Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 33, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 31, 1878 Page: 1 of 8
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Groceries.
B
UY YOUR
fo fRROOO0 0C°S g
too H 8 88 0 P gR,k n ss«
CKSG R R OO COC EKK R R II KICK 8SSS
—AT—
HENRY MERRITT,
No. 121 Main street,
DENISON.
TEXAS.
£ORNER GROCERY,
W. H. PIER, Prop’r,
Main street and Austin avenue.
DENISON, - - . TEXAS.
GAISMAN & CO
—THE—
DENISON GROCERS.
CHOICE FAMILY CROCERIES,
Fruits, Vegetables, etc.
10-4 tf
'JpiIE ALAMO GROCERY,
T. A. SALE, Proprietor.
Dealei in
GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS.
Fresh vegetables always on band.
No. 105 Main street,
DENISON, - - TEXAS.
GAISMAN &
GAISM AN &
GAISMAN &
GAISMAN&
GAISM AN &
GALS M A N &
COMPANY.
COMPANY.
COMPANY.
COMPANY.
COMPANY.
COMPANY.
Real Estate Agents.
K. NEEDHAM,
LAND AND CLAIM AGENT,
Will adjust claims against the State o
Texas and the United States, settle
DISPUTED ESTATES,
and 'do a general
LAND AND CLAIM BUSINESS.
Office opposite National Bank.
DENISON - - - TEXAS.
3-6.
JESSE M. COOK,
NOTARY PUBLIC,
AND DEALER IN REAL ESTATE
Gun Block, up stairs,
DENISON, - - TEXAS.
10-2
THE
THE
THE
THE
FIRSTCLASS
FIRSTCLASS
FIRSTCLASS
FIRSTCLASS
GROCERS.
GROCERS.
GROCERS.
GROCERS.
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Medical.
VEGETINE
Purifies the Blood, Renovates and
Invigorates the Whole
System.
Its medical properties are
ALTERATIVE, TONIC, SOLVENT AND
DIURETIC.
vegetine Reliable Evidence.
WASHINGTON.
Col. Schleicher’s Report on Mexi-
can Border Affairs.
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L
EONARD & COFFIN,
REAL ESTATE AGENTS,
Nelson House Building,
DENISON, - - TEXAS.
2-6 tf
w
M. II. HUGHES,
REAL ESTATE AGENT,
Main street,
DENISON,
10-10 tf
TEXAS.
GAIS M AN &
GAISM A N &
GAIS M AN &
GAIS MA N&
GAISM AN A
GAIS M A N &
COMPANY
COMPANY
COMPANY
COMPANY
COMPANY
COMPANY
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THE PRIDE
THE PRIDE
THE PRIDE
THE PRIDE
OF
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DENISON.
DENISON,
DENISON.
DENISON.
Vegetine
Vegetine
Mr H. R. Stevens:
Dear Sir:—I will most cheer-
fully add my testimony to the
great number vou have already
received in favor of your great
and good medicine, Vegetine,
for I do not think enough can
he said in its praise; tori was
troubled over thirty vears with
that dreadful di-ease, Catarrh,
and had such bad coughing
spells that it would seem as
though I never could breathe
Vegetine an-v ,nore> and Vegetine has
a cured tne; and I do feel to thank
God all the time that there is so
good a medicine as Vegetine,
and I also think it one of the
best medicines for coughs, and
weak, sinking feelings at the
stomach, and advise everybody
to take the Vegetine, for I can
assure ttierrt it is one of the best
medicines that ever was.
Mrs. L. GORE,
Cor. Magazine and Walnut Sts.‘
Cambridge, Mass.
Vegetine
Vegetine
Special to the Galveston News.
Washington, March 28.—Mr.
Schleicher will, to-morrow, present
his report on Mexican relations. He
will not make recommendations as
to recognition of Diaz, but will fully
develop the fact that it is both our
interest and duty to give moral sup-
port to the constituted authorities in
a neighboring republic, and that it
will be greatly to our advantage if
Mexico were under a permanent
government strong enough to en-
force law and order in all its States,
lie will recommend that our gov-
ernment shall vigorously assert the
rights of Americans in Mexico, and
thus obtain security against forced
loans, and will also urge that we
shall maintain on the frontier a force
of regular troops sufficient to protect
our own people against raids from
the other side, and pursue robbers
across the line if anywhere Mexican
authorities shall be unable to act
against them. He will also suggest
that President Diaz shall be asked to
encourage immigration into Mexico
by offering security to American
capital and labor desirous to engage
in building railroads, developing
mines, or other industries.
THE PAPAL CONSISTORY.
EDUCATIONAL.
| valuable services o£ Dr. A. C. Burle-
| son, and the Hon- O. N. Hollings-
Some Facts in Regard to the Pea- worth in,favo.r nf P^ic scho01 enter*
body Fund-Denison Liberally , Pr,se 1,1 ”*'* city. T he School Corn-
Endowed, Etc. mittee
lowed,
Editor Daily Nexus:
will, probably take some
action at the next meeting of the City
Council, recognizing the benefaction
In view of the liberal donation ^hi,ch we ?re to receive through the
of ($1,500) granted our public school j‘"“Re8s of theab°ve mentioned gen-
from the Peabody Fund, the follow-
ing in regard to this great source of
educational aid lor the Southern I
States, will, no doubt, be
interest:
Q. E. D.
__________ Dr. Wright, of Blue Ridge, in-
read with forms us that a kind of caterpillar is
destroying the foliage of the trees in
Gen. J. Eaton, U. S. Commission- Dig Creek bottom, fairly stripping
them of their leaves. They are not
the regular caterpillar, but are cer-
tainly a species of them, and very
probably are the production of those
great flights of butterflies which
were noticed to be going overhead
last fall, in such large numbers.
They are something unusual to tin's
section.—Marlin Dali.
An Astonishing Fact.
v M
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COMPLETE
COMPLETE
COMPLETE
COMPLETE
COMPLETE
COMPLETE
SELECTION.
SELECTION.
SELECTION.
SELECTION.
SELECTION.
SELECTION.
Vegetine
Vegetine
Vegetine
GIVES
HEALTH, STRENGTH,
AND APPETITE.
Restoration of the Scotch Hier-
archy and Conferring of the Hat
on the American Cardinal.
Vegetine
My slaughter has received
great benefit fiom the use of I p0pe delivered
I •>- -.........
all her triends. A few bottles of
Vegetine restored her health,
trength and appetite.
N. H. TIL DEN,
insurance and Real Estate Agt.,
No. 4G Sears Building,
Boston, Mass.
CANNOT BE
Vegetine
Vegetine
H. TONE. J. T. MUNSON.
pONE & MUNSON,
Dealers in
REAL ESTATE,
—and—
COLLECTION AGENTS.
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Abstracts of Titles furnished for the
City of Denison and Grayson county.
CORRECTNESS GUARANTEED.
Office, 215 Mainstreet, upstairs.
DENISON, TEXAS.
Gunsmiths.
J^HEEDER & BEEBE,
GUN AND LOCKSMITHS.
A full assortment of all goods in our
line alwavs on hand. Breech and muzzle
loading guns for rent. Repairing neatly
and promptly done. West Main street,
south side, Denison, Texas. •
Prospectus.
VICK’S
THE
THE
THE
THE
LEADING,
LEADING!
j
LEADING
LEADING
GROCERS.
GROCERS.
GROCERS.
GROCERS.
Y \
Y Y
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YY
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ONLY
ONLY
ONLY
ONLY
THE BEST
THE BEST
THE BF.ST
THE BEST
GORCERIES
GROCERIES
GROCERI E S
GROCERIES
EXCELLED
Charleston-, Mass.
Vegetine\H- 7?. Stevens.
[ Dear Sir ; This is to certify
(that I have used your -Blood
Preparation” in my family for
Several \ears, and think that,
or scroula or Cankerous Hu-
mors of Rheumatic Affections,
it cannot be excelled; and, as a
blood purifier or spring medi-
cine, it is the best thing I have
ever used, and I have used al
most everything. I can cheer-
fully recommend it to any one
in need of such a medicine.
Yours respectfully,
Mrs. A. A. Dinsmorr,
Vegetine No. 19 Russell Street.
IT IS A
VALUABLE REMEDY.
South Boston, Feb. 7, 1S70,
Mr. Stevens,
Dear Sir : I have taken sev-
eral bottles of your Vegetine,
and am convinced it is a valua-
ble remedy for Dyspepsia, Kid-
ney Complaint, and general de-
bility of the system.
I can heartily recommend it
to all suffering from the above
complaints.
Yours respectfully,
Mrs. Monroe Parker,
86 Athens Street.
Vegetine
Vegetine
Vegetine
VEGETINE
Prepared by
H. R. STEVENS, BOSTON, MASS
Rome, March 28.—A consistory
was held at the Vatican to-day. The
an allocution and
the Scotch episco-
pate as follows: The Right Rev.
John Strain, D. D., metropolitan
archbishop of St. Andrews, at Edin-
burg; the Most Rev. Charles Eyre
Rich, bishop of Glasgow ; the Rev.
McDonald, bishop of Aberdeen;
Rev. MacLochland, bishop of Gal-
loway, and Rev. McDonald, bishop
of Argyle.
His holiness then appointed Fath-
er Chatard. rector of the American
college at Rome, to he bishop of;
Vincennes, and Father Kane bishop
of Richmond.
lie then made the professions of
faith according to the established
usage anil took the oath to the apos-
tolic constitutution. Finally:, he
conferred the hat on Cardinal Mc-
Closkey, who, after the consistory,
had a private audience with the
Pope.
Rome, March 2S.—Rev. Father1
Grant, grand rector of the Scotisffi !
college, and organizer of the Seotish !
hierarchy, which was proclaimed
to-day, died yesterday. He be- j
queathed his private fortune to the
Catholic church of Scotland.
Cardinal Louis Arnot Disan Fe-
iippo E. Sorse is dying.
er of Education, in his report to the
Secretary of the Interior for the year
1877 says : “Nothing in the century
of our history just closing, indeed
noth jug in human history, parallels
George Peabody’s aid to education in
the Southern States, whether we con-
sider the awards bestowed or the
method in which the great trust is
administered. Its operations com-
menced early after a great civil war.
They aimed to secure not merely in- , . , ..
diviJ.,,,1 education, but the establish-1
ment or otate educational systems by dyspepsia or disordered liver. The result
local action among a people who had 1 °f these diseases upon the masses of in-
little experience of common schools 1 teh'gent and valuable people is most
and little knowledge of their admin- ?la™inI- making life actually a burden
i,(ration or .bait bench,.. The task : £5i»
undertaken was one of the most del- | reason for this, if you will only throw
icate, the objects aimed at most com- a‘-‘de prejudice and skepticism, take the
prehensive and honorable.” advice of druggists and your friends, and
The following table exhibit. ,h. j smSZ'i
amounts received from the Peabody | of bottle of this medicine have been given
Fui.d, by twelve of the Southern
States from i86Sto 1876 inclusive:
Virginia.......................$183,000
North Carolina................. 82,700
South Carolina................ 23.330
Georgia....................... 67,062
k iorida....................... 41,930
Alabama....................... 51,750
Louisiana...................... 53,850
Arkansas...................... 54,300
Tennessee...................... 175,800
West Virginia.................. 100 900
Texas.......................... 7,800
Total........................ 842,462
Gen. Eaton observes that Mr. Pea-
body's gifts to education and charity
will never be fully known. So far
as ascertained from authentic sources
they were as follows :
Fora church building........$ 100,000
United States Sanitary Commis-
sion........................ JIO.OOO
Museums, libraries, colleges,etc 1,813,500
Southern Educational Fund... 3,484,000 j
For arranging American exhi-
bition at the World’s Fair in
London in 1S57............ 15,000 I
away to try its virtues, with satisfactory
i results in every case. You can buy a
sample bottle for 10 cents to trv. Three
j doses will relieve the worst case. Posi-
tively sold by all druggists on the West-
ern Continent.
FARMING LANDS
For Sale by H. K. Needham, Den-
ison.
A Useful Publication.
Total......................$5,522,500
It will be observed that Texas has
received, comparatively, hut a small
amount from the Peabody Educa-
tional Fund. An explantion of this
fact, however, is found in the very
interesting report of Dr. Sears, (Gen-
eral Agent) for 1S77. He says: “It
may be well to remark, the disparity
apparent In the apportionment ot
funds in the different States is not
the result of negligence or of acci-
dent. Our rule has been as indica-
ted in former reports, to withhold
funds when they would be expended
160 acres of land, 40 of which is
in a good state of cultivation, with
two box houses. Situated in the
prairie two miles north-west of Den-
ison, at a price too low to publish.
I will sell at $3 50 per acre, 339
acres of land, 150 acres of which is
the finest of black sandy prairy, and
the balance grazing and timber land
—situated near the new oil springs.
3'10 tf*
Distress after eating, one ot the most
I unpleasant results of indigestion, will no
j longer be experienced if a tablespoonlul
; of Simmons’ Liver Regulator is taken af-
ter each meal. This wiil prevent the dig-
| tress referred to; and by persevering in
! the use of this remedy for a few weeks a
j permanent cure will be effected, and pain
will no longer be the penalty of eating.
Miss: A word in your ear, The next
fine afternoon that you saunte- out, buy
a box of Glenn's Sulphur Soap. That
admirable purifier will remove every one
of those pimples which detract *0 much
from your beauty.
New Laundry.
The undersigned* respectfully an-
nounces to the public that he has
little purpose, and to bestow them j opened a laundry on Morton street,
liberally where they would be pro-
ductive of important results. The
value of the donations is clearly en
( ui fiiend Biyant has complimen- j hanced by being; made at the right
' lime. All the States will in the end
receive their due consideration, and
each at the lime when the greatest
between Austin and Rusk avenues,
and solicits the patronage of the pub-
lic. Satisfaction guaranteed.
;
, amount of good can be accomplished,
w nch Virginia, Tennessee and West Vir-
ILLUSTRATED PRICED CATALOGUE.
Seventy-five pages—300 illustrations,
witn descriptions of thousands of the best
flowers and vegetables in the world, and
the way to grow them—all for a two cent
postage stamp. Printed in German and
English.
Vick’s Flower and Vegetable Garden,
50 cents in paper covers; in elegant doth
covers, $1.00.
Vick’s Illustrated Monthly Magazine-
32 pages, fine illustrations, and colored
plate in eveiv number. Price $1.25 a
year; five copies for $5.00. Address,
JAMES VICK, Rochester, N. Y.
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Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists.
J.
Tobacconist.
E. MASON,
Manufacturer and Dealer in
ClG-A.nS’,
219 Main street.
DENISON - - TEXAS.
3-7 tf.
ted the News with a copy of his lat
est and best work,“Texas Boiled
Down”—a closely printed pamphlet
of over one hundred pages
tells all about I txas, past, present ginia were early called to pass
and prospective, or, in the language ; through a crisis in the history of
of its title page, Texas as it was, as ! ,neil' public schdols ; and at
it is, as it ought to be and as it will critical junCt,ure theT needed assis’
I . , rp 1 - . . , , , | tance more than they may ever need
oe. Tins is indeed a vade mecum it again. Louisiana, South Carolina
j of statistics and information on vari- J and Texas were not then in a condi-
| ous subjects of interest to the tmi- j tiou favorable to the development ot
: giant and immigrant, and is well :l systenl of schools. It would have
j worth Lie price, which is only 25 becn,a Sross wa,\t of economy to ex-
„ , , ,, ... ,T ,, J I pend money on them in unpropitious
■ cents. Published by W. N. Bryant, times, and have little reserved for
Dallas, Texas. This publication their use when the right opportunity
3-36 6t*
J. E. Bailey.
Gents, Look at This.
Call for the “Don Martino” cigar
—two for twenty-five cents. The
finest ever sold in Denison, For
sale only at Brown’s Bazaar and at
that I Brown & Webb’s.
Oats! Oats! Oats!
has this to say of Denison:
should arrive. Our wise founder
POLITE
POLITE
POLITE
POLITE
POLITE
| POLITE
! ATTENTION
I
ATTENTI O N
ATTENTION
'.\TTENTI O N
ATTENTION
ATTENTION
7^ LENDORF,
Dealer in
HAVANA, KEY WEST,
—AND—
DOMESTIC CIGARS,
Tobacco and Smokers’ Supplies,
Postoffice Building,
.DENISON, - - TEXAS.
Dyeing and Scouring.
^ ALLIGER,
DYEING AND SCOURING,
Austin avenue, next door to Aug. Uhlig,
Denison has about 6.000 popula- i anticipated this course of action,
tion, is on the immediate border hi his^ second letter to the
the Indian Reservations, end the
trade from the different reserves con-
stitutes a very handsome source of
revenue. Tjjis is the sp >t where the
.Missouri, Kansas and Texas Rail-
road strikes hands with the Houston
and Texas Central railroad—and
through this gateway is transferred
a very large and respectable portion
of the freights from the East, and
the mutual interchange of travel from
all parts of the United States. The
export of cattle and cotton is a large
feature ot Denison’sc ommercial ex-
hibits. Denison is the initial point
of the Red River and Rio Grande
railroad, which is now a foregone
conclusion, and will ere long join in
matrimonial bands the mutual inter-
ests of Middle and North Texas.
250 bushels of choice red oats
just received, and offered for sale in
tile Cook building, one door east of
Collin’s Custom Mills, on Woodard
street. _ 3-2 i-tf.
Our Changeful Climate.
Makes a reliable remedy for throat and
lung disorders necessary in every house-
hold. Parkers Ginger Tonic is just the
medicine needed. It radically cures
1 1 ustccs, ot March 20, lie lett j coughs, colds, sore throat, bronchitis and
them “an absolute discretion as to
the localities in which the funds
should from time to time be ex-
pended.’’
Dr. Sears alludes to his visit to
Texas last year with the Rev. Dr.
Burleson, whom he calls “our excel-
lent agent—the pioneer in education,
even consumption, if used in time, by its
powerful specific action on the stomach,
kidneys, skin, liver and mucous surfaces
of the throat and lungs. In this nanirel
way it cleanses the waste matters from the
blood, builds up the tissues, fortifies tne
system against further attacks, and per-
manently allars Inflammations of the
the throat, lungs and other organs. It
■ • . • . - cures dyspepwa and its varied symptoms
who had crossed every river and of headache, nervousness, palpitation of
every prairie from the Gulf of Mexi
co to the Red river, and from the
riabine to the Rio Grande.” He
speaks very hopefully of Texas, and I
evidently desires to do all in his j
power to promote her educational
interests. We know by experience
his feelings towards Denison. Last
year we were granted more aid than j
was asked, and this year though tiie
amount applied for was fifty per
the heart, wakefulness, acid stomach,
costiveness, liver complaints, coated
tongue, low spirits, rheumatic paiw- etc.,
and gives comfort after a heartf mea1
buy a $1.00 hottle from your druggist,
3\ . M, Hanna & Co., or a sample bottle at
Wets., and test its extraordinary merits.
t-3-5 7-9 n-i3-
— — ♦ -•
Mothers, Mothers, Mothers.
Don’t fail to procure Mrs. Wins-
. . low’s Soothing Syrup for ail diseases
Stages will commence running be- cent, ixjore than last year, yet it was of teething in children. It relieves
promptly granted. The people of j
DENISON,
TEXAS.
tween Fort Worth, Texas, and Fort
Yuma, California, July rst. Col.
Chichester, of Little Rock, is the
cohtAactoi.
. . the child from pain, cures wind
Denison certainly appreciate the ! colic, regulates the bowels, and, by
kindness of Dr. Sears in thus re- giving relief and health to the child,
sponding to their appeal in a time ot j gives rest to the mother.
need, 1.01 are they insensible of the
3*6-o&w-iyr.
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Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 33, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 31, 1878, newspaper, March 31, 1878; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth525126/m1/1/: accessed April 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.