Sherman Daily Democrat. (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTIETH YEAR, Ed. 1 Monday, January 30, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
TAGE TWO.
THE SHERMAN DAILY DEMOCRAT.
MONDAY. JANUARY 30. 1911.
SHERMAN DAILY DEMOCRAT
SHERMAN, TEXAS.
Published Every Week D»y Evening
Dally Democrat established July
26. 1881. Weekly Democrat estab-
lished Aug. 14, 1879.
0.0 ft E. C. HUNTER, Publishers.
The Daily Democrat Is the official
newspaper for the City of Sherman
and publishes all legal notices.
Subscription: 50 cents per month.
{2.50 for six months when paid In
advance.
The Weekly Democrat Is published
on Thursday. $1.00 per year. It 5s
lie county seat newspaper.
X
Dallas Office—307 Juanita Bldg.
Phone MaiB 4886. K. a. Wy’nne,
special representative.
Mall subscribers changing locations
should give their former addresses
as well as the new one. Subscribers
served by city carriers will please
assist the management In rendering
good service by making complaints
about irregularities or omissions.
-BOTH PHONEB-
THIK DATE IS HISTORY.
January BO.
1619-
1775
1778-
1825
King Charles 1 beheaded at
Whitehall.
-Walter Savage Candor, noted
writer, born. Died Sept. 17,
1861.
France acknowledged inde-
pendence of United Stutes.
-General Lafayette arrived on
a visit to Harrisburg.
1831—Richard latwrence attempted
to assassinate President An-
drew Jackson.
1 847—The Earl of Elgin assumed
office as governor-general of
Canada.
1879—Jules Grevy elected president
' of France.
18$5—•Ex-Queen Lilioukaianl for-
mally renounced her claim
to the throne of Hawaii.
1 908—Frederick V111 proclaimed
king of Denmark.
Tomorrow is the last day. Your
neighbor will have a poll tax re-
ceipt. Will you?
The Duke of Connaught, a brother
of the late King Edward, is to suc-
ceed Earl Grey as governor-gener-
al of Canada.
1 Sherman is to have another big
hanking institution in a new home.
The Commercial State bank will oc-
cupy one of the best in the South
before many months. Sherman peo-
ple have confidence in their town
and it is demonstrated every day.
"While our public square is just
now undergoing "the transformation
j of a wagon yard into a park it is
not pretty but the foundation for a
Mhuty-spot in the heart of Sherman
can be seen evolving day by day
and we shall all be proud of the
change before many weeks.
Wisdom dwells in blue skies and
broad sunshine and the wide hills
and the infinite waters: in peace of
mind, freedom, ownership of thh
earth. He is poverty-stricken who
is so absorbed in the one little in-
closure that he loses his grasp on the
bending universe which is his most
splendid possession.—Gail Hamil-
ton.
POSTAL SAYINGS HANKS*
The forty-eight savings banks
started as an experiment appear to
take well, is the statement of Post-
master Hitchcock.
Owing to the fact that so many
requests have been made to permit
the deposit of larger amounts than
the law allows. It Is probable the
postmaster general will recommend
the maximum of $506' he consider-
ably Increased. It is disclosed flint
many persons have n hiding much
more than $600 which they are will-
ing to lend the government at 2 |x>r
cent interest. .Mr. Hitchcock hoites
to obtain from congress this session
an appropriation that will permit
the establishment of many more
hanks. Uutimately, postal banks will
he establshed in all sections.
LATE MARRIAGES.
Mrs. M. N. York of Montana writos
well on marriage that happens in the
evening of life and better denomin-
ated "the mellowness of a sweet old
age," where the union is a happy
one:
That a bridegroom of 73 declares,
there are no love marria'ges after 50.
1 know of one woman in Montana
who married in the seventies and
has an ideal home. Her husband, ft
man of her own age, approves and
enjoys both her companionship and
her work. I am a widow in mid-life,
and looking about me I find the old-
er men, especially those who never
married, dogmatic, and selfish, liutte,
I am told, has 4,000 unmarried men
of all ages, nationaltes and kinds.
\VUy? Not because there are not
just as many good women needing
homes as ever, hut because the clubs,
the lodge and other places not as
desirable have usurped the home's
place with them, getting their time,
their money, their morals; and giv-
ing back, what? Nothing that adds
to their future welfare. 1 do not
believe this is right, or for the state
or country's good. It is not natural,
and artificial lives can not give us
the best. Many of them have been
too busy building fortunes to thin
of wives and children Now they are
middle-aged with no true homes.
What right have they to expect the
love of youth? Yet, I think a wo-
man of any age makes a mistake
who marries a man. she can not re-
spect or harmonise with.JPbr a home
or money. The trouble Is, with many
men, they want too young a woman.
They think that they can buy youth
and beauty, only to find when they
do that it turns to dead sea fruit.
Money can never buy love. Let a
man of1 middle age seek a bright,
companionable woman of similar
tastes and near his own “age. He
needs a home worse than a woman
does. She can busy herself with
small things where he is lost. I have
seen some very wise marriages in
middle life, where the sun sank to-
ward the western sky and gilded
gray hairs with a halo. They had
sought respect one from the other,
forbearance and friendship, and had
found not the love of youth, but
the mellowness of a sweet old ago.
BRILLIANCY.
Hrilliuiit men like pi have ns
their helpmates brilliant women.
The essence of marriage Is coiu-
1'inlonshlp. and the woman you
face neross the coffee urn every
umniipg for years in*|s| t.e Im.iIi
able to appreelate your jok.-s and
to sympathize with your aspira-
tions. If this is not so the mull
will stray lo tuully or else ebuse
the ghosts of dead lio|**s through
the graveyard of his dreams
lTeltltii’ss pails unless it is bark-
ed up*toy Intellect. The.merely
clever, woman Is nearly as bad
‘as the clever man. All those
is-ople who carry most of tliefr
gt mm Is In the show -window are
■headed for jobs at tin- button
eounter. Libert Hubbard.
i
THE PEOPLE'S FORUM.
There ire hundreds of yiung
trees being set out in Sherman
along sidewalks and In the gardens.
Tie Demon at is pleased to see this
and ev n ybody who has invested in
trees will be rewarded for the cost
in due lime.
THE CANAL AND LEPROSY.
Dr. David Starr Jordan is raising
his voice against allowing the Pana-
ma ("anal »to open without the pres-
ence in San Francisco of a large sta-
tion for the Segregation of Asiatic
and Oriental diseases, so that they
may not he allowed to spread, la-ss
money than the nation lias already
spent in Honolulu upon its Hawaiian
lepers would relieve tire country of
the lepers who are now at large in
the seaboard states, and in addition
would establish- a, station where all
Asiatic diseases might be treated. It
will be remembered that a few weeks
ago,, in reporting, the results of his
eflorts to propagate leprosy bacilli
outside of tho Jiutpan body, Ur.
Gbarles W. Duval of TuTune Univer-
sity, New Orleans, told the members
of the New York County Medical As-
sociation that leprosy germs, after
lying on bits of skin for a year or
more, would reproduce themselves In
colonies after being introduced into
Ills culture fliuds. The longevity of
the segregated bacillus he found was
greater-than that of any other
known disease and this was an ex-
planation of tlie peculiar malignity
(if leprosy and the tenacity with
which it. clings to any given com-
munity after once establishing itself
While Dr. Duval was making his re-
port ten lepers stood at the side of
the room, some with faces noduled
until they .seemed hardly human,
others with hands that were gnarled
until only the “leper's claw” re-
mained. It was the first time since
Moses probably that the clean in
considerable numbers, had sat know-
ingly under the same roof with the
unclean, and men of science had
come close to the lepers, touching
them and demanding concerted ac-
tion in their behalf that would give
human sentiment upon this one sub-
ject its first lift since the Dark
Ages. Of the 530 cases now known
the United States eighty per cent
are in five seaboard states. The pro-
posal of the doctors is that the Unit-
ed States take hold of the leprosy
problem, it being manifestly unfair
to allow one state to drive its lep-
rosy into other states and obviously
impracticable for each state to handle
its own cases on account of the small
number of them. A national institu-
tion might lie founded,—which would
be a refuge for those to whom be-
ing known is hut to be hunted, and
would also be a center for research
work in the patient effort to dis-
cover a serum which will do for lep-
rosy what has already been done for
so many of its cousins in the bacil-
lus family.—(Colliers.
To the Democrat:
The esteemed Denison Herald in
a lengthy labored editorial outdoes
Jeremiah of old in lamentations
over tho impending desiruction of
the sacred right of local self-gov-
erniftent, which it declares is in-
volved in the proposed statewide
prohibition. Now, if apprehension
for the safety of local self-govern-
ment is really what prompted ttie
Herald's labored efforts, it may
calm its fears. Prohibiting tltf? sale
of injurious beverages can no more
destroy local self-government than
prohibiting the sale of injurious
food will.
Since the sacred right of local
self-government in Texas has sur-
vived for years the enactment and
enforcement of statewide statutes
prohibiting the sale of had meat,
most people of unbiased mental
vision can see that it will as surely
survive the advent of a state-wide
law prohibiting the sale of bait
drink, and if llie Herald keeps harp-
ing on this strain intelligent people
are likely to conclude that it is
moved by some consideration other
than fear for ttie safety of "local
self-government.”
Why does not the Herald he con-
sistent and insist on the repeal of,
the statewide pure food law, the
statewide gambling law, the.state-
wide bucket shop law, and Others
which endanger the Community's
right of self-government every whit
as much as a statewide liquor law?
Why does the Herald asquiesce
in the statewide prohibition of the
sale of the bad food, and then pro-
test so vehemently against the state-
wide prohibition of the sale of bad
drink? In short, why does the Her-
ald want the law to favor the drink
seller more than the food vender?
Is the Herald going to leave a think-
ing public to guess the real reason?
H A. IVY.
Ttiat little uprising of insurectos
in Move i is developing a sore spot
on the Diaz dynasty and when reg-
ulars are drawn into trails and mas-
sacred as they have been lately the
home government will be impelled
to do something drastic and of
sufficient force to remind the bel-
ligerent insurgents that the army
of Diaz is not to be whittled down
on the installment plan.
There are congressional bees
buzzing under the hats of many as-
piring sovereigns in this state and
the matter of redistricting is the
bug under the chip. Among the
shining marks promised for slaugh-
ter are Randell, Henry and Hardy.
If the truth were made known one
ft
or more of these gentlemen don’t
care whether the district is in the
shape of a dry goods box or a shoe
string.
Taft's reciprocity proposals, which
will enable governments to take
down their tariff walls and provide
for the interchange of commerce be
tween the United States and nations
inclined to be friendly is
along the same lines that James
G. lllaine worked for when senator
and cabinet member. He made
some' headway and his plans wore
dropped only when the great states-
man passed to the other side. Taft
has hit upon a good way to give
the people relief from tar
iff burdens which can he
won through the agency of commer-
cial friendship which ought to obtain
now with Canada, Mexico and other
nearby nations, republics and king-
doms. Taft will incur much oppo-
sition with the republican party and
some from the democratic party, but
the patriotic and loyal American cit-
izen who has the brains to under-
stands the iniquitous tariff tmposi
lions will praise good deeds from
any source.
♦--............♦
| TH^S IS MY 71 ST BIRTHDAY.
•Li ii uni ,v BO.
Lisbon Charles \Y. Smith.
-----—♦
Neil Green, son of Hettle, that
very wealthy lady of Wail street
who owns property, mines, railroads,
stocks and bonds, will be at the head
of a big trust company with one hun-
dred million dollars. Ned built the
Texas Midland road just to play with
while he sojourned in Texas, aspired
to he in control of the pie counter as
diapenser of the goodies and plums
to be given out at Washington, hut
failed to land. He has lately been
tendered a place on the staff of
Oov. Colquitt and cannot shake off
the habit of living in Texas, although
hi* operation* will be mainly from
the Office in New York. Green will,
by hi* long residence In Texas, be
the better fitted to make Investments
In the Bouth and will no doubt do
The Rev. Dr. Charles William
Smith, bishop of ttie Methodist Epis-
copal church, was born in Fayette
county, Pennsylvanvia, January 30
184 0. After completing his education
lie entered the ministry and filled
pastorates in different parts of his
native state. For four years he was
the presiding elder of the Pittsburg
district of tlie Methodist church. At
the General Conference held in Hal
timore last May he was elected
bishop, oishop Smith was editor of
the Pitsburg Christian Advocate
number of years aud has earned the
reputation of being one of tlie most
powerful editorial writers of his
church.
NOTICE.
For sale, my home, Cl 2 North Lee
Ave. 4 room house, two lots 50x120
Young orchard, storm house. City
and well water and a small new
barn. $1,500.00 cash. If taken at
once. See J. B. Harrison, 612 N.
Lee Ave., or Copley & Gresham.
J19-tf
--
Genuine McAlester nut and lump
screened coal. Phone* 640. Scott
4 McKown’a gin. b29-2w |8heehey.
To Straighten out Racing Tangle
New York, Jan. 30.— Whether
there shall be peace or war o4l the
trotting turf next season is believed
to depend upon the outcome of the
special meeting begun in this city
today by the stewards of the Grand
circuit. The meeting is the di-
rect result of the action of the Col-
umbus Driving association in with-
drawing from the Grand circuit on
account of the dissatisfaction over
the allotted dates and the steps tak
en to form the “Great Centra?” cir-
cuit. It is believed . every effort
will be made to patch up a truce
as the formation of a rival circuit
under conditions as they exist at
present would, according to the opin-
ion of nearly all of those well in
formed as to the situation, prove
disastrous, especially to the East
era tracks of tlie Grand circuit.
UNEXPLORED CANADA.
Vjst Areas Where the Foot of a White
Man Has Never Trod.
There ure vast ureas in Canada of
which even the government lias uu
Jellnite knowledge, and there are thou-
sands of square miles whore tlie foot
of a white muu has never Raid. Prac-
tically all knowledge of tills big wild
country has been secured again uud
again along a few chosen and well
worn routes, outside of which invesll-
jutiou has seldom gone.
Imagine a dozen or so well beaten
vehicle highways traversing a country
jue-fourth as large as Europe—narrow
highways hemmed In by Impenetrable
wilderness—and one may form some
sort of Idea of the little that Is still
known of (100,000 square miles of the
North American continent.
Along these routes nearly all "ex-
plorers" have gone. Along- them ure
situated most of the fur posts, and be-
yond their narrow Hues hut little Is
known. And in this world of forest
and ridge mountains and eternal deso-
lation, still burled In the mystery and
silcuee of endless centuries, ure its
"people.”
Approxim.T ely there are from 15.000
to 25,000 hu nan souls iu an area fif-
teen times tl.e size of Ohio, and there
ure no mor* than 500 of these who
have not some Indian blood In their
vein*. On the other hand, fully one-
balf of the total population has its
strain of white blood.—Leslie’s Weekly.
The Badge of Honesty
Is on every wrapper of Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov-
ery because a full list of ingredients composing it is printed there
in plain 1* nglish. More than forty years of experience has proven
its superior worth”as a blood-purifier and invigorating tonic for
the cure of stomach disorders and all liver ills. It builds up the
run-dovviy system as no other tonic can in which alcohol is used.
I he active medicinal principles of native roots such as Golden
Seal and Queen’s root, Stone root and Mandrake root, Bloodroot
and Black Cherrybark are-extracted and preserved by the use of
chemically pure, triple-refined glycerine.
Send to Dr. R, V. P'.erce at Buffalo, N. Y., for free booklet
lized medical
ig, Scudder, Coe, Ellingw________
host of others, showing that these roots can be depended upon
which quotes extracts ' from well-recognized medical authorities
such as Drs. Bartholow, King, Scudder, Coe, Kllingvvood and a
for their curative action in all weak states of the stomach, accom-
panied by indigestion or dyspepsia as well as in all bilious or liver
complaints anu in all “wasting diseases” where there is loss of
liesh and gradual running down of the strength and system.
The “ Golden Medical Discovery ” makes rich, pure blood and
so invigorates and regulates the stomach, liver and howel%
and through them, the whole system. Thus all skin affections,
blotches, pimples and eruptions as well as scrofulous swellings
and old open running sores or ulcers are cured and healed.
In treating old running sores, or ulcers, it is well to insure their healing to apply to them
1 r. lerce s All-Healing Salve. If your druggist don’t happen to have this Salve in
stock, send fifty cents iu postage stamps to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel ainP Sur-
gical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y,, and a large box of the “All-Healing Salve” will reach
you by return post.
\ou can’t afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute for this non-alcoholic,
medicine OF KNOWN composition, not even though the urgent dealer may thereby
make ai little profit. Chough lie offers the substitute for a less price you
can t afford to experiment with your health. Go where they give you what you aslc
for without argument.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels.
Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take as candy, *
The Public Square
I have heard a lot of grumbling
about moving the hitch rack off the
public square. Now, Brother farmer
1 don't think anyone has any more
right to grumble than m^*’tf''1j’ifty
years ago when I waaAjuite a small
hoy 1 hitched ncy jrtjny to the old
pecan tree that stood near the south-
east. corner of the square as you
old pioneers will remember that
stood more than half a century, and
the square has been my hitching
place ever since that time.
Now, I will admit that a habit is
almost second nature and it seems
odd to us to hitch anywhere else.
But we will soon get over that and
oilr new- ground will bo all right.
Now 1 know you all are fair mind-
ed men and wqfnen and you like to
see everything clean and decent and
you well know that it did not look
presentable to anyone. Husbands,
how would you like to come homo
at noon and find the breakfast dish-1
es not washed and the beds unmade
and the house not swept. It would
not look very presentable to your
company if^you happened to have a
friend with you for •dinner. Now,-
would this not emharass you? I
think it would. I have been embar-
assed a number ([Himes by coming
to Sherman with friends from other
cities to see our puElie square in a
filthy and unsanitary condition. Now
let s quit grumbling and help make
our public square decent and invit-
ing to strangers. We must remem-
ber that city and country people are
brothers and sisters. What is good
for one is good for the other for we
both depend on each other. So we
should all work together to accom-
plish things. I can see quite an im-
provement and I know you can. I
can look in the future and see this
beautiful park these good ladies
have planned out for us. I say God
bless them and I hope there are
more that have the rtprve to take
to the field and help them in what
they undertake. They surely will
succeed. Say hurrah for the ladies.
I want to say to you people that are
grumbling so much, have you been
down to the new hitch ground? If
not, go down and investigate every-
thing and see if they are not getting
along nicely with their limited
means. You must .fern ember when
we first started out. the ihost of
us had a small capital and we had
to improve as we prospered, and if
you will join these good ladies’ tune
they will have everything-.ia suqh
fine shape and the square so beauti-
ful you will wish you had started
the move. Help before they quit
needing you.
W. H. CHISHOLM.
Henri Rochefort Reaches Four Score
Paris, Jan. 30. iHenri Roche-
fort, for many years the foremost
editor and publicist of France, cel-
ebrated his eightieth birthday anni-
versary today. Tlie career of Mr.
Rochefort lias been a tumultous one
from his youth. In 1805 he began
tlie publication of a paper through
whose columns he made violent at-
tacks upon the imperial family. The
paper was suppressed and Mr. Roche-
fort escaped prison by fleeing to
Belgium. When permitted to re-
turn to France a tew years later he
resumed his editorial onslaughts
against the government and was
again committed to prison. On the
proclamation of the republic a year
later lie was released by a mob. The
climax of his career came in 1871
when he was tried by court-martial
for his attacks upon the government
and sentenced to imprisonment for
life. He wits transported to New
Caledonia, but. effected his, escape
in 1 874. The general amnesty of
1SS0 permitted him to return to
Paris where he has since spent his
Tinic chtcfly tn attacking all govern-
ments in turn.
SOLVES A DEEP MYSTERY
“I want,to thank you from the
bottom of my heart,” writes C. E.
Rader, of Lewisburg, W. Va., “for
the wonderful double benefit I got
from Electric Bitters, in curing me
of both a severe case of stom-
ach trouble and of rheumatism,
from which I had been
an almost helpless suffer-
er for ten years. It suited my
case as though made just for me.”
Fof dyspepsia, indigestion jaundiee
and to rid the system of kidney
poisons that cause rheumatism,
Electric Bitters has no equal. Try
them. Every bottle is guaranteed
to satisfy. Only 50c at I.ankford-
Keith Drug Co. d&w
NO- 3150
REPORT OF THE CONDITION
• f lh»
MERCHANTS AND PUNTERS
NATIONAL BANK*
At Bberinan, in the State of Texas,
at tin* Clone of Business,
Jan. 7, 1011.
UKSOt'KCKS.
Loans and discounts................
Overdrafts.secutvd *utd unsecured..
r s iitTudjitotfocur*'circulation...,
r. S. Bond* to secure r,K.l)t*i»osits..
Premiums on V. S. Bonds...........
Bond*. Securities, etc.......
Banking hou**. furniture aud fix-
tures ....... ................
Other real estate owned.............
Due from National Bunks (not rv-
sorvt* agents....................
Due from Mate aud Private Banks
and Bankers. Trust Companies
and Savinas 1 tanks..............
Due from apprhvud reserve agents-.
Checks and other ca*>h items........
Notes of other National Bunk*......
Fractional t*apcr currency, nickels
.... and cents......
lawful money reserve in Bank, vU;
specie • ■ .............K.7.T41.SO
Lof?al-tender notes......14.0fto.uo
Redemption fund with P. H. Treas-
urer!.') per cent or circulation)-.
Total
'K7&c;U-
21*5,000.00
SO ,000.00
f».(juo.no
Hl.H4-4.lSft
141.9Ht.Kl
ft .OtV. .00
134.&VH.55
37,OSH .37
7B7.0U6.49
3,900 16
6.77f».OU
■464.2ft
17231 HO
14,7150.00
$3,*6ft,lU3
CANTWELL & HUDDLESTON
BARBERS
UP-TO-DATE ARTIST*.
BATH*.
We Will Appreciate In*
Patronage.
/
R.B.NALL
LIABILITIES.
Senator l.allcy Sells His Horses
SAVES TWO LIVES
"Neither my sister nor myself
might be living today, If IS* had not
been for Dr. King's New Discovery,”
writes A. D. McDonald of Fayet-
vnle, N. C„ R. F. D.. No 8, "for we
both had frightful coughs that no
other remedy could help. We were
told my sister had consumption.
She was very weak and bad night
sweats but your wonderful medicine
completely cured us both. It’s the
beat I ever used or heard of.” For
sore lungs, coughs, colds, hemor-
rhage, lagrippe, asthma, hay fever,
croup, whoitping cough—all bron-
chial troubles—it’s supreme. Trikl
bottle free. 50c and $1.00. Guaran-
teed by Lankford-Keith Drug U.o.
d&w
New York, .Ian. 30. The annual
midwinter horse sale of the Faslg-
Tipton company began at Madison
Square Garden today, with a total
of nearly 1,000 horses of various
breeds to, ha disposed of, including
a number of trotters and pacers of
high repute and low records. The
star offering is a consignment of
about fifty horses from the Ken-
tucky stick farm of Senator Joseph
,\V. iiaffey. of Texas, who is president
of // tho American 'Associa-
tion of Trotfing Horse Breeders.
-Senator Bailey is retiring from the
ranks of trotting horse breeders and
all of his horses will go under ttie
hammer at the present three days’
salt*. In his collection are half a
dozen young mares having records
around 2.1b, together with several
fast colts that gained records last
season.
Capital stork paid iu.............. $600.000 00
Surplus fund................... lJO.Uuo.U0
l ndivld»M profits, less PXptMrsas ami
taxes paid......... 5,216.60
National batik notes nutsUiiidiug- 2rj.7D0.U0
Dik* to other National hank* • ••• 769.316.jo
Duo to Stab* Bank* ami Imuker*— 340,974.74
Du** to Trust Companies and Savings
Banks...................- 67.960.17
Due to approved reserve ugeiiU..... 1,434.3s
Individual deposits subject to check 1,138,379.07
I>emand certificates of dei»osit...... 4,*36 40
Timo certificates of depot-it.......... 474,473.11
I'll it ed Suites deposits............. 4l.Kft3.3S
DeposiUXil IL S. disbursing officers ~ 7.U09.IK
Tot A l......................... $3 ,*65.103,53
State of Texn>. County of Grayson, ss:
I, C. B DorchasteT, Cashier of the above nam-
ed bank, do solemnly swear (hut tin* al*>ve slat
incut is true to the )*est of iny knowledge and )**
lief. C. B iHiiuiiKsTi ii. ( adder
KubscrU'Od ami sworn tn bufort* mu this lUth
day of January ,, 1911.
Bay 1 jourHRgrCK, Notary Public,
U my son County. Texas
correct—Attest;
T. D. .101NKR
T. C. COLK
J.L. RANDOLPH
Directors
OPTICIAN
Makes Torle, Krlptok, Invisible
BIFOCALS
FYAMI NATION FREH.
Office over Lankfird. Keith A N*ll.
EMILE BENZEL
Lunch Room
Merchant* Lunch Every D»y,
11 to 2 (except Sunday) ud
Short Order* a Specialty.
Everything In
I
Legislative Bribery Cases
FOR LACRIPPE COUGHS AND
COLDS.
Take Foley's Honey and Tar. It
gives quick relief and expels the
cold from your system. It contains
no opiates, 1* safe and sure. H. L.
. n» w-f&w
It*
Springfield,, 111., Jan. 30.—The
cases of S. C. Pemberton and Joseph
S. Clark, two members of the Illi-
nois legislature who ‘are accused
with former State Senator D. W.
Holstlaw of conspiracy to commit
bribery, were called for trial today
in the Sangamon circtm court. The
two legislators are-charged with hav-
ing demanded sums varying from
$1,000 to $1,500 from firms com-
peting for tlie contract to install
new desks and chairs in the senate
and house chambers of the eapltol.
This is the second trial of the * ac-
cused. The first trial was held last
November and resulted in a dis-
agreement of the jury.
Genuine McAlester nut and lump
screened coal. Phones 04 0. Scott
ft McKown Mill and Gin Co. ti
OLD SOLDIER TORTURED
“For years I suffered unsptakahh
torture from indigestion, constipa-
tion and liver troubles," wrote A.
K. Smith, a war veteran, at Erie,
Pa., “but Dr. King’s New Life
Pills fixed me all right. They're
simply great.” Try them fof any
stomach, liver or kidney trouble. On-
ly 25c at Lankford-Keith Drug
Co. d&w
--4---- .
For lluhftell Family Murder
Maryville, mo., Jan. 30.—(Intense
public interest is manifested in the
ease of Hezeltlah Roacoe, tlie al-
leged murderin' of the Hubbell fam-
ily, which came up for trial today.
The member/ of the Hubbell fam-
ily, eonsistii/g of the husband, wife
and two children, were murdered in
their home on their farm near here
on the night of Nov. 20 last: The
murderer afterward attempted to
burn the house to conceal the crime.
Roscoe was arrested a few dayk af-
ter the murders and has since been
kept in fhe jail at St. Joseph, owing
to threats of lynching. He is said
to have had a quarrel with Hubbell
over a card game a short time be-
fore the murders.
---,-
Genu'ne McAlester nut and lump
screened coal. Phones 640. Scott
ft McKown’* Gin. dl~u*w
Condensed Statement
MERCHANTS ti PLANTERS
TIONAL RANK
Sherman, Texas
At Close of Business Thursday,
Jan. 7th, 1011.
KKMOl’ltl'EH.
Loans ............................ .... $2,149,572.25
Hank building ami fixtures.......... Ml.919.sl
Other real estate.................... 5.06T..UU
H. H. Bond* ami premium..........- 3fto,uuu.(J0
Other stocka and 1*ojkU ....... K1,844.H;>
U. 8. Treasurer.......... $ 14,750.00
Due front hanks.... .■ . 933,363.41
Cash on hand........... l*J,5K8.'2l 1.136,701 62
Totai........................
LIABILITIES
Dapltal......... ............'.....
Surplus and undivided profits... .
Oireulatium.......................
Dc poult so........................
Tota ........................
$3,665,100.53
' $600,000,00
125,236.(50
292,700.00
2,647,166.93
$3 .KOft, 103.53
Mrs. H. W. KeaUcy
ALIi KINDS OF HAIR WORK.
—M—
CURLS. PUFFS. AND RRAIDS
MADE TO ORDER.
Working Up Combings and Dye Work
1017 East College St. Old phone 4AB
txjx*s, totied with i ilue Ribbon, v •
Take v<> other, l ujr of your ^
years known a, Bwt, Safest, Always ReitUM
SOLD IV DRUGGISTS EVERYWHEKf
DR. R. FLOWERS
VETERINARY SUROEOH
AND DENTIST.
Office—McKinney A Stag*!
Drug Store.
Office—Both phone* 09.
Residence—Old phoa* 717(
New phone 7B6.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ft-
For Guaranteed
PLUMBING, HEATING AND
GAS FITTING,
At Ix>west Prices, See
Breedlove
& Gohring
NEW rilONH 140.
Lon Burton
f
WANTS YOUR PAINTING AND
PAPER HANGING. NEW
PHONE 471) RED.
Mrs. I. M. Weems
VOICE
Slndlo 211 East Brocket! Street
Old Phone 132
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.
Matching Search Results
View five places within this issue that match your search.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. THIRTIETH YEAR, Ed. 1 Monday, January 30, 1911, newspaper, January 30, 1911; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth645300/m1/2/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .