Transcript
Page 1: D£Y mow Youe * * Lrl/Sr!* AY Folks AZoun' .* .« Efiik V A ... · CHEERFUL CHIRPS (BY “DEL.” i jk > \ Mostly nonsense, except in those rare intervals when a real idea comes along

! CHEERFUL CHIRPS(BY “DEL.” i jk >

\ Mostly nonsense, except in those rare intervals when a real idea comesalong and is grabbed off.

The Great American Home

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Efiik SOPPEtZ- V A

George W. McDougall—“Scotty”MeDougall—of Williams, where hejustice of the peaces, confidentiallywhispered to us the other day thatthe reason he was born in this coun-try instead of Scotljfnd was to savethe price of a ticket over here.

Speaking about Scotch women, IkeVeasey wants to know how about theone who wouldn’t use perfume on awindy day?

Speed Campbell says the firstmountain lion he ever shot was asquirrel. The first time he hit himhe missed him altogether. The nexttime he hit him he hit him in thesame place. Then he took a stone andknocked him outa the tree into thewater and he drowned.

Did you ever stop to think thatyour mother’s brother’s father’s cow’sbrother was gn ox?—Herb Hilkins.

How long has it been since you’veheard of a woman being thrown bypatching her heel in the hem of herskirt?—Ted Spencer.

Lindbergh advises us by air mailthat aviators don’t put their money inair pockets.—Dr. Flett.

A foreign critic writes that Ameri-can women don’t show enough hau-teur. Why expect them to showeverything?—Jim Giddings. .

The days are gone when chaperonsWatched over social pleasures.

The young folks hardly give a careWho overlooks their measures.

A modern girl can easilyForget the chaperon—

Her mind is taken up with howTo get the chapalone.

—CHARLIE LEHR.

Johnny Matthews was stumped theother night when after telling his lit-tle girl that all ships are called “she,”she asked how come that fightingships are called “men of war.”

The first thing no married coupleshould neglect having is a wedding. —

Ray Simpson.

A1 Beasley was strolling along thestreet oustide the insane asylum atPhoenix and across the wall in theyard he saw a man standing by aflower bed with a fish-pole and lineapparently waiting for a bite.

“How many you caught?” A1 asked.“You’re the ninth,” the man said.

If self-preservation really is thefirst law of nature, then how comeyou see so many physical wrecks?—Tom Bellwood.

When you recollect that as a manthinks so is he it explains why somemen are never.—George T. Herring-ton.

Some of the people who registeredlast week at Flagstaff hotels:

Lynn C. Doyle.W. E. R. Nottman and wife.I. Wood Knott.Urv Kacid.B. A. Child.I. B. Damm.Iva Beeke.C. D. Monk.Jack Assan Colt.Doane Teller.Perley Gaites.Lotta Legge.Ophelia Legge.U. Seymour Legge.Hiss Takin.VS Kant Igo.Mae B. Swift.Abie Liever.Ivan Offuliteh.JKtrry Legge.Grinnen Barrett. 1Heidi Elley.G. Howitt Fils.Derr T. Foote.Y. B. Frade.Ella Phant.Phillip McCann.

Carter Joy is another of our fre-quent fall-guy stand-bys who breaksinto poetry this week. Carter war-bles:

I willbuild me a house by the side ofthe road,

Where the automobiles pass by;I will find me a nook which is

screened from the cold,Where the road is never dry.

I will buy me a team of horsesstrong,

And hitch them fast to a chain.I will be on hand when the cars come

alongRight after the first spring rain.

I will watch the road from my shel-tered nook

Till the wheels get firmly stuck,Then I’ll saunter forth, with a friend-

ly look,And sing as a man in luck.

I will wait till every means they’vetried,

With blocks, jacks, chains andpower;

And when they are thoroughly satis-fied

I will chant: “This is my hour!”

Then I’ll bring my team with ropesand chains

And fasten them firm to the bar;I will pull from the mud the soiled

remainsOs an erstwhile beautiful ear.

But before they start on their wayagain

I’llcollect a handsome fee.They will surely remember the good

time whenThey were pulled from the mud by

me!>!

Yes, I’llbuild me a house by the sideof the road,

Where the automobiles go by.And I’ll earn in one spring enough

greenbacksTo last me till I die.

Arch Ude sends in the followinglittle poem, reminiscent in its style ofthe late Frank L. Stanton:

Just a’wearying for you,For a drink what would I do?Longing for it, wond’ring whenWe can have it back again,Thirsty, don’t know what to do,Just a’wearying for you.

Just to taste a schooner’s foam.Foot on rail and feel at home,Bubbles breaking in the glassAs they did of old, alas!Country’s dry and I’m dry too,Just a’wearying for you.

Every day I miss you more,Miss the sawdust on the floor,Miss the bottles in a row,Ice and shakers and—you knowIfwe had them what we’d do,Just a’wearying for' you.

Listless since you went away, .Dull, in everybody’s way,If I had you here tonightI’d go busted and get tight,Lots of other folks would too,Just a’wearying for you.

Evening comes, I miss you more,Thoughts of root-beer make me sore,Seems that thirst just can’t be curedAnd it cannot be endured.What the Hell then can I do?Just a’wearying for you.

Says Hopi IndiansNeed No Subways

No one who has seen the Hopi vißlages perched high# on their rockypromontories overlooking the dry butgorgeous Arizona cleaert can be sur-prised at the victory of the Hopi In-dian in the long-distance races. Hecomes from one of the toughest stocksin America, endowed with endurancethanks to the age-long battles withnature.

His people have always been good.runners. It is not uncommon for aHopi farmer to travel twelve or fif-teen miles to his corn patch and backin a day, and to do this day in andout. Unlike his neighbor the Navajo,he 'does not use horses but goes onhis own lightly shod feet. Thus froman early age he is trained to covdrdistance—and covers it at a speedwhich would be trying to most whitemen.

The New Heavyweight Challenger

His clirnate is at the same timekind and cruel. So scant is the rainthat he has trouble in raising a fewears of colored corn and his desertbeans and squashes. But it is alsoone of the most invigorating and

#

healthful climates in the world, sunnythroughout the year, with a cold, drywinter and a summer relieved by coolnights.

The Hqpis are true children of thedesert. Although they long since

ceased to be nomads, they have notacquired that softness which the des-ert tribes of Arabia say makes theweakness of the settled, peoples whohave become farmers in the oases.Even New Yorkers in such a climate,

: COUNTY CHRONOLOGY l* *

• Compiled from the Files of The +

• Coconino Sun, Twenty Years +

• Ago This Week. *

**+**?*++****?*+*Commencement week at Normal.

Graduates were the Misses ConstanceDecker, Mary Studley, Alta Hubbs,Grace Dutton, Edna Newman andJephea Perkins. Prize essay anddeclamation contest awards made byT. E. Pollock, H. E. Campbell andD. M. Francis to Miss Lillian Terry,Miss Irene Johnston, Miss BerthaSchwalbe, Miss Constance Decker andMiss Mary Studley.

Hay selling at Safford at $9 a ton.

Miss Carrie Rickel returned from athree weeks’ stay in Los Angeles.

Miss Vera Greenlaw, who had beenattending Normal at Tempe, returned.

Misses Grace and Mary Kidd homefrom Tempe normal.

Miss May Hicks home from Univer-sity of California.

Misses Edna, Grace and Lila Vailreturn from school at Fayette, Mo.

Mrs. E. A. Sliker entertainedNormal graduates and alumni.

Charles Stemmer home from teach-ing in the southern part of the state.

Edwin and Bertram Babbitt returnfrom Notre Dame, Ind., where theyattended the university.

Following pupils of the secondprimary neither absent nor tardyduring the month: Howard Miller,George Moyer, Benjamin Rickel, RuthStearns, Anna Vishno. Elsie Dietz-man, Bennie Taylor-. Fourth grade:Dennie Harrington, Goldie Imel,P.ryon Jones, Pauline Rickli, KyleSutherland, Ruby Garing, Dolph Treatand Fletcher Fairchild.

In Which DickIs Some Sarcastic

Grand Canyon, Am..._

June 13, 1927.Editor, Coconino Sun,Flagstaff, Arizona.My Dear Editor:

| Once upon a time it was thoueht by

I many that a proper and sufficient! highway from a point on the NationaliNjld Trails highway to thq Grand Can| yon national park was a necessity andI would be a good thing for the state| and nation and all concerned.

Os course this was an absurd ideain the first place and now since theLees Ferry bridge may be built andthe North Rim of the Canyon sograndly featured, the idea of a roadon the South Rim fades into a mistyand distant future.

I wonder if you can advise what,if anything, is to be traded off in

order to secure a $1,300,000 roaci pro-gram for a highway to Zion nationalpark and Mt. Carmel?

You will recall that all efforts tosecure an appropriation, or even con-sideration of an appropriation, for aroad to the Grand Canyon nationalpark, met with, “You sell us the Trailand we will see what can be done.”

It may be that there would be achance to get a highway to the GrandCanyon on the South Rim if there wasa nice, big, rugged mountain to tun-

nel through and thus have added costsand scenery to be looked at through-windows in the tunnel.

Os course a tunnel could be run un-der Red Butte. If this was done, ashaft could be run to the top of the

Butte and with an elevator one houldgo to the summit and watch the sun-set and dance to the noise of a jazzyorchestra.

I believe that the reason for nohighway to the Grand Canyon na-tional park, on the South Rim, is thatbuilding such a highway is too simpleand inexpensive.

Yours very truly.R. P. GILLILAND.

if they had to travel twenty-four milesafoot to and from their work eachday, might acquire more endurancethan those who survive the daily or-deal of the subway.—New YorkTimes.

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PIN POINTERSForeign titles this year are said

to abound in large numbers, await-ing ( A.me: ‘ican heiresses.. The mar-ket is a little bearish on lions, youmight say.,*

* *

Farmers in Saskatchewan arensing ca-mels instead of horses for'their farm work, says a dispatch.All chased out Ontario, perhaps.

.* .«* * *

Only two wrestling matches inChicago during the • last 20 yearshave been “on the square,” accord-ing to investigators. We didn’tknow there were so many.

' * * *

American girl students have too

much time for dancing and notenough for digging, is the opinion

of Miss Tami Yamanmro, a visiting

student. That, depends, of course,

on what kind of digging she means.* * *

The bee has five eyes, but odds

are-offered that no bee alive couldlook past the loving couple in the

row just ahead last night and seeJhe picture.

0

Residents of Yuma art? being ad-vised to boil drinking water from thecity mains, due to the large amount olriver water going into the pipes with-out proper filtration.

Pinewood DairyPrompt Service and

THE HIGHEST GRADE OF MILK

We invite the public to visit our

Dairy at All Times

Andy MatsonProprietor

Phone 382R4

Ba Itself \mmumm life8 flu n*s From on ? vaccination vmkfc.,tWirtV'S i Cut:ir‘s Liuuid or ±oi.d

if.

The Cutter Laboratory“Tht Lets ratcrytMiit Km-u-.s Hew”

Berkeley (U.S.Lu >£c) CP.iiorm;.

N .IV—OldStyle Powder and Til!Vaccines still madefor those who ot-zicx *.h x.

! .

| [1“ Doc WIS' E"j li —--nil

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fW.ANY A MAM UDSEsTWITH INSPIRATION ANDGAINS BACK WITH"PERSPIRATION /

PRINT SHOP CALLERS

Si YOU MUSTUT THIk'K I AM QUiTTiWq 1jc, VO UP- rAPSft. BECAUSE I POUT |*I fJKE IX, EDITOR = FACT IS, VUE

'to Dour fzzl l;:-e we gau rI f? AFFORD IT, WITH EVERYTHING I

?‘-'T7 SO HIOH A:

/""folks, thercls^'|pgSL. MOTHIUE BETWEES4

“fiytCT THIS GUY AUD (STARVATION BUT j

fI-tk s three farms \

U \ I awd $3”. 000 IU!¦.

MICKIE SAYS—

' A WEV^'SPAPER A( »<3 CLUITE A JOB SEX TVI BOSS, \

J "\OU CAU PLEASE SOME. OF '; TV)' PEOPLE ALL OF TH’ TIME,

AMD ALL OF TVl' PEOPLE SOMEOF TH' TIME, BUT WO EDITOR.

EVER. PLEASED ALL OF TM'PEOPLE ALL OF TH‘ TIME' "

kSOTH' BOSS DOES THE

BEST HE KIU AMD LETS IT )

<3O AT THAT j—’

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'. :

THE COCONINO SUN FRIDAY, JUNE 17, 1927Page Two

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