Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 124, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 14, 1924 Page: 14 of 48
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Prominent Young Port Worth
, Girl, Bride of Wichita Falls
Man, Is Expected Here Soon
5 Another charming young woman is to be added to the Wichita
Falls group of young matrons in the bride of Walter Victor Monger,
recently transferred here from Fort Worth, according to announce
ment from the latter city.
An account of - the Monger-Buggs wedding was in last Sunday’s
Fort Worth Record, and to reproduced below, Miss Susss was a mem-
her of a prominent Fort Worth family, and popular in the young so-
cial set, besides being a talented and charming young woman. Mr. and
Mrs. Monger are expected here soon, following their wedding trip east.
(From Fort Worm Record)."
The B- TTViy“Trenby erian
Church was the econo of one of the
most artistic weddings of many
seasons Wednesday evening when
, Miss Mary Eroty Suggs and Walter
Victor Monger of Wichita Falls
3 were united in marriage.
The beautiful and simple inte-
rior of the church waa decorated
with a profusion of flowers, palms
and lacy ferns, the altar bring
bank'd with the lovely soft cling-
ing greenery. On either side stood
tall conucopias of gladioli, while
chandeliers and warts were hung
with smilax and plumes terns.
Ths color scheme of pastel shades
was further carried out in the bou-
quets of the four bridesmaids and
the maid of honor, whose beautiful
clusters of astors, roses and glad-
loll, tied with long streamers
matching ths rainbow gowns of the
wedding party. *
Miss Ethleen Reimers, daughter
of Mr. end Mrs. C. D. Reimers, was
the dainty flower girl, and Master
J. L Meyers, Jr., was ring bearer.
They carried out their parte with
a dignity very charming to the ob-
server.
The bride, talented daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. Leonidas Suggs, WM-
lovely in an ivory satin gown,
beaded with exquisite iace. Her
veil was held in place by a. coronet
of orange blossoms and buds Her
shower: bouquet of roses and lilies
of the valley was mounted on a____,_________
white satin staff. Brocade slippers town guests were present.
of peari white harmonized with the
artistic trimmings. She entered on
the arm of her father, Dr. Buses,
who gave her in marriage.
The musical program was under
the direction of Sam 8. Losh at the
organ. Mrs. Mabel Helmcamp Neely
sang “The Night, Has a Thousand
Eyes," to Clyde Whitlock’s netting,
and “The Dawn," by Cantor. The
Rev. David F. McConnell, pastor of
HadAwrAine EloIM *-*
Dr. Haywood Davis acted as best
man. Miss Katherine Suges, sister
of the bride, was the attractive
maid of honor. The bridesmaids
were Miss Helen McNeely of Mem-
phis, Tenn., Miss Elisabeth Lomax
of Denton, Miss Anne Lewis and
Miss Louise Bomar.
The ushers were Leslie E. Dolt.
John Repper, Jack W. Gilliland and
Charlee M. Moore. Immediately fol-
lowing the ceremony a reception
was held at the home of the bride’s
parents on Hemphill street. The
home was brilliantly decorated with
roses, ferns, and gladioli. Delicious
isos in molds of slippers, wedding
bells and hearts were served with
the wedding cake. Fruit punch was
served to the dancers, on the bal-
cony Md lawn. ’
The ribbon maids who took part
in the wedding were Misses Mary
Poston, Ruby Edmonds, Myrtis
Gann of Oklahoma City and Ethel
Grant and Mrs. Carrie Sherrill Wile
llama. A large number of out of
MRS. WALTER V. MONGER
Mrs. Norris Says-
There are women, still young, with a child or two, with energy,
money, beauty, intelligence, who are scared of life.
It is a dangerous time when we look life straight in the eyes,
when nature takes away the
===== veils with which she has
, blinded us. and drops our con
20-6-0 riding hand from her own.
people. If you are not needed at
where you are nedd.
the fact that the tubercular patients
are being allowed to wander at will
through the other wards.
Not at first, not for a year or two.
but inevitably, your life work will
come toyou.—Into the busy, full
days you have found will enter the
surprise. Can you go to Washing-
ton as a delegator Can yen go
abroad for a year to study this or
that at close range? Could you take
the salaried position that is to be
created to the Institute for just
your sort of work?
These things may not sound par-
tleularly interesting on the outside.
But neither is a black and rusty
furnace I stores ting from the out-
side. All the flame, the roaring
white heat, is within.
There is as much bleak and
stupid unhappiness in Paris salons,
on ocean liners, in crowded opera
houses, as there is in your block.
The moving picture queen whose
likeness you wistfully study may be
actually more degraded and miser-
able than any unfortunate you ever
saw scudding along forbidden Grant
avenue in the dusk. The histories
of great fortunes are the histories
of great crimes, great tragedies,
great wretchedness. As for .the
stupidities that wealth breeds, they
Some women look through -a
neatly curtained window into a
rain-soaked smalltown street.
Awfully dull. They look at their
hands, needing another *mani-
cure. But why bother about it?
Nobody cares. Presently such
women think they are going to
get a divorce.
1 % • •
. Such a woman feels herself
capable of better things than
housework. Yet there seems to 11 muupausuawm ME* wwroaxae mawwww* y-g
be no way to break through ths are endless. The illy etransenet:
crust of dullness and find them. - " * am. W
There is a way out. It is
death. Not the real death that
to to come to ua all some day.,
But the death that it meant in
the phrase “Who so loseth his
lite shall find it.”
—Lose your life as star as you
yourself are concerned. Plunge
deeply into the lives of other
home there are plenty of places
Don’t decide that your husband is no longer theillinel, your
lover, that because you are not having a vitally absorbing and ex-
citing life, that divorce will mend matters.
It you are not happy now it won’t make you happier to disrupt
"VerTtninE. ...
Your work is waiting, and in your own town, too. The bigger
work will follow, perhaps travel, fortune, fame.
—• • * * *
Certainly when we see how mediocrity is succeeding on an
sides no one need be afraid of life.-
ths silly marriages, the silly law.
suits, ought to be sufficient Indica-
tion of that.
Mother and daughter quarreling
ever a diamond. Elopements with
dancing masters and spuriousinoe
blemen. Dinner at which a cherry
tree stands at every plate, end each
guest has silver scissors to cut his
own cherries. What other word may
one find for such nonsense as this
except the familiar word—duliTAT
OK K tsasmscare Tbot’to
never, dull. To see the tears of a
grateful girl saved from worse than
death. To take the first kiss from
a new baby who would lack even
his first skirt but for you. That to
never dull.
And being interested in life is ths
rsal secret of being interesting. An
Interesting woman, absorbed in
some work that is all for the good
of the race, cannot be dull. She may
be stieat at a dinner, because she to
really tired and overburdened and
puzzled. But it to the silence of the
astronomer, the scientist, the think-
er. It is a silence that everyone re-
oL the fortune, the tame wlU all
follow. Certainly when we see how
mediocrity is succeeding on all sides
no one of us need be afraid of life!
To die for awhile is only part of
the process. Forget yourself. Die.
Get the humble job that begins ev
ergihing—the minnow that catches
the bigger fish.
And if dying is a rather hard
thing to do-and' It to—consols
yourself with ths grsat promiss:
“Greater love hath no man than
this, that he give his life to eave his
friend."
MISS RUTH hA-SON
IS HONOREE SATURDAY
• Miss Virginia Lomax entertained
with a "kid's party Saturday eve-
ning honoring Miss Ruth Harrison
who baa left for Fort Worth where
oho will attend Texas Womans
College. .-'............
Dancing was the chief feature of
entertainment and punch was
served through out the evening.
Those present included Misses Ruth
Harrison, Mary Brown, Mary Taa-
ered, Faye Cameron, Elizabeth Cou-
per, Margaret Smith, Helen Bullitt,
Margaret Blum, Anna Ruth Kahn,
Ina Merle Robinson, Mildred Han-
sard, Virginia Creath, Mary Rath-
beum. Louise Burna; and Messrs.
Bob Murrell, Drummend Harris,
Murrell McGregor, Herman Staton,
Preston Wood, Elton Felder, Hugh
McDowell, Charles Jetter, Dummy
Deems, Reymond Smith, Ralph
Walker, Leslie Nolen, Kenneth Sto-
well. Bowman Thomas, Leslie Car-
tert Gregory Rowe, Edgar Smith,
Morris Norion, Cherry Johnson, Ed-
ward Anderson, Ben Howie, Buck
Steed, Steve West, Dick Ramming,
CeelP Morgan, Kenneth Boiler, Far-
ris Halt. Bsrt Clark, Red Martin,
Snub Pollard, I. H. Faught, Mus
Staton, Jack Kadane, 3 Marconi
Hobbs, Herman Wilkins, Harold
Carter, Hershal Gafford, J. M.
Kenny, Raymond Taylor, Orlen
Daniels, Ben Langford, Undoll
Stone, Ernest Morgan, Buster Rob-
inson, Claude Miller, Lowry Crites,
Gillan, and Ralph Braken.
2E
BENEFIT PARTY FRIDAY
EVENING WELL AACENDED
DOES THE FUTURE SCARE YOU?
(Continued from Page One.)
a good humored writing of checks to
replaced by these sickening bills.
“All to be paid out of nothing: Billy
himself has changed from a strange,
thrilling mysterious demi-god to a
commonplace young man with a a
good appetite, and an unreasonable *
extravagance to ths matter of tail-
fors. And even mother yields one
Hess sympathy for an unsatisfactory
husband than she did in the old days
for a scratched finger!
4 Mary hersest says almost Violent.
Ty, she hates divorce. But these
peers are apt to win her gradually
to the point when anything—any-
thing - seems better than the utter
fullness, the stupid atrophy, of her
All afternoon, making tissue paper
sonbonieres for the charity mate, she
broods about European drawing
rooms, dimmed lights, women m
sinuously sweeping robes greeting
brilliant, gravely attentive men. The
rain falls— falls. Ths children are
ever at the Smiths.
‘ Mary thinks of closed cars, reach-
ins the Opera house. The music has
begun. The boxes are all rustle and
perfume and murmur—
that she has left herself more room
to live.
One of the enjoyable informal af-
fairs of the past week was a Benefit
party Friday evening at the home
of Judge and Mrs. P. B. Cox of In-
dian Heights, when the members .t
Circle Four of the Women’s Mis
‘ The telephone. It is Billy. He
mas to take a man to dinner, and
they may stir up a little game after-
ward. All 0. K ? Can Mary get
her mother to come over to dinner?
, Certainly, dear, Mary says.. Don’t
play too late. She stays at the tel-
ephone to call mother’s number, and
• vision floats before her eyes as
she does Bor—Furred women, laugh-
ins. their arms full of flowers, go-
•kg Up gang-planks to big steamers
Cooded with winter sun-
’ She looks through a neatly cur-
Sained window into a rain-soaked
small town street Awfully dull.
. She lookslat her hand on the tel-
Aphone. She needs another mani-
pure. But why bother about It? No-
body cares what her hands look
But what she actually has done
Is narrow down the none of her
normal interests until there to noth-
ing left She never cooks a meal,
nor makes a garment, nor teaches
a lesson.: All these are Women’s
normal duties. Just as accounts and
customers are men’s.
. Mary never nurses a patient, nor
handles a now baby. Paid outsiders
do that Outsiders’ teach her little
girl morality to Sunday school. Out-
alders take her email boy off her
bands even in ths long vacation.
Somebody else feeds and picks the
ehleken that Mary eats. Somebody
else makes the current jolly that to
served with them. Somebody washes
Mary’s towels—even Mary’s hair and
fingernails— for her.
’ And so Mery to left, stranded,
thrown back upon herself, and find-
Ink herself decidedly uninteresting.
She yearns for self-expression, with-
for ane ret. netinie capable of
better things than housework. Tot
there seems to be no way to break
through the crust of dullness and
routine, and find them. 1
, But there is a way out, Mary. It
is death. Not the real death that to
to come to us all some day. But the
death that to meant to the phrase,
"Whose loseth his life shall find it."
Lose your life, as far as you your-
self are concerned. Plunge deeply
absorbed, into the lives of other
people. “ If you are not needed at
home, there are plenty of places
where you are needed.
. There are young girls to reform-
stories. There are babies in orphan-
ages. There are lonesome, wistful
bid people to the poorhouse. There
are sick soldiers, Lalek children.
There are the blind and deaf.
Don’t do it, fitfully. Give up
bridge and- uto club, and present
yourself, day after day, at the in-
stitution.” Tell them that you will
always be there between two and
five. Nets darn. Help serve lunches.
Take asick child to a elinie. ‘Get a
dismissed wayward girl a safe job.
if a matron or a superintendent to
hostile to you, you may be sure that
that to the one place yea are espe-
-1-"- - '>4. Don’t interfere nor
criticise. Just be steadily, quietly,
intelligently friendly and helpful.
And after a month or two of it,
watch your own life develop! Listen
to your own animated and eager
voice chattering at your dinner
table. You must get that book
about the prison experiments to
Sweden. You must find out what
the tow to, in this state or that
spects.
And when she doss speak, note
how she to attended. Be don’tyou
fortunate American women who
H0%€ net t auPY.*7en X"/012-lonarx Society wore hostesses
Don’t decide that because your NaHiy ’** ***** inave
husband to no longer thrillingly
your lover, that because you are
not having a vitally absorbing and
exciting life, that divorce will mend
matters.
If you are not happy now, it
won’t make you happy to disrupt
everything, and vaguely start out
to find an absolutely new field,
that novar has mads anyone happy
Instsad took about you. The days
of yarning, preserving, knitting,
weaving, cooking, washing, are
gone forever.
- But your work is waiting, and in
your own town, teo. Ths bigger
work will follow, perhaps ths trav.
Nearly 100 guests injoyed the
varied entertainment of the eve-
ning, including muste, readings,
games and refreshments. Miss Mar-
guerite Fisher read two groups.
“Maggie McCarty Ooeo on a Diet"
and "All in the Point of View" and
"Angeline at the Sealbacks,” and
George Taylor gave two groups of
songs with the guitar accompani-
ment. The flrot of these waa of
popular music, and the second hu-
morous numbers. He was assisted
in the staging of "Maggie" by his
little daughter, Emmie, aad the two
made quite a hit.
. Refreshments of ice cream and
cake were served.
HOLLIDAY
ICE CREAM
DELICIOUS-TASTEFUL-REFRESHING
IDEAL-
—with cereals at breakfast: .
—as a bear man’s between-meal bites T*
%, —for dessert at all meals, alone or to tombinttien with pie
or fruits:
—an on afternoon Invigerator,
— as n anak at bedtime.
-------
80c qt.
Patrician Ice Cream
A Delicious New Flavor
(Packed in Cartons)
80c qt. •
Ask for It by Name”
And so presently she tells her
tricken mother’ soberly that she Is
ofng to get a divorce. She simply
a’s stand it any longer. She has
he explains tearfully, completely that , the
hanged. She used to be so happy €11
» busy all the time. Now she just r needs
sels—dull. She doesn’t seem to
eve any initiative. She feels ner-
ous all the timet ready to cry.
"And it must be marriage!” Mary
■me it up desperately. "For I never
1 Mary thinks that she wants to
ve more fully, more deeply, mors
atieryingly. It has seemed to her_____ ..._______.. ___„
hat in solving the servant problem, about education for minors. You
nd the children’s school problems, r----—*-------------------14
cor Austin
Holliday Creamery Co.
Phone sner
must bring to the mayor’s attention 4
Letter from Annette Anderson to
Mrs. John Alden Prescott.
My Dear Mrgt Prescott:
I hope you will forgive me for
bothering you, for with your fear
and grief over your father’s illness,
I certainly do’not wish to add to
your burdens is any way. But I
have to tell you—and I may.ss well
do It first as last—that I am go-
ing to leave Mrs. Prescott. Miss
Bradford and I cannot live to the
same apartment.
• 1 do not know what there to about
that old maid, but there surely to
something that brings out every
critical and unkind faculty to your
mother in-law’s personality.
Mrs. Prescott does not strike one
as being a woman who to readily
influenced, but to hsr case I have
found how easy it is to appeal to
the worst that is in all of us. Miss
Bradford makes Mrs, Prescott feel
that she is not only abused and her
more than wonderful, infallible
Judsment.Absolutely disregarded,
but she is all ths time flattering
Mrs. Prescott’s narrow egotism by
telling hsr that her opinion is much
better, ee account of her long life
and experience, than yours could
possibly be. Of course 1 do not
mean this to being done in so many
words, but the intimation to clear.
LI have been less enough, my dear
Mrs. Prescott, with all sorts and
conditions of men aad women, to
know that age has nothing to do
with judgment. a child of 16 to
sometimes better capable of judge)
ins the affairs of modern life than
a man or a woman of 60, who has
grown up in a secluded environ-
ment and is full of narrow-minded
prejudices.
Miss Bradford seems to sour all
the milk of human kindness that
to to Mrs. Prescott’s heart. She has
made ker think that her son,
through your influence, to not treat,
ing her as a eon should treat his
mother, to not deferring to her
enough. Nothing I can do seems
able to change her thoughts to some-
thing happier or more kindly, for
Miss Bradford has succeeded to
making Mrs. Prescott think that I
am in league with you to curtail
her importance and influence to her
son’s eyes.
2Bince Mr. Prescott went away.
Miss Bradford has persuaded his
mother that the thing to do is to
give your apartment a thorough
cleaning. Of course J think this is
only an excuse to go through your
most private things, but I dare not
suggest this to Mrs. Prescott in
fact, I think Mrs. Prescott also has
a sneaking curiosity to know exe
actly what you have and how you
keep it.
You of course know that your
cook has left. I believe Mrs. Pres-
cott wrote that to you. As her son
took Sarah with little Jack of course
your mother-in-law has usurped all
the authority to your apartment.
Yesterday when I returned from my
daily walk, I found them emptying
your clothes closets, and the rooms
were a sight. Trunks had been
emptied, bureau drawers turned out
on beds and sotas, and all the cloth,
ins that you bad but away in close
ets as well M that on hangers, had
been taken out of ths closet.
Tour mother had hired a very or-
dinary scrub woman to wash down
the walls aad the floors, and she
told me she was going to have her
brush your clothes and put them
back tomorrow. The woman was
slovenly to the extreme, and I am
quite sure she will never get them
back to the places where you had
them.
Both Miss Bradford and Mrs. Pres-
sett were exclaiming over, your ex-
travagance in clothes.
Next week Mrs. Prescott says she
intends to eend your beautiful old
French desk over to the cabinet-
makers and have it thoroughly gone
over and taken apart if necessary
to find the secret drawer she to sure
is there somewhere. 3
(Copyright, 1924, NBA Bevvies, Inc.)
Tomorrow: The letter continued.
Pretty and Adequate Lunchroom
To Be feature Woman's Building
‘At Fair, Women Chairmen Plan
A pretty and adequate lunchroom,
furnished and managed to meet all
==*22
the woman’s Building at the Tems:
Oklahoma Fair, according to plans
approved by the chairman of the
Women’s Department in # meeting
Thursday in the offices of the Pair
The mooting was attended by all
of the department chairmen, and
their various reports and plans n.
aleated an enthusiastic interest
among the women to the coming
fair, and an expectation that the
Texas-Oklahoma Woman’s Building
would be second to none among the
state fairs.
• Calinarr Entries.
Among other things, it was de
cided to accept entries for the cull-
nary department tip to 7 seleck the
as* MTI. MTS
in that department at 4 o’clock the
same afternoon. -
It was ales decided that all fra- partment
gite exhibits and the more dainty |
culinary displays are to be exhibit. 1
ed to glass cases, .
Concessions for the advertising
of appropriats merchandise or food. 1
products will be let to the building,
if the display la attractively 1
planned. The Building to to be open A
from $ a m. to s p. m. each day out 1
the fair. "
The department chairmen present 1
at the meeting included the follow. 1
Ing: Mesdames Charles Hartsook 1
director: B. L Fain and R. E Shep. "
herd, assistant directors; Joe H. -Ji
Jones, Building director; Claude B. J
Wood, in charge od antiques; New. J
ten Maer, old ladies’ work; c. F. ]
Basham, knitting; R. E. Strange, 1
crochet; J. Brown Hopkins, plain: 1
sowing; E. B. Goraine, fancy sew. 1
ing: J. L Maxwell, embroidery; J. 1
Walker, culinary; A S. Downing i
(formerly Miss Georgia Lansford, 1
canning. * W. Marriott, plants and
flowers: J. A. Kemp, library booth: 1
D. O. Whitney, woman’s, exchange 1
and George Keith, Children’s de- 1
in
Comus Club Dance Compliments
Young folks Leaving for College
The Comus Club entertained with
a dance at Lake Wichita Wednes-
day evening especially honoring the
students who are leaving for school.
The music was provided by Jimmy
Alton’s orchestra from Dallas and
dancing was enjoyed from 9 until
1 o’clock. ’ The chaperones for the
occasion included Messrs. and Mes-
dames J. A. Fisher, Sass, p. F.
Gwynn, C. C. MeDonald, AMA
Bonner, L. R. Stringer, and J. C.
Straus
Those present included the fol-
lowing: MImm Katherine Marcus,
Graele D. Shamburger, Ruth Bar.
hard, Lee Wolfin, Alma Willis;
Ethel Moran, Mary Ella Pace,
Oneita Deems, Frances Mulligan,
Georgia B. Leath, Mary Ellen Me-
Mahon, Dorothy Bear, Audrey John-
son. Let Joe McCallister, Dixie Tut-
the, Bonnie Jennings, Opal Tarleton,
Irene Taylor, Mattie Lee Straus,
Margaret Smith, Nevo.—Back,
Frankie Adickes, Josephine Cum-
mings, Josephine Tucker, Gene Nel-
son, Bernice Proas, Lillian Randle,
Mary Allison, Gwendoline Taylor,
Lillian Cobb, Margaret Blumm, ley
V. Larkin, Margaret Allison, Anna
Ruth Kahn, Lucile Benson, Helen
Snider, Frances Loman, Gay Gwynn,
Faye Fisher and Je Betsy Miller:
and Messrs. Jack Spires. Clyde
Barrett, Johnnie Childers, Ted
Adams, John Gaston, Morris Pol-
lard, Algy Sowell, D G. Morgan, R.
Camp, M B. Pollard C E. Nash, A
D. Anderson, BL D. Willis, Bud Seev-
ers, Raymond Taylor, Lowry Crites,
Wanna FauntLeRoy, Edgar Smith,
John Willis, C. H. C. Wilkins, Sam
Hildrith. Tom Beaty, D. A. Kalin,
J. A. Kenny, Roy Dee, John Tan-
ered, J. F. Shaw Jr., A. A. Brown,
Fay Hooker, Henry Edwards, How.
ard Puckett, Conrad Kelly, Howard
Puckett, G. B. Chapman, E. C. Lee
Bus, R. D. Dickey, Gordon Thoma-
son, Lester Martin, Morris Norton,
Kenneth Boller, Jerry Base, Clyde
Berans, ‘Lish Stone, G. L. Coffey,
Bert Ripley, John Ray Duke, Miles
Dee, Otho Key, Preston Wood,
John Wesley, Walter Friberg, J.
W. Hoover, Charles Cook, E. M.
Robertson, Jenks Smith, Carroll
Maxwell, Abe Bashars, John Mor-
gan, P. W. Maer, Clifford Somers,
C. B. Curtnsr, Karlo Kuntz, Virgil
Fisher, A C. Jennings, Elton Fol-
dor. John Sides, Cecil Moran, D. W.
Bright Jarrel Gose, Gore Wage
goner, Ben Lansford, Charles Full-
er, Rogers Kelly, Hyatt Donald.
Temple Shell, W. 0. Robertson, Ted
South, Walter Nelson. Carl Shoults,
warns Gillespie, Montoe Gillespie,
Glenn Weaver, E. S. Weldon, J. A.
Kar. C. M. Patrick, McClory. P P
Langford Jr., W. J. Waggoner Jr.,
G. D. Anderson Jr., V. O. Rose, Bill
Snoddy, Smith Langford, B M.
Britain. John Britain, Barl Shape
pell. G. U. Rissins, Lee Haney,
Allan Montromery, and Joe Carri-
Fan. .
MISS SAUNDERS HOSTESS,
DAMCI FRIDAY EVENING;
YOUNGER FOLKS ATTEND
ire. W. a Witcher assisted her
niece. Miss Frances Saunders, at a
very happy farewell troule at the
Witeher home on Tenth street Fri-
day evening, when a half hundred
or more members of the younger set
enjoyed a very delightful dance.
The affair was in the nature of a
farewell from Miss Saunders, who
leaves this wash for ths Miss
Hockaday school to Dallas.
Muste was furnished by the Dec
Ross orchestra, and fruit punch
served during the evening. The
guest list included ths following:
Misses Mary Brown, Helen Bullitt,
Elisabeth Couper, Frances7 Boyd,
Mary Franess Collier, Katheryn
Marcus, Alma Willis, Marguerite
MeDonald, Margaret Smith, Ina
Myrle Robinson, Fays Cameron,
Neva Black, Donna Mitchum.’ Doro-
thy Dele, Anna Ruth Kahn, Mar-
garet Blum, Maurine Still and Ida
Witeher: aad Messrs, Claude Miller,
Bill Ince, Robert Humphries, Harold
Carter, Cecil Moran, Morris Norton,
Edward Smith, Pisres Langford,
Sam Bashers. Ben Langford. Lobert
Catter, Robert Murrell, Buster Rob-
ertson. Ferris Hall. Edward Ander-
son, Herman Staton, U. H. Faught,
ten Felder, willte Saunders and
Emmett Banknight.
Prompt attention will be given
orders at the studio Shop. Phone
5040. 1111 Kemp Boulevard.—Adv.
The -Popular Way
To Remove Hair
And also the quick, sure, satis-
factory ways Use Del-a-tone. This
reliable, scientific preparation has
been in general use for 14 years. To
remove any growth of hair just ap
ply in smooth paste, wash off, and
marvel at the result. Made by The
Sheffield Co., 536 Lake Shore Drive,
Chicago. At drug and department
stores or Mat prepaid in plain wrap
per for one dollar.
DEL-A-TONE
4 Removes Superfluous Hair
N ■
Portraits
By
Photography
The only things we
make but we make
them good.
1010 Tenth Street Phone 8970. —
w. non ZetWe *
S.:
Here Is Help
Here are some of our help-
ful aad dependable serve
ices. If you will phone
us we will be glad to go
into details on any one of
them,”. - A
The company
your washing keeps
When you send your washing "out”-
do you ever stop to think just where
“out” may be? ..
Very often it’s “out” of your residen-
tial district into the homes where con-
ditions are anything but favorable
for cleanliness.
Why not send us your laundry—and
_ be safe?- Next week have us do your
work in the modern sanitary way.
We have a variety of services—one
—a just suited to your needs. Please
' phone us. _
laundry Owners Club of Wichita falls
wait. coormaTVE ADVERTISING
Finished Family Bundle
Finished Family means
everything sweetly washed
and beautifully ironed:
your most prized personal
’ things, your best linens-
everything daintily clean
and neat.
The average family wash-
ing done Finished Family
Way costs about $1.00 per
person per week. Reason-*
able enough isn’t it ?
Rough Dry.
--Rough Dry is both satis-
factory and- economical.
Everything washed and
dried, proper pieces
starched, flat work ironed
—and the price Is small
compared to the work
done.
A bundle for the average
: family will not cost more
than $1,50 the week,
, Wet Wash
Wet wash returns the fam-
fly bundle thoroughly —
washed and with the flat
work ironed. Other work
comes back damp, ready to
• starch and iron, or to hang
out to dry.
It isn’t expensive either.
- The averato •family bun-
dle will not exceed in cost
$1.25.=--
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and Jir
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: church
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W: AD
tot preach
M Church
was rhe
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WrineY.
tested it
Bi tend.
19:45 0
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church
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Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 124, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 14, 1924, newspaper, September 14, 1924; Wichita Falls, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1680071/m1/14/: 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.