Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 185, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 9, 1928 Page: 4 of 16
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AMARILLO DAILY NEWS
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Tri-State Pr ss Breezes
•nd certainly cannot be injurod wif
Dr. MeCoy will gladly answer
23
weeks of duch
diet, addressed to him, care of The
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otr party politics.
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one day.
The Woman's Day
"It isn’t her elass, if you m0n your 18th birthday, while you are
side of the colon is always unclean.
inevitably reflect on me and not on
after David promines he will finish
in Kansas City, where Enid
scho6l, y*u will of eoutse take your
(CONTINUED ON PAGE SIXTEEN)
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quickly. “T managed his affairs very
be contented and huppy, Mr. Harr.
(289) BREAD AND BUTTER
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THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE:
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Little Joe
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Sketches and
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Chinese Elm seed and planted it. Now ChRdreae
has 700 little Chinese Elhs about a foot high which
will be transplanted when they are large enough.
Mere seed from China will be ordered. The 700 trees
represent a cash outlay of six or seven dollara.
LETTER
GOLF
of the chargee againet him, and it
cost only a thousand dollars to got
‘Carson to issue a statement to the
presn that he had really seen noth-
Sally put her arms about her moth-
er, and leaned her glossy black head
against the. golden one. "I'll try to
Paper underwear is going to be tht thing during
' the hot weather, according to a fashion writer. Chi-
•page people, however, will etioh to the same old cast-
Iren vogue.
I
ii
Vernon had a day recently, according to R. H.
Nichols of the Record, during which the weather
man ran almost the whole octave of conditions.
wife of a wealthy New Yorker.
In another state Sally and David
believe danger of detection io over,
»
I
As the Abilene Morning News sees one phase of I
the political situation: "Josephus Daniels has de- i
dined to run for vice president on a third party !
ticket in case Al Smith is nominated. No love is lost
but he's the finest, most honorable
man in the world!"
H
A
1
which has been too long retained.
When the food wastes and impurities
finally reach the colon or large in-
teatine there is even a greater ab-
sorption of toxins if the membrane
of the colon is not in a healthy con-
dition
2
“Much crime."* remarks Tom Waggoner in the
Clude News, "is charged to people who will never
pay."
Last nite after suppir pop sod. Well
I bleeve ill go around to the bowling
alley for a little useliss exercize
maybe Ill drop in at the Little Grar d
ferst and see the pickture If Im in
time for the ferst showing.'
And this morning at brekfist ma
“Clarendon people know just exactly how the Waco
people feel," says Sam Braswell in the Clarendo
News.
’
DAILY NEwS
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pontotniee as Amarille,
«a (u. 157. ____
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A year ago, according to 'Fred Story in the Chile
dreaa Post, the county agent bought a quantity of J
HEALTH4MET ADVICE
5225%
zuhnmsenaemzea#55ss
BaznanWen
he News Fubilhfngcompan,
tie Benny J-
Note iBook 1
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Suk
THB RULES
I—The idea of letter golf is to
ohange one word to Mother and do it
in par, a given number of strokes.
Thus to change COW to HEN In three
strokes, COW, HOW, HEW, HEN. '
2—You can change only one letter
at a time.
1—Tea must have a eomplete word,
of common usage, for each jump.
Slang words and abbreviations don’t'
eount.
4— The order of letters cannot be
changed.
One solution is printed on the baek
page.
had fostered in her asserted itself, i
“But, Mr. Rsrr. if I would disgrace
87
F 4
will make your debut in soeiety.that
fall, and, I hope, be very happy with
us and in your new life."
Sally sat very still, her eyes wide
Ff
Noting that the Prines of Wsles is taking up
aviation, Olin Hinkle Intimates in the Pampa Newa
that he’d better strap himself in.
3
1 the jobs. There are the usual letters urging employers
to refuse to hire married women. There are the usual
I letters from the married women themselves, challeng-
ing the world to show just and true cause why they
haven't the same right to work for a home and educa-
' tion for their children as a single girl has to work fori
■ ~
Naaegse
imoms CMt
sault had been provoked by his own bin given to a bewtiful America
mistaken charges against you and gert by an Indian prinee. Prince
Nash. The boy's reputation is cleared . Flanagan, and all the action takea
now and he can go back to college place on bord an ocean liner in the
thin fall. I also saw his grandfather ' middle of the Atlantic, ware the rub
a roller mills with facilities for grind-
bushsis of wheat in a day. In these
1901-Financial panic in New York
began.
phy atune with her new condition and insists on her
right to work, if she wanta to. Only in the rarest case
does one find a wife who admits truth in some of the
single woman’s arguments, or a single girl who looks at
the question impersonally and grants the wife's right
I to work.
H7s-s-s-sT ! R-
76omE WHERES ELSE: ‘
His oTlER HAFF AINT )
COMI’TRU UP HERE!,
voo’ke PUSHN’M UP
TH’ BACK OF A MAMS'
AcoAT, ER UP HIS
$, PANTS LEG: }
Aalz cpdemvpleseqazrqarrurt ££ p
loabw soutbern olrade sod wetmre osttymne. hmm it Os
I Men to Unw of Denver, Dellen. Fers owlahoma
2432
[I
\ip date
American
HISTORY
TRE WHY OF IT
I am only repeating what I have said many times on
i this subject when I say that great sweeping social con-
ditions make obr moves rather than we ourselves. There
would not bo enough working wives to create a prob-
lem if there were not a demand for them which they
are meeting. Wives still would be in homes if ths
great social and economie scheme needed them thre
worse then it needs them somewhere else.
w ■■
-a
OTHER AMERICANS.
A Canadian paper repeats the old protest egainst
7=909. “4906dd-e3
There are still som otd-fashiond mins that um a
, water-wheel for their power, but generally these have
given way to hug
ing thousands of i_____T„_______________,
the grain is crushed between sets of steel or porcelain
rollere. 5010* (To Be Continued)
1
Long ago man learned
to crush grains between
two stones and make a
paste of the fine parti*
des. This he baked in a
srudeoven.------------
Iinan handkerchiefs which Enid had
given her. ' .
Vs"Oh, yes, yea!" Barr answered
SKETCHES at bemby
snNorSIn NY BPiucnu
WEDNESDAY MORNING MAY 9, IBM.
----------NOTICE TO THKP
„apnzuonror"uu,xamoningrm."
— isaideasndaricntisemeerggerrqortorm
ho made wave warranted. * promine
published reference or ertele-----
4 -
’ e
many who are uninformed. The in-
Euruponna"mim.,
Tuas, under the AsS ad-------- _
IDe aad amilinTPress Leasod Who Berrtsa.,
EVERYBODY W All S
The letters have an astonishing similarity. They are
the same today as they ware a year ago. No one has
done any real thihking on the subject. There are the
usual irate letters from men who eqmplsin tha^. they
can't get jobs because 'all the married, women have
them. There are the usual letters from unwed damoaels
wke rave that they can't get jobs because all the mar:
ried women “whoNe got men to support them" have all
Mem
gi
Next the grain was
ground by mortar and
Pestle, later between two
groat stones, one of
which revolved against
tht other.
Every human being has a work to carry m within,
duties to perform abroad, influences to exert, which
'are peculiarly his, and which nd conacience but his
own cm teach. —Channing.
THIS HAS HAPPENED
SALLY FORD, ward of the alate
orphanage since she was four, is
y© ATCAIAG A FSA
WdHiLE SOOZING IS
TA LAND OF m
SLUMBER ATk
A THOUGHT
la It not lawfui for me to da what l wlH with mine
own:—Matt. Hi IL
-A By Williams
ins are absorbed from the feces
’A
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Ni
News. Enelose stamped, addreas-
ed, large envelope fer reply.
COLON CLEANSING
We oecasionally read of aomeone
dine frees breathing aewer gas, but
millions are meeting untimely deaths
because at the beneration and reten-
tion of poisonous gases within the
body's owe sewage systein.
The intestines are divided into two
parts, the small intestine and the
larze intestine which is also called
the colon. In the small intestine
food materials are absorbed after
being chanent by the digestive fer-
ments. A rntural fermentation takes
place through which the various
foods are converted into substances,
which can be asaimilated by the villi
7
1
24
ELM "B .
All civilized people need bread. It is the commonest
food the chggpogt but is the one food rich and poor
alike must have. Wo tire of almost ovary sort of food
except bread and butter. The “broad that mother Mod
to make” often persists as a fond memory of the days
of our youth when we lingered in the kitchen for a hot
slice on baking day.
udes pmrmeneh ekm-er Cesy^pe. num
thickest wells, like an X-ray.
Yes, yes, go on. ma sed, and pop
sed, Thats all I can think of. I never
even went to the movies, yee god <
you dont meen te say you bleeve all
that junk could happen even in a
movie, do you? ma sed, Why certeny,
it sounded perfeckly wonderfil), I
think your terrible not to have
finished it befor• yhu told me at
never happened.
Help aid sucker, pop sed and went
down to the office.
OUT OUR WAY
that she’s suited only to poverty still in school. If there is any news-
and hard werk!" Enid Barr intor- paper publieity, it will be of an in-
rupted passionately. "Look at her,1 nocuous kind, I hope.
Court! She's a born lady! Sho's "Naturally I shall take care that
fine and delicate clear through—" ; any hewspaper investigation will net
“And so is David!" Sally cried in- be able to go back of the stor 1 shall
dignaritly. "He may be middle-claas, I prepare very carefully, and if there
is any hint ef acandal at all, it will
between the New York governor and the North 1
Carolina publisher, but Daniels is a good enough |
politician to know that the poorest way in the
world to belt the Republicans ia to give them the
election by bringing out a third ticket based on
Democratic discontent."
even through the
GRAY COUNTY’S OIL FIELDS.
Hardly a week passes that some development does
not take pla giving impetus to oil field activity
in Gray coant,, and gradually indicating that thin
county soon ’• to lead the entire Panhandle in .
crude oil production. Most significant, when view-
ed from the possible dimensions of the producing
area in Gray county, ia a ebowing Ia the Empire
company's test south of White Deer. Commercial
production tn thts test will open an immense terri-
tory to the south of the present so-called proven
Women, of course, have an equal chanee with the
men to become great politicians. However, they
mustn't be caught Knapp9e ,
ing compromising between young
“That ia another thing..’ Sally."
Courtney Barr interrupted in an al-
most gentle voice. "You must try to
remember net to votes to Mrs. Barr
0.
L ",
Of course I went to protect Moth, neatly. Rand, the district attorney,
sr—" personally attended to the quashing
Courtney Barr cut in with heavy dig — —......— .— —---------
nity. "The important thing ia that ybur graduation from the finishing
ten years. But not so. Let there appear one letter of tiont ARTHUR VAN HORNEthat
protest against employed married women in any newt- the Lady Bountiful is ENID BARR,
paper anyyhere and the editor is buried under the
flood of fetters that sweeps into his office.
AUSTIN l
Ford has been sought by the police l aa your mother in the hearing of
•a a —delinquent. My wife and 11 anyone— Anyone! If we are going to
could not Jossibly-hope to explain protect her, we muat begin now."
Clyde Warwick urges business men to support the '
movement for a Canyon High school band. He de-
clares in the tanyen News that "good musical or-
ganisations are essential and a good band ia one -
of the most desirable for the public school."
BY ALLENE SUMNER In Capital City, location of the
No phase of our modern life items to brihg such a orphanage, Sally ie recognized by
bloat and a moan and a general to-do whenever it ia | one of a crowd of little orphans,
mentioned aa the working wife- not that wives, most ’ ehaperoned by a beautiful “Lady
of 'em, haven't always worked, but I mean the wage- Bountirul." Quiek action on the part
earning, eight-bours-a-day or less, outside-the-home of the barter diverts attention from
working wife. One would think that by thia time she | Sally. Sally learns from aa eastern-
would bo casually accepted. We have known her nearly ' er, who annoys her with his atten-
than in the colon. Constipation and
obattpatioh"mubt therefore be over-
come. Until one has learned to do
this through using a sensible diet
and developing a better tone of the
intestinal and .abdominal muscles,
the safest plan is to take one or two
enemas every day to assure a
thorough cleansing- of the colon.
This enema treatmeat should be
used by anyone suffering from any |
kind of disease or disorder. Laxa-
tives are temporarily helpful, but
there are many objections to the con-
tinued use of such remedies which in
the end produce more intestine! irri-
tation. The washing out of the colon
with plain water eannot producs any
1, 0 the movie, O, it was one of those
detecktive erook mystery pickture
do you wunt to heer the story of it '
„ -. : .. i 0 Id love to, ma sd, and pop god
Nash and yourself. He also admit- well, it was called The lanagah
ted that the boy’s anger had been | Ruby and it seems this ruby
in n measure justified, that the as- I werth a fabuloua fortune and it hud
ware it
MARRYING THE RARON.
A German newspaper the other day printed a ques-
tionnaire for ita feminine readers, asking them if
they would (provided thes had the chanee) marry
the trans-Atlantic aviator, Baron von Huenefeld.
And two-thirds of them replied that they would not.
This is interesting, fsi two teasons. First of nil,
it is rather surprisin to knew tkst the Baron,
with his engaging smile and hia monocle, should not
be considered a matrimonial bargain. And, second-
ly. it is surprising to learn that the newspapers in
Berlin are so like the newspapers in the United
States. We had supposed that thia questionnaire
idea ,was-a home-grown product. Apparently it isn't.
MOTHERHOOD'S A JOB
Despite all the hue and cry about the conveniences
of today's woman aa contrasted with the sorry plight
of wives a generation ago, I am convinced that home-
making is a good full-time job for any wife with even
but one ebild. end if she has two or three or four, she
works msny times as hard as the employed woman.
; I have heard wife after wife confide that abaolutaly
। the only satisfaction she gets out of working outside
the home ia that of doing a job rhe enjoyed rather
than that of housework which she despises, because it
rakes every penny she esrns to pay far home jobs for
which she is responsible.
The result, of course, is thst babies sre left out of
the scheme of things, which to me is the only argument
pro and ten working wives, and even then tke question
is not one of duty or obligation tto state, but whether
wivesi are not themseives choosing a lesser thing and
losing a greater one, ------------
“We shall not quarrel about classyour mother, as I have already point-
ed out. After your adoption and
applying the word "American" exclusively to eitizens
of the United States. It points out, with justc,
thst citizens of Canada, Brazil or Chile can just ns
logically apply the word to themselvex.
Many nttempts have been made to find a word
for the United States, and all have fizzled. During
the war the British solved the difficulty by culling
all United States troops "Tanka" — although they
probably didn't imagine how that would sound to
soldiers from Alabama or Texan Someone once
sugested "Usans"; but thst is hybrid that doubtless
will never gsin favor.
Well probably go on saying "Americana"; but we
might remember that our heighbars to the north
end south can use the name es well as we eat. Why
can't seme ef the bright young Ben who coin ad-
vertising names and slogans do something about it?
Surely, it ought to be possible to find a word that
would strike public fancy and avoid wounding the
pride of other American nations. p
testine, Md when this condition ; QUESTION: Mrs. K. L. G. writes i •
exists there is bound to be an ab- intend ukina a Ma vosaao. but an I am
.tin" -C Nli.n. int Maori ? very poor sailor. I drend being neasiek.
sorption Bl Po15onS Into the D100d । Do you think I could overcome this ten.
streame. THE INTESTINAL AB- ; dency to peneiekness If I sat only coruln
sourriox,o. BEEN S„WHiCH ' - pronabiy eru U.s .
HVVL• HAVE- SN EL-INA" vast amount of seasickness ia eauseq gim.
TED IS PERHAPS THE GREATEST . ply by biliousness. Yet, there are many
SINGLE CAUSE OF DISEASE. ! ^T?1* hesith. who become
When the membrane of the’colon ia ■ •ubjectea t any rrsuu" motwoin“Ksuh“Ehn
in a healthy condition, such poison-1 they get when on a ship. This may •D
in* of 4 ho Llood gtream cannot taka due to defects of vision which can M
ing or tne blood stream cannot taxa corrected by properly fitted glaosos. or it^ •
place. In a large percentage of may ho caused by an fmpropr amount of
eases, however, there ia not only a ; the halaneinu fluid in the inner ear. In
dangerous absorption ef poisons from gherlmme"thptogons et 69 xuyhe in
lbs colon but because of phrlypsus : bed .nd lyine in a horleoniai ponttioi .
and kinks in the colon these poison-, Thts will weneral) overcome MssickM a
•M toxins ere occasionally forced e matoa wh or ipi."9))
beck into the smell intestine, where fast, usine only one kind of fruit on a-
they sre even more readily absorbed “M day.
A DOUBLE ONE
Here's something a little different
—go from WORM te TURN In three
end then continue on for fear more
to BACK. One solution is on the
back page.
MAY 9
1502- Columbus sailed from Spain on
his fourth voyage.
1711—Spaniards captured Pensacola,
Florida
1861—Confederate congress recog-
nised the existence of a state
Lz
injury to the membranes or produce
a partial paralysis as claimed by1 sed. Wat was the piekture like,
' - — Willyum? and pop sed. Wat pickture
personal questions on health and , lean wate
" " m l . After several
next summer. We have an estate on
Long Island, you know.
“Aa my ward and aa my distant
.2. .. . , . I relative, you would not be particu-
my mother, why don t you let me 1 , but our friends
go? I can marry David and no one i ", 2 ... . A 11.
till ever know that I have a I wouid meet you.caanally and hetho
. , less surprised when it became known
mother Qhat Mrs, Barr and I had decte to
“That is very sensible, Sally," adopt yu as our daughter. All our
Courtney Bsrr nodded, a gleam of friends and acquaintances know that
kindlineas in his cold eyes, "and I it has heen a great grief to ua that
have tried to make your mother be we have no children, and I believe
lieve that your happiness would be our action ir this matter would be-
best assurred by your sticking 3o casion no great surprise. The adop-
your own elans-"| tioif itev will * take plre before
eleansing treatment It is necessary
for anyone to wait two or three deys
after taking the last enema before
the bowels will move by themselves.
This is just because the bowels have
been completely eleenod out at least
two days in advance.
KEEP THE COLON CLEAN! If
you do not have two er three bowel
movements daily, take one or two
enemas each day antll you learn how
to overcome eonstipation.
I will be glad to send you a apodal
article on the eaun and cure of
constipation. Juat send a seif- ad-
dressed, stamped, large envelope and
ask for the article called "The Cause
and Cure of Constipation."
"farmed eat" to CLEM CARSON the
eaaimer she in-16, and meets DAVID
NABH. student, who is working on
i the Caron fam.. .David bite Carson
when he makes remarks about
Devid's friendship for Bally. They
run awey and join a carnival. David
aa reek's helper and Sally as "Prin
eess La|la.~ erystal gazer.
mysteriously disapeers from the gerla
stateroom, and the captin ia ia lor -
with the gerl and he swears if the
ruby haa not bin given back by mid-
nite he will aink the ship.
My good n isa how thrilling, ma stam
and pop sed. And it aeems a grd)
detecktive happened to be on bo%J
end he was also in love with the ger,
and there was- a famous gang of
crooka from London led hy a be-
tiful adventuress and a handsome
villin, and he was also in love wit \
the gerL
My goodnlss she must of bi
fassinating, ma sed, and pop sed.
She was, and the bewtiful ad-
venturess was fiendishly jelliss, be-
cause it seems she was in love with
all tho men who were in love with
the gerl, and midnite drew neer and
all the paasengers were on deck with
life preservers on in case the ruby
wasent given up by the stroke of 12,
and the captin was reddy with a
bomb to throw in the engine room
and suddinly it become known that
the ruby had a mysterious power of
lighting up at midnite for 5 second
so that it could ho teen no matter
area.
And such has been the bitory of the Grey county
territory for months, er since the famous Bowers
pool south of Pampa .was opened. There haa been a
steady widening of the producing area, with • mount,
ing production almost every week. The low price of “4
crude has held down development, but new wells
Tbe Daily New la ar tndepe
newspaper, publishing the e"2. "xr"pemralen, I
supporting what *t believes to be rizht rezare1ee”
yet. 4 4
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
CHAPTER XLU
It as the loving dfstress on Enid
Barr's quivering face that quickly
brought Baity te bewildered, humilia-
ted submission, rather than the eoid
anger and ill-concealed hatred in
Courtney Barr's pale gray eyes. Enid
had left th arm of her husband’s
chair and had drawn Sally to a little
rose-upholstered settee, and it was
with her mother’s hand cuddling hers
compassionately that Sally listened
as the man’s havy, judicial voice
went on and on:
"I am auro, Sally, that when you
have had time for reflection you win
see my viewpoint. Naturally, your
mother’s happiness meana more to
me than does yours, and I believe I
know my wifewell enough to state
positively that a newspaper scendal
er even gossip among our own circle
would cause her the most acute dis-
tress. It shsll be our tusk, Sally, to
see that she is spared each distress.
"I’m sorry te appear brutal," Barr
said stiffly. "But it is better for
us to face the facts, for if our
friends over know . them they will
not mi nee words. If yoa, should
come into our home now, as you are,
gosKip would immediately aet them-
selves to dig up the facta. Too
•many people already know that Xally
that your mother ie determined to
have you, to fit yu for the station
to which she belongs. I believe she
is making a mistake, both from yqur
standpoint and from hers, but I am
willing to agree to a sensible ar- . - -
rangement. Our plan now. Sally, island blank, while her bewildered ue-
to put you into e conservative, rather happy mind tried to picture the fu-
obseure girls’ finishing school in the ture which, Courtney Bsrr wes out-
south. I have several relatives -'poor | lining for her. At last she shook her
reletions.' ’l suppose you wiuld All , head, aa if to elear eway the mists
them—in the south, end it is my s«g-' of doubt and. bewilderment. Her
gestTon tbit you enter school es my 1 mother hsd Uken Solly’s little lex,
ward-mine, you understand, not your ; cold gands and was cuddling them
mother's, so that any suspicion as to ! against her cheeks, bringing a finger-
your real psrenUge will rest upon ' tip to her lips oceasionally.
me, rather than upon her.” He arched ' "Poor baby! And—poor mother,
his eyebrews af Sally, looking rather Enid whispered brokenly, and the
consciously noble, and she inoddja spell was broken. The hard lump of
miserably. "During "the two yekk unhappiness and resentment that had
that you will be in school-" been aching in Sally"* throat aince
“Two years!" -SaHy echoed blankly, i Courtney Barr had begun to apeak
Two years more of loneliness, of not 1 melted in tears. They wept in each
belonging, of being an orphan! other’s srms, while Enid’s husband
“Two years will pass very quickly,” | walked impatiently up and down the
Courtney Barr assured her. "Enid room.
please control yourself! I am infinite- * hen the storm hsd spent itself,
ly sorry to distress you in this man-, Sally .remembered David again, and
not, but Jt ia the only sensible thing paim and fear contracted her heart
to do." 1 '< , sharply.
“Yes, 'Court," Enid choked and "Did you see Pavd, Mr. Barr?"
buried her exquisite facgan her small.' She sat up and dabbed at her wet
useless-looking white hands. | checks with one of the exquisite sheer
our extraordinary interest in a run- "Yes, sir,” Sally bowed her head
away orphan. Do you agree with lower so he might not see her tears,
me. Sally He tried to make hi: Mrs. Barr and r'wil ,
voice kindeubut hiz 7” were casual remarks about my pretty young
cold, and hard ". steel. ‘ , ward in school down south, until our
“Yes, sir.'.Sally agreed .a her friends become accustomed to
meek, institutional voice. But she You will be registerd as
felt 80 sick with shame ahd antrSauy Bsrr. a distant relative of my
that her only desir then.was it own and my ward. It ia even prob-
run and run and run until shefounad would anwine o
a haven in Dav. . arms. At the I with a ahort tie
thought, some of the spiritedness
which her few weeks of independence
a.
- +°Whein“tnn"podyn.....enervatea guAYTSKONZ.ANB.AX8WKHA.Ea:
through wrong habits ef living, and , . atong really..made of.atone, and »
the .mall intestine does not have ; "OAhswut ioniol
enough energy with which to force 1 rioue kinda. They sre made of urie nela
along the unused food materlals, the i eryatala uratranoxalate.of. lime, phoephau
result to that variouswastes and tox- | boat ’ simm, guhendnte, Um'TmK?
Thene eryntala sad minerali sru eementc
tocether into guferently shaped atones, but
are rarely of the same composition A
ordinary stones, of the noil. Many of these
stones can be dissolved under proper
dietetic treatment if the ehemietey of -
the Urine is properly changed, the cemeni.
ed eryatals lose their adherenee to
othev and out in the form of
"xravel. Such remedies as muriatie neid
are zometimes used te diasolve these stone*.
Moot people suffer from colitis in but the safeet and baneat method is througN
a greater or less degree. This simply | Ehntechemiatvy of the urine by
moans inflammation of ths large in- — -
and they go freely eboat. MR8.
STONE, matron of the orphanage,
follows Sally and confronts her la
the sideshew. Agaim GUS. the bar
her. comes to her rescue and she
manages to get away. She and Da-
vid flee and plan to get married
The preacher to saying the first
words of the service when Mrs.
Stone and Eaid Barr rush in and
stop them. Raid confesnes there
that she is Sally's mother. Sally
eliags to David, bet Enid insists she
must not marry him. Finally, Sally
agrees to go with Eaid, but only
kum a hhdu . —
HEROES ARE.MADE -NOT BORN, 5
0,5 t
538
place in our home as our daughter.
i=i
* enSahikkisf*Zno. FAYABUB IN V20,
Ihsmmasasazg
MDfBtRS~Or TBE AUBITJJBEAO OF C1RCOCAT1$NB
agd l
mink eoats and French perfume and weekly facials and! .... - . . ..
ahis eellegq work and come for her
All the letters are so futile. Not one of them exam- 1 later. In Kansas City, where Enid
pies anything but the earth-old habit of human sophia- | he. ne"-Lound dauEhterSaiy
try-of fu construing one’s own condition, one's own meet; « "J huahand, COETNEY
niche in life, that it satisfies one’a.philosophy. ; SAKE. the Tirot time The EirLn
in other words, the single girl's philosophy demands , * To.Aim .crstallize"L"hen .he
ear on the working wife, until she herself is a wife, tella her that t0 proteet Enid the!
when, if she wsnts to work, she crestes a new philoso- cannot lake Sally la their home just
have been drilled in sufficient number of different
areas of Gray county to leave ne doubt as to the
potential output of the county. A few months ago
lttle thought was ziyen to Gray as s heavy produc-
ing district, but today its daily output is almost half
thst of Hutchinson.
The proving up of new areas by such important
wells as that of the Empire company may not give
any noticeable stimulus to Panhandle activity just
at thia time, but they remind us of the wide bound-
arfro of an eil field that soma day wilt ba produe-
inging many timea ita prosent output. Another re-
minder, tee. ia that Pampa, while having doubled in
popalation in the past year, haa had but just a taste
of what is to come >a city growth and industrial
expansion.
City building note by E. Q Perry la tbs Plain-
view News: "Cities do not grow, they are built. A
pretty city, a convenient city is not an accident. It is
the result of careful planning. Only recently has
there been any great amount of attrntion given to
the building of a city. Boston, and other New Eng-
land cities show no indications of early day plan-
ning. The cities just grew and as many say the
streets followed the cow paths. New Boston er thst
poftion that has been built during the past half
century is as modern and convenient as any other
large city. Today all cities are being planned ia
■■ vance or their buiaing. cy ptammmgtrmw--
pcheme and ia being studied by all growing cities."
I* ’’
1 '
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 185, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 9, 1928, newspaper, May 9, 1928; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1570156/m1/4/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.