Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 17, Ed. 1 Monday, December 3, 1928 Page: 4 of 12
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AGEFOU..
THE AMARILLO DAILY NEWS.
! OUR BOARDING HOUSE
By Ahern
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nilingle
4—Th* order at letters cannot be
tar quite
place. One of the singers stepped Weinertz answered exeitedly. "It’s
£
her there m he can get at her if
surze at relief eeme
1
that
They had to wait a few minetea
duter when he
back to hie Mat.
•nea
in North Da*
ertz turned to Jatrj and told her
V
a
68
her old trick. She wants to get out
of chorus so sho slipped into the at-
flee with your singers after you’d
"It’s the test we give to voices," ,
Mr. Weinert* explained. “Those sing-
"tfah maculae «
eandle oquntrn. C
Mesire Sowther
Sho looked curiously at the girl
on the stage. Surely she was good
girl. His brows came together in a
। binck line.
and allow to stand for fifteen
twenty minutes before serving.
forth at a signal from a small, dark ,
man with gray hair at his temples ।
whom Jerry had not seen step out at ■■
.4 n
tin
good and most of bis
and faaey feed end
ever her that brought tears to her
eyes. She sank back in the seat with
a big sigh. Alester began to talk rap-
idly. ineonsequently, and she knew
LETTER
GOLF
T
I
ed New Mealeos
S Montha.......
1 Yeer..........
heard them and . , . here she te,”
he added, “but she tried the same
thing last year with Mr. Shields. I
remember her." \
:528
what passed between him and Mr.
Weinertz when the latter went over
I to talk to him. *
1
himself forward in his seat, his eyes
on the scene before him. "
"Arradonde," he called, before the
girl could start singing. “Come here.”
The dark man came to the foot-
erta’a waiting room.
She was glad when the tryouts for
the singers were over. It didn’t mat-
They joke so much about the flivver that Henry
Ford brought out a new and better Mr. comments
the Claude News. There are those in Amariile and
the Panhandle who have made several wiseeracks
about women's dresses, also.
{
4
introduce them!
The theater had lost some of its
glamour already.
Two of tho remaining singers were
rudely stopped and motioned away.
Jerry’s heart bled for them, and for
changed. •
One solution is printed on the back
page.
be likes to know that somebody is around to whom
be eomes first; he wants someone to be ready to
kiss the sore place if he gets hurt; be wants petting.
If she gone away all this is interrupted. He has
« newipaper Mbusbot trarvs*.
) Rnaheeih al Teuaa. Earner* New
and Wester oklahoma from II te
Flished hy"TheAmarilie
Sixth and
E '
■ feu
earn --
"mothers" should rotate, each being able to give , . TL -
the child one thing in which she is scientifically cor- PeeY. nd she. thought he
‘g ■ d
PUZZLING BLOW OUTS
There aro several kinds of BLOW
OUTS, but the par is the same for a1)
of them. That is sevon. But perhap:
you can beat the solution on the back
page.
NATURES WAY
Despite the fact that this is
r
02
trunts ne one and refuses even a temporary separa- I
tion from hex offspring.
1.
- w
YOUR,
CHILDREN
yOeAberts Bartan
OFBbyEA ServiceIne
SIX SAILORS
. ok SHORE
LEAVE!---
ANp I WISH
Nod WouLD SAN
SoMEHiAG
ABoBT His
SM0K«G,-~~*
---E oALM ,
•-ME HB HASA
A CIGAR I
m. His MOUTH '
Eh. is WHEA 2
NEW YORK, Dee. 2- -Important pustness in New
York used to be conducted by exeeutives who wore
clothes into the shinines of a sliek dime, featured 1
frayed cuffs, run-over heels, and hated the telephone.
Their old-fashioned ways symbolised honesty and
integrity.
I
1
smartly dressed.
“She can't sing—she's a piece of
tinsel, I tell you,” Mr. Weinertz was
saying angrily to Mr. Arrandonde.
The latter turned to look at the
AAANY A MATeH IS
‘ W ENDED B Abi OLD
FLAME.
6
01
A Mesth. • 00 a one oo a
• MMth .a.......
Outside T
THOUGHTS
But whono eball atfaat on. at thene ngele ones
which believe in ate, it were better for him that
a millatone were hanged about bio neck and that
he were drowned in the depth of the a**-—St. Matt,
tail.
THE RULES
1—The idea of letter golf is tu
change one word to another and do
it in par, a given number of strokes.
Thus to change COW to HEN. in
three strokes, COW, HOW, HEW,
HEN.
t—You con change only one letter
at a time.
9—You must have a complete word,
of common usage, for each jump
Slang words and abreviations don't
EY GQODESOAUTHORe/"WETGTW0E
the tatention of this newspaper to wrongk aw or tnjure any ,
individuai, firm, concere or corporation and correetiona will I
.Ordinarily sho would not have done
that, bat she wanted to say some- ■ light* and Jerry could hear plainly
AMARILLO DAILY NEWS
EtHuh.3 Nerowter A IMt Pultobit U Du J.B.»taeh
Jan. 1, tWO to Jan. I, Mt ____________
2 WAA ! - I 60 f
g 0 A FS2-3
2BAH!!-.{
EGAD,-ge AUS {
3 A BLANK SHEeTS
- QF PAPER AMP I
P LL JRAW UP ,
5, MN MILL Alow!
2 m sPo-d-Tr-r2>
f I WARM Not,
‘ if Moc 2
{ DoAf FEED ME,
‘.I WILL Go OA 3
7 A HUNGER 3
> SRIKE LAL <
, .Nod Do, B¥ g
2,. ObVE A
the poor creatures hopefully occupy-
tog Ute hard benches ia Mr. Wein- eouwt
a3‘genRae
e=sspueraemnszs
Tri-State Press Breezes
a.ys Aaron Edgar to the Collingsworth Standaid:
Mohn D. Glenn is sprouting a little moustache on
bio upper Hp" Imagine wearing a moustache there!
What wem% those Wellington boys think of next!
# tuur in advane at Desver Dallas. Fort Worth. Osleheme
t'n see other paper* earryine cumpiete tiwtris**.
Eotiefa aaaaal elees matter et the pen* aMaa at Ameri|1o
Teana, under the Art at March to. IM
• nsTWHift lucelateaPis G=sJ WKo fervid—
- sunCfPFToN HATES If MAIL hr mANCt~
bad qualities are well known
Bond street clothes will not
4 f UL2& wnee-q
LT. "To core HINA -
A young men eame out and seated
himself at the piano. He did not look
Broadway ladies, whom the tabloids often fea-
ture in Park Avenue “love nests,” have a new ren-
dezvous where they ran gether and recount the
woes of a world filled with heartless men. It is a
hair dressing parlor that opens et 4 a. m. whither
ladies of the evening may go to be beautified before
retiring for their day of sleep.
We-. •
EBI
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je
224,’
Their salaries improved but their mode of living
did not. They continued to wear eheap elothinz.
shoes and hats and to patronise the less expensive
luncheon places. It is exiomatie that in New York
more than any other eity one must spend money
to make money.
.There are scores of successful men who are con-
viaced,creating a personal air of prosperity breeds
prosperity. They say they have proved it. Whether
that is true ar not there is doubtless a mental stimu-
lus to fine clothes and elegant good that has its
effect. —
New York eonduets a large slice of weighty
Noted artists declare the most perfectly shaped
feminine' head in America is that of Mrs. Julius
Walsh, a New York lady from the Blue Grass re-
gioas at Kentucky.
In a theater the other night I sat next to a
gentleman—curse his dyed mustache—who seemed to
have the fixation he had fallen sole heir to the
arm rest between us. After an exchange of pushes
and shoves I felt a quick jabbing sting. Braver
spirits may smile but Ive read all about those pois-
l oned needle affairs. So murmuring a few mauve
nothing* and stifling a "Caramba" I kept my arms
in my lap for the rest of the evening.
ditions come here and sing for me.
They must be judged for appearance I
and stage presence, as well as for
voice,” he added conversationally.
Jerry was glad she hadn’t been
asked to sing, doubly so when, a
I
ata eomica •c
muck to ker now
tailspin is indicated by the sign over a pad lock ad
I place just reopened. It mournfully proclaims, “This
I is as Lively as Any Restaurant Can Be W ithout Real
Liquor.”
Cabbage and Raisin Salad
To two ports of finely shredded
cabbage add one part of grated car-
rots and one part of seedless rais-
ins. Pour over this mixture a dress-
ing made of diluting peanut butter
with cold water to the consistency
of eream. Almond butter may be
substituted for the pesnut butter it
you prefer.
Five Minute Cabbage
Into boiling water immerge a cab-
bage head that has been cut into
several pieces. Boil vigorously for
not longer than five minutes and re-
move from the stove. Do not add
salt until served. Prepared in this
manner cooked cabbage does not have
as much of its usual gss-forming
tendency.
whether she failed or succeeded. She
had begun to perceive that one must
have a dove for the stage greater
than hers not to mind its seamy side.
But she'd started and she’d make
good if she could. Thore was a seamy
side to working in a departmoat
store, too; the eranky customers, for
instance.
When she found herself on the
stage the second time she was able
to dance—not as well as she could.
(continued on Page it, Col. 35°
sight of her leaving them when necesnary. It ia ss- They had to wait a few minutes
tent* ■ t, of course, that she provides for their safety before the singers arrived. Mr. Wein-
and eomfort while she is gone.
IAeREEVri
s$ SoU DocfoR.w
- He CAA ofEA
That the speakeasy business Is going into a
Ta gode olde dores of Xerrie Englande reached
marem the Ma and several eenturies of time to in-
apire the Paducah Post printer to set the following
elassitied ad toot week: “For Rant-A bed roome
4 turished." Rowe muche?
Mothers Blameless
Now these mothers are not to blame. Their in-
* • »
Childhood is like a mirror, which refleets to after
Ilf the images first preseated to it.— Samuel Smiles.
Biologiats, psychiatrist* and psychologist are dis- Jerry forced a smile. Alester ee*
covering more things each day about children. companied her to the stage and stood
Theories are advanced, tried out and discarded. . while A piano was moved onto it at
But the one thing that they all seem to agree dr: Weinertz s order. Then he left
upon. i* that too much mother is not good for children, here.atte drazzing.a chair from the
A child to be perfect, according to the newest theory . ** and placing it near him.
: should hove not one mother, but several. These
thing, something shout the theater,
and she knew practically nothing
concerning it.
ehamteat luvinuene, the age-old forces ot naturecam
still be enlisted to advantage in doing the work of ’
the world.
The Biological Survey and the Bureau of Plant
Industry of the United States Department of Agri-
eulture hove been experimenting on new methods cf
helping farmers rid their orchards of destructive
grubs and insects; and one of the best ways has
been found to be the enlisting of an army of insect-
eating bird*.
Careful researehes have shown the investigators
what birds are an orchard * best protector*. New
“hey are studying methods of Breeding that will en-
able a farmer to maintain these birds ea his land.
Odd. isn’t it? We use machinery for more vs-
rieties of work every year; but nature’s methods
at beeping the insect population to cheek still seem*
tebethe meet effective.
nftairs aeross the luncheon table. In the atmos-
phere of a carefully appointed restaurant, men are
likely to be far more impressive and convincing
than in the slap-bang setting of a greasy spoon lunch
room. *
Men in large citie* are foreed into quick im-
pressions— to take snap judgment. Hence the value
of correct attire. In smaller communtties a man's
standing and character are not so debatable. His
musie stopped abruptly in the middle
of her song.
Then snothcr girl walked down
stage and Jerry felt Mr. Weinertz’s
arm brush against her* as he jerked
Gene A. -__- _____ ___ _______
Wiibur a Hawk, Ovoarsl Manazer
raaaa aaaaaaUaa aH depertmete 4262.
change them.
New York has been trained to respect to a
I marked degree what it knows a* “a front.” It may
1 be a bended knee to four-flushing but so long ns
one's lot is cast here the successful have found it
wisdom to obey the metropolitan mandate.
The Daily Nees is en independent Demoeratie ,
newspaper, publishing the news impartially, end
sovporting what it believes to be right regardles
at tattr politica.
HeBennys
Note BoK
too. had been misled by
with unaffected frankness thst her!
figure wss good, very good. She ,
guessed that was why h wss giving
her a second trial. Apparently she
bad passed the first test.
“We’re going to hear the singers,"
hr went on, “who got by tho audi-
tions," I
asked whet sn audition was. :
The most accomplished theatrical dopestera de-
clare that out of some 40 new productions to finish
out the season only two will be hits. So far there
have been only two other pronounced suecesses.
Yet what has made the stage business one .of the
most romantic and fascinating in the world is this
uncertainty. The potential flop does become a
smash. Not in our generation will the wiseacres
who predicted failure be able to laugh off the amaz-
ing success of “Abie's Irish Rose."
F
) \
» - NoHtA 6 BT A 63
Ase OF OVER-EATe /
AND LACK OF EXERCISE,*
MRS. HooPLE-aI ModLD
Sueges-WA -f MASOR
G00A FAs FoR-To 4
weEKS!- Nlorf/6
BtrT ORAlaE ICE
,-E FIRST VEEK, AAD
( MLK -ME SECOD )
... WJEEK!e
little Isler, several young women
came onto the stage and hovered
nervously ardund the piano. The pi-
anist was cal lad and again took his
glad when Den. happens along the
beach. Under cover of his presence,
Jerry forces Alester to take her heme.
Ho to contrite and when she says she |
has lost her job en hie account
he promines to try to get her in a
chorun. Next day he takes her to in-
, terview the producer.
NOW CO ON WITH THE STORY.
E
CHAPTER XXIV.
The theater was dimly lighted —
snd silently vast, it seemed to Jerry,
who never before had been in an emp-
ty auditorium. They walked down to
the front row of seats snd stopped.
Jerry could hear voices coming across
; the bare stage from the region that
had always been a fascinating world
of mystery to her.
1 “Lights,” Mr. Weinert* h bowled.
, and there was a scurry of feet in
j answer. A few seconds ister th*
stage wss flooded with light snd the 1
producer turned to Jerry with a smile. I
“Will you walk through that door
over there and go up on the stage,
! please?” be said.
Jerry glanced at Alester, her
I heart in her slippers. He took her
by the arm and moved with her to the
door.
। “Don't forget what I told you, kid-
dy.", he whispered. “Close your eyes
while you dsnee snd pretend you're a
prima donna stopping the show.”
waats her there to think for kirn;* some singers."
Jerry felt a
hLe
70Pj
have left some interesting occupation
! "PBausnuszsns -uizatn-nu 2
I are,taid, * about ‘ happen feared that the trembling in her
I IAm on the side of these learned gentlemen to kneex cuid be.xeen from, the front
' Ui. extent—that I am convinced a good many mis- Watn.")here Alester had joined Mr.
guided mothers are ruining children by hindness and
er* .Mr. Arradonde selects st his au- I looking enough and she was very
ggsggeogmjtgcasurumazn.pgrot
MM6rg4* 2 _____
a Month...............I .55 I Yer...............»is.*v
BV Caii IN AMaRILLO. AJABLE IN ADVANCE.
I Kens .70 4 Montha. •••••••••••* 1400
4 Nootb*....... ......KAO I Yser.................W.W
-“rmgas ov Mir asoTD &
Yao Aesoelated Frew t exelualvel, ntitled to the ese ter
m*tohs*M*o at an new* dlapetebes eredited to ar m* qthermise
erdte to tot* peper. and sb* lcel pem publtshed berein.
QUESTIONS ANO ANSWERS.
Removing Wrinkles.
Qustion : H. K. C»n you sugget s good
prereription for removing wrjnklest !
don't know what to buy. as there are •o
many removers from which to choone "
"Answer: It is dangerus to us* prep-
aratlona fur removine wrinsles except, as
they sr* uned by * trained conmetician.
Sometimes liquid preparations sr* uned,-
snd others us* • peeline induced by a
burning at th* ultr-violet light. Mas-
sa** treatments can then be given ta th*
skin hod Ice applied several Ilmen daily
to produce a wood blood circulation. The
very small wrinkles can be almost entirely
removed by such method*, but of cour:
the lere• ones cannot be changed eycept
by facial aurgery. and the final mult* of
this method ar* vary dinappointing. Wateh
for the articles appearing tomorrow and
Wednesday.
RANCID BUTTER
Quasi ion: Basel mak»: “What causes
the rancidity of butter 1 And is there any
method of making it fresh acainT"
Answer: The bitter taste of rancid but-
t*r la cnuned by butyric arid whih ha.
formed. Thia neta can be removed to a
Iarue extent by thoroughly washing the
butter with frysh milk which abeorte the
butyrie acid. After Uta. th* butter »heud4
be mixed with water to remove the milk.'
HIGH NLOD PRESSURE.
Question i Mr. K. D. writes: "I am 89
year old, fairly well preserved, and weich
155 pounds, but my blood pressure is far
too blah. Have a dissy feeline and abnon
mal heart action. Now please tell me if
I tentions are the finest in the world. But somewhere
in generations past someone gave out the ide* that a
little child didn't thrive quite so well out of his moth-
oris comphny, even for a short period. She also be-
lieves that Betty or Tommy love her so well that she
can't bear to make them surfer, even tat an hour or so.
I shall try to break the news gently to these ,
ladle* that the reason their children scream them-
selves blue in the face when they ■*• her put her hat
aa, ia about oat part love to ten part* eager that their
comfort is going to be interrupted.
“Mother” is associnted with contentment and com-
fort just m the man to the gray uniform asnociates
himself in their minds with letters.
te come eecond tar a little while with oomebedy else-
or even third. He knows he I* not aa important te . _____
anybody eise aa ho to te his mother.* Jake Weinertz’s calling her off the
Every mother should aceustom her children to the stage; that ha was evincing relief.
He raised hi* faee to the girl.
“If you hod a voice to match your
nerve,“ he said to her, “I'd go into
grand opera and sign yen up for life.
Get off the stage. Come around for
regular rehearsal tomorrow if you
want a place to th* chorus."
“You go te hall,” the girl retorted
and shrugged her way off the stage.
Jerry's mouth was 0-shaped (a sur-
prise. She pulled away from the pro-
A jail t
her to danee
THIS HAS HAPPENED
Fate introduces JERRY RAY te
wealthy ALESTER CARSTAIRS when
he crashes his airplane into the camp
she io sharing with her roommate
MYRTLE. She likes his pilot. DAN
HARVEY, but Alester la struck with
her beauty aad shows her attention.
Unable to buy a new geon for a
party Alester has invited her te, Jer-
ry yields to the tempatation to take
one from the store—intending to slip
it back next day.
Jerry ia discharged from the store
when she confesses that the dress is
ruined. She seeks another job. and
is surprised one evening when Dan
calls. He propones and she tells
him she does not believe in love but
io going to try to marry money. He
, leaves after trying te warn her.
Alester take* Jerry for a drive and
■oea to the deserted camp where he
offer* a ring aad a proposal which
stuns her. She repulses him and is
_ _____-__— _____ in Philadelphia.
Waa that the way he talked to girls 1889-First leginlature
who didn han rieh young triMd* te Uta met.
alswnhaiimlrmeodzisduncce
HEAITH DIETADVICE
Those who knew say the only speakeasies serving
liquor tkat will not kill oa the premises are hiding
away in bland innocence on top Doors of lofty apart-
ment bouses. In this stand of the bootlegging
bonanara few chances are taken. Tko list of patrons
is limited and those who want liquid ckeer must
phone in advance. No more than 10 are permitted in
the apartment at one time. They are so quietly on-
dueled that often the owners of the building are
uaaware of the law breaking. Drinks have reached
a new high in these haunts -being 12 each.
My sister Gladkiis I*'back from her
honeymoon with Harvey, being Mr.
Parkins, on account of them her €
through celebrating their weddin ■,
and yesterday they came ter supp r
and told ma and pop all about wat a
wonderful marvel lis* time they had on
their honeymoon, Gladdis sayinu.
such seeonery, such sunsets, it was
more like a dreem tkan a reallt; ,
wasent it darling?
Meening Harvey, and he red. Ye <
Indeed, I can never hope to recap-
tore such plezzure as long as I live,
it was like a fairy tale. '
It was perfeek, it was divine, was-
ent it darling! Gladdis sed, and Mat-
vey sed, Tkat just diseribes it deary.
Ill never forget tkat sunset acre
Lake Lilly or tkat sunrise over Gush-
ing Falls, ho sed.'
Neither shall I, ony youve got them
slitely balled up darling, the sunset
was over the fall* and the sunriseue
was across the lake, Gladdis sed.
But deary dont be rediculiss, Har-
vey sed.' I was present at both and
even though I was in love at the
time I hardly think I could of been
goofy enough to mistako a sunset
tor a sunrise and vice virtue, he sed,
and Gladdis sed. Ho was I present
darling, and III thank you not to call
me rediculiss on our ferst week home
from our honeymoon, and farther-
more wat* the ideer of saying you
were in love at the time, does that
mean to signify that your not in love
now by any chance?
No it duzzent and you know it
deery and if yoult stop snapping my
words up like that and twisting them
into dubble meanings they never hakk
youll do me a favor, Harvey red,
pop sed. in other werds tho honey-
moon was a rousing success and bro'
the house down, so to speak, so wh:
eant I help you 2 to another slice of
meat each, or perhaps a slice between
you, if you insist on being senti-
mental.
Yes, my goodness for land sakes }
wish you 2 would eat and injoy
yourselfs, ma sod.
Wieh they kepp on doing and so
did the rest of us, especially me.
- । But it Is • new dressy age and important em-
maabh.1 ployes must attune themselvea to its demands. In
“BW• I a large industrial concern with branches circling ths
----NomTTrLC- , world three high-salared executives were recently
An erroneous reflectlos upon the ehareeter, etanding ar ' given the gate with a year's pay. They had aot
prozressed sartorially with their jobs. .....
tanatur ’tn clle to IS* *11»«<|»* *f «b* Msm It is 80
Um Baw Cabbage
The amount of cabbage consumed
throughout the world ia enormous.
Of all vegetables, ealy the potato ex-
Mods it in popularity. Indeed, la
many parts ef the world cabbage is
practically the only frosh vegetable
obtainable daring the winter months.
While raw. cabbage is quite a
wholesome vegstable, the cooking
process seems to make the sulphur
compound of cabbage pecullarly
volatile, causing cooked cabbage to
be a great gas producer. .
There Is art ia the selection of the
choicest cabbage. Properly selected
cabbages are young, crisp, and an
fresh as possible. The exterior leave*
should present a green appearance.
Unfortunately cabbage may remain
crisp fer several months after be-
ing picked, and if tke outer leaves
ar* removed can be made t* appear
fresh for several weeks; however, tko
longer cabbage has been kept th*
more gas-forming it becomes.
When properly selected and eaten,
cabbage furnishes a valuable bulk
to the intestines and is rich in vi-
lamins.
Cabbage should be avoided by those
with asthmatie or flatulen tenden-
cies. The cabbage family contains a
number of related vegetable* such
as brussels sprouts, cauliflower,
kale, kohlrabi, collards, red cabbage
and savoy cabbage. These are all
wholesome, but like the cabbage are
gass-forming.
Sauer kraut is cabbage preserved
by cutting the fresh heads into fine
shreds and mixing with salt in bar.
rels or erocks and allowing tke mix«
tore to ferment. Because of tko large
amount at mH the general use of
sauer kraut is not advisable, but it
may be used occasionally when fresh
vsgetables are not obtainable. It
is slightly cathartic because of the
excessive amount of salt. Sauer
kraut should be washed to remove
the surplus salt. Hero are a few rec-
ipes for preparing cabbage which
you may find interesting:
Tomatoes Stuffed With Cabbage
Remove the centers from tomatoes,
leaving the shell intact. After cut-
ting a raw cabbage into small pieess,
run through a vegetable chopper and
mix with grated small carrots, finely
chopped celery, the tomato pulp and
olive oil. Mix well and place in to-
mato shells. If this is served on let-
tuce you will enjoy a tasty dish.
Apple and Cabbage Salad
To one small head at finely shred-
ded cabbago add the chopped leaves
of one head of lettuce, two chopped
apples and a half cup of finely chop-
ped celery. Pour eream over mixture
2424
a cA%$
blah blgod premure *eoula kil wjthout my
her! (bin* warnine of “ppronchine dau”
A hww : Abnormallr high Meed pu.-
•*r*. when it renchee the dooes ro os atapt,
may gi''* werninu of polo and ovoresalon
in th* heart refon: airfteuit breathinu.
faintnens, a dull wtupor, delirlum, etc., but
It uausll atrikes lih* a anake la the dork,
t bave wriuen a spacial article on Huh
blood prewsure and will gladly bend it to
row without chare if yau will enelone a
tone atamped belt-addremsed envelope with
your requeat.
“Coprrieht, 1028. to The Bell Syndicate
weakening day by day their ability to depend on them- [ Suddenly a tune ..
w te be happy anywhere out or their
" "huaeabtamrtrurrttmnnn.nn:'
| shopping to do, or wishes to go to a party. to the foor.
Indeed we even know the mother who won’t go out "All right, all right" Mr. Weinertz
at all unleas she can take Betty or Tommy along. She shouted to the piano player
......... ‘“J ‘ tem--------1 Then to Alester: “Go up and get
your little friened, Al.”
ited oa prominentty aa waa the wrong
tho wings, and took a place nearer
tho proscenium.
The pianist struck up a lyric air
and the aspirant for stags honors
opened her mouth to sing. Jerry
thought she must surely be frighten-
ed to death, but her notes came true
and pure. Mr. Weinertz nodded his
head. Jerry could so* thst the dark-
haired man was watching him ox*
peetantly. She held her breath for
the girl oa the ntage.
“Too bad; too bad,” he muttered
sadly. “A lovely, voice, but bandy
legs. . .”
He gave some signal that Jeryy
did not see. Mr. Arradonde—she
guessed it must be he—motioned the
incer back to the piano when the
Th* music crashed to a stop. Jer-
ry** heart turned to lee. She had
failed, but they’d given her such a lit-
tie time. Alester was leading her off
the stage ia silence. Rhe was too hu-
miliated to look at him!
Mr. Weinertz wAs standing. He
put out a hand and took one of hers.
"My, my,” ho Mid; “what a cold
hand it is. But that ia flno, fine.
All the true artists have stags fright.
Tbs others—pooh—no imagination. I
would not want a girl evon ia my
chorus wbe was like tkat.” He push-
ed Jerry gently into a seat. “Now
you will sit kero and get used to tke
thenter," he went en, "while we hear
r
m_2
mae-
A SUGGESTION FOR THE PANMANDLE
Tke Lions dub of Ardmore, Oki*., is respon-
sibie for a series of large sign boards along High-
way 77 through the Arbuckle mountains, which make
the soute an outdoor museum.
The face of the southwest is one large geological
museum, says Dr. Charles N. Gould of the Oklahoma
Geological Survey, who praises the werk of the Ard-
more club for the interesting information it gives
the traveler.
Dr. Gould terms it “humanising geology" and
the plan has been both popular and profitable, he
declare* in an article in The Scientific Monthly.
What has been done near Ardmore can be done
in the Dsnhandie. especially though the oil field
district where the significance of exposed formations
and rockbeds is as marked as in Oklahoma or any ।
other section.
Dr. Gould has the following to say:
“la Oklahoma we are now placing tie guide-
book by the side of tho read.
“The Lions club of the thriving little eity of
Ardmore, aided by the Ardmore Geological Society,
has placed by the side of the ne* highway north
at the eity a dozen signu sards descriptive of the
various geological formations exposed on the zur-
face in the Arbuekle mountains.
“The Arbuckle mountains of southern Okla-
homa are an object lesson in geology. Those who
knew tell us that ia no single area of similar size
in the United States arc there aa many geological
features a* in this region. With the exception of
glacial phenomena and volcanic phenomena, almost
the entire gamut at geology may be obaerved in
these mountains.
“It is slong th.s highway, where the grade
winds down the south side of the mountains, that
the guide-book sign* have been placed; calling at-
tention te the rarious formation* crossed by the
highway. And surely no better place could have
> been found. In grading the road across the moun- '
। tains, it was found necessary to blast away many
of the ledges, laying bare evposure of rock not
preriously seen.
“In Okiahoma, geology is no longer a strange
thing. The people do not look upon geologists as '
either pdants, freaks or soothsayers. Geology has
today taken its place among the profensions, the
Mme as engineering, law or medicine. In Okla-
homa nearly one thousand men follow the profes-
sion et geology
“At the State University at Norman, 90 miles
north at the Arbuckle mountains, a geological fac- !
ulty of 15 men instruets over 1,300 young people.
Praetically every large city in the State has its |
geological society. It is largely due to the labors
ef these men thst Okis homa today ranks second
among the states of the union in new mineral wealth
per year. It is the geologist who baa been largely
responsible for the discovery of the JOO oil fields of
the State, that last year produced petroleum prod-
net* valued at approximately 9000,000000.
“The moving spirit* in th* matter were the
writer, and Dr. C. W. Tomlinson, a graduate of the
University of Wisconsin and the University of Chi-
eego. who is practising his profesison as deologi-t
for one of the petroleum compnnies operating in
Oklahoma.
“And the people use the signs, it it no un-
eommon thing to see half a dozen cars lined up by
the roadside and the tourists studying the cress* '
Beetle* and roading the description. In distant |
states one hear* remarks anent th* teological signs 1
in the Arbuckle mountain* at Ardmore.
“Thus, la Oklahoma, we are humanising geology."
All date* of stoUr* o*e *f opecial dtepatehes bereis er* ah*
nmwt
MrME*s6TAODTTBUREAVOVCICUCATION8
4•
oyej — ’
-fe w
(""2-
s.
“I don't remember having seen
her bofore," he said.
“No, of course you don't," Mr.
( , Little Joe
<9is date
YMERICAN
AV/HISTORY
DECEMNER 9
1775— Birthday ef Gilbert Stuart, per-
trait painter, best known for
his portraits at Georg* Wash-
ington, .
1818— Illinois admitted to the Union.
1881— Electric street light* adopted
. - Ml’*
"o
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 17, Ed. 1 Monday, December 3, 1928, newspaper, December 3, 1928; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567724/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.