The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 6, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 20, 1906 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 26 x 20 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
-
I >
;
I
I
I
x
The Truth 8eeker
k Joarhel of Fwethonght tod Beform.
At«3p*rYMr.
Published weekly by
THE TRUTH SEEKER CO.
6a IvESEY ST., NEW YORK.
Publishers, Bookseller*, and
Importer* ot Freethouqht Work*.
Specimen copy mailed on application
Large catalogue furnished free.
Hotel Hiawatha
Mrs. M. I. NICHOLS, Prop’r
104 W. Main Street
A strictly first class hotel at reason-
able rafes. All of the comforts of
home. Good tables, clean, comfort
able rooms. The patronage ot the
public! solicited.
How Did Your
Teeth Look ?
The other night when you were
laughing at the minstrels? Just
look in the glass and see how
tljiey look. If yjou’ll.use Dr. E
L|. Grave’s Unjequaled Tooth
Powder a few weeks and t. en
look in the glass you’ll declare
it’s the best you ever used.
SEA & NOE
V
y* // J
“Right Up To The Scratch
Th^ way to mak4 money in real
estate is to watch tfie movement in
this, that or the othri direction ; or
it you esn’t watch 14 yourself, have
some one post you Who is ever with
an eye opener. We give '.advice
about the. real estate deals which
have brought profit to many. Will-
ing to do the same lor you. Takes
little fime or car tare to see us at our
office. We feel confident we can
put you firmly on [ the “Road to
Profif.” General real estate business
, . ... . V- . ■
Fifty Years the Standard
^ CREAM w
BAKING
POWDER
A Cream of Tartar Powder
Made From Grapes
No Alum
Our Co&ntrj’i Achievements,
Hews From nil Quarters Condensed—What
the Workers are Doing—Bui-
jlutuUg fesettm
B.C. MURRAY, -
Proprirtor
Sunday, May 20, 1906.
DRAMATIC BTORY OF M1LLI0H8.
Ire. Richards, formerly ot Denison,
Heir to a Quarter of a Million-
«UNJONljg
This paper goes to press at
4 o’clock Friday evenings.
TELEPHONES:
(Grayson County Telephone Co.)
Gazetteer, 80.
B. C. Murray, Residence, 372.
R. P. Burhans, Residence,
Phone 54.
Old
The prohibition paper* of the state
are running Judge Brook*’ opening
campaign speech as an ipset.
In his “opening” speech Col. T.
M. Campbell gave figures to show
that railroads in this state, valued
by the railroad commission at $16,-
520 per mile are rendered for only
$$,450 per mile, but little more than
half the commission’s valuation.
This must have amused those who
transacted—buying,! selling, renting, I heard him, and who have been ren-
Qrrtte a number of our people will
recollect Mr. and Mrs. Richards
who resided here a number of years
ago. Mr. Richards was a well
known druggist. They left here and
located in Houston, Mrs. Richards
has fust fallen heir to a quarter ot a
million of dollars by the death ot a
rich French relative. Mrs Rich
ards has recently returned from
France, bringing full confirmation
of the fortune which has been be
queathed to fcef. The money ha*
been placed in the bank to her in
terest. By her succession to the
landed portion of the bequest, Mrs
Richards also succeeds to the title of
countess. Mrs. Richards intends to
make this country her future home
Her fortune wili be transferred to
this country. She has many friends
in Denison who remember her with
emotions ol pleasure. She was
member ot Tather Crowley’s church
Mrs. Richards declare* that she will
never claim the title of countess
but prefers to remain a plain Amer
ican citizen. She was born m Texas
and it is her wish to live the balance
of life in her native state.
Natural gas la furnished at ten
cent* per thousand cubic feet at
Kansas City. It ia being very gen-
erally used. The consumption will
soon reach 18,000.000 cu. ft. a day.
It may not be a very interesting
fact to know how much lard there ia
in the world stored up ready for use
but the amount is 135 lietces.
Word from Oakland announces
that it will be about sis months be-
fore the larger business houses of
San Francisco will be able to re-
sume business.
During the past nine months 72
new cotton mills have been erected
in Great Britain with 6,348,000
spindles, which is about 13 per cent,
increase over previous capacity.
There is a general expansion of cot-
ton goods producing capacity
throughout the world. People are
wearing more and better clothing.
Nicarauga has long been a neg-
lected portidn ot the world. There
is a great deal of gold there but un-
til some millionaires took hold of
the country was not developed. The
gold mines are now producing well.
A national convention of credit
men i* to be held in Baltimore June
13 i1*, the purpose ot which is to le-
stnet credit and lessen the amount
of money lost on bad debts.
turbulent spirit of its political work-1
ing men in check.
The commercial and industrial
outlook in Canada for a booming
business was never better than it is
at this time.
Great interest is felt in the coming
silk crop ot the world because of the
very heavy demand for dear and
cheap silks that is springing up from
all classes of people.
New England hosiery factories
have been sending large quantitiea
ot underwear to ban Francisco.
About 1 co,000 bags of cottee
were lost in San Franciaco in the
recent earthquake.
During the month ot April com-
panies with capital above one
million dollars were organised for
over $100,000,000 dollara.
One of the interesting features of
passenger railroad service at this
time is the long runt of Pullman
trains at high rates ot speed. Trains
are new running from Chicago and
St. Louis to New Orleans, Mobile
and Florida, making forty miles an
hour. Plans are laid tor running
fast tourist trains from Chicago and
St. Louis to the P icific Coast st a
like speed.
The Rock Island Rtilroad has
arranged to irrie>te 1,000,000 acres
of land in two counties in the ex-
treme southwestern part of Texas
adjoining the Mexican border.
They will then sell this land to tann-
ers and make a big profit.
SKILL
TYPEWRITING.
The banks of San Francisco have
$78,OCX),000 and the city wants
to borrow anywhere from $100,000,-
000 to $200,000,000 at a low rate
of interest to re build.
Speed That Exoeede That of Many of
the Hoet Expert Stenog-
raphers.
The aatonlehlna dexterity which the
modern vlrtuoai of the typewriter poe-
earn wee shown In the Chicago
teat In which the winner wrote 4,1
words In 10 minutes, an average speed
of 164 words e minute, says the Spring-
field Republican This Is a brisk pace
even for shorthand work, and many
professional stenographer* have
worked years without attaining a 150-
word speed. But the character of the
teat makes a great difference, for It Is
one thing to rattle off a repeated sen-
tence on n memorized passage and
quite another to deal with new mat-
tar, especially If the vocabulary la not
very simple.
. There ere mnny kinds of type writ-
ing where the fastest expert would have
to feel his way along at a paltry 40
words a minute or so. It must be re-
membered, too, that the second half-
hour must be slower than the first,
and the second hour slower still. Rno-
Ing speeds must not be taken aa a basis
for steady work.
Moreover, the matter of accuracy ta
even more important than that of
apeed. There should have been a spe-
cial medal fo. the young woman who,
though she finished but fourth,
only 52 errors In 4,085 words.
Plows and Implements
Buggies and Harness
For Close Prices See
MOSSE&CO.
Repairing and Painting. 424-426 MjunJSL
COLLEGE YELLS EMBALMED
Canned “Bah-Bahs” Would Be a
Great Treat a Few Cen-
turies Hence.
Borne thoughtful Austrian haa In-
duced the Imperial Aeadamey of Sol- I
| encea of that empire to secure phono- j
graphic record* of the numerous lan- I
guagee and dialects of Austria-Hun-
gary, these records to be canned and
sealed, aa It were, for the enlighten-
ment and delectation of future gener-
If You Cook with Gas
In Bummer, you know what a solid comfort
If you don’t have a gas stove, then you
it is.
are missing the solid comfort of a
lated home.
well
regu-
Denison Light & Power Co.
307 W. Woodard St.
There was never such an exciting! atlons. The Idea was so good that the
academy has seen fit to extend it. Ex*
am pies of languages and music have
country as there is at this time in been secured In New Guinea and In
British America where railroads are | certain sections of India. A party of
scientists equipped for this research
William J Bryan
iem last week.
was in Jerusa-
Franz Kohfeldt
122 Main St.
ODELL
The Laundryman
A name that ijs going all
4ver Denison and outside
qt Denison. Odell stands
f|or the best laundry work
i|n Denison. Try me, that
is al) I ask. I’ll do the rest.
. Ask for the
GATE CITY
LAUNDRY
600 Block
West Maih Street
dering land
acre at $10 -
that cost them $50 an
Bartlett News.
Over in Topeka a woman by the
[name of Lizzie Beil made the state-
ment on the street that the Elks are
better than the church, and she was
promptly put into the county jail,
charged with inlanity. “Why,” she
exclaimed, “why r I’ll tell you. The
Elks followed the Master’s example.
When the earthquake occurred at
San Francisbo they at once sent
j $1,000 to the sufferers. They didn’t
stop to ask and wait, the way other
people did.”: [Note.—By the way
who did send more money to San
Francisco: the church or the lodges ?
—Atcheson Globe.
Wall
Paper
bout what shade
look best—the
paper problems ?
Let
Are you thinking a
and [pattern woulc
price; and the other
w[e’ve solved a good many,
us b4lp you to decide.
WE HAVE ijV LOT OF
Faints and oils ...
that kre worth talking about.
T. B. WA
L’DRON
The Druggist
223 Main i
SWISS
CHEESE
j
A fine New One
Just Received
H. A. TUCKER
A. E. Pellerin
FINE i
WATCH AID JEWELRY
REPAIRII6
Promptly and at Reasonable
Prices
112 W. MAIN 8T.
Carl Schurz, the noted statesman,
died on the 14th of May. He had
been a prominent figure in Ameri-
can politics for the past halt century.
He was of German extraction but
was forced to leave the land of his
nativity on account ot the revolu-
tionary upheaval in 1848. During
the succeeding twenty years he was
one of the prominent figures in the
political history ot this country. He
went to Spain as United States Min-
ister in 1S61, later resigning to re-
turn to serve in the civil war, during
which he earned the title of major
general. In 1S69 he was elected to
the United States senaie from Mis-
souri, being the first German-born
citizen to become a member of the
upper house ot congress. In the
meantime be engaged m newspaper
work, both in Washington and in
the West. HU career in the senate
was a brilliant one. He was secre-
tary of tne interior under President
Hayes.
The Presbyterians are putting on
style. A bock of Common Wor-
ship has just been published by the
authority of the General Assembly.
For three years a special committee
has been wrestling with this question
of forms and services, and the result
is this prayer book. There is too
much “lorm” about this thing to
suit many churches in the West, but
in the East it is just the thing. The
book is said to be patterened after
the Episcopal prayer book. It is
also a matter of note that the word
“obey”’ is omitted from the mar-
riage ceremony. Also the reference
to the “worldly goods” with which
the united couple are presumed to
“endow” etch other. These omis-
sions will please the women.
If You Have Dyspepsia. Read This.
The old way of taking pepsin, bismuth,
etc , to cure dispepsla is all wrong. They
may be put up in tablets or in liquid, the
result is just the same. The object is to
create artificial digestion, but this does
not make a cure. Stop taking the pepsin,
etc., and you have your dyspepsia or in-
digestion back again. People use cocaine
or opium tor nervous troubles ana sick-
headache, it does not cure,- stop taking
the drugs and the pain and distress re-
turn. The only Common Sense Method
is to drive out of the system the cause of
dyspepsia and sick headache, by cleans-
ing the stomach and bowels, at the same
time using a medicine that will act on the
liver. Thl* forces through the glands of
the stomach the digestive fluid that nature
intended. In this way you cure dyspep-
sia. The medicine that cures dyspepsia
by this method is called Dr. Gunn’s Im-
proved Liver Pills. Druggists sell these
pills at 25c. per bo*. It only takes one
pill tor a dose, For sale by W. H. Rob-
ert, )r.
The city has received $8,400
worth of street improvement bonds
of 1892 and $5,000 worth of sewer
bonds of 1892 which the council or
dered purchased at the last meeting.
The bonds will be canceled at the
next meeting of the ceunol. The
bonds would run until 1922, draw-
ing interest at 5 per cent. By pur
chasing them at this time, the city
was compelled to pay a premium of
11.5S cents on the dollar, making
the cost for the principal, premium
and accrued interest $15,295.50.
Interest for sixteen years is saved
making a saving altogether of about
$9,240. The city was enabled to
purchase these bonds before they
had matured by the method em
ployed in handling the bond funds
By purchasing bonds of one kind
with sinking funds of another, the
funds obtain the interest which ac-
crues. As fast as this interest
amounts to enough to buy bonds
they are taken up and canceled.
Leprosy is the plague of the Phtl-
lipines. It comes from living ex-
clusively on fish diet. There are
10,000 lepers on the islands.
If a man adulterates food in Ger-
many he gets six months and a fine
of $375- If we did that here we
would have to build more peniten-
tiaries. t
People with high toned dogs get
them vaccinated as they are liable to
small pox.
Quito is the only city in the world
on the line of the equator. The sun
rises at six o’clock and sets at six
the year round.
If we did here as they do in Nor-
way there would be more lumber
The law rtquirct that for every tree
cut down three saplings be planted.
The largest tree in the world was
recently cut down in California and
it was a shame. The old fellow
was twenty-seven feet in diameter
and towered :oo feet high.
There is a crater in the .bandwich
Islands that is issuing a stream of
lava which extends for fifty miles
It is the largest volcano in the world
and is twenty mile# across.
There are ninety crematories in
Europe and America and so far 125,-
000 bodies have been incinerated.
The negroes of the Southern
States are killing themselves off like
flies by drinking cocaine. It makes
them! physical and mental wreck*.
The cotton spinners and cotton
growlers of the United States held
one 6f the most important conven-
tions! in Washington, D. C. last
FOR SALE.
being built over prairies, through
forests and over mountains at a
speed which bears comparison to
the speed maintained during the
period ot transcontinental railway
construction.
A bank has been started in New
York City that stays open all day
and all night. It is the first bank to
do so. ‘ It i* for the purpose of
business people who are obliged to
work at night and who cannot do
their banking business in the day.
The tea merchants of San Fran-
cisco ere buying all the tea they can
get and will need upwards ot $50,-
000, halt chests to replace losses. •
The European coffee importers
have started in to buy immense
quantities of coffee to replace de
pleted stocks.
was sent to Australia last summer and
another party Is to start for Greenland
at an early date. A11 these records
are transferred to special archive
phonographs and carefully stored
away.
While the field for this form of col-
lecting is .widening, says the Cleveland
Plain Dealer. It might be pertinently
suggested that the American coUege
yells should be included in these in-
teresting archives. To some people
the vigorous "rah-rahs" and other ex-
uberant syllables in use by the young
collegians would prove fully as Inter-
esting as the heathenish gutterals and
tomtoming of the New Quines* sav-
ages, or the Sanskrit chants of the
Hindustanese. So let the addition be
made as complete aa possible, with due
cognizance of the “H00-rah ki-rah!” of
our own Case school and the “O
8ketlio! ” of our Western R*servs.
===*=
R. B. ELLIS & CO.
* *
Electricians,
Plumbers and
Contractors
SOMETHING ABOUT ECLIPSES
800TT 4 DTTfiOH
The new furniture bouse, the cheap-
est and best line of furniture in Den-
ison. Next door to Empire build-
ing, Mam street. •
Not
the Same in Manifestation as |
They Were in Former
Day*.
25 lots on East Sears and
Morton Streets on easy pay-
ments. Will J. SCOTT,
44.J ISO Main St.
AGENTS WANTED:—San Francisco
Earthquake Disaster; Thousands killed
I and injured. $500,000,000 worth of prop-..
1 erty destroyed. Full and authentic story f< r the benefit of the lodge or church,
but aa a matter of
This is the season when sharpers
wotk churches, lodges, etc.,inthe
most heartless manner. A sharper
comds along representing an elocu-
tionist or lecturer. He makes a
church or lodge committee believe
tr’at his lecturer or elocutionist i* a
great drawing card, and gets a con-
tract signed for a guarantee. The
church or lodge committee then goes
to work bothering the public to sup-
port the entertainment, saying it ia
weekj one of the purposes of which
was to get rid of the cotton specula-
tors fnd Wall street influences.
Aljready 400,000 tons of steel rails
have< been sold tor delivery next
year.! This will be the greatest rail-
road! building year but next year
mayjbe a greater one.
Wjall Street lias had a one horse
papic within a few days in which
paper values declined $750,000,000.
The actual value ot the property re-
mains the same but its speculative
value has declined.
Marine steam turbines are being
largely adopted because ot their
greater power for sea going vessel*.
One of the largest ships ever built
has just been launched at Liverpool.
It is called the “Empress of Britain.
It is 559 feet long, 65 feet wide and
has a displacement of 20,000 tons.
The loaders and unloaders of
freight on the Great Lakes are now
on strike and there is a general tie
up.
An oil company has just ordered
pipes for a pipe line to be 116 miles
long and another for a line to be 60
miles long, the result ot which is an
Eclipses are not what they used to
be. The eclipse, with Its accompany-
ing phenomena, was observed a gen-
eration ago as the manifestation of
certain effects of heat and light, bnt
far more complex Is thy vision of the
Investigator of to-day. Prof. T. T.
Thomson and the Cavendish school
have placed the electro-magnetic the-
ories of matter and of radiation on the
firmest of bases. We now think of a
body which, like the eun. radiates en-
ergy, as sending out not heat\and light
but corpuscles, electrons of almost
popular notoriety, positive and nega-
tive ions, and rays and emanations of
such varied types and complexities
that elucidation and definition sti^
await them.
Then, too, M Lebedet and Messrs.
Nichols and Ball have confirmed the
theory of the pressure exerted by
we cannot now
the corona as a simple glow
It must be viewed as the complex
expressions of light exerted on parti-
cles within Its ethereal territory, of
the action and Interaction of pulsat-
ing carriers of composite electricity
and matter.
APPRECIATED PERFORMANCE
Looked Like the Real Thing and the
Company Had to Do It
All Over,
light. Consequently
look at
told by survivers and eye witnesses. Larp
estand best book. Best illustrated. So per
cent profit to agents. Freight paid
n. New York Barbershop
Cooper & Co.,
134 Lake Street, Chicago, III.
Special attention paid to artistic hair
cutting in the latent styles. Hot and |
cold baths.
224 W. Maifi 8L. Deeleea. Toll.
BARGAINS.
iniite Cough
JOfaa, Colds and G
Ladies’ Watches, 88 to SIB.
Gentlemen’s Cold Watches,
to 820, at O’MALEY’S,
fact, it ia for the
benefit ot the sharper, who has a
guarantee for every dollar the en-
tertainment can raise, and possibly
more. This sort ot a confidence
game is worked every winter, and
people are greatly bothered by com-
mittees at a result. In seven cases
out of ten where the people are aik-
ed to be liberal as a duty, the money
goes to a sharper, and not to the
Church or lodge. Piety hat long
been a favorite cloak for sharper*,
because a church committee 1* 10
eaiily worked.—Drake Wataon.
POSTAGE STAMP TONGUE.
Disorder Resulting from the Unclean
Habit of Licking the
Stamps.
"A number of ailments, some of them
extremely dangerous, are comprised
under the general head of postage-
stamp tongue,” said a physlRan. “Post-
age-stamp tongue. In a word, is any
disorder contracted from the licking
of postage stamps.
“Three or four persons a week visit
me with postage-stamp tongues. They
have a throat trouble, of a skin dis-
ease, or a pulmonary complaint,
brought on by the reckless habit of
stamp licking.
“A stamp should never be licked, as
its gummed surface Is always squirm-
ing and pulsating with germs. If any
licking Is to be done, let It be applied
to the right-hand corner of the en-
velope, where the stamp goes, for there
the germs are apt to be sparser.
“To be safe, though, the tongue
should never be applied to either en-
velope or stamp. A damp sponge
should be used in the tongue's stead.”
The late Joseph Jefferson used to say
that his career came very near being
nipped In the bud In a small western
town, relates Success Magazine He at
that time was a member of a small pio-
neer company which progressed by
means of three “bull teams" from one
mining camp to another. They were
always heartily received by the miners
and cowboys, who readily paid the five
dollars In gold required to witness
their performance. Mr Jefferson was
the traditional melodramatic villain,
and In the third act was supposed to
kidnap “the child." The supposed
mother, bearing Its cries, rushes upon
the scene Just as he Is about to escape,
and fires a fruitless shot from a
volver.
Upon this particular occasion all had
gone well until this scene was reached,
and the audience, many of whom had
never before seen any kind of theatri-
cal performance, sat as If spellbound.
At the crack of the mother's revolver
however, the spell was rudely broken.
“By heaven, she missed him!” a red
shined miner in the front row shouted
drawing his own "six-shooter” and
leaping to his ffeet. "Round to ‘he
back door and head him off 'fore be
can git a hoss, boys!" he yelled, and
following him. half the audience slam
peded for the exit
.The excitement was finally allayed
by the "mother" and the villain's ap-
pearing hand in hand before the cur-
tain, and the manager's explanation
the situation. When the performance
had been concluded, the audience in
slated on paying another admission
price and having an immediate repetl
tion from beginning to end.
IS A CANADIAN PARADISE.
Beauties ot
ter*”
overcrowding on the pipe mills.
The sum of $466,000,000 is t\> be
spent upon two of our battle ships
the Massachusetts and the Oregon
to put them in first-class fighting
condition. The appropriations for
the Navy are in round figures $100,-
000,000. It seems very strange that
we have to build steel tuba to coat
$7,000,000 a piece to keep some
peoples from hurting us.
There is $32.22 in circulation for
every head of population. This is
the largest amount but it is not
equal to the necessities of the coun-
try according to banking opinions.
Uncle Sam proposes to spend
$26,000,000 on the Panama Canal
this year.
The government ot France haa
demonstrated its ability to keep the
■ ■
‘The Lake of Deep Wa- j
with Its Myriad
Islands.
Whose Say-so Is Best?
With nearly all medicines put up for
sale through druggists, one has to take
the maker’s sat-so alone as to their cura-
tive value. Of course, such testimony Is
not that of a disinterested party and
accordingly is not to be given the same
credit as If written from disinterested
motives. Dr. Pleroe’s medicines, how-
ever, form a single and therefote striking
exception, to this rule. Their claims to
the confidence of Invalids does not rest
solely upon their makers’ say - so or
praise. Their Ingredients are matters of
public knowledge, being printed on each
separate bottle wrapper. Thus Invalid
sufferers are taken into Dr. Pierce's full
confidence. Scores of leading medical
men have written enough to fin volume*
in praise of the curative value of the
several Ingredients entering Into thews
well-known medicines.
I
Temagaml Is shaped like an octo-
pus, with long stretched-out arms, and
its shores are Indented with deep cir-
cling bays. Island strewn and culminat-
ing In sharp points and curves that
add to the beauty of this magical
scene. “The lake of deep waters” is
the meaning of the Indian wont, and
they lie deep and coot tn their bad of
granite; tn stlllnesa a perfect mirror,
tn storm darkly menacing, wttfc foam-
edged waves showing fang-like teeth,
writes Kato Westlake Fetch. tn Four-
Track News. a
Being 100 square miles m area, Te-
magaml forma one of Canada's great
natural raaervelrs. Mighty rivers
from the height of land to the north
flow Into It, and It in turn feeds tha
streams that flow southward, carrying
their life-giving* waters through the
forests t» the peopled lands below.
There are 1.400 Islands tn the lake, and
the government haa Included the whole
area In a magnificent tenet reserve of
a million and a half aerea.
vessumsBBSBmsNMUHPcsm
the worst cases of female weaknea*. pruiacr
aua.antevaniao and rotroventuo^^^w^^to
Irregularities, sure* painful .
disagreeable and weakening drains.
iwn st pelvic catarrh and a multi-
r dUeanes
Union Labor Employed.
103 S. Rusk Ave.
PURE
IOO
Denison Crystal Ice Co.
Delivered nt your
door?. A rebate
given when ticket*
are bought.
The State National Bank
ION, tej;
’aid up Capital $100,000.00 burplua and Profits $100-000 00
G. L.
Blackford,
President.
A.
OFFICERS :
F. Plattrr, W.
Vice President.
DIRECTORS:
G.
Mismtii.
Cashier.
A. W. Achrson,
W. W. Elliott,
E. H. Lingo,
J. W. Madbin
J. B.McDocoa
CoURTSHAT M.
B.McDovgall,
Marshall,
G. L. Blackford.
A. F. Plattrr,
P. H. TosiXj
D. N. Robb,
WE 8OLICIT YOUR BU8INE88.
^msmmm*m>imm>+*i*<*i***x**t>**^
f Denison Bank and Trust Co. $
Pays 4% Interest j S
I
. .................... I
feMB**i»«ana»«aMg* an SUhHhwhJ
I
Compounded twice a year, on time deposits.
Acts a* a^ent for the sale or rent manage-
ment of every kind of real estate. Makes
prompt collections and remittances ot rents
end other incomes. •
lie National Hank ol Deoison.
SURPLUS AND PROFITS. 850.000
OFFICERS
C. S. COBB, President R. S. LEGATE, Cashier
J. J. McALESTER, Vice President P J. BRENNAN, Asst Ceshle
DIRECTORS:
I. J. McAlester,
R. S. Legate,
W. B. Munson,
H. Rerensberger,
J. B. McDougail,
E. A. Sleek,
C. C. Jink* "
( P. J. Brennan,
C. S. CobH,
J. R. Culltnane,
W. H. Cobb,
w. S. HibSsrd
No Interest Paid on Conor a I Deposits.
Interest paid on deposits not exceeding three hundred ($300} dollars In Sav
Ings Department.
Accounts of corporations, merchants and individuals solicited and wtll rere*vs
careful attention.
Amongst these writers we find such turd
leal light* a* I'rof. Finley Elltngwoud. M D ,
of Bennet Medical College. Chicago; Prof
Bale, of the same city; Prof. John M. 8cud-
acr. lL D.. late of Cincinnati. Ohio: PM
John Kin*. M. !>.. late of Ctnetnnatl. Ohio:
Dr. Qeover Coe, of Sew York; Dr. Bartho-
low, of Jefferson Medical College, of Fa..
and scores of other* equally eminent
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Proscription
eaknen*. prulap-
sk>n and corT— ts
period*, dries up
g drains, sume-
rrh and a rnultl-
__ _____ ullar *o women.
In mind. It Is not s patent nor even a
secret medU-tne. but the "Favorite Proscrip-
tion * of s regularly educated physician, of
large experience tn the cure of woman's
sllar ailment*, who frankly and cunfld-
7 takes bis patients Into hla full oun-
noe by Ruling them Just what hla "Pro-
ptlon1 la composed , -f Of no other modi-
! "tt
* maker la not afraid » deal tbu*
(mealy and honorably, by leUtnt
wtleot using the same know exactly
m la taking.
women ure Invited Vo consult Dr.
eorr^iHriid-
Waples-Platter's Coffees
Are crisp, mellow and delicious, full
of flavor and strength, because they
are roasted fresh daily.
other
scripttou
cine ^mh
womanly confidence are prulectod by
TeeeioM.^ Addra* Dr. R. V.
U sumps.
From Forest to Yard
Every stop of the way from the tall tree to the boudiag 01
flooring of the smallest dimensions receives vigilant -cere befog it
gets into the heads of our customers, The tree is all right in the
first piece, the sawing end planing in the second place, end drying,
or “seasoning,” in the third, and price and prompt—a of
delivery in the fourth, at
Lingo-Leeper Lumber Co.
(Successors to Bum tor, Limoo A Co.)
Varda at Denieoa, Dallas, Fort Worth, El Paso, Colorado, Big Sparing
unu~i U(j Poco*.
it
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.
The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 6, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 20, 1906, newspaper, May 20, 1906; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth555481/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.