Yoakum Daily Herald (Yoakum, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 338, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 17, 1925 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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4
l/jfe 4/'<
W
^ PJNOW WARE IS
\\\/ HELPING HIS
V WIFE "TO SEE THAT
SHE GETS JUSTICE”
'UIIIIMIIE
the delicious Sorghum Flavor
WIFE AND HUSBAND HAVE JOINED
TO DEMAND JAIL FOR “ANOTHER” MAN
MYSTERIOUS PASS WORDS
BRING PROHIBITION BOOZE
ell to his sheba.
• Oyster shell," she replied, discard-
ing the time honored and venerable
•‘apple sauce.”
MR3. WARE SELLS /-
HER JEWELS TO /
FINANCE KONEV'S
DEALS UP NORTH
By NKA Service.
CHICAGO. March 17 When the typi
cat •’triaiiL'le'' does a sommersault you
«el such circumstances as Involve the
■ft-Ase of Mrs. (’ecile Ware.
The story Is sordid but it is interest-
ing because it reverses the usual plot
tafolvlng the outraged husbanfi, his
madly gay and surfeited wife and the
other man.
Tbe “other man* *ls always necessary
to a triangle tableau Just as he was to
Mrs. Ware -a woman with all the com
forts that social position and the
wealth of her husband’s cotton broker-
age businesses could afford her among I
New Orleans’ elite.
Mj*. Ware confesses, now that ii M
all over, that it was a very silly ami
nnforgiveable thing for her to do,
when she left her husband’s palatial
.home to seek happiness and love with
•dark G. Kuney two years ago.
Handsome and 35
Kuney is 35. He is handsome. Mrs
Ware is a slight and piquant person of
3U. She has had Kuney indicted in
Chicago charging him with larceny.
She says she gave everything to
him love .honor, money, jewels and
even her home which was sold for
half Us value when Kuney re
quested it, she says.
.lames W. Ware, the lady’s husband,
aged SO, and a pillar of tfew Orleans’
smart set .once was in the point of
killing Kuney. so Mrs. Ware insists,
but stayed his hand at her request.
N»w, though the couple have separat
ed. Ware Is helping hts wife In her
prosecution “to see that she gets jus-
Ore.”
That is what makes the case untrue
By International News Service.
Granted and Alimony Given’’. Affirma
tive—Alta Darnell, Hazel Welch, Lil-
lian Piland, Treva Meyer and Mrs.
Harnden.
Negative—Bernard Rogers, Alma
Stratton. Leona Hagens. Helmet Boy-
sen. Fred. Bucanek and Mrs. Harnden.
It was voted on by the student body
as to which side won. The result was
Negative.
KANSAS CITY, March 17
I shell.”
That’s iiie most popular phrase here
as a result of government investiga-:
tions of a liquor ring that used the
words “oyster shell” as code lor li-
quor. Americans must have their
little quips, and so it goes among the
cafe and club habitues—they knowing
they are springing the latest.
But you haven't heard it all yet.
“I love you truly,” a shiek whisper-
Coughs Always
Dangerous—Quick
Way to Stop Them
Chronic coughs and chest colds often
lead to more serious trouble. Not only
is the infection itself dangerous, but
the continual coughing spells day and night
Mrs. C. J. Walker came in today
“Oyster | j-rom Maybank to visit her daughter
| Mrs. C. S. Bolton and family.
Subscribe for the Dally Heraia
MRS. CECILE WARE
of type. It touches up the dark spots i r Contrive
with a splash of chivalry, or what I “I now realize it w as all wrong from j
would you eall it? the start,’’ says Mrs. Ware. “We were;
!botli to get a divorce-and then marry.
I He told me that he had gotten into
-SAVE YOUR MONEY-
One box of Tutt't Pill* laves many
dollars in doctor'a billa. A remedy
for diaeasea of the liver, aick head*
. ache, dyspepsia, constipation, bil-
iousness; a million people endorse
(TutTs Pills)
this there is nothing
But be sure you get the genuine Dr. Bell**
Pine-Tar Honey, and no substitute. Dr. Bell’s
is the original pine-tar honey and haa been
known for over a quarter of a century as the
best. It is scientifically compounded of just the
Tight proportionaof ptne-tar, honey and other
overnight, make sure you get
30c at all good druggist*.
JttffiEi
■BILL'S
OHa G'Ujcuma&
NETAfrHONEY
“ACHED _& ACHED”
Lady Says Her Back “Hurt Night
and Day”—Least Noise Up-
set Her. Better After
Taking Cardui.
Winfield, Texas.—“My back hurt
night and day,” says Mrs. C. L.
Eason, of R. F. D. 1, this place. “[
ached and ached until I could hard-
ly go. I felt weak and did not feel
like doing anything. My work was
a great burden to me. I just hated
to do up the dishes, even. I was
no-aceount and extremely nervous.
“My mother had taken Cardui
and she thought it would do me
good, so she told me to take it.
My husband got me a bottle and I
began on it. I began to Improve at
once. It was such a help that I
continued it until after the baby’s
birth.
*‘I took eight bottles and 1 can
certainly say that It helped me. <
It is a fine tonic. It built me up
and seemed to strengthen me. I
grew less nervous and began to
sleep better.
“I can certainly recommend
Cardui to expectant mothers, for to
me It was a wonderful help. ... In
every way I felt better after taking
it and I think it is a splendid medi-
cine.”
Cardui is purely vegetable, and
contains no harmful drugs.
For sale everywhere. NC-162
Charges Wait
Kuney now is in Three Lakes, same
difficulties w ith the law there. So |
soon as he has his freedom, Mrs. Ware j
through her attorney, Charles S,!
Wharton of Chicago, plans having him
brought here, where Kuney, it has
been made known, will deny all her,
charges.
Mrs. Ware says she met him when ,
he came to New Orleans to sell some |
crops and see the races. He stayed
three months, according to her story,
anti after leaving telegraphed her from
Chicago telling her to come, which she
did.
Meanwhile, she says, she had pro-1
vided him with many thousands of
dollars by selling her Jewels and even
her home, because Kuney told her, she
says, that he needed money to finance
a deal up north.
Kuney is married too.
business difficulties and needed money.
“He fooled me from the start. I am
devoting the few funds I have left to
see him punished. My husband is
helping me. He is a wonderful man.
I lost him, my home and prestige.”
Of such stuff are triagles made.
(Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.)
MARY JANE S
MERRY JOURNEYS
ENCHANTED FOREST
BALDWIN’S
LITERARY.DEBATING
SOCIETY
The Baldwin's Literary-Debating So-
ldo ty met on Friday morning, March
13. 1925.
Following a short business meeting
which consisted of a report of the
l#ng and pin committee and Ten-
nis committees the program was turn-
ed over to the program committee.
The program consisted of a debate
“Resolved that Divorces Should be
Own a Car This Su
Enroll Now!
er
your own car. Many a
anyone can make come
It soon will be a temptation to get out on the road in
time you will wish you had a Ford—a wish almost
true through the Ford Weekly Purchase Plan.
This plan was evolved to put car-buying on the
simplest and easiest basis. Now no family need be
handicapped for lack of a car; it may be paid for
out of weekly earnings.
By enrolling now, you can have your car for sum-
mer use. Have a Ford Dealer explain the Weekly
Purchase Plan in detail or write us direct. _
Runabout $160 Coup* $620 Tudor Sedan $680 Fordor Sudan $680
On open can demountable Haa wd Marat mm MS «m AUpricstf. ©. 3. Detroit
HI THE NEAREST AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER
BALLOON
lire Equipment
Full Sizev29x4.40)
Now Optional On AH Ford Can
$OC extra on all clow d body typee
"O# open types ia- |J|f
eluding demountabU rim* T9
TOURING
♦290
Mary Jane
Wins
the Burrito
Race
"/ will ride in your Burrito raceraid
Mary Jane, "and I am sure / will win it.”
/■\NE day Mary Jane was strolling
If through the Enchanted Forest when
along came Prince Otto, the little son
of the Elf King. “Hello, Mary Jane, how
would you like to ride in the Burrito race?”
asked the Prince. “I would like to, but
what is a Burrito?” asked Mary Jane. “Oh!
Burrito is the. Mexican word for donkey.
Don’t you know what a donkey is?” and
Prince Olio laughed.
“Yes, indeed I do,” answered Mary Jane,
who became “miffed,” “I will ride in your
Burrito race and I am sure I will win it.”
• Now Mary Jane had never ridden a
Burrito in all her life and when it came time
to start the races she might have been feel-
ing a teeny bit nervous but she didn’t let on.
Prince Otto himself lifted Mary Jane to the
back of her Burrito, the only white one
amongst them, and in a cloud of dust they
were off across the meadow.
There was great excitement when the
little white donkey drew into the lead and
passed Prince Otto’s pavillion way ahead of
the others. Mary Jane’s name was put up
as the winner and Prince Otto announced
that the prize was the largest can of MARY
JANE SYRUP ever made. Then Mary Jane
invited the Prince and all his guests to have
tea wit h her, and served them hot buttered
scone3 with a layer of delicious MARY
JANE SYRUP on each half.
It was a delightful party and everybody
agreed that there was nothing any of them
liked better than MARY JANE SYRUP,
and hoped* that Mary Jane would visit
Prince Otto’s court very soon again and
would attend the races with them.
WATCH FOR the next story about “The
Pretty Song the Sitvinae sang to Mary Jane,”
ETDETF For all children. The complete aet of 20 NSW Mary Jane Fairy
" , ,Talet. beautifully illustrated, sent free on receipt of one Mary
Jane label taken from a can of Mary Jane Syrup. Write the Corn Products
Refining Company, Dept. A, Argo, III
To Win a Smile
from a child, serve nutritious MARY
JANE SYRUP with that delicious sor-
ghum flavor. Contains nutritious food
elements and is a real health builder. Your
grocer sells Mary Jane Syrup—get a can
today.
MARY JANE
the SYRUP with
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Richter, T. H. Yoakum Daily Herald (Yoakum, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 338, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 17, 1925, newspaper, March 17, 1925; Yoakum, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth757817/m1/2/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carl and Mary Welhausen Library.