The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 155, Ed. 1 Monday, April 1, 1929 Page: 4 of 12
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< Speaking of Spring Styles
The Fort Worth Press
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But he will be remembered simply
diplomat.
He achlved not -so
as a man 'of great heart.
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furnish such
magrificent
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toxica
cause he forbade further circulation of a sex •
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. questionnaire on the campus. But be may com-
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Washington want industri
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finders.
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Natureland
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From the Record
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Your English
?
.New!.
Now!,
$1 DOWN and
IS ON C
A
revolutionary
ing up to
1
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Milk
200775
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27
cd
$
Bi
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BREAD
republic have a port like Bos-
ton, or an overhead haze like
Continuance
senco of II
RIGHT-0
FOR NE
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SWEET
HEART
Part of Wl
Gra
551 ’
5b ' ■
C. H. Montg
Gas
The Nation’s
-—Pulse
The Business of
Living
A Complete Line of Diamonds, Watches,
Silverware, Luggage, Etc.,
for Your Selection!
• Wickedness is a wonderfully diligent archi-
tect of misery, of shame; accompanied with
terror, and commotion, and remorse, and end-
less perturbation.— Plutarch:
“WALK A FEW BLOCKS . . .
SAVE MANY DOLLARS”
t CREDIT JEWELERS
IN FORT WORTH 32 YEARS
1505 MAIN STREET
1. IEWQMQDEHS,-
THEY'LL NEVER
MAKE POPULAR
022-2
i
* TODAY’S ANNIVERSARY
------— ----------—-
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1912 he has been the interpreter of friendship
between the two peoples.. He continued that
service during the war in unofficial capacity.
He returned to the embassy in 1921, and has
carried on ever since. "
Now he is gead at hts post.
He was a lawyer, a banker, a Governor a
LOUIS
STAR
MOV
___________________ Our texts for
this, in the main, consist .of
Current Events, a weekly mag-
GU
Dyeing
2-2
WIHO can blame the younger
VV generation for going bol-
shevik? What must its thought
be as it reads the-Constitution
of the United States?
"To drink, or not to drink,”
is no longer the all-important
question. 2
The all-Important question is
one of commn honesty, or liv-
and admini
. . Rules of |
liminary he;
c
r .9
>
f •
Made with
Milk
169 J:
WOCH, the peace-maker, sleeps beside Napo-
I leon, the war-maker.
IT FoR TEN
YRS
____
“Know it by Heart’'
MA COMES HANDY
"So we shall elope at mid-
night.”
"Yes, darling." ,
“And yo.u will have your suit
case all ready when I sneak up
to the door?”
"Sure. Mother Is packing It
for me now."—Pathfinder. , ,
4
s
2 ■
p, 1 •
4
2"
..9
monument down from the quarries at Quincy,
Maas., to a wharf on the Neponset River, from
where' it was shipped to its destination. This
pioneer tramway was only three miles long, and
• coat only 134,000, but it marked the beginning
of our modern network of systems, with their
360,000 miles of track.
* This road was followed, inter in the same
year and early in the next, with two others, in
Pennsylvania, built by coal mining companies
to haul coal over the mountains.
These roads, since they depended on sta-
tionary engines and gravity Instead of locomo-
tives, were not the type of railroads that we
know, but they were the forerunners of them,
and their success hastened the coqging of loco-
, motive-drawn tralna " 2. ’
WILL DA
TRIAL
A
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$4
rRIPS-N
ARLCOMINGX
TN -{
AGAIN 5
Myron T.. Herrick
WrHEN Americans think of France they think
W ot Myron T. Herrick. When the French
sarcasms from' a certain class of wiseaeres be- , subdivisions.
lyn Lawrence, Marlon Wilson.
b, r
[r‘r.
"gn
Deeds to
landowners
Grapevine R
urday aftern
County Cler
was deeded
a part of tl
proving of
to virtually
Deeds fr<
remain to
Davis, count
The road
from 30 to
the widenina
was needed
reeded with
waiting for
deeds.
Prizes Are
Theate
Mi
$1 WEEK 5
WILL PAY FOR ANY PURCHASE k
N AT WOLF & KLAR’S * J
1
Made with
think of America they think of Myron T. Her-
rick. Since he went to Paris as Ambassador in
azine published for school chil-
dren, and clippings from the
daily Press contributed by our
teacher, Mrs. L. D. Howard.
, We find the. cartoons from
The Press help us to understand
political affairs better than
anything else we can find.
Editor The Press:
VOU may be surprised and In-
- X terested to,know that your ■
paper is belg used for a pur-
■ pose for which you probably
did not intend it.
ny MBS. WALTER fERavSON
. TR. BROOKS, president of the University of
— Missouri, .will probably undergo scathing
beverages in their
Word was
City Attorne
that Clintoi
Wichita, Kar
been appoint
the Kansas 1
mission.
Montgomer
city in its rec
Fort Worth (
cation to the
mission ar !
1 o11 tforar
tic consumers
He was fir
riclals with a
the gas coni
earnings. HI
corresponds i
Commission i
T EGENDS and tradition have haunted the
L grand old place for many a year.
And when the firemen were poking in its.
blackened ruins they came upon a- strange
looking whip. It was a whip with a particu-
larly long series of thongs, braided near the
end. This should—and probably will—become
a museum piece of the theater. For this was
the instruhiert which made good boys out of
bare-legged little roughnecks who are now
some of our most celebrated citizens.
The whip was applied to the ankles and,
legs of "the noisy "gallery gods." It was the
symbol of law and.order, wielded by an ex-
pert house cop, whose aim was generally un-
erring. Let a disturbance start in the gallery
■—and it generally did—and crack! thru the
dark went the whip. Even the threat of the
lash did not always bring the desired order.
• The lads of grandpa’s day took, their In-
corrigibility to the theater with them.
Walter Loth, a leading dairy
farmer of Waukesha County,
Wisconsin—leading because he
makes the business pay hand-
somely—rigged up a radio with
loudspeaker. In his barn, and
turned on tho current when he
began milking.—"As soon as I
switch on the music," said Loth,
"the cows turn their heads to-
ward the loudspeaker and stand
still. They never get restless
as long as the music. is going on
and that makes milking dead
easy."
"embassies and legations, and
that real loyal 100 per cent
_American_diplomatswon‘tac-_ _
cept it if offered outside their
homes. But in order to make
that effective Mr.Hooverhim-
self would have to do something
about it, and he is not expected
to do anything of the sort.
There may be diplomats who
rigidly observe the Volstead act
in other national capitals, but
if so their secret has not leaked
out in Washington. The unof-
'ficial attitude of the State De-
partment is that they ought to
be diplomats first and prohibi-
tionists afterward.
pilgrims from the famous and affluent of
Broadway,
They drive up before the Tire-blackened "
shell; they stop to study it, as one might study
an old friend who dropped In after many many
.years; they ta their canes against a sidewalk
mor used to the sticks of blind beggars than
of Broadway plutocrats; they re-enter their,
cars and drive away.
For they are men of world-wie reputation
who started upon life from this quaint old
place, which stands now a mere shell. To them
it is "the little red school house" of the dram.
They have gone far since they left its doors.
Here Owen Davis learned to write melodra- -
mas. Sam H. Harris and Al Woods, the theat-
rical producers, cut their wisdom teeth here.
Eddie Cantor, the millionaire comedian, "was a
graduate. It -was the birthplace of American
"Varjety"—or vaudeville, as we call it today.
It was the home of the melodrama thrillers.
It was the spot upon which fame came to such
near-immortals as David Warfield, McIntyre
and Heath, the Rogers Brothers, Francis- Wil-
Son, Sam Bernard, Lillian Russell and the par-
ents of George M. Cohan.
COOLIDGE AND CONGRESS
* PresFdent Coolidge’s relation-
ship with Congress has been
different from that of all his
predecessors. Quite often dis-
agreeing with Congress on mat-
ters of legislation, there never
developed any rancor or bitter-
Wess over the differences. He
has impressed everyone with
the feeling that he acts at all
times conscientiously, without
the slightest influence from
fear or favor, and with an eye
single to the general good as
he sees it. He seems to have
proceeded upon the theory that
others will do their duty in the
same spirit.1—Rep. Tilson, Rep,
»Conn.
BY “THE VAGANOND
VEARS ago, one balmy spring |
- morning when all nature
was doing her best to beautfy
this old world, a gift to man-
i kind, I was told by a very wise
i medical man that if I,had a
■ Poor Refuge ,
RURGLARS being driven but of Dallas Coun-
D ty by Athe brigades of officers patrolling
the county at night with sawed-oft shotguns
found poor refuge in Tarrant Co.unty.
We read with considerable Interest the re-
port of a dozen persons charged in connection
with more than a score of burglaries in and
near Fort Worth after the confession of the
master mind.
Whether it be luck or consistent work the ■
law enforcing agencies of Tarrant County, in-
cluding both city and county officials, have .
been very successful.
Practically all of those arrested in the last
few days have criminal records. Some of them
have admitted pany other burglaries ahd rob-
beries besides .those for which they have
served prison terms. If the courts and juries
of Tarrant County now will work as efficiently
and faithful as the.Afficers did, these fellows
will go back to the pewhere they belong for
a long enough time. "" . . ’ • ’
•-----------------------------------• ?
rpEXAS, the home of the he-
- man, the wild cowboy and
the big rancher, claims the
champion rose town of America.
It is Tyler; a little city in Spilth
County. This spring, Tyler has
shipped 75 carloads of roses,
25,000 bushes to the car. The
growers sell them to the retail
dealers of the North and get
about 20 cents apiece.
-
group of public buildings as
Washington boasts, but any of
’ equal size could show better
homes, especially for middle-
class folks, and better laid out
BY RODNEY DUTCHER
NBA Service Writer
WASHINGTON, April 1. —
’’ If your unfortunate corre-
spondent cannot find any Inter-
esting news, It is because wher-
ever he goes looking for It in
Washington, people always in-
sist on talking about prohibi-
tion, especially with reference
to the Jones law.
No one ever mentions the
weather any more.
Here it is 10 years and moae
-since we first had prohibition
and people have been more ex-
cited about it during this last
year, between the. political cam-
paign and the Jones law, than
ever before.” ' That may not go
for the rest of the country, but
it certainly goes for the capi-»
tal.
David Hughes, "Detroit bank-
er: "When we say charity be-
gins at home, that implies also
a charitable view of the opin-
ions,' actions and motives of
others."
Franklin P. Adams: "Most of
us feel that it makes little dif-
ference how much or how little
things cost; we know that liv-
ing costs a little more than we
can earn and let it go at that;"
T HAVE no doubt that the news of the burn-
1 ing-of Miner’s Bowery Theatre has by this
time spread from one end of the land to the
other. Its destruction came on the eve'of Its
revival. A Broadway group was reconstructing
it—even to the resuscitation of the old beer
bar which adjoined it. It was the intention to
produce the same old plays which thrilled
grandfathers and great-grandfathers — for it
was built 115 years ago.
By GILBEIT SWAN “
" NTEW YORK, April 1.—Down in the Bowery,
- ' a charred shrine of the drama is drawing
much by unusual intellect as by his sympa-
thies and his charm.. He liked people and they
liked' him.
A younger generation of Americans learned
of this veteran and admired him forth"
' elecity with which he fathered Lindbergh,
when that modest youth flew into world ac-
claim. But the older generation had grown to
expect just that sort of thing from the Am-
bassador. He had a way of doing the right
' thing, in the right manner, at the right time.
He was much more than High envoy from
' one important government to another. He
• tried to be the representative of the Amertean-
people to the French people. ‘ And he found
happiness in such success.'
' Herrick earned the tribute he -gave. to
Lindbergh so graciously—"Ambassador 'of
Good Will." . . ‘
rTH Mexican rebellion is lengthening out.
X Early hopes of.cleaning the rebels out of
the country quickly were too optimistic. Weeks,;
maybe months, will be required to restore,
order. .. " 2 . -
This situation might be explained by the -
superficial assumption that the rebels repre-
sent widespread discontent among the Mexican
people. Such is not the case. Testimony* of
diplomats, American newspaper and- business -
men, and of special investigators. is practi-
cally unanimous'that this is'‘Simply a. revolt
• of army chiefs for selfish and anti-soclal pur-
poses. These discredited generalslack the
support of an important labor, agrarian or a
political/group in the civilian population. . •
The ability of the militarists to prolong
the civil war is due to the unusual geography
of northern Mexico and to the rule-or-ruin
rebel strategy. By capturing banks and” ap-
propriating funds, by retreating from the pur-
suing Federal troops without a major engage-
ment, and by destruction of railways and
bridges in their retreat, they delay defeat..
Even after the oncoming Federal army drives
them backward to the border wall? they can
separate into smaller guerrilla bands and infest
the mountains as long as they have funds, to
pay their mercenaries. •
The t raged? of the situation is not that .
the GH-Calles government, representative of
the farmer and labor interests, is endangered,
for the psychological hold of the government
on the country is considerably stronger now
than when the revolt began. Rather the trag-
edy is the useless destruction of netionah
wealth and organization in a country already
terribly impoverished by eighteen years of
—F—a womAN’s VIEwroIST---
Missouri Ur’s Sex
Questionnaire
recurring revolutions and counter-revolutions.
In the long run the prosperity and Inde-
pendence of the Mexican people and their
ability to evolve stable economic and political
institutions depend upon basic social recon-.,
Btructfop. That' means schools, roads, irriga-
tion projects, industrial development—all re-
quiring money. But the money so .necessary
for reconstruction to now, being drained off
and lost in civjl war'.
Fortunately the United States government,
in sharp contrast to its conduct during certain
other counter-revolutions below the Rio Grande,
has thrown its moral support to the Mexican
govemhment.- The Federals are permitted to
purchase arms and supplies here, while an
embargo is maintained against the rebels.
This policy is wise both from the- standpoint
of Mexican democracy and the business inter-
ests of the United States.
In these circumstances it is rather surpris-
ing that the rebels have sent to Washington an
alleged diplomatic mission whose first act is
to start propaganda against Ambassador Mor-
row. Of course, there is no chance of "that
rebel mission being received by the tate‛ De-
partment or otherwise obtaining. any recogni-
tion from the Hoover administration. ■ As for.
the rebel propaganda. It is apt to do the
Mexican government much niore good than
harm.
Our sixth grade arid seventh
grade reading and civics glasses
Pittsburgh? . have been making an extensive
A payroll has become their 1 and intensive stud?’ of recent
prize obsession, just" as tho political affairs. - ------ '
.Unclp Sam. were not furnish-1--!—
Ing one.
----
44
NOT satisfied" with the dam-
-\ age -that has.been.doneky.
all the unwise platting and
, him. . ’ ' ..
For the-past several years we have been •
harassed with such incidents. Millions of
these fool things have been distributed, .and to
what good purpose? Oh, says the sociologist,
the .answers "throw a regular spotlight upon the
inner man.. Nonsense! Nobody lays bare his
’soul in a questipnnalre and nobody ever will.
The professor responsible was ' doubtless
honest in his endeavors to find out some great
truths. But his kind are likely to run (muck
now and then in spite of their higher intelli-
gence. Their energy gets the best of their
commonsense.
Sex," as everybody admits, is the greatest
. force in life. .The students have been apprised
* of that fact for some time now. If It has not
yet gotten over with them, then they are far
more stupid than we give them credit .for be-
ing, and stone blind to boot. For the power of
sex, the* allurement of* sex, the importance of
sex, is continually broadcast. The fellow who
secretly thought it a- secondary matter would
not dare pipe,up amid all the hullabaloo. The
psychologists have us intimidated. And agree-
ing that sex is the world’s grandest and most
thrilling fact, still it’s nothing new. We’ll ad-
mit it and-just let'things go at that. One needs
no questionnaires to bring it to our attention.
And imagine. if you can, the illuminating
answers that the Missouri youths must have
given to these stupendous queries: "Do you"
intend to marry? "At what age? If you mar-
ry do you hope to have childreh? How many?
.Are you in fvor of family limitations by
means of birth control?”
But the prize question is this one ad-
dressed to'the co-eds: "Would you quit asso-
ciating with a man, married or unmarried, on
" learning that at some time he had engaged in
moral irregularities?":
Doesn't the sociology professor know that
the Don Yuans of the world have, never had
any trouble accumulating sweethearts?
» ।. . »---—I NEW yonK--------———4 >
. Shrine, of Drama
A N enterprising reporter has
n been mean enough to turn
out a story raising tha. question
whether American diplomats
•broad should observe the spir-
it of prohibition laws at home.
Most emphatically it may he
said that his enterprise is not
appreciated by the State De-
partment, the White House or
the diplomats themselves. •
Dr. Clarence True Wilson, the
dry leader, has said that our
diplomats should not serve in-
fort himself with the thousht that tha acoma a a
• mon folk, those-who pay the taxes, are with | WaTindEn
energetje bullfrogs; and WHY
a perch will gamble his birth-
right away in an all too often
vain effort to steal an emaciat-
ed worm ff the hook, when the
cards in the game of life are
“stacked" by the guy on the
other end of the string.
Sitting here taking a punch
at my typewriter, I seem -to
hear someone say: "Why all
the foregoing cornfield advice?”
The answer is found in the cap-
tion of this mental aberration
—and means Big Business; with
life swinging in the balance,
suspended high and dry above
the turbulent stream of doubt,
apprehension and loss of faith
in self. Therefore. I took his-
advice, and have followed same •
down thru the passing years—
and what has It profited me?
I am today one of—the—
world's richest men, and WHY?
I have found- the trail to happi-
pess, contentment and all that
enters Into the warp and woof
of sane living; I know how to
be happy and high-minded amid
the meaner drudgeries of.life;.
aad, above all, how* to make’
friends with my luck, and to
kid myselt into thinking I am
one of the luckiest gys this
side of the pearly gates. Yeah,"
and tn about two minutes I'm
goln' flshin'—for the other
baby has dug the ‛wums.‛
ideal, or of modifying that
ideal so that average folks
can live up to it.
Youth is naturally honest,
naturally straightforward in
its convictions, naturally anx-
ious to have its words and
acts square with each other.
What is youth to think when
it sees us older folks preach-
ing one thing and practicing
another?
I How can it believe in any-
thing, have faith in anything, *
* pr.feel lIke standing by any-
/Those who- blame the young
people for what is happening
mfss the mark. Young people
never were, and never will be
reponsible for the collapse of
great principles.
Young people always have,
and always will take their cue
from the preceding generation,
but in doing so, they pay far
more attention to example than
preeept, and are Influenged
more definitely by what the
preceding generation actually
'does than by its lip music. -
WOLF & KLAR'
—A
TERRIBLE
z-- g/*
} GOSH! 7"*2-,
AH* IVE // I -gG2
GOT TO WEAR I {if
The editorials and news re-
ports are simple enough for
eveli bur childish minds.
As we believe in giving credit
where it is due, we have decid-
ed to tell you how much we en-
joy The Press. " ,
. Respectfully,
• Both Wees. Virginia Taylor,
2 - PAGE 4—THE FORT- WORTH PRESS—APRIL 1, 1939
./•
’I t
. Uncle Panther's Mail Box
HOREIGN diplomats in Wash-
-I lagton are not worried lest
their diplomatic liquor immu-
nity be taken away from them,
but some of them are annoyed
at the thought that their truck-
loads from Baltimore may be
temporarily halted by the po-
lice. There is Intermittent agi-
tation in Congress for ellmir.a-
tion of the privilege, and some
irresponsible members have
charged that diplomatic liquor
was being bootlegged, but any .
actual change which would
shut off the supply is a quite
unthinkable thing to the diplo-
mats themselves.
. One truck was held up and
its -contents unloaded by the
police—that of the Siamese le-
gation. All those who might
have been Instrumental in the
act have since sought to duck
responsibility for the interfer-
ence.
"Why on earth did they pick
on the poor Siamese?” an am-
bassador asked your corre-
spondent the'other day. "Why
not the British or the French?”
From another diplomatic
source one hears that the Brit-
ish embassy is holding up a
cargo in Baltimore until It has
. positive assurance from the
State Ticparttnent that no one
Win molest It en route. ~—---
THE FIRST RAILROAD
rFODAY is the anniversary of the humble be-
- ginning of railroads in the United States.
Just 103 years ago, the Granite railtoad started
to operate. It was built by the state of
Massachusetts and those citizens in particular
who were Interested in erecting the Bunker
Hill Monument.
Its purpose was to haul stone for the
Beulah Mae Taylor, Ella Block, ! burning desire to stick around
s zparaurEmn. gSninmi M •
deau Wyrill, Opal Kendall, Eve-' come' acquainted with the doo-
dlebugs, birds, flowers, lizards.
PREPAREDNESS «
"Mother, am I going to get
another plate et ice cream.be-
sides this one?”
“Why, dear?”
"Because I want to know
whether to gobble this up or
drag it out.”—Modern Eti-
quette.
They Say— _
e-----X................
SECRETARY OF STATE STIM
• SON: "The Philippines did
not adopt the Volstead Act.
During my stay of more than a
year In the islands I never saw
an Intoxicated person.”
TON"T say "Who did you
— hear?” "Whom” is correct.
Pronounce "facade" as if
spelled "fa-sad,” with strjess on
"sad" and "d” as in "deal.”
Don’t use "phone” when you
mean “telephone.”
Adage popularly used, but
often misquoted: “Danger past,
God forgotten,” was "When
danger is passed the saint is
cheated," as Rabelais quoted it,
in 1633.
• Prohibition supplants
weather as the favorite
national topic these days.
•---------------------------;---------------
mwre-peepk
The notion that t>hr city
was set aside as the nation's
capital seems quite beyond
thetn comprehension.
Standardization, as exempli-
-fled by the Chamber of Com-
merce complex,' has schooled
them to think dt no town as
grand without smokestacks.
They see _ no incongruity in a
glue factory near enough to
smell upon the Lincoln memo-
rial, or a steel plant near
enough to' smut Washington's
monument.
Why, "they want to know,
shouldn’t this shrine of the
Tracy
SAY8
Hypocinsy is the great
secret of all our troubles
• vjith regard to prohibi-
tion. .. *
♦———■ ■ • । »
WASHINGTON, D. C. — A
’’ place of strange contrasts,
this national capital of ours,'
with its social barriers to
prove how well the world has
been saved for ' democracy,
its campaign against hooch to
show how well prohibition
. wrks, its formal,, evasive
'statements from above, its
trickle o€ ()1 too definite scan-
dal from below, its magnifi-
cent public buildings and. its
- disappointing residential sec-
tions.
Real estate promoters have
more than made, up for what
the politicians left undone to
spoil the original plan. Around
the impressive parks and struc-
tures, which government en-
gnees have developed with
so much care, there is spring-
ing up a lunatic fringe of mo-
ronic subdivisions. The land-
scape is being leyeled., and ....
'grand old oaks are being cut
down to make room .for in-
stallment plan houses and
mail order gardens. • •
, All the cities in this -coun-
try put together could-hardly
WITH two dry Congressmen
‛VV on the carpet", prohibition
grows even more popular as
a topic of conversation.
It seems to be taken for
granted that these Congress-
men are guilty, tho they have
only been accused, and tho the
law says no one is guilty until
convicted.
When a Senator stands up
publicly, as Brute did, and
declares that all the sincerely
dry Senators could be put in
a taxicab, what can one ex-
. pect ?
It is only fair to these par-
ticular Congressmen, however,
to give them their day in
court.
It is equally fair to expel
them if that day results in
conviction.
Hypocrisy to the great secret
of all our troubles with re-
gard to prohibition.
If a lot of, drys hadn’t
thought they could go on
drinking in spite, of the law,
■ we would never have been
inflicted -with it.
If a lot of drinking drys
did not Imagine they could
make themselves solid with the
public by shouting one thing
and doing another, we would
be getting along with it a
good deal better.
No law in American history
has led to so much lying, de-
ceit and pretense.,
The entire situation stinks
. to high heaven with insincer-
ity. Hip-pocket peddlers are
paraded before the bar of jus-
tice to fool the public..while
those who made the law and
those who enforce it snicker.
■The time has come to have
a clean-cut showdown one way
' or the other.
As things , now stand, the
average father finds it diffi-
cult, if not impossible, to teach
his children respect for the
law, or faith in government.
frUm persor
alleged atte
employe to
the Legislat
The first
tween admi
•dmintstrati
over effort
Fournet, sp
"i.25
ware
WWMSSK# AM
! Marjorie Kelley, Justus New, L.
Wynn Baker; Harold MeClure,
N. G. Allen, J. T. Odom, Marlon
T. Ledbetter, Leon „Riekett
Woodrow Cownder , and Glen
Roberts.
Trial of 1
with the n ■
Dec. 11. 13:
Criminal 1s
on mo’on o
Continuan
of th- abser
fense witnes
Hogg a de
niiml.H tank
ton, who
H 66 • wit
A statemo
then district
ah not hu- fol
effort to obl
ter. and nil* i
Ing ’ to Hall
Twelve th
ticipated Sai
Easter egg
tion Departi
ter, held at
Ity Parks.
There wn
eggs placed
ov . *y . ry
largs parks.
The Wort
110 prizes I
ment charge
week-nd bi
12 Represen
duced tonig!
House stttfn
the whole.
The Gover
to be preser
night, but h
pear befor
court, accor
and present
that Standa
enced legisl
against him
Provision t
crowds are
procedute c<
House meet
ous acenes
when the lov
mini-trative
SArRD
ATTRAC
Owped and Published Daily (except Sunday) by Tha Fort Worth Prean Pubiishing Oo..
Fifth and Jones Streete, Fort Worth. Texas. Price. In Tarrant Cunty.
1 cent B-10 centa a week i elsewhere, 5 cents-10 cents a week. 4
Telephone Exchange, Dial 1-6151 «. - ,•
JOHM II sonnELks RALPH D HENDERSON HERRERT D. souuz ’
Ml tor - BusineeaManazer Maragins Editor
u A wi.Kn, ctkco __ o. ■ rorom.
Cits EBI 1 or _______—3-*« _____Advertistnz Manager.
zemberot unitea Prens. sertppe. Howard Newspaper Alllance. Newupaper Enterpriee Assoclation.
Newapaper Intoimatlon »>rvlco..»nd Auilll Burtau of Circulation._____________
"Give taghFand the People Will FinH Their Own Way”— Dante
*------------
HOR the wicked are like theatroubled sea.
I when it cannot rest, whose waters cast up
mire and dirt—Isaiah 57:20. • •
Attempt t(
Of Hous
Gover
By United Preng
BATON R
The Louisa
will meet he
motion mac
the week-en
of Governor
The Govt
went to th
and silver e
The winn
nr” Cones a
en eggs, an
A J Ander
Directors
T. Il Heffir
non of the
ment and M
W orth 1 ■ ■ •
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Sorrells, John H. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 155, Ed. 1 Monday, April 1, 1929, newspaper, April 1, 1929; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1546224/m1/4/?q=%22thurber+%22~1&rotate=0: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.