The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 164, Ed. 2 Thursday, April 11, 1929 Page: 4 of 14
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PAGE 4— THE FORT WORTH PRESS— APRIL 11. UM
The Higher the Hat the Better the Target By Talburt
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RE the mighty falling, or
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Is the publie getting wise |
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eat efforts to organize
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Your English
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Dawes to London?
cleaned.
and cooked our "ketch." and
and
experts
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They Say—
TODAY’S ANNIVERSARY
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expert! at Chicago beauty show
threaten that father will, in 1929, ante
ed how little the Coast Guard
—4
'proper relattonsntp
Mi
“Finding themselves safely at
•SAN FRANCISCO Jury decides that gifts of
P silk stockings, lingerie, etc., etc., etc.. to
erhouider
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After all,
“firemen."
however,-'
brought
to
run
be
be
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m
ity to the aspect of the female of the species.
What a life! What a life!
Q. Is the retired pay of .an 1
army or naval officer subject to
federal income tax?
3
Q. When and where was the
final game of the 1925 World
m
tr
th
of
oi
at
SI
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m
be
sent the ill-fated schooner to
the bottom.
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HERBERT D. SCHULZ
Managing Editor
O. E BOROM
Advertiuing Manager
The Nation’s
Pulse
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charge of having helped fin-
ance a 'counterfeiting ring.
Governor Johnston was con-
victed of general incompeten-
. cy, while Governor Long is ac-
cused of abusing his power in
many ways.
e
vr
"-mez 508 Commerce
a A. TURRENTINE
2
/
double the nunrber of looms.
That proved the straw that
broke the camel's back.
The workers are wide-awake
now. and these strikes repre-
sent the beginning, not the end
of trouble. •
were brought back into
. , with it.”
Other industriew, if wise, will back
Federation in its efforts.
A continuation of such wage and hour
eg
ul
• 1
th -
At
W
N
“Personal Service With
Every Sale”
i
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i
The Business of
Living
K th
th
' Ft
Dr. Sacasa resumes his
old campaign for a more
..friendly relations with
Latin-America.
• ____________a , Each morning 1 offer a prayer
I of thanks for my many bless-
Q. What was the date of the
1249482,
C. H. THOMPSON
——......NEW YORK-------
That Insidious Lure
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much in court, it should not
munt for much as an excuse
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05
I nsigned
cerdially
MMTOM.
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TURRENTINE
&
THOMPSON
—PRINTERS
' shootins, folks and signing
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Menaber of United Prews, seripps -Mraird Newspaper Alllanee, Newepaper Enterdrine Allocution
N—*p«p*r lnforin.ll.>ii Srrvlcn, tnS Audit runuu of Circulation. ____ ____
“Give Light And the People Will Find Their Own Way”—Dante
YOUR QUESTIONS ANSWERED
You ran get an answer to any answerable qnrstion of faet or Information
"y
3 ” ti
2 a
k q
Ag,
BMBBN-
mmlbtydgd
va
h , th
r ; ot
pli
dittons as now prevail in the southern textile
centers can mean but one thing—the growth
of communism.
Communism has always thrived on wage
. slavery wherever it has appeared In America.
home, it
3
a
wanted more,
down efficiency
The Fort Worth Press
iscnivrs - uowAuD NEWSFAFEW)
Ownea M< Pubituhed Daily iexcept Sunday* by The Fort Werth Press Pubiishing Ce.,
virh and Jones Ntreeta, Fort Worth. Tessa. Price, in Tarrant County.
2 cent- 10 cants a waak: elmewhere, B eanta—10 crate a week.
I‛ve stood for more bothersome
WZal
gone, and there
i It
ine
' . bu
Tracy
SAYS
Are the mighty falling,
oris the public getting
wise to a lot of peewee it
put in high of fleet
them were. A few.
WESLEY J. WRIGHT
Our personal, courteous service with every
sale has built our business and that of
our clients. That’s why they insist on a
•‘TAT" label on every printing job.
TSN"T It about time that they began issuing
I rain checks at those “decisive battles" in
__________________ -_________________________
=
a i
/*eR-7K
( ---0*
upon the abdication of President
Solorzano after the Chamorro
to a lot of peewee it put in ,
high office without giving the
matter sufficient thought?
Governor Johnston of Okla- I
homa has been impeached,
Governor Long of Louisiana is j
part in the southward drift of
the textile industry.
Money was scarce before the
mills came, children worked
on the farms and there were
few labor laws.
Until recently, the people
Were too glad of a chance to
connect with regular payrolls
to bother about the question of
lair dlay------
One would suppose that the
mill owners might be content
with such a set-up, and most of
AND I will bring you out from the people,
A and will gather you out of the countries
w herein ye are scattered, with a mighty hand,
and with a stretched out arm, and with fury
poured out.—Ezekiel 20: 34.
teach weavers how to
reqneets cunne be anewered. All let are confidential. You are
invited to make use vf this free serviee as often as you please.—
ings. In dollars and-ents J
am not rich—but in the com-
Al.
up two billion dollars for paint, Hpstteks and cutler had to go on when she
other accessories giving vim, vigor and vlrll- .....
Jack Johnson - Jim Jeffries
fight ?
A. July 4, 1010.
coup d'etat. He wa kept from
I office by American marines, but
his gallant fight against the
' Chamorro-Dias government ob-
tained for Nicaragua a few mil-
lion dollars' worth of free ad-
vertising and finally resuled in
a victory for Sacasa’s Ideas'and
ideals. And now here he is.
He turns out to be a tall,
slender, graceful man. Just
short of six feet, with hair halt
Wright has been con-
nected with the natural
gas industry in Texas
for 18 years, coming
here from Indiana. He
is thoroly familiar with
the Fort Worth Gas
Company’s distributing
system, due to the fact
that for the last two
years he has performed
the duties of general
superintendent of this
company as well as his
Dallas duties. .
Apparently, there was not
much back of the performance
except suspicion.
Suspicion does not count for
272 I
0o"n..7
fF-mih
- ..32
ITHE protocol division of the
- State Department, they call
it, and it is supposed to pur-
vey all major social problems
such as go with an interna-
tional pow-wow, a pink tea at
the White House or a dinner
party *t which politics and
money mix to any considerable
extent.
This should appeal to those
who have been deterred from
aspiring to jobs at Washing-
ton for fear their wives might
be unable to bold up the so-
cial end.
All their wives need do now
is consult the protocol division
of the State Department, to
find out what, or who is prop-
er.
PRINCE CYRIL, Bulgaria, vis-
1 itor: “Bulgaria felt the
effect of the World War for a
long time, and my brother.
Boris, when he was called to the
throne was not happy. But con-
ditions are improving again,
tho slowly, and King Boris is
happy again.” ,
their discontent. Third, hon-
American's sense of humor. His
air of distinction is well placed,
for he was the foremost physi-
cian in Nicaragua, head of the
national medical faculty and
dean of the Medical School at
the University of Leon. He le
very happy in the triumph of
his party and of justice in Nica-
ragua.
being impeached and former »-----------------------------
Governor Catts of Florida has i Q. Is there an American Ian-
Just been indicted on the guage?
TUT TUT?
A MAH
YOUR SIZE
SHOULD HAVE
SOMETHING
EVN .
HIGHER?
-------
ITHE fact that the captain
I and crew of the I’m Alone
have been discharged show-
WHO
IN FORT WORTH
Earle A. Rowell, northwest
organizer, White Cross Anti-
Narcotic Society: “It takes but
from 5 to 25 days to make an
addict and about 25 years to
make a drunkard. There are
two things only that make
drug addiction a problem, pain
and profit,"
• «
Dr. Mabel Elliott, chldren’s
department, St. Luke’s Hospi-
tal, Toklo, visitor: “The Japa-
nese are great at research and
have distinguished themselves
In scientific medicine, but in
praetieal sanitation and eating
habits they are still far be-
hind the umes,
“feed"? Ask me ‘nother one.
brother. Yep, the "Vagabond"
and the Boy Scout, youth and
age, went out Into God's big
playground and caught a few
small fish, which we put on
the stringer; but in memory's
basket we placed one of the
intangible catches of life —
FRIENDSHIP.
bj wrting te Frederick M. Kerby, (uestion Hditor, the Fort Worth Press.
Washington Burenu, 1328 New York Avenue, Wnshingten, D. <., enelosing two
cents in stamps for reply. Medieal and legal advire cannot be given, nor eno
extended rree arch br mnde. All other questions will receive a personal reply. “■
Union Labor’s Contribution
LIGH wages, as an accepted part in prosper-,
I1 ity, were not accepted without • struggle.
Baek a generation ago, industry in America
•till believed that the way to prosper was by
keeping wages down. The philosophy under
which mass production, waste elimination,
standardization, high wages and shorter hours
were combined to make good times, was then
unborn. . .
The realization has not yet dawned that an
adequate market for mass production neces-
sarily calls for wages adequate enough so that
the workers themselves may purchase what
they themselves produce, and for leisure
enough to use that whieh they have been able,
thru high wages, to buy.
No—high wages weren't tendered voluntar-
ily to the workers of America by far-sighted
employers who suddenly saw the light of a
new economic philosophy.
The force that was primarily responsible
for the establishment of a high wage standard
was none other than the American Federation
of Labor.
Against the almost unanimous opposition of
employers, the American Federation brought,
under the leadership of one of America's truly
great men, Samuel Gompers, a new level of
pay and of hours. not only to union labor, but,
incidentally and as a by-product, to non-union
labor as well.
And in so doing, instead of administering
a curse to industry, it brought a blessing
even unto those who had so violent opposed it.
The contribution of high wages to the
prosperity formula, the formula which, today is
espoused by Herbert Hoover and by every
other far-looking economic leader, should be
credited to the American Federation of Labor.
Without that organization, Americen wages
would not be high today. And without a
high wage standard, the prosperity that pre-
vails generally in the United States would be
impossible.
William Green, head of the American Fed-
eration today, is an effective exponent of what
his organization fought for so many years to
attain.' . •
‘ Naturally, he and his organization are con-
tinuing the work in those spots where Industry
has not yet seen the light.
One such spot is the textile Industry of the
South. & “
Harking back to an economic theory that is
dead, so far as most Industries are con
earned, the textile centers of the South resent
the efforts of the American Federation to
bring about an Improvement in the wage and
hour situation that now exists.
Appointment of Wesley
J. Wright as manager
of the Fort Worth (Jas
Company was announc-
ed Tuesday by O. K.
Shannon, president.
Wright will move here
from Dallas immediate-
ly to assume his duties.
In Dallas for the last
eight years he has been
general superintendent
of the Dallas Gas Com-
pany. He has resigned
that position.
LINCOLN'S LAST SPEECH
GIXTY-FOUR. years ago today Abraham LIn-
3 coin, from the steps of the White House,
delivered his last public address to the Amer-
ican people.
The occaslon was informal and the speech
was extemporaneous. General Lee’s surrender
to General Grant had occurred just two days
before and, after indulging In wilder Jubila-
tion. It occurred to several hundred Washlng-
tontans that It would be a fitting tribute to
the gaunt, worn man In the White House to
call on him early in the evening and extend
their congratulations.
- • Lincoln responded to their nolsy acclama-
tion! by appearing outaldo .and speaking to
them briefly on the subject of reconstruction.
He repeated his belief that it wss not neces-
sary to decide whether the southern states
were ever out of the Union, so long M they
PRESIDENT HOOVER has
- been asked by the Asso-
elation for the Advancement of
Colored People to place a ne-
gro on the proposed commis-
ston to Investigate the' prohi-
bition problem. '
It goes without saying that
no person should be barred
from such an appointment be-
cause of race. religion or poli-
tics.
By the same token, it goes
without saying that no person
should be appointed for such a
consideration. •
We are getting altogether
too much of. this sort of an
appeal in connection with pub-
lic office.
I Series of baseball played?
them | A. At Pitatjurutp, Pa., Oct. i
A curious industry in big |
New York is that qf the deal-
er in eyes, beaks and claws
for animals and birds. Taxi-
dermy is much improved to-
day. It is now a real art.
The operator must follow na-
ture very closely and such Im-
portant Items as beaks. eyes,
claws and teeth are carefully
selected. A , dullness of eye,
for instance, will no longer go
with the museums. and a beak
that was cracked when the sub-
ject was killed must be re-
placed by a perfect beak. ——
Ry Gin.nv«r SWAN
NEW YORK, April 11.—To Mr. Philip Sin-
•) nott, manager of th* NBA Service Pacific
Coast Bureau, San Francisco, Calif.
It's been so long since I was in California,
that I've almost forgotten how to alibi for a
fog and admire the sunshine, Instead, I've
adopted an old New York custom of talking
about myelf. When you can go down a street
talking to yourself, then you have completed
the Manhattan cycle—even if you are a little
bit butty.
Nevertheless, I haven't forgotten my kin-
dergarten lessons in Calltornfaese and can tell
the teacher right off the bat the particular
state where “life is better." In fact, I’ve
thought of twisting Jim Roarty’s slogan to fit
New York. I was going to make it. “where
life is bitter"—but just then the postman ar-
rived with the Easter popples which your coast
bureau boys sent to jerk a tear from these old
eyes. Out here they think a poppy is the name
of a musical show.
T ET us rejoice over the set-
— tlement of the Gann case,
even tho a good source of copy
has been spoiled, and all the
more so because settlement was
brought about thru courtesy
rather than by command.
It wag adroit of Secretary
of State Stimson to appeal to
the chivalry of foreign diplo-
mats, and it was right noble
of them to swallow the pill so
gracefully.
So, too, it was gratifying to
learn that our government is
equipped with a tribunal to
adjust such snarls, and that
President Hoover feels it
should be permitted to do so
is the future.
Q. On wba date did Easter
Sunday fall in 1864?
A. sinreh 27.
Q. What is an aquamarine?
A A transparent blulsh green • or
sea -creen variety of beryl. These
stones convo chlenly from Brazil and *
the Urals.
AT first we felt that, having traveled all the
• way fruin Californlg by airmail, some-
special sort of welcome should be given Apis.
I considered calling Grover Whelan, but he’s
no longer our official greeter. And Mayor
Walker was certain to be out in his latest
cutaway for the Easter parade.
So, It being Easter morning, it occurred
to us to show the New York bugs what a well-
dressed bug should wear. However, they ritzed
him after the best fashlonof a New Yorker
with a visiting fireman.
, Then, to our horror, we noted that Apia
was threatening to go the way of most visitors.
He abandoned his poppies and made straight
for the gay Ninth Avenue tulips we had put
in the window.
But it merely shows you what the metrop-
olis will do to a bug that spent his life in a
poppy field. And I wish you’d ask him to
come home. I’d make the suggestion, but it
doesn’t seem the right thing for a host to do.
the beautiful secretary by her lonel nloyer cou
are no part of the -bueines FutF-------tosh, .for
Juries are becoming brighter and brighter’ • -la
HORMER Vice President Dawes has been
r chesen by President Hoover for the post
of Ambassador to Great Britain, according to
apparently reliable reports,
if this is true, we can only repeat the re-
gret we expressed a month ago when his name
was first mentioned in connection with that
appointment.
Dawes’ record was such that Hoover did
not want him for a campaign running mate,
when the Dawes-for-President movement col-
lapsed on the eve of the Kansas City conven-
tion and large financial interests attempted
the alternative of obtaining second place on
the ticket for him.
There are even better reasons. In our judg-
ment, why Dawes is an unwise choice for the
court of St. James.
Anglo-American relations are strained.
There is growing conflict over trade, markets,
eredits, raw materials, freedom of the seas,
and navies. World peace depends in large
measure upon achieving Anglo-American un-
derstanding and cooperation, and upon miti-
gating these conflicts.
Our Ambassador in London should be great
in patience, tolerance and selr-control.
“Hell 'N Maria" Dawes is not eminent for
those qualities.
. monplace things of life I am
one of the world's most weal-
thy men. And, today I thank
j God for the knowledge of how
I to PLAY.
' On yesterday I turned back
the pages of the Book of Life,
and lived once again in the
days long-gone to make up
the lost youth of time. A little
Ind, just across the alley, with
these words on the flap of the
left pocket of his blouse: "The
Boy Scouts of America," was
my companion. He dug the
“wums" and we weal tishin’.
Me didn’t wander far a-field.
Nothing can be fairer or more noble than
the holy fervor of true zeal.— Mollere.
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Q. What radio station uses
the slogan "The winter vlay-
-ground of America?"
A. WoAl at San Antont, Texan
PReMHGAFeNof-thatdea
- among other physicians and
among his patients became bla
'bobby after he returned to
practice in Nicaragua. A man
on the operating able, just be-
fore the anaesthetic, could nev-
er be sure that he wouldn’t flrat
have to listen to a good-will lec-
ture by Dr. Sacasa.
So great was his fame for
■ that sort.pf thing that, while
American mnarines were in Nic-
aragua, in 1919, he was chosen
by a conHtion of parties to go
with Salvador Calderon Rami-
rez to Washington, explain Nic-
araguan conditions to the Wil-
son government and seek mor-
al support for a fair election in
1920. Wilson sent a commis-
sioner to observe the election
and the commissioner found
that about 30,000 fraudulent
votes had been case to elect the
Conservative candidate. But,
thanks to the convenient death
of Presldent Dego Chamorro in
1923 and another marine inter-
vention, there were fair elec-
tions in 1924 an 192M which
elected Liberal candidates.
A. There le no diatinct Amerlean
language, altho the impression hat
been ereated in some quarters that
America has a language ut Ha own
by the title of H. L. Mencken a widely
circutated book ""The Amertean Lan-
gunge." In that book he hows the
Idioms that are commonly used in the
United States, and how they differ
from tdloms used in England to ex-
press the same idea. Even the ter-
minolory le different In many cases,
but they are all in the English Ian*
guage.
OUT belonging to the land where everything
D is “bigger and better" you weren’t content
to 'send merely a box of popples. You en-
closed In It a "visiting fireman." Have you
heard the latest one about the man who found
a fly in his soup? . . . Well, anyhow, when
the wife and I opened the box, out stepped a
cute little “Apla Callfornientum." And I don’t
know what to do with him! I don’t even
know for sure that that is his name. We’ve
called him an "Apis Callfornientum" to hide
our ignorance. You see the only bugs we
have here are cockroaches, mosquitoes, files
and bed-bugs. And when a bug with person-
ality arrives, it’s something to write home
about. 1
I might inform you that he looks like a
bee whose great-grandmother had carried on a
flirtation with an ant. His cost is golden and
bee-like, but his lines are those of an esthetic
dancer. Maybe the bees have gone in for
those clothes?model figures since I left home.
444
" n/ "THE VAGABOND"
T AM not old—just born •
-I long time ago. that’s all.
ate’ some. Did we have
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Q. On what date did Palm
Sunday fall in the year 1999?
A. March 26,
Q. When was William How-
ard Taft the president of the
United States?
A From March—♦, 1000 to March
4, ion.
Telephone Exchangs, Dial 2-5151
.OHM II SonnELLs ” RALPH D. HRNDEREON,
Bailor Dustness Manager
L. A. WILKE agfeglb
any tenor___________________ _______
By RODSEY DUTCHER
NBA Service Writer
WASHINGTON, April 11.—Dr.
V Juan Bautista Sacasa, the
new minister from Nicaragua,
has come here in pursuanee of
his old hobby crusading for
happier relations between the
United States and countries of .
Central America.
That was how he happened to
enter politics; that was what in-
directly elevated him to the con-
stitutional presidency of Nica-
ragua. Long before Hoover was
ever heard of, Sacasa was carry-
ing the good-will torch around
in his own country, despite what
seemed to be the efforts of re-
current landing parties of
Amrerican marines to shoot it
from his hands.
Dr. Sacasa 4s a physician. He
has what might be called an ex-
cellent bedside manner which
will do him no harm as a diplo-
mat.
He graduated -from the Co-
lumbia University Medical
School in New York and was an
Interne at Columbus Hospital, , .
He acqred an admiration for
the United States along with the
conviction that it was nowhere
near as anxious to grab terri-
tory and oppress small nations
as some Nicaraguans believed.
_9235
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l 777778
3422
By MBS. WALTER FKIGUSON
QUITE the most sensible and intelligent thing
I have read in a month of Sundays is the
article in a recent Atlantic Monthly by Ram-
say Traquair. The woman’s movement in
America is discussed by the author.
He points out several Interesting facts.
One is that while women feel justified in imi-
tating men, they frown down the man who
imitates women or who attempts to cling to an
activity which they hav snatched from him.
Another, that while wo break every conven-
tion we insist upon men toeing their old
marks. He says that while women are living
in the twentieth century, men stilt extst in
the Victorian age.
He is right about this. There is more
than a modicum of truth in his charges.
Tho we women are deserting the kitchen,
in droves, we are not willing for men to take
our place there. We are turning the men out
of jobs downtown, while we deny them, by
our scorn, the right to make a career of do-
-mestielty, —Thts obvtousty Teaves them with
not a financial leg to stand on and puts the
home in danger of being abolished altogether.
We consider it a mark of intelligence to
compete with men in all their old trades, but
the fellow who turns the tables and occupies
himself with what was once a feminine calling
is in danger of being dubbed a “sissy."
And just what, for instance, is a “sissy?"
Everybody knows. Many a sensitive child hrs
been humiliated by the term. The luckless
wight who is not exactly like all other boys
In every particular finds men, women and chil-
dren insulting him with the name.
When a youngster does not have a strong
tendency to fight or play with guns or swear;
when he feels deeply or has a heart full of
pity for weak things: when he does not like
discord and is gentle of manner—he is a slssy,
if he loves the violin better than baseball, the
drawing pad better than marbles or the library
better than the corner drugstore, he is a super
sissy and worthy of all scorn. Let him, in
short, depart by one lota from the path of
strict masculinity as we conceive it, and he
becomes the butt of cruel jokes.
The result is obvtous. We want to be like ’
the men. When we have accomplished this,
however, will it not be equally true that men
are like women? A bewildering ring-around-
the-rosy is apparent. And any way you look
at it, the future looms monotonous.
TT has always been under-.
1 stood that the eagle will not
attack the wild turkey gobbler
but Harold J. Cook saw such
an incident on a ranch on the
northern edge of New Mexico,
and he has snapshot photo-
graphs to prove it. The preda-
tory bird was a golden eagle
and the gobbler weighed about
15 pounds. Feathers strewn
over a diameter of 30 yards
showed that there had been a
hot fight. The caglo made no
effort to lift the turkey but
started right in to eat the
flesh off Ita back. It was still
alive when Cook spied them
but died soon after, the eagle
flew away.
. "96X
‘ 304122
w2..,15
K "Ghe %
■ i,f i
rREXTILE strikes are growing
- common in the South. One
does not have to dig deep to
discover the reason.
First, the workers hate
something to strike for. Sec- j
ond. agitatars are' playing on |
T AST Sunday, Thomas Has-
— tings, writing in the New
York World, declared that New
York City should limit the
height of Its buildings to eight
storles.
As tho in answer to hts sug-
gestion, Wednesday's news
contained the announcement of
a 63-story building to be erect-
ed by the Bank of Manhattan
in the Wall Street district.
Except for the Eiffel Tower,
this building will be the tall-
est strfture in the world, top-
ping the Woolworth by nearly
50 feet and the Chrysler by
more than .JO------- . L______
SACASA, as everyone knows,
• became constitutional prest-
• dent thru his vice presideney
would be utterly immaterial whether they bad
•rar been abroad," Lincoln said.
Two evening! later he waa assassinated,
and the difficulties of reconstruction, more
difficult in many ways than the dirfieulties of
—2 Um war Atneif, tell onto mor* belligerent
F *
p, t
A ; d
P $
,o
i r
Q. When was the Louisiana
Purchase Exposition held?
A. At st. 1ula, Mo. trom April
3 t• Duc. J, 1004.
•-—-—-——————a
H"
? M
.2 c
•. •
a . gray and with all the Latin
just to a nearby "puddle""
( where the perch hung out.
। When the King of Day
dropped behind the. western
borderline, leaving a curtain
of saffron and gold, the lad
and I made our way home-
ward—tired but happy; for
we'd bln a-fishin’ an’ snagged
a goodly mess o' perch, the
delectable, friendly little pan-
fish of the wayside puddles,
and meandering brooks making
their Bay thru pastoral scenes.
On reaching home we went
to his house, the folks were
yagk 3
•3:
7
s,"
along sensible lines have been ।
balked by employers who ।
should know better.
Poverty has played a large I
/- I-
/ / ,/M
TON’T say . “This cake is for
— you and I.” “You and
me," is correct.
Pronounce "precedence" as
if spelled - "pre s« den" with
stress on “He." It is not "pres-
e-dens."
Don't use “in hopes” when
you mean “hopeful."
Adage popularly used but
often misquoted: “Better a
blush on the face than a spot
on the heart’’ waa "Better to
have a red face than a black
heart,” as an old Portuguese .
proverb says.
—' A WOMAN’S VIEWPOINT ... ---------
When Men Imitate Women
--------------------------
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Sorrells, John H. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 164, Ed. 2 Thursday, April 11, 1929, newspaper, April 11, 1929; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1546233/m1/4/?q=waco+tornado: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.