Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 153, Ed. 1 Monday, December 20, 1920 Page: 2 of 8
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SHEMAH DAUT DEMOCRAT, SHEKMAH, TEXAS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 21. IMI
—to "trike a blow with the flat that nlll remember that most of them were PRESIDENT
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but tuff* tttnaformed by
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the pact law weeks we, have
great changes InJ t!w>
financial world. We have coma "to a««
lod of reckless fc
and daring wast*
indaj worhl uaxt
end and that we mo*t ree*
fe Rome old raohlonort
- « * «**-
t>my and tirtft
' wine time we are all
no calamity haa befallen
practice of tboae vM '*
and helpfully upon
and thflr
failure at. life very cen-
ter of our peraouai Uvea. • %
not demoralised and we are
§t Jfo been ln-
ou hua
Ita delusions.
Its misplaced emphastaapd, with
Mltleaa waste. And with renewed
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God that the peril ,T
come to an end, with
with
Ita nHHOm
courage and redoublel energy we will
turn again to our ta-lta and otur 0c'0«
patlona. There will be leas Joy riding
on thirty cent gasoline within fb* nest
twelve months, and there will be more
time spent In our homes and with opr
' '%|r ^'ri- -::"1 «
ef Reckless Abandon.
* Now the wme spirit ; of reckless
abandon and ill considered excesa
which haa characterised the financial
world haa crept Into our wbole Uvea.
And just as sotmd economic teaching
has rung a note of warning and called
the economic world back to tbe exer-
ci e of unchaining virtues, so the
teachings of Ood are constantly warn-
ing Ug that if our Uvea as Christian
pe ople ate to be wholesome they must
he motived on some unchanged and un-
changing teaching*.
influenced, doubtless, by the press
abandon of the war period. Chris-
tian people have £ren awept by cur-
Sfeenta of sin that area resproach to the
name of Jesus Christ and that are fa-
tal to all Christian living. With
home of us It hps been a matter of
too re tacit consent; with others It Mi
Wn open approval; with all of us
tin're haa been more or less a surren-
der. indicated by silence or by the lack
of any positive no9 of prOtrst or op-
- position, '?■ ' *-a^-
FvU Amusements.
% "
We sre all agreed that much of our
amusement today is not merely ques-
tionable-—It ia openly and positively
eviL Right thinking people are agreed
that society, spelled with a capital 8
and Italicised, has placed Ita Imperial
*tany) of approval upon forma of
dancing that are more senaual, as lias
lasen proven upon Investigation, than
any dfuicing which Livingstone found
In the heart of Africa more than half
a century ago.
And Society (so-called) has placed
Its regal authority upon forms and
styles of dress for women thst would
cause our mothers to hide their faces
*Jn shame, and that all right thinking
people agree are not only encouraging
but fostering the most powerful temp-
tations that sweep through modem
1I#A
The pCfcSS brings to our door every
morning the story of gambling and
theft, burglary and robbery, murder
and crime, and evil so widespread and
prevalent th^t *e are no longer sur-
prised at even the glaring headlines
that announce it. and all al>out us
there swell and sweep tides of Immor-
ality that threaten to engulf aud de-
stroy ua..
Fact# Are Stubb. n. Things.
Now We may excuse, we may eon-
done, we may attempt to explain. Hut
facta afe stubborn things, and we ars*
face te - face with facts. To fall to
Is t* be blind; to fall to chnl
PP lH to bo guilty of moral
cowardice and unworthy of the name
cf Christian. 1 am not an alarmist,
and I Would deny the accusation of
being a sensationalist. I merely refer
you to altuatlons which you know
nl*out better than I do. And the honi
Tm« struck for plain speaking aud cou-
ruaction on the pirt of Christian
There are two institutions to which
those who arc thoughtful out in the
world are looking today for strength
atul for guidance and for help, as they
challenge tbe tides of immorality that
sweep about us.
They are looking to the church of
Jesus Christ, and they hare a right
to look to her for an example and an
attitude and for teachings that, out
In the open, will challenge every form
of vlee and evil that there is In the
life of our day. The church of Jesus
Christ must always refuse to conform
to the ideala and standarda that a
God lea*, reckless, sinful, unthinking
society pr«i>oses shall control the life
pf which you and I are a part.
Not only is that tnn-. but the church
Of Jesus Christ mtist herself furnish
P
rule and obtain. "Be not conformed.'
But the attitude must not be a nega
tlve one, a mere refusal to conform.
But "be ye transformed," presenting a
constructive, positive, developed life to
the ideals which }ou propose to chal-
lenge. 'K .
. .Is an Imperative Gait
The call to the church of ■' J«m
fchrist is sn Imperative call in this
hpur. and It Is a personal call. World-
Uness Is not sn uet nor a series of
east. It is an attitude—an attitude
that manifests itself in unthinking, 1W-
coiisidere<l compromises, that mani-
fests Itself lu s frantic, desperate ef-
fort to keep pace with the crowd and
somehow break Into tbe circle of the
"four hundiM" tl*«t manifests Itself
in s willingness to surrender all to he
Popular, and that manifests Itself In
the substitution of the material for
the spiritual and in the substitution of
the temporal for tiie eternal.
Now If the church of Jesus Christ li
too weak or too Insipid or too color-
less to challenge that attitude and
those ideals, then her Christlsnlty Is
not the Christianity of her Lord. Je-
sus Christ wsg a non-conformist, aud
he stayed ln the world, out In the open,
challenging the tides of evil and Im-
morality and vice that swept about
him- Ajpd here, as elsewhere. His
es must be as their I-ord.
To be perfeqtly plain. If the attitude
the standsrds of life that, out In the
open. Ucked by loyil consistency and
opposition, (dialI he
of the World Is right. If worldlness
produces better men and women, and
If It produces better homes snd letter
communities, theu let us conform td^
and confeas that It Is right. Let us
Hose our Bibles snd turn our churches
over to places of revelry and confess
that tfc~are wrong, that somehow we
hare been deceived, that Jesus Him-
self did not know how to manage life,
and that the standards He erected an*l
placed in the hands of His follower
erf mistaken standards.
So far as you and I are concerned,
we are tbe church. For all practical
purposes we make up the church. We
cannot, we dare not attempt to, escape
the personsl ami individual responsi-
bility that rests upon us In the most
searching hour of this generation, so
far as the vitality of the Christian re-
ligion is concerned.
"Be uot conformed"—theoretically
all of us are agreed that the teachings
of Jesus Christ sre the only correc-
tives and the ouly hope In the world
here and the. world liereafter. Our
practice must square with our theory.
We have come into possession of a
new life; we must live It. We claim
to possess salvation; we must Vork It
out. {>ur lives most conform to our
creeds.
A Measured Assertion.
I make this measured assertion:—If
the preachers, the church officers, the
Kundav school teachers, and any con-
siderable number of the members of
the congregations that, are worship-
ping in Sherman at this hour. will
stand out In the open with consistent,
unquestioned lives unri high purposes
and a determined opposition, the next
six mouths will see the creation and
the crystallization of a community con-
science tliut will make some things im-
possible in the town where you and I
live, jg ■ %
The church of Jesus Christ Is un-
dergoing hm awakening. She Is realiz-
ing that she canuot • remain ueutral.
that when her life within Is threaten-
ed and the life about her is being de-
stroyed, she Ih false tovevery Ideal she
professes If she does not stand out in
dathless opposition to the destructive
forces that are about her.
Preacher* are realizing that for them
to come to their pulpits and talk
about the sins of antiquity and deplore
the detraction of Babylon and Home,
und not mention the sins ami vices
that are sweeping their young people.
1'ruuds them moral cowards before the
world.
And large numbers of Christlan men
and women are realizing that for them
to gather here like this and sing
hymns aud pray and wOrshlp, and
then dismiss and go out Into the com
muntty willing that the Immorality
that Is rife shall go on unchanged--
are are realizing that such an attitude
brands them with an inconsistency
that is glaring and that is shameful.
Church Faces Serious Tasfr. ' ~"
The church of Jesus Christ faces a
serious task We are h) the world to
win people to Jesus Christ, aud then
we are here to help In spiritual devel-
opment and sold growth. And when it
comes to soul growth aud spiritual de-
velopment, modern science does not
help much aud machinery d*s>s not
help much.
I)Jd you rend that recent statement
of a French philosopher who said that
the chief contribution of science to the
world h d l>een to make man bigger
physically? He said that ?he tele-
scope and the mlcroeope had Kiven him
a more powerful eye; that the tele-
phone had enabled him to semi his
mice n distance of three thousand
mlleji; that the steamship and i the
railway had Increased the speed of his
feet like the seven-league l>oots of the
flv^rapfs; f jthst sqlftncp ha<h grown ed Jh q«l, and In His ,jri*hte#i
physical men who were slant*. and His Justife, His mercy and
Where Science Falls. I love, with • conviction that broi
ymm
. th«y mentioned ,hia
unless we ure willing to ask <iod t6 j To th#m sin was real. It was hide- hRVe l*?rri negotiating, sajd this mr
give iw souls big enough to manage ous. It was awful : It waa something to ,n* tl,Bt ,ho will
UNDER THE LAW
(Continued from peg* one.)
afldlng that she was In Mexico,
speedy trial will be demanded. >
will reach not two feet, but twenty- stalwaft nan-conformist* Tbey bellev
mmm
JK
brought a
f But when it <tome« to the #PUl Of touch of awe to the reverence with
men. be said, there science tells, and which t*<9 mention.1 Ids <<Mme. ^ ^
surrender; jvlthld
ofir larger Itodlea, disaster faces us he shunned thd hated and fought, a week or ten day*, but that the place
all. The one lndlspeiudble. lie says, The little church to which they led you of wrrender has not been arranged,
which the 'var revealed, is tlu.t we was to them, next to the home, the, He said she was not In Cblbmifcua
mtist have moral power and moral greatest Institution In the land. Home
vision. ( I of you can remember now with what
purely, In all frankness, there Is no fervor tbey sang. "How Arm a foundu-
other source, no Oilier Institution ci- thai ye mints <4. the I-onl."
c*pt tbe church of Jesus Christ, tbaf I A Holy Sabbath Hay.
stands In the community sahtiuth after j To them the Bible was (hsl's wordT
esbhath procl lmlng tliat she stands as much so as If they heard Him
for moral power, moral vision and speaking, and the book which some of
moral stamina; that Is not ashamed yon have kept as an heirloom they
to oppose every standard that Is not Miowly spelled their way through with
In keeping with the standards of « great longing to know God's will
Christ. To do less than that Is to pull Und to do It. ^ /
It down. To them the Sablmth day was holy
There Is one other Institution to —a ,iay of reference and meditation
which people are looking—and they and worship ' They stood out in the
have u right, to look to It—and that Is world acknowledging themselves as
tin- ho-ne.'" Afln If tlylpw^,aynes'pilgrims and strangers here. Tbey
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ma ,
when the home of America conform to ' were not ashamed to l>e c«lle<l the
the standards of the world, that Is a friends of God. They Ilv&l their sim-
dark day for us. Some thlpk that that ,| jl} ijyes, gave tlwlr testimony, and us
time has come now; that parents have | <jod called them they went home un-
surrendered; that some by tacit con- shrinking and unafraid.
sent and some by open approval, theyl And they fed the life of America,
liave opened the doors of their, homes | your life and my life, with the cldef-
to the tides of Immorality which In'out things that we have today. They
the past were turned
that were erected
by walls (ti«i u because they were not ashamed
I appeal to
in the Christian to build Christian homes.
home, and that the teachings of those'you u„ your memory goes back there
Christian homes are now silent at the'thls morning, that you usk God to give
hearthstone. 'you the grace to quietly return to your
Now I do not like to believe that. I j own home and say, "As for me and my
house, we will serve the living God.
A'Norl&ted Prtx* DUpatch]
El Paso, Texas, Dee. 20.—Mr. and
Mrs. Smith both said that they lutd
heard from their daughter and they
believe she would soon ho ln Kl Paso,
but refused to say where she was when
then heard from her.
Neither immigration authorities,
police nor the sheriffs office here had
any Information to indicate that Claril
Spilth was in Chihuahua, as Intimated
In newspaper interview published to-
day.
"If Miss Smith was found In Chi-
huahua City, the first thing the
American Council there would have
done would have l%en to wclre me and
I have heard nothing from him, said
Oscar Harper.
.•a i
, HE SAYS
ic
fli&'i'ik
—* '
My father'* God 1« my hod and his
Bible Is my Bible, and every source of
spiritual strength that was open to
ltlui is open to me."
1
They
ascent to
climbed the steep
Heaven
Through trouble, toll and pain.
O God, to us may grace lie given
To (follow 111 their train.
HAMON MAKE STATEMENT
(Continued from Page One.)
would rather think that that is an
exaggeration. Bnt I do know this •
that if the parents of America do open
the doors of their homes to the tides
that sweep alsmt us tottyy, then they
expose those within the walls of that
home without any safeguard. I do
know that the Christian home lias
been our chlefest defense. I do know
that the school teacher, the press, the
|.readier lu tlv> pulpit, and every force
lu society that wants to help elevate
the world, Is powerfully handicapped , PARENTS OF CLARA SMITH
if the home is gone.
r i i,>
Appeal to Parrnts.
■ ■ *
*4 I appeal to the parents who are
here this morning In the name of
your children. In 'the name of your
nelghls^' children aud lu the name
of Jesus Christ, that you refuse to
conform to the standards of u godless
society for your home and for the
lives which God has entrusted to yor.
1 liav? on my desk replies to Inquiries
which I have sent out about our stu-
tientVi who f a\|e left here. There have
come to me from distant parts of this
State, stories that would almost break
your heart, ami you would say. "God I
Can It Ik> true that the streets of Slier.
man revealed the tcmpetntluus that
led tfiose young men where they have
gone?' Home of them are your neigh-
bors' children. \
I talked just the other day with a
man who touches more young men
thgn any other man In this city, ami
he says that there comes u great silent
Associated Press Dispatch! <•
Adrmore. Okh., Dec. 20.—Interest
In the search for Clara Barton Smith,
wanted in connection with the death
of Jake Hamon, which has been
smouldering for more than- a week,
broke Into flames again today and
Carter County authorities openly ex-
press the belief that Miss Smith would
surrender within n few days..At the
same time it became known that Rus-
sell Brown, County Attorney, nnjl i
law firm of this city, representing Mlsg
Smith, had conversation relative to
boud for Miss Smith In the event of
mill" £13!
Owr iwijS
:'i* • .vrBffiwr:
W. B. Ixigan, special representative
In thei Southern States for Teniae,
the medicine that has created such a
sensation nil, over tbe United ^States
and Canada, gives some highly Inter-
esting facts about Ta'nlae and the re-
markable results achieved by It.
"Contrary to the pppnlar oplhlon."
he stated, "there Is no great mystery
about Teniae, except In so fnr as the
chemistry of the human body .Itself
and what it does with substances tak-
en Into it, is n mystery. Some of the
Ingredients of Tanlac have l een
known and used as medicines for cen-
turies. Others are of more recent
discovery, but every one of them Is of
recognised therapeutic valutj and Used
by the medical profession everywhere"
Tanlac is simply a co-mingling of thete
medicinal elements In a way hitherto
unknown and which brings out their
curative and reconstructive powers to
a most remarkable degree. Briefly
it allays irritation of the stomach,
strengthens the digestive and •sslmlli-
her surrender. Mr. Brown admitted ! ative orkans, builds up and revitalises
the attorney hnd approached him on the whole system, and gives the body
the subject. Mr. Brown said lie hud j new powers of resistance and
advised the attorneys he would not
resist application for bond, if the ev-
strengtli. Gratifying gains In weight
are not uncommon, especially where
Idence proved Miss Smith was entitled j ft person has suffered from under-
economic waste; the remedy for this
lies in congressional action to prevent
trading which is essentially gambling.
"A limitation of the volume of open
speculative trades In wheat, similar to
the limitations placed on corn specula-
tion during the period of government
control would probably tend to reduce
the possibility of manipulative trad-
ing"
to liberty on ball. In that event, he
would not ask for bond • greater than
ten or fifteen thousand dollars.
Tim County Attorney snhl that
Miss Smith would hp permitted'to re-
turn to Ardmore of her\own volition
to stnnd trial. '
U. S. Army Officer Will Visit
Ireland To Study
Conditions
sAMftree dutch thrift?
' ' • MSlP11 "i I
HolM«MWMp*4 fe^reateal Peopla
In the* Wprt* to Abbreviate
j Written Words.
The Dutch are the greatest peoplo
In the world for abbreviations, says
the Detroit News. It seems to be a
national trait of the Hollander, and
,re m - '"7 """ I not only are the missives between Nev
oppeul to tliem and to the parents a^ul romv nml her {ln„Khter Bn,
help
they
to the churches of tlds city to
theiu with reinforcements that
need in facing temptations such as
they never faced itefore in the world.
I appeal to the women, and espec-
ially to the mothers. There Is no
other human factor In this world as
mighty for the uplift and cleansing of
the world as consecrated motherhood,
especially Christian motherhood. I ap-
peal to you that In your lives and in
your homes and in your Influence, you
will help to build a wall about
young iH'ople of Sherman lu sn hour!
when, they need It as you do not J
dream that they need It
Just the other duy one thousand I
Catholic women in far awuy Belgium, {
whose theology you would4 hot accept
for a moment, signed, a declaration lu
which each one pledged herself to
four Milngs:
Catholic Women's Pledge.
First : We will not appear in church
or in society dressed In any way ex- j
eept lu modest, simple attire.
Second: We will not allow modern J
dancing to come into our homes or ;
meet with our approval. |
Third: We will not attend any
I
theatre or place of amusement where!
dnilghter and Mynheer
and hlSy*on liberally sprinkled with
the shortening of Dutch as she Is
spoke, but the advertisements In' the
Dutch newspapers are also thriftily
abbreviated so as to pcrrtilt of the
maximum amount of expression wfch
the minimum of type.
Private correspondence as well ns
business correspondence In Holland Is
a network of abbreviation, so much so
that a Hollander who has not been lu
his native land for a good many years,
hut still retains a knowledge of his
the I' mother tongue, likely to fall by thei
1 wayside In reading a letter from an
old friend from whom he lias not j
heard In a long time.
The Dutch lovit Is quite accustomed ;
to he told In a lefer by his sweetheart j
how much she l^ves him In abbrevia-
tions that suggeft more a Russian ,
stock ticker news Item than the love-
■ y<
laden words of n romantic maid.
Immoral or suggestive plays or pic-
tures ate ihown.
I Fourth: We pledge otirsilvs to bai,-j
jlsh.trom our homes all pictorial pa j
p;>rs tli!it carry suggestive pictures. j
The Presbyterian paper that quotes j
that article adds this: That If the!whlch hp,,1 coflvention In Chicago
Christ fa n women of America would i n Rhort tlnie B*°- The convents was
each of them pledge herself In a simi-
lar way, she would do much to bring
Which Way Do You Sleep?
Do you sleep with your body lying j
from east to wqjfc or are your toes j
pointing soutbentR while your head !
lies northwest? If you are lying In '
this position, you are under the pres-
sure of the magnetic meridian. In
other words, you are sleeping under a
tension and there Is a bad effect on
the blood pressure and the pulse rate, j
"Change your bed with the head
north or south amJ you'll sleep bet-
ter."
These are some of the theories pro-
pounded by Dr. W, W. Bailey of Dav-
enport, la., secretary of the Central
Society of Physical Tflernpeutlcs,
' CQfrSiBNT ttmfPmtT,
Major Oliver P. Newman, who hag
Urorf tfelecUnT to head the subconimIt-
tee of live Americans nunied tc- visit
IrelAtid and study the situation there
for the American Commission on
Conditions In Ireland. Major New-
man, wy was in tbe artillery of the
A. E. F*., was president of the hoard
ef commissioners of the District of
Columbia under President Wilson,
and be'of'e that, was a prominent
iK'Wspapc * writer and Investigator.* i
nourishment brought on by dyspepsia,
indigestion, illness, operation or other
causes.
"It Is a demonstrated fact in medi-
cal science that the stomach is the
stnrtlhg point of most of the ills that
■
see have tJ'l
m
ml
%
^ffllct the human body, and many of
the so-called diseases are not diseases
at all. but reflest symptoms of tbe
stomach derangements of the weaken-
ed condition of the body that natural-
ly follows. Some kinds of rheuma-
tism, gastritis, palpitation, nervous-
ness, kidney disorders and Uver com-
plaints are among the more common
troubles developed throhgh the stom-
ach. Scores of other dbtease
been traced to the-saine source.
"Tanlac was made specially to
overcome these stomach complaints
ijnd the various so-called diseases and
symptoms that follow them, bnt the
astonishing reconstructive powers re-
vealed by It have not only astonished „
the general pablfc, hut have some-
what surprised even the originators
of the medicine themselves. Thous-
ands of letter* reach the Tanlac off!- 1
ces from all parts of North AmercS
telling of remarkable results derived
by people who have suffered for
yeartf without being nble heretofore
to find relief.
"Naturally * these remarkable
achievements have spread the fame of
Tanlac to all quarters of the conti-
nent. and the demand for It has neces.
sltated working the laboratories nlgbt
and -day. \
"The tremendous popularity of Tan-
lac grows steadily Instead of diminish-
ing and can be erffclnlned In only one
way—merit. Its" remarkable restora-
tive effects seem to be more perma-
nent than hitherto believed possible.
Thousands <« persons who took It
when It was first introduced five
years ago report that they are still
enjoying excellent health, and mil-
lions of American homes are now
using Tanlac'nsj the family medicine
after having first tried It out thor-
oughly."'
Tanlac is sold in Sherman by Carl
R.Nall, In. Denison by Waldron Drug
Co., and In Tioga by TJrb Bradley.—
Advertisement.
mm
"CA^J YOU BEAT IT?"
COW or HORSE feed at $ 1.00 per hundred pounds. We
are offering a limited number of sacks of our "MILK MAKER
MIXTURE" at $1.00 per sack. This feed formerly sold at
$2.00 per sack. If you want your COW to produce mote
milk and better milk or your horse to do more work and
better work, try a sack., > v v ,,
% SHERMAN OIL MILL.
(
Army Supply Store
114 South Crockett St., Sherman.
U. S. Army Goods
, ON SALE NOW
U. S. Army Wool Blankets, 0. D. Wool Army Shirts.
A Full line of Army Clothing and Shoes.
Army Supply Store
114 South Crockett Street. Sherman. Texas
< 1 , '■ .5 _ i .
Persia has a
literature.
rich fund of ancient
presentwl In conquering contrast to the ! ancient fable, that in the field of wnr
(ikals which the world proposes sliaiy ihc Hg French gun« hare enabled us
back the old fashioned Ideals of our
mothers to the young women of our
day and she would do much to help
the younk manhood about it in tin
hour of their tiem-st temptation.
1 appeal to you to establish the kind
of home from which most of you came.
There lias been wondrous progress,
from the home
you came to tin
I mnde up of licensed doctors of the
! Middle West who rely more on
physical methods of curing diseases
than on medical methods.
'!
, Itond Rehired.
Following a habeas
eorpo# hearw
injr before .Imlgc Silas Ilare . In the
Fifteenth District Court Monday
mornlmr. the bond of All>ert LntiKhlin
from which most of j of Denison, charged with robbery with
homes which most of, firearms, was reduced from $'J.r>00 to
you have built. The lives of your par-' $1,500.
ents were, many of them, lives of
hardship and toll and sacrifice. They
I<auKhlin. who Is a railroad shop
employe at Denison. was asquitted
did not have any telephones, or dec-! Saturday in the Fifty-Ninth District
trie lights, or automobiles or air-
planes, They lived a life (hat was fi;ll
of hardships as we look back upon It.
Aud vet when we look l«ick to those
childhood hoiucg and see again the
faces find fonn* of our parents, we
Court of a murder charge growing
out of the shooting of his brother-in-
law, Joe Bruhn. The robbery with
which he is now charged Is alleged to
have occurred since his first trial
last year ou the charge ofWurder.
/■ \\ '**
Plan Your
Holiday Trips
yia
INTERURBAN
Hourly Service.
between
Denison-Sherman-McKinney-
Dallas-Waxahachie-Hillsboro-
Waco-Ennis-Corsicana.
and intermediate points.
O V
XCbere Sboulb be flOuslc (n Ever?
"footne tbis Cliristmas
v
• • • , v
We Have a Complete Line of f f
i
Pianos,
Players,
Violins,
Banjos,
Mandolins,
Phonographs,
Harmonicas,
Guitars,
Sheet Music,
Music Bags,
Music
Satchels,
Music Stands
All the Leading Phonograph Records
,<■> and t
Q. R. S. Player Rolls.
v
*. -
VESTAL
Music and Machine Co.
> South Travis St.
,'V*v > *
I
im
in' rltnli V iiWilfa- ii [ i • m -it- rhiyfiii l iin^Slii
pvnsnfvppvippapv
B8HE
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 153, Ed. 1 Monday, December 20, 1920, newspaper, December 20, 1920; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth194169/m1/2/?rotate=90: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .