The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 36, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 16, 1906 Page: 3 of 4
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c,v“Baking Powder
Pure. Wholesome. Reliable
Made from cream of tartar derived
solely from grapes, the most deli-
cious and healthful of all fruit acids.
Its use is a guarantee of perfect food
and a protection against the ills that
follow the use of alum, alum-phos-
phate and other low grade powdersi
The mixtures called baking powders that sell for ten or
twenty-five cents a pound, or a cent an ounce, are all alike,
made from alum and costing less than three cents a pound.
BLACKSMITHTNG
.Iorsz-Shoeing I General
a Specialty. ! Repairing
Early Days in Denison.
Item! of LoorI and General Interest Taken
From the Column* ot the Denison
Sew*.
Shop: W. dejrxvrSTiutot. WKKK ENDING December 14, 1S7S.
J. T. SUGGS,
Attorney-at-Law and Notary Public.
COLLECTIONS. . . DEPOSITION?,
Local Attorney Dun Mercantile Agency,
Rooms 1-3, west stairway, Muller Bide'
Rhone 162-*,
H. L. DECKER
ATTORNEY.
106 MAIN STREET,
Denison.
Texas.
INSURANCE.
FIRE
LIFE .
ACCIDENT
G. F, FRENCH & SON,
212J W. Main St.
900000000OOOO
Dr. D. D. CRAWFORD
Osteopathic Physician
Office 228 Main St., ever
Peck’* Jewelry Store. Located
in Dinison since January, 19011.
Chronic Deseases a specialty.
Office Pbone 46, residence
phone 46 2.
MQ9889M9iE'
ne 46, residence a
I
ooooooeooeoooow
goooooooeoocooooooooooeooe
T. E. REARDON
REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE
RENTS COLLECTED
NOTARY PUBLIC
106 N. Rusk Ave.
i«QOQ<MM»o«»aooouoaooooo>
Pork was selling in Denison at
$3 30 a hundred.________Dr. J. C.
Fetid went to Houston Wednesday
as a delegate from Lone Star Lodge,
A. F. and M. and Denison Chapter,
to *tbe annual Grand Lodge and
Chapter meeting_-City Marshal
Hardwick was awarded the contract
to haul the lumber from Denison to
the Territory to be used in the new
Lebanon Academy building----
A protracted drouth had nearly
ruined the wheat prospects In this
section___Will H. Stimpson, a
young man from Bostrn and an o’d
friend ot M. H. Sherburne, arrived
in the city with the mten’ton ot re-
maining__The Denison News
of Dec. S, contained this item:
“Mr. D. Acre, for several years a
resident of Denison, now engaged
in the lumber business in connect! in
with Mr. E. H. Lingo at Wh te-
wright, returned yesterday from a
trip to -L.xmgton,*" Missouri. I*s
transpires that his business thtre
was seriously important, being notb-
jingless thin to lead to the altar
Miss Ella Wernway, one of the fair
| est daughters of that goodly city
Mr. Acre’s numerous friends who
were somewhat mys’ified at hi* ah
[sence, are quite hearty in their con
gratulations over bis salvation from
'he dreariness of old bachelor’s life”
__Corn was so cheap in this
[section of the state the farmers
I claimed it did not pay to haul it to
market. It sold as low as twenty
I ceqt* a bushel__The Chickasaw
tor of the Greenback Thunderbolt,
had suddenly and mysteriously dit-
apoeared leaving a number of debts
unpaid________There was no reading
matter on the local page ot the Den-
ison Morning News Friday. The
pressman pied the form while put
ting it on the press_____J. M. Lee
leased the Planter's House to Mr.
Frank ot the St. Nicholas restau-
rant, in order to engage in the fur-
niture business___________Joe White ac
cepted the position ot salesman tor
M. Singer & Co________Sixty thous
and bales of cotton were transferred
from the H. & T. C. to the M. K.
& T. during the season ending Dec.
1_____The Ledrick mansion near
ing' completion, on Gar.dy street,
was considered the handsomest res-
idence on the street___________The Den
ison and Pacific railroad was com
pleted as tar as Pottsboro and i»
was expected to reach Whitesboro
in February____John Doyle, of
the M. K. & T. repair shops, w
convalescent alter a long spell ot
sickness--Mrs. Potts, of Potts-
boro, came to Denison Thursday
on the new railroad. It was the
first time she ever rode on a railroad
train----W. G. Veal, piesiding
elder of the Waxahachie district,
was the principal in a salacious
•candal, at Waxatiachie, and was
placed under $r,coo to answer the
charge of attempted assault ot Mrs
E. B. Gr ffin, a member of bis
church.
The Pullman Car Company is a
moat striking illustration of the fact
that a monopoly is constitutionally
and inherantly an enemy of the law,
and against every regulation, how-
ever wholesome, which interteres
with its autocratic and monopliat c
purpose*.
While up to this time none ot the
great railroad aystems have attacked
the railroad rate bill, the Pullman
Company threatens to fignt that
provision ot it which declares every
sleeping care a common carrier.
It proposes to say that its cares are
hotels when the law threatens.
It is true people sleep in them or
try to, after being held up for two
d tilers, and that in some of them
t ley can get upon order some me-
dicated meat and baked beans and
stale coffee, but they are no more
hotels in point of law and tact thin
are the caboose in which the Con-
ductors and brakemen sometimes
make Ci ffee.
The Pullman Company toots
every passenger for two dollars,
loots the railroad* for three cents a
mile lot the privilege ot handling its
cars, takes all the revenue the cat a
produce, and pays the porteis about
enough to get lunch, leaving them
to get a salary out ot the helpless
passengers.
There has not been any marked
or practical improvement made in a
sleeping car in ten years. The same
stuffy, dirty blankets, tbe same lying
fiat on your back to dres* or un-
dress, the same ladder-climbing to
get to or from an upper berth, the
same crowded smoking room and
contracted ladies’ dressing room,
yet tbe same two dollars must be
dug up before you can be snubbed
by the conductor or treated with
lordly contempt by the por er.
It it no' wonder that the press
dispatches state the company has
acciimmulated a surplus fund of
thirty million dollars that it is trouh'
id to know bow to disburse. It
might tiy paying back some of the
money out of which it, has tor thirty
year* past buncoed a helpless public.
No wonder thoae who have such
a choice titbit of a monopoly and
have had it so long are loath to
to have its operations interfered with
The gall that demands that rati
roads shall pay the owr er for hand
ling their car«, while the owner of
the cat* takes all the revenue, is
t qua! to defying the plain and
wholeiome previsions of the law
It is a strickiog paradox, an
absolute incongruity of sentiment
and action that in this day and
time when as never betore the
people are aroused against monopo-
lies and trusts they should so un-
resiitingly submit to as heartless and
greedy a monopoly as rver held up
and looted the defenseless public.—
Houston Chronic’.
SETTLED BY THE WAITER.
ta 1906 an experimental school ot
■pinning and weaving was started In
a remote Boer village, aaya the South-
ern Workman. The village ehosen
was Phlllppolla, In the Orange River
Colony. Six girls were, received
when the school opened Its doors,
March It, 1906. and it was soon pos-
sible to admit more from the long list
of applicants. During the first eight
months, about 40 have received train-
ing In one or another of the branches
of the work. The primary ob)«dt Is to
teach work which girls can carry oa
at home with their own resources.
Independently of Imported material,
and, ao far as possible. Independent
also ot external supervision, but with
a simple democratic and cooperative
organisation, among themselves. This
work Is Intended to be useful In mak-
ing necessary article* for their own
homea, as cloth, coverlets, blankets,
ruga: but It la also expected that a
sale will be readily found for such
things In the town*. Bo far there haa
not been the least difficulty tn sill-
ing tbe articles made by the school,
After two or three months of work
In Phlllppolls, enough has been achiev-
ed to arouse Interest through both
the Transvaal and the Orange River
Celony although no attention was
even yet claimed In public. The Ini-
tial success of the scheme passe*
from mouth to mouth, and tbe Boars
—who are a cautious people—begin to
believe that these Industries can be
rooted In every district and become
an element in national life.
I am spresding my-
self for the holidays.
If yon want some-
thing nice in the line
of meats, see me. I
v ill have all kinds of
delicacies for the
table.
Harry Fatum
Union Market
Mirick Ave., near Morgan
CON QUINN
Diamond*. Watches and Jewelry
Bought and Sold
too W, Mein St
HAIR ANNOYS NEW YORK.
Man With
Long Locks Is
Every Turn.
Quysd at
"It Isn't very pleasant to have ths
tyss of 4,000,000 of people glued on
rou and the fingers of 4.000.00.) of peo-
ple pointed at you Just because your
hair Is long, but I shall continue to
iefy New York and wear my locks as
l prefer them,” said Louis Bernhard.
* longhaired artist model who will
pose at the National Academy of De-
sign when the winter class opens.
'■Everywhere I go In this big town
people urge me to get a haircut and
offer me money. Why. If I had taken
all the dimes and quarters shoved at
me In the last seven months 1 should
have a sufficient fortune to endown a
kindergarten—where New Yiwk bar
bhrian* might be taught manners
"I can walk the streets of Podunk or
Philadelphia, or any village or city In
America save New York, without at-
tracting attention And yet New York
Claims to be cosmopolitan' But 1
shall not have my hair cut. I need it,
and New York may eontlnue to laugh
U It likes—and has nothing els* to
do."
Model Bernhard Is SO years of age
and his locks are black as a defeated
politicians post-election dinner.—N
Y. World
MEN ARE IN THE MAJORITY.
Outnumber the Women In the World
Except In Europe.
WORKED LIKE A PROSPECTOR
H. If. CUMMINS
LAWYER
218 W. Main Street
W. J. MATHIS
Attorn e y at Law
McDougall Building
ftooooooooooooeoooeooooooo:
Denison Lumber Co.
DEALERS IN
Lumbers Building Material
Chas. Deffebach, Mgr.
600 West Main Street
COBQPOBQ6HMMIOOQQOQQQ8 2000'
lillette Safety Razors
Over 5,000,000 told.
It you get one you will never be
without it.
Denison
Barbers* Supply Co.
Sella Shoes “Broken In”;
One clerk who had earned the repu-
tation of being the best saleswoman in
the shoe department was asked the
secret of her success.
“I sell all the shoes that have been
returned,’’ she explained. “The other
girls are afraid to show then), but I
find them the best sellers. Our house I them in for several day*
Is liberal In Its treatment of dissatis-
fied customers, and we get back a
good many pairs of shoes that have
been worn around the house until they
are partly broken in. These shoes are
much more comfortable than a brand-
new pair. The soles may be a trifle
■oiled, but the customer who puts ease
above every other consideration does
not mind that, consequently I sell
■hoes while the other girls only fit
them on."—N. Y. Globe.
Indian* had a big war dance at Col
bert Saturday night__Tbe total
valuation of city prooerty for taxa
tion was $936,430.00. The tax
leavy amounted to $16 447 at_____
Saturday night some miscreant got
away with two caddies of tobacco
from in front of I. Yeidel’s place ot
business while be and his assistants
were engaged in waiting on cus-
tomers._A vendor of bogus
meerschaum pipes visited ihe city
and victimized several of Denison’s
smokers-Mr. J. R. Pittman,
road agent for Fisher’s stage Line,
in the Territory, reported that he
|came to Denisor, went to the First
National Back and cashed two drafts
tor $500 each, put the money in an
envelope and on his way to the de-
pot stopped at a saloon on Main
street a few minutes where a dance
was going on, and when he got to
Caddo, lo and behold his money
was mi sing. The Denison News
remarked that while it knew noth-
mg regarding Mr. Pittman, it did
know there was no dance hall on
Main Street_____.,__Louis Lebrecbt,
Joe Brenner and Mr. Brumttwere
all brought betore the justice corn
for violating the Sunday law. Tbe
state failed, to p(ove the allegation
and they were discharged. The
Sunday law was a dead letter in
this county_A boy named
Jackson, sixteen years of age, while
out in the woods hunting stray hogs,
twelve mile* esst of Stringtown, I
T., came upon two bucks,-with
their antlers interlocked. He had
no wtapon but succeeded m killing
both of them with rocks and clubs.
The indications were that the deer
bad been in tbe condition he found
_Keno
Doubt About the Pineapple For-
ever Set at Rest.
William 0. Whitney, Jr., who haa
spent a year in Indian Territory learn-
ing practical mining at Quapaw. de-
scribed at a dinner party In New York
a Quapaw restaurant. .
"At this restaurant one evening,”
he said at his description's end, "two
miners near me got Into a botanical
argument about the pineapple, one
claiming that It was a fruit and the
other that It was a vegetable.
“In the midst of their argument the
waiter entered in his shirtsleeves and
looked about to see what was the
cause of the loud talking.
"The miners decided to let the wait-
er settle their argument, and accord-
ingly one of them said:
'Pete, what is a pineapple? Is It
a fruit or a vegetable?*
‘The waiter, flicking the ashes from
his cigar, smiled at the two men with
pity.
'It's neither, gents,’ he said. 'It’s
an extra.' ”
SURELY WAS THE BEST MAN.
Not
Much Doubt at to the
groom’ Superiority.
Brlde-
"Who was the best man?” inquired
the able editor of the Polkville (Ark.)
Weekly Clarion.
Well, I reckon, all things consid-
ered, the groom was,” replied Mr. Lab
Juckett, from out at 'Possum Trot,
who had percolated into the sanctum
with the news of a wedding which had
been solemnized in his bailiwick upon
the previous evening.
’The groom?” replied the scribe, in
some surprise.
"Er-yah!—or, ’tennyrate, that’s the
way he ’peared to me. He got the
bride’s father so drunk before the
ceremony that the old gentleman had
to stay hid tn the hay-mow all night
and was seeing green dogs and such
like, when I came by this morning.
The groom also throwed the bride's
two brothers out of the window for
objecting to their sister's flinging her-
self away on him, and talked her
mother to a gasping standstill when
she sorter started in to remonstrate
with him—and she’s never been what
you'd call an unable lady, that-a-way,
herself. Yep!—looking the gent upon
one side and down the other, I shorely
reckon the groom was the best man
present upon that interesting occa-
sion.”—Puck.
The Btatlstlsches Jahrbueh, pub-
lished by the German government,
aontains every year about 50 pages of
comparative statistics of the world.
Thla Is a source to which writer*, on
the comparative statistics of nations
very often go for Information.
In the Jahrbueh for this year the i
statistics of population as to sex are 1
collated. Some countries, as France
and China, give only the total popula-
tion. without distinguishing the sexes,
and they have to be left out of the cal- j
culation.
In Europe the only countries In j
which the number of males Is given as
exceeding that of females are Servta, I
Roumanla, Bulgaria and Greece, all of j
which are Balkan states. The Teu- I
tonic, Latin and Slav nations have a
slight excess ot females, which Is
often only a few thousands and rarely
as much as 800,000.
In every other continent most ot the j
nations have an excess of male popu- j
latlon. Thus in the western World j
Jamaica, Mexico and Venexuela alone |
have an excess of females. The Unit- j
ed States, Canada, Brazil, Argentina, 1
Uruguay and ether countries have an
excess of males.
So far as accurate statistics have 1
been obtained la Africa only * the i
French possessions and the Gold Coast j
colony have an excess of females,
while In Egypt, the Nrench posses-
sions, the Transvaal. Orange River
colony and Cap* colony males are the
more numerous.
In none of the Asiatic countries are
females In excess of males, according
to the statistics. In the Philippines
ths males are in excess of th* females.
Wicked Trick cf » Western Man on
a New York Kid.
"I've boon seeing New York,” an
nounced the western man, as he blow
Into the office of s New York friend In
a downtown skyscraper.
"Coney Island?” Inquired the New
York friend, languidly.
"Oh, of .coiyse."
"Shoot the chutes?"
"Shot everything In sight. But the
best time 1 had was with a kid down
there ”
"There are plenty of them."
"Yea. New York doesn't have tru
j worry about race suicide. This chap
i was about three years old. He was
! digging In the sand on the beach with
a toy shovel and a tin bucket
j talked with him awhile, and when he
I wasn't looking I slipped two or three
| cents down the bole he had dug
| When he resumed hla labors his eyes
i bulged. He couldn't believe his luck
A FAMILY EDUCATOR
should be an authority in &1) the
principal departments of knowl-
edge, and should give in concise
form all that the consul ter needs to
know about the derivation, spell-
ing, pronunciation, and definition of
words, aa well as facts a Unit cities,
towns, and the natural features of
every part of the globe, facta in
history, biography, literature, etc.
Such an authority is Webater'a
International Dictionary.
NO HOME IS COMPLETE
without this compart storehouse of
reliable information.
Rev. Lrmu Abbott. D.D., KtUter
Thfi Oyllooh, mu; WH«ffr him ilvi
the favorite In mir huwhi.kl. aim
hare teen no wauna to t rnnofvr my alia
Kianct to any of hkiompHiUira
The New and Knlarjfed Edition
has Z5.000 New Words, completely
Revised Gazetteer, and Biograph-
ical Dictionary. 2 350 quarto pages,
with 5000 illustrations.
THE GRAND PRIZE
(Hionwr A warm vm given the Intern*,
ttonal at the World'* Fair. St. Louia.
F R E E - “A Taat la Frt.au:
PtrxM-tive un«l rntortuitnntf
f*»r tbe whoie family. AUmj / \
lllu*tratc<1 pamphlet. f ’
O. 8l C. MERRIAM CO„
PUBLISH! Ml.
Sprinofield. Mars.
»wnn
ALL TEXAS POINTS
and tbs point* in Louisiana west of the Mississippi River
Rate One and One-tbtrd Fara for Round Trip
Dstns of Sale December si, », 33, 24, *5, *6,
30 and 31, 1906, and January 1, 1907
Finn! Limit January J, 1907
Ticktt* also oa Sate lo Fointi m tbe
OLD STATES
December 20, at nod fa, loot. Rote Ono and One-third Fort
for Round Trip. Final Limit. *0 di
Special Train via Houston and New Orieena December, jo
' dart from date of sale.
For full information address one of our ticket agent*, or
C. K. DUNLAP. T. M. M. L. ROBBINS, G. P. A.
Houston, Texas.
SPEND THE
HOLIDAYS at HOME
Low Rates to the
South-East and North
M. K. & T. FLYER SERVICE IS THE BEST
For Particular* Write,
W. G. CRUSH, G. P. A T. A.,
DALLAS* TEXAS.
From Forest to Yard
Every *tep of tbe way tram tbe tall trae to tbe boardlag or
flooring of tbe smallest dimensions receives vigilant care before it
gets into the bands of our customer!. Tbe tree ts all right in tbe
first place, tbe sawing and planing in the second place, and drying,
or “»ea»omag, ’' in the third, and price and promptness of
delivery in the fourth, at
The Lingo-Leeper Co.
(Successors to Lingo-Leeper Lumber Co.)
Varda at Denison. Dallas, Fo«t Worth, El Paso, Colorado. Big Spring*
V Hand and Pecos.
\i
It waa better than Qndtng pay dirt to
watch him. He dug up the cash with
a yell and started to find hi* mother,
further down the beach. While he
was going I slid In a few more sop-
pers and threw a little sand over
them. He came right back and be-
gan digging, and. of course, he eoon
made another find. That settled him.
Ho gathered la the goods and then he
buckled down to work on that hole
I like a prospector. I'll bet he's digging
j there yet If his mother hasn't dragged
| him away, and If she has I’ll bet be
I yelled some before he went."—N. Y.
I Sun.
Knows “Divine Right” Doctrine.
At an exciting Republican conven-
tion at Worcester, when Gen. Butler
nearly captured the nomination for
governor, Rev. Freeman Clark took
the platform, and in a great speech
against Butler enunciated a new and
novel political doctrine, since known
as the “divine” right to vote.
A year or two later, on a hot sum;
mer day, Mr. Clarke and his family,
were driving through Roxbury, when
the horse balked at a sewer excavation
In one of the streets. No amount of
urging, Including a vigorous applica-
tion of the whip, could make the ani-
mal move. An ardent admirer of Gen.
Butler who was passing along, and
recognizing Mr. Clarke, dryly re-
marked: "Parson, your horse must
understand the ’divine right’ doctrine.”
—Boston Herald.
THREE MEALS A DAY.
i
Followed by Cool Chang*,
“Yes,” said the haughty maiden,
with a gleam ot scorn In her dark eyes,
“don’t fear I shall reproach you with
your perfidy. I waive all plaim to
your miserable, fickle, utterly undesir-
able affections.”
“Wbew!” muttered the crestfallen
young man, as be was left alone with
his thoughts. “But that was a bet
praise!" ________ _
opened at Waterman'& Weil’*
dub room Tuesday night—with a
full house-----The amount of cot
ton pouring into Denison by rail
was Mid by (he New* to be unpre-
cedented. Ail the side track* of
the two road.- wete filled with load-
ed car* and the compress was run-
ning day and night___The Pres-
byterian* were sadly in need of a
parsonage And the ladies of the
church took upon themielve* the
woik of raising the necessary fund*
I for this nlj ct. Mr*. Alex Ache-
Latest Dietetic Wisdom, According to
an Authority.
There is another dietetic scare
abroad Just now. We are never suf-
fered to be long without one, and per-
haps It Is because we are continually
being swayed this way and that way
that we manage, after all, to keep our
balance.
Having been solemnly warned
against over eating, we are now being
emphatically warned that we are in
great danger of being underfed.
There may be nothing In the new the-
ory; but, In any case. It will serve to
prove the wisdom of steering a mid-
dle course, which, put tn Us plain
«,» .nd M,.. 0»,«. William* ££ ?£?*££
[soliciting donation* from the buii-1 atB proportions, which very few of
nets men with good luccea* us do, says Home Chat.
It w»a announced from Sherman, I Elth,r we a4t ridiculously, or
_ ’ e.t excessively, and then cure
that the young lawyer Boswell, edi- -^, ^ 7
Anecdote of Pericles.
Democracy was a new thing to the
Athenians, and they became so dread-
fully swelled over it that Pericles was
at his wit’s end what to do with
them.
“If It were not for the plain people,
politics would be easy,” he was often
heard to complain.
Finally. In his desperation, he con-
sulted the Delphic oracle.
“Give the plain people plenty of
rope,” was the veiled answer of the
pythoness, “and leave the rest to ths
gods.”'
Pericles was sorely puzxlei' But on
his way back to Athens, he urchased
a cigar of the boy on the train, and It
waa a Connecticut cigar. .
”1 wonder if this can be the rope the
oracle meant?” he suddenly exclaimed,
after he had smoked awhile.
It could be. and was. To make a
long story short, a great political «©-
cret had come to light, and from that
time forth Pericles had pretty much
bis own way In everything.—Puck.
STEVENS
WHEN YOU SHOOT
Yon w*#l to HIT wha* you mre aiming a*
[ —be it t«rd. brut or urjrt. Make your
abert* count by altooting the SI EVENS.
For 41 year* STEVENS ARMS hawe
earned oif PRFMIF.R HONORS Roc AC-
CURACY. Our hoc:
Rifles, Shotguns, Pistols
A«k ynoC Iv-*!er- ’n
slat o® tbe STivtNt,
If you iaa»' t
»e ikip duwt, t r -
/“f/.u/. «;* ■
to riftt 1 if > ata' ■-g • r. «•
Aea-1 4 m ta stamp*
f* Cala.nw
ofctmcettcMti-ct. A
telsfi’ilgbonk r-f nfer-
• fv imrst M l
;*'«nc> H«e »Vw*rr*
Beautiful three-color Aluminum Hanger will
be iorwartied for xo cent* in at am pa.
J. Stevens Arms & Tool Co.,
r o. Box *oe*
CHICOPEE FALLS, MASS.. U S. A.
XMAS
With the
Old Folks
It you arc eoiue back borne to ipend the holiday* in the
good old wav, let u* quota you low rate* and tell rou all
about our
Exceptionally Good Service
Hiving our own rail* right into t .e heart of the southwest
we are able to plesve you.
Tickets on tale December Jo,*ai. 22. Limited 30 dsy*.
Write
C. W. STRAIN, C. P. A.. Fort Worth
No. 1 _____
No. j____
I No. 5—Flyer
| No. 7 Mali _
(. 1. 4 T. TIME CAM).
MAIN LIN*.
SOUTH SOUND-AJUUVSS.
- .1 -12: lop.
---- 3:3s
■ rr
41OP. in
* 35 ? w
No. 1___
No. 3_____
No. 204—Flyer .
I Nc_ q-----------
DSTAXTS,
.ti yo p. m
. 4:14 a. 01
- 44J P-®
. 7: * 5 P no
We Do Not Wear
the Trust Collar
If you buy lumber, »hingle«,
doors, posts, windows, etc., ot
me, I will tave you many dol-
lar*. Try me and *ee.
John Brownbridge
I No. 2__
No. 4_
No. jo6—Flyer
B 200 Block, Chestnut St.
Sash, Doors,
MOULDINGS, SHINGLES
No. 4—
No. 6—Flyer.
A quality door*, 2 ft, S in by 6 ft, 8
u1), 1 3-8 in thick___$2 00
A quality door«, 2 ft, S in by 6 ft, 8
in, 1 1-8 in thick_ __$1 60
A quality doors, 3 ft by 8 ft, in
thick, tor Hiding doors, per
pair------$12 00
24 by 36 window*, 2 light*____$1 7^
26 by 34 window*, 2 light*__$f^75
40 by 36 window*, 2 light*_$4 00
40 by 34 window*. 2 light* ... $3 23
Price* ot other »ixe» on application.
S by S porch columns, S ft long, solid
cederbo.ed_____$2 73
Not made from itave*.
4 round, per too tt_____30c
Window and door stops, per
too ft__;______________30c
Other mold kept in stock.
Red cedar ahingles, per 1,000 $3 25
Boi* d’arc fence po*t*______12c
Free delivery to any part of the city.
3 45 P »
■ :**.>
.12:10 p. B
No. 8 Local Passenger__9:00 a. m
MINED LA, GREENVILLE AND DAL |
LAS DIVISIONS. i
H BOUND-AJUirVXl
No. b—Flyer
No. 202
No. 204
SOUTH BOUND-DlTilTV
No. 5—Flyer---4 45 P- *
No. 201----12 p. 00
No. 203__________4 04 a. m
oooooooooooo DENISON LUMBER CO
Rapid changes of temperature are hard
on the toughest constitution.
The conductor passing from the heated
inside of a trolley car to the icy temperature
of the platform—the canvasser spending an
hour or so in a heated building and then
walking against a biting wind—know the
difficulty of avoiding cold.
Scoff's Emulsion strengthens the
body so that it can better withstand the
danger of cold frosff changes of temperature.
:W 5 . - f.- \!
It will help you to avoid taking cold.
ALL DRUOOlSTS
6o« West Main Street.
CHAS. L. DEFFEBACH. Mgr.
DRUGS
Person* who value their health
will not patronise cut-rate druggist*
in order to save a few pennies. It’s
a matter ot health, you know, and
our Drug* are absolutely
8l Lotus and Baa Franmaos Tim* Clasi.
>>*>5
No. $ti------
No. 504—“Meteor"
---12:30 p. ®
Dtr&iTi
Pure
SEA & NOE
No. 511 —
No. s°9—‘
10
Hu 410—*
Mo. 512—
Meteor"
. n iop. 1
*» SOP-'
•Meteor’
No. jio—"
No. 412—
l:»sr.
6:1$ a. m
. 6:14 a. m
TEXAB k PAUinO TIME QAM)
Leave
Leave]
Ed. Luethcke
TAILOR
. All ktod* <M tenc » dytag
11 repelrta*. XU £**et
116 Main Street.
Pbooe lot.
.7:40 a.as
11:14a a
Leave (to Clarksville oely) _ J 45 ► m
aaszssSs??*K -
PATENTS
■IK:
C-A-SNOWS
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 36, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 16, 1906, newspaper, December 16, 1906; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth555554/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.