Yoakum Daily Herald (Yoakum, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 327, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 4, 1925 Page: 5 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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THE YOAKUM HERALD
Events and People as Seen by the Camera
F ortun^Gone—Now- Salesman
Unique Dinner
Frock
When Armour Bidding Collapsed)
Vanity’s Marker
a* a .- •
/*■ *'■ LUKHi &LU1V0
\ ! ii8iwii«r<8ttTM)»waw
v fORWiKif WdWIiWS
0 uReTSrtAWYiiSOWNWKf*'
\ #a. v. ■
- ■
Jig........ ;:......_;..........L-.'
"Horn in lsr.n ]t>0 or more
years after The exact number of
years, months and days, nobody
knows ami nobody cares Monument
erected by himself, for himself, dur-
ing his life to gratify his own van*
ity. What fools these mortals l>e.”
That's the inscription Curtis Lloyil
of Cincinnati has had placed oti Ins
monument at Crittenden, Ky. Lloyd
is an authority on fungi and a
chemist.
T-UOc store s t-i: an Armour A ('« factory in Chicago :
lapsed wiii t, a luo wall c u. w.i\ ’l ot of maciiin •. nn
wile hurled into a tui. ' i • 1 mass of ii"l>riH.
From Land of Mesquite
Smokers Beware
'V- *i. -'i ' >' <->. •
and Mrs. Ward Burgess of Omaha Neb. once >
rltvd himself up from newsboy to the head of a lar„.
e had contldenee in him and staked (urn thousands
title left by her parents Had luck came along and f.r
ankruptcy wiping out his fortune, even to the takln*:
Largess is employed us « tiond salesman for a New
t millions He
lottiing concern,
a dollars of an
! Burgess into
home. Now
k firm
neckline to
fTnilKHK’8 a unique
this dinner frwk of while
georgette with brocaded figures
In shades of blue, that is most
charming. The sash is of silver
• loth and Is allowed to fall in the
most natural and unstudied line*.
Serving 35 Years for B
WM
President
Your after-dinner cigar or.pignret,
or your ‘‘thinker” pipe are going to
start a rebellion! So says Dr. Daniel
Kress, chairman of the National
Anti-Tobacco convention committee,
which meets in Washington in
March.' According to Kress people
will soon rise In "righteous wrath,
and puss laws to wipe out the to*,
bueco curse." So puff hard, you
* may soon have to get a drag hidden
from.(lie eyes of federal agents.
Marta Oonesa. highest priced Mexican actress, will soon be seen in a
Spanish play on the American stage. Hen* she is shown in a typical)
Mexican costume.
Congratulates Winner
Didn’t Faint
, : ' r yiv-:. •••••••• .c*:-.- -
<1. Lauri Icelander has been elected
as president of Finland by the Agra*
rlan party His term will run for
six years.
Who Wins?
A nation-wide movement has l>een started to ask President ("nolldge to
parole Edna Bond, mountain giri of West Virginia, who is conilned tn the
Stark county (O.) workhouse, on a charge of bootlegging. Edna is sorv
mg the longest sentence ever known for hootlegging—seven Years and
a fine of $6000, which tf worked at u rate of 60 cents a dry would keep
her in prison 35 years.
He’s Ice Skating Champ
When bandits entered the First Na-
tional Dank of Noble. Okla., Mrs A
E. Ellinger, wife of the president,
didn't faint. She slipped out a door
and notified citizens who captured
the bandits.
Here we have Cyril Walker, national open gulf ehampkm^ongniUiTanng
Walter Hagen, British open Mtlehoider, following their match for tha
“unofficial chamrconship of the world" at St. Petersburg, Fla. Hagen.'
it will he recalled, won ranily, 17 to 15
Subscribe for the Dally Herald
Japanese Vessel Burns at Sea
4
- -
If ’ ' ' \j
i
m
V •
m
An Important process for “explod-
ing” bacteria Is being held back
from the world while two men
argue over who made the discovery.
They ore Ur. Winford Lanion
(above) of the University of Minne-
sota and David Crowther (below), nn
English mechanic attached to the
dental laboratories of the same
•chool. The patent office has sup-
ported Crowther's claims, but Judge
J. F. Smith of the U. 8. Court of
Custom Appeals has held la furor of
-4-
eih' ffrf- Iks r
Gorman of St. John. N. defend*
tamthumpion.
ec mured Mho Lake PImM
•Thla is how the Japanese steamer Oinyo Maru of Hie T. K. K. line looked when more" than L*0 pxM»-t\gera'
and members of her crew abandoned the burning veesel off the west Mexican coaet and tech to if*boats.
TWf were burned to death and several injured, while all were imperiled by the explosives the thuya was
carrying as part of her cars*.
m
•»
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Richter, T. H. Yoakum Daily Herald (Yoakum, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 327, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 4, 1925, newspaper, March 4, 1925; Yoakum, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth758209/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carl and Mary Welhausen Library.