Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 12, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 28, 1929 Page: 4 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
M
——
RILLO DAILY NEWS
„2
-
HEH. «T Mt
Dr. J.
n
HAwE "TAATOUTFiT
Fubilshing C wm.
1
6
Measles sprends so rapidly that ode
WAGOM OUTMDE
\
Day and Night AM*eiated Puem Haaod WireBerviee
It
I
suBscAIPTION
•lo
the first years of gtammar
Outaide
/
ahkfii’
.70
2.
.2 1
M
J •
■
%
til
Nu
All
59
$
m6225o1
0
el
$
8
$
-THE OUTSIDER.
body.
‘.t
WORLD MARKET FOR OLD TIRES.
on
।
।
(
into the furnishings of many eountry places
on
P
Lone Island.
GILBERT SWAN.
Li
(Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, las.)
p
Wayne Kite is a most considerate
leel socially.
t >
«
He will he m meticulous about his shirts as she
Little Joe
A PEOPLE’S THEATER.
I
6
A gtoup ef publie spirited citizens
the
7
0
c
tablish manufaetures.
4
teu.s.PAT.Ow.
r
enture
ML.
AWu
7. W
■
OUR BIGGEST PROBLEM.
A
%
Nethinrinan American life is more astoundlng
T
4
N
Mystery Lurks in Deep
0
A'
%
3
Pur
t
25
r
2*%
«*
?
“r
I I IT
Ml
r
0 J
IP o|n
1____I__________
eountry teking 27,000 lives a year, with no prospeet
that it would end, we shoula have stte and federal
O3ge HAPPIEST
- tHENUEACTK
ousness and dignity on his
the pirit of carelessness 4
I in a ih •V
HIS B US'
in his auto
transform
Not many American motoriats realise that whoa
they junk their old and worn out automobile tires,
they are furnishing material for several pairs of
shoes for »ome peasant in a distant land, and that
• profitable industry has developed abroad ia the
transforming of old automobile shoes into new shoes
for human heings.
Distributors in foremen ports await the supply
is going to i
New Years a
your not zR
get shed 5
will power
Yao Godi52
dropping wei
off amoking after
e Willyum Im sure
let Yewstace Hew*
a simple matter of
•7/////1Z
-WARJCOLUEGE- JRWLL
|i r ■ t i ■ I
111 n i m
1 11 I
in a i ii i in
The Daily News is an independent Demoeratie
newspaper, publish I «r the news impartially, and
ouppirtiag what it believes to be right regardless
of party politica.
The one time you heep it qulet
by telling people to when there’s
a aleeping baby in the house.
with the utmost sori-
rt. There was none of
one so often associates
prised if it reacted on my entire ner-
visa system, and the longer I abstain
the were DI be, I sippose.
P»
I i
I I
I $
I
MONGOLDEEDSEA
PSgdS8#
/«■
) tr
r
J
l ■
wm GOG TO
MOMGOUA, Qur
YULLESAFG
QU OUR SUB .
LAY T YEAR
z way in South AMIERIC
AT Rio or JANEIRO,
-IT WAY MUCH COLDER
THERE THAN THIS.
(
-hm
ORDER AUDIT OF CITY
OF SHREVEPORT ROOKS
FOUR 0E6REES
FAHRENHEAT
TwIS MORN I NW,
JONNTHATs
PRETTY COUP.
h
tion to 1
Amarillo
AVH STORY
On Dec. 18, 1818, Alexander 1 of
Russie gave his peasant subjects ths
same right with his nobles to es-
UT WHEN VUE
IWMrTE A FARMER
WORR¥ Aou
I’ OFFICER
OF T OA
KECHINa NOO.
IN HERE NOW.
HEo -mu. nou
rGo-OUTSIDE
\AGET WARN
23
V,
Sr strain. And eertainly the girls will have to stop
on the gas if they want to keep up with the type
ut man-about-town that seems to be developing.
The Woman’s Day
The men of this generation may hate to pat on
swallow-tail eoata, aad feel silly la high hate—I
approprinttons to fight It The whole natien would
be alarmed. But we let our automobilea kill thet
many aad 'w* do absolutely nothing about it
This thing to rapldly becoming the very blutest
problem we tace. It to for poet time thet We rolled
up our eleeves and tackled it in earnest. That we
have lot It go so long is a burning disgrace to the
nation.
AN’ TLt GO OUT
AM WALK -KAAT
him. “I'll go if Sen. Brookhart won't
be there," said Lafe Bud. whan afked
to attend a dinner for Jake Bentley,
who almost sold his farm yester-
day.
(Copyright John F. Dille Co.)
a Bg hted fire ermeket in a box uf uh-
iighted fire erhekers. Usually when
one youngater has the measles his
2
US betwe
I ------
Tb. A
I
!
2
pean
The child affected with, .1—
should be kept isolated, from
3
. 1 .
playmates are all likely to get them.
Messles oecurs mst frequently be-
tween the years ut sis aad ten, er
.. 2 . "77 - -------
ABE MARTIN
WugNWUL
V • N
)/ WAS
V HIDING-
YwHED BUCK
rCAFTURED
vUEBMANE
uspecreo
OFAlDDdC A
a Am---
his morning, but Inter
' if Im going to stop
r hkw Years I mite es
Mod practice by stop-
" so dident smoke all
poss it roasted onmz
ict I wouldent be ear-
Walt Mason Himself
The World’s Most Famous Rhymster
ne A
"2
2 SPECIL DI
2 z2uze
—so * RED
FO
“SgJS&S,
282,
]
I
J
We was eating breakfist this morn-
ing and ma aed to pop, Willyum, I
was tawking to Maud Howe on the
telefone yestldday and we got to
tawking she told me thst Mr. Hews
Tefoop lr
il • - • THOUGHTS "
Wine to a meeker, atione drink to togingt ana
whosoever to deceived thereby to not wtoa, Freveske
IW,WE EXPECT
HIM "‘LEAVE:
15 HOOSE AN
AMD A SuI
L-o LEANE HIS
MPosT OD5/
wo explain the miatakou aad tell ypa the word. Then you sun see bow neat
«--- (Copyright, 1020, NEA Berrien, ta) -
gbedF, Ba2
4
V
Answers.
1: Omit “not."
t. Pronounce the su ss in "haul,”
not as e in “1st."
3. Debris.
JI
a tAa i VsccT^r
IS MANUH A 61AtE
A
i
SS-
WRECK, HAO
AVTUED A
an’ polite foliar to mi
but comin’ toward yof
(By United Prem)
SHREVEPORT, La., Doe. 27~Gov.
Heuy P. Long today ordered E. A.
Conway, state supervisor of public
aceounts, to msko an audit of the
municipal books of Shreveport.
He said the investigations had boea
ordered after numerous complatnts
bad eome to him regarding the city's
affairs. T*
Joe Dixson, finance commisaiotier,
said he welcomed the probe. Mayor L.
E. Thomas refused to comment.
82
. of old tires collected by the neighborhood junkman.
J Diecarded tires regularly comprise part of the cargo
i of vessels destined for all points of the globe. Shoe*
g made from junked tires protect the Macedonian
from the anew, slush and rain of his mountain
,f eountry; they protect the feet of the Mexican from
his sun-baked path. The stealthy footed cooly la
| Japaa, China or Korea wears a “tabi" with a rubber
2 sols ent from your own cast off tire—well, it’s not
weE Ver LDoM-may
HsPABLE HERE,-ob NEEO V
fte, pop sod. Constant
away a stone, and
-ri-iaz
o.,2g M"vwge
I :mmnpermt218
phizuzsuremsu.
MEMBERS nr THE ASSOCIATED PARAS
____________ Dross is exelumively eutitled to the une for
! iu»inmhi at alt new* dripmeh*. eredited to toBst *******
" eredited to this paper, asd also local sews pvbttobsd tetote
.......publiction ut wpecial diapaiehes herein neo ***
Alexander was a liberal aad thia
was one of a number of construe-
tive measures he instituted. •
To further uplist the country, he
instituted the Imperial bank, and
Odessa waa made a. free port aad
the laws aa debts aad mortgages
were amended.
Today also in the anniversary of
the birthday of Woodrow Wilson,
oa Dee. M, 18se,
And on Doo. M, 1838, John C. Cal-
houn resigned as vice president be-
cause of the prenident's nullificatioh
proclamation.
On Dee. 88, 1848, Iowa was ad-
mitted to the Union.
GIVES FIRST DOLLAR
EARNED TO FUND FOR
LINDBERGH MONUMENT
impossible. In Spain tire shoes are rivaling the
ropo-soled alpargata which is a form of footwear
backed by the eastern ut generations.
Greece is providing the beat market for old tires
Approzimately 60,000 junked tires ar* being im-
ported annually by this country where the old-
fashioned shoes of leather have almost completely
disappeared in favor of the tiro ahoe; which custom
has entirely wiped out tbs former annual importa-
tion of 30,000 Jo 35,000 cow and buffalo dried hides.
Again shewing thet the development of world
markets is as much a matter ef ingenuity, aad edu-
cation as salesmanship.
And after supptr, he sed. Where
the mischiff is that booh I waa reed-
ing? and ma eed, Whata the name of
it? and he aed. How the dooce should
I know!
And he knocked a pile of hooka off
the living room table, laying, Bleat
it to biases, and ma aed. New Will-
yum be ealm, if you dent went to
aware aff Im sure I want any an-
other word about it. Im not going to
have you rula your helth and every-
body eltses just because it happens to
be the ferst of the year. I absilutely
refuse to allow you to step smoking,
she sed. '
IVERY SERVICE-Shoula yea fau to reneiv
e News b earrlez please call The New-Globe,
I o'ejoc a m. and a 400 win be met out 07
mt. It le oar desire to awe mubaorfber prompt
r cerVice. ana we will avprecinte your motunyuu
adit o'eteek a. as.
Grammarslips
1. What ia wrong with this sen-
tencet "Thia ia not hardly enough
paper." • 1
2. What ia the correct pronuncia-
tion of "daughter?"
3. Which one of these words is
misspelled? Debri, debonair, de-
bauch. "
‘ COURSE
sieedn2 1 ,
WUSTSEYOUR
C" KT g
sad. eh LOST/ 24
, , ■ »
H
la Texe, Okh
A Serlous Ye
His purchases were ms A
Automobiles casualties this year are far above
last year’s, according to preliminary estimates made
by the U. 8. census bureau. The national death
tell for the year to liable to reach 27,000. With
2500,0000 automoblles added to our traffic stream
during the year, the situation eontinues to grow
worse—and nothing effective ia being done about it.
Fortunately, the disease is usually
not serious and need net be te. pro-
vided the right treatment is used.
In this beginning of this disesae,
the appetite is poor, the nose swollen
and the patient presents all of the
usual symptoms of a cold, with irri-
tation and fretfulnesa. As the rash
comes on, the face, lids of eyes, nose
and lipa may become so swollen and
misshapen that it is difficult to rec-
ognise the patient. The rash, which
usually takes two or three dayo to
develop, usually starts on the faeo
and spreads down over the body. The
areas first affected begin te fade
about three dayo later. A week is
usually required for the whole proc-
ess ut rash development and peeling
off of the entire body surfaces. The
rash turns from a rosy color to a
yellowish, and the skin finally comes
off in brown-like flakes accompanied
by an intense itching.
At the first symptoms of the dis-
who am I te aet myself up agenst a
steas T ho sed Hl eware off if it Ulis
me, he sed.
My lands how is it going to Ull
you or anything even half as radical
as that, ma sed.
And tonite when pop came home ma
eed. Willyum I hear theres a very in-
tristing picture at the Narcinajas
this week, sippose we take it ia to-
alto.
Sippose we dent, pap sod. I never
want to ooe another movie, thata a
way I feel about movies, in ease the
census taker Fings the doorbell Aad
wunts to know how the master of
the house feels about movies, he oed.
My goodness Willyum, you must ef
put the wrong foot out of bed this
morning, ma sod, and pep oed, No, I
fie fatal ties. If some epidemic should visit the
are ready to step out into the world and leav their
school days behind, they not only have something in
their hends, bat know aecurately what to pat on ike
oatside. . f ,
If this young man I watched to a sample of young
---—------------ ---Amerien, I think we need only about a generation to
than the complacent way ia which we taka our traf- putthe Amertenm man so far ehend of ie British,
as that Anglo-American relations will suffer anoth-
hat the disease may occur at aay agb,
and every once An a while an adult
may be attacked.
Ia most citles, epidemics of med-
slaa may run through the school On
the average of every two years. This
it ezplained by the extremely epl-
donate nature ut this disease. Daring
the year when it is prevalent ail ef
the avallable school children may
have it aad by taking it home spread
ft to the younger ones aa wall. By
the next year the potential crop of
mensles-takers to exhauated, hat the
third year usually Hada several thou-
sand new childrep both la city aad
country schools-enough of the
younger children to start the mea-
sloe epidemie all over again.
Fortunately, Nature seems te have
provided a safety period for young
babies during the firat four or five
months, during which time the infant
ie very unlikely to catch measles.
After this,time he usually loses his
immunity.
The ‘majority ef measles eases at-
ear daring the Wintr tod early
Spring. The first indieations of
moasloe are usually • catarrhal dis-
charge known as KopUk’a spots. After
this oseuro, the well known rash of
measles develops oa the skin of ths
#2"e2
l • m-
......-to- -----
THE PASSING YEAR
Farewell, old year! As you depart, to let your blithe
successor start upon its promising career, I think you’ve
been a good old year. Of course a poor man here and there
dommam complains that he is in despair; he says
Emda his children daily cry, and cry in vain
MN for pumpkin pie; he hunts for work
Ey.en M throughout the town and all employers
“#)A6d turn him down. But nearly everyone 1
know is earning good and gaple dough;
n. j,D4 few are so poor they cannot drive their
E94‘“MB cars with pistons four or five; few are
"“44 so poor they do not know the blessings
EhE of the radio. ‘Tis true that choas, sad
and strange came down upon the stock
e.n exchange, and paper profits disappear-
UKunwson28 ed, and many a fellow tore his beard
and cried aloud in anguished tones that
he had lost a million bones. The coin he lost he never had,
and so his plight was not so bad. But men of sense and
judgment fine, who put their kopecks down in brine and
bought good bonds and things like those, avoided all such
grievous throes. ’Tie true hot weather hurt the corn, and
farmers wished they were not born; some cornfields shriv-
eled in a .night, but other crops came through all right,
jent seems to literally
Q
Us date ins
American
with the adolescent boy And hi* elothes, non* of the
contempt some boy* hssdciate with fin* raiment. In
faet, there was nothing boyish or immature at all
about thia youngater. He know clothes, knew what
a bey should wear for various occasions, an* he ae-
eepted it, an* triumphed ovar the ordeal. But be-
llovo mo, there waa nothing “sissy" about thin young
men. He was e highly sophisticated, thoroughly mod.
em youth who know what he wanted, and who got it.
It to the eustom, I believe, in England, te en-
courage the young bay* ia preparatory school to wear
high beta—end one does ooe young hoys there in the
meat amazingly ambitious millinery, a* that when they
f Es-smam-
was all rize
on 1 ded
smoking Mi
well get %
ping rite nv
day mi Li
nerves. Ia
FLAPPER FANNY SAYS:
am /I
Pop just making a gruot and put-
ting the newspaper up in frunt of hla
face ao ha could wink to himself be-
hind it and pritty aooa he took me
to the movies.
Quaker City have pledged 8X10,000 toward too pro-
ject aad are ready to proceed if the city council
will provide a municipally-owned site at a nominal
rent, ea a long-term lease George W. Korris, gov-
ernor ef the Feders! Reserve Bsnk ef Philadeipha
end ehairman of one of the theater corporation'*
sub-committees said that "the play* will be produced
by a repertory company of good professional ac-
tor* and our idea is to have a theater where a
men may take hi* family with the assuranee that
the production will be elean and interesting."
It la also hoped that other cities will follow the
ame plsa. so thst thebompanies might be exehanged .
for certain periods-during every season. A* two
famous radio comedian* might aay; “Isn’t this a
beautiful thought r" Think of it A rosi theater, a
fiao group of acton presenting play* fit for the
whole family to see, companies interchangeable, and
nil at a top price ef $1.80, Wonders never cense
te happen.
TBS CUM OF MEABLES ; i , 1
•an fka child ehoufd be giveh <01
quent email enemas, at least two V
thres timss daily. Ths child she P-
alo be put to bed in a fatriv dark:
ened room, but allowed plenty of
fresh air. The UUd should be urged
to drink Urge auantitiea of water
gad it is easier ao* *o allow 4.
other food except some of ths arid
Aruita if she child desires them. *•"
Mitos rash has hezup to diser
____ rom %
other children to proven* the apread
of the disease as much as possible.
°
1 "riO i'f - /
If this metho*, of treatment is fols,
lowed these la very little danger of I
complieations arising. Adults shoulak
ass s pimUsr treattent xhoud th )
If you give the heeling forces of
the body a chanee to work by fol-
lowing this regime, the chanees sre
that after the msastoe have he*
overcome the patient will fool much
better than before.
the cow* gave-milk, the hens laid eggs, enough to fill the
i. about her hats. And furthermore, bi. standards farmers’ kegs, the apple trees were loaded down with
will be hia own. He will neo* no mother to guide him fruit theymarketed in town, and in the end, most every;
into the realms of elegant haberdashery. , where, things turned out right side up with care. Good
Recently I went. Into one ut New York’a smart- by, old year, you had your flaws, like every year that ever
enty"aon rhare.cthdrpa mHttod te ft’S was, but when 1 view you, con and pro, 1 rather hate to
a aimpie little matehing tie aa* handkerchief for a i see you gO. ______. . ____________
# if
i
BELIEVE IT OR NOT!
(By United Preee)
EVANSTON, I1L, Dec. 27-A plens-
ant smile lights* ths foes of.C Mile.
MacDonald ss he seated himself be-
hind the wheel of his automobile on
a downtown street.
"I’ll show you doubters thst this
to the smoothest running esr in
town," sal* ths viee-president of the
Shawnee Country Club. "Why it
fairly parrs." Three friends were
waiting to be shown.
The meter purred softly enough as
the cor started from the curb. Then l
I* squealed. The farther MacDon-
al* drove, the louder the squeals. He
got out and lifted the hood.
On* jumped a big gray rat, poised
sa ths radiator aa* than jumped
down an* scurried sway. The motor
resumed its putt. MacDonald ha*
not found ths eat.
Seen About New York
NEW YORK, Dec 28,—Thone extremely ultm-
ultra ladies of tashion, who set the styles and
toe* what to left of New York’s 400, “junt -douldn’t
be eoon wearing the eome gown twice."
Wherefore, * market exists Is Manhattan which
to both unique and amuaing. D'o the market la
the enat-otr garments and baubles of the very rich.
Meet at this trading to handled by one worn-
an who has made a fortune for herseif, aa* eon-
siderable ut a reputation. The gowns invariably
find their way into the theater. Generally they
become the ultra-swank affaire which adorn the
lovely ladles of tbs gmarter shows. A few, to be
sure, finds their -way late the hands-or rather
over the shoulders—ut some of the better known
feminine etars,
Becaune of the nature of the dealing, it is all
done with a great deal ef quiet end caution. The
nemo of the go-between does not avDear * any
chop window, end the name by which she la known
both to fashion and tha theater to not her own.
Sho is accepted la the moot exelusive circles,
an* those grand dames “who just eouldn’ be seen
wearing the seme gown twice" allow her free
range among the fineries which are to be disposed"
of Thus they got et least a percentage back upon
their investment, thouzh the sum secured in the
deal to likely to be well under the purchase price.
Trading does not etop nt dresnes, but goes to
trinkets, shoes, hats and other objeets of apparel.
For it to literally true that those who go obout
in the upper social other must not be seen at the
elaborate funetions in "an old drees." And any
dress upon which the lorgnettes ef the Blue Boeh-
en have oaco nite* becomes immediately "old."
Then ia a number of shops which deel in mod-
ish gowns, enpes, hate and such which have been
worn upon the stage. Most of these an likely to be
quite new, and in generally the left-overs from
playa which have failed.
They are alio likely to be the ereations of some
of the world’i boot known designers and to be
very much in "mode." These shops have a fegu-
lar following among women who are playing the
fashionable game on email margin. To "keep up
appearances" they must atom to be well dressed
while not being able to afford the original crea-
tion i.
Some of these customers make regular nnadi
ef the shopa, keeping in constant touch with
everything that cornea in.
"This," whispers the proprietor, “ia an opera
cape, worn only a few tlmoe by Min Lotte Gael
—an* we've completely relined it."
Caat-offa from the theater also fin* their way
Entered
if'
Man maketh a man net like an ass In a risk pas-
tare.—Zahir Ad-din.
cmbeveazg
nemevermFnDbnan"
"""
12 S'
(By The AametetefFreM)
ST. Li, Dee. 27—rhe first dol-
lar he over earned was eontributed
today by 11-year-old Donald Longton
of Saginaw, Mich., to start off a
fund for erecting a atatue hero of
Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh.
Ths money was in a latter te-
eeived by Mayar Victor J. Miller from
th* boy, who wrote that he earned
thedoftar when bo otoa 14 yaara eld.
Mayor Miller recently suggested •
status to Lindbergh be erected near
the City Art Museum.
By PHILLIF if OWLAN
aa* BICHABD CALKINS
J
i
ec,ba
73*
14
• J
az
isention of thia newspaper to wronalr ate ut Amjure aa*
dunl, firm, concern or eorporation and correetioha will be
when warranted a* prominentiy a* was the wrong pub-
, I rive BB ■■ ut artiele
gQtlUI or THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION*
boy of 10 for less than 88.
While a friend was making purchases, I sat down
to rest in s corner, on*, slong come s boy probably ’
between 13 an* 14, to do some shopping for himself.
He wss, I should say, a prop school boy—really a
handsome youngster, elean-cut and lithe, and his
mannan with tbs salenman won Impeccable to say
the least.
I* a apace of say 10 minutes, he ordered himself
four suits and his first tuxedo. Ths suite went very •
NQTICS TO THE PUBLIC.
- Any erroneoma refleetiom upon the charagter, etandie ut rep-
O alari in at any individual, firm, eomcern, ut uuruataHua that
- max appear la toe eolamha of The New--Glob will be eeladiy
f o*rr»rt*e when eniled to toe attentlon et the editor. It b mot
Mae ut mensles in a achool room *f
yoyngetere to almost as infeetots As
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
। (Strained Hear)
Queation-w. P. aska: "W1U you plegse
aidvine me it anythina eaa he done for
a atralned heart? Would massage help?"
Answer-One who b auftering from ea
neyte enne of heart , train ehomld rest in
bed tur neveral dare and have at least
bao massage trentmnent each day to help
the circulation. After the heart baa par-
ttally pesovered from Ite etrain, it ie
than well to take light esllshenie exer-
elses, tint while Irins in bad, and then
finally almple twiating and bending ex-
ereiea taken while atandinu. The heart
shoul4 be examined frequently and the
exereise Ineretoed under the advice of a
competent physteal culture instructor.
(Cheese)
Question—Wrt. B. L. H. «k.: "Will
you pieaea ndvise whether or not Lim-
burear chemne I* tatteninut"
A newer—AU cheeeea can be cpnaidered
fatteninu. aa they contain a larze amoyg: •
of butterfat. W A
< Rabbins Banian) F- J
Question-F. M U aal»: "Will fam
kindly let me know if rubbine a bunion
will reduce or mnlarge it? It rubbing ia
ut no avail, aould you tell me whas to dor"
Anewe- The bunion ie formed because
at a costant rubbing of the toe-againgt
either U tiuht fittine ahoe or ond 4
b too loo**. Have your ehoeg fitted. pt \W
eriy, end eoak your feet in hot water for'
at least fo minute* each day.' Rubbinu
around the bunion may be of some help
in inoremaing th* blood’* elreutation, but
medieinai prepurations would be at no
value
(Coprdabt, 1920, by The Bel Syndloate,
, Ine.)
I
i t
4 BUCK ROGERS, 2429 A. D.
"A
22
A top price at $1.50 for a theater seat I* the
atartling announeement that comes from Philadel-
phia in connection with proposed plans for a peo-
ple’s theater which would fora* the nucleus for *
fl** art* recreation center. .. .
A‘A.V
Qp. wo.g'ev oeQ-
b I
Ei I
gA0KTEsu
• -27
_nusranPg.
.....»
mean eome of them may—hut J am in a mood to
' prophesy that the boy ut tomorrow will be aa style
coatclou* s* bis sister.
c. H v Vi2 " 95
4K*M 4 ''It « *
rapidly a* far as bs was concerned— they wsr* te
be made te measure from stock styles. Ho selects*
two tweeds that were exeellent testa, one te be mads
wilk knickers add one with regulation long trousers.
Hie selection at a navy blue skewed admirable
restraint and * knowledge of what’s what. But it was
the Tuxedo salt that brought forth all th* latent
Beau Brummellam in his youthful conseiousness. He
was meticulous about all pointe whore any 1 question
at personal taste wss involved.
Hs knew exactly the type of lapel that bo want-
ed. Md just the material, and there was just one
certain type of shirt, with sa invisible strip* in th*
material, that he would have and no other.
ittle Benny's
Note.Bo-
l
There At at lenst four mistakes in the above picture. They may,
lata to grammar, history, etiquette, drawing er whatnot See if you
fi*d them. Then look at the erambled word below -and unsefamb. 1, „
swiching the letters arqund. Grade yourself 20 for ekeh of the mistnkes
PM find, aad 88 for the word if you unneramble it* Oa tha bank page today
PosT FeR HOU
WHILE SOO
ANv WALKi*
i .
TV
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 12, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 28, 1929, newspaper, December 28, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1568052/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.