The Bonham News. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, November 3, 1899 Page: 4 of 4
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. J
x• k
HANNA’S GREAT BLUNDER.
II
ikreveport
or New Orleans,
' ' Vicksburg, Jackson. Meridian,
Birmingham, Chattanooga,
Asheville, Atlanta, Cin-
cinnati, New York,
—AND TO at.t, POINTS—*
NORTH, EAST, NORTH-EAST
and SOUTH-EAST.
FfoM, CIom Connections,
Through Sleepers.
■all o»your nearest ticket agent for
■Wther information, or address:
R. J. Anderson, A/G. P. A.
New Orleans, La.
G*0. H. Swth, G. P. A.,
New Orleans, La.
I^ii
fi
treserves
Lar“-*.”r_ wtta
fuiflatwu thin by u; H
IKSoA. DosvmJ of asm »-
F^'Reflned
Paraffine Wa
KJ3s2>3?l
h?SS‘:r,.;
LIVERY STABLE
BY
Uie O. Wilson,
i ride of tbs square
One Hour
Erased
Oace more between Fort Worth
sot Dearer.
**•*
Beginning August 1st the New fast
Main of Pullmans and Cafe cars will
Fort Worth
ieved to Have Been Due to a Fit
of Anger.
Washington, Oct. 24.—The
administration leaders in Wash-
ington are greatly perturbed over
the trust issue and certain com-
plications that have grown out of
it They fear that Hon. Mark A.
Hanna has put his foot in it by
his speech last week on this sub-
ject and seriously endangered
the prospects of Republican suc-
cess in Ohio and other States
where elections will occur next
month. The president and his
immediate advisers have been
particularly anxious to avoid the
trust question, to handle it with
gloves, so to speak; create the
impression that the Republican
party was really opposed to
trusts and would curb their rap-
idly growing power, without in
fact committing it to any policy
in that connection whatever.
Above all, it was especially de-
sired not1 to undertake a defense
of trusts.
All Republican spellbinders
have been cautioned on this point
and given the most minute in-
structions as to the line of talk
they should put up when re-
ferring to the trust issue. The
idea has been to give the people
a magnificent jolly, and confine
all statements on this subject to
brilliant and glittering general-
ities.
Comptroller Dawes, who is one
of the strongest stump speakers
in tne Republicen camp, in his
Boston speech a few days ago
showed consummate skill,in car-
rying out the McKinley idea. He
talked for over an hour, and
while he was careful to say no-
thing to offend the trust mag-
nates, he intimated that the
G. O. P. all in good time would
settle the question to the satis-
faction of everybody.
The day following the appear-
ance of Mr. Dawes’ Boston speech
Senator Hanna came out in a
blunt defense of trusts, declaring
that they were simply angelic
and of the greatest benefit to the
working classes. Comptroller
Dawes naturally feels chagrinned
and indignant that his delphic
utterance should be so promptly
and flatly contradicted by the
real boss of the Republican
party.
The contradiction between the
speeches of Hanna and Dawes is
the chief sensation in adminis-
tration circles. Many of the
close friends of the president be-
lieve that Senator Hanna has
made a terrible blonde*. They
think that he probably lost his
temper and was betrayed into
■baking statements which are
likely to bring about the defeat
of the Republican party in-Ohio
and elsewhere this fall.
“If we lose Ohio next month,”
said a leading Republican to-
night, “it will be aH on account
of Hanna. I think that he is go-
ing to prove another Burchard’
Hanna made McKinley, and I
presume that he belives that he
has the right to unmake him. Be
that as it may, the election of
Mr. McLean as governor of Ohio
this year will sound the death
knell of William McKinley.”
On Arledge Ridge.
We have 19 acres of fine black
land going at a real bargain. No
house, in 4 miles of Bonham.
$100 cash, balance to suit.
ev disease is the enemy <vre have
(ear as a result of the feverish
into between President McKinley
and the Sulu Sultan, providing
among other things for this
American recognition and pay-
ment of the Sultan’s harem keep-
er, is now in the hands of Secre-
tary of State Root, an approved
Kidne;
most to
restlessness of our much vaunted mod-
ern civilization. It iB a treacherous , and duly authenticated part of
enemy, working out its deadly effect
under cover of the moet trilling symp-
toms. The first indication of chants
in the urfne, frequent headaches,digest-
ive troubles, should be the signal for
prompt remedial measures. Prickly
Ash Bitters is a kidney remedy of su-
perlative! merit; it is soothing, healing
and atreni “
aching or
M the “Denver Road" as hereto-
fore at 9:46 A. M., but arrive in
Denver
a* 1 P. M. the next day—one hour
earlier! Passengers reach Denver In
t&m Jor lunch.
•••*
For lull particulars address
A. A. CuasoN, G. A. P. D..
B. B. Keeler, V. P. A T. M.,
The Fort Worth A Denver City Rail
way. •
FORT WORTH, TEXAS.
tost Passenger Service
IN TEXAS.
4 HPOflTAKT GATEWAYS 4
penatives ment; It is sootmng, dealing
and strengthening, auickly relieves the
aching or soreness that always appears
in the advanced stages, checks the
progress of the disease and has an
excellent cleansing and regulating ef-
fect in the stomach, liver and bowels.
Sold by N. H. Moore, Bonham.
-4-F——-
Lincoln said: “No man is
good enough to govern another
man without the other’9 con-
sent. When the white man
governs himself, that is self
government; but when he gov-
erns another man that is more
than self-government—that is
despotism. Our reliance is in
the love of liberty which God
has planted in us; our defease
is in the spirit which prizes
liberty as the heritage of all
men, in all lands, everywhere.
Those who deny freedom to oth-
ers deserve it not themselves,
and under a just God can not
long retain it.
Bright’s Disease.
Bright’s Disease is uo respecter of
persons; It attacks men and women, the
strong and robust, the rich and poor,
the active body and brain workers, the
fathers of families, the bread winners
in every sphere of life, seeming to
choose for its victims those only who
can least be spared. Smith’s Sure Kid-
ney Cure is the only guaranteed rem-
edy for Bright’s Disease. Your money
back if it fails to cure. Price 50c. Sold
by all druggists. . Nov
The output of pig iron in the
United States for the present
year is estimated at 14,000,000
tons, or two-fifths of the world’s
production.
v ^ m ^-
That Throbbing Headache
Would quickly leave you‘if
you used Dr. King’s New Life
Pills. Thousands of sufferers
have proved their matchless mer-
it for sick and nervous head-
aches. They make pure blood
and strong nerves and build up
your health. Easy to take. Try
them. Only 25c. Money back if
not cured. Sold by J. W. Peelor
and J, C. Saunders & Co.
the historical records of Ameri-
can acts. It is in order, there-
fore, to hail the Raja Mura, sup-
erintendent of harems, as an offic-
ially accepted American institu-
tion. Under the impelling im-
petus of imperialism we are 6ut-
ting strange capers these days.
Spain’s Greatest Need.
Mr. R P. Olivia, of Barcelona,
Spain, spends his winters at
Aiken, S. C. Weak nerves had
caused severe pains in the back
of his head. On using Electric
Bitters, America’s greatest’blood
and nerve remedy, all pain soon
left him. He says this grand
medicine is what his country
needs. All America knows that
it cures liver and kidney trouble,
purifies the blood, Jones up the
stomach, strengthens the nerves,
puts vim, vigor and new life into
every muscle, nerve and organ
of the body.. If weak, tired or
ailing, you need it. Every bottle
guaranteed, only 50c. Sold by
J. W. Peeler and J. C. Saunders
& Co.
Arbuckles’ Coffee
S ^ ' \
Is the Standard of Coffee Excellence by which all Coffee Quality is Compared.
No. SI
Dining Room Table
Cloth.
I
Ta!?Jc noth, whit* with red boa,
Sine 50 x 68 inches. * J
Seat on receipt of >/eal
. pnsmg>- 4unp and fiO *.i*tmtu
ctH fr->i * ^rnppemdf ArbockhB1
No. S3. A Dress Pattern.
*4
_r iurn
fig
...
- • \.V,-$SFA ..
*; ) ba '-in
12 yards
Printed Or- i
candle. SB j
inch**
a m*. 5 col- i
ora m select
fmm. Fiak. j
llijfi. Black,
Prsrl and
KUh Oreen.
Sent poet.
***[*• ’
ipt cf
- ent
?***a«e , <
v' .itij* net!
lyt* .term,
i v r# CUE ,
■Cii wrap-
No. BO
8lx Handkerchiefs.
No. 55
Four Handkerchiefs.
Ivim.minimi
OOOOCCCOCOQOCC
a
a uni|il««
vtl! v* .
-u. H
etsrv- -
There’s no use paying for something
you don’t get. No use paying your
money for carefully sewed seams, and
for carerful cutting and then get com-
mon goods and ail the badness that poor
pants means. The price of common
pants will buy a pair of BUCKSKIN
BREECHES, and they have a guaran-
tee in the pocket that makes good our
statements as to their being the best
jeans pants on earth. Best fit. Best
finish.’ Bold by McDonald A Howell,
The income from the Monte
I
Carlo gaming tables for the past
year reaches 15,520,000.
Work every hour, paid or un-
paid; see only that thou work,
and thou canst not escape thy
reward. Whether thy wqrk be
fine or course—planting corn or
writing epics—so it be honest
work, done in thine own appro-
bation, it shall earn a reward to
the sense as well as to the
thought. The reward of a thing
well done is to have done it.—
Emerson.
A Frightful Blunder
often cause a horrible
Will
burn, scald, cut or bruise. [Buck-
len’s Arnica Salve, the best in
the world, will kill the pain and
promptly heal it. Cures old
sores, fever sores, ulcers, boils,
felons, corns, all skin eruptions.
Best pile cure on earth. Only 25c
a box, cure guaranteed. Sold by
J. W. Peeler and J. C. Saunders
& Co.
No. 52.
Lady’s
Apron.
Ftp* quality
white lawn,
wide strings
aml hncy lace
Insertion, site
S3 rfj* Inches.
S'Ol post-,
pnld «:■ re-
eclat |f tveu
c <> a i p <> n : -
u« e':t t a mjp
and C3 si£-
n.11,nrc» ctj (
fnrta wrap-- ,
puts of■ A
b uc k le a
Unacted cpf.
fee.
No. 54. A Paircf Window Curtains.
?:t Ladies' Poets* Hsndker-
ebu-fa. hemstitched, colored bord-
•NlmijiUintlMi Seatpest-
paid on receipt of 2 rent
po-.taar Ilamp and 2U sig-
natures cat from wrappers ot
* Arhnctiea’ Komed Coffee_
—----------
\ J
i .
L. a ■ X
. I
•tssr
SM UMl
UUwotao.
Ml
rria?
f M««Mt
^staatpawd
20 atr-
aalarem
eat from
wrapper* ef
Arbasklas'
K -. 57.
j. ^-qirof
. .;ors.
ih» beel
—; uuinti fAC-
• • w#l! finbOi-
S.'iug.
- vdUpitWf on
uf J cent
• - ifitmp and
' iviinre» cut
• of
Roasted
Fr*
No. 58. A Pair of Shears. v
F-ach Cur-
tain a yanl
trlitc* L.rvt
thr*e-qo#irtp-r
ya'rd?
‘?4ent *6*?-,, . - . .
.Of :h* he*t Am^riGM make. I taebss long. Scat post-paid
rn d <>n re- OT1 receipt of‘J cent poatace ittmp pad 15 aifiaiarea
co i p“t .of *2 c*:t from wrappers of ArbucJtloo Roasted* Coffee.
cert fo-t- ' “ •---—-" •—i———, j ' - - - ■ -——r 1 "
a,,. • No. 59.' Razor made by J. R. Torrey. f X
and Kiwis- < \
\tutn?tsu ' ~ j--
from amp- ' «— '
p o r • of A r-
Mrck lap/ ’
RdABted C'jt-
f“e.
The j. R TorTVy Baaot M
known as the beet made in the CDUmd
ytttea' The prime-! toarantee of Its Basotho
torer goes with eocl) rator. * Seat p—et-patd ••
eidtt of -j went pMjgge iitwy aod 2b • Is■■ terra cot from wtappeesot ArtWfcHi*
'"R.-'je-e.l r«)rw.
No. 60. Lady’s Belt.
r~'mt l: l imnmw! iui“u:'!! U v imiiiuu iLUl uni^=l
No. 6 I, Man's Bolt.
Grain leathex. ■—i i •*.or. !_ kel-phitod
No. 62. A Carving Knife and Fork/
Latest style, grain leather Ua color 1 w
In. wide, nickel plated buckle. Belt* «ie uickle and rtmrs. When oN-r'K ptve
when mderl”, from £ to i’tn.'/’fromS sl« of waist In Incite*. Uc: 'e!-jzz Ji A ;lm-ciase set. Boon ted with genuine bock bore han«lea.'vXnl» hteM
•oil la.; fromJJtoM In. Sent post- to«Inchesla : n-t - tp-r p<.«t-p«ld 8 -c-ee Sent by express, charges prepaid. •• receipt ef
P«W em recelpt'oT a 2 cent post- on receipt of - c-nS'i*—:•• • •• »'«*op J trnt pnstage stamp and 06 slgaatares cut from wrappers of
age stamp sad 20 signatures cut_________i ...... e. .
ftnm*be wmpiwrl^ ArbuckUn"Roasted ned 2* sipeerurVs c-.t fr n. -r.‘ -rs A:- --kle .--ousted Codee. When orderBg name yoer
Ooffte.
of ArtHtck!*-^ ituF M Cofic-
Offidtf A! 54 yo«r Pool Offlco.
n
No. 63. A Butcher’s Knife.
No. 65
A Lady’s Pen Knife.
•lx Inch blade, hard wood handle, good ci-U'-lpls «
poof-paid on receipt of i cent pomace s(ah. f
cut from wrappers of Arbuckles’ Kotneri
No. 64. A Kitchnn Knl’n
Will cut bread, slice ham and saw ths '-’t'C,
sesry kltfhen. Sen
14 signatures cut from
nt post-paid on receipt of - — 'I postci
jt from wrappers of Arbi*-'tl.o' l:---
—.-virw.1 ,c. no t -Ji •
2 x-rit pOSt“. Mf -I-
Its. t to Ht,i; dmshed Uad.a.
IU- J> beaattfoJIy yanegated
.mifadoa of otyrx. Sent
post-paid on receipt of 2
ere? postage stamp and. 30
signatures rat from wrapper*
of Artucklsa' Roasted Coffee.
No. 67. Picture Frame.
. | •
* CaMret site, braaa,
sllyerplated. Seel
post-paid ee re-
ceipt of S rest
postage eta mp
and 12 slgea.
tares cut frea
■wrapparx of Ae-
burklea1 Roasted
Coffee.
A London millionaire was pois-
oned by stripped bass at ’Frisco.
Infant mortality is something fright-
ful. Nearly ODe-quarter die before they
reach one year, one-third before they
are five, and one-half before they are
fifteen! The timely use of WHITE’9
CREAM VERMIFUGE would save a
majority of these precious lives » Price
2£c. J. C. Saundejs & Co. Nov
-— e —--
To do anything because othfers
do it and not because the thiDg
is good or kind or honest in its
own right, is to lose control or
captaincy upon yourself and go
posthaste to Ihe devil with the
greater number.—Hugo.
If you have sore throat, sorentss
across the back or side, or your lungs
feel sore or tender, or you are Ihreat-
No. 66. A Ccntlen^m’s Pocket Knife.
Two-bladed knife made of beet
malarial* and finMbed to work-
manllkt manner. Sent poet-
pafd on rOeeipt of 2 cent pest-
age stamp and 40 signatures
cut from wrapper* of Arbockiee’
_ Roasted Coffte.
-A——5---—*- ■ ■ ......-
No. 68. An 4'L Revolver.
Highest grads material and
workmanship, II calibre, cealre41re ; .
double action. Sent by express,
charges prepaid by ns, on reeeipf
of 2 cent postage stamp and ISO
signatures cut from wrappers of At-
tackin' Roasted Coffee. When ordering name your bsaieet
ExprsB Office aa well u yoar PoatOglca. ..
Vv». 30. A Centleman's Watch.
The ” Is a watch of tbs ordinary size Stem
wn»l *•>•! -et. t-ist proof, nick--plated case, solid back.
. :»» e - ■ - highly poHabed ataal ptnlooa. Modeled
• Iter 4 r- • . -.co. r-Tahls timekeeper. The prlnlad guar-
i-- >f - .r..-^er vroopanics each watch. Sent post-paid
at r»rdr:H I erne postege stamp aod 20 slgaatares
1-j; frui^rs, i.-t '< Arbuckl-S Roasted Coffk%
No. 71.
Enameled Alarm Clock.
No. 70
A Porcelain
Imported porcelain fran • - - i ' V
corate,! >lovem-o: ms.1. y 11- -u
Clock Cb-Lgcamniecd them * r<r*1 me.
keeper, I. lpch>s h’.-ti «»m- r>l'U. ■*—,c
by express, eh.i-x,-* or i-.ii.l an
receipt of 8 erut pe-cage s> >-np >a4
113 aigaalures c-i: I:n - - •!-;* -f
Arbuckles' P.oac: d Coffee „-1 nag
name youj nsvre^A f.xpria, gey, at »-.1 a*
your Post Office.
TM» b a picture of the tig-
nature on Arbacklet’ Routed
Coflee Wrapper, which jou art
to eat out and lend to ua as a
No OthOr part of tho Coflee
Wrapper wfl bo accepted at a
vouch or. nor will thU Picture bo
accepted at tuch
Man*—W*flaw—BuaBgBMnBBWwt—w 0 ■ - r: ■■ a fbla ir -
_MCKA1XH”°2-^° LAC«Bor^.“
Highest standard of Alarm
(-<■*tales* frame, orhamtar*' . __
French pattern and *
WUl run thirty h* '**<’00<J
tog. Sene* urswttboo.wl.o-
,r express, charges
„ .j, ow receipt of 2 «*■<
doge stamp and 86 s»««B-
tares cot from srappers of Aa
j tackier Roasted Coffee. Whet* or-
dering name yoar nearest F.xpnrss
; Office and your Root Offlcw a* well
H
reoenta one page of a Llot which la foood lh each
- Cf Arbacklet' Row*ted Coffee, and witb each
store
Bros.
! or OtTB MCirATtTHEfl ABE PEDfTEP 02 KM *
—-- - ........ ......—-- -.ACKCBOCO._p>gt Of mu ub* win ***** —--- , —
Uin** til oomwnnloatiortt tt ARBUCKLE BRO^ h5Y|0N DEPT., NEW YORK CITY, N. Y.
It is said that a Hungarian has
invented a new telegraphic
machine which is capable of
transmitting over sixty thousand
words an hour.
Our. Harem Keeper.
“To ImNe to naive
4 FIST TRAINS DAILY 2
...TO...
St Jftuis, Chicago
, • a..and the East.
ow*1’ ““ nr"»*
»?BW ORLEANS
flOiJ
•fffWBFffllnMln Ytrtibtiled Buffet Sleepers,
Hflnfcdnifl New Chair Can (teats free).'
BBUKT UNB TO
NSW MEXICO* ARIZONA
AND CALIFORNIA.
- \ MPadic Coast Limited/
flwH weekly, between
9Hfl4A90, 8T. LOUIS, DALLAS. PORT
WORTH. LODANaELCS AND
•AN nUNOIDCO.
ft»TVh—fw iffBt, ft win, m.
f *- n«n, m. r. rvma,
r^r. lB4#Bilm«*f, Ib'1 NWfladtitMIfL
The War Taxes Stay.
New York World.
One year and two months after
the end of our war with Bpainthe
“temporary” war taxes voted to
support the effort to free Cuba
are.still very much in force
The internal-revenue taxes
alone are taking from the people
$1,000,000 for every business day,
or over 1300,000,000 a year, which
is equal to the highest exactions
from this source during the great
oivil war,
And instead of planning for
reductions the government offi-
cials are casting about for more
and higher taxas. Imperialism
and militarism do indeed come
high- j i
The Examiner notices that the
Texas Farmer, Texas Christian
Advocate, Texas Farm and
Ranch,-and several other papers
of the State, are printing paid
matter for the round bale cotton
people just as though it were
"pure reading matter and not paid
for by a gigantic corporation
seeking to crush out all the lit-
tle square bale giDS over the
country, So long as big cor-
porations can buy their way in
to newspapers on the terms tnis
round bale company has done
this year, just that long will th>*
trusts and syndicates be able to
snap their fingers at the people.
—McKinney Examiner.
Cornshellers for Sale.
Two first-class cornshe’lers for
sale at a bargain. One 500 and
the other 250 bushels daily ca-
pacity. Bran new. Apply at
News office for information.
Montevidoe’s harbor improve-
men*»^^ *15,000,000.
* St. Louis Republic.
Among the salaried officers
recognized by the American Mil-
itary Governor of the Sulu Isl-
ands in keeping up the royal
court of the Sultan of Sulu it
may somewhat astonish Ameri-
cans to encounter the duly re-
corded title of Raja Mura, keeper
of the royal harem, who is to
receive from Uncle Sam’s rep-
resentative a stipend of $40 per
month for looking after his mas-
ter’s many wives.
At first sight it will probably
seem to the average citizen of
this monogamous country that
the pnited States government
made a sufficient surrender of
principle in officially sanctioning
the fsulu Sultan’s practice of
polygamy. The generosity
breadth of tporal yipw which
leadsi the McKinley administra-
tion tio assume the cost of keep-
ing the Saltan's harem in order,
supervising his women and pro-
viding the necessary retinue of
hareii servants, may not prove
altogether grateful to the
American mind, still
faithful to old fashioned stan
dard* of Caucasian decency an’d
moraflity. •„
It maiy be taken for granted,
however, that the Raja Mura will
fairly earn the salary which he
is to receive from UdcIb Sam
The turn of «0 per moeth
jgtssai’ real- estate. 1
externally, and use B A L L jL R D’S
HOREHOUND SYRUP. Sold byJ.C,
Saunders & Co. . j | Nov
Over 15,000 people went
through Yellow-stone Park this
season, breaking the record by
3000.
I have a great variety! of
lands and cify property on
my books for $ale and trade
Constipation means the accumulation
of waste matter that should be dis-
charged dally, and unless this is done
the foul matter is absorbed and poison*
the system. Use HERBINE to h*' _
about regularity of the bowel* p‘ri™
30c. J. C. Saunders & Co, ' ^
There were U,607 foreigners
settled in China in 1897.
4-
A Narrow Escape,
Thankful words written by
Mrs. Ada E. Hart, of Groton, S.
D. “Was taken with a baid cold
which 88tt)Gd on my lungs; cough
set in aDd finally terminated in
consumption. Four doctors gave
me up, saying I could live but a
short time. I gave myself up to
my Savior, determined if I could
not stay with my friends on
earth, I would meet my absent
one»e^ibove. My husband was
advised to get Dr. King’! New
discovery for Consumption,
coughs and colds. I gave it a
trial, taking in all eight bottles.
It has cured mo, and thank God,
I am saved, and now a well and
healthy woman.” Trial bottles
free at J. W. Peeler’s or J. C.
Saunders & Co’s. Regular size
50c and $1. Guaranteed or price
refunded',
If you are suffering from drowsiness
in the day time, irritability ol temper,
less j steeples^ nights, general debility, head-
ache, and general want of tone of the
system, use HERBINE. You will get
relief and finally a cure. Price 50 cts.
Sold by J. C. Saunders & Co. Noy
Buckinghamshire, England,
reports a plague of frogs.
For burns, cuts, bruises, lacerations,
. ,<« injuries of any description, BAL-
LARD’S SNOW LINIMENT is a sov-
ereign remedy. It never fails to do
not seem excessive for the oner- f Food, and so promptly that its wonder-
ous work of superintending a II^rp^ • SMd
Nov
They Don’t Want To.
Large and small tra*’ , „ ,,
and sandy far’*' jtS’ black
lands, large * Z13’ Pasture
_OUQ and small tracts
acre" ~J acres> another 492
„ another 417 acres, and
several other smaller traiQts.
t-. • 4 ■' M
Fruit and berry farqos, etc.
Some of this property must
be sold. Some one will get
a bargain and some one will
lose a bargain. j ' ,
See My List. ?, ^
Assessor’s offieD, Court House.
. N. E. LAINH4BT.
9 U § HUM.
65 Acres of Good Black Land is Going to be
Sold at *a Bargain. •
Storm’s Malarial and Chill Killer.
ONCATEST DISCOVERY OF 19TM CENTURY.
Quit buying medicine and drugs for
chills and fever. Call on or write James
B. Storms, at Lannius, Tqxas, be Will
sell you a receipt to manufacture and
use in your own family a pure-Vegeta:
ble remedy that is a dead shjot, sure
cure for chills and fever amLall malar
rial troubles. Soldou a positive (guar-
antee, -agents wanted to sell receipts on
commission, or will sell county, rights 1
or precinct rights. Patent applied for'.
James B. Storms. Prop.
22-1 mo X Lannius, Texas,.
Paris is to have an internation-
al congress of deaf mutes.
The price is $750 for tiie nice
little 5-room, 1 hall and 2-porch
cottage near the.Fisher placef i
acre, east front. Come at once.
Wbeeler & Evans.
Fine Place for Sale.
I have a fine black laud farm of as) acres lot
sale. 15o acres In cultivation and 90 acres (tv
grass and timber. Dwelling house 6f three
rooms and two halls, with omt of ttie finks*
tarns In the couuty, two good: rent liaises,
four go<4 wells, g.«ad pool. (Mod i-luxil in a'
half mile, iln adjoining. Tie- farm is Inst
west of tin- county farm, slY mh.-s southeast
of Bonham. This Isone of thetx*st pieces of
land in the ajunty^ tend.krill be sold at a Very
reavojwhle igurc Will se;l for half cask abd
balance on time. ^ M. FPGray.
a-lmo r>odd City, Texas. ,
< *
We have a farm ot 65 acres, all in culti-
vation, four miles southeast of Bonham.
House of 3 roomsf good dug well, p’ublic road
on two sides. Can sell this place; at $27.50
per acre, with one-half cash $n.d balance to
sdit. See us first or you will miss a good in-
vestment.
WHEELER & EVANS
Over First National Bank. Bon ham, Texas.
' rBy meditatiDg on our own
tendencies we think we get the
key to universal conduct.
WANTED-We will pay 112 a Week salary
to e ther a man or woman to i-epresent tbe
Midland Monthly Magazine as a subecrip-
tion solicitor. Tho Midland Is the same size
a* McClures or the Cosmopolitan. It Is now
in its-sixth year and is the Onjy Magazine
of this kind published In the great Central
'Vest. A handsome premium given to each
k?,u:!?<r*^er- lb cents for a copy of the
Midland and premium list to the Twentieth
< jSSj-uryTcblisbikg co.. st. Louis, Mo. IS«
Wha t About S1QOO
F6r a 6 ro om house, J acre of
lanli in two bJocks of the publie
school, We Lave it, south front.
Wfeeler <fe Evans.
. ^ -
ative Chocolates enre chronic
*stipation anfl liver Iroubles. Ple&s-
** x to take. Guartr^teod. Hargrove &
F ulkerson. 2C-€mo
superintending a|
harem filled with the wives and [by j. c Saunders A- Co
concubines of a savage ino&ar^h.
Tne Ritj4 Mura will undoubtedly
have to ruslle. Il is true that{ .Houston Poet,
the United States government The money changers, yielding
has ailso promised to give him au to the pressure of increasing bus-
assistant, who shall receive $15 iness demands, are grumbling'
per njonth, but it stands to Reason over the ■ ’’inelasticity ” of: our;
that a $15 a-mouth man is not of currency system. Why don’t
much account anywhere you find they be honest and admit what .
him. It is the high-priced $40-a everybody knows.- That the : »iOe,2Sc,«MBDa FOB MLf IV
montii chief keeper of the royal money supply is insufficient to
wifery to whom the American supply demand, and give the j
DON’T FEFjL RIGHT
Do you
freshed’
SOUTHERN
RAILWAY
Is the Direct and Faat
* ^ Line to Points in
Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee.
North Carolina, South Car*
olina and Virginia.
SOLID VESTIBULE' TRAIlfS
, BETWEEN
New Orleans and Washington
Memphis and Washington
4 Hours Quicker
Than any other line via Atlanta.
ELEGANT DINING CANS. . . .
. . . DOUBLE DAILY TRAINS.
Pullman's FINEST PALACE CANS
—FROM—
NEW ORLEANS or MEMF
—TO—
Washington, Baltimore, Philadel-
phia, and New York, with-
out change.
0rpor map folders, schedule* and
ether information call on
Ticket Agent, or addrea*
W. A. TURK,
,rt., Waa
C. I. HENS
Asst. G. P. A., Chattanooga,*]
J. C. ANDREWS, ,
‘ Southwestern PaBS. Agt., Hou»ton,
Texas.
and aay
nearert
Gen. Pass. Aft., Washington,D.f
{■MEDIATE RELIEF AND PERMANENT MM
JOHNSON’S
DISPEP8!S|
cure rf
4.
wake up in the morning tired and unre-
l Do you perform your daily duties
langui Jly} Do you miss the snap, vim and
cnery y that was once yours? If this desaibes l
y°UT condition you are in urgent need of
PRI CKLY ASH
BITTERS
BY ALL ODZ
QUICKEST T:. _
TO j.
?sEAo T
E
North
East..
OK THE
A Sdtettflc, Unfailing and Permanent Rem..
Nr^Vr^M«n<31*“U0D “a Stoauck
Moore’s Drug Store, Bonham, Texi
Bargains in Lands.
people must look for the proper [country free coinage that Abler-1 Look oyer our list of }and bar'.
—- . ... - gains in this issue arid see
supervision of the Sultan of Sulu’s ica may set the pace forj the
harem. j world’s progress in this, as in
The terms of the treaty entered everything else?
you cant find, something to ^
you. Wheeler «fe Evp.no
Bonham,
e?a».
\ our tr ouble arist s in a clogged and torpid condition of the liver
aD - bowels wh.ieh, if allo^^ed to continue, will develop mala-
rial fevers, ki dney disorders or some other troublesome
disease. PRICKLY ASH BITTERS drives out all
poisonous impurities, strengthens the vital
organs, pnmotes functions 1 activity,
good digestion, and vig\ir and
energy of body and bra in.
SOLD AT ALL 0RU6 STOR ES. PRMIt, il.CO PER BOTTLE.
NEAL H. MOORE, Special Ag'eiit.
Is made in J "hrough Cart by tht
Louisville & JJoshviH* R. R, ,
V
Wrttt for Information k
T. a KINGSLEY, T. P. JL, DALLAS, TEXAS.
„ MAX BAUUGAPT^N, Pass. Ago*;
MEMPHIS, TENN.
Thousands of men and women suff< r
from piles, especially women with
male weakness have this suffering
contend with in addition to tbetr other
pains. TABLER’S BUCKEYE PILE
OINTMENT will quickly effect a cur*.
Price 50c in bottles, tubes 75c. Sold by
J. C. Saunders & Co. Now
The water buffalo is the Phil-
ippines’ beast of burden.
*-
- •_ ;
V' K j/f-
- - _
*
. £
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Evans, J. C. & Evans, Ashley. The Bonham News. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, November 3, 1899, newspaper, November 3, 1899; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth914563/m1/4/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bonham Public Library.