Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 87, Ed. 1 Monday, February 11, 1929 Page: 4 of 8
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nHE AMARILLO DAILY NEWS.
FOUR.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
By Ahern
THOUGHTS
bew
had their hardehipa, but they
Our mi
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ADVAICE
2 8SL’.“
Onkaide
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Tri-State Press Breezes
an
Hrau tmm or
about a half dollar, an
i, he sod.
ste
dl
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s8)
Do not toko any reme-
we sugar.
8
UE
a,
Seen About New York
Ituh^, loyally
suspiciously, trustfully
1
P
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E
good.
. The Woman's Day
BLOOD TESTS.
B
Q
Q
K
SEASICWNHBB.
n
i
• ehanee
Little Joe
h
years ago before a national park was
drenmed of
A
1
la because there is a queer
160.
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di .
2
A muu es
E:IA*()EHETASRY-Y
T -
LEITER
GOLF
wasthe
Hi. in i
•aa him they woul
tha man drinking 1
iov-
Fre t
Ma aad Puda Simkins was wawking
along just wawking alone, aad I aad.
G. I wish I was rich.
Bt da I, Puds ged. I wish I had
Progrese’ march has destroyed an old-tlme land-
mark at Canadian, the Records says. Last week a
•mall frame building which had been used as an in-
suranee offiee for more than 20 years was removed
to maha room for a filling station.
never had t• listen to nongs on the radio ending
op with “that wonderful soap of mine."
on today's babies wehthering the gale, what with all the
counteraeting protections of seience ettered them.
selfishly. Whether we shall be suspicious of people
or shall have confidene in their trustwerthiness,
whether we shall aehieve ear aims by stealth, guite
and deceit or by straightforward means these and
other basic eharaeteristies are detemmined early ia a
child by the treatment he receives, and otvioualy
they enter into the esuential quality et his spiritual
life in funeral and of his religion in particular.
When parents, therefore, say they are not teach-
In* veligien to their ehildren, they are deceiving
themselves."
The real eervant
soeial stigma atta
frequent then as now and
on la iba home all |be~8
eopportla* what it believes to be sighe
of party polilica
with busineas, golf, bridge. euiture clubs and “isms''
to the exclusion of religion are forcing millions of
American boys aad girla iato virtual paganism, in
the opinion of the Rev. Harry Emerson Foadiek,
noted Baptist theologian.
These name parents, who assert that they are
not worried over their own irreligion, are decidedly
worried over the materialistic attitude of their eons
and daughters, Dr. Posdiek points out.
"Parents in arts sis here been abandoning the
religious training offered by the churehes," he says.
“The father has preferred the golf links to the
sanctuary, and the mother has followed him or, be-
coming modern on her own aceount, has espoused
some 'ism,' from positive atheism to general indif-
ferentism. In one way or another a large propor-
MUWPLCATON
0BUE.
CHILDREN AS PAGANS
Fathers aad mothers whose lives are taken up
L<Ea
*2
to men
seeoot
A LTERARY PUZZLE
There isn't much difference be-
tween a PAGE and a BOOK in letter
golf. Par is five Md one solution
is on the back page.
roco VO"IUGr
4 US sewED OL
--- -e-n 1
' to cure your hendaches, as this
ill interfere with the natural elim-
Oklahoma. Texas aad New Mexice ave expeeted to
be well represented at the second general meeting
of the Carlsbad Cavern Highway aneeiatien which
will be held in Carlsbad oa February 11, The Caris,
bad Current-Argus reports that Oklahoma City, K1
Paso, Lubboek and other cities are making eaten-
sire plans to send delegates to the meet.
-f..
c
body in washing out and eliminating
toxins. Orange and lemon juice may
be added, but it is advisable not to
tion of the children of the United States ave being
reared without any relirious training worthy of the
QUESTIQNt Bubsevibwvwritess"win
kindly advlse w if a test of blood I
from the car could----- ‘
She flounced off. Than turned on
her heel with another little admoni-
tion.
"Ge to the devill" she commanded
tersely.
He stood there until she had step-
ped into the lift, and was whisked
away. The lift, he noticed, wi • like a
golden cage. And the thought flashed
through his mind that Ashtoreth was
a captive girl in a golden cage. Monty
was not imaginative, nor particularly
sentimental. He shrugged, and pull-
ing his smart hat over his ovgs,
stopped a taxi and returned to his
pension.
Some time after midnight, he was
startled by a patter of small stenes
on his window. He woke instantly.
With a sort of clairvoyant sense, he
knew that Ashtoreth was in the gar-
den. throwing pebbles (a reuse him.
So sure was his eonvictloa that he
did not pause to look, but slipped
into his dressing gown mnd hurried
downstairs.
albler
“rhi"
WARD ON BABUS
It's a bard age |a which to be a baby, aceording to
the California State Department of Health which, after
much research, bag diseovered that radio, jasa, ehurch
areviees, bright lights, dance balls, and all the modem
patrpings are very bad for babies.
Let's see, ear mothers and grandmothers toted their
bids to ebureh and bee socials and granges and quilting
bees, beeause it was the only way to get there them-
salves, and nothing so terrible seemed to happen to
the offspring. To be sure, social diversions weren't at
TDoNFoRee,,IMAPANINe:
edes HERE,-AN’ I AAVE
• PRIORrM WIGHT'S OVER MoD
OD ussov-T’BATUB!-
anve’AA BACK IA VODR
k ROON AN’ IMF A Book,
’eBcADSE I AlAT Qote
-fo Gle MVSELF oAE op,
L ~Nos EMiAurte WASH .
eBenns
And Jesus anewering enid ante the. They that
are whole meed not a phyaleten: but they that are
eish......BC. Lobo »i»L
As I boo in the body, so I knew la the soul; they
are eft most desperately sick who are least senafbde
of their disesse.-Anhur Warwick.
Hd tell him about
the water, aad he
falling against the bed. It was soft
and warm, and smelled faintly of
tobaeeo. She sat on the edge aad
waited. Her heart was pounding
wildly.
In a moment Monty came carrying
a candle, which he shaded with his
hand.
How handsome he looks, thought
Ashtoreth. But she was trembling
too violently to say anything. There
were voices on the street, and the
sound of a oar, with engine running
madly. Then a horrid clattoriug shook
the little house.
"That’s the sort ot knocker we
hard!” whispered Meaty. “Maybe it
will wake Madame. I couldn't.”
It must have been an iron knocker,
et the very toast. It shook the bricks,
end beams of weed. Aad flakes of
mortar esmo tumbling down from
the wells.
“It would route the dead," shud.
de red Ashtoreth.
Then they heard Madame, breath-
ing loudty, in the next room. They
heard her plant heavy tees on the
floor, and they heard the bed ereak.
She atraek a mated aad lighted her
candle. Aad, complaining, deseended
the stairs.
Monty went to the door end, open-
ing it, listened to the conversation
in the heB below. After a moment,
he turned quletly to Ashtoreth,
"it's year husband." he said. "And
Madame to seeding him up."
(TO BK CONTINUED)
2
k’
; SANp AApc-E
, LAIRD oF IMIS MAAloR HAVe P
Access -to His -UB! £
I WELL KNow, a BATH ir i
Mod is Dorr OAU a NoVEtN, J
Birr AD EVEA,--I CAD "
-TRtcE uratm ADD WASH, /
(A3 -Te -Me r-CAKES Mod 7:
“To SOBMERGE!--- HM-M-)
III COMPROMIsE, AAlp LeYou
SHAVE-TA COMPLICATED /
and pumps with rhinestone heels.
She looked frightened and dis-
K. I. Will of the Lynn County News pointe out
something else which he belleves should make those
ignorant of West Texes sit up and take notice; par- i
ticularly those who imagine this a barren waste. '
Will Montgomery, a farmer near Tahoka, has four-
teen persimmon trees which are "ust loaded down
with fruit and have been for several vears," says Mr.
HIl.
-
j
HPFBAfLEN
HH20,oF-HE
F "WACER
+e BISOA=
______ 3
s a dineese, task
what esgaea e*<
poseible sr vlaur
Montha:::;:.:
----- jik
------------------
Piekle paeker boon found a way to beanuty the
pieke Would you eall thgt l yretty pleklet
— - --
AK’ PoLSH ToBS,---
— I WoA’ COMB J
AsHorb Top AT
pr LEAST A Half J
HOLR f. <
The Deity News ia an tndependent Demecratie
mewspaper, pebitobing the mewa tmepaitlally, and
AUDTTBTKEAToVETCU
"MISTEESS* AND "MAID”!
Will the fact that the words "miatreastand "maid"
are no longer used to express the relationship between
employer and dentes tie employe make muck difference
to our much-diseussed "aervant problem" t Tho indue-
trial department of tke National T. W. C. A. recently
tailed a eonference on that problem and suggested that
•" elimination ef those weeds might help.
Perhapa it would. The substitution of the word "majd"
for “hired girl,” however, has meant little. for the eld-
fashioned “hired girt" was much more ensily procured
than a new-fashiened "maid”
would say i 'How muchr 'Well, he
swallowed two pitcher’s full.' 'Is be
still ollveF "Yes, So they would go
late the room and the doctor would
fool his poise and say: ‘And yen
drank two pitchers of water! What a
eonstitutien you have got.'”
(Dr. McCoy will gladly answer per.
sona! questions on health and diet,
add reseed to him, sure of The News.
Enelose stamped, addressed, large en-
velope for reply.)
Giving me a ideer, and I sed. Well
hay, I toll you a good one to Ids de. “K
Lots portend we get a IS deller bill h
and ash people if they can change it, 4
l aad.
Wich we started to take torus da-
fag, me going first and asking some
man silling bananas in a baskit, say-
ing, Hay mister, do you happen to
have change for 10 dollers?
Do you happen to be the United
States mint in disguiseT the man aad.
Mooning he dident have anywares
near that much. Being a man with a
chert mustash and a long red swet- •
tor, and Puds torn was next and he "%
naked some kid going pass, saying.
How about change for 10 dollers,
folio, have you get it?
I get change for 10 punches in th*
isnoot if you get trash with me, the
kid sed.
Being a tuff looking kid with red
hair and a torn up nose, being the 2
things that proberly made Mm look
the tuffest, and me and Puds kepp
on going. Puds aed, G wise thia ia a
dangerous game.
Being my torn next, and I asked
some man sweeping the street with a
long black mustach, ony he couldent
apeak inglish and dident even try,
and then Puda naked some lady with
4 packidges. Would you mind chang-
ing 10 dollers it Ito not too much
trubble, lady?
Well, thats rather a large amount
of money for 2 each email boys to be
earvying about, but inasmuch aa you
were bb pelite, why yen, I think lean. J
Aad she put dawn per 4 paekidges on -4
somebodys stops and started to open
her pockit book with « obliging la
preseion, me end Puds looking at
each other nerviss, aad I pushed Puds
amung the ribs with my elbow on ac-
count of it being his tern and he
still bad to do the tawking, and the
lady started to eount out her money
and ail ef a sudden Puds sed. Whose
deg is that, hay, hay. And ha started
to ran down the street like the mis-
choff with me after him, and we dont i
know wet the lady did an aceount o•
us net even looking ground.
Being a My with a pointy nose
and at least eae gold teeth.
(The George Matthew Adams Serv.)
She would walk along rue Sainte
Honore, out to the Fauborg, end
leek in the windows ef all those
adorable little shops. They were sure
to ba full ef entraneing things. She’d
get a quilted jacket for Malto. And
some of that gleaming Russian jew-
elry for Sadie. Sadie would adore
those ankle bangles, end the long,
drippy ear rings. If she didn’t have
enough money aha ould have them
sent eoliect to the hotel. Hollis
wouldn't mind. But it would serve Hm
right, if he did. Her last afternoon
in Purls! And he’d zone eft, without
a word.
KSX Si gushezajens"tpdn“.=
mm nppem ■ the columm TheNew-glabe wn bo el
enrieete when caited to the attentiee of the edites. M w
the tatention ot this mamapaper to -rnet, am or tejure
* correetione
for the vegien. Me and hie wife and children and
grandchildren loved that home; it became an integral
part of their lives.
ips toward a cure. Never attempt
to break a fever. Bather, encourage
it for as soon aa the poisons are
burned up, the fever will disappear.
It la advisable te drink largo qhan-
tities of water aa this asaista the
4) i
ecgugnag
next Mar or June (leu a bed Ee , -
waya aeanjek on en er Lakel. WmM ran
advine a fruit fast Just before sailing f l
"ASsW2kzedemuiencrn. U
FACE OF VORS, WHILE
I BATE,,.
o'clock from luncheon their suite was i
deserted.
She leaked on their dressing table
for the customary note. If Nellis
as much as wandered down to the
bar, he waa sure te leave a message.
Weighted with a crystal bottle, or
an onyx jar. Or stuck, maybe, in
the corner of her mirror . . . "Be-
loved, I adore yea. Seeking liquid re-
SHE WON!
Chicago police were ealed to a certain address, a
private dwelling, where, it was veported. a man was
beatine his wife to death. They found the man comer,
eg under the table which waa liberaly beetrave with
broken eroekery, frying peso, and other trophies of
the ehase. Woman wiumphant wee standing over him,
a hat poker ie her hand She was taken to police
court; her mate, te the hospital.
Postponement of the annual meeting of the Pan-
handle-Plains Historical society to Mareb W. ia an-
neoneed by The Prairie, student publication nt W.
T. B. T. C. Ordinarily this meeting is held ia Feb-
ruary but because of probable unpleasant weather
conditions, it waa decided to put it off anothev
month.
CHAPTER XLVI.
Hellie must have concluded his
packing some time that afternoon, be-
canon when Ashtoreth returned at 4
erywhere. With well bred nonchal-
ance they crash the gilded gates of
the best and the worst places ia
Payis
"ri stroll right in,” she decided.
“They won’t dure say anything.”
So she took a taxi, and was deposir
ted at Maxim’s, along with a few
American tourists, and two dubiously
attractive ladies, who arrived aimul-
taneously. Sha fallewod on the heels
of the tourists, leaving the cocottes
(for sueh they were) standing on
the sidewalk, waiting an auspicious
moment to ask some man to take
them in.
She sat at a small table near the
door, where she could best see sin
ia aqtion. It wasn't as exeitiag as
she expocted. The ladies of the
boulevards, sitting In groups, ordered
drinks, and chatted together, quite
like women anywhere. The American
tourists looked at them shyly and
made comments behind their hands.
Thors was not a woman there who
looked “fast,” In the American sense.
Ashtoreth wondered if any of them
were war widows, and if they had
children.
me here for a while. He's coming
back later. We'll have dinner Co-
! gether. Hollis can't be here for aa
hour.”
He drew out e chair, and let her
order for him, supplementing her
suzgestions with a bottle of cham-
paghe
“You shouldn't ever eat sole with-
out champagne. Ash. I'm ashamed of
you!"
They toasted each other gaily.
“Hera's to the maiden of bashful fif-
teen]
Here’s to the widow of fifty)
Here's to the flunting, extravagant
qucen.
And aero's to the housewife that's
thrifty t
Let the toast pass;
Drink to the lass;
"Iu warrent she’ll prove an excuse
for the glass. ... You're the
flaunting, extravagant queen, Ash”
"Thavs all right," she retorted.
"I‛m married to the king."
Monty grew serious.
“He is • prince, you know. Ash. I
don’t believe you half appreeiat
him.”
"Oh, yes, I do,” she protested.
“There’s just one little thing, Monty.
Two little things, I should say." . . .
She leaned toward him, and tho
sparkling champagne made her eyes
dance. She laughed softly. Irresist-
ibly. "False teeth!" she giggled. "Two
♦ * ♦
When she returned, Mogg was baek.
And Hollis had telephoned, leavinu
word that ho hod been delayed.
It waa f o’eleek, I'M wait half aa
hour,” she decided, “aad if he Isn’t
ia then. I’ll hare dimner by myself.”
She would go to Maxim’s, because
she enjoyed watching French girls.
They fascinated her. Nellie didn’t
like to take her there, because be
naid sho stared outrageouoly.
At half poet eaven, Ashtoreth put
on dark elothes, aad a small felt hat.
She had beard that wemen were not
admitted alone. Bat that of eeure
was nonsense. American girls go ev-
HIS HOME
It may be that just, because the spirit of home
possession is a Mt strong in women, somehow I can’t
find Senator Thomae Walsh of Montana at all ua-
reasonable la fighting against a condemnation and ap-
propriation of his summer homa in Glacier Park. He
picked his spot, the trees, the beet view of the lake.
As he stepped through the wicket
into tho guru*w. the came toward him.
IMARHLLO DAILY NEWS
♦ * »
Sha ordered a filet of solo with
wine sauce pud was waiting for it
when she was conscious of someone
standing at her elbow.
"Ashtoreth! What, in the name of
all that’s holy, are you doing here!"
It was Meaty.
"Oh, hello Monty.” She was elabo-
ratsly casual. “Sit down, won't you?
I'm all alone."
“So I noticed. What’s the big idea?"
“My husband had an engagement,"
she IM glibly. “And he just parked
* * «
She was beginning to be a little
nervous. Mollie had quvely vetuvned,
aad waa probably friuhtend to death.
tressed, and came to him with out-
stretched hands.
“You'll catch cold," he told her
coolly, quite aa though ho were used
to visits from beautiful girls who
came to him at midnight, to throw
pebbles at his window. “Go upstairs,
and I will call Madame.”
"It’s about Holly!” she eried. "He
hasn’t come home yet.”
Monty took her arm starnly. “Go
in the house."
“Don't be cross!" she begged, and
taught his wrist with her hand. "I
woke up, Md when Hollis wash’t
there, I was so frightened. I didst
wait to dress. I didn’t think, Monty.
I only threw on a wrap and came
straight to you."
He led btr down the little flagged
walk and Into the house.
“Wait in my room," he commanded.
"I’ll be there aa soon as I can reuse
Madame." . J
• • •
She stumbled up the dark stairs
There was a feeble moon, shining
whltolr, and the room was full of
shadows. Dark, hateful shadows. And
am
will
------to housework. Just why this
should be so is a punuler. Just why (
te wash dishes end pool petatees than
bolts is a mystery.
frenhment. Return ia 10 minutes.
Will miss you fearfully. Tour ador-
ing husband.” . . . Billy little notes,
full of crasy protestations. She
would flag them on her pillow morn-
ings, if he woat out before she
awoke. , . , "Angel, you look like a
madonna wltk your eyelashes kissing
your cheeks- I go to choose flowers
for your breakfast tray.”
She had given Mogg the afternoon.
Probably Nellie had entrusted a mea-
sage to boy and the stupid ereature
hod forgotten to leave word. Bbe
lifted things on her dressing table,
poking about. She looked under her
pillow, and an Hollis' chiffonier . . .
Maybe he was erose because she
launched with Monty. But he told
her to. He had been perfectly pleas-
ant about it. Well, if he was angry,
he could stay angry. The ideal
Bbe opened her bag. Petit point,
with an old gold clasp, set with
S'
n
I
taken out of the body and burned ,
up. it would be easier ea the patient,
but nature find* it necessary to .!
burn the poisons where they are.
within the tissues of the body, and
the temperature rises, breathing be-
comes faster and a copious perspira-
tion may break out. These are only
indications that the body is taking
Monty regarded her severely,
"I wouldn't tell anyone but you,"
she assured him.
"Wait, that’s nice of you, I'm auras
Listen to my words of wisdom, young
woman. If your husband had a toupee
and a wooden leg and a glass eye,
he’d etill be aces with me. Aad you’d
be a darn lucky girl, at that.”
“Well, it's not very romantic." she
demurred, thinking of the tooth. She
believed that was why Hollis was
always up first in the morning. Prob,
ably he kept them in a glass la the
bathroom.
At 10 o'clock she pretended to look
about for Hollis, and watched the
door* as though expoeting him.
"What are you doing tonight,
Monty™
"Goin* to bed,” he told her. "Wont
out on n bender last night, and I'm
not feeling ee bet ''
“Then suppose you take me home,"
she propesed. "We can leave a mes-
sage hero for Holly. I’m tired my-
self."
. Germany exports 50,000,000 mouth organs en-
anally. Well, that s something te blow about.
$-
!_____________
DRINK WATS* IN VEVENS.
There is much miguidoeetauding
about teveovr. Most people are
alarmed at a fever, but I am usyally
elensed, beeause I reelise that a tever
ia an indication that the body is put-
ting up a fight agsinst disease oxins,
Md that the body baa epnaidereble
vitality. You have probably noticed
that fevers are more frequently found
in ehUdrM than in old people. The
reason tor this is that ehildren re-
act mere qulcklyt toxins then do
adults or those who have become run
down to health.
Fevers burn up -the waste and poi-
vonoua material in the system and
clean out the toxins of physical cor-
ruption. If these toxins could be
NEW TOBK. Feb. 1 0,-Manhattan snapshots:
Subway straphenger absorbed in book on bee farm-
ing .. . And a cheeker same under way in barber
shop, even as ia Sorghum Plata ... A last year's
baseball scoreboard seems to me the height of some-
thing er other . . . Perhaps futility.
• Tho sandwich man who wheels about a baby.
And thws attracts plenty of attention . . . They
tell me be rente a different baby every dey . . . But
you know bow "they” talk . . . Raymond Hitchcock,
the comic, exehangmhg gags with the hat chock boy
in the Algonquin ... The het bey. by the way, is
a future artist, holding his job to moke a living
the while . . , Many of the hotel pain tings were
done by this lad . . . And the pretty girl at the
same eheck stand writes quite well and is always
engrossed in the elassies . . . What a world!
Wonder what happened te the bandwieh man
who used to ream Broadway on stilts and sit down
atop a taxicab for rest . . . For years I waited to
see a taxi start off with him, a la the film eome-
dice . . . But it never did . . . Bomehow, I always
wanted him to wind up in a romanee with a stenog-
rapher and carry on his courtship threugh a secon-
story window . . . But he never did ... He prob-
ably went baek to Bridgeport, Conn, from whence.
I was told, ba earns . . . They say Peaches Brown-
ing made move than a quarter at a miien out of
her stage expleite.
The editor of eneet Hmm "act” mazanine gvoupa
which printa pictures of ashed young women, la m
attractive young wife who told me she tech the job
to get money -ftp a vine-covered cottage in the
sountry, where I eon have lot of babies . . . Which
should provide sufficient irony for one day.
Contracts have just been let for erection of ISO
reaidenees on load sold by Littlefield College within
the city of Littlefield, the Lamb Count Leader
says. Worh will also begin soon ea the new college
administration building Md other struetures on the
campus.
-----.__________________ a groat ugly wardrebe. Bbe bumped
Well, it would serve Mm right. Just her knee on the thing, and tripped,
Along Fourteenth etreet, which is one of the
meet conglomernte thoroughfares linking the East
Side with the West, have grown a healthy aad ex-
panding group of department stores.
They are quite unlike My other stores ia town,
in many, respecta Md their trade is drawn from
the pooplee of every land, thousands af wham bare
never learned to apeak English. Employes belong
to a dozen nationalities aad are called la as later,
proton upon oecasions.
There la n ceriqin stem in this district wheve no
salesgiris are retained. A1 customer pieke m ar-
ticle from a rock which carries the price. The stere
steads ready to take back the garment if the sals
lag and price ar intact. Furthermore, if two chop
sera got together over the back fence and find that
one purchased a garment for less money than the
other, a refund will be given. One store advertised
J waleand_the poliee and fire department had to
be called. The rteoet was roped off for hours.
, —Gilbert Swan.
Wight AMAeted ^om Loami
Mzqezeerzgga
•--*****2,% S uphe • *********3200
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QVESTIONS AND ANSWENS.
QUMTiOWi’ Mil. M-' k writes i "I
bave oufterg4 ttr l Iona time from mleep-
lesnnene. Can you tell me a rmedv ter
namer
ANSWBRi The vrtnalMl eauao of in.
mania ia diyetive ireuble, aeb 3 ieg-
ma fermentatien at feed, whleh producs
upa prenure nutnet the beast ee die-
teeodm. Even it you are not eenaeious
o »u«h prgsnure. It is eurrielewt te un-
conucioualy irritate you and keep you trom
uetting a desp alumber.
inative processes going ea.
Per,plration should be induced
even U it is necessary to supply arti-
fieia} warmth by placing het water
bottles around the body, la every
fever it ia advisable te use ewe.
mas, sometimes several each day at
the heginning of the fever. The tem-
peratur should not be allowed to
remain long above IWA degrpes and
if it rises boyond this height, coo!
sponge baths along the spins and ab-
demon may be used at intervals of
about an beer apart. But if the fa-
ver is below this temperature, tepid
or warm sponge baths should be sb-
st i toted.
Thera is very little dangsr of a
fatal termpination to a fever if those
simple methods are used. Beware at
My method or drug which will in-
terfora with throwing out ef the
toxins which were responsible in the
first place tor the development ot the
fever, and be sure net to use ony
rich fsed until the fever is over as
it eannot be properly digested during
a fever aad might cause serious
trouble.
The following,extraet, which is
trOm a lecture by Robert Ingersoll,
may be interesting in showing the
value of water drinking for fevers;
“All the advance that has been made
in the seience of medicine has been
made by the recklessness ot pa-
tients. I tan recall when they would
n't give a man water in a fever-not
a drop. Now Md then some fallow
would get oe thirsty he would sayi
“Woll, I’ll die anyway, so I’ll drink
H’—Md there-upon he would drink
a gallon of water, and thereupon he
would burst into a generous perspira-
tion and get well, and the next men-
ing when the doctor would come to
, THE BULKS
I-The Idea of Utter Golf lo to C
change eae word to another aad do -
it ia par, a given number of strekes.
Thus to ehange COW to HEN, fa •
three strikes. COW, HOW, HEW,
HEN.
1— Ton change only eno letter at a
time.
3-You must-have a complete word,
et common usage, for each jump.
Blah* words aad abbreviations dent
count.
4—The order of letters cannot bo
changed.
n sotuttent printed on the back---7
pege.
ANSWER: Bueh terns era not necurate
•• far ee bring able to disoerer from
thmne (note whether, roe have a teaser or
cancer. I kner the tests yea refer te.
nnd exeuqerated claims an me tor
them whieh eannot be suhstantiated.
Mm foods Md flourishes."
That may be true, but there are quiet but pow-
erful influenees outside the vast bee hiees of pope-
2 latten censtantly working for all that stakes life
anally worth livine. th I ass that grace and ennoble it
and make more firm the foundetiena of our insti-
tutions. The cities have no monopoly in noth mat-
* toes.
s. ________________________
Judeine from the way the gangaters hen peon
bd alnyine one another lately, perhapa the police ought
Ignoble
“The old fashioned Sunday school boa been
widely diqeonted. The family altar baa been
generally diseontinued. Anybody who knows the
state of mind of wide areas of American youth, their
ignorance of even the most primary matters con-
rented with religion, Md the almost total darknene
that obscures their minds so far aa the Bible ia
concerned, will agree that they are in thia regard
"little pagans.’"
The increaelng number of parents who believe
they can solve the problem by allowing the child
to grow up without religious guidance, then choose
a faith for himself, are facta* failure, Dr. Tosdiek |
believes, because “they cannot help teaching re-
ligion."_________ • ____________ . ..
Regardint religion, not as chureh derma bat in '
Ite broad sense, he declares:
"Religion is at least the sum total fit a life's
reactions to the universe, and every home Unite out
children inclined to view life either confidently, or
%2
mau arar err.
the same, she had better be going.
He was crasy about her, really. It
would not do to frighten him too
much.
"Come up,” she invited Monty. "It's
perfectly respectable. We have a
drawin* room."
He declined shortly. "No, thanks.
I’ll be toddiing along. See you in
Boston some time."
“Oh, please come, Monty. . . .
Listen, I'll tell you something. It
wasn’t true that I was expecting
Rolly at Maxim's. I dont knew wkara
he is. I went there alone, because he
didn't come home to dinner. He went
out this afternoon, while I was
lunching with you. Ho didn't leave
any message er anything. And I
haven’t seen him sineo.”
Monty whistled. “Was hs sore be-
cause you met met”
“Oh. no. Ne. that wasn’t it. We
haven't quarreled. In fact, I think be
probably left a note for me when he
went out, but Meg* waa eleaning,
and she’s the moot thorough thiag
you ever saw. Sweeps everything up,
just liku a whirlwind. Hally’s pour
note must have gone the way of all
tisaue. I've no doubt he’s tried to
reach me a dozen times by telephone,
but you knew yourself how these
French people are about getting met.
sages, I assure yes, Monty, there's
nothing wrong. Only I’m just a little
nervous. And I would appreciate it
if you’d stay with me.",
Monty considered his hat (it was
one of those light gray onea—almost
white) Md fleshed aa imaginary
speck from its spetlese rim.-He was
plainly embarrassed.
"Gosh, A»h! I'd rather not go up
to your rooms. Don’t yet see how it
is? Let’s sit down here in the lobby.”
Ashtoreth’s color rose hotly.
"You're the most ptovinciht crea-
ture,” she told him angrily. "Na, I
shan't sit in any old lobby. Go ahead,
if you want. Go ham*, and say your
prayers, and ask Ged to keep you a
-—M
• --.A .
ASHTORETH and HOLLIS MABT
are newlyweda, honeymooning ia
Faria. Ashtoveth la rarely beautiful,
aad Rollis la extraordinarily rich. No
calle her “ORCHID" because she re-
minds him of that lovely flower.
But happinss oMms, somehow, to
have eluded them. Before their mar-
riage Ashtoreth had been a ntenog-
rapher la ‛lart‛s employ. She ia
year younger than he, and he idollz-
an her youth aad heauty.
In Farts she meets an old sweet-
heart. MONTY ENGLISH, who has
gone to France to sell radios for Ms
film. Meaty is young and Monty la
haadsame. But he is distressingly
peer, and Ashtoreth couldn't see him
at aU.
No treats her rather coldly, hut It
la apparent that ba ta still in love
with her. Hollis devotes hi mor If to
tennis and the collection of antiqui-
tie*. Both pursuits bore Ashtoreth
to teara. When he is not al the
courts, or browsing about la old
shops, he makes tender love to his
little bride. And that also bores her.
Annoys might be a bettor word. She
has discovered that he hae two front
teeth that come out on little swiv-
el*, and that spells the end of ro-
mance.
She Invitee Monty to have dinner
with them and contrives to nee him
on several oooo si sqs, though Monty
tries to disceurage it.
On their loot day la Faria she has
luncheon with Monty at JACK’S. He
telle her frankly that he decan’t
want to see her again,
NOW GO ON WH THE STORY:
CITIES AS MACWINEB,
Cities ave machine-made produete, typical at the
machine age in which they have in the Western
world attained their greatest importance. Whether
men utilize machines or machines dominate men and
the etten of either fact upon the inner life will first
be apparent in the eities accerding to eminent stu-
deate of the subject. We may not agree with these
savants that the fate et Western civlization hinges
upon the eities and upon whether the people eon.
gregate in the great centers learn to govern them-
eelves wisely and to live sanely, as Prof. Chariot E.
Merriam, of the University of Chicago prediets but
hie reasoning is at least interesting, despite tbs fast
that some of us are so old-fashioned as to believe
that tho people of the smaller communities and of
the farming country might perhaps have more to do
with the ultimate fate of civilisation than even the
eities.
Prof. Merriam declares that "modern civilisation
is built upon specialization, upon a division of la-
bor unparalleled in the history of man. Aad the
city is the home of specialisation in its minutest
form*. Can these minute specialist* build a world
in which the social zvaces shall aot be saerificed to
industral power) The city will show. The modern
world lives upon invention rather than upon tradi-
Maa,^a4kaTatara rather than la the MM”—-----
The modem city ta the moot significant social
product of present-day civilization, Profesror Mer-
riam declared. "The tendeneies of the time are most
vividly exproossi in its wops of life, both the good
Md the bad.
"The city is the soil in which the religious, the
pelitica} order, the social order of the future must
grow and change. For la the eities era inereasingly
rout sr 11 numbers, wealth, power, organising ability,
"T-*—‘•'r in the things upon which modemn eiviliza-
Ste Ossi te tMs peper, and Mo Iocel p
M stskte od potateastea e wpectal di
enunea fyms aumuonena, the fruj fa
wiU to belprul. If taboo test briere start-
Ins on mar vgsgae M pm brasses -F
=# ' d
•Miag flute to suer eam la that asee
5% boXaXhcZ
(cooiEC 1MU. M Te Bsil MMisstq
Ina.)
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 87, Ed. 1 Monday, February 11, 1929, newspaper, February 11, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567793/m1/4/: 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.