Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 304, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 11, 1927 Page: 5 of 90
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Amarillo Daily News and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Texas State Library and Archives Commission.
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NDAY MORNING, I
—____ t
PAGE
11, 1927.
You are Cordially Invited to See
‘X-
A
the Special Display of the Beau-
%
tiful New Nash Automobiles in
I
4
Our Spacious Salesroom.
I
Dealer and Franchise Week
Service Denartment to Give Needed Information to
Nash Owners
I
NASH
Greatest in
i-=a
Leads the World in Motor Car Value
History
Over
i
Cars
17,
in August!
E
I
Greatest
I
Month
I
in All Nash History
And the nation-wide—world - wide—demand
is racing higher and higher.
built—and they
in their price-field.
MAKE OUR PLACE YOUR HEADQUARTERS
Retail—Nash Cars and Trucks—Wholesale ,
NINTH and POLK
-
N/58
111
DUMAS
Their introduction a short time ago started the
greatest boom in Nash business ever known.
PAMPA REMOVES
WATER TROUGH
FROM SQUARE
Distributors, dealers, and buyers, are unani-
mous in their emphatic declaration that these
EDWARDS’
STUDIO
On Your
Office Desk
e
The Photograph of your
wife and youngsters, of
course!
Go with Nash—and you’ll grow with Nash—
for the country Has Gone Nash.
The new Nash models at new lower prices are
sweeping the country like wildfire.
Already factory output is higher than at any
time in Nash history.
And good dealers throughout the country are quick to
recognize that a Nash contract today offers a most
unusual opportunity.
August sales drove far above the biggest previous
single month of business the Company has ever known.
It is a success that is a national sensational.
i
।
With 21 models—all SIXES with 7*bearing motors—
and at new LOWER prices ranging from $865 to
$1990 f. o. b. factory, the merchant in business with
Nash has as his sales field the most profitable market
known to the industry.
HENRY PROPST
President
♦
I
W. P. (Bill) LEWIS
Viee I’m. and Service Director
the greatest cars Nash ever
are without equals anywhere
7
new models are
.me
r
CLD 1.AztdL1A2 LRLCTED IN 1912
Wa3 oacz CZATER OF CAMP.
tc czoUNDS
2099
.c
"e
- -
A
WILLIAM (Bill) FREEMAN
Wholesale Manager
Announcement of interest to
the automobile industry of
the Panhandle of Texas and
Eastern N. M., is the appoint-
ment of William (Bill) Erec-
man as manager of the
wholesale sales of the Henry
Propst Motor Co. Mr. Free-
man has complete super-
vision of the awarding of
franchises for Nash dealer-
ships throughout this section
mentioned.
We are especially desirous of
meeting people throughout
the territory who are inter-
ested in automobiles and dis-
cussing the Nash franchise
and the wonderful possibili-
ties offered regardless of your
present connection.
Iwitbe to yuf interest to
see Mr. Freeman and discuss
the possibility of securing the
Nash franchise in your terri-
tory.
Just that needed home
touch during the long
hours. _______
HENRY PROPST MOTOR COMPANY
n«ARILLO SUNDAY NEWS AND GLOBE
The Townsite well is now
down 3,210 feet and
picking up more gas con-
tinually. Have not made
actual gauge in last three
days, but estimate about
19,000,000 feet of gas.
A few desirable % blocks
of lots left that carry
6-lQ00ths of 49% interest
in well. These are bar-
gains at $500.00 cash up.
Gas rights alone make
these 14-blocks very val-
uable investments. Well
logs as near perfect as
possible for a potential
good oil producer.
FA. 0. DUGGAN
MANAGER (Dumas)
Mor re County Townsite
• (03 Amarillo Bldg.
Phone 4147
Nash Demand
t
604% Polk St. Phone 710
J NO COUPONS
Lx'
FAIR VISITORS
Daily gaining tremendous momentum, the tales of the
new Nash models at new LOWER prices are eclipsing
all past records in Nash history.
Members of our complete Service Department have been instructed to give
a special service to every Nash owner during Fair Week. Should there be
any question about your car they will be glad togive you any information.
As many as possible of the dealers throughout the territory will be present
to show prospective buyers through the complete line of these beautiful new
automobiles. Plan to meet your dealer here? Full information on dealer
franchises will be given this week, too. If there isn’t a Nash dealer in your
town, let us explain the possibilities
a
.-t ■ 1
(*e--CeT te The Gen*av MtewsGlobe.)
FAMVA, ttfi, 10,—Mdern and re-
junnt- Fakp- has daetreyed one at
*ar .14 ’ Landmneka and the last one
te hrand fte af'y e« a "country” town;
(he .14 -etering trowgh,
tha old ravarite troug*, on the publie
enre rvyosite the eity hall, had stood
iuce 191! and w„ one of th, stepping ‘
atones in th, eity'a water aystem. It i
and the “town” windmill were mad,
poseible by puble subacripton of Ni-
■VO, and took th, place of the first eit
wet drilled in 1860 on the present alt,
of the new and modern five-stor
Seaneidez hotel.
The "town well" and watering trough
n$ one time marked the busiest place in
town, many years ago whsn it was the
rente* of a big camping ground for
wheat farmer, who marketed their grain
in Pampa. Today a modern system sup:
plies th> eity with an abundance of
water, ami the farmer, haul their wheat |
to market with big motor tracks over
gond road*.
Ferses no longer clutter up the
street’. Even in the field, they have
been replneed by tractors and the sor-
ghum grain crop, have been cut to a
minimum.
Removal of the watering trough not I
+ only marks a new period of eity devel- .
1 epment. but it also.marks a new era in
farminc.
W HELPS SHERIFF
YU WIN JACK HEALTH
m ' Th- A-socinted Press.)
FATL3 CITY, Neb., Sept. 10.—Sheriff
Albert W. Young ha, returned to hi’ Job
from a her Uh quest which was financed !
by $100 of public subscriptions.
Young, known in Nebraska a- “the |
sheriff without an enemy," suffered a
breakdown from overwork, and citizens
raised funda to send him away to re-
euperate. Bankers. clergymen, farmers,
merchant, and convicted bootleggers
war, an ong the contributor, to the
fund.
u Within a week after his depurture his ;
■Bite was appointed to serve in hi, stead.:
at full salary, until her husband recov- I
ered.
HONEY FOR DINING CARS
its The Amneiated Proas. I
HITE CLOUD, Kas.. Sept. 10.— Rail- |
road dining car services buy all the .
honey produced by the 200 colonies of !
bees on the farm of Charles Burkhalter, I
White Cloud banker. Each hive on Burk .
baiter’s farm has IS supers. each of ’
which is filled with tiny individual
frames, in which the bers deposit their
honcy. Every frame contains a serving !
for one person. The annual output of1
the colonies is shout 8 tons.
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 304, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 11, 1927, newspaper, September 11, 1927; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1569158/m1/5/?q=%22%22~1: 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.