Sherman Daily Democrat. (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTIETH YEAR, Ed. 1 Monday, April 24, 1911 Page: 4 of 8
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THE MERE MANS THE RAILWAY
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THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY
Teter fainter says: the
complexion of a house
like that of some girls
—soon comes off
unless
PATTON’S
Sun-prooF
PAINTS
is used
Patton's Sun-Proof Paints are made
in evaei proportion) — of the mmt
durable materials, perfectly mixed by
improved machinery. They are the
bdtj spreading, longest wearing
paints, and have the most
brilliant and lasting
colors.
color card and
lull information tram
A 0AL.L.AD OF WOMAN,
boro ua In her dreaming womb
And laughed Into the face of
"U death:
Km/ She laughed In her strange agony
To give her tittle baby breath.
Then by some holy mystery
Sho fed us from her sacred breast.
Soothed us with little blrdllke words—
To rest, to rest, to rest, to rest.
Tea. softly fed us with her lift—
Her bosom like the world In May.
Can tt be true that men thus fed
Heed women as I hear them say?
1 wonder If such men a* these
Had once a sister with blue eyes, »
Kind ns the soothing hand of God
And-as ths quiet heaven wise.
1 wonder when all friends had gone—
The gay companions, the brave men—
If In eome fraglio girl they found
Their only stay and comrado then.
Shall she who bore the son of Cod
And made the rose of Sappho's song:
She who saved France nnd heat the drum
Of freedom, bear this vulgar wrong?
Have no part In the world sho made—
Serf of the rainbow, vassal Sower—
Save knitting In the afternoon
And rocking cradles hour by hour!
-Harper's Weekly,
W. N. BUT RIDGE A CO.
210 South Travis St.
| UNION LABEL TRUTHS. |
Tile union label Is it constant ?
■*t reminder oflhe common Interest 'j,
and entummi duty of all trade
unionist* In and toward each
other and a certain guide in the
discharge of Hint duty.
The union label is a weapon
(hat profits the employer equal-
ly with I lie employee, but only
so long us bulb aim at the some
object. It can never be turned
against the employee, been use it
is the latter's exclusive property,
to lie given or withdrawn at
pleasure.
To the woman of the trade
unionist household the union la-
bel affords a guarantee that the
wages earned under union label
conditions are expended upon
union products and for the
maintenance of union condi-
tions, to return with interest In
improved conditions for all.
The union label enlists nnd
arms In labor's cause those ele-
ments which determine the Is
I sue of every cause in clvilp/.ed
f society—namely, the women and
X children.
T You can always tell a union
<a man by the coat that he wears—
T if It bears the union label.
.1. J. J. A. ■«. ,t. A J. J, .1J, ■». JL .«. -ST- ■>. J, .1. .1, .1.
« T i Tt i'-*"*™ .~ TT rTTt TTtTTTTy r
THE MARKETS
rtsicRBo Oratn and Provisions.
Chiaego, April 24. *.
.— Close
Wheat-
May ...
July . .
Lard—
May ..
July ...
corn—
May
July ...
Oats—
May ..
July ...
Pork—
May ...
July ...
Kibe—
May . .
July ...
fid %
87%
51%
52%
:;i %
ai%
15.55
14.87
8.5n
8.02
July . .
Sept . .
Sales
Cotton Steed Oil.
Open. Cloae.
......6.26 0.27
.. ,.'..0.25 0.27
15400.
Chicago I,lve Stock.
Estimated receipts today 50000.
Estimated receipts tomorrow 13000.
Official receipts yesterday 0359.
Hogs dull, fully 15 lower than Sat-
urday's average. Cattle lOAo 15
lower. Sheep 10 to 15 lower.
VIEWPOINT
WHY MOTHER. IS TIRED
By BYRON WILLIAMS
E are told the world was a
very sad. unhappy place be-
fore woman came. The gar-
den was a wild, aygurding to
I, Inhabited by a hermit who
sighed and wondered what ailed him
At time* there seemed to be a void In
hi* life as big as a bale of hay. There
wasn’t anything to do but to alt around
and feel louely. count the doves on the
cupola of the unicorn bouse and won
Uer why.
And when she arrived I haven't o
doubt but that the hermit came run
ntng out with a complaint that there
were three buttons off Ills trousers, the
banger ou his coat needed fixing and
bla socks were as full of holes as a
Swiss cheese.
Before the woman got her hat off
this long suffering man undoubtedly
asked her If *be wouldn't make nome-
biscuits like mother used to make, stir
up a batch of pancake batter, pop some
corn, chase the flies out of the dining
room, water the flowers and spilt a lit-
tle kindling for the morning fires.
No wonder mother Is tired when
night comes. Let’s take a little trip
H. Styt «C.,
New York Cotton.
New York, April 24.—The mar-
kets had the folio wing range today:
Close
July . 15:04 .......7. 15.13 15.00
Oct .12.99 ........ 13.02 12.93
ANSWERS EVERY CALL
Sherman 1'conic Have Found
This Is True.
Thai
New Orleans Cotton.
New Orleans, April 24.—-Tito mar-
kets had the following range today:
Yestd’j
Open. High. Low. Close. Close
July .15.13........ 15.26 15.05
Oct . 12.98 ....... 12.97 12.92
Spot cotton was firm
Middling 15 cents.
Sales 1250 bales.
A cold, a strain, a sudden wrench.
A little cause may hurt the kid-
neys.
epells of backache often follow.
Or some irregularity of tile
urine.
A certain remedy for such attacks.
A medicine that answers every
call.
Is Doan’s Kidney Pills, a true spe-
cific.
. Thousands of people rely .upon it.
Here is one case:
G. B. Deckard. three and half
miles east of Whitesboro. Texas.
sa>B: “Several years ago 1 was at-
tacked by pains in my loins, often
so severe that I could scarcely
move. The passages of the kidney
secretions were also irregular and
accompanied by a burning sensation.
1 tried several remedies and ron-
•sulted a doctor, but without getting
relief. Seeing Doan's Kidney Pills
7.82
7.71
LI vet-pool Cotton.
Liverpool, April 2 1 -The mar-
kets had the following range today:
Yestd'y
Open. High, Low. Close. Close.
May-June—
7.87 -m.’ ... 7.88
July-Aug—
7.75 . , . . 7.77
Spot cotton was steady.
Middling 8523 cents.
Sales 12,000 bales.
Galvcsi in Cotton.
Galveston soots was firm.
Middling 15 3-16 cents.
Sales 917 bales.
Total, port receipts 9,359 against
8,219 last year.
SHE UMAX LOCAL MARKET.
Butter............15c tb $ .20
Eggs............1 2 % to 1 5c
Turkeys, per lb ............15
Corn..............50 to .65
grass
lb
10.00
.08%
advertised, 1 procured a box and af- . , ‘ ' '
ST£S2 'ATs mk£ife:-per -.............-a
K?^«*tpni«hs<,nf- 1 C°,Miafa PT'81 Cotton in' seed''. . !!!! 4.80 to 4.90
Ktdney Pills to be a splendid kidney Cotton lint......n,00 to 14.50
renM3djv Cotton seed! per ton
ASKS IF HK HAS HAD A BARD DAT.
with her. She gets up at 5:30 to knead
her bread nnd put a patch ou the
northeast corner of Willie's trousers
Willie mennt well when he tried to ne-
gotiate a flying jump over Brown’s
barbed wire fence, but fulled, and
mother is glad to fix the trousers lie
cause her heart is filled with thanks
giving. Willie did not have to eat his
supper standing up. which is evidence
enough that the cruel barb was only
wool deep; therefore mother slugs as
she sews.
At C o’clock mother begins to got
breakfast nnd to arouse the slumbering
family Father, lie it said to his credit,
always gets up when ho is called, but
Willie nnd Verne and Qrnce are Promo
thean bound to Morpheus. After a
great deal of strenuouslty mother at
Inst succeeds in getting the family
around the breakfast table, where she
feeds them, mean white being wary as
to their manners and deportment. At
last father gets away to Ills work, the
children ar" off lo school, and mother
drinks a clip of coffee, munches a piece
of cold toast and plans her day's cam-
paign.
There Is work to do on Verne's new
dress, for site goes to the city next
week. There Is bread to bake and din
tier to get. There Is a missionary meet
tug in the afternoon anil the shopping
to do. Mrs. Jackson Is going to call
some time during the day to learn how-
to make the stitch for n centerpiece;
the laundry Is expected; also the gro
cer's clerk, the milkman and the cof-
fee salesman. A roast has to be put
Into the oven nnd pie baked.
Dinner over and the missionary
meeting attended, mother cornea home
to find Willie soblt^ig over a cut finger
She gets the salve and the bandages
nnd fixes Willie's wound. Father nr
rives, Jooklng tired and cross. Site gets
bis slippers nnd pats hint on the head
nnd asks him if he has had a hard day-
fit the office.
Grace cannot, find her pens and ac-
cuses Willie of purloining them Moth
er stops a brewing scrap and spends
ten minutes bunting the pens, which
she finds. Then Willie cannot find his
lint. Mother tells him it must be hang-
ing in Its proper place instead of lie
ing thrown down wherever he hap
penod to be when he came to supper.
At tills juncture grandpa wants the
liniment, nnd Mrs. Means' hired girl
calls to ask If mother will come over
a mlmile—the baby has swallowed a
tack. Before she returns nn emissary
from tlio restaurant department of the
local church has colled to sec If moth
er will bake a enke for the supper Bat
unlay night. Miss Nowwod telephones
and wants to know how to boil an egg
and how to cook rice, dry or wet? Fa-
ther has lost the nutgnzlnc he was
rending, and Willie lias fallen asleep
on the sofa and lias to be carried up
stairs and put to bed
These nnd a few other things keep
mother tip and doing “with a heart for
any fate’’ until everybody but father
has gone to lied. 8he settles down
then to her sewing. Father reads and
smokes, maybe. And the minutes fly
away until It is bedtime. But just
before staying good night, if father lets
her know in one of the hundred ways
there are that he appreciates how tired
she Is, all the drudgery will be for-
gotten, all the trials will be pleasures.
Just a word of praise and love. How
far It goes with mother—God bless
her!
'-Zest
HAPPENINGS
FAHKWELl. TO CAUL,GRAY.
Frisco Official Who Goes to HUl Liucs
bs Guest of Honor.
St. Lout*, Mo., April 24.—More
than 6<>0 officers and employe* of
the St. Louis and San Francisco
railroad assembled from the eleven
states traversed by the railroad and
representing all branches of the ser-
vice, at a banquet In the Mercantile
Club gave Carl Raymond Gray, the
retiring senior vice president a re-
membrance book bound in pure gold
and "silver. The farewell dinner and
demonstration probably constituted
the moat signal mark of apprecia-
tion ever manifested toward a trans-
portation official In the United
States, at least in the west.
The token was the gift of 22,009
employes of the system. The 500
persons attending the dinner were
the chosen representatives of the en-
tire force. -Clerks, trainmen and ex-
ecutive officers were seated side by-
side, and the oldest employes, in
point of service, occupied places at
the speaker's table. It was a demo-
cratic feast and the cheering for the
guest may have been have heard in
Portland, Ore., where Mr. Gray goes
this week.
S. A. Douglass, foreman of the
down town Firsco slwtch engine, has
reported for duty after a vacatlou
of several days.
Switchman Pelly for the St. Louis
and San Francisco railway company,
has resumed his duties after a layoff
of several days.
Leo Lillis, a machinist in the
North yards of the St. Louis and
San Francisco railway company,
spent yesterday in Dallas.
J. R. Newberry, lineman for the
Texas and Pacific railway company
with headquarters in Paris, is here
for a few days on company busi-
ness.
Roudmuster Beck for the St. Louis
and San Francisco ailwav company
with headquarters in Ft. Worth, was
in the city this morning.
There was-a derailment on the
line or the Missouri, Oklahoma and
Gulf railway company yesterday at
Sherman junction. An engine was
off the track for about two hours,
however, no other delay of Jraffic
occurred.
o-.- .
The News of
The Courts
IT WILL GET YOUK GCKT
MAKE ANYBODY^ GOAT LAUGH
KELLOGG’S FUNNY JUNGLE BOOK
Funniest thing you ever saw, as good
as going to the Circus.
Moving pictures of animals—changing
heads and arms—dancing, singing,
skating. 3t)0 combinations of laughs.
This Is the Way lo Bel this 2Sc. Book Free
Send us the tops of two packages of Kellogg’s Toasted Corn Flakes
(be sure you have the right packages and do not send any substi-
tute) together with the coupon properly filled out and
we will mail you the book free.
If your grocer does not handle Kellogg’s, try another
place. If they don’t keep
V
T oThe Kellogg T oa.ted Cora Floko Co*
Wood and Povdru St.., Dailaa, Tins
Pleote tend me a Ktllooo Funny Jonoletand
Boo*, for tchir/i / enrtoee you IA« loot of two
liuckaret KiUowt Tootled Corn flak".
it.l.l.t.t.l.l.l.l.lKl.l.t.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.WI.I.1.1
it, send us 10c in stamps
along with the coupon
to cover the cost of post-
age and packing and
the name of your regu-
lar grocer and we will
mail you the book.
[OUT THIS SIGNATURE
TOA$TEJ>
V. M. U. A. “GYM” EXHIBITION.
Program to Be Rendered by Mcm-
Imrs of All Glasses.
For sale by all dealers. Price 50 | Frying chickens dog.. .'. 3.00 to
Fosj^r-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the
United States.
Remember the name—Doan's—
and take no otheij.-
Wheat
Alfalfa hay, per ton (choice)
22.no
3.50
1.05
22.00
WANT ADS. If 7/7 fttl.P.
Chief of Polce Henry DeSpttin
has begun the proper enforc ment
of the hitching ordinance as regards
the hitching of horses around the
court square and on Travis street.
He and members of the police force
have been busy today In seeing thai
the ordinance is complied with.
< into Cass- Basses.
in the city court this morning
there was one case called before
Judge Jameson but it was carried
over until tomorrow. The .defend-
ant was charged with allowing Ills
team to stand too long in one place,
as is made a violation under the
city ordinances.
Damage Suit Filed.
Claude M. Powers has filed suit
in the Fifteenth district court
against the St. Louis and San Fran-
cisco railway company for damage
to the amount of $35,000, alleging
that on September 14, a handhold
on a box car broke and let him fall
to the ground, recieving permanent
personal injuries. He wa^ a switch-
man In tlie yards at Sapulpa and it
was at that place that the accident
occurred.
In the District Court.
May A. Braun vs. Fred Braun is
the style of a suit on trial today in
the Fifteenth district court before
Judge 11. L. Jones. It is a hearing on
the part of the plaintiff for defend-
ant to sltow cause why he should not
he adjudged in contempt of court for
failure to pay alimony as pet- pre-
vious order of the court.
-—A-
When you get White Rose
Oookltig Oil you can use It In so
Jttuy different ways. Always pure
atm 3weet as butter. Call W. D.
WlVarton, old phone 681. f22-tf
sheriff McAfee Returns.
Sheriff Lee McAfee returned litis
afternoon from Co-rims Christ I hav-
ing in charge N. \Y. Elmore, arrested
thereon a warrant charging murder.’
On account tof prison regulations Mr.
Elmore could not lie seen this af-
ternoon before press hour.
j Case on Trial.
The case of May Heed, ot al, vs.
Florence Parsons, et al. to clear a
title is on trial this afternoon in the
district court.
Fifty-Ninth District Court.
The case of Fred Parker, charged
with the homicide of W. L, Scott,
was called for trial this afternoon ill
the Fifty-ninth district court before
Judge J. M*. Pearson.
The first annual gymnasium exhi-
bition conducted under tint physical
Department of the Sherman Young
Men's Christian Association will be
given Tuesday night, April 25th, at
8;15 p. m.
The mem tiers of the various gym-
nasium classes have been drilling foff
tlie past month in preparation for
their places on the program. Physical
Director H. E. Crate has been train-
ing two special squads of senior
members, one in gymnastic dancing
and the other in German marching
especially for the exhibition. This
type ot gymnastic exercise is a de-
parture from old methods, affording
pleasure to both theme who take part
as well as to those who witness, a
demonstration of snappy pyramid
building will be enacted by the
working boys and intermediate clash-
es. Several lively games will be
sandwiched between acts which are
guaranteed to extract peals of laugh-
ter from the gallery spectators.
Tito following plan of admission
will be used on Tuesday night: Each
participant in the exhibition will be
given three tickets to be given away
free to those whom he desires to
have attend. It is hoped that in the
distribution of these tickets that the
parents and immediate families of
those taking part will he first con-
sidered. Ladies will be most gladly
welcomed. Admission will be by
ticket only. Tills plan is used on ac-
count of our limited seating space
on the running track. There is a
possibility that the exhibition will
lie repeated, with new features add-
ed, on Thursday night at a charge
of 25 cents admission to help de-
fray the expense of the exhibition,
and to apply on the cost of fitting
out an outdoor gymnasium.
The program' for the evening is as
follows;
Evening I’regi-am:
Overture “Sonora Waltz" —
First Act —Entry March. Seniors.
Second Act Free Calisthenlc ex-
ercises, seniors.
Third Act - Apparatus exercises,
seniors, led by C. L. Bradford, Tom
Wright, It. E. Stollings and K.
Grafton, members of Leaders Club.
Participants in first three acts—
It E. Stollings, D. K. Grafton, C.
L. Ballard, Tom Wright. Frank
Grafton, C. C Jordan. W. C. Scott.
Fat Ramsey. Clifford Sentell, J. B-
Perot, Roscoo Jackson, Kenneth
Chenault, Don Hook, Jno. Wake-
field. Jno. S. Hefner. F. G. Mr Elroy,
Floyd Ramsev. W. G Corder, Of.
Thrasher, Gits- Modrall, E. F. Wig-
gins, J. D. Lillie.
Fourth Art Tug of War, Busi-
ness Men's Volley Ball Classes. Four
o'clock teams vs. Five o'clock teams.
Fifth Act Bar Bell Drill. Jun-
iors. Cameron Braekney, Manuel
Rfesenberg, ^ Raymond Stephens,
Ijalnier Schumacher, Leon Irby, Hen-
ry Burton. J. P. Wheat, Jr., Ia>e
Simmons, Sam Reeves, Olen Ramsey.
Sixth Act—Gymnastic Dancing,'
“Dance of the Dixie Rubes," Seniors.
R. E. Stollings. C L. Bradford. E. F.
Wiggins, D. K. Grafton. C. C. Jor-
dan.' H. E. Crate.
Seventh Act- Hyman Pyramid
Building. Intermediates and Work-
ing Boys Sqluad No 1—Grover Can-
trell, Clarence Stollings, layon Rey-
t’y*Tright, /gey, by Metropolitan Syndicate, A’. Y.
Step Into A Higher Position
If your ability lias improved, your value bas improved. And
sometimes the easiest way lo get a raise is to get it from a new em-
ployer. The easiest way to find a new employer, and tlie raise In pay.
is to let a Democrat classified ad find it for yog in the Market-place of
the Munnimakers. No surer way to turn goods into money;—no surer
wuy to find a buyer for tlie thing you want to sell;—or to find an
employer for your time;—than to step Into tlie Market-place with u
little classified ad. Pick out any article you can spare,—write a fair tie-
scriptipn of it,—put a fair price on it. lust see htgv quirk the Munni-
maker ad will bring a buyer, and will hring money to your pocket.
Wall
Car New 191t Patterns Art
Paper just received.
a21-3t WALSH HARDWARE CO,
A TEXAS WONDER.
The Texas Wonder cures kidney
'and bladder trouble, removes
gravel, cures diabetes, weak and
lame backs, rheumatism and all ir-
regularity of the kidneys and blad-
der in both men and women, regu-
lates bladder troubles in children.
If not sold by your druggist, will be
sent, by mail on recv'pt of $1.00.
One small bottle is two months’
treatment and seldom fails to per-
fect a cure. Send for Texas testi-
monials. Dr. E. W. Hall, 2926 Olive
St. Louis, Mo.
nolds, Rudolph Parker, Calvin Case.
Olen Ramsey, Jno. Reid. Squad No. 2
—Max Blassingante, Corner Goff,
Newlon Sanford, Jno. Naylor, Edgar
Hatmltpn, Arva Corder, Wei den
Moore, Cleveland Burton. Squad No.
3—Chas. Ludlow, Paul Newman,
Tom Thrasher, Bob Piner, Jno. Ad-
amson, Roy Vest, Gus Wright.
Eighth Act —“Oh! the Bull Frogs
on the Mat," Seniors. D. 1<. Grafton,
C. L. Bradford, H. E. Crate.
Ninth Act—German Marchin, son*
tors. D. K. Grafton, R. E. Stoll-
ings, Gus Modrall, Don L. Hook, Tote.
Wright, Clifford Sentell, Ken net li
Chenault, Pat Ramsey, Frank Graf-
ton, C. L. Bradford, Jno. S. Hefner,
Floyd Rbmsey, Jno. Wakefield, J.
R. Perot, Roscoo Jackson, E. F. Wig-
gins.
Tenth Act -Some Lively Games,
seniors.
Eleventh Act -A Hot Volley Hall
Game, Busines Men. Phelps Fhamc-us
Phour vs. All Star Picked Team.
WANTS—TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
TORNADOES and heavy winds are
getting closer every day. Take out a
policy on your dwelling and furni-
ture. !t doesn't cost but little.. Go to
your cellar and let. me look after
your home. Fire and storm policies
written only in old reliable compan-
ies, Sumner C. Moore, over Hol-
lingsworth Cariiet Co. „ al 5-tf
Your Floor
Problems Solved
W)
WHY BOND’SPILLS
ARE THE BEST
They are honestly made of best [
agents, and are small, gentle but
effective. Bond's Pills relieve the
bad effects of overeating or drink-
ing. Headaches, Biliousness, Con-
stipation, Sour Stomach, yield read-
ily to ONE PILL, taken at bed time.
Try them once. Their merit will
convince you.
A free sample on request. Men-
tion this paper.
BOND'S PHARMACY CO.,
Little Rock, Ark-
FOR SALE—Fjne Jersey cow, good
milker, fresh; second call', never goes
drv. A. Jones, 731 E. Brockett.
a2 4-tf
LOST—Wlatoh chain with Modern
Woodman charm. Finder please re-
turn to E. N. Holland. Hall Furnflneto
Co. and receive reward. 2 4-3t
FOR RENT—Furnished room just
west of high school building. Old
phone 556. a24-6t
FOR KENT—Nice front upstairs
it pm, w-ith board at Walsh House by
Mrs. Hawkins. a24-tf
TAKEN IT’—One brown mule, 14
hands high; branded 4H, about 18
years old. Owner can have same
by calling on me nnd paying for
advertising, and proving same. Mr.
Jobe. F. F. D. 1, Pottsboro. Tex.
a 2 l-Ct
T h your floors arc worn and shabby
•l and you arc at a; loss how to rc-
finish them, an easy way to do it is
by means of floor paint and a stencil
border. By use of this stencil bor-
der over a painted surface you can
finish your floor artistically so that it
will resemble a parquet effect and at
the same time harmonize perfectly
with the ircncral color scheme of the
room. For work of this kind two
coats of
Sherwin-Williams
INSIDE FLOOR PAINT
will produce the proper finish, the
stencil being applied after the second
coat is thoroughly dry by means of
S-W Stencil Colors. S-W Inside
Floor Paint comes in a number of
shades and combines durability with
quick drying qualities. It can be
scrubbed and cleaned without in-
jury to the surface.
vVe will be glad to talk over this
metnod of floor finishing with you if
you will come to our store.
Gibbs’ Drug Store
iv.
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Sherman Daily Democrat. (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTIETH YEAR, Ed. 1 Monday, April 24, 1911, newspaper, April 24, 1911; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth645066/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .