The Bonham Daily Favorite (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 30, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 12, 1924 Page: 2 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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
> « WR.UR U A
Nite piece or war
\«'NC». nt rat you
J NO-nARM I
(Don't want it v
> it would seat
W Airline ton u
ANO R5M.M
\ md rot i *ot<<e»Tmt<
tention to fitting of glasses
Phone 629
DEVIL
PUBLIC WEIGHER
VMM'S
nmni
HOukB*'
i EANtuQ
w. c, (bill) Long
Candidate for
CONSTABLE
Proeiect No. Ono
\ SU'D
SAM
but rr mut
Good FEfc urroe
l Boms
\ SWR£ OFF
oaewG( ToBxeeo
. A MEAR AGO •>
♦ C. R. (CHARLEY) JONES
♦ Candidate for
♦ PUBLIC WEIGHER
♦ AT BONHAM
\ XMOMJ MOU WOUUDUY
s 0s 90 FOOUftH AS Xb
txub a of ^
W oh,
.•'8URGURS
Y drughx;
VI. Mb
Wmen Now Depend on
lb Restore Their Vitality
Tl’KADAT, AUGUST It, Illi
FAVORITE
l./ GENE BYRNES
Seen Assembled
COUNTY SUPERINTENDENT
COMMISSIONER PRECINCT ONE
I Ik Fl«f Vt a •’ in a»i i v ill |*i i x11v i 111n iiiul-j . , t
within a f«»w years suffering and Hick- **w*,'s Impow?<l Antiseptic Liniment,
........ A....... ... .... II...I 41... ..... !LfnM
SAM POWERS
For Man Or Beasts,
This la important and will avoid de-
* RED BALL BUS -
LINE
Tenaa, aa aaeond das* mall matter.
■*w
FOR JUDGE 6TH JUDICIAL
not
Way $1.00
them. Thcsu
hem,—Luke 841.
do.—
TATI COLLECTOR
a.
this
TAX ASSESSOR
I). V. Hill
of
I
'DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Thia ia a Studebaker Year.
WYATT BALDWIN
CONSTABLE
SHERIFF
ED BRENT
P-
P.
P-
P-
to
her
AH announcements In this column
are subject to action of Second Dem.
ocia-Lic Priijiarj, August 23, 1224.
m.
in.
ni.
in.
m.
m.
m.
tn.
in.
m.
tn.
tn.
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in.
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jn.
TAX ASSESSOR
Fa'npin County
G. B. SPARKMAN
Candidate for
Constable of
Precinct No. One
PINK STODDARD
Candidate foe
TAX COLLECTOR
Fannin County
IRA G TURNER
Candidate for
TAX ASSESSOR
Fannin County
that
The
par-
have
ALEXANDER
CONFECTIONERY
And Sandwich Shop
WILBUR FAXON
Candidate for
TAX COLLECTOR
Fannfh County
LAUNDRY HAMPERS, (3 sizes)
LAUNDRY CARRIER BASKETS,. (2 styles)
I EED BASKETS,
EGG BASKETS,
LUNCH BASKETS,
PICK SACK DUCK, KNEE PADS, SCALES
EVANS
t Editor
INGUSH
2:30 p.
4:30 p.
8:00 p.
A. J. STEVENSON
Candidate for
ELBERTA PEACHES
have 50 buahcls fine elbertns
store Wednesday,’ 100 bushels
HENRY R. SCATES
Physician and Surgeon
Room 203 State Bank
Bldg. Practice limited to
disease of Eye, Ear, Nose
a. m.
a. ra-
il. m.
p. tn.
make
USED PARTS
got 'em on East 4th
from the 3Stli district.
Respectfully,
. W. F. Keeton.
f. m. .
a m.
m.
m.
m.
Each
** + **««*OOO*
♦ GEO P. BLACKBURN
♦ Candidate for
♦ DISTRICT JUDGE
♦ 8th Judicial Dlitrict
We,Have As Nice And Complete A Selec
iton of Baskets As We Have Ever
Sherman, Denison and
McKinney
; 6.75
7.95
8.95
10.95
12.80
16.25
17.60
22.75
18.20
NOTICE—All notice* of entertain-
taaata, dinners and ether benefit*
where there , la aa admission fee or
ether monetary coniudeiatlon, will be
street.
L. C. BOWLING
Will
nt. my
ThursdnyrSO bushels Fridsy und Sat-
urday. Price 71.00 per bushel. These
peaches we of extra fine quality, liv-
ing been well sprayed mid cared for
something unusual for fruit- in
section..
m.
m.
m.
m.
m.
♦ . B. C. (3RENT) TARTER ♦
MONUMENT
fqr your plot. We are now
showing many new and artis-
tic designs. Let us .subnet
plans for a Monument that
will lad. un your plot.
Bonham Marble
Works
Where the Fault Lies
We don’t believe Texas parents
JUDGE R. J. WILLIAMS
Candidate for
DISTSRICT JUDGE
6th Judicial District
ICE COLD
WATER MELONS
To The Voters of Fannin County:-
I would bo ungrateful indeed, if I
were to fail to express my apprecia-
tion to the voters of Fannin County
for the loyal support you gave me hi
the first primary.
While I received more votes in Fan-
nin County than my three opponents
it becomes necessary for me to lie In
the run-off with Mr. ('ox of Lamar
County; therefore, I shall ask your
continued support in the second pri-
mary, August 23, that Faintin'County
may have the representation to
which it is entitled in the next Login-
latute
Babcock Bros.
AUTO SUPPLY
North Side Sq. Bonham,
in an
ICE COOLED
CASE
Telephone 555
We invite you to visit our store. We shall be
glad to see you.
Lv Denison
7:30 a.
WELLS & HUMPHREY
When you buy your range—Buy a Cop per-Clad
TRANSFER PAPER
The • Favorite now has ■
supply of Purple Tranafer
paper, size of aheeta 18x24
inches. . Tf
P-
P.
P-
80x3%
30x3 Mi
30x3%
31x4 S,
fex4 S,
32x4% S. 3- Cordfc
33x4 8. S, Cord ..
Paris
a.
a.
a.
Lv. Greenville
8:45 a. m.
12:15 p. m.
' 2:15 p. m.
6:15 p. m,
connections with
and Santa Fe at j
Also direct con-'
Bonham- Denison
Lv. Bonham
I :30
10:30
2:00
4:30
6:00
Fare I____0
Cars leave Alexander Hotel
Bonham; Hughes Cafe, Phone
59. Denisoi). .
For further information call
372. I)'
THE SANDS OF LIFE
are running low for many
of us. Mure-and more peo-
ple are observing the custom
of preparedness. Why leave
to others the task of selecting
a
Joseph w. Bailey, one
?nator from Texas, an-
on Weise cm.-«*7 J*’“* “
WJW ij WITH OUR EXCHANGES ♦
WELL-KNOWN AUTHORITY PRE-
DICTS THAT WITHIN A FEW
YEARS AFTER UNIVERSAL
USE OF ST. JOSEPH’S G. F. P.
WOMKN. W ILL NO LONCKR
HAVE TO GO AS IF UNDER A
(LOUD.
R\<-ry woman lo<|ks forward to the
tin.e
bi id<
: life.
euinr ,
love, glowing with energy and health,
land tilled with lusy dreams of the
' future.
Hut what a difference a few years
j make. Dreadful changes take plaeb;
gone are the dreams of yesterday:
| tir»Nl lines ore etched in her face; per.
i liufis her health is impaired.. Cares
: and respon. ibilitirs iiavv weighed too
heavily on her frail ' houKleis. Socull.
<<d “female troubles” have made her
weak, irritable ol. nervous.
This Mate of affairs can be, traced
to a condition in the Hyetem of wo-
men which has-been proven to lie ca-
’ " _ • u,'d
malady never corrects itself. Un-
stamped out, it spreads to other
l of the body through the inflam-
I ination of the mucus membrane, chua-
ing that awful whinisalil mid morbid
feeling of rtnprs slon which- ninkes it.,
victims feci like life is hardly Worth
living for them.
The success of St. Joseph’s G. F. P.,
has established beyond question the
eoireetness of the theory that catarrh
of the generative organs is the cause
I of nine out of ten cases of so-called
‘’female disorders."
"At the present amazing rate. wo.
men are u: ing St. -losepli’s G. I'. I’.
1 know i am safe in predicting that
tiers from so-called disorders of wo-
men will bo comparatively Unknown
among the women and girls of this
country,” suys the. representative of
the discovery of this wonderful me "
cine. .,
YOU OWE YOUR photo. , v: :'K
GRAPH TO YOUR FAM-
ILY AND FRIENDS.
Faces fade, and the people
wc once knew, wme of them,
ate gone fofeVer. Children
grow up and go away. The
old heiuso in torn down. The
pets die or disappear. The
time to take the picture is
when you see It. The historic
value of things, fixed in a pic-
ture, ia hoyond price.
FOSTER-PHOTO
BRUNSWICK
TIRES
These Tirea are good tires-
and wc guarantee
prices are money savers
30x3. Fabric ............1
30x3% Fabric ..........
Suburban .Cord .
Sedan Cord
S. S. Cord ......
S. Cord .......••
S. Cord ........
tn.
in.
m.
m.
p. m.
p. tn.
p. m.
Arr. Bonham
9:00
11:00
12:00
3:00
4:45
5:30
8:00 .
Trunks and
Bonham-Paris Bus
FARE ONE WAY $1.50
Pari,
a.
a.
n-
p-
the Ku Klux wont know you a
year from now.
Isyilon < _
time Senator
L nounces that while ho is’still
’ opposed to woman suffrage
‘ he will -Vote for Mrs. Fer-
guson for governor. He says
• he will so vote 'because if
she is elected Jim Ferguson
will be governor, and that if
• it were not so Mrs. Fergu-
, son would not get his vote.
, Since Mrs^ Ferguson has de-
clared that she will be the
governor, her new found
friends does not seem
have much confidence in
pledge.
what their children under 18 years of
are shall do and shull not
Gainesville Register.
We are not so sure of
as we wouldA»ke to be.
parents of Texas, like the
ents of most other states,_____
come t.p look on it as the duty
of the government to do for
them and their children what
the parents of two generations
ago would have resented as a
harmful interference with the
duty of the home and the par-
ent. The present generation
has been educated very large-
ly to believe it is the duty of
the state to take their children
at a tender age and give them
all necessary instruction of ev-
ery kind, relieving the home
of duties that belong to it
alone. It is not a far step
from free education and free
text books, to free food and
clothing and state supervision
of daily life. But if we have
any complaint It is not at the
federal government, but at
the individual parent and indi-
vidual citizen. They are neg-
lecting their duties, and some
one mint shoulder the respon-
sibility. As there is no one
else to do it, the state must do
it as a matter of self-protec-
tion. Every right the Individ-
ual surrenders is done volun-
tarily. He Is too Indifferent or
too engrossed in other matters
to iperform his duty to his
Maybe prohibition is ___
an issue in the present Tex-
as campaign, but we notice
that our old liquor friends
are lined up on one side.
issue? t
DEMOCRATIC NOMINEES
FOR CONGRESS 4TH DISTRICT '
****♦<*«****«* + ****lft4f**|* ♦ •
♦ SAM RAYBURN ♦ • JNO I. CROUCH •
♦♦♦.♦♦ ♦2 ♦♦♦♦»« ♦ Candidate for
Red Ball Stage Line
Bonham-Wolfe City-Grecnville
Lv> Bonham
6:00
9:40
12:15
4:00
We
Cotton Belt
Wolfe CitjA
Line to and feom Dallas. Also !+***A*«*a.a***«e
Sulphur Springs, Terrell, Tyler
and other points.
Ial Bonham 6:00 a. m.
• Ar. Dallas 9:30!
Lv. Dallas 4:00 p. m.
___ Ar. Bonham 8:00
FARE—Wolfe City $1.00
Greenville $1.50
T. S. FORD.
WAY $1.00
Leave
Sherman
8:30 a. m.
9:30 a-
11:30 a.
1:30 p.
3:30 p.
5:30 p.
7:30 p.
9:30 p. m.
DISTRICT CLERK
♦ W. B. (BAS) RICHARDSON ♦
Whole or by the slice
We Have
CHOCOLATE
CANDY V
is evidence aplenty that we
are getting too hot in some
other ways. Our political
pulse is too high, and our
lighting blood is getting too
warm.
Therefore, we need to be
careful to keep cool. Some of
us believe that the Ku Klux
are such a menace that we
ought to dp everything in our
power to prevent their success
at the polls. We are honest
in that belief. But then it is
well enough for us to remem-
ber that some of the best
fri«n<ta we have, and many of
the best men in the state, be-
long to that order. They-are
as honest and sincere as we
are. They believe the order
Is working for the best inter-
ests of the state. They are go-
ing to live here and work
with us after this campaign is
over. Heretofore they have
been with us in some of the
hardest battles we hav«
fought They will doubuess
be with us in some we shall
have to fight in the future.
Let us not get so excited that
we needlessly besmirch them
and offend.
Some of us, on the other
hand, knowing the record of
the husband of the opposing
candidate, knowing, that It
smells to heaven, and know-
ing that he claims if hia can-
didate ia elected that he will
AhCKI£, THE
HINGS THAT NEVER BAPPEN :c™R’
l/KLAli IIl nlriIhLjj
children, his neighbors and
himself, so he* shifts the bur-
den to the state. He permits
wrongs to exist because he is
too cowardly or too much |
without care to right them, i
Somebody mu»rt do what he
{efuses to <lo. Because there
ave been Injustices toward
children permitted by the in-
dividual citizens, the state
must needs right the wrong,
or because the state is as in-
different aS the individual, the
Nalioiiiil goxmratnejil is cnli-
ed as a last resort. We' do
not favor the movement to
place the welfare1 of the chil-
dren of thp different states in
the hands of the> national
government in the matters of
education,- labor or training,
but it is sure to come unless
the parents wake up to A fuff
realization of their duty and
the states arouse to the fact
that they have given away
their 'birthright because they
.were unwilling to pay the
price of retaining it. There
is no complaint justly at the
federal government. It is
.strictly a creature of the indi-
vidual states. If they insist
on making it their master in-
stead of their servant, the’
fault is theirs. allFf
LETTER FROM KEETON
THANKS THE VOTERS
nan loqxa forward to tor
wnen sh< shaft become a happy
the greatest a.rtbition of her
And when her wedding day
ii, she is indiunt with life and
be governor of Texas, feel
that anything tp prevent the
state nfliit falling under Con-
trol of the man who borrow-
ed vast sums from the brew-
ers, sought to wreck its state
university, and filially was im-
peached and removed from
office, is the wise thing to do.
They believe that not the
worst record the Ku Klux
would make would l>e as bad
as the one he did make.
Therefore they are just as
sincere and honest in their
desire to serve their state as
those on the other side.
Bath sides are probably
mistaken in part. The Ku
Klux wouid not be as bad as
some of us expect nor so good
as others expect; Jim Fergu-
son might not be as rampant
as he once was, and would
not do as much as his friends
expect. The great majority
of the,voters, of Texas ’Stfe
jioneat and want honest gov-
ernment, and they would not
long tolerate a bad regime.
The legislature still has the
power to impeach, and the vo-
ters still have the power to re-
tire at the end of two years
dishonest or incompetent-offi-
cials.
Keep J cool. Keep your
_ --------- ------------------friends. You will need them
ohargtd for at the rate of on* c*nt| Inter on. Jim Ferguson and
4 word. Obituarlea, resolutions of the Ku Klux wont know vou a
respect, card* of thank*, etc
charged for at th* tamo rate.
must accompany ardor. .
CHANGE OF ADDRKSJt J
BIBLE
^THOUGHTS
——FOR TODAY--
w i !... | iUSsc*1 *■ "
TftK GOLliEN RULE: At yo would
that wee ahopM do to yon, do we alio
necessary and helpful to say
old things -over. Most of us
are attempting to keep cool
so far as our physical temper.l iMlI r_______
store is concerned, but there .arc in favor otrengrew telling them
Leave
7 :0()
9:00
10:00
1 :00
2:45 p. nt.
3;30 p. tn.
6:00 p. m.
We haul your
Baggage — Never miss a
schedule. "We never Sleep.”
Leave Paris from Morgan
and Gilbraltar Hotels. .
■— Bonham-Sherman
Red Ball Stage Line
FARE ONE-------- ‘
Leave
Bonham
6 a. m.
8 a. m.
9:15 a. m.
11 a. m.
12:15 m.
3 p. .ni.
5:30 p. m.
6:30 p. m.
8 p. m.
1. C. MAG0U1RK
Ry Qty CfrrMr, 1 month ..........$ B0
By City Carrier, 8 months _______*1.50
By City Career, 6 month* ......*2.75
By City Carrier, 1 year........... *5,00
By Mail, I moath ,„r..................* Bo
Ry Mall, * months ................*1.75
By Mall 1 yfer ....................*3.00
FORHGN RBPRRSRNTAT1VK8
2. J POwdrtL...—.......r... Chicago, Ill.
P. R. Nerthdp New Yurt, N. Y.
A W. Paport...-------------- Dalia*, T*y.
MOTTCR TO THE PUBLIC
Aby ewronabu* reflection upon th*
chafacfaf, reputation or »tanding'of
any firm, individual or corporation
will be gladly corrected upon being
called to the attention of th* pub-
■n*u Daily Except Sunday.
■r FAVORITR PRINTING CO.
BRERWOOD SPOTTS
REPRESENTATAIVE
♦ «♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦
F. A. DALE
Candidate for
REPRESENTATIVE
Fannin County
Leave
Bonham
Arr.
7:00
a. m.
9:00
9140
a. m.
11:40
11:50
a. nt.
1:50
12:40
p. m.
2:40
3:oo
p. m.
5:00
5:00
p. m.
7:00
6:40
p. m.
8:40
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Evans, Ashley. The Bonham Daily Favorite (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 30, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 12, 1924, newspaper, August 12, 1924; Bonham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1183522/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bonham Public Library.