Honey Grove Signal. (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, July 23, 1909 Page: 4 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 27 x 21 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
MINISTER BADLY BEATEN.
\
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over SO years, lias borne the signature of
and has been made under his per-
sonal supervision since its infancy.
Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-gocd” are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health, eif
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Gil, Pare-
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is I loo said. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Isarcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys ‘Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend*
GENUINE O ASTORIA
Bears the Signature of
The KM You Hate Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, T7 MURRAY STREET. NEW YORK CITY.
Honey Grove’s Picnic and Ice Water.
A post card carrying the fol-
lowing in blue print on its back
has reached the Chief office:
“Honey Grove, the town of con-
crete, the city beautiful, the
sweetest place on earth, the dia-
mond breastpin on the bosom of
North Texas, the queen of the
blackland prairies, buttermilk
headquarters, home of slang-
jang, wants to see you at her
third annual picnic, August 5
and 6, 1909; ‘and the nights shall
be filled with music, and the cares
that infest the day will fold their
tents as the Arab and as silently
steal away.’ ” On the address
side, written in a feminine hand,
is this: “Come up; that same
tub of ice water you saw two
years ago will be in operation.”
Let’s scratch our head a bit;
this writer attended the first
of these picnics at beautiful
Honey Grove; we remember
the inviting grove, the same
which gave the town the second
syllable of its euphonious name—
the honey has long been used up
in the peach and honey prepara-
tions by the inhabitants and they
reached a buttermilk and slang-
jang basis; the concrete walks
ran in parallels along gloriously
shaded streets; the ladies blos-
somed in white and pink like the
luxuriant orchards there; a great
lake reflected rows of electric
lights and duplicated the spark-
ling heavens on its bosom; and
Jim Lowry hovered over the scene
like a bald-headed benediction;
but that tub of ioe water some-
how escapes us now; we remem-
ber a jug of something, but to
save our lives cannot be certain
that it contained ice water. How-
ever, it may have been a tub and
it may have held ice water; as
our recollection is imperfect, we
will defer to the writer of the
postal card, and in the meantime
wish with exceeding great desire
that we could partake of the hos-
pitality and good things of charm-
ing Honey Grove this once again.
—Comanche Chief.
President Helps Orphans.
Hundreds of orphans have been
helped by the President of The Indus-
trial and Orphans’ Home at Macon,
Ga., who writes: “We have used.
Electric Bitters in this Institution for
nine years. It has proved a most ex-
cellent medicine for stomach, liver
and kidney troubles. We regard it
as one of the best family medicines
on earth.” It invigorates the vital
organs, purifies the blood, aids di-
gestion, creates appetite. To strength-
en and build up thin, pale, weak chil-
dren or run-down people it has on
equal. Best for female complaints,
Only 60c at Black & Little’s.
?A;.: AT • T!
“My Young Sister”
writes Mrs. Mary Hudson, of Eastman, Miss., “took
my advice, which was, to take Cardui. She was
staying with me and was in terrible misery, but Car-
dui helped her at once.
CARDUI
It Will Help You
J 30
“Last spring,” Mrs. Hudson continues, “I was
| in a rack of pain. The doctor did no good, so I began
to take Cardui. The first dose helped me. Now I
am in better health than in three years.”
Every girl and woman needs Cardui, to cure
irregularity, falling feelings, headache, backache and
similar female troubles. Cardui is safe, reliable,
scientific. Try Cardui.
AT ALL DBUGr STORES
Fire Extinguishers
We have just received two shipments of Fire Extinguishers which
we are selling at prices and on such terms you cannot afford to be with-
out them. An extinguisher will reduce the cost of your insurance and
may save your home. See them and get our prices.
Knives, Forks and Spoons
The celebrated Keen Kutter tripple plated Knives, Forks and
Spoons are fully warranted for 5 years. A written guarantee with ev-
ery set. They will cost you but little more than those not so good, and
there is absolutely nothing better. Terms easy.
Buggies
We still have a complete line of the Celebrated Michigan Buggies
and are making prices and terms to move them. Come while the as-
sortment is complete and you can get one to suit you
Implements and Machinery
The Torpedo Sulkey (the field trial winner) is the chief and is
guaranteed to please YOU. Thomas Crown Changeable Speed Mowers
will cost no more than the ordinary mowers and suit you better.
Hardware
In fact, if it Is kept at a hardware store we have it, at prices that
cannot be beat, quality considered.
S. L. ERWIN & SON
Southeast Cor- Square
Telephone 66-2
He Baptized a Young Lady and Was
Whipped By Her Father.
Amarillo, Texas, July 19.—Rev.
J. D. White, formerly of this city
but now of Clarendon, - is in the
city to-day with both his eyes
blackened and otherwise disfig-
ured, and he declares that his
state is due to an encounter with
E. Keahey, the father of Miss
Velena Keahey, a girl to whom
he administered baptism last eve-
ning at the close of a sermon a^
Pampa, Texas. Rev. Mr. White,
who is pastor of the Christian
church at Pampa, states that he
preached there yesterday and
after religious services in the
church administered baptism to
the fifteen-year-old girl. The
mother of the girl, the preacher
states, attended the baptizing and
accompanied the daughter home.
The father, it is said, opposed
the connection of his daughter
with the church.
This morning the angered par-
ent encountered the preacher and
assaulted him, inflicting painful
and unsightly wounds. For this
offense he was arrested and fined.
It is stated that in the encounter
Rev. Mr. White was bound by
the injunction, “If thine enemy
smite thee on one cheek, turn the
other,” and not offering further
resistance, was badly beaten.
Of iQterest to People with
ThiQ Hair, Gray Hair or
Diseased Scalps.
In an interview with the Hessig-
Ellis Drug company, one of the largest
firms of wholesalers in the Southern
States, they stated that the demand
for Q-Ban Hair Restorer and Q-Ban
Hair Tonic was growing to unprece-
dented proportions. So great has the
market become for these preparations
that druggists are ordering of them in
greater quantities than of any other
preparations compounded for the same
purpose.
The offer made by the compound-
ers of Q-Ban Hair Restorer and Q
Ban Hair Tonic is unique. You can
go to any druggist and buy six pack
ages of Q-Ban Hair Restorer, one at a
time, and if after using the sixth bot
tie the color of your hair has not been
changed to the color of youth, any
druggist will give you an order on the
manufacturers to refund to you your
money. The Hair TONIC is intend-
ed for use by gray haired people, as
well as those who are . not. A daily
application of the Hair Tonic will, it
is said, positively increase the growth
of the hair from three to six inches
per year until the limit of growth has
been reached.
The preparations will keep the hair
in a perfectly healthy condition and
will eradicate dandruff, stop- falling
hair, correct eczematous conditions,
etc. No woman should be without a
bottle of the Q-Ban Hair Tonic. Its
use is a delightful habit. For sale at
all druggists. Ask your druggist
about the guarantee on Q-Ban Hair
preparations.
Black & Little recommend and sell
these preparations. If you are gray-
haired or your hair is commencing to
fade in color, you can have the first
package for nothing—simply call and
ask for it.
If you are gray haired or becoming
gray, you can have the first full sized
50c package of Hair Restorer by sim-
ply mailing your address and 12 cents
in postage to Hessig-Ellis Drug Co.,
Memphis, Tenn.
A Story of Life and Death.
She lay in a bed, as pallid as
the snow-white sheet that was
drawn up closely about her chin.
A pink flush just tinged each
cheek, as the faint glow of the
morning sun flecks the sky be
fore it peeps above the trees in
the east. Her brown eyes, ab-
normally large, because of the
wasted face, were as soft and
pleading as the eyes of a fawn.
For long weary weeks she had
lain upon this coach, her life
slowly ebbing away. Each day
she would wonder if she would
live to see another dawn, and her
mind was filled with thoughts of
the world and its curious ways.
Her heart longed for life, and
just a few more years of happy,
joyous girlhood. How she yearn-
ed for another springtime, when
the earth would be dressed in its
best attire, and out on the prai-
ries the beautiful flowers would
shed their honied fragrance. She
could not understand why God
had sent her this affliction, why
she must suffer a thousand deaths
before the grey hand of the Great
White Plague closed forever her
tired eyes, and sealed her pale
thin lips. Among the thoughts
that swept her brain like the
breezes sweep an Aeolean harp
was one that persisted in return-
ng day after day, night after
night. She could in imagination
smell the odor of costly flowers
sent to lay upon her coffin and to
adorn her cold dull grave by
those who had never during her
life time so much as a single car-
nation or a red rosebud that she
| loved so dearly. One day the
COMMON SENSE „
Leads most intelligent people to use only
meendines of known composition. There-
fore it Is .thatt Dr. Pierce’s medicines, the
makeTslof which print every ingredient
enteringnaAo them upon the bottle wrap-
pers and attest its correctness under oath,
are daily growing in favor. The com-
position of. Dr.jPierce’s medicines is open
to evervhodvVDr. Pierce being desirous
of having the search light of investiga-
tion turned Elly upon Hs formulae, being
confident that the better'the composition
ot these medicines is known the more
will their gr^ t curafive~me7its be recog-
nized. Being wholly made of The active
medicinal principles extracted*from na-
tive forest roots, by exact • processes
original with Dr. Pierce, and without the
use of a drop of alcohol, triple-refined and
chemically pure glycerine being used in-
stead in extracting and preserving the
curative virtues residing in the roots
employed, these medicines are entirely
free from the objection of doing harm
by creating an appetite for either al-
coholic beverages or habit - forming
drugs. Examine the formula on their
bottle wrappers—the same as sworn to by
Dr. Pierce, and you will find that his
"Golden Medical Discovery,” the great,
blood-purifier, stomach tonic and bowel
regulator—the medicine which, while not
recommended to cure consumption in its
advanced stages (no medicine will do that)
yet does cure all those catarrhal condi-
tions of head and throat, weak stdmach,
torpid liver and bronchial troubles, weak
lungs and hang-on-coughs, which, if neg-
lected or badly treated lead up to and
finally terminate in consumption.
Take the "Golden Medical Discovery*
in time and it is not likely to disappoint
you if only you give it a thorough and
fair trial. Don’t expect miracles. It
won’t do supernatural things. You must
exercise your patience and persevere in its
use for a reasonable length of time to get
its full benefits. The ingredients of which
Dr. Pierce’s medicines are composed have
the unqualified endorsement of scores of
medical leaders—better than any amount
of lay, or non-professional, testimonials.
They are not given away to be experi-
mented with but are sold by all dealers in
medicines at reasonable prices.
angels came and carried her last
faint heart beats and laid them at
the feet of Jesus, and the patient,
tired, wasted little body was
drawn in a white hearse to the
city of the dead, and tenderly
lowered to its grave, and when
the little mound was surrounded
by those who scarcely knew her
when she was alive, the bouquets
of flowers that she had thought
about so often were arranged by
loving hands, and left there to
wither and to die in the heat of a
sweltering summer sun, when
their beauty and their fragrance
might have cheered the dying
girl during those lonely days
while waiting for the summons.—
Cleburne Enterprise.
Another Deep-Laid Scheme Exposed.
The Standard Oil Company has
placed on the market its first lot
of petroleum butter, its latest
product. The company has es-
tablished a' plant near Alton,
111. “Preparations are being
made to do to the milk cow what
the auto did to the horse,” says a
dispatch and the product will be
known as petrol butter. It is
said to be of the same consisten
cy of lacteal butter, but is brown
in color. It lasts a good deal
longer than real butter, it is
claimed, and does not become
rancid.” The information that
“it lasts longer than real butter”
is doubtless correct. It would on
our table. Petroleum is all right
to make fuel oil, axle grease, coal
oil, gasoline, vaseline and dozens
of other things, but we draw the
line at using it in lieu of butter.
And this new butter that is to
come in competition with the cow
means far more than one would
suspect at first. Should petrol be
used extensively it would neces-
sarily follow that the Texas But-
termilk Club would dissolve and
thousands of men who have been
saved from the booze habit would
return once more to their snake
medicine. The more this thing
petrol is analyzed the easier it be-
comes to see through the whole
deep laid plot. The whisky trust
has it in for the beef trust and
the butter trust, hence it appeal-
ed to the oil trust for relief. Petrol
will put cow butter out of exist-
ence, which will lessen the de-
mand for cattle. The whole
scheme is a deep-laid plot, with
the ultimate result plainly in view
—the whiskey trust is determined
to destroy the influence of Col. J.
H. Lowry, of Honey Grove, orig-
inator of the Texas Buttermilk
Club and now its honored presi-
dent. It is a shame that so good
a man as Lowry must be de-
stroyed by the Standard Oil. The
people should not tolerate it and
we do not believe they will.—Mc-
Gregor Mirror.
1,000 Watches Free.
The Weekly Commercial gives a
small, regular 12-size, thiu model,
nickel finish watch for a club of only
twenty three-months’ new trial sub-
scriptions at 10 cents each, $2.00,
the amount collected to be remitted
with the 20 names. Each trial sub-
scription must be new, not now tak-
ing the Weekly, and only one to a
family. The watch is fully guaran-
teed,nice enough for any one to wear,
a good time-keeper, and cannot be
purchased from any jeweler for less
than two dollars. Drop us a postal
card for sample copies and blanks.
THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL,
Memphis, Tenn.
A Millionaire’s Baby
attended by the highest priced baby
specialist could not be cured of stom-
ach or bowel trouble any quicker or
surer than your baby ,if you give it
McGee’s Baby Elixir. Cures diarrhoea,
dysentery and all derangements of the
stomach or bowels. Price 25c and 50c.
Sold by Black & Little.
Hundreds of Honey Grove Readers
Find Daily Toil a Burden.
The hustle and worry of business
men,
The hard work and stooping of
workmen,
The woman’s household cares,
Are too great a strain on the kid-
neys.
Backache, headace, sideache,
Kidney troubles, urinary troubles
follow.
J. O. Fryar, living in Clarksville,
Texas, says: “As I am a blacksmith,
my back is subject to more or less
strain, the result being that I suffered
a great deal from backache. At times
my back wonld feel as though it were
unjointed, and these attacks finally
became so severe as to lay me up for
a week or more. The kidney secre-
tions soon became affected and caus-
ed me much annoyance. Hearing of
Doan’s Kidney Pills, I procured a box
and after using about one-half the
contents, I could notice an improve-
ment, I continued taking Doan’s
Kidney Pills and was entirely cured.
I have no hesitancy in recommending
them to all suffering in a like man-
ner.”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, Sole Agents for the United
States.
Remember the name—Doan’s—and
take no other.
STRAIN TOO GREAT.
Hard on the Hunters.
About the strongest advertising
ever done in Texas, or anywhere
else, for that matter, is told of by
the Alpine Avalanche in the fol-
lowing: “In the neighborhood
of Houston a party of hunters
found an animal of the bovine or-
der placidly eating grass in a
clearing. As they came up they
observed that upon its broad side
there was printed in letters a foot
long the word ‘ox.’ The other
side was similarly ornamented.
Down by the creek were two
mules. On each side of these
was painted “mule.” The hunt-
ers went to the home of the farm-
er and told him of their discovery.
“Somebody has been painting
your stock,” they said, having
decided that it was a sort of Hal-
lowe’en joke out of season. “It
was me,” said the farmer. “So
many of these city hunters come
along and shoot my stock and
tell me they made a mistake, I
ain’t leaving ’em any room for
mistakes.”
Pure F°o<R Pure Water and
Pure Air tb« Best Doctor.
Give a person pure food, pure wa-
ter, pure air and the doctor loses a
job. The reader will say that this be-
lief is as old as the hills. Nothing
further from the truth. We can live
many days without food—about five
days without water, and about five
minutes without air,yet only a SHORT
TIME SINCE, when a patient had a
desire for water, THAT MEANT TO
THE DOCTOR THAT HE COULD
HAVE NONE Air and water were
considered the most dangerous things
that a sick person could have, and
acting on that supposition, when a
person had typhoid, or any fever
whatsoever, all windows were closed,
and they proceeded to burn up the
air in the room of the tortuted invalid
with huge open fires, and to burn up
the patient by denying cool drinking
water. Many of you living remember
all about this, and probably the sol-
emn, bombastic old fellow who tor-
tured you. Now for the point: If
you are not well, are in the dumps,
your inards commencing to rebel,back
sore, difficulty in urinating, look to
what you eat and drink, and if your
stomach, bladder and kidneys are
commencing to rebel at the food and
water you are consuming, use Melon
Seed Compound. This Compound
makes it possible for the stomach and
other organs to handle that which
goes into your stomach, and makes
you well in consequence. Melon
Seed Compound will neutralize the
impurities of the food and water you
drink. Your stomach, kidneys, blad-
der and liver will do the rest with the
aid of pure air; avoid draughts, but get
fresh air night and day, and avoid the
frying pan like you would a pestilence,
and help nature a little by using Mel-
on Seed Compound.
A Horrible Hold=Up.
“About ten years ago my brother
was ‘held-up’ in his work, health and
happiness by what was believed to be
hopeless consumption,” writes W. R.
Lipscomb, of Washington, N. C.
“He took all kinds of remedies and
treatment from several doctors, but
found‘no help till he used Dr. King’s
New Discovery and was wholly cured
by six bottles. He is a well man to-
day.” It’s quick to relieve and the
surest cure for weak or sore lungs,
hemorrhages, coughs and colds,
bronchitis, la grippe, asthma and all
bronchial affections. 50c and $1,00.
Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by
Black & Little.
Before you buy a buggy see J.
L. Brown, at Diamond Edge
Hardware store. A full line of
Marshaltown and Patterson ve-
hicles,
Double Daily
Sleeper*
to
Denver
commencing
June 1
Standard Sleeper, North Texas to Den-
ver, thru without change, every morning
and every night.______
Vacation fares very low this year to
Colorado, California
and
Great Lakes Region
Harvey meals en route
Write for vacation booklets.
W. S. Keenan, G. P. A., Galveston
atyit
||i
Winy asiiffex* with
pain when
BALLARD'S snow
LINIMENT
WILL CURE
RHEUMATISM, CUTS, OLD
SORES, SPRAINS, WOUNDS,
STIFF JOINTS, NEURALGIA,
SCALDS, ETZ.,
G. A. Friedel, Dallas, Tex.
writes: “I use Ballard’s Snow
Liniment for my family. It
is the best Liniihent made.
Ifc relieves burns and scalds.’
25c, 50c aijd $1.00
Ballard Snow Liniment Co.
ST. LOUIS, MO.,
Sold and Recommended hv
BLACK & LITTLE.
The University of Texas,
Co-Educational Tuition Free
Annual Expenses, $180.00 anc
Upward.
Main University, Austin;
Session opens Wednesday,
September 22nd, 1909.
COLLEGE OF ARTS: Courses lead-
ing up to the Degrees of Bachelor
and Master of Arts and Doctor of
Philosophy.
DEPARTMENT O F EDUCATION:
Professional courses for teachers,
leading to elementary and perma-
nent 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 Uni-
versity and Normal courses; seven
weeks. Session 1910 begins June 18.
For catalogue, address
THE REGISTRAR,
University Station, Austin.
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, Galveston
Session eight months, opening Septem-
ber 28th. Four-year course in med-
icine ; two-year course in pharmacy ;
three-year course in nursing. Thor-
ough laboratory training. Excep-
tional clinical facilities in John Sea-
ly hospital, University Hall, a dor-
mitory for women students of medi-
cine.
For catalogue, address
THE DEAN,
Medical College.
We have a complete stock of
caskets, coffins, burial robes
and such other goods as be-
long to the line at reasona-
b l e prices and courteous
treatment.
Smith-Poole Comp’y
P
— Yy—-V-—-.'v—
=1
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF HONEY GROVE.
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $275,000.00.
EXTENDS TO ITS DEPOSITORS AND
CUSTOMERS EVERY FACILITY
THAT THEIR
BANKING RESPONSIBILITY WARRANTS!
b
i
Planters National Bank,
Of Honey Grove, Texas.
CAPITAL $75,000. URPLUS $60,000.
R. J. THOMAS, President
PEYTON WHEELER, V. P., J. C. McKINNEY, Cashier,
F. E. WOOD, Ass’t. Cash.
-o-
We have ample means to treat you well as a customer and
'beg of you to give us a trial.
£88
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.
WHITE’S
Cream Vermifuge
THE GUARANTEED
REMEDY
THE CHILDREN’S FAVORITE TONIC.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
THE GENUINE PREPARED ONLY BY
Ballard-Snow Liniment Co*
ST. LOUIS, MO.
Sold and recommended by
Black & Little.
A Golden Wedding
means that man and wife have lived
to a good old age and consequently
have kept healthy. The best way to
keep healthy is to see that your liver
does it’s duty 365 days out of 365.
The only way to do this is to keep
Ballard’s Herbine in the house and
take it whenever your liver gets in-
active. 50c per bottle. Sold by Black
& Little.
Machine oil, the best brand.
See J. L. Brown, at Diamond
Edge Hardware Store.
Joe Sap's Tales
By a Southern Man
A BOOK OF HUMOR.
The Preface is reproduced here, show-
ing something of the Author’s style, in
which he has no equal:
“As regards style of composition, I am without a
rival—in my family. The reader will doubtless ob-
serve that my style of writing differs from all of the
early writers. There is probably a greater difference
in my style and that of William Shakeskeare than
that of any other writer of note. My style differs
from his in a thousand different ways, but in no re-
spect is the difference so great as in the length of opr
writings. Mr. Shakespeare frequently devoted from
four to five hundred pages to a subject, whereas I
would have devoted four or five lines. But of course
he had his style of writing and I have mine and I am
not calling attention to his long-winded works for the
purpose of detracting from his fame. Time alone will
tell whose style is the better. However, I have a few
friends who would, go before a notary if I should re-
quest it of them and swear that there was no compar-
ison between Shakespeare and me.
“Now just a word of admonition to my friends
who may be so fortunate as to read this book. Please
refrain from all heated arguments with those who
may claim, even after reading mv book, that Shakes-
peare is a better writer than myself. No good can
come of those heated discussions, besides they are not
infrequently the cause of arraying father against son
and brother against aunt. If a fellow wants to be for
Shakespeare after carefully reading my book and see-
ing its beautiful thoughts unfold like the petals of a
une rose, all I can say is to just let him rip, for the
world has always been divided in its opinion of great
Full of human nature and the most humorous book published
since the death of Biil Nye. Joe Sappington, the author, is beyond
doubt the greatest writer of satirical humor today in the South. The
book contains 250 pages, is handsomely bound in blue silk cloth asd
illustrated.
Price, by mail, $1*00.
EMBREE PRINTING CO.
208 East Cross Ave. Belton, Texas.
A LARGE NUMBER
1 MI OF DIRECT
THROUGH CIR-
CUITS
having been placed in operation by
this company between the important
towns in Arkansas and Texas offers
to its patrons a more prompt, efficient
and comprehensive LONG DIS-
TANCE service than heretofore. No
intermediate stations on these cir-
cuits, thus insuring a minimum of in-
terruptions, Avoid travel and save
time, trouble and expense.
Southwestern Telegraph and Telephone Co.
Ivan. Erwin A Go.
General Insurance
and Loan Agency,
Honey Grove, - Texas.
Fire, Tornado, Life, Accident, Bur-
glary, Health, Steam Boiler, Plate
Glass, Live Stock, Bonds.
Splendid facilities for
real estate loans........
None Bnt the Best
Signal and Republic $1.40.
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.
Lowry, J. H. Honey Grove Signal. (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, July 23, 1909, newspaper, July 23, 1909; Honey Grove, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth633983/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Honey Grove Preservation League.