The Bonham News. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, March 12, 1897 Page: 2 of 4
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gtoutuxm Hrroft
EVANS & EVANS,......Proprietors
EDITORS
W. A. Etus. y. €. Etus, Aslley Etus.
Catered at the Bonham, Texas, poetof-
flee as second class mail matter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One copy one year................11.50
One oopy six months..............
Ooeoopy three months.....;......
PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
.75
.50
AY, MARCH 12, 1897.
vote ought to keep in
good company.
“Make it right to seU whisky,
and nothing else can be wrong.”
the PLEA for the sa look.
There is only one way to
Heaven—are yon walking- in it?
You vote for the saloon, or you
vote against the saloon. There
Is no oilier issue.
Pi
K“s[
Mr
To-morrow you vote for the
sale of whisky in Fannin county, - ------ ~ --------
or yon vote against ‘the sale of the people, in effect, that
Which will yon do? *-u~ i
Do you propose to vote to
please the law-breakers, _or do
you vote to sustain the law and
the Will of the people?
the
Two years ago the opponents
of prohibition urged upon jour
people a number of things that
they said ought to keep any man
from voting for the local option
law. What are they urging this
year? They have had to aban-
don the claim that prohibition
would kill our business, or would
increase our taxes, or would in-
crease the number of crimes
among the people. The only
thing they have to fall back on is
that “It don’t prohibit,” and tjiey
are trying to make capital out of
that, and so defeat prohibition.
Whether the law prohibits or
not, the majority of the voters
t>f this county wanted the law.
The state gave it to them. Do
the majority of the voters of the
county propose, to allow a very
few mho to twart their will and
defy the authority of the state?
They now seek to compel the
citizens of this county to repeal
the law for their especial benefit.
Two years ago these men nptf-
“A CLEAR LOSS OF $29,450.”
would violate the law
say “W§‘ 8o'Tioial& the
propose to continue to do so
less you repeal it for us.”
Every man who favors
local option law ought to vote to-
morrow. ,The decision of the
issue may depend on your vote:
Will you vote for the saloon,
or against the saloon? Are you
in favor of enforcing the laws of
the state, or are you in favor of
repealing them for the benefit of
the men who violate them? Your
• vote to-morrow will decide.
Two years ago the advocates
of the saloon told the people that
the prohibition law could not be
enforced, and that no convictions
under it would be had. Now
they say the law is not enforced.
They have changed, it seems.
Last Monday Mrs. Henry Ward
Beechhr died at Stanford, Con-
necticut It had been just ten
years to a day sinoe the death of
her distinguished busband when
she died. Mrs. Beecher had
live to the good old age—eighty-
five years.
The county treasurer is boubt-
lere the worst surprised man in
the county to learn for the first
time, from a city paper, that the
county, treasury is bankrupt.
His books and bank account fai
to show it, and this information
from an outside sotlrce, comes
like a clap of thunder from a
clear sky.
question is, are you going to do
it? Our jail is full 11 men who
are anxious for you ‘to repeal
other laws for their benefit. If
you favor one class, why not an-
other?
AH ACKNOWLEDGMENT.
During the past few days The
News has been the recipient of
many letters from good people of
this county, indorsing its course
for the stand which it is now tak-
ing, and has always taken, in fa-
vor of good order and good mor-
als, and against vice and crime.
We appreciate the cheering and
comforting words, coming to us
as they do from those who are of
the best people of the land. It
gives The News encouragement
in its battle for the right,
to have the aid and "the ap-
proval of the pure and the good
men anefwomen. The News, as . - - -- ------------
a journal, has, to the best of its -th°se in incorporated towns have
There is one man in a “cold
storage” in Bonham who says he
Is not going to stay there any
longer, if prohibition carries
next Saturday. We hdpe he
will, not only quit the cold
storage, but quit selling liquor at
Ml. He can be a useful citizen
in most any- other business than
the one he is in. &
’ The prospect is very good for
the legislature to pare through
this session without passing
either a fee bill ietr making any
change in the laws notv ia force
hx regard to preferred creditors.
Each of these ‘ .measures has
enough opposition to prevent
it from being ^~fiaal^y -acted
upon. The majority are in
favor of legislation on these sub-
jects, but the minority, by skill-
ful tactics, can manage to pre-
vent final action.
Dun’s Review for last week,
sayg “the slow improvement ob-
served for sometime has contin-
ued through the week. ” If there
has been any improvement in
business matters for scene time,
it Certainly hits been very slow
and very gradual, so much, so
that ft has been to the ordinary
observer not perceptible, and to
the keenest ‘observer it would
haveWequired a miscroscope of
wonderful magnifying powers to
have discovered it. When the
improve gets large enough to be
. observed by thd naked eye, we
hope it will be seht around this
way on exhibition so that the peo-
ple can take a look at it.
Remember that to-morrow is
election day; remember that the
eyes of the people of many
counties in Texas are upon the
voters in Fannin county; remem-
ability, contended for what it
believed was right, and forjthe
best interest of mankind. It has
tried to be on the side of good
morals and good order, and has
never stooped to low, vulgar
billingsgate or blackguardism,
and so long as it remains under
the management and control of
its present editors $od publishers
they intend to battle for what
they believe to be right and
proper, and to do it in an honor-
able and decent manner.
Such was part of the heading
of an article in the Review last
week, in which it is claimed that
this county has lost $29,450 in the
past two years by refusing to
license saloons. That statement
is calculated to mislead. The
writer says that in 1895 we had
thirty-one saloons whiph paid
* ’into the county' treasury
$14,725 per annum.” That state-
ment is not trhe, for we had forty-
two saloons, thirty-five of which
sold whisky and beer' and
seven sold beer only, which
paid into the county treas-
ury only $5,425 per annum, thej
balance of fclje iicense going to
the state and the towns where the
saloons were located. Now inj
two years this would amount to
only $10,850 for the county. Let
us figure now on how great(?) a
sum our people have been taxed
extra to support the county since
the saloons were voted out. The
tax levy for 1895 .was made be-
fore prohibition went into effect,
and the levy for 1897 was made haro
uuderthelaw.
tl«F matter, we shall have to
count the tax for ’96 and ’97 as
the two years under prohibition. ,
In 1896 state taxes were reduced
8 cents on the $100 valuation and
county takes, werd reduced 5
cents on the $100. -The taxable
valuep of Fannin county are a lit-
tle oyer $10,000,000. Five cents
less tkxon the $100 means that the
people of this county in 1896 paid
$5000 less county tax than ^hey-
did in 1895, and they also, paid
$8000 less state tax. Now the
county poll tax for 1897 is re-
duced 25 cents, and this means an
additional reduction of $2000 to
the tax payers of the ^county:
Then in 1896 and 1897 the people
paid $12,000 less county tax they
would have paid at the rate of
taxation in 1895, to say nothing
of $16,000 less state tax for the
two years. This makes $28,000
less State and county tax the peo-
ple have paid than the Tate for
1895 would have made them pay,
to say nothing of the city taxes
other law. Don’t wait for the
officers to hunt up and find out
every violation, but go -to work
AN EXTRA SESSION.
President McKinley seated jin
and help the officers and *n-/hjs inaugural address^that“owing
courage .them m their duty.' Let tq th^ emergency:of tbe^case, U
indJb01i| cal] an extra session of
see that each official upon whom
the law imposes the duty of look-
ing into these naattej^has suf-‘
ficient encourager M^nt to neg-
lect nothing.* But] don’t wait for'
the officers to. do all without,
your assistance, and in two more
years violations of the local op-
tion law will be as few as viola-
tions of the lay?, against horse
Mealing.
congrjass about the 15tla inst.
f-vs: U r ■-'t . 1
* /‘There could be no better ti
to put[* tfye government upoq a
soundj financial and econonfib
basi,s than how. The people haye
* ;paly recently voted that this
shoulqjhb done, and nothing is
more finding upon the agents (of
IrieirwilL than -the obligation of
immediate action, . It has always
^eemeqjto me that, the- postpone-
LOOKING TO FANNIN.
t A local contemporary says of
prohibition: -
“That no good has some from, this
measure all observant citizens .know,
that much harm has resulted, who can
doubt, especially when he sees the
county treasury bankrupted, " the
country cross roads covered with irre-
J v» vuo * WIOIVU n 1W U it 1 v
sponsible venders of the vilest liquor
place
God’s sun ever shone ^on, each
a festering source of crime and coo-
tamin&tiou, social and moral. The
paid. In Bonham, they told us
we would kill our schools and
ruin our revenue by doing away
with the saloon license. Taxes on
city property are 20 cents less
on the $100 than in 1895, aud our
public schools still flourish.
If the county has done without
the license and yet reduced tax-
ation this much, letls insist on-
losing another $29,450 in the
next two years. It pays. Don’t
you think so?
Appeal for the Cretans.
been chosen, deprives eongress
too often of the inspiration of the
popular will and the - country !of
jthe cot-responding benefits. is
Will Follow Her Bright Example. ” evident, therefore, that to post-
——; '* ,$one action in the presence of so
The Eyes of Prohibitionists Every
where are Upon Her. Let Her Win
Next Saturday and <^ier Counties
An old lriend writes dhe letter
below from a Western county.
The voters of this county ytfho
want to vote right should read It:’
To The New^ ‘
I am glad to sbe the
•® -goorrgov
ment. But “again” is not the
right word, the News is always
doing that. God-grant that ou
Saturday next a majority of the
voters in Fannin’ county may bef
found on the same side. , //
The eyes of every intelligent
prohibitionist.ih Texas are upon
Fanntn county. '; If she carries
prohibition again, the prohibi-
tionists know that~prohibitlon
will prohibit, and then the vic-
tory will be won. Fannin will
prove ihe leaven that will jqaven Y
the whole lump; for if profiibt*- L iday; it wilt take time to g
tion cap. be made a success ia jit.. * This country has had aTc
Fannin, a large, populous county
with a number Of large towns/
one of them almost a city, it can
be made-a success anywhere," and
Red ;RiV.er, Lamar, Grayson,
Cooke and other large counties
will follow her lead. Oh that’tbe
firml What have they to lose by
doing so? Only a few paltry doD
larsof whisky tax money with
which any decent man should be
ashamed to soil,his hands. What
have they to gain? Good gov-
ernment and good morhls, sober
' Awarded
Highest Honors—World’s Fair.
DU
W'VSS-TE- A.B.BCABBOROPOH
GEO. A. PRESTON, 2nd Yice-Prgal D. W. SWEENEY, Ant. ''’arhlrr
cream
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF BONBM.
Capital and Surplus $220,000.00
i ; , ♦ ,
All business pertCming to legitimate and eonaarvattve baakiua
solicited. t - V *
Prompt attention given to collections. Iotereet p.-rfd tfo*
deposits.
MOST ’PERFECT MADE.
A pure Grape Geam of Tartar Powder. Free
Hit; l/IICa L llltJ pUS WUUUtJ* ™ vrtam vi i/uuu i uwuci. « ict;
ment of the meeting Of congress from Ammonia, Alum oriany other adulterant
until more (than a year after it has 40 Years the Standard. *
MITCHELL WAGONS rill K»
great a aecessity would b'e unwise
thejpart’of the executive, be-
iuse lunjust’tft the interests of
e people. ” !■
I. Tis to be hoped that when s
jqch
extra siesafon is called, its acts
^ prove as disastrous to
j tko^pooplo of 4 b >o
as were the- actions of the
called session gf 1893., From that
time to! t^he present, it has been
getting worse and worse for the
great masses of the people. Now
if President McKipley will sug-
' something and congress
-ftrry. out that something that
wilj gi\je the needed relief/and
faid in ridding us of ,the heavy
huijdeni we have bqpne sd long,
then tifuly will he deserve the
graititudp of the nation.
4s Mjr. McKinley .wisely says,
jpeed npt expect to find relief
ive
: j • : t - ’
BRING*BACK THE SALOON.
v<, .. , - ‘bng
1 of financial sickness, has
>me;ydry weak and feeble and
it will-take sometime to get re-
stored and hearty again, even'if
Mi\ McKinley’s , prescription
proves to be a good one.
In Texas -&e peed not calgi^ate
citizens of-old Fannin may.stand qn much prosperity until another
firml WUnl Unt.A l__' ‘
crop is grown, because we have
nothing but stocjc to sell. If the
president will tn®ua^e to get con-
fidence restored enough to cause
the hoarded money-seeking in-i
vestment,^that we hear so much
talk-about?, put into circulation, so
prices for «the products of the
qoqntry; and if *we have a good
orop thih season, tben'we will see
a little pifra perity sure enough.
But will i| be ^fijh?*Tfcat’s-.thq
The following appeal in behalf
of Grecian refugees was sent in a
letter to the First National bank
of this city by Ralli Bros., of
New York, who are. the largest
cotton buyers in the world, and
who haye, during , the cotton
season now closing, purchased in
** V *u vv vulUllvU ) Ova
sons, husbands and fathers, hap- that we • can have reagohable
py wivqs and children, lower1 ’ ...
taxes, already lowered since pro-
hibition was adopted, apd with
all that the knowledge that the
infamous whisky business is.not
goingon by their consent,‘that
thejrare-pm responsible for the'
crime, misery and poverty that
it produces. How is that? some
anti may say. .1 mean it, just
this:\ Every man,-Whether from
the love Of liquor or the love of
money* or for afny other cause,
uoimiumvu, owiai auu uiurai. iw uuw Liuoaig, puididbt3U ID
slate alons jpp.000 bales of
and many of them prtrjurers tn pur- cotton:
»uit of the very practice* they kamed
under the protection of the' law.n
And yet the man .who wrote
the above is urging the people of
New York. Feb. 18, 1897,
At a large meeting of The
Greeks of this city, held at Web-
ster Hall on Wednesday, Feb. 17,
to devise means to help the Cre-
tan refugees in Greece, to the
number of 15,000, mostly women
and children, a committee was
appointed to collect funds for the
Fannin county to return tbj the
system where men learn, as he
says, “under the protection of
the law”, to learn practices that
. “UU nc 1HJ w UJ
and thieves, and many of them j to the generous American public,
purjurers.” Who could jiave j whose sympathy for the strug:
penned a more severe arraign-1 Cretans tis so faithfully
, ! echoed in the American press,
j Subscriptions may be sent to
em? the treasurer ot the committee.
will lead them to become ‘ liars : purpose, and we now appeal to
question
-4-
2L ■ f
Bring back the salooD. and <lo-it right
‘soon, . .«
For without;!* our city is'dead;
Her Whsines28 collapsed, homes not worth
a Idem, •
And her childrenallcryingforbread!
Rring back the saloon, with its wonder-
ful boom, • »
And revival of business so great;
Yes, bring ^t right here, there's plenty
And ao^lt b^re’’lt8 tooTa1o?
Bring hack the saloon, yes, do it right
awjw, -•
For without it Oar “pises’1 cannQt.
thrive* ; , f .
For sell whisky tb^y Wijj, by night'and
» bytlay,
Yea, sell It without law in a “flive.”
. 4 • * ■* i
Bring back the saloon, -give them a
. _ goql job, 1 ‘
For why should thd&- work as other
me**? 'I i
Let them mix Cocktails, and theirjvic-
-v, „ tims rob, •*
And prepare them to dwell in the
| •“pen.”
- r |n *, . >; • ., ■ ' •- :s.jr -
Bring back the saloon, yes, turn whisky
,• loede, ,,
Give us iMentyvof old Bourbon and rye;
Knock out the bung, let it*flow with
siutoe,M -
For we are all so infernally dry.
»L : For Sale by
W. A. ITunnelee A Co.
Wholesale and Retail Grocers, Bonhaia,
Fulkerson-Peters Co.,
-DEALERS IN-
fLUMBERfr
Sash, Doors, Blinds,
Shingles,
Mixed Paint and
Window Glass.
The Qolintyj likes a great deal
Of being bai^rrupte'd: None otf
its script is at, a discount; because
there is plenty of money in the
treasuny to cash it. '
who giyes his consent by his vote, J f Since F^by, ’ - * the county
to the business of selling whisky,* Bas paid of its’-ifeohded. indebted]
is just as respoqsibje, morally, |ness $28,960, | * • ;
poqsible, morally , ness $28,960
for the murders and other crimeq, j ■■ ■ i ■ ■ —
the poverty and tears and’rags
and. wretchedness of women
Bring hack the ^tlbon, yes, do it-at
onca, . ’ <
] 1 With ita crime ahd Comanche-like
-rail , I
From men anp-boya who. aot -like a
.’ dunce. . ' •
When crazed by this fire from hell!
, ' <•'■.. 'j
Bring back the saloon, let homes be
saddened, A '
And hearts,<nade to bleed and moan
O'er lives that are wrecked and brains
that art ipaddened,
By seeds which t^ie saloon hath'sown.
Bylfl? back' the kaloon, with its fearful
tloom, .-.V,- , ■ ■
To its victim* in warning given;
For we are Reared that beyond ^the
tomlv jf.
No drunkard^halyenter heaven.
Bring back thellalobBt let petitions cir-
And get signatures far ahd wide;
But the signer* may feel, when all too
lateH7 i
t)h! “I need,not thus to have died.”
Then vote,* if jfeu will, this ploa for the
' If *
With all of 1^ evils and woe; ;,
Make a league With hell, and like a
j j ; funeral knell,
It will haent-you jrherever yon go.
•}-■ S: )' VlNplBL
ONE BLOCK FROM T. P. DEPOT,
South Main Street,
Bonham, - - Texas.
Caron
fABLEi EXTRACT,—Ndt iHTdXIOftTYFiAri
VeOTABlS EXTRACT.-NOT iRTOXIOATfNO^
RmALEDB8HBI
A6K YDUR DRUGGIST FOR tt.
children which that busiupss pro-^
duces, as the man who sells it*
over the counter.,
J^et any man think .over'thi*
statement and'he will see that it
it is true.-- Who votes for whisky,
anyway? Do tho jlure,good, mor-
al, people who desire ^he welfaite :
of their country, do So? .Nol f
often. Do good women, our
Sisters, mothers and wives? No,
no! Just compare the two classes
—those who vote for whisky and
aS jfahnhv Count'S Ceacbcrs1 Iristitute.
art* l'
ment <^f the licensed system
saloons than this friend to tti<
If men learn these things under
licensed saloons, what j system
could possibly be worse?
In conversation witb a pros-
perous farmer from the. river
country this week, he remarked
that he personally knew that
prohibition had benefitted s ome
of his neighbors^ Under the
license system when they came
to town they bought whisky and
came home drunk. During the
spring and summer they would
make a bill at the saloon, aqd in
the fall when they brought their
cotton to town the saloon' bill had
to be paid. For two years now
they could get no whisky, (ven
“by order” without the money,
and the result has been that Shey
have bought little. No sotton
money has gone to. pay the
whisky bill made in the’sumqier,
and they have gone home
sober many times when they
would have gone druDk if they
Mr. G, Lekas, pare of (Colonel
Charles E. Sprague, president
of the Dime Union bank, Broad-
way and Thirty-second street, to
the Greek Consulate, No. 33
South William street, or to the
undersigned,. chairman of the
committee. »
Father Agathodoros,
Archimandrite of the Greek
Church. No, 73 West Eighty-
third Street, New York City,
N. •-
■ 1/jin vocation
'2. Xddresa a
. ^_____.r. 1.8- .Rebpoufe
see which side you would rather j Gener^jBusiness,
be classed with. Will you cm 10:30a, m. i ij' ’ •
those who vote against it, and
do every where else, to over-
ride the law, and the expressed
wishes of the people. 'A new
election was had last Saturday,
and carried again by an over-
whelming majority for prohibi-
tion—about five to one. God
l,s; ■ . go
with the whisky party just be-
cause you think it -s^ili bring
more tax, or that it will help
trade? Qh, that- men would be
men, and vote for, the right jje.-
cause it is right! If the true ntett
in Fannin county will do thi§.
next Saturday, ere many months,
!'
■ VBCj
■* r
I
it
Morning'Session, 9:30 a. m.
* -if
I "
SS8SSS
PROGRAM OF
.t^aOhers’ Institute,,
TO BE HELD IN ‘1 ^
nham/ march
/’ 1 . : -. ’■ :
r, first d|y—Friday, MARcd |36.^ *
m
IQINiHiAlM Rl
i'fil
isaii
msmmmm
J-L--
f'
......____S. E. Watson
... .'.‘.Hon. E. L. Agnfew
S.-P. Sn ith
utTAb odiuiutt), ure many moains, ^ **
the way the court, of -appeals Diseus^ionL ----
Three cheers for the town of
Cumby, and precinct No. 4 of
Hopkins county, Texas. They
tried prohibition for two years.
“ vuw iu n n-m otuu, laAOq -WJ.il U4J
The whisky dealers tried, as they stin further reduced, the grand
rlA enfowtr wrK/kMA Alr>rt in ' t
7.a How to Ii
will 6f the -people of Fannur
county, they will cease to defy
the law and the will of the peo-
ple. The expense Of enforcing
the law will stop, taxi will be gening Session, 7130.p. m. j
old county wifi move onward in
peace and plenty,/advancing jh
education, in morals aud in pros-,
perity. Her sister counties foil
low their bright'.exemplar and in
ten years prohibition will prevail
over three-fourths • of Tbxas
ber that the eyes af God’s c°ukl have gotten the liquoi-on
noblest and purest creatures, the cre<Lt. * ■ 0
-omen are looking atjou and! Ou8'oSdTt7^r^^_rs tell
appealing to you m behalf of' us in effect they are vijlat-
themselves and the children, of
this land to do your duty; re-
member that God will hold you
responsible Tor the manner in
which you vote to-morrow, and
may you so -vote that future
generations will have cause to
ing the law every day, and
they ask the people to repeal
4^3 m£/tS Now. dot old Fannin county <
_ 1 m i n . J. /-v nv» A rv tn t t mm n u ,1 £ .11. 1 1 4 I Al 1 1 l«/l LX /tnoVt ,1 i* . * g—».
to thank God l^at the voters of
Old Fannin county did, on the
13th day of March,
their whole duty.
of violating the law, and t|ien
ask the people to help them
peal the lawi1 /-
189(7, do
A votte against proh*ibit|on,
means a vote fpr whisky.
Don't fail to vote to uior
, uv Li iiu ct; sum udlo i. cAciS
bless and prosper |uch noble peo- NextSalurday wiU be a d
pie. They were not afraid to wheu every good man in Fannin
express their views, or stand county should do his duty. - '
lp:30 C, TTi.
1. Syfe\enfl in School Wc*-k... ...
2. -Discussionj-..............
1 3*. .General Discussion , ,
[ 4: Infinitives aud Participles,
1.5. pistri&m............ '...
8. General Dlscijasiop.
Afternoon S6mop\ 1:30 p. pi.
t 1. Why Educjate-,i:....{...
jfL E/Goff, G. C, Trout
41- / i.f ‘ w . f •«' a
...
i".,. W. A-. Thpmas, Jr.
..B. W. Milldr, J. G. Jacoway
ft j - | -V •
;----- •, - - j .... Page Trotter
. .............J.(Ab QW, J. I. Moreland
I * nj. dap*-’ - /
The oldest
and best
NEWSPAPER
in
FANNIN
COUNTY,
y*.
ubc Iftcws .4o!
Not the Cheapest, but the Beet
8. Diacussfon1-. *l.„* . r.
9/ General Discussion.
qssion. ;j [. ji’J, ,
rove the C|>unt^y Schools.. j.;Ll .]|
f
2. ’Disfcussipn.
. Crop and Chattel Mortgages.
veniitg Sessfon, 7t30 p.m. i j - / .
4.‘ A ©ourse ft Study for Coubtry Schools, 'A.' A Malooo..,:.,... Estimates furnished on any class of printing.
■ ...........r.“. ..../....L.....J..S. Kendall attention^ all orders.
A
3.- (5eneralj|Discussion. j '
BECOWD DAF'-iSAffURDAV, MAltoll ti.
'ession,' 9i:OOtfCm. I ! ' f oi
Texan.
up for the right way—not afraid
of loosing a‘ few dollars in trade
or somebody's patronage. They . Wbat A Prominent Insurane
were determined to do right in ^
>1 an Says.
yet sPlte of the world, the flesh' and |mloseoni
the j the devil. iSwrites: I had been -left with a-very fiis?
vi niniu mjiuiup '!cnnu uj re leave uotii
class of men Would onenlv boast come out to-morrow and follow 1 took Allard's Hurehound Svrup/Ono
. - 1 J v - .. - ... i bottle -completely cured jnfe. I senfon^
re-
. y
..Si E. Watson j Keeps Always on Hand ..,
Bright. LT.<Fitzgerald Land Notes,
j • . ; -J Bills of Sale,
.. F. M. Gibson; , Typewriter Supplies,
Notes and other Blanks,
•... -J. T|,‘ Hajll, H. R Jones
P
Late Style Type FacJea* k
Neat and Accurate Wot*.
The Very Best Mafertal.
•'/ ra**r:'I'
.....- .....
Vfl • It
.....•.E.yL. Troticr. F. M. Gibson
*
R. Wood
W. Parker
1 L Impbrianta of\Psycho!bgy in Teaching. L-rj,’t*.,.....J.
j 2. .Dibcnsslon ,.. .y.......j‘W. J.^Morrpw, J. X
3. General Ijiscussion... i j «
4. The' Teacher Who poe^ Not Attend Institutes .. J. E. Roderick .
5 Disfcussioq ’ F o z r f
6- General Discussion/ j
i. ’ Refitjemeut^nd Courtesy in School._____j; .1 .'Mra: J. S Leslie
. : i. .,W. CfTkilor, N. L. Holt!
' ' ' -}. *' ..!
. . Hon. J. M. Carlisle
k *' / ' i
8. Disb|ssjoq ............ ..
\9. Geijeral Discussion,
ip. Relation qf State to Pu jlic Schools
U. Geriej-Jl Business.
’ aAdjjournm.e'lit.
THE NEWS,
Bonham, TfMtH,
When the Roses Come Again!
YES) THEY ARE HERE NOW.
. J 1 aud 2 year old in splendid atworuneRte; | and
3 year old Marechal Neal grafted roeo*. the
treaip of the Chrysanthemum, new GeBaaitnm
' wfr*’ Branching Asters. Heliotropes, Oanna.'
Jesaipiooq, Orancres, Violet*, Pansies of tbe fol-
lowing kiads: The best and larpestGiant Parts
Brugiiot, Butterfly, Internatiooal and Airtrt,
Pure.White, Tuberoses, and many other nlaaM
too numerous to mention hero.
Thanking my patrons for former favors, I ask
a portion af their trade for this season.
City Greenhoase and Garden,
A. d. Hammock, Jr
•. i
tire noble example set by those^^ ^^rL aS
good people of Hopkins county, t'dugh, and she .experienced immediatd
and let us have the law in .forcefefej f, !™.Kf S *“*’>n'p
for another two years. When .lolin Crnnstyn. testtajn|,.liirostr,H‘i.
we ...... " ’
one do his, duty, audit gan and •**)<*.*i‘ mbtlleftn* 4ii*ve‘‘iev<irl
will be enforced-as well as any S'evl! 'v. sinlHS’E: '
t%Il« nnui twu V.L'Oil ?>. IT U(tTl • ' 1 iii_- 1 hlj JUllIjliC1
it. let each uml ovon ^lially »iv‘4 •«•] b>
do his dnty, audit can .and .**•>' "tl.ei* <swjt;h in«-<ii<-itn- •i'lmvf'ieve^ |- 1
Ml
ii/
“Tnere's a jnan/al the museum F-uneral pi rector (to geutleman
I; Each (>Teacl
orjfler tlinM Ihe greatest gcxictmay be accomplished. • i
The li)|iblie. in general, and especially SdliogJI' Truk
entering the door)—Are yob one
mourners, sir?
-Teacher bit program must special preparatipn in • 1 'Gentleman—Yes. HeoWetf me
iu----eatest goodjmav be accomplished. *, ’ “That's nothin,” sneered the —Boston Transcript
iaffl TOWii !,,v 'I I.avon-I taatbd 0«
Very Reapertf ifll y.
F. Xf pRA4^LKY,
; stufT, in' twenty yealrs.
: Detroit Free Press.
\V»>ak, pale, and sickly women and
i children made bealthv and rosy cheek-
sali."— by usiajr Dr. Simm'ofaB- Sarsaparilla.
■4 ocnls aud 50 dosba. For , sale by
14
core- A Muehert.
40-H.
_
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Evans, W. A.; Evans, J. C. & Evans, Ashley. The Bonham News. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, March 12, 1897, newspaper, March 12, 1897; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth912928/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bonham Public Library.