The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, November 9, 1928 Page: 4 of 30
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Fort Worth Press and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Fort Worth Public Library.
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■
IGE 4—THE FORT WonTH PREM—NOVEMBER 9, 19282
Gosh How We Dread Going Back to It All
The Fort Worth Press
Pulse
I
/
W
4
3
I
r
The World and Herbert Hoover
1
• L
0
31,
IS sew 1UuK
Children of the Rich
14’,,
the
21’
nsople everywhere are eagerly, and sometimes
<
%
l‘(
4)
%
&
e,
+
1
J
what they.saf
haphazar4
eore
4
4-
he
t- father,’ eme
. nnd the
2
dards of lising end purchasing power ef
Q ‘What tn the prevent enliet
(nr the domination
Natureland
I
( hin
• n ntA
9^ fhet prede
.4 urtis
3
Prsident,
Pilot
standing
J ung
m uch
s
alie parerhal reten
»d statew it Mond itr
te
T vor
more then
J
ehout4
ietimatety
been
r
==
gov ernment
I
They Say—
Yours English
high
•-----
< Governor Smith
fe7j
wuy-
-He ts great in tieart and tn mind.
He is great
wit
ehre; they flatter
The real danger in our
II
diek:
—SPECIAL TRAIN
An Ideal Investment
— VIA-
See the
A
$180
Citizens 6% or 7% Certificates
1
r
Veethnii Geme
Safe—Contervative—Dependable
"A seniee taarwetMe"
Ti
(1 rider stnte Swpervision)
Phone 2-9193
607 Throckmorton
ft1
a
l
2c’
00000
108/0105
e-.a
UIMES
Fort Worth-West Texas Day
at the Vaco Cotton Palace
MI55OUWI
PACIFIC
have
1 hr
Its
any
ninring *
zen erally
12a
rhal
When was the first
that denomination
t
Q W hn holds the world rec
ord for firing upside down?
Bay hr vs.
Texas U.
i
79,
gold,
/V
7/
Est
- tan
000 009
much er
remarh. tet e
xbeut it:
red
held
fributed te eomsumers im em
meerien -ieh making * prede
7, 'r ",
what the governor of North Carolina said to
the governor of South Carolina is still In cr-
1 culation, -
9
• ‘e
•re
1 1-^
He
no dis-
Q. Where are the headquar-
ters of the League of Nations
Non-Partisan Association?
Smoking Room
Stories
No man ran know the pain -
That women dare who wait for hair
Once bebbed to grow again.
Fort Worth to Waco
NOVEMBER 10. WM
9
wUND ner
FA HF
1 ’
ba/
"Y
homely honesty which have been the secret of
his power.
We wish for Alfred E. Smith long life and
ueturwing, tense Horn 7:13 1', M.-Arrie Vevt Wevth * 45 FA
«x, fir het orriee 114 M«f wu l. (vhome s*nso,
i. a r. Maituw, F’bone 24js;
The foster Catrh nz* them
eeems to he that presperity 0 •
kka"
THE CITIZENS SAVING
& LOAN ASSN.
JOHN H SORRELLS
Editor
—•
*1- fees on a *inde* ledge and
Mo- in j a hege elmed ef aerid
amnte into » feline sitter e
Itrr • tajkinz ahaut tnem
4 nt The a
iast, teinz feh
chmi/t of 1 ogenhazen I niver
♦ decjlef to tof • that mjs
>F p teni neariy.that let g
L A WIHE,
City Editor
Hon to flow ef inepme, mones
ean be put in the bonds ot
sumerste enable ehem te
iegjade
6421
81u2 0
wiw the vreristem of a weman
uhip narigntir to a pent nerih- [
DAILY POEM
-----lb PAI I* M<( RM ---
THE HAIR APPARENF
' k m hushan4 f
~e and ee - • •
will represent one of the rich
1 est district in the" coutry.
• •
WITH the single exception of Woodrow Wil- j
’’ son, no American President has ever
"icen the center of such worldwide interest as
. Yet, they mest 4• that wit
the predurte of Induatry ne
memema
ofien misqnoted: "A flofferer ‘t
tongue is full of deeett ' • •*
"Their throat to aw open sevwl
Q How did go eden 1 ote on
• he national referendum on pre
hibition in "12922:
A The measure v ne Aefeate4 bj a
nine de batin fems
athietie organtzationu
KK"i
3 • W,a,
(1 C. KNIGHTS: "Every shop-
U per has two nurehasinz pow-
ers, the amount of money he in-
tended to spend, and the
amount he may spend if he is
properly handled."
*a
Franklin F. Adams: "Our "P-
ton of an Intelligent voter is
one who can distinguish the
campaign issues bindfolded ’
tin how to dress that awkward tress
That s growing out again.
and the pennant
What tear- are sobbed by them who bolhed
And now await its gl ow th
As they decide if they should hide
.One esh , or none, or both
Behold the lass before the glass.
Observe her torture while
she tries to furl some wayward curl
Too long or short for style.
w
yafS,2i,
/N8
, >
n fidelity to the common people.
| do <>
I Not pausing In argu* whett
C"y . •
Q In speakinz o one s hur
band is I’ proper in sell him b
his first wsm»'
A. Tn trims. »n4 apu*ntnn-• •
rux he relies h- Me me' OR-e ‘
-han •p-ekin« '* l He - •"2 1a *"
E have not only elected a
new President, but a new
(elinkerinu:
h-At; and
we now sell to the entire world
>76,000,000 for the same pur- ;
. . pose.
luxury. They arrive at their private schools in In Pennsylvania, where bond
Rolls-Royces, accompanied by smartly dad ] issues totaling >138,000,000
maids or governesses and attended by chauf-. were up for approval, four out
, - . „u .u feurs in gold braid or tailored liveries. of five have been defeated. It
Ilie battle for world trade is on with all The tuition fees of one of these smart । appears, however, that the so-
called ‘‘welfare bonds,"
amounting to $50,000,000 have
been approved.
• • •
dally participate in a pageant of pampered
They arrive at their private schools in "
yces, accompanied by smartly dad
what use
SRACY
SAYS
We are certainly not
dwelling in a world of
“open covenants openly
arrived at.”
family riches.
There is an unreality attached to
York and tin.nation will Jose one of the great. . But women know a depth of woe
That man can never toucli.
in Nev York
richest, and mightiest of all countries.
yow mean "aing lew."
Adaze povelatly used
diek: "The real danger in 21 Mngnr,' as
situation lies in the fact that vaalms -9.
so many people see clearly
what they are. revolting from
and so few see *’ al "hat
they are revolting to "
••orlt with figures so there will
azreeabte" turprizes with him in
IyGJLNERTSWAN . T.
NEW YORK, Nov. 9.—In New York s upper
IN west side, -the little children of the rich
Why the
he will
vote tor the first time They
generally roted the Republican
uch an
tort and no 10/02
deseended 4 riser
an ee1 • a e ft fouad
17 ■ ear azo, tit
time as
end nt the civil
WHEN -Gew Alfred E. Smith goes nut of GMALL griffs. abide on every side
YY office on -January 1, the state of New : M .And tlianjjnilsf suffer much.
N3
together: then hurning
A • F
I' l i • ■ '■ ■ - •
extreme contra't is School No.
York’s great East Side
Here the youngsters arrive al
clvurches in the United Htaten. The
first churches were bsiit ahout 1850.
Attemptn fry organize N natlonal asso-
cintion hegan in 1A62. 'The National
F' ■» itualist A orrs ttion dates from
1$93.
• •
Q. Do wasps as well as bees
sling? y . '
A. Xft
nnrevds largely on Anglo-American relations, rN
neterthsu, there are those, even in liigh
rlace, ST predict almost certain war betwecf
enaM- emnemere te buy th
predeet *• a prefit to the troe
decers, . .
York and inj the nation.
Smith received the largest popular vote,
over given a candidate of his party-in the
percentage of popular votes. With t+e esce p
lion of 191H. his defeat was by the narrowest
margin in 20 years. This was despite the fact
that his. handicaps as a candidate were perhaps
ed and officer personnel of th- .
Indtans United states navyt
A There »r a7,ri2 miiMMt men
•n1 3,331 orieere-
In auch quarters hare been
• for clinic . for better hou
medical attention and for set
with their
appears in
as great as tha of many class
es of citizens to whom we
have given the ballot without
question it certainly was as
great as was that of the him
dreds of thousands nt slaves
whom we enfranchised at the
$ - . - ■ —
on *** "Oh
• a If ntlff food ef t rege
her fe»t and improv* the Chinere
renutring alas
Dr. H. fl. Pickard: "If fen
give a girl an inch nowadays
she will make dress of it."
anxiously, waiting to
make of his power.
little boys would not think of appearing with-
out french labels in their suits. They are sur-.
rounded on every side by swank’ and are
taught, almpst from their cradles, to be dis-
ciples of smallness and reflections of the
1
ing, for better
Hlemtent heteee
4S(NIPPS-HOWARI NICWSPAPER)
Owned and- Publishe Daily (except Sunday) by The Fort Wortlf Press Publishing Co,
Fifth and KensgStreets, Fort Worth, Tvxms. Trice, in Tarrant County.
7 "5 2 cemim cents a week: elsewhere,5eents-pcentsarweeko---------------w----
Telephone Exchange, Dial 2-5151
RALPH D. HENDERSON HERBERT D. SCHULZ
Business Manager Managing Editor
C. E. BOROM,
Advertising Manager
f Member of United Press, Borippa-Howard Neyspaper Alliance, Newspaper Enterprise Associat Ion.
Newspaper Information Service, and Audit Bureau of Circulation.
. "Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way”—Dante
nonal reply. I nsigned reqeeste eannet he anewered AW letters are ceeft-
dential, len are ewd>elty invited te make ese ef l Me free serviee ee eftes
as ze please. — EDITOR.
t school on
nkate and.
bare fori m
’he people. That confidence and affection' is ,
not dimmed by his election defeat in New
The Nation’s
nante r no turn ft ion 4temey 4
"To everything there is a season, arid a time
I tn every purpose under the heaven.1—
. Tecl. 3:1.'
theAnantir ocean ■ • •mmteg
of a church which has helped build Americit > at a whole package of the smokes: nnd she
under a constitution of religious -equality but deems it cruelty. ■
YOUR QUESTIONS ANSWERED
Vew ran et rr nn-wer •• fff nn-wereMte queetew rt tart rr totnrmntff
*» wriinE I redeHet M, arm, Qwete ’AH* iha fm Start* Fme, IT.
Maahlaalm tfc hew jar* ItffHM. waebimgten, D,c, emetenira l *
Iwa roll in .lamp, far rrfir. WSgfeaT aW legal ’ggWM f—WW *W grim.
ner ttn ttmOrf fereereh M made. AW inftt quezttom wrtt Mart,, a •er-
rIHIS electien
His greatnesn W#t grow to the estimatm_of
the country as campaign passions cool. Those
who have hated him- for his church will come
to respect him for simple losalty.to his' re
ligious faith, which has strengthened him in
long public service. The Catholic church can-
not give tod many such sons to the nation.
Nor can that chureh have a belter missionary
for the civic virtue of Its creed. His service
is sufficient answer to those who question the
Americanism of his fellow -believen ; -
He has given himself to public labor for a
quarter of a century. In all those years as a
municipal official, legislator and state execu-
Ive, he has been almost without exception a
cader of the people and a champion of their
rights, t
His reward is the richest that can come
n any man the confidence and affection of
1 speaking, m as high' a
are entitled tn vote and
been for a. long time,
native intelligence was
War
men should
as wards of
for so many
sts • hele foreign poliry. He reduces all Things
to the otmpie human equation. To him mat-
kets are penple, not places, and foreign trade
exrantion is to be had b' improving the otan
we are Informed, h»
their "blood brother. ’
FtMar rrH I mirersity
"‘And mine.’ rrlirf'O fhe
m wrrupteg the sest af ap
plted 4leetririt; at sing Hint "
ACCORDING to assessors' returns, California
A poultrymen have $4,388,172 worth of
fowls; and yet, probably, some chickens flew
away, whcn they saw the assessors coming.
office in
them prior to 1914. War outlawry, coqpera-
Q. What are the constituents
of Portland cement?
A if la produced by mixing finely
pulverized limestone tnr chalk or
marly and clay (nr shaley in prepor
tions of about 75 to 25; grinding them
nf Ntions turns out the prize win
attitude bespeaks
eredulity, the red.
A. 'Th* headeo
at 6 East 30ti
"ITME deftett has Mee ma4
J mt ti rftltitr htoof in th
90ti. farzely by ehsnee, then
say, by vlanning, ■
ran he made ne nt all limet it
the fntnt"" Hut non monej
mesnt glad flew into rootuemti
hands in matehethe eonstantig
niftfaaint ontenl nt eoneumer
zoede.
They rntilftiS that a riehi
flow of tnonnf la pensible; IM
with enough it now led an tom
rfftitna flow of zeods to relne
home-made coasters, one roller
now and then. I fa t-lcsllv enough.
candidate, for
told them to
----------------—4--------------•
those who chose Hoover as even better fitted
for the presidency, but who have never doubted
that Smith would have served the nation with
distinctiop and honor.
As Lincoln represented an earlier rural
America, so Smith in a sense is a symbol of
the newer coming America of the immigrant
and of the city.
American public life will be poorer Without
the gallantry, the color, the wisdom, and the
,V-a
UWeah-
8 .
Observe dgree, propriety and place. -
Shakespeare.
more ihan a local reputation
for herself as a member nl the
' New York Board of Alder- I
j men
If one may credit the unof- l
l Helal returns, a negro has been
elected to Congress for the
first lime in more than 25
'rars. He is Oscar fle Trie,I of
Chicago, a real estate man an
former aiderman He wil fill
I the. vacancy caused by the
death of Martin . Madden and
"rT*orhancearquaintanees,‛
’ b-zin a smeker,emkims
sibility as well as honor. In-
stead of crowning those whom
it elects. Democracy puts a
burden on their shoulders. Mr.
Hoover faces nothing so dis-
tinctly as four grueling years.
• ♦ • f
rp size and nature bf Mr.
I Hoover's burden are fore- 1
shadowed In the foreign attl- .
tilde. France is not enthusi-
„astie over his election. Neither
is Italy. One does not have
to look very far to find the
I reason. •
France and Italy still hope
for further debt reduction. If
t . f Vmt ISmiU • im A, W.-Are Vmin tn. itV A M,
Correspondent qults
polities and fMs a new
idea of pnejnfity.
________ ..... . . The tuition fees of one of these smart
Ilie trouble-breding possibilities which that schools would keep an average child in food
may mean. Navies and merchant marimeshave | and raiment for n couple of years,
become problems as vital as the same problem. | The little girls wear those cute, short,
-ere when Britain and Germany bickered over skirted dresses, imported from France. The
Q How , many member* of
the Society of Friend, are there
in the United States?
* There are 10 Orthodm
Friend- blip. Frienge 2.004
Wiburiten ana 2 ’ Frunttive ' Frtends.
(elinker) to Ir.alr; Me powder,
Q. What is the origin of the
quotation "Then shall I know
even a. f am known"? _________
A. It oecurw (a fhe mibie, tiuirteenth
chapter. M. P2‛ “Crizlane
Q. What was the KFnrr of the
Army-Navy football game in
1927?
A. Army 14. Navy D
Q. How man daily newspa
pers are there in continental
United States’
A 2,222
Improte the .world and we Improve bur-
selves. 1h»’ 1. Hooverism Hoover work’
with fart, and figures and thinks in term; of
people, as th* European pretr has keenly ob
served. Which means that he Is less con-
cerned with abstract principles, ar the french
Journal des Debats puts it, than he is with
practical results to everyday folks.
Because Hoover thinks along these lines , im
our opinion, the signs am -better., today for
constructive. International cooperation, with
America taking the lead, than they have been
in eight years. Tho by a somewhat different
route, the Wilson dream of world peace un-
der American leadership or initiative may yet
ome true, to the everlasting benefit of man-
kind. ' ‘
ed States?
church of
built?
A. There
east nt lhf niff indier or
southnep nt pain, whirh ts
the bame thing where he join
fO a fftnslr of the speetes.
There, in mid m-ean, the egze
i-vereintd an hatched, altar
which rhe old one- died The
; 'onot looked aethinz 1th* ••
eel It was thi sod tmin and
looked like a transparemt leaf.
Het when the iime ramr tot
• Uem to »nti„raif in f.aro^n nt.
Mil ifttot) ana hor rano in .
1 sehmidr Hr fowne rhaf*her- I
j O'ft an fr1 might hr la Wurmpe i
nr 1hr infrrlnt of rffirtO 1 nil 1 to a ziven imr ten f enbush e
\ 7011
»
When zoalot purge their flesh b courge
With whip -or healed rocks.
They feel for lest acute distress
Than maids with errant locks.
Tho troubles vex the stronger sex.
PH} late political campaign ha given some
I elue as lo what we may expect in the
future Ten1 of thousands of people'have been
attracted to Times Square each night by talk-
ing picture speeches mad' by famoue men and
women. In future campaigns'it is not hard to
believe that the candidate will be photo-
graphed and recorded in their leading speeches,
which can then be sent to every village and
metropolis, giing an eminently more vivid and
thrilling effect than the radio, for instance.
the mixture nt %ory
Hally grinding the
fher fhat eeonomtsw"rene
rerned emie wirh ptedegetten sn4
L 9^99 dAnk eute nC
iteif F’rodeetinn dnet net U9
„-,‛oW
)«‛jak "9
.11 Spiritualiat
Ameries * fhair var
tela moif horn -that rounded
out arf amazingly, an4 h"ae-
ed for thotr Dr sehmidt fa
no» in fh» F’aeifie looking fnr
the breeding fitarr of the eel of
tha ofalfro toatf.
Q. From sha’ celleze d'd
Gene Tunney gradvate?
A He AM «rntunte from ■
mMrff Hr rrrf rf su *fp*t--"
Congress, and not only a new
Congress but new officials in
most of the States. Besides
that, we have decided quite a
few incidental questions.
Massachusetts, for instance,
voted to allow Sunday sporty
while California voted to re-
tain the "present law which
sanctions professional boxing.
Nine States voted on bond
issues aggregating more than
>450,000,000. Of these, $225,-
000,000 appear to have been
authorized, and the amount
may reach >300,000,000.
The largest single bond is-
sue authorized was $100,000,-
000 for road construction in
Iowa, while .Missouri voted
( NF of (li«> wir cr*r| to be heard in the
Broadway hideaways is that "Rum was not
made in a da " ___-
And the Merv Brothers provide a dirty dig.
whirh I wish would be more often applied
when celebrities and near celebrities are being
favned over ‘Groucho Narks, in one scene of
the play is introduced to a near-celebrits
"Oh yes." says he, "Ive heard of you all
mv life and I nt darn sick of it '
wemw mitare
sea artrof ffOO'
I WASWINTON, Jaw 9, The
I VV fMowHno yoaa"4 frat a
, staat fol al tals Omi vrot-
perity, trot out, an astoniehing
i; Ofarth of any ano eowstreedive
5 suzzestlens an io new H fidget
bl , Ira atalfHata*4
And in thip .botze podge of a i r ij g sneth
ofttime erow bard before it> time let. in
spite of alljhe handicap .. J shrew’ne so and alert
n. • derpinpan i’few other places Thh Fa t
ft' ar, t hirty what wan Aeserihe4 ne
a uorid record fnc upsite down.-
at Knssl, f;ernyanv, lap* an ber g,
1927, when ha fle • in that posirion for
18 minutes an -6 sermns
Q. For "bat do the letters R.
O. T. C. stand?
A Reserie ■ • • r rainig Corpa.
inereas of flew of tnotiry la
rnnaoinfta haa lot htlrf veriode
hrm rnntftff4 hr rnoaftturUet
nt nro ratsifl fneitieptneh m
farlnrlft. pewer planlr an ralG
roagt aoU Ihtrotth rnnalffieflfH
of arm puMite onrha. lalftr ine
anafftat enlvnt he* ham kept
wp hr fnffraar4 anti,ton of ina
aiaHmfoi tataa hut iha rah of
lartfaaf fananf eoallniit lagaf^
ingely _ J
— WiHam a, Munro. ."They
claim to be engaged in th* pur
suit of truth, but that it not the
whole story. The colleges are
also engaged, with equal ardor,
in the pursuit of funds."
• • •
Rev. Harry Emerson Fe
not cancellation. They know
such hope is vain with Mr. .
Hoover ar, President. It would
probably lie vo ben lust as I
vain with Governor Smith as 1
President, but that is some-
' thing they did not know. Any I
change was for the best. In |
their judgment.
Then there is the disarma-
ment problem, especially, as it
' lias been messed up by the '
1 bv pevert nnd" privation ; hardened b hard
। knock and wearened by under nourtihment, ii
the. sueh placet Manhattan undertakes it, greatest
I hurden of $ mericanization and turnimg out .nt
Ciry. It fa an orzanizarion working
in rhis rountry t~ prorr te Ameriean
adherence te the laagre rff Nattnns
which is proscribed by millions of voters.
When 14,000,000 Americans vote for such
a man for- President, kt is an earnest exhibition
of the tolerance of the nation and of the
amer r ihai mad. We record UU* es Amoa-
-b 4 —— ■ . + ■
inlet The aohnit find, in a
fabuleuel, meatthy •«'»»• tens
4atihnuzandaet.prertaetrirke
an fataH'ra a»4 minemu-gqe
"atruazlinz amateusty en tbe
edze n< ane ■ 4M hr* showi
hen *e pre imrreacee,
tne enmirr et ror,rr< faHa'
nil *'nial r a4iaart. 1nffi4
reft tmaintoml rrr r--r a tote
infra b buetmese rerernem a"4
• ion and conciliation between nations, war
debts and reparation?, the struggle for control
of indispensable raw materials and the open
door for commerce—these and other questions
are to be answered or Interpreted by Herbert
Hoover, so his attitude will, necessarily mean There is an unreality attached to them,
much not on y to < > prosper y u o t when one considers the gay attributes of child-
p-a<* n 1 ie wor hood. And yet, In spite of all their breeding
Britain, paturally enoush, mani e*U and training, the spirit or childhood will out
. penial interest in the American I resident- and, when unguarded by nurses and maids nnd
ricct. Sanethinkers both in Britain and Amer- l 2 .. . . .
. .. . . . .. , ... , u . . tutor*, they have been known to revert in type.
’• s ho}ds that the salvation of white civ lizatioi ... ■'
A
9or viniatien ef sertinna 1M en4 1A1
ef the tnfh penal cfe emeh
def nes eriminal enaren as fhe 4ne
trine "‛ther ergenised gever ~ent
sheuld be • erthrown e feree he
V ielenee or by any unleetoi meame
tie was rharget with pohiteaften in
fhe" Reveluftomars Age a lefe • ina
t Arnmunist magazine, an ereteto
whieh the etate eonten4e4 a4voeatee
the duty neeessity an preprtety at
morrhrefteg ergantre4 gen ernmmene b
force an vielene Gnverner Srmifh
iasue a parden fer (tflow after he
eer^H severav 4*0 M 9^^
t von reeernmendation of fwe esenetate
itpatree hf vhe New Yer eeurte en
rhe greune that the nentenre "9 u"
4uly severe
, attemipted Franeo-British to
cord. The bovs were caucht
and dropped the matter with
as good grace as,vossible, but
even so. It was enough to put
thin country on guard.
We are certainly not dwell-
Ino In n World of "nn-n coy
1 enants openly arrived at"
nther words he is fop prartical a statesman to
rollo" a policy which *111 lead in destructive
internatienat frietfon ■--
What ireren more important, the uorld, to
Hcorer. 1s--madeup of penple rather than
reintriot in thip may be found the key to
q How many persons are »n
gaged in th* work of prohibf
tion enforcement and how ,
much does it cost the govern
ment annually?
A There are appreatmatet 4 nee
persena engageg in prehthteton enf^rta
ment t .apevdtiure^ in 1927 ampunte
te $11 72, 23 #3 th* eppropriatten
1928 wat $13 320,4 inrluding
329.640 for marcott
-e
D
'AL
or /
US /
of etther rountries nt trade’routes
' Consider Chins. By cooperating 10 put
mid winter.
Here am packed the young of all the pen-
plan of the worid. Here are the children of
nnoplans. Chinere. Hindu;. ■ fermans.. Irish,
Hungarian . Armenians, Japanene, negroes or
Tu rk
Here come y oungaers witi patched over
pant- >nd with coats that, fail to fit coats
* That betray, a handing down tiom one zenera
i tion in th, otirer Here are y eungsters carred
more powerful titan any presidential cundidgte
has ever had. He had a,minority party and.
that divided against itself' he had a minority ACCORDING to his wife's testimony. .Mr.
Issue in prohibition modification; he had an P Dave Edwards • .of Frisco is ‘somewbat
opponent of almost unique popularity riding a j prejudiced against cigarets. She relates that
wave of national prosperity; he had the mark I he threw her down, sat on her and mude her
ones arc all named Ruth —
Ruth Bryan Owen of Florida.
Ruth Hanna McCormick of mii-
nois, and Ruth Pratt of New
York. The first is a daugh-
ter of the late William J.
Bryan and the second a daugh
ter of the late Mark Hanna.
While Mrs Pratt might not be
able to claim such distinguish
t-amrececent, menasmade
r^n has the Chinese would have bought more
than 1:: ,990,090,000 w orth of our stuff.
Viewed in this humanitarian way, there i
• no limit to trad* expansion for all and without
clash. By boosting Chinese standards still fur-
ther. until say, they approximated. the Cana
dian level, our annual sales to China, would
reach the brain wrenching total of $35 000,
AS a result of the election,
n we now have seven wom-
< n in Congress, where we for-
merly had four. Curiously
- enough, bu without the slight-
est significance, the three new
th* tio countries over foreign trade
P-V-T fjlt (IFt^f I*1 FW* .
latter categor» Says the Paris Temps
TON’T **v "fexyeet you will
1' go in the natty. "I ane-
pmo" If rottrol
Tronomnee "fnafh ' an If-
spelled "jos-1" ieh altera on
"jez," "
DonT use "siwg.towty"whew-
whole or bring en devreselm
Orn4nret*. maei mske proti
aa4 eate mener, eeniumei
ninaf flan taro. Jaeaa prefi
••4 ihtifia moan a foiertt
matot. whieh Venat • an
cstehinze rail "Ihe Aftemma i
thrift '
1 Q tor what »s« Renjamin
Gitiew convieted and sentenced
m prison in Ne- vortt— Why
•as he pardoned by overnor
Smith?
Herbert Hoover will be from the moment he happiness when he takes his post as a high
enters the White House. private in the ranks of American Democracy..
on Wilson humanity pinned a very defi- j a.
nite hope. Broken, bleeding and trampled
upon by war, It looked to him and his inter-
national peace program to save it from any-
thins like that ever happening to it again.
t oday the eyes of all nations are on Hoover,
clothed with greater power than any poten-
tate, and head of what has suddenly become •
years, and why that wardship
should have been interpreted
as depriving them of their
rights. Is a mystery, whicl does
not seem to accord with the
tolerance and broad-minded
ness we have been hearing so
much about
rnHO defeated, Gov e r n o r
1 Smith faces no prospect of
isolation or the poorhouse.
The Senate of Mississippi
has invited him to move to.,
that State. Harry Getz has
assured him a positton if he
wants it and a Toledo firm
has offered him >50,000 a
vear to become its president.
H is gratifying to learn that
a man of Governor Smith’s
attainments is still appreciated
in his hour of defeat.
For Governor Smith, the
political struggle we have just
passed thru is ended. For
Herbert Hoover. It has Just hr-
gun Triumph carries respon-
ll was eoieoopnsy fecozmhed
J that IM eounry had vussed .
throuz» a peried of seme de- ।
pressten oMi an uweseai vot
eme of unempioymen6; tut no
oaf airrar on the politiecal vlat-
form to aatAtde hen a inrofr
' tratf of inf ron4ttlon route he 4
> W*fontr4.
VtotrsMt an oar eapested the 2
| eneviinz of a anta ail wwieh I
would tnataaior. naopihh and l
1 employmnt for ezew and on, I
' togiaatan Mateh 4, 132%. But I j
| it aid seem aa if the yoittl'laaf l
mizht hate dene a irele tetter ’
man merely 4na off weme of
theetdstoek, j A
WaxDEIING off tae itoi iieal
V ateea in eeareh el a new I
idea on presperity, yoof tAttoto
pendent eetonnlata a yhamyn*
let railed "Prozress and Plen-
1y;‘ try Wanam Itnfaai Foster I
and Waddit Catehinae, ynhHaa* !
ed hr the rmiaa Voundattos |
for Ekenomie It ******* tom j
ter la direeter of the tn'ioda I
tien, Whoa V/an terom mende1
him at an eagetienr.rd educater,
and Catewings •• a maaafanier
et with tmyrea tae roeeeritoa^
The Pollan Pmiadailne t* re:
foitahua an, at Al Amith eopd
standart nf bring woutd -not- onty-net—Erttafn--
and America billions of doilars profit annui- ,
tv but Thins herself and th* rest of th' world
vouid be infinftely better off into th* bargain.
Last ear for instance, • sold in Chinu
400 00• onn citizen . only 31 99,000,000 worth ,
nt zonA We -old jtist as much to Mexico I
w th on 1 5 090 00. inhabitants On a Mexi-
'fan need not slave with crimp 01 wave
Nor rack his puzzled brain
j Inn i
men
hav •
Their
Q How many Spiritualist
churchek are there in the Unit-
ARNOLD, head of the National Droadcasting
P Company, declares that" words thrown , out
into the ether keep going ’round and round'
Lere ver. Sonewhere out in the vast unknown,
) "485572 yo
l - <223
Q is the fre ring yntrt nt
araler the ram- rt the meltinz
point nf lee*
Q. Is glass a metal?
A Some glrttrr rnfltln metat Mit
they are not etanetrted •n wu-h
l future
--tket,
ca une
Charle,
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Sorrells, John H. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, November 9, 1928, newspaper, November 9, 1928; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1547220/m1/4/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.