The Fannin County Favorite. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. [18], Ed. 1 Friday, August 9, 1907 Page: 3 of 8
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TffEFAJfMN
COUNTY FAVORITE.
3
r
Pull!
They say I have the pull In
the Dental business of Bdnham.
There are at least two reasons
for this—first, 1 positively guar-
antee ray work; second, all the
tilling I do is without pain.
My business is larger than
at any time since I came here—
pver two years ago.
Teeth extracted free
new teeth are ordered.
when
Dr. F. C Allen
Over Hub Clo. Store
FAVOR
Congressman Defeats Gov. Varda-
nian For Senator.
HAS A
MAJORITY
ABSTRACTS
M M
We make reliable abstracts and
perfect titles. Loans made on
real estate*
Pritchett & Nunn
Twelve to Fifteen Thousand Which Later
Returns Will Undoubtedly
Increase.
ALMOST A
COWARD
by Minnie Long
The man I wed must be a brave
man. I would not marry a coward. I
want a man who would go through
fire and ^ater for my sake."
The big white steamer was forcing
its way swiftly through the waters of
the lake on its way to South Haven.
A gay throng of excursionists was on
board. Young men and maidens were
laughing and singing, children were
_ playing, and a band of music was do-
ing its best to make itself heard above
Jackson, Miss,, Aug. 1 —In 11118 din of the merr3rm*ktn*
ij,. r, , , . , | Mildred and her two admirers were
the Democratic primaries today j seated In a sheltered nook on the up-
Coagressman John Sharp Wil- P«r deck when she made the remark
CARAVANS OF THE DESERT.
NEARLY A HEART
BREftK
•y WALLACE MACON
H9
Gold Hunters and Consumptive* Found
Traveling Old* by Bids.
—•**
Ever Journeying across the desert
sands and climbing the arid peaks and
foothills of the far southwest sirp two
caravans—one seemingly rugged and
healthy though afflicted with a die- chjUtoa#. across the crowded waters.
P,.?JaK ,nB° ,°therbma Mingling with them was the sound of
elated by the great white plague.
The river was a stream of moving
i life. Oay volcos rang In a sliver
lisms was elected for the United
States Senate over Gov. James
K. Yardaman by a majority of
from 12,000 to 15,000 votes. Later
figures will doubtless inorease the
majority, as many of the strongest
Williams oounties are yet to be
heard from. Of a total of from
105,000 to 110,000 votes polled
Mr. Williams has reoeiyed. from
60)000 As 65)000 votest carrying
Died at Jacksboro.
From Sunday's Dally.
Yesterday J P. Noble of this
city received a message an
nouncing the death of his broth-
er, Jack Noble, which occurred
at his home in J^ckeboro. Mr.
Noble was a resident of Bonham
a number of vears and was well
known by many of our citizens.
Many a woman wouldn’t do a
thing but send in a .hurry call for
the doctor if her husband was to
apeak a kind word to her.
Mr^. Sam Cotton i-t visiting in
Whitewright.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
ARLINGTON HELPING, M. 1
El LECTIO physician and surgeon
Office, Alexander Building, Smith
cut corner square. Residence, CIS W
UAH' Street, ''tfiue phone 156; R«1
deace, 1E0. Office hours 9-12 a. *v
t-i p. «n,
C. A. GRAY, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SUROEON.
Oflc* over Saunders, Martin A Oct’s
Drug Store. Phone at office and reiri
D.T. Boyd.M.D.
SUROERY AND OENERAL PRACTICE
OtVee over Peeler’s Drug iStore
Phone at Office and Residence.
DR. J. A. LANNIU8.
ECLECTIO PHYSICIAN AND SUROEON
Special attention given to Diseases
of Women and Children. Offlc* ov«
Graham, Crawford A Co. Phons MS
Residence 918 North Poplar.
DR. H. H. MITCHELL.
DENTIST.
—Crown amfl BrtdfB WOrk T3WNHr
Offlc* in Alexander Building, southeast
Corner Square, RoomB. Offlc* phoa*
1M; Residence phone IM—9.
DR. J. C. CARLETON.i
PHYSICIi
IUROEON.
Offlc* over Saunders, Martin ft O*
Offlc* Phone No. 11,1 rings; Reetdea*
Phone No. 1L
R. K. MARTIN, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SUROEON.
Hour*—Morning, » to 19; Afteraoee
1:11 to B; 7 to f.
J. E. NEVILL, M. D.
OEWkRAL PRACTICE.
Office over Nunn & Jones Co. Bes-
idence 620 West 9th St. Telephone Mo
*»2r. Residence 903 tr.
DR. H. S. RAGLAND
OSTEOPATH
Offlce.at residence; 006 west Bib 8t,
Phone 954.
perhaps fifty of the seventy-eight
oounties.
Free, for Catarrh, just to prove
merit, a trial size box of Dr.
8hoop’s Catarrh Remedy. Let
me send it now. It is a snow
white, creamy, healing, antiseptio
balm. Containing such healing
ingredients as Oil Euoaliptus,
Thymol, Menthol, etc., it gives
instant and lasting relief to Ca-
tarrh of the nose and throat.
Make the free tost and see for
youreelf what this preparation
can and will accomplish. Ad-
dress Dr. Shoop, Racine. Wis.
Large jars 50 cents. 8old by all
dealers.
A Good Thing For Fannin County!
All newspaper readers should
take a local paper and a general
newspaper. By special arrange-
ment we are making a clubbing
rate with the Fort Worth Semi-
Weekly Record and can thus
furnish our readers with a State
paper of ihe best type at a low
price.
- The Record is a family news-
paper containing the news items
from everywhere, good agricultu-
ral.artioles, excellent market re-
ports, nn interesting 'household
page and other features that are
instructive and entertaining.
The Record’s market reports
are aocurate and reliable, its news
service better than ever.
The Buster Brown comic pict-
ures in each Friday issue, furnish
a rare treat for the children.
Each and every member of the
family will be pleased with the
Record. Our clubbing rate is
$1.75 for the Weekly Favorite
and Semi-Weekly Reoord, one
year. Subsoribe at this office.
Go to the polls Tuesday and
vote or for ever after keep
quiet about the result of the
election. For the man who can
vote and refuses to do so has no
right whatever to complain at the
result of any election.
that she would marry none bet a hero.
Both men loved her—or at leaBt one
had told her so, and she could read
the other man's secret In his eyes.
But she could not decide between
them. Harold Boleau was handsome,
a graceful talker, a good dresser, a
man of the world. He was the one
who had told her he loved her. On
to$ other hand, John Walters was
silent, rugged and sometimes awk-
ward In speech and manner. Yet he
was so sincere, go earnest, so manly,
that Mildred almost Imaging that It
was he she loved best.
The steamer neared the mouth of
the harbor, and the three stood at the
rail, watching a fisherman In his boat
almost In the direct line of the big
ship's course. As the steamer neared
the boat a daring thought flashed
through Mildred's mind. What If Bhe
were to fall overboard? Who would
be the first to spring to her rescue?
Harold Boleau or John Walters? Sup-
pose she put them to the test. Even
if both failed there was the fisherman
In his boat, anld so there could be no
danger. And, Mildred reasoned, a
wetUng would be a small price to pay
for a test upon which all her future
happiness depended. She resolved to
make the test.
Slyly she loosened the long pins
which fastened her hat to her shining
brown hair. Then, with a little ex-
clamation she gave her head a toss
which sent the hat flying from her.
She made a quick grasp to reach It,
and then with a wild shriek fell over-
board. Hardly had she struck the wa-
ter than the form of Harold Boleau
shot like an arrow from the rail and
plunged in beside her. Mildred could
swim, but her skirts sustained her,
and she knew she was in no danger of
sinking. And It was with a sense of
Inward satisfaction that she realised
that at least one of her lovers had
not hesitated to risk his life for her.
Hhrold- and sprang to her rescue,
while John had remained safely on
deck.
Three hours later on the. return trip
Mildred unexpectedly found herself
alone with John Walters, and her
face flushed under the stern gaze of
his steel gray eyes.
Doubtless you are ready to set me
down as a coward because l did not
spring to your rescue," he said, stern-
ly. * “Do you think It was a fair
test?"
"I might have been drowned,” Mil-
dred said, coldly.
"There was no chance of your
drowning. I know you can swim.
Then, besides, there was a fisherman
In his boat, not three feet from where
you fell. Besides, your 'accident' was
too apparent. It was easy to see
that you fell overboard deliberately
and Intentionally.”
"And you were afraid to Jump In
after me,” Mildred said, as she walked
haughtily away. "You were a cow-
ard. Yes, I did fall in Intentionally
I'm glad I did, for It enabled me to
find a brave man."
The sun went down, and In the twi-
light the little groups of excursionists
became quieter. Suddenly there was
a cry. A little crippled girl had fallen
overboard. Mildred and Harold, stand-
ing near the rati, saw the helpless
form of the child whirl over and over
In Its flight toward the black waters
of the lake, and saw the curly head
sink from sight. Unconsciously Mil-
dred turned to the man at her Bide
One Is scarcely more optimistic
than the other; one procession seeks a
glittering yellow dust that means
riches, the other a more precious thing
—health. Though the trail may be
long and the water holes Infrequent;
though the desert sun may be blister-
ing and the tongue swollen with thirst;
though the mountains may be steep
and the path slrowu with cacti, there
Is the glittering substance In the sand
a little farther on for the argonaut; a
lease of life at the horizon, when the
red desert sun announces the dawn of
another day, for the white plague's
victim.
To many seeking their wonted vigor
the hope that ever carries them on-
ward Is sometimes as futile as the
race after the wlll-o'-the-wlsb that lures
the argonaut,
But the procession moves on and
on; the pilgrims can not leave the
sands until the mountain air and sun-
shine have healed the Bears made by
ii.'s ehlef elty' ----------------------------------—
The main trail of the weak-lunged
leads from Pecou to Y uma. For more
than 1,000 miles prospector and plague-
ridden traverse Its tortuous course.
In the caravan seeking gold nearly all
are poor. In the caravan exiled and
fighting for health there are rich and
poor, high aud low, democratic and
fraternal In their Ills and expectancy.
To some this hope Is as uncertain of
realization as the prospector’s pot of
gold at the end of the rainbow. But
many who have early Joined the pU-
grlms, after years of travel by day un-
der the scorching sun and sleep by
night in the pure air of the mountain
top, end their alloted exile and return
to the old home 1,000 or more miles
distant.
But the ranks are sooh recrul'ed.
And some there are who must travel
along the great highway until the end.
Oftentimes the bones of prospector
and plague-ridden are found bleaching
In the canyon. The skeleton hand of
one Is outstretched up the hillside,
where’ others reach the goal—and
gold; tho bony fingers of the other
point home.
THE special sales day is a fine With a questioning' look In her eyes,
proposition, yet our merchants But he remained leaning against the
are a little slow 'to take hold of
rail, gazing almost unconcernedly at
i the water. With a queer feeling
the soheme, other towns are about her heart Mildred turned away.
At the same instant there wag a
cheer. Some one else had leaped head-
long Into the water and had reached
the drowning child. The steamer
using it.
Haywood has been suggested
for president. What next?
Don’t overlook the ooncrete
grossing proposition. Wa musk
Ifttfi. quickly- passe* from sight, bat -the *p-- he looked
have them.
The bleaohed blonde’s method
of keeping her hair light is a
dork secret.____
A real men doesn’t here to use
words to tell it._
Policy holders Meeting.
Notioe ie hereby given to ell
policy holders of the Fenners’
Mntuel Insurance Association of
Fennin County to meet in regu-
lar session at the coort hones on
August 5, the earns being the
§rst Monday . _________
of electing offioere and traneaeting j n'm going to merry a brave man
any other boeineee that may ••• thmt wmM -
some bbfore the aseooietion. *
W. J. Hood, President,
W-E. Newton, Setretory.
glnes were reversed, and slowly the
big boat came round to the spot where
the child and rescuer had disappeared.
Nothing was to be seen but the rest-
less black-wulmh of The info,
a shout rang out and the
Then
ship’s
searchlight soon located the forms In
the water. Five minutes later the
sailors helped John Walters and his
burden to the deck.
It waa not until one evening a week
later, to her own home, that Mildred,
with her head on John Walters’ shoul-
der and bis arm about her walsL sob-
bed ont a plea for forgiveness for
doubUng hi* eourage.
"I was foolish, John,” she cried,
"bat bow I'm glad, for I did End ont
which one "of yon was the reel hero.”
- John kissed away her leers. He
was so Mg and strong that Mildred
nestled to hi* arm* to happy oon-
lut
“And, after all. John,” she said,
np at him with the light of
through Are and
, water tor my sake, for If you hadn’t
saved that little girt I wowM have to k ,
fieved you a eoward aU the days of -
my Utm“ v
*•- —«• * -* • •* - *
Qflfck Thought 8aved Ship.
The Russian war frigate Olaf, prior
to the outbreak of the war with Japan,
which had accompanied the yacht of
the czarowltz to Copenhagen, was
Jying at anchor among hundreds of
other ships Ip the harbor, when a fire
was discovered In a coal cellar below,
which was -only a few fee^ from the
powder magazine* There was no time
to put out the fire before It could reach
the magazine, and an explosion of the
large stores of cartridges and gunpow-
der contained In It probably would
have destroyed not only the Olaf and
the surrounding ships, but part of
Copenhagen itself.
Capt. Rebbinder, the commander of
tho Olaf, saw at once that the only
thing to bo done to prevent a catas-
trophe was to sink tho ship. After
sending away the crew, with the ship’s
papers, cash boxes and most valuable
Instruments In boats, he ordered the
carpenters and engineers to make a
leak In the vessel, and half an hour
afterward she sank In shallow water.
Next day she was raised again and
sent off for repallra.
The court-martial unanimously ex
pressed the highest praise of the con-
duct of the captain and his subordl
nates. The emperor appointed him his
aide-de-camp, which Is one of the high
est honors conferred on Russian naval
officers, knd the officers and men re-
ceived gratuities from the emperor's
privy purse —Sunday Magazine.
Mingling
stringed Instruments and minstrel
songs. It was the last day of the
regatta.
Well, everything must have Its ap-
pointed end, even the regatta,” said
Arneston a little sententlously.
The girl win/was seated by his side
on the deck of the houseboat Glow-
worm looked up at him with a strange
light In her deep brown eyes.
"Shall you be sorry?” she asked In
a sweet, rich voice.
"Yes, 1 shall be sorry,” he answered,
simply. "I thought I'd grown alto-
gether tired of the river. It's about
the tenth year running I’ve been
here. But my Interest In It has re-
vived. I shall remember this regatta
as long as I live.”
Why?" she asked, and she looked
at him musingly.
"I'm 40 bow, Mias Basset. I've al-
ways had everything I've wanted as
long as I c$n remember. 1 have tried
most things, and had become a little
"of them all. An.l then all at
once It was Just as If 1 had walked
out of gloom Into eternal sunshine.
These last three days are tho most
perfect my life has ever known.”
"That sounds, as If you were In
love,” she said, smiling.
“It Is love,” he said; "and It Is you
I love."
There was sudden silence between
them. She did not move, but her at-
titude became a little rigid, her smile
died.
"I cannot marry you,” she said at
last.
“I care for you as I have nover
cared for any other woman."
“My refusal will pain you, then. I
am glad, because It la my wish to
patn you.”
Arneston gazed at her In blank
amazement. ’
"Eight years ago I had a friend
whom I loved as I should have loved
my mother had she lived. She met a
man here who made her love him.
She loved him as only such a woman
could love. She kept back no reserve
of love. That woman's name Is Agnes
Reid."
The girl paused and looked at her
companion closely.
The man did hot speak. She fan
cted he had started—that was all.
"It pleased this man to win her love
that ho might cast It back at her.
He gave her up—Jlfted her. She came
home to us—my father and me—her
old friends. I knew nothing of this
man or hl« name until after she died,'
gad then I found some letters w-hk'H
told me all." n.
“And who was he?”
She leaned forward, her eyes were
blazing In the darkness.
"That men was yourself. Those let-
ters were- signed by you. It waa you
who killed this woman,"
“I see."
The words were spoken dully, with-
out any feeling whatever. *
"When I first met you,” she con-
•tinned, “I saw—a woman can always
tell—that I attracted you. I resolved
to do all In my powor to make you
care for mo seriously. I wanted you
to say what you have said to-night,
that you Joved me, that I might tell
you this story, and give you that aq
my Answer."
"A kind Of revengef\Wei(, at any
rate, Miss Basset... you ha)'® made me
go through a severe quarter'" ,of |n
hour. As for my defense—well, fVlli
not trouble with that."
He raised his hat and turned away.
Miss Basset watched him until the
shadows swallowed hla form up.
"I don't feel at all as l expected.”
she said to herself In dismay. "I
thought I should glow with satisfac
tloo. What a weak fool I am. If I
hadn't told myself all day long and
half the night what cause I had to
hate him. I should—have loved him.”
Everybody noticed how quiet and
Hlck’ry Holler’s Charhplon.
Wilkins wus th' flghttn’ cuss
Hlckr'y Holler town;
0111
Fur up an' down th’ Valtry h* wus
knowed fur his renown!
Bill weighed about two-forty! He wua
built Jtst like & rock,
And Bill allowed thet from th' Ark he’d
cum frum flghttn' stock!
He hed a muscle thet stood out like ham
fat on a hawg,
And when he landed with ills mit th’
thing fell like a lawg!
At least theft what BUI Wilkins said.
I've heerd him time agin—
And so he held-th' champeenshlp frum
Hlckr'y up f Unnl
bfaggln’ and fer Mowin' BUI wua
certainly th' stuff,
way he licked a peddler ono't wus
nutpln'. short o' tough.
Of course th’ peddler man wus lame and
Jlet a leetle old—
But William biffed him In th' slats and
laid him out plumb coldt
1%’ kids frum all th' countryside they
worshiped Bill, you know,
An' used f hang around th' store a-llsf n-
ln' to him blow!
They wished thet they could fight Ilk*
Bill, the he-row of his kind.
Who whipped s man blindfolded ono't
with one hand tlad behind!
-
II
.u
wintry niglfl w« had ».laaaey-'t ina
rnnitmn Bv*, 1 think, ^
wus there.
m
folks frum everywhar
n-fUlin' up th' rli\k
A load cum In from Neeheway, frum
Rockford an' frum Rudd,
And fust thing anybudy knotted our BUI
wus out fer blood! .
IWi! tuk a drink o' forty-rod an' vowed
thet he wus king
Of all th' flghtln' rings there wus, an'
dared 'em all, b' Jlng!
Ho .walked eround th' mincin' floor an’
bragged with all his might—
An' then he got his dander up and dasted
them t' fight!
Us kids we leaned fur o'er th* rail an*
we wus proud, you bet,
Of William Wilkins. "Flghtln' BUI", th’
greatest ever met!
Kobudy tuk up Wflllum'a dare, an' that
made Billy mail—
He lammed th' nearest feller hard—he
wus a little tadi
The little feller's name was. Smart H*
, Jlst hed cum f town;
Wus wurkln' In th' butcher shop an'
sparkin' Hadis Brown!
Now Hmart wus smart, a» you'll allow
when this here tale Is told,'
Fer Intew William's guard he sailed jtst,
like a lion bold!
His fare wua white as seven sheets an’ •
gratin' wus hi* teeth.
8ei he to William. "Flghtln' Bill”! ”C\Hn
on, you chicken thief!”
He went fer BUI sum like a flock of
water cranks bruk loose,
He hit him Jlst below th' belt an’ never
made excuse.
He lainmed him on the nose and chtn, he
hit him In th' eyes—
At flghtln' this here little cuss wus cy-
clones In disguise!
In less than seven seconds he bad caved
In William's vest
And had pill pawin' In th* air and
■purrin' for a rest!
Ho put a stinger on Bill’s Jaw and kicked
. ——him 1« th' shine,''"'’ —•—
He yelled fer him t' say his prayers nn*
wipe away his stnal .
An' then with one Tmlr-rlppln'
ftlil Bill to th' floor
An' landed In the midst o’ fl^*#*glvln’
him some more! '
In goin' down PIU hit hi# head agin' a
wooden peg, ’ *
An' when he got his breath agin’ ysvv'd
ought t' heerd him beg!
He roared "Enough!" Jlet Ilka a bull tuk
down t’ shed his hide—
He begged th' boys t' pull Bmnrt off—an’
then bruk down an' cried!
As Hmart got up, ho bowed perlite. "In
harm dun, BUI,' he said.
Then friends helped William Wilkins hum
nnd tucked him In his bed!
I tell you WlUUyn hated that! lie stayed
hum fer a week
Before he (last t' cum up town hts erst-
while haunts t' seek;
An' whan he cam, he tuk hli plana be-
hind th* grea'ry stove
An' set there m*ek*r'n Moses wua,
rhnwin’ on a olovb— y * **'
And never onc't frum then tTfl now, hes
William, of renown,
Said aught about th' champesnshlp of
Mlck’ry Holler town!
:rn
Nervous Bridegrooms.
"Bridegrooms are sometime* ner-
vous; brides never,” said the clergy-
man.
“A young butebej during his wed-
ding ceremony got horribly tongled up ptle Miss Basset was at supper, and
- ■ many wondered what had become of
with an unllghted cigar. He found
himself, In his nervousness, with the
cigar In his left hand when the sol-
emn rite began. To put the ring on
the bride’s finger he hurriedly trans-
ferred the cigar to hla right hand
When the right hand came Into play,
In his confusion he stuck the cigar In
hts mouth. With both hands occupied
Arneston. When she reached her own
little bedroosn In tho Olow-worm sha
found a letter waiting her.
Two or three newspaper cuttings
fluttered out of It. She read the brief
note: 1
"You will see that the Inclosed cub
he bad to speak,
from his pale lips
pocket for him.”
“One young man
wlaeki I Ijiaj I'lVll 111 ill
Uf
saying: ‘I, John, take thee, Mary, to
be my lawful wedded wife,' he said,
loud enough to be heard all over the
ehurch: '-I, Mary, take thee, John, to
I took the cigar you were Kood *nou*h to P'** to roy
and put It In his cred,t 1 •hould haTO un<l**«lved you
| at the time, but It was plain to me
that you had merely pretended to (Ike
me -wbstt—I hoped—that
was so
that, lb
nervous
itesd
something different”
be my lawful wedded wlfa
7h
Anxious to Oblige.
The manager of a telephone ex
change recently gave employment as_______
an operator to a young woman whose ] the utmost dreams of present-day *uf-
tmW
Where Women Really Ruled,___
Capt. Tucker was commissioned by
the British government to explore the
Congo region to West Africa early In
th* nineteenth century. One of th*
discoveries made by th* captain
proves that a select few of th* Congo
women had reached a stage? beyond
Tickle Grass. --*f-
Rome girls, like the Ben Davfa Ap-
ple. are good only to look aL
1907
CSllli-'
rwn •
1907
Are you still writing It ‘‘1904"? V
No man who lovea the church should
spilt kindling woods under a clothes-
line!
previous employment had been to a frdgtsts.
department etore. Th* girl seemed he found to be hereditary in th* f*.
male' line. u:Ybtcrs of
chiefs wt •* a..used to choose
own husbsu^s. over whom they be-
came "most absolute mistresses, and
can even extend their prerogative to
the selling of a refractory spouse to
slavery.” Little wonder, reflected the
eo bright and willing and
such a clear and distinct vole* that
th* manager resolved to give her a
trial
The newcomer, who waa all amiabil-
ity and willingness, rapidly learned her
new duties, but on* day an Incident _______ _________________ _
that betrayed her depart- captain, that the hoaor of a royal al-
. . ^ . . 7 Hence "Ie a matter «f Tittle emulattoa
la answer to a ring she had asked among the gallant* of the Congoes*
,W"L*r^"tare*m ”nald ton patro court” 11 tb* chlaf ^ M many as
”1 am eortr that m I* busy juTt u* toT*royal priaceeaes
**3d the girl, ”*rt I can tot yo* mcady. ,
hove Sia ev IM ’ . .......r ---j\
"Impetuosity manages
badly,” la what mother told Littlo
Willie. Just then the door started to
blow abut on the cat’* tall and moth-
, er*s Irttl* lesson cost tabble her caudal
the mighty , appflndage. Impetuosity Is all
their a some Instances.
verelgn of on* tribe
all things
right
;igK
.
jmf;
f
Cv-'-
im
:7 V' •
To decrease your fat, boy a sledge-
hammer and awing It If yon develop
Into n proficient knocker you can get
a Job on th* editorial staff of some
salary of aa editor will reduce your
embonpoint at once.
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Spotts, W. S. The Fannin County Favorite. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. [18], Ed. 1 Friday, August 9, 1907, newspaper, August 9, 1907; Bonham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1091735/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bonham Public Library.