Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 303, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 4, 1928 Page: 4 of 12
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OUR BOARDING HOUSE
By Ahern
ARILLO DAILY NEWS
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We came home from the
Sergeant Roth I
la private
another.
THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE:
(389) Our Presidents
Little Joe
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The Texan. showed
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been for the question of money. He.
was always pennileaa. He had learn-
A stalk of corn from which 10 ears sprouted was
exhibited in e Philadelphia grocery the other day.
Too late, however for honorable mention in Hoover’s
acceptance speech.
Frien
Bride
Love
LETTER
GOLF
"*
man.
the I
Tut-tut. "Old-Battleaxe" of the Floyd County
Hesperian says one of the commissioners’ races'in
Floyd warlike a flapper’s date — neck and neck.
today, and after suppir
cigar and sat down in
IRAUCHER
It BESSEY
And he put his feet up and puffed
big puffs, saying, I dont mind say-
ing I feel like a new man, full of
good old rod eorpussles and green
vitamines and reddy. to roll up my
sleeves and attack the worlds prob-
lems.with the dedly earnestness of
one all star football player tackling
8
\V-ALEY
DINERSD,
Emil Ludwig. In his impressions of America, views
Success and not money, as the ideal. The profeasor
must have missed seeing some of our better class
eigaret ads.
SYNOPSIS BY
SKHES
anewer per*
lb and diet.
Mrs. L.
cently wa
been the c
of delight
Included
many othe
fill her "i
list of hai
Mrs. T<
Miss Clan
the hostos
a beautiful
at their ho
' which was
the lovlie
bride couli
The lun
long table
orchid flo
ranged wil
charming I
cards won
full weddi
Covers
guests
On Satui
One worn
suffered
case of <
"Formai
constantl
tried fou
out rem
ed.a
..
2
BMesan
BY CA
"Why don't yon nt tht old man and ott him to rttomn
yon for tht Undid Prtn job I*"
Dr. McCoy will g
sonal questions on
J
3
.M
forming
over, the
sepporting what it bell ev co to be right rezardleas
of party politico.
• r lor
ley or-
blic of
eredited to this paper and elee local aew* di
AB nebta at oobitaaetoo of opecial Aepeuhm
recomme
Re
«421
xoricEToTuE Puna.
tie Benny s
NoteBoK
-/ m.T,
GILBERT SWAN.
(Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.)
VW
9 SM"C B|
‘Aeiqci,FoR,
16 ‘toNeR
w
fighting
gnized _ . —_____
xas and asked to be
admitted to the Union. •
Gen. A. Mown, Panos eng me i oner,
wnur U Mown, eneru neaeaer. '
THOUGHTS
The frat man la st tin earth," earthly— Cue.
15:47.
ce
Lean not on earth; it will pierce thee to the
heart; a broken rood at bent; but oft a epear, on its
sharp pointe. Peace bleeds and Hope expires—
Tomy. _______________
MEMBEES or TE ASSOCIATED PaES.
tbs Amoetated Psoas la enele nivey entitied to the
webueauion of an news dlspatehes eredited to or not <
invaded Maryland.
1891—Chicago World Fair Association
asked the government for a
■5.000,000 loan.
-d,
MGl.u
banu avunn. use am use karemnal at Teana, Samara Moa
Mamon bouibure Colorado ana Weter Ohinuma trum is t
So ecun m advanc at Dooms. Dallaa, run Wori, OS i aS i ms
Diw and steer sasses earrytaq arms tots UMpMeSaa.
i Mooed-eMaa asanas as the gmosritos al Amarilla.
tOasA ooem the Am at Mason 30, 47a.
“Da, us Nigb AmocniedPie teaset wi Servtea.
"svsRIPTOK NATES Bfmn. n"ADVANCE
la Tuusa OS to tome and New Mantao.
posed in the world that escaped its , td it grew and flourished. Foreign
ceaseless vigilance. To Don's eager correspondent. There was romance
imagination it seemed the very Genie In the term. Don began to plan ways
of the News. ; and means df seeuring sudden as-
As the firs t thrill of writing items , signment. He knew that ordinarily
which other people read off Don years of experience preceded such
HDrFra
2eade
Outalde TMom. OWrtema and New Mealee
--.ec-.eg,e 4 a 1 Tone.............HOSS
MMIEAS IN AMARILLO, PAYABLE IN ADVANC
THE RULES *
1—The idea of letter golf is to
change one word to another and do
it in par, a given number of strokes,
three strokes, COW, HOW, HEW.
HEN.
B—Ten can change only one letter
at a time.
■—You must have a complete word, 4
of common usage, for each jump. !
■lang words and abbreviations don’t
count.
4—The order of letters cannot be '
te:
• What are
To the M
bl
To the wl
Whore th
bi
Aad the
to
Through t
Of what I
The kiss <
JPhe curve
{The spell
» Fot work I
The dust i
And one b
Not soon
retrved
MEMBEM OF THl~AUmT~BPRRAl>~OP~CIRCULATIONS
FOR STARS ONLY
You should be a star to work to-
day's letter golf puzzie-STAGE to
DOORS. It’s a fairly simple par six,
however, and one solution is on the
back page.
■ Month eeeceeb-qee- 4 .n
• Months -,-,-,..-.-$2.25
84
12
pick up little stuff. The Telegram i: __________ „ _ ,
prints it, and people here read it," I found himsalf always
country
>p Jit a
Bringing his bride, a Berlin newspaper woman,
Sinclair Lews, who took Maia street to a serious
spoof lag in one of hisbooka, bestows upon the no-
tion at least temporary approval. His first remark?
"After all," ba says, "the re’s no place like home."
. . . And if that isn't a Maia street crack, please
just what let —
Mr. Lewis establishes some kind of world’s record
when he confesses frankly that he "has no views
on Europe."
Comparisons are frequently misunderstood," are
hlo words. "Wise eracks come easy, bnt compari-
sons require deep thought and cannot be made la
ordinary conversation."
Mrs. Lewis is writing a book on Russia—and it
will bo’"By Miss Dorothy Thompson."
K ? I
Sa , ■
gtog
ed - A
NSTAIES
‘PA,
-AAn
about ro-
ues. How-
MORE WORE PER MAN.
Government reporta aren't always the most in-
teresting reading ia the world, but now and then
they contain statements that provoke thought.
The Department of Commerce recently issued a
report oa the nation’s business for the first half of
1928. After pointing out that business conditions
were good and that production was high, the re-
port made this amazing statement:
“In maffufacturing, the output per worker aver-
aged about 43 per cent higher in 1027 than in 1919."
That one sentence contains implications of •
whole new social and economic system. It will bear
a good deal of pondering. Man’s capacity to make
things has increased enormously. The results will
be of incalculable scope.
During Jackson’s. administration the first railroads
were built in the United States, anthracite coal was
used in an engine, a reaping machine was Invented and
other important machines designed. Opponents of
Jackson, calling themselves Whigs, banded into a po-
litical party. From the Whigs the present Republican
party drew much of its early strength.
menmeasynopus comet mis. The Srnesonet, (Tq Be Continued193
using this
many well-bred children who were
it seems to Jess Mitchell of the Lamb County
Leader at Littlefield that growing old in sad
"enough without Dame Nature rubbing it in with
*l double-chia and baldness.
al-:m P
M/6.:
" A POLICE BERGEANTS BRAVE FIGHT
Now and then we read of police deeds of heroism,
the saving of a drowning persons, disarming of a
bandit, or a thrilling rescue from a burning build-
ing. But the breve fight of Sergeant Arthur Roth of
Cleveland has been carried oa to • different way—
the saving of children in the rushing traffic of the
city streets— and the sergeant lies seriously UI as
, the result of his struggle.
Three youngsters were billed in four consecutive
days oa the streets and Sergeant Roth's nerves toft
him. Ha lies seriously ill from a nervous breakdown
as Cleveland's traffic toll for 1928 mounts past 140
lives. For eighteen hours a day Sergeant Roth has
carried oa a campaign of education— showing his
films and giving lectures in the schools by dsy and
putting on the same ehew for the truck drivers of
big .companies by sight The sergeant, a lover of
children, pie his whole heart inAuhis work, and
after automobile wheels during the first half of
August had crushed ent the lives of more than half
a dozen little ones, he fell stricken.
If those who drive automobiles recklessly, who
step on the gas in an effort to beat signal lights, who
pursue the "right-of-way" ruthlessty, oblivious of
The country along the Gulf of Mexico beyond the
United States' possessions was called Texas by the
Spanish and Mexicans. Americans began to move In
about 1819. Soon large numbers had arrived. Both
Adams and Jackson tried to buy the territory but Mexi-
co refused to sell. The Texans began to tak about in-
dependence and in 1835 fighting began. ' tor
changed.
One solution is printed or th back.!
My TEoodness wlyum, Im eortcay **** ....
TELLING THE WORLD
by Dale Van Ever
He .was so dirty that when they searched him,
hospital attendants at Bellevue hospial wore rubber
gloves. He gave his name as Peter Reilly, of no
certain address, and his beast skiuued a little now
and then. He was very, very dirty.
He was very dirty, filthy, actually — (pardon this
please) and HOW I In a paper bag next to his
skin, the searchers found $3,419.58 in cash. Two
bank books showed deposits of $587.
A really dirty man!
glad you fool so well and ambitions,
ma sod and pop sod. Well I do, and if
a reporter from any of the papers
calls to ask for my opinion of my
present condition, you may quota mF
freely. And you may ferther soy
that I owe my splendid fizzical fit-
ness to the feet that I cawt up on
my sleep, he sod.
Well I must say yon certeny cawt
up on your sloop if anybody ever did,
ma sed. My goodness you went to
bed rite .after suppir nearly every
nite and never got up till • or 10 the
following morning without ixagger-
alien. If catching up on your sleep
makes you feel -strong you awt to
feel like an unlimited giant, she eed.
I do, I went to get down to that
old office and dig in a mile a min-
alt, pop sod, and ma nod, AH rite,
then why dont you make a clean start
by setting your alarm clock at a
quarter to 7 as youve bin threttening
to do for soverel munthst
I will, but not tonite, ita not a
wise thing to make such abrupt
changes, pop sod, and ma sed, Hoe
boo dont make mo laff. =-
Meening she dident think he ever
wouid, . ‘
chair, saying, Well, wen it comes to
restoring a mans vim and vigor and
renewing his appetite for work,
theres nothing like a cupple of weeks
in the country, unless perhaps a
cupple more weeks.
In distant places who gathered the been perfect, he thought, bad it not
news that Iron Mike delivered.
Tigers in India killed more than 1000 people last
year. But the blind ones in tbio country killed
even more than that.
BY BENEFIT OF INVAS1OX.
For quite a few yean aow American marines and
Ravel forces have been in charge of affairs in Haiti.
A good many people have felt that this was not
~ right, and the United States has been accused of
seizing the island without regard for the feelings
of its inhabitants. Native leaden who have pro-
tested have gone to jail; it is possible, reading the
record, to work up quite a bit of sympathy for the
oppressed Haitians.
But there's another side to IL
A writer in the current Review of Reviews points
out that the medical staff of our navy has been
extremely active ia Haiti. In 1915 nearly half of
the country's population of 2,000,000 Buffered from
some form of tropical or social diseases. Today the
percentage of victime is inconsiderable. Helth
stations and clinics have been established through-
out the island. Disease is being conquered.
When you're pitying the Haittiana, don't forget
that point.
themselves s U
week's money to pay last week’s bills.
He was tired of cheap restaurants
and Mrs. Simpson's lodging house.
The Telegram had raised his salary
but he had not yet learned to live
even comfortably on thirty dollars a
week.
Then one day came a phone call
which made him feel at once very
foolish and very pleased. The cash-
ier of his father’s bank called him
at the office one morning.
"I've noticed you haven’t drawn on
your account for weeks," he explain-
ed. "Perhaps its slipped your mind
that you have a small income from
those bonda which your grandfather
left you in trust. It isn’t a great
deal, averages about a hundred a
week—but it has been piling up."
Don could hardly believe his oars.
There certainly was no question
about his wanting to draw on it.
Now he could live decently.
He found n good bachelor apart-
ment. It belonged to a college pro-
fessor who was taking a year in
Europe Was full ofibooka and other
eeholarly paraphernalia. It made a
fitting background for a budding
foreign correspondent—a journalist.
that which la mere favecod by the
sunshine.
The modem bathing suit has
taught U to cultivate bodies more
bountiful and plensing to the eye.
Even in ordinary atreet clothes, the
women of today have adopted each
practical styles that the air cireu-
lates over the whole body, giving the 4
ekin a continuous air bath for which V
it has been hungry for several gen !
orations. For some,reason, men have*
he observed to the sympathetic tele-
graph editor. "But the stuff these
press agent guys write is big or it
isn’t worth Writing at all. And when
they turn it out it goes all over the
world. There’d be something to that
kind of work.”
The telegraph editor was unim-
pressed. He was a veteran news-
paperman. He had known the drud-
gery .of many kinds of newspaper
work. He knew there was routine
in press associations just as on
newspapers and that it was imper-
sonal routine at that. A man wor-
ing on a newspaper had a personal
connnection with his work. He could
see what he had written in print.
Some of this he tried to explain but
Don waa oblivions.
"Well, why don't you see the old
man end got him to recommend you
for a job with the United Press F
suggested the telegraph editor wear-
ily.
"That’s a swell hunch agreed Don.
"I’ll have them send me to Paris."
The telegraph editor grinned. He
thought Don was fooling- Nothing
could have been farther from the
truth. Once the idea had been plant-
Many northerners op-
posed Texas’ admission
because it would give to
much mora slave terri-
tory. The dispute was
not bottled at once ‘ ‘
$ )9 *
$ (5
e‘0 \“\TEXAS
M-s
Months ngo Gangland’s guns barked into the face
fo Frankie Yale aa he drove hie automobile along
a city street. It was Gangland, silencing one of its
own citizens, and in affairs like this the police
seem to be altogether unnecessary. '
Now and then in the newspapers are stories say-
ing that “the murderers are known, arrets are Im-
minent and evidenee ‘necessary for their indictment
is being gathered."
If no arrests ever were made for Frankie Yale’s
murder, it wouldn’t be the first time Gangland has
exorcised its swift and bloody office undeterred. It
is a quaint and curious way Gangland has—and it
almost seems as if the underworld had some sort
of treaty with the police whereby those things
could be consummated.
Gangland lives more er loos by a code of its own
—and a rigid code, too. There are boundary lines,
strictly drasm, carefully watched. Then are on-
written restrictions, about Gangland's women. Thoro
are transactions Gangland forbids. The transgressor
pays with his life.
To Gangland, life is grass.
brought up to consider the feelings of others before
themselves sidestep to allow oomo ruthless compan-
ion to shove himself into their place. I have come
to the conclusion that one of the first things chil-
dren should be taught is the gentle art of standing
up for themselves.
The creed that I speak of need not interfere one
whit with generosity. It deals more with a fine sense
of justice and in showing a child that he has as
much right to his own consideration as others.
A certain boy got up a little summer flub for hik-
ing. swimming and things that other boys love to do.
Instantly his close friend conceived the idea of or-
ganization and made himself president. The first
boy did most of the work. The second boy got all
the honors and "bossed" things. The first boy, loyal
to a fault, allowed It to pass "beause" aa he explained
to hie parents, “Bob’s smart and he can do things I
can't do."
But hie parents know better.
Jane's aunt took five little girls on a picnic in her
ear. The glory rather reflected on Jane, who was in-
strumental in getting it up. Her mother put up the
lunch, provided rebec and swimming suite and what-
not fer the children's comfort.
When it came time to get into the waiting codan,
Jane expected the seat of honor beside her aunt But
thoro was Betty, already ensconeed. Jane stayed in
back with the others. Betty pointed eat the places she
had been to, all along the road. Betty knew tbio
and knew that, Betty did this and that and other
thing. It was Betty’s party. Well-bred Jane never
said a word.
Bnt her aunt was not stupid. . .
That night she remarkd to Jane's mother, "Yon have
taught Jane everything to make other people happy,
but left her out It's high time you were giving her
a lesson in spunk." ,
ed by both sezes allows a freer cir-
culation of air and undoubtedly con-
tributee to the increased longevity
of the human race.
Take advantage of the waning sum-
mertime oo that yea can avail your-
self of thio meet valuable health
foreo —a simple and inexpensive
treatment for which there io no bet-
ter substitute in the physician’s
pharmacopoeia.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
QuesTION: A. M. writes: ”1 am
meventy-three rears eld. and am bothered
with a twitehing or serkins in my less
whe retirinu, somelimes koopinC nw
awake lor an hour or more. Will you
please let sue know the cause, also if there
is a remedy F
ANBWERi The Jerkin* is your lees
is doubtlees reused by a poor eirculaton
of blood. I would advise you to take some
exereines about an hour before retirtng.
After the exercises, sit Io a tub of warm
water, immersine the less is the watet
for about two or three minutes. This
will help the eireulation and should pre-
vent the jerkins. If you will write me
0 Monthe «••••.6425
1 Year .......... ..0tM
WOMAN'S VIEWPOINT-
By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON.
There is nothing truer than that the world takes
us at our own value. The child who always stops
back and allows the others to elbow him ent of- place
will react to his own behavior and keep sliding
down in the scale of his self-esteem, and eventually
the esteem of others.
He will feel in time, certainly and surely, that he
was born to take a back seat in the world. He will
obsequiously kow-tow to children who are his in-
feriors in mental and character make-up.
break weald be permanent Seen his
father would send for him, his allow-
ance would be resumed.
But weeks went by with no word
from Joel Davis. Don lived with dif-
ficulty on his meager Telegram sal-
ary. His pride stiffened. And gradu-
ally his interest In his work became
more and more absorbing.
Yesterday's achievements are as
nothing when one is handling news.
Every day presents a new start; each
story to be covered a totally new
problem. Don liked that It fitted his
eager, restless temperament. Every
moment in The Telegram office was
a new moment On the dullest day
the biggest story might break. Other
people might hear of it later, listen
to rumors, wait to read the papers.
But the newspaper man knew at once.
He was immediately head over heels
in the center of whatever was hap-
pening.
For weeks Pon chafed when he was
kept on routine while more experi-
enced moa were seat out to handle
more interesting stories. But gradu-
ally his margin of usefulness grow.
His eagerness and energy made up
for his-inexperience. More and more
often it wa* to him that the city
oditor nodded when a reporter waa
to be sent out on a hurry call.
But of all things in the news room
of The Telegram which caught and
held his Interest it was Iron Miko
which fascinated him most. He was
always aware of Ito steady, staccato
ehatter. One* whoa ha was watching
it, it broke off ia the middle of a
sentence of a story about Washing-
tea polities. Aa if jerked by nervous
fingers the paper flow up a double
apace and the keys swiftly spoiled:
“FLASH — SHANGHAI— CHINESE
RIOTERS FIRE ON AMERICAN MA-
RINES.
That waa the way with Iron Mike.
It did not even wait to finish a sen-
tence when news of great importance
broke. It was leepless, tireless. Ita
mechanical hands were conatantly
writing and nothing of import hap-
Seen Aboyt Nov York
NEW YORK, Sept. s—When the big linen from
Europe arrive in flocks, passengers often are hold
for hours on the piers until the customs iaspertero
c*a got around to them. The situation la "meet"
far the ehip news reporters and camera men.
The other day IS big ships from abroad went into
a huddle at thgir piers an d passengers had to wait
for baggage examination. That day the ahip news
eolumna were full — stories ayd pietures.
Harry M. Daugherty, he of the unhappy Hard-
ing regime, wee among those who arrived. Hoover
would carry Okie, he thought, aa a matter of
course. . . . "I’m through with polities however,
and won't take part in the campaign." . . . Bnt we
all knew that. Daugherty, a wet aayo he thinks the
Eighteenth amendment is enforceable — and will be
enforced.
* Montha .*40*
I Yer....,,,
SYNOPSIS
Don Davis, thrown oat by hie
wealthy father, goes to work aa a
Telegram reporter. While working
oa a murder tip, Don meets Chrys-
tal Maleae, a road house dancer.
Spike Gregg, the murderer, la ar-
rested and Don Mores a scoop. He
refuses the invitation of an old
friend, Lily Merrill, and goes to
live at a rooming house, where he
io kept awake by the pacing of a
mysterious woman In the adjoining
room. He discovers that she io
Mra. Cranston, a woman for whom
a nation-wide search la being con-
ducted. and scoops the story. To
save Mrs Cranetea from suleide,
Don urgks his paper to suppress
the story, which they do. Dea
takes Chrystal to dinner to thank
her for taking care of him while
he wa* drunk.
The Dully News la aa teds*—dsat Demoeratie
9i date in.
•K/)AME RICAN
JvVHI STORY
September 4.
1861— Confederates violated neutral-
ity of border states by sending
troop* into Kentucky.
1862— Loo crossed the Potomae and
CHAPTER XIV
Wanderlust
Those first months on The Tele-
gram meant much to Don. He had
sought a job on the etaff that day
after the final break with hl* father
chiefly for the sake of amusement.
It had seemed an entertaining thing
to do. He had not felt then that the
K.BSoveMDeAR,I voA‘
FIK.1.LPOLABouTMY *
| MARVELoUS INJVENrOA VET!.. =
2’- MAP,- v IS A -TALKIAlG f
F SI6NBOARD! --0N BACK OF E
-THe SleN IS A SoDNDREPRODUCINaE
L MACHIAE TA PLANS A RECORD <
f APVERSIA6 -Te -ARci DISPLAYsD
I ON„WE SlGA!-FOR IASCAAcE,TE
Er -TWe SLBJEc is ALTOMOBCLE ):
V ADVERTSIAe, WV-TALKIAG SiGA-K
4, BOARD WoULD AANOLNce )
—KULVoCALLY;„He QUALITIES AMP )
ERPRICE OF -TE •
AufOMOBILE!-) >
k ma. vs PAT.OVV.
Bq 1 ERR, SV NIA stnVcE, me
1
addramed to him, care of The New*.
Enelosed stamped, addressed, large
envelope for reply.
BUN BATHING
When you are contemplating a sun-
bath, either in the nude or at the
beach. it la well to keep in mind the
fact that an overdose of the son’s
rays to always injurious.
I find that many people suffer
from the mistaken belief that if a
little sunshine ia good, a great deal
to better. Extreme sunburn to often
very dangerous, aa thb skin becomes
ao swollen and injured by tho bum
that the proper elimination of the
poisons, which are normally dis-
charged through the perns, cannot
take place. This has a disastrous
effect upon the kidneys.
Even a faint glow of sunburn on
the skin affects the body in a pro-
portionate manner, and to injurious
aa long a* it lasts. It ia much bet-
ter to measure one's sunbath over
several exposures and receive an in-
creasing tan each time, than to try
to become burnt through the effects
of only one or two sunburns.
One whose skin is well tanned has
benefited by the ultraviolet ray* of
th* sun which ar* needed to produce
such a dark color. However, the
mere darkening of the skin is of no
benefit but must be considered only
as a necessary change which occurs
to the skin as a protection against
too much sunlight.
In taking your sunbaths, remem-
ber that the sunlight must strike the
body directly without the obstruc-
tion of clothing or even glass, which
would divert the ultra-violet rays.
Heating the body with sunlight
through clothing is of no more bene-
fit than heating from a stove.
It is well to time yourself at first
so that you do not take an over-
dose of this valuable remedy and in-
crease the time of treatment as your
skin gradually tans.
When taking a sunbath, one should
avoid overheating, which is indicated
by a quickening of the pulse. When
this occurs, quietly rest in the shade
for a time before finishing your reg-
ular time for exposure.
Sometimes people bathing on the
beach are sunburned on a cloudy day
because they do not feel the heat of
the sun. This is because the ultra-
violet rays which produced the burns
do not warm the skin, but do pene-
trate through the clouds and moist
air. If you wish to stay on the
beach for a long time without being
sunburned, it is wise for you to ex-
pose your body to the sun for only
a short time, and for the remaining
period keep it covered with a blanket
or robe. In thia way many hours
can be spent on the beach so that
one can benefit from and enjoy th*
inhalation of the clean, fresh, moist,
salt air.
Nude sunbathing is now being rec-
ognised by all physicians for dis-
ease* such as anemia, tuberculosis,
rickets, asthma, catarrh, chronie ton-
sillitis, and disorders of metabolism,
such as nephritis and diabetes. There
is a German proverb that states that
the hearse calls twice as often on
the shady aids of the street as on
Hs restored his stock of clothes.
Resumed his one time habit of eating
in Hugo's. Bought a small roadster.
The difference msdo by this com-
partive affluence was amasing. Dar-
ing the months of his poverty what
money be bad waa the result of his
own painful earning. Nevertheless
because it was so scant it had
brought him little satisfactin. He
had felt a failure. Poverty had daily
impressed upon him his own inferior-
ity. This new income was in no
sense the product of his own effort.
Still it brought with it the illusion
of success, restored his self confi-
dence. Living in good rooms, eating
excellent meals, driving to work in
..... ...... ”
"piparitkeAa "
Nod SA SOMETij6 “
ABodT aoca 1b A
CORA- ROAS-oMORROV |
WiT TE owL’s CLUB ?.
--TAT BElAlG -HE ie
CASE I WILL BUY A’
SMALL LEO OF LAMB, :
INSTEAD OF .A “fed f
PoUAD ROAsT!.g_.
larva, atamped, neit-midiesed emvelope,
I will be clad to nend you a apecimi chart
of exercises without chars*.
QUESTION: Mra. M. G. aakai "What
is the bestmethod of keeping urapesf
2 ANSWER: Sound cranes may be kept
in oood condition for a lone time by wrap-
vine each bunch in waxed paper. After
tying the end* they should be placed on
sum* soft material, such as cotton bat-
tin*. and kept la a cool place. They may
abo be packed in California redwood •aw-
dust and atored in a cogl place. Angther
method,, frequently used la Europe, io to
place the atock of eack bunch of wrapen
in a email kettle of water containine a
piece of ehareoal, if a temperature of
about 88 degrees Ie maintained, they will
koe* in enod condition for e lone time.
QUESTION: Rath eskat “Whet would
you think beat to do for eciatie rheuma-
tiam! The party in quention bee been
in bed elose to four years with it. He
Ums milk diet now?
ANSWER: What to called "“seiatie rheu-
matisn" may be due to an Inflaaaomtion
of the seiatie nerve and eaused by rhea-
mail, toxins »r, the acne may be
pinched some place between where its
hranches emerge from the lower epine
An ostepath or rhlropractor oould quleki,
correct the trouble if it to eaucod by
pinched nerves, and a diet to euro rheuma
turn would brine about a cure of the
trouble U it to canoed by the rheumatle
toxemia.
k
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 303, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 4, 1928, newspaper, September 4, 1928; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564062/m1/4/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.