Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 167, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 27, 1926 Page: 2 of 18
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WICHITA DAILY TIMES
WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER M. 1028
SUNDAY HEREAFTER
it HARRISBURG, Pa., Oct. 27. (—
Dismissing exceptions to Ite former
' ruling cloning th. Philadelphia Sesy
quicentennial on Sundays, the
Dauphin county court today reaf-
firmed its previous decree and Is-
sued aa injunction to enforce its
closing order. Unless the Besquicen-
1: tennial Exposition association ob-
’ 1 tains s stsy of execution from ths
supreme court the exposition must
% be closed on Sunday.
The court in its decision overrule
ing the exceptions declared thst it
. I differed with the contention of the
1: association’s counsel thst Sunday
' opening was not s public injury. It
• ■ said:
"In this day when from tbs presi-
- fdent of the United States, and others
■ ' high in official position, from pulpit
1, aad forum we are constantly re-
minded that one of the great.dan.
• ■ gore of the time is the lack of low
1 I observance, we think it to a matter
1 1 of great moment—assuming that
1 ■ our conclusion to right, that the
<! opening of the Sesquicentennial oa
it Sunday to a violation of the law-
i that such a great enterprise should
. not be permitted to do what the
I ordinary individual ■ would be pun-
T yished for doing. Favoritism toward
1 a great enterprise would lead to
1 ! disrespect for the law and in that
■ ; way to injury ts the publie."
------
TEN KILLED IN R. R.
CROSSING ACCIDENT
I IN MONTH OF AUGUST
1 ___
1 AUSTIN, Oct. 27. (P)—During Aug-
ust there were 23 railroad crossing
< i accidents in Texas in which is per-
il sons were killed and 23 injured, the
, ; Texas railroad commission reported
! Wednesday. Twenty of the aeci-
11 wents were caused by automobiles
; trying to beat the train, and 10 per-
sons were killed and 31 injured.
SUSPENDED SENTENCES
FOR YOUTHFUL RUNAWAYS
J • FORT WORTH, Oct 27. uy—Five-
1 year suspended sentences were im-
posed in juvenile court today on
two youthful runaways of Cemer-
i on. Texas, who left home to a “fllv-
! ver” and took one short fling at the
(! highway robbery game,
Pioediserse. Miller, 14, and Edward
; Zeni. Johnson, 15-year-oia ruume
station attendant nt Keller of 111
1 at the point of a pistol recently.
11 Character witnesses testified that
»i the boys had good reputations at
11 home and went to school and one
of them to Sunday school. The boya
told officers here after their ar-
root that they wanted the money
to put a new body on their auto-
mobile, which they had partially
stripped to buy a pistol.
COOLIDGE TO ADDRESS
ADVERTISING AGENTS
* WASHINGTON, Oct. FT. (ry-Dele-
gates from 188 advertising agencies
throughout the United States unm-
oved here today for the opening ses-
sion of the annual convention of the
American Association of Advertise
lag ageneles, which will culminate
i tonight at a dinner to be addressed
:; by President Coolidge.
t; Arrangements: were made to
1 broadcast the president’s address
; through a chain of 11 radio stations.
Most of today’s session was de-
1 voted to' receiving reports from
• some of the 47 committees of the
■ organization which have been at
work through the past year oa
I problems involving national adver-
Haingrageneles.
- W. F. R. AND FT. W. RATE ON
PIPE HELD EXCESSIVE
i: WASHINGTON, D. c. Oct. n.—
I Th a proposed report by Examiner
1 Burennan to the I C. C. on com-
1 plaint of the Oklahoma Salvage aad
• Supply company over rates charged
< by the Wichita Falls, Ranger end
1 Fort Worth railroad, it to bold rates
; charged on a shipment of eight cars
Iof pipe and casing from Ed Hobby
, ; 1 and Jake Hamon to Okmulgee were
Fexeessive, Reparations are recom-
Amended and equitable rate recom-
11mended le 44 cents per hundred
■ 1 pounds._________2__________
“Claims Stomach Souring
Causes Bad Breath
New York Cits. Mr Ben Lo-
helde writes :“I was formerly T
! victim of constant upset stomach,
^ bad taste in the mouth and very
I disagreeable breath. My bowels
f were constantly constipated and
: nothing helped except temporarily.
After using Carter's Little Liver
Pills I have overcome all troubles
and I am especially happy because
of a sweet clean healthy breath."
Carter's Little Liver Pills are
» emall, sugar coated, easy to take
by every member of the family.
Their action on the bowels is gen-
tle. 26 * The red pigs. Druggists.
We Pay 8% on Your
. : Idle Money ,
our so. Certificates pay 4%
January 1st, and July 1st for
money, waiting permanent in-
vestment. Principal and inter-
est credited on the 8% Certifi-
cates may be withdrawn upon
60 days' notice, after six months
from date of your Certificate.
Texas Loan and
Mortgage Co.
casteai store, $100,000.00
WICHrra FALLS TEEAS
Eagar F. Haney, President •
wm. Baleridee. Secretary and
" Manager
NO DANGER MOTOR
Proximity of Mars Popularly
Blamed for Bad Weather in 1 nr ryuAeTIN
Europe; Scant42,400,000 Miles FUEL EAMHUO HUT
Pans, Det. 21. un—The approach
of the earth-toward Mars and the
prevalence of earth shocks are
popularly given to be responsible
for the spell of extremely Bad
weather from which Western and
Central Europe is suffering. One
form of inclemency follows an-
other.
Gales and thunder storms and hall
and snow are causing havoc on land
and sea, and the weather observers
promise ao relief. They ear that
the wave la moving eastward and
has now reached the Balkans, but
that another is coming in from the
Atlantic L
— There have been heavy falls of
snow with low temperatures aU
over Hungary. A hurricane in the
Drop in Plane
Cures Deafness
Of Houston Man
HOUSTON, Oct 27, (——Roy wa-
llama of Houston, employe of an
oil company announced Tuesday that
an airplane ride had measurably
improved hia hearing He sought
the air journey Saturday aa a cure
for partial deafness.
Feeling that perhaps, the Im-
provement in his hearing might be
only temporarily relieved he decided
to withhold announcement of his
experience until later.
Specialists had relieved him but
Baranaya district along the Danube Future and in dispair he sought an
has crippled telegraphic services
and paralysed, railroad communica-
tion. Some houses collapsed and a
number of persons were injured by
falling walls. ‘
CHICAGO, Oct. AL. v—Mars, the
ruddy world of mystery about which
men have speculated for hundreds
of years, is not likely to yield very
much information concerning its
physical aspects until larger and
more powerful telescopes are made.
This was the opinion of astrono-
mers at Yerkes observatory, Wil-
llama Bay, Wis., who have been
training their lenses on the engima
of the skies, now a scant 42,400,000
miles from a questioning earth.
Weather was ideal at Williams
Bay last night, but air currents In-
terfered with observation, creating
a haze about the planet and cause
ins its telescopic image to waver
before eager eyes. Several sketches
were made, however, and observa-
tions will be continued for the next
two weeks.
Current scrutiny of the planet
which hae two moons to the earth's
one, has revealed that the summer
season le well advanced. The white
epot at the north polar region,
taken to be ice or snow, was con-
siderably smaller than during ths
observations of August, 1924, ths
last time Mars was In a favorable
position for investigation.
The intriguing question as to
whether life exists on ths planet
still romaine a matter of conejec-
tale" opinion..". ”
Professor. Edwin B. Frost of
Yerkes believes that if life exists
on Mars it le of such a low form
that the building of canals, the op-
erating of light signals to the earth
and other manifestations occasion-
ally Attributed to “martians” are
impossible.
A thrust at the man-lite theory
came from Dr. W. H. Steavenson,
astronomical observer at the Royal
observatory. Greenwich, England,
who said that efforts to pick up
wig-wage from Mare are all
“bunkum."
"All we hope to do and gain la to
to 50 years le some definite idea of
the climate and physical conditions
and afterwards by deduction de-
cide whether Martians really exist.”
The attention of scientists in all
parts of the world has been turned
to Mars this week because it is
nearer the earth then it will be
again until 1939,---
ARISH DECLARES
CHICAGO, Oecaf. (7—Exhaus-
tion of America’s natural atore of
motor fuel was put beyond the
Ice Cream, Radio,
And Barber Shop
On Royal Train
QUEEN MARIES TRAIN EN
route to Montreal, Oct., 27, m—
Queen Marie of Rumania continued
her journey through Canada today,
happy to her reception as grand-
realm of probabilities by W. S. Far-
ish, president of the American Pe-
troleum Institute, In a survey of the
si! industry today before the third
conference on education and indus.
try, nt the University of Chicago.
Not only did he point out virtual-
ly unlimited sources of supply, but
be predicted that new fuel econ.
omies and new meter efficiencies
will compensate or even over-bal-
ance any increase in fuel cost.
Should our supply of well oil be-
come exhausted at aome distant
date, he said, we already are as-
cured of fuel, similar to gasoline
fan. 53 auttarlale ’UCh “ °"
r These reductions processes have
now advanced to such a stage that
Mr. Farish ventured the opinion that
they will be put on sound commer-
Olaf basis as soon as gosoline prices
advance materially from present
levels.
Even with this vsst supply In
view, Mr.. Farton said, there are
current extravagance in the Indus:
try which is inexcusable.
To the very nature of the oil field
In its rush to find fortunes in new-
ly discovered fields skin to the gold
rushes of earlier days, be charged,
some of the fault, but he directly
blamed the petroleum laws and fed.
daughter of Britain's great empress,
Victoria, aa well as queen in her
own right, at Toronto. ' 1
Marie would like to abandon her
royal role for a time aad learn the
Americans as they are and how
the average American lives. She
told of this desire during an in-
formal chat in her car.
She said she would Uhe to step
into an American kitchen, have a
ebat with the housewife and see
how the dinner dishes were put wivmynu* vs -------......=
through a washing machine. She her busy .throughout the
added that she and her children
would like to have the opportunity.
to come in such contact with Amer- NEWSBOY BYSTANDER
leans that they might show them RAWOPs -4"
selves to be ordinary humans with
human qualities.
Comfort abounds on board the
royal train. It ranges from an ice
cream parlor to a barber shop
where the queen may have her
bobbed hair attended to daily. There
are four-poster beds, a dibrary and
bath and also a radio aad a phone-
graph on board. i
Deeply touched by the Toronto
women’s acclamation of her yester-
day as descendant of. Victoria the
queen in reply declared she had not
forgotten that she was born in Eng:
land and added where beder' that
“there to as stronger link that binds
us together than ths association
of the British empire."
Marie urged the women of Cans
ada to join, their slaters throughout
the world to an endeavor to bring
lasting peace
VICTIM OF GUNSHOT
GUARDS DISMISSED
FOR PRISONERS’ ESCAPE
BAN ANTONIO, Oct 27. V)—Ma-
tion Fuller, seven-year-old, news-
boy. was in a serious condition at n
hospital h ere Wednesday, after
, serving se innocent bystander at A
gun battle between two soldiers.
The men, who are under arrest, are
said to have shot, following an ar-
gument. Marion, who was in line
of ons of the charges of buekshot
from a chotgun. was struck by four
slugs, one piercing his right lung.
This wound and another in his abe
domed, physlelans said, might prove
fatal. He was weak from loss of
blood when brought to the hospital.
aniven in Montreal.
MONTREAL, Oct. 21. (P)—Mon-
treal welcomed. Queen Marle of Ru-
mania today with an ovation and
program of entertainment that kept
.. _--, ----------- ™» day after
her arrival here shortly before 10
O clock from Toronto . :,
NORTH FORK BRIDGE
SOON TO BE WILT
ALTUS, Okla., Oct. 27.—The con-
tract for construction of a steel
bridge across the North Fork river,
between. Granite and Lone Wolf,
will be granted November 3, by the
state highway department and work
wiu be started soon afterward.
HOUSTON, Oct. 11. Wn—W. C. Col-
line, H. M. Barbee, J. S. Wilkes and
a T. Harrell, prison guards at Blue
Ridge-prison farm, were given no-
tlee of their dismissal from the aye-
tom Tuesday as the result of the"
escape of 26 prisonersfrom camp 1
No. 2.Sunday night. A
.The men were guards on duty nt
the time of the jell break, accord-
ing to Captain Henderson, in charge
of the Blue Ri' o unit. He notified
the men of their discharge Tues-
Sight of the escaped convicts
have been recaptured. Captain Hen-
derson announced. . r
-----------------•-----------------
Klan Counsel.
ST. LOUIS, Oct. 27. (P)-The St
Louis Post-Dispatch today ,aaya
William F. Zumbrunn of Washing-
ton. general counsel for the Ku Klux
Klan, has resigned ns chief counsel
for Federal Judge George W. Enge
Itoh of the Eastern Elnois district
to his Impeachment trisi before the
senate opening, November 10. *
WHERE QUALITY: STYLE AND VALUE ARE UNITED
airplane ride. Ed Bond, Houston
aviator, took Williams up 9000 feet
and maneuvered his plans into A
tsii spin. For $500 feet ths ship
shot earthward st a- dizzy pace.- At
2500 feet the ship was brought ont
of the spin and for the remainder of
the distance to the ground tight
spirals were in order. The ascent
was made in to minutes and the
descent in less than n minute and
a half, _
When the ship landed Bond
shouted to his passenger: “Mow do ........ ______________
you feel?" * 3 --- Farer pasha a vainat consolidations
"Don't yell so loud," was the an- Mai MET M=2
Bond then talked to Young Wil-
liams In a conversational tone and
was easily heard.
“That quick fall ocarod me stiff,"
he said.
“In a few seconds 1 felt a dis-
tinct pain in my left eer and the
oound of the motor grew louder.
“My right ear felt like a piece of
cotton had been removed. It felt
open. The pain in the left ear was
the very first sensation I had had
in that ear for several years. My
hearing has been much better in
the right ear since the flight and
the left ear is sensitive, but of very
little use.
“That flight has done more for
my hearing than any other thing
since I began to have trouble 10
years ago. 1 am just hoping that
more flights will continue to help
me.’’ .
for much of the wastefulness. An
intense and, generally costly com-
petition is shown as a result.
The failure of the laws to give
title to the ell until it has reached
the surface, he pointed out, makes
for feverish competition in a new
field to catch as much aa possible
of the subterranean pool.
COURT AT CLARENDON
SENDS HI-JACK PAIR
TO PRISON, 5 YEARS
PUBLISHERS CALL ■ .
UPON PRESIDENT
WASHINGTON, Oct. 21. un — A
committee of the National Publish-
ers' association conferred today with
President Coolidge and Director
Lord of the budget at the White
The publishers were reticent
about the object of their call, but
It was indicated that they were in-
terested in revising the poet office
department's budget- system to a
meaner which might result to low -
OVER $500,000
NEW FALL
• GOODSTO
. CHOOSE FROM
Big Assortments, Plenty
of Variety, All Sizes-
So Shop st Saul’s. .
Famous for its Values
FREE! This Week
I 75c Box
Golden Peacock . '
Face Powder
FREE!!!
With Each Jar
Golden Peacock
Bleach Creme Sold
HOT SPECIALS “FOR COOL DAYS"
U
SILK \
HOSE \
SLIGHTLY IMPERFECT
.VALUES TO $1.00
A PAIR—SPECIAL
TOILET GOODS
ECONOMIES
ELTS
FOR TOM
50c Bottle Listerine ........39€ \
25c Can Mavis Talcum. .... a. 19c \
25c Can Bonnie B Talcum.... 11 \
\ 50c Forhan’s Tooth Paste. ...39€ \
\ 50c Pebecco Tooth Paste.....39c
\ 50c Squibb’s Tooth Paste.....39c
\ 50c Pepsodent Tooth Paste...39€
BOY
SKIRTS
39c
Special to the Times, v
CLARENDON, Oct. 27.—The Don-
ley county grand jury has returned
11 true bills and will finish its
work this Wednesday. The trial jury
took up the rose of Kid Lewis, col-
ored. for the sale of intoxicating
liquer and the result was an sc-
quittal. *
J. E. White and Hugh Glass, whs
have been held here since their hf-
jacking near Lelia "Lake, sometime
ago, were tried yesterday aad en-
tered pleas of guilty and sentences
of five years in the penitentiary as-
seased against them.
Harrington McNurland. the third
boy In the robbery has been bound
over to the juvenile department
since an affidavit by hie parents
that was only 15 years of age has
been filed.
er postal rates.
In the delegation were Cyrus H.
%-Curtis of the Curtis Publics:
Publications, and A. C. Pearson.
Sure Relief
6NW6 BELLANS
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mile Sure Relief
BELLANS
2-2
re
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Colors
50c Ipana Tooth Putd....... at#
75c Gouraud's Oriental Cream Nd
( 50c William's Aqua Velva....39€
(*50e Large rear, ooh Powder
\ with Puff ,. ............3
All
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Belts
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Whiting Davis
COLORED
MESH BAGS
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$6)98
metty Styles — Flat Mesh — '
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Other Bradley Knit Jacket*
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Lumber Jacks, All Wool .-.---..... $3.95 and Up
Chamois Jackets............59.85 up to $27.50
Regulation 0. D. Army Shirts, made from best
grade Wool .------------------------------$2.85
Bedford Cord Breeches, button leg—an exceptionally
good fitting pant.....7......... $4.95
Reversible Hunting Coat, guaranteed water proof or
your money back................. $7.95
“Shoe Department"
Dress
Shirts
Shoes
and
Oxfords
Com-
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Blankets
4*73
One tot Men’s Shoes and Oxfords, Brown Bilt, solid
leather. All new patterns just received.. .$5.00 Up
Regulation Army Shoe—none can beat it.....#1.1
Boys’ School Shoes and Oxfords, new patterns just, , ’
received ..................... $2.95 Up
LOWEST PRICES ON TENTS (All Sizes) and WAGON COVERS IN YEARS
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IE.ARMY STORE
809 Indiana
Phone 4280
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Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 167, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 27, 1926, newspaper, October 27, 1926; Wichita Falls, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1680246/m1/2/: 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.