Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 17, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
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VXGETWO.
SHERMAN DAILY DEMOCRAT.
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1912'il
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SHERMAN, TEXAS.
11
O. O, * B. C. HUNTER; Publishers.
The Dally Democrat ts the official
newspaper of the City of Sherman
and publishes all legal notices.
Subscription: 60 cents per month.
98.09 per year In advance.
It;.''
The Weekly Democrat Is published
on Thursday. 91.00 per year. It Is
the big county sent newspaper.
:•
Dallas Office—307 Juanita Bldg.
Phona Main 4888. F. A. Wynne,
special representative.
Mall subscribers changing location!
abould give their former address as
well aa the new one. Bubecrlbert
•erred by city carrlere will please
aeeist the management In rendering
good service by making complaints
gbout Irregularities or omissions.
-BOTH PHONES-
THX DEMOCRAT EXTENDS
Congratulations to:
Thomas F\ C.ailor, Protestant
Episcopal bishop of Tennes-
see 58 years old today.
John R. McKean, Cincinnati
newspaper publisher, '64
years old today.
Sydney Anderson, representative
in congress of the First
Minnesota district, 32 years
old today.
Charles R. Davis, representative
• In congress of the Third
Minnesota district, 63 years
old today.
country and we are still In the for-
mative period. We take short cuts
and dangerous chances. Railroads
will continui to pay for the lives of
those they sacrifice and the injury
to persons In assuming to trans-
port. them over their lines. Yet, this
personal Injury business is abused.
Courts are confronted with cases
that have little or no just right to
ask for damages. Juries lu Texas
have been liberal with defendants
in damage suits and have in many
rases no doubt rendered verdicts
that were excessive. The perjurer
gits on the witness stand, or at
least many people think they d'o,
and because the defendant is a big
corporation th re is a notion com-
mon among the masses that It ought
to be lilt good and hard. The peo-
ple should re mem b r ope thing in
the disposition of damage suits
against railroads, that the > judg-
ments are paid by the people.
For proof of this ask th.- rail
road commission of Texas. It is
charged' up in computing running
expenses and earnings. The com-
mission takes all this Into account,
damage suits and all, in the ad-
justment of tariffs.
“Jones, lie pays the freight," but
Jones don't. The f. How who buys
the wagon pays if. Likewise the
people pay for lots of tilings they
are Ignorant about.
-I
$
L
THIS DATE IN HISTORY
September 17.
1665-
1778-
1792-
1825-
-King Philip IV of Spain died.
Born April 8, 1605.
-Presidio of San Francisco
founded.
-Meeting of first parliament of
Upper Canada.
-Mordecai M. Noah selected
Grand Island, in the Niagara
• River, as a site for a city of
refuge for the Jews, to he
W*! WWtfflKb'wWMMk” between!'
•.....tire federal* under Gen Me-
t; under Gen. Lee.
1871—Inauguration ,pff the h iMprtt,
Cenis tunnel*);, i.hfougji'j
Alps.
1878—The Mackepile government.
‘ • hi ‘t data alert *tn t.ha 'general
the negro ignorant not me
books, i sbst of the meaning
great forces of human life,
rant of the meaning of lifi
and duty—this is the menaci
pate,, that menace of its pe
order. It is rarely that
iHle.Uigent Christian colored
“ defeated ’in the
elections in Canada.
1884—Tin discovered In West Vir-
ginia.
1894—Japanese defeated the Chi-
nese In the battle of th® Valu
river.
1909—The »i
mens
Bill.
1911—Thomas H. Carter. former
■......
ton, D, C. Born in Ohio in
1854.
)
railway damage suits.
if
:
mS»a.
H. G. Askew of Austin has given
out h statement relative to railway
damage suits in which he says:
“Thirty-two Texas rairoads paid
out for one year to June 30 last 82.-
923.944.20 in personal damage suits,
or 75 cents per capita for each per-
son in Texas. (
“This enormous sum would have
been sufficient to have operated on
the same basiB K cost the state for
the fiscal year ending August 31
last, the various slate departments
as follows:
1 “Executive office for over sixty-
five yeprs.
“Department of secretary of
state for over one hundred and stx-
ty-two years.
“Department of insurance and
banking for over twenty-aix years.
“State board of health for over
forty-five years.
“State live stock sanitary com-
mission for over eighty-live years.
“Attorney general's department
for over seventy years.
“Department of education for
over one hundred and fifteen years.
“Railroad commission for over
elghty-one years.
“University of Texas for nearly
eleven years.
“Agricultural and Mechanical col-
lege for nearly eight years.
“State experimental stations for
over fifty-six years.
“All the higher courts for nearly
eighteen years.
“The Confederate home for over
thirty-one years.
“All the state asylums for the In-
sane for nearly three and one-half
yeare.
“It would have paid the pensions
and maintained the Confederate
Pension Bureau for over five and
one-half years.
“It would have sustained every
part and' parcel of the present
state government for a period or
about aeven full months.’’
The railroads are to blame for
many of the accidents because of
negligence and defective equipment.
However, R appears to the nolooker
In aome of the cast® that judgments
are sometimes excessive. The rail-
roads of the United States have
more accidents than anywhere in
the world. We kill more people In
railway accidents taking Into account
the same mileage and amount of
inf«ty a|tpllaac«a, good
smooth, firm roadbed,
i who are competent'and careful,
i the fatalities and Injui-
___ __.. Tm #*w
The Tioga Herald man almost
calls names when he scolds some of
his citizens. Me says there are
men In his town who pretend to
be merchants who borrow the local
paper. ' Of course, they don't ad-
vertise and' that may tell the secret
why Tioga ts a town of about 500
people when it ought to be larger
than Mineral Wells. It has as good
or better water but Is too backward
to tell about it. Hit 'em again
Herald man.
JAIL KECK LESS DRIVER!*.
Three deaths from the operation
of automobiles in or near Chicago
on Sunday and a long list of injur-
ed from the same cause show that
state and municipal efforts at reg-
ulation of these vehicles do not
stop reckless driving. Limitations
of speed and requirements of safe
operation in the vicinity of street
}o he ignored by automo-
cars seem
hiiists who are reckless or indiffer-
ent to the safety of pedestrians.
The public on foot, of course, can
not he absolved from the duty of
carefulness In the streets and roads;
there are careless, overventure-
some pedestrians, and careful and
conscientious automohilists. But
anyone who is observant sees daily
evidence of lack of care on the part
of drivers of automobiles. One dri-
ver. for example, as his car passed
swiftly along North Clark street
last Sunday, kept up an animated
conversation with those seated be-
hind him, his head beijig turned
backward oftener than forward. Had
his car struck a pedestrian or anoth-
er vehicle while thus engaged he
might have been technically inno-
cent but morally guilty of criminal
carelessness.
Carelessness on the part of auto-
mobile drivers is too much In evi-
dence. A man or woman'guiding
a machine so fraught with possi-
bilities of injury and death should
be as soberly devoted to Ills duty of
running it as a railroad engineer ia
to the task of guiding tits locomo-
tive. Cntit there Is a greater
sense of responsibility on the part
of many automohilists accidents
will occur, despite efforts to enforce
the law against speeding. But these
laws should be strictly enforced,
and a few jail sentences instead of
fines would do much to deter froTli
dangerous practices those drivers
whose conduct eaii he regulated only
by fear of punishment. — Chicago
Record-Herald.
PEOPLE S FORUM.
LABOR AN1) EDUCATION.
E. L. Hlackshear. principal of
Prairievlew Normal College deliver-
ed a good address at the ^national
Baptist convention (col. I at Hous-
ton last week. The following is only
a, small portion of pis, talk to the
J\V* tljou^iinHj t#!<iripjtj^eople'; pres-
ent;
S><Next (o:.Mre performance of Chris-
tian duty, our two greatest concerns
lid in
Christian duties. We
great
lokej flurjfailh and interest
cation'. ' it is the Ignorant
must! never
edu-
negro,
ly of
f the
labor be Increasingly useful i
SMSlWsSlS
meeting the question- came up as
to the status of the working colored
woman. A leader declared it was
n delicate question. My friends,
this question should he handled
without gloves.
“It is not the colored woman that
works that is a menace to the race.
It Is the colored woman or man that
does not work that disgraces us.
Let us honor the hard working ne-
gro niau or woman. They are the
backbone of our progress, the root,
and branch of our churches, our
fraternal orders or business enter-
prises and our educational institu-
tions. We spend enough on skin
bleaches and hair straighteners to
endow a college each year. But it
is not the kinks on the head that 1
am concerned about straightening,
but those within the thinking,
not the skin of the race that need
bleaching, but the hearts and its
life. If it is hot our destiny to
command the applause of listening
senates, to make up armies, to make
laws or to enforce them, we can do
something that is equally as useful
so far as we are concerned. We can
obey the laws and respect the cus-
toms and traditions of the land. The
country, and, Indeed, the civilised
world, is in a period of transition.
New ideas are coming to the front.
Men are coming to see that it is a
nobler thing to he loved than to be
feared. Let us as a race exalt the
service we perform in all lines of
honor and endeavor in a noble op-
portunity. 1-et us serve our day and
generation In kindness and fidelity.
Le us make men value and love us
for the skill and usefulness of our
service.
Necessity has made us the most
peaceable, inexpensively controlled
10,000.000 of people on the globe.
We come nearer following the gold-
en rule than any other people. We
are fine diplomats. We have to be.
Like the negro bishop tn a Louisi-
ana town who was anxious to get
a hack to catch a train at a depot
a mile awdy. He approached the
white man and offered him polite-
ly, a stiver dollar to take him to the
station.
“Parson,” said the white man.
1 need that dollar, but I (don't
drive niggers.”
Sir,” said the bishop, “I must
catch (hat train, take the dollar
and get in the hack and I will do
the driving.”
II was an unusual sight—a negro
bishop turned backman and a white
haekman a passenger in his own
hack for the first time. But the
sltuafion was saved and the propri-
eties and amenities well preserved.
The bishop made the train; the
white man got the dollar—and re-
sumed charge of his bajek.
4-
Although Sweden long has been
a leading country in the
ture of matches, Its first toothpick
m *m «wrt »»i/ rwwor-
",KW
Scientists say the suu Is growing
cold. At this distance a£i locality
the; cooling process is hardly notice-
able and this Uawktye will have to
be “showed."
The pictures in newspapers some-
ttme Show the homes of Chambers
of Commerce. Sherman will have
one, too, hut we want tue library
and auditorium first.
Huge of many kinds and sizes
stopped business in Childress for
several hours yesterday morning and
cars could not run for several hOuiSj
In that town; They were so tkiel$
wheelbarrows'and shovels had : ; to
be ns. (1 to gather up the bugs that.:
fell under the electric lights jaud
sand ha.J to b» placed on the tricks
'Of railroads to move cars.
WILSON CAMPAIGN FUND,
Dollar subscriptions to the dem-
ocratic campaign fund to elect Wil-
son and Marshall will be received
and forwarded to the nationai treas-
urer by the Demourat.
Contributions Received.
H. A. Ivy ....... .<.......,|l.t)0
H. E. Hall .............. t 00
E. C. Hunter.....;........ 1-00
G. N. Roberts 1.00
Mrs. C. N. Roberts....... ... IiOO
timers. The sit uation was grow fog
a (Hite, 'Alien th flUenvery of tjfe
pletwrea settled the matter conclu-
sively by giving the old' wooden
Stable, with a big wooden sign negr-
as big as a side of the house sur4
C. 9. Roberts............... 1.001 'ftountiiig a sturdy wooden post in
J. Q. Adamson ............. 1;0(C
Anyone who wants to have a part'
tn ttie good work may do so by
sending any amount, large or smalt,
to the Democrat, filling in the fol-
lowing blank form:
Sherman Democrat
Wilson and Marshall Fund,
Date.
Name;
Address:
Amount:
Honduras Is developing a valu-
able Industry from its hitherto ig-
nored guano palm trees, which
yield a lumber lighter than cork.
I THIS LS MY 48TH BIRTHDAY. *
| September 17.
Jaim - C. Needham.
James C, Needham, one of the
veteran members of the Cal-
ifornia delegation in the national
house of representatives, was born
September 17, 1864. The interesting
event occurred In an emigrant wagon
in the vicinity of Caison City, Nev,,
while his parents were enroute to
California. Mr. Nedeham was gradu-
ated from the University of tlie Pa-
cific in 18x6 and from the law
school of tbe University of Michigan
three years later. After being ad-
mitted to the liar he began the prac-
tice of his profession at Modesto,
Cal., whch place has since been his
home. He was elected to congress
by the republicans of the Sixth Ca-'l-
foruia district, in 1899 and has been
re-elected six times.
------- ---- —. j___
NO MORE
GRAY OR
FADED HAIR
Women and men who use PARIS-
IAN Sage can be sure their hair will
-never turn gray.
PARISIAN SAGE will preserve
the natural color of thp hair; stop
It from becoming faded and tireless,
a»nl by nourishing the hair root to
give to the hair a lustre and ra-
diance that compels admiration.
PARISIAN Sage stops falling hair”
banishes dandruff; makes the scalp
• lean gud tree from Itching and
promotes a growth of heavy hair.
Large bottle 50 cents at dealers
tuanufac- everywhere. Bold by Tile Craycroft-
Stlhson Drug Co. on money back if
dissatisfied plan.
Other Itig Cotton Days.
To the Deuioirat:
In last Friday's paper, under the
h-.adlog "Sherman Once Got Cot-
ton,” you natna circus day in 1879
as the record lor' receipts, with a
thousand balsa claiming the prize.
I well remember two days tint
outranked it in the season of
1X77-78, the actual high water mark
■icing about, the middle ot Decem-
ber, 1,877, Wheu there were over
eleven hundred hales on the square
in one day; the other which 1 be-
lieve was in January, showing over
r, thousand.
How do I remember so well?
Thereby hangs a tale. On the two
days named Jim Caradine photo-
graphed the square. I sent copies
of both pictures to my old home to
let the folks see what kind of a
country 1 had discovered. Many
yeais .ater, when on a visit. out
there, 1 saw the old pictures auu
they appealed to me for two rea-
sons. First, on the merits of the
pictures themselves, for they show-
ed houses, bearing rign- of business
conccirns which I had dear forgot-
ten, as well as the houses shelter-
ing .them and seeing them called up
any long lost incident:’, of the past.
Of the, buildings shown in the pic-
tures, the Alexander building on
the west side and the Fitch block on
the north were ail that were still
in commission at the time 1 dis-
covered tlia pictures. Tbs rest
were all did one story wooden build-
ings, except the Southern Hotel on
the north side, where the Jewel
picture show and the implement
house adjoining on the east now
stands. This was the “dude eatery
of the town then and consisted ol
a lull story b low and a slant above
where a joug■ nosed man walking
around in the dark was liable to
smash that member against the
wall. The second reason was that
there had long been a controversy
on- between Charley Wandelohr and
myself about the date of the con-
struction of the building now occu-
pied by the Cash Grocery, which, at
the time of the opening of the con-
troversy, was owned and occupied by
us as a grain house; I. who came
here in September, 1876, claiming
that at the time of my arrival and
lor about two years longer, the site
was occupied by an old wooden
building ‘used as a ifvery stable,
which afterwards occupied the brick
building built around it. as It stood.
He stoutly insisted that wltdu he
first set foot ill tile town, which
was about the middle of January,
1877, that the brick house was al-
ready constructed. W® wagered a
‘suit of clothes on our opinions and
A'lit out to dig for proof and
Strange as it may seem, neither
John fenriedy. wild “Occupied-' both
btHUliu&d' during Yhe 'time eduhl
tel), tt&r fektlld-Mpubl:1 Bilge, whej J
believe wil iiilVivstetl In the' busi-
ness with JflgV nor Charley McFar-
land.' who littMt the brick, nor S.
A. '•SchotfU tvHdse father owoM the
grfihhd, attf other of the lojd
a; mi... . 1 ...tn., n'rOnufYlF
front with a horso pictured: doing a
7oake walk, and turning the picture
ovef, was the endorsement tu faded
ink in my handwriting. “Taken in
Dec. 1877."
I prized the pictures very highly
for as stated, they showed so much
that without them was utterly lost-
There was not a stick, or timber on
the square, except the old pe an on
the south side which was used as a
hank of ueposit by the old time
traders whereon to hang up their
saddle pockets which were some-
times loaded wRh gold, but were
lift there just the same. Cotton
wagons butted right Into the court
house corners and here and there in
the sea of wagons and cotton, would
be a face and one of the host pic-
tures i ever saw of Ed Levy was
in the lower left hand comer of one
of these pictures.
As said, 1 prized these pictures
beyond any rational comparisons I
could now make and they probably
marked the zenith of the old town,
for like Mark Twain’s mountain riv-
ulet on Hie continental divide, part
ed in its middle by the atone which
piloted the water striking it on
one side to the Atlantic and that
striking it on the other were de-
flected to the golden gate ami’ the
waters of the Pacific, except that in
our case the current had been all
our way, for Sherman was the big-
gest trading point in the west, hud
tlie richest territory as well as tlio
biggest, reaching, as it did from
the Dallas county line t.o Kansas,
and from Hunt county on the east
to the Indian tepees on tho west
Add to this the bigg st and best
.lank and Hie most, populous county
in the slate and you have the situa-
tion. Bear in mind that at the time
this was doing Fort Worth had no
railroad and had iCss population
than Siiennau had; there was vir-
gin forest between East Dallas and
the union depot-—I have seen it
myseif and it would look from all
tn is that the stream should have
continue^ to flow our way, hut it
is claimed by some that some pig-
gish snout., rooting around In the
flow pushed the stone over so that
tho current went the other way and
we know the feat.
One tiling, however, that is axio-
matic seems to have been overlook-
ed by th. hand on the rudder ol
our craft and that is that no great
l ilies can lie created by people who
have no faith in their real estate
vaues and we have been dominated
in times past by those who were woe-
fully weak in the failh when it
comes to land values. However, that
Is another story which I won’t dis-
cuss now. It only remains to take
our village and make the most of
it.
A. P. FINLEY-
,.A
A machine has been/invented In
England for turning the rims and
boring and finishing tj/e hubs of
wooden wheels at the Bame time.
LORNA MAKES HAY
WHILE SUN SHINES
By DOROTHY DOUGLAS,
Lorna gazed blankly at the big ship
that was making its way ponderously
out to sea. She was stumped with the
sudden knowledge that her husband
was glad to be leaving her.
They had been married a scant
year, and through all those months
Lorna had fought against the hints,
from kindly neighbors, that her hus-
band had married her out of pique.
But Lorna had believed in her hap-
piness until the moment the ship had
pulled away from the wharf with her
husband on hoard. Then, she had
looked up suddenly at him as he leaned
over the bulwark and was surprised to
see an expression of relief, as from a
released burden, In Ids eyes.
She hud taken the blow like a little
soldier, with smiling lips and a happy
waving of farewells. When the boat
was well out in the bay the hand that
held her handkerchief swept across
her eyes and she stood for a moment
in blank misery. After that she
braced her shoulders and went home.
She knew, tlrst of all, that she had
come upon a blank wall In the path of
her life.
“J am married ta a man who does
not love me,” she told herself with a
peculiar sense of aloofness stealing
over her.
So, with her fighting blood aroused
and her pride hurt, Lorna probed deep
Into the heart of things in order to
discover the lack, for she knew the
lack was In herself.
“I will make hay while the sun
shines,” she smiled at her own ex-
travagance.
As Lorna descended the stalrB the
big living room struck her as being
dull and toneless. This, too, was her
fault. »»
“I .will also make over the rooms,”
She laughed quite like the old I.orpa
who had not known David Brooks. “I
will buy yards and yards of cretonne
with big pink roses la It, and when
David comes home he will think the
garden has walked into the house.''
When Lorna first beheld herself In
her new raiment she blushed at her
own extravagant beauty. Her hair was
fluffed as If from a lover's caresses,
and her eyes were aglow.
“But David will not know me,” she
reminded herself.
Even in her new view of life Lorna
was not without her moments of blank
dismay. What ir David could nqt
stamp the memory of Beth Cornish,
frbm his heart ? Could It be possible
that the gosRip she had heard wasinot
true—that merely her own careless-
ness had made David indifferent?. .
Fortunately these morbid thoughts
were short lived.
As the weeks passed swiftly, Lotjna
i'eftlizod"that ntie was indeed improv-
ing the hours. . <i ,, J
"Perhaps, after all,” she reasoned,
“it is good for us to come agaa
blank walle In oHr paths. D> ml
never hsjvO known that the big^st
things In life Were passing me 6jf—■
perhaps I was really contented with
only half of David's love."
.So in the end Lorila came to look
upon her cross as a blessing. 9he
seemed ' to have made new friends;
she seemed to hold them firmly at her
side. She gave one or two dinner par-
ties and found herself branching Out
In many directions.
Ldrna had pot ceased to love her
husband, but she began to feel Inde-
pendently strong.
When the letter came which men-
tioned tho day of her husband's ar-
rival, Lorna sank down into her big
chair and trembled. After all, now
that he was coming, she felt strangely
weak. There was so much at stake.
She knew that she could never again
he happy with half his love. She had
struggled for the whole and she must
have It.
She did not go down to the wharf,
hut waited for him at home. Lorna
had dressed with unusual care. Her
gown of trally blue and her little blue
slippers peeping from beneath were
only the setting for her exquisite beau-
ty. She knew that she was looking
well, and the knowledge lent a certain
proud carriage to her figure.
David saw her through the French
windows before lie entered the house.
He caught his breath and was con-
scious of a thrill. Whether it was from
surprise or longing he knew not. But
certain it was that he quickened his
step and took her Into his arms with
an emotion for which hq had not bar-
gained. It left him breathless and a
trifle confused.
“Lorna—" he said, and stopped.
“What la it, David?” she asked with
a little unsteady laugh. She looked up
at him and the glow in her eyes left
him dazed.
“You are not the same Lorna—
whom I left—1 hardly feel that, you
are really mine—”
“But I am, Davy boy.” She smiled,
because she knew that she had won.
His arms held her in a way that made
her knowledge certain. “I have made
the house over, though. See!” She
turned and swept in the changed sur-
roundings.
David looked over her head, but did
not release her. “Lorna!” he put a
firm hand under her chin. “Lorna—
little wife—look at me. Did yom—did
you think ail this was necessary to—
to make me love you?”
She looked up for one fleeting
glance, then her head went down on
his shoulder.
David’s arms closed about her and
drew her near to him. He was silent,
a long moment, and when he spoke
*jis voice was not quite steady.
“I love you, dear,” he said simply,
■T have always loved you.”
Lorna smiled up at him. “That la
all I want."
“F-
Australla has established a
training school for boy^ who wish
to become expert farmers but who
lack the means to obtain proper
Instruction. 101-5
NATURE’S LAWS.
Nature’s laws are perfect if only wc onev Picra, hut disease follows disobedi-
ence. Go straight to Nature lor the cure, to tie lorcstj there arc mysteries there,
some ol which we can fathom for you. Take the burk of the Wild-cherry tree,
with mandr-xc dot, Oregon f*rape root, stone root, queen’s root, bloodroot and
golden seal root, make a scientific, glyceric extract of them, with just the right
proportions, and you have
DOCTOR PIERCE'S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY.
It took Dr. Pierce, with the assistance of two learned chemists and pharma-
cists, many months of hard work experimenting to perfect
this vegetable alterative and tonic extract of the greatest
efficiency.
C. W. I'AWUiv, Laq.
Mji. C. W. Uawi.ey, of Millville, Calif.,writes: “ I wish
to tell you that 1 have used your ‘ Golden Medical Dis-
covery’ in my family for twenty years. We have had a.
doctor called In but once during that time, I have a family
of ten children, all well and hearty, for which, to a great
extent, we owe thanks to you and your* Golden Mddical
Discovery ’ and ‘ Pellets,’ which we use when sick.’’
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Peilets regulate and invigorato
Stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules.
Bob!
DENTISTRY
Dr. Jno. 4. Roberson
Will Reopen his Denial Office 136 N. Traifie
On Wednesday, Sept. 18
Dr. Roberson has spent the summer in the
Hast and is better prepared than ever before to
f^ivc his patients up-to-date, sanitary and practi-
cally painless dental work.
i I
>■»■» is4r£.i
»-« 4 a a . .
arc
OR Burning Mont*
"On Tima”
SPECIAL LOW RATES TO
CALIFORNIA AND RETURN.
Ou Sale May 27 and 2Hlh,
June 3, 4, 5 and 6th.
Limit, July 27.
On sale June 23, 24, 27, 2A,
21) and SO. July 1, 2, 3, 4
and 5, limit August 27.
Special summer rates to all
points in South east, Colorado
points, Kansas Cjcy, St. Louis,
Chicago, San Francisco, Los
A'.igales and many other
, po uts,, An, k?le !*t to (
September 30th,
For k further , InJJqrniiUion (
phone [Y$. If. |D^f4ing jftr wift* *
T. J. Anderson General Pas-
nenger Agent, llpitstci^
JOBBERS
■ i
interested in Eastern
Oklahoma are direct-
ed to the facilities of-
fered by the
M. 0. & 6. RY.
1,
♦ V
I
EMILE Bl
Lunch Room
Mgrchanta Lunch Every Day,
11 to 2 (axcapt Sunday) sad
Short Orders a Specialty,
tor reaching that ter-
ritory Daily freight
service is now ottered
liUm f S!he rman to
_ points as far as Cal-
and d e 1 i v t r y A v
.H-JfUuie the next iday /
BENZEL “alter loading. { •
J: R. GlffliTER, Agent
Both Telephones i
Cotton Belt Station
Saerytlijeg t» Beaaean
Texas Traction Co.
(Denlaon-Sherman-Dallaa
Interurban)
“THE CONVENIENT WAV’
TO
DALLAS
AND
FORT WORTH
IS VIA TUB
LIMITED
LEAVES SHERMAN
7:00 and 11:00 4. m. and
1:00 and 6:00 I*. M.
Frank Smith, Agent, Sherman.
Jas. 1>. Griffin, U. P. A., Dallas
No.666
This is a prescription prepared
especially for Chills and Fever.
Five or six docs will break any case
of Chills and Fever, and if, taken
then as a tonic the Fever will not
return. It acts on the liver better
than calomel and does not gripe or
sicken. 25c.
Dr, R Flowers
VETERINARY SURGEON
AND DKNTIiT.
Office—Blttlng's Drug Morn.
Office—Doth phones 78.
Residence—Old phona MI t
New phone 7M.
EDWARD H.
car{,
M. D.
Practice Limited to Eye, Ear,
Noae and Throat.
----
OPTICIAN.
KKYPTOK — BIFOCALS
Commercial Rank, with
Poe & Swafford.
Dra,
CantwcIIS Cantwell
BARBERS
Will appreciate patronage
from the public and guarantee
nice, up-to-date aervlce.
Bring the Children for
Trimming,
Opposite Crayrroft’e
BATHS. BATHS.
OLD NEWSPAPERS
IN BUNDLES
FOR SALE
AT
DEMOCRAT OFFICE
AT 10 CENTS
PER HUNDRED
FOR 10 DAYS
NOTHING BETTER TO WRAP
ICE IN TO PREVENT
0. L. GUINN
PIANO TUNER -FOR
lildd-Key College,
■ r-
1
' | ! vW
m
Linz Building. Dallaa,
C’aifs-Uurdette College,
Sherman Music Oo.,
T
Residence Phones; New 383; Old I
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 17, 1912, newspaper, September 17, 1912; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth719973/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .