Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 89, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 4, 1876 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 26 x 20 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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DENISON.
SUNDAY MORNING.
ITEMS OMNTEREST., »
Personal and X.lternry. * ‘
—Mrs. “Stonewall” Jackson and her
daughter are at Augusta, Ga.
^ —The translation of the Bible by Julia
E. Smith, of Glastonbury fame, has
just been published at Hartford.
—‘The legal opinions of Cfcief-Juifcite
Chaise, under the title of'^fhase’e De-
cisions,” are announced for publication
in New York.
—M. Bartholdy, the Frendh sculptor
who modeled the colossal statue of Lib-
erty for Now York Harbor, has arrived
in that city.
—Mr. Herbert Spencer’s steady ap-
plication to work has brought on nerv-
ous exhaustion, which has compelled
him to limit is studies to three hours
daily.
▼
t
—Archbishop Purcell, of Cincinnati,
completed his fiftieth year in the priest-
hood recently and was presented with a
chalice of 18-carat gold, studded with
amethysts and diamonds, valued at
$4,000.
—The Carrollton (Ky.) Independent
says there are only two living members
of General .Jackson’s staff who were
present at the battle of New Orleans,
and they both reside in or near Carroll-
ton—Major Thomas Butler and General
William O. Butler. The first is over
87, and the latter in his 86th year of
age—both of them now enjoying good
health.
—Anna Dickinson says she will
neither abandon play-writing nor act-
ing, and will yet show what she can do
on the stage. She is sure that even her
enemies accredit her with some power,
since they criticise her, not as a debu-
tante, but as an actress with an assured
position. She means to make them all
retract their words, and thinks she can
do it in time.—Boston Advertiser.
School and Church.
—Mr. Sankey’s songs have been pub-
lished in Chinese.
—Mr. Osman Sellew, a member of
the Vino Street Congregational Church,
Cincinnati, Dr. Boynton, pastor, has
presented that church with a parsonage
costing $18,000.
—The Southern Presbyterian Assem-
bly has adopted a resolution providing
for representation of the Southern Pres-
byterian Church at the Pan-Presbyterian
Confederation to be hold at Edinburgh
in 1877.
—The Baptists of Kentucky cele-
brated the one hundredth anniversary
of the first Baptist sermon ever preach-
ed in the State, with interesting cere-
monies, at the Walnut Street Church,
in Louisville, May 25th. Kev. Wm.
M. Iliekman was the first Baptist
preacher, and his first sermon was de-
livered near Harrodsbarg, May 25,
177(1.
—The Third Presbyterian Church of
Albany, N. Y., has honored both itself
and a worthy pastor by giving the Kev.
Dr. Hailey, now over 50 years in the
ministry, "a salary of $1,500 a year, and
relieving him from all pastoral duty.
The act is as much one of justice to a
deserving pastor as of creditable gen-
erosity on the part of a grateful and ap-
preciative church.—Christian at Work.
—The Methodist Episcopal Church
Conference has elected tilt following
editors for the ensuing year: Dr. Wil-
liam Mast, Christian Apologist, Cincin-
nati; Dr. Henry Seibhart, German,
Family Magazine.; Dr. Arthur Edwards,
Northwestern Christian Advocite; O. II.
Warren, Northern Christian Advocate;
I)r. E. Q. Fuller, Methodist Advocate,
Atlanta; Dr. Francis L. Hoyt, Western
Christian Advocate; Dr. B. St. Janies
Fry, Central Christian Advocate; Dr.
Alfred Wheeler, Pittsburgh Christian
Advocate; and Dr. John II. Acton, of
(Ohio, Pacific Christian Advocate.
Sclfiire nml Industry.
—The Texas wheat crop for this year
is estimated at 12,000,000 bushsls.
—American meat, imported weekly
into London to the weight of 150 tons,
sells at tire same price as the be.-t Scotch
beef.
—The take of buffalo robes in Mon-
tana the present season is the leaviest
for several years. Some of the dealers
will ship from 8,000 to 10,000.
—The manure from city horse-stables
isnow beingpressed into one-third its or-
dinary bulk by tlie use of powerful ma-
chinery, made for the express pirpose.
The bales, which weigh about 150,
pounds, are confined by suitable staves
-Mr. 8. W. Hilton, of Greeley, Col-
-orado, has built seven grasshopperdtill-
kig machines for the coming camp:
and is at work upon toe eighth.
Greeley Tribune says that one of these
justifiable curiosity in regard to their
construction. It informs us, however,
that they have been in use daring the
pasf Week and have given full satisfac-
tion, and
*He *______
Daniel!
id'A'- 1
on, and that the ltev. G. II.
has one operating around his str:
i'j'bed-, p!
■ Hapl aad Ml»hap». * * jj
4a locomotive Whistle frightened
twW hones attached to a plow m f field
ht Palihtine, N. J., ana the animals
running away, knocked down George
Garton, a farm employee, dragging the
plow across him and killing him almost
instantly.
—Mrs. Schulte, of Corcoran Town-
ship, near Minneapolis, Mirin,, wag ad-
vised to eat rhubarb leaves for her
health. Some were prepared as greens,
of which the whole family partook,
shortly after which they were all taken
violently! sick and one of them died.
It was thought the rest of them would
recover.
—James Johnson, Mayor of Middle-
town, Ohio, while riding home on a
train on the Hamilton and Dayton Rail-
road fell asleep and was carried beyond
the station. Upon awakening anu dis-
covering the fact, he jumped from the
train and was drawn under a car and
instantly killed.
—A little daughter of Louis Bonan
was struck by a locomotive at Paterson,
N. J., and instantly killed. The en-
gineer being unable to stop the train in
time ran out upon tire cowcatcher and
made an effort to save the child. He
succeeded in catching her in his arms,
but not until she had received the
stroke.
A (i-yeav-old daughter of George
Christianson, of Milwaukee, was killed
by lightning while standing under a
poplar tree. Her clothes were stripped
from her person and her shoes torn to
shreds. A lady who saw the stroke from
a window says the little one rebounded
five feet under the force of the blow and
fell on her face.
—A farmer living near Corning, N.
Y., plowed up a can of phosphorus in
his field, and, not knowing what it was,
took it to a drug-store for examination.
While opening the can it burst into
(lames, and was hastily pitched into the
street, where it struck a passer-by
named Chase, burning him fatally.
Another man who went to his aid was
also badly burned.
—The suicidal mania: In Iowa,
Jonathan Sage, a wealthy farmer of
Pella, hung himself with a log-chain;
Elson A. Ford, of Linn County, an-
other well-to-do farmer, killed himself
with strychnine; Nettie Swafford, an
intelligent young lady of Cass County,
shot herself (in account of being accused
of stealing; Julius Raid, a young Ger-
man of Clinton, shot himself; Frank
E. Chamberlain, a prominent lawyer
of Storm Lake, shot himself; Wm.
Bingham, of Sioux City, cut his jugu-
lar, while frenzied with whisky. In
Michigan, Isabella Dewitt, aged
18, of Fenton, took a
fatal dose of strychnine, having been
betrayed under promise of marriage;
and Benj. Bezner, an old citizen of Eas
Saginaw, took rat poison. In Indiana,
Capt. Frank Daily, a saloon-keeper,
shot himself through the heart while
under arrest for passing counterfeit
money; and Charles Hanley, a hard
drinker of Lafayette, also shot himself.
At Birmingham, Ohio, David Olds,
aged 77, rich and respected, cut his
throat on account of ill-health. At
Louisville, Ky., J. R. B. Glascock, an
old resident of Madison, shot himself
on the steamer Belle and his body fell
into the river. At New Orleans Fred-
erick Bauer, aged 78, and Lucien Au-
gustin, aged 50, both ended their lives
with the bullet. At Chattanooga, Tenn.,
Robert Burrows, aged 34, a molder,
blew out his brains while suffering from
mania-a-potu.
Porr!|(n Vote*.
—London and its suburbs have al
[From Hie New fork World.J
Hoftttpitv Fid1 W con-
tested will Cast
complications <
acter, lias just been trjed fif the Wayne
County Court at this placet before C.
P. Waller, Presiding Judge of the dis-
trict.
In January, 1873, a man who had for
thirty-five years been known as Daniel
Miner died in Clinton Township, this
county. He was the owner of two fine
farms and considerable pergonal prop-
erty. On the farm on which he died
were two houses, one oocupied by a
woman named Catharine Hooker, by
whom he had three children, and the
other one by Rachel Ryder, mother of
three other of his children. He lived
alternately with these women for twen-
ty-six years, Rachel Ryder, however,
being tne favorite mistress, to whom he
confided the bringing up of his oldest
son by Catharine Hooker. A year or so
before his death he was visited by an
elderly man, a stranger in the neighbor-
hood, who had a long interview with
Miner. This man Miner introduced to
one or two as his half-brother, Thomas
Jefferson Main, and during his stay at
Miner’s the latter kept him under his
personal surveillance, as if apprehen-
sive that lie might make some
revelation which the farmer evi-
dently feared to have made.
Shortly after the departure of Main
from Clinton, Miner received a letter,
the contents of which seemed to cause
him intense grief, and he did not make
them known. From that time he ap-
peared to be oppressed with feelings of
remorse or sorrow over some act of the
past, and his whole nature changed.
His health also rapidly failed, and he
died on the 4th of January, 1873, in
great agony, and pursued to the last by
some haunting remembrance.
Among Miner’s neighbors there had
nro^.^werraffthat he wantad to
S2wl^ nititation he could to hi*
wronged children. The decision of the
easel* the pojnts presented w
to the plaintiffs, but the soil
carried to the Supreme Court
decision of the
rwasatete®
the nit ia to Jjxi
arrieff Co the Supreme Court.
The contesting parties an now among
the most prominent citizens of Otsego
County. Mrs. Main, the deserted wife,
A Romance of the Signal-Service Bn-
reau.
I heard a couple of days ago a hither-
to-unpublished romance connected with
the life of one of the most prominent
officials of the Signal-Service Bureau.
He was, my informant states, once en-
gaged to be married to a lovely, charm-
ing and wealthy girl. The eve of the
wedding had dawned—if an evo can
dawn—and they were occupying the
same rocking-cnair and talking as in-
anely as only lovers can talk, when the
fair one said: “Albert, duckey, there
is one thing I wish you to do when we
are married.” “Name it, lovey,” he
replied, making her feel that her cor-
sets were a mile too large for her.
“ That is, petty, to have no rain en
Mondays, because, you know, darling,
that Monday is washing day, and if the
things are not washed and dried then
the week’s work is so fearfully put back.
You will, won’t you, my owny?” The
young man’s heart was torn, but he re-
plied : “ Maud, dearest, my duty to my
bleeding country demands imperative-
ly that I shall whoop her up the pre-
cise sort of weather that heav-
en will probably send impar-
tially during the next 24 hours
upon the just and the unjust, without
regard to age, sex or previous condi-
tion of servitude. If an area of baro-
metric disturbance exists in the Middle
States on Monday, how can I consist-
ently with my duty declare that the
probabilities favor clear weather with
death, the farm was to go to James
Miner, Catherine Hooker’s oldest, son.
Tire contesting parties were Daniel D.
Main and live others, of Otsego County,
New York, who claimed to be tlie legiti-
mate children of Daniel Miner Main,
who was the legator under the name of
Daniel Miner. They told the following
narrative to establish their claim as the
lawful children of Miner:
In 1825 one of the most prominent
farmers in Madison County, N. Y., \4as
David Dennison, of Brookfield. He had
several children, one of them being a
handsome young woman named Fhebe.
In the spring of the above year Denni-
son hired a man to work on his farm
by the name of Daniel Miner Main.
With this man l’hebe fell in love, and
her parents strenuously opposing her
marrying their hired man, she listened
to his proposal to run away and marry
him, and in October accompanied him
to Unadilla Forks, where they were
married by Elder W. B. Maxson. The
newly married pair returned to the
bride’s home some days afterwards and,
although her parents were deeply
grieved and indignant at her conduct,
they forgave her and took her husband
to live with them. They subsequently
removed to l’lainfield, and finally to
Edmeston, N. Y., where Mrs. Main
found cause to repent her hasty mar-
riage. For thirteen years her husband
treated her with neglect and cruelty,
spending his time and her money in
debauchery, openly supporting a
woman named Catherine Hooker, famil-
iarly known as “ Line” Hooker. In
1838, having wasted his wife’s allow-
ance, Main disposed of all their per-
ready as maiy as 50 rinks in actual op'. sonal property, even to tlie necessaries
1
could not love thee, dear, so darn much,
loved I not honor more.” “Then you
do not love me,” she sobbed, bursting
into tears. The reader will readily un-
derstand how they progressed to a
quarrel and parted enemies. She re-
turned his presents, and is now lectur-
ing on Woman’s Rights, and he is a
wBic lonucii lucicwii. 1 confirmed misogynist and sits up all
heirs of the III man appeared, an, j Sunday night at the Signal-service oi-
announced their intention of bringing l(;e’ with S]ee Inakln* °f,Je-
suit to have the will setaside. Accorcf-! °tins Mo"da>r announcing falling
ing to the terms of the will, one farm barometers, atmospheric disturbances,
was left to Rachel Ryder during her heavy rams, showery weather, and so
life, and the other to two sons of fcath-; on.-New lork World.
erine Hooker. After Rachel Ryder’s j
Hooker was believed to know all about
the matter, but she never made any
revelations that satisfied the curiosity of
inquirers. Shortly after tlie death of
Miner, a document purporting to be his
will was entered in the Register’s office
in Ilonesdale, and letters testamentary
were issued thereon. Subsequently,
oration.
—Europe swarms with America
singers and, musical students, delvin
avvay industriously witli the hope that
they may blossom out at no distant day
as prima donnas.
—A cable announcement from Edin-
burgh is to the effect that an organic
union has been effected between the
General Assembly of the Free Church
of Scotland and the Reformed Fresby-
of life they had in the house, and,
pocketing tlie proceeds, left the place,
taking the Hooker woman witli him.
Besides his wife, he left seven small
children destitute of food and clothing,
lie never returned, nor was he ever
seen by any immediate member of his
family thereafter.
When Main deserted his family he
went to Chenango County, N. Y\,
thence to Susquehanna County, Fa.,
and subsequently settled in Clinton
terian Synod of Scotland, and thus two
r______________________ historic Churches from henceforth be- Township, this county, where he died.
and bands, ami may tfien be traisport-! come one in name as heretofore one in | Twenty-six years ago he met Rachel
ed to all parts of tlie country at a cost faith.
much below that required for uiqressed j —An extraordinary suicide is related . -
manure. by the French Journal de Chateaubriant. County. He took her to Ins house, and
—Mr. Joseph Newmann, of Sac Fran- ( A we,11-to-do farmer got up at 2 in the subsequently built t he second ^use^oii
cisco, passed through this city t>-day, ; morning, went to the bake-house, filled I his fami and put Catherine Hooker and
says an Omaha dispatch of the 2pth, one side of the oven with wooiL lit jt.i her three children in it, placm Rachd
with some 6,000 silkworms, whisk he ! and laid himself down lehgtlnriie* on the head of his own house, where she
is taking ii) Philadelphia to exhibit, j the right side facing the wall. When became the mother of three of his ehu-
This is the first instance in which silk , discovered, the upper part of his body (iren-
/
The will is contested on the ground
iat Miner, or Maiu, was insane at the
,rtie it was made, and that undue bl-
ue nee was brought to bear in having
it hiade as it was. It was shown that
Miner had told a nephew of his that he
intended to atone in a measure for his
worms have been carried such dis-; was roasted; the lowerlimbs were unin-
tance, as from China to Philadelphia, jufed, being outside of the oyer
some 4,000,miles. Tliay.are.in Teonjtflbii of the ex;!
dition, ha\x grown d$tfljlB ft Verir .sad. iftf , pli*
be ready to spin on arrival. I hitnlth is good, mit the unfortunate
—Peanut-oil, first made in the itontMcaji m longer recognize her neatest
during tlie war, is now in larg? de- j lanons, and tlie visit of any one who is
mand. It supplies the place of aliaond n<ft one of her regular attendants irrl-
and olive oils for various uses, iind is tates her beyond expression. She has ________n _____ ___ t .
lower in m ice retains its purity and occasionally lucid intervals, but they are died, and when Thomas J. Main, his j stance.—Rural New- Yorker
Novel Experiments.
A New Jersey agriculturist is experi-
menting upon forcing the growth of
potatoes by means of • team pipes under
the ground, and has succeeded in forc-
ing a growth of fifteen inches high in
two weeks from date of planting. The
potatoes, however, have always turned
out small in comparison to the vine.
This is anew idea, but the practicability
of forcing vegetables by electricity dates
back as far as 1841, when a Mr. Pell, of
Hyde Park, on the Hudson River, forced
the growth of tomatoes so that in a
week from the date of planting the
plants bore small ripe tomatoes an inch
in diameter. The following was the
way it was done. A row of tomato
plants, forty feet long, were set out;
at one end a sheet of copper an eighth
of an inch thick, fourteen inches wide
and four feet long was placed perpen-
dicularly two feet in the ground, leav-
ing two feet ip the air; at the other end
a zinc plate of same size was similarly
placed; a wire carried over poles was
fastened to each of these plates, the
earth completing the circuit; anabund-
dance of manure was used, and in one
week the result was as above stated. This
crop was also followed by three other
weekly crops of the same size within a
month. Oi course it is not necessary to
linlit the length of the row to forty feet,
and as it is a simple and easy thing to
do, perhaps some of our readers will
make the experiment. —American
Orocer.
---
Eccentric Hens.
Eds. Ritual : I will tell you of a cu-
riosity that has in the last few days
come under my notice. A lady in this
place had occasion to use some duck
eggs for culinary purposes, and in break-
ing one, which was unusually large,
discovered, in addition to yelk and white,
a perfectly formed egg inside, about the
size of a walnut. It is the first “freak”
of the kiud I have ever known, and I am
sure must be quite unusual. How cau
it be accounted for ?—J. K. Wheeler.
This is one of the freaks of nature
which we never attempted to account
for. Instances of double hens’ eggs are
. „ „ , not infrequent, but such freaks are as
Ryder, then a young and attractive j nothiug in comparison with the finding
wetnan, in Dundoff, Susquehanna | ()f hard, foreign substances within eggs,
such, for instance, as a full grown mar-
rowfat pea, as noticed recently in one
of our English exchanges, which, by
the way, caused a great deal of ridicule
to be heaped ofi the journal first pub-
lishing the story.
But wc have in our possession the
head of an iron bolt, one-fourfk of an
inch iu diameter, which was found in-
side of a hen’s egg as laid. Of course
we know that, according to all scientific
AV&mLkMd*1' •'
Egg SandvXches.-Boil fresh egga 5
minntea; put them in cold water, and
when quite cold peel them; then, after
taking a little white off each end of the
eggs, cui theremainder in four slices.
Lay them between bread and butter.
Apple Float.—A pint oi clewed, well*
mashed apples, the whites of 3 eggs,
beaten to a stiff froth, 4 large table*
spoonfuls of sugar, then add the apples,
and beat all together until stiff enough
to stand alone; fill a deep dish with
whipped cream or boiled custard, and
pile tne plant on top. This is excellent
with other fruits.
Velvet Cream.—Halt a box of Cox’s
gelatine in a third of a teacup of tepid
water, and 2 glasses of sherry wine.
When thoroughly dissolved, flavor and
sweeten 1 quart of rich milk; add to
jelly; stir well, and strain into molds.
To be eaten cold with cream. It is best
to be made the day before it is used.
Lemon Pie.—Boil in 14 quarts of wa-
ter, the juice, pulp and grated peel of 2
lemons. Add, when it boils, 3 heaping
tablespoonfuls of flour, mixed smooth
with cold water. Before it cools, add 2
teacups of sugar, 3 well-beaten eggs, a
piece of butter half the size of an egg,
and a little salt. Bake with under and
upper crusts.
Pot-Pie.—1 coffee-cup of sweet milk,
1 tablespoonful of butter, 1 heaping tea-
spoonful of baking-powder, added to
flour enough to make a very stiff batter.
Have just water enough to cover the
meat, but not the dough; drop in the
mixture by the spoonful; cover tight;
boil 15 minutes, and you will have a
light, delicious crust.
Strawberry Blanc-Manye.—For a
quart of strawberries take 4 ounces of
white sugar; crush the strawberries
with a silver spoon and mix them well
with the sugar. In 4 hours strain them
through a sieve. In a pint of boiling
milk dissolve 2 ounces of gelatin, add
to it 4 ounces of sugar, strain through
a bit of muslin, and mix with it 1.1 pints
of cream, stir till nearly cold, then add
the strawberries gradually, beating the
two quickly together; then drop in a
little at a time the juice of one lemon.
Butter a mold, pour the mixture in and
set in a c»ld place over night.
Vegetable Soup.—3 onions, 3 carrots,
3 turnips, 1 small cabbage, 1 pint of
tomatoes. Chop all the vegetables, ex-
cept the tomatoes, very fine; have ready
in a porcelain kettle 3 quarts of boiling
water; put in all except theoabbage and
tomatoes, and simmer for half an hour,
then add the chopped cabbage and the
tomatoes (the tomatoes having been
stewed), also a bunch of sweet herbs.
Let tlie soup boil for 20 minutes, then
strain through a sieve, rubbing all the
vegetables through. Take 2 table-
spoonfuls of best butter and one of
Hour, and beat them to cream. Now
salt and pepper your soup to taste; add
a teaspooniul of white sugar, 4 cup of
cream if you have it, and lastly, stir in
the butter and (lour. Let it boil up,
and it is ready for the table. Serve
with fried bread chips.
---
How They Buried <he King of Ouuyoro.
The Journal de Paris contains a letter
from an eye-witness, giving the follow-
ing particulars of the atrocities com-
mitted on the occasion of the funeral of
Kamrasi, King of Gtpnyoro, in Central
Africa. An immense grave or pit, capa-
ble of holding several hundred people,
had been dug, at the bottom of which
the wives of the defunct King had been
placed in the form of a ring, to be in
readiness to receive upon their knees
the corpse of their late tyrannical and
barbarous master. Several regiments
of the royal guard had been sent on the
preceding night to silently surround
some of the neighboring villages. The
first human being, be it man, woman
or child, that made its exit from the
surrounded huts was forcibly seized and
carried off, and the captives entrapped
in this manner conducted towards the
pit prepared for the funeral. Here
there commenced the most horrible
scene. The limbs of these poor
creatures, arms and legs, were
broken by the soldiers. The lam-
entations and cries of despair of the
victims intermingled with the shouting
of the fanatical crowd, and one by one
they were thrown into the gaping gulf
below. Then commenced the beating
of drums, the flourish of trumpets, the
piercing sound of the whistle and pipe,
which, together with the violent vocifer-
ations of the crowd, drowned tne cries
of the victims. The soil dag out
of the pit the previous day was
then thrown back into the
monster grave. The fanatical spec-
tators of the dismal drama, as soon asfc
it was tilled up, commenced to dance
on the summit of the grave, stamping
the soil down with ail their might, so
as to form a hard, compact layer above
those buried alive. All the lamenta-
tions having ceased, nothing was left to
indicate the ceremony of the abomina-
ble sepulture ; the noise of the instru-
ments had ceased also, and the as-
sembled crowd retired, satisfied with
themselves, and admiring the greatness
of the King whose manes demanded
such sacrifices.
-—Quartermaster \Vooden, of the One
Hundred ;did Foin-fh Regiment, shot
himsellat Dover recently. He was one
of the Six Hundred aqd bail won the
Victoria Qffwv? the fHos? of the Iaigion
Turkish, Crimean
flavor for a long time, and is less sus-
ceptible to the effect of light than )bve
oil. The oil is extracted entirely .Tom
of very brief duration, and at such times j brother, visited him in 1871, and ccm-
she only occupies herself in domestic sented to keep his secret and appear as
mirsuits. I his half-brother, he was filled with re-
fiWw. ___ ~ _______
and natural laws as understood by us, *if Honor, and tb4
no cut’ll foreign material could possibly . am\ Indian medals.
find its way from the crop of the hen 1 --—•««--
treatment of his wife and family by into one of her eggs, still the passage —The papers are greatly incensed
leaving them his property when he j has been made in more than one in- because Rev. G. D. Latbrop, of Am-
......— T **-*- '1---- *—’ xr~'“ v—| herst, Mass., is in the habit of flogging
his wife. It is getting so that a ininis-
The Bankers and Brokers’ Building ter has no rights which any body else
W'll be formally opened May 30. I is bound to respect.
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Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 89, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 4, 1876, newspaper, June 4, 1876; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth722280/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.