Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 300, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 1, 1928 Page: 4 of 16
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By Williams
1M
THOUGHTS
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TILLING THE WORLD
ordered
' for os to go back to the primitive.
9
The Womans Day
(m
were profane.
Don
Intel
Perhaps you can beat the -
in editorial page.
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i
T ri-State Press Breezes
Pm
Th
con-
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Ue beef, too
S
'a a girl on
Phon
O
W
K
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tko town calle bar. For yearn sh •
who washes other people’s elh
has been just “Biddy,”
HOOVER HEARS, SEES
—
Little Joe
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LETTER
GOLF
RO!
GIK
CO
• Montha
l Feer ..
5 ’
h
ar
More than one man in Manhattan has done very
well by assuming a feminine name and appearing
to carry on n woman’s work. Two fiction writers
that I knew of bare suaesafully used women's
names when writing. And, to my knowledge, no
one knows the difference to this day. One of the'
meet suceessful “lovelorn” departments, though it
appeared under a woman's signature, was for many
years, carried on by .a man.
Y
M
weatl
meat
zove
ploys
weatl
for t
tratii
Wi
suece
foun
ere t
be made when warraated as orominenty as was the wrona
pwMiahed referenco or artwia.____________________ _____
Dr. William Bowie of the V. S. Coast and Geodetie
Survey says the earth to cocling off one degree
Centigrade every 16,000,000 years. Thus, the earth
will be two degrees Fahrenheit cooler in the year
16,001,928 A. D.
Many a prise fighter has been cast in the stage
role of a fighter. Singers have played the role of
singers, and dancers have appeared as dancers. But
for the first time, unless my memory fails me, a
newspaper man has been cast to play a reporter.
He to Russell Crouse, who of late has been column-
ising oa aa afternoon Manhattan paper.
Charity shall cover the multitede of else. — I
Peter 4 A
Croat minds, like heaven, are pleased in doing
good, though the ungrateful subjects of their fa.
von are barren to return.—Bowe.
lion
has i
vey
the 1
Ilona
cel ve
be th
ity t
duce
s
GIFFORD PINCHOT
IS FOR HOOVER
Sped
BO
VOS C
bales
-
cert director in Russia. One morning he gave her a
quaint old filigree pin.
When Marjorie ate in a restaurant, the waitress was
a person to her. So were the salespeople in every store
or the boy who mined her a fresh orangeade. So was
too traffic eop at the corner and street car conductor.
At the end of the yeat Marjorie was almost bright-eyed
26" than herasir.........
woes. And because she has been able to find it so, she
is criticised for “hardness” and “luck of memory for
the dead."
All of us knew people who do not find it necessary to
suffer personal loss and cataclysms in theiv lives be-
fare practicing the secret of happiness by utilising
every contact, every experienee, to the utmost.
In a town I know lives “the Irish washerwoman," as
B large.
2b
c
ta
s
T
night
the i
two-i
three
The
had i
Su
brail
at n<
toe t
Th
ed.
Th
weatl
tore
day.
-Congress ebolshed the “spirit
ration" la the armysand navy.
____ rayed and heard only
ittent bits of the oration.
■’S
Al
Ai
Dr. McCoy will gladly answer per-
sonal queations on health and diet,
addressed to him, care The News. En-
close stomped, addressed, large en-
velope for reply.
principles which were true then have
remained the same helpful doctrines
to assist us in living upright lives
today. Nevertheless, man would be an
unhappy primitive creature if it were
not for the development along the
lines of scientific research.
Ameriea is a country where little children are in
) Feet danger of growing up in the belief that Jus-
Whetaa tout bandage around her eyes because sho's
aboa to choose her favorite brand of cigarettes.
undeveloped food, as for us to go
back from the automobile, aeroplane
and railroad, to the horse and buggy.
If your ethics demand that, why not
be-consistent and refuse to ride on
railroad trains or refuse to use elec-
tricity? •
With the multiplicity and variety
of ideas about health and diet, many
people are hopelessly confused by be-
ing confronted with so many theories.
This food problem has been made
more and more difficult by the - re-
ligious and ethical aspects which have
been followed by some of the inves-
tigators. If one is a firm believer
in some particular religion, he is apt
to be strongly influenced by refer-
ences to food found in the test books
of his own religion or ethical philoso-
phy. It is a great handicap to be
bound to dietetic suggestions In such
inspired writing whose principal
teachings must be considered to be
those evoking good moral conduct.
Human nature has not ehanged
S82*85
rare souls who utilises everything in the boquet of liv-
ing, did more than justdeave her washing at “Biddy’s.”
She learned that “Biddy” was an opera singer years
and years ago in the Ould Country Dowh; that she
saag in Ireland's best opera halls and concert stages;
that one day her throat closed—no money, the steer-
age to America, washings, and in her little shack old
pietures of other days.
Everyone has a .story. Anyone can have it for the
reading But mont of us are too busy to bother until the
crash comes; thenwe wonder what in the world is left
that lent sawdust ad ashes. •
QUrTION: M. a asks ■ “Is Bonnie elab.
Mr er elabbered whole milk healthful and
for aa elderiv person Who dearly
elderiy person who
• (387) Our Presidents k-lanas-a-amima4--494e2
The man who was married in the Lubbock jail
recently probabiy will notrealiie until after he
serves h a sentence that “stowe walls do not a prison
make nor iron bars a cage," observes B. 8. Hilburn
ta the Plaieview Herald.
r* 9 $
by Dale Nan Ever
SYNOPSIS BY BRAUCHER
SKETCHES BY BESBEY
-----------—v
OUT OUR WAY
/ Outaide Tasas. OSU
1 Month ............ I to
IN THE NEXT BOOM
CHAPTER XL
Don was stiff and sore and uncom-
fortable and incredibly sleepy. Some-
one was jerking and pounding him.
He resisted feebly for a time and
then at last unwillingly opened his
eyes and tried to sit up. His tormentor
waa the night editor. Dawn was dim-
ming the electric lights in the big
newsroom. He had been stretched out
on the hard surface of a table. The
night editor pulled him around until
he slid upright to his foot on the floor
whether he wished to or not.
“You're a fine specimen." the editor
remarked. “A great big help."
. A bird wit ■ ear 1* worth two I
Blains-San of the Labboek Journal
Broadway 1st -.formed him. -
--es.Shelived alone in
her aback down by the railroad traeke But one of those
ANSWEBrThe. ran rater to hoe a
ver doubfi value, and many of *oe
who formerly advoated H have dizbon-
tinned Ho use. Kenb youe child eleas im-
» ne tear
■
.Jackson was among
the candidates for pres
dent in 1824 but tho elec-
tion was thrown into the
to the Vernon Recordi “A local subdcriber says he
likes the idea contained In ths Ke Hogg peace treaty
whereby it io. taped -to m-akewar impossible be-
tween the nations signing th azreement. He rays be
will begin negotlatiohs for a slmilar agreement with
the bead of hla bouse." "
, THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE:
JRWILLIAM
glass ev era esavica.'m<iJ
HEAITHD
18325352
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better days, and after that year in the little brown
house emerged a new Marjorie, ready for living.
“But what has she to live for?" asked Marjorie's
friends, and some were inclined to find Marjorie's
methods of self-teclamation fenny and almost insane.
For Marjorie's formula, boiled down to tho last drop,
waa nothing more or less than to “promote everybody.”
date in
ME RICAN
H STORY
September 3
Kotmof
dearment 1
Y
par
solutKe
' A
1
ETHICAL THEORIES AND
PRACTICAL DIETETICS <
The demlaant nfan of today is oss ,
who not only lives a virtuous life, i
but is also keen enough to take ad-
vantage of modern progress along
scientific lines. Although the in*
apired teachings of moral conduct
have not changed in any degree
throughout she countless centuries it
Did he get the interview? And
how did it turn outT
g y
2 * • a
ukx .
.‘b.s
TWO CAN DO THIS.
Team work comes in handy and
often in letter golf it makes a nice
THE RULES
1—The idea ef tetter golf ia to
change one word to another and do It
in par, a given number of strokes.
Thus to change COW to KEN, in
three strokes, COW, NOW, KEW,
HEN.
1—You can change only one letter
at a time.
S—You must have a complete word,
of common usage, for each jump.
Slang words and abbreviations don't
count
4—The order of lotton cannot ba
changed.
One solution is printed on back
page.
Jackon’e beloved wife,
Rachnphktostheturna
and heart-broken. For
years he was inconsol-
abta. ’ s—
(B, United Prese)
WASHINGTON, Aug. 41.—Herbert
Hooever heard and now himself in
the talking movies today for the
first time since becoming a presi-
dential canaidate,
’Ho went to a local theater for a
private produetion of his last week’s
farm ro lie f speech at his birthplace
home. West Branch, Town.
He indicated eho was pleased with
the “show." . * t
BY ALLENE BUHNER
Nobody knew how Marjorie Howland could ever “go
on." Life seemed to have anatched. first one possession
and then another away from her—from husband and
child to the old Colonial house with gleaming white
pillars and polished mahogany.
Marjorie herself, didn't know how she was to “go on”
a
I DAILY NFWSir
“Come to work so drunk you can't
sit up—not that you’re over much
use—gnat-brained cub—”
Dou's tongue was furry and his
head .ached. .Gradually he colleed
his faculties/The last he remembe4
wae giving his money to the or-
chestra. Ho felt fn his pockets. All
empty. He had awakened penniless be-
fore but this time it 'was a more
serious sedicament.
“How'd I get here?" he inquited.
"Because someone had more cease
than you." ,
Befuddled as he was, Don gathered
that the night editor was not so ag-
gravated as he sounded. In face there
was almost a suggestion of respect in
his tirade. At last the rub reporter
amounted to enough to“be worth bo-
rating.
“How'd you know I was at the
Bluebird?” Don was still curious.
“Holy eat, I didm’t bring you in. I
wouldn't have gone across the street
to pick you up. A swell-looking skirt,
much too nice looking to be worry-
ing about you, brought you in. Raid
“The same woman,” he exclaimed.
“She's staying at my boarding house.
Nrxt room to mine.”
The city editor looked slowly from
the photograph to Don and then
emitted a low grunt of satisfaction.
Without a word he gestured Don to
follow him Into the managing editor’s
- A 3
- -6.0.
..
(By United Press)
HARRISBURG, Pa., Aug. 31.—
Former Governor Gifford Pinchot of
Pennsylvania announced today that
he would support Herbert Hoover for
president. - - • . »
whole country is looking for her.
Read all this stuff on her case and
then go to her. Make her give you an
interview. It’s a big story if we mere-
ly announce we have found her. Bui
it will be a bigger one if you tear a
real interview out of her.”
Neither of the two editors inter-
rupted him while he looked over the
clippings. In common with nearly
everyone else in the country he had
-read more or test about the Cranston
scandal. Glancing over the assembl-
age of clippings he filled in the gaps
in his knowledge of the story.
Out of a clear aky, Horace Crans-
ton had sued his beautiful young wife
for divorce. His position in‘the fin-
ancial world and here in the social
world had made this in itself a story
of consequence. But the whole coun-
try gasped at his charge. He accused
The sensational press shrieked with
the scandal; the meat conservative
papers printed columns. The fair-
minded ' waited for her defence. But
to .pile another ocneation on the
story, Mrs. Cranston, after remaining
silent for several days, suddenly dis-
appeared. Her most intimate friends
had no idea where . she had gone.
Finally her own lawyers appealed to
the police authorities to help them
locate her.
The city editor was rubbing hie
hands together like a miser contem-
plating his hoard.
"What a story," he repeated. "Now
young man, go back to your boarding
house. Use your own judgment. But
however you .do it, bring me an in-
terview with Mrs. Cranston.'’
a colored jery greatly since the story of cre-
i damning, tion was written, and those moral
She found that the old man had been
her of misconduct with
butler and his evidence was
"I'm for Hoover and against '
Smith,” the former governor do- .
clared- "That goes without saying,
I‛m dry and for the Eighteenth 1
amendment. *
3 Another itep torwatd recounted by the Childresa
2 Index: “Foma Ind leation of the inereasing import-
» once of Ch 1 dreis as a cotton market this year may
be had from the telephone company, which io in-
stalling automt e telegraph printer tape machines
to receive and sen cotton price reports between
Childress and other market pointe. A year ago there
was OM'neh’ machine at-childress and another et
Paducah. This ye. there are three at Childress and
may be a fourth. ; heu is one at Paducah and one
at Wellington, and there are three at Quanah."
— If Al is wet and the G. O. P. to oily, it-neems to .
Olin Hinkle, of the Pagipa News that those on the
water wagon have a mmodlty that win not mix
with either.
g. Domestic anti-war tredty talk by B. H. Nichols
#
• MoMte
When Marjorie bought her morning paper at the
corner she smiled at the newsboy or old man who sold
it, and talked with him. She found out that the news-
boy's father was an arehrtect dying in Denver; that
the small boy had promised Dad to take his place.
And there were the embryonic bassos who all but
fell down stairs on the last deep notes of ."When
, the Bell in the Lighthouse Rings Ding-Dong."
Which brings us to the ever popnlar subject of
the transteat quality of fame. Both those songs were
written by a Londoner, so-journmg in America.
Arthur Lamb was hie name. And he has collected ,
many aa honest dollar for his efforts. It was easy-
come, dny-go with Lamb.
The other day he died. I doubt if more than a few
hundred persons in all America knew his nans In
spite of the fortunes he must have made from his
many popular songs, he died without a penny in his
pocket. In fact, in the little town where he passed
on, they knew oe little of him that preparations
* were being made for burial in a pauper’s grave.
Someone in New York happened to learn about his
death and mmoney for the burial was forthcoming.
It’s an old, old story, with new names and ad-
dresses.
Those over-night "discoveries" don't always “take."
There was, for instance, a young man named Edwin
Pawley. A qouple of seasons ago he appeared in
a play, “The Same Woman." Critics didn’t got
wildly excited about the play, but broadcast Paw- ’
ley aa a “find." But he dropped out of sight just
the same. The ether night when “Elmer Gantry”
opened, Pawley was “discovered” all over again.
This time he may get the breaks—end, again, in
a couple of seasons they may "find” him once more.
It happens that way, now and then, on Broadway,
GILBERT SWAN. .
(Copyright, IMS, NEA Service, Inc.) 5
-5
Which reminds me —"Mary Earl," a name to be
found on many a cepy of sheet music, is really
Robert A. King, I am told. He is the writer of a
number of hits, including the ‘'Beautiful Ohio
Walts," which, a few years back, sold iato the
millions.
doinc
nutritious____
loves it? Would oa--, ------ -
erav M bo llhsir te he benefited b woine
ANSWEN, Ciashred whole milk is e
vey 200d feed, and one could live on this
diet for many year without Medina anr
other feed. If creon vesetables are taken
with ebe labbercaboutthrecnpnrtn.uned
per da) it makes a very well balnnee4
dint but so simple that most people would
not bwiiq t H»» "" «*>• diet exelusive-
b for any lneth.of time, M ..
qzToNi Mrs. R. K. wvKssi “Mr
privato office. Here
/SA, -NA HEAT
_ WAES DONG DART
’ OF TAAR WELL, I'M
moT DOWIGr 6o Bad
"EN — x 1 rT NAS
\ ALL ME- s. -
for a while, and she didn’t. There was a year in a sani- - . .
tarium and another year in the little house at the rear His remarks had a wide range and
of the big white one—e house which h<d been a ple-comeeoQheme-----*— "
house for Marjorie and her brothers andshters daring b4mked and *wi
g /
Mo and pop and, ma was taking a
wawk across the fields and ma sod,
After ail io sod and dona pro and son,
its certny nice and quiet end peace-
ful in tho country with the grass end
the trees end the open spaces com-
bining to make it so diffrent from
the city. Why the very air we’re
breething la full of pure berds end
hutterflys insted of ell kinds of mixed
dust end germs. I think it would be
perfectly ideal to beve a little piece
out in the country were we could live
a natural arefree existents with ne-
lure on all sides of us and us rite in
the middle of it, eho sed.
Sounds good to me, pop sed. The
country come before the city cud l
goes it will outlast it, he sed.
Which just then he gave himself a
farso slap on the back of the aock.
saying, Dingbust that mosquito to
biases.
That’s odd, one bit me just then
too, drat it, ma, sed. And she started
to take terns scratching and slapping -
her ankle, and ell »t a sudden she
scroetehed a fearse sereetch, saying.
A mouse, my goodness it almost ran
over my shoe. . •
Aw G, ma, it wes ony e field mouse,
they can’ do anything M yen, I sed,
end me sod. It made by bind run
cold, that’s more then I care to beve
done to me, thank you.
Wich just then pops foot wont
down in a hole, him saying. Too gods
I thawt my ankle was broken, wet a
sweet little spot for e holo.
A rabbit dug that, pop, tbolr celled
rabbit burrows, I sed, end pop sed.
Thanks very much, it makes me feel
much bettor, I love rabbita, I wish I
hod that one in a stew.
And pritty aeon we came to come
body sitting on a fonts, holding hi:
hod thinking, being Mr. Merfy th:
farmer, pop seying. Good morning
you look a bit downcast, aad Mr
Merfy saying, How elto do you wuni
me to look with a 5,000 dollar mort-
gage on this tarnation farm and al
my cropa going bad oa mo.
Woll mother, perhaps wo better
atick to the city a little wile longer 4
pop aed, aad me sed. Well, there *
could be much worse pieces, it seems,
Wich* there could.
M%.
Seen About New York
NEW YOBE. Aug20.A lot of thing, havp hop- .
peaef since strong moa wept over their atdins to
tho RMal etcaias of “She’s Only a Bird la arGilded
Cage”
The aong, ftaelf, for inatance, has loot ita loot ves-
tigo of maudlinity. If and when it ia trotted out, the
crowd laughs uproariously. A certain speak-easy
cabaret in the Greenwich Village belt has filled its
tables due to the preseuce of the singer of such sob-
by old ballads. Invariably ita presentation, done
with mock solemnity, geta a heavy laugh.
Everyone with a memory, er with a grand-daddy,
can hark back to a day when this song, like a great
many othera, waa more or less typical of the moral
viewpoint of the times
SQuEER-PNGr
HOW EM
HEAT WAVES
MAKES 7A"
SCEHERY
MjBRATE {
<AETAWAM.
ste.z himself IN‘TALKIES
brought the bundle of dippings from
the morgue which were connected
with the notorious Cranston case
"Thia is a whale of a story," said
the city editor. "And we must de-
pend on you to get it Mrs. Cranston
disappeared three weeks ago. The
BY cAzaaS DI AMARIDLO, PAYABLE M ADvANCN
1 Mone .............t .to • Montha ............M H
B Meatal ...........Wico t YQar ......
MEMnERS or THE ASSOCIATES vasa
Tkn twin US Pres a enciusiveiy entitled te the — tee
wesubeatios W ah new. dispatches eredited u> M nM otherwie
erdite te ebis paper and aleo local new. pubilshed berate
I AM rwhte o vubicatlon of "peeial diopatehen berate on "ie
HBMBKM OF~ THE AUDIT* BUBEAU Oy CIRCULATIONR
agg l
NOTICR TOTiE PUBLIC.
Any erromenua reflection epos the eharneter, atanding n
novniln et ear tndviduaL, tire, eoncera or eorporauq ‘
umx .eenr te the colamne of The Neweglobe will be
eemeM when cailee te the attention of the editor. It___
the tntentloe of this iiinue to wromely on or tnjur ear
-T
who formerly advoated M teve
tinued ite (use. eebyoua*:
side aad out and you need___
•f hla developineaiptheria. Sena
artiele "PiDKtheriTt Com ana
cere ofthls newupeper, ineloslng a
meif-addresned, stamped envelope_________
little Benm2g}
I Note«BOOK
Thle was interesting. For a moment
he was puzzled. Who could it have
boon ? Then be remembered. Must have
been that little dancer. She was a
good sort.
"Go home and sleep it off," was
the ed iter's, last shot.
Don stumbled up the steps of the
lodging house. But before he could
reach the door of his room end re-
fugo in sleep, Mrs. Simpson, the land-
lady, pounced out on him.
“You are two weeks behind in your
rant," she declared in shrill aecusa-
tion.
She stood in the doorway to the
Cining room. Several of her lodzers
- ^3
#eEpfu:e
SYNOPSIS
Don Davis, disinherited by his
wealthy father, becomes a Telegram
reporter. Chryatal Malone, a road-
houne dancer aids kim la getting a
murder story. Spike Gregg, the murd-
erer to arrested. Lily Merrill, an old
friend, asks Don to atay at her house,
bat be zoes to a rooming house,
where ko te kept awake by the nerv-
oes pacing of a woman in the next
room. He fails at getting a good story
of a train wreck, and again he le kept
awake by the pacing of the mysterious
occupant next door. Discouraged by
hie failure, Don goes on a bat with
his friend. Bud Evans. Chryatal geta
him out of a brawl and aafely back
to tko Telegram office.
_ 9UESTIONB AND ANSWERS
QUESTION: Mrs. H. J. K. writers: "I
am interested in your answers to ques-
tiona. What would you advine for a eough
of about fifteen years atandineT Worse
ia damp weather and in winter. Started
With the erippe. Never leaves me en-
tirely, bet sets better el times. Is not
anr won than it waa ton yenrs ace.
Never have colds in my hend, and rarely
couch Anything loone. Different doctors
say II i bronehial, Doesn’t meem to break
my heajth but eertalniy is annoving."
ANSWEA: Memo people have a forma-
tion of excesaive muus which occurs only
in partleular port. It is apparent that
your form is the branchial tubes and not
on the other mucus membranes. Shia
eliminatiom b not ao wood in the winter
or in damp weather, so move elfminatlon
occurs through the muews membrances. If
vou Wil limeremne akia elimtnation by fre-
qeutn bathin and throush tekine yizor-
oua exergise, I *■: sure you will no longer
be troubled with the „eralstent Much.
| mtnhea NousuaOto S. ttoO. Pgbtlahed by bu. J. B. Hmm.
■ ItaL K 1>M, to Jan. 1, mt.
78 "ruusbad bp ike Asarulo Old. Nawa Pubilhing Company
stab and wulmore Sureeta
Gene A. Mova manor and Pabllaher.
Wbr d Hiwa, enerai Managen
»emq Qaaeesttag AS DapasUtooto am.
Oak SMarntra and eieptn newwpeper cohlbhsO to tea Fita
bondio eountm. Coven ebeFarhanal ot Teana. Ba store New
Meuiam Uontbem Calera de aad Weatere Oklahoma teem II to
SC Man to edveaea W Denver, aila. Von Worth. Oklahema
MW aad tobee rami earrytM eompWte dlepeteh"=,
taMMsl aa eaera*e*Ste mot we at the pontatfic. at Amarilo.
Taaaa. eater the Ate et March m, IBta.
PUB Mad Wtobt AmsNelil Pram Leeeed WWo Servira.
SUBBCBimON RATES by MAIL. IN ADVANCA
GYPSIES AMONG US.
Hungary, land of the Gypsies, wants to see ne
more of them. A government decree, just issued,
rules that the Gypsies shall be wanderers no longer.
They are to be transformed - into responsible citi-
aeus, liable to military service and subject to all
the laws that affect other Hungarians. Thy must
put away thir pieturesque costumes aad give op
their own language, and they must rattle down and
take to working for a living.
Tkio io probably all vary sensible and ptoper.
Gypsies are a disturbing elemet. They have been
known to steal things. Worse yet, they unsettle
us, and by their very existence hint that our way
•f life ia a big mistake. The Hungarian govern-
' meet, doubtlss, io wise.
But it may be that enacting tko decree will prove
easier than putting it iato effect.
The Gypay io not only a man of different bleed
than ours; he seems to here a different kind of
soul. Not for him ar the standards, rewards
and triumphs of the civilization of which we are
ae proud. He has a different net of values.
We seem to be born with the impulse to look
•bead. Wo are always wondering how we are te
fare next year. Life has certala tangible, material
zewards, that can be felt, touched, seen and han-
died; houses, automobiles, beak accounta, aad the'
like. Vader our standard, tko succesaful man gets
these things and the failure does not. A way of
life that loads to them to good, and"a way of life
that does wet to bad. —
AU of Abie to foreign to the Gypsy. Life to a
Bench more ensy soing affair to him. Its rewards
never lie ia the future, nor era they things that
can ba weighed aad measured. They are, instead, _
emotional reactions; glimpses ef new vistas, the
pleasures of carefree wandering, the delight of the I i
• open road. The mors' process of living, to the :
Gypay. can ba enough if it io tackled right.
The Dolly Newa to an tndependent Democratic
mewspaper, publishing the news impartially, end
euvportinz whet it belleves to be right regardleas
of party politica.
% ‘ a.
mutaetm. A NATURAL. S^TriKlS-,
___________________________________________________________n * *_____________________
that Andrew
It grew to be
ers, for they
Eggeneral was
n at a sol-
IRR8 YBhan hla
$3
ettomeaw22
1411—Hoary Hudson’s mutinous crew
found in wretched condition.
The “Welcome," with 1M
Quakers, including Wiliam
Penn, aboard, railed far Amer
loo.
1807— Aaron Burr ‘acquitted of trea-
son.
Mu} 2,6, 1 r
s 4
ls most asatredly not true that nun’s
material environment and oppottini:
ties for advancement beve remdned
the same.
No new natural lows have (seen
produced by man. All materid. en-
joyment and accomplishment' have
come from a better applicatiea et
the never-changing lows of dture.
The present hour alone .is.man’s Hero
he must work, but it is for him to
plan bls .path forward into the fu-
ture,
Thora io no time within historical
records where the average life of
men approaches the age of fifty-eight
as it does today. Man haa had the
ingenuty and cunning to use the nat-
ural forces to the fullet talent,
and the highest civilisation will only
be developed when the laws of life
are most fully understood. ,
There is practically no food used
on the modern table whick in any
way resembles those foods* used by
primitive man. Those tribes living to.
day in a primitive state have a very
hard time to obtain enough food to
keep alive, and many of these tribes
are literally dying of starvation.
The ruling nations of today are
those who have profited by utilising
the mechanical forces, and by devel-
oping their food supply so that it
io both varied and plentiful.
We should not confuse philosophi-
cal or moral touchings with those
which we believe belong wholly in
the material scientifie realm. Man’s
natural food centuries ago woo no
doubt dictated entirely! by what he
could secure at that tiro. He dreamed
of more food and butter, and through
experimentation with the laws of na-
ture, his dreams have been made to
come true. It would be at unwise
were at breakfast and they listened
with interest.
Don was too low spirited to argue.
By force of habit ho began ta fumble
in his pockets. That recalled the fact
he bad loot all hia money the night
before. He had not intended to let
hia rent go unpaid. But due to his
irregular habits ho seldom saw Mrs.
Simpson and so had neglected to at-
tend to it. Now, that she was actually
taxing him with nonpayment he could
not pay.
“I’ll pay you tomorrow, euro," he
promised feebly and tried to stop past
her up the stairs.
“Tomorrow," she cried, becoming
excited by her own vehemence and
by the sense that her other ledgers
were listening. “You’re a cheat, that’s
what you are. You think I don’t know
you’re the oom of old Joel Davis. He’s
filthy with money. Yet you try to
cheat a respectable hard-working
woman out of rent money that’s due
her."
Desperately Don sought to retreat
up the stairs bat she followed him.
One or two of the more curious ledg-
ers left the breakfast table the bet-
ter to listen. Don hurried to the door
of hie room only to find it locked.
Behind him the landlady laughed
triumphantly
“Illi stay locked, too, and all your
thingu will atay in 11 until you pay,"
she declare*!.
As Don started to turn toward her
he suddenly forgot her existence. Just
in front of him the door of the next
room opened. The room occupied by
the. mysterious women who paced
nervously for hours. She had opened
her door to era what/the commotion
was-about. For a seond sho stood
facing Don.
Ho could never forgot the hunted
look in those wide, dark eyps. He did
not notice how she was* dressed or
even how old she was. He saw only
a woman’s eyes. They were haunted
eyes. Fear, stork, naked ' tmr, was
mirrored in them. It wes the fear of
one pursued by some nameless
horror.
She disappeared as quiekly as she
had appeared, withdrawing into her
room with a gasp ef fright. He could
hour the click of tko key oa aha
hastily locked the door.
Mrs. Simpson was still chattering.
“Oh, go jump in the lake," he ad-
viced her..“I’ll be back in an hour
with money to pay your bill and I’ll
eertalniy be delighted to get out."
All the way to the office be raw
thoae haunting eyes. The incident had
ee stirred him that ho forgot hla
fatigue. Even ‘while accostinj the city
editor he still saw the cringing’ fsar
that leaped and danced, unfettered.
“Can you give me an advance on
this week’s salary?" he asked. "I’ve
been a little careless and I have to
pay my room rent.”
He fidgetted a moment while the
editor serawled the order on the cash-
ier’s office. Then unaccountably. Don’t
gaze wae drawn to the newspaper
scrawled wide open aeross the editor’s
desk. Fro* the copter of the front
page the mysteriouis lodger's photo-
graph looked up at kim. She was smil-
lag, happy; there waa no fear in her
when that photograph had been posed;
but it waa the same woman. He
pointed at it exeitedly.
When
.11 aa. ... to the presidency in 1829,
gentle fMB Of hit wif constantly him. bur
Jackegn' firetterm William Lloyd Garrison' Libera
was first published, and ita Idtaa of emancipat
caused a groat stir through the land.
Snemandeypen, cepte tz, moee (To Be Continued]
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 300, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 1, 1928, newspaper, September 1, 1928; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564059/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.