Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 53, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 25, 1920 Page: 2 of 8
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Qlpcies Now Gathering In Frtnpt to
Pay pue Komaeo to Sara of
Mfon, MnJ. I. th« Egyptians.
s. Mtwrg, (•.ihimiiiiiiHiii lit th«' flVUMl
Aurltulturul iiml Mtcliuuiial t'olli^' .1 From att over *«Hltvi« Europe him*
. "ft* riiCJtlF * ¥/
•s3r5t
b"Ar-vtjsJ?tasfiMIKfe ■ >*
vv ' •/ -4 $v;'
.;, .• ;. ■•. ,
■ ■ ■
sm
&t
•'•ft-
kp;
will vial l
ywytxh- < /
I'jrnv f«r
rh't- at 5:27 p. hi.
ut MUkv ft
W* A. Brown-
^KlH*r AH
are well known in xhihobic cfrivlc* Iti
Dalian and, will ipwjlw a JUeytj vvt
,«ow bm f
Hnwiux fruui prtioi leu lly nf$f*
lu Ur*y*m County are fxfa M to b'
to ligltftjftf thi> un-ninnles unit
to the HpeaUln*. whli | wM! U'l-
A lurgi> dedication from LMimnt,
will alxo 1>e In •^•wtaiiw. Th>-
i, promptly «t «i
afejrw***
itau Tnwt Comimiiy rtf ivita rlty
a mviitjpi iiiwl lianktna (fepiirt-
and axent'U'n abroad, waa Howrt
f Hflnk couiihihhIoiki jum'jilt c
Uleu at <> o'clyfc Hil* morning
' Ha! Ha!
nature w< u!« rfii!,i'
Nobotly—how'ku t 7
Honif -Hlie tflvi*s us all fiui**, l>iu
n jk| imtH ti'<-tli. -. Hrowii
j.: • ■ **■*■> A . •.;.t ,*
'■
ms from our rivers
Pof rl Musmi PlaharlM Art a Flourish-
ing and Vary Interesting
: Industry.
should he reraemliered that In ad*
to thWr food value are
inry in our rivers If w« are. ti*
at* the penrl button Industry
!® country, which employs onie
tl)ouxfvi>d people and jlclds a
wsm5f kt more 'than *5,000,-
f* • . ■ . - i *
fiftr the young muaaels, whleh are
roscople site, are thrown off
idi'ut of the Ninetieth JU,vl>"
'K has left r..i
llty ♦«> attend tbi- Mis'oud r.:<
untou of the dtvtftion to 1m> held then-
Xi*p. 25, Iti Milt 27. Major AMhburti
I. km iiii'iiibvro of Slsf, a^HfH-lH-
t« attend the ri'iiuliui. He witii
ted pre id<'iit ut tl « fir*t li-unlon
ill' Italian la«t yeat'.i
W-, >,ff
"Si> you ap" (< tfrnduali' from Hfiiool
thla sir. bt^h-irv'; -i]
"Yen, uUiitle,*'
''Ami do you ibluk yon will irt't
through tin* exereltw'k all right, dewr?*'
"i'lu m|. mie, auntie. ^ • iiy tww
*km-*■ are awfully tl#Utr'-*oMki«s
Stali KUiun. *::'•; m '
ol varavQitK tire <*«iiverging to-
a liti.l#' liatiilet < ) the nborea of
ta^y, wi ere the old-wprW gipsira
are gathering to pay homage to their
patron saint, Sura, of the Kgyptbtna,
who, they bellova, was the nervaut of
. ia Virgin Mary. ; ' • '
The word ha* gone out for the gath-
ering of the t(ip«y elanM at "Snlnt"
Haira'a shrine in the Breton village of
M<{UUiaoe«. Already tbetr eucaui|>-
t, I* the shajK- of a huge,, five-
czech with a scotch name
Editor of Maw Y^rfc H las Lldu CNf|
acandad Prom Rob Roy'a
••'>•■ , Cl *aman.
If Harry Lauder were to rend that a
MacGregor w« one of the leaders of
Cxei'ho Slovakian thought In America
he would doubtless conclude that the
prUi.tci; tuau bad pled the type. just the
game it'a a fact that the patronymic of
B. C. Or^r, editor of the New York
Bohemian daily, Hlae Llda, k* nothing
a Czecho slovak renin ah t of
t)i||fnnswjdpta that one' Of the
a HOceators was an ad-
Scot oftha treat Bob Boy's
clfm who found hi* way to Bohemia
there.
I The real Bohemia of New York,
quite unknown to the pallid Bohemi-
ans who criticise life from the eleva-
tion a Greenwich yilluge table d'hoto,
lies In the Seventies, between Second
avenue and tha East river. Since the
war its inhabitant* call themselves
Czecho-Slovak lans.
EdUor Gregr, whose forefathers for-
got to haod klm down a Scojtch accent,
and who wouldu't know how to *ay
"Hoot, mon!h either In Scotch or
Ceecho-Slovak, is a son of a renowned
Bohemian patriot who aerved for 50
year* as a parliamentary representa-
tive ot his people In thu legislature of
their Ausffiniungarliin oppressors,
The editor idronelf is a profound atn-
dent of International affairs and Is
looked uuon as fc sage by the 7<>0,000
Cxecho-Slovsklans lu America.—New
4W«*M. r; fy ,t' f • ;
fewer golden WEDDINGS
lll* Marriages and the Divorce Courts
^ 1 Reduce ths Number of These
, , Anniversaries.
More and more Infrequently with tlie
Succeeding years do we rend of the ob-
servance of the golden wedding unul-
versary. Memory re.cnlln (he lime when
auclt celebrations were of frequent oc-
the brood pooch... ot fh.lr "f™, Z'^
U (iro, prJor OO.WO, tlx lorvol f7„<i
nottel.' slowly drift to Ike bottom .0.1 «•" "< .
iJl I felicitate tho«e who had shared the
joys and sorrows of two-score-ten
Sara has no foundation anywhere In
the Scriptures. The origin of the
strange story, which conflicts at every
point with the New Testament, Is
veiled In mystery. The gipsies of pu-
rope, however, believe the story of
Sara with- implicit fullh.
Sara of the egyptians, their legend
says, was the devoted servant of the
Madonna. After the resurrection she
followed her mistress, In an exodus
l'rom Palestine unchronlcleil anywhere
outside the gipsy legend, but was un-
able to overtake her.
When Mdry reached the shores of
Palestine and took ship, Sara, who
was a magician, turned l:«r scurf Into
a raft and fbllowed her mistress over
the sea. But she never overtook the
Madonna and the raft, so runs tbe (
tgle, was finally wn«hvd ashore on the
coast of Brittany, in France, where
Sgra died. ,,
Because of her wanderings nud her
magic powers, Sitra wae adopted us
the patron snlnt of tho gipsies, who
Jbullt her a shrlue at i'lo^munec which
contains her wooden efljgy un<( a rel-
iquury said to bold a splinter of her
thigh bone. "Snlnt Sara" has never
been sftnctlfted at Itouo' and she Is
Ignored by all oilier <,lirlfllnns. But
the gipsies still hold a y«-nr!y'g«!Her-
lug in her honor whenex er war has not
closed the luternnfional liotiudaries.
m
ttffi universal cab
wiW"
IN PRICES OF
pointed star, contains 5,000 gipsies .
^rom France, Spain, Italy and Boumu- i Don't make too much
nla, the laud of their orlgiu. J other fellow's glasses. He
The gipsy legend concerning "Saint" i !y biased, but thep you have no means
feeing ThreuQh Other's Eyee.
, We all have our natural tendency to-
ward a bias of one sort or another.
When we see through other's eye* we
also add their bias to our own.
Is a possibility that on« bias will coun-
teract the Otlier. If go It is well, it
is «l«o possible that otoe blus wl(i dd
very greatly to another. Then wlmt an
unfair verdict yon must render. i'o«>r
judgment is sure to follow lutd shame
wiU lay at your door before you dream
it possible. Yet most of u are to more
or loss extent guilty of "the habit It's
^.enVy to take our start from where
othem leave olf. We are compromised
to the extent that we lean on their
Judgment*. It Isn't fair and often
lend* to sorrow.
Don't make too much fun of the
may be bad-
of knowing how you look In his eyes.
We are all more or less influenced by
our heredity and environment. -So the
wise thing la to get all the facts pos-
sible before we pass judgment
In France the oxen that w«+ri( In
the tlelds are regularly sung to iY* an
• uiouriigcment to exertion.
Time-Saving
1 ,, . " 7v. . • . ry '¥■
Interurbans!
Whaf b your time worth?
The litfrrurbaii Service
Itetween Dallas,
Dejiisou, Sherman,
Waco and ('orsicaiiu.
with Us Hourly SchedtilcN,
saves ycur \alijable'
minutes aur
Saves Money, too
Ask Any Agent
il if *W t
)• Mi
! The war is over and war
(r=±
peHuli In a few days* time unless thu.v
come In contact with a passing fish
of suitable kind and succeed in mak-
ing attachment. Once this attach-
ment Is made, the tissue of the flsli
grows over the little mussel, unlll It
tiaS undergone a remarkable < liaoge
wf 'form and structure: then it drops
from the Ash to commence us inde-
pendent Ufe at the bottom of iht*
•tre m or laker >
it l« a further fact that the young
<of yntucu^ kind* of umm-ls ret in In?
mrf?ericf The t)laQk boss is host
several sort* of mussels, while ilie
kind o/,hprrlng, i« the only
.,i| for (he bes^of i|u niimi'i^.
lis' la^t uiehflotKvl tlsli Is fnr
Wing abundant in Auiericao rlv-
«rs,Clt is plaln^th^it much cure should
be tfserclsed hi lt| malujeiiauee.
mu*^l ftsh'eri (hat supplies tl e
water pearl button Industry Is
actively conducted In nt least twenty
states lu tjy ^p^IsMppl rived basin,
♦he raw' production of shells now has
« value oi about 51,0(X),(MX). The fresh
waler pearl button Is now reeo«;nl/ed
as among the cheapest durable but-
tons that ran lie procured. The mus-
*el beds have been rapidly depleted,
Chiofl.V becaus^ the llshermen in past
Wotml' retiiln. only the very l>e«t
ishefls' nn<| discard ns culls nil shells
(that were of an Inferior urn.de. , ,
Naces^ry actU n In tie' way <>f gov-
•CDineut legislation to protect 1ho
mussel fisheries has been so long de-
layed that tbis unlipio and rather
Important Industry Is now *ure to < x
perlence considerable dJflli ally In per-
petqatlug itself.—Floyd W. l'amons,
(!n the Saturday t'vening t'oM.
where board is now cheap
• - im " * t,'<i a ' ij ...
j , . ; ? Ti
Girt* in the Mlaaion Schools in China
Pay only %\l Yaar for
:,|rl' Their Meals.
• "l*$s refreshing In these darn of high
prices to u*aru 4hat somewhere It Is
possible to get one's dally bread nml
Its Accompaniments nt a low figure.
The place Is Chlpa—Tengsehow, In the
province of Shantung. There, in the
tnlsoion school, a girl may have three
a da; for $18 a year.
>0 menu sounds strange to the
trcbdol girl of the western World, but
to tbe rtilii^se student It Is highly wit-
ilsfifctory. .StenmCMl corn breed and
raw, turnips that have been kept,In
KVhie and then chopped quite fine coin-
the regulation breakfast almost
yeftr.- t'For iMnner there Is u*u-
inlllet rooked dry Ilka rice, imjl
ot vegidable. v'Wlce a week the
We l|jKook.Ml .wHA tax ork |n-
pf In b««u oil ns usual. Soppcr
seme as breakfast. Perhapa half
j times k year, however, they
with more luxurious fare.—i
' , '
years and Invoke heaven's blessing
upon them as they continued hand in
hand the journey toward life's sunset.
This Infreqtieuey may be due in a
measure to the present custom of mar-
rying at a later age than was the rule
several generations ago and to the fact
that, we of the present seem to l'::tl
earlier under Hie band >>f the irtim
reaper than «lid our sturdier ancestors.
But to the divorce <" il may be accred-
ited the greater pari <H' the blame, T' e
present-day lusirrtuv*1' Is too o£t< n 1 mi ■
Illy contracted, t !>*• parties lliei'fto
fall to weigh carctidly tbe responsi-
bilities of married life, and the most
|,l,ivia| 11>IVercin es somvliuies leail to
scj itral'ion. The uuinlajr of couples
who II\e to routid out 11 ft> years of
in.iiilnit'tuiii( eumpHoioii.-rlilp becomes
ever smaller and siualiw.
sJ-'ttS i,'
WEEK
Every oncp in a while we have a habit? of "nosing
rgund" in the different departments looking for short
ends.
So far, we've never failed fo find a lot of 'cm. Then
we have every piece measured, ticketed and marked.
Remnants of every sort, kind and description—odd
lots atjd everything of which but a small quantity remain.
Silks, Dress Goods, Ginghams,
Linens,Domestics, in fact
there are hundreds
here, all marked
at short-end
i Prices.
COME!
*
.
!*\iwnv
in ooi<
THE DEPCNDABLX S
o
prices must go.
o
0
o
0
o
to
Effective at once Ford Cars,
Trucks and Tractors will be
• « ' . ■ ' ■ « ♦ V "
sold F. O. B. Sherman at the
,i '■ .("1 |. I m *
following new prices:
D
o
o
o
D
o
II
\ "
Old Price
S 748.91
v
i
0
O
TRUCK .
COUPELET
i
722.88
727.94
957.16
1,087.32
912.10
New Price
5603.14
556.28
630.59
847.83
899.89
852.10
O
D
o
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O
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y VV* ^ ^ V'A. '• *.V./ • L
1VM; ' f;V|fev
& fmk'-/
p;(i,..
ir^
comfortahlo and cheerv
ai winter weather with
LE
fO
ORIGINAL
HOT BLAST HEATER
'S
i
The Ford Motor Company makes this reduction in the face
of the fact that they have on hand immediate orders for >46,065
cars and tractors. The Company will suffer a temporary loss while
using up the material bought at high prices. They are willing to
make the sacrifice in order to bring business back to a gqing con-
dition as quickly as possible and maintain the momentum of the
buying power of the country. Henry Ford says: "THE WAR IS
OVER AND IT IS TIME WAR PRICES WERE OVER. There is
no sense or wisdom in trying to maintain an artificial standard of
values. For the best interests of all it is time a real, practical, ef-
fort was made to bring the business of the country and the life of
the country down to regular pre-war standards." r\
We are at your command with regular Ford Efficiency in
service and eagerness to fill your'orders.
O
D
o
o
D
o
o
D
o
.i
i
o
.HE «tov« that consumes the valuable fuel pases by means of its famous Hot
Blast Combustion is guaranteed to save one-thitd your luel. (Set cut).
Wc unhesitatingly recommend this remarkable heater to those who want the
belt ftr.^ nw« economic 4 Move m*4t, Pout avcvyi * tuUumu. Ui u* itow jvu /v*n ,uday.
PEARCE AUTO CO.
SHERMAN
FORD.AND FORDSON
Authorized Sates and Service.
'%• £ h'f." i * ♦ j
DEN1SON
D
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rlliuife
T:vrw
|""thec<
5cu
TheGOOD
SERVICE
STORE"
IMtPlPMlMIMfllinl
, . m
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 53, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 25, 1920, newspaper, September 25, 1920; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth194098/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .