The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 19, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 24, 1902 Page: 1 of 4
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Are You Going
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Moore’s
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Where all the latest styles known to
the art of photography are made.
K»r ,W Main St.. Denison, Tex.
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VOLUME XXL | »«»««,rjtos ^ v«A».o.,..w,,r ( DENISON, TEXAS, SUNDAY, AUGUST 24, 1902
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j NUMBER 19.
NEW
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MARKET
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CHRIS. KIRCHER, Pmoriuxro*.
u6N. Ratk Avenue.
: •4i«_ ' :r
Fresh Meats,
Sausage and Fresh
Live and
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BARGAIN DAYS
From now until September 1st we will continue our
slaughttr sale on alt summer dry goods, clothing, shoes and
furnishings to make room for our immense fall stock now ar-
riving. The reductions are simply unparalleled, and the goods
_are,bound to go from ONE FOURTH to ONE-THIRD OFF,
| shd as low as HALF PRICE.
tOOO Men's and Ladles* Handkerchiefs
Clearing at less than Half Price. . . .
+-
Headlight Flashes
t
250 Headlight.UNION-MADE Overall Suits on sale at
$1.30 per suit until LABOR DAY, September ist. We hope
all our customers wilt take advantage of this opportunity.
I1
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DRESSMAKING DEPARTMENT
Our Dressmaking Department in charge of Mrs. Seiling
will be open for business September ist, and will be located
on the balcony floor-now being added to our store.
Hocker-King Dry Goods Go.
v
400*402. Main Street
LADIES’ OXFORDS
We are closing out all
our lines of ladies’ miss*
es’ and children’s Ox*
fords and Slippers at
cost prices.
We have the exclusive
agency for the
DOROTHY DODD
Shoes and Oxfords
THE SHOE MAN
211 Main Street
*J8U. v •.
The Revs Briefly Told.
Cholera report* from the Philip-
pines show the total number of cases
to be about 30,000.
The Moros are on the warpath in
Mindanao.
Tbe shah of Persia is visiting at
the court of St. James, London.
The Boer generals Both, Dewet
and De la Rey visited King Edward
at Cowes, Isle of Wight, and re-
ceived a hearty welcome.
Father John Troncy, a celebrated
French priest who is well known in
Texas, died at Monterey, Mexico.
Colonel William A. Hemphill,
founder of the Atlanta Constitution,
is dead.
A meteoric stone killed a Mexican
sheep herder near San Antoaio.
Tbe meteor struck a boulder on
which he was sitting and a fragment
penetrated his brain.
Prof. Harrington at the Agricul-
tural and Mechanical college sug-
gest, levees for protecting Brazos
bottom farm lands.
The tariff treaty negotiations with
China have been successfully con-
cluded.
Two boys were drowned while
swimming in a lake on Galveston
island.
Charles M. Schwab will go to
France for re«» after consulting with
Mirgan. The report that he was in
a state of physical collapse and
would resign the presidency of the
steel trust was without foundation.
Soldiery were sentj^l^gicjua^
TVnh.^ T uesiTayto keep order among
the strikers.
Cattle owners have asked an in-
junction against department officials
to prevent collection of tees in the
Chickasaw nation.
A Venezuelan city has fallen into
the hands ot the revolutionists with-
out a shot.
International complications may
arise on the Isthmus of Panama.
The city of Austin has finally
gained possession of the plant of the
private water company, and the liti-
jgation is at an end.
G. W. Burkett of Palestine is a
| candidate for the republican state
| chairmanship.
! At Nesquehoning, Pa., in a clash
I Detween striking mine workers and
ideputies Monday night, Patrick
Sharp, a miner, was shot and killed
almost instantly by the deputies.
The shooting caused considersble
excitement and almost a riot for a
time, but order was restored. A
deputy, charged with the killing,
war arrested.
Six live* were lost in a fire which
consumed a ramshackle tenement at
36, Essex street, New York'City.
The little island of Tortshima was
overwhelmed by e volcanic eruption
between August 13 and August 13
and all the inhabitants, numbering
130 persons, were undoubtedly kill-
ed. The island is covered with vol-
canic debris, and r.ll the houses on
it have disappeared. Torishima is
one of a chain of islands extending
between the Bonin islands a,id Hou-
do, tha hjggcst island of Jhpan.
It Is a pleasure to ua to de-
liver your wants.
T. B. HANNA A SON.
If every catpenter and contractor
in America should bear in mind that
he has to pay $2.30 for the same
keg of nails for which tbe foreigner
pays our “iron kings” but $1.30,
there ought to be a serious depletion
,n the republican ranks about these
days. _________
Senator Wellington of Maryland
is quoted as saying that be is strongly
in favor ot a constitutional amend-
ment which would extend the presi-
d^r>*ial term to six years and make
it imposiioit /*«- -•.;• •--->•> to serve a
second term. He stated that he re-
garded the whole trend of the repub-
lican party as toward imperialism
menace to the futureofthe
republic. He believed there was a
constant tendency on the part oi the
executive to encroach on the legisla-
tive branch of the government, and
that some remedy which would ef-
fectually check such encroachment
should be adopted. Bumming up
his remarks, the senator said: ‘‘The
American people have put aside all
the higher ideals of past generations
and have settled down to gross ma-
terialism.” Truer words were nev-
er spoken. This country has been
drifting toward imperialism ever
since the first gun was fired in the
civil war.
It was exceedingly kind of tbe
Hereld to give the Gazrttker such
e flattering notice in ka issue of last
Thursday, although it was decidedly
mistaken in saying that the paper
had been leased and the present
proprietor would retire from the
newspaper field. As this ts the first
occasion we can call to mind that
the Herald has kindly alluded
to tbe Gazetteer, we doff our
Panama to the management and
with a low bow thank them most
heartily for this tribute to the paper
and its editorial staff.
The king of England and the no-
bility nearest tbe throne fairly daz-
zled the onlookers during the coro-
nation ceremonies with their trap-
Persia, who is now visiting Eogland.
The dispatches tell t» that when the
schah left the train at Victoria station
ne was resplendent in a blaze of di-
amonds. On his tarboosh (cap) a
huge diamond stood out like a head-
light; hit epaulettes were adorned
with large emeralds, and hit breast
was covered with jewels of all kind*.
—
Morrison & Fourmy, the Texas
City Directory publishers of Galves-
ton, have complimented the Gazet-
teer with a. copy of the directory
for Waco just from the press. Like
all their publications it is a beautiful
specimen oi high-class printing and
binding. The number of names
in the voiuu.. u ,,)7s4t showing an
increase over 1S91 .. „rS xh-’ sv
a liberal estimate, will place the
ulation at 2
' ■/’
MOORE
Is a photographer and not a black-
smith. There are blacksmiths in
Denison at the photo business.
Tbe following remarkable escape
from death of a deserted infant is
told in a Desoto, Mo., paper:
William Heims, a ’farmer living
near Irondale, about twenty miles
south of here, found a baby boy in
a valise beside the Iton Mountain
railroad track. Everything about
the place indicated that the valise
had been thrown from a passenger
train that passed an hour earlier.
The child, apparently about five
days old, was neatly dressed, but
neither on its clothes nor about the
valise was any mark indicating its
identity. The train parses that point
at sixty miles an hour, but tbe valise
had landed on the top of a low bushy
tree, and the baby had not been
hurt. Heims says be will adopt the
boy unless its parents can be found.
He is a prosperous farmer and it de-
j lighted with tbe boy’s appearance.
The Mayor of Omaha.
The mayor of Omaha, Neb., is
called a bold, bad man. He has
been mayor for six yean and will
possibly be re-elected. Here is what
be says:
“I don’t give a d—n for the
church people. They are no use in
an election. I would rather have
one tough saloon keeper or gambler
on my side on election day than a
dozen of the people who do a lot of
holerin’, but don’t get out and vote.”
Here is what the business men
-
say:
“He’s a bad man, a b-a-d man,
indeed. But he helps business.
People like to come to a town where
there tt something going on, where
everything is wide open and woolly.
It brings trade, you know.”
"
Samuel Gumpers, president of the
American Federation of Labor, de-
livered an address on the 16th before
the Chautauqua Assembly at Moun
tain Lake Park, Ind., to an audience
of several thousand. He was es-
pecially severe on the system bf
child labor, and especially in tbe
Southern States where there are no
laws to protect the little ones from
extortionate greed of heartless cor-
porations. He declared that tbe la-
bor of young and innocent children
is tbe great evil that n.eds reforma-
tion. Many states, particularly in
tbe South, bave no law whatever to
prevent the practice. ‘‘Men get
rich,” he declared, “from the labor
of children whose bones are ground
into almighty dollars. It is a sad
commentary. Men walk the streets
idleness in the textile districts
’he mills are filled with chil-
Insl"ltd of labor being crown-
with honor\m!fi«*v* “* r-g^tful
heritage, it f«" a
much labor can -We squeezed _
the laborers and bow little wages he
can be forced to accept in return.”
Mr. Gumpers is right, and the next
Texas legislature should pass laws
to protect the children of the Lone
Star State.
white
•'f how
IP
Sidney Elkin
Women’s
Vests,
In all the fancy.and plain sum-
mer vests.
Silk vests for women, in
pink, blue and white, all the
sizes, at 30c. -
Plain, white Jisle, silk taped
vests, or sheer cotton, if you
want them, at 23c.
Your money always return-
ed if not suited.
Sidney Elkin
Phone 101
ooooooooooooooooooooooov
NEW
WALL
PAPER
Our new spring stock _ ot Wall
Paper is now arriving and we are
ready to show it.
If you are going to paper your
house, you can’t afford to overlook
our stock. We want to show you.
T. B. WAIiDROU
223 Main Street.
J£RS. MINNIE BAILEY,
SPECIALIST
In Fryers, Brain Troubles and all
AcutS*Tnflamatory Diseases, I
Meningitis and Canczr.
314 W. Gandy St.
Denison, Texas
Vi
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REMOVAL
•••SALE***
General Mile? will not be permit-
ted to head the Grand Army ot the
Republic parade, the president hav-
ing objected.
The presidential trip to Texas
will probaDly be declared off.
At the democratic convention at
Greenville C. B Randell was unan-
imously nominated as candidate for
congress.
25 per cent off from regular prices
during this sale, and 50 per pent
off on all odds and ends in men’s
We a ,is,e open work
hose in tan^^llf8*^re€n an<* red
at 3 pairs for 50 cemS^’......
Yours, Anxious for Trade,' -
U. 8. CLOTHING CO.
209 Main Street.
11
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Denison Mill and Elevator Company
DENISON, TEXAS.
There are no mills in Grayson County up to date like the Denison Flouring
Mill. In some instances their machinery is old. It is impossible for them to
turn out a strictly first-class grade of flour. They are all watching and are
jealous of Denison flour, which is marching into their territory to stay. Bri-
dal Wreath is our champion brand, the household favorite, but the other
brands are a splendid flour. The Denison Mill and Elevator Co. are paying
out a great deal of money for advertising to introduce their flour, but the
money is sure to flow back to them many fold. It is already coming their
way. Remember our brands................V * *
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 19, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 24, 1902, newspaper, August 24, 1902; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth570951/m1/1/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.