Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 138, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 26, 1927 Page: 4 of 26
twenty six pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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1
AND
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4 let her grandchil4 die.
The Palisades
4 women, rigid mor-
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teedusMiB ef the cotton eled here added
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SPECIAL
Money To Loan
and others to attend the
natra-
DLAMONDB, WATCHES
JEWELAY
FinkleaElec.Co.
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MARCH WINDS LAST
BUT A FEW DAYS—
I
—
—
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1
4
i
The bagpipe did not originete in Seot-
land, it can be traced to aneient Perala,
and, by inference, was played to Chat-
dM, Eeypt and ancient Greece.
Y,
of cultivatien in the sehoel of agrieul-
ture and the methoda of mautactet
in the department at Textile Enginser-
ing. At Poat. Texas, the Postex mills
manufaetures the eotton into cloth and
the elath into the famous Gara shest-
ing and pillow cases that are recogpised
as the-beat produet ot Ha kind to the
entir United States. Others milla er
expected to ha lecated to thia meetlon
within a few yeara to take advantag
of the natural adventages for such •
plant to this great cotton producing
iseetion.
Recently I went on a leeture tear and
Iked with mothers ef boys and girls
he are attending mid-western universi-
ea. I talked with offieials of th* uni-
The Jewish Ladies Auxilary will
hold a Home Made Cake Bale at
Pigzly Wiggly store, 614 Polk St,, to-
day. Saturday, 26._______
Proceed* to be uned for buliding
Jewish Synagogue.
But March winds pass in a short time; whereas
the Classified Ads of this newspaper are a perma-
nent institution for service—a handy, readable sec-
tion where buyer and seller meet on propositions as
variable as the wind itself.
And sometimes it takes a veritable hurricane to
give folks the start they need toward reading Globe-
News Classified Ads regularly.
39
t
SPECIAL BOY SCOUT.
MEETING SUNDAY
tw the Bonutiful Paintinz
sTocKs-novcur. BOLD. QUoTED
WEBOY&SELL
SOUTH PLAINS FARMERS CONSIDER
ADOPTION OF BURR EXTRACTORS
lite
i
s
S>M
•ill
• iM
Hut one meat realize that what Chriatine
Stoble did when aha pulled th* Arigger
NewandUsed
ELECTRIC WASHING
MACHINES
At Reduced Prices
“An ill wind blows nobody any good”—certain-
ly not, if we look only for the bad in the breeze.
7
EYE. EAB. NOSE. THROAT
Phone Mil
Belt* 412 Oliver-Eakie Bldg.
msr
I
of growing rotton here, the South
Plnins bus a school the Texas Techno-
logical Milage, eonveniently located
where students ntudy the best methods
allsta, firm bellevers that drastie pum-
Lhment aheuld tollow any violation of
tbs code of morality, have it la their
hearta to do.
Little 16-year-old Rosa Stoble had done
wrong. Bet m 1e-yearold girt ean quite
come under the elaseifitation of a hard-
ened eriminal deserving a death sen-
tenee
e and love and intellicent help ever
ill ease the weight of the erosses these
om Stable* bar.
Of eoure the erime at Red Bank was
iiile, and nokody can exeuse or evem
mame that wether who murdend her
ABOUT POULTRT
Only the youngest and tendereat poul-
try should be roasted or boiled, the elder
birds are better boiled, ptewed or Mea-
seed. ' 0, .
place where cotton can be produced et •
the lowest cost in the entire South,
Jones pointed eat Lew costa and high
yield* have put the South Plain* in th* l
limelight a* the greatest cotton pro-
I Bat I also wa* told that there are net
so very many girl* who live ■■ they
' The younger generation of today i*
the crowd that wa* around 10 years of
hce during the World War. That was a
period when the whole world was swept
1,1 *
UNION STAGE UNE DEPOT
StUL wo should not hold to the code by .
and brutal punishment; by
•Mils murdering their daughters who
Neaoe eawed mothers.
LUBBOCK, Mareh 2—After adopting
the little *l*d for harvesting nt Im
and saving thougands of dollars to labor
coete. Booth Plains farmers are lap nt it
now to adopt the use of a burr extreter
machine on the farm to rut down
ginping cost and to save the burro
gathered to the sledded process for the
land, according to Dm. L. Jones who
le loaning an invitation to South Plalne
farmers to a meeting at the state ex-
periment station here Be terday March
M when a burr estractor machine will
be demonstrated.
Jones expects several hundred farmer*,
eounty agenta, eotton buyers, ginners
* eate 0
Kmm- ew +e** V
a look a Petroleum
Amydu r a Ber
BarvtMv Pot,
Euaoma
angdianti
Ctorhako Oil
Corkr-iMfallfoy
"E"
Amarill Loan Office
___Reterences-anybank
1U B M K.
I
MiM
NiM
lima
tie*
x‘
Anavilla. teem
4" 9 Display
At 510 Tayloe Street
Today.
■ t
a
ther had been a* swift Md rentle to
r to understand her daughter and to
Ido her before her relation• with the
hy’i father as obe was swift aad fere-
pioni.cpi.
#Bosin #E
."abrjnd4H45as.zo2
mi EVE
YOUNG B MAWLEY
Kher*. Bat ap from the days of the
ve we have bean fighting ear way to-
rd menagamy. Humanity isn’t going
threw that all away because some in-
riduala af the race are going to violate
I rode.
Nothing bet sympathy and lore and
nderatanding ever will keep that prob-
mdown to its minimum-whieh, after
L, is all we can hope to do.
burr extraetor wil insure even lower
pteduetion cesta.
The Booth Pistol has made the
wrentest progress to the predueion of
eetton to the pact eeverai yeers of any
section to the world. Only a few years
ago, Sooth Plains farmer did not be-
lieve the fleecy staple could be raised
here. In 120 only 17008 bales were
grown to Lubbock eounty and ethal
Booth Plains counties had only a few
hundred bales. This year approximatel
75,000 bales have been ginned to Lebhete
county aad neariy 60,000 bales have
been zinned M the Booth Pleins.
Booth Halas farmers have made a
profit on their cotton in spite of the
ruinious low prices paid for the cotton.
Lubbock eoeaty will rank about tenth
to the entire state this year to produe-
tion while Crosby. Lynn, Daw M. Terry,
Hale, Floyd. Garaa, Hockley, Lamb aad
other South Platos counties will follow
to close order.
BYJANE ADDAMS.
Punishiment, bo matter what Ite char-
acter, never is going to solve Ike prob-
— -wed mther.
The world Ie fell of Bom Stobles.
ething bat uympathy aad underetand-
E-E
LETS BULB A
Y.M.C.A
3$ a
*4
to the demonstration.
The machine I* similar to the mm
used to Plains gins to separate the
cotton burr from the cotton when
ginning sledded or snapped cotton. The
(Copyright, 1927)
The so-called steam we see toning
bom a kettle to not steam at all but tiny
dobulez of water eondensed from the
Beam. Bteem the vapor or gas of water
in invisible.
"famous
) MOTHER
Johmson Reneh
Meliro OU Co
Matab ON Co
Nev Sum
Panfiela on Ca
ransane Y
ibande OU
Su.'Has
•oMont Oil .
—-w, » ,
—
.2
REftRQUGH SKIN
a •h, white, Mi by Kina
Resinol
Neither do the Classified Ads make and save
money for those who ignore the bargain offers there;
or who fail to place an ad of their own when there
is something to buy, sell, rent or exchange.
Yes; March winds pass..the Classified Ads are
on the job for you day after day and year after
year. . . .....I...... . 4
U
K
Five
in tl
w
—
i ’ ■ .1" )
Whatever you want—Whnever you Want it
S. " “• i Nan L Gilkerson, M. D.
You can use the Classified Ads
-m-a-tacu-na-m--t s*manewm
Goods’ •— "Mincell
Sale.:
womT PLAINS CoAcIESRED BALL uns_LoNE STAB uNES- .
BSD STAS LINKS—LONS STAB LINE.
Mu/n i-0
-gv
AWind
tton af the Mitchell Cotton Burr Ea-
trusting machine. The machine was
i made by John K. Mitehel of SL Louis
who will be here personally to assist
—
_______________J__
--------bw-L
We still are to Mm* degree to th*
ekwash of those days. The younger ,
meratien of today le growing up with,
n memories of those days to their
lad* and to their hearts. [ L
The next generation will swing farther! _
iek late moral conservatism. It to a
Mural swing of the pendulum.
Judze Lndaey.
Judze Ben Lindsey is sincere to bls
ompanionate marriage" idea. Bat he is
vong- That to Mt the remedy. It tears
rwa. It makes rather a mess of what
Maid be elean-cut aad sharply defined.
1 tears down what women have been
qhtine for over uneounted zenerations -
egal responaibility for parenthood .ng
ome protection for the woman.
Always, I suppose, there will be unwed
--------------------------——
Hiding to the cellar of her home M Rod Beak, N. J,, 16-year-old Rona Stoble beecame an unwed mothen A few momenta later her own mother, Mrs. Chriotiae
Miili, came ragtag down the utaim aad shot Bees. te death. The baby died ea the eement fleer beside Ite metbev.
“I eould ae* tad the ghums.* Mrs. Christine Stoble said. Her temible menture of outraged respectability has are to id gad divided America. There ar
those who weald pardon the avengle parent, those who would punish her.
Jane Addams, ef Hull House, bhlengo, one ef the best lewd social worken la the United States, has given her view* *a the Bed Baah trugedy te The News.
Kers to her comment ea the emstnd the serial elanizicane ef IL
‘ A SCRAP OF PAPER,
GUST OF WIND—
AND A NEW READER
1 Hurrying through her reg-
ular “wash day worries” to or-
der to keep ea appointment
down town; and combating a
regular terror of a March wind
into the bargain; th*** were
enough to cause one of our lo-
cal housewives to think seri-
ously of locating someone to do
the washings for her.
As she waited at the corner
near her home for a Mr. al-
meet worn out by the buffeting
the wind had presented earlier,
the Mme breeze »wt a setap
of paper to her foot.
Ar t glancing down, the
words "Washings at Home"
met her eye. promiently dis-
played ea a section from the
Classified Ado of this newpa-
per.
This woman HAS efficient
help ea wash days now, thanks
to that Classified offer Aad
the Classified Ade hare a new
and very much interested read-
er—thanks to a vagrant March
wind!
—TO-—1----41 -—f ---
mueEe De5VNe= • VK B W -EM
“Help Wanted" “Household
I 1.,.a that th* „ounc., tor will mark another big step to mL1
Znomtion ...mrned.that.te.xoune’ing the South Plains spreme lb the.
zzneration.xeem2810 Passion Tor production of cotton Jones deelnres !
talking about m. Already the Plains to recognized a* the
Th* War's Backwash. K
ducing section of the South. Tbs to (
. . '1
Stupidity at Work.
. Human punishment after all to usual-
ly such a stupid, un-understanding in-
effectual sort of thine. It remadiM so
few situations. It soiree so few prob-
lem*. And It multipliee so many trage-
dies. *
Little Rosa Stoble, like any other 16-
year-old girl who to going to become an
unwed mother, needed every bit of the
love and sympathy and understanding
that could hove been given her. She
[weeded it to the utmost.
I I think that if Rom's religious
AMA-TONE
ns WATan THNr GIVES :
—0v ■ TOUPEP
‘ f / to A. • » 2 a r • ,
Recommemded to adia atomach,
oirvuM comastioma, kdney or
bladder trouble. For pertieulam
phone 1934, Clty Market, IM B.
•Ih. Rooma with garages at well
onESh Ejeokettmita
HOLDING’S MINBBAL WBU.
___ 1
B,3
of sledded or snapped cotton per hoar
and io mounted on skids in order to be
moved from cotton pile to eetton pile
to the fields where the sleds here been
। empled. The machines will likely be
1 introduced os the grain thresher to
former years, being moved from stack
to stack of grain to perform Ito work.
Three distinct reasons will influence
South Plains farmers to using ths burr
extractor*. Jones said today.
The first is to order to save the barre
for tbs toad as fertiliser. The burrs
have been burned at the gia thio year
and tests of the ashes disclose the feet
that the ashes contain a* high as 35
per cent potash.
The extractor will cut down ginning
exp moo, naving the former this cost.
The extractor will cut down the bulk
of the eotton hauled to the gia aad
will save the farmers much time in
awaiting their tarn nt the gin.
The cotton tamed eat by the extrac-
tor will be ef lesa bulb end ean be stored
for bleaching purposes much bettor by
farmer*.
A number of prominent eetton men
of the state end others interested in;
the farmer*' welfare are expected to
attend the demonstration.
The introduction of the burr extrac- I
suomTEs DIECT, •oUTE PANANDLA•O
GLOBE-NEWS
PHONE 4750-751 8 •—s."F
What she thought was a disgrace upon
i her and her family, there would have
been no tragedy. For there would have
But that ie aekiag a lot of uncounted
। thousands of mother*, apparently. Fath-
iota. toe. It to much easler to let things
elide and then try to be an avenging god
on your own account.
Problem a New One.
Once I believed that every unwed
mother should beep her ewa child aad
War IL Now I know I wae wrong. I
have mm m many of them utterly an-
' fitted to rear their children, whether
j they were married by all the priests and
pastors in the world. It Ie absolutely an
ndividual problem every time it arisea
And heaven knows that It arises often
enough everywhere.
it to a eurious thing about America--
whan It eomes to talk about sexwear
probably ae radical a nation as there is
in the world. Bet when U comes to any-
I thing else, politics, economies, say pos-
eible change la the order of things at
they are—wo are the world’s most con-
eervative nation.
82 Beauty
Of Hair and kin
, 5 Preserved By
Cuticura
,.55.
7:5
tob»
Choi
Mar
whe
Ct
elect
MU
1. 11
ecor
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—■ ■
10
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 138, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 26, 1927, newspaper, March 26, 1927; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1570144/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.