Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 35, Ed. 1 Monday, January 20, 1930 Page: 4 of 10
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.Y
4
' AMARILLO DAILY NEWS
Note Be
Pne
Seen About New York
ich
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you get out of this habit
U
agzerating the more pleased
$
pop sed.
Well maybe it wo not exaekly
all a w*yi that long. I sed.
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Damoeraale
ne Wb Now, to an
TIE SATEST cm.
date suburbs at te future.
etall
Wick 1 Mid.
Blackburn’s ambulanee. Ph.
1
a. Truly.
Little Joe
B
ABE MARTIN
miles southwest, of I
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It was most gorgeous to behold, a
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BUCK ROGERS, 2430 A. D.
Prime Minister Caught
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Anybody can Jet Otis.
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walk home with it. We debt call It dishonesty at two.
Why shouid we at four or six if the child has never
been told differentiy! It I* at just about thli age that
w, must start our eonerete lessons in honesty. It’s up
Yes, I’LL GIVE
You two or
THEM AND YOU
CAN 5END I
BY AR MAIL.
ca
fa
‘ WEOD
ow-ns,
A MOGUL
HENRY, ‘NANE YOU A
rwo-cENT STAMP? X
FORGOT TO PUT ONt
ON MY LETTER TO
JOE OUT IN MISSOURI.
Us date in
American
HISTORY
\
th
A he DiDarr
KNOW ABOU
If we start early aad strike while the Iron I* hot,
at the time an act la committed, not only in this mat-
ter of honesty but a hundred other little things, we
will save ourselves tone of trouble later on.
Nothing can equal the object lesson in accomplish-
Tea eannot loan to be a comic. It ia * gin
of God."—Harry Lauder.
©MeA
nau a e mt. on
ticularly when the habit of helping themselves to other
children’s possessions to so difficult to break in some
children. Sometime* we cannot help a feeling that
somewher in ages peat there ha* been a black mark ‘
of dishonesty on the family escucheon which has filtered
down to the present.
Bat a* a matter of fact, we greatly overestimate it
Practically all children starting life have this tendency
to reach out and take whatdoean’t belong to them if
it strikes their fancy. A baby doesn’t question whose
rattle he seises. A two-year-old child will toddle over
“No man can produce great thing, who la net
thoroughly sincere in dealing with him self."—James
Russen LowelL
Paris. It has been th* scene of many
other historie events, including the
signing of the armistice between
Garat Britain and the United States
in 1783, and was, fsr a time, the
capital of France. -
Today also la the anniversary of
the institution of the United States
Departments of Commerce and La-
bor, on Jan. 18, 1903.
On Jan. 18, 1775, Georgia elected
delegate, to the Continental Con-
gross.
On Jan. 18, ITU, Daniel Webster
was born.
take, you
eegeidede
can see M
TELEVOX LEVT THE APARTMENT
AND RETURNED IN A FEW MNIT$
wOGO._ A-T-
“Love is a rust, primal force, the very heart of
Mfo itseiz."—Sherwooa Eddy.
VERSAILLES CONFERENCE
On Jan. IE 1919, the Versailles
peace conference formally opened.
Out of this meeting earn* the
treaty of peace signed by represent-
ailroo of the allied power, and Ger
W fHILLIP NOWLAN
and RICHARD cALKINS
TELwOK? STAID
Gor 8,
&
1
4
We expect them to know instinetively that they never noblest gift I had.
should touch other people*, things. But M a rule they “
4 •
N
J
—iN --r
ant thrills as I go forth to milk the cow.
I owe my thanks to Uncle Ben, a better
scout was never born; he gave to me a
fountain pen upon the festive Christ-
mas morn. It is a triumph of its sort and
must have been exceeding dear; it seems
France, capital of
Seine-et-Oise, 11 i
to
fMo-
N Dououeks TR4u6
"ZA pose DOESNT ALIM$
"V LEAD TO A $1R1WB.
___ID
/
1,
CHRISTMAS GIFTS.
My aunt gave me a fountain pen, at Christmas time,
and made me glad; I said again and yet again it was the
Eeing and Bundas.
ent .............81.00
“Did ha pan out or drop out?"
asked Toll Binkley today when he
hoard o* Dink Bott*' deth. Ive only
met Constable Plum’s new deputy
once. But he emells like a good, law.
•bldin’ eitizen.
(Copyright John F. Dille Co.)
‛cucv-ukr)4E
COMBINATION /Z * €2
-aw. PAHAP). V
Joi
and 20 for the word If you uneeramble it. On the bac
I oupteia the miatakes aad tall yen the wood. Then yo
w a hundred yen bat.
Myrna or th a audit sukeau or cisculation*
$
466291
NQACEToTEpUBLIC.
. of aa-
&
F
2-i,
Walt Mason Himself
The World’s Most Famous Rhymster
• a
Pep wee smoking to himap4 4 1 ]
wae thinking about doing mhyDhene-1
work, saying, G, pop, m fellow, made {
a slide today and it was a peetch, it
was about a half block long.
Come come. Ire Maa many elide, h
my long and bizsy Ufa, but Ivo newr
seen one. a half block long or a quar-
ter of a block either, and the sooner
THOUGHTS
Look onto me, and he ye eaved, all the ends of the
earth i fee I am God, and there to nene else—lselah
45:22,
a"
don't know any nek thing. Pro had to argue my way
through a veritable bramble-patch of opinion on this
■abject; so many mothers insist that honesty io born
in a child or vice vena.
Not a Serlous Fault
HI admit that occasionally it doee look like it, par-
Probably yea have never heard of Radburn, N. J.
But it to improbable that you won’ hear of it many
time, from now on. For Radburn, if Now Tork'c
tending architect* and city planners are correet in
their predietions, to destined to be the forerunner
,V
r't
Thio newest suburb at New Tork City, 13 mlles
from Manhattan bland. I, designated by its builder,
"The Town for the Motor Age." Ito streets and
sidewalks are m designed that it to possible to reach
any house in the town from any other without once
erossing the path of an automobile.
The town to without doubt the safest populated
spot in America, My* The American Architect mag-
azine Although located on a male motor highway
Md in a region nf immense traffic it also effort
garden-like veclusion and quiet to fully 90 per cent
ot its residents.
The chter feature of the plan to a write of
court*, or deed-end streets, running back from the
main motor highway on either side. Along each of
these ocurts Mme 20 housos are grouped. m that
only motorists bound for one of these homes have
aay need to enter the court.
But the added feature af safety is thet the
sidewalks do not parallel the eourta. IB fact they
are not sidewalks in the litefal sense for that rea-
son, but simply walks or footways which approach
the homes from the side opposite the courts and
the* provide dividing lines between one resident’s
property and hie neighbor's. Only the garages and
kitchens of the homes open up on the meter drive-
ways, M that unlesa a resident or caller to bound
for his automoblle there is no necessity of going
into the vehiele area at all. *
A third safety fnetor to that the court, on op-
poaite sides at the highway an set placed directly
opposite each other, as to the case with city street
intersections, but enter the highway in a stagzered
design. This makes it imposable for a motorlat to
drive at high speed aeross the main thoroughtare,
since he meet maho either a right or left turn.
Each house, then, instead of facing a busy and
dangerous street, looks out across a quiet town to
it* neighbor'* front porch. Behind it to the drive-
way of the court, with gardens on either aldo, whoee
quiet to broken ealy occasionally by the passing of
a neighbor’s car. The problem of crossing the main
highway is solved by aa underpass, which dlpc be-
twath the thoroughfare while traffic goes flashing
by above.
The plan also provides adequate park* and play,
ground* to be reached with equal safety.
bfor M •
u.a to hold about a quart, and ought to run
H me for a year. It fills itself with pur-
pie ink when I press down a little knob,
and in the coming days, I think, ‘twill make a pleasure of
my job. If I am happy in my den, it is because of Cousin
Kate; her Christmas gift, a fountain pen, is something
truly fine and great She must have known what I de-
sired. she surely must have read my thought; she saw
——__। that I was sad tired, and broken-hearted and dis-
La th. gWhenkeuponskeerp,, her lav th.1 traught; "He needs a fountain pen,” she said; she has the
joU Wher. aho fond il Ton her i* is Mar’a doil, not heart to understand; the one she gave is black and red, my
bon. "Wo mustn’t touch Mary'* things!" There’s th* name engraved upon the band. "Now work will be a keen
lesson! Every time she appropriate* something, she । delight,” I murmur softly through my face, as I sit down
mu hetoldeltmust bekoptupcontinuousiy- Pretty l in pece to write an epic that wili jar the race. I feed
• a. th* t"berod will understand I my red Rhode Island hens, and my emotions are sublime,
for I have fourteen fountain pens that came to me at
Christmas time. My life’s no longer on the blink, my soul
is shorn of doubt and fear, and if I don’t run out of ink
I’ll write a million odes this year. —
God can ehange th* lowest to th* highest, abase
th* proud,rand reise th* humble.-Horace.
many, marking close of World war.
When’s the Time to Quit?
. hhf by BRUCE barton eAu,
had made himself master of one certann phase of
the company's affairs
He looked around him and above him, and was
discouraged Everywhere his way seemed to be
blocked by men who had been there longer, but
were young enough so that they would be active
for many years.
One night he definitely deaded to look for .
something else. The next day an officer of the
company visited his branch, and a violent discus-
acn ensued The officer upheld one side of the
question, my young fnend the other. And my
young fnend knew his facts, he was right.
The argument ended by the officer asking him
to come down to New York “for a few weeks."
He has been there ever once.
If he had resigned the preceding evening, my
young friend would have missed his one great
chance
Hanging over the door of the laboratory of a
great automobile company is this sentence “No
one ever would have crossed the if he could
have got off m the storm “
I am not writng this piece to try to make any
man contented with a poor job There are plenty
of instances where men have mdethez.everlase- ,
mg fortunes by making a freah start - 0 _
But more often, I think, the battle s won yus
by sitting tight. • McOum Nevspape Syndicate
, ..
"I* the best storles, th* humor lles la th* Im-
plication."—Zona Gal*.
will be *Mto
It b mi
sed. Thanks for th* alite concession,
and I Md, Anyways, Skinny Martin
took a fearse spilr and got a bump on
his forehed the (tea at a orange
Officer he's I* agon, pop sed. Tat
Fool sake what did I just got throuzh
telling you? If I remember that Mar-
tin boy cotreckly, his whole bad
izzent much bigger than a oraago.
m according to your diseription he
mart of looked like a S hedded boy,
ho Md.
Well I hot the bump wm aa Mg aa
a peetch, I sed, and pop sed, Aad I
bet it wasent aad I win without see-
lag it. Youll make much more of a
hit la thia ekepticat world by under-
stating insted of over stating. If
yoa had told ma he had a bump the
size of a pao Id willingly bleeve l«
was at leaat the (Im at a bean, but
now that youve dragged aa intire
orchard into the story Im prepared
to bleeve what he got la the bed
waa a bale and not a bump at all,
be aad.
Walt G, pop, at least it was a good
size of a bump, nt least, I nod, and
pop sed. That sounds more ilka evi-
dents. All rite, the boy had a bump
on hla hed, I dont question it At
teat Im convinced, he cod.
I bet Ivo MW (OOM emall erangos
at least that big, I ood, and pep sed.
And I bat I could give yoa a wallop
with my slipper that would EMe a
bump th* lire of a watermelon.
There, confound it, now youve g Ame
doing it. Yoe *•* what happendby
associating with people like you. Do
your lesins, Ka ood.
r
0 I S U V
Grammarslips
L What ie wrong with thia sen-
tonce? “Not one of the hooka were
read."
t. What la th* correct pronuneia-
siom of "suiter"
' • 3. Which one of thest words I*
— misspelled Trustee, truely, trous-
mou.
mipars or TuE ABaoanno ram
The AmoclatsdPiea to enelqafvel, jnhm to the
(teobkeoMM of all new sapetehe eiedited
“aebz,asamdztg.aranapau
RODE downtown in a taxicab, and
looked at the picture of the driver on the
license card which is issued by the police
Where had I seen a face like that’
Suddenly I knew An acquaintance of mine
looks enough hke that taxi driver to be his twin
if the whole truth be blurted out, I doubt if
there is a very wide difference in intelligence be*
tween that taxi driver and my acquaintance
Neither has much education Neither is well
read Neither can be accused of profound thought
How Is it, then, that one is on the front seat
of a cab and the other ndes in the back scar of
a limousine’
Luck? Undoubtedly there is a lot of luck m
every successful career But I think my acquaint*
ance has at least one quality which the taxi driver
lacks He stuck to his game through some pretty
lean, tough years when there was every reason to
be discouraged and quit ,
The dividing line between success and failure
■ just a hair-line in thousands of cases One single
decision may make all the difference
A young man has just been promoted into the
vice presidency of a corporation, and given a stock
participation that will make him many times a
mllonare
He told me that he started in a branch office
of the company as an accountant Before long he
Aw eroneom MftomiM upon ito eharneter, atanding at rep
«IMiM at oat tadiviqual, hrm comeern, or corporaio i**i
(Mr aaatae t the qolumga at ne Newecis. -- - -----
■rnvMM when (*IM t lb* attentlen of tb* editur. ______
alcaporzomot egroas
ada."hzascarantndetcaprominenu a* wm lb* wroag "u
Sad’e
- •
i.M
fk'
V &
PHVE
- rteM a m. nd • cop, wiU te^*—l out W
mewapaper, pabllehing the news impartially, and
suvvorting wb*t U belleves to be right regardleas
at party polltiea
tag th* ***** truth we wish to impress •• • plastie
young mind. ‘
Answers.
1. Say, "was read." “On*" is th*
singular subject.
3. Pronounco "sweet," not "suit"
to a strang porch, pick up a doll that teal hers, and
ona de the eatse mistakes we ar* likely to make
la tenhihg ong ehildren behavior is to give them
long talk* upon this, that or the otkar subject at times
whan thev ar* not much interested.
Wo ta Johnny to bo hind when there I* no one
to bo kind to; we tall klm to bo polite whoa there
is no ano near needing hi* consideration: we insist on
hla being honest whan ha haaal been taking anything-
All right, these things—but not enough. |
I am nat discounting th* value at wise eounsel, th*
in-between talks that d* have great suggestive value,
I especially to the older child. But I am convinced that
. the zreatest steps toward definite training ar* awom
plished through actual eases. Th* time to train a little
child la kindnesa is when ha hM been tapoUte. And
the time to give him a first ateM lesson in honesty to
when he I* being th* opposite. Because it I* a fact
that children-litile children-will unconsciously annex
things that don't belong to them, act knowing th*
ethtes of ownership. “
Little ehildren ar* really ignorant at personal right*.
•OH THE POOH
DNT KILL HIM, YOUR
„.MNJEST,MLA ‘
888240083
RQZEN TF
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"Th* vocabulary of many a stenographer to a*
abbreviated M bar froth."—Murray Morton.
suescpirjION RATE* BY MAIL IN ADV ANU*.
1 ESL^hF fezrez
1 Week ••**••*••<••**( IB 8 Months ***••***« ».22-10
• Month a* a® -79 6 Montha. --**0
gm uric tin to Xt Data Nu I Combtaattos wia
3 ..................1 axernn4.
NEW TOBE. Jam. 10--Thone very swanky am-
ployment agencies, where Park Avenue and Fifik
Avenue uelect their valets, butlers, maid* aad such,
ar* flooded with job seekers at the moment.
Th* backwash of th* Wall Street crash has has-
tened thousands of extravagant ones back to tka old
family budget. Establishments which overflowed
with servanta just one winter ago, now manage to
get along with a cook and a chauffeur. Entire staffa
of servanta have been cleaned out in the acramble
to keep down expensee.
However, these very exclusive bad very select
agencies are one at Manhattan’* particularly inter-
••ting aldeshowa. ,
There ar* two or three which practically control
th* selection at servants for th* people of the Biao
Book and the Social Reginter. Referenees of those
seeking employment must be fool-proof and unques-
tionabe. *
The first fear of an agency to that a thief, or a
opy for a thieving gang, may somehow manage to
obtain a position which would enable him to arrange
a big “inoldo" job. The uhderworld has far years
tried to establish “plants" in the homes of the rich.
Naturally, they would prefer that eno of their own
group set the stage for the "big haul." But, la a
few cases, bribery at * maid er a butler or a pantry-
maa or a valet, has been found effective
Second comes the problem of diseretion. Servant*
of the upper elasses are likely to overhear thing*
which might lead to seandal or see things which
private detectives might like to heart about. Many
ef the spiciest divorce cases in New York are on-
livened by tales told on the witness stand by ladies"
maids.
Thu*, an agent who reeommends a lackey mart
be superlatively cautious. Seldom to a job filled
witbeat the meat elaborate nearch into the antece-
dent* of the job seeker.
J ait now, however, th* offices are flooded with
the blue blood* of the serving world. Servant* who
have seldom, if ever, been ont of employment make
the rounds as thoroughly a* any Breedway ham
actor.
In severat of th* large establishmente, I am told,
servants who have boo* “in the family" fer years
are working without pay, waiting for the master to
recoup hi* fortune*, and content to take • bed end
board. • •
The world'* meet high-hat group of poker player*
la known aa the Thanatopsis Literary and Inaide
Straight Club. It to made up almost entirely of
celebrities — authors, playwrights, columnlat* and
theatrical figures. The chieftains are Heywood
Broun, the essayist-eritie; F. P. A, the paragrapher;
Alexander Woolleott, the critic;. Robert Benchley,
the humorist; George Kraufman, the playwright;
Harpe Man, the elown; Harold Bom, the editor, and
a dozen other eminent Manhattanites,
The name, ineidentally, was sugzested by Sin:
elair Lewis, who gave a similar title te • group ef
poker enthusisets mentioned in one of hia novels.
The latest in Manhattan abopa la called The
Peasant Village.
Located in a skyscraper, it reproduces oa entire
European market place, Ono can ge strolling down
a quaint atreet *ad drop ia on *11 aorta of interest-
Ing vender*. There ar* pottery stalis and brass
etall I aad marta for glasaware, leather geoda and
all the reet. There is even a tea shop.
The atmosphere if that of nimost any little
French town. GILBERT SWAN.
(Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Ine.)
The Woman’s Day
(Copyrighat, 1930. NEA Service, phe»
" Ther are at lotat four mistakes in the above picture. They mebrer- I
tain to grammar, history, etiquette, drawing er whatnot. See if su can I
fled them. Them look at the at rum bled word below-and unseremble it,
by switching the letters around. Grade yourself SO for each at the min-A
) f
"^HO.-THERE,TELEVOX f X (vee,,
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A life insurance atatistician find* that scholars
live longer than athlete*. Maybe some at theee ath-
tote* really de die for dear eld Rutgers, *
thing of mottled white and green; the
pen itself was made of gold, and fit to,
please the proudest queen. A gift of
that sort surely fills a long-felt want,
we must allow; and so I’m feeling pleas-
herein bm aio
EheE
Car and rtUn cacmy tamwa •—>>«*• (Malta**
" D*l *ad NW AataitolM Fr— L*a*ed Wile"
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BUTTON FOR ME, TURNED OH THE)
PARAVZING RA.wE’LL FIND TWAT
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 35, Ed. 1 Monday, January 20, 1930, newspaper, January 20, 1930; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564808/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.