Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 207, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 11, 1929 Page: 4 of 16
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.
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0 DAILY NEWS
THO
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HANEGO
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talkies.
Someone asked him a question and his answer was
The Woman's Day
• ITS A MYSTERY.
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42
Seen About New York
NEW YORK, Jan. 10,— "What most of us need,"
writes
month." . . . Countme in, buddy!
5:
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(Continued on Page IS, Col.,4) .
3
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By PHILLIP NOWLAN
Good Bye World!
# B
and RICHARD CALKINS
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A BTEP TOWARD EBERFF. —
Ons of the most important events
play
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made
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de
I HAM* HER
/GOIG ALONC
"THOSe DARK
SeETS ALDNI
"LAT NIGHT.)
The Daily Newa is an independent Democratie
newspaper, publishing the news impartially, and
supporting what it belleves ta be right regardless
of party politics.
"Ah," sighed a dieting lady who sat next to ma
at luncheon, “there seems to ba a destiny that ends
our shapes."
Molly raised her eyebrows and lifted her hands, palm upward,
to indicate that she knew no more than they.
In th.
U.wclly
t
neaunoar. W- MOTERS GET GRAH
OK
GE
MEET
Bus
62151
1921
terbui
o’eloci
La
Servic
o’eloe
Nee
Ml S
Ami
meeti
o’cloc
By DR. FRANK McCOY
Author of “Th. Fast Way to Health”
UNCL
WEAL
How
laid up
precioy
poor ol
Highia
by a
need. I
doing I
ho nod
iter. I
writes
sends I
ter." 7
pictur:
be a ]
was ul
money
is n
tures"
tions I
of anl
-- I LkE
-T‘ HAFTA GO
--A* KIDA
SHOWS SHE
Pick* out,
ALL FOLLA
MISSin’ AN’
MOOSA-,
GOOL-ENED
SAPS
!
1
/TME ROCKY
/MOUNTAINS/
INUSTDRQP ’
MORE BALLAST
<TO CLEAR -
N’THEM !j A
, 10“ SAME
"EN ON*. Iwois
far as his own life is concerned. But
he does what I’ve given him to do,
and does it loyally, to the boot of
his very food ability." He tapped his
pencil on the desk. Because of what
you've done, he has offered me his
resignation."
"I didn’t mean he should do that,”
said Molly, weakly. Talking with this
square-faced, keen-eyed vigorous man
was a different matter than a con-
ference with Btieko.
“Neither does a brat who tinkers
with his father's car and starts the
engine and sends the car plunging
down hill moan to cause a wreck.,
but it does so. nevertheless," he said
telly. "You’re done more damage in
thia office today, my good young
=
6
Li
—a
A NATURE PUZZLE.
Today's puzzle is an edition into
nature lore. Change a TREE Into
a BUSH in seven strokes. Thst’s par
and ons solution is on the last page.
-dmza.3"he.D*k
►?—"TsAmarinazsmuamax-aapebianne
Gene A. Howe. Eltor and Publisher
Wilbur C. Hawb. Geqeral Manager...
Phone eonnectine all departinenta SMS.
its'date Jr\
American
HISTORY
WELL;ELL MOT \
Go -b The. ONES |
HE Picks out, \
WrA A MURDER
im EUER- FLICKER.
STUFF uKE THE.
BCHERS REMENGE
WWA DOES HE
--INK L HAM ?/
nystem which reguire treatment,
these eauses are kinks or prolap-
h *
1.
envelope for reply.
Copyright 1929 Dr. MeCoy Health Service, Leo Angelen, Cat.
Mary. "He’a nuts on company prod-
acts."
"Yea—and he said I thought I was
a pet in the office.” *
"You are,” said the vinegar-faced
cashier. “So you are— but many a
pet's been paddled by the old man."
Ho turned away. "Better got back to
your places,” he advised, as he shuf-
fled toward his cage.
Molly was at her desk end the
others, still chattering, were resum-
lag their normal labors when Btieko
came from (ho inner office. He walka
ed heavily, his head down and his
eyes upon the floor. Molly watched
from the corners of her eyes as he
passed her, and then ehe swung In
her chair to see his farther prog-
rest.
"And he said it so well and familiarly,” quoth
the eynie, “that be was given a five-year contract.”
To eat back to a previous paragraph, I hear that
Dix will insist upon his Isst picture being taken
in the New York studies of Paramount to avoid
any possible embarrassment.
And one of the village punsters remarked at the
Murray party that the reason "they are called Titan
pietsre—referring to RKO—is that they tighten up
just before a contract.”
Which, heaven knows, I wouldn't print if I didn’t
need five or six lines to fill out a column.
GILBERT SWAN.
(Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Ine.)
eWIFE
"7 Ivzzzzo 102 Lk
\
1
BLAST HIM ) %
HE'S GOT
OUR BELTS x
AND SHIRTS!)
/ THIS WIND
I OUGHT TO
CARRY ME
-SOMEW/HER
5
S
j.
b
Long ere this, I hove ne doubt, the wire dis-’
patches have carried word that Richard Dix did not
renew his contract with Paramount pietures, but
signed up with the new Radio pictures.
... Lunching with Dix the other noon, I learned a
Nqele.jnside information. Behind the change in not
BUCK ROGERS" 2429 A. D.
FOB MOTHERS.
Little 7-year-old Ruane Howe of Atlantic, la., went
out to pick violets for hia mother on Mother’s day. He
fell into a creek and was drowned.
It's seldom that a child gives his or her life for a
parent. Parents do it every day—not accidentally,
either, but often deliberately. The parental instinct is
too fierce a thing. It needs leavening with selfishngss.
The offspring themselves would be better off.
THE RULES.
1—The idea of Letter Golf is to
change ons word to another and do
it in per, a given number of strokes.
Thus to Change COW to HEN, in
three strokes, COW. HOW, HEW,
HEN.
2— You change only one letter at
a time.
3—You must have a complete word,
of common usage, for each jump.
Slang words and abbreviations don't
count.
4—The order of letters cannot be
changed.
—Ona xolution iz printed on the last
page.
‛w
HOM
CLUB
The
strati
ium I
ing J
count
Du
J. RJ
deleg
Cour
Stati
1
Fthe <1
fundi
ing t
IW
a62 1
" NOTICK TO THE PUBLIC
Aar erromeous rehleetion upon the eharactet, standine or
rDutatiom of any individuni, firm, concern, or eorporation that
may nppear ta the eoiunana at The New--Globe" will be uladiy
eorrected when called to the attention of the editet. It is not
Uh intention of this newspaper to wrongly uae or injure any
individual, firm, eoncern or corporation and corteetiona will be
made when warranted m prominentiy m wa th. wrong pub-
lished, reference or artiele.
e
e) I
Speaking of movie matters, Miffany-Staki pic-
tures tossed a party for May Murray oa the same
morning I talked with Dix. May le elated. I be*
here, to make a singy-talkie version of “Peacock
Alley.” And there I heard the sardore tale of a
young man who got his first speaking part in the
SRWLLIAMS, e
e-i 01a •v MB satwex. me.
t-----
Brethrem, if a man
which ar* spiritual,________ ______.
of meaknena; considering thyself, lest thou also be
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PREM.
The Acociated Prase b exelunitely entitled to the oto t»
rpublction of all news diapatche etedited to or. not .other-
wm eredited ta thi paper, and al locel news publisbed herzin. .
AH riuhta of publlcatton ef epecial dispatehes herein are alvo
teserved____________
wwwBeea nr the abbit bureau of CIRCULATIONS
THEYLL LET HER.
Mrs. Rose Simon, 17, has been married two years,
has a baby, takas care of an apartment, cooks for five
people, and attends collegs.
Which is just a mild sample of what the modern
yoang woman is letting herself in for, only to learn
that the more she will, the mor sho msy. If Mrs.
Simon took a wage-earning job in addition she'd prob-
ably discover that nobody objected very much, and that
if she ever dared quit then she'd be accused of being
lazy. *
P
Questions In regard to Health and Diet will be answered by Dr. MCo
who saa be addresned la core of this paper. Enelose stamped addrenned
58
The "fog belt" is no longer a suburban beat for
Manhattan's policemen. They are now "sentenced"
to the Holland tunnel which, from the viewpoint
of a policeman, is something approximating solitary
confinement. All alone in the great closed apacrs
of that amazing engineering feat, the .copper has
time end opportunity to speculate on nothing in
particular. He hss no one to talk to, and life be-
comes s monotonous panorama of esrs whizzing by.
RIGHT IDEA.
A few wsge-earning wives are bringing their fam-
ilies up in the way they should go, and are no more
expected to get dinner and wash dishea, too, than ars
their husbands. But not enough of them are putting
this idea over. Too many women have six irons In
ths firs, and find nobody the least bit agitated about
their keeping them there.
/what
( SHOULD DRIFT)
I OFF INTO __A
NSPACE3
woman, than I can correct in three
months."
“But he hept me late Saturday, and
it wasn’t right the way he jumped
onto me,” she cried. “It wasn't fairl”
"The man has his weaknesses. So
have you, I might add," said ho. "I-
managed to hurt his feelings by hir-
ing you without consulting him. Hs’s
small in some ways—I know that. He
likes what authority he has, and
wants more. Poor chap I He'll never
His part gave him one word to utter.
Ine
by
WOMEN PUFFERS.
Women ere not allowed to puff cigarete on the
' billboards in Sioux Falls, N. D. The eity council, meet-
ing in solemn session, voted to oppose the erection of
any eigaret billboards showing women smoking or
looking ae if they might be about to. Other towns
are getting agitated about the eigaret makers' propa-
gsnda to women, too.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL IN ADVANCE.
— 1. Texas, oslehoma and.NexMexicoe
Month .............L-n 6 -........8428
EEhe ............ M ** - 1 Year ...............18.00
utaide Tews, ontahoma and New Mdexicot
1 UmQ ............t 85 1 Year ............■ .SIME
BY CARRIEB IN AMARILLO. PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
1 Meath ............s.70 A Month...... .......14 09
• Meath. . ......ifear ..... 68.00
To the
4”
sm: E"the, Ead Sn
Cetonto ate wetern okLhoma from it te
<4 Dalla, Fon Worh. Oklahema
and other papers carryine complete dupatehek
DISARM OR FIGHT. ' "
Either France, Italy and the other powers of conti-
nental Europe must soon follow the suggestions of
the recent Geneva conference and reduce their arm-
ies, or Germany, potentially the greatest miliary
power of them all, will eventually rebuild a great
standing army. Then Europe will be again, as in
1914. an armed camp, inviting war.
Such is the prospect presented by Frank H. Si-
mondt, authority on international affairs, in The
Review of Reviews, where he discusses the Geneve
proposalt to abolish the eonsenpt army system on
the continent.
“The actual faet ie that France, Italy, Poland,
Jugoslavia. Rumania, Czechoslovakh, Spain, Bel-
gium and other smaller states do actually employ the
conscript system snd have not the smallest inten-
tion of giving it up," says Mr. Simonds. "It. must
be elesr that while European powers msy now ar- .
rive at useful agreements about such questions as
length of service and use of poison gas, the all-
important fact is that Europe is going to remain
armed for an indefinite period.
“Thus, after five years, ths League of Nations
faces substantial failure in oae of its major under-
takings. But ths failure rests not with the League,
primarily, bat with the constituent members, who
do net yet feel secure, and despite all the conven-
tions, poets and reglonal agreements, ineluding the
Kellogg treat itself, place their reliance upon guns
and soldiers.
"The real danger lies in ths faet that Germany,
potentially the greatest military state, is con-
demned to rest its own defenss upon an army dimit-
ed to 100,000 men, while it is sarroundod by states
mors or less bound together by treaties and main-
taining on s war footing mors thsn 1,000,000 soldiers.
Behind this first line they have at least 5.000,000
trained troops, whereas Germany has none and is
forbidden to trsin any."
It is idls to believe that such a condition will be
endured by Germany sny longer than is absolutely .
necessary, he asserts.
"For the moment the question, so far as Germany
is concerned, is in abeyance," he says. “While al-
lied troops srs on German soil and reparations are
still to be adjusted, the Germans are unlikely to
undertake to break the contract which binds them
to heipleseness in the fece of armed neighbors. But
no one can believe that in the future Germany will
stay disarmed. Thus the failure of today at Geneva,
if it stands, most foreshadow the return of Ger-
many to the ranks of conscript nations and ths
restoration of sn armed continent.”
quist. "You’ve cooked that old
prunel”
Molly bore her honors modestly.
“But I think Mr. Frasier's mad," said
sho. "Hs made us toll him all about
it Btieko was just erawling back
there in hie corner. He offered to do
anything to help me if I wouldn't go
see his wife."
"Look out for the boss," advised
the cashisr. “He won't stand for much
monkey business."
"I'm not afraid of him," sho de-
clared. "And Btieko kept me here
Saturday until after • o'clock, and
he bawled me out when I was
through."
"About using labor-severe?" asked
TOO LATE.
But it's a little late in the day. The eigaret peo-
ple themselves never created the woman smoker. They
lost millions of dollars by not exhorting her to smoke.
It was the woman smoker who bombed the eigaret
maker and demanded attention by telling him how
many hundreds of thousands of dollars a year she was
spending for smokes. The damage wae done long be-
fore the billboards went up,
NO BEAUTY CONTESTS.
_ Beauty contests have been prohibited in Italy and
prefects have been ordered to especially watch bathing
beneh resorts for any attempt to put on bathing beauty
contests. Ths order says that beauty contests “result
in grave inconvenienee to public morality."
To which one opines that if the "publie morality”
is so fragile a thing, something more serious is need-
ed to bolstsr it up than ths abolition of beauty eon-
tests.
I want
z . a
[As I SS
t . .A ■ ; d
He went to his dosh, dosed it,
took his hat from the peg from which
it hung, and went quietly out the
door.
Amazed Inquiry was In the glances
east by the other girls at Molly.
Had Btieko quit? Had she persuad-
ed tko boss to fire him I
Molly ralssd hor eyebrows and lift-
ed her hands, palm upward, to indi-
cate that she knew no more than
they.
A minute later Mr. Frasier called
her, with a sharp clatter of the buz-
ser that was fastened beside her
desk.
“I'm not satisfied with your pro-
ceedings.” he ssid at once, when she
stood before him. He did not ash her
to sit down. She waited in silence.
"The men who just wsnt out to my
friend. He is a faithful and officiant
employs. He has worked for me for
20 years." She could barely see his
eyes beneath the lowered, shaggy
brows. ”I know he is not popular in
tho office. I know he’s s failure, eo
HANAN AB.
The banana oecupies a position in
the diet of tropical countries simi-
lar-to that occupied by potatoes, sweet
potatoes and other highly atarchy
foods in the cooler climates. As to
the quantity of food produced by the
banana plant, it cannot be rivaled in
the vegetable kingdom. Although very
prolific. It requires but little earn If
it has a moist, warm climate, and
antagonistic planta are hept down.
An acre of bananas will yisld from
two to 12 times as much carbohy-
drates as could be obtained from a
similar sized field ot cereals.
The banana tree to highly orna-
mental, with palm-like leaves, and is
often used in laadseape gardening in
southern California and Florida. Some
ef the homes of the motion picture
stars in Hollywood look almct like
tropical gardsns because of tho
abundance of banana plants and palm
trees, but the climate, while suitable
for growing the plant, only permits
the fruit to ripen in exceptional in-
stances.
Bananas do not grow with the
points hanging downward, as they
hang in the store. Upon the banana
plant the points grow upward.
Bananas are sold throughout most
of the market in North America, but
they must be picked ia the tropis
and shipped while still in a green
condition. Most of the bananas are
imported from Central America, Ja-
maica, Columbia and Cuba, After
being stored for a time, tho okia be-
comes yellow, with dark spots, and
the starch becomes converted into su-
gar, principally cano sugar aad dex-
trin. It is a popular fruit because of
its very pleasant flavor.
The banana is undoubtedly more
wholesome in the tropics, where it
attains the full ripeness upon the
tree, but it can, nevertheless become
quite wholesome if subjected to hest
as in baking or cooking. Those with
a non-catarrhal tendency may also
sat of the banana in its fresh state
after it has become fully ripened, but
not mushy.
The bansna contains about 20 per
cent carbohydrates, mostly in the
form of starch, proteins 1 1-2 per
cent, and mineral matter a little less
than 1 percent, in which potassium,
sodium and chlorins ars most abun-
dant.
Ths banana is deficient in lime and
iron, and should, therefore, be eaten
with green loaf vegetables. It should
be combined as any other starchy
food.
Bananas are tory rieh in carhohy-
drates, and for this reason too large
a quantity should not be eaten at
one time. It is estimated that one ba-
nana equals two slicss of bread in
calories. _____
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Child I* Irritable.
Question. Mrs. J. K.wka: “Will you
soacmt the proper diet toe a ehUd ot
2% yeart He does not seem to be ill,
but Kas reach epota on hie cheeks at times
and ie unsuslly eross and irritable at-
tar waking from hie afternoon nap.
Auswer: Try civine hia four feedings
,933. 4,-
og -em-m, -
ez,eg*3j
But i let DOWN
TOO MUCH SANO - ANO rnc.irf.
KEPT ON RISING ‛8e! 6
HOwEVER I HATED Gear •
TO LOSE THE BELTS **
So ...... (to BB CONTINUE)
ittleBenny's
Note.BooK
■i । I
41
Ma was doing Spring house cleen:
ing today, and after skool I went
up to my room, climbing over things
on the wsy up, and my room was all
mussed up like the dooce, with the
chairs on top of the bed and every*
thing, me thinking, G, good nite.
And I quick ran and looked in my
elosit on the floor and I couldont see
anything of my collection of dltfrent
else spools, and I looked all around
without finding them anywheres and
I ran out in the hall yelling, Hsy
ma, where are you, wheres my spools!
What epools t ma sed downstairs,
and I sed, My colleetion of epools, I
had more then 50, I was going to do
something with them, where are they?
My goodness Im sure I have no
ideer, maybe Mrs. Lacer knows, ma
sed. Meening the scrubbing lady, and
Mrs. Lacer sed. What, them old bare
spools, their in the ash ran by this
time.
Well heck, holey smokes, wheres
the ash can? I sed, and the nod.
Out in the back street if it hasent
been taken away.
Wich it hadent been, lucky for
me, and I had a fearse time finding
all my spools in it, and I dident
find them quite all anyways, and
thsn I remembered about my pile
of diffrent color string that' I was
going to undo the knotts out of and
tie them all together, and I quick
ran up agen and the string wasent
anywheres in sits, and I ran out in
halt agen yelling, Ma, hay ma, wheres
my string, where the dooce is my big.
pile of string? and ma sed, If you
mean that unshapely tangle of per-
feckly usele»s twine and derty old
cord,, it bernt up with a lot ofother
rubbish just where it awto, and
now if you dont gst out of tat house
immeditly Im going to put you to
work. M
Sounding even worse, and went
and sat on the front steps feeling
worse, and after a wile pop camo
home erly and opened the frunt door
and looked in with one look and
quick shut it agen and took me to the
movies and we came home way late
for supplr but it wasent reddy any-
ways.
ga
hce
dependence.
Two commissions, in fact, were ap-
poipted on this date. One to prepare
a declaration and the other to frame
a plan of confederation.
On tho committee which drew up
the Declaration were Jefferson,
Franklin, John Adams, Roger Sher-
man and R. B. Livingston. They re-
ported to congress on June 28, 1776,
but action was delayed for several
days.
When the Declaration finally earns
up for consideration, it was passed
unanimously on July 4, 1776, by the
delegates of 12 colonies. New York’s
delegates could not vote on tho Dec-
laration because they had net yet
been authorised to support the move-
. ment for independence.
I Thomas Jefferson is credited with
having written the Declaration of In-
dependence almost in its entirety. At
least, in the form in which it was
submitted to congress and adopted.
All the committee members doubt-
lensly contributed their share tths
toaes ineorporated la tha document.
only Paramount’s neglect to "take up" an old eon-
tract, but a tale of friendship which started whoa
Dix waa barely squeezing bread aad butter money
out of Broadway.
At the present moment William Le Baron to
production manager for RKO pictures. And years
ago Le Baron had a similar job in the Astorja pleat
of the Paramount concern. Dix was appearing ia a
Breadway pay titled, “The Little Brother.” Le Baron
saw him aad in a sense, discovered Dix. It was Le
Baron who first put Dix into the comedies that made
the letter’s screen reputation. They have been good
frieads for years.
It has been open gossip in the film "inner cir-
cles" that Dix has not been particularly happy with
the successors, ot his former friend. Xa tact, the
word has gone around that the “axe was out" for
Dix.
The time for renewal of his contraet rolled
around while Dix was in a Baltimore hospital recov-
ering from an operation. Meanwhile a number ef
others came by wire. The contract the young com*-
diaa finally signed stipulated that all pietures in
which he will appear shell be supervised by Le
Baron. •
Meanwhile, Dix has taken on a large number
of pounds and tells ms he will hibernate oa a Min-
nesota farm to train down. He has one picture left
on Ms Paramount contract. It will be “The Boome-
rang."
My suggestion for a theme song was, “Boome-
rang. Come Back to Ms.”
LETTER I
GOLF
Names snd Situations in"this story
are fictitious.
The Story Be Far.
Molly Anderson, engaged to Bob
Brownell, who works in ths same"
office, has been scolded by her sharp-
tempered landlady, Mrs. Potter, for
trying to run Brownell’s affairs. Mel-
ly is angry at the office manager,
called “Btieko” by the girls. He is
badly henpecked at horns, so Melly
suggests to him that she’ll call oa his
wife and “oxplain” that there “wasn't
anything wrong” when Bticho kept
her at the office Saturday after*,
noon, te work—a task that Molly bit-
terly resented. Btieko is frightened:
offers to speak highly of Molly to
Mr. Frasier, president of the com-
pany. Frasier overhears part of the
colloquy and calls Molly and Stleko
into his office.
New Go On With the Story.
CHAPTER XV.
“What’ it ell about?” asked the
head of the firm, when the three
were coated in hia office, and the
door was closed.
Stleko glanced et Molly. "We wore
—"he began—“I was just—I wsntod
to tell this young lady that her
work was progrossing—that shs is
quite.satisfactory." He ran his hand-
kerchief around the inner bend of
his collar.
“Yes?" Mr. Frasier turned to Mol-
ly. “Suppose you let me in on the
secret. I'm curious."
Molly spoke promptly. “He kept me
hero Saturday afternoon to •Work, and
we got through after dark. Before
he loft he told me I was acting as if
I was a favorite here, and that he
wouldn't stand tor it.” The president
ehot a keen glance at his office man-
ager. Sticks was looking fixedly into
the corner. “He said I didn't use the
pencil racks and things that the com-
pany aella, and I'd have to do it
hereafter. He said if I didn't want
to de IL-I ought to resign.”
She stopped, as if the recital were
complete.
“Yeo?" Her employer eaid again.
"Go on."
Sticko's hunted eyes turned to her
appealingly.
"Today,* said Molly, "I asked him
if his wife had come back.”
"Oh!” Mr. Frazier looked as men
do when sudden light is turned upoa
a mystery. "Please go on.”
The office manager intervened.
“She said she’d tell my wife that
we’d been together alone," he ac-
cused.
"You don't say it the right way.”
Molly objected. "What I said was. I
wanted to explain to your wife that
there wasn't anything wrong In our
being here torether." Sho searched
Mr. Frasier's fses for a hint of what
he waa thinking.
Tko president tilted back in his
chair, and frowned. "Molly, go to
your own desk for a few minutes.
Then IH want you to come back.”
She left thorn, Btieko with his head
bowed dejectedly, Mr. Frasier with a
stern fixedness in the line of his
jaw.
When ehe re-entered the main of-
fice she wae received with shouts of
glee. Ignoring Sticko’s rules the
girls, the thin eashier, the young man
typist, the two bookkeepers and one
er two salesmen who were in the
office clustered around her, laughing
and shouting.
"You did it!" cried Mery Holm-
Little Joe
wesamsfum
wSMAUSNteseW
HIS PRIDE. Ad
AeeeaBRV
Sured
Pw and NleM Awe«iatod Frees Leased Wire Serrix
Itate to tast again ea nccount ot that
What is your ndvjoer __
Answer: You should not worry about
losing weight as long ss you are tryins
to overcome your trouble with eoltre, aad
it will perhaps be necessary tor you to
take soother short fast. Be sure to adhore
strictly to the diet between the fastine
periods. The goltte coins down st first
was due to the fnstin regime, I .
quent enlarwement might bare beehceuned
by some dietrit indiscretion, utetftA-tpu-
ble or strain of the nook.
(Copyrigbt, 192), by Bell Syndicate, Ine )
, in the history of our republic occur-
l rod on this date in 1776 far then
congresp appointed the commission
which named the Declaration of In-
contributor, "is a poeketbook-of-the-
tempted- Galathians 4:1.
Unless you bear with the faults of a friend, you
betray your own—Syrus.
susof’the Antestimes. The use of luminal
or bromides which deaden the nervous
system, eannot be considered a euro, end
I belleve actually handicapa recovery to
snoot mo
Geitre.
Question. Mrs. J. H. writest ‘T have
been foliowins a fantine and dietins re
simo to cure was my woltre, I have loot
considerable welght, end Curias the fast-
ins period the oitre became much emal-
ler, hot since I here started to rat it
SIMOS to be wetting large ngain. I am
worried about my Isao to weight, and her-
. ed milk a day. notes eight sr in ounces
of milk at seek fegding. At the oosond.
third and fourth feedings give him a
wood-elued dish of minced spimach, car-
rots. strios beam, summer squash or cel-
ery. It is a wood plan to wee alio one
of the vegetables raw alone with the
one.
Epilepsy.
Queetion. H. J. J. writest "I em stuns
to start the tasting and diet regime for
epilepuy, and I would like ta know just
hew the treatment will affect me In the
etart, what changes or other indications
ed a euro trill take place. I heve tried
so many thinge without result, that I
wish to know all these thing at the start
ia order that I will understand all aymy-
toms and not become discouraged for I be
Hern your method is the risht one-"
Answer: There are always decided chang-
m after mins tho orange julce fast for
epilepey. Either the spells disappear alto-
i aelhoR ee they become temporarily worse.
When the latter occurs It is an indication
that there ars certain definte conditions
#/i
Ao )
065
ALLENE SUMNER
Oar national anthem has never been above eriti-
| eism. Music students criticise bad metre matched to
bad rhythm, and there has bssn considerable agitation
' tor a long time for a national anthem “that people
could really sing.” But the Rev. George W. Hilton of
St. Foul's Episcopal church, Huntington, Conn., has a
different reason for proposing its banishment. Hs
asked his congregation to eliminate the second verse
st Memorial day exereises. He objected to the “bombs
bursting in air" as bad war propaganda.
Serioaely, if we want no more war, the way to
begin is to oast everything bedecked with the gor-
geous panoply of war that strikes kid’s ears or eyes.
The minister has the right idea.
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 207, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 11, 1929, newspaper, June 11, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567913/m1/4/?q=carry+nation: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.