Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTY-FIFTH YEAR, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 8, 1916 Page: 3 of 8
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Saturday, July 8, 1916
Summer Clearing Sale Prices
MEN S OXFORDS
All
All
All
f J,
, AW
..$5.50
1 J' ...
..$4.00
/ J1
..$3.25
J J
f '
/
WOMEN’S OXFORDS AND PUMPS
’t - ' A
AH $6.(X) valoea:.
.......$4.75
j V ‘>*5
All $5.00 values..... ...
.......$4.00
i A
All $4.00 values......
......$3.25
” % 5|
All $3.50 values. M.....
.......$3.00
AH $3.00 values. .,.....
.......$2.50
YATES SHOE CO.
THE ONE PRICE SHOE. STORE
STACK OF ERRORS
FEATURE OF GAME
SHERMAN IvOSES YESTERDAY'S
CONTEST TO THE PARIS
TEAM S TO *.
Office Furniture and Supplies
We are Agents for • r ^
%
Allsteel, Y. & E. and Weis Furniture and
Supplies of all kinds.
OUR PRINTING WILL PLEASE YOU.
Reynolds-Parker Co.
J
Sherman played a listless, ragged
games yesterday, marked hy poor suit
port and frequent muffing. and lout to
the Survivor*, 8 to 2. Shiite (darted
on the mound for the locals with lota
fVT stuff. going pood for three innings-
lit the fourth and fifth, two Innings of
town hall for the I dona. Par la scored
alx off five hlta. three errora and nil
inerons alow play*. The wore showa
a total of alx mlaplaya for the Liens,
hut those do not (nclude the many
aleppy plays whf&li took place; the
lalter allow. In the run column of the
visitors.
Hlgglnftofhum succeeded Ship!' in
the fifth and let the Survivors down
with four hlta and half as many runs.
decree Murphy, a local hoy. played
In a Paris uniform and featured with
several nice- catches In right field and
also alarrcdlnt hat. hy driving In two
runs with a long double, which lilt
(he score board. ’ ,
'HaH‘s error in letting Frantz on in *
the sixth, followed liy two-hase drives
by E. Sheffield and Mackey, netted the
local's only inns.
f Harrison and Mackey supplied Ihe
pepper for the entire nine yesterday
hut It was •Ineffective and with no
trouble at all the Frnntzmen lost n
mechanically played game.
1 Totten, for the visitors, hit .750 and
D. M. HESTAND, M. D., D. C.
Chiropractic Adjustry
315 South Walnut Street—First House South of Library.
A. F. McKNOWN, J. F. WHITE and W. O/ALUSON, Assistant*
1
Nothing Finer
for breakfast than fine llaron or Sliced Ham, served with toast, eggs
and a good rtip of roffee. You will have to buy your coffee and eggs
somewhere else, bill come to US for the best HAM and BACON.
HIGHEST SCORE FOR CLEANLINESS.
Sherman Fish and Neat Market
♦♦♦#♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
(•© •©• O •© • O •X>*X>*X*X>?<X*0*©*0*0(*X>^i0®0 *OCi<ys)
I
8
?
?
s
i
8
.....
We Aim lo Satisfy the
Particular Customer-
and to him we offer a bread of the highest quality—a
strictly fine and close-grained, swefct, wholesome loaf
The Butter-Nut
Order from your Grocer.
Vienna Steam Bakery
gj W ATCH OUR WINDOW’. 207 SOUTH TRAVIS 8T.
|o* Or©*©* <•©* o •O^Xy-O^O-OsaiOs
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
IT WILL PAY YOU TO READ THE WANT ADS.
We Are Headquarters For
Picnic Lunches!
and OTHER GOOD THINGS to Eat
Cash Grocery Company
figured in three runs.
Score:
Sherman—
AB n PO A E
Young. 2b.........
0 2 3
1
J. Sheffield, If ......
. 3
l 1 1
1
Llpps, m .... .......
. 4
1 0 0
0
Frantz. 11*.........
. 4
1 " J
1
Sorey, ss ...........
0 2 3
1
F. Sheffield, rf ......
. 3
t 2 1
O
Mackey, ............
. 4
t 1 2
0
Harrison, e ........
. 2
Oil 1
0
Slit;>e. p...........
. 1
0 0 1
0
Illgglbotham, .......
..2
0 1 0
0
Total? .. .’.......
5 27 13
6
Paris—
AB H TO A F,
Hall. If ............
. 5
1 2 0
1
Cook, tli..........
. 1
0 10 0
0
Totten. 31* .........
. 4
3 1 1
0
Clark, ss..........
. 5
1 2 3
0
Crittenden, e.......
. 5
1 3 2
0
Speer, 2b .. ........
. 5
0 4 1
1
Kverdnn, m ........
. 4
3 2 1
1
Murphy,'rf .........
. 3
1 3 1
0
Pure.il, p ..' ........
. 3
0 0 3
0
Totals .. .. .......
10 27 15
3
Purls............000 330 011—8
Sherman .. ........000 002 000 -2
Runs—Frants, E. Sheffield: Totten
3, Clark. Crittenden 2, Sneer. Ever-
don. Two-hase hits—Murhpy, - K.
Sheffield. Mackey. Frantz. Three-hsse
hit—Chirk. Sacrifice lilt—Murphy.
Slilpe. Sacrifice fly—Kvcrdon. Stolen
liases—J. Sheffield. Double play—
Mnrphv to Cook. T<eft on bases—
Parts 8. Sherman. First hns(; on halls
Dff Shlin* 1. off Higginbotham 1.
off l’ureelk" 5. Struck out—Bv Ship0
6. hy Purcell 3, by Higginbotham 1
lilt hv pitcher—Rv Higginbotham
(Totten.1 Hits Off Shipp 6 in 4 in-
nings, off Higginbotham 4 in 5 In-
nlifes. Time of game—A hour and 40
minutes empire—Myers.
ABOUT BASEBALL.
Manager Walter Frantz Gives His
Views on the Giant American Game.
won so many pennants. Its great to
win a pennant In a minor lengue If
its done In the right way. The game of
life Is. being played together with the
baseball game and the athlete that
doesn’t recognize the Importance of
This Is a greater bone head than any
who halts up the play on the diamond.
Clean living and a high Ideal are the
big determining factors. A dead fish
will float down stream hut It takes a
7lve one to go up stream. The public
is licgtiming to show great considera-
tion inr.oleah sport and fair play and
where those are not, there Is war and
blindness. \ Wo have had our bad
handicaps when we most needed a
strong front. We are crippled at
present hut hope to speedily remedy
this and go forward. The test of n
loyal public Is in Its ability to rise
and stand by the directors and club
with consideration. We have to build
up and not tear down. Lines are out
for several good men.
WALTER FRANTZ.
Notfs and Observations.
Dick 8|iecr put the |iep In his Sur-
vivors yesterday and the Lions lost.
Hnpiicr has regenerated and gone
from the Tulsa Producers to the Mus-
kogee team.
George Murphy, a Sherman hoy,
played right garden for Paris yester-
day and handled every chance perfcct-
, figured In a fast double play, lined
iF a two-bagger, got. on first once
through an Infield error. sacrificed
once and whiffed ome. His two-hag-
ger brought In two runs and started
the fireworks for Paris. Pretty good
day's w;ork for George. ♦
At MeAIester DIt Spencer had Ills
face punched by an irate Iceman who
took exceptions to his rulings and at
Tulsa one of the bleaeberltcs made a
true |icg at the umps in the center of
the diamond. After the game, Dit an-
nounced that he lmd worked his last
game In the Western Association nnd
Jimmy Stewart, a resident of Tulsa,
who has bee.il doing a comeback with
Price's team, has liccn handling the
indicator there. The fans of thja city
will be sorry to miss Dit, for he hns
not. only been one of the
Is’st arbitrators that President
Hill has assigned to this
city hut lie has tact in the hand-
ling of the crowd and his bad ones
have not irritated the crowd as did
<’,v Mrogan's breaks. Tulsa Democrat
takes a firm stand against the rowdy-
ism that found expression in the pre-
sentation of the pop bottle to Umps
Spencer during the progress of the
game and properly trims the. enlprft to
a finish, informing him that he hus
disgraced his parents and Ihe city In
which he reside?. That’s the kind of
spirit that will maintain clean sport.—
Fort Smith Tlmcs-IiecorJ.
JACK LOVE OF SAN ANTONIO IS
TO SUCCEED WALTER
FRANTZ.
Official announcement was made this
morning of a change in the manage-
ment of the Sherman base bn 11 club to
take place immediately. Jack Love of
San Antonio, Texas, league, has been
soeured to manage the team following
a decision of the directors and Presi-
dent Will Fay that a change was nec-
essary In order to bolster up the club
and put It on a firmer basis. Love Is
nu ex-big leaguer, having played with
Kansas City In the American Associa-
tion and has an exceptionally fine
record for a player. His position is
second base.
President Fay further announces
that no expense will he spared* in re-
habilitating the team. Injecting new
life Into It and making a final effort 111
the pennant race* He has several
feelers out and Shormnn fans may ex-
pect some new faces on the local dia-
mond soon and with this announce-
ment a break In the losing streak re-
cently experienced,'may be looked for.
It is a well known fact that, a team
cannot play Its host, without patron-
age and the small turnout of fans nt
the last two games has done much
toward the brand of Imll played.
Love Is expected some-.tlnle Jodrr?
and will take charge Immediately. No
agreement lias been reached with Man-
ager Frantz but If Is probable that he
will remain here, playing first base for
the present.
Sherman Players Percentages.
Young .. ....
......78
313
Nokes........
-300
Sheffield J. .. .
......62
264
Frantz........
263
Sorry■••• •• ••
......77
263
Sheffield, E. ..
......27
261
Lipps.,^., .. ..
.,,...66
237
Higginbotham ..
.....29
228
Harrison.....
171
Youngman.. ..
......25
160
Mackey......
......23
168
Corzine........
120
Shijip •• •• ••
......13
105
I'aireloth......
......23
041
- Club Bnttlug.
BASEBALL CALENDAR.
Western Association.
RESULTS YESTERDAY.
Paris S. Sherman 2.
Muskogee 4, Oklahoma City 2.
Tulsa 7, MeAIester (1.
Denison 7, Fort SmitbL-3.
WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY.
Tulsa at MeAIester.
Fort Smith at Denison.
Oklahoma City at Muskogee.
Paris at Sherman.
STANDING OF THE TEAMS.
Clubs—
Iterilson ..
MeAIester
Tulsa .. .
Fort Smith
Sherman ..
Plyd Won Lost IV-t
...76 42 27 .60!*
■ • • • • 7^, 48
......79* 45
......TS 37
.....78 35
Muskogee........80 35
Oklahoma City .. ..78 33
Paris .. ,. ........7!) 33
32
34
4t
43
45
45
46
.590
,570
.474
.440
.438
.423
.418
Raschall in n town will test the wis-
dom and judgment o”f people more than
any other enterprise. It Is an educator.
GemilniHsportsmnnship takes every-
thing into consideration nnd wants
class of entertainment nnd not alone
mere win. The people may get, n
real run for the money In seeing a
handicap race. Money can buy class
in sports ninny times and a hunch of
old heads may cinch a pennant but
not for a certainty. The main thing
these days is how to conduct a league
and have every club In tt prosperous.
In order to have the I vest In the game
the public hns to he educated In base-
ball, We arc face to face with a new
era in the game. Old ideas and meth-
ods are0 destined for the sernp heap.
There's more glory and credit In man-
aging and developing a club of young
sters and finishing along the middle
than at the top with a big expenditure
of money aml.no talent, for the big
leagues. The complaint of the major
leagues now is that the minor leagues
are not developing players and taking
sportsmanship cliances on winning tint
arc sacrificing everything to win. This
has made the minor league public,
hard'and'critical and quitters in the
extreme. It makes them narrow-
minded and kills the love of sport irnd
fair play. If a league Is to be a live
one there has to tie a great “get to-
gether” enterprise. There arc from
four to eight clubs In a league and
every town or city has to have an In-
terest hi every other club and its sue-
cess, ‘ There’s bound to he reverses,
hihnlleaps and had breaks. There's
five months to the race,'giving time
and opportunity for any club to re-
verse tilings under handicap. There's
time for change of players and im-
provements. The Boston Braves de-
served all the more credit for their
great achievement. All can’t win the
pennant, but all may have many points
of credit that the leaders fall to show.
The club in last place may beat the
leaders at; every turn In all their se-
ries. The brightest stars in the game
may be on the second division teams.
“‘A0 gallant fight”—“a handicap race”
makes the true blood to flow with
genuine enthusiasm. Walter- Johnson,
the siieed king, for the most part has
pitched on n tail-end club. The world’s
series doesn’t always have in it the
greatest players of the game. Detroit
wonld rather have had Ty Cobb ' of
world fame on its club ami lie around
the middle than at the top without
his brilliancy. It. is the divided hon-
ami variations in the game that
Texas lasagne.
RESULTS YESTERDAY.
Waco 8. Dallas 6.
Shreveport 2, Fort Worth 0.
Galveston 2. Beaumont J.
Houston 5-9. San Antonio 1-5.
WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY.
Fort Worth at Dallas.
Waco at Shreveport.
Galveston al San Antonio.
Ofily three games scheduled.
STANDING OF THE TEAMS.
Clubs—
Houston . .
Fort Worth
Waco ...
Shreveport
Pl.vd Won Lost Pet
......85
......84
......83
.....84
hold all together and it is narrow
miwlodiioss and ignorance and lack of
sportsmanship that kilts the.greatest
all-American game. It Is a greater
achievement to have put stars in the t‘ H
big firmament to shiue than to have^ <|t| ', g«
Galveston .. .. .....83
San Antonio . ......83
Dallas . .. ......85
Beaumont........83
49
48
47
43
42
38
35
33
36
36
36
41
41
45
50
50
.576
.571
.566
.512
.506
.458
.412
.:«>s
American League.
RESULTS YESTERDAY.
Detroit 9, Philadelphia 2.
Boston 2, Cleveland 1.
St. Louis 5, Washington 0.
New York 4, Chicago 3.
WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY.
•Chicago at New York.
St. Louis at "Washington.
Otevelnhd at Boston.
Detroit at Philadelphia.
STANDING OF THE TEAMS.
Clubs— 1’lvd Won lost Pet
New York . ........70 43
Cleveland.........71 40
Boston ...........70 39
Chicago..........09 37
Washington .. ..71 37
Detroit . .. .......73 37
St. Louis .. ........72 31
Philadelphia .......(id 17
27 \ .611
31
31
32 -
34
30
41
49
.503
.557
.536
.521
.507
.431
.258
Playing percentages of the players pf
the Sherman Bast' Ball club, April
20th to July 7th, Inclusive, by A. B.
Saul:
Individual Batting and Fielding.
Name. Games. Bat. Field.
918
921
953
985
922
957
977
904
982
948
978
951
1000
962
Name. Garnes^ Pet.
Denison................76 263
Ft, Smith ..............78 259
Tulsa J............ .. 79 247
Sherman .. _____________78 243
MeAIester.........." . ..78 242
Paris..................79 241
Oklahoma City .. .. .....78 235
Muskogee ................80 229
Club Fielding
MeAIester...............78 957
Tulsa..................79 1*56
Sherman .. .........78 952
Muskogee...............80 949
Denison .. ............76 9-17
Ft. Smith..............78 944
Parts..................79 942
Oklahoma City ..........78 935
Not official. Compiled from newspu-
per reports.__
SHOULD SLOAN’S LINIMENT GO
ALONG?
Of course it should! For after a
strenuous day when your muscles
have bceft exercised to the limit an
application of Sloan’s liniment will
take the soreness and stiffness away
and get you in fine shape for the
morrow. You should also use it for
a sudden attack of toothache, stiff
neck, backache, stings, bites and the
many accidents that are incidental
to a vacation. “We should as soon
leave our baggage as go on a vaca-
tion or camp out without Sloan’s lini-
ment.” Writes one vacationist: “We
use it for everything from cramps to
toothache.” Put a bottle in your bag,
be prepared and have no regrets, d&w
Confederate Veterans Meeting.
Every Low Shoe in Our House Most Tike • Walk.
In the face of the greatest advance in
leather known we offer our entire stock of
Spring and Summer Footwear at prices that
Rre can hardly buy the Shoes for now.
r
Boy Your Shoes Now or for Fotnre nod Save Money. :
BARGAIN
FOR QUICK SALE—Five-room bun.
galow on South Travis. All modem con-
veniences, house nearly new. Owner has
left town. If you are interested in soinbr J
thing first-class and at two-thirds its value
see
COPLEY & MILLS
NO. 3139.
. fcit
1 ML
Mildred Lee Camp U. C. V., will
hold its next regular meeting next
Sunday at the Y. M. C. A. hall at 3
p. m. This meeting will be an un-
usually interesting one. Mr. H. P.
Abney will sjmak for us and Comrade
J. M. Blaine will give a detailed ac-
count of a 'certain unfortunate organ-
ization which sprang up,in the coun-
try near Gainesville, Texas, during
the war resulting in the hanging of
between 35 and 50 men to the liroht,
of a certain Elm tree. This will be
of historic interest to many and
we trust that a goodly number will
be present. Everybody invited.
J. B. STINSON.
Commander.
National league.
RESULTS YESTERDAY.
Philadelphia 1. St. Louis 0.
Brooklyn 4. Cincinnati 3.
PI t't still rgh 5. New York 2.
Chicago 1. Boston 0.
WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY.
Boston—at Chicago,
Brooklyn at.Cincinnati.
New York lit Pittsburgh.
Philadelphia at St. Louis,
STANDING OF THE TEAMS.
Clubs— Pl.vd Won Lost P<‘t
Brooklyn . ,'..'.,<.65 40 25 .615
Philadelphia......65 36 29 .5
Boston ...........62 33 29 .5
Chleago .........’.72 36 36 .5
New York .........65 31 34 .4
Pittsburgh......,.6S 32 36 .4
St. Louis ..........73 34 39 .4
Cincinnati........70 28 42 .4
THE PATH OF DUTY...„
Duty is not elusive, for It llos
right at your door. Go not so
far out of your path for a truar
life; keep strictly onward In
that path alone which your
genius points out;’ do the things
which lia nearest to you, but
which are difficult to do; live a
purer, a mora thoughtful and
laborious life, mora true to your
friends and neighbors, moro no-
ble and magnanimous.—Henry
D. Thoreau.
.A
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE
Merchants & Planters National Bank
AT SHERMAN |
In the State of Texas, at the Close of business on June 30th, l91q
RESOURCES.
V ,8 .
(a) Loans and discounts (except those shown
on b).............................. 11,788,675.32
Total loans.... .. .................. ... ,, 1,T88,675.3.,
U. S. Bonds:
(a) U. S. bonds deposited to secure circulation- (par
value)...............................
(b) U. S. bouds pledged to secure U. S. deposits (par
value................................
otat U. S. Bonds.......................
ornls, Securities, etc:
Bonds other than U. S. bonds pledged to soeurepos-
tal savings deposits......................
Securities other than U. S. bonds (not including
Total bonds, securities, etc ...;............
Stocks, other than Federal Reserve Bank Stock
a. Subscription to- stock of Fed- *
oral Reserve Bank .......$43,200.00 rj
b. Less amount, unpaid...... 21,000.00..........
h. Equity in banking house................. .. ..
Furniture and fixtures......................
Beal estate owned other than hanking house .. ..
Nfet amount due from Federal Reserve Bank .. ..
a. Net amount due from approved reserve agents in
New York, Chicago, and St Louis............
b. Net amount due from approved’ reserve ageuts
in other reserve cities.....................
Net amount due from banks and bankers
other than included in 19 or 11...........
Other cheeks on banks In the same elty or town as
reporting bank .. ... .. ............ .. .. ...
Outside cheeks and other cash items,...........
Fractional currency, nickels and cents...........
Notes of other national banks.................
Federal Reserve Notes ..'...............,.....
Coin and certificates.........•........ ,. ...
Legal tender notes......................
Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer and due
from U. S. Treasurer......................
345,000.00
20,000.00
• »
365,000.00
5,000.00
VM
■ -'•rtt j ;*
142,000.00
147.000.00
4,575-00
21,600.00
21,606.00
171,000.00
-• jr
171.000.0Q
-3S3
67,648.67
291,517.61
•h
101,783.84
393,301.45
28,755.65
1,288.76
103,847.72
%'tj,. i
2,488.64
30,044.41
15.850.00
3.000.00
87.f)Sl.OO
12,000.00
Total
$3,!
LIABILITIES:
Capital stock paid in .....
Surplus fund...........
Undivided Profits.......$122,588.73.......... 1!
Less current expenses. Interest and taxes paid ...
Circulating notes outstanding................•
Net amount due-to banks and bankers (other than
included in 29 or 30)........'......... ......
Demand Deposits:
Individual deimsits subject to cheek...........
Certificates of deposit due in less than 30 days 8..
Certified eheeks..........................
Cashier’s checks outstanding
United States deposits..........
Postal savings deposits .... .. ....,.
Deimsits requiring notice but teds than
Total demand deimsits, Items 33, 34, 35, 36, . 37,
k 39 and 40............................. 1,502,303.67
Time Deposits (puyable after 30 days, or subject
to 30 days or'more notice) :
Certificates of deposits .. .. ................
Other time deposits.............'.............
Total of time deimsits, Items 41, 42 and 43 .. ... 358,475.98
.00 •
_V
,21 ^ .
(.
I
• • • • * • a
$ 600,000.00
120,000.00
78,528.64
345,000.00
258,403.92
1,176.828.76
296387.68
57.00
356.96
22,388.33
998.40]
16,78
■ p*
294,924.66
61,551.32
• •••• • • •• •••
♦
$3,26*712.21
Total .... ..... .. ., ...
State of Texas, County of Grayson, as:
I, C. B. Dorchester, eashtef of the above-named hank, do solemnly swear’*’
that the above statement Is trqe to the best of my knowledge and belief.
C. B. DORCHESTER, Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 7th day of July, 1916.
A. C. SANDERS.
• - Notary Public, Grayson Co., Texas. • S
Correct—Attest:
» . i T. U. COLE, i)
H. W. HEAD. „ i‘ f ~
T. D. JOINER, v
1 Directors. * . jH
For the stomach and Imwel , disor- z™v"f7riiois’
dors of of babies MeGEES BABY I * <li»betps, weak and lame backs, rbanma-
ELTX1R is a remedy of genuine
morlt. It arts qiuekly* 1ft * 1 - j»yyoar<lrogrist. wilifae snitbrmail ontg-
wholesome and pleasant to take.l reiptoftl. One small bottle ta twe month*’
Pr.ee 25c and 50c per bottle. Sold
H. L. Sheehey, north side square. | states.# Dj\ E. y? ”
to th-s&w
■
'
monlals from this and other
EXCURSION RATES«DALLAS
• via ' 'i > ; .
The Home Interurban
accent
National Tractor Demonstration
July IS, IS, 20 lid 21.
$2.40 &XHL22L
Tickets on rale
a
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: a
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTY-FIFTH YEAR, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 8, 1916, newspaper, July 8, 1916; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth719126/m1/3/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .