Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 268, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 6, 1930 Page: 4 of 14
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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
M
OUT dun WAY
m
HE
Dorothy DiXSa
M. ie
V
Day and Ntuht AmoetatedPmLemdWirServtee
that?
BAY STATE MAN.
{2!
5
l
(
•a
#
1
\
radio station can be heard
4
windows, the majority of
2
MLATIONs
IE
DROUTH RELIEF PLANS
44
Led
'53
Dale-Plums or Persimmona
K '
*
1
1
r
tragrant yet.
GILBERT SWAN.
oranges or apple*, for their exeep-
some irritation of the alimentary canal and
moting Cintestinal eleanlinesa.
little late and start to get sleepy for
Do you realize that there have
of gnawing wi
ial tensionT How do we
bar*'
th*
S06AK
BUCK ROGERS, 2430 A, D.
The King's Ultimatum
V
INS
1
17
(0
&
%
1
7
7
%
I
i J
""Hr22ae
cuqpauma
...
kemtukkohdndmduobbttbedsichbrakamakddumedase aebid
pepomin
■ >
9
//
//.
!444.
Q
RETUN TO
E GHOReS
OF TE AKE
WHERE uE
WADIEvYE
ARCA$
"One M no more speak of bad musie than ana can
apeak of bad sunshine; there is no such thing."--
Be nJ amin De Casseres.
The Daily Newa la ae independent Demoeratie
newapaper, publiehing the newe Impartially, and
Bapp irtlag whet At belleves to be right regardless
ef party politie-
-
PB fVE
WILMA* ]
%
1
• I
470,3
#7w5*a
7is date tr\
/^AMERICAN
(/HISTORY
‘in
■ r
Answer:
The queerest thing on earth, and the most miraculous, te the
power women here to kid themselves about men being in lore with
them.
MARTAN
. use (
■
■
1
De-E Muna
RescT
WHERE
7 ■
keep your diet well balanced.
(Arterini Tension)
Question: E. I. H. asks: '’What is arter-
___
0 DAILY NEWS
Ma was reeding her paper and pop
was reading hia and I was laying on
the floor reeding The Mistery of
Glenrook Cassle, being my new Sid-
ney Bly detecktive book, and ma sed,
I think ita high time for somebody
to go to bed. n
Not mooning herself or pop and me
being the only other one theA, and I
sed. Well O wizzickers, goah, 1 pint
even sleepy.
That duzzent perrent you trom
needing sleep at your age, ma red.
and pop sed, Childern grow while
they sleep and vice virtue they sleep
while they grow, no get busy and do
a little of each.
Being 2 agenst one and no use
urge wing, only I did anyway*, say-
ing, Well holey smokes, Jimminy,
Ivo had about a thousand hours aleep
thia week alreddy, and thia is Satti-
day alreddy so I awt to stay up a
AMARILLOANS ARE INJUR
Mr. and Mr*. W. L Barber an i
C. Barber, until recently owners at
the Virginia Sisters Cafe here, were
seriously injured in an automobile
Marriage without love can be an outward success. A man ean be a good
provider and give his wife every comfert and luxury. He ean be polite and
attentive to her and make an agreeable companion. A woman can be i
splendid housewife, bear a man children, be pleasant and easy to got alona
with so that their domestic life runs on oiled bearings. Very often the
husband and the wife who care little for each other get along better to-
gether than those who really love, because their indifference eliminates
jealousy and makes them Jess exacting toward each other.
branches after the frost time. The |
negroes use poles to shake down the 1
’ lying and should be shunned as the
plage*. Do I make myaelt «leer?
he sed.
Yes, sir. but anyway, 40 hours is
a lot of hours and I bet I could stay
up till brekfist now and not even
yawn,once, I sed, and pop sed, By
gollies Ivo got a good mind to make
you stay up and try it, and I sod, G,
all rite, I'm willing, and pop sed, Go
to bed.
Wich I did.
But to answer your questions; what sort of wife a woman is going
•to make who marries a man just because she respectp him and he ia
a good meal ticket? I think she will make a good wife in the sense that
she will be a pattern of all the domestic virtues. She will be faithful,
not only because she la probably inherently virtuous, but because at 41
a woman has lost most of her romance and her sentimentality and la
net likely to be attracted by any passing mate, however much of a
sheik he may be. Also she knows what she is about when she picks Mt
a husband and she is satisfied with her choice.
And that ia why the marriage of convenience founded on respect and
esteem and mutual helpfulness is a suceess so far aa marriage at a social
institution i* concerned. But to a sentimentalist It ia the body without the
soul and leavea one wondering if the husband and wife do not erave ■emo-
thing more than duty and if, no matter how well they are clothed and fed,
they are not still heart hungry.
7
ee/
K,43 4
dioxid gas until ready for marketing.
Unless cultivated, the fruit is usu-
Answer:
Whether the marriage of convenience, or the
marriage pf love to the meet euccesaful in the long
run to M old eubjeet, of debate that has never been
nettled. A good part of the world holds to one
theory. A good part of the world holda to the other
theory.
It to significant that in those eountries in which the
head rules the heart there are fewer divorcee than
E—2-6;
28888
The native wild persimmons found
in North America require frost to
remove the puckery taste, and they
are commonly toft hanging on the
trees until the frost eemes, long after
the leave* have departed. The tree
is very ornamental when loaded with
the ripe, rolden-orange globee.
Some of the Japanese persimmons,
new being grown extensively in the
United States and Canada, are larger
And you read of a time when their seafaring men
wandered the globe; when natives from the Band-
wish Ialands aad ths Fijis roamed the streets; when
old Captain Howell stood dgainst the British in the
Battle of Long Island and the sperm candles sput-
tered bright in the taverns; when Captain Eliphalet
Halsey went away in the Argonaut to sail around
the horn and came back with 1700 barrels of sperm
oil, while the tavern mugs filled to overflowing,
lang ago and tar away, and yet, somehow, strangely
and haunting memories of another era.
Time has dropped her leaves gently upon this old
town.
To be sure. Its barber is new dotted with slick,
white yachts and old seafaring men take parties out
to catch weakfish and bluefish and the beech front
has been taken over by younr women taking sun
baths and Shelter Island has been blockaded by the
estates of the rich. One cannot run completely away
from things like that.
But loll along any of the paths of the town proper
and rest, under a tree against a rotting fenee for a
moment, and it isn't hard to recreate a scene where-
in the Fordhams had gaytaverns on opposite sides
>f the road. •
Walking through the sneient graveyards, scenes
as they might have been before the American revo-
lution. or during it, or after it, or during the whalik
days, or the War of 1812-scenes that have flashed
across this town and somehow left their imprints
became easy companions of year stroll.
For Sag Harbor pioneered the nation tn whaling
and grew rich thereon. All New York state echoed
her prosperity, and across the bay the fisherfolk
took up the call until New Bedford became a center
Your idea of going away from home to work to fine. There is nothing
like seeking out a new hunting ground if you want to capture a husband.
* • DOROTHY DIX.
there are in our owa country where we practically ah ‛
waye marry for love, or what we think at the time to love, but,whether
theeo cold-blooded marriages are happier than our hot-blooded ones wo
have no moans of knowing. We at toast have our moment of rapture. We 7
know the glory and the cireling winga even if they do not last.
Personally, I admit to being a sentimentalist and I belleve that a
: deep, passionate love to esnential to an ideal marriage. I believe that .
marriage without thie kind of love to champagne without the flat and
the sparkle; to a rose without perfume; to feed without Haver. It takes
love to put the thrill id a kins or the touch of a hand. It takes love to
make just the nearness of another rapture. It takes leva to make saeri-
fices sweet and to make us feel it a joy and a privilege to nerve an-
other. '
NEW YORK LETTER
BAG HARBOR, L. I, Aug. 5.Notes from the log
of a nomadic vacationer:
The men who went down to the sea in ships sleep
here Ja pci! kept more romantically lush and fra-
grant. more unspoiled by Intrusive elements; more
■Imply immortalized than any I have yet eneount-
ered.
Most towns tinted-by ths faint pastels of history
turn their romance into a commercialised chromo;
the town changes its transient runts It guards its
past behind fences and blatant stgns, but not Sag
Harbor. The great atone monument, dedicated to all
4
12
Mra. R. T. Cole of Hico, T»xm. la
J*
ee at thi. newpaper ** -rongi, cm or tmJut ear
____firm. eonegra er isrpareUee ana eoreectioma win ee
mode when warranted as orominenty aa wm the wrong vub-
taheL. referene ** anitle
LKVf FOR WEB
D0 BU 7
AusiILL HAVE 0 )
1M/iMAKE WSGF s
V_ ANOHR GARMENY
/QF VNE$ AMO P
(LEME$ AMO-AMO- 5 A
)TLL 8-BE JUST <I
M-MV Luc IF SCW- Y
600/ $TiEN rue //
t ARSIP7,JAK
TO TUB PUBLIG
epee the eharaeter, atandine ee rep
i
moskuy/T
Fovemnseb—
8s
ft
7 will bl
• Cr.fFW4iLl.MMAS
Domyukasemezic.
»»«<
........g-!!
k ■♦•••• 1•94v
asHo wt
r-
■ DAILY THO
VAuLE WLMA
"TWAS HIDING
FROM M ITHF
38454
a econ
A. M
lease
struct
buildi
wlthir
Her
Frion
triet
end (
stock
pany
keepi
Wo
inch
Dimm
diteh.
Pipe
as thi
and I
with,!
a el
lengt
be ml
for rl
ting I
No a safe rule te, if within six montha a man doesn't up and pro-
pose to you, thereto nothing doing in the matrimonial line and the
sooner you weft him out into the air the better. Let him make room
for some naan who ia matrimoninily inclined and means business.
w.:"n3
*n
€,AceD
—41. .
ne
/AAEAjwuuE,TuE
""NWINGTOLLONG
WILMA'S FLGHT, ki
INIALDO SUMMOMED ME
EFOR HM•
HPAh
kJ 2.6
132,,4
843
36522
wreck in North Hollywood. Calif, lari
Friday. They ore confined to a "F
-
at4
Benny’s
Note BguK
land eoast young men went down to the sea in ships.
One writer alone has recorded immortality the thrill-
ing saga of those times—Herman Melville. In “Moby
Dick," which. If you asked my favorite of all books
written by an American, I would choose.
Buried away here, among the venerable records of
the tow librsry, you coms upon picture* of that
period which moke *U the other he-men of the earth
seem physical vygmies. The athletic goto of the in-
cient Olympic game* knew no such (train and thrill
and bazardous risk of lift. Here was a behool of
men who were truly Olympian.
Small wonder that “Med Anthony" Wayne turned
to them as bis comrades in battle, for bare was ti-
tanic strength and steeled courage.
Sundas. ..
.........MM
fA
b! a
- I r-
the minute J feel hungry I become ter-
ribly 'weak. I am also under-weiht."
sion which you have is determined by an
ally too soft .fm^i "sucn
value commercially, but those who i arterial tedsion may come from hardening
are fortunate enough to live close I of the arteries or from nervounnesa which
to the wila.trees will enjoy the fruit. | eauporthngntterie M remain contracted
In some of the Southern 8tstea.it Is I ----"--i —---
permimmons from which came ths soy- 1
ing, “Ths Isngsst psls gets the per 1
slmmon."
(Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Im )
WASHINGTON LETTER
BY RODNEY DUTCHER.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.— The famous Caterpillar
Club grow* from month to month and on s recent count
there were 263 member*, eligible because they hod
saved their live* by emergency parachute jump! from
airplanes eloft. Some have made more then one sush
jump, a* 265 have been recorded.
Misa Mery Fshtney to one of the new member*.
Horn wasn't an emergency jump, but whan she Jumped
by premeditation at Jollet, HI., her chute became on-
tangled in the plane and she dangled for two whole
hours before the thing released itaeif and dropped her
afely to the ground At the time tho chute untangled
itaeif she, wea begging her pilot to take her within
10 feet of the ground end Jet her jump. Another
parachute jumper, Bruno sehustk, wee killed when he
attempted to eave her. While his plane flew above
here he climbed down a knotted rope. Before he reach-
ed Mlaa Fahrney her ehute bed become disentangled,
but Schustek’s strength waa gon. and, enable to pull
himseif baek, he fell MO fort.
auddgnly and made a profound Im-
preaalon both in thia country and
abroad. '
MeKinley’ body lay in ntate in the
Capitol at Washington en the 17th
aad then taken to hia home city.
Canton, Ohio, for burial. In hia mer-
sate to Congress, Dec. S, 1901, Presi-
dent Roosevelt declared, "Il it not
too much ta eey that at the time of
President MeKInley’s death ho wara
seribe ragged semi-circlea lined with quiet paths,
ret her than with sidewalks. Quick-Jurna and cork-
screw roads bring release from the montony of pavet
meet*—and though the joss tunes of some fareway
* blaring through th. Apen
cottagva are pietureaque
DEAR MISS DIX—I have been married five years. My wife also works,
it seems that in business she doesn't correct people who call her by her
maiden nsme and a lot of people do not know she to married. She eeye
that nobody to interested in whether ah* ia married or not. It mekea me '
feel very ekoap. We work together and save together and I told my wife
torbuy w few shares of stock. She did and I found out that she put n
in her maiden name. What do you think of this? W. A H.
to shell make you we Idol* war graven *****
nelther me yog up a etanding tmage, waNhar shall
ya net a* any image at stone la zour toad to ba*
dawa te Hi A* I am tbs Lard yaat Go—Levifieue
26:1. ....
God will pat up with a great many thinge la th*
buman heart, bat there is one thing that Ho will
not put up with in it+a second pinee. Ho who
offers Ged a second plnce, offer him ae place—
Ruskin. _____________________
‘ She will be a good housekeeper because *ho will consider it only honest
to manage her end of the partnership as wsll as her husband doss his, and
the chances ars that she will be amiable and pleasant aad agreeabie to lies
with nd will de everything in her power to moke a gp of marriage just a*
she would of any other business. There is an eld axiom to the effect that
the women who marry for a home make the best homes.
As for whether the men will be satiafled with this kind of wife, t
that depend* upon how much the man asks of marriage. In thi* case
it 1* to be presumed that he I* middle-aged or over, end at that age
very often the men thlnka more of Alo atomach then he does of hf
heart end prefen friendahip to nentiment,, end he ean be perfect!*
hoppy with any woman who Ie a good housekeeper and. doesn't nag •
- DOROTHY Dll.
DEAR MISS DIX—i am 23 years eld snd have been going with a man
for three years who profesLto love me better then anything else in the
world end to kind end good to me, but never mention* marriage. I bM
mentioned marriage to him bn several occapions, but when I do he beconk
sullen end stubborn and informa-me that he deesn" know whether he
every merry or not. Thi* men to well off and fully capable of supporting
a family. I bave been thinkin for a long time of going to another eity
to work, but he oppose* my doing se. What should I do?
WORRIED.
The Indiana made ta persimmon
bread by grinding corn and blending
It with the palp of persimmons and
baking it into a sort of cake. Chineae
aad Japanese dry the persimmon, us-
log a process which leaves the dried
fruit with e thick coating of natural
augar erently reaembltng a date in
conwatency and flavor. In tko ori
ental aountries, the marketing of
dried peraimmons may be compared
to our marketing of dried poach**
Th* persimmon contains about 15.3
per ent sugsr, although some range
higher. It he* about 80 per cent of
water; 1.38 per cent cf protein; 57
per cent of fet; 1.08 per cent crude '
fibre, and 65 per cent mineral mat-
ter. The principal mineral element* i
Ite contains are: Potassium, calcium. I
magnenium, sodium and phosphorous.
In servine the fruit, 1; I* usuut o
pull out the item end and eat the
eenter with a spoon. The fruit may
be aliced end each slice used a* a
baae for a fruit salad. When peeled
end mashed with the addition of a
little orange juice it mey be frozen,
end make* a very delicious doearA
Dissatiafaction with the government’a proposed
drouth relief measures ho* been expressed by Gov-
ernor Dea Moody and many other Texas leaders who
want something quick and tangible la the region
where relief to most needed.
The Texas committee, of which W. H. Fuqua of
Amarillo to a member representing the banking in-
tereate of the state, ba* been advised by Secretary
Arthur Hyde of the department of agriculture that
the federal government has no plan for making loan*
to farmers except through credits advanced by co-
operative marketing associations, affiliated with ths
Federal Form board. It to obvious that such a plan
to tee indirect to be of early benefit to the drouth
am es a whole. . " -
Raliroads are co-operating by offering reduced
rates in the drouth district on livestock and grain
shipments, and tbs general committee, tn consulta-
- tion with governmental and business leader* of th*
state hopes to procure more tangible relief in ether
form* shortly.
Mr. Fuqua and ether members will go back to
Washington early next week to press their claim*
for an emergency relief fund, which they believe to
be available through the Red Cross.
Citizens of the area where geliet is needed may
mt amured tbit all members of the committee,
together with Congressman Marvin Jones and sen-
ator Connally and Sheppard, are doing their utmost
to secure all peasible help from Washington, end
that they will continue, to press their case despite
the lack of encouragement first encountered.
4
the most widely loved man in the visiting la tha home of her eon. A.
United States." Cole, 2116 Washington Street.
SHOOTING OF McKINLEY.
On September fl. 1901, President
McKinley, while attending a public
reception at the Pan-American Expo-
sition at Buffalo, wee shot by an as-
sassin, one Leon Czolgosz.
On the day preceding, the president
had delivered on addrgss on commer-
del reciprocity among the various
nations and it we* believed he we*
soon tn propose a policy In thia con-
nection which might have made his
aecond administration fully mo-
mentous at hi* first.
The surgeons who were summoned
operated almost immediately on the
wounded president, and thus mads
possible the fight for life which was
then 'carried on.There seemed to
be some hope he.would pull through,
but on Friday, the 13th, he took s
turn for the worse end died the fol-
lowing day. The actual end came
The puckery taste of some of the
pcretmmoeo is due to a small amount
of tenia Mid. The Japanese method
of ripehing them artificiall% co that
the bitterness is removed, is to place
the persimmons into casks newly
emptied of netive beer or soke. The
barrels are then seeled and in Ano
weeks the fruit is ready with all its
sugary flavor and marvelous color.
Out of curiosity, peientists investi-
gated ths process and found that the
casks contained carbon dioxid which
when acting upon the tonic acid mel-
lowed the fruit. From this comes
the procesa of exposing ths fruit in
storage rooms filled with carbon
a race between the possum, ths coon.' ABF MARTIN
sndm*a to be first to reach the per-' A
! G2,1a
tional food value certainly merits at- " anaTpr
tention. mot ing fintet Inal eleanlinesa.
MP AF}5i,, -3 - c-S: l4ja"a0..2
B*Qad-ae-/3*
h •,0 f p M “7 ▼ $ t1
„tE HEROES ARE MADE~NoT born.
r
___________________ only been 120 hours this week so for,
.Answer: Most peoRle will havta feeline including waking hours! pop sod. So
amptinitotzhe"hissin notmefue hung, dont you think its a site overstate-
This gnawing or empty feeling often ! ment to say that youv had a thou-
maken.a verson nervous and be win suffee, sand hours elssp? he (ad.
qut I only sed abut a thousand, I sed,
atrenuth immediately upon ratine. toed1 end pop sed. Well to be exact you
cennot. Kive you any.real streneth until alept 6 time* 8 or 40 hours. Don
etter It has been ia the body far at least ‛ ■
Fivs years ago, Mr* Irene MeFarlend, professional
jumper, become the first woman member of the Cater- ____..... .. .. .....
pillar Club after her private chute had failed to fun: stmmons clustered
tion in one deseent end she hed in the emergency used
I get hundred* of letter* from girls who ar wasting their lives welting
for men who will never do it in the world to pop the question to them.
These, poor, seir-cfeluded simpletons My they know these men are in love
witk them because they see it in their eyes: or because these men come
to nee them nearly every night; ar hecause these men are jealous when
any other man pay* any attention. And the pitiful moron* go on hoping
against hop, and letting these men monopolise them while they grow older
end older and lose their beauty and youth and they cannot understand that
they have hypnotised themsejves into believing just what they went to
believe.
(Suaden Hungen 1..... —- _
Queltion : Hender *>k.i "What ia thel next week.
huh of Budden hunger? If I do not vet
I Mice heard a woman say that she never hsd soy happinens in mar-
ritge until she ceased to love her husband. "When I married him," eh*
said, “I wm crazy about him, and I wonted to monopolize him end his
attentions, end I wm wild' whenever I mw him pay any attention to an-
other woman. When he atayed out at nighta I would walk tke floor in
agony, and when he came home I poured over him a torrent of suspi-
done and aceusationa and we were in a perpetual wrangle. But now.*
and she shruzzed her shouldera, “I dont care when he comes or goes.
Hia flirtations even amuse me, and ao we zet along together eplendid-
ly. We are just good friends who have learned to make allowances for
each other."
A feller 'll smoke a etgar that
smells like an ignited horse an' then
complain if he gits e punkiny canta-
loupe. "Oh, fer the ole penie o' “?I
whea therwus nothin' to cut out or
economize on but a trip to Niagary
Falls," said Tell Blinkley, today.
#.v
cegcpue
ve 98 cQmvU0®
te
I £
) ,N
2rN
v/ •
M
wm.
1 aT "
four hours. For your underweight, I would
advise you to select your food very care-
fully and not try to ’•luff” to tain. Just
Now that shipping methods ars so
reliable, with poper core, refrigera-
tion, and packing, it should be pos-
aiblo to ship the fruit moreexten-
sively, and the persimmon will pos-
sibly come into greeter prominence in
the ordinary market instead of being
a rarity. It has been estimated there
are over one million square miles
upon which the persimmon is grow-
ing wild, waiting for some organiza-
end do not require the frost to msks tion to popularize it.
them palatable. ______ •——• __
Persimmons, when ripe, are sweet, 9UEST1ONS AND ANSWERS
tender and juicy, and have the ap- duostion: ** A n'^'L -M,
peerenee and texture ef custard in a j is iwollen all tbs time. Is there any reile?
thin silken bag. Tho fruit, although in a correc dietf _
delicious has not yet become popu-ghdnweiinezcoundlcyypinhpthergorondt
lar; however, the time mey come 1 in your mm if thi* u the caune, of course
whea they are es familiar to us as i i can to entirely eliminate through a cot-
orangen or apple, for their excen- rect etet, A redngne wually comes from
if there is ons thing tbet is certain, it is thel no man who is in lev*
with a girl avsr fails to tell her about it, and to tell her early and often
and continuously. And another thing equally certain is that if a maa is
in dove with a girl ha wanta to marry her. Right off. Quick. Imme-
diately. Pronto.
ividuni,rirm,Eonearn, or corporatioa teal
— -__qolumi of The New-Giob. will be qiadiy
whea eeited to the attention of the editor. 4
us?
What Kind of Wife Will th. Woman of 41 Make WUmPN
Marries for Convenience? — How Any Girl Can Tell
When a Man Loves Her — Does a Husband Lone Hia
By PHILLIP NOWLAN
and RICMARD OLKIN*
-GArrS UOTUING Mi J )
NOU AGRED 10 LEVE <
MRS At NCLNow, lib "\
-Fo GOD/GIRLOR MO
‛U_-- Wu g
HAD E $TU
SV YUL GiLor
A SAVAGE TLL-
WILMA (A<ED uR,
WUr TuF GiRI
CLANISMEU CAME w
HE KESUE AND
WiLMA HAD to
A WOCKET-DSOL
. BAERAGKW
$ELT -DFTENSE-
3834
Ac -
Ssskra2
I don’t think your wife gave yea a oquere deal la having the atoek
fesued in her maiden name. It should have been in both of your
names, M you both pat money in it. I think it naves a lot of mla.
undorutending for husbands and wives to keep their bank necounts
and their investments separately. .
Ae for your wife uhing her maiden name in bueinoss, 1 cm no objection
to that. It probably saves trouble, at the people she deals with knew
her before her marriage. Practieally all profeseional wOTen uh their
maiden nano* after they are married and no one thinks it reflects wpon
their husband’s dignity. Take a bread view of this and domt be super
sensitive. DOROTHY DIX.
(Copyright by Public Ledger.)
Of TbIe A UDIT BDiEA U
a4o 1
Dignity When His Wife Uses Her Maiden Namer
DEAR HIM DI— A businens womdn at 41 feeently married a“di
whom she seys she respecta, bat to net sure that she love*. Love, the sya
h based on respect end she expects to be hoppy with him because she, fe-
epeeta snd trusts him and because matrimonial syecess ________________
nothing to do with it. What sort of s wife is sho going
to make? Will a real men be satisfied with e wife like 15208 2
the whallng men mat ever weattp Davy Xenac ta
womething of • quiet eymbol. A- L______1
Once away fom the few Bloeka 0 businevs pinaen,
with their hews stands sad shine parlots aad radios,
the past aweepa ia like a fog off the bay. The an-
cient willows and oaks bead giant shelters over the
duaint aad charming old houses which, thank henven,
have escaped the ravages at the modern bungalow
builder. - ■ i
Here is a house, atill standing, which wm sHelled
during tha War f 1812, and all about are scattered
a dosen more that have seen the passing at a cen-
tury er mors- The lanes, widened into streets, de-
57
3299
.r
wood hospital yhere their conditi
sr* reported m critical. “
,"U
3
HEALTH4MET ADVICE
$ Dr Frank McCoy ,
aesatMzsxd
Ght G He wk.
esamg
impht-waraftomanan:
They don't realise Ihst a woman only sees herself mirrored in •
man's eyes or that a man may coms to see her for a thousand reasona
other than because he loves her and wants to marry her. He may
come because he enjoys her society snd likes somebody to listen to
him, or because he wants to be petted and mothered, or because her
house la a good free dab to leaf In. er because she feeds him. And he
may be jealous of her and try to keep other men away not becaune he
eares for her, but because he is a dog in ths manger. And all of that
baa nothing to do with marriage.
Ep-GA2d
,*(7
30225
2286*
2
2222,*
Wgguz"msesw ( w-wyagXF
SMOEE ORIPTED AWAY. \ clSWAVE GONJE
/ wi TM/ MV
/ - ( ROCKFI5 MUST HAVE
IhJd , \S1EW '
14Hit//s A our OF TE•
i tossed other papen eartyina com
kMRMg ■' aasswt else* warn* M'
Tezas, under the Ae* at
iaiaita Texaa. Oklahoma *M M- “----
1 iN AMARILLO. PAYABLE I
" --F" I I Meal*
THE MOTORISTS RESPONSIBILITY
4*— —
In a certain middle-western city the police lately
.have been etopping motorists at random and testing
their brakes. The results they have obtained ao far
kava been illuminating. Three eat of four ears
stopped were found to have defective or improperly
adjusted brakes.
It seems fairly obvious that ns automobile can
opetate a crowded highway with a duo regard for
publie safet unless its driver is able to stop it
quickly on a second's notice. Yet here we have the
discovery that 75 per cen: of all autos luck that
essential qualification. It is a disturbing revelstion. .
Every mototist owes it to himself as wen us to
his fallow eltizens ts ksep bl* brakes in good con-
ditiom. A rapidly moving automobile is a dangeroue
instrument unleas it is under perfect control when
ita brakes are faulty.
WERE WAS
woni l
the army type parachute which she also carried, de-
acending ia safety.
Many Ato Kifted.
Despite It* large roster, membership in the Cater-
pillar Club still mesns something, as 1* Indicated by the
fact that some airmen reach the ground alive and some
de not. Lieut. John R. Glascock of the army air corps
was one of the former, and his passenger. Private
Stephen Yaxza, was one of the latter.
Glaseoek was flying upside down near March field
when bis plahe broke into a violent outside spin. He
tried vainly to do aomething about it and about 1,800
feet from the ground shouted to Yaz to "ball out,"
although he could not ata him in the back neat by aid of
his mirror.
“The rest of the time between 1,800 feet and 500
feet I was busy with the control* trying to get re-
sponse from ahe airplane." Ginscock reported. "Ap-
proximately between 4M and 500 feet from the ground
I unbuckled my eafety belt end wm thrown from the
plane in’S horizontal positiom, slightly up, for nearly
a hundred yards.
Landed Safely.
"I pulled the rip cord and the chute opened al-
most instantaneously with a very loud snap and in.
tense jerk. I waa then in a position facing ths water
tow** at tha field, end my body was parallel with the
middle of the water.teak.
“I leaded hard. fsU backwarda, uhbuekled the para,
chute straps aad immediately proceeded to the plane
which had crashed within 200 feet of where I tended
and obserted that Private Yazza was still la tbs plans
snd thsra was no sign of life ia hie body."
that seem about a thousand? he sed.
It mite to a butterfly, because but-
terfes only live one day, I sed, and
pop sed, im tawkipe to a human fly
___________ just now, and Im trying to impress
ba “ir”--— — know when we upon him the fact that the habit of
Aaower: The amount d artarlal tea- exaggeration I* next to the habit of
4e/77
#
The former* teem reedy to acknowledge that the
fellow who wrote “it ain't goin‛ to rain no more" was
nomewhat at a ever. "*
(1
1 ;*12
5$
%46-L
■FECIAL DELIVERY SERVICE-Shoula roe
St' l
esedtel me— Il new deeire le eiv
•M *MI*fao*err pervies, IM we «U appreciate
M MeweM a pad le O'e— e. ax i ______
MEM B ERa or in ABoOCIATTD PRESS
ne AmerUHed >*am I* ezelunivel, entitied to the see fur
MpobBeaUM at all new. diepatehes eredited to ar Ooi ether
who evvdttod in thi paper, aad ale locai new vublished hereim
AH ht at Dubttcatios of eoeeial “hepetehe herie are "i
caul out W
Men orgmu
mat nditi
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View five places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 268, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 6, 1930, newspaper, September 6, 1930; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564914/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.