The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 28, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 20, 1907 Page: 4 of 4
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Sppil®
It you would posset*
A Warm Heart
you should tint thaw out the phyu-
cal man. We are ready to help you
with the greatest stock of Heating
Stoves on earth. Look at these
beaten. Investigate them thoroughly
and you will he convinced that this
is the right place for everybody to
purchase their heater*.
Over one hundred good second
hand heaters at less than halt price.
BA«Y PAYMENTS.
J Chas. H. Jones
Furniture and Carpets
Your Home Furnished Completely.
AXMINSTER RUGS
9X12
A large* shipment of beautitul pat-
terns, floral and Oriental just in.
We are fortunate in being able to
offer these Kng* to our trade as
they are very scarce in the market
now, owing to the demand being
greater than the supply. Many cus-
tomers h ive been waiting for these,
come early and get first choice.
CARPET DEPARTMENT.
Chas. H. Jones
401-403-405 West Main Street.
jdag fettm
SAY
II you are going to
drink, try a bottle
of our
New York Cider
2 bottles for 25c
MULLEN
422 N. Houston Ave.
Both Phones
No groceries taste like
Mullen’s.
K
Pay Day Once More
vyre are getting our new
stock for the winter and
holidays, but we have
hundreds of beautiful ar-
ticles which we wish to
close out and will at ac-
tual cost in many things.
Now is the time to take
advantage of the clean-out
skle.
THE JEWELER
The
Model Meat
Market
will give boarding houses,
restaurants and hotels
special prices. All* other
orders will receive prompt
attention and lower prices
than anywhere else in
town.
Ill North Burnett Ave.
Both Phones.
Free Delivery. 274
USE IN CRYING
Over spilt milk, and no use
in worrying over « leaky roof.
Phone me and I’ll tell you
what a new one will cost. I’ll
sftve you money.
A. J. Routon,
265 New Phone.
ill Miiin Street.
FAIR
BI66ER AND BETTER THAN EVER
J75,000 in Premiums and Purses
TRANSPORTATION
Dowble-treck Street Car Serviee
AMD
S. A. A A. P. R. R. Shuttle-Ti-eJns
DIRECT TO FAIR GROUNDS
SAN-ANTONIO
November, 9th to 24th 1907
And your grocery hill is some-
thing fierce. iWhy not cut it
down. Save but e few dollars
and tat them kelp you meke a
living.
Did you know we art sail-
ing:
18 lbs. standard granulated
sugar_______$t.OO
8 lbs good (oasted
coffee-------------$i.oo
5 gallons best oil------70c
48 lbs Hour.......... $t.2Q
12 cans 3 lb tomatoes—$1.15
ta cans good corn--85c
Navy beans, per lb---5c
4 lb*. Atm A Hammer
soda.
2 packages ebeoanut.
Eagle milk pier can..
3 peks Egg-O-See-----------25c
3 peks Egg-O-See corn-25c
3 peks Wneait Berries---------25c
And everything accordingly.
Cause we art selling groceries
and fresh meat* your’e want-
ing at prices your’e tickled to
pay.
Tucker-Jonz
Cash Grocers.
328 330 Main St.
We call your attention
OUR
Voile and
Panama
Skirts.
>••••
Most complete line in
the city.
Mrs. S, J. Rockwell.
Fresh In:
Come and See Os
Sunday, October ao, 1007.
800IBTY.
rat the Oaaattter win tbaak
1 tar the saaounraweat* el
i by them, or other society
1 tercet. Address ••Sedety
RAILROAD B0MBL1HQB.
Engineer Tom Murphy, who has been
os the conetiuctton of the M. K, ST., Ii
In the Territory. It Is to be hoped that
Tom will go back to his old run on the
Katy,
s tearing down ot the old M. K A
T. depot t* about finished.
’ The I milder* of the Interurban from
Sherman to Dallas announce that the
cars will begin to run December ist.
There Is now on toot a move to build
such a line from Bonham to Greenville
via Wolte City and the promoter* are
meeting with much encouragement from
the people ot the towne and country.
Cot. Crerear has put men to scraping
oB the end* of the tie* *0 as to accommo-
date the brick work.
C. M. Hadler, who
potnt, has been promoted
Miss Jennie Jones and Bob Henry were
I married at the Jones mansion lsst night
| The bride I# the daughter of our worthy
I Constable Jone», who made a good offi-
jeer, and will undoubtedly be re-elected
I next spring. He offers a fine horse for
sale In another column. The groom runs
I a grocery store on Main street, and It a ] X**™ b^*nuCMh*er of
I good patron of our adrertitina columns,
j and has a good line of bargains this
week. Alt the summer he paid two cents
more tor butter than any store In town.
I The happy couple lett on the 10 o’clock
j train for Milwaukee to visit the bride’s
uncle, who Is reported to have lots of
money and Bright’s disease. Bob cer-
j tainlv has an eye tor business.—Coolee-
I mea (North Carolina) Banner.
The
I save.
1 no matter how tmall.
haa for several
the Frisco at this
at. We
NeW Cereals
Brand New Kraut
White House Coffee
Kosjher Meats
M. Emilslein
EAGLE GROCERY
419 W. Main Street
IRON FENCE
See me about the prettiest
cheapest and best all steel
fence made. To introduce
this fenfe until Nov. 1 I
will accejpt orders in lots
of not ldss then fifty feet,
one walk gate included,
set up in either Sherman
or Denison, at 65 cents
per footi After the above
date it will be 75 cents per
foot. 4Jso, if you wish a
fine granite or marble mon-
ument, get my prices.
Drop! me a postal.
k. P. CHAMBERLAIN
622 Main St., Denison,Tx.
rv
1 beginning of wealth Is learning to
"Lsy by” something each week,
London chemists have discovered that
I two-thirds of the weight of a girl ts com-
I posed of sugar. If they had experi-
mented on Texas girls they could have
| done better than that.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawtence
[gone to Chicago to live.
312 W. Main St.
For veterinary work call on H. F
Stevens, at No. aao West Chestnut
atreet. Day or night calls answered
promptly.
Opera 1
The Pi
company
THEATRIC) AL.
Irish Senator” will be at the
House an Wednesday, October 23.
yes “The Irleh Senator’
seated their great comedy
the Fraternal opera house |
Tone have
Miss Lelia
to amn
congratulate Mr. Hadley, and we also
congratulate the FjUco In haring made
such an excellent choice. In the time
Mr. Hadley has been here he has made e
host ot friends who will Join with the
Gazettesr In congratlationa. Mr. Ma-
honey will succeed Mr. Hadley. He Is
also * faithful end efficient servant ot the
Frisco,
C. B. Dorchester of Sherman, who was
recently at St. Louts, said: “While on
my wav to St. Louts I met Mr. Dewar,
vice president and treasurer of the com
pany. He confirmed fully the press re-
ports ot the success ot President keneiick
In the floating of a French loan and
stated that Mr. Kenefick was then
Chicago on business looking to an active
era ot construction Texatward and that
shortly after his, Kenefick’a, return to
Muskogee he would Igave for Sherman
Strait, leading lady In*the Texas Ranger, anj D*nUon wUh , corpse of engineers
| to more permanently go over the route*
of which topogrsplcal and preliminary
I surveys have already been made.”
I has abandoned the stage for the present.
Mrs. Pierre Wilton of Dtlist was In the
I city the past week. The doctor and wtte
I have recently returned from Europe.
Miss Laura Potett of Elk Horn, Neb.,
1 has arrived to spend the winter with rela-l * twitch engine
O my, how we are
fixed up. Everything
new, new paper, new
fixjtures and a new
stock of jewelry. The
r ittiest little tjewelry
ouse in NorthTexas.
When you want your
watch fixed, see us.
kinds of repairing.
The following It the text of a “Railroad
Man’s Prayer," pasted on the fireman’s
tlves.
the Northern
“Now that I
When we tee a good for nothing fellow
I bragging about his ancestors, we think
the blood must have stopped with him.
Marrying a woman tor her money is
I very much like setting a rat trap and
[ baiting It with vour own finger.
A paper asks: “Is marriage declin-
I Ing?" We should say not. The girls all
want to marry and they ‘ can find their
1 affinity without any trouble. No, mar-
[ rtage Is not declining.
It Is very rare indeed to find an old
| maid who has reached the age of forty,
j They usually stop growing old at thirty.
M. J. Martin, a wealthy farmer living
I near Kankakee, Ills., succumbed to a
1 coffee heart a few evening* ago. For
many years he had been fond of the bev-
erage. Mrs. Emma Herbst arrived in
Kankakee recently tor the purpose ot ex-
I hibiting a new coffee pot at a grocery
j store. It happened to be the store where
] Martin traded. He drank some coffee
and he drank some more. Then he took
I still another cup. “You would do to
make coffaa for me,” he said to the wo-
man. From that day he spent much of
his time around the grocery store drink-
ing Mr*. Herbst’t brew. His heart soon
I began to trouble him, and the climax ar-
I rived, when he married Mrs. Herbst and
I took her home, along with two ot the
new coffee pots, to make coffee for him
three times a day for the rest of his life.
Martin was 65 years old and his bride is
[ thirteen years younger.
The modern boy of ours seems to sec
I nothing in life but the froth and bubble*
I of pleasure that dance on the surface of
I existence. We wonder what has become
of the old-fashioned boy* and girls with
1 whom we played and went to school?
They were real boys and girl*. Take 75
per cent cf the girls and boys ot today—
I the girls ail they think of is dress, and
they want to many before they are fairly
j dry behind the ears; and the boys, they
I give no thought of fitting themselves for
I the real responsibilities of life. The old-
fashioned boy of the bygone' days was
I always trying to make something ot him-
I sen. He dreamed dreams of making a
j man ot himself, ot getting an education.
I He was brought up to honor his father
I and mother. The old-fashioned boy has
j passed practically away. It seems st
times as though he had left neither suc-
cessors, heirs nor assigns. Not long
I since we saw on Main street six boys, all
I smoking clgarrettes and using vile lan-
I guage, and we should judge that they be-
] longed to respectable families. And the
I girls, they are above household duties;
I they gad the streets. Many a good old
mother will have to make the old cloak
do another yeaf because too much of the
family Income ha* been devoted to dress-
ing the silly-pated girls. The old-fash-
ioned, sensible girl has disappeared with
[ the old-fashioned, sensible boy.
Pacific yards at Suokane:
have flagged thee, lift my feet from the
rough roads of life and plant them safely
on the deck ot the train of salvation.
I.et me use the safety lamp of prudence,
make couplings with the link of love, and
let my hand be the blbie and keep ail
switches closed that lead off the main
line into the siding with blind end*.
Have every semaphore on the line show a
white light of hope that I may make the
run of life without stopping. Give me
the Ten Commandments as a working
card, and when I have finished the run
on schedule time and pull Into the ter-
minal, may the superintendent of the
universe say: “Well done, good and
faithful servant; come Into the general’s
office to sign the pay roll and receive
your check tor eternal happiness.’*—Ex-
change.
PERSONALS.
Rev. J. M. Binkley of Sherman was
here the past week. *
W. C Bridendolph, assistant postmas-
ter, is taking a short lay off.
Jim Ferrett and Theo. Tobin were at
Fort Worth the paat week.
Mr. Joe Brutsche was at Sherman last
Sunday to visit his daughter, Mrs. Gregg
Sam Poston of Parson, Kan., i* here
on a rtsit to friends.
George Higgins of Kansas City is here
on a visit to relatives.
C. J. Corcoran and Jim Tobin, two
known Denison boys, have returned from
California, where they spent the past
several week* on a visit to relatives.
Dis.
turned from
Rutledge and Birch have re-
a fishing trip to the gulf.
M. K. tc T. Special Bates-
$25.00—California and to the North-
Iwest; some points slightly higher. On
I sale Sept, ist to Oct. 31st.
$16.40—Kansas City and return; tlck-
I ets on sale October 12th to 16th inclusive;
I final limit October 21st.
DALLAS FAIR.
Tickets on sale October 19th to Novem-
| ber 3rd, inclusive.
$2.90 Dallas and return; final limit
| Nov. 4th.
$2.30 Dallas and return; good two
[ days from date of sale.
$1.00 on Sunday, October 20-27, Nov.
13. Good to return same day.
For any other information call on or
| write
J. Gbrlach, T. P. A.
|E. A. Kxllog, Both Phones 201.
Jt. Ticket Agent. No. 222 Main St.
I Union Paasgr Station.
Joseph Gabant left the past week tor
the Nevada gold fields.
Frank Butts has left here and gone to
Boise City, Idaho, to iocate. HU wife and
family will follow shortly.
J. W. Scully was at Dallas the past
week.
Con. Quinn expects to make a trip to
Ireland in the spring.
Chas. W. Irvin of Altoona, Pa., is In
the city, the guest of his uncle Joe T.
Irvin, 900 block, West Chestnut street.
Mr. Irvin is very much impressed with
Denison and may make up hU mind to
locate here.
Judge J. T. Pott* of the Chickasaw
Nation, near Colbert, was here the past
week. The Judge Is another citizen of
the Territory who is swearing by Dr. J.
F. Baker. His wife for years was an In-
valid and has been completely cured by
the doctor.
The Gazetteer received a pleasant
call from our old townsman W. A. H*l-
ienbeck, now ot St. Louis. Will is do-
ing well and his wife it in excellent
health. He will remain In Denison a
[few days and then visit hi* daughter,
Mrs Nichols, at Ardmoie, and then go to
his farm in the Territory. Hi* daughter,
Mrs. Thomas, arrived with her father.
She has been vUitiug in St. Louis.
Condensed Hone News.
Instead ol teaching German and]
Latin in the public schools more
useful and practical education should I
be given. It is time misspent. No
pupil can acquire German or Latin
in the very short time that they have
before graduating. They will never |
put to use either of the studier.
That honor is on a par with a lot of |
other fool notions that creep mto|
public schools.
We direct attention to the article!
of D. I. Brumbaugh, on the inside
of the paper. It is verv interesting.
It will be continued in next week’s j
issue.
Mr. Neil, the cotten expert, ad
vises farmers to hold cotton for 15c. I
Fifteen cent cotton is sure to come,
but the average farmer is sure to let |
go before the harvest is ripe.
Phil May has received the ap-1
pointment ot letter carrier. Civil
service examination tor mail clerks
and carriers was in progress on the
6th. Sixty-five mail clerks are paid]
off here.
It 1* dollars to doughnuts that the]
pav-ng on Main street will rot be
completed this winter. It looks as
if the city and Mr. Crerear cannot
arrive at a harmonious understand-
ing, and there the matter stands.
The late conference was a miscsr-]
risge.
Before we cross the divide, wej
want to enj >y an old-tashion coon
hunt, and have an old-time darkey
with his pack of dogs do the bunting.
It Is the greatest sport in the woods,]
especially if the coon puts up a fight.
Coon properly barbecued is a very |
palatable dish.
The Denison Herald stales that]
the wotk of paving Main street is]
once more under way. Nay, nay,
Pauline, tbe work is not under way.
To the contrary, it has ceased en-
tirely, and tbe onck put down are |
being taken ap.
On account of the backward con-1
dition ot chrysanthemums, the dates
of the Denison timer show have
been changed from Nov. 6, 7, 8, to
Nov. 30. 21, 22. This action was
deemed necessary for the full suc-
cess of tbe show, for which a vast]
number ot chrysanthemums are to |
1 grown.
The Denison Light and Power
Co. received the present week three
car loads of machinery. The foun-
dation is completed and the machin-
eiy will be placed in position at
once.
Just as we go to press we learn
that Mr*. R. P. Hibbard died in
Michigan. The body will arrive
Saturday from Detroit, and the fun-
eral will take place at some hour Ou
Sunday.
Alex Hubert (col.) shot and mor-
tally wounded John Walker, (col.)
Thursday night m tbe 700 block,
W. Johnson street. The trouble
was over a woman. Hubert was
arrested.
Dr. J. F. BAKER
PHYSIO-MEDICAL SPECIALIST
la the treatment of chronic diseases of Both men and women, successfully employing
Sanative (non-poisonous) medication.
The statement of a cured
patient:
-
'
Wm
llfea
M
m
. *w
Mmm
7*. 4
- 774
Gunter,Tex., Feb.27,’07
To whom it may concern : <
I most gladly recom-
mend to suffering human*
ity Dr. J. F. Baker, of
Denison, Texas, whom I
have known intimately for
three or four years. Dr.
Baker is a practitioner of
the “Physio-medical
School.” His idea is to
make well, to heal his pa-
tients. Therefore he uses
no poisons. He believes
that God has put in Na-
ture’s great laboratory a
mm
healing, health-giving pa-
nacea for all human Uls.
Hence, his system is that
of “sanative medication.”
Many good people think
if they do not take calomel
they will certainly die. Just
as well say, if a man did
not cuss he could not get
to Heaven. “Do evil that
good may come.” Such
things are a contradiction
of the very “eternal nt-
ness of things in nature as
well as in grace.
Dr. Baker’s system of
medicine grows daily in
favor of the people, as is
evidenced by the great
number of patients h e
serves and by their testi-
monials to the healing ef-
fects of his remedies. Dr. Baker has never lost a single case of pneumonia. Having
myself and child been recently delivered from the jaws of that dread disaase, pneumonia,
through the mediation of Dr. Baker’s remedies, I therefore the more gladly and grate-
fully testify to the effectiveness of “sanative medication.” Fraternally yours,
Thos. E. Milholland.
If you are a sufferer 1 would be glad to talk the matter over with you, either at my
office or your home.
Dr. J. F. BAKER
Beal Estate.
Don’t forget to see Dr. Rhea in
tbe Muller block it you want bar-
gains. He has the cream of city
and country property. Give him
call and he will do the rest.
Stand Together.
The seven hundred newspapers of
Texas should stand or fall together
in defense of the right of free con-
tract. Fight every candidate, for
the legislature has the power to de-
stroy freedom of contract m this
state, says the Dallas Timts-Herald
That any legislative body has power
to dissolve private contracts and for-
bid the use of valuable consideration
after tbe fulfillment of the contract
is an absolute absurdity. That the
state may forbid its officers to use
transportation for which they have
given no consideration is different.
It might naturally be inferred that
an officer accepting a free pass ex-
pected to compensate tbe road issu
All those interested in Pyrography | mg the same by some service to be
| are cordially invited to inspect our performed, what the service is to be
In a recent advertisement W. A.
Baity says something that the Gaz-
etteer takes pleasure in publish-
ing. It 11 the key note to this
remaikable man’s business career:
I always try to impress on ray
cletks the importance of being am-
bitious and self- expecting, and let
them know that 1 appreciate loyal
helpers. I don’t work any $3 to to
$5.00 a week girls. I pay them
cough to live decently on and when
I have them come back and work at
night I pay them extra tor it. My
highest ambition is to be able in a
year or two to invest enough in real
estate to care for myself and family
in old age and then divide the profits
of this business among the clerks
who prove tf emselves worthy of it.
Special Notice.
The Eiler “King of the Cattle
I Ring” will show at night only on
account of our calcium effects. Will
show here on Oct. 26, night only,
under a big tent.
Fred Bogar, the laundry king, haa a
| splendid new girl at his home. Let the
| good work go on, Fred. There will be
| no danger ot the name of Bogar dying
I out.
stock in outfits, parts of same, and
a good collection of wood material.
Yeidel’s book (tore, 205 Main St.
1 Phone 504.
A. B. Johnson, tbe merchant
| tailor, makes clothes tbst last and
look well for years. Only the best
| of workmanship.
Woman M. P.’s Mishap.
One of the women members of the
Finnish diet met with a laughable
mishap recently while attending the
sittings of a legal committee. Bored
by the proceedings she bestrode her
chair and rocked to and fro with her
feet clear off the ground. Suddenly
she overbalanced and fell above the
chair, with which she battled for some
moments aa she lay on the floor. The
•Quality of the sexes Is coming to be
looked upon so much as a matter of
course that the male members of the
committee, not concealing their appre-
ciation of the humor of the situation,
are reported to have been ungallaat
enough to refrain from expressing re-
gret at the mishap.—London Mall.
the public is not informed. But
there is no disguise nor bint of ulte-
rior motive in the tailroad issuing
mileage tickets pro rata for services
by ntwspapers. We can hardly be-
lieve any legislator so dense as
not perceive the difference, and
therefore must believe that it was
blow at tbe newspapers for their
knocking the legislators out of their
free passes.—Ex.
BARGAINS.
is I •» »•«>,« o-«*al*v*
character in the whole cast,”
Girls Tackle Corn on (Job.
As a matter of fact nothing stirs
tbe heartstrings ot a youth more
readily than the sight ot a well bred,
good looking and laughing girl
eating corn from the cob—heartily,
joyously, and, mayhap hungrily,
is impossible for a girl to eat coin
from the cob without smiling, dimp
ling and showing her pearly teeth—
every fellow’s “best girl,” of course
has pearly teeth. Moreover,in choos
ing corn thus preoared and tackling
it unafraid and undismayed she
shows ber generous measure
good, common sense—and a sugges
tion of this, coupled with her natural
coquettishness, is never wasted on
level headed man. Such a girl
would be sure to serve Irish potatoes
with their jackets on when rounded
up finally and domesticated.—
Washington Herald.
New Phone 109
425)4 Main Street
Keep You Neat Klub
Shine Parlor
Horae* Kemble, Prop’r
Upon payment of $i ev-
ery 30 days you will be
entitled to the pressing of
one suit of clothes per
week, and Shines when-
ever desired.
Shine 5 Cts.
214 W. Main St.
Both Phones 718
Wireless Across the Ocean.
The inauguration of a regular
trans-Atlantic wireless service was
accomplished by Marconi and his
assistants Thursday. Mr. Marconi
stated to a reporter that more than
5,000 words bad been transmitted
between the station at Port Moerin,
six miles from here, and the Irish
station during the day. He declared
himself entirely satisfied with the
result.
r “ ......-
The Negroes Did It-
Gen. William Crozier, chief of
ordnance, in bis annual report made
public Thursday, makes the definite
statement that the blame for the
shooting up” of Brownsville, Tex.,
rests upon the Twentv-Fifth Infan-
try. His conclusions are based upon
a technical investigation for the pur-
pose of ascertaining if the rifles m
evidence had been fired.
THIS It THE TIME.
It Is recognized, that the
best time of the year to have
a picture taken is In oool
weather. Moore, the photo*
grapher, is waiting for you.
You know what Moore can
do. He la the best photo-
grapher In Denison.
Now We Have It.
Royal No. 10
FLOUR
Milled especially for hot bis-
cuits, fine cakes, bread and
pastry. No one claima to!
make a better flour tl an Royal
No. io. We are selling it at
$1.65
Per 481b sack.
Yours for better bread.
Deposit Your Savings in
The First State Bank
Of Denison.
We make a specialty of saving accounts. You can start
with $1.00. See us about it.
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS:
A. S. Burrows, President. T. A. Murphy, Vice-President.
C. F. Christenson, Cashier.
R. T. Arthur, E. Regensburger, A. D. Jackson,
Dr. W. C. Rutledge.
Taeker-Jooz
Cash Grocers
328-330 Main St.
y
Horribl ! Th - Rev. R. C. Craw-
ford of the Woodlawn M. E. church
at Chicago, told his congregation
how himself and three other Metho
dist ministers, diguised as “hoboes”
and “plain citizens,” gumshoed
their way through a Woodlawn
amusement park, and found women,
and even members of their own con-
gregations, drinking liquor.
Try A. B. Johnson, the merchant
tailor, for a suit of clothing.
Useful Candle Nut.
One of the oddest nuts In the world
Is the candle nut, which grows In the
Pacific Islands. The name is derived
from the fact that the kernel Is so full
of oil that when dried it can be stuck
In a reed and used as a candle. The
natives of Hawaii roast these nuts,
and after removing the shell reduce
the kernel to a paste, which, when
seasoned with salt and pepper, is re-
ported as making an appeUsing dish.
The husk of the nuts and the gum
which exudes from the tree have me-
dicinal values, while the burned shell
Is used in making an Indelible Ink
with which tattooing ts done.—Ameri-
can Fruit and Nut Journal.
r
Second-hand School Desks for
sale at a bargain at Scott & Burch’s
Furniture Store, 307 W. Main St.
Bucolic Style.
"The farmers made fortunes on
wheat, didn't they?” “Yea, Indeed,”
replied the railroad official, “and by a
little strategy we are getting them to
ride In our parlor cars. You know the
farmers have always been prejudiced
against parlor cars.” “Why was thatf”
“Well, they 8&id the cars didn’t look
anything like parlors at all. That set
us to thinking, so we fitted up sev-
eral special parlor care with wax
fruit, horse-hair furniture and old-
fashioned photograph albums and now
you couldn’t pay the farmers to ride
In any other car but the parlor,"
Where is the man, woman or child that isn’t in-
terested in pictures? And the older the pic-
tures grow the more they are treasured. It’s so
simple and easy to make them with the modem
Kodak, and not very expensive either. We
have a splendid line at $1.00 to $20.00. You’d
get lots of fun out of one.
Kingston
HAS ’EM
If you want one of the swellest suits in town,
ask to see our line of
$35.00 HACpTT-CARHAflT SUITS
They’re hand tailored all the way through.
Wootton & Hayes
,:i
tsmam
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 28, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 20, 1907, newspaper, October 20, 1907; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth555443/m1/4/: accessed May 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.