The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 5, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 23, 1897 Page: 3 of 4
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HORAN
j—— DEALER IN-
Saddles, Harness and Saddlers' Supplies.
Aina Curdled R Flue Line of
Baggies, Phaetons* Carts,
ANl) • ! *
fell IllfM
416 W. MAIN ST.
to finish the Pawpaw hill...............Let-
ters received from Jerry Nolan at
Kansas City report that he is much
better and will soon make a tripj
home............Sand and other material
for the new- Catholic church is being
delivered on the grounds_____________..Mil-
^^PITROIIIZE HOME INDUSTRY
TEXAS BREWIIG CO.
Brkwkus and Botti.khs,
•1
FORT WORTH, TEXIS.
rAlwfer-
Special Brews:
“Spaten Brau,” Standard.
. Capacity: ?
2,000 Kegs Dally.
!
n
GEORGE P. STANFORD, Agijnt,
XDEiTXSOTSr, TEXAS.
V - ! ■ I . | I . : ■: v | > -J
Aiiheiiser-Bosch Brewing Association.
I
Largest Capaeity
of any Brewery In the World.
Pure Malt and Hops used.
Nutifoloiis and- Wliolesome.
Highest Award World’s Fair, 1893.
MIKE COLLINS, Agent.
*
EV
r,
If.
PSOPjRIiyoRS THI
Mt Palace
327 MAIN STREET.
■w) ' I I
oe Wines. Liquors and Cigars.
Denison
♦ ♦
♦
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3
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—
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1 '
Fifty Years Ago.
President Polk in the White House chsir.
While in Lowell was Doctor Ayer;
Both were busy for human weal
One to govern and one to heal.
And. as a president’s power of will
6ometimes depends on a liver-pill,
Mr. Polk took Ayer’s Pilla I trow
For hia liver, 50 years ago.
Ayer’s Cathartic Pills
were designed to supply a
model purgative to people who
had so long injured themselves
with griping medicines. Being
carefully prepared and their in-
gredients adjusted to the exact
necessities of the bowels and
liver, their popularity was in-
stantaneous. That this popu-
larity has been maintained is
well marked in tbs medal
awarded these pills at the
World's Fair 1893.
50 Years of Cures.
LEZE. MAJESTY.
Bow . Subject of the Kin. of Belgium
I’layrri li.
It i* a curious refaction that men
who will face death w ith impunity are
yet absolutely aghast with fear when
brought into the presence of the great
ton Smith informs the .Gazetteer T" °f‘ho e"tb. "Much great divinity
that he read in a paper recently that
Dr. Wright had died in the peniten-
tiary at Rusk____________.J. D. Quinn
gave his check for $5000 to the
erection of the new Catholic edi-
fice ........ Snap Shots in Dallas
News remarks that a pitcher full of
beer has won or lost many a game
of ball.............The city is overrun
with tramps and beggars ........They
are talking of some farms in the
Chickasaw Nation that are going to
\ield thirty bushels of oats to the
acre.......... A stranger, giving the
name of Stroud, home Dallas, was
picked up on Lamar avenue last
night in a fainting spell.
^undai) ferttm
LOCAL CONDENSATIONS.
MONDAY, MAY IJ, 1S97.
Superintendent Fitzgerald of the
Water Work’s company has pre-
sented Chief ot Fire Departmeat
Linden with a gold medal. It was
worn by “jjjie” when he pas chief
of the department ....... Cal Cum-
mings, who used to be the king
bee of the colored gambling fra-
ternity in Denison, passed through
the other day in custody of an of-
ficer. Cal is wanted on various
charges...._______The Philharmonic
band entertained a fair audience last
night at the pavilion at the end of
the street car liue____.....Mrs' Edi-
son. at No. 521 East Sears street, is
very low with consumption________
Last year’s corn has commerced to
arrive in the city. It is worth 40
cents per bushel,.-.*........Farmers ; opened to settlement by September
state that the outlook for oats is the j il It is a prettv country well diver-
most promising in many years_____] sified with hills and valleys, prairie
The new police force has started in
well—..____The seating capacity of
TERRITOK* NEWS.
The maps of the Indian Territory
when they are finished will be the
most complete maps of any country
in the world. Besides giving what
all other maps give in the way of in-
formation they furnish you with au-
thentic data as to the altitude of each
town in the Territory. They take
up every public highway and railway
and every branch, creek, river,
bayou and lagoon. Should a road
be found entering the Cherokee na-
tion at its northern boundary this
road ^‘picked up" and carried to
its destination, or if it crosses the en-
tire Territory it is followed from
where it entered to its exit. All of
the farm houses in the Territory are
given and the names of the owners.
The ferries and fords are marked
down on* the map as are also the
bridges. Tile territorial buildings
and different public institutions of
every character are located on the
map. The altitude of every town
is given and the height of the differ-
ent mountains are all marked down,
together with the nature of the vege
tation coveting them.
The work in the Territory will
not be completed before Christmas,
if the appropriation bill should pass
immediately, and the chances are
that it will not until spring.
It will be perhaps a year before
correct maps of the Territory are
published,but when they are finished
they will be the most remarkable
work in topography ever attempted
in the United States.—South McAl-
ester Capital.
News received from Washington is
that the Wichita Reservation will be
thg new Catholic church edifice wfill
be 1000 instead of 100 as published
in the Gazetteer of last issue___
Irish poutos are rotting in thegroun “,c “• T
. t . . and has an admirable climate,
owing toi the excessive rains___________
A lady who visited the high school east and west, with an
and timber, numerous streams and
I a warm, geii.rous soil. There will
be homes for 3,000 or 4,000 people
on farms of 160 acres each beside
the population for towns. It lies
between the Canadian river, north,
and the Washity river on the south,
The
reservation is about 40 miles across,
’ * "" average
-DEALERS nr—
Distilled Water Ice.
FACTORY: Foot of Woodard St & R. Ft. Track.
fa., ■L'iTT'" j ——
E. ALEXANDER^—
Heal Estate and Rental Agent.
NOTART PUBLIC—^ l
■ _ ; M
Nlate Agent for the International Building and Loan
v Association. Money loanel at 6 lA per cent.
OFFICE, NO. 311 MAIN ST,.
building states that the walls are so width of about 23 miles. Seven or
badly cracked in some rooms that
the hand can be laid in tbe*seams.
The school buildings^ are sadly out
of repair_______ This was appearance
day in Justice Cutler’s court________
C. J. O’Maley was awarded $750
damages against the Denison and
Pacific suburban railway for ob-
structing a street:_________Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Keeler observed their wooden
wedding Saturday night at their
home on Munson street. There
quite a large gathering of
FURNITURE.
I k
ASS AND QUEENWARE,V,
CLOCKS AND WINDOW-SHADES,
V AND HOUSE FURNISHINGS
» CASH AND INSTALLMENTS.
New Coods Exchanged for Olid.
^ - ^W. C. MORRIS, Manager,
411 Main St , DENISON, TEXAS.
BURTON, LINGO A CO.
,t| (Successors to Waples Bxtos.)
vi TNmmwiWTrHmTanFfHimw
r ■ ■ . u I
Sash, Doors, Blinds, Molding*.
Laths, Lime, Paint.
Yards at Denisons Dallas, Fort Worth, El Paso,
1 - Colorado, Big Springs, Midland and Pe oe.
-’ ' _
triends___..-Quite a number of our
people went down to take a look at
Red river yesterday, which is the
highest stage of water for a number
of years _____W. L- Ashburn has
closed out his grocery house on
Main street. He told a Gazetteer
reporter that he did not take in
enough to pay rent____-The Union
News company has established its
headquarters here with E. A. Mor-
timer as local agent. R. N. Sexton,
ttaveling auditor,informs the Gazet-
teer (that this will be the headquar-
ters for the company from Galves-
ton to Kansas City. Twenty-two
employes will report here and make
Denison their home. The payroll
will aggregate $30 per man. Every
little helps, and. the Union News
company is an adjunct in t^Nlt direc-
s * - . W
tion. *
TUESDAY, MAy l8, 1897.
Messrs. Scholl and Chapman are
making arrangements to issue a free
advertising rfheet......a... Rennells, the
-young man who werjt crazy, has
been conveyed to the county jail.
He ha^ A mania for expectorating
tobacco juice Into his shoes, which
he removes for the purpose of mak-
ing impromptu cuspidors "of them_______
The chilly nights are hurting-.the
cotton plants___________The board of
county commissioners visited the
alm^ house Wednesday on a tour
of inspection______,___Everywhere they
are reporting the wheat prospects as
bright. The wealth distributing
ability of the wheat crop in North
Texas will equal the average potion
eight hundred Indians will be given
allotments on the land first, and the
rest is for the white settlers. Minco
is located on the Rock Island rail
road, just three-quarters of a mile
from the eastern border of the
Wichita Reservation.
The failure ttf congress to pass
the Indian appropriation bill has de-
layed the survey of the Indian Ter-
ritory a considerable period and will
entail an additional expense of no’t
less than $23,000 to complete the
work. The bungling attempts at
legislatidfe which characterize the
congress of the United States is an-
noying to many people and posi-
tively disastrous to many sections
and many enterprises. Public sen-
timent condemns the slow, snail-like
gait of our national legislature and
not infrequently disapproves of the
actions of the law-makers, when
finished. It seems to be of late al-
most an impossibility to get action
on the simplest formal measures
which are requisite for carrying on
the 1 machinery of the’government.
Appropriation bills are neglected
and \ buidened with monstrosities
that distort them and their object.
Can it be that the great lawgiving
branch ot the Federal government is
getting too bunglesome for effective
service?—Phoenix.
The sentiment of the Indians in
the Territory would seem to be
averse to ffte idea of ever having a
territor al form of government over
them. When they cease to exist as
a tribe they want to blossom forth
as a full. fledged state. They care
little to go through the transition
period that most states undetgo be-
fore becoming a factor in the Union.
There is much reason for this uni-
versal desire. A territorial form of
government is undesirable for the
Territory, and would be hazardous
for Territory interests. Territories
have been in the past, and! would
doubtless be in the future, political
toot balls, and if the political con-
ditions were not just favorable
might be barred out from the rights
and privileges and blessings of state
Tropd at the whim of a dominant
political -patty. When the tribal
forms of government cease to exist
and the final change comes we want
to see the Indian country ushered
into full and complete statehood
both because the Indians want it and
they deserve it. The popularity! of
the Ten itory is already sufficiently^
doth hedge a king” that few nten would
venture to assert their independence or
the right of their manhood if » sover-
eign’s view were opposed to theirs.
This is, no doubt, uu inheritance
from the days of feudalism, when the
monarch was indeed the liege lord of
all the people. Among the few, how-
ever, whose names have come down to
an admiring posterity because they bad
the stamina to rely on their own rights
and assert their own desires must be
mentioned the name of M. Van den -'
driesebe, a subject of the king of' Bel-
gium.
Some time ago he saw u piece of
ground at Ostend the position of which
pleased him. As luck had it, it chanced
to be directly in front of the king’s vil-
la. This fact, we may be sort , did not
make it less desirable in the gentleman’s
eyes. He called in the aid of architects
and builders and proceeded to erect a
house on it after his own heart Unfor-
tunately, however, his majesty looked
out of the windows of his villa one day
and found that his subject’s home, if it
had not emulated Aladdin's and sprung
up in a night, at all events interfered
with his view, as did that miraculous
structure with the view of the other
sovereign.
The king naturally remonstrated at
this want of consideration in a subject,
and, no doubt, expected that the remon-
strance would have good effect. 80, in-
deed, it seemed, for M. Vandeudriesche
engaged a number of workmen, who
proceeded to pull down the edifice, which
had only recently.been finished.
Alas for the credulity of the human
mind, even -when that mind belongs to
a potentate of the earth! As km in as the
foundations of the building had been
razed to the ground, and the king, no
doubt, congratulated himself on that
uninterrupted view of the country which
he had had before, he was startled to
find that an increased army of builders
arrived to augment the number of those
who had been employed.
Oddly enough also, a huge quantity
of bricks and mortar appeared on the
scene. These bricks the masons began
to use in the most nnacconntable man
ner possible, piling them one on top of
the other with mortar between. It look-
ed as if they were building u wall.
Thrnr were. Slowly, as is the manner of
mesons in every country of the world,
the wall grew by inches. Instead of
villa a 13 story fireproof building was
erected, which effectually prevented his
majesty from seeing the country which
lies on the other side of the property of
his recalcitrant subject.—San Francisco
Chronicle.
Old CtiiaoD.
If the Tarious Grand Army posts of
the country were disposed to take ad
vantage of an offer made at the last see
8ion of congress, they might materially
increase the warlike spirit supposed to
pervade every patriotic family, says the
Washington Post. The offer was to sup-
ply warlike implements, which, if they
have outlived their usefulness, will
serve as ornaments for post hcadquar
ters and might inspire the rising gener
ation with much patriotic fervor. This
oould be accomplished by accepting the
tender of several hundred abandoned
cannon and shot and shell which con-
gress has decided to give to .any Grand
Army post that may apply for them
and which are now lying useless and
neglected at the navy yards.
These cannon are mostly old style
models of engines of war, which might
have been considered just the proper
thing 30 years or more ago, but which
with the march of progress and the ad
vance of invention, have 4>een placed
upon the retired list Their places have
been filled by guns and munitions of
war of a more improved type, and as the
abandoned articles are valuable only as
old metal the government decided that
could put them to no better purpose
than to give them to the veterans of the
late war, who fought on the Union aide
these same guns.
t it is surprising to count oip just
posts of the imniens/ Grand
have taken advantage of this of-
fer . Since the passage of the joint reso-
lution last winter the records in the of
flee of the secretary of the navy, where
such applications have to be filed, show
less than 100 from the entire country.
There are still guns on hand for about
700 more poets, yet, strangely enough,
the Grand Army has made no effort to
provide itself with an armament
which, although it Would be of little
service ih time of war, is valuable from
an artistic standpoint in time of peace.
GRAPES AND THE APPENDIX.
Th« Lift la H«M>da Are* Not fto iHtugrrou m
11m Born Claimed.
Things have been said about the bane-
ful and delicious juice of the grupo ever
since the olden time when Noah found
out about it anil came thereby to grief,
but even before Jliat iqen ate grapes,
and only within the last decade have
they been talked to about that. It is
only since surgeons began to make
money hunting for grape seeds in the
vermiform appendix that jlople haye
been afraid to eat grapes and to eat
them straight
It now appears that in all the thou-
sands of cases famous, and possibly in
some cases infamous, in which this new
fashioned surgical operation has been
performed there is not one case in
Which a grape seed or any other little
ballet shaped thing lias been found in
the vermiform appendix. The whole in-
terior of the appendix is only big enough
to admit a medium sized darning needle.
Nobody knows what it is there for, but
it must have beeu useful at some time.
It is a case of the survival of the unfit,
like the wisdom teeth, which are of so
little use to most people, and the ton-
sils, which cause so much trouble now
uud then.
Th>- tonsils and the appendix are
both unused parts of the laxly and pe-
culiarly liable to disease Ix-cause they
are not strengthened by use. If inflam-
mation attacks them, they are unable to
resist. Thus many diseases which have
been ascribed to peritonitis or colic or
a mysterious providence of some kind
have been due to tbe diseased condition
of this little useless organ of tbe human
system, and if the trouble had been dis-
covered in time the appendix could have
been removed, and all would have been
well.
The remedy, therefore, is not in avoid-
ing grape seeds, which do not canse tbe
trouble, but in keeping as well and as
strong as possible, and in case of sud-
den illness calling a reliable doctor,
who will know what tbe matter ia.
Somebody once said that most people
use a doctor to enable them to sin
against the laws of nature with impu-
nity. But that is a bad use for him.—
Washington Times.
late war,
the*
^■tat it
hoC-Vw
Army hoi
Your Uncle Proas.
Watches and Jewelry on Sale
Money Loaned—
, Three Doors Above "Gazetteer.”
Main Street, Denison, Tex
A car load of bananas large for statehood, and the peopl
toJall
crop—
were received in the city____________Mrs.
E. A. Dodge is quite ill at the
home of her daughter, Mrs. Winn.
.... _The new police force has been in
office one week, and yet have not
made a single arrest. Denison is on
good behavior sure_____The Xavier
academy will close Thursday, June
the 10th___________Mrs. James Freeman
Clark picked up a $10' bill this
morning tbe sidewalk near the
Jones lumitu-e establishment_________
Red river is still verj high, but
ferrv communication has Izeen cs-
*
tablished—.____Joe Salmon, who
has charge of ffic road gang east,
thinks that it will take two months
3 '-v-rr
are capable of maintaining the nec
essarv institutions of a sovereign
state with both justice and dignity.
—-‘Phoenix.
The Shirt Waist Collar.
It would tie interesting to trace many
of the no called caprices of fashion to
their real source. Many, as is well
known, are of historic origin and re-
ceived their inspiration in the whim of
some royal or other distinguished per
Honage. The introduction of the sepa-
rate collar shirt waist, which has and is
enjoying a great vogue, was, it is said,
due in the first place to the laziness of
a cutter in one of the fashionable tailor
shops where ladies' waists are made.
He suggested and advocated the style to
save work, it was discreetly talked up
by the head saleswomen, who received
the customers, and the thing was done-
well done, too, most women will testify.
Compotrr Toun.
Engliiih uunnuuoe the death,
after a long illness, of Berthold Tours,
the well known musician and composer.
Mr. Tour* was a Dutchman by birth,
having been born in Rotterdam in 1838.
He studied at Leipsic and Brussels,
went to England in 1861 and for a
good many years served as a violinist
in Costa’s orchestra. Far the last 10
years, however, he had occupied the
responsible post of reader and editor to
the great firm of Novello <*- Co., in
Which capacity he did an immense
afmiunt of useful work in the ’•reduc-
tion" of orchestral scores to their piano-
forte form. He was also a voluminous
composer of graceful violin pieces,
songs, hymn tunes, anthems and church
services.
Victim of SEc Duel.
Critic—The hero and the villain had
a duel last night on tbe stage.
Friend—Who got the worst of i«r
Critic—The audience. —Twinklsu
Twenty '
Years....
For more than twenty years
we have been telling how
Scott's Emulsion overcomes the
excessive waste of the system,
puts on flesh, nourishes and
builds up the body, making it
the remedy for all wasting di-
seases of adults and children,
but it isn’t possible for us to
tell the story in a mere stick-
ful of newspaper type.
We have had prepared for
us by a physician a little book,
telling in easy words how and
why Scott’s Emulsion benefits,
and a postal card request will
be enough to have it sent to
you free. To-day would be a
good time to send for ft.
scott a sowrre, n™ yo*.
The Peabody Fund.
George Peabody’s gift of $3,500,000
for London workingmen's houses has
increased to $6,000,000 in tbe 34 years
since his death. Last year the trustees
of the fund provided 11,887 rooms, be-
sides bathrooms, lavatories and laun-
dries; 19,854 persons occupied them.
The death rate of infants in the bnild-
ings is 4 per cent below the average for
London.
CONDENSED
Mincemeat
Incomparable Quauty
[m e Wapl t h-plat t i (jHpct
TORT WORTH V
DENISON, Tima*.
Widow’s Double Grief.
A clergyman who recently called
upon a young widow to condole
with her upon the loss of her hus-
band, placed considerable emphasis
upon the proposition that the separ-
ation was merely temporal and
painted in vivid colors the happi-
ness of friends reunited after death.
When he stopped for breath, the
sorrowing one heaved a deep sigh
aDd quietly remarked: “Well, I
suppose his first wife has got him
again then.”—Chicago Times-Her-
ald.
Lffre lappet*.
If yon know anybody who lias u pair
of old fashioned lace lappets, says a
fashion writer, you may recommend
her to utilize these in the following
fashion: On the next evening or dinner
gown the ' lappets may liegin almost
touching each other at the waist, and,
gradually parting, form a trimming
down the front of the skirt, ending in
Immense quadruple bows of satin rib-
bon. which must be stabbed through
with dismood buttons or clasps, or, an-
other way, as the cookery books say,
line the lappets with velvet or s*tiu of
some bright color and turn thehi_into
bretelles, crossing the shoulders ibid
meeting just above the waist, badj^smd
front. Should any one wish to insult
and vulgarize her beautiful old lace
with a U-m of modernity she can buy
1 hmesti..jj4 or imitation emeralds, sap-
phires or rubies and sew them all over ik
law For the Foor.
The Legal Aid society gives legal as-
sistance to the poor of New York who
caiinot afford lawyers' fees. It has ex-
isted 20 years, has cared for 80,000 cases
and secured over $600,000 to its needy
clients. It is supported by voluntary
contributions,
Popular Science
Tbe National M ol Denim
C. S. CUBB, President.
J. J. McALESTER, Vice-President.
R. S. LEGATE, Cashier.
Capital
■UI
PLUH, •18,000.
Pies that will fill “that aching
void,” Pies that are whole-
some and good. Wk Guar-
antee the Purity.
The WaplBs-Platlar
Gfocer Go..
DIRECTORS • .
J J. McAlester, McAlester, I.T., J. B. McDougall, W. H. Cobb,
C. 8. Cobh, R. S. Lent*, J. D. Quinn,
E. A. Slack, E H. " ~
tf.l
L. Eppstcln,
B, Munson, J. M Ford.
Indian Territory business Will receive prompt attention and ia
solicited.
Ford Building
GEO.. STANFORD & SON
-DIALER IN-
Dffffp Mine,
Screened Lump-
McAlester Coal.
Feed of All Kinds.
Offi ce on Houston Ave.,
Between Main and Woodard Sts.
4* Adam F. Homback’s Saloon-
Ifcfc 214 W. MAIN STREET.
Imported Brandlee, Wlnee,
California Crepe Brandy,
Old T. J. I
Bour-Mash Whteky.
IMPORTED and DOMESTIC CIGARS.
JT WILL PAY
every business mao to use attractive and up-to-date
Printing.
- -#We Do It!>§-
Pamphlets, Circulars, Letter Heads, Bill Heads,
Cards. Dodgers, and everything in the printing line
executed in the latest style, nest and at reasonable
prices.
Being thoroughly equipped with
the latest styles of type and the
very beet materials we are en-
abled to give you the very best
work, and, style and quality con-
sidered, the cheapest.
“Good Paper, Good Ink, Good Presswork,”
Our Motto.
I
We know we can give yon just what you want and how to
get it up for you. You can make your money go
a long way by getting your printing done at
The Gazetteer Office.
All kinds of Legal Blanks carried in stock.
Dr. J. B. BROOKS,
Late physician ia charge of the
Keeley Institute, Hot Springs, Ark.,
and the Tri-Elixiria Remedy Co.,
Memphis, Tenn., has opened a
PRIVATE INSTITUTE
AT HOT SPRINCS
LEWS
For the treatment of the
Morphine*
Opium,
Cocaine and
Whiskey Habit.
Also tor the treatment ot all dis-
eases that come to this great health
resort, such at Rheumatism, Neu-
ralgia, Nervous Disorders, Blood
diseases, Stomach and Liver Com-
plaints. His home treatment for
Alcoholism or Drug Habit can IM
sent to any point by express. Cor-
respondence solicited, and strictly
confidential. 44-iy
MKT
t
.mV*1
CATARRH
w
loc alVisease I
and lathe reaaNsi«
seddta sSsMbs si
It css ta cored bj s
la, q sickly ab
.vUsI at sac*
W oat stops Me
Dr. Muss’ Tala FlUa.
Formerly Boston Journal or Chemis-
try, Enlarged and Improved.
This popular monthly contains a large
(lumber of short, estv, practical, interest-
ing and popular Scientific articles that
can be appreciated and enjoyed by any
intelligent reader, even though he knew
little or nothing of Science. It is Intend-
ed to interest those who think.
*
Profusely Illustrated and
Free from Technicalities.
Entirely Different from and Much Supe-
rior tp other papers with a similar name.
Monthly, $1.75 per year. Newsdealers,
15 cents.
The Largest Circulation of any
Scientific Paper in the World.
Conducted by BENJ. LILLARD,
108 Fulton St., New York.
•^-Mention this paper for a sample copy
Ely's Cream Balm
1. acknowledged to
matTE. i-cid
rcinsdlsa. It open.I
Ulsy, pals sod lot
SOLID TRAINS OF
WA6IERJUFFETJLSPERS
FREE RECLINING
KATYMAMCARS
ST. LO UIS,
CHICAGO,
KANSAS CITY
CLOWE CONNECTIONS
TO AU. POINTS
EAST, NOBTHmWEST.
First Class Meals
AT OUR OWN
DINING STATIONS
60 CCNTS.
rkyjssk.
•Ml liftMKn >*
At a Vary Lam Prim.
FOKSALE.
On easy payments and at reasona-
ble rates, a 60$ acre farm a % miles
east ot Deniaon, part timber and
pasture, good well, permanent
stock water. Good poultry and
stock farm. Or will trade tbe whole
farm for suitable city property of
equal value, or tbe 33 acres all
cultivatable land on the north tide
as part payment, balance cash and
easy payments. Call on or address
Mrs. R. P. Burhans, 310 W. Gandy
street, Deniaon, Texas. 14-tf
TH* a*MI WEEKLY MEWE [Qatvmia at
Dattaa) la aakHakal Taaadaya aad Friday.. Each
laawa eeaate M watt pagaa. Thaee am awaoal
liar ami
104 PARIS FOt fl.
A. H. BELO * 00., Pnhhahara,
Smith's Small BOa 1
prevent and eve at
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 5, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 23, 1897, newspaper, May 23, 1897; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth572334/m1/3/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.