The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 30, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 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:
\
and Iron workers are
work they can do. F
rie* art all slackening
Cotton mills in the
In the Dead wood Independent, a
speech delivered by CapUin George
at Greenwood is published in full
covering nearly seven columns.
The following clipping from the
Sleek Hills Press will give our
readers some idea of how Captain
George's oratory strikes the citizens
of those frigid regions:
A GREAT SPEECH.
The speech of Col. James A. George,
which w* * “ tar * -*
Friday ni
The wey Southern cotton 7m?n*
pi&s ssiss
ward to be gone two or three weeks California and next year traders say
inspecting sites and looking up ad- will be the best year the state has
vantages with a view of removing ever had.
their whole factories there. There The iron trade is active; furnaces
A G. BARNES,
Th« Finest Wine*
And Liquors ....
Ich appeared print-
Iwood Independent
latterly effort, and
one that should have been In the hands
of every voter before the election In or-
der that he might become perfectly fa-
miliar with the issues that are Involved
In the .election of a judge to preside
over the courts In this district. Colonel
ATTORNEY AT LAW
National Bank Building.
29-im
Domestic Clears.
103 W. Mtin ftrart.
P. ODonnell’i Old 8tand.
and I toll over the dog and
in three place*. I waited till
B. C, MURRAY,
Attorney at Law and Notary Public
West Stairway Muller Block,
Denison Texas. . . .
,sym
Sunday, November 14, 1897.
judicial fight," and issues of the utmost
importance to the. voters of this circuit.
It ts to be sincerely regretted that every
voter had not the opportunity of hearing
his speech, as the avalanche of votes tor
Hon. Jos. B, Moore would have been
unprecedented.
Our old fellow citizen, whose
name heads this article, made sev-
eral speeches this fall in South Da-
kota, in the late political campaign.
animated judicial
H.T. WALKER, D.D.S
A NAMELESS GRAVE.
By Lus Vernon.
are to be put down, so says a fool-
ish city ordinance.
The government is going to fit up
a few vessels as machine shops where
our disabled war vessels can have
repairs quickly done.
The idea is advanced to have an
agent at each European embassy to
About five ycRri ifo Mim MtcDunffCi
a member of Nat Goodwin’s company,
died at the Florence Hotel, in Missoula,
Montanta, and was buried there, the
members of the company meeting alt ex-
penses.
There is no word ot death or birth,
Above this nameless grave—
i Above the narrow mound of earth,
j Where tall, rank grasses wave;
No mark, no sign to tell who lies
In calm, untroubled sleep,
Where never, as the daylight dies,
A mourner comes to weep.
I Yet there the first white daisies blow,
I The early primrose springs;
I In pine boughs, solemnly and low,
I The thrush at twilight sings.
I Oe’r monarch’s dead no loftier sound
I E’er rose in stately fame;
1 No sweeter flowers spring around
I The tomb of Charlemagne.
Attorney at Law and Notary Public.
Room 6, east stairway, Muller Block.
There „ ___________,
contest, between the democrats and J*th*r in*orm*tion th,t *ril1 **• o(
republican,, Opt G.or.c f~?
stumped the district in favor of What next! Charles Paraons,
Judge Moore, the democratic norm- inventor of the steam turbine which
nee. It is gratifying to note that fitted in the 100 foot torpedo boat,
Judge Moore got there. “Turbina ” gave her a speed of 33
t-. „ ... . . knots an hour, is about to construct
Tne following is that portion of ,t New Castle-on-Tyne, England, a
Captain George's speech in refer- vessel of the torpedo boat destroyer
ence to government by injunction, type with turbine engines which it is
which covers the ground so well calculated will attain a speed of
that we need make no apology for ^ ,*° f’
, . , _ v Armstrong, the English gun ma-
reproduemg it in the Gazetteer: ker, ,nd Krupp, the German gun
In West Virginia we see a state maker, are bowing and scratching
circuit judge prohibiting men from et the Sultan in Constantinople,
Good idea,
Persistent
: Coughs
By the use of electricity excava-
tion of the moat sensitive teeth or
removal of lore oereos is accoaa
ptiahed absolutely without para.
Perfect success is assured where
all other medicaments fad.
Office, No. 210 Main St.,
(up-frtaim), Deniaon, Tex.
OLD RELIABLE GROCERY.
JfljTJ. LEEPER
•een in the moit familiar way. At then*
arq actual experiences the name of the
writer Is withheld. The letters will
doubtlsas excite much shrewd guessing
by readers and study ot Internal evidence
to discover the secret. The "Experi-
ences," which will he beautifully illua-
trated, begin In the December number
and will continue for several months,
a STUDY Dt HYPNOTISM.
The GAxarraaa la Indebted to the pub-
TNE GREATEST OF ILL^»
p
Pabet Brewing Company's
merits of the local agent, Louis ‘
Him, The News force promptly *
went on a “strike” which lasted un-
til the keg was exhausted_One
farmer in Grayson county produced
600 bushels of potatoes on an acre
of ground-Mrs. L. S. Arey sold b
her residence early in November lo t
M. J. M. Sheader_Boss shipped *■
a load of Denison flour to Calvert |
Crystal Spring* Lodge
of Good Templar* elected officer*
It is' in a certain sense a love I on the night of the 5th, and among
■^‘l| L ,COTC*.f>: I them are the following familiar |
name*—M. J. Fitzgerald, W- E.
Simpson and A. Frahtn___Dr.
Grass, a radical republican, was ,
elected mayor of the capital of Tex-
as in Nov. 1877. over Gen. Shelby, 1
democrat, by 130 majority. There
were two other candidates in the <
.field, however, an “independent"
and a “workingman."____Henry
Merritt was one of Denison’s lead-
ing grocers In 1877. He failed
many years ago, and the last beard
I of him he was “broke” in Colorado.
Some other firms of that day were
I tbe following: D. W. C. Davis A
Co., Goldsall & Co., Sam Star A
Co., Eppstein Bro*.. J. B. Mc-
Dougsll, J. L. Natbof & Co., A.
R. Collins & Co., John R. Carr A
Co., and Alex W. Acheton____
I Austin had a bonded debt of $96,-
900 in 1877_J. H. Porter had a
sweet potato on exhibition at hi*
store which was four feet one and a
I half inches long. We know it was
I so because the editor of the News
declared he saw it “with his'own
eyes."--Messrs. Scullen and Per -
|ry (Ed.) embarked in the wholesale
commisson and grocery business _
I Thursday night, Nov. 8, 1877, Jack
■ Tyner, a freight conductor on the
J j H. A. T. C-, fell under the wheels
r of a sleeper just as it was leaving
* I the depot and both thighs were
. crushed and mangled in a fearful
j I manner. He was carried into the
] Alamo hotel where be died two
g hours afterwards__The new M.
, E. church was the scene of a de-
lightful concert on the night of Nov.
|8, and the News made mention of
those who took part, among whom
K were the following: Mr*. Shultz
meeting and discussing the matters
relating to their interests. We see
this same judge prohibiting a regu-
larly ordained minister of the gospel
from preaching and praying to the
people at these meetings. In Penn-
sylvania we see a circuit judge is-
We may not guess, we only know
The tail pines* shadows pass
At evening, lovingly and slow,
Above the flower-flecked grass—
That here the golden sunbeams play.
hrrrtofon
tap at
Dr.Yeidel’s
N HOLDEN,
rusal leaves an Impression on the reader I on the 6th
as being a record from real life, and he is ‘
not likely to lay the book down until It Is
finished. I ' * _______
story, original, however, in Its 1-----
Hon, and development. There Is not" a
wedding at the close, but the reader Is
left to surmise there was a mating not
fsr in the future. The primary object of
the writer was no doubt a desire to en-
lighten the reader as to what Is hypno-
tism, of which so many exaggerated the-
ories ere afloat, and to disabuse the mind
from the uncanny Ideas that its pracUce
is either diabolical or dangerous, A
careful perusal of "A Study In Hypno-
The thrush chants by her nest,
That underneath Montana’s clay
A heart finds peace and rest.
BLACKSMITHING.
G | General
■TV. RxPAiaiNG.
water through and would give enor-
mous power.
The ore business at Duluth, Min-
nesota has got to be enormous. A
Train robber* looted a Sant. Fe ^o^Tand r wounded’ for ‘d.rin
express train in New Mexico. I ^.ik^’^Tlong an Ameri*
The robber* secured considerable jcao highway, carrying at their head
booty. They dynamited the safe the American flag. We see Judge
and helped themselves to packages Jsckson issuing a proclamation
containing gold and silver coin. P/oh*f "* from speaking in
“ j the Monongahala district on any
The express car, day coach and suj,ject. This thing seems *0 funnv
chair car wetg burned. The pas- to our republican brethren that the
sengers were not molested. The St. Paul Dispatch, a republican pa-
robbers, seven in number, are be- Per» finds occasion to make it a
, . , ! cause of merriment, and has a car
lieved to be car men. toon representing Judge Jsckson
57,000 tons. Another line of steel
vessels is to be built for lake traffic.
A general advance of wages it
probable in the Lake Superior Re-
gion. We will probably have an
8 hour strike in the building trades.
pOLEY THE TAILOR,
lot Main Street.
SUITS MADE TO ORDER.
Also Cleaning, Repairing and Dyeing.
g^TAll work warranted.
The
Diamond
Bakery
going.
America is to be the land of
heavy machinery.
Mic,rr - "
Milwaukee concern
hoisting engine to pull loads up at
that dsbth at a speed' of 3500 a min-
ute or nearly 60 feet a second.
Whew! The load to pull will
weigh 21 tons. The steam cylinder
w. x. knack. h. g. how*.
KNAUR A HOWE,
Denison Foundry & Machine Shops.
Execute all work pertaining to the busi-
with a needle and thread sewing up
the mouth of Eugene Debs. Debs
may be the meanest man in the
United States, but even if he were,
the act of a judicial tyrant in sew
ing up the mouth of any citizen of
the United States, is far more out-
rageous than any crime ever com-
M. W. Connally, an Irish genius
who was discovered in Texas about
forty years ago and drifted around
as a news-
Listen here
The Tamarack mine in Calumet
goes down 6,000 feet. A
many parts ot the world
paper man, came back to his native j
heath on the occasion of Governor
Taylor’s visit to the Dallas fair.
“Mike” is now the editor of the
Appeal-Avalanche at Memphis and
I is said to be very bright, but
bis week in Texas could not have
been devoted to the study of Texas
politics, judging from the article he
wrote for his paper upon his return I ewfmaiTfree speech,Vnly holding
I home. Some of his mistakes are j him amenable to libel if he speaks
J almost as laughable a* those made j libellous about bis fellow men. But
by sny Irish writer on American ‘j16 ^*ve *• r^Dg I 'n I°w*» * t>OT*
I ’ , » der sister state, we see a republican
I conditions. The boys must have judge by tbe ngme of ClydCt at
kept “Mike” engaged in quaffing Charles city, in the state of Iowa,
j the best in the city while he was j enjoining Editor Wright frompub-
bere is the only way we can account lishing public official letters which
for his failure to size up the Texas corruption existing at
I . , _ I Washington, This injunction is
I situation more accurately. But no unique. It prohibits Editor Wright
matter, his old aasociates were glad from printing the letters; it prohib-
i to have him among them again, its him from printing any other let-
413 to 417 W. Caestnut St
Best Bread
FIRE AND 1
INSURANCE
In Deniaon, and the peo-
ple will tell yoa. that.
Bread anle* more than
doubled in thirty days.
Try the.........
Diamond Bakary for Broad.
W. MAIN ST., DENISON, TEXAS.
Welsh tin plate makers are flock-
ing to this side. Machinists will
wonder to hear that cutting ma-
chines are being made *0 fine that
they have 300 teeth to the inch.
As a people w<* are emerging
from a depression of five years du-
ration, which promises to be the
last for a generation. Statesman-
ship has broadened its vision and
business men have learned valuable
le'sons to avoid ruin and pitfalls.
It will be a grand thing for this
country if the farmers will have an-
other good year, next year.
The Centennial of the Irish Re-
bellion in 1798 is to be celebrated
next year on a grand scale in Phila-
delphia.
A copy can be obtained by addrewing
The Passenger Department, Texas A
Pacific Railway, Dallas, Texas.
322 Main Street,
a Specialty.
No (hue—No Pay.
Tbe Headquarters for
All Kind* of Fruit.
California Peart, Peaches, deli-
cious Concord Grapes from
New York, very joicy. I carry
more fruit than any bouse in
Denison.
Frank Aflamola,
118 W. Main It, Deniaon, T«
zs-tf
INSURANCE.
mg the letters in his paper; it pro-
hibits him from talking about them
in public; it prohibits him from
talking about them in private *, and
Free of Charge to Rofferer*.
Cut this out and take it to your drug-
gists and get a sample bottle free of Dr.
King’s New Discovery, for Consumption,
Coughs and Colds. They do not ask
you to buy before trying. This will show
you the great merits of this truly wonder-
ful remedy, and show you what can be
accomplished by the regular size bottle.
This is no experiment, and would be dis-
astrous to the proprietors did they not
know it would invariably cure. Many of
tbe best physicians are now using It in
their practice with great results, and are
relying on it in most severe cases. It is
guaranteed. Trial bottles free at T. B.
Waldron’s Drug Store. Regular size
50c and $1.00. 1
£ R. BIRCH,
PHYSICIAN
to cap the climax, it invades the
sanctity of the hearthstone, and en-
joins Mr. Wright under pain and
The stock of gold in the world is
$450,000,000,
Coal discoveries in other parts
ot the world are spreading popula-
tion and civilization. Coal covering
215,000 acres in Columbia has been
surveyed, the pile is 300,000,000
tons. Ecuador is going to raise her
own hops, dig her own coal and try
penalty of contempt of court, from
even talking about these letters to
his wife. This is some of the fruits
that the wave of prosperity so glee-
fully promised, has borne to tbe
American people. This is not the
kind of prosperity that was prom-
ised, and the wave of prosperity
that struck the men in Pennsylvania
shot down like
& SMITH
when they were
dogs, was not any increase of wages
in gold, but a dose of cold lead for
Jerusalem. There is no good fur-
niture tbeie and most people are too
lazy to sit down.
American boots and shoes are be-
coming popular in Germany.
American clothes wringers are sell-
ing all over Europe.
Street cars will soon be run on
skates. A three-mile experimental
track is being laid now. Enormous
quantities of electrical goods are be-
ing brought from this country to
Germany.
Over 3,000,000 words a day are
telegraphed in England, The Czar
has ordered an electric launch in
New York. It is to be only 37
feet long.
Trolley cars between Cleveland
and Loraine, Ohio, make regular
speed of 35 miles an hour and have
gone 55 miles.
Ten thousand live lobsters were
recently shipped in one cargo to a
F rench firm.
Bankers are anticipating a rush
of business next spring that will
make a scarcity of money, Manu-
facturers in the New England and
Middle States see evidences of a
great increase of consumptive ca
pacity in the United States.
Small shops are to be built in
Ohio, Indiana and Illinois to do
small machine work. These will
be two or three hundred of them.
Societies are being organized in
some parts of the west to organise
Klondike parties to start next
spring.
Though business it rather dull
iust now prospects point to a very
A writer in an agricultural paper
aaya it is not necessary to go to the
expense of dehorning cattle. Here
is his plan:
Buy a five-cent stick of caustec
potash, and as tbe little horns make
Farm.” The entertainment closed
with a tableaux, “Return from the
Village.”_The New* of Nov.
10 announced tbe departure of
Maughs, Slater, Fish and Scott for
a hunt on Warren’s lake_Tbe
Newt of tbe same date stated that
some miscreant in tbe soutbean part
of the city was cutting off the cows’
tails. Several cows were thus dis-
figured_D. W. C- Davis sold
bis “desirable residence” on Gandy
street to J. G. Fish, stock agent M.
K. & T. railway, for $1,900. Tbe
lime Fish cave Be bee A Sbeeder
$aoo for a fbot gun_Twenty-
seven emmigrant wagons paaaed
I through Deniion Friday bound for
The Denison New*
Ldaring to walk as American citizens
along the American highway.
How’s This?
PLANS,
SPECIFICATIONS
and ESTIMATES
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CAENEY & CO., Toledo. O.
We, the undersigned, have known F.
J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be-
lieve him perfectly honorable in all bus-
ineta transactions and financially able to
carry out any obligations made by their
firm.
West A Traux, Wholesale Druggists,
the first sign of starting on the calf,
wet them with a little water, rub
them with the caustic stick, and the
calf will never know that nature
ever intended that it should have
horns.
Main St, up-stairs, Denison,
Texas.
Furnished.
W. T. Oackley Proprietor.
Billiard and pool tables. Elegant bar
equipments. Everything up to date. A
strictly first-class line of liquors sold over
the bar. 8-tf
horse can run ?* Well, that it Tom
Ochiltree’s greatest forte and I
don’t believe a horse bearing that
name will ever lose a race.”
President McRinley has issued his
proclamation naming Thursday,
Nov. 25, as a day for fasting and
prayer. The average American
citizen will feast on stuffed turkey
and mince pie* and spend the after-
noon in praying for relief from the
pangs ot indigestion.
People of Durant and vicinity are
jubilent over tbe fact that both tbe
Choctaws and Cherokee* have rati-
fied the treaty.
Now Dr. Leon Noel, a French-
man, declares be has discovered tbe
germ of cancer, and that it comes
from vegetation, from trees and
underbrush. He says he has inocu-
lated animals with germs found in
the sap of certain trees, and that all
the symptoms of cancer are pro-
duced.
Designed tbe Fora and other
public buildings in Denison.
Toledo, O., Waldino, Kinnan & Mar-
vin, Wholesale Druggists, Tolebo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internal-
ly, acting directly upon the blood and
mucuous surfaces of the system. Testi-
monials sent free. Price 75c, per bottle.
Sold by all drugglsta.
Hall’s Fam ily Pills are the best, nov
GRANITE
SALOON
The shortest and quickest route to all
points east, north and northweat. The
only railroad out of Deniaon to St. Louis
and Chicago without change and lay-
over. Only change for Cincinnati,
Louisville, Buffalo, Cleveland, Washing-
Jack county,
was advertising an excursion to Gal-
veston and New Orleans, round
trip tickets to Galveston $15.50;
New Orleana $35.50.
Hall’s Orest Diaoorery.
One small bottle of Hall’s Great Dis-
covery cures all kidney and bladder trou-
Duke” of
Cleburne, will have hie annual rab-
bit races at his racing course in
Cleburne on Thanksgiving day.
J. Grrlach, Ticket Agent. I There will be grtat sport there and
I *-b» “Duke” will entertain royally—
HOTIOE. people from every part of the state
- I will attend. I. M. Standifer who
& T. is the only railroad j u g trjend 0f the “Duke” has been
Hhsnve'LrSt. Louis. Hannb I invited to attend and act as one of
ble, removes gravel, cures diabetes, semi-
nal emissions, weak and lame backs, and
all irregularities of the kidneys and blad-
der, in both men and women. Regulates
Robert Kennedy,
Proprietor.
Come and see us, we will treat
you right and give you your
money's worths Fine liquors a
specialty. Ice-cold beer and
lota of good things.
The Best Salve la the world toe Cut*,
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever
Sore*, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chil-
blains, Corns and all Skia Eruptions, and
positively cure* Piles, or no pay required.
It la guaranteed to give perfect
tion or money refunded. Price sc cents
per box. For sale by T. B. Waldron, ly
Beetu* a Horns.
Paying rent ia like pouring water
in a rat hole, you never see it again.
Now is the time to buy a home on
easy monthly payments from
Frans Kohtbldt,
£ytf IU Main SL
Dr. E. W. Hall:
Tb|s ia to certify that I have used
Hall's Great Discovery for kidney trouble
The leading cigar ia “Queen Mar
l cigar 1* “Queen
just introduced in this I gurette.
and can recommend It to the public.
|. A. Meadows
[uat introduced in this
or quarter. ft
Two for quarter,
*
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. 16, No. 30, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 14, 1897, newspaper, November 14, 1897; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth572352/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.