The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 267, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 9, 1928 Page: 4 of 12
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' Mental Murder
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they can.
You will reallze this more fully
Q. What is-psychology?
A
Saenz fi a realist.
in close
eontaet with Mexteo's internal.
j problems.
well
those
in the film production of Car-
-♦
and he only In his mind, if any.
V
miing offieer
the
in
Radio Racketeers' .
But just because there are more divorces
2
marriage is harder.
that
Marriage
It always will be.
i T
country have resources of
morning.
more than *28,500,000.000,
close their windows because it is too hot and
rs XEW YORK
R. GILBERT MURRAY: "I
D
Q. From what was th* mo-
more
Mythical Personality
uorutyevI
-
T
. more traffic court:
Is coming when there will be
Natureland
/%
Nordics and Others
e4,,
"5,
Family Fireside
"Cu
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GO TO COOL COLORADO NOW
6
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This Date in American History
TV
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oceanic trade, and
German
|
On Sale August 11, Final Limit August 21st
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Intelligent.
I 4i-----
manded such
probably did
the dynamic side of money —
dollars in motion and at work.
were they considered tbad" if they left their
spouses, but -they were economically depend-
erelgn rights never descended
to truculence. He kept his end
gue the point.
When Governor
ft
Vo
i hr
1 n
her
Ja l
out
Q. How many knockouts did
Harry Greb score in his career
driver is becoming as muc a
menace as the speeder."
#9
|R every man shall bear his own burden.
—Gal. 6:5. . .
passed and we find that there is not so much
fun in having several mates as we had thought
; we shall become sane once again; .
firm eight monster alrplanes.
These are but two of the many
esamples that might be cited to
show Europe's determination to
take advantage of an obviously
new and important field.
son lai
sition
I Itim
mit .
w on ,
nder
state ,
But in the main, we are facing with courage
the problems of marriage,.
When this wave of marital promiscuity has
watch the experiments and ap-
plaud the stunts. •
An English firm is building
two giant dirigibles for trans-
Hl
lire
Of til
• - 1 a I
' ’ ' I
I Us'
li< « d
"the 1
port d
cpapzMtfmnd
416-17 8. Jennivgs
Phone 2-3101
6
Call at 116 E. 9th St.
Phone 3*1661
bear, she rushed home, accused
her husband, ignored his angry
denials, spent the night brood-
ing over her woes, lost her self-
control, and murdered him in a
g
♦ of 'Mm: etital
.PAGE.4-THE.FORE FORTH PRESS— AUGUST 9, ISM
---
I
-----A WOMAN'S vnwroir-------
The Problem of Divorce
qucandt
Hort*
n. « .
renmet
after killing her husband with I
a bread knife.
CONSOLING HIM
"A month ago my wife left
me without any reason."
“ “I felt sure some one had
left you without It."—Every-
body's. ' ,
of the racket from their neighbors' radio sets.
All who live in congested neighborhoods j
will'sympathize with ’the objectors.
Aaron Saenz it Mexico'r
greatest hope in forestall,
ing a serious outbreak.
»oli
Pl el
ton.
abld
Hun
,-wi
imo
T
brat
Reel
Ic n
Sena
who
hand
tor. ]
$20.00
ROUND TRIP
learned how to save money, as
well as make it.
The national banksiwith their
thirty-five op 40 million deposit-
ors, represent a good index of
prosperity. The volume of their
loans and discounts, as well as
their resources, gives a fairly
reliable picture of the flow and
distribution of wealth.
Because they deal very little
in long-time credits, they reveal
men with Geraldine Farrar? ■
A. Wallace Rei, ,
Judge E. M. staytor, Balti-" •
Tracy
SAYS
its a'Uritas. lr» rsctenci
huma ex :
ure And ■ t the
" N-
V
5 •
! Natlon S
Pulse
Q. Has Owen Moore, the first
husband of Mary Pickford, re-
married?
A JU is now n arried jo ‘Kathryn
WHEN Dr. John Roach'SUa-
•V ton described Governor
Smith as "the deadliest foe of
America today of. moral prog-
ress and true political wisdom."
he probably did not expect the
latter would demand permission
to appear in his pulpit and ar-
• Q. Are sisters of naturalized (
American citizens admitted to
this country outside the quota?
A« They must procure admisnion in
that same manner •• other immigrante
uder the quota rule.
The plea of ignorance will never take away
our responsibilities.—Rutkin.
,5,
1
4
Q What is the address of
+ the main office of the Disabled
s.
5
A
8
8,9
22:
89
What the neighbors said was
I >
I
2'. 9
a
F N.
The complainants s ay they cannot impBtantnproemcanetmasstnott hi X™!
a minimum speed law instead
of a maximum. The slow
of the
Northern Mexico to become the
I most vhetonus commander in
• the revolutionary yanks.
» *, s'
LIE became .Obregon's chief '
of staff and entered Mex-
j ico, City at his commander's
side- when the Western army
overthrew the reactionary Vie-
toriano Huerta. ,
When the revolution ended. '
। Saenz returned to civil life.
Obregon made, him under-see-
retary of foreign affairs and
The American people
have learned how to save
money as well as make it. |
--—---
li Ne l h
i I •. d
ST. Lt
1 • <;<..«
publican
-tatct $
today In
535 out
Ka I lot I
tinet
plete ict
hansas c
Roscoe
(ity, 95.
Natah
Da Md
70,621 .
”----------— »
(HSUort Volf. This o the UW
of three article* oy ttoaney ’
Dutcher, Wathington correepona • '
ent for thie paper ana KBA
Service, rhtcuming the leaner* V. |
ahd tiauee that came to the fore
in Mezico following the aieaeet.
nation of I'rcciAentHlect Alvaro
Obregon.)
most savage manner the next
morning.
What the neighbors put into
her mind with their smirks and
arched eyebrows does not excuse
• the crime, but it ought to give
them something to think about
during the nexl^few days.
- - •
English Justice. .
***e42,*29
up in every court room in the
: United States and put ph "the
| desk of every law maker. It
I represents a conception of fair
play that we need to acquire.
I • .
Saving Money.
ud, 1
he bi
his ca
hanie l
dow n I
Virt
mmnym
I her be
stumpe
mony ■
de clare
totnal l
eubseri
hitHtio
BRAN
COVCF
l y t nu-1
OKL
V h tors
Branso
nation I
preme |
' I
posed n
1 "
W H
chief o
votes d|
that re
precinet
would s
fhe
i<d litt
ectipsin,
solons. I
.........abletria
---- amor M
J 929 leg
tinue ui
January
The n
rouse
about an
" ho see
ninistra
such as
eannot sleep with the windows open because
rTHE same economic slant that
A makes our Industrial lead-
ers and financiers Indifferent to
shipping, makes them indiffer-
ent to aviation. It hr rooted in
the notion that so long as busi-
ness is good here we need not
worry, how It is anywhere else,
and that no matter how much
we buy and sell, It is all right
for other peoples to" carry the
freight.
I European nations are taking
up international air traffic with
A vim, while we aro satisfied to
Um
have frankly gone Into the alimony business. ‘ ever, but handed him *30,000
I by way of recompense. .
This item should be pasted "
know of nothing
is not of the ruthless type
miht- -peek to impose
not particularly frank, but was
accompahied with such smirks
and arched eyebrows as are oft-
en more convincing than words.
She gathered that her hus-
• band was unfaithful, but that !
does not seem to have hurt so ।
much as "the fact that her
neighbors were wise to it.
Cutting short a vacation when
I rTHERE is this much to be said
| A in favor of English jus-
(UR pet Nordic notion that we are inher-
U ently superior to all other races, receive
a jar at the Williamson Institute of Politics
when a professor by the Celtic name of Mac-
Kenzie declared It is based wholly on conceit.
This is a bad blow to our racial selr-
esteem. The fable of Nordic supremacy has
been hugged to our bosoms, in the comfort-
ing if unjustified conviction, that we belong
by inheritanc to a specially favored portion
of the human race.
The Nordic, declares Professor MacKenzie,
simply got a running start over his red, yel-
low and brown brothers in the, use and de-
velopment of mechanical energy,' but, biologi-
cally, possesses no advantages. "
It was demonstrated by the World War
that no nation has a monopoly of courage or
loyalty and the history of mankind would seem
to bear out the professor's opinion that no !
race has a monopoly of brains.
Rhinehart Kouer, in his stead.
It be will not come.
Very truly,
CLARENCE E FARMER,
Candidate for Representattve,
Place 4,
Your English
Consequently, multitudes of women put up
with husbands whom they would not now
toT era to TiF i day. They had to. Not only
ALMOST uncanny are some of the tales con-
A neeted with her efforts to® vanish com-
pletely from the picture.
More than a year ago she was reported
sailing for England to aid in the filming of
Kiplihg's "Kim.” A process in the invention
of which she was supposed to have had a
hand was to be used. Reporters watched every
sailing and finally located the ship on which
Maude Adams was supposed to take sail. Her
name did not appear upon the passenger lists.
. But their sleuthings indicated that she had
taken an assumed name. When they rapped
on the cabin door, an elderly, fragile woman
peeped out and said there must be some
mistake.
Finally a “kid reporter” got a bright idea.
When the door opened he began to speak
with great feeling. • ' —A
"Good morning, Miss Adams. Oh, please,
don't deny to me that you are Miss Adams.
I saw you when I was a mere boy, and I
could never forget you. I will always remem-
ber your eyes.. You are Miss Adams. Your
eyes have never changed.” •
'And, so he reported to the other newspaper-
men, tears came to the eyes of the frail
Woman In the doorway.
"Thank you, my boy," said a tender voice.
And the door slammed.
the gossip grew too
Ypuw ca get an omwer te any eneweraMe qweetton et fnet e, Wm>».
11m by yritie te Fiedenek M. Kerb,, «uemeie whier, ter far “ “
rrra. Washirigton Surroo. 1322 »n lark Avenne, Wa.wimuien,
rmelosimE tw• rnii la etemp for rrelr. Medileni nnd treat u*.ir»___
be Kiven, nor cen extendeg rrsereh be made, AH Mher queiln- will re-
ertye a pernonal veply. I 'nelgned requente rmnet be anawrrrS All ie-I
are eonridential. ow are cerdlally nvited la make me ef ihM tree xenie
aa often aa you pleme-EDITOK.
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ot fill
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problema which are constantly
in the foreground because of
the great amount v>f foreign
eapita! In 'the couhtry,
. • • •
TT was Saenz whp conducted
- 1 the long diplomatic contest
. on the . oil question between
Mexico and the administration
at Washington. It has been
recognized on all aides that he
handled his part with great
intellectual ability. His firm-
ness in standing up for what
he considered Mexico's novi
D)ON'T say "The boat very
V nearly runk hefore help
cyme." "Nearly sank" is cor-
red.
es Pronounce •Imbroglio" as if
; •---*----------------4
T AST Spring, Eawell Kemp,
. a Washington florist, was
employed to beautify one side
of the low hill leading to the
Washington monument. He put
in about 500 plants. They
grew precisely uniform in size,
came into bloom simultaneous-
ly, in July, and the flowers
formed a huge American flag
in which every floret of the
blues and reds were exactly
true to shade. Sweet alyssum
were used for the white
. stripes, altemanthea for the
red stripes and lobelia for the
bl up stars. It was a perfect
example of the florists’ art m
the use of nature.
(c$2jH1
L. ‛(FSe,
mEg
VERY much like her own character, Peter
V Pan, she has become. Deciding suddenly
to go into complete 'retirement, she bowed
farewell to the public.. The notice was given
•that Miss Adams would never again make any
sort of public gesture. She would not receive
reporters, nor would she ever.again pose for
a photographer. Nor would she allow herself
to be caught unawares by cameramen.
Like Peter Pan, she went out the window
one day, leaving her shadow behind.
t 1oMW
H, Uiited r
OKLA I
9 —Croui
was swat
Thonpsor
•
tn the W
No new
made Imi
ahd gas
terday.
Q Was there a President of
the United States before Wash-
ington.
A Georee Wnhineter waa -aa tirt
Premident the Const ifutioh of tne
j I nited Ntates Ilefore fhat here was
the Continentn! C' tlgro^s. but ttw pis*
By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON.
WE hear a great hullabaloo about the ruin
’» of marriage thesedays. But,ras.is true
in other cases, we often yell more than we
suffer.
Fifteen per cent of all marriages end in
divorce. This leaves 85 per cent, to succeed.
That’s not so bad.
If we can keep up this general 'average,
we shall not need to worry. According to
statistics the ■ majority of men and. women
who march to the altar live quite decently and
sanely and bring up their children as well as
B RODNEY DUTCHER
*EA nr.nvir:K wtarrn
WASHINGTON, Aug. »__Af-
W tdr the Agrarian leaders
had held the floor on the Mex-
ican seene for several days—
long enough to force Luis Mo-
rones and his chief men from
the government—other ele-
ments among the Obrezonis-
tax, much more practical in
their handling of affairs, as-
serted their influence.
Aided- by the careful but
firm policy of President Calles,
they appear to have forestalled
j the possibility of serious out-
! breaks.
I The announcement that
Aaron Saenz would probably
■ be the ehotee of Congress fdr
protisional president has, tem-
' porarily at least, put the ex-
• tremists in the background.
Saenz is less than 40 years
old. He $ primarily a civil-
ian. altho he holds a military
title. Of all those who sur-
rounded Obregon he was the
| closest to his chief He was
—-4=
HE uational banks of tais
muc l,g , . . .. . these days, do not make the mistake of be-
THE Federal Radio Commission reports that Having
1 It lh receiving many complaints concerning has always been: difficult?
broadcasting late at night and early in the 1
The company that advertises
its milk "from contented
cows” might learn something I
about real cow coddling from
the peasants of Bavaria. It is
the custom In that country to
dress up the cows, on fete
days, In head pieces and with
decorations resembling Christ-
mas trees, on their backs. The.
belief ia that bossy, being a
female of the species, will be
so contented with her bonnet
and dress that she'll give more
milk.
permission, he
not expect Dr.
1
7
l-
I
I ‘
Vetersns?
A. 2500 M-iroreAvt,Cinetnnau O..
Q. What is the Value of a
Confederate *20 bill portraying
female and globe, issue of
1*61?
A. Coin dealern offer them for 23
to 40 centa.
r /",
Vi g
Q Are all criminals, who are
Q. Who was the leading man I sentenced to death, executed on ■
-- u— Friday at mldniglft?'
I • A *A Mo-t exe ufona ar
1 if you make out a list of your acquaintances.
You would undoubtedly find, if you were a
normal person and lived among normal peo-
ple, that while' none of them are ecstatically
happy, most of them are reasonably content.
The divorce wave has probably reached Its
zenith. Marital troubles have increased enor-.
mously during the past -quarter of a century.
—That*a' becauae; prior to fhit Time, a divorced
woman was disgraced. Divorce was not re-
spectable.
Something should be done about it‘and
somethingeanhe-dene=Itts-posstble-te-tene
any radio set down to the point where, while
still sufficiently audible to those in the same
room, it will not annoy those next door. Any
reasonable neighbor -should be willing to’do
this much for you. Unreasonable neighbors,
persons accustomed to disregard the comfort
•t . others, should know that it is possible for
the radio commission to regulate the hours of
broadcasting and so to shut., off the early
morning and late night broadcasting if it finds
such action In the public interest.
Every station in the country is now operat-
ing on hours fixed by the radio commission.
This should.be sufficient warning to the
racketeers.
America and Ships.
g E N A T O R FLETCHER of
P Fiotida, is right. Sale of
government ships at this time
means that they will pass Into
the hands of foreign owners.
American capital -has lost its
stomach for the sea. It is con-
tent to loan money abroad and
establish branch houses, but
shies at- ships. Railroads,
mines, mills, automobiles and
hard surfaced highways, have
not only infatuated us with land
- enterprises, but have caused us
to disregard the opportunit-
ies of maritime trade. The
"roaring forties,” :ith the
Baltimore clipper and the New
England square rigger, have
shrunk to a memory, while the
peftod succeeding the Civil War
with its track laying, wire
stringing, and town promoting,
still captivates our imagination.
The American flag will disap-
pear from the high seas, unless
we accept its maintenance as a'
national-problem. We have the
cash, but lack the spirit. With-
out government support of a
very substantial nature, our
merchant marine is doomed.
WJE are making progress even in the art of
VV murder. A New York man has invented a
system whereby a husband with murder in
his heart .can get all the kick out of murder
his murderous inclinations may require, ’and
yet not harm a hair of his victim's head.e
This inventor wired the police, "I killed
my wife this morning. Am ' at 42 Newark
, Street, Hoboken.”
He was duly arrested, insisted he had killed
his wife, surprised her in the apartment,
cha sed herinto . the, bathroom,—stabbed—her-
with a. long-bladed ■ knife and .then had a-taxi
- driver dispose of the body.
All of which sounded murderous ehough
• to the police until, the police found the mur-
AereAt calmlyaluing-t--her-demh-at-am
office on Broad Street, very much alive’, and
all they could charge the husband with was
disorderly conduct. •
Q. Do citizens of the terri- 1
lories and island possessions of
the United States vote in the
presidential elections?
A nr, only citizenejot the stater
can vote tut members ot the H-ctoial
College.
Q.'Are there more women In
Insane asylums in the United
States than men?
—A. Aerm-ems to rhe1 urr,' avaIt-
abie etatintie• there are 136,217 malen
and 122,204 femalen In-insane anyluma.
the American people have
Q. What is the full name ok
. ---------- . Prince Leopold of Belgium? ; i
which is-hearty two billion dot-t X: 1206 TTIpII, Chart-,, XT _____
bert, Meinrad, luhert, Marie Miguet. ;
YOUR QUESTIONS ANSWERED
wag ,#/
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Again, She Starts It
rTWAS the woman who did it, who is doing
- it and who will do it. .
When Queen' Surya,—of Afghanistan, got .
home to Kabul, from her European tour, she
appeared, publicly, unveiled and wearing a
tight-fitting sport costume, whereby she has
started for King Amananullah what Eve start-
ed for her man—fierce trouble. The orthodox
branch of the Mohammedan cult is boiling
with revolution.*
You see, the Koran prescribes that not only
woman's Bice but also what is called her
"bodily rhythm” shall be covered. Surya
studied the rhythm, in Europe, and decided
that it "was calculated to make her Adam like
apples, figuratively speaking. Amananullah,
too, noticed quite a bit of the rhythm, while
on the European trip, and concluded to west-
ernize as to rhythm and many other patters
that he hadn’t seen much of, in home- circles.
So, he introduces the innovation by sending
his Mrs. out on the street, with her rhythm.
Of course, both the promised Innovation and
the threatened political revolution depend upon
woman. Do you think that Afghan women
will go in for ryhthm, or stick up for the •
mullahs of Mohammedan orthodoxy?
By the way, it is reported that Mrs. Aman-
anullah, while on her long European trip, was
very reserved, diffident, rarely speaking, but
closely' observant. That's the most dangerous
kind, when they get home.
’Jot
___a i with Obregon when he
emerged from his farm In
Q. What was the date- of the
Battig of Jutland between Ger-
man high seas fleet and the
British grand fleet during the
World War?
A. May 31, ISIS.
------------4
"T8 THAT YOU, Edward?"
A sbe asked, as. a man's
voice answered the call. •
"Speaking," he replied. "That
you, Maud?”
"Yes. You remember I told
you last night that on no ac-
count would you be permitted
to enter our house again?"
"Shall I ever forget it?”
"Well, we have decided to
move, and I thought you
might like to know our new
address.”—Liverpool Mereury, -
• * •
THE MTARTER
"Have you heard the story
that's going sround about
Eunice?"
"Heard It? Why, honey, | j
started it."—American Legion
Weekly.
A. It han ashy or whitish grey
tinge: extreme biond.
’ before the puttie and in the -later mnade him full minister
Q What period of reata la Interest of the rare in Mace when Fant was transferred
inciM«L in the Dark, Ages' .4 ror nepren ntative, I here from that.pont.to the trean-
A m yar. biw.R 6 F :i »t challenge George t’. Kemble 80 well. 41d Haenz per-
the loman Fm; ire 476 a i- and fhe, to a jolnt discieslon of tin 1O11 bl* 5aK . that Calles,
bezinntnwor"uentury. ntand on he aasimed the preside
—fthe Kr-m^tead lx» aU ills l cy, reappointed him minister of
claim to'the office of nepre ‘ lorelun affaire He left the
sentative and Assistant Crty pon •» 1227 to take the gov-
Attorney' in violation of the ernorship of his native state
"Constitution: 1 will aeak, 1 ot Nuevo leon and to take
Friday nlzH er --- harxe.eohrezen.4-saszaizn.
and t}.e"yz,lfowfng Wedneedav ,pr»«idenry. ■
night at Capps Park twIIl "
airre to meet his ehlef, Mr.
- CIREAT BRITAIN'S attempt to steal our Mr.
U Kellogg's thunder, by making a secret
"compromise” with France, is positively mean.
* ____ . i
TT seems that Obregon's assassin hasn't a
I lawyer; and so, he hasn't reached that
state of poise wherein one pleads not guilty
by reason of insanity.
1----- By GILBERT SWAN.
NEW YORK, Aug. 9.Maude Adams, once
A’ the most eminent figure on the American
; stage, is today the most mythical personality
Broadway ever produced.
Her name is mentioned as one mentions a
wraith or a legend. Like the fairy folk of her
own "Peter Pan,” she wears a cloak of invis-
ibility. ' Where1 she goes or what she does are
things observed only by those few intimates
who never tell.
. Now and then a wisp of a figure, bundled
in a great coat, and with a hat pulled well
down over the face, slips in and out of Man-
hattan's affirs. And the word goes around:
"Maude Adams was Just here.” But no one
seems ever to remember seeing her. And
no one remembers just’ what she looks like. .
It Ie though a specter had passed.
.I
hard to ’ I
If all murderers would adopt this method,
do their killing in their own mind and keep
it there it would save Intended victims harm-
less apd save all- the bother and expense of .
the state trying, convicting and murdering the
murderer. This is the only kind of murder
we can recommend. Its advantages go heavily
outweigh its disadvantages that we would like
to see the same principle applied to all forms
oT crTme. For we can stand crime provided I
nobody suffers but the psychological- criminal, |
TTx will omapoptewnoare
still living mentally In a more
or less feudal atmosphere. De-
,t i I mocracy in Mexico is a hope
Lil Joe Says: , rather than an accomplish-
-----------------4 I ment
TTeq
Q. How old .Is Jack Demprey?
A n« bomn J:„* 21, Tw*
। A * ‘ ...... । — ......f-o
They Say—
--------------------------------
SlappedtrAkenHe "h° Get dramatic in history than that .
. from the legitimate vlay ot _
Lm "ChAneyply" thernid.“mit,‛N America should have ended in
var of the <Hwn.• . . the American peace move-
Q. What is ash blond Natr? ment.”
Labor and the Candidates
THE American Federation of Labor has
A found little to choose between Herbert
Hoover and -Alfred E. Smith and so declares
a program of Neutrality in the presidential
race. This seems a sound decision. Both
candidates have given, through their long ca-
reers, convincing evidence of their sympathy
with labor's aspirations. Neither can be ex-
pected to suggest unfair or unfriendly legis-
lation, so far as labor is concerned; and
neither is likely to oppose or veto legislation
designed to meet labor's fair demands.
By taking this course the A. F. of L, keeps
Itself free to fight for the election of its
friends to congress and it knows that these
friends are in both parties. The very heart
of labor's hopes in congress, indeed, lies in
that group of Republicans commonly called •
progressive, or insurgent, or independent. ' So
little, however, have party labels come to
mean In this respect that now we hear some ■
Democrats In the senate and house called pro-
gressives to distinguish them from the ma-
jority of their party colleagues. The labor
forces make this distinction and In so doing
reveal their wisdom.
ticea.ILia.nothullLonoc-was
rules. When it makes a mis-
lake, it is willing to pay, as.is
____ ___________. ___ Illustrated in "the Slater case,
1 ent upon a husband's bounty. Then, adulter Slater- was convicted of idut-
was the only reason for divorce, and one can dering an old woman in years
understand the Embarrassing position of a- P»r<foncd after he had
wife whose husband "put her aside.” terved 18 years o a lire **"
How much more sensible we are now. In this country we would
True, there is a tendency to run this divorce have said, "Our mistake, good I
business Into the ground. Some women have bye,” The English government
lost their sense of balance and a few of them was not content with that, how- J
EEWVTHNG
BUT A <
HiAT. "
SJ
spelled "im-bro-lyo," with . -
on ......., ■” inquirer" Mzsthpiaorrenendanewaynwaa
informed. found to arrive at a common
Don 1 u»« "funny ” when agreement.
you mean "strange," Saetz’s achievements are of
pAdxEvvyuwd vut tbemetorsusur,
o.ten misquot'd The tongue । provisional president- at this
ia an unruly member" was period of Mexican history. He
"Th tongue can no man
j lars more than they had one
• ; year ago.
While demand deposits have
I increased by only *226,000,000,
time.depositshaveincreasedby.
Olid,000,000, 1 suggesting that
$1 a ortyc-fighter?
A.-htty-twe .
G. T. Armitage, Hawaii
Tourist Bureau, Honolulu, vis-
itor: "We are having the
best summer tourist season in
the history of Hawaii. Tour-
ists, too, now stay with us an
average ot 20 days, whereas
their limit of a few years ago
was a week."
TYUT Saenz ought to be able
AJ to induce the various fac-
tions to compromise their dif-
ferences and avoid plunging
Mexico again into the chaos of
civil war. He is an Obregon
man and apparently a Calles
! man, as well. With the living
support „of Calles and the un-
qualirled backing of the tol~
lowers of the dead Obregon,
he ought to get off to a good
atari.
There seems to be no doubt
tint President Callee Ie sin-
cere in his resolution to leave
the presidency when his term
expires. According to informed
persons who know Callee and
Mexico, only an attempt of
some faction or factions to
create a condition of civil war
before his time expire* would
cause himn to continue in of-
fice after his legal term is
■ BP, ■„ ' '' ■
Uncle Panther’s
Mail Box
;. —----------- . ------—
WANT* A DEHtTE
vanor Th- l•l•**
T AST Monday, you published
1 an article about the stand
of George C. Kembte, candi
dat for Representative. It
1 was amuninz, to say the least.
That this may be fully aired
The Fort Worth Press
(scurs - HUWABO NEWSFAFEN)
‛wned and published daily (except Sunday) by The Fort Worth Prow Publtahtng Co.,
Filth and Jonas Streeta, Fort Worth, Texas. Price, in Tarrant County,
1 centa-10 cente a week: elsewhere. * cent-10 cento a week.
______________________________Telephone Baehanso, Dial X-S1S1
JOHN H OOBBBlLs RALPH D. HENDERSON HERBERT D. SCHULZ
Editor , BustnezManazer Managin Editor
L. A. WILk• cdMAGo a. m BOROM
City Eaitor —“5 7 Advertistns Manases
Urinber ot United Pr«»; Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, Newspaper Enterprise Aaeocle-
tlon. Newspaper Informailon Service, and Audit Burreu of CIrculetlone.__________
"Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way”—Dante
————‘---•------------------•
Straton would come back with
the suggestion that the debate
be staged in Madison Square
Garden and then repeated in
half a doezn Southern cities.
Governor Smith says he has
no intention of starting a hip-
podrome, which is something he
sheuld have thought of before.
Dr. Straton says he wants room
for everybody to see and hear.
Which Is something he may
have thought pt before.
Gotham’s Latest Murder. "
NOTHING more serious than
IN neighborhood gossip ap-
pear* to have been behind the
, latest sensational murder in
New York.
"The neighbor* said things,"
-Mrs. Kirkwood tells the police
AUGUST ».
1642—First commencement at Harvard Col-
lege. , r >
1780— Birthday of Francis Scott Key. author
of "The Star Spangled Banner."
1808—President Jefferson suspended diplo-
matic relations with Great Britain.
1012—House of Representatives passed the
first federal radio control bill.
for A timne whan they ws least A •
turb the routine, of "the prtenn The
dsy of PSSAutirrn is fixed by dectee ef
the„eourt. 7 -
Q. What does th* word "See "
as applied to wines mean?.
A ll >. . Srrn n word meaning
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Sorrells, John H. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 267, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 9, 1928, newspaper, August 9, 1928; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1546152/m1/4/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.