Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 123, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 16, 1930 Page: 4 of 20
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OUT OUR WAT
THOUGHTS
STRAIGER TIA TTRUT
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WESTAMARILO
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IS TO HOLD COMMUNION
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The Daily News la u M
the mews impartially, and
ABE MARTIN
4
•l
Grammarslips
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Si
t
APPETTE!
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8
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would cause my
be dibturhed by
FLAPPER FANNY SAYSi |
pour wejght to too little far
heluht.
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WELL,
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Police Also Fail
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Only skin deep.
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buasdlMkaRkzkxkadaulcmshmanansisidnuda
HIGH
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20c88
•WHERE
SMALL
we 60?
Mr. and Mra, R. O. Lehman re-
turned Monday night from • two
weeks” visit in Dallas and Houston.
People who can’t stay en frisky
horses are better ill.
Mra. Laverne Calhoun, secretary to
City Manager W. N. Durham, returned
yesterday morning from a brief trip
to Dallas.
QucxfN
COME. “
vokE
0EV*o
era sen
n
g
I
The happiness of the wicked passes away Ube
a torrent.— Racine,
1
Ha has been hero longer than any other Death
>a senator. ineluding Calhoun and Bee Tillman.
..;
y‘
"Art ion by certain Demoeratie senators on the tar-
rienay, making life in its later periods more satis- iff has made no the laughing stock of the real mases
boon the persistent champion of cotton here and has
fathered nearly all the Important cotton legislation.
He was author of the Smith-Lever rattan futures act
whieh eontrois and stabilises the exchanges and his
' pushed plenty of farm aid bills. During the war it
, was Smith who presented the measute which lad to
the creation of Muscle Shoals for munitiona la war.
time and fertiliser in peacetime. He was chairman of
the immigration committee when it produced and pass-
1 ed the first restricted immigration set over Wilson’s
MAYOB VISITS PARENTS
WINTERING IN CORPUS
I dident axually find a dime, I sed.
Well then yea gods, whats all the
OH, ANY-
WERE:
JU$T to
Irb A
PAC
TOEAr
-E—V
7AAmw-H--TEPsOnE
-ME wh4- PcTona
9
V
"apees" dodge the law against ballyhooiva their tick-
eta in the streets. Thus barricaded against the traf-
icmm uomang/
uFWE'UA
IwWf
ouaxuho
New that Tessa Guinan is back in the “glowing
gulch," the wisecracks once more flow like water,
and it seema just like the good old days before the
Wall Street crash.
S
For years, one or two crowd realty dealera epeeiaU
ized is such locations ‘and me seed great fortunes.
CAMPAIGNS START.
To use an old expression, “polities is getting
hot.* Jim Young of Kaufman, one of the dozen ea-
trants in the governor's race, will be ia Amarillo to-
night, Gregory Hatcher, who would stop up from
the treasurer’s offiee to governor, will follew elose
on his boels. Others will be here seen to address
voters.
Contrary to the usual custom, the candidates for
state office are heading out toward the Panhandle
early in the campaign. Heretofore, they ignored this
seetiom, many not coming here at all, sad if so,
: usually late in the race.
Local voters, as they become more numerous,
also are more important in the eyes of the down-
state candidates. The Panhandle is reaching that
stage that it represents the balance of power at the
" tvoting box.
' The candidates are eoming, and we should zive
them a bearing. It Is our opportunity to loam how
they stand on the major lessee. especially issues
of concern to this partieular section. Well hove a
chance to get nequainted with all the eandidates
before July M.
JIM. \
we WAAGNEO HE WAS)
Hss-,ogr2
/eAclencke I
uRE COMB me
auoa
Loaf,* Hymn - “Break Thou the
Bread of LUe," scripture.
"o"f* iseo. The M *rdheh "y
wto the house of the
erba 12:7.
_________ partaking
of the loaf, prayer—"Thanks for the
Walt Mason Himself
The Worlda Most Famous Rhymster
16
FuAhg-.
oSSo
wocuoop
E4ih
fi
Al2
O Meal
. t
,T NEws,
$ wap .
"SEi
SezHu8h:
[hITSA TOLGEW V/HEM Y»
"WORK FOR VOUR BOARD
AMD THEN LOSE VOUR
WAE'TTEO
3 pE
>,
•iE
32
A modi ma l service club for young women in secre-
tarial and kindred jobs reports that of the 1500 girls
who joined during the last year, most of them suf-
' fared from ailments brought about by trying to live
in one of the one-room-and-gas-jet spots with which
New York is cluttered.
Trying to “keep going" on the salary of an office
worker, the girl must prepare her more-or-less mania
on a one-burner plate. The result is dietetically dis-
astrous. The girl is badly fed and develops anemia.
Mental ailments arising from loneliness brings
hundreds of the girl members to this clinie annually.
They grew depressed and despondent.
Physicians connected with the place say that there
la a definite Manhattan malady which, for want of a
technical term, they have called “one roomitis."
, GILBERT SWAN,
(Copyright, IMO, NEA Service, Inc.)
/
I
Aulwnggxas
A $R w© 9 $upl
AWAWMMMKSK
1
mi rvaLIG
> mo ehaipeter. Meedtoe ee sup
a. oeueoru, or seeueeatton IMt
------
i the wrone pee-
2,
RIGHT OR WRONG
“Be sure you’re right,” Dave Crockett said, “and then
serenely go ahead;” and many, as you push along, will be
convinced that you are wrong. Who can be certain he is
aa--m right when he engages in a fight, or
“The greatest trouble today is that everybody is
demanding hie righto—oil rights, but no duties to go
with them ."—William GIbS McAdoo.
Seen About New York
NEW YORK, April Ik—Millions have been made
by real estaters who learned how to convert a two-
by-four open space on Broadway iato a rentable
property the site of an average doorway.
Meet of these have been converted into ecops for
ticket scalpers and speculators, who are forever
looking for baady camping grounds in the vicinity
of some bit theatrical attraction.
A place hardly broader than a football player’s
shoulders adjacent to a very popular vaudeville
bouse brings more than $4,000 a year. By thus hav-
ing any sort of shelving room off the sidewalks the
so confident my mien and tread, that no one had much
use for me, and wise men sunned my company. For peo-
ple do not like the wight who is convinced he’s always
right They have more friendship for the skate who is in-
clined to hesitate, who will admit, in any case, that doubt-
less he is off his base. And now I gaze with doubting eyes
on all the problems that arise; I do not take defiant stand
on any problem in the land. Whatever side I may ap-
plaud, I know there are great men abroad, wise lads who
have more good horse sense than I can place in evidence,
whose views are opposite to mine, who think I should take
in my sign. And so you find me loath to say that it’s a
pleasant, balmy day, although the skies are blue and
bright and birds are singing in delight. Some men, en-
titled to the floor, may say such weather makes them sore,
and who am I to say they’re wrong, and show such men
where they belong?
(Copyright, IMO, by George Matthew Adama.)
By RODNEY DUTCHER
WASHINGTON, April 16.—The answer te the eon-
sumer’s prayer seems te be Senator Ellison DuRant
Smith of South Carolina.
Smith stands to a elass by himself as the bare ef
the tariff fight. He was the oae Democratie senator
who refused to veto for an increased duty ea anything.
When the tariff lobbyists and the eorporations ia
his owa state brought pressure te beer on Smith be
bad just one answer for them:
“I am opposed to the principle of • tariff for pro-
tection and ahall vote accordingiy."
Oppeeed One Decrease,
When the bow publicity machine of the Republican
National Committee issued ite recent broadalde show-
ing that Democratie setators cast ISIS votes for duty
inrrsssao er against decreases their figuree showed
that although Smith hadn't voted for a single inerens
he had vote dagainst one proposed decrense He hadn’t
intended to spoil his record that way, but it appears
that when the question of cutting the rate ea kaolin
—a clay—came up, Smith just figured that the pot-
tery industry bad received so many tariff favors that
he was opposed to grasting them any more—such as
cheaper kaolin,
in South Carolina thye are important eotton, lum-
ber, tetxitle and rayon interests and these folk all
went to work on their senator. But Smith, while his
solleagues were temporarily or peraistently deserting
the Democratie-insurgent coalition on behalf of in-
teresta in their own states, stood firm all the way.
The fact is that Smith is of the old “tariff for
। revenue only" school and he seems to be about the
। only one left.
He braved the wrath of business interests in hit
“papakss
pREArER
resemouma
AMARILLO DAILY NEWS
« •
to attain this type of eomplexioa
which can be done th rough bu tiding
the general health and through
proper skin cleanliness.
tea need pragtttloneno. paco
Move reewdf anaMued. end
•oar hang of etnidne trom bad
For one resson or another, it has occurred to few
people to eonsider the posaibility that there might
be more Valees in the family than the fabulous
Rudy.’
Thus,‘wGen Ma end Fn Value arrived in town the
other day to visit their widely famed offspring. I
was surprised to meet a very taented young sister,
Ruth. she plays the piano. it seems, and with suf-
ficient quality to make a name for herself one
these days -quite independent of her relationship.
fie regulation, the “spec" can hawk to his heart’s veto,
content and charge what he pleanes. Caroli
BUCK ROGERS, 2430 A. D.
Lester Hanger has a charge aceount
at the Monareh 6 A 10. an’ now when
a mouse trap don’t work, or a piece
o’ jewelry turns green, be kin return
it without a lot o’ quibblin’. I’d like
to see a prison census chewin’
among other things such as schoolin’
an’ environment, how much money
each criminal had whoa he wus con-
victed.
____
wou,sA,nuuAvEM H
Puacaazad
773 .musoue-hecAN
22.28 WD US
tions this evening? and I sed,No sir.
Wich I dident.
clamors for some great reform with fer-
vent “voice and courage warm? When
you are sure you’re right you say that
men who think another way, who don’t
approve your clarion call, are off their
bases, one and all. When I was young
I used to hold that all my views were
good as gold; I was quite sure that I
waa right, which attitude was not polite
to men who differed much from me. on
any scheme or policy. I was so sure that
I was right on everything that was in
sight, and with such vim I went ahead,
but Wnl staff ourelf. Look for tne-
Honal num, such M liver and gall blad,
dvr trouble. Any riri who la as thia M
you are must have a tendeney to extreme
nervonanena. aad this is no doubt what
keepa yen awake at night Yau need phy-
•hooting for? Pop sed, and I Md. I
found a nickel.
Well, the principal le the same, or.
rather I should say the intrist is the
same oven though in this race the
principal ie eul in half, pop sed.
Where did you find thin nickel? be
Md. and I sed. Under your chair.
Hand it over, pop sed, and I sed, I
ha vent picked it up yet.
Meening it was still there, and pop
reetched down and picked it up, toy-
ing, Have you any other little ques-
Mayor Ernest O. Thompson return-
ed yesterday from Corpus Christi
where he spent six days with his par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Thompson.
He reported that his father, who went
to Corpus Christi for his health is
greatly improved. The two have spent
the winter there and will remain
sometime longer.
WILBUR WRIGHTS BIRTH.
On April 16, 1M7, Wilbur Wright.
, American pioneer in aviation, waa
born near Millville, Ind.
After a high school education, he
l went with kic brother Orville to Day-
I ton. Ohio, where they opened up a
। bieyele repair shop. With the ex-
perience they received from motor-
eyelee they began experimenting with
gliding machines. In order that they
— I might carry out their work unmo-
\ . lasted, the brothers removed to Kitty
• Hawk. N. C.
On December 17, 1903, one of their
machines rose of its own power, re-
mained in the air 59 seconds end car-
I riod the operator Ml feet. Thio wee
the first instance of actual mechan-
leal flight. Two years later the
i Wrighta built an airplane in which
G—K-are
Fee-F
832 to advance of beirmr. Pyt
m-ararmewaanmr
€
4
of the America* people," he says. “The principle that
divides the two parties le fundamental. If we do not
•tend for the protection of the masses of the people
where have they to get
"A man’s loyalty to a principle is measured by
the snerifice he is willing to moke for that prineiple,
I snd if wo ns Democrats ran not stand for justice to
the manufacturer and at the same time justice to the
consumer we ought to change our name. We have no
\ right to impose upon the greet masses of the Ameri-
\ ean_people a burden they are not able to bear simply
) because me want to foster_an industry, not in infancy, 1
kut grown snd disrevorenble, and full of wealth.
"The me-t mimerble protectionist In the world is
the man who eimply wants to protect the local thing
to it appiies to him in the hope of getting votes to
I return him ts impose farther burdens on the Ameri-
। enn people."
Smith is a rather strong looking gent, the eon of a
minister ahd younger In appearance than his age of
n Ho wears s larze mustache, and ususlly knows
what he is talking about or keepa quiet. His hobbies
ire risking and bunting.
He has always been a farmer and raises a couple
of hundred bales of cotton a year on his plantation
at Lynchburg, s. C. He helped organize the Southern
Cotton Associntion in 1M6 and waa field agent and
, reneral organizer for it until he was nominated and
elected a senator 22 years spo. ta 22 years he haa
rY.tion,apsisting the lunge. When a
— burn involves about twothirds of the
A skin of the body, death results from
5 toxic poisoning. If the pores of the
skin were completely blocked, one
would die within a very chert time.
Because the ekin in a living organ,
it responds quickly to a change ta tko
tain to grammar, history, etiquette, drawing or whatnot. So* it youjean \
find them. The* look at the scrambled word below—and unseramble l< by -
awitching th* lotton around. Grade, ytarooif M for each of the mi stokes
you find, tori’* for the word if .yon unseramble It, Ob the baek m
edas we egplain.the mistakes and you the word. Themamge.
" "" ......
diet. After the living habits in
changed for the bettor, the old cells
which an constantly fulling off show
the new cells that an being nourish-
edbya better blood stream, and thie
produces a Bower and better com-
plexion.
Thee genenl health of the body le
often dearly depleted by the condi-
tion of the akin. The disease of any
important internal organ undoubted-
ly hue ite effect upon thie body-
covering. An examination of the
skin forme an important part of
every doctor’s examination. One who
ie in the pink of condition baa a
clear, rosy skin without blemishes
I they flew 14 1-1 miles.
But in 1908, Wilbur Wright not a
record in France for the longest ,
flight ever made up to that time,
when he covered M miles. For thia
achievement he waa awarded the
Michelin price. The French patent
rights of the Wright machine were
disposed of for 1100,000, end the ma-
chino was adopted byjthe United
States army.
By HHILUF NOWLAN
and RICHARD CALKINS
The Wort Amarillo Christian
church will obaerve a communion
service eommemorating the institu-
tion of the Lord’s Supper nineteen
hundred yean age at S o’cloak Thure-
day evening. The public to cordially
invited to attend, according to Bov.
Ferrell Fox, paator of th* church.
The program that has been planned
to aa fellows: Hymn—“Come Thou
Almighty King," Invocation and
Lord’s Frays r, responsive reading, re-
marks by the pester. Communion
hymn, prayer — "Thanks for the
—1
K99fsecebeb‘e
VLAMON
wou
The wicked to* to
rights sun shall rteaK
drenma every night fegardlema ot whethe
t ent or not before retiring, and why I am
no tired every morninig even when I re-
tiro early."
Answert There is M doubt but what
Cup," hymn ’’I Gave My Ufa for
Thee," neripture, partaking of the
cup, apecial-“The Old Bugged
Cross," benedietion and cloning hymn
“Bloat Be the Tie That Binds."
WUcem OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESA
eAreiFiricmmitep.aau"ee.- *
RMMMttMl of all news diepetchee credited w «
,, • • ■■ - , be=eM ' ; -n 4
.a -
thing in the Senate, as everyone known—and he hasn’t
ADDING LFE TO TZARS.
There has bee* seek a brazen blare about find-
ing eternal youth through monkey gland grafting
and other cheap methods of alleged human revitali-
zation that one might be tempted to discodnt come
recent discoveries if it were not for the integrity
end standing of the medical men involved. '
Dr. Casimer Funk, discoverer of ntamins, and
Dr. Benjamin Barraw of the eellogo of the city of
New York have discovered the principle of hormone
injection as a means of revitalising the human er-
ganism end stopping ravages of age, and suecessful
4 W88Q 62222202826840622005 dmMMSMA•
7 date in
V)American
X/Hi STORY
Hos3
‘GiA ois!/ Na
l——e=a-ee==
WonK OF TB SKIN
Many people regard Uto skin as »
cert of dead covering and neglect to
give it the proper care whieh it need*
to entry on Ito tremendous amount of
weak which it doe* nt all timoa
Leather ie nothing more or less
then dead skin and consldered oae
of the toughest materials known. The
living akin ia quite different from
leather in that It to not only alive
but la mor flexible and performan
astonishing numbers of tunetione.
The akin mart be regarded aa an
organ just as the heart, liver, lungs
and kidneys are regarded as organa
The skin to capable of doing more
different aorta of work for ye* than
eey other one organ. It in the pro-
duction. manager, controlling the out-
put of- oil and perepiration—the
growth of the balr, lashes and nail*
It ia also a bodily thermostat, busily
regulating your temperature for you
—quite a perfect regulator of tem-
perature when we consider that it
maintains the normal temperature of
98.8 degrees at the north pole or in
the tropics.
It la different than meet of obr
ofgans in that U ia external to the
rest of the body. Memo of the other
organa have an advantage for thie
reason: For example, wo cannot pow-
der our kidneys or touch up our
hearts with * little more rouge abode,
pet lipstick on our livers or sun-tan
on our lunge because we cannot get
at them.
The skin is also a very valuable ob-
serving ntation. being connected by
a very efficient telegraph system to
the brain, and reporta almost im-
mediately whether there to danger
from pain, fire, cold or discomfort
from wet and beet.
In many canes the skin is called ea
to perform some it the functions of
the other organs when they are dis-
eased. Thin property ia knew* aa
eompensation. For example, the kid-
neys may be asslated by the exeretion
of liquids through the skin.
The skin plays a part In respire-
i WASHI
k ths most
7 the large
waa the s
day befor
customs ■
Weighir
enough ts
engageme
‘stone has
antiquity,
years age
near the
For unt
the head
Shiva es
guarded I
precious
English a
early Ind
the prope
pony.
la 1611
England
•iso to 11
finally it
Marquis
many yes
eye, unt
jeweler i
Holdin,
art more
tome ser
——*9? able portion of your life to the quest,
fle Benfrs perhapk e half an hour or so, he sed.
NoteO. | I Where “4 yen find thie dime? he
°
wsssmrt. HUMPTV DumPW
06
LuK
1. Whet ie wrong with this sen-
tence? “Thore wore no other alter-
natives."
t. What is the correct pronuncia-
tion of "bitumen"t
S. Whieh one of these words is
misspelled? Rusin, rapier, ravenous,
race oo n.
4. What does the word "embryonm"
mean!
6. What word beginning with t
means “dishonest"? F
Answers
1. Say, “was ao alternative." 2
Pronounee firet ayllable “bit." noi
ia “unit," aceent after the u. 1.
Raisin. 4. Rudimentary; undeve-
ed. “Our plane are still in an emikk -
on le stage." 5. Fraudulent.
factory."
Hormones are eaid ta bo ehemica substancer,
similar te vitamiac, the,quantity of which in the
human eystem declines correspondingly with the
advance of years, and hence the replenishing of the
amount will control the ravages of age.
“What it does", says Dr. Benjamin, “ie to add
life to years, net years to life." And the average
moa ic not co interested in increasing the number
of bio years as bo is desirous of maintaining high
efficiency throughout the entire spun of hit Ilfs,
however long er ebort it may be.
Fep was smoking te himself and
all of a sodden I sew a niekel ea the |
floor under hie chair, and I sed. Hisy '
pop?
Do I heer the nightingale calling? .
pop sed.
Meening what did I wunt, and I '
•ed. Sipposing I found a dime some-
wheres. -
You'd be doing better than I over
did, I dent bleeve Ivo ever found a
cent in my life, pop sed. Other people
era always managing to find money,
but the boot I can do along that line
is Nose It. he Md
Me thinking. Hoek, what did he :
h*ff to think of that for? And l ced.
Well sippose I did find one, and no-
body avvertized in the paper for it,
would t be aloud to keep it according
to law?
According to law, perhaps, but not
according to your conseients unions 1
yen forct did everything in your I
poorer to diecover the idennity of the ,
riteful owner, pop Md. and I sod.
Well G, pop, a person east spend all
their iifo trying to find out who lost
a dime, eaa they?
Well, no, such • life could hardly
be called well epent, pop cod. But
we'll My yo« eould devote * reason- ,
Bav sad NtolM Amneeie
sunaoprzuos 84
-
* Er&tfiBB m AiL
clinical application has boon accomplished by Dr. state to stick to hie principles—an almost unheard of
Harry Benjamin who says that the discovery bes .
-m.an, -t..t .... ... ... .A L... any soft words for other Democrate who deserted or
moan th. graetostrtep forward that has yet been traded when they excuses opportunities.
made toward extending the human platform of effi - - - rr-
QUESTIONS AND ANSWEnS
(Pains in Stemeehi
QutionsMr. R U O asks: "What
le ghe mum e a pein in ike Momoch at
night whieh disappiar upon aristas t Have
been bothered with this for about Ms
yeare. Am IS years old. I fort tall, and
wejsh lot pounda."
Anawer: Such pain ta often auned sim-
ply by the formation o€ gw which to gem-
erated during tee nieht. Do not lap Ml me
ta diagnoe rear trouble ia thia column, aa
it would be unwine for aw te attempt to
de ea. Ge to a wood physieian ana have
a dignosis made. then It you are art im-
proyine under his treatment, write ma
a«ala. giving me dlaknonta, and I wUl be
clad to send you what advtoe I een.
(Lew Weght and Unanuna Bleep)
Qumtion:O. M. V. ata: “WOf yea
plense tell me how I enn pat oa weichtt
I am a girl of to yeer old end only weiah
•7 pounds. The meet I ever weigbed woe
106 pounds. I am (Iva feet, eevea ead a
half inches tall lno ylvaM tell me what
W’ABVLL"
eppannaeoea :8220
_ ___, _ 2.a.3m
1 2 T Betob ............AMI
qnvagphur"uurupuzcam
a. m. a • copy wil be,
> our desire to give eubeer
‘a
Arriving from Chicago where she epoat the win-
ter. Tex immediately bunt into * stream of gage
from gunland.
Asked about her audionces there, she came back
with “Of course, I dealt with nobody bat big shots.
“Out wort thoy used te say that the bad men shot
firet and asked questions afterward. Now they mere-
ly cheat and let the district attorney ask the ques-
tions. The Mt girl came to mo oae night and ached
if I didn't think wo could make a fortune in the gun-
checking concession. Whet thoy need out there in a
padlock low for hip pockets."
HOTICK to
FvgetecK
M529
“2
sfuana
Pteue eennecMai
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 123, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 16, 1930, newspaper, April 16, 1930; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564894/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.