The Bonham News. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 1897 Page: 4 of 4
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*0^8- KINCAID & COX
SURGERY and GERERAL PRACTICE.
’it:
Office Hoow-9 to 12 a. m.; 2 to 4 p. m.
OV*R SAUNDERS’ DRUG STORE
■
Telephone Connection at Office and at
Residences.
1.
If'
_..fr
In Bonham, Mar?h ii-u! uSw
Entire Consecration. Chris-
tian Endeavorer, can you com
prehead the wealth of meaning
in those words? What a blissful
thought to be wholly given to
the Lord!
Turn with me to our bond of
union, the C. E. pledge. Is it
hard for us to read the Word of
Ood and to lift our hearts in
prayer every day to our Heaven-
ly Father? Is it a cross to be
~ loyal to our own church? We
4l-iyr find it a joy to attend and take
^ ~----I some active part in each prayer
pB8. WEA.VEB A CROWDER meetings but is there not a part
of the pledge more difficult to
keep, “I promise Him that I will
| strive to do whatever He would
reason why we have so little
power is because self is mixed
with everything wp do. Let us
. r -f
----- wwnriiion, or whatever
Would Like to HaVe Me Be or Do.
Mw** Sherman.
of the fact
cr more pro-
file American <
|)B. a A. GRAY,
' i
Physician Surgeon,
BONHAM, TEXAS.
Office over Moore A Muchert’s.
Telephone connection with Office tad
■ Residence. " -
Again,t meaning Pp„iei,„,. J J
■—s —V----6 .,«• U»us: The Allopathic School of Medi. !th“p'HX-^,e0‘ic’
henceforward say in the language c*ne» that claims’calomel as its pGr ^ speaking, thu * w • ULJL% a, ^ n i i ii
of John the Baptist: -“He must sheet anchor for nearly all dis- •>** med!cine^ *• like all
increase, but I must decrease.” eases, is again knocking at our °“r^Dl-ry’found' ? ' pEALERf
. Only & few more pulse beats legislative‘halls asking for more €2!“! ^on^: GfrOCGriAff
and theOfuture ages will be-roll- ^edical legislation. If the “dear Iunbiassd, itrWh^l V *A \<*U\A
people for whose welfare the oldJUS,' , m^e3tl^ation at 'the [
ftp.hooi coomo f/-v k/v ____f- «. u$UuB of tue people 1o prove our j
Practice limited to Diseases of
The EYE, . ,
EAR, . .
NOSE, . .
and Throat...
Office Hours I f » m I SKxkman,
1 2 Ur 5pm | Tkxab.
s wiswTOrci ale WUU1U
like to have me do.” Thatclause^
ot itself, is consecration. Young
friends, are yon ready to say,
would he, Lord, what Thou
would’st have me be; I would do
'what Thou would’st have md do;
I would go where Thou would’st
QR. J. C. CARLETON
. | * wumu go wnere i nou would’st
Puysioian g. Surgeon, bave me g°?”
Bonttsm t Were mine the power to write
, Texas. (but one thought upon the heart
Bonham, Texas.
I--- •^AvrtAgm uyyju uue uwan
Office Over J. c. Saunders & Co's of ©very Endeavorer, it would be
I ,r>- _....
Drug Store.
Dr- r, *. martin,
Physician and Surgeon.
raw
BONHAM,
OJU* imU-miI oorner
»i»>ll-Pl«ro« One Co,
laxAS.
or iqnare, over
TOVARS A EVANS,
attosxxts-at-la w.
_WU1 ptaoMca lawl* Ue ooarta of fuili,
Orajson, Loir ud Hut eouttM, uil la the
aepniM eourU at AastU ud Tylar,
Uwtfd Stataa waits at DtUu a»d Tylor.
E J*Aa"aw W.C.DUWOAW
AGHII & DUNCAN
ATTO UREYS-AT-Law
BO SHAH - ... Tti AM
this: “Be willing for the
Heavenly Master to use you;
count it all honor for your lives
to burn out for God.”
Though your efforts may seem
feeble, remember the Savior has
promised that your ,, work -for
Him, no matter how small, shall
not be in vain. He is looking
for willing workers, among the
hosts of young people, who have
a holy ambition not to be great,
but to do good; not to be min-
istered unto, but to minister.
What is more noble than to be
the means of helping some strug-
gling soul to a higher life, than
to lighten some drooping heart’s
sorrow, bringing instead
Only a few more pulse beats
and the^uture ages will be-roll
ing toward eternity. May it be
said of the Endeavorers of the
ninteenth century, “They walked
with God.”
In conclusion let us turn to that
beautiful promise in the fifty-
eighth chapter of Isaiah! “If
thou draw out thy soul to the
hungry and satisfy the afflicted
soul, then shall thy light ijise in
obscurity, and thy darkness be as
the noonday, and the Lbrd shall
guide thee continually.” May our
souls rise toward Him daily in
true consecration, and make even
of the crosses of this life so many
steps to that temple where He
shows himself face to face.
“Entire Consecration. , Whither, Lord,
thou goest,
We, too, would follow.
The true, glad watchword of our hearts
thou knowest;
All; all for Christ, and Christ our all in
all,"
M
V
•.
W. A. Nunrielee & Co,
■’ « • DKaLKTlr rv
.'il
clhim of having thle most ad
vanced system of medicipe of |
school seems to be so profoundly
solicitous, would only examine
into the methods and re- j -* I
suits of ’’State Medicine,” medi- m!fcerD^eS*1
cal legislation, and the men who A scbool:of medicmt, al-
are advocating these Measures [JtW do not wear the regu-
the whole miserable imposition !?tlon cpllar> of the American
would be swept out of existence,
and every school of medicine be
compelled to stand on its own
merits without any legislative
bolstering or state paternalism, as
has been the case with regard to
the Allopathic School of Medi-
cine*.
Every law upon tlte statute
dbalbrs in
Provisions,
OLIVER’S CHILLED PLOWS,
j;, MITCHELL WAGONS.
South Main St.,. BONHAM, TEXAS
r *i
Lumber, Sash, Doors,
Lime, Cement and Mixed Paint, •
Hardware, Agricultural Implements.
■:.'.HAS A FULL-LINE OF.
upon
books has been placed there
through the instrumentality of
the old school of medicine;
what has been the result?
a secretary of the very „
that i$ constantly clamoringwwr
medical legislation, in a report to
his association in.-this state some
St. iouis Republic. I years ago, stated the .disgraceful
The harvest of scandal and [ the state was filled up
with quacks. By this he wanted
; ^mis
Medical association, yet-we’have
a profohnei j consideration [fair our j
Allopathic, neighbors, whd say!
Jke state is filled up with qukeks, j
and then .very considerately fathl,
er over four thousand of that pro-
duct, and that being the case we
would not want* to burden them
with the additiQnal dutylo^ be-
coming tile guardians of any --——-
Headquarters for BARB WIRE and NAILS
. Carrie. aniBu«i«.r
StudehnlrAw onA
Do You Wont • Nico Homp?
I have for sale one of th4 pret-
tiest and nicest placesiuBonham,.
situated five blocks west of the
court house, on 6th between
Beech and Cedar streets. A frac-
tion over one-fourth acre, good
dwelling with four rooms,a good
stable and cow shed, a wdl of
most excellent and never foiling
water; also, hydrant and ainas
connected with city waterWorW
Will sell for part cash and bal-
dnoe on monthly installments or
will exchange it for blackllanda
near Bonham. W. A. Evr '
At Hews
CATARRH
' 1 . .,.**«» a r kjl.ltume. ut'....
1 B'Jl,AIery’s Celebrated.Cultivators,
i middle bursters, Stalk Putters, & Plows.
LOCAL‘‘DISEASE
—< U ttv rwufl »t coKlt u*
“ddml climatic cluiqh
Ely’s Cream Balm ■
Feeding The Truet.
e; ami gigantic prop
Whl all their time
scI|^Bh.wn business
means to ehrv
Studebaker and Springfield Wagons.
attend to ^beir
--- The word EcUrtic T lim, v- . , ■ ' ---*™*
means to cho6se,the best, so *hat L?mber ^“J atld Store just north of Postoffice, BONHAM.
in choosing a guardian we would
H. PRITCHETT,
—- v outuudi ana
popular condemnation was reaped
by the Democratic party on ac-
count of the concession to the
sugar trust wrung from the
oarty by the friends of the trust
in the senate when ‘the Wilson
bill was being held up.
Without any wringing or hold-
ng up of legislation, the sugar
trust has obtained from the Re
mblican majority of the house.
Ways and Means comiqittee
twice as good a thing as it-got
from the Democratic congress
aftei: weeks of hard fighting and
threats. The Dingley bill con-
cedes a differential in favor of
about one-fourth of a cent, or
twice as much as the differentia!
to prove that more medical legis-
lation was needed. Further on
in the same repiort and in support
of the “Pope Bill,” which was
then under discussion and which
adyocated six Allopaths and one
Eclectic as a state!board, * he
stated that they (the Allopaths)
had over four thousand physi*'
cians 6f their school in the state ^ hive done more
while the Eclectics and Homeo-1 their,n|0'r*
not choose a school of medrcine
whose most prominent and test
informed members will give ex-
pression to lamentations lira thfe
following. These quotations are
all from Allopathic authority^ for
‘‘out Of fhine own mouth hav4 we
condemned thee”:| .
“Medjicine poor science! ■ ijoc-
tors poor philosophers! Patients
pobr victims!”—#Dr. Maunsell
‘‘Wejhave assisted in multiply-
ing diseases; wb hive done more
Hr t % _______
Buy You a Home.
^ T , ' ' I - '“"-TED states.
^ We have for Sal^ the follow-
^ ing X-ands on 'Easy Terms:
______i_______
Notary Public
—FOB—
------, ----e>‘~b iusreou the
sunshine of phristian joy ? . -.. ^
| Are you willing to sacrifice Pr°vide<I in the present law.
anything for the sake of One who Thia rich concession is flanked
gave up His celestial home, ^ provisions for countervailing
I Trrk ama ! U_ l _ I n n Ii /vn 1 / • .
physicians when quantify and m-mL'. '
not quality would serve’ theiri ‘-Np scie^ci wintains -so many
purpose for selfish ends! sophisms, $rrors. dreams and $es
Allopathffi legislation that ere-' ^ “edicin^?,-^Ricliter.
ated these so-called boards of ‘‘Smce the tiMB ojf the Gyeqks
and Romans rnfedicmef has in
| where numberless angels viedjdu^es oa sugar importec
Fannin County. to d0 Him honor, to tread in sor- from bounty-payi
Kknnwiiuii______i- ™-I.-lrow and l°neliuess the weary l^bich will give the trust a
ways of this world? All of this fci&bter grip on the jnarket of this
that you might reign with Him ““ky, / ^
forever. Your sacrifice is a Voiumes of anti-trusttalk can-
not offset the evidence of the
Will
»cknowled£menta, write
deeda, mortE»cM, etc.
examiners, has been the fruit- aud ,Romails mfedic^iei has ii
ful squrce of filling the state with f,° Pro^ress* or' baitih- any,
incompetent material: but thp sbould ber recohstruttld upon
incompetent material; but thel^sbould be recohstrujitld^ upon en-
more of these fiat doctors that Stlr^y new bas^ ”_HSboenheiB.
^ o. EVANS,
ALttorney at Law
and
NOTARY PUBIJO.
Office north side of public eqoare
over Bargain Store, *
forever. Your sacrifice is a
measure of your love. It is not. - r-v-------
hard to love God with all your suSar schedule upon the attitude
heart, if you -serve him with All of 1410 Republican party
your life. s. wards the sugar trust. The de-
I you “ad® a consecration of your struction of the trust does not lie
. --1. rf youraUis ot t^e afu/then the Mas- l° ^ turnmF over of the people
JiW , -- ter asks no more;” to the greed of trusts.
. Darling -risked her life ----
receive my prompt attention. All on tbe waves of a tempestuous _
SMn- I I- * We bo... her I A London paper has exited
M ^ AC • l . . ».
Bohhajc,
Texas.
voted ^ 14 wil1 b* Pf°*“ptly exe
I,
Notary and
Pension Business.
I onlv cclil ^°at’ her| A tendon paper has extracted
only companion bemg her aged from an official report on bank':
| father, she rowed to the ship- rUDtcv thp ^ °
jl^mne^l ^d t timh Tive,i few faiIures occur
safeto Longstone Mt i"' bUSiDeSS'
Conntlesssouls are lashed about ^ remark-
I by waves of sin V lng Upoa the 8nbN. we would
' wrX^cur daty ^ VurW H"* ? * ^ ^ thiS
Let us steer te’ at rate, the statistics
r.J. ABERNATHY makes I hr our We boat.
a specialty of these lin0s- L^J^and1W women in busi0ess are more Care-
He keeps a fnll supply of Master of storm r.,JJem t0 tbe ful than men-less liable to run
blanks. Has 18 years expert- wiU speak to ^ ^h° ‘nto 0X00ss and^o ruin themselves
ance. guarantees satisfac- The mind, like the eye catches ^ fdventurous a spirit.”
«mCE. NORTH cum 8TBEET anS ^heT/pes aa/The" “ ff*™1 -4
Bonham. Texas. I and nnhw ___g I ^ accepted as generally if not
are made by these examining ,®€ai-cb tbe entir^ literat^eiof
boards, the more consultations pT® ^^l00tic School: of MedHtae,
and fees it means for the board* observe results Of their treat-
for is not the licentiate under meDt disease- and you will 1st
lasting obligations to the means |one? dlscove.r that they have nb
that in the twinkling of an eye\re^°n for. making such humi(i-
took hjm from behind the dry admissions as the above.;
goods counter or cotton field and Now in conclusion we wish to
stamped him as a full fledged statecrearlyt<:)UrP0si|ti0ninregard
doctor? ° Jmedjical legislatibh. Alawthst
What confidence can we exptre^>K;r-a^e0 and certificate doctois’
to have in the medical profession] on^y at farce blit a presump-
when certain, members will, under uP°n ^ne ignoij^nce of the
the guise.of questionable laws, PeoPIe‘ , A state may confer
pose as an examining - board and DaeaQin^l0Ss titles uton indixliJ-
l ~ a ...» I nolo iTxL:nL J.«
THE
equitable
LIFE, ASSURANCE
SOCIETY
OF THE UNITED STATES.
♦
$178,496,769
Reserve on all
existing pol-
icies
(Calculated on a
^___________ ______ ____ ______________I_______It
Acres 4 mUes north of Bonbiam. Good dwelling, an I Liabilities^
Q^v^daDd pleDty 0f water‘ La0d all under fence, j Undivided \
whji 60 acres ih cultivation, J* - 5^^?/
Acres of the Mary Cox purvey, near the above tract*- * Standard J
This 40 acres isfll in cultivation, and has a nicalittle I Outstanding
orchard on it A«surance ... $916,102,070
g°^d l*nd aH UBder fence and in cultiva- ' anc^wTitten . $127 694.084
tion; dwelling, house, well water and good orchard A**- •A*7f«»4.084
small family who desire a good home coidd not do bet-
, ter than to bqy this place.
$00 Acres 3* mUes west of Bonham, with dwellings, barn,
elfc.; all #inder fence; a number one tract;
Amount . ..
Declined.. , ...$21,678,467
Iastallment policies stated at their con-
• muted rahie.
' J
number one tract*!
160 Acres 3 miles south of west from Bonham. A good
tenant house, plenty of water: The land all under
fence and mo?t of it in cultivation
A ,j■ •$, i X ' *
Acres about one mile northwest of Bonham. This is a
desirably piece, of property and can be had very cheap;
Acres of the James Campbell survey, about 9 miles
SOIltH nf RnnVinm At_«_____ia
HENRY B. HYDE, Pr*$ide«t.
JAMES W. ALEXANDER, V.-P.
Will M. Wateks. MrngV, Dallaj.Tex
M. A. BRIDGES, Agent, ■
8b 1 Bcnhaat, Texas.
south of ..Bonham; ^be’^^nd^^ j .
Ch>%»I of creek bottom land, not subject to overflow I KKftls 0. LC,
600 Acres good red^oak and black jack land, 4 miles from OfJflV****
amxseo..: Will cat up and sell in small tracts to suit / Q U 0
purchasers, and will give good terms, on long time, if 1
part cash is paid.
* ’■ ’-I/*-'- T
-? •
lbs.
LESCRIPnON FREE
for breeder*
fypt h*ku
ymr
?ose as an examining . board and ®ea,lin8l0fi!5 titles upon indixiid-
foist upon the people a lgt of men uals wl^icb carry with it no r^-
without any preparation and call sP°hsibility. hut when a statfe
without any preparation and pall SPonsib‘bt;^’ h*11 when a state
them doctors, and this is a fair dirpc|; pf b^ delegate^
Rtlfll-imon ike __I authorilv nrptcinric -
tQ | authority pretends -to confer thb.
title of -M. !>.; with all the re-
specimen of the old school
raise the standard of medical. .. .. _______
education and the pretext for | sPonsibUiqy pertainjpg thereto
WE also have one of the neatest little places in Bonham we
wish lo sell or exchange for black land in the county
yiijBrgperty ^ west of the.square and convenient to
the business part of town.
. ..v * V* i [■“-'/ 1 ■ * . • -« »'
Evans, Evans & Pritchett.
• i
—DEALER IN—
Shingles, Doors, Sash, Blinds,
Lime and Cement.
and nobier, the more they reiae untS^true *^7^ “ -
us. Christ is our pattern Let ’ h WOmen ln
I US k6eP V6ry Cl0Se to the samPle- fortunes d0Itn0'afCUmu]ate larf3
FRANiT mUVQ that* the patterns-we weave our =7 It follows from, the
r H AiN A J Url -CiO, | daily lives, may he like the onel k r6aS°n that enterPrises that
of whom it is said, “He went I gre,at returns also almost
about doing good.” Nothin necessar^ evolve great risks,
was too small or humble for His I ,av°,dance of the r'sk carries
notice. Farrar says: “It’s the h avoidaQ0e of the ac-
little self-denials, little honesties ^Panying chance of making a
little passing words of sympathy’ * T° pUt the matter in a
little nameless acts of kindnesV-Ju ^ & W°man conducts her
which when woven together! buS.me®s on. the cardinal prin-
gleam out so brightly in the pat- maklD^ M few l^ses as
tern of a life God approves.” Possible; a man on the cardinal
In the spire of StrasburgCathe- pri°cip^e of making as many
dral one lovely polished stone is* Pr° ^ “ PQSSible‘
placed, though unseen by any Sam Jones says marriage is he-
lium an eye. Long years ago a coming merchandise, clubs are
dexoted peasant woman was substitutes for homes, wives are
very anxious to aid in building fast becoming society ladies,
this structure. For many years children are becoming unayoid-
M. ROSENBAUM, 1:7gaVe 8 1 ber time t0 Polish, able nuisances, and distraction o{
rr----f mg one small stone till at last] live a habit. The few children
— pretext >: r - i 7rr=
which they want legislation and on any manHhat - announces him
appropriation of the pubjicfunds. TeIf 88 an^^ applicant tp become A
Indirectly every tax payer of this and. can raise the pa-e-
great state of Texas is contribut- s9rib0d fee, *^e most earnestly
ing toward educating AlInnatHir. eQteT W protest against surh
LIVERY STABLE
BY
South Center Street,
Bonham, Texas.
Highest Market
Price Paid for
FORS AND HIDES.
enter, opr protest against^ such
mnjuit^nd which has b<Jm de-i
claced unconstitutional by several-
supreme courts of different states,7
thp mnef j__i^ ,
*j|f vvtolVU 4 Wlllg
that of ;.the state of, Missouri,
The courts are rapidly becoming
convin^d tha£a firstjclass college
faculty is the oply competept
authority to .say as to who shall
practice medicine or not. Make
a law that 66 person ^ali be.per-
mitted to practice- mjedicine or
surgery e^cepj upon? a diploma
eminating frothy first class col-
lege, apd that to-entitlefthe holder
to practice in any state, then let
every school of mediae see tp
its own household knd keep their
colleges up to the highest stand-
ard in preparing meii. for the
Bonham, Texas. I T7T “—” » paoit. me few children
she brought her finished offering who enter the house are given
o the Lord but the builder lover to milk bottle and purses in
indlysaid, ‘‘Your offering has babyhood, fashionable colleges
come oo late, for no place is left in youth, and given over to °so-
When you
plant seeds, plant
FERRYS
Always the best.
For Mia everywhere.
«. FERRY A CO..
* Detroit Midi.
below where your stone may
I show its beauty to the world.
Just one niche remains, and that
is away up on the lofty spire.”
| A smile lit up the woman’s worn
face as she replied, “That is just
the place; my stone will meet the
|eyes of Him I have labored a
ciety, ()ress and amusement in
womanhood. Instead of reading
their Bibles and - saying their
prayers at night the "girls plait
their h*ir in shucks for bangs
and the boys plait their toes for
toothpick shoes, and both go to
sleep wjth adime novel under the
fe time to serve. The Angels pillow and fifteen cent head Fm
and my Lord can see.” So.! top of if ; ‘
| Christian friends, the stone our ‘
Ifjj: __ | love has polished long may not I ?efor^ the Apple Stand.-.He;
UAY|f L^yia r\ t rn lifes cathedral find ail honor- ^ ^ QU are to° fine an old lady to laws TChereby they -want to'as-1 secure' f^i* the- Oi-etansT the-re^ Trouble Ahead;.
OtJUL J; InG ' edplaCe’butbesuro thewai,i^ ^Vetn/°^harJfor a ^methe^^shtpfind become forms wl)icl, W Iromisfed onlv! ^
A A niche is kept in God’s -Heavenlv ■ &he: Go wa>’ wid 3 uro blv- the guardians of the entire medi- in the vaguest ferL ‘ This is a 1 - f l u ! T'
building. Htavenl>jney. Ill a man that hud th£ caI P^sion and the people, theory ppon’whth tly a2 *’ ^
If we are consecrated en sa®e ldees before we was. mar-* As Ec]ect*cs we want those calo- agree, biit In lie details eff its ex-1 » 'I
deavorers our hearts are emptied ned,.that4rm workin’ fur now. j mel g0nttemeEito understand that ecution there rareVriou^ diffe*r- I i ^Padoe^’ '' 1 ‘
of selfish "desires that they mav ^Pr‘ Troth. j our existence for more than three fences of opinions. Russia and iMWu,^ *. I !
be filled with the Holy SpiriM It is ^ j quarters of a century m thp fape ' France bJinglLa iming\d em if^ y°tt S°l’ .
% : ; • -fll ■' - . . ■. . •' - ' 1. ' .. ■' -• Ii - 1 r t' • ’ '"'A*
! To »ny person interested in humane
matters, or who lores animals, we will
tend free, upon application, a copy of
the '‘ALLIANCE, ' the org-an of this
Society. In addition .to its intensely
interesting, it contains a list of the
valuable and unusual premiums given
by the paper. Address The National
Humane Alliance. -110-4llUnited Char-
tties Build ing,’ New York. * 38-2m
ing toward educating Allopathic
doctors. If you doubt it look at
the Dallas News of Feb. 17, ’97,
where the modest sum of $108,-
333.32 is asked by the so-called
medical board of the University
of Texas, which is in reality an
Allopathic college, which proved
a financial failure and asked the
state for help. While at Austin
wp were told by members of the
house Ibat each appropriation
was ma,de upon the promise that
it should be the last, as the insti-
tution would thereafter be self-
sustaining,* but the very demand
for this last appropriation provres
the contrary, aud if the senti-
ment expressed by several mem-
bers of the legislature is taken
as a criterion on which to base
an opinion, no more money
will be Appropriated, and no w me judgj
more medical legislation , will be »nd abilft
enacted. In other words everymedicine,
school of medicine will .have to
educate its own members and de-
pend upon its own merits as to
its fitness to exist.
Under no circumstances has
the Eclectic School of Medicine
ever turned public mendicants,
asking financial aid from the
state. Our colleges are not only
self-sustaining and in a flourish-
ing condition, but all of them re-
port larger classes this year than
heretofore, and all this in the
face of the general financial de-
pression and medical legislation,
which is so detrimental and per-
nicious to all but the Allopathic
to ; School of Medicine, and yet with
he all the unsavory and none-envia-
“>n biy record of the old school, and
insincerity toward the p( ople,
they ask our. legislators to mss
laws whereby "they want toas-
sume the diclatorshipand become
the guardians of the entire medi-
cal profession add the people.
the most recent decision that-fbr the pre
that Of orf JL£2f sha«
ish troops shall be immediately
wjihdraw4n frolm the Island, and
that the restoration of order be
entrusted to t|e European fleet,
assisted by the Greek army, un-
c er a commander to be appointed
by the Powers,. It i& further
provided that-ror the present the
to the
f£m ?LaCd ,assists„ “ture to expel |
f-nlcte?
lungs, the liver, the kidneys and the
50 ■ “do^6 1
For sale by Moore & Muchert. 40-4t.
Lake C. Wilson,
On the nortt-eart aide of the square
t Preparing iur irie
practice of medicine; ti^en let the
jeople be the judges as to prot
of every
i r i ■■ ■■ i Eclectics
'ire 3sk noidther tribunal, and are
perfectly willing tb abide by the
decision 6f sfjch a competent
authority p the Aknerjican. peo-
ple- G. HELBlNGj M. D.
There is a monientary lull in
the stpr-ql ’ in.’Eastern] Europe,
which seems fa be ^ ’ Portent, of
greater fury rathei^ thLn a har-
binger of peace. Jff’hJ1 Powers
have giyj2m0reece th?i| ultima-
tum ;■ Gj-eece has gMyen <tb4
Powers , her ultimatum; nei-
ther has accepted' thp other,
and all are| waitihg for a
moment to see what willjhappen:
The demand of lAe Powers is,
substantially,1 thaf Greie' shall
take no further payt- in the ’set-
tlement of Citetan difficulties, aud
that it shall be lefj. to them to re *
guard the peace of Europe and to
secure for the Cretans |the ■ re-'
forms wltich are* |)romised onl^,
i,n the vaguest forms,; “
Powert, but th.*t after three
months they sh^ll be givein the
choice between genuine autono-
my and annexationito Greece.
It is further provided that both
Turkish andrGfeekr ttoops shall
be withdrawn from; their respec-
tive-frontiers id view of the Im-
minent danger of the out-
break and ’slaughter, ! es-
pecially in Thess'aly To
our undiplomatic!-; eyes . this
appears quite reasop^ble but' the
Powers do not- so regard it.
Thd probability i'Al that they will
establish a blockade pf the Cre-
tan ports without delay, bu) that
there will be some, hesitation in
attempting the co'ercion of
Greece further than thil. Xheir
aim, apparently, is to force
Greece^o begin the war, if; there
is to be a waT, and thereby, bear
whatever oditrm may be connect-
ed with. it. Preparatibns for war>
are being actively ihade,*an<i it is
becoming more improbabfe ejvery
day that a peacefu}’ seitfement
can be, effected.—ChriistiaD Ejvan-
gelist. ' !.
-------r
Thursday night
«EO. F. OGLESBY,
for | VETERINARY SURGEON.
i !% inquiries are made _ __
Niem.
D- -—-'--- » r
Evans, Evans & Pritchett. 10"OOD NEWSPAPERS
At a Very Low Price.
p«^.7hebUr.S0Sfh'Ser: - . x.-
Sarsaparilla. 50 cents and 50 THE SEMI-WEEKLY NEWS (Ga*-
ooses. for. sale by Moore & Muchert. '’eston or Dallas) fa published Tuesday
— «-__ and Fridays. Each issue consists df
4<Mt 104 Papers for Only $J.
Sample copies tree. * * *
SOUTHERN
7 * I Cl ALL
RAILWAY CUPID’S
I» the Direct and Fast
Lhie to Points in .
Address
! fi. BELO t CO., Publishers.
Dallas or Galveston, Trr
For Curt oflxaouttad Vtm t
rW* ‘■ottafBralm^omar. H
---Stminui 0ta*m,
NEBVE
tgg&sss
olina and Virginia,
SOLID VESTIBULE TRAINS
. . BETWEEN ‘ .
New; Orleans and Washington
Memphis and Washington
Adlmta D& OTTO BI8MAE0E
e. o B*, go. sa». ST.'rxwia.
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. £v ' ROUTE
• f.
4 Hours Quicker |
New Orleans&North LasternR
Alabama sVicksburg Ry
|_Vicksburg.Shrev£port4Faci.:icRR!
ght ojf last week j “ * ^*CKer|
four prisoners sawed" th,eir way Than any othor line via Atlanta- Q
o.ut of the jail at Granbury, Hood tLEGAHT DIRIRG CARS. IblirevepOrt
county, i ' •- * ' ' 'l I .
I : *.’*.
A German scientist says’that f
”the very best thing to do is to
jeat applies. if ^ej remember i
(correctly the' late My. Adam ' I
*NEW ORLEANS or MExMPHIsj
double daily tra/rs^ or New Orleans,
adopted that platfo^p! tand jsee
where he landed!—Ex.
llj. * T —■ TO--
O Pullman’s FlREST PALACE CARS Vicksburg, Jackson, Meridian,
r —pbom Birmingham, Chattanooga,
n I!___ ' *ROM~ I Asheville, Atlanta, Cin
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phia, and New York, with- aod SOUTH-EAST,
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Soli^ Vwrtbuled Trains, Fast TV»e(
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—TO—
^ntu«nn^l?/oWers? schedules and any
--*1
Sleeper*.
Gao. !>«». AeO.’n-^hSSSac, IinIom“iSS“or
c. A. BENSCOTER, T. M. Hunt. T. P. a.,
lA t ----— m I nnlUe i|l
>
7
P. A., Chattanooga.Tenn.
. j-C-ANDREWS. 1
Texir ° CPB Agt:’ Rpu^tou,
I 40-tf|
p vt p Dallas, Texas.
H. H. Garratt, A. G, P; a
. New Orleans, f*
I. Hardy, ,G. P. a., .
< New Orleans, La.
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Evans, W. A.; Evans, J. C. & Evans, Ashley. The Bonham News. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 1897, newspaper, April 2, 1897; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth914115/m1/4/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bonham Public Library.