Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 315, Ed. 1 Friday, September 27, 1929 Page: 4 of 16
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MARTLAL LAW AT BORGER,
slade-who is the escaped convict, joke, Laxton?" Mr. Fotherbury ob-
served.
1.
,8
0
whipped eream.
7
The H Oman's Day
r
$
"A
2
1
The mutder of the prosecuting at-
Ml field city-
Little Joe
Borgera indifference to
ternep was deplorable.
1,
•d
We made a single file in the pre- quite come to the end. He ie aloe the
Mr. Fotherbury and
FARM PROBLEMS ELSEWHERE
((Continued on Page 18, Cob 4)
DECADENT DATI?
L
ge I
taste towards greater reticence in the future.
\fn
.-
c
Two twin girls were adopted while still babies by
pother for a year, they offered themseives for scien-
REALLYE
of Newplace. It is also Pell's ghost.
IF
8
3
BUCK ROGERS, 2429 A. D.
Strange Sub Halts Rocket Ship
"g
ft
j.
y
I
6
f ■
Pretty soft, but ovsr the heads of most nij
A :
CRAFT
«
g
1
F
■y PHILLIP NOWLAN
aad RICHARD CALKINS
•-
Du
Sa
“Tea—but don't be alarmed. I have
already presented to him a free par*
don. He escaped from Dartmoor on
IT SAYS HERE
THAT PICKING
WAS ONLY
TRTY-Sx
YEARS OLD
WHEN ME WRDTL
'VANITY FAR"
Ri
R
ALLFINISHED,
NOW.SR/
kej
1 u
MOW'S THE
osmo
_CDMING? 2
should be a reminder to all of theineed of intelligent
parental aid children need, whether bright or dull. The
theory of heredity woe an alibi for neglect. With that
chailenged, parent, should shoulder their responsibili-
ties with even more seriousness than they have had.
tors. The remaining three accompan-
led us to the house. One of these
walked around to the book. One stay-
od in the shadow of the porch. The
last of the six entered with ue and
stood aside la the hall.
ether everything, but they certainly told the world noth*
ing. •
“A little surprise for you, Mr. Foth-
erbury," he eaid, "This ie Mr. Rod-
toe
me
u
► the four-t
The di
la thia we
that Ha f
TO LWE OVER.
PET.
vi
c.
with—"
“Extraordinary!" Mr. Fotherbury
exclaimed. “How do you make it out!"
Laxton smiled; but did not answer.
“It’s easily got at from the eon*
text,” he Mid, vapuely. “But that’s
his majesty.
“Yss Newplace had been a rich ab-
bey. There were legends of great
gifts made to it and of much treasure
stored. What d’you think happened to
v Mil
-
John
G. Bi
' > Car
wore sitting by the center table talk-
ing. Mr. Fotherbury rose and eome
to Laxton, My ing:
“Ah, professor, you’ve brought
your friend who’s going to show us
a way through the men? Will you all
find chairs?
look at the map. I was a ground
ptan of the church, Laxton’s finger
pieked but a dMK------------
“This Is the transiation of the few
words referring to the mark: 'aad
of the highly gifted aad very rever-
end Abbot Fortunatus, from the al-
tar 11 feet and from the north wall
nine feet, at a depth of nine feet.'
"Then you have missed the little
thread in the Abbat’s book.” Mid
Laxton, tapping on the open page.
“Hero it ie—plain as a turnpike, to
anybody who can read church Latin
and understand a map."
.6
To see then hew that by works a man in justi-
fled. and not tor faita an»< Jemou 2:24
=4
Dr. MeCoy"s menus suzzested for
the week beginning Sunday, Sep-
tember Di ,
1.
G
nson. Sells aad Flate. Hagenbeck and Al
it takes them at the value given them la
#=
DECADENT DAYS? I Laxton stood aside and indicated
Frankness, it seems to me, baa become confused Dedslade,
Laxton pointed to a circle on the ma p—tomb of the Newplace treasurest
I “But eo—it's not a joke. I hadn't Henty the Eighth failed to get away
NOW,, THE GAR-
FINKLE SERENADERS
W(X PLAY THE weu-
KWtfN OPCfWlO
fCLFCTtON^PO&i- a
euTTeRFLY”
Cousih John! Redslade reveals a cur-
ious story that hegins to pry open
the mystery of Fell. Redslade and
Pell became friends in the army. Af-
ter the war, Redslade inherited New-
place Abbey but could not meet the
mortgages on it. He fell into the
hands of Smithins, an unscrupulous
firm of money-lenders, and lost New-
place to them. Pell saved him from
attempted suicide but the report of
his death was accepted. Then follow,
od his million-frane coups, the Dover
affair, their prison terms and finally
Redslade’s escape. Laxton halts the
recital. He has arranged, a meeting
in Fotherbury’s library for that very
night—an inquisition that will selva-
the mystery of Poll's death.
triminals within its own gates is largely to blame,
• beyond a doubt The killer of Mr. Holmes should
pay the extreme penalty, and it is Berger's duty to
see that he goes to trial.
But the question now is what good can come of
martial law. _ .
If the rangers, the special prosecutors and the
authorities of Berger and Hutchinson county, are
unable to apprehend the slayer and to crush the ole*
meat of lawiessnesa, the murderer of District At-
torney Holmes will never be brought to trial, sei*
Here or no soldiers.
J.R.WiLLIAMS
© 1920, ev MM sunce, MC.
I
Lul
I
because he knows darn well nobody
would ever steel It as long aa there
was anything elts to steal. Excuse
me. everybody, I sod- a. ...
A»d> quick tamed arouad and
started to wawk back feeling worse
insted of better. , -
A BLOW AT HKREDITY.
An editorial in the Woman’s Home Companion re-
ports a study of the question of heredity versus envi-
Them
SUDDENIX,
AS WE
SLID
DOWN
1ro A
GREAEr
VAIIEY-
LIKE
TROUGH-
M
ns
M
838""582,
H L
• aer
mtos peg
tr0bie
at, 1m)
I doubt if hard work, steadily and regularly ear
ried on, ever yet hurt anybody.— Lord Stanley.
ton, “here's the ghost Poll was about
to conjure up in this room when he
lost his life. I'm sorry some of the
people to whom he wished to show
his ghost are not here now, and par-
ticularly one of thorn—Marling?"
"Ah—Martlag. You know—"
“Tea. Marling is no longer avail-
J
I .yo
PRveps 6
E RISKT THROOGN A
ReDUGHF,Go A.
CRD6TPOEH f
Seen About New York
? I 1 , -
NEW YOBE, Sept 26—The name of Jerry Mur
given has flashed suddenly, large and imposingly, ia
the world of tanbark and Moves.
To he sure, Jerry's name has for some time been
a name to reckon with in the circus realm. But such
is the way of the public that it bellevea what it sees.
And sinee tt seco such names as Aingling and Barnus.
40 K
P
kifie study. They looked alike, their emotional reac-
tions and temperaments were very similar. Tot the
girl, brought up as an only child in a good home, rated
an intellgent quotient of 96.9 and the other, brought
up as the youngest of five girts in a poor family, rated
only 84•.
The editorial’s conclusion states that this should
be an tncentive to parents “to ge enthusiastically with
modern trend and give their children all possible ad-
ronment that strikes a severe blow at the theory of
heredity.
_____R/
WHATS
THAT!
TINT THREADS.
It was just half-pest 9 when we
passed under the gatehouse of New:
place. On the bridge six men had
—
THOUGHTS
8
REVELATIONS PAT.
Today there are no reticences whatsoever. Grand-
mother’s granddaughter not only beats gossip to it
but outdoes it at its own dirty game. Non aad women
have discovered that intimate revelations, told in heart-
'Mushroom soap: Place, in one
quart of cold water a half cup of
world is. after all, a small worid. And
Jerry Muzgivan has been so important
me rail into milUone. Te moot ed the
g T
•W l
diced celery, one diced catrot, one
tablespoonful of chopped parsley, and
one eop of cooked mushrooms cut in
small pieces. Piace over—fire—and+
bring to boiling point Keep tightly
covered, and jost below boiling point,
for one hour. When ready to serve
add a little boiling water if liquid
has diminished from original quart,
and a half point to a pint of hot
eream. Do not thicken with floUr or.
cornstarch. Add a little salt at the
table if desired. J
"GOSH, m)
A NEW OHM
ON ME. .
imm. sR/ 1
/pj
The Amarillo Glebe, Mornlog. Evening and tantar
1 Wash ................I JO I Moeth ...........MIAO
MEMBYKS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRaML
The A-celated Fima to exefusively ehitled to the ana toe
— - of all newa Stop atr b ■ eredited to or eat other-
_______la ent paper, ead also heal newa vybliaped batata.
AM zdebt of pubileatlon of epecial diupatebe banta am also
tember 11 at Brandywine, and
Ringling's name has been, of course, a household
word for many years. But Jerry came out of his
quiet but active background when the big deal went
through aad millons were passed for the acquisition
of his shews.
And, if it means anything to anyone, Jerry comes
from Peru, lad.—a perfect setting for a small boy
hooded for a drees giant's Job to come from.
e o e
Variety, the theatrical weekly, has figured up
how much it coots s chorine to keep her face the way
it should be, if it was. The bad news goes something
like this: hair waves 810. Face powder $2. Lipstick
$2 aad up. Manicures- regularly—44. Eyebrow so-
lutions 65 cents. To say nothing of perfumes, mas-
cara and such. The total is about 110. And the
dear giris, unless they work for Earl Carroll, are
likely to get around $50 a week.
Still and all, they manage to Mi!
GILBERT SWAN.
(Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.)
September 27 occupied Philadelphia.
Howe arranged to remain in Phila-
deiphieduxingtha—winter _*kP*
Washington encamped at Valley
Forge.
Howe resigned shortly after taking
Philadelphia, but it was not until
May, 1778, that Sir Henry Clinton
was appointed to succeed him.
RIDIN GREAT
—Cemou"c
ng
could prevent it. I inside the gate one dropped out
The old art of blackmail paid well. But the black- and stood motionless near the door
mailer himself was a social outcast. For society held of Marling’s house. The other five
♦hteya sarred in those days. Marriage vu eno followed us. At the fork of the road
»f them. Husbands and wives might not have ibid each twodtsappearedtewerde the -cloise
Tom to the inn to meet Mr. Red-; “I suppose this is not an elaborate name, Fortunatus, suggest anything
alate । who la eh- aacanad eenviet take. Laxton?" Mr. Fotherburv ob- to you?”
He pushed the book into the middle Washington and defeated him Sep-
of the table and we all bent over to
Sunday afternoon mo and Pude
Simkins was taking a wawk to the
park with Mary Watkins, more boa
cause we wanted to take a wawk wit
Mary Watkins than what we did with
each other, and we was both saying
even the most boastful blackmailer of yesteryear look . into h. library,
like a piker.
Perhaps it might net seem so unethical if thes '
confession writers confined their stories to their own
heart throbs. They Invariably bring in others, some-
times a whole string of other men and women. There
seems to be no feeling on the part of writers of the
pale such sensationai revelations might bring those
others.
with license in this matter. That a man or woman
could write this type of book and keep his qelf-respect
able—however, we proceed without
it at my request, and here it is.”
Laxton turned back the covers of '
Sheldon and took out- the vellum-
bound quarto of the Abbot John Dea-
eon.
Mr. Fotherbury’s eyes opened wide.
“I think it quite likely,” Mid Lax-
ten, “that this book is the little
. things to make her left so she would
think we was grate, and all of a sud-
den Puds sod, G, by the way, I won-
r das what time it lai___ .
And what did he pun out of bld
pockit but a new silver watch, and he
looked at it, saying. Half pass 2.
And he stuck it back in his peck*
it as if ho dident think anything of
’ it insted of proberly having- boo*
thinking about it all a time, and Mary
Watkins aod, O my what a bewtiful
watch, did you just got it?
What, that watch? Puds sad. I had ,
that a long while, I had that ever
since my berthday, he sed.
Ong beipg_jabout 1 days ago, and I
'sod.-Well its big enough to be f ’x
watches, -be careful it dent pull you
down on on side and make you wawk
crooked.
Dont worry about me, I been wor-
ried by experts. Puds Md. And pritty
soon he pulled the wateh out and
looked at it agon, saying. Well can
you beat that, 25 miaita to B alreddy.
Maybe it is by that old wateh, bob
what does that prove? It dont prove
anything, because I bet you 5 doilers
its slow, and if it aint alow I bet you
. 1A dollars its fast, I- sed, and Pud*
’ sed. You wish you had it, thata A
trubble with you, and Mary Watkins
, sod, Benny Im ashamed of .you, donb
act m jelliss.
Who, me? Good nite dont make me
laff, he ha. And Pads looked at his
watch agon, saying. Us pritty neer a
' quarter to >, time certeny flies late-
ir
Why don't you have your initiate
the doctor
MOMENTS wE‘o LIKE
neauamanonw. •The.. EACHERS
d WHAT AT-
QUEER CRAFT
I PUT A $HT
-ASGSS ns
string to guide us out of the maze,
Mr. Fotherbury. As you know, it's a
manuscript history of Newplace by
the last Abbot. The part that inter-
eats us is the last page or two, writ-
। tea, so they tell me, at the beginning
' of 1533, when the Abbot got word
that good King Hal was going to
“I apologize for my rudehess," Mid sehd. his famous visitor, Bishop.Ing-
he, after a moment of silence: “Mr. worthe to sell up athe.place. The bish-
Redslade! Has he risen from the OP. when he arrived, found there
wasn't much boodle in Newplace for
dead?"
Laxton laughed a little.
“Substantial ghost, eh?” he said.
“But truly a ghost. Poll’s ghost, in
___________fact." •
two different families in London. They never saw “Poll’s ghost! Poor Pell!" Mr. Foth-
each other again until they were 19. After living to- erbury shuddered. “Shan’t we all sit ■ it, Mr. Fotherbury T" . ________
— * * ** • “ L ' *“ down?" I “I haven’t the faintest idea, pro-
"Yes, Mr. Fotherbury," Mid Lax- fessor."
and tell you the trend.
.tio"
Lircuuid
• put on it? Mary Watkins sed, and
• I quick sod, I tell you why he dont.
-tvn. “You mean—treasure?'' Mr. Foth-
“Absolutely Protean, isn't it?” said (erbury’s eyes opened wider than ever.
Laxton, with his heartiest laugh. “Precisely—treasure: the stuff that
(Copyright, 1020, NEA Servichhale),
There are at least four miatakes in 0)4 above picture. They #9 Fkain
to grammar, history, etiquette, drawing ot whatnot. Boo if r>0 ’.to Ind
them. Then look at the scrambled word Below and unseramkle by swieh-
lag thetotters around. Breda yourself 20 cfor each of t he audtaW yak find,
and M for the word if you unscrambie AOs the inumpegumweni exptai*
' ‘ mucanushowneariooghama
J ' ,
«462Dl
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Aar erronecus rehlectlon upos the eharacter, utandine ar
repatation or nr fadividaat, tirm. comcern, or compereuen teas
sear teems m too eolumna or The New-Giob. will be eladiy
corieeted When called to tee attentioi of tee editor. U k eat
the intention of ten mewapaper to wrongly am or injur ear
taMVAaL tirm........ er orporation aad correctione will to
made when warraated to prominenu, mwathe wrone pub-
Meted, taann ee arUeta._____________________________
terWBBBa or THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIBCULAT1ONB
• *
egg
is incredible. But even more incredible does the great alnde,‘the former owner of New-
national thirst for each luried tales seem to me. I place.”
feel that this la one of the greatest vigneef doee MrFotherbury’a surprise was not
donee in the nation. It throws every note of good so little.
ya Burnt rw sMAujt^n FAFALan advance
_-ipgnais*sm-f*
1 Year ................ MAS
eertvtion te Amarnie ball. News Ie Ci
. ■ Buaday.
' Breakfast: Poached egg an Melba
toast, stewed raleins.
Lunch: ‘Mushroom soup, head let-
tuce with peanut butter dressing
(meds by thinning peanut butter
with milk).
Dinner: Roast chicken er pork,
cooked spinach, asparagus, combina-
tion salad of celery, earrots and
pees molded in gelatine, baked Apple.
Monday. \'
Breakfaat: Caddied egg, crisp ba-
eon. genuine wholewheat muffiss.
Lunch: Cooked pumpkin, string
bean, shredded lettuce. ____
Dinner: Salisbury steak, baked
persnips, boiled turnips, salad of
quartered cucumbers, pineapple souf-
fle with whipped cream.
Taeaday.
Breekfast: Cottage cheese, Melba
toast, baked apple.
Lunch: Boiled potatoes (unpeeled),
cauliflower, cooked beet tope.
SYNOPSIS: Veronica Md Tom aresthe 24th of June. He also knocked I “Mr. Fotherbury, you’ve never
engaged. But their betrothal dinner | me out in your corridor on the 25th found the abbot's grave because there
is Interrupted when Loxton commons of Juns." never was such an abbot. Doesn't his
> ( A
4 IP I
HOWE IN PHILADELPHIA.
On September 27, 1777, General
William Homa, a British officer, en-
tered Philadelphia efter defeating
Washington nt Brandywine two weeks
earlier.
Howe is the officer who command-
ed the British at the famous Battle
of Bunker Hill in 1775. After this
battie, Howe was victorious at Long
Island, defeated Washington at I
White Plains and captured Fort
Washington and Lee. He settled down
in New York for the winter of 1776-
TL
He again took the field in June,
1777, Desiring to capture Philadel-
phis, but fearing the dangers of a
long march across country, he sailed
down the coast and up the Chesa-
peake bay as far m Elkton, where
he landed August 18.
Marching northward, Howe met
■MaBNcM November A 008, Pubtlebied «p Be R E Mum
Jan L tete to Jen L IMA
BNMhtod to The Amartte OI.H News PtoBAtae Ooto»oas.
Blate ead Filial im tmetL
Gene A. Howe Editor ate Pubutaser
Wbur C Hawk- Osecvel Nmmmm*
__________Fhone conneetins au 4rpantment OCR
Oxly mornina aad aventng newspaper vubllahud tn ate Paa-
andle egunt». Coven tee Panhandle of Teuma, Beetom New
■calm Southem OetoraCs aad Wensera Oklabeme trow it to
M team la ndvnnce at Denver, Dallaa, Bor Wordh. Oktahoma
Ci aad other lum carvyiue eomplete Omewtea______i
Entarad m eiam mattar as the aaatattu, at Amariule,
Texaa, under Ite Asa at Mared to im
. cession in the vaulted corridor, new person who was found in possession
breakine first person: pay prices that would have made lit up by electric bulbs, and issued of the book stolen from your library,
“ u.-.i . * - Nr. Fotherbury. But ha now restores
Anawer There is no renaos
maeot totals ate she at yoaq•
eea ata at ite tendeney to puk
The eame tozemia whieh causd
Usm uauulty aftedts the t eli
'A t NEVER MSARO 1
SUBMARINEP) OF ONE, SIR •
NETHER AMERICANS
I NOR MONGOS use
X ANVTHING LIKE,
•E--TNAT/J
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS,
Irregular Pulse.
.....Bernaise C. J. wzitesL “At one Ltime
my pulse will register W. at another time
M. fee no apparent runs Hu this
chanie la pulse any signiticance for a
wall *i" of MF'
nave: Your pulse will be much lower
when you ere renting; aad much fanter
after exerclainu. Thia is perfectky normali
tea wuch a yariation as you note should
not oecpr while you are qulet. If so. It
is borsmo at a varyine amount at aaa
pressure againat your heart. This is due
to tmproper food, eating tee hastily, over-
eatine. end «amy food oombl nations.
Nem-fat-formiie Folds
Question- Tntereted writes t "Fleam give
me a 1M M feeds that do not ‘produce
fat."
Anawers The foods which produc the
moot fat are the ceteeis and the fatty
foods. All tee net can be said to he pon-
fat-forminE. There are hundreds at them
otter foods, ead in selectine a diet all
you have to de ie to eliminate everythine
made from i irish or dour, and cut down
m oik and fate.
ItawerlM Tenalls.
Questlon—Mr F. W. H. actol “Would
" 'A
TECHEP
_,I6_AN
Recently a woman wrote B lurid book diselosingthe
shortcomings and infidelities af her divorced husband.
The book has become a beet caller, has brought in $20,-
000 for movie righto and has secured the writer a posi-
tion oa a New York newspaper.
All of which shows the high price fl rat-person gos-
sip pays today!
Ia Grandmother’s day, no breath of scandal about .
a family was allowed to leak out, if tight locks Oa family silently, fallen in behind ue. My ing
wkeletons and integrity a* the part ef family friends no word to anybody.
public ha weald have been a stranger.
• B •
Things happen to change the atatus of a name.
Just a abort time ago it was announced that,
thanks to a circus argument, the time-honored «M>
tom of opening the spring crcus season with a Ring-
ling Brothers performance would be abandoned next
paar.
For a moment It looked as though Jerry would
bo ia ths ring for a little serap ia which the circus
crown worn by John Ringling erstwhile art con-
noisseur end Floridian, would ba at stake
However, the colortul J. Ringling doesn’t fune-
tion that way. He baai learned a lek since Be Md
his three brothers started their amazing careers by
charging three pins admission to a show ia the
family ban.
Wherefore, Ringling appeared suddenly ac the
purchase of the string of showa which Muggivan
bod so shrewdly merged—John Robinson’s, Hagen-
bosk's, Al G. Banes', Sparks’ and eome others which
formed the American Circus Association. Thus,
overnight, a great circus monopoly grew out of the
circus game which the Ringling lads had started.
August, the father at the boys, had been a harness
i* Mxfireger, la- Md John, wbM the circus
finally took some tart of eispe, was a ckbWn and a~
singer.
Dinner: Roust mutton, cooked
beets, cooked lettuce, salad at en-
dive and celery, prune whip.
___________ Wednesday.
Breakfast: ‛ Coddled egg,, genuine
wholewheat bread aad butter, stew-
ed figs (fresh or canned).
Lunch: Con (canned), cooked spin-
ach, cucumbers. 4
Dinner: React beef, oyster plant,
mustard greens, salad of shredded
cabbage, stewed apricots.
Thursday.
Breakfast: Toasted breakfast food
with cream (no sugar), ripe or stew-
ed peaches.
Lunch; Staffed eslery, non-starehy
vegetablegotp. - "—-----------
Dinner: Baked or broiled rabbit,
cooked carrots Md peas, McCoy sal-
ad. ice cream.
Friday.
Breakfast: French omelet on Melba
toaat, applesauce.
Lunch: Baked pumpkin, okra, let-
tuce.
Dinner: Broiled sea bass, cooked
chayotes, cooked spinach, salad of
sliced tomatoes or lettuce, no dessert.
f t Satrdayl 4
Breekfast: Dish of wholewheat
mush with butter or leream, pear
sauce. ' i'- ' *.♦ 4 —02 '
Lunch; Fint of buttermilk, 10 or 13
dates.
Dinner: Roast eat- with Melba
toast dressing, baked grated small
earrote and Turnips, cooked lettuce,
salad at tender raw spinach leaves,
gelantihized milk with prune juice and
vantages, and attention, in the faith that inherited _ .
weakness can Bo overcome.. -------------- Ihtau Thiz, then, lx the former owner
Certainly it should be encouraging to parents whose-- “ --- * '
children are net at the head of their elasses. Bet it
eeF- f
■ • / i,l ge 11
-.ni
■ T 1
AMARILLO DAIlY NEWSl
While the gravity of the Borger situation,
brought to a head by the murder of District At-
torney Johnnie Holmes, U act to be minimized,
there seems little justification tar such a drastic
measure aa martial law. Almost a dozen Texas
Rangers are on the ctound conducting a thorough
investigation. Clem Calhoun, a special prosecutor,
has been cent to Borger by Governor Moody. It la
true there have been no arrests and it may be true
that ae cm will be conticted as the slayer ef Holmes,
bet it ie doubtful if the presence of soldiers would
alto; these facts materially.
Tho. solution ia Borger is the breaking up of the
crime ring by the arrest and conviction of its lead-
srs. The national guard is not a detecttvs organiza-
r lion.
‘ Sending troops to Borger would give the city a
blech eye Before the rout of the country that iq ua-
deserving. There have been numerous murders ie
Borger, Md there have been ugly threats and alle-
gations smacking of a conspiracy in lawlessness. But
it is also an escaped convict—”
“Good gracious 1“ exclaimed Mr.
Fotherbury.
f 3 "i N
62.2)
The Daily News to an independent Democratie
newspaper, publishing the news impartially, and
eupporting what 2 belleves to be right regardless
of party petit lea. ,
-77
1
the
in
■- o
7
There may be little comfort ia the knowledg»
that others have problems as well as ourselves but
there to a certain satisfaction in knowing that we
are not clone. It to a fact that Europe, too, has a
farm problem which to m serious, if not mord ae,
than that which we Selieve we have hero.
Dr. J. G. Lipman, director of the New Jersey Ag-
ricultural Experiment Station, has recently returned
Eroman —Europran _ visit and , reports thirty the
European statesmen are concerned with a pressing
problem of farm relief.
According to Dr. Lipman, the European farmers
are complaining bitterly of the unfavorable price
situation. Farm laborers are deserting tho coun-
tryside for work in the towns and eities. Farmers
themselves, burdened with problems and discourage-
ment, are abandoning the fields for the factory, chop
end store of the city. In some places the influx
from the rural areas has canned acute housing
shortage in the cities.
To hoop their agricultural industries from be-
coming completely impoverished is the critical sit-
eation being faced by those ia authority in Europe
but while the European problem closely parallels
the American farm problem, theirs is further ag-
cravated by an acute land problem. Their farms
an set of sufficient acreage to warrant the uta of
" machinery and aborsaving‛eqeipmentandmaztef
the farms are even too small to provide a fair
Standard of living.
In many cases farms are of necessity hept small
through adverse taxation and legislation.
Considering these faets, our American former
still hue things for which he can be thankful.
-"S e"
pee advise a wee of 84 to have
tonalla temoved! They heve bothered
an ead ea fee yeara. Alm have eta
intle rheumatiam, end varieose velins,
■»v»au SMOM fell of podaon
SUascaIPTION RATES BY MAIL IN ADVANCE
In Tsaos. OVItaows andNa Medteoi saas
64
7is date ir\
V)AME RICAN
^HISTORY
■ rav -
J—ac.
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 315, Ed. 1 Friday, September 27, 1929, newspaper, September 27, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1569352/m1/4/: 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.