The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 10, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 14, 1908 Page: 3 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:
1
mm............. . .........
mmrm
■J*
Home News
river this month. Avuant, thou Commencement Exercises,
false prophet! | The Denison High School lield
We were taken the past week its commencement exercise at the
for Postmaster Scott. That is!opera house last Friday night.
B. Munson states that good **tter than Ma* Ukm for Tom |Miss I,a VfZ ^ Ua‘ 8al“'
service will l*e established, " !taU,r>’ and R,cl,anl Brumbaugh,
TWO GOOD EXCUSES1 SOME ROYAL EXILES
wmr^r . ■■ - ■ __ __ . ^
- -----,----------
GOME AND SEE ME
WHERE MEN HAD RIGHT TO QUIT
POKER GAME.
WKKK KNIHNO, JINK 1‘2. 1880.
The regular monthly meeting of
the North Texas Potm>l»>gieal So-
ciety took place at Tone’s office
Sat unlay evening. The attend-
ant v was good. Mr. Ed Perry
exhibited six varieties of strawber-
lwrries and five varieties of grapes,
also specimens of ripe loaches, the
Amsden and Alexander. Other
members had exhibits......Jim
Ijee was humming the following
air on the streets Friday. “Its
grand to he a jwq>a, Oh, can’t you
wish me joy, For Pm the father of
a Itouncing baby lx>y”......Aeor-
resjiondent in the Sherman Cour-
ier made a funny charge against
tla* mayor and city council of that
city, lie said Messrs. Wilkinson
and Brown were Oampbellites;
that they were employed to defend
tin1 city in a suit with the Gas
company by a vote of the city
council composed wholly of Camp-
hcllites, the result being a tie, the
mayor, also a Campbeilite, giving
the casting vote......The resi-
dence of Mr. I,. Fppstein on Gandy
Street was discovered on tire about
1 o’clock Monday morning. The
occupants had to get out in a hur-
ry and the children were carried
out in their night clothes. Most
of the furniture in the lower story
was saved, but a good deal of it
more or less damaged. The tin1 was
supposed to have caught from a
gas jet in the servant’s room
which was swung around too close
to the wall. It was one of the
handsomest residences in the city.
Mr. Eppstein estimated his loss at
$3,500; insurance $2,500... .Tone
«fe Le* V shijtped from Denison
en here and Oklahoma at the * Dnve Welty writes from South- who has the distinction of U'ing the Pl.ytr Now to w.» to th. Foot That
site of the old bridge or near to it 1 California that he is sending only boy to win first honor in the Ota** c«u«. Be.tde "Cold Foot"
aite (H the uli) bn*. o,™»rto.U hi,U.ry of the Ifeni.m «hool», *-» «»*
Gazetteer has received * 1 • ...... i
KINO* AND QUEENS WHO
WITHOUT THRONES.
ARE
*r hRK a|for which he is m*eiving 30 cents H*e foundation thought'
pioneer townsman, |wr dogen ln Uie wiuter j,e Kel81 for his valedictory address, Addi- *
45 cents. Please read this, Messrs.
Finn and Quinn.
one' /filn-d 1 Mixes of peaches
north Tuesday...... Society Vor-
wseris held its annual meeting
Sunday afternoon and elected the
folowing otiicers : President,Louis
Lebrecli; Joe Euper, vice presi-
deut; R. Schwall>e, secretary;
August Uhlig, treasurer. John G.
Gnase was elected chairman of
the music committee and John
Hoerr chairman of committee on
turning. The membership was
thirty-three, non-paying members
having l>een weeded out......The
city council was advertising for
proposals to build a cistern on
Main street, near the corner o
Burnett avenue, capacity 1000 bar-
rels. This is the cistern the street
paving company bail so much
trouble to till up last w inter......
A special train well loaded left the
union depot Tuesday evening for
Gainesville, the attraction being
the dedication of the new Lindsey
hotel in that tow n......A recep-
tion was tendered Rev. A. W
Decker and wife Tuesday night at
which they were presented with a
silver tea set by admiring friends
...... D. Tilden, of lightning rod
fame, was married Tuesday night,
the bride being Mrs. Mary A
Perry. The ceremony was tar-
formed at the residence of the
bride’s [>arenis by Rev. O. A. Hall
......Eighty-two degrees in the
shade at 0 a. m. T^rsday......
Mr. Eppstein, who was “burned
out,” moved his family into the
Aniol residence, opposite the La-
mar house____“Stoneman’s Yeast”
was put on the market by Mrs. L.
Stoneman. It is still manufac-
tured and sold in this city and it is
a real favorite with housewives
...____The two remaining cases
against Andrew Moore charging
embezzlement were called in the
county court Wednesday and nol-
prossed. Randell Bros, were
Moore’s attorneys......The So-
ciety Vorwserts celebrated its third
anniversary Thursday night with
a grand ball which was largely
attended, not only by the mem-
bers but many non-members..
Mr. C. B. Randell, Captain of the
Gate City Guards, having been
elected colonel of Fourth Regiment
Texas Volunteer Guards, a meet-
ing of the Gate City Guards was
called at the Armory Wednesday
night, to accept his resignation.
M r. John II. Coffin was elected
I captain to fill the vacancy, Simon
Murphy elected second lieutenant
in place of Lea Kune resignec
and C. R. Mathews in place of
Asa Runyan resigned. C. F,
O’Nealey was secretary and Ed
Leeper treasurer......The Texas
Tla*
letted from our
Luci lius Price, wIh> is now one of
the big real estate men of San An-
tonid. Among other things, Price
says: “Conditions in Southwest
Texas could not l>e better. Timely
and abundant rains have assured
good crops. Corn is already made
and all other crops are so far ad-
vanced that we no longer have any
apprehension us to the ultimate
ouborne. This country is never
visit ed by the deadly and destruct-
ive cyclone. The winters are very
milcl, the nights during summer
are pleasant, on account of close
pro? imity of the gulf, from which
we i jet refreshing breezes. This is
the California of the Southwest—
no letter or healthier country any-
wero.”
T re farmers have not been able
to g rt into their fields in several
wee is, consequently the weeds are
monarchs of all they survey.
•lent religious services are being
held at the cotton mill.
Cornelius Nilson, son of Mr. and
Mr;. A. A. Nilson of this city, has
gra touted from the Southwestern
Optical College1 in Kansas City,
an< will arrive home in a few
days. He will possibly t>e asso-
ciates! in business here with Jus
tiler.
t Considerable com was brought
he city last Saturday and com-
manded the top notch in price.
new kind of liar has recently
eoihe to the surface. He is called
the Red river liar. It’s hard to ob-
Probably MoM Plctureaque of Thom
All lo Dorn Carlo*, Who Assorts
■His Right to RmIs in
Spain.
Up Thoir Cards.
Sometimes you're liable to Imagine
son s couplet. j a p0l(8J. aame j,ag CO|<l feet when he
’Tie not in mortals to command hsen’t,” said a man from Cheynne. “I
success.” **t in a f„Ur-handed game In a hotel on~ very forcibly of the tragedy ^
The evening exercises wen* in- roonj ,n Denver one night a few year# kings.” First, in 1870, came the over
France has a goodly crop of royal
that the fellow playing opposite you In „Ues and pretenders to the throne.
At Fsrnborough llres the ex-Empress
Eugenie, a pathetic figure, reminding
The Interurbnn goes too fast at
church. The opera house was]___Wed been Introduced to him by mid son, and tcMi&y this unhappy royal
We have as largq and
well assorted stock df
high grade groceries as
can be found in Denison
and our prices are right.
Call and see us ana we
will make you a customer
j. r. mckenzie & son
E. A. Pellerin
JEWELER
Watch repairing. All
kinds of fine work a
specialty. Carries fine
line of jewelry. Can save
you money on watches.
there some time.
Deputy Street
Henry Miller’s report
Commissioner J troWfje(j witli patrons of the public] h^^and °wh*n ^"sidd we^pre ^ e,lle' one of the 1<>n*1,8«t roo“*
for the!
a guileless sort of a young fellow and
was. we understood, the manager of a
big wholesale grocery firm ln Denver.
''We hadn't started the game till
after midnight, and before we knew It
the light of dawn began to dribble ln
at the windows. By that time the
young man who managed the whole-
sale grocery was Into the three of us
to the tune of of about $800 all told.
"When he saw the daylight creeping
ln he announced that it waa pretty
nigh all off so far as be was concerned.
Bat we jollied him out of that Idea,
and so he played on, winning right
W
T.
nai
ink
tain reliable news from the river.
notice that a Sherman paper
rejwrted a thirty foot rise when
the wagon bridge went down.
engineer Cooke, of the M. K. &
passenger service, was the last
min on the wagon bridge before it
went down. Mr. Cooke had a very
rrow escape, hearing the creak-
noise and feeling the bridge
trembling Ireneath his feet, he was
fo ■ a moment paralyzed with fear.
Ho then ran like a deer and had
just gained the bank when, with a
rumbling noise like thunder, the
bridge swayed for a moment and
the structure dropped into the
river, the piers following. Cooke
1ms in his experience as engineer
txen in many tight places, but this
wis the narrowest escape of all.
L. B. Mi Mire is not only an up to
date jeweler and general all round
b l si ness man, hut is also a suc-
cessful farmer. Mr. Moore has
seventy-fiv,e acres in potatoes, and
fist Friday he purchased an im-
proved potato digger which cost
him $80.
Judge Mixson has realized.$30
from onions raised on a piece of
land 80x60 feet. He received $1.50
per bushel for them. That is what
may he called profitable garden-
ing.
The North German Steamship
lo. has requested Martin Kohl to
jbtain views of the farming dis-
t riots around here, as they wish to
v se them throughout Germany as
tn incentive to induce immigra-
tion to this section. This is a novel
idea and a good one
Dr. L. D. Mason, of Chicago,
says too much water drinking in-
duces intoxication. That kind of
intoxication will never affect the
members of the Wilderness Club
when on a hunt.
In spite of hard times, let us get
ogether and have a Fourth of July
jelebration—some kind of a time
that will bring in the country peo-
ple. We suppose that Woodlake
will have its usual blowout.
It is estimated that 10,000 hogs
perished in Red river valley dur-
ing the late freshet.
All of the country and city
schools have been closed.
Dr. Joliff will spend his summer
vacation as a guest of San Rich
He has been sentenced to 225 days
in jail and a fine of $200 for violat-
ing the local option law, with
many other cases against him.
At a meeting of tine Trades’
Council in this city last week
was provided that 6 o’clock woulc
be the closing hour the year
round. The council ratified the
school ami the excises conducted I lng upstair* to play a little draw ha
month of May shows that there! j,y ppoft Hughes. The graduating asked to be allowed to sit in. He was.
was $300 collected in street taxes consisted of Ralph Lallier,
and twenty-five delinquents re- Kathleen Wilson, John Eubank,
ported to C ity Collector W ood. I jt,ssjp Madden, Bessie Byers, Plos-
Warrants have been sworn out tor Lie• McCkmnis, Fm| Morgan, Mil-
tliose turned in and arrests willhmI ciume, Roberta Ih.yle, Frank
follow. Nagle, Nellie Knaur, Ethel Wil-
Hon. C. B. Randell has returned n,on, Myrtle Smith, Richard
and will at once In-gilt an active Brumbaugh, valedictorian; Odra
campaign ior re-election. Carter, f’iukie Brack, lla Esler,
Cob Lon McAleer has put in a snlutatorian ; Etfie Wilson, Joseph
transfer between here’ and the! Wheeler, Rachel Watson, Bessie
river. He charges $1.00 for the J NtJies, Virgie Beggs; Kthlvn I>»tl-|aIon« mt nine o'clock in the
trip- - >« **»' *•*« Meta* — zrZLfvSZ
Of all the rot that is palmed off I sent
on the public the worst we havel The eSercises jiussed off in the
seen is what is called Chicken I ^ost creditable manner. The
Literature. The jioulty journals Inwards of scholarships aud cash
are full of senile advise. No twojl>r'*t?swert' as follows:
of them seem to entertain the I Two scholarships to University
same opinion. Some writers arelof Texas; first, Richard Brtun-
ffimplydurn fools and should neverIbaugh ; second, Miss lla Esler, for
l*> permitted to air their views in I high standing, there being a very
the j>aj>ers. If a chicken raiser!small fraction Is-tween the grades
should Is- guided by the advice of I of tfie first and second honor pu-
the average poultry writers (es-lpils.
I*eeially the women) they would! Mr. O. A. Maxwell, Frinci|>al of
make a complete failure of thejthe High School, announced the
chicken industry. J following awards of prizes:
Looking hack over a diary kept! Draughou s Business College,
twenty-eight years ago, we find I combined eeolarship, valued at
t he following memorandum penntsl J $83, Richard Brumbaugh,
at Allen bayou, Chickasaw nation :| Gate ( ity Business College and
“List for first time in woods ; re-JLiterary Acailemy,combine*! sehol-
mainetl out two nights and onel*irsfin,» valutsJ at $83, Miss Ethlyn
day ; badly scared and very bun-1 I^dlier.
gry. Shot all ammunition away.I ^ • J- Leeper prize, $20, for gen-
ExpecUsi to wander until ex-jt*ral excellence in scholarship,
haustcsl an<l starvetf Resigned I Richanl Bruinliaugh.
to fate. Struck a well traveled! J- T. Munson prize. $20, for
roatl and was determined never to! Hugest grade in chemistry, »Miss
leave it. Espied a cabin inhabited | Rs Lsler.
by Indians. Directed to camp by I For undergraduates, the S. 1’.
Eli IVrry. Reach camp sick, witli 1 Ancker prize, $12.50, for the high-
high fever for three days.” In jest standing in (totally, John Mor
this memorable experience we|ris* class of 10.
realizes! one thing, nature* is very! *^- !’■ Ancker prize, $12.50,
deniy and aald that he guessad he’d
better cash In.
"Entirely without justification all
three of us aet up the cold-feet holler.
"What's the matter—chilblains T” we
asked him, aarcastieally.' “Feel a
draught on your tootsies? It's a won-
der you wouldn't see a chiropodist for
what alls you! Here It la just the
shank of the even—the morning, and
you’re running off like a—”
'Gosh blame It all! I'm going to be
married at 11 o’clock this morning—
only two hours from now—and I've
got to skate home and get Into my
weddin' toga, haven't IT'
Which was the truth, as we verified
It later. Of course we had to apolo-
gise to him for accusing him unwar-
rantably of being a victim of frigid
lower extremities, and I guess he
started to keep house with the pat
thousand be took away-from the three
of us.
"I got Into a little game with s
sheriff I knew In southwestern Colo-
rado, and after we were well under
way a big, weather bronxed chap,
w-earlng rather a serious countenance,
as It struck me at the time, poked his
head in at the door of the sheriff's,
which was inside the jail, where we
were playing
'Come on In. Jeff.' said the sheriff,
good naturedly 'Want tn slam Into
this’'
"Jeff didn't mind If he did. he said,
and he disappeared for a minute and
returned presently with a sack filled
with gold money. He bought |100
worth of chips, and the cards began to
filter his way from the tap of the
drum
"Before an hour was over I was
pretty und inviting under fttvoTU-J highest grade in toitin, Miss I>-1 iu | durned sorry the sheriff had invited
bie circumstances, but when lost,
nature—pittiliess, barbarous, mur-
derous—will leave you to starve
upon her breast.
It is stated that Biggerstaff of
Bells will make the race against
Sheriff Rich, who will lie a candi-
date for re-election.
Did Charley Scholl or Major
Me Willie send the dispatch? A
dispatch to the Chicago Inter-Oc-
ean from Denison relates a thrill-
ing tale of the hairbreadth escajic
of a young lady from being de-
voured by fierce bats at a hotel.
It seems, according to the vera-
cious correspondent, that the
young lady was spending the win-
ter in this city and, as the dis-
patch naively explains, “contrary
to the custom in those parts, she
threw open her window.” A
thunder-storm arose, driving the
bats into her room. She fits I
screaming, and wrapped in the
bedclothing, and “when daylight
came the attendants of the hotel
entered the young lady’s room
(presumably armed to the teeth)
Brieger, class of ’09.
W. J. Mathis prizes of $10 to
hoy or girl doing l»est work in
English, awarded Louis Patton
and Miss Eftie framing.
The scholarships for Washing-]
fond and D*e University, I^exing-]
ton, Va.; Tulane University, New
Orleans, La.; Drury College,
Springfield, Mo.; and Universily
of Chicago, will Is* announced
later.
Mr. E. H. Hanna, formerly pres-!
ident of the Board, officiated
in the imjsirtant capacity of
making a farewell address to the
class of ’08, and presented thej
coveted roll of sheepskin.
The Poets’ Corner.
This week we have a new poet,
Mr. Cooj>er, the old-time sport,
jolly and free, who weighs 400
pounds. Mr. Cooper is a man of
vast experience and has seen all
the ups and downs of the wild and
woolly West. He has seen more
money i>et on a card than any
In the squib of poetry contrib-
uted Old Man Cooper breathes
the sentiments of good fellowship
which has been the guiding star
of his checkered career:
Here’s the grip of fellowship
To every one of you,
him to sit in. for he had more than
$300 of my pieces of eight, and It
didn't look like Jeff knew how to lose
at poker any way he or we played the
game. He got Into the sheriff just as
hard as he did Into me, and the longer
we played the more Jeff accumulated.
Along toward two. o'clock In the
morning Jeff looked up at the clock
and said he reckoned he'd drop out—
that he had a few letters to write and
such like trifling excuses. 1 felt like
being real rude to Jeff, and I was just
about to tell him that two o'clock ln
the morning was a mighty untoward
hour for a man to pry himself loose
from a game in which he was such
a big winner, when my friend the
sheriff gave me a kick on the leg under
the table.
"So I didn’t say anything while
Jeff cashed. And when Jeff took me
by the hand bade me good-by with a
good deal more fervor than the cir-
cumstances appeared to call for,
wondered a heap Just what kind of a
proposition Jeff was anyhow. He
stuffed his winnings into the bag he
bad brought into the office with him
and moseyed out.
'Well,' I said to my friend the
sheriff then, 'you took that good and
easy, didn't you? I figured that you’d
let out one little roar, anyhow, over
that fellow's hiking away with so
much of your good dough In his gun-
nvsack—not to mention mine—but
you didn't seem to—'
Steady, there, podner,' said the
at the
called Jeff
some, but you see I'm a-goln’ to hang
Jeff at 7:30 this mornln', and I reckon
he wants to git ready for his little pa-
rade across the border.’
man in Denison. Cooper is a good
and killed 61 bats,” 61—count’em I ^ u{ the ul<Uime sP°rt th«t are I ^criff. wo^ld
—61. President Roosevelt cannot M118! passing away a man whose
afford to let this pass, in justice toPie‘ir* js HS as Hs frame,
the nature fakirs. He ought to
treat them all alike.
As the law now stands a man
must support his family whether
re is able to or not. Since the
wife does not have to do the suj>-
porting many worthless men are j And "may the glum and dark days
without mates.
The school census will be eom-|
pleted this week. It will show no
increase except a few negro pupils.
We congratulate Joe Wheeler,
who graduated from the public j always have a seat for you in the
schools. He is a splendid young I poets’corner,
gentleman,, an honor to his father
and lie will climb to the top of the I Risks Life for Fiance,
ladder.
come
To trouble none of you ,
May each one here find life more dear
And every day more sunny,
And may we be from care as free
As we are free from money.
Fad for Sheffield Plate.
Many women are collecting Sheffield
plate, which is stiver on copper, and as
none has been manufactured for more
than half a century It is worth more
than solid silver. The pieces are very
feautifully decorated, and unlike old
china It Is really worth collecting, aa
Its value increases with age and It
cannot be broken like china.
touching ln all Europe, quietly awaits
the great call.
Within a couple of hours' railway
Journey of Farnborough, vix., at Eves-
ham, In Worcestershire, lives another
French royal exile, the Due d'Orleane,
chief claimant to the throne of France,
whose sister. Princess Louise of
France, waa recently married to
Prince Charles of Bourbon, whose
sister escaped miraculously with her
life at Lisbon. The duke's great-
grandfather was King Louis Philippe,
the last of the line to reign ln France,
who signed an act of abdication tn
favor of his grandson, the Comte de
Paris, father of the present Due d' Or-
leans.
How the revolution changed France
from a monarchy to a republic every
schoolboy knows, and not only Is the
duke thus prevented from wearing a
crown, but by the expulsion act of
1880 he Is made liable to arrest and
punishment if he sets bis foot ln
France. This act forbids the soil of
that country tn the direct heirs of
families which have reigned.
For this reason Prince Victor Na-
poleon, who claims the Bonapartist
succession and Is styled Napoleon IV
by his followers, resides ln Brussels.
Prince Victor's father was cousin to
Napoleon HI., husband of the ex-Em-
press Eugenie. Napoleon III. died In
1873; his only son. the prince im
perial. was killed in the Zulu cam-
paign of 1878. and thu* Joseph Charles
Paul Bonaparte, father of Prince Vic-
tor, held the poeitlon of head of the
house of Bonaparte, and his aon be-
came heir of the Bonapartist hopes
But the act of 1886 exiled them both
as pretenders to the throne Prince
Victor, however—his father died in
1891—still hopes to reign in the coun-
try of his birth, and reminds his par-
tisans at intervals of this ambition
by sending them signed photographs
of himself.
And then there Is the most pictur-
esque of all claimants to the throne
of France—Dom Carloa. duke of Mad
rid. who considers that by strict right
of heredity he should also be king of
Spain He claims to he Carlos VIT ,
the rightful king of Spain and the In-
dies. by virtue of his descent from
Dom Carlos, brother df King Ferdi
nand YU of Spain (who died in 18331.
and also claims to be King Carlos XI
of France and Navarre, since the
death of the Comte de Chambord In
1883. when the elder line of the house
of Bourbon became extinct. On ac-
count of the latter claim he has been
expelled from France, and of late
years has not pur„'*«1 his claim to
the throne of Spain quite so actively
as he did In the 70's. when, after the
strenuous campaign, the government
managed to dislodge his adherents
from their strongholds In the north of
the country Like the Due d'Orleans.
Dom Carlos is very rich, and it is said
that he hopes, through his son, Dom
Jaime, who is an officer ln the Rus-
sian army, to yet gain those royal
rights which are said to belong to his
family.
In Paris lives Queen Natalie of Ser-
via. mother of the murdered King
Alexander, who. after her divorce
from King Milan, took up her resi-
dence ln the French capital; while
near by lives Prince Guy de Luslg-
nan. who claims to be king of Arme-
nia, Cyprus and Jerusalem. He
traces his descent from the famous
knight, Guy de Luslgnan. who became
king of Jerusalem in 1186. There is
little likelihood of the prince "coming
into his own." but ln the meantime
he has designed two attractive decor-
ations. the Order of Mount Sinai and
the Order of St. Melusine, which he
confers wdth much solemnity upon
persons of whose merit he approves.
The Princess Eugenie Crlstoforos is
another claimant to a throne with a
particularly long pedigree. She traces
It back to the Emperor Constantine,
and her father. Prince Theodore, was
a candidate for the throne of Greece
in 1863, when the powers selected
Prince George of Denmark.
Portugal, too. has Its pretender* tn
Dom Miguel II.. whose father fought
unavailingly for the crown early ln
the last century. The crown is also
claimed by Prince Pedro d'Alcantara,
who considers that he is also the right-
ful emperor of Brazil.
At Porter's Old Stand
128-130 W. Main St.
SHIEIGS & SHORT
Undertakers
1*4
Embalmers
Pictures and
Picture Frames
425 W. Main Street
Phono 127
Great Furniture Event.
<*> 9) 9) <S) (*J 9) 9) <S) 9) 9) ® ®
This is the time of year
that people are looking
for furniture to fix up
the house. We are the
people that you want to
see. Call and look at
our new lines of furni-
ture. Everything neces-
sary for a well furnished
house.
THE
Hendrick Bros.
411 W. Main St.
A 6000 CIGAR
There is nothing made
and sokl that makes more
confidence than cigars.
We’ve a tip top 6c cigar
and you’ll agree with us
after a trial. Ask for our
Watt Brand
The Cigar of Havana—
“ Watt ” pleases. In it
we have obtained the
highest jiossible quality.
It made for us by an in-
dependent manufacturer.
We shall be satisfied if
you give it a trial.
Waldron Drug Store
W tie re Medicine
Is Purity.
J. F. TINSMANN. Pragrietar
No matter what you want in the
SADDLE, HARNESS
and BUGGY LINE
See rne and I will save you money.
Now is the time and
this is the place.
Chas. E. Fritch
206 W. Main St.
Full of Scratches.
• "What has this man been doing. a#r-
gaant?" gasped Officer O'Toole, as he
rolled over and over the sidewalk
with the unruly prisoner,
i "Hold on to him." shouted Sergeant
l Baumgarten, as he sent In the call for
the wagon. "He vas a 'fence.' ”
I "A 'fence,' Is ut?” he blurted. “Be-
We Cairy the Largest
Stock of
PICTURE FRAMES
in Denison. We have
many beautiful designs to
select from. A large and
assorted stock of pictures
suitable for framing. Make
your home more attract-
ive.
W. H. HALTON & GO.
Undertakers *
510 Mam St.
In These Days
of adulteration and substitu*
tution you don’t always find
real good coffee wherever you
go. The surest and best way
is to bay one that is known
to lie- first quality. Ask for
CONVENTION HALL
Coffee and you get the Is-st.
It’s a combination of Mocha
and .Java and comes in on**
and two pound cans and sells
for 40c and Toe respectively.
TONY HILL GROCERY
Whitehurst & Hopkins,
Proprietors
Both Phones
flUPTURfl
If you haw tveen a tms wearer Inn* v®o are
fully coovlacffi that the tru s will not c*<re. Your
own erpeitenre ha* proven it un**ttsfftcu>TT.
1 hen why continue wear the tru**3 If too
were suffering from some aiim* nt and oc went
to a physician and he gave voa a Sottle of medi-
cine wMch made v**u worse, instead of better,
would yoo take bottle after bottle of the »arr.e medi
ctne? We believe yon would no*, and vet you are
doing thas very thing when you continue to buy
trug^e*.
i
HUMPHREYS’
Veterinary Specifics cure dii
of Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Hogs and
Poultry )>y acting directly on the sicx pasts
without loss of time.
4.4.)FRVER«. (.ntntlm. .
ctaxa) HUB*. Lung Fever. Milk Fever.
Injuries.
B B.)KPRAIX». Lament
cuuai Rbeumaitam.
C. r.lMIRE THROAT,
ecus) Distemper.
5^1 WORMS. Bo.., G»ka.
F. . r . >roi «h». r«u«. im
onuaj Leap, Pleero-Pnean
P F.irOLIf. Bdlyache.
a’RRA) Diarrhea, Dysentery.
G. G. Prevent* MISCARRIAQK.
A BLADDER BINOR1
I I. ? BRIT DISK\*F> Mange,
crass j l leer*. Greaae, Farcy,
J. K. I B A R COMHTIOV * taring Coni
ecus 4 Indigeation. Stomach fetaggnra.
PLASTER-PADS
Are entirely different from the truss, and are
seemingly an unfaiimg cure for the wo»*t forms
I of rapture. Being seif-adhesive, they hold the
rapture in place without «traps. truckle or obnoa-
tous springs—ran not slip, so cannot ckn e or
compress against the pelvic bone. The pad*
con am a powerful medicine which is kept con
stantlv in contact and is gradually ahsotbod*
, thereby runng the non obstinate cases m a short
| time. Hundred* have successfully treated them-
| selves at home without hindrance from work un-
der our guarantee.
Write today and “Trial Treatment,’* together
j with interesting book and strongest endorsements
rill be sent absolutely
Address STUART PLASTER CO.
Block 17, St. Loris, Mo.
,dad, from th’ looks av me hands he
Live Stock Journal estimated the
number of cattle to be driven agreement without a dissenting
flapped from Texas during thelvoloe' Thl8 Wlil affect W' ^
year at 650,000 head.......Gen.
Miss Ollie Montgomery,) 7 years I
. old, hid her sweetheart, A. G. But-1
The International I olar Con-jit»r) for three weeks. She carried I
gress is now in session at Bras-This meals to him secretly after
sels, Belgium, with represents-1 nightfall. Finally, having failed |
tatives from twelve countries, in- |n *‘e.r e^(ortf obtain a pardon
, , t*4 * an. for him she braved the rapids of
eluding the t inted .States. Tl|fc, t)ie James river in an open boat in
object of the congress is to create!order to join him in his refuge on
an international association for the an isolated island, which the young
study of polar regions', first to ob-j111 an had carefully fortified. Then
Now the Diabolo Girl.
The diabolo girl is the latest craze
... ...i an<l wilt no doubt furnish “copy" ford . . . .
Come again, old sjxtrt, we Will | the illustrators of advertisements Just mMt * barb-wolre fence.
as her predecessor, the golf girl, has t
done for several years. But the garnet! Couldn’t Eat It.
Itself does not suggest itself aa read- 1 Mr*. Ben ham—A tramp stole one of
Ily as did croquet and It will probably ®7 P'®* to-day.
be a long time before It la generally Benham—1 wonder what he will do
played. -* , with It?—Harper's Weekly.
I'.
Garfield was nominated by the
n publican convention at Chicago
May 8 on the thirty-sixth ballot,
aud Chester A. Arthur received
tie* nomination for vice president
... .The eighteen-months-old child
of j'gv. Recks, near Palo Alto, wan
dered mto the woods and was lost
A large party turned out in seared
of tlte little one, ami ■ it was nearly
a ,iay before the wanderer was
This wilt affect
closing hours
We have discovered another
thing against the English sparrow
A moaning dove has. a nest in
tree opposite our porch. The
sparrows have driven the doves
away and taken possession of the
nest. They were fighting for it al
day last Sunday. They will fight
no more ; the contents of » hotgun
tain an international agreement
upon questions relating to polar
geography; second, to organize a
concerted effort to reach the north
pole; third, to organize an expedi-
tion for the extension of polar re-
search in all directions, and,
fourth, to prepare a program of
scientific work during polar expe-
ditions.
Kansas City, Kas., has been in
the hands of reformers for two
put them into tlie bird’s hereafter.
Col. Lon McAleer must be & ye&ra. During that time Tie city
found. It was lying on the ground J pessimist. The Colonel says that government has run behind
last asleep. (the Katy will not get across Bed^UOU.
she brought Butler to Richmond
and forced him to surrender, in
order that they might be married.
Justice Crutchfield, after listen-
ing to the story of the arrest on a
trivial charge, his subsequent es-
cjjpe anil of the devotion of the
girl, wij>ed ull the charges against
the young man from the books
and told them to call on the near-
est preacher.
Boyd’s island, on which Butler
sought refuge, is located in the
middle of the James river rapids.
It is hard to reach even by the ex-
perienced river men. How tlie
girl manged to reach it each night
is a mystery. — Richmond Ex-
The effect of Scoff’s Emulsion on thin*
pale children is magical.
It makes them plump, rosy, active, happy.
It contains Cod Liver Oil, Hypophosphites
and Glycerine, to make fat, blood and bone,
and so put together that it is easily digested
by little folk.
ALL DRUOGISTSl BOo. AND SI.OO.
*k?. «*eh :
At druggists, or sent prepaid on receipt of |
Humphreys’ Medicine Co., Cor. William and
Stroeta. Sew York.
OT BOOR M M LED FRES.
PATENTS
Free adrice. how to obtain paten ta. trade mat ha,
DENISON TRANSFER LINE
TIM MURPHY
Proprietor
Moves Safes, Pianos and
Household Furniture with
special care safety,
(infers given prompt at-
tention. Baggage trans-
ferred to all parts of die
city. Phone 42. Office,
106 W. Main Lit.
oopTrtgitt*. «**=- IN ALL COUNTRIES.
Business direct -with Washington sores time, I
\ money and often the fount.
Pittnt and Practice ExcTtahraly.
Write or come to as at
| 9 tS Rlath Street, epp Halted States Patent OAm
WASHINGTON. Q. C._
CASNOWI
60 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
Patents
J. E. HOWARD
The Leading Real Estate
Man. Buys and sells Beal
Real Estate, collects rents
and pays taxes for real
estate owners.
108 North Rusk Av*.
JD
• i
I
SUMMER EXCURSION TICKETS
i
PURE
IG0
Denison Crystal Ice Co.
Delivered at your
doors. A rebate
given when tickets
are bought.
DcaiQNS
Copyright* ho.
Anyone sending a sketch and fleeerlptIon may
quickly asoeruun our optmoti tree whether an
invention M prob.biv ptentebt*. Commnnta*.
ttouttrtetlvouuadeuiinl. HANDBOOK on Pinrti
Mat free. Oldeet scene? for securuic patents.
Patents taken tbronsh Mann * Co. reom
NMCMl natter, without cher**. Is the
Scientific American.
Sft
1 newsdUNl—b
New M
ttston. D. C.
’t>,.ut ch»r*e.
tic Hit
lu.tiH
c :
fear : f-ur mo'itha, 1
mm
A handsomely Illustrated weekly.
Mllriltt*. [
Ttt.V>
BARGAINS.
Ladies’ Watches. SB to BIB.
Gentlemen’s CoM Watches,
se to sao. at O’RSAUBY’S,
at greatly reduc-
ed rates to points
NORTH,
EAST,
SOUTH-EAST
| Cob late, Pacific Coast
ate MextcBn Psists via
H. & I. C. Rail Road
On sale commencing June 1st, re
turn limit October 31st, 1908.
Loop trip via New Orleans and
Southern Pacific Co. Summers.
Going via steamer and returning
via rail lines or vice versa.
For further information see ticket
agent or address - *
C. K. DUNLAP,
Traffic Manager. ’
T. J. ANDERSON,
Gen. Pass. Agent
Houston, Texas.
IFJ
I !■
if
i ff
*
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. 27, No. 10, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 14, 1908, newspaper, June 14, 1908; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth555536/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.