sixth—We favor leaving the cir-
culating medium wholly in the hands
of the government.
Seventh—We favor liberal pen-
sion laws.
Eighth—We express sympathy
with labor in its struggle with the
insatiate money power, whether in
factory or farm.
Ninth—We oppose all sumptuary
legislation and demand an early re-
submission of the so-called prohibi-
tory amendment to a vote ot the
people, and an immediate repeal of
those laws passed in the interest of
prohibition, which tax a large por-
tion of our people to pay for their
deprivation of the priviledge and
inalienable right of local govern-
ment, and declare- unequivocally
for high license and local option.
A FIGHT WITH 8NAKE8.
Yesterday three young ladies of
Fulton county went after huckleber-
ries on Sliding Hill . mountain and
while busy with the berries found to
their alarm that they were surround-
ed by snakes. They each secured
clubs and bravely started in to ex-
terminate the reptiles. When they
had killed all they could find they
went home, told their story and
then fainted. David Johnson and
Lewis Wilham Ensley went to the
place spoken of by the girls and
found forty-nine snakes that had
been beaten to death by the young
ladies. The snakes were mostly of
the most dangerous kind, being
blowing vipers and deadly copper-
heads.—Pittsburg Dispatch.
I f TO STRtNC-THtN
r I™!1 WtA* AND
1 l PIMUTATED.
t
/1
DROMCOOLK’S
ENGLISH
IMALE BITTERS I
T0HIC * *URt c«"t ' OR kU L
"NM|TY MtOICAL ADVISER MAILECI
•riLita,
Cheatham’s Chill Tonic, purel
vegetable, guaranteed to cure a
forms of chills and fevers. Try it
Sold by Guiteau & Waldron, 15-tf
The scandal piles up on Commis-
missioner of Pensions Raum, but he
does not resign, nor do his super-
iors in office give any signs of ask
ing for his resignation, although
common decency should have caused
them to do so as soon as he unblush-
ingly acknowledged having borrow-
ed $12,000 on notes endorsed by
Pension Attorney Lemon. But
there is worse to come. He has
been engaged in some business tran-
sactions worse than the refrigerator
company, of which one of his would-
be judges —Representative Smyser,
of Ohio—is a large stockholder, and
Representative Cooper, who first
formulated the charges, is in pos-
session of the facts, and he intends
to see to it that the public has them,
even if the republicans on the white-
washing committee shall refuse to
investigate them.
Hall s Hair Kenewer enjoys a
world-wide reputation for restormg
the hair to bald heads and changing
gray hair to the original color of
youth.
There is now no longer a shadow
of a doubt as to what the M., K. ft
T. intends to do after reaching this
city. Arrangements are already be-
ing made to put an engineering
corps in the field between Sherman
and Dallas and to push the line right
on, while below Dallas the Hills-
boro branch is being pushed ahead,
and thus it will be seen that the gap
between Sherman and Waco will
soon be closed.--Sherman Register.
Gebratene Saucischen (Imported
Sausage), Sprotten (Smelts) in Oil*
Gaensebruat (Goose breaat), Rus-
sian Cavier, Etc. 14-tf.
“Have you boarded long at this
house?” inquired the new boarder
of the sour, dejected man sitting
next to him.
“About ten years.”
“I don’t see how you can stand
it. Why haven’t you left lone
ago?”
“No other place to go,” said the
other dismally. “The landlady’s
my wife.”—Chicago Tribune.
A RATTLESNAKE BABY.
The following is taken from a let-
ter written by a Wasco county lady.
After giving the name and date of a
child’s birth, she writes: “Where
the child’s fingers and toes ought to
have been there were rattlesnake’s
heads, and there was a small snake
grown from the top of its head and
hung down on its face. The head
of the snake was the child’s nose,
and whenever the baby moved the
snake on its face would raise up,
run out its tongue and hiss. The
bady only lived five hours, but the
snake part lived five hours longer.”
—Portland Oregonian.
Summer Complaint.—A drug-
gist at Britt, Hancock County,
Iowa, relates his experience with
this disease as follows: During the
summer of 1SS2, my little girl, two
years of age, was taken seriously ill
with summer complaint, so common
to children of that age, and after
being treated by a physician and
getting no better, I took from my
shelves a bottle of Chamberlain’s
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem-
edy. She felt relieved after the first
dose, and in three days was entirely
well.—Alex. Moir.
For sale by Guiteau & Waldron,
and all druggists. 37-tf
Alluding to the candidacy of Don
A. Bliss, the Sherman Register
says: “He is a good judge of law,
and is one ot the brightest legal
minds at this bar. He is in every
way worthy to fill the position of
district judge and will be an honor
to the office.”-
Tnm oar Re*uiar correspondent.
OUR PHILADELPHIA LETTER.
Philadelphia, Sept. 10, '90.
A Frenchman has invented a gun
that is fired off with carbonic acid
gas, which has a pressure of ^00
lbs. per square inch, and which fires
from 100 to 500 consecutive shots,
at a cost of 2 cents, without noise
or smoke, or smell. This will revo-
lutionize gunnery. All the kings
and emperors are talking about it.
The French are trying to adapt it to
aitillery.
The new town of Middlesborough,
Ky., is having erected buildings
which, when finished, will be worth
$1,605,000, and has buildings under
contract to be erected this fall, which
when finished, will be worth $926,-
ooo- A building company has been
organized in London, with $1,000,-
000, to be put into buildings in Mid-
dlesborough It is claimed that this
will soon be the greatest manufac-
turing town in the South.
An English syndicate tried to buy
the Oketenokee Swamp for $1.25
per acre. It has $2,000,000 worth
of good timber on it, and 500,000
acres underlaid with sulphate.
Georgia marble is being quarried
and shipped to all parts of the United
States, for public buildings.
There is no end to tne projections
of electric railroads in different parts
of the country. The electricians are
the busiest engineers in the country.
The business is expanding even
faster than it can be conveniently
kept up with.
The Southern people are advised
to raise hops, as being the most pro-
fitable crop they could raise. A
great many nurseries have been
started this year.
The time is not very far off, when
anal building will be entered upon
on a grand scale, all over the world.
Railroad building is a powerful
civilizing factor, but the canal is
bound to do as much in the future
as the railroads have done during
the past 40 years. One will supple-
ment the other. The trouble about
canals always has been, the want of
a proper motive power. Electricians
think they can solve the problem.
Cemented banks will lessen friction ;
steam power will probably be used
in some shape; countries can be in-
tersected with canals, which cannot
maintain railroads. Engineers can
tunnel canals through mountains also,
and so greatly lessen the cost of
transportation, that vast areas of
lands now worthless, will become
valuable.
Philadelphia locomotives are now
making 30 miles an hour between
Jerusalem and Jaffa; they will soon
be snorting all over the Holy Land.
Locomotive builders are getting
all the work they can do; car build-
ers are rushed with orders. The
Canadian Pacific nas just ordered
30 new locomotives. Ventilated
cars are in great demand, tor fruit.
There is going to be an immense
amount of bridge building in the
next twelve months. Nearly all the
railroad companies want bridge work
done, and the bridge iron makers
are crowded with work.
, Compressed air, instead of steam,
will probably be used in our cities
to operate machinery. The pipes
for its transmission will be laid three
feet below the surface; the air, be-
sides giving power, will ventilate
workshops. Engineers who have
examined it, say it will be a great
improvement over steam power.
A French engineer proposes to
build a ship railway and carry ships,
rigging and all, from Havre to Paris.
A project has been formed for the
building of a ship cant 1 from the
Bay of Fundy to the Gulf ol St.
Lawrence, 16 miles.
The Canadian Pacific Railroad
uses 100,000 tons of coal per annum
on its far Northwestern division
Every nation in Europe is keep-
ing its people in poverty, to build
fighting palaces, and mainta:n
enormous standing armies. The
“Trafalgar,” a British man ot war.
cost $3,400,000. When the people
come into power, they will stop all
such nonsense. Governments are
not worthy of support, which cannot
rule without robbing the people,
and building such expensive engines
of destruction.
The ruling classes of Europe evi
dently feel that their time for render
ing an account is not far off. Three
million men, who should shake
hands with each other, are standing
in hostile camps, idling away their
time, and waiting for the command
of some foci on a throne, to start to
killing each other.
The Italians are straining every
nerve to become a great commercial
nation. The common people are
fleeing from their homes, to foreign
countries. Italy has statesmen who
are able to teach even a republic
valuable lessons in republicanism
Germany has already made giant
strides in the direction of a higher
civilization. Her philosophers have
compelled British scholars to follow
their lead ; and her statesmen are in
structing the world in practical
statesmanship, which is in advance
of our own much vaunted states
manship.
Russia is coming to the front a
one of the leading powers of the
world. While the Tsar is hiding in
the corners of his palace, the thinkers
and writers of the Empire are mov-
ing the whole world with their
writings, and strong and stirring
appeals to the highest sentiment that
can actuate humanity. British
writers talk of the home, the parlor,
the race course, while Russian
writers talk of national well-being,
spiritual and moral development,
and direct the minds ot all readers
to the future of the race. "
The wage workers of Europe have
vastly more sense than the so-called
educated classes imagine; they are
thinking, but not aloud; they are
observing the movements ot labor
throughout the world; they are
recognizing the mistakes and short-
comings of the ruling classes. While
they are not waiting for the oppor-
tunity to strike a blow for freedom
and humanity, they know that the
time is bound to come, and that
some way or other, the armies and
navies which are created to keep
them in subjection, will become their
allies in a struggle to overturn all
tyranny and injustice.
The women of the world who
think and read, are convinced that
before many years pass, they will
become a more important factor in
the world’s business, legislation,
and development generally, than
they have ever been; that in some
way, duties and responsibilities will
devolve upon them, which have
never yet been met or performed,
and which will grow out of the
higher development that society at
large is making, with the aid of the
new civilizing factors and agencies
that invention and wealth have
brought to their aid.
ZMIOTOIST Sc
Ayer’s >
Sarsaparilla All Kinds of FreshMeats
The Best
Blood Medicine
.So say Leading i'hysirian*
and Druggists, and their opin-
ion is indorsed by thousands
cured by U of Scro/bla, Ec~
soma. Erysipelas, and other
diseases of the blood.
“Sjtr's Sarsaparilla baa won Its rrpo-
tattoo by yean of valuable aervlce to the
Community It u tk, bt.t." - K. 8. Lang,
Druggist. 212 Merrimack Lowell, Maas.
Dr- W. P. Wright. Taw raw Ford. Teon.,
says: “In my practice, I invariably pre-
scribe Ayer's Sarsaparilla lor cbrouic dis-
eases of the blood."
Dr. K K. Boyle, Third and Oxford sts.,
rhiladelphta, ra. writes: “For two yean
1 have presort lied Ayer's Sarsaparilla la
numerous instances, and I nod It highly
effleacious In the treatment of at) disorders
of Uie blood.”
L- M. Robinson, Pharmacist, Sabina. O.,
certifies : -Ayer’s Sarsaparilla has always
been a great seller. My customers Uilnk
there is no blood-purifier equal to IL"
“For many yean I was afflicted with
scrofulous running sores, which, at last bo-
came so bad the docton advised amputating
one of my legs to save my Ufe. I began
taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla and soon saw an
Improvement. After using about two doxen
bottles the sores were healed I continue to
take a few bottles of Uiis medicine each
year, for my blood, and am no longer trou-
bled with sores. I have tried other reputed
blood-purlflen, but none does to much good
as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla."_U A. Robinson.
Neal, Kansas.
Don’t fall to get a
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla
rRKPARKD BY
OR. J. C. AYER & CO., U«rf, Mass.
8oki by Druggists. *l,atsg». Worth s botU*.
A TERRACED MOUNTAIN.
During the recent visit ot Jesse R.
Grant and Chas. J. VVhimple to
Sonora, Mexico, they were much
struck with the sight of a terraced
mountain. It was located about
fifty miles southwest of Magdalena.
The mountain is circular in form,
about three-quarters of a mile in
diameter and terraced from base to
peak. The height of the terrace is
from ten to twelve feet, and in many
places is built of solid masonry. At
many other places it is cut out of
the solid rock. The roadway is
from fifteen to twentv feet in width,
starting at the base of the mountain
and coiling itself spiral-like to the
peak of the mountain, which is not
less than 1,200 feet higher than the
base ot the mountain. The cost of
the construction and cutting out of
the solid rock of this terraced road
must have been enormous, and the
remarkable feature of this wonder is
the state of its preservation. Here
and there masonry has yielded to
the crumbling influences of time,
but these are exceptions.
At the base of this terraced moun-
tain is a mighty rock, which has the
appearance of having been hewn out
of a solid rock, and weighs ioo tons
or more. It is placed at the mouth
of what appears to be the entrance
to this terraced mountain. Here an-
other query is suggested. Does this
door to the mountain open the way
to mineral treasure or to the shrine
of ancient religious devotees?
Again, does the teiraced road which
coils itself to the peak of the moun-
tain lead to the shrine of the ancient
vestal virgin who kept eternal watch
on the sacred fire which was never
suffered to die?
One thing is certain, there is a
wide field for those near at home
who wander far into Egypt and
Persia to study the mysteries of the
hidden past.—Tucson Sun.
Saved From Consumption
Several physicians predicted that Mr.
Asa B. Rowley, Druggist, ot Chicago,
would soon have consumption caused by
an aggravated case of Catarrh. Custom-
ers finally induced him to try Clarke’s
Extract of Flax [PapillonJ Catarrh Cure.
He says: “The result was unprece-
“ dented. I commenced to get well after
“ the Jirst application and am now, after
“a few weeks, entirely cured.” It will do
the same for you. Price $i.oo. Try
Clarke’s Flax Soap for the Skin and you
will use no other. All of Clarke’s Flax
remedies are for sale by T. B. Hanna
Son.
8TATI8TI08 OF T0RNAD0E8-
The tornado, with hardly an ex-
ception, occurs in the afternoon, just
after the hottest part ot the day.
The time of greatest frequency is
from 3130 to 5 o’clock. The tornado
season includes March, April, May,
June, July, August, and September,
but storms of this nature may occur
in any part of the year. The months
of greatest frequency, as determined
from a record ot 20S years, are
April, May, June, anil July. The
single month of greatest frequency
is May, April following next in
order. The State in which the
greatest number of tornadoes has
occurred is Missouri, followed next
in order by Kansas and Georgia. A
record of more than 500 tornadoes
and “windfalls” (i. e., paths of tor-
nadoes through forests) in Wiscon-
sin, considerably exceeds the num-
ber from any other State, but little
weight can be given this comparison,
owing to the want of thorough in-
vestigation of the subject of wind-
falls in other Stales. From a care-
ful investigation of the origin of tor-
nadoes and their geographical distri-
bution, there is every reason to be-
lieve that these storms were as fre-
quent and violent two hundred years
ago as now. Moreover, there ap-
pears to be no cause tor any unusual
change in the annual frequency of
tornadoes lor a like period to come.
—Lieut. John P. Finley in Septem-
ber Forum.
English Female Bitters is an iron ami
vegetable tonic, prepared by physicians,
specially tor the cure ol ills that afflict
the female sex. It builds up and
strengthens feeble, broken down and
worn out constitutions, it repairs
damages inflicted by years ot suffering,
regulates the whole system, adds iron to
the impoverished blood and makes per-
manent cures of long standing cases. It
cleanses and tones up the stomach, im-
parts a keen appetite, aids digestion, re-
lieves sick headache, acts gently upon
the liver, cures swimming and giddiness
of the head, pain in the side, palpitation
of the heart, and tinges the pale cheek
with the bloom ot health and beauty.
Can be used at all times by married and
single, for recent or chronic com-
plaints. 19 4t
THE ELECTRICAL TELEGRAPH.
In 1747 Bishop Watson sent the
discharge of a Leyden jar through
10,600 feet of wire, suspended on
poles on Shooter's Hill, and a plan
for an alphabetical telegrapji to be
worked by electricity appeared in
Scot’s Magazine for 1753, which,
however, seems never to have been
realized. At Geneva, ini’1774, a
telegraph line was erected J>y Les-
age, consisting of twenty-tour pith
ball electrotypes, each representing
a letter.—M. Fan-ant, Science Gos-
sip. a
mg
PURE LEAF LARD
Of their own rendering »lway» on hand. Orders solicited.
NatkoafBank^ Mivvreii' Two doon* Wwt of Suie
_ a* ]»a
Pettit St Waltz,
ARE THE -
LEADING PLUMBERS in the CITY
THEY ALNO 1>0
Tin and Galvanized Iron-Work.
Thay art at proaat aakla* bit Wna la PETTIT *v WALTZ
BATH TUBS. Bafar* Laariat Tov Mar.
15-jmo
Stats Natioaal Exchaags,
I1EUVHV MTBR, Propr. °
A FIRST-CLASS LIQUOR CAFK
Cixolcw WINES an. A CIOA.RS.
M m EW Door West of State National Bank
LADIES
We have opened at 111 Burnett Ave.,
in the Booth and Terry Building, a
first-class stock of Ladies* Fl rxish ixo
Crooi>9. We have the finest line of Underwear and Hosiery
every shown in the Date City. Our Silk Hose at $1 and
our Fancy Lisle Threads have created a furore of excite-
menv among the ladies. See them. We handle the cele-
brated 11. & S. Corskts and dabble a little in Millinery
Our Prices are right. ----
Sm HUDGENS & PROCTOR
before buying elsewhere.
and dabble a little in Millinery.
FURNISHINGS
Sniny SideBeer HalNRefFeshnent Parlor
Near the Exposition Building and Cotton Mill,
HEWITT Sc ZLlSArY, PROPS.
Thi» popular reaort ia the only Beer Hall on the line of the Rapid
Transit Railway. It is located near the Cotton Mill and 6nly tnree
Blocks from the Exposition Building.
IT IS A COOL and qUIET PLIC’E,
Where ladies and gentlemen can spend an hour pleasantly, as the beat
of order is preserved and no disreputable parties allowed on the premise*.
■6 u
fiSflRON
w TONIC
l Brawny Bargee at the Helm.
TSwer-S-simkEris
■V
22
(FIS
To-day it b raining ia torrent*. He knows be
experience the value of a ** Fish Brand Slacker.
It ie hie eob article of drew, end to him worth
t, ana
f itonr
nights when that ''blacker*' made uj,
ditterence between comfort and misery; and all far
drawers, shirt, coat, vest, and p
you tales by the hour of storms
nights when that “Slicker*’ ma
pants. He’ll tel
s lasting days and
made up the whole
TAKE
TO ALX POINTS
NORTH AND EA8T.
THKolC.ll TKAlMa CARRY
PULLMAN 8LEEPER8
Between Point* in Texas and
CHICAGO, 8T. LOUI8
—AND—
KAN8A8 CITY.
Close connection* In all ot the above
cities with fast trains of eastern and
northern lines, make the M., K.
it T. R'v the beat line lo
New Vort tostow, Msstreal aM SL I'tal
Geo. A. Eddy, # _.
!«. C. Cnoss, j •wefrers.
i.......... | eJWSftJBi,
H. P. Hl’GHKS. GASTON MKSt.IER
AalGra CU.VS G«n. Paa* A Ticket Aah.
TOUT wuiTH.rax uduu, wo.
JO. K. GRKKNH1LL, Ticket A*’i.
d.kisuk Tax**.
Milkmaid Brand
a mere tnfie from hit week's pay. Why don't
you buy ooe for yourself? To realize how little it
costs, think how long it lasts. It will outwear
four suits of clothes. Better get ooe to-day, be-
fore sou forget H. A day's delay may cause a
month of sickness, and coat a hundred timet the
price of a Sucker Beware of worthless imitations,
every earment stamped with the “ Fish Brand"
Trade Mark. Don’t accept any inferior cost when
you can have the “Fish Brand Sucker** delivered
without extra cost Particulars and illustrated cat-
alogue free.
A. J. TOWER, - Boston. Mass.
J. T. EVANS,
SHERMAN, .... TEXAS,
—WITH —
SECURITY, MORTGAGE AND TRUST CO,
OF DALLAS. TEXAS.
Will make loan* on Farm, Ranch and |
L.BNTRALLV Located City Property.
Tint's Pills
Regulate The Bowels.
Ceetlveeese deraegee Ike efemle eye>
inns sad begets dlssaees, sorb m
Sick Headache,
Dyipepsia, Fever*, Kidney Disease*,
Bilious Colic, Malaria, etc.
Nothing Better for Bikle*
FULL CREAM. FULL WEI6HT
BEST ON EARTH !
SOLD BY
H. Brooks and Hiber A Lowell.
5-M.
Teas«Pacific R'y.
Tail’s Fill* prodara l*f*l*r bahlt *f
bady and (aad dl|,allon. allbaat
wblrb, aa one raa aaja; good Drallb.
Sold Everywhere.
-LIFE-
-OK THE-
HON. JEFFERSON DAVIS
-B Y-
MRS. JEFFERSON DAVIS.
TO BE SOLD BY SUBM.RIPTION ONLY
The Prospectus and complete outfit for can I
massing will b« ready immediately.
A3RTTS WXSHnrc 2ESXEABLS 7EE&X7CBY
on this great work will please address, as soon ♦
u possible, the publishers,
BEDFORD COMPANY.
iS-i* East iSlh Street,
M-ti New York.
MCDOUGALL+HOTEL,
J. B. McDoogall k Co.,
T*« Grati Popular Route botwooa tk*
BAST <sc TX7"
Short Liac to
—1STEW ORLEANS^.
And All Points la
LOUISIANA. NEW MEXICO. ARIZONA
aad CALIFORNIA.
Favorite Lioc to tk* Norik. Kul and Root* East
DoobU Daly Lin* ol
POLLEAN PALACE ML.SSP1NO gab
'.krone* to St. Loot* via tk*
Iron Mountain Itont«.
Tom ticket* rrad via Teas* aad Fad*.
Katlwar. For map*, urn* table*. Uckola. rat*
aad all rcaoirad ti.lonaatioa call oa
W.C. RIGSBY,Tictat Afoot. Doaiaoa
. P. K EG \ V, Tra*. Paa*. Acvat, Dalta*. Teas*
b. w. McCullough, g p.it. a.cmiu.
IOHN A. GRANT Goa'! Emm*
F. I). MARSHALL, M. D.
UcnlMon, Texas.
lo Sherburne SuildiaR. othc* with Dr. W, H
Mill*. Keudcnc* ioj Ataitro*| Art. Hoar*—
SteiOLB , 11*4 sod } to 1 y. a u after and
till S a. m aad ta to l p. m at mtdoee*. Tele-
phone. ,* tf
BURTON, LINGO & 00.,
(Successors to WArus* Bros.)
JMBE_
Sash, Doors, Blinds,
OPIUM a
|l-WiWW«o t M t* i ■ tLLEY.M U
At lawia. lia O&ue Rat>* WRUateU 8A
lat'd VkUkiy SrMIr
gWjj at bone wtlh-
DENISON, -
PROPRIETORS,
- - - TEXAS
Thia Hotel is located at the Junction of theMis-
•o-ri Pacific and Houston S Tazaa Central Rail-
road.*, bat a step from the Depot, aad is supplied
with ail. the modern improvement* of a irat-claa*
hotel. All the
t are well furnished aad cat
pried, aad have perfect veatiiatioa; water la ele-
vated by *t*am ta every float, aad tba tables are
adtaowMdgtd to b« the boot (applied of say bean
M
LATH8,
Varda at Dcniaon.
ratio, Big Springs, M
oh It/tug, J£ i
XoILAR),
tr.
PAINT.
Vorth, Kl Paso, Colo-
us. V
, Dallas, Fort 1
id land and Pea
R- C. SHEARMAN ALEX RENNIE, G. L. BLACKFORD
Prraulcnt. \ KT l*TTMdrnt Canhiw
STATE NATIONAL BANK.
O
Pakf up Capital,
Surplus,
( X>c
•
• •
• •
m
■ 1V
• s •150,000
00,000
0
Alt'* U*RRle.
A. W. Ai'hfana,
A. K. ( olltaas.
It. C. Nh.
w. as.
J.C.
“THE •
root tank aad
Loom* up thia acaaon a* usual ta the f
of nobby tit rater* to th« largest and fi
FALL SUITINGS
ever brought 'o Denifloa. Ail th* fetching aovoltio* ia fabric ropr
tented and aatiafaction guaranteed.
A. B. JOHNSON, 108 Main 8tmt
TTHSTOILiZE BEN
-Dealer In New and Suceafl Hard
])itsonJji, ^'atekef ui Jewelry,
GENTLEMEN’S FINE GOLD
LADIES' FINE GOLD W.
•ftollxS aad lM*at«-«l Jnwelrr flat Verr Low
All kinds of Watches and Diamond* Bought.
Good assortment of OKNTS’ CLOTHING for Spring
and Summer Wear.
UNCLE BEN, 210 Main Street.
IF1. G-. PROAS,
SUMMER CJ A. RDE CIGARS,
OUR GREAT S CENT LEADERS.
No. HO MAIN NTREET.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
- OT DUBOIS
PAID DP CAPITAL, #150,000.
HUItPLUM and PROFITS, #05,000.
J. M. Foiu>, President, C. W. Ptl*, Cashier.
W. G. Mkgixmb, Vice President.
• BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
Sam Hanna, W. B. Munson, W. G. Meoinnia.
E. H. Linoo. Paul Wapleh. J. B. McDoioall,
W. P. Kick, J. M. Ford Sam.Star.
WAPLES, PLATTER & CO.
iiitfiin b Ha***, rums a varus
WHOLESALE GROCERS.
Now. 1041. IOH, lio At IUI Mali
Country Merchants would consult their interest by exam*
ining our good* and prices. Correspondence solicited.
B. N. CARTER,
ANHEU8ER.
LEMP and
BEER
MILWAUKEE
Office, Foot of Gandy St, at Railroad Track.
Grove s Tasteless Chill Tonic
II taM ataaaaat ta tha wu a. kewea
TbTawhUeat i a feat wtU tab. tt ami
i it u
h* tt- Barer
Cat fos flftlr hatf the anna af eebar
Chill Team
Be iflfllll aaaflad Me
It partta* the bleed eel i
n le ee lute a* eay Mb
FOE SALS UY
T. B. Hanna A Son and Gaitena ft Waldron.
ENGINES 110 BOILEOS CONSTRUCTEI Ml REPAIftEB.
Bras* Castings Made to Order. Circular Saws Ham-
mered and reground. Gin Saws Filed. Pumps ot nil kind#
Repaired. Electric Light Plants Machinery repaired.
Steam Jet Pumps and all kinds of finished Brass Goods for
Steam Fittings in stock. Belting, Shafting and Pullies.
8econd*Hand Engines Bought and Sold.
H* 109 Sooth Fannin Avenue, DENISON, TEXAS
Imk
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 20, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 14, 1890, newspaper, September 14, 1890; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth572305/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.