The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 52, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 28, 1889 Page: 1 of 4
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W)
m:
^Scotch Flannels,
Oxfords,
Zephyrs,
French Percales,
, —AT THE—
VOLUME VI
T
l SUBSCRIPTION TWO DOLLARS A YEAR , J
1 ONE DOLLAR FOR SIX MONTHS. 1
DENISON, TEXAS, SUNDAY, APRIL 28, 1889.
ANNA, • COWLES
III MMR STREET, Wholesale and Retail
“MONARCH” Gasoline Stoves,
4 “GARLAND” Cook Stoves,
I “BUCK’S BRILLIANT” Cook Stoves,
“CENTENNIAL” Refrigerators,
“WHITE MOUNTAIN” Ice Cream Freezers,
Water Coolers, Lawn Mowers,
Screen Wire,
, _. . . _ y\ ■ 1
Cutlery, Tinware,
House Builders’ Hardware,
Carpenters’ Tools, Barbed Wire,
Farming Implements, Wire Fence,
Buggies, Wagons, Nails, Iron.
Screen Doors,
X ±Lj-E
«DR. IjA]VG-S»
OVER UNCLE BEN’S JEWELRY STORE.
Representative Henry Cabot
Lodge, of Massachusetts, is a very
fortunate man. He says: “I am
not overburdened by office-seekers.
The people of my State do not seem
to be anxious tor much. In my dis-
trick there has not yet been a single
endeavor to remove a postmaster.”
'y
n
Cheatham’s Chill Tonic, purel
vegetable, guaranteed to cure a
forms of chills and fevers. Try it.
Sold by Guiteau & Waldron, 13-tf
The Inter-State Commerce Com-
mission has notified the officers of
all the railroads in the Middle and
Eastern Stales to appear before the
Commission May 3d, and set forth
the persons and classes of persons,
if any, to whom each of them has
issued free passes or free transporta-
tion to persons other than its own
officers or employes, and the officers
and employes of other railroad com-
panies, and all the conditions and
limitations connected therewith in
each instance, and how they do this
branch of business.
THE GOMIHG EXCURSION.
What Ita Members Will Probably Da On
• Its Arrival,
“A little fire it quickly trodden
out, which being suffered, rivers
cannot quench.” The same may be
said of human disease. A little
indigestion, a alight disarrangement
of the bowels, a torpid liver lead to
aerious complications and results.
These can be avoided by the use of
Morria' Cascarinc. 30-im.
-----
Fruit of the Lrtom and Lonsdale
bleach muslin, 36 inches wide, for
10 cents per yard, at Beirne & Sten-
son’s. j
The Hush of hope on the cheek
fades into paleness under the bale-
ful influences of constipation. Mor-
ris’ Cascarinc will cure this com-
plaint. 30-1 m.
For yean it has been the custom
to consider the four years’ commis-
sions of Federal officials as begin-
ning from the date of theirconflrma-
lion. Now, in order to make vacan-
cies, the Republican Congressmen
are bringing pressue to bear on
President Hatrison to have an order
issued to consider these commis-
sions as dating from the original
appointment. The President has
referred the question to “me too”
Miller for an opinion, and the chan-
ces are that all those officials ap-
pointed by Mr. Cleveland in the
spring anil summer of 18$$ will find
out that their commissions are con-
sidered as having expired, notwith-
standing that it was in some cases a
year alter appointment before the
Senate confirmed them. The Re-
publicans want the offices, and not
having any good excuse for remov-
ing the incumbents, they have hit
upon this schefiie.
Bsllsi A't HonAossI Syrup.
Wa lurtatN tku to b# th« tmt Ce*Srm/ oab-
■Jkcturod in th« m hole wide world. Thu u keying n
treat deal .but it t% /ran For (wmo/fw*, Ctugks,
CVAfr, 5#r< r*r#e/. Sere Chest, Pneumonia, Bron-
(Amu, Asthma, Croup, Whooping Coug -4, and all
diaOa>ea of the Threat and Lung*, we positively
guarantee Ballard'* Horahound Syrup lo be without
any equal on tha whole (ace of the f lobe In tupport
of this statement wa refer to every individual who has
av«r uaed it. and to tvery druggist who has evar sold
It. Such evidence is indisputable.
T. B. Hanna & Son, Agent.
KOOFIHG.
Go to Smith & Beck’s.
Persons wishing to improve their
memories or strengthen their power
of retention should send to Prof.
Loisette, 337 Fifth Avenue, New
York, tor his prospectus post free,
as advertised in another column.
Three thousand yards satine rem-
nants shall be on our bargain coun-
ters Monday morning, at one-half
regular value. Beirne & Stenson.
Bath tubs at Campbell Bros.
You may buy any clasrof goods
in our line, no matter even if they
be piece goods, and if you find they
are not better value than is sold by
our competitors then we shall take
back the said goods and return your
money. Such is the faith we have
in our low prices for good goods.
Beirne & Stenson.
Water meters, the cheapest and
beat in the city, at
Campbell Bros.
It is scarcely to be expected that
the contingent of one thousand New
England capitalists and manufactur-
ers, who will arrive in the city next
month, will be as deeply interested
in tailor made clothing as they wilt
be in iron, coal and real estate, but
that they may not] disdain an oc-
casional investment in this drection,
is amply justified by 'he action of
last week’s visiting delegation, many
of whom, though returning so soon
to the Hub of America, saw fit to
purchase at the Star Store in this
city, not only complete suits ot their
fine tailor made clothing, but outfits
of fine silk shirts and haberdashery
as well. This alert and enterprising
firm, always awake to the necessities
of their trade and anxious to secure
that which will give the largest
measure of satisfaction, have taken
a new departure this season in the
quality of the clothing handled by
them, and instead of the cheaply
manufactured goods formerly
brought to this market, have intro-
duced a line of tailor made goods,
cut in the latest styles, handsomely
lined and finished, substantially put
together, and equal in guaranteed
excellence to the best productions of
the first craftsmen in the city. These
goods cost no mare than the slop
made goods sold by the general
trade, and require only an inspection
to prove their superiority. Nobody
who appreciates an elegantly fitting
stylishly cut, and substantially made
garment, can afford to refuse giving
this great importation an examina-
tion. The line of elegant novelties
in shirts is now complete, and con-
sists of men’s fine shirts in zephyr-
weight flannels, silk warps, silk
stripes and Fongee; also complete
lines of negligee cheviots and fancy
flannels in Ceyloij Oxford zephyr,
French printed, lawn tennis, etc.
These goods are the finest in the
market, and should be seen by every
man who would combine elegance
with comfort in what he wears. •
Distress after eating, heartburn,
sick headache, and indigestion are
cured by Dr. J. H. McLean’s Liver
and Kidney Fillets (little pills.)
Anything you want in the plumb-
ing line at Campbell Bros., and at
living prices.
Kirk and Dud Fairbanks, of the
Austin avenue hews depot, are
active boomers ip their line, and
smell business afar off. When the
New England capitalists arrived in
our city they found the Boston
Daily Globe and Other New England
papers on sale oin the streets, the
resu’t of the foresight and energy
of the young gentlemen above men-
tioned. _j
During the warm weather yon
need an apetizer | and strengthener.
Try Cheatham's Chill Tonic. Sold
bv Guiteau ifr Waldron. i5-tf
j*- -■ "■
While some boys were shooting at
a target near Foft Worth the other
day, by a premature discharge, one
boy named Claud Booth, was shot
in the eye, killing him instantly.
Hose, hose, hose, fully guaran-
teed, at Campbell Bros.
--4-w--
There is more Catarrh in this section
of the country than alt other diseases put
together, and until the last tew years was
supposed to be incurable. For a great
many years doctors! pronounced it a local
disease, and prescribed local remedies,
and by constantly [ tailing to cure With
local treatment, pronounced it incurable.
Science has proven! catarrh to be a con-
stitutional disease, and therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney &
Co., Toledo, Ohioj is the only constitu-
tional cure on the market. It is taken in-
ternally in doses trjom ten drops to a tea-
spoonful. It acts directly upon the blood
and mucus surface]of the system. They
offer one hundred dollars tor any case it
fails to cure. Send tor circulars and tes-
timonials. Addreis, F. J. CHENEY &
CO., Toledo, Ohio. AV* Sold by Drug-
gists, 75 cents^ 40-im
Ladies solid hose for 5 cents per
pair. Beirne & Stenson.
OLD RELIABLE
This is Pettit & Waltz. Anything
you want go to them.
OLUTOBD Sc ESLEB.
Messrs. Cliff&rd & Esler, the ar-
tistic painters and decorators, are
enjoying a run of business, which
not only engages their whole atten-
tion, but which is on the increase
everyday. They have just received
a very .large shipment of new wail
papers in all the latest designs and
tints, and will pay especial attention
to the decoration of interiors with
this handsome material. To ac-
commodate this department of their
growing business, they have rented
the store room adjoining their paint
shops, No. 223 West Main street,
which they have fitted up as a show
room for their stock. Here they
will be glad to receive their patrons,
and to receive commands for paint-
ing or for the decoration of interiors.
The Belknap Rifles, of San An-
tonio, are en route to New York to
take part in the parade ot the Cen-
tennial of Washington’s inaugura-
tion. They will worthily represent
Texas, an empire as little known to
those who took part in the cere-
monies of a century ago as the in-
terior of the Dark Continent is to
those who will be present at the
coming ones.
The Invalids Hope.
Many seeyningiy incurable cases of blood
poison, catarrh, scrofula and rheumatism have
been cured Dy B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm),
made by the Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta, Ga. Write
to them for hook filled with convincirg prjot.
G. W. B. Raider, living seven miles from
Athens, Ga., writes: “For several yevrs 1 suffer-
ed With running ulcers, which doctors treated and
pronounced incurable. A single bottle ot B. B.
B. did me more good than all the doctors. I kept
on using it and every ulcer heated."
G. C. Kinard a Son, Towaltga, Ga., writes:
We induced a neighbor to try B. B. B. tor
crt*rrh, which he thought incurable, as it had re
sisted all treatment. It delighted him, and con-
tinuing its use he was cured sound and well."
R. M. Lawson, East Point, Ga., writes “My
wife had scrofula 15 years. She kept growing
worse. She lost her hair and her skin broke out
fearfully, Debility, emaciation and no appetite
followed. After physicians and numerous ad
vertised medicines failed, I tried B. B. B., and
her recovery was rapid and complete.”
Oliver Secoty- Baltimore, Md., writes: “I suf
fered from weak back and rheumatism. B. B. B.
has proven to be the only medicine that gave me
relief.”
51-im
Soil pipe at Campbell Bros., No.
1 iS Rusk avenue.
Dr. W. G. Lange has removed
his dental office from over the “Red
Front” to the pleasant and commo-
dious rooms recently occupied by
Messrs. Coffin & Zintgraff, over
Uncle Ben’s, which he has furnished
elaborately. The Doctor probably
has no superior in his protession in
the State, and those who wish
dental work done should call and
examine his work and learn prices.
Gasoline
Pettit A Waltz.
TWIN BURN EE
stoves, just received by
Prom oar Special Correspondent.
OUB WA8HIHQT0H LETTER
Washington, April it, ’£9.
Government receipts for week end-
ing April 20: Internal revenue,
$2,186,743; customs, $4,348,072.
Total, $6,734,813.
The week lias been one ot hopes
and expectations, but the outcome
does not show up as the “boys”
would like. In the first place the
President showed an utter want of
interest in the claims ot the patriots,
t. e. Republicans, for he went down
the river on an excursion, and left
hundreds of hungry office-seekers
loafing around in Washington. This
they do not think proper, for during
the time he lost on the trip he could,
had he taken the advice of those
who want to give it, appointed more
than a hundred men to office. I
heard an amusing growl at the Eb-
bitt House the other night. There
was a lot of office-seekers together
and one of them was telling that,
during the campaign, he went more
than a dozen times to see Mr. Har-
rison and was never refused admis-
sion. He thought Ben all O. K.;
and now, he says, I have been up to
the White House more than a dozen
times^sent in my card and have not
been able to see him yet. His
case is but the^general run ot all.
Before the electionV'Ren had to see
everybody, now he is biJss^and can
use his own sweet will as towtio he
shall see. Many men fall into the
error of supposing that a man’s ac-
tions, when he is a candidate, shows
his true character. There never was
a more fatal error. As a general run
the man who is the most suave and
bending when a candidate, turns out
after he is elected to be the most
arbitrary man in existence. When
a man is a candidate he has to bend
and seem glad to meet men whose
very presence is loathsome; but
alter the election the necessity for
such a course is past, and most men
give the cold shoulder to those
they do not like. Harrison is, by
birth, bearing and instinct, a gentle-
man, and the howling rounder in the
political arena has no charms for
him at any time, and while he toler-
ates him during the campaign, now
that he is elected he can give him the
go by. Harrison is but a part ot the
general rule in this respect, and is
not the exception.
Tuesday, April 16, was the
coon’s day. Fur weeks they have
been making elaborate preparations
for the celebration of Emancipation
Day in the District of Columbia.
The weather god put the blacks, so
far as the day was concerned, on an
equality with the people on inaugu
ration day, tor it rained almost the
entire day. They did not flinch,
but marched in the rain, and at
night had the pleasure of reading m
the papers that the President had
appointed two men to office, and
narry a one a coon. William F. Hep-
burn, of Iowa, was appointed
Solicitor of the Treasury, and Wm.
H. Whiteman associate justice ot
the supreme court of New Mexico.
Whiteman is a Whiteman in tact as
well as in name, and it does seem
strange that on this day, above all
others, the black man’s day, that a
whiteman in name and in fact should
be appointed to office. Is this an
omen, or merely a coincidence? The
President sent in the name of White-
man for the same office and the
Senate failed to confirm him. T he
appointment of Mr. Hepburn is a
good one. He is a good lawyer, a
jovial fellow and a gentleman in his
behavior, He was a member of
Congress from Iowa tor six years,
and was above the average congress-
man. He was a most persistent op-
poser to the general river and harbor
bills and always stood to his guns.
From a personal acquaintance of
some years, I am fully satisfied that
the President has made a good ap-
pointment and one that will be a
credit to his administration.
Appointments made on April 17:
Robert Protection Porter, of New
York, superintendent of census;
Wm. H. Calkins, of Indiana, asso-
ciate justice of the supreme court of
Washington Territory; J. W. Cun-
ningham, assayer at Boise City,
Idaho.
We have been told, and know by
his acts that President Harrison is a
protectionist per se. No act of his
has emphasized this fact more than
the appointment of this Englishman,
Robert Protection Porter, as super-
intendent ot the census for taking
the eleventh census. Porter is as
crazy on protection as Wash Jones
is on greenbackism. He will start
out in the compilation of the
eleventh census with the sole and
only purpose of proving that every
blessing at hand, or in the prospec-
tive, comes from a high tariff.
Earthquakes, cyclones, prairie fires,
grasshopper plagues, overflows of
the rivers, small-pox, yellow lever,
cholera, etc., he will sa), was caused
by the agitation of the question of
reducing the tariff. The campaign
book lor the Republican party in
1S92, will be compiled by govern-
ment employes under the control of
Porter. During the last campaign
he was the editor ot the New York
Press, and if anyone can show a
single issue of that paper, during the
! campaign, that did not shriek for
| protection then I will acknowledge
[ that Tom Ochiltree is a truth-teller
j and Gnat Q. Henderson a states-
| man. Every supervisor and enumer-
ator of the census will have special
on the score of fitness, for he is emi- ments, the President
nently fitted to fill the place with nounces that he has set
to-day an-
IENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER|
r AT THE DENISON TOSTOmCE.
NUMBER 52.
credit and honor. During the last
campaign he wa* living in Indiana
and since that time; the first time
I heard of him living in Washington
Territory was his appointment. I
understand that he has gone there to
live, but I shrewdy suspect that, the
tact that WashifMon Territory will
be a state by nem October and will
havfc the electing of two U. S. sena-
tors, accounts for the fact of the
change of residence. Harrison, it
seems, »s willing to help him in his
efforts in that line. V\ ell, if Wash-
ington is to have Republican sena-
tors, I know of no man that I would
rather see in the Senate, of Republi-
can faith, than Wm. H. Calkins. If
he is elected, Wfohington will have
a senator the equal in ability to any
senator there. But the question that
constantly recurs to me is, what be-
comes of the pledge to appoint resi-
dents of the territories only to terri-
torial offices, and how long a resi-
dence does it require to make a man
a resident and citizeo?
On Thursday,>the 18th, the Pres-
ident made appointments as follows:
E. S. Lacey of Michigan, controller
of the currency; T G. Phelps, to
be collector at San Francisco, Cal.,
and F. S. Hill, collector of internal
reveniie for Maryland and District of
Columbia. These appointments are
of but little consequence to the peo-
ple at large, except the office of con-
troller, and that only affects national
hankers. Lacey has had a short
congressional experience and made
no mark except receipting for his
salary, for diemage and stationery
account. But in this respect his
record is on par with nine-tenths of
the members ol Congress.
IS YOUR APPLIC ATION ON FILE ? ^
In about ten days the State De-
partment will begin the appointment
of U. S. Consuls. During the round
up the department will brand some
two hundred and ten. It speaks well
for the modesty of the American
office-seeker, that for these two
hundred places, there are on file
only 3300 applications. Among
these applications is that of Zadek
of Texas, who “vants to be consul
mit Hamburg, and who vas Ihe best
Republican in Texas.” The indi-
cations are that Zadek is too short to
reach the plum. This appointment
of consuls should be made with
great care. England, by a wise
selection of her consuls, has built up
her commercial supremacy. Ninety-
nine out of every hundred of the ap-
plicants for these places have no
other idea of the duties of the office,
other than to travel at government
expense and see the world. I doubt
if one in a hundred knows the lan-
guage of the country to which he
wants to go. The resources of the
country to which he wants to go is ^
matter that has never entered his
head. Ask one of them what we
import from that country and what
we export to it, and he will look at
you in surprise. Not one in a hun-
dred has the least idea that the true
mission of a consul is to furnish to
his country the information that will
enable us to increase our commercial
dealings with that country. The
consuls of all other nations are hut
the eyes and ears of their country at
every commercial centre in the world.
Through their governments at home
the citizens of his country are told
of what the people where he is sta-
tioned need. He lays betore the
people where he is stationed the ad-
vantages of the articles of commerce
that his people have. The result is,
that England, German}-, France and
other nations have taken all our
foreign trade from us. Consuls of
other nations are not on leave during
campaigns and at home whooping
the hoys up. As our consul system
is at present run it is but an alimony
establishment to pension off political
heelers and pay them from the public
crib. Congress should divorce our
consulor service trom the political
pen and anrex it as a part and par
cel of our commercial interests and
let bosses of trades in commercial cen-
tres select men tor the country with
which that part of our country trades
If this was done we would soon
have a foreign trade that would
necessitate the building up of Amer-
ican ships, and that is what we
need more than soft place* for polit-
'ical hacks:
SPECIAL AIIOUICEEEITI
I Lingo, Waples & Co.,
•Mu
AND-
A»*ICBHU*A$ IIHHUf MVU,
/ I» Headquarter* for
Itnrstj- Hardwa
re. “quick
Kvcrvtklng Is Iron nail Mkcll sail
Mtovcaaail other I^caiUag Mnki-a, Iluggira, W,
►♦<•«* l.-m. Trata. KlMrtMNl Wire, Hlaokantiha'______ _ _
l’lowa, Wagon Wood-work, Nteel anil Wire NalU. Culler*.
Giiua. 1*1*tolas anil AwrimrIUm.
EVERYTHING THE TRADE DEMANDS.
----
SOLE AGENTS FOR THE “(’HARTER OAK” AND OTHER FAMOUS
BRANDS OF COOK STOVES; Alno HAY DOCK BUGGIES.
aside aepa- '
rate days tor the several departments '
a* follows: Monday—Navy De-I
partment; Tuesday—Postoffice De
partment; Wednesday — Treasury-
Department ; Thursday — Interior
Department; Friday — State De-
partment ; Saturday—War Ilepart- I
ment. As business from the depart-
ments of justice and agriculture is of
minor importance no particular days
are given these two departments.
By this system the heads of the
various departments know just what
days they can talk over business !
from their departments with the j
President and can devote the other
days to their office work and the two
Cabinet days of Tuesday and Fri-
day. Unless it is urgent business,
that will not admit of delay, each
Cabinet officer will refrain from
running to see the President. The
plan, 1 think, will work well.
DAMN IT, HOW HE NICK* 'EM.
There is one official that com-
mands the admiration of every
patriot ( ?) here, via. J. S. Clarkson,
first assistant postmaster-geheral.
His daily average ot appointments
of fourth class postmasters is now
one hundred and eighty, and he. is
trying to run it up to two hundred
per day. Then take the postal
clerks. Mr.-Cleveland issued an or-I ..
der fixing Apr.1 13 a» the day when Prompt tint! Careful Attention Given Order* Throuah the \tniim
Snivel Service reform should apply i _____ ~ T
to postal clerks. Harrison knew Hl INDUCEMENT* TO OOI'NTHY ONUKKN.
Clarkson was a humper trom Hump- J —— ■ ■-——-3-3——
ersville, but did not thiuk he could
get his work in by that time so ex-
tended the time till May 1. As
Clarkson's admirers here say, there |
°n. C1*.rk%on “nd h*,h“ | ret. in office, though she may be an
m.i let *t “k h“" d official, wife, she should he trea.ed
hvr M ? U* •? “ “ h" husband’s taking office
b> the time May 1st roll, around, 1 rohbed her o(
there will not be a solitary Demo- j r;ghts to be
crat or that unmentionable tribe,
mugwumps, in office. There is no
doubt but that Harriso'i believes in I eastbr eggs
Snivel Service reform tor—Repub- - Saturday was a beautiful spring
licans. * I day, but only one easterling official
a hit of history. P°PP«d out of the shell, viz: Robert
Senator John Sherman has put in
a great deal of time in trying to get P°,n,cd $*cond Secretary of the
H C Parsons appointed Controller |
of the Currency, and when E. S.
Lacey received the appointment
John was somewhat surprised and I
is wondering how it was done. It •
was done in this way: I saw it “ °‘ * "*K“'VC •"d «»>«
mentioned that Sherman was urging ! 'J’ * h,le ,,h*v have not got what
Parsons’ appointment. Meeting . *hr> ar,e ',ler’ f*"°" h-
Republican that does not love Sher- "° Look ml ?**• ( ?)
man. I told him quietly how to heat • . f* not Pr®V,,ded F,r»‘ «"d
John. I to!d him to go to the Sen- j ^Tr'’ " S*""! u”* 1 * «ood
ate and get the report ol the Secre- ,Kpub!'C*n; ^ h* fr-
iary of the Interior. made in .SR. I ,ht\n ,he fortunate Luther Zadek.
100, 102 aiul 104 East Main Street.
taking
none of her vested
rights to be treated as a lady, and
above all as a woman.
one patriots (?) on hand will sing
Gloria in Excelsis in a subdued key
THE TEXAS 8PRLN0 PALACE.
Mile* of Caotm—Another Anno*
tion Second lor Fort WorUi.
BULLLAVT VOAX OF A 00BP* or
OmtAXAKTim.
Fmb is* r«i mma ".mu. mm mm
Mr. E M. Lingo has )i*m returned trom
a trip to Kansas CM* ind Chlrwa, and
wtule absent arranged lor the nklMie*
| In HiW city ot the greatest feat tic painting
la thM country, “MUnion*. r t)h%e sag
lookout Mountain.*’ Tha r*1**1* g
| IBM great maairrpiece ot art mas dona La
I Berlin, Germany, br a corps *f noted
artists mho spent months to thM counter,
.teeing ami sketch<ng the conntre In
I i
•Sas s
iiSLtrsSrl
»«l I
There cause to be thankful j which the scene M depleted. The ,__
lnf was transported to thM country la M*
Iasi sailing steamer Idle, lair 10, ittg,
arrived la New Yotfc laly u, •
special permit ns* issued b, the .Secretary
ol War to here
I a. 5 snS » Vet •*. la Hote l i
mr 1 « bsansut O Pal
r— *
SOM* >.« Out _________
Gsma* MtAjteea «s dupe s tons
end P C. KnSe team and teea
iSSi I ,*u-n fortunate i.umcr /.riitk.
and which contained a copy of J. j! | f*Tnd oi ,he kU* ,lu,,cr*
Newell’s diary. and he would tee ! C,n.“* Q Henderson. What . trio
that H. C. Parsons, while Marshall f, ,n° LCu1,e’ /adek and
of the T. S. Supreme Court in 1871, ,iender*°". •!' howlers from bow-
was the chief lobbyist for FremoUt ; J™"*’ f*cl* flaming «o ^ the
anti Marshall O. Roberts, and was man'h“ Pu,l'd Barren through,
the man who placed over one mil- °n !"* ^ "° olfice'
lion of dollars of land Erant bond. I Wdl 'hV°“n,rv ?
Kob. Protection Porter is a true
patriot. He took the oath of office
The duty paid on tha can,a* uas 1 T^JTZa.' .....jr* **"* •
nyouo. TO* painting M yape (cat mam sod ten Mar an « o4d steal |ju s
con tains 30,000 supr'Etsa. leet I 1,11 ■«*. o s lamm system,
elgtr. osar seven loos. The bus in ten* n*o .
li was I hipped was lour iret ,quam : «*«—- II Vr' p Vte’ji**
grant
among congressmen where it would
do the most good. The man I spoke
to told me he got the document and
sent it by a safe man to the Presi-
dent. The next day Lacey was ap-
pointed and John Sherman is now
wondering who struck Billy Patter-
son. Time evens up a great many
things, and this is one of them.
Saturday, April aoth, so his salary
would begin, and left for New
\ ork to confer I expect with the
Protective League Association as
to the best manner to show that pro-
tection protects the manufacturers.
THE STORM AT APIA.
ship your cats. Admiral Kimberley's official re-
A dispatch from Dubuque. Iowa, P°" W“ rece,v*d •« d«-
says: “A new industry has suddenly y,'*terdaJr: Tbe •'•P00
sp.ung up here. A man is here buy- d'flc” *Tom wh« "•
ing up cals and pay. from 30 cents to know' . Thl' mrn «•
$. each, according to size and age. d°°mfd ^ *howed ,,u< Ameri-
He shids them to Dakota where he I C*".P U.C
sells them at $3 each, where they are 1 W"h CO,OTt
wanted to destroy the mice which
swarm by thousands around corn
and wheat bins, doing great dam-
age. Cat* are very scarce in Dakota.
Thus far two car loads of cats have
been shipped. ’
Communicated.
Rev. A. Strokes, of Dallas, is in
the city. He preached last Thurs-
day a wonderful sermon. Subject,
“Rejoice because vour name is writ-
ten in the lamb’s book of life.”
He said we ought not to rest
until vve know that our names
rV*tte<r>i *n tbe s hook j orders to get information that shows
of life. 1 he stone which the
builders rejected, the same was : appointment will be the means of
mac e the head ot the the corner. expioding an oft quoted saying,
This was from the Lord. And it is I “that figures do not lie;” for the
marvelous in our eyes. And the j way he will distort figures to make
voice ot God, and the voice of the i black white, will cause Eli Perkins
people rule 1 say to this large ma- . and Tom Ochiltree to hide their
jority if God is tor you. who | heads in shame and mortification,
can be against you.- Hell itself and cause Aninas and Saphira to
may rage, ant venture spite. Christ wish they had been figures instead
will save his heart’s delight. It is . of human being8.
nothing but prejudice that the big j
men have got against Elder Griffin j william h. calkins.
^'s. congregation. Rev. J. L. : It seems somewhat strange to
Griffin is endorsed by 3,000 people j read that the President has appoint-
in Dallas, he holding the largest re- ed W. H. Calkins, of Washington
vival ever held in that city
Rev. J. L. Griffin preached to
4,000 people Sunday night in the
skating rink at Dallas, and he has
organized a Baptist Church in that
city. A convention will be held in
Denison the last of May. They
say Moses was a good old man,
but he erred and died before the
promised land. Rev. J. L. Griffin
and his congregation still remain in
Hopewell Baptist church. * * *
Territory, associate justice for that
Territory, for Mr. Calkins is, in
fact, from Indiana. He was for
some years a member of Congress
from that state, and candor compels
the admission that he was one of the
ablest men that I have ever seen
from that state in Congress. Every-
body who knew him respected and
liked him for he is a wholesouled,
generous and big-hearted man. No
one can object to his appointment
POST OFFICES ON OCEAN VESSELS.
Mr. Sachse, Secretary of the Im-
perial German postoffice, in a lettei
to the Postmaster-General, dated
Berlin, March 6, proposes the es-
tablishment, jointly by the United
States and Germany, of sea post-
offices on vessels plying between the
United States and German ports
which carry mails. The suggestion
is made that postal clerks, similar to
railway mail clerks, be employed
jointly by the two governments for
the distribution of the mail while
crossing the ocean, so that when the
mail arrives at the port ot destina-
tion it will have been distributed for
all the large distributing offices,
either in the United States or Ger-
many. The estimated cost of the
service, as estimated by Mr. Sachse,
will be about $43,000 per annum,
which, to each country, will he
$22,500 per annum. The Post-
master-General has the matter under
consideration. If this is adopted,
then as each government will pay
one-halt ot the cost, then each gov-
ernment should appoint its half of
the clerks. If adopted, it will he
followed by other nations and this
PortePs w'd give more clerks- These ap-
pointments would be very desirable
offices to seek.
On Priday. April 19, the Presi-
dent made the tollowiug appoint-
ments: Solon W. Stocking, of
Onondaga, N. Y., to be an exami-
ner-in-chief in the patent office; R.
W. Wlieelock, of Mitchell, Dak.,
receiver of public moneys at Mitch-
ell, Dak.; H. Kelley, ot Jackson-
ville, Ore., receiver of public moneys
at Drewsey, Ore.; J. R. Hayden, of
Olympia, W. T., receiver of public
moneys at Seattle, W. T.; Laban J.
Miles, of West Branch, Iowa, agent
for the Indians of the Osage Agency
in the Indian Territory; James D.
Hatchitt, of Frankfort, Ky., a spe-
cial agent to make allotments of
lauds in severalty to Indians, (act of
Congress approved Feb. S, 1887);
Morris D.Wickersham, ot Alabama,
to be U. S. attorney for the southern
district of Alaham*
.somewhat sarcastic.
China has sent four of her distin-
guished men to this country to s.udy
and investigate “the wavs, manners,
means and methods of American
civilization.” They arrived in Wash-
ington, I). C., Saturday morning,
and are stopping at the Arlington | the Yankee
Hotel. The gentlemen bear the j
following names-. Y. L. Foo, H. |
K. Koo, H. P., Sanainura and
Tson-foo. Without seeing their I
special orders it would be bard to j
tell just what they are after. We I
have various ways, methods and ]
manners of civilizations. In New
\ ork City the gin mill brigade furn- j
ish the aldermen and rounders. In
other places a man’s voting is fixed
by his grave-yard ; in others by the
game of poker he plays, and in
W ard McAllister's brigade of four
hundred, a man’s standing is fixed
by the success he achieves in
making himsclt as little like a man
as possible and approach as near
the monkey species as well as he
can, without the tail that the monkey
sports. If it is the ideal civilization
that thev are after, let them call on
Doctor Mary Walker, Granny Hoer
and Senator Blair and let them ex-
plain the beauties in the eye ot the
day when all the women of the
The Trenton went down
flyin ’, and the men on
J board, with death starring them in
the face, when they saw that the
English man of war Calliope was,
j by her superior steam power, going
to get out of the death-trap, gave
three rousing cheers for the saved.
Those rousing cheers have been
! heard acress the water, and English
| admiration lor true sailor pluck is set
forth in the London Telegraph as
follows
THE CREKRs FROM the TEENTON.
“Consider the scene and the
matchless heroism and generosity of
crew. Almost sure of
instant death themselves, they could
M*e the Queen’s ship fighting the
hurricane and appreciate the gal-
lantry of the effort with the gener
ous pleasure of true mariners. We
do not know in all naval records any
sound which makes a finer music
upon the ear than the cheers of tne
Trenton's men. Saluting triumph-
ant manhood, the doomed saluting
the saved. It was pluckier and more
human than any erv raised upon
the deck of a victorious line of battle-
ship. It can never he forgotten,
never must be bv Englishmen speak-
ing of Americans. The dauntless
cheer to the Calliope wa* the ex-
pression of an immortal courage.
to Iu<t the same rhlppri la
Kansas Cits In open car* tr to port ol
entry ■ The dutr paid on the cam at •«*
over iicMxxr. Tire palnlir
In slse,
and oclgti,
■hrch It was thipped •» lour Irel sq*
•nd 6llr leel in length. Alter ih.ee roar*
ol phenominal success la Kansas City, l , , ,
•here the painting ha* been list led b. Mm. Earn
over loo hundred thousand people, hfc •"•«***■•
in the near future to be transported So s*L*
Fori Worth and pul up In a buUdtryg J. B sodlter
which will be especially erected toe It br ***’»*••*•
a company organised here ol promt.,em .......
business men, who base the Inte.eaU and ,
welfare ol Fort Worth aod surreundite Jw t^waa s* Pate W*
country al heart. Plan* and .pntb attuo. T***
lor the building hare already been made, STmw^tea Jan
and it M expected, withda.orablc weather, • dm MwB t» | w cteeii
tens,'
•dU ••
Sam
lo have it ready lo open 10 the public by
lunc 1 at farthest ThM will be aa at-
traction such as no other city In the
Southwest has to otter, and la securing it
above several other rum pet I r^ cities the
gentlemen Interested In the matter are to
be congratulated, as It should and will at-
Uact people Iron, all parts ol the country.
The loregoing described pktare will be
eshlbitrd in ihM city under the auspices
ol ihe Texas art exhibit company, in a
building fittv leet high and yuo leet |a
circumference, now being
ed and prepared tor It
nue, opposite the Texas Sprite
The president ot thM company, J. M
Robbins, esq., to whoso Incipient lore-
sight and enterprise the citizen* ol Fort
Worth are indebted tor thM grand I real
and art exhibit, informs ns the building
will be pushed lot-ward with all possible
celerity, and hope* to have It thrown
open to the public on May 15.
BsUsri'r Imv r .-1---
W »k* rude sad tew tte lads* s* ate bte^llb
M tte wesM h
Mari *1.--. . .
Lsss ■ 1 sad sa, M*ri Ss, M<
fiSYfiUC
Lte rj aad r«te' |iUo. T f*r. teM
* mewn* par IXTI *E>
ing specialty erect-
on Jennings a«»-
»* sprite, nlattis
Mdsd It wTS car* baited »W tte sad hate a*
wussdt rtes sod Md hss^ssr a^llNSteSr
aw rc" w m***TrT 11 ^
T. B. Hits* ft Sow, Agent.
The next session of the Ttnt
State Teacbera' Association will be
held in Galveaton, June 37, 38 and
39. 1889.
No Quinine, no Araenic, no Sftfy
chnine. no C'.nchamd.a, no Mercury,
no roaring or buzzing in the hend
Try Otcatham’a Chill Took. Sold
by Guiteau A Waldion. 15 tf
A BABOlIlT
Tar Bale, ar Ezckaaf*
The residence of Engineer W. |L
'i «>ung, 519 West Morgan street.
, 100 *«t front by 150 feet deep,
facing south. Seven large aod well
While all true Americans blush
for shame over our rotten ships, and
curse the niggardly American Con
gressmen, we can all join in cheer-
ing for ihe true sailor grit of our
American seamen. We have the
men. let’s have the shifts. G.
land will be unsexed. I expect the I Undeservedly Lsurtsd AL
true mission of these disciples of1 — A 1
zv . , U The tmUiuiluac art »rww to Mk« fimt at met
Confucius is to look over the held ! v„ .*« « . *wyb«i .»d ww
and advise the Emperor as to the j sm***. is. hsr.sa*.*« ...pm <* .sus ***
best place to send missionaries to ■ *u ,h« mon p° **»»* b» ndmir. rs*
this country. \\ e send them mis- ** resjxws.w. .a*** *y*>p
sionaries, opium and rum to teach
the beatitude of a religion 1S00
year old, while they could send us
missionaries to teach a religion that
was old when Muses was making
mud pies on the banks ol the Nile.
The Chinese exclusion bill does not
apply to missionaries, and they could
send over a missionary to each man,
woman and child in the country and
still have five times that many at
home to take up collections for the
conversion of the heathen Ameri-
cans. This missionary racket is a
great band to work for—cash.
arranged rooms, besides closets,
pantry, bathroom and china cloeet.
Whole bouse plastered, the bust
piece of such work in Deniattn.
Flues laid in cement. Gas, and
water works water in house, and
yard hydrant with fifty feet of hone.
Good well with force pump. Finely
shaded with elm* and ornamental
trees and shrubbery. Fzll nail
flower and vegetable gardens, four
hundred bearing blackberries, and
fine orchard of bearing fruit trees
__| „ Convenient to church and school
i»*-*ir wssknsw sod dwordv. Ssd a sides in I 111,__, . _ . . _ .
«hites„.-s.es...te tesd,ss.w« s. ,te ms. blo^k the park or sweet
ous •vstrm At s wrv* look tad Crss^siilisn. I c*r*- Five minute’s Walk (fMI
w* belies, tbat sot o«, can i» pasted mi *o j center of business. Will exchange
*a*cuv* a* Hmanrt tinweis Mum. la re-1 for unimproved property in or near
Denison, i’oaaesaion given in thirty
day*. This offer open for thirty
days from April 13. 18S9. t
Frank M. Kontxaox,
Real Estate Rustler, 110 Rusk ave-
nue. Deoiaoo, Texas. 30
Let *1.
lose all Mebuten
L‘7L**bte£
f-W 'ljal »*. Macs te
. WM....S—.........
Lei a*. Mate an. Hsiw~
Sea Mswss and A M. >
•as Late ana Ir i n
L<a> ■. 1 bad *. teste •*, I
Lei 11. I
a- • mrnmmmm•
£4 *,*■• aa
*• 8*0 tf?*1®!
Lte S. Mari aK Mr
Maw ZStes* a aw
'TlJLXZi't JJ
' I* b. a 1
T V.
>»» *•»**!.*
•4 v
nswisz ryorois dagewma. « sink., tte key sole
ol rceoser} ol rtno«ti> sad yaaetsde by tb*
oerver llrsdsehet. treason ia <|siet Sleep, ab
BOTU.SI MOSUL roes* lo uses per ted an IS.. *11
these saodity aad urtimsl.l. disappear a* I be sys
wot eainr slrrngth Irons Us* great tease. Dyspcp
us. bilioasacss. rbcsatsiissa. eosMUpatiae. aad
kidney complaint* are tsbdaed by tte Risers
* t.
sod l Mari as. 6 T. F-.........
Lem laalnklte *, St A F ed
tete «*te l ead t* A L. Tter...
Lam r ate n teate a. M A F. add
A J R ten rite sIL Tan..
Lte. note it, kter in A- a. CM
W. r Rm aajf, S lat.....
Lte •*.**.*. aa. teste in, aaA k
*“d ««- teste 4 eM a* aaesen*'
ten. A. A t. trims te W r. tte
ra *•*......—.
Led t. Mete fix <3. T. P«. ». M |
(a At** Senate ..... ....._____
Lam <| sad te.Mtettte.ai t. ft,
■mm* J J. Falteeska .....
a—m t MMate *. sente's add a
Hsaa.m W. *• «ssa aad | M
Mtefil sd i a* • U A, Mate an. O
Uv E Mss*, w W. P. Cat i
SR. F*te. — I -
XkSter am a Lav**'* rm a
II. Ik. rdt, L. L Lauro a 1
Tovars sr* sera*. F ii Mart,*
Cote, raw A Adas* te A.I
te M V tt Cbme, VOS.
rdi* das acme, t G ttsdte
«r M Pk.up.aC n te
Elate *V Dams* rdtewin.
te* ss II Tte*.......... ..
Los. mm* te. Stem pn M
M tote te A. ■ "■ . ,
Lsa* *«***,!
•*••• X **. _ _. —.—. .I, .
Lot •. Mari V l.syas t add UBS. F. M
Gnten. at al. te C A. Msdaaaaa*
V r^ j E Nrar a •eam
Lte tfe MaMj*£o*ir. r "sGas M SSs* *** **
, cearay sa tCY SteX.................. smw aa
Lmati aad te. Mate an. te. i s. son
ST W Lampbm te D. W M 'sgw .m
Mates . and ... p ttU.mMidte.
pbdte Spill Id. m Stem an. m MteW
Mdsm asmtea Ssstu Cte!!TI. Siam a*
Xa-Ote* omasa tern, . and p. MX. a.
Dsoss steaos.) H Fsore* w G
8 Mtt..pL.................. Stem
Lam r. • ana v Mass an Milan ml
i att* . |as r. er»tg*« teA kari. .... vam a*
danri.l O jakassa mV «. kdSm. Gum
Led a* Mari s,te,«st sS.S.Iaas.
bmatl r dar an* D **m*ymtt.
t—. Rafis .... .....oeoooooo, gjs o
teoas and s kn* mem. r. c Mama a*-
»«■* » S OariwC X fiateHw... .a..
HFmte RL mZman'esT'*
Cm* ................
ttiori >•. M. .r. end,
xnfLBh
’ *“ A. a <
Lm L Mate m
e u Waa*
A NEW DEPARTURE.
To facilitate the work ot the Pres-
ident and the heads ot the depart-
MORE KLUNXRY1SM.
At the rate we are rushing into
fiunkeyizm it will soon be xn impos-
sibility to get a man of refined sensi-
bilities to accept office. Aa »ooa as
a man gets into office, his picture,
(in nine cases out of ten a cfaaracti-
tude) is published. This is bad
enough, but the latest fad here is to
print in paper* the pictures of the
wive, and children of the officials.
Men can and do stand a great deal
of abuse towards themseives to hold
office, but it must be gall and worm-
wood to “a man” to »ec hi. wife or
daughter’s picture printed in cheap
paper, tor gaping tool* and would-
be libertine* to canva* and bandy
coarse jokes about. A man in office
i* public property, but until a woman
The bill introduced in the legisla-
ture to prevent corporations from
holding real estate in large bodies
for speculative purposes was defeat-
ed.
PLUMKia,
Gasfitting, etc., go to Pettit
Walts.
A SCRAP Of PAPER BATES HER LIFE.
It wax ju*t an ordinary tcTap at wrap-
ping paper, but b saved her fits. She was
in the last at age* of consumption, told by
phraicisns thst she was incurable and
could lire only a short lime: *bc weighed
lew than seventy pounds On s piece ot
wrapping paper she read ot Dr. King’s
New Discovery, and got a sample bottle:
it helped her, the bought a large bottle,
ft helped her more, bought another and
grew better tart, continued it* u*c and M
now rtrong, health*. ro*y, plump, weigh-
ing 140 pound*. F'or fuller particular*
•end damp to W. II. Cole, t>ruggi*r, F'ort
Smith. Trial bottle* of thl* wonderful
l>l*covcry free, at Guiteau k Waldron**
drug rtore.
Aa a woman’s friend f’ennvroval
Wafers lend them all, for correcting
irregularity.
The Texas Central ia the only rail-
road that ha. to far offered free
transportation to the Texas Veterans.
tm* ^ *te r.XT, T..
. _ ___1 aa 1
meat Mala term, tm to Batter fit How-
ard's drug (ton*, aod are alrnadv wowing
a very wide vwaeb la tMe real waste May
field The senior member ot the firm M
j Mr. J. R. Mart to,
! estate firm ot M
Flatulency and wind on the
stomach arc caused by mdigegbon.
A few dose* of Morria* Cascarinc
will speedily give tooe to the digea- hcM ^
live organa. JO-lin. I Mr j. R. Martin, formerly mi
Martin A
When buying meal*, don't forget j ~ *
Go* Kline's meat maiket, No. 531 lie ha* t«*i a nwideni of DewMom al-
Wert Main street. "»«"* *tBC' HwtfaiM* of tMe dh and
_ a — j rnptys ihe Imptmi roaMoKie of (Mr
, , . , entire < < m Own Fly. HMssnso. Mr C
L.ghl caar* few hundred and T i« »*, li, ^ti imA pwm
eighty pair* of ladies kid l*ult>>n ular and Itrfr wen ten m«.
Lias, of Hus
boots, worked holes, solid leather
counter* and inner-nolea. on D and
E widths, at $1.33 (ret pair. The
credit hou»e* a*k $1 for the some.
Beirne & Stetson
upon to rrmulr Iommtaatm
to iHett. i«f fit ittittib
< uocmwl. Iliff ha«r a toM* Ifta
rhotoe pioprrUr* uprm their Monk* wi
U»e* will b« glad So
pun hurry
P
......
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 52, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 28, 1889, newspaper, April 28, 1889; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth571520/m1/1/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.