The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 258, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 29, 1922 Page: 4 of 8
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, --
Tol
Si
To
Editorials
n
evecomreee
Oil for Troubled Waters
I
469
Mi - -
I
4
$
bom
4
the
■»
year
I
SMELL OF THE SEA
30
that
BY BERTON BRALEY
Peruvians and Chilians have signed
RO
I
judge was arrested
• G
2
We sat
I
WagystoKecp Wel
HEALTH
I
HURST.
a dis-
1
his work, despite repeated refusal
to submit any to him. he mail
RATE FLAG.
ate flag*
>
1
GRAND PRIX RACE IN FRANCE
4
ereermree
BY FRANK 9. TAYLOR
ly kart.
jcn
Today
4
SENAT
ADI
t
i racet, leading in the grand paa rw whies
A
»
6
HHHHH
II
I I
I I
-
■ I
aGE
Ends W
Marilyn i
t dilence is boys che
iehool starts soom.
We know a bass drummer who
belong to the musicians’ anion.
GOAL J
GIVES
TOPI
At Mr. Hughes’
the differences.
t
irem
At
The an k a leer has decided to
talk back instead vt come back.
I they dig this tunnel under the
Engliah channel the American try-
tag to awim it can walk IL
by writing to The Fort Worth
Frees Washingtom Bureau, 182a
Rew York-ave, Wantingtom, D.
utoralii mb..............a
s‘ Colui
a New Jersey man wants all
widoustomarywidowera.
It takes a bathing suit to get in
the social swim.
Russia and Germany are plan-
ning. but two heads are not better
than one if they both ache.
It beer and light wines do come
book, you can say prohibition died
with ita bootleggers on.
Says Prices
Speed Th
Makes P1
Mrs. J
to cook
a result
stove?
pared n
for hot
Bureau
Fill out
suggest
dinners)
The man who Mows his own
born is usually out of tune.
imports $24.
This leaves us
111 apiece. It a
The trouble with being
poor to you seldom recover.
the despised "Coomer All" to the
Importunate one. -
The agent found a publisher for
It; it made one of the hits of the
season and now it's gaining pop-
ularity in England. Australia and
Canada.
Bennett,
he won at D
t Louis Chenosky. newsboy, living
(at 1201 North Houston-st, tum-
bled off the running-bd of H.H
Blair's ear at 9:30 last ntuke e$
Sorenth and Honston-atS RadWSul
run over by another ariveABw.
J. MeAuley. 0o4 pafmoreit “
f Blatr took Leola to the Ra»ttot
* osplta but it wee toun bo was
Once mon
ia called to i
water.
Engines f
went to a I
could do no
burn.
A one-sto
Birdville-rd
destroyed b
terday. The
M. Lawson,
covered by H
about $1,75
v a man with sideburns
at women’s styles.
WINES-BEER
FIGHT FUTILE
‘GASOLINE HOBOES’ BREAK ALL
TIN CAN TOURING RECORDS
He lived within a village
Whore life had not a thrill.
Where nothing ever happens
And nothing ever will;
Yet every day he wakened
With undiminished vim.
Believing that Adventure
Would somehow come to him.
■seen tariff: Re-
of finanee eon
He was a home-kept plodder.
Bound dose by family tiea.
Who could not seek the open road
• Or roam beneath strange skies;
Yet still within his bosom
He kept the fancy aweet
That acme day he would meet Romance
Upon the village street!
been bothering him for some of A
atmate tbs feeling of hunger,
too. will good news tend to in-
Aniti-Saloon Leaguer Think*
Cause Is Safe
TUNING IN
On Congress
“Man Loses Two Fingers"—
band bus Two fingers of what?
Tho one day and another
Were very much the same.
Within his eyea that eager hope
Burned with a joyous flame;
And the his joints grew ereaky.
And tho his hair turned gray
He knew—he knew Adventure
Was coming down the way!
His great Adventure found Mm;
Death came and took him hence
To roam tremendous spaces,
To seek vast firmaments;
Because no blighting circumstanee
His hope and faith could shake
Hia soul hobnobs with Boone and Scott.
With Frobisher and Drake!
( Copyright, 1122, NEA Service I
Seven Die in Auto Wreck
RICHER.
How much is f—
fee ting your pros
test 12 months ■ ■
ache papers call
ended June 30"—4
ANSWERS
To Questions
Real Rulers
Speaking of the great "industrial disturbances.
is not nometimt
economists, howev
the difference butt
sign trade and no
the difference bet
and hard times.
Ai suto. A train, a erussng. A collision, seven auto passengers
dead. That, at Bridgeburg. Ontario. This picture shows the wrecked
auto in which Daniel. Fretz, his wife and three children, or Colorado
should be careful
when ta m unhappy
d. If you are engag-
erentionai coat rover
I— taxing your men-
. unpleaeantily. InC!
■K^to set in.
[ Mt use eight of the
Mhich to elm. name
. B6444» tor self -con
and at
whet
JMn this cond1.
A Rank Slander
It’* fine business to hold law and order meetings. Might
be a food idea to have one a week-thruout the year. Law
and order of course are highly desirable. The country couldn’t
get along without ’em.
But the "law and order meeting” held in Fort Worth thia
week apparently was just another open shop attempt to dis-
credit the railway workers. There was no other evident mo-
tive for it
Law and order, insofar as the railway strikers are con-
cerned, is prevailing here in very satisfactory fashion. The
strikers have shown every willingness to cooperate with the
authorities.
Under such circumstances it is poor advertising for Fort
Worth and poor appreciation of the strikers’ fine spirit for
little group* of disgruntled anti-unionists to get together,
make their platitudinous speeches about mythical danger*
of disorder, and adopt their meaningless resolutions on law
enforcement.
It is true there have been reports of two or three flog-
gings since the strike started. No right-thinking citizen ap-
proves of floggings. There are plenty of police to prevent
them.
It is also true that there were reports of scores of flog-
gings BEFORE the strike started, and that no "law and
order” meetings resulted.
The effort of the open shoppers to create the impression
that the strikers here are mere thugs and brigands is con-
siderably more detrimental to Fort Worth than any act of
the strikers themselves has been—or will be.
Camouflaging such propaganda as a "law and order”
movement is a rank slander on real citizenship.
Hughes Scores Again
Once more Secretary of State Hughes has shown his abil-
ity to guide international conferences to a successful con-
elusion. The delegates of Chili and Peru, assembled at Wash-
ington to settle the long-standing Tacna-Arica dispute, had
quarrelled and were about to return home when Mr. Hughes
stepped into the breach and evolved a method of agreement
' tor having 129 barrel* of cider in
nineenlar. That was hard.
THINKING
Things Over
iblic welfare, thru control of general necessities, just so
j as let alone. And one congress after another lets it
alone.
Falls Off Auto; Run
Down By Another
tinguished eastern writer says that "it is inconceivable that
a few powerful men in Wail-st can control the welfare of a
hundred million people.”
There’s nothing "inconceivable” or wonderful about it.
It is common knowledge that a few Wall-st plutocrats own
the railroads and most of the mines. The "inconceivable”
thing is that government, in seeking to relieve an oppressed
public, goes after workmen and operators instead of the
Wall-st controllers of such.
Wall-st will continue to gamble in Liberty bonds and th*
They Should Pay
A Washington dispatch says that the Harding adminis-
tration would give a good deal right now to know whether
the American people favor cancellation of the allies’ debt to
Unde Sum or insistence on its payment.
The comparatively small part of the American people
with which we are in close touch seems to be pretty unani-
mously in favor of requiring the allies to pay. Of course, it is
conceded that reasonable time should be granted. This is the
feeling in respect of Great Britain and France, in particular.
The ability of these two nations to pay America depends,
largely, on their collection of what’s owing them by other
nations, to be sure, but it is not up to Uncle Sam to serve as
general collector of more or less bad debts.
The demand for cancellation is looked upon as coming,
very largely, from Wall-st interests which would like to have
their private loans abroad paid up as soon as possible.
The Harding administration can make no great mistake in
believing that the American people are not for cancellation.
And we guess that the British and French people don’t want
to “welch.”
Washin
1821
I wi
DAYS,
NAME
1
GLORIA.
Q. Where was Gloria Swanson
born?
A. Chicago. ,
e
l verenenemrnrrernrrnnmrnrnre"
: Unusual Stories
Of Unusual People
:H
' ; Only two more months until
• time to wish it was summer again.
By United Pre
LOS ANGI
Mlarilynn Mil
reaches the
"happily-ever
row at beaut
One of the
romances un
land will cor
the couple is
of "Mar yan
emoon. I
. oOnly the c
at Ives will at
be richly de
and draperiel
mony. will I
wedding sup
Mary Pled
maid and Vie
of Jack's, wi
Rev. Dr. Ned
Church of st
will officiate
There is a bright side. If the
। trains atop, kinfolks can’t visit.
BFFRAN
The Mort Worth
“wmK
set too hot U
zood old bums
their thoughta
Circle and wn
its a great 1
Try IL
AU you han
about Wrange
started wrang
the Wrangel
just like perpe
teal, legal and loveand marriage
advice will not be given. Un-
elgned letters will not be an-
swered. AD letters ere confi-
dentini and recelpa personal ro-
tetter threw it into the waste bas-
ket in a friend's office. The friend
fished it out, and not knowing
Hurst had meant it for the dis-
card. returned it to him.
For 11 months it kicked around
his study. Then, In order to
squelch a literary agent who had
1088.
Exporta la the lest 12 months
totaled $3,770,000,000. This was
$2,746,000,000 lees than the pre-
vous 13 months. Imports dropped
$1,046,000,000.
Back of this is a national ten-
dency to bay more from other
countries and sell them lees. We
muu, however, are over a billion
a year to Ue good. That to profit)
month for the seed to come up:
seed should be planted three-
fourths of an inch deep.
M(
Fenny things happen. Maa aam-
ed Clarence on a Philadeiphta
team to knocking out home runs.
ByNBA Service
meaTTiJB — Tho a pretty auc-
cesatul short story writer, S. B. H.
Hurst never tried a novel un-
til he undertook "Coomer All."
They once put money in old
stecktaga. now they put it in new
ones.
Cigarets made up la papers of
different colors are said to be pop-
ular with New York ladies, who
match their cigarets to their
frocks.
CHARITY AT HOME.
"We should Mt weep over the
condidlon of our neighbor's
children when oar own are at
our feet crytag for bread."—
Q. Who designed the Conder- SprH.Colorado, aid.Mrs. James Baker and her non, of Stevens-
a Aas "VHAe, ununo, •®E GeaCD.
TANK MOTOR CARS
pean turmoil. His prestige stands at its highest point. He
has behind him the vast impersonal power of the United
States. America wants to gain nothing to Europe’s disad-
vantage. Mr. Hughes can speak to the Europeans as the
delegate of humanity at large.
- HOT AND COLD.
Q What is the highest Md
what to the lowest temperature
ever recorded?
A. The hottest temperature ever
recorded by the United States
weather bureau was at Greenland
Ranch. Death Valley, Cal. The
thermometer registered 134 de-
grees above zero. The coldest tem-
perature ever recorded was at
Verkhoransk, Siberia. It la vari-
oualy given aa from 90 to 95 de-
grees below sere, the difference
arising thru doubt of the abeolute
accuracy of the thermpmeter used.
"ARAKES ON THE PRESS."•
“The prealdent says the brakes
must be put on the press. I say
to the president of the United
States this is not Auatria; this ia
not Prussla; this ta once free
America. Butting on Ue broken to
the next thing to putting on a ■
muzle, Md the statement le m
implied throat to the press. Not
the prealdent nor congress nor
senators nor judges shall shackle
or abridge the freedom of the
press in the United States while
the first amendment of the conati- f
tution ta intact Md there are men I
of wisdom and courage to defend |
Md maintain it."—Senator Stan- I
ley (D). Kentucky. t
WASHINGTON—Tkle ta "Un-
tou tourist" year.
More than a million Ameri-
cana are on the road now, ehug-
about neetnu the country,
meat of them eamping as they go.
At tourist centers all recorde
have been broken by this year’s
trek of nutomoblle exeuraloniata.
That's what offielals at the M-
fonal-pk neryie• and at the Amer-
Itoa Automoblle Anoelation head-
—Xi'S? Pog
A. There were several Confeder-
ate flags, but the boot known one
wm designed by E. C. Hancoek of
New Orleans. La. and presented
by Col. J. B. Walton for adop-
ton ta 1111. This is the flag with
the red ground, the blue diagonal
erosa emblazoned with white
stars, one for each state.
In Constantinople the harem
guards are striking. What's the
fare to Constantinople?
quarters have to say. The Ameri-
can ia becoming a regular gaso-
line hobo. ♦
Government officials eay the
erase for "tin-can touring” is
one of the best popular move-
ments that has developed in the
United States They say that it
ereates a better understanding of
the country and Its problems.
"The man from the West campa
at night around the same open
bonfire with the ma* from the
cast Md one from the south and
possibly Mother from the north,”
remarked Director of National
Parks Stephen T. Maher. “They
swap viewa, and learn to under-,
stand each other better."
The natlonal-pk service, tkina)
cognisance of the general sum^
meruime automobile migration,
laid out dozens of model camp-
nites, with water, fuel Md •eel-
tary equipment, for campers.
Citlee. especlally thone ot the
went, are dolns the same Md
their faoilitles are taxed to ea-
paelty this year.
-ONLanaLER INDEPENDENT ULTSZS?
The upkeep la the downfall
, when the outgo excss da the in-
come.
their protocol and there is no longer a cause for war between
r- them.
Having added South America to hi* Far Eastern success
gPPMMwee—................—>
; One’s health usually is consid-
4 era* a physical condition. True.
M but did you ever think bow much
6 the mind had to do with physical
Econdidons? The absolute control
def omne’s mind can often overcome
i Feer, for instance, can bring
!* about utter cheer in a person’s
henith. It may serve to paralyze,
as has been ibosi i ed la the ease
‘8,- •«
e-----
ji’ st a sswjSjS
21n; "wix°ttob2
aeder act ot March a 1,
—— in diplomacy, Mr. Hughes ought now to turn to the Euro-
War Mt only threatens Europe? - — "s-m ---
LEMON SEED.
Q Can lemon trees be crown
from eeed? How long dote it take
for the seed to come up? How
deep should it be planted’
A. Yee: the fruit may be of
value, but this is not always true.
"When in Washington do as
Washington did" to better than
j "When to the capital do as the
I capitalists do."
Rupees mlaUis
Mltainr-d.
ANTDODF SEEN ANATOLIA T
As senators kaow. Anatolia con-
sista of that great stretch of ter-
ritory bounded upon the north by
the Black Sea, upon the south by
the Mediterranean Sea, and upon
the east by what may be denomi-
nated the Mesopotamia region.
Syria also borders it upon the
southeast. On the weet it over-
looks the Bosphorus Md Constan- —
tinople." — Senator King (D), 9
Utah. -T
£ Take the case of one euceesafui
&Mbasipess man for instance. He
avoke UM morning to find his
dPSdH attacked, his business in the
SAhande of creditors, aed his pride
nshed. He formerly enjoyed ro
bust health. Md was vigorous and
blert. but soon after his failure he
Soet flora rapidly, became sleep
'tom depressed, constipated and
Eatetul to those about him. Dux
Muuce next two years he was ex-
Eaminet to one physletan after a>
Ebhet. but it was not until rela-
• —* to his asaletance fl nan
Kplty that-he began to show any
IHmpt improvement. This man
r 'W* t*— gained his for met ph-.
Finished, even
he didn’t like IL
But he'd worked
oo hard on it
that he sent it to
an editor any-
way. ' It came
back with the ed
itorial comment
that it wan “ter-
rible." Hurst
tried Mother ed-
itor. who said it
was the worst
thing the author
ever wrote. The
DOOMED
Fur years we have aU been
moaning about "the old oaken
bugket that hung in the wel."
Quarters have advertiaed the
famous old bucket until most of
us have it indelibly in our bralna
aa a symbol dor pure, retreahing
drinking water.
New comes ths ' Connecticut
State board of health and warns
that moot wells with M old oaken
bucket are germ-polluted, and
about as fit to drink from aa a
swamp.
Meet of our sentimental ideals .
would be unmasked the same way
if we pave them wound analytieni
thought.
. It takes from two weeks to a
Cm The Fort Worth Press
> Published Daily Except Sunday at 1007 Commerce Street
Sh
READ, CITY RALL!
Fort Worth used to have a
makeshift camping place for
auto tourists. It was in Trinity-
pk. Then the flood came. Now
the "tin-can tourists" who
come this way must shift for
themnelves. At • soot of a few
hundred dollars, an excellent
camping ground eould be pre-
pared, it would bring thou-
sands of dollars in tourist
money to the city.
Ths Fort Worth Presa
Weshington Bureau
BY ROBERT TALLKY
WASHINGTON — Ught wince
end beer?
Gather elosely, ell ye who ere
looking forwent to the dey wbea
they may be bed again, Md listen
to Wayne B. Wheeler, general
counsel of the anti-saloon league
of America.
“You are far from the promined
lead—very, very far indeed."
says Mr. Wheeler, who proceeds
to explain:
"Altho proposed legalisation
of light wince Md beer ie now
greatly before the public eye
becaume of the Literary Digest
poll and the recent political sue-
cesses of some of ita champions,
it is practically impoesible of
attainment. Ite supporters are
being fed on ftile hopes."
DRY* HOLD WHIP
At present, Wheeler says, there
are less than 1** avowed "wets"
among the 431 members of the
house end only about St avowed
"wets" smoag the 96 members of
the cenote.
Furthermore, the official dry
spokesman cays Ue number of
dry congressmen is increasing.
"Seventy-eix senators Md e Mg
majority of Ue congreesmen."
Wheeler continued, "come Itrom
states whose laws prohibit even
one per cent beer."
BUT, SUPPOSE—
Suppose tho, that by some
chance, congress aheuld modify
Ue Volstead tew so as to permit
the sale of Hght wines Md beer.
"We would tmmedlately bring s
test ease in the courts, charging
violation of the constitution,"
Wheeler said.
“And the supreme-ct of the Uni-
ted Statea had already upheld the
one-half of one per cent stand-
ard."
EII
> n« Fort Word
AWaBhiugtou By
WASHING?
Ton Muring coi
in its current
"With asp
the breath, e
soared to lev
pected to see
of 1920. The
coal reaching
at the level
tary Hoover 1
at Ue mines)
portion that U
the long grees
fare the eyes
the hungry bl
BIG SPd
"Theaveral
day. July 24,1
with $3.98 al
Thia magar
mouthpiece I
warns profl
against takin
the coal-buyin
“What ia I
about M Indi
strike to low
workers and I
torts huge pro
is no fairness |
THKIR d
"Whether I
it or noL the
from themsel
ducing Ue grl
rent tonnageL
continue volu
fair price arl
tien from tho
During Uel
lump coal so
mines; mout
lump to $9.75
v run to $7, al
"ump to $7.54
EDISOX.
Edison gives to a museum Ue
original models of two of his im-
portant taventioM—Ue tint pho-
nograph Md Ue first incandencent
eleetrie light. Most of sc, in hin
shoes, would have kept these treas"
ures to tickle our vanity Md senti-
ment.
But Edison enys he is not inter-
ested in old models. He looks
ahead, never beck, concentrates on
Ue future, is not chained to'Ue
dost Md petrification of Ue pact
That's u sure sign of an alert
mind. Nearly all of us have a lot
of traditions Md cost-iron preju-
dices that should be thrown in Ue
ash barrel, along with junk that
litters up Ue attie.
WINDJAMMER*.
Rep. Crowther (R), New York:
"Th gentleman wants to know
when we are going to have a tariff
Mil. I will tell him that under
Ue present rules of Ue other
body (eenate) we shall have a
tariff bill just as soon as the Dem-
ocratic windjammers get thru."
Rep. Wingo (D). Arkanaas:
"Democratie windjammerst What
about your Republiean windjam-
more? You have Ue votes la Ue
senate. They took eight mouths
behind dosed doors, excluding the
Democrats, to report the bill. Now
they can not get a majority of the
Republicans to stay on the job to
approve the monatrosity!"
pubitean _________-___ u.I
ne-1 <■ a'rhi n,m‛ Mmakazokavi
Llation ebmmittee meets on Me-iET-4
11 Corame 00pang. dcj^^.r^^ moiueine roar memsanz bane
d."the ram itsahnaae 13 mlles an hour on A road and will go thru snoy, eand.
--------
Special Articles
of birda. many of which, tho
—Bi ilij wounded by the small
mhot, fall to the ground as if
by lightning. So it is in
We
__) again, cud newe will alter
the erpiremeion of a man's face and
eres lower his physical tone Md
« of Fort Wirth Us— ora the alma
t. When daughter smokes cigarets
you know who is boos ia that
home _____
U time is money, most of us are
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Siler, Leon M. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 258, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 29, 1922, newspaper, July 29, 1922; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1547004/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.