The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 112, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 9, 1928 Page: 4 of 14
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PAGE {—THE FORT WORTH PRESS— FEBRUARY 9, 1925
1
The Fort. Worth Press
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Third Term Issue • •
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OBLE Senators are quite con-
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the assoctation
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of millions of dollars for new warships to bring our navy
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un-
fortunate enough to be opposed
missions to mines in California
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and
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if
fortunately, Britain and America are
Beauty Parlors for Dogs
his two equally well-known
Natureland
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t his ancestry or a carpenter by
(
coming to..
“‘A Service Institution"
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make their troops stay sober it
would seem that the association
The Nation’s
Political Pulse
। gineer
Alexis,
third
no
YOU euTeHA-
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sent him to New Mexico and
Arizona.
our
re-
Gosh! We‘d Forgotten About That Fellow
of their own brotherhood,
representation.
CHAPTER VII
Tndcttnfl ITif World
• once straight,
machihery.
GRIEI
AC
en:
and
release"
elaborate
"The I
is the 1
Georgi
the New
ertolre 1
as adve
day nld
celved a
death o
utes bel
the firs
Man."
Gaul
man" at
ditorfum
term issue now that it is
longer an issue.
tals for dumb animals.
The Ellin Prince Speyer hos-
’novi-1
with
Janin in great esteem.
So they cabled and wrote him.
asking him to send on an ex-
about loading some tiny toy of
an animal.
And so, in the late Forties,
there now appears a sign in a
window telling the world that
here your pet vurp can be mar-
cel-waved, or curled or other-
wise beautified in a manner be-
fitting a blooded hound. Glanc-
- for each simply and solely be-
cause of Intolerance and provin-
dallam.
Granting that It is right to
such pretensions.
In a recent propaganda
Fort Worth ,
Has—
TC
Bl
.. .. -imri
E I
Mardi Gras
NEW ORLEANS
r FEBRUARY 16-21st
abuse of the injunction is trace- ;
able to scared or biased judges.
under-way between his country and ours, his revelation
was of-more than ordinaryrimportance, and for a reason.
One needs to be blind indeed not to see that, measured
by the standards in vogue up to the present time, no
greater strain has ever been placed upon the peace-time
relations between two great powers than that to which
those between Britain and America are now subjected.
Without either having sought it, the two great Eng-
0, •
the other doors against him.
Partly for practical experi-
ence, "but mostly," he said af-
Guild
As
full leased wire of the United Press Associa:
cion, Scripps-Howard News Alliance, and full
Newspaper Enterprise Association service.
1NCOMILE
TAK
Published Daily. Except Sunday, at Ffth and Jones Strsets
Fort Worth, Texas
term not only with complacence,
but with enthusiasm. If he had
LEFT
WVER5
42.
g
l
-—..—, ...------• ... ......... proprietor put his tongue In
anti-Catholic tirade, while Jack- -his cheek and chuckled loudly,
son goes to trial on charges of He does not laugh any more.
-l1 m"""*en *"‘ he" ‘ He waxes wealthy off the fees
charged fat dowagers whogh
JOHN H SORRELLS, “
Editor______
KOM-
THERE AINT
NUTHIH’ LETT
IN THE ICE
BOX?
5—
■ $09
$.24
'J
L Entered as second-class mail matter, October
13, 1921, at the postoffice at Fort Worth, Tex:
' as. City delivery, 10 cente a week. Dy mail
i in Texas, 46 cents per month; $1.25 for three
I months; 15 for one year.
President, but it will not fool
anyene as 'to' who settled the
issue) In this particular instance.
e
Tiekets, reservations and further In.
formation at City Tieket orlee, 1|<
East Ninth Street, or T. a. Mallon.
Know Fort Worth:
Cantey East. extends from 2800
South'Main. east to Mansfield
Road, H&TC and I&GN tracks.
Admitting that some of <
laws should be changed or
peeled, we might derive just
(CONTINUED TOMORROW)
•---- 1 ------------.--------------------
fate, or destiny or what you will, has thrust them into an
arena where only fighting has been known before. And
if they are to escape without war it must be thru the
door of common sense which no previous occupants of the
RALPH D. HENDERSON,
Business Manager
___________ ____
ring have ever seemed able to find.
by U. 8. Marines. Furthermore,
ly be found with the law, lish-speaking nations today face a situation loaded with
cnha" dmikthnm-- dynamite. Never on more friendly terms than” at present.
that Cherrington try to teach
them to read and write.
-----,-------—,
The Road to British-American Peace
{XTHEN from his throne King George scooped the
V V world on the news that a new arbitration treaty is
political corruption, but there
are thousands ready to cheer"
OR
BANKM
into high places in the dry ranks
General Augustino Cesar San-
dino of Nicaragua and Sultan
Ibn Saud of Nejd.
“Such scum a* this," it said
fn effect, "are the sort who join
American prohibitionists to en-
force prohibition on their peo-
pie.” f
Leaving aside old Ibn Saud,
who was at last accounts the
best fighting man lb Arabia, the
association shunned the liberal
viewpoint altogether. The lib-
eral viewpoint is that Sandino,
long sihee admitfed by his. «n-
emles to be more than a bandit.
♦ 01
to
tent to discuss the
n- —li-
J
$2/710
ROUND TRIP FROM FORT WORTH
Tickets on Sale February 18 to 19 inclusive
Return Limit February 28th
Limit .May He Extended to March 14th on
- Additional Payment of $1.00
TWO FAST TRAINS DAILY
8:15 A. M. and 10:00 P. Ml
From TAP Station
spelled o-fish-al" with stress
buy I
weal
cept
brov
an t
• • «
nTHE Association Against the j
I Prohibition Amendment pro- '
fesses to be liberal and tolerant
for debts and loans — this last
the beginning of his extensive .
and well-concealed personal phi-
lanthropies.
Wheu he finished with the
United States Geelogical Sur-
vey, be traveled ou tue last of !
his ready rrunds to Nevada City.
There lie hoped to get a Jou
on the technical staff of some '
Follette might have introduced
that resolution . If President
WHEN Herbert Hoover
’ ’ Stanford, h had a little
less-than no money at all.
His summe’s earnings went |
WELL .WELL,
I HOPE YOU
FOLKS WERE
EXPECTING
ME“ |
oiui"
terward, "because I had to cat,"
he took a laborer's. job in the
drifts of. the Mayflower.
In collaboration with a shift
of Cornish miners, he pounded
a drill, shoveled ore, pushed a
hand car for eight hours a day
(
I
. I
camp, mostly from the Univer-
city of Calitornia, bui these
had no present opening.
His collego diploma closed
Committee
to count-
Minnesota
people of Britain and the people of the United States
must-recognize if history -is not to go on repeating itself.
For more than 200 years Britain has fought and
beaten every nation that rose to challenge her supremacy,
either* as a sea-power or as a trading power. Now,
thanks to circumstances rather than to, any predeter-
mined plan of our own, we find ourselves doing both.
We are rivaling her in both directions at once.
Like Britain, our prosperity in a large measure de-
pends upon our ability to sell our surplus products abroad.
cal situation has ended only in the same identical way.
The question before Britons and Americans alike now is,
is history going to repeat?
Which is why the news King George published from
the throne this week has more than the usual impor-
tance. This newspaper believes the announcement gives
an inkling of the answer to the vital question confronting
the people of this country and ors.
—Ferttfnately, the world has learned a lot in the last
20 years. We have learned that nobody wins a war. Both
Wis., think*
branches, the McBride wing.
Y which demands stiffer penal-
ties, and the Ernest -Cherring-
___tOn Wing, Which MjUUi edu—
wraduate prospector,- 8tli held
the relha: and thin hardy eon
of toil scorned the "college
bred" as impractical and yisiou- )
ary.
Good mining engineers with
sincere attempt to face a disagreeable truth which the ----------- -------
- .. . । and not Pharisaic and Intoler-
ant like the Anti-Saloon
he spent moot of hl*
aat" is correct.
Pronounce “official" a*
Sad to relate, nothing new pre-
septs itselt unless It be the ef-
fort* of General Superintendent
F. Scott McBride and hl* staff
to persuade the Civil Service i
Commisslon to make its very
low standards for prohibition
agent* stil lower so that the
precent jobholders may continue
to hold on.
‘I the mental tests are mad*
brother*, Henry
To Calvin Coolidge, and to
Calvin Coolidge alone, belongs
the House
makes the
Senator Johnson (Rep. Cal.)
The (Jacksonville) agreement
thus executed, that solemn un-
dertaking to which in a degree
the U. S. government was a
party; that contract was repu.
diated in August, 1926, almost
two years before the expiration
or Its terms, by the Pittsbursh
Coal Co. and that repudiation
and violation of the solemn
agreement by the Pittsburgh
Coal Co. was the beginning of
the terrible warfare that ha*
'since continued in the State of
. Pennsylvania.
congressman. “You should in-
vestigate with Congress and Mr.
Calvin Coolidge to try to be
sensible in National Game Base
Ball no'base to count on fly
ball, out on first base, three
strikes to out—And more of.
the same. '
"INJUNCTIONS are not' alWays
- used against labor.
But for one issued by Fed-
eral Judge J. C. Hutcheson of
Houston last August, Southern
Pacific clerks would be looking
for a “company union," instead
ter. -
Modern youth may be wise,
but there are still some good
Bhings to be learned from their
elders. Grownups may be boobs
and all that, but the tLme has
not yet come when they are
willing to take serious orders
from high school students.
i ♦—----------------
Do You Know*
NTO city in the world pay*
IN such attention to its pel*.
'There are innumerable bird
store* and bird doctors. There
are just as many hospitals for
labor.——
He would go to San Francis-
co and ask Louis Janin for IL
job.
HE was an outstanding per-
ri sonality even In that city of
individuals. This Louis Janin;
French by Dirth, got his tech-
nical education both in Pari*
and in Freiburg, Germany. With
for MEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF’ CIRCUEXTIONS
and Nevada. He visited Routt
County, Colorado. to inspect a
"gravel proposition," to lay out
its ditch lines and to bring in
,. water. Before the year was out
Janin had raised his salary to
9250 a month for field jobs and
"The Life of Herbert Hoover
A REMINISCENT BIOGRAPHY—BY WILL IRWIN
Copyright 1928 for The Fort Worth Press by United Feature Syndicate
Tracy
—-SAYS
In nine cases out of ton,
abuse of the injunction
is traceable to scared or
biased judges.
And Janin, .like Branner,
Great Men
GPEAKING on the subject of
: 0 a monument for the late
Coolidge had not clarified the
mean lag or '!l do not choose to
be a candidate in 1928," but, I
how would the old guard have
taken it?
It is proper, even at this-late
hour, for the Senate to go on
reedrd a* opposed to more than
two successive terms for any
cut no small figure in robbing
Jackson, as well as quite a few
OthTa, of their Jiud——Pe
have convictions. even to the
extent of narrowness. It is right
to measure men by such a
yardstick, especially men who
■ aspire to hold public office and
' who must take an eath to deal
alike by all, regardless of race,
creed or color.
Who manage it.
In nine cases put___ot ten,
Independence,' young Rob
HAVING panned the associa-
tion, it I* only fair now, in
order, to be quite impartial, on
the prohibition question, to turn
around and pan the league.
Ing into the window, you can
see the beautiflers busily at
work from morning to night.
Do ypu rate a ship captain And. contemplating Hthis scene,
by his religion, a bricklayer by perhaps you will wndr—Reven
a* I did—what the world is
sarcasm, welcomed
A Wisconsin gentleman
thinks the House Rules
Committee makes the
baseball rules—witness
his letter to his Con-
gressman.
. lin, refusing" to pay him the
" courtesy of listening to another ।
pltal doe* not dlscrihilnat’e. Its
patients, I am told, include
monkey*. canaries, goats and
parrots. Last year some 16,000
"assorted animals were, treated
there.
There is even a "home for
stray dogs and cats” where, if
the owner fails to appear, new
home* are found. Each year
wandering vurps and kitten* to
the number of several thousand
are given homes. •
Brdadway, seem to be taking
this extraordinary occupation
seriously.
When the notion first dawn-
ed to turn a good old-fashioned
dog-biscuit emporium Into a
beauty shop lor "popas" and
such. I have no doubt that the
cate the public. Since the Mc-
Bride wing is out to save jobs
for preseri prohibition agents
the sugestion is made gratis
•st"l
$/AN,I
»/il .a.
MEASTIME, his brother Theo-
1 IVI dore and his sister May had
moved from Portland to Berke-
ley across the Hay, where May
was going to School.
Theodore had left Penn Col-
lege midway of his course,
learned the printer's trade and.
when that newfangled machine
-appeared, became attnotypeop-
erator. This wa* only a mean*
toward an end; his suppressed
youthful desire for Robinson
. Crusoe and other worldly read-
ing had endowed him with lit-
erary and journalistic ambition.
In his leisure time, he wrote.
Between flights to the South-
west Herbert lived with the fam-
ily at Berkeley.
"Tad, you’re not endangering
Kipling as yet," he remarked
one day. “Probably the family
talent doesn't run to expression.
Why den’t you put yourself un-
der Branner and learn engineer-
ingL,IlLbe estabtished by the
time you confe out, and we can
work in partnershp." Tad took
his advice.
Then came a big, unexpect-
ed chance which gave direction
to Hoover's destinies for the 10
years. . . ’ ‘
up to parity with Britain. In Washington this week, we
are told, President Coolidge indorsed a new plan to
strengthen our merchant marine, not only as..a trade fortunatlsbnoubrtoatrot
measure but as a national defense measure. Ships aie
now in preparation which will cross the Atlantic in four
days, beating the fastest time of the fastest British flag .
ships by a whole day. Not only that, but built with flat
decks from which airplanes can take off and on which
they may land. In time of war they would be, to all
intends and purposes, first-class aircraft carriers.
These things are not aimed at Britain. They are only
the logical developments the indispensable needs of this
stupendous, fast-growing country, of ours. They are
aimed at no one. We look upon all nations as friends.
But the fact remains that thruout all history this identi-
A lone peacock was put out ,
In the barnyard of a North
Dakota turkey farm and at once
a dozen turkeys made for that
new bird with intent to do him
severe bodily harm. Did the
peacock torn tail? He squared
off and the flrat three or four/
turksto arrive received such
resounding peck* that Matter
Peacock waa-thereafter allowed
all the room his toner desired.
$ ■
. sides lose. Also
-——-————•
A Master Plumbers’ Associa-
tion.
or night. Tommy Ninnis, one
of those veteran foremen who.
lire to mining what hardened
non-coms are to armies, served
a his shift bos*.
1 And from him, Hoover pick-
er up practical trick* which
came handy in hl* later career,
, , . At the Nevada City Hotel,
Heever-pleked-up-aet-ef the
lore of mining.
-Out of all the talks there,
came with frequency and re-
spect the name of Louls Janin.
As the world.-dragged into
1896, Hooyer- had saved a lit-
tle money from his $2.50 a day
on the drill. And he came to a
decision. Nevada City offered
him no prospetes beside day-
minu or oilier. He tailed.
The "practical miner,"
working years in San Francis:
so; and his interests covered
the whole West.
Hoover visited Janin's suite
of office* over the Anglo-Cali-
fornian Bank, got acce** to the •
great man, and presented his
application.
Janin asked about hia train-
ing, "Graduated from Stan-
ford; one summer wtth the Ar-
kansas Geological Survey; three
with the United State* Geologic-
al Survey, and some work at
Nevada City,” Hoover replied.
Why among all the applicants
Janin picked this inexperienced
boy as an apprentice on hia
staff, he never diVed to tell.
Probably he caught that sub-
tle aura of mastery and integ-
rigty which made ua at Stan-
ford Hoover's followers all;
only, with his French talent for
rapid , intellectual contacta, he
perceived it instantly Instead of
gradually..
For a Rw week* Hoover
served in Janin’s office aa he
had- in Branner's—tpying out
letters, keeping the correspond-
Time and again, Britain has been where she finds her-
.self today. And every time she has fought her way out,
across her conquered rival. Now, without our willing it,
| and whether we like-it or not, comes our turn to face |
her in the same blood-soaked arena, and only a new dip-
lomacy and a new statesmanship can rescue her and us
without a’repetition of the same old gory story.
This is not the outcry of an alarmist. Rather it is a
Rule* Committee
baseball rule*.
"triform Rule*
ppen the right way
bate*,” he write* a
might .with good grace let that
fact - be ballyhooed by the 1
’league.
when two good fighting men
like Ibn Saud and Sandino
• nr RODNKY DVTCHER
NEA BKNVICE WRITER
WASHINGTON, Feb. 9.— Sen-
• ator Hiram Bingham of
Connecticut ha* the moat grue-
some appearing office on Cap-
itol Hill.
Hla walla are covered with
huge cartoon*, some 1re-sized,
showing Chiamen being tor-
tured and put to death in all
sorts of unfortunate way*.
Bingham picked them up
while in China last summer.
They are propaganda cartoon*
issued by Chinese nationalists
and communists to illustrate
their version* of what, foreign '
Imperlalists were doing to the
people. The tall and handsome
senator from Connecticut rays
the style of the art to Russian
* rather than Chinese.
The largest -eartoon, covering
most of one side of Bingham's
inner office, show* a Chmese
being killed by a foreigner in
uniform. Another shows a Chi-
nese enwrapped by a serpent
labeled "uequal treaties” and
beset by a rat, a tiger, a wolf,
an alligator and a wasp, repre- •
senting other evil*. In another
our' own Uncle Sam is shown
garroting China, who** head. I*
caught tight by a closing door
entitled "unequal treaties."
NOR are the old plodding
IN horses forgotten! With gas
-filling stations cluttering ev-
ery other corner in the Inter-
est of the passing automobile-,--,
some were inclined to forget
that horses get thirsty now and
then and that hot New York
day* are a bit hard on the old
plodders. Horse troughs be-
came fewer and fewer. There
are but. a half dozen—or per-
haps less--left in all New York.
So someone started a "horse-
watering” fund, to provide palla
and. troughs. Last year $100,-
000 was spent on the task of
getting water for tired and
thirsty horses. But then, it's
a big city!
much advantage if the same
thing were to happen to some
.of the men who administer
them.
•------
George H. Corson, the wild
bird expert, wants to know the
reason for the followiug: If you
place the cg*g of the willest
turkey under a barnyard hen,
the hatched turks will be per-
fectly tame. If you put com-
mon guinea eggs under a Wy-
‛ andotte; Rhode Island Rod or
Orpington hen, the hatch will
go wild if you make a threaten-
ing gesture. The guinea Is sup-
posed to ba a tame bird, but
watch them when you feed
them and you'll note that they
are suspicious uf every move
you make.
MIL MELLON
Snator Neely (Dem., W. Va.i
—A sense of fairness impels
me to say that I believe Mr.
League. It doesn't.'always Hve
up to It* professions, which
may be a point for the league,
because the. league make* no
NX wna WALTEH FEnGUSON
JUDGE BEN LINDSEY, erst-
while of Denver but now of
these entire United States,
seems to be growing wilder
and wilder. Hi* last outburst
contains a scathing rebuke to
parenta in general and to par-
ents with any convictions in
particular. He announces in
P '
e. • ’
-
1 t
WESTERN Australia had dis-
W covered gold in the Coll-
gardie district. A boom fol-
lowed—a rush. As the surface
diggings worked out, as the
mners began breaking into the
veins, capital for large opera-
tions invested in this field and
capital demanded the latest and
most efficient technology. That
was to be had tn the United
States.
A British firm, with interna-
tional interests, knew that
Americans led the world in gold
mining on a large scale and
that our best techniofths worked
on "fish." ■ '
Don't say "Who is it by?
Like Britain, our position is now such that our national
security demands that upon the high seas there shall be
credit for having maintained the no fleet superior to ours. We are willing, even eager,
precedentnestablishedabyWash- to limit our fleet to the very minimum agreeable to the
terran. next power, but we can not afford to accept inferiority
The Republican party would because of the risks, involved.
. have nominated him for a third . Thus at this moment we are appropriating hundreds
■ Field Marshal Haig, Premier |
Baldwin informs us that Stone- • i
wait Jackson was one of the '
greatest modern military lead-
ers, if not the very greatest.
This may be just another bit
of that pro-British propaganda
; - which worries “Big Bill" Thomp- '
son so much, but most folks
will accept it as 4n example of
that mental alertness and liber-
ality -which make Englishmen —
any easier, they will include
questions like; ,
How much whiskey is there
in a full quart bottle of whis- .
key, or
When arresting bootleggers
should they be put in jail or in
the postotfice?
The league now has two
"Whom” is correct.
Pronounce “meringue" as if
spelled "ma-rang," with stress
on "rang.”
Don't use “childish" when
' you mean "childlike."
Don’t use ‘ had wrote" when
you mean "had written.”
Adage popularly Used but
often misquoted: "In the pink
of perfection” was "The very
pink of perfection,” as Gold-
smith wrote it in "She Stoops
1o Conquer.” -
in GllERTSWAN. • dogs and cats, where the fees
NEW YORK, Feb. 9.—Those 1 are quite in proportion to those
IN beauty parlors for dogs "harged an average human,
and cats that dot the side There are several charity hospl-
street* oft Fifth Avenue and
I was the frontier still; only
. a few years since Geronimo
spread file and torture over
Southern Arizona. ..
Amidst surrounding* which
live today only in the movTes,
he camped for month* at a time
among the sagebrush, or lodged .
in primitive frontier hotels.
Hoover avoided the moyie
stuff. A* he said later. "That.
kind of adventure never ap-’
pealed to me much." Janin ap-
preciated already the boy’.
'‘Renin'S, inf drmed judg men t;
began now to perceixe his ex-
ecutive ability.
U out any other way.
What is there to arbitrate
when one party chooses all the
delegates?
By the same token, where
would those Southern Pacitic
clerks be today but for a fear-
less, straight-thinkjng judge
with the power to issue an In-
lunction?
_
•o hard to beat.
Wide-awake and broadminded
as we Americans claim td be,
there are many among us who
never thought of rating .Stone-
wall Jackson among the out-
standing generals of the ages.
While this may be traced
partly to Ignorance, it can also
be traced partly to prejudtce .
Politics and settonatsmtave
U- TF politics and sectionalism
I A have blinded us to the great-
I ness of some great men, they
1 , . , have made us imagine the
I greatness of some little men.
On what other ground can
I you explain the presence of a
n Heflin in the United States Sen-
F. ate or a Jackson in the Gover-
Fdtu nor's chair of Indiana?
I 'The Senate walks out on Hef-
no uncertain terms that'we
do not have Reuse enough to
bring dtp our children, that we
are booba in the strongest
sense of the word, and that
furthermore he would enjoy
giving us a good swat in' the
jaw. . .
If you ask the why of this
avalanche of vituperation, echo
will probably answer why. So
-Lfar as the ordinary parent can
make out,, it is because we do .
not let the children have their
own way entirely, because we
are not all sold on the idea of
companionate marriage and be-
cause we will not talk about
aex morning, noon and night.
Mr. Lindsey believes in leav-
ing everything to the judgment
ot the children. When it comes
to sense he thinks they have
it all over ua. We ought to ait
down and let them run things.
He has no patience with our
silly old-fashioned moral con-
victions.
And he may be right. Per- •
haps he has hit upon the only
sure and certain method of
righting social evils. But at
least the parents of all these
misunderstood young martyrs
• should be allowed some time to
outgrow their foolishness. And
this being a free country.
Hoover saw debt or starvation
ahead the boss lad down be-
fore his unpaid assistant the
papers and data in a mining
suit. . • ,
"I want a technical report on
this situation," he said. "See
what you can do." Working
night , and day Hoover finished
the reoprt. typed it, laid It on
Janin’s desk.
“Good—very good!" he told
Hoover, "Where did you get
all this practical knowledge!"
“I worked underground in
that mine, pushing a car," re-
plied Hoover. . •
Thereupon Janin put him on
.salary a nominal fifty dollars
B. A. WATSON
District Panserger Agent
L 301 Anderson Did*.
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY: For many are.called, but
H few are chosen.—Matt, 22:14.
* M •
There's a-small choice in rotten apples.—Shakespeare.
both democracies. In both he word of the people is the
law of the land, provided they make good use of the
prerogative which is in their hands and vote real states-
men into office. ,
Properly guided, the two nations will never go to war.
"-------------
smoothing the‛4 in California. Also, they held
•I— so much as nodded consent.
The Republican party was,rot
only prepared to scrap a cen-
tury-old precedent,' but to eat
its own words for the sake of
capitalizing his popularity.
Now that he has prevented it
from trampling statesmanship
and common sense under foot j
for the sake of polities, the Re- '
publican party is glad to chirp
its approval.
Annm
Texas •
of trus
the uni
RoutH
discusse
ion. TE
year wB
meetina
8. J.
dent of ■
ed the B
Othe
Stark, d
R. M. I
torney.
Worth, I
Othel
C. F. #
Zandt •
Reed, 4
Hilisboi
Worth;!
Charles!
G. McF|
Marfa; I
s. p. a
•on. Fol
Dallas;!
Andrew!
Cook. F
Annul
port* al
Collegel
held Wl
The |
were re
Repo I
•bowedI
tertal al
Brite Cl
89 mini
dents 1
L. C .I
of this I
Andrew!
dent; Li
secretar
Fort W1
Other
H. Fost
Kerns, I
Fort We
tin, and
If you will look about
you can easily see that
the good judge exagger-
j ates a bit.
Mellon is one of the greatest
a i financiers this country or the
I « r H+ world has ever produced. But
Vonr Hnolich because of his formerly having
-VuI Luli81ISII Had untold millions of dollars
•------------—---------• imvested in distilleries and
Don't say "They set in front brewerles, 1am.u nable,to be-
of me at the theater." "They syrwhntdeeineymhpth with
prohibition legislation or be-
come enthusiastic about its
strict enforcement.
9$
erties, owing to the trying cli-
mate. a yqung man peferred.
And bore, Janin performed an
act of pure decency.
This boy Hoover, not yet 24
years old, was a find.
Janin called Hoover in (ron
the field and put the offer.
Hoover Janin said afterward
stood for a moment so dazzled
that he could not speak. When
he found his tongue, he accept-
ed the spot.
He rushed opt Into Market
Street, hurried to inform Fester
Hinsdale, how a full-fledged
young attorney, and Folsom. h]s
laboratory mate in the engineer-
ing department of Stanford.
They went boyishly wild, of
course.
"You'll need clothe*.” said
Hindale, and they led him to
that Market Street tailor who
made most of the college crea-
tions for Stanford men in fund*.
Hoover ordered three new
suits—and at one time!. Hins-
dale cherished for high-colored
homespun* a fancy which hl*
poverty inhibited from expres-
sion. He cajoled Hoover Into
adding a "morning coat” of ag-
gressive Scotch tweeds. . .
Two years later Hinsdale-re-
celved an express parcel from
Australia. It contained the
Scotch tweed suit and a note in
Hoover's hand saying: "Sinpe
you like this damn thing. take
it. I haven't worn tt yet.”
♦.....................
A Woman’s
Point of View
2—,-’: “[
must have perceived that this -__________________________—
boy not only did things, bitt got pert .engineer who could intro-
tilings done. - duo Californian meth nd»
So one dayand*ju-t when their Western Australian prop-
what's .to prevent us from ’
disagreeing if we feel like it?
If you will look about you
- can easily-see that the good
judge exaggerates a bit. Never
have parents been so concern-
ed about their dutis as they
are today. Never have they
^studied their children with such
intelligence. Never hate they
. been so generous, so tolerant.
। or so lenient.
But the average father can
I note quite believe that his 16-
year-old, son I* wise enough
to make all his own decisions,
and the ordinary conscientious
I mother cannot understand why ,
she should not be heeded occa-
sionally by her flapper daugh-
j 5 bls creed? — ____
i . Why not think of public ser-
| vice in the same way, measuring
I men, not by the church they
I attend nr who their xrandfath-
•I rs were, hut by their fitness
i f for the job?
As things now stand, , their ;
brotherhood is not only upheld, 1
but the Southern Pacific must J
recognize and deal with it.
In Judge Hutcheson * opinion,
• "company union" permits te !
employer to sit on both sides
pf the table.
No sensible man could figure
fine technical training were a month, while working in the
still, by way of disguise, wear-. office, and a hundred and fifty
lug rough clothes, chewing to- । dollars a month while out on a
j vacco and debasing their gram- ' job as subordinate to the senior
mar, • | members of the staff.
Innoeentiy, Hoover revealed Within a fortnight. Janin was
lii* secret, l’here were, indeed, ' sending him on engineering
college-,trained engineers in
i -
I
♦---------—---:-----♦
From the Record
•----------------•
53- A > he
*29
$- %
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Sorrells, John H. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 112, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 9, 1928, newspaper, February 9, 1928; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1545997/m1/4/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.