Honey Grove Signal. (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, February 5, 1897 Page: 2 of 4
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LEADERS IN LOW PRICES.
II, BLOB & CD.
DFT GOODS.
■ GKOcepies.
NORTH SIDE SQUARE.
•«
SI
Signal Publishing Co., Publishes
J. H. Lowry, - - - Editor.
Entered at Honey Grove Postoffice as second-
}lass mail matter.
Office of Publication oyer Post-Office.
SUBSCRIPTION:
One Year #1 22
Six Months ®<?
Three Months 35
STRICTLY IN ADVANCE.
PUBLISHED FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK.
Since Mrs. McKinley's inau-
guration gown is to be a brocade
of silver, it is in order to inquire
whether it was made by interna-
tional agreement.
The United States Senate re-
cently passed 104 pension bills
in 95 minutes. It is safe to say
that the amounts thus approriated
represent far more than 104 days
of toil and many gallons of sweat
from the oppressed tax payers.
The twenty-fifth legislature,
like all of its predecessors, is do-
ing more talk than actual work.
About twenty days of the session
are gone and very little actual
business has been transacted in
the way of making or unmaking
laws. A new assignment law, a
fee bill and an amendment mak-
ing the payment of poll tax a
pre requisite to voting, are the
most important matters with
which the law-makers have to
deal. Bills looking to these mat-
ters are under consideration, but
it is doubtful whether either of
them ever becomes a law. Lob-
byists are on hand tr work a-
gainst every rn-.-sure the people
demand, and they succeed in
confusing the legislators until
they hardly know their own
minds.
. Among Monday's failures wer
the Philadelphia Lead Co.,
Philadelphia, the Guarantee
Trust and Stfe Deposit Co., of
"Westchester, Pa.; the Keystone huge
Manufacturing Co., of Mount freely to Mc's election, and John
Sterling,111.; the Mascow Nation
al Bank of Mascow, Idaho. 0,
prosperity, do get thee gone!
Two primary elections for the
selection of municipal candidates
will be held in our neighbor city,
Paris—one by the democrats who
supported Bryan and another by
the democrats who cast their
ballots for McKinley. Here's
betting on the boys who followed
the banner so nobly carried by
the boy orator of the Platte.
The failure of two large Build-
ing and Loan Associations at
Knoxville, Tenn., bids fair to en-
tail a heavy loss upon Southern
people in general andTennessee-
ans in particular. Many of the
writer's personal friends in Ten-
nessee have for several years been
placing all their earnings in these
Associations, which promised
such abundant returns for their
money. Experience has often
taught the lesson that these for-
eign investment companies are
mighty good things to let alone.
Col Hogg says Mr. Bryan is
one of the greatest men the coun-
try has produced and Mr. Bryan
says Col. Hogg is one of the
world's greatest statesmen. There
you are.—Dallas News.
The Dallas News says the Dal-
las News is the greatest paper on
earth and—the Dallas News says
the Dallas News is the greatest
paper on earth. According to
the News' own statement Messrs.
Bryan and Hogg each have an
advocate while the News is forced
to testify in its own behalf. But
what the News lacks in variety of
testimony it makes up in abund-
ance by singing its own praises
every day.
Last Friday the president ap-
proved an act of congress abol-
ishing the penalty of death in all
federal convictions except those
oOreason and under the articles
for the crime of murder or of
rape. In cases of murder or
rape it allows the jury to qualify
their verdict of guilt by adding selling it by the barrel. A free
'without capital punishment,"
when the convicted is to be sen-
tenced to life imprisonment. The
law does not apply to any pend-
ing proceeding or any indictment
now found or to any offense com-
mitted before the passage of the
act, but juries are empowered to
return qualified verdicts in such
cases, and the sentence must
imposed accordingly.
resident McKinley's cabinet
be made up of such men as
iyman J. Gage, the banker
prince of Chicago, Russell A.
Alger, the Michigan man whose
"barrel" contributed so
kCJ
Sherman, the Ohio millionaire.
The scriptural phrase "the poor
ye have always with you," may
apply to some people in some
places, but it will not apply to
William McKinley in the White
House. Men who surround our
president must be able to array
themselves in purple and fine
linen, wear silk socks, puff blue
smoke from a four-bit Havanna,
and sip mint julip, worth ten dol-
lars a sip, through a golden pipe
connecting with the back door.
Poor men will please keep off the
grass.
The talk of enacting a law to
make lynching a capital offense
is all buncombe and no such a
law will ever find a place on
Texas statutes. It seems hard
for some people to understand
that there is a difference between
rape and other crimes, and they
contend that rapists should be
treated with the same considera-
tion as other criminals. At such
an argument as this every heart
around which the tender affec-
tion and pure love of wife, moth-
er and sister clusters, revolts. A
rapist has no more business in a
courthouse than a mad dog. By
forcibly despoiling the pure and
innocent he forfeits every right
to a trial by jury and the sooner
his carrion carcass returns to dust
the better. The people of the
South are going to protect their
women, no matter how men may
rant, and some editors would
gain a warmer place in the hearts
of the people by sheddding their
tears over the mangled forms of
innocent women and children in-
stead of weeping so profusely
over the remains of rape friends.
ir-
The following is about as good
__ r_ „ a joke on the free-silverites as
of war of the army and navy and ^as appeared:
4-"U rv nuimQ rvP mnT>rl or r\t r\£
A man in the parched state of
Kansas was hauling water and
silverite came along and,stopping
in front of the water dealer, in-
quired: "How much do you get
a barrel for your water?" "Two
dollars," was the reply. "Why,
if we had free silver you would
get four dollars a barrel," re-
marked the f. s. Oh, yes, and if
..^Ihaditin hell I could get a
be! thousand dollars a barrel for it/'
I was the peppery reply..
1897 is a good year to begin courting
your family.-—Clarksville Times.
Avaunt, you horrid old bachelor;
what's it to you? 1897 is a mighty good
year for Joe Taylor to begin courting
some pretty girl. Or if perchance he
has made a beginning, it's a mighty
good time for him to bend his efforts
in the direction of matrimony.—Hon-
ey Grove Signal. }
The above items appeared in
the Clarksville Times and Signal
early last month. I knew that Joe
would take good advice, but re-
ally his promptness in obeying
instructions was somewhat of a
r..rp.iae. As soon as the Signal
reached his sanctum Joe threw
away the Faber, kicked over the
paste-pot, dressed cap-a-pie in a
manner calculated to lay the
daisies and the daffodils in the
shade and made a bee-line for
the home of the prettiest young
lady in Clarksville. Then and
there did he plead love's cause
with eloquence surpassing Claude
Melnotte's and the sequel was the
following announcement which
was received at this office Mon-
day:
Rev. and Mrs. Charles E. Lamb
announce the marriage of their daughter
Maggie May,
to
Mr. J. J. Taylor.
Thursday morning, January 28th, 1897,
M. E. Church, South,
Clarksville, Texas.
Mr. Taylor is one of the most
brilliant writers on the Texas
press, and acquaintances of his
bride assure me that no fairer
lady e'er breathed the pure air of
Texas. May their married life
prove one grand sweet song.
PETTY PENOILINOS.
Snow balling was the order of
the day here Sunday.
Miss Lizzie Thompson returned
Sunday from a visit to Detroit.
Misses Carrie and Haydie Elel^
of High, visited in the city Satur-
day and Sunday.
N. F. Rutherford who has been
on the sick list for some time, we
are glad to say is able to be out
again.
The school has been rather
light for several days on account
of bad weather.
Joe A. Smith, from Delta coun-
ty, was in the city this weeek.
N. J. Reynolds, so wo have
been informed,left Tuesday night
for Dallas, where he will marry
Thursday.
Held Services Alune.
A preacher who serves several
churches in the northern part of
Lamar county had a unique ser-
vice at Frisco church during the
late cold snap. When he got to
the church on the Sunday morn-
ing of his regular appointment,
no one else had come, and the
house was very cold. The preach-
er built a fire, and sat down to
wait for the coming of the con-
gregation. The hour of service
arrived and he took his seat in
the pulpit, and waited a few
minutes longer. Then he begun
the usual service—gave out a
hymn and sang it alone, read the
lesson, offered prayer, and an-
nounced his text and preached.
The Advocate's informant did not
say whether he also took up a
collection, but it is presumed this
part of the service was omitted.
No one came in during the ser-
vice and the preacher was his
own and only congregation.—
Paris Advocate.
TEXASliGNAL.
[registered.]
This thoroughbred registered
Jersey bull will make the season
in Honey Grove at $5.00 to insure
calf. For further information
applyto
; J. M- Gilmer.
J
Austin Letter.
Editor Signal.
That "Matchless Tribune of the
People," the Hon. William Jen-
nings Bryan, has come and gone.
Austin and the Texas Legisla-
ture, though slightly disfigured
and gasping for breath, have
about recovered from the shock
of contact with his august pres-
ence and things continue "in the
even tenor of their way." I do
not in all things endorse Mr.
Carlyle's idea expressed in his
"Heroes and Hero-Worship,"
but there is one thing certain and
that is that one always ex-
periences peculiar thrills of awe
and veneration when he comes
into the presence of an acknowl-
edged grand character of the
world. Just such a feeling, in-
describable tho' it may be, took
possession of my entire being
that morning when, among the
thousands who gathered at the
capitol, I was rushed into the
presence of Mr. Bryan and felt
his warm hand clasp over my own
involuntarily extended. As soon
as I had somewhat regained my
self-possession, there came to my
mind those words of Browning
when a friend told him he had
known that matchless poet, Shel-
ley. Speaking to that friend Mr.
Browning said:
"And did you then see Shelley plain,
And did he really speak to you,
And did you speak to him again."
Mr. Browning regarded Shelley
as a kind of immortal spirit too
grand and perfect to touch upon
the earth and whose very pres-
ence was, he thought, calculated
to strike one speechless with awe.
I don't think Mr. Bryan is in any
way akin to this conception of
Shelly, yet there is something
about the man so magnetic, so
fascinating that, as he stood there
smiling and giving a hearty
hand shake to thousands of en-
thusiastic men and women, my
eyes on all his motions with a
mute observance hung. In the
afternoon at four he addressed
the students of the University
and this talk, like all his others,
was beautifully appropriate, and
sensible. That night for over
two hours he spoke to a house
that was so crowded that there
was not even standing room. But
salve Bryan.
Among the most noteworthy
events that have transpired in the
Legislative halls this week I note
three joint resolutions offered by
"Walters, of Fayette. The first
relates to the compensation of
the members of the Legislature
and provides for fixing it at a fig-
ure not to exceed $1,000 per an-
num, and allows no mileage. The
second relates to the membership
of the Legislature and fixes the
number of senators at 31 and
Representatives at 93. The third
relates to the term of office of the
members and fixes it at four years
instead of two. All three of these
resolutions have been read and
referred to Committee on Consti-
tutional Amentments. The Com-
mittee on Privileges and Elec-
tions, after deciding that "Pale
Cream Book Paper "was not
white, have completed their in-
vestigation of the Brigance
(Dem.) vs. Bennett (Pop.) con-
test and concluded to oust Mr.
Bennett. Mr. Bennett was the
Republican-Populist fusion can-
didate for Grimes county and was
the recipient of most of the "pale
cream cocket hat" tickets.
Whether or not the decision of
the committee was according to
politicaal principles or those of
right and justice this "deponent
sayeth not." House bill no. 192
making it a penal offense for any
person to sow or scatter Johnson
grass or Russian thistle or sell or
give away any hay or oats con-
taining their seed or roots, was
reported favorably by the com-
mittee Monday and will doubtless
be passed.
Sunday and Monday your cor-
respondent took a lay off and
visited friends in the country.
We traveled down the Colorado,
oyer 12 miles of macadamized'
roads and pulling up at the mag-
nificent two-story dwelling of our
host. After a hearty dinner we
spent the afternoon in pleasant
conversation; and as the shades
of night began to fall the welcome
sound of the supper bell sounded
on our ears and we enjoyed such
a repast as only those who live in
rural ease and luxury enjoy.
Monday morning I arose to watch
the sun with smiling face mount
above the crimson peaks across
the Colorado. What a beautiful
sight! Twelve miles west of me
I could see glittering and larger
than any planet the thirty-two
electric towers in Austin. Turn-
ing my head I beheld old Sol with
his kaleidoscopic art changing the
eastern horizon from violet to
deepest crimson, then to blushing
rose. After breakfast mine host
invited me to' his upper gallery
whence he showed me his "little
patch." This "patch" lies in a
bend in the river and contains
between seventeen and eighteen
hundred acres, all in cultivation.
On the place are gins, stores and
blacksmith shops while approxi-
mately 50 negro families dwell in
as many cabins. As I glanced
in speechless admiration over this
gentleman's vast possessions I
thought "Truly, this is life in its
fullest sense." In the course of
conversation on the gallery my
host informed me that he came
to this very place thirty-six years
ago with a wagon and pair of ox-
en, a wife and three children and
five pairs of bare feet. Indeed,
measureless are the possibilities
of humanity!
This will probably be my last
letter as I expect to return home
in a few days in order to press
my claims in our local struggle
for political preferment.
Walter Stephens.
GENERAL HEWS.
Nourish
Him. S
That's the whole secret in a
word. We can cure no disease
unless we can keep tip the pa-
tient's strength. And there's
only one way to do that—feed
him. But if the system refuses
food? Then use SCOTT'S
EMULSION of Cod-liver Oil
with Hypophosphites. - It goes
STRAIGHT TO THE BLOOD,
stops the wasting, rekindles
the vital fire, makes new flesh
and so renders a hopeful fight
possible against ANY disease.
Especially is this so in bron-
chial and lung troubles, in the
relief and cure of which Scott's
Emulsion has won its reputa-
tion. Book about it free.
Scott's Emulsion is no mysterioes
mixture. It is palatable, non-nauseat-
ing and infinitely preferable to the
plain oil. The genuine has our trade-
mark on salmon-colored wrapper. Get
the genuine.
For sale at 50 cts. and $1.00 by all
druggists.
SCOTT & BOWNE, New York.
J. B. Gordon, general com-
manding the Ujiited Confederate
Veterans, has issued an order
postponing the meeting at Nash-
ville, Tenn., from May 5, 6 and 7
to June 22, 23 and 24.
There is so much coal in the
South that good mines in the
Monongahela valley in Western
Pennslyvania are idle waiting for
it to be used up. One trouble is
so much Alabama coal is mined.
| Last year our corn exports
reached 128,500,000 bushels.
Wheat exports were 83,000,000.
Large quantities of this went
from Sothern ports. The exports
were much heavier than last
year.
Cigarettes formerly made by
hand are now rapidly turned out
by machinery, one machine, the
Eclipse, turns out 25,000 an hour
or over 400 per minute. A newer
American machine beats this,
and has been lately introduced
in all the cigarette factories of
this country a id England.
Congress is going to consider
. a plan to dig and operate a deep
waterway or canal between or
from the ocean to the lakes. This
will probaly be the greatest en-
gineering scheme in the world.
A commission of experts have
been working it up. They say
it can be done. It must be twen-
ty feet deep. Surveys will cost
86,000.
;The plague which has been
raging for six months past at
rJgombay, and to some extent at
other places in India, is conceded
to be "the true plague." In its
general character it is identical
with the "Black Death," which
in the fourteenth country des-
troyed, it is said, 100,000 lives in
London, the lives of seven-eights
of the population of England and
some 25,000,000 persons, or one-
fourth of the population of Eu-
rope. But sanitary science is
supposed to have mitigrated its
virulence or lessened its oppor-
tunities. In Bombay, with 750,-
000 inhabitants, the mortality is
kept down to about 1000 per
week. Calcuta, with 1,000,000
inhabitants, owing to the efficient
sanitation, is substantially free
from the plague. The plague is
a glandular fever, attended with
a swelling of the groin. It seems
to be unknown whether it is due
to a microbe or to unsanitary
conditions. It ravaged Hong
Kong a few years ago, destroying
many thousands there. It is ep-
idemic in China and the Euphra-
tes Valley, just as cholera has its
home in the delta of the Ganges.
London suffered from it in 1665
and again in 1720. During the
present century Asia has been
the chief scene of its activity. In
1830, at Bagdad, the death rate
from it was 2,000 a day, and on
April 21 of that year as many as
30,000 dead bodies were counted
ther§,. It appeared again on the
Euphrates in 1867. Its ravages
in China have been enormous,
but little was known in Europe of
the extent of the losses it caused.
Every Saturday,
Dr. Geo. F. Oglesby, the not-
ed Veterinary Surgeon, will here-
after be in Honey Grove to serve
all stock owners needing his ser-
vices. The people are acquaint-
ed with Dr Oglesby and his
work, an ! it is not necessary to
say more than that he is one of
the most successful Veterinary
Surgeons in the South. Remem-
ber, he will be at Lane's Stable
every Saturday. Bring in your
stock.
Healing «i The Pine Woods
Is brought to you in Coussen's
Honey of tar. Grave ills have
small beginnings, and coughs
and'colds need prompt attention.
This remedy makes the curing of
throat and lung troubles easy.
You know the value of tar. In
this preparation you get tar in a
new and effective form combined
with other remedies. Honey of
tar soothe, heals and strengthens.
Not only promptly cures the
cough but has a decided tonic ac-
tion on the entire system. Price
25 and 50 cents. Sold by T. H.
Peery. 2-52.
Please Settle Up.
All persons knowing them-
selves indebted to the firm of
Marschall & Breckeen, will con-
fer a great favor by calling and
settling at once. On account of
the death of Mr. Marschall it is
necessary that the business
should be adjusted at once.
Consumption can be cured by
use of Shiloh's Cure. This great
cough cure is the only known
remedy for that terrible disease.
Sold by George A. Dailey.
The best cough cure is Shiloh's
Cure. A neglected cough is dan-
gerous. Stop it at once with
Shiloh's Cure. Sold by George
A. Dailey.
Sure, Prompt, Positive
Cure for Impotence, Loua
of Manhood, Seminal
Emissions, Spermatorrhea,
Nervousness, Self Distrust,
Loss of Memory, &c. Will
make you a STRONQ, Vigor-
ous Man Price $1.00, 6
Boxes, <?5 00.
Special Directions Mallea
SEXUAL
PILLS
with each Box. Address
Ballard Snow Liniment Co.,
2910 LUOASAVC. _
ST. LOUIS, - MO
The fac-
simile
•lgsature
of
DASTORIA,
il 68
evwy
>/ wrapper.
ffH&S 9"f® ^r" Taylor's Sure Cure it,
O Ut Pi Jr. a simple herbal remedy
for Chills and Fever,
nyi | | Dumb Ague and all Ma-
O 1 Lb msa larial Troubles. It will
promptly do what quinine and mineral
poisons can never do. It is impossible
for malaria to stay in the system when
it is used. Be as well as you once were.
PRICE, 25 AND 50 CENTS.
BALLARD SNOW LINIMENT CO.,
310 N. Main St., ST. I,OUIS. MO.
CASTOIJXA.
The fac-
simile
signature
it
Is OB
vrappet
Deafness Cannot Be Cured—
by local applications as they can-
not reach the diseased portion of
the ear. There is only one way
to cure deafness, and that is by
constitutional remedies. Deaf-
ness is caused by an inflamed
condition of the mucous lining- of
of the Eustachin Tube. When
this tube is inflamed you have a
rumbling or imperfect hearing,
and when it is entirely closed
deafness is the result, and un-
less the inflamation can be taken
out and this tnbe restored to its
normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed forever; nine cases out
of ten are caused by Catarrh,
which is nothing but an inflames
condition of the mucous surfaced.
We will give One Hundred
Dollars for any case of Deafness
(caused by catarrh) that cannot
be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure,
Send for circulars; free.
F. J. Chenney & Co, Toledo,, O.
Sold by druggists,. 75 cts.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
biliousness
Is car -ed by torpid liver, which prevents diges-
tion and permits food to ferment and putrify in
the stomach. Then follow dizziness, headaches
Hood's
insomina, nervousness, and, b H ■
if not relieved,. billons fever jgjj « | Eg ^
or blood poisoning. Hood's | 11
Fills stimulate the stomach, ™ W
rouse the liver, cure headache, dizziness, con-
stipation, etc. 25 cents. Sold by all druggists.
The on\y Piiis to take with Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Hon. W. J. Rryaii's Book ^
A LL-vho are interested in furthering the sale of Hon.
W.J. Bryan's new book should correspond im-
mediately with the publishers. The work will contain
An account of his campaign tour . . .
His biography, written by his wife . .
His most important speeches . . . .
BWBM—MMHPBWMHnMMPBIfHBIffiniH WM I ■■ H II III 11 ■
The results of the campaign of §896.
A review of the poBiticaB situation . .
AGENT© WANTED
Mr. Bryan has announced his intention of devoting
one-half of all royalties to furthering the cause of
bimetallism. There are already indications of an enor-
mous sale. Address
W. B. CONKEY COMPANY, Publishers,
34!-35! Dearborn St....CS3tCAG0.
- , ■
r -". -
WSf
Bell you what you want,j
prices. Come and get:
money. I know it. I c'
West Side, Big Saddle in|j
Would You Have
A Good Thing at mighty little more than
the first cost of a poor thing? I have it.
Would You Have a Saddle ma.de of
California leather that looks better and
wears longer than any other leather? I
have got 'em.
Would you Have a Harness made of
leather so strong that it makes the light-
est harness? I have it.
Would you Buy Direct? I'm your man..
Had You Rather keep the money here
for making? Then buy of me. Would
you buy at hard-pan, rock .bottom, sub-
cellar, way down, as low as you can for
the best there is or can be? That's my
price. It's business I'm after and sad-
dles and harness you want. I have got
them. I want your trade because I can
id save you a per cent. Haven't space to give you
tem and buy where you please. I can save you
prove it. j_ Wi Hamilton.
lit.
GALBS
BLACKSf!pING
AND ^WOODWORK.
Horseshoeing a specialty. West of City Hall,
block north of Square.
One
COLLIERS
St. Louis.
RED SEAL,
at, Louis
SOUTHERN,
St. Lou's Chicago,
St. Louis Branch:
Clark Ave. and Tenth St., St. Loui . i Broadway, New York*
$1500 ;foronly SO CTS.
READ HOW IT MAY BE SECURED
The Weekly Commercial Appeal, in order to retain the laegest
circulation of any, weekly in the South, offers a cash gift to the
subscriber guessing th6 correct or nearest correct number of bales
of cotton received in Memphis from September 1, 1896, to April 15,
1897, includes, as follows: If the correct or nearest correct guess
is received in Noveniber or December it will get in cash SI,500, if
in January $1,000, if m Febuary $750, but if not till March only
$500. Contest closes March 31, but the correct or nearest correct
guess first will be a^&r'ded the pri&e. Receipts in Memphis in for-
mer years were as follows: From September 1, 1894, to April lo,,
1895, 571,094 bales; from September 1, 1895, to April 15, 1806,,
407,260 bales. FIFTY! CENTS must accompany every guess for'
12 month's subscription to The Weekly Commercial Appeal. The
Weekly Commercial Appeal contains all the news of the week
Asked and Answered Department, Veterinary Department, <t>10,000
prize story, Talmag^'s Jsunday sermons, latest market reports, Farm
Department, etc. [Special offer to agents and club-raisers will be
sent free on application, Sample coppies free. Address
COMMERCIAL APPEAL, Memphis, Tenn..
GO TO
W. T. CLARK'S
For Neat-Filling Bouts and Shoes.
Repairing Neatly
Sho] >
and Promptly done at reasonable rates,
located on South Sixth Street.
JAPAHESE
IE
50c. and $1 per box, 6 for $5.
Japanese Pile Ointment. 25 and
50c. per box. Japanese Liver
Petlets, 50 pills> 25c
CORE
Will ewe all hinds ol
guarantee with 6 $1j
dress on receipt oi p|
tiles. Why suffer with this terrible disease ? We give written.
1 boxes, to refund the money if not cured. Mailed to nny ad'
, The- Japanfie Pile Cure Corosany, St. Paul, Minn.
V
v
When you buy 0
a house you make sure that the title is clean
When you paint it, use Pure White LeacL
Examine the brand and see that it is right.
It makes all the difference in the world
whether the White Lead is genuine or not.
(See list of genuine brands.)
For colors, use the National Lead Co.'s
Pure White Lead tinting colors. No trouble
making or matching shades. Send for pam-
phlet and color-card — they are free.
NATIONAL LEAD CO.,
J /
/ i
K
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Lowry, J. H. Honey Grove Signal. (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, February 5, 1897, newspaper, February 5, 1897; Honey Grove, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth387953/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Honey Grove Preservation League.