Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 29, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
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Herr von Bethmaoh-Holweg, chatt-
' cejlor of the German empire,
fifi yearn old today.
Ernest W. Brown, professor of
mathematics at Yale Univer-
sity, 4r. years old today.
Simon N. D. North, former direc-
tor of the United States cen-
sus, fin years old today.
Ideut. Col. .1 antes Domvtlle mem
her of the Senate of Canada.
TO years old today.
John A. Maguire, who has beer,
re-elected to congress from
the First Nebraska district.
4n years old today.
Francis C. BurnatrrV, for many
years editor of England's fa
raous humorous weekly,
“Punch," 7$ years old today
THIS DATE IN HISTORY.
November iltt.
16S2--Prince Rupert., founder and
first governor of the Hud-
son's Bay company, died In
England. Born in Prague.
Dec IS. 1619.
1798—Hamilton R. Gamble, war
governor of Missouri, born.
i Died Ian. SI..1864.
1808—Sir Frajtcls Nathaniel Burton
took office as lieutenant gov-
ernor of Upper Canada.
1811—Wendell Phillips, famous ora-
tor and reformer, born in Bos-
ton. Died there, Feb. 2, 18Si.
1830- The last Polish revolution
commenced at Warsaw
1863—Confederates under Gen.
Longstreet made their second
attempt to carry Knoxville by
storm, ~r"
1891—william Allen, to whose ef-
forte was largely due the en-
actment of a homestead law
by congress, dfed in Colnm-
bus. O. Born in Windham.
Conn.. May 23. 1810.
1896—John Scott. U. S. senator rroru
, Pfenftfrtlvania 1869-73, died in
Philadelphia. Born July 24,
1824.
1898—-Steamer Portland from Bos-
ton to Portland, Me., foun-
dered in a gale off Cape Co t,
with loss of 118 lives.
There are a few Shermanites In
California to spend the winter. Th»v
always come pack better satisfied
than ever before.
Thanksgiving over leaves Santa
Claus an unobstructed field for his
world-wide campaign and the man
and woman who would lie bappv
will shop early.
. Texas people are more than ordi-
narily thankful for thi bounteous
crops and prosperity and observed
the Thanksgiving day of 1912 with
gladness to the Giver of every tem-
poral need.
San Antonio is about to stop the
smoking habit on street cars. ano
the city eomm'ssion has a hunch
that the street car company will he
glad to see the reform effected
The Baltimore platform favored
the sing’e presidential term and the
term of Wilson is pledged to that
plank Then what? If Bryan and
Roosevelt live they will likely he
the nominees to contest for the high
houor .of being president in 1916.
They *a\ it will require thirty
million dollars more money to fin-
ish the Panama canal. What's the
difference. Whew the big waterway
Is opened for traffic the tolls wilt
icon repay the eApftfiditure and take.
up the bonds as thf;, mature.
-»--------
Gov. Dix of Nbw York has par
dotted Albert Patrick, an inmate at
Sing Sing prison for twelve years
Patr'clt was the legal adviser of Wil-
liam Marsh Rice of Texas. whose
depth occurred in New York The
taler Of Nice says he was prompter
by Patrick to commit the deed. |f
has beeft a mysterious case from the
beginning and doubt has existed in
tlie mind* of many that Patrick was
innocent. Relatives have spent a for-
tune to hat* hirti liberated and Gov.
tHx fare him his liberty believing
Mint he baa suffered fot a deed with
♦birth lie was in no wtse connected,
ibtubt alwatya belongs to the accused
and the *wt#rw»r has done what hl«
it* dftei
Witter.
One of the, absurdities of the cot-
ton trade is that the stuff used to
wrap the cotton bale is grown hi
India and manufactured in Scot-
land. ea>s the Memphis Commercial
Appeal.
The producers and manufactur-
ers of jute have the United States
for one of thetr biggest markets.
The people of the United States use
it just because they have been in
the habit of doing so. Nearly every
hale of cotton pays tribute to the
jute man.
It would take 100,01)9 Ogles of
cotton a. year to furnish wrappings
for a lo.non.ntu) crop, cotton wrap-
ping protects the raw cotton as
well as does the jute, makes a
neater package and in every way
would serve a wrapping purpose.
The more uses to which cotton is
put the greater will be the demand,
and unless there is a development
of cotton territory in some other
country the cotton area of the
Solid) will lie doubled. If the uses
of cotton are extended there will In-
demand for all of it.
Cotton should be used as wrap-
ping material ft r cotton. It should
be used as a sack for sugar. It
should lie used for twine and for
rope. It should be used for every-
thing when the cost is no greater
than the article now In use. Es-
pecially should cotton be used^for
jute for the reason tiiat every pound
of jute is a tax on the cotton grow-
er without any compensatory re-
turn.
TIIE „SHEItMAN SENTINEL.
• •V—» -
The attention of the Democrat
lias been called to an Item publish-
ed a few days since relative to the
sab- of the .-hetman Sentinel which
needs further explanation to do jus-
tice to all concerned. The news-
paper was sold to Mr. Bullock who
now has lull charge, but the plant,
including linotype and all machinery
is. retained by Mr Maxey, who will
conduct the job department .and do
1disposition for printers and will
also pay particular attention to law
brief printing
REFORMING THE MONETARY
SYSTEM.
A11 interesting fact about
present status of
reform of the
this country is that everyone
the struggle
1110D-'they system
t he
for
of
is
for reform and the only definite
proposition now before tin* country
is the Aldrich plan, which we be-
lieve we may say \ylth accuracy, is
repudiated. The probaniiity is that
with any other name attached to
the Aldrich plan it would have re-
ceived unanimous support and the
weak places would have been
eliminated by amendment, ns ex-
perience showed need. But with the
name of so unpopular a man at-
tached the weak points of the bill
will prevent it being made a law.
Mr. Aldrich stands with a coterie
of men* w ho stand for certain
things in our national politics
which the people repudiated at the
last general election, and his ad-
vice oil even this subject. about
which he knows so much, will be
taken with a grain of salt —and by
some with the entire salt cellar.
The work of the National Mone-
tary Commission Is not lost in
spite of - the prospective failure of
tlie hill which it proposed, for most
of the large sunt of money which it
expended, in its Investigations went
< I ERO S “TUHKEY TROT.”
Besides getting a great deal of
valuable advertising for itself and
the surroundnng country, the en-
terprising little city of t'nero has
given by its unique celebration ihis
week an illustration of the impor-
tance of poultry raising in Texas <0 the men who will try to correct
which is calculated to benefit the the features of the Aldrich plait
He Ha* Made With Riant Juice—
Term- Statement of Mr. J. M.
Garrett.
Although a resident of Sher-
man only four months. Mr. I M
Garrett of O'", South Willow stieb
has a large elide of friends an J
acquaintances in the <ity. He cam-
to Sherman from Muskogee. Oklu.
Mr. Garrett has ilia 1e a personal
test of pant .lube, the new tonic
‘wish li has swept over Texas like
wild fire, and which lias bt’ough*
forth piaiso from thousands of p o-
plf* in the larger cities of the sta*e.
What Mr. Garrett has to say will be
read with interest in Sherman.
“1 believe Plant. Juice is til*- great-
est tonic in the world. My iiidneys
have long given me trouble of seri-
ous character. 1 have had to get in
f!v" to seven tinn s of nights and ir.
addition i have teen a sufferer of
rheumatism. 1 hoard of such re-
markable things accomplished bv
your Plant Juice that 1 decided to
test it. And this is tile result. 1
urn better in every way. My kidney ;
eavp~t;f-f4^rj to y.ouble me; riteuina-
tisiYjttsf hi^ red: liver li deni-
ed y*ff r„(. {S£ on Is again perfes’.
i f'*nf ./i,/(. / ter and stronger
tlr rafreftiveiP'1 cl that I shall be
<%. ’f'e K.I VoJ >>' PlHl" •' n,‘* ‘
I) s. ov<>,., -, I have long been
t 'v 1 j,- ' jijs die greatest tonic
u| v -of the age. Taken
itY Jo it attaiks dis.-as ■
lisv .tines and teinovo* alt
toxic^ 30^ It clears the liver and
puts nc. ,e an .' strength into you.
It is an absolute specific for all de-
rangements of stomach, liver, kidneys
and hood. It will do you more good
than anything you have ever taken.
Every bottle guaranteed. S< e the
display today and talk with ‘the
Plant Juice man at Lankford-Kelth
drug stoic.
entire state.
Turkey raisers received for their
sales last year the very important
sunt of 871.490. a pretty good in-
come from a business which can be
conducted in connection with every
farm without detracting from the
chop demands. The turkeys sold
in Uttero last year averaged eleven
pounds each in weight and brought
III cents a pound bn fr-pt. Cuero
shipped 82 ears of dressed and fro-
zen turkeys, aggregating 704,000
pounds, and the result has been one
of which the citizens of that sec-
tion have a right to be proud.
But the lesson that is taught is
of statewide importance, because
what can lie done around Ceuro can
be done in almost any section of
Texas, and Die example which has
been set should not be overlooked
by fanners and others in other
parts of the state. if Cuero ship-
ped 3 2 cars last year, one hundred
Texas towns should ship one hun-
dred titnrts 32 carloads, or 70,-
400 pounds, worth 10 cents a
pound, aggregating $704,800.
There is a market for many more
turkeys titan Texas is likely to pro-
duce soon, so there need be ho
fear of overproduction. On the con-
trary. the more turkeys raised the
more popular they will be, conse-
quently the demand for them will
he greater.
Besides the entertainment which
Citrtro lias provided Its visitors and
besides the reputation it has gain-
ed by Its “Turkey Trot.” the city
has given a valuable object lesson
lo Texas.-— Kx.
would not have to go out of busi-
ness. because it could comply with
, , ... „,the law. Tile plan would be to
lor the collection and compiling of .; alM) P-auBe this tax fund which in
data that will be et untold value j the of „ „MV ynn bp
eery large—to protect the public
while the experiment was being
made so. that any losses could be
made good to the public.- Austin
Statesman.
to the nation for all time to come
arid that will be of especial value
ANIMAIS AND MEN.
Dr. Harvey Wiley, the apostle of
pure food, told* the' Wellesley Wo-
man’s club that it ' “was better
to be a stall-fed steer than a man,
or a fat bog than a lean woman.''
Tills scriptural paraphrase had a
decidedly pessimistic sound com-
ing from one of Dr. Wiley's well
known optimistic temperament, hut
the doctor was jocose. What he
meant to say was that more atten-
tion is given to the food of aniuiHis
than to that of the human species,
which is in a sense true.
And it doesn't apply to food
alone. More attention is given" to
the breeding of animals than to
that of the human species. Great
improvement lias been made in the
physical beauty, the spirit and
character of the horse by trie care
man has taken with hts breedtrtg,
and other animals, notably dogs,
have brten likewise improved. With
(he human species marriage is un-
restrained among all classes and
people of deformed shape, diseased
litfdles and cramped minds beget as
many children as the better sort.
The different grades of what is
called nobility, aristocracy or any
of the social distinctions, founded
Cn birth, wealth or station, make
obtie of little difference in this re-
spect. In fact, the family standing
of riches of a young person of de-
fective qualities often enables him
or her to marry when otherwise it
would he improbable.
Just how a remedy la to be
fott'nd for this condition is not So
easy to determine. Animals can be
bandied with much more facility in
this respect than men. What Is
known as the science or eugenics
is an effort in this direction. Its
pram teal application is necessarily
difficult.—'Nashville Banner.
Texas is the great turkey market
of the United State* and the indus-
try is growing rapidly. The turkey
harvest is running up into big fig-
ure* year by year.
President-elect Wilson has been
annoyed by visitors and kodak
fiend's in Bermuda. He should
have come to Trtxtl* bo spend a few
Weeks and cOukl Irtv* found so-hi
klhn in the fcardehs rtf Norfh Texan,
the broaff prairie* of the west, the
heart judgment suggest* after long plhey- forest* of East Texas or along
cphaiderotibu In
the epMt
which do not meet with popular fa
vc.r.
As is generally known, the pur-
pose of change in the monetary
system will lie to obtain elasticity,
which means that when there Is
Wealth and currency to represent
it is needed that currency will be
forthcoming. Rut there is another
need And that treed is the retire-
ment 01 this emergency currency
when the strain is past We heard
recently a suggestion for the work-
ing out of this problem, which, il
seems to us, is worthy of consider-
ation. The proposal Is that banks
having prime commercial paper in
their vaults at a time when cur-
rency is needed, lie permitted, tin-
der the direction of the national
bank examiners, to issue currency
against a certain percentage of
this paper. In this way. Austin,
lor instance, could supply the ne-
cessary credit for moving the got-
ten without calling on New York
and every other part of the country
could in time of ordinary pressure
meet the demands of its industrial
and commercial world. Now the
next 'problem would be to retire
tills currency when it was no
longer needful. Of course, it would
look just like any other currency
and by the word retire we do not
mean that it would Jie called in
front public use/ We mean that
when 1 lie pressue had passed the
banks that had issued this emer-
gency currency would simply for-
ward to Die department at Wash-
ington currency equal in amount to
their emergency currency fur can-
cellation. This would then put the
emergency currency on a basis of
guarantee of any other currency,
which means gold or government
bonds in the United States treas-
ury.
Now another problem arises in
fixing a manner of forcing a recall-
ing of litis currency. • Suppose the
hank was slow about it0 What could
be dche to spur action? What
could be done to wipe out the cur-
rency li^sed upon prime commercial
paper instead of upon gold or gov-
ernment bonds? The suggestion is
to lax the emergency currency a
very small amount as soon as it is
issued and to have this tax auto-
matically aiseil after ninety days.
At the end of the second ninety
days the plan would be to raise the
tax again to a figure Dial would he
prohibitive to emergency currency.
This would force the hank to ac-
tion or force it out of business, and
If the bank were in good hands it
THE ATTORNEY FEE LAW.
It Is an interesting story, that
seems to have taken shape at Com-
anche, (though the inspiration may
have come from some other place in
Texas) tiiat Senator Charles, A'. Cul-
berson will be called to Woodrow-
)V i I so n s cabinet and of course, re-
sign the senatorshlp: that Governor
Colquitt will then resign the execu-
tive office' and of course, be suc-
ceeded by Lieutenant Governor Will
A. Mayes, who will as soon as he
qualifies for governor, — appoint
Mr. Colquitt as Culberson's succes-
sor in the United States senate.
Well, stranger things have happen-
pened Waco TrlliuM*.
The new administration under
Sheriff Simmons have put Die lid
down pret.iy light oil the bootlegging
business in Denison and Sherman.
Several booze resorts in this city
have been raided, suspicions liquids
seized am! the places closed up.
The proprietors are usually absent
when the officer calls, but arrests
are liable to follow at any time.-—
Denison Gazetteer.
MAY PROVE FATAL
\Yhen Will Sherman People
“ |he Importance of It.
Lenin
Backache is only a simple thing
at first.
But when you know ’tig from tlie
kidneys;
That serious kidney trouble* fol-
low ;
That Bright's disease may be the
fatal end.
You will gladly profit by the fol-
lowing experience.
Tis the statement of a Sherman
citizen:
Mrs, J. B Parker, 800 N. Throck-
morton St.. Sherman, Texas, says:
“Doan's Kidney Pill* are in my opin-
ion the best remedy on the market.
I had occasion to take them for
rheumatic pains and lameness across
the small of my back. At times 1
suffered intensely and my kidneys
were in bad stripe. My general health
was run down. The contents of two
boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills gave
me relief. Since tliqn I haw al-
ways been ready to speak a good
word for Doan's Kidney Pills. Oth-
er^mentbevs of my family have been
greatly benefited through the use of
DoanB Kidney Pills."
For sale by all dealer*. Price 50
cents. Foster-MMburn Co., Buffalo.
New York, sole agents for the United
State*. J
Remefhber the name—Doan’s -
anil take np other.
Don't miss the 25c holiday open-
ing sale. Saturday it a. m. Nickel
Slore. Adv. 2x-_
LATEST WHIM OF JANITOR
Mrs. Audley Learnt He Is “Superin-
tendent” and Sees People Only
by Appointment.
Mrs. Audley, who had moved intc
a new apartment, was driven to the
verge of distraction by the persistent
failure of the janitor to perform cer
tain services which were essential to
the comfort of herself and her family.
Onp morning when her indignation
had reached the boiling point she
telephoned to the basement.
“I want to speak to the janitor,"
shp announced emphatically.
“Do you mean the superintendent?"
inquired thp voice of a woman at the
other end of the wire.
“I mean the janitor; but if calling
him ‘the superintendent’ makes him
do his work more promptly—the
superintendent.”
"The superintendent ain’t in his
apartment at the present moment,"
replied the voice, with unmistakable
haughtiness.
“Are you the ja—superintendent's
wife?” telephoned Mrs. Audley.
“I am Mrs Maebrtth, the wife of
the superintendent,” admitted the
voice.
“Well, I am Mrs Audley. I’lease
send your husband to me as soon as
possible. There are things that must
he done ill my apartment, ami that it
was his business to have done days
ago, and I want. What! busy? lie
may just as well be busy doing the
work I require as the work required
by anybody else in the house.” said
Mra. Audley hotly. “So, please tell
him to come to my apartment without
further delay.”
“The superintendent never sees no-
body except by special appointment,”
came Die voice from the basement.
“Oh.” murmured Mrs. Audley. and.
hanging up the receiver, sat down to
laugh.
Austin dispatches report as a mat-
ter of public interest chat the su-
preme court on Wednesday held con-
stitutional fhe act of the Thirty-
first legislature authorizing judg-
ments against the roads for $30 at
torney fee in any case where the
claim against the road is less than
$200 and which, after thirty days
have elapsed from the time it is fil-
ed. is not paid.
The ground upon which tlie law
was attacked was that there was a
conflict with that clause of the con-
stitution which provides that ' no
till (except general appropriation
bills) shall contain more tha.11 one
subject which shall )>e expressed in
the title.”
Tlie opinion off Chief Brown upon
any constitutional question is entit-
led to profound respect, and The
Chronicle has 110 purpose to criticise
the opinion rel'ered to, but it is at
liberty to criticise the law, and had
it been attacked upon other grounds
and sustained it should have com-
mented on tlie holding.
The law is not. in the judg-
ment of the Chronicle,, eith-
er just or wise. Why single
(out u railroad and subject it
single out a railroad and subject it
to tlie payment of attorney's fees
any more than a telegraph company,
a gas company, a canal company, or
any other public service or quasi
public service corporation? Why, if
a man have a claim against two cor-
porations and neither pays, should
one of the defaulting rr delaying
debtors tie mulcted for an attorney's
fee for delay and the other not?
There was at one time in Texas a
law which authorized judgment for
$ I n attorney's fee if a claim for kill-
ing stock was not paid in a certain
length of time by a railroad. One
of the first cases under it came up
before a judge now on the bench in
Houston. He held the law to be
class legislation and unconstitutional
and refused to enforce it. Later
another trial court held differently
and tlie railfnad appealed. Tlie in-
termediate appellate court and the
supreme court affirmed the holding.
Tlie general attorney of the Santa Fe,
though only $10 was involved, car-
ried the case to the supreme court
of Die United States, which court re-
versed all the state courts and held
the act invalid, as it should have
done. *
It is such legislation as the bill
referred to which gives ground for
the charge often made that Texas
legislators and presumably Texas
people are prejudiced against rail-
roads.
What is needed is a general law,
applicable to all corporations and all
individuals, authorizing as part of
every judgment a reasonable attor-
ney fee just enough to compen-
sate the plaintiff for the expense to
which''he Is put. When a debt is
justly due and the debtor refuses to
pay and suit Is necessary, the credi-
tor should not be obliged to give up
a substantial part of his recovery as
an attorney's fee. He should not
be compelled to hear the cost of a
suit which is made necessary by
fault of the debtor.
There is such a law in many of
tjie states and it* is just and right.
Many a solvent debtor would pay
who does not pay now if he knew an
attorney's fee would be added to the
judgment against him, and many an
honest, forbearing creditor would
collect his debt In
to
and come out loser.
Such a law has long been heeded
and ought to he enacted, but
such law as the court had before it, “sage tea” made by our grandmothers'.
Magic of the Rainbow.
The rainbow shimmering high tn
the hpavens is more than a mere arch
of glowing eolors. It is a royal am-
bassador from the kingdom of nature,
a herald bearing a message of vast
importance to mankind. Written up-
on its brilliantly-hued, shining arch-
way is a truth that man has finally
appreciated after the countless ages
that have passed since the first rain-
bow glorified the hpavens. And this
truth is what? Nothing less than the
revelation of the component elements
that constitute the cun and starB and
the dim-chining nebulae lost tn the
farthermost hiding places of the unU
verse. By means of thts truth, writ-
ten large upon the raindrops, we
know more about the composition of
the sun, 93,000,009 miles from the
earth, than we do about the world on
which we dwell.—Popular Mechanics
Magazine.
USED IE TEA
To Darken the 'Hair and Re-
store Gray and Faded Hair
to Its Natural Color,
It is easier to freserve the color of
the hair than to restore it, although it.
is possible to do both. Our grand-
mothers understood the secret. They
made a “sage tea.’’ and their dark,
glossy hair long after middle life was
due to this fact. Ouf' mothers have gray
hairs before they are fifty, but they are
beginning to appreciate the wisdom of
our grandmothers in using “cage lea”
tor their hair and are fast following suit.
,.... 1 The present generation has the advan-
full and not hftV*|tage.of the past in that it can get a
give a large part of it to get it ready-to-use preparation called Wyeth’s
Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy, As a
scalp toirle and- color restorer this prop-
no aration is vastly superior to the ordinary
Wednesday ought to
acted.
ha ve been etc j The growth and 'beauty of the hair
'depends on a healthy condition of the
scalp. Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Unit
Remedy quickly kills the dandruff germt
Regulate the bow'Is when theiy Remedy quickly Kills the dandruff germ*
■all to move properly, HERBINE which rob the hair of its life, color ana
is an admirable bowel regulator, r-Juatre, makea the scalp clean and
helps tlje liver and stomach and re- healthy, gives the hair strength, color
stores a fine feeNug of strength and, an5 I’'8!.'//’ ar>d makes It grow,
tiitoyancv. Price ..be. Sold by'. wNWcstitVittlefromyourdruggEst
Lankford-Kelth Drug Co.-Adv. ' areH«/.Sffl 'V“Ur b?c.k
Toilet Exquisites
In Parisian Ivory
Vanity Boxes, IVrfuine Bottles,* Combs, Brnsties. Minors,
llair Receivers, Duff Boxes, I'lmilcr Boxes, Hair Din nml Hat Din
Holders, Nail Buffers, Files, Brushes. Talcum Boxes and many
other pieces. Ask to see them.
Lankford-Keith Drug Co.
You Remember the Fine Cherry Pies
I
Thai you had al Y. M. C. \. Iasi Spring? We
have lhe same kind ol Cherries in slock and a
lull Hue ol all tresh can goods.
HARDAWAY-MUSE
s>o
McALKSTEH H MD NTT,
BRIAR CREEK LDMR.
ARKANSAS (BERNICE) ANTHRACITE,
DENNSYI,VANIA ANTHRACITE AND SMITHING COAL.
tVel’urchase Only the Rest and Our Driers Are Based
on Quality.
Our Weights are Correct and Service I'ronitrt.
TERMS CASH
WE ADDKKCIATE YOl'R DATRONAGE.
Dlit).VMS Btl.
£. ARNOLD!
New IHarket Just Opened
I resh Meals of all kinds. Orders taken uml goods delivered
promptly.
Lester Pedigo
At the O. I,. Fields' Old Stand. Corner Cherry end Yaden.
c
0 AL FOR
OLD DAYS
delivered when you need it—
hs you want it. Thoroughly
screened and free from slate
or waste.
Phone your ordpr today and
we ll send a load up right
away.
BOTH PHONES 251.
«
H. L. Bishop
(S.N’VI)ER'SJDLD ST A NIL)
il & w if y0U 8re 8Btisfted af a fair trial.
OIL BURNINC F0AD
The Hustler
V
TME FASTEST TRAIN IN
TEXAS
“The Owl”
FAST NIGHT TRAIN
North and South
HEAVY RAILS
ROCK BALLAST
SAFETY IN TRAVEL
For Detailed , Information Ask
the Local Agent
RAILWAY I IMtt TABLE.
II. & T. C. RAILWAY. !v_
Going North.
No. 5................10:15 a. ni.
Going South.
................1:20 p. n>.
No. 6 .
Missoini,
KANSAS A TEXAS.
Southbound.
No.
251
arrive .......11:00 a.tu.
No.
253
arrive......1:43 p.
m.
North bound:
No,
252. departs . . ..11:10 a.
tn.
No.
2 54
departs . . . . 3:30 p.
m.
T. & P. RAILWAY.
.„
Going East.
No.
32,
mail and Ex. ... 12:43 p.
m.
No.
34,
Cannon Ball ... 7: 43 a.
m.
No.
36,
express, leaves..4:00 p
in.
Going West:
No.
31,
mail and Ex.. . 1:38 p.
in.
No.
33,
Cannon Ball.. 10:41 p.
in.
No.
35,
express Ar. ... 10:50 a.
m.
COTTON BELT.
No.
29
arrives ...... 9:50 a.
m.
No.
203
arrives .. 6:25 p.
m
No.
204
leaves......10:35 a.nx
No.
30
leaves.....4:55 p.
m.
0. L. GUINN
PIANO TUNER FOR
Kidd-Key College,
Carr-Burdette College,
Sherman Music Co.,
Residence Phone: Old 885.
HAIR WORK
For all kinds of Hair Work,
Manicuring, Shampooing, Scalp
Massaging and also buy combings.
Ring old phone 4 94. ' Call 703
Natchez, Travis street.
MISS ALMA U. SMITH.
WANT \'0S. DO IT “NOW:
FRISCO RAILWAY.
I
507 (southbound) arrtves 9:10 p. ta
508 (northbound ). leaves 6:20 a nx
50_9 (southbound) leaves 3:55 p.m.
510 1 northbound) leave* 12:01 p.m.
Motor car ,8-bound, lv..6:20 a. m.
Motor car (X-bound) Ar. 10:15 p.m.
INTERURBAN TIME TABLE.
South Bound.
Ikjeal cars leave 45 minutea after;
the hour.
Ffrst car to Dallas .......5:45 a. m.
Last car to Dallas ......9:45 p. m.
Last car to McKinney.. 11:15 p. m.
Car leaving at 6:45 p. m. stop* at
McKinney. No car leaving at 8:45
p. m.
Limited cars pass at 7:00 a. m-,
11:00 a. m. 1 p. m. and 6:00 p. m.
Local cars from Denison arrive 37
minutes after the hour from 6:37
a. m. to 10:37 p. m., inclusive, 11:50
p. m. and 1:00 a. m., also 7 minutea
after the hour from 9:07 a. m. to
7:07 p. m. inclusive.
North Bound:
Local cars arrive on the hour.
First, car from McKinney. 8:00 a. m.
First car from Dallas. ..9:00 a. m.
Last car from Dallas and McKin-
ney ..........11:49 p. m.
Limited cars pass at 9:40 a. m.,
m. and 8:40
I
1
11:40 a. m., 3:40 p.
p. m.
Local cars leave ft
a. m. ancLJJKmlnu
for Denlaon 6:00
minutea after the
hour from 7:15 a. m. to M:10 p.
m., inclusive and 11:50 p. m. Al*o
45 minutes after the hour from
8:45 a. m. to 5:45 p. m. inclusive.
Car leaving at 6:45 p. ib. stops at
Woodiake.
mm
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 29, 1912, newspaper, October 29, 1912; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth719895/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .