The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 228, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 26, 1926 Page: 3 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Resigns
Y
•t-
'■
a
Effective June 27, 1926
i
tbit I hid
l com
y
nt East ‘9th Street
Phone Lamar Ml
(9
1801
Lemar anas
long In
up again.
\
A
BAY
♦
m.
to
By}’
Ar. Twlen
Mala
ThcNayJimted
1
e prize "bust" was made at
i
On Last Day of Term
SawG5
Y
LOANS
y»
5,
ri
o d
SEATS
5
Meder Free Fane
V,‘we Senll Yem
CONFIDENTIAL
of the MIGHTY
E
meat
No Interest
No Interest
Fort Worth
, f'
Plan Cot _
- •.
\
T. J. (Uncle Tom) Maben
Under Supervision of State Banking Department
10M MAIN STREET
LAMAR 1546
i
$
Candidate
Or the Salounge Chair of
For
The Pioneer Locals
-
JUSTICE
Select It At Night
Between Fort Worth and Cleburne
of the
PEACE
I
s
/
-1
7’
I
4 .
L +,
)
>
h
I,
1
L ‘
0
EIIIX a
CHANGE IN
SCHEDULE
that
yet b
Precinct 1
Place 1
I
LIQUOR APPEAL
DIVIDED COURT
FRIENDS MENACE
TO CANDIDATES
1926
.X*
Fort Worth Kiwanis Club mem-
bora who attended conventton re-
cently to make reports Monday.
menced it 25 years ago—an en-
thusiasm that I had begun to lose
as I allowed myself to grow tat
J
’ll
1
found-
theater
J
\
\
Lv. Ft Wert
teas r. m.
a small I
east of 1
4 with |
ta rand I
winen-
are next !
ur mi0a I
of the
M. al
detalls
a wort
V
i
i
TO RETELL OLD
: . IN HISTORY
Years of Effort Win Be
Argument for Road
7’
v
-5
Fall School To Be Larger
Than Ever, Announced
3
286
K
It”
! 1
At
No. 18—Mid-Continent Special will leave Fort Worth
9:55 .p. m. instead of 9:80 p. m., arriving Oklahoma
City, Wichita, Kansas City, St. Louis, St. Paul and
Minneapolis same aa now.
Motor ear to Graham will continue to leave at 5:00
p. ni'., but wttt arrive Graham -at >;OO p. m. instead
of 9:30 p. m. -
Motor Car From Graham Will Arrive Fort Worth
At 11:15 A. M. Instead of 11:25 A. M.
V. N. TURPIN, City Passenger Agent
4
water five miles deep, and is thus
nearly 30,000 feet from base to
summit.
________Husinesa and profes-
slonal men, as well as his papilo.
that my friends have always mar-
veled ..that I was able to do m
CANDID BUTCHER
"Are you sure there is no horse
Mk.X V C
« weuh*
BUI h
Half-Pdst Every Hour From 6:30 4. M.
to 8:30 P. M. and Again at 11 P. M.
- SPEED WITH SAFETY
? ■
A ■
For People Like You and Me
The Morris Plan is making loans from 950 to 32,500 to
men and women just like you and me. We have unexpected
expenses and places to use money which will help to insure
our future independence. There may not be enough In the
evings account or maybe we prefer not to une our savings.
Whet aM we de if we have tmeuttielent eellateret
• If we have net estebitahee ■ berrewimg meeera
M a lai bankt
The Morris Plan has answered that question for over (.000
Fort Worth people. both men and women. The terms of that
company are wisely designed to meet just the elreumatanees
is which you and I are situated.
USEFUL UNITS FOR FORDS
Bosch Ignitions ,...812.75 Zenith Carburetors $12.30
Detroit Water and Oil Pump .................810.50
SAM AvAgMLIo
GENERATOR SERVICE CO.
2
622
COMMERCIAL HOTEL
■> meH ef BeMew PMMM
sm maim rxF
4 .
/ ' -
1.
§
. Are Occupied by People Who
--Want The Beit, WieHier H Be —
The Box-Seat of the Ox-Cart
—
George Kreyenbuhi, A. B. Fraser.
E- Bideker, E. F. Freeman.
tAWIi Qutgtey, Clyde Ar Penr,
A. Lon Baker, Charles Allgaler,
Bam H Lane, Don Cowan. Fred
M. Brown and E. E. Voce.
STORM KLLS TWO MEN.
By United Prana
CHICAGO: June 2*.—Two men
My platform is my past record in the same office
for honesty, efficiency and fair dealings.
I am probably the only Confederate Veteran seek-
ing office in Tarrant County, and perhaps you will
never again have the opportunity to cast another
vote for a confederate Veteran. ,
(Political Adv.)
The picture at the left shows Mrs. Gibson after she had lost 80
pounds and ‘wearing a dinner dress that makes her look even thinner.
At the right, Mrs. Gibson as she looked five months previous when she
weighed IBS pounds and before she began her reducing regtme.
-u.lcu
1 my shoulders. My arms have be-
' come something lose than columns
of fat and my ankles are becom-
' Ing such a size that I am having
1 all my skirte—which have stead-
ily grown longer since my hips
' peeled down—made shorter this
: week.
I am feleing better, doing more
work and looking better than I
1 have in two years.
Go thou and do likewise.
The Bad.
By United Press.
PHILADELPHIA, June 26. —
The Matson liner Malolo, largest
passenger steamship ever built in
an American shipyard, will be
launched today from the shipways
at the William Cramp A Sons Co.
here.
Before Secretary of Commerce
Hoover, Shipping Board Commis-
Honors J. H. Walsh and W. 8.
Hill, and distinguished leaders of
American shipping, the Malolo
will be christened by Lurlin and
Dorenclo Roth, 6, twin daughters
of William P. Roth, vice president
of the Matson Navigation Co.
The Malolo will be placed in
the San Francisco-Honolulu run in
April, 1117.
It is 532 feet long, with a beam
of tl.fMt; oil will be used as
fuel.
live coup died It is emphasised
that the prestige and prompt ae-
s
supported him again*! Klan at-
larks. He had served Birmingham
omsr
A .distinctive feature of "The Morris Plan" is in eliminating th*
embarrasament which people sometimes have In dineuneine
their personal atfmirs. Th* emptoyew of th* Fort Worth Morri*
Plan Company give their time freely and cheerfully and they
conaider no personal problem as petty sr umimporant. They
also know from experience that applicants for loans desire
prompt service and, therefore, regarless of size, all loans ar*
«iven Immediate connideratton at the tints application is made.
personal contessions by adding
when fate struck again la the
form of a second panic. That was
in 1907, Clark went to Europe.
Powell In 1019.
Two times the project had been
pushed under water but it wasn't
, E. amroan, Owner
diimmaunkazm
NEA, Cleveland Bureau.
Following months at fruitless
effort on the part of the Ku Klux
Klan to oast him. Chester K.
Handman baa resigned as prinet-
were killed and many basements j*1 "r Wondlawn.
in the eity were flooded during a larzent phool.in .Airninshom
killed were both atfuek by light- nttaburgh.
ning. "lomel ----
a
HOUSTON ON DEFENSIVE.
BELTON, June 2«. — The de-
fenae today started its presenta-
tion of' testimony bearing on the
slaying of Garrett White by Sledge
Houston at Somerville last March.
The State rested its case last
night. White was slain as the
outgrowth of political enmity
growing out of White’s re-election
as constable and the defeat of
Houston in 1*24. officers believe.
2377
Joseph Weldon Bafley, former
U. S. Senator, wii epeak next
week la interest of Governor Fer-
guson’s campaign.
In 1*13 Hurley, Bailey and oth-
ers succeeded in interesting a
large mid-western trust company
la financing a plains railroad.
Everything looked rosy when
along earns the World War. An-
other set of plans was juaked.
Col. C. H. Powell. father of
the TPAG, appeared in 1*12,
along with the late John F. Wal
lace, first engineer on the Pan-
ama Canal, and Edwin J. Noon-
an of Chicago, noted railroad en-
gineer. Wallace pronounced the
TPAG plan "the best unbuilt rail-
road in the United States."
----------------PAGE S—THE FOET WORTH PRESS—TINE 26, 1926-
WHAT I ACCOMPLISHED’ IN FIVE MONTHS.)‛SCOUT LEADERS
---------------------J GRADUATED -
1849
Vie
Sunday Island, in the Pacific, la
really the tallest mountain in thesnchools for 18 years,
world. It rises 2000 feet out of
rIHE black dinner gowa I am
A wearing in this picture is the
one that has the moot alenderiz-
ing effect in all my wardrobe. It
is very simple, only a slight trac-
lag of art steel about the neck I
and sleeves.
I have loot all the fat across 1
”XUSAIN,June 24.—On the last
day of the term of court, the
judges of the Court of Criminal
Appeals were divided in an opin-
ion deciding a liquor case. With
Judge O. 8. Lattimore dissenting,
the court granted appellant's sec-
ond motion for rehearing in the
case of I. L. Sawyer, convicted in
Hill County of ponsesging liquor
for Mie and sentenced to one
‛ year, and reversed and remanded
the ease for another trial.
Admission of testimony of a
witness for whom Sawyer appear-
ed to have acted as agent in se-
curing a quart of liquor was re-
garded by a majority of the court
as constituting error, the higher
court holding that the trial judge
was not authorised to assume that
it was a sale.
If Sawyer was the witness’
agent in securing the whlakey.
then in law his act was free from
criminal wrong and had ao signif-
icance as throwing light upon the
subsequent transaction for which
he was prosecuted, the opinion
held.
Judge Lattimore, ia dissenting,
admitted that conviction was un-
der circumstantial evidence, but it
was his opinion there were no
flrounds for a reversal of judg-
How Fort Worth has groped
since 1890 for rail connections
with Central West Texas, such as
the Texas. -Panhhandle A Gulf
would provide will be recounted
to the Interstate Commerce Com-
misalon July 19, whea that body
hears final oral arguments of the
throe rallroada seeking permit* to
huiid new truckage into West
$ The ltory will be told by F. W.
xtll and William J. Bailey of
Fort Worth, both officlals of the
TPAG Administration Corpora-
tion. Bailey has been a promi-
Tarrant County -
Subject to the action of
the Democratic Pri-
mary, July 24, 1926.
d
a.”
RESTRICTRD
ROSEN TERRACE
• blocks beyond Rosen
Hts. ear line on Lake Road.
•2.50 to *10 down.
Rosen Heights Land Co.
ma w. 25th st Pros. M4
3 t
a SPANISH REBEL vomrrnnzak pnisox
UNDER ARREST VIENNA. June 24.— Bucharest
------- dispatches said 4* life prisoners
MADRID, June 2*. — General I escaped from the Tarzokna prison
Aguilera. Amplieated in the revonlyenterday, killing the guards and
lutionary plot to overthrow the ,, “ ’ .. 21...
government, has been arrested At I uking dynamite to blast their way
Taragonlar and will be brought to to freedom. Four of the escaping
Madrid today. i prisoners were slain.
As exeitement over the abor- ........
Completion at scout leadership
and training course by 96 men
has been announced by Clyde A.
Peary, chairman.
These men were included la aa
enrollment at 165. Thirty-tive
others have credit for two-thirds
attendance which will be applied
on the aaxt tnatruction school. ’
Fa, course which is to be even
larger la j scope aad attendance
than the on* just completed Ie
now being planned, Peary said.
Mm of recreational training along
with scout instruction gained fa-
vor with businsM men who took
the course, Henry said.
Those who received advanced
standing were: Charles Oawait,
W. P. Higgens. R. R. Maxon.
. NORTHERN TEXAS TRACTION CO’
sent figure in "paper roads" pre-
viously built over the survey of__
. —_____w-a.___ I much work with the samtMthu-
............... MHey H— jrj—ti , , ,
The late Michael Hurley was
the first builder to recognise the
E-
ASSAULT SUSPECT HELD.
"‛XUSTN,June 24.—Governor
M Miriam A. Ferguson today tasued
T aa executive warrant for the re-
turn to Texas of Odle Bentoa, un-
der indictment in Coke County for
1 criminal assault and Mid to be
under arrest at Hampton, low*,
according to the papers filed in
the executive department
and logy. 1 Mid to myself that
I was growing old. I know bow
that 1 wm only growing lazy. 1
have goae back to taking care of
myself. I had thought that I did
not have time to do it I know
now that if I had not taken time
I would have soon been a victim
of overeating, over-strained nerves
and under-exercise. »
Gainesville when a Moody intro-
High Tribunal Disagreesd“g05myuntg“ Eom2, ‛ouh
nr.ct nev T™ old ■" he said, "made • triumphal
need of a road to the plains. That
was in ill*. And plans of financ-
ing the line had advanced to the
point where there was every rea-
son to believe it would be built,
when came the terrible panic of
1893. Hurley's plans were among
many others which fell by the
wayside.
The project was revived ta
1907 by James W. Swayne, now
chairman of the State board ad-
ministering the employers’ lia-
bility act. Swayne was success-
ful in getting the support of Sen-
ator Clark of Montana, million-
aire railroad builder. Clarke had
agreed to finance a line from Fort
Worth to Albuquerque, N. M.,
Drive around down town tonight after
the ghow and gee the beautiful, window
digplaya. “He” will enjoy it and you can
decide together on your next, day's
purchases. Window shopping at night *
A. ia made doubly delightful by the bril-
liantly illuminated streets and show ■
windows.
1 -
LAUNCH OCEAN
LINER TODAY
entry into Jerusalem."
Colquitt's "Free Lance" gives
Jim another opening which he is
using. The "Free Loom" • re-
ferred to Moody as a graduate of
the university. Moody makes no
such claim. He says he had not
the money to finish his law
course, pawned his watch aad took
the State bar examinations m he
could begin practice.
Yet the ‘Tim Lance", state-
ment give* Ferguson a chance to
quote Dan’s educational record of
D. D. F. ia government Fergu-
son explains that D. D. F. means
"Darling Dan Failed.’*
The Auetin American, also sup-
porting Moody; pictured him as
refusing liquor as a medicine.
Moody is a pro but Ferguson uses
this to picture him as a fanaUe.
w ...... । * 1
ARTICLE AB
NOW la passing let me give you
IN, a concrete illustration of
what I have done with mxeit. I
have followed the regime laid
down very carefully aad am sUll
following it The picture today
shows what I did with myoelf la
about five months.
I think it is worth any sacrifice
that I have made, aad agate I say
to every woman that reads these
words, that every woman can '
well unless she I* deformed. It
Is up to the woman. If she cares
more for her oom aad her stom-
ach thaa, she does for her ap:
pearance and her health, oho will
Mt more than she ought and take
less exercise than la necessary aad
will eventually look like I did ia
this first picture.
I am going to close these very
tion of Premier Frimo De Rivera, meat in this sausager"
coupled with the personal popu: "I can assure you there is no
larity of King Alphonso, saved meat at all there!''—Nagels Lus-
Spain from the peril of revolt I tige Welt, Berlin.
MARSHALL. June J*.—"Save
me from my friends; I can take
care of my enemies," la an old
political mw. All candidatea will
Indorse it.
Moody is the worst sufferer
from hie friends in this cam-
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Toomer, Morrison R. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 228, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 26, 1926, newspaper, June 26, 1926; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1545986/m1/3/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.