Honey Grove Signal. (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, August 5, 1910 Page: 4 of 4
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The Tenderfoot Farmer
It was one of these experimental farmers, who put green
spectacles on his cow and fed her shavings. His theory
was that it didn't matter what the cow ate so long as she
was fed. The questions of digestion and nourishment had
not entered into his calculations.
It's only a "tenderfoot" farmer that would try such
an experiment with a cow. But many a farmer feeds him'
self regardless of digestion and nutrition. He might almost as well eat shav-
ings for all the good he gets out of his food. The result is that the stomach
grows "weak" the action of the organs of digestion and nutrition are impaired
and the man suffers the miseries of dyspepsia and the agonies of nervousness.
To strengthen the stomach, restore the activity of the or*
Hans of digestion and nutrition and brace up the nerves
use Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It is an un•
failing remedy, and has the confidence of physicians as
well as the praise of thousands healed by its use.
In the strictest sense "Golden Medical Discovery" is a temperance medi-
cine. It contains neither intoxicants nor narcotics, and is as free from alcohol
as from opium, cocaine and other dangerous drugs. All ingredients printed on
its outside wrapper.
Don't let a dealer delude you for his own profit. There is no medicine for
stomach, liver and blood "just as good" as "Golden Medical Discovery."
EARNED FORTUNE
WITH HOOPSKIRT
Joseph Thomas Enlarged Upon
Modest Bustle.
INVENTOR IN MANY LINES.
Death of Crinoline Creator Recalls
Evolution of Sewing Machine and Sul-
phur Match Maker—Was Native of
France, but Lived In America For
Sixty-four Years.
More than half a century ago two
men sat in a dingy room working hard
to perfect a contrivance for sewing,
and the result of their efforts was the
first sewing machine. One of the in-
ventors was Joseph Thomas, who died
recently at his home in Hoboken. He
was eighty-three years old and for the
last three months had been bedridden.
Thomas was an inventor of many
machines that have brought millions
to those who bought the patents, and
one of his ideas was the hoopskirt,
which was popular with women from
1850 to 1870. Thomas had always been
a keen observer, and in many instances
his wife aided him in inventions, tell-
ing him what was needed by women.
When he was a mere boy he noticed
the bustles worn by women, and when
out with his wife one day they talked
of the peculiarities of feminine fash-
ions. "I wouldn't wonder that they
would soon have bustles all around the
skirts," he remarked.
Fortune In Crinoline.
It was not long afterward that Thom-
as launched the hoopskirt, and he soon
found that even at $300 a dozen he
could not make them fast enough for
the demand. He was offered thou-
sands of dollars and first rejected all
offers. At that time he had several
other ideas, and when finally he re-
ceived an offer from a Philadelphia
concern of $50,000 he accepted it. That
amount of money meant a good deal to
a poor Inventor in those days, and
Thomas was regarded as one of the
coming millionaires. The Quaker City
firm made hundreds of thousands from
Thomas' invention. The idea went
from here to Europe and thence to Eu-
ropean countries.
Thomas then settled down to perfect
his other ideas, and the sewing ma-
chine came next He did not get any
money for that, as he was employed as
one of the draughtsmen in a machine
company. But he earned a big salary,
and his employer made a handsome
present to Thomas and George Blees,
the other inventor.
Thomas left the company when he
found he had enough money to devote
himself to other ideas. He realized
the necessity of a machine for the
manufacture of sulphur matches with-
out recourse to the old method of dip-
ping small sticks into a prepared so-
lution. He made the machine.
Inventor From Youth.
Thomas was nineteen years old
when he came to America from a
small town in the vicinity of Paris.
His father had made small Inventions,
and from the time the boy started go-
ing to school he showed a keen Inter-
est in all the different pieces of ma-
chinery. When Thomas arrived in this
country he had little money, and It
was while he was working in a ma-
chine shop in Paterson that he met his
wife. That was sixty-four years ago.
Thomas was a brother of General
Thomas, who fought with great dis-
tinction in the Franco-Prussian war.
The soldier brother received the Legion
of Honor from the French government
and was retired with other honors.
AMERICAN CANS POPULAR.
Malays Use Them For Every Imagin-
able Purpose.
To the Malay peninsula every year
go about 1,300,000 one gallon tin cans
containing American petroleum. Con-
sul General Du Bois of Singapore
.writes:
"Thousands of the cans are used as
water buckets. The Interior of a Ma-
lal, a Tamil or a Chinese home con-
tains American tin cans of all sizes
and shapes put to some useful purpose.
Sieves are made by puncturing holes.
Thousands of dustpans are made from
the cans by removing one side, curving
two sides and attaching a large wood-
en handle. Baking and cooking uten-
sils of air kinds are also skillfully
manufactured from them and may be
seen in thousands of homes.
"For storing articles of food against
ant onslaughts the tin can is a bless-
ing. Hundreds of men are engaged in
manufacturing tin cans into funnels,
pepper and salt casters, cocoanut and
nutmeg graters, lamps, biscuit tins, tea
and coffee pots, ladles, mugs, cake pat-
ties, Chinese pipes, oil pumps, money
boxes and the framework for false
teeth.
"So necessary has the American tin
can become to these people that to be
deprived of its manifold uses would
cause a real hardship."
Illinois to Boom Poultry.
As a result of action at a meeting of
the Illinois State Poultry association at
Springfield recently a department of
poultry may be established in connec-
tion with the state university at Ur-
bana. The members favorably passed
on a proposition to have drafted a bill
authorizing such a school and appro-
priating $10,000 for the purpose. Gov-
ernon Deneen promised his aid in bet-
tering poultry growing conditions in
Illinois.
ADVENTURE WITH A BEAR.
A Fishing Trip on Which There Was
One Passenger Too Many.
Two men on a hunting and fish-
ing trip in the province of Ontario
had an adventure with a bear which
is described by a writer in Recrea
tion. They were crossing a lake to-
ward their camp and steered to-
ward what they thought was the
burned end of a sunken log. It
proved, however, to be a large black
bear. He was swimming slowly, evi-
dently enjoying his cooling bath,
and in no hurry to go ashore. They
had no weapons and made their
plans to drive the bear toward their
camp, where their guide was at
work, and when within a few hun
dred feet of his rifle all would be
i right.
I A few quick strokes put our boat
between him and the edge of the
lake. We naturally supposed he
I would turn aside and let us drive
him before us. We were wrong in
our supposition. He swam right up
to the canoe and strove to go past
us. c
"Hit him and turn him againI"
called Bill. I raised myself m the
canoe, reached out and struck him
fair and hard on top of the head.
Unfortunately I struck too hard
and broke my paddle. The over-
reach upset the canoe, and over-
board went Bill and I.
When I came to the surface I
found the boat floating keel up and
but a few yards away frop me. I
managed to get back to it. Bill
was holding on to the stern. I had
hardly got a good grasp on the
canoe before I realized that we had
a new passenger. The bear had
crawled up on the floating boat.
Here was a nice state of affairs.
Two men, neither of them swim-
mers, clinging to the end of an up-
turned canoe, with a bear in the
center, apparently determined to
stay there.
"Shout for Tom and the rifle/'
suggested Bill.
There seemed nothing else to do,
and so we shouted. Our first "Hel-
lo !" disturbed the bear, and he
hugged the canoe a little closer.
The canoe had drifted near the
headland, and Tom was ready for
us. A few more minutes and we
were rid of our uninvited guest.
As Tom brought his rifle to sight
I crouched as low in the water as I
could. There was a puff of smoke,
the crack of the rifle and the dull
"pesh" that told of an unerring
aim. Bruin slipped down into the
water stone dead.
In less than five minutes Bill and
I were safe ashore and, save our
wetting, none the worse for an ex-
citing adventure.
Gave the Sign.
It was during the late Spanish-
American war. A wealthy merchant
who had left his business to offer
his services to his country was pac-
ing up and down on picket duty
one dark night. Suddenly he de-
tected sounds of approaching foot-
steps, and, quickly bringing his gun
into position, commanded in a so-
norous voice, "Give the counter-
sign !" The person challenged
proved to be an enlisted dry goods
clerk, formerly employed by the
merchant before the war broke out.
As their eyes met a smile played
around the corners of the clerk's
mouth and he answered in a low
whisper, "Cash!" Then the mer-
chant, bringing his piece to a right
shoulder, let him pass and resumed
his pacing.—-Detroit News-Tribune.
Professional Jealousy.
Brignoli, the famous singer, was
intensely jealous of all other ten-
ors, never admitting for an instant
that any one of them could sing
even passably well. When the hand-
some, talented Tom Karl burst
upon the New York stage Brignoli
turned up his nose.
"What do you think of Tom
Karl?" Tagliapietra asked him one
night.
"Oh, he is a very nice little boy,"
he replied with a shrug. "I like him
very much, but he has missed his
vocation. I think he was born to
be a policeman."
Karl was tall and of fine propor-
tions and was singing at the time
with Titiens in "La Favorita."
An Odd Word.
There is a most peculiar word of
five letters.
Take away the first letter and
you still have a bit left.
Administer a deathblow to the
second letter and you still have a
bit left.
Kidnap the third letter and you
have the whole of it left.
iWhat word is it ?
Habit.
Detective Work.
Scene, village Sunday school.
Clergyman questioning a lot of
small boys in a farming district.
Clergyman—How did Jacob know
that it was Joseph sending for him
from Egypt ?
Small Boy (excitedly—He seed
his name on the wagons.—London
{Tit-Bits.
Signal & Dallas News, $1.75
SLEEP IS EASY
ON TROLLEY LINE
No Smoke, Noise, Dust or Tips
In Illinois.
CORN BELT GARS ARE MODELS
Run From Peoria and St. Louis and
Have More Conveniences Than Are
Found on Pullmans—Nine Foot
Blankets and Sheets a Comfortable
Feature of Service.
Smokeless, dustless, noiseless sleep-
ing cars with "tipless porters" are now
in operation through the corn belt of
Illinois, running from Peoria, where
they make whisky, to St. Louis, which
produces beer. These cars are owned
and operated by the biggest electric
railway system In the world.
Besides the above Inducements, this
road serves Its sleeper passengers with
hot coffee and rolls in the morning,
and this service carries with it no ex-
tra charges.
It is the intention of this electric
road to safeguard its passengers from
monetary loss while on the sleepers.
A feature of the cars is a burglar proof
plush lined steel locker built In the
wall at the head of each berth. The
conductor holds one key and the pas-
senger the other.
Illinois System Leads.
Illinois now boasts the greatest ln-
terurban system in the United States,
operating over 500 miles of perfectly
ballasted track, doing a general ex-
press and freight business and build-
ing a $5,000,000 double track two mile
bridge across the Mississippi river at
St. Louis. This, when completed, will
be the heaviest and finest bridge to
span the river.
However, this is not a tale of the in-
terurban, but of what is asserted to be
the finest sleeping cars in the world.
Two of these have recently been com-
pleted by the American Car and Foun-
dry company at St. Charles, Mo.
These cars are trailers and are
drawn by a regular motorcar. This
does away with motor and air brake
compressor vibration and insures a
quiet ride. As the power is noiseless
and there is no ringing of bells or toot-
ing of whistles, a more comfortable
ride is given than on the steam roads.
The cars are fifty-six feet over all,
twelve feet nine inches high and nine
feet three inches wide. Instead of the
old familiar deck roof, a survival of
the horse car days, these cars have
what is known as the turtle back mon-
itor roof. The side walls go flush to
the roof line, and the roof is rounded.
The outside of the car seems peculiar
owing to the roof and the windows in
the upper berths. There are two of
these in each berth. These windows
are double and are equipped with
screens. At the head and foot of each
berth in the roof there is a ventilator
which can be opened and closed by
the passenger. These features make
the upper berths as attractive as the
lower and obviate that suffocating ef-
fect so noticeable in ordinary cars.
At one end of the car are a smoking
room and toilet facilities for the men,
and at the other are the women's toilet
room, a heat compartment and linen
lockers. The two end compartments
are equipped with the National sleeper
sections, which in the daytime make
up into seats similar to those in use on
the Pullmans.
Long Sheets and Blankets.
Besides the regulation berth curtains
there are separate curtains for each
upper and lower berth. There is a call
bell in each berth, and the deck lights
in the top of the car are arranged so
that the light will not shine into the
upper berths. The sheets and blankets
adhere to the Kansas law and are all
nine feet in length. The cars through-
out are furnished In solid mahogany.
Each berth Is supplied with berth
lights, current for which is supplied
from storage batteries. This Insures
a steady light for reading.
The present service is between Peo-
ria and St. Louis, a distance of 193
miles. The cars leave each terminal
at 11:30 p. m., arriving at 6:30 a. m.
Regular Pullman rates are charged,
with the exception that a reduction of
25 cents is made for the uppers.
LONDON USING TELEWRITER.
Users Write Message Instead of Talk-
ing Into Phone.
London has beaten New York in one
feature of up-to-dateness. It has the
first "telewriter" exchange in the
world, which was recently opened.
The telewriter is a device for writ-
ing by wire. One subscriber to the
service calls the number of another
through a telephone attachment on
the new machine and then sits down
and writes what he wants to say, the
message appearing on a roll of paper
at the other end of the line.
So far London has only forty sub-
scribers to the new system, confined
to a small section of the business cen-
ter, but before long it is hoped to ex-
tend the wires all over the city and to
make the service as general as the
telephone.
Sparrow Hawks Kill Sparrows.
With a pair of sparrow hawks at-
tached to long cords so that they
can't get away Thomas Champ of
Salisbury, Lancaster county, Pa., is
clearing his place of the pesky spar-
row.
The Laziest Man in the World
would not be contented to be
sept in the house and doing
nothing by rheumatism. Neither
are you, who are always busy and
active. Then don't neglect the
first twinge of an ache or pain
that you might think is just a
'crick." Rub well with Ballard's
Snow Liniment and no matter
what the trouble is, it will dis-
appear at once. Sold by Honey
Grove Pharmacy.
E. & W. Collars have long
3een the standard. We have
them in every shape, style and
size. The price is two for a
quarter.—Wilkins, Wood & Pat-
teson.
Sharpless tubular cream separ-
ators, most durable, simplest and
easiest to clean. — Richardson-
Blocker Hardware Co,
The Only
Real Painting
is "White-Leading"
CONSIDER the
subject of paint-
ing: in its broad-
er sense — in its
Permanent re-
lation to your
property.
^[Estimates
should not be based on
"painting" merely, in which
the paint used may be good
or bad, but on "white-
leading," which can only
mean "painting with pure
white lead and linseed oil/'
Collier
Pure White Lead ("Dutch
Boy Painter" trade-mark
manifests its superiority not
only in its non-cracking,
non-chipping finish, but in
holding colors fadeless and
weather-proof.
•INor do you have to
double your next appropri-
ation for painting by paying
for burning off f&e~ old
paint, as is frequently the
case with "painting," for
"white-leading" gives an
ideal foundation for subse-
quent painting.
€| Specify "Dutch Boy
Painter" Pure "White Lead,
the surest and most eco-
nomical paint for you, the
fairest to your painter.
To anyone interested, we will
send, free, valuable literature on
white leading, including "Dutch
Boy Paint Adviser
National Lead Company
722 Chestnut St. St. Louii, Mo.
CANDY OF OTHER DAYS.
A Packet of Sugar at On* Time Was a
Costly Present.
Before the general use of sugar
it is evident that the varieties of
sweets, as we understand the term,
must have been limited. Even when
sugar became known its price—-ac-
cording to some authorities, equal
to about $7.50 a pound of our mon-
ey—must have made it the luxury
of the wealthy. It is true, how-
ever, that there are in use today,
though in different combinations,
verv many of the ancient equiva-
lents for sweets. The various deli-
cacies "au miel et pistache" are
only another form of the honey and
nuts or almonds of which the ear-
liest records tell us. It is also prob-
able that the candied fruits espe-
cially in evidence at this time dif-
fer only slightly from the melipek-
ta and dulciaria of the Greeks and
Romans.
But when sugar came into gen-
eral use sweets blossomed forth in
a thousand varieties. Indeed, "thou-
sand" is scarcely the word, if we
are to take the word of the Span-
ish confectioner's play in Beaumont
and Fletcher's play, who declared
that he could "teach sugar to slip
down your throat in a million
ways." Other old dramatists give
us here and there allusions to the
taste for sweets that came in with
the time of Elizabeth.
One of the servants of old Capu-
let begs his comrade to save him a
piece of marchpane. There are not
wanting authorities to assure us
that the "pretty little kickshaws"
that Swallow, justice of the peace,
bade to be brought into the arbor
were a recognized description of
sweets. In other writers of the
times we meet with constant refer-
ences to "kissing comfits," and we
learn that these were not, as the
name might indicate, twisted up in
colored paper and called "kisses,"
such as are still to be found in old
fashioned candy shops in our own
country, but that they partook
rather of the nature of our aro-
matic cachous. Even the "sweet po-
tatoes" so affected by Falstaff were
not improbably more or less what
we now call crystallized and were
eaten much as we eat preserved
quinces and apricots.
A packet of sugar was at one
time a costlyjpresent to make even
to royalty. History tells us of the
"comfit box" that the great Guise
missed as he was enticed to his
doom.—Harper's Weekly.
Spelling as Hard Work.
Most people study the spelling
jook with more or less assiduity
during their school days, varying
the process by occasional mental
dips into the dictionary. Then they
devote the rest of their lives to
forgetting what they have learned.
If in doubt when writing a letter as
i;o whether the "e" or the "i" comes
first in some such word as "niece"
they take a chance at it, arguing
that the recipient of the communi-
cation will understand what is
meant and probably will not know
whether the word is spelled right
or wrong. About seven times out
of ten the theory will hold good.
If any one doubts the large amount
of popular ignorance on the sub-
ject he may convince himself as to
its prevalence by a little quiet
observation. — Louisville Courier-
Journal.
DOUftT DISAPPEARS.
No One in Honey Grove Who Has
Bad Back Can Ignore This
Double Proof.
Does your back ever ache?
Have you suspected your kid
neys?
Backache is kidney ache.
With it comes dizzy spells.
Sleepless nights, tired, du
days,
Distressing urinary disorders.
Cure the kidneys to cure it all.
Doan's Kidney Pills bring quick
relief,
Bring thorough, lasting cures
That's what Honey Grove suf-
ferers want.
Profit then by another's testi
mony,
Twice-told and well confirmed
F. M. Lester, of Mineola, near
Honey Grove, Texas, says:
was troubled by kidney complaint
for some time, I had a constant
desire to void the kidney secre-
tions, but they were scanty at
times and passed with a burning
sensation. The use of two boxes
of Doan's Kidney Pills regulatec
the passages of the kidney secre
tions and stopped the burning
pain when being voided: I glad
ly recommend Doan's Kidney
Pills."
For sale by all dealers. Price
50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co.
Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for
the United States.
Remember the name—Doan's
—and take no other.
Sorg Scales Not Broke.
In contradicting the reports
circulated throughout this section
of the country a few months ago
regarding the alleged heavy losses
of Sorg Scales, the Paris man
, who played the cotton market in
| New York last year so success
I fully, Sterling Price, of this city,
one who has perhaps been in
as close touch with Mr. Scales as
any other man, repudiates the
report and claims that Sorg Scales
has enough wealth in actual cash
on hand to buy half the business
buildings in Paris and then have
more money left to his bank ac-
count than he could spend in the
remainder of his life.
Mr. Price says that when the
speculators thought they had
Scales on the run he was hedg
ing rapidly on the opposite side
of the market through his brok-
ers and when the game was over
he cashed in three times as much
as his losses amounted to.
Scales is estimated as easily
worth eight millions of dollars
and his success was so great last
season that he is now recognized
as the leader on Wall street and
the- best posted man on cotton on
the exchange.
Sterling Price predicts a big
cotton crop in this section this
fall, in other places it will not be
so great, but the price he says
will also be above the average.
Paris Advocate.
Baby Morphine Fiends
are made by all soothing syrups
and baby medicines that contain
opium and narcotics. McGee's
!3aby Elixir contains no injurious
or narcotic drugs of any kind.
A sure and safe cure for dis-
ordered stomachs, bowels and
fretfulness—splendid for teeth-
ing infants. Sold by. Honey
Grove Pharmacy.
Prairie Hay—First Class hay,
::ree from wiregrass, for sale at
the press on the Braden Meadow
at $10.00 per ton. Terms, cash
or satisfactory note. Ph ne or
call on J. A. Underwood.
Advertised Letters.
List of letters remaining un
claimed in the Honey Grove, Tex-
as, postoffice July 25, 1910. If
not called for in two weeks will
be sen't to the Dead Letter Office.
Call for 4'advertised" letters.
One cent charged for the delivery
of each piece.
Gentlemen:—W. T. Allen, R.
Carlisle, Guss Carter, G. F.
Davis, H. T. Denson, O. C. Ellis,
Walter Fleminan, J. F. Holt,
William Tomson, L. A. Watts,
G. S. Watts, W. H. Watts, Wall's
Drug Store, C. T. Wall, W. T.
Wilkins, M. W. Wilkerson, Carl
Young. Ladies:—M r s. Mollie
Bogan, Miss Isly Johnes, Miss
Nina Ried, Miss Pearl Simpson,
Mrs. Mary Stull, Mrs. Millie
Williams, Miss Grace Young.
T. D. Bloys, P. M.
goes to
to'' cure
Took All His Money.
Often all a man earns
doctors or for medicines,
a Stomach, Liver or Kidney
trouble that Dr. Kings New Life
Pills would quickly cure at slight
cost. Best for Dyspepsia, Indi-
gestion, Billiousness, Constipa-
tion, Jaundice, Malaria, and De-
bility. 25c at Black & Little's.
Let wonderful WASHWAX do
your family washing; saves rub-
bing and saves the clothes;
makes them clean, sweet and
snowy white. WASHWAX is a
new scientific compound that
washes in hot or cold water with-
out the use of soap. It is entire-
ly harmless and different from
anything you have ever used.
Send ten cents stamps today for
regular size by mail. You will
be glad you tried it. Agents
wanted to introduce WASHWAX
everywhere. Address Washwax
Co., St. Louis, Mo.
Call when you want to figure
on anything in the general hard-
ware line we can supply at the
best prices. —The Underwood Co
Our "Lovers Delight" is some-
thing that out classes them all—
only 10c too. — Black & Little.
Facts
r poultry to remain sick
a day.
They give you less results in beef,
pork, work, or eggs, when they are
not in perfect health. Take a little
interest in your own pocket book
and doctor them up with
Black-Draught
Stock and Poultry
Medicine
It will pay you to do this.
It has paid thousands of other
successful farmers and stock and
poultry raisers.
This famous remedy is not a
food, but a genuine, scientific med-
icine prepared from medicinal herbs
and roots, acting on the liver, kid-
neys, bowels and digestive organs.
Sold by all druggists, price 25
cents, 50 cents and $1. per can.
;3®-Write for valuable book: "Success
with Stock and Poultry.'' Sent free for a
postal. Address Black-Draught Stock
Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.
THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS.
Co-Educational. Tuition Fee.
ANNUAL EXPENSES, $180 AND
UPWARDS.
Main University, Austin;
Session opens Wednesday,
September 28, 1910.
COLLEGE OF ARTS: Courses lead-
ing to the Degrees of Bachelor and
Master of Arts and Doctor of Philos
ophy.
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Professional courses for teachers,
leading to elementary and permanent
certificates.
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT: De
gree courses in civil, electrical and
mining engineering.
LAW DEPARTMENT (In its new
building): Three-year course, lead-
ing to Degree of Bachelor of Laws,
with State license; course leading to
Degree of Master of Laws.
SUMMER SCHOOL: Regular Univer-
sity and Normal courses ;seven weeks.
Session 1911 beging June 17.
For catalogue, address
THE REGISTRAR,
University Station, Austin.
DEPARTMENT OF EXTENSION: I.
Correspondence Division; offers cours-
es in various subjects. Students may
enroll at any time. II. Public Dis
cussion and Information Division;
furnishes bibliographies and traveling
libraries on current problems. III.
Lecture Division; offers popular lec-
tures by members of the University
Faculty.
For catalogue, address
THE DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION,
University Station, Austin.
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT,
Galveston.
Session, eight months, opening Septem-
ber 27th. Four-year course in medi-
cine; two-year course in pharmacy;
three-year course in nursing. Thor-
ough laboratory training. Exceptional
clinical faculties in John Sealy Hos-
pital. University Hall, a dormitory
for women students of medicine.
For catalogue, address
THE DEAN, Medical College.
Citation by Publication.
The State of Texas.
To the Sheriff or any Constable
of Fannin County—Greeting:
You are hereby commanded,
That, by making publication of
this Citation in some newspaper
published in the County of Fan-
nin, for four weeks previous to
the return day hereof, you sum-
mon Bee Payne, to be and appear
before the District Court, to be
lolden in and for the county of
tannin, at the court house there-
of, in the town of Bonham, on
the third Monday in August,
1910, it being the 15th day of
August, 1910, then and there to
answer a petition filed in said
Court on the 8th day of July,
' .910, in a suit numbered on the
■ Docket of said Court No. 6752
wherein Lizzie Payne is plaintiff,
and Bee Payne is defendant, the
nature of plaintiff's demand be-
ing a suit for divorce, alleging
as grounds therefor abandon-
ment on the part of the defend-
ant; plaintiff has filed her affida-
vit that she does not know the
residence of defendant and asks
:?or citation by publication in this
cause.
Herein fail not, but have you
then and there before said court
on the said first day of the next
term thereof, this Writ, with
your return thereon, showing
low you have executed the same.
Witness: E. S. McAlester,Clerk
of the District Court of Fannin
County.
Given under my hand and seal
of said Court, in Bonham, this
the 15th day of July, 1910.
E. S. McAlester,
Clerk District Court, Fannin Co.,
Texas.
BALLARD'S \
i SNOW :
\ LINIMENT |
J WILL CURE |
% Rheumatism, Cuts, Sprains, Stiff £
♦ Joints, Old Sores, Wounds, Neural- ♦
X &ia, Contracted Muscles, Etc., ♦
4 Mr. ErnestS. Ware, Qullcene, Wash. %
$ writes:—I had Neuralgia in my arm some ^
time ago, which lasted about a month. It ^
was so severe at times that I could not work &
€> at all. I tried several medicines, but could ^
find none to relieve me until 1 tried Ballard's 4
Snow Liniment. After two or three appli- +
cations I was relieved and soon got well. £
i PRICE 25c, 50c AND $1.00 ^
X Ballard Snow Liniment Co., 2
J ST. LOUIS, MO. J
♦♦♦♦ Sold and Recommended by ♦♦♦♦
HONEY GROVE PHARMACY.
GEO. W. WILSON
VETERINARY SURGEON,.
Office at Bryan's Livery Stable, Phone
39—3. Calls answered day and night
Special attention given to horse den-
tistry ,
1'Mjlil
MADE AT HOME
OF THE BEST MATERIALS
B
SADDLES
HARNESS
H
Bring Your Repairing to
A Dftf'C HARNESS AND
OLAIxlV 9 SHOE SHOP
Pale-Faced Women
You ladies, who have pale faces, sallow complexions,
dark circles under eyes, drawn features and tired, worn-
out expressions, you need a tonic.
The tonic you need is Cardui, the woman's tonic.
It is the best tonic for women, because its ingredients
are specifically adapted for women's needs. They act on
the womanly organs and help to give needed strength and
vitality to the worn-out womanly frame.
Cardui is a vegetable medicine. It contains no min-
erals, no iron, no potassium, no lime, no glycerin, no dan-
gerous, or habit-forming drugs of any kind.
It is perfectly harmless and safe, for young and old to use
1± CARDUI
143
The Woman's Tonic
"After my doctor had done all he said he could for me,"
writes Mrs. Wm. Hilliard, of Mountainburg, Ark., "I took Car-
dui, on the advice of a friend, and it helped me so much.
"Before taking Cardui, I had suffered from female
troubles for five years, but since taking it, I am in good health.
"I think there is some of the best advice in your book
that I ever saw." Your druggist sells Cardui. Try it
Write to: Ladles' Advisory Dept., Chattutoet Medicine Co., Chfttttnton. Tenn.,
{or Special Instructions, and 64-bage book, Trooe Treatment lor Women, seal irca.
UNDERTAKING
A full line of Coffiins and Caskets.
Every Grade and Price. Burial
Robes and all other Undertaking
Goods.
South Side of Square.
COOPER
COMMERCE
GREENVILLE
TERRELL
KAUFMAN
ENNIS
are best reached via
Paris and
Double Daily Service
Leaves Paris
5:20 a. m., 4:15 p. m.
F, B. McKAY,
G. P. A.
Terrell, Texas.
Announcem e nts
For Representative No. 1
Sam Rayburn
For Sheriff
W. B. Leeman
For County Judge
Rosser Thomas
For County Superintendent
R. M. Parker
For County Clerk
John T. Fitzgerald
For County Attorney
S. F. Leslie
For Tax Assessor
W. C. Finley
WHITBY
r, jP**/
THE GUARANTEED
WORM
REMEDY
THE CHILDREN'S FAVORITE TONIC.
BEWARE Cr iM'TATIONS.
THE GENUINE PREP'.HCD OlilV BV
UiUard-Snow f Iniment Ce?
e~r. i onif . tvso
Sold and recommended by
Honey Grove Pharmacy
Electric
Bitters
Succeed when everything else fails.
In nervous prostration and female
weaknesses they are the supreme
remedy, as thousands have testified.
FOR KIDNEY,LIVER AND
STOMACH TROUBLE
it is the best medicine ever sold
over a druggist's counter.
For Tax Collector
E. B. Thomas
For District Clerk
Earl McAlester
For Commissioner
Geo. T. Shaw
For Cotton Weigher
Frank Newberry
For Constable
W. F. Martin
For Justice of the Peaoe.
Jno. T.Damron
Best J-J A
Substitute Purely
For Vegetable
Calomel jj"^ P.-epa ration
HERBINE
CURES
malaria.
CHILL?
AND
FEVER
bal^ARD SlSC
ST. LOU5S.
Sold and i(<
AND \JJ
i ve a
COMF1 AilfRfcJ
QUICKLY.
PRICE 50c.
'TM£.NT CO. II
SSOURL
si by
HONEY GROVE PHARMACY
Signal and Dallas News $1.75.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Lowry, J. H. Honey Grove Signal. (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, August 5, 1910, newspaper, August 5, 1910; Honey Grove, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth357260/m1/4/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Honey Grove Preservation League.