The Daily Hesperian (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 133, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 17, 1905 Page: 2 of 4
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- -1.X •
THB DAILY HBSPBWAW, GAINESVILLE. TEXAS.
^ - a-----1-* - OIt» InsUnt relief la
I AtatTlPtR Nm»1 C*t*rTh-ell«,
inflammation, sooth*
•ad haal aorau atembimoe. ewreton the bnath.
B*dt gargle for aoia threat. Sir Drnuistaor oiaiL
DyspepletsSSS
Indicestion and Pyspensl*. Sn*»r*<x»t«'dI UMeto.
Mr. or Sr. cTl/Hood Co., Lowed, Mass.
U Made bjr Hood It s Good.
Ube Ibespetian.
ESTABLISHED IN 1869.
GEO. T. YATES. Prop.
TELEPHONE NO. 62.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
Invar I ably In Advance.
Twelve month*...... ....................*1.00
81* months ........................... n
Three month*............................. to
DAILY DELIVERED.
One MMth
One year....
.* so
. 6 00
. I I
ALL PAPERS DISCONTINUED AT
THE EXPIRATION OF THE
TIME PAID FOR
Look at printed label on your paper The
date thereon shows when the subscription
expiree. Forward your money in ample
time for renewal ft yon desire onbroken
we can not always furnish back
Alee, aa w
numbers.
TO ALL MANAGERS.
Mo »ne Is authorised to ask for favors on
aeoonnt of the HKSPBKtAN except over the
signature of the proprietor of the paper.
Addreee sll communication*, of whatever
nature, to the HBSPKKLAN, Gainesville,
Texas.
RATES GIVEN ON APPLICATION
Catered at the postortice at Gainesville,
Texas, as second class mall matter.
Iiilf dollar to the old darky, and a
sympathetic, prosperous-looking man
hanging on to a strap added a quarter.
“The last ti-ne 1 saw that grafter he
was telling a man with ‘Lexington, Ky.,’
on his grip, ‘Ah’m frurn Kalmuck my-
self, an’fo Gawd ’ef I ever gets back
dere ah won't leave fur nuthio’ but
heahen.’ I started in to disillusion the
Blue-Grass Colonel and found that
Kentucky happened to be the old
faker's genuine native State.”—New
York Sun.
THB LOGIC OF IT.
PK0VE3 THAT BHE ‘‘WADDLES.’
$5.00 REWARD.
The Hesperian will pay the
above reward for each arrest and
conviction of persons stealing
copies of the Daily Hesperian
from doors or yards of sub-
scribers.
‘‘Madam, your husband says you
can kick 6 feet ^ inches.”—Judge
Fitzgerald to Mrs. Paul Noe.
“It isn’t true. I can’t kick 4 inches
and when l walk I waddle.”—M*s.
Noe to Judge Fitzgerald.
To prove that she “waddled” when
she walked, and that her husband’s
charges as to hej kicking abilities are
“base calumnies,” Mis. Paul Noe,
who is suing her husband for a divorce,
gave a ew exhibition steps in Judge
Fitzgerald's Court yesterday.
Blushing rosy red and pouting de-
murely, Mrs. Noe tripped up and
down before the jury box.
“There, now, what did I tell you?’’
she exclaimed, trumphantly, at the
conclusion of the performance.
Evidently she was right, for im-
mediately after the Judge awarded
her temporary alimony.
Mrs. Noe is a stylishly dressed
woman of middle age. She lives at
No. 39 East Fouith street. Her hus-
band is the^ovner
hotels in the city,
Mr.Noe, in his answer to his wife's
complaint, sets forth that, while she is
only 4 feet 11 inches tall, she can kick
the chandeliers 5f their home and that
she once exhibited herkicking prowess
in the presence of visitors.
“Why, I never did any such thing,”
declared Mrs. Noe in Court.—New
;r bt 10 F
is answer to
Rauies law
Thick-Skulled Moors.
■ Gov. Lanham's Picturesque
Staff.
Gov. Lanham recently increas-
ed his staff by appointing several
additional colonels, a noted
Negro heads - are proverbial for j preacher and a successful brew*
scUditrbu'into respwt .hey are far erbeina included in the lint of
excelled by certain Moorish tribes of I . r_, . , , T-, .
Morocco, who take a very real pride | aPP°intnionts. This led the Dal-
in the thickness of their skulls. The las Times Herald, leader of the
heads of their boys are kept closely
shaven from the time when hair com-
mences to show upon them, and are
never covered, whatever the weather.
This treatment so tends to thicken the
cranium that the lads are able to fight
with it. They butt as bulls do, and the
w^ak point in the skull of the loser is
frequently sought for by hammering
his head with a stone.
For a sum equal to one farthing these
boys will split a hard brick across their
own skulls. In boxing also these
Moors receive the blows of their op-
ponents upon their hardened pates.—
Exchange.
A Pleasant Faker.
“There's a new faker in the subway,
and his special victims are Southerners
of the old school. He is a versatile
negro, with the stamps of the old-time
darky upon him,” said a commuter as
the express pulled out of the Grand
Central Station yesterday. ‘‘I’ve seen
him work his game several times, and
it's the easiest work any man of his
color does north of Mason and Dixon’s
line. He hangs around the Grand
Central Station until he spies some
Southern tourist coming in from some
Northern trip. He can spot them every
time. More than this, nearly every
Southerner carries a satchel, always
tagged with his name and that of his
town and state. _
That subway grafter keeps his eyes
peeled for the tag. About a week ago
a big slouch-hatted man and a quaint
little old-fashioned woman boarded the
downtown train. The man carried a
bag marked ‘Petersburg, Va.' The
darky, who always manages somehow
to get a seat, eyed the tag, then got to
his feet, seemingly with great pain,
“ ‘Hab dis here seat to’ de missus.
Squire,'said the colored man, doffing
his hat.
“ ‘Where did you come from?’ asked
the big man, ‘You’re the first polite
darkey I’ve run across.’
*• ‘Ah’m from Virginia, Squire, an’
ah wish to de goodjLawd aw wuz back
dere again. ’ That was worth just a
free lance journals, to offer con-
gratulations—Honey Grove Sig-
nal. Congratulations were in
order. It please^ the Times-
Herald mightily to see that prince
of good fellows, Brewer Wahr-
mund and that erudite and learn
theologian with the tire of holy
z >al in his eye, Parson Carroll,
capering as outriders for the
Lanham military cavalcade
The Times-Herald commended
the appointments. WhenGospel
and Gambrinus buckle on their
swords there should be some-
thing doing —Dallas Times-
Herald.
Of course it is a true story we
are told about the dog that treed
a biiz cattish hanging by the fins
in a tree on the Big Muddy bot-
toms near Alto Pass after the
sudden running out of a flood the
other day. Illinois seems to have
a monopoly of this kind of dog to
date. Missouri hats good coon
dogs, ’possum dogs, bird dogs,
rabbit chasers and turkey dogs,
but the catfish dog is not yet
developed on this side of the
river.—Republic.
Your Summer Vacation.
Can be pleasantly spent in
Waukesha, Waupaca, Fifield, or
at one of the hundred resorts
reached via Wisconsin Central
Railway. Write for illustrated
booklets, which tell you how,
when and where to go. They are
free on application to Jas. C
Pond, G. P. A, Wisconsin Cen-
tral Railway, Milwaukee, Wis.,
or Ira F. Schwegel, T. A , 407
Traction Building, Cincinnati, O.
Subscribe for the Hesperian
The State Fair
OF TEXAS
DALLAS, TEXAS
September 30, to October 15, 1905
‘‘Booker Washington is as good at
John Wanamaker's daughter, for he
escorted her to dinner in a public
hotel.”
“I am as good as Booker Washing-
ton.
“Therefore, I am as goad as John
Wanamaker's daughter or any other
white woman.”
In plain language this is the reason
ing and this it the lesson of the Sara-
toga incident, and this thought w.U
run in the mind of every brutish negro
in the land. Wherefore, we may
expect more insolence and probably
more violence.
Herein lies the fallacy and the in-
finite mischief of the social equality
which northern zealots are practicing
with Booker Wasington. It is amaz-
ing that they cannot comprehend the
effect of their example, but it is more
remarkable that Washington himstll
is blind to the portentous consequences
of his hobnobbing with these people.
He was raised in the South, he has
come in contact daily with southern
people, and he ought to have sense
enough to understand not only the
utter impossibility of social equality
but the awful results of such exhibi-
tions.
It seems that he has had his head
turned by the White House dinner
and by other amenities which foolish
northern people persist in txetci-irg
toward him. Just after he first began
to attract attention on account of his
splendid work for the industrial edu-
cation of the negro he made a speech
in Atlanta, Ga., in which he used this
fine expression, referring to the com-
mon interest of the two races and their
social separation, towit: “One as
the hand, but separate fingers,” by
which he meant the two races ought
to cooperate in all matters for their
general betterment, for the mutual
good of each other, but ought to
remain distinctly apart in all social
relations. That was the correct
philosophy, and he was hailed as the
wisest and greatest of his race, because
he had the courage to teach his peo-
ple to be industrious and to discourage
them from aspiring to social equality.
But he has lost his philosophy and
has now beepme by example, if not by
precept, the most conspicuous ex-
ponent of social equality and race
amalgamation.
When a man of his great ability—
for he is great by any measure of
mental faculty—abandons the funda-
mental principle which he was the first
conspicuous negro to announce, what
may we expect of ihe mental process
of the less enlightened of his race?
We have the answer already in the
growing insolence to which The Record
has recently rtferred.
It can no longer be disguised that
social equality is the militant desire of
the negro race. It it is to be com-
batted no longer by argument or appeal
It has assumed that brazen form which
is beyond argument. In sections
where it is even slightly tolerated,
much less acknowledged, it will take
form in such freakish exhibitions as
that at Saratoga. In sections where
it is held in abhorrence as false in
effect and repulsive in contemplation,
it will take form in insulting and out-
rageous conduct by insolent negroes,
and it will provoke multiplied violence
and increasing disaster.
The most painful aspect of the case
is that it produces a chronic acuteness
in the race problem. It distracts the
attention of white people in the South
from other political sociological mat
ters and perpetuates for an incalculable
period the burden which has oppressed
these people for forty years. It forces
the South to continue to be a peculiar
section. It prevents us from that
intimate and homogeneous relation
with the whole nation which has been
the effort and the aspiration of all
thoughtful southern people for the last
generation. It puts upon us a curse
of woe which no man can measure in
extent or time. It is breeding hatred
whtre there was once affection and
later tolerance.
The present situation is a confirma-
tion of the worst fears of the farseeing
men of the civil war periqjj—fears
which even Mr. Lincoln had enter-
tained and which in our optimistic
nature we have adjourned from year
to year. It is beginning to appear
that in America we are about to repeat
the history of *all ages whenever and
wherever an inferior and superior race
have come m contact.
O the poor fcols who aie laying up
a day of judgment against a whole
race which would otherwise conten-
tedly abide the decree of Almighty
God, who in His wisdom has set one
star above another and who Himself
alone can perform the miracle ot
changing the leopard’s spots.—Ft.
Worth Record.
DO YOU GET UP.
• WITH A LAME BACK?
Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable.
Almost everybody who read* the news-
papers is sore to know of the wonderful
cures made by Dr.
Kilmer’s Swamp-
Root, the great kid-
ney, liver and blad-
der remedy.
It is the great med-
ical triumph of the
nineteenth century;
i discovered aftey years
of scientific research
by Dr. Kilmer, the
eminent kidney and
bladder specialist, and is wonderfully
successful in promptly curing lame back,
uric acid, catarrh of the bladder and
Bright’s Disease, which is the worst
form of kidney trouble.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is not rec-
ommended for everything but if you have
kidney, liver or bladder trouble it will be
found'just the remedy you need. It has
been tested in so many ways, in hospital
work and in private practice, and has
proved so successful in every case that a
special arrangement lias been made by
which all readers of this paper, who have
not already tried it, may have a sample
bottle sent free by mail, also a book tell-
ing more about Swamp-Root,and howto
findoutif youhavekidney or bladder trou-
ble. When writing mention reading this
generous offer in this paper and send your
address to Dr. Kilmer
& Co., Binghamton,
N. Y. The regular
fifty-cent and one-
dollar size bottles are Horn* of Swamp-Boot,
sold by all good druggists. Don’t make
any mistake, but remember the name,
Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root,
and the address, Binghamton, K Y«, on
every bottle.
Concert Program.
Following is the programme
to be rendered at the park pavil-
ion this evening for the benefit
of the Daughters of the Confed
eracy:
“Bonnie Blue Flag,” chorus of
children.
Vocal solo, Miss Illmah Hulen
Quartette, Misses Sweeney,
Wiggins, Phillips and Rubey.
Vocal solo, Miss Caldwell.
Piano duet, Misses Grow and
Sarber.
“Old Camp Ground,” Mrs.
Ella Smith and chorus of child-
ren.
Vocal Solo, Mrs- Edwards.
“Until the Dawn,” male quar-
tette.
Vocal solo, Mrs. Smith.
Vocal solo, Mrs. Gallia-
“Twilight Bells,” ladies’ quar-
tette.
"Undo Sammv,’’ orchestra.
Stop-A-Leke Styck.
It mends leaks in all kinds of
roofing, tin, iron, * steel, felt,
gravel, slate, tile, or shingle.
Results are permanent, simple,
inexpensive,efficient; saves labor
and expense. Sold by
Stevens, Kennedy &
Spragins Co-
Bv each customer purchasing
$1.00 in merchandise during our
Continuation Sale the next 10
days will be entitled to either
10 yards of calico or lawn for 10c.
Only 10 sards to one customer.
Remember the dates, Aug. 14th
to Aug. 26th.
Yours to please,
C. L- McCo\yTN.
THE STATE FAIR.
Dallas, Texas, Aug. io.—On Satur-
j day, September 30th, the gates of the
J great.State Fair of Texas will be thrown
! open tor the twentieth annual entertain-
; meat, and the city of Dallas, which is
I now conducting the big show, will wel-
come the people of the Southwest to
participate in a round of sixteen days
snd nights of pleasure. An army of
mechanics, artisans and laborers is at
work on the buildings and grounds.
The great stone auditorium and ex-
position building is about completed,
and the electricians are wiring the
structure for a brilliancy of illumination
equal to the illumination of the World’s
Fair buildings at St. Louis.. The large
statutes received from St. Louis are
being placed on ihe buildings and
about the grounds. The woik of lay-
ing the cement promenades around
the buildings and of extending the
cement railway track to three times its
former length is progressing nicely.
Work on several of the more elab-
orate amusements and displays is well
under way. The caroussel, the figure
< ight, the river of Venice and the to-
boggan will be ready early in Septem-
ber. The bulk of the material tor the
farm and mill display has been collec-
ted. This will be the mrst complete
and most artistically arr.-nged exhibit
of the kind ever made in the country.
A section of Exposition Hall has
been assigned to Ian art display of old
and modern masterpieces, consisting
of the best selections from the galle-
ries of the art centers of the Northen
and Eatsem cities. It wilbbe equal to
the finest art display ever made any-
where.
There are now more than two hun-
dred and fifty race horses on the
grounds in ,raining tor the coming
races, and the number will reach six
hundred head by opening day.
The first day of the fair, Saturday,
September 30th, has been designated
Dedication Day, as the magnificent
new aditorium and exposition building
will be dedicated on that occasion.
The fair will be formally opened by
Governor Lanham, who is the first
honorary vice president. President C.
A. Keating, ot the fair Association,
and Hon.Bryan T. Barry, Mayor of the
city of Dallas, will respond. The Dal-
las Commercial Club? in connection
with the various civic, fraternal and
industrial organizations, will have
charge of the ceremonies. The gov-
ernor will be greeted by a chorus of
two hundred children voices and a mixed
chorus of one hundred voices, accom
panied by Seymour’s Military Band of
fifty members. The selections will be
patriotic airs. j All of the honorary
vice-presidents are expected to be
present.
The first day is also set apart as
Press Day, it being the desire of the
city of Dallas to have the editors pres-
ent on the opening day of the first en-
tertainment of this institution given
under the auspices of the city. The
municipality has put about $300,000
in this entertainment, and it is particu-
larly anxious for the editors to see it
with their own eyes.
The several organizations of travel-
ing men have united to have a day at
the fair. Of course everybody knows
what the drummers can do in the way
of rustling up a crowd. They will
probably select the second Saturday,
October 7th, to snow the ground under
with their avalanche of friends.
Have you seen the New Fash-
ionable Ladies Belts at J. R. M.
Patterson’s? They are beauties,
and the correct thing for sum-
mer wear-
The present organization
known as the State Fair of Texas
stands today without a parallel in
the history of fairs- It is owned
and managed by some fifteen
hundred of the most prominent
citizens of Dallas, who have do-
nated the money to build a fire
proof auditorium and exposition
building on the fair grounds,
costing $100,000 and in addition,
to this have advanced the pricely
sum of $90,000’ for premiums,
purses and attractions that the
fair of 1905 may go down into
history flfc the largest and grand-
* est event of its kind ever given
in the southwest. '
The gates of the Twentieth
Annual Fair wiH opefl at JO a. m.,
September 30, 1905, the Fair
continuing sixteen days.
During this period the public
is assured of sixteen days solid
pleasure and recreation, as well
as the opportunity of seeing the
largest and best display of live
stock ever collected together in
the South.
The lovers of speed horsesre a
assured thirteen days racing
with high-grade horses, compet
ing for purses aggregating $30-
000, and last, but not least, the
homeseeker will have an oppor-
tunity to examine a complete
display of the varied resources
and industries of Texas, as well
as those of Texas of her sister
states< a.
For further information and details address the State
Fair of Texas, Dallas, Texas_ Yours respectfully,
State Fair of Texas. _ „n
Boom sue rugs from $10 up, at
Sydney Smith, See. C. A. Keating, Pres. Bass ^Harbour’s.
Fine Pocket Knives.
Wastenholm and Rogers pock
et knives at H. F. Smith’s.
Both phones.
The management of the re-
union have completed arrange-
ments for two games between
the Gainesville team and Mari
etta, the Indian Territory
champion, at Kaneteso Park.
Games to be called at 10 a. m.,
Thursday and Friday, the races
preventing afternoon games.
The Gainesville team is one of
strongest that ever represented
Gainesville. Admission 25 cent®
children 15o.
Don’t read J. R. M. Patterson’s
ad. in this issne without thinking
it over fully. Now is certainly
the saving time to buy desirablF
merchandise.
Something Entirely New.
We have just received the most
complete “Steam Cooker” that
has ever been shown in this city.
If you appreciate a good thing
come and see this cooker. Sold
by
Stevens, Kennerly
& Spragins Co.
Bath Tabs
We have I bargains in porcelain
hath tubs. Investigate this.
Stevens, Kennerly &
Spragins Co.
Beyond Expression.
G. W. Farlowe, East Florence, Ala.,
writes: “For nearly seven years I was
afflicted with a form of skin disease
which caused an,almost unbearable
itching. I could neither work, rest or
sleep in peace. Nothing gave me
permanent relief until I tried Hunt’s
Cure. One application relieved me;
one* box cured me, and though a year
has passed, I have stayed cured. I
am grateful beyond expression.”
Hunt’s Cure is a guaranteed remedy
for all itching diseases of the skin.
Price 50c.
Beautiful
Cut Glass
All the Late Novelties Just
1
received. An inspection will
delight you.
The Jeweler
>♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦»♦♦♦ ♦♦»♦♦♦
t Your business
| is not up to date
* nor is your
home complete
witho u t our
telephone.
5 cents per day
places you in
direct commun-
ication with our
700 well -pleas-
ed subscribers.
The
i Peoples Home
ii Telephone Co
< ►
Public is Aroused.
The public is aroused to acknowl-
edge of the curative merits of that
great medicinal tonic, Electric Bitters,
lor sick stomach, liver and kidqeys.
Mary H. Walters, of 546 St. Clair
Ave., Columbus, O , writes: ‘‘For
several months, I was given up to die.
I had fever and ague, my nerves were
wrecked; I could not sleep, and ray
stomach was so weak, from useless
doctors’ drugs, that I could not eat.
Soou after beginning to take Electric
Bitters, I obtained relief, and in a
short time I was entirely cured,”
Guaranteed at H. W. Stark Drug Co.,
price 50c.
Baby carriages, Go carts. Our
new spring line of handsome
buggies have arrived and are
now ready for your inspection iD
our big furniture department;
call and see them.
The Wm. Killgore Co.
The DeLavai cream separator
is the best known to the trade.
If you contemplate purchasing a
cream separator don't turn your
money loose until you examine
the DeLavai. Sold by
Stevens, Kennerly &
Spragins Co.
FOR SALE—125-acre black
land farm six miles south of
Gainesville; also 8i acres between
Broadway and California streets,
just out of the city, good im-
provements. Apply to W. J.
Witt, 710 E*st Pecan street,
phone 420, or city hall Gaines-
ville, Tex. dwlm
They Should
1
“My honest conviction, based upon
my own experience and that of my
friends, is that ‘Hunts Cure’ will cure
a larger per cent of skin trouble*,
especially of an itching variety, than
any other remedy., Certainly those
afflicted with any form of itch should
try it.” J. O. Moore,
30c per box. Atchison, Kas
Reduced Rates via the Katy
$4.80 to Hillsboro and return,
account Parsons Brigade. Sell
August 13th and 14tb. Limit
August 17th.
$13.90 to Victoria and return,
account Canal Convention. Sell
August 7th and 8th. Limit Aug-
ust 10th.
$5.65 to Corsicana and return,
account Colored Fair. Sell Aug-
ust 9tb, 10th, 11th and 12th.
Limit August 13th.
$35.95 to Pittsburg, Penn., and
return, account Colored K. P.
Sell August 17th and 18th. Limit
September 1st.
W. L. Green hill,
Ticket Agent-
Change In Landau Line.
The carriage line owned by
Chin Goon has been purchased
by W- E. Cheaney and Jack Sel-
lars, and will be operated under
the style of the Gainesville Lan-
dau Line, with headquarters at
the same place, Chinese restau-
rant. Both nhones 118. 18
Plumbing and Heating
Etimates made free for all
kinds of plumbing and steam
and hot water heating and gen-
eral repairs. Old stand, 202 W.
California Street New and old
phone 372. M. P. KELLY.
“Plumber.’’
If you' need a plumber don’t
forget that we have a first class
man, one that understands his
business.
Stevi ns, Kennerly A
SpraTUi8 <*!o
See the "Odorless” before you
buy a refrigerator.
Bass & Harbour.
New summer neckwear of the
newest aud neatest designs. Lov-
able, wearable and washable. J.
R. M- Patterson’s.
-■ Astonishing-
Reduction Sale
PL^At^yyvvv-LA>^^AAAAAA/WVVVSAAAAAAAAAAAA/VV^
You will be surprised at
the reduction we are now
making on all our fine
I
Summer Suits and
Goats and Pants
You will save fully 30 per
cent if you buy your sum-
mer outfits from us. v. v.
Henin£er Bros
Advertising In The Hesperian Is a
Paying In vestment.
Special News to Farmers
and the City People
We are selling buggies,
wagons, hacks, Success
plows, Disc plows, etc., at
figures that will be interest-
ing to you. Our stock is as
usual—large, our force of
clerks anxious to show you
these goods. We know
how to appreciate your trade
Come and let us reason to-
gether on good goods at
correct priees.
Stevens, Kennerly & Spra-
gins Co.
Summer Plowing
Made Easy.
We have just received several cars of plows specially adapted for work in this
county, and if you are going to need a plow give us a chance, and we will
show you the best line of plows you ever looked at. We especially recom-
mend the Jno. Deere Stag Sulky for general plowing, but if your ground is
extra hard we have the best Disc Plows made, every one of which we guaran-
tee to do the work and give perfect satisfaction. Our new stock of Grain
Drills is now being received and if you contemplate buying a drill we invite
your inspection of the ones we are selling, and which have always given such
universal satisfaction. Our prices are always right on everything and it will
pay you to see us when in need of goods of any kind.
Our Grocery Department is this w»ek closing out their present supply of
XXXX coffee at eight pounds to the dollar, one dollar’s worth to a customer.
Better he quick. If in need of a wind mill see us, as we are still selling the best
mills and at bottom prices. Make our Big Department Stores your head-
quarters when in Gainesville.
Wm. Killgore Company
North Commerce Street and Big Hardware House
Southwest Corner Squire
Corn Crushers
We have the beet corn crusher
that is on the market. Everyone
guaranteed. Gall and see for
yourself. Stevens, Kennerly
A Spragins Co.
Oar beautiful line of go-carts
have arrived.
• The Wm. Killgore.
Do Yon Want to Sell?
If yon have a small boose snd
lot yon will sell cheap I will pay
the “spot cash” for it Call and
see me over Lindsay bank. Both
phones*
jy 17^ W. L. Everman.
We will please yon
Try
Milk Cows For Sale.
24 head. Will sell any number
from one to twentyfenr. Call on
me at the marble yard and I will
take yon in a baggy to see them.
Also f
mule.
A
Mi
-Js&sifak
,v:
BiigP
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The Daily Hesperian (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 133, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 17, 1905, newspaper, August 17, 1905; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1121813/m1/2/: accessed June 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.