The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 165, Ed. 1 Friday, April 12, 1929 Page: 4 of 30
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PAG
Jome wonr RESS—AFAIL
ct
By Talburt
Pulse
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YOUR QUESTIONS ANSWERED
Natureland
♦
♦
In the world, just as Congress.
Stedman pf
th* best
«
the surname Beverly?
■
1 75:1
7
31
Won't You Tell Me. Hon......Waring’s Pa. Orchestra
.S
constitute the great
I
lem of human progress.
responsible
Y 1
l’recious Little Thing Called Love.....Marvin-Smalle
Caressing You
. . . Mart in-Smalle
Wedding Belle Are Breaking Ip the Gang(iene Austin
That's What I Call Heaven....
. . . Giene Austin
W abash Bine*
Boyd Senter and Senterpedes
Goin’ Bark to Tennessee Reyd Senter anti Senterpedes
.Waring’s Pa. Orch. ‘
Jericho . .
I'll Always Be In Love With You Waring's Pa. Orch.
Hedskin . . .
. Selvin’s Orchestra
?
TODAY’S ANNIVERSARY
LOW FARE
@-
They Say—
EXCURSION
Manhattan dailies items concerning who
, the
at such-and-such a place, are almost
was seen
\ I0I0R—COLUMBIA—HIUNSWICK AND OKEH RECORDS
ALL THE HITS—ALL THE TIME
2
A.
PAY $1 CASH
$1 WEEKLY
J
CITY TICKET OFFICE
11 4 E. Ninth. Phone 3-2616
1
812 Main St.
"» StWVIet iwswtunieN"
A
A
3
#
i
MISSOURI
na A sa
NEWEST
BIG HITS.
L A, WILKE
cur vastof
1752
75
178%
75
21870
75e
prob-
They
for
21802
78c
21864
75c
}
21802
75
people is paid for thru excess-
ive charges to rich people.
As a matter of common sense
those who can pay 'their doc-
tor's hills are being forced to
balance the account for those
who cannot.
w
3 •
41194
73
2185%
75<
only when he takes'off. . After
that he tucks them up among
his feathers.
. . . . Shilkret’s Orch.
. . . . Shilkret’s Orch.
...... .Art Gillham
........Art Gillham
Weary River.....
The Song I Love : . .
21861
75c
41192
75c
21836
75c
21832
75c
I
I
1755
75c
N
{« 11
susianna
'fain, strect
My Angeline . . .
Coquette .....
Outside .....
HERBERT D. SCHULZ
Manstin* Editor
C. E. sonos
Advertising Manager
37 feet S inches in circumfer-
ence.
21888
75c
21886
76c
1726
mise
----,-----------------------------
Careful, Aunty!
21833
75c
21855
75c
21851
75c
" $e
i ,0):
218a3 < Jarolinn Moon..............
75c * I Wish I Had Died in My Cradle
L
---Join Our Record Club---
SELECT TEN RECORDS
she will be “seen and heard” by tens of thou- j
sands of New Yorkers for the 'first time. Which
* • erate w
the Inve
ed to al
fight ag
ping e nil
limit.
■■ IN NEW YORK--------
Big Town Gossip
... .Gene Austin
, .. .Gene Austin
f
t
4
4
~ A. woman-a v IEW FOINT ——.
Dancing Is Not a Sin
Bream Train :
She's Funny That. Way
Glad Bag Doll......
I'll Never Ask for More
V,
Member .r United Fress, Seriwos -Ha rd Newipapey alllance, Newapaper Enterprine Aasoclation
Ne-npaper Intormetisn Eervice. and' Audit Bureau t Circutation.
"Give Light and. People Will Find Their Own Way”—Dante
Frankie Martin and Guitar
.............. Lee Morse
.. . .............Lee Morse
..... Whiteman's Orchestra
... . . Whiteman's Orchestra
. . . . Aaronson's Commanders
1709
75c
.......Gene Austin
....... Gene Austin
.... Shilkret’s Orch.
.. . Goldkette’s Orch.
.... Shilkret’s Orch.
......Olsen’s Orch.
INDEPENDENCE DAY CELEBRATION
APRIL 19-21
rickets to Galveston for Texas Independence Day Celebration
PACIFIC
LIMES .
SI
Q
F/ .
Precious Little Thing Called Love.....Olsen’s Orch.
. 1 Faw Down an' Go Boom. . ...........Olsen's Orch.
I he Big Kock Cand Mountains
Frankie Marvih and (iuitar
Hiding on the Elevated Rallroad
\ I
The Business of
Living
The Nation’s
I
89
You Were Meant for Me. .
Broadway Melody.........
I Love You ..............
komesweerony
men for other southern States
deny both claims.
2.27
4
8---V
WASE
nattonwi
• 'I ’ ml ■
ers and
machine
been on
ef the
Labor.
Labor
the cour
(MM#)
- a-
‛es
TRSU
GALVESTON $910 w
is a typical example of things in Manhattan.
They could go to see her in the flash for the
expenditure of a nickpl’s carfare. And, wheth-
er or not you believe it, I know sends of
people who have never been on Second Ave-
nue. which is the East Side's Broadway.
And one of the biggest cigaret concerns
‘ You probably won t want a
valley oak of California as a
shade tree for your new home;
it takes 200 to 300 years to
rE FLU carried off 56,311 people, in 10
1 weeks, in Germany. Must have been fiercer
flu than ours.
-----------------—•
Q. Whe was the .f iret-woman
executed in New York?
The Fort Worth Press
ecuirrs-WOWAK• SEWSFAFEN,
owped ana Publishea Dally cexcept Sunday) b/ The Fort Worth Press Publishins Co.,
Hirn a*4 4<v*«S St roots. Fort Worth. Tosis Price, in Tayrant County.
J centa- M casts a weak: elsewhere. S canto—10 centa a week
Thnt N1
0
ATST
1 '
•
AMe"
,1.
ICKNESS and its healing
51
Tracy
SAYS
InstitutionaUged medi-
cine can not become too
high-handed without kick-
ing the ground from un-
der its own feel.
,,} I
Q. What do the names Pa-
tricia and Mario mean?
A. Patrleta (Gaelte » mean • ‘noble’:
Marlo (Latin)mean "zrbat Vtetor• "
Q. How did th* State of New
Jersey ratify the Eighteenth
amendment, and when?
A By vote of the State Legislature
in March, INS.
All by Yourself In the Moonlight.....Johnny Marvin
Sweetheart of All My Dream*. .......Johnny Marvin
Glad Bag Doll ................Ted Lewis and Band
When the Curtain Comes Down. .Ted Lewis and Banti
A. Mr- Margaret
hanged tn Hudson 1
■lets hl* feet trail
in America has been paying several smartly
dressed young women 3100 a day to parade ,
up and down the “Avenue," smoking as they
go. The first appearance was made during
the Easter parade. The idea is to accustom
the- world to seeing women smoke In the
streets, with an eye, of course, to future sales.
. GRE
INV
01
Many
The
There it lent liquor in
Washington now than
ever before, despite the
furore raised by the Mi-
chaelson case.
Bhrutz.
that Te
about
crops.
If th
propose
ers ove
upon 4
corn; '
wheat;
sorghut
oats'; 1
f05,00/
000 art
000 acr
seres o
( reach maturity, san Benito
i County. Californta, has a vailey
: oak that is the largest nut-,
producing tree in the United corn liquor In th* world comeb
states. It is 125 feet high and from North Carolina. Spokes-
North Carolina says
FT. SUMTER BOMBARDED
HORT SUMPTER, situated in Charleston Har-
r bor and therefore in Confederate territory,
was bombarded 68 years ago today, after the
Federal government had refused to abandon it.
The fort was held precariously by Major
Robert Anderson and about 75 men. The at-
tack was conceived by leaders of the Con-
federacy to prove to the world that the south-
ern government was ready to enforce its rights
as an independent nation. So far, the Con-
federacy had no intention of Invading north-
ern territory and it did not believe that the
North would Invade it.
Charleston shook with the rumble of the
gune that hurled a colorful shell attack on
the fort and its tiny garrison. A wave, of ex-
citement spread thru the city. War had come
at laat—a colorful, picturesque kind of war,
with shells that opened like fireworks as they
arched over the placid waters of the harbor.
There were no casalties, but the fort,
eaught fire and there was come fear that the
magazine would explode. - The fire was ex-
tinguished. however, the fort surrendered and
Major Anderson was rowed over to Confed-
erate headquarters to dine with General
Benuregara A—k
man Charles M.
By "THIS VAGABOND"
TID you ever perch yourself
— on a log. away out in the
"tall uncut," and try to analyse
the thing called Life? r have
many times, and what has it
profited me, I sometimes ask
myself. Somehow, I have never
been able-to turn in a very sat-
isfactory answer. I am never
'able to dope the thing out to
my fancyrthere remains always
a rattle in the old wagon of
"Nigntonstyingfonh
it’s all about.
oFr a long while, 20 years or
more, I have had this thought
hung in the attic of my Ivory
dome: “A portion of all the
joy and happiness in this world
is mine; and take it the other
way 'round. I also come in for
my share of all the other guy's
E
TmIi
Q. Does the Jones bill have
to be ratified by the Statekeg- percentage of 1929 hooch. How-
3
Hr RODNEY DVTCREa
NEA Service Writer
WJASHINGTON, April 12.-
W Despite all the whoop-te-
doo over the fact that a dry
Congressman found himself in
trouble with the prohibition
laws." there is probably less
liquor at the Capitol today than
there ever was.
The Michaelson incident has
undoubtedly scared some mem-
bers, but the tendency toward
caution began some time ago.
Congressmen have learned to
use discretion* They have learn-
ed. In most rases, that it doesn’t:
do to vote for a law designed
to send people to’ prison for
five years and then openly flout
that law. Too many" persons
are apt to be sore about it.
Thus the members of the
Senate and the House who keep
liquor in their offices have be-
come fewer and fewer, among
the dry contingent especially.
And there is not so much pub-
lic drinking, either by legisla-
tors or government officials
i here No new teetotallers are
reported, of course, but condi-
tions aren t is smells e* they
... I
sorrow." Some “nutty" idea.
’you'll say! Maybe so. I can't
prove a thing—not even th*
Red-Baiting Labor Department
PED-BArTING is the v. s. Labor Depart-
h meats initial contribution in efforts in
' nettfe the Carofina textife strfkes. As a re-
• suit it has accomplished nothing constructive
but has materially incteased.the bitt»rn*»s in
that industrial strife.
The department* coneiliatiqn agent in the
strike area. Charles G. Wood, I* quoted as s
saying that "no conciliation is possible until
the misled workers divorce themnelves from
thetr communistic leaders." Wood is further
quoted as describingthe trike1 a fnrtn o
•’revolution,'’ and as praising the use of state
traops against the strikers.
Instead of reprimanding and recalling its
agent for his partisanship, the Labor Depart-
ment reasserts ite- "utmost confidence , in
Woods fairness and his ability as a mediator."
Altogether apart from th* fact that the
Carolina workers are striking against wages
and conditions close to industrial slavery and
that the employer* are zuilty of sabotaging
the system of national high wage prosperity to
which American industry and the Hoover ad-
ministration are committed, the Labor Depart-
—menta attitude is inexeusable._____ .
Whether the striker* are members or no
union, or of a conservative union, or qf in
alleged communistic union is no business of
the department or of its agents. There is no
law preventing workers joining a so-called
communistic union. There arc certain laws
against violence and it should be enforced
squally against employers and employes. But
the Carolina strikers have not been guilty Of
violence, d«-»plte provocation, and even if they
had been guilty the preservation n( order does
not rest with the Labor Department.
The Labor Department may be pleased or
displeased because certain alleged radtcal
leaders have come in the aid of strugghing
workers neglected tnr years by conservative
unions, but auch opinions have nothing to do
with its duty of attempting neutral concilia-
tton.
Qur I will hope continually and will yet
D praise thee more and more.— Psalms 71.14.
He that loses hope may part with anythipE.
—Cosgreve. .
Q. Are lilies of the valley
easily grown?
A. Yes. They yequilre ne aperial at-
tention, and are adapted, for planting
n round shrubbery, pomhes or shady
places, where they come up every sea
son and bring an abundance of beau-
tlfnl flowers.
—21
X t atum.
a,
,* ____’
Q. Who administered the
oath of office to President
Harding?
A, Ehi t Justice ivNte
V * v
Q What is the’ meaning of
The eagle
So lot
eiency"
dle-aged
merely t
a certair
John P.
of the
A F. of
the subj
'To el
rl«l thin
thousar:
men I id
me*) cde
clared.
"In n
"the M
worker
dleage
$ of dils 11
muscula
mid* ui
F*edRge
certain to- mention them. A trick costume
at a charity fete is generally good for a pic-
' ture in the rotogravure sections of the Sunday
from a brand of cigarets to a beauty cream is
a profitable source of income, as well as a
means of getting their pictures in the papers.
The “younger set" is particularly active in
this connection, and such is the social com-
petition th a great city like New. York that
some go to amazing lengths to keep their
names before the public. Not even the chor-
ines, the movie ladles or Broadway actresses
are more versatile at space grabbing.
ever. the idea is not So Bad at
that—think I.
Folks, listen! About the only
think I see to the foregoing
stuff is this: My belief has a
tendency.to keep me from doing
anything that might bring grief
to my fellow man. And it also
causes me to put a little water
on his paddle, in the hope that
I .‘too, may rejoice in his hour
of Good Luck—just a fool
hunch, that’s all.
4
Free Textbooks
N/TOST important school systems have adopted
IVI the plan of providing 'free textbooks for
the children.
' Usually this applies only to children at-
tending grade or junior high schools. Free
texbooks in senior high schools are scare*.
Parents at first thought this was a grant
bleseing. It saved them a certain number of
dollars each school year fot each child. But
other methods are being built up to part the
family from its dollars.
If Little Willie doesn’t need a dime or a
quarter or a half-dollar to attend some school
function, the parents are asked to subneribe
to a school magazine or contribute to a school
organization or to attend a social function
designed to raise money to assist the school.
Pianos must be bought for the auditorium,
rugs must be bought for the principal's of-'
flee, teacher* must be given valentines and
other present.—— ’------
Each week something new crops tip and
♦he parents have become resigned to their fate.
Family budgets, where budgets exist, in-
clude ever-increasing items for school expense.
if the parent* had to buy the books as
veil as pay for the incidentals. father might
have to give up his golf and mother her
bridge club.
Raising children, as nl yore, continues to
be one nt life's greatest trials and tribulations.
have been
much of
priestcraft
Q. Will salt watr freeze’
A. 'rhe freezing point for sea water
of average salinity la 28.6 degrees
Fahrenheit, which If also the point of
' maximum enstty.
M"
the superstition,
and hokus pokus
will- be on sale for 10:00 p. m. train April 1 0th, 8:20 a. m.
Limited to leave Gal-
• b*----1 ’ .
islatures before it can be en-
forced?
A. No. It is a Federal iaw, enforced
by thegiederal prehibirion agents.
• ♦ •
Q. Is an alien seaman who
deserted his ship in the United
States in 1924 subject to de-
portation?
A. If he haw been living unmolsted
in this country for more than three
years, he is no longer subject to dr
port at Ion, Paccording to a decision
handed down March 21, 1927, by Fed-
eral Judge William Bondy.
TN contrast is that new generation of pub-
I llcity mad rich folk who go to extreme
lengths to gain even slight recognition. Where-
as the richest and most important of the so-
cial figures lives unobtrusively, the hundreds
of "would-bes" make frantic efforts to seem
important.
I know of at least a dozen who actually
hire press agents to keep Their names in the
newspapers. They organize their campaigns
like a theatrical production about to go out
on the road.
One of the latest rackets is to “be seen"
at snappy night club openings or at first night
performances of certain Broadway plays. The
"second-string" columnists, who prepare for
after, indictment for killing her child
She swore her innocence. And several
years Inter another woman confessed
on he deathbed ’■ . • fh
murdere mid not Mtn. Houhgtelins
NEW YORKS richest woman, I am informed.
IN Is Mrs. Payue Whitney.’ The late Payne
Whitney is said to have left a fortune of
$200,000,000, But her taste is not for display;,
nor does she fancy the limelight. One of
Manhattan's most modest inhabitants, her am-
bition lx to write good poetry. She already
has two volumes of adult verse and one writ-
ten for her two children. These have not
been given general public circulation.
Q. If a natural born citizen
of the United States of Italian
parentage should go on a visit
to Italy, would he be subject to
the Italian Government?
A. According to Itlian law, emigra-
tton and the assumption of a foreign
cftizenship do not exempt Italian-born
• individuals or their children hor
abroad from performing their military
service In Itab.
Q. What is the population of
the world?
A. rhe estimnated population ia
j j 48,000,000,
professes to be dry and is dry.
2. The man who votes dry,
professes to be dry and is wet.
3. The man who votes dry. «
professes to be wet and is wet. .
4. The man who vote* wet. .
professes to b* we’ and ts wetr-s--
5. Th* man who votes wet,
professes to b dry and is wet.
The third group ,Is the .small-
est. One of them is a western
Congressman who was quoted a*
saying last fall to his constitu-
ents that he voted dry- but
when offered a drink “acted •
just like everybody else."
Another is Senator Col*
Blease of South Carolina, who
says:
“Everybody in South Caro-
lina knows I take a drink. I get .
up on the stump and tell 'em I '
do. But I'm representing my
constituents when I rote dry.”
Senator Blease is a bluff, .
florid faced, frank, plain-talking
gent of jo. who wears suspen-
ders. colored shirks, butterfly
neckties and no vest. Some peo-
ple contend that he is no states-
' man, but he has practiced law
( for 40 years,-knows human na-
■ ture, says what he likes and
isn't letting anyone put any.
thing over on South Carolina.
ITE says South Carolina pro-'
Fl duces the best corn liquor
This leaves average folks
out in the cold. The bulk of
us are too proud to accept
charity and too poor to travel
with the rich.
n, MB*. WALTEK rnGUSON
“T )ANCING," says a Baptist pastor during
• the Acourre of « city .revival, "la the
worst enemy of the human soul. It is worse
than liquor, tobacco- or any1 oilier form of
vice. '
Statements such as this are a‛p#t of the
reason why creeds like the Baptist are declin-
Ina all over the world. Instead of bread,
ministers of Lhis type hand out stones to those
who come for spiritual sustenance.
Every person who sat within the sound of
that preacher's voice knew that such a state-
ment was overdrawn, ridiculous and utterly
without truth.
is dancing a worse vice than lying or
hypocrisy or deceit? Is it more harmful than
malice or greed? Is it more deadly to the
soul than pride or sloth or envy, than vanity
or gossip of hatred?
Of course not. We all know that Danc-
ing is merety a pleasant and healthful exer-
cise when Indulged in by decent individuals.
It has been magnified into a sin by a lot of
sensational pulpiteers who can think of noth-
ing else to agitate about.
•Why don't these men who are so anxious
’ tn saw our souls preach to us of the danger of
lying 'and cheating our brother in business?
What human soul can atand the chicanery
-at aoina nf our trade methnds and come ont
alive? Why don't they caution us about our
dirty polities, our blatant eagle screaming?
Why don’t they point out tn us the wickedness
of war and tHe harm of the injustices of the
strong over the weak? Why don't they talk
about our vilest sin, our worship of money?
Why don't they teach us to love each other,
as Jeans did? • .
Because if they did, they might step on the
toes of spme wealthy parishoner. Their sal-
aries might suffer. So they begin upon the
unoffending youngsters about dancing and the
wickedness of the’sex instincts. Sex, while half
the men and women of their congregations,
those who build the churches and pay the
bill, are eaten up with lusts and greeds and
hatreds
When God walked upon the earth, sex was
a clean and decent thing. We have made it
into an ugly, shameful and Blinking evil. And
our youngsters could dance from dark to dawn
every night of th* week and not commit half
tha actual sins that a lot of these slick church
pillars have to their credit. ,
that has plagued the race.
Much a* medical science
may have accomplished. It can
not afford to be overly proud.
We have not arrived at a
point yet where doctors do not
lose every case in the end.
More than that, we are still
beset with quackery, some of
which comes to us thru the
most regular channels, and the
public is still sorely perplexed.
/ Th* greatest physician still
makes mistakes, and the ver-
iest ignoramus still performs
surprising cures.
A Danish laborer opens his
throat with a pen knife and
extracts a piece of bread which
had become lodged there and
which was choking him to
death.
Doctors gew up the wound
after he is thken to the hos-
pital and praise the operation
as highly sccessul, which is
sensible, since they could have
done no better.
I!
Ill
rNHAT story is not yet finish-
L ed. The question of what
doctors shall be allowed to say
In print, or what they ehall be
permitted to charge fr their
services is not entirely one for
them .to answer.
The public has a right to be
heard in the matter, and some
doctors have sense enough to
recognize that right.
Dr. Herman M. Bundesenn,
for Instance, coroner of Cook
County, 111., and one nf the
best knnwn health experts in
the country, has resigned from
the Chicago Medical Society in
order to show his dlsapprovsl
of Dr. Schmidt’s treatment,
while Dr. Charles Mayo, head
of the world famous Rochester
clinte, has come to the latter's
defense.
TNSTITUTIONALIZED medt-
’ cine cannot become too high
handed without kicking the
ground from under its own
feet. When you get right
down to brass tacks, the medi-
cal preCession depends, not on
doctorBMut other people.
It cannot survive by circum-
scribing itself with a eode of
etfffes which fails to include
other people.
Neither can it survive on an
arbitrary fee system which au-
tomatically continues to rise.
One bear* much about the
charity work done by doctors,
of which there is a great deal
and for which they deserve the
highest praise.
They do not bear the whole
burden, however, since much
of the free service to' poor
22
13%
and 10:00 p. m. trains April 20th.
veston April 22nd.
B, GinERr swAX
NEW YORK, April 13.—The “Big Town"
.) gossip ... Jo Davidson, the internationally
famous sculptor, returned to Paris the other
day because he couldn't find an American
barber who could trim bls whiskers properly.
And a group of "gypsy" players, who wan-
der through the enstern countryside of sum-
mer months putting on old English comedies,
has as its star performer one Bushnell Cheney,
He happens to be the son and heir to the silk
millions, yet he prefers the vagabond trail of
his theater group to the financial world in
which he could cut a wide figure. And they
do so that Cheney Sr. has steadily refused to
underwrite the traveling players for a single
dime.
And Molly Picon, who is “the darling of
the East Side," will soon be known to a na-
tional audience, thank* to the talkies. Al-
though the favorite of the Ghetto .for years,
Rev. Walter John Sherman,
Methodist! “We suffer more
from the weakness of good
men than from the strength of
had men."
*
‘itliNNM,
1 * 1 *
। IHE Americap eagle On
1 Uncle Sam's silver quarter
is shown with his feet —or
claws trailing behind him. A
naturalist who has taken mo
tion pictures of many birds in
I flight says that this is wrong.
T. R. on Social Rank
(UR Republican government has ho social
• arbiters. Social arbiters SO with kings
and hereditary privileges. In Britain there is
a regularly constituted public official with
duties and powers to rule on all questions
ef official social precedence. When King Ed-
ward died every person who marched or rode
in his funeral had a designated position ac-
corded by this government official. And much
herd feeling was caused because under, the
ancient traditions which govern precedence
kings and kingdoms outrank republics. A
little kingdom outranks a big republic.
So it happened that ex-President Theodore
Roosevelt, who wasdsignated a special envoy
to participate in the Edward funeral, found
himself in a gilded chariot behind the repre-
sentatives of Montenegro and other minor
kingdoms. The special 'commissioner from
France found hi* republic also so rated and
he went to Roosevelt and urged that the great
republic register a protest.
To which Col. Roosevelt replied: “My
dear Cambon. I appreciate, your feelings, but
I have a very strong feeling myself that a
funeral is no place to kick up a row.!'
Which may or may not have a bearing on
the present cat fight in Washington:
1. The man who vote dry.
Telephone Ewhange, Dial 2-3151
soux H SORnELLS RALPH D HENDEnSOX,
Eaitor Duntneaw Manager
—Two Stores— 513 Main, St.
• Pa 7w . -W
A. It is an Engitah name meaning
beaver Is* or beaver meadow . •
—
DHERE is another row in
Chicago, and, perhaps, an-
other racket back of it. It is
worth mentioning, however, not
only because it centers around
something besides the beer
trade, but because it involves
a problem in which every one
is interested—the problem of
sickness and medical fees.
Dr. Louise E. Schmidt was
expelled by the Chicago Medi-
cal Society a few days ago. on
charges of unethical conduct.
He had not been guilty of
mhalpractice, or overcharging a
patient, but what he had done
was far more offensive in the
eyes of the Chicago Medical
Society.
The Chicago Medical Society
rannot forgive advertising. It
cannot even forgive the writ-
ing of articles.
Several years ago it expelled
Dr. Hazeldine for writing about
the “Baby Gallinger" case, tho
the question involved was '
more moral than medical.
Dr. Hazeldine was only try-
ing to tell an intensely inter-
ested public why he did not
save the life of a monstrosity.
Dr. Schmidt was only trying
to save an intensely interested
public some money.
The expulsion of the two
1*11* its own story. __•
Q. By what party was George i
Washington elected?
A. He was the unanimous choice f>t
the electors. And there were no politi-
cal parties organized in the United
States at that time. ,
Q. Who wrote the Constitu-
tion of the United States?
A. Gouveneur Morrie atually framed
the Constitution, but its execution was
due chicllyLRvagegMadisgnyho.iga,
po pu I a rly,knownas F“tbeV-ME-NN
Constitution.'’
e • e
Q. Who played opposite Lea-
trice Jo in "The Wedding
Seng”?
A. Robi if Aes
Q. What is the citizenship of
a Chinese born in this country
of Chinese parents?
A. He tn n natina! born American
citizen.
T. A P. Sta, Phone 2-6344
•--------------------------------
ALBERT DE BASSOM-
A PIERRE, Belgian Ambas-
sador to Tokio, visitor: “Japan
is anxious for world peace. Her
own economic problems are
serious enough without having
the costs of war added to
them. Hostility toward other
Nations is confined to the jingo
press and does not reflect the
official or popular attitude.’”'
• • »
apt. Robert Dollar, 85-year-
old ship owner: "I am sorry
that Edfson"feets that no man
can be happy. I can still do a
hard day’s work. That ought-to
make any man happy.”
Alice S. Ryan: ”,Women go
to beauty specialists as to their
father confessor."
You ran *M an answer to any answerable question ot rnet nr infurmatien
by wnting to Frederick M. Kerby, Question rattor. thr Fort Worth I’reas,
Wnshtngton Bureau, UM New Aork Aienue, Washington. D. < . enelosing la«-
centa in etamp for reply. Medleal and l**al ndvien ennnnt be Ehen, nor ran
extended reserch bo madr. All other questious will recelve n pereona! reply.
Uneluged requeste cannot bn answered. All letters nre confidentinl. Fan pre
coralally Ini lied to make use of this free sensice aa often na you plense.-
EDITOR,
"Seler
• who hav
nate wa
eape tb
est was
middle-:
“In a
ar* told
tribe w
relative
to pi rat
be peen
tries."
‘ 12 M
R
NOW I* the season whan lito la all a-quiver,
LN while awaiting the U. S. collector's re-
| mark* on vour income tax jet urn.
22
Wo Te Amo—Mean* I Love You .....The Columbiana
Carolina Moon .....................Smith Balew
If I Had You.....................Smith Balew
I Want to Be Bad................. Orch.
You Wouldn't Fool .Me............. Orch.
Button Up Your Overcoat ......Waring's Pa. Orch.
My Luck Star . ..... .........Waring's Pa. Orch.
w eary River ................. Smith Balew.
That’s the Good Old Sunny South......Smith Balew
Adams Music Co.-
_
c-ta*
,<
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Sorrells, John H. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 165, Ed. 1 Friday, April 12, 1929, newspaper, April 12, 1929; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1546234/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.