The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 160, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 7, 1925 Page: 1 of 8
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HOME
HOME
O
EDITION
EDITION
FORT WORTH, TEXAS, TUESDAY, APRIL 7, 1925
1007 COMMERCE STREET
PRICE 1 CEXT IN FORT WonTH
VOL. 4, NO. 160
LIGHT VOTE POLLED FOR COUNCILMEN
FEW VOTERS GO
GLORIA
TO DOXES
M. R. T.
N
Vote to Be Cast
TALKS ARE MADE
Efforts Being Made te—
Bring Out Late Vote
ed for Visitors
at sal-
Auditorium of St. Paul’s Meth-
aries ranging as high as $50
0
v
Tat
Advertised figures were consid-
Fixtures Reclalmed.
for five years and announced the
First news of Porter’s fake ref-
St.
Machine Co. office here.
PAROLED
sensed office equipment loaned to
able agitation among some of the
of
Parole for Forrest Dawson, 17,
official publication of the federa-
JAmea. McNeill, Mrv-toe Mr--driver.
1
near Weatherford,
next two years.
at
0)
unpaid.
J.
on
good ter the first
months of
■ 9
f <
-
vance credit to new concerns un-
Best Plan
1 CofC invites bids on these.
0)
Dick
CASE IS SET
Gilvin File* Suit
1
AUTO DEALERS
- k
No
FIGHT
e
reveal the
/
NE
surface and will not peel oft.
Seward in County Court at Law
•gainst Ed Etler.
learn the name of the boat.
— WATCH FOR GLORIA--
NO REPORT,
Legal Department
First on 'the Street
The
•rem • mea umyuct me "
cently, will be taken to Terrell
received by County Judge Emmett di
+
-6
s
-
m
V
4 tp
Y
— +
tI
41
Governor Frees Forrest
Dawsonoof Weatherford
Election
Extra -
Ed Etier Charged With
Assault on John Homan
Rag Soaked With Ether
Tightened Across Mouth
the law," declared Hanger.
—'IL-merchants would not
800 votes; Ten North, 87 of 550;-
Ten South; TRJ bT«T4Wr ®1wtwh’
the
pro-
ed about $600
Furniture; the
male quartet, directed by W.
Marsh, composer of the song.'
Reports were to be made
BARRON FIELD
ABANDONED
Fort Worth
Press
Nearly a hundred automobiles
were brought into the place as a
If
1430
Ward
147 votes.
Only 102 persons of the
saken the project and is offering
for sale $2,500 worth of equip-
ment installed there a year ago.
Thts tnicludes • five-room house,
erected for a field caretaker, a
water tank and a gasoline pump.
Mrs. J. D. Burch, Dallas woman
who is said to have given the in-
formation leading to the. capture
of Darraugh, is also held on a
charge of theftin connection with
therotbery.
WOMAN BEATEN
IN ELECTION
OFFICERS PLEAD
GUILTY
WEATHEN ponrc AST
PAnTLY CLOVDY.
clubs.
Abont 25 clubs
thelr activitles of
the
work
CofC Offers Equipment
for Sale Now
TP&G AIDED DY
DALLAS FIRMS
$10,000 SubsriptionsAre
Made By Branches lhere
31 Dry Agents and Cops
Admit Graft -
things as this would not happen."
— WATCH von GLORIA —
Foreign Debts Not to Be
Discussed
meat has a balance of $14,596 in
Its favor.
— WATCH FOR GLORIA —
Printer Is Paid.
Jollahlle,prlular,=
'FIGHT PEST
Coolidge Thinks This Is
; >. 2e202
2. asi
SOS CALL
Dipping Water and
Gas, Is Message
Baker Will Be
Taken to Terrell
it is too late?
You will find the answer in Gloria, the Flappe
Wife—the tremendous story that will grip you.
READ GLORIA—THE FLAPPER WIFE—IN THE-
PRESS, BEGINNING NEXT THURSDAY.
DON’T MISS THE FIRST CHAPTER.
Two damage claims riled agains:
the etty were turned over to the
the company.
Later. S. K. Ash, manager of;
the Rosenthal Safe Co., repoBsess-
This means that over a hun-
dred flags more will be seen over
the city when all Lions are sup-
plied than were shown at the |
last day of patriotic significance.
mods railroad wheel done in gold
and purple.
—The—
SPOTLIGHT
worth
R
distributed from Fort Worth ire
so different from those distrib-
uted out of Dallas, there would be
no competition between the two
I tie*."
TP&G workers bowed to
T • ••
It appeals to me that a proof
of efficient business method and
saving by the city manager, and
sensible action by the first coun-
cil. will make for greater city
unity.
8
Ha12828
Two score or more autos,
stripped of their paint were be-
, tng driven Tuesday into other
in this vicinity.
— w ArON kon GLoRIA —
ASSAULT CHARGED. /
Assault case agalust J. R. Too-
opening of,the Western Lacquer —----,
Corporation. said to be a factory result of these representations.
" ____ . wA-.a c• De-•A • ‘e en L A e
Auditorium of St. Paul's Meth- Fort Worth paint shops, to be were prongised positions
odist Episcopal Church became a finished at higher prices than the artea .. hizh ..
garish sweep of bobbing spring owners first expected. week,
hats Tuesday morning when 300
ICPEAKING of the election—I
3 heard a prediction yesterday,
made by a man of experience in
politics to one of the candidates
of the Citisens' ticket, that the
present form of government will
in a few years approximate the
aldermanie system.
— • rother’Boxes.--——
Other boxes reported at 2 p. m.
showed the following reslts:
WEDNESDAY’S PRESS WILL CARRY THE NAMES OF THE WINNERS IN THE KNOW TEXAS CONTEST. WATCH FOR IT
She has intelligence.
But has she enough intelligence to understand before
tion, was discussed by Mrs.
Remond,presiden ior
lington Heights, with a voting
strength of 1600, had tallied only
it’s the Thrilling Story of a Flapper
Wife in Fort Worth. Starts in
Next Thursday’s Press
THE PRESS Thursday will begin publication of
I “Gloria, the Flapper Wife,” the story of a young
woman whose life is the life of the young women of
Fort Worth.
The story is fiction, but it is true.
pmgmuaweemeam It tells frankly, and de-
ance is 8373,333.
The total budget for the year
Lenaene
- ,
of the condition of the place and Northwest, 40 of 600; Thirteen
stayed there Friday until he col- Central, 35 of about 400; Brook-
lected 316 for printing. Other lyn Heights, 10 of TB; Ariinzton
W. C. Dunlap, 63, formerly of
Fort Worth, died at his home in
Vernon, Monday. Dunlap was a
pioneer of Tarrant County, having
erably under the lowest price of
Special Programs Arrang- Wbishorperctdmirrcessrket. days
lotted to a "pinch" fund to cover
who waslegaldepartmentihead to names of the Dallas subscribers.
Eort.iyrphrt of hotewhilead declaring »“« money would be a-
day. when E. M. Fillingin, man-
ager of the Burroughs Adding
reaera- ...
FenrSeveralDepartments
Show Balance on Hand
Hampton wouldn't
I candidates. Backers of the inde-
Police were expecting to round
up a second man and thereby re-
cover, the money stolen in . ibb
35,000 rooming house robbery last
week, Tueaday.
Detective W. J. Lewis returne
from Little Rock. Ark., with J. C.
Darraugh, 30, Tuesday morning.
He is being held in city jail pend-
ing investigation, altho charges of
theft have been filed against him
in Justice Shannon's court.
Darraugh claims that another
man got Th# maBey. M^drarig TB
Detective Chief Tom Jackson. Po-
Heehope to find him and recover
the loot.
Home Money Found.
About 3350 in cash, a watch.
eligible voters in
By United Press. *
CHICAGO, April 7.—First vio-
lence in Chicago's municipal vote
contest was reported today when
Mrs. Barbara Gileson, 29 a cam-
paign worker, was found beaten
and gagged with an ether-soaked
rag.
Mrs. Gileson, who was actively
engaged in opposing the proposal
of the city to buy the street car
and elevator system, went to the
garage in the rear of her home
for some las* minute campaign
work. Her sister found her seven
hours late;-.
— WATCH FOR GLORIA —
BOY SLAYER IS
March 34, according to communi-
eatlon received team the—Boyat
train.girls for future club mem-
bers.
Mrs. J. A. Britain of Seymour,
president of the First District,
called the meeting to order.
Officers Introduced.
Rev. Charles Draper of
Against Joe Wills
A 33,000 promissory note is the
bone of contention between Paul
Gilvin and Joe B. Wilts in suit
filed in District Court.
Gilvin claims the note became
due February 1. The note was
made out toR. E, Davis, whom
the petition claims is now Mrs.
Paul Gilvin. Date of the note was
January 31, 1924
Gilvin als s alleges a deed of
trust to 33 acres of land between
Lake View and Glen Garden was
given him by the defendant.
- WATCH FOR GORIA —
PIONEER DIES
chureh. A special musical
CITY FINANCES IN
—GOOD-SHAPE—
Co. took back two typewriters,
pendent candidates point to it
' voting places
Claimed Nranch House. Porter fa sata to haverrepre-t2 P.me----s
women gathered there and bust-i The Western Lacquer Corpora- sented the Fort Worth' branch
ness sessions of the 24th annualltion, oftice was stormed by irate xauld be wholesale jobbers ofi
convention of the First District, owers Saturday, when it failed : lacquer, undercoating and paints:
Texas Federation of Women's) to open for business after cred- Te introduce this line the special
--- price was made on auto painting.
gram had been arrangd for their
entertainment. Business nesslons
were resumed at 1:45 p. m.
"Texas, Our Texas," recom-
mended as a State anthem by Ex-
Governor Pat Neff, was sung by a
close at 7 p. m.
repos- The low vote caused consider-
Three Dallas firms, operating
branch houses in Font Worth, have
subscribed 310,000 to the Texas,
Panhandle & Gulf railroad proj-
ect.
This report was made Tuesday
by a special committee of TPaG
workers who spent Monday in the
neighbor city.
The committee comprised Ire-
land Hampton. CofC manager; L.
C. Abbott, Tom Poyner, W. E. BI-
deker, Col. C. H. Pawell.
Disbarment proceedings against
Theodore Koenig, local attorney,
are set for Friday morning in
17th District Court, Asmistant Dis-
trict Attorney John Morrison said
Tuesday.
Koenig is under indictment for
perjury. That was the principal
ground for filing of disbarment
I petition against him.
were checked at
and two rings were found in Dar-
ad-|raugh‘s possession when he was
- — ' arrested in Little Rock,
been
such
I. Baker, adjudged insane re-
Watch for The Press
Tonight With the
Most Complete Re-
turns.
menu by the various clubs, to Ing at 14th and Commerce Streets,
was 31,353,300, of which $968-
436 has been spent so far and
vouchers are now issued for $104
430 mere. . .
Fire and Mmee Commissioner
John Alderman is 326,000 to the
erences was given last Wednes-
was granted
One of the lightest votes in the
history of etty elections in Fort
Worth loomed Tuesday when the
branch of the Western lacquer
Corporation of Los Angeles, for-
merly the West Coast Paint Co.
Credit agencles later could find no
such companies.
Accounts were opened at a
number of bsiness places in Fort
painting and refinishing of autos.
Help wanted columns were also
used and more than a hundred
women and girls applied for and
rpHE Lions Club has decreed
1 that every Lion in Fort
Worth who hag a child in school
must become the owner of an
American flag.
• • •
The club also has decreed that
Lions’ flags shall be displayed
properly on those days when the
flag is supposed to be displayed.
Lawrence Due to
Arrive Wednesday
Babe Lawrence will reach Fort
Worth Wednesday afternoon fn"
custody of County Detective Harry
Hamilton and Deputy Sheriff Tom
Snow, according to a communica-
tion received from Phoenix, Aril.
The return trip wasBegunMon^
day.
Bill Lawrence, his brother, has
been sentenced to hang June 12
for the murder of Haie Burch,
Phoenix policeman.
— WATCH FOR GLORIA —
reported on
the past 12
3:20 p. m. Wednesday..
-WATCM FOR GLonIA—
/ ENGINE HLOCK SrOIEN/
Police are on the lookout for
the one who took the engine blocks
of a Marmon car from T. w. Pg*,
3313 Wayside Street. The bibek
is valued at 3200,, and was token
some time within the last two
weeks.
Prairie Chanel, 44 or 723.
— WATO« FOR GLORIA —
MONEY SOUGHT
IN ROBBERY
Man Returned From Lit-
tie Rock on Charge
The robbery occurred Friday
when Mrs. Anna Hood. 1803 Jones
Street, discovered the loss of
33,065 in money, two watches and
other jewelry.
— WATCH FOR GLORIA —
Clubs, got under way. itors Friday afternoon had made
Principal talk of the morning demands on F. A. Porter, man-
session was made by Mrs. Paul, ager. ----- --
Donald of Bowie, who urged the Porter es me to Fort Worth sev- • other Fort Worth paint shops, it,
organisation of junior depart-! eral weeks ago, leased the build- was declared.
CofC Markers to
Be on Window* Now
CofC will introduce a new type
of membership marker in about
three weeks, Clyde Pemberton,
membership secretary, said Tues-
day.
LITTLE INTEREST
operator.
“Dipping water fast, no gas,"
-ouIn—— - The design is men"w-: was the message, The signal
Heis charged mol railroad wheel Wo in sold eeased before the operator cuid.
did. Dick has money; he can afford maids for me.
I’ll NOT slave for any man!” '
And that was a beginning of strange things in the
pretty little home on ’Sixth Avenue.
“You butterfly—you beauty!” exclaimed May ey-
mour, her friend, when Gloria greeted her that jolly
fall morning when Gloria appeared for the first time
after her honeymoon. .7 . 2.
And she was a beauty—dressed in a four hundd-
resided near Benbrook for 40
years. ,
Funeral services will be held
" at the residence of h(k son, J. T.
Dunlap, 450 St. Louis Avenue, at
with assaulting John Homan, auto
dealer, in front of City Hall Sat-
urday afternoon.
The fight ia said to have fol-
lowed a dispute over auto paper.
It started at Etier’s ptace of buxl
ness on Commerce Street.
Later at the police station,
where Etler was being taken on
the charge of fighting, he is al-
leged to have assaulted Homan
again, beating him geverely.
Me was placed in city jaitatd
then transferred to the county.
He furnished a‘ 3500 bond thru his
attorneys, Baskin, Eastus *
Greines.
—E.... a ny United Press. .. _ .. •
? -Fe-EI । KINGSTON, Ont.. April 7.—No*,
Get* Damage Suit* 1 report of a sinking ship had been
5 1 received by the Canadian Steam-
ship Co offices-here, and so far
as officials know no ship is due
O'
"57
Wednesday or Thursday. Admit-
tance papers have already been
faded, warped.
Aggravated assault charges The new markers can be trans-
have been filed before Judge Pete ferred to glass or any smooth
any pledges that might not be re-
deemed.
"Didn't hear a single alibi over
there," the manager reported.
"We were accorded a warm recep-
tion and our proposition pro-
nounced a sound one."
There is a possibility of a $10,-
000 subscription from a single
Dallas firm before the end of the
week, Hampton announced.
Plan Another Trip.
"Dallas people realise the TP&G
will be of vast benefit to their
etty as well as Fort Worth," he
Mid. "However, the commodities
given.
Jobs Are Promjsed,
Meanwhile advertisements were
run in local newspapers giving
special introductory prices on re-
Heretofore wall cards have
been used. These have proved
unsatisfactory, according to Pem-
berton. Inasmuch as they have
with glee, saying that friends of
office I the independent men can poll
oyal Typewriter enough votes to give. their men
a substantial standing When the
final count is called.
and the Typewriter Supply Co.
revowmerned-s whtmitcouid-ol-w
First Violence Reported
in Chicago Voting
IS FOUND GAGGED
ministration. has been named su-
pervisor of game and fish war-
dens In the Northeast Texas dis-
trict. with headquarters at Dallas.
T E. Hubby, fish, game and
oyster commissioner made the ap-
pointment
Ridgway was dismissed here be-
cause his pollcies did not coincide
with those of the City Commis-
•ion.
— WATCH FOR GLORIA--
It's good business to have
flags properly unfurled before
boys and girls. It saves a
youngster much embarrassment
later in life to learn early how to
, 'respect the red, white and blue.
’ ! • • •
len in Criminal District Court was Moore. . ' h
dismissed Tuesday op motion of Baker was charged with killing election Tuesday and halted
_ . . ... “ --•* “h- No row sul
til their credit rating hag
thoroly established then
seekers, unpaid creditors and un-
I painted autos has been left in
Fort Worth by the closing of the
Western Lacquer Corporation.
motion pictures, Americanization,
community service, health, enti-
nareoti, ehna- writers, public
4 welfare. fire vreventlon, thrift,
ruralite.kegialature. State activ- the
The florist who supplied nearly
8100 worth of flowers for the
grand opening is still unpaid. it
was Mid by J. A. Smith, who had
Church, gave the invocation.
Mrs. F L. Jaccard contributed ;
an organ solo. *
The 16 district officers here,
heaviest contingent known to at- l
tend a district meeting, were in- 1
troduced by Mrs. R. E. Buchanan
ofFortWorth.State_parliamen-
________________________________________________ , i, . ..........
Future of "Federation News,"
legal department by City Com-
mission Tuesday. , /
M J Redmond and wife, Della
Redmond, ask 836.000 for injur-
fes sustained by Mrs. Red^gd in
a tell caused by a hole in the
M{ret. Mias Louwellen Johnson dismiasea ruesany op mouon or saker was eumrgea win >uuut mwuuvu .ww
aaks 33,600 damages Because of«the District Attorney's office: Too- his wife, Mrs. Priscilla Baker, at I for the day . -
fire in her home which she claims len was charged with assaulting Grapevine previous to the insan- , tons ‘from Fort Worth were re-
was due to lack of water. la minor girl. /Ity hearingi, , Ported. 1__"
I learned this last night at
the Arlington Heights Civic
League meeting, when a Lion
arose and presented a flag for
the Arlington Heights High
School auditorium where the
meeting was held.
The Fort Worth Press
tn-n * > .■. A . • /
________________-_______________________________________________:____:___ -IC--------
The two voting places in Ar-
cently, the story of what is
happening to materialistic
young wives every day,
right here in Fort Wortli. -
Gloria Gordon, who work-
ed in a real estate office in
: the Continental Building,
weds Dick Gregory, a
young lawyer. Gregory is
/of an old family tree, and
has lived nicely and afflu-
ently as a bachelor. Gloria
met him at a dance, decided
he could furnish her with
the life of ease which she
desired, and set out to
marry him.
She did, and that is
where our story begins.
In her quest for pleasure
for her senses—she loved
=beautffutclothes, and gay.
friends, and laughter that
“wrinkled care derides”—
- she forgot her- husbande-----------
It is a human document
GLORIA —intensely human.
------- ---—— ---------‘What ip the reason that—---— --------------—
- Ishould head emy dackeat household drudgery ,"-saidv i —en-hhrunch az (torch.
Gloria disdainfully in her mirror when she was back
HAVE you voted?
If you haven’t, then get to the
polling place before 7 p. m., and (
, perform that duty. . ■ I
— The-more-vptes,the-snappier-
...........thecomminsioiers who are elect-
ed will act.
* 7 ■
D A AI AATTrAA Tf. S Fort Worth e government air
KAN Illi I I Illi 111 port at Barron Field Ie no more
Unit VW I I VII IV Chamber of Commerce has tor-
WASHINGTON, April 7.—
President Coolidge believes the
proposal to eliminate the boll
weevil pest in the South by dis-
continuing the growth of cotton
annually in succesalve (ones has
---much practical value. The Gov-
! ernment is ready to cooperate tn
i such a program, he told the Na-
tional Association of Cotton Man-
ufacturers here.
Coolidge is of the opinion that
this project would starve the peat
out of existence.
— W ATC H FOR GLORIA —
J SHIP SENDS OUT
been employed as office manager.
Smith My a he la loser of 3197 in
commlMlons.
Scores of young women had
1 been promised jobs. Salaries
। ranged froth 316 to 360 a week.
Several of the busineus men
whe hed.relatlens with Porter
classed him as a man of strong
personality and one who knew his
business well.
Practically every line of busi-
ness in Fort Worth waa reached
fur credit Before' repot la tolild Ed
obtained as to his references.
No Laws Violated.
Mercantile agencies on ’ queries
to California declared no such
firms were known as the refer-
ences he gave.
An investigation also was made
by the District Attorney's office,
but, according to District Attor-
ney Hanger, no acts showing vio-
‘ attom of the tuw cou t be
charged.
"It just shows that a man can
corn* into this town and do near-
ly anything but murder and get
away with it and still be within
Delegates lunched
300 CLUB WOMEN Leaves Unpainted Autos
MEETlNG And Unpaid Bills Here L man maa a raan
Conference A trail of disappointed job Worth and ready references were
dollar coat and a hat that d
had made Dick’s purse ■
seem trash indeed. E
And it was her beauty I
that drew back to her that I
young actor she had knowp I
—Stanley Weyburn — but I
that is a part of the story. R
Out in Fort Worth are |
the young women who are g
married and then feel they ■
haven’t anything to do! I
And they look around for 7
the thrill of life.
These women are often r
fine women, sparkling ,
girls, who are not neces- k
sarily bad, but are turned I
to the idea of clothes and I
crash of cymbals—Wheel E
Make it a big night!
Temptation — clothed E
beautifully, and set to I
music of wonderful rhythm I
—comes sinuously- into I
their lives. The women I
often yield.
But does Gloria yield?
Paul'* ' Methodist Episcopal
printer* are said to have been left Height* East, 85 of 800; Arling-
unpaid. ton Heights West, 62 of 800;
Dawso served- 40 months, f .
Good behavior at. the training
school gave Dawson the parole.
Willis Wayne Todd and Cecil
Jensen are now serying life sen-
tences in the penitentiary for
McNeill's murder. Death sentence
given Todd was commuted by
Governor Pat Neff.
McNeill wan killed August 31.
1931. He took the three youths
into his service car. He ws
slugged with an fren pipe.
—WATCH FOR GLORIA —
WHITE HOUSE 1$
~ SILENT
' The cllyHanca ata in. pood
condition, according to figures
compiled by Ed Cheatham, eity
auditor, ' —----—
The city is 363,296 under the
budget for th* first nine months
of the fiscal year which ends in
July. The unexpended net bal-
WASHINGTON, April 7. — The
White House today announced a
policy of silence on th* questio.
of the foreign debt to the U. S.
and the proposed second Wash-
Inglon artiis conterenee until
there is something definite to re-
port. ,
No new developments have
arisen in regard to either question,
a spoksman of the President said.
— WATCH FOR GLORIA —
-cW.o . sa
Twenty-four Cincinnati policemen
and seven dry agents pleaded
guilty to charges of bootlegging
and bribery when their trials in
connection with the Cincinnati
graft probe were called in Federal
Court today.
Thirty-nine of the original 71
indicted officers remain to be tried
on charges of accepting bribes to
conceal liquor and narcotics law
violators. Six pleaded guilty last
week.
from a honeymoon that had taken her and Dick to
Montreal. “I won’t sacrifice myself like my mother
—-e;
t ‘ .ep"5*a
m - iamm.e
Officer Recalled.
"We're moving out of Barron
Field because at the time we im-
proved it, it was agreed the gv-
ernment was to recognise but one
field in North Texas as an air
port, and that Barron," explains
Ireland Hampton, CofC manager.
"The government proceeded to
recognise Love Field. Dalls, also
As a result the sir truffle be-
tween San Antonio and northern
fields was divided, reducing the
visits here to a number insuffi-
cient to make maintenance of the
field feasible."
For several months the govern-
ment kept an army sergeant per-
manently quartered at the field
to attend to the wants of landing
plloto, but he later was recalled.
— WATCH FOR GLORIA-
! , ) .
Ridgway Named
Game Supervisor
R. Bonna Ridgway of Alpine,
*,,3
"9
gzasd8p"
By United Press.
CLEVELAND Ohio, April 7.—
An SOS signal from a ship report-
ed sinking near Kingston, Ont.,
I in Lake Ontario was picked up
here today by an amateur radio
• 4 1 ' » 1
> FLAPPER FANNY SAYS:
. Some folks never nave heard
a traffic cop swear, and then
others have parked near a
fire plug. -
Fort Worth can use a portion
of unity about as easily as any
community in the country. —
— WATCH FOR GLORIA —
era..%
l .4
“0
1,2.5
South had gone to the polls at 2
p. m. Seven Southwest, with a
voting strength of 500, had polled
only 39 votes, and Eight North-
west. with about 800 voters, had
76 votes.-
Judge* Optimistic.
Judges , and election clerk*
look for a much heavier vote in
the afternoon, however. Poll*
• • • . Implicated in the murder .of
And, take it from others be-
afdes me, snappyactlonTs wnat
is devoutly to be wished from
- the men who will choose the city
managerFandmake "him bundrour
town and save our money fort he Training School Tuesday.
- I do not think that way, but
here’s the argument of the po-
litical astrologer who made the .
prediction: Each district will
eek its representation —= folks
won’tike elections for council
men citywide, but will return to
- the idea of each ward choosing
its own as * more democratic (
method. ,
bill sold during-the week .
Abby Bros Safe Co. had sold
collection. Eighth Northwest, 76 of about
itles.
A literary conference will open
the final sessions of Wednesday.
"Constant Trend of English
Literature Toward the League, of
+Nattonswtt be the theme:" - Mrs.
J. C. Berney, chairman of liter-
ature, Wichita Falls, will preside.
Mrs. James A. Britain, Sey-
mour, First District president, and
Mrs. Henry Redmond. Corpus
Christi, State president, were the
principal speakers at "Presi-
den’s Evening,” held preliminary
to the convention Monday night.
— WATCH FOR GLORIA —
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Toomer, Morrison R. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 160, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 7, 1925, newspaper, April 7, 1925; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1638341/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.