Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 167, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 21, 1928 Page: 9 of 16
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SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 11, 1928.
AMARILLO DAILY NEWS
«GE NINI
AMARILLO DAILY NEWS
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MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRE
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*** O * AUDIT DUNEAN ON CIRCVLATGE
NoTICE TO THB rusLiC
Any erroneous reflection upon ths character, standing 95
reputation of any individual, firm, concern or corporation E
may appear in the columns of The News-Globe will be gladi
corrected when called to the attention of the editor. tw ••*
the intention of this newspaper to wrongly use or injure
individual, firm, concern or corporation end cordons "
be made when warranted * prominently as was the wrong’s
published reference or article._____
The Daily News is an independent Democratic
newspaper, publishing the news impartially, and
supporting what it believes to be right regardless
of party polities.
JESSE JONES FOB PRESIDENT
Jesse Jones of Houston, generally accepted as “ths
first citizen of Texas in private life," was honored
recently at a banquet tendered by a group of dis-
tinguished business men of Dallas. It was reported
as a testimonial dinner, but the keynote of the
different speeches was that Mr. Jones should become
the first citizen of the nation.
"The tributes and appreciation of the many-sided
citizen of Texas and Houston reached their apex,
when several speakers proposed Mr. Jones as the
“next occupant of the White House." The applause
resounding after several such references to the pos-
sibility of his nomination by the Democrats gave an
unexpected point to what was otherwise a gathering
without any political flavor.
"It has been said that Jesse H. Jones would grace
the nation aa its first official citizen," said Jed C.
Adama, Democratic national committeeman from
Texas, "and the wish has been expressed that a time
will come when such will be the fact. 1 tell you, the
time has now come, and Jesse A. Jones would adorn
the White House."
Cullen F. Thomas, Dallas attorney, called on ex-
temporaneously by George Waverly Briggs, toast-
master, concluded his tribute by expressing a belief
that “Even as Jesse Jones is the first citizen of
Texas in private life, so he may be the first citiaen in
the official life of our nation.”
The dinner, attended by a host of friends and ad-
mirers that filled the junior ballroom of the Adol-
phus hotel, wss given a further note of brilliance by
the presence of a large number of women, including
the wife of the honored guest. In a brief toast Mrs.
John 0. MacReynolds spoke of the charm and per-
- sonality of Mrs. Jones, which has enriched the life
of the honored guest and has won for her a host of
friends throughout the nation who see in her a rep-
resentative of the highest ideal and best traditions
of American womanhood, Mrs. Jones responded gra-
ciously with a brief acknowledgement,
in his response to the various toasts of the eve-
ning, Mr. Jones declared that the tribute to his wife
“is the one thing that has given me by far the great-
est happiness in this party.”
DRUNKEN MOTORISTS
Judge M. L. Dunham, of Grand Rapids, Michigan,
looks at things in a way we like.
Announcing, the other day, that motorists brought
before him for driving while intoxicated would be
sent to jail for long terms, he declared:
“The drunken driver is almost as great a menace
as the bank robber. Hereafter these drivers, when
proven guilty, will go from this court to jail for the
maximum term."
We think the judge is absolutely right. Any man
who is in the slightest degree under the infleunce of
liquor has no place behind a steering wheel. Ner
has be any sympathy coming it, trying to drive
while in that condition, he gets arrested and jelled.
A BOUND PEOPLE
Some men are worried because they fear liberty
will be lost to America as a result of her prosperity.
Rich nations are not as tenacious of freedom aa
struggling peoples must be and history is filled with
evidence that indifference to the birthright of lib-
erty all too often follows material success.
It is deplored by these watchmen that the people
of this country are indifferent to the fate of their
institutions and that they show a disposition to per-
mit inroads upon their rights so long as the balance
to on the right side of the ledger. That view to one
which presupposes that our people are grossly ma-
terial, concerned only with the needs of the hour
and content if their pantry is supplied, their bills
paid and their ability to have a good time unim-
paired.
_ While there may be corroborative evidence to sup-
port such a viewpoint the history of the-American
people contradtets it. Unless we have changed over-.
night we are etill capable of sacrifice, of nobility,
of unselfishness and possess still some regard for
the rights and happiness of ethers beside ourselves.
11 is undeniably true that there has been a trend
away from idealism in the past few years. That te
a regrettable thing, a pitiful submergence of our
higher selves and our nobler aspirations. Those
who have weekly deluded themselves into the belief
that modernism, with nil its sordid worship of ma-
tertal success, its opportunism end its butterfly ex-
istence, is any acceptable substitute for
the things that means character, that mean life
la ite fulness of usefulness and dignity, as well as
of unsoiled joys that are sweet and laating and with-
out ating, are sadly mistaken.
Seen- About New York
NEW YORK, April 20.—All the world knows “the
Little church around the corner.” A considerable ‘
fraction of the world knows someone who has been
married there. Bearce a visiter to Manhattan but
visits its snug little garden and is delighted by ite
pastel-tinted approach.
But any number of people have asked me how it.
get its name. It came about after the death at
George Holland, an idol of the old Wallach Theater.
Joseph Jefferson, who made “Rip" a classic of the
stage, went to a fasihonable church In the neigh-
borhood and was given a chill reception. No, they
could not hold a service for an actor! The very
idea. ,
Jefferson was shocked and indignant Where, then,
could one go te have prayers said over the body of
a great actor?
“There's a little enuren around the corner you
might try," he was told.
And “the little church around the corner" It be-
came from that day on. It also explains why the
people of the theater held it in such esteem.
The best circus story I've heard to date comes
from Dexter Follows, the veteran advance guard of
"the greatest show on earth." Years ago, relates
Fellows, a lion escaped while the cirrus was playing
in the west. Volunteers were celled for to hunt it
down. Members of; the party stopped to take a few
bracers at the nearest bar. Everyone ordered whis-
ky—that is-except Fellows.
"What's the matter with you? Why don't you
take a little shot ?" inquired the leader of the party.
"Nope, whisky gives me too much courage.”
Broadway never tires of reproducing in life the
plots it brands "old stuff" in its theaters.
The police of Boston and Detroit were looking for
him. The charges in both cases happened to be
murder. For months he had evaded them. And
then, this clean-cut, attractive young fellow appear-
ed on Broadway. He seemed to have plenty of
money. There was a theatrical man, for Instance,
who needed soma quick money and got $5,000 from
the kid, though they barely had met. The people on
“the street” liked him.
And then it became known why he was there. There
was a certain auburn-haired chorine with whom he
was to be seen in the supper clubs after theater. He
had met her casually some time before, and he had
fallen in love. And here he was, night after night,
inviting detection and arrest to see her. There was
no attempt to hide. Aad so he stepped right into
the arms of the law. He probably could have kept up
the chase indefinitely. They're still gasping about
the tables he frequented. And there's a broken-
hearted chorine. Not a man's son of them but believes
that somehow he can explain; that there's been some
tragic mistake. They've even taken up a defense
fund.
The girl, of course, feels she wss to Blame.
But, since this is life and not the theater, there's
nothing anybody can do about it but wait.
GILBERT KWAN.
(Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.)
The Woman's Day
BY ALLENE BUMMER
Even though the marriage of Berlin, the Immigrant
boy composer, to Ellin Mackay, heiress to one of Amer-
ica’s great fortunes, in years old by now, that marriage
continusa to “make page one” again and again as a freak
rumor sprouts up that Papa Mackay has forgiven his
darlin' darter and gone to implant a grandfatherly kiss
upon the cheek of his tiny grand-daughter. What a sen-
timental, romance-loving, gossipy, plain “nosy” people
we are!
THE GIGOLO
The gigolo has come Into his own. He now carries a
card like a union man and is officially recognised as
"a gentleman of occupation." In case anyone needs a
definition, a gigolo is a ladylike young man who hesi-
teles to aril his lily white fingers with menial tell, but
who has learned that certain rich ladies past the first
fine flush of youth will pay well for a handsome youth
to escort them to teas, dance with them, pay checks
from their own purses under the table and in general,
mahe the world believe that lady's charms per se have
gained her these gallant attentions.
ITS BAD TOO 1
Gigoloing has been more or less under a cloud until
just recently, the marry band of boy friends were li-
censed, given cords ‘n‘ everything. It isn't to the point
to explain that all this was dons because so many ef
them carelessly mispaced their lady employers' jewels.
Gigoloing has brought more smirks and jeers far the
employer than the employe, however. Doesn't one see
pathos there, too? The pathos of a world which demands
escorts for women if women go forth at all and which,
in the some breath, denies them the minute a woman
grow old, whereas a man can “step out" alone of ae-
companied to the end of the picture!
JEWELS FOR BLONDER
A wealthy brewer recently married a blonde show
girl. He is said to hers given her ten diamond and
emerald bracelets, three diamond rings, and a $2,000
pearl necklace. And, aftsr all, what difference does this
superfluity of jewelry mean to her, and why in the
world should ahe be any hoppier with ten bracelets than
with two? The tragedy of tee much wealth is that all
too often there seems nothing in particular to de with it.
MORE BOOKS
Some more on that Hundred Best Novel list:
“Peace and War,” Tolstoi; “Fathers and Children,”
Turgenev; “Phineas Finn,” Trollope: “Picture of Dorion
Gray,” Wilde; "The Downfall,” Zola; "Huckleberry
Finn,” Twain; “The Conqueror,” Atherton; “The Clay-
hanger Family,” Bennett; “The Emigrants,"* Bojer;
“Drums,” Boyd; “Possession,”; "The Green Bay Tree,”
“A.Good Woman,” and “Early Autumn,” by Bremflold;
"Her Son’s Wife” by Canfield; “Death Comes for the
Archbishop,” Cather.--------------------
THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE!
(274)
OUT OUR WAY
By Williams
The Ce OLD
HeN,T SHOP
MONEY LENDER,
DON HIS PAY DAY
COLLECTIN'
YES, BuT \
50 MANY 1
OF TA B0VS
GET BEHIND
WITH- THHER
\ PAM MENTS.
0-------0
BEFORE Gomer ouT
BE SURE %/Ou HAVE
ALL NOUR PARTS
RINGERS-ARMG- utos
STY* AS NOTHING
WILL BE RETURNED
-UnEO
′* THE AR REAR RANK:
m u E. Pat. OFF.
128 87 NEA gurnet
THIS HAS HAPPENED
J.RWILLIAMS
•1 U MA NETVICE, MO a
WIE AUSTIN sAMMY MS" Xu
in the dress or cook tent, without her
The summer she to IE BALLY "Princess Lalia" complexion, which
FORD is “farmed out” to CLEM she was to apply with exceeding care
CARBON and leaves the state orphan- so that the disguise might bs Im-
age, the only home she has known penetrable,
from the time she was four. At the
farm ehe meeta DAVID NASH, ath-
lete and university student, working
there during the summer. When Car-
Because the carnival lot selected
- It is difficult to define a Hawk.- Apparently • Hawk
is a day bird of prey which is neither an eagle, a vul-
ture, a faicon, a buzzard, a harrier nor a kite. I The
most common European species is the Sparrow Hawk.
These birds have the very carriage and countenance
of battle. Here a Sparrow Hawk is raiding a flock of
chaffinches.
[ By NEA. Through Susel
a the fuiihr di Ta kaaf se
Hera is the American
Goshawk or Goose Hawk.
The European species is
trained to kill wild geese.
04102044)
=*,‘“”2 2
* Dr. McCoy will gladly answer
personal questions on health and
diet, addressed to him, core of The
News. Enclose stamped, addressed,
large envelope for reply.
—T : 1
Dr. McCoy's menus suggested, for
the week beginning Sunday. April 22:
Sunday.
Breakfast—French omelet, toasted
Shredded Wheat Biscuit, stewed
Saturday.
Breakfast—Coddled eggs, Melba
toast, stewed apricots.
Lunch—Oranges as desired.
Dinner — Broiled steak, string
beans, head lettuce with olive oil,
pineapple sponge.
POTATO FLUFFt Feel and boil
a* many Irish potatoes as desired.
When thoroughly done, mesh and 1
season with a little salt. Add i
enough thick cream to make a atiff 1
better and beat vigorously for seve
oral minutes. Heap into a flat bake
ing dish, sprinkle with Melba teast |
etumbs and place in a hot even until 1
lightly browned. Nerve while hot
in the dish in which it hee baked. |
Sweet potatoes may be prepared in
the same manner, except that they |
should be belled in their skins. If 1
they are thrown into cold wetor |
when done, the peeling can be eerily |
slipped off. Mash and beat aa di. |
raisins.
Lunch — Stewed corn, buttered
boots, shredded lettuce with peanut
butter dressing. .
Dinner- Roast pork, cooked aspara.
gus, cooked celery, sated of grated
raw carrots and chopped celery, ap-
ple whip.
Monday,
Breakfast — Breakfast food re-
toasted, served with milk or cream,
but no sugar, stewed figs.
Lunch- Potato fluff, spinach, salad
of shredded raw cabbage, wuypwu was. mnan .... on
Dinner—Vegetable soup, pot roast rested for Irish potatoes,
of beef, steamed carrots, green peas, *" 44
raw celery, Jello or Jell-well, with
cream.
Tuesday.
• Breakfast—Coddled eggs, Melba
toast, stewed prunes.
Lunch- Eight-ounce glass of grape-
juice.
Dinnor — Broiled mutton chops,
mashed turnips, string bean salad,
baked pears.
----... ----,.--— Do not
add the aril, but be careful to re-
move all stringy fiber.
son makes insulting remarks about
their friendship, David strikes him a
terrific blow and not knowing then
whether the man to dead or alive,
Sally and David flee.
They join a carnival, David aa
cook’s helper and Sally in a sideshow
disguised aa “Princess Laila," crystal
gazer.
NITA, the Hula dancer, becomes in-
fatuated with David and threatens
Sally with exposure to the police for
the Carson affair If ahe doesn’t keep
“hands off” David. Sally hears they
are going next to Capital City, where
she spent so many years in the or-
phanage. She telle David they muet
run away. David promises to meet
her that night after the train to load-
ad to talk things over with her. They
etroll to a clomp of trees and sit
down to talk. Devid tehee her In hla
arms and for first time they confess
their love for each other. She trite
him the news of her mother which
MRS. BYBEE uncovers for her in
Stanton. The women who bed left
her at the home wee not her mother,
according te Mrs. Bybee’s Informa-
tiee, but was a maid hired to take
the baby from the mother in New
York and disappear.
As they sit there, they are startled
to beer Nita’s voice in the darkness
somewhere near them. “Steve—I’m
warning you. If you doable-crone we
I'll cat year heart out. Fifty-fifty-"
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY.
CHAPTER XXIV
When Sally was awakened soon af-
ter dawn the next morning—Wednes-
day—by the shouts and songs of the
"white hopes” unloading the carnival
on the outskirts of the Capital City,
the question which had insisted on
worming ita way through the heavenly
joy of knowing that David loved her
sprang instantly to ths foreground of
her mind: who was “Steve” with
whom Nita had quarreled and bar-
gained in the dark last night!
Bally and David had met or had had
pointed out to them nearly every
member Of the show troupe, and
there was no Steve among them. Of
course Steve might be one of the
roughneck while roustabouts. But a
star performer, such as Nita consid-
ered hsrsslf, would hardly consort
with such a man. The two classes-
simply did not mix, oxoept in rare
instances. David of course was dif-
ferent Everyone connected with the
carnival knew that he wee a univer-
sity Modern, working In the kitchen
with Buck only because he was hid-
ing from the police.
Then the thought of Devid dis-
missed Nita end her threats and her
Nieve. She crawled out of her berth,
scurried to the women’s dressing
room and hastily applied her show
make-up. Pop Bybee had summoned
her to the privilege ear on her re-
turn from her momentous walk with
David the night before to caution her
hes to Appear—in Capital City, even
HAWKS
by “the Kidder," Pop Bybee's ad-
vanee men and "fixer," was in the
heart of the city, and the railroad
spur allotted to the show train on
the outskirts of it, the cars would be
abandoned by the carnival perform-
ers and employes, only Pop and Mrs.
Bybee continuing to occupy their
drawing room in one of the Pullmans,
Sally, being told the arrangements,
suspected that they stayed with the
train to guard the safe under the
green plush seat, the existence of
which was known only to Nally. Mrs.
Bybee took little Interest in the
carnival Itsslf, earing only for the
heaviness of the canvas money bags,
which were brought to her at the end
of each day's business.
It was still not coven o'clock when
Bally joined the straggling process
sion of performers heeded for the
cook tent and dress tent, a quarter
of a mile from tie show train. She
knew very little of the city Itself,
since the orphanage was situated on
its own farm in a thinly settled
suburb.
There was no glow of pride, no
sense of homecoming as she trudged
through the almost deserted streets,
but every time she passed a police-
man idly swinging his “billie" on a
street corner she thanked Pop By-
bee la her heart that he had caution-
al her to don her disguise. For be-
yond a casually interested glance at
her brown face and hands and har
long, swinging braids of fine lus-
trous black hair, the law did not
seem to find her worthy of attention
—certainly not of their official no-
tiee.
If only David could pass that cor-
don successfully! Probably he had
gone to the carnival grounds. But
Pep Bybee, true to his promise to
protect the boy, had decreed that he
should become private chef and wait-
er to himself and Mrs. Bybee, re-
maining cooped op all day in the
privilege car of the show train.
Poor David! Dear David! Her heart
ached passionately for his loneliness,
for his magnificent body gaged in a
hot box of a kitchen, when it had
been so gloriously free in fragrant,
sun-kissed fields before she had met
him.
booths, endowing them with glamor:
"Bybee's Follies Girls- a daszingly
beautiful chorus straight from Zieg-
feld's Follies in New York—Six rea-
sons why men leave home;" “Beauti-
ful Babe, the Fattest Girl in the
World! 620 pounds of rosy, cuddly
girl flesh;” “The Palace of Won-
dare—Greatest Aggregation of Freaks
in the World: also Princess Lalia,
from Constantinople, erystal-gazer,
escaped member of the Sultan’s Har-
em; Hess all knows all—Past, Pres-
ent and Future!"
Sally wandered along the midway,
waving a small brown hand to Eddie
Cobb, who was aotting up his gam-
bling wheel and gaudily dressed Kew-
)' dolls; exchanged predictions aa
to the day's business with two or
three good-natured concessionaries;
won a gold-tooth smile from the
bonne-haired girl who-sold tickets
for the tin rabbit rases.
But she soon discovered that she
Wednesday,
Breakfast — Wholewheat muffins,
with unsaited butter, baked eggs,
stewed raisins.
Lunch—Boiled rice, parsnips, let-
ture.
Dinner—Clear tomato soup, Nella,
bury steak, cooked celery, baked egg
plant, dish of berries (canned),
Thursday. ___...
Breakfast Eggs poached in milk, tenterethe
re toasted Triscuit, baked apple.
Lunch—Pint of buttermilk, ten or
twelve dates. .
Dinner—Roast veal, spinach, mold-
ed salad of peas, string beans and
celery, cup custard.
Friday,
Breakfast-Cornmeal
I receive hundreds of letters daily
from readers asking me to give thorn
the basic rules of proper food com-
binations. I have therefore prepared
a special brief article on this sub-
ject. You can obtain thla by writing
to me care of thia newspaper. Ask
for my article called “Food Com-
binations.”
QUESTIONS AND ANSW ERS
QUESTION: Alice M. writes: “I am
getting se ingrown toenail, will you
please Ml me how to prevent its getting
an! worse?′
ANSWER: Any chiropodist can treat
your toenail and show you how to make
it grow into normal shape. One method
of treatment is to shave the nail to the
—ter se the-edges will be encouraged to
-row toward the center, making the well
; more narrow. Ask your chiropodist to
show you hew to use this method of treat-
menu
milk, no sugar.
Lunch — Cooked lettuce, cooked
oyster plant, salad of grated raw care
rots.
Dinner—Baked sea bass, spinach,
squash, lettuce and ternate salad, ne
dessert.
QUESTION: Cook anks: “Wh
the best types of chickens foe table
ANSWER: The best types a
d Brahma, Cochin, Langshan, D
mush, with Orpington, Plymouth Book, Wye
• Rhode Island Red and Houdan,
scales M the legs, thin necks, an
colored thighs are signs of tough
chickens, A good table bird shoul
a large full breast and, at other
She’d bite her tongue out first! She
was going to be good, good, prove
to herself and David and all the
world that "It wasn’t in her bleed.
But all day, as the crowds gather-
ed bad Money clinked merrily as It
fell into rash boxes, she longed for
David, lived over every kiss he had
given her, from the brushing of bit
lips against the tip of her short nose
to that dizzying wedding of lips when
their love had been confessed In the
moonlight.
And because she was bemused with
was restless and lonely. The carni-
val had no glamor In those early
hours. Without the crowds there was
no glamor; the crowds themselves, most riotous seeress of her crystal.
romance, thrilling with her own
awakening to love, she made an al-
a large
of the
starved for al lenst tt hours before killing.
Those killed with partially full erops
should be avoided, ae the disintegration
of the grain quickly discolors the flesh.
They aca more tender If held for two or
three days before cooking.
QUESTION: Mrs. J. E. writes: “One
of our boys frequently has pimples on his
ears, and the last few ton he has had a
lot of small pimples on the inside of his
mouth I bathe them with boracle solu-
tion, but wondered if you could tell me
the cause and cure. Me seems in exeel-
lent health. He Is very fond of eathogs
and has had one eveer day for years.”
ANSWER: Bueli unwholesome mixtures
as eggnogs would be just the thing to
cause pimples on your hoy’s skin or even
inside his mouth. Raw and milk
should never be used together, but mey
be used cooked in the form of custard.
South American
hawks, called Caracaras,
are flesh-eaters. They
run as well as they fly.
Here is a Brasilian Cara-
cara.
though they did not suspect it, fur-
nished the glamor with their naive
credulity, their laughter, their free
and easy spending, their susceptibil-
ity as a relief from the monotony
of their lives, to the very spirit of
carnival for which this draggled old
hoyden of a show was named.
“The kids would levs it." Bally re-
membered suddenly, seeing in a
painfully bright flash of memory the
oldish, wistful little faces of Betsy
and Thelma and Clara and all the
other orphans who had until so re-
cently-though It seemed years ago
--been her only friends and play-
urates.
“I wonder if Eloise, Durant is ter-
ribly unhappy, or if she has found
some other ‘big girl' to pet her. 1
wonder if Betsy and Theima and
Clara miss my play-acting."
"She smiled at the picture of her-
self draped in a sheet and crowned
with her own bro Ide— an ermine
clock and a crown of gold adorning
a queen! “If they could see me new!
Play-acting nil the time, all dressed
up In purple satin trousers and a
green satin jacket all glittery with
gold braid! I wish I had lots of
money, so I could send them nil
tickets to come to the carnival,” her
thoughts ran on, as homesickness for
the place she had hoped never to
see again rose up, treacherous and
unwelcome, to dim her joy is the
glorious miracle of David’s love.
“I suppose” she confessed forlorn-
Why, he might almost as well be
in jail!. And he had done nothing
but protect a girl alone in the world
from the cruel revenge of a man who ly, “that Mrs. Stone in the only moth-
had promised the state to treat herer I'll ever know. I wish I'd always
as his own daughter.
But even though her heart throb-
bed with pain for David she could
not be wholly sed, for he loved her.
wanted to marry her, would even now
been good, se ehe wouldn’t believe
| the awful things Clem Carson said
about me. She thinks I’m bad now
gazing that first day of the carnival
la Capital City. Girls laughed shyly
and cuddled against their sweethearts
provocatively as they left the Palace
of Wonders, determined to mahe
“Princess Lalla’s" enchanting prop-
hecles come true.
And she was so seductively beauti-
ful herself, asparkie with leva aa
ehe was, that three or four unaccom-
pealed young men, seeking knowledge
of past, present and future, suggsted
that she fulfill her own phophecies
of a "so beautiful brunette," until,
embarrassed though flattered, she
took refuge in assuming that all gen.
tiemen prefer blonds.
She did not see David that night
after the carnival had shut up shop,
f he could not leave the show train
and only male performers, barbers
and concessionaries were permitted
(CONTINUED ON PACI SIXTEEN)
Tittle Benny’s
Note BOOK
5
Battiday me and ma was eating
brekfist on account of pop having
went down to the office and Gladdis
be married to her If she had let him
give up his ambitions for her.
By the time she had finished
breakfast In the reeh tent the earni-
val was nearly ready for business.
Even the Ferris wheel’s glittering
immensity was flung toward the sky
the beehet seats hanging motionless
in the still, het air. Banners adver-
tising reel and spurious wonders
watt being—tacked upon—1
—like my mother. I wonder,” she was
startled, her face flushing hotly un-
der the brown powder. “If 1 am bad!
They say it’s in the blood.-I’m crazy
t have David kiss me, and—and he
had to ask me not to. Maybe David
is afraid I'm bad, too, and will make
him bad!"
The thought was unbearable. She
wanted te fly to David, to search his
gold-flecked hazel eyes again, to see
........ If he bed lost any of his "respect”
tearred. for her. But she wouldn’t kisshim!
SKETCHES BY BESBEY
avNOPSIS WY BP UPHEN
Flocking in numbers like wolves in-a pack, Cara-
caras hunt in company, and, in the manner of the
jackal following the lion, the Caracaras keep pace with
human hunters to eat the offal and the carrion which
they may furnish. One species, Audubon’s Caracara,,
ranges into the southern parts of the United States:
naces-e-s comene in. monetise (To Be Continued)4 2L
LETTER
GOLF
A HOT PUZZLE
It’s a little late in the season for
a ROOF FIRE, but it makes a hot
letter golf puzzle any time. Far is
five and one solution is on berk
page.
not being up yet, me thinking, G. 1
wonder if she remembers wet she
sed yestidday about me having bin
te the movies enuff this week.
And I was Jest going to mention
about a Kut Up Komedy being around
nt the Little Grand, any jest then
my knee happened to neck agenst the
leg of the table and some of ma’s
cafee went on her chin won she
thawt It was going In her mouth, be-
lag one of the worst things that me
likes to have happen to her, saying.
My lands for goodniss sakes issent
the leg of this table big pnoff for
you to see? "
ite big enuff but G wizsickers its
under the table? 1. sed-
New dont eet tip a long argewment
about it. ware do you ixpect It would
be, hanging down from the wealing I
ma sed.
No mam, I sed polite. Thinking.
Heck, darn the lack, I gess I better
wait a little wile now.
Mooring before I mentioned the
Little Grand, end I started to open
my egg end It was softer than It
looked from the outside, end some
of it ran up my rist and some ran on
the tablecloth, ma seying. Look at
that. naw jest look at that.
Meening espeshilly the tablecloth,
aad I sed. Writ gosh, ma, holey
smokes, how did I know it wee that
R
O
O
F
F
I R
£
THE RULES
1—The idea of letter self is te
change one word to another and do it
la par, a given number of strobes.
Thus to change COW to HEN, la
three strokes, COW, HOW, HEW,
HEN.
2— You can change only one Letter
at atime.
3—You must have a complete word,
of common usage, for each jump.
Slang words and abbreviations don’t
count.
4—The order of letten cannot be
changed.
One eolation is printed on back
page.
s date inv
SME RICAN
4IST ORY
Little Joe
5 try % BeRRoto .
WMONEV AND YoOLt
FAD. You HAVE A
LOT OF CLOSE Com,
FRIEADS. 564
soft?
New do you know enything, 1 de-
clare you dont seem te half the
time, ma sed. Go on out in the
kitchin and wash those hands wile 1
get this off of the table cloth, she
sed. Wich she did all except the
stone, and I bumped the leg of the
table agen getting up to go out to
the kitchin, making ma spill back
some of the egg she was jest lifting
up, the result being 1 decided she
proberly remembered wat she sed '
yestidday enyways, so I dident even
mention the Kut Up Komedy,
out «•
T.
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 167, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 21, 1928, newspaper, April 21, 1928; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1650662/m1/9/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.