The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 303, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 21, 1922 Page: 2 of 8
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IT
The Heart of Turkis
W
Nib
education of children to protect •v Unite Prena
Sea
fl
AA
‘d
Inatit
Amusement Calendar
1
1‘
t
”h
4
mass
1
OF SOLVING MURDER MYSTERY
And Confectionery
to protect the strikers from moles-
l
Jack Holt
A
Quick News
eeceeeeeee
[ “who’s in, that room" stuff, he's
weemennuennenenennnenennpenenennnnnnnnnnnent
HIPPODROME
will be
Robert W. Chambers
k
A .
Preaz
Serial
Iamar 6684
3
With Music
rem®
6
The
of Kemal
do-
wagwww
Columbia Grafonola
LLY LEITZEL AND "SAIDEE"
well
c‘
Rene
Horace
ed to witness such a aight when
“A
T
$1.00 to $2.50
But
bore it merely rep-
It
O
Weekly
J"
So
t 1
•Tha
ran
T
HCENSES.
A
802 Main Street
ei
g2aj
2"
A
080646
X
h
R F
1-
Did You Take Advantage of the
Men’s Suit Event?
with the suspicion that Bulga-
ria may support Turkey, has
Swift Makes Deal
With Monterey Firm
Mr
Than
club i
Very probable the Armstrong
steel plant will be buUt here. aay
buniness men who are interested.
’ear Desert War
Between Bedouin
And Wahibi Tribes
Hase
until
to sta
Ung l
I do?
. Co
tell k
if yo
get t
wil i
Wright & Dietrich
The Somewhat Different
I
n
Dr.
Celun
niki
»
you
her
• I*
Almon Q. Locke, who doaatod
$14,900 to the county two year
ago to be used as a fund for the
troope on Ita borders (6). Mean-
while Soviet Russia la said to
be concentrating troops in the
Caucasus (•) to come to the aid
of Kemal. The bulk of Kemal’s
troope are quartered on the
mainland of Asia Minor (4).
J. Ferrera, representative of V.
Ferrera A Co. of Monterey. Mex-
leo. the only refrigerating plant in
northern Mexico,has left FL Worth
after completing a deal with Swift
A Co. to handle their retrigerated
products in his territory. He also
conferred with Sam D. Sbeapes
of the fruit growers and ordered
ten earloads of fruit.
Ye
wait
Al
Fina
mob
knot
H
sing
Pe
comp
least
your
taste
mud
enter
1:
Automotive Trade Association
meets Thursday at Texas hotel in
luncheon session.
A Paramount
Picture
Billy
Lamont
Trio
Lvely
Thi
activi
music
Prosh
afteri
leadei
1 they must be driven out
"Turkey has been fighting for
I years and is anxious for penne,
at only after the laat territory to
When dey stops talkin" and walk-
tn'. I don't have nothin' mo' to do
wif 'em."
Watch your bieyelee. boys! Sev-
on stolen in last few days.
The Standard Musical Instrument
For Over 30 Years
Jim Johnson is suing J. L. Lan-
easter, receiver for the TAP rail-
road, for $10,000.
He alleges that his wife, Aman-
da Johnson, was permanently in-
jured la a derailment near Grand
Saline in July. He further alleges
that the accident was due to the
neglect of the company to keep the
road bed safe.
"1
4
Dear
' > I
with
1 hat
l de
but I
inter
I me
ehan
resents a bit of "trick photogra-
Phy
Both the subjects are with the
combined circus, however. The lit-
tle lady is Uly Leitzel, who was
this spring officially recorded as
the worid’s “greatest aerial gym-
nast." The hippopotamus to "Sai-
dee,” father of the Ringling Bros,
and Barnum A Bailey hippo, "Tiny
Toddlee.”
Miss Leitzel aad "Saidee" are
close frlends. And now that the
giant fellow is a proud parent, he
is unusually amiable. still he and
Uly are not quite as "elose" as
the illustration reprises to.
1
Dear
My
when
have
clear
and a
come
arou
the I
OUt 4
the, 4
Dewitt,
Barns &
Terrence
The
Awakening
of Toys
"T
ed at
First
ley bj
tist el
ag
_o
“The Three
Must-Get Theres",
te
Fill Your Home
interested in Russlan lIterature.
He was born in the Palo Dura
canyon, near Amarillo, and was
brought up on the farm. "Perhaps
that is why I am doing this rube
character. I have associated much
with country folks," he said.
Several years ago Clifford was
s newspaper and magazine adver-
Using man. One night while with
a party in a San Francisco caba-
rot. he hopped up and sang a song.
The manager stepped over and
hired him to sing at the place reg-
ularly. From that he went to stage
work.
A-
I
/ A
emma
I
keWOMAN
WHO ,
KNEw"
Austin Man to
Address Rotarians
Phosphate of lime taken from
slag is a valuable fertiliser.
•mnmsamwasmmnestmM
11
‘ 1
it
It si
, py:
»o I
, N
bite
Ken
told
N
Palace
“BLOOD AND SAND." an I ba-
nes drama starring Rodolph Val-
entino as a toreador; Lla Lee and
Nita Naldl also in east.
ABOUT
TURKISH WAR
(Continued from Page 1)
Majestic
“THE WOMAN WHO KNEW,"
comedy drama starring Madame
Beeson, headlining vaudeville bill.
Screen feature, Max Linder's bur-
lesque, “The Three Must Get
There's."
4
• st
Many whs did take advantage st it yesterday were ga
* with the idea of securing such wee-
J
Em*
SPECIAL
Shiplap USS For 1000 Feet
Good shtagtoo at $4.50 For 1000
Arlington Heights Blvd.
L 8470
Any Amount D div med Anywhere
/WALAGC
(—2so2-B
VALENTINO
—I—
“Blood and Sand”
Deer
V
have
man 1
llove
—And the Boot is as
Cheap as the Best
BINYON-O’KEEFE
• puxovxc* akonck.
Aty t otted
! CALCUTTA— Loyd George was
zdenounced by thousands of Mes-1
today following a pilgrmage {
Suits With 2 d90 r A
Pair of Pants
This 2-Pant Suit idea is a great one as every man
knows what satisfaction it is to have the extra
wear they afford.
Made in the latest styles including snappy Sport
Models in Tweeds and Worsteds.
Browns and Blues with neat pencil stripes and
brown and grey tweed mixtures are the most popu-
lar in the sport models.
Come in Friday and take advantage of this extra
value. See them in our Main St windows.
Boys’ School Suits
The best value in Fort Worth, with two pairs of
pants, knicker styles, full lined, ......$7.50
s
V' ,
.. dhdraw’ Forces
Or War Will Come
DRE ABOUT
MIBUS PROBE
(Continued From Page 1)
Injury to Wife
Egypt
"HURRICANS GAL.” a story
of adventure, spiced with hatred
and love. Dorothy Phillips the
etar.
Discovered! Perfectly
Honest Press Agent
2122128MMedKdMedkedadzdmexu. a az aHsssp.ezea,
House Paints
AB Onisw |BA0 Fer Gallon
1802 Throekmorton St.
UNCIAMED WAREHOUSW
co.
[land Holds
ut Against the
Turkish Demands
— V/
(JACK°NUDE‘
(LIFFORD
- A
ANDERSON enow
DETECTIVE*
Feature Photoplay
Max Linder
<‘
vs mu
%
by w
to afi
la St.
ciety
patrol
new 1
comes to town next Wednesday-
Bat it lea t true. That to to any.
the picture which accompanies this
tale of the Ringling Brothers and
Barnum A Bailey eircus press
agent wasn’t snapped as you see
“While Satan
Sleep*"
A Paramount PI ehm i
BBBIAN—“If Britain is un-
Bhs to withdraw from Constan-
nople, we would be forced to de-
ero war,” Nuri Bey, Turkish Na-
■altot representative here, an-
venced today.
"I the Greeks are unwilling to
Turkish Nationalist troops
under the leadership of Musta-
pha Kemal Pasha who defeated
the British at Gallipoli in the
world war, have advanced from
their base at Angora. Asia Min-
or (1) and have taken the im-
portant seaport and commercial
center of Smyrna ($) which fire
The old detective comes out on
the Majestic stage with rheumatiz,
corns that foretell the weather, sil-
ver star, celluloid collar and cuffs,
goatee, pipe and other habiliments
ofthe up-country character.
How different off-stage ia ap-
pearance is the Jack Clifford who
plays Anderson Crow! His part-
ner, Oliver Leopold, modestly con-
fided that Clifford is about 23.
"About 5 years more would hit
it.” Clifford added.
Far from being interested in
w. Mexiun and Mrs. E. O.|
2—--------
STAGE DETECTIVE BALKS A TJOB HodBgyfRoat
Hippodrome
"WHILE SATAN SLEEPS,"
Paramount film version at famous
Peter B. Kyne story, “The Parson
of Panamint."
Deputy Vaughn and former City
Officer Street located two stolen
boats la the possession of Clarence
Monroe, youth, on the Stove Foun-
dry rd along with bathing suits,
cigars, candy and chewing gum
taken from a stand on the Mme
road.
Young Monroe was arrested aad
turned over to the juvenile author-
ities.
many members said they would
not return until 'December, even
if President Harding called them.
The house marked time while
the senate tried to decide which
of three bills it would dispose of
before adjourning sins die. These
included the Liberian loan, the
anti-lynching and the deficieney
appropriation measures.
Ed Shurter. Austin Rotarian,
will address the weekly Rotary
Luncheon Rriday. His subject will
be "Americanization and Our
Schools.”
Shurter delivered this address
at the Los Angeles convention and
one like it at the Mineral Welle
conference.
WASHINGTON — Congress to-
day was preparing to quit and go
home. The senate's action* into
yesterday sustaining President
Harding's bonus bill veto, 44 to
28, was the last important act of
the sesslon.
Facing prospects of a summons
back to Washington in November,
Lucille,
bake Arnette action.
t The Bedouins are traversing
the BaSdad retro air route in
How of meeting and battling the
Wahibt, who are reported to have
Aefeated the trans-Jordian Arabs,
setuinz Amman.
birds aad animala, appeared
Thursday before the county com-
miasioners and asked that the ex-
pease of one delegate to the con-
vention of the American Humane
Society be paid out of the Internet
from this fund anqually.
His reques was' granted. The
court has spent the interest from
the fund heretofore for the pur-
chase of bird and animal books
for the county achieols.
Besides paying the expense of
one deleate each year, there will
still be n margin to carry on the
work for which the fund was orig-
inally intended.
Rialto
“ORPHANS OF THE STORM.”
D. W. Griffith productlon, called
“the greateet love story ever writ-
ten.”
14,
CAIRO — Doner-, war between tast as Jimmy, were you summon-
edouin and Wahibi tribes was
owed as imminent here today,
to the government prepared to
Lona has tone l d delay in setting
into for the conference.
Britain was the only nation
aciding out OBSinet this demand
f the Turks. Lord Canon, tor-
un minister, stated he could not
fve an anewer to it until Friday.
.* was believed that aa Angio-
Nurkih conflict to inevitable un-
am Curone to permitted to grate
he demand of Kemat.
caused Jugoslavia
. §
-
. .\ t.22
Fort Worth's music-making
cops leave for Mobile.
of uncertain origin destroyed as
it was captured. The Turks have
driven the Greeks from the
whole coast of Asia Minor; the
latter are fleeing to Piraeus.
From his positions in Smyrna
and Brusa, Kemal is able to
threaten Constantinople (S).
now under interallied control.
Allied warships in the 8m of
Marmora and before Smyrna are
preparing to hold the Turkish
leader in check. Britain is rush-
ing troope to occupy the neu-
tral sone about Constantinople,
indicated by the dotted line.
Kemal tn a draft of peace terms
has demanded Constantinople
and Adrianople, seen west of
Constantinople. This, together
t
I
gl.gNL
57 --
e®
g,z
6 WAR
$-
C Pay—-----
, To Annual Meeting
With the long winter evenings ahead, what could
struments? Ton'll get more down-right pleasure
strumentsA Ton'll get more down-right pleasure
out of a Columbia Grafonola than any one thing •
you could own.
A small first payment puts the model you select in
your home at once. Then you can play while you
pay the balance at
DRS. HUDSON & HINES, DENTISTS
. a mm A Quarantend bet of TEETH $10.00
| K E A 22-Karat Gold Crown............
f i, Yeers* Buecem m Ter Woth
"" Bettee Quelt», Lewe Pees
°DVNZAIWED. SEPT. 27
" AFTERNOON AND NIGHT
THE GIANT COMBINATION
New TMCA wormitory elub
elects 8. B. Adler president; G. L.
Ledingham, vice president; L. Me-
Alister, secretary-treasurer; W.
L. Peterson, sponsor.
BY BETTY BROWN.
Anderson Crow, detective, who
is pulllag Fort Worth for laughs
this week at the Majestic, is a
pretty good sleuth on the stage.
But—
When I naked him to help solve
Fort Worth's skeleton mystery, be
asked, evasively. “Did they find a
skeleton?"
Premed further to attempt a eo-
lation of the mystery, he said.
“Not me! rm like the darkey.
the Smyrna moms r re was made
the Turks.
The K sma list ■ are preparing an
Net of Greeks charged with
committed atrocities and
irrender win be demanded.
payment for the rased vil-
the "greatest show on earth”
Coming Soon
In The Press—A
Burglar takes $100 worth of
jewelry from home of Mrs. R. E.
Teel on Grapevine-rd. Deputy
Sheriff Chambers finds suspicious
tracks of small boy.
Watto— TMey, Teelaht,
21. te So IBAS.
Priees me a 2eritees she a si
NOW FLAYING ““
ongressmen to L .
Income Tax Inquiry
E work. Moot of them drifted
■ away. Those who stayed were
I evicted from their homes.
I 1 CAMP ESTABLISHKD.
■ About SOO families were moved
B to Mingus, where a tent colony
[ WM established on leased ground.
I One section is occupied by whites,
I another by Mexicans, and another
I by negroea.
Since then, according to WU-
J kinson, the United Mine Workers
t have paid out about $20,000 per
' month to keep up these families.
I They are fed, and get meager al-
lowances for clothing. Two mo-
tor trucks were provided so they
i could haul their fuel.
Trouble started after the killing
I of M. ▼. Torres. TAP guard, at
Mingus recently Ranger Sergeant
CM lion, stationed here, and other
officers went to Mingus to inves-
l ligate
MAKR MANY ARRESTS.
They made numerous arrests of
P suspecta, among them some of the
' strikers. The suspects were
brought to Fort Worth, kept in
• jail over night, then released.
Some of the strikers asserted
2 they were not fed while in cus-
R tody, and were left to get back to
E , Mingus as bent they could.
? Afterward, it is charged, the
| strikers were told to get out of
2Mingus or go to work on threat
E-or arrest for vagrancy.
■ J Wilkineon was told members of
| Mho eolony were lined up and
f abused by the rangers.
TAKE AFFIDAVITS
Thursday Attorney Sanders of
| Strawn, representing the union.
E iand B justice of the peace at
I Mingus were to begin taking af-
| tidavits from the strikers regard
1 ing their grlevances.
| ; Them may be used in federal
S , ^r act e flags if such are necessary
Complete the Happiness of Your
Home With a
BY THE PRESS AGENT
“Hey, Jimmy! Come on quick
. aad see what's happenin’ to. de
coicus goil. Holly gee! De hip-
po's swallerin’ her whole!"
And like as net you grown-up
youngsters would travel just M
r United Pens ‘
FARISPeace or war depended
iuraday on the revivified "sick
Ml of Europe." With the treaty ,
' Sumo practically scrapped by
a calling at B aew Near East
ece conference, anted dip lews t s
shanged views ia aa effort to
dty the main basis of settlement
4
"‘J
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Siler, Leon M. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 303, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 21, 1922, newspaper, September 21, 1922; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1547050/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.