Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 272, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 11, 1923 Page: 10 of 48
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NICHITA 0 WILY T
WICRIT A Fazls TEXAS
a minus FuBLisMisG COMFAnv. 4
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* NATIONAL ADVERTISING HE
E Kais Special Advertising
€ Chicago, Kansas City, Atlante
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MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OZ ANGULATION
LT N E MBER ASSOCIATED
M The Associated Press to exclusive
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Local news published nereis 5.1 ‘%
tied to the
saoaneeis:
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ertiser:
TmuenWiVeFos
errors or of
the publishe
further than
at:
Y, MARCH 11,1928.
7O""t
rone month
=*== F=L
, Six months -NJM
alone year **************************
avy By mail is Texas and Oklahoma: 5 1
One month **************0440*0***00000*:
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A 'By ‘man outsids of fexis ana Oklahoma
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me The Sunday and Weekly Times
By mail only to any address:
A Sir months newwcoscetucanawc0ocang,0wegeepe
5aOne year ■.......■....,■..... Sore
1 . SUNDAY,MARCH 11, 1923
mA
on NEFF CALLS arECiAu'edM
S.T € LEGISLATURE,
ins “The legislature having appropriated farno. sums
. ot money in its regular session without passing
: measures for sufficient taxes to meet the eppropria:
* tons it has been necessary, for Governor Neff to call
inon a special session. In his call for the special session
uts Governor Neff mentions other subjects, but taxa-
s: tion measures are the most important and first con
V‘ sideration. We can’t dance is this matter of pub
3e. le improvement and the extension of governmental
To activity without paying the fiddler through taxation
as has been shown to the necessity of a special ses-
sion of the legislature to authorize more’ taxes.
Governor Netr in his call takes occasion to criti-
cise the senate for “smothering” the quo warranto
bill providing a method for removal of public offl-
cers who fail to enforce the laws. Some method of
doing this ought to be provided but doubtless the
senate saw to the measure urged by Governor Neff,
too many openings for the play of politics and the
abase of power. Texas might easily fall into some
.. thing worse than the occasional failure of officials
00 to enforce the tow end the power of removal ought
to be restricted and closely guarded. The Texas sen-
ate has been a bulwark of conservatism and sanity
and has prevented much unwise legislation which
conservatives in the house could not srevent getting
through that body :
The special session can complete tax measures
that will give revenues sufficient for the appropriate
tions already voted but it may not do so if Governor
Nett attempts to go rough shod over the senate. * *
-----------------------------
Hi
.M
. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY
I am Alpha and omega, the besinging,and
Death borders upon oar birth, aad our cradle
stands in our grave.—Bishop Hall. -
! -------
ANOTHER OUTLET. '
F It has boon said that only one railroad, the first
one, was built into Wichita Falls, the remainder of
his chye ran outete’bemg billy ‘out for Wichita
Falls. That in literally true, and it is just another
way of saying that it has been the energy of Wleb-
Itou, working for Wichita Falls, rather than the
efforts of outsiders, that has given thin city the out-
lets it now has. . "At 1 . .
That saying holds good in the case of the latest
addition to this city’s rail facilities, the extension of
the Wichita Valley toWaurlkar although built by
the Burlington system, it is due in very great mea-
sure to the activities of Frank Kell, whom a big city
would-be humorist once dubbed the “champion, bush-
league railroad builder of the United States." Every
community of any importance has its railroad bulld-
ers who build on paper; Wichita Falls has-been for
tunate enough to have one who builds more substan”
tially. * ,
L if the extension, whose completion was celebrated
Saturday, meant nothing more than linking Wichita
| Falls to the little city of Waurika, it would be a tre-
mendously valuable acquisition, for that community
has a citizenship and a spirit that will not permit it
to romain a litue city indefinitely. But # means nine
connection with dozens of sood-towne. Ton the Rock
I Island, in southwestern oxiafioma, and brings Wich-
its Falls closer to a prosperous and growing section
of the Sooner state, til
1. It is the opening of another gateway between
Eiehita-Falls and Texas, which is likely to have
more importance than now realized. It plans that
have been mentioned mature for the operation of
I through sleepers from Abliene and from Brecken-
ridge over the Wichita Valley and the Wichita Falls
a Southern railways via the Bock Island to Kansas
City and Chicago, the connection just completed will
give a much more direct route to Kansas City and
. Chicago than now exists and will mean that instead
of having to go to Fort Worth and Dallas to set
such a connection-West Texans will come through
Wichita Falls and Waurika. This will mean much
' th the West Texans thus conventenced and to Wich-
ita Falls.
• Mr. Kell has dropped a hint or two about further
railroad building.” The line to Waurika, Wichita
Falls has been led to believe, will later mean more
i than it does now, and Mr. Kell has indicated that he
would not necessarily let the Waurika project be his
: last. There are other sections of Northwest Texas
and Southwestern Oklahoma to which Wichita Falls
may, in later years, be more closely linked. Is the
light of Mr. Kell's words, Wichita Falls has a right
to hope for still more railroad outlets. 1
--—*----:
25,000 YEARS AGO.
The Stone Age people who lived la Great Britain
| 25,000 years ago were physically and mentally su-
perior to the average European of 1923.
So claims ths eminent authority on anthropology.
Prof. Elliot Smith of England. 4
Smith O. k.’s, as accurate, Mackenzie’s book, "An-
clent Man in Britain." This book, which is creating
a sensation in England, gives this description of the
Britons of 250 centuries ago: 5 . ,
| “In Sil essential features they were of modern
type. They would, dressed in modern attire, pass
through the streets of a modern city without partio
jular notice being taken of them. One branch was
particularly tall and handsome, with an average
height for the males of 6 feet 1% inches." *
I The people who inhabited Britain 25,000 years ago
suffered from many of the physical complaints that
I are common today.
TODAY’S TALK
.By omonam MATTHEW ADAMS
---------.— ^ --------------
INVISIBLE CURRENTS OF LOVE. ■ :
I believe that silent influence is very great.
Great because there can be no influence at all
without a background of achievement and worthy
works from which to reflect.
ace HopeUNCLE SAM'S BURDEN if
PARTrONE
By MORRIS t
the Uniteavstate
FARE
honor on
ste
tryee
therea
no, au
iscour
No matter how long we live, we learn that the
number we are able to influence greatly must neo
esearily be very small—and the number of those who
become extremely doer to us is still smaller. 5
After several thousands of years, we find that
we know veryilittle about ourselves. We hold with- ,3
to ourselves tremendous power but the sources we netere
have only tapped, as yet. -
I believe it possible to send, intelligently, invis-
ible currents’ of love across great distances, and
have them received by those for whom they are, in-
tended. T $ ' 21
I often send these invisible messages to the lit-
Uo group I love—scattered as they are—and I am
certain that many, and may be all, come back to me
and help to build the moments of happiness and
beauty that are mine so often. - ’
Who knows but what, happily awakening to the
of the smaller *
but they are ad
themselves Vi
upon the banner
talons. 7731.
uruen,"
o be hoped that its
% which, reprettably,
: pnac and the dot.
letarmina:to 1 1
years ago we wit
wwEaa
ton.. The heants
5
rentes
%. sour years br
to settle the?
nuerose quaint
=imet
15
wtowst
pray God
morning, a mother's love from vanished lipa has not
touched one's sleeping eyes and made them feel the
love of all the world?- J
P When we teel, we start the dynamos of our be-
tags to work-storing currents of love, for all able to
be made happy by it. , d e t s
Never in all the history of the world has there
been such a need for invisible currents of love. The
very air should be charged with them.
You have them. Why, not help? 5
. (Copyright, 2923 George Matthew Adams) '
. -----------------A0
.227272 senhobe tocattain onto
=uhhe*m4
mind, a thing we do not now possess.
1 thought the war, would drain the
last drop of blood out of the veins
ot the American people and fill them
with the ichor of the gods, pulsating
in thoughtand conduct to service,
sacrifice and peace. It did no such
thing. The Englishman had his pro-
judice for England, the Frenchman
for France, the Italisnifor Italy, the
German for Germany, and therview
one obtains about, the things now
going on in Europe will mine tim a
out of tea enable him to fix the
ancestry of the 1 ian who expresses
IL Yes, the league of nations *
doing wood in restraining, some of
the little fellows, but it will only
sceompliik its perfect work when it
m
g
J UST FOLK S-.-7
-------------—E ,——
*WINTER AND THE BOY. 1 1
* Red of cheek and bright of eye,
1 Shoulders square and head up high,
• Ten years old, when blood to warm, <
re. Making I mockery of the storm,
. “Laughing at the winds that-blow,
. Fairly wallowing in the snow-
Ago stay find the storm-king grim,
2. But a boy can play with him.
, Cost wide open at the throat
Like the loooe sail of a boat.
Bare of knees and bare of hands, in 1
Master of the gale he stands;
Sturdy, rugged, stench and true.
Out of doors the whole day through.
Giving us a roguish grin
2 When the blizzard drives us in.
r 84 AC
Age alts at the window pane
Wishing spring would come again;
Like the tenants of a jail.
We are prisoners of the sale
And we hear his lusty sheet.
But we dare not venture out.
Yeeth may brave the biting cold-
Age can never be so bold.
(Copyright 1922, by mogar A. Guest.)
SMILE A WHILE
WITH TON SIMs
Eight congressmen are threatening to tow the
United States.
This Master you will not see any women sitting
"home in their new bats listening to male sermons.
Seven tax collectors were shot in Siberia, show
ing that even the worst of countries has its pleasures.
“There is evidence in skeletons of the effects of
rheumatism and of bad teeth,” says Prot. Smith. %.
' Those ancients were' clever surgeons. They were
skilled at performing the delicate operation, tre- ,—------------------------------------
panning, the skull to relieve the brain from pressure bathing suits to get their pictures to the paper,
or irritation. Skulls, which have been dug up, re
veal this clearly and unmistakably. :
Similar operations, by the way, were performed
by the Aztecs who had a highly developed civiliza
tion, on the American continent, until the plunder
ing Spanish explorers destroyed it.
A Some people will even stand out in the snow in
Fellowshipof
Draper -
...."%-hutit -:"%
Sara.:: .HERE ■
SUNDAY*
The Chetettaa renecees.”
* “For he tout is not against an “is
for us.” Mark 9:402 “7 ,r
Road Mark 9:38-50.
“The redemption of the world: is
earned onward by the binding of
Christian hearts and liver tobether.”
Meditation: to Jesus, great heart
there to room for those who follow
afar off, but is it not pathetic .that
there are Christians who cannot be
recognised except that they do not
oppose Christ: *
Hym-%
Jesus shall reign where’er the sun
Does his successive Journeys tun.
His kingdom stretch from shore to
wn "noun, than, wax ana wane as
. 5 more. Ah y
Prayet: O thou Lord and Father
of all mankind, unite the hearts of
thy children of whatever race or
creed, of whatever land or clime, in
one great fellowship of the Spirit.
Let no unworthy thing separate as
from one another and from thee, O
God. May we have unity of life, of
hope, of faith and of service, that
thy, divine kingdom may come so
this troubled world; through Christ,
Amen. 4 ... S.
"sisie
noo’t’what may
to their rights.
I of them in the
f it were set for
whartspanteth for
o the souls of men ev-
par for peace. Give the
ace to say whether there
_ _se or war and we shall
thave-eliminated almost every dan-
serf of conflict. We shall not have
peace nor permanent hope of peace
so Jons as man in authority are ac-
tuated by the ballot that their first
duty is to maintain’ the integrity of
their own country, their second duty
is to obtain every political and eco-
nomic advantage possible, and their
third duty is to talk, if any time
remains, about peace and good will
among men. Fretful little realms
may be held in a we by the overpew.
erins majesty of larger govern-
meats, but a friendly feeling will
set exist until the little fellow la
convinced that the law by which he
is governed is the law governing
all. T 1 N
1 Not since Frederick the Great
made his assault upon Silesia has
any nation deliberately avowed its
intention to prepare for a war of
aggression. The cry is. farms, men,
ships for defense!”—defense against
whom no one st the time knows,
but sooner or later, the target is
found, the enemy is uncovered. The
expense which was gladly met for
defense is, used for offense. While
the present system continues there
ta nothing other to be done. Jt. ts
vain to train our boys’to be too
proud to fig ht. for they may be
made the aggressors by designing
politicians. But while the soul of
the world, seamed and scarred by
tim last conflict, is, crying out for
ponce, why do not the people take
steps to disarm the world and to
prevent its rearming until a future
generation desires another war?
(Copyright. 1923, by Thomas R.
Marshall.)
/ owes
®
LITTLE BENNY’S
NOTE BOOK -
By LES PAPE.
bin that meny sir he hadent of
jumped erround and barked so mad.
Amuns, those heelping ia the ix-
periment was Benny Potts, Sam
Cross,Leroy Shooster and Lew
Davis.1.
The late Prot. Camden M. Coburn, who uncov.
sed the cities which the Israelites built of sun-dried
Nick before they fled Egypt, had ths greatest sur
rise of his life in India. -
1 There Coburn saw an ancient document In which
scientist of 0,000 years ago told how he had dis-
covered and isolated something like M different
kinds of throat bacilli (disease bacteria).
Link this fact with Prof. Smith's revelations
bout the Britons of 25,000 years ago, and it rather
akes the starch out of our vanity.% . y
How long will it be until exploring scientists ot
he future did deep into the earth and uncover rem-
ants of the civilization we have today—for instance,
isut here in Wichita Falls *
tsaeie Coogan makes a nickel while you read this
European countries are paying men big wages
just to sit around and think up excuses for wars.
Financial writer says lower taxes are not in sight,
agreeing with us that all taxes are out of sight. 5
A man who ran away from the alee, warm steam-
heated Wisconsin insane asylum was crazy.
The Seattle wife asking divorce because hubby
cut her hair probably alleges barberous treatment.
A rhkie association says pickles make people
beautiful. Just the same, getting into one doesn’t.
A faung tody telle as after her husband has worn
a suit twice It looks an old as Kins Tuts suit.
No homeLombsts dwinout 4 few highbrow
books around to make people think you read them.
FrNA(TYA-= , t4- ■
You have to live 50 or 60 years before you leara
every thing young people should know. I
Park Ave. News
Weather. Partly diffrent.
■ Spoarting Page
„Benny Potts auctioned off his
fielders glove at a auction held on
his front steps last Sattiday morn-
ing, Skinny Martin bidding 16 cents
and being the highest bidder, the
ony trubble being that he dident
have the 16 cents so the next high-
est bidder got the glove, being Sam
Cross bidding 11 cents, having Kent
Int*letlng Panka about Intristise
Peeple. Sid Hunt saya he is sorry
he ever had a radio set gave to him.
because his father makes him go to
bed on time every nite now and
then lissens to it himself.
Pome by Skinny Martin
A Free Country, r.
Wat a bewtifili site is the wash on
the line
As it waves and flops and flutters.
And if eny of the nayhers think dif-
front • MN
They can shut their shutters. A
1 Science and Discoveries. Some of
the fellows went erround with Sid
Hunt wile he bowt a box of dog bis-
kits for his fox terrier Teddy, and
on the way back they Experimented
te see if human beano cold eat dog
blakits, the result of the Experiment
being that there was ony I biskits
left for Teddy and there mite not of
YOU AND 1
- —By ALBERT APPLE
“Anuayl
Lewis Ebert, who works in New
York City and commutes from his
home at a distance, figures out that
he has traveled hearty a million
miles making the back-and-forth
trip in the 'last 251years.
Assuming that the trains aver-
a ged 50 miles an hour, Lewis has
•spent 20,000 hours on commuting
trips or the equivalent of eight
hours a day for eight years.
How much time are you com-
pelled to waste similarly? The fast
airplane—flying flivver—eventually
will save most of this time now lost.
man
Nine-tenths of the alcohol drunk
by the thirsty before prohibition
was in beer, according to. Com-
mander Evangeline Booth
The return of “real" beer, ac-
cordingly, would undo 90 per-cent
of prohibition, ' That’s : something
that “has occurred to few of the
“liberals,” However, King Alcohol
was put out of business on account
of the other 10 per cent, which
went late firewater. Minority rule. 3
Abuse of whisky by a few brought th
prohibition to the millions, con- A
tented with a mild drink. -
a JOKE
When Prot. t Frank, Lockwood
joined the staff of the University of
Arizona, be wondered late the ceme-
tery and noticed that the tombstones 4
indicated most of the early settlers "
of Tucson had departed this life
rather young.
"Must have been a bad epidemic of 1
something in these parts,” Lockwood
commented to an old man nearby.
“What'd they die of rT %
“Most of them died of a difference
of opinion,” the old man answered. *
Differences of opinion—stubborn
refusal to compromise and 'meet the
other side halfway—caused most of
the trouble in history. In Europe .
today, also ‘ it
B FATH
A woman’ of 75, la Cleveland,
leaves a doctor's office with the
health certificate which she needed
to admit her to an old people’s
home. Crossing the street, she IS *
run down by a motor truck. Dies :
In the hospital three hours later.
Fate is ironical. You will scan the -
news for many, days before you find
a greater human interest story than
this tragedy of the old woman. After
all, fate was kind to her at ths end. 4,2
She is out of her misery—gone to
the universal “old people's home." n
• Only thing certain about February
weather is its uncertainty.
1
3
,
FOLKS BACK HOME ***-** I stEmEL. By Robert Quillen
it * n.L al *
“Set down, son,” said Uncle Qus, •
“an’ listen.”- He gnawed a fresh
portion, of natural leaf from a gen-
erous twist and settled in his arm
cliair. ‘I been argutyin’ with the
preacher,” he continued, “an’ I’m
full of words I didn't use. It ain't
no fun argufyin’ with preacbers.
They begin by
‘ thinkin they can’t
be, wrons. an a
. LY. you don't agree
with ’em they in-
DC ' sinuate it’s on ace
50 4 count o’ you bein’
2 wicked.
says some folks
is unselfish an’
re thinks only of
a other folks, an’1
9 maintain he’s full
o' dang-fool no-
- tions.
I “All motives is mixed an’ the’
aint no such thing as straight-out
unselfishness. I’ve knowed lots o’
folks what was good an’ kind an
neighborly, but I ain’t ever knowed
none what didn’t think about the - 4
selves mo or less. 1
———,_——_. _ . enter work hard an’ deny the 4
“Dis yere cot fines you seventeen selves, to buy good clothes to the 1
delinks an a half.” wives am chaps, an’ folks calls at 1
— ----—- An. — —unselfishness, but it aint. The men 1
get a sight -o’ pleasure out of it ■
Keepm’ithe folks dressed up to just 1
in way of ministerin’ to the’ own ■
pride. I An when you do things to 1
folks you love-you get a heap o’ 1
selfish pleasure watchin’ the’ eyes ’
* " tame no
selves some. It makes’em proud an.
happy to think how good an’ Jong, j
suttern, they are bein', an* they 9
ear’s help thinkin’ that like as not
folks to admirin’ ’em. t.L.2
a “ don’t like plum selfish folks, *
but I aint never seed no plum' one *"
selfish ones", Uh nA
PITOL
ny sANes 2. aEGo
U. & Representative From ‘ Ohio,
Thirteenth District.” '
5 A negro down in Alabama was
arrested by a colored constable and
brought before a black, Justice M
the peace.
The justice couldn’t read or write,
but he frowned portentiously at the
culprit, and, turning the pages of a
fat volume on his desk, said: % -
“Nissan, dis vere, is de statutes
of de state of Alabama and rm
goto’ froo it till I finds de. big gest
fine to sech cases” made an’ per-
vided. An” I’m coin cha ge you dat
fine.” kin 1
He ruffled the pages slowly and
eventually announced:
The defendant paid the fine and
started to walk out, when the con-
stable whispered to him: HWy
"Niggah, you-done teolion.” You
2224*01
‘I knows, my business,"replied
the other.” ‘‘I kin read an write an
I knows dat wasn’t no statutes of
Alabama. Dat was a main ordan
catalogue. An- the jedge was fool-
te‘ around in the tinware section
when he finds me. If I’d‘a argued,
the chances is he d‘a” done tu’s
ovah to do automobile section.” . i
many
“The most Interestin
Europe for set
nor then ex-I
war re
efre
her heir. If true, and if it's aibby,*
a birth may be tremendously his-
For, when the boy sand
Id. about 1944, it to ee
r^rax^si«-«
for brothers all AAR ^--XE
• aninst that.
at the Gea
' wind
In
Main Street
Tourists who roar through a vil-
lage la a cloud of dust, or stop for
gas aad information with every evi-
dence that the enforced delay is als-
tasteful, are of two types.The first
says: “What a quaint and charming
spot this lar The other drawn its
garments close and exclaims: “How
cheap and sordid and unclean!" The
first judges the village on its mer-
its: the other compares it with a
metropolis. (6
The village has no beautiful bulld-
ings. The beautiful structures men
build with their hands require mon-
ey for the building. Mammon builds
temples to itself. But 1a the village
are streets where the branches of
ancient trees meet above the head of
the traveler, and old fences whose
pickets lean awry under the weight
of rambling roses, and walks of
mellowed brick bordered with box.
wood. These have an intimate charm
more winning than the cold gran-
deur of clone piles that tower into
gray skies. Thoae are the show
places of the village.
The metropolis must rest Ita case
upon show-places, also. There are
streets where money has persuaded
there are many others where pover-
ty and utility have wrought frank
ugliness. For each beautiful strue-
tare there are a hundred unlovely
ones. The greater the city, the
greater the number of unlovely
spots that cluster in its outskirts.
Man makes beautiful playhouses,
but his work shops and garbage
cans are uniformly ugly. :
• GIRL AND THK BUTCHER BOY
K°
ble
say
Towneyer can
on. ispust ■*
, Pa has worried
off and on ever
since w,o was
till marries:" but #
Bly don’t never signi-
h fy nothin’ except
2, that he needs a
i across the street came
might and sat With daugh -
E the cushions to the cor-
i living room to make talk
s the, wooes of those who
y in love,” she confided,
first began going with Hir-
ed him, of course; but he
Hiram, the butcher boy,’
ba girls loked‘ about him.
ly took him seriously, and
stry about him, no matter
1 didn't think I could ever be
lone about him. I thought jear-
sy was just common and silly,
t last night at the party he was
Bwmsw W
is, and it save me the awrullest
all Hurty inside and kinda sick. „
“I wouldn't let him know for any.
thing. Of course t like to love him.”
but I'm scared all the time I'll love
him more than he loves me, and that
would be terrible. I believe I'm a
little bit sorry I love Mm. as much
as I do. It’s like having chains on
that hold you fast. It doesn't seem
to be that Way with boys, but 16
seems to me when a girl’s honest-to.
goodness In love. It’s kinda like she
was a slave. Anyway, I won't feel
free and easy again until I make
Hiram convince me he loves mo
bushels and bushels." 1
Poor generous creatures! They
give reluctantly and with many
doubts and fears. But when at last,
0.o-nesaantaraa
mum snu ---=-= to possess: woman is ever a martyr
mad exactin but to her love, Rimaol’s,
Ben Short
In our town there is no lack of re- ,
spect for the President of the United
States, or the Governor of our State
or ths local preachers; but we are In
manyways rather primitive, with
primitive standards of measurement,
and when we wish to convince a
stranger that one of our citizens is
a regular, sure-enough man, ws say:
"I've seen him muscle out a sack of
flour in each hand." That is beat to
the highest praise we can offer. The.
highest to: “Nerve? You bet he's got
nerve! Why, he’d fight a burr saw 11 .
It is inevitable that this environ-
ment should produce bullies—men,-
with great thews and a vaat appetite
for punishment, who will fight
gamely and well with little prove- 1
cation, and In time develop a degree
of skill so great as to make defeat
in any encounter highly improbable.
Of such kidney was Ben Short, the
blacksmith. As Ben began to devel-
op as a man of war, he had to fight
every, Saturday night and held this
pace without lowering his colors
until the neighherhod conceded that
the sidewalk was his by divine
right" r
Now, it isn’t good for boy, man,
ornation to" so unwhipped. It to
thus that arrogance is developed,
and unseemly manners Ben became
a nuisance and a quarrelsome pest.
He cursed 1 everybody, strangers
Included, and spoiled for carnage.
Tbs community, in fact, was on the
point of teaching him a lesson, when
an undersized traveling man served
as pedogogue, using a pocket knife
to make his point clear. • *
Ben’s countenance to oddly decor-
ated now, but he is a modal citizen.
One seldom hears mention of "this
nerve, but there is much praise of
his dignified bearing and common
sense.
0 wile wins
Little Willie
Willis to saving ,
the tooth he had ,v 1
pulled Saturday, %
He says he is go- d
ins to save all as. . M
tooth and have r
them made into a 2
necklace that Will Cl
cause the enemy’s R
to tremble with -
terror when he
becomes a pirate.
he
M<
cor
Ce
r por
b Sh
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Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 272, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 11, 1923, newspaper, March 11, 1923; Wichita Falls, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1660864/m1/10/: 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.