» *1 il V «**.■ V ■* I ■+-» V* ‘ n V *» ViX* A ■ U kl fmanifestation# the Indians huv© receive-! frrni Him regarding Ills* appearance oh earth again. fie pay^ that may tie sometime. Idcr Indian instinct# will assert themselves and then ?hewlll comeback to her people, join in the dance and make herself rendv to receive the Messiah. Theold chief says the belief is confinedmostly to the good Indians .and says thatthe had ones will nut mend their La 1 way# and accept Christ.Another letter is from an undo to a nephew. This letter tells of the wondrous re relations that hare been made at the ghost dances, and of the murvtd-loti* interviews inspired Ind.ans have had with the Messiah. florae oi the inspired Indians, says the writer, have had Interviews during their trances witti dead relative# who have told them to prepare for the cuming of Christ, and not to treat him as did the while people of oil. The writer cautions his nephew not to reject the Messiah until he lias attended u ghost dance and has had nu opportunity to judge himself of the endeuce of thecoming of Christ.STILL WANT THE IHNGGR3. Corrcspondecc** of the Gazette.Manoi'm, Tn*,, Dec. 19.—There bu been no further demonstrations of hostility am one the Indians near this county that ws can bear of, but the home guards, as temporarily organized last Monday, went into permanentorganization to-day and made application to the governor and a!#o appoint**! nieu to scout along the border and reportany movements of the Indians. We havehopes that the Hangers will arrive hereIn a day or two. *seal, said;411 mu makk that seal.It was tlie tir#t seal inode by the new pritress we adopted mo year* ago. I remember it well, now. I was not well arc u* turned with the new process at the time, and 1 had a good deal of trouble with Jt. I urn not positive, but my lm~ pres‘inn Is il. ut i used a regular led seal Imp res if on as a copy.11An hour inter tho reporter called nt Mr. Vunconrt‘s place with the fraudulent certified copy of the divorce decree. The morneut Stewart the seal hesail? 44 That** it; that’s the first seal male In the shop by the process wo use now. *1He examined it minutely and said: lt;4Ww you kpp that *F4 In the word 4off — It is broken u little at the 1 nek. Now look nt the 'K1 in •county*, and in • 111-luiiU’— you will see ttiat there Is u piece clipped off the top edge. Here i- the type that the seal was made from.1 *lie tuuk down a box of steel-Iramed* • HFKS is the 4 r , ’he Pail. “You notice that little broken sped on the body. Now hi-re is the •. that piece chipped off:1*It wHi Hi he itiid. The defects In the type showed up plainly enough in the Impression of the seal.' 4Now,41 he said, “there is not another font of type ia America exactly like That one. Another font could not be exactly Ilk© that. There would be difference* somewhere. I would go before any court cud swear that i madethat seal.*’‘ * Ana 1, ” said Mr. Vanconrt, 4 • would swear that that seal was made for Lawyer W. Durrie Hughes.44* ‘You are certain that you did not make that seal for the state of Illinois, or for some agent of the state, or of Conk county? 5 * asked the reporter“imada that seal at the order of Lawyer W. Durrie Hughes,” replied Mr, Vanconrt, positively.The Nun knows that this snai still in existence. Ia all probability U will he iu the hands of the police within tweaty-four hour*, together with 100 or more printed blanks of Chicago divorces ready to be Oiled aud sold to deluded person* for Sif50 each,TREY 44 ASSUMED” A GBEAT UEaL. Special to the Giuclto.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.Pond It? ton, *»bo, when he bought his divorce, was mayor of Fort Worth, Tex. The men who sold him the divorce were W. Durrie Hughes, who said be was the brother-in-law of Mr, Williams, once attorney-general of the United States under Goo. Qraouj and Patrick Campbell, both the attoy-/ neygpracticing la this city. /It was not many years that Hughes Campbell were la partoenhip, and27k# / f/rr^L J)i£0mrr,and so do the eoodsJMrilarry Meyer * lt;%»h dry pood* old aud shopworn poods; uojflpnag lt;mt at cost, but every day nera^ods andViw prices. HvKKwtlETEB, ni2mjila street.A Cook Book Free.To every subscriber of the \YeaJkly Gazette who send# u* ii*|rCl|Be«sh wq willsend (bo Won© year andtheJHpgriMVwCook Dook, 31 5 page*,bm^tfnTTn cloth. In ordering paper please mention this offer. Seud $1.50 and address The Gazette,Fort Worth, Tex.#-■-Texas and Its SlBjorlt y. Wsthiagioa Star,Texas with 500 newspapers gives 170,-000 Democratic majority, and a ltepub-llcfln suggests that if she had 170,000 newspapers, she would!nt give 500 Democratic majority.