The Bonham Daily Favorite (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 88, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 27, 1942 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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Bonham, Texas, Tuesday, October, 27, 1942
(THE BONHAM DAIEY FAVORITE
Page TKree
}.3Wa<SSS^ffSai*»
hurchei
Icciety
|arties ]
ersonals
| Billie Joyce Moore,
| Lieut. Robert Arnold
i Marry Monday Night
j Miss Billie Joyce Moore, daugh-
! tei of Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Moore,! Tarpley, Mr. and Mrs. Belmer
duff, Misses Bessie Oienduff, Bob-
bie Putteet, Margaret Ann Mc-
Donald, Martha K. Hatley, Jose-
phine Keene, Bernice Henegar,
Maxine Barron, Mr. and Mrs
Austin Siburt, Mr. and Mrs. Geo.
1st Methodist WS1CS
Has Circle Meetings
Monday Afternoon
The W3CS of the First Method-
started soon.
Circle two met in the home of church which will be
Mrs. J. R. Bevans with Mrs. A. S.
Broadfoot and Mrs. John Smith
as co-hostesses. Mrs. Bevans,. „ „ , ,
circle chairman, conducted a short 0 rayer W1 e 0 selve
became the bride of Lieut. Rob-
ert L. Arnold, son of Mrs. Nancy
Mrs. Doc Leatherwood told of,
«*> Plans c, the new year's w0rh| ™ Tj
mentioning that on Thursday, the;
Mite- boxes will be onened at j
that time.
Miss Annie Lockhart had charge J
of the recreational hour during j
which she conducted short mem- j
Mrs. E'd;. Hodge with Mrs. Tom! ^^Tof Tetter! ^“whiS1 “? °» « “°°?S
business session and Miss Mabel
1st chui^-.. had the following ci1'-, Taylor gave the devotional taken
cle mec’lngx in the heme of mem-!
bers Monday afternoon:
Circle one met at the home ofi
from Psalm 8.
The group presented Mrs. H.
Grady May with a gift and with
.. -----j a
Frank, j, ^.Q be rea(j each day for ^wo
con- I weeks. Members were urged to
ducted a business session. Mrs.
R. L. Ely told about the collec-
Gray as
Svobodav
co-ho.i ess. Mrs.
circle chairman,
tion plates for the churfch for
which she is making a collection
A treasurer’s report was given by
Mrs. W. S. Kuykendall.
Mrs. Floyd Jones gave the de-
votional using quotations from the
sermons of Jesus closing with a
prayer.
Mrs. Gray and Mrs. Svoboda
conducted games. Refreshments
were served to fourteen.
were
attend the Week of Prayer ob-
, , , . | winner,
servance Thursday and to sew f«r , ,
,, _ , i jl tic nostess
the Red Cross.
ning at 7:15 at the home of her
parents at 320 W. Sixth street.
Earl Dale, minister of the
| Church of Christ at Atlanta, per-
i formed the ceremony before an
altar of fern and marigolds.
The bride wore a soft blue wool
dress with beige accessories and
i of several denominations. A guest, j a corsage of pink rosebuds. I
: Mrs. George Harper
I La. received a war
White, . Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dale,Jer-
ry Wayne Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. F. E
Moore and Donald Moore.
-o-
DlllMHj
of Shreport,! Mrs- Sam Mitchell, aunt of the I
stamp as I bride was matron of .honor, andj
i Mr. Mitchell attended as best'
Mrs. Phil Griffith, the former j
Miss Jewel Baugh, is recovering i
from a major operation at thej
Light Couchs
ue to colds . . . eased
without “dosing”.
VICKS
W VAPORUB
APPROVED BY 2 GENERATIONS
Following the program, Mrs.
Henry Youree conducted several
games. Fourteen were present.
Circle three met at the home of
Mrs. Bernice Chitwood and her
mother, Mrs. Ola Smtih. Mrs.
D. w. Sweeney opened the meet-
j ing with selections from the Up-
I per Room and a prayer. Mrs. F.
j W. Burnett gave the devotional.
! Mrs. Joe Shaw, treasurer, report-
j ed that all bills have been paid
with a balance for the needs of
| the last quarter. Mrs. Claude
; Stewart, Ways and Means, chair -
was assisted by j R1£n-
Mrs. Charles Inglish and Mrs J Wedding music was given by
Claude Steart. Visitors were ; Miss Margaret McDonald.
Mrs. E.H. Protchett, Mrs. Jay Tay-: A reception was given follow-
er of Dallas Mrs. Charlile Swope j ing the ceremony. The table was
was a new member. Twenty-two j *aid with a lace cloth and center •
were present. ec* with a tiered wedding cake.
November fourth Monday meet-1 Lighted pink tapers were at each
ing will be with Mrs. C. O. Bel- j end °f the table. Mrs. Mitchell
lenger at 7 p. m. with a covered j Presided.
dish supper for the entire circle.! Lieut. Arnold will return to Se-
This will be the final meeting of i bring, Fla., and Mrs. Arr*>ld will
the year. i remain here until her husband is
Mrs. M. W. Thornton was host- stationed.
esr for the meeting of circle four
L. Adams as co-
Atending were Mr. and Mrs.
John Miller, Mrs. Monroe Oren-
Paris Sanatarium.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Carter and
daughter of the Rio Grande Valley,
Pvt. J. B. Oats, Camp Wolters;
Twyman White, Greenville Army
t Flying School, and Misses Sybil
Jackson of Sherman and Louise
Cunningham of Gober
were Sunday guests
in the home of Mr. and Mrs. L.
I W. White.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Hodgkiss and
daughter, Nell, of Paris were week-
; qnd guests of relatives and friends
i in the Edhube community.
Lt. nd Mrs. Joe W. Rhodes were
with Mrs. B.
hostess. The
man gave a report of the rum- j the group repeating, the Lord’s “Ruth and Naomi.” Following a
mage sale of this circle and the, Prayer followed by the devotion- business session, Mrs. Adams led
church-wide sale. The money al by Mrs. T. J. Clotfelter. Mrs. a series of games. Sixteen were
will be used on repairs of the Dan Barnard told the story of preent.
Loan Hates On
Cotton Raised
Cent Per Pound
COLLEGE STATION — Tejcas
cotton farmers will receive on®
cent per pound more for loan cot-
ton than they did before tlv>
President’s Stabilzation Act went
into effect.
Higher loan rates on rice and
peanuts also were announced at
the same time.
The one cent increase in cotton
which represents 90 instead of 85
percent of parity, raised the loan
rate on 15-16 inch middling to
17.61 cents in the El Paso Valley
to 17.82 cents in East Texas and
17.77 cents in the Central Texa^
area.
Farmers who already have plac-
ed 1942 cotton in the loan at the
lower rate automatically will re-
ecive one cent per pound increas-
es without making requests, ac-
cording to Fred Rennels, assist-
ant administrative officer of the
triple A in Texas.
The new loan rate on market-
ing quota peanuts, Rennels ex-
plained, will be $140 per ton for!
Nc. 1 Class A Virginia variety;
$141 per t^n for No. 1 Southeast-
ern Spanish, $139 for No. 1 South-
western, and $127 for No. 1 Run-
ner type.
No changes will be made in the
price of peanuts raised for oil
Durposes, he explained since the
support prices already are more
than 110-percent of the compara-
ble prices determined for peanuts
for oil, and the new law requires
only a 90 percent rate.
An approximate increase of 21
cents per barrel will be made on
rice, the amount varying by areas
and varieties, he explained.
Uncle Sam needs your help—buy
War Bonds today.
Jap Aliens Are
Being Questioned
By U. S. Officers
HOUSTON, Oct. 27 (U.R)—Immi-
gration authorities today question-
ed 25 of 52 arrested Japanese ali-
ens for possible hearings before
the enemy-ali'en botrd.
The other 27 arrested Japanese
were released. All but one is liv-
ing in the war-vital oil, shipbuild-
ing and shipping area of south-
west Texas.
-o--
War Stamps buy bullets.
PenetrO
Many users say “first use is
a revelation.” Has a base of
old fashioned mutton suet,
Grandma’s favorite. Demand
stainless Penetro. Generous
jar 25f5, double supply 35i.
COLDS'
COUGHING,
SNIFFLES,
MUSCLE-
ACHES
WOW-MORE THAW
EVER-YOii'&l WEED
THIS OH/DE TO THE.,
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
meeting opened by Floyd Jones. They were en route
from Georga to California Where
Lt. Rhodes has been transferred.
Miss Mary Jo Dulaney has gone
to Fort Worth to make her home.
Henry McAnally who attends
NTAC in Arlington, spent the
weekend here.
Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Spivy were
in Dallas in the interest of R. M.
Spivy Co., Tuesday.
Misses Hunt and Wade are in
Dallas for the day in interest of
Hunt’s store.
Mrs. Tom Dale of Henrietta;
Mrs. J. P. Sewell of San Antonio,
and Mrs Lela Biggs of Wichita
Falls were in Bonham Monday.
Mrs. Sewell was born and reared
here. She was Miss Daisy Mc-
Quigg. Mrs. Biggs was also born
in this city. She was Miss Lela
Young. Mrs. Dale lived here a
number of years before going to
Henrietta with her late husband,
Tom Dale.
—-o--
WPB’s order halting production
of metal doors, door frames and
shutters is saving the I. S. about
129,000 tons of steel for war, on
the basis of 1941 output. That’s
enough metal to provide all the
steel needed for the steel parts of
6,315 big U. S. bombers. ;
--o-
Get in the scrap with your scrap.
Pages measure 10”
x 13W — over
half a yard across
when opened)
30 BIG PAGES
OF WAR MAPS
to keep you informed about:
★THE LANDS WHERE AMERI-
CANS ARE FIGHTING — Full-
color maps give details about every
country in the world, every large
island, every ocean, every sea*
★FUTURE WAR STRATEGY—How
we can smash the Nazi war machine;
air attacks against Japan; Axis pin*
cer moves in India.
★SEA ROUTES AND SUPPLY
LINES — Time and distances in-
volved; threats to allied shipping.
★ECONOMIC FACTORS — Vital
resources of warring nations; the
oil-rich Caucasus; Mexico and South
America.
★THE STRUGGLE IN THE SOUTH
PACIFIC—Australia's defense and
offensives; Japan's difficulties in the
East Indies.
★ARCTIC WARFARE—Alaska and
the Aleutians; Dutch Harbor; Ko»
diak and the Pribilof Islands. (
★MILITARY STRONGHOLDS ^
Naval, air and army bases; the fight
for Malta, Gibraltar, Suez, and the
Panama Cana!.
^*To relieve distress of MONTHLY^
Female Weakness
AND HELP BUILD UP RED BLOOD!
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Compound
TABLETS (with added iron) have
helped thousands to relieve periodic
pain with weak, nervous, blue feel-
ings— due to functional monthly
disturbances. Also, their iron makes
them a fine hematic tonic to help
build up red bldod. Pinkham’s Tab-
lets are made especially for women
'Follow label directions.
SET yOHR WAR AT
r ***
Here is your guide to global warfare — a big, handsome
United Nations Atlas with full-color world maps and new,
fascinating strategy maps that show Axis objectives and
anticipated moves of the Allies. Even the vital resources
and important supply lines of the warring nations are in-
cluded, and helpful explanatory material accompanies each
map. Don’t miss this amazing new book! You will use it
constantly—to follow the war news and to better understand
the devastating conflict now raging all over the world.
To secure your copy of the War Atlas simply present one
from page 2, with 20c in cash, at BONHAM DAILY FAVOR-
ITE office.
each
with one War Atlas Coupon from page 2 of this
newspaper. To order by mail send coupon and
20c (Plus 3c Postage) to: BONHAM DAILY FAV-
ORITE, Bonham, Texas,
YOU CAN SEND THEM
CANTEEN
GOODIES
(food packages for the Armed
forces)
Au/a/Jme Ut tfa w&iSl
/VO D£l/f/£xy
C*MRO£/
Choose from 15 different,
carefully selected assort-
ments of the things the
boys like .. . well do the
rest! His package will be
packed professionally to
prevent breakage and will
be SHIPPED THE SAME
DAY!
Boxes as low as________
Others up to____________4.25
Oelivery Guaranteed or Money
Refunded. Order Tours Today
and Surprise Him!
BONHAM’S
... a weekly Directory and Review of Bonham Busi-
ness Firms Listed
O. K. Tire Shop
All Sizes Tractor, Truck, Auto
Tires Repaired
Come To See Us
F. L. Lynn, Manager
513 North Main
Phone 381 Bonham, Tex-
Silzler’s Flowers
We Telegraph Flowers Anywhere
Phone 339 West 7th St
We Pay Cash
For Used Furniture!
Paul H. Coleman
USED FURNITURE
312 Main St.
LEETH’S
ARIETY STORE
“We May Have It”
South Center Street
Fannin County
Abstract Co.
Abstractors of Land Titles
Fannin County
Phone No. 229
8. E. Corner Square
The Texas Co.
Gas and Oil
C. H. VAN ZANDT
WHOLESALE DEALER
Wilbur Dearing
RADIO
SERVICE
615 Willow St.
Phone 660
Claude Brent
HARDWARE
East Side Sq. Phone No. 301
ICE
The Premier Food
Preserver
THE NOOK
FOR GOOD EATS
New Management
OSCAR MITCHELL, Prop.
East Side Square
MIKEL - BROWN
BURIAL ASSN.
Burial Insurance, One Day to
90 Years Old
802 North Main Phone No. 400
McClure’s
Jewelry
The Store of Best Values at
Fairest Prices
West Side Square
BONHAM ICE
CREAM
FACTORY
A Home Institution
We Help Make Bonham
Loy’s Cafe
Open AH Night
It’s The Coffee’
CONOCO
Service Station
B. B. Dorough, Operator
North Center St. Phone 301
C. A. COX
Hardware
South Main Street
Federal Land Bank
Refinance your short-time land
debts with long-term Land
Bank Loans while the present
4 per cent
contract rate is available
a. h. McDonald
Gulf Service
Station
Let us service your car. Wheels
packed. Washing and Greasing.
GULF SPRAY
BARR’S
Filling Station
SINCLAIR PRODUCTS
West Fourth St. at Star Street
City Dye Works
Mrs. R. C. Ford,
Prop.
When Better Dry Cleaning Is
Done We Will Do IF.
518 N. Main Telephone 217
Bonham Marble
Works
Monuments to order
123 South Main Street
Shuler Brothers
BARBER SHOP
Alexander Hotel
Ray Shuler
Lowell Shuler
Putteet’s
Cleaners
Our Work Speaks For Itself
North Main Street
Phone 242
Victory Sandwich
and
Short Order Shop
NEW BUSINESS
Come to see us
Four doors south of First
National Bank
Alexander
DRUG
J. C. Magouirk, Prop.
Sandwiches and Fountain
Service
Southeast Corner Square
C. C. Martin
CHIROPRACTOR
Over First National Bank
Phones 413-C and 413-D
Buy war
Bonds Today
i
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Cantrell, Robert M. The Bonham Daily Favorite (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 88, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 27, 1942, newspaper, October 27, 1942; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth871023/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bonham Public Library.