Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 87, Ed. 1 Monday, February 11, 1929 Page: 2 of 8
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NG
/
THS AMARILLO DAILY NEWS.
1
—
Walt Mason Himself IMMIGRATION
N
57,000GIFTWLL
The World’s Most Famous Rhymster
LAIS WILL BE
the Child
STRENGTHENED
PLANBANQUET
WAINSON
$40,000.
alty in this elass of cases,"
more difficulties or embarraasment
Troubles
Explained
While large corporations still show-
DALHART FARMER
WEATHER
tention lest it become a decisive fac
9
DR. BARKER VISITS
POISONS RABBITS
tor working toward a (till further
1
|
OVERCOME BY GAS
1
was recommended by the officials at
PUBLIC FORUM
serious to-
denled by a
igorieal recitatton of .
IN COLLINGSWORTH
CURE
COLLEGE
PLAINVIEW FIRE
NORTHCOTT
MEMPHIS ORDERS
1,5
eleetion has be
20 ad-
None of the e:
many
*
Ij5i
"ik A .
11
RE MILLION IN
FIFTYYEARS
INDUSTRIES SHOW
ACTIVITY EXPANSION
*
I
( Continued from Page 1, Col. 5)
valley again prepared to meet with
smoking smudge pots a prospeetive
pointed out, “the extraord innry ab-
sorption of funds in speculative so-
curity loans deserves particular at-
MEMPHIS EXES .
Of TEXASU
pital. Hit condition
night.
fire chief of the voluntary fire de-
partment of Memphis, to fill the va-
coney eaused by the accidental death
Kansas City Doctor Gives
Good Advice to Suffer*
ers from Gallstones
of the Liver
la other times there didn't neem to be any particular difficulty or
flurry about roaring children, and when most of us older ones were
brought up it waa a perfectly plain aad simple proposition without
any aterillzed milk or sterilized philonophizing about it.
With this money he determined to
do what he had always longed to do—
LOCKNEY LOOKS
FOR PROFITABLE
YEAR DURING 1929
2
i
We were just dressed (imply, reared plainly, spanked when we were
bad, kissed when we were good, taught obedience to our parents, respect
for our elders and that our place in the scheme of things was in the back-
ground.
than before the first successful at-
tempt to enter the country unlaw-
felly.’'
The Blease bill simply would pro-
vide that any alien who has been ar-
rested and deported under the gen-
eral immigration law and who shall
again enter the country unlawfully,
shall be guilty of a felony and sub-
ject to 91.000 fine and two years' im-
prisonment.
CREAMERY TO BE
STARTED MARCH 1
AT PLAINVIEW
FOUR WOMEN DIE
IN GREECE STORMS
(Continued from Page 1, Col. 6)
may we as individuals, question such
action or impute to it the character
of a wrong?
"The question of the justification
of capital punishment is not to be
L
A6ag
CLOVIS SCOUT
COUNCIL NAMES
NEW OFFICERS
are of the opinion that
a
raced fields outyielded his acreage
not terraced, in spite of the fact that I
end year of operation as a junior
College this spring.
England now has 14,841 bookmak.
era.
arrtrauturnrz.pdtg"
TEXAS SOLONS GO
INTO FIFTH WEEK
PROFESSOR SETS ASIDE FUND
FOR USE OF UNIVERSITY
OF GEORGIA
TERRACING OF
FARMS MEETS
WITH FAVOR
The simultaneous anaeBuoomoat that two different men in different
pasta of the country have invented n potent spanking machine that is
guaranteed to carry repentance and reformation in its wake when prop-
erly used ia more than a coincidence.
EFFORT MADE TO HAVE LARG-
EST ATTENDANCE ON
MARCH 2
PROPOSED STATUTE WOULD
MAKE IT FELONY TO VIO-
LATE RULES
I am quite aware that these heterodox views will
act moot with the approval of moat mothers, ead that
I shall be considered a rank Philistine by the child cul-
ture devotees, but to my mind there Ie no other such
he pays up for the unslaked lime just when he said he’d
pull the trick; he pays the miller for his bran, the plumber
for his leaden pipe, and has smal] use for any man who
looks on promises as tripe. He always pays his bills
on time, he pays them all with genial mirth, and so the
poet writes a rhyme to celebrate his sterling worth; and
everywhere this good man wends, on pleasure or on busi-
ness bent, he finds about a million friends who’d like to
make him President.
(Continued from Page 1, Col. 5>
by the noige, began shrilly pleading
for protection.
“Sheriff, we believe you are right."
Winslow said after eonferring with
the others to the corner of the jail
waiting room, and be ebook hands
with Sweeters and left the jall. The
Edison always had “side lines."
W hile perfecting one invention he
would be toying with half a dozen
other ideas at the same time.
Thus, while the electric light, dy-
namo and motor were being given
the world, Edison was making the
experiments that were to make radio
possible. He aloe devised a machine
that would make low-grade iron ores
valuable, and put all of hie available
eash into the formation of a com-
pany to market It—for moot of the
eountry’s available iron ore deposits
then were of the low-grade type, and
there was an enormous market for
such a machine.
sinister figure in modern life as the child Bolshevik, nor la there any other
erime against society eqal to letting a child make itself and everybody
else miserable and uncomfortable when it could be sweetened, made agree-
able aad optimistic by a judicioualy administered spank.
For the spank atands to the child for law, order and reepeetabNity,
aad It is happy just in proportion aa it to amenable to it. The child
eriminal ic jest as unresttul as the adult criminal.
CUP AND MAIL’TOLAY!
Dear Dr. Haddock:
Please send me a free copy <f
your booklet, "The Liver and GeN
Bladder." X
ditienal deputies and a vigil was
maintained thi *
62,
make that melancholy man present his
bill again, again; which is a cheap and
tawdry plan detested by all righteous men. He always
pays his bills on time, and makes no creditor feel sick;
(Dy The Associated Press
AUSTIN, Feb., 10.-It is possible
that this week will see action by at
least one of the houses on some of
the major bills pending In the legis-
lature. One of those preposing prison
relocation and concentration, high-
way bond issue or regulation of pub-
lic utilities may be reached and acted
on.
mob shortly dispersed. ,
Sheriff Sweeten summe
----- _ —----Nor Isn
There Aay Other Crime Equal to Letting a
Child MakeItoolf and Everybody Ele Miserable”
C. C. Stinson, county agent, who
assisted Mr. Roberts with his ter-
racing problems, believes this dem-
onstration alone will mean thousands
of dollars to th* farmers in this com-
munity. since there is not a farm in
n
PAGErWO.
cheap fuel in the form of natural
gas and electric power. Bankers say
that farm and cattle loans are very
low while deposits reflect a very de-
sirable agricultural condition.
< By The Assoc iated Press >
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 10.—Marshall
Neilan, film director, was overcome
by gas in the garage of his Beverly
Hills home, but was revived by an
inhalator squad on route to the hos-
county, thus saving the farmer a
large expenditure in the marketing of
his grain and cotton products. Beef
cattle feeding is being practised on
a small scale as the farmers now
have an abundance of cotton need
feeds to aupplement the cheap grain
, sorghums that have been grown here
for a number of years. Agricultural!
leaders of the community predict a
men, and it goes without saying that
deportation as passengers aboard
regular passenger steamers is no pen-
tout the night,
returned.
Modern Life as
ringlet from his beard ia treasured aa a
keepsake fine. He always pays his bills
on time, and makes no faces as he pays;
he may not reach the heights sublime
that are attained by rifted jays; he may
not wield a brush inspired, or write a
book that rings the bell; but more than
all he is admired in Punktown, where
he’s wont to dwell. He always pays his
bills on time, and offers up,no cheap ex-
cuse; he always holds it is a crime to
buy the butcher’s stall-fed goose, then
and the two now
ones Science and commercial depart-
menu. The collrge will close its see-
Then he turned back to his first
love, electricity. The are light had
been invented and was in some use
for street lights, but it was imprac-
l tical for use in the home. Edison
determined to find an electric light
that could be used cheaply by every
householder. The problems were
The greatest misfortune that has befallen the human race since the Eden
episode to the discovery that the child is a problem. Up to that time we
2n" been pestered and confused with theories. In the mercy of Heaven,
it had not oecurre to anybody that there was danger of cowing •iprou
■niHi hr AAking a child behave, or that it was a humiliation for a child
to h2vote obey’ts parents. It is altogether probable that Mrs. Washington
and Mrs. Jefferson and Mrs. Lincoln and millions of other .women, "ho
brought up sons who were a credit to them never once suspected that Utt
George or Thomas or Abe was a problem. They were just boys and they
dealt with them on that platform.
' chilaren are Joel an adorable now as they ever wore and we nerdIt
#fctmarzssegnermaha Srenainta i
th? hart requirement. of life, not taught that they may shirk its re.
-posibiitietttofchzahooa “ the of -n“Snorkr‘dik
. (Copyright by Public Ledger)
jor industries showed expansion of
activity during the past week, and
business generally continued satis-
factory. The federal reserve board,
however, called attention to whet it
regards as a precarious condition of
the credit structure.
UNCOIN DAY I
PROGRAM NOW
BEING PLANNED
It to a prophecy, and it indicates that flaming
youth is about to get its comeuppance. Of course,
there in nothing the matter with the old-fashioned
hand-made spank, except that there is not enough of
It to go around. Hence the invention of something
that premises to enlarge its scope and usefulness
meets a long felt want, for there is no other such
crying seed In America today as for some method
of dealing with the obstreperous children who are
in need of a good paddling.
tag poet. Veterans of Foreign Wars,
to be given at the American Legion
home in the eity auditorium starting
at a o’clock tomorrow night, accord-
ing to W. L. Ottinger, commander of
the poet.
"The meeting will be open to all
former service men and their fam-
ilies." said Mr. Ottinger, "and special
warning to the wives of the service
their husbands going out without
them."
Refreshments will be served and
there will be dancing for all follow-
ing talks by several of Amarillo’s
loading citizens.
The most curious evolution of the civilization of our day is the atu-
tude we take toward children, and its fundamental principle is that a child
must not be made to behave. Ho is no longer forced into the straight and
narrow path and compelled to stay there. An effort is made to beguile
him into the ways of righteousness and politeness and civility, and if he
condescends to walk in that direction everybody offers up prayers of
thanksgiving. If he behaves, it is simply a matter of grace. Nobody is rash
enough to Uy to make him.
the first incandescent electric light.
At about the same time Edison
produced another invention—less
spectacular, but tremendously impor-
tant. He developed the first central
power station, to furnish the current
for the hundreds of lamps with which
his Menlo park laboratory was fes-
tooned.
bleakly to below 30 at 2 pointe, felt — ■ ......■ ■
- MARSHALL NEILAN
GOOD PAY
He always pays his bills on time, and as he walks
along his track the people o’er each other climb to
roundly pat him on the back; he’s highly honored and
revered, his fame will never cease to shine; a raven
firming of money rates to the preju- and paved the way for the eleetrie
diee of the coentry’s commercial in- street ear, subway, elevated and elee-
terests." I trie locomotive.
In the new attitude toward children it to held that obedience to
desirable, but that it,is tyrannical and brutal to enforce it. You mart
m.-a"ust X- impau „2q"udtsr
d AotinEWith a 19 or 12-year-oid boy or girl. That to why mothers
are sitting up at night, with their hearts torn with fear,. waiting for
their flapper daagbtere to come to at 3 o’clock la the morains. ad,why
fathets are going down to the police courts to pay the fines of th l
hoodlum sons.
(By The Aseraialed Pree)
NEW YORK, Feb. 10,—Several ma-
oetrom each ward.
Eletion judges were named: Word
1. T. M. McMurry; War g, J. w.
Wabeter: Ward ». Major MeCann;
Word k T. k Bladen.
Now all of that to changed. After the first baby is bora into a family
nobody expects to get aay rational conversation oat of either parent
for the next twenty years. It is alwaya what Tommy thinks or Sally
says or Johnny did, and no effort to made to suppress these Infsat ter-
rors. On the contrary, they sre dragged to the front and hept there.
Now I do, not believe in suppressing children, but I hold it is a rank
injustice to any child to bring him up to think that he is of supreme and
paramount importance. It is going to be a bitter day for him when he finds
out, when be to grown, that nobody will listen to him, and Ufa will give
him many a hard knock before it kicks the inflated self-esteem out of him
and reduces him to ths proper sits for the little bit of place he to going
to fill in the world. Many a man is a failure because his mother has brought
him up to think that he ought to start out by being President of the United
States instead of emptying somebody's wastebasket.
Another cherished theory to that you mart never force a child to do
anything. Lead him to it. Entice him. Always present duty with a
halo around it.
"I never give my children any duties to' do at home as duties, heenuse
it would be distasteful to them, but I make a game of it and they never
discover it is anything but play." said a woman to mo, exploiting this
theory.
Yes, but how about the day when that child growa up and aces the
Bork that to atripped of Ite tinsel and disguise, and that la hothing but
a hard, unromantie, twelve-hour-a-day job? We get the answer to that
to the down-and-outers who have never had the grit to do anything
hard, who all their llvee have drifted from place to placesnd oecupa:
tion to occupatlon, trying to find a moft •nap in which there was good
pay and bo work.
instances of the miscarriage of jus-
tice."
Both speakers lauded the idea of
the public forum and congratulated
the church on the contribution It is
making to • reasonable und intelli-
gem solution of questions of vital
importance today.
A vocal solo “Not understood" by
Marion Ada Beacon was a feature
sf the meeting. She was mccompar-
ied by Mrs. Guy Chisolm, talented
pianist of Amarillo.
Rev. Robert Allingham, pastor of
the church opened the meeting and
introduced the epeahero.
bringing mill operations generally
near to per cent of capacity.
Automobile production continued to
gain.
Cotton textile prices wsrs rather
unsettled, and there was further talk
of cutting down production.
Crude oil production continued to
gain, and the trade was rather pes-
simistic over the immediate pros-
poets of control. Consolidations with-
in the industry were sesn as the most
likely means of bringing production
into Hue with consumption.
(Continued from Page 1, Col. 1)
estimated. The loss was partially
covered by insurance.
The plant which was owned and
operated by Mr. Jackson of this city,
wm the first packing ptoat estab-
lished on the south plains.
The fire apparently epught in the
roof and wm discovered at about 2
o’clock in the afternoon.
The local fire department could not
extinguish the blase on account of
the plem being located in a remote
part of the city aad some distance
from a fire plug.
The loco is the heaviest sustained
as the result of a fins born for the
past five yoare.
of Clovis is presidsnt of ths area
council and Minor Huffman is Seoul
executive. The area covers one of
the largest territories ia the country
and baa an enrollment of 716 secut.,
Roswell ia area headquarters.
Mr. Robert* terraced to acres of
hia farm in 1(27 and is so thoroughly
•old on the idea that he has purchas-
ed a new Corsicana grader and ha,
recently terraced 100 acres of his
cultivated land with the completion
of this laat terracing work, hit en-
tire farm has been terraced.
Mr. Roberta stated that hit ter-
Unfortunately, the tremendously
rich Mesaba iron range, in Minne-
•ota, was discovered just then. Edi-
son's company failed, and for a time
he was acutely embarrassed finan-
cially, To recoup hu invented a ma-
chine that would make cement more
cheaply—and got his money beck.
At the same aims, he was trying
to invent a practical storage bat-
tery. This took years of his time,
and be to said to have made 50,006
experiments for thio pne purpose. Ia
the end, he succeeded.
• a a
reaus in that section feared would
assault green beans, peas and pota-
toea before morning.
The Brownsville weather man pre-
dicted “fair and continued cold" with
temperatures from to to 26 degrees
by Monday, accompanied by heavy
frost.
It was believed citrus groves would
eteope material damage but orchard-
ista get bon fires ready to touch off
should tbs “danger"* point, not
I reached thia season, come upon them.
The Gulf coast section, which
looked somewhat wonderingly yester-
day on thermometers which alid
DALHART ROTARY > ,JDALHABTj*F»b. 10.—D. A. Arts,
farmer living IS miles southeast of
Dalhart, claims the record on poison-
Special to X he News. ' ing rabbits with poison grain. Mr.
DALHART, Feb. 10.—The Dalhart I Arts distributed 2% pounds of poi-
Rotary club "as host here yesterday i soned grain, mile maize, around hla
to Dr. Charles E. Barker, nationally i stack lots yesterday afternoon and
known inspirational speaker, who de- picked up 10 dead rabbits this morn-
vered four lectures during the day ing.
and. evening: I The Dallam County Commissioners’
The first lecture given by Dr. Bar. court is sponsoring the mixing of
xen."as to the student body of the poisoned grain for farmers of the Dal-
alhart High school on “How to be I kart area. More than two tons will
uccoarTul in Life." Dr. Barker com- be distributed to the farmers during
Plimented the students very highly the late winter and early spring,
on their attention and wonderful re- ____________
•ponse. to his talk. The luncheon
ca2a-X MANGUM NAMED
(Ry The Amociated Pres)
ATHENS, Feb., 10—Extremely ee-
vere weather ia prevalent through-
out Greece. Four women died at Thes-
saly where sixteen feet of snow com-
pletely demoralised all transporta-
tion and made virtual prisoners of
the inhabitants.
Special to The News.
WELLINOTON, Feb. 10.—CittoeBs
of Collingsworth county, who are in-
torestod ta a hotter roads program
are eireulating petitions over the
continued increase in the practise of i .
irrigation due to the incoming of
Having developed the phonograph,
which would preserve sounds for Boo.
terlty, Edison wondered if sighte
could not be preserved likewine. He
left electricity for a while aad began
to eaperiment with cameraz. There,
suit was his invention, la 1801, of the
moving picture camera and projector.
Edison was alwaya interested chief,
ly la inventions that had a direct,
praetical value. He was not greatly
interested in his moving picture in.
xentionsi he did not believe that
hz"az"2-sommsrz-t.Pzta,URGE PAVED ROADS
and left to others the great work of
developing the moving piesure indus-
try. But every movie you attend waa
made possible by Edison.
Recently. Edison’s attention WM
to conduet extensive experimenta
with rubber substitutes.
More than 1,100 patents represent
Edison s life of invention. Many of
tbene sever articles in daily use. Yet
Edison never was Noted Amone the
richest men of the country. Hie
whole career was devoted to inven-
Mob, and once a device was compit
be lost interest in it. It has beea
estimated that the industries which
have grown out of his inventions are
worth st least $20,000 000,000,
personal fortune has been estimated
to run over a million, but not to aay
height comparable to then •( Fora
or Rockefeller.
Dorothy Dix Says:
“There Ia No Other Such Siniatar Figure in
To do this, he had to devise a dyna-
mo far more efficient than anything
then in existence. He did: IF—and
- then developed a new electric motor,
r built an experimental electric train
Continued from page 1, cel. B)
road train was hie first
perhaps, a very promising beginning-
But it served.
Already he had given evidence of
a boon natural curieatty. His moth-
er, going to the cellar one day, found
him at a long table covered with bot-
tles, most of which were labeled
“poison." Ho hod rigged up a lab-
oratory, of sorts, and was going to
make some experiments. Whoa be
went to work on the railroad be
moved his laboratory to the bag-
gage car and messed around gully in
it at every spare moment.
Electricity fascinated him from
from the beginning. The telegraph
waa then coming into general nee,
and he longed to learn about IL
Chance gave him his opening.
In 1862 young Edison rescued the
daughter of the Mt. lemens station
master from under the wheels of a
train. The station master, full of
gratitude, asked the boy what he
could do to repay him.
"I want to be a telegrapher," Edi-
son replied.
So a telegrapher he became, and
for five years be worked in that
job. All the time he was studying
electricity and tinksring with embryo-
nic inventions.
Thsn he moved to Boston, where
he secured his first patent—on an
electrical vote-recording machine.
But the device, while a successful in-
vention, was a commercial failure;
and in 1869 Edison, then 23, moved
to Now York, slightly discouraged.
There he had better success. He
devised an electrical stock ticker.
Special to The Newt.
. WELLINGTON, Feb. 10.—Seth Rob.
4 orts of th* Swearingen community,
is • great believer in terracing, ac-
cording to C. C. Stihson, county
agent. Mr. Stinson, has been observ-
ing the work Mr. Roberta has been
doing on his farm for some time and
’ ho finds that terracing has been an
1 important factor in the success of
the work.
on the long path that was to yield
some of the world’s most useful in-
ventions.
The first fsw years were unspec-
tacular. Edison helped perfect the
first practical typewriter and de-
veloped a carbon transmitter for tele-
phones; but it was not until 1876,
when he moved his shop to Menlo
Park, N. J- that real success began
to earns.
After a number of experiments, he
devised a little machine with a wax
cylinder, needle and sensitive dia-
phragm. Into the fnnnel that led
to the diaphragm he spoke the words,
"Mary had a little lamb." Then be
changed the machine around, put in
a different kind of noodle, and turned
a lover. Out of the funnel came his
own voice, saying "Mary had a little
lamb." The phonograph had been in-
vented.
Bpoeiel t« Thi News.
PLAINVIEW, Fb. 10.—Instellatloa
of the machinery in the Hale County
Dairy association’s Co-operative
Creamery at Plainview will begin this
week. C. M. Anderson, manager and
superintendent of the new plant, says
the building is complete and the
plant will bo placed in operation
about Marek 1.
Costing $30,000, the creamery will
be the largest on ths Booth Plains,
and will have a total eapacity for
making a million pounds of buttsr an-
nually. It was financed by farmers
who ora members of the co-operative
marketing nasociation that has oper-
ated in Plainview and Halo county
for the poet five years. Farmers
bought stock in the plant on the basis
of 110 per cow (or every cow they
have ip their dairy herds.
Modern butter machinery will be
used in the plsnt which is entirely
electrically operated. A well has
been dug under building which will
furnish cool water for the manutae-
tore of butter. Butter will be sold
uMor tke label of "Plains Gold," end
will be shipped to tke eastern mar-
keto, with a email part of it mar-
keted locally. The buildtag which
houses the creamery is built entirely
of brick and Ie M by 100 feet in sloe
covering one floor. It is complete
with cold storage facilities for hand-
ling e ear pt butter.
WIHESTER, Musg- Powder
pufte, hairpihs end Fphotottaphs of
another girl' in her husband's pockets
constituted erueity, Mrs. Bertha F.
Hadley charged in her suit for di- '
verve.
Speeial to The News.
LOCKNEY, Feb. 10—Business lead-
ers, of this city, familiar with the
financial and agricultural interests
of Floyd county declare that pros-
poets for agricultural prosperity and
profitable business were never bet-
ter.
During th* period of depression
sinee 1920. farmers of this section
I have become independent. A living
has been made at home and debts
that could not easily bo paid were
not contracted. A number of promi-
nent farmers state, that even though
the dairy and poultry businesses have
increased by leaps and bounds, the
sheep raising indastry bids fair to
a prominent place in the well diver-
sified, Floyd county farm program.
Fatmers are noir organising in or-
der to receive a better price for their
products. Farm Hauls have been
shortened, the result of the rail ac-
tivity in the county during the past
two years. Elevators and eotton
gins have been erected at the differ-
ent rail switches throughout the
“-In any event, an allen deported at intahliphuhimaettsin.onindependent
eoverpmene expensozundsrthepro; 10 atFh. A mve 0 Newark,
entprpcedureuin not N. 3: built * workshop and started
Special to The News.
' SLATON, Texas, Feb. 10.— Sixty-
eight girls are now enrolled in the
home economies department of Sla-
ton high school. Ineluded are nine-
teen freshmen, to sophomores, n
juniors and nine seniors. Miss Pau-
line Lokey it head of the department.
"Many of the aliens, who are re- .. ... . I
quired to be deported, enter ae sea- patented it—and sold the rights for
the unterraced field was mer* level
! and had been outyielding th* field
| ‘bat was terraced in 1927.
I
Special to Th* News.
CLOVIS, N. M, Feb. 10.—Officers
of the'Clovis Boy Scout council were
elected for the year 1929 at a ‘meet-
ing of the council held laat night.
Those elected were: judge A. W.
Hockenhull, ehairman; John D.
Brown, viee-chairman; E. A. Story,
seeretary-treasurer; Carl Allison,
commissioner. The following commit-
we ehairmen were appointed: A
Mandell, finance; Judge C. A. Hutch,
court of honor) M. B. Kuntz, activi-
ties; R. E. Kessie, community serv-
ice.
i ho year's activities were outline,
in detail at the meeting and it was
voted that the finance campaign h
put on next Thursday. A father and
son banquet ia also being planned I
for February tl;
Clovia ia one of the administrative
eenters for the Eastern New Mexico
Area Scout Council. Ivan G. Bridges
the section of th* county in whien
Mr. Roberts lives that will not ba !
helped by the kind of soil conserva-
tion that is being practiced on the !
Roberts’ form.
Ll~ ,.2 rso, de"
MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 11.
this afternoon at Galveston.
North and Central Texas continued
to shake off .newdrifta—heavy at <
some pointe, light at others—from '
their doorsteps with rising tempera-
tures and sunshiny weather holding
today.
ed no effects from persistently high
credit rates, building permits fell
eft considerably in January, save for
New York city and the far west, and
there waa a growing tendency by
bankora to believe the high rates are
imposing an increasing restraint upon
smaller businesses.
The federal reserve board, in a
statement declaring that th. absorp-
tion of federal reserve credit for
speculative purposes must cease.
The metal industries still held the 1 in 1882 Edison’s New York power
lead. | plant began commercial operation on
Demand for steel, particularly for : • emall ncale. Out of it grow the
automotive, railway and structural Eiant General Electric Co. of-today.
products, chewed come increases, 4 • • •
Gallstone sufferers, espe-
cially those whose suffering
has about driven them to
despair, will welcome the
news that a large percentage^
of cases of this painful,
health destroying disease
may now be effectively
treated at home with medi-
cine.
To Dr. E. E. Paddock, a
Kansas City physician, who
for 30 years has specialized
in the treatment of infec2
tious diseases of the gal
bladder, gall ducts and the
liver, belongs the credit for
formulating a scientific home
medical treatment which is
based upon and represents
the researches of many of
the world’s leading medi-
cal men. This treatment has
been used by thousands with
a most gratifying record of
results. Sufferers declare
in no uncertain terms that
Dr. Paddock’s treatment
brought to them relief be-
yond their fondest hopes
and expectations.
- According to Dr. Paddock,
surgery is resorted to in
many cases where proper
medical treatment would be
effective. It is Dr. Paddock’
opinion that surgery should -
be resorted to only in emer-"
gency cases, and that sur-
gery when used removes
only the obstruction—the
cause remaining — unless
medical treatment is taken
to correct it. Dr. Paddock’s
new book fully explains his
method of treatment and of-,
fers convincing evidence ott
'ta efficiency even in cases
where other methods have
"piled.
Anyone who is afflicted
with catarrhal inflammation
and infection of the gall
bladder or gall ducts associ-
ated with gallstones of the
liver, should send for a free
copy of Dr. Paddock’s
bookleb, ”The Liver and---
Gall Bladder.” In this book-
let Dr. Paddock explains the
symptoms by which the dis-
ease may be recognized Be-
fore it reaches an acute
stage—and why these symp-
toms, unheeded, may cause
indescribable suffering and
ill‘health. Just fill in andy
mail the coupon below and"h
the booklet will be Bent free
and without any obligation.
Send for it today.
county. This petition will be pre-
sented to the commissioners at-their
tegular meeting Monday, February
11, requesting them to order an
eleetion to deermine whether ar not
bonds to the amount of 1400,000 will
ba voted to pave highways in this
eounty.
' Should the eommissioners order
this eleetion it will ba the seeond »t
thi nature bald in Collingsworth
county. Tha tint road bond eleetion
waa defeated laat December by (17
votes,
Bentiment in Wellington for paved
roada io qrowing eonstantly and
e Silas Wood a short time ago.
SLATON MERCHANTS sazmmmS
TO ELECT OFFICERS E SLATON GIRLS
(By Tto Asagcipted Preep)
ATHENS, Ga., Feb. 10—A million
dollars er more will be available (or
professors’ salaries at University of
Georgia in 1975 because of one man’s
faith in compound interest and his
contribution of 17,000.
Ckarles F. McCay was professor of
physies and mathematics at Univer-
alty of Georgia in 1841. Hia will did
not aay what induced him to set
aside the fund for professors sal-
aries and for lecturers at the uni-
versity. The fun already has grown
to 9110,000. In 1873, it is estimated
it will produce a revenue of 140,000
annually.
Strangely enough. Professor McCoy
left the fund to a university that he
probably took leave of with unpleas-
ant thoughts. Th* university histor-
ian done not reveal the nature of
the dispute ths professor had with
the chaneellor, but the records show
there was sharp disagreement. Two
other professors left about the same
time.
McCay later taught at Columbia
University and served as president of
Carolina college. Then he became a
banker and insurance man at Au-
' gusto, Ga. He is credited with hav-
. ing formulated the system of determ-
ining life expectancy used by insur-
ance companies.
- IN ECONOMICS CLASS
of the Slaton Retell Merchants’ as-
sociation will be held at the Sla-
ton Club Tuesday night. Mrs. Lee
----Ereen. secretary of he association,
'( wilI present her snnual report. Oth-
e ers to appear on the program include
- M88 Ruby Dan Smith, high school
expreznion department head, and L.
t" A:.Wtron, seeretary of the Staton
Chamber of Commerce. Four direc-
torn will be elected for the year.
Women of the Presbyterian church
willnerve the dinner, led by Mrs.
y Rowers and Mrs. George H.
Janos. A. J. Payne is president of
the association.
many, but in 1879 Edison introduced in any use in trying to augar-coat life in the hope that wo can
awallow it and never discover there is a bitter pill inside. The sweet always
rubs off et the eritical moment. Far better to cultivate..enouzh backbone n
a child to make him strong enough to choose the right, even if it ie hard.
When any one has learned to do what they have to do without fuss or com-
plaint, when they have learned to take their pill without making faces,
they have conquered fate.
(By Th* Asssrimst Prew)
WASHNGTON,Feb. 10.—An effort
ie under way in congress, sponsored
by the department of labor, to
strengthen the immigration laws by
makng it a felony for an alien to
violate the restrictive laws more
than once.
Already the bill by Senator Blease,
Democrat, of South Carolina, to pro-
vide a fine of not more than 91,000
and imprisonment of two years aad
deportation, has been favorably re-
ported by the senate committee on
immigration. Action is expected at
this session.
At present the immigration laws
provide no penalties for aliens re-
entering the United States bnt depor-
tation. except for sexually immoral
and anarchists.
Sineo it esuses no further embar-
rassment at a person whe has been
previously deported. Secretary Davis
said the additional legislation was
needed. Frequently, Mr. Davis said,
the department has deported the same
aliens several times.
Bpecinl to The Mew's.
MEMPHIS, Texas, Feb. 18.— Work,
ing committees were named in a
meeting hold a few days ago for the
annual March 1 banquet •( Univer-
sity of Texas ex-students in Hell,
Doley, Childress and Collingaworth
counties. Local exes hold high hopes
that the affqir, which will be held
in Memphis this year, will be the
liveliest and most entertaining In
the association’s history.
A strong effort is being put forth
to have the largest attendance on
record in this section. A suitable
place has not yet been selected in
which to hold the banquet, but this
detail aloqg with others will be defi-
nitely worked out within the next
ten days.
Following uro the committees
named:
Banquet: Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Dick-
Oy, Mr. and Mrs. A. 8. Moss, Mr. and •
Mrs. R. L. Ragsdale.
Frogram: Mr. and Mrs. John Don- '
ver. Mr. and Mrs. PeteClower, Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Grundy.
Invitation: William Russell Clark,
Lyman E. Robbins, 8am J. Hamilton,
H. J. Gore.
Gallstone
HIS IEWDEPARTMENTS
Special to The News.
CLARENDON, Texas, Feb. 10.— The
Clarendon Junior College wae given
erfiliation in the new departments
A.i. this week in a letter received from
CITY ELECTION •irz
u.un.. " • The college is now recognised in the
. MEMPHIS. Texas, Feb. 10. — An following wort: English, History.
S--"- A’*p ordered by the City Mathematies, Soclal seiences. Fol-
Council of Memphis to be bold The eign languages,
firas Tuesday in April for the elec-
tion of a mayor and four aldermen.
- ' ■ - rr - - .....* ,
the bonds will be voted if the com- ■
missiohers allow tho'shCOnd election
to be held. ' ’.
speaker spoke before the high school ■■MaA.n. m. ..
MEMPHIS FIRE CHIEF
Daughter in spite of cold weather | -
the auditorium of the First Method- «... — .---
Pie of th* eity volunteered to ray rcemmended hv *h- ~""-ial- ..
that th* Rotary club bad done a won-
derful work in bringing Dr. Barker
here for the day.
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 87, Ed. 1 Monday, February 11, 1929, newspaper, February 11, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567793/m1/2/: 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.