The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 105, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 1, 1928 Page: 4 of 14
fourteen 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:
g
- ■
■ PAGE 4—THE FORT WORTH PRESS—FEBRUARY 1, 1928
«
m2
♦
The Fort Worth
What Every Woman Knows
SS
RACY
ent is
W
i as.
TELEPHONE EXCHANGE DIAL 2-515
1,
i
SCfifXPV-i
0
I
Jill
&
f
\
‘1]1
sylvan representatives, Kent
i.
N
0
1
t
Ranging from way back in the foggy past up to the
0
S'
even
to the
people witl a doctrine
ment officials and otlr federal
social stability and
1 387 A. D. his own army was
for-
which Js so vital to the eco-
foreign
composed of Germans almost
t o $700,000,000, it has
slow
through every organ
When Chinatown Celebrates
—•
The dragon
is
a gorgequs
i Ford of-pre-war vintage.
+
chain
tiary and
crowded with
longue, of gold paper and green
Kind Words Can Never Die
•i
«
“ pcrs. numbering
26- in all,
tent and flesh out of another.
«
be
exerxane..
that’
be applied to everyone
I
ear
celebration in Chinatown that
4 " Her Co
2,25
%
i ■
nseat the Hon. James
Boss Vare, elected to
not have any business
turned out of the peni-
ion’s
ulse
• fell, and prices rose: poverty,
the great enemy of civiliaztion.
is out tv
M. Beck
the Sen
thrown
A Woman’s
Point of View
and doomed to be
1 gave Beck his old
House last fall after
kyered for him even
*t of writing a book
aks right to the Sen-
being re-elected,
elected Governor
jobholders raised me
squeezing it out of
when the mines of. Spain and
Sicily failed she neared bank-
ruptcy: and as early as 220
Full leased wire of the United Press Assoc
tion, Scripps-Howard News Alliance,' and f
Newspaper Enterprise Association service.
speclal,
-annot
So, their representatives "at Havana should be very happy
over the assurance that, after having fixed the govern-
Entered as second-class mail matter, t
3, 1921, at the postoffice at Fort Wort
unto the p
to prove V
. dence upon imported food and
foreign trade; the imperialistic
of it by
e liquor
I dealers
eign
fields;
t£
577
When I was
the peniten-
gangs wre
ook upon. ,
And as it weaves, "the rhyth-
mic drum beats of a far-away
Orient keep time to its steps
coAn
giv
sylvA
here ’
Dei
iber
reg-
kail
tee
WIN
Ml
PO
in Texas, 45 cents per month; >1.25 for
months; 25 for one year.
38
I CAN'T
IMAGINE WHAT
New Years,
cleaned.
There are
toms—and
KNOW FORT WORTH
Calloway, begins at Cherokee
one block south of Crowley, ex-
tends west byond the city lim-
its.
repudiated the national debt.
Marcus' Aurelius sold his erown
Hend
Big
JOHN H. SORRELL8,
Editor
3
2
Do You Know
- Fort Worth
Has—
----THE STORY OF CIVILIZATION
>. Why Rome Fell
'--------BY DR. WILL DURANT------
4
government.” . ‘ . .
Sure! Look at Hawaii, the Philippines, Porto Rico
tunate, or rich and poor; the
exploitation of agrtulture by ■
- Privileges
“ranted An
not have much difficulty in bringing bout, some day, a
coalition against the United States which has become a
far bigger menace to British interests abroad than Ger-
many ever was ...”
The author says he wrote "The Looting of Nicaragua”
of getting out.
a------------:---------------------------------------------------
! A Warning to Machine Politicians
,.............. . ....... , . ...... . -
AILS THIS.
YOUNGSTER!! NOTHING
SEEMS TO PLEASE
HIM!
I
Meanwhile the dragon weaves
thru the S-shaped Doyer street
and trails along Mott and Pell.
And’Manhattan has brought to
ib for a few days a touch of
the far-away and the bizarre.
(Copyright, 1028, by NEA Bervtee, In.)
feat by some stronger incor-
porated beast; the loss of mar-
"When I tell -the railroad
men,, farmers, miners and fac-
Americans should continue to live like cats and dogs for
\ -i . ‛ a fw financiers who, keeping the public in
" ignorance of what is really going on, are driving things
L . *etting the precedent establish
• . । ment of a foreign people, U. S. forces are in the habit
Coks.g
in danger of becoming a
Smithsonian exhibit —
b%
q
B
tained there by American bayonets.- He shows us a tiny
nation held—helpless—while American fortune-hunters, .
■
E ■
paralysis
of the i
Nation
Again
Natio
clined
week e
2.355.2
Petrolev
Wednes
Texas
The ave
Feta -
k.ahona
Kansas
Panha ndle
North Te
West Cen
West Tei
Fast Cen
Southwest
North Io
Arkansas
Coastal 1
Coasta! I
Fastern
Wyoming
Montane
California
Total
9
become unjust. If the govern-
ment were not willing fr var-
"euskinda of. propaganda to be
spread with stickers and stamns.
ed threads of order into that i when Emperor Valena tried to
security ' halt them at Adrianople in
s a dapon head of feroctous.
KAO$-s
.42
-}sg‛n
Lt29K 0
; and Santo Domingo. As' a stabilizer of other people’s
government your Uncle Sam is the real thing. Of course,
the people to be stabilized must not "be too powerful.
None of the Pan-American peoples are too powerful.
X
NW makes you
GLAD you’re
nd of a fight which may ,
loss Bill Vare of Penn-
L his second bad licking
Ys season.
Ag the 3:5 other Tenn-
is What gets us into so- mary
f the rebel General Sandino can defy the United
States as he is doing, Nogales suggests, what would
happen if all Latin-America with its 80,000,000 people
joined hands to oppose Washington’s "imperialistic”
hold?
He repeats that there is no such thing as a small
enemy, ."That insignificant groups of isles called Great
Britain, for instance,” he observes, “has succeeded in
destroying, one after another, the Napoleonic, German,
Austrian, Russian, Turkish and Chinese empires by means
IK
statesmanship.
All that they are sure of just
now is that tiey do not want
Hoover. * V
people, hungry for fertile soil,
and glad to husband it; the
rise of a stata-financed by the
ties as more
ue is fought over successtlly,
or dropped, but the’ party re-
mains. Then comes the "boss.
colored people ,
- in Nature we echo the poet; in the world we echo the
thinker.—Ouida.
Navy Program
•navy program grows ap-
ing it
Eng vit tu - •
m; -.....11 . : 15-
and ll 1.' lb
Secretary Kellogg with his withering fire. He
charges that the will of three-fourths of the people of
Nicaragua is being nuflifiedan Washington whiePresi-
dent Djaz, who went from T $30-a-week clerkship in a ;
mine to the presidency at one step, had to be main-
Slates must be
kets, industries, • and wealth:
the dcay of cities . and the
arts; the advent of a vigorous
and primitive people, hungry ♦
for fertile soil, and glad to
TN the beginning a game is
- usually simple, its object’ fs
to amuse, and those who start
it care little about the frills.
Later on suggestions and appli-,
ances are added, a technique
5
owners of the land; the-growth
of wealth and the inevitable
differentiation of strong and
weak, of fortunate and unfor-
necessity for controlling
_ to none.
Did the people E what I
meant? You bet, thv did!
"The gang raised I; 5, 000 ’to
is developed and the game be-
comes so scientific that the ob-
-ject is lost sight of. Bridge-,
whist, cribbage, chess and,box- MEMBER
industry, and of industry by
commerce, and of commerce by 1
finance; the engrossment . of
rHE scrpps-Howard newspa- • ttonalt: but are devoted to the
L noru momharing «« in .11 1 tasks of serving the. public wih
a truthful news service and
Harding into the White House.
And we have visions of poker,
games.oil leases, and a domi-
nafing third house to pilfer-the
public treasury as the driving
white ntne billion dollars of cor-
porate wealth goes untaxed,
they know what I man, be-
tory workers there that the
Pennsylvania tax system hits-
widows worst of all—especilly
widows forced out to make their •
Is our Idea that'marriage will .
bring us happiness. In spite of
the fact that all. preceding ex-
amples have shown us that it is,
in truth, a continual struggle
and a perpetual readjustment,
we will rush to the altar be-
lieving that the mere act of
getting married will be a pan-
acea for all our woes.
h u ngry .at
breakfast time C
Louisk
100 N
“ hr
A new-
opened
blowing
C6.X M
15 10-4
The,
barrels
today.
The
gusher
T IS during the New
That. more than anything else.
— was ths
Mississi
ft bling!
Protesting, "Marine rule in .
[ Nicaragua" is different from,,
boosting the Red Cross, yet if
one is tolerated, why not the I
| other?
We are hopeless opportunists :
• ashen it conies tn granting prty-
"‘ileges or .imposing restrictions.
man atihome and they didn't
like that.
"I made 130 speeches and
spoke wherever I could get a
front porch, a church social or
an abandoned hotel barroom.”
Kent predicts that Democracy
will soon recover itself in Penn-
sylvania. -___________________
employes, but the workers cane -
to my meetings at night and*
employes except the official
wted for Kent. \
"Ih 1924. during the, Repub
lian landslide, they counted -me
out in districts that were posi-
lively mine. This time I served
notice that they hadn't, betterI
try it again, paid $200 "for
. watchers and won by' 1500 votes.1
I've got the great independent
district of Pennsylvania, which
orequaandexact}aticetoall_pzoducts,and-detendedhysthe andEineriei h aon PPitot Pre
Department. If we do not call a halt, he insists,’there is
bound to be a. crash. Anti-American feeling, he says, is
mounting fast, not only in Latin-America but thruout
' the world.
“There is no such thing as a' small enemy,” Nogales
writes. “Nicaragua is only a dwarf compared with the
United -States, but even a flea-bite in an elephant ear is ‘
yards as -Admiral Magruder sug-
gests, the government will have I
to establish some.mnew ones
The latest calculation indi-.
eaten that if the program is ,
launched, as Secretary Wilbur j
r- desires At, wttt Inyolye a total' f
16. is written in the book of
• something-ot-other. Perha— the
- merchants have laid aside their
-superstitions, but custom and
tradition must be observed. Be-
sides it does bring success, since
the festival lures many tour-
ists and tourists have more dol-
lar bills which are snipped off
by-the chop suey merchants and
i the dealers in antiques.
- - AS a°mattr of.exact justice,
A one, individual or institu-
| lion has just as much right tn
etiek stamps dn an envelope as
L-, ynqther. ‛
L, Once this, method of free ad-
ertising has been opened up, it
i too late to draw lines.
It - Constitutional rights and civil
"herties fall flat if we attempt
- • make fish out of one move-
, I
cause they’ve seen it.work. My
opponent had referred everx: .1 Some and
body who wanted anything inn
Washington to the county chair-
outset parties are—borm—nt—ts-—r---------------------------%—
X. 'S’ # to live,"
which cannot
City delivery, 10 cents a week. B;
OF THE AUDIT BUREAU ^)F CIRCULATIONS
full turn: at first the advent "
of a . vigorous and primitive
crept like
tentiary and out of those chain
gangs 1700 men and the only
. mistake I made was thst I
didn't -turn out the whole
darned business.
husband it. Is this the cycle
of-tistors? Her certainly is J
the rpad by whihRome fell;
Jet, oilier nation's profit by it. I
the dragon stalks the streets.
Fromr the business house long
strings of good American dollar
musAuwmmhe is
>«» M the dragon
o fremMsto 1o
' ! J* Mhddhadition. d. - |>
qrdusdd oldest b > •1
day Mi most bo r. .|
■ Mn nae Iow
Im- lndi I • E । -1 ■
MM d E oranu‛
« ’ I • 11,1 1,
m m
mit would seem.
colored dragon weaves Inthe
very shadow of elevated tracks
a'hd of severe mnicipabuild-
ings with cold Greek faces.’ .
beautiful thing to
O
Nh
the leader of this unarmed and
ill-clad host that drew the
nomie life. Trade languished^
ihvestment ceased, employment as completely as thst of the
" ‘ . invaders; he was ignomtnious-
NO SET STYLE
I "Oh. George! Will you al-
F" wavs love me like this?"
, "Rather not. darling. I'll
— show you another hold tomor-
row.—Everybody's.
A LONG the street the ilchee-
H nut peddlers are out with
their carts . . . and the deal-
era in candled orange peel and
the dealers in coconut dain-
ties. All Chinatown is out on
its fire escapes. All Chinatown
is in the streets. During the
New Years all guns are tossed
in the corner. All tong diffi-
culties are forgotten. Enemies
can meet and exchange scowls,
but they cannot exchange shots.
Men who have been hiding in
dark hide-aways for many a
month come suddenly forth and
are the sky and smell the air—-
if any.
And Chinatown demands that
all debts be cleared during the
jewels to pay his troops; but
when jewels were valued more -
than troops, the soldiers took I
matters into their own hands; 1
law relapsed into force. judg- ।
ment into violence; and no
later emperor was strong
enough to reweave the loosen- |
American money well. And his
inward operations, whatever
they may be, are equipped with
clippers that snip off each dol-
lar bill clean and send them
fluttering into his greedy maw.
It’s quite as strange to see a
drago witIa taste for dollar
bls as it is to see a dragon at
-all in the shadow of an elevat-
ed train, _______________________
_ Those who feed the dragon
well will continue to, prosper.
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY: For a living dog is better
i h than a dead lion.—Eccl. 9:4.
, A *TE gM•MVI AR
own living scrubbing floors, dragon, witu a hend.as large as
dressmakng or Th factories — t Ford of- pre-war vintage. —
and restrictions
We have the ridiculqus habit of
telling our daughters that a
good man’s love is the ultimate
in life for a woman, which is
undoubtedly true. But we fail
to go on and explain that some-
times this love may be very try-
ing and that we must 4se all
of our diplomacy to get along
• with it. .
Neither the’single nor the
married state can alote bring
content. For that must grow,
like a frail plant, only within
the heart of one’s self.
But the chances are thst
neither.a third, fourth nor fifth
union will bring any better re-
sults, so far ss happiness ia eons
cerned, than a first' or second.
If you can't adjust your life saw
istactorily after/a coupleiof mat-
rtmonial trials, it is a pretty
good bet that you will never aea
complish much by .rushing off
to the altar with a new hus-
band.
Happiness in marriage comes
only after a long apprentice- -
ship of endeavor. It 4s the re-
sult of evolution., it is the
beautitul flower that,-blooma
only for those who have climbed
the high hill of unselfishness,
kindness and forbearance, to-
gether.
Despite experience will
show marriage is a con-
tinual struggle, we all
have the childish idea
that matrimony will in
itself bring happiness.
paper and red paper; a fear-
.is thst he wat even a legal
Phtladelphiamnd hence had no
right to run A the special elec-
tion arrangedLr him by Vare.
Kent, J 3 yig old, is a for-
because he “thinks it about time” that Americans knew
the truth. He thinks it a shame that "North and Latin- hasineer been debauched.
■OUT meanwhile a new and
D subtle power had estab-
lished itself in the heart of the
capital; not an arm* not a
government, but a faith; pow-
erless in all the goods of the
world, but strengthened with
hope, and confidence so intense
that when—the power ’ef thw
- Empire fell into pieces it was
it alto develops, that instead of coalitions, because they were in her way. They might
of doing away with several .navy ’ ' ........ — .
This
rate ot
29. A
show
pinebet
30th. t
Tbur
Ida He
B-5, h
third
feet in
After
first 1
ter, it
and th
35 per
w a‛r.
Roxa
bsck fr
’ flowing
making
hour.
Important than
stretching from cost to Coast,
become and growing daily Io influence,
have Tssued a statement o edi- .
torlal policy in regard to the
pending national political cam-
In their opinion he not only
many such cus-
all sound ones.
dry; \ Hun* and other refugees from
desiccated Asia, the Germans
slate-maker, ward heeler and ' __________
machine. The' idea of improv- . , ;
& tpictrvernnqgnintades ; A Latin-American Foretells War
ther develops a syatem. You .,0.. , , »
get efficiency without • effect- \X/AR between the United States and Latin-America,
iveness, effort without aim. The VV perhaps even a war between the United Statesand
found their way down into
Greece and plundered Athens,
the center And refuge of the
surviving culture of the world;
-drunk with pillage and victory
they swept over mountains and
seas into Gaul and Spain and
distant Africa; everywhere they
ravaged ancient cities with fire
and 'sword, snd laughed as
they put the torch to splendid
edifices built there by Roman
architects and engineers. No
Roman, army could stop them;
Mrs
"Thatd
caused I
go blaci
indite
I take t
caution,
constipa
CARTE
WHEN GRANDMA KICKS
"Doesn't-your bother object
to your wearing that short
drens?"
"No, but grandmother do**.
. “ hers."—Film Fun.
60)
the fields by wealthy men; and
the substitution of tenants, or
serfs, or slaves for an owning
peasantry; the listless and
wasteless tillage that soon ex-
hausts the soil: the depen-
campaign. Anyone whovantea
to distribute it to persUge the
l yoters to votegalnstmecould ' fields: then war, and power,
have a barrel.free. BuKmost and glory: then, suddenly, de-
of them took it and sold t for -
15 cents a glass and then pted |
for me. \
"I couldn't get a canpign
card on railroad property. The
railroad officials placared
their grounds with oppositn
placards and worked on thr
’ state. The bonds of political
power and commercial, ex-
change which had united dis-
tant regions under one rule,
weakened and snapped :•-the
great Empire fell into hostile
halves, snd spent in civil
strife the resources that,might
likely to cause infection if not properly treated. The in-
fection in this case is already apparent. It is rapidly
i until even some of its 1 spreading not only over Central America but over all j
thuslastic supporters are the ‘Latin-American countries.’
। single cause ever, ex- • have stemmed the barbarian
hausts the meaning of . tide.
the simplest events; . • • •
It shoid not have permitted the
Red Cross to-usethem.
palgn .which deserves to be"
aretully read by every voter—
man and woman—in the United
tates. It needs particularly to
be read by exery Republican
voter. . . .
This policy was determined
at a'conference of the papers’
editors—itself an unprecedent-
ed procedure in American {Jour-
nalism. and an unprecedented
event in American politics'.
It remains only In order to
bring home the fully signifi-
cance of this announced policy
to make clear that the Scripps-
Howard chain is composed
wholly of independent newspa-
per*. They are tied up with no
inperests either locally or na-
5 _ ■
BOY’S BEST
"Willie, where did you get
that black eye?"
"Johnny Smith hit me." 1
"I hope you remembered
what your Sunday School
teacher said about heaping
coals on the head of your ene-
. mies?”...........
"Well, ma. I didn't have any
'coal, so I just stuck his head
in the ash barrel."--Success-
ful Farmla* |
(From the Portland, Me., Evening News) N
markets and
ly defeated, and when the
news of his disaster crept
across the Empire every sdult
mind understood that this was
the beginning of the end. In
410 Alaric and the West Goths
captured snd sacked Rome; in
420 the Vandals conquered
Spain and Africa; in 451 it
was the Germans who, uniting
for a moment with the. Ro-
mans. turned bsck Attila and
the Huns st Chalons; at last
in 476 the barbarian general
Odoacer peacefully deposed the
last of the emperors of west-
ern Empire, pitifully named
Romulus Augustulus. The Ger-
mans were masters of Rome.
(UR Mr. Hughes "tickled 'em pink” at Havana by de-
V1 daring that the U.S. Department of State will
retire from Nicaragua .and Haiti as it withdrew from
Santo Domingo, "after the establishment of a Stable
were called on to ctribute.
They had to pay, -but ley were
so angry about it tit they
voted for me after sporting
me on the quiets •
"The output of sever brew-
eries was diverted intoy dis-
trict in thelast four daxor the
O perhaps the wheel of • N
1 every civilization comes -N
•------—----------------------4
\ Three radio broadcasting sta-
tions: WBAF, KFQB, snd
WJAZ.
♦---———— 4------
From the Record
i h in,
Judge thin how many factors i HOR not the surrounding
/ hordes at
Rome, exported not goods but last helpless betore them grew
gold for her imported grain in resolution snd audacity.
■------- ---------- - . Pushed by the Inundating
who did
ther*. I
concession-grabbers and financial exploiters plunder it
. backofitall.___________to.....thrjr hearts* content.____ _____._____-----‛ ________i—-apyussenusaav
—The T^nund* norone partin. I General Moncada, the Venezuelan pictures as a ‛and.speclanprivile
want’a candidate who wiilcon- 1 renegade and traitor, who betrayed the Liberal cause
duct himself according to Hoyle, which he was supposed to defend in order to make him-
who win reverence party tech- I self solid as a U. S. preferred candidate in this year’s
nique and who conceives poll- ! presidential elections. "
Here you are given just a glimpse of what the Latin-
American general has to say of the ways of our State
Th
Pc
dealers. Tbe liqud
THE PAGE THAT KILLS
Rep. Tillman (Dem., Ark.)—
The movies have destroyed the
lectures, the drama. Jazz has
crowded out real music. “The
Bat” draws better than "Mac-
beth," doggerel is more read
than the fine lines of Tennyson
or Milton. I may be old-fash-
‛ioned, but I think of the Vir-
ginia reel and the stately min-
uet as preferable to the twist-
ing. wriggling modern dance.
(lass eyes and a great white
RAEusinosEMansoN,
ILEASE AND THE NEGRO \
Senator Blease (Dem., s. C.) P
I have some times been pafV
ed as an enemy of the negro
race. That question I leave to
South Carolina. I know how .
they feel toward me at-home.
If the matter were left entirely
to the negro people of South
Carolina I am sure I would not
Mur tha slightest difficulty in >
By MU WALTER FEkGESON. I
A RICH INDIAN woman has I
A just been married for the
fifth time and-announces to the
preas that she feels sure this*
on* will "take."
There'* nothing like living in
perpetual hope where matrimony
is concerned. And it seems that
modern Americane, in spite of
the fact that they are inclined
toward pessimism in other
thing*, believe that if they only
try long enough they will find
the perfect .mate and attain that
atory-book felicity called "be-
ing. happy ever after.”
One of our most childish il-
lusions and on* that stamps u*
a* a primitive mental race still.
legal snarls.
• The idea of thinking in prin-
ciple.bas gone out of fashion.
If an object seems good, we are
willing to pass a law. nr vio-
late one to help it along, for-
progressive, fearless editorials.
Therefore, these papers, unlike
so many of their contemporar-
ies, have won the confidence of"
their public. Their constitu-
wey le influenced tz. what they
eay because it feels that thelr
editorial expressions are disin-
terested and intellectually hon-
est. .' . ,
In short, the Scripps-Howard
announcement is a warning to
the GOP machine that if, as in
1920, it again disregard* the
obvious publie desire, passes
over Hoover and stages another
bedroom nomination, th* party
is headed for defeat. And
should the Republican* fall to
nominate Hoover, a similar
warning and opportunity is giv-
en to the Democrats to nom-
inate their, outaanding figure,
Gov.-Alfred, E. 8mith of New
Xork — ~
AS for Beekron whose case he
A has been working late at •
night, Kent has dug up a fnass
of material from ancient con-
stitutional records, but he relies
especially on the constitutional
requirement that a Cngrens-
man shall, “when elected, be sin
inhabitant of that state in
which he shall be chosen',’-and
the Pennsylvania law requiring ,
a candidate to live in Pennsyl-
vania six months before elec-
tidn.
Beck was elected Nov. 8.
1026. He had rented an apart-
ment in Philadelphia only in
July, but Vare controls Phila-
delphia, and someone had as-
sessed Beck for a poll tax on
May 3, exactly six months back.
Kent says heck had no proper-
ty in Philadelphia, thatthe as-
"sessment was fraudulently post-
dated and that the record of It
ha* now been spirited away, al-
\ the two of Kent's witnesses
managed to copy it first.
Kent quotes framers of the
constitution as warning that un-
less Congressmen wemmexutred j
to be Inhabitants of Bj Uftrict
they ran from "ricieh.of
neighboring ntates mmplo9
corrupt methods armdbt nt
the public councils amdn "'i
fallod in their own stin 22
Beck may retain hEika
Kent probably has m2
chineer of bring ar
and its capers. Now and then
it halts and a Chinese in the
best American suit that Division
Street can supply, steps ot
Into a hollOw square, adjusts
his very American suspenders
and readjusts his even more
American arm bands. In a mo-
ment he has swung into a-stilt-
ed, muscular contortions of a
strange dance..
In the windows Chinese
youngsters are packed . like
beautiful dolls in a toy-shop.
They wear faeir bright native
suits, and upon their heads are
Eld and bejeweled adornment..
Thru the pavements patter the’
soft soled slippers of old Chi-
nese merchants in their somber
black skull caps. On the out-
skirts of the crowd school boys
in gorgeousty embroidered suits
of Nile green silk flaunt gay
banners.
It is an incongruous sight to
come upon suddenly out of the
rush and welter of the great
city; aeudd^n and unbelievable
transplantation to the half
primitive, half exotically Ori-’
ental. ,
Win
tentloi
one gi
second
in the
the no
The
1 T.
Produc
in Sec
report!
barrel
Tota
Collett
pay to
feet 1
above
FI
The
Ida He
troleun
Block
top of
Well
off, an
at the
per da
Alon
produc
reporti
in Wii
Texo
l Gris
-tion 4
exstw
and be
the str
cent w
Reaa
..... Get in
Reag
. well, ii
Skelly
ported,
’"•with ol
The
degrees
3131-41
been d
fro. > 8
Section
Out 1
A Ditt
Block
made !
I I
4
BY RODNEY DUTCHEN
NEA HER VICE WAITER
WASHINGTON, Feb. 1. — If
VV Congressman Everett Kent
doesn't watch out, they’ll stuff
him and put him in the Smith-
sonian Museum?
I Kent is the only Democratic
congressman from Pennsyl-
\nja. He got into the House
ker a gory battle with a pow-
1 machine and a big slush
ft. • He is so intelligent and
agssive that he has taken
t , ing are examples in point.
% The same thing is true of
>, politics in a democracy. At the
•DARENTS who know better
I are very remiss when they
permit their children to attain . I
maturity with this Idea in mind.
$7,000,000,000 for the navy dur- : touny >
ing the next ten years. | the sake of
Cry Over Stickers - to an extreme.” ■ 7 - - -
A HI’F and erv over stickers Unless there is a radical change, he warns, we are
A wlmnind AlLAMdlcaAntilgoing to lose our $2,000,000,000 with Latin-Amer-
Imperiallst League: ready to ica, create an incurable hatred of us and pessibly plunge
take chances with’ prison, and , the world into wal,*
the Postoffce Department wob- 1 ‘____'
mer machinis newspaper re-
porter, school weber and prin-
cipal, coat deal and lawyer.
He served a tert here once be- 1
fore, being elect! in 1922
WITH referend to his last
VV election, Kehwas asked:
“How did youa Democrat,
erer getelectedm Pennsyl-
beat me. Prohibitr} enforce-
pmmmmem--
gq
-
atorship. N ■
The allegon against Beck
government comes to be regard-_ a world coalitionheaded by Great Britain, is envisaged
Fn^t^C?; anon, Bnanecpourpamcg8r“ompeaiism‛aneone of'Vriend! |
ment by which to make the con- ship and good will. i BeHhad
nection. This not altogether pleasant outlook is the underlying " " aa
_______ \ ' thought running thru a brand new book, just off the
Po-ITIIANS:do no want press, called "The Looting of Nicaragua.” This volume,
is not enough o? a pYisayane the work or General De Nogales, whose life-seems to
have been spent alternatively ‘in world-roving and
A. D. Hellogabalus. in- the
midst of wealth and luxury.
getting. scared.
The cruisers and carriers need
- airplanes to give them a bal- ’
3 ance, the submarines need moth- |
er ships and ’every kind of a
craft needs men.
L it now develops that nearly
• A 1500 airplane* will be needed to
give the new fleet symmetry,
not to mention twenty-five or
thirty, thousand additional sail-
or*.
SAYS
The idea of thinking
in principle has gone out
of fashion,
•—-------------
.. "nv LBERT swxx'y ’ • can change his tartes. He know*
I NEW..TR Feb. 1.—Along
I -N the snake-like alleyway that
I is Doyer Street and those nar-
1 row parallels that are. Mott and
juBeil’ street* the trM£of_a vari-
•> expenditure of something like
he’s the only Democratic
Congressman from Penn-
sylvania.
9 —
EMED
shred* of order together, and
restored the authority of the
ancient city, tamed the eavag-
ery of the barbarians, and pre-
served some measure of the
classic letters and arts as a
heritage of culture tor a re-
barbarized and rejuvenated
world. In 321, A. D. Costan-
tine, one of the greatest of
the emperors, accepted the
new religioh and unconscious-
ly bequeathed to. its leader*
his precarious imperial power.
In 462, when Atilla and his
Hun* stood at the gates of the
city, Leo the Great, not Em-
peror but Pope, "Went out snd
dissuaded him .from attacking
Rome. The Empire had passed
into the Papacy, and a new
age had begun.
Published Daily, Except Sunday, at Fifth and Jones Aets
Fort Worth, Texas > \
vania?"
“Simple,” said 6. “I went
lacks knowledge of the game, fighting, ought to be read by every American. Even if it
3 but win not j lay in according were ony fifty per cent accurate, and it is surely that,
tothe.rules;, "il,gnot,make i it would still contain much the public should know.
promises, will not agree to dole - ... ...
out patronage, will not trade - .. --- .
with those who are ready jo present day whereof he writes, the Venezuelan soldier of
deliver the goods and who have fortune flays our dollar diplomacy, bombards our State 4
no object except to pet paid for Department for its meddling in Central .America and
gudso We findtho good Old cabal rakes Secretary Kellogg with' his withering fire. He
ri, grming. just as it did eight
9 Years ago when Dauzhprty and
F- his associates manevered
Four-N
Extern
•A ft
sion of
Creek
seemed
Shaheet
No.' 1
barrels
The
51. Bio
7 0-barr
f hours,
depth 1
the pay
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.
Sorrells, John H. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 105, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 1, 1928, newspaper, February 1, 1928; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1545990/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.