Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 266, Ed. 1 Friday, August 9, 1929 Page: 4 of 14
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ABE MARTIN
7
convention of realtors which starts
3
Grammarslips
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s
ment. An nequittal would have been inevitable. Ada
Vance acensed her, hat it is incredible that an Amer-
GOWNS
bella’s guilt."
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complete
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Little Joe
BUCK ROGERS, 2429 A. D.
Barren Ground
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CITY RESERVE OFFICER
TO ORGANIZE NEW
SHAMROCK CHAPTER
thoughtfulness in allowing Ada to commit suicide
saved the district attorney considerable embarrass-.
WHITE DEER FARMER
LOSES WHEAT IN FIRE
REALTORS PLAN ON
RIG CONVENTION AS
RESERVATIONSGROW
with Amarilloans responding in-fine
fashion in registering for the state
SITE OF THE
ANCIENT CITY
OF DAVENPORT
the fullest, best rounded and most
constructive schedules for a conven-
sbout. Ilka tinted fireflies and, bit by bit, the hulk-
ing black outlines of liners lying in berth are re-
“Mere legialation against war cannot establish
peoee."—Charles E. Hughci. ---------------
"Higher living standards, in terms of distributed
ommodities if not of happiness, have been achieved
(under the power nge) far a larger fraction of the
"The stoek speeulator who haa thrust himself
into the book-collecting game has . . . brought
the dealer into golden days and led the hobby-horse-
■an into expensive fields.”—Adam Dey (Century'.
COLDER-THAN-ICE
BLOCK ON DISPLAY
IN STORE WINDOW
populatin than has ever before obtained."miStuart
Chase (Current History'.
LETTER
GOLF
P
t
=
TH
Some women like hand-holding if
it's the whip hand.
word, of common usage, for each
jump. Slang words and abbreviations
don't count.
d—The order of letters cannot be
changed.
Ann velntlon is printed on the lead
page.
—A
NOO/
WILL VOU
’ TELL ME *
lean jury would have believed that she did. Eurther,
all the known facts point with equal logic to Si-
mained to consider the situation seriously and opine
that it wasn’t such a dumb idea at that.
Other males in other eities have followed the edi-
mares of running around the streets in nightclothes
has really come true.
The main, and almost only, interest which I find"
n pajama wear on the streets bf then is all the hulla- I
HARK,LAD/2
8 THE SPY SAYS
MORKE KA-LONO
K PLACE IS ON THE ,
THE RULES.
1—The Idea of Utter Golf is to
change one word to another and do
it in par, a given number of strokes.
Thus to change COW to HEN, in
three strokes, COW, ROW. HEW,
HEN.
2— You change only one letter at
a time.
$*
a
g4kk!
mA'A?
lit a statesman with a brick, and try to
i show, with trenchant pens, that he was pinched for steal-
' ings hens. Thia form of base ingratitude, these inuendoes.
if Only ‘
fM NOT TOO
«_LATE/
LONG GLOVES
Ung gloves are imperative for
formal evening wear this fall. The
correct models are pll-ohs, of soft
suede in ereamy white.
day at the Gibson Drug company, ill
East Seventh street.
A 40-pound block of the frosen
carbon dioxide which ia 114 degrees
below zero and mads from natural
gaa will be allowed to melt there.
The Panhandle gas, it ia claimed, is
tie Bennys
NoteBo.K
si
THE FAST WAT TO HEALTH.
Dr, MeCoy"a menus auggested for
the week beginning Sunday, August
Ut
With the speed
A OF LIGHT, L TORE THROUGH
Q. SPACE LIKE AMADMAN•
— . n .........—
OUR WAY
THOSE DETECTIVE STORIES
Prof. John Barker Waite has beep reading a
dozen or bo of the latest thrillers of detective fie-
tion and he’s ready to tell the acthets they are
tucky. They don’t have to prosecute in court those
villains whom they so cleverty trap in the loot ehap-
tor. If they did, they wouldn" get five convictions
rat of a five-foot shelf of murder mysteries.
Prof. Waite, widely known authority of the Uni-
versity of Michigan law school, looks at the detective
■evol. and finds it fatally lacking in evidence that
would convince any jury. jdge er lawyer.
"Th* evidence the usual fictive detective eollecta
to support his brilliant hypotheses, which looks so
invulnerable in print, would make him a Inughihe
stock if "introduced in an actual court of justice,”
declares the legal-authority., ,
Moreover, the hero of the average detective usu-
ally violates the tew tn a score of places in bringing
his villain to justice, points out the professor.
(%),
-d
imply proven by their slavish adherence to dress that |
is utterly unaesthetie end uncomfortable.
Man cannot change hie ways without a terrific
wrench; when one of them refuses to conform to stand-
V
8
Walt Mason Himself
The World's Most Famous Rhymster
aS’agRMZe
sbeaemzay=e
—eeam-eeeee-----
Wednesdey.
Breakfast: Eggs and tomatoes on
melba toast.
When Washington, the good and great,
went forth to save the country’s freight,
to save for freedom this our sod, did all
his countrymen applaud? Oh, read the
books and you will see how mean those
countrymen could be. At mention of his
name they hissed; if any adjective was
missed when they were talking of his
deeds, it’s been concealed from one who
reads. We think it is a modern trick to
WHEN THE MONGOL SPY
REFUSED TO REVEAL MORKE
KA-LONOS HIDING’ PLACE- 9.
Macgregor got rough •
g
strike.
(Copyright, 1929, by The George Matthew Adats Service.)
Special to The News.
WHITE DEER. Aug. 8—Hugh Ed-
wards lost several hundred bsheis
•t wheat by fire thia week. which ha
had stored in a granary, three miles
Meth, — _____
Mr. Edwards pays the damage was
several hundred dollars, partially
covered with insurance. This grain
waa extra good wheat as it was for
need. Origin was unknown.
Vg"
“8
R
1 T
3
low and lewd, are products of our modem times—but read
the tale of ancient crimes. We worship old Abe Lincoln
now, and place a wreath upon his brow, while we’re de-
nouncing living men with voice and lyre and poisened pen.
But while Old Abe, distraught with woe, was struggling
to defeat the foe, did all his countrymen applaud? Did
IDEA SPREADS.
Crowds gathered and hooted and jeered. Soma re-
voaled. The vaguely mysterious seems cloaa at
hand, with sudden recollections of Shanghai days.
v: y
Captain Harry Foster, in charge of
the Reserve oficers’ organteation
here, will go today to Shamrock at
the reguest of reserve officers ia
that vicinity to assist in organizing
a local chapter of the Reserve offi-
care Association of the United States
and to give a start to a troop echool
for the officers in the East Panhan-
dle. The school will bo run by Lieut
Curl Franklin Smith, infantry reserve
and supervised from the local office.
A branch office of the Ninetieth
division U. S. army, an all:Texas or-
ganization, which served during the
World war, has been opened in the
Federal building, with Capt. Harry
Foster, U. 8. cavalry, D. O. L., in
charge. The territory covered by the
office is the entire Texas Panhandle.
'I
447sga*
wa
about the same time.
BUT MEN—!
83 33
2553
: )3 hhm£
The Daily News la aa independent Democratic
newspaper, publishing the news tmpartially. and
supporting what it belleves to be right regardless
of party politics.
By ALLENE 81MNER.
When the old-fashioned college cut-up got tired of
‘ shooing the cow into the chapel, he organized a night-
shirt parade. And all of alma mater's husky males pa-
raded the town attired in flapping nightshirts.
The old-fashioned nightshirt parade is giving way]
to the pajama parade which the old college cut-up a*
well aa many who never were college cut-ups, are stag-
mg in our towns, great and small.
W. O. Saunders of North Carolina seems to have
started it when, agitated by too much perspiration un-
der the collar, and spurred on by all the mutterings
of the various male dress reform organizations, he hied
himself off to work one morning all clad in nice clean <
white pajamas, a string tie under the pajama colter,
“The «toty-book hero can get his... by al hote and oxfords, and' Pim leaf
monnor of devices, from breaking and entering to
GOOD OLD TIMES.
All evil things, we’re prone to Bay, are products of
this modern day; all things were better long ago, then vir-
tue used to brighter glow, and this old seedy tinhorn earth
was thick With men of sterling worth. But reading his-
mm-e--aam tory we find that in the times long left
behind things were no better than they
A few other things which are part and pareel
of this city are— green tagliarini, with meat sauce
. . "Fly-trap” cafes and “Fashion” restaurants . . .
the shivers that follow getting caught between
treet Curt on a four-track street car system . . .
he hill Cable'cars . . . fish food markets . . . com-
plexinhs that need no rouge ... the Aleatraa light
and the pork sausage grinderies.
GILBERT SWAN.
(Copyright, 1929, NEA Service. Ine.)
baloo that is made about the only obviously'sensible
might have eoneocted all the ImprobablUtloe of which : "afoxtmmentoadrersnnirm."anth "Eonaervnttva, is
FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: mountinterest to.them. Inadditio)
lighter features are planned, and a
■a*■ —special round of entertainment for
Fer Our transzreselons are multiplled- before
thet, and our sina testity agalnat us— l»a Wb Mill.
. —
Be more careful of your eonscienee than of your
estate. The latter can be bought and sold; the
Cormer never. ■ Hauen Ballou
Lunch: Cooked okra, baked
Still and nil, the pungent odor of copra, in from
the south seas...ati elingsto the docks. And thers
is the fragrance of spices from the Orient, of cof-
toe from South America, and sandalwood and raw
tobacco.
And viewed from a ferry boat, through a night
tog oust, an eerie sense of the theatrical covers the
:rescent-shaped vistas. From a point off Alcatraz
the eity lies like some huge amphitheater, dancing
with lights. The signal lamps of small craft bob
ma
HOW RAILROADS BUILD CITIES
How would the proposed Rock Island line to Fort
Worth help Amarillo?; how would the Denver bene-
fit Pampa materially t, ate questions that have been
naked in connection with the railroad hearing in
Fort Worth last week.
la this day of paved roads connecting all prin-
cipal cities and towns, and with commercial air lines
springing up ia every direction, many are of the
opinion that a new railroad doesn’t mean what it
once did to a eity.
The Santa Fe recently acquired control of the
Orient, and announcement has just been made that
sa new employes have been added to the general
office forces of the Sants Fa ia Amarillo. This
ia itself pretty well answers the question of what
railroads do for a city.
The Orient does not run into or through Amarillo,
but operation of the system is being directed
through the general offices located here, and thia
indirect arrangement brings as many nsw people to
Amarillo aa a good-sized factory would employ.
Bailroads are big institations, and when major
systems propose to build new lines or to inaugurate
new trunk line service, eities which would be
operating centers for such lines ran well afford to
expend both money and effort in their behalf.
Nob Hill has been for more than half a century
the city's social center. Here are the swankier ho-
. tale and the elaborately new skyscraper apartments.
It is to west what Fifth avenue is to New York.
Here you will find the smartly dressed and beauti-
fut women, with a certain flair that distinguishes
them from women in any part of the world.
In fact, San Francisco has created certain types,
native to itself. Sections of the Mission district,
for instaheo, have a linguistic argot a* distinctive
is the famous Brooklynese “tom" and “Uri." There
s a certain worldlines* in the appcarance of hun-
dreds of its women. You'd recognise them any-
where—and do.
MEMBEaS or THE ASSOCIATED PAES8.
s=sa-a=
reserved -_________
MEMBERS OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
€21
NOTICE TO THE PVBUC.
An, eroneus rfleetion upon the character. *u»«M ee
msuUK. o any individual, firm, concern, os corporation shat i
InU auonr i» th* columna ot Tie NeweGiobe. will be slash
correcta hen called to th. attentien ot the editon.It -to not .
th* intentton of tta mewapaper u> wroneiz — w. '"J’*!*...*?’
tndtvidusi, firm. concern or corporatios and <x*T*eti*»* will to
made when wAiranted as prominenuy aa wa th* wromg ved-
shed, reference or ________________________________________________ I
the women la on the bill.
Hotels are preparing to take care of
the influx of guests, and arrange-
: ments already are under way to as-
sure reservations for the entire ex-|
peeled 150 delegates and thair fam-
ilies.
Those who intend to take the postt
convention trip to Carlsbad are urged
to Inform John G. MeKenzie, direc-
tor of the tour, of their intention as
soon as possible in order to speed up
making of reservations.
conniving with pastel officials to rob the mails," he
oeys. "Detective novels are few in .which the pto-
logon let done not accompli th come brilliant stroke
boards.
Bevern! nationally-known speakers
have been engaged to inform the real-
tora of Toxas about matters of para-
I was sitting on Sid Hunts frunt
stops tawking to him about diffrent
subjecks such aa what makes some
peeple taller than others, him saying
their necks and me aaying their legs,
and I sed, Hay, how about taking a
wawk out to where the aireoplanes
land.
Burr, all rite, G. Sid sed.
And we got up off the steps and
just then the frunt dor opened and
Bids little brother Bert came out,
saying. Where are you going, you
follows T
Sid winking at me and aaying, O,
nowheres, we just got up a second to
stretch because we expect to sit down
agon and stay sitting a lang while,
dont we, Benny?
Sure we do, that* all we do expect
t» do, sit, I sed.
And we both eat down agen oa ac-
count of Bert being one of those lit-
tle kids that alwaya wunt to go
along no matter where it is, and Sid
sed, I mite take a wawk if I wasent
so tired, but anybody that waited for
me to take a wawk would haff to
be a long waiter. Im so tired I awt
to be lying down insted of sitting
up.
Thats a way I feel too, its a won-
der I tint asleep, I sod. It wouldent
serprise me if I sat here for 2 more
houro steddy, I sed. And me and Sid
both stretched and yawned with our
mouths open, and just then Mrs. Hunt
eame out with her hat on, saying,
Como on, Bert, Im reddy.
And her and Bert went downtown
or some place, proving he couldent of
went with us even if we asked him,
and Sid sed. Good nit*, darn all that
tawking about being tired, now thats
just a way I feel.
Meening tired, and I aed, Me too,
f dont aven injoy the very thawt of
a wawk now.
And we both yawned for real and
kepp on sitting thers.
' tor’s example. Acting fellows have found a pajama
clad stroll a splendid way to get publicity, especially
when accompanied by a sweet young thing who seems
not ut all abashed by an escort clad in smart orchid or
pale green or blue pajamas, white straw hat, white
shoes and hose, and carrying a cane, to oftset the
feeling that, after all, one of those horrible night-
A HOLLYWOOD PUZZLE.
A temperamental FILM STAR la
the principal character in today’s
changeable drama in six parts. line
solution is on the test page }
When woman wants something different, some- i
king comfortable in clothes, she wears it, and,If the .m
I rest of the world doesn't like it. that’s just too bad. I NR
Point is that she does not have to be conspicuous, i Ei
for all her sister sex is discovering the seme thing I
ANNOUNCEN. M. M. L DATES
Special to The News.
ROSWELL, N. M., Aug. 8—The
1929-1930 session of the New Mexico
Military Institute will open on
\
WE
no one say he waa a fraud? Oh, read the volume, that A novel refrigerant to be put into
appraise the men and deeds of those old days, and you will renerat domestic noo is on display to-
find our sires were like their husky sons who kick and
plant, cucumbers.
Dinner: Fish loaf, spinach, butter-
All about little streets dart away at odd angles
and curves. Here the smalls grow as assorted as
the types of buildings. Out of the darkness sud-
lealy slinks the lonesome figure of a Bailor careen-
ng down a hill to his ship. The coffee houses and
' tailors' tumbledown boaring houses are strangely
anchanged by time. Hills jut suddenly up into
zomplete blackness. Down below the lights blink
and the gray streams of fog take on weird shapes.
Thia is the San Francisco of yesteryear—the
san Francisco that seems never to die—thet has
planted something in the bood of all who have
been close to it, like myself.
1 .
U Hn
"ss
•,203328
52953
99%
It's better to change your mind an'
pay some heart balm than to be dug
up later to be analysed. Some o'
these times the Roosevelt boys an’
ther whiskers are goin' to be mis-
taken ter some o' the queer •peel:
mens they bring beck from Tibet an’
find ‘emselves stuffed an’ propped
up in a museum.
(Copyright John F. Dille Co.)
By PHILLIP NOWLAN
and RICHARD CALKINS
Bar and NlsM Aa**<iiat*4 Prses Loaead Wire________
gUBSCRU’TlON RATF? BY MAIL IN ADVAMCR.-"
w ..............................teU
JT- ...... .....till 1 Yeae ............... 00
0 uialde Tezas, oxaboma pn.Mew Mnleos ... M
* MrntAkii iN AAkitzo. PATABLB'fMAbVANCI.
wet. J 18 J #ontha .............J210
I Month ........• • ....Sa.***""*" '
Now» in Combipatlon with
lorning. Evening aad Sunday
2325,’
«02u9hjaSap,
M2ud‛Nw‛
“"an,* '
57/
tutabtlaned November A 4000. PuBINteC NOnJ.E Nun*
Jan 6, UM M Jan L IBM.
Sixth and FHimore HIFeet
(Mas A. How.. Editor end Publlsher
Witter C. Newt. Geperat Manezer
Pbone conasctina all dteortm***. tm
Oalr wotnins and mala, aswssagw oublished la the ran-
Ondt. enntf). Coasts the Fanhanle at Tesaa. Eestern New
Met ‘Souther Colored* aad Weia Oklahomna frem.2 te
m h *d.an«. o Denver, Dalias, For Worth, Oklahoeis
Citana UtoHarars tarryiac **■»** ■._________
With more than 100 out-of-town 0-dinetoricinis
hotel fenervationa airead made and tion o the atate body and local
Breakfast: Cottage cheese, fresh
peaches.
Lunch: Combination ss lad of cook-
ed string beans, shredded carrots and
Beets in gelatin, glass of sweet milk.
Dinner: Roast beef, zucchini, green
peas, celery and ripe olives, prune
whip.
next Monday far three days,' the
realtors ia charge of arrangements
for the convention are cenfident of
one of the tergoat representations
over at a state real estate men’s
meeting.
Praises of the program arranged
and malted te realtors over the state
continue to come in. It is one of
-HEA A GOOD soog
A AU/MARRES A U
VMTHESE DANS we
MAS TO BE A a
GOOD ( G8
SPOKT. “73
O
1. What is wrong with this sen-
tence? “He is nothing like so intel-
ligent as his brother.”
2. What la the correct pronuacia-
tion of "learned” (adjective)?
S. Which one of those words is
misspelled? Rummage, rythm, rose-
ato, ritual. — ,
ANSWERS.
1. Bay, "not nearly so intelligent."
2. pronounce ler-ned, accent first
syllabie.
3. Rhythm.
MERCY, 1
MASTER./
, I WILL , t
SPEAK!)
Bunday.
Breakfast: Caddied egg, whole-
wheat muffins, stewed figs.
Lunch: Avocado salad, carret loaf,
lettuce.
Dinner Bruited chicken, asparagus,
sated of chopped raw cabbage, celety
sad beets, lee cream.
Monday.
Breakfast: French omelet, small
piece of broiled bam, Melba toast
applesauce l
Loach: Grapes or berries as de-
sired. ' I
Dinner: Leg of mutton, baked
squash, McCoy salad (lettuce, "toma-
toes aad cucumbers), pineapple gela-
tin • ■ — I
9-KL--
7-28
NLgelo6j
-a®.
Gooo SJFFaI >
GOH! HE GulfS
SORE Ouz HE GE
1M ALLU4 Picv
especially suitable for this by-
product.
.rd he suffers a. a martyr; he is booted at and jeered 1 |
upon; and it will take yean and decades and cenguries 1(
of a few pioneering males weanng pajamas, t|w joly i “M PF
sensible Street raiment in hot weather, before they can AU) \
.void cat-calls ned derision. K22/ )
Hora’s betting that year husband Jahn will not
live to see the day of emaneipated males, sartorially
'peaking!____________________________ _________________
LpAaEFOUL-. 4
AMARILLO DAILY
?. •iu «Wah
. wNee
J.R.WiLLiA~S 1
ft wee m.
N,1
2
la violation of the law."
Prof. Waite chides euch fiction stars ss J. S.
Fletcher, Carolm Wells and Agatha Christie for
creation of evidence which, he says, would never
convince a court. And as for that newly crowned
king of ths mystery novel, 8. 8. Von Dino, he coys t
"In "The Greene Murder Case’ Mr. Van Dino's
adlwscmvs"
a
h
49is in
VTjAME RICAN
AM6/HISTORY
TREATY WITH ENGLAND.
Eighty-seven years ago todsy, on
August 9, 1842, ths famous Webster-
Ashburton treaty with England was
-gnadimWazhnzten
The chief features of this pact, ne-
gotiated by Daniel Webster and Lord
Ashburton, were settlement of the
boundary between Great Britain and
the United States on the northeast,
extending westward beyond the Great
Lakes, and a cruising convention for
the mutual suppression of the slave
trade.
As to the northeast territory In
dispute, embracing 12,000 nquare
miles, seven-twelfths were set off
to the United States; Great Britain
taking the residua and obtaining the
highlands she desired which frown
upon the Canadian Gibraltar, and a
dear through eireuitous route be-
tween Quebec and Halifax.
The United States government was
permitted to carry timber down the
St. Lawrence river, and though be-
ing bound to pay Maine and Massa-
chusetts *300,000 for the strip of land
relinquished to England, gained in
return Rouse's Point on Luke Cham-
plain, of which it would have been
deprived by an exact survey.
By the cruising eonvention clause,
whieh the president himself had a
conspicuous part ia arranging, the
delleate point of "right to search"
waa avoided aad each nation bound
itself to do its full duty by keeping
up a sufTleient squadron on the Af-
rean const for suppression of the
slave trada .
od boots, salad of alicad tomatoes
with chopped parsley, no dessert.
Thursday..
Breakfast: Poached egga, toasted
shredded wheat biscuita, stowed rais-
ias.
Lunch: Apples and pecan nuts.
Dinner: Roast pork, cooked greens,
mashsd turnips, salad of chopped
raw spinach and celery, apricot whip.
Friday.
Breakfast: Toasted breakfast food
with eream (no sugar), ripe figs.
Lunch: Cooked string beans, ’spin-
ach and rice sa casserole.
Dinner: Broiled white fish, spin-
ach, cooked tomatoes, salad of raw
asparagus tips 'eaten as celery, Jello
or Jell-well (no cream).
Saturday.
Breakfast: Crisp waffle, t or 8
slices of well cooked bacon, baked
apple.
Lunch: Ice eream, with one kind
of fresh fruit, except bananas. •2
Dinner: Salisbury steak, mush-
rooms on casserole, baked ground
beets, salad of diced celery, cooked
string beans and parsley and peach
whip
"Spinach and rice en casserole:
Measure a half cupful of rice and
wash thoroughly. Lot soak in the laat
water for an hour or more, drain,
and cook until tender in about a
quart of boiling water. Then throw
the rice into a colander and rinse
in cold water. This washes away the
sticky liquid, and separates the grains
of rice. There will be about two cup-
fula of the cooked rice, to which
add one cupful of cooked and mashed
spinach. Mix together thoroughly, put
in casserole, and bake for 15 or 20
mirutes, tightly covered. Remove
cover and place under broiler frame
until slightly erisped on top. Serve
each portion with a lump of butter.
QUESnONS AND ANSWERS.
Th. Breath-Holdine Habit.
Question-Mrs. G. H. wites : Mr baby
bold* her breath until she is black in the
face nt time., end nothing we can do
neema to set her out of this habit. Will
you plense tall me something to dor
Anawer: Babies often learn to hold
their breeth thia way just to frighten
their mothers sad to attract attention.
However, it la pomaible there may be wome-
taino wrong with the child, and I would
muggest that you take her to a baby ape-
September 2 for new students and
on September 9 for old students,
according to an announcement made
here by Colonel D. C. Pearson who
says that every thing points to the
most successful year in the history
of the school.
eliallat. W roe find there to nothing wroru,
gai ne aitention to ess habi, (or she
willy Ml begin to breathe again be-
for there to say danget.
Quqation-a. K. sake i "Can potato,, e)
enrrota nt aaparazus replnce apinach I
pour celery, tomato and spinach soogt Da
hotter and eream make a good mixtuta
with thb'sogpr ” F
Answert Carrota ar maparegus eoula ha
used to replace the amaze" in this aM
but I do not advise the use of potatoes
because ther do net pombine well with
tomatoe. Battoe aad emeam assy be uned
with the noup.
Caneek. I
Questton—S. F. writoh: 1 ** u >
rin working in a family where eeel of
the number* haa enncer. I am to do no
washinu, onto ironing. I hard heard that
cunger ia contagioua, and I am doubthul
whether it la wise fee ma to become em-
InleekA B---M
MVIT DvtB
Anewer: The exact aauaa of cancer to
unknown, but dgotora are practically all
of tile opinion that it la not contagiors,
and I do hot belleve there W.ll ba ear
danger in your taking over the house-
work In the famly you write about
There to not much danger nt a perse* i
contractine cuncer it hr liras upon the ■
correct dirt and unes enough exereines to 1
maintain cood health.
(Coprright, 1929, The Bell Syndicate. Ine.)
By
COING PLACES
%2 AND
SEEING THINGS ’
SAN FRANCISCO.—Few spots suggest romance
aad glamour quite so strongly at San Francisco's
waterfront. ■ -0 _ ...
To be sura, the waterfront of Frank Norria and
Jack London is gone . .. and forever. When "Thran-
Fingered Jack’s" disappeared from the Meigze
wharf belt and when Darby Laydon’s turned into •
eigaret and gum emporium in Steuart street, the
change began. .
Steam beer, which could be found nowhere alee
in the nation, survived for d time. As did a few
picturesque, tumbledown bars buut upon piers, with
the bay waters splashing below against the piles.
But concrete wharves earns in, clipper ships appear-
td less frequently through the Golden Gate and the
aid sugar-barkentines running down to Hawaii took
on auxiliary engines. The war dealt the final blow
and shipping changed its entire tune.
."S
2
OM‛ U!SS WsH
1 DDHT HAE 7T
DO 60 MUCH
“4,,
Pich’iM.
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 266, Ed. 1 Friday, August 9, 1929, newspaper, August 9, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567972/m1/4/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.