The Bonham Daily Favorite (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 62, Ed. 1 Friday, September 25, 1942 Page: 4 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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i ou nave tne saving opportunity ot your lifetime... you can
save "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness” ... your life, your
liberty, your right to the pursuit of happiness... by buying War
Savings Bonds NOW... right now, when Uncle jSam needs every
idle dollar to put to work!
You can, at the same time, save money for your own personal
needs after the war is over... save it to buy things which are not
now available ... lay it aside for the future... your future... lay
it aside NOW in War Bonds so Uncle Sam can use it NOW to win
the war!
Of all the things you need today, War Bonds top the list! War
Bonds are life-giving fuel to Uncle Sam’s war production—pro-
viding ships, planes, tanks, guns and ammunition for war until
victory!
Save! Save to save the lives of boys who have pledged them-
selves to defend Old Glory unto death! Save! Save every day in
every possible way ... invest your savings in War Bonds!
You can now buy War Bonds conveniently at the I™""
Texas Power & Light Company’s district office... —
we are authorized by the Secretary of the Treasury
of the United States to sell War Bonds. We invite
you to buy War Bonds NOW so you’ll have both
money and the privilege to buy things you’ll need
after the war has ended in American Victory!
This Company, with
typical free-enterprise
efficiency, is providing
Electric Power to help
win the war... filling
the needs of war indus-
tries, military encamp-
ments, air fields... as
well as the needs of its
regular customers.
Page Foiif
THE BONHAM DAILY FAVORITE
Dressed Fryers
Pork Sausage
Ground Loaf Meat
Beef Roast & Steak
Treat and Spam
Prunes
Seedless Raisins
Grapes
Mince Meat
Evaported Apples
Malted Milk
Bakers Cakes
NEWTON’S
GROCERY and
MARKET
171—Phone.—678
Cardinals Cinch
Tie For National
League Pennant
Dodgers Win But
Still Trail
St. Louis Nine
Bonham, Texas, Friday, September 25, 1942
By United Press.
Tire Quotas For
Texas During
October Reduced
PORT WORTH, Tex. Sept. 25.
(UP) — Texas Rationing Director
Mark McGee said today that tire
quotas were cut lower for October
and called for mass share-a-truck
meetings.
These will be held on Oct. 1 at
Beaumont and on Oct. 2 at Hous-
ton.
Welfare Worker Is
Transferred From
Honey Grove Area
HONEY GROVE.—Miss Rose
Monday, who has been with the
local office of the State Depart-
ment of Public Welfare has been
transferred to Commerce.
Mrs. Kathleen Wright of Leonard
will serve the Honey Grove area,
coming here from Bonham on the
I second and fourth Mondays of
The St. Louis Cardinals clinched ! each month,
a tie for the 1942 National League j Miss Mary Ross will continue in
pennant Thursday by blanking the! charge of the office here with Miss
Cincinnati Reds 6-0 at Sportsman’s j Doris Pittman as secretary.
Park while the Dodgers defeated |--a
the Braves 5-3 at Ebbets Field
Both victories left the
trailing the Cardinals at
games. The Cards have only two!
games remaining, both with the j
Chicago Cubs, while the Dodgers j
have three—one with the Braves1
and two at Philadelphia.
[ If Brooklyn were to win all three
j games and the Cards drop both
of theirs, each club would have
won 104 games while losing 50.
Mort Cooper allowed only two
Cincinnati hits as he registered
his 22nd victory and his seventh In
a row. It was the Cards’ 41st
victory in 49 games. A Dodger
loss or a Cardinal victory will
clinch the title for St. Louis.
The Cards rapped Ray Starr
and Joe Beggs for 10 hits and
were helped by three Cincinnnati
errors. Stan Musial singled home
the first run in the opening inn-
ing after Jimmy Brown had singled,
taken second on Harry Walker’s
bunt and reached third when Bert
Haas threw wild to first.
Cooper held the Reds hitless af-
ter the fifth inning to register his
10th shutout. In
eld. i n £1
Dodgers senator says
2 1-21 J
Dislodging Japs
To Be Hard Task
Japs’ Offensive
Wings Have
Been Clipped
A letter to the Favorite office
from Charles R. Jones, who is with
his daughter- Mary Evelyn in Ro-
chester, Minn., states that she was
feeling very well at 9 o’clock Wed-
nesday morning, the time the let-
ter was written. Mary Evelyn’s
many friends are hoping she will
be restored to her health. She was
Army Nurse Is Wed
T. P. depot in place of J. M. Jen- j
kins, who is laying off. Jenkins I
is the regular day telegraph op-j To Corporal At
J Fort Dodds, Iowa
an army nuise stationed at Camp they desire)! during
Wolters for the past year. Corp.
Wolfe is a graduate of Cornell
University.
Teachers Will
Be Allowed To
erator.
Tom Smith has gone to Texark
ana. He formerly fired on the| SAVOY, Sept. 25.—The Rev. and
road. He is now on the retired j Mrs. W. A. Cunningham have
list- ! announced the marriage of their
Frank Crow has gone to Texark-j daughter, Lieut. Ruth Cunning-
ana from where he will go to ham to Corp. John D. Wolfe of! Wear Anklets
Ford Dodds, Iowa. ! „
tv/ivo lx/ if , ! HONEY GROVE.—Signs of the!
Mis. Wolfe is a graduate of Car-! times
ing passenger trains through here D-llTs ^nd ^ °f' 'Women techers in the Honey'
now. | , d a graduate of Baylor Grove schools will 0e permitted to:
School of Nursing. She has been wear anklets
Shreveport to run a switch en-
gine for the T. P. Ry.
W. E. (Wee) Biggerstaff is fir-
the
school term, it is announced by
W. O. Cravens, acting superin-
tendent.
The men teachers can go sock-
less if they desire.
--o--
War Stamps buy bullets.
at Ro- ( in Bonham Friday.
Grade 2, passenger tires, availa-
ble only to defense workers, will
be decreased 17 per cent to 4,307
WASHINGTON, Sept. 24 (UP)—
Rep. Warren Magnuson, D. Wash.,
said tonight that Japan’s “offen-
sive wings have been pretty well
clipped,” but he warned that an
American victory will not be won!
until “long after the European!
war is over.” j
Recently returned with other!
congressmen from an inspection !
of American bases in Alaska, I
Magnuson said American forces j
will find it “extremely costly” to !
dislodge the enemy from their j
established positions in the Aleu-I
tians and elsewhere.
, “It’s going to be a long, hard
the fifth, the process, something J Think was
Cards practically sewed up ihe, wen demonstrated in our offensive
game with two more runs on a! iu-Ehe Solomons,” he said,
double by Brown, a pass to Walker; There has been no further word
and singles to Enos Slaughtei and j from the navy department on ac-
Musial. Brown and Musial both tion in the Solomons since its re_
cent report of
American
A five-hit, four-run blast!
collected three hits.
The Dodgers registered their fifth
straight victory in defeating; toe there. The air attacks are de_
signed to hamper enemy attempts
to retake islands captured last
month by U. S. marines. Areas
bombed include the most likely
springboards for enemy counter
operated on last (Tuesday
Chester.
L. D. Tolbert, Long Beach, Calif.,
who has been visiting his sister,
Mrs. Chester Showers, in. Bonham
returned to his home this morn-
ing.
Mrs. George Wilson and Mrs.
James Dev and children of Tex-
arkana, who have been visiting
their sisters, Mrs. Lillie Groom
and Miss' Georgia West in Bon-
ham, have returned home. Miss
West accompanied them for a
visit.
Mrs. C. L. Currin is visiting her
son, Travis Currin, at San An-
gelo and her daughter, Mrs. Er-
nest A. Wise, at Childress.
Mrs. Lowell White, who under-
went an appendectomy in a Sher-
man hospital Monday, is reported . . „
getting along as well as could be lo men a, ^ 1 •
expected.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Roberson,
who were in business here some
time since, were here Friday.
They now live in Cleburne, Texas.
Walter King, who works at the
Bonham Steam Laundry, had to
be taken home Friday morning,
on account of illness. Mr. King
lias been working in the laundry
for many years. During the first
flu epidemic he was seriously ill
from the complaint. He has felt
the effects of that illness ever
since.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grant
Miss Bess Diggs of Leonard was i
or go hoseless, if
30-Day Stay Of
Execution Has
Been Granted
GETTING ILP AT NIGHT
WAS GETTING ME DOWN
Read how young Georgian escaped kidney
misery. Quick relief thanks to famous
Doctor’s tonic. Sleeps like baby now.
‘‘Kidney pain was pestering me day and night”, says
Mr. Kent Hulsey. “Sometimes, I’d get up, five times
during the night. A lucky day for me when I tried
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp Rout. It sure relieved those
kidney pains. And I sure do sleep like a bal©r now”.
Mr. Hulsey is one of thousands who thank Swamp
Root for quick relief of kidney pain. For this re-
markable stomachic and intestinal liquid tonic
flushes out painful sediment from your kidneys.
, Originally created by a well-known physician, Dr.
night Saturday for the desert slay- j Kilmer, Swamp Root is a combination of 1G herbs,
ing of Enrique Valles on the high- j£*S; SS.’lJSM-SdSS'Jj
way between El Paso, Tex., and
AUSTIN, Sept. 25. (UP).—A 30-
day stay of execution was ordered
today for Fidel Contreras who was!
to have gone to the electric chair j
at Huntsville Prison after mid-1
Carlsbad, N. M. •
/The stay was approved by the
governor to permit a sanity hear-1
ing. Prison physicians reported he
Braves.
against Jim Tobin in the sixth
overcame a three-run Boston lead
and gave Brooklyn their 101st vic-
tory of the year—highest win total
for October, McGee said. Passen-' compiled by any Dodger team fn|
ger retreads wil be cut nine per history. Whit Wyatt, who gave up ! *
cent to 19,823, and passenger car
tubes eight per cent to 14,228.'
New truck tires were decreased
22 per cent to 14,383; retreads 17
pei cent to 15,088, and truck tubes
21 per cent to 15,036.
There is an increase in new
passenger car tires but only be-
cause taxicabs have been admit-
ted to the “A’ classification.
Planes bombing dap posij w«t Street.TdTat moved
in
Luke Wells of Ravenna is now
with Hunt’s. He is salesman in
the Eargain Basement.
L. T. Hall is working at the
“Grouchy” Husbands
And vires, may be suffering from aggravat-
ing bowel gas, sour stomach or headache,
caused by spells of constipation. Try AD-
LERIKA. It effectively blends 5 carmina-
tives for relief of gas pains, and 3 laxatives
for gentle, quick bovel action. Your druggist
has ADLERIKA.
Saunder’s Drug Store and Jeter’s
Pharmacy
ATTENTION
Members of the
WESLEY CLASS
Urgent business con-
cerning the future of
the class, and necessit-
ating the vote and at-
tention of every mem-
ber, must be settled
Sunday. Every
member is asked to be
in the class and aid in
this transaction. Also,
during the Sunday
morning session, the
committee on nomina-
tions will present the
officers for the new
year.
BE THERE!!!
9:45 A. M.
Visitors always wel-
come
seven hits before being replaced j
with none out in the seventh, was j
credited with his 19th victory, j
Hugh Casey pitched hitless ball the !
rest of the way Four consecutive! ri , ,
hits—singles iby Dixie Walker, Arkyi 1 .a?yth,ln!L
Vaughan and Pete Feiser and Dolph
important island of the group.
Maghuson, a lieutentnt com- i
mander in the naval reserve, said)
weather conditions in the fog-!
shrouded Aleutians was “awful . .!
To K'ie“C0LDS
What they say about those
fogs is true,” he added. “Many
times our fliers can’t see the
wings of their planes.”
He said American and Jap
troops in the Aleutians are not
very active now but that “one
side or the other is going to
start moving.”
---o--
Camilli’s double—plus an error by
Sibb.y Sisti made up the Dodger’s
winning rally.
The Giants divided a double-
header with the Phils at New York.
Bill Lohnnan blanked the Phils
with four hits for his 14th win of |
the year as the Giants won the j
opener 8-0. George Hennessey re- |
lieved Johnny Podgajny in the!
third inning of the nightcap and al- j
lowed only three hits the rest of j
the way as the Phils registered a I
3-2 decision. Bill Burich’s single j
scoring. Ryon Northey accounted! SAVOY, Sept. 25.—Miss Jenelle
for the winning run in the sixth j Feagan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. i
Ted Lyons and Ed Smith pitched j Plato Feagan, Savoy, Rt. 1, and j
the White Sox to a double win over j Edison Blakey, son of Mr. and Mrs. j
the Indians 3-1 and 4-2 at Clev<e- j T. E. Blakey of Savoy were married;
land. Lyons recorded his 14th win! last Saturday night by the Rev.1
as he scattered nine hits in the j Clyde Beck, pastor of the White |
first game while Smith pitched a j Rock Baptist church, at the Graj - j
four-hitter in the nightcap. i son county building. Mr. and Mrs. (
Savoy Couple Are
Married In Sherman
On Saturday Night
Misery of
666
“Rub-My-Tism”-a
Liniment!
LIQUID
TABLETS
SALVE
NOSE DROPS
COUGH DROPS
Wonderful
Air Raid Breaks
Up Meeting Of
Quisling Party
STOCKHOLM, Sept. 25 (UP1 —
A national meeting of te Norwe-
gian Quislingites in Oslo was in-
terrupted today by an air raid
which began at the moment Vid-
kum Quisling finished speaking,
reports from Norway said today.
habit-forming drugs. Just good
ingredients that quickly relieve bladder pain, back-
ache, run-down feeling due to lazy-acting kidneys.
And you can’t miss its marvelous tonic effect!
Try Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp Root free! Thousands
have found relief with only a sample bottle. So send
your name and address to Kilmer & Co., Inc., De- Mr. Kent Hulsey of 1747 Broad St
partment 000, Stamford, Conn., for a sample bottle Augusta, Ga., gives credit to Dr Kil-
Iree »nd postpaid. Be sure to follow directions on mer’s Swamp Root for helping him got
package. Offer limited. Send at once! rid ot sluggish kidney misery.
AT BONHAM THEATRES TODAY"
AMERICAN
BEST
“Tombstone”
With Richard Dix - Frances
Gifford
“Down Rio
Grande Way”
With Charles Starrett - Rus-
sell Hayden
]
ELITE “Johnny Eager”
With Robt. Taylor - Lana Turner
Your Tires
Are No Better
Than Your CAR
Your Car
Is No Better Than
Your TIRES
Our service will
help both your car
and your tires.
Everybody’s
Service Station
Phone Open
777 All Night
1^' *==--
i .=S-
BUY
No other games were scheduled, j George Blakey, 1017 E. Cherry, at-
| tended th ecouple.
Mr. and Mrs. Blakey were grad-
uated from Savoy high school.
Positions Are Waiting! Be A
Beauty Operator
20% DISCOUNT
from regular tuition on all Sep-
tember enrollments. Train for
a lifelong profession at South-
west’s finest beauty school. Mail
postcard today.
MARINELLO BEAUTY
SCHOOL
3606 Ross Ave. Dallas, Texas
Green Beans
Green Black Eyed
Peas
Fresh Butter Beans
Squash
Celery
Cauliflower
Also have home
grown mustard and
turnip greens in bulk.
Nice and tender.
ELKINS
Phone 508 or SOS
FIRST CHRISTIAN SUNDAY
SCHOOL
Sunday is Promotion Day with
a special program beginning at 9:45.
Bring someone and help us to
have at least 200 present.
Cold Weather Is
Close Around The
Corner
We have a good stock of all
kinds of heaters and will be
pleased to supply your needs.
Also penty of STOVE PIPE, EL-
BOWS, DAMPERS, ST©VE
BOARDS and RADIANTS FOR
ALL GAS HEATERS.
HUMPHREY
SUPPLY CO
Wheel-balancing service
\ if? - :
CAN SAVE YOU
A LOT OF
TIRE WEAR
(.plus small cost of weights')
ONLY
$ -[50
• Come in right away and
let us check your wheels for
proper balance every 2500
miles. Wheels improperly
balanced cause uneven.
spotty tread wear. They are
also quite likely to wear out
bearings, bushings and king
pins. Don't wait. Delay may
ruin one of your tires.
GET OUR 5 VITAL SERVICES
THAT EXTEND TIRE LIFE
"S*V?eBRADF0RD-WATS0N CO.
WE NOW WRITE
THE NEW EXTENDED COVERAGE
ENDORSEMENT POLICY FOR YOU,
WHICH IS MODERN COVERAGE.
1890 In Bonham State Bank Building 1942
GOODYEAR
SERVICE STORE
CLYDE CRITTENDEN, Mgr.
517 N. Main Phone 41
Between Lem Tittsworth and Bonham Bakery
SAVE LIFE, LIBERTY S7 .TpTWWI
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Cantrell, Robert M. The Bonham Daily Favorite (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 62, Ed. 1 Friday, September 25, 1942, newspaper, September 25, 1942; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth871408/m1/4/?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.