Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 322, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 1, 1926 Page: 8 of 20
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WICHITA' DAILY TIMES
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CHITA DAILY TIMES
' WICHITA Fania TEXAS
rums POBLMHIBB COMPANY PUBLISHERS
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RAnans aniline!!"
mumn AGOI BUREAU OF CIRCULATION
FIONA ADVERTISING anParsENTATIVES
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seescurrton naTEs
The Daily and Sunday Times
carrier in Wichita Falls and all towns in Texas
........................
months paid in advance.................1185
onthe if paid in advaneee-exneyecst.........
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Mani-rezas and Oklahoma, in advance: ...
BOBtb . aoe enee oe••...•aoo sao as.oa.ano n.ooeo .
months an-..............................
i AND OUTSIDE or THAT irs ALL RIGHT
It does not'appear as yet that the new “malt
tonic” justifies the fears of some prohibition leaders
that its sale to equivalent to reopening the saloons.
The “liquid doesn’t please all tastes, excessive
drinking of it is sickening, and it is much heavier
than beer is—or was.
Furthermore, here in Texas, the sale of it will be
barrod by state law. In a number of other states,
the statutes will also prevent the sale.
From a prohibition standpoint, the 3.75 per cent
stuff seems to be nothing to worry about.
. Some Men Born Congressmen
and oklinon
Ie month ..
iree months
I months ..
Jo year ....
' JUST ।
FOLKS
-By-
EDGAR A GUEST
MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press to exclusively entitled to the
============
tens sr gonmeess er sia"aLai
tel* for damages further than the amount received
r him for such advertisements___________________
REGULAR CITY CARRIER SERVICE
Should you not receive your copy of The Thmee, 97
rrier by G:00 o’clock to the evenings on week days
4 is•• o clock on Sunday mornings please, telephone
e circulation department, $391, before 7:00 o’clock
the evening or before 9:80 on Bonder mornings and
oy will be sent out by special messenger, it is our
i to give subscribers prompt nod satisfactory
rvice. and wo will appreciate your notifying us dur-
g the hours mentioned.
SP7
THURSDAY, APRIL 1. 1926
1 „ HEARING THE END OF A LONG FIGHT
i Every obstacle, legal and financial, has now been
' emoved from the path to construction of the free
bridge across Red River at Burkburnett. It has been
long and wearying effort, and one that probably
rould have been abandoned in many communities.
The free bridge brings our Oklahoma neighbors
such closer to us, figuratively if not actually. It
amoves * barrier to the close acquaintance that
hould prevail between neighbors so close at hand.
1 to a good thing, from a business standpoint, for
7 lurkburnett and Wichita Falls, and it is no less of
■ good things for the communities on the other side
2 the state line. .
The agencies and individuals whose ceaseless ef-
? orta for this bridge are about to bear fruit, deserve
ha thanks of the community, rt
1 F ----
F ons TROUBLE WITH BEING INTOLERANT
AGE LOVES THE SPRING
It was good to see the spring arrive
In eighteen hundred and ninety-five,
I was glad as a healthy young boy could be
To see the leaves coming back to the tree;
And in nineteen hundred with joy I'd shout
To see the grass and the tulips out;
But then I rejoiced in a small boy’s way
■ And I wasn't so glad as I am today.
I was glad to see spring in nineteen-ten
And I sang with joy at its coming then, I
But I’ve noticed this, with each passing year;
My heart leaps faster when buds appear,
And I welcome the robins with greater glee
Than Tweed to do, for it seems to me
The older I grow, the more I yearn i
For ths winter’s passing and spring’s return.
Spring is lovely when life is young.
But its deepest charms to the old belong;
Now I thank the Lord, when the skies are blue
That another winter I've weathered through.
And I thank the Lord He has let me eee
The leaves come back to the maple tree.
And I thank the Lord He has let me stay
For the blossom time in another May.
Yes, tough if you will, you youngsters small,
■But you know not the beauty of spring at all,
And you little guess what it means to see
The buds once more on the apple tree, > .
But an old heart, stung by the winter blast,
Is truly glad when he sees at last
The grass grow green and the birds a-wing.
For the Lord has given him another spring!
(Copyright, 1920. by Edgar A. Guest)
-----^-------„ % .
By CHARLES P. STEWART
NBA Service Writer
WASHINGTON, April • 1.-Some
congressmen were bora to be con-
gressmen. AM congressmen start
out as something else, generally as
lawyers, but these natural-born
ones have the congressional virus
in their bleed from earliest infancy,
and as soon as they're elected it
breaks out all over them.
Thenceforth they’re primarily
congressmen and doctors, lawyers
or merchants and as forth incident-
ally
Others, before breaking into poll-
ties, become tea thoroughly' satur-
ated with their various original call,
ings over to get them out of their
systems. These remain essentially
doctors, lawyers and merchants and
are congressmen only secondarily.
Congressman Blanton of Texas,
for instance, la almost exclusively a
congressman. He was a lawyer to
begin with, but as a congressman,
hs swallowed himself up as a law-
yer.
Senator Copeland of New York,
on the other hand. Is a striking
specimen of a doctor who happened
to be elected to the senate. He MI-
dom has anything to say about leg-
islation except as it relates to ques-
tions of health, sanitation or th*
practice of medicine. Otherwise
he’s indifferent. For example, the
coal strike interested him immense-
ly—because it was giving his con-
stitutents pneumonia. *
If Blanton . lost his congressional
Job he’d dry up and blow away, or
at any rate hibernate until he got
it back again. If Dr. Copeland were
retired he’d go back, with a light
heart, to writing medical articles.
Congressman Edgar Howard of
Nebraska is another one like Sena-
ter Copeland. His brand’s different
from Copeland’s bread, but he was
branded indelibly long before he
came to congress.
Howard’s brand is the brand of
a country editor.
His interests are wider than Cope-
land’s. An editor has to be inter-
ested in everything. Howard is, but
his interest is a newspaper man’s
interest. He doesn’t figure much in
the give-and-take of debate, but he
has a speech to make on nearly
every/subject of importance and It
invariably sounds exactly like an
editorial—a good one, too, for he’s
a very capable editor.
Howard runs the Telegram, at Co.
lumbus. Nebraska
At one time he was secretary to
William Jennings Bryan and. in ap-
pearance. he somewhat suggests A
small edition of the latter—not that
he’s a little man, but he doesn't
measure up to ths late commoner’s
imposing stature.
He has some harmless little, ec-
centricities, such as.a frock coat
and rather tons hair. At first you’re,
apt to mistake them for congress
sional eccentricities, but they’re not.
They’re old time country editorial
eccentricities .
Another thing Howard’s set be-
sides eccentricities, is the old-time
editor’s sympathy for the underdoc.
Let somebody show up at the
capital with a hard luck story,
somebody no one else has any time
to waste on, somebody who's been
skinned by the “interests” and it
isn't .very safe to be seen talkin*
to, and You’ll behold him trailing
around with Howard. .
Howard generally is classed
among the house of representatives’
humorista, but he oan rip the stuf-
fing out of a subject when he feels
like it.
79
e Benny’s
Tote. Book
No Vital Political Issue for the
Coming Campaign Year Developing
Bundey afternoon pop was to
mg and thinking and I was setting
there wondering wat to do next, and
pop sed. Well Benny, are you glad
you have a little brother?
""Meaning the now baby, and I sed,
Well, I aint sorry. 1
Thats a beginning, at leest, pop 1
sed. I expect your little brother to 1
be a grate help in forming your
caracter and making you a better
boy, he sed.
G. how? Look at the else of him.
1 mat isaciiy wat Im tocking at
I moon thinking of, pop sed. He’s
smaller than you and he’ll continue
to be smaller than you, so you’ll
haft to take care of him and pro-
tect him and ooe thet no harm hep-
pons to him, you’ll haft to think of
him insted of ony of yourself. In
other words you’ll huff to be un-
selfish. sad unselfishness Is the
greatest virtue a human been can
have.
Well nr take care of him, but I
hope he appreciates it. I sed.
: Weather he dees or not you’ll
have done your duty and your con-
actonta will be cleer, pop sed.
Wish jest then ma called from
her room, Willyum. If your not do-
ing enything I wish you’d come and
wawk this baby, he wont keep qulet
for me.
But I am doing something, et
leest 1m Jee# ebout to teke Benny
for s wawk and 1 dont wunt to dis-
appoint him, pop sed.
And me and pop quick went out
for a wawk, being a exter intrist-
Ing wawk on account of stopping
In 3 places for a ice cream soda.
-.
* LOT ANGELES Cal, April 1
mok- The best judges agree that as yet
ttin* ™ - no vital poutcat
issue tor the com-
ing campaign year
to developing
ing the people,
the moment.
""
For
HOW TO FIGHT THE FLY
• Y re
8. Cobb, the humorist and author, declared
ech in New York recently that while the
ave of intolerance in this country was bad,
ot nearly as bad as it would have been if
upy-ts of it had talked back to the other side.
‘During all the era of bigotry and vituperation,”
ir. Cobb said. “I think the finest thing was the at-
itude maintained by the clergy of the rank and file
f that faith against which the spleen of the bigots
ras chiefly directed. I know al nothing more ex-
implary as a tribute to the spirit of law and order
han their serenity under fire. As an American, I
in proud of the attitude of both the Catholics and
lews when the lance of hatred was aimed at the no longer have either the time or the capacity to do
east of every solitary one of them.” ------••■•■•-•---••
[Ons great trouble with most movements con-
Mead in the spirit of the recent one, to that other
olks never can bring themselves to take the propa-
landa as seriously as its authors take H. d
The Quest of Completeness
By Gum PANE,
By DR. HUGH S. CUMMING
Surgeon General, United States
Public Health Service
The fly is a distinct menace to
health and should be treated as a
menace, in other words. Swatting
files, commendable a pastime ** It
is, is not in itself aa important an
eradicative measure as are other*
which aim to eliminate th* breeding
places of files.
The most successful method of
ridding a community of files to to
institute and continue a campaign
to that end. It is only by united ef-
forts of all residents, supplemented
by th* support of health depart-
ments and service organisations
generally, that progress In fly
eradication la possible.
This does not mean that Individ-
ual effort should be subordinated or
submerged or that the cleanliness
of premises la set of value. It only
means that the problem should be
attacked as a whole and that the
united effort of every citizen to
necessary for its solution.
Of oracle*! I vs measures, these
which, aim to control th* develop-
ment of the larva* hold first rank,
while those instituted against adult
files sr* usually much less success-
fel. As ion* as fly breeding areas
It is an uphill battle to develop that all-roundness
of mind and completeness of character upon which
the satisfactions and successes of living to largely !he«- unaaeees."nep:
depend. E ‘
The major difficulty grows out of the fact that,
almost without knowing it, we have sold our souls to
the specialists.
Modern knowledge has grown so rapidly that we
more than cultivate some small corner of knowledge.
Intellectually we are a generation of small farm-
ers.
FROM ANOTHER
MELLON’S BAD GUESS
We have been driven to specialisation; we must
embrace it or withdraw from the competitions of
modern society; but it behooves us to sense and, if
‘ possible, circumvent n danger that lies coiled at the
heart of the practice of specialization.
'In a day when the increase of knowledge to
marching with seven league boots, specialization to
a medicine that must be taken in ever larger and
larger doses; with each passing generation every
department of the world’s knowledge and the world’s
work to being more minutely subdivided; and If this
process goes on with nothing to counterbalance it, L
VIEWPOINT
Ce IN PARIS
By IRENE DAVIDSON
The Pack end Babbit. ’
Well, I see the Pack is still mari-
nating that word "Babbit” around
from one frothing jowl to another
.In the lend of the Brave and Gay.
The last two magazines I’ve seen
Stanren w. Mellon doesn’t make many bad
"guesses, but his estimate of the March income tax
Payment was quite a bit off.
The secretary of the treasury had guessed that
the March receipts would reach $400,000,000. Second
of $420,000,000, was still too low. The third
guess appears to. be ab«ut $450,000,000. If the last
guess matures, and, according to the way the money
pouring la it should, receipts from this source for
current fiscal year should go well above $1,800,-
200,000. N A eralizations, that have heretofore preceded and pro-
■ Receipts for the fiscal year of 1925 were 11,880,-
1100,000, and that may be somewhere near the figure
time may come when men will be so narrow that
they can neither conceive nor comprehend those big
and brave flights of imagination, these creative gen-
duced all the great advances in science and society;
we shall become a race of men who do not know how
I Mr. Mellon was a little too bearish on American
■ During the recent debt negotiations, says Mellon,
was found that many peasants in one of the
taller countries were living on about $31 a year,
is up to America to increase that standard of
ring so American ships can carry a bit more cargo
hen making for those ports. The way to do this,
ellon believes, is by helping the foreign nations to
it on their feet. The present debt settlements, he
ys, are the best that could be obtained, short of
res, and should be pressed "firmly but gently."
- Mellon pleads for common sense, not sentiment
, the settlements. He likens the United States to
e most important creditor of an embarrassed firm,
is impossible to get more than the debtor can pay.
ew capital to a matter for our private capitalists
investors to decide upon, not the government.
(The secretary, as head of the Mellon banks in
ittsburgh, which have stood back of many an ap-
trently doubtful enterprise that panned out won-
to keep their lives in perspective. - -
It will be futile to fool ourselves; there to too
much to learn for any of us ever to become human
encyclopedias; the problem to to keep from becoming
human microscopes.
The intellectual and epiritual riddle of our gen-
eration to thia: How can we embrace the narrowness
of the specialist In knowledge and achieve complete-
ness of character T
M. M. Parks, in the Brooklyn Teachers’ Associa-
don Year Book, presents this interesting observation
on the aim of education which puts with singular
force the riddle I have stated.. 1
“Books, says ths student; knowledge, the scholar.
"Character, says the preacher; truth, the philo-
sopher.
“Beauty, says the artist; happiness, the Epicu-
fully well—aluminum for example—knows where-
he speaks.1
And a few debts to settle might be good little re-
rean. :
“Self-control, says the Stole; self-denial, the
Christian.
' “Loyalty, says the ruler; patriotism, the patriot.
“Wisdom, says the old man; achievement, the
youth.
“Courage, says the soldier; success, the mer-
chant.
ers for Europe that there was a war recently.
“Wealth, says the banker; vision, the dreamer.
Hoover’s “Save Your Life" conference is ended
I its work has just begun. The next steps lie with
Lesislatures of 44 states and the people who live
“Play, says the child; love, the maidan.
• "Friendship, says the comrade; personality, the
teacher.
"Health, says the physician; growth, the biolo-
traffic code has been drawn up. It will be in-
ing to watch what the states will do with it.
will be plenty of battles over this code, plenty
litical grubbing and oceans of talk. If they
I all pass it at once, and in its present form, it
be the surprise of the age. .
e thousand men and women of those states,
ook the trip to Washington at great personal
and communities. They have
worth while..
everything, but you can’t
worth half so much as #
pressive measures of other charac-
ter, and therefore the control of fly
breeding areas is the first requi-
site.
This means that the highest
standard of community cleanliness
must prevail, that the accumulation
of refuse and rubbish must be
avoided and particularly that the
proper disposal of garba** and or-
ganic waste must be provided.
If you live in the country you
should know that refuse from sta-
bles and cow pens constitutes the
favorite brooding place for flies.
Where it is impossible properly to
protect piles of stable refuse, treat-
ment with certain vegetable and
chemical products with the idea of
destroying both the eggs and the
larvae is to be recommended, of
such substances; borax to probably
the best, applied either to solution
or sprinkled over th* pile and than
moistened with water.
It le claimed that borax injures
certain soils, especially if used in
excessive amounts. There are, how-
ever, a number of other substances
which may be used and answer the
same purpose. Chloride of lime pre-
vents the access of fit»e and the de-
velopment of larvae. However,
chloride of lime interfere somewhat
with the fertilising powers of the
stable refuse .C
she low sak
By Bal Coekaom
are more
to bei the
pt to the peo-
TV.SINe
T and from other
(hmieaat
spontaneously
(W among voters. It
s is possible for the
whole campaign
year to pass with.
SULLIVAN out any great ex-
citements. This judgment, however,
is subject to two qualifications. One
is that it the prohibition issue con-
tinues to be agitated, it will provide
a vital and bitterly fought issue.
"dry versus wet" is. the issue it will
overshadow everything else. The
other qualification to that to this
western territory, quiet though It
seems, there are 1? t economic ma-
terials for a political storm of the
same nature, though not of ths
same degree, as the, one that ex-
pressed itself in the emergency of
Bryan in 1896.
The self-consciousness of the
farmer and the rural districts, as
against the city le practically uni-
versal.. The farmer compare* him-
* self not only with the city business
. man, but with th* city worker. Th*
E more thoughtful bankers every-
where ere aware of this state of
feeling among the farmers and ere
apprehensive shout the political
. consequences that could emerge
from it. s
in terms of real purchasing power,
are about twice what they were le
1914. The farmer’s income, in the
same terms, to less than two-thirds
Of pre-war.
The former does not know the
exact figures, as the banker does,
but he recognizes ths facts and
represents them. This disparity be-
tween city and country le recog-
nized by bankers as a condition
whick neither can go on nor ought
to go on. They think that in the
course of years it would correct it.
self gradually, but they believe It is
possible for it to express itself in a
political overthrow.The farmer is
in a mood to respond to two kinds
Of political appeal ,
He would look sympathetically
on a revival of the old issue een-
tering about “big business" accom-
panied by the investigation and
prosecution of alleged trusts. He
would also listen to proposal* for
tariff revision. Suggestions for uni-
versal tariff reduction would not
appeal to all the farmers because
many ot them have learned that
some of their moot vetoed crops,
like beet sugar, are, dependant on
protection, but the farmer would
regard it as reasonable for the tar-
iff to be revised on the bests of a
frsnk discrimination in favor of the
farm and against manufacturing.
Just as the tariff we* once In-
voked to stimulate manufacturing
as an infant industry, the farmer
would now adapt it so far as it can
be adapted to help agriculture as a
sick industry. If such a tariff re- 1
vision were to result in the reduc-
tion of city wages and the unem-
ployment of. city workers, that
prospect would not deter the farm-
er. On the contrary he would **1.
come it, for he desires a condition
which would enable the farmer 4
hire, at wagon he can afford, efts
workers who now get larger wages.
ANSWER TO YESTERDAYS
PUZZLE
2CAN12
HEIRO -
1
GdIHi-N
J] 41
N
TAILORED AT FASHION PARK
The icebox has been raided: there
are crumbs upon the floor. There
once wet good food stored away—
that isn’t any more. The kitchen
sink is all messed up with dirty
pistes galore. Oh, can’t you hear
the shrilly ■ shriek of children’s
voices soar?.
The quilts out to the bedroom
show faint footprints on the top.
The springs are squeaking loudly
as a jumping tat goes flop. The
curtains, due to tugging hands, are
just about to drop. Why to it little
youngsters never know just when
to stop?
The dining room and living room
have added to the Joys of poppy
youngsters who jare making lota of
noise. In every nook and corner
there are games and books and
toys. You can’t expect a kid to
know a thing like that aanoye.
It’s juat the chance that seldom
comes, so kids do things up brown.
The house is like a riot and com-
pletely up-side-down. They dare
the little spankings, and they risk
the sigh and frown, that mother’s
gonna register, when she comes
home from town.
What? Only twenty million ma-
chines all told? Why, most of us
have dodged more than that.
If it weren’t for the early settlers,
credit houses would have a heck of
a time.
Some people don’t seem to under-
stand that this is a free country and
we’re all allowed to think.
He never hugged his lady fair.
He thought it out of taste
The evening was the only thing
That ever went to waste.
now, HONEsTLT-
The man who invented tomorrow
certainly was a great kidder.
And, sooner or later, we all find
it out.
It’s like the follow who referred
to the “sweet little skunk.”
There ain’t no sich animal.
Waiting for tomorrow is some-
thing perpetual. Today, of course,
was tomorrow—but it isn’t. To.
morrow to.
For instance, ya go to sleep to-
night end say. Til sea yn tomor-
row." ‘ Then you woke up in the
morning and find out you were all
wrong. Dog-gone-lt. It’s today-not
tomorrow.
So—let’s put off till tomorrow, all
th* things w* shouldn’t do today.
If you can figure this all out, you
get a gold modal , . . tomorrow.
M
: . from home fairly reek with it,
"I wish I knew Sinclair Lewis;
I’d like to know if living with th*
result of his ill-advised coinage for
* decade would be punishment
enough. If it wouldn’t, I’d like to
think up something else for that
_ purpose, that the . government cen-
sor on penalties would pass.
* la a little while they’ll be doing
it out loud these Babbit-hunters.
“Lemme feel your "pulse," they’ll
say. If it beats a little quicker
when the band plays “Home Sweet
Home,", you’re lost: you stand con-
victed a Babbit. “Lemme see your-
tongue’’—and it they find a little
whisp ef a Thing” Bobby said at
breakfast trembling to tumble out
on e sympathetic ear, they'll nail
you. Babbit!
They’ll poke through your ears
at your brain. Here’s a little cor-
ner you've reserved to Saturday
Evening Post love-stories. It
shouts your status. Babbit! Babbit!
’They’ll look through your throat
into your tommy; here's a spot
that has never outgrown a yearn-
ing (In the ball season) for pea-
nuts and soda pop, and that
wouldn’t knowchampagne If it
could read the label. Babbit! Bab-
bitt! Babbit!!!
Once upon a time my chum cam*
from from college, after her first
year’s study of sociology. She
gravely enlightened me ae to the
numerous children who are feeble-'
minded without it’s being discov-
ered in infancy. But there was a
way to tell; a curious, startled lit-
tle look in the eyes: funny, sodden
little movements of the hands. . .
Working together, ws picked out
four little feeble minds to the
neighborhood. :
"Does Ray L. go to school?" I
asked guardedly the last time 1
was home. When Ray was two, he
would look at you serenely and in.
nocently. Thee a' sly, wild little
look would come into his syss; his
hand would fly out in one of those
fanny, sudden, little movements,
and you would be left with a emart
slap on the nearest projection. Fee-
ble mind: sed! •
“Ray L# I should say so: he's
the brightest child in the neighbor-
, hood.” I didn't ask about the other
three. Since then I’ve bed asnephew
and a niece who have been subject
to those little wild looks and sud-
iden movements; I know whst they
do for them! -
But it's no use. I couldn’t tell
the Babbit- hunters anything. If
they were in the class that could
be told they wouldn’t be Babbits
hunters. They wouldn’t fun with
the Pack that’s forever on the tree
mendous end blood-thirsty scent et
the “bourgeois” “ intelligence. . .
they’d be concerning themselves too
diligently and with too much dig-
nity with their own, mind, soul,
spirit, and service to humanity to
be worrying: about the. Babbits. .
in the meantime, that patient old
philosophy to the effect that “The
one sure sign et mental inferiority
in eneseit is the search for it, in
others’ id working at the same old
stand. . ‘
111
gist ‘
“Unfoldment, says the psychologist; adjustment,
the sociologist.
“All these and more, says the true educator.”
----------
Tom Sims Says:
Only a short time now before the baseball scandal
season, ata €
A skirt is a garment which always seems to be
too long, too short, too tight or too something.
—
The boyish haircut for girls looks much better
than the girlish haircut for boys.
Aux
[if) 49
Visors to Be Changed.
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.—Short visors
on the uniform caps worn by po-
I lee art new required under an or-
der which condemns "long bills" as
“not military." Police are complain-
ing because the new visors will not
keep the sun out of their eyes.
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
AC L MFTOL
SBAY
19
IT
az
soeroeeirenel
$9
44
49
4
av
24
as
20
16
as
av
as
as
EASTER STYLES
, FOR MEN
FROM FASHION PARK
B8
40
St
46
sa
HORIZONTAL
11. Commander.
12. Rust of any metal.
13, Guided.
14. Decree.
16. Nothing
5%
58
4a.
45
Hinner W
T
You can ent best on an empty stomach, but you Pains *
>1 thing best on anambie smegzoate.t n 287 W RAN .penmane
TAT A n
think beat on a
1 insect
1 : enfinea late sabrie (p. pr.).
20. A barterer. 1
so. Foundation of anything
I FTlien set
EATICAt
E
6. To. Invest with ministerial
6.- Pertaining to soured milk.
7. To place.
5 4.427 NANENment
12 Yellow parts of eggs.
1 52. EOMO n
36. To satiate.
N7 T2 Put up in poser
#
#
05
2
mated perfect score
Heating.
mntee
setting.
1. 9228 meatal
Ewen =,
bWHorm
ve of either,
m*mans..
horse
Notable Values :
Splendid suits for Easter. Chevyton
blues, tans and greys. Tailored st
Fashion Park and priced to warrant .
\ value.
$45
Of the Better Kind i
Parktown worsteds largely make up
this showing. Selected spring pauerns
from the tailor shops at Fashion Park ■.
$55
VBMcClurka&Co
SMITH-FAIN Co., owner N
Scott at Ninth Street
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Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 322, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 1, 1926, newspaper, April 1, 1926; Wichita Falls, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1702955/m1/8/: 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.