The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 53, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 3, 1936 Page: 2 of 14
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♦
PAGE 2
Clapper
Reclaim Dangerous to
Statesmen; F. D. R.
Should Be Careful to
Keep Balance.
By RAYMOND CLAPPER
WASHINGTON, Dec. 3. — Ap-
VY plause is tricky siren’s music
for a statesman, particularly for a
world statesman. Ho perhaps it is
just as well for President Roose-
• «t*h
Want Ad Service- -Cull 2-5151
. IE FORT WORTH. PRESS
Want Ad Service—Call 2-5151
.HURSDAY. DECEMBER 3.1936
Santa Missed Little Girl's Tent ‘Because ROOSEVELT HAILED CADET PLAY GLEANS
It Didn't Have A Chimney;' Let's Help Her AS PEACE APOSTLE TOYS AT HI MOUNT
7+ 1
By SANTA PAL EDITOR
Telephone 2-3427
WOMAN’S CLUB COMES
Kl SANTA PALS AID
Uruguayan Capital Gives
Him Warm Welcome
Comedy To Be Given Today
At Lily B. Clayton
NG rZoling ko
. TENTS, a» a rule, do not have chimneys
• Do you suppose that's the reason Santa Claus, when he makes ______.... ._____________.__________.... .. ........
his usual rounds on Christmas Eve, sometimes overlooks the homes the Santa Pal organization of The Press and the Goodfellows of
that are made of canvas ?the Klar-Telegram, proceeds to be divided between the two or-
At 4 p. m. Sunday, in Paschal High School Auditorium, the
Woman’s Club will sponsor the Centennial Mass as a benefit for I
By United Press.
MONTEVIDEO, Dec. 3.
There’s a little girl who lives out near Lake Worth who seems to |
think so, because Santa Claus missed her and her little brother' and
two sisters last, year. 1
velt that after his triumphal visit
to South America .he has two
weeks alone with himself while he
steams back home That will give
him time in which to think. %
He has enough to think about.
Events have catapulted him onto
the world stage Conditions were
ripe - consid-
erably overripe
- for a fresh
figure. His
first appear-
ance has
brought him
great applause
and encourage:
ment to go on.
It is a tempt-
ing role, but a
t r e acherous
one, as a pred-
ecessor, Wood-
row Wilson,
discovered ' too
Mr Clapper late. Meastahs
have to be extraordinarily good
and lucky as well' to get away
with It.
Already the fly-paper is being
spread around for President Roose-
velt. Foreign debtors, who would
like some more money to buy guns
with please, are hinting- vaguely
that they would be willing again
to scale down what they owe us
for the last war A French na-
tionalist propagandist is on a lec-
ture tour in this country saying
ha is confident that if the democ-
racies of Europe (presumably In-
cluding Russia) get into a fight
with the dictators (presumably
not Including Stalin) America
good old America will be found
arms In arms, so to speak, on the 1
side of the democraciesFacts Are Eitet :
IOOSEVELT hints that Europe’s
IV crazy course isn’t the best
thing for the world nor for us
and that he hopes they will come
to their senses over there And
promptly this is interpreted as an
indication that he, wants to depart
— from an isolationist policy and
that the United States is not to be
neutral when the democratic form
of government is threatened by
autocratic attack, as if it was
up to us to go over to Germany
and make Hitler let his people
4 have a little butter on their bread.
In other words, the old stuff
about making the world safe for
democracy is being hauled out and
dusted off. How many times is
the United States going to have to
save the world to make it safe for
democracy? Or are we expected
to de that thing as a permanent
habit’
Why Be Policeman?
rwo tilings are being confused.
1 It is one thing to deplore con-
ditions in Europe and Asia. in
point out the suicidal fate of con-
tinuing in the present direction, to
suggest alternatives such as the
reciprocal trade program and such
other policies as will enable us to
co-operate as friends without mix-
log up in foreign disputes either
as umpires or belligerents.
But it is something else again
to do what many pro-Leaguer#
would like to have us do — step
in and be one of the policemen in
Europe’s family quarrels Some
are urging that we pick an ag-
gressor — or take the one that
one aide in Europe selects and
help club him down, as if you
could say now which would be the
aggressor, Hitler or the blind
pound-of-flesh politicians on the
allied side who helped make it
possible for Hitler to exist Quar-
rels can reach the point where it
becomes purely an accidental mat-
tor which party beats the other to
the draw
“We live in a tent, so I gueas that s the reason he didr t come to
see us,” she writes in a letter to The Press Santa Pal Editor -just one
of the scores of plaintive letters which sr* arriving in every, mail as
the so-called ' happiest” clay of the year approaches.
But why shouldn't Santa visit the tents as well as the houses
chimneys or no chimneys? !
In answer The Press Santa Pal organization which gave toys
and Christmas cheer last year to more than 2000 children is making
an early start this year . , to see that there are no unfilled stockings,
whether in tent, hovel, or boarded homes of the unfortunate
| the Star-Telegram, proceeds to be divided between the two or-
ganizations, which are furnishing Christmas cheer for the un-
fortunates of the city
The "Centennial Mass,” which presents 1000 voices from -
! choirs all over North Texas, was written by William J. Marsh
and was first offered at the Dallas Centennial Oct. 11 by a choir
of 2500 voices, before an audience of 25,000 persons.
Booths for ticket sales have been established in various |
downtown places, and tickets for the event, a musical high-spot .
of the year, will be 25 cents, , 1 - . •■ ‘
ident Roosevelt landed in Uruguay
thia morning, receiving the third
; and last colorful welcome of his
14,000-mile peace tour.
| Thousands of excited Uruguay-
fans had stood for hours in a tor.
rential rain waiting for the cruiser
Hundreds of used toys, given by ,
Pres-North Hi Mount School pupils yes- |
' terday, as admission to a Polly |
High R. O. T. C. entertainment
Indianapolis to dock so they could
; I welcome “EI Pacificador" — The
Magnificent Response
Peacemaker . .
He was met-by President Gabri-
el Terra and a host of distin-
guished Uruguayan officials.
. . i A special pavilion had been
Papa got crippled last summer Got one of his eyes put out and cant erected on the dock for the his-:
work He cant pay for a santa so plese send us a dear Santa Pal. We toric meeting which began as
are affal poor but we still love santa We would hee glad if we can auspiciously and with as warm a
I get some clothex for papa and some school clothes for Gs and a coat welcome as Mr Roosevelt’s meet,
for mama Mama works but she dont make enough to live on hardly ings with the presidents ofArgen-
auspiciously and with as warm a
Treaty Was Vengeful
hla
He
WILSON was trapped by
V own good intentions.
wanted a League of Nations — a
sort of .International NRA which
would bring about international
Justice. But to be sure of getting
It he hitched it up to the Ver-
sailles Treaty, a treaty of ven-
geance which all clear - headed
economists at the time knew
The response to the Santa Pal appeal even this early in the-----------— ----------
month, has been magnificent. 1 " plese send UN a santa pal. My little sisters would love a doll and
Many of our more fortunate citizens already have called The 1 my little brother would like to have a little car are a walker. Some-
Press Santa Pal Editor at his headquarters in the Old Fire Hall, north thing he can push his self.
of the City Hall, and have asked that they be given children for
thing he can push his self,. . .’
tina and Brazil
Christmas Day “adoption."
Others are donating cash asking the Santa Pais to see that
purchases are made for certain families, and that the clothes, food
and toys are delivered to certain families on Christmas Eve
The Santa Pal Editor is glad to receive calls in either case, and 1
if YOU- want to help (and help is needed), just telephone 2-3422 and
The Press will do the rest
The letters which follow are typical of those being received the |
first of which I# from the little girl who lives in the tent Look them
over and if you are moved to give a bit of Christmas cheer to those
whose needs are listed by number, call, the Santa Pal Editor at 2- 3422
Dr. Terra stepped up and put
his arms around Mr. Roosevelt in
the Latin American “embrazo”
a gesture of extreme cordiality.
The two presidents immediately
stepped into a waiting automobile
and started a 20-mile tour of the
city. 1
The President leaves this aft-
OH MOMMY-LFT5 GO INTO
Stripling’s AND GET AN 1
ENTRY BLANK FOR THE
SHIRLEY TEMPLE DOLL
CONTE ST GAME ,2
Edw
u
were ready for the hammer and
paint brush of the East Side Lions 1
Club.*:
The club will repair the toys,
and others to be gathered this aft-
ernoon at Lily B. Clayton School
and tomorrow at McLean Junior
High, for children of poor fami-
lies for Christmas.
The entertainment, a blackface |
comedy, was written and prepared |
by the Polly cadets.
In the comedy are Jack Parr. 1
Lamar Stuckert, diaries Gregory,
Ted Randolph, O. S. Lattimore,
James A. Peacock, Jack Courtney,
Harper High, Ben Brown, Clark
Reid and Robert Shafer. They
were assisted by Virginia Cassol,
sponsor; Billie Maxine Hilliard and
Wanda Lee Sheppard. Bryan
Chirk, Eugene Harrison and Wil-
lard B York were in charge of
properties.
11,650 PRIZES
including real live Scotch
Terrier Puppies like Shirley
Temple’s dog. "Corky"
GET YOUR
FREE
ENTRY BLANK
ON FIFTH FLOOR
move Be
ermerti
public ins
came pa
printe-sed
eWohe
British
empirdser
part ofeie
marriale
choice s
tutioniba
Repin
Simpsina
severaipes
7 The F
ing some
in Big
Repel
De royal Ph
has bee
weeks B
give uph
the kumpes
his depi
12:30T
returnee
having Be
Before
.London
cussed B
friendsing
and war
don it B
Bucking
• dispatoipe
papers B
D
It
lutely the
devciopies
were: se
1. The
from her
.tionshipp
own press
talk withe
succeed 5
solutionB
2. Bale
that in B
vr.net theD
monarchs
and
scendsr
the occurs
• the king
hope of B
3. Ball
pressionse
reached Be
pire, parse
4. Ball
to Edward
to follows
refrain fed
son a me
arise bece
impelled s
further the
position a
Mi access
a govern
resign 5
Parliament
5. Bald
consider a
situation H
nous
tional sites
Drake
It
possibility
tion by y
permitted
but Parlia
excluding
a ion from I
That see
cussed in
circles but
the king is
. of it. •
• Either I
cabinet of
king remas
The bigh
the mobilise
by the go
is united •
and the
to bring
hope thath
give in. H
That
sudden ti
which this
began the
) campaignE
Stop
It is in
ward that 1
pire demal
personal
whelming 1
throne I
he wants ■
Simpson, 1
unity of el
A stocks
sharply y
insurance ■
the coronal
poned and 1
5 subjects.
his ears, co.
the country
himself and
This tally
outspoken!
W Simpson: ■
FIHe -
of her for 1
lives.
Working
clothes, s
pipes, talk
-plimentary
They loo
photograph
Mirror alor
"She put
was one co
cal. She w
was.
An editor
icle, the org
57.‘ "Dear Santa Pals: I am a boy 14 yrs. old. Was promoted
| to junior high last June. My daddy is out of work and I need some
clothes so 1 can go to school and I wondered if you could find me a
Manta Pal that would help me get ready for school. My daddy does
i yard work but has no work now and no prospects of starting me
back to school, or even a Christmas. So please try to find me a pal.
I have no shoes, need trousers and a coat of some sort ..." 4
bile, Ala. where he will board a
58 "Dear Sirs’ I am u girl of 11 My daddy has been out of train for Warm Springs, Ga.
work for six months I have a little brother and sister. My brother
, wants a red wagon and my’sister wants a doll and I want some shoes .
Please OFFICERS’ MEETING
WILL BE POST TOPIC
and we all want some underwear and nuts and candy and fruit.
54. "Dear Santy Psi I am a little girl 9 years old that Santy dont leave us out...."
Clause by some bad luck dident come to see me nor my little brother * w*..
and two sisters last year. There are seven in my family. We are
very poor We live in a tent so I guess that is the reason lie dident
come to see un. I am the oldest of the children. My brother and 1 or
trying to go to school, but the W P A. pays so little and daddy
doesnt get to work study eather The work has shut down now We
need some shoes to were to school We would be proud of any kind
of toys and candy and fruit I do hope so much that Santy Pal will
find his way to my door, . . ."
ss.—"Dear Santa Pale: I am a gin 15 years old. I have a little I
sister lO years old and three little brothers, one 12, one 7, one 5
and If you all dont thank of us we wont have a aronge are apple
for Xmas. Our father hasn’t got a job & we wont have nothing if
you dont thank of us. Please dont forget. . . .”
a a e
56 "Dear Santa Pala We are a pair of twins 12 years old Feb
12. We have three little sisters and a little brother. He is crippled.
Slave Ship’s Arrival in 1861
Shaped History of Nation
(Starts on Page 1)
dollars that can be made from It
in those three centuries the
long processions of America's fa
there and sons were born, and
worked and loved and fought and
died. New nations rose .and fell
ernoon on the Indianapolis for Mo-
bile. A la
OIL MEN TO HOUSTON
69.—"Dear Mr. Santa Pal Will you come to see us ? Without
you come we wont have any Christmas, I have two children and
expect another one in January. Girl is 8, boy is 7 years old. Please
dont pass us bye. ...”
71 "Dear Santa Pal: I am a little girl 10 years of age. My
mother is a widow and cant buy me anything for Christmas so please
dont forget me I would like some school clothes. I have never had
a pretty doll so. please try to bring me one Ami bring me some candy
and futs...".
75.—"Dear Santie Pals: 1 am a boy 13 years old. My daddy is”
not working and my mother is sick and there will not be any Christ-
mas for me unless some good Santie Pal comes to see me. I would
like to have a few clothes, some books and some games. Ko if you
will please bring me these I would be very happy...."
76 "Dear Santa Pals: I will rite you to let you know the con-
Idiscon we are in. 1 am the youngest in the family. One of my brothers
had a opracran and I was in a wreck the other day and we havent go
i eny thing to eat. There are five of, us in the family hut my mother is.
sick nearly all the time y daddy is sick now. Werneeg some cloes
| We wont have any Christmas at all. There aint eny of the famley
able to work very much I work some but not much for I cant find
nothing to do and cant hardly pay our rent
world was soon to realize that,
two perfect affinities had met '
Cotton always has been the crop
' for slaves. Slaves generally the la
. bor for cotton.
Between the two great human
The great came and vanished far tora in cotton culture in that |
Cotton sufficient to s clothe and 1
convenience a hundred worlds was
early day the baronial owner and .
passed through the spindles
In the years between those two |
picture# a sturdy young man in
a strange costume writing in a
the black slave, other white men
Halfom’s
IK The Houseof,
Diamonds
| Ex-Service Men Auxiliary Called
To Make Plans
] Bothwell Kane Post No. 21.
American Legion, joined by other
ex-service men and auxiliary mem-
bers, will meet at Hotel Texas at
7:30 p m. tomorrow to plan en-
tertainment for the legion officers’
state conference here Dec. 12 and
13.
-
A. R. Smith, general chairman
for the conference, said arrange-
ments will be made for 3000 dele,
gates. .
Blackstone Post will discuss its
participation in the officers’ con-
ference at 8:15m. today in the
French Room at the Blackstone
Hotel, Craig Laine, adjutant, an-
nonuced. A committer also will
report on a joint indoor picnic
to be held with the Veterans ot
Foreign Wars post at 211 1-2 West
11th St. tomorrow night.
Fort Worth Delegation Goes To
Mid-Continent Meeting
A delegation of Fort Worth oil
men, headed by J. D Collett, pres-
ident of the General Mid-Continent
Oil and Gas Assn., will go. to
Houston lo attend the annual
meeting of the association’s Tex-
as Division, opening there tomor-
row. Mr. Collett, Charles F. Roe- |
ser and J. P. Shannon were ex-
pected to leave here today. Jake
Hamon of Dallas heads the Tex-
as Division. Houston oil men
promise the visitors a full round
of entertainment, including a golf
match.
AT LAST
A COUGH RELIEF - THAT
ALSO_SPEEDS RECOVERY
Remember the name" it’s FOI EY S HONEY
& TAR! Double acting One set of ingredients
quickly soothes relieves tickling hacking cough •
ng . coate irritated thr at Aininga to keep:
you from coughing. Another set reaches the
bronchial tubes, loosens phlegm, helps break up
a rough due to a cold and speeds recovery, I or
quick relief and speeded up recovery, ask your
! ueri t for double acting FOLEY D HONEY
TAL. Ide letods
Stripling's Is
Headquarters
Your little girl will think
she’s in the land of dreams ‘
when she sees our glorious
assortment Of dolls! Find
out which one she prefers
and buy it for her now on
our Lay-Away Plan.
Santa couldn't bring
you a better present
than a
GENUINE
DOLI
It looks like Shirley' It's
dressed like
Shirley in her EOuo
big movie hits. SAP
massive book, and a grguP of
half-frightened men and women
talking over dangerous under-
takings in little schoolhouse
the civilizations were altered, the
thrones were felled, the blood was
spilled.
Slaves Once ‘Needed'
In the Cotton Fields
The excitement of Jamestown's
people that day did not revo|ve
about the 20 naygurs.
What held their rapt attention
found themselves crowded out. An
economy had begun like an in-
visible rod-like-germ in a healthy
tissue to marshal them into a line
•that, was to growmore and more |
apart from other men The line
| made up tile poor whites of co-1
lonial days. It formed the despised I
trash of the early eighteen hun-.
Idreds, and it leads down straight '
through the centuries to the teem- |
ing present in cottonland and the'
, meeting in Sunnyside schoolhouse
Today cotton, moat dramatic of |
all inanimate products of the
United States, moves slowly, but
surely to the greatest crisis of its
long career.
was the strange craft that found|
its way into the James River w fth
the tide Khe was a barnacled
and sea-worn brig, her amazing
guns lashed to place with stout
rope and strange chain fastened
about stanchions She flew the
Dutch flag but the crew was Eng-
For more than a century Amer-
ica’s most valuable export, other
nation# with new self-containment |
i policies, with new and strange |
philosophies and new-born jeal '
lish. She had the mainmast of a
schooner and the foremast of #
brigantine She was in need of
victual# and of water, and was
ousies have in the last four years |
cut seriously into the export trade |
of American . cotton producers.”
' American cotton's 10,000,000 de-
pendents have reached the end of
the economic rope and their lot in
1 life has become a national respon- 1
sibility. New mac hines, perhaps as
revolutionary as the gin and pow-
er loom, are on the horizon to.
clearly In distress
, For food and fresh water, the
ship "Jesus" yielded up 20 nay- _ __________________________
gurs. Otherwise, according to John further pauperize the shared rop-
Smith’s “Proceedings and Acci-
denits of the Virginia Colony,” tt
would have been necessary to
throw them into the sea
per army, and to complicate in an
unpredictable way the world bat
tie for sales."
Thus their purchase which is ,
spoken of as the acquiring of “a
Loss of Export Market
commodity most needed here," is Cuts Price of Cotton
also defended on- naive grounds. '
The slaves were “compensation I
for an act of humanity"
The colonial# who flocked down
to the water’s edge when the an-
chor rattled down the Jesus’ side
Cotton, the textile of a thousand
uses, tho economic “all” of a sec
tion larger than France, Ger-
many, Italy and Spain, the prod-
into the broad river did not know Ult of one in every three of the
her history. The Jesus had been
nation’s farms — it occupies a
the property of Sir John Hawkins, fourth of the nation’s land where
the man stealer, and her crime live a fifth of the nation’s popu-
was not in selling slaves, but in 0 '
ataulina o— .1-.— Anae -.....- w.aaHation. B employs and directly
could not be enforced.
Europe i# in the clutches of
hates which rise out of a thou-
sand sequences. In Spain, there
is an actual unofficial European
war on already. In the last
month the only sign nt good-will
in Europe has been the exchange
ot the London Philharmonic or-
chestra with the Dresden Opera
Co., a musical barter deal Other-
wise the capitals seethe with hate-
stealing the slaves other ships had
taken on for sale She was the maintains besides its army of un
first "hijacker." . derprivileged another 5,000,000;
To keep the naygurs from be-
ing thrown among the porpoise
which hemstitched their way be-
side the Jesus' ancient timbers,
the governor of Bermuda had ..
bought several slaves. He gagged
on dealing with a privateer, but |
the record reveals that when the
Its empire the Southern States
because cotton has a purchasing
power that accounts’ for the pros-
perity of 'every other American
4€/ eMlWu
Wens
and
1e 'I .
Ladies Longines V
ROBERT
FULTON
— 17-jewel Long-
ines 14-kt. nat-
. ural gold filled
. case. A sturdy
reliable time,
keeper
$47.50
0 %,
Jere "
"atuikt Lone.
Case, Val Solid
and 1ew « ^
” GRUEN CURVEX PEEK
Ful size 17-jewel precision move-
ment accurately curved to fit th#
wrist-form case, 14-kt. yellow gold
filled.
$50.00
$298
to
298
depending
on size
Nancy
Trunk Dolls
A dressed 12- _
inch Doll in a W AC
wardrobe trunk, a )
complete with ■ FP %
five pieces of
Clothing ......I
I6-Inch
Nancy Dolls
E n trancing
dolls dressed In 4
lovely little
party frocks..
Have curly hair
and are 16
inches high! ...
95
‘My Dream
Baby
II
"Like a tot of Ad
your o wn’’ SAT
dolls. They are ■
fully dressed, ■ *
and are 11 ■
inches high ...
fulthreats, relieved only by the cemmmeity was offered “desire of •
comic opera crisis in the British getting surmounted all other# re-
Empire over whether Mr# Simp- spects and fears,” even as it did
son I# constitutional or not at Jamestown.
---------------- . | The deal made, the Jesus de-
parted to be sunk by a Spaniard
DORIS DUKE CROMWELL even as she herself had sunk
GAVE DEMOS 46O 000 many Spaniards
GAVE DEMOS $50,000 Of the “naygurs" at Jamestown.
nothing is known during the six
months following their landing,
but in the spring of 1620 they
planted a field with a brownish
black seed which had been given
to Captain John Smith by the
Indians In exchange for a bright
I and the—Ui-Ue boxes in
Tobacco Heiress Donated $5000 to
Texas Committee
By United Press.
WASHINGTON, Dec 3 Doris
Duke Cromwell, tobacco heiress.
contributed $50,000 to the Demo-
cratic cause in the last election, shawl I
ths Renate special committee in-which candles and communion
vestigating campaign expendi- books had come from England
tures, reported today.__._________| Cotton culture had begun. The
dragon’s teeth were in the ground.
Exported, cotton has paid for
most of the tin, rubber, silk, furs,
—sat coffee and les which the
United States has bought abroad
It has, to a great extent, made
possible the American standard of
living to which the 10,000,000 in its
retinue, even in their imaginings
cannot hope to aspire.
Sixty per cent of America s cot- ,
ton has always been, and much of |
it must continue to be, exported, |
and these other nations, now em-
barked on cotton raising, are
slashing at this export business
on the basis of price, and price
is one of the things that degrades
the 10,000,000.
So the sharecropper war is im-
portant not only because it itse
volves the dreary lives of 10,000- |
000, but because it involves cotton.
Dazzlingly brilliant is this
Haltom's modern solitaire‘in
either white or natural
gold .............$160.00
An exquisite ring in platinum
with large perfect blue-white
solitaire gracefully emphasized
by smaller diamonds on the
side
.8250.00
An extraordinarily fine blue-
white square cut diamond
magnificently mounted In
platinum ......$1,100.00
Ann Shirley Dolls
Inspired by R. “A
K. O.'s Anne A
o f Gr e e n.
Gables." Plaited D
red hair 14 4
inches high ...
Dy-Dee Dolls
The doll that’s
almost A reale A r
baby l Eats WM
bathes, sleeps, P 7 %
drinks.
breathes. A I I ANA
rubber ........
John D. Rockefeller Jr. and two
other members of the Rockefeller
family gave a total of $103,000 to
the Republican Party, the report
said. Alfred P. Sloan, automobile
company executive, gave $50,100
to the C O P
Mrs. Cromwell's $50,000 went in
$5000 contributions each to Demo-
cratie state committees in Ala-
bama, Arkansas, Florida. Louis-
iana, Mississippi. South Carolina.
Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and
Connecticut.
Staple Moving to Greatest
Crisis of Its Career
And cotton Is important, net only
because it has made peasants tar
s plenteous land, but because
America’s prosperity, indeed her
national solvency, I# dependent on
cotton, and cotton's retinue.
More Than -,000 Other Designs in Fine Diamonds, $75.00 to $7,500.00
A vast stream nf history began
to flow from that simple entry
John Rolfe made, American black
slavery had begun Great for-
tunes erected on tte backs or
slaves were beginning to form.
Slaves became useful on indigo________________-
and rice plantations. When they out a revolutionary change in the
began to cultivate cotton thestatus of the other
The fate of the cropper and the
fate of lotton are interwoven
Ko far that matter is the fate of
the planter, for between him and
the cropper the difference is a
difference merely of degree. No
better day for one can come with-
USE A
HALTOM’S
CHARGE
ACCOUNT
z ,
JEWELERSSILVERSMITHS
MAIN AT SIXTH FORT WORTH
WEEKLY
OR
MONTHLY
PAYMENTS
Dy-Dee
Includes or- d
gandy dress,
1 » and cap sateen 8 I
• 1 I a , birdseye 8
diaper and a ■
pair of rubber ■
panties . ......
00
TOY DEPT FIFTH FLOOR
aoowrs
-parts
193
Easy
Carr
Trade
J. H.
Radl
300 Main
wedi
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Weaver, Don E. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 53, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 3, 1936, newspaper, December 3, 1936; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1672829/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.