Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 208, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 12, 1929 Page: 4 of 16
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FOUR
OUT OUR WAY
AMARILLO DAILY NEVS
ALTH AND D
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THE DOGr BLANKETS.,
The Woman's Day
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large apartment house, where a brass
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LETTER
GOLF
that
rugs
By PHILLIP NOWLAN
and RICHARD CALKINS
Sattiday morning we was eating
brekfist and ma sed to pop, its just
too aggervating, Willyum, here I am
getting along so bewtifully with the
house cleening and I just dont seem
to be able to get hold of Osker or
mod shut the steel drawers, fasten-
ed them by a pressure of her finger
C
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f
Chi
Nut
0
Mae
B:
you’re over your grouch, Molly, I
wish you’d spill the story—I'm dying
to hear what happened to Sticko!"
“What happened to me, you'd bet-
a 1st when visitin
be shown such aig
k
Le
trash striae beana, earrota, orenues, let-
tuce and milk.
tor say," returned Molly,
from the curb.
IB
. ana. u. a rar. err.
SOME RABBIT?
► FOR A «
MERE OUTLAW
ki EM TO J
hek/EN,
I MIGHT
AS WELL LAND
HERE AND HUNT
FOR SUPPER,
7 date tr\
/)A me rican
/HISTORY
NEw YORK CITY.
NEW CIGARETTE
INTO BIG FIGHT
Questiona to regard to Health and Dlet win he answered by Dr. MeCoy
who can be nddreuMd in are of this pager. Enelose stamped addroeaed
envelope fee reply.
Copyright 1923 Dr. MeCoy Health service, Lee Angelez, Cat.
(rocommeo)
8
' I
We shapes la the only fault that is incorrigi-
ble.—Rochefoucauld.
■
I "
ft
MIDLAND MAYOR'S WIFE
WILL SING OVER RADIO
of town tomorrow for a couple of
days. Think it over—and try not to
be any more of an idiot than is nee-
........ or
his desk and settled himself to road
an artiele that attracted his interest
The afternoon was poor and dis-
mal, so far as Molly was concerned.
She was rearranging Mr. Frazier’s
national flics—the letters that were
outside the regular office routine.
L oo‘r Vuo
BouT TAeT9 -
WHUT EF eM€
“AnKe -HER
SPAT ?
SAFF’LL HAwe
-r GT, a PAIR
1‘ KEEP UP
wr- ‘IM.
ment of city affairs. Aa early as
1657, while the city was still under
Dutch rule, a loeal tax was levied to
purchase fire ladders, hooks and buck-
ote. It was one of the earliest in-
stances of taxation for local improve-
ments in America.
A year later, in IMS, the first street
paring in the modern manner was
laid. IL too, was paid for by assess-
lag abutting property, after a plan
to let each lot owner along the street
do bio own work was rejeeted. •
In 1673 the province of New York
passed again into Dutch hands, but
upon the spring lock, and hurriedly
sought her bat and coat.
3
of common usage, for each jump.
Slang words and abbreviations don’t
count. ,F
Hot tube hood loot by
of yours become a ntumblin
weak.—I Corinth »:».
NOT SO SURE.
It’s just such tales as these which convince us that
the crime researchers who Insist that criminals are
mentally diseased and should be treated as sick rather
than sinners are right.
Such tales, too, convince us that our pretty tradi-
tions about women’s moral superiority over man's is
a bit far-fetched.
START TO WISH.
You ean got MUCH in letter golf If
you first WISH for it and then take
four strokes. That's par and the solu-
tion is on the last page. _
L. c
I, . ■ ii
THOUGHTS
ADVICE
By DR. FRANK McCOY ▼
Author of “Ths Fast Way to Health”
Symptome of Csaow.
Question. K. L asks । "wjs 2
0
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572575.7 ”
Sene
st
And
"WHEN IN PARIS."
“When you try on clothes, wear your best under-
wear.- This is to impress the fitter who, being a tem-
peramental Gallic, will take greater pains if she likes
your lingerie. This sounds frivolous, but isn't
A choice item from the list of “do’s" in “Paris Is
a Women's Town," by Helen Josephy and Mary Mar-
garet McBride. It's a sprightly condensation of what
every old and young woman should know who is about
to "do" Paris. It tells how to get Patou or Worth’ mod-
els at a fraction of their original cost; how to get a
job, how to manage text drivers, where to get apart-
ments, chep or expemsive, what nights to get ’into
the opera without weering evening drees, end where
to hire a reliable male escort.
1
8
I HATE
TO SACRIFICE
LIFTING POWER,
BUT I'LL
HAVE TO
TWINS.
Because she herself was a twin. Mrs. Richard Mayor
of Glencoe, UL thinks that sho will especially know
how to bring up her own twin girls recently born to
her.
We are rather prone to embrace the theory that
personal experiences are apt to be duplicated and that
personal experience le of any special help in seeking to
interpret the experience of others.
ALLENE BUHNER
Side by side in the day's news are the tales of the
fiendish exploits of two grey-haired women. Mrs. J.
C. Powers, 11, of Macon, Ga., is charged with paying
a young boy to shoot her 21-year-old roomer on whose
life she had a SI 4,000 insuranee policy.
And here is Mrs. Catherline Casaler of Chicago,
back in jail again after spending 27 months there on
a murder charge, and then being released till new mur-
der charges flew about her grey head. In jell the 27
months for one murder, she is supposed to have gone
forth upon her release and killed 24-year-old Cammeo-
Ha Soutar, who was her husband's housekeeper while
she was in jail.
M
T
conl
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Mix
for
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onio
spot
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in l
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And
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-hoofer,- the entrance ia mode with a camera long
shot and, ae they tell me. H’s really Pat Rooney,
the vaudeville gent, who does the dancing ... In-
cidentally, I‘m told that tho talkie megnates are
doing everything possible to put the erusher on news
dealing with film biers who have to have doubles
for their voices . . • Which is quite a lot of them.
amount of pain and wome bios 4but
in many cases the nerves ot sedmeHirn
mrtbzcus,gzzpmezoyza."te
to usunlly eonalderable bloatine. cspeciel-
W throuuh the intentines. You may be
meedlomaly worrying over the eymptoms of
guatritis or atomaeh canner. De not «uesn
about it, and do not try to diazmove your
own ense.
,,Xz
I FOUND THE ANTI-GGAVm
IBSTANCE IN THESE JUMPING
:lts COULD BE CUT EASILY WITH
1 MM kMFE
whatever his name is, I meun
handy man that always beety m
for ma.
OUTRIDE, INSIDE!
Some communities have tried to Insist that their
teachers be married ae that they could “understand
children better." Rat nothing is ee true aa that in-
finitely more ean be seen from the outside looking in
than from the inside looking out, and a personal ex-
perience is very apt to handicap one when meeting thet
abate experlenca in zomcone cize. MrzMgxer’ twins
may be so different from herself thet their reaetions
to what Worked with her may be quite the opposite.
way out, but had halted with his hand
upon the knob.
Mary Holmquist laughed, and with
a brisk “good night" to Molly hurried
to the door. While Molly stared, her
lips parted, the pretty blonde linked
her arm in Brownell's end together
they passed out of eight.
Molly collapsed into a chair.
Bob Brownell—with little Swedie!
Bob, who sold thet Mary was a “good
hid!" Mary, who said she didn't like
poor boys!
Molly pressed her palms against
her forehead. Evidently something
was going on that she did not un-
derstand. Bob had been so humble
ebout the money the night before,
aad now here he was, arm in arm
with rod-lipped, careless, pretty Mary
Holmquist! .
She glanced at tho diamond on her
finger. It sparkled bravely under the
ceiling lamp which somebody had just
touched on.
If Molly resigned now, she couldn't
keep watch of Mary and of Bob. Keep
watch! Just when she had decided
AVOID SUNBURN.
The summer sun la a*w flooding
the earth with the full force of Its
heating and healing rays. Sunlight
is essential to life, bet too much at
one time, when one is not prepared
for IL may be harmful.
Most of the severe sunburns occur
In tbs early part of the Maaen before
the shin becomes tanned. One ahould
always keep in mind that sa over-
dose of the sun's rays is always in-
jurious. Many people suffer from the
mistaken belief that if a little sun-
3
The cigarette war, which is be-
coming hotter and hotter, haa flared
out in a now place in Amarillo.
Raleigh cigarettes in the now "Sod-
die Bag" pack are taking Amarillo
in e big way. The manufacturers,
who are Brown A Williamson back
in Louisville, "have started a tre-
mendous advertising campaign in
the Panhandle, beginning with a
series of large advertisements in
the Globe-News.
Raleigh's “saddle pack" cigarettes
sell 20 for 20 cents, and are said
to be mode of Turkish, Kentucky
and Virginia tobacco. The package
and the packing are unique,
E. N. Montgomery ia the “Raleigh"
man in this territory and N. C.
Stone, of’Dallas, has charge of the
distribution In the Southwest.
--
I
-_______— sa kindir.
atate some of the aymptoma at a cancat
of the stomachr is there any pain «<
bloating r
At this moment she eaught sight large apartment house, where a brass
of Bob Brownell, who was standing plate (inside the glass of the front
at the door. He’was evidently on his I door) announced that housekeeping
------- - suites of one and two rooms were
for rent within. Molly inspected the
sign, and then turned to look at
the row of push-buttons, with mail
boxes beneath, and little elite where
tenants could put their cards.
see the blonde girl over her shoul-
der. «I might es well work at go
home and grouch around, all by my-
•elf.”
1M AIRPLANES A DAY
Another indication of the tremendous extent to
which the aviation Industry is expected to develop
in the near future can be seen le action taken at
the recent convention of the airport section of the
Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce.
This organisation recommended thet all cities
of 100,000 persons or more must build their airports
so as to be able to handle a traffic of at least 100
planes a day. la addition, it was estimated that
at least 1500,000,000 will be spent on airports in the
United States this year.
Figures such as these show how aviation is
progressing. At present only Chicago reaches the
100-planes-per-day. If the small cities are to attain
this level soon—end the industry's leaders believe
they will—the business of eviction will have to ex-
Pead to many times its present sise.
nd
vac
The cabaret ncane in the film version of "Brond-
way." by the to the sort of thing which gives
e New York dweller more than a alight pain. It
gives the dweller In the outlands a completely er-
roneous picture and conceptidh of the big streets
end Ito how placet. This scene implies that there
are night chibs M largo aa Madison Square Gar-
den and the Hippodrome combined. Whereas night
elube are crowded little 10-by-12‘s, quite lacking in
any of the lavish magnifieehce displayed in the
film.
Nor do women jump to the tape of tables
end wave wine bottles about. Nor do goats driak
out of neat slippers, AU that belong* to the "Merry
Widow"-Viennese opera vintage. And I doubt if
there was much of it even then.
There Is. to be,sure, a certain amount of drink-
ing. But the atmosphere, generally speaking, is not
particularly glamorous.
But imagine the embarrasament of this eolum-
.25
meane thia liberty
th to them that are
. — --------=, — 4— The order of letters eanhot be
England regained it the tollwing changed. ‘ M
er and hold it untilethe Ameriean One solution is printed on the leal
1—The idea of Letter Golf to to
change one word to another and de
it in per, n given number of strokes.
Thus to change COW to HBN, In
three strokes, COW, HoW,gAEW,
2—You Change only one iher
3— You moot have a complete we
Eatabllabed November 4. 1000, Publishe4 to De- J. E Num
________________Jac. L 1»I> to Jaa. 1. Ite________________
BuMbhad to The AsrnHlto Blebs Nswo EebBshlM OsriMac,
Slate and Yilmor Stregte
Gene A. Mews. Miter end Publisher
Wibr C. Hawk, General Mannuen...
Phone _______________________________________
Only morulng and evemine mewspaper publisbed In the Fea-
keadle eenatry. Covers the Panhandle at Tesas. Ms Mesa New
Maehl Beate era Colorado and Weetera Oklahoma tewm Ute
M keen to advance at Denver, Dallas Fort Werth OktobM.
City and otherpapercaruyinK eompletediapatehen__________
Entara ne eerent elam mattar at tee vostottiee aS A sea rt Ito
Tease, eader the Art et Marsh H. im._________
Day and Nigbt Asoclated Frees I sassd Wire Service
L MEMBERS OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
ad21 -
' NOTICE TO lilB PUBLIC.
Any erroneous refleetion sooe tee eharacter, atandine or
reputation of any individual, firm, concern, or e-ruerMtoo teal
may apvear ia the columas of The New--Globe will be gladiy
eoriecied whoa called to the attention at the editor. It no
the imtention at this newepaper to wrongiy aaa or injure nay
individual, firm, cone er n or eotporation and correctione will be
aeede whoa warranted m prominently m wee tee wrong pub-
lished. reference er erticle.
I [
t
Nemes end situations In this story
are fictitious.
Mr. vraaDr, Sena StEereies, hoc
unmercifully seolded Molly Anderson
for humiliating the office manager
(called "Sticko" by the girls), Molly
is engaged to Bob Brownell, who
works in the Mme place. She is leav-
ing the office for luneh, end tolls
Mary Holmquist, another typist, that
•Im's going to quit.
Now Go On With the Story.
CHAPTER XVI.
“I went to be clone," Mid Molly,
as the other girl caught up with her,
in the street.
"Oh, all right.” The pretty blonde’s
temper was not ruffled. “But 'when
en hiswey, Molly began gathering
---- the letters together for the night.
Ordinarily this work would have1 Since her employer was going en e
Four blocks away wm e restaurant
where she end Bob had diked, fre-
quently, when he wes feeling pros-
perous. She turned her steps toward
thia place through the homegoing
crowds that pressed against her.
"I‘m not going to eat,' she explain-
ed to the cashier, who stood guard at
the restaurant door. “I'm just look-
ing for somebody."
She went down the aisle, looked
into the tide room at the rear, and
then seanned tho -tables on each
side. Bob wm not there, and neither
was pretty Swodie.
Another restaurant was near by-
he had taken her there, once, when
they first met. But he was not there
now—with her face close to the big
front window, she could see -the oe-
eu pants of all the tables.
She stopped, her finger to her lip.
Mary Holmquist lived with another
girl, about e mile from the office.
Molly remembered thet sometimes
there was talk of little dinner par-
ties, where Mary and her chum pre-
pared the food over a hot plate in
their room.
Molly took a bus.
The Swedish girl's room was in a
NEW YORK, June 11—The Big Town gossip:
When Ed Gallagher, of the famous “Mr. Gallagher
aad Mr. Sheen,” died As other day, penniless and
alone, someone told me that the song which made
them famous had earned a more eigaret case. Bry-
an Foy. of the lata Eddie Foy brigade, wrote it. It
brought the Gallagher-Shean team fame and fortune.
Announcement of Al Smith’s autobiography is
about due, with George Oppenheimer, of Viking
Press, letting it out . . . And Georges Carpentier,
who once eemo over as a “box fighter,” will be back
this fall as a musical comedy headliner . . . Harry
Hershfield tells me that he's putting his comic strip
people Into a novel . . : Mitzl’s married name is
Mrs. Boyd Marshall . . . And they My around Wail
Street that the number of millions dropped by W.
CDurant in the recent market crash would keep all
of my readers and 10 other people in pin money for
the rest of their lives.
In tins pielure vetien of "Btondway,*Chet-h-
tie art of doubling is worked overtime .. . Whenever
Glenn Tryon, the leading eharacter, appears as a
)UCK ROGERS, 2429 A. D.
_ eler STFF-
Loov-LooK!
MUH CA LosE
NOW! IVE €EEN
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WHER NO MAN
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Instead of going to “The Greasy ■
Spoon,” where the girls would gather
in a minste or two, she turned the
corner and went up street to another
restaurant. There, over a thin sand-
wich end a cup of tea, she brooded
long over her trouble.
She had not seen Mr. Frasier be-
fore in the mend he had shown that
morning. No girl in her reasonable
senses would .want to see him in
that mood again.
She looked at tke clock. There was
just time to get beak to work. If
she should leave her employment
now, without notice, it might be
deys before she found another job.
The Two-Gun Man
-—-Up
THE OIL CONFERENCE
A meeting of much interest to ths Panhandle is
President Hoover’s oil conference, now in session in
Colorado Springs. Thora haa been a great deal at
talk in recent years about various methods to bring
the oil industry out of its present state of depres-
sion. Central of production, and a tariff on for-
eign crude have been the remedies most frequently
discuased.
If the Colorado Spring* meeting has been celled
for the purpose of advocating more rigid control of
produetion, it will not be favorable to Panhandle
operator*. Nor will the plan be acceptable to New
Mexico's representatives. Both of these districts,
comparatively new in produetion, bore immense
reservoirs of oil in the ground. To date only a
email amount of thio has been extraeted. There are
heavy investments ia acreage and operationa in
both the Panhandle and New Mexico with relatively
small dividends so far realized.
A strict policy of prevention in now drilling will
work a hardship upon hundreds of eitisens who have
investments in new fields.
All they are interested ia is a price for crude
that will warrant fuAher drilling—an opportunity
to drill wells end develop their acreage In which
their money is tied up end is earning no dividends.
Furthermore, Mme attention should be paid
to the marheting end of the business. To regulate
production and still permit the major companies to
have free rein in marketing, a policy that has en-
abled them to make their usual high earnings dur-
ing the clump, will be at no benefit te the inde-
pendents.
The discussions should be enlightening, how-
ever. . And< Mr, Hoover's plan for bringing relief to
the Indus.will be awaited with interest. During
the campaign he intimated he had a plan that would
bring better deys to the oil men.
Let's hear it.
»UMC Bl FT ION MATES BY MAIL IN ADVANCE
la Teaaa, Qklehoma and New Mexicoa
Month ............. I Mentha ................
..... 0
‘AMLAfa^WAWA^
SB"g-
\ 24use
Never mind him, HI beet them for
you this afternoon, its just the exer-
cise I need, pop sod, and ma sod, O
Willyum that would be wonderful.
G, pop. III help you, we’ll both beet
them end we’ll have a contest to see
wich one gets the most beet, I sed,
and pop sed, Good, what is a more
noble site than a father and son boot-
ing the ancestral earpits side by side,
strengthening at the same time the
traditional of the clan and the bi-
ceps of the race.
And after luntch I was sitting on
our frunt steps waiting for hm to
come home so we could staj. me
having my red swetter on likefaper-
fessional rug beeter, and soon as
he terned around the corner I ran
down to meet him, saying, Hurry up,
pop, this is the afternoon wo beet
those rugs and have that contest.
O, is it? Wasent that next Satti-
day? pop sed, and I sed, No sir, G
wizx, today is the Sattiday, dont you
see my red swetter? and he sed. Sure
enough, for a moment I thawt that
was the ferst call for sunset.
And he went in the house and sat
down in his private ehsir and litt
a cigar and started to bro etho com-
fortable, me saying. Ma's got them
hung out on the clothes line all red-
dy for us, pop.
Meaning the rugs, and pop, sed, I
couldent ask for bettor news than
that, sippoM you go down and start
a while, if its going to be a contest
you cwt to heve a little hahdycap. I
Your smaller than I am, he sed, and I
I sed, No I aint, pop, I meen no sir, I
nothing doing, I aint going to start I
unless you do.
Woll come to think of it, it would I
hardly be sportsmanlike for a big I
strong rich man like me to take a I
job away from a poor weak handy I
man like Osker, whoever he is, sip- I
pose we go to the movies and think I
it over, pop sed.
Wich we did, and ma was mad at I
both of us, being more fun than if I
aho hsd of been mad at just one '
without the other, on account of
mizzery loving company.
been interesting. Handling another
person's private mail ean even be tas-
cinating, at time. But Molly was in
no mood to enjoy henelf. Mr. Frazier
bad practically dered her to quit;
the pleasure of her brief triumph
over Sticko hed ell been taken away;
the matter of Bob Brownell and his
money had not boon settled.
So she took the eorrespondence
thet bed been gathered in the long
steel drawer, glanced atethe names
of those to whom Mr. Frasier had
written, and those who had written
to him, and divided the letters in
new manila folders, without enco
reading a single piece of mail.
She was still at work at 5:30, entail
heaps of letter* ranged before her
on top of the row of filing ceses.
“Going?” asked Mary Holmquist's
▼oleo behind her.
“Not yet," said Molly, without turn-
stepping , Kwhat”s th, big idcat
“I'm blue as the diehens,” Molly
said, swinging her body so she eould
JRWiLAMS
einovanurneasume,w
aA,, vMA
---—2—-
By Wiliam
MIDLAND, June 11—The wife of
Mayor Leon Goodman was invited to
ting over the Sears-Roebuck broad-
easting station, following n program
she geve last week over station
WBOW at Terr* Haute, Ind. Mrs.
Goodman ha* don* sale work at Mid-
land and recently organised the Mid-
land Cowgirls quartet.
: On June 10, 1M5. New York City
‘ was incorporated. A year before it
had passed from Dutch control—*n-
der the name, New Ameterdam—to
the English.
Under the original charter, which
went into effect 264 years ego today,
the mayor and aldermen were to be
appointed by the governor of the
province. It was many years before
the municipal officers wore elected.
New York City offers en interest-
ing study of eerly efforts fh this
country toward effleient manage-
But
Till
3
2 Meate aas
BY CABBIE* IN AMAM
1 Meath.............. 1 79
» Meate. ......... -M«»
sursngas or THE AssoclTED PRESS
The Arsociated Flam Is ezelusivel, entitied to the me for
mepublicatlon at an aa^a dlepateben ertdited to ernot other
wIm ereditea in this pause. ana also localnews teMltes« herein.
AU ziehu at publieation at social diopatehe herein araWNe
ia better. Extreme sunburn ia dan-
go reus because th* pore* at the skin
become so swollen and injured by the
burn that the proper elimination of
toxins cannot take place. This he* a
disastrous effect upon the kidneys by
burdenig them with overwork. Evon
n email amount of sunburn affects
the body ia a proportionate manner.
"It is much bettor for ano to meas-
uro the time of exposure so aa to
produce a slightly increasing tan
each time than to try to become tan-
ned through only one or two sun-
burns. Always go into the shade when
yon notice n quickening of your
pulse. When you wish to lie in the
oun for a long time, it is better to
expose the skin only e short time
and the remaining period keep it
covered with a blanket or a robe.
People are often burned badly on
cloudy days, as they ar* apt to remain
out too long because they do not
feel the heat at the sun, but it
should be remembered that the ultra-
violet rays, which actually produce
the burn, do not warm the skin.
To hoop cool in the summertime
it ia necessary to reduce the hoot-
ing feeds, such es th* starches, su-
gars-and fat* to the minimum and
drink plenty of pure water and wear
clothing as light a* possible. No
drink is aa valuable as plain water,
not- spoiled by syrup flavor*. Un-
sweetened fruit juicen may be added
if desired.
During the hot deys. it is some-
times a good plan to make a luncheon
entirely of some of the juicy or leafy
green vegetables In salad form.
Severe sunburn should be treated
much like any other burn. While sun-
burn is very peinful it is hardly ever
serious enough to cause death, al-
though this doe* occur in some in-
stances. Much relief may be had by
using cool showers or ice wstor com-
presses wherever ths psin is severe.
The skin should be covered with en
alkaline oil, such es carron-oil, which
Is a mixture of lime water and lin-
seed oil. This is obtainable at any
drugstore, and will keep out the air,
and at the same time, neutralise some
of the acid products of the decom-
posing skin.
It is much the better plsn to take
the sunshine in small doses and in
this way avoid the unpleesant effect
at sunbbrn, beet oxhauation or sun-
stroke, Enjoy the valueble summer-
time, end avoid the suffering caused
by lack of judgment.
41 EBTIONg AND ANSWERS.
Question W. R D. writes: "What foods
are tee cause at diebetest"
Answer: There are no particular foods
which ia themselyes cacao diabetes, which
is a disorder of metabolism. In earing
diehetes It la advisable to eliminate atareh-
ea aad suzar for some time, but thia
ia algo true in the treatment at mast
disordera The auger appeering in the
urine to slyeogen from the tnnues, and
doe not come directiy from the auger
you ML
Superfluous Mair.
Questlom. Mlaa H. writes: “I am trou-
bled wite hairs on my taaa. but cannot
afford tee electric needle co you suu-
sort. I pull the hairs out every day but
they keep coming back. I am only 1*. and
am M ashamed at my appeerance. Can't
you help mol"
Answer: The electric needle to the only
cure meana at kiliine supertluous hair
but you will be able to somewhat dis-
couraee the growth of those hairs if you
will use one at the rosin and wax prepara-
tions now on the market. Thia conta-
in a cake, and tee warmed wax to pat
ea the fare where there is hair. Aa aeon
aa it cools, ths wax plaster to pulled off.
bringing the hairs with it, aad making a
much better job of it than you can do
with the twascara. Yen will need to uao
thia preparation only about once a week
to keep down the urowth, during which
time it will gradually become lena.
vitamima.
Question. Housewife aaks: "Are there any
eertain foods which contain all of the
vitamins?"
Answer: Ye, there are a few foods
which are thought to contain all of the
vitamins. You will find them in tomatoes.
that Mary was se utterly and entire-
ly aafo!
Mr. Frasier cam* strolling from his
office, a fawn-colored hat perched
sidewise on his grey hair, a eold, half
smoked cigar between his teeth,
jauntily tilting upward.
Molly arose. MI'm not going to
leave, Mr. Frazier," she said. "That
la, unless you want ms to."
“When I want you to, I’ll tell you,"
he observed. “Going to stay, eh? All
right." He seemed to approve. “By
the way, how are you end that young
man of yours coming along?”
“Why—why—first rate, I guess,"
■aid Molly.
“Glad.of it,” ke returned. “I’ve been
worrying about Brownell. His work's
irregular—sales away down on* day:
first rate th* next. Thought you
might have been quarreling with
him."
Mr. Frazier nodded and eontinuod
She seised her check, paid as she
went out the door, and ran all the
way to the office into which the last
-stragglers were hurrying. Mr. Fra-
sier’s busier rang just a* she reached
her desk.
He glanced up from a newspaper
when she reeched his desk.
“Have you decided whoa you’ll pre-
sent your resignation 1" he inquired,
idly.
"Did Mary Holmquist tell yea?”
•he demanded.
“Nobody told me.’’ He turned over
a sheet of his paper and examined a
portrait of the neweet movie star.
"Then how—" Molly began— “if no-
body told you—”
“Oh piffle," he responded. “I've
been hiring girls and men for a goed
many year*. I bawled you out. There-
fore you’ve bee* wondering whether
to quit me cold—walk right out on me
—or leave at the end of the week,
lent thet right?" He didn't seem
much interested. He was looking at
the sporting page now. “Isn’t that
right?" he repeated, after a moment’s
wait
“Yea," she said, almost in a whis-
per.
' “Well, make up your mind some
time today," he said. “I’m going out
1^
hee was a difficulty. Neatly en-
graved cards were visible, and old,
yellowed printed ones; cards with
names scrawled with pen and ink and
others scrawled in pencil. But Mary
Holmquist's name was not there.
Molly tried a bell beneath which
there was no card, and listened for
an answering click of the lock. She
was disappointed. After an instant,
she tried another. Still there was no
response.
Come to think of it, the apartment
might be in the other girl'a name.
Thora were plenty of cards with wom-
en's names on them.
Molly pushed the janitor’s bell. Af-
ter a long wait, the door clicked, and
Molly turned the knob. A woman
came to the door of suite 2.
“I'm looking for Mary Holmquiet,"
eaid Molly.
The woman looked at her impas-
sively.
"Her name isn't in the lobby. What
room is she in?" Melly tried sgain.
“I don't know," said the woman,
and cleaed the door.
There seemed to be nothing else
to do. Molly went out to the sidewalk,
and stood uncertainly balanced on
the curb. She might go home, and
leave Bob in the elutches of Mary
Holmquist. She might eat—it was
time for dinner.
Swinging thoughtfully in the direc-
tion from which she had come, she
started to walk. Night had fallen,
and she went slowly, for the way was
unfamiliar.
As she reached an illuminated cor-
ner a young man and a young wom-
an appeared from the other side,
laughing and chatting. Molly stood
stock still.
The folk across ths street were
Bob and the blond* girl, walking
hoes*—ta ’Mary’s koine T
(T* Be Continued.)
Oh, yes, and Robert Lttell, now of The Poet. is
likely to get that World dramatic editorship about
which there has been eo much confusion.
While Pierre de Rohan, who Broadwayod for a
certain syndicate, has dropped everything to run out
to Hollywood to make a talkie or two . . . Leaving
behind him a play called "With This Ring," which
waa co-authored by Florenee Bess, late of M.
Hearst's hirelings.
And I went to cal! on Baelanova, boot of all the
heart-breaking vamps, who is now playing in vaude- •
villa during a vacation period in order to help her
English accent . . . And I learned that this was
also her honeymoon, she having been married but
two months ago to Nicholas Soussanin, a Russian
actor, who has been playing small parts in Holly-
wood.
“My busband he play* th* part of bad men—
What you call them . . . villains . . . and I play
bad women—-what you call them . . . vampires • . .
but he ces very nice and so am I. In life we are
bo* verr good," she explained. GILBERT SWAN.
WHY?
The wife of the Hungarian prim* minister. Countess
Margit Bethlen, is winning considerable suecoss ae a
writer, they say. Which, of course, reminds us at Mar-
got Asquith and Princesea Bibesco and Mrs. Frances
Parkinson Keyes and Mrs. William Borah and all the
fair ladies who, by virtue of their husband's positions,
have names that “tick." One wonders if the same ma-
terial sent ia to publishers over unknown nemos would
mean anything—or, at least, nearly so much.
"LINDY" FAILURE.
“Lindy" trophies, they say, are not selling at all
well since his marriage. Most of ths purchasers had
been women. Which is exactly why, for box office rea-
sons, stars and starettes of the dramatic world will
move heaven and earth to keep the fact of their mar-
riages a secret from their fans.
Funny, isn't IL that while there is life there is
hope, and that as long as a Lindbergh or a John
Gilbert or a Mary Pickford are known to be single,
all their adoring subjeets can imagine the possibility
of being the lucky man or girl, themselves f
The Daily News le an independent Democratic
newspaper, publishing the news impartially, aad
supporting what it believes to be right regardless
at party pollties.
/ am A mm l trip, she would have plenty of time
(7 VA4mpp A ) "sbpas, -tekutasAna
/M. wu ■ EEm • A" A Mr. Frazier she might have
e AAl4 WW m E dBe UGM9 been quarreling slam-
"Zyzzr 23222222222
( “
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 208, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 12, 1929, newspaper, June 12, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567914/m1/4/: 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.