Wichita Falls Times from Wichita Falls, Texas (2024)

Retired Of Dies Lester E. Miller, 69, retired engineer who worked for the Fort Worth and Denver City Railway for 44 years, died in a hospital here at 10 a. m. Thursday following a heart attack late Wednesday in downtown Wichita Falls. His home was at 1605 Austin.

A native Tennessee, Miller had lived in this section 45 years. He had been married more than 30 years. Miller retired May 24, 1946, from the Fort Worth and Denver City Railway. He was a member of the Grace Methodist Church, Joseph A. Kemp Lodge, ande Masonic chapter, council commandery, a 32nd degree Scottish Rite Mason and a member of Maskat Temple.

A veteran of the Spanish American War, Miller was a member of the Tennessee Volunteers. Survivors include his wife; a son, Robert E. Miller, Wichita Falls; a niece, Mrs. Lloyd Farmer of Richmond, who was reared in his home; two sisters, Mrs. Minnie Parks, Chattanooga, and Mrs.

Mary Hambright, West Palm Beach, and three brothers, Herbert Cleveland, John McDonMiller, ald, and Cliff Miller, Chattanooga, Tenn. Arrangements are in charge of the Hampton-Vaughan-Merkle Funeral Home. USO Club Remodeling Contract Awarded A. G. McClung has been awarded the contract for complete renovation of the USO Club building at 822 Lamar, It was announced by Grover Bullington, chairman of the USO YMCA building committee.

Work will begin almost immediately and is to be completed in 30 working days. Probable opening date is in early May. McClung submitted the low bid of five received by the committee. The contract was awarded subject only to final approval by the central Young Men's Christian Association committee in New York, which should be received late Thursday or Friday, Bullington said. Committee members are Bullington, Walter Peltason, John Lynn and Kindel Paulk.

Cosmic rays have been constant for 25,000 years, it has been proved by Dr. Willard F. Libby of the University of Chicago in its 000,000 atomic and metal research program. Piles Hurt Like Sin! But Now I Grin Thousands change groans to grins. Use doctors' formula to relieve discomfort of piles.

Sent druggists by noted Thornton Minor Clinic. Surprising QUICK palliative relief of pain, itch, irritation. Tends to soften, shrink swelling. Use doctors' way. Get tube Thornton Minor's Rectal Ointment or Rectal Suppositories today.

Follow label directions. For sale all drug stores everywhere, In Wichita Falls at Renfro Drug and It was love at first sight for Tertius (right) and Gretjie when they were introduced through the bars of the hippopotamus house at Pretoria, South Africa, zoo. Quite oblivious to onlookers, the hippos gave each other a big kiss, and what is more, held on for half an hour. Soon Gretjie will be formally introduced to Tertius' home and the couple will set up housekeeping together. (AP Wirephoto).

Texan Loses Life In Traffic Mishap Special To The Times Love at First Sight A Airman in Japan Given Promotion Bobby L. Hatfield, son of Mrs. Mabel Hatfield, has been promoted to sergeant at Misawa Air Force Base, Honshu, Japan. Hatfield entered military service in October, 1946, and arrived in Japan in July, 1943. He was assigned to the Fifth Air Force, the occupational air force for Japan and southern Korea, and subsequently assigned to the famous 49th Fighter Wing as Misawa AFB.

He is working editor of the base newspaper, "The Misawa Piloteer," and plans to return to his home in August. Hatfield is the sixth of the "Hatfield clan" to don the U. S. uniform. Five older brothers were in the service during the war, one of whom was a prisoner of war.

Mrs. Sophie L. Schram Dies in Roswell, N. M. Mrs.

Sophie Lazetta Schram, 87- year-old Roswell, N. resident and mother of C. F. Schram, 1604 Hayes, and Frank H. Schram, 2133 Avenue of Wichita Falls, died at her Roswell home Wednesday after being bed-ridden about a year.

Born at Independence, Texas, Feb. 3, 1862, Mrs. Schram lived in Austin County, Texas, about 25 years before moving to Roswell in 1905. All but one of her dren were born in Austin County. Widow of C.

F. Schram who died about 10 years ago, Mrs. Schram had visited in Wichita Falls at the homes of her sons many times. The two sons plan to leave for Roswell Friday morning. Funeral services have been set for 4 p.

m. Saturday. Survivors include another brother, Harry F. in Schram of Temple City, two sisters, Ann L. Schram and Mrs.

F. L. Smith, both of Roswell, nine grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren. Oil Field Worker Dies at Holliday Funeral services for George P. West, 55, oil field worker, who died Wednesday night at his Holliday home after a short illness, will be held at 2:30 p.

m. Friday from the Methodist Church in Holliday. Burial, under direction of Pearson Funeral Home, will be at Holliday Cemetery. Survivors include his wife, three daughters, Mrs. Joe Decker, Mrs.

Bill Smith and Miss Elnora West, all of Wichita Falls; two sons, G. P. West Jr. and Stanley West, both of Holliday; four brothers, one sister and two grandchildren. Motorist Suffers Lacerated Eyelid Eugene Williams, Route 1, 20- year-old oil field roughneck, suffered a lacerated upper left eyelid Wednesday night when his automobile collided with a parked car at Valley View.

Williams said the other automobile was parked on the wrong side of the road. His eyelid was sutured at Wichita General Hospital. Writ Again Asked In Death Case been set for 10 a. m. Thursday, March 31, in the 30th District Court of Judge Frank Ikard, on a second petition for a writ of habeas corpus in behalf of David Beck and T.

C. Saucier, former attendants at the Wichita Falls Hospital under indictestate ment for murder with malice in the death of Thomas Houston Gibbons. Application for the hearing was filed Thursday by W. W. (Bill) Ballard, defense attorney, who alleged that Saucier and Beck were illegally restrained in the Wichita County jail and that they were denied execution of reasonable bonds.

At a hearing on a writ of habeas corpus, filed while the defendants were being held on a warrant from the justice court of H. M. (Doc) Newman in lieu of bonds of $7,500 each, Judge Temple Shell of the 78th District Court refused to release the men and ordered them held without bond. The second, application for a writ was as the defendants are being held without bond on a warrant issued on the indictment from the office of District Clerk Glenn Haynes. Saucier and Beck are being held in county jail without bond on an indictment of murder with malice in death of Gibbons March 4 at the hospital.

The indictment charges that the defendants killed Gibbons, by their "stomping feet, beating and kick- with their fists and choking with their hands." District Attorney Clyde Fillmore has asked that several witnesses be subpoenaed for the hearing and indicated he would contest any move to obtain the release of the two men. Brother of Wichitan Succumbs in Tulsa Mr. and Mrs. S. B.

Wilson, 1105 Austin, left Thursday morning to attend funeral services for Mrs. Wilson's brother, Charles C. Barnard, who died Wednesday in Tulsa, Okla. Barnard, a retired merchant, had been in ill health since suffering a heart attack several months ago. Survivors, other than Mrs.

Wilson, include one son, two daughters and other sisters, Mrs. Juanita Waltz of Birmingham, and Mrs. C. V. Wise, former Wichitan now living in Chicago, Ill.

Accident at Bridge Injures Wichitan W. C. Smith, 3505 Cumberland, was admitted to Wichita General Hospital Thursday for treatment of injuries suffered about 11 a. m. in an automobile accident at the Virginia Street bridge across Holliday Creek.

Taken to the Wichita Falls Clinic-Hospital in a Pearson Funeral Home ambulance, Smith later was transferred to Wichita General re Hospital. Incomplete diagnosis revealed that he suffered a hip injury. A Winter's Tale RUSHVILLE, Ind. (UP)-In a a winter traffic accident, a truck carrying 21,000 Eskimo pies crashed near here. BACON WILSON LAUREL DAY NIGHT OGA FOOD STORE 2001 Ninth Phone 4383 Cotton Futures Turn Irregular NEW YORK, March 24.

(P)-Cotton futures turned irregular in slow dealings today. Price movements were narrow with scattered liquidation and hedging absorbed through mill buying and short covering. Switching operations from near to later months made up a good part of the trading. Most traders were awaiting congressional action on ECA funds for the next fiscal year which directly million bales more in the next cerns financing corn cotton exports of crops season beginning August 1. Futures closed 25 to 35 cents a bale higher than the previous close.

Open High Low Close May 32.14 32.19 32.11 32.19 July .31.09 31.12 31.04 31.12 October .28.19 28.24 28.15 28.24 December 27.97 28.00 27.93 28.00T March .27.83 27.86 27.81 27.861 May .27.55 27.58 27:55 27.621 Middling spot 33.52t, up 6. New Orleans Cotton NEW ORLEANS. March 24. (P)-Cotton futures moved over a narrow range here today with trade buying and short covering offsetting long liquidation and hedge selling. Closing prices were steady, 25 cents to 40 cents a bale highr.

Open High Close May 32.04 32.08 31.99 32.07 July 31.05 31.08 31.00 31.07 Oct. 28.14 28.31 28.13 28.21 Dec. 27.92 27.93 27.92 27.97b March 27.77b 28.82b bBid. Livestock Special Times OKLAHOMA CITY, March 24. -Cattle receipts calves 200; no load lots beef steers offered: odd lots sters, hifers and mixd yarlings about steady; cows, canners and butchers weak; bulls active and steady; vealers and calves scarce little changed; stockers dull: 10 head top good and choice 960 pound yearling steers short load good steers good mixed yearlings $24.50 and $25; common and medium heifers $18 to $22; some good heifers held at $25 and above: beef cows upward to $19; canners and cutters mostly $13 to $16; medium and good sausage bulls $19.50 to $21; slaughter calves mostly $15 to $24; vealers quoted to $26 and above; little done early on stockers; few stock cows $16 to $18 and stock heifers $20 to $22.

Hog receipts packer market about steady; shippers and small killers 25 to 50 cents lower; top $21.25 to all: most good and a choice 190-240 pound weights $21 to $21.25: lighter weights $19 to $20.50: sows $15.50 to $17; stock pigs scarce and quotably steady, few at $21. Sheep receipts 650; choice 81 pound spring lambs $21; wooled lambs quoted to $29; load clipped lambs No. 3 pelts $27; ewes upward to $12. FORT WORTH, March 24. (AP) Cattle 650; calves 250; steady; medium to good slaughter steers, yearlings and heifers kinds downward to $18; butcher and beef cows $16.50 canners and cutters 16.50: bulls good and choice fat calves common to medium calves culls $15 18; stocker steers $23.50 down: stocker yearlings $24.50 down; stocker cows stocker calves $20 Hogs 900; butchers 25-50 cents below Wednesday's average and pigs unchanged; top $21; most good and choice 190-260 pound butchers $20.50 20.75; good and choice 150-185 pound $19 20.25; good and choice 290-400 pound sows pigs 19.

Sheep 900: shorn slaughter lambs steady to strong; few spring lambs and feeders steady; medium and good spring lambs $26; good, few choice shorn slaughter lambs with fresh shorn and No. 2 pelts shorn yearlings and 2-year-old wethers $23; wooled feeder lambs $24.50 down. CHICAGO, March 24. (A) -Hogs slow, 25-50 cents lower on butchers; closing mostly 50 cents off; 60WS around 25 cents lower; top good and choice 160-240 pounds $20.75 21.25; 250-270 pounds $20 20.75; 280- 310 pounds 330-375 pounds choice around 500 pound butchers good and choice sows under 400 pounds scarce at 425-500 pounds 525-600 pounds Cattle calves 500; steers closed slow, weak to fully 25 cents lower: other slaughter classes moderately active, steady; average to high choice steers practically absent; small lot yearlings medium to low choice steers medium and good heifers $22 25; beef cows. $20.50 down; medium and good sausage bulls $20 22.50: good and choice vealers 29; stockers and feeders slow, about steady.

Sheep slaughter lambs steady; high choice kinds absent; top $30; good to average choice $29 sheep strong to 25 cents higher; ewes $14.25 down. KANSAS CITY. March 24. -Cattle calves 100; indifferent demand; limited supply fed steers and heifers slow; cows slow, steady to easier; bulls weak, spots 50 cents lower; vealers and killing calves steady to weak; stockers and feeders scarce; load mostly choice 1136 pound Kansas fed steers medium and good $22 24.50: high good to low choice around 980 pound Kansas fed heifers $25; medium and good heifers $21 24.50; good and choice vealers $26 28.00. Hogs fairly active, steady to mostly 25 cents lower; top good and choice 170-250 pounds $21 21.50: 250-300 pounds $19.75 21.00; steady to 25 cents lower at $16.50 18.00; stags $15.50 down.

Sheep 1.500; active, killing classes fully steady; odd lots good and choice trucked in native lambs $29.50: medoum and good shipments $27.50 28.75: three decks wooled lambs to shearer buyers good and choice slaughter ewes $13. Spot Cotton NEW ORLEANS. March 24. (P)-Spot cotton steady. 25 cents a bale higher.

Sales 1,952. Low middling 26.50; middling 32.50; good middling 33.00. Navy Captain Served WASHINGTON, March 24. (UP) U. S.

marshals today served Navy Capt. Harold A. Latta-Lawrence through his attorney with lawsuit papers in which wife accuses him of his' being "close and intimate" with 68-year-old Rep. Edith Nourse Rogers, Republican, Massachusets. Stock Market Tips Slightly Downward By WILLIAM D.

HORGAN NEW YORK, March 24. -The stock market slowly tipped lower today after an opening surge of buying quickly ran its course. At the close prices for numerous issues were on the way down. Gains were still in a clear-cut majority but widest advances were trimmed and here and there some issues drifted into the minus column. Fast trade accompanied the morning gains but business soon lapsed into the familiar slow pattern.

Turnover was at the rate of around 1,000,000 shares for the full session. New York Stocks (By The Am Airlines Am Tel Tel Am Woolen Anaconda Cop Atch SF Avia Corp Beth Braniff Airw Chrysler Corp Cont Motors Cont 011 Del Curtiss Wright Freeport Sulph Gen Elec eGn Motors Goodrich, BF Greyhound Corp Gulf Oil Houston Oil Int Harv Kan City Sou Lockheed Airc Mo aKn Tex Montgom Ward Nat Gypsum No Am Avia Ohio Oil Packard Motor Pan Am Airways Panhandle Penney (JC) Phillips Pet Plymouth oil Pure Oil Radio Corp of Am Republic Steel Sears Roebuck Sinclair Oil Socony Vac South Pac Stand Oil Cal Stand Oil Ind Stand Oil NJ Sun Oil Texas Co Tex Gulf Sulph Tex Pac Tide Wat A Oil US Rubber US Steel West Un Tel A Woolworth (FW) Associated Press) .159 23 146 1457 55 291 23 311 9 931 34 63 63 40 321 10 81 77 814 42 541 71 7 7 27 .117 91 44 44 44 41 38 38 36 593 17 64 72 11 25 665 66 66 9 32 32 28 23 401. 3934 40 41 195 193 16 41 41 19 571 155 47 107 103 36 287 281 23 4 59 91 93 91 14 6' 15 471 461 25 60 597 13 391 58 301 295 295 73 121 123 23 241 25 36 37 27 62 16 16 13 413 16 627. 62 62 26 405 44 58 681 58 67 58 29 11 65 15 201 20 22 221 20 20 20 397 393 393 47 7334 731 19 15 153 9 45 Local Markets The following prices were being paid producers in Wichita Falls Thursday: York Cotton Exchange futures Chicago Mercantile Exchange egg and butter futures furnished by courtesv of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner Beane in Wichita Falls. Cotton May 32.19; July 31.12.

Eggs October 47.60. Butter March 59.25. Grain (Quotations by General Mills. Inc) Wheat $2.00 (Quotations by Nutrena Wheat $2.00 Milo $1.99 Corn $1.29 Oats 68c Barley $1.08 (Quotations by Economy Cash Feed Store) Wheat $2.00 Milo $1.99 Oats 68c Corn $1.29 Barley $1.08 Poultry (Prices quoted by poultry firms below are only indicatire and do not necessarily constitute an offer). (Quotations DY Barton Poultry and Egg Co.) Hens, heavy 28c Roosters 12c Hens, light 23c (Quotations by Massey Poultry acd Egg Co.) Roosters 15c Hens, light Hens, heavy 30c Guineas 50c (Quotations by Noble Poultry and Egg Co.) Hens, heavy 30c Hens, light Roosters 12c (Quotations by McKinley Poultry and Egg Co.) Hens, heavy 28c Hens, light 23c Roosters 15c (Quotations by J.

R. Douglas Rabbitry) Rabbits (any color) 3 to 5 pounds. per pound. live weight 25c Cash Grain KANSAS CITY. March 24.

(P)-Wheat down to up No. 2 hard and dark hard No. 2. red Close: May 2.01¼: July Sept. 1.81¼; Dec.

Corn down 1 to up 1: No. 2 white $1.46 1.50½n: No. 2 yellow 1.39. Close: May July 1.27. Oats down to up 12; No.

2 white 75 79n. FORT WORTH, March 24. (P)-Basis carloads on track or in storage, freight paid to Texas Gulf ports. Wheat No. 1 hard Oats No.

2 white Corn No. 2 white Sorghums No. 2 yellow milo per 100 pounds CHICAGO, March 24. (AP)-Wheat, sample grade hard $2. Corn No.

2 yellow Oats No. 1 heavy mixed No. 1 heavy white No. white On February 21 we started Job No. 20,000 GEORGE S.

MAY COMPANY Business Engineering OFFICES IN PRINCIPAL CITIES DON'T If you've been wondering whether to buy or sell GULF OIL SOCONY-VACUUM PANHANDLE PRODUCING REFINING TEXAS COMPANY why not decide on the basis of fact? We'll give you all the information we can about these companies whose products you use, whose names you know. We'll supply current facts without charge on earnings, dividends, outlook whether you're a customer or not! And if you do ask us to execute your orders we charge only the regular commissions permitted by the exchanges on which these securities are traded nothing for our other services. Just call, come in, or write Department H-18 MERRILL LYNCH, PIERCE, FENNER BEANE Members New York Stock Exchange City National Bank Building Wichita Falls Telephone: 2-0707 Grain Price Changes Small By WILLIAM FERRIS CHICAGO, 24. (AP) Grain made minor changes while weakMarch, ness cropped up in lard on the board of trade today. Lard fell sharply at one time, October moving to a new seasonal low, in line with slumping hog and cash lard prices.

Loose lard was offered at 11 cents a pound, down cent, and only cent above the extreme low reached on the mid-February price break. Among cereals, corn acted the steadiest as cash receipts again fell off. May wheat met selling pressure from the Southwest, regarded as hedging, and was weaker than any other grain contract on the board. Wheat closed 3 lower to higher, May 2.14⅛. corn was lower to higher, May oats were lower to higher, May rye was unchanged to 3.

lower, May soybeans were unchanged to lower, May 2.13¾. and lard was 25 to 38 cents a hundred pounds lower, May $11.32. Wheat- Open High Low Close May 2.15 2.15¼ 2.13½ 2.14¼ July 1.89⅞ 1.90½ 1.89 1.90¼ Sept. 1.90 1.88⅝ 1.90 Dec. 1.89⅝ 1.90½ 1.89¼ 1.90½ CornMay ..1.32 1.32½ 1.31⅛ 1.31⅞ July 1.315 1.30½ 1.31⅜ Sept.

1.24⅜ 1.247 1.23⅞ 1.24½ Dec. 1.13⅛ 1.14¼ 1.12¾ 1.13⅝ OatsMay .683 .69 July 63 Dec. .623 Dec. LardMay .11.62 11.70 11.27 11.32 July 11.65 11.65 11.22 11.30 Sept. .11.60 11.62 11.25 11.35 Oct.

.11.55 11.55 11.25 11.35 CATARRH SINUS SUFFERERS FIND CURB FOR MISERY DUE TO NASAL CONGESTION. SUPPLY RUSHED HEREI Relief at last from torture of sinus, catarrh, and hay fever due to nasal congertion is seen today in reports of success with formula which has the power to reduce 3 nasal congestion. Men and women with agonizing sinus headaches, clogged nostrils, earache, hawking and sneezing misery tell of blessed relief after using it. KLORONOL costs $3.00, but considering, results, this is not expensive, amounts to only pennies per dose. KLORONOL (caution, use only directed) sold with money-back guarantee by All Renfro Drug Stores.

Mail Orders Filled. Eighth and Scott Wichita Daily Times Page Mar. 24, 1949 Weather Data (Continued from Page One) U. S. Weather Bureau at Kell Field reports the following temperature highs wednesday and lows Thursday with precipitation data in designated cities for the 24-hour period ending at 12:30 p.

m. Thursday, March 24, 1949: Temp. RainTexas Cities- High Low fall Abilene 79 60 Amarillo 74 38 Austin 79 65 Trace Beaumont 73 62 Childress 51 Brownsville 82 73 Corpus Christi 70 Trace Dallas 60 Trace El Paso 74 46 Houston 72 64 Lubbock 79 42 San Angelo 83 62 San Antonio 78 67 .03 Texarkana 57 Tyler 72 57 Waco 61 Trace Outside TexasArdmore, Okla. 75 57 Albuquerque, N. M.

64 30 Atlanta, Ga. 73 54 Boston, Mass 61 40 Chicago, Ill. 40 33 Denver, Colo. 63 27 Los Angeles, Calif. 64 Little Rock, Ark.

65 Miami, Fla. 78 74 Kansas City. Mo. 66 Detroit, Mich. 45 33 Lawton, Okla.

78 Minneapolis, Minn. 43 34 8:::::8 New Orleans, La. 74 56 New York, N. Y. 68 39 Oklahoma City, Okla.

74 57 Seattle, Wash. 59 42 Seattle, Wash. 59 41 To The WHAT'S NEW At 1502 HOLLIDAY STREET DUNCAN, March Joe E. Dooley, 28, of Gainesville, Texas, died Thursday morning in a Duncan hospital of injuries suffered Wednesday night in an automobile accident about five miles north of here. Dooley was injured about 9 o'clock when the 1946 Ford sedan which he was driving overturned after Dooley had swerved sharply to miss a tractor on highway U.

S. 81. Riding in the automobile with Dooley was J. C. Lubbers, 20, of Tioga, Texas, who was dismissed from the hospital after receiving emergency treatment for minor cuts and bruises.

Bill Grimes, Oklahoma state highway patrolman who investigated the accident, said Dooley and Lubbers were traveling south toward Duncan when they topped a hill wand met the tractor, which also going south. Turning sharply to the left to miss the tractor, Dooley lost control of the automobile, Grimes reported. Dooley was employed in an oil field near Lindsay, Okla. Driver of the tractor was Donald Wayne Hines, 21, of Duncan. The tractor was lighted, the highway patrolman stated.

No charges were filed. To develop good meat fowl, chicken-of-tomorrow contests are held among West Virginia's 4-H and Future Farmers of America members. The development stretches over 12. weeks, each starting with 100 straight-run chicks or 50 cockerels. Professional Directory Attorneys Osteopath Physicians Surgeons BRITAIN CONNELL Dr.

R. H. Peterson, Throat, Nose, Ear. A. Britain Jack Connell General Practice.

Lawyers Dr. T. R. Krohn, Rectal and 825-26 Hamilton Bldg. Phone 2-1119 Colon.

General Practice. 325 Hamilton Building Phone 5664 BULLINGTON, HUMPHREY, DR. TED C. ALEXANDER HUMPHREY FILLMORE Obstetrics and General Practice Lawyers 906 Grant street Phone 2-2883 Ninth Floor Phone City 4361-4362 Patent Attorneys and Agents National Bank WAYLAND D. KEITH IRVIN J.

VOGEL Registered Patent Agent Lawyer Practicing Befo.e 0 8. Patent Office. 330-332 Waggoner Building Patents- Trade Marks Copyrights Phone 4471-Res. 6784 Phone 6640 814 Staley Building C. M'DONALD and Physicians and Surgeons GEO.

W. ANDERSON L. D. PARNELL, M. D.

Medicine and Surgery National Lawyers Building Diseases of Stomach and Intestines 405-411 First Bank X-ray and Clinical Laboratories, ElecPhone 9974 tro-Therapy, Artificial Fever Therapy 410-19 Staley Bldg. ROBERTSON J. D. HALL, M. D.

NELSON, MONTGOMERY Bldg. Phone 2-5216 411 Hamilton Building Phone 2-0797 Attorneys at Law Urology 707 Hamilton DRS. WALTER AND BILLIE ADAMS JAMES E. PROTHRO Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Clinic Attorney at Law Corner Eighth and Austin Streets 706-7 City Nat'l Bldg. Phone 2-5548 Phone 4311 1100 Eighth Street WAYNE A.

RESER, M. D. E. W. NAPIER Diseases of the Chest, Bronchoscopy Lawyer By Appointment, Please 414 City National Bldg.

Phone 2-2189 Phone 2-5776 Hamilton Bldg ALLEN, LOCKE KOURI RUDOLPH EDWARD JACOBI. M. D. Z. Allen.

Taz Locke, Philip 8. Kourl Surgery Women Attorneys at Law Phone 2-5044 Diseases of 500-4 Staley Bldg. Phone 2-8608 Hamilton Bldg PIERCE. GANT BANDY ROBERT L. HARGRAVE.

M. D. Marvin Pierce, Jack Gant, Paul Bandy Surgery Diagnosis, Diseases cf Women Attorneys at Law Stomach, Colon and Goiter 640 Nacol Bldg. Phone 4900 218 Hamilton Bldg. Off.

7859 Res. 2-5441 MARTHA B. BUCHANAN. M. D.

Chiropractors Infants and Children DR. PAUL L. HEALTH MYERS CLINIC Office: 2-8471 2-8144 315 Hamilton Building 2-0701 CHIROPRACTIC Ninth and Burnett GEORGE J. SEIBOLD, M. D.

Phone 9298 Asthma--Hay Fever- -Allergy 1310 Ninth Street T. A. MYERS Phone 2-6333 Res. 2-8401 CHIROPRACTIC OFFICES W. K.

RUNDELL, M. D. 810 Staley Building 7243 Obstetrics and General Practice Phone 7266; Res. 718-20-22 Staley Bullding Phone 2-8191 Res. Phone 2-0940 Dentists E.

A. COX, M. D. DR. C.

E. GRAVES Diseases of the Rectum and Colon Doctor of Dental Surgery 203 Hamilton Bldg. Phone 2-3282 Plate Work General BAILEY R. COLLINS, M. D.

Practice 0th Floor Staley Bidg. Phone 7258 Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics DR. LOUIS E. TOMPKINS 222 Hamilton Building Dentist Office Phone 7979 Residence 7648 FOr 1011 Tenth Street OWEN Appointment. Phone 2-5694 Medical and Surgical M.

Urology C. BERG, D. 306 Hamilton Building Clinics and Hospitals Phones: Office 2-9817: Res. 4683 ALEXANDER CLINIC and DR. H.

S. BELL, M. D. MATERNITY HOSPITAL Medicine Obstetrics Pediatrics Obstetrics and General Practice Office Hours 10-12. 2-5 p.

m. 906 Grant Phone 2-2883 1515 Tenth Street Phone 7975 Clinics and Hospitals THE MEDICAL AND SURGICAL CLINIC Phone 7137 Fifth Floor Hamilton Building Phone 7137 DR. J. E. KANATSER, Obstetrics and Diseases of Res.

Phone 2-1411 DR. W. K. M'FATRIDGE, Obstetrics and Diseases of Women, Res. Phone 4373 DR.

L. N. SIMMONS, Obstetrics and Diseases of Women, Res. Phone 2-2151 DR. A.

PIERCE, Infants and Children, Res. Phone 2-2955 DR. J. A. HEYMANN, Gen.

Surgery, Gynecology, Goiter, Res. Phone 2-3557 DR. HARRY LEDBETTER, General Surgery and Bone Surgery, Res. Phone 2-0690 DR. EMILE MALTRY, Medical and Surgical Urology.

Res. Phone 2-8494 DR. W. G. HARRISON, Medicine, Diagn's Heart Stomach.

Res. Phone 8202 DR W. L. POWERS. Internal Medicine and Diagnosis, Res.

Phone 2-5566 ALVAR CONNER. Business Manager. Res. Phone 5118 Phone 2-1181-WICHITA FALLS -HOSPITAL STAFF- -Phone 2-1181 SURGERY MEDICINE Dr. Kiel Medicine and Dr.

W. Jas. E. Crump Genery Surgery Dr. 9: Smith Diagnosis Dr.

Dr. Lee Urology and Gynecology Dr. J. R. Mast J.

R. Reagan, Dr. I. L. Humphrey Jr.

Dr. R. A. Mitchell, Dental Surgery Dr. W.

B. Whiting. Heart Dr. Jack E. Maxfield, Orthopedics Dr.

A. Leach, Medicine and Skin EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT Dr. R. L. Nelson, Infants Children Dr.

G. W. Slaughter. Infants DE: B. Arrington Children Dr.

R. F. Knox, Med. and Gland Dis. LABORATORIES OBSTETRICS Dr Claude D.

Wilson. X-ray Dr. W. Parker and Radium. OBSTETRICS GENERAL PRACTICE Dr.

J. G. Pasternack. Pathology Dr. R.

D. McConchie Wayne J. Holmes, Business Manager Besulah Marshall, R. N. Supt.

How the Eckelkamps increased their income Pictured above with his wife and sons is Louis Eckelkamp of Villa Ridge, Missouri. Mr. Eckelkamp owns a restaurant and service station, "'The Diamonds," at the junction of highways U.S. 66 and Missouri 100. In their financial planning for the future, the Eckelkamps seek both security and income.

Thus, their program provides for the regular purchase of stocks, as well as for home ownership, savings in cash and U.S. Savings Bonds, and adequate insurance. They own the shares of three companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange -two common stocks and one preferred. These securities returned 5.9% in 1948 on their combined purchase price. "Our dividend checks pay for many extra things," say the Eckelkamps, who do their investment business through a nearby Member Firm of the New York Stock Exchange.

The experience of the Eckelkamps may be applied to many families in the middle tax brackets who are interested in how much income their surplus funds will buy. In this city, as in more than 360 others across the country, Member Firms of the New York Stock Exchange are ready to serve with facts about securities and their yields, with prompt and efficient service. The Dividend-Paying Common Stocks on the New York Stock Exchange Average Yield This income rate to investors is revealed by a factual analysis of dividend payments by these companies in 1948. A study of listed common available on request, in the from The Exchange Magazine, New York Stock Exchange. New York Stock Exchange, stock dividends and yields is form of an article reprinted monthly publication of the For your copy, address Dept.

20 Broad New York 5. Invest through a Member Firm of the NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.

Wichita Falls Times from Wichita Falls, Texas (2024)

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