Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 13, 1912 Page: 1 of 8
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DAILY DEMOCRAT.
YdIRTY SECOND YEAR
Associated Press
SHERMAN, TEXAS, NOVEMBER 13 1912 WE.DNE.SDAY 5f CENTS PER MONTH
Ladies9 Gloves
• H'lt (iLOVK SKmo.V i.s showing a complete line of (.lores
for Liidies' mill Children. I .allies' Kill (.loves iu long anil sliorl
lengths all of the lending eolors of the season. I .allies' anil
('liililren's Knit (iloves in a nival variety. Ill sixes.
LADIES’ Kll) (HX)VEM—111
Duttoll length in all the popu-
lar shades ami white anil
hliiek; all sizes, per
Pair . . 83.00 and #3.50
YAKS.YR (JIXUKS, so well
known for their perfect filling
and wearing qualities, all the
leading colors and sizes, a
P»ir.............SI.50
MARVEL KID (4LOYES Made
from extra fine kid. very soft
and wear well; all eolors and
sizes, a pair.........SI.50
F.YMOKA —The lust kid glove ,
on the market for the price;
all colors, white and black; all
sizes; extra value, a
P“lr.............SI.00
OHIO WRECK
KILLS Mil
• IXCIWATI IIA Ml I,TON At DAY-
TON TRAIN HI NS INTO
OF UN SYY'ITCH.
KNITTED CLOY KKFor l.adies, Misses and
variety of colors; all sizes; prices, per pair..
Infants in great
20*4 and 50C
TIIE DELINEATOR AND
STVI E BOOK
For December Now
Heady.
HI TTKIIICK PATTERNS
I t lit OKOKAIKER
Now i■]<J Stock
III anil 1.1c—None Higher.
FOUHTEEN KNOWN DEAD
f
For $4.00
RED HID BUTTON BOOTS, GREY,
WHITE UNO BLACK. NEW
BUCK BUTTON BOOTS
If you appreciate shoes of charaefer, re-
finement and good t.iste, you will enjoy
seeing your feet iti the elegant styles we
are now showing.
Malone=Pierce Co.lhr
Shoe Men
Jj
Fifteen Se*i .isly Injured Were Tuk-
en to llospi al iu ludiiiupolis
—W reck Caught Fire but
Was Extinguished.
Associated Press IM-patrli |
I ndianaiHilis, I ml’., Nov. 1 2. At
least fourteen parsons were killed
and fifteen seriously hurt early to-
day when an inbound Cincinnati.
Hamilton and Dayton passenger
train ran into an open switch and
crashed hcadon into a freight train
at Irvington, a subuijj. The train
was coming from Cincinnati at the
rate of forty miles an hour.
Among the dead are:
Fred Hutchinson, fireman, passen-
ger train, Madison, Va.
c. Imholt and wife, theatrical
people of l.o8 Angeles.
Albert Allen. Los Angel.sL
•loseplt I.. Palmer, Etowah. Tenn.
Charles Clancey, aged Id, Jackson,
Ky.
John Clancey.aged 52, Jackson.
Ky.
Mrs. Clifton Chaney and son,
Chester age ; 5 months, Jackson. Ky.
Fiftten seriously Injured were
tiken to the Deaconess Hospital In
this city.
Among the injured passengers is
Clifton nancy of Jackson. Ky.
The wreck caught lire, but was
extinguished before any damage was
done. Most of the dead were foun"
in the wreckage of the first car
which telescoped the baggage car.
The engineer of the passenger train
is believed to he In the wreckage,
hut the engineer of the freight es-
caped by jumping.
Firemen and police worked at the
wreck two hours before the first
body was found. Holes were chopped
'n the lops of the cats and the In-
lure 7 supplied with water for which
they cried' pitifully.
STUDENTS FROM CITY
AKE BETTER PHYSICALLY
Iaswm lii’ed Dispatch |
I Columbia, Mo., Nov.
12.--Men
frrom farms attending the I'niverslty
§if Missouri are interior physically
o students from cities, according to
>. F. Field, instructor in athletics,
vho yesterday opened a class es-
pecially planned for the physical de-
velopment of farmer lads.
Mr. Fir’d based his conclusion
upon examinations made in Hit' gym-
nasium. Students from farms,, he
said are developed unevenly. Tlio
muscles of arms ami shoulders us-
ually are over developed, while the
grip is weak. The city man who Ims
some physical training, usually has
a much better physique.
4 BARBER’S COT
SAVES MAN’S LIFE
Foil KALE or trade, good four-room
house with hath. I/it. Inn ft. front.
..*1 Sycamore St J. K. lUee i’love,
new phone 52 7. nIll-til
Diamond Edge is Qualify Pledged
Warranted and Carried Only by the
HARDWARE
COMPANY
Walsh-Snyder
Associated Press IfiKpatchl
New Volk. Nov. 12. -dlv a singu-
lar chance, a barbers' helper, had
dragged a comb from the shop to
the sidewalk hist night Just be for"
Thomas Nevil, a guard, fell from a
ninth avenue -vated train as it
turned a curve ami Nevil's life was
saved. The helper had just fitFshe I
blushing Hie comb whan Nevil lain.-
ed on it. Nevil broke a leg of the
couch, lint he. himself, was only
iMghlly Injured.
Kcgillate tile how >Ih when they
'ail to move properly. IIKKBINK
is an admirable laiwt I regulator. It
helps the liver and stomach and re-
stores a fine fueling of strength and
buoyancy. Frier .pic. Sold by
Lankford Keith Drug Co. Adv.
d At w
i
Wonderful
Cooking Slants
With
The Great Majestic
You are urged to visit onr store this week and see for yourself.
A special representative from the factory is showing WHY the Great
Majestic Range bakes so perfectly ard heats all the water wanted with a min-
imum of fuel. .
Lizzie Bacon, one of the best known cooks in Sherman (uses a Majestic
in her own home) is showing HOW the Majestic does its work.
I
Hot Coffee and Biscuit Served
FREE—S 8.00 Set of Ware—FREE
DR.O. A. CARR
PASSES AWAY
I RESIDENT OF < A lill-lll RIIKTTK
I 01,1 F,OF DIED HERE
THIS .Y FT Ell NOON.
ii *
LOSE HEAV
DESPERATE SORTIE MADE HV
TIIE ti YHIIISON AT YDIU.Y.N-
01*1,E YESTERDAY.
Established (.real Educational lnsii-
Ilitinit Ill'll' Eighteen Years Ago-"
Pellagra YY'as Cause
of Dcnth.
Dr. O. A. Carr, aged (i7 years,
died this afternoon at 1:10 o'clo k
al tho home of Dr. ami Mrs. ('has.
E. Johnson oil South Willow street.
Dr. Carr had be’n in had health for
about, five years and the illness is at-
tributed to ills great giief on ac-
count of ills wife. In tlie latter pirt
of his sickness pellagra has been
the illness and s'nce the last few
days h" became paralyzed in the
right, side.
About two months ago Dr. Carr
went to (Sulphur, Oklahoma, thinn-
ing' perhaps the change would do
him good. Ha remained there until
Saturday when he was (nought back
here. Ho was taken to the home of
Dr, and Mrs. Johnson and every at-
tention lias been given him. He had
no relatives in Sherman hut Dr.
Johnson was a great personal friend
and his family physcian.
Deceased is survlv d by a brother
also a sister. Mrs. Ood lard at Mount
Carmel, Ky., and a sister. Mrs. Jio
Fox, Fi\, of Mountain Hap. Va.
Tile funeral service will be con-
dueled tomorrow afternoon at 2:2n
o'clock from the Houston Street
Church of Christ. Itev. R. D. Sini'li
will conduct the service.
The deceased was horn in Flem-
ing county. Ky.. Feb. 5. 1X45. He
was educated for the ministry and
taught tn iToxIngton I'Diversity. Af-
ter his marriage he was pastor of a
church iu St. Ixiuis. Wth Mrs Fair
he was engaged In educational pur-
suits In Springfield, Mo., for several
years before coining to Sherman to
take up the same kind of work-—
that of the education of young la-
dies and in which Mrs. Carr was as-
sociated with him.
Dr. Carr went with his bride, who
was Miss Mattie Myers, to Australia
and they were in the mission field
for the Christian church for many
veuin. While In Melhorno Dp. Carr
was drawn to a bright orphan boy
and so impressed was lie with the
little fellow that he sent him to
America, ahead < f them ami had
him placed in a college. The hoy is
now Rev. Capp, a great preacher iu
Kansas City.
Dr. Carr was successful in his in-
vestments and leaves large holdings
In Wichita, Kns.. Topeka. Kansas
City, Springfield and Sherman, ,11c
was a man of broad education am!
had traveled much in many foreign
countries.
He is survived by K. A. Carr, a
brother of Mavf.eld, Kv., Mrs. Mary
Hoddard, a sister of Mt. I’.irmel,
Ky., Mrs. Minnie K. Fox. a sister of
I'ig Cone (lap. Va.. who Is the
mother of John Fox. Jr., the au-
thor. A sister, the wife of W. It.
Smith of Sherman, died two years
ago.
Carr-lliti delte College, which was
founded by Dr and Mrs. Carr was
tn honor of tli" Carr name and Bur-
dette for Pi. Carr's mother's maiden
name. It is believed Ills will may
contain a handsome endowment fir
the college which is now a monument
to thi life work and of the founders
who are now still Iii death.
Dr. Carr educated many poor
girls in the yiierman college without
the expectation of pay and did F
because lie loved to help wort It v
girls who gave promise) of yielding
good to others in days to conic.
Leslie-Taylor Hardware Co.
WANT A WOMAN
IN NEW CARINET
J
Associated Press l»i.eatcli 1
Denver. C„l.. Nov. 12. - -At a meet-
ing of the Why Club, an organiza-
tion of business and professional
women, a movement was launched
today to have a woman appointed a
member of President-elect Wilson's
ca binet.
Mrs. Mary C. C. Bradford. who
was elected stale superintendent of
Instruction at the recent election,
said that women now poll large
enough a vote lo he entitled to rep-
resentation in tlie president's of-
ficial family and soon a nationwide
movement with tills in view will bo
launched.
YVrecJv Near Corpus Christ!.
AsKOcllltcd Press Dispatch 1
Corpus Chrlstl, Tex.. Nov. 12 —
Ten passengers were injured, three
seriously, when a St. Fouls. Browns-
ville and Mexico train from Ho us
ton southbound was.wrecked \ negr
Fin ton early this morning.
„ , ^
Coal. McAlester Lump and Nut
screened, Scott & McKown Ola &
Coal Co. Phones 040. o30-30t
Creek (.cnci'al at I'skiip.
Associated Press Dispatch 1
Belgrade, Nov. 12. The Creek
general. Souzo. has arrive 1 at Fs-
kitp and bo**n received by Kina
Fetor. He said that there were. Sd.
mm Creek troops before Saloniki
anthat thev would probably be di-
vided to aes'et the Bulgarians at
Tctiitalja and the Servians at Mon-
adi '.
In ltc> Austro-Servla dnfieulty
danger arises from the agitation o'
n "roup of Chauvenlstie Servian Of-
OretB. who cherish hopes of success-
ful resistance to the Austrian arm'-
and foster amldt'oes among the peo
pie of th“ resitrreel Inn of t li•* inertle
vitl Heivian empire, to inclule Bos
nia and Herdegovina
These roods are deprecated In
Seivian official uuHrters, but wheth-
er the responsible government wit
be able to resist them is doubled
Tmks Retreat.
Associated Press lli.-patchl
Sofia. Nov. 12 Hen. Tlieodnroff
‘n command of tip* Bulgarian arm'
on mting in tin- neigliborliood o'
Saloniki. in an official dispatch, d>'
s'Tibes a three hours’ engagement
on Nov. P with the Turkish troops
It ended Iu the retfeit of the Turk'
and about this time Hen. Tlieoddrotf
learn d that Saloniki had surrepdar-
ed to ih" Creeks. At o'clock Satur-
day morirag a division of the Bui
garian troops intereil Saloniki and a
sei vlan n -iment entered tile city
about the same time.
GIRL HILLS MOTHER
IN SLEEPING CAP
As.-o, iatcl Pm - Dispatch I
Fhiladel|iliia. N’i.v. 12. Mrs. Kliz-
ahitli Myers of New York was shot
und killed by her daughter on a
I’eiinsylvania railroad train near
here today. The girl shot tier
mother in mistake for a robber.
They were on their way from
Salem. Va.. to New York Miss My-
ers and a passenger, W. II. Cuthbert,
of Lynchburg. Va., are being detain-
ed at a Trenton hospital. The
shooting occurred near Bristol. Pa.,
and the train continued Its journey
to Trenton where tho Injured wo-
man was carried to u hospital. Ef-
forts to save her life were unavail-
ing.
ROOSEVELT LEADING
IN CALIFORNIA COUNT
Associated Press DDpatchl
San Francisco. Nov. 13.—Returns
from all but five precincts In . the
state early today gave Roosevelt a
plurality of 2 4 votes over Wilson.
Later—Wilson took a lead of forty
seven votes on Roosevelt in Califor-
nia in the election count today, with
five precincts still missing.
. i
WELL KNOWN EDUCATOR TROOPS DRIVEN BACK
Compelled to Re-enter the (.iiii'lson
B\ the Kcseigcrs—Bank of
France Advances Money
to Bulgaria.
Associated I’resH Dispalchl
Sofia. Nov. 12.- A deep-rate sor-
tie was made bv the Turkish gitrt-
son of Adrianople yesterday, aeon-
ing lo a dispatch to the Mir. Auer
five hours fighting the Turkish
troops were driven link by Hie
Bulgarian besiegers. The Turks lost
heavily.
Russia's Position.
Associat'd Press Dispatch 1
St. Petersburg. Nov. 12. Russia
dots not intend to go to* war over
the question of Servia obtaining a
port on tee Adriatic Sea. according
to Sergius Sazonoff, the Russian
foreign minister.
M. Saranoff informed M Popo-
vitch. the Servian minister here,
that, this decision had been reached
as the result of conversations lrdwcen
the Herman ambassador to—Russia
and himself. The Novoe Vremya
and other newspapeis denounce the
Russian government's policy as one
of vacillation and surrender.
Premier Kokosvoff express'd the
opinion today that the dispute be-
tween P-rvla and Austria would be
settled by compromise.
Money for Bulgaria.
Awwlutcrt Press Dispatch)
London, Nov. 12. The financial
news prints a Pails dispatch report-
ing that the Bank of France has
advanced $8,000,000 Xo the Bulgar-
ian government- against treasury
I onds.
Dolls! Dolls!!
Have you seen cur doll window ? Then, you've truly missed
a doll show if you haven't. Bring (lie little folks down town and
let them enjoy the doll window.
Now is the Opportune Time
to do x-Ajiir Simla buying while slocks are fullest and at their
best, and think of the saving on this week's purchases:
It’s 10 Per Cent Discount
On All Dolls, Toys, Bric-a-Brae, Etc.
Make your selection this week. Don't worry about what you
will do with Hie Santa packag ;s, we will care for them until you
wish them delivered.
Another Saving on Your
\ Christmas Purchases
All Bassett and Havlland
China Table Ware
|
1
For Immediate Buying
20 Per Cent Discount
Think what a saving on that handsome dinner
set you have plandcd to give your wife on Christ-
mas morning!
Mr Smoker
YOl R I IK Y It I N LESS PROPERLY MOISTENED IS UNFIT
von SMOKINO. THE SAN-I-F.Y-<TEXT HUMIDIFIER KEEPS
(li lt ( IHYUS IN PERFECT CONDITION.
Watson's Q. V. S.
CARPETS and RUGS
CLEnNEO and M.TEREB
In onr renovating depart nenl we have Installed up-to-date
electric machinery, and are n'nv equipped to do all kinds of old
w oik.
I!a; s and Carpets can be thoroughly cleaned, and old car-
pels can he altered in shape o ' size in a thorough and workman-
like manner.
All altering and re-laying will be done by f irst-class work-
men. and our technical knowledge, coupled with our vast exper-
ience. gives every assurance o' satisfactory results. Phone us
your requirements in this line of work.
rjoUJnqstvor'trr
► Ladies' light weight, high neck and long sleeves,
bleached white, full sizes
at 50c, 35c and 25c each
©MMem’s
Union Suits, fhll bleached, extra
finish, sizes two to sixteen years,
at 75c, 60c and 50c the suit
THE DEPENDABLE STORE
^ I
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9si
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• Mr,
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 13, 1912, newspaper, November 13, 1912; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth719296/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .