The Bonham News (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 57, Ed. 1 Friday, November 5, 1915 Page: 3 of 4
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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THE PRICE IS THE THING
New goods economically bought have been literally pouring into our store, filling up the gaps made in our stock by the heavy
October selling. November shoppers will find this store the best and most economical shopping place in North Texas. Every
item throughout our entire stock represents the best value obtainable at the price.
YOUR CASK WILL BUY MORE AND BETTER MERCHANDISE HERE
We*
{Bargains Sn 7/fen’s and
{Bogs’ Shoes
mentis«xk Gun Metal Good Year welt .latest toe
and heel, button u>s-I»ce^regular $5.00 value, our
cash price................................. $4.00
Men’s Patent Colt Good Year welt, shoe, regular $5.00
value to closea out at ........................ $3.50
Men’s Black Gun Metal or Vici Kid, all leather shoe
regular $3.50 value, our cash price .......... $2.85
Boys’ Gun Metal in English or button latest ♦styles,
priced specially $2.98, $2.49, $1.98 and $1.49
Men’s Boots or Bootees 16 and 19 inches high, double
' sole and water proof, made of high grade Elk,
priced specially at $6.98, $5.98, $4.98 and $3.49
Men’s Work Shoes, priced specially $3.49, $2.98, $2.49,
$2.29, and................................ $149
We give ^rou more leather for your money than any
other house in North Texas
7/fen ’s Clothing ^
BEST DRESSED MEN IN TOWN-
are not always those who spend the most for their clothes.
It's no secret that good -dress depends on good taste, and
a knowledge where to buy. We are showing very snap-
py and highly tailored clothes in all the new fabrics, blue
serge included, at a great saving to you.
Men’s ail wool $20.00 Suits, our cash price...... $14.98
Men’s all wool $17.50 suits, our cash price _______ $12.49
Men’s all wool $15.00 Suits? our cash price...... $11.25
Men’s all wool $12.50 Suits, our cash price ...... $9.49
Men’s all wool $10.00 Suits, our cash price* ______ $7.19
uhe jCac/ies’ ZDeacty~to~ clfJear ‘Department
OFFERS MATCHLESS VALUES FOR NOVEMBER BUYERS. OUR NEW YORK BUYER HAS JUST SENT US
IN, FOR NOVEMBER SELLING, THE NEWEST AND SMARTEST COAT SUITS AND DRESSES, IN ALL THE
POPULAR FABRICS AND STYLES, AT PRICES THAT MEAN A SAVING TO YOU FROM $5.00 TO $10.00.
Suits worth $30.00, our cash price ........... $21.75
Suits worth $27.50, our cash price........ $19.25
Suits worth $25.00, our cash price .......... $16.75
Suits worth $20.00, our cash price .......... $15.00
Suits worth $17.50, our cash price........... $.12.50
Dresses worth $6.50, our cash price ............... $3.98
Dresses worth $7.50, our cash price .............. $4.98
Dresses worth $10.00, our cash price............ $6.75
Dresses worth $12.50, our cash price............. $7.49
Dresses worth $15.00, our cash price............$10.00
Dresses worth $17.50, our cash price ...........„ $12.19
J/fave Just Jlrrived
SHIPMENT OF NEW SPORT COATS IN THE POPULAR WHITE CHINCHIILA, GOLPHINE AND THE NEW
PLAIDDS AND STRIPES AT $4.98, $5.98, $6.49 AND.................................................„ $7.49
HANDSOME COATS IN THE MORE STAPLE COLORS, RARE VALUES AT $4.98, $6.75, $8.50,'$10.00, $12.49 AND
UP TO .......................... ................... ....................................... $19.75
MANY SPLENDID VALUES IN LADIES’ SKIRTS AND WAISTS ARE HERE FOR QUICK SELLING. NEW
STYLES, NEW MATERIALS AND ECONOxWICAL PRICES.
THE STORE THAT
ENCOURAGES
ECONOMY
Max Hermer
TIE STORE THAT
ENCOURAGES
ECONOMY
B«H’S NEW STORE
—WEST SIDE SQUARE
oCadies/ 7/fissses and
■Children’s Shoes
Made of all leather in all the leading styles and leath-
ers. Shoes that look well and wear well.
Ladies Patent cloth top Military Boot, lace or button,
regular $3.50 value, our cash price .......... $2.98
Ladies’ Gypsy Kid Boot, regular $4.00, our cash price $3.25
Ladies’ Patent cloth top, button boot, regular $3.00
value, our cash price ...................... $2.49
Ladies’ and Misses’ Gun Metal, low heel, button, made
of all leather, the very thing for school, regular
$2.75, our cash price ..........k..........$2.25
Ladies’ and Misses’ Vici Kid or Gun Metal, button
or lace, medium or low heel, regular $2.25 value
our cash price .............................. $1.75
Misses’ Shoes in Vici Kid or Gun Metal, regular $1.75
our cash price .............................$1.39
Other Shoes priced at 98c, 79c and..............49c
{Bogs’ School Suits
THAT WILL GIVE DOUBLE SERVICE
Made of the sturdiest and purest woolens, built by the
most careful expert tailoring. Suits that will give abso-
lute satisfaction at prices that will appeal to the Econom-
ical buyer.
Boys’ Suits worth $8.50, onr cash price........ $6.49
Boys’ Suits worth $6.50, our cash price .......... $4.98
Boys’ Suits worth $5.00, our cash price___.....$$.96
Boys’ Suits worth $4.00, our cash price.......... $2.98
Boys’ Suits worth $3.50, our cash price.......... $2.49
Boys’ Suits worth $2.50, our cash price .......... $1.98
» a « a n a
l ....CORRESPONDENTS.....»
untttttttttxunttnnuun
Ely and Kerr
We haven’t much news, for we have
"MmVUw Tom” Starts Yoir Liver
kfer Tin Caionei and Yon Don’t
Lose a Day’s Work
Liven up your sluggish liver! Feel
fine and cheerful; make your work a
pleasure; be vigorous and full of ambi-
tion. But take no nasty, dangerous
calomel because it makes you sick and
you may lose a day’s work.
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel crashes into sour bile - like
dynamite, breaking it up. That’s when
you feel that awful nausea and cramping.
Listen $o me! If you want to enjoy
the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel
cleansing you ever experienced just take
a spoonful of harmless Dodson’s Liver
to stay in so close we don’t gather, been very encouraging to the cotton
much. ! growers, but we fear that there will
We have been having fine weather be too large an acreage planted to
and the farmers have been making cotton nex^ >'ear-
good use of it. Cotton picking is al- j A good acreage of wheat has been
most a thing of the past, as there sown* And that which is up is look-
is very little yet to pick. We never | *nR fine.
saw people so interested in getting ( We bear of lots of sickness chills
..... . and fever mostlv. B. F .Allen, who
out their cotton. The prices have......* , ,
has had typhoid fever, has about got-
ten well again.
Mr. and Mrs. Newt Coleman are
rejoicing over the arrival of a 15
pound son at their home. Also John
Clark is wearing a long smile over
the birth of a boy at his home.
Rev. Davis of Ector filled his reg-
- • | lar appointment at Marvin Sunday at
_ . . , . , . , . , ! 11 a. m. He returned to Ector and
Tone tonight. Yonr druggist or dealer . . , T. , T.
sella you a 50 cent bottle of Dodson’s j conducted the funeral of Lncle Jim
CALOMEL DYNAMITES YOUR LIVER!
MAKES YOU SICK AND SALIVATES
Liver Tone under my personal money-
back guarantee that each spoonful will
clean your sluggish liver latter than a
dose of nasty calomel and that it won’t
make you sick.
Miller at 2 p. m.
W. E. Ferguson and wife, and C.
A. Layman and family of the Long
Branch community, visited at the
Dodson’s Liver Tone is real liver ! home of A. W. Layman last Suhday.
medicine. You’ll know it next morning j Teddy and wife visited C. V. Newell
because you will wake tip feeling tine, j at Fulp Sundav.
your liver will lx- working: headache
and dizziness gone: stomach
will be
sweet and bowels regular.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is entirely vege-
table. therefore harmless and ean not
salivate. Give it *tq your ehildten.
Millions of people an- Using Dodson’s
Liver Tone instead of dangerous calomel
now. Your druggist will tell you that
the sale of Calomel is almost stopped
entirely here.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Morrow of Ely
visited C. R. Frailicks of Kerr Sat-
urday night. - . _
Mrs. Nannie Kinslow of Randolph
visited Mrs. J. H. Newell Monday.
A. W. Layman has gone to his fine
black land farm he rented near Ce-
ll na, Collin County, to finish sowing
wheat. He will move there in about
thirty days or sooner.
Forney Henry, Harve Booher and
Robert Haglar will move to Jones
County in the near future.
The little town of Ely was shot up
a few nights ago by some bad boys,
whom, we guess, had. gotten a little i
too much “Red Eye” under their!
belts and didn’t know of any other
way to show their bravery.
J. A. Willis’ mule, which has been
in a swing for three weeks under
treatment for lock jaw from Dr.
Henry Kuhn of Trenton, will soon be
O. K. and ready for the harness.
School opened at Kerr Monday with
Miss Ethel McDonald as teacher.
School opened at Nocona with Al
Kinslow as teacher.
Teddy.
They came over
Sunday afternoon,
in their car.
Miss Stella Echols visited her sister
Mrs. Julia Wallace and family at
Donaphon last Saturday.
We had a good Sunday school last
Sunday afternoon, but the prayer-
meeting tha
ed.
Mr. Thomjt Trout, wife and chil-
at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Billie Trout last Sunday.
Mr. Jim L^wis was married to Miss
Evelyn Beaty of Corinth last Sunday.
! We wish for them a long and happy
life.
Mr. Emmett Roberts, wife and chil-
j dren visited at the home of Mr. Eli
Jones of Boyd last Sunday.
Mr. Roy Bradford and wife visited
>;n -MuV ‘ JW . • W a
nedy of Boyd last Sunday.
People in this community will soon
! be through picking thier cotton and
i Mi ■ M M ' »•.
We Two.
digging potatoes.
We hear that a man b
CIIDQ
Taylorville
This is the Car
i
to look for and to ask for ix
want to find a new pleasure in c
drinking, if you want to get ccr.;„
menls on your coflee from coe.,
A your r.cxi coffee order Wkiie .A
Coffee. Full weight, air tight, c~
two and three-pound cans. Whole cv
greund. »
WAPLES-FLATTER GROCER CO.
* T VV h- j/e u«/•„** Onlj )
fkn: ffW. D >i! <*, A: r..!-. B'-
HBk. 1 ( hiiiirpiht-, a r,i .iin, . r • li. C-.*ie.
v • v ■ • t 1 MiM U lii,
wUtafdru, 1 iMid/xuit, ukiiauji.a.
Health of the community very good
with the exception of Uncle Hugh
Baum, who is quite sick at this writ-
ing.
Mr. Mose Baum and sister, Mrs.
Mamie Cunningham of Callahan Co.,
visited their uncle, Hugh Baum and
family last week.
Mr. Sam Cole and family leave
this week for San Saba County, where
they will make thei r future home.
We hate to lose these good people,
they are fine neighbors, but we wish
them well anil are glad to say that
such people will be a good recom-
mendation for this community.
. Mrs. Julia Sudderth and daughter.
Miss Fay and grandson, Ralph, vis-
-4ted the former’s daughter, Mrs. R.
H. Green of Leonard Saturday and
Saturday night.
Miss Jewell Clark spent the day
wifti Miss Nellie Baum Sunday.
■A Mrs. Dallah Green and son. Bob, of
Leonard spent Sunday with the form-
er’s mother, Mrs. Julia Sudderth.
The proceeds of *he box supper at
this place Friday night amounted to
$49.85, which was for the benefit of
the church. It was the quietest
box supper I ever attended, and
everybody had a good time.
Billie.
PERFECT
FITTING
Munsing
UNION
PUSH
& Si
FIT—perfect fit—do you know what it means in under-
wear- especially union suits?
We believe that Munsirgwear union suits will give
you a new idea of underwear fit.
ww onnmT
... />r~x
me -v
&
„ ,11 * S* *
a
Oakland .
I will try my hand at a few items
f >» The News.
Health is not very good in this com-
munity at present. Lots of chills and
fever. At most every house there is
one or more of the family down sick.
The school at Oakland is progress-
ing nicely with Miss Myrtle Lindsey
of Bonham as teacher.
Mr. Jno. McDowell, wife and daugh-
ter, Martie, were visitors at Bonham
last Saturday.
The three Moore brothers were
pleasant callers in our community last
'‘tows?
l . a ~
F ■r
IIP1 J
There is a coi rect-fitting Munsingwear garment for
you in any style, weight or fabric desired. Ask us to
show you.
Children’s union suits............................ 50c
Extra large sites ............................... 66c
Ladies’ union suits ............
................ $1.0^
ladies’ vests and pants ........
.................. 50c
Men’s union suits..............
iovp
j lira «r
GRAHAM, CRAWFORD a
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Evans, Ashley. The Bonham News (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 57, Ed. 1 Friday, November 5, 1915, newspaper, November 5, 1915; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth974298/m1/3/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bonham Public Library.