The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 277, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 22, 1935 Page: 4 of 14
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PAGE 4—EDITORIAL
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THE FORT WORTH PRESS
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1935 .
The Fort Worth Press
A SCRIPPS-BOWABP NEWSPAPER
SEWARD a SHELDON
JAMES P. POLLOCK...
...........Editor
Business Manager
Entered as second class man matter at the Postoffice at
, Fort Worth, Texas, Oct. 3, 1931, under act of March %. 1879
TELEPHONE EXCHANGE
DIAL .3-5151
owned and published daily tex-
cepi Sunday) »» the Fort Worth
Press Company. Fifth and Jones
Streets, Fort Worth, Texas.
cupunse
vict to be placed on probation during good
behavior.
Particularly is this true of young first
offenders who would be better off at home
with a fresh start, than in that post-
graduate school of crime, the Texas Peni-
tentiary System.
At present juries that convict can
suspend sentences, but such suspensions
cannot be revoked until the offender has
been convicted of another felony.
The jury is all-wise in Anglo-Saxon tra-
dition, but we doubt .the jury always acts
for the best interests of society and the
Eject Aliens
Johnson Says ‘We Are Saps’
For Not Ending U. S.
Relief Problem
Member st the United Press.
Scripps-Howard
- Newspaper Enterprise Association.
Science Service, Newspaper tn-
s formation Service and Audit Bu-
6 reau et Circulation.
convict.
The fifth amendment on your ballot
Saturday would grant the criminal judge
the power of probation and would also
permit him to re-impose sentence if the
probationer violated his trust.
We believe that leaving this problem
News Alliance to the judges, who are at least likely to
be more experienced and better qualified
—than—jurors—would be to society’s best-
THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1935
SUBSCRIPTION RATES .
By carrier per week 10c, or 45c per month. Single
copy at newsstands and from newsboys 3c. By mail in |
Texas. $6.00 per year. $7.00 per rear elsewhere.
“Give Light and the People
Will find Their Own Way"
A Thought for Today .
MOR great is the Lord, and greatly to
r be praised; he also; is to be feared
above all gods.—I. Chronicles 1S:25.
Fear is the mother of foresight—Sir
Henry Taylor.
Vote 'Em All!
A GOOD way to think of the seven
A amendments to the constitution of
Texas which will be on your ballot Satur-
day, is that each in its way is an approach
towaid greater civic decency in dealing
with civic problems which affect the whole
state. :
Some are more valuable and construc-
tive than others, but as a whole this is
one of the best groups of amendments
to be submitted to the people by the Legis-
lature in many years.
There is no present prospect of a con-
stitutional convention to write a new con-
stitution. That being so, the only possible
way to modernize our antiquated constitu-
tion to permit greater-social and economic
progress, is for the- Legislature to submit
wise amendements and for the people to
interest.
THE sixth amendment would abolish the
1 fee system of paying county or dis-
trict officials in counties of more than
20,000 and would give county commis-
sioners of such counties- the right to say
whether precinct officers, such as justices
of the peace and constables, should work
for fees or for straight salaries.
In counties of less than 20,000, com-
missioners could make a like decision as
to both precinct and county-wide officers.
The fee system has long outlived any
usefulness it might have ever had. The
most serious objection raised by opponents
of the amendment, is that if it passed,
county officials would sit back and draw
their salaries, but would take no step to
collect fees to go into the county treasury
instead of their own purses.
All we can say is that we believe such
racketeers will be in a small minority
among public officials, and if voters do.not
quickly root them out once they are dis-
covered, voters will deserve any lack of
service - they may suffer. This objection
has not been proven true, in city govern-
ment.
By HUGH S. JOHNSON
NEW YORK:—Nobody knows how many
I people there are in this country who
are not citizens of the United States and
have never declared their intention to be-
come citizens. The census is old and in-:
accurate. Bootlegging of immigrants has .
become a major industry. Politicians do
not seem to have the courage to let any-
------——-----body find out the truth.
otinr Such people are on
the relief rolls by the
4 A hundreds of thousands.
They also hold Jobs to
......"" f the exclusion and detri-
1 s ED ment of citizens because,
as a general rule, they
are used' to a far lower
standard of living and
will work for starvation
wages.
It has been said that
there are so many of
them that, if they could
all be sent home, there
would be neither an un-
/-employment nor a relief
upon JOHNSON problem in our country.
' Ildo not know whether this is accurate,
but I do know that they make up a large
chunk of our problem. , j
Now this is insufferable: There is not
.the slightest just and reasonable excuse
for it. It is a terrible condition, and it is
permitted because of a dash of mawkish
sentimentality on the one hand, and a
whole lot of political pusillanimity on the
| other.
*
*
THE seventh amendment is double-
1 barreled.
One barrel would permit the state to
distribute free text books to children of
school age in all schools, public, private,
and parochial. At present the state is
restricted to providing free textbooks for
children of school age in. free public
schools.
We can see no objection to this phase
of the amndment. Parents who send their
children to- private or parochial schools
are taxed nevertheless for the support of
the public schools, including the cost of -
free textbooks distributed to all other chil-
a.dren except their own.
The amendment retains the present
Ma, Here's That Man Again!
T WWhAt
\ ARE oU
100?
ADMIRISTRAO
THURSD
Bolts Part)
Pegler Yelps When
Elected To
Office
By WESTBROOK PEGLER
(Copyright, 1935. by The Fort Worth Press).
NEW YORK.—What I would
I like to know is if a citizen
goes along minding his own bus-
iness, always cheering at pa-
rades, always saying ma’am to
ladies and generally living up to
his raising and then some poi-
son-pen en-
emy elects
Mm—to_the
Democ ratic
county com-
mittee in a
R e p u blican
neighborhood,
simply by
marking a
ballot by
stealth in a
voting booth. j
isn't there!
| anybody he.
can sue? Isi’t
there any re-|
1 dress for
| that? j Pegler
The problem is personal be-
j cause a man rolled up in the
| .suburbs the other,day sating he
| was a vice chairman of the
■ Democratic county committee
and aske 4
do about turning
out.
"What rascals?’
nuw
111 1
HON
Millions
Capita
- La
. (Star
Mr. Rogers
face injuries
erash that
Sofia lives
Ten thous
line when 11
and the cro
the rate of 4
utes.
At the ra
brough," r
lowers, thri
1 lion by an 1
Poli
The 15-re
adopt them. ,
There is an unsleeping, selfish, and
reactionary opposition, which is now at-
tempting to defeat two of the most con-
ive of the presenteamendments. Such I
opposition succeeded in defeating a group |
that had similar constructive possibilities, 1
provision that none of the available schools
fund, shall- ever be used to support seek
** *.
THAT cruelty, what hardship, what in-
VV justice, would there be in saying to
| these people: "There is the naturaliza-
tion office—if you wish to declare your
intention to become citizens, that is the
end of the matter—if not, you are using
bread needed for our own people and,
unless you are also willing to take on
the duties and responsibilities of our peo-
ple, we think you ought to go home?"
Other countries do just that. There
is »o reason for our not-doing it. There
is every reason why we should do It.
During the war, when only,citizen’s and
declarants were available for military serv-
ice, and when (before, we corrected it)
quotas of each locality we re figured in
proportion to population, we had to change
the quota rule because in many districts
_____:___WHAT OUR READERS SAY ---------
Gladstone Is Cited on Meaning of Local Option
---»_--—.....— ——— - - —--
tarian schools.
The other portion of the amendment
would change themethod of apportioning
the available school funds. At present
the fund is distributed among school dis-
in the United States there were so many
' aliens that the draft threatened to depopu-
late the district of citizens. '
• ♦ •
Editor, The Press:
ON page 2945 3rd vol. Uni- SoAinepired
— versal Dictionary, of the I ecclesiastically Inelined. The
English language, under he d of - will not ........ . ha
taken all liberties from man.
trary to the plain teaching of
tricts on thebasis of a scholastic census
two years ago.
Vital amendments to the state’s funda-
mental charter are much more important
than to elect any set of officials for two
or four year terms. We urge every quali-
fied elector, to vote on the amendments
Saturday.
TT WAS said above that each amendment
1 in its own way constitutes an approach
toward greater civic decency in dealing
which counts every child of school age in
the district, whether the child attends a
school or not.
The amendment would have to the Leg-
islature the method of apportionment. The
THEY take our benefits and avoid our
1 burdens. They degrade our living con-
ditions and devour our substance. Some
of them hate our institutions and seek to
Local Option is the following: |
"Temperance Advocacy: An
expression believed to have been - it '
for which Christ died. •
In order to place before their.
Legislature might retain the present
destroy them. Our burden of unemploy-
ment is now the heaviest in the world and
they are a large (if not the largest) part
of it. Yet our relief laws make it a crim-
inal offense to discriminate in favor of
citizens of the United States or even ex-
soldiers, of the United States.
We are the world's greatest saps when
first used by the Right Hon
W. Gladstone, M. P. who wrote
With public problems.
First is the amendment which would
permit the Legislature to create an old- |
age pension system to support Texas' aged
poor. The top limit would be $15 a month
per person. This amendment would per-
mit the state to take care of Its indigent
| method, or might change it so the funds
' would be apportioned according to school
attendance, or school enrollment. -Either
change would penalize districts with large it- comes to international relations
j negro and foreign population, counted in * fought and financed a World War
the school census but who may not attend
school.
It Would mean less money for district's
with floating population, and naturally for
those in which past surveys have found
We
and
turned the tide of military victory in a
matter which was none of our business.
Then we let ourselves be duped Into pay-
ing for it.
While we were doing that, we
in a letter to the Rev. John
Jones, on Oct. 9, 1868, “that,
as regarding the liquor traffic,
it was his disposition to let in
the principle of "local option"
wherever It was likely to be
found satisfactory. Sir Wilfred
Lawson has for many years
went in favor of the principle
of prohibition, the political
preacher
quote the scripture. Time and
again the .ecclesiastical “leaders
urged the adoption of the prin-
| ciple in some legislative meas- I
have quoted only a part of the
prophecy that King Lemuel’s |
| particular, quoted the above,
i mentioned passage of Seript ire
thus:
“It is not for kings, O Lem-
ure, contending that the inhab-
itants of conveniently marked-
j uel,‘it is not for kings to drink
i wine: nor for princes strong
' out districts should be allowed i drink Lest they drink, ar 1
the option of deciding whether
“These Republicans," he said.
. I “Jones, the road commi - ■
1 Shine, the town supervisor, and
J the assessor and the town clerk
| and the town collector.”
"What’s the matter with
them?"
I “Republicans,” said the vice
chairman of the county commit-
I tee— “every last,on<
"What am I supposed to do?"
“TO? said the vice chairman.
D Hel. man, you’ve got to
-sion to kee;
1 A brilliar
sprinkled ri
the tree bi
and 1
the local commit teeman guard, 11
“When you say that, smile,” ltwo in office
■ om he will serve He knows
that he can drink moderately
to happiness and excessively to
tine ry,
Solomon said: “Go thy way
and eat t • y bread with joy and
'•art for o now Accepteth
I said.
“Well, you are
"It’s a lie I said
“He brought out some papers..
said.“ Let’s adjust this guletly
thy works < Eerh 9.7.) Also: j
“Honor the Lord with thy sub-
stance; and with the first fruits |
Tell the how this happened.
of all thine increase So shall
thy barn’s be filled with plenty,
presses shall bur
with new wine.” (Prov. 3:9;
10)
TAVIS PUGH
11414 w Belknapist. |
A\PPE 14A FOR PASSAGE
OF ol D AGE PF NSION At r
Editor. The Press;
My ret tat ■
3 body
I said, "Let me :• t efirst to
j congratulate you.
trial in such ca
What about m
, pena This is the first I heard
sleeve band
25
- - . (
There wa
aged in an orderly and decent manner.
It would dovetail with the national
social security bill recently signed by
President Roosevelt under which the Fed-
eral Government could extend old age aid
not to exceed $15 a month, but only in
states which would co-operate and match
the federal funds.
Thus If this amendment fails, Texas
will be barred from co-operating with the
federal government and from getting fed-
eral-funds to aid our aged, although Texas
would continue to pay federal taxes to aid
the aged of more progressive states.
| evidence of "padded" school census lists
Districts with stable or growing popula-
tions, and with high school attendance.,
such as West Texas, would gain by the
change. The Fort Worth school district
would receive $700,000 or more, instead of
$600,000.
started to finance the trade and govern- | the liquor traffic should be |
ment of the bankrupt nations. The com- ■
binations of all this muddle-headed mawk-
ishness ruined us.
But werlearn nothing and we forget •
nothing. Our tariff policy continues to
regard the nations which have traded the
LOR the reasons outlined above The
P Press urges that you vote on Saturday | pot.
If eligible, and that you vote FOR every
constitutional amendment on your ballot.
I licensed and carried on in their
| several localities, and of regu-
| lasting it if they elect for its
continuance."
Mr. Gladstone was 59 when
| he wrote to the Rev. Jones. .
forget the law, and pervert the
I judgment of any of the afflict-
| ed." (Prov. 31 4.5.7
But he does not continue and
quote Proverbs 31.6 7, which
reads:
breeches off of us for 18 years as a This letter was written 16 ears
League ’of Commercial Benevolence, and
our policy 'toward aliens is equally crack-
We are great on such slogans as "the
“Give strong drink unto him
that is ready to perish, and
wine unto those that be of
after he had attacked Disraeli’s | he Hearts Let them drink
| budget system in the British Par- and forget their pauents and
remember their miseries no
lament in which he immorta-
THE second amendment would permit
1 treatment, and observation of persons
suspected- of lunacy, for not more than
90 days before a jury trial, to determine
sanity.
Mental ailments are diseases, just as
much as tuberculosis or cancer, and a Jury
trial to determine their presence and
severity: is about a« out of place in this
modern world as belief in witchcraft.
At present the jury trial must be held
at once. The pending amendment would
at least permit the patient to receive ex-
pert diagnosis and attention, and might
result in expert opinion to aid a jury with-
out any means whatever of its own for
actually determining sanity or insanity.
* * *
THE third amendment is that to repeal
I constitutional prohibition, and to sub-
stitute local option and the sale .of liquor
under state regulation, or alternately, by
state monopoly as the Legislature might
provide.
PIGS IS PIGS
THE Republicans, scratching about for
I issues', have found one that coincides
with what looks like packers’ propaganda
Philippines for the Filipinos." It would
be refreshing to hear somebody utter and
| mean a new slogan that we have not used
| with any effect for a generation — "The
United States for .the United States."
lized himself with the making
I of one of the greatest speeches
| ever delivered The dews of
youth had long since faded from
his cheeks when he wrote to
Mr. Jones. Born in a country
more..
Solomon taught some won-
| derful lessons on temperance,
but he was not a prohibition-
i ist. He said: "Wine is a mock-
Extended discussion of this amendment
is unnecessary here. Liquor saloons and
liquor sellers are operating wide open in
most of the state's population centers. As
> much liquor is being sold and consumed
in Texas as before prohibition. But under
.......present—conditions—no effective—control—is
possible nor can the state or any sub-
division obtain any revenue from the traf-
fic.
Under the amendment, if adopted.
counjies which went dry before state-wide
prohibition would remain dry until their
from Chicago. It is designed to get the
housewife vote. It’spige —the ghosts of
some six and a third” million shoats and
sows “plowed under" by,a cruel Triple A
in the fall of 1933.
Pork is high, say the critics Why?
Because of a pig shortage due to the crim-
inal slaughter of the porcine innocents.
Unfortunately, it isn't so simple.
Primarily the pork shortage is due to
| the last year's drought. That calamity |
reduced the 1934 corn crop by nearly one
billion bushels. By taking the surplus
baby and mamma pigs out of circulation
(practically all of the usable pork was
fed to relief families or turned into fer- .
tilizer), the Government's program not
only prevented a disastrous oversupply but |
acted as a stabilizer by saving for the
drouth year some 70 million bushels of
corn that the pigs would have consumed
if they had lived. Even after the reduc-
tion was made, the 1934 slaughter was 68
million head, or slightly less than in either
1933 or 1932. It was equal to that of
1925, when we exported 6,7 per cent of
our lard. Last year we exported 1.8 per
cent of our pork and 21.1 per cent of our'
lard.
If the packers and processors are spread-
ing this tearful story of the lost pig gen-
eration one wonders at their logic. How
, , can they claim in their hundreds of re-
people vote, otherwise, and local option covery, suits that they have borne the bur-
, den of Triple A, and at the same time
would at all times rule.
THE fourth amendment represents the
1 only possible means for the state to
meet any relief emergency arising before
1937.
The late legislature appropriated no
weep for the housewives who must bear It ?
We don't like to see food destroyed. But
when, as In this case, it helps to restore
purchasing power to farmers, it is less of
an economic sin. At any rate, pigs is
money nor took any other direct steps to
provide state funds for relief, despite the I
fact that all estimates indicated that the
$20,000,000 raised by the sale of relief
bonds would be exhausted before the end
of 1935.
pigs, and not much of a campaign issue.
The Daily Nosegay
it did do this, however: At present |
■ only a regular session can submit a con-
stitutional amendment, such as that under
which relief bonds were issued.
Hon. Van Zandt Jarvis,
Mayor of Fort Worth,
City Hall.
Happy Being Unhappy
e-----— -------8
By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
THE psychiatrists ‘are getting beyond
1 their depth when they begin computing
feminine unhappiness. So when we read
that some professor finds 98 per cent of
us drooping with sorrow, I think we may |
safely charge him with Barnumizing.
On this subject, we've got to doubt all
the figures. For it's a |
where the liquor question had
been a problem, for more than 1
R00 years, the only partial so-
lution that Gladstone could see
er, and strong drink is raging:
and whoever is deceived there
by is not wise" i Prov. 20:1.)
VO. It paper is a poor man’s
1 friend and one that will tell
the truth regardless of who it
is about, I
I am an old man and want to j
see the old age pension come 1
out on top. Tie moneyed peo-
ple are against us like the West |
Texas Chamber of Commerce. It |
I was said at one time the Tax I
Payers’ Association of Dallas
| was going to take the field to
I make speeches against the aged ■
Will, some of y force give
u* a writeup to show the peo-
ple that a great deal claimed by
i them is framed..
A ARMSTRONG
Mansfield, Texas Rt 1.
"You were duly elect
there s patronage wit
7
know,”
There is no one
testify
to this
who
was local option. Taking his |
advice,.along with that of a long I forcible than t e excess
line of United States statesmen,
I shall vote for repeal and for
the restoration of local option.
B E. COOK
Stephenville, Texas.
HITS PREACHERS IN
REPEAL FIGHT
Editor, The Press:
Well - known fact that THE most faithful servant the
women thrive on unhap-
piness. Some of us
aren't really happy un-
less we re miserable, if
you get what I mean,
and even today, with all
’ the enthralling stir of
modern life, a good
many remain sunk in a
perpetual dump, their
minds scurrying about
like moles under ground
trying to find and fetch
to the surface some new
grievance.....for—themto
cry over,
Mrs. Ferguson The average woman
| isn’t unhappy; she just thinks she is. Of
course, that makes it practically unan-
imous, so far as she is concerned, but I
contend she’s no business getting into the
statistics, since she’s more of a poseur
than a percentage.
Burden-bearing is a kind of tradition
with us. As soon as the physical packs
| were loosed from our backs, we caught up
mental ones to replace them and have
| bowed under them ever since, and very
proud of ourselves, too.
“Bearing up nobly" is a honeyed phrase
in feminine ears. We like to astound the
neighbors with our Christian martyr be-
havion, and so we lie awake nights—tak-
ing care to let everybody know about it.
of course—grieving over delinquent hus-
bands, worrying about the children, revel-
ling in all kinds of imaginary sorrows.
All this was bad enough. Then along
came Mr. Freud and now we have not only
devil has is the political
preacher who advocates man-
made moral Issues that are con-
SIDE GLANCES
can
more
is
The excess user, however,
generally a man who does not
want to take God-given rights
from his fellow-creatures, just
because he hasn't will power to |
drink 'as he should.
The excess user is generally i
a man who has common sense
enough to know that the prin-
ciple of prohibition—will not
protect him. He knows that it
is up to him to use his will
power, that he is a free moral |
agent, and that he can choose i
By George Clark
Today’s Poem
Contributions are welcome
They n st be original No
contributions are returned.
Y
got one election inenector to AP-
point
Whom do you, wi
inspectorship to:
yelled. "You an
me to squeal on a
my punishment if
I am not going
friend I only
want to know
“Isn’t there anybody
here that could use
wheedled.
"Get out of here: I yelled. I
deny everything. I’ll demand a
jury trial. No man ran come
into my little love bower and
call me a Democratic committee:
"Strangers and tools," the say- I men do onS TOU eat peramT
The vice chairman bowed
STRANGERS AND FOOLS
ing.goes,'
‘Are the only ones that will .
ever forecast
What the Lord in heaven but
seldom knows: R
What the weather will be.
or how long it will last."
Ah. useless your rules and wea-
ther-saws—
They are no good here, I tell
you, because .
In Texas our weather knows no
laws.
Ask the man on the- street of
a Texas town
What he thinks'of the wea-
ther, and what it will be.
He will squint his eyes and
— thoughtfully frown.
And his forecast (which sim-
ply means: We shall see)
Will probably be: ‘It's too all-
fired hot;
You know," he will say, I don't
know but what
It might come a rain—but again
it might not."
“Oh, another Huey Hong,
eh?" he said. "Not regular.
• Going to Jump the party All
right. Jump. But wait till we
turn the rascals out, and then I
hope you get a ticket for speed:
ing some night and con ■ around
to the administration to square
It. And you might as well un-
derstand you lose your patron-
age. Your $60 inspectorship is
out"
Party lines are crumbling UP
our way.
This Is Life
4
The pending amendment would permit
submission by a special session on a sub-
ject requested by the .governor, so that if
the relief problem became serious and it
became necessary to raise money, the
Governor could call a special session and
ask that a new relief bond amendment
be submitted to the people.
This was the sole purpose for which
the Legislature approved the amendment
and unless conditions improve it may turn
out to be among the most timely and most
needed amendment ever to, be submitted.
1
TN MANY cases where persons are con-
1 victed of a felony the ends of justice
and of society would be met, were the con-
Dear Van:
I see, in the cause of civic boostin’,
You plan to repave Main and Houston,
This winter or this fall.
Van, what do you mean "repaving"?
Many and many a motorist, raving,
Would swear they had never been moved
at all. Y
P. S.: And what do you plan about that
disaster
That the maps call East Lancaster?
Yours, etc.,
LESTER (Just Call me Les)
our ancient woes but an entirely new list
of sexual and matrimonial maladjustments
to fret about. And such a hullabaloo as
is always going on over them!
T Unhappiness has become a regular cult
with American women. It may be the re-
sult of our civilization, as is said, but I
think it can also be traced to a perverted
desire for notice. Happy people get very
little attention nowadays.
It’s the unhappy who are diagnosed,
psychoanalyzed, and pampered, who march
in perpetual parade before us. A little
of the same kind of treatment Johnny
used to get in the woodshed might effect
a partial cure on the- mass of the patients.
I know some I'd like to see It tried on.
“Now, listen, anything you win from Dr. Stroud’s wife
goes toward paying something on his bill"
..... - - a
Ask the farmer who leans
against his plow
And studies the skies above
the plain,
And with a bandana mops his
brow—
Ask him if he thinks it will
come a rain.
He'll be slow to say: "You
can never tell;
Those clouds up there look good,
but—well.
If it don't, there'll be a long
dry spell!"
By JAC K MAXWELL
OPACE on the editorial page
D of a daily newspaper is fre-
quently limited, there being too
much copy for the amount of
space. Therefore, the editor is
in need of short skits with
which to ‘plug a hole,’ as it is
called. So, with this fact in
| mind I do the editor a favor:
"A tart temper never mellows
with age, and a sharp tongue is
the only tool that grows keener
with constant use."
*
Deputy st
standing di
coffin on-
line. acted
F rom him c
of orders to
"Step On
Get a mo
Lerrer take
. nz now a
Later. tw
NH ROE
he was bo1
in what wi
ory, 55 yea
The Upli
place where
dungaree a
hat and boc
Phote
Mr Rox
motion pict
time of his
ence of the
act public.
Although
under whic
enough, the
Imported ir
ure care!:
ic view by
smaller tree
In this I
artificial ET
dozens of r
ers, and new
The tree
good shelte
1 be a ph
ary box.
The Clare
ender. of <
The E’plifte
and sweet t
Through
hey passed
geles. one
•enters of
iners drop;
Forest Law
Mr. Rogers
Jon. of wh
h» nation 1
Quotations
-»
ARKANSAS
WIL
Now, Reader, this lesson take to
heart,
(Excuse the sudden didactic
twist,
But the moral Insidiously tore
me apart,
And 1 tell you, 1 simple
could not resist!)
For I’m teaching you something
not taught In schools:
Forget your weather—saws and
rules—
Those who forecast In Texas are
strangers and fools!
A. L. CROUCH.
109 N. Taylor.
Why, I preached to 60,000
persons In one 'day at the San
Diego World's Fair last week.
The nudist show there had no
crowds like that.—Aimee Kem-
ple McPherson.
Since man is the object of
wo man’s affections, why
shouldn't he take thorough care
of his appearance?—Gail, New
York beauty specialist, explain-
ing why men patronize beauty
shops.
A gentleman cannot support
a family. That is hard work,
leaving no time for politeness.
LITTLE
Gov. J. .Mar
i state half
or of will :
of his time
funds for .
Ims. State
closed at r
lag was ha
Don't
Tormen
—
4
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Sheldon, Seward R. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 277, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 22, 1935, newspaper, August 22, 1935; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1688784/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.