Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 10, 1912 Page: 7 of 8
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, m2.
SHERMAN DAILY DEMOCRAT.
— 7MC£ SEVEN.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for
light housekeeping at 202 corner
Walnut and Cherry streets. s9-tf
FOR RENT—'Three unfurnished
rooms, gae, bath, sewerage. 622
South Montgomery. Old phone
1010. •< 10-3t
FOR RENT—Very desirable fur-
nished rooms. 505 South Crockett
St.
*9-6t
FOR RENT—Unfurnished south
rooms. Apply at 703 South Mont-
gomery street. su-tf
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for
light housekeeping. Julia A. King.
*601 S. Travis St. s8-8t
FOR RENT—Very desirable fur-
nished rooms. 505 South Crockett.
s2-6t
FOR RENT—Three rooms furnished
complete for light housekeeping. 833
South Montgomery. al9-tf
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, 209
West Jones street. a5-tf
FOR RENT—Three large cool
rooms for light housekeeping; all
conveniences References. 1216
East Cherry afreet. mlT-tf
I HAVE for rent a few very desir-
able offices in th» most prominently
located office building in Sherman.
Oeo. Murphy. f20-tf
13 LINES, 8 TIMM-------*5^
3 LINES, « TIMES........4<
3 LINES, 12 TIMES........71
3 LINES. 24 TIMES......fl.
ADDITIONAL NUMBER OF LINE*
IN SAME PROPORTION.
EOlt SALE—Some full-blooded
black 'nlnorcas; pullets and hens;
cheap. A. W. Peters. sl0-3t
FO.» SALE—A good tent. Old
phone 987. sG-tf
FOR SALK—My store house, stock
of groceries, and home, situated'
in Brookston, Tex., good crops and
established c-jsh trade; the beat
location in town; reasonable terms.
Call, write or phone for further par-
ticulars. J. W. Roche. a29-30t
FOR SALK by Vernon Brown. No.
512 North Grand avenue. One
Duroc Boar, 5 gilts; all bred. One
Jersey bull, Jersey cow, fresh soon.
a.30-lm
PEARS FOR SALE—We will begin
gathering pears about Sept. 19.
Phone your order to 751, new.
Market prices will prevail. Pears are
extra fine and large. C. L. Odneal.
-pr- o36-tosep20.
FOR RENT—Furnished cottage,
four rooms and bath, cheap to right
party. Old phone 1029 or Call 616
South Willow. a30-tf
FOR RENT—HOUSES.
FOR RENT—Store room on public
square, $20.00 per month. Call at
Texas Advertiser office. 8pl0-6t
FOR RENT—House for rent, on
grounds of Academy, Walnut street.
Inquire at St. Joseph' Academy.
s9-3t
FOR RENT—New five room house,
gas. electric lights, bath, sewerage,
two blocks ifrorn square. Old photic
»34. s9-tf
FOR RENT--Four room house,
close In, ull conveniences, good loca-
tion. Enquire at Ollphant’s Book
Stdre. 9-3t
FOR RENT—Cottage corner ol
Crockett and Brockelt. Vacant Oct.
1. M. M. Jouvenat. 6-3t
WANTED—To trade a piano for a
fresh Jersey cow. Apply to Jake
Ritchie. 1414 West Houston St.
»10-lm
WANTED—Two nice young ladles
»o board and room. Nice location,
three blocks from town on car line.
Call new phone No. 720 or address
Box No. 573. a8-tf
NOTICE—I have a house moving
rig and am prepared to do all kinds
of house moving, rcbiocking and
leveling. All work guaranteed. Call
or phone Thomas' Transfer office.
O. P. Clauneh. a9-lm
J. BENNER, Jeweler, old phone 669;
residence 1126 South Travis street,
Sherman, Texas. Phone him when
you want him. a9-lm
TO RENT—My residence. No. 816
South Crockett street; cernmodtous
house, barn, suitable for garage;
bath with Instantaneous heater;
garden, chicken house and chicken
proof yard. Apply to E. C. McLean,
I 1'20 4 North Travis street. s4-tf
FOR BENT'—Eight! room house.,
corner Crockett and Pecan streets.
J. H. Wharton. a29-tf
FLAT FOR RENT—Six rooms and
bath; all modern convenience*. See
Earl Caraway or call Old Phone 449.
Jy 16-tf
FOR RENT—Commercial Hotel;
brick, 17 rooms, In business part of
city. Furnished or unfurnished See
W. M. Scott, 202 E. Lamar streot,
Sherman. j2-tf
DWELLINGS for rent In all parts
of the city. New phone* 226. J. W.
Blassingame. m8tf
MISCELLANEOUS.
WANTED—To buy mens cast-off
clothing atid shoes. Old phone 208,
Sp9-tf
8HOKS—I want to buy good sec-
ond hand shoes. Old phone 208.
Sp9-tf
MARSHAL DORCHESTER, the old
reliable barber, at No. 208 South
Travis street, expert In his line, and
will thank iron for patronage.
rt-tf
FOR SALE—Two good Ford cars. Dr.
Swafford. m24-tf
YOUNO MAN, four years experience
In bookkeeping, good penman, accu-
rate, owns typewriter, now employed,
desires change by Oct. 1. A l refer-
ences. M. M., care Democrat. 7-3t
FARMS FOR RENT—10 miles from
San Antonio, Texas, best market for
produce in Texas; two fine farms
two miles apart, one of 400 acres,
the other 450 acres in cultivation,
fine new lund, good improvements.
Terms cash or on shares one-third
and one-fourth, tenant furnishing
teams, tools, etc. Splendid oppor-
tunity for good home, good farm,
good location. Address, Harry
Landa, New braunfels, Texas.”
a7-3t
WANTED—600 people to buy wood
at 14 per cord; delivered anywhere
Inside the city limits. Phones 333
new; and 735 old. W|e have coal
and stove wood. See us before buy-
ing. Estes W’ood Yard, West La-
mar street. *5-1 w
TO LEASE OR RENT—60 weres of
black nammock land, four miles
south of Kingston, Ok. W. H. Ford,
M. D.. 421 North Austin avenue,
Denison, Texas. s6-6t
WANTED—To rent part of a store
suitable for a Jeweler. Phone J.
Sefnner, 669 Old Phone, or address
11,26 S. fravlB, Sherman, Texas.
s4-6t
want to buy all ‘ the
>nd-haifd buggies, horses and
harness in Sherman. J. Wi. Burks,
7f8 East Cherry. *2-lm
|R SALE or Trade—Two good
ares, one good horse, one good
tile. Tom Spurlock, New phone
63 and 688. s4-6t
V WANTED TO TRADE—Good horse
a id buggy for diamond and piano.
T sm Spurlock, New Phone 463 and
6 18. ’ a4-6t
MfONEY TO LOAN on diamonds,
ar Finance Co., 212 Com. Bank
a3Q-lm
FOR SALE—A side saddle In good
condition at a bargain. Call at the
Democrat for particulars. Jy25-tf
FOR SALE—One of the nicest rigs
In Sherman; good surrey and fine
combination horse. Apply at Sher-
man Transfer Company. Jyl8-tt
W. H. GOBER—Livery and Bag-
gage, 111-19 North Crockett street.
Both Phones 69. m8-lm
FIRE AND TORNADO insurance
written In time-tried and fire-tested
old line companies. J. W. Blassin-
game. New phone 226. m8-tf
FOR SALE—My big carriage team,
surrey and harness, or will trade
for a house and lot. See W. T.
Wilson. New phone 370. Jy23-lm
VACUUM HOUSE CLEANING—Old
Phone 456 or 133. olO-tf
FOR SALK—Three milk cows, two
fresh; call at residence. 606 South
Crockett atreeL ml5-tt
SHERMAN MATTRESS FACTORY,
wholesale and retail. Will you atop
and think for a moment of one de-
prived of sight, striving to make an
honest living? Only by your pat-
ronage It can be attained. All kinds
of mattresses made and ren-
ovated. Goods delivered. A. H. Gib-
son, Prop., 608 E. Lamar street.
Old phone 865 dec8-tt
FOR SALE—$95.00 Duntlsy Vucnum
Cleaner (electric) only used a few
times, at great bargain. C. L. Chap-
man.
HELP WANTED.
WANTED—Two young ladlcB to
room and board near Washington
school building. Apply to 914 South
Montgomery street. Mrs. S. V. An-
drews. s9-lw
WANTED—A cook, for two in fam-
ily. 708 East Cherry. J. W. Burks.
s6-6t
WANTED—'Family to pick cotton;
oii6 that can pick from 1,000 lbs. to
one bale per day. Phone or see C.
/H. Furch, R. F'. D. No. 4, Old
Phone 1505-1L-2S. s9-3t
WANTED—Girl to do light house-
work. Call old phone 498. s5-tf
WANTED—Woman between 18 and
30 years of age to do general house-
work. 633 Evergreen street. New
phone 688. *4-tf
WANT.JD—A middle-aged woman to
cook and keep house for a small
family. Apply 222 East Pecan tftreet,
Sherman, Texas. a30-tf
WANTED —Good Plano player;
must read at sight. Apply at H.
Kreas.’ a28-tf
ONE DOZEN agenU wanted Imme-
diately; men. woman vt middle
age; also colored. Apply to O B.
Fisher, one door wait af Alrdome,
Sherman, T«xaa. m26-tf
MONEY TO LOAN on household
goods, easy payments. Star Finance
Ccl, 813 vom. Bank Bldg. a30-lm
If Interested In picking up some
snaps in Sherman property see us
at once, as we have some good
propositions. Call at our office and
let us show you. *■
RUSSELL RKA1/TY COMPANY.
LOST AND FOUND.
FOUND—In court house yard, bunch
of keys. Owner may get same by
calling at this office and paying for
this notice. y22-tf
FOR SALE—REAL ESTATE.
FOR EXCHANGE—One quarter
section good and, 5 miles northeast
of Texoda, Okla., for farm land in
Grayson county. Address W. J.
'Hall, Agt. M. O. & G., Carpenter's
Bluff, R. 1, Denison, Texas. 9-3t
DESIRABLE, nearly new, flve-
ropm cottage, modern conveniences,
corner lot, near school and colleges.
Attractive price and terms for quick
sale. Address "T.-P,” Democrat.
s9-m-w-s
FOR SALE—Residence 121 Grand
Ave., a bargain. See me. M. F.
Kidd. »9-lm
FOR SALE—Lot 100x140, dwelling,
six rooms, bath, sewerage, barn.
Northwest corner of Willow and
Odneal streets, opposite new Fifth
Ward school. We are offering this
property at a bargain for ten days.
Carpenter & Belden, Exclusive Agtg.
a31-10t
FOR SALB—Some nice building lots
across the street east of the new
Fifth Ward school building. Also
my home, Beven-room house; large
barn; plenty of shade trees; or
would sell the block of 300 feet, all
together, at a bargain if taken at
once. For price and terms see me.
J. 1. Jolly, 703 So. Willow street.
Old' phone 459- a31-tf
FOR KALE—My residence on South
Crockett »treet, No. 812;. 12 rooms,
2 bath rooms and tvlo halls, modern
equipments; hot and cold water,
electric lights and gas. Want small-
er house. Will take cottage as part
pay or teasy terms. Old phone 795.
Y. B. Early, 812 S. Crockett, City.
a30-tf
FOR HALE—100 acres, clear of
Johnson grass, 4 mile* east of Sher-
man. See Dr. W. D. Poo. a24-lm
PIjACK FOR SALE—On West Hous-
ton St., four room house, lot one
hundred twenty by one hundred
fifty. See J. L. Ritchie, 218 W.
Houston St. Second hand store.
Jly4-tf
FOR SALE—Lot 50x150, 3 room
dwelling, large barn. No. 1215
South Montgomery streets. Rents
87.50 per month. Make us an of-
fer. Carpenter & Belden. alOtf
FOR SALK—My residence at No.
1222 E. Lamar St. for sale. Apply
to owner only. Chas. Crenshaw.
Jyl3-tf
FOR SALE—J. M. Potts’ residence
at No. 1039 E. Lamar St. for sale.
Apply to owner only or Chas. Cren-
shaw. Jyl3-tf
QUICK SALE —On account of leav-
ing city; W. Keatley’c 5-room res-
idence. 1017 E. College St., for
cash; make offer. Write H. W.
Keatley, 908 12th St., Miami, Fla.
a5-tf
FOR SALE—My residence, 121 N.
.Grand avenue, six-rooms; city water,
gas, electric lights and sewer con-
nection. A bargain. See me; M.
F. Kidd. a3-lm
; SALE—J. P. Goren ha* bar-
gain* In dws'.ltDgs and business
property and vacant lota and farm*.
St* blm first and last. Offlce la
Binkley Annex. Jyl-tt
1 SALE—My 10-room house
1026 S. Crockett St., cheap. H. F\
fin. m26-tf
MONEY to LOAN on piano, goods;
easy payments. Star Flnanco Co.,
No. 212 Com. Bank Bldg. a'30-lm
BUGGY PAINTING.
REPAIRING and TRADING.
Can make your old buggy
new at lea* cost than anybody
—at my new *liop. One block
north of waterworks. t*09 N.
Ricketts street. Old phon* 610.
W. C. HARRIS
Proprietor
alfcfstii ft .yA.frf'.A.-,.
nmcnniLL a
for Mowing,
Hauling, Storing
Hew Phone 737
THADDKUS GETTING READY.
Will Teach the Clehurne Boys the
Art of Wrestling.
The following is from the Cle-
burne Morning Revlewi
Clebarro College begins its
fourth session Tuesday. New pupils
are coming in d'ally and are getting
ready for, a good year's work.
Thaddeus Bookout. who has
charge of the gym, has been putting
in hte equipments and getting every-
thing is shape to care for the physi-
cal development of the students,
Physical culture te a fad—If you
please to call it such—destined to
stay for many years; for men are
beginning to uoderetand that a
heathy body is absolutely necessary
to a healthy mind.
One of the most beneficial forms
of physical culture is good, clean,
scientific wrestling.
The catch->as-vatlch-can wrestling
once known as Lancashire, is, per-
haps, thA most popular form of ex-
ercise at Yale, Harvard and the
other leading universities from the
simple reason that it is so varies
in its action thus bringing every
muscle of the !bod|y into use and
giving the participants a complete,
well developed body to serve him In
tihe duties he has to perform In af-
ter life.
While the touree Mr. Bookout
will give is not designed for the
development of professional wrest-
lers the work Is along the same
lines as that given in the leading
colleges and universities and the
same methods and tactics used by
Gotch, Hackettschmidt, Roller, Both-
ner and others will bo taught. Some
of the young men about town are
talking of going out and taking the
course this session. Members of the
faculty say prospects for a good
year at the college are very bright.
INDIAN EVANGELIST COMING.
Rev. Wright, Will Hold Series of
Services at First Presbyterian
Church.
IMPRESSION OF NOTED ABBEY
Irving Call-] Sepulchsra in Weatmln-
»t*r Notl. ng but a Treasury of
Humiliation.
London.—The last beams of the day
were now faintly streaming through
the painted windows in the high vaults
above me; the lower parts of the ab-
bey were already wrapped in the ob-
scurity of twilight. The chapel and
aisles grew darker and darker. The
effigies of the kings faded Into shad-
ows; the marble figures of the monu-
ments assumed strange shapes In the
uncertain light; the evening breeze
crept through the aisles like the cold
breath of the grave; and even the
distant footfall of a verger, traversing
the poets' corner, had something
ktrange and dreary In its sound.
I endeavored to form some arrange-
ment in my mind of the objects I had
been contemplating, but found they
were already fallen into indistinct-
ness and confusion. Names, inscrip
Westminster Abbey.
The Rev. Frank Hall Wright, gen-
erally known as the Indian evange-
list will begin a series of daily ser-
vices on Sunday the 29th of Septem-
ber, at First Presbyterian church in
Sherman.
Mr. Wright is a thoroughly train-
ed and a most efficient speaker and
a cohsecrated worker. He preaches
the gospel tn its simplicity and pur-
ity and depends upon Divine rather
than human agency for results. One
of the features of his service is his
own singing; he has a voice of re-
markable power. He expects to
have with him Mr. Hammontree to
lead the chorus of voices. Mr. Ham-
montree is training at the Moody
Institute of Chicago for his braftch
of service and has obtained a na-
tional prominence in chosen work.
The Sherman public will be
warmly welcomed to all the meet-
ings connected with these services.
WHAT WE NEVER fORUET
according to Bcience, are the things
associated with our early hdme life,
such us Bucklen’s Arnlc Salve, that
mother or grandmother used to
cure our burns, boils, scalds, cores,
skin eruptions, cuts, sprains or
bruises. Forty years of cures prove
Its merit. Unrivaled for plies,
cornB or -cold sores. Only 25 cents
at Lankford-Keith Drug Co. d&w
—♦
tions, trophies, had all become con-
founded in my recollection, though I
had scarcely taken my foot off the
threshold. What, thought I, is this
vast assemblage of sepulchers but a
treasury of humiliation, a huge pile of
reiterated homilies on the emptiness
of renown and the certainty of obliv-
ion! It 1* indeed the empire of Death
—his great shadowy palace, where he
sits In state, mocking at the relics of
human glory and spreading dust and
forgetfulness on the monuments of
princes. How Idle a boast, after all,
is the immortality of a name! Time
is ever silently turning over his pages;
we are too much engrossed by the
story of the present to think of the
characters and anecdotes that gave
interest to the past; and each age Is &
volume thrown aside to be speedily for-
gotten. The idol of today pushesthehero
of yesterday out of our recollection;
and will. In turn, be supplanted by his
successor of tomorrow, “Our fathers,”
says 8IF Thomas BroWne, “find their
graves in our short memories and sad-
ly tell us how we may be burled in our
survivors.”—“Westminster Abbey.”
FRANCE WINS WORLD’S
AIR CHAMPIONSHIP
Chicago, 111., Sept. 10.—France
won ; the world's aviation cham-
pionship yesterday. Jules Vedrines,
driving a Deperdussin monoplane,
took from America the James Gor-
don Bennett silver trophy without a
contest. Not an American areoplana
rose trom the ground in defense of
the. cup, won by this country from
Ungland last year. De Lloyd Thomp-
son, the only American aviator, who
had not withdrawn from race up to
the lust hour, took a final glimpse
of Vedrines' record and walked off
the field.
Vedrines' time for the 124.8 miles
over the 4.14 miles course, was 1
hour 10 minutes and 56.85 seconds.
His average time was 10!>.5 miles
an hour. His only competitors were
two Frenchmen—Maurice Prevost,
also in a Deperdussin. who made the
record in 1 hour and 13 minutes and
10.82 seconds, and Andre Frey, In
a Han riot monoplane, who came
down because of engine trouble af-
ter making twenty-three of the
thirty lap® of the course.
Vedrines made easy work of It.
Starting before, any of his competi-
tors were out, he sailed around the
pylons like a -swallow, attaining a
speed at times of almost two miles a
minute.
BEAT ENDANGERS LIVES
OF ELDERLY FOLKS
Slckncrts anil Misery Follow
Inattention to the
Minor Ills.
EXPERIMENT WITH COTTON.
Effort Will Be Made to Determine
Wisdom of Early Ginning.
Waco, Tex., Sept. 10.—Two rep-
resentatives of the United States
.Department of Agriculture, D. E.
Eazle and George Harrison, have
reached Waco for the purpose of
conducting experiments in ginning.
Cotton gathered from u farm in this
county will be separated into three
parts. After the first third has
been ginned an interval of two
weeks will be allowed to pass before
the ginning process is carried out
and the last portion will not be
ginned until after eight weeks after
the first third has been treated.
Specimens from the three divisions
■will Ire sent to the mills, so the
grade may be accurately detetrminod
to ascertain whether it is best to
gin cotton immediately after it is
gathered or to wait for from two to
eight weeks. Another feature of
the work to receive attention front
Messrs. Earle and Harrison will be
the standardizing of the length of
cotton. McLennan county farmers
are greatly interested in the experi-
ments to be conducted by the gov-
ernment's agricultural representa-
tives.
FIRST APPLICATION
A Simple Remedy Gives Colpr,
Strength and Beauty
to the Hair,/
You don’t, hnve to have fffay hair or
fade,] huir if you don’t want tr*. Why
look old or unattractive? If your hair
is gray or faded, you can change it
easily, quickly and effectively by using
Wyetn’s Sage and Sulphur Hair
Remedy. Apply a little tonight, and in
Qie morning you will bo agreeably sur-
prised at the results from a single
application. The gray hairs will be less
conspicuous, and after a few more
applications will bo restored to natural
color. i
Wyeth's Sago and Sulphur also quick-
ly removes dandruff, leaves the yea Ip
STEERS CAPTIVES FOR YEARS
Large Herd Grow# From a Few Anl-
male Which Fell Into a Deep
Ravine Long Ago.
Meeker, Colo.—By risking their
lives a company of Unde Sam’s regu-
lars has rescued a large herd of Texas
long horn mavericks from the bot-
tom of a deep ravine.
A number of years ago a large
bunch of cattle was turned on the
range. A stampede occurred, and
hundreds of the animals fell over
from a precipice. The first ones
were killed, but the renr :id«r, alight-
ing on the carcasses of their com-
panions, survived. And there they
stayed, their existence unknown to
the cowmen, who supposed that they
had all been killed.
The survivors Increased, growing
large and becoming wild. The war de-
partment finally detailed the soldiers
to get them out.
The rescue was thrilling. The huge
beasts, proved more than a match for
the soldiers’ horses in speed and
charged their rescuers. They over-
turned many horses and attacked the
riders.
SNAKE KILLS HER TWO SONS
While Mother Goes to Rescue of Chil-
dren Baby Falls In Tub and
Drowns.
There is more Catarrh in this
section of the country than all oth-
er diseases put together, and until
the last few years was supposed to
be incurable. For a great many
years doctors pronounced' It a local
disease and prescribed local reme-
dies, and by constantly failing to
cure with local treatment, pro-
nounced it incurable. Science has
proven Catarrh to be a constitu-
tional disease and therefore re-
quires constitutional treatment.
Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by F. .1. Cheney & Co., Toledo.
Ohio, is the only Constitutional
cure on the market. It is taken in-
ternally in doses from 10 drops to
a teaspoonful. It acts directly on
the blood and mucous surfaces of
the system. They offer one hundred'
dollars for any case it fails to cure.
Send for circular and testimonials.
Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO„
Toledo, Ohio.
Sold bv druggists, 75 cents.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for
constipation.
Real Estate Transfers.
Mrs. Margaret Tolson to H. B.
Bookout, 2 acres, .1. B. McAnair sur-
vey. Consideration $600.
B. C. Cooper and wife to J. W.
Jackson, 50 acres, J. P. Womack
survey. Consideration $3,000.
W. S. Nelson and wife to A. W.
Short, lots 1, 2 and 3, block 4 In
Tom Bean. Consideration $1,500.
Barlow Roberts to B. L. Herring,
40 acres of the Jas. 'Pearson survey.
Consideration $2,800.
G. F. Cox and wife to McCornb
Missionary Baptist church. 1 acre
Rachel Halntng survey. Considera-
tion $50.
When n man goes away on n busi-
ness trip his wife would much rath-
er he had her picture In his trav-
eling hag than an accident policy
in his coat pocket.
YquNg/^
Mothe
No young woman, in the Joy of
coming motherhood, should neglect
to prepare her system for the physi-
cal ordeal she is to undergo. The
health of both herself and the coming
child depends largely upon the care
she bestows upon herself during the
waiting months. Mother's Friend
prepares the expectant mother’s sys-
tem for the coming event, and its use
makes her comfortable during all the
term. Tho baby, too, Is more apt to be
perfect and strong where the mother
has thus prepared herself for nature’s
supreme function. No better advice
could be given a young expectant
mother than that
she use Mother's
Friend; it is a MOTHERS
medicine that has
proven its value
in thousands of
cases. Mother’s Friend Is sold at drug
stores. Write for free book for expect
ant mothers.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., AlluiU, Gs.
rieNd
Older people should be especially
careful of their health during the
hot months, as high temperature
has a peculiarly enervating effect
that tends to disarrange the entire
digestive system. The slightest In-
discretion in diet is almost sure to
he followed by bowel trouble and
Indigestion but if care Is taken to
keep the bowels open by using a.
gentle laxative stimulant at the
first sign of any irregularity, a great
deal of tho misery and distress can
be avoided.
Strong, harsh and drastic physic*
should be avoided because of the
shock to the system following their
use. An excellent laxative and one
that is easy and natural in Its ef-
fect on the stomach, bowels and liv-
er. is found in Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin, a compound of simple laxa-
tive herbs with pepsin that is pleas-
an to the taste and positive in it*
action. By cleansing the bowel
tract and removing the foreign
matter that Irritates and Inflames
the tissue, a dose of Syjmp Pepsin
will quickly check the summer diar-
rhoea that is so prevalent. Dr. Cald-
well’s Syrup Pepsin is sold in drug
stores for fifty cents a bottle; large,
family size, one dollar. A free trial
bottle will be sent postpaid, If you
will write to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 406
Washington St., Montlrello, Illinois.
Save Your
Order for the
Best Tailor-
ing Company
4 "
Open lor Business
September 1st
Commercial Bank
Building.
4
Barham Bros.
Proprietors.
THE BREAD MAKER
is properly proud of his products
and that is why we are proud of the
Bread we make and sell. That is
why the people eat and buy it. They
realize that it is the purest and best
and host, satisfying to the hungry.
Ask your Grocer.
Vienna Steam
Bakery
W* I/cad—Other* Follow.
►♦-a • • ♦ d
dean and healthy, and promotes the
growth of the hair. It is » clean
wholo#otno dressing which may be used
at any time with perfect safety.
Get a fifty cf‘. bottle mm tour drag-
>gist today, and see how quickly it wil
restore the youthful color and beauty ol
your hair and forever ehd the nastj
dandruff, hot, itchy scalp and falling
hair. All druggists sell it Under gun.
antee that the money will be refunded
if you ru* «-o(!-eed Bf»«r *-10 trial.
Agents, The Craycroft-SHason
Co.
Raleigh, N. C.—The attention of
Mrs. George Adams, living In Pitt
county, was attracted by the cackling
of a hen, and she sent her 8-year-old
son to tho barn to drive the hen from
tho nest. A scream from the lad that
tho hen had pecked him caused the
mother to send her younger son to as-
certain the cause, and a similar out-
burst from him led the mother to in-
vestigate.
She found that both boys had been
bitten by a rattlesnake that was colled
in the nest. Hurrying with her little
ones to the house, she found that her
babe had fallen into a tub and drown-
ed.
Th* boya, lacking medical atten-
tion, noon died In agony. The three
children will be buried in the sam*
grave.
Chicago Women’* Feet Beautiful.
Chicago.—The women of Chicago
have been exonerated and vindicated.
Chiropodists from all over the coun-
try In session there, and a noted ex-
pert stated that Chicago women have
the most beautiful feet nnd ankles. He
said It was an outrage the way New
York and the world libels the feet of
the Windy City’s fair resident!.
*
Nursing Mothers uri Malaria.
The Old Standard GROVE’S
TASTELESS CHIU. TONIC, drives
out malaria and builds up the *ys-
tern. For grown people and chU*
dr"., «*
Texas Traction Co.
(Denlson-Sherman-Dallai
Interurban)
“THE CONVENIENT WAY”
TO
DALLAS
AND
FORT WORTH
IS VIA THE
LIMITED
LEAVES SHERMAN
and ’
7:00 and 11:00 *.
1:00 and 0:00 P. M.
Frank Smith, Agent, Sherman.
Jas. P. Grifflu, G. P. A., Dallas
W. L. GILL
ARCHITECT
Both Phonos
Rooms 413 and 414
M. 3 P. Bank Building
iSiSlB
Dr. R. Flowers
VETERINARY SURGEON
AND DENTIST.
Office—llitting's Drug Store
Residence—-Old phone 7H7;
New plume 7S0.
FERDINAND DITTLER
TEACHER VIOLIN AM) CORNET.
Studio 140 N. Travis St.
Old Phone OOfl.
Mrs. H W. Keatley
HAIR DRESSER
Would thunk you for paat pa-
tronage and future orders wilt b*
promptly filled by mall.
MRS. H. W. KEATLEY,
90S 12th St., Miami. Fla.
THE CARTERCAR COMPANY
baa considerable desirable territory
open for reliable agents, and solicit*
correspondehce wlthpartlesinterested
In securing the agency for this well
known automobile. We hare the
best proposition on the market at
this time to offer.
We are delivering several carload*
weekly now and the territory la be-
ing tied up very rapidly. Don't de-
lay. Write at once.
UARTKROAR SALES AGENCY
'■ fflBXAa
Fort Worth, Tew.
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 10, 1912, newspaper, September 10, 1912; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth719270/m1/7/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .