Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 318, Ed. 1 Friday, March 27, 1925 Page: 8 of 20
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-8__
WITH TA DAILY TLES
, WICHITA TALES TEXAS :
THE TIMES 04 H».I»UIMI ONNVANN PUssiEHS
published Every Weekday Afternoon .
and on Sunday Morning 1
Entered at the Postortice at Wichita Falls au Second
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FOLKS 77
-B-'
EDGAR A. GUEST
, THE GOLF CRY.
In golf this cry has world-wide fame:
"I’ll never learn to play the game!”
At twenty-four when he began
He smiled to hear an older man
in rage and bitterness proclaim:
“I'll never learn to play the game. *
I’ve played for thirty years or more
Each lesson worse than that before,”
FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 1920
1 A THOUGHT‘FOR TODAY
% Give to every man that asketh of theer and
of him that taketh away thy greeds ask them not
again.—Luke 6:30,
7 That alone belongs to you which yon have be-
* stowed.Vemuna, , 3-
X
COINCIDENCE
Alfred McCann of New York over-a debt of
gratitude to someone, but he doesn’t know who
it la. McCann had Buffered from hiccoughs for six
days, when a man who refused to tell his name ad.
* vised him to “put a finger in each ear and drink
a glass of water held to your lips.”
McCann did so and the hiccoughs left him.
That probably was enough to establish the in-
fallibility of the "stop up your ear method” with
McCann. Doctors doubtless will explain it as an
} 3 accident, more than anything else.
Houdini says he once gained a great reputation
as a sorcerer when he was visiting with a family
and, for, the edification of one of the youngsters,
r walked into the yard and commanded the rain
t”to stop. * ‘ .-7-— *---—
2- Oddly enough, it did. “Then," says Houdini,
=“not wanting to delude the youngster, Ltook him
; into the yard again and ordered the rain to resume,
“thinking to prove to him that it was nothing more
than coincidence. -
f “But the confounded rain did start up again.
, I Today yon can’t convince that youngster that I’m
not possessed of supernatural power.”
FRENCH- < ; C
■ * Fist fights are becoming a common occurrence in
the French chamber of deputies. Premier Herriot
‘seems to possess a knack of infuriating the Con-
, |.oemotives beyond all self-control. ,
5. The other day it was a speech by the premier
"on "Christianity” that precipitated a bloody? riot
, Pand ended the sitting in chaos. 4
L You sort of envy the French. Think how much
tmore interesting our own senate sessions would be
, if the senators possessed some of the Gallic tem-
"perament.
And think what might have happened had Vice
I President Dawes addressed his inaugural speech to
the French chamber instead of to the staid United
"States senate.
PIPE OF PEACI
s U The modern version of the pipe of peace is not
Jan Indian calumet but an underslung, “upside down”
Laffeir.
Vice President Dawes, after antagonizing most
F of the members of the senate, is now, creating a
friendly feeling among the outraged solons by dis-
i “tributing copies of ths strangely-modeled pipe he
has made famous.
1 Since inauguration day he haa given away eight.
JPSenator Overman, who does not smoke, was pre-
t sented with one with the following speech: “I like
"you and will give vent to my Impulse for you by
presenting to you a pipe." . +
E If this keeps on there doubtless will be another
senatorial investigation, into alleged bribery or
--------------------__—
r * - ICE CREAM. , . a
" 1 We are eating less tee cream, says the depart-
1 ment of agriculture in publishing figures showing
"the average consumption for each person in 1924
was 2.56 gallons as compared with 2.68 in the
year preceding... i ,
r The decline was attributed to the cool weather
r last summer in many parts of the country.
s Why not try prohibition on'it? Bootlegged ice
cream might appeal to many who never eat it be-
“cause it's too easy to buy.
So many mothers have started—using rouge
their daughters may quit it or be considered old-
fashioned.
No wonder Philadelphia is known as fileepy
town. People staying up late at night look sleepy
next day., C
-
The first sign of spring, as we warned last
year, isn’t reliable until you see the last sign of
winter.
... ---—---— • l , -
L. Once, when • man was in love, his barber got
rich. Now, when a man’s in love, his filling station
rich, s 1 T
F ——------ a -J
1 We are living in hopes that spring will, make
people too lazy to work crossword pusales.
WICHITA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, MARCH n. 192521
At thirty, worried, he in turn
Exclaimed: "Thia game I’ll never learn.
Some days I play it fairly well,
. Drive like a pro, and truth to tell.
Approach and putt; then something snaps! 3
I see my boasted game collapse.”
Gambling Is All They're After
pastors Motet This column does not necessarily reflect the edi-
torial views of this Paper It is printed ne n discussion of timely
toples by one of the ablest writers of the country,
- By CHESTER H. ROWELL. *
Once more ths bill to “legalize horse racing” (which is already
legal) is up In Missouri, and presumably in other states. And of
fa 20r-2nusnl, there-is nothing about horse racing —erria
It would be a useful reductio ad absurdum for o t
some one to introduce a real horer racing bill, and w
see how these alleged horse racers would skedaddle
to oppose it.
, There are laws for the public encouragement of 1
agricultural fairs and like enterprises, which could Bioosgeat
serve as a model. The bill could expressly, not only ,
“legalize" but promote horse racing, with a commis-
eion, and even an appropriation, to help it. '
If that bill was silent on the subject of gambling, thergix
nd Left the anti-gambling laws ap they are, the-Pd
“horse racers" would not b« interested. , T
Gambling is the only thing they are trying to Auan
promote. Their bill should be so entitled.
It seems only a littla while ago when the first
young men who had not served in the Civil War began to come to
congress, r -
They were invaders of the rule
that all offices, elective and - ap-
pointive, must go to the veterans
and were the harbingers of a new
generation. A
but not into agreement with, the
Conservatives.
' t
At forty, still to hope he clung,
Dubs thought him skillful, but he knew
With golfers good he'd never do;
In from the course at night he came.
Sobbing: "I'll never learn the game!”
Fifty and sixty came and went
Nor once relieved his discontent, +
At seventy he himself agreed
The first half-century hard, indeed.
Now eighty-five and bent of frame.
He knows he’ll never learn the game.
(Copyright, 1925. by Edgar A. Guest)
? 1----A----
They do not belong permanently
there, and it to not best for the
Now the last of the veterans country that they stay there indef-r
Fe Finitely. 1 *
We still need, if not a Liberal
party, a liberal movement in one or
both of the existing parties.
It is the radicals who have, for,
the moment prevented thia In their
General Isaac Sherwood says This
valedictory, and the Civil War dis-
appears from the public life of the
nation.
TODAY’S TALK
By GEORGE MATTHEW A DAMS Y
-------------------------------------------- --------------------
THE STRONG SECRET PLACES. R*
No matter how weak a man may appear, there
art always limos whan he is very strong—times
when he steals into some secret place of his heart
and there finds the strength that amazes himself
and so often those who would weaken, him. f
Like the mighty giants in the fabled myths,
there are times when he stands out strong and able,
giving a background to his aspirations and achieve-
ments. 1 F f 1€
And in the end a man must be measured by his
It is the end of an lie, which be-
gan In heroism, exaltation and
graft, descended Into sordidness. In-
tolerance and barrenness of soul,
expanded into great material pro-
gress and culminated, morally and
politically in the Roosevelt era.
Then came let-down, partial re-
covery, the exaltation, of the great
war and the spiritual collapse that
followed—and the last of the veter-
ans survived only to see the flrut
and most discouraging stages of the
long cycle through which his own
generation had also gone.
Perhaps, having lived through it
once, he is equipped to look with
more charity than the. rest of us on
Its cyclic repetition.
Liberalism is Needed '
. The pending split in the British
Labor party further illustrates the
need of keeping alive the almost ex-
tinct Liberal party.
MacDonald and his associates are
being driven by their own radicals
into a practical .position scarcely
distinguishable from Liberalism.
Their philosophic differences be-
come academic. '
It is much the same in America.
Reckless radicalism has driven Pro-
gressives largely into union with.
present quarrels is perhaps the best
hope of its revival.
Experts er Polities— Which t
i The two schools of farm policy ’
have, for the time being, apparently ,
neutralised each other into, inac-
tion, and the farmer will be left, as
usual, to look out for himself-
which, in the long run, and With
much individual tribulation and In-
justice, he always manages to do.
One schoolwants to “pass a law'
about it," and the,other wants to
help the farmer to tools to do some-
thing about It. .
One would put the government
back Into war-time artificial meas-
ures. of purchase, guarantee, or po-
litical export bureau, with the re .
suit - inevitably, of encouraging
over-production In precisely the.
commodities of which we have al.
, ready a surplus, leaving us to 1m-
port the things which might .have
been raised in their place.
The other would help the farmer,
by organisation, to solve his own
marketing problem.
The second school has the experts
and most of the practical farmers,
behind It. •
There is more politics in the first.
Between them, we wait a while.
HIS WEAPON
KENWARD
strong' points and not his weak ones. •
I have often come to the conclusion that the
really strong man isn’t a very showy affair. And
I think that I am right. In his presence you can-
not talk about the failure of understanding. For
such a man is his-own interpretation. He is as
mysterious as is the stroke of the artist, which
just the minute that it is put to canvas, becomes
the painter. 11......T -----
Egoism fades in the presence of the strong man. + Ron currandi" sarge
His noble bearing absorbs virtue and shames the
selfishness of those about who can only boast.
The innately, brave man keeps his soul and
doesn't loan it out. But he lavishes his love and
his influence. And is most always misunderstood
for it at that. Which, however, doesn't bother him,
for his understanding is too keen.
i Only he who has observed and lived among the
strong and beautiful children of the wild and the
forest is able to locate their, strong secret places,
where they live and dream in their happiest mo-
ments, moments when they rear their young and
sleep under the stars unmolested. 7
It’s the same way with people. You can’t mine
for a soul with pick and shovel. You have to use
SARGENT WAS COOLIDGE’S
PROTECTOR IN SCHOOL
I By HARRY B. HUNT , [to Black River Academy, at Ludlow,
A NEA Service Writer----TTVt nearly+o years ago. - ■
, The Sargents” lived at Ludlow.
WASHINGTON, March 27. The and young Coolidge went to their
1N biggest man in the president’s cabl-e house to board.
As a timid, bashful boy from
the village of Plymouth) callow
Cal was scheduled for a "course
of sprouts" by the more sophisti-
eated academicians. t /
Then John Sargent passed out
word that the newcomer was sort
o’ under his protection and that
-■•.•■- •..■■.— 5* —-—-., — -. | he’d tend to anybody who tried to
bus, heretofore the lengthiest cabisitend to Cal Sargent’s fist was as
neteer, and tips the scales ath 25 i bhi then as It hi todsy—and hili'
pounds or so more than Secretary biceps more supple. The hint was
Weeks the heftiest of” the 0 sufficient,
cabinetU
Sargent just scales under al
the tools of understanding and toleration as you
go along. And you have to spread sympathy and
sweetness. Then you are led in and are introduced
to worth and the treasured things of human life.
Never forget that there are unrevealed spots
and places in other people’s Uvea as there are in
your own. ,
’ (Copyright, IMS. by George Matthew Adams)
Fa Ripplin ghumosig
CY-wthmr)
ROMANCE
"When I was young I loved a lady,” said William
Doe, in pensive tone; "her eyes were blue, her name
was Sadie; her hair was auburn, mixed with roan.
It is with sadness one confesses the folly of dead
years, by heck; I wrote fine odes about her tresses,
I wrote more odes about her neck. I used to sing
beneath her casement love songs when dusk fell
on the lea, the while her parents, from1 the base-
mont, threw chunks of coal and rocks at me. And
when she said she’d be a sister, when I desired she’d
be a bride, I shod the sort of tears that blister, and
liks a large blast furnace sighed.. Into my eyes
the tears were welling, my sad heart thumped
against my slats; for days and weeks’my thoughts
were dwelling on doom and crape and rough on
rats. She married James Fitzdoodle Snoozer, I
saw her don her bridal wreath, and 1. an also-ran.
a loser, stood by the church and gnashed my teeth.
And now I count my legal tender and thank the
gods she turned me down, for Sadie was a reck-
less spender, she bought up everything in town.
Her husband in those days was thrifty, he had a
large and goodly roll, but now we see him broke at
fifty, his credit badly in the hole. When I was
done with tears and raving I hooked up with a girl
named Maud, whose queenly heart was bent on sav-
ing, and now ws have a noble, wad. And so I cast
sardonic glances on young men who have loved
and lost; it’s often best that their romances have
run against a killing frost.”
(Copyright, 1936 by George, Matthew Adams)
L Tom Sims Says:
— — -2, . -
Georgia moonshiners used a church ball to
warn of revenue officers; a ml booze ring.
Norfolk (Va.) jailor got arrested. Charged with
bootlegging. Maybe keeping bad company did it.
Garibaldi - - Sargent, the
new attorney general, whom Presi-
dent Coolldse called to office After
the/ senate Thad ‘ turned down
Charles B Warren, towers a good
three inches above Secretary Wil-
----- Sargent comes to Washington
feet, five inches in his socks, in with the reputation of being " a big
hateht ui. ..i.h, <. ranPhlv 1%. mar from a small town."
Ludlow, 13 miles from Coolidge’s
home town of Plymouth, is a burg
| of only 1,700 inhabitants. Life there
height. His weight is roughly 18.
stone, for some 250 pounds avoir-
duvols..
Sargent typifies the "rugged Ter- i
mont strength" which the poets | is calm, simple, natural.
write about,, .’■'I *1t is from such surroundings.
Although his - years have [ Coolidge believes, that a true per-
brought a certain (laeeid looseness j speetiveof law as' well as fire can
to the skin of his neck and jowl,'best be gained.. There, fundamen-
the lines of his jaw are still firm tals alone stand out.
and strong. ■ 1
The very bigness of his body,
ponderous but powerful, suggests
a mind that, likewise, while per-
haps not of panther-like quick-
ness, plows straight ahead through
all obstacles to definite and sub-
stantial conclusions. -
The superficialities, the abner-
malities, that so often warp the
viewpoint of city dwellers are
missing. The technicalities, the
evasions, do much practiced by big
city lawyers, find no place,.
Bored a California oil „en thousands of feet
“Next biggest bore is some of the movies’ they make.
-4—- P
A horse will pull your car out of a ditch. And
very often horse sense will pull you out. I
— It is almost warm enough to practice classic
now.
Terrible news from Italy. Ten feet of snow in
places. We hope it doesn’t kill the spaghetti bushes.
Sargent ought to help Coolidge
feel more at boms in his job. With
Sargent In town, the president may
reel, in some degree, the same kind-
ly Interest and protection that he
felt when, under Sargent’s wing, he
was saved a hazing on his entrance
ANSWER TO YESTERDAY’S
: CROSSWORD PUZZLE E $
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Tittle G5
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aNote Book
doeckes
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Short words, most of them, but they’re not so easy to get, because
of the great number of unkeyed letters. In addition, due or two of the
words may be found above average difficulty.
2
As an aid to legal and philosoph-
Ical researches Sargent relies no
little on pipe and plug.
During long winter days, when
Ludlow lies snowbound, Sargent
spends days on and in his library,
smoking and consuming both
chewing tobacco and legal lore- in
prodigious quantities. -
Following the spring thaws, he
gets a severe attack of fishing fee
ver. And a little later he is apt
to be seised by a mania for gar-
dening.
His red and hoe have, supplied
the Sargent table with its fresh
fish and vegetables throughout his
life.
Sattiday afternoon pop was amok.
Ing and reading with his feet up.
and I sed. Hay pop.
1 dont bleeve so. pop sed .
Can 1 have a dime to go to the
movies, Puds Sunkins land. Leroy
Shooster are both going and their
anxious for me to go with them,
can L pop? I sed. .
, Im quite sure not, pop sed. Tour
thinking intirely too mutch of the
movies, the feral thing you know
you’ll be a movie actor and make
$2000 a week and diskrace tie hole
family,, ho sed,_______. , F.
Aw noT wont pop, can T, pop
The incident is closed, pop sed.
Meening no. and he kepp on. read-
ing and smoking and I jhawt a wile
and then I sed: Well, maybeJIT
bring some of the fellows in and
practice football, signals, we wont
make -mutch noise.
No, you'll ony nock a few ceelinse
down, thats all, perish the thaws
pop sed. 1-11 --
Well then maybe 111 make a book
ease, I got all the bords and nates
’and things and ′ I can start It rito
fieer in, the’ setting room ware theres
plenty of space - I sed.
Wait for some weekday to do
that. I beseeteh-wou. do you realize
this is my afternoon home, for the
love of Peet yee godejipop sed.
And he moved his-eyebrows up
and down and kepp on reading and
smoking and I sed, O well, then I
gess III practice on my mouth or-
gan, I havent practiced on it for %
long wile. 'j .
Are you fingically incapable of
thinking of anything plezzant, heers
a dime for the movies, hurry up and
get out, pop sed. -
Wich 1 did.
1
13
17.
2.1
23
27
53
31
3 2
35
37
58
46
48
1.
$
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
39
44
4.2.
T
M
Ex
49
HORIZONTAL
Tears spam. ‘ y
Almost a donkey.. _ ~ •
Metal rods in jail cells.
Tatar :
Plant from which bitter drug
Premium for exchanger of
mont)
Punishing.
Opposite of poetry.
Newspaper subscribers.
Beyenth-note in scale.
Champion Movers
BOSTON — Moving companies’
would be rich if everybody was I
like John Tufts. H* andhis wife ,
have moved four times in ths 15:
months they have been married.
His wife is’now suing for separate
maintenance. , —
* Strokes at Same Time
BELFAST, Ireland.—An aged
couple there suffered a stroke of
paralysis at almost the same time
and both died within a few hours.
- ■ -=======
1 25. Behold,
" 28. Wedge-shaped support. ,
29. : Had affection for. S *
30,Half an em.
32. Myself.
34.. First In rank.
. 38. Grotesque blunders.
40. A few ten-cent pieces.
........43, Toward sea.
44. To employ. •
• 45). Left. -----
46. Sleeps.
47, Two plus one. -4
48. Gaelic,
r 49. Before. ' .
50. Little children.
VERTICAL
% Toshervest
3. A laborer.
I To daub. K
4. Horse
7. Supports.
8. Constellation.
. 9. To bring up.
0. Black haw.
1.7. Correspondence (pl.)
18. Continue E %
20. Three-toed sloth. '
XL Hebrew Deity.
31. Eren water.
1 37. A poem for mupie,
31. Direction between Europe
5 and North Pole. “
32. Third note - *’
7 it 9Aamex
i 35. A man who I-
his money. 4
| 36. Correct.
" 17. Principle. ;
, 38. Uncovered. 3”
•1 3s. Not so much.er r
1 41. Mohammedan tribe of Philip-
strong and healthy and able to re:
sist disease, - * -, j
Too much candy robs the checks I
of their roses—fruit helps to keep.
them, or to bring them back when
there have been lost. .
Today’s Puzzle
in scale,
ditates.
I Jus usu for use In eating
nan who is very tight with
42. Observes.
1
SAYS
BUGHOUSE FABLES
IS IT Au RIGHT )
ECR ME TO PARK
(N CAR NEAR
Tus WATER 1
PLUG 1
SURE - IN CASE
“YouR AUTO CATCHES
ON FIRE FOL ,
\ coMEA IN h
*HANOYCr
Davy. Dapple, a thrifty young tin- -
Took a dancer one night, out to
--(1). —
Les, he felt pretty ----(2)
When’she gave him his — (3) 1 1
But his bank roll, dear reader, was •
(1) meal (not corn mean).
(!) Horizontally prostrated
(3) Skimmer.
<41 Succerssiully reduced. 1 1,
Fables On Health
A Chicago man wants $50,000 be-
cause another man took the wife
he treated like 30 cents.
L You must make a lot of noise, to
be a social lion
%-----•
It’s getting so where there's
smoke there’s ri I
Santo Domingo scientist ssys
frogs there bark like doge. Well,
maybe Santo Domingo frogs lead a
I dog’s life.
i outside of jail the smallest plage,
on earth is a room in a board Er .
iouse in spring, -> T
lit
0iiEKs"
Beware of Sweets
Sweets make a good servant but
a bad master, Mrs Mann of Any-
town learned in her study of fooda
for health's sake. * t
, They contain concentrated
energy, which makes them capable
of being transformed very quickly
in the system to energy.
This explains why one, when
fatigued, Teels freshened up NO
quickly after eating some sweets.
This- relief does not last long, how-
ever.“and if more sweats be oaten
the edge of the appetite is dulled
so that one does not eat enough of
th proper foods when meal time
comes
Children, especially, are too apt
to satisfy the pangs of hunger by
sweets. They have learned that they
get satisfaction from IL but they
do not appreciate the danger.
Sweets are a good food In their
place, but they should be in cooked
foods or at the end of the meal.
Overcome the candy habit in chil-
dren If you would have them
Remruitsix urses, each one bear,
in medletter, of the alphabet. Sel
theren a row and try to form af
word/utilizing all six discs. After
you have formed one word, rear,
range the discs so they will form an
entirely different word. The first
word is not so hard to discover, bet
you may have trouble with the sec-
onde W
New York man found ‘his wife
safely, married to a fireman in Los
[Angelas, showing there was no need
TH .worry.C y
In Seattle, an auto driver ran into
aynew building going up, so car:
slaim it was going the wrong went
The worst March wind we have
seen was telling about his golf 1
score. - t
Last pusale answers
The bird dealer bought tbs fol-
lowering hundred birds with $1001
19 canaries St 06 each ......$ 95
1 goose at 11.2202222 1
80 chiekens st .03 each ...... 4
10%.e $100
Valuable Etchings X
LONDON—After being stored in
a bank vault for 70 years, a col-
lection of etchings, including 300-
by Rembrandt ware recently, re-
,10,006/44 1044 "^ more ihan
Government exports are advising
us to set mouse traps for sparrows
The: mice are willing. ,
rig world makes a resolution
every day. But China seems to
make one every hour. 4
While opportunity la supposed to
knock at your door only once you
can always find it somewhere down
town. | T
One thing proved be: stauistles is
that you can’t always prove a thing
by statistics. . , .
Mil Make Th
Problem a
-1. Preside"
WASHINGTON
# commission to
" Shoals problem,
mer Senator Dial
Professor Harry
• University: Will
New York and 5
the American Fa
tion was named
Coolidge.
Contrary to V
...let members “
fcommissles—wh
ized au Getermi
: tieal "methods J
eilitle availatie
Appointment •
A which will be 1
submit a report
possible before
congress whs 1
lution passed
Mr. MeKent
tired voluntar
March 4. At the
man of the
which her Jurt
legislation and
1 congress he let
1 f ve ptanc v of the
* Mr Dial is
term nr the sen
Mr Curtis is a
ical engineer a
executive utfses
trogen research
Mr. McCletia
■ University of 1
president of tb
of Electrical.
Bower, educati
€ versity, has, be
farm bureau. F
or Muscle Shot
Secretaries
probably will
cymmission in
* BREEDING
DESIGNED
WEIGH
SEATTLE, 1
ALreeding exp
double the we
deer by-crossi
land caribou.
Nunivak Islan
wim bay, Be
banks, Alaska
1.. J Palmer.
States biologi
Nome, Alaska
day.:
Reindeer a
cated caribou.
′′ studies of wi
ascertained 1
increased lu
pounds, the
herds, to 300
bou bulls ar
Kokrines dow
We to be usv
ing."
CHAMPION
IS
4
CHICAGO.
T’letertje IT
been the wor
is dead. Th
duced a wo
pounds of
quarts, in a
according to
stein Associa
yesterday oi
Farms at S’
three offspri
$35,000, the
ban. Marshal
i, was In A
famous cow
filmed at th
in Milwauke
made her pt
cow In Ama
FORMER H
DIES
INDIANAT
P—Dr. Joh
nationally i
and for 26
Indiana stat
at his home
years old. H
tack of inf
"Oh! hov
complex
THERE
A lain p
admired,
k brother,
A. And back
~ faction o|
Men 1
charms <1
with ent
haps, wo
To for that a
wtheirs. 11
I the hopi
9 ' craved 1
clear ski
skin-isI
condition
. beauty. 1
1 clear ski
L S.S.S. 1
will rid 3
and given
Since 18
people
pimples,
eczema a
Because 1
herbs an
with pel
self. Yo
out you 1
325
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Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 318, Ed. 1 Friday, March 27, 1925, newspaper, March 27, 1925; Wichita Falls, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1653547/m1/8/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.