Article clipped from Fort Worth Weekly Gazette

earth again. fie says that may tie some f11iie- Her Indian instincts will assertthemselves and then she wilt coma hack toher people, join in the dance and make herself ready to receive the Messiah. The old chief my* the belief is confined mostly to the pood Indians .an-1 save thatthe bad ones will not jO'-Dd their tad ways and accept Christ.Another letter is from an uncle to a nephew. This letter tells of the wondrous revelation* that hare been madeat the chon dances, and of the marvellous interviews inspired Indiana have had with the Messiah. florae ot tho inspired Indians, says ibe writer, have had Interviews during their trances with dead relatives who have told them to prepare for the coming of Christ, arid not to treat him as did the white people of old. The writer cautions hia nephew not to reject the Messiah until he has attended a ghost dance and has hud nu opportunity to judge himself of the evidence of the coming of Christ.still vast tiii; hangers.Correspondence of tho Gazette.Mangi-m, Tn-,, Dec. 1!*.—There has been no further demonstrations of hotUJ-itv among the Indians near this county that we can bear of, but the home guards, as temporarily organized last Monday, went into permanent organization to-day and made application to the governor and also appointed cicu to scout along the border and reportui;j movements of the Indians. We havehope* that the Hangars will arrive here in a day or two.\It was the rind seal inode by the newrnu-es't wo adopted mo years ago. I re-member it well, now. I was not well accustomed with the new process at the t in**, and 1 had a good deal of trouble with It. I urn not positive, but my !m-presdon is Hint i used a regular t ed seal Imp real ion as n copy,11An hour Utter rhe reporter called at Mr. Van courtplace with the fraudulent cor tilled ropy of the divorce decree.The moment Stewart saw the seal he soil: 4'That** it; that’s the first sealTim It* in the shop by the process wo use now. * *He examined it minutely and sold: lf S w you kpp that *F* in the word ‘of1 — It is broken a little at the ! ack. Now 1 o»• k nt the *N 1 in 'county', and an ‘JH-luuis’—you will see that there is u piece clipped off the top edge. Here i* the type that the seal was made from. *rlie took down a box of e teei- framed* ' FI F ftE IS TtIE F ,he Pail. 4‘You notice that little broken ?p d on the body. Now here is the 'N 5?ec that piece chipped off?1 1It was m he said. The defects in thetype showed up plainly enough in the itn-pressioti of the seal.**Now,1 * he said, 1 ‘there is not another font of type !o America exactly like that one. Another font could not be exactly like that. There would be differenced somewhere. I would go before any court cud swear that 1 made that seal.Abu i, said Mr. Vanenurt, * * would • wear that that seal was made for Lawyer W. Durrie Hughes.* *“You are certain that you did not make that seal for the state of Illinois, or for some agent of the state, or of Cook county? 5 * asked the reporter'*1 mad* that seal at the order of Lawyer W. Durrie Hughes,11 replied Mr, Yancourt, positively.The Nun knows that this f=«al is still in existence. la all probability it will be in the hands of the police within tweaty-four hours, together with 100 or more printed blanks of Chicago divorces ready to be Oiled nuJ sold *o deluded persons for S-50 each.THEY 44 ASSUMED* 1 A GftElT I'LiL.Ey-ecial to ibe Giuctt*.Washington. Deo. 22.—The New York Sun to-day publishes the following: * ‘The victim of one of the fraudulent divorce mills In this city has run toearth the proprietors of the mill. He is no less a person than William S.Pendleton, vbo, when he boughthit divorce, was mayor of Fort Worth, Tex. The men who told him the divorce were W. Durrie Hughes, who said be was the brother-in-law of Mr. Williams, once attorney-generai of the United States under Gen. Grant^ and Patrick Campbell, both the attar-/ neyg practicing in this city. /It was not many years that Hughes Campbell were in partntrthlp, andThe /,‘ar^k Dofcjpbrr,and so do the coodsl^Ilarry Meyer'* cgsh dry good* old audthrjp-worn goods; nojMUig Sot at cost, but every day needffodt and^ew prices.IIarky^IFkyer. 1412gLiln street.A Cook Book Free,To every subscriber of the WeuJkly Ga*7RTTE who send# u* £l+|/ijgge*»h we will send the \Yone year andtheJftpflpliWwCook Book, 335 pace*,bSwloclotli. In ordering paperplease mention this offer. Seud $1.50 and address The Gazette,Fort Worth, Tex.-'..-L ' ♦ '--T«ias and Its majority. WAihhagtoa Slsr,Texas with 500 newspapers gives 170,-GOO Democratic majority, and a Republican suggests that if the had 3 70,000 newspaper*, the would ’nt give 500 Democratic majority.+ £L_ ^ __seai, sum:* * 1 Id!' MaKK Til A 1 SkAf..iiianlfe«taiJfni*» the Indian* have received from Him regarding Hit* appearance on
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Fort Worth Weekly Gazette

Fort Worth, Texas, US

Thu, Dec 25, 1890

Page 9

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TX, USA 16 Mar 2023

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