The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 131, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 1, 1932 Page: 4 of 16
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THE FORT WORTH PRESS
TUFSD.
e Fort Worth Press
Fanning the Flame
LETTERS
3
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TUESDAY '1. 1033
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Another Stab?
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te for 1
Occasionally municipal ownership is the
■ Phut I
Strict and efficient state regu-
nd Delta <
aken Uhde.
so-
And w had the same kind
Now.
wjth its sponsors agreed to accept
bureau acquiescent,- with
The Russlan army was almost
11.- bool
I
nge for the defeat his
Hindenburg was that he had at-
E
wrder.
He Left Life Gladly
High
They had won the battle of the
a
mander in-chief of the Armies of
Van Zand
War
L •.
to' send the older man as general
are
Orleans add arrested his marshal
Well, we became afraid tn
and Turks were set in motion and
in a awift and'ruthless campaign’' lies. long before'we became at
Rennenkampf,
General
on
corpus his authority as commam
United
States I refuse to obey the writ.”
ASK THE PRESS
FG
Don’t Let This Depression Ruin Your Digestioi
n
O
€
*8
A LAWYER.
•4
THEY SAY
such 'a
23)
A.
should be poor, -and tha
:5
drugging is more likely to lead to
British statesman.
1
A
1
HEN History Was in the
w
he.
"E
tion evasion. — Dr.
” PKlgin.
NEXT: Mental attitude.
«
{
I Oil
El2IIT3
M
e}
I I
nat? army officers on whom they
were served answered “By order
stops digestion
the glands of-
helm golng over plans for a
battle. ‛
cor-
More
> Old
show
rect solution of
often it is not.
with a.
one side
1 915-the Bus
: of d. fl ndinig
DISPt
ROUl
HIGH
Dele
BATTEF
bill, it was defeated last session by its adminis-
tration "frierds."
of world opinion can be maintained, Japan In
the epd will have to settle irt line with the
peace treaties.
• * Owned and pubitshed datly (except
Sundar) by The Port Worth Press Pub-
lshing Co., at Pit th and Jones Btreets.
Fort‘Worth. Texas.
the Rumanian army was put out
of business.
come out even.
It is not surprising that under
Auk
Bocr
(lac ov
in dreams or in oblivion. '
DAnY HEALTH TALK’-T------------------
Commiss
Oklahon
. For
"High
The high
r
A
A
formerly been stationed at Koen*
iglburg, so that he was probably
well acquainted with the terrain.
Ludendorff was also an East Irus-
with
every
structures in line with other economic trends
will in the plaudits of" an appreciative public.
1422
Iighway.21
ivercand A
ield, M H
42
requm
iway 21
inatlon. . Ar. ,
Under such circumstances, self
Wind puffs up empty bladders; opinions,
fools.—Socrates.
TUESDAY, MARCH 1,
Editor
..Bustness Manaser
-.Manauine Editor
.......... Editor
Advertising Manager
a determining factor.
It is all the more remarkable that world
opinion has registered In spite of unwillingness
pf the British Tories—and French imperialists
to Cooperate with the United States to outlaw
the fruRis of .Japanese aggression. '
If the United States had begun fn Septem- '
her, instead of waiting until January, to make
clear to Japan that we would not recognize any
settlement imposed on China by force or in
violation of the nine-power and Kellogg trea-
jnstead of prescrip-
of hi* men’ patients
firad
I Caldwe ii
Trading and"
lures, three
ity ITmita o
ra; Bishop,
| Crockett
ighway 99,
AL Pecos
/ line, Han
anv, Fred
6,01 1.
I Atascosa
I 5 culverts,
Port Worth.
1 Fort Dent
, grading,
ires, eonrr<
lass unit ne
fitehell, Ine
ZARL 3. QAn*s .....
MBEKr D BCHULz
—LA WHAM_____ ______
a.*®. NORMENT _____
utive and the judicial power is ■
Hnevitable. The judiciary wins, in
most instances because it is ever
, alert to extend its own authority ’
and power and the executive is
usually submissive.
However, in a few remarkable
instances we have had executives
of courage w-ho hve resisted this
encroachmet.
Thomas Jefferson said: • .
“The federal judiciary consti-
tutes-a subtle corps of sappers and
miners, which will eventually un-
M-
4?
1 -,Ad
— .4 42
"XUSHtN
Highway (
' second day
fitting her
| tton of dis
the major
Plans tc
Houston re
-Manor and
»idered as
the center
vous sesal
. A delega
I Coke Coun
r a proposed
and Bronte
An effor
change the
»o that it
to Luling,
Nixon and
Chairman
act withou
given notic
dered advl
«"Eg
Mt the
rort
if mfie
fitesof
rotr
nefude
witt c
way 7:
town t
14 nor
the time they started on their
campaigns and, ut the right,
write checka
tions, most-
Q. What is whe salary of 4
Chief Justice of the Suprei
Court of the United States?
A scnirs-HOWARD NEWSPAPER
•own D. MINTEER ..............................
Who was clamoring that he must!
withdraw his troops beyond'the
4 Vistula. ‘This would meangiving
26
Ha recelven $20,500 a year.
responsible health and social worker urging its
passage as an emergency; necessity, the same
ly 500 years before.
■" ,382d
6,72
more the .Germans mnoved, pakkle-
-utary. i the north. IttE,Eovno
and Vil ns were oceu pit d. a nd biy'
•-----EIGHTY YEARS OF MISDExvha--------------------------
Hindenberg’s Splashing Drives on Eastern Front Cost
Czar Heavily and Drove the Russians Out of Germany
rates to “get right." .
army, which narrowly escaped a
trap and got out of erman ter- :
1 ritory. By mid-September East 1
SUBSCRIPTION rates
Binele copn two cent*: by mall In ‘Texas, so cent* per
month.; by mall outside of Texas, 60 cents per month; in Tar-
rant Counts, per copy two cents; 10 cent* per week; elsewhere
five cents per copr and 10 cents per week.
"Give Light and the People Wilt Find Their Own Way”
3%2,/
A Thought for Today '
AND THERE was also a strife among them, ,
H which of them should be accounted the
greatest.-—Luke 22:24.
prove premature,
a-".
"w
a bad rate situation.
sharp wits and considerable mil-
itary ability,
German military headquarters
world rejoicing Is In
swer is an illogical and elearly
h,02
-aszagngcg-
tained high rank, had retired, bird , r i
reached the age of 6 7, but was, ; H
nevertheless, reported to have 1
Making — These two
The Old man, with the panorama of his
life behind him, with weary bones and heavy
heart, and feeling perhaps that in the house
of another, altho that other was his child, he
was somehow ■ in the way, knew himself un*
wanted and unnecessary. He was alone in all
the vast meaning of that terrible word.
off more acid invan attempt to
neutralize the soda
was greatly displeased wit Colo-
nel-General van Prittwit, who
6v
did lead his armies near taar-
saw and was then compell
The German situation was se-
rious enough.- Their army had
in the house of his son, walked leisurely out
to the barn and hanged himself. ’ ——"................
"Relatives could give no reason for his
rash act," said the newspaper.
Yet every imaginative person can think of
Since the Republicans have their convention
hall picked out, all they have to do Is nominate
Hoover, and wait. Wait unfit the country for.
gets the depression.
, A WOMAN'S VIEWPOINT ----------
Hindenbrxand-hiswMe.waitinz
for the special train which was I
speeding from the west front in '
/-}
d B
KF 1
2 .2"** {1
•9 V6. AP. M
*
Member of th* United Press, Scripps-
Howard New* Alllance, Newspaper En-
terprise Aasoclation, Science Service,
Newspaper Information Service and
Audit Bureau 01 Circulations:
General Hindenburg (left) and
Prussia was cleared of Russians.
But, as a whole, things were
the budget
sthn. It would be a good scheme
Com merer
taken up a
.hen ring
- Held
The com
Oklahoma
th" present
th" Clari
Oki,, rout
flew bridge
out to a quick lunch or sits in
some restaurant at a conference,
during vich his mind is more
concernet with business than with
foodhis dinner in the evening is
likely to be heavy and to be ac-
companied by alcohol, and he may
work far into the night trying to
make the figures in his books
iI
in re-establishing his digestive esting-- Theodore Dreiser,
routine thru proper diet and elim- ■ •*"
Then somebody at G. H. Q. re- ,
membered Hindenburg; that he make an offensive towards
was an East Prussian and had saw, but his plans were limited
TN RESPONSE to the call of the
I Allies in the west, he prepared
k 1 NN •
-s
82
the U. s. supreme Court when it -------------------------
tried to invade by .writ of habeas, Htfge Russian army
ties, much of the horror and futility of five
-— months of-ruttss wf ff** are beemspnret,--
Of courses it is not yet certain .that’ Japan
7 will withdraw-Afte five months of trickery
and pledge-breaking,en- Tokio war office can
not be trusted merely on the basis of its re-
out ita consent to answer the suit I
of a private citizen. This exemp- ! Hanover, accompanied by a
tion is essential to sovereignty it- licitous old lady- it was Paul von"
- I ; ow th .■'! • y w Pte r- I v '
11 promiblttom wifheverrtey +
railway platform - at
Everything is taught in schools
-except the mechanism nt mony.
—Norman Angell, wrfter.
It Is tdo’bad that the only,
profitable Industry left iprolbi- ,
And eventually will gain from such a palicy.
Now is the time for utilities with out-or-line * sort of admin l st 1 a t ion methods apparently are
• being used to kill it.
heoler *
rete pay
homa I
4
some time or other get less se-
> vere—Sir William H. Beveride,
by the timid Falkenhayn, then
generalissimo of the “erman i
forces. Notwithstanding tha he
annihilated samsonoft. shot him
Ludendorff, who was
chief-of-staff. ' ■ |.w ,,
The two men had netermet. ".etar.ve ...
All that Ludendorfr"knew about ancestors had suffered here near
i ') "hi" on the battleflell which Iih-
° ,n * I denburg mulled Tannenberg. It
HU usqaL response to the sit-
uation Is' to rush off to a drug
store for some bicarbonate of
soda. If bicarbonate of soda is
used in large amounts, it either
NOT infrequently he tries to get
rid of his intesrina} difficulty
.by large doses of strong cathar-
tics, which merely irritates his
ponditioh still further and make
even more unlikely the establish-
ment of a satisfactory digestive
routine.
When the tired business man
leaves thequick lunch counter
“5 return^ to his work, he be-
war-tfme photographs
permanent distress than to he of
benefit. The physician is likely
to prescribe a diet with a suffi-
cient amount of bulk, with a suf-
ficient amount of fruit and green
vegetables to make the digeltive
tract self-regulating as it should
on the.fene
apod the nt
fee, sits all forenoon in a chair
smoking anywhere from 20 to 50
cizarets or three cigars; rushes
The trade depression will at
SOMETIMES without Intending it, we
• vey cruel to the old. Perhaps it would be
better for them if we followed the example of
a few barbarous faces and at a certain period
sc
WE ARE SO busy with living, we stronger,
VV healthier, younger beings, that gradually
we listen less to what the old have to say.
many reasons for this deed.
down the
the east. As such,'he wanted to
dermine and destroy the liberties
of the people" i ____— ' ’ _ train . - drew in... he.stepped
— Andrew Jacksn defled the In-idowh, saluted and shook hands,
junction of a federal judge at New They quickly boarded their train
Orleans add arrested his marshal and started off for Koenigsburg.
were born of such campalgne
As Samuel Gompers used
say, conflict of opinion Is' et
tial to progress.
We simply । an not bring f
the original ideas and radi
Constructive measures whirl
constantly changmg situation
to answer a suit before any tri-
bumal, yet the governor in his ca-ner-wenerut von rrauw1z, WIVInot gbing well for the Central
pacitv 'is chief executive officer was in command in the east and -A 1 xoinK,W ,
of the state may be made tlan-wh — — “ •hA N. ...... Powers. PPe Allies had more
Belgium, bearing
and General Samsonotf. with an-
other army further south.
Hindenburg withdrew most of
the troops’facing Rennenkampf,
leaving only a slight screen. He
concentrated, all the troops he
could .secure lb an endeavor to
draw Samsonoff into a trap. It
succeeded.
TRACY
* SAYS— j
Much of the dietreeel
with which we are afA
flicted goet back to tide-1
stepping and evaeiveneta I
in politics. I
By M. E. TRACY
NEW YORK, March 1—By cor
It mon report, the treat e
operative era at Washington
about over. One filial effort in b
halr of the tax bill, we are ||
General Eric
A NY time a man gtsAnto this
------ ........ M. type of condition the best
program his. eymination measure that he can follow is to
- peen, -2 that, as a re- see a physician, $o will hid him
suit of an overloaded intestinal in re-establishingV his e--i-‛
tract, he should develop a listless 1
or Irritable temperament;
gins to complain promptly of
main.
federl judge appointed for life
by A foreign power and who is
answerable to no one in the sov-
ereign state whose rights alone
are involved in such a suit?
History proves in all ages that
tyranny does not originate in the
servants subject to the will of
the people, but has ever begun to
spread its power under forms of
judicial procedure* Liberty is not
lost at a single step but (a Subtly'
undermined.
In our country it was the ju-
diciary invading and paralyzing
the power of the legislative and
executive branches of the govern-
ment to regulate the slave trade
which brought on the Civil War,
• -There is no judicial power-
whereby a sovereign state may
lawfully be summoned before any
judicial trihinal anywhere with-
______. fall back because of Austrian de- ;
and the younger .man as Strate- j feats.
gist. So said, so done’. I Then Hindenburg turned about
• • » | and catpured Lodz in -Poland.
WHEN Ludendorff s' special
W train drew in ■ he stopped
The greatest danger to state,
liberty and sovereignty today lies
in an illegal encroachment by in-
ferlor federal courts.
W. H. (Alfalfa Bill) Murray of
Oklahoma is the latest executive
of the type of those above named
so,far as courage and conviction
goes. At-least, he seems equally
able to maintain the executive
prerogative and temporarily check
the mining and sappng by the
fedral judiciary. ' •
As said by Governor Sterlink,
practically no law of the State
Legislature is now allowed to ha
enforced until it has been sub-
mitted to and passed upon by
sme inferior federil Judge wh
arrogato to himself the uncon-
stitutional right to supervise, the
legislative and executive func-
"Q What Is a shirter. In I
Aine?
A in metnt mines, th* torm in w
for an under foreman who han charge
liny portion of a mine for one whirl,
larwe mnes there will be one «ehg
foreman and 10 or 16 shiktera dr uni
foremen. ,
! the late summer of 1
: ilana began to thnK
P’etrograd from capt
• « <
TN 1916 Russia b
• » again. Her am
By MILTON BRONNER
European Manaset, NEA Service
fConyrl«ht. 1933. by NEA Service Inc >
RERLIN, March 1. In the gray
D light of an early August,
1914, an old gentleman in civilian
attire nervously paced up and
China’s small army at Shanghai, however,-
Japan win-in the "nd thru sheer -rnTjrrr- —pathette.sceneuntotas-ttseir-before
1ority. of military equipment if the fighting
continued.
Hence the Importance of world pressure as
The whole
: us!
MATERNITY and Infancy aid again is in'
IVI Jeopardy. ,
This time it is in the United States Senate
commerce committee that administration sena-
tors and some southern Democrats seek to
i of stocks, bonds and businesn, ■
‘ The idea of not offending th
or that element has played a dor
Thant part in our campaigns sun
the war. We have spent far mo
time trying to make platforn
safe-jhan we hate trying to mal
them purposeful.
“Don't rock the boat," N
■ been the universal slogan. The 1
suit is that very little worthwh
work has been attempted, mil
less accompitshed. . |
another grandiose plan, involvhg
millions of-men. One huge army
was to force its way thru th" ,
snowy passes of the Carpathians j
into the wheat plains of Hungary
—the breadbarket of the Central
Powers. At the same time, an-
other big army was to invade East
Prussia. Hindenburg, himself,
took charg of the troops in East
Prussia and in February was
fought the second battle of the
Masurian lakes, resulting In 110,-
000 Russians being captured.
Hindenburg drove on. Libau,
The federal judielary occupies
a unique and favorable position
created by the Judges themselves
not'by the Constitution. They I
have assumed the authority not
only to interpret the laws but to
enforce the laws by injunction.
The only authority given them’ is
to interpret the laws.
The assertion by these judges
that tho a sovereign state under
the Constitution cannot be made
The Time to “Get Right”
rTHIS IS a wonderful time-for public utilities
1 to “get right" with the public, especially
the consumers. «—
Municipal bonds are a drag upon the mar-
ket. Revenue bonds cannot be sold at any
price. So long as the bond market remains-in
a chaotic condition all municipal ownership
projects are blocked.
Utilities, for fhe vresent, need not fear
municipal owhership threats. They know-the
munickpalities cannot secure the financing.
_As commodities have fallen in price utilities
have held their rates. Utility rates remain a
sore spot on the, generally falling economic
map. ~ •
And in,states like Texas where there is no
adequate machinery for rate regulation there
is little that n be done toward bringing the
rate structures down.
Some day the bond market will be restored.
. Municipal credit will return. Money can be
5
Grand Duke Nicholae a s'r" , -
moved and the czar, I.In, "If. as rea,
!Mimed supreme command. Once kr
Q. What is a “proof gallon’
. A. It la qefjned by th« bureau of j
duntrini Alcohol «■ ' * win* or liqut ■
ion .cqnteine M per c*nt of *h»oM
( alcohol of 100 proof distilled sprit’
Q. Who won tho Nohel For
, Prize this year?
A Jnne Addams, *ocl*l worker s
founder and hend of HUH Nnun Boi
Bettlemept in Chieagot and Njeholns Mi
i ar Butler, pregident >f Columbia 0
versity in New Yrk city
* **.,
Q. Who invented the vacuu
cleaner?
A. H. C Booth He mad* and pad
ed thy. first succesaful anpUan** In I
roar 1901. ,
quest for.a conditional truce in a battle .which "
it has bungled.
After a Shanghai armistice’'and withdrawal
is definitely accepted—If it is accepted there
will remain the vast territory of Manchuria
which Japan grabbed and now rules thru, a
puppet government, backed by Japanese guns."
If Japan finally can be made to disorge Man-
churia! it will be a miracle rarely If- ever
equalled in the history of imperialism
. But however long and circuitous a final
settlement of this war and its resulting prob-
lems may be, there is great hope in the
• prepent achievement of a world conscience.
Japan is being made tn recognize that some-
timres the cost of conquest is outlawry, which
is too great a price to pay. If a united front
■n Canton,
Baiiy, hhilat
F Randall
aliche bas
[rom Fanyo
Fort Worth,
| Crockett
Ifrld. over
niletwest
Bertram, Ft
■ Urorkilt
Editor's Note: This is . the
fourth of five articles on good
health for the business man
and qffice worker. , •
By Air. MORRIS- FISHTEIN
■dit<*. Journal of the ‘American Medical
Xssociation and of Hyuela, the
' % Health Magazne. •
A PROMINENT New York phy-
A sibian.whose practice’ con-
sists largely of business men- re:"
marked recently that if he could
MA,"e,
iadJX
ed ■ :
",
would get well. ■ ■
.' The economie stress is, no
doubt, responsible for disturbance
of digestion and related disorders
for business men.
When a man worries he does
not eat. When a man is driven
by pressure for time, be eats too
rapidly/and without appetite. •
Eating at % time When one is
mentally preoccupied is 'likely to
he associated with poor secretion
of the/digestive juices:
P‛ t • ♦
rHE average businss man arises
I to a quick breakfast of or-
ange juice/whgak cakes and cof-
ax • • *
For it is significant that Japan sought a
diplomatic road of retreat only after the United
States' had outlawed Japanese conquest, after
the small European nations had forced the big
• European powers to permit a special session
of the League of Nations Assembly, and. after
Soviet Russia began to move. ■ . ,
We would not detract from the unexpected
and remarkable demonstration of .Chinese de-
fense power and national morale during the
last month. Despite all of the heroism of
INDENBURG now went hob
foot after Rennenkampf's
eventually will regret such a stubborn policy. 1 1
They wil face the wrath of the public. -The . .
.utilities that move now id'place their rate thepubteheaith service amendmenf.
er-in,chief of the ation’s arm)
We brush their opinions aside as useless. We, These original writs/remain on
smile at them patronizingly as we do at little , file in the Supreme Court, un-
children. We shoxe them into mental corners. executed, hecauee the subordi
We forget them. We tell them persistently
that they can’t do this or that or the other,.
and we laugh sometimes at their old-fashioned of the president of the
ideas. Unconsciously we may begrudge them
their bit of bread and their ease.
little anainst the Germans, bq( In
the south, under Brusniloff, the
i ltusslans smashed the Austrian
Fourth Corps, reached the Car-
' pathians ami saw the Austrlana
: in Bukowina run away
General Ludendorff at abqut, "Hindenburg and Kaiser Wil-
Hindenburg , was made- com-
country has suffered from noth-
ing so dtstinetty as lack of frank
disagreement ami robust debate.
The hiding <>f money has boon
more than matched by the hiding
of convictiorid, • .
If honest partisanship wan
ever needed, if 4s needed now.
and not only between the partlei
but between factions within th
parties.
.eq Md
unty line
nsti uctiot
0H for |
I block a vote on this important piece of social
legislation. The vote on the new Jones-Bank-
way for the Russian steam rolle:
to go crashing towads Berlin.
Starving the Schools .r.r
rHE RECENT meeting of the National Edu-
I cation Assoclation superintendents in
Washington brought out in disquleting tones a
situation confronting the American school sys-
tem. The closing of 750 schools In Arkansas,
turning 3000 pupils out of classrooms, indi-
cates the depression’a effect upon schools
closed, colleges placed on short rations, educa-
tional budgets pared to below the subsistence
level.
This is dangerous and it is unnecessary.
We are still the richest nation on earth, worth
about 300 billions in dollars.
Of our estimated national income In normal
times of 90 billions, we spend only two and a
half billions on public schools. It is pertinent
to remind ourselves that we spend more than
two billions annually on tobacco; ' nearly the
same on soft drinks, ice cream, candy and
chewing gum; one billion on theaters and
movies; nearly as much on Jewelry, perfumes
and cosmetfgs; half a billion on sporting goods
and toys.
For every dollar' we spend on schools we
spend $2.61 on these luxury items. Out of
every $100 of national incor"we spend $2.74
on schools, but $13.98-on passenger autos.
The American luxury bill is at least five
times greater than its public education bill.
Compared with* other nations, we spend
little* of our great wealth for public purposes.
Great Britain uses 22 per cent of her income
for public purposes; Germany 20.1 per cent;
France 17.1; Japan 14.4 per cent; the United
States 10.4 per cent. Yet our per capita
wealth and incomes are far greater than any
of these nations.
The., trouble, apparently, lies with our
wrong emphasis ‘and with a taxation system
that does pot tap the real sources of our
gret wealth.
It is axiomatic that the price of democracy
is education, that the quantity and quality of
our democracy is in direct proportton to the
quantity and quality of our education. With
machines giving us more and more leisure we
must absorb this in the schools or pay the price.
In crime,’ degeneracy, deterioration and, hence,
autocracy.
We cannot afford to starve the nation’s
schools.
eeY?"janugntoNr an2e "
""2’ kdrpr §g
Erens WAshinston Bifenu. 1331 Ne
York Avonue, Wanhineton. D n,, en
—fbfroR "ent ,n "tam "or "eDl
Q. What is the origin -of t
name grapefruit?
. A.. y in derived from th* fugt that
fruit ii born* In elinterA of ihre 1o
renemblin« a bunch or rapes.
Q. What is the drug call
‘’snow’?
A. Cocenthe.
T‛S a good thing people git old
and. die. It keps things Inter.
’ "* (
would have done four, or Mill o
years ago. It might have helpe ireah'
some or our financial and indus n 6-
and put him in jail.
Abraham Lincoln defied even
NKXT; The new eommander-in -ehlef
of all Germany • armlet lakes eharse
on the heels of starvin Germany's
terrible "turnip winter" in I'do . . .
Tho allies are halted, and the treat
German drive at March 101N, brings
their darkest day in the Word War.
. . . American douchboys at ' the
Marne, and the turn of the Ude . . ,
from had to worse . , the ashes nJ
Nvember ... an old hero retires far
the second time.
trial leaders 40 realize that the
were blowing bubble n 1 1i ,
Instead of that; we bad ad
patd optimism all along tha iine E *
Joseph J.,
head bill is sqid to be 10 to 10-with the
poiaaiblRty that RghafOf- Harris' or Georgia,
' ow 111, may cast the deciding vote.
In view of its loud protestations in behalf
of children’s welfare and public health protec-
tion it seems, almost incredible" that the ad-
ministration again will assume the- blame of
letting thft bill die in committee.
For seven yars the Sheppard-Towner act
carried on its life-saving job. It saved 60.000
American babies. But it was allowed to lapse
in 1938 Revived two .years ago as the Jones
Old-Time Campaign
rIE-time has come for a rgu
1 lar old fnshioned k noo
down and drai out camp.i r--
campaikn with brass bands, tofci
light parades and cart tall or|
tory.in whiel the politicianawi
wet • if f i. i to . wha
they mean once in a while. 2
G<> back over Amerian histn
i------- tions of a free,, independent, sov-
entirely or forces ereign state,
estomach to give
lationis the safer method.
The utilities that refuse to budge now
merely because they-* have the upper hand
setf-amt-tsatsotessentintto- the
liberties of-the people.
3 ’
formed, and then tha good o
i partisan song and dance, ■
Are* you disapopinted? Woul
you prefer to see the pol t cfar
go waltzing into the, ampalg
prtending that there are no Issum
worth getting excited about, whii
whisperers do the dirty work tiacB
stage? ■
Why a two-party system, if dim
agreqment and plain talk sre mil
of order? . ’ I
Assuming that an emergenct
made It necessary for Congress tl
unite for the adoption of certal
relief measures, does it follow thaW
+ I such a method would holve- aw
our problems? |
drifted too closely together • to
be of -real * rv he. - 1 ■ ' "
For a decade and more, the
_bad, for l^gitlmat" municipal ownership ven-
tures. It is then that the public, fretting
from what it interprets as. 'a good socking I
< when it was- helpless to resist, will be ready I
for the plunge toward various municipal own-
ership projects.
And Such a situation will be dangerous.
By Mils. WALTER FERGUSON
rNHE OTHER day a kind old man I have
I known long arose from the breakfast table
Side-Stepping
MUCH of ths distress with whirl
-- we are afflicted goes back t
side-stepping and evasiveness II
• polttes, • 1
No one can say how much goo
tan honest, strergttrorwarddi
cussfon of ecnomte conditft
This is the fourth of tir rt
clusive stories on President
Paul' von Hindi nhurp, (Irr-
many’s i/rejit' if mod' m fi)
are, u hn is now a eundidate-
for a si i ond term in the no- r
tional eleetlon to Ie held .in 4
Geruany on Kundav, yiaiih ,
1.1- The Editor. |
realities Accompanied by Falke n-
The federal judiciary
has aegumed the author-
ity not only to interpret
the laws but to enforce
' the laws by injunction.
Editor The Press:
T BEG to make these observa-
I tions regarding your recent
editorial on "Ovil and Military
Authority."
Both the U. B. and Texas Con-
stitutions divide all powera of
government into three distinct
classes. Legislative, executive and
judicial. —--------
The Institution of Texas pro-
vides each of these shall be con-
fided to a separate body of mag-
istracy and further provides:
"And/no person or collection
of persons, being of one of these
departments, shall exercise any
power properly attached to either
of the others.” *
Legislative power—the making
of law, is confided to the Legisla-
ture, The executive power—the
enforcement of law, to the gover-
nor and other executive officers.
The judicial power—the interpre-
tation of law—to the courts.
• • «
Our Constitution places In the
| governor the executive authority
to enforce all the laws, and
•whenever in his opinion it is nec-
essary, he has the discretionary
authority to call out the militia.
It is self-evident this is a dis-
cretion which must .be lodged
somewhere. It is lodged by law.
In the governor.
Is It not safer to lodge" this dis-
cretion in the governor, who is
subject to a vote of the people
every two years, and who can for
abuse of power be impeached in
30 days, than to lodge it in a
! vaide, for
I Freeatone
av nt on t
4 to F P
ior Compai
Hope
VEN IF the Japanese-Chinese negotiations
Mitau, Lemberg were captured.
Novo Georglevsk, with, .a garrison
of 100,000 men, fill. Then War
aw was taken, and Grodno in
six weeks the Russian front had
receded 150 miles.
duns. The German armies on the cised.
west must stand on thi- <IH'e'I' e ; ~~Ali of g* —4
for the time being. The flfkr bitsl- | has retarded economic rheovi
ness in hand was to attend to but now many have stopped
those" Rumanian*. Joint armies of | think that fear operates th« al
Germans, Austrlana, Bula aibins way in politics.
i
with everybody promising to fl
serve the delightful season o . "A
rity, junt an tho U wi7yii
of life we killed them.'
I ahi sure many of -them would suffer less.
For under thq guise of benevolentr—we often
treat them to slow torture, altho we do not in
any sense realize this. We want' to be ind.
We are sorry for them intermittently. But we
do not_understand them. ■
an to move
les ejfected
But Russia's slnn. th was brok-1 and you will find that bur g
en, as events were soon to prove ent lenders and greatest trtu
, when she sued for peace History
-tban-held their own In the west, wan to show that Hindenburg,
then marly 70, had succeeded,
I where ‘Napoleon . failed, in con-
quering the land’of the czars.
| By July, 1916, thekniner and
; his flatterers came to a sense of
Too Much Harmony
A 8, a matter-of common know1-
A edge, we have had too much
harmony for our own good,
The iwo major parties, have
&I san)
filth
hayn and. others, they came to the for. except 6y disagreement 4
castle of Pleas In. l'p|>cr Silegia. debate. .
Hindenburg and Ludendorff were • • •
sent for.. .a i ^'8^t to Think
1. Falkenhayn remigned ami Hln
, denburg was im'id.. iiimoianilPT in "EMOCRACY has’ little <
.. chief of all the armie . with : 1) for exiatence save xu ft ma*
to Ludendorrr as his quartermaster । room for a frec, honest expfl
general, | sion of opinion,
* * * J The right to think is Iha I
THF new chief at once decided important rigit, but how can
1 there must be no more Ver be 'of benefit, unless it is ek
jected: Th
list ween T
Smith, Aik
various ata
wav*.
A whler
one was fn
romminmion
the offer II
Bld* wet
of n> hwai
- #++ w-i
and dralnir
And so I do not doubt that this really
good old man who had tolled all his days and
who remembered himself as the important,
member of his house, walked into the sunlight
on that last morning and departed gladly from
life. It was his way of standing aside for
youth, energy and hope,, his last gesture to a
heedless world. He has wrapped himself again
a wmwaGMutaezsoncwy peg 4
* ' 7
■ . .' 1
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Minteer, Edwin D. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 131, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 1, 1932, newspaper, March 1, 1932; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1537891/m1/4/?q=%22thurber+%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.