The Sunday Morning Herald. (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 11, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 10, 1910 Page: 4 of 12
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THE SUNDAY K'JKNING HERALD SUNDAY
ApmL.io Dm.
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p.
THE SUNDAY MORNING HERALD
' Ruccf ror to
THE WEEKLY HERALD
Published every Sunday morning at 210 Taylor
Street Amarillo Texas.
Panhandle Press Q Qf The Wcst
EOESEN AND DUKST.
"Entered as second-class matter October 10
1909 at the post office at Amarillo Texas un-
der the act of March 3. 1879."
?t I
SUNDAY. Al'IilL 10 1910.
Under The .Red Flag
The telccopcs of 'poiitica! economists are
now tunic' iijuii Milwaukee and she will he
watched with jealous eye henceforward lost
she plunge out of the orbit of a well-regulated
municipality. .
And;wit!i seeming!' good reason. For the
first time in the h'Mory of the l.'nitod States
the Socialists have gained dominant control of
the affairs of a large city and the conduct of
such affairs will he subjected to the keenest
scrutiny on t!io part of -a curious populace and
the jeiiliius leader;! of other parties who of
late years have evidenced an increasing fear
of 'the growing influence of Socialism.
To those of us who know hut little of So-
cialistic principles the new government of
Milwaukee will he something of a unique ex-
periment. Hut the party in power doubtless
has its plans for such government well-nib-
tured' and deems t lie operation of the c;ty .
affair? not empirical in any sense.
Whatever may he the outcome the eperi
mentiwilhbe obscived Vith keenest interest
Many persons both in the city and
country have endorsed the position of the
Judex on the good roads question There
can he no doubt as to the results of good
roads. Kami lands vould become more
valuable farmers would make better im-
provements about their homes better
stock would he raised better vehicles
would be seen on the roads and the peo-
ple would be more contented. All this
can be achieved by the expenditure of a
few thousand dollars on roads. Childress
Index.
And the time to expend those few thousands
is now. No better natural roads may be found
in any section of the country than in the Pan-
handle of Texas but with the increasing in-
influx of farmers and the consequent increase
in heavy traffic it is onlv a matter of a few
rars before our now excellent roadways will
be heavily cut and rutted. A thousand spent
in time on heller roadways would save tens
of thousands at a late dale.
DAN CUPID: COWBOY.
" Cupid's a cowboy.
; The ki.ig ci life kind
void-pl;ji:s ne gallops
O'er
His- j.ur
More
en than the wind.
Desire
And hii huso is m3(;e
i.'iiille and a glance.
a Minshinv brawl
Th
est of hearts
at I.) t overtakes.
is are the bronchos
saddles and breaks!
Allcitiucns approached on the subject of an
annual fair in Amarillo expressed themselves
at heartily in favor of sucdi an exhibition. The
sentiment so enthusiastically voiced gves
promise of eariy crystallization into definite
plans a consummation not only to be devout-
ly wished but to be striven for most earnestly.
A IJanhandle Fair here would prove of ines-
timable value to Amarillo and to this entire
section of country and TJie Herald is gratified-
to note the unanimous sentiment of pro-
gressive jritizc.s in favor- of .at Let's have
theJTair. Concerted effort will insure the early
success of the movement.
According to an exchange "a few nights
ago a Fort Worth -negro preacher proved
to his highly gratified flock that tlie col-
ored ra-e stood high as far back as the
days of Jesus by referring to 'Nigger De-
nnis.' " Of course the negro has always
stood lr -h when perched on a ladder
robbing ."me white man's chicken roost.
('hillicolhe Hornet.
Perhaps it was the same eloquent exhortcr
who referred' to the fiery furnace triplets as
Ashech. Mesach An' a bad Nigger. Be that
as it may it was just the old-fashioned negro
who occasionally robbed a hen-roost that was
dependable in' many respects. The new-fangled
coon is the limit ami is worse than a barnacle
on society. ' '
Contcutnn'
the side are. sij
"Why did
"That's easl
MAVERICKS.
M lie CllUCk-hox and fnioles of friemkl iin mi
for any round-up on the" range of Life.
all it Cripple: Creek?"pcause its waters are limpid.
tf'lanagan ''an there's just w an thing thot's
up to be."
aks Casev.
'An acute sense of modesty has suppressed
.congratulatory' comment hitherto. Cut now
that practically all of pur visitors have 'de-
parted .The .Daily Panhandle feels constrained
to clap Amarillo heartily on the back and com-
mend her for a genuinely notable achiever" it.
She has proved herself a convention c": equal
to any in the state and has shown herself
thoroughly capable of caring for large crowds
easily and happily. That she knws how to
do things in a big way will he enthusiastically
attested by every visitor during the stock-
men'i convention. . .
Attorney 'General Lightfoot Land Commis-
sioner Robbon and Superintendent 'of Public
Instruction Cralley are three candidates for
Staje office who will have a clear field in this
year's election. And they are entitled to it.
All have proved able efficient and conscien-
tious public officials and no stronger endorse-
ment of their records could be asked than that
opposition against them is almost an unknown
quantity v '
..Marse Henry Watterson declares that
Rooseyelt.is the most startling figure who has
appeared? since Napoleon Bonaparte. The
"Star-eycjd" might advise-in' this connection
jest what good the Corsican accomplished for
jl.he world.
: - In the Interest of good health' moving pict-
ure shows in. Chicago arc exposing the habits
of the common house fly. Tht exhibitions arc
said to be genuinely spectacular..
With a fair association in the full en-
joyment of its faculties' Lubbock will not
haye to take a back scat for any of her
sister towns. The proposition is one that
spells progress all along the line and one
that will prove one of the best rdvertis-
ing mediums that could he employed by
any community.- We have the nroducts
and the territory and likewise the enter-
prise; so wherefore are we to hesitate?
- - J.uUin-k 'Enterprise. ; .... i . . .
.'. Wherefore-iwTee7iri2vcrr' fofMilc-.Coimtv
in the ranhandle should have an annual fair
where the products of soil and range may bo Plongeon " from penetrating
exhibited. Lubbock is big 'enough and pro- DieulafoV from accompanyi
"Slime." sa
phwat it's cr-r-a id
"Phwat's tV"
"Ice becorri' I
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According f roloncl Clankspuh a dinky dug-out with one
tow-hea'ded you! iter in it is a darn sight more of a home
than a beaut of Ltinrralow'with a narlor full of noodles.
lK NEW VIEW OF IT.
i
r'i' if fH'iwiBnrtfifnrfiT
BBU9B&
We moiie-to lon on Rtic!iM -nywlirre in th Pnhndle. in
lima tnRlnx from fi.ooooo to f iod.ooo.oi. I.onu time rt-oii'il
f!r-. 1
IfyofrhiveMIe funiN. in itT invi;it. wjhM be pleurl to tlk
FIRST MORTOACF. RRAL FSTATIi LOAN'S to jou-No invy.tuient
can tirt it coniervttiTcly plucct Rel Itnte loan it nfver f!uoUitc
Ut growing.
Sadler Mortgage-Loan Company.
Amarillo Nat'l Dank Bids Amarillo Ten
"MfflTBMS
SBSH
is Clod's '.umbrella
0..te sky
tad above us big and blue.
a torn place where the yellow
i!e sun-drops trickle throuirh.'
AMARILLO NATIONAL BANK
Capital & Prof ts $200000
Wc know your wants and want your
business .'..';.
B. T. Wret Pres. W. M. Lay Vies Prei
C. L. Ware Cashier
FranKBrSalter Ass. Cash. CT. Wa Asi. Cash
Terry Thompson Ass. Cashier.
gressivc enough to make such an institution
a marked success and so are dozens of other
counties in the .Panhandle. ' '
The action of the Austin judge who so
vigorously scored the practice of carry-
ing concealed weapon's is worthy the con-
sideration of every good citizen of the
state. The bandy gun is responsible for
a -very large number of killings and ought
to be put out of business. -Wichita Times.
A belief which is generally shared. But hovy
to do it is the problem. Laws have been passed
a hd heavy penalties for infractions have been
fixed but the fatal forty-four continues to do
business with deplorable -regularity. There
seems to be but one final reniedy and that is
a trifle extreme. A law should be passed re-
quiring all clothing manufacturers' to adopt a
uniform 'style of hip-pocketlcss trousers and
bob-tailed coats which descend no further than
some two inches above the twin suspender"
buttons in the rear. I his m addition to the
laws already enacted might effecf in time the
desired reform "and. put a few undertakers out
of business.
;' Much comment
fact that tw-Tn-?r.:
is being aroused over
LA IJl Li L
the
"IJclahoma indulged
ilhout scoring a
routed with a
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504 POLK S
It is a good thing that Mother Eve
dwelt in a mild climate. These early
spring days would be rather trying on fig-
leaves and the stove moved out on the
first warm day' too. Iliggins News.
Perhaps. But it must he remembered xli-
mates change as well as costumes. That par-
ticular portion of the globe which is supposed
to have been the first stamping-ground of
Adam and his frau may have been as shivery
as Eskimoland is today. Clothing is just a
h-.ibit anyway according to Raymond Duncan
who has reverted to the ancient Greek costume
as. the most attractive comfortable and hygien
ic and w ho rtjssd a storm ot protest in Gotham
xccutiveshlnihy permitting his tl rce-vear-old vnnmtmr
. . - - . --..f.-.v. iu
jorave old Uorcas it.
(icmiatert. garments. Jt :snot at all
lor wi:o )iavnc iwv- :ne newspaper tratcmitv
.1 lu:rr)po;'ii ituch sartorial innovalion.v witiiiu
:. 1 .;sh up (ure :tnd for
'to the tribe.
re me'
sttcc-
7 -fe WOMAN- EXPLORER.
From the NewA JvVorrd'''
In her readies to undertake new feats in the Himalayas.
Miss Annie S. iPtk is in no wav deterred bv the records ofj
others. Un tlii rmtrary' as a mountain climber they only
spur her on. c duke of the Ahruzzi went up 21000 feet
why may she ifolgo higher? .Men have no exclusive rights
as explorers. 1 . "
Isabella Cirdlishop spent thirteen years in Asia travers-
ing rfffion's wlicrqffy. if any. foreigners had' nreceded her.
Jbe ert-4it?AvicB1''4ihipf did itcUkeeii-UuieLe
tuc wnas i iiuHian rr Mme.
inr per nusbana dunncr his arch
aeological labors in Persia. M. F.dith Durham in the Balkans
has accomplished what few i sturdy' Englishmen of the best
spotting type would care to attempt.
' 1 Any nuinber of women missionaries. -without thought of
fame or rnaifHal reward have goiie dn errands of civilization
and humafiilM to parts where nature seemed plainly to' forbid
their trcspwlng. They are doing so every day in the true
spirit of the adventurer who fires difficulties appalling to most
people as inevitable consequences of his task.
It wai not to make records but make homes tint the
women pioneers of this continent 'with their families plunged
into the pathless wilderness and crossed the barren plains
where privation and danger; aud death dogged their footsteps.
But for a few exceptions they are unknown to farne but did
any period ever produce a more heroic race of explorers than
these nameless wives and .sisters of the. early settlers?
It Is Our Duty to Make Life Happy.
By 'Cormt Leo Tolstoy. ( ' :
We complain of life. We complain' that it is ill ordered.
We fail to understand that it is not our life which is ill ord
ered but that the mistake is ours in doing what we ought not
to do Vve act as acts a drunkard who complains that there
are too many drinkshops forgetting that the drinkdiops could
not" exist if there were not' so rriahy drunkards.
. Life Is given to us that it should be happy. It is our own
businefs to make it happy.; The way to make it a certain
chain of unbroken happiness is lo live in Jove and not in
hatred - .
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i A Sad Place i
yinari just back from a jaunt in the .woods was trying to
tcjj friend of the pleasant place where he had camped the
najTieof-whicli Jie had for the moment forgottem
. . "11 was in a bend of that "fine trout stream up there you
k10lt)" he said "thottgb I can't remember the name. It's a
sort 'Indian name means. 'Weeping Water' "
Oh." said his' friend "it must have been the Minneboo-
I0o;. Sun da v Magazine.
t . ... ' .
HAM AND A SON OF hAm.
'colored. m.-ln complained to the storekeeper that a ham
mid-winter' in rather at-lwM' ie had purchased (here was nM good. "The ham is all
said the torekeepetv - .Nq it am t boss insist-
t-'naiiiHJjiii'fi1 iii .niuinii! rWM.'MiiiliiiiiaxLiuianiillirn.iiliiiiijrUTl rimrtnr'jeaa
improh-rin' P'V
'oat ham's shore bad! "How can that be"
v will Rdont VOne neff'u; 1flm s no P
the 'f.rfftinued the storekeeper "when it was turfd only last week?"
casons which arc best knowr't'1! colored man scratched his head reflectively and. finally
'i Jfeeited: "Well" safi then It mttrt"liad had a relapse."
Hzttick Refrigerator
THIS 15 OUR THIRD SEASON WITH THIS REFRIGER-
ATOR. AND THE DOZENS OF SATISFIED CUSTOMERS
N AMARILLO HELP US TO MAKE ADDITIONAL SALES-
THE HERRICK'S ADVANTAGE IS TiE DRV AIR CIR-
CULATION. AND rOOD WILL KEEP SWEET. DRY AND
COOL WITHOUT THE LEAST TAINT1N. j
AU Size; Spruce and Enamel Lined
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Daily Panhandle VVant V j V
Ads Bring: Rjsults
era
THE .FIRE . COMPANY
May stop at your house next. Let tis build you;
a Concrete house and vou have nothing-to fear
( beewse IT CAN'T BURN v.-.;- : :
: The Insurance Rate fs Clieapcr Torf.
Potter (SL LeMond
Concrete Building Material
Phone 732
U:HaFPi w v.'. nirsf wmrj?mr "rrn in; i
First nhd Taylor li
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The Sunday Morning Herald. (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 11, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 10, 1910, newspaper, April 10, 1910; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth288997/m1/4/: accessed March 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .