The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 41, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 15, 1911 Page: 3 of 4
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MANICURE SETS
We have a nice line of
Manicure Seta, all sires
and prices to suit all.
We are anxious to have
you see the line.
SEA & NOE
We save your life.
HINT TO PICTURE LOVERS THE SECRET OF POPULARITY ! SOURCE OF ZULU JAVELIN
Easy Way to Oaln
Your Fin* Works of Art by
th* Neighbors.
* Woman Who Mao Learned to Keep "ony Afrteaf, Trlboo Move Attaint
bolf In background Make* «"•«•♦> •« *"•««»• Motal*
a Hit. I »e Make th* Assagais.
!*m spooking non to th* ns on wh#
odmlroo good picture* and who per-
hap* has a gallery of them.
Many of your neighbor* do not
proporty appreciate your Corots and;
Israels and your Moure# and
Aa a rule th* women who ere most
popular are th* ones who hare learned
to k*«p self In th* background.
Haraa't you sometimes come aero**
th* women who talks of nothing but
her own personal attain? Aa soon as
PRETTY CHECKING SCHEME
.0.1 D.'.birir. "4 ^
JEWELE.R
319 W.Main St.
and Turner*.
1st us suppose you bore n Corot
depleting a dance of wood-nymphs.
Tabs your penknife or your wife’s
hatpin end stub holes in th* hands
ef th* nymph* Then pest* tissue,
paper of different colors, orange sad
purple and crimson, behind the holes.
Now place powerful electric lights be-
hind these holes and your nymphs
are carrying fairyltghts and you hare
Intensified the Interest In Corot.
Say you hare a Constable In which
there Is sn old English church in a
rural landscape that only Constable
oould hare painted.
Illuminate the clock In th* seme
way and set a chime of bells behind
It that may be eet ringing by pushing
a button. If there Is e cow In the
picture, contrive to make her moo.
Now call In your friends, press th*
button, light the lights, make the
bells chime, and the cow moo end
your neighbors will appreciate Con-
stable.*—C. B. Loomis la The Delinea-
tor
tentlon wanders sad she lets you see
pretty plainly that she is not inter-
ested. She Isn’t likely to be popular.
Then there 1* the women who Is
nerer happier than when she Is telW
Ing you all about her domestic trials,
and tribulations, how naughty her
children are. and what n great deal
she has to put up with.
But this le not the way to become
popular, either. Most of ua hare
troubles enough of our own, and do
not want to hear too much about the
worries of our neighbor*. If you want
to be really popular, self must be put
In the background, end kept there.
It la the women who Is reedy to be
interested In anything and every-
thing, end always willing to hold out
a helping hand to anyone who needs
It, who gets the warmest welcome.
8o, If you want to be popular, learg
first to be unselfish, and then teach
yourself to be Interested and cheerful
wherever you are, and you will be
well started on the road to popu-
larity.
WANT BARGAINS IN PEWS
MUNICIPAL KITCHENS PLAN
LX
Bed9.fl.00. Springs, 50c.
Mattresses, $1.00.
Dressers, $4.00. Chairs, 50c
Wash Stands, $1.00.
Scstt A JdMiggs, Furniture
and Stoves. 307 W. Main,
j* Phones 5.
We Gariy 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. |
Thrifty Church-Goers Wh* Setk Cut
Rato* Sometime* Will Overlook
All Other Consideration*.
Minister* have so many thing* to
! worry about that It 1* pretty hard to
| add the bargain-hunting habit* of
their parishioners to their other cares,
but some of them are doomed to shoul-
| der that extra burden. Old member*
of the congregation are not likely to
go out hunting cut-rate pews In other
| churches, but newcomers who are Just
deciding upon a church home all do It.
"A reduction of two dollars a year
In pew rent will fetch the bargain-
hunter every time," said a sexton.
“Only last week a young woman who
[ expects to make her home in this city
concluded that of all city churches of
this denomination she liked ours best
and would take a pew here, but when
she found she could get a pew that
suited her about as well In another
church for three dollars a year lei
she let all other considerations go by
the board and identified herself with
that church. The cut-rate pew hunter
Is a recognised feature of modern
| church life. Because a new member
electa to Join, our congregation does
not at all signify that he shares our
religious convictions or likes the pas-
tor and our service; It may mean that
we charge less for the pew he likes
than another church up street.”
Former Army Surgeon Has Scheme
for tho Lengthening of Hu-
man Life.
A former United State* surgeon
says that human life may be length-
ened If people are taught more about
the subject of ventilation, how to
breathe, how to dress, in addition,
he would “have food supplied by mu-
nicipal kitchens, where the cooks
shall be required to pass an examina-
tion and not be engaged unless they
possess the proper certificate of qual-
ification.
He might have gone further and
said that In case we hare municipal
kitchens there would also have to be
a municipal kitchen commission In-
structed to see that the kitchen pro-
vide pure food. Perhaps there would
have to be a kitchen committee above
them to see that th* commissioners
were not influenced by "graft.”
But many a housekeeper will cling
to her kitchen to the last. She may
accept ready-to-wear clothing, and
send her washing to the laundry to
be cleaned with the clothes of a hun-
dred other families, but most families
Ilk# their food cooked In some partic-
ular way which renders the commu-
nity kitchen, whether in boarding
bouses or fashlonabl# hotels, unsatis-
factory.
Th* railing charge shout Idols for
th* heetben being manufactured In
Birmingham. England, has become an
aril ole of common faith, yet on the
most scanty evidence la th* earlier
yean of the last century the same
charge was laid et the Puritan door*
of New England, ter It was common-
ly said of ship* sailing out of Salem
aad Boston for the coeat of Africa
that they were freighted with mis-
sionaries and hymn hooka la th* cud-
dy, brass Idols end New England rum
under hatches la th* ’tweendeck*.
There Is no reason to suspect a for-
eign source for the Zulu. Javelins.
Many of the African tribe* have at-
tained to the art of smelting several
of the metals; th* Amasulu, a race of
no Inconsiderable culture, have prog-
ressed so far In the Iron eg* that they
have Invented the softer grades ef
steel. The steel tips of thee* weapons
are not considered Imitative of th#
leaf but of th* obsidian tips which ara
frequently used by warriors of the
same age. The name to preferably
* pel led assagai aa In better conform-
ity with the etymology. It to an Afri-
can name, but not Zulu nor of any
language In South Africa. It was
Introduced by the Portuguese discov-
erers, who had already borrowed It
from the Berbers of Morocco or more
likely from the Moore during their
domination of the Iberian peninsula.
In the Berber It to al-xaghaysk or
without the article saghayab and
means spear. In the chlvalric period
It existed In English In the composite
tonoegey or launce-de-gay.
NAVAL TIP FOR SEAG0ERS
Wee Given Each
Bee* Served Ra
Tve Just heard of a new
■y«am." said the woman who always
has new Idee*. "This was revealed at
a golden wedding recaption I attended
reeeaUy la a little country tow* up-
state. Of course, th* hone* was large,
but as the whole tows, pretty nearly,
was there, it was something of s task
to food and otherwise refresh those
guests property and to he sure that no
oo# waa overlooked. Wall, after
treating the deer old wtf* ead hus-
band, who stood with th* golden win-
ter sunshine at thalr backs, th* guests
were passed Into a room where punch
wea served. Thence on Into th* din-
ing-room, where tee cream, cake and
other dellcactoe were handed out.
They left this room by soother door,
which took them out Into th* hall
again, but bafor* they passed out of
th* dining-room a pretty young grand-
daughter, who stood by the door with
a big basket full of yellow carnations
(especially colored for the event),
pinned a flower to each guest. Of
course, every on* wee glad to get such
* charming soevanlr, hut only the
member* of the family knew that
when a guest were s yellow flower he
had been served bountifully aad those
without had had nothing. Pretty
clever for a country attnlr, wasn’t
itr
I
Xorene* Qrsy Him Jest*
, rived et th* dignified age et
ttut waa atlil referred to hr
' eualntanoaa aa “that
“lux." -on the contrary, Mfca
•nee. wta was e year young*
| dignity enough for n woman of
1 to ho oom pored
e wolf or any otht
had at-
talas, a fox.
to a
W. H. HALTON & CO.
Undertakers *
Bio Main St.
Regularity
in calling for and deliv-
ering your bundle of
laundry is one of the
many good features ol
onr laundry work. No
matter how well your
shirts are laundered they
are useless to ydu until
jrour bundle is delivered.
‘‘Prompt Delivery”isour
watchword. Phone us
your next laundry’ needs.
Ineeda Steam Laundiy
Branch Office 114 R. Risk Are.
Both Phones 7,
Laundry 628 and 630 W.
Nelson St.
Denison, Texas.
A Little Lapse.
Very conscious people stumble Into
I blunders almost as often as the slap-
dash. And thetr slips are usually
worse, because they have to do with
particularly horrid contingencies they
are morbidly anxious to avoid. For ex-
ample. a married pair, most solicitous
of the susceptibilities of their guests,
asked a certain gentleman, head of a
famous piano forte-making firm te
I dine.
"My dear,” said the wife, "you know
I Mr. 8teckmeyer la dining with us to-
night, and that he dislikes the slight-
est allusion to his business In any
| shape or form.”
"Very good,” answered the husband,
"better steer clear of musical topics
[ altogether."
So they discussed politics, golf and
I the drama and all was well. Towards
11 came the sound of wheels and th*
I footman made as announcement.
“Hey, what’s that?” said the senst-
I ti re guest. The host cleared hto
throat, raised hto voice, and with e
last Inward congratulation that "shop”
had been successfully avoided, de-
[ dared across the assembled company,
Mr. Steckmeyer’a piano to at th*
I door.”
Deserters' Trying Trip. _
Th* remarkable adventures of two
I soldier*, who were captured after a
19,000 miles' flight from their regiment
In central India, waa told to the
I Guildford police recently. A const*-
1 ble saw the two men wearing engin-
eers’ overalls, and he himself being
Ian ex-soldier, his attention waa drawn
to the men’s military boots. Then he
saw one of the men "change step,”
and this so convinced him they were
j ieserter* that he stopped them. They
[admitted having deserted from th*
Manchester regiment, which was sta-
tioned In central India. After a trying
march through the Jungle they said
hhey reached Bombay and concealed
[themsetv#* on a troopship bound for
•ingland. Afterwards they passed
themselves as members of the crew,
and when th* boat reached South-
ampton they made their escape in en-
gineers' overalls, and were making for
London.
Lemon and Ginger Should Bo Given
to Those Not Sure ef Themselves
on Shipboard.
A surgeon on the naval hospital
ship Solace has s remedy for seasick-
ness which should be of Interest to
folks who are going on winter cruise*
and are apprehensive that they may
have to stay below deck most of the
time.
It to simply a decoction of lemon
and ginger, and may be taken in th*
form of lemon soda and ginger ale. or
a dash of seitxer may be added to a
little lemon Juice and Jamaica ginger.
The doctor's Idea 1s that the lemon
causes a greater secretion of the gas-
tric Juices and that the ginger serves
as a stimulant, th* used of which can
be best appreciated by the vtctlip.
The remedy has been used on the
Solace with various degrees of suc-
cess, and It Is not pretended that It
will prove effective for everybody It
should be taken In small doses as soon
as trouble seems to be approaching,
although It may be of some use at a
well-advanced stag*.
Uninviting as the beverage may
eeem. It can be made after a Uttle
experimenting so that It to very
agreeable. The lemon Juice and gin-
ger is not as palatable as the soda,
bat has been found to give better re- j
suits. Usually It is best to make It |
with more glrger than lemon and with I
Just enough carbonic water to make
It drinkable.
CURDS AND WHEY HEALTHFUL | £ £
Little Miss MMint’s bslloasles Were
Beth Mad* From Milk and Are
Seed far Children.
The spider that mad* bold to sit
down beside little Muflt meat have
been a very terrible spider to frighten
her from th* disk of curds and whey.
Mias Muflt lived In th* time when Ut-
tle girls at* curds and apples sad
nuts and fruit. They were healthy
tots. Curds aad whey were good for
thorn. The present day Uttle Mies
Mu flits would he better off If they at*
them.
MUk to compoaed of solids ead wa-
ter. Coagulated milk, which to called
curd in the country, to rich In casein.
It contains carbon, hydrogen, oxygen,
nitrogen end sulphur, s combination
of animal chemicals of great value
Whey to the watery pert of milk. It
contains a natural sugar.
Many people throw sour milk away.
Wtoe ones utilise tt. By draining off
the water card remains as s solid.
Put a cupful of curd to a cheese-
cloth and twist the loose ends togeth-
er and hang It where It will drain
over night. In the morning place It
In a dish and daks It with a fork and
salt. Qlve It to th* children and teU
them It to the same thing that Miss
Muflt was eating when along cam*
the spider.
Mr. and Mr* Morris had been
celled away from their hem* tor e
stay at four or five day*. They did
not doubt that Floreses could man-
age things during their absence, hut
they did not take that Uttle ”miax”
Into consideration
Something was wrong with the
auto, and It waa not to be taken out
of th* garage until th* father re-
turned. He hadn't left th* boue* an
hour before Mine Joel* waa planning
lo have It out She pestered and pro-
tested end coaxed, end when th*
gardner had finally looked th* ma-
chine over and sold he guanas I H wee
all right If not speeded up, Mtoa
Florence reluctantly permitted hsreslf
to he coerced.
Off they started on* afternoon, with
the gardener at th* wheal, end nt
the end of a mil* they left th* hlg
way, dodged a telegraph pole, tore
through a stone well end brought up
In e blackberry patch. No on* wee
killed—no on* badly Injured. They
war* Just shaken ep; end the auto
was Just smashed.
The eoeldent was heard ef. ead th*
city editor of the Eagle assigned s
reporter to secure th* detail* la an
Interview. The gardener, who had
Just had hto scalp wound dressed,
said that th* thingumbob had sud-
denly got away from th* thlaguajtg.
oogbt et Coney Island. It wee th*
•at ever J wtoh I could ted mm
mw# Bhe It-
wUl so
the stone wen. ate
"Moat vividly. 1
my room ate tori
over the bed I
•t I hod Jest__
eouM ate ktskad a g
deltor when th* net
“By George, bet a
cue or a vaudeville
the reporter. Tie. I
father Is n church i
cartwheels
it be
ef e
tt at
frying eggs ead bason, and
FREE BOOK
Far Every Wring Thing on the Farm
Hsmpkrey*’ Veterinary Specifics.
600 Page Book free, on the Treatment and
Ours of Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs,
Hogs and Poultry, also Stable Chart to
hang rp, mailed free.
LIST OF SPECIFICS,
a. a. Per rarma. Milk rmr, Leas Pe
s. B. Per EPSAIVH. L■■rife. Bhneali
C. C. Per SORB Throel. Eetseode. Mates
B. B. Per WORMS, Beta. Grebe.
E. n. Per COUGHS, CeMe. leSerese.
P. V. Per CSUC. Betlrerhe, Dierrtee.
0. «. Preresta MISCARRIAGE,
a. H. Per KIDKEY ead Bledder MserSere
1. L Per SUB DISEASES. Manse. EresMeaa.
J. A. Per BAB COSDITIOJf. tadtseetlee.
At druggists or sent prepaid on reoeipt
of price. 60 et# each.
Hruphkxtb’ bumbo. xxDicnrg oo„ O0CBm
wittiest end Aae Streets. Hew Tort.
Laying a Foundation.
“Pardon my abruptness. Miss Clt-
ronella, but will you marry me?”
"Marry you, Mr. Boneer? Marry
you? Not If you were the last man
o earth!”
Pondering a moment, he took a
small memorandum book out of hto
pocket and checked off a name.
"Well,” he said, "there's no harm
done. It to due you, however, Miss
Higgins, that I should explain. Ton
have heard, I presume, of th* Great
American Novel, but have not seen It,
because It has not yet appeared. I
am about to write It- But In order to
fit myself for the task I need one or
two experiences. I wtoh to undergo
the pangs of s rejected lover. I have
not yet succeeded—and you are the
eleventh. I may have to he rejected
by half a doses more girls before I
experience the necessary emotion.
Good evening, Mias Higgins.”
Various Uses for Sawdust.
Sawdust may be made to serve a
I number of purposes for the housewife.
1. It to splendid for removing sedi-
ment In glass and aartbenware, etc. 2.
A handful thrown on a dying fir* will
help to revive It 3. Well dried and
heated aad sprinkled over grease spots
In carpets, etc., It to very useful In re-
moving these objectionable marks.
It should be well rubbed in, left for a
few hours, then treated again if neces-
sary. 4. Heat some sawdust on s
piece of paper In the oven, and It to
| an exoellent remedy for mildew and
damp spots on metal or other polished
goods. 6. Rub some dry sawdust on
articles that hare been polished and
the polish will last longer. 6. Slight-
1 ly moistened sawdust sprinkled on out-
[ house floors, veranda or larder, etc.,
and brushed off with a hard broom
| win clean the floor without much
| trouble.
Player* of Cerda
It a tailor be the ninth part of a
man. It muot be a consolation to th*
card-player to be at least a fourth- If,
indeed, he be "dummy" he need not
be a tailor's dummy. The whole range
of human emotions to his. The tri-
umphant holder of four trumps, the
masaaored and Innocent victim of a
“grand slam.” the irritable and Irrec-
oncilable whiner whose trick has been
doubly won by a sleepy partner, are
subjects for caricaturist and tragedian
silk*. For In a game of cards one has
the mirror and measure of a man. A
Hogarth might sharpen hto pencil or a
Lamb write a whole series of essays
upon the card-player. The benevolent
old gentleman, with gold-rimmed spec-
tacles ; the studious old maid whose
mind carries the procession of cards
like a human kaleidoscope; th* dream-
er who to thinking of some ault more
romantic than the four oardinal points
of the card-player’s compass; th*
hopeless and abject beginner—all
move In the pasteboard circle. They
are not Invariably models of propriety,
of restraint and temper, hut always
they are artiste’ models.—R. R. Buck-
ley in the London T. P.’s Weekly.
I AM our mo
XWKB. 300 MUST
writ* our
Qcr* anor4* •
girl turulmi serf
room before ni
of this Interview.*
Then he ashed
during th* awful
at afl.” was th* r
tog of^MteLtMt *** "
scribe tt. I seemed to he
the air on angsts’ wings I eoeM loon
oh. how I
lonBsfi tor them; I trite I* fly flown
for dinner, but I kept fiytog higher
instead.”
"By Oeocget By George!” softly
exclaimed the newspaper man. TH
run that to under th* subhead aft
Bacon and Eggs and Grim Death ' “
Then he asked tf she thrilled when
the auto at length brought ep to th*
blackberry bushes.
”1 felt eevan successive thrills pans
over me,” she replied, “and than 1
found myself picking blackberries to
carry home for s pie. I waa cut ate
hrutoefl ete shaken, but I fllfl not feei
It I we* languid. I was ptarflfl I
was coolest If death had oom* tt
woelfl have been painless I think
they ought to kill our murderers that
way instead at by electricity There
all"
The Eagle man went ewey with th*
scoop" of ble Ufa. end “that tittle
minx” tumbled flown on the floor ate
toughed uadi she had to be threat-
ened with life Imprisonment Tbs
Beds wea watched tor next morning,
but not e line of that Interview could
be discovered. It wee so th* next
day. ead then th* young man caged.
Ho was met by th*
Joel*, who btoehlngly begun te
T. E. REARDON
Rxal Err at*, bmnuKi
Rents Collected
Notary Public...
106 North Rank At*.
E. R. BIRCH
PHYSICIAN
Office nt Hanna A Sac’s Drag
Store; residence No. 600 W.
Chestnut street. Telephone.
JOHN T. 8UGG8
Residence nod Office
Phone*
N. H. L. DECKER
Attobjutt
No. 206 Main Street
Denison, Texas.
JOHN HOLDEN
BLACK8MITHING
Horse Shoeing n specialty
General repairing
Shop 204 W. Chestnut St.
W. E.'Kneur H. G. Howe
KNAUR A HOWE
Denison Foundry
end Machine Hbop
Execute all work pertaining So
tbs business.
418 to 417 W. Chestnut Ft.
Th* See’s Ventilation
On* of the reasons formerly urged
against th* existence or living eras
turns In th* abysses of th* or sec was
ths supposed absence of oxygen th
It waa dsemsd Impossible that say
considerable quantity of oxygen could
exist at great depths. But dlscov
cries of rsosnt date hav* shown that
there to no lack of oxygsa even at th* ,n<1 that th* first thing b* knew be
greatest depths. This explanation to dMn t know saythlng. except that ths
that th# cold water of ths polar re- ^ *ouJ<1 surely give him th*
glous, charged with th* oxygen from bounc* wh*n he returned
th* atmosphere, creep* along the hot w“ *°t enough for th*
tom toward the squalor from both pole* I B*d«- It wanted thrills i
ajid thus carris# a supply of oxygen t,OM- “d th* gnrd*s*r waa sent Into
th* house to see If they oould he hod.
A personal Interview w
with Mtoa Florence Gray
with:
"Will you
dumb yonat
to speak to
Bat I am ah#”
"Tee, I think yon are.
at yon closely.”
ttoee* tail th* deaf
tody that I would
sr tor a mamamtf”
to toofl
over th* whole vast floor at th* ooeaas
The surface water moves toward th*
poise, aad so e greet system at circu-
lation exists. Wars It not for this
world circulation, on* authority as
suras us. It Is altogether probable that
ths ocean would In time become too
foul to sustain animal Uf*. at least
Its higher manifestations and th*
sea, the mother of Uf* would Itself be
dead.
Well Appointed
and
Distinctive
Funeral Service
Shields *& Short
425 W. Main St.
Phones 127
Counter Diplomacy.
"I think you will like this poods,
madam," urged e salesman In a
clld avenue ahop. "It to Just the thing
for a stout, middle aged lady."
“Sir!” aqusatod th# customer to e
rag*. Th* clerk sew hto feu pas ste
recovered himself quickly.
“Pardon me,” he smiled, *1 mistook
you for ths young lady who was to
her* yesterday looking for sonsetl
ter her grandmother. Now that I look
et you again, I ss* that this was
older peroen. Now, if you are haying
for yourself, we have something over
her* that—'’—Cleveland Plate-Dealer.
Queer Case of 8uicld*.
An extraordinary case of suicide
was described et an Inquest held on
the body of Alfred Hampson at Vtr-
| glnla Water, in Surrey. It waa stated
that Hampson suffered from weak-
mindedness. He was left alone In
[ his private room In a sanatorium for
about twenty minutes, and when his
attendant returned Hampson was
found pressing a red-hot poksr Into
bis body. He Informed Doctor Moor*
that h# had been told he had s devil
Inside him, and ths only way it could
be killed was by means of a red-hot
poker. Hs died next day.
A Gladstone Story.
Mr. E. F. Benson, In an article on
th* winter charms of Grindelwald In
“Travel and Exploration," related an
anecdote of Mr. Gladstone. It seems
that at s country house one morning
th* gneets were discussing at break-
fast the right way of pecking *
sponge-bag. when th* sponge has been
need and to consequently water-
logged. Mr. Gladstone, who had ap-
parently been solely absorbed by hto
morning's correspondence, suddenly
closed the discussion by informing the
party that they were all wrong. ‘‘The
only proper method to to wrap it up
In -your bath-towel, and stamp upon
tt. Then put It In your sponge-bag.
You will find It perfectly dry.”
Shakespeare's Limitation#
He could not construct plays or In-
vent stories, though he selected good
ones with considerable certainty. He
often enriched th# characters, seldom
or never th* incidents; even th* char-
acters he create* are usually sides of
himself, or humorous masks without a
soul. He must hav* beard of the
statesman Burl sigh often enough; but
nowhere does he portray him; no hint
In hto works of Drake or Raleigh, or
Elisabeth or Sidney. He has no care,
either, for novelties; he never m
lions forks or even tobacco or pota-
toes. A student by nature. tt ever
(here was one, all Intent, as he telle
us, on bettering hto mind, he pea
through Oxford a hundred times and
never mentions the schools; Oxford
man had disgusted him with their
alma mater.—Frank Harris In The
Man Shakespeare.
The Limit.
Madge—Charlie tells me that foot-
| ball isn’t ss brutal aa many believe.
Marjorie—The games Tv* seen
[haven’t been half as bloodcurdling as
the college yells.
College Qlrie Economlxe.
Th* girls at Wellesley are working
hard to raise $100,000 for the student
building and. In consequence, hav*
given up many of thetr pleasures in
the way of fudge and parties. They do
not ride when they aan walk and will
net give flowers to their pet senior,
but all the money possible to put to
the bank for th* fund.
All persons having claims I
against the estate of I. Sims, de-l
ceased, are notified to present the
same within the time prescribed I
bylaw. The temporary adminis-1
tration heretofore granted to Nep-1
pie Sims, has, by order of court, [
been made permanent. This Dec. |
19th, 1910. Neppie Sims,
Administratrix.
Poatoffice: Denison Texas. 3841
H.&T.C.I
Railroad
‘On Time”
West End Mill
ustom Grinding a specialty,
an shuck, shell and grind
Mir corn into chops at any
me. Custom ground meal
uesdays and Saturdays.
ED. FORD
Old phones. 447,
yrn ten Hke this gi
rate a am semen m s Bn-1
shag, "tt to Joat the thing
I? he smflafl. T 1
feemg lady who
Are You Going Away
to Spend Christmas?
Have you friends coming to visit
you?
In either case use the road of
Oil Burning Locomotives.
Low Holiday Fares.
j For futher information, call od
nearest Agent or write to
T. J. Anderson G. P. A.
DENISON TROVER LIRE
TIM MURPHY
Proprietor
Moves Safes, Pianos and
Household Furniture with
special care and safety.
Orders given prompt at-
tention. Baggage trans-
ferred to all parts of the
city. Phone 42. Office,
106 W. Main St.
A. E. Pellerin
JEWELER
Watch repairing. All
kinds of fine work a
specialty. Carries fine
line of jewelry. Can save
you money on watches.
*1 wanted to any that there we
bo thrills to Chet taf tie* th* other |
day until th* lam. 1 am goto#
pet them into thto et th* vary ate
Where oea I find year (ether?"
"I* th* Mty. bet—hut—"
"No. you float understand, bat 1
explain I am going to him to ask |
tor tho tend at hto float ete dm
daughter, aad teU him that TU p
vide aa septum (or her for th* n
W. J. MATHIS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
McDougall Building
Denison, Texas
ra pkif to woo j
•ent to b* my wife No I
Juat be deaf ate dumb
loot th* eooop, bat X am
But Not Nov*.
At on* time tailors need to help a
men to drees cheaply by taking back
hto old clothes. An advertisement in
th* London Time* of November IS,
1834. states that "gentlemen oea. If
they ehooee, be dressed by oootract.
Two suite a year, six guineas Extra
fine quality, th* very beet, te
Lneea. Three suite, ten gain
roar suite 1$ guineas. The old salt
to be returned before e new os* to
obtained.” Overeoete were obtainable
on the earn* terms, ate gentleman
were reoontmsnded do hay the adver-
tiser's “Spanish cloaks of superfine
hto* cloth, a complete circle of nine
aad one-half yards, four guinea*.” Ap-
parently tiies* would never want re-
newing, as nothing weald ever wear
them out
ly replied to the negative, bet Just as I at her Uf#”
promptly "that Uttle minx” com* to “Blr!”
th* front with; I "And then
“Oh. It will be delightful t AU my until you eoi
Ilf* I have longed to be interviewed I ua* talking
for a newspaper, but It has never I about It. I
com* about." I going to
"But father wlU be
“Then, you needn't Interview. HI!
attend to It." I Bringing Out lode’s Wealth.
"But you'll moke a great loo# story I India's s serried wealth to
of tt.” I Into th* ope# A abort Urn,
“Of course I will; end. oh. flop I flnanrial te riser to norther
ice. w* can have some fun oat of tt I mod* th* sngpaaeinn that all
at th* seme time. W* can me he tt | railway lines he converted into
th* greatest Interview at th*
tleth century!" I India's hoarded millione," th*
"What do you mean?" her trtete | tor the unwillingness at the noil*
to Invest thetr moony being, to
"Ton needn’t come to the room at I opinion, thetr lack at e - tey me
all. HI tie a bondage around my band I of selling out in time of need Bo
and another around one of my -tiwitt. I la the Co-operative Credit Socle
and ni pretend to be deaf ead dumb. I that have enticed th* as rings from
Oat me e pencil and some paper. R their hiding planes The Hants
will be barrels of fan.” I governor of th* Punjab, ta Ui re
"But—but—" I view of th# working of thee* m
But she had her way about It The ties In hla province during th* tom
reporter woe shown Into the parlor I year, states that begs at rep*
to find on* of ths victims of th* no-1 te with moeld hav* been deposited to
cldent nsating to a. big easy choir, and I the which have been ostablteb-
he proceeded to say: I te ta connection with thee* societies.
”1 cm from the Eagle, and X shell Another observer believe# that the
be much obliged for your story at restoration of
th* eoeldent. Were you speedingT" I rupees Into circulation shows that
Mtoa Joel* fetched e groan ate I the co-operative movement to
wrote on a slip of paper: clog to tap th* hoarded wealth of th*
"I cm deaf end dumb. Yoa meat I province, and he looks upon tt already
writ# out your question#” I u -qb* means of securing th*
"By Georg# hut thto to rather te- I tlon of elevators to th* greet s
tcreating! •' exclaimed th* reporter. | exporting tract.” Thas begins the
“Deaf and dumb, and a storing loch- snapping at anoth r of the
Ing girl nt that! Too blamed bed. I sutinlng outward tiee betwae thto 1
First and only Interview with e fleet | ,w now Be* hleflj ta
end dumb girl.”
Ate he wrote oat th* question he
had naked bat
answer:
“No, w# war* not speeding W# I Bleeping out at floor* to e |
were Just peaetog n swamp, and I I habtt among Bkowhegon people. At
think a bullfrog cease out ead at- | w peopt# winter and summer, el
tacked on* of th* front wheels. I I tn the open, earn* haring only n pta
felt the machine give an ewfel shod- I alMp under ead other* ere !
der. Just os e strong men does when I leaping nornhes Thto habit to
he to that and death comes to
She cent mean that they were et- | „bo M
tacked by e bullfrog, end yet eh* 1
W. 8. PEARSON
Attobkby at Law
212 Mam St. Upetairs
Notary Public
A. P. WOOD. Proprietor
Notary Public
Security Building
Denison, Texas
CON QUINN
Dimmon**. Watchaa aW
Jtaalry Bought aW So*
209 W. Main St.
PATENTS
CASNOW
.
Fmbi m LMBfecr
that you buy from tins yard hav
mg less waste than any other, be-
cause it has been selected trom the
beat kiln-dried superior lumber
that ia “cat and dried.” When
you want u> to “figure on lam
mr” lor you we will givo you an
•■timate that will defy oompeti
•ion.
[ibe bingo-beeper Go.|
and she wrote to
We Are Glad ti
Show Yon
WALL PAPER
the new line of di:
tistic wall papers
stinctly
1 which
ar-
HBH wo
have just received from the
factory. The designs and col-
orings are unusually attrac-
tive, and the assortment in-
cludes rich pax>ers that are
adopted for drawing and re-
ception rooms, dining rooms,
etc., as well as lower grades
for rooms of less importance.
J. P. Tinsman
DRUGGIST
Where Medicine
Is Purity.
208 W. Main St.
Fred Sherborne
SHOE REPAIRING
Good work by workman
who know their bosinees.
Don't throw away your
old shoes.
US W. Main 8tr«at. *
Patents
«attSC
mtMUUK
Serves the beet 26c meal in
Denison. Try them and you
will be a permanent custom-
er. Erenrthiug the market
affords.
101 W. Main 8treet
Corner Houston Ave. *
asmaaashs heeplas
psa bested se me
Ismm f„ki», a
stats ta ste hern ta
*26. M
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 41, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 15, 1911, newspaper, January 15, 1911; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth571809/m1/3/: accessed March 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.