The Daily Herald (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 158, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 18, 1923 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
■; < r ' v_• : •:is*-’^-.-:-‘vT--:,••
iSy
- 111 ■ iiigsBgaggssgga»ga««s
3p3
pee
IP
m
?joB
K>?
pL
5&V'-
if-
1!
>•
IPs:
Hit
11;
tp*.
jf..^
»
i i
^-i?
■
Rv'
£$.
;
p%';:-'-
W:.
4 .
WPr-- finjgbv
:.v:r
If-
IS.; :■
Ife
*
te i
»‘-
i^:';f-1
t-l
if*!
nt
Ir^pl;’
Kfc?
M:L '
B#v;
$■■■■■■:■
mzf
K?
fe
IS ■ ■
M
WgEPp
m i%.--
i
■sy )%££:$■
Bi
m
m:¥
mt
THE DAILY HERALD EXPERT ADVISES ON
WAY TO ACT DURING
Bntered at the Post Office at Weather
ford, Texas as second class matter.
Published every day except Sunday at
Weatherford, Texas, by The Herald
Publishing Co., Inc., Herald Building,
U1 York Avenue. Telephone No. S60
A. C. MacNELLY, Pres, and Mgr.
A TINDER STORM
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the
character, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation which
may appear In the columns of The
Dally Herald will be gladly corrected
If brought to attention of publishers.
MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is exclusively
entitled to the use for re-publlcatlon
of all news credited to It or not other-
wise credited In this paper and also
to the local news published herein.
ail rights of re-publlcafion of special
dispatches are also reserved.
One year ........
31x months _____
___|4.00
___J.00
WEDNESDAY, JULY 18. 1923
AdeD
Adell, Texas, July IS.—C. B. Wright
is on the sick list.
Corn Is needing rain.
Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Guerry were
Sunday guests of the latter's mother.
Mrs. Cleaves.
Mrs. Vera Perry was a week-end
gueet of her mother. Mrs. Yeary.
Air. and Mrs. J. L. Guerry were Sun-
day guests of Mr. and Mr?. J. E. Guer-
ry.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown and Mrs.
Saiab Klrksey of Grandfield, Okla.,
wore guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. W,
Mujlonix.
Miss Leona Guerry was a Sunday
guest of Miss Rule Lanier.
Miss Gladys Guerry spent last week
with her sister, Mrs. Evie Boley of
Gores.
John Wright of Seymour was a
week-end guest of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. C. B. Wright.
Mr. and Mrs. F.rwin Guerry were
Sunday guests- of the latter’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Tinker of Advance.
John Barnes was a business visitor
in Caddo, Saturday.
Misses Zena Wilkerson and Willie
Owens of Breckenridge motored here
Thursday and spent the day with Miss
I.eona Clements.
Mrs. Maggie Guerry spent Thursday
with her mother, Mrs. Wood, of Au-
thon.
Mrs. Lucy Guerry left Tuesday to
join her husband at Fort Sill, Okla.
Milton, Mass., July 17.—Get under
c >rer If possible, when a thunder
storm threatens. If this is. not prac-
ticable, lie down. That is the advice
which Alexander G. McAdie, director
of the Blue Hill Observatory in this
town and professor of meteorology at
Harvard University, gives in an ex-
planation of the action of lightning
prepared for The Associated Press. He
gives wh-ait he describes as “ten good
rules to help people take care of them-
selves.”
''In a battle,” says Professor Mc-
Adie, “a hundred bullets are fired for
each soldier killed. It is something
like this with lightning flashes. There
are a hundred discharges for every
bolt of lightning that hits a person.
Fortunately too, of every hundred
streaks of lightning about ninety are
from cloud to cloud or spill-over dis-
charges of moderate electrical energy
and are mostly horizontal, doing no
damage whatever.
“About ten flashes in a hundred
gLOOD impurities are pumped by
what causes that grainy appearance,
that muddinesa, sallowness, pimples,
■p—
blackheads, acne, red spots, and that
impossible
“something”
which no face
cream, massage,
or face powder
can cover up or
beautify I The
foundation for a
beautiful skin
simply is not
there, and no face treatment can give
it to you. But increase your red-
blood-cells,—and quickly the ruby
tint of purity begins to glow in the
cheeks, the complexion becomes ve-
nus-like and immaculate I Try it.
It will do it every time. S. S. S.
builds the red-blood-cells you need
for a beautiful complexion. Begin
using S. S. S. at once, and give your-
self what you have been working
for, for years.
PROHIBITION CAUSES
MORE STIR THAN RUHR
IN ENGLISH CIRCLES
S. S. S. 2a mold at all good drug
stores in two sties. The larger also
more economical.
C ^eWorld's Best
, Jt rSlo
lood Medicine
in a straight line. Some flashes come
sideways and seem to be crooked, al-
CHANGE OF UFE
Seventh: If you are near a person
who has been struck make everv
come vertically, that is. down to earth effort to resusdtate him. 0nly rare_
ly does lightning kill outright. Most-
ly people pre stunned, and all that Is
though there are really no flashes needed ls , ,utle artlfical re8plratlon
ziggagging like, the teeth of a saw t0 restore t.hem tQ conscloune88. OI
as artists generally depict lightning. <C01lr8e get a docter qulck.
“The intense straight flashes are ,f you are ,n a trol]ey car
the ones to be feared, and it is a silly and a flagh comeg |n and bunJS the
person who stands out in the open ftlBes wllb a roar and a b]indlng (lash
when such flashes are seen. He in- sit gtU]. The danger fg over> and
viles trouble, but the Invitation is not w!li!e you may be WgMened you are
always accepted. not likely to be hurt.
“At this time of the year, thunder- „Ninth. ,f you have a radio better
storms are frequent and there are a cut it out during a t,hu]lder 8torm.
comparatively large number of fatal The antenna shouId be grounded
accidents. One reads in the press des- direct and aU wjregj ag far ag p088,,ble
patches that four men are walking kept outgide
along a New Jersey beach during a ..Tent,h: „ your bouge ,g provlded.
thunderstorm. There Is a flash of with good lightnlng rodg you need
lightning, one man is killed outright, not have much fear Moreover>
one severely burned, and the others dwelling houses in city blocks arc
stunned. _____,,_____ ..... „
“Now there is no protection for a
case like this unless one could carry
around with 'him a metallic cover well
grounded. The first rule is then: Do
net stay out on a beach or in a field
I-ondon, July 17.--American prohibi-
tion stands out in the news and edi-
torial columns of British newspapers
as- the most interesting subject of the
day, not excluding the Ruhr situation.
The government issued a “white pa-
per” m which Ambassador Geddes at
Washington is quoted as declaring
that American prohihtton, on the
whole, iias been effective in the ru-
ral districts and smaller towns over logfoiatlon
the United States.
The most significant facts In re-
gard to the effect of prohibition as
quoted by the ambassador ls a 40 per
cent increase ill savings banks de-
posits and increased efficiency among
workers.
Prohibition is less effective, the am-
bassador declares, along the eastern
seaboard and in the vicinity of the
Great Lakes where powerful organi-
zation cf smugglers carry on a regu-
lar traffic in liquof.
Home brewing, he says, is largely
on the decrease. He declared that
or.c of the worst effects of the dry law
is that men who drank sparingly be-
fore prohibition now carry flasks to
social gatherings.
The anti-American Tory Morning
Poet seizes the opportunity presented
by the overwhelming vote In the
house of commons in favor of Lady
Aator's bill forbidding public houses
to serve boys and girls under 18 with
liquor to denounce the measite as an
attempt to restore the purltanism of
the seventeenth century, which, it
charges, has America In its grip 40-
day.
In its amazing editorial entitled,
“The Return of the urltan,” the Morn-
ing Post cites the charges made In the
Spectator by an anonymous Ameri-
can undergraduate of One of the older
English universities:
“That there has been more drink-
ing In American colleges, universities
and high schools than ever before is
an unquestioned fact.
“Among the youth of the country
not only drinking but drunkenness
has become extremely widespread and
! Immorality is on the increase. ’
The Morning Post adds that this
I condition is a result of prohibition
in America, bringing the
same results that England saw in the
seventeenth century.
It D an interesting coincidence that
this attack fellows closely upon the
speech of Lord Astor which urged the
government to stamp out rum smug-
gling Into the United States so as to
give prohibition a fair chance.
The Franconia of the Cunard line
arrived at Liverpool yesterday. It was
reported that champagne and whiskey
brought aboard the ship by travellers
war freely consumed on the way over.
Those who failed to provide their own
liquor remained dry, as the ship’s of-
ficers refused to issue any liquor ex
cept !n cases of necessity.
WvmfwM
-'V
■iwWI.h 1
at Keene, the past week-
relatives
end.
Leonard Holme* of Weatherford,
visited Raymond Cretsinger Saturday
and Sunday.
Mra. Cal Walker of Weatherford,
visited her father, F. B. Vance, Sun-
day.
,Mlee Idell Vance an dher grand-
mother, Mra. Vance, apent the past
week with Mrs. Cal Walker.
Mrs. J. O. Barton and daughter,
Frances, accompanied her slater, Mra.
J. L. Snider and daughter, Mlaa Lo-
rena and Mrs. R. J. Rains to Fort
Worth Thursday.
Miss Geraldine Owens la still vis-
iting In Fort Worth.
Medical Virtues Retained and Im-
proved—Dangerous and.. Sickening
Qualities Removed. Perfected Tab-
leta called “Calotabs."
Harmony
■Harmony, Texas, July 18.—The
honey-dew has damaged the crop to
Some extent.
Mrs. Ruth Cretsinger has returned
from Ranger, accompanied by C. A.
Byars and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Morrell visited
" The latest trluinph of modern science ls a
d rn g°tra^e wr‘CaRtaba ’,U Cal o meK^he1 m ott
generally usoful of all medicines tnns enters
npon a wider field of populartty—purified
“ ’ “oae objectionable quat-
and refined from those ________________
files which have heretofore limited Ite uae.
lu biliousness, consHputlon, headaches and
and Indigestion, and In a great varjety of
liver, stomach and kidney troubled calo-
mel was tbe most snccossfnl remedy, bat
Its use wes often neglected on account of
Its sickening qualities. Now U ls the
easiest and most pleasant of medicines to
take. One Calotab at bedtime with a swal-
low of water—that's all. No taste, no gri-
ping, no nausea, no salts. A good night's
sleep and the next morning you are feel-
ing fine, with a clean liver, a pnrlfled sys-
tem and a big appetite. Eat what yon
p'ense No danger.
Cnmtabs are sold only In original, seal-
el packages, price thirty-five cents for the
large, family packages,; ten ceuts for tbs
small, trial size. Yonr druggist ls author-
ized to refund the price as a guarantee
that you will he thoroughly delighted with
Calotabs.—(Adv.)
practically safe."
PRISON BODY MAY MAKE
LEASE8 FOR OIL PROSPECTING
Austin, Texas, July 13.—Assistant
when dark, heavy clouds are overhead Attorney General Caves has advised
or coming slowly from the west or the Prison Commission it may make
south. Get under cover if possible. If a proper lease for oil prospecting on
this Is not practicable. He down. Don’t State prison lands and submits a form
remain standing. to be used in the proposed lease of
“Second: Do not stand undeT a 9,000 acres on the Eastham farm to A.
tree with thick foliage. You are C. Kazamler of San Francisco, Cal.
forming a part of the line of disch- Tho State is to get one-eighth royalty,
arge, since the body, more particul- The lease is subject to approval by the
arly the skin if mioist, Is a better con- Governor before being executed by
ductor than the trunk of the tree, the Prison Commission. Drilling must
More people are killed by lighting in commence within forty-five days from
•this wayr than probably any othe the date the lease is finally signed
and a hole 3,000 feet in depth must be
Third: Don’t stand in the doorway drilled within twelve months. The
of a barn or at a window in proximity contract makes all other customary
M -I | 1 » , M. • to a ehimmney. There are currents reservations with reference to offset
rioriaa Laay m * miserable of air or Winds and the lighting fol- wells, protection against "damages,
lows to some extent any draft or col- laying pipe lines at the proper depth
umn of rising air, especially warm and regular requirements to safeguard
Condition, Bat Says She Found
“ Ini Hi ‘
Got
Cardui Helpful, and
otWelL
Aitha, Fla.—In explaining how she
found Cardui so helpful during change ol
life, Mrs. Ella M. Bailey, of Route 2, this
place, said:
“1 became so weakened it was an effort
for me to get around. I knew what was
the matter, but I felt like I couldn’t give
up.
“1 just dragged, and I certainly was
nervous. I was so restless i could not
sit down long—yet so weak I couldn’t
It is a
“Fourth: Don't laugh at any one's
the interests of the state.
get depressed and out of
get about. Tt is a most miserable and
such a helpless feeling.
“1 would get depre
heart.
"1 began to feel, after awhile, there was
no use to try to get well. This is ail
wrong, for it makes a person worse.
“1 had heard of Cardui, and thought it
might strengthen me. A neighbor had
used it witti good results.
“I took one bottle (0! Cardui), then I
saw i wasn’t so nervous, so kept it up.
“Gradually the nervousness left me.
1 began to eat and sleep better. Was
soon well, and all right. .Cardui did
wonders for me, and I certainly do
recommend it.” -
Thousands of other women have writ-
ten. to tell of the beneficial results obtain-
ed by taking Cardui, and to recommend
it to others.
Sold everywhere. Try iL NC-146
nervousness during a severe thunder ONE KILLED> 30 INJURED
aterm. There is good reason to be WHEN TRAIL DERAILED
nervous. Even if one is in a build-
ing that is struck the damage is nine-
Memphis, Tenn., July 13.—One man
was killed and about thirty persons
y eig t cases out of a hundred, con- injured, twelve seriously, early today
ined to ripping out piastre or knock- when the Memphis Special on the
tag out slates and tearing off any pro- Southern railway, was derailed two
Jecting timbers. But there are times miles east of Larkinsville, Alabama,
When the storm clouds descend to according to reports received here,
earth and amid darkness the flashes Fifteen of the Injured are in a hos-
are heave.v and numerous. At such Pital at Huntsville, Ala.
ttme3 tnere Ig danger. It is danger-j H. L. Carr, 19, of Durham, North
otis to 'be near a chimney or a tree or I Carolina, was killed. Mrs. G. T.
tied
a flagpole 0r a metal close-line.
’’Fifth: Stock should not be
near a wItc fence.
“Sixth: There is no particular
Sense In going to bed. Standing on
glass or rubber or any good Insulator
j Graves of Dallas, is among the injur-
ALBUQUERQUE EDITOR FOUND
GUILTY CONTEMPT OF COURT
Las Vegas, N. M„ July 13.—Carl A.
a woolen blanket for example, will Magee, editor of the Albuquerque
give one a little more security and a Tribune, was held guilty of contempt
geat deal more confidence. The pro-
bability of a person in a ordinary
•residence building being struck is
very slight.
I
of contempt of court by District Judge
■D. W. J. Leahy here today, after the
close of the trial, for publishing an
article alleged to have been deroga-
tory to Leahy and other officials.
Poor Richard Said
— “A PENNY SAVED IS A PENNY EARNED.” In his
day, pennies were as large as our quarters. Yet all the
pennies in the world wouldn’t have taken Poor Richard to
a movie, bought him a flivver, or paid his street car fare.
The pennies of a hundred years ago were not as big in buy-
ing power as those of today.
—BUT POOR RICHARD’S ADVICE IS STILL GOOD. And
it is no less vauable when applied to dollars instead of
cents.
—EVERY YEAR you spend a large proportion of the money
you earn. So much for clothing. So much for shoes. So
much for things to eat, house furnishings, garden seeds,
tools and what not.
—THERE’S JUST ONE WAY to save money in making
your purchases. Know what you want before you buy.
READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS.
—THEY TELL YOU what is new and good. They tell you
where and when to buy to best advantage. They help
keep you posted on what the stores and manufacturers
are offering.
Read the Advertisements. They Save
Money and Earn Money for You
—
■••i ii
TUBBY
Owen! gee WH12.
‘TUBBY DON’T WALK SO
FAST MY NEW SHOES HOOT
MY FEET UKE BATHING
IM. •
• '
ill®
L v J
.
That’s True Enough
PONT SO SO EAST
TUBBY WAIT TOR Mt
£
ICE
fl®
By WINNER
WE11.6EE WHI2!
HURRY UP!
YOUftE AS SLOW
AS A SIEEWN SMAtt.
(* I CANT WALK
ENNY FASTER, MY,
FEEXHOftT EVER
TIME I TAKE A
STEP
ilK
a.‘%
r\ti0
‘ l
. WELL,JtMMiNEV CRICKETS!
[WHY D0MCHA TAKE LONGER
STEPS AN’ THEV WONT BE
-rn SOMANY HURTS _
1;;
‘ a
W r
WF-b’
Eg AjMgL it
>:;.-
S^lkaei
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View four places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Daily Herald (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 158, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 18, 1923, newspaper, July 18, 1923; Weatherford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth645985/m1/2/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .