Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 8, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
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SHERMAN DAILY DEMOCRAT
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SHERMAN, TEXAS.
O. * E. C. HUNTER, Publishers.
The Daily Democrat is the official
hewapaper of the City of Sherman
and publishes all legal notices.
Subscription: 50 cents per month.
15.00 per year In advance. -
The Weekly Democrat is published
on Thursday. $1.00 per year. It 1b
the big county seat newspaper.
Dallas Office—307 Juanita Bldg.
Phone Main 4 886 F. A. Wynne,
special representative.
Mall subscribers changing locations
Should give their former address as
well as tbe new one. Subscribers
served by city carriers will please
assist tbe management In rendering
good service by making complaints
about Irregularities or omissions
This state will, be, going forward
one big stride when those tugs and
barges come up the Trinity river
from the gulf with frciglu and leave
with their burden oi merchandise
down ttie river again.
It. will mean a readjustment of
11eight tariffs for all North Texas
The government has expended
$ I. too,olio to improve tlie Trinity
and Dallas people have also come
forward with funds.
A steamboat company has been
organized to put boats and barges
on the river some time in the near
future.
It will lie worth touch to the peo-
ple of this section when freight
tariffs are lowered, as they will tie.
when navigation begins.''
-BOTH PHONES-
i. t
THE DEMOCRAT
EXTENDS
K-
Oongratillations to:
Congratulations to:
Lieutenant General Nelson A.
Miles, former head of the
United States army, 73 years
old today.
Charles $?. Diehl, former assistant
general manager of the Asso-
ciated Press, and now pub-
lisher of the San Antonio
Light, 50 years old today.
Prof. “Samuel B. Christy, for 30
years head of the department
of mining of the University of
California, 56 years old today.
v« vr
THfS
S , > a- »' ■
DATE IN HISTORY
August 8.
1607—First settlers from England
v landed in Maine,
1778—A force of Canadians and
Indians invested Ft. Booms-
' borough, Ky
1812—United States army which
had’ Invaded Canada a month
previously, retired across
tbe river to Detroit.
1827—George Gaming, famous
Bntsh statesman and orator,
died. Bom April 11, I7V0
1829—Baltimore celebrated its reu-
tennjal.
1846—Daud Wilmot introduced his
proviso in congress.
1861—ludeh P. Benjamin selected
as Secretary of war of1 the
,'lf4 Confederacy.
1884—FSrt Gafnes, in Mobile bay.
surrendered to Farragut and
Granger.
1880—Rev. John A. Wa.terson con-
set rated Roman Catholic
Bishop of Columbuus, O.
1911 —IV tltam V Fry**. United
fit*teg senator from Maine,
died at Lewiston, Me. Bern
there Sept. 2. 1821.
Don't the court house grass sod
look green and nice?
It should no! be long until some
more paving starts In this (own.
. With Teddy in the running tbe
whole bunch is now on the race
course with the White House as
goal
Franklin county has voted good
Toad bonds during the past three
months in the sum of half a mil-
lion dollars. That's good. Who
next?
The Galveston port received 642
immigrant; during July. This gives
aome idea of how Texas is filling
up. Thrjv are coming in from oth-
er gates into the great state of
Texas.
TRINITY NAVIGATION.
FI Nil FOR CAMPAIGN.
The Democrat lias been bunded
one dollar' bv Prof. II A. Ivy,
I lie
lirsl one offered for the dc inoerulic
national Campaign fund.
There is a popular wish through-
out the country that the campaign
fund he raised mostIj by Dollar do-
nation') and newspapers have open-
ed their columns lo help get sub-
Hcrlptioris lo 'conduct a clean cam-
paign and elect Wilson mi l Mar-
shall.
Anyone who wants to have u part
In the "ood work may d'o so by
sending my amount, large or small,
to the Democrat, filling in toe fol-
lowing blank form:
Sherman llemociut
Wilson ami Marshall Fund.
Date.
Name: .
Address:
Amount -
H.. A.
HILLY
DONATIONS:
Ivy..........
. $1.00
DO N'S HOARDING IIOl SF.
INVENTS Tl RHINE ENGINE
If til-. Ir.test. turbine eng Lit i:i-
vent'on which is said to produce
85 per cent of proficiency, me ! 3
Ihe expectations of its inventor,
transportation oy land oml sea will
be revolutionized an 1 s|>‘" J records
will be broken.
Da pi. Louis H. Flatau, Sec >'c c.'cry
of the Hahok .Manulu luring Do.,
of St. Louis, who has 150 practical
inventions to Ills credit in the
United States patent office at
Washington, has just. completed
and obtained letters patent on a
new lirb'nft engine.
"I have spent the best enorgi s
of my lif> for thirty years In my
efforts ic evolve a perfect turbine
engine, aiul ! have readied my
goal at lust." said Captain Flatau
as lie prepared to demonstrate his
Moral Health
of Children
Needs Guarding
i outhhil
Criminal
By MRS. W. 1. YOUNG, Galveston, Texas
Invention.
“It. ..r«>inbines'~simplioity of con-
struct ion with durability of mate-
rals and economy of space and cost
In such corre.l proportions as to
put it ha>c«n,cl comparison with any-
thing now in existence. It is so
compact mat it ran he built for
half ih.?'c ost ami operated iti one-
fifth the- space occupied -by any
other engine of the sa.me power,
am; it is so simple in its construc-
tion it can lie understood and op-
erated by a child, it can he reversed
instanlly, while running at top
speed, by a lever attached to a
throttle.*, valve, without the* Slight-
est shock to Ihe machinery.’’
The Flatau turbine engine looks
like a fly wheel with all the dri-
ving mechanism enclosed wtliip the
wheel itself. An electrical gener-
ator is attached to the end of the
driving shaft of the engine, and re-
volves in a field that.is fastened to
the housing, with an 80-pound pres-
sure generating an electrical cur-
rent sufficient to supply! sixty 32-
candle power carbon lamps.
Captain Flautau claims this
small engine is capable of develop-
ing 8-ho-s- power with 150 pounds
steam pressure, and that a similar
engine mft'ident to drive the pro-
pellers of Hie Lusitania could he
constructed for one-tenth the cost
and stored in one-tenth the space,
occupied by the turbines now in use
on that vessel.-—St. Louis Glove
Democrat.
w
This Is a great season Moisture
In the ground and splendid pros-
pects for tall gardens and more
“provender” for the live stock as
well as a cinch on the corn and cot-
ton crops.
The Progressive republican ticket
Is Roosevelt and' Johnson—the lat-
ter governor of California. Mean-
while : belting in New York Is two
to one in favor of Wilson over
Roosevelt or Taft.
Do you remember "Dan” Sully,
the only genuine cotton king that
Nqw York ever knew, who only a
few years ago was perched on the
dizziest heights of audacious spec-
ulation, who cleaned up $3,900,-
000 in a few months. lost it in a
lew mlnutfs, and vanished from
the limelight? Well, “Dan” Stilly
is now running a hoarding house.
it is at Watch Hill, R. I. Un-
derstand clearly at the stall that
the ex-cotton king is really run-
ning the boarding house. ’ lie isn't
just pretending to—sitting aloof
somewhere in lonely majesty, lend-
ing his name and prestige to the
undertaking, dazzling hoarders with
the tales of past grandeur.
No. The erstwhile czar of the
cotton market not only superin-
tends everything in the higher de-
partments of ihe job, but he turns
to arid takes a hand often in oilier
matters which most people in his
place would' delegate to others.
On the subject of Wall Street,
that made and broke him, Sully is
disinclined to talk. At heat he is a
man of .t few wobds, but on cotton
and speculation in general he
Bpinxlike.
The house, by the way, is a
fine summer residence, built by
Sully himself a year or so before
his downfall on the -cotton ex-
change. md named Kenneth Ridge,
after a son who died. It stands on
an eminence, the highest in Watch
Hill. Before its owner s'downtall Hie
house witnessed festivities which, if
houses can meditate, must lead to
startling contrasts.
The '‘Dan” Sully who now takes
people through his house and' quotes
prices in rooms to them was once
Worth more than $3,900,000. He
lost nearly $2,000,000 of it in two
mlnufCB. According to him he
announced his voluntary suspen-
sion to the superintendent of the
cotton jxt-hange at 1:15 on the af-
ternoon of that fatal March IS. It
was not read on the floor of,,.,, tho
exchange Until two minutes past 2.
“That delay of 2 minutes cost
me $1,176,000," Sully said once, in
telling Ihe story. “If it had been
fead or before 2 o'clock t might
have come out all right.”
As It >\hs when the smoke clear-
ed from (he field where lie had
met disaster, his liabilities totaled
up to something like $3,000,000.-—
New York Times.
Little OTeviHe is to have a broom
corn show. Broom corn is a great
money crop and a show which will
accelerate the cultivation of .broom
corn arid broom making ought to
have a boost anywhere broom torn
will gyow in this great southwest.
HUMAN BURRS IN THE WORLD
Unwise People Who Bore Their
Friends With Their Display of
Lack of Tact.
Do you ever encounter inquisitive
people who are really annoying—peo-
ple who have npt, the least interest
In your affairs, but simply “want to
know" out of Idle curiosity? A great
share of America’s reputation for rude-
ness may be laid entirely to the charge
of their riling questions. Equally un-
desirable is the person who confides
her family troubles to all her friends.
Instead of pulling the stoutest kind oT
padlock on,the closet door where the
family skeleton lurks, some women
shamelessly drag it out and parade
In the public eye. „
The too-frlendly Individual who runs
In at all hours without ringing and
... offers her services upon every occ'a-
is slon, and the woman who monopolizes
or tries to monopolize all the time
and attention of her friends Is like-
wise to be avoijjfd. “Dearie, if you
tprk tfctnkiqg of going shopping this
Week, let roe know and I'll go with
>*»u. Stop for me if you go to the
matlnWe on Wednesday.”
It never occurs to them that their
company might not be appreciated.
But just as tbe burrs of the field make
us appreciate the flowers more than
ever, so do the human burrs teach us
to rejoice in the pleasant, considerate,
sensible friends that fall to one's lot
for the latter outnumber the former
many, many times.—Exchange.
IIAT shall we do with the youthful criminal? That is a
problem that requires serious thought. Some of the great-
est intellects have pondered over that momentous question,
und yet all reforms hearing on the subject are still in an
experimental stage. To prevent and protect our children from becoming
youthful offenders shtfuld be our first endeavor.
Modern municipal hygiene does m>t attempt to stop the ravages of
disease by merely treating those afflicted. The purity of the water supply,
the sanitary regulations governing dwellings and buildings, the efficiency•
and completeness of the sower system, etc., are given the required atten-
tion. Time, thought arid money arc expended judiciously to protect our
physical well lieing. I’mtcclion is the watchword in ihe municipal depart-
ineiii safeguarding our health.
The moral health of our children needs to he guarded and fortified.
If we can cheek or reduce the number of wayward youths the problem
will he partially solved. o
Many parents feed, clothe and send their children to school, hut for-
get to instill into the plastic minds of their offspring the love of truth,
honesty and consideration for the rights of others. Character building in
the home is essential to good morals. Parents should co-operate with
school teachers and religious instructors indhc training”rif children. “The
high instincts of reason, of conscience, of love, of religion—how beautiful
and grand they are in the young heart !’’
Undoubtedly heredity plays an nnportftnt part in the character of a
child. J firmly believe that good and worthy examples, the proper envi-
ronment amt a moral and religious training" exert a powerful influence in
controlling and eradicating hereditary evil tendencies.
(Jive youthful offenders a chance? Why, of course. Teach them
the means to earn an honest living, then give them work and put enough
in their pay envelopes to enable them to live respectably, tank of em-
ployment and insuffic ient wages produce a harvest of criminals.
The wonder is that we have not a larger crop of voting lawbreakers.
What chance have children of tender years working long hours in mills,
mines and factories? Stunted bodies and minds are not productive of
strong moral characters. Men waxing rich on the profits derived from
child labor not only dwarf Ihe minds and bodies of the poor, unfortunate
children in their employ, but they kill their souls as well. (Jive youth the
heat chance by abolishing conditions that produce youthful criminal*.
Boys and girls who stray from the straight and narrow path should
not he herded with older and more hardened criminals. A little more
classification in jail and a little less out of jail might
be beneficial to Immunity. Confirmed law breakers
are professors of crime, and all professors, w.liotliei
'good Or evil, take(plcasure in instructing the voting
Minor offenders .should not he treated like sea-
soned jailbirds. There are many pitfalls’ for the un-
wary, ami a stop downward often means a toboggan
slide to the gutter. Von, on the height, throw out thetf*
life line; there is always a chance that it may be'
grasped.
Publicity should not he given to the petty crimes
-of first offenders. It does not help the youth to retail-
or regain his self-respect, and self-respect, if noi
wholly destroyed, leads to reformation.
YOU EAT KOI) NEED DlfiESTIT
THE NEW RELIEF FOR INDIGESTION
It lias been stated that more than
eighty million people in the United ;
States are victims of some form oi 1 ';u*
Indigestion. The American people
do not take time enough to eat.
the result is stomach distress, gas,
ibelqhing, indigestion and dyspepsia.
Digestif is the now relief—it has
been found a certain, quick and
permanent remedy." Thousands of
people have found relief from its
use. Their own statements on file
in our office are proof. You can
try it for yourself without any
risk—If it falls to give you abso-
e satisfaction your money will be
returned. Brown's IMgestit is a
little tablet easy to swallow and
absolutely harmless. It relieves In-
digestion almost instantly, stops
food fermentation, prevents dis-
tress after eating and cures dyspep-
sia. You need it even though you
are not sick—it aids digestion and
gives you all the nourishment from
your food—50e.
Lankt'ord-Kcith Drug Co.
Saints and Sinners.
Goodness itself can be so overgood
that you can’t distinguish It from
badness. r }
When saints make sandwich men of
themselves, advertising their virtues
to the public, extolling their own ten-
der, angelic qualities, you want to kill
them.
If only some of the pains taken to
make human beings good were ex-
pended in trying to make them happy
what a different, place this old world
would be.
If only teachers and preachers and
parents and fanatics and reformers
would realize that what people need
is a lLtlo sunshine sent Into their
lives before they talk about responai-
billtioa and a Jut arc state.
There are children and grown
people so cobwebbed over with care
and misery that all talk of "how good”
lo them Is useless. Their only hope
—their only salvation—lies in infusing
a Utile sympathy, consideration and
happiness into their lives.
Often it is a mother—weary, body
and soul. Tired of plodding, tired of
working on in a round of endless de-
tail-little, insignificant, provoking
items that she gets no credit for do-
ing, but fatal discredit for leaving
undon^.
——
JOBBERS
interested in Eastern
Oklahoma are direct-
ed to the facilities of-
fered by the
M. 0. & G. RY.
& '
pc®’-
r
Tomorrow night Is the time
Sherman's Y. M. B. A. is to have
a big open meeting. Every mem-
ber ought to attend and visitors
will be welcome. Those who are
doing the work In the organization
will tell what's what and the what-
n«M thereof at the Friday night
mealing. A town, like a man ought
-to find itself every now and then.
Mormons are- leaving Mexico
where a great colony of them set-
tled a few years ago in one of the
wide valleys. They lost thousands
of cattle, horses, homes and much
property in common, all because of
THIS IS MY 50TH BIRTHDAY
August 8.
Allred Spender
the InsufTectton, willing to flee with
what they can take along In their
pockets and bundles.
Tom Wells says tbe Fourth Con-
grewlonal district is the richest one
In the United States from rin agri-
cultural standpoint. That there is
more *4>ed land 1n this district than
any satbar. That tut govern merit
.....m»t rilwr’
This ought to*-He on the nest
let aeods put, were
■MMfrjn*? *k\ * t '•
J. Alfred Spender, editor of the
Westminster Gazette, who is men-
tioned as a possible successor to
James B'vce as Britisli ambassador
at Washington, was born in Balh,
England, August 8, 1862, and re-
ceived his education at Oxford. He
waR editor of a paper at Hull from
1886 to 1890. He joined the staff
pf the Pall Mall Gazette in ,189£,
but left tbe same year to join Hie
editorial staff of the new West-
minster Gazette, which now ranks
as one of the chief government or
gans The appointment of Mr.
Spender to the Washington Dost
would tnaik an innovation in Brit-
ish diplomacy, since he has had no
training In the diplomatic service.
He i«, however, considered a clear
sighted po'itician and thinker from
a liberal point of view, and he has
a strong personal influence with
many members of the British cabi-
net.
-,-
IIy took the lead In cele-
Glorlotis Fourth
DIGNITY IN LOW NUMBERS
New York Business Men Said to At-
tach Importance to Figures of
Their Telephone*.
“Such a small thing as a telephone
number has some significance in the
standing or a firm,” remarked a New
Yorker who had little else to do but
talk and observe.
“How so?” asked the other.
“Take the low numbers—‘Broad 1,’
for instance—and, as a rule, It will be
tintnumber belonging to an old estab-
lished firm, provided, of course, that
firm lias remained in one location. Tbe
firm now bearing the nbovc number
was In existence before telephones
were in use at all, and in like manner
it is possible to ascertain the old es-
tablished business houses. If a firm
moves, but remains in the same ex-
change, it has the privilege of retain-
ing Its original telephone number.
Americans don't care much for age
and long established Anything, as a
class, but there are many firms In this
city that are proud of their telephone
numbers In a system where the num-
bers run high up in the thousands.”
Possible
for Man
to Live
Without
Salt
By R. N. BUNN, M. D., Chicago
Upon the authority of a Chicago phy-
sician it was recently asserted (hat to de-
prive (hi* human race of salt for even a few
moil,Ihs would have* a disastrous effect uporf
the health of the people. This, I believe,
has always been the teaching of our text-
books, and 1 am not prepared to dispute its
truth, in so far as civilized man is con-
cerned.
• .There are, however, upon this earth
many animals, Wild or domestic, which get
little oT.no salt and yet are healthy. True,
“they have a craving for it, as is shown by
the ifict that, when given the opportunity
they devour it in asjmushing quantities, and hunters have long taken rol-
vaniiige of the fact that wild animals will return to the stilt lick. But
when there is no such spot known to them they live their whole lives
without it.
Of the use of salt for seasoning and preserving their food the North
\merit-nit Indians knew absolutely nothing, yet all authorities agree they
were a particularly healthy peoples until they were afflicted by (lie white
man's vice s and the white man's diseases.
It is true there are some accounts to ihe effect that their medicine
men had noted the action of animals above referred to qml administered
salt to their patients, and they may thus have benefited individual cases.
But as a race they were a meat-eating people, without salt, and yet a
healthy people. - ‘ .
Furthermore, white men who went among them and lived as they
Telling the Time In Turkey.
. In Turkey the watch and clock are
extremely rare and a big crowd of
persons could lie rounded up on the
street without finding a watch among
them, but the natives have an exceed-
ingly Ingenious way of approximating
the time and some of them hit it with
considerable accuracy. They locate
two cardinal points of the compass
and then folding their hands together
in such a ninnner that the forefingers
l#int upward and in opposite direc-
tions, they observe the shadow cast.
In the morning or evening at certain
known hours one finger or the other
will point dlroctly at the sun. A
comparison of the two shadows will
determine the hours between. Anoth-
er system followed in that country
and some others of the orient is to
observe the eyes of ca vat. Early In
the morning and evening the pupils
are round. At nine and three o’clock.
It Is oval and at noon it consists of
a narrow slit.
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
’ [ . !' ^ x ’ y •' 1 e W.
Both Telephones
Cotton Belt Station
, (
R. B. NALL
OPTICIAN.
KHYI’TOK — BIFOCAL*
Commercial Hank, with
1 I’oe H Swafford.
lira.
♦ ♦ • * - ♦ * M
Girl Walks to Work Asleep.
Miss Nellie I^rra, a pretty young
girl of Point, township, in her sleep
early tills morning arose from her hod
and walked to a local cap faciory,
where she was an employe. She was
Imrefooted and attired only In a flimsy
low-necked night gown. She was not
seen by anybody and finally readied
the factory and was about to try to
enler when the tooting of a locomo-
tive close by woke her.
Realizing her perdicament, the girl
grew excited and ran back home at
top speed. She fell senseless from
nervous exhaustion to the floor of her
home.—Northumberland Correspon-
dent Pittsburg PosL
WANTED:
A Good Delivery Boy
MILLER’S TRANSFER
Dr. R Flowers
VETERINARY HI ItGKO*
AND DENTIST.
lived scarcely missed the salt after they.became used to its absence.
Indian Killed on Track,
Near Rochelle, 111., an Indian
went to sleep on a railroad track and
was killed by the last express. He
paid for his cartessness with his
life. Often Its that way wheri people
neglect coughs and colds. Don't risk
your life when prompt use pf Dr,
King’s New Discovery will cure
them and *o prevent ’a dangerous
throat or lung trouble. “It complete-
ly cured me, In a short time, of a
terrible cough that followed' a se-
vere attack of grip,” writes J. R.
IVVatts, Floydada, Texas, “and I re-
gained 15 pounds In weight that 1
e1 (Rrle light*
large qgtpot,
r 3 guaranteed3W-
City
Girls as
Wives of
Western
Farmers
By IBA HOt, Omaha, Neb.
W hy do not more city girls become (he
wives of western fanners? The reason is
that a city girl who is willing to work at
stenography or' Iwiokkceping or any other
honest, employment is too self-respecting to
pielt up with a western man whom she
knows nothing about apd to cross tile coun-
try .to be inspected before marriage, even
though the* westerner is generally willing to
send money for the girl to come out till ho
gets a look at Iter.
We know he is simply longing for her,
as some kind of girl is necessary to preside
over his sluiek and keep the cows and chick-
ens, from roaming too far from home. She can help remove the litter
from in front of the only door when it becomes too cluttered up, cook
for the men on the ranch and mend rind wash for them.
True, there is not much housework to he done, as there are generally
two rooms in the shack and all the boasted fresh air they can enjoy in.
(lie winter months is that which comes through the cracks in the walla.
Take it from ow who knows—“Far-off hills look green.” This west*,
era ranch luxury is largely a myth and a selfr-respecting girl should think
too highly of her life to run after a man.
Recent tests made at the Pasteur
Institute In Paris on the steriliza-
tion of water from tbe river Seine
bottle free at Lankforu-Kellh brug .by means ot ultra violet rays nave
: SBhl IT.
investigations being made by en-
gineers to determine the feasibility
of electrifying the Denver & Rto
Grande i ail way across the moun-
tain pagses ofColtretio,
,
»x ■
Sleeping Sickness Discovery.
‘ Reports received from ihe commis-
sion on Sleeping Sickness working in
Rhodesia state that it has been proved
beyond doubt that the tsetse fly, known
as Glossina inorsituus, as a carrier of
the disease.
Tlie commission was dispatched to
Africa in consequence of the appear-
ance of the disease in regions where
Glosslnu pulpalis (the species of tse-
tse fly, which up .to that time had
alone been regarded as a carrier of
sleeping sickness.) was non-existent.
The guilt of Glossina morsitans has
been proved not ouly under laboralory
conditions, but also in nature. Certain
animals can act as the host of the
virus without suffering thereby.
While palpalls is to be found only
in narrow limits, morsitans Is met
with throughout Africa in wide areas,
and the methods of migration and iso-
lation hitherto employed will be prac-
tically impossible.
Office—lllttlng's Drug Bkir*.
Office—Doth plionee 7.H.
Kcsfclcnre—(>!d plion* 7BT |
New phone 7lt€.
Consumption From a Monkey.
A report comes from Russia that
Mme. Gvosdeska, prinia donna at the
Imperial theater, is ill from consump-
tion, having been infected by her pet
monkey. She fondled her pet. when
It suffered from bronchitis. Inasmuch
aB the monkey Is suffering from
tuberculosis, the Russian doctors de-
cided that the disease had been
caught from the monkey. It is prob-
able that consumption would last con-
siderably longer in the woman than
In the monkey, and the chances are
that the poor monkey while out of
sorts really caught, the consumption
from the prtma donna, who may have
been Infected long ago, the trouble,
though, only recently showing to any
serious extent.
THE
WHEN BUYING BUY ONLY
BEST
CojBts no more but give* the best
results.
H. L. BlomquUt, Esdale, Wis.,
says his wife considers Foley*
Honey and Tar Compound the beet
cough cure on the market. ‘‘Hhe has
tried various kinds but Foley'* gtvee
the best results of all.” For
Bitting.
' ' *
OLD NEWSPAPERS
IH BUNDLES
FOR SALE
AT i
DEMOCRAT OFFICE
AT 10 CENTS
PER HUNDRED
FOR 10 DflYS
NOTHING BETTER TO WRAP
ICE IN TO PREVENT MELTING
EMILE BENZEL
Lunch Room
Merchant* Lunch Every Day;
11 to 2 (except Sunday) and
Short Order* a Specialty.
Everything In Seaeea.
T
Cantwell&Cantwell
BARBERS
Will appreciate patronagk
Trom the public and guarantee
nice, up-to-date eervlca.
Bring tbe Children (or
Trimming.
i
Opposite Crmycroft'*
BATHS. BATHE.
—
jij£l
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 8, 1912, newspaper, August 8, 1912; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth719823/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .