Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTY-EITHTH YEAR, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 16, 1919 Page: 2 of 8
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Mto-W W‘W .-
if.
■
iSi
SHERMAN DAILY DEMOCRAT-SHERMAN, TEXAS.
1 ■ ■ ^..... .Mi"
ILFE
FFOM
WOMEN KNOW JOY
OF INDEPENDENCE
Hitler!
ngitlie 1 icmocra
Itlea ami ora'-slon*.
i Mwnbm ff
4 TWKMii
■entlttod to V;l
* i m
f the Associated Prcm.
»ed PtcM 1* exclusively
tat republloation
pf all diapatrhes CTedttod to It or
JW Otherwise credited in this paper
•fr* * Hd alM the local news published here-
I right* of republloation of
dispatches herein are also re-
Any erroneous reflection upon the
standing or reputation of
person, firm or corpora ion which
t apprar in* the columns of the
jjqprat will be gladly corrected tip-
to 1t being brought to the attention of
the publishers.
tot*
jHliinc.
oncrat.
Jlug-i -aid.
tone w:i«
* was
11
' I'
>'\F' me UI>- J ’I
ynifs" It has I'ninrllWUUi' wa«
new-born to lll>erty hv i*«. Sjjparent-
ly disastrous war. and perhaps Oor-
•toany will 1.0 eoiialty fortunate. But
Germany will hare to pay, even more
■benvilv than Frame paid, for Herons-,
rarsfcm Into strife at the-behest of n
ruler whose ntnhltions were so nideh
greater than Ids ability'—State press
in Dallas News. —_
At Boston a tank of molasses ex
pl<"led killing ten persons. Boston
molasses will now move up ahead of
Boston linked beaus.
%*Tle following Interesting
m-r’ is from Hr. Wolfe.
* Vim
A McKinney man. J. P. Thomas,
lide'L fclea'n sWhQ»,w4th his,Cartridge
tr. TKOMfas. la a brother of Mrs. tfeo.
• 1-,, .; •>fj.
It is*sfliirwAtrt^r Shetniaii Will re-’
re to'tfHlW lire ■Yrti' acewtthr of
■a f ness. We aye
•eeping on hli
toil he retires.
in. may be. he evidently hears the
limbMiigs of disapproval of Ills acts.
< ,4r
FOUND OLD INDIAN VILLAGE
interesting Relict, Relieved to Be Cen-
turies Old, Recently Unearthed
"In New Verk State.
•1 * > t * * I i ^ ' ’ * ’ »V*V l **1 !
Relief of an Indian village, anld to
< McKinney has suiiscribed a $50,000
<«hh Ixpp* apil acres of land, and
us landed a $500,000 oil refinery. It
said the refinery will employ 100
en, have a capacity of 5,000 barrels
j$ily. The pay roll will be $30,000
monthly. McKinney people have the
ouoy and can h^fjin^ thpy, ty)
Iter.
have Its origin as early as 1575. hnv$
been i^scovared in Clnson I'oltlt, the.
n ' nccoiidlna tp an ttpiiqiii)remcn{
y the'Mtikeum of •fta’AWrlenr}
Indian, Heye foundation." The dlscov,
ery wn.s made by Alan B. Skinner, not
chefluElBt of the ((AimlntlDtx - Tlie (list
wt,asuwati.
tant one by,.the niemlwrs of the toons'
datlon. Research establishes that the
village was probably Inhabited by na»‘
^This emisln^Judg^J^
tills city:
December 1. 1 !11 S’, Stenay. France.
(N'ortli of Verdun <>n Men sc River, i
Dear Cousin Alfred:
1 am glad to say censorship regnla-
Itinns have been lifted, or neftrly so. so
I will give you briefly an outline of
niv route anil time at various .places.
First landed in Liverpool, and went to
Borden. England, for two days, thence
to Mouthhampton. and crossed to lx*
Havre. Then after, one day there, went
to Issoumltm in Central France for a
Hmnlh anil tbetf to 15th Engineers sta-
tioned at (iennes which is on Paris Or-
leans U R. SO miles west of Tours.
At (iennes the 15th Engineers were in
charge, and Medical Department ran
hospital and medical end. Oetines is
nothing of a town to speak of. but is
ill chateau section, and very interest-
ing. The (ieneral Intermediate Stor-
age Depot is located there and is n
camp of 10 miles long and 4 miles
wills, abd lmd. when 1 left there,
about 20.000 men. and more war ma-
terial Ilian I thought existed—all sorts
—(put r ter master, engineers, ordinance,
medical, bakeries, a 500-ton a day ice
plant with a cold storage risnn 1000
by Rip,feet ati^ about 20 feet high, and
a IWtwor)< of railroad tracks^ It was
laid cut1 by gs and run by us until
a few \4eek* ago. Also had two otlnw
jobs at same time, one ut Chaumont,
■H
i
m
wm
it
11
iP
USE1F0RPLANES
IN PEACE TIMES
To Be Passed Into Mail and Pa*
trol Work.
AIR SERVICE IN INFANCY
TLursday^an^6^l9J9^
New Meat MarKet
Pay Cash and Pay Less
Call at the New Market opened by
January 15, No. 205 West Houston street
(formerly occupied by Busy Bee Restau-
rant.) ■ ,
Phone 458. \
Captain francla of Division of Mili-
tary Aeronautic* Suggests Many
Uses for Airplanes In Time of Peace
—Would Maks Valuable Addition to
Coast Guard Forces—Forest Patrol
Offers Another Opening for Expert
Aviators.
W. J. DODSON
(Formerly with W. W. Turley Market.)
and opemt New <)ha trail. TJie uiedicjl
departm«tt iif 1.1th bad a hospital
(canin) bf 250 liods arid scvrital small-
er tines. 1 bail one tin west id in of ontnp
a^.i) ip first did nil the work myself.
I.aier got a (looter aiid morel nien nn-
MRS. E. B. REPPERT
Federsl Chairman Woman’o Liberty l.oan
* Committee.
Thrift and eepnomy, cham-
pioned by the womanhood of
America, have won the strug-
gle against greed and rapacity;
Cannons and guns and men di I
their part on the field of bottle
but it was the savings of the
men and women at home that
put them there.
Put of. Vie four-years' trag-
edy has come the lesson- of
thrift. Not the' niggardly
hoarding of the miser, but the
knowledge of the value of
economy that produced •the
sage advice of Burns:
! i.ai»r got a ttocror aim more men nu-
I *efy. Unpor- , j ^ ()r twelW>1 dm-tors
Ii4wM> win*-a-food many 1 me Heal
corjis men. I was very glad'to get
aWny, for it was getting to keep me
tl^es t>A flip jSlbVinoy tribe, known to (pretty busy and responsibility was get-
very early settlers as "Snnkesklns." ting pretty
The research, made through the
kindness of a trustee of the founda-
tion, has established to the satisfac-
tion of the board that the tract re-
mained In possession of Its Indian In-
tlng pretty heavy. When Oapt. Wooley,
Id. Mailing anil I left they sent a colo-
nel. two majors and six lieutenants to
take over our work. Then went to
Chauinont and lmd little work In
comparison, and had a pretty good
time there, -considering there was a
•the
In the ,New' York legsllnJure there
2if 'f^hJ64nil! >ht112b ldte*$(^nH
i the senate and 04 republicans, 54
« onocrats aqifc'kliitoHafists *lb) ib* «»-
i nlhly. A year ago there were 30
i publicans and 15 democratic senn-
tl rs and 00 tepuWictUMi <U ilwms;rutifc,
I ; socialist Hil(F%'II4#pHi$(litIassei»-
ii rmen.
I Ylic abnormally small vote cast at
l e recent Bosfton Election will dimHt-1
£
“Save money, not for to hide
it in a hedge,
Nor for a train attendant;
But for the glorious privilege
Of being independent.”
Women have always been
the' savers in the home, from
necessity, but “the glorious
privilege of being indspencl-
jent,” gained from the fulfill-
ment of a patriotic duty, has
i given them an incentive tc
economize and save for the
sheer joy of saving.
A far-seeing government has
provided up with a means of
saving—Thrift Stamps, Wat
. Savings Certificates, Liberty
; Bands—which, - apart from
*ea tnetu ns Indian boundary liue«;«cprcmm'r. wneu we went in to Ar- their Use in winning the war,
blessings eve# devised.
There has been no letting
down of effort by the women
of the Eleventh Federal Re-
serve Distrftjt because the
KRAUSE ROOMING HOUSE
224 WEST HOUSTON STREET.
Nice clean beds and all the cover wanted. Home made
comforts, long, wide, soft and warm—and plenty of them.
PRICE 25 CENTS PER NIGHT, OR $1.50 PER WEEK.
Nice warm bath room, gas heat, hot water, new, clean
towels, plenty soap, long handle bath brush, warm dressing
room in connection, price 15 cents. \
VljWii¥^V¥<V(ViVI*iViVi4*''‘4“*******AAAA***AA*AAAAAAAA^ [
habitants until 1025, when It was par-. war on. As we often remarked, mi-
chased by Robert Cornell, an Kngll*5i- j war on the Chaumont front was a
man. Cornell’s family was later inns- pretty good war.*' General headquar-
tered by the barbarian tribe. During ters of A E. F. Is there, and they
the attack he managed to innke i,is BAY?Trots!’stores and hotels. Frajice
escape on a Dutch ship. ]«J®S ,mv<‘ , ,,f "
■ * i *End:limd ton uofttlv starvtHl. Wont to
'xi'r"'i i I ^England yon neatly starved. Went to
i a pleasur*^ wllos south „f Verdin, in
trrp through Clason Point, which l*J August, ntid Was in St. Mihtei drive,
somewhat of a summer resort. liisqHuil the honbydf being first Amerl-
July. He noticed very large .oystehjean officer In St. Afthlet City, and was
; shells, o$ jd| mpttDiljof 'qrnnd apf r^eog-‘'iu that sect I op until abbnt 20fh of
hired them a's Indian botindnrv Uuei'SepremlH'r. when we
o^T-1 -
I^enreh ILZ '"7n Z 'T^.w-nt no further north.' It was in this
, ® ' *' ’ j that we were iti worst sliell fire, and 1
prise of the senrc}iers, re|lcp of Indianl,.nn irnfhfully toy :1 don’t “hanker" to
illne wwro.unearthed, iCoslnoies, headship,, p, lvuy ^ix-h p)HC(% any more. It is
tcobkldg utensils and a complete bnlrirafher Haiti on your nerves, and yon
dress of the Slwauoy tribe were (Iis-[wish yon were some place else. One
Covered. Seventy lodge sites, contain-](lay a cook was dishing up dinner into
Ing hundreds of Indian Implements'* niess kits, and when‘shells got to fail-
t and ttoolB, were also dug up. t ‘"K PwAf# tW**’ H«*m* to hint he he-
What will America do. with her im- 1 j
mense airplane fleet and her army of
aviators now that the war is ended?
Will the machines be junked and
the aviators be turned loose to seek
other, pursuits?-
“Most assuredly not,” is the answer
given by Capt. Roy N. Francis of the j
division of military aeronautics, one of
America’s greatest aviators. Captain
Francis, who was one of the country’s
first airmen, having flown a Curtiss
airplane in 1908, has a record of be-
tween 3,500 and 4,000 hours in the air;
an achievement in which he has but
two or three equals.
As an army aviator he Is attached
to the executive section as an Instruc-
tor, and few aviators are as well qual-
ified as he to discuss this subject.
“America cannot afford to junk the
airplane fleet which has cost her so
many millions of dollars,” said Cap-
tain Francis. “I do not1 believe that
any other nation will do so.
“Even If the pence congress should
deckle on universal disarmament,
there are still any number of uses to
which airplanes cun he put In time of
peace.
"Take tfie air mall service, for in-
stance. This Is now only In Its In-
fancy, but It is destined to become as
common as the railway mail service.
It will employ hundreds of airplanes
and aviators all over the country,
patrol the Seacoasts.
“Then there Is the possibility of our
machines being used for seacoast pa-
trol work, a valuable addition to our
coast guard forces which save many
ocean vessels from disaster every year.
"They will be largely used, for army
dispatch work. Instead of sending of-
ficial messages from post to post by
the present methods, airplanes will be
used after the war is they wore at
the front,
“On the great lakes, airplanes can
be used fop .coast gjiard worfv as on
the seacoast, and they can also be
used for patrofing the lakes them- !
selves. Think how many wrecked lake
vessels might have been Saved in the
past had there been an airplane-near
by to carry its message of distress and
guide, rescue ships to the scene.
“Forest patrol Is still another open-
ing for the use of expert aviators, Ev-
ery year, almost, onr great forest fires
Blank Books
WE HAVE THEM FOR EVERY NEED
Prices Reasonable
OFFICE SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS
Reynolds-Parker Company
THE PRINTERS.
——
The collection contnlnprl 'em,to imrA-Came a little excited nml tried to put
14s be urged on the legislature at Its . ..lit all in one. and as a result there was
nfxt setsion as an lndlcutkn\of* thn ’ . 7*° tor olse s,leM]little tliimar left, but It did not make
X of compulsory ^^ ^ ieeo^U'i\ P°‘«"Mnny great difference as the boys had
yk ' Hundreds of pipes and a heautifuli r«*ui]»«irnrllv lost till desire for food.
f- mold dMwvetod blttier, hnd j This was first time they got an honest-
all are being preserved ‘for public ex- to-goodness shelling. Isits of times
there were none, so yen just Imped yon
tnonwe^Rh. now gives the legislature
anthortiy tyWMWl’YMtfiMoti for this If
Ityleslres.
Sian. 18 has Iteen selected by the
l4mocra'fieo(wiiim8ttee of the Sixth
Virginia 1 congressional distract as a
date for a jx itqary to choose a cautli-
hibltloa when the museum opens. This
history speaks of the Siwanoy practice
of digging snnd holes and placing
would not get bit.
On November iltli we went to Ver-
POST OAK DAIRY.
W. H. WALLACE. Prop.
date
dgle to sneer'd Carter Class, who re-
ccAifly resigned Ms seat In the house
td! become secretary of the treasury.
Three candidates are is the field. A
Dsniocratio nomination in this district
i^toquivaleut to an election. - e
f ees, .......
Senator Lawrence V Sherman of II-
lirnris. -wlutse terms expires March 4,
Ifpj,. udU have oiipo^ltion iu his own
p^ty>^tWnrr5(t!*Ttflt'TI 'irmiata" Tt.' Mc-
ailey having already made It known
t)mt be will Iti I (undidaltv forjjhe
Rgrabllcan noinlimtion. - ML SfeKin-
le> has served us a member and is re-
eled as one of the most astute
ieafders of the Republican party.
lnrge quantities of food nnd other of-; dun and built, or rebuilt, the railroad,
ferlngs to the “Great Snake." It was from Verdun to Metz. It was quite a
« be
the opening of the exhlblL " us hloWB t0 BOtWng’ 0ftPn n,U!Ul th-
TRUMPET NOT IN HIS LINE
Master of Organ a Distinct Falluro
When He Essayed to Play An-
/ other Musical Instrument.
■^-unn4-
Segotiattons ifre‘urilleh way lie-
tvveen two of the Republican factions
in’;Chicago to determine what course
to Jake to defeat III ay (A Ttnimpson
fol reuominnttou It is generally cou-
ceied ‘that If Thompson wins a rp-
uopiiiiation he .will l«» 5dePeated at the
elrftion by tlie Democratic candidate,
no/matter whom be way pc. His. ad-
mj^istratiou has Ae^ri anything hut
popular and his altitude toward the
wa*r ha* mad&tow porr. mallv unfsjp-
ulitr. 3 r‘- M a1 MW'
There It* an amusing story told
stout Sir Frederick-Bridget the fa-
mous organist of Westminster abbey,
and at how he was once gttilty of
making a “row” within the edifice.
It vt'as at the time of the coronation
of King George V. One. of the re-
hearsals to tako place was that of
the state trumpeters, who practiced
Jilelr fanfares within the building.
kDuring their temporary absence Sir
Frederick Bridge, thought he would
see what kind of a fanfare he could
produce, and, borrowing one of the
trumpets, set about making such dis-
cordant sounds that the clerk of the
works came up and expostulated: “If
that row continues,” he said, “my
workmen threaten to go on strike, and
If they do the coronation will have to
be postponed.” Sir Frederick hurried-
ly put down the trumpet, nnd soothed
tlie workmen by playing a selection
on the organ.
A STORY OF NUMBER 40.
Following the address
James A. Reed
of ^Prcs
Taftfrii
“afroun
fowteer
of Senator
of SUssonri in Xew Idood, that cured tlie worst <
In which he denounced‘the plan ^lts7vc7',Hc,I.amMU
Went Wilson amft ex-Pnesldent * " ,nrMI "*”* ,1‘”ma,,l'11
for a league of nations, he hHd
mnd table" coitfcrence with some
teen jlew York bankers, among
wii'oni will a tepreiefitAtlre of J. p.'
M«g*n A Co. At this conference, it
rted, the magnates of Wall
talked over” with Senator
the tongue Af nations, the rail-
road*. ths mert-hant marine and tradeq
especially export trade. It is further
reported that Senator Reed was in-
digiiant when ariltfd ll his - address
agginst the plan of a league of nations
followed by the “round table” confer-
ence had any connection with a pos-
sible presidential boom In 1&20,
4«-years ago an old doctor was pnt-
tittg up a medicine for diseases of the
worst eases of
proven
that the j ores were permanent. After
many years I secured the prescription.
(Ixhig a druggist.) and took each in-
gredient separately a lid referred to my
Ik S. Dispensatory nnd other authori-
tative I looks oft medicine and found
the medicjiml proiiortles. set down as
follows: "Employed In diseases of the.
glandular system. in blood poison,
scrofula, constipation, stomach ajid
liver troubles, ejtronlc rheumatism,
catarrh. In sores, ulcers. skin erup-
tions. mecurlal and lead poisoning,
t’ndcr Its ni-e males. tumors and
scrofulous swellings tliat have with-
stood nit other treatment disappear
as if by magic." To commemmorate my
fortieth year as a druggist I named
this medicine “Number 40 For the
Blood." J. C. Mendenhall. Evansville.
Ind. Sold by Glasscock Drug Co.—Ad-
vertisement,
ed bones of tuihuried soldiers of the
1916 drive, us we were in territory
where heaviest fighting occurred.
The ground around there for miles Is
nothing but shell craters nnd mines
ami mine craters. For two weeks af-
ter November lltb, they were Imsy
setting of tank mtnesr and att kinds of
mines. It was all mines, it seemed. Now
we are, repairing the Verdun-Sedau
mad, and nre at Stenay, and will fin-
ish ,tn about a week. 'Possibly we will
Im ordered home then, but I have little
to base hopes on, but there are rumors.
We Just live and thrive mi rumors,
-tliough, and get a new one every few
minutes. It would have been amusing
-to tiear ttwse coneerning the farts
just Itefore war ended. Souliers swal-
low anything. *
I wish you ’could have seen and
heard the barrage’we put over on No-
Vember'lst. It was the best music that
1 ever heard We had been getting the
devil shelled out of, us. and ours start-
mi about two a. ui„ and got heavier and
heavier until alxiut 5 a. m., when 1
think everything that could shoot turn-
mi Raise There was no interval be-
tween, with just one big' tremeudous
roar'which seemed to roll. It certainly
played havoc with Fritz, and farmers
there have had their plowing done
for them.
To get back to present location, am
at Stenay, and will scroll go to Se-
dan, We are living in a house which
escaped being shelled. Have a large
room ft wo of us) on semind floor.
With « north and south Window, a gv°d
fireplace, plenty of wood arid coal (the
last lieing some tlie Germans left, lte-
Fourtli Liberty Loan was put the northwest demonstrate that our
over successfully and war was present methods of prevention of for-
ideclared ended soon after. It'** ,lrps 8re fau,,y’ chleflJr Realise
;has ever been the part of wo-1,hP ftr<> n,°.t d.tRr<)Ver^id whlIe thpy
: man to do rin ef'v hut efTtr- nrp sti" smo,',Prlnc- Constant alr-
man to ao qu-ei-y, out eticc .plnne pntrol over 0„r forftj,tg
t vely those duties requiring ■ would make forest fires a thing of the
persistent effort. with a pnst.
thought .only for the final re- | “Then there are any number of com-
mit. Patiently and steadily ( merclal uses to which nlrplanes can be
; the officers of the Women’s 'put. Instead of a ,cargo of bombs, a
Liberty Loan Committees have ( commercial airplane could carry a car-
been preparing the way for the g0 ot *maii-pnckage freight for which
inext great demand, unchecked t Im'1’p‘,,ute deMvery is necessary.
by the fact that bloodshed ha.t I The ^ of,the alrp‘Tc far passe"’
“ , per carrying Is now being developed.
7 i. ■ - xu . !T1'0 ,HI?P Caproni and Hadley-Pnge
As chairman Ot the Woman -! < machines will be used for this'pur-
Liberty Loan Committee of pose in the future. Thousands,of per-
DAIRY NOTICE
On account of the high cost in the production of Milk, I
am compelled to raise the price from 60c to 80c per gallon,
in order to continue business.
" V. ■
This advance in price takes effect today, Jan. 14th,
1919.
the Eleventh Federal Reserve
District, f ask every woman
in the district to bo true to
the traditions of our sex.
THro«,gh necessity we learned
to save. We can now nut
sons will want to fly just for the nov-
elty, and the possibility of accidents
wtlF.be reduced to the minimum.
Aid Scientific Research.
“Again, .there Is tlie need for scien-
tific rosenrcli and improvement of the
LIFE INSURANCE “CALLIN' YOU” l
GREAT SOUTHERN LIFE INSURANCE CO., DALLAS, TEXAS.
Insurance in force over $75,000,000. Assets over $8,000,000. .
See A. W. BILLINGSLEY, Agent, Kelly Bldg., Room Nos. 9 and 10.
Phone No. 1530.
dren, our families,
and our country.
ourselves.
V\ e OWe this duty to our chi!*, to maintain the numerous government
* —— v-— I.-.- “ training fields for wtutors after the
war, but some of the best of them
should'be retained. I do not believe
1) will be necessary to discharge a sin-
gle pilot or observer from the army or
to juuk a single undamaged airplT.i
after war.”
(MRS.) E. B. REPPERT.
EXODUS ON FROM ALASKA
Your Government asks you
wery earnestly not to’sell your
Liberty Bonds unless you have
to. To part with your Liberty
hind), and plenty to «?at,'and so Topi- Bonds paeans giving up >otU
fortntile. The Hoclt certainly robbed! pledge of patriotism and Cltt-
tli(‘ place—no chickens, cattle or liotises
left, with few eivfllians' here. An old
woniaii savs tltey took her eggs and
milk ns long hs chickens laid and cow
gave hillk, then they took the chickens
the Americans are cleaning it; The
fields, though, have been well culti-
vated. * r
The desertptions - of conditions as
they are described in the various niag-
azincs are very giwul as far as I can
judge and accurate, .also better de-
scribed than I can hope to do, so read
them. Tlie ones 1 nee most...often are
in Saturday Eveulng Post. The pic-
tures in the magazines are good, too.
Hope you escaped the influenza, and
that the rest of them are well, and
liopo I can see you all in next two or
three months. Love,
JOE.
zenship, and handing your re-
sponsibilities aild privileges over
to some one else. Liberty Bonds
will be worth much mope money
ami cow. The town is filthy, though presently and it is good busi-
ness to hold them
If you must sell, get the full
market price. Go to a respons-
ible banker and let him give
you information and advice. Do
not sell to just anyone, who
ifnay not treat you fairly.
Tasmania- carries the bhileri,lftl(#?jSfi!#,“
box on one set -of wheels in the ("enter
and cylinders and driving wheels un-
der tenders at each cnib
Gives Steamship Companies Problem
to Wreetto With.
How to get hundreds of persons out
of Alaska who nre trying to leave Is a
problem that steamship companies of
the north Pacific coast are wrestling
with. More than 800 persons recently
reached White Horse en route to the
const. About 300 of these are from
Fairbanks nnd the other points on the
lower Yukon river. The last boats leav-
ing Dawson and other Yulfon towns
were loaded to capacity with gold
miners nnd others on their way to the
“outside.” The population of Alaska
and the Yukon territory has decreased
to -the lowest number in years as a_re-
snlt of the general exodus.
Gives Workers Insurance.
More than $13,000,000 in old line
Insurance policies has been presented
to its employees by a Seattle steel
shipbuilding concern. All workers,
from the heads of departments to the
boys and women, have received $1,000
policies. No charge Is made to the
workers so long as they remain in the
company’s employ.
FOR SALE
SPECIAL BARGAIN FOR THREE DAYS ONLY-60 acre*
improved black land farm, 7 miles from Sherman, on pike
road.
United Trading Co.
Room 307 Commeitcial Bank Building.
Every Sensation.
The following is frprn n letter writ-
too by a member of the United States
tank forces In Fra.nce: “I ran tha
(admit of all sensations from fear to
ifltred, and the latter was what I cai-
rleri away. Any nation that fills the
botles of the dead with bombs tn or-
Jer to kill tlie chaps that cotne out to
bury them, has no consideration from
me. nnd that is what the Germans do,
imong other things,”
Fire Clay Substitute.
The great resistance to heat of or-
dinary coal ash has suggested the use
d? this material for Arc bricks in place
Df fire clay. It fs claimed that a suit-
able binder has been provided in a
sew process, and several thousand ex-
perimental bricks already made are
being tested, both as a fireproof build-
ing material and ns a furnace lining.
™ ©■
A double-ended locomotive iu use in Chicago inventor's motor truck
NURSE
wheel has a heavy pneumatic tube sur-
rounding tlie hub, while blocks of solid
rubber, any of which can lie replaced
when worn, form the tread.
DAY OR
NIGHT.
Phone 12.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
DAILY DEMOCRAT.
In City and County.
One month............ V .00
Six months........*............3.25
One year.... 0.00„
Oit of County fa Texas and Oklahoma.
One month.......... $ .65
Six months................ 8.50
One year ......................8.50
Beyond Texas and Oklahoma and
Within 1000 Miles.
dae month.......\.............$ .75
Three months.2.00
Six months..... t... ^........... 3,i5
One year ...................... 7.00
Brtond 1000 Miles and Overseas.
One Aonth '«.,.$ .85
Three months ..................2.25
Six months .................... 4.00
One year ....... 7.50
WEEKLY DEMOCRAT..
Weekly Democrat—In Grayson coun-
ty, $1.25. In Texas and Oklahoma,
outside of Gryson, $1.50. Beyond
Texas and Oklahoma and within L000
miles, $1.75. Beyond 1,000 miles and
overseas, $1.85. <-
Iu compliance with tlio ruling of
the pulp and paper section of the war
industries board regarding tfie con-
servation of newsprlut paper, ail sub-
scriptions must ho discontinued at
date of expiration, unions renewal Is
pajd It) advance
IS
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTY-EITHTH YEAR, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 16, 1919, newspaper, January 16, 1919; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth722267/m1/2/: accessed May 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .