Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 86, Ed. 1 Monday, January 30, 1928 Page: 4 of 12
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DAILY NEWS
fon
Tri-State Press Br utes
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f
uzasuzus or not A8BOCIATED
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et M mem
pepe
will think up ebout T—.'
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8
14"
A ewollen gland in
neck and
THE GIRLS WHO APPEAR "WILD."
1-30
meau.apaT.ov.
Seen About New York
ing foods will
of any help.
belng waged for the opening of point of asking a question.
ferred to think of the other’s face
for a brother?"
1
..
3
t3 .
Whatever tbs name may
er the trainer, it means noth-
pension of government aetivities on
every hand.
• First Memorial Dar in Guthrie, shewing Capital Hill, where Scottish Rite Temple now .tends.
especially the tchnicai and scientifie
the exeeption— be-
who think the world ends there. And
young
-- The early stages of develop
probably will
Woman's Viewpoint
By OLIVE ROBENTB BARTON.
famus."
i leek ebout a* Aad quletiy ebeerve some eurteua
tinned to stare at the niting
meet needa put it down. It concerne the old-fashioned
ABE MARTIN
he neeidentally geta into the hard-
4
204, board of tea appeale 187 end
go back to the deed waa brouht up by Jee Craig.
"rve heard from him just once,"
Rita beard a train to
thing That there ie, to a way.
nan
s
Age
:U
a fires to
wonderful
hors a ehane 1 nver had."
M
•M go even funthet
dr
*gua
indi
Thor's at
«e
a pretty |
-
Wk
1V,
i 1
c.
7
I
cui
Firzitaras
Aad there
Manhattan.
know he w
he le now
LETTER
GOLF
silent with her. BetWeen them they
shared a common thought—that but
for the unkindness of eireumstances
in the rush, but where
I Lord only knows.”
with notices of this one
hit or her "first New
seekers scrambling over the border
in a wild rush. Tony rides on to
listed personnel of the army and
nary, which runs well over 100,000
men, the many thousands employed
Oklahoma to settlement. Chief char-
asters are:
tally,
■
Neither of them mentioned Tony
Harrison's name again until, ones
Caere at the Bar K ranch, the sub-
new woman etuft
. t repiled the at
Aad there win come other mornings when the re-
viewer have not been hind. And there will be other
that we
dputNu
J
Tony later falls in love.
Moore is one of the chief enemies |
WINE,
TO
en. They include about 80,000
on and 400,000 men. —
experta above the $2,500 and $3,000
a year class.
Sheriff
BySam Rs
w thereT
I enswerd proedly, "She and a friend
to sttoll
ria and
many wl
<e ..3
HooPL
S BoNs-
ware buslmesa,
Mrs. Moore meanwhile has died and
J enlemen: , We wish to toko this
means of thanking you and your
‘eBlzings
COPYRIGHT 27 NEASERVCC- “5
'1
‛v,
V
THE MIDDLE OF TRE ROAD.
the read man is seldom yopular.
ng in human nature which makes ns
a who refuses to take definite sides
alf-way between the two extremes.
ante, fee it often happens that the
I man is right.
fiearaguan sityation, for lari.....
that we bore no right there atau;
A fellow tried to forge a shock oa a lawyer in
Vernon the other day and the Record feat that if
each thing go on somebody wiU try it on editors and
of the movement to open Oklahoma.
DAVID PAYNE, leader of the -Boom,
era," dies and Tony in his loyalty to
Moore is troubled because of his
s
. The Childress laden indorses the plan to bring
more textile milla to Texas and declares that Chil-
drees is an ideal location for one or two.
THE STORY THUS FAR them spoke for a long time, although 1 temporaty escape from fierce, un-
The etory ia laid in the Indian Titus Moore stole an occasional fur- quenchable longings. He played only
territory and along the Kansas her- ties look at his daughter and ap- tor the mild amusement that poker
der in the US's, when a fight was peared several times to be on the afforded, and the amiable compan-
' ionship of men he liked.
rizoh®
EDNEST LYN
way of Hsing." ate eald, "My idea of being a real wo-
man to to leern bow to beep house. Nave a family, and
do the boot she san by that family. I can't see this
IRON STARVATION
The normal body in health eon-
tolas only about one-eighth of an
ounce of organic tone. Yet no animal
whose total roster runs to about 370,
#00. Ths Hat shows other eivil serv-
ice employe apportionments as fel-
lows:
White House .45, state department
4,400, treasury * 11,000, war depart-
ment 42,000, justice department 3,700,
navy 48,000, interior department 16,-
000, agriculture department 22,000,
commerce department 18,000, labor
department 4,000, government print-
ing- .office 4,000, Smithsonian Insti-
tution 100, Interstate commerce com-
mission 1,900, civil service ream le-
sion 417, bureau of effielency 71, fed-
eral trade commleeion 200, shipping
board 1800, dien property office 200.
tariff commtssion Mt, Panama canal
10,000, public buildings and parks of
the national eapital 2,264, general ac-
counting office 2,000, Veterans' bu-
reau 14,000, war finance corporation
M, national advisory committee for
ehenge one word to another
it in par, • given number of i
Thus to change COW to H
throe wtrokes, COW, HOW,
York appesranee." Out of the stack of mail leaps
an unfamiliar name. Oa a dosen other desks the
Tn RULES >
1—The idea of letter golf i# to
n,
"When some people pay a eompliment/ exeleime
the Chidres Post, "they set m if they wanted a
rogeipt for tor ________ ?
“The day may not be far off," suggests the Vega
Sontinel, “when they wiU threw ia aa automobile or
two when you buy five gallons of casoline"
4
dent"
her that, after all, she is
leader, ** done .not sus-
you have a typical "little tragedy” of
Perhaps one of the meet sinister reac-
said in his last budgst message that
the 1027 average wage of the worker
in Washington was $1,886 a year.
Of course, many get less, including
about M per cent of the women;
The nwin Record reveals the fact that on the
qunation of the tariff. Senator Cutting lined up
with the regular Republicane. Benetor Cutting to
the new solon from New Mexico.
ruizzFi
U, I VW ......
I,
o e e
Be savinu, bet not at the ooet of all Mberality.
Have the soul of a hiag mod the band of a wise
seonomiet-Joubertt
8 492
What doss the government pay4
workers? Well, President Coolidge
Advocating home printing, the Wellington Leader
quotes a business man to the effect that there la
lota of comfort in having a firm right in town that
one can ease when something about the job is wrong.
CHAPTER XLV
The train sped on and neither of
this column will. mayhop. carry a few more
graphs, of blasters ak and tragedy. GILBERT L
(Copyright, 1PM, NBA Serviee, Inc.)
wom- some get all they're worth and per-
haps more, but many are natorious-
HEN. ew.
2-You san change only one letter
Tea meet have a compute word i
F
• r
2 1003
Bq W ft* *.
ph the streets of Guth-
a riper. Thors were
led him as he passed
the hotel proprietor,
of the bank, where a
ent testified to the
: made by the firm of
iarrison. M
New
W
If you a
take a tel
times a da J
..old medial
Mrst food al
"•bon you I
endurance!
used to. I
That wJ
Mrs, J
"sbury A
"I was 1
down in I
94 lbs. I
Tanlac 11
sleep well
end gaineE
Tanlac i
weak, ner
stomach tB
nausea andE
who are al
A dose col
The first b•
ment to the
Tanlacis•
tains nafe. •
t-nts of room
rerogi* ■
copna (•
begin to tl
niney ha •
Ta
52 mil!
AT—aus..
“2
2a44
QVESTIONS AND ANSWERS
QUTON: Marv R. writee: “I
&e aac/8
L.xousposomFMASAK,
. AMP -AUA ME fo Hi N TwER}
... bap ekod6H as rir IS, TAT
YoU SCAAP -HeRe AD ER MV :
5 puGH, wJHILE SMOKIN6 OUE
OF M ciaARS! -- E6GA,
wAA COLOSSAL NERV
—BELIfLIG ME wrT
, SMOKE BLOWIA 3BeS
-FROM MY OWU PERSONAL
tag him of young folk of high talent- Hopefully he
has oot out only to find mediocrity, or something
just a bit bettor than the commonplace. He hoe
board hundreds as good and hundreds better.
When the armistice was signed
there were 018,000 civil serviee em-
ployee. By June 20, 1022, the num-
her had been cut de 560,000; since
thor the number has been as low as
more at first to bring about a rapid
change than all the food you can
stuff into your stomach.
When regular meals are resumed,
continue to take daily enemas and
use every method you know of to as.
sist in elimination of posone. The
diet should then cohaist of plenty of
Green-leaf vegetables and a reason-
meat. I woul
sown all her
Public Opinion
— PUBLIC OPINTO—Monday ...
THE CHARITY DRIVE
Amarillo Daily News,
Amarillo, Texas.
Omitting commissioned and
Titus Moore and
did you change your mind?" she
asked without turning around.
"I didn't,” he said simply. "Tony
“Wo, she's buoy with some designs she's submitting to 4
firs in Chlezge. If they Mho them She's to have a'
------ „ii Fm oo nappy for no one knows
haw Fro alvad to give her aa edueation and let her
Although much types attract attention “each af-
fectetion cannot be moderate," she points out. "It
must continually strata for new effects or it cesses
to challenge. So courses the action begun in the de-
sire to arrest notice become more and more bold
and foolhardy until frequenty there io a am ash of
some sort."
Citing examples from her own experiences, Mn.
Cosgrave eontends that many giris of the "wild"
type really possess extraordinary potentialities
which would win them lasting ndmiration and ee-
toem of their friends « wisely Cevrispod. Qualitles
of friendlineas, sympathy and consideration, she
points out, are likely to go much farther toward win-
ning lasting friendship than rash and spectacular es-
capcries and the flouting of eonvention.
a i iuzAUocaCVLaTo
21
no suh thing as a new woman. It le every woman
edapting herself to the boat way aba ana to a new era.
We would speak of a new era, net s new woman. Wo-
man’s work may shange thus the standards set for her
meat change. Women homelf le not likely to in one
ceneratien when she bao stayed pretty much the samp
for 5,000 yeara.
“I must go home new and start dinner," she said,
rising. ?
“Can’t Betty de thatT l noted-
V
PP,
written is piled fairly
and that who will
WASHINGTON, Jan. 20—The fed-
eral payroll seems to have something
like 900,000 jobs. As President Cool-
Vce has pointed out, there were
some 39,000 vacancies last year with
about 250,000 applicants ambitious to
fill them.
As to whether the government
needs all this help, you will have to
ask someone else. We have here some
information aa to just where all
these workers are employed in the
various divisions of government work.
a t
)
employee since 1916, so that inaha
far as the other older governm«k
en- establishments are concerned the H
erease of employee Ie Imo than 3044
000—eerily accounted for by the ex"
There wore things .neys and circulatory systems.
" ' ■----* ? A few days of this regime will do
tions of the great city in this destruetive effect upon
vanities and egoes and hopes.
To be a “ooeooso" in New York seems to be the
beginning and end of m many dreams. To get “good
notices" in New York Memo each a magnificent
achlevement. To tell in New York stems to ooend
the death knell of any hopes. New York is looked
epea te the goal- if one is to achieve anything, tra-
dition says that New York is the plate that mast
stomp Ito O. K. on the performance. And so little
struggling bamoas come to get their value all
mined up
Mearibrsofc. heartache, deepair, despond and even
sei tide follew in the wake of innumerable efforts
made to erook thia dty’s hard shell. individuals,
wrapt ter ee, many years la themselves—a perteetiy
natural cohsequence when one is training toward
some end seem to forget that teas of thousands ere
eonstantly doing the same thing. For every one that
wins the applause of the elty-a thousand go an-
noticed, or, what to ■ two Uy hitter barely noticed.
They oomo trooping to New York from every ham- ’
let and eityell the great army of youngaters who •
have plugged long beers at their piano exereisejor
at their fiddling Perhapa they have even gone to Eu-
rope and studied with a recognised master. Perhaps
the master has told them he was proud of their
work. And then they come to New York for an •p-
PSeares a day pasnes bat the desk at which this to
opena-the-mail. Aad this man is
Ns has had so many letters tell-
544,000 and as high as 564,000 as
compared with the precoat 560,000.
In 1916 there were only 428,000. In
the past 11 years, as the civil serv-
ice commissioners explain, new gov-
ernmental activities have been es-
tablished such as the shipping board,
tariff commission, Veterans’ bureau
and several others which have a to-
tal of 28,000 employes. Meanwhile
the postal service has gained 58,000
eondelomaly, of course, but ate to.
An illustratien may show what I mean.
We were discussing the question of home, one of
these methsrs end L aad an article Havelock Elite,had
written ou maniaqe.
1 bank later in the day to deposit some
money, passed the stronger coming
out. The man nodded briefly and
went on and Harrison was vaguely
disturbed by the notion that some-
where he had seen that fam before.
“The man that just went out leaks
famillar," ha said to the mahter.
"Have I seen-him before?"
"Cant tell you. He’s a stranger
here. Introduced hi ri self as Howard
Forbes from Chicago. Said he had
some capital to invest in Guthrie-if
the town looked good to him. And
he talked lib# a man who was think-
ing of. locating here. He seemed to
be real interested id the bank's af-
falra, oa the ground that a keek's
ausuu OuimzazmiehemanemepMen.z..mm
Of course they dent know these — these hard
plodding young people, whose programs suddenly
have appeared upon the rucks ef Town Hall, or Aeo-
Itou Hall or Carnegie Hall. I should like to invite
some of those star gazing youngsters to come with
me any day to the corridors ot the concert halls of
Manhattan and took at the staggering artsy of pro-
gram i bearing praetically unknown names.
Not that thio will chenge matters. Humans being
what they are and New York being what it in—each
knoeker et the gate will think himssif the exception.
QUESTION: A B 8 actor “Wil you
ple-s explain how to cook eoqaled esse'"
ANSWEN: Piece the unbroken one la
e deep pan which l> mot atanding oa tha,
fit*, and pour over' them hol l Inc watdm
Allow to stand for from five to ten miNy
utos When broken open, the an whould"
have a selly-like onaieteney, but ehould
at the same tone be so well reeked that
there is ne transparent albumen whieh
has not been eoegulnted. If the panrh
covered, lose time will be required to d
the same effect, but it >s possibly me
deeirable to have the one «ook very slow"
in toi perhape eighe to ten minutes, as
in this war they are cooked mon thor-
oughly.. .
OUSTION: J B asks: “to then anr
can for adhesions of the sell bladder be-
side, an operation r
AN8WU: Gel! bladder ndheslona ean
sometime, be broken up by manipulative
trestment.
m TERRIBLE
It's not hard for some men to go
from SMOKE to STACK, judging by
m . "ly underpaid, a condition affecting
Among them are nearly 310,000 em- ‘......-
ployec of the pectofflM department.
“M you think originality to dead, run for efftee
and see What your eemies will think up ebout you."
advines the Pampa News.
YONY HARRISON, orphaned at 11 we drop the subject. Did you know profitably spent. nere wore ung
when hia father wae shot in a poker that I had it in mind for a long time —but they lay in the background of
his mind, faintly smoldering. Rita
INE
She shook her need to disapproval. "He seems ta to Washington
think that women should be allowed to choose their own “
by the legislative and judieial
branches, about 57,000 miscellaneous
postal employee and a few more, the
federal executive service has some
560,000 employes, according to the
civil service commiseion. About M,-
000 are here in Washington and the
other 500,000 elsewhere. These are
what are known as government work-
what they sometimes smoke. See if
you- eon beet par on thia one. The
neronauttes 1M, tedara reserve board Brbnekpage: Ee" i revealed on
FORD-8 FLIVVER PLANE
Has the "flivver airplane" come at last?
For a number of years there have been imaginative
articles in the magazines and elsewhere prodiettag
that airplanes some day would be aa common as -
automobiles. For a long time people have been won-
dering it Henry Ford might not try his hand at mak-
ing a cheap, capable alrplane and swamping the eoun-
try with them.
Now be brings forth a tiry little monoplane —
its wingspread to only M feet. it will do between 25
and M miles to the gallon of gas and it eon be sold
for around $2a00 under present conditions. -
Is this the beginning of the era of aerial flivvers
that so many of us have been talking about?
same thing to happening,
moan to the tndividual er
lag to the’man-who
a bit dlsillusiened.
test somewhat longer than they did with the auto-
mobile. Ford himseit said not long ago that owner-
ship of airplanes by ordinary eitizens could not de-
velop as automobile ownership did, for the eimple
4 reason that it to much harder and more dangerone
h to tears to fly theni to te learn to drive a ear on
a seed.
Bo it looks as if we would have to welt a while yet
before jumping into an mirplene, for a jaunt to the
next state will be as ommon te getting into the
ante to go downtown to now.
And yet—you never can toil.
Improvements in safety and rellabiity features on
airplanes are being made with amasing rapidity.
Colonel Lindbergh insiata that flying to net danger-
•te. Americans have shewn an astonishing aptitude
for things mechanical; who can say positively that
the average eitizen coul4n learn to fly a »lane in
~ a abort time?
It may corns. Ford himself, in spite of his state-
menta, meet have a huneh; elee why sheuld to be
introducing this woe planet | ,
a. |j
it
k 4 *
VERFECoS!- HMF
svufpT---. SICH
BRAZEA EFFROERN2-
smsmznyas *
___ enn RR cov 4RM4MJMB— MB II— Md.
The daring giri—the one who is the first of her
group to smoke a eigeret or to take s drink, who
wears the shortest skirts and affects the most shock
~ ing conversation — to usually motivated by nothing
more than a pathetic desire to be popular.
This to the conelusion of Jessica G Cosgrave, pres-
ideal of the Finch school for Giris, who tea been
teacher and counselor to hundreds of girls through
their teens.
Ths desire to be eonspicuous in the hope that pop-
larity may follow explains why every group has, and
always has had. its extreme eseasbers, says Mrs.
Cosgtave.
The pathetic aspect, sho points out, to that fre-
quenlty seek girls would rather not be eoneidered
"wild," but lacking either mental or physical qual-
itiM end accomplishments which attraet others they
seek to avoid mediocrity by making themselves con-
spiceous by their daring.
"They do whatever to being done a little snore em-
phatleally than anyone else. If skirts are long,
theirs trail around thorn; if short, they go above
the knees. If hats are large or poked, their
features are extinguished by their head-
gears. They adopt the extreme styles - ta dane-
the gears. They adopt the extreme styles ia dane-
lag and frequently go almost or quite over the line
in acts of questiohable propriety, or even morality,
not — at least at the beginning — boMuae there to
anything really wrong about them, bat becaune they
are solanxioua to be the first and meet eonspicuous
game:. 'to adopt him?", ___ ______ _________ ___
• PAWNEE BILL, adventurer, teach- Rita looked startled. "Adopt him?" was but a painful memory; she would
er, Indian ' interpreter, obowman; He nodded.. ’T'd always wanted ■ be married-; that chapter was for-
JOE CRAIG, yho takes Tony to th, boy not that I’m dissatisfied with ever closed. There wae still the re-
Bar E ranch to live; my daughter,” he added with a smile, solve to run up some day to the Bar
11TVB MOORE, owner of the Bar “but to just sort of round things out. i K and see Joe Craig—some day when
K brand; it would have been right funny,'he should be less busy. He often
RITA, his daughter, with whom wouldn’t it -having Tony Harrison thought of writing to Craig, but pre-
Ho added darkly that many reports
of violence had come out of Okla-
homa- pinee the opening. "There's
been an awful lot of shootinge, Fm i
wonderin'."
Rita Meera went to bed that night'
with fear in ter heart. ,
But in Guthrie the spbsect of their
talk continued to get up with the
dawn, breakfast leisurely and spend
his days in a way that no longer
seemed strange to him.
Of aa evening he found it pleasant i
undeniably true that conatant disturbances such 80
Niearagua indulges to are unhealthy eonditiona for
our own teak yard.
The middle- ebureel ire M unpopular; yet
it’s no often corroot.
PARIS,
growing
younger
love fro J
to give
entirely I
Hops has
to learn J
really re
generatio
asks in J
France h
mantic iJ
hu.l exalt]
M Rop
to support
and song
longer th J
man. HI
young me
the war I
vivid rea
were th!
miseries •
grow up B
times of •
"Everyt
says. "B4
families B
elder br•
line. Thl
full plnyH
I ec•
/•
III a coupm
Now thE
a eram
(Kapital [
Ekenmthhebhhmees._c. -
GaM’poa MEAATou ME E
H-MAT A UTILE -Tile LIKE f
2 A veA AAKLE Puf$ Mod
—0 SMELF!u- wWN. :
3 SAV, W-MAf, WAS M6 rp /
Be DP AM’ PAhtClM’ AFtR 2
[ A DANs REsf! — KAH,-• k
wHesS I WAS A MAIL 1
3 MAS, I WAS WIALKIAS’ MV I
I wotrte TOR SIX WEEKS WrT <
7 A BusID AAKLE, AM’ CT )
( HALEP UP BERRE I EEM J
tew I---C
\ Hap
NF
Eight classified civil service em-
ployes were discharged last year for
political aetivities and 65 par rant
wero warned and reprimanded; three
others wore suspended or reduced in
salary and some resigned when re-
moval was recommended.
staff in the wonderful work and your
untiring efforta in behalf of the “40
and 8" Christmas eharity drive.
Ite suceeas was principally due te
the publicity given no by your hon-
orable newspapet. The “40 aad 0“
end tha American Legion of this city
era unanimoug 18 your praise and we
sincerely hope that at some future
time we one be of service teyeu.
•c specif uPy,
that thio deficieney could be ensily
made ap by simply usinc mere fend
rich la iron. This to, of course, a
valuable help, bat the enforced feed-
lag with iron-bearing foods to not
alone sufficlent to cure an advanced
case of pernicious anemia.
When a liberal mixed diet to ased
there to usually enough iron taken
into the eyetom te supply all the
bodily needa. The great faalt to that
the body cannot convert this iron
into blood aad tissue. Thia to due
to vartoaa toxic etates of the system
which interfere with proper metabo-
lism. Simply stated, the trouble to
thio:
The body encumbered with exeess
poisona to unable to change the iron
of the food into the needed iron of
the blood. If this condition of tox-
emia to allowed to continue, no
amount of stuffing with iron-carry.
-‛p
1 « 4:
Quqjdbl
First of all, It Io necessary to
cleanse the body from these toxins,
and then the correct foods san, with
benefit, be used, and the iron ele-
ments transformed Into living cells.
If your doctor rays you are anemic,
etart immediately a bodily heuse-
cleaning. A short footing diet of
fresh fruit io always helpful ia
eliminating effete matter from the
system. Daily enemas and sponge
baths ehould be need to assist elimi-
notion. Large quantities of water
taken at regular intervals will fur-
ntoh the fluid for fushing the kid-
| Craig said worriedly. “That was
when he wrote to ray how bad he
felt about Mrs. Moore's death. I
Guthrie whieh ia one day to epringing .... , . ...
from nothing to a city of 8000. There things would have turned ot dir-
...... ■" -—" ferently and more happily.
scape. Her father sighed and was
------- — — — - jast up and ran away when I was
. rsS S KLTX S K -ne " “? "
sWaN. nvrioaL.."a E TRera never have eonsented,” she
t"z.Wrn "J* io" T» I 1. wesldm"tisu
nl."p - -
Pawnee Bl to persuaded by the city be had been taken into the Moore
. ■■--------r---- ________of Wiehita to go there had lead the family.*
paradozes. One of these repeata itseir so often ttet T Boomers mo kiehemi. The firht .Rita snid nothinK. ""r* but con-
T-- - •--- -—-— -- -- ---—1 finally to won. On April 22, 1882, the
isfired that sends 50,000 home-
writimu ta rev to oak whet is
it. I have hod M lanced a <__- -
thmes bat after a while it seems to some
bash. H doesn't hurt ass. I am s straw,
henithy girl ed mixteen end soum people
so l will outgrow It. but I dsa't taluk
"ANswEn: Your only hope to rars the
swollen gland to to take » eareful diet
whieh wiU not overiond your lymphatie
eireulation. Il to beet, fee n short timne
te eltminate oil of the heavy foods and
live on fruits sad ureen vegatahles for
s month or two owl give your glands a
chance to empty it ms elves of any se
eumulated waates. Lancing only injures
Um «lands atil further, and extenda the
trouble to other glands nearby Hot ap-
plleationa or eletrical treetmenta are
sometimes helpful in emptyine owl the
awollen glands.
...... —
A THOUGHT
g.92,
2 - daq
He said presently, “One more A strange peace had descended on
thing about Tony Harrison before him—the peace that eomes with days
■ p
—;—s,Ah-
NEW YORE, Jan. The other morning they
found a beautiful young Russian singer dead in a
gas-filled Brookiyn bathroom. She had made her
New York debat a few nighta before. The c ri ties
eurtly and briefly recorded that oho could wet slag
—at leaet she could act slag well. She ted spent
many year studying with great teachers. She
thought ter hour had come. It had taken a few
hundted dollars perhape all ate ted — to make the
gratare of a puabile appearance in a public forum.
After that, it seemed et her. there was no uqe
goinc on. v
OUR BOARDING HOUSE '
NOTICE
The State
County oi l
' aaEy virtu
2 out o1
Ei Countyl
tifet. on a I
eburt on tl
1927, in fJ
Company, a
eorge M. I
Mhjarge-n n
W Mrs. J
ger in the I
Company v
No. 5960, o
t did on |
A. D. 1928,1
the followi
situated ing
State of Tm
George M. I
All of I
Fifty-nineB
Heights A
Amarillo, B
and on the B
being the fl
between the
and 4 o’clom
th., curthm
in Amarillem
sale and s•
cash, all thl
of the raid I
Ryan, w m.•
ker. J. H ■
.1 A < •
■
Dated at •
MUTICa N l»» ruuLC 1
to metieetwoe woo she aaretav. stoadtaa to
-=zzzi#=se
SLxrsz —-mm-
W artseto
a business man on tha road to pros-
perity. »
Thore rode into Guthrie one day
and put up at the hotel, a dark-
skinned man with a livid scar travers.
ing one side of his face from oyo te
chin. His hair, the clerk noted as
he removed his hat, waa short and
coal-black and slick with oil. He
wore a short mustache and a goatee,
and hie eyes, which one expected to
be dark, were gray and narrowed.
He announced to the clerk that he
had come to Guthrie to “Ieoh around."
Ho was thinking, he said, ef estab-
lishimg himeelf in some sort of busi-
ness if the town's prospects looked
as favorabtens ropurte ted Indi
cated.
Tony Harrison, walking into tke
mother.
The ola-fashioned mother ta fifty cases but of a hun-
dred to one of the meet arrent of radicate. Quite un-
She gated out the window. “Why when he should toll him ttet ho waa
--Se Menhe - ehi‛ mi eyeaeszyg
alee
7’- 70 s2
- ' 8
"2-35
board of mediation 27,
-
able amount of lean meata. These
toeda contain the largest amount of
available iron.
Do not be misled into submitting
to intravenous injectiona of inorganie
Iran, as this mineral baa normore
value ih the blood stream than small
pertieles of ron filinge. The vege
tables tranamute mineral iron tato
the organi form, and only to this
form can the body mate use of iron.
The fresh amount needed daily ie
very email—about the quantity you
can balance on the point of a pen-
knite. A anted of greens each day
will furnish you with all your'ny»-
tom can aseimilate.
The moot important point to Te-
member to to care for your body in
such a way that the digestive aad
assimilative funations eaa easily
tranapose the needed vegetable iron
lato bleed and vital tissue.
Good health . ia not dependent
ONLT upon the use of the right
foods. ELIMINATION of bodily tax
ins, BREATHING fresh ate, and
plenty of vigorous EXEECUE will
teip immeasurably in building ths
clean blood stream upon which you
life depends.
body could exist
if there were hot
at toast some of
thio vital element
prenent. la ane-
mie persons this
amount is often
very low, being
M per raat ot
the normal quan-
tity.
At first thought
it weald seem
Mltoe end
k Hisses
Ate
utoBtai
etaonw *
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 86, Ed. 1 Monday, January 30, 1928, newspaper, January 30, 1928; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1569295/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.