The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 26, Ed. 1 Monday, November 2, 1936 Page: 4 of 14
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2. 1936
PAGE 4 —EDITORIAL
The Fort Worth Press.
A SCRIPPS-NOWARD NEWSPAPER
DON E. WEAVER..........~.........Keillor
JAMES F. POLLOCK Business Manager
Entered as second class mail matter at the Post-
office at Fort Worth, Texas, Oct 1, 1921, under
act of March 3, 1879,
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MONDAY, NOV. 2 1946
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By carrier per week 10c or. 40c per month. Single
copy at newsstands and from newsboys, 3 By
man in Texas M per year: 17 per year elsewhere
3 . "IHve Light and the People oo
Will Find Their Own Way."
Another Shipping Strike
CHE Pacific Coast ports again have
1 become an industrial battleground
as the result of a long-threatened
Want Ad Service—Call 2-5151
THE FORT WORTH PRESS
TI. 1 TL Kansas For Roosevelt;
Hugh Johnson Says: It Knows Landon.
(KLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Nov. 2.
U Kansas is for Roosevelt. I bet"
50 bucks on it even in “Arkcity." I
saw the last minute confidential esti
mate of both parties,
and, except for' the
sizes of the majorities,
they agree on results
event to congression-
al districts. The Dem-
ocratica figures show
Roosevelt by . 15,000,
the Republican fig-
ures Roosevelt by
2000.
Some ol the reasons
: given by old-time Re-
■ publicans for ditching MrJonnson
I Landon were astonish-
- ing. The one this correspondent heard
I most frequently might be expected in
I an Eastern seaboard state, but it sur-
| prised me in Kansas.
"We know Alf. The state is full of
Alfs ‘average: little fellers’ swho do
pretty well with little things and are
all right as far as they go.
"But the world looks like a big war,
’ labor opposes him almost to a man,
• and witterly. Farmers are not for him.
They are not satisfied with all the New
Deal has done and they want to know
what's coming next.
But they know it was the crowd now
around Landon that kept them in the
dog house for 12 years, and that they
never asked Roosevelt tor anything that
he did not try to get for them. They
won’t go back to what, out here, is
called Hooverism :
Kansas business is for Landon, but
not in any such overwhelming majori-
ties as I found elsewhere, and some
businessmen are bitterly opposed to
him.
Nowhere: have
found' so much
rough-stuff with employes. From the
security tax racket up to outright
threats that if Landon is not elected
payrolls will be cut or plants closed.
The strong-arm stuff is without par-
allel.
or, if not a war, then Fascism, Com-
strike of 37,000 maritime and water- munism or some- other ism we don't
front workers. - .
.It is prayerfully to be hoped that
A CIRCULAR was distributed to ev-
A eryfront porch the morning I
i got to Wichita. .It was from the wom-
en’s division of the National Republic-
an Committee, and was headed, “Hid-
%
Want Ad Service—Call 2-5151
Who Says An Elephant Never Forgets?
‘I INTEND TO APPROACH THE ISSUES
FAIRLY, ASI SEE THEM, WiTHour RANCOR OR
PASSION. IF WE ARE TO GO FORWARD PERMANENTLY.
IT MUST ee WITH A UNITED NATION- NOT WITH
A PEOPLE TORN BY APPEALS TO PREJUDICE
AND DIVIDED BY CLASS FEELING.”
ALFRED M. LANOON
JULY 23J936
RULE
RU
ONDAY
AC K
C
Y
Broun
Landon’s Interest In
Labor Is Far From
Being Convincing
By HEYWOOD BROUN
THERE are few statements
1 which irritate me more thar i
"Why Governor Landon is friend
ly to, labor.": It’s like saying that
somebody is fond of dogs and
babies. Indeed, I really believe
that the Kansan's concern for the
worker is just about completed by
the time he has shaken hands
with the engineer. .
| er In the last couple of days All
has developed sudden passion for 1
j collective bar-
| gaining. He ds
| going to see
that the laws
on the subject
are strictly en-
forced. 1
of
he
this conflict will be brief and bloodless.
The costly strike of 1934 with its cli-
max of a four-day general strike calls
for no encore, particularly when sea-
borne commerce is prospering as at no
time in years. That strike cost the j
eoast millions of dollars, eight lives and
an aftermath of fears and hates that
affected the entire populace.
" We will not try to analyze the issues.
Both the workers and ship owners have
loudly voiced their grievances, and
each group doubtless has some right on
its side. But speaking for the public,
which always innocently suffers from
a tie-up of commerce, we feel that this
new strike is eloquent in its demand for
some constructive legislation by the
next Congress. ....
know anything about.. Alf just isn't I den Taxes. It exhorted the defeat of
Roosevelt to get rid of those taxes. It
man enough for the job. We would
be afraid to have him in there. He
would get pulled around and the first
thing we knew we would"be in it.
“Take this Communism stuff. It s
a hungry stomach that makes Com-
1 munism. • It’s a feeling that the gov
ernment doesn’t care anything about
the troubles of the plain people that
makes plain people chuck it. Alf has
gone harrd-boiled. We never did like-
the big money and the big business
crowd, and now he’s gone over to them.
MTAIE had. some pretty ugly times
VV out here in the depression, and
if there is any Communism coming, we
think the Roosevelt way of handling
distressed people is more apt to side- *
track it than what Alf believes and
what Alf would do. Maybe we know.
Ships and docks under the American
flag lack even the simplest machinery r , ,,
,9, 1 1 - Alf too well,
for mediation. When trouble threat- ., . , ,
‘A prophet is not without honor save
in his own country. No proverb was
better exemplified. Kansas is against
Landon because it knows him. Karimis
ens, some makeshift mediation mechan-
ism is hurriedly improvised, and if that
fails the President is called upon to RD
tervene. In the present trouble Pres-
ident Roosevelt dispatched an assistant
secretary of labor and a representative
of the new Maritime Commission,
which lacks general mediatory powers.
The wonder is not that these men fail-
ed but that they were able to postpone
a showdown by a series of truces.
Contrast this industrial unprepared-
pension. Holders of all sorts of mu-
nicipal and state licenses are number- |
ed. Every insurance policy has a .
number, and that is just what the
insured worker will get under the
I social security act. How else could
ness with what the government has 1
done in the rail transport industry. |
Congress set up in Washington the
. », National Mediation Board, a perma-
nent and expertly manned organization
for mediating disputes, and in Chicago
the National Railroad Adjustment
Board for adjusting grievances. .These
bodies were created on the foundation
of 45 years of experience and experi-
mentation. Since they have begun
functioning there has not occurred one
major railroad strike. The shipping
■ industry, on the other hand, has floun-
dered through years of strife.
The new Congress should create a
maritime mediation service ss able, per-
manent and expert as the railway
bpards. Strikes cannot always be pre- -
vented. But they can be reduced to a
minimum with wise and understanding
guidance of this sort.
the records of 25,000,000 insurance
policies be kept?
The One Fair Answer
TN the hour of our worst depression
1 we prayed for a leader. We got one.. |
We cried for recovery, it came. How 1
do we reward the leader? Do we turn
him out?
Of all the multitude of issues and
charges and countercharges that we
have been reading about and listening ■
to in all these many months, that ques-
tion, it seems to us, is the central one.
Deep in the American spirit runs a
strong current of fairness. We believe
that there is but one fair answer... It
is vote for Roosevelt.
c ours e,
slides by ....
fact that until
the Supreme
Court passes
on the Wagner-
. Connery Act
after election it
will not be
known whether
the
FEW CH
EXPECT
IN PAS
Methodist (
Prepare
Houston
showed pictures of almost every article
of food and household use, its price,
and, in red ink under each item, "Hid-
den tax a. apart of price cents."
Figuring on the percentage shows
that this circular assumed a 2 per cent
sales .tax. Now there is no-sales tax
in Wichita. The whole circular was
false in that. But its history was ob-
vious. It had been prepared for some
state that did have a 2 per cent sales
tax. Even as to such a estate it would
have been false, because neither the
federal government nor the New Deal
have anything to do with state, sales
taxes, and the federal government has
no such tax on plain food and clothing,
it was just a deliberate last-minute lie.
The Republicans are shooting the
works, and honesty and fairness are
out the window. But it is too late. It
is all ove r but the shouting not only
in Kansas but in the whole country.
As we said before, Landon may carry
four states.
Traitor to Her Sex
By MitS. WALTER FERGUSON
“T DO so much prefer the society of
1, men to that of women," said one
of our pseudo-intellectual ladies. "I find,
their conversation more stimulating:
they are not occupied
with the petty' details
of life. Really, if the
truth were known,
women in general bore
me."
Her expression was
as self-satisfied as
that of a newly ap-
pointed officeholder.
The other women in
the group made no
attempt to argue with
her; they accepted the
Mrs. Ferguson
insult as. if it had
The passengers don’t lynch the cap- ,
tain who brought them through the been .A compliment; most of them, nod.
- ding approval
storm.
| .
COMMUNIST,
_....... WHAT OUR READ EKS BAY
Casa Manana’s Success Indicates Comeback of Stage
Conservation or Conversation
PE campaign of 1936 has developed
i- I nothing more remarkable than Gif-
ford Pinchot's espousal of Governor
Landon on the conservation issue. Pin-
chot’s preference for a Republican
might have been explained on other
I , grounds but when he starts talking
I conservation it's enough to make the
. most seasoned campaigner’s head whirl.
: On the one side a man who pre-
, serves deep official silence on the
subject and whose record ss governor
contains nothing to inspire confidence
in his treatment of natural resources;
on the other side a man who has gone
* further than any other President of the
[ , United States to preserve and restore
forests, to put water resources to use-
full work, to prevent floods, to check
erosion. And a • man who has been
known for 30 years as a conserva-
tionist enlists behind the banner of the
former,
. It's enough to make one pause and
consider whether it might not have
bden conservation of the political for-
tunes of Pinchot that Pinchot has been
interested in all these years.
New Pipe Dream
CERALD L. K. SMITH,, who some-
U how seems to have the right to put
“Reverend’’ before his name, has cre.
Our pseudo-intellectual lady and
there are many of Her kind is quite
certain tins attitude marks her as a
ated for himself
superior person. She is. proud of her
“masculine mind,” whatever that-may
..be.* .
* gundy new pipe 1 What she doesn’t know. pool thing.
Is that every word she utters expresses
her inferior feelings. . Actually she is
conscious of some Alack within herself;
other wise she would not alwa’y s be call-
dream. :.......
According to his own statement, he
is looking for 10,000,000 good and-true
Americans who will permit him to or-
ganize them into a militant band to
protect the United States from an in-
ternational plot to collectivize, it. Once
this outfit jells, Mr. Smith will be ready
to take over the direction of American
life.
One could grow shocked and Indig-
nant over this monstrous scheme if
one felt that there were even the re-
motest outside chance that Ml. Smith
could evor-actually do anything of the
sort. But as things are, about the
only answer one need give is the sort
your small son makes when he is quar-
relling with a playmate.
You know stand erect, inflate the
chest, stick out the tongue, compress
the lips, and blow hard.
; Pinchot says Landon told him he
was for conservation. It reminds us
of the way Secretary Ickes summed
the situation up several days ago. “As
a conservationist," he said, "the gov-
ernor is a good conversationalist.’
, At any rate the Progressive Na-
tional Committee, composed of men
who have fought for and with Pinchot
in many a conservation battle, has
hastened to repudiate him in this one.
‘Like a Convict’
"YOU will be forced to take s num-
I her like any, convict," Republi-
can committees warn working men.
“and have all information concerning
your work, wages, etc., go into * so-
cial security card file."
Of course. Every income-tax pay-
er has a number, and must tell Uncle
Sam all about his earnings. Every
auto has a number, and in most states
every-driver has a number on his op-
erator's license.
Every soldier is numbered, so Is
•vary veteran who receives any form of
Editor, The Press:
DILLY ROSE, the greatest
showman of modern times, _
has decided to extend, the Casa
Manana Revue another two
weeks. Of the specialty acts,
only Paul Remos and his sensa-
tional midgets remain. Lately,
owing to inclement weather, the
show was put on in the Jumbo
Building, and the very rafters
shook from the terrific applause
of overjoyed spectators.
Six thousand iash customers
nightly at the Casa Manana can-
not be wrong
Billy Rose has rightly earned
the everlasting gratitude- of the
thousands of people who flock-
ed to Fort Worth from every
part of the globe to see his
stupendous, dazzling revue, and
no wonder! The audience re-
ceived best entertainment for
their money ever given on any
stage, bar none Why, any of
the headliners in the show, alone,
was easily worth the price of
admission
in all my life, I have never
seen anything like it. . It is the
miracle of the century. On cold,
chilly nights, when the tempera-
ture was below 50, this huge
open-air cafe theater was filled
to < apacity for both shows.
When the Casa Manana Revue
opens in New York next spring,
it will cater to millions at 310
tope.
Right here I wish to announce
to all anil sundry crepehangers
that vaudeville is surely and
positively coming back into its
own. - . .
The public is bored and tired
grain and have it in full swing
and workable in four years. That
is gospel. Eight years is only
— a short time for a national pro-
gram to he in its best form.
So I say elect Roosevelt and
complete the recovery that has
, been started and gaining ground
so fast.
THOMAS O. CHAPMAN,
3431 Darcy St., City.
PROPHESY SEES
GARNER IN POW ER
Editor, The Press:
THE following forecast is in
1 line "with cithers made from
1912 to 1918. Those former fore-
casts were of cyclones.
Not many days, thereafter the
judgment promised Adam in the
beginning swept across the briny
deep into the U.S.A., but not un-
til after the head of Mammon
had been transferred from Eng-
Gand to this republic, by which
this became the head nation of
the-world
The predicted cyclones of evil
followed the nation, including
_the Hoover reign. 5
Under new scientific light,
yet in its incadesceht state,
Bethel reads the prophecies as
follows: President Roosevelt will
be re-elected. He will be fol-
lowed by John Nance Garner of
the Lone Star State. Garner
runs Into the lap-over period
between the government of man
and the kingdom of God which
is to follow it
The-Constitution, like the Sab-
bath, was made for man and
| not man for it BETHEL.
by the "quickies" pouring out |
of Hollywood. It wants flesh j
shows and vaudeville..
' Shortsighted managers had
better come to Billyroseville and
take notice.
1 EUGENE ACZEL,
ing attention to her attainments. I Fort Worth.
Now, any man who prefers women 4
to men friends is generally regarded
as abnormal, a sissy, or a plain nut.
The psychologists have a word for I
what ails him. Is there any reason to
' think him more of an oddity than the
woman who suffers from a similar
complex” Obviously, no.
For there is something gravely awry
in one who finds her own sex unendul-
able. She's unbalanced emotionally.
Carried too far, her attitude succeeds
His Own Size?
LIOR the second time in a fortnight
P Candidate Landon has taken on the
President’s son, Jimmy, for a fight. The
only in antagonizing her friends of
both sexes. Women secretly resent
constant disparagement, and men never
admire the person who is traitor to her
kind. ■
Absurd and Unfair
(From The Houston Press)
T/E-wonder what the proponents of
VV the constitutional amendment to
first related to Nimmy’s views' on s . Gnu * W
1 41n . limit the cities representation in the
possible new NRA in the future; the 1
second to Jimmy’s views on Kansas
schools..
It is respectfully suggested that it
is the elder Roosevelt whom Candidate
Landon has challenged, The public
would prefer that he enter the big
ring and take on the champion him-
self, Otherwise the people may come
to think the governor has chosen, in
Jimmy, to fight a fellow of his own
size.---_------:--:____________________
On Patriotism
“TIE do only a part of our duty to
VV America when we glory in the
great past. Patriotism that stops with
that is a too-easy patriotism a pa-
triotism out of step with the patriots.
For each generation the more patriotic
part is to carry forward American
freedom and American peace by mak-
ing them living facts in a living pres-
ent."- President Roosevelt, in a speech
rededicating the Statue of Liberty
Legislature would think if the national
Congress would pass a law limiting
Texas to 21 representatives until the
state has 12,000,000 people.
They would fight it as long and
hard as they could, we are sure.
Yet that is exactly what they are
trying to do to the large cities of
Texas. They offer us a limit of seven
| representatives until a county reaches
700,000 people, Then we can have one
more for each 100,000 population.
The absurdity of the amendment
I can be illustrated by an improbable
but perfectly possible example.
Suppose there should be no increase
In Texas' population next year but that
| there should be a shifting of a million
people from the small towns and farms
into Houston, San Antonio and Dallas.
The three big cities would then
have 2,000,000 inhabitants and 21 rep-
resentatives in the Legislature, or one-
third the population and one-sixththe
representation.
LANDON CAN’T FULFIL
PROMISES It ELEC TED
Editor, The Press:
| listened to the speech made i
1 in Pittsburgh by Landon. |
Any high school student could
CAN ADIAN “BABY
DERRY" CRITICIZED
Editor, The Press:
A HALF million-dollar purse
A awaits the Canadian wom-
an who gave birth to the largest
number of babies by’Oct. 31.
This stork marathon started
ten years ago, encouraged by
the will of a Toronto sports-
man. He no doubt believed that
there was a shortage of babies,
and thus bequeathed this liberal
donation to the oposite sex to
have done as well He quoted I
SIDE GLANCES
a lot of truth. The Democratic
Party made a mistake to have
Parley as the Postmaster Gener-
al. Yet Landon made promises
he cannot keep and remain in
favor with the Republican party.
The spoils system is as old
as the world. Such is necessary.
To the victor go the spoils. The
Republican party and Landon
are no. exception to the rules.
Every available job will be giv-
en to worthy Republicans if
Landon is elected. He may be-
lieve in Lie merit aysten yet, to
hold on to his job along the path
of least resistance, lie will give
away to the spoils-system as all
presidents who have preceded,
him have done. /
If elected he will give to the
unemployed rolls some one mil-
lion people who now have jobs.
He said as much in his speech.
The people of the United States
are a bunch of suckers if they
elect such a man, at this time
anyway Landon himself can-
not if elected complete a pro-
This Is Life
BY JACK MAXWELL
WHEN a guy is going up, he
VV he should endeavor not to be-
come high-hat, if 1 must resort to
the vernacular of the street. And,
here's why: If and when a fellow
reaches the topmost rung of the
ladder of high finance, his or her
foot might slip and, on the down-
ward trip he will have to pass
some of the guys he passed while
on the upward climb. So.awhether
going up or down, let's try to be
just s regular guy. It will make
it a bit more easy when we start
down, if you get my drift.
encourage them to multiply.
Regardless of what his motive
was, it seems to have brought
‘ about a condition whereby more
children have been born in Can-
ada than otherwise.
Gold and publicity offered in
this "man-ordered" contest can
never pay the real price for
such a noble deed. Child bear-
ing is a duty which women have
been divinely authorized to do.
Not for wealth, but for replen-
ishing the earth and for the
glorification of God.
It's a piteous age when moth-
ers rob childbirth of its sacred-
ness and enter such into world-
ly competition for gold. No mat-
ter how many babies are added .
to one union. God is well able
to provide for all.
‘ Our hearts are in sympathy
with the expectant mother,-lying
near death, stricken with "de-
bilitation" trying to compete in
this maddening craze. Blessed
are mothers who refused to en-
ter this contest, thus keeping
the integrity of motherhood.
More blessed are they who obe-
diently perform their duties be-
cause they are women and be-
cause of the love and faith they
possess In God and Man
HATTIE M CROOMS.
915% Calhoun St., City.
THE BALD EAGLES
By S lent e Service,
Bald eagles, proud liberty-
symbols of America, are usually
assigned to homes in the loftiest
mountains by patriotic orators.
Actually, they are more numer-
ous along the seacoast.
There are more of these great
white-headed birds in south—
eastern Florida than in any
other single region Another
highly favored habitat is the
low country around Chesapeake
Bay, on both the Maryland and
Virginia shores.
Bald eagles are being very
hardly-treated by feather hunt-
ers in the Northwest, and by
casual wanton shooters every-
where, so that in many places
the species has vanished.
. By George Clark
there is any Mr. Broun
Federal legislation to speak of on
the subject. And even the Wag-
ner Act hardly seems- operative ■
save in a very limited number of
industries engaged in interstate B
commerce.
Of late the court has been ex-
tremely dogmatic in its decision B
as to what constitutes interstate "
commerce. If anybody sets a bale B
or a beam down for so much as a h
second the flow of commerce has
been interrupted and we areaback 3
in the jungle of States rights all ■
■ over again.
• * •.
INCIDENTALLY, one curious"
A thing about the Republican t
campaign has been the manner in 1
which it has attacked the Amer-
ican form of government and 1
sought to bring it into disrepute 9
I know that there have been many I
speeches by Landon and his as-■
sociates about the sanctity of the ■
Supreme Court, but the legislative 7,
branch of the government is also
part of the fundamental structure.
and it has come in for a beating.
Take, for instance, the last min-s
ute drive against the Social Se-B
curity Act. Republican spellbind-
ers are falling over one another
to point out that the disburse-#’
ment of funds will need enabling
legislation on the part of the Con-II
gress.
The argument of the Republi-7
cans runs that Congress cannot
be trusted to deal honestly with a
the funds raised by employers’
and employes' contributions. Con^H
gress, so the Republican spokes-yt
men state, is likely to steal the"
money and use it for other pur-.”,
poses, cheating the worker out of.
his rights.
Now, I will admit that there *
have been Congresses which seem-yo
rd to me pretty crumby. Ther^B
will be others. But if we are
accept the Republican contention,
that the legislative branch of the”
American government is almostip.
certain to be corrupt, we have"
gone a long way on the road to"
some one of those “isms" of which
the Landonites are always speak-
ing.
TOW can anybody argue thath
1 democracy is a good thing and
at the same time maintain that
the men the voters send to Con J
gress are almost certain to be un-t
faithful to their trust? After all,
I don't suppose that even Alf M.
Landon wants to abolish the up-
per and lower houses and place
the whole fate of the United States
in the hands of the Supreme Court
without any assisting agency.
When people say that it is pop-
pycock and gross exaggeration to
talk of Fascist tendencies under
the cloak of the Republican party
they overlook the fact that the
present drive of Landon, Hamil-
ton, Knox, et ally against Con-
gress is precisely in the tradition
of Hitler and of Mussolini.
'Germans and Italians lost their
liberties because they listened to
those who told them that they
were not fit to choose their own
renri-entatives ‘and must make
the elves the wards of a higher
paternalism.
HOMES AND HEALTH
By Science Service
The United States lags far
behind European countries In
providing sanitary, healthy
homes for low income families.
Prof. C. E. A. Winslow, pro-
fessor of public health at Yale
University School of Medicine,
told members of the American
Public Health Association.
Endless statistics, he said,
show the relation between bad
housing and high death rates
Especially significant are the
studies in Liverpool, England,
which showed that better hom-
ing was associated with lower
death rates for infants and for
tuberculosis and all causes.
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY
Seest thou how faith wrought
with his works, and by works was
faith made perfect.—James 2:22.
Faith is the root of all good
works; a root that produces noth-
ing is dead.—Bishop Wilson.
Today’s Poem
“We haven’t a tree on our place and I think a lawyer can
prove that the neighbors are legally responsible for these
leaves.” - .
COTTONHEAD
Cottonhead was a little boy:
His hair was white ... so white!
But Cottonhead had lots of joy
As he played with all his might.
Cottonhead grew and grew.
Till he was a man quite tall.
And, do you know, it’s very true,
His hair wasn t white at all.
For Cottonhead of yesteryear.
Who danced to the song of
spring.
Had walked far on life's wind,
ing »ay .. .
Then his hair was white again!
—By William Allen Ward
Dallas, Texas.
of the 28 pal
■ Worth District
Episcopal Chun
expected for
The pastors ■
prepared to leal
ton to attend 1
of the Central
The Houston
joint session
ference of the 1
Church, with 1
ferences of
copal Church.I
It will be th
ing of the
branches since
arated in 1844
The only
Worth districts
lam was the
cessor to Rev.
Transferred fi
Methodist Chip
as presiding •
The only pay
• ho has serve
years as paste
Rev. J. A. V
Methodist Chip
after four years
pulsory. 5
Rev John 1
pleted his this
nic Methodise
those who ha
are Rev. J. I
- Methodist, and
of Central ME
Riley is round
as . presiding-H
The Central
of which Ford
will be presine
H. A Boaz B
has called a s
inet, which in
ing elders off
9 a. m. tomoi
isters for 1939
will not be a
CHILD RI
PLAC
Girl. 13,
Chanc
By United Pre
NEW YOI
past two moi
13, of Spr
traveled. 500
tor car and
shows so sl
competition :
Show in Ma
Nov. 4-10, 1
Vera will
tors for the 1
ed to the per
hibits the be
eight jumps
the trophy
Maclay, thr
goes also re
lion's outsts
the year. - 1
Earlier th
qualified for
at the Gard
class, in whi
judged for J
ling saddle ■
ed to jump 1
For pract
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from her hol
and hack 1
coached by 1
specializes 1
tion for ehill
Overca
By WILL
Secretary, J
The bride
listen caref
hide is mis
often would
contract wi
formation. 1
Bidding 1
ing side J
organ
friend as 1
though this
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Open 11
must be
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by Walter
ange, N.
champions
the New T
Opening
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Weaver, Don E. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 26, Ed. 1 Monday, November 2, 1936, newspaper, November 2, 1936; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1672802/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.