Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 106, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 19, 1928 Page: 3 of 48
forty eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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—
PIM’
b
of South Dakota vetoed
The
I
!
DIAMOND RING
thuslastie Following
Ten-Day Free Trial Offer
sli
608% Polk St.
name and address today!
(adv)
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0
Values
Home Site
MAD BV vNE DOUGLAS CAMBY CO. ST. Josepu MO.
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to th* J
PLANS FOR RANCH PLANS BEING MADE
GIRL SCOUT WORK
FOR NEW WAREHOUSE
0
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2
your selection.
The Man Who
AMERICAN
$
N
STATE
BANK
Lives in a Shack-
21
»*
if
You want, in a word, to be in Wolflin Estates.
‘UolflinEskakes
I
of today.
• $
»
t
American
Fisk Medical and
reyi
cted
407 Polk St.
Phone 2-1261-
CW A. Fisk, I’m.
John L. Hackett, Bldg. Mar.
$
-
r».
1.
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28
PT.
1
“Saw Plow” Pulverizes Ground,
. Kills Weeds, in Demonstration
You want to tie in a part of the city likely to
become increasingly desirable.
You want to be able to make price compari-
sons which indicate that the cost of your se-
lection is reasonable for what you get.
You want restrictions in effect that make
certain all adjacent development will be
homes, and each in keeping with yours.
You want a site of dimensions exactly suited
to the home you want to build.
You want all civic improvements and con-
veniences already in when you build.
STRUCTURE BEING
TED AT EIGHTH
AMD HARRISON
You want to buy in a development that has a
record of responsible management and ful-
fillment of promises.
Wolrlin Eetates
Developmeit Co.
oul"•
tos ar
nt was founded in 1925, and
then ft has boo* active both in
Blackburn’s Funeral Home wm
ritate a short time occupy Its own
«
7
4
t
He would conclude that here was a
man of but indifferent abilities.
intativ,
livision
Ams-
aveling
at Eighth
ilding on
Your success is our auccoss w» welcome
your savings account however small the
first deposit. $1 starts you.
Ben H. Smith spent Saturday in
Vega on business.
aifleent new bulldi
Harrison streets.
A stranger comng to the home of a
business or professional man who
- lives in a shack would not beim-
pressed with his host’s success in
life. 2
ludir r
Me-
Henry
found
n view
MALCOLM WYATT
Malcolm Wyatt, sea of Mr. and
Mn. Earl G. Wyatt, 1500-A Jefferson
street, has received word of hie pro-
motion to the Expert Degree in the
League of Curtis Salesmen, from
Ralph B. Miller, manager of the
Curtis Vocational service. Ho is the
should be
your most
valuable
book/
Wins Honors as
Magazine Salesman
IS you seek a setting for your nice, per-
manent home, it is well to remember
the rules that assure you satisfaction in
ms
akt
" V
■
218 Oliver-Eakle Bldg.
Phone 2-2903
Ei
HOME
broke sticks and email stones. Sticks
that did not break were hurled aside.
A brick was broke* ia four parts and
plowed under. Powder is transmitted
to the blades by a chain drive geared
to a gasoline tractor. The device can
be drawn by horses it a stationary
motor is attached to drive the blades.
Observers insist ths saw-plow will
eliminate harrowing, disking, rolling
and dragging operations, usually re-
quiring considerable time and labor.
It can be adjusted to plow from six
to 12 or 18 inches deep. Bsst work,
however, to done at a depth of eight
inches. By rigging a drill er plantar
behind the machins, it is predicted an
individual farmer can plow and seed
simultaneously, as much as 10 acres
in a single day.
The Inventor believes the sawplow,
because it pulverises the earth, will
be effective against the European
corn borer and will kill out wild on-
ions and other such wood pesto.
Professional Bldg.
Phone m
. large
Locle-
Identa
iyaft-
Homa
Tins-
Santa
Texas
- Dr. Ernest E. Robinson, pastor of
the Sea Jacinto Methodiat church will
preach on the subjecti "Your Life a
Plan of God" at 11 o’clock Sunday
morning and at 71 o’elock ea "A
Prisoner Indiets a Judge."
Sreie music is scheduled far the
Deaf Haaur Again "
Through New Aid
U
d
1,
Your savings book is a symbol—th* week
by week record of your ability to live
within your income and put a portion of it
aside.
-5-
MGk.‘s
EADERSHIP TRAINING ARCHITECTS DUE
DOUSE FOR LEADERS
Thia bank encourages savings deposits bo* r
cause it knows that its future big custom-
ers are among the small savings depositors
/
i
5,
or money in providing every re-
ulrement for the service of those
he have lost their loved ones."
George Parr has the contract for
ne construction -and the work will
o pushed as rapidly as possible,
ommensurato with good building.
State Bank
untry-
1 com-
epee:
w the
rd ths
■ #
•14 i
1"
K
far patterns direct
, 1-12 Sterling
""
"0n.i
J. .•
A
smra $50
la ellver sr stumps for va up-
Spring sad Bummer 1888 Beek
itena, showing color plates, and
dhg50o designs, of Ladies,
’ a Children’s patterns, a
i HBomprehenatve article on
agE: also some points for
idle (Illustrating 80 of the ver-
mple etitcheu), all valuable
to the home dressmaker. Ad-
If the sum to your credit is growing
steadily, it indicates a look to the future—
a realisation that when opportunity
knocks at your door, it will probably take
saved money and bank standing to open ;
it.
9056.
ush I Blass: U. 1B and 20
geher with # yard of asm
stig material The width of
2 ya»? ***** la
glftS^s-t*
Earpiece No Bigger Than Dime
s bill for restoratlon of capital pun-
ishmentn 1927 after it had passed
the legislature.
Colorado has abolished capital pun-
ishment twice la 88 years and has re-
stored it both times. It was done
away with ia 1872, made legal again
in 1878. abolished asms more ia 897
and put back in state law in 1801.
In Tennesses the death penalty was
made illegal in 1818 but was brought
back in 1818. Washington and 0x-
gen abolished it in 1818 and restored
it in 1920. Arizona and Missouri,
which also did away with ft in 1818.
placed it in the statutes again aa the
extreme penalty in 1818 and 1818,
respectively. —
The League to Aboliah Capital Pun-
ko idlei
puld go
■ .:!
mpaign
for the
g that
ability,
educa-
Ige," is !
r. Cren-
M of a
in the
n, said A
Senator I
res and I
but bo. '
he most
ublican
iling to
ver.
and finished in atucco. It is a
rambling etruoture of Mexican mis-
sion design, and has an ever all
length of 800 feet. Wrought iron
grills, open stone stairs and rails,
open arcades and porehes will add to
the attractiveness of the ranch-
house.
depart-
bandry
ef eat-
eidigh,
»
b barlee
pment,
divia-
3. D.
arillo.
Wichita
Texas
tee, sal<T
bover if
omninat
face of
I clean,” ..
I
la reaf
It since
ted the
friend- ’
I Dawes,
Herbert
Iman to
tty, and
you to ,
City ia
m.”
ousands
le worn-
instead
Hoover
party,”
he had
by the
It was stated through error in Fri-
wy‘s Globe and Saturday's Daily
ews that the parsonage of the West
marillo Christian church had been
mpleted. In reality, the work has
1st started.
The pasonage is being built at
4 Fairmont by the MeCasland
instruction company of San Jacinto,
Ld is a one-story, six-room structure
I brick veneer, modem in every de-
seeking elimination of the death pen-
sky in states which retain ft and in
fighting its restoration elsewhere.
No state has restored it in the three
years, but neither have more states
done away with it.
i1e '
4
Mi
A training course for Girl Seouts
111 be held here for six or eight
eeks beginning 7 o’clock Monday
yening, February 27, at girl scout
eadquartersin the municipal audi-
prium., ’■
I The course is opsn to scout leaders
nd anyone interested in girl scout
ork. Mrs. Mildred Austil will be
to instructor.
Mrs. Austin invested ten girls in
e Tenderfoot rank Friday at th*
cKinley school. Miss Ids Mao Mc-
lure is captain of the McKinley
WORK UNDERWAY ON
CHURCH PARSONAGE
(By The Assoelated Prena)
EVANSVILLE. Ind, Feb. 18—Bim-
pie in construction and operation, a
“saw plow” that prepares th* soil for
immediate planting has been demon-
strated by Arthur Dick, Evansville
furniture factory foreman and me-
chanfo. The government has granted
a patent on his invention.
The machine, named for its unique
performance, is a cross between a
disk harrow and an ordinary circular
saw. The working parts consist of
two unita of four 40-inch saw blades,
each placed obliquely on aa axle
which to action gives the blades a
wobbling motion. The sharp teeth
cut the ground and the “wobbling”
pulverises it. Tested publicly on al-
falfa stubble, the sawplow cut the
ground so fine the particles resem-
bled cost dust.
In the same demonstration the
blades, made of strong, durable, steel,
Open for in-
spection Today,
8:00 a. m. w
5:00 p. m.
83
2
if you belong to the Flak Medical
and Professional Building, now to
the time to investigate its partieular
opportupitles for you. Just phone
Mr. Haekett at 4778. The bullding is
epea today from 8 to A
tall, having many built-In features.
The West Amarillo Christian
church ia at Second and Tennessee,
and the parsonage is about three
blocks away.
nted musieian.
Ths Funsral Homs has been lo-
ated at 1810 Pslk street for come
Imo, and since the recent court
ullng in the matter of location has
een aqdaind, arrangements were per-
ected Wanee for the erection of
M noff^ildtag.
Mr. Blackbur in discussing ths
ovs, declares that he appreciates
is attitude of these concerned and
hat he is glad to make the change.
Vithinaa. few weeks we will have
no c/MBBe most finely appointed
aneralablishments to be found
i any elly, he said.
“The funeral direction work is a
rofoasion which comes clossr to the
uman heart than any other," Mr.
lackburn declared, "and for that
eason we are sparing neither time
(ayTheAmocletedPrea)
NEW YOBE, Feb. 18.—Fourteen
states have abolished capital punish-
meat since 1847, but six of them sub-
seguendly restored ft and in three
m*ro ft may be invoked as a penalty
for homictdo within a prison.
State law touching upon the death
penalty has been tabulated anw by
the League to Abollah Capital Pun
lahmeng as a result of discusalon
aroused by the Snyder-Gray execs-
tions ia New York, the life imprison-
meat of Adolph Hotelling for murder
la Michigan and the state’s demand
for the death penalty in the William
Edward Hickman ease in California.
Michigan. Rhode Island, Wisconsin,
Kansas, Maine, Minnesota aad North
ana South Dakota half abolished
capital punishment, but Rhode Is-
land, Maine and North Dakota still
make murder within a prison punish-
able by death.
Michigan, first to de away with
the death penalty in 1847, has never
gone back to it although a mensure
restoring it came before the state
ane -~w--
sgg
l®
f 9® ,2
! bss U
rncrate )
ral elee-
w York, J
n states 3
t neces- . ,
outhern .1
t Smith
S House, 3
to Mr. 7
Holmes,
ley have -
. P. Lee . “2
enithies 3
In Tex- ’
i g33
333
"mpAFgi
an 5 AM
mmmqmmmarpmrnmymaanmnqg
SAVINGS ACCOUNT3
Number^ .
C:
ning Post, the Ladies Mease Journal
and the Country Gentieman when he
was 8 years old, and has worked for
the Curtis pubileationa fer five
years. He began by oelling only tea 1
copies of the Poet each week but at
present sells 118 coples each week.
He was promoted to Junior degree
after less than a year of service, and
his promotion to the Senior degras
same within another year. These
promotions oemo only after a boy
proves he is a reliable steady aales-
man, delivering a specified number
of Curtis publications every week to
regular customers. •
Malcolm will be at the top when
he takes the step fl Master Sales-
man which he to seeking. When he
attain* this degree and keeps up this
standard of work the Curtis people
will aid hip in completing his college
work, if he desires their help.
Among the many prises the boy
receives with his recent promotion
are his gold Expert bar to attach to
his Senior league pin, a cash deposit
in the Amarillo National bank, a cer-
tiff rate of membership, 100 letter-
heads and envelopes with his rank in
the league and name and address, .
subseription to Bey’* Life as long as
ba maintaina his steading and five
brown prize vouchers extra each
month.
Malcolm visited in the East last
spring aad made a special trip to
Philadelphia where he was entertain-
ed by the Curtis Publishing company
and his picture was taken for their
Boys magazine.
He is in his first year, in Junior
high school and ba* a high rating
in his studies. - \
His parents feel prond that the
habits of initiative, pprerverance
and courage acquired in boyhood, are
likely to persist into manhood and
ar* of much more veins than the '
many promotions and prises be wins
ForP
intre-
• ho '.n»
pubucan
.ft
o years
•y. who
In • .
a public
nhnn 11.
Fries of
but Mr.
deemed
the cat-
alwny,
' taking
r
f
Pleas are being drawn for a large
warehouse for J. H. Bishop by J.
Roy Smith, Amarillo architect.
The building is to be located on
South Grant street, aad will be 100
by 140 feet, brick and of two stories
with a full basement.
as false,
to pro 5
» than 3.2
Col. Lee. ....
tribute 45
mes fgr :
After twenty-five years devoted ex-
elueively to the manufacture of seton-
tifie hearing-aids, the Dictograph
Product* Corporation, Dept. 84M, 402
Sharp Bldg., 18 East 11 St., Kansas
City, Mo., has just perfected a new
medal Acouticon that repAsonte the
greatest advance yet made in the rt-
ereation of hearing for the deaf.
Thia iatest Acousticon is featured by
a tiny earpiece ne bigger than a dime.
Through this device, sounds are clear-
ly and distinetly transmitted to sub-
normal ears with wonderful benefit
to hearing and health alike. The
makers offer an absolutely free
trial for 10 days to any one person
who may be interosted, and a letter
will bring on* of these remarkable
aids to your home for thorough and
convineing toot. Bend them your
aX $1 Daan
rming ------------ ------ ----
years toward E. Boxwoll will be In charge
a lady attendant ahd is also a tal-
Plana for a large ranch house for
the Wolf Canyon ranch in New
Mexico, forty mile* north of Tucum-
cari have been completed, Will H.
Lightfoot and Rabey Funk, asso-
elate architects of Amarillo an-
nounced yesterday.
The ranch house will be the sum-
mer homo of W. L. White of the
White Dental Supply company of
Philadelphia, and will have a number
of unusual features. The ranch
house will be built of native stone
Your.office to your home-during th*
day .. . your new ewslomer eg *
client gathers hto impression of yon
and your abilities in large part from
your surroundings.
MEPAVISD
BEANS
~ro
41 COUGHS ..nJ THROAT IRRITATION (
he site nr* being moved off and
construetion of th* $65,000
, will immediately get under
ray. The building to to be of brick,
wo storles in height.
The new Funeral Home will be
eautifully appointed, providing ev-
ry convenience and attraction In-
tdent to the sacredness of the pro-
esslon. A commodious chapel for
ellglous services, reception rooms,
nd display rooms will be included.
Blackburn’s Funeral Home is own-
d and operated by EM. Black-
um, Howard E. Boxwell and Paul
1. Boxwell, all licensed embalmers
nd funeral directors. Mr. Black-
urn has been in the profession for
he pest twenty years and to recog-
ised over the entire country. Mrs.
"g5
A Ll
h •
, T A0,T nut ^0 G,te
,V LNdi 111 IV mUAU5,
ison Murders in Three More
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 106, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 19, 1928, newspaper, February 19, 1928; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1569315/m1/3/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.