Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 342, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 21, 1926 Page: 2 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
WICHITA DAILY- TIMES
Hoey, A. M. 28
KLAHOMANS ARE
CELEBRATING LAND
RUSH STAGED, 1889
Sand Storm at
Sea Is Cause of
Vessel’s Wreck
IMAGE CAUSED ■
S. W. TEXAS RAINS
U OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., April
, 11. W)—Solemn faced Indiana, cow-
., boys, plainsmen and deputy United
| M States marshals—Oklahomans In
1889—will join handa with citizens
-J of the younger generation here to-
day in living over again the memo-
retries of that historic year and cele-
1-■ brating the memorable rush for
Pl homes April 22, 1889, when 5,000
acres in and about Oklahoma City
t were opened for settlement.
" A three-day celebration will ter-
27minate with the dawn Saturday.
0.1s While modernly clothed men and
CORDOVA, Alaska, April St. ()-
A sand storm at sea caused the
loaa of the cannery tender Uncle
John, wrecked at Dry Bay, Alaska,
25 miles southeast of here, declared
the ship’s maator. Captain Ludwig
Torgersen, who arrived yesterday
with his crew.
Torgersen acid the vessel, seeking
shelter during a gale, encountered
donee clouds of sand over the wa-
ter, caused by an off-chore wind.
The tender grounded on a bar in
Dry Bay at the mouth of the Alsek
river and toppled over. Torgereon
aald the vessel waa practically bur-
led under aand three days later.
Torgersen and the crew went to
Yakutat, 60 miles up the coast from
Dry Bay, before coming here.
(Continued From Page One)
the Olmos watershed, San Antonio
la in no serious danger from a
flood. Fire and Police Commissioner
Phil Wright, acting mayor, declared
thla morning after reporta had
come in from his men stationed
on the Olmos creek.
The stream where it crosses the
Blanco road atood 81 feet at 10:30
a. m., but had fallen two inches la
the laat 20 minutes, this indicated
Wright aald that the creet of the
Olmos flood haa been reached and
AVh women crowded decorated streets _
"J* of Oklahoma City, costumed cow. EARTHQUAKE IN RUSSIA
2a boys, Indians and plainsmen par
"It raided between hunting-covered
.buildings. Some of them drove cov-
* ered wagons.
X This afternoon and evening were
to be given over to an old-fashioned
r11 rodeo where professional riders.
a bull doggers and lariat throwers
will entertain the celebrators.
At high noon Thursday 37 years
'M after the date when the crack of a
is, pistol released an awaiting line of
"several thousands persons who
sought to enter the "land of prom-
ise” and stake claims, the scene
0 will be reproduced aa nearly aa
1 possible.
t A number of men and women
E who participated in the race In ‘89
S will take part In Thursday's pro-
DOES HEAVY DAMAGE TO
BUILDINGS AT KRASNODAR
that th San Antonio river can car-
ry the load without overflowing.
“But under existing conditions,"
he warned, ‘‘a heavy rain will un-
doubtedly bring a flood. The ground
is soaked and a rain similar to that
of yeaterday would mean a flood.”
The Olmos started rlalng early
today, after torrential rains bagin-
ning shortly after midnight, fell on
the watershed. Six miles above the
Blanco road crossing, a farmer had
reported the stream within two
feet of the 1921 stage.
The river in San Antonio at 10:80
atood two feet above normal and
KRASNODAR. Caucasus, Russia,
April 11. ()— An earthquake today
ahook Popovichesky province, de- risine slowly
stroving the post and telegraph un 1-X
building and badly damaging the to 10 e‘aioal
etale capital. The shock waa also
felt at Rostov-on-Don. No loss of
laat night caused washouts on the
Santa Fe. Katy and Cans Belt rail-
roads, which serve that town. Roads
were made impassable.
The Missouri Pacific lines offices
bore had reported of washouts be-
tween San Antonio and New Braun-
tele on the International Great
Northern. The same offices also
learn that moot of the damages to
their read beds was done in that
section ot the state and west of San
Antonio on the San Antonio Uvalde
and Gulf. Line.
Inch Rain at Vernon.
VERNON, April $1.—Rain which
started falling boro Tuesday noon
continued throughout the afternoon,
thoroughly drenching this city and
surrounding territory. It to esti-
mated that more than ansinch had
fallen at I o’clock Tuesday evening.
Hereford Has Good Rain.
HEREFORD. Texas, April 21.-
One inch of rain fell over the Pan-
handle section, Monday night, and
left the outlook for 1926 extremely
bright Thia le the third rala that
haa visited Hereford and Deaf Smith
county during the paat three weeks.
Wheat is looking fine, and a
heavy yield to being predicted.
Farmers are eowing many acres in
oats, sudan, and other email grains.
Hundreds of acres of virgin cell
will be put in row crops for the
first time thla spring. With ade-
quate moisture right now in the
ground, a large acreage of cotton
and grain sorghums to predicted for
the coming year.
DISCUSS EFFECTS -
OF’FLU’EPIDEMIC
(Continued From Page One)
life has been reported.
Up to 10 o’clock, 5.13 inches of
rain had fallen in San Antonie, ac-
cording to f. H. Jarboe, local me-
teorologist. The forecaat was con-
NEW COCHRAN COUNTY
COURT HOUSE OPENED
. gram.
3 —----*------
1 CAMC OF 12 WORKS FOR
# 8 HOURS TO GET $50,000
% FINE LIQUOR, IN VAULT
MONTEREY, Cal., April 21. ()=
Fifty thousand dollars worth of
rars liquors was ths haul of a gang
of 12 masked sad armed hijackers
who broke into tbs conersts and
steel stora room of A. K. Macomb-
er. internationally known horse- ,
man, at Pebble Beach, near here, of pro
early yesterday.
de. The marauders, who descended
nd upon Stewart Fackenthal, caree
taker, and his wife and seven-year
' old daughter, bound them and set a
guard over them, then went about
- their work deliberately. It took
eight hours for them to break into
D the vault and load the loot into
a automobile trucks.
el More than 225 cases of pre-War
P whiskeys, champagnes, sherries,
i vermouths, liqueurs and wines was
“taken, but many cases of beer and
* ale were left behind. Three trucks
, were used.
Y Macomber is la Paris, He haa not
e occupied the house for several
1 years. "
LUBBOCK. Texan. April 21.—All
the county offices are now housed
in the new $126,000 court house of
Cochran county, at Morton, which
waa turned over to county authori-
ties thie week, according to J. D.
Caldwell, Judge of the Coohran
county court, who wasshere today
on business, and Cochran county
and Morton are still settling up and
developing at a rapid rate.
New furniture worth $4,000 has
boon installed la the now building
Cochran waa. one of the laat of
tho South Plains counties to be or-
ganized, and the completion of the
modern court house is looked upon
by the entire citizenship as a mark
= progress that ushers In the era
Of development that will see the
continued growth of Morton and the
development of the ranch lands of
Cochran county.
MASSACRE ALL BUT FIVE
OF 400 TROOPS IN GUARD
CHINESE CABINET, PEKING
it SHANGHAI - April 31. (r—Only
five out of 400 comprising the
J guard of the cabinet office escaped
far death at the hands of the Kuomin-
wt. chun troops before they evacuated
Peking, says the North China Daily
News paeole
•a The newspaper calls it a cold
blooded massacre. It says the ex-
5 Ctremists persuaded their comman-
P " ders to destroy all the guard of the
cabinet office which fired on stu-
W dents during a demonstration laat
1 month. The men were taken be-
18 Yond the Yellow Temple and ma-
chine guns were opened upon them
1 and only five escaped alive.
RUM SHIPS WIN POINT
IN U. S. APPEAL COURT
NEW TORX, April 31. Ur-The
effectiveness of the treaties with
Great Britain, Norway and other
countries permitting the United
States to seize rum runners at any
point within an hour’s calling dis-
tance of the chore, waa greatly lim-
ited today by a decision in the
United States circuit court of ap-
peals setting forth-that the treaty
does not make law extending the
limits of territorial jurisdiction as
to laws of the United States.
The appellant court, in an opin-
ion written by Judge Hough and
concurred In by Judges Manton and
Rogers, dismissed seizure proceed-
ings brought by the government
against the Sagatind, a Norwegian
vessel, and the Diamentina, flying
the British flag.
FOREMAN WHO LEAD 21
ENTOMBED MEN TO SAFETY
DIES AS RESULT OF FALL
I FAIRMONT, W. Va., April 21.00
Last January John H. (Jock) Me-
Nell, 60, a mine foreman, led 11
miners to safety following an ex-
′ plosion in the Jamison Coal d Coke
Company mine near here in which
19 other men lost their lives. Today
McNeil la dead, having succumbed
to injuries received In a fall down
three steps of a flight of stairs.
McNeil and his fellow workers
were entombed for two days and
nights._____
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
Yr 72-sti
0 6B LLANS
wet Hot water
ol25P Sure Relief
BELLANS
Se and 75€ Packages Everywhere
AINTEX
COTTON SPINNING SHOWS
BIG GAINS, MONTH, TEAR
WASHINGTON, pri 21. n -
The cotton spinning industry
showed greater activity during
March then In February and also
than la March of toet year, the
census bureau’s monthly report to-
day showed.
Active spindle hours for March
totaled 9,163,305,890, or an average
of 243 hours per spindle la place,
compared with 8,093,544,968, or an
average of 214 for February this
year and 8,599,440,113 or an average
of 226 for March laat year.
BOT THIRTEEN IS HELD
ON CHARGE OF MURDER
WILMINGTON, Del, April 21.0-
Joseph Battaglia, 13 years old. was
held without bailon a charge of
murder following, an inquest late
the death of Walter German, 22.
German was shot last Saturday in
front of the store kept by Bruno
Battaglia, the boy’s father, Mrs.
Battaglia, of whose seven children
Joseph is the oldest, bad previously
assumed the guilt In the shooting.
The parents are bold as material
witnesses. "
FORT WORTH COUPLE IS
WED IN SAN FRANCISCO
SAN FRANCISCO, April 21. (to-
Getting the marriage license clerk
and a judge out of bed shortly be-
fore -midnight here last night,
Thomas Joseph Maloney, and Mlao
Maude Frances Bellow of Fort
Worth, Texas, were married. Ma-
money to said to be of a wealthy Fort
Worth family...
HIGH GRADE GALENA ORE
FOUND IN DEATH VALLEY
GOLDPIELD. Nov., April «. Ito-
High grade Galena ore, having 1m-
portant lead and silver values, is
reported to have been opened up
la the Queen of Sheba mine in
Death Valley. Samples brought here
yesterday by mine I workers show
fine grained steel galena is bunches.
tinued rain up to Wednesday night,
with clearing weather Thursday.
The torrential rains were general
north and west of Ban Antonio.
Medina Lake reported a 10-inch
rain with a seven-foot rise in the
lake and a heavy rain still falling.
In San Antonio conditions which
existed yesterday when the heavy
downpour flooded many streets,
were greatly improved, the storm
cowers In most instances, carrying
the water off. "
Merchants howsvsr were moving
thsir stocks, of goods from base-
ments to forestall any damage
should the river get out Of Ito
banks.
Firemen and policemen, in addi-
tion to being placed on the Olmos
creek, wsrs sent to low places along
the river so they ‘could issue warn-
ings to residents If a flood appeared
imminent. ,
Military authorities at Fort Sam
Houston alee were prepared to oend
trucks, boats and men into the city
in case rescue work became neces-
sary. .
More than 400 feet of M. K. T.
tracka has been washed out at
Fratt, 13 miles north of San An-
tonio. Repair crews wsrs dispatched
from here and It was expected thst
the truck will be replaced this aft-
ernoon. ‘
Meanwhile trains from the north
were being held at New Brauntels
and northbound trains were ma-
rooned at San Antonio.
Central Texas Booked
' AUSTIN. April 21. (P)—A continu-
ous rain for almost 18 hours. la
places amounting to a cloudburst,
caused one death, considerable prop
erty damage and broken communi
cations all over central Texas Tues-
.day night and Wednesday morning.
Practically the entire central
Texas section waa covered in the
womsau 2 72= EL2AAS
Rock to more than eight inches at
Bastrop. Little MeMahan of Dale
was drowned in Onion Creek near
Bluff Springe when his car stalled
4a a rush of water. .
Two control Texas towns, San
Marcos and Bastrop, were marooned
from tho outside world Wednesday
morning, with the exception of wire
communications. A rain Tuesday
afternoon of about four inches, fol-
lowed by a downpour of four or
five inches Wednesday morning,
flooded creeks and streets at Bas-
trop. Water ran more than two
feet deep to the town’s main streets
and automobiles stalled in the flood,
reports said.
At Ban Marcos all railroad and
automobile travel wae suspended by
a rain of 6.6 inches which placed
the Ban Marcos river over the low-
water bridge, and washed out M. K.
T. and L G. N. tracks. Water from
Purgatory Creek at San Marcos wae
within a foot of the rail of the Katy
station in San Marcos, reports from
that place stated. It to not believed
that the station will be flooded, ex-
cert in event of additional rain.
Seymour Haa Two Inches
SETHOUR, Texas, April 21.—The
ground to thoroughly soaked from
the effects of a two-Inch rain which
has fallen here in the paat to hours.
It to estimated that the acreage in
wheat and oats will more than dou-
Me that of previous years. A record
yield of grain neems to be a safe
prospect Some of the experienced
wheat growers are of the opinion
that much of the wheat will make
40 bushels an acre.
The continued rainfall and chilly
weather for the paat month has
greatly retarded cotton planting.
Crowell Farmers Jubilant
CROWELL, Texas, April IL—
Wheat farmers and their dependant
business men alike rejoice over the
steady, soaking rainfall which had
resulted in 2.5 Inchea of moisture
hereabouts between Tuesday noon
morning, with cloudy skies presag-
. Ing a further insurance for the
small grain.
A delegation of 150 visitors from
Wichita, aKn., arrived here this
morning and marched jubilantly
through the streets, behind the
boosters’ band. Wheat growers all.
the rain heightened rather than
dampened their enthusiasm.
Good Rala at Haskell
HASKELL, Texas, April 21.—Over
one and g half inch of rain baa fal-
len here last night and this morn-
ing with a alow rain still falling.
No damage from wind or hall has
been reported here from any section
of the county.
Over an Inch at Eleetra.
Electra, Texas, April 11—At noon,
Wednesday the rainfall here meas-
ured 1.02 inches, following a hard
steady downpour which started
early Tuesday afternoon.
Xiao Inches of Raintan
SNYDER, Texas, April 31. ()-
Belated reports from the Dunn com-
munity near here say, that nine
inches, the heaviest rain in 26 years,
fell in three hours there Monday
night, washing out bridges and.ap
proaches, and damaging roada and
crops. €f W
Damage throughout this section
is much greater than flrat estr-
mated. Scurry County Judge Holly
estimates that damage to highway
alone will be more than $25,000. of-
fielals of the Roscoe, Snyder and
Pacific railread say it will take un-
til Saturday to repair the track
washouts, and a bridge through
which a freight locomotive plunged
early Tuesday, -injuring the engi-
neer. Tracka must be rebuilt before
a wrecking crew can reach the
stranded engine. -
culosis or chronic fibroid tubercu-
losis et mild degree. The frequent
failure to differentiate these condi-
tions result in much unnecessary
treatment for tuberculosis,”
Childish tantrum# may become,
hysteria in grown ups, Dr. M. S
Gregory of Oklahoma City warned
in a paper before another group.
Influenced by Training.
“If the baby sets what it wants
by a tantrum when young it will
react when grown up la the same
manner," the aald. “If the child has
been trained to meet reality than
as an adult he or oho will meet
reality and remain well." :
The quest for the magical potion
that will cure all disease was sus-
gestod by Dr. Hugh H. Touns of
Baltimore, presenting the latest
work la attempts to combat sen-
eralized infections by injecting
chemicals and dye substances, die
rectly late the veins. Hundreds of
instances were cited in which pa-
tients have been benefitted by such
injections. The diseases concerned
were generalised infections of the
body, joints, bolts, erysipelas, 4b.
cesses and similar conditions:
“People die with cancer of the
stomach because more than half of
them wait until It to too late for
aa operation before they consult
a physician," said Dr. George B.
Eusterman of the Haye elinic. "Sixe
ty-five per cent of such patients
are between 50 and 75 years old
and there are four men to one Woe
man who suffer from cancer of the
stomach."
The prevalent attention given to
high blood pressure was noted in
the section on pharmacology and
therapeutics which gave special at-
tention to new liver extracts to re-
duce blood pressure. The Canadian
investigators, Dre, A. A. James, N. <
B. Laughion and A. B. MacAllum.
told how the substance to prepared
from fresh liver tissue and purified
of dangerous chemicals. When the
substance to injected fate the body
there occurs a rapid fall is the
blood pressure.
Important Discovery
The age long hopelessness of
paretics, suffering from meatal de-
generacy due to syphylisis may be
turned to hope by the humble ma- .
laria germ. *
The treatment of paresis by in-
fecting the patient with malaria
was announced aa “an actual dis-
covery of the age" la the solen-
tifto lectures of the association,
which featured the third day of
the association’s 77th annual con-
vention here today.
This was considered one of the
moat Important subjects of the seve
oral score papers read in a dozen
scientific meetings.
Cases considered beyond the aid
of any other treatment were re-
ported to have been restored to ape
parent normalcy, and those of
milder infection showed surprising
results, the epeakora stated.
Dr. J. R. Driver Of Cleveland,
Ohio, reported the results in T9 pa-
tients at Lakeside and the eity ben*
pital. in Cleveland Of 65 cases to
which results were obtained, a sub.
staatial number came apparently
normal and returned to work, air
.2 *W, W“
marked, improvement la patients
that had been given Do. Dr. John A.
Gammer and or 1. A. Karnosh, both
of Cleveland, collaborated with Ds
Driver to the paper. 1
Report similar Results:
Dr. William a. D. Gosckerman of
Rochester. Minn., with Hans Reese
of Madison. Wis, reported” similar
results to the treatment of several
hundred eases. Dr.Gosskarman’s
experience severed two years with
IN patients, and he said many for-
merly hopeless cases had been re-
turned to their usual -occupations.
He, said his first case of this kind
was a young man on whom he had
tried every other known treatment
wichousy success and was about to
give up the case when the mother
appealed for Ry final trial. He hap.
posed to have a malaria patient
or
,0
BEAUTIFY IT WITH
“DIAMOND DYES”
Camp Fire
Sparks
LENON FOR THE MUR
-THE FINEST RINSE
Just Dip to Tint or Boll )
’ to Dye
MAMMAM-a-N—M—M—!
1 Dhen 16 - cons
C package contains
092 directions eo sim-
ple any woman
x 1 oan tint soft, dell-
TemA A. cate shades or dye
B7 colors to linegrie
“AA sIke ribbons
r'® Alt skirts, waista
disuHedresses, conta
=2 stockings, sweat-
- ere. draperies, cov*
Ruy Diamond
1-ntuar,
wool or silk, o
The Pokkam Camp Fire Girls
met st the home of Marguerite
Sheldon. 700 Denver avenue, Tues-
day afternoon. The meeting opened
with “Wohelo for Ave,” “The Laws
of the Fire,” the Hand Sign and
the Camp Fire Credo. After the
roll call and reading of the min-
utes, the treasurer reported on the
proceeds from a recent candy eale.
Lola Bracket! was elected substi-
lute representative to the Girls’
Council. A hike was planned for
Saturday, to
The following girls were present:
Linnie May Baggett, Lucille Hibbs.
Lena Smith, Myrle Kennedy, Mary
Vincent, Marguerite Sheldon, Nora
McMillan, Lenora Smith, Marguer-
lie MeBee, Charlie Mae Ebner, Leto
Brackelt, Arthearter Evans, Edith
McClure. Katherine Klersey and
Winifred Hudgens
win make your rage into pretty
and useful rugs. Phone 7075,rAdv,
and as an experiment he took ms:
laris germs of this patient and in-
Seated them into the young man
working on the theory that one dis-
case might fight another.
It happened that malaria waa
the fatal enemy of the syphilis
1 Form and thus the despised cause
5 yenow fever waa marshalled in
force to war on one of the most
tenacious and fatal of social dies
cases. /
wane the scientific discussions
were In presentation with imp
prevised lecture halls in the me-
ebinery building of the Texas fair
grounds, the great exhibit of medi-
cal equipment continued simul-
tancousty. The building had the as:
oset of an international medical
fair. Everything from the galloping
horse, similar to the one reported
in un. by President Coolidge to
rate for experimentation worn
shown in the exhibits. .
I In another lecture Dr. Theodore
o N
Diller of Pittsburgh appealed te
his fellow phrsiclans, too tint 2
the sick man as their brother SET
friend, declaring that sympathy
kindness and consideration were””
much elements of medical preetien,
as’soten
Zooid Imitation
Horlie k s
ORIC NAL X
alt. d Milk 45
er
For
Spinet
“.home,/..a-oeink ier All as:
.
Goodbye breakfast blues!
Tus first fragrant whiff of MJB-
and breakfast blues go up in thin air!
MJ B proceeds to set you right with
the world—and yourself! Not because
MJ B is simply coffee—but because
it is coffee contentment. There’s a big
. happy difference! ,
The cheering warmth,
the friendship, you er-
pect in your breakfast
cup isalways there. For
MIB is the coffee of
constant flavor!
MJB
meets every taste in
story
+,
A-
A.
MJ 1
C(c
coffee
a A Brandrastots a o. wee sante ve mde- Dallas
Twe Heavy Downpours
SAN MARCOS, Texas, April 21.(P)
— Two heavy downpours in the laat
11 heura have put the San Marcos
river on a rise and halted automo-
bile and rail traffic. Rain accom-
panied by-two violent electrical dis-
turbances totalled 6.6 inches.
The laat deluge started at 6:30
a. m. and It la believed the Katy
tracka were washed out between
here and New Braunfels. Trains
have been halted.
Flood waters rushing over the
San Antonio-Austin highway bridge
has etopped all automobile traffic.
Downpour at Eleetra. -
ELECTRA, Texas, April 21.—Rain
has been falling steadily all after-
noon and evening, at timee amount-
ing to a downpour, accompanied by.
lightning.
Washouts on Railroads.
HOUSTON, April 21. tri—No ma-
terial damage had Abeen reported
here this morning as a result of
rains In thla immediate section,
which ranged from half to one Inch.
Sealy, Texas, wax virtually ma-
rooned early today aa a heavy rala
Houses Are Unroofed
RICHMOND, Texas, April 21. (I)-
A heavy rain atorm. accompanied
by some hall, did considerable dam-
age just across the Brazos river
from here last night.
The store of J. S. Adama, three
miles from here across the river,
was unrooted, aa were two rural
homes la the neighborhood. Five
tenant houses on the property of
Mra. Clem Bassett, five miles north-
east of here, were blown from their
foundations. Trees throughout that
section were blown down. No cas-
ualties were reported.
Next time you wash your hatre
whether bobbed or long, rinse with
the juice of two California lemons
in an ordinary washbowl Ml of
water, followed by a plain water
rinse.
Soap forms a curd which stays on
the hair, no matter how frequently
you rinse it. with plala water. The
hair is sticky in comparison, not
really clean, when lemon isn’t used.
The curl comes out.
Try it, and then simply feel the
hair. Note, too, its-lustrous. fine
appearance. See how the curl stays
to it. One experience and you’ll
always use the California lemon
rinse as thousands do, including all
the better “Beauty Shops."
Buy a dozen California lemons to
keep handy. Get their rich, abun-
daat juice. At all good stores.—Adv,
Boulder Colora
0
re Bloom of Beauty
Can Be Brought to Your Cheek at Witt With the
New Valaze Cosmetics Created by
: Blackheads Come
but Blackheads Go
, --when you follow the for
mous trceumnent advised by
All the Taleno preparations
are eo exquisitely pure — so
scientific is their base—
:” pretset 8* well aa
We
V
1 Pimples—Blotches
4 — Acne
ES.ehenen
PIMPLES AND BUMPS
ARE AWFUL PESTS.
Girls and women of the most
even, dispositions are quick to re-
cent direct attacks os their char-
acter. or bold advances. But it is
hardly explainable why these same
folks tolerate disfiguring pimples,
blotches, bumps, “breaking out,"
ete., which are even worse pests
than that. .
These skin diseases quit annoy-
ins people quickly after first few
applications ef the wonderful Black
and White Ointment, and the regu-
lar use of Black and White soap.
The cool to so small none need hesi-
.fats because they "can't afford it." r
The I#e size of the Ointment cone
tains three timee so much as the
liberal >M size. All dealers have
both black and White Soap, and
Ointment-Adv.
ASHLEYS
HAIR TONIC
STOPS
DANDRUFFAN
PER BARBER S
HAIR
OPS
MANITOU TURKISH BATH
HOUSE AND BARBER SHOP
810 Scott Ave.
Ihe West is Best 4ee 0
• in BOULDER— 1
Here Nature has built magnificent playground, camp. IU
ins. motoring, mountain scaling. Rough it or rest. 1
Colorado U. Summer School, Colorado Chautauqua.
Here every visitor’s pleasure is every citizen’s desire.
Low Summer Rallrond Rates—Boulder now a common point
from East. National motor highways all the way to Boulder,
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
34 noulder Hotel Bldg., Boulder, Colorad.
CHAMBER OF commEnCE
.... != ...
GLACIER
REGION
City
W.
QUICK LUNCH
EIGHTH AT LAMAR
“A.
Place
That’s
Different”
- Tired Eyes: “"
== we
PmP Famous Treatment
-ate advised by
sena sillinykd
____3 Wel-.soonce nocusy nepert
-**------V-E-m
Valaze Bath Talcum -
$1.50
€ Added to the Valaze line of
te BuNrashe JK
of an absolutely, dependable
quality, and charm with a
neutraliser of body odore.
Valase preparations are nr*-
by Mme, Rubinstein her
in_her own daylight labora-
seleiuecai/," sitha.dh”%nat
»s3tlsb“”' wets
— the mild adeiuke Iodon wia
a mogle for refreshing tired eyes.
Astringent Roman Jelly
—tehees the dinue shout the eyes
voir . Grecian Am
ora. (Am
- stidly noun
50: Eoo
dude Crenm
MAIN FLOOR
$i3,030
rh"
eovere
and al
said,"
finger
"To
■er al
were 1
retroa
was t
ment 1
“If;
you!”
nr
A mo
that al
idly st
% was in
couras
She
the in
eyes,
man t
Pai
J
several
membe
follow!
foot to
Audr
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 342, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 21, 1926, newspaper, April 21, 1926; Wichita Falls, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1680175/m1/2/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.