The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 65, Ed. 1 Monday, December 17, 1928 Page: 4 of 16
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The Fellow Who Regretted the End of Football Season
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Pulse
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Something to See
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-A w OMAN'S VIEWrUINT
Today
There is no legitimate reason tor the For- i
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(
Acnut,=-
4
19----
settlement
Mail Box
Twelve Pt* sidents bare
HILLEY’S AlRrLANE SERIE$ I
ti
Reapportionment In Sight
g
.showing in air transportation.
people are already
"air- ,
tai nr. ut War and i'>
membership would remain at 435 as at present.
I
• ‘ongressiai-
lack of information on
i >
*
1
Natureland
d
FINE large garden pool wit
A
makes a jumping
I
germ in the seed
They
s N‘ W VeAK
Jimmy Crowley.
Pushcarts In Gotham
■A
countries. It could do the same I
lo
etosed type.
Bintea are of
a l ro disappeared.
f
I
4
V
\
they are picturesque, colorful and even poetic.
Yes, they're even symbolic of the ghetto. At
2
New
and inflicting puni hment?
s
N
They Say—
. than we have reduced murder
3
1"
233
07
It
11
.r
4
__________________________________________'
II.
22
A
i#
$
-TESTABUSHEDW,
( 1873
he had planted water lilies and,
to keep mosquitoes down, he
had stocked the pool with gold
We
in
the battered collection of toys and dolls; there
are the cries of the pedlers and the murmur
foreign |
financial
and
publie
the
and
and
peared. It wXk discovered -that
| every last fish in the pool had
State
the |
138
1a
preventing crime, or law vio-
lation without employing force
permitted to flout the constitution and continue
the present unfair situation.
। Idy over three or four years.
Around the pool were a lot of
very handsome shrubs. One day
a crane arrived at the pool and
fare evidence of a desire to be-
Here are the 18 committee members:
Borah. Johnson. Moses. McLean, Edge. Cap- 1
and
It
! d
It
Q. Where is the highest in-
habited place in the world?
3
11-
feet
Miller
Tech.
and Harry
at Villanova.
Amwta
' \
\.
Telephone Exchange, Dial 2-5131
RALPH D. HENDERSON
Business Marager
HERBERT D. SCIULZ
Managing Editor
C. E. BOROM.
Advertising Manager
1 We also have Christmas gift’
envelopes for currency, which
are yours without cost, for
the asking of our tellers.
When cornered where he can't resist.
He murmurs,. "um," when shown an ad.
Elusive as the morning mist,
As much aloof as Gallahad.
His mind's in distant Petrograd.
It profits nothing to persist
In trying to get help from dad
n making out the Christmas list.
% Mme
t ation o
92
good sense. ____
Champions of individual freedom clamor so
loudly that inexperienced girls are in danger
of thinking that all marriage and home life is
4
I pointing to the star in th# ex-
act center of the Capitol where
L . - J
11
I
[A
4,
j
' cheated ifisqmething’s left out.”
and everybody ' ----- ■ - —
MEMORY LAPSES
“Say. when I proposed to you
last night, did you accept me or
the critic and the unapproach-
able one ia not sure of himselt
and shroulds his own inferior-
ity in a mantle of superiority.
LENVOI
Oh, friends. on Christmas morning, glad.
When you discover you'Ve been missed,
Just know she got no help from dad
in making out the Christmas list.
This Date in American History
DECEMBER 17
1771—British under Hamilton took Vincennes,
Ind.
1107—-Birthday of John Greenleaf Whittier,
poet.
1860—Congress authorized war loan of $10,-
000,000.
1104—Sherman demanded surrender of Savan-
nab. Ga.
! They only got their newspapers j
once a week, and'sometimresnot I
, then if it was too muddy to get I
I
b-
1
Q What is the
the name Fazil ?
A. Good worki
------;--1
Uncle Panther’s
per. Gillette, Reed of Pennsylvania, Fess, Swan-
son, Pittman, Robinson of Arkansas, Walsh of
Montana, Reed of Missouri. Harrison, Bayard.
George. Shipstead.
What are they going to do Abtra* H 1
wealth, calling aloud in the midst of the busy
throng, and making glorious offerings for every
use of utility or adornment."
Momnber of Untted Press. Seripos-1 loward Newspaper Alllance, Newspaper Enterprise Assoctatton,
New eperH-r Intomiation HervUe, end Audit Uuresu nf Circulation.
“Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way”—Dante
-bgwn-TT-T--a
1 period.” he says, "and few men
have been able to see the
. change as J have •
2 Fp=
8
52
pt c, -,p
UMan at deren
N5i
2
We need
A The
laine in
I
president of the United States «
the pride of a citizen living was. You couldn't blame them. J
2
.M
(S
(
• m -i-
PAG J 4—THE FORT WORTH PRESS-- DECEMBER 17, 1928
Woman’s Place In World
—-e-
ten and backed up.
We are not going to reduce
war without battle any more
there are the little hills of cheap neckties; j
"Air Transportation" and the
"Future of Aviation" in Texas
rubbing shoulders
great, he says.
He has learned
coa > nt Ont tin Tech:
Stuhidreher, now coach :
A. Eghty -two per C
moblles manufnetured
Day follows on the murkiest night, and,
when the time comes, the latest fruits will
ripen.—Schiller.
Q. What is a
at-large?
A. I:epresentative"
(9882
oy assistant
Cho she suggests an amethyst,
Or roller skates or boneless shad,
Ie's simply turned somnambulist
And answers "yes" to good and bad.
Tho mother thru the stores may gad
With bundles on her aching wrist,
She's never yet had help from dad
n making out her Christmas list.
Tihet, which
above sea level.
rTHE comforting thought that
L there is nothing much to
do in eliminating war but
make pleasant speeches and
I
i
r
were Elmer Layden, new
Duquesne University Don
assistant coach at Georgia
j- esque Indeed. When he disap-
2, '
,828. g,
made me feel that greet new
" and humanness always go hand
* ! in hand."
of the nation. because j
of the anto-
the United
ages are consumed annually in
the United States?
A. Th* number is estlmated at 11,-
000,000,000.
----------------------------------;--
a power to
to make Texas the great air
the Gran Chaco
urge for babies goes deeper. /America is not
in danger. She has more comTortable m‘fe-
class homes. presided over by cmfortaMle,
middle-class women than any nation under the
| sun.
mained three days, standing
around on one leg and then the
other and looking very pictur-
Q. What makes the holes in I
cheese?
. ng ne:
teria. Th* gas eutche* In Hi- rubbery
ehieese and nrakes holen in " just n"
The Large Experiment
PROHIBITION COMMISSIONER DORAN'S re-
I port for the fiscal year ending June 30:
"TVI seen great men lying in
l atate on that little whit*
come a local fixture. This was
are splendid.
to what is happening to the
home and to marriage upon
which it rests; but In spite of
all that may be truthfully raid.
It is yet, thank God, one of the
two or three pillars upon which
our civilization rests."
umrepmesesamemaze 9
a great thrill
At the natural thuhe of the iudlddual fw Hh- '
erty, the truth remains that the average '
woman will always find her greatest happiness |
in the age-old occupations of her sex— -hone-
ORCHARD STREET is both king and queen
• of the pushcart lanes of the ghetto.
In Orchard' Street the peddlers squabble
for a half-inch of space. Their carts are piled
high with all the' rainbow's hues. There are
the fresh greens of vegetables and the reds,
yellows and oranges of fruits; there are the
myriad-tinted shawls and dresses and shirts;
YOUR QUESTIONS ANSWERED
Von ran get an answer to any an-werable question ol Cart or interutien
by writing Io Frederiek M Kerby, 4uestion lilHw. I hr Fort Worth l‘rea8,
ashington Bureau, 1322 Sew Yerk ivenue. W anhinxion, 0). 4 encloming
two cents in stamps for reply. Medical and lrgal adsice cannot he givrn,
nor cun extendled researeh hr made. All oher queatipus will receive a per-
sounl reply. I nsigne requeste cannet he answered. All letters are Confi-
dential, ion are eordinkly invited to make use of itis free service as ofteu
ns yvu ph ase. — I DI I OR.
Q. What
bean jump?
A. The jumy
th* kernel.
I the president's suite of rooms 4
1 or his private office in the Cap- 2
itol. They think everything's I
I here under on* roof, and feel I
women with bright shawls and ragged shawls,
women with market baskets and women with
bundles. It Is all a grand and thrilling clutter
The Fort Worth Press
es« urrs - noWAND NKWSFAPED
Owned and Tubltshed Dally truer pt Bunday) by The Fort Worth Fresa Publishing Co.,
Fifth and Jonea Sireets, Foil Worth, Texas. Price. In Tarrant County,
2 cents—10 cents a weekt elaswhere, 5 rente—10 cents e week.
sign Idealistic papers is beauti-
ful. but dumb.
Before we got thru with the i
Job. wo are not only going to
( write a code, but back it up
in the same old-fashioned way
that, all codes have been writ-
thdtfoume"
Captain Cody, 50 years ]
a Capitol guide, tells a '
few pointers on Washing-
ton visitors.
-Francisco—tetermtne to stop
the cutthroat rule of gamblers,
thieves and mountebank*,- did
they begin by disarming?
' h» N
r oma
Seventeen states will lose 33 representatites mean the same things, essentially, to men as
and 11 states will gain that number. Califor- they mean to women. And I for one do not
nia would gain six. Michigan 4 and Ohio 8. believe that any man ever attains his fullest
The decision to avoid an increase in size is | happiness without them. And I am sure that
refuse me? I really don't re- I
member which answer you gar* |
me." .
•‘Tell, well—I knew I refug-
ed somebody last night, but I
couldn’t remember who it was."
• —Film Fun.
earher
• car-oil
nit J
rourt 1
r ot I pl
Judge
th* we
aony
The
Aiss d
fession
bim tn
minded," and intelligently writ-
ten stories like those of Mr.
Lilley will further inform the
public.
SILLIMAN EVANS.
Vkee President. Texas Air
Transport, Inc.
want the Kellogg pact side-
tracked until their pet meas-
ure has been passed.
THEnE are plenty of means i
I by which the Pan-American 1
Conference could enforce its '
will. it could arrange for a
general embargo on exports
ST A
N plea
f mu
dawn of creation,
only refer to the
streets; there is the pawing and the haggling
| and the sound of bargaining; there are the
। peoples of the earth in native costume; there
are dirty children and clean children and
powers in the state. John Muir, the famous
truly great are humble
human—that the grouch
in a suburb of Utica, N. Y. It
was of quite good size. In it
agreement to outlaw war ends
the matter seem too silly for ' ■
comment. Who is going to
i keep it outlawed, and by what
I means?
since the 1920 census. They should not be
) vention program may involve
ns much strife and bloodshed
as would have occurred with-
out it. The difference is that
Q. Where is the town of Wis-
. casse t, and from what is the
IS
... . . without killing.
of the thousands of traders who clutter the , For the first tew centuries
at least, any practical war pre-
Foreign Relations Committee
rHERE is still time. A few days is all, that
1 is needed for the Senate to register th*
overwhelming mandate of the people by ratify-
ing the Kellogg peace pact before Christmas.
The treaty is clear and brief. It is easily
understood. It has no secret riders. It sim-
ply joins the United States with 59 other
nations in renouncing war as an instrument of
national policy. The Presidents the Secretary
of State and the chairman of Senate Foreign
Relations ommittee have declared officially,
for the benefit of the doubters, that the treaty
means w hat it says and nothing more.
Everyone agrees that the country is almost
unanimously in favor of immediate action. The
Scripps Howard popular poll is proving, that
beyond argument.
1 For the benefit of those de-
siring to give money for
Christinas offerings, we have
a supply of one, five, ten, fifty
and one hundred dollar bills,
and will be pleased to serve
you.
FWn
LIT
X nea
three!
wound
-a - o
vrobab
hetwee
nolice.
Harold W. Hackett. Kobe
College, Japan, visitor: "Our
college has grown Into the
very lives and confidence of
the Japanese people. It is an
anchor for world peace in the
greatest Asiatic seaport and In
the ancient seat of all Japan-
ese culture and learning."
24=
HESTER STREET is the pushcart street of
I1 tradition. .,
Orchard Street may be the hub, but Hester
Street has the history, the antiquity and even
the reputation. Hester Street is a name famil-
iar around the world. It boasted a street mar-
ket back in 1886 when some shrewd peddler
backed his cart against the curb and set up
business. Today Hester Street is all but aban-
doned. Only a few stragglers may. he found
there today.
Grand Street specializes in pushcart jew-
elry. silk stockings and*undergarments. Upper
Park Avenue has suddenly ..been invaded by
vegetable and fruit traders. Lower Delancey
Street has the fishcarts.
this moment the Dpartment pf Health is swing-
ing into action and one of these days the
glamorous marts of the East Side streets ma;
be no more.
Q Will you give me some
names for girls and boys be-
ginning with the letters, Z.U.
X, V and Q?
♦ ---------------------4
Tracy
SAYS
The comforting thought
that, there is nothing 1
i much to do in eliminating |
i war but make pleasant
Q. How many bottles of soft
drinks and carbonated bever-
A TIME to cast away stones, and a time to
A gather stones together; a tlm« to embrace,
and a time to refrain from embracing.—Eccl.
3:5.
with reference
loans, trade
tra nsactions.
•-----------------,------:--.
T ORADO TAFT: "Our homes
L seem to be on castors like
our furniture -ever moving, ,
ever changing."
whirl the machinery of a great city and at the
same time to train the people to a love of the
sublime and beautiful as displayed in living
water, the Spokane Falls are unrivaled. No-
where else have I seen such lessons given by
a river in the streets of a city, such a glad,
exulting outgush, crisp and clear from the
mountains, dividing, falling, displaying its
cge"E
2 .
gress from ignorance
".2232
sign Relatione Committee to continue withhold-
ing this treaty from the Senate, where it can
be promptly debated and quickly ratified.
For two weeks the committee has dawdled
along while the whole world waited. The
American people are weary of this. They
cannot understand why the committee majority
favoring the treaty delay sending it to the
Senate floor.
With only four or five days remaining be-
fore the Senate Christmas recess, obviously
the committee must report out the treaty im-
• mediately or destroy all chance of ratification
this month.
rTHE articles of Mr. Lilley in
____- __,_______—* TA* Fert WmU .Preen m
Q What was the name of
the woman who kept the wine
shop in Dickens’ "Tale of Two
Cities?”
Q What was the date of the
death of General Funston?
x Fet it, 1317.
L
I
It
■
Q Who, in the annals of
football at Notre Dame Unters-
ity were called the “Four Horse-
men"?
governments from taking what
1 they have the strength to take,
nnd what tradition has taught,
them to believe they have the
right to take, withov doing
something more than (talk.
at i ary Zn
I irieh. I
lluddhist Monastery
Q Why does Inaururation
Da a alway: fall on the fourth of
March?
CA. rhe dnte - ' A ' en • r of
. . *....... . , >> i ‘22
grant that our girls can keep to it! In spite I
slavery for women. And those who fear the
destruction of the American home are equally
noisy in their assertions that the, only place
for us is in the kitchen.
could take
away from
tion of the troovs
thinks best for the
tion of th* United ;
ens. Th* President
exercine thi* comnn
delerntes li>* auhoi
The poor maiden who is trying to,shape
her life ia thus torn between two prejudiced
pointa of view.
But there is a safe middle ground. God
Us ALLENE SUMNEE
NEA Service Writer
WJASHINGTON, Dec. 17. -
’’ Rutherford B. Hayes was
President of the United States
when B. J. Cady got hi* job
as guide to show people thru
the U. S. CapitoL That was
50 year* ago. There were only
three gides then. They counted
it a good day when there were
a dozen people to show thru
the nation's business house.
Today, aged 71, Captain B.
J. Cady does little actual guid-
ing himself. He merely act*
as "starter” for his 20 guides,
seeing that each gets his-or her
share of the several thousand
people from the four end* of
the earth who come tn see
America'* Capitol every day.
And Captain Cady wouldn’t
swap Job* with anybody else
on earth! One learns a live
able, workable philosophy from
shaken his hand since that
day lu 1878 when he got his
job, and lie’s known th* com-
ing thirteenth for a long time.
• "Hoover"* another human
Currency
: 3 53;
..... 6:3
speeches and sign idealis- ■
' tic papers, is beautiful,
। bu t dumb.
•-----------
"DIG navy men, which is
rHE great falls right in the heart of the city D something of a misnomer,
1 . . .... .... . since they are_only asking for
of Spokane, it ash., are not only the most J fifteen 10.000-ton cruisers, I
beautiful, but the most available of water
i both Bolivia and Paraguay and
put it under a mandate form
of government.
Ruthless, you say? Certainly,
i but whither are we drifting.
if not toward that very thing?
Have we found any way of
making and child bearing. Fizhting these, j QTTIKIXG a pose niucl like
rE House Census Committee at a meeting 1 she fights nature, and that 8 always a losing • that of our big navy Sena- ।
1 tomorrow (Tuesday! is expected to report battle | tors, the Bolivian government I
a reapportionment bill. Leaders say they will However. It Is distinctly foolish to declare says that it wants peace and !
isi. . . ng at rat. .scion that girls should noi seek careers, that they ’ favors arbitration, but not un-
The measure would make reapportionment should not be educated for the professions or til it has time to trounce Par-
automatic after the 1930 census on certifica- | taught to earn their living For it is possible
tion of the Secretary of Commerce if the House forwomen. as well as men, to find contentment ( What the Pan-American Con
it..IS ,,i. tn art e it ha. einc. 10 >1 m. and pleasure in work. ference should do is issue O1-
itself fails to act, as it has since 19.1. The 1 . in tend of making an 1
Love and marriage, home and children 1 .17' mniend " "‘aaing ap
peals. It should warn both
Bolivia and 'Paraguay that
their dispute over the Gran
peace means battle, or
I"
Kning of
iplace of rhe yellow pine It is situ-
pted nil rhe Coast nt Mnine and is one
or the oldest ha rbcs in the United
Sntes.
We are not going' to per- l
suade ambitious statesmen and
tricky diplomats that we have
scrapped their philosophy with-
out proving it by something
more convincing than lip mu-
sic.
This chorus in favor of
Q. Are more closed than open
automobiles manufactured in
Q Where did Babbitt metal
get its name?
v. Proin i nae nabiitt, wio in-
vented ih aliny.
questions to a keen, intelligent
citizenry. The automobile and
radio and all the wpeeding up
of living have made the change.
“Why. folks used to coni*
here who didn't know who-the
8808800883087
and vessels a* h»'
safety and protee
States and !«•» • ti-
, luiw ever, does not .
we would be struggling for an --
object that all humanity could Dr. James S. West. Baptist:
, , , , u visualize an worth while, in- ! "Much is being said today ns
l ofhumanity.,such.as can be found only in stead of westing life and
fanhattans East Side. - property in futile attempts to
it seems a bit too bad that such color must grow great at each other's ex-
go hand in hand with dirt—or what the Health i pense.
Department prefers to call "filth.” But so it . - -
has ever been, whether in the bazar* of Cairo,
the native quarter of Algiers, the beggars"mar-
ket of Paris or the pushcart belt of Orchard
Street, • . )
rTWi
Chaco is properly subject to
____________ _ _______________________ , arbitration, that the two gov- l
wise, for the House even now is so large it 1 i women do net 1 eminent* have solemnly sworn I
unwteldly Were the present basis maintained. But unfortunately life does not pour out 10 iet " De settled that way.
It is estimated an increase of 109 members i her best gifts into the lap of each mortal, that."ar represents a breaci
would be necessary after 1930. Some of the most, splendid men and women 0 a '!j, 1 na‘ ,5, "/ter
The duty of the House to carry out the In the nation are unmarried. And they are not tilat ir either or" botlgov erh-
mandate of the constitution and provide for | bowed down with misery. so there's really no ments persist, measures will I
reapportionment ia plain. There has been no sense in going about feeling sorry for them. be taken to compel respect
reapportionment since 1911, and as a con- | They manage, in spite of the pessimists, to | not only for their treaty obll-
. sequence some 14 million persons are without ' garner a modicum of pleasure out of existence, gallons, but for the duty they
fair representation. If the 1 930 census is ig- Neither should we cultivate gray halrs by own to keep the peace,
nored, the number will be 30 millions. ’ worrying over the mistakes of the women. j If the western world lacks j
States which will lose representation nat- ' The urge for careers may be great., but the the power or the courage to
urally will oppose legislation, as they have urge for babies goes deeper. America is not Fo that far. every one might
ust as wrdl quit talking about
the idea of preventing war.
the KAM fron
bread.
VTOW the navy aviation sharps have got up a
IN horn that will throw ft volume of sound
along a given path. The marines will have
to be called upon to control the crush of
wives. If ever that horn is put on the market.
to a ■ 01 m in
destroys the
HAVE watched people pro-
—
and imports affecting both ■ the United States?
was shooed away from the back
yard, so that the crane should
not be frightened. He re-
to the postoffice."
Then Cady chucked a lit* 5
| tle-
fifth which increased considera- ' smarorighttnow,’ Lou Of'them* I
! come here wanting to be shown
. Utr. Zor
They should one," he nAy*.
stimulate further the healthy atHcreo yeanst gddown ont:
interest which Texas people are a thousand. He has seen mud-
A.,
K
wI
i dy boots and dusty coats of a
V - have a real opportunity, j dirt road, horse and-buszy ora
change to th* grooming of
an automobile age.
of our own West to discorer
the process.
When th* citizens of a
1 mining camp decided to re-
place the rule of "bad men" I
I/
-346
th* dead Presidents lie in
state.
"I've watched thousand* of
people streaming by with a
tear for such men *• McKin-
ley. Harding. General Logan,
the Unknown Soldier, and it s
The Nation’s
named derived?
A. It ie an Indian
9
star,” said Captain Cad
"Uv* lived through a great
elected when a Ntate i"
elect mot* lteprest ntati r
( ongressinnal Mistriet t |n
tle ndditional l emheru '»
the votemrenehn -tat
nomtnated 1; Ftate honv‘
•------------ -----------
Q-Can the President'of the
United States, under the Con-
stitution. make any disposition
he wishes of the Army and Navy I
of the United States?
A Th* Prenident ot thene ' ird
States, under the Constitutlon. is th*
commander in Chlef of the Arm and
Navy of th* United States, Ther f 1
h* i* empowered to make vucht disposi ।
Distilleries, household stills, termentors, etc.. ", diL "ERT SWAN
seized, 216,611; arrests for Volstead viola- , NEW YORK, Dec. 17. And now they would
tions. 75.307. ' 1) put the pushcarta from the streets of New-
An enormous sum of money was Invested ' York.
in apparatus for violating the Volstead law. It seems that they re unhygienic, dirty, in-
Conviction of all the arrested Volstead viola- terfere with traffic and bother the street
tors would have filled all the prisons in the > cleaning department.
country twice over, or more. | Which, for all we know, may be true. But
Enforcement docs. Indeed, seem to be quite once the pushcarts are gone 1, for one. don t
in "‘experiment." care to visit the East Side very often. If
______________________ push-carts are dirty, it is equally true that
•----•
DAILY POEM
♦---- -----By PATL MeCREA ---------—•
BALLADE OF WASTED ENDEAVOR
rTHE fox, a master strategist,
I A very smart’ and cunning lad.
But we geo tricks of turn and twist
Thar even foxes never had
When mother geta herself a pad
And takes a pencil in her fist
And tries to get some help from dad
in making out her Christmas list.
WE stand on the frontier
• j W with regard to interna-
n, Mus. WAL.TER vewatsos tional law. Our position is
TTPON the question of woman's proper place I that o a comparatively new
U in the twentieth century world, we seldom • and unorganized community in
keep our mental balance. Our enthusiasms ) The tasks before us-is to
have such a way of running away with our . substitute orderly justice for a
I system of criminal bullying. It
; is identical with the task that
pioneers have faced since the
mnkes hole* in
j .by that of constituted author- i
tty, did they throw away their
43*1
When th* vigilantes of San i
means nothing. Such a revolt!- .
tion as It Implies is impos- '
sible without conflict. just as
free speech, religious liberty,
the ballot and republican gov-
ernment were impossible.
If the United States, or any
other nation, does what will
' lie necessary to institute that
reign of law thruout the'world
I
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7
Q. What is the religion of
the last President of Mexico.
Plutarco Elias Calles?
e Ila w aa brought up in ’he Toman
Cnhtotic Vulth. but ’■ now a * ree-
mason and a 1 erthinker._____.
fue hrst Wecnenan Mareh O’ । ।
jour, which happened to fall on ’
i 4 Fhua the hegint ng r nd end
ecsstle admiinist rat ons- a ne de-
naturalist, said of them: "A«
Ievenge.
hv"
45636-
32
which Woodrow Wilson visual-
ized, it la going to need not
only cruisers, but a good many
other things with which to
persuade criminally minded
politicians and potentates that 1
the demand is not an empty ,
gesture. I
rTHE most tragic aspect of
I all peace efforts thus far
is an utter lack of realization
of what they mean. The ideal
is fairly born, but the concep-
tion of what will be required
to give it practical forn* ia
still in the embryonic stage.
, We are not going to stop
JOHN it. SOnnELLs
Editor
i L. A WILKm,
7 City Editor
Such an attempt is small- |
minded and illogical. It ere- l
ates an impression that the j
Kellogg pact and the naval
program are antagonistic, that
if we agree to outlaw war, we i
do not need to build more
cruisers, and that if we do
build more cruisers, agreeing
. to outlaw war is a piece of
superfluous hypocrisy.
President Coolidge has in-
dorsed both propositions. '
Which suggest that the prob- '
lem involved is quite big ■
enough for more than one idea
at a time.
The notion that a mere 1
I TOLD ,)
YOU WESHOULDNT&L. (
WATT ‘TIL THE 6
LA^T PAY *.
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Sorrells, John H. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 65, Ed. 1 Monday, December 17, 1928, newspaper, December 17, 1928; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1547252/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.