Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 110, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 1, 1875 Page: 1 of 4
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0 A. SPRAGUE,
Wholesale
«, .'ifAifflser UK
and Retail dealer
l4%^»\3 J JIAl
P
DRV GOODS, NOTIONS,, KIL-
LINERV.
GENT'S FURNJSING GOODS, Sc-
LMUAfid
No. 220 Main Street,
DENISON,
TEXAS.
AREY’S
Denison Music Store,
314 MAIN STREET.
PIANOS and ORGANS.
The Four Best Pianos in the World.
Guild, Church k Co., Boston;
Hteinoway k Non, New York; Ju-
lius Bauer k Co., NewYork; Mar-
shal k Hmith, New Yorkalso
The Four Best Organs.
New England, Boston; Esta &
Co’s., Vermont; Mason & Hamlin,
Boston; Geo. Wood k Co., Mass.
W, R. Arey is Agent for these celebra-
ted Pianos and Organs, and will supply
the people of Denison, Northern Texas,
and Southern Kansas with any of the pi-
anos on the instalment plan, and will al-
ways give satisfaction. Any of the in-
struments will be put in your house free
of expense, and warranted to always be in
in tune.
Tlie Guild, CntirCh & Co’s, Parlor Fa-
vorite for only $425. Mr. II. C. Barna-
bee, ihecelebrated vocalist, says they are
splendid in tone and action, and the
1 handsomest piano he has ever seen. Call
and see them.
The handsomest and best piano in the
world for the money at 314 Main street,
Denison, Texas.
Mr. Arey solicits the patronage of the
citizens of Denison and vicinity. Every
dollar made here will be expended in
ge'oinii to build up this beau iful, enter-
prising city.
Patronise home people instead of out-
siders. W. R. Akey, Agent.
mayi-tc
JOHN NEVINS,
S.*---- >
CONTRACTOR Alto. ffcltJ.DER,;
DENISON, TEXAS.
! fa ■&** * for
erecting wood, stone or brick buildings.
JOE WORK
will receive prompt attention.
All work warranted to give satistaptibn.
Shop south of his residence, second
house west from the corner of Rusk and
Gandv streets. febitf.
LJllxAs, Thursday MobSikg, Jwly i, 187s.
T^fy^tiftNTS
- w. '«S|wA........
MwU
No.
m BwpK’t iwry**.
Direction aqd Details of the Wis-
consin Storm.
4-
A.
S. NICHOLSON,
Retail and
WHOLESALE GROCER,
No. 279 Main street, next door to First
National Bank.
DENISON, TEXAS.
May 5 tf.
w.
M. PECK,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Special attention given to the collection
of claims.
N. E. corner Main st. and Burnet ave.
DENISON, TEXAS,
t march3o.
DRY GOODS,
derler in
GROCERIES,
FURNITURE.
GLASSWARE,
QUEENS WARE
NEW YORK TRIBUNE
“TbeLeadiag American Nevsgaper.”
The best Advertising Medium.
Daily, $10 a year; Semi-Weekly, #3?
Weekly, $2. Postage free tu tne Subscri-
ber. Specimen copies and advertising
rates free. Weekly, (in clubs of 30 or
more, only $1, postage paid. Address
The TrIb'unk, N. Y.
Ian. 12, d&w 1 yr,
A DVERTISIXG, Cheap, Good, Sys-
xY. tematic. All persons who contem-
plate making contracts with newspapers
lor the insertion of advertisements, should
send 25 cents to Geo. P. Rowell & Co..
41 Paik Row, NewYork, for their PAM-
PIILET-BOOK (ninety-seventh edition),
containing lists of over 2000 newspapers
and estimates, showing the cost. Adver-
tisements taken for leading papers in
many States at a tremendous reduction
from publishers’ rates. Get the Book.
Jan. 12, d&w 1 yr.
-AND-
HOI ME FURNISHING GOODS,
of every description.
The highest price paid for country pro-
duce.
Corner of Main street and Austin ave-
nue,
DENISON TEXAS.
M. SHEEDER,
to $20 PER DAY. Agents wanted.
All classes of working people of bpth
sexes, young and old, make more money
at work for us, in their own localities,
during their spare moments, or all the
time, than at any thing else. We offer
employment that will pay handsomely
r every hour's work. Full particulars,
rms, etc., sent free. Send us your ad-
dress at once. Don’t delay. Now is the
time. Don’t look for work or business
elsewhere, until you have learned what
we offer. G. Stinson & Co., Portland,
Maine.
Jan. 12, d&w i yr.
A. AREY,
Furniture and
MATTRESS DEPOT,
No. 314 Main street,
DENISON
TEXAS.
224 Main Street,
DENISON
TEXAS.
Keeps constantly on hand a large assort-
ment of
TEXAS and CALIFORNIA SADDLES,
Buggy and Wagon Harness, etc.
I am now manufacturing my own trees,
and warrant then
NATIVE FORKS.
Prices as low as any other house.
March 15 tf. J. M. Siieedkr.
G
G. RANDELL,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
DENISON, - • TEXAS.
Office over the postoffice, on Main st.
Will practice in all the courts in the Ilth
Judiciary District.
June 2 t-f.
Particular attention paid to furnishing
hotels and boarding houses with
FURNITURE and BEDDING
at wholesale rates.
All kinds of upholstery and repairing
work done. Mattresses made over and
carpets cleansed. Carpets made and put
down.
COFFINS MADE TO ORDER.
All orders promptly attended to, and
the patronage of all respectfully solicited
Apr. 15, tf.
J.N-
HOLDER & CO.
DRUGGISTS and APOTHECARIES,
and dealers in
Fine Drugs, Medicines. Chemicals, Pat.
ent Medicines, Toilet Articles,
Etc.. Err.
Physicians’ prescriptions carefully com-
pounded day or night, by a competent
druggist.
South side Main street, opposite Postal-
fice, Denison, Texas.
Chicago* Ihoa iw^Repdtts from
numerous points in Wisconsin, Min-
nesota,,, Nqbrpdtf. ¥ Iowa, Missouri,,
and Southern Illinois, indicate the
Storm which passed over that section *
lasting from Saturday till Monday
night in many localities, did a great
damage, killing a considerable
amount of live stock, tearing down
houses, fences, innudating whole
farms and injuring cfops to sonfrt ex-
tent. Railroad bridges and Cillvterts
were swept away in some places,
and many persons injured and sever-
al reported killed.
THE DETROIT TORNADO.
Detroit, June 28.—The damages
by last night’s tornado foot up as fol-
lows : Two killed, both children;
three persons dangerouly hurt and
twelve others severely; twenty-three
cotages vygre demolished. A more
serious loss of life was prevented
owing to the sparsely settled condi-
tion of that part of tue city. A
meeting of citizens for the relief of
sufferers, is called for Wednesday.
THE STORM IN KANSAS.
Leatenworth, Kas., June 28.—
On Saturday night and Sunday
morning a terrible wind and rain
storm passed over this section of
the country, doing a vast amount of
damage. The corn, wheat, and oth-
er crops were leveled to the ground.
Several houses were unroofed in the
city, and the roof of the large flouring
mill of Hensley & Co., was blown
completely off. Several bridges are
reported washed away in the county.
A house about five miles south of
the city was blown down and a lady
by the name ot Doan fatally injured.
At Nortonville, on the Atcheson,
Topeka and Santa Fe railroad, three
houses were blown down and a
child of 8 years was instantly killed.
FURIOUS THUNDER STORM.
London, June 29.—A dispatch
from Puda Pestli to the Standard,
says a furious thunderstorm passed
over that city to-day. The light-
ning was incessant and hail fell in
such quantities that roofs of houses
and surrounding hills were covered
two feet thick with ice. The water
fall was extraordinary; torrents
swept through the streets of Buda,
carrying men, vehicles and every
thing movable down into the river.
Many houses were suddenly flooded
and destroyed before their inmates
could escape. Five hundred inhab-
itants are missing and at least one
hundred have been drowned or killed
by the falling walls. All railways
are interrupted. %
THE PARis FLOOD.
Paris, June 26.—The loss of
property by the overflow of the
Garonne and other streams is fully
as great in the department of Lotet
Garonne as in Haut Garonne. 170
houses were destroyed at Moissoie
and 50 at La Magistere. Immense
damage was also done at Bognierie
De Bigorre. At Ogen the Garonne
rose 36 feet.
The American and English resi-
dents ofParis have open subscription
books. The National Assembly to-
day voted urgently for a motion to
appropriate one million franks for
the relief of the sufferers.
,JSf*
She hath her wish—tor which IN vain
• She pined in rerilew dreams—
“Oh, mother I is this heme again?
How desolate it seems ?
Yet all the dear, familiar things
Look «e they did of yore 5
.But oh! the change this sad heart brings
' This is my home no more ?
“J left thee!—like the dove of old
t left thy parent breast—
frlit oil life’s Waste, on waters cold
My soul hath found no rest!
And back the weary bird is come,
Its woes—its wanderings o’er;
Ne’er from the holy ark to roam!
Yet this is home no more.
“Oh, mother! sing njy childfioqd spng* I
TTiey fall like summer rain
Off thiswhym heart that taiffTy longs
Tb be all thine again!
Speak comfort to me 1 call me yet
‘Thy Mary’as of yore;
Those words could make me half forget
That this is home no more!
“Sit near me! oh, this hour repays
Long years of lonely pain;
I feel—as if the old bright days
Were all come back again
My heart beats thick with happydreams,
My eyes with tears run o’er;
Thou’rt with me, mother! oh. it seems
Like home—our home once more!
“Oh, home and mother!—can ye not
Give back my heart’s glad youth?
The visions which my soul forgot,
Or learnt to doubt their truth !
Give back my childhood’s peaceful sleep,
Its aimless hopes restore!
Ye cannot!—mother, let me weep—
For this is home no more!”
Thou mourner for departed dreams!
On earth there is no rest—
When griet hath troubled the purest
Of memory in thy breast! [streams
A shadow on thy path shall lie,
Where sunshine laughed before;
Look upward—to the happy sky !
Earth is thy home no more!
The History in a Bottle.
How tlie German Girls Sent the Story of
Their Captivity to tho Golf Coast From
the Head Waters of the Brazos.
We are under the impression there
is more building going 00 at pres-
ent at Marshal, than at any inland
town in the state, except Austin.
All the new houses on the public
square are going up rapidly, and the
foundations of the building on Aus-
tin street are being laid. Everything
betokens prosperity. With two
courts in session, school commence-
ments, public examinations and cele-
brations, the city lor the last week
has presented a scene ot life that has
rendered it very attractive. The ho-
tels and boarding houses have been
crowded, and the streets alive with
people. There is an air of thrift and
gaity about the place that is refresh-
ing. All that Marshall needs is a
little more enterprise.— Marshall
HefaM,
[From the Wichita Beacon.]
No little interest has been mani-
fested in the German family, a por-
tion of whom, were brutally mur-
dered by the Cheyenne and Arrap-
pahoe Indians, while on their way
from Georgia to Colorado, and the
remainder, the eldest daughters, car-
ried into captivity, though now hapi-
ly restored to civilization once more.
The particulars of their capture an 1
the talesj of their terrible suffering
while held by the savages were
heartrending in the extreme, and are
familiar to our readers ; but there is
another little unpublished epesode
connected with their checkered ca-
reer, which we willgive our readers.
Sometime since, we are informed qv
Wm. Redus, of Texas, a bottle was
picked up on the beach on the Gulf
of Mexico, near the mouth of the
Brazos river, which, upon examina-
tion, was found to contain a paper
on Which was written an account of
the capture of the German girls and
the names of Ihe various members of
the family, how the parents were
murdered, together with other facts
and incidents; also the aproximate
location and temperary camp, which
was evidently on the head wateis of
the-Brazos. This bottle had been
corked up tightly by Catherine and
Sophia, the two eldest girls, and
thrown into the river, in hopes it
might reach civilization in this way,
and strange to say, after having trav-
eled Soo or 1,000 miles along the de
vious windings and changing current
of the Lone Star State’s most mag-
nificent stream, it was at last picked
up on the Gulf of Mexico many
weeks after the captive girls had
written this bottle history of their I
sufferings, and about tiie same time J
the story of their eventful and horri- |
ble eight month’s captivity was given
the world from their own lips.
-m----rv----— r- —r -
QJ> »ate. .... ,
CONTRACTOR AR& BOLDER.
Pl«ns and Specifications for Work Fuv-
nishad.
Stair b uilding a specialty.
Shop: Old News building SkWdy Street.
DENISON, - * •' TEXAS.
All fpb Work promptly attended to.
J.
M, COOK,
NOTARY PUBLIC.
Northeast corner May? street and At^.rm
avenue (tip stairs).
DENISON
TEXAS.
^LAMQ HOTEL,
J. G. TAYLOR Si CO. Proprietors,
Main street, near the Depot,
DENISON
Mar, 1, tf.
TEX AS
\\HLW
AM HUGHE*,
DALER IN
REAL ESTATE.
Loans negotiated, and collections
promptly made.
OFFICE ON MAIN STREET,
DENISON,....................TEXA!
July 24dtf.
DR. C. MIA
CELEBRATED
LIVER PILLS,
FOB THE CURE OF
Liver Complaint,
DYSPEPSIA AND SICK HEADACHE.
The Spanish Fleet on the North-j
ern coast has bombarded the Car-
list’s ports of Berme at Madrid.
The Secretary of the National
Grange ot the Patrons of Husbrandry
has received intelligence of the
death of Colonel R. R. Powell, off
Mississippi, one of the originators of j
he granger movement in the South, |
and who at the time of his death, j
held a prominent position in the or- j
Uei ol the State.
Symptoms of a Diseased Liver.
■pAIN in the right side, under the
1 edge of the ribs, increase on pres-
sure; sometimes the pain is in the
left side; the patient is rarely able
to lie on the left side; sometimes
the pain is felt under the shoulder-
blade, and it frequently extends to
the top of the shoulder, and is some-
times mistaken for a rheumatism in
the arm. The stomach is affected
with loss of appetite and sickness;
the bowels in general are costive,
sometimes alternative with lax ; the
head is troubled with pain, accom-
panied with a dull, heavy sensation
m the back part. There is generally
g considerable loss of memory, ac-
companied with a painful sensation
of having left undone something
which ought to have been done. A
slight, dry cough is sometimes an a:
tendant. The patient complains of
weariness and debility; he is easiK
startled, his feet are cold or burning,
nnd he complains of a prickly sensa-
tion of the skin ; Jiis spirits are low ;
and although he is satisfied that exer-
cise would be beneficial to him, yet
he can scarcely summon up fortitude
enough to try jt. In fact, he dis-
trusts every remedy. Several of the
above symptoms attend the disease,
but-cases have occurred where fe .v
of them existed, yet examination o-
the body, after death, has shown the
liver to have been extensively de-
ranged.
AGUE AND FEVER.
Dr. C. M’Lake’s Liver Pills, i*
cases of Ague and Fevfr, when
taken with Quinine, are productive
of the most happy results. No better
cathartic can be used, preparatory to
or after taking Quinine. We vvou’.a
advise all who are afflicted with this
disease to give them a fair trial.
T S. Idlers and PJirRldan* ori^rtnjr f:-m
of icif than Fleming Hros. wUi <io 'it'll lo * ;. «
tiieir i iikvi di«CiiK:tly, and take t<o,>e but
C. M'Laut s liver Pith, prepaid b-j Fin- i.,j
Pittsburgh, Fla., th? lumket bmtfj ini
tktv intiWiom. Tfr tlione visiting to fti\ - tin a
trial, we will forward per ID ail, p.mi-paid, to n\v
pnrt of the UtiiM tttatfw ; t»oo box 01 Fills *
t'- dte three- »»fjt fifeUtgA utiiRips, or one vial
V ; nufuc* 1 >r fourt**•>?)
c V* - from Canada must Uj iKvouipakiHai v/
tv ea-y stmt* extra.
DR. C. NI’LANE’S
VERMIFUGE
SbouM be hi uwi ^ery. If you wnnM m?' . -
c-ibir n grew uf wHaiti t. mosw.' viuo.ipjb a. 1
Lnd V 'Men. give ibetu » lew Jo-i * of
M’LANE’S VERMIFUGE,
TO LXP1X TICK WOR.U.
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Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 110, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 1, 1875, newspaper, July 1, 1875; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth721909/m1/1/: accessed April 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.