Christian Messenger. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 15, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 29, 1885 Page: 8 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Fannin County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Bonham Public Library.
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' Terrell is to liave a t
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and dollar school-house.
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^Urilt estimated to "be .1,150 years
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en ewr shpt the widow aMfifstfgl
demand then went horhe1»'nd sh
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Clias. Bassano. a prominent citizen ofi
Paris, died last week. -
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A shrewd tramp rwPfTIfiiii self off aa
Lk James, in the city of Louisville,
(and a lot^jrf^Mjjjnfre' dined him
and wined hiip anX lionised him a day"
two, before. ;they discovered their
|teke*§nd -tl^gr Jtit like they
In¥ ¥ go‘oat,^4.„Jti<* ftenfreives
half to t deatii sneh toad-
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LOUISTAKA,
^EW
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The depot hotel a$ Paris was burned
a few days ago. i.>
The streams were higher \
’: ►te rains than ever known be
Xafire at Teh*ell burned sevenry-Tive
bales of cotton on the ^epot jplatforhi.
•i . jJas* fetallens \|^s thrfl^;oitf his
wagon and‘ killed, at McRin^Was
f week. - v\ -‘
t A m w - V ‘ . t A
} ‘ i^^me as T>ig as a 0111111^1110^1
trunkls reported to have falle^in Fii(
count^/ ^ ^
h ■•- 4-4^ <«V . <v ?
Cre^ Taylor, a barber of Paris, haa
been IWed for keeping hfs shop open on
Simday,
^ n 5 .j- * ’•
Leonard Ray, of Wood county, a vet
eran of 1812, wag bom in 1796, and is in
his 90th year.
disease.’ He is Abie‘l;o^
little. ''•'ifeS!5SSfto^
^ 'I'WI I
It is estimated that a ton of gold is? Jj cancer in 1
buried every year with the people who
e id this country.
v llie4city of San Francisco receives
^.bOO 'bananas per' month from the
Sandwich Islands.** ,•* :
It is said to cost more to print a news-
paper in Arkansas than any other state
nr tae umei$s^liL'
Iowa has sent more* vS^ferg'tiO the Newf
Orleans exposition than any other ndr
ern-st&te.
k / The effort of tjten. Banios in Cen
Ameriba shows that there can be n
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forced union of thejlve republics.
The cholera has; again broken out in
Spain. It is presumed m6 germs of the
disease lived through the winter.
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^Tlie little town of Medicine Lodge
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ry Ub«? Cop-
se Vs. ’
Frank Roberts, a noted horse-thief;
icWaftrMlled in Beleware Bend, Cooke'
s fhat Gen. Grant ha#
cancer in the mouth at all, but
simply an ulcerated sefre throat... When
the physicians happened to admtasfttef
a remedy that was good for sore throat;
the disease began to mend. The won-
der is that they did not kill liiiji with
their remedies before he had a chance
to recover. ,
Favorite Ltn6
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arrest him and his crane:.
O O
Kai
nsas.was inundated by the bursting
!^!by.°*r:r8Wh0 were a and many lives were
lost.
L- V
liim
T)eiiison had a small cyclone la^t
week, which wrecked the skating rink
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gun-boats, ai *c<
■'it
ild - ,give EngRtni
Baptist chuieh, some residences, and considerable of a tusm* un the water,
_______IT* 1 V" ' - ’ 'I ■ 17
if war should be declared.
several business houses.
A Denison butcher salted, smoked and
1l train composed of two cars of gold
cured a hog into bacon, w ithout cutting bullion, three cars of silver, eight cars
it up, and then sent it to the New Or-
«
leans exposition.
The penitentiaries are being ran at a
loss 0/ *'*.000 per month to the state,
and the conclusion is that there is knav-
ery or bad management somewhere.; .
The death list of the Texas veterans
tiafc twenty-seven of these old
have passed away during the
iontbs. They will soon all
be gone. %
A white man and two negroes were
buried alive by* the caving in of a bank
at Ft. Worth, lafct, week, while they
were laying pipe for the water works.
One of the negreerwas rescued.
If there is onci thing that the people
of the state are more deterretaed oh
than any other, it'ii that the ne^t legis-
lamie shall not be composed of drunk-
aids and rowdies, ■ •*
! As Mr. Davig was crossing the Uuad-
alu^e liver, tejjve miles above Gon-
refVS, with his wife, son and daughter,
lie got into swimming water, and his
daughter was drowned.
C. j;. Gilbert, editor of the Abilene
R$pd$er, armed with a cowhide and a
sixshooter, went hunting W. L. Gibbs,
of the Abilene Quill. He found him, a distance of 2,5<JK) miles. She sfcys she
and Struck him with'the cowhide. The stood the ti^p weljy^ 4ud never f^ed;to
1*^
edftcg.jthen shot Gilbert with
^^fjpg his Sklflf ^ •
a re-
of silk and four cars of tea recently
passed east 'from California and Color-
ado. *.
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A dreadful malady is prevailing in
Overton county, Tenn. It baffles the
physicians, and has the - appearance of
black tongue fever. Many have
died.
. •
North Carolina needs a stock law.
. - >
The newspapers have figured on it, and
say that it takes five dollars, worth of
fencing to keep out one dollar’s worth
of stock.
A Pennsylvania farmer dreamed he
was rolling logs, and one was about to
crush him. He sprang out of the way,
and in doing so sprang out of bed and
on to the bureau, breaking three ribs. :
A man dug up a pot of gold at Little
Rock, Ark., the other day, while work-
ing in his garden. So the papers say.
The pot contained 88,000. It is suppos-
ed that a great many other men in Ar-
kansas will now go to work in the gar-
dens. .
Ttv
Miss Mary Markher has just arrived,
In Chicago with ten car loads of cattle,
worth about $10,000, which she brought
fiom her ranch in Washington territory,
Alexander ca® sell you nil grades of shoes, from
cheapest to hmst. lie carries a large variety of men’s
women’s and children’s shoes, and can suit anybody,
hfeeixe quality and price. He will not sell you a
iffohoe Vqd represent to you that itjjs oil goat,
Hot. will t^i.1 you truthfully whsWhe oilers to sell. He
intends to build up his bussness by selling goods as
chfcap as-be ean, and maintain the name of dealing
hvneqtly with fcveivlx dy. .
-*r--
1 *• CALL AT
A^DINGEK’S DRY GOODS
EMPORIUM.
If you Avant the best 'and greatest bargains ever
offbred in Bonham. Our stock is now complete
liaving.just received to-day and by other late arrivals.
the building (If ■ A large assortment cf Dress Goods at from oc up
TO fgg
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NORTH, EAST, AND SOUTH-EAST.
Pullman Palace
Sleeping Cars
Dail y—Between
SI. LOUIS A DALLAS, FT. WORTH. EL PAS*
& SAN FRANCISCO,
MARSHALL and NEW ORLEANS
Without Change
SOLID TRAINS EL PASO TO ST LOUI8.
FAST TIME, ' ^ * *
FIRST GLASS EQUIPMENT^ *
^ SURE CONNECTIONS
See that your tickets read via Texas A Paciffc.
A large assortment of Cloaks, Dolmans, New Mar-
kete, Russian Circulars, Colored Jackets for Ladies
*» » Aj*. j V + *?
Misses and Children.from $2.50 up. ],
A large assortnieffJkof Velvet, Velyeteen and Trim-
mings. t 1
A large and the' prettiest assortment of Prints in1
largest, be* L&E***"*^. ««»• P-' & Ti^et Age.,
For tickets, baggage checks, or any information
as to routes and.^ates apply to any of the ticket
agents or to H. P. HUGHES, Passenger Agens.
moustou,
and cheapest assortment in the ci^.
AV< arc offering special bargains in the above line
of goods JOHN H ARDINGER.
NOW READY!
THE
• i
Ray - Burnett Debate.
l
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HOLT’S SCHOOL.
BEGINS MONDAY, NOV. 5, 1884.
ExpuUEKCSD teachers in all department.
Buildings new, Urge, well arranged an i proDerW
furnished. v
^ Fxpens*4 moderate.
Gentlemanly and ladylike, working students wanted.
Work” is oor.-watchyord; “success, our motta.
For particulars and circulars, address
ALEX. HOI/T, Italy, Ellis county, Texaa.
8-38. 6m
—
This-discussion embraces questions
not .usually discussed between Baptists
and Christians, viz., the origin, age and
succession' of the Baptist church, the
scriptural authority for the mourning-
bench, and experiences; also the pse
and progress of the reformatory move-
tnent of the Campbells, and* whether
they set up a new church.
It is perhaps the liveliest discussion
that ever took place on the American
continent. It is war to the knife, all
the way through. Every word uttered,
in the discussion is contained in the
Dr. J. A. Seegar,
" . LENTI8 T,
, ____ . 7
Over be Post-Oftoo, Dallas, Texaa.
NOW READY
“Sifting Campbellism,
A A debate
4 1 BETWEEN
THE “TEXAS METHODIST,n AND
THE “CHKI8TIAN MESSENGER.”
jJOQ^nighfc^regt inHh^Mttteiiniiks
of me way cars* - '• * 1
book.
Brice,
*
A, Pamphlet of Forty Pagee. Price 25c. per oopy .
htl otpiaa for $1.06 Two *«ilar* per doM^
CQnts; paper, 25 cts. ^ .. ? _. .
stampsvsend two-,.. ».■??
.Bonham, Te»M Hatmnttomrn.t,
■tampa, will
#
i
14;
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Burnett, Thomas R. Christian Messenger. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 15, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 29, 1885, newspaper, April 29, 1885; Bonham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth914028/m1/8/?q=corinth: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bonham Public Library.