The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 97, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 23, 1930 Page: 4 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
4
4
0e -s
H
• ,
m-
4—THE VORT WORTH PRESS-- JAN. 23, 1130
On His Mind!
The Fort Worth Press
B
$'
>
“Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way"—Dantt
igtencf..
i
w
William
7
%
1
-»
\
L."
IN NEW ouK
V
I
foreement by common action of
A
r
h
ry aross. the street
ing to do what they can
1
1
present deadly undertow
control
piano and radio and Victrola
I
in
also had a noticeable effect upon healthy ones
ASK THE PRESS
।
।
Thls ferment is a chemical
I
rated fron the Rocky Mountains
• •par
tn th
of the Red, Drazos
I
mala against the cold!
They Say
A sane and Intelligent examination of
___way:
I
many
4
0
I*
■ will
Q.
I
h
t—-—xacketeers.
produets."
1
4
/
4
\
(!
T-
l
I
u
The
Nation’s
Pulse
in a dozen different ways
Law Impotent
will-
for
Dr Hans Fischer of Munich succeeded in
rtificially preparing or synthesizing 'he resp-
Ano
Hav
ing
illust
sure
only
set
the
"Our country is being ‘com-
missloned to death."—A. B, See.
of
they
‘Tett her true tove i» Mhe the rose.
That once will its beauty rare unelose--
Once will It live In ach heart, true.
Say to her, "His beats but for you."
7
/
The Business
of Living
Q. Is Hoot Gibson appearing
in motion pictures now?
“Heroism is heroic because it
is so rare."—Will Durant.
A
faw
blip
ing
are
all
lect
"Tell me the cause: I know
there I* a woman in It"—John
Fletcher
Uncle Panther’s
Mail Box
statement of the' American Chemical Society.
Progress for 1929 Is summed up In Indus-
trial and . Engineering Chemistry. one of the
official publications of he society. —
"It was," the journal states, "the year of
the Graf Zeppelin's flight around the world, of
and yet on they sail,
with their eyes fixed on some
distant. GOAL. _______
—---- SCIENCE FOR THE LAXMAX ------
Many Chemical Advances
Are Seen for 1930
£
"......'.—------—
wants, should rather .be helpful
If no changes are needed, well and good
. If they ar. let's have them
THE human foot is changing In appearance,
1 says a science bulletin. Maybe It’s the re-
sult of constant pressure in street cars
CAFETERM
Barbecued Frankfurter A.
with Creole Rice .... ZUC
Oh. littl star. Oh. laughing star.
You are no near, and yet so far—
As far as you are front the sea
So 'far my love is, star, from me.
dwellers over by the East Riv
er may see a dark shadow hur- ‘
No Snoopers Need Apply
rNHE Department of Justice has straightened
- up from the keyhole and is looking the
world squarely in the eyes these days. •
It is no longer going to play the degrading
role of snooper.. It will not tap teephone wires
even if the Supreme Court has given it a legal
right to do so, and it will not disguise its men
as prisoners and send them to spy in 'federal
penitentiaries.
Instead, under orders of Attorney Genera I
"It I have any troubles at all
jt is from being invited to- too
many dinners,"- Al Smith.
Tell her that youth is like the spring.
Fleeting the joys that It, will bring--
But unlke spring as seasons foil. '
Youth will its joys no more unfold.
more humans may be expected
to apply. Whiet menns that
1 300 must shift thru the night
Despite the fact that
everybody seems to fear
war, there’s -plenty of
"peace machinery” in ex-
Whil
are
mem
only
piece1
beig
Today’s Poem
...... -H, ANNA 11.01 nsov BASSErT-
TO A STAR
H. little-, laughing, twinkling star,
You are so near, and yet so far—
Vih“nin
7
L
"We don't know a millionth
of one per cent about anything."
—Thomas A. Edison.
zommeg
.
lit west by th* Fecos Valley* and
—'— uh to form the source of
Au r
paid
-hrother tromthe West Indict
who arrived In New York only
a short time ago with a swob
As far as you are from the sea—
• Ho far my love is, star, from me. ..
She is so high, so fine. so pure.
I ne'er shall reach her. star, I‘m sure
Oh, pray look down from whore you ire,
vid her be kind to me, O star.
urging them on in the game, of
the survival of the fittest.
They are buffeted about on
obly beeapse it might make
war less probable, but because
ft would certainly reduce taxes.
What they want more than
more a disorganized
j
i
KAHL J QAINES,
BusIsim Manager
U A. WILKE,
City Enter
spaphEntervria Asspelation,
nt otroutatjen
cent era of stock market gambling. Credit ,
was diverted from legitimate business and In- |
dustry, and money concentrated in financial ’
Too Much Danger
()N the other side of the pie:
U turn looms that colored
AND Jesus said unto them,, I am the bread of
H life; be that cometh to me shall never
humger; and be that belleyeth On me shall
never thirst.— St. Jobe 6135.
■
to guard his house, and
By JACK MAXWEL
rTHIS thing of doing a daily
1 column becomes irksome.
There are" days when the old
1 compound known as a haemin. It is the sub:
, stance which makes possible respiration or the
reations of, breathing in living organism’.
Other advances In blo-chemistry in 1929.
, pointed out by the journal, are the use of a
line In" any ordinary
(1OMMENTING on the flight o' the Grat Zep
U pelin the journal saya: "The Graf Zeppe-
JOHN H •ORRELLS,
MMW
wennenr D. senz:
Managin Utter
ration ferment.
• nd Colorado rivers. It has An arra
of 40,000 square mlles and an altltude
of 5000 feet, k l» very dry and al-
most woodlas•
To let him tell it, England
and the United States have not
only failed to form an en-
tente cordlate. but (re actually
facing a dangerous split.
Not begrudging Mr. Tardieu
any credit he may deserve, or
receive. In hie efforts to recon-
cile these two governmentn, It
js only fair to recall that he
made a whale of a mistake at
the start.
Press Waits
(UT in Milwaukee, the edit-
V or of a suburban weekly
etarts a campaign for the re-
their heels. They make their
way in shoes that are all but
'falling from thir feet. Hat-
leys. and" with ragged shawls
have resulted from
drifting of shamblig humans.
The scene is a large, dreary
looking place over by the East
I ntyer. It is ealled the Mnici-
I pal Lodging House,
"A ME RICA JM - circus for
n grown-up Ichildren -All-
ert Pasfer.
MAYBE that parrot disease, was started by
IVI vaudeville actors with that joke about a
couple of other fellows.
Aem
(47
217
9
A
"Boredom is as positive a
sensation' as a toothache."—
Lee S. Gunter.
.Treat B. Johnson and R. J. Anderson of Yale
1 University.
Tests made with the sugar by Dr W., C
White of the U. S Public Health Set vice, show.r
. ed that the deadly sugar had the effect o f im-
mediate killing tubercular anmals and that I’
one cent taxes not even poll
tax.
Nw this is just one case.
There are lots of them here,
they say at the tax office, and
we have no way of finding out.
Yen. Illa next film prohally
be calleda"Tla Montana Kid.”
Do mother rabbits ever
PPr Z4w
442o4c42,7-
AS0A4ems
schools and have never
THE Pan-American treaties of
- arbitration and conciliation,
which we have negotiated with
the other American republics,
appear to have left few if any
loopholes for wars between na-
tions in this hemisphere. Peace-
ful settlement Is provided for
all disputes between these coun-
tries. In the arbitration treaty
the stgnatory nations agree to
abide by arbitral awards and
under the conciliation treaty a
commission would report on the
facts in a dispute and a cooling-
off period is provided:
Opportunity is still left for
this country to intervene by
sending marines In to “Vesfore
By DAVID DI.Tz
Srlppe • Howard Selence Editor. ,__
SPECTACULAn advances are looked for In
• the field of chemistry in 1930. This opti-
mism grows out of the record which was made
in 1 929. c
Advances in 1929 ranged from practical aide
। ■ ---- for the field of aviation and
CITY TAXES
Editor the Press
T ALWAYS read your paper
1 and find it very interesting
Would like for you to ex
press your opinion in the
Press about the city taxes. Do
you think it fair for +eme of
us poor, devils to have to pay
taxes for every little thins we
have, while others who make
more money have lots mote to
pay taxes on, never pay a ennt?
Don't misunderstand me. I
don't 'mind to pay mv taxes
and I have lways paid them'
but to my certain knowledge
I have a friend that is in busi-
ness here. wo has a car, a
the authorities are
"Nothing is so notoriously
passive as American audience
at the play."—Gilbert W. Ga-
brie!.
France.- Germany pIta".
He has I Despite the creation of the
gone beneath the veneer of ‘ World ourttheinternattonal
"Tad's" work, and found the I Court of Arbitration is still da
greatest gift to mankind ... inK business at the Hague. ”
the will to carry on when the | falled to prevent the World War
going is hard and the grade because Austria-Hungary refun-
1 - ed to let her case anainst Ser-
len knee and collected dam-
ages in no less than 12 suits
| against various transportation |
companies, by claiming it to
raotrnor’nttrcommunisore” t0 -and-alamond: and have educa:
do not warrant it,
The street car company Ap- ■
--peals to the Supreme Court
and ho one knows whether
•he press will be hamstrung
or confirmed In its traditional
liberties. ’
laws forbidding use of marines
abroad without Congressfonal
consent and provisions for joint
Inter-American responsibilty In
dealing with internal troubles
of small republics.
The old Bryan treaties nego-
tjated under President Wilson
with 29 other countries, have
been largely forgotten, but still
stand out as treatL’ of great
value if obbrved. They pro-
vide for the investigation of all
disputes by international com-
misslons composed of one citi-
zen of'each nation, one chosen
by each nation from a foreign
nation, and a fifth selected by
agreement. A year's time is al-
lowed for investigation, during
which time hostilities are for-
bidden. • ,
can revolution from yelling for
marines whenever they need
help. Peace societies hope for
sonal Interest in his cartoons
of hilarity And comedy, be
cause I knew from whose pen
they came, and the conditions
under wbieh he 'bucked the ,
line' "
empty space In the mental-
Bouse. ’ And tbat'a my hor-
rible condition at the present
time.
In view of the above state
of affairs, t am going to til)
In with a hit from a letter re-
"Sentimentality is uncon-
scious Instncerlty." -- Edith
Hamilton.
his protection, It is taken fr
granted that he will presently
pass out of the picture.
in-other words, the state of j
New Jersey is not st all sure
that it can prevent a group of:
Chinese from killing one of
their number, openly, deliber-
ately, and after having pub-
lished their intention to do Bo.
facts without muqraking: wfihswhaFGlass -
Zepmelin '
• ' tied about stinging ears;
1 The people of luxury-land
sleep comfortably. Perhaps one
complains that the steam heat r think Powers has preached
tent particularly good that right good sermon. -
night. Going to a Brightly
to some other harbor If any,
To accommodate as many
as ponsible involves the neces- 1
! rrHE principal difference be-
- tween the effect of the
league and of the treaty. In pre-
venting war is that the league
authorizes punitive action
(gainst aggresstve pations vio-
lating Ita covenant, whereas the
Kellogg pact, thru which na-
tions renounced war as an In-
strument of national policy, has
value only as It is binding psy-
chologically and morally.
Here is a bird’s-eye view of
the major peace Instruments as
they affect the chances of war:
are to be applied to the business of law en-
forcemeat.__________ - , •
The new order established by Mitchell
should be widely felt. His example will per-
haps, be followed by other law enforcement
agencies of the government. it will help to
restore flagging confidence in the entire struc-
ture. There is no way for governments—or
individuals—to win respect except by deserv-
ing it.
ted their children
roDNEr DVreMER
NEA sorvie Writer
WASHINGTON, Jan. 32.- The
’’ world is so full of Instru-
ments for the preservatiqn of
peace that yo might think no
one would consider war as a
real danger any more. But the
naval haggling about to begin
In London will demonstrate that
a great number of treaties, con-
ventinns and covenants bave
only partially mitigated the old
psychology among nations.
la borate machinery Jo take
the plane ot war. auch as the'
League of Nations, the Hague
and World Courts, and other ar-
bitral or conciliatory bodies,
have been re-enforced by treat-
ies desiemd to strengthen peace
psychologically, the outstanding
example of which is the Kellogg
treaty of recent history.
light's golden Jubilee in honor of Edison's
first modest electric Iamp, nf ..the death of
Baron Auer Von Welsbach, who, among other
things, made the gas light of yester-year prac-
ticable.
"If was also the year when physical chem-
ists, breathing hard on the trail of the mathe-
matical physicists leading into the land of
wave mechanics, found that the once funda-
mentally simple gases, oxygen and hydrogen,
were, after all, mixtures of isotopes."
—.... , , steep and uncertain.
THE penniless bed-searchera . • • •
A -travel alone-unless they TN this ola world there are
are a diverse crew J many "Tada." In all walks
Many resemble the people ; of life we find them, men
of Gorky's "Lower Depths.'' and women fighting the Big
Yet there Is not even the de- Battle, with grim necessity
pressing drama of the Gorky
play There la no sense of ,
conditions, over which
seemingly have no
!...... order." and there is nothing to
keep factions In a Latin- Amerf-
ing thru brush after grazing
on a woody hillside. In a few,
there is a sense of cumuiattta:
despair: sn anxious testov
different falls.
. Those who elude the auto.,
or escape falling into an open
manhole, still run a big chance’
of being shot by thugs, or dry
agents, and if they don't suc-
cumb -to that unhappy fate,
the racket still remains.
The homes of’Jesse L., Las-,
ky. famous motion picture
producer, and of bln sister,
Mrs Blanche Lasky Turnbull.,
are being guarded by officers,
because of a death threat re-
cently made against them.
The threat merely states,
"You are going to be killed —
shot., Beware."
No 2ne would take such a
threat"serlously. except ‘for the
fact that confidence in law
enforcement has broken down.
Tho we have more courts
than ever before, more peace
officers with guns in their
hands, more taxes to main-,
tain the judicial system, there
never was a time when aver-
age people felt so Insecure in
the face of threats, thugs and
Your Questions Answered
• • •
Q. In what state is Llano
Estacado?
• A. The name mens "‘staked plain,’
and le an extensjye plateau In north-
west Texne and northern New Mexico.
L
c
Pacts Are Needed
GENATOR CARTER GLASS of Virginia pro-
• poses a study by a'Senate committee of the
Federal Reserve Banking System. Also, he has
prepared Iegislalion designed . to restrict the
use of Federal Reserye credit in speculation.
Glass wan one of the authors of the Re-
serve Act. He helped administer it as Seere- ■
fary of the Treasury under Wilson, and has
since given much study to its operation.
No doubt the propoxate of Glass witt-be as-
nailed in many quarters as another instance of 1
attempted government Interference in business.
The critinism, however, is not, sound
There were Tnnumerable chargestat "he"
Reserve Board did not function during the re- ,
Happy the man who bees a God employed
* in all the good and ilia that checker life.-
. Cowper.
. _
Naval Limitation Vs. Reduction
■ XTOW that the London navat conference ts—
.1N actually getting down to work, fbe public
' should be prepared for the ebb and flow of
hopes and reports widen Indicate future one
day and success t he next. This should not pro-
duce a reaction of discouragement or cynteism.
The' bigger the problem the harder the. nego- '
" tiations,
TheconTerenee is away to a good start.
Th'- opening addresses were short on oratory
and long on sobr‛ statement The unerltleat
optimism which initiates no many international
eonferences and' erashes In failure at the end
was lacking The mood at London, rather, is
to leave the boasting until after' it is earned
by achievement, and to be content in the be-
ginning with expression of sincere intentions.
That, sincerity cannot be doubted. It le
bayed on two facts. None of the governments
ean ba tenee Ite budget If J here is to be a na val
, building face—-tho we could stand the finan-
ciatstratn meh eawler- than-any at the others _
And none of the governments can afford-to
face tho public resentment at home If it re-
turns without an agreement.
While the delegatins are to be congratu-
Iated for their honentconfesslon of the great
differences to be overcome, and while,the peo-
ples at home are thus warned of long apd try-
ing nepotiations ahead. it will be well for both
governmentn and peoples to keep their eyes on
• he one text by which this conference wit be
judged. ! . --
No amount of technicalities or alibis should |
be permitted to obscure that crux issue,
That issue is navel reduction—-within the J
parity already conceded to us in formal state- 1
bean aimniv will nA. The league covenant recog-
bean simply will not function. , nizes the desirability of iower-
and one is forced to think that . ing armaments to the lowest,
one’s brains have gone on a ; possible point consistent with
vacation . . and left at) a national safety and of the en-
which be sallied forth against
all odde. with a smile that hid
the suffering. I had a per-
himndfoitgoes unt“1too-—tnunatoz0.to
humans are packed like ani-
110,000 a ‘ year. They make
their way thru bright lanes
and dark areaways under the
elevateds. They make their
way wth children shivering
in their aims and erying at
population of a country town.
Multiply thia hy three or four
Thus Including the popula-
tions of the Salvation Army
homes, the YMCA flop houses
and the many Bowery* mis-
stons, and you approximate the
size of a thriving little city.
A little city, then, , which
comes rawliog from some-
where out in the night. A
city of ragged dwelers, A
city without a dime in its
communal purse. A city with- ,
out 4 place to. sleep or keep I
warm. •'
not a
sense.
It is
r
d
They fight harder against
surrender to this sordid iney-
Htability. . Partieularly when
there sre children.
Yet women and children do
come. They make their way j
past those new sky-reaching ,
places where the rents are ’
its average capacity is some
- . .1100 persons per night. But
-It ever enjoyed before, as . far this- is a particularly tough
as disease is concerned, we. winter. When winds reach Hie
have confronted it with a ' freezing point, some 1 400 or
greater risk of getting -killeg
mista and business men on causes and cures.
The ReserveToard was attack'd by (nd 'pt*lied
by other financial leaders for the measurer 1
undertook.
■ Whether the remedies proposed by Glass
will prevent s repetition of the recent panic
and its attendant evils can only be determined
nfter study. There is no reasov why such »
study should be detrimental to buxines’ in any
TI goes without saying that
lai ontePnepl"to"anccetha. not J slty’or qinek tnveution. Chalrs
are placed about tables and
the penniless droop lo .ajeep
taxes, It Is not fair _
What do you think” ■
A READER
e s •
HOSPITABLE CrTy
Editor the Press:
I WISH thru your newspaper.
I to express the thanks due
the people of Port Worth front
transient jobless men. for the
food and lodging given during,
the present. Inclement weathe;
By the Salvation Army and
other charitable organizations
of your city.
I am only one of about 150
men new sheltered at the Sal-
vation Army bulldtng and
know from personal observa-
tion that the captain in charge
here assisted by a capable
staff of workers, are doing
ifuch to alleviate the sufering
of the poor.
I think that the best wav
for all transients to show thdr
appreciation of the generosity
of this city I* to "clear but"
as soon »s the weather per-
mits, so the charitable funds
will not be depleted when the
next cold wave comew.
Of course if you think this
letter would give the city un-
favorable publicity by attract-
ing other transients here, do
not publish it.. But In some
' way exnress our appreciation
to the public,
ROBERT ALLISON
'To have appreciation of art
is to have immeasurable
wealth."—Otto H. kahn.
that, however, is protection
.against the violent, or unnat-
ural causes of death or phys-
ical Injury which have come
to beset them on every hand.
While many of these causes
are mechanical in .their na-
ture, and can only be reme-
died by mechanical means,
quite a few of them rest on |
our apparent niability to en- 1
force the law.
A wealthy Chinese of New-
ark, N. J., has just received-
"the flower of death" from
his tong.
Tho a policeman has been
kill their young when the nest
is disturbed?
A. There hnve beep » ASes ‘repor’ted
w here a mother rhbblt hat kiiled her
new horn young heenuse they were
disturhe This it alto true of some
cats ar4 sheep, thi thru jenlouny of
other instinet, ill tow I, and |:lll tht
fondied animalA
Hn. van not exclusivly * chemica! trlumph. ’
Yet it is doubtful If It could have circumnavi-
gated the globe without the help of various
obscure persons In laboratories and plants.
"These obscure persdns fuel it with ethane
derived from natural gas for Its first return
trip to Germany from America. Later, when
the Gref Zeppelin set out from Tokyo for its
tramspacific flight. its fuel bunkers contained
pyrofax mixed with hydrogen: the last leg of
the journey was made with a mixture of pyro-
fax and natural gas
"Nor was Edison's electric light- entirely t
chemtcat dream come true. Nevertheless, s,
.great deal of chemistry seemed to have inex-
tricably merged into its history by the time
Henry Ford staged Its 50th anniversary for his
old friend, and brought Einstein Into a million
American homes thru a barrage, of Intercon-
tinental ststfc In the first International broad-
cast of its kind."
Fhe—ournal -also states that there was an
increase in chemical imports and exports In
1929.
"Organized effort to promote safety In the
chemical industry produced constructive re:
suite," the survey continues. “Significant ad-
vances were made in the development of proc:
esses and equipment and In the utilization of
GHELBY baa this to »ay In ; • • • '
P regard to my hit concern- ' THE World Court, whose pro
ing T. A. Dorgan • (Tad i: "To- | , 1 toco lx were recently Signed
nT * ’ am glad ’.“"h poke about hy this country and probably
Tao. He was a fine examne . t ..
of one who 'carries on.' de- "ill -be ratified by the Senat.
spite the handicap ' under sits as a judicial body tn pure "
given the human baby 3 bet-
ter chance to grow up than
centers to the detriment of the rest of the
country which the Reserve System was de.
signed to prevent The final, ctash menaced
the country ' economic structure.
An interesting aspect, of the dificults was
the wide disagreement among bonkers, econo-.
The power company applies
for a court injunction to for-
bid him from publishing ar-
ticles of "an tnflamnatory
character."
The Judge to whom the ap-
plication was made, says that,
tho curts have the right to te-
sue tuch an injunction, the
facts in this particular case
life's ocean by the high-
surging waves of adversity, all
the while realizing the ever-
ember et Unite Prate, Hertpps-Howarg Newopaper Aillance, New
Newepaper Intormatton Serviee2 an4 Audit Burenu i
IHE womes and chdfen al
- waya come last!
V
£ , ■ - ■ ’ '
-------------
hold consumption to soine extent dur-
- PrrtA< ah earb ••
• • •
lighted window, the palace
Q. Was coal used in Eng-
land during the early Anglo-
Saxon period?
A. Coal was an article t>f ho ve-
Life
rpHE twv greatest achievements Of 1929 in
I the field of bio-chemistry, the branch of
chenistry dealing with life processes, were the
isolation of a poteoneus. sugar produced by the
tubercle bacillus, and the synthesis of the
respiration ferment.
The poisonous or toxic sugar l» known a«
polysaccharide. T was isolated by Doctors
Mr. Mellon’s Human
SECRETAWY of Treasury
• Mellon Indorses the idea of
transferring the Job of enforc-
ing prohibition from his
shoulders to those of the De-
pariroent 6r"Justice.
So would anyone else in
Mr. Mellon's place.
Law enforcement not only
with regard to prohibition, but
with regard to most everything
else, has become a rather
thankless task In these days
ofsuper-regulation on the
one hand, and popular resist-
ance on the other. It prob-
ably suffers from nothing so
distinctly ss the fact that
nobody, who can get out.of it,
wants to assume it.
As’ law enforcement faite,
the cry for-security iocreases,
'and with good reason
Tho it is true that we have
I international obligations.. Ln-
der Article X. members are
guaranteed against aggresslon
and undertake to protect
against external aggression the
I territorial integrity and-existing
political independence of all
re-
gscuurs - no W ABU NEMBfArKH)
I Dally (saBMH Bunday by Th* Port Worth Prena Pubitahing Co,,
treete. Pert Worth. Texan. Price. By mill. In Texan, BOo month)
—■ >■.. —
Tracy
------------SAVA__
Tho we have more
courts than ever before,
more peace officers with
yuns in their hands,
more taxes to maintain
the judicial system, there
never was a time when
average people felt so in-
secure.. in the face of
threats, thugs and rack-
eteers.
'pdiiniG to London wltb the"
V idea that .the Anglo-Ameri-
can alltunce had not only been
established, but that It repre-
sented the greatest threat to
Franca. Andre Tardieu finds
himself permitted to act as
peacemaker between Ramsay
MacDonald and Henry L. Stim-
new local anesthetic, ethyocaine borate, the
___'.lie. 'tuvlene oxide as a fumigant and the
discovery of the feasibility of substituting n>»
•odium salt of malic acid ter ordinary salt tn
the die’ of people suffering from high blood
pressure, dropsy or Bright's disease;
Advances in other ftelde of chemistry in-
eluded the evolution of * self-extinguishing
eigaret end s fireproof match at the 11. S.
Burca} of Standards, the journal rtates
bla so there. It arbitrates in
.cases involving such problems an
boundaries, fisheries and debts. I
It is overshadowed, of course,
by the new World Court.
One method of preserving
peace is in the use of interna-
tional commissions b e t w e e n
countries with-unguarded boun-
daries. Our treaty with Can- .
ada. the star example, created
, a commission which has settled
innumerable boundary dispute’
The Women's International
League for Peace and Freedom,
operating here. is strongly advo-
cating a similar treaty between
the United States and Mexico.
Q. Doea the chief of the
United (8tates Army Nurses
Corps hold military rank? •
A . Juli Stimnon. ie Chlet ».f the
••J Nuraw Corpt, hold: ihe link .it
Mijul ‘
life, in aiding aviation, in re-
voting-old coneepte, in build- -
ing up industry at home and
~ qaz/ abroad. In developing for
v American men of science a
N N"K world-wide systm of ab
\, \ stracring chemical literature,
L \M. In effecting industrial co-op-
NV '-ration, and in the advance-
-M ment of industrial chemistry
DAVID UlETZ ‘and chemical engineering,
1929 mirrors a long list of conquests," says a
ments of the Brittsh government.
“ The tssue ts-not mere- Itmttatton; or a brief -
building holiday, on a basis of the stAtus quo.
Much a postponement of the issue could have
hern achieved with greater speed and much
less friction by a simple exchange of diplo-
matic notes if that is al! the conference
achieves, it will he a failure.
President Hoover has stated repeatedly i
rince entering the White House that the !
American government and people demand re-
duntion. We regret that Secretary Stimson
in his opening address at London did not em-
phasize thik test issue as the President has
done. In tha opening session it remained for
the Italian and the Japanese.* to insist on the
distinction between mere limitation and actual
reduction
Just, as the high mark of the pre -confer- _
enee negotiations was the Hoover pledge that
armaments cannot be cut too low to suit the
T’nited States, so the high point in the in-
augural session of the conference was Japan's
declaration thst rhe is ready to go "the limit
in naval disarmament."
Limitation is not enough There must be
reduction. ,
They could find out if they
wanted to and If they can
force one to pay they should
have a law to force everybody
to. All I want is fair treat:
ment but wher, ft 1i so ~trrrd—
for me to keep my children
tomething to eat (nd clothes to
keep them warm and then my
neighbor next do'or making
more than twice what I make
and never pays one nickel
I
Q. What is the average
weight of a polar and a black
bear, at birth?
A. The polar bear weight from ill
to 20 ouncen and the black bear from
12 to id ounejs.
contact between them; no Im
plication of any entanglement I
of Ilves They drift in and
they drift out. And some
nizht they drift in again. . I
They travel alone. Tragic-
ally alone. Like cows break-
| ly international disputes. Its
j stroogesl feature is an optional
' clause thru which nations agree
to accept its decisions ax com-
pulsory once thev hava submit-
ted disputes to it. Forty-two
nations have accovted '
1 clause, including Engl nd.
n, GILBEAT SWAX
VIEW YORK.—On a told
-) night, the line begins to
form about shdwn. But It is
celved this a. m. from Shelby ! members The League council
Powers . . . one of the guys , I* to decide, what contributions
who sent me a Jews harp; In' ' of fore« should be made byotl- .
(act, Shelby sent me two uv er members against oD• tonsid
'em. ' ‘ ered to hrve committed an art
• • •’ of war.
Q. When was Horatio Alger
born, and when did he die? Are
many of his books In print?
A. Moral tn Atger tived from 1832
to 1*00 Of his runny books one hun-
dred and six rrt •Uh nubitshe.
• • • N
Q. How long does the night-
blooming Cereus remain open?
A. The bloom uaunlly opens , about
8 o’elock in the evening and closes -
about 2 o’clock In the naorning.
GOTHAM ISN’T ALL SPLENDOR
a........... — —----------------
which tells the story of the
newcomer—the first timer;
Most of the men are just burns
- ambittonless, shifting, with-
out desires, seemingly without
senses They do not even
communicate with one anoth-
er. There is, rather, a stolid,
indivldualistic desire to get
there first and get a bed Let
the other fellow look after
with faces buried in hands and
arms flung across table tops.
The rest must’crowd togeth-
er in a chaos of stenching.
filthy bodies.
11 is not a pretty picture
It is one phase of the great
city in Us more hopeless and
terrible aspects. Eleven hun-
dred humans could make the
other industries to discov-
cries in the theoretical realih
of atomic structure.
"In prolonging human
:rhe!L the principles ol
0
1
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Sorrells, John H. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 97, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 23, 1930, newspaper, January 23, 1930; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1638644/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.