Sherman Daily Democrat. (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTIETH YEAR, Ed. 1 Friday, May 12, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
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THE SHERMAN DAILY VI
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FRIDAY, MAT 12.
r Evening.
. Is the official
City of Sherman
all legal notice*.
♦ 2
ad
Subscription: 60 cents per month.
.SO for six month* when paid In
vance.
m
The Weekly Democrat la publihed
on Thorsday. 11.00 per year. It 1*
the big county seat newspaper.
Dallas Office—SOT Juanita Bldg,
i Main 4888. F. A. Wynne,
representative.
subscribers changing locations
give their former address as
the now one. Subscribers
served by city carriers will please
assist the management in tendering
good service by making complaints
about irregularities or omissions.
-BOTH PH ON K 8
m
THIS DATE IN HISTOltV.
May 12.
1781—Fort Fetniyler, N. Y., destroy-
ed by fire.
1789—Tammany Society founded in
New York city.
1809—British mniy under Welling-
ton forced the passage o!
the Douro after a desperate,
struggle with the French.
1820-r-Florence Nightingale, famous
Crimean war nurse, born in
Florence, Itnly. Died in Lon-
don, Aug. 13, 1910.
18(52—Commodore Parragut, with a
flotilla, asceuded the Missis-
sippi.
1870—The province of Manitoba
was formed with Adams 0.'
Archibald ns governor.
1879—Income tax hill defeated In
the lower house of congress.
1885—Battle of Batoehe, ending
the rebellion in the Oaundlun
Northwest.
1892—Bridge across the Mississippi
river at Memphis otjicnod.
1898-—'American fleet under Ad-
miral Sampson bombarded
San Juan de Porto Rico.
1910—The battleship Florida was
launched at the Brooklyn
navy yard.
Sherman people have built, many
miles of cement walks thin year and
the work continues very satisfactor-
ily. t
Texas Is building and endowing
colleges and universities. This Is a
good sign of the progressive spirit
In her people.
Home grown vegetables are be-
coming plentiful and they are fine.
The home with a small truck gar-
den is saving money.
Texas keeps right on building
railroads, notwithstanding we have
been told that the foreign capital is
timid about investments in Texas.
North Travis residence district
looks fine since the paving. The
street from end to end is about one
and one-half miles long. Wont it
bo great when the paving is finish-
ed?
And now Gen. Navarro is to be
oourtmartialed for surrendering at
.Juarez. Wiiat'3 the use. in* couldn’t
help it andj to punish him will not
make friends for the Diaz govern-
ment.
Diaz and his sympathizers are said
to be «linefeed over the defeat of the
r
federal forces in the north and well
they should be, for tho movement
against Diaz is of no small propor-
tions.
The country papers will be very
Interesting this week, especially the
weekly press, since the boss is out
for a big time attending tho press
association at Port Lavaca and the
office boy is doing the writing. ~
Sherman will soon have another
pretty park, but Its size will be de-
termined altogether by the liberality
of those good citizens who own
land along Post. Oak creek from
North Travis bridge to the T. & P.
railway bridge spanning the creek.
Francisco I. Mailero Jr. is the
name of the provisional president of
Mexico. He has selected his cabi-
net, with Juarez ns the seat of
government. This victory will bring
to the aid of the rebel chieftain
many who had up to this time been
neutFal or undecided about the sit-
uation in Mexico.
Sherman manufacturers, It ts
often said, sell more of their pro-
ducts in the town s adjacent to
Sherman than they do at home.
This 1» because we have not got
the home spirit with us. The re-
verse would be the case If we
would Insist on the home mer-
chants supplying our wants with
fMune-made goods where ft is pos-
sible. .
AND ItllFWBRIKri
If the preachers who are advocj
the confiscation of the tax-pay
brewery industry ot Texas will
'. to advocate the
property, their
will bo greatly strengthened.
So long a« the churches enjoy ex-
emption from taxation, It la scarcely
good form for them to urge the de-
struction of any legal business
which contributes Its honest share
toward the support of public insti-
tutions.- Bouthwestern Farmer.
Who among men would want to
tax church property? No one ex
cept the enemy of the church and
what the church stands for.
What would the property of the
merchant, banker, fapitallst or even
the Southwestern Farmer amount to
If there were no churches?
The churches are making the
world better and happier. They
serve to restore and reform the
falling and dlspatring. Men and
women give much of the:r time to
the cause of tho religion of Jesus
Christ for nothing while the average
pay for preachers Is less than that
of any of the professions that re-
quire talent and education.
Your reference to confiscation of
the brewery industry will not make
votes for the saloon. The brewery
builds and conducts its affairs in
Texas or any other state with the
full knowledge that they may some
day be compiled to convert their
buildings Into Ice plants, or factor-
ies that do not manufacture stuff
to ''confiscate” the brainy destroy
manhood and muke paupers of men
and their families. The brewery
interest and the saloon must be pre-
pared to move when It is outlawed.
OCR ENEMY IN SUMMERTIME.
IMPROVBIM
TEST POTATOES FOR STARCH
POINTS FROM THK HUMS
In other words, the resignation
of Diaz has a string attebed to It,
a la a certain Texas statesman. —
Ter sell Dally Transcript.
Woodrow Wilson has befen com-
pared to Roosevelt; be certainly
has T. B.’s faculty for getting in
the limelight.—Houston Chronicle.
Anyhow, 3fid?0 will go down in
history as the man mho started
something just when the peace
t movement seemed to cover the
earth as the waters cover the great
!deep.-—Wace Tintes-Hcraid.
The rest of high living is felt
most by the man who hasn't the
price.-7-Four States Express.
A man should always raise his
boys so he can bo proud of them
and live so they will bo proud or
him. Given this, and there will bo
genuino reform in the land. There
would be a whole lot of fathers who
would have to change in their mode
of living to come up lo the stan-
dard. —*McKiuney Cetjrier-Gazette.
A farmer friend says a high-class ^.Ja -------,___
home-loving hen who wants her off- upon the amount of starch which the
spring to be happy, will refuse to tubers contain, juft as butter making
lay eggs after being taken out of depends upon the butter fat in the
Texas.—Austin Statesman. milk or cream, says the Rural New
Yorker. Consequently in buying pota-
toes some quality test is required, just
as in the case of selling milk, the
Babcock test Is applied to determine
the amount of butter fat. The test for
potatoes is based on a specific gravity.
As is known starch is heavier than wa-
ter and will sink te the bottom and the
sample starch test is based on the dis-
tance which the starch will fall In a
volume of water. The instrument
shown in the Illustration is used.
There Is a small wire basket attached
A child was born in an automobile
In New Jersey the other day. Its
________1............, » .. ___13
the aeroplane's next turn,
ton Tribune.
-Galvcs-
Like the troublesome tramp who
drifts south In cold weather and re-
turns north witli the breaking of
spring, the commou house flies do
not become annoying to the average
person until the weather becomes
favorable for breeding. Then they
make their appearance by the mil-
lions.
At this season of the year heal’ll
authorities the country over are
warning citizens of tlife danger in
allowing the disease-spreading fly
to lurk around their homes and
calling their attention to the fact
that it is even more essential to
guard against the results that fob,
low in the paths of these posts than
it is for a police department to rid
a city of tho troublesome tramps.
Throughout the winter months
these pests can be found as adults,
hibernating in houses, sheds and
other protected places. When the
spring months come they emerge
and begin to deposit their eggs upon
the filth and decaying vegetable
matter. Within a few days full-
grown files are to be found, show-
ing that a large number of genera-
tions are reared in a single season.
The common house fly is distrib-
uted over a large area, it is not
only an annoyance to mankind, but
It, is exceedingly dangerous in the
fact that it disseminates typhoid
fever, tuberculosis, cholera infan-
tum, djsentry and many other dis-
eases.
Ail the germs, all imaginable mi-
crobes fasten themselves to the
spongy feet of the fly and the fly
brings these germs into tho hoGse
and there wipes them off his foot.
His feet are wiped on the food you
eat, on the faces and on the lips of
your steeping children.
Physicians are united In tho
opinion that the common house fly
is one of tho greatest, enemies of
humanity and one of the most dan-
gerous.
Is is essential that houses be well
screened and the occupants instruct-
ed not to allow the screen-doors to
be opened more than necessary. It
is often observed that occupants of
the house when «i>eaking to outsid-
ers will partly open the screen door
and "hang to It,” gossiping in such
a position that a large number of
flics, taking advantage of the oppor-
tunity, will buzz in. Screen4 will
turn away ail flies as well as mos-
quitoes and no family la so poor but
can afford lo install screens, when
health conditions are .taken into
consideration.
Flies do not like darkened places
ami they can easily be drived from
the dining room and kitchen by
darkening the same, allowing a
small light place as an exit.
Where adult flics become numer-
ous in dwellings and can not, be
easily driven out the following
means may he employed to capture
or poison these pests: A 5 per cent
solution of formaldehyde sweetened
with -sugar, honey or svrup, placed
about the house in shallow dishes
kills flies and is not as dangerous
as arsenial baits. Blotting pai>er
dipped into sweetened tea or quassia
bark, allowed to dry and then mois-
tened slightly as used, kills large
numbers of flics. Where flies are
very numerous the house should b<
fumigated with pyrethrum.—Hous-
ton Post.
mat man who doesn't patronize
home merchants and homo enter-
prise is not doing a great deal as a
town builder.—-Corsicana Daily Suu.
An Omaha female somnambulist
boarded a street car in her pajamas
and rodo down town. She said
afterward that she remem liered
nothing aiMiut it, but she woke up
everybody else in the town.—Hous-
ton Post.
After the coronation contes the
corn shows in Texas. Polks who
hadn't thought of that will change
their plans accordingly. There is
most alwaj'B something better do-
ing at home. Let Texas Grow.—•
Fort Worth ftar-Telegram.
It must be rather binding on the
American soldiers at El Paso to
have to stand in ranks and watch
tho battles on the other side of the
river without l»eing allowed to “bust
a cap —Dallas Morning News.
The Texas press gang is enroute
to Port Lavaca. The sight of
seme of those spindly-legged editors
in bathing would tie worth going
miles to see. Jim Lowry in a bath-
ing suit, would look like a Fannin
county turkey with the feathers off.
Dallas Times-Herahl.
BRAIN LEAKS.
Tin nlogy lias tricked many a man
into disaster.
Flattery is tho food thul only
folds feed on.
Tie- good things of life ufe not
won by worry.
Purchased pleasures arc not al-
ways palatable.
The school of experience takes its
tuition fee' in years.
Hope is the only safe pilot over a
sea of stormy doubt.
The simple things of life are
those that make it really wortii liv-
ing.
The graduating recital by Miss
Bernice Carleton, a pupil of Mr.
Carl Venth, will be given in Kidd-
Key auditorium at 8 o’clock tomor-
row, Friday, evening. mll-St
SENSE in SHORT SENTENCES
r(------
An empty head is easily turn-
ed
Excuses and weeds aro plentiful
lull what good are they?
Righteous indignation is what the
other man calls bad temper.
Sometimes the best way to save
money is to simnd It well.
Death is the only debt collector
you can't put off with promises.
Classical music Is like a cold hath
it’s tile correct tiling to say you
like it.
As soon as an Irishman gets
what lie wants lie starts .wanting
something else.
The more money you have get
the longer are the names of the dis-
eases you suffer from.
When a man chalices something
and it comes off tie's a hero; when
it doesn’t come off lie's a foot.
When we make something nut. of
11 man we call it smart; when tie
does it to us we call it cheating.
Society is composed of people who
look better than they are; the rest
of us are better than we look.
The wise mull lets his wife have
her own way. it saves (trouble,
and she'll get it anyway. And tho
wise woman knows that and acts
accordingly. Houston Chronicle.
There are several * propositions
now before Sherman to enlarge the
factory and mill dial rid and not
one of them should he allowed to
go by default. If the terms upon
which men propose to establish bus-
iness are reasonable encourage-
ment ought to ho
ing from those who
be indirectly benefit ted
have funds to invest.
fcrthco.ni-
aru to
and who
THIS IS MV BATH BIRTHDAY.
Maj 12.
Sir William G. Falcon bridge.
Test for Potato Starch.
to a special form of hydrometer. This
hydrometer is gauged so that, when
the empty basket hangs to It It will
float at a certain point at the top of
tho water. Exactly ten pounds of the
potatoes are taken. They are thor-
oughly washed and then dried. If nec-
essary ono potato will bo cut In order
to make the exact weight. The ten
pounds are put. tyito this wtro basi.et
and attached to the bottom of the
hydrometer. The greater the amount
of starch the lower these potatoes will
pull tho hydrometer into the water,
since the starch is heavier, and the
gauge is marked In such a way as to
show by the depth to which a hydro-
meter is pulled the per cent, of starch,
contained in the sample. That is the
way testing is done and it. has an-
swered reasonably well in practise. It
Is said that poiatoes average from 14
to 20 per cent, of starch; 100 pounds
of average potatoes containing 17 per
cent, of Btarch will yield about 1 3-10
gallons of denatured aleobol.
) ---„— -
Sir William G. Falconbrldge, chief
justice of die Court of King's Bench
for Ontario, was born in Dr uni-
m< ndvlllo. Out., May 19, l MO. Hi ,
education was received principally
at the 1 liiverslty of Toronto, where
his course was one of unusual dis-
tinction, Inasmuch as he received
high honors
HOW FARMERS ARE ASSISTED
Scientists and Inventors Responsible
for Revolution in Farm Method*
in Recent Years,
(By R. O. WEATIHCUSTONE.)
Scientist and inventors aro respon-
sible for the revolution that has taken
place on the farm during the last few
decades, for they have taught the
farmor lesson- ot the greatest value.
The inventor has supplied thousands
of useful ideas and labor saving de-
vices, so that the work can be done
nyore effectively, with greater ease,
and on a bar larger scale than ever
before. He has shown the farmer
how tho heaviest work can lie done
by mechanical moans and has worked
out plans for obtaining the necessary
power from natural sources.
The scientist has shown that the
soil is a wonder world, the mysteries
of which are only partially mastered.
Tho mastery of the problems of the
sail presents one of the test fields
for activities of bacteriologists of tho
present day, who are hard at work in
the interests of humanity. Tbe men
engaged in this work include some of
the best, of modern scientists.
Tho scientist shows exactly what Is
lacking in a soil, and indicates what
must be supplied in order to obtain
proper result; .
New fruits and flowers are beiug
Introduced by explorers In govern-
In nearly every depart
incut, of die curriculum, \ftor hist mwu as well as private employ, and
graduation In 1866 he filled tor a
year the chair ot modern languages
in Yarmouth College, Nova Scotia,
He returned to Toronto on being
appointed lecturer, on Italian and
Spanish at t'niversity College, lie
studied law and was called to the
bar in 1871. In 1 s.S7 lie was ap-
pointed a judge of the Queen's
Bench division of the supreme
court of Judicature of Ontario, and
later chief justice of tile Kings
division of t the High Court of Jus-
tice of Ontario, which position he
now fills.
4—-
Tlie graduating recital by Miss
Bernice Carleton, a pupil of Mr.
Carl Venth, will be given In Kidil-
Koy auditorium at 8 o’clock tomor-
row, Friday, evening. mil-tit
Toadies of the First Presbyterian
church will sell bread and cake Sat-
urday afternoon in the southwest
room of the church. Phone 848.
' mll-2t
some of the innovations have proved
to be of great value. Some of the
staple crops now grown in the middle
west were unknown except to scien-
tists only a few yesrc ago.
The Inventor of the preseat bee-
hive and Us wonderful appliances,
made a new- Industry possihle, for
without it, the modern apiaries, repre-
senting the investment of millions of
dollars, never could have been de-
veloped.
8uccess In Gardening.
Success in gardening depends upon
many factors, one of tbe most im-
portant being tbs planting of good
seed.
A BOLD STEP
To overcome the well-grounded and reasonable objections of
tbe more intelligent to the use of secret, medicinal compounds,
Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., some time ago, decided to
make n bold departure from the usual course pursued by the
makers of put-up medicines for domestic use, and so has pub*
lished broad-cast and openly to the whole world, a full and
iplete list of all the ingredients entering into the composition of his widely
brated medicines.
com
cele
Department of Agriculture Bulletin
Discusses Alcohol Making, Par-
„ <s ticularly From Spuds.
Oly V. C. MELVILLE.)
Tho U. 8. department of agriculture
bos issued Formers' Bulletin No. 410
on potato culls as a source of indus-
trial alcohol. This bulletin discusses
alcohol making more particularly from
potatoes. The amount of alcohol which
can be made from potatoes depends
Thus Dr. Pierce has taken his numerous patrons and patients
into his Ml confidence. Thus too he has removed his med*
Icines from among secret nostrums ot doubtful merits and
placed them in a class all by themselves by making them
remedies OP KNOWN COMPOSITION. By this hold step Dr.
Pierce has shown that his formulas are ot such excellence
that he Is not afraid to subject them to the fullest scrutiny.
The graduating recital by Miss
Bernice CarletonJ a pupil of Mr.
furl Venth, wilt he given in Kidd-
Key auditorium at 8 o’clock tomor-
row, Friday, wesiug. mll-3t
•
Not only does the wrapper of every bottle of Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, the famous
medicine for weak stomach, torpid liver or bilious-
ness and all catarrhal diseases wherever located,
have printed upon it in plain English, a full and
complete list of all the ingredients comport an it,
but a small book has been compiled from numer-
ous standard medical works, of all the different
schools of practice, containing very numerous ex-
tracts from the writings of leading practitioners of
medicine, endorsing in the strongest possible terms,
each and every ingredient contained in Dr. Pierce’s
medicine^. One of these little books will he mailed
free to any one sending address on postal card or
by letter, to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., and
requesting the same.
From this little bo k it will he learned that Dr.
Pierce's medicines contain no alcohol, narcot-
ics, mineral agents or other poisonous or injurious
agents and that they arc made from native, medi-
cinal roots of great value; also that some of the
most valuable ingredients contained in Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription for weak, nervous, over-
worked, “run-down,’ ’ nervous and debilitated wom-
en, were employed, long years ago, by the Indians
for similar ailments affecting their squaws. In fact,
one of the most valuable medicinal plants entering
into the composition of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre-
scription was known to the Indians as ‘ Squaw-
Weed.” " Our knowledge of the uses of not a
few of our most valuable native, medicinal plants
was gained from the Indians.
As made up by improved and exact processes, the “Favorite Prescription” is *
most efficient remedy for regulating all the womanly functions, correcting displacements,
as prolapsus, anteversion and retroversion, overcoming painful periods, toning up the
nerves and bringing about a perfect state of health. Sold by all dealers in medicines.
A government institute for tbe
promotion of the silk industry is to
be Established lu Italy.
Seventy labor unions have be-
come affiliated with the California
State Federation of Labor since last
October.
Eve.v fourth woman in New
York City is a wage earner. Of this
number inly 47 per cent earn more
than $6 a week.
in the state of Washington the
compensation act will go into effect
October 1 and the woman’s eight-
hour work day on June 10.
The maintenance of way men of
the Canadian Northern railway have
been granted an increase in their
pay amounting to 14 per cent.
In tho paper making industry of
Frnnco nearly 82 per cent of the
masters are organized, as against
only 21 per cent of the employes.
The International Iron Moulders'
union now lias an approximate inem-
lierstiip of fifty " tliousund. Three
new unions were added during last
mouth.
It is reported that one thousand
oil mill men joined (lie United
Brotherhood of Carpenters n£jd
Joiners within two weeks recently
at OshkuSh, VVIs.
Toronto (Ontario) stage employes
have petitioned the managers of Die
local theatres for an Increase of
wages. Several conferences have
boen held.
The new button workers’ union
at Muscatine, la , is steadily in-
creasing its membership and bids
fair to become one of the strong
local unions in Iowa.
Members of the International
Printing Pressmen and Assistants'
union have commenced to advocate
Han Francisco, Calif., for the 1915
convention of the union.
According to statistics compiled
by the Wood Workers union in
Germany, tile ave nge hours of
211,00(1 workpeople were 57 1 er
wick, while 13,001 worked less
than 5 4 hours.
The present membership cf the
International Longshoremen's asso-
ciation in tho United States and
Canada is 32,000 and the growth
has been 8,000 in the past two
years.
French laundry workers organiz-
ed recently in San Francisco. The
Work, of organizing is being carried
on under the supervision of the
steam laundry workers' union of
that city.
There are about 28,000 co-oper-
ative associations in Germany, with
more than 4,000,000 members; and
these,.with their families, represent
nearly one-third of the total popula-
t ion.
The federation of trade unions i
connected with the building industry j
in France has decided the bodies j
which form it shall no longer take!
part in any building operations con-
tracted with prisons.
It is announced at Champaign,
Illinois, that the Illinois traction
system will grant a second raise of
wages for the motormen and con-
ductors which will become effective
May 21. The increase will be from
$2.50 to $2.70 for a working day
of nine hours.
\
i
WEAR A FLOWER FOR MOTHER’S SAKE
To honor the best. Mother that ever lived—your own. That
is the purpose of Mother’s I*<v. •
SUNDAY, MAY 14
A White Flower for Mother’s Memory.
A Bright Ftywer for Mother** l/iving.
We will be prepared Saturday, I3th and Sunday 14th with a
large assortment of fine Fresh Flowers appropriate for Mother’s
Day offered at unusual moderate prices.
Special rates to Sunday Schools, Lodges, etc.
THE FLOWER STORE
Both Phones 150. Opposite Postoffice.
TEXAS NURSERY COMPANY,
Send Mother a Boquet, Pot Plant or Basket on Mother’s Day.
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♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ >♦♦<
BANKRUPT'S PETITION FOB
DISCHARGE.
In the matter of John F. Rennie,
bankrupt. In bankruptcy.
To the Honorable Gordon Russell,
Judge of the District Cburt of the
United States, for the Eastern
District of Texas.
John F. Rennie of Denison, in
the county of Grayson and state of
Texas, in said district, respectfully
represents that on the 7th day of
April last past, he was duly adjudg-
ed a bankrupt under the acts of eon-
gross relating to bankruptcy; that lie
has duly surrendered all liis proper-
ty and'rights of property and has ful-
ly complied with all the requirements
of said acts and of the orders of the
iourt touching his bankruptcy.
Wherefore he prays that he may
lie decreed by the court to have a
full discharge from all debts prov-
able against his estate under said
bankrupt acts, except as are ex-
cepted by law from such discharge.
Dated tliis 11th day of May, A. D.,
1911.
JOHN F. RENNIE, Bankrupt
ORDER OF NOTICE THEREON
Eastern District of Texas, ss.
On this 11th day of May. A. D.,
1911, on reading the foregoing pe-
tition, it is—Ordered by the court
that % hearing bo had upon the same
on the 12th day of June, 1911, be-
fore O. D. MeHeynolds, ono of the
referees of said Court in Bankruptcy
at Sherman in said district, at Id
o’clock in tlie forenoon, and that
notice thereof lie published In the
Sherman Daily Democrat, a news-
paper printed in said district, anil
that all known creditors and other
persons in interest may apjiear at
the said time and place and show
cause, if any they have, why the]
prayer of said petitioner should notj
he granted.
And it is further ordered by the
Court that, the clerk shall send by
mail to all known creditors copies
of said petition and this order, ad-
dressed to them at their places of
residence as stated.
Witness the Honorable GORDON
RUSfBLL, Judge of the said Court,
and the Seal thereof, at Sherman, in
tlir said district, on the 11th dav of
May, A. D„ 1911.
J. R. RLADES, Clerk.
By O. A. BRACKETT, Deputy.
12-lt
JOBBERS
interested in Eastern
Oklahoma are directed
(o the facilities offered
by the
MO&GRY
for reaching that terri-
tory. Daily freight service
is now offered from
Sherman to points as far
as Calvin and delivery
made the next day after
loading.
J. R. GUNTER, Agent
Both Telephones
Cotton Belt Station
- Mrs. I. M. Weems
Don’t let the baby suffer from
eczema, sores or any itching of the
skin. Doan's Ointment gives instant
relief, curqs quickly. Perfectly safe
for children. Ail druggists sell it. x
IS YOUR BUSINESS ADVERTISED 1
Dr. R Flowers
VETE BINARY SI' KGKON
AND DENTIST.
Office—Hilling's Drug Store.
Office—Both phones 7H.
Residence—Old phone 757;
New phone 750.
VOICE
Slnfflo 211 East Brocket! Street
Old Phone 632
2
Mrs. H. W. Keatley
- ■ go ,
AI.I kinds of hair work.
—R-—
CURLS, PUFFS, AND BRAIDS
MADE TO ORDER.
Working Up Combings and J)ye Wort
4017 East College Bt Old
CALL AT
B. G. Pally’s
West Houston Street
and select Groceries. Always some-
thing good for your table and all
the delicacies in season. His prices
are as low as they can be made and
give a small margin of profit.
C. F. PICKING,*!, a. C.
VETERINARY SURGEON.
13—-Phones—-13
11* North Crockett St.
1
i
.
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Sherman Daily Democrat. (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTIETH YEAR, Ed. 1 Friday, May 12, 1911, newspaper, May 12, 1911; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth644625/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .