Honey Grove Signal. (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, June 16, 1905 Page: 4 of 4
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./£V£gefable Prepacationfor As-
similating liieFoodandRegula-
ting the StomacJis ancLBowels of
Infants /Children
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful-
ness andRest.Contains neither
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral.
Not^Nartotic.
Jbcye OldJtirSAMUEL PITCHER
Pumpkm Seed"
Mx.Stnnet *
RodielU Satis —
utilise Seed- *
JihnpSeed-
ftSS&gfPLv:
A perfect Remedy forConstipa-
Tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms;Convulsions feverish-
ness and Loss OF SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature of
NEW' YORK.
Atb rnoulhs old
J5 Hosts - 35Clints
JDCSC^feQpy^WiAEgJEa.
teas*.
CAST0R1A
For Infants and Children,
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY.
Traveling schools for farmers’ daugh-
ters, which teach scientific housekeep-
ing, cooking and the like, have recently
been established in various German
provinces. The German peasant farm-
house gives little opportunity for prog-
ress in domestic culture. As a rule,
the peasant homes are huts iu com-
parison with American farmhouses,
bread comes from the baker, and meat,
ready cooked, from the store in the
shape of sausages. And the girls work
in the fields, too, which is another
drawback not known to American
homes.
Our old friend, the Grand Duke
Alexis, declares that Russia Is taking
her military setbacks philosophically'
and preparing to have revenge. Within
ten years from the present date he
says Russia will possess twenty-five
first class battleships, forty of the
swiftest armored cruisers afloat and
Innumerable torpedo boats, destroyers
and submarines. She will also have
1,000,000 soldiers in Asia and proceed
to annihilate little Japan.
Attention.
Christian endeaverors going to
Baltimore Convention, July 5-10.
The Transportation Committed
has selected as the Official Route
for the Texs Delegates as the
Frisco System to St. Louis,
thence Pennsylvania R. R. to
Baltimore. The official Party will
leave Fort Worth 10.50 A.M.,
July 3rd, arriving Baltimore 3.55
P.M. July 5th. It is earnestly re-
quested that all those going notify
the undesigned At Once, in order
that sleeping-car accommodations
and other arrangements may be
made. John R. Reeves,
Box 15, FortWorth, Texas.
It is estimated that a canal to con-
nect, Lake Michigan with the Missis-
sippi would cost $25,'000,000. If this
great waterway is constructed it will
not stop long until the Missouri is
reached. Some day the value of canals
{Will be greatly appreciated iu this
country. They afford a cheap method
Of transporting freight and compel rail-
roads to reduce their freight rates.
Spain’s Awakening.
The visit of the boy king of Spain
to England and his diligent study of
English “as she is spoke” in America
is taken by the world as an indication
that the young monarch may nurse an
ambition to restore the ancient glories
of Ms realm. Stranger things have
happened. Spain once owned half the
world and gave birth to mighty men
This ambition of Alfonso may have re
latlon to a movement in Latin America
for a union of Spanish elements.
A newspaper correspondent writing
from Havana to the Boston Transcript
believes that the Spaniards in Cuba
are uniting to combat the Americaniza-
tion of the island and are stimulating
their countrymen in neighboring lands
to co-operate. He says that Cuba is
trying to fill the country with Spanish
natives to drive out the Americans and
that Cuban consuls are traveling over
Spain to stimulate immigration. Last
year 15,000- immigrants arrived from
Spain, and for the first three months
of 1905 the arrivals averaged 3,000
month. A new pride of race, a new
interest in the old land is noticeable,
and it is whispered that some day
Spain will be back in Cuba and all
Latin America will welcome the
change.
Speculation and Banking.
Comptroller of the Currency Ridgley
recently exclaimed before the Na-
tional Association of Bank Cashiers,
“Speculation is the curse of the day.”
The comptroller was preaching a little
sermon on bank frauds and while the
remark may be taken as due to the
heat of argument there is food In it for
everyday reflection. Banking, in the
minds of many, stands primarily for
speculation. This is of course not
true. The ideal banker, like the ideal
In any business, is the careful, conser-
vative man. Rapid financiers may be
cried loudly after In the street, but the
level headed man with capital to In-
vest or cash to lay away safely goes
to the quiet and unobtrusive man of
business for advice. True banking
methods encourage a respect for
money and an appreciation of it as
permanent treasure. The love of
money is often confounded with love
of what money can buy. People with
a rage for speculation do not seek so
much money for its own sake as the
luxury and indulgence to be obtained
by the means of it. The craze for in-
dulgence blunts the sense of caution
and the speculator is lost through the
power of his appetite and not through
primary love of money. Banking is
based upon the Idea that the average
man will work his best for the produc-
tion of real wealth and will safeguard
his earnings. Real prosperity is of slow
growth and the possibility of enjoying,,,
unearned wealth is the temptation
which spells ruin to those who give
way to It.
CONSUMPTION’S WARNING
-v-
Inside facts soon become evident in outside
symptoms.—Dr. G. G. Greek.
QThe aid of scientific inventions is not
needed to determine whether your lungs
are affected. The first symptoms can be
readily noted by anyone of average in-
telligence.
<JThere is no disease known that gives so
many plain warnings of its approach as
consumption, and no serious disease that
can be so quickly reached and checked,
if the medicine used is Dr. Boschee’s
German Syrup, which is made to cure
consumption.
<JIt is in the early stages that German
Syrup should be taken, when warnings
are given in the cough that won’t quit,
the congestion of the bronchial tubes and
the gradual weakening of the lungs, ac-
companied by frequent expectoration.
<JBut no matter how deep-seated your
cough, even if dread consumption has
already attacked your lungs, German
Syrup null surely effect a cure—as it has
done before in thousands of apparently
hopeless cases of lung trouble.
<JNew trial bottles, 25c. Regular size,
75c. At all druggists. a
For sale by Black <& Little.
Have You A Cough?
A dose of Ballard’s Horehound
Syrup will relieve it. Have you
a cold? A dose of Herbine at bed
time and frequent small doses of
Horehound Syrup during the
day will remove it. . Try it for
whooping cough, for asthma, for
consumption, for bronchitis.
Mrs. Joe McGrath, 327 E. 1st
street, Hutchinson, Kan., writes:
“I have used Ballards Horehound
Syrup in my family for 5 years,
and find it the best and most
palatable medicine I ever used.”
25c, 50c, $1.00. Sold by Black
& Little.
Not all of the enterprising Japs are
fighting Russia it would seem from an
account furnished by the United States
consul at Tamsui, Formosa. A Jap-
anese capitalist is about to invest
$400,000 In the purchase and cultiva-
tion of 50,000 acres of Texas land and
.Will employ his countrymen in raising
rice, fruit and vegetables on a large
scale.
Judging from the “smart” career of
the Jap who was recently extradited
for embezzling $6,000 belonging to the
Hawaiian Trust company, it looks as
though the Yankees of the east had not
Ignored any art In their zeal for copy-
ing western civilization.
The existence of plants which are
sensative to atmospheric changes has
long been known to science, but it re-
mained for an Austrian investigator to
bring out a plant substitute for the
weather prophet. The new system is
founded on the sensitiveness of the
Abrus precatorius, which, the discoverer
says, is reliable for indicating in ad-
vance fair weather, rain, low wind and
tempests both on land and sea.
The historic bells of Chertsey parish
church, in England, which inspired
Rosa Thorpe to write the famous
poem, “Curfew Must Not Ring To-
night,” lately stopped ringing, as the
frame of the belfry is crumbling and
must be rebuilt. Two of the eight
bells in the chime are 600 years old,
and one of the two sounded the curfew
In the days when its ringing meant
something.
Signal and Republic $1.60
May Mant
The best fitte:
L. Erwin & C >’s>
patterns 10c each,
vand styles at S.
Acute Rheumatism.
Deep tearing or wrenching
pains, occasioned by getting wet
through; worse when at rest, or
on first moving the limbs and in
cold or damp weather, is cured
quickly by Ballard’s Snow Lini-
ment. Oscar Oleson, Gibson City
Illnios, writes, Feb. 16, 1902 “A
year ago I was troubled with
pain in my back. It soon got so
bad I could not bend over. One
bottle of Ballard’s Snow Liniment
cured me.” 25c, 50c, $1.00. Sold
by Black & Little.
Tunnel Building.
The piercing of the Alps at the Sim-
plon pass, the bold railroad enterprise
to connect Manhattan and Long Is
land by subaqueous tubes and the
completion of the East Boston tunnel
under the Charles river have stimulat-
ed interest in this new means of com-
munication, and daring engineers are
seeking new fields of conquest. One
immediate effect of recent engineering
triumphs has been the revival of the
old plan for a tunnel under Bering
strait to furnish all rail communication
between the two hemispheres.
A more practical movement than the
Bering strait plan and one, like that,
to interest Canadians especially, is the
revival of the agitation among the
Prince Edward Islanders for better
communication between that populous
but isolated province and the main-
land of the Dominion. The Island is
separated from New Brunswick by a
waterway six miles wide at its nar-
rowest part and only navigable in
winter with the most powerful ice
boats. A railway tunnel plan has long
been talked of, and It is figured that
with cheaper and better working meth-
ods now In use the scheme could be
put through for $.10,000,000, the inter-
est on which would be no more than
the present annual cost of maintaining
inefficient winter communication. If
this project should go through It would
be the first tunnel to be pushed a great
distance under the sea.
In Mad Chase.
Millions rush in mad chase aft-
er health, from one extreme of
faddism to another, when, if they
would only eat good food, and
keep their bowels regular with
Dr. King’s New Life Pills, their
troubles would all pass away.
Promt relief and quick cure for
liver and stomach trouble. 25c
at drug store; guaranteed. Black
& Little.
The United States senate at the last
session officially placed the words
“civil war” on the records to designate
the struggle between the states in
preference to the more common term,
war of the rebellion.” The suggestion
came from a southern member iu the
form of an amendment and was ac-
cepted by a northern senator as being
“more courteous.”
Wire Owns the P&j
A member of the Canadian parlia-
ment recently raised a note of alarm
as to the ownership of the north pole,
taking the ground that the United
States has deep designs with respect to
icy arctic. In the course of the de-
bate which followed it was agi‘eed that
Canada owns the north pole simply be-
cause she owns tei’ritory adjacent to
polar waters. By the same course of
reasoning other nations besides Great
Britain have claims on the frozen
north.
The United States territory of Alas-
ka Is adjacent to polar waters, so is
Siberia, Greenland and Norway. Rus-
sia, Denmark and Sweden-Norway
will be equally interested Avith the
United States in heading off the Cana-
dian claim. If naval airships ever
start in business perhaps the first in-
ternational scrap will be over this
unique dispute. It Is not at all likely
that ordinary battleships will be able
to get together under the conditions
existing In polar waters.
Ideal Cool Places in Summer Time.
In the mountains of Virginia, Ten-
nessee and the Carolinas there are lo-
cated many delightful resorts, whose
situation is ideal in summer time,; be-
ing free from the scorching heat which
makes midsummer a time to be dread-
ed. In this beautiful mountain
country summer is a period of coolness
and comfort, pleasant and agreeable to
the invalid or full of attractiveness to
the healthy and vigorous. Here are
ample accommodations to suit every
taste and requirement, from the best
hotel to the quiet, comfortable farm
house.
This region is best reached via the
SOUTHERN RAIL AY, with its fre-
quent trains and excellent service.
Write for their Summer Folder and
other literature, containing compre-
hensive and detailed information, be-
fore deciding upon your summer’s out
ing. M. H. BONE,
Western Pass. Agt., Dallas, Texas
The New German Tariff Law.
Under the new German tariff law so
el ten referred to as detrimental to
American commerce the United States
will stand at a disadvantage In com-
peting with Germany’s trade in cer-
tain products now exported in large
quantities. On the 1st day of March,
1906, the German tariff law of. 1902
will go into effect with this country,
ending the present ax*rangement, which
dates from 1828. On the same day
special tariff conventions negotiated
by Germany with Italy, Belgium,
Roumania, Switzerland, Servia, Austria-
Hungary and Russia will also become
operative. By these' conventions con-
cessions are granted whieh the United
States exporters will not enjoy.
Under the nevr arrangement cereals,
meats and some other food products
are to be admitted from the seven
special treaty countries named, at
rates much lower than these products
will have* to pay If imported from the
United States, In some cases less than
half. Next year the duty on Ameri-
can Avheat imported by Germany will
be $1.78 per 100 kilograms (220.4
pounds), as against 83 cents in 1904.
At the same time wheat from Russia
and Austria-Hungary will j?ay only
$1.30 per 100 kilograms. Corn next
year Avill pay $1.19 per 100 kilograms,
as against 38 cents in 1904, while corn
from the special treaty countries may
71 cents. American apples,
admitted free, will pay
s under the new law and
more than double the rates
of the favored countries. German ex-
L,uuc* enteij*^71
doughnuts, with which many a man stuffs
his stomach 'under the name of “quicj
lunch.” The quickest way back^tc ■
ports to the United States are now .Sou4V4 *s
.The story is told of an old Roman hero
who desired to found a great city, and for
a sum of gold ha purchased from a bar-
barian tribe as much land as he could
cover with the skin of an ox. By cutting
the hide skilfully into one long strip, he
encompassed enough space to establish a
stronghold. The human skin is full of
little tubes, which are called sweat-
glands. If all these glands were unrav-
elled and laid end to end, they would be
long enough to fence in an area of over a
square mile! When they are all working
properly they rid the body of two quarts
of poisonous matter every 24 hours. If
the surface of the skin is not kept clean
and the mouths of these minute tubes
open and free, all the substances ex-
tracted from the blood Avill be forced back
into the system. .........
rubbing avi
the inside also deeds attention.
Picrse’s Golden Medical Discovery and
“Pleasant Pellets ” relieve the glands of
much unnecessary Avork, bv opening up
the bowels and kidneys. The strain is
relieved; the bloom of youth returns; the
mind feels clearer, and the body becomes
stronger and more able to resist disease.
The common sign of the business man’s
slavery is “ weak stomach,” the natural
consequence of the rapid eating, the in-
digestible pastry, the coffee and pie or
Follow The Flag
WABASH ROUTE
THROUGH SLEEPERS
—T0-
New York, Boston, Buffalo, Niagara Falls,
Detroit, Chicago, Canada, and
the Northwest.
The Shortest, Quickest and Only Line from St. Louis or Kansas City
running over its Own Tracks to Niagara Falls or Buffalo.
TIME AND EQUIPMENT UNEXCELLED.
SEE THIS SCHEDULE:
Leaving St. LOuis............9:01 a m........12:30 p m........9:05 p m..........11:32 p m
Arriving at Detroit.......8:20 p m........11:40 p m........9:30 a m..........12:01 p m
Arriving at Buffalo.......4:30 a m........ 7:34 a m........7:00 p m......... 7:50 pm
Arriving at New York..3:50 p m........ 7:30 p m.......8:06 a m.......... 7:45 a m
Arriving at Boston 5:20pm .......9:50 a m..........10:10 a m
Unexcelled Service Between St. Louis and Chicago.
Leave St. Louis..............9 :32 a m ........9:17 p m..........11 ;32 p m
Arrive m Chicago........5:30 p m ........7 ;30 a m.......... 8:00 a m
St. Louis, St. Paul and Minneapolis Limited.
Leaving St. Louis.......... 2:02 p m Leaving St. Paul................7:10 p m
Arriving at Minneapolis.. 8:15 p m Leaving Minneapolis........7:45 p m
Arriving in St. Paul.........8 :50 a m Arriving in St. Louis.........2:00 p m
The^ New Pittsburg Line.
Leave St. Louis............9 :01 a m..........2:34 a m..........12 ;32 a m............8 :30 p m
Arrive Toledo..............7:45 a m.........,2:25 a in........-11 :Q5 d m............8 :40 a m
—Arrive Pittsburg........6 :25 a m .......... 6:25 a m............4 :UU p m
Stopover allowed on all through tickets at Detroit and Niagara Falls
Meals served in Wabash Palace Dining Cars. Hours of valuable
time saved by purchasing tickets via WABASH. Consult ticket agents
of connecting lines or address
W. P, CONNER, S. W.
395 Main St., Room 202.
P, A.,
DALiAs,^mr
more than doubled by our exports
Germany. It is stated that Germany
would make concessions to the United
States in return for similar concessions
to German importations.
Going North Soon?
If so, you ought to look into the low
round trip rates via the Frisco. The
following are all top-notchers:
Louisville, Ky., (Veterans Reunion)
one cent per mile rate. Tickets on sale
June 9, 10, 11, and 12, good to return
July 10th.
Toronto, Canada, (on the Lakes), one
fare plus $2.00. Tickets on sale June
18, 19, 21, and 22, good to return August
31st.
Indianapolis, Ind., one fare plus $2
Tickets on sale June 19 to 22, good
return June 29th.
Asbury Park, N. J., (sea shore), one
fare plus $3.35. Tickets on sale June
28, 29, 30, and July 1, good to return
August 31st.
Baltimore, Md., one fare plus $2.00.
Tickets on sale July 1, 2, and 3, good to
return August 31st.
Buffalo, N. Y., one fare plus $2.00
Tickets on sale July 7, 8, and 9, good
returning August 4th.
You travel on the finest trains run-
ning out of Texas, Harvey dining ser-
vice, through sleepers and chair cars
electric fans. C W. Strain,
Gen’l Pass. Agent, Ft. AVorth, Texas
Barrie, the novelist and dramatist,
has just turned forty-five and will
have to be up and doing If he improves
on the record he made before he reach-
ed forty. He went to London tAventy
years ago and at thirty was one of the
most popular fiction writers in the
world and at forty one of the most
successful dramatists. Yet he was
told by those who thought they knew
all about it to keep away from London.
An unprecedented eATent Avhich es-
caped the argus eyed press occurred
In New York city recently Avhen .JeAVS
and Christians met together in a Chris-
tian church edifice for a joint discus-
sion upon the needs of the ministry.
A doctor of divinity and a rabbi led
the discussiop, and laymen of both
faiths took part. History records no
such coming together of Jew and Chris-
tian since the days of Paul.
A recent trial for check raising
brought to light the fact that the most
expert check raisers in the country
are pensioned by the. Bankers’ associa-
tion to stay out of business. That is
surely getting paid for -“being good.”
White Ros
—-S. L. Erwin
Flour—unequaled
\Co.
Torture of a Preacher.
The story of the torture of Rev.
O. D. Moore, pastor of the Bap-
tist church, of Harpersville, N.
will interest you. He says:
T 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
Dr. King’s New Discovery for
consumpiion Coughs and Colds,
which entirely cured my cough,
and saved me from consumption.”
A grand cure for. diseased condi?
tions of Throat and Lungs. At
Black & Little druggists; price 50c
and $1.00, guaranteed. Trial
bottle free.
%
FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE
Will positively cure any case of Kidney
or Bladder disease not beyond the reach
of medicine. No medicine can do more.
FOLEY S KIDNEY GURE
strengthens the urinary organs,
builds up the kidneys and invig-
orates the whole system.
IT IS GUARANTEED
TWO SIZES SOc and $1.00
Passed Stone and Graval With Excruciating Pains
A. H. Thurnes, Mgr. Wills Creek Coal Co., Buffalo, O., writes:
“I have been afflicted with kidney and bladder trouble for years, pass-
ing gravel or stones with excruciating pains. Other medicines only
gave relief. After taking FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE the result was
surprising. A few doses started the brick dust, like fine stones, etc.,
and now I have no pain across my kidneys and I feel like a new man.
FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE has done me $1,000 worth of good.”
No Other Remedy Can Compare With It
Thos. W. Carter, of Ashboro, N. C., had Kidney Trouble and
one bottle of FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE effected a perfect cure, and
he says there is no remedy that will compare with it.
SOLD AND RECOMMENDED BY
The long sunlight and pure air of the
arctic regions are said to be effective
in knocking out tuberculosis. This Is
the notion of Dr. Sohon, Avho is the
medical companion of Commander
Peary. Perhaps the costly expeditions
to the frozen north will, after all, justi-
fy their projectors.
Japan has never been invaded by
foreign foes unless In centuries long
past. The racial descent of the na-
tivaP'Is therefore practically pure,
which probably accounts for their in-
tense and self sacrificing patriotism.
Cures Old Sores.
Westmoreland, Kans., May 5,
1902. Ballard’s Snow Liniment
Co.: Your Snow Liniment cured
an cld sore on the side of my
chin that was supposed to be a
cancer. The sore was stubborn
and would not yield to treatment,
until I tried Snow Liniment,which
did the work in short order. My
sister, Mrs. Sophia J. Carson,
Allensville, Miffin Co., Pa., has a
sore and mistrusts that it is a can-
cer. please send her a 50c bottle.
Sold by Black & Little.
Signal and Commoner 1.60.
A NEW WAY TO
MEMPHIS
and the SOUTHEAST.
FRISCO
SYSTEM
To RANDOLPH and
ISLAND.
the ROCK
Leave Fort Worth, 10:50 A. M.,
Arrive Memphis, 8:00 A. M.,
Next Morning.
It’s Every Day With The Best of
Service.
C. W. STRAIN,
General Passenger Agent,
Fort Worth, Texas.
use Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov-
ery until perfectly cured.
FEMALE
WEAKNESS
642 1-2 Congress St.
Pobtlakd Maine, Oct. 17,1
I consider Wine of Car dill sut
to any doctor's medicine I ever _
and I know whereof I apeak. I gtfjP
rered for nine months witn suppressed
menstruation whioh completely pros-
trated me. Pains woul&ghoot throu
mv back and sides and I would hi
blinding headaches. My Un
swell up and 1 would feci I
could not stand up. I naturally
discouraged for I seemed to be beyor
the help of physicians, but Wine <
Oardui came as a God-psnd to me. I
felt a change for the better with!* •
week. After nineteen days treatment
I menstruated without suffering the
that all suffering women" knew"oM*!*
good qualities.
Treasurer, Portland Economic League
Periodical headaches tell of fe-
male weakness. Wine of Gardui
cures permanently nineteen out of
every twenty cases of irregular
menses, bearing down pains or
any female weakness. If you are
discouraged and doctors have
failed, that is the best reason in
the world you should try Wine of
Gardui now. Remember that
headaches mean female weakness.
Secure a $1.00 bottle of Wine of
Carduitoday.
WINE"
CARDUI
J. G, Baldwin,M. D. J. Cappleman, M. D,
Drs Baldwin & Caileman,
Office, front Boom in Is ortu Byan Building.
Phone 12 4.
CEO. 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.
BENJ. DABNEY, M. D.
OCCULIST AND AURIST,
Late resident Surgeon, Eye, Ear,
Nose and Throat Hospital,New Orleans, La.
BONHAM .TEXAS.
)r. S. F Milliken: Dr. S. W. Leeman
FFICE, POLYCLINIC BUILDING, PHONE 8180
228 South Ervay Street,
DALLAS, TEXAS
’ariial List of Seal Estate
For Sale by
L. E. Vanlandingham,
Paris, Texas.
88 acre black land farm 8 miles
south of Paris. Good 4-room frame
house, 2 tenant houses, 4 cisterns,
good barn, grainaries and sheds, 10
acres in alfalfa and clover fenced in
6 different fields. This will make a
fine home. Price, $50.00 per acre,
easy terms.
92 >2 acres, 12 miles northeast of
Paris, 65 acres in cultivation, 8 acres
alfalfa, good house and other
necessary improvements. Price,$3000.
72 %. acres, 6 miles northeast of
Paris, about 50 acres in cultivation,
very good improvements. Price,
$16.00 per acre.
A farm of 107 acres, 5 miles north-
east of Paris, soil black, gray and
sandy. Good for corn, cotton, fruit,
vegetables, berries, good bearing
orchard and berries. Price, $35.00
per acre.
105 acres, 7 miles northwest of
Paris, 35 or 40 acres in cultivation,
35 acres more cleared, 40 acres in
bottom, 2-room house, cistern, cribs,
and stables. Price, $16,00 per acre.
161 acres of Bois d’arc bottom land
15 miles north of Honey Grove, 125
acres in cultivation, 3 good tenant
houses. Price, $16.00 per acre.
200 acre black land farm in good
state cultivation, 3 tenant houses in 4
miles of Honey Grove. Price, $35.00
per acre.
134 acres B/4 miles from Honey
Grove, all in cultivation, good 5-room
house, good barn, well, pool and
tenant house. Price, $50.00 per acre.
440 acres, Sulphur bottom land in
southwest corner Lamar County, most
all in cultivation, 7 sets improvements.
This is a fine farm. Write or see me
for prices.
600 acres, 5 miles from Paris, 250
in cultivation, 350 fine hay land. This
is a fine body of black land, see or
write me for prices.
150 acres of black land in good
state of cultivation, 4 miles south of
Paris. This is a bargain.- Price, $35
per acre.
SIX acres, 6 miles northeast of
Paris, new 3-room box house, 10 or
12 acres cleared, balance in good
timber. Timber will pay for the land
and chopping the wood. Price, $850
easy terms.
In addition to the above, I have
some fine little truck farms, timber
lands, west Texas farm lands and
ranches. Paris business and resident
property, some of which I am author-
ized to exchange for farms or farm
lands. If you haveproperty to sell or
exchange list with me. I may be able
to get you up a deal.
L, E, Vanlandingham,
Paris, Texas.
Larger Berths
In Sleeping Cars
The berths in the standard and the compartment sleeping
cars on The Southwest Limited are longer, higher and
wider than the berths in similar cars of other lines. Six
feet four inches is the comfortable length of these berths.
All the cars on The Southwest Limited are owned and
operated by the
Ghicago,
Milwaukee &
Railway
St. Paul
An excellence of service is thus assured, not obtainable
elsewhere.
The Southwest Limited leaves Kansas City, Union Station,
5:55 p. m., Grand Avenue, 6:07 p. m., arriving Chicago
8:55 a. m. This train took first place within its first year,
and holds it.
M. F. SMITH, Commercial Agent,
SOI Slaughter Building, Dallas, Texas.
ROUND TlUa i^PyJS dNE^RE
COOL COLORADO”
The Gem of American Health and Pleasure Resorts and
OUR NATIONAL SUMMER PLAY GROUND
Affording every essential for Physical and Mental upbuilding and advance*
isesjt, may be visited end enjoyed at aa extremely lo»v cost,
COLORADO
Offers more Creditable Resorts and Health Retreats affording
accomodations within the limits of moderate purses than can he
found elsewhere upon equal area which, wills its
INCOMPARABLE CLIMATE AilO MATCHLESS SCENIC CRAHDEUI?,
EDaKes it well nigh i/resistahle to those possessing a sense
appreciation.
THE DENVER RGAD”=S5>ar
•leading fharets "a
double doily solij;' U
Sleepers, alt meats in Magnificently Appointed Cafe Cars
i I.ine of Least Resistance” and provides
u.s wii’ij Pullman Palace Drawing Roeffi
H
(a /a
carte) at reasonable prices, the privilege of numerous stopovers* jfep
and schedules saving many hours time. It is shortest by exceeding
s===sTHSEE HUNDRED M1LES=== M
per round trip (sec- anv map) SI is the only line offering
SOLID THROUGH TRAINS r?S£. SOUTHWEST
Upon Postal request we will gladly mail to any address beautifully illustrated
isaformation booklets and advice of other interesting special arrangements.
Address A. A. GL1SSON. Genl Pass. Agt.. Port Worth. Texas.
P. S.—VPON APPLICATION any Connecting Line will ticket you via
*THE DENVER.1'
A Colorado Summer
IS A PERFECT EXPERIENCE
Spend your Vacation in the Mountains.
Breathe the Crisp, Pure, Piney Air. Gather
Strength and Health from the Great Out-of-
Doors, and come home happy. From June
1st to September 30th the Santa Fe will
sell you round trip tickets at very low
rates. Ask the Santa Fe Agent for partic-
ulars.
W, S. KEENAN, G. P. A.,
GALVESTON, TEXAS.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Lowry, J. H. Honey Grove Signal. (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, June 16, 1905, newspaper, June 16, 1905; Honey Grove, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth496537/m1/4/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Honey Grove Preservation League.