Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 124, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 17, 1930 Page: 4 of 22
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fHUMDAY MOiWINC, AFML IT,
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OUT OUR WAT
itlon
M dlstinetly M M a local call and thls
AMARILLO DAILY NEWS
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OF TBE AUDIT MUBKAU OF CIACUCATIU,.,
and have never suf-
el party polltiez
ABE MARTIN
HANDING DOWN WISDOM
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NO
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you use-
Iom little encumbrances on the face
of realizing we had made a mistake.
WONDERS NEVER CEASE
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oral Eleetrie, and it zives something of a foresight
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portntions by the biggest corporations.
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K1522852"2
Woman
bat now i
n her career aa a rib
the whole embrella.
Yon pesky little varminta, you mizz- of the erth, he sed.
rible little werme, you ugly little en- Belng nothing but a lot of inaults.
LT. ME
OUT/ A
T take a week out of my bizzy life
to demonstrate that my little boat
can go a thousand miles in all kind,
of weather without a breakdown, and
He zives the name, of p
to this form of seeing.
rapiration
lien sweat
I’m not a bit uneasy about her, but
I think.-she had a premonition for
■ho put on her flat-heeled sh ms be-
fore leavin’ home this mornin!” Mid
Mrs. Pony Mopps, when midnight
7 TOP TAAT
f ARGUWGr AMO
CoE RIGMTvne
lector of his day,
being the largest.
Article, on eimilar subjects which
I bare prepared far free distribution.
Please send J-cent stamp for each
N-
BSHES DOWM.
60 WE WOrr Ger
OuR STbCuGrs
surely soakin’ it to women these
days, but since the beginnin’ o' time
all great struggles for emaneipatloa
have been filled with tragedies.
"Truth win not make us rich. but it will make M
ttea"— win Durant, author.
date ir*.
. MERICAN
HISTORY
measure. I can do that without consulting anyone and
I rated for industrial as well as agricultural rate, when
I thought they, we re jusufied. The only thing I opposed
was the raising of rates for the benefit of monopolies."
Kendriek voted against the cement duty and for
the duty an brick, because he thought the cement
price was eontrolled, whereM the making of brick, was
in the hands of thousands of individual makers. He
voted again, t the aluminum tariff boost beeause be
felt that aluminum product, were handled by a elosed
Til
Mone bn
Me and Pud* Rimkin, wm wvkinz
along just wawking along. Pud, say-
ing. G. look at that sutemobeel
Meaning a little empty automobeel
BUYING RIGHT-OF-WAY
FOR HIGHWAY, WHEELER
was further broadcast to Europa aad Aala. Vour
continents Hataoad ta on this exehang at telleh-
tationa
siow THE CLASS
the ROUTE NE
TOOK, WHAIC.
I
FLAPPER FANNY SAYS:
41
- ! ..... .---
read world ne*a, it never will, however, it cannot,
supplant the home newspapet.
Again, a new etherial link he, been established
' tion for the rest of the country. That shows an ex-
tremely provincial frame of mind.
"And Tve nothing in common with the men who
•0
lt+
itie sight
e Mton-
2
#12,%88m72E1Eo
WHO DA MMA WM PNC FIRST
TO ciREVMAVIGArE TUE 4L08E
EARUYI THE I6MEENTURV,,
The man. who’s made a great success, who is a pluto-
crat, is often called on to express his views on this and
that He’s manufactured robber heels since first to man-
hood grown; if he is wise he’ll make his
spiels on that one theme' alone. He haa
forgotten more, one feels, than we can
ever know, and when his discourse
(ByTheAsnociatedPre.)
SHAMROCK, April 16—Purchase
of property required to widen the
right of way on Highway No. 4 to
100 feet haa been started ' by the
Wheeler county eommissloners court.
Contract for paving the highway
from the pouth county line north
through Shamreek ta the county
seat, Wheeler, will be let April 23 at
Austin
This project ie 20 miles long and
the road from the county Mat to
the north county line will be paved
a, aeon at a rente can be decided on.
Members of the resident highway
engineer’s force here are rapidly
completing surveys and plans on
Highway No.' M-A from the Gray-
Wheeler county line to Wheeler. It
i, considered probable these plane
will be sent to Austin for final ap-
proval the latter part of the month.
The county’a third road improve-
ment project, Highway No. 44. from
the Oklahoma boundaty west to ths
Oray County line, hss been surveyed
and a email part of the plane com-
pleted
Jest because he *M ag Ex-President, interest
in Calvin Coolidge waa not lacking and part of that
interest expressed itaelt Ju a not altogether wholly
eincere applause of his retura to super-simplicits.
The country to stil interested and, we believe, glad
to know that within a few weeks Mr. and Mrs
Coolidge will be moving into their now $45,000
estate of nine acne located on a bluff overlooking
the broad swpep of the Northampton meadow.
The Beeches, ae this estate to known. offers an
unhampered view of auch well knowa peak, as
Meant Tom end Mount Holyoke m well M miles of
the beautiful Cennecticut River. The country S.a
whole is very happy over thia move bcMuae it is a
site far more fitting for a former Chief Executive
of the United States.
Then ar* at lean foyr miutakes is the above pieture. They may pet-
tala t‘‘utammar, bistory, etiquette, dtawine or whatnot See if pan can
find . . . . — . . .
tleBen
Note Bo
(Heating Vped»)
Qumtimm K. I. G. wrttest -I aa. a
Nekiherner by birth ---- _ --
farad from the oold until * returned North
into the manner by which one of these days we may corporation. But he voted against very few increases.
"He points out that there are thousands of rates in
S
■
look at the
n arotind.
his collections
id probably the
Ui* NOWLAN
BA BD CALKIN a
2ee*
T
l;
S
Walt Mason Himself
The World’s Most Famous Rhymster
ibled word below—and unserem
U yburseit 0
)
5 )
liking way that blind men find their
way about often atopping short in
front of an obatacle to painted out
by Mr. Farigoule when ba says that
time develops a crude form ef parop-
tie sight. This subject, however, io
etill in aa experimental stage and le
not considered scientifie by most in-
vestigators. There le ne doubt, bow.
over, that the Mas* of tough can be-
come very sensitive and of a great
aid to the other senses.
Deaf people are often taught to
hear through the him of tone/ and
there ie ne doubt that a sensitive
skin can be of grant assistance to
blind people, not only in recognizing
obects but also in recognizing the
delicate variations of the atmosphere.
5===#=
s-zmanraura
and HMM Aeeootoud Item Loosed Bewiea. ~
THE AMARHXO DAILY NEWa
gdauzanxg
rypsF"-1- ABOARD TMeT
M“ev.4MP d
the man came out of the cigar store
with a big elgar in hie mouth and ,
about 4 men sticking out of his coat '
poekit. laying. For the love of mud
can I bleevemy eyest
| Proving he was serprised nit fte, I
7—3 • wu
(OME PEOPLE WHO GOTO
WcOUEOE TKE UPNOTHING
MUCH BUT SPACE'
JRWLLAAS,
•-6 ovouuaseEE,mc.
=EE=Es=f=
mbutwet s edieelech am
m,a.mmipypsorqum.ansasiqzaa.g
aa=
a
WASHINGTON
V’LETTERL
---------------------------------
WASHINGTON, April 16—The Republicans, gave
out a list showing the number of times Democratic
senators had voted for proteetion during the tariff bill
battle aad it waa found that Senator John Benjamin
Kendrick of Wyoming wm cwt in the rate of Abou ben-
Adhem.
Kendrick had voted for an increaM in tariff rates
exactly M.timea and there wm no close second. Broua-
sard of Louisiana came next with M. (Incidentally, he
-
a tariff bin aad ao man can be informed ac to all of
them. He had to vote with such information as he had.
He denies being la on any of the trading that went on,
explaining his change of vote on two ov"hree measures
by saying that he had remained open to persuasion by
new evidence. The indepedent oil people, he thought,
came along with a fine arument againet cheap oil im-
f
„w}
.,4
New that Admiral Byrd and bis party have left
Antaretica and there to no present need for the
radio broadeasts to that far off part of the world,
operators and listeners-in are obliged to turn theit
attention elsewhere to see the feata of miraculous
radio performance. The other day the complete
firat page of the San Franeisco, Call-Bulletin was
transmitted by radio to Seheneetady. Now York, and
these in the far East were able to read the front
page of a newspaper jest three hours after it left
the press in a far western eity.
The recording machine is on invention of the sou
of Owen D. Young, chairman of the board of Gen-
with South America. Over a radio and land wire
circuit of 6,000 miles, President Hoover epoke with
the presidenta of Chile and Uruguay. The voices
from South America were reported to have eome to
BUCK ROGERS, 2430 A. D.
A PSTCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION
Mechanical fitness to only a limited phase of th*
test for autoista that R. B. Stoeckel, commissioner
of motor vehicles for Connecticut, believes should
be in force. A sense of social responsibility to
deemed Just m important, if act mor oo.
Ob the definite conclusion that at least M par
eeat of the diffieuities an the highways are caused
by personality defects and on the basis of the prin-
cipte that the operation of a meter vehiele is an
expression of the character and personality at its
operator, it becomes almost imperatire that we
gauge the sense of social responsibility possessed
by the applicant for a driver's license.
According to Mr. St seek el, the present form of
examination is too limited. If the candidate pre-
Note a reasonable dettse’of intelligence, answers
questions readily aad is able to demonstrate that
he can drive a car from the mechanical standpoint,
ba can secure a lieense. Not in all statoe de the
tests even go this far aad this It for from being
treats of heels, much learning will he
show. But he is tempted every day by
interviewing sharks, and then he gives
himself away and looks like twenty
marks. He may discuss some work of
art that’s gained a world wide fame, and
what he says would break the heart of
one who knows the game. He may be
tempted to outline new policies for
banks; to those who study his design,
he looks like twenty francs. The blood
of listeners congeals when he outrages
sense; if he would talk of rubber heels,
much wisdom he’d dispense. A well known scientist has
won much honor in his day; he knows a lot about the
sun, and moon, and Milky Way. When he’s behind a
telescope he is without a peer; but he is always springing
dope that fails to win a cheer. He tells young mothers
how to make a luscious pumpkin pie, and how to frame
an angel cake no hubbies will not cry. And any woman
in the land could take that wise old toff, and show him
why he should be canned, and where he should get off.
A man grown rich in buying junk stands up, severe and
strong, and shows that Einstein’i work is punk, arid all
his theories wrong. He paws the air and wags his ears, happens. I hardly roll into my own
he thunders and orates; like twenty kopecks he appear homptown Azain withumy, precious
to thoughtful delegates. If each man talked of what heWsatarappahsrrmPi"te bJMb
knows, to exercise his face, this weary world, we may depths of nowhere and scrape eft the
suppose, would be a brighter place. very finest view, end now my friends
(Copyright, 1980, by Goorge Matthew Adame.) will swear I rubbed on the root of.
------------- it myaelf to fool them. Leeve my
I cite, you hideous little inseeks, you
and I eed. We did it, mister, we did | piosonous little mierobes,
it with these sticks.
•Landing in frunt of a cigar store ;
with oo much dry mud oa it you ;
couldent hardly tell what color It wm
criticise* another for voting hi* conviction, in a tariff ' in you wonted to know.
whet happens? Ill tell you what
---- I.A%4CS
I Year . .1;:252:252:5:8600
• aa4 New Mdazieei
PAABEWBVN.
•RS
Giving me a ideer, aad I Md. Well t
hey, I get a ideer, lets atart to clean I
it, end when the man comes Mt and |
seo* the diffrente he’ll be ee glad J
bo’ll give us each B dime or some-
thing.
Wieh we started to do, picking up 2
sticks out of the street end atarting
to serape the mud off, and after
about 11 minnita we had it *11 scrap- . |
ed off ef one eld*, looking grate on .
that side and proving the automobeel
wm blue underneath and just than 1
•?*,3* "
*7
Here ony me end Puds wawked awey with-
---- olut ansering back anway, on account
in the office of The Binboard, th* entire teat
•hew world—moot roving performers-!has a mailing
arrngement. The forwarding department ie larger
and busier the* most amall town postoffices and two
highly specialized elerks are presumed to be able to
track road folks down la aay part of the world. Oao
sack Jab of tracking resulted ia the location of a ear-
tain performer out to Australia and another was
trailed to India.
Dozens of mothers, fathers and wives, whose .
children and husbands have disappeared, eome to
find out whether thy have run away with a chow.
—GILBERT SWAN
The ski to * tough eovarine which
keeps you protected frees the eut-
side world and Ito dust, diet, cerms
aad polsona. Oa oao part of year
body the ekin may arrenge iteelf to
a very thin lozer, M on the eye-
Iide, aad on another part, thick aad
calloused, the latter ta protect you,
as on‘the sole at the feet, for
example.
The external layer of the ekin le
really dead, but the inner call* are
marvelously alive, and yet few peo-
ple appreciate just how sensitive the
akin ie or how elosely allied it ie to
the nervous eystem.
The chia has the teak of putting
came an' no daughter. Juries are
me. I don’t like th* attitude of those toon who make the
sky the limit on their local product* and deny protec- '
. 75
E*, e* V "
2229
*343, 653
*..*,6
A P. MOBGAN’S BIRTB
Oa April IT, 1837, John Pierpont
Morgan, Ameriean financier end art
colleetor, wm bora at Hartford.
Cena.
Following bie education at the Eng-
lish high echool in Boston end Uni- .
versity of Gottingen in Germany,
Morgen entered the bonking business
in New York. Ho at once distinguish- ,
rd himself in tke field of interna-
tional banking.
Some of bie Moro noteworthy
achievements were a syndicate to
, toko up the beads negotiated by
' President Cloveland and for the pro-
1 taction of the geld reserve; finane-
ing the largest reorganization of rail-
weye and consolidation of industrial
proportion ia -the United Btates and
organicing the U. S. Stool Corpora-
tion.
Morgan was the greatest art col-
Grammarslips
1. What ie wrong with thio Mn-
tencet "The hounes are Mt apart
by themselves."
2. What le the correct pronunein-
tion of "imbecile"t
3. Which oif of thoM words is
misspelledT Colonize, colonel, er-
ume, calamity. ad
4. What does the word "inebrd"
(aean) mean? Mk
5. What word beginning with W0
means “worldly"?
ANSWERS.
1. Omit “by themseives." 1. Pro-
netneo both f's as is “it,” acjapt
first oyllable. (. Column. 4. A drOk-
ard. "Bo was an inebriate of*e
slums." 5. Mundane.
out about two plate of
each day. Nearly two a
I AIH ARGUN-GOS
NO—X 3 MEREL-
SAD- RCH PEEPUL
HANE SERVANTS As*
Poor PEEPUL HANE
3 " •
•. „U0 mUC AA0 " • ’■
338
58225
Seen About New York
MEW YOBE. April 16—The "Sky Club” ie, ap-
yarenty, going t bo the limit. ' .
Forebed mmething Ube 1444 foot above, the
ground, OM at Manhttan’s most luxurious aad un-
usual organizationa will be the high spot of some:
thine or other. It will be, so far as I know, tko fimt
rendezvous to New York’s famous skyline.
When the bow Chrysler building, which haprens
sit the moment to bo the tallest la town, wm under
construction, the three top atories were engaged-
Furthermore, it io to be exclusive, limited to
nom. BN members. And since members ero share-
holders, rather then dues-payers and the shares
come at $20,000 each, It seems evident that the mem-
berahip will be limited to eorporation chiefs, bankers
and such.
There, far above the eity’. roar, the tired bun:
bom maa can leas back over his stock reports aad
bio bridge game, interrupted only by the whirr of
the motors M th* new “firing police" go by.
Thor* are half a dozen spots on Broadway which
act as “genera, delivery" windows for those tran-
sient theatrical folk who are here today and gone to-
morrow. ...
Theres bb eld simile that goes somethine like
this: “Aa uncertain as an netor’s addresn."..
Wherefore, private business concerns that eater
to the Broadway eastomers act as mail distributine
agents ter hundreds of ctors who do not know what
their addresses will be from one day to another.
This uneertainty of dwelling place io not based en-
tirely upon the wandering life of a performer; con-
sideration haa also been given to those periods when,
due to a bed season, a player io rapidly wandering
from o*e actor’s boa rd ing house to another, with
shir upon bio back as his only asset
la such circumstance, he cannot honeatly give
a permanent address and he does not care to got bin
mail at a postoffice general delivery window. Hence,
he sees one of several mediums open to him.
Thus, Mmething like 300 letter, a day are han-
died by th* L Miller shoe emporium, a concern which
has owed most of ito rice to theatrical busineas. A
■portal deportment io engaged to beadle the mall,
though there to ao income from IL
Aad many are the stories this department could
tell. The other day I wm told of a girl from the
Middle West who. heviag run againet hard luck ia
getting a Broadway engagement, went out with a
burlesque, show. She did net want her mother to
know the type of performer she bod become and
hesitated to give forwarding addresses. Be she sur-
gested that all letters be addressed to her at “such
and sueh" an address.
Another girt called for a letter which bed been
. waiting for her more than a year. She too. had been
desirous that her address be kept secret, not wish-
. tag the home folks to kaow that she wm up againet
it and bad gone out with a tent ebow.
most important, owned by a eiaglo
individual. In 1912 ba gave to the
library of eongress a complete set
of autographs of the signers of the
Declaration of Independence. Be
died In Rome, March 81, 1818, while
abroad for hie health. Ble eon sue-
ceeded him ee head ef the Morgan
quuo_um‘p.A n gaq, “le it
true that lemha On up the bloodr"
Anpwers No, lemona de ao* "dry up"
th* Mood, aad de art help to ieduee
ar2z2on
This meend, pt pourse, a lemnom tart aad
Ue aa other food i used a pound or mere
of *eleht will bo tort ench day ter oom*
time.
threpoyed Ogee, the moa cod.
4 -•
A v|r|AlClT
A $45,900 ESTATE
Some years ago a moa, new fessed for bie preach-
meats and practices of thrift and economy, moved
from a simple email town home to a stately mansion
in Washington. Upon retirement from the high
office which accompanied thio homo in the nation’s
capital city, he returned to this plein Now England
v ARGUIG ?
j
glands era required for thie uittle
tock, which to not a part-time job.
but continues throughout the night
and day. If these two million sweat
glands were pieced end to end in a
row they would reach about seven
miles.
Embryologists have discovered
that the akin aad the nervoys eystem
sed brale have evolved from the
Mme primitive tissues and are there-
fora closely related.
A writer, named Louis Farigoule,
of France, hue written a book oa the
subject of eyelese eight in which he
states it to his belief that we oil
have a sense of yisien lying in the
shin covering and that we can sc*
through our skina. He eites the feet
that sleep walkers can go through
the meet hazardous adventures while
walking around with their eyes ehut.
against decreases.) Thora 63 votes of Kendrick's seemed
to call for an explanation.
“Did I veto for more raises than anybody else?"
ashed Kendrick as year eorrospoadont tickled him la
, the ribs with a knowing leer. "Well, I'm proud of it!"
Tke senator is sn old-time cattleman and owns one ।
| of the largest range ranches ia the west. He is now 72
yeas* of uge. It was he who first raised the Teapot
Dome fasue la the Senate whoa independent oil oper- '
stor, urged him to Ieoh into the Sinelair lease.
PUBLG
•eras reQleetle upon the eharheter, etandime • MN
=23
I WWVMM4 es goMmssw ee mm the wwat veb
MEROES ARE MAQ - not Born. j
mkiomn— -----:e—,--------
after having sport three coneecuuv roan
ie the Berth. Thl, tort winter I oohed ell
over wien the eola and had to bundle •» -
to all sorta of wanln,. Before woing Booth,
woolema eeemed quite unnecemaary. Piemce
MU me what to eat to set my MoM to
better eonditlon."
Anaver: Perhape ran wraW 4a well to
era more etarehe to your diet A aeed
plen h to use one tarshy meal a day,
laking some oao kind of etarchy food at
noon tocether with oao oe two raw weg--
tables. Mora to a Ms* ot good atarbess
Potatoes, uren osra. marcajon, opaghotti.
vermlceli, noedles, Hubbard pquneh, rlee,
•orebroad. covnmeal, wheat flour bigeults,
-holavhet flour, wholewheat zluten brend.
Shredded Wheat, barley, water erackers,
ennta tumip* parenipe and bet ead
(Copsteht, ISM Th* Bell Byndtcate, Ia)
far enough. On the other bond, it to believed that — Wyoming benefits from the tariff bills, especially
certain psycholozical tests ran determine sociat ; through such of her Important industries as wool, beet
_______a a.... ana h. .h. ha. .. sugar, mutton end other meat products. But Kendrick .
voponpD! to a aegree ano ao aa* ae "en‘6 | was not one of those Democrats who stood like a cement
ef soclal reoponaibility should be declared unfit for rampart against most of the inereases and melted
the operation of a motor vehicle, promptly when any local industry *■■ involved. He's
-■ __-..... just en aet end-out proteetionist.
"The nation ha, adopted protection as an economic
policy," he Myo, "and the only question left is how its
benefits are to "be distributed. That's ell that interest.
amat#
i E-2- e=
- ---He-emx
Pbpr-S,*
323-4:8 "tai
*343*/, 4
r
"90 M. 22:
"22 and tell
article you destre. This to to pef-
alally pay for preparation aad po"-
tage
Acne aad Blaekhende---1 Ecem4
’ aad Psariasis----: Skin Parasited
I aad Ttching—-—: Havu Ton Bad Yow
Daily Sweat---?; Th* Psychology
, of the Skin--1 Bronzed Skin Din-
1 ense----; Treatmenta for Skin Blem-
. iahes---; Skin Elimination—J
• skin Fsede 1 Nettle Rash----i
Erasing Peek Mark—
OCBVHONB AND axswaas
Aww and Digesten
Qumuon,J. K. wsMmi -Pinee etat
i th* etfeet of anger oa the dlupateem
, WM. Court • mvere upell ft indtowmo*
he atributeble to oeUag whenmgo.
amawer: It to volt* aodarent that osetata
: Muta, am ......... whoa eae become
, MSW, althcuuh erah tauiao have..nover
bran toelrted. hi mar be due to the e-
‘ eltenen e Mme of the toll MS glesd.
> such ao the adsrari,. or H may come from
, cho m instil* wbtoh tesult from the ogt-
. bent of eneer, adag up ao mosh nera
' tone. Canatn it to that ded(ructive smer-
• tloma are tmportant tactor to the deve-
i ramrat of art only acute but ehront ind-
i zeatien.
DOWN WITH \/T. N
‘*KE)/(Ng
e
€
V
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 124, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 17, 1930, newspaper, April 17, 1930; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564895/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.