The Bonham Daily Favorite (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 98, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 16, 1910 Page: 2 of 4
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THE DAILY FAVORITE
HKfAVOtHl PUlMIttilOHPAJO
W S. Srorrs .....
. Editor
Iiltr* 1 *
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•1 HwoHim
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NOR * WAIN ftTRk’TM'
aUlt»C«l»*T10N;«AT*»
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P«i Monti
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UN MI Mil K llMlt SAM
People who live in the tiopic*
have to U* thoughtful a* to the
state of their live*. It i* ad enable
♦« til*Lain from heavy foods, the
lighter the lietter. We know these
thing* because they ha\e been.
wiitten aliout in fiction, looks of
travel ami medical reports arena) |
ponied by liguics ami citaliotui of
awful examples.
Hut what does Uncle Ham hoc-
estly care about thej. lives of his
•on9 and daughters in the Philip
pi nest Nothing at all, for he is
carrying out his yearly practice of
loading n ship with moteiiul for
the Thanksgiving dinner in ihe
islands. Thirty-seven bundled
turkeys, 10 laurels of crauberrii s,
GOO pounds of mincemeat and 200
boxes of red apples, have been
packer! in the retiigcrators. There
is also canned milk from Wash-
ington, prunes from Oregon, or-
anges from t'aliforaia, beef from
the Dakotas, pork from Iowa, mut-
ton from Wyomiug, butter from
Minnesota and eggs from Wiscon-
sin. Enough to founder the ship,
Christmas
Vei l few pliol<>gi4|>hei* ex< n
in the ciHe* arc keeping up w ith
the time* in the tapid improve
meata of the la»t two nr thivc
yeatw, ami niauv people coinimie
the non plugio**iv«- punt with
the latent at d i«e*| ami get in
lei no Mill out ol date wotk at a
aavmg of a tulle on (he dnsen.
You can not alloid to cnmpli
mint xoui tneml* with any thing
but the liest of ita kiml, ami the
man w ho i* able to make the
lust high priced woik ought at
no to In* able to get out the ls*t
in the lower. I Itelieve 1 ran
please you in either. Am now
making the fieat tvvo and thus*
dollar cabinet* ever put out in
Honharn.
Foster,
PHOTO
Tilt KOMI AM IIAIUTp h A V OH I * Ai.
BROKEN PROMISES Eichsn* Ch»‘ J
jlwiMtiMf'irit'd •••••*• tMhMM
“Yes, 1 would like
one ol your pictures
ever so much 1
haven't sn> ol m> -
self at present to ex-
change. but expect
tu have sente taken
soon anil then I'll
remember you.”
Now, be hear »t: lo how
many people have you told
this old, old story? And how
long ai;o wire tome of those
prom tes made? Count them
up carefully, then come in
and get enough pictures to
“s q u a re” yourself. After
keeping your friends waiting
so long it might be atlvis, blc
lo get something extra j.ood.
WE HAVE IT.
t‘lliratf** Hu* It MM
|trt | **«<*» l*
, tlx Ijft' "W |
mil v ,iX a tie
time
ii th.
Stall'
and in
doing
«i m
<l«*
f 11 1114
k*to the
man
-a tin
t h uni
i a old*
that can't 1
*• Mft%|
iislrilh
ml ai d
that might
lii ir f
ad and
rc-re.-d
k>) nil
pn.p
U\ RIP
1 got tl
IV III till j
inf;
“Yo«
.tit1 t<
ntx'iu
• a -h in i
ct puni.lttu
*'iii lh.
pi de.it 1)
, N <>ur J
x telim died
lmi a
m*'. \
mi will
die a
tiUlldl
t'x| linn
•*. \>»
u mil let
WitM'
iittl
nf hun
i.iii kn
IIW l«*lgl , 1
You
fill ii<it In' |m
i nut till
to lilt al
•
hand
oi n 1
i»pci a
xx nut;
nu will
have
no flK
hi ext*
pi tne
i ight id
mere
PtINU
•nee
ii foul
or live
‘Ihe
Revolution
r r
r~i\rr t
A «l 4 L •
L^'Cy
or, if the ship] escapes, to founder
the army. All this we know to be
very bad for folk in the tropics. It
will strain belts and cause the
guards to^tuiu out very, very list-
lessly. It will make eyelids droop
ami increase the natural irritation
of the doctors at sick-call the next
morning. Uncle Ham ought to
know better—but] some way or
other we haven’t the nerve to say
he ought to do lietter.
While delivering a speech in
the recent campaign, William Ran
dolph Hcaist, had the unique ex-
perience of having]; the ceiling of
the hall in which he was speaking
fall down upon him. Had that
bejii the colonelj.he would have no
doubt pointed with pride to such a
r ’cord.
T. C. FINLEY
Main Street.
m
j Cut
Glass
THE BREAD MAN
is the man most popular in thc^
home. Our bread “wins in a
walk,” tiecause it is pure and
wholesome, with a substantial |
“body” to it that satisfies all. (
EVERY BREADWINNER
will find it to his ailvantrgc to
patronize our Rakeiy, for he gets
here the best qurlities at the
fairest prices.
The Model Bakery
Nt hsino a grievance is likecher.
ishiug au illness. We always try
to get cured of the illness. Why
not of the grievanceT A sure cure
is to forget. It is not always an
easy task, but do your best and
you will at least get relief.
Iowa has decreased in popula
tion more than seven thousand dur-
ing the past ten years. Come to
Texas, the fastest growing Htatc in
the Union, and locatc]in Fannin,
the best county in the Htate.
Two Minutes I alk
About Abstracts
Something You Must Have
To enable you to steer clear
of the rocks of invalid, contest-
able, unmerchantable titles—
AN ABSTRACT.
The individual who purchases
or loans money on real estate
nowadays without an abstract is
taking long chances of being in-
volved in lengthy, expensive lit
igation, or suffering loss and
worry on account of a defective
title.
You’ll know to certainty just
what you arc buying if WI I make
an abstract of it first.
Yours truly
Fannin County
Abstract Company.
K. H. Pritchett, Lessee
We have just received a
a shipment of rich cut
glass in
Many
Beautiful
Patterns
of bowls, nappies, comports,
vases, water sets, cream and
sugar sets, puff boxes, cologne
bottles, etc. All full and per-
fectly cut, at reasonable
prices. Call and be convinced
1
| C. E. Bowman
Jeweler and Optician
5ac—a mu* ■in—
The Pensylvania foot ball play,
er who had his jaw broken in a re-
cent foot ball game will never be-
come a successful politician, for a
gent with a broken jaw can never
stand a show in that game.
Too much time spent in looking
for the luuIts in others bjiuds you
to your own. There is none per
feet, so Ictus be gem rous in our
views of the weaknesses of our
neighbors.
Nol Sorry for Blunder.
“If my friends hadn’t blunder-
ed in thinking I was a doomed vic-
tim of consumption, I might not
be alive now,” wiites l>. T. Han-
ders of Hiinodsluirg,. Ky. “For
years they saw every attempt to
FALLING HAIR
fdsy lo Slop it dial Make il Lustrous
2nd Beautiful.
If your hair is falling out, if
you have dull unattractive hair,
or If you need a daily hair drew
ing, read what Atis. Ilcttie Hedg
inau of Nelsonville, Erie county,
Ohio, writes June .1, Pd 10, about
Parisian Sage:
. “1 used Parisian Sage for falling
hair and find it the finest thing I
ever heard of. My hail was fall
ing out by combs lull, and I could
nio my fingers through it. ami they
would hang lull of loose hair. 1
washed my hair ami got a bottle
of Parisian Huge ami used two ap.
plications, and I could see a great
difference. My hair was lustrous
and nice and had almost stopped
falling out and by the use of one
more bottle it stopped altogether.”
For women, for men or for chil
ilren Parisian Huge is without any
doubt the finest preparation for
th(‘ hair. It is guaranteed by the
Saunders Drug <'n., to stop hair
Happy thought loi the day:
Bonham is soon to have her water
supply replenished and her bath
houses will lie opened once more.
.V lioon laugh is better than
hunting trouble any hour in the
day or any day in the week.
It is no eary Job to tie a shining
picmple, but it does a great deal
more good than preaching without
practicing.
----------- -----„ --»
cure a lung racking cough fail. At l,,,m hilling, to eradicate dandruff
last I tried Dr. King’s New Dis. “nd1 il‘5,,i',K "‘'“'P, m U'°
covery. 1 he effect was wonderful.|(lilintilv ,u.l lum,.(l aiH, ^freshing
It soon stopped the cough and hnir (ln.SHillK from Krcasc or
am now In better health than I stickinwH im(l OUKht to be in cv
have hail lor yeaiw. This wonder- hom(. u-hl,n. (.v,.ry member of
ful life saver is an unrivabd reme-'th;. t;imily (,)lll(1 uso it daily,
dy for coughs, colds, lagr.ppe, ,ll(lUl(. r,o cents at the Haui.-
c.ioup, hemoiii uigi s, ,|(.rs |)n,g (’o , and druggists ev-
Vciiis tin- ctrinut solitude will
be^m to crush in upon you like an
iron v ig'd. You hear that street
car Ik i! n ging in (tie streets an it
Ini.ss s now; you will icmcmlier it
in after yean as the most exquisite
music; and you can only dream of
it by day and by night and youi
dream w ill lie toiture unspeakable.
In the summer you will guess there
are cool fixers running somewhen
undei green tree*, ami you w ill
long l<ii the sight id oxen a gieen
leaf with :io aching you never
thought you could expencoec. In
a few weeks the holidays with
their lights, lestivitios and happi
mss w ill be here, and many a
Christmas will roll over you in
your iron cage and high stone wall
but you will never hear a child
laugh again. The law hus taken
its full and ample revenge on you.”
Nacodoehes Sentinel.
in baking methods which gave the
world Uneeda Biscuit also resulted in a
Revelation
t
in soda cracker quality. You
realize this the moment you
open the royal purple package
and find soda crackers so tempt-
ing and good that they cannot
be resisted.
a Package
(Never sold In bulk)
Uneeda
Biscuit
NATIONAL
BISCUIT
COMPANY
FAR
| lead at this
to In it die a: e
crest on your lail
ested in until you are black in the and registirs a complaint about
face and there is not one in a hun- j«°me article he read in his neigh
died who will thank you for the *,ul s lmtM r’
you for
kind words and the boost, but on
the other hand, if you should hap-
pen to do or sax something that
these same men did not like, they
will begin to roar aliout it, and in
many cases the fellow w ho makes
the most noise about the matter
spends very little money with the
Htanil by your home paper; it
always stands by you, whether it
admires you or not. In fact, the
local paper is the liost friend you
have. It will refrain from telling
the truth about you many times
while you live, ami lie about you
when you die; that’s lieinga good *oc:l' paper, and in some instances
friend, and you know it, remarks, we have known such cuttle to not
an exchange. — Italy News Herald, even Iw on the subscription list.
That is good sound doctrine and You who have not experienced it
is the gospel truth, but from our do not know the feeling that creeps
own experience we have learned over an editor when one of these
that you can sing the praises of a “long eared” fellows w ho does not
mao or the business he is inter- subscribe for the paper, conics up
Both Speedy and fffictw,
The Rapublican candidates in
Fannin county failed to announce I
in the papers, then fore they were
overwhelmingly defeated. Moral:
It pays to advertise. Bonham Fa
VOKITE.
True, as a general proposition,
but how about Teddy ami his new urinary irregularities. The!
nationalism! Advertising ia nec use of Foley Kidney I’lilsrid^
cessary to success, but there must entirely of all my former troi
Tln-v have mv highest rccomsA
elation. Hold byJ. W. Peeler. |
This indicates the action ofFtlj
Kidney Pills as H. Parsons,]
Creek, Mich., illustrates: “Ikj
bean afflicted With aseverecml
kidney a bUdder trouble fori
T found no relief until I used Fill
Kidney Pills. Thesecuredmii
tirely of all my ailments. Iq
troubled w ith backaches andl
verc shooting pains with anm
Irits, Hominy,
fast foot
:urle
be a good article back of the adver
tisement.—Fort Worth Record.
The Favokitk hail reference to
judicious advertising and not
“spot lighting,” as is carried on
by the chief gas lmg of the tuition.
*** V
Even John \V. Korn, who once
ran for the prominent job of vice
j presiden , has landed as a United
States senator, and William
Jennings is still — well, what
| is hedoing, anyway I —Han Antonio
Express.
Bolting the head of his Htate
j ticket and playing second fiddle to
I the Republican party.
A wife should bo a man1! tyl
meet, especially when it cornel^
helping meet the bills.
NOT
Write deed
tr First Nat’l
When a remedy has lived for over thirty years, steadily
growing in popularity and influence, and thousands upon
thousands of#women declare they owe their very lives to it,
is it not reasonable to believe that it is an article of great
merit?
e challenge the world to show any other one remedy
special class of disease which has attained such an
asthma,
whooping
croup,
cough
or weak lungs. |,,|y u Thu Kir, with thl. Au.
r>0c, *1.00. Trial bottle free, duar lHfrh lmi; i> on ,.V(TV ,„<*„**.
on teed by J. W . Peeler. I N |, 7>
S3
m$«
The Anbeuiser Busch xvasatung,
but not killed, in the rcrept Mi*,
n . i • •'
., l .. > •
M’llfi plcetinn,
Tor Ue riother in »h« liome to bf
aim w fi, alilo to devote hoi
tiino an J fiiieniUh to the rearing oi
cliililrcn. is ono of life's grnatofe
l)le*.;uigs. Oitcn tlio boaring oi
I'hildiin lnjuree the mother's health,
if slio has not prepared her syiten.
i.i advance for the important event
Women who use Mother’s Friend arc save-l much of the discomfort and bufferin'
*o common with expectant mothers. It is a penetrating oil that thoroughly lubri-
cates every muscle, nerve and tendon Involved r.t ruch times, and thus promotes
physical comfort. It elds nature by expanding the skin and tissues and pe.
fecUy prepares the system for the
coming of beby. Mother’s Friend
assures a quick and natural recovery
for every woman who uses It. It Is
for sale at drug stores. Write for
free book for expectant mothers.
3PADFIELD KEOULATOK CO.,
AUMUV Oft,
I
k m
w
We challenj
for a
enormous demand and maintained it for so many years as
has Lydia F.. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound, tne famous
woman’s remedy for woman’s ills. Unless it is a very good
medicine and the claims made for it are honest, such a record
would have been impossible—fraud or misrepresentations
would long ago have been detected and the business gone
into oblivion. Read this unsolicited letter: —
Corry, I’a. — “I am happy to xvrito you about the benefit I
received from Lydia 15. Pinkliam’i Vegetable Compound
Before my marriage txvo years ago, I suffered something awful
every month with pains and other distressing symptoms, ami 1
took Lydia E. Plnkham’H Vegetable Compound in dry form
Since then I have never been troubled with pain, not oven ii
dull backache or headache, and It has helped me a good deal
before childbirth. 1 recommend your medicine wherever I iro ••
— Mrs. 15. 15. Buss, 112 15. Church St., Corry, Pa.
When a woman like Mrs. Ross is generous enough to
write such a letter as the above for publication, she should
at least lie given credit for a sincere desire to help other
suffering women. For \vc assure you there is no other
reason why she shopld court such publicity.
We say it in all sincerity and friendship—try
Mr. Otto Paul, Milwaukee, Win,,
nu\s Foley’s Honey and Tar is still
more than the last. He writes ns,
“All those who bought it think ,
it is the best for coughs and colds;
they ever had and 1 think it is |
still more than the best. Our baby '
had a bad cold and it cured him !
in onoday. Please accept thanks.” I
—For sale by J. W. Peeler.
Good Results Always follow
The use of Foley Kiiluey Pills.
They are upbuilding, strengthen,
ing and soothing. Tonic in action
quick in results.—Hold by J. \V.
Peeler.
Two Story)
Brick
Building
I \'h~:
on
Main Street has
been placed with ui
For Sale
for a few days, If You 1
looking for a good, safe
vestment you better see i
at once.
Gibson & ^ ayloJ
p. S.—We loan mon«T|
on farms.
-try this medicine.
For .TO yonrs Lydia E. Plnkham'g Vegetable
Compound has been the standard remedy for
female ills. No sick woman does Justice to
herself a ho will not try this famous medicine.
Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and
has thousands of euros to its credit.
Mr*. Ptnkham invites all sick women
Ito write her for advice. She has
guided thousands to health free of charge.
Address Mrs. Pinkham. Lynn, Maw,
THE BANK IN WHICH TO DEPOSIT
YOUR MONEY is the Bank that has been
TESTED and TRIED. The Fannin
County National Bank of Bonham has a
record of over Thirty Six Years, and
I wenty One Years under same manage-
ment. All legitimate banking business
solicited. Liberal accommodations and
courteous treatment extended to cus-
tomers.
: : :
::::::: :
Capital Stock $100,000.00
Surplus Fund 50,000.00
J. W. RUSSELL, Pres., J. T. KENNEDY, Vice-Pr«» |
C. L. BRADFORD, Cashier.
THE FANNIN COUNTY NATIONAL BANK
OF BONHAM
THE OLDEST BANK IN FANNIN COUNTY
and
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Spotts, W. S. The Bonham Daily Favorite (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 98, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 16, 1910, newspaper, November 16, 1910; Bonham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth922274/m1/2/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bonham Public Library.