The Daily Hesperian (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 241, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 24, 1905 Page: 4 of 4
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das. R. Bell
Real Estate
and Loans
. . . OFFICE 1ST . . .
First State BanK Building
- /
885 Acres of fine land
to be divided in tracts to
suit purchasers. Will sell
on small payments and on
long time.
517 acres ot fine Red River bottom land well improved.
163 acres of fine fruit land on the interurban line, a
great bargain at $25 per acre.
65 acres of fine land at $30 per acre on long time.
66 acres of fine fruit land at <30 per acre on long time.
17 acres of fruit land, well improved at a bargain.
Several fine tracts at Valiev Ytew for sale on long time.
80 acres of good fruit land tor £ 1.00c.
A finely improved land of 127 acres near Gainesville for
•ale cheap. This is one of the best small homes in Cooke
county.
The best all round farm in Cooke county for sale at §30
per acre. This is fine land, black, land, truit land, fine
water, plenty of pasture, extra buildings, close to school,
on a public road and is a regular snap at §30 per acre.
This will bear the closest investigation.
A fine farm of 3>7 acres, finely improved at *30 per
acre. This is a real bargain.
A number of fine tracts near Woodbine for sale on very
reasonable terms.
Some of the finest land in Cooke county near the city
for sale in tracts to suit.
A very finely improved farm of 60 acres at §40 per
acre. This is a regular snap.
A verv fine orchard for sale at a great bargain.
A good 4a acre tract for sale at a very low figure con-
ridenng the land.
We have the Ed P. Bomar tarm near this city. This is
the finest farm in North Texas.
60 acres. 30 acres in cultivation mile of school house,
house of 2 rooms, good water. 2 acres orchard, fine land,
very cheap at Si,000.
90 acres, 70 acres in cultivation, 6 room house, all
necessary outbuildings. mile from school house, smooth
land and a great bargain at §2.350.
142 acres tine land, a regular bargain at S25 per acre.
Fine prairie farm of 106 acres, 5 room house, deep well,
line black waxy land, a bargain at §52 50 per acre.
40 acres of good land for $650. This is a tine bargain
for some one.
73 acres for S25 per acre, on good terms.
68 acres near Valley View at §35 per acre. A regular
snap.
71 acres well located land for S25 per acre, another
bargain.
100 acres of fine land, well located at §30 per acre.
Must be sold at once.
880 acres fine pasture land for S9.000 This is a bar-
gain for there are 500 acres good tillable land in this tract.
Fine farm of 532 acres at $25 per acte.
117 acres of good land, 7 acres orchard and vineyard,
good well, well improved at $20 per acre.
A very fine tract of improved land near Gaiuesville for
$60 per acre.
98 acres of improved land within 5 miles of the city for
Si.750.
162 acres of well improved land near Whitesboro for
83.000.
120 acres of land near Hemming for §2,000.
100 acres of well improved land near Woodbine for
S2.500.
80 acres near Burns City at §22.50 per acre.
70 acres near Burns City for $1,000.
150 acres near Tioga for $20 per acre.
144 acres of good land for $15 per acre. This is a bar-
gain as party must sell.
100 acres near Muenster at a great sacrifice. Parly
must sell. Make us a bid on this tract. It must go.
96 acres near Lindsay at $40 per acre.
60 acres fine black waxy land, with fine improvement-
in the Era black Land belt for $60 per .v-rc.
150 acres fine land near Era at $45 ]■ r acre.
A very fine tract of fruit land near Wnitesboro at $25
per acre.
1,000 acres of land on Red River for $12,000.
91 acres fine black land for 84.000.
100 acres of well improved land, 7 miles of Tioga for
$1,500.
103 acres of land near Era for $6,000. ^This^ is a well
improved farm.
181 acres of land near Myra at $40 per acre.
2,500 acTes of land near Era in tracts to suit purchasers.
JAS. E. BELL
Office in First State Bank Building’
(Down Stairs)
GAINESNILLE,. TEXAS
"r-
mi IftAdjuY —
An, siAWEgmm mu
*WVS/V/X«
| AMUSEMENTS \
“A Little Outcast” which
comes to Gainesville Saturday,
Dec. 30, written for men and wo-
men who realize the evil in she
world and what this modern
complex civilization of oars loses
by its insane worship of the good
of “getting on,’’worship of wrong
doing, of false friends and fear
of the world’a censnre, auch a
story is written around the lives
of Paul Weston and George De
Voe in ‘‘A Little Outcast" and it
might be the story cf any two
men in ordinary life It is on
the lines of humVt interest that
“A Little Outcast” forges ahead
of its compeers.
The story is one of New York
City life with all its varying
changes from exclusive man-
sions of the great to the squalid
hovels of crime and serves to
present some striking stage pic-
tures.
Prominent among them are
| views of a fashiorahle Fifth Av-
I enue mansion with its white and
: gold drawing rooms, and sin irt
1 boudoirs. Cooper Uoion, Five
Points, the famous Cainese res-
taurants in Pell street, for the
hop friends, a panoramic view of
the battery at night, the great
duel in the water off the govern-
j ment pier and the thrilling res-
cue by the police in an electric
launch.
vvV
For Fifteen Years Face and Body
Mass of Itching Sores—Could
Not Express Suffering—Doctors
Failed —Had Lost Hope
CURED BY CUTICURA
AT COST OF $1.25
“ My head was one mass of scabs,
tny forehead was covered down almost
to my e brows, and I had to wear
my hat . .1 the time. My body was
covered with spots in size from a pin-
head to as large as a silver dollar. A
white, crusty scab would form and
itch, and words cannot express the
tort are and huuuliulion I suffered for
fifteen years. 1 tried many doctors,
and all kinds of treatments, but could
get no help, and I thought there was
no hope for me. A friend told me to
get Cuticura. 1 did, and in three days
my head was as clear as ever. 1 ap-
plied theOintmcnt night and morning,
also taking a hot bath three times a
week, and using the Ointment freely
after the bath. After using one cake
of Soap and two boxes of Ointment I
was completely cured, without mark
or blemish. 1 was so phased I felt
like running down the street to tell
every one I met what Cuticura had
done for me. If any one is in doubt
about this, they may write to me.
(signed) H. It. l'runklin, 717 Wash-
ington St., Allegheny, Pa.”
35
Intercostal Usual for Tens.
Don’t Do It.
Should you have a cough, cold or
sore chest, do not rely on time and
nature to cure. They may do so—
thoy may not. Tse Simmons’ Cough
Syrup. It is a balm for sore lungs and
will cure you at once
Life a Century Ago
Oue hundred years ago a man could
not take a ride on a steamboat.
He had never seen an electric light
or dreamed of an electric car.
He could not send a telegram.
He couldn’t talk through the tele-
phone.
He could not ride a bicycle.
He could not call in a stenographer
and dictate a letter.
He had never heard of the germ
theory or worried over bacili and
bacteria.
He never heard a phonograph talk
or saw a kinetoscope turn out a prize
fight.
He never saw through a Webster’s
unabridged dictionary with the. aid of
a Roentgen ray.
He had never taken a ride in an
elevator.
He nad never seen his wife use a
sewing machine.
He had never struck a match.
He couldn’t take an anesthetic and
have his leg cut aff without feeling it.
He had never seen a reaper or a
self-binding harvester.
He had never crossed an iron bridge.
—Marshall Herald.
COMPLETE TREATMENT
For Every Humour $i
Complete external and internal
treatment for every humour, consist-
ing of Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and
Pills, may now be had for one dollar.
A single set is often sufficient to cure
the most torturing, disfiguring, itch-
ing, burning, and scaly humours,
eczemas, rashes, and irritations, from
infancy to age, when all else fails.
Cutic.urs Soap, < lii.tmriit. m il Pi 1*, arc gold throughout
lb*- world. P'-ttfr llr’ijg a 4 In i Oovp., Uostoii, Sole Prop*.
§/* Semi for " .Skin ami B».»>U I’u iti, xtioi
District Court.
u.’*
In the case of Mrs Anna
Fletcher vs. F. H. Lanins, exec
utor of the will of Mrs Mary Ej
Gilpin, suit for the purpose to
contest the nrovision of the will
of Mrs. Gilvin, which provided
that Mrs. Fletcher should be
paid only the interest on the
money willed her and left in the
hands of P. H. Lanius, the exec-
tor, as long as the said John
Fletcher, husband of Id rs.Fletch-
er, lived, the court held that this
provision was inoperative, and
that Mrs. Fletcher was entitled
to the whole legacy at once, not-
withstanding her mother’s will
provided to the contrary,
Five thousand dollars were in-
volved in the will in question.
His Happy Return*
The people testify that Hood’s
Sarsanarilla cures scrofula,
eruptions, catarrh, rheumatism,
dyspepsia, nervous troubles, and
you may take it with confidence
that it will do for you what it has
done for others.
The non-irritating cathartic is
Ii« ud's Pills. 5
NEW OSAGE AGENT.
Washington, Dec. 23.—Captain
Frank Frantz, who recently was
appointed governor of Oklahoma,
will be succeeded as agent for
the Osage Indians-
The Osages are the richest In-
dians in the country and all pay
ments to them pass through the
hands of the agent
Advertise Your Business, It Pay3
I ARE YOU GOING TO ViSlT
THE OLD HOMESTEAD
DURING THE HOLIDAYS
Special Low Rates. Fast Trains. * Elegant ^Equipment
VIA
Memphis, Birmingham. Atlanta, Nashville, Chattanooga, I
St. Louis, Kansas City, Chicago, Atchison St. Joseph.
In addition we will sell to many other points in the old states
east of the Mississippi River.
ONE TRIP WILL CONVINCE YOU OF OUR
SUPERIOR SERVICE
Write the undersigned if you expect to return horn: for the
holidays; a postal card will do. We will be glad to answer all
inquires:
F. Lehanf, G. F. A P. A., i’yler; D M. Morgan. T. P.
A Ft. Worth; R. C. Fyfe, Ass’t G. F. & P. A., Tyier;
Gus Hoover, T. P. A. Waco.
Furious Fighting.
I “For seven years,” writes Geo. VV
Hoffman, of Harper, Wash., ‘T had a
bitter battle, with chronic stomach and
liver trouble, but at last 1 won, and
cured my diseases, by the use of
Electric Bitters. I unhesitatingly re-
commend them to all, and don't intend
in the future to be without them in the
house. They are certainly a wonder-
ful medicine, to have cured such a bad
case as mine.’’ Sold under guarantee
to do the same for you, by H. VV.
Stark Drug Co., at 50c a bottle I ry
them today.
It was Old Home Week, and the
returned sons and grandsons had been
telling with more or less pride of the
changes time had wrought for them.
At last Edward Jameson spoke:
“I went away from Jiere twenty
years ago a poor young man, with
one solitary dollar in my pocket. I
walked four miles from my father’s
farm to the station, and there I begged
a ride to Boston on a freight car. Last
night I drove into town behind a
spirited pair of horses, and my purse
—guess how much my purse holds in
money to-day, besides a large check,”
and Mr Jameson looked about him
with a brilliant smile.
‘ Fifty dollars!” ,
“Seventy-five!”
“A hundred!” shouted the toys,
filled with admiration.
•‘No,” said Mr. Jameson, drawing
a large, flat purse from his pocket
when the clamor had subsided, “none
of you have guessed right When I
had paid the 25 cents to Ozzy Boggs
for my refreshing drive in the coach I
had, besides my trunk check (which I
retaioed for financial reasons), exactly
4 cents. 1 have come back my
friends, to stay. Any little jobs o
sawing and splitting will be gratefully
received.”—Youth’s Companion.
An interesting Texas enterprise is
that which plans to connect the Miss-
issippi river above New Orleans with
Texas by means of a canal along the
entire coast to the Rio Grande. There
it is proposed to connect it with a
similar canal to Vera Cruz.
This is intended to be a waterway
for light boats only, the gulf being
available to heavier coasting craft.
The work would not flt costly, since
the soil through which it would pass is
mostly alluvial or sandy; and for a very
considerable pa*t of the way it would
pass along the rivers and bayous of
Louisiana and Texas. It is estimated
that the cost would not be more than
S4 000,000
This canal, if built, as doubtless it
will be some day, will open a sys'em
of water transportation such as the
world has never known. For boats of
light draft it will extend the Mississippi
river to the Rio Grande and connect
Texas directly with the upper ws't-rs
of the Mississippi and all ua navigable
tributaries.
By means of it a boat could be
loaded with coal at Pittsburg and un-
loaded at Galveston or Brownsville. A
light draft steamboat losfded with fl ur
at St. Paul could arrive at the same
destinations with its cargo unbroken.
There would be no costly handling as
is neeessary in the case of freight
destined for the same points by the
gulf route.
And if the Rio Grande were im-
proved for l'ght navigation a steamboat
starting from Great Falls in Montana
need not eDd her trip until wed up t! e
Mexican border.
Let us by all means have a careful
survey of the route cf this interesting
canal and close estimates of its co-t
It is going to be needed for exchange
of heavy freights betwetn Texas and
the Mississippi valley.—St. Louis
Republic.
I__’_
Torture of a Preacher.
The story of the torture of Rev. O. D.
Moore, pastor of the Baptist church, ot
Harpersville, N. V., will interest you
He says: “I suffered agonies, because
of a persistent cough, resulting from
the grip. I had to sleep sitting up in
bed. I tried many remedies, without
relief, until I took I)r. King’s New
Discovery for Consumption Coughs
and Colds, which entirely cured my
cough, and saved me from consump-
tion.” A grand cure for diseased con-
ditions of Throat and Lungs. At
H. W. Stark Drug Co. Price 50c and
$1 00. guaranteed. Trial bottle tree.
Hynes Buggies.
The leader of all buggi^ is tne
Hynes. If you anticipate giv-
ing your wife or daughter a ve-
hicle—don't make a mistake, get
them a Hynes. See.
Stevens, Kennerly & Spragins
—
Stevens, Kennerly,
& SPRAGINS CO.
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North “S tfel!ar|rest Hardware dealers in
Har-
line of Guns, Targets. N-w Loidrd NhelL^f8 I)fpart™ePt Hou will find an excellent
Uegginf, etc.. K.,r Chris',n ,s we haV.O tb ,1 X J" X ,0ad8-**din« «"•><»•
Teaspoons. Table Spoons, war Shells -in Let ** and Forks’ Sil.VPr
Safety Razors, Pearl Hand e Pocket Knives, etc ' * 1 -Vou maV want in this line
Harrows!'corn Crushed "re"""Wo "wlnt .“““fjde 'faiTlicK Plo“'s’ 1JraK
please yui:, both as h, E,,ods and prices. G^sa ulai. Yoors YXbXZ °°Wer W
Sevens, Kennsrly & Spragins Company
OPERA HOUSE
Paul Galia, Lessee and Mgr.
ONE NIGHT ONLY
SATURDAY
DECEMBER 30
ExcelentOrgauization Presenting
Little
Outcast.
With all the original ncen-
ery, costumes etc., exactly
as presented in New York,
Chicago ond other large
city,
Where Others Failed.
“Each spring lor five or six years
| broke out with a kind of Eczema which
! nothing seeernd to relieve permanently
j F.nally I tried a box of Hunt's Cure
| which prombtly cured me. T wo years
! have pa-sed by, but the trouble has ;
j not returned.”
Mrs. Kate Howard,
Little Rock, Ark. j
Save $50 Or More.
Fifty dollars reduction on all |
painos in stock from now untii j
thf first of the year. We sell the1
well known Stager paino, we sel I
the celebrated Cote piano, we I
sell other makes of tine pianos,
ail at a bargain now for a short
time. We have a fine selection
of pianos in stock- Come and
see them. We sell on easy terms
Come soon and get a bargain.
Barnes Music Company,
Corner Broadway and Commerce
streets, Gainesville, Tex.
Hold Farm Since 1300.
Recently the stock was sold on a
farm in Dumfriesshire, Scotland,
which had been hi id by a family nam-
ed Moffat since the year 1300, when)
King Robert Bruce made a grant of i
'he land to the Moffats. They held Itj
for 300 years as owners, and the rest i
of :he time as tenants of the Dukes of j
Bucc'euch
J
Close Quarters.
"Tou’re in a pretty Ught Ax," said
the defendant’s lawyer. “One-half the
Jury want to hang you, and the reet
don't think you’re worth the rope.—
Atlanta Constitution.
I am prepared to buy and pay
Miot cash for a r'sw good notes
P. FT. Lanios,
Cninnavillo. Tevaa
Regular House Prices.
Seats on sale Thursday at Ed-
wards Drug score.
KING OF ALL LINIMENTS
CURES RHEUMATISM AND ALL PAIN
111? ET s * j^*» * ?m rr
raar.4
■ huskies speamao wm»l
> all wuaiuntu or maa
la, a,
tare, n
a am M
reoarae
-----T.,
ROBINSON WAS
APPREHENDED
Hillsboro, Tex. Dec- 23 Jie
Robinson, who is charged with
having burglarized a store at
Penelop, Hill countj', some time
ago, was apprehended at San
Anton o this week. An officer
went down to Waco Thursday
aud returned today with the ne-
gro and placed him in jail.
Thia la Ho Joke.
Hunt’s Cure has saved more people
jrora the “Old Scratch*’ than any other
known agent, simply because it makes
scratching entirely unnecessary. One
application relteves any form of itching
skin disease that ever afflicted man-
kind. One box guaranteed to cure
any one case|
Commit Sport by Proxy.
“Vandal." a well known writer on
sports, said in a recent 'ssue of the
London Express: "The sports of this
country arc absolutely rotten—un-!
sound to the core. This nation Is no i
longer a nation of sportsmen. It is a j
nation of o bis-taking people who com-
mit sport by i roxy.”
Somebody Said That—
‘‘Many pleasant people come to see
us, and such of our visitors as are not
pleasant people have at least the good
effect of enhancing to us the pleasure
of being alone."
Our Big Demonstration Sale
goes on dealing out sales and val-
ues never before recorded: It
is indeed a sale that appeals
strongly to all mankind.
J- R. M. Patterson
Per Cent
Reduction
On all of our Ladios Fine
CRAVANETTE SUITS
AND SKIRTS
We Show the Largest and
Finest Variety m Gainesville
“Work every day,” said Brother
BiU, “so you can look every
blamed man in the eye and
« tell him to ‘go to’.”
HENINGER
BROS.
tXAD !fOS REMARKABLE CURB
“I was moch with rheumatim, writes
Bd. C. Nad, IowavUe, Sedgwick Co. .Kansas, “going
about on cratches and asfiering a great deal of pain.
I was tadiod to try Ballard’s Snow liniment, which
enred me, after nringthroe 50c bottles. ITISTHU
GRBATB3T LQUMBNT t B VBR U8HD; have ree-
• a tab— ot persona. aU expnas
taatonCt^^hllw wRth
deal of light labor oa film-" ***** *
THREE SIZES: 35c, 50c AND $1.00
BALLARD SNOW LINIMENT CO*
-M
H.aW jSUrk Drug Co/
*■ ^ •> -r -
Write
S. E. Perlberg
® Co.
Merchant Tailors
Chicago
for booklet, “Brother Bill,
Duds-osopher,” or call on us.
If there is anything better to
be had for the money than our
$15.00
I
Made-to-Me*sor« Clothes
we honestly da not know it.
They are S. E. Perlberg &
Co’s tailor-made clothes, too,
and you know what that means.
IBffct in style, fabric and finish.
Ask us to explain to you why
!*a coate always keep
A. C. Varner,
a Doors East of Postof
CALIFORNIA
♦
□ Contains nearly 6,000 square mile* of rk . alluvtiilCsoil.'^*^
It has a good climate, plenty of of water^and excellent rail
and water transportation.
Now is the time to buy while land prices are'low.
“THE SACBA1EIT0 TALLEY” j j
a book of 112 pages and 111 fine iHustrations.Etells all about
this wonderful valley, ita people and'their excellent schools
and churches-
Sent for Ten Cents j
Dept- C., Adv. Bureau, 43l]Caiifornia^fit., Sanl Francisco^ Cal.
itwntnd
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The Daily Hesperian (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 241, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 24, 1905, newspaper, December 24, 1905; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1107719/m1/4/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.