The Bonham News (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, August 25, 1916 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.
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Page Two
The Bonham News
ESTABLISHED 1866
ASHLEY EVANS - - Editor
L. E. DICTJS * - - Local Editor
and Business Manager
*». A. COBPEDGE - - Solicitor
L'ntered at the Post Office at Bonham
Tex**, as Second Class Mail Matter.
---—— --1 and American sentiment.
THE BONHAM SEMI-WEEKLY NEWS
fully away in the sunset of life, with i
the calm assurance of having ‘Fought |
a good fight and kept the faith.’ ”
RKEUtMTISM ARRESTED»" I.’.:: :1,12.....
Tomorrow, Saturday. Aug. 26, is the
day that gives every Democratic voter
in Fannin County an opportunity to j
vote for his country and for his j
party, or to vote- for Germany and its f
emperor. Chas A. Culberson as sen-
ator is a Democrat and an American
representing Democratic principles ’
0. B. Col- |
SUBSCRIPTION RATES ! quitt as senator is a mugroumpt and
One Year .... One Dollar » mongrel, representing his own in- j
Six Months - - - Fifty Ceuta1 terest and German sentiment. He
Three Months " - Twenty-five Cents would be a hindrance to a Democratic
_•_ administration and a reproach to the
j Democratic State that elected him. •
He is an aid to the Republican cam-.
1 paigners, and a friend to the Repub-
lican nominee. Take your choice and J
Many people suffer the tortures of
lame muscles and stiffened joints because
of impurities in the blood, and each suc-
ceeding attack seems more acute until
rheumatism has invaded the whole system.
To arrest rheumatism it is quite as im-
portant to improve your general health as
to purify your blood, and the cod liver oil
in Scott’s Emulsion is nature's great blood-
maker, while its medicinal nourishment
the organs to expel the
modify his famous Now York Amer-
ican interview, in which he denounced
the Wilson administration as the ^
“worst failure in history,” its foreign
policy as “imbecile,” its handling of ■
the Mexican affairs as an “egregious
failure.'' and its anti-trust laws as
“fakes.” But the record is there as!
and Mr. Colquitt has boon!
Scott’a Emulsion is helping thousands trying to defend himself ever since, j
every day who could not find other relief. There are mighty few supporters of
the alcoholic aub.ritu.ea. the WUson administration who ctn
" • ■ ' bring themselves to -vote for the man
nickel’s worth on a credit for five who has furnished ammunition for
years and have enough money in the ! republican papers and republican
bank to pay for anything we may! spellbinders to use against a demo-
FRIDAYf AUGUST 25, 1916
7
FATHER
A great sorrow came into .he life
of the editor of The News when his
father, ripe in years and rich in deeds
and love, closed Ids eyes and sank into
the sleep of death last Saturday.
This hand had hoped to pen a tri-
bute to his memory, but for once it
has lost the power to write. Another
must do what the son wants to do
bat cannot now trust himself to try.
The following tribute is from one
who has long known him well, and
who is competent to judge his worth.
It is an editorial expression from
the Daily Favorite of Tuesday:
“On Saturday evening at 6:45 the
death angel came into our midst and
took from us one who had been near
and dear to us all our life—Judge
William Ashley Evans. It is only
gradually that we can realize that he
has gone from us to another and bet-
ter place, and it is only gradually
that we learn not to look for him to
come in and speak to us as before.
All Bonham mourns the passing of
this kuyHy man who wanted to live
and do more for his fellows.
“In the early successes that were
the inevitable fruits of honesty, chari-
ty and a clear brain, they rejoiced
with him. In his last days of suffer-
ing their compassion was powerful,
but it could not help him. Death had
marked him and he went forth to
meet it.
“To know him in life was never to
question his word or deed. In death
his memory has lost nothing of the
almost super-human reverence his
life commanded. He suffered, he
knew he had to go and he went—his
body racked with pain, his mind tor-
tured with an awful suspense and his
soul serene and pure.
Bread-winning was to Judge W. A.
Evans a means of sustaining useful-
ness. For himself, he wanted but
little, for othera he constantly labored
with hand, with heart and with brain.
Men sought him out for business
counsel, for he waa ever to them pos-
sessed of flawleas judgment.
Men sought him out for comforting
in troubles that were their own, and
they found him always gentle, always
sure of himself. With all his gentle-
ness and with all the modesty for
which he was noted among hundreds
of friends, he waa a man of positive
convictions. Being positive, he never
discounted his own judgment when he
advised a friend, but seemingly the
very positiveness that typified what
he said and did brought to him a
realization that his was no common
word to be sought for and his modes-
ty made him next to humble when he
waa praised.
Judge Evans was always a devout
Christian and one who carried his
Christianity with him into the home,
the lodge room and the business of-
fice.
“Bonham is his heir, inheriting a
memory that might enrich any life
that partakes of it.
“The privilege is not granted to
vote accordingly.
-o-o-
In the contest of ballots tomorrow
if Colquitt and the German Kaiser
win, then Texas and the Democratic
party lose. If you believe the Ger-
man emperor. is right and President
Wilson wrong, you ought to vote for
Colquitt; but if you believe Wilson
right and expect to support him you
can’t vote for Colquitt.
- —o-o-
The Methodist Church has bought
a brewery at Flint, Mich. The Meth-
odists down here in Texas will be
shocked at this news until they learn
that their Michigan brethren are not
using the brewery to make beer, but
are putting it to a far better use.
-o-o-
For a long time our anti friends
have been trying to convince us
that prohibitionists are a let of in-
competents, but they haven’t succeed-
ed half so well as some of the pros
have who declare they are going to
vote for Colquitt.
-o-o-
Even if Uncle Sam succeeds in buy-
ing the Danish West Indes he will
have no cheap land for homesteaders.
Each acre is costing him about three
hundred dollars.
Kaiser William, Candidate Hughes
and Oscar Colquitt all agree that “the
Wilson administration is the greatest
failure in the history of the presi-
dency.”
unnunttunuunuButt
« - »
« REPEATING THINGS SAID 8
U 8
nntttttiaannnuun 8
It is announced from Houston that
C. C. McDonald will be a candidate
for governor two years from now.
If so, for the first time Charlie will
be the cause of our having a most
pleasant sensation—when we run
our pencil across his name on the
ticket.—Bonham News.
And for our part we can say the
same thing in regard to Ben F. Loon-
ey and Louis J. Wortham, in case
these gentlemen decide to offer their
services for that office. Ye Gods,
what a motley crew we have to pick
our governors from in Texas!—Sher-
man Courier.
88888888 o. naantre
8 8
8 WITH OUR EXCHANGES 8
8 8
388888888888888
A lady said to a Democrat repre-
sentative: “I noticed what a woman
said about paying the grocery bill
with her poultry and it was good.
I can tell you another ‘chicken story’
Six years ago we were renter farm-
ers, and planted an all cotton crop.
Today we have forty acres half paid
for, and have met every note when it
came due, and have all the nice little
comforts of the rural home, with
plenty of fruit, garden stuff, and live
have the next twelve months. How-
ever, as we are taking in from $30
to $65 per month in. real money we
probably won’t have to touch this nest
egg.” Thus the Democrat’s oft re-
peated suggestion that the cow, the
hog and the hen are mortgage lifters
and home builders comes true again.
—Sherman Democrat.
The trouble is to convince many
people that money can be made, and
independence secured by dealing in
such small things as poultry, milk and
butter and hogs. Most farmers es-
timate that the profits on fifty acres
of cotton will be rrtore than on all they
could produce of such stuff as that
mentioned above. The result is that
the average farmer, and especially
the average renter, puts in practically
all his time in the cotton patch, not
even taking the trouble to produce
enough meat, eggs and milk for his
own table. His idea is to do big
things, and not to waste his time with
little things. Expecting to make big
profits, he spends in proportion to
his expectations. If the crop chances
to be good and the price good the
cotton crop pays expenses of the
year. But the crop and the price are
poor quite as often as they are good,
and at such times the cotton farmer
has debts he cannot pay. There are
two helpful things about raising eggs,
making butter and growing hogs as
a means of making a living. They
teach the value of little things—they
show how little savings grow into
large profits. Consequently they
teach frugality in living and caution
in expenditures. The farmer and the
farm wife who deal in these things
of small value but sure profits be-
come economical, thrifty and saving,
and as a result become prosperous.
Try it for yourself a few years, and
become convinced of its profitable-
ness.
EVER SALIVATED BY
CALOMEL! HORRIBLE!
Calomel is quicksilver Ind acts
like dynamite on,
your liver. I
Calomel loses you a day! You know
what calomel is. It’s mercury; quirk-'
silver. Calomel is dangerous. It
crashes into sour bile like <dynajnEt«,
cramping and sickening you. Calomel
attacks the bones and should never be
put into your system.
When you feel i>iliou3. sluggish, con-
stipated and all knocked out and believe
‘What Congress has
done concerning a
Government
Armor Plant
and what people are '
thinking about it’!
very early age.
Now to the grief stricken husband
• o the heart-broken children our
whole heart goes ogt in tnder pity
&r.l wc point them tc Him who knows
how to e omfort with that peace which
passelh understanding.
A loving friend,
ORA WILKINS,
El wood, Texas.
close to church and school. We start-
many to live to the ripe old age of ed with poultry, added hogs, then
eighty-alx years and then pass peace- milk cows. We haven’t bought a
The equipment of
AUSTIN COLLEGE
Sherman, Texas
is modern and complete and meets
all requirements of the State De.
partment of Education for institu-
tions classified a plus.
Her information address
THE REGISTRAR
Sherman, Texas.
The Herald read the evidence pre-
sented to the executive committee at
Houston and must say that the un-
seating of the regularly elected dele-
gates from Bell county and the seat-
ing of Ferguson men who had not
been chosen by any convention at all
was in our opinion a high-handed out-
rage. The democratic party' has come
to a deplorable condition when it will
seat as authorized delegates the self-
appointed leaders of a faction in any
county. The Ferguson delegation
from Bell didn’t have even the sem-
blance of a title to seats in the state
convention.—Hamilton Herald.
But they had quite as much as some
others who were also seated. It was
not a question of right with Fergu-
son and his henchmen. It was a
question of controlling everything,
and having the power to do so, they
overrode all truth, all justice, all
rights, and controlled things as they
wanted to. If the people of Texas
permit such things to go unrebuked
we are mistaken in our estimate of
their metal.
Cherokee County will have a young
lady as treasurer,- she having defeated
her opponents in the primaries. The
average woman is a good hand at
handling finances under most condi-
tions, and it not likely that the
Cherokee County woman will fail
in her duties in handling the money
of the county.—Tyler Courier-Times.
Fannin County is not behind Cher-
okee in that kind of progressiveness
which recognizes and rewards worth
in women as well as in men. Fannin
has just elected a most competent
district clerk in the person of Mrs.
May Brownlee, who has done much of
the work of the office for the past
sixteen years.
The Houston Chronicle has come
out strongly for the prohibition .of
the liquor traffic through statutory en-
actment by the United States gov-
ernment. With the antis and the
brewery and liquor interests crushing
all right principles under heel, as was
done at Houston, the appeal will soon-
er or later go to the government and
the day will come when it is not
made in vain, and the whisky traffic
will be as completely abolished as has
other things that heretofore put the
laws of God and man to shame.—
Sherman Democrat.
The more desperate becomes the
case of the brewers and distillers the
more desperate the methods they
adopt to prolong their hold on tin life
the State and the Nation permit them
to enjoy. But in their desperation they
overdo matters. They so outrage de-
cency, honesty and public conscience
that they' bring about a reaction, and
public opinion whips them out of
power. The liquor crowd in Texas
have gone about to the length of their
tether, and the Kan Antonio and
Houston conventions have already
started the re-action against the
methods of the brewers
work. Dodson’s Liver Tone straightens
you right up and you feel gre$t. Give
it to the children liecansd it is perfectly
harmless and doesn’t gripe.
CITATION BY PUBLICATION
ing to protect her home and save her
child. If there is such a thing as jds- i
tice, surely a mother has a jtiSt cla m
to a voice in shaping )the environment
that may determine whether her child : ^ ^E ^ ^ EX AS,
will realize her hopes or bring hjer
gray hairs in sorrow to tjie gravje. I * aniun County, Greeting:
cratic administration in this cam- you need a dose of dangerous calomel jjost
paign year and whose election to the remember that your druggist sells for
Sena* would be featured and gl.ri-
fied in by every republican newspa-! pleasant to take and is a perfect subsii-
per and anti-administration cam- 4ute *or calomel. It is guaranteed to
paigner in the North and East. More ' StfErS TffSSjf ^
than any other State Texas Is respon-j Don’t take calomel! It makes yon
sible for the nomination of Wilson, siek the^next day; it loses yoi^. a day's
We do not believe that there is a ma-
jority of Texas democrats now who
w'ill vote to repudiate that adminis-
tration or who will fail to vote to
show the remainder of the United
States that the greatest of all demo-
cratic states is overwhelmingly be-
hind the President.—Denton Record-
Chronicle.
Mr. Colquitt is adroit, he is brazen,
he is consciousless, and he needs to
be all these just now'. He abused and j
villified the president and his ad-
ministration, and now has the effront-
ery to claim that there is no longer
any disagreement as the president has
come to his way of thinking. The
president has not come to his way of
thinking. The president is not forc-
ing trouble with Mexico, as Colquitt
w'ould have done; the president is
not kow-tow'ing to the German em-
peror as Colquitt would have Him do;
the president has no doubt of the suc-
cess of the regional banks that Col-
quitt pronounced a failure, and still
believes that the anti-trust laws are
sound instead of being the “bare-faced
fakes” Colquitt pronounced them. The
president has not changed his poli-
cies, and has had no need to change
them. Colquitt made his grand stand
play to catch the votes of the farm-
ers, and he has caught Some of them.
m % r«M«ct«d in
Editorial Comment
Thi* is the title of a booklet
we have prepared. W«
thail be glad to send
a copy free to any
one interested.
Bethlehem Steel Co.
South Bethlehem, Pa.
CITATION BY BUI ICATION.
FARM NEAR ECTOR.
The State of Texas
To the Sheriff or any Constable of
Fannin County, Greeting:
Minnie Lee Biggerstaff,- adraini*-
stratrix of the estate of Walling Big-
gerstaff, deceased, having filed in our
County Court her final account of the
condition of the Estate of said Wali-
ng Biggerstaff, deceased, together
with an application to be discharged
from s?id administration.
You are hereby once again com-
manded, that by. publication of this
; writ for twenty days in a newspaper
regularly published in the county of
62 acres near Ash Grove- school
louse of 4 rooms, line water. W’ill j Fannin you give due notice to all per-
a bargain.— j sons interested in the account for fi-
sell at $2250, and it is
Evans, Bonham.
-x-
Will H.
33-3t. j r.al settlement of said estate to
Because God has planted in every hid- I W hereas oath has been made before
man heart a sense of justice, and He- j rr*e ^-v Crawford, President of
opposition and open
way to the polls.
woman’s pat i
1
FOLKS NEED A LOT OF
LOVIN’
cor-
a non-
cause the mother argumenU makes *In Crai.am, Crawford Company, a
irreaistible appeal to this universal j rj0rat*0n> laat A- S. Covell is
sense, it will finally batter do\*n all jr?siHent of this State so that the ordi-
nary process of law can not be served
rjion him, you are hereby command'd
1 that you, by making publication of
\ this writ in some newspaper printed in
Fannin County for four successive
By Strickland Gillilan
“Folks need a lot of loving in tHe
morning, < j
The day is all before, with c£r*s
beset—
The cares we know, and those thi,t
give no warning; ;>
For love is God’s oym antidote fer
fret.
■ f , !
“Folks need a heap of loving at Jtne
noontime—
He claims to be the farmers’ friend ,h,> b*«!' '“I. 'h« ™>"ff
and yet not a single act of any impor- j „ „ 8n*“hcd ,r0"' sm,f-
tance has he done to benefit the, Ha,t-W*y betw'CT ,h" ,nd *¥
farmer. Where is the law he had ■
passed that specially benefits the.
farmer? He advocated a wild-cat i r e'
State bank to use (and lose) the
“Folks hunger so for loving at thje
night-time,
When wearily they take them homj?
to rest
At slumber-song and tuming-out-the-
light time— >
Of all the times for loving, that’ll
the best!
croon-time,
While bickering and worriment
rife.
I*
use
children’s school money, but the legis-
lature was too sensible to listen to >
him. He advocated a law making it {
a felony for a farmer to plant more
than twenty acres of cotton, but the
law-makers laughed him to scorn. He
is the farmers’ friend for political i
purpose only, for he has done nothing
for them but to give them some fool-
ish advice that would work their ruin j
if they heeded it. One thing alone
ought to be sufficient to condemn Col-
quitt in the eyes of every true Amer-
ican, and that is his denunciation of
a strictly American president in the
effort to win for himself the support
of foreigners who hate Wilson be-
cause he is an American president
and not an ally of, and sympathizer
with, the German emperor. A man
who will be disloyal to his own coun-
try in order to win office is not wor-
thy the support of any American.
-. . 4: * j
“Folks want a lot of loving ever#
minute—
The sympathy of others and their
smile!
Till life’s end, from the moment they
begin it.
Folks need a lot of loving all the
while.”
J. E. SURRATT TO
MAKE ADDRESS
Judging by the way the Russians
are capturing cities frojn the Germans
it is evident that they will retake Pe-
runa, which the Germans captured
from the Russians early in the war.
—Tvler Courier-Times.
They will also probably make a des-
perate effort to drive the Bulgars
away from Kastoria, which they have
just taken.
w ap-
pear and contest the same if thU^ ae«
proper on or before the October Term
1916, of said County Court, commenc*
ing and to be holden at the Court
To the Sheriff or Any Constable, of House of said County Jn the City of
Bonham, on the 2nd day of October,
A. D. 1916, when said account and ap-
plication wiil be consider-:*! by sai4
court.
Given under my hand and seal of
said court, at my office, in the City of
Bonham, this 11th day of August, A.
D. 1916.
J. L. DOBBS,
Clerk C. C. Fannin County, Texaa.
By Myrtle Hancock, Deputy Clerk.
33-6t.
I
WANTED
All your tin and plumbing work;
We know' how and will appreciate
your business. 23-tf
McClure Tin & Plumbing Ca.
-x-
WANT IT NOW?
Well improved 80 acres sandy land,
for goods, wares and merchandise pur-! ^ ^ mile pike, only
Somebody will
33-2t.
weeks previous to the return day here-
of .summon the said A. S. Covell to
be and appear before me at a regular
term of the Justice Court of Precinct j
No. one, in said county of Fannin to I
be, held at my office in the town of
Bonham, in the county aforesaid, on 1
the 25th. day of September, A. D. :
1916, to answer the suit of the said
Graham, Crawford Co., plaintiff
against the said A. S. Covell, defend-:
ant, said plaintiff’s demand being for j
the sum of $68.60 due upon an account
chased by defendant of plaintiff and i easj terms,
furnished to defendant by plaintiff, j ** warn,
said account being itemized and filed
in this cause. *
Plaintiff has caused an attachment
to be issued in this cause and to be
levied in and upon one five-passenger
automobile, Overland, No. 739, and
one Chalmers Roadster Automobile
No. 763, both siezed as the property
of defendant.
Herein fail not and of this writ
make due return at the regular term
of the Justice Court for precinct No.
one, in said County of Fannin, to be
beld on the 2“<th day of September, at
10 o’clock a. m. as the law directs.
Given under my hand this the 10th
vlay of August, A. D. 1916.
R. C- BRAGG,
Justice of the Peace Precinct No. 1.,
Fannin County, Texas.
Issued on August 10, 1916. 32-F-4t
Ashley Evans Land Co.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
888888888888**11
DR. RALPH C. DAVIS
Bye, Itr, Nose aad Throat
«
a
a
-- a
Fannin County National Bank a
Building, Bonham, Texas a
Office Phone 454 - Rea. 288 a
V
8888888 888*
888838888888**a
DR. E. H. H. FOSTER a
- a
a
LOVING MEMORY OF
MRS. ELLA WILLINGHAM
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
Pbyaiciaa and Sargooa
Once again the golden gates of
heaven have swung open, once again
a tired weary soul has wended its
way to the great beyond, but this
Grim Reaper is no respector of per-
sons, and in all things concerning this
life we must submit to the Allwise
All Canning Club members and Ag-
ricultural Club member^ are request-!
ed to meet at the Firemen’s Club
room, in Bonham, Saturday, August : Ever-knowing God, who in His wis-
26th, at 10:30 A. M. Mr. J. E. Sur-' dom doeth all things for the best
ratt, Secretary of the Red River- Val-1 Mrs. Willingham had lived a useful
Offlc* over W. P. Claypool'a M
Drug Store *
Phone Office and Realdenw *
888888888888***
88888888888* *8 «
8 DR. M. V. GRAY *
8 Deatiat «
8 - a
8 Office Over First National Bank *
8 Telephone Number 862 N
8888888888Q8MH*
ley Fair, will address the club -mem- j life, was 40 years old and was widely
bers and bring to them an interesting j known throughout our community as j
message. We hope that all club mem-1 a noble hearted woman. She had been
88888888888888
»!
WHAT OTHERS THINK. 8
8
88888888888888
The Mother Argument.
i bers in Fannin County will avail them
selves of the opportunity of
Mr. Surratt at this time.
Miss Edna Huffaker,
A. S. Van Kirk
—Will H. Evans, Bonham, 33-"t.
The Commoner.
The strongest argument In favor of
woman suffrage is the mother argu-
ment. I love my children—as much,
I think, as a father qan; but I ami -x---
not in the same class with my wife, j APPRECIATE THE PAPER
I do not put any father In the same i Bromide, Okla., Aug 21, 1916.
class with the mother in love for the 1 ^PW8:
child. If you would know why the- Find enclosed money ordei to pay
mother’s love for a child is the sweet-! balance on the paper and for a con-
est, tenderest, most lasting thing in tinuation of same, lj will send a dol-
the world, you will find the explana-!lar ,ater- 1 must haYe thp P*Ppr
Yours truly,
A F Keener. M D.
living in this county 19 years, having
hearing come here from Alabama. She leaves
her husband and four children besides
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Berrie
Kent, and a sister to mourn her
death. A host of friends will sadly
miss* her for she was always ready
with tender words and caresses to
heal the heart-wounds and scatter
flowers in the pathway of others, she
NEAR EL WOOD. \ , ■
54 1-2 acres at Elwood, 40 a(rcs cul-
tivated, 3 acres in orchard, five room
house, small barn, great abundance of
running water. Possession few days, was ever forgetful of herself, her no-
tion in the Bible: “Where your treas-
ures are there will your heart be
also.” The child is the treasure of the
mother; she invests her life in her
child. When the mother of the Gracci
was asked: “Where are your jewels?"
she pointed to her sons. The mother’s j
life trembles in the balance at Ahe j
child’s birth, and for years it is the
object of her constant care. She‘ex-
pends upon it her nervous force and I
energy; she endow* it with the wealth {
of her love. She dreams of w^at it i
* to do and be—and, O, if a mowier’s
dreams only came true, what** differ- i
ent world this world would be. The 1
most pathetic struggle that this earth
knows is not the struggle between ,
men upon the battlefield; it is the
struggle of a mother to save her child
when wicked men set trap* for It and
lay snares for it. And as long a* the
ballot is giveni to those who conspire
to rob the home of a child it is not
fair—no one can believe it fair—to
tic a mother’s hand* while she Is try-
ble heart went out to others and with 1
an ever generous hand she profered j
solace in the time of need. She will j
he missed by those who loved her |
bc<t: by th'.=e who went to her fo- j
advice and comiort in hours of sorrow
and by those with whom she -e-1
jo’Ved in their hours of success and:
happiness. She was a truly nob'e!
U-hristian having professed religion
and- joined the Methodist church at a
Sewing Machines
REPAIRED BY
PHIL JACOBS
WILL CIVE YOU PERFECT
SATISFACTION
I SUPPLY NEEDLES- OIL SELLS
PARTS FOR All RINDS
SIINC YOUR SEWING MACHINE
TROUBLES TO
ZLE BLUE STORE
NORTH MAIN STREET
BONHAM TEXAS
EXAS PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE FOR YOUNG LADIES
This* school ir> fo-- rt*" n y-
Iflt.on. Its. location
M . K. .<• T. . 1 a ... fa
Music. Art. F.ynt ■- ‘-i"-.-v •
sir l.«l\»ar«l llHilcr l’.-rr>
■in i linr-fl .-i nlx'nOmena.l development and repu-
• and • \eiid-iit, on tin- t) tllar-Waco Interurban and
lt!>- cf . xtierier.c- i t-acher^. Departments: Literary.
h. i *>>tr. \-ti- Science. .
\i»itI»K illru-tiir of music. Voice teaoker personally
Indorsed h> Kmma K.-iines. i'luno and violin teachers from best eonservntorles. Art
teacher from the Corcoran. c\prcsvlon teacher from Kfuu *. One of the six beat dn-
nrvtlr neither teachers in the I niti it states. >evv and complete domestic setenee
equipment. Modern lanuuaKt- tnhtes. Standard four-year A. II. course. Pure water
from s'oo-foot vvcli. Property worth fJ-l.ttbO.
One patron iuys: A cultured, Ohiistian home where order, .system, comfort and
refinement rerun uprt m*." It- jut fib- are noted f-*r their gentle, quiet, ladylike
manners It you-.want your laughter trained to he an ideal woman send her to
T. P. C. Send for illustrated catalogue.
R. C. SUMMERVILLE, A. M., President, BoiM Milford, Texas.
i
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Evans, Ashley. The Bonham News (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, August 25, 1916, newspaper, August 25, 1916; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth913487/m1/2/?q=evans: accessed November 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bonham Public Library.