Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 97, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 16, 1920 Page: 2 of 8
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SHERMAW DAILY
HUBERT MOOT TO
CfHIPTV HPURPR
uUulLi I luClTlULii
Tb« Texas Cenfofenw of SocW
p, wtolcb will hold it tenth an-
iu Sao Ajitoulu. Nowm-
to 29, will be attended by the
of a number of social
a«enclee in Sliermaa, It la In-
Mis* Zephyr CunniiiKhnui.
who will represent the ClTlf $*egO#
HwSunra: ■
mm-v:
Texas Federation of
In am Aotoubv
on the, < oriferen«Cl
Mnse will attend flw Con-
ference aa the repretientatlve of the
Chamber of Commerce, pud. otlfef
delegates are likely to go. '
Hollowing In the condensed schedule
of session, Nov. 20-28,
m. —State Fi
a Toget|Prr (Tint).
Sunday
BL
And Rural ProNenw, Joint
.—4 j p. m.—inspirational
" •* Mi- ->
8:00 p. ra —Oeneral session, ; Cmu-
mlttee on Children.
Monday—8.00-0:00 -Family War*
Institute. r i>XM olmi)ter <
zz. v™~ —«
12:15—Luncheon and busli«sf sea.
•loo. « V I .. /
. : 8 .-00-5:00--Family s«^on. ' ^ '■*,
• Hwtlon on Children. .M-
Section on Prisons and Jails.
Section on Health.
Section on Bucai Welfare.; I.3f-
6:30 p. .—Dinner for Family So-
cial JTorlwrs to perfect State orgauUn-
fipu*
8:00 p. m.—General Session, Com-
tolttee on The. Family. , i
* Tuesday —H :00-9:00--Famlli' Work
Institute.
8:30-12:00- -Jolnt Session, *"0oifimft-
... - , tee on Children and the Fam/ly, .
*Ff Section on Health.
Section on Rural Welfare.
2 : >4:30—General Sotudon, ^mpo -dialled In a very lnferest
f , alum oil Legislation—All sections;
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Com-
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8:00 p. in.—General Session,
mittee on Prisons and Jails.
State Council of Social Agenclea.
First Annual Meeting, St. Anthony
Hotel, Friday, November 19. Sessions
will be announced.
.—.—..
Dallas Gets Legion.
— ■ * j
fcaaocUtsd Prtw Dispatch]
San Antonio, Tex., Nov. iiJ -State
headquarters of the American I/eglon
of Texas will be moved from this city
to Dallas Wednesday, according to
Charlea W. Scruggs. *tate adjutant.
They will be located at 208V4 North
Akard street.
J • 1*
The first locomotlre's espaclty ws*
a load of ten tons at a rate of five
miles an hour.
The Texas Chapter, Society of In-
Industrial Engineer#^ with headquar-
ter* in. yhermun, sKfed high In every
way'aV'the National convention, So-
ciety of Industrial Engineers, >r
Pittsburg, last weofc, Haydfn W. Head,
one of the Sherman delegates report
ed at Tuesday's luncheon of the Get-
rfc Bnokoor. Comity Attornwh
elect of Grayson County, who will he
inducted Into olftce December 1. will
name Henry Wilson as Ids tlrst as#lp-
tant, and Jndgn B. Q. "Adamson tu«t
Farley iioasonovcr, Sherman and rvti
Ison Jnstice Courts asslsta nts trapper-j
lively. Tills Ii|ferjoation was secured
from %. Bookmit Xueaday.
•Mr Bookfcgt,*aJ4 Hpit It wan his l|,-
tentlop to make a clean-tip of the cas-
now ]lending in the liistrlct and
County Cowfta as rapidly « possible,
and to keep i| e chm-n ejeaned up and i
disposed of while In office. He said lie j
Vfas working on evidence now which
would be needed ft* the disposal of
crlpdnal cases pending When he goes
the welfat* plans and
II jd#s, looking , to Mi
" tm#it 4^>d Improved
Ing conditions among employes
which Surge plants of the East are
g Into effect Individually, the
Industrial plants of Sherman, acting
together, can pat Into effect, we
learned,'** Mr. Head said. "It is our
purpose in the Society of Industrial
Engineers to <le*elop In a community
way here in Sherman many of the
principles which we learned is the
North add East." * M
Sherman secured some excellent
from being the home of the
chapter of the society, at tin*
was somewhat of a
to visitors that, a city ot the
slsse of Sherman should have one of
Che chapters ©f the societies, with
New York, Detroit, Cleveland, and
4 *etat other of only the .fergest
cities having chapters, although the
<2 Uh - Sherman, hecanae of the
Interest which has been taken here
In the study of industrial engineer-
ing, and the large manufacturing out-
put per (fapita, to the right of a chap-
ter were readily allowed.
Mr. He«(t explained the field of in-
dustrial engineering to br a study of
•II plumes of successful Industrial
management.,
Preceding Mr. Head's talk, Carl
Zimmerman, another of the Sheriaau
There are seventeen mountain peakfi
Ing-iiiy -a numl er of the experiences
of "the Sherman- dWejrutes in their
visit to the convention and through
seme of the larger industrial plants.
A motion was adopted to hold but
one luncheon in December.
- f.j
Haying toe War uo«.
. .Referring to tlte cost of the wa<*.
Secretary of War baker told the
Unance committee of tliu senate and
..house that y e total outgo In round
dumheva would be J30.000,tHH),000; hut
l|9.00(),000,000 of this was loans to our
allte.* Nearly a third of the net cort
has already been paid out of money
raised by taxntlon. The oilier two-
thirds was obtained from the five
Liberty IMtha* If ire pay-a billion e
year, besides Interest, we cun clear
off the war cost iu about tweuty-ono
FARMERS' UNION
into office.
There are said to be 11,000,000 or-
phans as a result of the world war.
' t
Federal expen«lllurcs for September
amounted to more than $1,044,000,000.
" ■'
gss ii'ii i mini
te middle: man
ipiyi | /
AaMoUtfwl Prww p/ipfttch] .
Kansas City, Mo., Novv i<MEstab-
lisbmei^and «xten«J<m of r%npeiptive
agem'tCK tr> eMralu^te tlie middle
nam In the marketing of farm pro-
ducts was one of | he prliwlpul * object u
«n the program it the convention of
IhC Natlouai '^nrmcra' I'nlon, which
opened lii-rv- today. I>clegates from 28
Slates were pReM^t*.' .|v: i. 11
The « rgsuiratloin- a<H^or<llug to deie-
gatcH, dliwcts a co-operative farm Ihis
tness ncgH-iratfriR $.100,000,000 annuaIIv
aud repn .'ids more than 800,(aio
"i' r:>'"
Committee reports were heard at
the opening session. Charles S. Bar-
rett of Union City, Ga., i-s president of
rhe union.
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrnmmmmmm
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Archbishop !H.
Milan, Italy, Nov. 10 rardinal An-
drea Carlo Ferrari, archbishop of Mi-
lan, Is reported to l e seriously 111. He
was born In 1^) au«i was created a
cardinal iu 1*94.
* V ;
———
j.--. ' The fftjst aecorded strike in America
its is' that U
of an altitude of over 5,000 feet In New Vork City in 1741
the Jonrtieymen hakera In
=
c.
Chrysanthe urns
We arc now cutting thousands. All colors and grades,
$2.00 to $9.00 per dozen. All other seasonable Cut
Flowers. Phone us your wants,
:f Home of Flowers
Phone. 377—159. 215 N. Travis St.
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GET ,Y0UR ANTI-FREEZE NOW.
Cold Weather Soon. - , _
Birge Filling Stations
=5SH
A Bungalow Built
sit?
ill
with our shingles as the
lumber ns the inside parts
outside covering ami our
will he both artistic and
lasting. It will bo a cheap
building, too, for it will
not need repairs for a long
.time, vLumber and mater-
ials arc as chenp now as
they will he for some two
or three j*ars to come, so
why delay your plans, un-
til then. Get the benefit
of your own home NOW.
Let ua figure with you.
*v
PP0r«>sSS
W|f''
Wmm
Lumber
mm;
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Grade Pictures
SELECT YOUR X.MAS GIFT NOW WHILE OUR SHOP
IS FULL OF THE BEST.
Our Franinf Department u Waiting for Thai PICTURE
' ton Expect t j£|ve for X-mas.
210 South Travis.
JIM
GE
y if.*
&wm
Phone 460.
w
mft
Some say that coffee
should not be drunk
four hours of
ie. But the rule
doesn't ap]
\s
fine flavor-no
eine - healthful I
e's a Reason'
&
That Coltk With
- 1 ~
QUININE
FOR
Colds, Coughs TQm\V
- £ AND
La Grippe
Neglected Colds are Dangerous
Talc* no chanc«s. Keep this standsrd remedy handy for the first sneeze.
Creaks op a cold in 24 hours— Relieves w
** Grippe in 3 days—Excellent for HeaUacho
Quinine in this form docs not uffoct the head—Cascara is o^at Tonic
Laxative—No Opiate in Hill's.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT
■MM
REMEMBER tQ ask
AX your grocer for Cal-
umet Raking Powder and be
sure that you get it—the In-
dian head on the orange label.
Then forget about bake
day failures. For you wil!
never have any. Calumet
always produces the sweet-
est and most palatable foods.
"And noiv remember; you
always use less than of most
oth^r brands because it pos-
sesses greater leavening strength.
Remember-
Always
A
CFST n* test
BAKING POWDER
■ ..*-
■I ■.
There 13 no waste. If a
recipecalls for one egg—t
cum of flour—half a cu& ~
milk — that's all you use.
You never have to re-bake.
Contains only such ingre-
dients as have been officially
approved by U. S. Food Authorities,
Is the product of the largest, most
modern and sanitary Baking Pow-
der Factories in existence.
m
: 0**1
" I'
&K'
Md
Mm
Recipe
—4 cups sifted
flour, < level tea-
spoons Calumet
Baking Powder,
1 tablespoon su-
gar, 1 teaspoon
•alt, t eggs, 9
I cups of sweet
milk. Then mis
want t.
regular
Kf'
•a s?
Checked up our old dormitory pal "Snapper"
Taebo this morning waiting on an appointment
down Peachtree St. "Snap" wanted to know a
bookfull about my visit to the Camel factories.
Tn&Tn1X&
annoying way of saying, "But that doesn't sur-
prise me.**
Anyhow—whea l e*_
of Camels#?. J. Reynolds Tobaccc
Atlanta,
Wednesday
f
g|s
'Warn# £
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what does the old bird sputter 1
the miHiona )
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pi
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lavs *
they'd have to make that many to supply the de-
mand! Camels have the quality smokers want!
And, they have the most wonderful mellow mild
body and the most refreshing flavor ever created
in a cigarette! Of course they make
millions; of course they buy enoug
stamps from Uhcle Sam every day to build a
duplicate of the Winston-Salem post office! Why
not? Smokers everywhere will have Camels!"
Mi
v
, 1 ^
'VI..
m
I've pulled Camels out of my pocket to supply
somebody's shortage I've heard enough gooch
things said about 'em to fill a volume! 'That's
my brand'; 'Camels are a wonderful cigarette*.
'Like getting money from home,' etc.
"And, Shorty, what's the answer? Why-
Camels blend of choice Turkish and choice
Domestic tobaccos meets the universal taste!
And that's the 'hole' story, old golf ball"!
Pete, you pet phonograph, did you ever
hear a better record?
Sincerely,
fMi.
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- JI- .M -H.-L
A Demonstration of Practical
u: ■ -*
Economy
f * / i> •• • , . -v *• x" y " '*fc -I
Two pounds of Mazola fried 208
' A'
Doughnuts—2 pounds of
S urd fried only 138
TV /TRS. A. Louise Andrea —
* -*• awarded the goltl medal at
the Panama-Pacific Exposition a3
lecturer on food and culinary topics
—in a comparative test recently
fried 208 doughnuts in 2 lbs. of
Mazola, v/lule only U8 could be
fried in the same amount of lard.
At lhe r.rane time thin expert
fYkd 2rl/2 Ihr,. of j>oratoes in 2 lbs.
ci TV'U'zola, a*? against 7 lbs. 14 oz.
fried in 2 lbs. of lard.
*
Aiso, she fried 253-4 lbs. of fitih
cteak, cut to a uniform thickness
of one inch, in two lbs. of Mar'ola.
Twolbu. of lard fried only 16^2 lbs.
Equal to Butter at Half the
Price—Better than Lard
This means that Mazola is from
twice to more than three times
more economical to use than lard,
on the basis of actual accomplish-
ment.
Jn cach f.:r,t, 4 lbs. each of Mazola
and lard were fried down to 2 lbs.
•
This confirm^ the experience of
the seven million housewives who
already use Mazola. the Great
American Cooking Oil.
W. E. KINGSBURY
OiitiTtt Sa!*i. Xapruientutlvo
300 North r.rvoy 3t., Dalian, Tex.
FRFF Sixty-four page beautifully lllus.
1 troted Corn Products Cook Book.
Write today. Corn Products Helming Co., P. O.
Box 161, New York.
Mazola is a 100% pure vegetable
fat. There is4io loss from evapora-
tion, nor loss of bulk from heating.
It remains sweet and clean, and
can he used over and over again—
merely strain it. *
i)tta/ity and Economy—
* a Problem Solved
\ ' ,
The wonderful economy and
high quality of Mazola teach a
lesson that no thrifty housewife can
ignore. Not oidy will the cost of
cooking the daily meals be cheaper,
but the food more delicious and
digestible. ^ v
Mazola is cold at all good grocers
in pint, quart, half-gallon and full
gallon 'cans.
Once you try Mazola for Salads
you tvill prefer it to the finest
imported olive oils. The price of
Mazola is about half that of ottva
oU. No customs duty—no ocean
freight chargc* on Mazola. %
$■*#
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 97, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 16, 1920, newspaper, November 16, 1920; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth194142/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .