Honey Grove Signal (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, November 27, 1925 Page: 3 of 10
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WE NOW HAVE
on display a line of Gas Cook-
ing Stoves. Come in and
spect them and learn prices.
Smith & Johnstone
in-
never can suspend payments, as
agreed upon, without sacrificing
her financial credit.
' COUNTY BASKET BALL
SCHEDULE ARRANGED
It is true that navment nf ,Fannin county has been divid-
debt spread over so Ion* a period i f £ai? *°u:\di:"umbered
as 62 years involves specialiL!’ W1"
risks, such as future wars, do-S , f'cs- e J
rnestic disturbances and eco-Lf ac 1 ^L-nct meet
nomic misfortunes of the debtor
RED BALL
Bus Line
FINE ROOMY BUSES
Running Between Paris and
Gainesville
Cars Leave Honey Grove as Follows:
GOING WEST
7:45 o’clock ...
A M
9:30 o’clock _.........
_A. M.
11:30 o’clock .........._...
A, M,
1:30 o’clock ..........
P. M
3:30 o’clock ..........
P M
5:30 o’clock ..........
P. M
7:30 o’clock ___________
P M
GOING EAST
7:45 o’clock .........................................
.....A. M.
9:45 o’clock............
A. M
11:45 o’clock______________________________________
....A. M.
1:45 o’clock .........................................
......P. M.
3:45 o’clock.................................
.P. M.
5:45 o’clock ______________________________________
.....P. M.
7:45 o’clock .......................................
....P. M.
Fare from Honey Grove:
To Bonham 75c; Sherman
Paris $1.00.
$1.75
Direct Connection Made at Sherman
with Interurban Cars for Dallas.
Makes Connection at Gainesville with
Santa Fe North and South. Katy to
Wichita Falls. Bus to Ardmore. Bus
to Denton. Bus to Wichita Falls.
Direct Connection Made at Paris with
Buses for Hugo, Greenville, Clarks-
ville and Texarkana.
The Italian Debt Settlement.
So far as the American people
are concerned,, the debt settle-
ment with Italy agreed to by
the United States Debt Commis-
sion represents a heavy loss, but
it is a wise settlement
that. America is bound to lose
on all these funding operations.
The nominal figures of these
debts represent impossibilities,
and in translating them into
possibilities they must be writ-
ten down. Even the British
settlement embodied a virtual
scaling down of the British obli-
gation by some 20 per cent. It
has been estimated that Italy’s
capacity to pay is but about one-
fifth that of Great Britain. The
nation, yet all governments are
jealous of their financial credit,
or their borrowing power, and
they will usually strain them-
selves to meet their recognized
c-nd well-established obligations
abroad. This fact has its weight
against the economically well
founded arguments that these
war debts can never be collected
even in accordance with the
funding contracts, which repre-
sent a great concession over the
demands of uneconomic “pa-
triots” for “payment in full.”
By the agreement Italy con-
tracts to pay $2,042,000,000.
This sum embraces the principal
of the original loan, $1,647,869,-
_____ 197, and substantially all of the
for all interest that has accrued since!Hail at Ladonia.
the war. The scheme of annual! January 8—Windom
payments, beginning with only doma at Gober
Bonham January 28 and 29,
and play for the county cham-
pionship. The result of each
game must be mailed to J. B.
Nice warmer, director of ath-
letics, Ravenna, Texas.
Each school that expects to
have contestants at the county
meet must pay the Inter-
scholastic League fee. This fee
must be paid before Decem-
ber 1, 1925.
The games scheduled for Dis-
tricts 2 and 4 are as follows:
District No. 2.
December 4—Windom at Ladonia.
Dodd City at Hail. Harrison at
Gober.
December 11—Gober at Hail. La-
donia at Dodd City.
December 18—Hail at Harrison.
Gober at Windom.
January 1—Dodd City at Harrison.
Butter Kist” Bread
Get it fresh every day
From the Home Bakery
With a guarantee on every loaf
Try our cakes once and you’ll try them often
BAKERY IS ON SOUTH SIXTH STREET.
at Hail. La-
WRIGLEYS
AFTER
EVERY
¥5,000,000 for the” first ^ “ WW#m-
years and rising every decade! January 22—Windom at Harrison,
thereafter until the payments in Gober at Dodd City.
the last seven years become $73,-
000.000 to $80,000,000, amounts,
of course,
bulk of the interest in the 62-
year period. This is where the
United States makes a big con-
cession, involving a heavy loss.
For American Liberty Bond
District No. 4.
December 4—Telephone at Riverby.
at Lamasco.
at Lamasco.
settlement reached accordingly, holders must be paid at 414 per
is by no means a failure for the cent; that is to say, the United
American Debt Commissioners. States government must
The terms granted to Italy prob-1 m per cent on the money
ably represent something in ex- 1 ‘
cess of what Italy can reason-
ably pay, and a little more than
would be demanded by a bank-
ruptcy court of an insolvent
to cancellation of the E^ood af SelE Lamasco at Mayfield.
December 11—Mayfield at Self.
Riverby at Elwood.
December 18—Self
Mayfield at Telephone.
January 1—Elwood
Self at Riverby.
January 8 — Telephone at
Riverby at Mayfield.
January 15—Elwood at Telephone,
■p^-y j Lamasco at Riverby.
if I January 22—Telephone at Lamasco.
1L| Elwood at Mayfield.
County Executive Committee.
h MEAL
'Visi
affords
\ benefit as well
as pleasure.
Healthful exercise for the teeth
and a spur to digestiorj. A long-
lasting refreshment, soothing to
nerves and stomach.
The Great American
Sweetmeat, untouched
by hands, full of
flavor.
A TEXAS WONDER.
For kidney and bladder troubles,
gravel, weak and lame back, rheu-
matism. If not sold by druggists, by
mail $1.25. Small bottle often cures.
Send for sworn testimonials. Dr. B,
W. Hall, 2926 Olive Street, St. Louis,
Missouri. Sold by druggists.
Self.
121
J. C. MAGOUIRK
PROPRIETOR
To Cure a Cold In One Day
Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets.) ft
stops the Cough and Headache and works off the
Cold. E. W. GROVE’S signature on each box. 30c
debtor.
To reach a definite agreement
is in itself worth while. It helps
along European stabilization. It
helps Italian credit. It is also a
gain for the United States be-
cause it is better to have the
debt funded in precise terms,
even at a heavy cost to the cred-
itor than to leave it at large in
the nondescript condition of a
financial waif. Now that the
debt is funded, Italy recognizes
definite obligations extending
over 62 years, and that country
borrowed to loan Italy while it
will receive from Italy much less
than 2 per cent on that sum.j Don’t forget that York’s Ga-
Italy will pay no interest the!ra&e does welding, promptly and
first five years; in the next 101satisfactorily,
it will pay one-eighth of 1 per
cent, then one-fourth of 1 per
cent, and so on up the scale, the
2 per cent rate not being
reached until the last seven
years, wffich will begin in 1980.
-Fort Worth Star-Telegram
No Worms in a Iieallhy Child
All children troubled with Worms have an un-
healthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a
rule, there is more or 1 ess stomach disturbance.
GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regu-
larly for two or three weeks will enrich the blood,
improve the digestion, and act as a general S length-
ening Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then
throw offer dispel the worms, and the Child will be
© perfect health. Pleasant to take. 60c per bottle.
Dollie Cappleman Junior
Missionary Society.
Methodist Church.
November 29th, 2 p. m.
Subject: A Flight to South America.
Hymn.
Scripture: Mark 5:19.
Sentence Prayers.
The Boys and Girls—Billie Capple-
man.
Customs—Arra Mullins.
A Brazilian Festival — Mozelle
Baker.
What South America Needs—Ray-
mond Bates.
Roll Call and Minutes.
Hymn and Benediction.
Junior B. Y. P. U.
November 29, 1925.
Group No. II in charge.
Introduction—Glossell Rutherford.
The Land in Which Manya Lives—
Lilly Belle Stevens.
Manya’s Father—Geraldine Starkey.
An Unkind Mother—Estes Meade.
The Arrival of Strangers—Rogers
Burnsed.
Manya at the Meeting—Frances
Edwards.
The Story from the Book—Dorothy
Martin.
Manya Tries to Win Her Mother—
Gerald Smith.
Manya’s Mother Goes to the Meet-
mg-^Louise McKinney.
Manya’s Mother Is Saved — Tal
Richardson, Jr.
Daily Bread With a Kick.
From Berlin comes a piece of
news that may prove even more
epoch making in this country
than in Germany. An Italian
engineer named Andrusani has
invented a device that will ex-
tract alcohol from fermenting
bread dough.
The simple housewife or baker
has perhaps never suspected
that the staff of life contained
alcoholic sap. By affixing a
simple piece of machinery to
the oven one can conduct clouds
of intoxicating steam into a
special chamber where the wa-
ter is separated from the alcohol.
Some statistician has calcu-
lated that if all the bakeries in
Germany were fitted with this
invention enough alcohol would
be produced each year to supply
half the national needs. It
would mean the saving of 9 mil-
lion hundredweight of potatoes,
2 million hundredweight of coal,
and a large quantity of wheat.
What its adoption in this
country might cost the boot-
leggers and revenue agents has
not been estimated.—Ex.
Signal $1.50 a year in advance.
Eyes Examined; Glasses Fitted.
John T. Nall, of Bonham, will
be in his office at the Pharmacy
Drug Store on Wednesday of
each week. “C” Nall “C” Better.
Mmmmsmmmmmasaat
BEBBSm
2£ xaf*"as to thofe £ ££8 SZ
are
Pure Cane Sugar, per 100 pounds..................$5.85
Paris Special Flour, per 100 pounds............$4.45
24-Pound Sack Meal....................................... .....60c
Blue Karo............................... .....................................................45c
Red Karo............................................................ 50c
8 Pounds Swift Jewell Compound...................$1.25
10 Pounds Davis Baking Powder, pound......10c
Prince Albert Tobacco.......................................................12c
Grand Can Corn No. 2......................................................He
No. 2 Hand Packed Tomatoes...........................8 l-3c
Michigan Salt, barrel...................................................$3.50
100 Pounds Michigan Salt.......................................$1.25
50 Pounds Michigan Salt.............................................65c
Best Sockeye Salmon No. 2........................................25c
3 Pounds Maxwell House Coffee..................$1.48
All Feed at Cost and Less.
No. 2V2' Extra Fancy Peaches..................................20c
IMiss TFJtaLis*
Came In and Buy What You Need, as My;
> Stock Is Complete In Every Way.
I
SOUTH SIXTH STREET
SMITH
HONEY GROVE, TEXAS
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Lowry, J. H. Honey Grove Signal (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, November 27, 1925, newspaper, November 27, 1925; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth648011/m1/3/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Honey Grove Preservation League.