Sherman Daily Register (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 184, Ed. 1 Monday, September 17, 1900 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : b&w ; page 24 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
- 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:
MS
OP THE
mm
li
mmmmm
mmm
- IIo I
ODB Of
to
_ Jf ft favorite
-Tori city, where
la aufflcieot to
OF MONEY
m
>{<
I
> itt Qnyaou count;
with
man it Chaa.
' Ajfier hat log
timas in defe|| b¿
I to the front and take*
' democracy, making bia
campaign at Van
o'clock p.
ey Vowail ia a damoorat of
metal and baa probably
e work for the party iban
' r one man in the bounty. It
of time when tbe peo.
I reward bim for the apírtidid
I bit done for the party.- Tan
Appeal It Rat Orerleok
Rmaller Tewaa and Oaaatry
U IWíWl HaTaÍBÍered M||S
the
Casts#
UjA: single
Blood will,
of ijtéifpn
■W
unless cheat ■
time, make the whole impure,
Hood's SapUparilla. is the
great lender in blood purifiers.
t casts no efuuMu. but brings sunshine
And health'into entity household. < >,
DyapeptiA-t"F six months niy sys-
tem ioss out of order with dyspepsia and
Impure blood> Spent lots of money in
vain, but Hood's Sarsupariita cured me
thoroughly." Jos. S. Zauba, Geno , Neb.
Eruptions — " 1 h*d Annoying erup-
tions caused by Impure blood, and physi-
cians' treatment failed to benefit. Hoofs
Sarsaparilla removed them and I am no
longer annoyed." W, R. Hudson,
Nation*, Pa. \ Í\£
IP
Wm
fa; Worth
Mf# COOK.: ';V
. the beat Coffee and Tea in
a. W. Shbadsb.
to the Catawba Imitatf
la the Confederate army
dedicated at H Ml , &
acted by Col; Samuel B
e an-1 John M. Sprott. About K
came up from their rwerv*
l#j^; and were enter. '
'M. White. Ben HarrU,chief
' I one of the half-down
i auxvlvllig, delivered an ad-
antipwnt la a handsome
i bettfinip' tllislgure' of an
Sipeliii i ow. óa
Ináerlpíionu,
Jm
' ' V Frequently /Uhull , •: '
trld te bullt threo time la
Me «aya: ,# la, of colirio,
l that íhe ^aky m ap-
wlir be supplanted by oth
i third oí a century, bat
mam •wor¿<*
a oí uoh
t it is true that we re-
about every ?0 Or
l in Ihe atom 1a worth as
, in the aunahine.
expect* the Mm
trademark
Etv A Cook.
'•Book Store for boofc
glad to |«ópply you
_hool
rMOa.
I M$l^;.OBSs
árhéat Heidi-
Post-
Sv®|jO:si#p •.;Oftlripe,
JHL,. .fiiiMi
the flautea |jBl<p3*
eases the «rain w«
.«to SJo att acft, *o
will not be cotwpleto
baa become a lár#e pari
l^áranea
uve ttucomM'Mm
a Urea rwmit f«n
uotlvcs a^4':tí>rc#lil«i.:
popular prices, beat
«'in ¡i,t nm
i'a Laxative Chill
i «old under etrtot guar-
• chilla, fevor and ma-
dera of whatever character.
.
?■&&>
' . -V
RHI
. --VÍÍ' }i
J.,
Uve Chill Ton-
he areateat combi-
and convent-
Xí;ÍB#onr
iPNfó'w'Pf
gjÉHBigigm
. -
MHMNhímh
from
wift and
26o
rw^m.
.
, Latest fall
y & Coox,
• 1
" eing paid
Cotí
........ St.flStat.78
*. tolas
■ S'. t CS
-Ij
tSS'tt
Stft
♦ o soil
g,.
MÜB
*■ ; ■. . •' •
of Kftpúrthala, the Sikh
la about to revlalt London,
popular with Englishmen. 1
;hlate and a warrior, and li
in the PuAjaub brfhgs htm In
HlaJiouae atOQd truo
1ng the mutiny, and his
translated, reads: "Bia
Honorable and Beloved
the English Oov-
of Rajahs, the
the lilttstrious."
the British
difficulties In ths
mm
WBWWWP
Hon. Bice Uaxey has returned from
Braxoria county bringing bis aiaier,
Mrs. Brown and family, home from
VelSsco. They escaped uninjured
but lost practically every thing. ¡Ipi
Dr. 8sm Maxey wbo lives at An gle
ton was out in the country when tbp
e'orm came up. He literally pioked
up the patient and carried, bim into
the yard and was followed by tha
family. In almoat the twinkle of an
«ye the bouae was wrecked. Bpeak-
ing of tbo terrible condition of sffaiis
at and near Angleton Mr. Maxey said:
"All of Brazoria county east of the
Brazos river ia storm-swept and the
bomea, crops and property of the peo-
ple wrecked. I>r. J. L. Greer, for-
merly a realdent of Van A'latyne, wbo
now lives at Aogleton, told me tbsl
of the 20,000 people of Brazoria coun-
ty fully one-half are without home or
shelter and from my own observation
over different portions of the county 1
think his estimate is conservative;
ratber tban extravagant. JT'/" .' ^
Visited Velatco, Anglaton, Cbe
nango and one or two other small
places and have never seen eu h prop
#rty destruction, not even in tbe path
of our own tornado. If it were to rain
in Brazoria county today thoosauda ol
people, iick and wellf: would be
drenched for aheer tack of shelter
which they have no way now of pro
viding. The Joss of life wan ver>
light, but property loss is almost to-
tal. I met maoy farmer whose housee
were totally wrecked and who bad
families out under tress for
v, It was all the shelter tbej
had anil provisions were scant and
thoy bad no. money.pgfiilpip^
"There had been some provisions
and oiothing sent in but I was in4
formed .by Representative A. E.
Mastersoo who was at the train when
I left that they bad received no money
at all. The thing the people of
county are in tbe most im-
mediate need of la a little money to
get hammer^ *awa, nails and building
ao they can fix up some sort
Iter. The iloo<l of last year left
the people in bad fioancial abape, tbia
storm has destroyed the present crop
I talked to several men, one I remem
ber, J. S. Eikina an Old acquaint
ance of our townsman, Mr. B. L
Fielder. He lives eight: miles
northeast of Valssco, he is a fatmsr
He told me that his house was total
ly destroyed, that cotton bolls in his
field ware rolled up like a wind-row,
knee high a.nd this only describes the
condition of the great mtjorily of
farmers in Brsaoria county, The fesr-
fui death reports from Galveston ss
well as property lost therfe having
been given to muob more prominence
and spsce in the accounts of the
storm I think there is danger of the
suffering people in the country and
•mail towns being over looked.
"It will be impossible for «he farmers
in Brstoria county to make a nop
next year without help. In fabt,
their famiiiea will suffer for necea ;
tiea and comfort through the wloiar
uuleM provided for. The e >• not
provision for the people or feed for
stock to enable them to make a crop.
No kind of food oratock feedf <>uld
be sent;smiss if furoished to
pie. I believe nine-tenths of the
farmert.of Grayaon county will be
glad to contribute something and for
the putpose of giving them an oppor
tnnity to do to I am going W> organize
a committee here at Sherman to re-
ceive and ship what the farmers bring
lu. I would be glad to see this done
in every town in Grayson county.
Any rrfoney contributed, if tent
to Dr. J. Li Greer at Angleton, or to
Hon, Louis Bryan at Volateo, will be
certain to go to the relief of the suf-
fering.
'armera, by the ti mé you bring In
your ot]í«i Íbütions arrangement^ will
be made to take care or them: If
you bad been with me the past five
days and witnessed the destitution
among the country people in Brazoria
tiavpr Disappoints
Hoart' Pili oorg Ur r UK t U>« uon-lwltstla n<t
■Si, ckú>uú« to aa^wSK-H^rTi^t^are:
• Jt fi t'afea. . c
Lee, the little aon of Mr. and Mrs
j. P. Leslie, whoae death from diph
theria was reported on Saturday last,
was interred at Van Alstyne at ao
early hour yesterday morning. 'Mr.
Leslie aaid to a Browtbb representa-
tive today:.
" I hear that a rrmor has become
current about the city that other
members of my family are a fillet"!
with diphtheria. This is npt the case
as none of them are ill. I have taken
every precaution "
Hunt's Lightning Oil taken intir
nally ourea imftediately cramp colic,
Darrboea and kindree trouble . A-
an inbaleut it i unexcelled for ea
tarrh, headache and oolds in the
head. Guaranteed. 25 and 50o hot
ties. "
Local Market.
yf^The prices below are paid by Sher
Man dealers:
Whest per bushel, ; fit!
Osts(ssc)HMl)|wfbusUrt, .... ..... W
Corn ¡ier buebol {--'p
Hay («holes) p >r ton . d:
Chickens (spring) per dos , S2Í5 to 15U
Usss : $i. to a
K*i« per (lot, tí to,He
Country lsrd, n
Butter; ,! « toM".
Berwick Bay Oysters served in an?
style for 86 cents per dozen at the
Diamond Bakery Lunch Room.
Engineer Cerps Attention.
There will be an important meeting
of the Sherman Engineer Corps in the
court room of the city hall tonight at
8:80. Every member expected to be
present. By order of the major.
, Fpswckb Bomar,
First Lieut, and Gen, Mgr. ProTem.
ALASKA'S DESTINY.
QrMi
county you oould than mo^ fully ap.
precíate why I take this step. Con-
tribute what you can,
of corn or a bale of hay,
a<ong. In the name of a destitute
and suffering class of honest farmer
I make this appeal."
Ñetlce is Co
er for
throNgh
water
the
lili
Consol HoCoek ftsjrs It Will Be n
Mln)0|( Country.
Consul MeOook at pawaon City has
made a report to the state department
In regard to mining in Alaska and th«
Klondike, in which he says; "Favor-
able reports have'been tocelved Her?
concerning Forty Mile mining camp.
Tho Xanana district in Alaska Is cre-
ating quite a stir and dividing honors
with tho Koyukuk country. Men who
have come from the Tananá claim they
can get from 10 to 80 cents of pay dirt
to the pan, and, as they aro working in
summer diggings with only from two
to three feet to bed rock, it is a good
as |l a pan where one has to go 25
feet to bed rock. Many who left here-
with horses to take them ovisrlnnd
from Fort Yukon to the KoyUKttk
found It hard work to cross tho luw.
marshy country in that section, oPfi.
hearing of the good prospects in the
'/anana, changed their course and went
to the new find, which ia about 125
miles from Circle City, directly south.
Alaska is destined to be a wonderful
mining country, The greát necessity
now Is good roads, good camps, and the*
prospecting of comparatively unknown
sections. Great dissatisfaction was
expressed at Dawson this spring after
the wash-up by miners wbo worked for
men who leased mining claim* from
the owners. The laymen sign con
tracts to work so many feet of the
claim during ths season, the ownor to
receive 60 per cent of the gold coming
Out of the claim, the lessee agreeing
"that all men working the property will
be employed tindor a written contract,
by which the men promise not to hold
the claim in any way liable for their
t- v
ffS
Pi
HI lliHIIL.„„IIIBn
•A peyv Specials Here and 'f here on
Sate MONDAY.;
Ladies' pure linen hemstitched hand-
kerchiefs Sc. I . ">> I m 4; I
111
em-
Ladies' pare? linen hemstitched
bioideried handkerehiets only 10c. ;
3 nice heniBtikhed ladies' inintial
handkerchiefs, pnt up ia nice box, 30e.
Ladies' embroideried pure linen hem-
stitched handkerchiefs, actual vuloc 35c,
only 29c.
mm
, '
If *
H"v
Full yai*d percale, new fall styles, og.
Good outing cloth, new-fall styles, 10,
8 1-3, 7 and 5 eta
Ladips''grey ail wool cheviot skirts,
nicely lined, velvetine binding, $3.
Ladies' black crepon skirts, beautiful
pattern, only $3.
Ladies' black serge, all wool stitchel
skirt only $3.50.
I
ife-
HM
■SK"y>;
sassseaifssB;
1.IIJKIW.J1 Bp
STaOE fob women
li Tfiwtptatloni Are Gnéntly Exaguer-
ut«<t 5
That the personal character of fic-
LrcfSea ranges from bad to good would
tmrVlly need reiteration were it not that |
BROKE LOVE MATCH.
JKpotH on Woium ' Kttr* iiutU;atod I.eproil
T-tlut.
A young man Of Bryn Mawr went to
m the south seas for his health.two yeans
thó b'tíuéiT viíreá" of the one kind ar-, ' i¡go and returned hist week much ben
more ti the public eye than the modest
virtues oí the otber. Mra. G. H. Gil-
bert says In ths Metropolitan Magazine
tiiat tbe temptations of the stuge are
greatly exaggerated." "A young actress
truly Interested in her work," the old
lady adds."is subject to no more tempt-
ations than any other young woman ia
any other careor. Her .ultimate future
depends upon her strength o{. charac-
ter, her womanhood, anil, I may add,
her intenllpca. tf I had a young daugh-
ter and vvaa convinced cf her dramatic
ability I should -'have no more hesita-
tion iii placing hempon the stage than
I should hesitate in placing her in a
newspaper office or iu a business house
as a bookkeeper or stenographer. But
I should see that my young daughter,
until her character and principles^ were
flxod, should have the protection of her
mother, and as far as possible the re-
straining influence of a home, however
humble." Tho exigencies of theatrical
11fo are against the feasibility of do-
mesticity, nd Annie Russell, writing
also in the Metropolitan, sayo it is pa-
thetic to note how an actress, remain-
ing only a few weeks in a strange eity
will struggle lo set up the altar of her
household goods in the room of her
hotel, and will surround herself with
the little comforts that suggest a home
Miss Russell calls attention to the fact
that in summer time the majority of
stage people are wont to retire to coun-
try houses of their own, from the pre-
tentious villas of the affluent to the in-
expensive cottages pi the less prosper
on8. "Familiarity breeds contempt,
«he remarks, "and perchance the bless-
ings of home life lose something 01
their value for ¿hosu to whom they
have become a habit, but we who are
deprived of" their swoet consolations
bold them as the highest gifts of life
and are raady to struggle for their pos
session."
THE CHINESE DHAGON.
tt Kíj« s^ ihu Mr nf Universal Do-
minion.
in China the flvc-ciawed dragon is
th i emblem of royalty. Usually it la
pictured as rising from the s><ui and
clutching at the sun. thus expressing
tho idea of tmive/sal dominion. The
emperor's person Ik t illed the dragon's
body, his throne the dragon's throne.
To see the emperor, a privi lege allowed
to but- few, is to see the drogon'n face.
The emperor's crest ú ;i, dragon;
dragon appears on th¡> Chinese flag.
The dragon is calle! "Ijuqíí" la China
wad symbolizes all .that u imposing
«ftd powerful. The ranas of the people
believe In the dragon at an actual ex-
istence and , wnste much time and
money in attempting to propitiate the
monster, The dragon has noua de-
scribed by Chinese wrH<r.? rts a most
fearsome lookinü monster, and they
give it all sorts of extraordinary attri-
butes. There aro three kinds ci <lrss-
ons. one of the sky, one of tho marshes
and One of the sea. The two formé?
must remain in th?ir W Hrf, but the
latter, the most powerful, can riso to
HHHj the sky and holds dominion over th«
wuiccs. It nnlortunately has turned out |'*,v^ra; Phc dragon is .¡greatly, feared
In hundreds of cases that the coat of! fshermeu and they take great pairM
worklngthe claims has taken morej^'rWÍU with due respect and cottr-
than 68.per cent of the output, the!^ Ev*r* s?r,:u' lhfl .««hermen
lesaeee' share. The men employed on ■ ®íí(i0r ^ mafelv.ln -proc«:«on* Ma
the claims have thua been deprived of hoW* Ol lhe drá^n; each m.- carry
the Wages they expected at the end of a pole With a l.iutern made In the
the season. Laymen on rich claims do (,f « *&.■ * ^ Órw>n. anteíit-
very well, but the majority of Klondike by wen ,%-ne^. l Ui his body,
claims cannot be worked on a 50 per ^ f^esaton. For r. vuonth during
cent basis with the current rate of the swnmer the fishermen set «re
wages." trt j«ñs papara and throw ihc.tn upon
• * ■ - the wote; a to appease Iba Ltiug Wang,
, . - hitMt Vessel in the World. ■, ns the water dragan is tailed. And at
At the recent trials of the Vlper that all seasons the fishermen throw over
vessel reached and maintained the es- vast tjuanthie# of . firecrackefs from
iraordlnary speed of forty-three miles their boats In order to keep the Lung
an hour. The boat is fitted with com- away. The Lung to trappo¿ed not to
pound steam turbine engines, and it like the noise of exploding cracker ,
is a^ question whether its success will Áli mandarins of high rank have a
not bring about a tremendous revoln- dragon embroidoretUn gold thread on
tlon in naval construction. The great- colored silks on the front and back of
est Interest In all parts of the world their coate, litis dragon is diatltv-
has been aroused by the trials of tho ^gutshed, however, *!<om 'tSe. faipcriai
British torpedo boat destroyer Viper, dragon by h-tving hv.t four «lávt . The
which have recently taken place In dragan is also, a favorite emhlt-m upon
the North s«a. A good deal of
crecy was obser^á with regard
these trials, but It Is known that
up to forty-three and forty-
live milcaan hour have been obtalfte l.¡
The Viper thua proved Itself the fast-
est vessel In the world. Tbe Viper
was built by the Parsons , Marine
Steam Turbine company, .at Wallsend-
oa-Tyne, from the designs of C. A.
Parsons, youngest brother of tho
present Bari of Rosse. It I .the sec-
ond vessel to 1>« propelled by steam
turbine engl ei-4he first. oi eourB>\
being, the Tttrblnia, which, la«nehé¿it
189?, made t&e ustonishlng speed of
forty mlieá án lioafi c* thlrty-ll^é
se- platea and cttps nrionj; i'.ic richer
to c«tstiC3.—New York lirrinl.
■ - - -
üÉaHi
'mmm-
A R«yirt Kilt! or.
la at least one ttewspap«r
whloh is edited by a ki;t£. In Urmty
N^wJ^i.-iland there Is an iaterestlug
littlf e!?;hl-page paper, with tbrt;« < ;.¡-
umns 'to a "pag*, printed in both tha
English and the aatlye tongue, atid
ealied The I%lAd?a;.óf ie<íreB star ^: IU
Editor Is no uví'íí person than, his
i! hirtI¡¡T¿4. TíWhísW. It. if' tnw
this pntentiia Ik nst M. iadepftsa-
«overdgrt. ,hut ült^n he descend
fiiltod, «ays the Philadelphia Record.
.He tells a sad story -trbout the daugh-
ter A>t a native king whom he mot on
one: of the smaller arid mórs remóla
of tho Hawaiian islands, She v.-an a
beautiful girl and it was bis greatest
pleasure to be with her, Ashing and
bathing, p.nd to sit beside ber in the
council-house listening to tho sou'gs of
the king's poets. It is not unusual for
a white. ms,n to marry a'Hawaiian, and
the youth from Bryn Mawr, without
prospects, almost penniless and wKh
heajllh that was always wretched, in
the uncertain climate of his homo
though*: sometimes that it would fce
wise and plcasa-ct to marry the Ha-
waiian princes and to live on hei
quiet and bentstlfiil island for the rsai
of his days. But suddenly the princes-
became sad, heart-broken. She wi nt
out. no more. She sat alone and wept
day and night. Tho young man could
find oixt from no one what troubled
her, for' all whom he questioned pre
tended hot to know. One day he me!
inn princess by chance on the beach
alone and he asked her what had filed
her life with sorrow. She pointed with
a strange gesture, to a tiny brown
spot, like a mole, on the lobe of each
of her ears' and she ¡ raíl her linger over
her brows, which, he now saw, were
thinning. Then she fled from the
mystified vouth and he never saw her
again. A year later-on another island
he heard a physician say that the ab-
sence of eyebrows, together with the
brown spots on the lobes of the ears,
indicated the beginning Of leprosy.
Australia'* Output of Itabhfta.
Australia has made out of its rab-
bit pest an. industry. One exporter
alonp revives from rabbittrs between
10.(•00 and 26,000 rabbits a day, for
wnich b«> pays trappeis, as wages,
$5,(>00 a week. This same exporter has
24,000 trap.) set, employing 500 persons
to look after them. Last year he ex
ported 700.000, rabbits, and he expects
to send away 1,000.000 carcases this
season. Another exporter sajs he has
sent away 2SO.OOO rabbits during the
season, and: that his wages account
With tho • men employed averages
33,500 :v week. Another exporter es-
timates that the output of rabbits this
season Will be about 6,000.000, and an-
other person in the business estimates
cbe number at ¡>i.0{ 0,00í>. Taking the
rabbits at tj. tents a head, the sum
¿o.im distributed among, the trappers
"will * bo about $300,000.
Ha. 3259.
BSPflBT OF THE CONDITION
Of the Merchants and Planters Na-
tional Brtnli at Sherman, in the
State at the Close
of Business Bept 5, 1900,
KK OÜBCE3.
I,o bs an,l atsconcts,$l,B23,tWl 90
OverdrM't >. ¿«éum&Md nnsecuretl 133 4«5 8
U. 8. tioiida to sficorc c.ircututlun.. fiO,<K)(l .00
li. t5 ltóiiilsto fieonro U. S deposits mó.OOft UO
!*ro!Hlnm<i on O e¡' Komis. 11 'ifitt 00
Sttiiiki, SB'jia'ttl«B,'eMi 1ttrttH' to
itanklnc-hoiiát*, furnitute and ttx-
tiirua 2ó,WW (*
Othfr real astute owned . . . ..... 81,740 00
Ouiitvom National liattka (not Bo ,
*erve Ag«nU) 106,90" 71
!>or fj-ow State lianks and Panltcra t«,407 01
Ba«: froia ftppfevud reservo agents S,4.'i« 83
iWirnol Bnv<?ii|fe Stamps, .......... 1,886 1.9
Chwks t.-iU uliicr ca b items 6,B8a 22
f ractional paper citrreiicy, nicilea
•••• and oenta . 4W 40
ItAwrvi. atuXEY Bbskkvk IN HANK,
US':
Sye.-it! ..... t $15,740 50) -jí\ fu., jm
tiSgal-touaor notos ¡ MJTOWi 00
Bedompt'on fund with t). 8.,'lreas-
urer(5 per cent ot circulation ) 2,500 00
TOTAL 2,155,124 65
MAHtUTlES.
G&i>itat etook paid in,,.......... «00,000 00
>urplu fund .. ........ ... 120,000 00
Untilvldad profits, less expeiises
ami tfttóss paid 08,074 21
Sationul BAr,k Notes.<>nl8inndh)¡{.. 60,000 00
üaótootlior SaUonalillanks.... .. 71,877 no
Hue to Stut« itidik aiidllaakorii,... 12,051 07
Individual deposits sulijéct to
che-k ... «1,104 «I
DmriarjdcertlllcateB of deposit 22,548 l~
Utiitod SlatesUoposns.-...., 78,74 i
OopOBttupf U, S. disburatugoflleors 20,0301
Hills p ittW'i..V,. 800,' oof
TerrlWo Crlmo of a Frcnoh KiiTmhfte.tl.
Rendered Insane because the woman
he loved refused to have any dealings
with him, a farm hand living near
Avigaon,' France, perpetrated one of
the most terrible tragedies that has
happened In that land in rereyt years,
The farm hand, Jean IJaptísté Alh-
mand, was" rejected by the mayor's
daughter and he Wftndoréd &boiu for
several days without saying anything.
He appeared at a public band conrm
where many of bis tor/nsmtn had
gathered ope evening,n¡td,apr-r"at:ír¡ug
the mayor's party, fatally stabbed the
.girl, who rejected him,-her father and
mother and another bystander and
also severely wounded four others,
'men. turning tbe knife upon himself
he plunged ir into his breast fourteen
times and fill dying.
m«H IMco tor MrdaWon.
Tl\ate it: ph-aty oí money in Londo i
where the ot her day $St!5; was. pa id ia
a sliver medallion of Syracuse, datnc
11. C. 43S-:H3 by the artist known v¡
col)ector3 as liimon. It U true thig
d:C'.idr ehni was uncommonly fine -- ,
lhvo the head cf Arcthuso wearing
broad dlidem and surrounded by f.;mr
dolphin?, arid on the reserve was *
qitadriga drives to left, horsés in
high action and above Nike «bout te
crown Chavioieer, On the wfco'e, wr
guens this was .vorth Its price.
Maii.v n;«.->Vvr Ulgh«tr E<hj«HItiii,
M ¡AfcuoííHi-e-Ua has 2S3 hish sriuwils
,'w(-ntv-¿v8 ar cant of the \ iiiwi'r,- >
TOTAL, #2,155,124 55
State or Texas,
I'ouuty ortirayson, as.
I, O. Si OorcUester, oashiur or tho aliové
iiamod bank, do aolemniy swear that the shove
étfttenWíit l<t truo to the bast Of my knowledga
<ilidbailor. C. B. DOKCHEttTKK Cashier.
Hubserlhed and sworn to before me this, lith
day orSe,Jtemt.er, JWW. O. b Guksuam,
. Notary i'ublic, Grayson Co. , Tex.
Correct—Attest.
. [sBAl-l
T, 1) Joined,
K. ,C. MIILAHD,
.1. L. 1ÍANDOLt'II,
H A CiiArnAS,
II K It r. Y A NT,
W C. hipiuMK,
. Directo m.
BKOAI'lltlLMION.
KK8Ut!I«:K9.
|oana ■ . .... . l,r,23,001
'.ivfrf.j-.aftf.. 183,4051
lUSer >ti 0S4 a 'J bonds... . 1 2*.t id
nauk tittitóiiíg and fixtures ... 25,00li 00
úther )'<?«! estate 31.74e noi
Ü:a. lionUs lo secare
clnmiatiiiQ , $"o,coi) ro
If, 8. itotids to secare
U. 8 deposits 100;00u 00
Premiums on U, S.
.Bonds . 11,250 00. $1B1,250 00
Int ;lJeve«u« Stamps 1,885 00
five percent redemp
tion fund ..... ., 2,500 00
Due from banks and
Cash on band 2T.6.917 17
Total
Capital stock
Stirplns fund
Net prijllts, .
Ciroulatiou
Uuo banks
U S. Gov. deposits
One depositors ......
llilia paj ubis
total .............
UARI1JTI1.S.
% H3.42S s 7 ■
i<9 600 40
Sla,!l!il 8
V
10,75i 20
«2,155,124 58
* «10 000 00
120.000 00
08,074 2t
50,000 00
1.0J7,OflO 84
300,0OO 00
$2,155,124 65
Notice cf Sale.
In accordance v. ith an order of tho United
States Ü! reuit Cloiirt for the Western District
of Texas, at San A ntoftio, ii tho- case of
Mcb. SbacklcU and Linda H. «lobwwn va.
Southern BuilaiOg & Loan Association,' Ko.
.09 in Equity, tundo and entered the 29th day
of May, liiOO, 1, A. L. Ik'aty, in and by a "
order appointed Special Oompiissioncr
«aid Court, for that purpose, -will sell.i
puhlie outcry, hetwceri the hours of ten
■o'clock «■ i". and four oMnck p' ni , upon
tip) first Tueedby in Od<iber, 1900,before the
court liOUso door > f tho town of Kliurinan,
Grayson com ly, Texas; the property of said
Association, to-wit: -
A tract Of land in Grayson county, Texas,
on thu Water of Post 4) k Grwk; being a
fart/ f a survey orjgimd'* granted ,T. H. Mc-
Anuir mid oiit of a curvey of i(7 acres get '
apart.1,1 ,T.T. Shannon in the division of the
estate of 1'hoij. J. Shannon, deceased, s too
bein$ vbOiíñ on plst of snid division asIot No.'
. K*. Ix-chmintf 25 ft. N. of 8. w'
A lot soléuy 11. K.sndMsr-rtihannoñ
to K'^o W t on cut of aid lot No. 9 K*
«'A;" tboiee s. 74 w. 408 ft. to a itate
thvncen If, w. 28# R t^ i, e dr. of lot No.
6, in block 3, 03 2-Jj ft; thence n, 1G w, 280
ft. to ft ,-tako n. 'ine of Scott it-ect and s
hne of K. K. .Shannon's l t addition; thence
«. 71 e. mi n. Jine of Scott street If extend
ó' 4 feet more or Ires to tho w. ¡¡ik> oh SS
man Hoad; tiience (¡.16 e. With w. line
Slir-mian ronti leef; thence ?. 18 w with
same 156 fi ; tlicnec s. 16 e. with fame to
pUce of bejjinning, containing 5 terra.
Term :—Not wa than four hundred and
fifty dollars, all cash or one-third of which
shall? he paid in CMh, and the remaining two^
thirda payable within one y ar alter date.
tearing eight per cent, interest from date
and secured by ft vendor's lien or deod of
ltwt, nr both. M W. O. Robard., Receiver
oí wnd Askot-iation iji the 8 tato of TexM
ntay elect.
A. L. BKATY,
Spccial Commissioner
The Kaly 4:20 p, m. Train
itmii
that
e«t
frwiriihe roy^l throw
ehftlr, tb«n. ludofc-tS, ¡
m m
Tvrraty-fiv'! per coat of tfw ibltiírtn
who attend ths public sebeóla av.ti;
thrmw'lves of high school privilege/!.
the perfeiitnge rising in many towns i
to. ihli <y fovty.. and even fifty .jwv M.kca coenftction at Pen won for
c«nt Is it not most time for 'Vrnnfes" I'aUel,OTO. Whileaboro, Onioeavilio
**t%> f^rtPD, Ft. Worth]
%#V Wliiiewright, Ocleate, Oreen-
viH« and point aonth.
-.1 ■ ■ -L.—..., •„
^/.4Stf, ' ¿>"-'1.'; . , , '.V', , ,-Ui
The ' ,nly roo
«senic ronto ti
th« north *r _
««at. Hmwhh,}.
wr -iJi, ,-T
Oha^tvartlon alcfrpem tlirooib tho
Wrtt * ¿lip®®®
to tu'llt about t.hn live per cent cf the
cblldr^li who over ¡to to the hixfc
aehoolí- Jtmriial of Education.
v.é*iiii,>.,i...i,Ui; ^ii„ i?
_ . < t'oUen BHI Bale * . >
Effective.* onco. Cotton Relt wjll
« lí tk'k^is'to M . Kitja, Ark . a , rate
of $11 for roood ttip, good imtil Oct,
8I4, WXh for reutrft .A
MtqOifat. MiittiAk
Báptftt sa«ci«.tit>n ai, Kiehwot#, Vi
;J2 u,
3r d, V n.t ot «
i 8e
1
mmmMm
m
HP
■■oo)iéáV:.ft jív
ticket to - Rktb-
w&vt
WMW$
U eoTOetbioa *"
8a F, i
í'-í Pi
i
fi'bl
quil
°thf
freí
S\e\
anc
Best
4 IM
"H
2 FA
St. Lo
CoacbM I
Stecpars «o
Superb Pu
Handsor
NEW
A
Operators
"Pa
CHICAGO
WOI
.t. mat
h. 8. '
tehalal
A. A. Keli
;. *.*. «•
I tenwyt)
! - o ; A. Q
Oder
chi«r of f
Iter Watei
Horn, On
Táeraeaa
Al'termftB-
vraflli B.
end W r I
, Ward; «
Kottrtn W
t«r¡ '«roi
Banodl Trui
well, J. <
lanl, ff.
Chctb
not a ti e
i*lt want,
y**t ear
went. I
OwrecbH
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 four 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.
Bowles, J. F. Sherman Daily Register (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 184, Ed. 1 Monday, September 17, 1900, newspaper, September 17, 1900; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143484/m1/2/?q=sherman%20daily%20register: accessed April 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .