The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 23, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 29, 1932 Page: 4 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
AY,
Another One of Those Things, Eh!
■
News of the Week in Review
.. DIAL $-611
muavuowE macmanos
WAS'
A
2
A
%
z
12
NATURDAY, ocrongn 26, 1032
X
C
(C
W
7
>V01
M,
afe
0
No*
1
34
«ui>porting
were
prided chiefly of 1928 Hoovercrats,
22-enu
KO’s big Ha
R
bills at the
Senator Cutting Bolts
Hoover invades Mid-West
anOM OU’T of the campalgn’s recent fog
the
He did blame him for hav-
ini’ algnedhis administration with "those
e
by • the
pass
Blalne -Bolleuu anti wire tapplng hill.
on a government farm at $1 a day I Editor. The Press:
general fund’soverdraft-’was increased to
$940,970.35,
In
(
"The wjse ate In- In Asia .force her to regard Jap
reason ;
pay his own debt and would take
minds by experience;
Why shouldn’t
AS ONV WOMAN HEES IT
IHE battle of the Century, Big
T
Business vs, the Bonus.” will
start in December. Big Business is
are
them. Besides,”
. fighting the bonus because it is
hanging their heads in shame to
Douglas
should resent tLe fuel that we are always
THIS IS LIFE
4
2
economic dure nil
1
•9
17
20
The love for gossip is shared equally
34
I by the
all their tidbits of talk
to
of the Caribbean.
D
53
5E
[57
armett WEST.
1422 Gould. | nothingness . . . and that's that.
/,
J
T
/ •
—gw
_
_
4
2
you Imagine a college or univer-
sity in Texas, of all places, being
com-
The
Oregon, Europe and South Africa,
and on plantations In the Island*
"Give Light and ths I’eoptf
Will Their Own Way"'
Owned and pubitshed galls cx-
cpt Bundav o Th Fort Wart*
Prews pubitshins o» at ruts and
Jones sereeta, Vort Wart*. Texaa
States government would enact a
law. wRereby when a man signed
a note for the purchase of goods,
or borrowed money, and was 21
years of age, sane and a man of
The University Amendment
NE o) the constitutional amendments
the
It
greut
to the
William
confirmed
Drive.
Jack
which
yg
present
is only
minded on the question of recog-
nizing her?
Par
secon
Q When were Julia Sanderson and Erank
Crumit married?
A July 1, 1037. .
tions cited above.
, Press advisen: .Vole YES
WHOSE HEAD SHOULD
H ANG IN SHAME?
Editor, The press.
PLAN BO
SEEN I
will
the
d
1
the movie.
Interesting "sho
looker thru the ]
and White House!
make the governn
Q. Why is salt used to freeze ice cream?
A Salt iowere the temperature of meltine ice nnd
the mixture of salt und lee produces • lower tempera-
ture in the freener then plain Ire end water.
AN ARGI MENT ABOUT
BACK PAY
Editor, The Tress;
equipment was sold. for the pill m-f ringed isles qf the
That is -all but Jack and Kate, 'tropics.
W
X )
Women Are Not Gossips
.By Mus. HAi. rm n:n<;t mon
Big Broadcast
Needed
758
4
92
LET ENCIE SAM
GI ARAN TEE YOUR NOTE
Editor The Press
-feeble link connecting It with the
era of the horse and buggy.
How We Can Utilize Our Knowledgerand Power
__________________WHAT OUR READERS SAY =
35055
285
NT
ii
•427
1925 knows that'the so-called bo-
nus is a just debt due the veter-
ans. and will be paid by the gov-
ernment. Every veteran that dies
I
L
3
Q. How old Is Kate Smith, the radio sing-
er? ’ 1 7
A Twenty-three
. « . ... min. mercially, and there are no statis-
and Kate, the mules tics to Show a decrease in the
have been doing general binthrate of the stubborn hybrids.
3,53233
5sN-2z
Lee Tracy,
mings and Alan D
Any person acquainted with the | of bulidings and grounds, put
Adjusted Compensation Act of ----
20-
20c '
g
TRACY
SAYS
Q. Did AITred E Smith hold any political
office during the World War?
A Prom 1015 to 1017 he wns sheritt of New York
County, and in loir milt he wAN president of the board
of aldermen of New York County.
s
claimed to be a Democrat while in | the burden off the good, honest
Heover -• 14 was also a direct, hit at the
essential wnkness, from a liberal’s view-
. point, of the Hoqyer record.
Cutting did not blame Hoover for the
- depri ssion, ’nor even for the mjstakes a
bewildered man honestly might hav* made
in financing the nation in those early days
a
• c
5
RUT good mules must go some-
D where 'when they die com-
stamp on-thet note and guarantee
payment. •
They could make a small charge
that would take care of all their
losses. Provided,’if he did not pay
Eo«AH2M240M
. University obligations be rescinded. The
' presest amendment would accomplish that I
purpose, leaving unimpatred the authorhy- —H
ar th* board to invest in the other obliga-
HORIZON ill
1 Upright sur-
face that
bounds any
opening, as I
a door. I
5 Overhead I
10 Rock or cliff]
14 To affirm. I
15 Pretentious |
rural rest- 1
dence. I
16 God of love. I
17 Goes to bed. I
19 Rubber, penc
ends I
21 Either of tw
distinct covJ
nants of God I
23Tmage, I
25 Snowshoe. I
26 Having wings
29 Satiric. I
31 Confidential. I
34 Corded clothfl
35 Thick shrubfl
37 Three letters
standing for I
"His Royal I
Highness." I
35 Antelope I
39 Tainted 1
42 Injunction, 1
41 Enthusiasm •
. 45 To cry. I
weary load of words with which
"The mule team was the last
rmnant of old times,” says Dees,
■ Hoise I am
t:
(0
599
SATURDAY,
288,3
W)22
' False Rumor” and tin other "Malicious
enact them, in thin country. Before they I
Fan stand with any degree of permanence
% A-d I
.22
Mrs. Ferguson
The Fort Worth Press
a oMurra-aowAM MEWSVAVES
euwAnD’R uELDoN ........ esutt
■MM. S OADES ................. Manaser
We have plenty of everything that
is needed in the United States’and
a great surplus on hand at this
time, except confidence in’ man-
kind.
A Last Minute Lie
IOMMENDATION I- dm Editot Wood nt
Demand Special Session
HROM EAST TEXAS came an insistent
I demand for a special oil session of the
Legislature t correct conservation laws.
A hearing of the Railroad Commission was
called for Nov. 3 to fix production on the
basis of physical waste.
Chairman C. V. Torrell and Commis-
sioner Lon A. Smith went to Tyler to
, make a personal investigation of the oil
situation.
On the Ferguson side in the Governor’s
race were the regular Ferguson Demo-
crats, urging party members to vote the
ticket from top'to bottom, and the state
organization, advocating party regularity
to prevent the election of the Republican
candidate, Orville Bullington, and thus
presenting an obstacle in the path of the
national nominees.
It would make the grand rascal , realize that
structed by
' ~ ----------- tions.
-now automatically gets his bonus. - ena"shnysaevndenini; tomemanr
So, just -suppose the veterans of nationals for property that wai
the World War should all die to- damaged, destroyed, or confs
a
10°
aa%.2
A Toronto man, blind for 45 years,
regained his sight after being hit suddenly
on . the head. He must have suffered
qulte a 4snppointment.
to their interest to keep the dol
lar on its throne, where half the
poor people cannot reach it, and
where thousands of people will be
kept on the verge of starvation.
The bonus will put billions of
dollars In the hands of quick and
needy spenders which, in turn will
raise the value of services and
goods because money will be plen-
tiful for a while.
uim-
Editor Wood In
said, that ita wource
denying the report
had been traced to
upoh which Texas votera , wIIT pass
8 would restore the I niversity of
he adds, “they
just ate their
heads off.”
Mules and
horses aren't
yers and Judges that people
are taxed to keep up, and yet get ! should he land
no service therefrom.
to add
Grounds for Complaint
rHERE are just grounds for
I complaint against Russia, but
I the Hoover administration has
done nothing to see whether they
could be removed. It has adopted
a pose which virtually closed th*
) door in Russia's face, and, was
almost equrvalent to saying "that
any attempt on her part to open
negotiations would be rebuffed. I
The trade we have lost by pur
suing such a policy might be eon]
sidered of no great consequence
were, the policy justified. But th*
policy is not justified, either by
common sense, or our own tradi
and when we realize that
th* eye and the ear are laden, and to
make the reader nnd the listener in this
time of sorrow and distress thankful ot nt
., least one thing, namely that the campaign
la nearly over. -
EES can'remember—and not-. --
so long ago, either—when > "We're shipping quite a
Anti-Ferguson Democrats,
the Roosevelt-Garner ticket.
Bt JACK MAXWELL =======
LELLO, and howdy-do! •
I1 He was an old man, feeble
TCU—Not a 'One-Horsef School
-----.---------- ---By C. L. DOUGLAS-----_--------
In writing to the editor
be a* brief as possible. Let-
ters shoutd not exceed 250
words. As evidence of good
faith, sign your till! name
and address. If you do not
wish to have your name used,-'
say so.
great numbers—on farms in see-'
tions of Louisiana, Mississippi,1!
She reminds me that women
sure he will soon poan country. Russia's interest
our commercial. Industrial and
engineering methods for guidance]
27"5
te,
I LESSINGS be upon the head of all
D kind souls who write to newspapers.
Just at Hi* moment when life seemed
_ totally bereft of ideas
kezuzmmzzan came
Way of recognition Is some $400,
000,000 in damage claims and I
water-tight mind at Washington.
Men while, the cost of ou
_ of recrimination -and ' figure-Juggling
the Denver speech, of Senator Bronson
Cutting came as an invigorating'western
breeze. it was a confession of -a dis-
iustoned American liberal, who fought
' four years hgo in the callee’of Herbert
Bid of
J the Late rary
sunscmrnon aaruB
•a earrier per nS 11*. or abe per month aui«M
IWI at newsatanda and trom newsbovs, 1c Mat rates
en request
rNHE PALACE $
I Laurel & Hard
length comedy on
'killers. I
The comedians I
after returning fi
War as hard-boile
movie it called 'I
Troubles. I
The Big Brol
Worth, brings t1" I
Radioland into oil
The talent incil
by, Burhs and All
the Mills Brothel
Sisters. Vincent 1.1
iras headed by Vil
Cab Calloway. I
a Stuart Erwin al
help weave a stors
casting. I
Your Question* Answered ..
people that are having to pay
thalr bills today. This would re-
store confidence with the people
that have money and-would be
glad to loan it at 6 or 6 per cent
per annum and we would have
good times back in the United
States within 30 days time.
E. A. RUST.
left afoot like that?
But it's true, nevertheless—
and the discovery of such a situa-
WHY, N
SHOW
Q What iethe Mexican population in the
United Stales. California and Texas?
A Californin has 368,013 mid the United Stntes has
1,423,533 Texas has 643,681,
TCU had dairy and farming facil-
ities in plenty, but a few years
ago the administration discovered
that it was cheaper to buy food
than raise it and so all the
Editor, The Eress:
NEVER before has there been
-N such a marked trend toward
'the notion of utilizing our knowl-
edge and power for the welfare of
society as a whole rather than to
promote the interests of corpora-
tions and big business.
But no good will come from
this change of sentiment so long
Candidate Roosevelt
their authority to Invest the permanent,
finds of the University was widened to
, inelude U. H. bond*, state, county, city or
»<diool bond* and Federal Farm Loan ob-
UasHonx,
The regents said that when the build ,
mg program was financed, they would ■
udvoeate that the authority to invest In
4 WINGING DEFENSH
OF CITY COUNCILMEN
Editor, The Tress:
T DEFEND our councilmen. They
1 have not been careless in man-
agement of, city affairs. Tey
have in all cases done their best
and as well as any of you city
people could do.
The city's debt must be paid.
, will be seen no more on the I
: greensward facing University
to the West 'ndles now," say
Koss Brothen.
So—just in case some old
friend out at TCU might like to
know—Jack and Kate may even
now be headed south . . . bound i
necessary, any:
tion in a state that always hashow, in th
been famed for its livestock seems 1 m Aeh 1 ? ■ a ■
conclusive proof that the gasoline T U 8.6.8
age has scored a knockout de-1 trucksand light
cisionover the faithful Servitor carsrornau K
of man now. and mechanical mowers to
As I,’. L. Dock, superintendent trim the grass. And it's the same
.................... grounds, put it: everywhere you look. Gas power
"TCU hasn't any horsepower!" has supplanted animal powgr and
••• | from all appearances it would
rHE current issue of The Skiff, seem that the beast of burden is
1 university publication, brings about to become as extinct aii the
. , j .. , 1l"a I Dodo bird or Hippogriff. Even
to the student body the-belated the army has replaced mules with
] information that Jack and Kate caterpillars.
VXTASHINGTC
VV the buttoi
the week-end. I
Washington M
at the RKO Holly
“the movie that 1
official Washingto
A book by the s
*d a lot of hell -ail
capital. I
from roving hustands, we must admit that
we cannot justly be accused of greater
frality Ip this respect. , <
In cities men's clubs afe Breeding
nlacen of salacious stories and lively tales
of the misbehavior of the-grent, the near-
great and the neighbors. In small towns
th* barber shops and pool, balls are hot-
bed- bf spicy ieandatmongering. ‛ ,
And It is Interesting to note flint ‘to-
day our most prominent dispenser of gos-
sip I* s man, Mr. Walter Winchell.
O g TER LI NG, the great business
governor of Texas, announces
WHERE WILL ROOSEVELT
this note that he would be placed CVT EXPENSES
he opei
PRESIDENT HOOVER invaded -
I doubtful mid-Western, area for the.
fourth time'in his Intensive campaign for
False Visions of Patronage Pie
TIM FERGUSON Ulis his various aud-
• ences there will bo 31,000 Federal jobs
io Texas for the Democratic faithful—
those who “vote her from top to bottom.”
He seeks to check party bolting by hold-
ing out the hope of a piece of patronage
pie for good Democratic boys and girls.
There can't be many more than 26,000
Federal Jobs In ail Texas, and many of
them are under the Civil Service. One of
our Washington correspondents reports
today that the turnover, of federal Jobs
in the whole U. S. will not total more
than 20,000.
Either Jim is all wet, or he knows
something no on* else knows, and that if
spread abroad thru th* - country would
wreak havoc with Roosevelt’s chahces
That In, that Roosevelt plans to wreck
the. Civil Service, turn out all Republicans,
nnd ga back to th* day* of “to the victor
belong the spoils."
Of course, Roosevelt plan* no such
thing. Of course, Jim is all wet. .
bound mind, that the United
States government would put a
morrow . ..ihe f. S. Government rated during the BolshevIjt revo
would have to pay the bon(s to ltionavthat sheackbwledge.and
. pay p#+vate debts, that she adjust
every one of them at once . • . her methods of trade and com]
that is how just th4 bonus . law is. merce to internatjonal usage, ano
The Press editorial, "Roc iin from all. effor
and the Bonus," doubted the right to encourage political disturbance
of soldiers to claim their bonus, or ,We..have no right to assums
. ... ... 01 that she won I meet such a del
l should say doubted ex-soldiers mand, or to refuse her recogni
The Grundy tariff rates have insulated
us economically. Incited tariff warw against of the crisis.
--------- By ALAN CARNEY —.......-
POLITICAL propaganda flowed treely in.
I Texas this week along with crude oil
from wells in th* East Tsxas field.
Texas Democracy was split Into four
groups as th* batdle of words In the
gubernatorlal race simmered down to the
question of party loyalty. - r
Armed national guardsmen and Texas
rangers took command In the East Texas
field as GOv. Rosa Sterling sought to
maintain the state’s right to curb crude
production. • This followed a ruling by
Federal Judge Randolph Bryant that or-
ders of the Texas Railroad Commission
controlling oil output were invalid.
East Texas -citizens “took matters in
their own hands” to stem any probable
wholesale opening of wells and consequent
breakdown of tha proration system; Sev-
eral temporary injunctions were granted
against companies to restrain them from
overproducing the present allowable.
May Avoid Sewage Tax
AN INVESTIGATION of city departments
A in Fort Worth, to cutexpenses "to
the bone” and possibly avoid a sewage
tax, was ordered by City Council. Three
committees composed of councilmen were
appointed. ,
The annual financial report of City
Auditor, H. C. Michael showed 10 city
departments spent more money than they
took in drifting the past fiscal year. The
he is backing Bullington, the Re-
publican, nominee for governor.
Sterling claims to be for.the Dem-
ocratic national ticket. He also
side. ' ' world where mules are used in
Thus TCU has severed the last
Member of Um Unsted Prena
serivps. Noward Newe Alliance.
Newapaper enterpriae Aanoetauon, I
Betence service. Mewspaper Infer-
mattom SnrrM and Audit •«- '
renu nt etreulattons
by necessity; the brutes by in-
stinct.” So said Cicero a long
time ago, but his words are
strangely uptodate,
HUGH BEATON, M. D.
Q. Do rattlesnakes bring forth their young
alive? How many are hatched at one time?
A Fariy in the fell femnle rattlesnakes brine forth
from xlx to nine younw nbout five inchen lons. ’he »««»
hnvin« been retnined in her body until hntehed
shouM repeal 'he wartime Espionage Act
and restore to citizenship all wartime
politieal prisoners. It' should block the
red-baiting Hamilton Fish program* and
halt .all other pat rioteering and snooping
progranis that alm at curbing free thought •
and, fr** conheience In America.
The Grundys have been too long with „
MS.
»-VX X = " j
brothers? . ! --------------—
A. Children with one parent in common are half- 1
sisters and brothers. '
"anatlonal party headquarters."
Hard, the fadlo broadcanter.
as we cheer and handclap for
Norman Thomas and then go to
the polls and vote for what we
don't want.
Roosevelt is a better . gamble
than Hoover,.but neither is elear
on the chief things that Interest
585
i2sha?‛
ordinary anese aggression - in the sam
the stupid light that we do. Ruskia looks t
until he had paid the government
back all he had borrowed from
the man he had made the not to.
Let the government handle the
situation directly just as they do
the. postoffice situation. This
would do away with a lot of law -
rated in Washington.
The Democrats of Texas
“Why shouldn’t we be EE
open-minded on the ques-
tion of recognizing Rus- EE
sia?” EE
— - By M. K. TR ACY ===== H
“AT the present moment, I am ■
A open minded on the que*- ■
tion of the recognition of Rus-
sia,” writes Governor Roosevelt I
to Robert B. Nixon of Wayne. ■
Pa. ■
The question Is one that should ■
not he .decided out of hand. ■
If a satisfactory agreement can ■
be made regarding several points •
at issue, there is no reason why I
this government should refuse to I
day that they ever elected Sterling
governor. What is the effect of
present conditions? Let the rend-
er stop and think. Garner is mak-
ing a plea for the Democratic tick-
et' In some Northern state, claim-
ing the South is solid, and some
slick dock says:
"Mr. Garner, your party claims
the South to be solid and the
Democratic governor of Texas is
boosting the Republican Party
ticket,."
What would" Garner's answer
be? What would yours be? What
"would the Democrats in Garner’s
audience do? They would hang
their heads in shame.
Mr. Sterling‘understook to elect
himself for a second .term, but
failed. He failed in the first pri-
mary, he failed in the run-off, he
failed in the state committee, he
failed in the district court, he
failed In the supreme court. still
not satisfied, he is trying to elect
a Republican governor for Texas.
In this he will fail again.
I predict we will have the great-
est true Democratic vote ever east
in Texas for all nominees from
president to constable.
J. N. HVDSDN,
Eastland, Texas.
recogntze_Russia. •
The Hoover administration ha*
simply been guided by blind prej-
udice. .
Ever since the United States
became a nation, it has proceeded
on the theory that other people
had a right to set up any form of
government that suited them, and
that when such form of govern-
ment acquired sufficient strength
to be regarded as responsible,. It
should be recognized.
The Hoover administration has
not pursued that course toward
Russia. It has not been’ open
minded, even in a strained sense
of ahe word.
ns, allenated our be st customers and lost’
tor us one-hair of our wales abroad.
The aetivitten of <h* busy-body "Mrs.
Grundy" have brought u* ho«Gy and
erime-hreeding prohibition, custom* and
pontal ci nor whip of book* and periodical*,
persecutions for nonconformfs' vieww. Pe-
ernse of her puritanical edicts we are now
mid by li* what wn may drink and read
- -
Tlie new Congress, of course, should
vote to modify the Volstead Act hi favor
ul beci and wine and repeal Hit 18th
Amendment in tiivot of temperance. II
alno should pass th* Cutting bill to make
the Postmaster General wubmit his rulings,
now obsolete, to juries, just a* the 1930
, cratIc lenders were plainly" nick over the
first campaign speech of the 1928 nom-
tnec. •
In Europe, a new naval accord among
world powers appeared likely* as France
decided to offer definite and sizeable re-
ductions rtf bind and sea strength in th
interest of general disarmaments. It
meant renewed life for the world arms
conference at Geneva.
Serious riots were broken -up by Lon-
■ don police as an army of British "hhger
strikers” reached Hyde Park. London
hoodlums were credited with starting the
disturbances. '
Texan to th* "pay a* you go” basis.
Two years azo the University, regents
were givenauthority to Invest in obliga-
tions-of tli* l niversity, to provide money
for a building fund. At the same time
scotehing the
eoneerning the
most wives get
There is little bop» of equity where
rebellion reigns dlr Shilip Mdney.
■till*, raying he had been given the mis-
information by Ray Benjamin, of the
Repuhlican National Committee headguar-
tars in Chicago,
At the time the lie wawlaunched, said ,
Wood, the Digest bud not received a alngle
letter asking that a vote be changed. .
they must run the gamut of the courts,
and meet the approval of men detached
in every way from popular sentiment.
Ho the federal anti Injunction act,
sueceskful in congress after many years,
'J*a» started ou . tli.- torttpt* path thru
the courts D wits invoed in * labor
dispute.bt the District of Colimbla recent-
ly and upheld. /
/ It is kratirying to have At survive ft*
first test suecesnfully nnd lo emerge with-
out having He purposes inti t p ted away,
a* too often happens in th* courts.
A Thought for Today
PUT THOU, son of iiian, hear what I
1 say unto thee be not thou rebellfous
' like that rebelllous houne; open thy
mouth, and eat that I give you Ezekiel
tH.
William Raymond Ryals was sentenced
to 99 years in the penitentiary for the
murder Sept. 25 of A. G. MacGuerty.
Tin' slayer of the newspaper circulation
auditor pfarguttywhen his’trial slatted.
A Jury in 48th District Court heard
attorneys argue the case of Mrs. Emma
'Norwood, asking $100,000 Insurance on
the life eof her husband who has been
missing Bince 1921. -Whethef Norwood is
actually dead and whether the Texas
law, which says a person missing seyen
years is “legally dead,” applies to the
case, were the principal points.
More than 5000 Enstern Star dele-
gates were in Fort Worth for the Golden
ibilee of the Grand Chapter of Texas.
Mrs. Riva Burnett of Miami was elected
worthy grand matron and Amarillo clfosen
for the 1933 convention.
Arson charges were filed against a 22-
year-old Fort Worth salesman following a
blast which wrecked a two-story residence
at 2242 Mistletoe Avenue and shattered
windows a block away. The matt charged
was thrown from a ■ second-story window.
Wintry weather moved into. Fort.
Worth on the wings of a norther and sent
the mercury down 2 7 degrees in 12 hours.
had a just claim. Roosevelt tion as a result of such assump
shows good judgment when he tion. I
Haya or Indicate* that the bonus it would be just as logical for
1 . I us to withdraw recognition o
w! be paid in the-future all the France or Enzland. assuming tha
political parties in rhe V: S. can’t they are not gotnE to pay the wa
seep the boys from getting their debts. I
bonus in 1 945, but because this • . I
bonus is for service during 1917 o N . i All
and 1918 It was due and payable ur IV atural _Ally I
in my judgment if the I nited iwhen the boys hft the service in RUSSIA’S form of governmuen
1918 and If ana es soldier had n has no hearing on the situa
been paid $509 in cash tn 1918 -tion, except as it precludes trad]
Its net result was to bring on drowst- I Gossip
MaN and fail to convince, largely for the
rearin. that its chief emphasis X, as no pietured an -meddlers and vulgarinns and'
what, has ......me " Hoovor ffxntfi te ‘ ko wipinz bunytodts
tarirn. , . . W< shonld. What's more, we do. For
his attempt o dress up A demon hav ......n given Keveral bad reputa-
strated fatlure the most conspiepou" of tona .which are founded wholly upon
his adminintration slid present It a- a , ral , hood. This gossiping charge is one
of them,
last year m
was not B
're-election. 'Hie sharpness of his personal
ridicule of Gov, Roosevelt increased with
every publie appearance.
Gov. Roosevelt ended: his fsecond- long .
campaign tour at Baltjmore with a bitter
attack on the Republican ptahjbition
"straddle plank." He planned a swing
into NewEngland,, after deciding to wind
up his campaign with a whirlwind finish-
at New York. - »
Al Smith's speech reviving 'the re-
ligious issue transformed New Jersey Into
fighting and debatable ground. Demo-
postman. A letter from -
Westville, 'Ohio. The
woman who wrote It Is
ngitated and angry, and
will she may be, I
share her rage and
herewith hammer the
typewriter in defense of
my maligned sex.
She sends a cartoon
in which a male voter
is beset on each side by
an ugly old woman, one
of whom is Iabeled
Roosevelt-Garner-Bullington Club was the
fourth faction.
Bullington spent most of the week
campaigning In West Texas. Ferguson
delivered his key speech of the week at
Waco and came to Fort Worth yesterday.
A Good Law Upheld •
TTNFONRTUNATELY laws are not laws
U when the representatives nt th*' peopte
---- policy toward Russia is incalcul
xou on able. It has deprived our manu
editorial, facturers of a great and growini
in The market, has kept thousands ol
You can pl in answer to any answerable ques-
tion at fact by writine to Frederick M Kerbs,
Question Kditor, Fert Worth Prer Washinuton Bu-
reau, 1,133 New York Ave. Washington. D C. in:
elosine .7 cents In stamps for reply. Mtedical and
ideal advlee cannot be given
Dige -I toe so promptly
lant inute campaien ' II*
magazine - presidential
ITEXAS CHRISTIAN UNIVER-
[ 1 SITY is no longer a two-
| horse, or even a one-horse, ; "and
school. — i there
. . . me,. . . .enough work to
in fact, T< L has no horses al pay for Keeping
all—not even a mule. And can them. Besides,"
and tottering his way along the
"Concrete Trail.” In one hand was
a well-worn cane. His other, hand
was braced against the wall. tn an
effort to steady himself. For al-
most one block I watched him,
while people (his fellew-beings)
passed him by. Not a hand was
outstretched to aid th* Old Man
. . and I began to formulate, in
my mind, a "hard human-interest
story,"
Just when I thought I had the
story "in the bag," out of a door-
way stepped a man; he had spied .
the efforts of the one in distress.
This fellow had lived in My Town
but a short while. I was but
“slightly” acquainted with him.
But, when he took the Old Man
by one arm and assisted him, very
gently.- to a comfortable seat,
well, my "Hard Story” faded Into
Mr, and Mrs. Grundy
| TN1NS If rails of its fluty, the next
U Congreps will throw both Mr and Mrs
Orundy out ot the window, Thene precious
marplots iv' brog it in enougi *at
trouble, ridicule and poverty.
Cutting Aet limit* censorship
eustomw collectors. It should
I Do NOT deny that women enjoy talk-
1 in; about their neighbors. I do deny
I that they enjoy it any more than men do.
And it can hardly be true that political
gossip emanates from women, since we
are not yet in a position to invent such
• •- ■ mm ah th* whispering enm-
paignn, the ugly Inferences and the ma:
I iletoun lies have been first created and
then dhseminnted by men'.
benefleiarjes at special privilege" who
now unite in demanding his reelection.
The bolt from th* G.O.P. of such
western •Republicans as Cutting, Norris,
La Follette and Johnson is one of th*
Roonevelt campaign’s most reassuring
aspects,
Here are men without axes to grind
and who are among the country's chief
champlons of democracy with a small "d".
If a little leaven leaveneth the whole
lump their activity In the Roosevelt cause
may help assure a progressive administra-
tion In the event of hi* election.
1 New Liberty gets
Dolores Del Ki
Crea have the st
The Tivoli will
then switch to I
| dent. Ralph Gi
l
traction, I
The Isis and I
-10,4....."Witn • I
l er. with P’hflip 11
<•! I V Jorda ■ I
the Democratic primary.
He says: "I rejoice in the
glowing prospects of the election
of a Democratic president and
vice president of the United
States, nut the Democratic banner
mint not be tarnished with the
slime of the Democratic nominee
of Texas.”
" Mr. Sterling said it would
make the Democrats of the nation
hang their beads in shame for the
Democratic hosts of grand old
Texas to be led by the Democratic
nominee (Mrs. Ferguson ) when
Roosevelt and (lamer are inaugu-
It‛s Nearly Over
$1/1 I’ll THE ■ - epti....... .1 few aggte -
W sive and effective attacks having to
do with the bonus, Koonevelt’w past con-
neetionwith tnr> ten fins nae and Roone-
veil w ratrer tetle r reference to the
Sipreme Court,/ the one nnd a haif-hour
Hoover spi < cb »i Indianapolis Inst night
was merely* defensiye and monotonoun
and boresome.
32452,59
gA
HA
434-
-
(/- s
poll, A will-known brokerage houne in
New York had tent out -Io its branches
In ‛n acore of etties the atatement that
th* Digest had received mor* than 35,090
letters from persons who had voted for
Roosevelt, asking that their votes h*
ehanged to Hoover Th* same report was
broadcast nationally by a well-known radio
spenker.
A
VAY I conzratulate
IVL your splendid -
"Economy and Talk.”
Press of Oct. 22?
I, too. am wondering
'US. No vital difference exists be-
tween the two old parties. They
i are each branches of the name
economic tree. Either are useless
to any but political officeholders
and protected and strongly en-
trenched interests. Neither has
anything to offer for’our national
and international plight but palli-
atives and potty, superficial rem-
edies or evasive drivel intended
only to confuse or deceive..Rooae-
volt’s bunk farm relief dope is a
fair sample:
While we may not indorse some
of the Soclalists’ideas, I venture
to say that many of us who haye
always voted the Democratic tick-
etwill vote for Thomas to regts-
ter our protest against the meth-
pds that have brought us to bank-
ruptcy, beggarv and disgrace.
J. W. B.
work on the campus, have been Have you ever wondered about)
crowded out by the auto and the , it?
power lawn-mower; and juniors Well, just out of curiosity I
and seniors who have-been ob-called Ross Brothers, who buy
servant enough to notice the gap more mules than anybody around
in the scenery, are .told that the j these parts, and asked them
two animals have been sold to about it. And this is what they
Ross Brothers, mule dealers at i told me—
the Livestock Exchange on North- Sure, there’s still places in the
rHE only outcome for our gov-
1 ernment, as Inee it, is this:
our citizens out of work, and losj
.p us a natural ally in the Far East
" ‘ Russia comes nearer te agree
cut Inc with our point of view on dis
White armament than any other Euro
Isn’t Radio Wonderful!
rURSDAY night the Republican Na-.
I tional Committee dud into its Jaans'to
hurtle thru 10,000 miles of air the Hoover
speech of Theodore Roosevelt Jr.,, sta-
tioned at Manila. The idea, of course,
was to let American voters know that
young Governor Teddy, and not Governor
Franklin D., is T. K.’s eldest and his
spokesman.
But bow unlike th* thunder of Theo-
dore the First were these cheerful
thoughts from the other side of our
widest ocean:
“We have had within the memory of
those now living, or their father*, but
little real trials in the United States . , .
a* we have never known what other
peoples have suffered we feel that our
suffering has passed belief and could not
be worse . . . we are still Infinitely the
richest of th* nations. Our government
rest* on the firmest foundation . . ! we
have had no great Indusirial disorders.
There has been o government dole . . .
The United States is still American and is
going to stay art. That is the issue in the
campaign and we will fight it out on
those lines,”
A long way for such little thoughts to
travel!
and put his money in the bank or and commerce in accordance witi
Invested It where It would have ( sound inter national practice. I
drawn 5 per cent interest he The fact that American expord
would have had $1,000 today in- ers and importers have beer
stead of an argument about back trading with Russia for -the laid
pay in the form at a.bonus con- decade suggests that there is- ill
trovers '■ ause for-worry .ui that score
WALTER CAMINER. About all that stands in th]
j and, parttcula
' ries ! li* Li
' The club's lune
I nr of the food I
tarian repesenta
। dustry were in’]
| Jaci ll l|
B. the. Chamber of I
| ■ ongratnlated u
: ■ n I of I
h socfation. ot Cha
L; merce. |
"W Uh tl coi
I rroducine more fl
I eat, with adequa
oversupplies In I
I children in the I
I ery tor bread
l ' whether we III
1 tional planning I
Hott, in an ail
L graph, said 1051
L manufacturing fl
. products Fackik
Would Balanc
Demand. Cof
Th* coming s
economy is a na
Schools and Prisons
QTATEH, counties and cities planning to
• cut down thetr public school budgets
should first read an appeal sent out by
the National Education Association,
The N E. A. finds that it costs $300
a year to keep a man In prison. It costs
only $100 a year to keep a child in school.
Punishing shout half h million criminals
costs $1,500,000,000 annually. Educating
26,000,000 children costs len than $2,500,-
009,000 a year.
Evaluated at its lowest level, education
is our bekt crim* preventive. It is the
clmapest commodity on the market, cost-
ing every person of voting ace only 10
rents a day. Crime is, th* most costly
thing we have. Whereas schools educate,
prisons do not prevent or cure crime.
Cutting school budgets can lie th*
rankest extravagance.
/
1 * '/ 4. /
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.
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.
Sheldon, Seward R. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 23, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 29, 1932, newspaper, October 29, 1932; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1537968/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.