The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 96, Ed. 2 Wednesday, January 22, 1930 Page: 4 of 14
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IM
PAGD 4 —THE FORT WORTH PRESS—JAN.
1930
—4
a
The Tail That Wags the Dog
1
• 1
outside Texas, 60c month: In Tarrant County. 2 canto. 10 cento a werk:
where, 5 cento — 10 cento-e werk
i
4
'Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way”—Dante
B
A
#
2 r
nd.
‘t‘f
have been in placing or-reaching.men in-
$
N
I F
ik
-
i
no
1
, given
41
nt GII.KE^. SWAN
D
."Lucy Stoner” may be.
and
1
. picture producer.
The Deadline
coincidences.
which "laid an egg."
to
thorough and important
perhaps the only Breadway Ite
it isn't, he
who owns a row.
FI
ASK THE PRESS
If
$
who got
6
$--
1,
A.
I
4
•law.
12x20 noon
They Say
$
6:30 pm
Lv. St. Louis
■ L
1
80
H
dnmn
suummmuKmmu lamizaun
emueszmenunbmMimnik
mi
com-
been .
cist for Harper Erothers:
But the change came out of
that
more •
settings
he ■ put
to share his wife's monfker.
He is David McCord, and at
There la ne netuzt reletianship.
courtesy they are called, hrothera-
rather
st range
It
In
It was. a little practical joke:
played upon him by Marshall
Neilan. who was Ids particular
but
of
be.
the
the skyscraper apartment
modern hotel?
editors
up.
So I
The Business
ofLiving *
The
Nation’s
Pulse
ii
s:==z
sima
riod have been found, but many belonging to '
. the latter part are known | Where Do W 6 Dritt ?
VOU sang; at first I thought I heard
I A little, sleepy, twittering bird,
. Or lazy, bubbling, purling brook.
Wandering thru some wooded nook.
Then morning trill of lark on wing,
Then lovers. idly murmuring.
You sang; I heard in accentsmild
The laughter of a little child—
And tho I knw that all around
The earth was turning, bare and brown,
So grandly, sweetly did you sing.
I thought that all was green with spring.
X
t
name."
And that's that!
ering each other.. .*
Under the new order, when
W
11
-1
2
30
to pick It up, teach it to box ahd match the-
thing with Primo Camera.
in it< a MANWELL
ID you ever reach the place
along"the tote-rpad of life,
. ___..■■.■--I? AEW •"K — -----
TAKES HIS WIFE’S NAME
by mail, i
eliet
far away from man's later types, with parts
and features that are almost like the, modern;
and every skeleton is found to differ in these
reapacu.____________________■ ____________________
"Here is facing us, evidently, a very note-
committees and the tariff commission, and the
end is not yet In sight.
Everybody seems hap-
py over prohibition. wets
and drys alike, with pos-
sible exception of Hoo-
ver's famous commission,
tripped by a web of dark
politics. .
(‘r. Wilcox, Dist. P’assenger Alt., Wabash Ry.
1307 Kirby. Bldg., Dallas, Texas. Phone 7-3513
°THE
183
AMEHDMEHT
_MI
■■■■I
iuun
'si!!!
Zsiiipim
Sfuanmu
------ill
0 , ’
-urulevidph .
L
II
male for. husband's names. Ah, said I-'
I fo myself, I'll take my wife's
&
I
TO DETROIT
You sang; dull care I nursed so long, .
Died alsb with your dying song;
A gift to you I long to bring.
Whose value round the world would ring.
Hut you're beyond all givers living,
- You have the glorious gift of giving
least in my memory ’ had appeared before millions
i as that of a cinema villain.
"Think of it, the tremendous
waste! Rain mattes 3,000,000
miles of road impassable and
■causes delays which are incal-
. culable.- John Brisben Walker.
explains, because he wants to
be particularly rural, but be-
cause it's the only way he's
found of being certain of fresh
milk.
1
*UL
A
—---- NIENCE FOK TRE LAYMAN ----
Nature Forged Man of
Today in Age of Ice
do a
t job
Q, is there any law to pre-
vent an atheist from being a
witness .in a federal court?
A. Nil.
6, i
JOHN H "SORREI.1.S.
Editor
HERBERr D SCHULZ
Managing Editor
Member of United Press, Seripps Howard Newspaper
Newspaper Inforrhation Service, and
0N
ritziest of show
AN estimated 4,000,000 tourists crossed the •
A border from the United States into Can-
ada during 1929, and each spent about $75
while on the Canadian side, according to sta-
Tracy
sAva
The superstitution still
prevails that politics can
be separated from eco-
nomics and that mate-
rialism has no connec-
tion with moral develop-
ment.
■ ...■■■mi
■ ■■a ospwei
3Miaaiiiai
imnzan!
once upon
become a
Neilan was
i
3
used in
on but
Rather
Leave St. Louis—
Union Station.......
Arrive Chicago—
63rd St. (Englewood)...................
47th St.............. .6i37 pm
Dearborn Station................6150 pm
Wabash trains St. I xmls to Chicago at
8i47 am, 12:20 pm, 9:52 pm, lliSO pm
Any ticket agent will make reservations and sell
tickets over lite w abash Railway Ask the under:
signed for lowest fare, and travel information.
By DAVID DIETZ
Seripps Howard He I nice Editor
PRESENT day man—Homo Sapiens as the
I scientist calls him—was forged from a
crude forerunner by the rigors of the glacial
age. This is the theory of.Dr. Ales Hrdlicka.
pi- famous anthropologist of the
a*. .Smithsonian Institution.
anmmi
usaniL-=-----
zMEMEKKEMMHL
emmmumuii
of the Finance Committee, which writes, the
tariff schedules, was shown to be listed on
the league's books , as a “correspondent" and
to have received $1,541 from 1924 to 1 928.
Dingley is the son of the father of the famous
Dingley tariff.
Clayton Moore, clerk of the House tariff-
making committee, also appeared on the
league's books as a “correspondent.” "He re-
reived $1,866 in the samp four-year period.
All in all the tariff lobby seems to have
The God, O men, seems to me to be really
wise; and by his oracle to mean this, that the
wisdom of this world is foolishness and of
pone effect.— Plato. '
' ;---------------------
gan. McCord narrates
oeipts and even
-
the most ordinary voice can be
the government tariff bodies is gradually com-
ing out in the Senate lobbying investigation.
Already the trail is uncovered into Senate
commission. engaged
haustive research 1
and noble purposes.
ing to be allowed
than have the furniture go to
Cain's storehouse he ships it
out to Long Island.
And Arthur Hopkins, who
has a reputation for being the
NANY visitors to Washington have been im-
IV! pressed by the United States Senate. Yes,
the'architecture is unusual.
---—K-—“HriBiiwm
pretext for raising
^Banner
• Blue
Limited"
The Train of Trains Between
St. LOUIS
CHICAGO
to prove
new big program
their point.
Root loggers have
So it may be that a young
man who ’ takes half of his
wife’s name is not in the same
class with those dear la.dies
who rebeled against changing
their names'back in the days
wlien* womeh were fighting for
“this freedom.”
rate, my attention
called to the first
furnished his
from stage
' shows which
letters from
them mixed
where it seemed like the black
i clouds of sorrow, were hanging
so .doggone low that you could
touch cm? I have . . . and I’m
that way right NOW
’ Frankly and honestly, I know
I am not what the world calls a
soft, one-minute egg . . . not me.
On the other hand, I try t , lead
the'passing throng to think of
me as being long in the "hot
water," hard boiled and with a
shell protection that's just too
thick. But. when alone. I know
t amnot there ... and here's
my reason:
It went—with growing
Variations ;
TAR HRDLICKA has recently examined the
L skeletal remains of Neanderthal man and
it is on this basis that lie advances his theory
that present day man, who first appears In
the Auriganeian period, developed from Nean-
derthal man. . .
Dr. Hrdlicka points out that the skulls and
other bones of the Neanderthal man show a
vast variation as to detail and that variation
can be put in sequence. This sequence ad-
vances from those least like modern man to
those most like him.
He points nut further that great variations
exist within single skeletons. -
"In one and the same-skeleton are found'
parts and features that are very primitive and
Culturres:......— ...... -.....---
FNHE cultures older than those of Neanderthal
1. man are .called Chelleean and Achillean be-
cause typical examples of them have -been
found at Chelles-sur-Marne and St. Acheul,
respectively. The culture of the Neanderthal
man. which is superior to these'preceding ones,
is. called Mousterian because a typical example
. Scours at Le Moustier.
Mousterian culture was followed bl one
known as Aurignacin, No skeletal remains
belonging to the start of the Aurignacian pe-
I in ex-
with high
were go-
______"MODERNITY can't even talk
IVI leisurely without a stimu-
of the Senate Finance Committee and the
—werthy -exemple-ef instabillty, an instability,-
plainly, of evolutionary nature, leading from
old forms to more modern.”
Dr. Hrdlicka believes that variations ap-
peared in the Neanderthal man because of the
rigors of the glacial environments. The harsh-
ness of the environment intensified the strug-
gle for existence and the working of natural
selection. As a result, he believes large varia-
tions occurred in individuals. Only the indi-
viduals most fitted for the battle survived and
so gradually, according to Dr. Hrdlicka, mod-
ern man arose from Neanderthal man.
He points out that the chief differences be-
tween Keanderthal man and modern man lie in
the reduction of the muscles of the jaw and
body with consequent chages",in the teeth,
jaw, face and skull, and reduction of the eye-
without interference. But that
turned out to be too good to
be true. Politicians on Capitol
Hill joined together to make
it a goat .
At any
has been
nian at I
tistics. Probably took in a lot of movies.
T -..... - , e - -E.
„ A LIGHTHOUSE is offered for sale in an ad
A In a British newspaper. Somebody ought
H He were TIvnrg“Hf the
ent day, he would probably re- l
trouble . . . that's W H V Five
( LORD. how manifold are chy works! eIn
U wisdom hast thou made them all; the
earth is full of thy riches. — Psalm 104.24.
trs .. . ।
plained. "All about me wpre •
women refusing to bear their j
minutes ago. I walked into a
doctor's office. I had just had
my mid-day snooze, and -was
feeling fine, not a cloud in
sight.
In that office I found three
little children, not big at all.
They were almost babies . , .
and oh, how sad were those
kids. .Something seemed to rip.
Inside me. Held close In the
A TEACHER says it is not easy to . learn to
A play the saxophone, which confirms our
fears.
brow ridges. Such reductions, Dr. Hrdlicka
insists, are still going on in the human race.
A WOMAN lecturer in New York talked for
A two hours without referring o her notes,
says a news IDispatch. The newsy part of that
is that she did it in public.
Just prior to the appearance
of the earliest-known ances-
tors of present day man.
It must be remembered
that the very early history of
mankind is shrouded in great
mystery. Almost nothing is
known about the beginnings
of the human race. There
are only two authenticated fossils, the so-
called Java man and the so-called Piltdown
man. The age of these two fossils is esti-
mated differently by various authorities, some
placing them at less than a half million years,
others at more than a million.
We have nothing more to go by in the
way of skeletal remains until we find those
of the type known as the Neanderthal man.
However, there are evidences of human be-
ings preceding'Neanderthal man: These con-
sist of stone implements, flint hammers .or
hatchets', rude borers and scrapers. bones of
animals which lavebeen split to obtain the
marrow within them, and idles of bones and
refuse accumulations in front, of eaves. The
ashes of hearth fires are also found near or in
caves.
-______prohibition forces seem to have been
1 doing plenty of shooting. but: molt of the
--------btg-shots-m-the-raeket -ara immune-------—
tai remains. was short in stature. heavily built,
and possessed of brutish features. Hit! fore-
head was low, his eyebrow ridges large and
pronounced, his-nose was large, his teeth large,
his jaw heavy ard with receding chin.
The skeletons found In the Aurignacian pe-
riod are essentially like those of present day
man. The most Important ones are those which'
are thought to have constituted a race which
has been named the Promagnon.
Cromagnon man was tall. He had a well
shaped head with high forehead and large
brain capacity, Itis thought that' he looked
very much like the American Indian. »
The common assumption among.archaeolo-
gists is that Cromagnon and the other types of
the Auriganeian period revresented a great in-
vasion which came Into Europe and extermi-
nated the Neanderthal man. This is thought
to be the explanation of the sudden . disap-
pearance of Neanderthal -man. " '
However," Dr. Hrdlicka points out that
Neanderthal man disappeared at the height of
the glacial age, the most unlikely of all times
for an invasion of Europe. He also points out
that a great invasion would have been beyond
the abilities or the organizing powers of pre-
historic man.
Then, much to his amaze-
ment. he. fpund that Neilan
had named the villain of the
piece, “Kenneth Hawks."
• •
rpHERE is one producer in
1 the Braodway belt who has
(2
<1 ,
GOME astute research expert discovers that
• poets •hardly'ever are' athlete*. Even tho.
quite a few of them are long-winded.
made to cover a circle of 6000
miles in diameter, vastly more
of us will have,to keep quiet.
Speech may continue free,
but only those in possession of
the mike will be able to make
effective use of it.. /
no new marriage didoes.
The Fort Worth Press
( MIrs ■ HO WAHI) NEWSFAPEK,
wied and Publistid Dall/ (except Sunday) by The For Wuth eseme Publinhins Co.,
ifth and Jones Streets, Fort Worth. Texas. Price, by mail. In Texas, 04 month;
plaint, for they have
lant. The real conversation we
have is simply anachronis-
tic.”—Rachel Crothers.
country homo
•What DiJ If? ' 1
WIHAT was it that brought
’’ .the Interstate ;
' Commission into being; but the
railroad?
What has helped the er initial
more than the conversion of
policemen into traffic cops?
What has caused the oldo
fashioned home to disapepar but
have no
"THE real victim of theswhole
A melodrama is the Law En-
forcement Commission, which
I had a chance to gain enormous
। prestige and do a great deal of
■ good for the country but-may-
I not be able tq recover the op-
. port unity. There will be an
attempt In Congress to1 off
"the commissfon now and the
board's best hope of survival
. lies in the fact that the poli-
ticians realize it might again
sometime come in handy for
political purposes.
A few blatant drys, quite
without the sirnport of the dry
organizations which ordinarily
control them, chased the com-
mission all oxer the pasture,
twisted its arm and made it
say "Uncle”!. That is the ex-
planation of the commissions
report, with the strange addi-
tional fret that President Hoo-
ver was willing to join the
howling pack tearing at hle
own pet commission by sup-
porting the demand for a re-
port the commission wasn’t
1 ready to give.
makers, is
Raphael McCord. All of which
has happened since his mar
riage to Ruth Raphael, publi-
NJEW YORK. I
IN idea what the
WENNETH ' H A W K S. the .
TL young movie director who
went to a tragic death in the
recent Hollywood plane, dis-
aster, was perhaps the only
figure in filmdom whose name’
erony. Hawkshad,
a time, decided to
(LD age, which waits around the corner, will
U never seem real to any of us until it is
here.
When it has come, only one in a thousand
of us will have saved money to guarantee our
independence. What Of‘ tbe rest of us? For
some there are the home of Children. ‘ For
the others . . nothing but the poorhouse.
The fate of the aged is a problem that has
never been solved - because it does not deeply
move men until they are too old to do any-
thing about it , ■
But some day it will be solved, as all other
problems are today, on the basis of enlight-
ened self interest. ■ ■
As to the difficulties,of overproduction and
unemployment grow more acute, as the work-
ing day and the working hour are shortened
without reduction of pay, so the working span
of a life will be shortened without depriving
It of means of support.
Industry or government will find that old
age pensions are necessary- to the economic wel-
fare of the whole body of people. Whichever
learns the lesson first will act first.
This action must not be long delayed. It
Is. the part of enlightened government to lead
the way.
prices, whether they are going
to be hurt or not.
Of course, there are some
persons who profess certain
disguist over the fact that pol-
j ities has completely dominated
I the landscape in these last few
weeks of frenzied prohibition
argument, but that doesn’t
1 cont much in Washington.
vale payroll. Edward Nelson Dingley, expert
A NEW musical play is advertised aS having
A a chorus of 50. Rather younger than the
average. ,
Revolution
AlOST people reaJize that we
IVL are in the midst of one of
the greatest revolutions that
over occurred, but very few
have reached the point, where
they perceive its subtler effects.
To the great majority it rep-
resents little more than a change
of mechanical appliances, . the
substitution of autos for horses,
or electric lights for tallow can-
dles.
The superstititon still pre-
vails that politics can be sepa-
rated from eeonomics and that
materialism has no connection
with moral development.
Neanderthal man. as judged from his skele- l . . ...... .......
! ’I I.Lll’INOTT says
• tho we are publishing
ho A
Yesterday the, lobby inquiry revealed-that \ N-
the ’American Tariff League has had employes j ■\
House XX ays and Means Committee on its pri- i NU
DAVID,DIETZ
sic of Bach. Handel, Beethoven
and their like represents tho
highest xorm, but how many lis-
ten to it when they can twist i
tile dial to jazz?
We still proclaim mother love
as the most priceleks thing in
life, but with fewer children
each succeeding year. ‘
en.
" Midnighe Limit-"
t>. St. Louis. . 11:50pm
1
THE WABASH IS NOTHD
in ITS EXCELLENT
MEALS .... .
books than ever before, . the
classics are going out of date.
Galli-Curci says the opera is
"very old-fashioned entertain-
ment for 1930."
We still force vur ebildren to
read Shakespeare., Virgil and
Homer, but how many of them
keep It up when free to do as
they please?
We still preach that the mu
last reports you could find
him on the staff of a widely
circulated national weekly.
Now. I learn, lie has become
' * cuio
current Issue of Bookman,
when ho' was attached to an
army bureau in France and
was running thru a stack- of
cards bearing the names- of
More Lobby Tracks
ew successful the prime Aariff.. Interests
Q. How are square - holes
made In wood?
। A.' Sometimes they are cut with A
9 sIntting attachment' on a milling ma-
Rhine, or are drilled square with a spe-
dal attachment to a Inthe, called th”
radhore Attachment. The usun| and
, most satisfactory way la to broach
the hole. /
HDBA
making it Hawks did. not see rHE "other fellow s trouble,
.the completed picture, withuits. I
tilling, until it had a pret by some strange quirk, of
view in a small town outside fate, becomes all too often MY
1 ■ of New York
THE voice of a king comes
- over the sea, and many
Americans get up much earlier
than is their wont to hear it.
That is probably more signif- '
। cant than anything he said, or
> than anything the naval con-
ference will do.
Just now, We are content to
stand In the presence of a mira-
cle, but tomorrow, or the next
day, ve shall begin, to realize
- what the miracle implies. _ .
Under the old order when
the loudest shouter of them all
I could not make himself heard
' more than two or three hundred
yards, many people could talk
at the same time without both*
been doing pretty well for itself. This same
-league had for its vice president Joseph R.
Grundy, the daddy of lobbyists.” who has
since been given a seat on the Senate floor.
Then there was the case of Charles L.
Eyanson. official of the Connecticut Manufac-
turers Association, who was, ~mployed at the
' same time as Senator ''Bingham’s secretary
.and who attended the ’ confidential tariff-writ-
— ing:' meetings of'the Senate committee-untt-
the plant was.discovered.. . ______*,_
.________ .Nor should1William_Burgess be forgotten.
He is the gentleman employed for 20 years as
a lobbyist by the U. S. Pottery Association, ex--
cept for a four-year Interim in which he ac-
tually served as a member of the t-Aiff: com-
mission. According to„the investigating com-
mittee he has been guilty of attempts to bring
secret pressure and by threats to ruin the
morale, of government tariff employes and to
get special favors.
Even more notorious is the case of J. A.
Arnold, whose fake organizations including the
Southern Tariff Association have been ex-
posed and condemned by the investigating
committee.
- . This probe cannot go too far for the .public
good. Logical arguments against high tariff
increases have not always moved Congress,
but the exposure of lobby methods has pro-
duced a publie reaction and disgust which Con-,
gress cannot ignore.
I - t>r HrdHcha's theory up- -
.sets the generally accepted
notion about the so-called
Neanderthal man, the type of
) man wo -inhabited Europe
Your Questions Answered
• • •
Q. Why are there no snakes
in Ireland?
A. Thin Im due to zeogranhic posi-
tion. isolated as It In from th* region
in which snakes originated and which
they now occupy. A few attempt*
hnve heen mad* to introduce harmless
species, but ns far n= th* records show
nne have been estpblished there. Thia
may b du* tn a lack-of proper en-
vironment, climnte, dinease or other
A bnormyt--trndtttonn.—Fhe—law-worm, 6
or legtess lira rd. which sunerficially
. leeks very min’Ii Ilk* a snnke. isna-
‛ttve to Ireland end- mey aecount for
gome of th* enake ' records of that
country.
q. How did Harold Lloyd
lose his thumb and forefinger?
A. He lost part of his hand while
he was posing for some comic photo-
graph’’. He held a rpal bomb, which
the propertv man had given him by
mistake This exploded, blownn up
the studio and injurinr Lloyd's hand.
• ee
Q. Is there any relation be-
tween the husbands of sisters? ■
out of a series
vise the maxim to read: “Give
me control of the engineer, the
architect and the chemist, and
I care not who is elected to
Congress.”
How Will It End7”
IN order to square Communism
I with science, Russia finds It
necessary to establish a despot-
ism more ruthless than that of
the czar.
In order to make co-operation
effective,, Mussolini obliterates
democracy. 1.
In order to combat trusts
and monopoly, we Americans
are gradually evolving a bureau-
cratic form of government.
One need not be a pessimist
to wonder where it will all end.
rNHE recommendations on
I prohibition were not new
for the most part and might
ns well have been dictated
from the White House. It
made a couple of radical pro-
posals which were new, and
even some of the, drys have
attacked those as half - baked.
It is quite likely that this
session of Congress will enact
no more of the program than
the transfer of enforcement to
the Justice Department.
cans to colonize Texas.
The right to establish a
Texas colony was obtained by
Moses Austin. He died soon
after, but his son, Stephen,
took up the work.
Being free to choose the "lo-
cation for liis colony, Austin
selected the lower Brazos and
Trinity valleys. Before long
many claims covered the re-
gion from the Sabine to the
N ueces.
Discontent with the Mexican
rule was not long in appealing
and a state of warfare existed
between the Mixicans and
American colonists for several
years.
In 1836, the Mexican leader,
Santa Anna, was taken captive
and was glad, to sign a treaty
in which Ite 'engaged to do
what he could for the Inde-
pendence of Texas:
Thus the Republic of Texas
was launched and a Constitu-
tion ratifl/d" in September of
the same year, with Sam Hous-'
ton as’president.
Texas was admitted to the
Union in 1846.
WASMINOTOX,D"KC"I. mo-
VV ment everyone seems to
be happy over the-prohibition
situation.
The dry organizations arc
happy because “their" presi-
dent has gone Into action for
the cause.
Dry senators and representa-
tives Who participated in the
' recent ballyhoo are happy be-
cause they may now turn to
’ ' their TTry— ronrtllti^ins ItT The.......
coming election campaigns and
claim erdit for the big drive.
President Hoover fis hapvy • •
because he feels that after this •
no one will have any reason to' •
yell at him about, prohibition
enforcement for som time to
I come. » • •
THE wets are happy because
i 1 they think the Commission
on Law Observance and En-
forcement is inclined to agree
with them that prohibition can
never be enforced and because
they rely on the failure of the
I' More Dictatorship
rNHE great mcha nisnis we
1 have devised are dojng
tricks to some of our, moat cher-
ished traditions and concep-
tions. • — - —.....-
Slowly, but relentlessly, our
attitude towrd a lot of things
is being changed.
We don't think of the home '
" as we used to, or the’ church, or
even the government.
We can't because modern de-
vices, and the mefhods they
compel us to adopt make it inti
possible.
Whether we are creatures of
circumstance, as individuals, we
are certainly so in the mass,
and probably al cays have been.
T‛e invention of a swifter ve-
hicle of a more complicated
machine for grinding flour, or
of a bleger—broadcasting set,
only makes us a little more so.
Every forward step we take
in this direction only calls for
more system, more discipline,
more dictatorship.
A smart philosopher once
said; "Give me .to write the
songs of a nation and I care not
who write* its laws."
I arms of a white-robed nurse,
the littlest of the three was
sobbing out her grief . . . while
the nurse tenderly wiped away
the fast-falliug tears as the
coursed down tho baby's cheeks.
INSTANTLY. I ..knew the
- THING had happened!
There, alone with the doctor
and the nurse . . , not a cock-
eyed relative in sight . - . those
kids were taking it on th chin,
if you know what I mean:
Cold, hope-blasting, right
from out the blue came that
message: "Daddy Is DYING!”
Folks, it got me. It has me
RIGHT NOW! /
That grief, the hell of It all
. . . and those little kids have
. gotta bear it, and there's so lit-
tle I can do, to HELP them.
71 * .
Wuj
Today’s Poem
By ANNA FLOTRSO BASSETT
TO A GREAT SINGER
■ I t • • -rod " , a
8
---
wreCasmkm-A,., • WA « A SH RAILWA Y
with Creole Rice .... 4UC ‛lemmmamSE"VINOsIEK"
। men recommended for medals.
Casually turning over a cer-
tain card be found his own
name staring up at him. And
thus he first met the "other"
David . McCord.
• » •
rHERE are. however, certain
1 complications, which Mc-
Cord lias related to me A one'
time or another. Both of
these Davids.: 'it so happened,
are writers. . And both were
quite well known to New York.
One day, the young man who
is now Raphael McCord began
to get checks- which belonged
to the other. His friends call-
ed him up and congratulated
hint- on his progress. Fine—
they said . . you're coming
along great. He got bills in-
tended for- the other and re-
complications. >
"So when I decided to
change my name, ' I began
thinking that it was about
time for a good old-fashioned
man to do his stuff," he ex-
-
-MOSTef the people on the
IVI commission expected Hoo-_____
ver to back them up.’ They
have been grieving deeply be-
cause he didn't. The commis-
sion was conceived by Hoover
in the campaign as the be t
method of handling the tick- ’
lish prohibition issue. But
when it was actually appointed
everyone cheered because of
the high caliber of its 11
members and the fact that
hardly any of (hem were con .
cerned with politics. For
months it appeared as if th*
Telephone Exchange. Dial 2-5151
KARL J GAINES,
businexs Manager
A WILKE.
Olty Editor
Alllance, Newspaper Enterprise Asuoclution.
Audit Bureau cf Cireulatlon
Today’s
Anniversary
—-----
TEXAS COLONIZED
Jan. 22. . 1821. Mexico
agreed to permit .Ameri-
"‘Conrinenral Limits^'
L*. St. Loouis .1:47 em
"Detroir Limited"
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Sorrells, John H. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 96, Ed. 2 Wednesday, January 22, 1930, newspaper, January 22, 1930; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1638643/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.