Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 47, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 21, 1927 Page: 4 of 14
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AMARILLO DAILY NEWE
PAGE FOUR
Bv Williams
OUT OUR WAY:
AMARILLO DAILY NEWS
Tri-State Press Breezes
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least in Manhattan.
t Copyright, 1927, NBA Service, Inc.)
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scene; some idlers were having fun
ing superior and trying to protend they
men's
with a drunken Indian.
o
o
government frowned on the sale of
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hand and wltl
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Then It was that he caught sight of red man a violel
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(CONTINUED ON PAGE FOURTEEN)
(169) SILK IN THE ORIENT
THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE:
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SKETCHES BY BESSEY
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are not entirely dependent upon any
particular source of water supply.
One of the distinguishing differ-
ences between mineral and vegetable
life is that rocks cannot of their own
desire change their location, while
IN Am’ AGE \
WHEN PEOPLE '
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be made when warranted as pn
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“Fools rush in where wise men heep their heads,**
deftly twists the Claude News.
)
The Memphis Democrat rises to object to a head-
line some days ago to the effort that the “tail end
of Colorado blixsard hits Panhandle." “The whole
body, head, shoulders, sides, feet and tail hit in Mem-
phis," the paper comments.
The fact that Demosthenes practiced down by the
seashore is advanced by the Clovis News as a tip
to saxophone players.
b
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IN BELOW
IF mow vAOE
ONER. BeteR
-KAROW A
WEDNESDAY-MORNING, DECEMBER IT, IW7.
h
e
uu
When tha silkworms
have hatched, they are
placed on frames and fed
day and night on mul-
berry leaves.
ton
fidl
Bui
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tha
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Tammany Hall, in those good old times, dispensed
its favors in return for rewards. Did you care to
open a pool room, a saloon, or a place of uneasy re-
pute—all arrangements were made for s' cash con-
sideration. based largely on the enterprise. Political
trading, district bossing and concessions all came
within its walls and reached a high point when Boss
Tweed and his descendants were in power. The East
Hide was then the seat of political strength and
there were very few elections that couldn't be "de-
livered," if necessary. The whole East Side was well
orgenized and manipulated, and where fixing didn't
work, gang activity did.
OUGHTUH SEE
OURS . 1 Hi-
HA~NEARL
Tammany Hall, it might be added, started as a pa-
triotic and benevolent association. Also it was a prol-
etarian. or at least a burgeoise organisation intend-
ed to fight the aristocrats who formed the Federal-
ist* and rode to power with Alexander Hamilton.
Because of the anti-Hamiltonian association, some
said Aaron Burr was behind it. This has often been
disproved. Its power as a political cudgel grew from
year to year and took on strength with new victories.
With strength came the bosses and now security—at
I
Wl
‘eBlzingeeHorizoh
COPYRGHT2276NEASEWC $32 • EDNEST LYNN
“Another lawyer in this city is showing symptoms
of prosperity," says the Vernon Record. The attor-
tR has purchased a new automobile. "The Judge
came to Vernon several months ago from Electra."
adds the record, “and is rapidly picking up county
The man here ia exam-
ining cocoons. The best
art set aside for carry-
ing on the race of silk-
worms, while the others
art used at once.
Qapital
TmbEhatG
L
J
all foods are dissolved, and the in-
dispensable agent which carries these
food materials to every cell of the
body.
No organic lifo could exist without
water, and, while in the plant king-
dom the various forms of vegetable
life are forced to secure their water
from the soil in which they live, ani-
mals, on the other hand, have the
ability to change their location, and
eE
starches, and the minerals out of
which tha tissues are constructed.
Many do not realise that over two
thirds of the body is water and only
one third made up of the other ele-
ments.
5,*
5,7
26732
2093
water had very little trouble getting fore, highly amusing.
INDUSTRY REPLIES.
Was the summer of IPX? abnormally cold, as the
sun spot scientists say, or was it really not an ex-
traordinary season at *11, as, the weather ebterevers
tell us? .
Who shall tell? We navy heard people declare it
was the coldest summer they had ever been through,
and others just as forcefully dssert that it was just
as warm as any summer they had ever known.
Here's the answer, perhaps: in the Westinghouse
company’ report on 1927 business conditions is an
item about electric fans. The volume of fan motor
business showed a market deecline. ‘
When seience and the weather man disagree, indu ,-
try offers the reply.
toast, but the real wholewheat bread, if
toasted through, dev Flop* a bitter taste
because of the burning of the protein and
bran elements. Wholewheat bread only
partially toasted make* an excellent food
if there is no reaaon why you should not
use th.* starch which it contains.
QUESTION K. L. asks: ‘What is arth-
539
g
KIN
ENT
Th
Bucb
are «
•ntir
Ing, i
chur
IYna
> and New Mezieo
not have hesitated; would, in fart,
have jumped at the ehaneo. But with
the fiery speech of David Payne still j
ringing In his ears, he found a quick
decision difficult. The man's enthu-
siasm was contagious; besides, now
85
Gradually Fourteenth street Miss disintegrated.
From the gay-white-way that was it becam8 a street
of cheap shops, pawnbrokers, shooting galleries, ra-
dio vendors and movies. A cinema finally crowed out
the old Academy of Music snd a gas company took
over the cnemA, Tammany, named for a crafty In-
dian tribe, saw the East Side pass as a political
stronghold, saw the city move up and ever up, but
eluug to its historic rock for 60 years.
Now Tammany will go up town and join the re-
spectability. The veteran bartender will go, perhaps,
though he is what a coat of arms is to impoverished
ex-royalty; pleasant to look at and reminisce over,
but possessing only sentimental value.
Long before the Congress met
early this month, they had been
forced to begin their campaigns for
thenext Congress, which assembles
two years hence in December, 1929.
And Tammany Hall, tucked shoulder-to-shoulder
against the Academy of Music, made political his-
tory and surrendered Manhattan to the Democratic
party for considerably more than the proverbial 126
worth of wampum, prediscovery whiskey and beads.
Today there clings to Tammany Hall, as barnacles
cling to an old ship. the fragrant oder of yesterday's
beer bsrrels. The old place is haunted by fragranees
which some might not consider fragrant, but are
warp and woof of a bygone day .unknown to a gener-
ation born to cocktail parties and speakeasies.
flourished where water was abundant,
and the uninhabitated portions of the
world are those placet where the least
water exists in an available form.
THEM CAN BE NO LIFE WITH-
OUT WATER, and the highest forms
of life hre those where the water
supply has been regulated to meet the
demands of both vegetation and ani-
mal life.
We now use water scientifically to
grow our crops, and we water our
domestic stock to furnish the best
supply of meat and milk. Yet, we who
have an abundance of available water
do not often think abou what would
be the best quantity of water to use
to meet our body's daily requirements.
Drinking and eating haphazardly, we
have a consequent haphazurd health
or sickness!
Those who are suffering from any
kind of physical disorder con do well
to find out how much wster their
bodies require, both for the mainten-
snee of health, snd its helpful use in
the cure of existent disease.
In tomorrow's article I will explain
I some simple rules about the use of
water as a curative agent.
Fe5<ee—
• JRWLAMe.
whisky to the Indiana, still. those
The appetite of the silkworm is almost incredible.
Thousands of girls are employed in great groves of mul-
berry trees, such ae the one pictured above, in Japan
and China, picking leaves upon which the silkworms
feed. While those leaves ars being picked, the silk-
worms are hatching in an incubator or In the sun.
ehmemamm«
4
7
It. Ones a month the rod man was
in funds, and it was not herd to walk
into Caldwell, flash four or five dol-
lars on s man with an ensy con- (
sejence and get in return a buttle of
whisky which the unprincipled one
could purchase in eny saloon for a
dollar or a dollar and a quarter.
This Indian was staggering and
gesticulating wildly. Opposite him
stood his tormentor, a rough look-
ing, unshaven fellow. probably from
the railroad cump. He held a watch
in his hand, and as the Indian
lurched toward him and reached for
it he suddenly withdrew the extended
longed to another.
Still, what was he to gain by join-
ing Payme and his Boomers? They
might convert hundreds to their
cause by their exhortations, but
would their efforts hasten the open-
ing of Oklahoma? Wasn’t something
else besides nitre rebellion needed
aborigines who craved their fire- ,
AMD HAM
-o WEAR
SUC-KRWBIL-IME I LOOK
CLOWHES, AINTJA PAN IH
the intention nt this
/-1s AnT fes „ANK
NJATAIN!WU\ GRACOVS!
OUGHIUH SEE WE’RE LWilEr
3
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Lillie edged into the group, frown-
ing. “Whose watch is it?" he asked.
The man next to him answered
‘‘.It belongs to the Indian, Breeden's
teasing him, that's all."
"I suppose he thinks he's boring a
lot of fun," Lillie spoke bitterly.
The man glanced at him sharply.
“I reckon he is aimin' to amuse his-
self. Why don't you speak to him
if you don't like itr" He spoke as
one disclaiming all responsibility and
welcoming any interruption that
might start an argument.
"I will." He turned ebruptly and
strode toward Broaden just as the
HO ETTA? Hie
candidate to bind his mind and hia
vote for the more than three yean
that may elapse from the beginning
of his campaign to the end of his
term. Few protest this to the vot-
ers. however. Being principally con-
cerned with getting in, most of them
who face any trouble over nomina-
tion or election will promise almost
anything.
Senators are elected for six-year
terms instead of two-year terms as
representatives are.- Every short
session, of course, finds some of
them in their seats although they
have already been voted out.
The system of course, is not so
tough on the individual Senator who
meets competition as for the indivi-
dual congressman who must fight
for his seat.- Nevertheless, the pro-
posed Norris amendment which
would cut out the “lame duck" ses-
sion end bring elected members of
both houses into session within two
months of their election has often
been passed by the Senate, but has
never even been .voted on by the
House.
Although the j the ground. Words of bitter protest
— •- -• . poured from the tormented one's lips.
They were in the Indian tongue, and
unintelligible to his audience; there-
plants do move about to some extent, I
and because of an inherent need for !
two things. WATER AND SUNLIGHT.
The first birth of organic life, both
vegetable and animal, came from the
sea, and up through the Palaeozoic
jungles to the present time organic
life has been ehanged and controlled
I by the varying balence of the two
, elements of water and sunlight. ,
In man's evolutionary progress
water has been always an important
determining factor. Civilizations have
"The calm life is the happy life," aays the Am-
horst Argus, warning that if you experience blue
Mondays, despairing Tuesdays, exalted Wednesdeys,
eathusiastie Thursdays, weary Fridays and tmpatient
Saturdays, nd to mention exhausted Sunday, you are
wasting your vitality, muddling your work and
wrecking your happinesn
On the whole, he thought, it would
be better to take this job and sit
tight. If anything came of it—and
there was no telling what it might
lead to—perhaps, in time, even an
Indian agent's commission—he would
be infinitely better off, while Peyne’s
cause certainly would not suffer for
not having bad him.
He wondered what it would be like
teaching Indices, many of whom
would be almost entirely ignorant of
the English language. Would they
aubmit to elassroom discipline? He
grinned at the thought, and tried to
picture himself in front of a black-
board explaining rules of grammar
to a class of noble red men.
He thrust the letters in his pocket.
Seen About New York
.——
NEW YORK. Dec. 10.—With the passing of Tam-
many Hall, Fourteenth street gives up zbout its last
ghost.
In those good eld days, when petticoats were petti-
coots and champagne was something other than eider
and shasta water. Fourteenth street was the pride and
joy of New York.
Here the carriages let out their guy loads in front
of the cafes and all about, particularly where Broad-
way pokes its nose southward toward Broadway, the
Frohmans and other celebrities were getting their
•tart. Forty-second street was out in the country and
the Academy of Music was the last word in operatic
splendor. Names that are now traditions were on the
peek of the world. Delmonicos screened its naughty
scenes, if any, and the expensive jewelry concerns
sparkled their lure on all sides of “the square."
**XSN6H0SE
wJAF-AAA
The woman pictured on the right here is reeling the
silk from cocoons whioh are in vessels of warm water
behind her. This process is very simple. On the left
the woman is putting the silk into skeins such as the
one shown near her knees. In thousands of Japanese
and Chinese homes this scone is common.
m.Owowto.Me (To Be Contmusd)
CHAPTER V
At the postoffice Gordon Lillie
found a letter from his father. En-
closed . in the envelope was another
letter, addressed to him 4 Welling-
ton, from the Indian agent at Paw-
nee. Okla.
This one contained real news. It
announced that the post of teacher
in the Indian day school at Pawnee
wes open and Lillie might have the
job if be acted quickly.
“It looks to me like a real oppor-
tunity," his father wrote, for he had
opened the letter before forwarding
it to his son. “You esn do what you ;
like, of course, but things at the mill .
are slow and are not likely to wet
much better.”
The letters in his hand, Gordon
Lillie walked down the street and
eonsidered. A day before he would
8
AN ACT OF SPORTSMANSHIP.
In Chicago the other night Jack Delaney and Paul
Berlenbach met in a brief but decisive battle of the
price ring. •
It was part of the effort Paul Berlenbach has boon
making to “eome back." For Jack Delaney it was
just another fight. In the sixth round Delaney
floored his adversary, and when Berlenbach got to
his feet to a very groggy eonditfbn and practically
enable to defend himseif, Delaney did the gentle-
manly thing.
With Berlenbach standing dated, Delaney pleaded
with the referee to halt the fight. A few more
blows and he might have veered a knockout and add-
ed another valuable victory to hie record. But he
those the more gentlemanly way.
Delaney Hasn’t always given a good account of
himself in the ring. There have been times when
he put up a sorry exhibition. But here, we think,
he showed himself in e new light—as a sportsman
who waa unwilling to take advantage of a defeated
fee. It was a fine thing to do.
j
EQUALITY OF SEX ALL DEPENDS
BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON
A man has lifted his voice to Olympus and suppli-
cated Jupiter to relieve his ruined life from everlasting,
omnipresent, never-to-be-evaded woman.
There used to be corners on this soil of mortals where
man's rights were inviolate, he cries, where men were
men and lipsticks snd stockings didn't stick out st you
from every masculine sanctum in town.
His club has been invaded. When he. goes in for
lunch, there are the inevitable female lounge lizards
and their female guests taking up ell the nice big leath-
et choirs, smoking the corruption called cigarettes, and,
you can hear him say it, atinking pf perfume. No long-
er can a self-respecting man go near the place and
•moke an honest cigar.
There used to be saloons, but heck, there aren't any
now. If there were, the women would be there too, act-
teems te have a different definition for
it."
ANSWER Arthritis simply means r heu-
matism gi the joints. Acute inflamma-
lory rhel matism U sometimes found in
the muscles.' but most rheumatism, in-
eluding arthritis, comes from • deposit of
rheumatic toxins in ths joints.
it
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sli
Bu
tra
tri.
th.
fir
jur
HoN 1AE
--- . SOHEOE ( wAH
WEDDI JAwT S/UIE) KIDS
That London will have a popula-
tion of 20,000,000 in the yexr 2,002,
is a recent prediction of statisti-
eians.
BY CARRIERS IN AMARILLO. PAYABLE IN ADVANE
1 Month ..........» to f ontha •............ 8400
i M .nth. ............ Lee 1 Yer ...............*■**
MEMBERS OF THE'ABBOt IATT.D PRES
Tbs Asnocinted Press is exelualvely enutied to ths ass fat
repubieation of all news diapatchu ereditei. to er not ather
vise credited la lbw paper and »ta meal news pubilshed
herein.
All vrighta at publication at see,tel dlspatehe» herein ar
also reserved.
MEMIHEASOF THE AUDIT EREAU or CICULXrTONS
a42j l
----NOTicErrpuue---
Aar errs neons refieetioa uvou the charaeter, atandine or
mputatiow at any individuni, firm, Meseru or ecoporation that
may appear ia the eolumna at The Newa-OMm *il be iadly
rorreeted when called to the attention at the editor. It b not
A
24
ita causes ? Everyone
f iciently dextrinized. The average whole-
j wheel bread whic h is made partly of
I white flour, may be used in making Melba
November 4 a0onFuuaagbe3.Nuna
__L ____
Fatitek »d to The Amarillo OUbi Nswo FqBMMw Otais—if
sixt and ilmnoi atrssas
Gene A Howe, Editor and rehhshe
Witeur O Bawl. GemereiManeqea•
By RODNEY DUTCHER
WASHINGTON. Dec. 20. — Con-
gressmen, who ere subjected to con-
temptuous criticism both by intelli-
gent persons who know what they're
talking about and nit-wits who don't,
are often more to be pitied than
blamed.
One phase of the system by which
men and women are made into rep-
resentatives is so queer as to be
almost ridiculous.
Many of the current crop of con-
gressmen, old end new, have spent
much more time campaigning and
waiting for their sects than they
will now spend in said seats.
ON NEW TRAFFIC REGULATIONS.
The Amarillo public is pretty good-mannered when
it comes to observing the traffic regulations, but
it likes to be told when the police make changes
with the lights at the various intersections. Tskc
the example of the light at Seventh and Taylor,
where left handturns have been permitted. Recent-
ly, inmost have been Sunday, the sign permitting
turn* was removed, and ever since there has been a
stream of complainta.
People come down Tayler, er drive east on Seventh,
sad turn to the left without looking at the light.
They've been doing ft right along, in fact have form-
ed the habit of following certain routes when com-
ing down town, and the first they know about the
change is when the traffic officer calls them down.
The police, of course, are right in their attitude
that "the sign isn't there new, anad if you were
careful in driving you would notice that it isn't.”
but the public would feel better shoot it if the
changes were called to their attention. And, it
would be an easy matter for the police to issue a
notice to the papers when the changes are to be
made
OvESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
QUESTION X. Y. 2. asks; "WiI you "U
kindly etate through the column whether J
or not you approve of sulphur. for blood J
purification T Aleo, whether there is any '
cure for pinguecula or ptetywium."
-. - • ----------the little knot of men just ahead of
that the job he had sought was in him. There was a scuffling going
his Erasp.it lacked some of the al- on in the center of the group, and
lure it hod possessed when it had be- Lillie heard rough voices raised An
loud laughter. Evidently somethfe ■
was pleasing them. He hastened fir- '
ward.
A congressman retains office 16
months after he is seated. Very
often, his campaign hod to be be-
gun two years and more before he
was seated. Thirteen months elapse
between his election to the next
Congress and frequently he began
his campaign more than 13 months
previous to the election, which
means that numerous members of
the Seventieth Congress had to step
off the stump and onto the floor of
the House.
For a specific example, take Rath-
bone of Illinois. Rathbone was elect-
ed a congressmar -at-lafge in No-
vember, IPSA, aft.' being forced to
get set late in 125 for the April,
1926, primaries. On December 6, .
1927, he took his seat. But months
previously, he had to look to his
political fences when Meyer Thomp-
son of Chleego promised revenge for ,
Rathbone's opposition in the mayor-
alty election.
In October, 1927, Mrs. Medill Me
Cormiek announced her candidacy
and began a vigorous campaign
which put hia political life in jeo-
pardy. Hence, Rathbone is end has
for some time been working to win
in the April, 1928, Illineie primary,
after which he will have a six:
month campaign for election ahead
of him. If he is licked, he will go
i out of office a year from next
March and Mrs; McCormick, or a
, Democrat, will eome to the hill a
year from next November.
All of which, among other things,
places a discount on a cyndidate’s
campaign speeches. One who has
already served may run largely on
his record, but for one who would
make promises for his next term or
for his non-incumbent opponent, it
le a difficult thing to talk to the
voters sincerely and convincingly
about what he will do from 16 to 25
months ahead.
If he wins, then even after his
election he must sit and twiddle his
thumbs while the defected incum-
bent sits through another session at
Congress and casts “lama duck"
votes which need take no inspiration
from the wishes of his constituents
who defeated him. He can't possibly
make a legislative promise which he
can begin to put into effect in less
thsn 11 months, even if he announ-
.ces a new platform on election eve,
whM he does not.
In one 1 year, or two, eonditiohs
obviously change. Issues aren't
what they were. National or local
sentiment may shift. And it may be
too much to nek a seif-respecting
Dr. MeCoy will gladly answer
personal questions on health and
diet, addressed to him, care of The
News, Enclose stamped, addressed,
large envelope.)
NO Lift WITHOUT WATER
Moot people drink whatever amount
of water they are thirsty for, and
likewise eat whatever kind and
amounts of food which please their
appetities or fancies.
I find that all which has been writ-
tea and taught about preventing di-
setae through proper habits of living
is almost entirely a waste of effort,
as no one seems to be really interest-
ed in health until he is sick. Thep,
and then only, will he listen to rea-
son about changing his bad habits
to good ones. Therefore, there daily
health artieles are written primarily
for those who know they are not per-
fectly well, and who wish to have
health more abundantly.
In our study of food science, wo
are constantly confronted with the
fact that water is the most important
element in the body; in many way* j
even more important than proteins.
W
J.
Jae
gro
Fal
tun
test
th*
l c
the
Hs>
and
mean format Ion* on the cornea of the eye
which are due to irritations from some
cause such as outside infection through
dust or bacteria, or from an ver-Acid
secretion of the eye lubricants. Thia
trouble can be checked and even cured
by proper dieting and the use of a simple
eye wAsh applied several times daily.
QUESTION Mrs. J. M. B. writes: "You
nay when making Melha toast to use
white bread and cut all the crust away.
Why not use wholewheat, and leave erust
on the slices?" %
ANSWER I suzvest cutting awsy the
crust as it has already been "‘toaster"" in
the original baking of the loaf, and will
burn before the inside of the slice ia suf-
D)*,
If chess wames uro to be broadcast, the Childress
Post wants bad-timo stories between the Moves.
Closing end climaxing paragraph of an’editoyial
in the Collingsworth Standard an Cempaniohate
marriage: "It took human beints thousands of cen-
turies to establish Marriage—a device by which
Providemce and woman, co-operating, are gradually
teaching Men to be decent. It's a slew precess, boh
that le no reasen for getting discouraged and go-
ing back to old monkey days and ways.”
equal- The barber shops, too! Rather than go into ons
a man’s tempted to eat his own hair nowadays.
There we re other pieces—sharp thorn* in the flesh
of this bruised soul-where women hed horned in and
cheated him out of hia masculine privacy. "Why. It has
even gone so far that men can’t sit at dinner after the
coffee and tell a good story or two,” says he. "Th wo-
men won't lesve until we go with ’em!" Women! Wo-
men' Always woman! And ha far ene is siek and tired
of them, he wants us to undentend.
Not long ago I got on a street car packed to the
hinge, with humanity. I waa very tired and I had been
ill. I stood for exactly one-half of a thirty-six mils trip.
All around me eat partly gentleman, thin gentlemen,
young gentlemen, old zenilemenl I didn’t expect a Teat.
They were as tired as I, probably, and the other tired
women in the ear. In the smoker men were smoking ci-
gars in magnificent privacy. One place our friend for-
got to mention, by tha way—the street car smoker.
So you see there are times that men den’t wish wo-
men to be their equals end times that they do. In th*
smoker he doesn’t want bar to but in the main car, he
does, decidediy. You see it all depend#.
AMLARILLO’S TELEPHONE PLANT.
To the hundreds who yesterday inspected the new
plant of the Southwestern Bell Telephone company
there no longer is any doubt of the claims mode
by the officiais of the company that Amarillo has
the most Madam telephone plant in th* south. It
waa evident that nothing but the most modern in
present day electrical equipment went into the
building, and that the company is at least in posi-
tion to render Amarillo the utmost in service. An-
other point was emphasized as visitors went through
the pleat, and that is that th* company has made
ample provisions for giving adequate service to a
much larger city than th* Amarillo of today. This
bespeaks the confidence th* Southwestern Bell Tel-
ephcne company haa ia the future at Amarillo and
the surrounding territory. It is but one of the ex-
amplee of public utility companies showing their
faith in the Panhandle by making tremenedous in-
vestments.
wT A
BU6KLE-
Only morning and eveninu a ■ wee sew etatatad le th* ren-
banai. country Corses tha PaebaeMa at Tsaaa. Easter# Mew
Mexico, Southern Colorede and W-ter Oalahgme ftem It t*
|« hour, ia advance at Denver, Dellga, ftet Werth. Oktahoma
ity and othsr ropers snrtriUg gemytete MpsWta*.
Enterd as necond-elans matter el th* poatoenie. at Ameriu
Texne, uedw the,det qf M»Jb W. M*.
Dar and N lwht AsociatedPerw Intend Wirr Service.___
SUBSCRIPTTON RATES BY MAIL. IN ADVANCE
While water cannot be considered pAANS"“i Nmuh “heterestionraon ana
strictly a food, it is a solvent in which I diet scientifically to bring about blood
purification. The diseases you hare named
F
POOLS BECOME SAGES
Education and Letter Golf change
a FOOL into a SAGE. It takes
seven strokes, according to the Puz-
sle Editor's guess, but the Puzzle
Editor’s guesses aren’t always the
best. Par is on the beck peg*.
THE RULES
1—The ide of letter golf le to
change one word to another and deg
it in per, a given number of strcan
Thus to changs COW TO HEKin
three strokes, COW. HOW, Hik.
HEN. I 1
2—You can change only one W ir
at a time. 5 %
3- You must have a completeF
word, of common usage, for < . J
jump. Siang words and abbreva--
tiens don't count.
4—The order of the letters cennor
do ehanged.
. One solution is printed on the baek
page *
HEALTHeDIET ADVICE
adessrkzwd
222222222.523255225
___eawecvmwwsamo M-
M
sprawling into the dust.
( “Come on. Little Wolf, or Lame
I Dog, or whatever your name is,” he
called tauntingly. “Come and git it.
It's your’n." s •
, The. Indian scrambled to his feet
with an effort and again staggered
Hie eyee met an all too familiar , toward the watch. Again he was met
---------a-----a—i— “ with a push snd again he went to
THE STORY THUS FAB
CALDWELI., Kan., in 1880 was •
wicked cow town, close to the bor-
der ef the Indian territory. There
GORDON W. LILLIE, later to be
widely known as PAWNEE BILK
was waiting oa table in a restau-
rant, when JOE CRAIG, foreman
of the Bar K ranch in the Chero-
kee Strip, came to town and ear-
reled in the restaurant with TOM
BENTON.
Smarting under the quarrel,
Benton later that night picked a
fight in a poker game with JEFF
HARRISON, professional gambler,
who had come to Caldwell with his
small son, TONY, and shot him.
After the killing Benton rode
away and Craig took Tony Harri-
son to the Bar K ranch, where
COL. TITUS MOORE, owner of the
Bsrk K brand, welcomed the or-
phaned boy.
In Caldwell Gordon Lillie is
meeting DAVID PAYNE, leader of
the movement to open the Indian
territory for settlement. Lillie
thinks somewhat of joining Peyae's
“Boomers.” __-
toot .............. $10.00
1 Month .........,.8-7
5 Moneha ......ie Lit
Outside Tcea, Oku
i Month .............IM
0-g
/r AWFIL
(GLAD I •
WASN BOR-
TE• MET
—L-.
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 47, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 21, 1927, newspaper, December 21, 1927; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1569255/m1/4/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.