Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, September 24, 1920 Page: 5 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 26 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
ftff
.,- n yWK,'s W- .,<> ■ •-.■-, ^ •■ '
'• .'
g* •<
mmm
MM
asMEE
%mmma
"TP
#r
, ,
BRPfeS
BY OSTEPATHS
* V
A country-wide crusade tor bettor
health baa just been started by the
Atn-rican Osteopathic ^Association.
Fuee public clinics are being estab-
lished io cities in all the states for the
osteopathic treatment of the poor, free
lectures on the prevention of diaeaee
are being given in various community
tenters. "Better Babies" conferences
are being held by the women osteo-
pathic physicians for the benefit of
mothers and infanta.
Osteopathic hospitals have been
built in several cities recently and a
number of others are projected for the
immediate future.
Mltw CHnda Murt MacGUIivray. as-
sociate director women'® section, Gov-
ernment saving's division of the Rtyt*
veil til Federal Reaerve District, is
speuding Friday and 'Saturday In
Grayson County, meeting with the
women and school children of Sher-
man and Denlaon in the interest of
her work. Miss MacGUIivray spoke to
the students of Junior High School
Friday bornlng. she impressed the
need of thrift among the people of
thla nation, and pointed out tluit thrift
stamps are but a vehicle for thla pur-
pose. Saving accounts. Investments on
'good security, and • other forms at
' thrift ure to the recommended she
said. \
j Miss MacGUIivray Is planning a
I meeting at the presidents of women'®
large* I ncrease^t^the number otSSrUb ,ciub* of the dty to ukt* "P wl,h thwu
ulants, enlargement of faculUea, and a tbe snbJw>t of teaching thrift and pri-
still higher standard of entrance and
curriculum requirements.
Great industrial plants, mills, facto-
ries, and large commercial houses are
installing osteopathic Apartments for
the purpose of keeping their work-
ers fit, decreasing absences due to sick-
ness and increasing the output by rais-
ing tbe physical efficiency. Several
railroad companies have also added os-
teopathic specialists to their staff of
physicians who restore injured employ-
ees to active service.
Accident insurance companies have
discovered that injured men whom
they <**• for under the Workmen's
Compensation Act and employers' lia-
bility contracts are in many cases re-
turned to wage earning very much
sooner under osteopathic treatment
than heretofore. This baa resu I ted in
a number
companies natal ftp g osteopathic spe*
claUsts in their oflfeea In various <ftties
to care for these caaea.
Laws regulating the practice of os-
teopathy have now been paaaed in ev-
ery state in the Union. This means
that osteopath]? is how standardised
and regulated by law in a manner, anab
ago us to that by which the practice of
medicine is controlled. Unqualified,
incompetent and illegal practitioners of
osteopathy are therefore now barred
rrom practice by law and the public
is Just aa -Well protected from Injury
by unqualified osteopaths aa it is saved
from harmrby unregistered medical
doctors. No osteopath can practice in
any state in the Union now without be-
ing legally registered by the state.
Educational standards in osteopathic
colleges have been raised to tbe level
of medical standards and are enforced
most rigidly. There are only seven
osteopathic colleges in the world, and
they are all members of tbe Associat-
ed Colleges of Osteopathy. This organ-
ization compels absolute uniformity of
entrance requirements and a minimum
curriculum of study hours and aub-
jects equal to that of medical achools.
The length of the course of study in
osteopathic colleges is four years and
no person can enter without a high
school education. These colleges are
located in Chicago, Philadelphia, Boa-
ton, Kansas City, Dee Moines, Kirka-
vllle, Mo., and Los Angeles.
Large general surgical and obstetri-
cal hospitals are maintained in
Iiogatlng Its principles In the city.
Further announcement of this meet
ing will be made.
• j:*
Mrs. H. C. Dillingham.
News was received in Sherman Fri-
day morning of the death of Mrs. H.
C. Dillingham, mother-of Miss Kvorie
Dillinghuui. principal of Jefferson
School, and of Mrs. Nora Jackson of
thla city, which occurred Thursday
afternoon at her home in Commerce.
Mrs. Dillingham was herself a for-
mer retddenf of Sherman, having lived
here for about twenty yeurs before
moving Io, Commerce.
The IkmIj* will be brought to Sher-
man Haturday aftaraon over the Cot-
• ■ - ton Bell, arriving here at 2:40 fL m.
^nenal services will be conducted
from the station by the Rev. Oeorge
T. Cuthrell of Central Christian
Church, and Intermeut will be made
in West Hill Cemetery by the side of
the husband of the deceased, : who
died u number of yeurs ago.
Mrs. Dillingham, who was 711
years .of age, was a native of White
Mills, Ky. Besides iter daughters
here, she is survived by several jtfher
children: Tom Dilling|tinm of Fort
Worth, Dick Dillingham of Commerce,
Harry I >111 high lira of Tyler, Mrs. Ber-
ry Fain nnd Mrs. Walter Reed of
Commerce. -. , '■ J, . .
Mrs. Dillingham had many friends
in Sherman who learned of her death
with ranch sorrow. She had been a
life long member of the Christian
Church. * .
Honorary i ill bearer* will lie W. H.
Lucas, John Pittman. K. F. Jones. C.
B. Dorchester. Robert Long and Dr.
Geo. F. Cuthrell.
■—
j™™*"-#
*k
Away by
W&W'
•-' 2ai
rV,: ',• i- ; \-m
11
The weekly
HiBi
Library.
Ma
er of
port, Is g
Mr* P. 8. Duval
& Duval of
called to Texarkana
count of the death of
er of Mra. Duval.
t'wB i
The Friday servi
Church will be held r
o'clock, aa announced
good attendance la
Tbe public Is cordially
t a .
Rev. and Mrs. Jap Manton went to wl
Pari* today, where Mrs. Manton will "?■
visit for several days.
will remgp Saiurduy and will be In
his pulpit Sunday at Grace Presby-
terian Church.
The Democrat la in receipt of a card
from Thaddeus Bookont written from
Pike's. Peak. Mr. Hookout says he ar-
rived In a snow storm and la "having
a great time.' He will be gone arv-
erat weeks.
;:st\ * -
jii.agVx,
FederalbuUdi
position of
mm
The district convention which has
Iin,MnM ' l**" In progress at Central Christian
riiTr f -! ^ Church since Thursday was cloned
Police Headquarters, N. Y., after lie- w|f, the afternoon session Friday. It
Ing questioned regarding the bomb Wag to hola ^ n|f„t
Ht.ii.tli.iic ia hi* w«o. Pr"1,J' "* "' • ™ to f
selling candy when tbe explosion oc-J
curred twenty feet away. ' ...WBWWMWM.M ^ - -—
knockerl unconsdons and his horse'
and wagon disappeared. It is thought
Walter . ... ■■
for fnrttxtf In
|| 'Meltlons and Die
o be held for the
Mlaa Kahma T. Odom of fi02
atreet had her tonalls
at Sherman Hospital -WMM
*m W. 8. Ruth of Coaigate, Okla.,
ia at ^p-iiiun Hosjiltal |j|jitreatiiient.
y'-V- v'.v •;
am
<!?
WIW noticb. m ■
We have moved our stock from 218
South Maxey to «0l Raat Brockett St.
T'NION CD-OPRRATIVR 00, p-
s24-.'itc Phoaea llW*l7f .
.mm. IL
both horses ami wagon were blown to
bits.
THE AMERICAN
RED CROSS IN
t PEACE TIME
Junior Red Cross
i
Personal Mention
/
Mrs. H. L. Hall and daughter,
Miss Francis, retumeil hoqie today
from a visit to ' St. I^ouis.
* AI TkOtims. pidtlisher of *'larksville/!||
passed through Sherman Thursday en
con- route to Dallas.
.* -
junction with osteopathic colleges, the
largest being in Kirksville, Chicago,
Des Moines, and Philadelphia. It is
only a matter of time when hospitals
will be added to the equipment of the
other colleges.
Osteopathic colleges are chartered
educational institutions, authorized by
the states to confer degrees. They are
not conducted for the purpose of profit,
but entirely from the educational
standpoint
Osteopathy, then, is a school of prac-
tice, the basic principle of which is the
mechanical adjustment of the body.
Thla Is so simple that it is difficult to
see why there should be any misunder-
standing regarding it Osteopaths are
mechanical physicians, or mechani-
cians of the human body. As the J
spine Is the central support of the
structure of the body and as It con-
tains the spinal cord which is the main
cable of nerves extending from the
brain through the whole length of the
trunk, the adjustment of the spine la
necagsarUy the most important part of
the Work of the osteopath. Surgery be-
ing mechanical, is of course embraced
within tbe scope of osteopathy al-
though body adjustment by the handa
of the osteopath saves tbe patient from
a very large percentage of avoidable
operations.
Nothing which is scientifically true
regarding the human body as taught
by tbe older schools of practice is de-
nied in the teachings of osteopathy.
Osteopathy is not aisystem of negation,
of attack or criticism of other schools
of practice. It is not destructive. It is
constructive. There are plenty of
sects and cults based primarily upon
denial or denunciation of others. Os-
teopathy is not of these. There is no
Instrument of precision used in diag-
nosis in the old schools, which Is not
utilized by the osteopaths. Osteopathy ,
Is necessarily baaed upon anatomy, 1
physiology, chemistry nnd the other
fundamental sciences underlying all
teaching of the art of healing. These
sciences all existed within the medical
fold before oeteQpathy waa born.
WhUe it ti true that nothing which
has been proven -to be scientifically
correct is denied in thi tenets of oste- j
opatby it is also trite that the mechan-,
leal adjustment of the body is such a
natural procedure and brings about
fcueh remarkable resu'ts. that the oste- :
opath has no need for the adrainistra- •
tlon of druijs internally for the treat-
ment of disease. - |
Potter's Materia Medlca says thet
there is no statement more scientifical-
ly proven than the one that tbe human
body contains within itself every sub- •
stance necessary for the treatment of ,
disease. With such an admission by aa >
authority on drugs, the osteopath has ,
no need to look elsewhere for his reme-
dies. The next proposition is how to I
make these snbstancus availible. Sci-
ence teaches that the body is the most
,->erfeet machine known. Hence oste-
opathy concludes that a perfect ma-
chine with all the substances neceaaary
present needs only perfect adjustment
In or-ler to maintain perfect function- (
Ing, «hich is health.
Charles Oriimcll went to Dallas
Thursday to attend S. M. I*.
N«m1 Hogan is here from Spur, visit-
ing Mr. ami Mrs. B. I). Dye and fam-
11,y"
Dr. T. W. Crowder left Thursday
' for a visit of several weeks in El
j Paso. He will lie joined next Week by
Mis. Crowder, who will remain for a
time also.
Mm. M. F. Robtnett,
Mrs. M, F. Roliinett 45 years old,
of Madill, Okla., died In this city Fri-
day ufteriioon at 1 o'clock.
She was a widow and is survived
by eight children.
The body will be shipped to Madill
Saturday morning by the Stewart M.
See,ft I'lidertaklng Company, for Inter-
ment.
About 12,000,006 boyji end glrie, com- I
posing nearly half the school popula-
tion ef the United States, ure members
of tbe Junior Red Cross, which Is help-
ing the children of Europe, while at
the same time It Is doing an Important
work here at home. Haitian Chetwolf, '
who wears the engaging smile shown 1
in this picture, is the son of en In-
dlsn guide and trapiier. He Is the
youngest Junior living In tbe neighbor-
hood of Juneau, Alaska—and he sends
greetings to fellow Juniors of the Unit-
ed States.
Modes of the Mo-
ment at
Prlcea.
Tbe town where a man falls to get
work and bread will ever after be n
'bum town" to 1dm.
Ignorant
a no rehy.
demnracy is the parent of
NU NN 'S
shoes are good shoes
Shermanl
Denlsou
I
We quote no for-
mer nof Coinimr-
ative Price.
We let you be
the Judge of
Valuee ,
Why Not Save 10 to 30%
on Your Meat Bill
You can do so if you buy your meat from the Ferguson Meat
Company. We have eliminated all unnecessary expense, and
are selling the choicest meat on a very close margin. We
had rather sell two pounds of meat and make a profit of five
cents per pound than sell one pound and make a profit of
eight cents, upon this principle we are building the biggest
meet business in this section of Texas.
These are Our Every Day Specials
The fool makes hl-dory out of the
Iilood ^f the innocent.
fV,,
•
AltAr We get better , neqnunted
tiftcn rue thai we ever met
-
Round Steak 27c lb„
Ijoln Steak 2Mc lb.
Porter House Steuk 27c lb.
T Bone Steak 27c lb.
Shoulder Steak 18c lb.
Shoulder Roast k..18c lb.
Arm or Hump Ronst ....17c lb.
Boiling Beef .. ..JJtc lb.
It).
lb.
Veal Steak .. .....
17c
lb.
Veal Roast
.....lie
lb.
Veal Rtew
..... ir*'
lb.
lb.
Minced Ham
2.V
lb
Bologna.. .. .. .
2fic
lb.
Meat Sold Here Government Inspected.
Ferguson Meat Co,
Phone 257.
203 South Travis St.
The Returning
Sanity in Prices
At last its here, the prices of today is back to almost
its normal condition. The patient has been improv-
ing for the past four or five months, until now he is
almost—sane.
PRICESIdAME TO ITS SENSES
and no need any more to have to throw away your
money" in order to obtain a garment that will please
youP You can get a good one at a sane price—and
in this store especially where prices are always sen-
sible, you wiO find everything m the Ready-to-Wear
at prices much lower than you anticipated paying.
For Tomorrow—Saturday
A Superb Collection of Suits
Sensibly Priced.
$39.95, $49.95, $59.95 and up in easy
stages to $147.50
27|$j
lilt
■ ' \1
I
i'-'-'-V N ■<
A yratlcpl
ftyyljpjm
—You'll
your silk
but our
pretty
wpR
which to
iY$§am&
Buy now while
and the saving to ;
}'M
'IWMJ
n.,v
—All makes in
this special price r
are here to select
Cordova
mv:-.
The Season's AfaJ®
in Coats and
—A woman can now choose from a
colors and modes in our Garment Section,
fall colors and distinctiveness of mo '
Marks Bros, a real pleasure. -
—Stocks are great, variety of styles
mm
■ $
represented that you are sure to find the very suit or coat
you desire—Glad to see you any time.
m i ,i
wp
mmm
|||®| NOTE EXHIBIT |
of Blankets donated Austin College Foot Ball Team,
south window. This donation was made by sixteen
firms, of Sherman, each firm donating a blanket. The pre-
sentation will be made by Mr. Hayden Head, at Austin Col-
lege, on Saturday.
Take a Peep aft the Window as Ym go by 9
HSUI
..
m rjm
i
SHERMAN'S GREATEST
m
'B>§
ifll
Am
*
Thoroughly good ,workmarH«hlp. the
uae of highest grate material, and ex
acting care In vulcanising with the
flnent equipment dMatnable Insure re-
pair nervlce that really pays. Wet
sell MtWJtBplip % <t tttbea. "The
moat talked of tlH l America.** tT*
our free road service, ita for yout con-
venience.
Better Quality Enam^
eled Ware. A piece for
every kitchen pur-
pose. "Lisk" has a
smooth glass like sur-
face that is not affect-
ed by acids of fruits,
4. i.
SSfe
vegetables, milk
other foods.
. Run no risk,
it's "Lisk." The
is a guarantee
quality.
mm(I I "
i - i
m
Mi
I
|Li*
m
■H-v W
Hi
, m
'V
:' \ i
. ;
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, September 24, 1920, newspaper, September 24, 1920; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth194096/m1/5/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .