Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 32, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 1, 1874 Page: 4 of 4
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K-' $}!> DEALERS IN
except Saturday stopping only at principal
stations, and arriving at
Fort Wayne, 7 Hours,
UUvvUOa
tea witn severdi i nciusanu
PROVISIONS, FAMILY GROCERIES,
c LIC&ORS, CIGARS
—AND— •
Toledo,
Detroit,
Cleveland,
Buffalo,
Rochester,
Albany,
7 1-3
IN ADVANCE A. Full Drowlng CertHin !
Of All
Comp’ing Lines.
TOBACCO.
Main st., opp. Board of Trade rooms.
DENISON,....................TEXAS.
mar4*tf
Do Tour Own Painting, PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CARS
WITH THE
AfERILL CHEMICAL PlUf.
WHITE
AND ALL THE FASHIONABLE
SHADES,
OF PROPER consistency for use,
are sold by the gallon at less price
taan a gallon of the best lead and oil can
‘U mixed, and the Avprill wears longer
end is much handsomer.
Beautiful sample cards, with what the
owners of the finest residences say of it,
Urnislied free by dealers generally, or
: v the
AVERILL CHEMICAL PAINT CO.,
32 Burling Slip, NewYork.
'eo-f idw 2m.
N
ANSON, BARTHOLOW & CO.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
No. 527 North Second street,
s:\ LOUIS,...............MISSOURI.
Represented in Denison by their Agent
D. C. Freeman, who is prepared to make
liberal advances on cotton.
deciS w-tf
French Restaurant
M. CIIICHET, Pro™.,
Main street,
ftENiSQN . -..................TEXAS.
The table is furnished with the best in
■Uie maiket.
MEALS AT ALL HOURS.
Prices wifi be found as reasonable as
any house in the city.
GOOD SLEEPING ROOMS
furnished on application. feb I|-M
THE SHORTEST ROUTE TO FOR
TUNE.
fan him mi.
A Legal Grand Gift Concert.
Endorsed by Government and State
Officials.
Drawing Positive.
Thursday, April 30th, 1874.
FOR THE BENEFIT OF A
JUVENILE REFORM SCHOOL
At Leavenworth, Kan.
The Grand Southern,
Corner Main and Austin,
DENISON.....................TEXAS
I would say to my friends and the
public generally, that I shall be pleased
to see their faces often at the Grand
, Southern Saloon, and assure them that
no pains will be spared to merit a liberal
patronage J. RAYNAL,
see6t ptwjm. Proprietor.
M
UNSON & GUNTER,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW AND DEAL-
ERS IN REAL ESTATE,
13 Prizes Real Estate, •• $159,125
1 Cash Prize, - - - - 20,000
2 Cash Prizes,$10,000 each,20,000
20.000
10.000
'20.000
25.000
20 000
20.000
15.000
13,960
10.000
5-79°
9'•12 5
4
a
ft
5,000
4
tt
ft
2.500
20
u
ft
1,000
50
H
ft
500
100
tt
tt
200
200
(<
ft
IOO
300
u
((
50
698
tt
ft
20
1,000
1,158
tt
10
ft
tt
5
<6,450
if
2.50
40,000
$450,000
where, to whom liberal commissions
will be allowed.
Single Tickets, $2.50; Five tickets
$12.00; Eleven Tickets, $25.00; and
ineach package of 11 a cash prize
guaranteed.
ggjp-Money should be sent by Regis-
tered Letters, P. O. Order or Express,
‘J with the full address of the purchasers
in plainwritmg. Order tickets at once
and avoid the great rush which is cer-
tain to prevail at the close of the
scheme.
But a limited number of tickets left,
and they will h* sent to those who
first apply. Should the money aiuive
too late, it will be returned by P. O.
Order.
For further information and particu-
lars, send for circulars to the Man-
ager and Proprietor,
DENISON AND SHERMAN, TEXAS
Special attention given to the purchase,
sale, and location of land certificates and
the prosecution of land claims generally
c. R. MOREIIEAD, Jr.
E. S. NEWMAN.
J. I\ SF.LI.AR
N. H. YOUNG
"OREHEAD, SELLAR & CO.,
WHOLESALE GROCERS
AND
LIQUOR MERCHANTS,
508 North Second street,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
feb i-tf.
SIMON ABELES,
Leavenworth, Kansas.
II. Matzdorff, Agent Dension.
THE GOLDEN i\GE,
Filled every week with brief and spark-
ling notes on the news, literature, poli-
tics, art, science, reform, and all current
themes.
Everv subscriber gets two beautiful Chro-
mos,
THE FALLS OF MINNEHAHA,
-AND-
THE GORGES OF THE YO-SEMITE,
On Tuesday, 31st of March, Next I
New York, (via Buffalo) 61 hours.
Boston, 6} hours, *
With Corresponding Fast Time to Other
Points'
The Only Fast Line Landing Passengers
in Grand Certral Depot, New
York City.
THEREBY AVOIDING ALL FERRY
TRANSFER.
From ST. LOUIS and HANNIBAL, to
TOLEDO and CLEVELAND, Con-
necting with Drawing Room and
Sleeping Car Lines for
Rochester and
NEW YORK WITHOUT CHANGE.
The DAY TRAINS have recently been
pquipped with new PASSENGER CARS,
fitted up with everv improvement for
COMFORT and SAFETY, and STAND
UNRIVALLED for STYLE and ELE-
GANCE. Miller’s COUPLERS and the
Patent Air Brake are used on all fast
trains.
Ask foryourTickets viathe “WABASH
ROUTE.”
W. I,. MALCtlLM, J. S. LAZARUS,
Gen. Passenger Agent. Western Agent,
Toledo. Kansas City
In order to meet the general wish and
expectation of the public and the ticket-
holders, for the full payment of the mag-
nificent gifts, announced for the Fourth
Grand Gift Concert of the Public Library
of Kentucky, the management have de-
termined to postpone the Concert and
Drawing until
Tuesday, 31st Day of March, 1874
Etpnnnt
No doubt is entertained of the sale of
every ticket before the Drawing, but
whether all are sold or not the Concert
and Drawing will positively and unequiv-
ocally take place or the day now fixed,
and if any remain unsold they will be
canceled and the prizes will be reduced
in proportion to the unsold tickets.
Only 60,000 tickets have been issued and
12.000 CASH GIFTS, $1,500,000.
§1,500,000,
will be distributed among the ticket hol-
ders.
The tickets are printed in coupons, of
tenths, and all fractional parts will be
represented in the drawing just as whole
tickets are.
LIST OF GIFTS.
One grand cash gift.............$250,000
One grand cash gift............. 100.000
One grand cash gift..... ....... 50,000
One grand cash gift............. 25,000
One grand cash gift............. 17,500
10 cash gifts $10,000 each---- 100,ooc
30 cash gifts 5,000 each.... 150,01x3
50 cash gifts 1,000 each.... 50,000
80 cash gifts 500 each .... 40,000
100cash gifts 40oeach.... 40,000
150 cash gifts 300 each.... 45,000
250 cash gifts 200 each.... 50.000
325 cash gifts 100 each.... 3 ,^00
11.000 cash gifts 50each.... 550,000
Total, 12,000 gifts, all cash,
amounting to.............$1,500,000
PRICE OF TICKETS.
Whole tickets $so; IIalves$25; Tenths,
or each coupon $5; Eleven Whole Tickets
for $500; 224 Tickets for $i,ooo; 113
Whole Tickets for $5,000; 227 Whole
Tickets for $10,000. No discount on less
than $500 worth of tickets.
The Fourth Gift Concert will he con-
ducted, in all respects, like the three
which have already been given, and full
particulars may be learned from circulars
which will be sent free irom this oflice
to all who apply lor them.
Orders for tickets and applications tor
agencies, will be attended to in the order
they are received, and it is hoped they
will be sent in promptly that there may
be no disappointment or delay in filling
ail .Liberal terms given to those who buy
to sell again. All agents ate peremptori-
ly required to settle up their accounts
and return all unsold tickets by the 20th
day of March.
THOS. E. BRAMLETTE,
Agent Publ. Libr. Ky.,and Manager Gift
Concert, Public Libra ry Building, Lou-
isville, Ky.
The work originally published under
the title of The Nfw American Cyclo-
F.EDIA was completed in 1863, since
which time the wide circulation which it
has attained in all parts of the United
States, and the signal developments which
have taken place in every branch of
hi
JAMES A. GEORGE & C0„
Commission Merchants
FIREPROOF WAREHOUSE,
Gunn Block, Main street,
DENISON.....................TEXAS.
Receiving, buying and forwarding
COTTON, HIDES WOOL,
AND OSAGE ORANGE SEED,
science, literature, and art, have induced
the editors end publishers to submit it to
an exact and thorough revision, audto is-
sue a new edition entitled The American
Cyclopaedia.
Within the last ten years the progress
of discovery in every department of
knowledge has made a new work of refer-
ence an imperative want.
The movement of political affairs has
kept pace with the discoveries of science,
and their fruitful application to the indus-
trial and useful arts and the convenience
and refinement of social life. Great wars
and consequent revolutions have occurred,
involving national changes of peculiar
moment. The civil war o^our own coun-
try, which was at its height when the last
volume of the old work appeared, has
happily been ended, and a new course of
commercial and industrial activity has
been commenced.
Large accessions fo our geographical
knowledge have been made by the inde-
fatigable explorers of Alrica.
The great political revolutions of the
last decade, with the natural result of the
lapse of time, have brought into public
view a mu'titude of new men, whose
names are in everv one’s mouth, and of
whose lives every one is curious to know
the particulars. Great battles have been
fought and important sieges maintained,
of which the details are as yet preserved
only in the newspapers or in the transient
publications of the day, but which ought
now to take their place in permanent and
authentic history.
In preparing the present edition for the
press, it has accordingly been the aim of
the editors to bring down the information
to the latest possible dates, and to furnish
an accurate account of the must recent
discoveries in science, of every fresh pro-
duction in literature, and of the newest
inventions in the practical arts, as well as
to give a succinct and original record of
the progress of political and historical
events.
The work has been begun, after long
and careful preliminary labor and with
the most ample resources for carrying it
on to a successful termination.
None of the original stereotype plates
have been used, but every page has been
printed on new type, forming in fact a
new Cyclopedia, with the same plan and
compass as its predecessor, but with a far
greater pecuniary expenditure, and yvith
sueh improvements in its composition as
have been suggested by longer experience
and enlarged knowledge.
The illustrations which are introduced
for the first time in the present edition
have been added not for the sake of picto-
rial effect, but to give greater lucidity and
force to the explanations in the text.
They embrace all branches of science and
natural history, and depict the most fa-
mous and remarkable features of scenery,
architecture and art, as veil as the vari-
ous processes of mechanics and manufac-
turers. Although intended for instruc-
tion rather than embellishment, no pains
have been spared to insure their artistic
excellence; the cost of llieir execution is
enormous, and it is believed that they
yvill find a welcome reception as an ad-
mirable feature of the Cyclopaedia, and
worthy of its high character.
This work is sold to subscribers only,
payable on delivery of each volume. It
will be completed in sixteen large octavo
volumes, each containing about 800 pages,
fully illustrated w'th several thousand
Wood Engravings, and with numerous
colored Lithographic Maps.
Liberal cash advances made on con-
signments to
Swenson. Perkins & Co., New York,
Phelps Brothers, St. Louis.
Moody & Jamison, Galveston,
W. C. Watts & Co , Liverpool, Eng.,
Highest cash Prices paid for Cotton,
Wool. Hides, Peltres and Bois d'Arc Seed.
Price and Style of Binding
In extra Cloth, per vol., - - - $S’.oo
In Library Leather, per vol., - 6.00
In Half Turkey A/or’eo. pervol., - J.00
In Half Russia, extra gilt, per vol. 800
In full Mo., ant., gill edges, per vol. 10.00
In pull Russia, per vol. - - - - 10.00
Four volumes now ready. Succeeding
volumes, until completion, yvill lie issued
once, in two months.
%’Specimen pages of the American
Cyclop.uni a, showing type, ^lustrations,
etc., yvill be sent gratis, on application.
First-Class Canvassing Agents
Wanted.
Address the Publisher,
!>. APPLETON, <S CO.
r.4'1 & 5i)l tlruadvvny, N. Y.
'T'HE FIRST GREAT SALT LAKE
A Gift Concert, authorized by and un-
der the immediate supervision of the city
authorities of Corinne City, for the bene-
fit and in aid of
The Public Free School,
The Only Free School In Utah Territory .
Trustees of the Public Free School:
Capt. 8. Howe,
J. 8. Gerrish and Alex. Toponce.
$226,500
—TO be—
Distributed to the Ticket Holders
-AT A—
GRANDGIFTCONCERT
TO BE HELD AT THE
Opera House, City of Corinne,
March 31st, D-sT-J .
Depository, Bank of Corinne
5oo,ooo Tickets
PRICE $1 EACH,
OR SIX FOR FIVE DOLLARS.
$226,500 in Gifts!
c PEN POLICY OF INSURANCE
to cover shipments in store. Satisfaction
guarnteed. Cotton weighed, stored and
held subject to owners’ orders. Our coun-
try friends will find us always on hand,
novq-tf. [AS. A. GEORGE & Co.
TEA AS & PACIFIC RAILWAY.
Trans-Continental Division.
A. CRAFTS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
—A NO-
LL S. COMMISSIONER.
SHERMAN...................TEXAS.
V H practice in the Federal, Supreme
L . _a ,-i f I » f '1 f M
. 11 ui auitv »1' ***v * — -—t
a r terior courts of 41 u State.
' J- 1 3—6ni
Two fine American pictures of American
scenes tor American homes.
AGENTS WANTED,
J. B. HART,
Dealer in
To canvass for the the GOLDEN AGE.
The inducements to subscribers are so
liberal Uiat the work of obtaining sub-
scriptions is eajy. Liberal cash pay.
Send for circulars containing full particu-
ars. Address
THE GOLDEN AGE,
41 Pa;k Row. New York City.
Agricultur’l Implements
Close connections at Sherman with
trains north and south on Texas Central
Railway, and at Brookston yvith El Paso
Stage Co.’s daily line of Concord coaches
for Paris, Clarksville and Texarkana, the
junction of Cairo Si Fulton and Texas
& Pacific railways.
PASSENGER TIME TABLE.
GOING EAST :
Woodard st., opp. J. M. Stratton,
Leave Sherman at 10:10 a. m.; Choc-
taw, 10:45; Savoy, u 130; Bonham, 12:15
]>. ni.; Dodds City, 12 :45; Honey Grove,
1125 ; arriving at Brookston at 2 :2o.
GOING west :
DENISON,.......
tttv i\c i Leave Brookston at 12 :.'yop. m.; Honey
’* A Lm. . ; Qrove , ; l)odds City, 2 105; Bonham,
may20, -»y
2:35; Savoy, 3:20; Choctaw, 3:38; arriv-
j ing at Sherman at 4130.
AS FOLLOWS:
<
1 Grand Cash Gift...............$50,000
1 “ “ 25,000
1 “ “ 12,000
: “ “ 8,000
1 “ “ 6,000
1 “ “ 5,000
1 “ “ 4,000
6 “ “ 3,000
5 “ “ $1,000 each......5,000
20 “ “ 500 each.....10,000
100 “ “ 100 each.....to.ooo
200 “ “ 50 each.....10,000
7(jo “ “ 20 each.....14.000
600 “ “ 10 each......5,000
1,300 “ “ 5 each......6,500
50.000 “ “ teach. ..50,000
52,934 Cash Gifts, amounting to $226,500 *
ONE CHANCE IN EVERY NINE !
The distribution will he in public, and
yvill be made under the same form and
regulations as the San Fra icisco and
Louisville Library Gift Concerts, under
the supervision of a committee of prom-
inent citizens selected by the ticket
holders.
Re*’ 'ence as to the Integrity of this en-
terprise and of the management is made
to the following well known citizens :
Sam L. Tibbals, A. Toponce, J. Malsh
and J. II. Gerrish—Member of the City
Council.
Judge T. J. Black, Ass’t U. S. Assessor:
Malsh & Greenwald, Proprietors Metro- 4
politan Hotel; Eugene Moore, City Mar-
shal; W. W. Hull, Architect; Kchoc.
Constable; J. Kupfer, Jeweler': Capt. S.
Howe. Contractor; O. D. Richmond Si
Co., Commission Merchants; M. E.
Campbell, Proprietor Central Hotel; Sin-
gleton .V Creath. Proprietors Pacific Sta-
bles; S. P. Hitch, Merchant, Sindv,
Utah; A. G. Garrison, Helena, Montana.
We will also announce that each and
very person buying a ticket can at any
and all times examine our books and all t
business transactions connected with the
enterprise; and as the drawing of prices
will be placed in the hands of honest and
disinterested men, it will insure a u:ir and
impartial distribution. -r
<>o(Ml amt Responsible Agents Winded. i
Liberal Commission Allowed.
jf^-Money should be sent by express
or bv draft or. any solvent bank, by post-
office money order, or registered letter, a.
our risk. For particulars, address
E. W.MORGAN, Manager,
Lock Box 158, Corinne. Utah.
i an 10-3 m
GEO. W. AI.FOBI).
W. G. rlAL
y^LFORD, VEAL & CO.,
202 N. Second st., St. Louis. Mo.
ALFORD, MILLER & VEAL
Galveston, Texas.
COTTON FACTORS,GENERAL COM-
MISSION MERCHANTS AND
PURCHASING AG’TS.
Orders to either house for tuerchan*
’ise, plantation supplies, farming Uten-
ils, machinery, Sic., promptly filled.
We do not buy or speculate' in cotton.
SC27-IV.
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Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 32, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 1, 1874, newspaper, April 1, 1874; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth721596/m1/4/: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.