Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTY-SIXTH YEAR, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 14, 1916 Page: 4 of 8
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Fancy & Plain Silks
SHOWING the greatest anortmrnt of Fancy Silica in at ripe* and
plaids tor dreases, skirls and waists—you will find the new weaves,
colon and color combinations that are so good this season;
priced at...................... ......$1.25, $1.M. $1.75 and $2.00
WOOLEN FABRICS In the newest weaves, colors and color com-
binatiens—stripes, platda, mixtures and plain and the prices are
right................................$LM, $1.00, 75c, «5c and 60c
BLANKETS AND COMFORTS hoocht before the advanced prices
and marked to sell for about what they would root us now.
Special Sale
For Saturday and Monday, Oct 14 and 16. Special
values that should appeal to the careful housewife because of
the treendous savings they represent. , y ^
J^enJer “Before
In the history of the Grocery business has there been
so many items in the food line advancing. j
iyour Best Interest
ia) prices are on for these two days.
Can best be served by buying liberally while these spec-
Best Lima Beans...........v ........./.. ,9c Pound
Best Pink Beans......- ............... .. .9c Pound
Best California Black Eye Peas.. ............7c Pound
16 lbs. Fancy Head Rice... ,v...................$1.00
8 lbs. Fancy Head Rice.......................... .SOc
4 lbs. Fancy Head Rice.......v. ...............25c
Best California Strained Honey ................. 9c Pound
Dixie Squares, Breakfast Bacon.i........... .20c Pound
% (Fancy, sugar cured.) ,
No. 2 Red Kidney Beans....................9c per can
Na. 3 large can Pork and Beans.,. ........15c per can
(Much beter and cheaper than dried beans.) ^
o
Large 16 ox. can Snyder’s Soap...........,.......10c
15c package Cream of Rice.... ----!.../,....... 10c
^ The new breakfast food.) / ^ ^
15c Pnffed Rice.... . .. ................... .11c
12c Puffed Wheat.......-.j. ...----;. •..........10c
lie Best Quality Shredded Cocoannt.r........6c package
10c Celery Salt.. .j......5................../.. ,8c
1 lb. Cook’s Pride Coffee.,....... ............... .35c
3 lbs. Cook's Pride Coffee................*... .$1.00
(You cannot buy a better coffee at froiri 40c to 45c the lb.)
Quart Muon Fruit Jars................50r dozen
3 lb. can Apple Batter........... ............23c
Large can Pie Pineapple.,.,. ................... 12c
Many other exceptional values for this sale. Space for*
bids quoting them all. Many items I cannot buy back as
cheaply as they are offered in this special sale.
Your for prompt service, better prices and better qudity,
Quinn Horn Cash Store
Old Phone 286.
Ne Phone 280.
212 West
Houston St.
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W@ir§l£(A
In Fancy Mixture, Men’s Suitings for Boys’ Trousers, all Wool
Material. Fifty-four inches wide; Dark colors in striped and
shot mixture color tones; just the material for good wear
for the Boys; Extra good value
At Only $2.00 the Yard.
THE -DEPENDABLE STORE
9///I
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Saturday, October 14. 1916
^Among the Courts|
'>
City Court.
There
were five rwsos before City
S. p. Lo*ltc rtils morning. Three
tor »H«tiu*>anre and two for
tkehtlng. All were passed over until
Monday uiuraing.
Tax Suit* Hied.
County Attorney Ben F. (iafford
•jh* within the pn*t few day a filed
slit? ven dePtuim-nt tax milts* In the
of nwvlet Clerk Harve Taylor.
IVnpb- wfto know themselves to tie
delinquent In the matter of taxes may
save themselves eonslderahk' costs by
calttng at tlie office of County Tax
Collector Jim Akers and (laying the
same. The mins of these suits are
mandatory on the county attorney,
and there Is a strong penalty attached
In the event he falls or refuses to file
them. The number filed are only
small part that will he filed, as the
official* are working rapidly in an ef-
fort to get them filed right away.
IWvnrre Granted.
Judge W. M. Peck of the Fifteenth
district court today granted a divorce
in ihe suit of Georgia Cook
Monark Cook.
CVuinty Court.
County Judge Dayton B. Steed this
afternoon signed the minutes of the
September term of the county court,
which closed today. The October term
will o,ien Monday morning at 0 o’clock.
Dogs Killed.
Within the past few days Patrol-
man Charlie Slumps has been called
on to kill a number of dogs that were
thought to tie suffering from the
r,l,l€8* -
Marriage licenses.
Henry C. Riley and Miss M*ry
Mattingly.
R. C. Crumpton and Miss Winifred
E. Dlckertmin.
Marlin Ingram and Miss Anna
Blanch Wright.
Harry Black and Helen Pool, i
groes.
C. B. Burton and Corda Patterson,
negroes.
W. C. Scoggins and Miss Lodle
Owens.
Real Estate Transfers.
Mary Belle Fielder to II. A. Stew-
art. —- acres J. B. McAnair survey.
$2250.
Batna Hnnter to Jerry Hickey, 21%
acres P. C. Martin survey, $870.
Jerry Hickey to Jas. H. Higdon,
same land. $1050.
E<lna Hibbard, et vlr, to T. E.
Reardon, lot 7, block 8, Miller’s Sec-
ond Addition to Denison, $125.
J. F. Davis to T. A. Naylor, lot 10
feetx475 varas, University lauds, $25.
Motor Licenses.
2456— O. F. Sweeney of Dorchester,
Jeffrey.
2457— Chas. Deffelliach of Denison,
Chevrolet.
2458— W. B. Crow of Denison, Ford.
2450—.1. H. Bush of Denison, Ford.
2400- M. S. Paul of Denison. Dodge.
2461— Mrs. J. M. Cox of Denison,
Dodge.
2462— H. M. Gough of Denison,
Dodge.
2463— R. L. Bush of Denison, Ford,
2464—B. C. Oney of Sherman Indian
motorcycle.
2465— -H. G. Cole of Sherman,
Dodge.
2466— C. P. Parker of Gunter, Ford.
2467— J. H. Forlsch of Denison,
Ford.
—--4——--
SHERMAN’S NEW ORCHESTRA.
Already the Baptist Symphony Orches-
tra Has Made a Splendid Reputation.
One of the new musical organizations
of the year In Sherman, Is the Baptist
Symphony Orchestra. It is composed
of a party of the most accomplished
young musicians in the city, and all of
them are of the city’s best families.
Those who compose the orchestra
are: Miss Ailene Sanders, director;
L. A. Glenn, manager; C. L. Pool,
secretary-treasurer.
First Violin—Ailene Sanders, Hazel
Frederick, D. C. Butler, Mrs. W. A.
Reeves, Jr„ W. S. Red.
Second Violin—Hampton Abney,
Margaret Crumley, Katherine Whar-
ton, Jamie Joiner.
Trombone—L. A. Glenn.
Clarinet—J. V. Dodd.
Cornets—Harold Burke, Earle Alt-
mui). Nell Gibson
Cello—George Rigby.
Saxaphone—Roy Ball, Mr. Hudson.
Already the Baptist Symphony Or-
chestra has made quite a lathi repu-
tation. They played for the manufac-
turer* and jobbers of Sherman at the
Tabernacle each evening during the
Red River Valley Fair and also at the
banquetglvep the editors visiting Sher-
man during that time. The members
also played in the orchestra during the
Brown tabernacle meeting.
Miss Ailene Sanders, the director, Is
one of Sherman’s most popular girls,
and was elected to the important posi-
tion by acclamation on account of her
popularity and the fact that she is an
accomplished musician and a success-
ful leader.
The new musical organization starts
out auspiciously, having quite a num-
ber of invitations to furnish music.
Quite a lot of new music has been or-
dered and in the near future a series
of concerts will be given.
♦
OPKK^Ql SK TONIGHT.
If. WilsenVill Prerent His New
TUy. ".Mfijllarn > Rase.
Al Ii. WllsotiSquulnt personality is
excellently flttetfor the Irish charac-
ter of Tom Care}a young and penni-
less rover who S$he soul of rollick-
ing good humor lihis new produetlSh
entitled “My Killnjicv Rose,” an
• «
%
Irish song-play which is being pre
son ted with an excellent supporting
company with great success and press
and public enthusiastically agree tli«t
pever before lias lie npiioared tq
such good advantage. The attraction
is hooked for the Sherman opera house
tills afternoon nml tonight at 8:15.
Tlie story concerns the remarkable
adventures of Tom Carey, whose na-
ture is the essence of fun and jollity.
--4----
H. & T. C. will run special trains
during Dallas fair. Very low rates.
Plenty of room to rid in comfort. See
adv. elsewhere. ol3--0t
Curiou* Papsrmaking.
In some parts of Indo China the na-
tives employ various fibers in the at-
tempt to supply thpir own paper. The
Village du Papier, a suburb of Hanoi,
owes its name to the fact that most of
Its 2,000 or 3,000 inhabitants make pa-
per from the bark of a small “paper
tree,” a species of mulberry, found on
the Black river in upper Tonkin. This
bark is soaked in lime made from the
limestone of the village, heated by
crude furnaces fashioned by hand un-
der natural limestone vats, pounded
by pestle into a fine mash, then dis-
solved in water until a thin paste is
reached. This paste ia dipped by bam-
boo screen sieves, until a slight film
covers the screen. Tills film is spread
on top of others, and each is taken sep-
arately or several together and spread
with a brush on cement radiators to
dry. A single sheet of paper is almost
as thin as tissue, but the desired thick-
may Co obtained by spreading
ness
several films on the radiator and dry-
ing them together or by pasting the
requisite number of sheets together
after drying
Colored Snowstorms.
Colored r-owstorms were recorded
as long age as the sixth century, and
a shower of red hail is said by Hum-
boldt to have once occurred in Paler-
In Tuscany on March 14, 1813,
mo.
there fell bail of an orange color. In
1808 red 8rv>w fell to a depth of over
five feet in Carnlola, Austria. The
storm of colored snow was followed
by one of the regulation color, and
the effect produced by the separate
layers of red and white, which were
perfectly distinct, was very peculiar.
A portion of the scarlet snow was
melted hi a vessel and the water evap
• orateST when a fine,, rose colored
earthy sediment was found at the bot-
tom. Snow of a brick red hue fell in
Italy In 1810 and in the Tyrol in 1847.
In the first volume of Kane’s “Arctic
Exploration' it is stated that when
the ship passed the “Crimson Cliffs of
Sir John Ross” the patches of red
snow, from which they derived their
name, could be seen at a distance of
fully ten miles.
Williams Hotel Arrivals.
R. Spencer, Dallas; J. F, Bolin,
Blue Ridge: S. W. Collis. Dallas; M.
A. Bowers, Blue Ridge; Clareuce Rut-
ledge, Blue Ridge; Jess Rhea, city;
A Cordell, city; L. C. Daughty. Mari-
etta, Okla.; J. W. Thompson, Dallas;
A. D. Reeves, Sadler; F. E. Reeves,
Southmayde; W. T. Mori, city; W. H.
Ord, Gunter; O. D. Stanley, Bells; B.
M. Radford, S. G. Radford; J. P.
Hose, C. A. Deaton, Bill Atkinses, J.
B. Downing, city. .
Bell-ans
Absolutely Removes
Indigestion. One package
proves it’ 25c at all druggists.
CHURCH NOTICES.
|Travis Street Methodist Church.
Sunday school 9:45. Preaching at 11
a. m. and 7 :30 y. ni. by the pastor.
Epworth I e-ague 6:30 p. in.
First Church of Christ Scienlist—
Services 10:45 a. m. Sunday school
930 a. m. Wednesday, 8 p. m. In tilt
church edifice, corner of Crockett and
Jones streets. Reading room In the
west wing of the church building;
0|>cn dally except Sundays and holi-
days from 3 to 5 p. in.
SL Stephen’s Episcopal Church-
Corner of South Crockett and Cherry.
The Rev. W. J. Miller, rector. The
apiMilntments for tomorrow sre as fol-
lows: Holy communion at 7:3n a. m.
Sunday school at 9:30 h. m. Morning
prayer and sermon at 11 o’clock. All
are cordially Invited to attend. Ush-
ers. Mr. W. I.. Ely and Mr. Moody.
Central ChrisUan Church—Bible
school 9:48 a. m. Preaching 11 a. tn
by Dr. Harwell. There will he a union
service at night of the Grace Presby-
lerlan and Central Christian congre-
gations. Dr. B. IVrenii Webb will eon-
duct tills service at the Central Chris-
tian church. Special music w ill be
render* .1 at the night service. All the
members of both churches and the pub-
lic cordially Invited to attend all ser-
vices.
Grace Presbyterian Church.-Corner
Travis and Cherry streets. Dr. B.
Wrenn Webb, pastor. 9 it. tn., Junior
Christian Endeavor. 9:4/1. Sunday
school rally day. Every member pres-
ent. All parents urged to attend. It
a. m. sermon by pastor. 6 uTO Senior
C. H. 7:30 union service with Central
Christian church at their church. Pas-
tor of Grace church will preach.
Gram! Avenue Presbyterian—Sunday
school 9:45. Preaching services at 11
a. m. and 7:30 |>. m. Westminster lea-
gue 6:30 (i. in Cordial invitation to
the public.
First Presbyetrian Churrh—Junior
C. E. 9:00. Sunday school and Bible
classes 9:40. Regular morning worship
conducted by the pastor. T. A. Whar-
ton 11 a. in. Senior C. E. 6:30 p. m.
Evening service 7:30. Cordial welcome
extended to the public.
The Nazarene Church—There will lie
regular services at the Nazarene
church Sunday. Sunday school at 9:45,
a. in. Preaching at 11 o’clock. Young
Peoples’ meeting at 5:30. Preaching
at 7:30 p. in. Rev. A. G. Jeffries of
Peniel will preach at 11 o’clock and
at 7:30. Come and hear him. A wel-
come to all.
Houston Street Church of Christ-
The minister, K. C. Bell, liegius a se-
ries of sermon-lectures Sunday, deal-
ing with the nature ami character of
(iiHl ami Christ, to continue morning
and evening each Sunday for about
two mouths. These lessons deal with
fundamentals and all are asked to
start with the first and get them nil.
The text for the series is: “And this
Good Travel Record for the Dodge Car
North Texas Motor Co.,
Shcnimu, Texas.
Gentlemen:—On August 17th. Inst.
I left "San Saba, Texas, in a Dodge
car and traveled via * San Angelo,
areoss tlie south plains through Lub-
bock ami Plainvlew and then into the
Pauliandle via. Amarillo. Texas. Clay
ton. N. M., Chico and then back to
Ratoon. N. M„ anti followed the Gulf
to Colorado route to Trinidad, Colo.,
on to Rooky Ford and Boulder, Colo-
rado, making nil the mountain drives,
the low and high drives some of the
grades rallying from three to twelve
per cent. On the return trip 1 came
ria Kit Carson and Parsons, Kans.,
on to Oklahoma City, okla., making
a side tri(i of 250 miles through sand
which at many times was up to the
axle of the car and then plunged into
black mud for two days which re
qutred low gear driving tlie greater
part of the time. Made tlie trip with-
out raising Ihe hood of my Dodge car
except to replenish the supply of cyl-
inder oil, covered 4443 miles of rond
without having to s|iend a cent for fe*-
-palrs unit without a puncture. I also
average*! 18% miles to each gallon of
"jasolluc. This is the first and only
dktthat I. have ever driven and he-
ller*^ that I could have gotten more
nines jier gallon of gas if I had been
an experienced driver.
Yours very truly,
T. Y. El,TON,
It San Saba, Texas.
is life eternal, that they should know
Thee the only true God, and Him
whom Thou didst send, even Jesus
Christ.” (St. John 17:3.) Sunday 11
u. in. subject: “God a Person.” Sun-
day 7:30 p. in. subject: “God a Good
Person.”
Card of Thanks.
We lake this method of thanking
our friends for their kindness shown
dear old Aunt Sue Raney during her
three years anti over of suffering with
paralysis and old age and we e.-qteclal-
ly want to thank the go-si sisters Hnd
nurses who watched over her almost
day and night ; nniy God's richest
blessings rest,on them. Also Uncle
Joliu Cqpley and family who did so
much for her in her first illness. We-
also want to thunk our kind friends
who sent such beautiful flowers ami
expressed their love and respect to all
concerned. Many we all lie permitted
to meet her in heaven where there is
peace and rest forever; where there
is room for the poor and lowly ser-
vant of God. Peace be unto you.
Signed:
MRS. SAMANTHA ALEXANDER.
Sister.
MR AND MRS. SCOTT ALEXANDER
MRS. ETTA ALEXANDER.
MISS EVA ALEXANDER.
MU. AND MRS. JOHN CARTER.
Nephews and Nieces.
To Avoid Paralysis.
Boston. Mass., Oct. 14.—Residents of
Philadelphia. Washington and cities
farther South who have passed the
summer in fashionable colonies along
the North Shore have arranged for a
sjieclal train to carry them home with
out touching at New York. The train
will leave Boston tomorrow and will
make the trip to Philadelphia and
Washington by way of the Poughkeep-
sie Bridge. The idea is to avoid tlie
metro(iolls on account of the iufantile
paralysis situation there.
-4~
Why Not?
Clerk—Now, see here, little girl,
can't spend the whole day showing
you penny toys. Do you want the
earth with a little red fence around it
for 1 cent?
Little Girl—Let me see it—Life.
Think It Over
No two people are alike, and
no two prescriptions are alike.
That’s why every prescription has
to be treated in a separate manner.
You get this individual treat-
ment, moreover you get the con-
sideration and carefulness that
should always be exercised where
medicines are considered and
health is at stake, when prepared
here, ' .
Ask your dqctorio leave your
prescription witntTv
Caim. Nall
Just Returned From
New York
Made Lucky Strike
bought
200 Ladies Suits
Very latest models at
diculously low prices.
The entire lot will be
placed on sale—
Monday and
Tuesday
First come, First served!
POLLOCK'S
Dry Goods Store.
We Sell Everything in Lumber
You wih by being 4bio to get anythlig you wont at
this yard when you want it.
You win by being able to get it at a price that ii always
consistant with the quality of the material
You win by trading with a firm that backs up every
statement it makes, tliat stands behind every dollar’s worth
it sells.
You win in every way when you buy your Jumber and
other materials here.
D. B. LYON-Lumber
BUY THE
Famous Bunson
Burner Gas
Stoves
Burns less gas than
other stoves—No soot, no
odor—Satisfaction
anteed.
guar-
FULMER & BRITTAIN
Hardware, Implements and Vehicles.
IT WILL PAY YOU TO READ THE WANT ADS.
■THE CAREFUL DRUGGIST.
5.50
mwmm*
mmmmp
M am
r
For This
Hero
Gao
Stove
This is one of our, best selling Heaters and we Guar-
antee satisfaction. See our full line of Reflectors, ASBESTOS
BACK and FUEL BURNING Gas Heaters.
Scull-Swain Hardware Company
“THE GOOD SERVICE STORE.”
'Mm
7>.■■ (^ ^ „ ,,4i.. iit1 si
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTY-SIXTH YEAR, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 14, 1916, newspaper, October 14, 1916; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth720204/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .