The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, November 4, 1932 Page: 4 of 30
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THE FORT WORTH PRESS
PAGE 4
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4,1!
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other
i
soft-
Wards Quality
unem-
0
Winter Clothes
$4.95
Formerly Priced $10
m
T- ■
Men's Bath and Lounging Robes
Boys’ “Big Chief" Coat . . .
533.28
tachment for there many years, sweetheart, fine, wire,
1
8
77
I
-
65c
49c
I •'
59
J
• hut marriage still seems to be the “
y
full lap seat.
Cotton
(
Hankets
4
25c
-
5%)
Women’s Outing
81x105
Rayon
Pajamas
Bedspreads
or Gowns
narcotics or
SWEATERS
among the-pillows. "tU
$100
89c
77c
39c
t
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i
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2 FOR S 1.50
3 FOR 1
8
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Park
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Wit
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[7
2-4121
Fort Worth, Taxa*
2600 Wait Seventh Street
___
f
alle
—BARGAIN ANNEX
' V - ’■ •* . . A • 097 ! 224
6
Good Weight
Men’s Pull Over
Still Man’s World, Veteran
Woman PlaiHvright Asserts
Bath or lounge robes, your choice, made of blanket
flannel or striped twill. You will marvel at these
unusual values. Buy the Man’s Xmas gift now.
Walter Chrysler Gambles $9,000,000
On Faith in Country and in His Aides
quite common and provides the
meat for delicious "snapper soup."
con-
ber
grop-
who
WOMAN AT HEAD
OF ELECTRICAL
CABLE COMPANY
Turtle enemy
OF FISH LIFE,
EXPERTS SHOW
Medium Weight
Cotton Rib
UNIONSUITS
Depression Gives Man
His Biggest Chance, •
Financier Says
1
-.I
Expands Plant Despite
Heavy Loss in First
Nine Months
Standard Size
In Three
Sil ndes
intelligent, too—they
thresh it out
has
> on
and
I t ’ s
And
Two
I
UTILITY OR DISH
CABINETS
Chrysler's snapping eyes
ened. ■
“But those 10,000,000
Rayon is being made from bam-
boo in India.
DIARY KEPT FOR 50 YEARS
MONMOUTH, Ore.—J. L Van-
Loan, who recently celebrated his
67th birthday, has kept a diary
every day, for 50 yers.
Men’s
Grain Suede
Windbreakers
aleeves
ankles;
made
Heavyweight
Cotton Rib
UNIONSUITS
. Now’s the Time and Ward's Is the Place
For Your
Limit
Two
Per
4 ustomer
Brand New
Men's All Wool
Sports Coat
Three Minute
Relief From
: Ward's Famous "Big Chief
Sheeplined Coat .
2 '
EX
x
E
Deany LaZan Began Her
Career As Dancer
On Stage
You will find your choice of most any
pattern or collar that you might select.
Full measurement; 81x105". It is hard
to describe these unusual values. Come
and see them . . . You'll, buy more
than one.
Su
w
Heavy wo
well made
for boys,
tailored
out for I
play ...
A handy accessory for your kitchen, finished in
white or beige lacquer. Art designs and .mirror on
door. Five shelves.
Your Headache
When you have one of those I
violent, nerve-racking headaches, I
from inorganic causes, you can 1
get soothing relief in three min- 1
utes with "B-C.,” a reliable, pleas-
ant-to-take temedy. “B. C.” is pre- ;
pared by a registered pharmacist, i
compounded on a different prin- i
ciple from most relief-giving agen- j
cleg in that it contains several In '
Eredients, so blended and proper- I
tinned as to accomplish in a few
| . >
-
2
E
4
so new, ho painfully young.
The world is so old,and
the New Freedom for women is
AV
f?
4
8433
mH
U- II ’ll 1
writing - steadily, forgipg day by
day the next sparkling Crothers
comedy. his moved Into town, se-
to devote it to appeasing
women’s vanities.”
So she turned to cables,
tinuing, however, to "make
averages imagination. It's a time to work,
and think, to tighten our belts the '
- way the Indians did in famine, to I
^Efficient But N6t Expensive"
I
caustic observation upon life and I
love, it's this creed of women I
“playing the game according to |
the old rules, "she has Selena Roy-;
al enunciate In the character, of
serie’
fall in the wet season
115 inches.
i
ting up in bed. her cloun-cropned •
head propped against a peach sat-
wise, gracious, intelli-
Th re's the husband’s
minutes what we believe no one
drug formula can do in so short a i
time. “B. C.,” should also be used |
I
1
I
cks SECOND FLOOR
gracious, I
meet and :
Many patterns in plaid of many colors. Come in to-
B
Moccasii
"strap TH
sition <
middle
water
ing. Al
for boy
do
523
Men's Flannel
SHIRTS
48c
Cotton flannel sacking Full
cut, reinforced, two roomy
button - through pockets,
lined collar and cuffs, 14 %
10 17'
Men's Striped
Quality
Work Pants
9 •
$1 =
. Each
All Wool
Fancy
Ntl| <h
They're well
made, ■ strong-
ly sewn and
reinf o r c e d.
Snug • fitting
cuffs and bot-
toms. In sizes
36 to 44.
the rules of the- game.” She’s
talking about “this everlasting
man and woman business, this
age old sex triangle situation."
’it's not as a moralist, but as
I
I woman of middle, .........
been watching the 'the fine.
found in Pennsylvania streams । '
are not edible, the "snapper" is ’ I
thtep, it
rib ruffs
best thing we have It's chaotic, i BRITISH CAST BALLOrS
dangerous, abused, difficult; it LONDON, Nov. 4.—Virtually '
----brings the most supreme happi- complete returns from the munic- I
ness. themst.desperate.uniptlipal elections held thru England
and Wales Wednesday showed the
following results today; Conserva-
8 '
ft
for the relief of muscular aches 1
- and pains, common colds and neu-
lecte1 a cast, directed it. staged | ralgia; for reducing fever and
the play, planned the sets, even quieting a distressed nervous sys.
rummaged second-hand shops for tern without opiates. narcotics or
authentic furnishings as is her -such habit forming drugs. Get "B ,
custom, she’s glad to lie back’ - -
drive thru for the good times we
I know are ahead. Itss silly to
a dramatist,
self-contained
age who's I
an unmarried, cool.
Uses Camouflage in Making
Food Catches; Has
Real ‘Speed’
By United Press,
HARRISBURG, Pa., Nov. 4.
Camouflage, the art of deception I
developed by man to high degree |
in the World War, but known to 1
nature long before that, aids the
snapping turtle in its war on
Pennsylvania fish life.
The State Fish Commission de- '
scribed the manner . In which the I
turtle acquires his food in ranking f
him with the watersnake as the I
two greatest natural enemies fish i
life must avoid.
The turtle lies on the bed of the
stream while awaiting his prey, -
He resembles a moss-covered rock ,
-N
- z
• V 4
- mx.1,2038
MONTGOMERY Ward & Co.
West Seventh Street Second Floor— Rear Hours: 8:30 to 6; Sat. 9 P. M.
: n
a
Ea.
Fine All
Wool
Worsted
Its du rabls
ribbed stitch
assures long
I wear. F u I1 y
I rein force d
against strain.
J Sizes 36 to 46.
Heavy
In Weight
Special!
Good, sturdy
paots, made of
fine quality
m atari als.
They're prac-
tically snag-
proof. Sizes
30 to 4 4 waist. ’
nc
r 2
that Miss Crothers concedes a
bit reluctantly:
' "It s still a man's world. He
made all the rules. When wom-
en juggle them and go in for
this so-called freedom they still
must lie and cheat, and deceive.
They can't yet be frank an4 open
and impersonally free as men.
It's All Bepn Said.
"“All this — my God. It’s all been
. said a thousand times before—
C." in 10c, and 25c packages,
meF8+wherever drugs arty sold.—Adv.—f 1
as he watches warily for fish.
-h---
Heavy Blue
Chambray
29c
or good quality blue cham-
bray with tripte stitched
seams and reinforced at
points of strain. Coat style.
All sizes for men.
doubt a country like this. We're
in a deluge, But we've got men
left —Chrysler Corporation has
men, tireless, working, driving,
planning,, thinking men. We can
buy now at prices we could never
buy before. We can build better
and .sell lower. It’s the biggest
chance we ever had. We’re making
the most of it.”
Eyes Soften
By OTIS PEABODY SWIFT
United Prose Correspondent e
NEW YORK, Nov. 4.—Walter
P. Chrysler has bet $9,000,000 on
the economic future of America,
altho he admits he doesn't know
when the depression is going to
end.
The sum mentiohed is that ex-
pended in dies,, tools, jigs, fix-
tures and new machinery to pro-
duce the new Plymouth car an-
nounced Wednesday.
With the automotive industry
at its low of years, with his own
company operating at a loss for
the first nine months of the year,
he made the $9,000,000 invest-
ment, confident the money would
return in sales in 1 933.
He told the story as he Hat be-
fore a stained glass window in his
office on the 56th fioor of the
Chrysler Building.
. The Biggest Chance ,,
"It's a time of opportunity! he
said, ‘leaning tense and eager
across his desk. "It’s the btegest
chance a man ever had, It's a
time to get out and do things—
and keen doing them. And that
doesn't mean the big fellow alone
it means everyone. the worker,
the office man. everyone—wheth-
er he's got a job or not. If lie'll
get out and dig for chances, find
them, use them, he has the chance
of his life today!"
It was no pep talk, no fight
tall of big business. Shy, depre-
cating. Walter Chrysler wanted to
make that clear. He nad come up
from the ranks himself; he knew
what people were up against to-
day. He himself; against the beat-
ing pressure of depression years,
had raised his company’s share of
the automotive business of the na-
tion from 8 per cent in 1929 to
17 per cent in 1 932. yet he knew I
other men had suffered gravely.
But he had a faith, and he wanted
to express it. -
'"It’s a time.for courage!” he
passIng scene with clinical de- sent wife:
In a Hedium
4 ream Color
Ontv
ployed. It’s hard. But we can
say this: Have confidence in your-
self. Keep thinking and planning
and hunting. Don't take the line
of least resistance. Keep your en- -
thuiasm and your faith. Find a
chance in some new business if
not in your own. Find some new
product. New line.
’ "We’ll spend four million this
year on research and- engineering
alone, planning for 1934 and
1935. There hasn't been a de- 1
pression as bad as this before, but 1
there have been other depressions. '
No one is making what they made 1
before, or will make again. We I
lost $5,346,000 this quarter, be-
cause we’re paying as we go, not ।
fooling ourselves. Yet we paid the 1
dividend because we knew that I
55,000'stockholders could use that '
25 cenfs they got for each share. I
That’s another evidence of our i
faith in the future. i
“Every man's got to do the
same kind of thing—do the best i
he can. Common-sense tells us I
that this country is coming thru. I
But courage tells us, whether we ’
have a job or not, that the big i
chances are here today, bigger ।
than beforehand we’ve got to
work and sweat to find them. I’m I
not a prophet, I don’t pretend to i
say when bad times will end. They ।
may be over right now.” i
cal pen in the throes of play cre-
ating. In her latest light, but
A coat to stand the stormiest weather. Full pelt heepskin lined with
sheepskin beaverized collar. Wool knit wrists inside cuff to k p the cold
from your arms. Extra long length (a feature not i und in । cap coats)
36 inches. Moleskin outside that is guarantet i w . r-pi o1 and wind-
proof. A coat that will give you years and years of sati factory ervice.
All sizes for men and younig men.
■r United Presa.
CLEVELAND, Nov. 4. — From
stage dancing, to costume design-
ing, to electrical engineering is
the devious route-traveled by Miss
Deany La Zan who might also
boast of being an expert cook and
an excellent golfer. .
She now is sales engineer of the
.Simplex Wire and table Co.,
Cleveland branch, and the city's
only woman member of the Amer-
ican Institute of Electrical Engi-
neers. Miss La Zan designs cables,
figuring current loads, stress and
insulation.
—After graduation from the Uni-
versity of Southern California,
Miss La Zan, who since childhood
had studied dancing, joined the
Denisshawn dancing company. •’
“From dancing, I turned to co-
turns designing,” she said. "And
while I liked the artistic side of
that work I soon began to feel
that it was a waste of one's life
“You Can’t Monkey With Rules of Game in Age-Old
Sex Triangle Situation,” Dramatist Says .
NEW YORK, Nov. 1 Rachel after” and await the praise that .
IN Crothers.' 'the Trnmre.' mel- is unfailingly hers.
low and very wise playwright- : Rachel Crothers is a hardy per-l
ing veteran of Times Square, still ennial on the street of white I
believes, after 26 years of writ- , lights, a subtly detached person
Ine. that “you can't monkey with ! who wields a dangerously satirl-
al,
13*68/
13
with a
independents, 50 gains and 51
losses.
At Cln, Cnal Zone; the rain- said, "A time for enthusiasm and
9
day and select one of these attractive blankets,
remember, there is a limit on this unusual sale,
to the customer.
When an unsuspecting fish swims i
his way, his head darts from the I
shell with almost unbelievable |
speed and grabs the fish. .
So adep is the turtle in this
method of catching fish, accord-
ing to the fish commission report. ;
that one reptile, raptured near
Wilkes-Barre, showed an average
consumption of three to five
pounds of fish daily.
While some species of turtle i
"Amoskeag"
Flannelette
Pajamas
P 98c
in pillow. Peach, satin coverlet, I
negligee, nightrobe and mules
complet'd the picture. II was 12
hours after the curtainfell on her
1932 Broadway offering. News-
papers with glowing lines by the
critics and a foot high stack of
congratulatory telegrams lay scat-
tered about.
"The Idea In 'When Ladies
Meet.' is new as paint, altho- some
nt the criics didn't see it,” she
smiled a bit wanly. When this
competent, hard working woman
has spent five months. In her
Berkshire foothills farmhouse,
fives. 68 gains and 56 losses; La- '
bor, 109 gains and 104 losses;
Liberals, 20' gains and 36 losses; >
ing. The modern woman
Twenty-six plays on Broadway
in as many years. Rochel Croth-
era is happy and satisfied ■— for
the season. Hut alceady she ques-
Hons "What next" Why another
play, of course. I'm starting it
tomorrow. Yes, it’ll be. about the
perpetual man and Woman busi-
ness— sex - can you get away from
it?”
th ewe ate.
war m, full
cut lulls with
long sleevew
and ankle
l r • g t h. In
plain w h I to
only;
Many pretty patterns in outing flannel
, * in your choice of pajamas or gowns.
You will find all sizes in this special
lot. Come tomorrow and take your
choice of these unusual values.
Our long experience . . .
our thoroughly modern
equipment . . . our re-
liability ... our large
scale of operation make
our moving, storage and
shipping service 24
of high standard --Chumk
a n d reasonable a“8
In price. Phone/%.e
Fl! / (A
ffeavy weight
I leered Outinz
This national-
ly advertised
flannel-
ette stands for
’ ' Q I A L-
ITY! Coat
style, full cut.
Sizes A. B. C.
D.
would lead her own life as a man
does has but cracked the shell.
"She has miles to go before
she's learned to toss the whole
thing off as lightly as man does."
Miss Crothers, called America’s
wittiest dialogue writer, was sit-
A low price
for a suit as
Well made as
«,» I
Montgomery Ward & Co.
own clothes. Mies La Zan entered
the engineering profession 12
years ago in Boston with the or-
ganization with which she still is
associated. .
"Cooking is my real vocation,’'
she said. “I learned it—well long
go. In my home in Los Angeles
it‘was my good luck that we had
an excellent Chinese cook and that
I had a natural curiosity about the
preparation of all kinds of food.”
Her chief relaxation is golf.
It Costs No More to Have the Best '
3-3351 A
--as0
1449
Grain suede teather wind-
breakers in reindeer brown.
Leather collar and cuffs.
Knit bottom, Sateen lined.
"HsmepmE*m29
BsHsEs ' 3 vbeg
525589825128009
17179
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_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________;
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Sheldon, Seward R. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, November 4, 1932, newspaper, November 4, 1932; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1537973/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.