The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 171, Ed. 1 Friday, April 18, 1930 Page: 21 of 36
thirty six 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:
ce
ent
shil-
made
eat
aves
tein
bsti-
tter.
than
com-
rally
west
rich-
hese
than
vr
t
nuts
but
t of
, the
■ the
anut
h in
con-
their
anut
salad
utter
otein
its is
y are
ood.
r.
ily in
care-
rfec 1
lar e
r are
ch in
either
h the
s any
1 and
trim -
Id not
th an
Up
:
$3.00
Rx
ide
MILWAUKEE MAN
PLAYS HOST TO
50 CITY'S POOR
Construction Foreman Has
His Own Ideas of
Charitableness
” MLWXOkmm, April 1#.—Guat
Newquist, native of Sweden, la 52,
unmarried, works hard and saves
his monsy. Here’s an example of
what he does with ths monsy he
saves:
Newquist was host to 50 hun-
gry children and their parents
who were hungry also. Hs fur-
nished the food, the place to eat
it, and then rounded up his
guests. He knows where, to find
the hungry folks for when he is
not working at his job as fore-
man for a construction firm he lb
out looking for them.
Every day is Christmas to Gust,
hi* friends will tell you, and will
add that his philanthropies bear
it out. He doesn’t usually at-
tempt to entertain on such a large
scale but 5 or 50 guests are all
the same to him.
“Lots of families In town are
hungry and I just thought I’d give
the kids a dinner," smiled New-
quiet modestly when he was asked
to explain his generosity. "I
guess they liked it,” he added as
he fought to keep his balance
while several laughing children
yanked his coat tails first in one
direction and then another as the
7
20
Short and Snappy
27 28 29
34
38
46
18
4,516
7
9
11
15
24
19
5
30
S
32
33
39 4O 41
44.
47
. HORIZONTAL 30 Citadel.
38 Insensibility.
30 Wrath.
1 Eccentric
wheel.
4 Meat.
7 Pronoun.
6 37
4
45
48
48 Sheltered
place.
VERTICAL
t Fowl.
2 To rectify.
3 Bill of fare.
4 Possessed.
3 Beer.
42 Wan. •
- 43 To eject,
44 Also.
10 Crippled, 43 Melody.
11 Wing part of 46 Devoured.
■ weed. 47 Monetary
party's fun increased.________.
----"Yes sir.—I'mhaving a good 19 Peril,
time," and Newquist grinned
good naturedly.
12 To leave out. unit of Japan. fl Behest.
14 To inclose.
1S Lalr.
16 Polynesian
chestnut.
IT Extra div-
idend.
YESTERDAY’S ANNWER
7 Trumpet.
8 Idol.
9 To match to-
gether.
10 Port of the
brain.
13 Net weight of
a container.
18 Ignominy.
20 Nimble.
28 Incum-rance
21 Conclusion.
22 Hourly
23 Before.
PREHISTORIC HUMAN
BONES ARE LOCATED
Unearthed In North Africa by
American Expedition.------
By Science Service.
BELOIT, Wis., April 18.—Two
fragmentary human skulls, to-
gether with bones of two skele-
ton* of prehistoric man, bars just
been unearthed in Algeria by the
Beloit College-Logan Museum ex-
| pedition under Dr. Alonzo Pond.
Thirteen student workers and
16 Arabs have started excavations
[ at a site 12 kilometers north of
Ain Beida and east of Berriche.
1 Lauriston Sharp and John Gillen,
1 both University of Wisconsin stu-
dents, have come upon parts of
an adult skeleton and the bones
of a child about six years of age.
The bones wers found in an un-
disturbed section of a small heap,
which gives evidence that the in-
dividuals were as old as the de-
posit in which they were found.
Numerous flints and some animal
remains have been uncovered.
Robert Kreiger, a Beloit student,
found a human radtua which had
been used aa a flaking tool.
26 To abolish.
27 Friend.
30 Rhythm.
$1 Striped
cloth.
84 Gets up.
_ of
TTARSISEMEXTCO 24 Rodent.,
OR ARUSSAM 27 Step.
2199316A 28 Smell.
MADORNIMITERE
TRADE STMI
OWTINOTEON BED
ROEL IP END AVE
Slum
007/ Io uiajs [[]»
n'eia u al La
iWlHlIR^ uenuiai:
20 Utmost ex-
tent.
31 Conscious,
32 To misrepre-
sent.
83 Region.
35 To surfeit.
87 Jewel.
40 Eggs of
Ashes.
41 Ers.
SCOTSMEN FEW;
SEEK COP JOBS
Two Glasgow Applicants
Use Same Envelope, <
* Story Holds
By United Press.
LONDON, April 18. — Boy,
page Sherlock Holmes!
Scotland Yard is confronted
with a first-class mystery. This
mystery is> Where are the Scots-
men in Scotland Yard?
Irishmen there are plenty in
Scotland Yard—and they hold
the good positions, too. Welsh-
men? It would seem as tho al-
most every other Scotland Yard-
er is a Welshman. And there is
of course a liberal sprinkling of
Englishmen on the force. But
it takes a fine-tooth, comb to
find the Scotsmen.
However, there 1* one Scots-
man, and a good one, too: Su-
perin tendent Lauder.
The curious part about the
scarcity of Scotsmen in the
i Yard, according to .one old-time
Yarder, is that there are plenty
of enthusiastic ■ policemen and
would-be policemen in Scotland,
but they want to be policemen,
and not detectives. In fact, tak-
ing the police force as a whole
there are probably as many men
from Scotland in it, as from
other districts. .
When police vacancies occurred
recently at Southend applica-
tions were received from all parts
of the country including a num-
ber from Scotland. The two
Scottish applicants from Glas-
gow, so the story goes, used the |
same envelope!
But why It is that Scotsmen
apparently dislike detective work
is a mystery that is yet to be
solved. . 1 1
RADIO AIDS SAFETY
BOSTON The Massachusetts
Governor’s Committee on State
and Highway Safety recently em-
ployed radio in its campaign for
careful, driving. A playlet was
broadcast, in which the jury in a
mock trial convicted a motorist
for travelling at excessive speed
and causing an accident in which
an imaginary child was hurt.
LONG BICYCLE TRL.
LONDON.—Ebernezer Dale, 82,
came to London from Liverpool,
over hill and dale, on a bicycle,
over 200 miles, to live with his
married daughter, Mrs. Henry
Hill.
-----s----------,-------
A North Carolina lawyer has
invented a photograph printing
machine which he claims will
produce 1000 prints an hour.
FO
THIRD CERTIFICATE
IN FOUNDATION GIVEN
Daughter of Journalist in Swit-
zerland Is Recipient
Special to the Press:
AUSTIN, April 18.—The third
certificate in the Foundation for
Child Welfare and Parent Edu-I
REDS IN SPECIAL CELLS
By United Press,
TOKYO. — Fifteen men con-
victed in connection with the so-
I called Communist plots Of March,
| 1928 have been transferred from |
| the Shakai prison to the Taka-
matsu prison for incorrigible crim-
inals. Special single cells have
been built for the reds.
WOMAN PUBLISHER
By United Press.
HOLYOKB. Mass. — Mrs. Wil- 1
liam G. Dwight is believed to be
New England’s only woman editor
and publisher of a daily newspa-
per. She assumed those positions
recently under the will of her late i
husband, founder and for many
years editor-publisher of The Hol- |
yoke Transcript-Telegram.
"Where.
Style
Costs
Less"
Monthly
Charge
Accounts
Invited
STYLE
Never before so many
clever styles and lovely *
colors.
. 507 HOUSTON STREET
Shoes
Ready-to-Wear
Millinery
EASTER SPECIAL
Regent Pump-
Yellow Kid —
Green Kid-
Violet Kid-
Grey Kid-
Pink Kid-
Python—
Calf—
107 Silk Frocks
Selected from our regular stock and priced
for an extra Easter special at—
95
Sizes
12 to 46
Hundreds of Pretty Styles
For Your Selection
$6)85
and
$4.85
Smart Strap-
Black Kid-
Green Kid—
Beige Claire-
( rd
cation at the University of Texas
goes to little Colette Helen Streit,
daughter of ,Clarence K. Streit,
correspondent for the New York
Times at Geneva Switzerland, ac-
cording to Miss Mary E. Gearing,
chairman of the committee to'
organize the Foundation. Colette
Helen’s stock was presented to
her by her aunt, Helen Streit, ;
Instructor in charge of the Nur
sery School at the university.
"When my namesake is old
enough, I know that she will be
very proud to be a founder in
this foundation," Miss Streit said.
“Its work is going to be a great
benefit to all children."
cyans.
Fort Worth's Largest Specealty Shop
Catering to Women and Misses
SALE!
In Georgettes .. . Flat Crepes and Chiffons
...in prints and solid colors. Formerly
priced to $16.75.
1
) 0
> 585
TWC PRICES
( NIY
$485
803 Houston St.
Press Want Ads for Results
SEALED IN STEEL
The Ideal Shoe
for
Easter Sunday
OF
DRESSES
TROUBLE PROOF
and
A graceful pump that comes in materials to com-
plement various types of Spring costumes, both
informal and formal.
Black Kid-
Black Satin-
Priced
$10
Black Patent-
Black Crepe—
(Women’s Shoes—Main Floor)
:t.qtiodn
7
Beautiful flowered and fig-
ured crepes and chiffons...
Plain Crepes, Georgettes,
Satins and Wash Silks.
Dresses with short sleeves, or
long sleeves and new skirt
treatments, Jacket Ensem-
bles, Cape Ensembles, with
pepium and lingerie touches
COATS
SPECIAL
$15
Coats of covert wool
crepe, twill, tweeds
and novelty sports
woolens developed
in tan, brown, blue, '
grey, green and all
the popular spring
shades. •
Thrift Dept.
Third Floor.
SALE
OF' A
98
Values to $5.00
too Hats selected for this one-
day tale . . . in Lace Straw,
Plain Straw, Straw and Felt
Combination. All the new
Spring and Easter colors. All
sizes.
Thrift Department—Third Floor
ENERAL
that even drowned in water
it still runs on
Now Priced as
Low as
*20500
at the factory
W
HO would dare to put a
refrigeratormechanism
to such a test—to sub-
merge it fan water—and expect it
to run?
Whe would dare? Those same
engineers who built a refrigera-
tor mechanism so efficient, so
utterly dependable that they
could ecal it up hermetically with
a permanent oil supply— and
know that it would run faithfully
through the years without a
thought or worry.
They submerged it in water-
and it still ran on. Think of the
significance of such a teat to you!
Dust, dirt, moisture, rust—that
lead to breakdowns and repair
bills—are powerless to halt the
flawless operation of General
Electric mechanism. For in that
small, round casing you see on
top of every General Electric
Refrigerator—the entire mecha-
niam is barricaded with impreg-
nable walls of steel hermetically
sealed! Dust, dirt, moisture and
rust can never get inside.
ELECTRIC
ALL-STEEL REPRIGERATON
roin me in the General Electric Hour, broadcast every Saturday Kooning at 9 o'clock. Eastern Standard
1 Time, over a nation-wide N. B. C. nedork. / ,
REID-BISHOP, Inc.
805 Lamar
(Neil P. Anderson Bldg.) Phone 2-9331
Open Evenings Until 9 o'Clock , ,
Here is a refrigerator that gives
you all the recognized advan-
tages of electric refrigeration-
and a great deal more besides. A
mechanism so efficient that your
electric current bills are cut to
• but a few cents a day. An incredi-
ble quietness of operation theday
you buy—and always. A freezing
regulator that is accessible right
at your finger-tips. A snow while
porcelain-lined cabinet that will
wearlike steel—because it feateel
And the entire mechanism per
manently oiled and hermetically
sealed against trouble
Come in and let us tell you
about our surprisingly easy
terms.
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. 171, Ed. 1 Friday, April 18, 1930, newspaper, April 18, 1930; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1664191/m1/21/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.