Honey Grove Signal. (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, March 16, 1894 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
'"{■
w
1
4:
^!v-
'TEXAS NEWS BEIEFS,
AT HOME AND ABROAD.
•INTERESTING
CULLINGS FnOM
THE DAILY PRC33.
-A Crisp and Complete Mrevlary of Racy
Koand-Ups Carefully Selected and Ren-
dered .Readable from Every Portion of
tlu Empire State.
Interesting Items Carefully Selected from
the Leadi;>g Dailies.
The following is a statement of cash
balances in the state treasury for tlie
quarter ending February 28: General
revenue,_ $47,693; available school
funds, $'38,421; permanent school
funds, $49,144; available university
fund, $14,258; permanent university
fund, $365; unorganized county tax
fund, $56,441; direct tax, $101,263;
available penitentiary fund, $80,000.
Thi^ lea^e*- -about $200,000 to the
•Credit of other funds.
At Houston a few nights since,
\\ illie Fields cut Ed Kyber badly with
a large pocket knife. Kyber was
stabbed in the side and back. The
first was a deep stab and may prove
fatal, though he does not appear to
be in immediate danger. The cause
of the trouble was not learned. The
boys are about 14 years old. Fields
was arrested and locked up.
Ten detachments of soldiers left
Fort Sam Houston a few days since to
make a plat of the country between
San Antonio and Boerne on the north
and San Antonio and Pleasanton on
the south, including the contiguous
-country to a general line between
these points. The combined plats
will be used for making a map for
military service.
The Beeville Kid Minstrels who ex_
hibited at Refugio a few nights since,
came to grief. In one of their acts a
game of craps is on the programme,
and Arthur Potter in firing off a pis-
tol supposed to have contained blank
cartridges, put a bullet in John Mer-
ritt's leg and one in Curran Archer's
head. Neither is fatally hurt.
Efforts are being made at Austin to
raise a fund for the purpose of plant-
ing wild rice along the banks of the
lake, thus establishing a permanent
feeding ground for wild ducks and
geese, and increasing the game in
large quantities. If the scheme is
carried out it will be a veritable
haunters' paradise.
At the recent term of the Archer
couuty district court W. H. Peckham,
who was formerly a banker at Throck-
morton, and who claims to be a cousin
of W heeler H. Peckham, recently re-
jected by the United States senate for
supreme judge, was convicted of
swindling and given two years in the
penitentiary.
Mr. Harry LaVerne has reached
Galveston after a long and in some
respects remarkable horseback jour-
ney. He left San Francisco, Gal., on
December 1 last and reached Galves-
ton Friday, March 2d, having made
the entire distance of 2184 miles by
use of saddle horses only.
The 8-year-old son of T. J. Lee of
Hallettsville has been suffering for
several months with a wound in the
foot, which baffled all treatment. Re-
cently a surgical operation was re-
sorted to and a sliver two inches long
was found imbedded in the tendons.
He is now doing well.
Recently near Burton, Washington
county, while Miss Lelia Wilson was
assisting in burning brush on some
newly cleared ground, her clothing
caught fire and she was fearfully
burned. It is thought her injuries
will result fatally.
A mortgage recently filed in the
county clerk's office of Anderson
county, covers the mortgager's pota-
toes, turnips, watermelons and 'pos-
sum dogs. It would have been a bet-
ter mortgages if the 'possums had
been left out.
The special collections by the
comptroller for February amounted to
$12,663, of which $7874 was for rail-
railroad passenger earnings, $1000
from express companies and the bal-
ance taxes for unorganized counties.
Jim Sneink, a farmer in Navarro
county, was bitten on Dec. 26 last by
a dog. Two weeks since Mr. Snienk
was taken violently ill and died a few
days ago with what some say was a
well-defined case of hydrophobia.
The committee soliciting the local
subscription of $100,000 to the stock
of the proposed San Antonio and Gulf
Shore road, report subscriptions to
date amounting to $26,000. They
think the balance can be raised.
At Corpus Christi recently the little
daughter of W. H. Darn-wood, while
jumping off a fence, stuck a stake in
one of her legs. Medical attention
was summoned and the child is doing
as well as could be expected.
A New York syndicate owning
16,500 acres of rock asphalt lands in
Uvalde county is breaking ground at
Cline for the erection of a factory
which will have a capacity of fifteen
tons of pure asphalt daily.
' Taylor county recently redeemed
$5000 of its court honse bonds held by
the school fund, and Hamilton county
did the same thing to the extent of
$1000, and paid interest due April 10
rto the amount of $1199.17,.
An officer who haa returned fro-i
Dahomey, Africa, reports that when
King Behanzin found that, escape was
impossible he summoned his agel
mother and said to bar: "I am going
to surrender to France. My father
must know of it. You, therefore,
shall see him and tell him." The
king thereupon had his mother be-
headed while he calmly looked on,
smoking a pipe.
A committee of Hiberians waited on
the mayor of Brooklyn, N. Y., a few
days since and asked if the Irish flag
could be hoisted on St. Patrick's day
over the city hall, and the mayor
said: "While I am mayor I shall not
grant special privileges to any nation-
ality. All shall be treated alike. The
Americal flag is good enough for all
American citizens."
The first step toward the expulsion
of the Jesuits from Mexico has been
taken at Hidalgo. It is said that by
the expulsion of Jesuits in the college
of that city by Bishop Monte de Oca,
the Jesuits are all out of power in
San Luis Potosi and have been ordered
to leave at once. Bishop de Oca has
as yet assigned no official reason for
his action.
Mr. Labouchere, in speaking of the
ministry of England says: "I am now
convinced that the Radicals dearly
love a lord. Love of and subserv-
iency to the titled is the weak spot in
the Anglo-Saxon race. We are a
race of snobs, and are never happier
than when indulging in an orgie of
snobbism."
Arrangements have been completed
with S. Stewart & Co., to construct
the new bridge to be built at St. Paul,
;Minn., across the Mississippi river.
It will be a draw bridge and will cost
;$1,500,000. Its length will be 3280
feet.
A party of thirty negroes left At-
lanta, Ga., recently for Africa. The
emigration fever is epidemic among
the blacks there. Several of these
parties have started before for Africa,
but none ev^r got beyond New York.
Miss Bertha Hirth recently went to
the bank of the Mississippi river at
St. Louis for the purpose of suicide,
but was rescued. She was tired of
sewing in a shirt factory twelve hours
a day and getting only $1 a week.
At Kosciusko, Miss., a few days
ago, in an impromptu iduel, Rev.
w. P. Ratliffe, editor of a Populist
paper, killed S. A. Jackson. ^Demo-
crat, arid editor of a paper. Both
members of the legislature.
Au Bruce, Ont., recently three min-
ers were killed at, the Ouhir. eold
mines by a rock caving in on them.
Their names are Frank Percy, James
O. Heath and Anthony Savage.
Joseph C. Craddick, a farmer living
four miles from Versailles, Ky., while
digging a posthole recently, dug up
an old earthen kettle containing sev-
eral thousand dollars.
During the recent election for
mayor of Troy, N. Y., a crowd of re-
peaters tried to vote when a row oc-
curred, and one man was killed and
three wounded.
The De Soto, Mo., postoffice was
burglarized a few nights ago. The
safe was blown open and $250 in
money and <$1700 in stamps were
taken.
The eight hour law of Colorado has
been amended so that persons em-
ployed on public works shall not work
more than forty-eight hours a week.
A long-lost Spanish mine of fabu-
lous richness has been discovered
near Durango, Mex. An old smelter
was found at the same place.
The Dolphin Manufacturing com-
pany's jute mills at Paterson, N. J.,
have closed down indefinitely, throw-
ing 800 people out of work.
Senator Stewart, Populist, has in-
troduced an amendment to the Bland
seigniorage bill providing for the free
coinage of silver.
With a kettle of boiling water and
a broom Mrs. Gustav Tedtman of
Chicago and her servant put two
burglars to flight.
The Italian consul at Rio de Ja-
neiro, Sig. C. Bertola, died recently
of yellow fever. The disease contin-
ues to spread.
Gen. Jubal A. Early died at his
home at Lynchburg, Va., a few days
ago. He was a few months over 78
years of age.
STORY OF DAMASCUS, j
A BRILLIANT PAGE FROM ITS
EARLY HISTORY.
Ta'msgo Preaches in Mobile, Ala.,
About 1'aul and the Spread of Christ-
ianity Aiuod£ the Pagan Nations of
the East.
Mobile, Ala., March 11.—Eev.
T. DeWitt Talmage, D. D., who is now
visiting- the south, has selected as the
subject of today's sermon, "Unappre-
ciated Servicea" The text being taken
from 2 Cor. 11 : xxxiii, "Through a
window, in a basket, was I let down
by the wall."
Damascus is a city of white and glis-
tening architecture sometimes called
"the eye of the east," sometimes called
"a pearl surrounded by emeralds," at
one time distinguished for swords of
the best material called Damascus
blades, and upholstery of richest fabric
called damasks. A horseman by the
name of Paul, riding toward this city,
had been thrown from the saddle.
The horse had dropped under a flash
from the sky, which at the same time
was eo bright it blinded the rider for
many days, and I think so permanent-
ly injured his eyesight that this de-
fect of vision became the thorn in the
flesh he afterward speaks of. He
started for Damascus to butcher Chris-
tians, but after that hard fall from his
horse he was a changed man and
preached Christ in Damascus till the
city was shaken to its foundation.
The mayor giv^s authority for his
arrest, and the popular cry is, "Kill,
him! I^ill him!" The city is sur- ^
tounded by a high wall, and the gates
Nile seems to be armed with all the
guns of thunder that bombarded Sinai
at the law-giving. On how fragile
craft sailed how much of historical
importance!
The parsonage at Epworth, England,
is on fire in the night, and the father
rushed through the hallway for the
rescue of his children. Seven children
are out and safe on the ground, but
one remains in the consuming building.
That one wakes, and finding his bed
on fire and the building- crumbling,
comes to the window, and two peasants
make a ladder of their bodies, one
oeasant standing on the shoulder of
the other, and down the human ladder
the boy descends—John Wesley. If
you would know how much depended
on that ladder of peasants ask the
millions of Methodists on both sides of
the sea* Ask theii mission stations all
round the world. Ask the hundreds
of thousands already ascended to join
their founder, who would have per-
ished trat for the living stair of peas-
ants' shoulders.
An English ship stopped at Pitcairn
Island, and right in the midst of sur-
rounding cannibalism and squalor, the
passengers discovered a Christian col-
onv of churches and schools and beau-
tiful homes and highest style of re-
ligion and civilization. For fifty years
no missionary and no Christian influ-
ence had landed there. Why this oasis
of light amid a desert of heathendom?
Sixty years before, a ship had met dis-
aster, and one of the sailors, unable to
save anything else, went to his trunk
and took out a Bible which his mother
had placed there, and swam ashore,
the Bible held in his teeth. The book
was read on all sides until the rough
and vicious population were evange-
lized, and a church was started, and
an enlightened commonwealth estab-
lished, and the world's history has nc
are watched by the police lest the tnore brilliant page than that which
Cilician preacher escape. Many of the ^slls transformation of a nation
houses are built on the wall, and their
by one book. It did not seem of much
Work will soon begin on the bridge
to span the Mississippi river at New
Orleans. It will be the longest bridge
in the world.
At Phoenixville, Pa., a few days ago
the Phoenix iron works, which usually
employs between 3000 and 4 )00 men,
closed down.
At Lima, Ohio, a few days since,
crazed by religious excitement, Ed-
ward Froideveaux beat his wife to
death.
The strike at the Cochiti gold dis-
trict, noar Santa Fe, N. M.° shows
free gold running up to ?8000 to the
ton.
balconies projected clear over and
hovered above the gardens outside.
It was customary to lower baskets out
of these balconies and pull up fruits
and flowers from the gardens. To this
day visitors at the monastery of Mount
Sinai are lifted and let down in
baskets. Detectives prowled around
from house to house looking for Paul,
but his friends hid him now in one
place, now in another. He is no
coward, as fifty incidents in his life
demonstrate. But he feels his work is
not done yet, and so he evades assas-
sination. "Is that preacher here?"
the foaming mob shout at one house
door. "Is that fanatic here?" the
police shout at another house door.
^Sometimes on the street incognito he
.Repasses through a crowd of clenched
1 cists, and sometimes he secretes him-
f Self on the house-top. At last the
, infuriated populace get on sure track
| of him. They hr"a> positive evidence
' he is in the j.iOusc- of 6n\o of the
! Christians, the balcony of whose home
reaches over the wall. "Here he is!
Here he is!" The. vociferation and
blasphemy and howling of the pur-
suers are at the front door. They
break in. "Fetch out that gospelizer,
and let us hang his head on the city
gate. Where is he?" The emergency
was terrible. Providentially there was
a good stout basket in the house.
Paul's friends fasten a rope to the
basket. Paul steps into it. The bas-
ket is lifted to the edge of the balcony
on the wall, and then while Paul holds
on to the rope with both hands his '
friends lower away, carefully and cau-
tiously, slowly but surely, further
down and further down, until the
basket strikes the earth and the
apostle steps out and afoot and alone
starts on that famous missionary tour,
the story of which has astonished earth
and heaven. Appropriate entry in
Paul's diary of travels: "Through a
window in a basket was I let down
by the wall." •
Observe, first, on what a slender ten-'
ure great results hang. The rope-
maker who twisted that cord fastened
to that lowering basket never knew
how much would depend on the
strength of it. How if it had been
broken and the apostle's life had been
dashed out? What would have be-
come of the Christian church? All
that magnificent missionary work in
Pamphylia, Cappadocia, Galatia, Mace-
donia, would never have been accom-
importance wh-etfrpr the sailor con-
tinued to hold the book in his teeth or
let it fall in the breakers, but upon
what small circumstance depended
what misrhtv results!
a Christian woman was seen going
along- the edge of a wood every even-
tide, and the neighbors in the country
did not understand how a mother with
so many cares and anxieties should
waste so much time as to be idly saun-
tering out, evening by evening. It
was found out afterward that she
went there to pray for her household,
and while there one evening she wrote
that beautiful hymn, famous in al]
. ages for cheering Christian hearts:
I love to steal awhile away f
i From every cumbering care,
And spend the hours of setting day
In humble, grateful prayer.
i ShaU there be no reward for such
unpretending yet everlasting service?
"We go into long sermon to prove
that we will be able to recognize peo-
ple in heaven. When there is one rea-
son we fail to present, and that is bet-
ter than all—God will introduce us.
We shall have them all pointed out.
You would not be guilty of the im-
politeness of having friends in
your parlor not introduced, and
celestial politeness will demand
that we be made acquainted with
all the heavenly household. What re-
hearsal of old times and recital of stir-
ring reminiscence's. If others fail to
give introduction, God will take ua
through, and before our first twenty-
four hours in heaven—if it were calcu-
lated by earthly timepieces—have
passed, we shall meet and talk with
more heavenly celebrities than in our
entire mortal state we met with
earthly celebrities. Many who made
great noise of usefulness will sit on
the last seat by the front door of the
heavenly temple, while right up withit
arm s reach of the heavenly throne
will be many who, though they coukl
not preach themselves or do great ex-
ploits for God, nevertheless held the
rop&
JJut who art thou, the mighty one of
heaven, on this other throne? "In
time of bitter persecution I owned a
house in Damascus, a house on the
wall. A man who preached Christ
was hounded from street to street, and
I hid him from the assassins, and when
I found them breaking in my house
and I could no longer keep him safely
I advised him to flee for his life, and a
basket was let down over the wall
plished. All his writings that make up with the maltreated man in it, and I
so indispensable and enchanting a part
of the New Testament would never
have been written. The story of res-
arrection would never have been so
gloriously told as he told it. That ex-
ample of heroic and triumphant en-
durance at Philippi, in the Mediter
ranean euroclvdon, under flagellation
and at his beheading- would not have
kindled the courage of ten thousand
martyrdoms. But the rope holding-
that basket, how much depended on
it! So again and again great results
have hung on what seemed slender
circumstances.
Did ever a ship of many thousand
tons crossing, the sea have such im-
portant passenger as had once a boat
of leaves, from taffrail to stern only
three or four feet, the vessel made
waterproof by a coat of bitumen and
floating on the Nile with the infant
lawgiver of the Jews on board? What
if some crocodile should crunch it?
What if some of the cattle wading in
for a drink should sink it? V.essel.s of
war sometimes carry forty guns looking
through the portholes, ready to open
battle. But that tiny craft on the
was one who helped hold the rope."
And I said: "Is that all?" and lie an-
swered, "That is all." And while I
was lost in amazement I heard a
strong voice that sounded as though it
might once have been hoarse from
many exposures and triumphant as
though it might have belonged to one
of the martyrs, and it said: "Not
many mighty, not many noble are
called, but God hath chosen the weak
things of the world to confound the
things which are mighty, and base
things of the world and things which
are despised hath God chosen, yea,
and things which are not, to bring to
naught things which are, that no flesh
should glory in his presence." And I
looked to see from whence the voice
came, and lo! it was the very one who
had said: "Through a window in a
basket was I let down by the wall."
Long- ili.u uuyainiy examples must
go from the arithmetic, as they have
already £one from all reputable
school-rooms. ••Reduce 5o0, Moo. 068
inches to acres" is out of date. 113 ia:
••What is the o.ibic root of 2;0, 671,.
777,032, 189. Si)7."
Mr. Walter Sell
Wonderful Good
at Small Expense
Rheumatism Perfectly Cured.
"C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.:
"GentlemenI do not know how to expres*
the gratitude that I feel towards Hood's Sar«
saparilla, which has cured me at very small cost.
1 Have Not Slept
on my left side for four years; suffering with
rheumatism with constant severe pains and h©»
jBg completely run down, but now all Is changed
send I enjoy good health. I experience sweef
refreshing sleep, have a good appetite, and mf
memory is rouoh improved. »n fact I am aston*
J shed at the < change. I can now perform my
daiiywork with ease. I had almost
Given Up All Hopes
of ever «>nJoying good health again, but by th«
persuasive power of a friend I was induced to
lake Hood's Sarsaparilla which has saved my
Hood'ss?>Cures,
life. I am now in perfect health, thanks t*
Hood's." Walter Bell, Galveston, Texas.
"AttestiJJoHN DeBhuhl, Galveston, Texas.
'■loo^s "Pfiis act easllv, yet promptly and
efficiently, on the liver and fcowgfc. 25«,
In tlia first year in which the Aermotor Co. did galvanizing it
expended $50,000 in this work, and did not furnish galvan-
ized goods for - tlie entire year either. No extra charge wai
made for the goods into which this enormous sum was put.
Am you curious to know why this lavish expenditure was
aHe? Arg YQU£Uri£«s to know how the Aermotor Co. came to
make bed-rock,h«ftimes prices long before hard times set in ?
The explanation is this: The Aermotor Co. foresaw that some*
thing better than painting was required and foresaw that hard
times were coming. ■■■& -
Tta AERMOTOR CO. FORESEES, IT LOOKS AHEAD, If
ANTICIPATES, IT KNOWS WHAT is COMING, IT KNOWS
WHAT SHOULD BE COMING, IT KNOWS IN ADVANCE WHAt
IT SHOULD DO.
Because of this it has an enormous factory, and turns out
ao enormous quantity of goods, and good goods. The othei
fellow is <; used-to-be, ha3 been, or might have been, had he
known, but ho didn'fc know. It is all in the past. His but
lness is in the gone by. Ours is in tlie present, the futur®.
His consoJatioQ is found in the darkey's statement. "It's bet-
{er to be a nas-befih than a nebber was." After we have don®
and are doing a thing find it is known to be the only thing to
do, certain little -piping voices are heard saying. "We can do it
if you will pay us enough money to do it."
We made the Steel Windmill business, made the model to
whicji the best of our imitators can only hope to remotely ap«
pfoach and in their endeavor to approach it are still weakly ex*
perimentjnK a$ $he exgensf qjffie usgr gut to rct^n Jo out,
enol;moui outlay for galvanizing'. Why did we do it? tE«
reason is this. WE BUILD THE BEST WE KNOW, REGARD*
LESS OS1 COST, and we believe we know better than anybody.
niftal, exposed to the air, will not last
nuTasTgalvanised, bun? pTtapsriy galvanized, will last scores ol
years. Barbed wire galvanized will iast 20 yeajs, an<J be prac-
tically as good as new. How long does it last painted? Bui
tho barbed wire is an eighth of an inch thick, while some of
tho steel 'isSi. in the vanes of windmills is from a thirty-
second to a sixty-fourth of an inch thick, and therefore would
last only from a fourth to an eighth as long as the barbed wire,
other thing? being equal, but they are not equal; the sheet
metal has holes punched thro '* and is riveted to thicker
and mora rigid pieces. ^
The vibration of the thin parts at ottfe «"!r&>its ~Uvc naint
a?ouft(i n-v.ets, aild water at once gets in and rust quieklyeatr^-^
away the thin parts. Some have used galvanized metal and put
in blacK rivets. This of course is not so good as painting sine®
the cut edge of the galvanized metal js exposed and is in no way
protected. WE BUILD FOR THE AGES. Wo wouldn't sell
yon a poor painted wheel, nor on$ mule of metal galTan-
iacd before belnp put together
as double price for it. ~
wo know, and know-
things aro praot«
irorthleap, wo
you would pay
b uS I d the hosi
tliat euch
Icaiiy
When
the sect
of an
motor Wheel is
all riveted ujp^com-
Itleled and cleansed •
of rust and impurities^
it is then immersed i
melted zinc and alumin
and left there until it becomes
as hot as the metal is and until every
crack, cranny, crevice, pore and opening of
every sort is filled, closed up and saturated with the moltes
metal and the tvhole 23 pieces composing the section becomt
soUered and welded Uygethcr as one piece, then you have some-
tiling that is strong, enduring and reliable. It is expensive to
do, and small doers cannot afford to do it. We keep 40 tons
of zinc and aluminum melted from one year s end to another,
but we have business enough so that tee can af 'ord to do it.
One word about tho nature of galvanizing. The silvery whit®
ccatifig which fills every pore and covers every portion of tha
Aermotor Wheel, Vane and Tower is zinc and aluminum when
ifc is first put on. but whicii, after standing for a time forms,
with the steel, a chemical combination or alloy which cannot bo
melted and i?j practically indestructible.
The 5th ^Jvortis^iont in this series will show a 4-Wheel Steel
Iruckj weighing 115 Jbs., which will carry 2 tons, and of which
wo use 300 in the Aermotor Factory. It will be found almost
Indispensable on an.y form or in any warehouse. For 2 copies oi
this advertisement, which is Ko. i in tlie series, and 33.50 cash
sent in immediately after the appearance of adv. Ko. 5, we will
deliver f.o.b., Chicago, one oi: these Trucks or forward from
branch houses, freight from Chicago added.
Where we can, we shall make liberal oiToTS to accept copies
of those advertisements in part payment for V.'mdmills. If von
have any thought of using a windmill this year write t-s al
owe, statin; what you win need, whether Pumping or Geared
and if possible we will make you a liberal olTer.
The Aermotor Co. proposes to distribute if'SOO. CASH, IS
P!l!ZKS for tho best essays written by the wife, son or daughter
r iv'riv ooni.?o TtI' °" a windmill, answering the question,
"HUV SHOltD 11'SE AW AEIDIOTOTt V For conditions oj
competition and amounts and numbers of prizes send for par.
ticiiJarsto tha Aermotor Co., Chicmto, or to its branches, at San
rrancisco, Kansas Ciry, Lincoln, Neb., SioitK City, Iowa, Min-
neapolis, Buffalo, or 65 Park Place. New York City. Aermotors.
rumpmg and Geared same price, All Steel, all Galvanized-Aft»r'
Completion, delivered free on cars at Chicago and shinned"ta
iny one, anvwhere, at the following prices-
S-ft. ©25. I Pi-It. S5Q.
i?/ psy
16-ft
$3 25.
b Uuiul! S BUfc?
Ko Alkalies
— OR —
Other Chemicals
are used in the
preparation of
BASER & C0.J5&
which is absolutely
pure and soluble.
m>2 ! j ' '• I more than three times
w i < j ■ '/ I 'hp strength of Cocoa mixed
wi'Jh St.arcli, Arrowroot or
Sugar, and is far more ceo-
nornical, costing leas than one cent a, cup.
It is delicious, nourishing, and Kisn.ir
DIGESTED.
Sold by Q-ocers everywhere.
W. BAJSEE & CO., Borchcster, Macs.
PlAifNOW
E/. ur.Y TJtlUMPH, I)
VXNELESS SWEET POTATO CM I r
1'UMPKIN vam. , ' all Grown
WONDEKFUL PEA, ( Stock.
JERUSALEM ARTICHOKE. )
iuriil<°o<aai<4'Z.Dru 111 m Seed 4 Flora! Co.tf00?1?1"
Mention this paper. ' * 0rtA
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Lowry, J. H. Honey Grove Signal. (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, March 16, 1894, newspaper, March 16, 1894; Honey Grove, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth409904/m1/3/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Honey Grove Preservation League.