The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 24, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 8, 1893 Page: 2 of 4
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-V' -r'VTO
^andag tofttwr
B Q. MURRAY,
PaoraimM
., THE SHORT LINE
TO NEW ORLEANS, MEMPHIS,
AND FOtWTS Iff TUB
SOUTHEAST.
Tike "Tin St. Louis Limited."
12 HOURS SAVED
BETWEEN —
Fort Worth, Dallas § St. Louis
AND THK EAST.
THE DIRECT LINE
TO ALL POINTS IN
MJSX1CO, NEW MEXICO, AHIZOMA.
ORXOON and CALIFORNIA.
THROUGH Ptllo&s Met SLEEPING GARS
B1TWSIM
Dtllu, Ft. Worth snd St. Louie,
New Orleans and Denver,
St. liOala and San Franolsoo.
For rates, tickets and eli inlormstion apply to,
oiiddren an* of the rkei agents or
C. P. FKGAN, GASTON VtESLIER,
Trav. Paaa. Ag*t. Gen'l Pan. A Ticket Aj't
L. S. THORNS.
Gcn'l Superintendent, DALLAS, TEXAS.
s SPARKLING
TONY FAUST.
"
sip
* <+-
The Coldest,
The Freshest,
The Best
■*i
IA
-at
DR-YEIDEL'S.
The immense quantities of Peer
•old at L>r. Yeidei's injure Fresh
Beer it all times.
N. B. Sandwiches and PretzaU
all day.
Is
£&?; .v
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE koTWP.
Da yoa wssr them? When next In need try s pair.
! Beat In the world.
LOL
£2.50
*2.00
F0 LADIES
*2.00
♦ I.7S-
ran boys
♦1.75
^M3
If yaawaat sins MESS SHOE, made Is the Wist
X
styles, don't pay *6 to $8, try my $3, $3.50, $4.00 ar
$5 Shoe. They tit equal to custom made and look aad
•ear aa wait, If yoo wish to economize in your footwear,
do SO by purchasing W. L. Douglas Shoes. Name IW
price stamped on the bottom, lp k for It whan you boy.
W, L. DOCOLJkS. Brockton, Hui. Sold by
M.H.SHERBURNE
Denlaon, Texna.
Model Form
*~S"LlOESI8«S.
Oar Model Pons
No. 80*.
^a WEAR THEM
^WHY?
SCHILLING CORsirr co>
Detects, Nkk a d Chirac*.
FOR balk by
S.Q.HOLMBS
Denison, Texas.
THE
MISSOURI, KANSAS & TEXAS
RAILWAY
n rammi tie enr uu tut tun
SlMpIng Gars, Texas to Chicago
WITHOUT CHANGE.
IA5T TUi.W m NOT AVARS 0# TBI FACT THJL?
Wan the first railroad to cross the borclpr ot
•JVxas (from any «ilrvctt ii)and pushtnto the
Ulterior anil on totloep witter on the Mexican
Gulf . t>ut such was the ouso find tt Is a fact
thai the KATY'stlJe ttr^t to (tot out of the oHl
run and Iniprov* its facilities for handling
passengers and frvlRht. th > early set-
tlers moved JromoKl lojf ctiWns to the more
Comfortable iv«x!erut. il hoSises, so has the
KATY adTantnl and un>ved her passengers
from Pulluian Into
Wagner Palace Sleeping Gars.
Tbt bnt SlMpirn: Car Vn k* ia the world,
iaetker a4r f« is U< istr*l«ctUs W the
AMEEICAN EXPRESS COMPANY
to do the express business of this Company.
The above Express Company covers lines
from the Atlantic to the tJulf. and none
stands higher than the A M ERICAN.
THE KATY REACHES
from Hannltml, north of Pt. Lotilsand Kansas
City, to Houston. Texajs. the hejul of tide
water, overltsown rails, and [xtsses through
Denison, Sherman, Dallas,Fort Worth,
Waxahachie, Eillsboro, Waco,
Temple, Beltcn, Taylor, Gains-
ville, Henrietta, Austin,
San Antonio, Houston
and Galveston,
and affords comforts and conveniences to
Its patrons unequalled by any other South-
western Line.
Any person wishing to visit
ST. LOUIS, CHICAGO, KANSAS CITY, HANNIBAL
or the productive plains and prairies of
MISSOURI, KANSAS AND THE INOIAN TERRITORY,
by all means take the
m i
wssotm,
WITHOUT CHANGE where direct oon.
Is made In Union Depots tor all
aa It Is the most direct, best equipped and
nuts THROUGH WAGNER SLEEPERS to allabove
fmrtimi
points Xorth, East and Wast.
TEES BKLEKIffG G&AZB CASS
ON ALL THROUGH TRAINS.
For farther Information as to rates, routes,
maps, time table, sleeping car reservations,
etc., call on or address your nearest Ticket
agent or
Wvi>-,£.RrSH' JAS. BARKER,
A« ^ gra lpMa.aTkt.Aft.,
!&£$£
; Sunday, October 8, 1893.
A FIHE 8ERM0H "SMASHED."
A young preacher, a graduate of
one of the theological schools ot the
country, preached a very nice dis-
course from the following words:
'Then tearing lest they should
fall upon rocks, they cast four
anchors out of the stern, and wished
for the day." (Acts 15:29.) Said
the young preacher:
"The ship represents the church.
The tour anchors are faith, hope,
love and prayer. Christians are the
crew. The sea represents the great
ocean of lite. The storm that pre-
vailed is the trials to which we are
incident here; and the island Melita,
where all escaped safe to land,
means heaven."
He dwelt with becoming fervency
on the importance of casting out the
anchors, - faith, hope, love and
prayer; the necessity of abiding in
the ship in order to be saved, and
the consolation to be found in the
tact that not a hair of their heads
should be hurt, but that they (the
members of the church) should all
reach shore in safety.
The preacher concluded by asking
one ot our aged preachers, whom be
had invited into the pulpit out of
respect for his gray hairs, to close
the meeting with a tew remarks.
The old brother arose and placed
his hand upon the young theologian's
bead as it giving him a phrenologi-
cal examination, and proceeded in
his plain, uneducated style, sub-
stantially ss follows:—
"My young brother, you have
preached us a mighty purty discourse
10-day but I'm air aid you've made
some awful mistakes. You saic
that the ship meant the church. 1
that's so, we have not got any church
now, for the ship was smashed to
pieces and destroyed. You also
said that the four anchors were faith,
hope, love and prayer. If that's so,
we haven't got any faith, hope, love
and prayer in the church, as they
have been cast out. And you
that christians are the crew,
that's so, they must be a mighty
bloodthirsty set, for they wanted to
kill Paul. You tell us that the ls<
land of Melita meant heaven. Well,
it that is true, heaven must be
mighty snaky place, as a snake bit
Paul as soon as he landed."—Sun-
day Magazine.
2
Perhaps some oi our readera would like
to know in what reapect Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy la better than any other.
We will tell you. When thla remedy to
taken aa soon aa a cold haa been con
tracted, and before it haa become aettled
in the ayatem, it will counteiact the effect
ot the cold and greatly lessen it's sever-
ity, if' not effectually cure the cold in
two dsya' time, and It la the only remedy
that will do thia. It acta in perfect har
uaony with nature and alda nature in re-
lieving the lungs, opening the aecretiona,
liquetving the mucous and causing Ita
expulsion from the air cells ot the lunga
and restoring the system to a strong and
healthy condition. No other remedy
the market poaaeases these remarkable
propettiea. No other will cure a cold ao
quickly or leave the system in as sound
condition. For aale by T. B. Hanna &
Son. oct
If the good people would give
their local preachers a little of the
enthusiasm and support they give
traveling evangelist they would do
great deal more for the cause of re
ligion.—Ciebourne Enterprise.
That's correct. But who's
blame for this condition ot things?
In many cases the local preachers
themselves. They invite these same
traveling evangelists into their pul
pits, and introduce them favorably
to their communicants, although
they very likely know little or noth
ing of their moral character. It the
pastors would give the tramp preach
ers the go>by perhaps their parish
oners would soon do likewise.
A firm in Brooklyn is manufactur-
ing an aluminum bicycle which
weighs only 13 i-a pounds. These
bicycles cost some more than the
first-class wheels heretofore manu
factured, but their lightness is an
important feature, and they wi
probably rapidly supercede a
others, with expert bicyclists.
to
Bond's Or earn Bye Salve.-
4 For Ulcerated and Granulated Lid#,
Inflammation of the Eyes, and all acute
and chronic diseases of the eye./ Cool-
ing ind healing. Guaranteed; SS cents.
Edwin Gould has a son. He ar-
rived Wednesday morning, Sept.
37, but the reporters didn't get hold
ot the news until last Sunday.
Dr. P. A. Skinner, ot Texarkana, Ark-
ansas, is an enthusiast in the praise of
Chamberlain's Pain Balm. He used it
tor rheumatism, and aaya: "I found it
to be a most excellent local remedy.
For sale by T.-B. Hanna & Son. oct
Doesa't Agree With the Saasttosr.
The Denison Gazetteer raises
a fuss because one of the lady teach-
ers of the Denison public scbool
opens school with prayer. Surely
the editor of this paper has no child-
ren in scbool, or he could not raise
lis voice against the teacher petition-
ing daily the great God of the uni-
verse to care for and protect the lit-
tle ones.—Honey Grove Signal.
Nevertheless, the editor of this
paper does do that very thing, and
le has several little ones, or did
lave until they grew to be big ones,
and he protested against religious
instruction in the public schools
when they were little iust as earnest-
y as he protests now. All the
jroperty owners of the state are tax-
ed to support the public schools, ex-
cept the church corporations
which pay no taxes, no mat-
ter what their religious opinions
may be, or whether they believe in
any religion or not, and their child-
ren, if they have any, are entitled to
equal benefits of the education pro
vided by this means without having
their children indoctrinated with re-
ligious notions of which they dis-
approve. And this is a case in
which the majority have no rights
over the minority, just as religious
liberty ia guaranteed by the Federal
constitution to all citizens, regard
1 of what particular religion or
church may be in the ascendency
The little ones indeed need protec-
tion but it is protection from med-
dlesome religious enthusiasts who
would like to turn the free schools
in proselyting camps, and which has
been already virtually accomplished
in some places. The state hss no
jurisdiction over religious matters
further than it is its duty to protect
everyone in the right to worship as
his conscience may dictate, so long
as hia religious acts do not lead him
to interfere with the natuial rights
of those who chafce to disagree
with him. There can be no real re-
ligious liberty where there is a union
of church and state, and history
shows that wherever religion has
sought the aid ot the state in enforc
ing its demands, to the extent that
it succeeded, it has become an en
gine ot oppression. The greatest,
indeed nearly the only opposition to
the free school system has originat-
ed in religious prejudices. The
Roman Catholics complain that the
Protestants are using the public
schools to proselyte the pupils, and
the Protestants retort that the
Catholics want to do the same thing.
They both get mighty near the truth
They both know the advantage of
indoctrinating the youthful mind
and are not slow to take advantage
of such a magnificent opportunity as
that furnished by the free schools,
but this is the strongest kind of an
argument why all religious instate
tion should be strictly kept out.
In many schools the protestant
version ot the Bible is used as
reading book, which is an insult to
the parents of catholic children who
believe it a false translation. It the
Douey version were used the pro-
testants would be justified in mak
ing a kick, and you can bet your
life they would do it and vigorously
too. The catholic teachers in the
public schools at San Antonio in
sisted upon being dressed in the
garb peculiar to the order to which
they belonged, which raised a how
of indignation from the protestant
clergy, but this was only teaching
religion through the medium of the
sight, while the protestant teachers
teach religion by word of mouth
To open the school with prayer is
but to impress upon the minds ot
the pupils the importance ot a relig-
ious ceremony, and is as much out
of place in the public school room
aa the sombre habilaments ot the
sisters. The same arguments that
might, be advanced in tavor of
prayer in the public schools would
justify the catholic children in
counting their beads. It's all of a
piece.
The only safe way is to leave re-
ligious education to the family and
the church. All of the time during
the six hours, five days in the week,
six or eight months in the year,
which the children spend in the
public school rooms, can be very
profitably employed in fitting them
intellectually and morally for the
serious duties and responsibilities ot
life in this world.
Proa Our Regular Ce
OUK -WASHIIQT01 LETTER.
Washington, D. C.,
Oct. 2, 1893.
The key that will open the dead-
ock in the senste is being made, but
the locksmiths are not working in
lublic. It is evident that something
of great importance is going on un-
der the surface in the senate. The
talk tor and against the Voorbees
repeal bill still takes up the regulat-
ed amount of time each day, and
will probably continue to do so until
some time next week, but senators
representing all sides ot the , silver
question are holding consultations in
private and it is confidently expect^
ed that the result will be a compro-
mise between the conflicting de-
, . ... . . .„ , system, returns health and vigor,
mands that, while it will not be pre- builda np fleth ud itren|th.
• ~u-*":'u~ 0— For all diseases that oome from a
disordered liver or impure blood,
Congressman Breckenridge has
been ruled against on hia demurrer
to Miss Pollard's declaration by the
court, and he will now have to plead
specifically to her charges.
"During my term of service in the
army I contracted chronic diarrhcea,1
iavs A. E. Bending, of Halser, Oregon.
"Since then I have used a great amount
<>f mejdtcine, but when I found any that
woultj give me relief they would injure
tnv stomach, until Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was
brought to my notice. I used i^.; and will
say it is the only remedv that:jgave me
permanent relief and no bad relults fol
iovK." For sale by T. B. Hanna & Son.
oct
List oi Patents
[
Granted to Texas inventors this
week, reported by C. A. Snow &
Co., solicitors of American and for
ign patents, opposite U.' S. Patent
Office, Washington, D. C: A. P.
Anderson, San Antonio, car-coup-
ling. L. Anderson, Paris, hame.
M. Everhart, Austin, clock-winding
mechanism. A. Maclarlane, Aus-
tin, educational appliance. J. C
Walker, Waco, wind-wheel.
In France it has been discovered
that milk can be kept perfectly fresh,
in a frozen condition, for a month
o morp.
"I consider Chamber] alna Cough Rem-
edy a specific for croup. It Is very plea*,
ant to take, which ia one of the most im-
portant requisitiea where a cough remedy
is intended tor uae among children. I
Have known of caaes of croup where I
know the life of a little one was sated by
the uae of Chamberlain'a Cough Rem-
edy." J. J. La Grange, druggist. Avoca,
Neb. 50 cent bottles for sale by T. B.
Hanna ft Son. oct
J
A GOOD APPETITE
eaa be bought, like anything else.
And good digestion after it, too.
Both of them, oome with Dr. Pieroe'a
Golden Medical Discovery.
That starts the torpid liver into
healthy action, purifiee and enriches
the blood, cleanses and repairs the
health and
See the World's Fair for
Fifteen Cents.
Upon receipt of your sddresa and fif-
teen centa In postage stamps, we will
-epaid a
mall you prepai<
Torld'a
our Souvenir Portfolio
of the World'a Columbian Exposition,
the regular price is fifty cents, but as we
want you to have one, we make the price
nominal. You will find.it a work ot art
and a thing to be prized. It contains full
page views of the great buildings; with
descriptiona of same, and is executed in
higheat atyle ot art. If not satisfied with
it, after you get it, we-will refund the
stamps and let you keep the book. Ad-
dress H. E. Bi'cklkn & Co.,
4 Chicago, 111.
Don't All 8peak at Onoe.
The state treasury is very bare,
Governor Hogg says, and he wants
all the people who dtaw pay from
the state to a6etain from drawing
their salaries until after Christmas.
Here is a monumental opportunity
tor somebody to do'a graceful thing.
The employes or offic als whose
claims are small—who receive $100
or less per month—cannot well af-
ford to wait, but the commission
trio, for example, might loom up as
examples of patriotic unselfishness.
—Waco Dsy-Globe.
Ballard'N Horehouad
Syrup. ,
We guarantee this to be the best Cough
Syrup manufactured in the whole wide
world. Thla ia aaying a great deal, but
it ia true. For Conaumption, Coughs,
Colds, Sore Throat, Sore Chest, Pneu-
monia, Bronchitis, Asthma, Croup,
Whooping Cough, and all diseases of the
Throat and Lungs, we positively guaran-
tee Ballard's Horebound Syrup to be
without an equal on the whole face ot
the globe. In support of thla atatement
we refer to every Individual who has ever
used It, and to every druggist who has
ever sold It. Such evidence is Indisput-
able. Sold by T. B. Hanna ft Son. 4
cisely what is desired by either Pres-
ident Cleveland or |he senators who
favor the free coinage of silver, will
be of such a nature that it will be ac-
cepted by the free-coinage men as
the best they can get and signed by
President Cleveland as the only sil-
ver measure that can be passed by
the senate. The exact nature of the
compromise cannot be given, be-
cause it has not yet been decided
upon, but that it will provide for the
continued coinage of silver by the
government and for[ the issue of
bonds to strengthen the treasury
gold reserve is regarded as certain,
as they are the two things contended
for by the silver men and, the uncon-
ditional repeal men respectively.
President Cleveland has taken and
will take no part in this compromise.
He has made his recommendation in
the regular way and will have noth-
ing more to say until congress sends
him the bill. While he believes
that the proper thing to do is to pass
the Voorbees bill without amend-
ment, leaving other financial mat-
ters to follow in a separate bill, it is
thought that he will sign the pro-
posed compromise.
Should the expectation ot dispos-
ing of the silver question by the 15th
of this month be realixed it is prob-
able that congress will take a recess
of several weeks. A recess can
easily be taken without retarding
legislation, as the house will next
week pass the bill tor the repeal of
the Federal election law and no
other important bill will be reported
for a while. The committees will,
of course, continue their work dur-
ing the recess, if one be taken, and
soon after congress comes together
again it is hoped that the new tariff
bill will be ready to be reported to
the house
The republicans in the house have
up to this time shown a fear of the
bill for the repeal ot the Federal
election laWs that is in some respects
remarkable. The attempts that they
have made to defend those laws
have been so weak that they prac-
tically amount to an acknowledg-
ment that the laws are bad and vici-
ous in their tendency and ought to
be repealed.
"Little Billy" Chandler made
one of his usual exhibitions of him-
self in the senate Saturday after-
noon, while speaking in favor of a
resolution recently offered by him,
calling on the secretary ot the treas-
ury tor the authority under which he
appointed the Fairchild commission,
which is investigating republican
crookedness in the office of the ap-
praiser of the port of New York
He started out with a lot of rot
about the senate being ignored by
the unconstitutional and illegal ap
pointment of the commission, and
wound up by admitting that con-
gress had given the secretary of the
treasyry eijplipit authority to expend
not more than $100,000 a year for
the detection and prevention of fraud
upon the customs revenue, precisely
the duty upon which the Fairchild
commission is engaged.
The house committee on banking
and currency is engaged in hearing
arguments from members of the
house in favor of the various finan
cial bills, .including several for the
repeal of the tax on state bank cur-
rency, which have been referred to
it, and later outsiders may hje heard
both for and against these measures.
Neither Chairman Wilson nor
anybody else can stop the flood of
outright lies that are being sent out
from Washington concerning the
new tariff bill. Mr. Wilson says of
the latest, charging that the demo-
crats on the ways and means com
mittee were hesitating about making
an attack on the McKmley atrocity,
and that the committee had agreed
jthat the new tariff should not go in-
to effect until Tanuary 1, 189^: "As
iko hesitation, the democrats of the
committee are now hard at work on
the new bill, which we propose to
report to the house as soon as we
can get it ready. We appreciate
the importance ot our task, and tbe
pledges which the democratic party
has made to the people, and there
will be no shirking of duty or of re-
sponsibility. Any suggestion to the
contrary is unworthy of considera-
tion. The date upon which the
new tariff bill will go into effect has
not been determined.^ .
Mrs, Cleveland was out Saturday
afternoon for the first ^ime since the
birth of baby Esther, Accom-
panied by the president she took a
carriage drive
Dyspepsia, Biliousneaa, Scrofulous,
Sain and Scalp Diaeaaee—eves Con-
sumption (or Lung-acrofula) in ita
earlier atagea, the " Discovery" ia
the only remedy so sure and certain
that it can be guaranteed. If it
doesn't benefit or cure, in every case,
jon have your money back.
On these terms, it's the cheapest
blood-purifier sold, no matter now
many hundred doses are offered for
a dollar (or leas)—for with thia, yon
pay only for the good you get.
Can yon ask for better proof of
ita superiority over all other blood-
purifiera? r
MUD (TUBE.
Another lama for Christian Soienoe—
How It Ia Done.
Mind cure. It haa reached that
atage at length where it begins to be
recognized by the medical profea-
aion as a means of relief, eapecially
in certain ailmenta having their aeat
in a diaordered atate of the nervea.
Dr. Bernheim aeata hia patient in
a chair, tella him to look at the doc-
tor and think of nothing but aleep.
He aays, "You are going to aleep;
you are aim oat asleep; you are fast
asleep finally. The more confi
dence tbe operator feels in hia own
power the more certain the aubject
ia to go to aleep really. Then, if
the experiment is successful, the
patient's subjective or subconscious'
ness believes what it is told by the
doctor and infiuencea the body ac-
cordingly. That ia perhapa tbe ex-
planation of mind curea ao far as is
known.
The physician makes a profound
impression on the aubjective con-
sciousness of the patient while he is
in the hypnotic sleep. The subjec-
tive consciousness continues to act
on the suggestion after the patient
has returned tp his normal conscious
ness, and thus the cure is wrought.
It ia to be inferred, therefore, that
all patients cured by mind healing
have the impression thus made on
their subjective consciousness. The
method is also known as healing by
mental suggestion, and Dr. Hamil
ton is of opinion that it is destined
to take its place as an important and
legitimate aid in therapeutica.—Ex.
All Free.
Those who have uaed Dr. Klng'a New
Discovery know its value, and thoae who
have not, have now the opportunity to
try It Free. ' Call on the advertlaed Drug-
gist and get a Trial Bottle, Free. Send
your name and addreaa to H. E. Bucklen
& Co., Chicago, and get a sample box of
Dr. Klng'a New Life, Pilla Free, as well
aa a copy of Guide to Health and House
hold Instructor, Free. All ot which ia
, guaranteed to do you good and coat you
nothing. Gulteau' St Waldron'a Drug
Store.
The Honey Grove Signal takes
the editor of the Gazetteer to task
for opposing the intrpduction of re-
ligious ejferciaes in the public free
schools. After calling him a "free-
thinker," (which ia complimentary,
for a man who is afraid to think
freely is a alave) he volunteers the
assertion that he "must know jthat
Christianity brightena and sweetens
the lives of the dear little children,
and makes of them good citizens
and happy people."
How happy, for instance, the
dear children must feel, when
Presbyterian teacher perchance
reads to them from the confession of
faith, Infants not elected, dying in
infancy, never truly come to Christ
and therefore cannot be saved.—
And how the lives of the dear lit-
tle ones whose parents don't claim
to "believe" must be "brightened
and sweetened" when the reading
lesson in the New Testament in-
cludes this: "He that believeth
and is baptized shall be saved ai
he that believeth not shall be
damned."
Buolclen's Arnloa Salve.
The best Salve In the world for Cuts,
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever
Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chil-
blains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions,
and positively cures Piles, or no pay re-
quired. It Is guaranteed to give prrfect
satisfaction or money refunded. Price
35 cents per box. For Sale by Guiteau &
Waldron.
Smith's Small Bile Beans act on the
bile, cure constipation and malaria.
The Proper 8itting Position.
"A proper sitting position," says
somebody, "requires that the spine
shall be kept straight, and that the
support needed for the upper part of
the body shall be felt in tbe right
place." Therefore sit as far back
as possible in tbe chair, so that the
lower end of the spine shall be
braced at the back of the seat.
A Medioal Firm Gives Away Cash.
J. F. Smith Ac Co., of No. 355
Greenwich St., New York, the manu-
facturers of that favorite cathartic
known sa Smith's Bile Beans have
adopted a novel plan. They ask the
individual buyers of Bile RAanq to
send their full name and address,
Beyond being a lit- j with an outside wrapper from a bot-
tle paler than she usually looks she
appeared to be in excellent health
and was certainly in a jolly good
humor.
A Sound Liver Make, a
Well Man.
Are you bilious, constipated or troubled
with jaundice, sick headache, bad taste in
mouth, foul breath, coated tongue, dys-
pepsia, indigestion, hot dry skin, pain in
back and between the shoulder*, chills
and fever, etc? If you have any of these
symptoms your liver is out of order, and
your blood Is slowly being poisoned, be-
cauae your liver does not act properly,
HaaaiKX will cure any disorder of "
liver, stomach or bowels. It has ao
as a Liver Medicine. Price 7} cents,
by T. B. Hanna ft Soft. 4f>ij
tie of Bile Beans, (either size) to their
offioe and they give $5 for the first
wrapper received in each morning's
mail, and $1 for the" 2d, 3d, 4 th, 5 th
and 6 th. Every day $10 in caah is
thus sent to their correspondents.
"Not a gripe in a barrel of them."
Ask for SHALL sua.
ItAOliS
Hmdbif a tonic, or child*
who want bufld.
TYPEWRITERS.
tor
*
Please write us for any information desired. Upon receipt
of such letter we'will mail you a personal reply, s|>ecimen8
oi Penmanship and College Journal.
ENGLISH TRAINING SCHOOL
In eonnection. Thorough, practical instruction; strict
discipline; best methods; able faculty; elegant apartments.
ail letters to NATIONAL COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, DmIsm, Til \
WILLIAM WOOLLAdbTT,
MAXVFACTVKSR OF
DEALER IN
PIPES AND SMOKERS' SUPPLIES 8EIEMLLY.
913 Main St., First Door Cast of W. U. Telegraph OMos.
S. 0. O'DAIB & CO.,
Dealkr IN
Staph and Faaey iroetries
k FULL SUPPLY OF SEASONABLE FRUITS AID VE8ETABLES
Always on Hand.
No. 503 Main Street, DENISON, TEXAS. wtt
FRANK PUGH,
MILWAUKEE BEER,
Office, No. 218 North Houston Ave.
FORT* WORTH * BEER
manufactured by
The Texas Brewing Company.
Equal to the Best Beer in the World.
Is now on sale at all the Leading Saloons in Denison.
Give It a Fair Trial. Local Agency,
GEORGE STANFORD & SON*-
Storage *nd Commission Merchants and Dealers In
Grain and Feed,
Munson Block, cor. Woodard St. & Houston Ave., Denison
Look [Over Your Stock
STATIONERY,
—and—
SEE IF TOU WON'T SOON NEED
Bill-Heads.
Letter-H^ade,
N ote>Heade.
Statements,
Env^lopei
Business Cards,
e : 1 :• "i x" 1:; t x: t- x x x % x x x :■
U
• 1
n
Or something else in our line. We carry in stock all grades
of Paper, do work Promptly, in the best style and as cheap
as anybody, quality of stock and character of work con-
sidered.
Check-Books,
Weak-Hooka,
Receipts with Stubs,
Order-Books, and
All Similar Work
Furnished to Order
J :« \ : t * k:I
We are also prepared to do Numbering, either running
consecutively or in duplicates or triplicates. All perforat-
ing is done by a machine, and is equal to the best. No
matter what you want in the
-HOB PRINTING#-
-line-
From a Visiting Card to a 500-Page Pamphlet
call and get prices at
Murray'sPower Printing Bouse,
DEISTISOIT, TiXAS.
W. C. MORRIS
hss started the
{fiierUkUl
At 110 N. BUSK AYE.
t i
Work Neatly and Skillfully Done. Prices Reasonable.
Embalming a Specialty.
Your Patronage Cordially Solicited at HQ N. RllSk AV6
Scientific American
design patents,
copyrights,
and free Handbook write to
mukn a co. aa bkoadwat, nbw tori.
est bureau for securing patents In America.
17 patent taken oat by aa Is brought before
pebttc by a netloe given tree of charge in the
Jfritntific ^meriwii
Owing to the wondertu]
Business, the
uicreaae ia the Special
SITE CITY JEWELRY CO.
have entirely refitted their Optical
No. ill Main Street, Deniaoo. Texas, where W.
W. Bostwick, an optican ot the greatest experi-
ence in North Texas, if not in the State, is pre-
pared with all the teats known to the picfeaaioa to
properly correct all defecU*e eyesight that can be
corrected with gtaaaes.
EYES TE8TED FREE OF OHAB0E.
Everything in the Spectacle line on hand
ground to sm« at the *
c
L
A
I
R
£
T
T
E
c)o
H'
w>
ST. LOUIS.
Jumrg! {[til ^•■traeUr^!
fiity f Nfle,
INVITED TO EXAMINI
AND PRICES WE
OUR STOCK
EVERT THING IN
ifociries, Provisions, 7nd,
AT LOWEST PRICES.
fecial Inducements to Cash Customers,
-r
SAM HANNA. Manager.
BURTON, LINGO & CO.,
(Successors to Waples Bros.)
Sash, Doobs, Blinds,
Moulding, Etc.
Yards at Denison, Dallas, Fort Worth, El Paao, Colo-
rado, Big Springs, Midland and Pecos.
a
&
IF. Or. PROAS,
KusAdvw •/fratii* Jraa/
SUMMER GARDEN CIGARS,
OUR GREAT 6 CENT LEADERS.
No. 11< MAIN STREET.
, :
Pioneer Soap Works
• I
.
\
DENISON, TEXA8,
J. T. SC&WACH&07EH, Proprietor,
BIG TO ANNOUNCE THAT | ^4
GENUINE AND RELIABLE HARD BOILED LAUIORV SBAPS •
from best grades of tallow are now made at the above works. As no fillings of
kind are used in these home made soaps they are more economical than any
ing from the North or East, one bar out washing two of the Imported. Use I
made soaps and dont send your money abroad for soap when a better article Is
furnished rirht here.
WILL LAST
A LIFE TIME.
Cfarmtrt 28 Twnl
NOT HALF the OOSTof
STERLMQ SILVER.
SPOONS
AND
FORKS
HAVING -
STE8UH tlUfEl H
•talfthrousti the baok aft
point* exposed to weait *
as ahown by out,
THEN PUTS ENTIIL
Guaranteed to contain
etore alhrer and ar* more i
durabl* than any plated i
or light Sterling sllwl
I SILVER
SILVERWARE,
CLOCKS, WATCHES, 01
Gold and Plated Jewelry
SILVER and COLO-HKADI
CANES, SILVER and GOI
HEADED SILK UM-
BRELLAS.
BOLD PENS, PENCILS, U.
SPECTACLES and
OPTICAL GOODS
-a" the-
MADS ONLY BY
ttVMfe
221 Main St.
-
DENISON CEML ICE CO.
—DEALERS IN—
Fate DbtillsdWatsr Ice.
FACTORY; Foot of Woodard 8t & R. R. Track.
ANHEUSER ■ BUSCH
-^Brewing Association* £-
Pure Malt and Hops
Used. Nutritious I
and Wholesome.
Largest Capacity o
any Brewery in
<
i -j
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 24, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 8, 1893, newspaper, October 8, 1893; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth313933/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.