Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 345, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 27, 1929 Page: 4 of 40
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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V
—
Back in the “Gay
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RADIO PERFORMANCE
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VALUE!
$
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this
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WE ARE ALWAYS
HEAR THESE
WONDERFUL
RADIOS AT
Name of Contestant
YOU. COME IN
OUR STORE
SOON!
County
City
State
Mail la newspaper canrying thia advertsement.
409 - 411
409 - 411
I
413 -415
413 - 415
Taylor St.
Taylor St.
3
you. Not mentioning Mr. Baker’s age when his mother bought eightyards and out, you will find it data nicely.
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To The People of Amarillo!
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PRAIRIE OIL & GAS COMPANY
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By N. K. Moody, President.
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GLAD TO DEMON-
STRATETHEM FOR
Full
unic
*
Do You Remember--
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Phase Circuit, and
Tone-Color Electr
of
the
Tex
offi
herd
con
thin
real
and
‘‘
The
J Comn
I Post,
and
ha J
-I
the
rail
mot
the
bus
of <
An t
zens‘ game eommhinsion. Recnt ap-
pointments at 3. H. W. Bibb of East
Texas aad Eugene Howe, Amarill
editor, of West Texas, eompleted Uto
membership of the commiaslon.
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of }
otti
gani
rillo
the 1
Mora
NEW COMMISSION TO MEET IN
AUSTIN TUESDAY) LOCAL
MANMEMBE
$115
LueTbas
P...
.nsul,
yeste
Hotel
exce,
ing t
Ther
rede
the v
secti l
Th]
mand
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para
Dave
SWEARS TO AFFIDAVIT
TO PROVE HE IS ALIVE
Only in APEX Radio will
you find these outstanding
features—1930 features--
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APEX SUPERSCREENGID
ArEx NEw MULr-PHASE
Cncurr
Apex Full TonE-COLoR
ELECTRO-DINAMIC
SrEAKEa
Speaker, is priced at only
$115 (less tabes). Come in *
today and hear it in action! *
Other Apex models from $45,
Convenient monthly terms.
7 ■ s
-
memi
: yho
Vete
thes
with!
also
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f < oil
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that
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Hig
sect
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RADIO FALL OPENING POPULARITY
CONTEST ADVERTISING COUPON
Good for Vive (5) Votes
I hereby cast this vote coupon la favor of:
GE
' sti
We hope that we may continue our part-
nership with you in our mutual work for the
growth and development of Amarillo.
k
wom
fron
and
e lud
Cire
War
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Nineties?”
Imagine it... this 1930
Apex Super-Screen-Grid Ra- -
dio with the new Apex Multi-
8
S'LOWER COST R
Zand SALES system N
7wfeneptce • One/katptdce"N
Do you remember—when young
dii
Their ages range from 20 to 10.
They are would-be-stenographerw
bookkeppers, accountants and the
like—studoats in Draughon’s Busi-
ness College, Nashville, Tenn., in
10SS.
As authority for thia statemeht,
we present one of the bait known men
la Amarillo. la the front row, second
from the left, we have Wm. K. (Bin)
Bahar, official reporter for the 108th
judicial district of Texas, one of
Amarillo’s leading nimrods, old fid-
dler, yam-spinner, and whr: bare
(By Tnternatimnat New ervige)
WASHINGTON, Ort. M- Eugene
E. Eoberts, a jeweler, has sworn to
an affidavit that he is alive.
He discovered that cemetery roe-
ords show he had been buried since
1907 and that the health department
ku a certificate, signed by a doctor
now dead, bearing his name. His
wife died in childbirth ia 1007 and
the child’s name, also Eugene E. Rob-
erts, got mixed in the records with
hers.
WILL TENDER
FISH HATCHERY
SITE TO STATE
meml
bars
natin
this
In
eycle
ment
bgle
Post
I Cu
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offie
each
mour
hors:
secti
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local
on t
secti
infal
medi
Th
of A
can I
all 1
are I
gani
(Special to the Sunday Newe-Globe)
CANYON, Oct. 26— Venison din.
ners are not common events for
chambers of commerce, but Mr. and
Mrs. G. W. Cox tendered such a din-
ner to the Canyon organisation re-
cently. About 86 members enjoyed i
the feast which was the result of a
hunting trip to Arizona.
Mr. and Mrs. Cox have a lovely
country home northwest of Canyon |
and are developing it as a game
reserve. They have wild geese, deer, |
Kaibab squirrels and other animals
of interest already on their place I
and will place others on it at an !
early date.
AMARILLO GAS COMPANY
By James A. Carroll, President.
*. V '
APEX
M4p J «
CJvauio
have evidence of what Dad and
Mother were in those “good old days”
they are always talking so much
about.
And don’t get ps wrong when we
refer to this group as young people.
I
"a
now, we have his word for it thit
he was only 22 and "eocky” when this
photograph was made. It ie evident
that he was the modernist of the
class. Observing the proud pose,
deal overlook the thumb of his right
hand in hi vest armhole, the
cigarette between his fingers and the
flower in his buttonhole. Second
from the right end of the front row,
Ie the fispper of the glass. Look her
over, girls I
Many is the yarn Mr. Baker can
spin of the success members of the
group have attained. As an example,
one man, who gave up post-hole
digging for a telegraph company in
Californta and spent his last dime for
railread faro to Nashville, is now
president of a big lumber company
in Arkanens and has made a fortune
telling the heavy timbers he once
juggled about as a day laborer.
But back to the mode of dress, it
will be noticed that the women, or
girls are more uniformly dressed than
the mea. Take a last close look and
see if you ean determine how many
different styles of hats, collars and
tlaa the men are wearing.
Ineidentaily, long skirts and high
waistlines are coming back in
women’s styles. Perhaps they will
not look like those, but there will he
some resemblance. Like history,
styles repeat themselves. Many a
young person today san remember
I rKpeclal to the Funday XewbGlbe)
AUSTIN, Oct. M —Bite for the tu-
H taro Central Texas state fish hatch-
; ery will be tendered the Stets Game
1 Commission at its session hero Tues-
? day.
This sits, located sa Bull Creek
tive miles nortbwest . qf Austin, In
pert of the area once given ths state
for a park. but which reverted to the
donor. the Iota A. G Champion, when
the etale tailed to improve the park
and build 4 read to it.
A commiktee of the Austin Lions
Club ha« been authorised by heirs
of Mr. Champion to take the game
eommtssoin to tha land aad invite
it to determine what portion of the
Champion land along Bull Creek will
be acceptable for the hatehery site.
> Chairman A. E. Wood ef the game
commission has declared the Cham-
pion tract an ideal location for the
Central Texaa hatchery. Thio hatch-
ery will he used to stock streams
of a dozen counties about Austin, to
which it is not practical to bring fish
from nay of the present hateheries
at Cisco, San Angelo, Kerrville, Dal-
las and Tyler.
n ia believed if a highway to the
hatchery to built, this would help
So locate ia the hilla nearby the Ual-
versity of Texas million-dollar as-
tronomical observatory, tha bequest
of the late 3. W. McDonald of Puris.
It has been decided the observatory
will be used for student work, so
a »
7 "
. X
LEAKING PAILS
Palls used for garden work, garb-,
age er other rubbish purpose* need
not be thrown away when they spring
a leak. If you putty the hole thor-
oughly and then paint over it, Inside i
man and oung women looked and
dressed like thia? Hera ia a fashion
plate of the “gay old nineties."
Don’ think it is an indication of
old age to admit sueh remembrances
for this photograph was made in
1899, just 80 years, ago, and this at-
.. . . . ... .. tire was popular a good many years
that it will have te be accesaible to later than EhaE.
the university. . I Her, ia a photograph every mm-
The, mgetine Tuesday will be the [ ber o the family should enjoy. It
second of the hew nine-member eiti- wi recall many fond memories to
those who once dressed aa these
young people are attired, and it will
interest the younger generation to
of material far one dress (ahe would i
make three out of that much now),
laced herself for that wasp-like
waistline in a conet.put rats in her
hair, and fastened those sailor hats
on with long hat pins.
CANYON CHAMBER HAS
REAL VENISON DINNER
We wish hereby to express our genuine
and deep appreciation to the good people of
Amarillo for their expression of confidence in
our companies by Saturday’s ballot.
We pledge you that this confidence shall •
neither be misplaced nor violated.
2
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A NEW PEAK IN
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Of
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 345, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 27, 1929, newspaper, October 27, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1569382/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.