Sherman Daily Democrat. (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTIETH YEAR, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 21, 1911 Page: 3 of 8
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I
IF YOU WANT TO REACH
TIIK FARMERS
OF GRAYSON (AUNTY AD-
VERTISE IX THE
SHERMAN
WEEKLY DEMOCRAT.
SECOND HEAD SECTION—PAGES 3 TO 6
SHERMAN DAILY DEMOCRAT.
THE DAILY DEMOCRAT
IS DELIVERED
BT CARRIERS IN SIIERJUN
AND DENISON
AT
50 CENTS PER MONTH.
SHERMAN, TEXAS, JANUARY 21, 1011, 1:30 I*. M.
♦ Are You Taking it for Granted
* or Do You
Know
that you are getting the best
Shoes to be had for your
money. There's one sure way
of knojving and that is by try-
ing this one—Patent or Plain
Leather.
$3,00
Ever see it? Do!
} FORECAST OF
COMING WEEK
TIIE OUTLOOK IS FOR A BUSY
AND INTERESTING WEEK
IN CONGRESS.
Under the Dome
of State Capitol
R. W. YATES
It’s Your First Order
The Qualify Coal Man is After
Then you’ll be after him with your future or~
tiers. — There’s a reason.
Good Coal—Perfect Service
JIM SNYDER
HAS COAL AND
WOOD TO BURN
IF YOU HAVEN’T, PHONE 354.
«><$■ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
►4 •
▼
t
t
> >
i >
< i
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I
Healthy, Hungry Men
are not satisfied with a vegetarian
diet. Nor with any hut good meat.
"Why not eat good meat every day?
We sell ft. We have the juiciest,
tenderest. freshest of, Beef, Veal,
Lamb and I’ork. And prices are
right.
■■■«-» -----—■■■■► - . » . gfcii i -------
EKE PACKING HOUSE MARKET
H. .1. It Y LA NT, Prop.
S. IV. Dotson, Manager lor the Sherman
Concrete Company
tu»/ commenced setting the blocks for the Jess Totten residence
on East Cherry street and he invites the public in general to come
and see the work for themselves.
We are still building sidewalks as cheap as the cheapest and
we are here to stay and if you have any such work to do, call
us up. New phone (it, and we will come to see yon.
SHERMAN CONCRETE COMP AN V
S. N. Dotson, Mgr.
♦♦♦♦<►♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦#♦ ♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦<
Use the Light That's the 'Brightest {
and y cull Use the t
Gas Light
It's the Best and the cheapest
SHERMAN GASLIGHT & FUEL COMPANY
t
\
DEMOCRAT WANTS WILL SATE YOU MONEY.
Electric Power
Your profits are not. so much dependent on WHAT you man-
ufacture as«fho WAY you manufacture it. If you are wasting
power by engine drive With its long line* of shafting you are not
manufacturing In the best way.
Drive Your Alachmery by General Electric
Motors and see your Profits Increase
CHARLTON CASE TO COME TP |
Tlm*<» N<*\v llishops of tlw» l''|»ivo|>«il
Hiurch and Out* of the Catholic
t hurt'll to lh‘ C'onserrattMl—Tht*
(vttTiiian ljii|Hkror’s Ihrthda.v.
Ill
v,W
Kpiii
I
Washington, D. C., Jan. 21.—The
outtock is for a busy and interest-
ing week in congress, and the legis-
lative Sessions in several of the
states also will fay claim to a large
febare of public attention, in sev-
eral of the states the efforts to se-
lect. United States senators will be
continued, while irt others the sen-
ators now holding office will be re-
elected without opposition. Sena-
tor ! a Folieltp of Wisconsin and
Senator Culberson 'of Texas are
among t bos slated for re-election.
In Colorado tlie legislature will
chouse a successor to tile late Sen-
ator Hughes. Mayor Speer of Den-
ver, former Governor Alva Adams
and-Gerald Hughes, son of .the late
senator, are among those prominent-
ly mentioned for the senatorship.
A meeting of the. Prohibition .Na-
tional committee will be held in
Chicago Tuesday to consider the
general prospects of the party and
to discuss preliminary plans for
the presidential campaign of next
year.
The habeas corpus proceedings- to
prevent the extradition of Porter
( hariton to Maly to stand trial for
tlie murder of his wife, Mary Scott
Castle Charlton, will again come
up for hearing .Monday in the Unit-
ed States Circuit court at Trenton
Tlie department-of state baa honor-
ed the request of the Italian gov-
ernment for Charlton’s extradition,,
but, the turning over of the yt ,«ng
man to the Italian authorities was
blocked by /the prisoner’s father,
who applied for a writ of habeas
corpus.
The week will he marked hv the
consecration of three new bishops,
♦ wo of ttio Episcopal church and
one of the Roman Catholic church.
The Rev. Louis Childs Sanford will
oe consecrated .____in San Francisco
Wednesday as hea l of new Episcopal
diocese in the San Joaquin valley.
In St. Paul the same day will .take!organization
place the consecration of the Rev.
Theodose Payne Thurston as mis-
sionary bishop of the Episcopal dis-
trict of Eastern Oklahoma. Tlie
Catholic priest to he elevated to
the bishopric is the Rev. Father Ed-
ward I' Kelly, whose consecration
as auxiliary bishop of Detroit is
scheduled to take place Thursday in
Ann Arbor.
Other interesting events of the
week will include the celebration
or the birthday anniversary of the
German emperor, the twenty-fifth
annual meeting of the Canadian So-
ciety of Civil Engineers in Winni-
peg, tlie annual convention of the
Association of American Advertisers
in Chicago, the meeting of tlie Na-
tional Merchant Marine congress at
Washington, and- tlie opening of
the regular session of the Provin-
cltil legislature of Ontario.
__— -—.-f-—,—-
THE STAPLE
- - FOR 1909-10
THE GOVERNMENT REPORT ON
THE AMERICAN COTTON
PRODUCTION. /
NOTICE.
For sale, my home, (11 2 North Lee
Avc. 4 room house, two lots 50x12b.
Young orchard, storm house. City
and well water, and a small- hew
barn. 11,500.00 cash, if taken at
once. See .1. I!. Harrison, 012 N.
Leo Ave., or Coplev & Gresham.
jlO-tf
New routes, free delivery being
established for White Rose Cooking
Oil and Sherman Eoap. Phone your
address to RSI, old phone. W. D
Wharton. Agent nlB-tf
Potato water-will remove mud
stains from nearly any kind of cloth
or garment.
. ArnnW? AOS —
Now, that the steam roller has
passed over them, the anti senators
are not doing a great", deal ot
chuckling,, but some of them declare
that their, time to laugh is "coming.
They are no longer greatly concern-
ed as to the liquor regulation bills,
for an anti-prohibition governor is
now in office, and he has said in
his message that if it is tlie purpose
to embarrass hint by passing such
hills, no time ought to be lost.
The house, by tlie way, passed
the daylight ataloon bill to engross-
ment. But the anti-prohibition sen-
ators know that there are other
subjects than the liquor traffic to
be legislated upon and they figure
that sente .of the pro senators may
join them upon these Subjects, con-
vert ng their side into tlie majority
and tlint some of the men who
changed the rules may lie embar-
rassed by the same. For example,
they say that the senators on-their
side may make the demands und<>r
the'new rales for Immediate ruling
on points of order, to the discomfit-
ure of the other side.
Furthermore, it is said that the
antis, since the steam roller ha:,
passed over them, ore determined to
dictate the date of the election upon
tlu- state-wide 'prohibition Amend-
ment or put it up to the pros not
to have submission at all. -Eleven
votes can block the submission of
an amendment, and they have eleven
votes. They say, that the instruc-
tions in the primary* 1 were simply
tor submission, m-t for submission
at any particular time and that
they stand ready to submit tlie ques-
tion. at tlie earliest possible date.
Hon. Thomas H Ball'of Houston,
head of the state-wide prohibition
reached* Austin, yester-
day and conferred with the pro
senators In regard to the emission
from the pro pc ml amendment,
which was mentioned in these dis-
patches Thursday. It, lias been
agreed to cure tlu> defect hv r.dd|"'T
a clause which shall continue the
present local epttm laws in effect,
pending further 1-y islation, in the
event state-wide prohibition shall
carry This clause, as now drafted,
reads\as follows:
“And until stirh iaws are passed
and become effective all laws in
force when this ^amendment is adopt-
ed. providing reindii s, penalties and
forfeitures in regard to the manu-
facture, sale or transportation of iv
toxicaling liquors shall remain in
full force and effect.'’
- ♦«
TO GET .
ITS BENEFICIAL EFFECTS
ALWAYS BUV THE GENUINE
KIDNEYS REBUILT.
HAS YOUR KIDNEY TROUBLE
GOT INTO AN ADVANCED STAGE?
Ppssib'y so and YOU FAIL TO
REALIZE IT.
THE TIME TO DOCTOR Kidney
and Bladder trouble !s AT ONCE.
No form of di ea -e mal^-s its ad-
vance more surely but insiduous'v.
It is a trouble that must be die-ked
at once.
if yours has been of, short Jura-
tion. depend on K A MINE quickly
reestablishing a cor, di ton of perfect
health........one or two boxes will do
tlie work.
If the trouble 's old—chronic—
you may with < qmU certainty dOttem;
on K A VINE brWnR you “into
shape.'’
K A VINE IF SURE IN ITS WORK
impend on it.
K A VINE SHOWS RESULTS IN
SEVEN DAYS. '
For sale l>j .Lankford. Keith Ji
Nall.
THIS IS MY 5(011 BIRTHDAY.
Jaiuiacy 33.
Maurice Hewlett.
+------—-- —-----------+
GEN. LUTHER HARE ON TOUR
AND
MANUFACTURED BV THE
SHERMAN ELECTRIC & GAS >
COMPANY
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦«
SOLD BY ALL LEADING
, „ 0RU3SISTS.
Owe Size only, so^ a Bottle
Maurice Henry Hewlett, whose
poetry, romances and other writings
•have made his name well known on
both sides of the Atlantic, was tu rn
in Kent, England. January 22, 1 SGI.
His education was received from
private tutors and at, the London
International College, supplemented
by extensive travel on the conti-
nent. He studied law and engaged
in the practice of that . profession,
but of late years lias devoted tit/
greater part of his time to litera-
ture. His first book, entitled
"Earthwork Out of Tuscany," was
published in 1895. Among his
other well known works are “Ttie
Alaska of Deal! Florentines,’’, “Songs
and Meditations," "The Forest 1,ov-
ers,” "Pan and the Young Shep-
herd." “Little Novels of Italy,
"Now Canterbury YTales," "The
Road in Tuscany,” "Fopd Adven-
tures" and “Tlui Fool Errant.”
DISSOLUTION NOTICE.
AMUSEMENTS.
Tlie Statistics Show That of This
l ifty-1wo lYr Cent of.lt Was Ex-
ported—However, It Develops
Uiat Southern .Mills Use More.
TOTAL OF 12,188,021 BALES
Washington, Jan. ,21.—Represent-
ing the muddy - of cotton -in the
United States for the year end;d
Aug. ill last as being 12,188,024
bales, 20 per cent less than that of
tite previous .year, ,in its annual re-
view of the cotton supply, tDo census
bureau says that 52 per cent was
exported.
Tiie quantity of cotton consum-
ed during the year was 1,798,05:1
bales, compared with 5,240,71 :t
bales in 1909, a decrease., of .441,706
bales, of 8 per cent. The average
weekly consumption of cot tour in
the United States in 1910 amounted
to aboitt 92,000 bales, compared
1 with >7,'00 in 1909 and 96,000 in
1907."
_ A significant feature of tlie re-
port is the growth shown in the
manuV'tuiing industry in the cot-
ton growing states since 1880.
There wire in these states thirty
years ago only 561,36(1 active
spindles, which consumed IS8.7 4 8
bales. In 1910 there were. 10,801,-
4 9 4 active spindles, consuming 2,-
292,333 bales of cotton.
The quantity of domestic raw cot-
ton exported during the year end-
ing Attg 31, 1910, amounted to «»,-
9.028 running bales valued at
$460,868,020. Of this. 38 per cent
went to the United Kingdom. 30
per cent to Germany and A15 per
cent to France, these countries tak-
ing about five-sixths of the total
quantity exported.
According to the report the total
value of exported cotton goods of
doni stic manufacture for the year
ending June 30, 19 10, amounted to
$33,398,672. whereas the import of
manufactured goods into the United
States during tlie same year amount-
ed to f66,473,1 43 in value.
The industrial importance of
American cotton is ilustruted by the
fact that net less* than 9,000,000
persons are emplpyed in its produc-
ible and handling and in the indus-
tries for which it furnishes the raw
material.
--—♦ ——----
SOLVES A DEEP MYSTERY
"i want to thank you from the
bottom of my heart,” writes U. B
Rader, of Lewisburg, W. Va., "for
the wonderful double benefit I got.
from Electric Bitters, in curing me
of both a severe case Of stom-
ach trouble and of rheumatism,
from which I had been
an almost helpless -suffer-
er for ten years, it suited my
case as though made just for me.”
Fof dyspepsia, indigestion jaundice
and to rid the system of kidney
poisons that cause rheumatism,
Electric Bitters lias no equal. Try
them. Every bottle is guaranteed
to satisfy. Only 50c at Lankford-
Keith Drug Co. d&w
‘‘Miss Ananias" is the title of Ade-
laide Thurston's latest comedy ve-
hicle whTFh will be seen at the Sher-
man opera house on Jan. 26.
"Miss Ananias" is from the pen
of Catherine Chisholm Cushing, a
gifted young literary and social fa-
vorite of Washington. D. C., whose
short stories have attraceed much
attention of late. Miss Thurston has
placed tlie direction of her (our in j
the hands of that up-to-date firm of
theatrical managers, Cohan and Har- |
ris although Francis X. Hope, as in
former years, will be her manager.
George M. Cohan, the actor-author-
mr.niiger, and senior member of the
firm, ussorta Htat A’Miss.Jlnanias*’
is the most original and amusing
comedy he lias come across in years,
and the leading dramatic critics in
exery (ity where Miss Thurston has
appeared are of the same opinion.
OLD SOLDIER TORTURED
“For years 1 suffered unspeakable
torture from indigestion, constipa-
tion and liver troubles.” wrote A.
K. Smith, a war veteran, at Erie,
Pa., “but Dr. King's New Life
Pills fixed me all right. They’re
simply great.” Try them for any
stomach, liver or kidney trouble. On-
ly 25c at Lankford-Keith Drug
Co ./ d&xV
PRICE
All Suits
All Furs
BRACKNEY’S
( ►♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦»♦« ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦< <
A
! I
l I
m
II
If
% K
m
I'M
b
J We offer the young married folks a “Liberal Credit”
everything to furnish the home from kitchen to parlor,
BETTER INVESTIGATE
He Will Go to Panama to Visit llis
Daughter and Grandson.
Bubbling over with enthusiasm
and with clld-like glee and antici-
pation, Gen. Luther Haro bid good-
bye to friends at the San Antonio
club rooms last night, and left the
city at 10 o'clock en route for tiie
Panamh canal district to be away
for six weeks or more. Asked the
nature of his mission General Haro
said:
“I am going to the Panama Canal
district because l cannot stay away.
Down there somewhere mid the fra-
grance of orange blossoms and mid
th.e groves of eocounut palms is a
little cherub, a grandson of. mine,
which 1 have never seen, and tlie
whole purpose of my trip to Panama
is to pee -this fine youngster.”
General Hare has a married d tigh-
ter in Panama, Mrs. Charles F. Ma-
son, wife , of Lieut.-Col. Charles F.
Mason, Medical Corps of the i'nited
States Army, stationed at Ancon,
Panama. Colonql Mastin' is chief of
the hospital corps at rliat place.-
San Antonio- Express.
i
11. B. Smith Furniture Company.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦«
COAL
Osage McAlester Lump and Nut,
Briar Creek, Lump and Egg
Colorado Egg
PRICES RIGHT AND WEIGHTS GUARANTEED
E.ARNOLD!
Phones 90
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦<
I
\
Closing Out Sale
The low prices combined with high quality is causing our
stock to move.fast. Conn- early if you don’t want to miss some
bargains.
The firm of Stowe & Russell has
this day been dissolved by mutual
consent, W. S. Russell retiring.
C. L STOWE.
- W. S. RUSSELL.
Sherman, Tex., Jan. 10, 1911.
John Stowe, son of C. L. Stowe
will be associated in the future with
his father and the offices will be
over the Lyric on the East Side of
tlie square. j 12-tf
-.......
CITY POLL TAX.
You have until Jan. 31st, 1911,
to pay poll tax in the city. Cannot
vote in any election without it.
X. It. BATHROP, '
1 7-tofl Assessor and Collector.
20 lbs. Brown Sugar.. .#$1.00
$1.25 Edam Cheese. . . . . . .OOc
65c Pineapple Cheese.... „45c
6 0c Swiss Cheese, per lb..50c
50c can of Comb Honey. . .40c
75c jar of Cupid Preserves .50c
50c jar of Apple Butter. . ..80c
35c bottle of Pineapple
Juice........ 30c
35c bottle of. Anchovies.. .80c
50c bottle Creme DeMenthe
Cherries...... 35c
75c bottle German Pearl
Onions.............. .55c
35c bottle Cupid- Sweet and
Sour Midgets........35c
35c bottle Heinz Mustard
Ohow........ 35c
65c Ferndell Plum Pudding 45c
35c Ferndell Plum Pudding 3-‘c
35c Ferndell Preserved Red
Pitted Cherries........35c
30c Lyndon Red ’’itted Cher-
ries-. . . . .... .......20c
15c canned Pork and Peas' 10c
35c Ferndell Asparagus
Tips.......... ,25c
40c Ferndell Asparagus,
tall.. ............ ,85c
30c Ferndell Lobsters.... 20c
35c Uwanta Crabs ........25c
20c Ferndell Pork and
Beans..............|5«
35c Ferndell Canned Roup.35c
Royal Anne Cherries. .20e
Ferndell Beets........15c
20c Ferndell Pumpkin,
2 cans for...... 85
35c Ferndell Glass Jelly..85c
Sour and Hot Relish, per qt 15c
12 Dill Pickles for........ 15c
30c
20c
Cash Grocery Co.
Elks' Bldg., ola (hone 125. new 121
SHERMAN UNDERTAKING «).,
■ 1 ■ ^
North Side Square
r"
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Sherman Daily Democrat. (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTIETH YEAR, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 21, 1911, newspaper, January 21, 1911; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth647611/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .