The Daily Favorite. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 289, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 20, 1909 Page: 2 of 4
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THE DAILY YAVOBIT*
•M'ltpiiuu* ul all showing
th it the growth ef a generation
frun the egg state to the adult oc
cupies from ten to fourteen day*.
Am u matter of fact, large sums
of money are spent annually in the
protection of property in the Uu^
ted States. Larire sums of money
Will Our Fight
Against Corrup-
tion Lessen?
catter
Kiutuk.
W. 8. 8i*oTTh
Any man w.,1
ijtss knows thi
lew wholesale 1
It is more iml
i.,2 business 1
may baaU rid
mcnty easy to
you will find th
one bank who
care of him tnrl
The man J
can not keep hi
confidence, bu
nests, he ma^
eggs warm. .
Moral: Do I
lnttrrtl at tl>e PoatoflRc* at Bonbai
Tczaa, a» Second-CUaa Matter
fOLK of Ml»»®urt
OMTrUlht by J. B. By E*-Cov«rnor JOSEPH W
Purdy, Boston.
HERE has been a great awakening on the subject of
| J J individual responsibility for the affairs of city, state
! |! and nation within the last few years. M ILL 1 lib
! ^ v 11 MOVEMENT TOWARD HIGHER IDEALS GO
! !! ONf Will not the people soon forget? Have not
'•♦•••••*<» the people already forgotten, and will not things be
allowed to go on in the eame old way as they were before the awaken-
ing of the people ? These questions are being asked all over the coun-
try today.
REFORMS SOMETIMES DIE, BUT REVOLUTIONS NEVER 00
BACKWARD, ANO A REVOLUTION HA8 BEEN WROUGHT IN THE
CONSCIENCES OF MEN. THIS AWAKENING IS MERELY A DE-
OFFICK NORTH CENTER ST.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Daily, in advance................
• is Month*, in advance.........
Per Month, in advance..........
fllfS CAUSE HEAVY LOSSES
Tl.« tine ‘Hinnution of the so I disease averted if everybody would
ca.led typ on tv «i vp on I ^eep their premises in a sanitary
fever and the true scientific evi-1 ' , ,
, condition and wage a never end-
denee regarding its role as a car-1.
h * . , rag war on the pestiferous fly.
rier of that disease have only re- ° . .
. , . . . Swat the fly and do it now.
ceutly lx‘en worked out. A species ■
of mosquito ha« beeu demonstrat-1 GOOD ROADS.
ed to be the cause of the spread of I -
.malaria. Another kind of mos-l Now is the time to plant good
.--4)uito is the cause of yellow fever, roads.—Waco Times Herald.
.and now the house fly is consider-1 -
ed an agency in the distribution The way some counties are vot-
of typhoid fever, summer com-ling bonds to build good roads
plaint, cholera infantum, etc. means a great good to Texas.—
The numlier of bacteria on a sin -1 Athens Review.
jHc Ay may range all the way from • .
&50 to 6,tt00j000. Early in the fly f Bills county will likely be the
t season the number of bacteria is j first to furnish its quota of the
» comparatively small, while later it Red to the Rio Grande roadway.—
. in comparatively large. The place Waco Times-Herald.
where flies live determines the “-
numlier they carry. It hardly Don’t overlook the fact that you
seems possible for so small a bit of k>g«?t very good and busy on
life to carry so large a number of I the agitation of first-class country
organisms. roads.—Austin Statesman.
The method which has been used ",“~"
to determine the number of bac Get the S00* roads idea thor'
teria on a fly was to catch the fly ou^y your mind and carefully
from several sources by means of consider a bond issue in connection
a sterile fly net, introduce it into therewith.-Corsicana Sun.
» sterile bottle ami pour into the The ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
bottle a known quantity of stern- . , , ...
. , ' , J. see wherein good roads would be
m*d aater. Then the bottle is . , . , .. . a. .
, . . , . . of general and lasting benefit to
s taken to wash the bacteria Irom . “ , . , . _ .
...... , , the town and country is not made
the fly’, body ami leg, to take up 00t 0, lheright uiDd of materi,, to
the oigaimms that would com, m L a„ onice ho|,|er._Watahachie
contact with a pan of milk if a ny
should fall into it. g ‘ _
If flies would stay in the pig pen The fact that every driver wi„
o. its vicinity there would be less wlect tfce ^ roads possible over
objection to them and the various which to driye with a load ghows
kinds of organisms they carry, but that the individual is in favor cf
flies are migratory insects and vis.it good roads. It is only collective-
everything under the sun. It >« ny that man favors bad roads.—
almost impossible to keep them Beaumont Enterprise,
out of kitchens, dining rooms, cow ____________
a tables and milk room*. Miss Helen Hickman will arrive
The only remedy for this com here tomorrow and lecture at the
m in condition of things is to re- First Methodist church tomorrow
move the pig pen as far as possible afternoon at 4:80 o’clock. All the
from the dairy and dwelling house, ladies in the eity are invited to
Extieme care should be taken in hear her. The lecture is free. Miss
keeping flies out ot the cow stables Hickman will leave shortly for
milk house and dwelling house. I Brazil, where she goes to do mis-
Flies walking over tood are theLjon work ^ a representative of
cause of the worst contaminationsI the Foreign Mission 8ociety of the
t mt can occur from the standpoint North Texas M. E. conference.
of cleanliness and the danger of -
distributing disease germs. \ Correction.
Ihe danger of the typhoid oi jQ ^j,e writeup in Saturday’s
1 ouse fly in the carryingof disease I of Aunt Wallie Lovelace>
sh-i ms has been abundantly demon-Lherevas a mjstake iu her age
^»>u ated. Flies and mosquitoes ntc- ,t „hould have read 93 yeanj of agt.
* $’,tate an a,,uual outla>' for w,t“ instead of 9S, as it appeared.
f >w aud door screens in the Uni- _
.t^-d States ol not less than $10,-1 If people with symptoms of kid-
>0,000. ney or i,iadder trouble could real-
j Tt>e estimated decrease in thehzc thoir danger they would with-
it.il assets of the country thiough out loss of time commence taking
yphoid fever in a single year is Foley’s Kidney Remedy. This
lore than $350,000,000. The groat remedy stops the pain and
louse fly, an important agent in the irregularities, strengthens and
he spread of this disease, i6 re- builds up these organs aud there
ponsible for a vciy considerableL, no danger of Bright’s disease or
portion of this decrease in vital other serious disorder. Do not
*u»ets. disregard the early symptons.
As an agency in the spiead of Sold by all druggists,
sber intestinal diseases this sum
^ lie greatly increased, and yet ^dS Made Good.
walk’’ 'S allowtd to broed unre‘ X- J- Muishall and wife of Han
' voui'^ over th® United States; I Antonio are here to visit the for-
{allowed to enter freely the mer’s parents, W. E. Marshall and
, » Of the great invjority of the wife. Newt Marshall is an honor
* -ftle; it is allowed to spread bac- graduate of the Bonham High
a treely over their food sup school and the Htate University
#esiu the markets and in the where he took the B. A. degree,
itchens and dining rooms. Mr. .Marshall is now conducting
w Strings a* it may appear, an ex- the Marshall Timiuing school at
bansdve study of the coudi- 8in Antonio, where he has ostab-
tions which produce house flics in I lished quito a reputation as an able
numbers has never been un de. I educator. This is another of the
The life history of the insect in many instances where the Bouham
general w.is, dowm to 1873, men I raised boy has made good iu oilier
tioned in only three European Jcltie*,
works and lew exact facia were __________
given. Iu 1873 a Salem (Mass. ) I It takes more than paint and
jkkysiciB i aludieil the iiuiuot rma powder to alter the complexion of
tions of the insect and g; \e de ls woman’s though*. 1
J. W. RutMlI, Prea.
J. T. Kennedy, V-Pre».
C. L. Bradford, Cashier
Ed D. Steger
A. B. Kennedy
j- B. Ru»»«:i
X l' BaiWy
T. L. Roffn
J. T. Dale
Richard B. Semple ^
Vi>
NESS EVERYWHERE IS THE MISTAKEN VIEW THAT IT INJURES
A CITY OR STATE TO PROSECUTE WRONGDOING.
I have heard men deplore the exposure of public corruption be-
cause it hurts a city. I have heard uien object to prosecuting trusts
and monopolies in order to make them obey the Inw because it hurts
business.
GIVE IT
Such views are entirely false. NO CITY CAN BE INJURED
BY THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE PEOPLE'S LAWS. To
do otherwise is to substitute the will of the official for the laws of the
people, and that is tyranny. No state can be hurt by exposing graft-
ing. To do otherwise is to connive at it. There is no secret remedy
known for evils of this character. They CANNOT BE CURED BY
HIDING THEM. The disgrace is not in their correction, but in
SUBMISSION TO THEM with supine indifference.
IT IS WELL FOR A STATE TO DISPLAY ITS VIRTUES AND
NOT TO PARADE ITS FAULTS, BUT IT SHOULD NOT BE FORGOT-
TEN THAT THE HIGHEST CIVIC VIRTUE IS THE OVERTHROW OF
DEPRAVITY.
AND IT WILL GET WELL
ASK
YtllOWilOHE NATI
CALI FOR Nil
THE A-Y-P £A
j© WHY DON'T
A PATHETIC LITTLE GROUP
children were from out near!
venna and were bouud forll
Holiness Orphan Home at Laol
co. Their forlorn, uukempt spfH
ance was enough to touchahj
of stone, helpless, dependent!
they were. ]
Mrs. Walter Inglish, than xha
there is no better or more > jfl
able woman in Bonham,
for and took charge of the lit!
waifs and will care for them uafl
an agent of the orphans’ homed
come for them. It was truly,
pathetic little crowd, and it hi
blessing that such institutions I
the one they are bound for eiidj
You are cordially invited toj
tend 8uuday school at Moon
Chapel every Sunday evening:
2:30 o’clock.
Pour Little Children Arrive Here
This Morning on the
9:15 Katy
Little Farms the Salvation
Of the City’s Poor.
By BOLTON HALL, Author and Lecturer.
ARMING is in general the most convenient occupation for
those whose business becomes unprofitable through the amal-
gamation of industries or the trusts. Here capital, 6mall or
~ tarfT* and executive ability or experience can be utilized to
the best advantage.
But our RISING GENERATION KNOWS PRACTICALLY
NOTHING ABOUT IT. They learn the date of the battle of Can-
nae and of the death of Xerxes and hundreds of other dates which
they could find if they ever wanted them in a dollar dictionary of
dates, but they have never learned that radishes will grow between
the rows of lettuce.
OUR PUBLIC SCHOOLS AND DISTRICT SCHOOLS TEACH THE
CHILDREN HOW CINCHONA COMES FROM INDIA, BUT THEY DO
NOT TEACH THEM HOW FOOD COMES FROM THE LAND AT
THEIR DOORS.
Huxley said that “small means do not ordiparily produce small
results; they produce no results.” If we are to turn the current
that carries the human drift in ever increasing quantity into our al-
ready congested cities, we must have organized effort, not merely to
take a few hundred men back to the land, but to show uncommercially
that it is COMMERCIALLY PROFITABLE FOR OTHERS OX
A BUSINESS BASIS TO TAKE THOUSANDS UPON THOU-
SANDS BACK TO THE FARMS.
lor this purpose the little Land league is organized with such
men as J. Pierpont Morgan, George Foster Peabody, William Lloyd
Garrison, Poultney Bigelow and others, the object being to GET
THE PEOPLE BACK TO THE LAND.
This is the SOLUTION OF OUR PROBLEM OF CONGES-
TION. Model tenements are all very well, but thev INCREASE
THE LURE OF THE TOWN and bring still more to try for the
great possibilities of profit in the cities.
THE RIGHT KIND OF FARMING IS JUST AS PROFITABLE A8
ANY CITY OCCUPATION. IT IS MORE PLEASURABLE, MORE IN-
SPIRING. ACCORDINGLY THE TIDE NOW tubmc Tnu,.Bn -----
Trade F
One sees many strange sights in
and arouud railway station*!, some
humorous, some sad and pathetic,
but one of the most touching inci-
dents the reporter has ever wit-
nessed was this morning when the
Katy local arrived. Four little
children were passengers on the
train.
There were three girls and one
boy in the party, the eldest, the
boy, being eleven yeais old and
the youngest six years old. The
Is something that no ml
knoweth the hour wher
strong companies as ex
UNDERTA
A full and comp]
I'mlertaking goc
Over First National Ba
north side of building, |
Over FirstNatM Kanl
Torna
Are liable to come at
*on of the year, for i
companies represented!
MWSS* aiid
^ /to hlgh^ff"™
following described
Tad in said county aboi
/north, HO K. from lid
( 103 4 5 acres of ('haj
bo acre survey, krmj
place. This July 10, J
C. B. Bridge,
otvr4rUfw 8
lint of himself.
Tih' -Leonard tl
•rj
/ . M
Y (w J
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Spotts, W. S. The Daily Favorite. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 289, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 20, 1909, newspaper, July 20, 1909; Bonham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth977222/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bonham Public Library.