Wichita Weekly Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, January 21, 1916 Page: 2 of 8
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XY TIMES, WICHITA FALLS, TEX AS, TRIP AY, JANUARY 21,1916
PAGE TWO
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the British force under Gei, Town
sliend that has been in a precarious
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Consumers Cash
811 Ohio Avenue • ,
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‘CONS
HEW
MEASURE IS PASSED
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1w
1 10 9mok
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It
wan 3.2, and as compared with the
ON DEFENSE PLANS
I
week.
F
Wilson has begun work to put into
passed, however, it was a partial vic-
in the statistics, Mui practically all of
tory for climants who would be grant-
tHzation.
gave evidence of having attempted to
I to 1914—the death rate from tubereu-
develop their claims.
Ionia in all its forma fell from 200.7 to'
$!
ASSOCIATION OF CITY
EDITORS IS OROANIZED
more than all external
stood second.
Junction with the civilian naval conM,
responsible for 83.804
ee to affiliate with the National City
' Editors Ansociation which was form-
ed here.
SOUTHWESTERN FRUIT
DEALERS MEET AT MEMPHIS
and should be Increased very slowly
to 46 or 50 degfees in ntbout an hour.
4
to
SNYDER. TEXAS TODAY
" vices recofre here today. Reports
i, Jom, 17,— The cold
Snyder. Tex
n8:
•u
Sunday and today the thermometet
twined
top of the levee.
“3
A
A.
168,6
Bi#
120*. 9
an;
e
FAFA’FN
COLD WEATHER HITS
MANY AUTOMOBILES
No. 3 cans of Pie Peaches, per dozen.only......
No. 3 cans of Whole Bcets, per dozen only.....
1
i
.....$1.00
.. .$1.20
fresh air. etc. duetih part, no doubt to
the efforts of the varlous societies for
treatment may he rendered at home
by putting the car in qnartora where
the temperature is gradually rieing.
Vh
.J
in the Huse was the bill under which
more than 700,000,000 acres of pub-
has been a moat marked ami gratify-
ing decrease during recent years in
the mortality from this scourge of civ-
SPECIAL SESSION
OPENS IN OKLAHOMA
the decline in the rate for tuberculo-
sis haa been nearly continuous. .
The only remaining death rate high-
er than 100 per 100,000 in .1914 was
" north of Torreon had
at Monterey. With thi
I t
ho have
t are at
X
> Un
*32
ig *
causes increased Yrom 89 per 100,000
in 1800 to’ 103.4 in 1905, since which
year it has fluctuated somewhat.
average for the five-year period 1906-
1910. which was ST.
Tne number of suteides reported in
1914 was 10,933, or 16.6 per 100,000
12
complished selt-destruction by the use
of firearms. 3.006 by poison, 1,552 by
hanging or wtrangulation, 1,419 by as-
phyxia, 685 by the use of knives or
other cutting or piercing inatruments,
>18 by drowning, 225 by jumping from
high place*, 89 by- crushing, mid 81
by other methods.
hope that the session may not extend
more than thirty days. While he has
not shecirled what measures are to be
considered.st ia expected the rates of
Intereat. Industries at the atate pris-
ons and amending the election laws
are to lie on the calendar.
I
Dy Asnosiated Prenwita i-
Washington, January 17.—The sec-
ond of the administration conserva-
By Assoeinte Pre**.
Oklahoma City, Okla., Jan. 17.—An
extraordinary session of the Oklaho-
ma legislature which was convened by
Governor R. U Williams January 8th.
Li’ i
’—JNrarg
OB
MEXICO VICTIMS
HAD PASSPORTS
T
1 1.
ill
""Compare th,enc price* with the cnes you are jutyiny and see if
we are-not sarjng you from 10 to 25 per cent. an your gryceriet.
SERBIANS TO REMAIN IN
ITALY FOR SOME TIME
Representative Baker and Burch of
California objected to a section giv-
ing relief to California oil promoters
FLOODS THREATENING
DAMAGE IN ARKANSAS
FOR NEUTRAL ZONE
Resolution far Strip to Be Guarded
Jointly by U. 8. and Car.
rania introduced. -
The temperature at fiyst should be
only a few dozrees abovesftecting.
nw, president of the American Insti-
tute of Mining Engineers, wnt also
toth presidenta of the American Re.
cinty of Civil FnzIneera, the Ameri-
ran Society of Mechanical Engineer",
the American Institute of. Electrica
Several Matters Are to Como Before
Legislature. Convened by
Governor Williame.
More Than 100 Caro Said to Have
Suffered Damage During the
----"Preezu Last Week.
Industrial as Well as Military Mob.- .
ilization. la Being Consid-
ered
,c
Deatiisdue’to railway accidents and
injuries totaled 7.062 or 10.7 per 100,4
Monterey. He sail
and others employ)
Ind., is president of tho new organ-
isation. . c.
------A----;—•-
Have Fallen Back to Within Six
Miles of Kut el Amara, Stae-
msnt Declares
greatly from year to year. TThe rates
ior measles and scarlet fever in 1914
yere the lowest in 15 years, while that
for whooping cough was considerabiy
above the lowest’recorded, rate for this,
disease, 6.5 in 1914, although far be-
Rv-n
STATK DEPARTMENT—LEARNS
THEY WERE TOLD TRAVEL
WAS SAFE.
from Asako. Americans }
been in the Laguna, distrli
crossings. The death rate from rail-
way accidents and injries is the low-
est on record and , shows a most
marked and gratifying-decline as com-
pared with the rale for 1913, which-
waa 13 per 100,000, and a still more
pronounced drop from the average for
the five-year period 1906-1910, which
was 15 per 100,000.
hi ran go.
mr IN ITALY
I Lead Carranzista
vezista L
/ "
I --
doches ounty Won the third prize.
R. F. Oakley, and ICs ulster. Mary
Oakley, of Nolan County were award-
ed first and second prises in te
Kleberg Beef Club. In the Pryor Baby
Heef Club Horace Hamilton of Gray:
' V
\ ■ ‘
\ l eg
6
"2
WICHITA W.
■WM———P—B
N)
11
- /■ Jr.
4
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The announcement wak made by
J. Austen Chamberlain, secretary for
India, who said that the "rurks had
retreted *" the ie|hili—of aiugboz
British victory. . 25 - '
The Turkish positions
he said, were carried Saturday by
rthe Hritish. , "
Itolict avparently is in sight for
■, vula :afu.
Two Phone—1551-1531.
’ • _ * *
•mg
W. L E
bHir E"
p &
.21 86 - , G“E
Rellet for Oil MAh Wwose Land.
Goverkgent„Tok2aAmoh
.. ... tasthe itin I"" i
emt
position at Kut el Amara in Meso-
potamia for some time since it was
compelled to fall back from the vic-
inity of Bagdad. .3"
It was officially announced in Lon-
'fun that the relief column guider
Gen. AiytHW proceeding up the Tig-
Mengphis, January 17-Wholesale
fruit and produce dealers from the
more than IM cities and shipping
centers la ths Vn|t*d States and
Canada attended the opening nes-
' slon here today of the annual con-
vention at th* Soutwestern Jobbers
Aesoclation at America. Th* address'
son County was awarded 6200, having ; Ingineers and American Chemical
added 251 pounds inweight to hisFoclety.
calf during a feeding 'veriod of 123 The work of collecting the data
days at a cost of 05t cent per pound. wili he carried on by the representa.
Josephine MfiberKer of Hill County tives or these organizations in con-
prize and produced 3.78 tons of bay
and nuts. Leone Holmes of Narog- public In New York by W, 1* Saund-
Members of Governmen and Dipl*,
matic Corps Have Arrived at
_ 2-- Brindisi
/ •n 1 MM, . •
* 2*
By Amnoetnted Press
Dallas, Texas, January 17.—At the
annuat convention of the Texas In-
dustrial Congress the prizes f{»r the
best field crops, livestock, and gar-
dens wer awarded. The capital prize
of $560, was adjusted to Alvin Tiroff
of Wilbarger county. Mr. Tiroff pro-
duced 4.64 tons of cowpea hay; 46.64
bushels of corn; 2 tons of kaffir
heads and 1.87 bales or cotton on
four acres at a total net profit of
measprtag ten by twenty feet, grew Railroad msiness Association, in New
673 pounds of vegetables valued at York, Jun. 27, h is expected t, rn.r.....w-
$42.32, at a cost of 85; net profit fer to the ndisability of having the
was 61.27 per sguare zarli nt athls railroads and concerns which inanu-
rat nn are would net $6,148. Willie fucture railroad supplies co-operate*-—
ilur who Hg the senepal mobilization plans, 4t
population. Of this number, 3,286 ac-
5 0-
By Asnneinte-) Prew.
Indianapolis, Jan. 17.—As an out
growth of the second annual meet-
ing of ithe Indiana City Editors As-
sdelation, city editors all. over the .----------------- - ------- . — -------------- — -----
United States today are being ask- formerly 9njoyed by this class of dl,deaths in the registration area in 1914,
Killing Americans Blamed On Lopez;
4 - Obregon And Trevino
------------------r-----t. .;--
-^9
com* affective interrupts a business monia) was
ris river hog innicted a defeat on
the Turks'who hve been driven out 1
of their posttions at Waddl bad fall-
*[en back to within six miles of Kut ■
el Amara. They had been beaten •
near Mapimi
arrived safely
mwere a few
auinoenn nrainN .* 146.8 per 100,000, the decline being
mn‛E"5 "A“AS nineeone’continuous from year to year. This is
RAILROAD DIRECTORS a drop of more than 25 per cent. Prior
By A„mrintea Pronn to 1914 the rate had flucuated, start-
Houston, Texas. January 17.— Attheing at 201.9 in 1900. Even yet, how-
meetings and elections of officers' of cver. tuberculosis has the gruesome
the various railroad* In Southern Fdistinction, o[ causing more dentts an
Texas, recently held," directors who nMaM than An other. EoEma A bodily
Torreon and Lerdo, a suburb:
odn Apprehension felt regarding the
•T> safety of Vice Consul Green atD
"tik" 1 ango was allayed today by the re-
ense gives- emphatic testimony ip the
effectiveness of present-day methoda,
not on|v of cire inn of prevention. Only a few degrees atinve Effocfing,
Theefficay of improved water- suppty one authority Informs, Th^ Times,
and sowerajte systems, of the cam- r- -—• — “—----• ---
peign against the fly, and >t othet - in to 46 or rm degrees in wbout an naur.
itary. precaullcas "is strikingly ahown permitting the water to thaw szraduat
by the reduction af the typhoid mor ly.
tniity rule to the extent ot mere than
London, Jan- 17,-—Announcement
was made in the House of Commons
today 'that • the Turkish forces in
Mesopotamia have falleh back to
within six miles of Kut el Amara.
cotton;-2,94 tons of eanytund -pea- - •
nut hhy; 24 5 'bishefsof wheat and
of grat uneasiness among the real-
deals there. The water at MeClel:
land now is within two fet of the
snd Fred Rosenburg of Decatur -he,
cultivated thr wareens on a com- ____
maraiy : eSamakapanuc"BaTodaf.ts Sisn.
ting them $175 eaeh, nhle organizations are cooperating in
The gonem} average* per acre oftalwidely advertised campaign to oh.
the contestants a re as follows: • tain bundles of old clothing for the
L
deli of Wyoming a group of members,
from the western states opposed par- I
tieularly the provision uddr whh,
the •beat oil reourts on public lands
090. This nuyaber-includes fatalities
resulting from collisions between rail-'
4-pound pails df Marco Coffee, steel cut, for only....... -.4 .90c6
was to meet here today. The gover- ed’prefential leases provided "they
norin Ms catt urgently expressed the I “ -- ‘
Py Aenoelated Pre**. --------
Rome, Jan. 17.—The Idea Nazionale
saya the Serbian government will have
headquarters at Brindisi for some
tine. Premier Pachitish and a num-
ber of other government officials are
at Brindisi.
ADeaths resulting from street-car ac
dldents And injuries numbered 1,673,
fir 2.5 pr 100,000. This rate, like that
pr railway fatalities, is the lowest on
record mnd shows a material falling
affected by the last withdrawals uq-
denthe..Taf admiistrationias,notithe Prevention of tuberculosis, there
being liberal enougn. in ton Iori
Andrew Carey of Taylor County was suiting board: When the plans ten-
first in the Hog (Hub; this hog show- ta lively drawn up by the president • <
ed a gain in weight of two pounds ■ and his advisers are complete, ma-
per day during a feedim period ofchimery will be sef gfg whh la
125 days. Pearl Lee of Comanche ' expected to placoain the hands of the
County stopd second in this class, government complete Informations re-
The reports of contestants in thesgardig bursiness and indusKFin
Home Sehool Garden Class show some source* which would have to be can-
remarkable records. ‘ od to the assistnce of the army and
■ Billy Minter, ■ ten-year old school ' navy in time of war, ' - •
boy of Austin, on a backyardgarden. When the president addresses the
u ■ till TT
Cowneas 3.3 tonsot dry hay; kaffir, needx. It ,l" estimated that nbout
mH', or feteria a. tons of heals; 150,000 bundles will have .been re:
*8.04 bushels of corn; 1.16 bakes oficeive by nightfall.
T*an .1
death rate a* high as 18 per 100,000
in 1014. The fatal cases pf diphtheria. —---
and creup-twhieh are classed together
--r t 4 H
way train* and vehicles at gratis
whooping cough had first place. In
every year since and including 1916, *8
well as in several preceding ynars,
measles has caused a greater nutbe >t
ot deaths hian the much more dreaded •
starlet fever. The mortality rates for
all three of these diseases ‘nuetuate
* IN THAT THEATRE 18 RE-
PORTED TOpAY
- _‛ J
TURKS ARE RETIRING
। n ’ ceipt at a state department dispatch
from him' reporting F: O, Emerson,
regarding whom inquiries had been
made, safe at Duran
2222ifffi
rector". In the future sales mad* to or 127 per 100,000- the lowest rat on
_______________ ________ railroads" by these directors will be I reccrd. The mortality rate from this
H. T Sullivan of Richmond, confined strictly to competitive blds, disease, like that from tuberlonia, hns
For ordinary materials where th* shown s marked decline since ,1900,
prices are standard, railroad com- when it was 180.5 per 100,000: Its
pantes have not been accpstomed to' fluctuations from year to year, how-
. placing bids. Hence the resignationlever, have been prohouneed whereas
of many former directors. * " ---“ . . .
heads on one ncre J. S Calhoun
of Hall County and Garland Whitt opration the plan he mthnod in his
of Ployd County were awarded the lust message to Conzress preparinE
second and third prizes Mrs. Krl the nation's manufacturing/railroad
Wolf took the second prize in this । "nd other business resources for
class in 1914. ' quick mobilization in case of emer-
Irbv Smith of Hopkins County led I gency. It became known that he has
all contestants m the Texas Peanut vritten to the heads of all the prin-
Club with a yield of 4 2-3 tons of pea -l ipal engineering organizatlons, ask-
nuts and peonut hay. This crop cost ing ’hat they appoint representatives
62.41 per ton to produce and net- It cllect data for use in organizing
ted a profit of $1is. Wm. Norman 1 businens for national defense in time
liny of comanche County won second ' of danger.
prize and produced 3.78 ions of hay The letters, one of which was made
previously at Qrah, 25 piles dowa
the Tigris from Kut el Amnara, e
crMtu to a British official announe- ;
ment yesterday. T
1hW T
'-2/ an
live-ninths in 14 years. 4
The principal epidemt,t inladies oi' ,,
childhood-whooping cough, measles, eat weather of-the winter ret in her
ahd rcarlet fever—were together re Sunday and teday the thermometet
---------------------------- »ponatble for’no •“fewer man 15.617 registers twelve decrees above zen
N^xt in order at deadlines* comel deat)a of both aduits and < thildren, or "with conaideralle srow. *
cancer and other malinant pumor* per‘100900 I the registration TWELVE ABOVE ZERO AT
. By Anprietared Pres*, i
Washinzton, January 17.—Evidence
cohect d at El Paso by state depart-
ment agents indicates that Carranza
' authorities at Chihuahua assured C.
K R. Watson, head of the party of Am-
•ericans killed near Banta Ysabel that
no escort was neaessary. In that
opinion many of the Americans agreed,
though they had susses ted to- the-au-
thorities advisability of sending troops :
with the party. ,
The advices further stated that
the Carranza governor of Chihuahua
gave Watson s persoham-passport anti
that the Carranza immigration au-
thorities in Juarez gave a general
pcesportfor the whole Watson party..
These developments are taken to
point to responaibility pt the Car-
renza government for not adequately,
protcting the Americans,
Eatabtawment of a neutral zone in
northern Mexico, to. be policed joint-
ly by the governmhnta of Mexico and
the United State* unless Mexican
disorder I* speedily controlled la pro-
posed in a resolution introduced to-
day, by Senator Gore.
The Gore resolution, referred U> the
foreign relations committee would SU.
thorize the president to Zemtet, ft ■
sn agreement with Gen, Carranza W l
\ use troobs to restore and make life
eecure in that'portion of .Mexico ad-
jacent to the United States. There
wassno discussion on the preppsal.
' Americans Concentrating.
Concntration of Americans at Tor-
ror and other’ points where Car-
. * inra troditScan afford them greater
) rotection, was reported to the atate
. department todaxby Consul Hanns at
els on his acre. Sam Villiva of Jef-
ferson milked third, having a yield
of 83.25 bushels.
In the forage crop contest Karl
Wolf of Haskell County won first
prize. He grew 4.89 tons of mllo
In only ttecade—from 190+1,80 orizs’periopthso, tartrar
Excitement ran high in Washingin oxer the assaninatio <4 "Ame rican* In Mexico, and the,opinlen waa express-
ed freely that this time American roops would be sent oyer,sthe border. Pablo Lopez a, Yasui chief, knowa as
"Red" Lopez, and General Reyna, two, Vila generals, led th* men who azsasinaed nineteen Americans near Hants
Ksabel, Mexico, and the pazsacre was commitutd^u the, wake of a Carchza trpop,train. acgordiug to informnatiom
gathered at E Paso, Tex. Statements made by , Quadelupe Gardena, cpbiduckeir of a train bearing the Americaits
ana Thomas B. Holmes, the onlykeQWA survivor 9 th* American partyriifcated that the murder of the United
Statewscitizens was deliberate I thepicture,No 1 shows the-International bridge at, Ki Pao, over which troops
1000 American, soldiers now in Texas: No.2:General Obregon, Carranza's ovmmnand-
wit Carranza at Queretaro; No. 4, General Trevino, Ip comnand of the Carranza
--------- ------------------ Non., "Red" Lopez. . . — -i”
«, I,.Associated Presa
Brindisi, Italy, Jan. 17.—Forty .
. members of the Serbian government ।
E
45 '
hu. H;
Texas, recently held,’ directors who i nuall than any other torn
were also shippers have largely Fesign- invss except heart diseuse
ed. The few remaining directors will 40 per sent
not be furnished witn‛ annual passes, cause*—accidents, homieldes, and sui-
The federal law known as the Inter- cides combined.
bave arrived here from Scutari ac-
companled by diplomats of the allied
powers accredited to Serbia.
6244.11. Several members of ..fell
WILSON ASKS DATA
was awarded the first prize of $200
in the Texas dorn Club. The socond
prize went to Frank W. Helton of
Wheeler County who grew 83.89 bush
'Wlait.ictL.iiC'U.jrt^yiiarantee and if the yooda do niA plMine, you your
money in uaitinu for you at the— Li —1 - ,
Sfore
Washington, Jan. 17.— l'resident
“ ' / that for Bright'* disease and adute
Lttle Rock, Ark.. Jan. 17.—A nephritis, 102.4. The total number of
force of 60 men was dispatched from tdeaths tue to those maladies' in 1914
Helena to McClelland on White riv-’was 67,546, more than nme tenths of
•t to asint in the light there agaihst i which were caused by Bright's dis-
threatening foods, according to ad- ease ahd the remainder by acute tie.
phritis. The nwrtality front these two
More than 100 automobiles in this
city came to grief last-week.when the
near-zero weather arrived, and amcA
result garage proprietors have had
a busy time of i making repairs
to "bursted cylinders and waiter lack-
ets. Failure to drain th* radiators,
and ‘inefficiecy of mixtures designed
to prevent the water freezing, caused
the damage. In most cases where
auto owners had mixed A the wnter
with alcohol or glycerine in suffl-'
cient quantity, there was no damage,
but in some machines where a oopsid:
erahle proportion of alcohol had
been mixed with the water, freezing
irevertheless resulted.
While it is considered advisable to
turn the car over to the repair shop
when the water freezes, J first aid
000 population. The death or mortal charged to these causes in 1914 were
tieularly th* provision uMar wh Ii "teafromthigeauteysh a mark- ’'f infants unde F 2 years or age.
the .best oil rekourtes on public lands edhain asgomiredwth.100,n. Apoplexy was the ciuse of 51,278
in California and Wyoming would be woenttwas.oniy.122.1 !eL.100.000. ; daaths. or 77.7 par 109,004, The rate
developed under federal leases. They ' 21 Tubereulosi. in 18 vartou..rorme ir at this malady Aar, increased grad
contend that each state should be per- [ elaimed . ^7? ,1* . . °*/t:dly. with ocqasional slight declines,
mitted to regulate suen development , ioh number 84.366 died from tuber: islace 1300, when it stood at 67.5.
within it. borders. ' orthenlnen (inelnding acute ’ Arierias disenses ot varlous kinds
m iar Xro ilosidAsantepritzofatheroma, anourism. etc—caused 15,-
Uwa health, the im^Xi 5per 10,v0, in the
No epidemie disease produced a
the vrato having fallen from 43.3 in
1900. This decline of nearly 59 per
cent is relatively greater thin that
shown by any other important cause
oUdealh. The rate has not fallen cn-
tinuotsly, but ‛nas- nuctuated some-
what from year to year, •
Diabetes was the canse of 10,666
deaths, or DI2 per .100,000. The rate
from this direushas risen almost
continuousTy i rem your to year since
1900, whemt was 8.7 per 100,000.
The mertality rato from typhoid
fever has shown a most gratifying de-
cline since 1900, havinz decrenned
from 35.9 per 190,060 in that year to
15.4 *914, or by67 pr cent. "This
decUne has been almost- as gredt, rel.
btively, as thiat fordipltherin, end has
been krater than that ' for any other
principal cause'of d*Mh. The tota
niimher of daths due to typhoid fever
in 1914 wan 10/85, The markei de.
crease in the mortality from this dis-
*
In the Caucasus, the ofTensive by
the. Russians with strongly relnfore-
ed columns along aj00 mile front,
apnears to be gaining force. Tin*
Turku evidently have been offering
a determined resistance, the war of-
lice declaring that their retirement
was only after"they had held strong
Russian forces In check for a week.
area la 1914, the rates for the three
diseases separately being 10.3, 6.8 and
6.6, respectively. In 1913 measles
caused a greater mortality than eithev
of the other diseases, but in 1914
WILBARGER COUNTY MAN IS TEXAS’
PRIZE FARMER; $244 PROFIT ON 4 ACRES
......... ■ ■ Hl 1* 11n) as
57 hushels of oats. The average net .
prfit of tlie boys and girls in the
kryor Baby Beef flub was 65.16, and
68.(1-in the HoE Gup. injtAe garden
contest the average net profit was
650.15:
The Congress has issued its prize
announcement for 1916 and will send
entry blanks to any one upon applica- i. ,
tion.
of th* president, William H. Grope from Georgetown and McClelland tall
of Burington, Iowa, wan a feature
z - of th* procnim today, ofticers will be
‘elected and the 1817 convention city
locking directorate law, soon to- be- Pneumonia (including bronchopneu-
_
100 pounds of Standard Granulated Sugar for only.............
17 pounds of Standard-Granulated Sugar for only......... . $1.00
8 pounds of Flat Grain Rio Coffee for ........... $1.00
N2 cans of soft, tender Peas, per dozen only........ .. .75c
No. 3 cans of Highland Sauer Kraut, per doen only-------- .90c
No. 2 cans of Pride of the Valley Corn, Maine style for..... .90c
No. 3 cans o-f Booth’s Tomatbes, per.case only.................
372-
• A--: ';'
Tna,
2b-cent jaf of Preparetj Mustard.for only............— —--15e -------
atvwnadi. No. 3 cans of Best Hominy, per dozen only-. ........ 90c
. ‛ 8 pounds of bulk soda for only............... ........... .25c.
dor Arm & Hammer Soda, per pound only ............. ......Sc ■ o.
- 25-et bottle of Blue Label Casup, per bottle 20c or two for. .35e- —
Carnal ion or Pet Milk, small cans, 6 for only..... + .. . . .25c
No. 2 cans of String Beans, per dozen only........ .85c L . .
No. 3 cans of Pumpkin, per dozeh only..................... 90c ‘
11 barsjof Laundry Soap for only.. ..... .. h.. -...... . .25D
Dried Peaches at 12 pounds for only....., ........ t.....$1.00
No/10 buckets of Compeund Lard for onlye: ... q.,ee .. .$1.10
Cooking Oil, best grade, per gallon only..... .. .....,! .70c
Country Sorghum, pet gailon only...................... .50c
Pur Ribbon Cane Syrup, per No. 10 can, for only..... ---------
No. 2 cans of Gooseberries, per dozen for only...... .-V. ... .75c
INo. 3 cans of Sweetpotatoes, per can 10c or per dozen: $1.00 , ,4
No. 10 bucket of Pure Honey for only......... /•..... .$1.00
Square Deal Flour; highest patent, guaranteed to . .
• be as good flour as is milled in this state, per ,
“hundred..... ...... ......,. $3.00
TION HEART DISEASE, TUBERCULOSIS AND —-iawthemtshent, 15.8iin 1903:
1 ; ; \ PNEUMONIA CAUSING MOST DEATHS
___ nan,--HW
N, , 1 Vashington, Jan. iK—‘ecording tolwhiMAtlecs220‛grales‛i 1914. ot
Carthe,enuA, Dwmrtmaekor Com-ifrom cancer has risen from 68 ptr
proa, iandcompQed, ay Rishard c. 1100,000 in i960 to 79.4 in 1914i—Fhe
zARfhn chinfataticiauafot, vitl sta nareane has. bemn almst eontinuons,
|ti*tra*, more than 30 per cent of. thelherp having keen hut two years—
898459denths reported for that year'1906 and 1911—which showed a de
— —----------..in.the.gistraiqp ara,vpich con- clino a compared with the year* 1m-
tion. meazuren, which ponied BatANffy [.faibert hbotit iwo-thirds ore popula- 1 mediarely preceding. It 1* possible
tion of the ehtire United States, wore that at leant a part of thin indicared
- . - -- due to three quses— heart diseases, increase is due to more accurate diag
llc land will be thrown for lease for tuberculosis and pueumonia—and more npses and greater care on the part of
private interests passed the House. than 60 percent toeleven causes—the physicians In making reperts toregis -IE----------- ----------- —
today without a roll canl. Immediate- | three just named, together With tration officials. S aff as compared with 1913, when
ly.atter.thenstoraer homestead.b U Bright’s disease.and nshritis, cancer. Diarrhoea and enteritis caused 52,.: "" ------------ -
was.take nup. 21riv prospect.th On d iarrhoea and enteritis, apoplexy, ar- 407 deaths in 1914, or 79.4 per 100,000.
would be passed early next week OP- I terial diseases, diphtheria, diabetes mig rate shows a mark. <1 Mnin att
position to the land lease bill was 1 tvphotd rever m ’ or
confined Drincinaliv to four western rever os compared with the rate for the pre
Fonrinentrtiinsipasyn the case of the' The deaths from heart diseasea < ceding year 90.2 and a very pronoune.
water nwer Sesasny 1 U CAse.a me (organic diseases of the heart and en-ed decline as compared with that for
water power scAn, mil passed last docarditis) in the registrntion area in 1900, which was 13212. Nearly five-
— . 7 - - - ■ 1914 numbered 99,534 or .50.8 per 100,- sixths of the total number of deaths
in MESOPOTAMIA The Following Prices
VICTORY FOR BRITISH FORCES ’ < • -1 .
fv
9
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Wichita Weekly Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, January 21, 1916, newspaper, January 21, 1916; Wichita Falls, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1566009/m1/2/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.