The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 38, Ed. 1 Monday, November 16, 1936 Page: 4 of 16
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PAGE 4
-EDITORIAL
Want Ad Service-Call 2-5151
THE FORT WORTH PRESS
Want Ad Service-Call 3-5151
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1936
MONI
The Fort Worth Press
a ACRIPPA-NOWAAD NEWSPAPER
DON E. WEAVER .......... Editor
JAMES r. POLLOCK ,•......Business Manager
Entered as second class mail matter at the Post-
office at Fort Worth, Terne. Oct. 9. 1921, under
art of March 1, 1879.
TELEPHONE EXCHANGE.........DIAL WW
TT 1 w a C More Constructive Atti-
Hugh Johnson Says: tude Is Needed.
Eureka!
sr
wwwnOwn ed and published
" TE daily (except Munday)
1 by The Hart Worth
Press Company, Fifth
- — and: Jonen Sts., rort
259 Worth, Texas.
~e
—Members of Heripps
e "amera Aw* Sa
Press, Newspaper I.
ornterprise Ammo leience
FAHervice, Newspaper In-
A-STEr fortnation Mervice and
MocAudtBureau of Circu
WATin lations
Monday, Nov. 16,. 1926
NEW YORK, Nov. 16. The deluge
I of dividends and the upward surge
of wages and salaries are bound to in-
crease spending and consumption, ac-
celerate the circula-
tion of money, and
keep business hum-
ming upward. ‘
Whatever may be
said of the obvious
faults of the undivid- )
rd profits tax, what- i
ever may be appre- h
hended of the new ■
militancy of labor un- ■
dei John L. Lewis•
to both of these "sin- ■
later" influences, bet-
ter business owes a
Mr. Johnson
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By carrier per week 100 or 4hc per month Single
copy at newsstands and from newsboys, %. By
mail in Texas, 96 per year: $7 per year elsewhere.
bow. There can be no doubt that this
outpouring from the Cornucopia traces
directly to them: How long all of this
' in the last ditch. After taking counsel,
a mellower second-thought already pre-
vails. One of two of the very pundits
have already suggested: "After all, it
is a new and changing world. . We
have contented ourselves with tearing
to tatters. Mr. Roosevelt’s proposals for
meeting it but what have we offered
as a substitute in meeting it? Noth-
ing, and it must be met.”
A° more, constructive state of mind,
a better and more patriotic and co-op-
erative attitude prevails, than has oe-
,-curred at any time since early 1933,
when 98 per cent of industrial employes
signed up with Mr. Roosevelt in the
President’s re-employment agreement.
But something more than a state of
mind is needed. What is needed is
more active and tangible co-operation
hot only as between government and
business, but, also ns between business
Pegler
Roosevelt’s Cousins Are
Entitled to Some
Obscurity
GOLD
| HEAL
PE
"Give Light and the People
Will Una Their Own Way?”
A Year of Repeal
AREXAS has finished ita first year of
I repeal. It finds that repeal, like "
prohibition, like charity, like life itself,
is not perfect.
Cities, counties and the state have
received large revenue from liquor li-
censes. But we also have the drunken
driver to contend with.
We were not to have the open
saloon, or liquor sold by the drink.
Anyone knows that liquor is sold by
the drink. In many establishments in
many localities. 4.
The trouble with analyzing either
prohibition or repeal is the lack of ab-
solute factors.
All drunken driving cannot be
blamed on repeal. We had drunken
drivers under prohibition. Perhaps
there are more now, but there are also
more autos, and people are traveling
more. And all drunken drivers do not
get drunk on liquor. We have had
seversKtragedies in which the driver
admitted he had gotten drunk on beer.
Liquor may be bought by the drink,
but we cannot say that we have the
open saloon in its old inglorious style.
Places ihst do sell drinks in violation
of the law usually are scrupulous in
preserving good order and cleanliness.
The knowledge that they are vulnerable
makes them careful. Perhaps, to look
at it realistically, it is better that way.
Repeal has not banished the boot-
legger, but it has tamed him consid-
erably. Such bootlegging as there is
is on a comparatively small scale. No
longer is it possible to build up on boot-
—legging an under world racket strong
enough to challenge the police and even
government, as we saw them challenged
by the Capone and other mobs.
No, repeal isn't perfect, any more
than human behavior is perfect. Texas
can find a lot of faults with repeal
after trying it a year. But, taking the
human element into consideration, Tex
ns has done about as well as could be
' expected.
Exploded Theory
CIENATOR MKELLAR of Tennes-
D see advocates a Senate in vestiga-
tion of The Literary Digest's presiden-
tial poll. Further, he proposes s law
for strict federal supervision of all fu-
ture straw votes.
It the Senator in merely curious, we
can feel some sympathy with him.
Many a citizen including, possibly,
even the magazine's editors would
like to know why The Digest, after be-
ing so frequently right in the past, was
so dismally wrong this time.
But the Senator Indicates s belief
that the Semite ought to punish the
magazine for having been wrong. And,
will continue is another question, but and labor and within labor itself. This
you can't get away from this; the happy, mellow and inviting interlude
New Deal was dedicated to a wider
inny not last forever. Now is the time
distribution of the fruits of our sys- to make the hay of peace,
tem for the purpose of creating a bet- ]
1
ter domestic market, and it is doing
both at s rapid rate.
It is better to pay out huge earnings
in dividends and wages than to sur-
render them to government in confisca
tory taxes. As a by-product it helps
combat outside labor unions to raise
wages.
DUT Jolin Lewis' activities are re
iJ sponsible, just the same, that so
much of the disbursements went in
wages and bonuses and not more in ,
dividends, I think, from the enlighten
ed selfish viewpoint of management,
that it would have been better if the
proportion paid in increased wages had
been larger and the proportion in in-
creased dividends less. I also think
that Mr Lewis would have done bet
ter to insist on merited credit for the
result than to, criticize it so bitterly.
The criticism could have been merely
that it was not enough.
Be this all as it may, the New Deal is
just now making its greatest progress.
The first reaction to the election
among the most frantic of the Cas-
sandras and Roosevelt haters of the
biggest business till earth was sullen
resentment and a determination to die
i T THINK it is up to business to —
1 make the first move. It "ganged”
• up on the Administration. The Pres-
ident has indicated that the incident is
forgotten and that the latch string is.
out. -
But mere palaver won’t do any good.
No delegations bearing verbal olive
branches and nothing else are going
-to help. Business knows the aims
which have just been so overwhelm-
ingly endorsed. It ought to accept
them as principles and come offer-
ing suggestions for carrying them into
' effect with the least harm'to itself.
George Berry's conference-may on.'
may not help. If George as a con-
ciliator and administrator could be di- 1
voreed from George as a leader of tri-
- umphant labor party politics, there is
none fairer, abler or better but the
- present aura around his pleasant face
is not exactly a harbinger of hope for -
spontaneous co-operation. To- timid
and uncertain Industry he will look a
lot more like Simon Logree than Lit-
the Eva.
Somebody ought to be on the job of
bridging this gap quickly if only in
unobtrusive aid of genial George.
HLDDE
- TAX
*____________c______. WHAT DI K READERS SAY --------
j Let’s Find Out What the Constitution Means, Then Follow It
Editor. The Press:
A MOVE to relieve the Presi- j
A dent of the < harge of dicta
torship.
With the above in mind, the
' following program was suggest
ed to some local Democrats and
they, recommended that I bring
the matter to our Democratic
Club at the next meeting
Today Out-of-Doors
The Seamy Side
Contributions to this col-
unin shouldbe brief, not
more than 250 words Full
name and address of con-
tributors must be given
Anonymous letters will not |
be published.
and the divorced Mrs. Wallie
Simpson:
"And 1 say unto you, whoso-
ever shall put away his wife,
1 except it be for fornication, and
shall marry another, commiteth
adultery; and whoso marrieth
her which is put away doth com-
By MARY DAGGETT LAKE
Director, Garden Center * ■
DOETS sing of the hawthorn lanes
1 of England,-but who will tell us
of the beauty of the Texas hawthorn?
With showy clusters of blossoms lull-
ing against the shrub’s dark green foli-
age, it makes an effective picture. But
the time when it is most glorious is
in the fall of the year when the small,
bright tomato - red, apple-like fruits
ripen. .
The flower is the Missouri states:
flower and the flower emblem of May.
And a garland of hawthorn blossoms
to be worn on a May day can be just
as effective on the heads of Texas girls
as on an English queen. It is useful,
too this gay shrub. Pioneers made
jelly from its fruits, and the wood fur-
nished shuttles for looms. it loves a
rocky hill, and is responsible for many
gasps of admiration from passersby
when it is in full fruit. so bright and
beautiful it is. Red Haw, "Tejocote"
and Mackensen’s Hawthorn, the latter
name honoring a Texas botanist, are
common names of the shrub. Botanical
name Crataegus mackensenti. Fam-
ily: Apple.
Refunding State Bonds
T ICK VAUGHAN, in charge of The
I J Press Austin Bureau, wrote a
aside from the question whether that
would be proper, senatorial punish
ment for The Digest w.....d seem stogy the other day r
alightly superfluous. , sasla wave $2,391,280 in interest
Federal supervision - of • newspaper
and magazine polls, to be sure, might
have interesting possibilities. It
Would provide jobs for a lot of straw
vote commissioners, supervisors and in-
spectors. But the need for it is not
quite apparent.
We suppose Senator McKellar’s the
ory is that publication of straw prim
somehow influences the real voting. But
• that is a theory that The Literary.
Digest, itself, has just exploded quite
thoroughly.
charges because some of the county and
road district bonds in which it partici-
pairs were refunded at lower interest
rates. The saving was made because
the bond houses did the refunding on
their own volition. The state didn’t
do it.
The same thing could be done with
millions of dollars worth of other state
bonds, but the state has made no move
to refund them.
Any one who invests money knows
By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
HIVERYBODY in Oklahoma is proud
I J of George Milburn. He is a na-
tive non who, has become a famous
writer and a mighty good one.
But nobody in Ok-
lahoma is proud of the
people whom George
has selected to present
as representative
small-town Oklahom-
ans.
With the license
which genius so often
permits itself, he has
written mostly about
perverted, detestable
and ignoble individ-
_ uals.
Mrs. Ferguson "Catalogue.” his
current novel, is a swell' piece of writ-
ing, but the editor should have blue-
pencilled it in. spots. The post office
crowd, the arrival of the mail order
books, the shabby subterfuges, the
petty malice, the swinish passions, the
futile, pathetic ambitions all are as
true to life as words can make them
when only half,of a story is told.
George Milburn was raised in a lit-
tle town in the Old Indian Territory.
So was I. Maybe because I happened
to be a girl and of an older genera-
tions, I escaped a great deal of the
smutty, evil sights which are so. fa-
miliar to him. They were there, to be
sure, and in greater numbers than
elsewhere, for the Territory was filled
with renegades from all corners of the
country, weaklings, clodhoppers, fa-
natics and fools..
But the events which live in my mem-
ory about Oklahoma small towns are
not those which have impressed Mr.
Milburn. 1 recall a jad-bellied banker,
but I also remember, and much more
vividly, the face of a gentlewoman who
gave me music lessons. Her stories of
a youth spent in an old Virginia town.
The Court’s Lights
A YEAR AGO the Supreme Court
A of the United States moved into
Its own magnificent white marble tem-
ple on Capitol Bill ftF Washington.
At once it became evident that
something was wrong with the lighting
arrangements In, the Supreme Court
chamber. Numerous experiments have
been made in efforts to correct the
fault and subdue the unfortunate glare.
When the Court convened again the
other Monday, the great velvet curtains
behind the bench had been swathed In
white and only half of the indirect light-
ing fixtures on the celling were turned
on. This arrangement, darkening that
half of the chamber where the public
sits and throwing the justices into
strong relief, is said to be a great im-
provement.
The country will be Interested and
pleased if, finally, the Supreme Court
has adjusted its electric lights satis--
factorily. More interesting, more Im-
portant. will be the Information which
the next few months will disclose as
to how, or whether, the justices have
adjusted I heir mental lights in conform-
ity with the new national spirit which
the recent election unmistakably re-
vealed.
how hard it la to get good securities
that pay 5 per cent interest. Yet Texas, and her migration to alien sod, are
still generously pays this high rate with- among the most moving of life's recol-
out any effort to change it. lections.
The Federal Government long ago I remember a merchant whose, flour
frugally cut its “rate on securities in I bin was never: closed to the hungry
half. . Federal bonds are snapped up and who, being richer than most, gave
at interest rates of 2 to 3 per cent.
Private, corporations, cities and
counties are finding a ready market
for bonds at low rates
Low interest rates save the tax-
payers money. Money saved in debt
service makee the tax burden that
much lighter.
The Press' Mr Vaughan reports
that the Board of County and District
Road Indebtedness has made no sur-
vey to determine what state bonds, may
lie refunded at a saving. This board
is composed of State Highway Engineer
Gilchrist, Comptroller Sherrard and
State Treasurer Lockhary , t.
It is bad business for.the state to
pay high interest if it can- refund part
of its debt at low interest. The three
gentlemen on the board could do the
state an economical service if they
would do it. Why don’t they?
A Canada girl, 15, went for a 400-
mile "stroll.” If th a bit longer than
that taken by our youngster when
sent to the grocery.
0
A.
great feasts of strawberries and ice
cream, when both were rare treats,
with all the villagers as his guests. I
remember a doctor, a learned man, tire-
less to relieve the sick and help the af-
flicted. Beside him is the ghost of an
itinerant priest, the only real saint I
ever knew.
I remember so many splendid people;
men and women building homes out of
nothing, upright Indians; decent
churchmen, honest laborers; sane, sim-
ple-hearted folk without any extraor-
dinary guile. 1 remember the hospital-
ity, the kindness, the generosity of my
neighbors. And I would not trade the
memories of my Oklahoma town for
all the money George will make writ-
ing about his.
RELIGION is suffering mostly from
e s want of men and women who have
| lived it out in their daily lives. Too
much of current religion is an echo, not
a voice: an opinion, not a conviction.
—The Rev. Dr. Joseph *. Sizzo, New
York cleraymar
By WESTBROOK PEGLER
NEW YORK, Nov. 16. Thanks
I to many reminders from Th«»
dore Roosevelt Jr. and his sister,
Alice, most of us are now thor- .
oughly aware that Franklin D
Roosevelt is only a fifth cousin of
theirs. The President himself has
never been heard to claim a closer
relationship and might even be
glad to high-spade his fifth cousins,
on a proposition of double or noth
ing with a private yearning, for the
latter alternative no less eager
than their own.
And, consid-
ering the re-
spective
a chievements
of the two fac-
tions, the insis-
tent disclaim-
ers of the Col-
onel and Alice
„ „ .. n d a s
though the
Plaza Hotel at
25 Bowery were
to station a
barker in front
of the place to
announce over .. „ .
and over. “This Mr. l’egier
hotel has nothing but the name in
common with the Plaza Hotel at
Central Park."
Anybody could guess as much
Perhaps the analogy is a little
| harsh, for the Colonel made s rec-
ord- for bravery in the war and .
there is nothing shabby about him
or Mrs. Longworth, but actually
we heard them the first time and
didn't need telling even then
Therefore, these frequent reitera-
tions come to have the sound of a
rather pathetic bid for personal
attention because people would
never think of the relationship st
all If they didn't bring it up. The
Colonel had his chance in politics
and didn’t make it, and Mrs
Longworth had her lively, joyous
day as daughter of a President
and White House bride and wife • |
of the Speaker of the House.
* * *
I THAT day is now on toward ths
A cool of the evening. This is
Franklin D. Roosevelt’s day and
the sun would shine no brighter
for him if he’were brother to his
fifth cousins, because he is just as
big and strong and noisy in his
own right as that other President 1
Rooevelt from whom the Colonel
and Alice inherit such public im-
portance as they possess. As to
whether Frat : - Hosevelt is
a great President or a national
calamity they have the same
right as the rest of us To strong
personal opinion. There are many
Americans who still hold the same
opinion of their father and those
who revere his name and defend
his reign as ardently as Jim Far-
ley admires Roosevelt, 2nd,
Their pride in their father Is
admirable, even by persons who
disagreed with him, refused to ac-
cept his word without corrobora-
tion and regarded him as a selfish
and glory-hungry demagog. Any
American would be proud to .be
the son or daughter of a President,
even of Rutherford B. Hayes or
Warren G. Harding There are ac-
tually some at present who are
immensely proud to be children of
Franklin Roosevelt though not
much given to boasting of their |
fifth-cousinship to young Ted and
Alice. In fact, mention of this
fifth-cousinship comes only from
the other side.
Young Ted has been in politics
ever since 1919, but in all that
time the only office to which he
has been elected was the New
York Legislature. Al Smith beat
him for governor in a big Repub-
lican year, and his appointments
to govern Porto Rico and the Phil-
ippines, like his job as assistant
secretary of the navy under Hard-
ing were a political inheritance
from his father, for nobody will’
believe that Lt. Col. Mike Swift or
a Major Pete which would have
received these posts on the
strength of a combat record, a
single hitch in the state assem-
bly and a B A. degree from Har-
vard.
Democra
But N
Th
By ROS
Political Wri
DENVER
is the firs
send.".
Its peopl
approved or
al amendme
lot by petit
for an old-
fied person
limit of the
the minimu
certain sta
aside for ole
The .bulk
will come f
adopted ten
provide relie
the state’s
Colorado sa
and applies
article
Cost 1
■ Colorado >
pension Of 1
sons past 6
ernmerit sha
about $8,000
The new 1
the new gov
with the bi
in Colorado
I on roll of 8
tually expec
000 now. TT
lsion cost of
undetermined
awith private
which the s
Tito the latter
The cost"l
as Colorado
schools, and
much as for
f th of nil s
fl" i > res
- The Feders
its law lx lih
more than sa
the most.
Where 1
The Colora
aside 85 per
of the state
several mino
pensions. TH
raise $8,000,
eral AsremBi
$8,000,000 .«,,,
pensions.
There is st
he headache
I" the amend
the general
it present is <
pensions, relic
children, the
mothers and
state welfare
If relief is r
and the other
bot to be cut
tombly must 1
on more to 1
money abstrac
, mit adultery.”
‘ The fifth verse says:
Thi
some
onable and to act only if they "For this cause shall a man
refuse to do so. Furthermore ?-leave father and mother and
propose to play the same game, shall cleave to his wife; and
that the court does They makes they, twain shall he one flesh."
the construing of the constitu God says in his word that his
lion more important than the I face is against all them that
| constitution itself. All right,
Before this wave dies out, we | then, let the masses do the con-
might hold a national jubiliza- | struing through a system of
tion that should include | definitions..
The constitution should not be
publication will give
chance for study.
Proposition: The result of the
recent election has loosened a
wave of elation "that should be
utilized for the general welfare.
1 Emphasizing the point
upon which victory was based.
2 public commendation of
the so-called brain trust.
3 A request that Congress *
demand of the Supreme Court
that it live up to its announced
principles which Is: To interfere
with the other two departments
only when their acts are uncon-
stitutional beyond a reasonable
doubt, and that the court Is in
reasonable doubt , when two
members dissent from nullifica-s
tion..
Should the Supreme Court re-
fuse to accept the. above defini-
tion, then sufficient judges are
to be added to make that one
effective."
4 A move for a clarifying
convention for the constitution.
5 A move to popularize the
history of the constitution of
the judiciary.
Explanation: (1) Is a rededi-
cation to the humanitarian ef-
fort. (2) Is to counteract the
strategy of some vested inter-
ests. They prosper by hiring the
best brains of the country, but
they object when the Govern-
ment attempts the same thing,
hence their tactics of ridicule of
Tugwell and others. (3) If the
Supreme Court majority is read-
ing a reac tionary political phil-
osophy into their decisions, why
waste valuable time in passing
additional humanitarian meas-
ures with the practical certainty
of having these measures knock-
ed out?
A demand from' the masses
Instead of from the President
that the court be liberalized
"what the judges say it is" but
what the average American un-
. derstands It to be. The judges’
job is to understand this under*
standing. Let’s find out, what
the average man considers
“reasonable doubt” to be. We
appear to be governed by opin-
ions and not by laws.
Various suggestions have been
made in regard to the court.
Let’s have some action prompt-
ly. I tried to get action on the
Supreme Court three years ago
as the first move of the NRA.
I claimed that it would be cut
| to pieces by a reactionary court.
We lost billions of dollars by
this failure
Our Democratic club could
call oil the. Democratic clubs,
liberal organizations and influ-
! ential persons for action. The |
Pioneer City should pioneer the
| most important move on the
| constitution since the bill of
| rights was adopted. Can the
I mass of Democracy act expedi-
tiously?
FRANK E. VEY.
1301 E. Belknap St., City.
P. S. Not written by a law-
yer, but by an engineer who is
fed-up on unrebuked judicial
absurdities. ,
. MRS. SIMPSON SEEN
AS PERIL TO BRITAIN**
Editor. The Press:
do evil. Since Mussolini has
thrown down the gauntlet to the
world, such an example would
bring the British of today into
disrepute before God and they
would be smitten before their
enemies, even as the Israelites
were put to flight and slaugh-
tered again and again. The hon-
or of Creat Britain is at stake.
Solomon said: “Better is a
wise and young servant than an
old and foolish king." The In-
terest of Great Britain, France
and Germany are one and the
same Mussolini has a large
army and whosoever controls
Palestine controls the commerce
of the world. The Russians have
the largest and most efficient
army in the world today and in
the spring she will bring her
armies into Palestine. It is then
the Jews will make a covenant
with Mussolini and consider him
their Messiah, which is the
beast of Revelation.
HIRAM WILDER
’ 2964 W: 28th St., City.
Today’s Poem
TO A BLOTTER
Thirsty, porous gourmand,
Eternally licking
At my hasty inspirations.
Of-all the things I’ve fed you
I'm pleased that I forgot
In my rapturous enchantment
To surfeit .you with love.
T WISH to express the opinion
1 of the Lord Jesus Christ as
set forth in Matt. 19:9 concern-
| Ing the unhallowed wedlock con-
| templated by King Edward VIII
MABEL McKINNEY WEIR.
2410 Rosen Ave., City.
TODAY’S COMMON ERROR
Never say, "The company has a
monopoly on electric current;"
say, "monopoly of electric cur-
rent."
me Democy
he amendmer
‘‘leaders are
hi- hands
■ "h’t done it
HIGH COU
TEXAS C.
By United Press
I WASHINGT
r S Suprem
will hear argu
ty of the Te
he production
protect the rig
rs of a gas
ilidity of or
tailroad Com
he daily prod
n the Panhan
Texas will
attorney Gen
’raw and th
hirers by C.
oma City.
Stag
may shield him against unfair |
charges of dictatorship. SIDE GLANCES
(4) General welfare, Inter- |
state commerce, taxation, TEAS- T
onable doubt, state rights and 1
other terms should be defined in
the light’ of our past experience
and modern conditions, and then
—perhaps the constitution will
need no other present amend-
ment than a section of defini-
tions which will minimize judi-
cial misconstruction. (5) The
people should know the truth |
about the constitution and the
past record of the indielary so
that they may act with intelli-
gence.
My plan Is to check it up to
the Supreme Court to be reas-
By George Clark
TIKE the son of Bob Fitzsim-
Li mons, who had everything but
what it takes in the ring, young
Ted always left his big momenta
on the clock. In the legislature
he could have raised hell, as his
father surely would have done, to
prevent the expulsion of the So-
cialist members, but failed to dra-
matize the case. .He should have
Prolific P
This Is Life
By JACK MAXWELL
QUOTE: "He that ruleth his |
spirit is greater than he
who taketh a city." Unquote |
I sometimes think, and it gives
me a big pain in the neck, that
in. giving the allotted days of
man as being three-score and |
ten, somebody got kidded out of
a lot of necessary living, as per
the next spasm:
Personally, I have used up a
goodly gob of the aforesaid
time and, I am far from being
this to “control my spirit ” in
fact, I am of the opinion that
when I reach the end of life’s
journey, though I may go all
the way, and look backward.
I'll see Mr. Spirit thumbing his
nasal protuberance at ME and,
ft will be just too bad ... . for
I failed to get the necessary |
"CONTROL" on-the-ball before
the game was over 1
-----shaken the very pillars against
the state prohibition enforcement
act, but missed. And, though he
afterward got credit for opposing
the Teapot Dome transfer while
serving in the Navy Department,
that was a chance in which a real
Roosevelt would have roared all
over the country and made himself
great though he wrecked the
Harding administration
So the son of the old mane,
shaker has no prestige on which
Franklin could impose were he me
minded, although, nothing here is
intended to say that hr is not a
good American, a respectable
family man, an interesting com-
panion and one of those aristo-
crate who will fight until cut to
pieces.
Mrs. Longworth la of the period
of women’s rights, emancipation,
good works and movements, but
her career has been social with
only a flippant participation in th
salon or inside politics of Vh cap
Itof
Ro all right, the' President A
only a fifth cousin to them 0
wouldn't it be more like It to say
that they are only fifth cousins to
the President Of the United
States?
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY
Now I rejoice, not that ye were
made sorry, but that ye sorrowed
to repentance; for ye were made
sorry after a godly manner, that
ye might receive damage by us in
nothing II Corinthians 7 9
SMZELaeL
“Go on in and entertain the guests. They'll think we
don’t know-how to run a home properly.'
A true repentance shuns the
evil itself more than the external
suffering or the shame.—Shakes
peare
Iv United Pres
TORONTO
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Weaver, Don E. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 38, Ed. 1 Monday, November 16, 1936, newspaper, November 16, 1936; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1672814/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.