Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 289, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 1, 1929 Page: 4 of 32
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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Whon ahe was
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tonowing l« written by Mn.
Fe
olo.
Academy in London; father was
(Compiled for the United Press
by the Baker A Taylor Co)
I
beneath
in
relativ
tures given before a class in the
-ItoUH Boa
joln those from nearer citles nn a
one
ing to th*' floor of the open attie
The Unlit Lamp. By Radeliffe Hall,
Bridge Prize*
Your Bridge Party
MeNeal of Denver University faculty.
acters teem too lucky— bat that is
narra-
none
hat vowed that she "eould not wear
from bar character atudies.
But always ja to ba at the colony
i
■
Fair Grounds
N 4
Tomorrow
6
LABOR
A
DAY’S
A
7*2)
>
*■
ENTRIES TO DATE INCLUDE:
L
.2,.
i
20 ROA
HUNDREDS OF TIMES
G STEEL, GASOLINE AND NERVE DO ITS BEST, DON’T
RACES START PROMPTLY AT 2:30 P. M.—FOUR MAJOR EVENTS
-
IF YOU GET A KICK OUT OF SPEED DON’T MISS IT
ition Call Frank Turner, Kelly Springfield Tire Service, Phone 7294
‘ 1
2--
. ■
#
. - ■’
V ’
"A
will be a brilliant success—if you plan •
now to usesome of nor apBrlrlingly new
favors, prizes, score cards and tallies.
A fascinating collection — we’re eager
for you to see—so do stop in and let’s
plan your party together!
Most Thrilling
Event!
t
done only in your own personal and
perfectly good way, uives courage
and eonfidence and inspiration. Then
Junk Car Race-40 Miles.
Free for All Race—100 Miles.
TEN BEST
SELLERS, .
those interested in tbi
try. The book la a coll
3 Fastest Cars on
Cars Costing Under 1
AU Qulet aa
By Erich M.
Brown. $2.50.
Amarillo Bookshop
------Rule Building----—
Aneidents in hto writ-
ng scenes end lecall-
iorral by bla -enK
4
—
ta, whe attended the seaslon at
tamous Wrter olony at In-
new indus-
ton of lee-
vMp y
s ' a (
of the Potter
•f Women’s
FAMILY GROUP. By Diane Pat-
Hab, PabMabad t b Dattan.----
2 aviation page sunday
18-year-9ld
McCarty Motor Co., Amarillo Studebokaf.
Henry Williams, Wichita Falls—Whippet.
Amarillo Motor Co., Amarillo—Hudson.
IF YOU ENJOY _____________ ......__
MISS THE LAST bAY OF THE PANHANDLE’S GREATEST AUTO RACE MEETI
July and
Irat of a
rack-5 Miles.
000.00—15 Miles,
i President Tells Experiences
At Writers "Colony” in Colorado
r
holding much of Indian lore as wall
m favored volumes from favorite
friends who have aa likely a* not
written th* hooka themselves. la thia
room with it, almple .furniture espe-
elally designed by a ‘deslgning‘
friend, receptioha ar* hold oach Sat-
urday following the luncheon and
lecture at the colony
These lectures are given by fa-
mom writers and are free to th*
students at the colony. Many promi-
nent writers and others from Den-
ver pay for th* privilege of attend-
ing these Saturday affairs. Thus op*
portunity to afforded the colony
people ta matt and beome nequaint-
od with tho interesting writer, folk
from afar aa wall a* those af Den-
vn Marvelous auto tripa are taken
up the hills to the gold mines aad
the old mining towns, ghostly new
“THE PANHANDLE’S SPEED KING”
HURTLING CARS WILL PASS THE GRANDSTAND
-e
those who come for the purpose, the
chance- ia there for wonderful help
and encouragement to keep the writ-
inf interest alive from morning till
night undisturbed and in the happiest
manner.
To thia end, regular daily claaa
work to hold in critietsm, marketing
and then mechanics of short story,
articles and essay writingl also the
various phases of writing presented
in novela, crime and mystery stories,
ths psycological story, largely used
by the so-called quality group of
magazines and the Western thriller
of thh m***»inn called the. Pulp
Martha Ostenno. Podd-Mend. $2.50.
Western Front.
“Legal Aspects of Zoning." by N.
F. Bakar, dincunses eity planning
particularly in respeet to the law
suits which have grow* eat of thia
I
"Trumpeter of Krakow." by Erie
Kelly, proves to be one of the moot
popular in the ehtldron'a section I
wish that the children might hear
Mr. Kelly tell of all the details of
the plot and hear the trumpet Ball
blown as it was and le blown in
Kraltaw aa the librarian heard it
in Washington during the AmeS
loan Library association in Washing-
ten InMay.
rdy family. An (nci-
sical, history- 80 in-
l up with old rural
irded to jUnder the
gifts of the
dent of Chia
|
l
I
1......
Very interesting and delighitul
Mr*. Hardy's account of the meal
, Jno. Ivy, Duncan, Okla.—De Soto.
E. H. Powell, Amarillo— Mannon.
Tri-Angle Motor Co., Whitedeer—Ford.
Meyers Bros., Amarillo— Hudson.
Harman Motor Co., Amarillo— Pontiac.
Harman Motor Co., Amarillo—Oakland.
J. A. Robinson, Amarillo Ford.
ach-in-theirtwn
I '
"Family GroupMs-
Portrait of
English Life .
A eerie* of portraits |* “Family
Group” by Diane Petrich who pro-
duced a beat teller in “See My shin-
lag Palace." An English family with
ita reaction to eudden wealth gives
the charaeters.
There Ie Rosalinde, the dreamer ■
er perhaps the praeticat tdealist,
and Merry, the gay brother, Patrick,
the reckleas one, Bayard, the musi-
elan, and Irene, of the eval face, pale,
blotted with rod, sulky passion flow-
er of her mouth." There le Stephen,
the father, who to • Harlyn of Corn-
wall and Marion, the mother, who
made freq teat trip* te the smart cabi-
net that contained her whiskey.
With scarcely no attempt to plot,
Miao Petrich builda a temptestuoua
story. Fer e* she paints her portratts
pasmon. death end disgrace creep to.
Somehow the cataclysmie events
that straighten the paths of the ohar-
FATE OF JOAN
OGDEN PLOT OF
“UNLIT LAMP”
chen foree tskpt as buny-g----------__ .. . _ ...
isrooma for the rough how* door* Bouse of the Crooked Tree. The f*ct>y hondtbbU IM remmvndabto
__the Lodge are ajar for thone from tree to there, at the end of the mean- ambition, that you are You and that
dlstant ktes— or Canada ta eomo and dering path that leads to the deer, ye* may do again what has been
things weren’t f*i*f well at home
at ell. Milly bed reused trouble beg
cause ahe couldn't go to th Mus ip
"""2
Late Anther Was Prollfie Writer
Joneph Buahnell Ames, popular au-
thor of many adult and children’s
Western storles, who died last year,
had a posthumous novel published by
CentuiyonrAugust- 16: t tscalied
“The Bladed Barrier," aad the acene
I* told in that portion of Mexico
known aa Lower California. Thia to
pSameomgcheconetppiae,mkkine”aim
the meet prolifie’o? Century authors
—=
New Library '
Books
onger.
Elisabeth wee afraid too. Jdan’a
20 DAREDI MIL DRIVERS WILL CONTEST FOR THE TITLE OF
ir4.
FoFurther
General Admissin. S1.6
THE ARISTOCRAT,
Burn quietly above his pale,
pound face__,__' .
Tall candles bor of dlynity and
grace.
Ba only came for board and room.
I said-, i
Be alee foun a heart untenant
Cry louder wind end min tort you
should hear
The truth, and mock me for the
pain I bear.
Proud hood unbowed before their
Inbrad scorn
Of tradesmen forelgn to "the
mannerborn.’
Bo quiet hands and lips; would
you confess I ,
A aecond death for him! Blot
MeNeal of Denver University faculty, and full of romance to the imagi-
who comes each season fresh from native. Trout dinners la Idaho Falls
new courses in her chosen field. An- and up to the Coder Lodge at Echo
other to Dovid Rafflelock of the ' Lake tempt even th* timid up the
Autkor and Jurnattst . staff • and- »• strap passes: Suppers in themenr-
writer and eritie as weh. | light by the lonely castle ruin can
i-mt
---------------1-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vicarage Is Best
Place To Learn
Life, Says Author
Who would say that aa EngHish
country viearag to the Mot place
in the wor to ms life at first hendt
Agnes Logan, author of "The Necep
aery Mm," maintaina th** such to
the case, her on life haring been
spent to three viearguHor book
evolved from some of her experlences
and early memoriae there. She wm
bom to Norfolk. England, and lives
now in Statfordshire.
Agnes Logon WM Ode abed at the
“jolliest, dearest sehool imaginable,"
Ue much-discussed Casterton, which
most have completely chanced slnce
the horrid times whea Charlotte
Bronte attended It Though Miss
Logon hod started to write when she
was seven, she had an ambition to
be a doctor, a* had ten ee many
people in her family for ceneartions.
Sho has an interesting family—James
Workman, the author 'f ezquisite
abort storles, to her unclo; her
zrandtather,Uosiah Adan, introduced
electroplating to the Un ted States;
Macadam of road building fame was
way, they loved Joan, they under-
stood her ein! know her qualities.
Those must not be loat to the
world.
“Joan, whatever you do, don’t let
them bottle you," warned Richard
"History of Art," by Eito Faur in
four volumes, ia a gift to the library
from the Pierian club. The title* amt
Volume 1, "Ancient Art;" volume 2
"Mediaeval Art;" volume 1, “Renato-
eance Art," and volemo 4. "Modern
Art."
An ancient village on the North
Soo island of Sylt gradually I* being
uncovered, with the wind shifting a
dune ,
to z-eut-of-the ledga apon a hill writersclgenas.Sheendsthe I
and look at the quiet pines, hazy die- tive cotreetly and yet detracts
in point of books published. Bis
nearest rivals are Barry A. Franck,
the famous vagabond traveler, and
Augusta Butoll Seamen, writer of
children’s mystery stories, each rep-
Yo eon ted by sixteen titles.
During IM part season, the welter
was a colored boy who lost winter
traveled with a high claaa waudeville
compans. Bls versatility extended to
an boar of entertainment in the Uv-
Ine room, oecasionally upon request,
*S>eo-M bad put-up,the dishes with
the help at Judy, his wife . ; . ale.
_ RUTH K DELzELL, Librarian.
"The Early Life 0 Thomae Hardy,”
by Plorence Emily Hardy, will bring
to the lovers of Hardy’s books much
pleasure aad insighs into the inti-
mils lido of the man, for it throws
lights
relatively new aystem of seeing, end
the low* which have been passed con-
cerning ft. Where the legal situation
Amarillo Motor Co, Amarillo—Essex.
Arthur Huffman, Wichita Fall*—Whippet.
। T. L. Sparkman, Pampa Dodge.
Cari Mangum, Plainview—Hayne*.
Amarillo Oldsmobile Co., Amarillo—Oldsmobile
Panhandle Motor Co., Amarillo—Chrysler.
Ballew-Satterfield Co., Amarillo—De Soto.
extriesbly bol
England--ls »_____ — _____
Greenwood The" Md finds many
stier echoes ia Hard’s navels.
Richard Benson WM afrald. Would
4 -MU ahe
couldn’t ba bottled. .
“Joan, will you marry ma and
away" But no, Joan must stay with
her mother a little while longer.
vacation, unique in being equally ......... .._______
pjrofitable end pleaoant,.ee well as pueblo style, is a sturdy ladder of
inexpensive. polished lodge pole. ‛
Though opportunities or* frequent ' Thus lg that end of room some-
for tripe end games end stunts, al- how dedicated' to th* booh shelves
ways the idee to stressed that for
out the goats!
I knew the hurt that
his eoul.
The hurt of love fo
_________Calltomiat
tbreugh the collega of eommereeeand
will be repeated this year. There
er* 20 chapters touching the follow-
top smteta. Effect of TrensparteMea
an dtvH bails*, History ofltplan,
Tranoporatton, Types of Planes
Typo* of Mete**, Theory of Flight,
Mali, Paesengers, Aviatlon Insurance,
Meteorology, Coste la Operation. The
book to a valuable om and a gift
from the Lions club of Amarillo to
th* library.
Admission of Car to Center Grounds, 50c
ue, Little
d. :
SPEED! THRILLS! KICK
lo not eleer M potato oat just where
the obscurities are. Thia ia a subject
which is of much Interoat locally at
this tin*.
“Airplana TEanaportauon,» by
James O. Wooley and Ear *. Bill
1* a new book and will appeal to
one of her family.
At seventeen Agnes Logan defi-
nitely turned to writlai- it was a
long, hard grind for her mother was
an invalid and Agnes wis curate to
■her- f*tb«n tho vigor.-This gap Jr
lence was invalunbleto her for to
the viearag* people com far every
eause. "Life, death, joy, nisery, slek-
ness, health, atn Md sainthood,"
•aye Miao Logan, "mart it the viear-
age.” It wm five yean before she
publiehod Mr first mort story.
Thereafter her work apreared regu-
larly in The National Be low, Panek,
The Radio Times, Britin Girls' An-
nual, ate Four boohs and three plays
were published before "Te Necessary
Man.” This is her boat work, she
believes, and an ezellent one
through which to Introcuce her to
American readers. -
She loathes noise and snake, which
la perhaps why aha prefe a the coun-
try to the town, the hU s to plains.
Her personality, quiet .ad utterly
sincere, lo reflected in her writing
because it is almost alvays based
on the result of experience. Her
favorite writs *e inelude Barzrie,Shaw,
Chesterton and Willa Cather for
“even when they deal with life fan-
tastically" they are at bottom sin-
cerely true," -
S. E. FISH TO WRIT
Next week *M win ten of Mary
wtih,whe to declared to be the
wo— to Amer-
_ _________ Cambridge
Em Md of whom B. «. Welle oeye
no woman in England can com-
bare with her"
I After about an hour of both plain
bad taney Colorado scenery, includ-
b a Hie in altitude of 2,000 feet
Earn the mile-high city of Denver,
hou eomo to the Lodge ta Indian
■ills, the home of the Writers’ Cl-
fay and from that moment until your
Etay to ended yea will find that writ-
ng to uppermost.
I The colony la conducted by the Au-
phor and Journelist a magazine for
writers, and ts further sponsored by
h number of elub- women of Denver,
which to M crooked miles away.
[ The lodge itselr, ot toga end na-
tive stone, stands on a rooky knoll
bn the.edge of the pine*. To reach
■ from IM eity you hove " poasibly
ziddenin the nutontobila of Elmer
Ella, -Who wems te be the offiecial
Meter.' To* may Mar a rumor that
be it e)d«r. quite • little older, cou-
sin of Milton Sill* of the movies. Al-
though the toting Mr. Bill* refrains
■rem bragging o the ralatfonshlp
ehose who khow him feel that 41
woula be entirely excusable on the
part of Milton f the Movies to call
attention 10 It- Fer with the trusty
Balch of yesteryear our Mr. Bills has
driven ever 20,000 miles of mountain
scenery, with complete suecesa.
Upon year arrival the hostess helps
fa the selection of • email bat cem-
MM*' toom. The** yea wort if
you shoose, Md are sure to do a
quantity of boevy sleeping.
Three tmes daily the. tom tom
"tompa" and into the dining room
troops the inmates. A happy spirit of
comiadeship and informality pervades
whitomuch, she wm m very dat’l Mr. Ratneloek with his interest- i ■ever be forgotten.
Daring July and August the | ing wife and small daughter live near Putelmeyes=t------------
---------—.--- th» , hy |B e ♦‘ivt I* known M the to learn the wish to write to • >•*-
111. Joan must wait just a
. to the region, the living room has a
- ceiling or earve4 cedar and a quaint
- entmey.Efalhgrrefthe nssr-tr
tone*, and peek after peak, enow-
capped and majestic, ts s means of
real and testing reJuvenption to all
whether you tuine to rm enly er to
eultivat your write side and give
yourself a chance.
Bacrifice. By Owen Johnson.
Longman’s Oram. EL .
Bide in the Dark By Prancea
N. Mart. (Crime Club). 12.
Roper’s Rew. Ry Warwick
Deeping- Knopf, MJ*.
The Specialist. By Charles
(Chie) Selo. Speciakty Publishers,
IL - .
ErWite. Anonymous. Cope and
Smith." M
The Ar of Thinking. By Emori
Dime*. Simon end Schustez-
$2.50.
Beary the Eighth. By Francis
Beckett. Harace Liverigh. M.
Contraet Bridge for All. By Mil-
ten C. Work. Winston Pzess, $2
"Back of the War," by Henry Kit-
tredge Norton, is • book of interest
not alone to the atudents of Inter-
nationai aftatra, it to written for
American people and getaat the roots
of international disputes in a way
that makes them understandable.
The book tends to eke* what has
taken piece in our relatione te the
rest of the world since the World
war; that foreign trade has vaatly
inereased. It has grown from three
million in 1M4 to over nine million
in 1926. Shipping has Men expand-
ed; there are more then 100 Amor-
icon banks abroad, whereas there
were none in 1014. There were 23,000
pasaports issued in 1*14 while there
were over 25,000 last year. Tho au-
thor warns the nation that since
Amerlea I* the Mort powerful end
wealthy country in the world there
ic not a move to the world that doos
Mt effort our gatereste, end the ac-
tion of our copntry may ba inter-
preted m of the highest importance.
Walter Noble Burns’ book "Tomb-
stone," with a subtitle, "An Died of
the Squthwest," has been “dog ent"
m th* author states, from old newe-
paper file* of the Tombstone Epi-
taph. Tombstone NuzgetT na Tue-
mu Star, which are aterad Ja_ih^
room* of the Arizona Pioneers His-
torical society in Tucson, supple-
moated by Interview* with pioneers.
Desert mesquite and catus form a
primitive frontier backgrqund for this
western story.
The Young Mey Mom. By
When Radalyff Ball wrote "The
Well of Loneliness," ahe—preaetted
intormation te the world which it
could not understand by virtue of the
fact that it lacked knowledge of her
subject.
. When she wrote “The Unlit Lamp.”
she clothed la a fascinating story,
a condition of Bfo which the entire
world to trying to escape Whe to
ther who wantato bo "battled-up."
yet that wm the fate of Joan Ogden.
Hoppy wore the days when Joan
Ogden wee born to India. Mn. Ogdon
wm pretty- then and not subject the
intec nervouanesa, nor wm the Col-
onel old, over-bearing and oubject to
heart diMMO. But then came
Seabourne that "botiled-up" little
sea-side town to England.
Joan wm only a child, yet some-
thing in her atreng, end revolting
bean cried to get out, got away. But
there wm always her mother, who
needed her co much. Joea did not
realize th* unfairnes sand unnatural-
ness of thia tragi* mother love then.
Besids, there was,a sick father.
There was MUly too, a younger sis-
ter, but Milly had talent; she played
a violin until people wept Md nor
dapper, little professor wagged his
head over her. Joon eould not go, at
least, not for a while.
Elizabeth, Joon and Milly’s tutor,
mw bow th toys were going; so did
control.
File by in stately style. I wear
my pride
Mask like, loot they should, know
that I, too, have died.
— Opal Winstead.
“The Aristocrat” woo awarded
the prize fer the ihonth by the
Kaleiscope Poetry magazine of
Dallas. The magazlne which pub-
lishes Ite fourth number this
month to edited by Whitney Mont-
gomery and Veld* Stewart Mont-
gomery. Wellknown Texas poet.
N Built la an interesting style peculiar
company around the table* set
papqg-Eraup-Vernnd dramazcoma
meuntain avpetites that prevail, epmea’eor. ° SS ,
Among th* outstanding Instructors
at th* Colonoy are Blanche Young
end her apartments wer ready for
Cambridge, day*, but would Jon
•ver come!
CoL Ogden died. Surely now was
the time to break. Milly managed
her own affair* by silently getting
involved in a scandal which hod to
be hushed up and stopped by Milly’a
going ewey. Be sho went to London,
but Joan, had to stay wftb her
mother, who wm left alone,
Milly finally escaped, consumption
took her away. Richard Benson wm
gone; even Elisabeth finally deserted
Joan,
Sealed, "bottled-up, with dream*
of her childhood wrapped up to her
heart, Joan grew old. tho was forty-
thrsa yean old; she wm taking car*
of a figgity, old lady. It was her
mother. Lite had been scaled again*!
hoF too long and when Richard Ben-
son cam* back, retired from a suc-
easeful medical career, wanting Joan
to go with him again, oho could no*
go. Inetoad, she hept vigil until her
mother’* death, then went to spend
her own last years, aursingover aU
Hneene relative-—--------------------
Joan Ogden io net • story-book
type Tbit the wbild *ocei e*ee. She---
is hero, there, everywhere to this
world. She la aU of *■ and bring*
a message of wm to that one who
allows himself to be "bottled-up."
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 289, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 1, 1929, newspaper, September 1, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1569326/m1/4/?q=denton+aerial+199%2A: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.