The Weekly Herald. (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 7, 1908 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 26 x 17 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:
THE WEEKLY HERALD MAY 7 1 90S.
THE WEEKLY HERALD
Published weekly on Thursday
at 111 rolk Streot Amarlllo Teiu.
Br r. E. lTOESEN.
Entered at tba Poitofflca at Amar-
lllo Texas aa tecond cluna mull mat
tr.
Official Organ of City ft Amarlllo
and Potter Count f
ADVERTISING RATES.
Dliplay 20o per Inch each Iniartloo.
Jxcala 10c per inch each inaertioa.
SUBSCRIPTION 11.00 PER YEAR.
Tba Herald will ceaia coming to
yon when your tluia expire uulesi
we art authorized to continue It.
t'hould any subscriber full to re-
ceive Tho Herald regularly pluase
advise ui at oora by card or tele-
phone. Any error reflecting upon the
character atandlog or reputation of
any person firm or corporatlor
which may appear In tha cclii'fln of
Tba Herald will be gladly corrected
upon Us being brought te tba at-
tention of the publishers.
THURSDAY MAY 7 . 1908
LIKE THIS I.KICCH.
In e?ery community . there are
some who like the leech are merely
"hapger 011"; who gt all they can
out of the work and effort of other
and grow fat 07 other' substance
Amu ill lo and the Panhandle are
no exception to this abuse. In fact
the leech la mure in evidence here
than anywhere It baa ever been the
writer' fate to cant his lot.
W'e havo tba leech In buslnes.
lie Alfa in hits office or aland be.
bind hln counters rakes in the
shekle and salts them down. He
baa no use for the anllrltors who ali
for donations or Rubrrlptlona. He
tblukd that other were placed bore
to build churches school railroad
fair packing bouses park street
railway pnved streets and all those
thing that go toward the develop
nient of a city. HI cold-blooded
make-up hi elfUh little soul hi
warped and contracted heart hi In
flnltetimul mind his every part and
parcel of being; rebel against tha
manly. the noble tbo liberal the pro
grcsslvo and the free-hearted H0 I
11 leech and despite all effort on the
part of other to awaken in him at
leuHt the lemblance of a man he
remiilim a leech. The leopard doe
not change his spots neither will the
K-ech eoaao t0 suck and steal his sub.
stance.
We have the leech In another
form. There are thos who have
grown rich from the advance in the
price of land. Some of them have
been liberal with their means thug
cattily acquired. They have been
jucnuuea wnn an rue movemonr
which tended toward a greater Ama
rlllo and a more developed country.
Hut there ure others who havo hoard
ed their wealth have reruBed to lend
any assistance in the common work
Of 'building; up and have even do
generated into "knockera' and de-
tractora of th town and country
that have made them wealthy such
men are leecbe who like their pro-
totype of the roadaide hedge should
Ibe passed by a not worthy of a look
from honest men.
And there are other. The leech
is found in every walk of life. Walk
over Win Ignore him; treat hlm as
you will he stm remains a leech
nuisance among men.
"WILT" TIIR "STOOL riGEOX
la every stockyards where cattle
are. killed there la to be found an
interesting character a criminal
.whose crime is bo hideous and re.
pulaiva as to make tha subject a
cnique attraction.
Up at Swift's packing house in
Chicago this character answers to
the name of 'B111t-' He is a steer
who arrived In a load from Texas
aome three years ago and was train-
ed to lead oattle Jnto the death pens
where they are mercilessly butch-
ered. "Billy"' goes Into a cattle pen
noses around the victims until he
has their confidence. Then h0 start
out into a straight and narrow lane
which leads to destruction. Just be-
fore he reaches the pong where the
batchers watt a door opens In the
'de of th0 alley and Billy slips out
while hi dupes go on to the sham-
bles. "Billy" ha a fine Hre 0f it H Is
isleek and well fed as a machine
office holder. He wear a 'bovine
mile and an lusiduoug manner that
carries conviction nkln to that con-
veyed to the rank and file Totcr by
the Snapp appointee. He hag a good
graft while It works.
lint "Hilly" la only one or a long
Una of the butcher' stool plgeorii.
The history of hi prdceor ha
biuD the Kiiuie. Ilo t will foljow
l0 their footstep. Hooner or later
"nilly" will grow proud and luxy
and fat. The aommon rattle from
the plain wll gaze on bin plump
(Idea and shining hide with nupl-
clou; ho will not gather thorn In
quick order and (ho butcher will be
kept waiting at their work.
Then. tome day "Hilly" will trot
down the long aley ahead of the
herd and turn to leave by the aide
door and It won't opm to Mm. He
will he swept on to the thambje
startled and Indignant. There will
be one more bHIow of fear and pain
the butcher wll grin and hi l ike and
"Hilly" fed ami aleck and fat. will
be beef like the oher while an-
other "Hilly" will fl)l blH plure.
It' lh way In the stockyard a
In machine politic. The "Hilly"
In both lend a gny life for a while
but let both beware of losing their
grip the end la fver In eight and the
butcher have no mercy.
ItfTKMM TIIK OI.IVi: IlRAXt H.
Apropos our comment on the re
cent stockmen' convention the Hos-
well Dully Record lni the following;
"After nil. it was a fair fight and a
glorious victory and whllo the Dully
1'unbandln ha probably said too
much still -we forgive them 'bellev.
Ing that all things work together for
good. It I a fact Just becoming ap-
parent that the Pecos country and
the Panhandle country aro becoming
more aud mor0 Identical In a busl-
ncB way not only as to slock Inter.
ets but agricultural. The time Is
not far distant when there will be
clone lrado relations and the grent
plains country In New Mexico and
Texa will be as one In a business
and social way.
"Th cattle convention coming to
Roawelt I not only fair and Jut;t
but a mean to that end.
'Tha unklndeat cut and the mot
unfair Is the perHonul attack on Mr.
Slaughter. It la a well known fact
that Mr. Slaughter's entire range cat-
tle intercut are in Texus not In New
Mexico and he has always been don-
tifled with the Texas cattle Interest
and not with those of New Mexico.
It ia true that hi homo I In Hon well
and he I known for his great loyalty
to his home town so great that he
said ln Amarlllo and It was well
known among tho cattlemen that he
would not accept the presidency of
the association If it would In any way
Interfere with Itoswell's Interest.
"Tho editor of the Panhandle
should come dow n next spring. Ros-
well wants to extend the glad hand
to him and to all the people on the
plain a well a to the cowmen."
The editor of the Record Is to be
congratulated upon hi conservatism
and falrne In this controversy. He
extend tha olive 'branch and Invite
all of us to co mo and partake of the
good thing his town will prepare for
thQ not convention. He has felt
the pulso of the Pocos country and
BHsure us that its Interest from a
business standpoint aro to become
"more aud more Identlcul" with the
Interest of the Panhandle. We are
willing to Joln hand with the Re.
cord In an effort" to eHtabllsh and
perpetuate uch a friendly and mu.
tually beneflclnl relationship between
the two section of this great smith
western country. But we would not
consent to a combination by wMeh
the Panhandle would lose It identity.
AS to the "unklndeut cut" we did not
aim to make a personal attack on
Mr. Slaughter. As the newly-elected
president of the Stockmen's assocln-
tion the gentleman renders himself
open to criticism Just the same as
would the Incumbent of any public
Office. If Mr. 81auarhtor rinla that
he made the remark accredited to
him we will gladly make th0 proper
apology.
1
TIIK IIArrv FA KM Kit
The farmer Is occupying the proud
est place lu this country at the pres
ent time. The city man of affair all
over the country I reported aa opti
mistic of the future for business but
be Is waiting to see what la going to
happen. The farmer is not only opll.
mlBtic but he la buying tool and
seeds for bla business thl spring as
usual pod getting ready to harvest
larger crops than ever before with
the weather Indications favoring hlin.
But ho is doing still more than that.
"He la still buv'ug automobile and
pianolas" says a reporter for the New
York Mall who ha staken a 10000
mile trip through the West South
and Southwest. This man says it is
worth while to travel that way Just
to talk with the people who are self-
sustaining regardless of the freniled
finances of the eastern centers at
times. He raid he heard no loud
note of despair but a great deal of
mimic that made him satisfied that
he I an American living anions a
people who aro resourceful under tho
moHt trying circumstance and who
bare nothing In their mind that
look like spring poverty of the dls-
heartening kind. Tho farmer were
discovered to him a the people who
siiHtaln the country when It ha the
blue ami ho wa not prejudiced In
favor of the tillers of the oll be-
cause he I a mere newspaper man In
tho big city of other affairs.
The tlimu which occurred yester-
day at Santa Barbara between the
tailor of tho Aliunde fleet and the
tradenmen of th0 town wan entirely
uncalled for detiirnentul to the In-
lercitt of the city and a luxtlng dis-
grace to that branch of our navy.
While It I manifestly unfair for any
kind of a bunlnc man to over.
charge iuply becmiHO he ha s a
"cinch" on the man It Is Juki a
much out of line for a sullor to ex
pect any special co'irlealea In the
way of entertalumont nd so forth
The report say this clash came as
the culmination of several minor
complaints of lack of entertainment
etc. It's too bud! What right 'hns
any member of the fleet to expect
thlH from any town? Anything which
has up to the present been done in
this direction hus been voluntarily
performed by tbo townspeople and
If one town doe not nee t way deur
to follow their example there the
matter should end. Tradesmen al-
ready In the way of tuxe. pay their
part toward the maintenance of the
fleet and why there should bo any
disappointment at the luck of elab
orate preparations for the reception
and entertnlnment of the Jackles is
difficult to comprehend.
Chancellor MrOrnekcn 0f the New
York university who returned from
a visit to Norwny and Sweden w here
he arranged for an exchange of pro.
fesKor. tells of a talk he had with
King Haakon of Norwny about the
growth of socialism In his dominions.
The king upon meeting a group of
Socialists had listened to ther opin-
ion that the wealth of the land should
be divided up at a given time among
all th people. Whereupon the king
replied by asking If they would con-
sent to a redlvlslon a few minute
later with all the babies born since
tho last dlvlnion
Secretary Wilson anticipates bump-
er crop thl year and thit the price
of edibles will contluue to be high.
Tho reason for the latter belief 1
that tho population of the country
hu lncrermed faster than the erop
acreage. The number of men that
have gon0 Into bimlness and manu-
facturing pursuit s far greater thn
the number that have taken up farm-
ing. The scarcity of farm help le a
large factor In the situation. The
secretary foreseej many families In
thl country getting meat only once
or twice a week as In European
countries
PA KM KItH SHOUT OF IIRLP.
In spite or the fact that railroad
officials anHumo to take a gloomy
view of the future and say the coun-
try U Just entering the shadow of the
panic there seems to bo no scramble
on the par tof tho unemployed to
entrench themselves ln Jobs against
the hard times. At least this seems
a reasonable Inference Judging from
the difficulty people have ln obtain-
ing farm and domestic help. Both
love and money nppear to hove lost
Upon Every Boltljg
And Wrappsr of tha Ganufoo
Dr. C;!i's Pho-Tsr-Honoy
ia printed tin bor donin tod tha
Dumber SMS. Th itoalun la our trtdo-
rowk and SOt la our jutrmnty lumber.
Th mtdifiu ennWined in uch bottle
will cure Cougha OoliU and all Bronuhtnl
troubles more quickly and effectually
than any othar remedy.
DR. BELL'S
Pine -Tar-Honey
I iold by oil drantaU o. BOo. and tlM
per bottle. Manufactured only by
THE E. E. SUTHERLAND MEDICINE CO.
laW)Mi
Piducah gantuckf.
mmmmmmmmmmwBHOMBmsuaismmmtk-
their proverbial charm. Rig money
automobile and the privilege of tak.
Ing his employer'a daughter to the
Fourth of July celebration are of.
fered lu vain by farmer. 1'nless
ono know how to land the fecund
franchise th surest wsy to get the
coin now I to don the overall.
The Dally Panhandle ha made
arrangement with the long distance
telephone company and with the tel.
rgraph company 0 Texas to secure
a full report as near as ran be as-
certained of the primary election re-
turns tomorrow night. Our off Ico
will be open during the night hours;
all medsages will bo pOHted up In bul-
letins and the public In general I
invited to make the Dally Panhandle
office It headquarters and get tho
return n they are flashed over tho
wiroH to us. fWe will most probably
Issue n pnelnl edition Sunday morn-
ing giving the returns n full a far
us rereved up to tho h"' of C'ns
to prctiH.
The movement to .buy cotton seed
for free distrlbuton among farmers
as an Inducement to get them to raise
cottou Is most timely and propery. If
wo can raise cotton In the vicinity
of Amsrlllo or In nny purt of the
Panhandle the sooimt tho farmer
learn of It the better It will bo for
all concerned. Cotton I a money
crop ouo of tho most remunerative
of farm products. Cottou In the
Panhandle mean a cottou seed oil
mill; and an oil mill mean the es-
sentia adjunct to the packing house.
Klsewbere in this Issue appears an
account of the work and progress at
tho local government experimental
station which should be read by all
Our people are not taking the proper
Interest In this most Important iustl
tution and neither are we taking
tch proper step to secure once and
for all the new location for this
farm. This question bas been pend-
ing long enough and it 'behooves our
people to take Immediate steps to se
sctire a permanent establishment of
this station In It new locatcn.
Snows fiobta and cold weather are
reported from the north tast and
northwest While we occasionally
have an unpleasant gust of wind
we are basking In the sunshine while
other countries are rolling snowballs
It may seem a brutal view to take
but there 1 no gainsaying the dec
laratlon of tho Philadelphia North
American that In this twentieth cen
tury the man who does not so
strengthen bl brain and train his
hand as to rse above the dead level
of the unskilled mass will remain a
clod and until the day of his death
wil be trodden npon.
Mayor Marrs will now receive the
"princely" salary of $50 per month.
Our offce "devil" Is putting on airs
since he has learned this fact feel
ing that he 1 not bo Tory far behind
Ills Honor hlinself In this respect.
Well really the only difference be-
tween the two is that where one gets
all the glory and honor Incident to
the office the other gets his full
quota of "cussing" from the office
The postal savings bank bill has
been reported favorably hy the sen-
ate committee oa postoffices but
with an amendment changing the
name of the proposed Institution to
postal depositories. If the govern-
ment Is to go into the banking bus-
iness one name Is a good a another.
In our Associated press reports to-
day came a story of a soldier In a
company of engineer who was under
arrest awaiting trial by court mar-
tial for having shaken hand with
Emma Goldman and pledging her
bis assistance. If It Is nroven that
he Is an ally of this Goldman woman
no censure no punishment can be
too great for this man Is n traitor to
hi country aud a spy ln the camp
of hi friends.
A bankrupt banker at Rochester
Minn. has turned carpenter and put
on overalls. lie declares that ho In-
tends to earn money enough to pay
every depositor who ha lost by his
mismanagement. An exchange re
marks that thl3 Is a heavy contract
but It expresses the hope that the
banker of former days will live long
enough to fill It. It often happens
that bankrupt bankers penult the
depositors to wear the overalls.
Get out of the road all yo "moc-
backs." and lot the avalanche of
prosperity pass. We are Incorporat-
ed and the slogan Is a greater aud
better Clovls clean streets more
sidewalks better drainage .better
fire protection' and city government
for the people and by the people
The packing house question la
neither dead nor aloopliiR In fact
It I very much alive. The men who
have thl proposition In hand aro de-
termined to atuy with It until It
consummaton.
It was J. West Goodwin tho w
known old-tlmo Mlnwourl editor who
onco suld: "I am an old man and
have had many troubles but tho most
of them never happened." That i
tho common experience
One of th0 dangers of hoarding
money is Illustrated by the case of
the Indiana man who died Inst week
from blood poisoning caused by
copper cent which he swallowed sixty
year ago.
The damage by frost Saturday and
Sunday nights to the orchards In the
fruit growing regions of Colorado is
estimated at 11000000.
Monday next we will publish an
Interesting article by K. A. (Pat)
Puffrath on Amurlllo today as com-
pared with It appeuranc0 In 1S7.
Luck of spnee only precludes the pos
sibility of our publishing it today.
"Beware of the gosslper" exclaims
a exchange. "Of all human para.
site who fcaHt upon the character of
your daughter wife or your self this
ally of the devil Is the most respon
sible. If you are in the least de-
gree addicted to this most debasing
of hublls shun It as you would the
very gates of hell."
A total of approximately 42500
mile will have been covered toy the
Atlantic battleship fleet when It ar-
rives at Hampton Roads February
22 next according to the estimates
made by the naval officials. The
distance to he covered according to
an Itinerary made public lately for
the voyage of the fleet from Snn
Francisco to the Philippines thence
to China Japan and back to Manila
Is 16218 miles.
When we see the elaborate prep-
arations in progress in the Amarlllo
yards of the Santa Fe railroad thero
can no longer remain a semblance of
a doubt ln our minds that the Santa
F0 intend to do all and more than
was promised or contemplated.
Within the next few years the Santa
Fe railroad will have the most ex-
tensive shop and yard equipment In
this city of any on their system
through the wholo Southwest.
We have often heard the remark
from the Hps of strangers and even
natives that Amarlllo Is treeless. Let
these short-sighted folks now take
a glimpse of our city and they will
change their minds. On every street
practically In every part of tho city
from the center to the very farthest
boundaries in all directions trees
may 'be seen In full leaf well cared
for tastily arranged in position to
produce the best effect and within
a few years the city will have the
appearance of ono beautiful grove.
Nothing could be more unsightly
on the streets of a city than flying
dodgers papers colored and uncol-
ored littering and clogging gutters
corners alleys in fact converting an
otherwise sightly anee: until an un-
sightly thoroughfare. We wish to
call the attention of the city council
to the fact that Amarlllo la subject
to thla abuse. Immediate steps
should he taken to remedy the evil.
An oidlnnnce should bo passed pro-
hibiting the promiscuous scattering
of any and all kinds of paper and
other matter that may be converted
nto filth by the elements. Other
cities have been compelled to pro-
tect themselves by ordinance against
this abuse and Amarlllo should not
be the last to take proper steps to
abolish a practice that 19 o detri-
mental to the city's appearance and
sanitary condition.
In the May number of Munsey'g
Magazine lt8 editor and proprietor
Frank A. Munsey writes nt length
of the business situation and takes
ror nis thenls the statement that
"there I not money enough In the
world today to do the world's
work." He traces the causes of the
panic with this Idea ln view and
ridicules tho Idea that ItooseveK was
tne responsible factor. He says the
crash was Inevitable nnd two yours
overdue. The demand for better
living was at the bottom of it. The
expansion of trade outroached the
available supply of money. There
was too much prosperity and credit
was strained. High finance and co-
lossal steals also had much to do
with the result and Roosevelt had
checked this bad work. But the
Roosevelt radicalism of today would
Ibe th9 conservatism of five years
1 r.i
HI. U
Povder
dl3pcnsablo
1 m 1
tlon cf our dally foo muti
bo frco from noxious inyrdienta
Complete purify anil whole-
isomerics; arc the unques-
tioned characteristics ci
WHOtiyS j Ufa'
118
CREAM
rxr
a l
c
1
I
c
Its active principle cream of tar-
tar a pare health-giving fruit
acid Is derived solely lrom grapes
Poisonous Ingredient are fonnd In the
low-priced baking powders. Their
active principle n a mineral acid de-
rived lrom snlpLoiic acid oil 1 vitriol
Study the label aa4 boy
oaly bahlna powder mad
Iran cream el tartar
A special train on the Pennsyl-
vania railroad ran from Pittsburg
to Chicago on Sunday morning lu
seven hours and forty-two minutes.
Tho distance is 4GS mllos which
makes the average speed a fraction
under alxty-one miles an hour In-
cluding stops. Never before so far
a known has this average speed
been maintained for so great a dls.
tance by a train carrying passengers.
In Its remarkable flight the special
train overtook tho "Pennsylvania
Special" which Is the company's
olghteen-hour train between Chicago
and New York and one of the two
fastest long-distance trains in the
world. The special wa stopped four
times and slowed down once by the
block signals to prevent overrun-
ning the Pennsylvania' crack train.
One of theso forced stops was five
minutes and tho others were nearly
as long. The run is said to have an
mportant. hearing on the future
service of the Pennsylvania.
WW
EXCHANGE COMMENT.
"Everybody has quit freighting
and gone to farming" says a news
Item from W'fed N. M. But one is
about as important In the scheme of
thing as the other. El Pa -0 Herald.
Miss Texas has leaned her Merry
Widow against the big red barn
donned her polka dot sunbonnet nnd
is doing her share of the joyous
work 0' harvesting the berry crop
and Incidentally preserving a few for
home use. Fort Worth Star.
Reflections of a IWhclor
An easy way to have trouble Is to
marry It.
What a girl likes about being ln
a love affair is maybe it will turn out
real.
The most notorious liar on earth
gets credit for telling the truth from
anybody he says something nice to.
The reason a woman knows the
baby Is going to grow up to be pres-
ident 1b tho doctor says he is so
healthy.
A man prefers to live In the sub-
urbs to the city just the way ho'd
rather go to church than the theater.
New York Times.
Looks That Wny.
Grand old Texas. Goddess of the
phantamagorla of liberty'" disllln.
sloncd dream. Knight errant of the
good old summer time. Hallowed
iy the memories of an empire carved
from the blood of martyrs. The hope
of tomorrow made manifest by the
achievements of today. The emblem
of progressiveness that knows no
power to swerve. The quintessence
of all the joys of earth with a min-
imum of Its sorrows. Shafter Lake
Herald.
. Maiden's Ilcn rf a U!im1i!'.ic1.
Genteel In personage
Conduct and eqnippnge.
Noble by heritage
Generous and free.
Brave not romantic;
.learned not pedantic;
Fro'ln not frantic;
This must he he.
Honor maintaining
be 04 In.
In the preparn
Meanness disdaining
Still entertaining.
Engaging and new.
Neat hut no finical;
Sage but not cynical;
Never tyrannical
But ever true
Henry Carey. J
Got Something for Money. 1
"One of the Items a hotel has to
figure on during the year" said a
hotel clerk the other day "Is the
cost of keys. It make no differ-
ence It u foot of lumber or a
pound of brass 1 attached to the key
some absent-minded guest will carry
It away. The loss of koy Is really
becoming quite a problem to hotel
managers. There la scarcely a day
with us that two or more key are
not carried away by guest. 6ome
tlnieg wo receive them back hy mall
and then again a guest will brine
back a key lu person when be re-
turns several months later perhaps.
Rut the replacing of those really lost
Is becoming an Item. It Is the cus-
tom with us to call off th list of
vacant rooms every afternoon and
check "P with the key boxes. After
doing this we nearly always have a
few keys to order." Houston
Chronicle.
Alexander '
There was a youth who kept a store
And though aome might be grand-
er He kept a store all through the war
And his name wa3 Alexander.
1
Hq mixed his goods with a cunning
hand
And was a skillful brander;
While oft his sugar half was sand-
Some called him Alex-sander.
One day his loved one to him came
Then lovingly he scanned her;
Ho asked her would she change her
name
And a ring did Alex-hand-her
"Oh yps" she said with smiling if v
"If I can he commander;"
They both then formed a partners'.!;-
And called it Alex.and-Her.
Mexnnder Geddiv
An Italian youth who said he was
Orazlo Tanelurrlno of New York
wa caught stealing a hnm In Hay.'
onne yesterday uud locked up A'liUe'
In a cell he wrole a ponti . card
which be asked a policeman to mull.
The card whs written In Lallan nnd'
was addressed tc ".if na ClirlHt '
Streets of Parudi :c. .1 read; "O
my dear God I rni in i' id.jn because
1 stole n ham. 1 .id 1 stoi'l it ma-.
licloiiHly but be.iiiure 1 outvied It ninl:
hadn't anything to e.-t in ton days.
I wish I could have d 'il tho moment
I done this protect 010 in this c:.r
and forgive inc. ood-byp;. gnod-'
byo."
Recorder Lazarus discharged the
youth and gave Mm money enough
to rcr-t to New York. New Yovk
Tribune. .
His Talth made hlm whole.
An Arizona m n moved iv
Texas. Verily the .'nasels rejoice.
more over one sinner that rpenteth
thnn over the fellows tV.nl think they
need no repentance El Paso Her
mmM&m
1 c
s
PL
o
in
Are you with us? Clovls lieuco.
ald. :
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.
The Weekly Herald. (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 7, 1908, newspaper, May 7, 1908; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth281673/m1/4/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .