Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, May 14, 1926 Page: 7 of 28
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.PART ONE
WICHITA DAILY TIMES
FRIDAY. MAY 14. sore
AND TEXAS FACE
tnd-her mesuing. rumnel
lung motor to the swim:
for more than an hour
worked with the youth, out every
device and every effort failed to
bring life back into the bodyepr
Preacher-Doctor
Dies at Kirkland
At Advanced Age
. " SAN ANTOMIO, May 1C. u—Be-
1 cause of the high wages offered
Mexican labor by eastern farm in -
terests, Texas to threatened with a
tabor shortage this summer, A. P.
I Carrillo, Mexican consul general.
| declared today.
' In that section of the “United
States, the consul pointed out, there
are vast beet sugar fields, the own-
era of which give months of em-
ployment yearly.
And, because of the shortage of
# laborers there, farmers are forced
1 to offer special inducements to la-
borers ta order to carry on their
I work, it was stated further. 5 . ,
“Mexicans are given free trans-
portation and therefore no extra ex-
+ pense to entailed by going to distant
■ points for employment,” Mr. Car-
rillo said. * “Many of the Mexicans
J ! also remain in the east to work in
tries" SO
LNC MOTOR FAILS TO
REVIVE YOUTH FOUND
sill INSIX FEET WATER
SAN ANTONIO, May 14. on.
While 25 members of the Bexar
, bounty safety council’watehed As-
sistant Fire Chiefs Butler and Mech-
tor demonstrate the use of a lung
* motor last night, two persons at
5 the municipal swimming pool
worked vainly over the body of
» Felipe Garcia. Lying in six feet of
water the drowned youth was dis-
Leaves His Vault
Unlocked, Goes to
A Movie $2,500
be
OUAMAff. nay 14—roote clar.
12-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. a
U Clay climbed a tree on his way
home from school Wednesday night,
tell, on the concrete sidewalk, and
fractured his skull. He was un-
conscious when taken to the Quanah
Sanitarium, where an operation was
performed. Be to still in a serious
condition, but phystclans believe he
will recover. E
--------------------------------------------------------------:--------------
MANSLAUGHTER CHARGE
AGAINST OKLAHOMAN AS
RESULT AUTO ACCIDENT
FORT WORTH. May 14. (—
Breaking, through a back. door,
burglars sometime last night en-
tases a jewelry store, at Cisco and
rifled the vaults, of gems and
watches worth $2,500. reports to the
Fort Worth police department this
morning stated. Two men are
sought. One is thought to have
served as lookout while the other
looted the establishment.
G. K. Bedford, chief of police at
Cisco, stated that the burglary on-
curred between » and 9:30 p. m. B.
B. Locke, proprietor of the store,
says he closed his place early to
go te a picture show, without turn-
ins the combination, of the safe.
When he returned a haft hour or
so "later he found the place ha«
Wf ...... eneorrea a
stranger loitering la front of the
store about that time. Bedford said.
Ac Locke returned, a second man is
said to have fled by the back door,
7 Sc no at es
COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa.—Adam
Berry, of this city, observed his
seventy-first birthday hero with an -----------i—
extra long session over his primer. Other members of the party were
Rich, successful, but lonely. Berry
has started to school to learn to
read and write. r *
VINITA, Oki. May 14. (—A
eharse of manslaughter was filed in
Sn‘% court *ere*2519
9 Davis, 1, on "a acawas Bear
Welch late Wednesday night. *
Davis and Humphrey, with tear
other Welch High School students,
had been drinking previous to the
accident, according to statements
made by the boys. Davis and two
others had alighted alongside the
highway and the automobile was
returning to pick them uD when the
tragedy occurred.
ga
Or-
which killed Mar-
Albinos are found among almost
every species of bird and animal.
Special to The Times.
KIRKLAND, Texas May 14—The
Rev. Dr. George Hare, 84, physician
and former itinerant Methodist
preacher, died here Thursday and
the funeral services Friday after-
noon at the Kirkland Methodist
Church were followed by burial in
Childrens cemetery.
Dr. Hare was born in Ireland.
April 14. 1842, came to the United
States in 1867, and was, married to
Miss Mary Amy Woreneraft of Ar-
Kansas in 1871. To this union was
born seven children, two of whom
are/till living. He began the prar.
tiee of medicine in 1879, and later la
1883 he graduated ta medicine from
the American College at St. Louts.
He was a member of the Methodist
church, and at one time was pastor
of the First Methodist Church, at
Hot Springs, Ark. In 1889 he moved
to Kirkland, where he made his
home until his death. His first wife
died in 1891 and was buried la Chil-
dress, Texas, and la December 1893.
he wee marries to Sarah U. Ford,
who survives him. Be to also our-
vived by a daughter. Miss Mable
Karo of Kirkland, and a oon. George
W. Hare, of Swarengen, Texas. Mr.
Hare was an itinerant Methodist
preacher until health failed, sad
was known for his untiring, unsel-
risk tie.
Too sows nobs
LONDON.—Tradition may have to
be broken this year at tbs re-year-
old May festival of Knutsford. The
May queen must have long hair
Thus far this year all the aspirants
have had bobbed hair.
“Dot’s VotLoole
—and Looie’s
released after they had made state-
ments. These statements resulted
in a raid on the home of Lee Mearh-
ers, ft miles north of here, and the
arrest of Meaghers and his wife on 1
liquor charges.
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Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, May 14, 1926, newspaper, May 14, 1926; Wichita Falls, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1680198/m1/7/?q=%22~1~1~1~1%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.