North Texas Enterprise. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, March 6, 1874 Page: 2 of 4
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T|I II Kprgnjmv**
'jum it. Bi;My
Ft DAY JKaRCII > >h
9r*m>
m
'.PIT*.
ir
mr 'I lie daily Mkarniso Courier
IlM Alispopjhf).
■f w
f tlM (^HVPfttlOH.
(Y *—40— ji • •■$
flffitcholder^, big nnd litjle, nigy
Mow Uko a brsnth, find li'Sl at case.
Tbo people orthe»l«to also may con-
gratulate themselves. The effort to
get up a egiiKtjti)l)oiial convention,
t0- Hood county i* alive will) and burdfq.the state with additional
yonllg,g^AfcM«♦pi^eH., ’ ^' 1 ‘ » ho tvy oxpmisi; has ignommionsly
Goor^m h,n» ;;<><> IcmjHuppce
-----
mt’TlitfnW1 dth.ke $12,000,000
irortli of liquor annually.
J-L-
tO+'liho. (.Hnjstinn church and,
Catholic* alao are preparing to erect
thuioho* iji FhermitTr.'* *
uu—« •
Mr The “wickedest man'’ hite
boon discovered ii» #t. -fjouja. His
Mt The honato, by | rota of aev- . jjoeljn^ t0 ^i,Q
ente^tf ^ "1"^ i‘ Thi lodged the/wholo platform. JillL aa
constitutional oonrentlon. Senaibfe.
---—v•*-•«< ■% --
M|* A.' wRd hog haa been killed
in Mississippi .^^.badltiakeaa large
aa ram’a horns. SqJltf papers day.
Mp^nojd^nn sevonty years of
ago took out Ilceit'W to tnarry at
Bhoi man, Juesdajv
failed, and there will be no enliven-
lion. It may bo a matter of inquiry
with some, how members of the
Legislature could thus go back on
the Democratic platform, which com-
mitted llioii) in favor of calling a
convention. The answer in, that
Hist section of the platforni was not
a popular monsiiro with I ho masses
of the people, ami lmd they had a
ehanco to reject it without rejecting
the wholo instrument, they never
would have vptod jt in they did,
J^r pKrtftiV-tigbtniaradoal
Taapa «?• ginning their
regular annual oomj/laint againat
gifr'Datg* ndfotea ..of English
farmers are preparing to ,epme to
Virginia in the spring. -In Amalia
oouhiy'i^’OOO'wbrllk' of land l>aa
beenpurohNSid fot“'th*m. ,un.»*
m .....— i »r.T ^•
wm- Pant, i& to nftT« *
disdt»M«n 'bu') tb«u>“.Kyidenoe$ oi
ChAat1liHl<.r,+”iyj«ld. Laurence -W.
BootlandR. l’etorson, nOmhtenoing
Mr 8omi raaoally db»pat Pilot
Poiat paated the fallowing placard
on jh# ribs of a poor-pony that was
hitched toii'^aoMInthaHown: “0»t%
wanladVVnfltilW wrthlh.
, it.nCl.iia a». ■*»--. _
■■r A mnlo drovow recently passed
»brq!.gh‘J'^lalmt(AfS, "Mike., a«d
offlarou $50 to 4i»V tisan that would
etiZw UiJn aK'rmar that had ao Much
as one cellar in 010116/.
jjflrVPie (iadktion, s“What la the
Lmml^ttore doltig to relieve the
peopledV answered by a cotem
porary, “Drawing $8 per day/’ time
‘reiieeing’ thaw. o(, a’ lilllk h>oee
change. ■ ,
tiff* A. Vdtigar or Mexican lion
haa been depredating upon the
aU»h ap Urapa Vine Prairia, in
Tarrant ooanty„and the poop'e are
oaiaa fhroa trying fp capture him.
MT The equipmpig and twiating
of bertain Demooratio papora over
tha dateat of JEhrookruorUMi for the
ff.'fl. ISenatei ia only exoeoded by
their twisting aid aquifming ove.-
in manyOtlior things, the niAsaoa of
the party had no voice in the innttor,
and it remained lor the ,more sen-
sible and thoughtful members of the
Legislature to relieve them of tho
difficulty, by taking a now departure
fromjbo paijy and its platform and
voting against-holding aeon volition.
Hither this ia the caeo, or elso mem-
bora of tjje legislature have a more
tender rogard fof tlioir own tenupp
of pfHop (which would be joopavdi*-
ed by a convention and a new
ejection) than tlioy do for party con-
sietenqj' qr even tho wclfaro of tho
peoplo. Qur flinijly would causo
us to-Mippbso the first to bo the real
motive in the case. HoWevor, tho
diloihiqa lias Iwo foiii? horn*, and per-
sona who relish political consistency
can tgfkq either one tlioy oiioose, and
explain away to their heuvt's eon-
tent. W'p cqrotoo littlo' for partylsm,
to bother our brains trying to co-
alesce its multifarious inconsistencies
and Contradictions. jVe nro onlj-
glad tho state has osenpod from tho
burdop of half a mil.ion taxation,
and othar possible calamities. ,
. 1 . M. 1
8(111 A-doIng.
t^q^efhi
Tfpfo":
efbatt of P' constitutional eon-
: fa.i.ii.
MT At th« late term of the District
court ftt Iteckwall, it i* said, five
lawyore oocupiedAhe asm# room a
trhdle week, and not one of them
♦dkchWw drop of liqtfor ip all that
jlftja. ' ft fi given PS fease without
P parltlel in history."
■ ■ ■ ■
I ,m^TmrSd7Trt<f*rch, the day of
s the drag the
0 will Act #nt^
rf f
Jacinto, hiKe been mpda TCgPT%fflt-
days, Jhjr thP Itfg^lature.
ay.Si l-iffl)UW» -
►l oelabr^ted Ticbborne
oa«e,,that hae- bean in prngrosa 180
I days, baa at last oqijie to a bloio,
idbppfpimaut boing proved a perjuror
and aontencod to ft yoars’ bonflne-
»«ant. .
■ — t 1 ■ -
1 jpg-^hisDal vettAn News anaoh no-
ea the vdeafh Iff that ‘ city 6f Col.
' wilt:if1. Austin, an nld^Fekae and
: pfl^cer oW ' fhW ataff Of Oaw. Som
’ ^jfeaa^pn dni^jpg tbo Texat Revo*
ilk ) ' ' Irr - '* !»*' ,
BtP SOtna uf.tUp Democratic joins
On Sunday evening wo look arnr.
orar to Slicrmafi, and on to Denison
Monday morning—to* seo lio.w bua-
ineas was prospering in those two
young cities, and decide if possibio
which is tho bettor trading-placo for
our planters and farmers. By con-
sulting that infallible guide, our
advertising columns, this question
can be settled by each ono for him-
self; for,aa we have often said, mer-
chants who are too stingy or short-
sighted fo see any ndvnntngo in
printer’s ink, are too stingy and
illiberal to give good bargains to
their customers. We found business
rathor jivoly in both places, consicb
ering the dullnots of the times, and
In a few hours’ operation among tine
various stores, got over a hundred
dollars’ worth of cards.
\Vbile Sherman perhaps doss a
larger trads, than Denison, boing
seme larger place, thtro are somo
houses in Denison that cannot be ex-
celled in Sherman 01 evon in North
Texas. D. ,W, (J. Pgvis haa pi°r0
hardware and agricultural imple-
ments than ,we ever saw in dne bouso
in the atpte, and ckrtalnly doe* the
heaviest trade in this section ofr the
«tat«. He has sold aver 800 plows
this ieaiOn, \n fhot sold'ns high as
7U in one day. stock of ngricul-
Shoa<|op stands at tho head, iljf
Stove is chgck full of artfolos in his
lino,-and persons on tlm look-out for
anything of that soft would do wuj)
to rend his card. He beiioveS'in
printer’s ink, and in “filling the
bill” when customers eqipo to ses
him.
Denison has n groat many pro-
vision stpres, whore the t(nccessarios
of lifv''are dealt out in largo quan-
tities to planters and country mer-
chants from the adjoining counties,
and Mr. Fred Muller stands at -4hu
hood of this department. When you
go to Donison with your cotton,
hides, or otlior produce, and want to
buy flour, bacon, potatoes, sugar and
coffee or anything else in that line/
don’t forgot to call on him.
Our young friend liiley, formerly
a resident of Bonlmin, does the drag
business of tho placo, JIo
aa agont for the ENTpacumt
ison in future. ' >
Bhernian seems to bo doing tl bet-
tor lumber business than Donison,
taking those two yards, McAllister,
Blarney A 0d., and E. G. Wheeler,
as sjieolinens, For lumber, sash,
doors, und buildor’s material gen-
erally, the}- aro tho places to go to.
Wlion ypn stop at Shorman, and
want to got off on tho early train,
tho Cilobo Hotel would be n choic*
place for you to tnke lodging. It is
near tho depot, and wo got a good
hod and oxcollent fare there. Mr.
Gobon, tho attentive host, will lalco
special pains to mako you comfort-
able.
■ ,m,m t m—■ ■ ■■ -
The lively local of the dally
Sherman Courier, Dick of the Hop-
son, is jpvial even in adversity,
and “ lot’s go” bis hold on the “per-
qiisito*” as follows:
Good Brx—With this number,
our bantling, tho Daily Courier,
(price iivo ocr.ts,) takes its ]>osltion
among tho ‘ has-beens.” The priv-
ilege of loafing around the streets
and smoking othor people's cigars
is uura no longer. Wo can’t help it.
Wc’vo done our host, and although
it was nothing extra, wo cou d do
no more. It is all for tho lack of
more currency, and wo think Con-
gress should increase the circulation
at once. Now, that our oocitpation
is gone, we expect to join therGgan-
gers, go west and run for Juetioa <rf.
the Pence. Good bye, hoys,(and gal*
too.) Yk Looac.
All of which is a joko, except tho
and that i.^a joke too, tu think
that I would pay a printer 82 with-,
out being dunned and drpmmod for
if half p do*cn-times.” .
—ir ior -*m■ ■ 1 mm --
Uorsc ThloveH.
Lioijt, Harmon, U.( R. A., from
the Fort Sill reservation, arrived in
Gainesville yesterday (Friday) with
a squad of fifteen negro soldiers.
He was in pursuit of a ganh of horse
thieve* who had stolen iroin the
Fort Rill reservation somo forty or
fifty head of horses. The Lieuten-
ant bad trailed them six days; tho
thieves.came ihe worst road they
could fiqd, crossing Red liver five
tint**. A few moments after the
arrival of Lieut. Harmon, two men,
said to bo the thiovoa,' made their
appearance, each leading two extra
horses, a|ul put the stock up at Mr.
Latimor’s stable. While a writ was
being jnado ready for the arrest of
the t dan men—Roberts, of Kansas,
and Hushing, of Kaufman county,
of Lieutenant Harman’s paly,
(fwner of the stolon horsoe *00-
thnt the thieves werJTTibofit/to
make (hoireai'Qponttemptod to make
the arrest, Rushing surrendered,
but Roberta made fight; he succeed-
ed in mounting Ins horse, and, ns
ho rode rapidly away, was fired at
several times; the balls missed the
thief, passod into s dwolliag house,
frightening the inmates consider-
ably. A bout this time tho soldiers
put in an nppoarafieo und with
Sheriff Morris gave ebuso, Lieut
Harmon soon following. On tho
prairie waat of Elm crook, they dis-
oovered a map herdii g a bunch of
horses that thoy supposed to bo the
thief; the man, taking tho negro
troops for Indians, broke at lull
speed; the soldiers charged, and
after shooting at the man thirty or
forty times, they captured him, find-
ing that thoy had *got tho wrong
man.— Gainesville Gaxotto.
— A Mississippi paper this wcok
Contains sixteen items, all about
Texas, clipped from ono issue of tbo.
the Nour 11 Texas ExTurRna.
— D. W. C. pavis, at Donison,
the great Hardware King of North
Texas, keeps tho host Reaper and
Mower in the World, also tho best
Walking and Riding Cultivators,
Feed Drills, Prairie Breakers,
Single and Doublo Fliovols, Black
and Sandy Land Plows, Harrows,
Colter's, Swpeps, Scrapers, bosidos
an Immense stock of general hurd-
irnro, not excelled by any house, in
the western States or Territories.
Go and seo the mammoth house.
JIM FAPr
ATTORNEY AT MaW
and " 1
Land Agent, •
Giecnville, Hunt County, Texas.
Pr icticee in Hunt and enrrognd- "
mg con'itios, and in the Supronra
Court of the State.
nil
| (M^TTiezarVrf^i*rch, the day of
tbe ffectarailon’of T*x«s Independ-
. jpHI, Ihe
im^iementrVs utiTTmtt0T, CO^
elating in part of 100 reapers, 186
walking tiriltlvators, and stoves, and
ohains, and spades, and Jttcks, and
hoosj and othor iron and et<f»l in-
etrtimenta boyonct number. Ho is
certainly tbe king-.bco of hnrdwaro
dektera in North Taxtfts, and only
ask* that farmers, blacksmiths and
t^ogeltants rail on hint, and consult
bis sioolt and prices
”' Thi ealebrated “Star Store,” the
• c)othiog!beVdquarters of tjio state,
iarr tbe phiof house in that Kne in
Denison'. We looked through tho
fcetabliAimcnt, from tbp to boVoin.
apd catl poqfiliontly assore all thoso
is search o( dtonqethinjj to wear”
that tha** ia enough a»d to *ppf* At
The southern mail was two hours
Isto yestorday. What is the matter
with tlio Central?—Denison Newt.
Anrt tho northern mnil was over
three hours behind Wednesday eve-
ning. What is the matter with (lie
M. K. k T. road?—Sherman Courier.
And what is tho matter with nil
your roads? A morchanl at Graen-
ville informs tis that ho had to send
two or throe different limes to Den-
ison bofore ho got his goods out
of the depot nt that place ; while a
box of early garden seeds, shipped
to Wo’don & Rednor of this county
from Houston, reached Dodd in just
ono month from tho day of shipiuont!
Tom R. Rurnetl, the long, lank,
loan, hungry-looking editor of the
North Toxas Enterprise, was in
town last Saturday, drumming in
tho interest of his paper. Tom
makes a good paper, notwithstand-
ing wo enn’t endorso his course; and
our peoplo, after subscribing for tho
Herald, would do well to give him a
1IA,— Qveenville Herald,
They ‘liftod.’ But now Dick, you
hod bettor go lightly dn that “long-
lank-lcah” matter—you llttlo pussy,
pouchy, grass-fod darling—or we’ll
get our Ilubhard-cut artist after you.. ^
Wo copy the following items of
‘encouragement* from two out of the
many Jotters we roceivo from our
friends. The first is from a prom-
inent lawyer at Dallas, tbe second
from tho inimitable Dr. R. R. R.
(Railway’s Ready Relief) Roberts,
the Mesmerist of the Period:
Tkrrim.ii.—Monday last a most
uiifortunii'to accident happened at
tho school of Prof. Vanloer in this
town. Several little children wove
in the yani near a small firo. Two
litllo giWs wore sitting by tho fire,
and a little ho3’, aged ,about seven
j'ears, was playing around) he said
to one of tno littlo girls, Maggie
Foreman - aged about aix years
—“Pin mad at you an’g dug to burn
you,” suiting the action to tho word
ho gathered up a handful of pine
shavings, east them into the firo, and
gathered them up ngnrn, throwing
tho burning mass into the lap of
littje Muggie; her clothing immedi-
qtely too)- firo. Wab a promptness
and forethought worlliy or older
years, ono of the school 'boys grab-
bled tho burning mass, and succeed-
ed in partly extinguishing tho flames,
but tho terror-stricken and sufloring
littlo girl tore away, and tho firo
again blazed up; at with h time
Prof. Vanloor camo to tho rescue
and extinguished tho flainos, burning
his hands and arms seriously in the
heroic task. JJttle Maggie’s clothes
wore litterally burnoil off of her
body, and death relieved her suffer-
ing at 8 o’clock the following morn-
ing.—Gainesville Ga/.otto.
Old Rye’s Speech.
I was made to be caton,
And not to no drank ;
To bo thrashed in a barn,
Not soaked in a tank.
I cowo as a blessing,
When put through a mill;
A« a blight and a curse,
When run through a still.
Make mo up into loavos,
And your oliildren are fed 5
But if Into a drink,
I’ll starve thorn instoad.
In bread I’m a sorvant,
Tho enter shall rule;
In drink I’m a master,
Tho drinker a fool.
Then remombor the warning,
My strength I’ll employ;
If eaten, to strengthen,
If drank, to destroy.
The firm of Johnson & Anthony,
successors to Allen k Johnson,
proposo to sell groceries ns cheap
for cash ns the old firm. Brown
Johnson has been in connection
with tho bouso long ouoitgh to get
tho hang of selling cheap, and i*xy*
Ire knows the/will. A^tWing ffo is
perfectly reliable, don’t take his
word for it, but go and boo for
yourself.
From the following it would seem
Hint tho ‘breethoring’arc not ‘dwell-
ing together In unity,’ as thoy
should :
'1 hey- have now been in session
near two months, and nothing lias
been done nor do we see any likely
hood of their doing much good by
prolonging tho sek-ion— some of
them, it scorns, have become great
economists sinoo their arrival at H10
capitol—they prefer staying there
for six months, at eight dollars pot-
day, and defeat a co slituli nnl con-
vention, thereby saving (ho dear
peoplo tho enormous oxponso of
holding U10 same.
Siicli a course ns wo now *pr>
foreshadowed by these wiso men,
will, in our opinion ultimately prove
tho death of tlio Democratic party
in this Stnto.-^-Groonville Herald.
Tho 14th Legislature is evidently:
not meeting tho expectations of the
people. By triggering and bush-
whacking, and caucussing, tricker-
ing and scheming, it defeatod the
will of tho peoplo in the matter of
tho U. S. Senator, and elected
man whom no body, itself not ex-
cepted, expected or wanted, and
thus it lias scandalized us. Now it
proposes to do the only thing for
which it pas elcctod—that ia to call
A Green Bay, Wisconsin, politi-
cian, who wants to stand woli with
tho grangers, sings:
Tho hickory berry vino Qnlwines
Tho brown nuts of tho turnip tree;
Tho eashmoro heifer skips and plays
To tho tuneful iv to of the fi-ath-
ry boo.
On tall boughs’mil], the buekwhott
buds,
Wohesrtho low of tho finny
plover,
While the bay Lull bitched to the
rumbling acvtlie
Husks out the golden clover.
James Gordon Bennett has givon
$70,000 moro to tho poor of New
York.
^FOR ^AL€.
Forty acrea of- I*, i, with l»,j
dwellings and o|jt hotuca,"-e-oriel *>«
«... * * ,T
<Wv
“/ /.
* e.*-
MutsDx FI .tiring Mill Ostlm
Gin etUclkod. Alee .'arntUlg ntrtftlk*,
Stock, Uogs, Cittlo, etc.. For par-
ticulars apply to tho proprietor Jab, ...
F. Gousn, at VVIstlii.il, Punnin Oouiity
Texas. Ter ns reasonable and .ps.3fr1'' •
meht easy. «L
Jau. 80th 1871.—lw.
J K. Riiwsll, 8. n. Allan, n. W. P»vk
l*r. » V. Pres....... Csltifse
FANNIN OOUlVTTV
««h<*H<*m»*.ptntlBii»g gthoir
”f,i4blu*iil*** five fiav. Cake a great
'”,wiirj»»*i>«*-BtyllA« feint -genapalj'
l(*:8MMt4Miii*r of bfig*4* or division,
■ tkie writer's distippt ^re.
•1 that, while . .*oJout:uing
Li with l*»hg»»A»*e hntraf wr* used tom
• f trudging Along on loot
the head of hie company., c He rtt
only A eeptain. Bat tbAl ie no die-
grace, for the captains were generally
latter men than the gaper*!*,
“I wish you would move the
EDTERt'Etsk to Dallas. I believe you
could do a first-rato business. Wo
noed just such a pithy, bold, inde-
pendent, sontentfous, ‘give-me-lib-
orty-or-let nie-hand • in - my - checks’
•ort of a journal.**
(2d epistle.)
“•Enclosed pleaso find 82, to pay
for your enterprise, pluck, and pure
human cussodness, and for saying
that I was a ‘pnrtier’ man than the
ugly scamp what does the local on
the Sherman Courier. Remember,
this letter ia strictly for your private
edification, and sanctification, to be
pul in the waete-basket at you* dis-
crimination, for tha good of the
haMF* freights and graatw- risks, [nation, (Chootawa,) and must not
£ -i lead you Into tomptation, but to
8m •m<*' ^*° financial salvation; which ie my ju»-
ln th* way Of eaddlery, harness, liftcmtiois, for troubling you to read
slum flodjpjs, )*8th?r, etc.,). M. this lut of td^innatjoa’-poosenee.
this1 place. ' Ae tha firm proposes to
doplfchti'any Bt. Louie bill {treeent-
ea it, cqontry merchants would do
wall to consult this house before
ggfpg further north, *nd inousring
Married—Tin the Wh- iiwhwrf; by
Rev. M—, H. W. Bee and Miss
Susan flivo.
How busy hath this little boo,
Improved life’s shining hour,
It gathers honey now all daj-,
From ono swoet choson flower;
And from this hive, if hoavon
pleases,
They’ll raise a swarm of littlo
booses.
Lone Wolf, Ihe war chief of the
Kiowns, was comparatively civilized
until ho lately hoard of the death of
his son. He had an'ambulsnco and
a pair of mules, and said he was
trying to tiv* like a White man. Tho
son wai. killed while raiding In
Texas. Lone Wolf drew his rovol
ver, shot his mules, broko lip his
wagon, piled it and his lodge on top
of the mules, and burned tho pile
He shaved one side of his head
stuck a black feather behind hit
ear, and started hjs followers op the
war path,
— Wo have recently passod ovor
portions of three conntioa, and can
report that thore ie more wheat
growing in the fields than at *ny
tim*. since tho war.
Whits R.-ck, Trxav 1
March All,, 1874. j
Ed ExTKnrmsK:
Please givo me apvcc in your 0 >!•
umns to say to the farmers of Fannie
and Hunt, counties, that I have on
hand a fine lot of sweet potatoes,
which I will sell at $1.25 per bush-
el. I have the Pink Yam, earliest
and best potato known, also the Yel-
low Yam, Spanish, Creole, Wymoth,
and tlse long kinds which is some-
thing hew. I havo 400 bushels in
all. Como soon, and get your seed
potatoes; 1} miles north of White
Rock, Hunt county, on the Greonvillc
and Bonham road.
SAM nEIFNER.
HT Tho'llonso rdftised to honour
in tho Sonato bill to apportion tho
school fund.
DK .1 S, AAUNOKR.l wynld ^inmine* .
to tlio I’liy»ii-nii,, of It-inhMn.s'ri tt><> | /
rouiiding ooinitry, smt to tits piiboo. that be ‘
hs« rocently virilwl wwlwl tewAjuartera _
that ho miijht -‘ruh up” a 1 tile »n«J better
qualify htirurlf for the erilaiaie ilnties of hjg I£J
irnfmiiion. Me hit lupfiHrJ a tack that baa *
«U4 exiatoil among tlio lilt'd 1 cal men of tbia
County—vi»; n yaw) awartmaat- af kiatnn
in ;nt», lata lwx>k» ami mh«r »p|dianee» kae-
e«»ary lor treating all 4'*pa»r* and diAeaf- **
ho* pertaiuinc h> Kraialo*.. '80 MTia aot
iiiiw nfi-emtni y for Indie* tn go a ffrat eia,
tanco nt heavy nxpenan in ordor te b»w< L
treated necordinjj to tlw ndvancad *tat*«f
our noble art I t., ,
Uonliuin, Tex., J*a, 15U), 187$.
> \
:“i i
IJouhuiii, Texas.
CAPITA!., - - - $100,000,00,! <T
DtREOCRf >;
J. It. Riiwoll, - . I). W. I’oak.
S. it Alien. - ..... “ ‘
i,-.
H Ki.llroWa,.
Kicluird White, - - H. It, Semple '
Charles Carlton. * ^1
Do a geueral Banking Busin see. — -
' *
Intermit paid on.Time Doposft*.
Collections made on all acoesslbfo' ’ .-
Points, and proceeds promptly ‘ \
ilomitted at current rates, 4
* ...
THE
Ilj
“NEW 'SOUTH,
«»’
1-UUI.KIIX0.4T „. ,fi- i -|
DENISON, TEXAS).^.^... ,
the largval paper pulili
pit. _l^ioli ainnl<erp:»iit,i
o 20 oolmnnaol riradiiur «r*i
ueal column* »r0 wall fijjwl with sit . *i
mnttera of interest lr*ii»|ilti!,(f‘1lf''
:i____a. 1___.:i» i-'. ■"
Deniiion, while each i*aiiw. wllf
tain a condensed report if North 0j ‘
Tex a* newa A- apeeial (eft HTp. »f a .
The AVw Shutk i« ita Market ll;|wt*h . i.
which are cnrefully corrected jn*t
before going t.i’press TlV tkiordW) * v
ing Iniaineas at. Denison, 'thill ahipw
is worth m<>r« than the price of th* ', ,.
paper. ■
Terms—One y*ar. $1; six monlha.
$1; three muntlis, 50 oCiits ' ’•
Sond 10 cents for simaliaeW'Mpjyi >4.
Address WEBSTERk HAA
D» bison Tim.
• • •■ • "it.
CHALLENGE TO HARVESTERS!
Great Trial of Reapers 11
Will come off on the farm of Wi
II Loolce, ono mile and a half north
west ot Bonhsm, next harvest, un-
der the superintendence o( tho fol«
lowing named men aa judges t Maj.
Alvis Kincaid, Oapt. W. H. Cobb,
George W. Myera, Lom. Blanton,
Harvey B. Cobb, W. M. Jones,.Capt.
Jim Smith, Judge Simpson, Capt. R.
W. Holland. All harvesters mast
be enteied by *.hc first of May, next
For further particulars inquire of
W. D. LOCKE
THOS u‘iU.|8Tj:a, 6IQ. oath AN
—mr Wg BLAIIET. -
M ALIISTER, BUMEY * CO.,
DEALERS IN
LUMBER, DQ0R8,
BLINDS. StSH,
MOULDINGS.
BTO.,
SHERMAN * . TEXAS.
Bonham Institute,
FOR raw#*
Malefi iDd Fem«kfi, ,
IN ODD FELLOWS’ KALI*. ' :
The second term of tho first scesloie
ol tlii- Iiistitu j will'open oil4he \2th
day of January, 1814,#and eootnrtM
six oonsc ulivo montjis, ()U wcck^,>
The course of gttodviisLdHridMrfu--
to Primary, Intermediate and Colle-
giate Department*, ’
PRIMARY DBPARTMI3NT
Embraces Bpeltjng, First, Seoood fit
Third Readers, Primary Arithmetie,
First lessons in Geography, aiq) Firgb
lessons in Penmanship, f • .. “
INTERMEDIATE department .
Embraces Fourth, Filth and 8*>th
Readers, Defining, IntcrmedfAte'hud
Higher Geography, English Gtnnw
may, Msiitul, lArartiael,1 and. Ifigt* - *
Arithmstic, History of the United ** >-r
States, and Penmanship complete. t
COLLEGIATE DEPARTHW. u, , ”
Embraces Natural, Mental, tnd Mor-
al Philosophy, Chemistry, GeologyK
Latin, Qrcek, Algebra, O^iMtry.
and othor branches of a high grade.
Government wiH be mild bntfim;'
Student# will ha required to obn^oi
themselves with dignity and pro-,"
priet.v toward* their teachers and
each other, and attend pnnctnalfy all
tlioir recitatiohs. The use of intox-
icating liqaors aqd prof#Dc eweagiqg
nre derogatory'to fhe beet (sterlst of
overy student, and oonseqently will
be strictly prohibited. Students will
be charged from date of entrance to
cloeo of term, unless Otherwise stip-
ulated, and no deduction will be mads
except in case of eiokoaae protracted
two weet^s, AH does must be paid
at the c\qeo of eaoh term. Pa rente
and guurdiansof 0)1 fidren Attending
this lustitgte, arc respectfully invit-
ed to visit it at any time.
mr idUH-OMfWrtrt
Priingry Departme*t, -,18.00
Intermediate, " , 4,OP
Collegiate .1 ■ r ■ ‘ 6,Qft
den! M
y
' i
■A
Incidental fee
1,00
J, P, Hamilton. Principal,
18 Miss Auce Herr, Alt*
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Burnett, Tom R. North Texas Enterprise. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, March 6, 1874, newspaper, March 6, 1874; Bonham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth913663/m1/2/: accessed June 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bonham Public Library.