The Bonham News. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 101, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 13, 1909 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Fannin County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Bonham Public Library.
- 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:
V
r*<
J® ' *
Mi
WITH
THE
T
What
BOOSTER
Sc
!
»•
j
■ >. •
<
-•-W
st.
■ -
J
*
*
•I:
..
<
UPPER HOUSE TEST
4
-V
BURNED TO DEATH
SMALL , BOY’S
PATHET1
A
HABIT8
AND
RECORDS.
BRAIN
A Booster is
one
LITTLE
CALLS FOR LARGE SACRIFICES.
Idea of Worldly Advancement.
MAYOR APPOINTS DELEGATES
9
ALWAYS SOURCE OF WEAKNESS
Pretense
Power
P
9
10
REAL LIVELY SPORTING EVENT.
save
are
LITTLE CHANCE FOR BUSINESS.
or
i
worth while.—Exchange.
t ■
*
.< V
X
»
»
a •' ■ .. ■.
tee
nEE
ii
I
I
■
■
I
i=
a
<
<s^
< -
a ■>
«£
I
House Amends Senter-Hume Guar-
HE. ’ anty Measure
Peace Conference Meets in Chicago
May 1st—Mayor Spangler
Appoints Delegates
All Sorts of Things Happened at To-
bacco-Chewing Marathon.
Firit Dress or Immortality;
World with Melody.
Story with a Moral for Sfl
Occupied Mothers.
Fruitful Theme Wittily
Thomas L. Maa
■
Made from
of tartar, derived solely
.81.00
. .50
.25
are contended with our lot—Rev. Dr
Curtis Lee Laws, in Leslie’s Weekly.
-b-
■’ - ‘ j
j
j
.
—
ESSAY ON THE t
Mouths
Invariably in Advance.
WHEN THE PHRENOLOGIST FELL.
z -
i.
i£r
PASSES BANK BILL
TO THIRD READING
E?
I -j
IW
fcc ■
™7?
& Roberts
.• I • • ’ I r r. '
The
child screamed and started to run.
The mother, hearing the screams,
ran to the child and endeavored to
put Jut the fire, which she suc-
ceeded in doing, but not until the
child was so badly burned that it
died.'Mrs. West was badly burned
about the hands.
The approaching national peace
congress the 1st of May directs
special attention to the internation-
al and national peace congresses
that have preceded it and whose
noteworthy purposes and achieve-
ments it will advance a degree fur
A Booster is not a
knocker.
Kool -Suit
who wants his town to
show to the very best
advantage.
' . f’,’
A Ked£-
does not
show your deformities
but it covers them.
about the size of your thumb nail,
Fill. th. ren“ln/<,l 81’ hOU* * Ue
Had we ministers trained and worked
for a business life as we train and
j work for the ministry, and lived as
A Noble Personality the
Noble Desires Inscribed In
'M
fegE* -
“No sport around here?
the old storekeeper at Bacon Ridge,
fleet ively.
away off.
around here last Saturday night and
seen our tobacco chawing Marathon.’*
‘Tobacco-chewing Marathon?” gasp-
ed the corn-starch drummer in sur-
prise. i
' Yes,: sirree!
sporting event in the state.
REVOLViHfe
7
• ■
A Booster is one
i- who keeps up-to-date,
so it is with the wearer
of a Keep-Kool Suit
he keeps up-to-date.
9 J
.. ■ .. ■ . ' . .
A Booster is one
who boosts.
•?
. 4 . ' ____. . * 1 —' -
Every Booster does
not wear a Keep-Kool
Suit but the fact that
a man wears a Keep-. cou6t>
evidence
8—<
I -T
I'aT 1
is being a Booster.
Ho is a poor little negle
whose mamma busy w
ers’ meetings and club co:
and such important matters
really hasn’t time to atten
children, says^he New Yor
Thia little boy wag entertaial
ual caller while his mother
stairs putting the finishing t
her toilet. Said the little be
own toilet was sadly in need
tion:
“What does e. t. c. mean?**
“E. t. c.?“ aaked the caltei
“Yes.” said the kittle boy. “
of a word. It’s la a book I
ing.”
"Oh,” said the caller. “B
abbreviation. It la Latin,
for et cetera.”
The little boy looked puszl
not |n Latin yet,” he said.
“Et cetera,” explained t!
“means—well, it means ‘and
The little boy was thou<
morrFent, and then he said
“I wish my m$mma co
to et cetera the buttons on m]
And taking in his dishevel®
ance, the visitor murmured.
■
I-
Ta ■
• ' % ■
■ERR'
There i.
■ scarcely any limit ta
r possible improvement h
but it takesrtime and mon
been improving flower ai
■eeds for over 50 yearn. M
people are working to n
Seeds suit yon. Buy the b
For sale e verywh
Kool i s i
that he is a Booster.
Fill a bottle or cor
water and let H
' •... ' 4';.
Therefore buy
I I ' • i- I . * . » * . ? ?
rjfe- jf
rxivt uunui
ION RATES;
There has not been an Ehgftsh gen-
eral since Marlborough. Wellington
was born at Dangan castle, Meath, of
an oldJrish family called Wesley, and
chirstened in Dublin. Wolff was born
at Ferneaux abbey, Kildare, and chris-
tened at‘ Westerham—nearly an the
same case as the Brontes (Brunty).
His grandfather defended Limerick
against William III.
Sir, John Moore and the Napiers
were Scotchmen; so was Abercrombie
(Egypt); so were Napier of Magdala,
Crawford and Clyde. Wolseley, Rob-
erts and Kitchener are Irish. was
Gough. The generals and statesmen
who saved India to Great Britain were;
Neill, Nicholson, the two Lawrences
(Irish), .Edwards (Welsh), and Rose
(Scotch).
I know of Wolfe because my great-
grandfather served under him at Que-'
bee. His Irish birth was corroborateo
to me by Capt. Dunne, once well
known in literary circles of a Queen’s
1 don’t know whethei
Scotchmen like to be called English
but certainly Irishmen do not.—-Lon
don News;
r* ...
I Union Lock Poultry Fence
’ Square. mesh. Tlie most Serviceable fence on the
’ mar’-et f< r puf.Urv yards, <.rc!>ar<ls and ^ar<!eps, and at
I nc ; rrutrr cost than nktliuK- Write i.’rcalaloj of fenc-
I iAr ill r<>T<*»M
I UPTGW rBltOB CO.. BeKUb. fit. • ’ganrsi Wv. Mo.
e.—.ia
TALK
Large Amount Has Been Thus Dis-
posed of, According to Tradition.
Church bells and ckurcfi plate are
not the only kinds bf buried treasure
of which there are traditions in
■Worcestershire, England.' There is
hardly a family who possessed a
landed estate at the time of the civil
war that has not some legend of con-
cealed treasure. For instance, the
Berkeleys of Spetchley say their but-
You are Booster if
you wear a Keep-Kool
Suit for it makes you
show to the very best
advantage.
Indian Coasting Steamera That Trane-
port Largeat of All Animals.
World’a Coldest City.
Yakutsk, in eastern Siberia, la
to be the eoldeat city In the worl
Detracts from the
to Accomplish.
His Knowledge of Horses Was Evi-
dently a Weak Point.
Mayor Reyburn of Philadelphia told
at a dinner a horse story.
“A farmer visited a phrenologist,.’
he said. “He had heard that the phre
nolo gist thought of buying a horse. He
bad his head examined and his bumps
revealed surprising things.
“ ‘Your tastes are the simple, home-
ly and pure tastes of a farmer,’ said
the phrenologist, ‘and a farmer I take
you to be. Am I not right? Aha, I
thought so. You are unready and fal-
tering in speech; you find it difficult
to express the simplest ideas. You
are sadly deficient in judgment and
have no knowledge of human nature.
Your innocent and trustful disposition
renders you an easy dupe to design-
ing men, and your own perfect hon-
esty prevents you from either suspect-
ing or defrauding any one.’
"The phrenologist the following
week bought a horse from the farmer.
The horse was knock-kneed, it was 25
years old, it had a bad temper, and it
balked. Though the farmer had only
paid $15 for the animal, he secured
without difficulty 8156 from the phre-
nologist for it. ’
“ ‘It’s wonderful/ said the farmer to
himself, - as he hastened toward the
bank to deposit the money-—‘it’s jest
wonderful that a man should know so
much about men and not know a thing
about bosses’’”—Detroit Free Press
disembarking its heavy unmanageable
freight. . . [
4:: 1 'TT",;1. '
SETTING OTHER1 PEOPLE RIGHT.
__
ler, to save the family plate, hid it . yOU WC3F 3 K.CCp-
and tried Kool Suit you will
r d
Price’s
Cream
Bakina
traded it.
not even heard of until
ness of being absolutely sincere, genu I have passed away.”
If your life is a perpetual lie "
you are not
you art
person from what
w wmcn cuy m uie world,
is the great commercial emporium
eastern Siberia and the capital of
province of Yakutsky. which in m
of ita area of 1,617,063 square mltai
xa bare desert, the soil of which
frozen to a great depth. Yakati
eonslsts of about four hundred boui
of European structure, standing api
The intervening spaces are occup
by winter yoorts. or huta of i
northern nomads, with earthen ro<
The doors are covered with ha
hides and the windows are of ice.
tSBSgt
under one of rthe elms in .the avenue
The butter was wounded
with his last breath' to confide his se
cret to a member of the family, but
could get no further than “plate/’
‘elm,” “avenue,” and died; so that
the plate remains bidden to this day.
The occasion upoYi which, the Berke-^
ley plate was hidden was the sacking
and burning of their family masion at
Spetchley upon the .eye of the battle
of Worcester by tile .Scots "troops who
accompanied Charles ( II* fromt^e
north. Sir Robert iBefk’elfey. was a tie
voted royalist'and had suffered much
Lt/
Result of
rain.
Rogers,
♦ •
Woodward
ly were serylng in .the royal army;
but the, Scots, whtf had' fought upon
both sides, ' were not‘careful to diS
tinguish between friAid and foe. Tba
only portion of Spetchley which es
caped the flames was ’ the stabling;
Here..Cromwell made his headquarters,-
and afteR! the war Judge Berkeley con;
verted the building Ibid a house and
lived there fof many-years.j The elm
avenue in Spetchley park, •‘where the
plate was-buried.' still exists, and ie
one of the finest in Worcestershire.
Pitfall Into Which the Well-Meaning
■ . Sometimes Fall.
Occasionally you may set a person
right, but be sure you know the per-
son, and don't get a reputation for
that sdrt of thing. People like to be
right, and get right, but not set right,
at least in a too direct way. Of course
we are concerted here with polite
society. You are expected to set peo-
ple right in politics, business and oth-.
er impolite circles, and set hard. The
way some contractors ta|i£ to their em-
ployes who dig sewers for them is, to
say the least, impolite, and the compli-
ments passed and repassed between
irate rulers and the housed of repre-
sentatives are far from pretty, but in
these spheres it is considered not bad
form to set folks right. Not so in the
charmed circle of polite society. Here
a correction mjjst be ‘so inferential
that it will not hit for several days,
and then feel like a cotton bat. Never
by any means correct a pronuncia-
tion. for you will likely never make
peace with the outraged party. Noth-
ing less intricate: tthan a Chinese
character may be (disputed. Nobody
is annoyed at that,- Me once knew a
truly good minister, who had a coun-
try charge, where the people were
fairly well educated, though they did
not always express themselves In sen-
tences strictly grammatical and lit-
erary, Th? rector was a stickler for
good language, and had a way of set-
ting everybody right while in conver-
s..tion. As his people thought he ought
to set them right in other fines exclu-
sively, his stay among them was brief.
—Newark News.
BURIED TREASURE IN ENGLAND.
nM guarantee advocates believe °P
these banks will avail them-
selves of the Cureton bill provis-
ions rather than assume the oner*
OUS burdens which Messrs. Senter economically as we have in the min
, Utry, many of us conla have accumu-
I lated fortunes ere this. I should like
| to know If there is any class of men
t more out of the use
j of their money than the ministers,
i Show me any other class ol%nen on
i earth ,with an average salary of $12
j a week who dress so well, five so well,
educate their families so well, give so
much and save so much for a rainy
day, and I will yield my point. Busi
ness men rarely realize the sacrifice
ministers make. I once tried to per-
suade a man of large possessions, who
is making $25,000 a year,, to give up
his business and accept a position in
our denominational work, which would I
bring him in $2,500. 1
fit at the very suggestion. We do not
envy our business classmates who
have won fame or accumulated wealth,
for in so doing they have had to forego
the heavenly privileges which we have
enjoyed. We do pot want to be pitied,
The firstTpehce society in Ameri-
ca, or in the world, was founded
by David Jajw Dodge and his asso-
ciates in August 1815. The Mas
sachusetts* Peace Society, which
owed its initiative to Noah Wok-
chester, was organized in Dr.
Channing’s study Christmas week
of the same year. The London
society was organized the same
j year; and from that time on peace
societies multiplied.
But almost a generation passed
before the inauguration of peace
conferences. The first internation-
al peace congress was held in Lon
don in 1843. It was the thought
pf the British philanthropist
Joseph Sturge, the friend of Garri-
son, Whittierand other anti slave-
ery leaders, and was first broached
by him in 1841 to members of the
American Peace Society in Boston.
The coining event will be the
second national meeting, and May
or Spangler has appointed the fol
lowing delegates from this city:
Messrs. Ed E. Steger, Zac Smith,
C. L. Bradford, H. C. McAnally,
1 Harry Roberts, Ashley Evans,
Sherwood Spotts, M. C Spivy, L.
’ K€ Crawford, A. J. Moore, D. W.
Sweeney and Dr. C. A. Gray.
and Hume have provided.
The first test on the amended
bill should come in the senate to-! on earth who get
morrow or Friday at the latest.
Its elephant fleet is one of the
strangest sfnd most ' deadly depart-
ments maintained by the British gov-
ernment in India. It is a large fleet of
coasting steamers specially built for
the. transport of elephants. .
India’s population is one-fifth that of
the entire
elephants,
work and
arenas of
pit them
against wild
fleet transfers the animals from Dacca,
the trapping and training headquar-
ters, to the various districts whence
comes the demand.
To get an elephant aboard ship is a
difficult and dangerous task. The ani-
mal must wade through the surf to a
stout raft, and this unknown surf, so
white and tumultuous, often terrifies
and maddens him. If in his fury he
slaughters a mahout Or two, he can-
not be'greatly blamed.
A-
.. .. —
can
per cent by buying a
Keep-Kool Suit this
week. .
Thomas L. Massoa, in Lippi1
Magazine, thus wittily discourses
a fruitful theme: i
"Brains are common to all pfl
the country, and traces of Urea
been discovered in summer at 1
Bar Harbor and Newport.
"They ar^ originally used to <
money, but when money ie ob
by them it usually takes their pl
" 1 he quality of brains varies
ferent localities. Mixed with |
they become very valuable. V(
spine, they are a necessity ip
household.
“At one time they influenced
ture, but the discovery wn* math
literature could do without
Since then they have been a Imp
cluaively devoted to adverdsiuE
"Brains are employed in vario
terprises. They make bridges.
Toads and other systems of franc
tion. They also create capital, ai
uf|fd extensively in evading th<
They mix with water and gaaolin
are absorbed by alcohol.
"Brains are bought and sold I
open market. .They may be tt
on the exchange In Washing
Albany <jr in other political
The best quality, however,
traded it. Indeed, oftentimes 1
long after i
In today’s Paris Advocate ap-
pears an account of the death of
themselves'^6 little three year old sou of
Mrs. Hawking. West, the little one
being burned to death.
It seems that Mrs. West and an-
other lady had done the family
washing in the morning and in the
afternoon were ironing while the
that the bill as it now [child was playing in the yard. The
stands will meet the views of a ma- little one got too near the wash pot
jority of the Senate and secure leg | aud his clothing caught fire,
islation upon the subject. It dis-
poses of the legal objection that
the State could not compel banks
heretofore organized to pay a tax
to pay the losses of other bankers,
because that provision is not now
compulsory as to the old banks. In
fttet, the only compulsory’ feature
left in the bill, as to sach banks, is
that which Senators Senter and
* Hume wrote and which the Senate
adhpted. Nevertheless, the origi-
WAS JUST ONE DOLLAR AHEAD*
globe. All these people use
They use them for draught
for tiger-hunting, and in the
the native states they eVen '
against one another and
beasts. The elephant
You
ji
Austin, Texas, April 7.—The
House of Representatives tonight
by an over whelm ing vote passed to
third reading the Senate guaranty*
of deposits bill, after amending it
in the following important parti-
culars: • /
It first struck out all A>f the
Senter Hume jHitJstitutes and
substituted the terms of the
Cureton bill as it pased the
House. Next it amended the bill
as demanded so as to make the
guarantee of deposits as provided
for by the Cureton bill compulsory
as to banks which shall hereafter
be organized, but optional as to
banks now in existence. These
latter banks may avail
of that provision or not as they
wish. If they do not, however,
they must givevthe bond which is
required by the terms of the Sen-
ter Hume substitute.
The original guarantee advocates
believe 1 ____
look prosperous and
“looking prosperous”
Argument on This and the Liquor
Bill Cause Ugly Mood on Part
Of Representation
Do Yom Think
For Yourself ?
Or. do you open your mouth like a younf
bird and trulp down whatever food or medl* ’
Lae mak be offered you ?
i i Y 8^
Intelligent thinkinc woman.
in need f from weakness nervousness, ■
• pain and sulMMnf. then It means much to
you that tbere\^ one tried arid true h<anes(
medicine qf sold by
dznggiMs for tpe eyre of woman’s Ills.-
. «fr
The makers of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre-
scription, fuFthe cure of weak, uervous, run-
down. over-worked, debilitated, pain-racked
women, knowing this medicine to be made up
of ingredients, every one of which has the
strongest possible indorsement of the leading
and standafCT authorities of the several
schools of practice, are perfectly willing, and
in fact, are only too glad to print, as they do,
the formula, or list of ingredients, of which
It ha composed, in plain English, on every
bottle-wrapper.
T T ’t* ♦ ■ »t»
• The formula of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre-
scription will bear the most critical ex-amina-
tion of medical experts, for it contains on
alcohol, narcotics, harmful, or habit-forming
drugs, and no agent enters into it that is not
highly recommended by the most advanced
and leading medical teachers.and author-
He almost had a: ities of lheir ««^ral schools of practice.
-- These authorities recommend the ingredients
o^BrTPiercesTavorite prescription for the
rare of exactly rite same laments for ~wh»cli
U^IlworlJ-famed medicine Is advised.
No other medicine for woman’s ills has any
Buch profession al endorsement as Dr. Pierced
we are not objects of charity, and we Favorite Prescription has received, in the un-
qualified recommendation of each . of its
several ingredients by scores of leading MietU-
K‘ cal men of all the schools of j»ractlce. Is
» auch an endorsement mot worthy of ypux |
Consideratiuu't ,
. . T ‘ .
A booklet of ingredients, with numerotw
authorative profestunal <*n<fprsen:ents by'the
icadiqg medical authorities of this country,
will bo mailed free to any one sending name
and address with request fur same. Address
Dr.'ll. V. Pierce. Jdulialo. N. Y. .
Love ia the only bow on fife’s, dark
cloud. It is the morning and evening I
star. It shines on the babe, and sheds
its radiance on the quiet tomb. It is
the mothef of art; inspirer of poet,
patriot and philosopher. It is the air
and fight of every heart; builder of
every home; kindler of every fire on
the hearth;-it was the first dress of
• immortality^ It fills the world with
melody, for music is the voice of love.
Love is the magician, the enchanter
that changes worthless things to joy,
and makes right royal queens and
kings of common clay. It is the per-
fume of that wonderful flower, the
heart, and without that sacred passion,
that divine swoon, we are less than
beasts; but with it—earth is heaven
and we gr^goda — Robert G. Ingersoll
“More than a year ago,’’ said the in-
surance man, "I received a letter
which said that the writer was a
widow and asked for a little financial
assistance. She wasn’t very greedy,
but would let me off with a dollar. I
shoved the letter into a pigeon-hole
and paid no further attention to it.
Next week another came. Then a
third and a fourth, and as a matter.of
fact one came for each week in the
year until I had 52 of them. The
widow had spent $1.04 In her efforts to
obtain a dollar from me. 1 thought
such persistency deserved an answer
of some sort, and so I wrote her:
“ ‘AH your letters received. I send
you the dollar asked for, but can’t
you figure that, you are still four cents
out?’
. f‘As promptly as if she had been a
business man closing up a $10,000 deal
she replied: .
" Thanks. No, I can't figure that
way. As I begged my stationery and
stamps from the neighbors 1 am Just
$1 in pocket in your case.’
"I have always had a tender heart
for widows,” smiled the insurance
- man, “but in this case I don't think
there is any call for my sympath}'.”
' .V- ' ■ * •••
ELEPHANT FLtET.
Once on the raft, his legs are tied
to pegs, and the slow sail to the ship
is uneventful, i But now a great band
must be arranged under the elephants
belly, and a crane must hoist him up
some twenty or thirty feet to the deck.
Here again the elephant cannot be s®t
down as intraclabte if. losing his head
In that unprecedented aerial journey,
he murders some more mahouts.
"Very prosperous, albeit stained a lit-
tle with. mahouts’,- blood, the elephant
fleet for matiy years has plied up and.
dqwn the Indiahgeoast, embarking and
It,, was the
... .... Yeou sph. handsomely < „
old Squire Weailiuibv claimed that 'I,e t.’onsofidated Mell
more, tob&cco in * an
man in the village Seth K >aiai'tued •
up. Wall, a.< the ; dividend, arid —
had “;"eib i» ’em around here. Mr
------- Frufi3, ...mur piecei‘" " frankly interrupted ‘the
slipped down his throat and made him hand,or<l of the tavern at Skedee Cor
•sneeze: Wall, sir, there was a^ase of I1Prs see, the only man Tn (he
fine pepper at that etTd of the counter community who' nilght otherwise take
and as Seth sneezed the pepper went .1 ' ■'
up in a cloud,, and then everybody
sneezed. Some of it got In old man •
Hardappin’a eyes and he pulled off his Ml‘eretn
coat and wanted to light. Then iom&
body upset the stove and scared the a toothpick which, speaking
cat When .it was ail over . _ ? •" * -
therby found his watch had been so bU8y •t<n about .the filter part
stolen by a horse trader who had crept of next tbat h* w«n't have time
in to ge^ warm apart? Wall, give to niake a f°o1 of himself in ar^ other
me a tobacco-chawing Marathon every Wfty r Looks considerable* like rain, off
Umn.” j.to the south’rd, don’t It?*—puck.
Company.
Little Three-Year-Old Child
Burned to Death at Paris
Yesterday
a
for th. kins. and nienlbers of hl, Ulnl Keep.Kool Suit and
7 you will be a Booster.
' 1 • •»
I •-: U • ' ' ...
an iuferrst In your gfitterlflg proposi-
tion has been for some time engaged
.in the payrhent of an-'election bet
i he was solemnly sworn to
Then some ; r°’! a I'cantrt eight miles by means of
14 $ i xzvl Lx • ki z* n, W 1 k. a_ oa i _
J m round
’ Josh Wea^i P11111 bvrs‘’ w,!l bp ,lkely to keep him
had been1 HG b”sy tiIj a,on« about.tbe Iglter part
Men Who Fought Britain’s Battles
Have Been Irish or Scotch.
When baking powders are peddled
demonstrated, examine their labels. You
will find they are not made from cream
of tartar. You don’t want them
the back are also symptoms th
tbe kidneys and bladder are oi
and need attention.
What To Do. ,
There is comfort in the kno
often expressed, that Dr.
Swamp-Root, the great kidne
fulfills almost every wish in c
rheumatism, pain in the back,
liver, bladder and every part of tl
passa ge. Corrects i nability to b
and scalding pain in passing r
effects following use of liquor,
beer, and overcomes that unpte
cessity of being compelled to
through the day, and to get
times during the night. The
immediate effect of Swamp
soon realized. It stands the hi
cause of its remarkable
health restoring prop-
erties. If you need a
medicine you should J
have the best. Sold by
druggists in fifty-cent
and one-dollar sizes. - ;
You may have asample bottk
by mail. Address Dr. Kilmer&*
hamton, N. Y. Mention this ’
remember the name, Dr. Kilmer’,
Root, and the address, Bin,
N. Y., on every bottle.
Remember that the brain is the in
strument through which the real per
sonallty expresses himself; and he
can only express w’hat is already writ
ten there, says a w’riter in the Nautl
lus. Consequently, the external man’
will be just w±at is inscribed upon his
brain, for all his actions must be dic-
tated or directed through these brain
records. You cannot saw wrood with
a hammer; nor can the soul play a
piano with the fingers until the know]
edge of piano praying is written in the
music place of the brainy Yom cannot
show forth a high and noble person
ality until you have written within
your skull a record of noble and holy
desires; according to the tools you
give it, so wifi the expression of your
soul be.
You can wind tip a phonograph,
and you may make it run fast or
slow, but you cannot make it-say any-
thing that is not on the records. It
some one had put his opinion of you
on a record, even though you knew
that opinion to be untrue, you could
not make the record tell the truth; the
only thing possible would be to make
another. You have written your opin-
ion of yourself ui>on your brain; you
cannot be anything else uhtil you
change the record.
There is nothing which will add sc I
much to one’s |>ower as the conscious
pPftfl LlAf VI Q Q 8vozvl 11 ♦ ftl o I
ine.
if you are conscious that
what yotf pretend to be—that
really a different
the world regards you—you are noi
strong.
There is a restraint, a perpetual
fighting against the truth going on
within you, a struggle which saps
your energy and warps your conduct
If there is a mote at the bottom of
your eye you cannot look the world
squarely in the face.
Your Vision is net clear. Everybody
sees that you are not transparent
There is a cloudiness, a haze about
your character, which raises the inter
rogation point where you go. Char
acter alone is strength, deceit is weak
ness, sham and shoddy are powerless I
and only the genuine and ^te true are
ONLY ONE OF ENGLISH BIRTH.
crea:
from grapes. All the ingredients
of Dr. Price's Baking Powder
are printed on the label They
pure, healthful and proper.
Little Financial Transaction
Had Netted Widow. ’
f I'
■ . i
liveliest J
Yeod gee.
. ----------
Tjhe could chav^ more tobacco in * an ’ Kubbei (’ impany, which are positively
..hour than any man jn the village Seth Ki,a«aUteed u> return a 69 p8r ceht.
Wheath v t</ok him up Wall, as the ',nn"a! divlrt,*n<5> and—”
crowd was standing around ami |>et !' 1 ‘.Joni really s’potfe you can d<>
, ting on their favorites and «Seth 1
chawed 'up six plugs, a lirtie' pie’’cetS1,l‘ksrn,th ”
You see, the only man Tn (he
drawled
. , re-
Why, young man, yeoU are
Yeou just should have been f
Man With Golden Opportunity. Had
Called at Unfortunate Time.
“Now. niy dear sir." earnestly began
the sua-.e stranger, with the up-tilted
cigar and unauthenticated diamond,
engraved bonds
lean Milkweed
’ j ■
To Remove a Fslon.
The following clipped from th
don Lanqet is a relief from
s 3. felon: “As soon as the disease
INGERSOLL'S TRIBUTE TO LOVE. °T“ T*
I let it remain for six hours, at t
plration of which time, directly
the surface of the blister, may b
the felon which can be ini
taken out with the point of a
or a lancet.”
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
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.
Evans, Ashley. The Bonham News. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 101, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 13, 1909, newspaper, April 13, 1909; Bonham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1370782/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bonham Public Library.