Newspaper
Clippings

County Superintendent of Public
Education J.B. King requests The News to make the following announcement:
There will be a meeting of the Grayson county
teachers’ institute held at the Franklin public
school building in Sherman, commencing Saturday, Oct. 22 at 9
a.m. This is the
first meeting of the scholastic year and will be an important one.
The year’s work for the teachers will be outlined
thereat, as prepared by the committee appointed for that
purpose.
-- Dallas Morning News,
10-20-1898
The democratic county convention assembled in the opera house
this morning at 10 o’clock
pursuant to the call of Chairman Gilbert of Denison, who was not present. Temporary
organization was effected by the election of Dan A. Bliss
as chairman. Zol J. Woods, J.C. Edmonds, J. E. Wallace of Sherman
and S. B. Evans of Van Alstyne were selected as temporary
secretaries. M.W. Bowles was
elected sergeant-at-arms and F.F. Boothman of the Dripping Springs
box was selected as assistant. One
member from each box in the county was selected as a committeeman on
credentials, and the same rule was adopted on the committee on permanent
organization and platform.The committees
were then sent to their respective rooms and the convention adjourned
to meet at 2 p.m. The
roll-call showed over 350 delegates present to cast the 123 votes of the
convention. -- Dallas Morning News, 07-19-1890

A resolution was passed by the Grayson County Press Association at its
meeting in the rooms at the local Chamber of Commerce, in which they agreed to
join hands with the Sherman and Denison Chamber of Commerce in the matter
of organizing the Oklahoma, Texas and Gulf Highway Association, and to work for
good roads from the Red River to the motion of a county fair in Grayson County
next year. -- Cleburne Morning Review,
11-07-1913

Seven County tax assessors were named by
Tax
Assessor-Collect Collier Yeury. They
will start work Jan. 1 and will receive $500 each for the four month’s task.
The men are W.E. May, Sherman; Guy Vinnedge, Denison,
C.W. Pope, Precinct 1; Clyde Douglas, Precinct
2; John Rice, Precinct 3; J.B. Dickey, Precinct 4, and I. E. Brown,
Precinct 5.
-- Dallas Morning News
12-30-1938
Strayed from Claude Johnson, near Van Alstyne, on Jan. 30,
one small black mare mule, about 13 hands high, 3 years old, not shod, had on
halter when last seen. The owner will pay
$5 for the recovery of his animal. A.E. Hughes,
sheriff Grayson county.
Strayed or stolen: One gray mare pony about 14
hands high, 4 years old, in ordinary work order, had on
large red leather saddle, hairpockets, made by W.P. Gunn, Sherman, TX.
Emmet Hall will pay $10 reward for mare and saddle
if stolen and I will pay $10 for capture of thief.
A.E. Hughes, sheriff Grayson county. --
Dallas
Morning News, 02-14-1895
The Grayson County
Missionary Baptist Association closed its ninth annual convention
here this afternoon after the most successful event of
the kind in its history. Bells was chosen
as the next place of meeting. The committee on church letters reported a total membership in the
association of 3,723; received by baptism during the year, 290; total
increase in membership for the year, 500; deaths during year, 45.
Rev. S.F. Aiken will preach the introductory sermon
at the next session,
and Rev. J.H. Taylor will preach the missionary sermon.
O.L. Smith was elected missionary for the next year at a salary of
$1,200. A collection of $254
was taken up for the theological seminary at Waco.
A committee
of two was appointed to arrange, if
possible, for an excursion rate to Dallas on Sept. 30, when
between 800 and
1,000 Grayson County Baptists will visit Buckner Orphans’ Home, near the
city, should suitable arrangements be made.
-- Dallas Morning News,
09-19-1908
Sheriff A. E. Hughes of Grayson county
came down today to identify the man arrested Saturday for Ab Stevens, who
is wanted in Grayson for murders committed seven or eight years ago.
One of the men he brought to identify him says positively he is
Stevens, but the other is not positive.
An examination of his person disclosed eleven
bullet or
shot wounds in the small of his back. He says the
places were caused by boils which were picked out.
He went by
the name of Thompson here and is wanted in Grayson county
under that name on a charge of horse theft.
Sheriff Hughes
left for Sherman with Stevens (or Thompson) tonight. --Dallas Morning News,
07-02-1895

Grayson County’s failure to provide a jail which
would be approved by the Federal inspectors as a safe place for the
keeping of Federal prisoners is causing a yearly monetary loss to the county of
approximately $1,200 in Federal funds. Payment
for the keeping of Federal prisoners in on a quarterly basis, but
W.V. Graham, jailer, said Tuesday it would average around $300 a
quarter. The largest quarterly payment
ever received was $425.
The smallest number of Federal prisoners housed in the jail, before all
were removed early this month, was three and the maximum twenty-six, the average
running around six or seven prisoners. -- Dallas
Morning News, 12-19-1934

Winter prevailed in Denison and this part of Grayson County last night and
today. Late this afternoon the
mercury was nearing the freezing point and fruit and truck
growers are apprehensive of tonight’s weather.
About 2 o’clock this
morning, a rain and hailstorm, accompanied by considerable wind,
broke over Denison and raged for more than an hour.
Water fell i n sheets and the hailstones of unusual size brought
many
sleepers from their beds as the stones rattled against the roofs and upon the
window panes. Rain continued to
fall until after daylight. Early risers today found drifts of hailstones more than a foot in depth. Fruit-raisers stated today that while many blooms were
knocked from the trees by the hail they did not believe that the fruit prospects
had been seriously affected should it pass safely through tonight’s cold
spell. During last night’s storm nearly an inch of rain fell. Many windows are reported
broken and several roofs damaged as the result of last night’s
hailstorm. Snow flurries were frequent in Denison throughout the
morning and afternoon hours. -- Dallas Morning News,
03-27-1913

The population of Grayson County announced
by the Bureau of Census today is 74,165 a gain of 8,169.
Population
in 1910 was 65,996. Denison holds its
lead as the largest city in the county with 17,065 people, a gain of
3,433. The population of Sherman is 15,031, a gain of 2,619.
Other towns’ populations in Grayson County are Bells 585, a gain
of 89people; Collinsville837, gain of 46; Gunter 575, no previous record:
Howe 582, a gain of two people; Pottsboro 454, gain of 141; Tioga 777, a loss
of 20; Tom Bean 367, a gain of 79; Van Alstyne, 1,288 a gain of 147;
Whitesboro 1,810, a gain of 591; Whitewright 1,666, a gain of 103.
-- Dallas Morning News, 09-30-1920
The constitutionality of the jury wheel
applying to Grayson and a few of the larger counties of Texas
was attached for the first time in a Sherman court this morning in the case of
the State of Texas vs. Gus Kenecht, charged with a violation of the local
option law. Counsel for the defense, after polling the jury as to
who had been drawn from the wheel and who had been summoned as talesman by
the Sheriff, attacked the qualifications of those drawn from the wheel
because the stipulations of said method and its effects were
generally violative of rights guaranteed under the Constitution,
the argument being in line with objections raised in Fort Worth-Dallas and other courts to the wheel.
A peculiarly interesting feature today was that the rest of
the panel was challenged also on the ground that none having been
brought in by selection by a large commission or the wheel, they had not
been summoned by any legal process.
The court over- ruled the challenges for above grounds. -- Dallas Morning News, 10-24-1907
Owing to the slow progress
of cleaning counties of the cattle tick by e lections, the
leading cattle raisers of Grayson county have petitioned the legislature
to change or amend the present tick eradication law to give Texas
state-wide tick eradication. Sentiment
with regard to tick eradication is changing.
Texas is nearer shaking off the
tick tax on livestock than ever before. --
Fort Worth
Star-Telegram, - 01-18-1917
Speaking
about investment dollar
activity in Texas, a concern with a capital stock of $250,000 will
“dress up” one of Grayson county’s pleasure and health reports. Which is
to say that the proposed program of progress includes every thing a
modern health and pleasure resort can offer the public in the way of
buildings, parks, amusement features and
the sort. With interstate highways
inviting tourist travel by automobile, and these same highways inviting tourist
travel by automobile, and these same highways inviting Texas
to See-Texas-First, it is good business progress and policy
to develop
and modernize and advertise and popularize the health and pleasure resorts of
Texas. --
Fort Worth
Star-Telegram, 04-14-1918
The movement of certain shrewd Eastern
capitalists to boom Denison, Texas, would indicate that they are strong in the
belief that the tide of emigration is to flow in that
direction. Denison is the county seat of
Grayson county, the
fifth county west from the Arkansas line and bordering on the Indian Territory.
The place has abundant advantages, of soil, railroad communications,
etc., the only drawback being the political and social conditions of that
portion of county. But there is a change
that these may be improved, and most people will hope that such may be the case. --
St. Albans
Daily Messenger, 05-04-1889
A ten-year-old lad
from Denison romped away with the bulk of first
prizes
at the Grayson county corn show.
He prepared his land with a deep
see bed, planted in March, and plowed the crop seven times.
His harvest was thirty-eight bushels per acre and sold at $1.50 per
bushel. In addition to the lad’s record
of first he pulled down the special prize of $50.
A liberal sprinkling of that sort of youngsters in every county in Texas
would cause their want’s-the-use seniors
to get up and hustle.
The future glory of Texas is tolerably safe.
-- Fort Worth
Star-Telegram, 10-10-1909
Last Saturday the esteemed Denison Herald broke the tape
at the beginning of its twenty-second mile in the newspaper Marathon and is
cheerfully on its way to another prosperous year for Texas, Grayson county and
Denison. The Herald builds while it
boosts. -- Fort Worth
Star-Telegram, -07-27-1910
All the candidates for governor
of Texas who have announced have been mingling with
Grayson county people at Sherman this week.
And each of them would have been happier if t’other sweet charmer had
been away. -- Fort Worth
Star-Telegram,
08-11-1905
We take from an Extra
of the Sherman
Courier an interesting letter from Mr. R.S. Stevens, the general manager of the
Missouri, Kansas and Texas
Railroad, in which he intimates that, if the people of Grayson county subsidize
the line to the amount of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, that the road
will be built through that county. -- Galveston News, 02-09-1872:

H.K. Needham sold an
80-acre university land claim
yesterday, to Mr. Samuel Nichols, of Missouri, who will move his family here as
soon as possible. Mr. Nichols
has
made a complete tour of the State, and thinks that Grayson is the banner county
of Texas. -- Denison
Daily News,
04-19-1878