Wichita Daily Times. (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 16, 1912 Page: 4 of 8
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FACE FOUR
WICHITA DAILY TIMES, WICHITA FALLS, TEXAS, MAY 11th, 1912.
WICHITA DAILY TIMES
Published Every Week Day Afternoon
(Except Saturday)
And on Sunday Morning.
—By—
THE TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY
(Printers and l'ublishers)
Published at
Times Building, Corner Seventh Street
and Scott Avenue
Omeers and Directors:
Ra B: vard, P'resident and Gen'l Mgr.
B E Huff v.............Vice President
P Anderson ...............Hecretary
B P. Donnell ........Assistant Manager
J. A. Kemp, Frank Kell, Wiley Blair,
T. C. Thatcher, W. L. Robertson.
MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS
Phones—
Editorial and Business Office.....167
ya Howard .............General Manager
B. P. Donnell...........Managing Editor
Subscription Rates:
By the year (mail or carrier).......$5.00
By the Month (mail or carrier)......50c
By the Week (inall or carrier)........16c
Entered ar the Postoffice at Wichita Falls
as second-class mail matter
Wichita Falls, Texas, May 16th 1912.
provements, for the purpose of mak-
ing such additions, betterments and
Improvements, said bonds to be au-
thorized without reference to the
amount of prior outstanding lieu ob-
ligations.
(c) To authorize any railroad com-
pany whose bonds or any part there
of were issued prior to the passage
of the Texas stock and bond law, upon
maturity thereof refund the same, dol-
lar for dollar.
--------------------
Any country that can truthfully
boast of soil that will produce a crop
of wheat that will make an average
yield of thirty bushe is per acre, May
be set down as a stood county, and
from the present veiry favorable out-
look there are at least a hundred fields
of wheat in this immediate section that
will do that this year.
BAPTIST CONVENTION -
HEARS MANY REPORTS
(Continued from page 1)
505 <UNIO
ED 505
This cool May weather has its nd
vantages—among which are that you
come nearer getting your money’s
worth in the purchase of a .chunk of
ice than will be the case when the
thermometer ranges in the neighbor
hood of 100.
If Tuft falls to-carry his own State
next Tuesday, the 21st, Teddy
----have-evenod-matters-up on him aditle.
and from the vigorous campaign that
thePresident is making it looks just
a little like that Ohio is no cinch for
him. .
_--=---------
In all probability an effort will be
made at the Houston convention to
put through a resolution endorsing the
administration of Governor O. B. Col-
quitt. If the attempt is made, it it
sure to cause trouble. Doubtless there
are some things that the administra-
tion of Gov. Colquit deserves endorse-
ment at the hands of a Democratic
convention, but to give him or it an
unqualified endorsement will meet
with strong opposition. To endorse
some one act of an administration and
condemn another is worse than no en
dorsement at all, and that is likely to
happen if the matter is brought up.
The truth of the business Is, if Col-
quitt asks for an endorsement, ex-Gov.
Campbell will be there and ask for an
endorsement of his two administra
tions, and from the way things look at
this time, Campbell will have more
friends in the Houston convention than
Gov. Colquitt. The best way to itet
around an embarrassing situation 11 te
1 that confronting the Houston conven-
tion is for that body to confine its de-
liberations strictly to the presidential
contest, and let the State Convention
that will follow the July primary elec
tions to be held for the selection of
State officers, pass on the matter of
the administration of- Gov. Colquitt.
more and more, it was stated, that in
the end the success of - foreign mis-
sion propagandism will depend upon
the converts themselves becoming fit
to propagate the gospel among their
own people.
The foreign board also recommend-
ed the roising of a large fund to be
used in equipping foreign mission
churches and other Institutions of the
Southern Baptists, in memory of
Adoniran Judson, the firs missionary
sent out by the church, whose cen-
temmat-cetebration-will-be-held-dur-
ing the convention.
Marked unrest against Interdenomi-
national control of denominational
Sunday School work is making itself
manifest, according to the annual re-
port of the Sunday School board to
the Southern Baptist convention
which was submitted today. This un-
rest resulted, says the report, in the
creation of a permanent lesson com-
mittee at the Southern Baptist con-
vention held in Jacksonville last year,
the Southern Baptists now being the
only denomination having such an
agency. This step, it is stated, will
bring about a more pronounced de-
nominational policy in the work of
tho Sunday School bard and will be
of Immense and fan reaching service
in directing the interests it has in
hand.
The report then states that the
feeling has been expressed “that the
International Sunday School Associa-
lon. with headquarters in Chicago,
had rendered the denominations good
service and had greatly advanced
If he wins, it will be an evidence that
a majority of the Democrats of the
State endorse his administration as a
whole Judge Ramsey Is making no <
effort whatever to get an endorsement
their Sunday School cause, so long
as it followed legitimate lines, and
remained within its own prescribed
sphere, but now in these latter years,
it has departed from its former poli-
cy and method: that its organization,
so simple in former years, had devel-
opted into a powerful piece of ma-
chi nery, with the management of a
clot se coropration; that It looks to
the denominations directly and indi-
reethly for financial support, and is ex-
pensi ve in its operations, with no
comm ensura tex quid pro con: that
it is It 1 no way amenable to the denom-
at the hands of the Houston conven
tion.
STOCK AND BOND LAW.
1 ination *. but is all the while making
encroae hment upon the ! denomina-
tional li fe, prerogative and work—es-
“pecially in the matter of teacher
Business leagues and commercial
bodies throughout the State are being
urged to adopt resolutions asking the
repeal of the stock and bond law, or
rather asking marked change in that
measure." Anticipating that our own
Chamber of Commerce will be asked
to adopt this resolution the Tines re
produces It below. Without attempt-
ing to at this time pass on the desir-
ability or non-desirability of the pro
posed changes, we submit that the
resolution calls tor some careful read
Ing and some thoughtful study. It
follows:
Whereas, There is urgent need for
adidtional railroad milease in Texas
and for an fimprovement of the exist
ing railroads in the state; and
Whereas, The bonds of several
Texas railroad companies willsoon
mature and they will desire to exe-
cute other bonds in lieu thereof of the
same face value; and
Whereas, The present stock and
bond law of Texas is an impediment
to the accomplishment of these ends: -
now, therefore, belt
Resolved, That we favor and urge
upon the next legislature the import-
ance of enacting a law so amending
the stock and bond law as
(a) To authorize railroad compa
nies to execute and sell in advance of
construction bonds or other obligations
secured by a lien upon the railroads
to be constructed with the proceeds of
the sale of such bonds or other obli-
gations.
th) To authorize railroad compa-
nies to issue bonds or other obliga-
tions secured by a lien upon perma
nenl additions, betterments and Im
training."
The inn ird reported, for the fiscal
year just . ended, a gain of $21,829 in
its receipts, or a total of $300,276.
There was € xpended in denomination-
il work front the profits of Its busi-
ness, $60,849. Its assets amount to
$335,863, which includes the site pur-
chased for $60,000 for a new build-
ing.
During the pas.t year the board is-
sued a complete series of periodicals
on the graded lessons for the elemen-
tary grades; first of a series of com-
mentaries to be prepa red by Southern
Baptist writers was issued; and con-
tinued and improved all regular per-
lodicals. The board maintains a spe-
cial field force for actual Sunday
School work of seven men and two
women, as well as co-operating in the
Sunday"School work in twelve states.
As its work for next year, the board
proposes the further extension of Its
teacher .training work, the B.‘Y. P. U.
work, periodicals carrying the grad-
ed lessons through the Junior De-
partment will be issued and special
attention will he given to the work of
equipping the board for its future
service and the development of Its
own work.
| Local News Brevities
*** **********************:
Dr. R. T. Bolyn, veterinary surgeon.
Office, McFall Barn; phone 14; resi-
dence phone 1076. 293-tfe
—Q—
The city council will meet in regu-
lar session tonight.
The ladies or the First ME. .Church
will give a Market Saturday, of pies,
cakes, bread and doughnuts al Miller's
drug store
Buy a Gurney.
-0-
3-1te
3-3tc
Drink Williams" Mineral Waater.
Phone 247. Well 1510 Tenth street.
2-26lc
R. Ferguson who for the past six
years has been firing on passenger
trains 1 and 2 on the Fort Worth and
Denver has been promoted to a place
as engineer on a freight train running
out of Wichita Falls and will move his
family here soon. Mr. Ferguson has
many friends here who will be glad to
learn of his promotion. Mrs. Fergu-
son is a daughter of T. Q. Aten, a for-
mer resident of this city, and her move
to Wichita Falls will be like coming
home.
Umbrellas repaired and recovered.
E. M. Winfrey, West Eighth street.
Phone 388.
3-14te
Tickets are now on sale for the Old
Maids' Convention to be given under
the auspices of the High. School Ly:
ceum course at the Wichita Theatre
onEridayzevening. May 17th at 8.30
p. m. Admission for those not hold-
ing Lyceum course tickets; Adults
50 cents; school childrens 25 cents.
2-3tc
My motto: Miller sells it for less
E. M. Winfrey for sporting goods.
711 West Eighth street. Phone 388.
314tc
The Gurney saves Ice and Is abso-
lutely sanitary. NO GERMS. Noble
Hardware Company, sole agents. 3-3tc
The following suits have been filed
tn the district court: Mrs. C. G. Camp-
bell vs. B. G. Campbell, divorce; Ma-
bel Meadors vs. Ike Meadors, divorce;
First National Bank va. W. F. Weeks,
et. al, debt and foreclosure; H. T. Can-
field, et. al vs. Frank T. Jenne, et. al,
debt and foreclosure; H. T. Canfield
vs. D. E. Bentley, debt and foreclosure.
Winfrey repairs nearly any old
thing; 711 West Eighth street Phone
388. 3-14te
E. G. Hill, undertaker, office and
Parlors 900 Scott Ave. Phone 225
Prompt ambulance service, 306-tfe
A class of 38 young communicants
received their first communion at the
Catholic church this afternoon. Father
Dolje officiated.
Typewriter repairing. Winfrey.
Phone 388. 3-l«c
Jesse J. Dolman, licensed undertaker
and embalmer, with Freear-Brin Furni-
turn Co. Day phone 136. night phone
132. 220-tt
Mrs. R. H. Joyce and daughter, Mrs.
C. W. Rountree returned this afternoon
after a stay of several weeks at Min-
eral Wells.
Lydia C. McKenzie has filed suit
against the Brotherhood of Locomotive
Firemen and Enginemen on Insurance
policy, demanding $1500.
The Gurney la the best made. 3-3tc
My motto: Miller sells it for less.
Judge James Greenwood left for his
home at Seguin this afternoon after a
short visit with relatives here. ,
Dr. Prothro, Dentist Suite No. i.
Ward Building. Phone 186.
62-tf
County Clerk Walter Reid is sending
out supplies today for the stock law
election next—Monday in the Electra
and Clara precincts. 1--
For the best bread, cakes, ptes,etc.,
the Home Bakery; phone 982. Free
delivery; 1309 Holliday. Dan Oster.
proprietor.
296-26tc
TheGem
the only exclusive Motion Pict-
ure Theatre in the city.
Change of program Every Day.
Night show at 7:30.
Matinee at 2: 30.
“Is It Your Hat?”
"Father and Son."
"Banker's Daughter.”
“The Trapper’s Fatal Shot."
ELMER WRIGHT, Manager
Pickard hina
Hand Painted Gifts
------from------
the Pickard studios are always highly
appreciated. Each piece in our assort-
ment being an original conception of
a creative artist.
In our assortment of hand painted
china are many beautiful pieces;
prices ranging from
50c to $20.00
Visit us when wanting high class
good*
B. T. Burgess
Jeweler
Phone 615
613 8th St
Corsicana.--The Cotton Belt Rail
way has been making extensive im
provemen sto- its yards and has dou
bled tracked its main line for a dis-
lance of one mile from this city.
Hotel Hotel Hose!
Noble Hardware Company sells the
hose, 10 cents and 20 cents a fooot.
You can buy any length. 3-3te
$***************
• EDITORIAL COMMENT. 4
INCREASNG THE BUFFALO.
From the Oklahoman.
For some years there has been much
THE COST OF LIVING
can be materially reduced by trading with us. The object of our company is not so much that of indi-
vidual profit, as it is an operation between buyer and selling, and this factor is carried out in dealing with
every person that comes to us, whether it is to buy goods, or to sell produce or cotton. We handle the
largest Block of
kzd olisat - i
Groceries, Implements, Buggies, Wagons, Harness, Oils,
Repairs, Salt and Feed Stuffs in Wichita County ,..
and make prices lower than any competitor can attempt.
TO GRAIN GROWERS-We have just received a car load of Plymouth Binder Twine, recognised as
the best twine on the market, which wo are selling at 10c per pound. If you are going to have grain to
bind, it will be well to place your order at once.
ialldlcuk al. ..
Farmers Supply Co.
Phone‘449
J. T. GANT, Manager
Mississippi Street
great, shaggy coat Is protection
against any kind of Oklahoma weath-
er.
Just how big this herd will get no
man can tell. The Increase will be
rapid. The present generation. will
see hundreds of buffaloes. The pres-
ent generation will see herds of buffa
lo in Qkluhbina . that will be numbered
by the thousands. The pictures of our
boy hood-days-will-becomo-realities.
The buffalo is saved.
THE TWO-THIRDS RULE.
Pensacola (Fla.) Journal.
The Journal sees nothing in the two-
thirds rule custom to commend it to
tho Democratic convention except its
age, and this is not a day when ante
quated things are popular with any-
one except J. Pierpont Morgan. On
a very few occasions a minority, who
were convinced that the majority did
not represent the will of the people
have fought stubbornly for what they
wanted and got it, but such instances
are the exception and not the rule.
The one principle which has always
governed the Democratic voter, and,
which is a good one, is that a majority
should rule, and the Journal for one
Is willing that the will of the majority
prevail even if it does, in some cases
break up ancient custom.
With the two-thirds vote necessary
in the convention a deadlock is likely
to occur when one candidate has a
clean majority of the delegates. A
deadlock would hardly be possible
with a majority rule prevailing, and.
If a majority rule is good Democratic
doctrine we see no, excuse for it not
working in a Democratic convention
held to nominate a presidential stand
ard-bearer.
THE METHODISTS AND "WORLD-
LY AMUSEMENTS."
That the General Conference of the
Methodist Episcopal Church is prepar
ing to take formal action on the ques-
tion of modifying the disciplinarian
rule of the organization governing
amusements is a fact of considerable
significance. The rule prohibits danc-
ing, games of chance and attendance
at theatres, circuses and horse racer
as "tending toward worldliness."
printed In the newspapers and mag onist of worldly
azines about the extermination of the worldS
buffalo. .From the countless herds
which roamed over the western prai-
ries of thirty years ago, the number
had dwindled to a few herds, most of
them in captivity.
Miller brothers owned one herd in
Oklahoma, Pawnee Bill owned another
in this state. There was one in Ca-
‘nada and another small herd in Mon-
tana. Several zoological gardens had
a few animals, but the life of the buf-
Against its retention is the argument
that it violates Christian freedom
breeds hpyocrisy and is unenforceable
while the contrary argument Is ad
vanced that its repeal would be Inter
preted as a moral decline.
The Methodist denomination has
been the historic and consistent antas
amusements ever
since Wesley more than a century and
a half ago promulgated his “general
rules" against all forms of self indul-
A Shelter in the
Time of a
Storm
is our Corrugated Iron Storm
Cellar. The storm period is
here now, we have; just one
% of these left and we will
make no more.
Regular price $125.00
But........$75.00
buys this one “
J. C. LIEGLER MFG. CO.
Phone 389
NORTHERN PRESBYTERIAN
r ASSEMBLY IN SESSION.
By Associated Press
Louisville, May 16,—With a sermon
by the retiring moderator, Rev. John
F. Carson, of Brooklyn, to be followed
by the election of a moderator, 2,000
churchmen of the Presbyterian church
of the U. S. A. organized the the 124th
General Assembly in, Louisville this
morning, the first in many years to be
held south of the Mason and Dixon
line.
Drs. Burnside, Walker and Jones
have moved their office from Seventh
street to rooms 3, 4, 5 and 6 in the
"Moore-Bateman building on Indiana
avenue.
My motto: Miller sells it for less.
Jesse J. Dolman, licensed undertaker
and embalmer, with Freear-Brin Furni-
ture Co. Day phone 136. night phone
132, 220-tf
Dr. J. 8. Nelson, dentist. Rooms
214 215, Moore Bateman building; cor-
nor Eigth street and Indiana avenue.
. 311-25te
Marriage licenses have been issued
to the following couples: W. R. Milar,
Chickasha, Okla., and Virgie Batch,
Grandfield, Okla.: Daniel E. White,
city and Miss Honnie Estelle Skinner,
city; James Phillip Hamilton, Electra
and Miss Annie Myrtle Stroud, Electra.
falo hung in the balance.
A herd owned by the New York Zoo-
logical society,, which was under the
direction of Dr. William T. Hornaday,
was offered to the United States for
propagation purposes provided the gov-
ernment would make some provision
for the care of the animals, Dr. Horn-
aday, perhaps the best authority on
wild animals In America, fathered the
measure; congress was induced to
make an appropriation to fence a great
area in Oklahoma and the American
bison seemed about to be saved.
The Wichita forest reserve was es-
tablished in Oklahoma. Frank Rush,
the game warden in charge, made a
trip to New York. The New York
newspapers announced that Rush, the
cowboy naturalist, had come to Goth-
am to take their buffalo away to Okla-
homa The papers told the truth.
Rush loaded them on the cars and
transported them to the reserve in the
vicinity of Cache In Comanche coun-
gence Incompatible with a simple
Christian life—against the reading if
frivolous books and-even against the
use of unnecessary Words in conver
sation no less than against indulgence
in alcoholic beverages. The faces of
the early Methodists were set with
Puritan sternness against display in
dress and the wearing of ewelry as
much as against card-playins; and the-
atre-going. .
That a relaxation of the old ethical
discipline is now even proposed- bears
witness to the pressure of liberal ten
dencies from without and within For
the Methodist conference to sanction
the practices so long prescribed would
be only less momentous an act than
the original prohibition. It wo Id have
a bearing on the personal conduct of
6,500,000 communicants, or more than
one-sixth of the total religious-popu-
lation of the country, and would evi-
dence a remarkable concession to the
spirit of modernism in religious ob-
servance. —New York.
Being
constantly actuated by an un-
Louisiana Red
Cypress Lumber
Just received a car of nice clear boards In any widths up to twenty-
four inches. The ideal lumber for bread boards. Ironing boards,
shirt waist boxes, box couch es, or any purpose where an odorless,
tough wood is required. •
J. S. Mayfield Lumber Co.
Phone 26
governable honesty, State Press admit
ted a few days ago that he did not
know what was meant by the bucolic
expression, “wheat in the boot,” which
admission was brought out by the
Wichita Falls Times saying that in the
lelectable land in •which it lives
“wheat is now 18 the boot.” Col. Hen-
ry Exall, president of the Texas In-
dustrial Congress,’who knows how to
ty.
That reserve contains 62,000 acres.
Part of- It is fenced with wire that is
high enough to keep the beuffalo from
straying away. From the original make a bale of hay rew where one
herd of fifteen the number has grown blade of grass grew before, called up-
to thirty, on State Press and after sorrowing
The buffalo Is saved to posterity, a few minutes over the ignorance
This most picturesque animal of the which he was shout to cure, explained
western plains Is not to be exterminate lucidly and with infinite pains what
ed- The animal that is native to alls wheat when it Is in the boot
North America is to be preserved. ■. Later a nice lady .with a kind and
In the Wichita forest reserve ths sympathetic voice celled Stste Press
buffaloes roam over a great tract. In over the telephone and told him what
winter they are fed in a manner stm- is meant by commentators when they
■ Hur to that used with cattle. No shel- say wheat is in the boot The Wich-
ter is required. The buffalo is quite Ita Falls Times has been liberal
able to take, care of himself. His enough to not harshly reprehend S.
P.s educational shortcomings, and on
the whole 8. P. feels that he has
been made acquainted with something
he should have known a long time ago,
but has gained friends by his open-
minded candor and contrite heart,
possibly he is mistaken in that as-
sumptiion, but anyhow, he knows what
is meant by “wheat in the boot"-
Dallas News.
—Yourapology isaccepted. Next
time you set yourself up as some-
thing of an agriculturist, don’t be so
quick about erecting a monument to
your stupidity in such matters by
saying you don't know what is meant
by the expression “wheat in the
boot."
GARDENS AND THE CITY CHILD.
At the Charless School on the South
Side the children are taking a course
of lessons in gardening. They have
tilled their ground, planted seeds and
are looking eagerly forward to the day
of harvest. Were the usefulness of
school gardens questioned they might
easily be depended upon grounds of
practical utility. In rural schools gar-
dening is coming to be taught upon
the theory that the study will result
In making better farmers, but in the
city there Is another defense, less im-
mediately practical, but none the less
real.
The city breeds a race of children
to whom the soil is dirt; something to
be removed for the making of cellars
and covered with brick, stone, asphalt
and cement for pavement and side-
walks. The notion involved in the
words “Mother Earth” never enters
their heads. But let these children
thrust their fingers Into the cool soft
soil of a garden to plant their flowers
and vegetables, Jet them follow their
seeds In their growth from the earliest
bud to the ripened fruit, and with the
growth of their plants there will spring
a new set of Ideas in the minds of the
gardeners.
There will be a new lure for them
in the idea of the open country, a new
impatience of tenement homes and
dirty alleys, a new vision of life some-
where else than in shops and factories.
Land hunger never quite deserts the
mind of one who made a garden, and
the man who wants a piece of land for
himself and works for it is thereby
made a better citizen.—St. Louis Re-
public.
■ THE NECESSARY MEN.
San Antonio Express.
Senator McNealus says the impres-
sion is hardening that the man who
three times "permittedhimself to be
defeated" for the presidency will at
last come into his own in the good
Democratic year of 1912.
In the opinion of Senator McNealus
Bryan towers high above all other
Democratic probabilities and his idea
seems to be that when Clark, Wilson,
Harmon, Underwood and the others
have had their complimentary votes
and have fully tested their strength
before the convention Mr. Bryan will
blithely step into the ring and carry
off the nomination.
Whether Mr. Bryan will "permit
himself to be defeated" a fourth time
is not stated, but it is presumed that
he is confident of winning this time,
as this is a Democratic year and the
Republican Kilkenny fight has made
-the way easy for a Democratic victory.
There used to be a saying that the
third time is the charm, but it did
not prove to be so in Mr. Bryan's case
and now It is proposed to see what
virtue there may be in a fourth time.
Former President Roosevelt has in-
timated that if he does not win the
nomination of his party this year his
hat will be in the ring four years
hence and, perhaps quadrennially
thereafter until the Republic ceases to
choose a Prsident by ballot or until
dath has removed the Rough Rider
from the field of political activity.
Whether Mr. Bryan would continue to
seek other terms after having been
elected to one or more terms can only
be conjectured, but his partisans might
consider him a “neccesity” in other
campaigns as much as in this and so,
likewise, the partimons of Colonel
R posevelt. I: would be interesting, to
say the least, if these two "necessi-
ties" should monopolize the presiden-
tial years, in which event they might,
pc thaps, alternate in 1, ding the office
of PresHier
There 1, however, another possibil-
ity, and that is, that the two conven-
tions to be held next autumn may ef-
fectually dispose of both the “neces-
sary lndlvlduala"or else the.voters at
the polls may be depended on to dis-
pose of at least one of them, th
Good Things
To Eat
Tn this hot weather you will appre-
date the luxuries truned out in our
bakery. The light, sweet bread, the
toothsome cakes and cookies, the de-
licious pies like mother used to make.
They’ll all taste good to you. and be-
sides save the trouble of baking. Tel-
ephone and our wagon will stop and
show you.
Our ice cream, sherbets and ices are
as good as it's possible to make them.
THE CREAM BAKERY
V. E. STMPFLI, Prop.
617 7th St.
».....
Phone 2S
COMMENCEMENT
GIFT BOOKS
MY ALMA MATER
A college man’s record
MY GOLDEN SCHOOL DAYS
SCHOOL GIRL DAYS
A Memory Book
MY HIGH SCHOOL DAYS
THE GIRL GRADUATE
MY SCHOOL LIFE
MY GRADUATION
MY SENIORITY
and various other book!”
very appropriate for the above
occasion. Best prices and as-
sortment ever shown In city.
Please call and make selections
early.
MARTIN’S BOOK STORE.
B.
609 8th
Phone 96
I AM ON MY WAY
to get some of that Nutraline, the best
feed on earth for horses. Also good for
hogs,cattle, chickens. And some of
thoseechicken remedies. All kinds of
feed stuff. Phone 437. Wichita Grain
Co. stand; 809 Indiana.
MARICLE COAL CO.
Exchange..
Livery Stable
First Class Livery Rigs,
All Box Stalls for Board- ,
ers, Automible Sery ice
Cars. Good Service all 0
the Time.
Corner Ohio and Sixth
... Phone as...
WILEY BROS.
Proprietors
R. T. PICKETT w. E. SKEEN
WILL BRYAN
Pickett Detective Agency
Office at Davis Bidg., 721 Indiana Ave.
oone 5g Residence on1
********4**44444
5 Teeth.Eetracted Without Pain ♦
DR. M. R. GARRISON
Dentist.
♦
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Donnell, B. D. Wichita Daily Times. (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 16, 1912, newspaper, May 16, 1912; Wichita Falls, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1663102/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.