Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 104, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 25, 1925 Page: 4 of 12
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WICHITA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, AUGUST 25,1925
Toa IlA DAILY TIMES
. WICHITA VALLA TEXAs - *
-1E TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY, eunLES
a Published Every Weekday Afternoon
0 -.=== and on Sunday Morning
IAEntered ar the Postoffiee at Wichlis Talis sa Second
— TMVNP vhch hinewl'indflictijiroscinit'"
- MEMbEu AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
NATIONAL AERTISINO REPRESENTATIVES
25-NRM
JUST |
FOLKS
—By-
EDGAR A. GUEST
: CLEVER CRIMINALS
RARELY ESCAPE
Editor’s Note: This column does not necessarnis refiser she sat.
tortal views of this paper. It is printed headiscussion of timely
topics by one of the ablest writers of the country.
OUT OUR WAY-
—By Williams.
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TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1925
DARK DAYS.
Life has laughter in it.
Smiles ‘and songs of glee
But the care-free minute
Stays not constantly;
Cares must come to vex us
Burdens we must bear.
Problems grave perplex us
As through life we fare.
Life has hours of duty.
Days of trial, too.
Ugliness and beauty
Age has wandered through;
Hills to climb and hollows -
Where our feet may rest;
After pleasure, ‘follows
Many a cruel test.
None forever dancing.
--None forever sad; -
Yesterday's romancing
.. Was a joy wo had;
Now our hearts are aching
With the hurt of grief.
Shall we, God forsaking.
Falter in belief?
By CHESTER R. ROWELL
The "crime wave” may be only one more example of the familiar
observation that we have invented tools faster than we have developed
the character to use them. Man's first tool was the hammer, and the
first use he made of it was to brain his neighbor.
Some of us are still in that stage.
Because the “gun” makes the cowardly weakling s
equal to the strong man, and the automobile pro-
vides a quick "get-away," crime and escape are both
too easy. The same conditions have weakened the
old restraints of parentti and community discipline.
Nobody knows his neighbor, and home is a place to Mette 1
sleep. To a strong character, these wider contacts I
offer opportunity for growth. To a weak character,
they offer escape from responsibility. It is Wells' IPthO
"race between education and catastrophe,” with
catastrophe, for the moment, in the lead. If it is
not to win, new methods of moral training need
speeding. The old ones are hopelessly handicapped. Poncil
As usual, there is the dull season summer agita-
tion on the proposition that the newspapers should BY
print only the news that “does good." .....In-N-h
And of course, also as usual, nothing will come of it. The people
will continue to read the papers that print all the news, and these will
be the survivors. —
It is well that it is so. For noe--------------------------------
greater calamity could befall a de-
moeracy than to be spoon-fed on
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY
, As far as the east in from the west, so tar
hath he removed our transgressions from us.
, — Ps. 103.12.
___Buffer anything from man, rather than sin
against God.—sir Henry Vane.
— God was in our pleasures,
God was good to give;
‘ In the joy He measures
God is seen to live;
Shall He then desert us
In our times of fear.
When our sorrows hurt us
" Will not God draw near ?
predigested news. Some news does
good. Some news does harm. Most
news does neither. It is the bus!-
ness of newspapers to print it all;
to print it decently, considerately,
intelligently, and with reward to
the intelligence and good' taste of
readers—but print it!
The important reform the news-
papers need is respect for the in-
telligence of their readers. The peor
ple have more sense than editors or
politicians think. But, because
they have sense, they are entitled
to all the news, including the part
that "does harm." Otherwise, they
would be infants, with the editor
as guardian. - He may be wise; but
he is not wise enough for that.
but left his victim’s own name. in
his own handwriting, for his iden-
tification. There are undetected
crimes, but not the “smart" ones.
The obscure common burglar may
have the luck to get away unper-
ceived, and some do. The Intelli-
gent man, planning an elaborate
crime and carefully covering his
tracks, leaves his trail in the very
coverings.
SELECT
DAN
-.MO
REFRA
St
Believes
For
y SOME THINGS VACATION DOLLARS
. P HAVE BOUGHT
A practical minded friend estimates that so many
is thousands of Wichitans have gone on vacations
this summer and that they have spent on an aver-
age so many dollars which are lost to Wichita Falls.
It may be that very few of the dollars our va-
meationists have spent will ever return to Wichita
Falls but they have bought a great deal that
sought to enrich not only those who spent them,
—but all the rest of us. Vacation dollars have bought
rend are buying better health. They are buying joy
. $ and bouyant spirit. They are buying richer ex-
periences and the improvement that must come
from seeing beautiful things. They are buying new
ideas that can be used right here in Wichita Falls.
And they are buying better friendships for each
other, for when we are off on a trip and meet our
fellow citizens in a few weeks or a few days we
din get to know them better than by years of
merely living in the same town with them. And
those of us who stay at home feel refreshment
gh at the ebulliance of our friends who have enjoyed
. a vacation. —— -
A Our vacationists are coming home. They are
coming home with new seal and a freshened spirit.
- sis it the cooler weather or the contagion of their
Minthusiasm which makes all of us feel better?
5___------------------
3 ... STILL IRRECONCILABLE.
Pain and joy are blended
Ever through the years.
Life, until it's ended
Runs through smiles and tears.
And the God who gave us
Joys—which slip away
Sends His love to save us
When we meet dismay. -
-—€--
It's Hard to Cover all Your Tracks
You can't get away with sul Loeb
and Leopold, super-intelligent and
super-educated, planned the “per-
fect crime" and left behind the
* clues for their own d etectio n.
Charles Henry Schwartz, chemist,
keen business man and amateur
student of crime, killed his man
and burned and disfigured the body
Writing 1a Real Labor
"Writing is. just hard work,”
modestly says Corra Harris, who
writes very well indeed. Of course
it is more than that. Most people
can not write well no matter how
hard they work. But also, no one,
however talented, can write well
without hard work. Language easy
to read is necessarily hard to write.
And the knowledge, the thought,
the feeling, the imagination, the
observation and experience of life,
without which there is nothing to
write about—these come only after
exceedingly hard work. Writing is
a talent, a trade, an art and a life.
Only the intensest concentration of
all these can produce anything
greatly worth while.
FRIENDLY ExEMES”
Jwvtlws
TODAY’S TALK
Br GLORGH MATTHEW ADAIM
GREEN PLANS PAN-AMERICAN
L ABOR MOVEMENT
Tittle Benny's
felts
Worst Story
IHaveHeard
Today
will ROGERS
Senator Borah and other senate irreconcilables
are reported “up in arms" over the terms of the
Belgian debt settlement.
They believe that the special concessions made
by the United States in the proposed settlement
| will prove embarrassing in making settlements
with other countries, and they declare that no con-
cession should have been made to the country
which was the first to feel the heel of German mili-
itarism.. —
: Concessions were made to Belgium, it was an-
nounced, because President Wilson had assured the
Belgians in the negotiations of/the treaty of Ver-
sailles that if they would forego a part of their
reparations claims against Germany the United
eStateswould-take-this into consideration in their
settlement of their debt to the United States. In
the debt settlement just negotiated the pledge of
President Wilson has been fulfilled. The fulfillment
seems to meet with general approval.
The prospects are that concessions will have to
be made France and Italy and other countries when
their debt settlements are taken up. Even conces-
sions were made to England when it settled its debt
to the United States. The precedent of concessions
already made may be embarrassing to the negotia-
tors in future settlements but the embarrassment,
might be greater if the American people were led
to believe that in every case their government could
atret the he pay of eery debt owed * b Eure-
.__- . RAINY DAYS.
Sometimes touble comes so fast and in such lib-
eral doses that it compels us to reorganize our en-
tire mental machinery. And sometimes our entire
life.
- -Like the nation that puts itself on a war basis
when the dark storms of the enemy appear, a man
is often called upon to face a regular battalion of
emergencies. Not the occasional rainy day, but a
string of rainy days. “ .
But we have all noticed that even after the con-
tinuous rainy days, there is sure to be more fresh-
ness than ever when the clouds roll away and the
sun again appears................... —
I looked out of my window the other day and
watched the rain pour down in torrents. It was
dark. Mist followed the rain. But on the morrow,
the sun streamed through my sleeping room and
there was a crispness in the air, and everything
looked green and fresh. Beauty seemed to have
been born anew.
Then I was glad it had rained.
I remember that last summer it was hot and
dry. People prayed for rain. The flower gardens
were pale and sad. The grass was parched and
the ground hard and baked. But this summer my
garden is in its royal garb and the grass is rich
in its green coat. Every day I see the smiles of
new flowers that have climbed a little higher to-
ward the sun and there is a look of happiness to
all nature that I have rarely seen.
Rainy days shouldn't be unhappy days. They
mean too much to the sunny days.
We are apt to want the good and happy things
of life to continue without break. But the wise
Watcher of human beings understands Setter. He
sends and gives variety. He knows His world and
His family.------— --——-
The man who grows welcomes every test of
his powers. .
The rainy days come to talk to us about appre-
ciating the sunny ones. And sometimes a while
string of them comes to wake us up!
(Copyright. 1938. by George Matthew Adams):
(RipplingRhumos's
66X % Wit Masor'C,
By CHARLES P. STEWART
NEA Service Writer.
WASHINGTON. Aug. 20.—Devel-
opment of a Pan-American labor
movement is one of the objects of
the meeting of officials of the fed-
erations in this country and Mex-
leo set for August 27 in Washing-
ton.
The North American and Mexican
federations already pull very well
together in harness, whenever an
occasion arises for team work, but
their affiliations with the labor
bodies of the more southerly re-
publics are not at all close. In:
deed, Venezuela, Bolivia, Paraguay
and Ecuador are without federa-
tions. though they do have various
unassociated unions.
Friendly relations with the Mer-
lean central organization are. of
value in a number of ways to the
American Federation of Labor. Im-
migration of workers into the Uni-
ted States from south of the Rio
Grande, for instance, is becoming a
serious problem.
Mexico is not on a quota basis,
and as wages, particularly in sea-
sonal employment, are higher on
this than the other side of the bor-
der, labor naturally is tempted
across, to an extent which threat-
ens to flood the market. Mexico's
position, however, is different from
that of Japan, which greatly needs
an outlet for her surplus popula-
tion.
Mexico has no such surplus. She
needs her workers at home and is
as unwilling to see them go -as the
American federation is to see them
coming in such numbers. Working
together on this question, the two
labor bodies hope to solve it sat-
isfactorily. . i
The American Federation's inter-
est, and perhaps also the Mexican’s,
in closer cooperation with labor in
the Latin countries farther to the
southward is more largely purely
altruistic. of immigration from
these republics there practically is
none.
From some of the British West
Indian islands, there has, indeed,
been enough of an influx of ng-
gro workers to cause a little con-
gestion in spots along the North
American coastal fringe, but from
Central and South America the
volume of arrivals of the working
class is negligible. Secretary of
Labor Davis speaks of it as a pose
sible future peril, but President
Green of.the American Federation
seems little worried by it, evidently
regarding it as a situation to be
met when it develops, if ever it
years to come. South America, for
3,000 miles south from the Carlb-
bean to Patagonts, and for 2500
miles west from the Atlantic-to the
Andes is very rich in resources and
very thinly populated.
. This region offers greater possi-
bitictes to settlers than the" United
States of today. Not, to be sure,
that it offers North America’s high
wages, but it does offer an easy
living to the indolent and the pros-
peet et tremendous rewards to those
who are willing to do the hard
work of development. “Not a white
man's country.” is Secretary Davis
argument. Not now—not all of it
—but it will become so as white
men take it in hand, when they
need it.
The northern federations' inter-
est in southern labor, then, is a
general interest in the welfare of
all ‘labor, as a world, or, at any
rate, a new world, proposition—a
feeling that what improves labor's
condition anywhere improves it
everywhere.
They may f'ad the South Amer-
lean worker unexpectedly hard to
help. He's quite unlike, not only
the North American worker, but
also the Mexican. The former is
the world's highest class worker.
The Mexican is a real worker, even
if not of the highest class.
The South American is a worker
only incidentally. He doesn't earn
much but he won't work much. He
strikes, not for more pay—he does
not want it—but for fun. He's a
good deal of a communist. He's as
temperamental as a prima donna.
You can hire him for a song he
likes you personally; not for a for-
tune if he doesn't.
He's likable but desperately dif-
fleult to get along with. I To change
his condition, the American and
Mexican laber federations will have
to change him. If they can do that
they can perform miracles.
Women Mail Carriers.
ONDON—Sit: William Mitchel
Thompson, England's postmaster
general, says there are 4200 women
mail carriers in the employ of the
department. The experiment of giv-
ing women carrier jobs has proved
a success, he says.
Threaten te Strike.
YOKOHOMA.—Taxi drivers of the
Utility Taxi Company in Inarchio
threaten a general strike because
*S
Us fellows was setting on Sid
Hunts frunt steps tawking about
diffrent subjecks sutch as wich we
would rather be, a drummer in a
band or the man that sets off the
dynamite for blasting, and how to
tell the diffrents between a Chinee
and a Japanee, and after a wile
Persey. Weever came up eating a
grate big, pretzil. Skinny Martin
saying, Look out you dont swallo
it hole and get a cramp, Persey.
Meening on account of the shape
of it, and Sam Cross winked at the
rest vr us fellows, saying, ill tell
you a good game, fellows, lets have
a contest to see who can take the
biggest bite out of Perseys pret-
zil, wat do you say?
Sure—lets, thata a swell ideer,
sure, all rite, us fellows sed.
Like fun, Ive got something to
say about that, Persey sed:
Us, fellows pretending, not to
heer him and starting to have a
fearse argument about wich one
would take the ferst bile. Skinny
Martin saying: It was my ideer in
the ferst place so I awt to go
ferst, wats the use of being a m.
venter if you dont get the ferst
profits?
No sir, me ferst, me ferst, lets
toss up for It. sure, thats rite, lets
toss up for ferst, us fellows sed.
I dident say eny of you could go
ferst whose pretzil is it for good-
niss sakes? Persey sed.-
Us fellows keeping rite on argu.
ing louder and louder, and I sed,
III tell you wat, let Persey decide
wich one is to have the ferst bite,
he brawt the pretzil erround and
its no more than fair to leeve him
be judge ‘and everything.
Theres not going to be eny sutch
of a game, I tell you, do you heer?
Persey yelled Nif- incited, and he
Somebody in always stopping me
and telling me a story and saying:
“You can switch that around and
tell' it in your act." F Now, I never
in my life on the stage told a story
Mine has always been just observa-
tions on the day's news. But still
I have to listen to them. I hate a
story and I hate the guys that are
always telling them. There is not
a new one in 10 years, yet people-
go through life inflicting them on
everybody they meet
The worst story 1 heard today was
told to me by Ed Borein, the cow-
boy artist of Santa Barbara. Call-
fornia. Ed Borein and Charley Rus-
sell are just about the best two
"cowboy artists in the world, includ-
ing New York. Ed had a beautiful
Spanish adobe house right on the
cliffs over the ocean and the late
fire in California jarred it loose
from its moorings.
Well, a commercial firm wanted
Ed to paint them a picture to use
in a big advertising campaign for
Aunt Jemima Pancakes. Well, Ed
dug up an old negro woman and
placed her seated on the ground out
Under-some big palm trees. He
asked her to remain seated while
he sketched her. But in a few min-
utes she asked:
—"How-long is I to be remained
here?,
"O only about a quarter of an
hour," he said.
She kept sitting under the tree
for three or four minutes more and
was agetting pretty nervous, and
she asked again, "How much long-
“Not long," he answered. “But
what's the matter with you; what
are you so nervous about:
“Oh nuthin' sah,'' the old colored .
Hlady responded, “only I am a sittin' ”
on a ant hill here." ,
I thought that was a very appro- *.-
priate ad for “Aunt' Jemima Pan-t
cakes, with the Aunt sitting on the ‘
ants. Ed always was a demon for
detail. 0
Now this joke will be appreciated
-more if you have ever come head on
with a California ant. I hate to ad-
mit it, because Florida will use the g
statement against us. in California, 4
.but ants are as thick as Fords out ( ‘
in California, and almost as annoy-
ins. But one thing about the Cali-
fornia ants, they will work. Ed has
a flock of them rebuilding his adobe
home.
(Copyright, 1925, The McNaught.
Byndcate, Inc.)
Counting Insects. — ———
WASHINGTON—Thedepartment e
of agriculture has started taking .
a census of the insects in the United
States.. The census will throw some
light upon the origin and habits of
all species, and it is hoped that fore-—
easts will be made of the periods in
which certain insects are most like- :
ly to appear in great number.
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
There are 20 four-letter words in this pusale and many with three
letters. •----
quick ran away to beet the band
holding his pretail in frunt of him. -
Proving he dident know we was
jest kidding, proberly being—a good
thing for him he dident on ac-
count of us not being absilutely
sure of it ourselfs.
20
LI
THE HEROES.
WAR MENACE.
The world is struggling, not yet very success-
fully, to organize for the prevention of war be-
tween, nations. It has scarcely begun to organize
against the nearer menace of war between classes,
or the remoter specter of war between races.
Prsident Coolidge is attempting to prevent a
strike against which our existing institutions give
him no weapon. If workers and employers cannot
agree, it is their privilege to fight each other with
strikes and lockouts.
So the head of the government is reduced to do
by solicitation what he should be empowered to do
by law. We cannot “outlaw war" between nations
for between classes, except by substituting some-
thing better. We are trying that, in a way, be-
tween nations. Between classes, we do not yet dare
• face to look very cheerful
in slept in all night.
but-doesn’t pay, very
claims man is run by electricity
Today's Puzzle
to
16
18
26
-
1213
23
5
35 34
8s
56
87
38
patrons do not tip as lavihsly as
they believed they would when they
entered Into an agreement on wages
with the company.
does develop.
As a matter of fact, despite See-
retary Davis, there's no prospect
that it will develop, at any rate for seven-menth baby.
Jimpson's back is always paining, he is always
sick and sore, yet he tolls without complaining in
the Gilt Front hardware store. He is packing an-
vils daily, he is lifting kegs of nails, and he tries
to do it gayly, and in this he seldom fails; and al-
though his labors tire him, still he-walks with agile
step, for he knows the boss would fire him if he
showed a lack of pep. Though his pain is grow-
ing broader he must bear it till he dies; he has
aunts who shriek for fodder, sisters, brothers ask-
ing pies. When the weary day is ended he goes
home and, eats some beans, then he roams with
heroes splendid in the he-man magazines. With
the red blood bunch he mingles, as the gripping
yarn he reads, and the blood within him tingles as
he notes their mighty deeds. Oh, those heroes,
how they thrill him, as the night hours drag along!
How their doughty doings fill him with an homage
for the strong! And it never seems to strike him
that he makes those heroes fade, that there are
not many like him in the lion-heart parade. It is
easy shooting tigers if you're feeling fine and fit,
and exploring Niles and Nigers doesn't need a lot
of grit. But when all your nerves are jerking, and
your careworn spine is sore, and you go on calmly
working at the old accustomed chore, that your
folks may not be facing lack of things to eat and
drink, you're hero and you're placing all the he-
men on the blink.
(Copyright 1936, by George Matthew Adams)
At the American Legion benefit
fair, John found that-pencili cost a - 44
dime each, tablets fifteen cents,
pens one cent, and erasers three and
five cents each.
—He bought, a supply ofeach,
spending one dollar and receiving
fifty articles. What were they?
Last Pufale Answer 1go
63
"nencacao
4
48
40
42
An eight-month baby has a much
better chance: of Mving than a i
BUGHOUSE FABLES
PWHADOA VE
PUT UP WITH THAT
Guy For MA: 3
GIVE HIM :
. Tee AIR AND
A MARRY
. SOMEBUDOY
. ELSE -
omyksfes-maJL DB354E
Cho Dinin see e 825Tenue To Nse ssmer
PLATO,
This is the workman’s rearrange- *
ment of the original four coops. Ar-
row shows where fences fell down
and the word “replaced" is in front
of each of the three lengths he put
up again.‘
Rubber From Corn. -—
LOS ANGELES. Callf.—According
to James F. Norris, president of the
American Chemical Society, con-
tinued high prices of rubber for
auto tires will result in the mane-
facture of rubber from Kansas cora.
ANswEn TO YESTERDAY’S
CROSSWORD PUERLE
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HORIZONTAL
1 Galter.
4. Y'u preen.
7. To act as a model.
10. Prevaricator,
12. Deposited (as upon a table).
14. Toward.
16. T9 trudge.
16. weight ul container,
10, l'reposition place.
BV. Anger
#E. The ludependent action of in-
dividual atoms.
24. To ver.sh, H
ub. Delivered--"----”
xi. To build,
#8. To murmur as a cat.
129. Periods.
31. Opposite of odd.
38. Hypothetical structural unit.
36. • Witiclamt.
#T. Journey.
38. Fourth note in a. scale.
39. Before.
41, marry.
43. Bilk worm.
44. Auction,
46. To point A gun at an object
to be shot at.
47. Small dark brown bird.
• 48. A donor.
51. Proverb,
63. Measure of area.
4. Plteher.
56. To poke or prick.
1. Melancholy note in scale.
D. Was vieterious
Snapping beetles.
13. equip.
64. Mimics.
5 ...indrrsst some
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LAh This chu
our prese
“The D
make a 1
universit
If a unfv
ward ale
Byan wis
is the ap
was ther
and it w
reward.
"From
come pl
schools. •
° can't une
the place
gcommuni
and knov
"appreclat
which in
‘These
with a r
lated by
do not ec
to attemy
plan like
be please
of Mr. Br
“I hear
tion of
the leade
tional me
t memorial
3 place in
NATION
s.-K
BUCKE
— (PP)—Conv
tional ec
lems of
before th
gram. T
* through
a The se
small eh
of delibe
body are
itself.
% A Probler
.—-—- —ganized
extension
tices and
program
* to obviate
ism in m
topic tha
1. Dr. 1
wizard, v
g yesterday
. T mal open
": cil.buti
t "oVers 2 * Sok
lime, and sand composition.
T. Pastry.
_ 8. Alleged force producing hypes 12
notism. ,
To amuse. . e %
11. Wing part of plant.
13. Limb of a tree, ------)
15. Metal in rock.
17. Drone bee.
8. Twitching (disease).
3. To ventilate.
* Tiaidln-oh.
. 24. An urgent request for pay-
ment; +
26. Male cat.r-
28. Modern word for energy.
30. Digit of the foot.
st. To emulate,
34. Rope by which the grappling
• icon ‘ Suspended from a bar.
se. Mineral spring. 1
31. To card wool as A prelimi-
nary to finer carding.
One given to indulgence in
eating and drinking. P 3 1
40. High priest who trained ,
Samuel, 4
41. To lubricate, a
48. Unit of work. 9 . 4
45. Night. ,.
11 A small mass. #
#. Female sheep, 1
50. To tell,
To stop by law. .
52. Property settled by husband
non hts wife at time of mar-
# saincun
Writing instrument. . 1,
BE. APPatue used in drains 1'1
so. Clusters of fibers in woortf:
# than string. 4
# * 4
71. Behold.
address.
—-—You
when it,
gry boy 1
to your €
the Stren
fectof
% CHILL T
Autome
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Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 104, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 25, 1925, newspaper, August 25, 1925; Wichita Falls, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1651408/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University&rotate=180: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.