The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 133, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 6, 1934 Page: 4 of 14
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ut
r
owned and published daily ter-
cent Sundar) Sv the Fort Worth
7 1 Press Company, Firth and Jones
. Streets. Fort Worth, Texas.
world, we
la
vent trade Sde.smrionegt tenesm,
formed.
Member of the United Press,
Serins*-Bernard News Alliance.
Newspaper Enterprise Association.
Betence Service, Newspaper Infor-
mation Service and Audit Bureau
of Circulations.
TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1034
It formed on the basis of flrat raising
purchasing power at home—and this to
the predicate of the recovery program—
it will have great chances for success.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
as carrier per week 10c. of Bo per i
month. Single copy at newsstands and a
from newsboys u. Mail rates on request 01
“Give Light and the People
Will Find Their Own Way”
A Thought for Today
- * A ND if a kingdom be divided against it-
A self, that kingdom cannot stand.—
St. Mark 3:24.
*1* *
Wemust all hang together or assur-
—-edly we shall all hang separately.—Ben-
jamin Franklin.
THE PRESIDENT ON N.R.A.
• DRESIDENT ROOSEVELT diagnosed ac-*
I curately the ills which threaten N.R.A.
in his address to code authority officials
assembled in Washington yesterday.
"The aim of this whole effort is to
restore our rich domestic market by rais-
ing its vast consuming capacity,” he said. .
Mentioning “justified" complaints that
—--------consuming—capacity has been lost sight
of by industry, he added:
"No one is opposed to sensible and
reasonable profits, but the morality of
the case is that a great segment of our
people are in actual distress and that as
between profits first and humanity after-
wards and humanity first and profits af-
terwards we have no room for hesitation."
Then the prescription:
"The purchasing power of the people
can be increased and sustained only by
striving for the lowest schedule of prices
on which higher wages and increasing em-
ployment can be maintained . . . it is the
immediate task of industry to re-employ
more people at purchasing wages and to
J do it now.”
In further defense of the wage-earning
portion of the new Industrial partner-
ship he warned that the sections of the
! recovery act guaranteeing collective bar-
gaining by representatives of labor's own
choosing "mean just what they say.”
“We can not tolerate actions which
' are clearly monopolistic, which wink at
unfair trade practices, which fail to give
labor free choice of representatives or
which are otherwise hostile to the public
interest,”said the President.
“Never again will we permit the so-
cial conditions which allowed the vast
sections of our population to exist in an
'» un-American way, which allowed a mal-
distribution of wealth and power.”
That should be clear enough for any-
one to understand.
Chiseling is not going to continue.
If employers chisel on wages and hours,
and collective bargaining agreements, if
they keep on raising prices far above the
amounts necessary to meet wage increases
—as the consumers' advisory board says
at least 14 industries have done—the
President will take action against them
under the law.
The high spirit of endeavor in which
the industrial recovery program was
launched has not been forgotten. The
administration's new pledge, it is fair to
hope, marks the re-birth of that spirit
in N.R.A.
HOW YOU GET THE NEWS
OF EUROPE AND ASIA
SUPPOSE you were a citizen of almost
• anyone of the far-flung countries in
the news demesne of Webb Miller, Euro-
pean manager of the United Press, who
visited Fort Worth yesterday.
You would do as you were told by the
current dictator, and (with the exception
of England and Scandinavia) you would
learn only what the dictator thought it
was good for you to learn—that is, only
what the dictator thought would influence
you to advance his ends, and accept his
orders.
In actuality, Mr. Miller said in Fort'
Worth yesterday, Mussolini’s press agents
tell every newspaper in Italy not only
what to print, but what to “play’s that
is, what items to put big headlines over,
and what items to put small headlines
over, and what items to leave out entirely.
This, Mr. Miller says, puts the ever-
present possibility of “the next war”
which European statesmen accept as in-
evitable and under the shadow of which
Europeans, live like the villagers on the
slope of Vesuvius, in the hands of a few
men only.
Should Mussolini choose to have Ital-
ian newspapers print an item that Italy
had been invaded, that would bring war,
whether the report were, true-orfaise.......
It should be understood that this sit-
uation applies to news within Europe and
in European newspapers only.
Mr. Miller has a staff of several hun-
dred alert, capable and experienced news-
men, engaged in getting the real news of
Europe and transmitting it to New York
for relay to Fort Worth.
Mr. Miller is not only a reporter hon-
ored by his craft, with breathtaking tales
to relate of experience in the far corners
of the earth, he is a great newsmanager.
And he sees to It that sooner or later,
in spite of all censorships and all physi-
cal difficulties, Fort Worth gets the im-
portant news of the immense area from
London to Toklo, which contains the most
of the world’s people, and whose affairs
are still dominant in the world despite
the rise of America.
On the day of Mr. Miller’s visit to
Fort Worth, America saw an outstanding
example of the difference between die-
tator-ridden Europe and Asia, and our own
country.
Our President spoke to us. He did not
command; he urged. He is our chosen
leader; but he can lead us only in the way
we will to go.
He is our chosen leader, but the Amer-
ican people would be about his ears like
a hive of angry bees should they feel he is
assuming the attributes of European dic-
tatorship.
He is our chosen leader, and he is
wiser than any European leader, because,
as he has already so richly proven, he
regards himself as the instrument of the
people and not their ruler. ———
From many of the ideas presented at
the N.R.A. "kick” meeting, General John-
aon should be rewarded for just listening..
Mussolini has picked the 400 new
members of Italy's last Chamber of De-
puties. and the people will be permitted
to vote against them—if they dare!
The Greeks, it has been discovered,
enjoyed wrestling 2500 years ago. They
still are welcome to it.
| Heywood Broun |
(Copvriaht, 1014. tor The Fort worth prese).
MIAMI.—Several definitive biographies
have been written about Prino Car-
nera by now, and I assume that these
works describe the manner in which some
prize fight fancier first
saw the Vast Venetian
and decided that there
might be gold in the
Man Mountain.
But whatever the
circumstances, it was a
most unlucky afternoon
for the unfortunate
Italian who wears the
heavyweight crown. By
dint of training rPrimo
has learned to take a
blow upon the chin or
chest without wincing,
but the giant is far too
sensitive to public opin-
ion,
Broun His pride bruises
easily. He wants to be loved, and in
order to- gain the approbation of the fans
he clubs smaller men about with his right
hand. And when he says in dumb show,
“Look at this" vanquished gladiator whom
I lay at your feet," quite naturally Car-
nera expects plaudits, laurels and acclaim.
But what he’ gets is “Boo!"
I am told that the mind of Camera
is built for cargo rather than speed.
Nevertheless, I think he has every right
to be puzzled at the nature of the recep-
tion which Miami accorded him when he
kept hia heavyweight title by virtue of
victory over Tommy Loughran.
You see, in the beginning Primo’s
tutors and handlers must have told him
that if he would be a good boy and eat
his spaghetti and learn to box, all kinds
of benefits, would flow into his keeping.
- There were many courses in the cuf-j n
riculum of Carnera, but never a cinch
MARCH L
1934 %
pakeoking, backlog She
mine whether N. R.
has not caused a suffi-I
cient amount of confu-t
sion to offset its benefits."
—— ■ By M. E. TRAOY 3
GENERAL JOHNSON should I
C more than satisfied with 1
call for public criticism of N. R. 1
It has been answered by what J
be described as no less than!
widespread, if incoherent, yell 1
protest. Neither capital, lab
nor consumers appear to be
fled with results thus far o
tained. J
While many of the objection
raised are hopelessly inconsister
or irreconcilable, they all point 1
a degree of dissatisfaction whic
can hardly be ignored.
__John W. Davis, one-time Deme
eratic candidate for the pres
dency, excoriates the whole pre
gram aa contrary to the tradition
and principles on which this re
public was founded, and as poor,
designed to promote recovery. . ]
Much as I dislike to do so, -
cannot help agreeing with the gor
eral trend of Mr. Davis' commen
nry Morgent
Taxpayer Car
Income Lev
INDIAN POW-WOWS
A REMARKABLE series of pow-wows
A has been called by Commissioner
John Collier of the U. S. Indian Bureau
in the Northwest, West and Southwest.
The first was held in Rapid City, S. D.
The tribes gather to hear Commissioner
Collier and his staff explain the details of
the Wheeler-Howard bill.
Hearings on this important legisla-
tion already have begun before the House
committee. The measure- is a radical
one, and upsets many traditional atti-
tudes and relationships between the 300,-
000 American Indians and their white
guardians. It strikes a blow i at two
evils that have grown up in a century
of white administrations. The first is
the gradual pauperization of Indians thru
the allotment system; the second is the
suppression of Indian tribal, social, and
religious institutions under the guise of
“Americanization."
In former times the hearings on Cap-
itol Hill would have been sufficient. If,
in his superior wisdom, the great white
father considered a thing good for his
red-skinned children of the plains it was
theirs to accept as all grateful children
should. Mr. Collier thinks this is not
enough. He wants the Indians to under-
stand the measure, to criticize it, to re-
ject it if they find it not good. Mr. Col-
lier thinks it is a life-line for their once
noble civilisation threatened with slow
_ death by whites. H« believes he can con-
vince the chieftains of the Sioux, the
Black Feet, the Navajos, Pueblos, Chero-
kees, Missions and the rest.
The pow-wows on the plains of the
West will allow the Indians for the first
time really to talk back to Uncle Sam.
They are important not only for Indian
reforma but as demonstrations of free
speech and self-determination.
SWAP THE SURPLUS
clear thinking of Henry Wallace,
the Secretary of Agriculture, on the
fundamental problem' of our place in the
economic world has helped to destroy
another fallacy fostered by the depression.
“Increase consumption at home," it
has been argued, "and all our troubles
will be ended." “Feed all the hungry
within our borders, clothe all the naked,
and prosperity will return again."
Yet this is not so. .
“Increased consumption .... Wallace
• writes in his recent pamphlet America
Must Choose, “does not absorb every sur-
plus. Boom wages would not melt our
total cotton or wheat supply. Even at
1929 levels, we would still be in a Jam.”
Increase consumption at home, of
courses that means increased purchasing
power. It does not mean the end of all
our troubles tho, for we cannot eat all
our wheat nor weal, all our cotton. So.
* CH * * ******
Primo Camera's championship title
has netted him just about $340, or as
much as a pair of his shoes coat him.
Texas In The Record
(From the Congressional Record)
Rep. Joe H. Eagle, of Texas, tells the
House of agriculture and dairying in Har-
ris County: .. .. -
“TT costs $2.37 in my milk sheds around
1 Houston to produce 100 pounds of
milk. We have certain local conditions
there. We are in a flat country. It is
not good agricultural land. It does not
drain well. We have not lived there long
enough or been rich enough to fix drain-
age so as to make the grass good for
dairying. My dairying constituents, there-
fore, have to get shell out of the sea and
grind it up In order to put lime into our
cattle.
“There is no iron in the grass, and
therefore they have to feed the herds feed'
that puts iron in them to make the milk
perfect. They do not raise enough corn
in our county to supply the dairying In-
terests, and they buy that from the north-
ern portion of our state.
“They do not raise a single bushel of
wheat nor a single pound of alfalfa, and
therefore they must import from northern
Texas and from Kansas and Oklahoma and
other states every bit of our dairy feed."
The Daily Nosegay
Mr. Leo Meyer,
Freshman Coach, T.C.U.
Mr. Raymond Wolf,
Line Coach, T.C.U.
Dear Dutch:
Dear Bear:
I note you two are touted
For the coach's job.
If either of you gets it
We won't break down and sob.
But I should like to warn the man—-
Who puts on Schmitty's suit:
. That the spot that Anderson was in,
When he followed Knute,
The spot where Terry found himself,
When he followed McGraw,
With all of New York fandom
Watching for a flaw,
These spots were as cool as cool could
be' 1
Icy's the word for It.
Compared to the spot the fellow's
On who follows Schmidt.
-------Yours, etc.
LESTER (Just call me
es).
one in all the lot. From 8 until 9 on Mon-
day, Tuesday, Thursday (and Saturday at
the pleasure of the professor) Primo was
instructed in the art of rolling with the
punch. At noon there were the freehand
• exercises in jabbing, and there were eve-
ning lectures on the nature of blocking
or what to do until the adversary's blow
arrived. And, of course, there was al-
ways some work.
A Proper Cause For Heartbreak
DRIMO CARNERA spent three years in
I the eighth grade, flunking his course
in jabbing each time. But he was resolute.
"I want to be loved," he muttered to
himself, and exposed his nose once more
to the punishing taps of the professor.
Thursday night I saw him come to the
eenter of the ring and face Tommy Lough-
ran, one of the greatest jabbers of all
American ring history. Primo feinted'
once, and then let his left dart like a
young cobra embroiled with a mongoose.
But Tommy couldn't thwart that jab. It
smacked against his mouth.
In its way that first left jab of Car-
nera's was as perfect as anything ever
done by Michelangelo. It had composition
and form and rhythm. It was in ita own
small way a masterpiece. But did the
audience take It in that spirit? They did
not.
At least, I think not. There la no
record that Michelangelo's ears were ever
assailed with the long-drawn howl of,
“Send that Wop back where he came
from!” I think that the great heart of
Camera broke in that first round and
that it had a right to break.
Joe Willlama Informa me that the
champion told him he could have put
Tommy away in the fifth if it had not
been for the hysterical screams of a wom-
an which distracted him. But I still hold
that all hope of vital victory fled from the
Italian's camp in the very first round.
Then It was that the great heart of
Camera cracked. He looked to the sky,
where the silver galleon was having quite
a messy time with the clouds, and he
cursed his fate. “I give you back," he
cried, altho quite inaudibly, “my days and
weeks and months. I've learned tech-
nique. I’ve got It. I’ve mastered it. And
now these Philistines do not like It. It
has been quite useless. They do not love
me."
——AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT —
Heritages
___By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON___
THINK of the fun a man geta, by mak-
£ lug ills ewe fortune nr career1 How
strange it seems, then, that so many of
them are determined to prevent their
children from having such pleasure. •
Too bad more fathers do not heed
================ the example of the fa-
mous Mayo brothers,
who are leaving their
money to medical science
Instead of to their fami-
lies. The decision, made
public some time ago,
marks a movement for-
ward in the right di-
rection. It ia an en-
couraging sign of eco-
nomic sanity and may
indicate that we shall
be led out of the wild-
erness by those who
love men more than
they love money,
If we ever lose our
Mrs. Ferguson desire to pile up vast
fortunes for those who come after us
most of the economic distress from which
we now suffer will disappear,
vision of life may be given
can then understand better
for our brief existence upon
* * * a
A new
us and we
the reason
the earth.
. 12-
He Lets the Public Know Where He Stands
WHAT OUR- READERS SAY
Editor, The Prpas:
I would like to have printed in
your paper these things which I
think the legislatures at Washing-
ton and Austin should do.
Ths President ‘and Vice-Presi-
dent should be elected by popular
vote; we should abolish poll tax
as a prerequisite for voting; we
should abolish lobbies at Washing-
ton and Austin; we should pay sol-
diers' bonua; we should enact a
compulsory unemployment insur-
lance law, and a pension law for old
men and widows.
We should enact a rigid immi-
Igration law, and a graduated in-
come tax law; abolish the fee sys-
item; abolish franking privileges;
Amend tho law to prohibit relatives
on the payroll; repeal tho tariff
We should revise and correct ju-
dicial procedure, consolidate
boards, bureaus and commissions,
put teeth in the search and seizure
law. Shorten special sessions to
15 days at $5 a day, regulate chain
and department stores, put teeth
in the anti-trust law, enact a rigid
depositor's insurance law.
We should enact a cotton grad-
ers' law. Graders should be put
under bond to the state to grade
cotton. Each county should pay
for the grading, not over 5c per
bale.
ASa mere observer, who has no
A come in direct contact wit.
N. R. A., I fail to see that it de
serves much credit for what ha
been done to revive business. 1
Most of the credit, I think
should go to those more construc
live and less revolutionary activi
ties by which the government ha
sought to extend credit, increas
employment and stabilise condi
tions. 1
Its sponsors continually asser
that N. R. A. is responsible fo
putting three million persons a
| work in private •Industry, but 1
I cannot help wondering whethe
they were not put to work oy th
i increased buying power which th
government created when it estat
lect full amount of policies and,minded, always ready to take a. lished conservation corps, the C
make sick benefits and accident stand for right and his fellowman. W. A., the P. W. A. and other
polices begin payment imine- .......a________aa___. 112l teenritee 1
diately.
We should make all heads of
state departments, now appointed, age 50.
elective; make the general manager trained him right In his vouth H.
of prison farms elective, and let ruined dim ment ™ his youth. He
the general manager of the prison has never departed from that traln-
farma appoint a warden. Sell all Ing. Let’s support Allred for gov-
prison farms except those neces- ernor.
sary to feed convicts, and put some
money in school funds.
We should amend the official
bond law and require all officials
to make bonds with a bonding
company.
We should repeal the toll_bridge
law and cut out the tolls: make a
His character is unqusstionsd. his terprises
ability for above ths average at Looking back over the pas
His father and mother eight months, one finds it difficul
| to determine whether N. R. A. ha
I not caused a sufficient amount o
confusion to offset its benefits.
J Q. BURNETT, | *
1406 W. Hickory St., TN order to get this straight, jus
Denton, Texas 1, ask yourself what has bee:
done thru N. R. A. that could no
| have been done without N.. R. A
Ask The Press
state scrip good for state taxes,
county good for city taxes.
1 am opposed to the sales tax
and to the so-called home rule.
Let the people say who they want.
Instead of the politicians.
It is my private opinion, pub-
liely expressed, that intoxicating
liquors never benefited anybody
but the undertaker.
Churches and schools make good
citizens, saloons make criminals.
I am 100% for law and order. I
am 100% against crime and dis-
order-I am 1004 for America.
Including Texas 1 am 100 %
against the enemies of our nation.
I am strong for our President.
I think he is the most wonderful
president this nation ever had-at
the helm. I desire to see him
move the capital from Wall Street
Our postage should be 2c any-
where in the U. S.
We should prohibit government
officials from practicing law at
Austin: prohibit state officials, ex-
cept the attorney general, from
practicing law at Austin: a law for
government ownership of all pub-
lic utilities.
We should use part of the tax
on tobacco, races, and luxuries for
rural schools; part of the oil roy-
alties on school lands for rural
schools.
We should tax all bonds, na-
tional, state, county and city; re-
ducg all interest rates to 6%: abol-
ish compound Interest In banks:
enact an initiative, referendum and
recall law. Exempt from taxation j
homesteads to the value of $3,000:
repeal duel clause in official oath.
We should abolish star chamber
sessions of county and city com-
mlaolonera; we should enact a law
to separate hardened criminals
from ths lesser class; abolish the
suspended sentence law. We should
require contractors Id hire labor
from the confines of the county or
the Incorporated limits of the city
where the project Is to be done.
We should amend the Insurance
laws; life, fire, accident, cyclone
and marine. Reduce rates; col-
You can set an answer is any an-
swerable question of fact a, writing
to Frederick M Kerby. Question Ear-
tor, Fort Worth Press Washington
Bureau 1322 New York Avenue. Wash-
inston, 0 C. enclosing three cents in
stamps for reply Medical and legal
advice cannot be given.
Q Who Is The Voice of Ex-
perience" who broadcasts over
the radio
A. Dr. M Sayle Taylor,
0 @ e
Assuming that a minimum wag
law is desirable, could it not bar
been obtained without this cons
plex, expensive system? Could not
child labor can be eliminated b
direct law, as well as thru a dele
gation of authority.
The delegation of authority ot
which \ R. A. depends appears tt
me as being its most dangerou
aspect. It virtually permits indus
try to adopt binding rules an
regulations to which the Individ
Q What is the minimum age
at which a man may be elected to | ual must submit without the righ
the presidency of the United
States’
A Thirty-five years".
Q Was Nicolai Lenin of Jew-
ish descent?
A Jto
Q What was the date of the
Tunney-Heeney fight in New
York City?
A. July 26. 1928.
to Washington and let this be a
government of the epople, by the
people, and for the people.
Here is hoping that some states-
man announces himself for gover-
nor, instead of the politicians who
have already been announced. ' It name Schwarts’
would also be a splendid idea to A It is a German family name mean-
elect senators and representatives ins black.
who will not run roughshod over
the constitution as they have done
Q. What is the meaning of the
of appeal to those regularly con
stituted agencies to which w
have become accustomed an
which were established for the
precise purpose.
If the theory on which N. R. A
rests is sound, there is no limit t
which the legislative power of thi
country cannot be delegated thru
a system of codes and commie
sions. |
This Is Life
By JACK MAXWELL
Q When did the Charleston, HELLO and howdy-do! . 1
at Austin. S. C. earthquake occur? AA For instance: Occupying I
1 have been in the state since A Between 9′51 p. in and 9 59 p in very conspicuous place on my dest
1910 and I think that bunch is the Aug. 31. 1886. - is a book, to which 1 refer quit
worst mess I have ever known, * • • often when in doubt as to th
FRED J BERRY SR., Q. Did George Washington re-correct way to spell a word. And
City, ceive pay for his services as com- according to the aforesaid book
mander-in-chief of the Continen-the word "POISON" means: “An
tal army’ agent capable of producing a for
A Served . bid. noxious or dangerous effect
tual expenses, PA ‘ P *upon anything endowed with life.'.
• • • • And, right hero- and now, I wish 1
Q. Who played the role of Ed to say that there a many poisons
Loomis in the motion picture to -
"Dinner at Right?" * mN 1
A. Grant Mitchell. , In other words. If a guy is so bad
T .ly cocked up on his left ear the
Q Should the abbreviation he can’t THINK RIGHT, that gar
H en standing for "Id eat." be fol- ratio la absolutely POISONED, Now”
lowed by a comma? [YOU think bp ONE ... for your
A. Yes. guess is as good as mine.
He, Too, Is For
Jimmy
Editor The Press:
I have just read a letter written
by Leona Stillwell, now Mrs, H. A.
Thompson. 1 want to confirm her
statements. I, too, was an old
sehooimate of Jimmie Allred. Jim-
mie la 36 years old. if he’s not old
enough to be our governor now, he
never will be.
have known
Jimmie all his life; he Is strong
in his convictions, honest and open-
SIDE GLANCES — By George Clark
(CONSIDER, if you please, how many
U enormous trust funds have reposed
—and no doubt many still repose—in the
vaults of a hundred thousand banka in
the land. All this aum of accumulated
wealth dragged from the earth and the
people should have been in active circu-
lation, yet it remained underground, use-
less, powerless to lighten the burden of
poverty which was bound upon the backs
of so many, citizens.
Surely we were given the breath of
life for something more noble than the
accumulation of money; for some greater
purpose than the hoarding of gold.
Men who boast of being self-made-are
usually the ones who are filled with a
consuming desire to have children who
are not self-made.
And the father who leaves millions
fancies he has done well by his children.
Unhappily, the rest of us agree with him
and when enough people are aoid on the
idea, you know what happens.
There is an orgy of grabbing and
greed; general prosperity disappears; mul-
titudes suffer! land the economic strue-
ture of a. country, totters. After all—l
said, the man who helps humanity has |
left the best geritage to his children.
O 1 P NA
U.SPA.
be found along the pathway ot
- live and mine: the greatest
Mental Polson-
Saving a Buffalo Herd by Strategy :
By C. L. DOUGLAS,
THE Charles Goodnight buffalo
I herd—one of the last of its
kind—was saved by the use of
subtle trickery.
Fred L. Haskett of Dallas told
me about It last week when I met
him strolling up the Avenida
Cinco de Mayo in Mexico City,
Mr. Haskett, who really was re-
sponsible for saving the herd from
destruction three years ago, can
laugh about It now ... but he
couldn’t then.
Here's the story as he told it:
After the death of the famous
cattleman, Colonel Goodnight,
some action had to be taken re-
garding the disposal of the great
herd of buffalo he had collected,
a herd which at the time was one
' of the largest in the United
, States.
Various suggestions were made.
$ Some wanted to sell the animals
, singly or in a lot; others were
; for preservation . . . and then,
as the argument went on, Mr.
I Haskett was assigned to carry out
■ some method of disposal.
* * *
* MR. HASKETT is a good pub-
£ licity man. He thought the
| matter over and hit upon an idea.
, It was this — be advertised far
and wide that any hunter who
£ aspired to bag a buffalo could do
i so by coming to the ranch, pay-
■ inga certain" fee per animal, and
J going on the hunt.
" He advertised thia plan of sx-
i I termination east, west, north and
' south—and it had the desired ef-
fect. The storm of protest was
tremendous, overwhelming.
Mr. Haskett received letters |
“No, sir, our grandfathers wouldn’t recognize the world honed him
we’re livin’ in today.” 4 7 *- 1. -
but branded him a monster, and
United Press. B
iiiy of Treasury
u, Jr., today exp
pefore the
tee, with a few
ba, of the pendip
Jing for $258,00
revenue. ■
Viewing the pre
a whole," Morgh
leve that the bill
litional revenues
int dealres pring
initiation of the
es which our el
own to exist in 1
he tax law. NE
stimately comply
inges, since the
Be equitable dist
"burden over the
I best able to
EThe Trea-ury)
trefore approves
las a whole, with
home minor mat
Martment will be J
th the committe
Hence. 1
The bill does J
Neral framework |
gsystem. The J
I those Imposed 1
lestic processing
■ sesame oils; 1
Ruction and refi
■ the check tax 1
■ , instead of Jul
repeal entirely
juices. In othe
Bling taxes are I
K amendments d
Bin their better
“The income tax
bnsiderably simp
increased by 1
upon dividend
Exempt Income.
Blon in the taxes
Bries incomes 1
Eekets."
W AIR
PUT ON 0
jidaire Coma
Will Put Innov
Market H
ir conditionings
e as your radio as
be of the averaB
ck, will soon be
Frigidaire Sales
rials announced
two sixes of aug
1 can be moved E
In and attached B
trici connections)
red here yesterday
J by Lee A. CM
J> who conducts
al meeting at the
400 salesmen in
the group was 1
I today, holding
ting. 1
he larger of the 1
J have a cooli
1 valent to two-th
ice in 24 hour
J-ths horsepower 1
The second has 1
e-eighths of ton J
I by a one-half J
for. 1
I third unit, wh
th attention amo
built as a station
both cooling and
somatic control. 1
■ M. Bratten. dial
the Sales Corp.
I in charge of the
Bay. Other local
led him were W.
Istant district ma
Her, service depar
les, air condition
Ker, and Frank
LONEL INS
CADET COR
a wolf in sheep’s clothing.
He almost hsd a fight in Aus
tin. An Irate member of the Leg
islature called Mr. Haskett aside
in a hotel lobby and said he
should be ashamed of himselfB*
that ho was almost a traitor to the
State.
• • •
TT was then that Mr. Hasket
I revealed his true colors.
“Listen,” he
said to the Irate
legislator, “no
man in the
State loves that
buffalo herd
more than I.
All thia bally-
hoo about ex-
termination has
been for a pur-
pose—to arouse
sentiment to
iliam Castle
*Best School C
Colonel William
Eighth Corps Ar
1 two-day inspect
rth R. 0. T. C. un
is William James
fnlc High, Jenn
I Riverside J
r 1
ools.
yesterday, he revi
M. Daggett Junk
r and Junior,
r and Senior HI
-- will select tt
rth company
for units after
Jetton over the ret
hth Area. This w
T
save the herd.
Don’t you think
the Legislature
ought to get
busy and in- ___________
elude buffalo in Douglas . .... -___....,
the State game law so that the 14" largest cadet cor
animals might be protected fron -------------------
hunters?" - 2
The suggestion fell in a fertile 7/iaam
field. The law was passed and the E-TUICT I OLA
Goodnight herd was preserved a, .
a part of the State’s “natural re 14end you clear )
sources." head, ‘hr de
5
, months.
Cadets showed p
1
edness at all seho
M Daggett Junto
I of the smallest
from all over the nation. They
called him inhuman, they called
him a heartless creature; they
all sorts of a rogue.
The Humane Society officials all I was saved.
“But even the the trick worker
I’ve had a hard time living dowr Tat
the method used," said Mr. Has
kett. "There still are people who
like to believe me a heartless
creature bent on obliterating ths
N
last remnants of the Southwest's
most noble animal." •'
But Mr. Haskett doesn't care-
for the last of the great herds
H
SINASIF
IS SOLD BY ALL
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Sheldon, Seward R. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 133, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 6, 1934, newspaper, March 6, 1934; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1684977/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.