The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 52, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 3, 1910 Page: 1 of 4
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Crown*, $6.00: filing*, $1.00 and up,
all other work in proportion.
Office 410 X Main street up stairs.
New Phone 183.
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7, h
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VOLUME XXVIII.
...........
H555
Subscription, f i.oo a Year.
DENISON, TEXAS, SUNDAY, APRIL 3, 1910.
NUMBER 5a
VI
I
Let Us Get Acquainted
A new dry goods house has opened to
which you are invited to call when
you visit Denison. We wish to get
acquainted with our neighbors across
the river who visit Denison so 'fre-
quently to do their shopping. The
Felder Dry Goods Company is com-
plete and up to date in every depart-
ment. Since our opening day, March
15, we have done a phenomenal busi-
ness. The store has been crowded
with pleased customers, and wC have
given so much value for the money
expended that they are coming back
to us when they want anything. We
are making new customers and friends
every day, and the object of this bus-
iness notice is to get in touch with our
Oklahoma neighbors. Everything in a
first class dry goods house can be
found here. The clothing, shoe, dry
goods and other departments are not
surpassed in Denison and are better
>
in the respect that we sell goods
cheaper than any of our competitors.
We are satisfied with a reasonable
profit and never depart from this rule.
The cheapest -store in Denison with
the best line of goods. Call and see
us and we will make good.
Felder
Dry Goods Co.
The New Store
203 W. Main Street
“The House that Saves You Money”
Till OFFICIAL FltVRES.
Bn fit Majority Lm Hm First
The officiacial reports of the
prohibition election from all the
boxes in the county were re-
ceived b? the county clerk Tues-
day, and the Sherman representa-
tive of the Herald was permitted
to copy them, and the figures fol-
lowing are taken from that paper:
1810 1906
Pro Anti Pro Anti
Deni ion, 8W____
Cash ion.......
Warner .......
Cotton Mill*..
Hjrtte Park____
Ellsworth .....
DeeVoigne____
Dripping Spring*. 32
Cherry Mound.
North Bell*....
South Bell*....
Preston ........
Potts boro ......
Locust.........
Cedar Mills ...
Gordon vi He____
Rosk Creek ...
Delaware......
Sandusky......
Basin Spring*.... 46
Sadler............. 74
N. Whitesboro____167
S. Whitesboro. ...146
Sherman, NE..... 98
Sherman, NW____132
Sherman, 8W.....150
Sherman, 8E._____187
Sherman, N5th...l31
Sherman, S5th...l42
Loving............ 78
Bat sell's Park ... 83
Black Bridge..... 90
Fairview..........100
Southmayd....... 57
Piainview......... 82
Collins vilfe.......210
Tioga.............175
Ethel............. 81
Gunter............ 93
Farmington ...... 67
Elmont........... 74
Van Alstyne...... 210
Howe.........:... 194
Jameson .......... 28
Pilot Grove.......168
Whitewright......272
Kentuckytown .... 55
~om Bean........108
Ida......t......... 80
4776 4309 3775 3130
| Majority.......... 467 646
Following are totals and majorities
I in preceding elections : 1908, Pro
4,319, Anti 3,744; Pro majority 575.
1905, Pro 3,847, Anti 3,084 ; Pro inajor-
| ity, 763.
Polls paid and exemptions tor 1007,
19,867; tor 1910, 11,215.
.. 66
. 198
126
470
396
487
420
61
96
117
103
626
1772
867
... 44
94
36
... 4
36
2
...41
74
31
.. 18
42
16
... 23
24
19
.. 19
30
17
p. 82
30
28
...40
50
39
... 35
32
25
...50
13
61
135
25
126
... 27
23
13
...101
103
86
... 27
36
16
.. 36
16
36
... 88
30
73
... 33
16
30
... 5
24
5
... 29
13
19
lown in
t#buy
One of the troubles Denison has
to contend with is oscillation. By
this is meant disturbance iq sta-
bilities of value. Property if out
of sight in altitude one mpffth,
while it cannot be sold the next.
There if too much up and do<
prices. Every one wants
today, and wants to sell tomor-
row. When you want to buy, no
one wants to sell, and when you
want to sell nobody wants to buy.
There is a market for everything,
even the most undesirable proper-
ty one season, while at another
nothing can be disposed ol. Other
towns may have this same expe-
rience; it is our husmese to cg^>,
rect it.
Rice gets a wonderful indorse,
ment as a foodstuff from Dr. J. H.
Kellogg, who, writing in a recent
number of Good Health, shows
that dire things would happen if
for one year the world were com-
pelled to go without eating tha*
immaculate cereal. He says :
A large part of Asia would
starve to death, while the health
of the world would decline appeci-
ably; for, while a great many of
us never eat rice, a great many of
us do, and it is those of ua who do
who keep the mortality statistics
from indicting us as a race of sui-
cides. Dr. Kellogg says it takes
one hoar for the stomach to as-
similate boiled rice, while it takes
’ ree hours and a hall to digest
roast bed. Boiled cabbage, he af-
One section of town has values I firms, is more than four times as
that are reasonable, while another indigestible as rice. Dr. Kellogg
is down below understanding. A doesn’t rest the case of rice on his
lot was recently cashed on Owings u* Ie^uote8 ^°*-
.__ , _ ' ... . . Bunge, who perhaps more than
street for $1,000, while one simi- any other man in the world had
larly situated on Gandy is held at studied the chemistry of foodstuffs,
$800, and a better Tot can be had on as saying that rice has a minimum
Munson or Walker for $500. We of al,kaline salts, which in excess
need low priced lots. We all r^ !!
joice m high priced lots. A great reflet that rice contains very little
desideratum is a uniformity of water, whereas the potato, for
values in lots. It is unreasons- example, is three-fourths water, so
ble to have property equally well ^at in comparing prices you must
situated on d.fferent sides of town l‘‘at'n„buvin,*
., . . , . , , , I °f rice you are getting about three
wide apart tn values. A good lot times as much nutrient substance
in any portion of the city should as you would get
potatoes.
Jap can
in a pound of
That is perhaps why a
fight a battle of Liao
be of nearly the same value as a
3? ri“ ,h“,ou
equally distant from the business Mr*. IsgsrssH Set* $113,323
centre, and equally well located, After ten year’s legal struggle
not only sell for less money, but] Mrs. Eva Ingersoll, of Dobbs Fer-
sell with difficulty, This condi- N. Y., received a fee of $183,-
up the low priced lots, and making in contesting the will of Andrew J.
them more readily saleable. A Davis, mine owner, of Butte,
movement of this kind, to bring Mont. The check was made out
in all the lots within a half mile of *be d®rk of the l nited States
*• •* «-*■• “• «*“>» ^
them with cottages, strange as it year contest over the Davis
may seem, will enhance the value |—Ex.
of the lots further toward the cen-
ter. The last house on a street or] The Gazetteer is in receipt of a
avenue is so far away that it is mar-1 °f a special edition of sixteen
keted with difficulty and at a re-
poges of the Marlin Democrat.
It is a curious situation and un-
precedented in our political histo-. , , ,, . ,
ry that a self-exiled ex-president is | what they would not = have before
at this moment more potential in
the political affairs of the country
than the genial gentleman in the
1 White House. What he may say
duced price. But build out that I Everybody, nearly, in Texas and
street ten or twelve houses l>eyond j Gklahoma, has heard of Marlin
the last, and purchasers want | ^ famous health resort.
This issue of the Democrat tells
The man who built 731 West Ia11 about the famous hot wells and
Woodard had difficulty in selling the wonderful cures wrought by
it because the last bouse on that I ^,e medicinal waters, and the
street. Now, that houses have | business advantages and tempting
prospects of the future of the little
Man Afent Csttss Smi FImt.
Henry D. Lindsley of Dallas,
sent Secretary of War Dickinson,
of Washington, D. C., a box of
cotton seed meal, and the secreta-
ry’s chef converted it into ginger-
bread and cookies. The secretary
at a cabinet meeting passed around
a platter loaded with the goodies,
and the members all pronounced
them all right. This is what he
says of the new food product, as
quoted in the Dallas News :
'In this day of the high prices
for foods, aod more particularly of
meats, I believe tliat one of the
most remarkable discoveries of the
age ia the palatabifity and com-
parative cheapness of cotton seed
meal or flour as a splendid food.”
H«*rv D. Lfndsfey said yesterday.
I was at Ennis a few days ago.
There I found a bakery whose en-
tire output of cakes, bread plum
puddings, ginger cakes, bread of
everv sort that common wheat
flour usually produces, was made
of cotton seed meal, or flour. The
effect is delightful, for the rich
flour makes a darker bread or
cake than the wheat flour, but the
taste is wonderfully better.
“The cooking was demonstrated
to me by the good woman in
charge. She showed me that the
foods which are made of dough
and must be kneaded, have about
34 to 40 per cent of common flour
and the rest of cotton seed flour'
Foods that are marie with a spoon
and may be baked without knead-
ing, and this includes cakes and
nearly everything except broad
and biscuits, are of cotton flour
exclusively. And the shortening
is with cotton seed oil in both
cases. Nothing but the sugar aod
the salt comes from the sources
outside of the cotton seed.
‘Later I learned from Col. J.W.
Allison of Ennis that he has used
this sort of food for thirty years in
his family. He said tliat analyses
have developed that there is from
live to seven times the richness of
common flour in the cotton seed
product anti that there is far more
of protein. It is this last element
that makes the cotton seed cakes
and bread fit substitutes for meats.
“What amazed me was to learn
that this food is excellent for inva-
lids and for children and for
anemic persons. It all means tliat
the South with the cotton plant
can clothe and feed the world.
"So delighted this discovery made
me, I immediately sent samples
of all the products to Secretary of
War Dickinson, who is deeply in-
terested in the South, her prod-
ucts and her welfare.”
or do or Wore ^ AH rhe pol„ie
yond the last house. Now, it |are illustrated by good half-tones.
ested in current politics.
This issue is a credit to the pub-
HAY!
HAY!
All kinds of Feed Stuffs.
DENISON FEED COMPANY
T15 r- 131 E. SEARS ST.
HAY!
would take several hundred dol
So great has been the excite-1 lars to buy it, because houses have I hshers and the citizens of Marlin
ment over the rebuke of Cannon been erected several blocks l>e-1 should be proud of it.
in the lower house of congress yond. .
that the Ballinger-Pinchot investi- How can the price of property A lewder in Gainesville was re-
gation has been to a great degree | lie made more stable, and jn. | heved of $1,200 worth of diamonds
You ars Respectfully invited
to visit my
MILLINERY
ESTABLISHMENT
We have restocked with
everything in Spring
Millinery. Order your
spring hat now. Prices
within the reach of all.
I know that I can please
you when others fail.
Susie Steen
428 W. Main St.
forgotten. Mr. Pinchot, after tes- creased in value ? Bv bringing it n»*ht the past week. The
tifying in the Ballinger-Pinchot nearer to the business centre ? jhie( Ba,ned access to the store by
investigation, has started to Eu- Conveniences and surroundings of ,orc>ng open a rear door while the
rope and is now well on his way course affect the value of lots, and proprietor was temporarily ab-
thither. It is reported that he is make one lot worth more than an- ®®nt-, The diamonds were on dis-
going in answer to a cablegram | other, to a certain extent, yet it is | Pla>’ in a 9>I0W wlD(iow
from ex-President Roosevelt. That distance which has the most effect . ~ " ~ . t .
The business section of Tisho-|one8° near the ex-president as I upon value. A lot six blocks I tice of the IlT Sup^C^
mingo, Ok., suffered an expensive e*-Fore8ter Pinchot should be the wes o e usmess <jen re 1 died SU(jdenly in Washington
fire last Wednesday. The proper- fir8t to *et Jhe ettr,o{ Mr'. *°°VT worthfoJr t,mes 88 m^h a8 a 1(f Monday night, the result of a
ty destroyed were the City Hall, velt: 18 subject of considerable six blocks south, north or * j Judge Brewer
postoffice and opera house, the | anxiety to certain individuals of | because you can get there in one | ^ „„„ u.....
Restrictive Fire ie
The “Insurance trust law,” fori
which Governor Campbell is
largely resjnnsible, has given rise
to a good deal of indignation in
the cities of the State. The editor
of the Arlington Journal lias this to |
say of this and other "trusts” ;
The Journal has been asked to I
pay an advance in premiums of
from $1.60 to $d.80 per $100.00 on
its risks since this Governor
Campbell insurance trust law l>e-
came effective, and it might be
remarked right here, that the fact
is, most of the anti-trust laws on
the Texas statute books levy a tax I
on the people, but it is cunninly
concealed, and a big fuss is made
over 9ollecting it from “big, wicked
trusts, whoop-la !” when, in real-
ity, all receivers’ and lawyers’ fees
in so-called anti-trust suits are
paid by the people, and the Thirty-
Second Legislature should be
asked to repeal or amend more j
than one such law in Texas.
telephone exchange and the I. 0.1 tbe ot^er 8^e-
O. F. Hall, as well as the follow-
was
fourth the time. The distance is I "ua [*aTB <*•»•** ,
_ . , ... . , .not measured in inches, but in born'D ^yma, Asia Minor, the
The Chicago prohibition elec- minUtes. Get a street car line I800 of a missionary.
ing mercantile establishments: tion has been called off, at least “ “3' north 13. nTniZ
Tishomingo Grocer, Company, J. ,or the present. It we. discovered
C. Roen's etore, E. E. Luces, Son that the cM lor the election we,1 ‘° th“ V0U C‘" COVer lhe
It is claimed the forth-coming
------------ -----—v—, ~~, iu* mi me «m:uuu was ■ • .. .• ... ■ U. 8. government census will
^ °' a,'e“‘90"
estimated at $40,000, stocks, fur- dered the petition invalid. The vm,r ,<,»« i urn- in v.
aoK ........ . , How will you get your street William J. Bryan, who is in
mtnre. Jrtnre., etc., .bent md.cet.on „ there wiU be no elec-1 „ „ow doe. Shermen.get L. Sooth vieiting the UUn Re-
m. Tl,e ofBcud twcorde were | „on, not tor «,m. tune en, wey. t,.r. and , bridw ,ub.„ription pnblice, i. o.p^tol home soon.
Senator Tillman, who was at thrown in of $1500? Ho* can I We may then look for a new book.
, . , , ...... i death’s door for many days is now Denison get a belt line ? How | The colonel is after the ducats.
We understand that it is the m- reported rapidly covering,and the can Denison get all the street car
n ion o ie coun y commission- pky9jcjftn8 8ay be will fully recov- lines she is entitled to and should I Three hundred thousand miners
ers e money out o t e n er jn ft gbort time. He is already have ? Not by a motion to ad- quit work Thursday for an in-
issue recently voted and appro- bte to teke short walks. journ. crease of wages. They represent
pnate it to building bridges whete | ..... .._; 1
A prairie fire destroyed $100,000 Twenty members of the city
needed. The people will never
stand for that. To put in the I worth of property in the Glen Pool I council of Pittsburg, Pa., are un-1
bridging will take thousands of | (Ok.) oil field Monday night. | der indictment charged with bribe-
dollars and absorb a large portion
of the fund. That character of
work belongs to the county, and 11!*1, . .
not a penny of the bond issue
JACCARD’S CAFE
Rates per week $4,50‘
Per month $18.00
SpeciuLattention to banquets,
entertainments, etc.
Short orders a specialty.
208 W. Main St.
New Phone 604.
The Houston Southwestern
Farmer says a table spoonful of
bisulphate of carbon poared into
the hills will get rid of the ants.
Any druggist can furnish it.
crease o! wages,
two-thirds of the total output of
bituminous coal in the United
Houcto busiDM. men and c.p- *^ * nam'*l 01
,, , ^ .hotel id th.t tluurishipg city. ?re ^e*leve^ *° Imve been involved
mu,tbc toiicb«llorbndge«. Thcl^ ^j u llrHuly ,ubscribed. >» «>? enme, to obtun the cil,
, Houeton 1. too public spirited to d«K»ll«- '* ■> clrnmed
should watch thei s.tiuttxn WT LUo» (Mveeton to outdo them in that ,l,» Rel d,’*‘
carefully and see that the money . - tnct amounted to a $1,000,000 a
is not frittered away. Errors can FP ^- year.
not be corrected after the money is Mount Etna has been in a vio- .
fooled away, as it will be if the lent state of eruption for a , 11 18 c,aimed ,n San Angelo
situation is controlled by incom- week or more. A number of new Ithftt one Person ,n evefY liundre<1
petent persons. One of the com- craters have formed, and explo-1of P°PulatIon in Toaa Gr““ coun"
missioners stated it was the inten- Lions occur within the moun- jty, owns a“ automobll«; The ^
tion of the county commissioners tain frequently. Many houses I tulf,tlo“®fJJie 18 8a,d 10
to draw on the bond issue money have been burned by the riv- fa lv S20,000- Thflt 8 g°lpg 80me-
and use it as they see fit. Then ers of lava, and hundreds of A fire in a ball room at Buda-
the people will have recourse to people have had to flee for their pest, Hungary, resulted in the
injunction, which is the necessary lives, ieveral towns at the base 1 death of 370, men, women and
course to protect and see t^at a of the mountain are threatened children. Many of the unfortu-
proper use of the money is made. | with destruction. | nates were trampled to death,
A meteor, resembling a brilliant
ball of fire, dashed to the earth in
Western Montana, late Tuesday
night. The shock of the impact
zs felt for miles around Mis-
soula. In Dixon, Arlee and Per-
ma the electric lights were extin-
guished, and the Indians were
greatly terrified.
J. B. McDougall’s residence was
entered by a burglar sometime
Thursday night, and McDougall’s
fine gold watch, two fifty dollar
bills and one five dollar bill were
missing in the morning. It
thought the burglar may have
crated himself in the bouse before
it was locked up for the night as
there is nothing to indicate how
he gained entrance.
Considerable literature in be-1
lalt of Evans, candidate for con-
gress from this district, has been
distributed the past week. It is
money and paper thrown away.
This district is not quite prepared )
to honor Mr. Evans yet. He can [
wait.
The prohibition majority is I
quite small. With a little more
effort in the right direction the re-1
suit might have been changed.
Don’t believe what people tell you I
about Sherman if another election |
is held. •_
Attend the Big
Muslin, Underwear
& Embroidery Sale
Begins
SATURDAY, April 2
and doses
SATURDAY, April 9
The best values thst
we have ever offered
Uerkina Brtva
» COMPANYJ
You Buy a Fortune
That fire or floods cannot destroy, thieves cannot
steal, nor reverses of fortune can impair. It is a
Business Education
And it is generally conceded that the best place to secure a
business education is at Draugbon's Practical Business
Colleges. More bankers indorse Draugbon's Colleges than
indorse all other busines colleges in the United Stelae com-
bined. Draugbon will give you a written contract guaran-
teeing to secure you a good position, under reasonable
condition**, or refund tuition. Ask for Catalogue, it wiU
convince you and it is free.
J. W. ADAMSON, Manager,
Draughon’s Practical
Business College
Denison, Texas.
“Follies of the Day”
Spectacular Musical Production.
250 - PEOPLE IN CAST - 250
“A Rvthmic Riot of Musical Merri-
ment and Gorgeous Coloring.”
Buffalo (N.Y.) News.
DENISON OPERA HOUSE A nr 14 f 1R
Thursday & Friday Nights "P* I *F • 13
Given under auspices of Denison Civic Improvement League.
Seats 25c, 50c and $1.00
Get tickets from participants.
Now Is The Time
A new spring suit is what you want, and the place to
have it made is at A. B. Johnson’s. It will pay you
to call and see him. The spring styles are very
nobby and pretty.
A. B. JOHNSON, Merchant Tailor
228 W. Main Street
Some villi&n who deserves a |
treatment of rawhide has been de-
stroying young trees recently set
out in Forest park. Eleven trees j
have been cut off about two feet
from the ground, most of them
near the northeast corner, along
the walk running diagonally to
the fountain and the others near
the closet at the southwest corner.
One tree was pulled up by the
roots. This vandalism was done |
Tuesday and Wednesday nights, j
Thursday night two flowering I
shrubs near the northeast corner
were cut off six inches from the
ground and s large leaf slashed
off from one of the Msguey plants |
near the fountain.
“A girl has a bard time with
her love affairs.”
“How now r
“Half the time she isn’t sure of
herself, and half the time she isn’t
sure of the man.”
' ip.‘ •" *."
Suede strap pqmps
Every kind of a Pump
you can imagine
All the Beautiful New Effects
One and two strap pat-
ent or Snede leathern.
Handsome, new effects
In everything needed for
hot weather. The style
snd prices are right.
$3.00 $3.50 $4.00
BRAY, Thu Shot Mon fir
\
\M
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 52, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 3, 1910, newspaper, April 3, 1910; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth572233/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.