Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, October 18, 1912 Page: 4 of 8
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f*GE FOUR.
-
W
SHERMAN DAILY DEMOCRAT.
-
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1812.
"EVERYBODY’S DOIN’ IT"
If “Casey Jones" takes the “Beautiful Doll"
down by “The Old Mill Stream" to make love
“In the Shade of the Old Apple Tree,” while
“Alexander’s Kag Time Band” plays “Meet Me
Tonight in Dreamland,” it is a sign that you
should take your “Mysterious Rags” down to
Stimson Bros. Tailor Shop where “everybody's
Doin’ It” and have them fixed the way they ought
to be.
SUIT OR
OVERCOAT
$15
UNION MADE
TAILORED i
TO ORDER
Stimson Bros.
SHERMAN, TEXAS j
123 North Travis St.
THE MARKETS
Chicago Grain «n«l Provisions.
Chicago, Oct. 18.
Wheat—
Dec......
May.....
July.....
Corn—
Dec.....-.
May.....
July ... .. .
Oata—
Deo......
May.....
July.....
Porn-
On. ....
Jan.. #.'«•.
May ..
Rib*—
Oct. ..
Jan. .............. 10.20
......... io.oo
. 11.57
v, •
Close.
02%
07%
94
53%
52%
52%
32%
34%
34 Vi
. 17.35
. 19,27
. 18.02
. 10.95
May .. ..........
Lard —
rvt ......
Jan. ‘I.'!. ".......... 10.97
May ............... 10 «2
Chicago Live Stock.
Estimated receipts today 17,000.
Estimated receipts tomorrow 0.000.
Official receipts yesterday 19.076.
Market slow at opening prices. Bulk
Of sales $8.75 @,9,05. Light weights
$8.30© 19.05. Mixed and buu-heig
■
8.70. Cattle dull and weak, sheep
r : ’ ^
*»rong.
New York Futures.
Ywtd’J
Open. Close. Close
Dec. . .
..19.32 10.56 10.34
Jan ..
.....19.38 10.58 10.39
New Orleans Futures.
Yeatd’j
gw V
Open. Close. Close
Dec . .
. ...10.68 10.82 10.69
Jan ..
..... 10.68 10.84 10.67
uiserpool Cotton.
(p v :jf
Yes’ty
Dec-Jan
Open. Close. Close.
. 5.79 5.82% 5.79
Jan-Feb
.. . 5.80% 5.84% 5.80%
COTTON.
Spot Cotton Market.
New York, Oct. 18.—Spot cotton
was steady; middling 10.95 cents;
sales 2700 bales.
New Orleans, Oct. 18.—Spot cot-
ton was steady; middling 10 1-4
cents; sales 770 bales.
Liverpool, Oct. ’ 18.—Spot cotton
was steady; middling 6.09 cents;
sales 14,000 bales.
Galveston, Oct. 18.—Spot cotton
was steady; middling 11 cents; sales
303 bales.
Total port receipts 89,739 against
88,689 last year.
Fort Worth Live Stock".
«. ■ i ■ ■■
Stock Yards, Fort Worth, Tex.,
Oct. 18.—'Hogs 2500, Including 4 00
held over, market closing 10 lower;
top 8.90; bulk 8.65©8.85; light 7.50
#8,70; mixed 8.60@8.80; heavy
S.70t@8.90; pigs 6.20@'6.75. Cattle
3, uom, Including 2000 calves; steers
steady: bulk 9.00 to 5.50. Feelers
steadv 4.50@5.00; cows slow, easy;
top 4.25;,bulk 3.25@4.10. Parkers
at 4:25, bulls steady, two loads at
3.80; calves slow to lower; bulk
4. »0©i5.00; not many sold; sheep
2.00, mostly goats; market steady.
The News of
The Courts
Court Notes.
Only three arrests &ere made ye -
terduy, two by Bite police and one
by the county officers. That Is not
nil unusual record for the day of toe
big circus.
The verdict in the case of Mcl.fr n
& Dilden vs. Sherman & Denison
Press Brick Co., was that the plain-
tiff be given $434.37. Motion has
already been filed for a new trial
and the case will be appealed.
Janie Potts vs. Pote Potts Is the
style of a divorce suit filed.
Judge W. M. Peek has discharged
the jury for the week In the 15th
district court, on account, of the de-
Bire to have a clear way for the
Ben Thomas case, which is set for
trial Monday. Thomas is a negro
charged with killing Jack Crain, a
while man, in this city in 1910.
The case has been tried once and
the negro was given a life term In,
the penitentiary but a new trial was
granted. A special venire will re-
port Monday in the case.
Muii'ingc Licenses.
Morey Fallon and Qoldlo Parks.
W, O. Hines and Ruby Jackson.
D. F. Casey and Ella McCartney-
B. H. Dane and Mary Coleman.
Edgar Goldston and M-aye Russell.
Virgil Milligan and Ellen MtaCul*
ley.
i, ------
H. Beatty, Little Rock, Ark.;
says: “For the past two years 1
suffered with kidney trouble, had
severe pains across my back and
over my hips that almost meant
death to me at times. 1 used sever-
al well known kidney remedies, but
got no relief until I used Foley
Kidney Pills. These 1 can truthfully
sav made me a sound and well
man.” Sold by W. L. Bitting.
—-m-w-F&w
(Adveitisement.)
MRS. C. A. YOl’N'G I)F,.\I>.
Passed Away Last Evening at the
Family Home Here.
s£Ji!S
ENTION
NEW WAY TO REMOVE TIRES
Device Slides Around In Rim and
Quickly Loosens Shoe—Punctures
Lose Their Terrors.
For the speedy removal of automo
bile tires the device patented by 3
Nuw York man should appeal. In-
stead of a motorist standing In the
middle of a road wn a hot. day and
laboriously pulling the tire off a wheel.
Insert the tool shown here and loosen
Way to Remove Tires.
the shoe In a twinkling. This tool
consists of a long bar with a circular
hook on one end to encircle the hub
of the wheel. At about the middle of
tills bar is a plate that fits over the
rim of the wheel and has a downward
projection that reaches in between the
wheel and tire and pries the latter
loose as the whole Implement is re-
volved around the huh. With this to
simplify the removal of a tire, punc-
tures will lose some of their terror to
motorists.
INSECTS HAVE ACUTE SENSES
Campbell & Rosson
LIVESTOCK COMMISSION CO.
Branch Office in A11 Principal Mar-
kets. Fort Worth, Texas.
■
WE CARRY 0NL/ THE BEST
Mrs. C. A. Young, aged 4 3 years,
died yesterday afternoon at 5:40
o’clock at the residence, No. 1502
East Cherry street. Mirs. Young
had been seriously ill for the last
several days, the beginning of the
illnrsB being due to gall stone
trouble. She had respit'd In Shermar.
since 1904, when t.he family moved
here from Tom Bean where she was
raised.
The'funeral service will be from
the residence tomorrow morning at
10 o'clock. Rev. B. Wrenn Webb
assisted by Rev. T. M. Kirk and
Rev. ft. F. Hradford will conduce
the service. Interment at West Hill
cemetery. At the age of twelve
years Mrs. Young was converted
and joined the Methodist church,
but upon moving to this city she
became a member of the Grace
Presbyterian church.
She is survived by the husband
an! the following children: Mrs.
Eva Phillips of Eureka Springs,
Ark : Mrs. Bertha Reynolds of l.uel-
H, Mile Juanita Young, Alex, Char-
ley, Jr., and Edith Young who re-
side at home.
Posses* Intelligence That, Though of
a High Order, Is Not Easy for
Us to Understand.
The mental processes of the horSe
»nd the dog are those of man in much
lower degree, in the view of Prof. A.
N. Harvey of Michigan, but the Intelli-
gence of insects must be of very dif-
ferent kind. The double nerve cord
and ganglia differ both in structure
and position from the brain and spinal
cord of man Insect eyes are immov-
able and compound, and perceive mo-
tion -and color, but not form. Ants,
bees, wasps and other inseots have no
hearing. Taste and smell cannot be
identical with those senses In man,
and fueling is a perception through
touch hairs instead of the skin. But
insects have very acute senses that,
we do not possess. A cecropia moth
can perceive a female a mile or more
away, although a man could not detect
It under the same conditions at a dis
tance of more than six Inches, and
ants, bees and wasps seem to have
j other senses located, like this, In the
antennae. Differing from man in gen-
eral structure, ’with shorter lives and
different living, the Insects have in-
telligence that, though of a high order,
Is not easy for us to understand.
It Beats Me How
ZEMO Stops Itching!
COPIES OF WAX IMPRESSIONS
Done by Pouring Melted Beeswax on
Article Wished to Reproduce
and Then Removing.
Fine copies of wax impressions eftn
he made In the following manner:
Procure an ordinary tumbler and 1111
It with a strong solution of sulphate
of copper, which Is made by dissolv-
ing two eent9’ worth of blue vitriol
in one-half pint of water, writes Ed-
ward M. Teasdale In the Popular Elec-
tricity. After this is done make a
porous cell by rolling a piece of
brown paper around a stick and fas-
tening the edge with sealing wax;
also, fix a bottom to the cell In the
same way. Make a solution of one
part of oil vitriol and 5 parts of wa-
ter and pour this mixture Into the por-
No Wonder Zcino Is GUARANTEED
to Ht»p Itching, and DOES It.
and by that we mean “best” In ev-
ery way—good body, fine finish and
great durability. These paints of
oura have wonderful weather resist-
priced paints. All we ask is one
longer time than the ordinary, low-
ing properties and look welt for a
fair trial. After that you will come
here for all your paints naturally
enough. You'll save money by it,
too.
W„
BUTRIDGE
FAINTS, WALL PAPER AND
PICTURE FRAMING. ...
““
Copying From Wax Molds.
A few applications of ZEMO. the
remarkable new remedy for skin af-'ous cell Wind the end of a copper
Dictions, and away go the terrible wire around the end of a piece of zinc
itching and pain of eczema and and place the zinc in the porous cell,
eczema sores. pimples, blotches,' Attach ibe other end of the wire to
prickly heat, rash. j the wax Impression.
It gives relief instantly to any lr- The wax Impression is made by
ritated. Inflamed or raw skin. The pouring melted beeBwax on the ar-
soothing effect Is almost heavenly. tjcie y0u wish to reproduce and re-
'“JJ' moving after the wax gets cold. The
moment. It sinks right In and
wfcx mdld then should be coated with
work begins. It cannot be equaled ., , . . ..
ed bv anything in this world for, black lead and polished 1 his is done
sunburn or reddened skin. Use it on| wlth a ca™®1 8 hair brush. A fine copy
the children for prickly heat, on
can be made
wax impression
ZEMO after the battery has been running
any sores, bites or stings.
is absolutely safe. Dandruff ah- about twelve hours,
solutely disappears after using ZE-
MO.
It will cost you only 25 cents to
try ZEMO first and prove It.
Many Tires Invented.
In twenty years there have been
more thun 4,000 inventions of tires,
ZEMO is sold in 25-cent and not Including mechanical devices to
$1.00 bottles, or sent direct on re- take the place of t|reg
ceipt of price, by E. W. Rose Medi-
cine Co., St. Louis, Mo. This $1
bottle contains six times as much as
the 25-cent bottle.
Sold and guaranteed In Sherman
by Carl R, Nall, the Careful Drug- Farmer,
gist. i
Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing and
Altering. B. K. and Mrs, B. IC.
Old phone 1071.
(Advertisement)
EXCKLIJCXT SERVICES.
At the Meeting of the First 1‘rcshy-!
terian t hutch.
NOW A MODERN CITY
Notwithstanding the rain and REMARKABLE GROWTH HAS
other adverse conditions a fine cor.-1 BEEN MADE BY KHARTUM,
gregaticn gathered at the First' i
Presbyterian church lust evening. J -
Those who came wore amply re-
n Fourteen Years It Has Risen From
Ruins to Have a population of
Sixty Thousand and Stately
Public Buildings.
warded. Mr. Wright was at his
best and his sermon on the “Wayi
of Life" was decidedly the finest ef-
fort of the whole series. Nothing!
could have been plainer or simpler |
ilian his exposition of the plan of.
salvation. I F(n]rte<?n years ago the present
Services again this afternoon at !aP’tal of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan
3:3H and tonight. The general pub- ‘'*s reduced by Lord. Kitchener’s
lie is invited especially to the ser- iriny to a heap of uninhabited ruins,
vice of this evening which will be Today Khartum is one of the most
the last of the week. No services mportant cities In Africa; with its
tomorrow, Saturday. Mr. Wright snvirons, it has over sixty thousand
will again speak at 1 1 on Sunday,1 nhabltants
Sunday night also, at 7:3°. j A beautiful esplanade runs for
general service will he held in the the of th°tNlle’ 011
church to which all the citizens of . k nif y httn,lsome 8tone and
therm an are cordially invited. Spec-jfick b\llldlne8 surrounded by gar-
ial music by Mr. WTright and Mr. >*ens ant* groves of palm trees. The
1 lammontree will be a feature of 71°8^ Interesting of these are the
BILIOUSNESS, GAS, HEADACHE
MEM CONSTIPATED BOWELS
tlia.t service.
Accused of Larceny.
Provide nee, R. I.. Oct. 18.—Al-
fred W. Qnlggi, who claims to be a
brother of former Congressman Lo-
nnie! Ell Quigg of New York, was
ariaigiud in court hero today to
s'and trial on a charge of larceny.
Quigg is accused of having stolen
$25,ouo from !. living Davis, treas-
urer of the Am it lit Order of United
Work men, who is now awaiting
trial for allege! embezzlement of
the fords of the order. It is allege,',
by the police that. Quigg borrowed
the money from Davis, alleging that
ho was going to buy a newspaper in
New York and never paid It back.
The authorities are hi possession of
notes for $34,000 purporting to
ave been signed by Quigg and heot
by Davis.
Port in the Ocean.
"When the harbor at Cape Lookout
off the North Carolina coast is com-
pleted the means for which were pro-
latbedral, consecrated last January,
he Gordon Menmtfal college, and the
governor’s pal^e.
There Is direct railway and steam-
ship connection with Europe, through
Cairo, a branch line to the Red Sea.
ind another to El Obetd, capital of
the province of Kordofan. This will
probably soon connect with the
French railways, and so complete a
transcontinnental route to the Atlan-
tic. When the Cape to Carlo line is
completed, Khartum will ho the prin-
cipal railway center of the continent.
The value of its exports and im-
ports increased in three years from
twelve million dollars to nearly
twenty-one million. It is the great
trade emporium and the educational
center of a country almost ten timeg
as large as Great Britain. In the
Gordon Memorial college students
are in training to become teachers in
vernacular schools, Judges In district
courts, engineers or surveyors. There
Is an Industrial workshop. In which
smlthwork and»carpentry are taught.
The college also has research labora-
IH-XH Mil's "SYJM'P OF FIGS" CLEANSES YOl'It STOMACH, LIVER
AND :5<> I'Fk/jOF BOWELS OF SOUK III IE, GASES, DECAYING
FOOD* AND CLOGGKD-FP WASTE, NO GRIPING
A harmless cure for sick Headache, i tion is a wonderful stomach, liver
uT7dliouSno*CTor' a sour, gassy,.1""1 »>™el cleanser regulator trod
, „ ,, i tonic, the aofest and most positive
dlac-rdored stomach, > tor constipa- 1^. ,jevjge(j>
tion, indigestion,’ coated tongue, sal- The day of violent purgatives,
lowness. pituples-—take delicious' such as calomel, pills, salts and
Fyrup of Figs. For the cause of j castor oil is past. They wore all
ail these trophies lies in a torpid wrong. You got relief, hut at what
liver and sluggish condition of your re;!! Thev acted by flooding the
30 feet of bowels.. j bowels with fluids, hut these fluids
A tcaspoonful of Syrup of Figs were digestive juices. Syrup of Figs
tonight means all poisonous waste embody only . harmless laxat ves,
matter, the undigested, fermenting• which act in a natural way. It
food and sour bile, gently iisoyed on j does what right food would do—
and out of the system by morning,! what eating lots of fruit and what
the
liver, stomach and bowels.
Be sure you get the old reliable
and genuine. Ask your druggist
for the full name, "Syrup of Figs
without griping, nausea or weak-, plenty of exercise will do for
ness. It means a cheery day to-
morrow -many bright days there-
after!
Please don't think of gentle, ef-
vided by the last session of congress,
Beaufort and that part of the Cam. wher”e ~conom7c pVoducts oMlTe
country and Its diseases are studied.
lina coast will be the most important
point on the South Atlantic coast,”
suid E. J. Rogers, a railroad man of
Beaufort, at the Raleigh.
The work has already begun, sur-
veys now being under way. This
harbor when completed will give ves-
sels a safe port practically in the
ocean, Cape Lookout being about ten
miles from the mainland. It will un-
questionably be the most available
harbor on the Atlantic coast.
Beaufort has a harbor that will ac-
commodate vessels of any draught,
hut the bar at the entrance to the i
The principal cause of this unexam-
pled growth Is the position of Khar-
tum, at the junction of the two great
rivers that form the Egyptian Nile.
The Blue Nile rises in the moun-
tains of Abyssinia, and is the solo
source of the floods that are the life
of Egypt. The White Nile takes its
rise from the great lakes of Central
Africa and the snows of the fabled
mountains of the Moon.
Under a dispensation of peace and
order the rich natural resources of the
fvotive Syrup of Figs as a physic, j and Elixir of Senna," prepared by
Don't think you are drugging yonr-jthe California Fig Syrup Company,
self, for luscious figs, senna and Hand hack with scorn, any Tig
aromatics cannot injure anyone.
This re murky, hie fruit prepara
Syrup imitation
"just ns good."
recommended
JUST RECEIVED—a large shipment ot
gilxpf. marmalade,
PEACH MARMALADE,
HONEY MARMALADE,
BLACKBERRY MARMALADE,
LOGANBERRY JAM,
LOGANBERRY PRESERVES,
( ANTALtlFPE PRESERVES,
j . CHERRY PRESERVES.
C. D. Pierce, Grocer
NEW PHONE r.tfl, OLI) PHONE 5H7.
Smith Travis Street, Between Two Bakeries.
Uncle Pennywise Says;
A man who’s been a failure at ev-
erything else figures that he can al-
ways fall hack on the chicken busi-
ness.
country will be rapidly developed,
harbor keeps away ships drawing Much of the rPKion ,a &din!rably
more than twenty feet. Before the i adapted t0 the raising of cotton,
war Beaufort harbor was the largest j Ther0 fre very extenstve forests, cap-
port on the south Atlantic roast, Hut I able of supplying, among other thing's.
It has done comparatively little since the very valuable product, rubber.
Our Daily Special.
The Only Things Worth Doing ar*
.he Things we Shouldn't Do.
WANTS—TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
the war."—Washington Post.
ri-
Wm. A. Allen, Chacon, X. Mex.,
writes: "My w.ji'.i had a cough that
nearly choked her to death the
worst 1 ever saw: YVe tried ev-
erything we could thick of hut did
her no good. By •mod luck I hap-
pened to get a bottle of Foley’s
Honey and Tar Compound an! it
helped her at once. It is the host
cough medicAn#,,I ever hear! of. '
Sold by W. Li. Bitting. m-w-F&w
(Advertisement)
For Lump Coal and Washed Nut
Coal, phone 369. BUSSEY & CO.
(Advertisement) o3-tf
Daily Thought.
A little philosophy incltneth man’s
mind to atheism, but depth in philos-
ophy bringeth men’s minds about to
religion.—Bacon.
Notice to Woodmen.
All members of Gherman Camp
No. 9 are hereby, notified that there
will-be a call meeting of Camp to-
night, October 18th for the purpose
of considering the attending of the
' alias Fair Woodmen Day, Oct,
! 4 th.
• C. A. WALCOTT,
Commander.
f. P. GREGORY, Clerk.
Fry Chicken in
Cottolene
The vast swamps on the White Nile
are to be drained and made culti-
vable. When all these tilings have
been accomplished, the newborn
Khartum will undoubtedly become
the leading city of Africa In wealth
and population, and In industrial and
educational activities.
When the chest feels on fire and
the throat burns, you have Indiges-
tion, and you need HERBINE to get
rid of the disagreeable feeling. It
drives out badly digested food,
strengthens the stomach and puri-
fies the bowels. Price 50c. Sold by
Lankford-Ke'ith Drug Co, d&w
(Advertisement.)
HIST—-Short black coat to lady s
coat suit. Reward for return to Mrs.
A. E. Tankersley, 614 Dirge street.
o-1 S-31
FOB A SHORT TIME ONLY
I will give a complete six weeks’
treatment, including singeing, sham-
pooing and massaging for only $5.
MISS RETTfET, '5fl.'MrGRKW,
Successor to Mrs. Emma W. Jackson
First-chi** Manicuriot.
Vow I’l.one IHiiei Old Phone 771
-i—
HAIR DRESSING
Hair Work. Manicuring, Massag-
ing and Scalp Treatment. Call New
Phone 453. 914 North Montgomery
street.
MISS MELISSA W. GIBSON.
Barham
Bros.
The $1.00 Prolit
Men.
Best Tailors. . „
Suit or Overcoat
to order $14.00.
We tailor to tit.
0 © # © 0 O $ O O 0 B & & e 0 O G & 0 S & O ■::> •:;> O Q *3 Q O O & G & O & S & & & ® ® $ -3
® **r
&
©
$
$
$
•
©
The New Idea Sale
Has been the scene ot a continual seeking ot shoppers since
| the opening day.
THERE IS NO SECRET to the "wonderful drawing power of
The New Idea Sale
The best fried chicken you
ever ate can be made with
Cottolene.
Cottolene can be heated to
a much higher temperature
than either butter or lard,i®
without burning. It fries so
quickly that little of the fat is
absorbed, preventing the food
being greasy. For this reason,
Cottolene-fried food is more
healthful than food fried in
butter or lard.
Cottolene is
more econom-
ical than lard
— goes one-
third farther;
costs very
much less
than butter.
HE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY
WE SELL THE GOODS FAST BECAUSE WE SELL THEM CHEAP
SHERMANS NEW IDEA STORE
&
$
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, October 18, 1912, newspaper, October 18, 1912; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth719459/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .