Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 104, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 4, 1926 Page: 3 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Do
ior
small
your-
onal.
ich it
oth-
thus
not
mo
DAY MORNING, MARCH 4. 1926....
AMARILLO DAILVINEWS
WHOSE CHILDREN
shall we STARVE?
TO legislators believe that a few months’ starva-
A tion is all right, butthat it begins to get serious
after five or six years?
There are 100,000 children in the United States
today who are slowly starving to death. They are
denied the economic assistance extended in forty-
two states through mothers’ pension laws, to other
children. They are starving, not because of their own
sins but because of the misfortunes of their parents.
Read Judge Henry Neil’s striking article in Good
Housekeeping for March.
FOUR remarkable short stories—THREE continuing
novels-EIGHT special articles — the Institute — the
Studio-Fashions—and many other features in enter-
tain and interest you in
GOOD HOUSEKEEPING
Out NOW—Buy it NOW
IOARD TO MANAGE
NELSON ESTATE IS
NAMED BY OFFICIALS
KANSAS CITY, March 3.—(AP)The
board of university trustees who will
manage and control the William Rock-
hill Nelson estate will consist of J.
C. Nichola, William Volker and Her-
bert V- Jones, nil of this city. Ap-
pointment of the three men waa an-
nounced today by the board of presi-
dents of the Universities of Kansas,
Missouri and Oklahoma, designated
under the Nelson will to perform this
duty.
Bales of the Kansas City Star and
Times, within two years after the
death of Mrs. Kirkwood, will be con-
ducted by the board of Universities
trustees appointed today. Mr. Nelson
directed in his will that the sale was
to be made “at the best price and on
the best terms obtainable as soon an
Mich sale can be made without sacri-
fice and not later than two years after
the death of my wife and daughter."
ITACTOAI
AnD010NE
ONE OF THE
SEASON’S BEST
BAI LEY’S popula
tolic novel
and a 2-reel Sennett Comedy
FAIRTHEATRE
The Home of
Good Music
in a sparkling
modern film comedy
ZANDER
the GREAT
=.====_________________o-nix-ey (unglir
and a 2-reel Mermaid Comedy
Mission <M7m G TT.MA Returns to
Friday WV III. D. Hid the Screen
CITY BRIEFS
F. E Walton returned to his home
in Slaton yesterday following a visit
In Amarillo.
Gordan MeGoughey, Warwick Well,
was visiting in Amarillo yesterday.
T. L. Smoat of White Beer is in Am-
arillo on business.
Olga Crawford returned to her home
in Channing yesterday. She had been
attending the cattlemen’s convention
here.
Charles Hankins, Lubbock, lo In Ama-
rillo on business
Florence Thornton will return to her
home in Dumas today. She has been in
Amarillo for the past three days attend-
ing the cattlemen's convention.
Miss Kate Meadors and father, Clar-
endon, were visiting in Amarillo yes-
terday,
E. M. Osier was in Amarillo transact-
Ing business yesterday.
Mrs. W. H Latham, Dalhart, was
visiting in Amarillo yesterday.
Raymond Haynes, Claude, was In Am
arillo yesterday.
H. E. Helion returned to his home
in Channing yesterday following a vis-
it in Amarillo. He was in Amarillo to at-
tend the cattlemen's convention.
Mrs. Byron Hodges returned to her
home in White Deer yesterday following
n visit in Amarillo.
Arthur Letts, Clarendon, returned to
his home yesterday after a business vis-
it in Amarillo.
Oscar Bivins returned to the ranch
yesterday after having enjoyed three
days of the cattlemen's convention.
Dorothy Dix’s Advice
At 17 a Giri Is Only In Love With Love
and She Needs to be Saved From Her
First Sweetheart Unit! She Has Seen
Enough of the World le Know Her
Own Taste in Men.
Colonel Green, a very rich Texan, who
with his wife, had adopted eleven daugh-
ters, says:
“Girls need to be protected from
their first sweethearts. A girl in the
puppy-love stage nerds protection
from herself just as she needs a
dentist when she has a toothache.”
I want to add my confirmation to this
statement. There isn’t a mail that does
not bring me two or three heartbroken
letters from women whose lives wsrs
wrecked because they had no one to pro
tect them from themselves when they
were 17.
‘‘I thought I was in love with the
man I married when I was 17,” one
woman will write. “Now I am 24
and I simply hate him. There isn’t a
thing he does that doesn’t get upon
my nerves. He bores me to extine-
lion, and I cannot imagine what 1
ever mw in him that made me
think that I even fancied him.”
“I married when I was 17 a man for
whom I thought I had the grand pas-
Mon." writes another. "I know now that
it was a child’s passing fancy, and I
have met the man who la my real mate
and whom 1 worship with my whole
soul.”
"I married when I waa 17,” writes
still another, “now I am 23. I have
four babies, and I am worn and
broken in health and old before my
time I have never had any of the
pleasures of girlhood and I am tired
of my husband, tired of my fretting
children, tired of my home, tired of
marriage. I would like to be free of
them all and to dance and go to cab-
arris and on joy-rides and have a
good time.”
So these letters run, each one stres-
sing some pitiful phase of the too-early
marriage. Oftener than not the man in
the case is not to blame. He took no ad-
vantage of the girl's inexperience to lure
her into marriage. She was just as anx-
ious to marry him as he was to mar-
ry her. ,
He has not changed and turned from
a fairy prince to a brute. He is just the
same ordinary chap he always was It
is only her taste in men that has alter-
ed. Nor has he failed in his duty to her
as a husband. It is only that marriage is
a life work and not a jazz party and
she wasn't ready to settle down to the
business of wifehood and motherhood
Nonetheless, there is the trage-
dy of a wrecked life as bleak and
piteous as can be made of broken
hopes and bloated illusions and
weariness and hopelessness and de-
spair. For there is no undoing this
thing that a girl did in the folly of
her youth.
It is because the too-early marriage
almost invariably ends in disaster that
it is so important to protect a girl
against her first sweetheart. It doesn't
matter who he la or what qualities he
may be crazy about him at the time,
but that is no guarantee that when she
grows up she will still be ravished by
that particular line of attraction in u
man.
For it is the girt herself who is in
a transition stage, whose needs are
changing every day, whose tastes
are altering every hour, whose
ideals differ from minute to minute
and who at 17 has no more idea af
what particular type of a husband
she will want when she is 34 than
she has of what style of hat she will
feel she rennet live without seven
years from new
Hence the danger of picking out a
husband for keeps before she even
knows what she admires and wants in
a man. Heaven knows matrimony is
risky enough for women without their
taking any chances on what they are
going to be and prefer themselves.
Furthermore, there is this added dan-
ger: that the disgruntled and unhappy
wife almost invariably finds some man
with whom she does full In love, and
then, unless she is a woman of high
moral principle and great strength of
character, there la another unsavory
scandal and a wrecked home and or-
phaned little children.
Oil maps at Randal Drug Co.
PANHANDLE GROCERY
MAN DIES; BURIAL IN
STRATFORD FRIDAY
PARK TALK
sons. The Masonic lodge or BI
WIl have charge of the funers’s
X Bicycle tires. F. L. Beer, soo k
Special lo The News
PANHANDLE, Mar. 3.—J. P. Brown.
70 years old, owner of the Brown Gro-
cery company, died at his home here at
4 o’clock Wednesday morning.
The body was sent over the Santa Fe
to Amarillo last night by the Stone Un-
detaking company thence to his oM
home in Stratford, where funeral ser-
vices will be held Friday aftenoon.
Mr. Brown was a pioneer Btratford
having lived there from 1M1 to 1925
when tie came here. He is survived by
his widow, five daughters and three
SureRe
FOR INDIGE
DELLAI
25e and 75€ Packages Ew
Better Than Whiskey
For Colds and Flu
The sensation of the drug trade
domereneh.the tooninnteeld %
teed by the
in your hand
swallow and e
to two minute
aka the drink
. ,, possesses. He may be the incarnation of
Pictures of such eattlemen as Lee every charm, and virtue and the girl
Bivins, Tol Ware, Fred Horsbrugh, R. -
D. Masterson, Sr. of Amarillo, and Har-
old Bugaboo of Clarendon, are to lie seen r
in the show window of Edwards.
MAY
I9D440:
SON
The Board of City Development is
fairly cluttered with newspapermen
nowadays They are looking and crav
Ing for stories on Amarillo, trying to
scoop one another. >
The Board of City Development in-
formation booth in the lobby of the Am-
| arillo hotel wait a busy place during the
I cattlemen'll convention.
Max Bentley in a story in the Star-
| Teli gram said that the lobby of the Am-
arillo hotel waa stacked ten feet deep
with cattlemen. The city jail was in
about the Mime condition yesterday. |
Moot of them were drunks, not cattle-
men, but the element which follows in
the wake of a convention. There are
three women In the city jail. Mr. Dent,
ley is staff correspondent of the Star-
Telegram
Mrs. R. F. Teel is seriously ill of pneu-
monia at her home, 1309 Harrison
street.
Robert Doubleday is seriously ill with
pneumonia at a local hospital. Mr.
Doubleday for the past two years has
lived in Panhandle. He formerly resid-
ed in Amarillo.
Norman Hopkins, son af Mr. and Mrs.
W. P. Hopkins, 1614 Harrison street,
was removed from his home last night
to the Northwest Texas hospital. He is
seriously ill.
K. w. Clark, former trustee of the
Burk Burnett estates, has been ap-
pointed general livestock agent for
the Fort Worth and Denver railroad
company. He will have his head,
quarters In Fort Worth,
Harley-Davidsons. Beer, 300 E. 4th.
SR
“,
Women
Like
The easy disposal feature
of this new hygienic help
—no laundry, just discard
nd effective as whiskey, reek
or any after cold and cough
ey have ever tried.
t stores are supplied with the
elixir, so all you have to
op into the nearest drug store,
clerk half a dollar for a bot.
ronal and tell him to serve
inspoonsful. With your watch
Auditorium
as well as
STS 1
MONDAY
MARCH
METROPOLITAN PRIMA DONNA
IN
CONCERT
AMARILLO AUDITORIUM
Friday, March 5th
Auspices Tri-State Fair
Miss Peterson sings grand opera and also the old-time
songs we all love to hear.
Seat Sale Opens Saturday
Morning at Ledbetter Drug Store No. 1. Out-of-town
patrons should mail their checks to R. P. Parcells, Box
751, Amarillo, Texas.
PRICES
Parquet and Boxes (1st 19 rows)....
Main Floor and Loges back 19th row)
Balcony..........................
When You Catch Cold
Rub on Musterole
Musterole is easy to apply and it gets
in its good work right away. Often it
prevents a cold from turning into “’flu”
or pneumonia. Just apply Musterole
with the fingers. It does all the good
work of grandmother’s mustard plaster
without the blister.
Musterole Is a clean, white ointment.
made of oil of mustard and other home
simples. It is recommended by many
doctors and nurses. Try Musterole for
sore throat, cold on the chest, rheuma-
tism. lumbago, pleurisy, stiff neck, bron-
chitis, asthma, neuralgia, congestion,
pains and aches of the back and joints,
sprains,sore muscles, bruises,chilblains,
frosted feet—colds of all torts.
To Mothers: Musterole is also
made in milder form for
babies and email children.
Ask for Children’s Musterole.
36c and 65c, jars and tubes; hos-
size, $3.00.1
$2.00
$1.50
$1.00
Better than a mustard plester
TN a new way, women now are
1 freed of the disadvantages of
old-time “sanitary pads.” Protec-
tion it greater. The old embarrass-
ment of disposal and laundry is
avoided.
Get Kotex—8 in 10 better-class
women have adopted it.
1 Discards as easily as a piece of
• tissue. No laundry. No embar-
rassment.
It's five times as absorbent as
ordinary cotton psdsl
You dine, dance, motor for hours
in sheerest frocks without a second's
doubt or fear.
It deodorises, too. And thus ends
ALL danger of offending.
You ask for it at any drug or
department store, without hesitancy,
simply by saying “KOTEX.”
Do as millions are doing. End
old, insecure ways. Enjoy life every
day. Package of twelve costs only
a few cents.
KOTEX
No laundry—discard like tissue
Pneumonia is now more
deadly than Tuberculosis
Government records show that
deaths from pneumonia reach
their peak during January, Feb.
ruary or March. Formerly, tub-
erculosis, the Captai n of all < lie
Men of Death," as it was called
by John Bunyan, was the moat
fatal scourge of mankind. Since
1916, however, pneumonia has
gained the grim title, averag-
fog yearly 32 more deaths per
100,000 population.
A Gorgeous Riot of Fun and Be;
THE WORLD’S GREATEST REVUE
COMPANY OF 199, CHORUS OF 50 OF THE MOS
BEAUTIFUL GIRLS IN AMERICA
30 SCENES OF GORGEOUS SPLENDOR
IMPORTANT: This is a guaranteed attraction. Your mone
refunded if dissatisfied. The show will be given here exact
as shown in New York and Chicago. (Signed) Dave Derde
Prices 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 Plus Tax
Seat Sale at City Drug Store
Dy t mA
.lll E
[ion is on-
OS-----
CINCE the dawn of civilization, pneumonia has scourged
O the human race. Hippocrates, father of modern medi-
cine, described this disease in 400 B.C., and yet after 23
centuries, we know little more about it than he did. The
cure for pneumonia is as yet undiscovered. But we do know
that colds lower the Vitality aud hence pave the way for
pneumonia. Many fatal attacks, however, might be averted
if more of us would follow this maxim—
“Never let a cold get a start”
Coryn - rhinitis-- no matter w hat medical men
may call the common cold, it is nevertheless a
disease. A person with a bad cold is sick and
should go to bed for a day or two.
Complete test enables the body to regain lost
vitality and so throw off germ infection. Un-
fortunately, it is not possible for all of us to get
such rest. The next Dest thing is to take vigor-
ous action at the first sign of a cold.
At night take a purgative—a hot bath, and
plenty of hot lemonade—go to. bed under
blankets to induce perspiration. Briskly mas-
sage the throat and chest with Vicks for five
minutes. Then spread on thickly—about one-
eighth of an inch thick—and cover with two
thicknesses of hot flannel cloths.
Leave the covering loose around the neck so
the vapors arising from the application on the
chest may be freely inhaled.
if there is much tightness or soreness in the
chest, apply hot, wet cloths to open the pores
of the skin before using Vicks.
If the air passages continue stopped up.
try the “teakettle and tent treatment." This
method fully explained in the directions—
consists, briefly, of vaporizing Vicks in a tea-
kettle and arranging a newspaper “tent” over
the patient's head so that the combined warm
steam and vapors can be inhaled.
Being externally applied, Vicks can be used
freely without disturbing the digestion. This
makes it a boon to mothers. An application
at bedtime will usually prevent a night attack
of croup.
Above all else, do not let a cold “hang
on” and become deep-seated during these
danger months. Treat it vigorously in its
early stages.
Vicks acts two ways-
Internally and externally
When applied over throat and cheat, Vicks acts like
e poultice or plaster, increasing the circulation and
to helping to prevent congestion in the region of
the lungs.
At the same time, the ingredients are released by
the body beet in the form et vapors and these vapors,
inhaled with each breath, carry the medication direct
to the air passages end lungs.
The ingredients of Vids ire printed on every
OVER 21 MiuoN Jars Uszo’l
1
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 104, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 4, 1926, newspaper, March 4, 1926; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1694067/m1/3/: 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.