Denison Daily Herald. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 272, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 20, 1878 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Grayson County Frontier Village.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
■r ,* ' -
rittflMMMfc>
•1.00
Ilk
aO*
IT BIBALD I*
t»en lerred br m»
*
l« published
Terras by
V $1.00; «lx
<m fffr,
i.; two months 25-ets
iprepWd.
. XfonU'Vlii
nST Speolmen oo|rt«s free ou appll-
r *
ADVERTISING BATES LIBERAL and
yw be furnished on application of re-
‘ sponsible Inquirers.
REMITTANCES should be made in
dnttt, post Office orders, or registered
letters. Send no cheeks unless cost of
eoUeetlon is covered.
ADDRESS ALL ORDER-1 to the IT hr*
aLD, Denison Texas. M. F, Dearing,
Business Manager.
HoS. A. H. Stephens was ronom-
inated for congress from his district
In Georgia.
Tm government of Servia Is ne-
gotiating a heavy loan from Paris
bankers. •
jfttfekerjr never flourished
M M>*. ffhat medical science bat
Ov*a 1,000 delegate arc In atten-
dance at the Y. M. V. A. conVontion
now in session at Genova, Switzer-
land.
Emile Hodel, the tin-smith; paid
for his attempt on the life of the
Emperor with his llfo. He was be-
headed.
Cardinal Pina recommends that
the Pope tako a trip for his health.
The old gcntloman (loos not fancy
the idea of leaving Romo.
Has the champion of a division of
the State noticed such a falling off
in its subscription list as to doter it?
Or why this ominous silence?
Austria has not yot succeeded in
ooeupying Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Tbe advanco of the army of occu-
pation is disputed by tho desperate
inhabitants.
All tho banks ol Chili, South
America, have suspended specio
payment, owing to the country be-
ing drained of gold to carry on war
with the Argentine republic.
moda marked advance in tbe lost
century is admitted, and yet th#
learned physician is denied the dis-
tinction, the feme and tattard that
ha baa earned, because that engine,
the most powerful in conferring 4j«-
t)notion and farthering substantial
reward, tbe printing press is, by’an
-arbitrary bode of ethics ihst is ad-
mirable for its modesty and for
nothing else, ignored entirely. The
oolnmnt of the press are invoked by
venders of nostrums, who become
famous in a day, while the deep stu
dent often saersfices a score of years
before bis ability and worth are rec-
ognized.
These ethical laws which govern
physicians are so strict and so sel-
dom violated, that newspaper noto-
riety, either by criticism or praiso,
is noxt to impossible.
The question naturally arises,
whether it is not time that the eth-
ics of the profession should progress
in proportion to tho advances of the
profession Jtsell. Why should quacks
be allowed to monopolize tho public
prints? Tbe public is being con-
stantly misled by quacks nnd quack-
ery, and yet tbe modical fraternity
will lift no finger of warning.
Tbe lawyer, the minister, tho
statesman, all reach the pinnacle of
renown thought the agoncy of tho
nowspapor, but that profession that
has givon proof of tho greatest self-
sacrifice not only alleviating, but
sharing tbs rinks of dangerous dis-
eases,as is now tbe cuso in those cities
affected by tho dread plague, tho
yellow fever—that has in its ranks
men of tbe highest attainments and
tbe grandest morality—itsadliorcnta
itro not blazonod on every page of
the public journal, and the reward
so justly due is withheld.
That tbeso expressions arc not
suggested by selfislmoss, that thoy
aro not prompted by a greed for rov-
enue from doctor’s advertisements,
is self-ovident when it is assortod
that prompt measures, such as wo
advocuto, would deprive tbe press
of a very liberal and generous class
of advertisers, the patont medicine
manufacturers.
K A VIIA xa E- EX O TI VS.
Anew bank, with a Capital of j
$500,000, backed by the heaviest ■
capitalists of Boston will take tho
place of tbo defunct Maslin in Kan-
sas City about the first of .Septem-
ber.
The colored greenbackers through-
out tho Slate complain most bitter ly
at being ignored by tbo Waco con
vention. In many parts of tho
Stato whore they are numerous they
are nominating straight republican
tickels, while in others Ihey affirm
their intention to vote with tho dem-
ocratic party rather .than with the
Dallas Commercial:—In prorogu-
ing parliament Queen Victoria spoko
of tho independent and territorial
integrity ot Turkey. Wo presume
thut slio inferred to tho bones and
tail feathers which the poor old
fowl was allowed to retain.
St. Louis Dispatch:—What queer
country this is, anyhow. A poor
man steals a pair of chickens and
goes to jail. A rich man opens a
bank, gobbles up a halt a million ol
tlio public money, closes his doors
and lives lino a prince tor the rest ol
his life. The former is a thief—the
latter a financier under a cloud.
Austin Slatosman :—It is more
greenbackers. If ibis determina
tion is ahered to the greenback il|ian probuhlo that the distinguished
strength is considerably less than ! Governor Throckmorton,
. , , , , will bo sorit to the legislature by tho
now estimated. I he .......1 " -
veto
| people of Collin county. They
■ is an important item to li.e green- righteously boliovo in him, and so
backers. i do the people in Texas. The dema-
gogues only fear him and oppose
The San Antonio Express looks j biro,
upon tbo pinspects of a wav with j
Mexico with grave alarm. While the' ®B*veston *S0WH:'
-Ex Gov. Scott,
, , „ j of South Carolina, wile and son,
people and interests of western loxas ; age(j about seventeen years, were
would suffer to somo extent by a put off the Council Bluff train a few
war, tho Excess admits that “life j days ago, for refusing to pay their
and property cannot ever bo safe ; *ale- Gov. Scott presented a ncalp
, , or’s ticket ol the kind known as con-
on our Mexican border unless raid- trMl tlk(!lg) which vvfts not transfer-
ing parties are pursued, captured ablo, and which had tho endorse-
and broken up. This can only lie j moot ot the party to whom it was is-
accomplished by following the j sued. The lady and tbe young man
thieves to their resorts in Mexico, drew revo!vers and made many hos-
. ,, ule demonstrations, but they wore
and if the Mexicans will not allow , ,oft on tb# jjMorm at a Way 8latjor);
Tks Alamo RlAos, bl San Antonio
r« sol fed to dizbai^v
Two angina* art sawing building
■tone at Honey Grove.
Corsican* hot quarantined against
all fever-infeotad points.
Denton bos a severe attack of the
Morphy movement
Watermelons nt Longview *re
rare and fall of ohills.
lndianola has quarantined against
Corpus Christi and Rockport.
Major B. H. Davis, ol Bryan, is
named tor the offico of chief justice.
The greenbackers of Waco aro
not happy over thoir county ticket.
Stone for tbe new jail at Galves-
ton is taken froi* the queirios at
Austin.
Tho total value of property in
Denton county assessed for 1878 is
$3,317,863.
Sharpshooters and boll worms are
making sad havoo with tho cotton
Crop of Gregg county
The assessor ef Harrison county
roturds 535 dogs, 8,850 polls $3,147,•
016 Worth of proporty,
Mr. Kopperl will sail for Europe
shortly in tho interest of the Gal-
veston and Santa Fo railroad.
Proprietors of cotton gins through-
out tho Stato expect to do double
tho business of any provious yoar.
Taylor Thompson, of the Denton
Horald, was recently niarriod to
Miss Mollio Palmer, of Pilot Point.
Roily Groon, a “bad nlggor” was
way-laid nnd shot on a plantation
near Hoarne. Tho murderer is un-
known. B
J. D. Sayers,candidate for lieuten-
ant governor on tho democratic tick-
et will make a thorough canvass of
tho state.
Col. ll. King, of San Antonio, has
a contract to furnish 300 mulos for
tho govornmont, to be usod for fron-
tier service.
The land commissioner notffios tho
public that his offico is out of blanks
for patents, ow ing to tho quarantine
at Now Orleans.
Taylor pound, tho Paris incen-
diary, was convicted and sentenced
to four yours in the penitontiary.
Tho easo vvaR rcpoalod.
Tho jail of Morris county has
nevor had an occupant and tho peo-
ple talk of converting tho structure
into a school lionso.
Dr. A. A. McBndo is tho Texas
correspondent for tho St. Louis
Globo-Democrat. He makos his
headquarters at Houston.
The press and people ol Toxas
took tho Dallas Ilorald’s little prop-
osition to diviilo tho Stato and sat
down upon it flatly and emphati-
cally.
'The private residence of T. S.
Bond, vice president of tho T.-P.
road, at Marshall, was recently
struck by lightning and sustained
considerable damage.
Tho East Lino narrow guago rail
road, which runs through Dangor-
mm mmM
mmm
Proprietor
French Bakery!
318 Main street:
BREAD, CAKES, _
PIES C0NFB(jjjQNARiK8,
A GOOD RESTAURANT
connected with the establishment.
IN Tt4E MULLER BLOCK
Q L. GIERSA,
Dealer in
Dry (Ms, Notions, Boots, Shoes
Clothing: and Fancy Afticlcs
Family Groceries,
Claimed Fruit*,
Flour and Balt.
IS NOW BEING OFFERED AT
Xi c» ;■» jw JL jk » .
TO MAKE ROOM FOR AN
Isconstantlv receiving fresh supplies ol
choice groceries, ami selling cheap. ^ ^
FOR THE FALL TRADE.
ACCOMMODATION MEAT
MARKET
TH OS. HOFFMAN,
INSURANCE AGENT,
BOA MAIN STREET,
DENISON, - ‘ TEXAS
JOE. Q UINX, Prop’v
AGENT
ALABAMA GOLD LIFE INS- CO.
of Mobile, Alabama.
A G E N T
TRAVELERS ACCIDENT INSCO-
of Hartford, Conn.
THE WHITE HOTiE
Cor. Morgau-st. Austln-aVo.
W. J. BCDD. Proprietor.
J®“SrKCUL Notick — This House lms
just been refitted and thoroughly refitted.
Visitors will find it pleasantly and con-
veniently located,With large, airy rooms
a well furnished table and everything
conducted In llrst-clnss order.
BOLTON’S
PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY!!
Located convenient to the Union depot
and tlie M. IC. & T. Stock Yards.
300 MAIN STREET OVER
GUICEAU Ac WALDRON’S.
Good stables connected with the Houso
on n
MluUU
■w*3 Are
H. TONE, T. J. MUNSON.
TONE & MUNSON,
Dealers in
REAL ESTATE
—and—
COLLECTION AGENTS.
215 Main st., up stairs.
DENISON,...............................TEXAS.
309
tej"1 Abstracts of Titles furnished for
Grayson County.
CORRECTNESS GUARANTEED.
EPPSTEIN BROTHERS,
Proprietors
KENTUCKY WHISKY DEPOT
30” Alain ctroot.
DENISON,..............................-TEXAS.
The Oldest House and the Largest dealers
ft
PATENT MEDICINES
in Liquors. Tobaccos and Cigars
in the City.
By fair dealing and keeping the best of
goods in their line they hope to merit
the continued patronage of their old
customers and make new ones.
Agents tor Anheusor’e Bottled Beer.
J, RAYNAL & CO,,
Proprietors
Grand Southern Saloon
ever Brought to Denison at 300 M.UR street.
A stobk of Paints and oils that will be sold at prices to defy com
petition nt 309 Main street.
Physicians prescriptions prepared at till hours of the day or night
by skilled druggists who have made the science of
Pharmacy their life study, at 309 Main street.
The public are invited to cull at 309 Main street whether,1 wishing
goods or not and examine our slock.
GUITEAU Sc WALDRON,
Cof. Main-st. and Austin-ave.
DENISON,................................TEXAS.
D. W. C. DAVIS,
The most choice liquors ami cigars con-
stantly on Imnd.
Pigeon Hole and Billiard Tahirs.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN
LEONARD & COFFIN,
Heal Estate Agents,
Nelson House Building,
DENISON.................................TEXAS.
C. B. BERRY, M. D.
this to be done peaceably', then it notwithstanding,
must bo done by force of arms, ft
would be decidedly to the interest of
both countries if the latter extremi-
ty were wot forced, but it it is ncrcs
sary, the people of Western Texas
will not shrink from the plain duly
involved.”
fwAnd piitoburg,ba. b«, mw PHYSICIAN AND SURSE0N,
to Leesburg and will bo extended j lie Main street,
rapidly towards Sulphur Springs. I [,UNISON.................................TEXAS.
Tho San Antonio Express says :! )©“];esMencc*~fl. E., ertrner of Gandy-
“In a little editorial nolo yesterday,____V",111111 Burnett-ave._______
the Express placed tho estimated
number of cattle in Texas at 5,000,-
000,000. Tliero was a littlo error of
4,995,000,000 head/ tho intention be-
ing to placo the number at five mill-
ions instead of five billions.
PaospEors on the Rio Grande are
quite favorable. It may not bo just
the thing to advocate war, but the
(^inclusion forces itseH upon us that
America must give Mexico a period-
ical thrashing to keep ihat turbulent
and treacherous people in a mood
to respect America and American
things. In our opioion the period
for auother chastisement has arriv-
ed. Our duty ,s plain and we can-
not neglect it. We have got Mexi-
co to thrash and the longer wo put
it off the greater will be Our incli-
nation to procrastinate. That fact
(bat McKenzie has crossed the bor-
der with a nnmorons following may
deter tbe Mexican authorities from
attacking. If this is tho case a col
liaion will be delayed for a time,
but not long. A collision is inevita-
ble, Tbo sooner it coroes the sooner
will we hare tbe job off oaf bands.
8t. Louis Journal The solid
south is being very profoundly stir-
red by the effects of tho independ-
ent movement. The Augusta Chron-
icle, a loading democratic paper in
Georgia, says: “As matters now
stand the loss of Virginia, or Worth
Carolina, or Georgia, or Tennessee —
the states where tho independent
movement makes the most progress—
to the democrats in 1880 would
probably give the republicans the
presidency; the loss or three of these
stales certainly would. But while
it is comparatively easy to point out
the evil, it is exceedingly difficult to
devise a remedy.”
the Denton Monitor
U.S.L.
» SPLENDID OPPOK’JUNT'l V
A TOW IN A FORTUNE!
GRAND MONTHLY DRAWING,1878,
At New Orleans, Tuesday, Sept. 10th.
Hardware
Stoves and Tinware,
Iron Steel, and
Wagon WoodWork.
Manufacturers Apjent For
CHAMPION REAPERS AND MOWERS.
I ad j
snoe, butl i
out In Meetin’ any
| fori have been l
lit ., '
Tobin's
Behold the
BUStftT!
55tr
W. M. HANNA & CO.,
Wholesale and Retail
DRUGGISTS*
110 Malh sttefet
DENISON.........................TEXAS.
Mjyi’rescrlption clerk slefcps in the store,
DENISON.................................................TEXAS
All the best companies In the United States represented with assets over $100,000,000
—---d--
HitifMl I'gil
Wholesale and Retail
WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS.
DeMsON,................................TEXAS.
jggrTLic best 5-cent cigar In the State.
PACIFIC HOTEL
RB^TATTH ANT,
ON EUROPEAF PLAN.
BgJ.Meuls can lie Had at any time, day or
night for 25-els.
Good cool rooms to accommodate the
traveling public or families.
FIRST-CLASH ACCOMMODATION
GUAURANTKKD.
Corner Mam Street and Houston Avenue
near the Union Depot. 7-1-ti
CAMERON HOUSE,
ALEX. CAMPBELL, Proji’h
(Formerly ofScdnlia Mo.)
Cor. Iloiiston-ave. and Crawfottl-st.
DENISON,,
...TEXAS,
New Men! New Goods!
The finest and largest line of perfumes brought to Denison at the
I^ew Drug store, 309 Main street.
Most complete stock of Drugs and Chemicals oyer brought to Den-
ison at 309 Main street.
Greatest Variety of
jjjQPConifortublc rooms nnd good table
furnished at very moderate prices.
7-14tf
House, Sign and Ornamental
PAINTING!
E. C. CLIFFORD-319 Main St
Near the PostolHee,
Doc? painting in nil its branches Includ-
ing
Frescoelng,
Kiilsomlmlng ami
Hanging
Paper
A well selected stock of wall paper al-
ways on band.
C. W. HOTCHKISS & CO:,
House and Sign
P A I N T E Pt S,
Ku-k Avenue.
DENISON.................................TEXAS.
juaT'Competelioii In Sign Painting Defied.
!
I’iiintlng in nil its Brandies, Paper Hang-
Graining.
lug. Kiiisomlning and Graining.
Agents for the best Booling Paints.
W. A. AREY,
-Mn nufnet firer of—
MATTRESSES,
IKI.I1 I.OUX&UN
I'mi.OIl FURNITURE,
UAMP (HAIRS:
--and-
BED SPRINGS,
418. West Main Street.
DENISON................................TEXAS.
Joyfully
fnys: Settler* are rappidly coming j Louisiana State Lottery Company.
to Denton county and settling on its j This institution was regularly incorpo-
J e> rittaj |,y (I,,, Legislature ot tbe State lot
rich prairie and timber lands. No ! Edncatlonal and Charitable jnirposes in
county in tho Stato presents more
inducements to sotllers than Denton
counly, and om citizens gladly wed-
como all good mon and truo who
cotno to make thoir homo among us.
1808 with a Capital of $1,000 000, to which
It lias since ad (fed a reserve fund of $050,-
Ausiin Statesman:— Ono of tho
most effeStive and eloquent occu-
pants of tho Northern Methodist
pulpit is the “girl preacher,” Rev.
Annie Oliver. She is about to ap-
ply to the Gonernl Methodist Con-
ference that she may lie regularly
ordained, but tho reverend fathers
of the church are mightily opposed I
to tbe concession. They aro inti-
martcly acquainted with the purposes
of the Almighty concerning women
and we suppose gentle Annie will
beforeedto confine herself to the
modest place she now occupies of
an unrecognized outsider. She may
get into heaven, but never regular-
ly into lbs pulpit.
An interesting foaturo of tho
Weatherford Times of Aug. 17th
is, tho sketches of the editors of
north-west Texas. Tho writer of
those skeichos is ovidently the same
who recently furnished that paper
similar sketches of prominent men
of tbo Slate. Those sketches aro in-
teresting and will popnlaralizo the
Times.
Tho Austin Statesman says: Mr.
000. Its Grand Single Number Drawings
will take place monthly. It never scales
or postpones. Look nt the following
distribution:
CAPITAL PRIZE. $30,000.
100,000 Tickets at Two Dollars each, half
Tickets $1.
I.IST OF FKlZltS.
1 Capital Prize ol.................$80,000
1 Capital Prize of................. 10,900
1 do. do................- 5.000
2 Prizes of do 2,600...... 5,000
5 do 1,000...... 5,OIK)
20 do 600...... 10.000
100 do 100...... 10 000
200 da 50...... iO.IHJO
500 do 20...... 10.000
1000 do 10...... 10,000
srrtioxlMATtKo riuz.Es.
9 Approximation prizes of $300... 2,700
» do. do 200... 1.800
9 do. do 100... 900
John Deere & Co's Celebrated Plows and Cultivators.
Deere’s Gilpin Sulkey Plows.
Adams and French Harvesters and Binders.
J. I. Case & Co’s Threshers and Horse Powers.
Steam Engines,
Gullet Cotton Gins,
Brooks Cotton Presses.
Mitchell & Go’s Improved Wagon.
\V. It. Makemson, deputy and acting j ^PriW8, Blnoun,|ngto.........$522,500
Grand Master, yestorday issuod an i Write for Circular* or send orders to
order convening the Grand Lodge; f>, o. Box CM, New Oricans^a.
of Odd Fellows of the Stalo in this I CHAS. GILMAN. Ag'-nt,
city on tho thirteenth of September. I Alamo Hotel. Denison.
Tl,, U,.„d Code, »/ world will j "X SSST
meet here, if the place of meeting, mentor
be not changed, on th. sixteenth of | Geu’ oJn. JUAA^ffliVofva.
September. Capital Prize $100,000 Whole ticket, $10.
Stvauhe & Co’s Corn and Wheat Mills, and all Kinds of Mill
Machinery. Victor Cane Mills and Cook Evaporators,
all of which I will sell at
Itif AII kinds of Upholstery and Repair-
ing done Satisfactorily.
Johnson's Commercial
COLtiEGE.
210 and 212 N. Third st..
First Building South of the Post Office,
ST LOUiS, MO.,
FOE LADIES AND GENTLEMEN.
Open Day and Night all the Year.
$20 00 For n Full Course of Double En-
try Bookkeeping.
Write for Circulars and References.
tween the ages of twelve and fifty years,
every Doctor. Lawyer, Merchant, Accoun-
tant Clerk, Mechanic, Farmer, and Lady
should send fur circular to tliftST. Lotus
Phokktic Instituth, 210 North Third
Street, St. Louis.
AUGUST KNECHT.
FACTORY PRICES,
With freight added.
A.11 Goods Fully Warranted.
State Agent For
CHAMPION REPAIRS. Practical Barbir,
Correspondence Solicited.
D. W. C. DAVIS,
^ j South side Main-st, mxt foUlty Baker
Denison and Sherman, Tex.j hot and cold baths.
Sdoin Hand Wrhino taught thor-
oughly, rapidly and successfully hyM.il,
on ’’ery moderate terms. We guarantee
to every student a speed of one hundred
and fifty words per minute, liyourmcth-
od Of instruction this nrt maybe learned
without difficulty, in less than one halt the
time usually required. Every person be-
-- c and (iff
SHAVING.
SHAMPOOING,
HAIR-CUTTING,
HAIR-DYING, etc..etc,
Done in the best maimer and
SATISFACTION ULARANIEED.
m
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Burson, J. W. Denison Daily Herald. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 272, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 20, 1878, newspaper, August 20, 1878; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth720455/m1/2/: accessed May 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.