Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1912 Page: 7 of 8
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|*>lt BENT—.Three unfurnished
ftouth rooms for light housekeeping.
r20 Siuth Maxey. o'.’i-tit
I'Olt KENT—Rooms for light house-
toeping, dose In. Old phone 883.
o22-tf
Hilt RENT—Very desirable furnish-
ed rooms. 303 South Crockett.
o21-l\V
.» HUNT Three furnished rooms
for houseketping; modern conven-
iences. One, hlo.'k east, street car
jine. 719 Noitli Willow street.
ot9-3t
roit l».,yi—A suite of nice south
(front ropius. unfurnished for light
[housekeeping. 319 West Mulberry.
[New p)|one 3X3. o9-tf
IFOR RENT—Two large office
[rooms, north side square; Apply to
(Chits. Crenshaw. o 13-tf
FOR RENT—Furnished' rooms for
! light housekeeping. Modern and
j close in. New phone 761. oS-tf
3 LINES, 8 TIMM.-----25#
3 LINES. 6 TIME*........40#
3 LINES, 12 TIMES-......70#
3 LINES, 24 TIMES......$1.25
ADDITIONAL NUMBER OF LINES
IN SAME PROPORTION.
WANTED—Four lady salesmen to
ran vacs the homes in Sherman and
Denison. Apply at I’atty-joiner-Ku-
bauk. Call for J. S. McKInsie, Tues-
day morning. Oct. 29. 23-3t
WANTED—Good second-hand stoves
of all kinds. , Old phone 208. o2-tf
J. SEN NEB, Jeweler, old phone 669;
residence 1126 South Travis street,
Sherman, Texas. Phone him when
you want him. a9-lm
FOB HALE—Bargain in second-
hand buggy and harness. Will sell
or trade. See E. L. Carroll at Dem-
ocrat office. 19-1 w
FOB BENT Furnished rooms, 209
West Jones street. sl6-tf
FOR HEN I'—Rooms for light house-
keeping. 116 S. Busk. «I3-tf
FOB BENT—Three rooms furnished
complete for light housekeeping. 823
South Montgomery. al'J-tf
I HAVE for rent a few Tory desir-
able offices In th* most prominently
located office building In Sherman.
Geo. Murphy. f20-tf
FOR RENT—HOUBE8.
Bill BENT—189 acres of black
'aim. 2 miles southeast of Sherman.
Inquire at 221 West Laurel St.
o21-tf
poit BENT—Ten-room house on
South Travis street. Call at Cheney
Hardware Co. olO-tf
LOB BENT—Half of eight room
house with modern conveniences.
406 S. Crockett. Old phone 67.
o 4-tf
FOB RENT—New five room house,
gas, plectrlc ltghts. bath, sewerage,
two blocks from square. Old phon>
934. s9-tf
FLAT FOR BENT—Six rooms and
bath; all modern conveniences. See
Ettn omrray or ealroid Phono HV7
Jyl6-tf
DWELLINGS tor rent In
of the city. New phones 226.
Blasslngame.
BONDS—1 can make your
BOND' at a small cost, and
SAVE You the trouble of annoying
your friends. Call and see me. II.
A. Holliday, 368 Com. B. K. Bldg,
old phone 4 31. 3-tf
ROOMS OH BOARD, or hoard by
day, week or months Terms liberal.
New management. The Royal Pal-
ace (Caruther's House), 302 cor-
ner Walnut aifd Jones Sts. Barnett
& Cowan. s23-lm
FOR SALE—A side saddle in good
condition at a bargain. Call at the
Democrat for particulars. Jy25-tf
HENRY’S EXPENSE ACCOUNT.
Texas Congressman Certifies He
Not Spend Cent in Primary.
New York, Oct. 2 3.—Representa-
tive Robert L. Henry of Texas,
chairman of the /foies committee of
the house. announced here , today
that in his formal statement of
ampaign expenses sent to Washing-
Ion lie had certified that “lie did
not tq-.011(1 a cent either in the pri-
maries or the general election cam-
paign. •'
AMUSING TRICK FOR PARLOR
Common Hen’s Egg Made to Come to
Life and Revolve Around
Like Boy's Top.
Here Is a trick which requires some
skill and practice, but which causes
more than enough wonder to pay for
the trouble. You take u hard-boiled
egg, place, it on a plate or platter,
give the pfkte a horizontal revolving
movement, increasing the motion
gradually, and soon the egg will come
to life, raise itself till it stands on
end, and then go revolving like a
top and moving all round the plate.
NOTICE—1 have a house moving
rig and am prepared to do all kinds
of house moving, rebiocklng and
leveling. All work guaranteed Call
or phone Thomas' Transfer office.
O. I*, ('launch. o9-lm
CHINA painting and painting done.
Call 316 old phone. olO-tf
MARSHAL DORCHESTER, the old
reliable baibtr, at No. 308 South
Travis street, expert In hts line, and
will thank you for patronage.
•«-U
SlIEHMAN MATTRESS FACTORY.
wholesale and retail. Will you stop
and think for a moment of one de-
prived of sight, striving to make an
honest living? Only by your pat-
ronage it can be attained. Ail kinds
of mattresses made and ren-
ovated. Goods delivered. A. H. Gib-
son, Prop., 008 E. Lamar street.
QUiphoneSOr, „ __ decS^/
EIRE AND TORNADO insurance
written in time-tried and fire-tested
a'l parts 0j^ ]jne companies. J. W. Blansin-
gaine. New phone 226. m8-tf
Life Into Egg.
Naturally you have to make a few
attempts before you can succeed In
getting the egg to obey Instructions,
but keep at it and you will supceed.
and the effect Is impressive. It is
best in boiling the egg to hold it in
an upright position with a spoon so
that the air inside will all collect
round the cent,#il axis of the egg and
keep it from being unbalanced.
LIVED ON
RAW EGGS
j. w
m8tf
M18CKL? ■ • NROUI.
Hill KALE—Cash or on time- A
lew good mules, horses and mares.
Must go. will take yours If 1 can't
get my price. R. E. Smith.
23-2t—1 tw
ttv»i Sr, for sale, to be moved off
lot. See J. R. Barrow. 2t-3t
I'Olt RAI/R— De Lnvel cream separ-
ator No. 12; a, bargain. Address B.,
care Democraty- o23-3t
FOR SALE—Iron bed, springs,
mattress, pillow, e,r., at bargain;
used short while by young man. “M. ’
tare Democrat. 23-3t
SHOES—I want
oud hand shoes.
to buy good sec-
Old phone 208.
Sp9-tf
FOR SALE—A new surrey and har-
ness with the best family horse In
eouhty. Horse 10 years old, gentle
and with every good quality and no
had ones. This turn out can be
bought at a bargain. See Rev. A. I..
Andrews or phone S. W. 117, Sher-
man, Tex. 23-3t
HEIiP WANTED.
WANTED by electrical massage vi-
brator com cm, woman representa-
tive in Grayson county. Opportunity
to make money and learn physical
culture methods free. Call or write
A, Berg. 1023 d. Montgomery. Oil
phone 987. t o21-3t
WANTED—Experienced collector
and solicitor to work in Denison
and McKinney. Room 516 M. & !*•
Bank building. Salary and commis-
sion. o9-tf
LOST AND FOUND.
Is 1ST—Bull pup, 1 months old;
white with blown spots and one
black eye, Reward’ for Information.
Call old phone 509. 21-3t
Mr. Richard’s Expericnct With Dif-
ferent Diets. Peaches and
Buttermilk for Three Years.
Mayor Jno. C. Wall said last night
at the first of the series of meet-
ings (hat Die city council is holding
this week for the purpose of hearing
the bidders on street paving tell of
I lie points in favor of the city con-
tracting with them for the work,
that the sessions a,t;e just as much
for the benefit of every citizen as
for the city officials. He said of
course the officials have the respon-
sibility tint everyone should be loyal
enough to attend, listen to what rep-
reseniatives from some of the larg-
est and most successful paving com-
panies have to say and at least learn
more about -pavements than the av-
erage man is likely to know.
No small number of citizens were
present Iasi night, together with the
members of the bidders and repre-
sentatives of firms• advocating the
•be use of certain kind of material,
the council room was full to o'er-
flovving. On this account Mayor
Wall announced i that tonight the
meeting will lie held in the court
house, so everyone who wishes to
attend may lie comfortably seated.
The session is to begin at 7:30 so
that more men can be given (he
privilege of talking before it gets
too late.
Under the advertisement for bids
the city may let the entire paving
contract to one firm, or else a por-
tion of it may he let to different
firms. Nevertheless, it is not prob-
able that the contract will lie cut
up so that the various contractors
will have any chalice of interfer-
ing with one another.
The council heard from throe eon-
Iractors last night and one material
man. The others are to speak to-
night or Saturday night if they do
not get through, it is the object in
view to be able to accept some bid
Monday night at the council meet-
ing.
Levy l evy, contractors of Mus-
kogee. Oklahoma, seem to lie the
low bidders on the work here. Tho\
confine their bids to paving for (he
residence section, and have enter-
ed bids on practically every kind of
paving specified for that section.
Tliis is not the first time lhat they
have bid' oti a contract in Sherman,
but the other time they were not
low. and did not get the work: this
time they possibly have an advan-
tage. Mr. Levy -stated that liis com-
pany can furnish an agreeable bond,
guarantee the work for five years
as required, and is equipped with
modern machinery to carry on the
contract.
Ockander Bros, have entered bids
on work in residence section and |
Memories of the Old South
FAVOR INDIAN RUNNER DUCKS
Hardest of All Domestic Fowls and
Do Equally as Well Confined as
on Free Range.
itOOMM FOIt RENT—Nice Rooms
upstairs, hath with instantaneous
heater, telephone, barn suitable for
garage. 816 South Crockett, oppo-
site Washington school building. See
Misa Irene Walker. Old phone 1007.
o23-6t•
FOR SALE OR TRADE—One 1910
Chalnipgs 30, one I9J2 Chalmers 36.
Stlnnett-Cole Auto Co. 23-31
FOR SALE—REAL ESTATE
FOR SAI.E—Store building and two
reijt houses on St-nth Travis street;
a bargain if sold at once. See Mrs.
C. H, Haines. o22-lm
WANTED—If you want to buy a
farm or a house and lot, or a vacant
lot. H. A. Holliday is the irrrm to
see, lie cun save you money. H. A.
Holliday. 308 Com. B. K. Bldg.
Old phone 431. 3-tf
Crcilton, Md.—Mr. George Richards,
of this place, during the past 12 years,
has probably trad more different diets
titan the average person would ever use
in a lifetime.
What he has to say about his experi-
ments, must therefore be highly interest-
ing to anyone sobering from indigestion
or stomach troubles oi any kind.
Tic says: “For more than 12 years.
I suffered with stomach troubles, and
paid hundreds of dollars for doctor bills
and medicines. I was also operated on
for piles.
I lived on dried peaches and buttermilk
for nearly three vears. The only thing
that would not give me pain was raw eggs
1 was a physical wreck. I could not
sleep, and was as near crazy as a man
could well be.
I must say that after taking two 25-cenl
packages of Tltedford’s Black-Draught,
ft did me more good than all I ever spent
for other medicines.
I have been working daily on the farm
ever since, and I am as hard as iron.”
This purely vegetable remedy has been
in successful use for more than 70 years.
Try it. But be sure that it’s ‘ ‘Thedford’s.”
Dr. R. Flowers
VETERINARY SURGEON
AND DENTIST.
also work in business section The
different bids' were not explained
Hilly, hut this firm stated that it
has a low bid on brjek laid on
ell r e for business section.
The Texas Bltiiolithii- company
staled that they are low on pave-
ment for Die business section.
W. M. Plndell, president of the
Dolarway Paying company, consum-
ed a great deal of time impressing
upon the council the value of Dolar-i
way. paving, it is a substantial con-
crete. with a thin coating on top of
a durable and wearing substance.
The paving was represented as ideal
for the residence district.
For Lump Coal and Washed Nut
Goal, phone 369. BUSSEY & CO.
(Advertisement) o3-tf
First Polish College to be Dedicated
Indian Runner ducks are the
hardiest of all domestic fowls. As
they do equally well in confinement
or on fred range, they may be profit-
ably kept by persons In town or city
as well as by farmers. They do not
require pond or running water—just
water to drink in, something deep
enough so the whole head can be Im-
mersed. says the Interstate Poultry-
man. They may be kepi more cheap-
ly on free range, as they will find;
many things of little or no value, such
as bugs, worms, grasshoppers, grass,
etc. These they convert into largo
white eggs, which if not sold for
hatching will commandj several cents
above ttie market price of hen eggs
and at Easter will bring twice as
much. They do not differ in flavor
from hen eggs, but are superior for
all kinds of cooking. As a table fowl
the Indian Runner duck is excellent.
The meal is tender, juicy and fine-
grained. Tims far the demand for
breeding stock and eggs for hatching
lias been so great that the duck has
not been raised to a great extent as
market stock; but wherever it. has
become known as a table fowl it is
wanted.
As egg-producers the Indian Run.
ner females are too valuable to sell
on the market until from three to nina
years old. A flock from a good-lay-
ing strain will average from 240 to
250 eggs per layer per year, if prop-
erly managed. I find by actual test
that the feed that will keep a Ply-
mouth Roek hen in good shape will
keep a Runner duck plump, so I think
it safe to say that they ran be kept,
as cheaply as any of the large breeds
of liens in winter and cheaper in sum-
mer if on free range, as they will for-
age farther Into the fields. We like
them much better than hens, as they
do not destroy crops, neither are they
so much of a nuisance around the
buildings as hens. The ducklings of
this breed can he raised to a market-
aide size cheaper and more quickly
than those of any other breed. As
the ducks never set, the ducklings
must be hatched by incubators or
hens. Hens give the best results, oft-
en hatching every egg given them.
The eggs are very fertile ami may, if
desired, be hatched any month in the
year. Ducklings hatched in June or
July often lay all winter, while, if
hatched In March, they will lay In
[time to hatch ducklings from them by
the 1st of October.
in Every Can of
French Market Coffee
The romance of the clays of Andrew Jackson, of Henry
Clay, of the picturesque pirate chief, Lafitte.nnd of the beau-
tiful women and brave men of the old South, clings around
every cup of delicious old French Market Coffee.
The French Market Coffee that you get from your grocer,
in hermetically sealed packages, is identically the same historic
French blend served in the old French Market in NewOrleans.
Try it once and you’ll agree
there is only one real old
French Market Coffee—only ^
one coffee with a history.
Roasted by our unique hy-
gienic pTdcess.
FRENCH MARKET MILLS
(New Orleans Coffee Co., Lid., Props.) j
MEW ORLEANS
(45)
AUSTIN < OLLEGE STUDENTS.
March Till oii-.'li Dallas Biimik-s
Stirets anil Her tile Fair.
PLAN FOR A HEN HATCHERY
Door Placed in Front of Each Nest,
Hinged With Leather and Held
by Wooden Cleats.
Here Is my plan for a successful
hen hatchery: 1 lake 16-foot lumber
and make stalls for 12 hens which
makes the nest, boxes a little over 14
KOH KABE—-Five Jersey pigs, $3.50
each. H. Cecil, South Cemetery
St., Sherman. 23-3t
WANTED-*gecond-hand cigar case.
Call Embry & Taylor Grocery. o23-3t
l-’DU S.\LlkjA few more Rhode
Island Rftf ipullets. All prize win-
ners. A. C. Overt, 902 S. Mont-
gomery street. Old phone 780.
OlO-tf
Office—Riding's Drug Store.
Residence—Old phone 757;
New phone 750.
Cambridge Springs. Pa., O t. 2 >.
■Preparations are completed lor
the dedication hare tomorrow of the
Polish National Alliance College,
the first ollega of the Polish Na-
tional Alliance established in the
United States. Thousand's of visitors
from all parts of the United Slates
and Canada are expected to attend
the dedication exercises tomorrow
and President Taft will lie the guest
of honor and Ilia principal speaker
at tlie great Po’isn-Amerii-an dem-
onstration which haft lio ’n planned
for this me mom tie occasion. The
Polish National Alliance in this
country has a total membership of
more than 1 mi,000 and branches in
many states. The college to he ded-
icated lien- tomorrow is non-sectar-
ian in its character and will be
maintained by the united' effort ol
the thousands of members of the
I olish National Alliance.
A Hen Hatchery.
Inches wide, writes J. ‘ Crandall of
Norwich, Kan . in the Farmers' Mail
and Breeze. Slats and thin lumber
may be used for the 11 partitions.
Floor the nest department. Chicken
wire is used to cover the top of runs
except for thp doors A, each of which
is 28 inches long, enough to cover two
runs. The doors H are the same
length. There is also a door 8 by 10
Inelies In the front of each nest box
aq,d all doors are hinged with leather
and held with cleats. The roof hoard
is not hinged or nailed but held in
plaro with cleats and may be lifted
off.
! !
YVAXTEIW-A job by a young man
with a No. 1 reference, if needed.
A salesman by trade not afraid of
AT A BARGAIN—A two-story brick
business property that will pay 10
per cent or more, for quick sale.
L. C. Chapman, North Travis St.
ol8-tf
FOR HA LB—We have a nice cottage
home in Fairvlow, lot 73x300, at a
bargain for a short time. Carpen-
ter & Belden, oli-tf
FIRM FOUNDATION
work. New phone 693-2 rings.
ol9-6i
WANTED at once—2.3 ladies to tp.ko
advantage of my special treatment
of hair and scalp for |5.00. For
further information call Miss Bethel
V. McGrow, Old phone 771; New
phone 63^y,piueu ol8-tf
FOR HAND-PAINTED ( HINA and
Flrfcihg colloid phone 516,. ol7-tt
WANTED—‘I want to buy all the
second-hand buggies, horses and
harness In Sherman. J. W. Burks,
708 East Cherry. o9-tf
QUICK HALE —On account of leav-
“v Big city: VV. Keatley’c 6-room res-
idence, 101J E. Colle -e 8t., for
cash; make offef. Write H. W.
KeatleJ-, 908 12th St., Miami, Fla.
a5-tf
FOR HALE—J. P. Oaran has bar-
gains In dwellings and business
property aud vacant lota and farms
Set him first and last. Office In
Binkley Annex. Jyl-tf
Miller’s Transler
Phone 7*3
Quick Delivery
No.666
This is a proscription prepared
especially for Chills and Fever.
Five or six does will break any case
of Chills and 'Fever, and If taken
then as a tonic the Fever will not
leturn. It acts o:i the liver better
than calomel and does not gripe or
sicken. 25c.
Nothing Can Undermine It in
Sliernmn.
II. A. HOLLIDAY can lnsu're- your
Plate Glass and your accidents from
your Automobiles, H. A. Holliday.
308 Com.
431.
B. K. Bldg. Old
phone
3-tf
WANTED—To buy men s cast-off
clothing and shoes. Old phine 208.
Sp!)-tf
FOR RENT OR .SALE —22 acres of
land/ In Bonham, Texas. Kith as
the richest opportunity for corn
dub hoys, intelligent farmer or
-trucker who wants to make money
and knows a good thing when he
sees Ft. Has splendid new resi-
dence of seven rooms, all within' 3
blocks of the nasseneer »nil freight
depots. Also two other good
places and a Dairy proposition fo,
rent or sale. AdcU’ess R. E. Smith,
Sherman, Texas. 25-2t<w
R. B. NALL
OPTICIAN.
KRYFTOK — BIFOCALS
Commercial Rank, with Drs.
Poe & Swafford,
m
L,
.-"V j?- rt A
People are sometimes slow to
recognize true merit and they cj li-
mit be blamed, for so many have
been humbugged in the past. The,
experience of hundreds of Flier man
residents, expressed publicly through
newspapers and other sources, places
Doan's Kidney . Pills on a firm
foundation here.
Mrs. J. it. Honaker, 806 N.
Throckmorton St., Sherman, Texas
gays: “I suffered for a long time
from my kidneys and the pain in
my bark was severe. I tired easily
and had but little ambition and was
so nervous that I xould hardly con
troj myself I felt miserable ill ev-
ery way and my health began U
run down. A neighbor advised me
to try Doans Kidney Pills and I
procured a supply at (Ire Craycroft'-
Stlneon Drug Co. They brought great
l-plief and i am never without a sup-
ply on hand. 1 cannot mom-mend
Doan's Kidney Pills too highly.”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, 'sole agent* for the Unit-
ed States.
Remember the name—Doan’s—
and take no other.
(Advertisement.)
Rape makes a good crop for late
green food.
Poultry Is extremely profitable If
properly handled.
Poultry, fruit and bees form a com-
bination hard to beat.
Fowls have no sense of smell. They
have nostrils, hut not. noses.
A cement floor In the laying pen
and roosting closet is advisable.
Don't let lice ‘‘get away” with your
chicks, while you wonder what ulls
them.
Keep the majes separated from the
growing pullets. Both will develop
better.
Ducklings generally begin molting
when eleven weeks old and continue
for about six weeks.
Don't forget that wet and leaky
coops do not tend to produce healthy
chickens, hut early death.
II Is a good plan to let all the
breeding stock out of Hie yards to en-
joy free range during the summer.
Don't try to breed from poor slock.
It. takes too long and good stock is
cheap enough for you to start right.
Free range tor the flock greatly sim-
plifies the feeding problem, because
tlie fowls can balance their ration, to
a large extent, with the food they pick
up.
The State Fair Grounds capitulat-
ed yesterday to the invasion of stu-
dents of Austin College at Sherman.
They came down on the interurban
in special cars, arriving here shortly
after 11 o'clock, with two purposes
to 0e a> c omplished, namely, to de-
feat the football team of Texas
Christian i Diversity and' to see the
fair. In the first they failed; In the
second they achieved signal success.
Soon after arrival the students
formed in parade and marched
Enough the business section of Dal-
las. their hand in the lead and their
college colors, tlie old gold and ma-
loon, flying in the breeze from file
amulets of half a hundred sturdy
aims. There were, all told',1 about
173 of the Austin College under-
graduates, accompanied by Profs.
.1. J. Dulaney, ('. R. Pepper and Al-
len. \ targ • number of Sherman's
fairest feminine flowers, properly
chaperoned and wearing ihe ruddy
jjlusli of enthusiasm and jovial spir-
its, also (ame along to see their
friends win fame on the checker-
board.
After the parade, which dispersed
at the Young Men's Christian Asso-
ciation Building, Hte students went
in groups to the Fair Grounds.
Their headquarters w- re located at
Convention Tent No. 1. There they
met their friends and reassembled,
after seeing thp sights of tlie ex-
position. to proceed to the football
grounds en masse. There were no
exercises at the tent, tlie meeting
there being merely preliminary to
the event of importance of Ihe day
the football game and to pro-
vide an opportunity for relatives and
friends it) see the students.
The day was well spent, despite
the disappointment of the game.
They are eager to come bark next j
year and hope and expect to win
more substantial honors.
Tile special cars returned to
Sherman last night at S o'clock,
carrying a tired but satisfied dele-
gation of lusty young boosters for
tii ■ college .colors. Dallas News.
\Vm. A. Allen, Chacon, N. Mcx.,
writes: "My wife had a cough that
nearly choked iter to d°ath (lie
worst I ever saw We tried ev-
erything we could think of but did
her no good. By -mod luck 1 hap-
pened to get a bottle oF Foley's
Honey and Tar Compound an 1 It
helped her at once. It is the best
cough medicine I ever heard of.
Sold by W. L. Bitting. m-w-F &vv
(Advertisement)
Arbor Day Observed.
Harrisburg, I’a., Oel. 23. In ac-
cordance with a proclamation issued
by States Superintendent of Public j
I list ruction Schaeffer, Arbor Day!
was widely observed throughout
Pennsylvania today with the plant-
ing of trees and shrubs and with
special exercises in the public;
schools. Particular attention was
given to the campaign to stamp out 1
the chestnut tree blight, which haul
spread its ravages over a large part j
i f the state.
JOBBERS
interested in Eastern
Oklahoma are direct-
ed to the facilities of-
fered by the
m. o. & o. or.
for reaching; that ter-
ritory- Daily freight
service is now offered
from Sherman to
points as far as Cal-
vin and delivery
made the next day
after loading.
J: R. GUNTER, Agent
Both 'Telephones
Cotton Belt Station
THE
INTERURBAN
SU.00—SPECIAL HATE-$3.00
TO
DALLAS
AND RETURN
OCTOBER 19TH-157TH, 1012.
ACCOUNT.
DALLAS FAIR
Good only on Local cars and
Limited to return three days includ-
ing date of sale.
Regular Rates on Limited Cars.
A French surgeon recently success-
fully transplanted an ape’s stomach
Into a man whose own organ was
Worn Oft..
This Girl Recovered
From Consumption
The maker* of IVkmnn * Allernfivo,
which I* doing mo much for i\ui
suinpMre*. arc comirtmilly in nvoipi of
wonderful reportm «*f recoveries brought
nlimit solely through the use of thin medi-
cine These reports are nhvnys tit flip
command of any.one lntcresh><i. and many
of the writers in t heir-gratit ode have sug-
gested that like sufferers write direct and
learn what it did for them. Here is one
specimen. 4l'| Second \vc . Aurora. HI.
’ tfcnt Ictncii : I’ai'di.u me for not writing
sooner, hut I wanted to see if 1 would stay
cured, 1 can now truthfully say I am
perfectly well, | wish to express my
heartfelt thanks. I have no pain, no
cough, no iii^lit sweats, no luty fever.
Since a child of two years. I have been
ailing with lung trouble, which grew
worse as I grew older At the age of
fourteen, the doctor said if l could not
be sent South I would surely die of (’on-
sumption. 1C very winter I would be 'sure
to have either Itronchlti*. Pleurisy or
I*neumoQia. I had Typhoid-I’mtomoulu
one time. I had catarrh of the stomach
and bowels and had Hay Fever for the
last few years; but have not anything of
the kind this year.
”1 will answer all letters sent to me,
asking a history of my case, from any
one suffering with lung trouble.''
(Sworn affidavit I KTT.V IM.ATH.
(Five years later reports still well.)
j’ckman's Alterative ik cIAm live iu ilion-
chilis, Asthma, Hay Fever; Throat and
Hung Troubles, and In upbuilding the
system. Hoes pot contain poisons, opiates
or habit forming drugs. Ask for booklet
telling of recoveries, and write to Kekmaii
Laboratory. Philadelphia. Pa., for more evi-
dence. For sale by all leading druggists
Tito Cvaycroff-SUriKon Dm? Co.
I^nk font-Keith 'Drug Co.
Stiormnn, TOxng.
Ho
arc
OIL BURNINC R0 UTE
The Hustler
THE FASTEST TRAIN IN
TEXAS
“The Owl”
FAST NIGHT TRAIN
North and South
HEAVY RAILS
HOCK BALLAST
SAFETY IN TRAVEL
For Detailed information Ask
the Local Agent
EMILE DENZEL
Lunch Room
Merchant* Lanch Evary Day,
11 to 2 (excapt Sunday) aid
Short Order* a Specialty.
■verythiag la Baa*—.
::,»5
■
1
1
m
if9
1
.li
9
!
Mrs. H W. Keatley
HAIR DRESSER >
Would thank you tor pa»t pa-
tronage and future order* will ba
promptly filled by mall.
MRS. II. W, KEATLEY^
DOS ISlh SI., Miami FT*.
m
/,
isi
.-.O'
iilii
MM
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i
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1912, newspaper, October 25, 1912; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth720098/m1/7/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .