The San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 158, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 25, 1925 Page: 4 of 20
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4
LIONS TO TAKE
SA PICTURES
TO MEET
Playground Photographs
Taken for Ohio
Convention.
Sin Antonio Lions will take pic-
turvs of Lion Field the playground
built on Broadway for the children of
San Antonio by the Lions Club and
the city with them to the national
convention at Cedar Point Ohio when
they Jcavc here over the Katy at 9:15
Friday morning.
The pictures of the field will be
made Thursday by the Pathe corpora-
tion and will be shown at the national
convention together with pictures of
the Easter egg hunt held in May. The
local Lions will have an extensive
part on the program of the national
convention. They also will present
their unique initiation ceremony and
* gridiron program.
Mary Stuart Edwards who will ac-
bompany the Lions will sing over the
radio at Chicago Sunday night. A let-
ter asking her to sing from one of the
powerful stations in that city has been
receive. 1 here and she has accepted.
Miss Edwards made a decided hit
both at the state and national con-
Jrentions last year.
At their noon luncheon Wednesday
the Lions initiated John K. Beery
James Otey and Dr. J. M. Bradford.
Percy Barbat. Joe E. Carrol Jr.
*nd George Clifton presented a skit.
Don Felice presented the prologue
being shown at the Palace Theater
this week and selections from the
’"Cavalleria Kusticana.’’
The Sunshine Glee Club made a
bit with its repertoire of old time
fnelodies.
(Advertisement)
Rich Men Not
Always Happy
‘•Here is another letter that makes
me happy” says Peterson. "One that
I would rather have than a thousand
dollars.'
"Money isn't everything in this
hrorid. There is many a big-hearted
rich man who would gtve all he has on
earth to be able to produce a remedy
with such mighty healing power as
Peterson’s Ointment.
"Read this letter by Mrs. Albert
Bouthcott. It seems like a miracle
but it is true every word of it.
“I know it because I get similar let-
I ters almost every day from people
who have used my ointment for old
L acres eczema and piles.
» "Is it any wonder lam happy?"
I Dear Sin:
I “I was an untold sufferer from an
I old running sore and ulcer. I had
I tried most everything without any
I relief from pain. A friend told me of
I your wonderful ointment and the first
I box took away the pain that had not
L left me before in years and after using
[ just nine dollars worth of the salve
I am cured. The ulcer was 9 inches
by 6 1-2 inches is all healed and I
can walk. Never never will I be
without Peterson’s again.
“You may use this to recommend
your ointment if you wish. I cannot
aay enough to praise it.” Y'ours truly
Mrs. Albert Southcott Lyndonville N.
I Y. Price 35c.
The mighty healing power of Pe-
I person's Ointment quickly clears the
I skin of all rashes pimples and blem-
I ishes. Peterson’s soap is a wonderful
I skin soap—use it daily—2s cents. Po-
I tenon Ointment Co. Buffalo N. Y.
Purifies the Blood
and makes the
Cheeks Rosy
Grove's
Tasteless
Chill Tonic
60c.
— ■—■J
MIER LEAVING
I THEHOSPITAL
Was Weak and Miserable. Lydia
’ E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com*
pound Restored Mrs.
I Anger’s Strength
LoweP Massachusetts. — "I read
^^bout Lydia E. Pir.khair.>
Compound in the
little books that
you send around
and I feltvery
good after I had
taken a couple of
bottles of it I had
been in the hospi-
tal and felt pretty
well at first but I
went down to noth-
ing. I was w eak
and had to lie in
bed almost all dav.
had dizzy anc fa r.tt;*
and lower parts c_-.a wts e ner-
^VOue I could not bear my children
^Ktvund. I hope the Vegeta. > ( '-.m-
-■nad helps other wcir.< n a- :t .
do all my own work now and f<e! f.
I have told my friends abci.t it
|Mnd my sister and my aunt. ” — Mrs.
|W'L!VB Auger. 19 fioward Street
\WaOwell Maaaachuaettc.
Mi Over v ••cl.wc far re-
to our question "Have you re-
^Maived benefit from taking Lydia E.
^mnkham’a Vegetable Compound ’ ”
■■ 98 out of exery 100 of the replies
■Say "Yes. ” and because the Vegetable
■Compound has been helping other
U>omen it should help you.
THURSDAY.
TWO WHO STOLE SAME
WATCH FREED TOGETHER
This is a story of two thieves and
a watch which was stolen by both
men.
“Mister I stole your watch."
On bearing that statement P. F.
Stuart county superintendent of
schools looked up from his work to
• see a 24-year-old man standing by
his desk.
"I was sick and hungry nnd broke.
I took your watch nnd pawned it to
get money to cat. You can do what
you want with me.”
The man a tubercular victim of
the World War has but a short time
to live doctors say.
WIFE CHARGES RICH
MATE PUNCHED HER
By the AuMM'iatrd PfMB.
NEW YORK Juno 25. —Domestic
troubles of Arthur K. Bourne Jr. 21
grandson of Commodore Frederick G.
Boumc sewing machine magnate who
left a 840000000 estate have cul-
minated in his arrest after a chase
through the streets by his wife who
says he punched her nose.
Caught by a police automobile di-
rected by his wife after a pursuit
through fashionable Park avenue in
the sight of 500 persons. Bourne plead-
ed not guilty in night court. Mrs.
Bourne fainted during the proceed-
ings. His hearing will be heard tomor-
row.
For two days bis wife Beatrice
Clancey Bourne also 21 laid siege
to his apartment house on upper Park
avenue. She said she wanted to ques-
tion him regarding a divorce suit he
filed in Pasadena Cal. recently.
Bourne came home last night. An
argument ensued while a crowd gath-
ered. He punched her she said and
fled through the crowd. Commandeer-
ing a police flivver Mrs. Bourne stood
on the running board and directed
the police driver until Bourne was
canght three blocks farther on.
Mrs. Bourne is the daughter of
John 11. Clancey an Astoria. Long:
Island contractor. Boumc is the son
of a director of the .Singer Sewing •
Machine Company. They met on the'
beaches of Blue Point. Long Island i
where both families have summer ।
homes and eloped in 1922.
ANDERSON FORMS NEW
PROHIBMALLIANCE
NEW YORK June 25. —The forma-
tion of an organization with the ini-
tials A. P. P. P. P. A. is announced
by William H. Anderson who is on
parole from Sing Sing prison after
serving part of a term for forging i
the books of the Anti Saloon League
and splitting commissions with a so- .
licitor for league funds.
The full name of the new organi-
zation is the American Prohibition
Protestant Patriotic Protective Alli-
ance. Its objects Anderson says are
to "resist abject surrender in the name
of bogus tolerance of everything vital
to true religion and genuine patriot-
ism” and “to protect future genera- |
tions of Americans who may dare op- |
pose a wet alien anti-ProtestantUm '
dominant in the larger American
cities.”
Anderson was state secretary of
the Anti-Saloon League when convict-
ed. Recently he has published a pam-
phlet charging that the state manage
ment of the Anti-Saloon League has
aided the wets.
Anderson is secretary of the alii- j
ance. He refused to name other offi-1
cera. Its views will be presented i
through a weekly published in Wash- j
ington which has praised the Ku Klux ;
Klan.
Anderson denies however that his
alliance will be affiliated with any
other organization. "While working
openly in some respects” his an
nouncement says “in other it will be j
more secret than any incorporated or-
ganization can be.”
BRAHMAS TEAR DOWN
INTERNATIONAL SPAN
FALLING INTO RIVER
DEL RIO June 25. — While 300
large Brahma cattle were being driven
across the international bridge here th‘-
bridge collapsed plunging 50 into the
Bio Grande.
All were rescued from the stream
though with considerable difficulty.
One big bull swam upstream against
the current some distance.
The bridge was washed away three
times this year.
HEAT-HATCHED~CHICK
ADOPTED AS MASCOT
VAN ALSTYNE June 25—A
baby chick which arrived at a produce
concern here under unusual circum-
stances has been adopted as mascot
by the employes.
Upon opening a case of egg* a few
days ago an employe heard the
“tweet-tweet” which indicates the ad-
vanced state in incubation and imme-
diately investigated.
Locating th“ egg from which the
sounds emerged he placed it in the
sun and within three days it hatched.
The chick was named after the iwr-
son from whom the case of eggs was
purchased.
DALLAS PYTHIANS
ERECTING BUILDING
DALLAS June 25. — The corner-
stone of the new Pythian Castle Hall
being erected by the Dallas Knights of
Pythias ut a cost of $130000 will
be laid today.
Charles I. Weiland supreme rep-
resentative of the national Pythian or-
der. will be master of ceremonies.
George B. Shaw past grand chan-
cellor of the order in Texas will act
aa chancellor commander in ritualistic
ceremonies.
A number of other leaders in the
order will be present.
Compleijn of the structure is ex-
pected about October L
Ho told Mr. Stuart where he had
pawned the watch. Officers went
there and found it.
“I won't prosecute.” Mr. Stuart
told Deputy Sheriff Spencer Newton
when the watch was recovered.
The watch was first stolen more
than two years ago. It was recovered
the thief was captured tried and
sentenced to two years in the peni-
tentiary.
His term expired recently and be
returned to San Antonio Wedtn rdnv.
He walked into the .■dieriff's office
and greeted Deputy Newton n few
minutes after the officer had returned
from recovering the same watch.
ALGONQUIN REMAINS
UNCOVERED IN N. Y.
By ths Associated Press.
AUBURN N. Y„ June 25.—What
is believed to be one of the most im-
portant discoveries of Algonquin te-
mains ever made in New York state
was announced by Donald A. Cadzow
of the Museum of the American In-
dian Heye Foundation New York
who has been working in the Finger
Lakes region for the past two years.
On Frontenac Island the only
island in Cayuga Lake Mr. Cadzow
has discovered and quietly explored an
Algonquin burial ground 116 feet long
by 90 feet wide.
"From a scientific standpoint it
may rival any discovery ever made
in the search for Algonquin remains."
Mr. Cadzow said. "I roughly esti-
mate the skeletons I found to be 1500
years old of the first period. We
found fourteen skeletons all being
prone instead of flexed or bent as the
Algonquins and Iroquois of later per-
iods. Evidence that the early Algon-
quins were cannibals is found in the
fact that we found broken and burned
human bones mixed in a singular way
with those of animals.”
ECZEMA IN RASH
ON JANOS
Could Not Put Them In
Water. Blisters Formed.
Cuticura Healed.
“ Eczema broke out on my hands
in • rash. Later my bands became
rough and scaly and then blitters
formed. I could not put my hands
Li water and I had to wear rubber
gloves to do my work.
“ I began using Cuticura Soap
and Ointment and after a few ap-
plications my hands were better. 1
continued the treatment and now I
am completely healed.” (Signed)
Miss Eileen McDonald Afton
Louisiana.
Make Cuticura Soap and Oint-
ment your every-day toilet prepa-
rations and have a clear sweet
skin soft smooth hands and a
Healthy scalp with good hair. Cuti-
cura Talcum is unexcelled in purity.
Soap sc. Ointmer * 3 and 56c. Talcum Z- Sold
evcrywf.cr* Sample each fra» Andrew;
labmun.i D«pl 3. Ma)dec. Km"
Cuticara Shariat Stick 25c.
(Advertisement)
666
is a prescription for
Colds Grippe Flu Den-
gue Bilious Fever and
Malaria.
It kills the germs.
Do roaches make you fighting mad ?
SPRAYING Flit quickly rids ments kill* moths and their larvae
the house of roaches. which « at hole *- Extensive teste
_.. . . . showed that Flit did not stain or m-
Flit •P r »y destroys roaches bed bugs j ure t h e mos t delicate fabrics
ants and insect eggs. The cracks and
creviees where insects hide and breed A Scientific General Insecticide
are readily reached by Flit spray. Flit is the result of exhaustive research
It is clean easy and safe to use. by expert entomologists and chemists.
xrsn- j v . More than 70 formulas were tested on
Kins Household Insects vgrioug hougthold inße cts before Flit
Flit spray dears the bouse in a few was finally perfected. Flit is a 100%
minutes of mosquitoes and disease- effective insecticide containing no to-
bearing fiies. Spraying Flit on gar- active (inert) ingredients.
Try in your hrme. For »aU by otorea generally.
Made by STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY) Bayonne N. J.
FLIT ft
RIC. U. 8. PAT. ***«3k.
DESTROYS
Flies—Mosquitoes—Moths f
Anta—Bed Bags—Roaches
Mm Other laaaets J
and TWIr Ku«
"Th« ytllote ean with the black band”
THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT.
20-INCH PIPE LINE
FOR LAUREL HEIGHTS
A twenty-inch pipe from Broadway
avenue to the site of the city's water
tank will be laid to serve Laurel
Heights and other North Side sec-
tions it was announced Wednesday.
A trench for the pipe approximate-
ly five feet deep and five feet wide
through 0600 feet of solid rock in the
hills in that section of the city will
be started within the next few days.
Judge Arthur W. Sceligson said
Wednesday that the trench contract
has been let to G. Brombaugh of San
Antonio by the water board. The con-
tract price was $1.50 per foot.
The pipe which was purchased from
the United States Cast Iron Pipe Com-
pany of Birmingham cost $53 a ton.
About 557 1-2 tons will be used.
The twenty-inch main will connect
at Broadway near Lambert's beach in
Brackenridge Park with the 24-inch
pipe from the park's pumping station
and extend to the 1000000-gallon
tank to be cercted at a point east of
Shook avenue.
The tank’s cost will be approximate
ly $130000.
Specifications and plans for the
tank arc now available at the water
board offices. The contract will be
awarded after all contractors inter-
ested turn in their proposals.
The water department also is in-
stalling a new centrifugal pump at its
Mission street station.
Wolff eMarx Cq
Dollar-a-Day
Reduction Sale!
Another Dollar Off the Price!
TOMORROW:
Choice of $ A A
$lO.OO to $ 2Uv
$17.50 qualities j
—the pair
SATURDAY-$2.00
Unbelieveable! But it is true that we
are offering choice of over a thousand pairs
of FRENCH BOOTERIE SLIPPERS at $3.00.
Of course the selling is going to be brisk
tomorrow but we are prepared to handle the
crowd. The footwear is conveniently ar-
ranged for self selection.
Saturday the price will be $2.00! Never
was there such a sale!
No exchanges—No refunds—No mail orders—No C. O. D.'s
BABY DISCOVERED
IN CEMETERY; LIFE
IS SAVED BY DOCTOR
HIGGINS June 25.—Abandoned in
a cemetery a three weeks old girl
baby was found alive by Mr. and
Mrs. n. F. Pcugh. who camo to the
cemetery to tend the grave of a rela-
tive.
The child was lying on a grave sur-
rounded by a small fence. It was
tucked in two blankets in a paper
shopping bag. the whole placed in a
small wicker basket. A bottle of milk
at the side of the child had soured
and insects were craw-ling over the
basket. One of the baby’s hands had
escaped from the folds of the blanket
and was severely burned. Prompt
treatment by a physician saved the
child.
AMERICAN SAILORS
DESERT U.S.S. TULSA
AT TAMPICO PORT
MEXICO CITY. June 25.-Special
dispatches from Tampico report that
there were “numerous desertions”
from the U. S. S. Tulsa when she
touched Tampico cn route to the Pan-
ama Canal.
Both the captain and the American
consul requested the Mexican authori-
ties to arrest the deserters the dis-
patches said.
PAIR SLAIN WITH AX
NEIGHBORARRESTED
BAY CITY Mich. June 25.—An
hour after the bodies of Frank Cady
and his wife had been found at their
suburban home Isaac Cravens a
neighbor surrendered to the police
and admitted he had killed them with
an ax.
Cravens nnd Cady quarreled over
a team of horses.
The bodies of Cady and Mrs. Cady
were found later the woman's head
nearly Revered from the body.
~~ (Advertisement)
••• ••• ••• ••• •••
I Hair Stops I
• •
I Coming Out i
A— .....j
A 35-cent bottle
of delightful. re-
freshing "Danderine”
will do wonders for
your hair. After a
few applications you
can not find a par-
ticle of dandruff or
any falling hair.
Hair grows thick
heavy and luxuriant.
Drug stores and toilet counters sell
millions of bottles of "Danderine.”
M Wcllt' Ga /
j
-a SALE!
Here are without doubt some of the most attractive
styles of summer—handsome lace and net combination
frocks—lovely georgette frocks—smart printed silk
frocks.
Light airy summer colors. Just the frocks you are
looking for. The ones you need for street wear—for
vacation—for dressy occasions—for sports wear. Frocks
radiant in their NEWNESS.
(Third Floor)
FREE INSTRUCTIONS
in the wonderful art of Plasti-Chrome or Italian Renaissance Decora-
tive Art. Classes are being held daily from 9 a. m. to 12 m. and from
2tosp. m. in our Art Craft School on the Sixth Floor. Simply buy
your materials here and you wiU receive personal instructions free.
We have a competent instructor in charge. You can make decorative
and useful articles for the home such as book ends candlesticks
decorative placques waste baskets etc. The work is easy and fascina-
ting. You will find our schoolroom one of the coolest places in town.
Delights Baby—
Relieves Mother
chooses. Tray can be attached and folding legs let
down to make Not-A-Toy into a stationery feeding
chair. Made of metal enameled in blue or pink. In-
destructible washable. Height adjustable.
$7.50 complete with detachable tray
'Baby Shop—Fourth Floor)
So easy
to keep them clean
when the quality of work-
manship is outstandingly
good—-
and when the price is right.
f
Very Plain:
Silk Street Frocks
Silk Sports Dresses
Voile Frocks . . .
Send them to us
by parcel post while
out of town.
—of Scores of Summer
DRESSES
—Frocks sure to keep you cool
and charmingly attired
Our Regular
$19.75 Qualities
1625
Not-A-Toy is not a
baby pen walker crib
coop or chair. It is all
of these with many spe-
cial advantages of its
own.
Belted in Not-A-Toy
^the baby can rock turn
twist stoop and
balance get the
natural exercise he
needs. Yet he can-
not turn over can-
not spin and become
dizzy nor harm himself
in any way.
He can sit still if he
JUNE 25 1925.
Others
With Trimmings
Pleating etc.
NOTIONS
10c Safety Pina; 2 for
15c.
10c Curlers; 2 for 15c.
10c White Bias Bind-
ing; 3 for 25c.
25c Koh-I-Noor Handy
Books of Clasps and
Safety Pins; 19c.
25c De Long Hair Pins;
19c.
25c Baby Rubber
Pants; 19c.
20c Coat Hangers; 16c.
50c Rubber Aprons;
39c.
50c Sanitary Aprons;
39c.
50c Sanitary Belts; 39c.
50c Whisk Brooms; 39c.
59c Ribbon Covered
Shoe Trees; 48c.
$l.OO Sanitary Belts;
89c.
(Flrat Floor)
sps
qjo
and up
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The San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 158, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 25, 1925, newspaper, June 25, 1925; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1631456/m1/4/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .