The Sunday Morning Herald. (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 29, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 14, 1910 Page: 4 of 8
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okwxwu HERAit. Sunday august m 1910. ...
A'HE SUNDAX m
1
Y
TUG SUNDAY ftlORNINQ HERALD
THE WEEKLY HERALD
Published every Sunday morning at 210 Taylor
Street Amarillo Texas.
Panhandle Press
IiOESEN AND DURST.
"Entered .is sccoud--cla-s matter October 19
3909 'at the post office at Amanita Texas un-
Icier the act of March d 1879.
.SUNDAY AL'CUST 14. 1910.
Lo and the Looter
Whatever disclosures may result or salutary
reforms be effected by the bribery investiga-
tion brought about by Senator Gore's sensa-
tional charges the probing will have served
a goodly end if it calls keen-eyed attention to
the almost child like credulity ami helplessness
of the Indian and the genuine pathos of his
position.
Discovered in his Cod-given domain by the
Invading Caucasian the red man became-thc
immediate target for the settler's shrewdness
and was duped into exchanging treasures in
ore and fins hr fancy beads and worthless
gew-gaws. And since ilie day of Roger Wil-
liams and hero haloed John Smith the unjust
one-sided traffic has continued without abate-
ment. It must be said in behalf of our honestly-in-tentioncd
Uncle Samuel that he lias endeav-
ored after taking possession of the red man's
'domain to make some reparation and apply
soothing unguents to the national conscience
by setting aside valuable reservations for the
Indian and has endeavored to all intent and
purpose to be a wise and honest guardian. Hut
Uncle Sam. is sadly nearsighted. While he
was developing his paternal system Cousin
John was devising deep-laid schemes under
cover to separate the simple and untutored
child of nature from his rightful holdings. How
iweirhe has succeeded may only be surmised.
Real estate records would only give slight
hint of his stupendous achievement
When Memphis gets a new . wireless
telephone system won't the lineman have
a "lead pipe cinch." All they will have
to do will be to ride around and push the
clouds out of the way. Hall County
Herald.
Why not add a few sky-scrapers to the
municipal equipment and thus save the line-
men the trouble of brushing the clouds away?
PrOPfiF ' There Is Rldht
TT i Place for
i.lU it ...
fty MADISON C PETERS .
There will be something in politics in
Texas two years from now. They arc
lining up for the battle. Wichita News.
And thi despite the fact that the popu-
lar slogan in Texas seems to be "give us po-
litical rest." Kcst is good and is needed but
it behooves the wise citizen to remain vigilant
lest corporate shackles already forged foe his
undoing be fastened securely upon him while
he rests. Teace has its perils no less than
strife and it is doubtful if this agitation-rent
commonwealth will know what political rest
really means until certain important issues are
thoroughly thrashed out. So let the forces
line up for the final and decisive struggle to
begin.. It will be a Titanic battle but if the
people are victors when the smoke of conflict
clears it is worth the waging.
Congress has adjourned yet the Con-
gressional Record appears every week
with great regrlarity. It is loaded with
campaign speeches which have never been
delivered but which arc printed under the
liberal "leave to print" rule. Later these
speeches will be pritjtcd by hundreds and
sent out over the country at public ex-
pense. rampa News. "
Thus constituting onther needless drain
upon the public pocket-book. If the extra cop-
ies of the.. Congressional Record served the
very worthy purpose of enlightening the dear
people by dissemination of valuable informa-
tion protest against their wide distribution
would be worse than foolish. But they don't.
They merely foist upon a long-afflicted popu-
lace a mass of surplus verbiage which our
nt ot ins stupendous acmcvciuciu.( i-i-c ."--
It would seem happily so-that 'tile icountry Congressmen and Senators themselves wet-
Is at least awaking to the nefarious manipu;
lations of these velvet-footed operators but
try as it may to make retribution it can never
fully rid itself rf the odium of hayrtig allowed
its wards to become preys to tht-vhitc man
commercial rapacity. 1
Certain Indian witnesses in the investiga-
tion now in progress have testified that the
government's delay in selling the tribal lands
was responsible for the signing away of mil
lions in attorney's fees in the belief that what
they deemed their rights would be luorc uick-
lv procured. This in itself is a reflection v " !
the government's guardianship which -s.n
though wisdom prompted . further delay in
selling the Indian landsshould have exercised
greater vigihnee to protect its simple wards
from the gndfr's manipulations.
Many of the Indians have "absorbed the
white m.".n's practice with his prcachirfg" have
been civi'ized in the fullest modern definition
of the tvi'ni. and now constitute a verv ciedit-
alio ai d worihy percentage of our citizenship.
But thousands' .still remain . simple guileless.
uniutoiVM children at heart and in consequence
fall ready prey to the " smooth-tongued and
conscienceless. Such being true it is the duty
of the union in future as it has been in the
past to provide the most vigilant protection
for its wards and to see that all business af-
fecting the tribes is dispatched with the great-
est expedition and justice possible. t
During the progress of the Oklahoma state-
hood bill through the Senate a member of
that august body in a forceful speech declared
that the red man "could no move stand before
the encroaching tide of civilization than the
morning mists before the rising sun."
To make the utterance doubly true the word
"commercialism" might very properly be sub-
stituted for "civilization." Let the. public
conscience awake and 'insure the First Ameri-
can fullest rights and protection.
rot Spartan enough to listen to and are mere
ly used to delude the credulous constituent
iiito 'believing that his 'distinguished represen-
tative at Washington is doing things and
earning bis salary. In other words the great
er part of the tedious stuff that clutters the
Congressional Record and the mails is cam-
paign literature printed and distributed at the
expense of the people. And it would he a real
Political Economy on the part of the bill-
payers lo demand a restriction of such need-
le ; expenditures..
A millionaire dairyman in Indiana will pro-
vide his blooded cows with individual bath and
tooth-brush. He will have cause to regret his
indulgence when Hazel Holstein demand pow-
'dered sugar on her breakfast alfalfarcttes. '
Lovers of James Whiteomb Riley and their
name s 1. i n.. will wish ihe Hoo.sicr poet
spcM.'y n'Oja?y from his present critical ill-
ness. The sordid old world can ill afford to
lose men of the Jim Riley type. It owns but
few.
Advocates of a law increasing the term of
governors to four years arc becoming more
numerous. An excellent law provided an-
other were enacted simultaneously v limiting
the number of candidates to two.
TheNittle green pools which are notable on
certain business streets following the recent
ruins! are neither attractive nor conducive to
the health of the city. They should be drained
and at once.
A mule's death occasioned a run on a Louis-
ville bank recently. A live mule has been
known to occasion a run on the undertaker.
The observant eye may note a number of
Senatorial lightning-rods against the Texas
horizon. LetThe blue bolt strike.
The will of the late John G. Carlisle shows
that he died a poor man. But Carlisle was one
of the old official regime.
l flagging zeal isn't to be commended for
the railroad switchman.
No gentle reader official probes do not as-
sure official probity. Would God. they did.
At the close of the special session it might Life is a garden; deeds are seeds what are
be an excellent idea to use the legislative jyou sowing flowers or weeds?
steam-roller' on the public highways. Such' "
energy should not be allowed to go to waste. ( A Jvcw heart-shaped spot has been discov-
Aniariilo mornings are flagons of exhilarat-
ing champagne provided by Ozone & Co.
'5'int;ier free oljo& ia Ibcjwpulaca
cred on the sun.
Ace high? '
Monopoly-owned Texas or Texas regulated
imoaoUl? ' .Take-jour choice
MEWSON auid: "The crowning fortune of a man is to be bora
TK I with a bias to souio pursuit which finds him in employment
- I and hanmncsa."
Tho liiHinoss which we love in tho one to which we go
with delight. No man ran struggle victoriously against hit
own character nnd tluvipaj who tries lo do anything claw than
that for which nature intended him will be worse than nothing.
Many of tho world's most successful men have failed in several
pursuits' U'foro they finally discovered the bent of their genius.
(iuldsmith failed as a physician but became immortal in
The Deserted Village." Cromwell was a farmer at forty and Grant a
tanner nt thirty-eight although the latter had fitted himself for hia gTeat
life work by military education at West Point.
No man will ever do his best until lie fills his proper niche. Many an
ambitious parent forces a boy to become cither a doctor a lawyer or a
preacher) and thus defeated disappointed and dispirited the boy who
might have become a successful fanner a good blacksmith or a merchant
prince. 1
There are many fathers .who think it. their divine right to dictate the
boy's calling in life. Handel the great .composer was set aside for the
law and hia father a physician did all he could to destroy the boy'i fond-
ness for music.
The parents of Bach meanly denied tho boy a candle so that ho had
to copy hia niuie by moonlight.
Galileo discoverer of the pendulum inventor of both the microscope
and tho telescope was set apart by his parent for a physician buj he
would hi Je his physiology nnd on the quiet work out the most difficult
problems in mathematics.
Lorraine the painlcr was apprenticed by his parents to a pastry cook
while Arkwright's parents apprenticed him to a barber. ' '
John Jacob Astor's father intended to make a butcher of his eon
which determination caused the boy to run away from his home in Ger-
many and brought him to America.
Thcro can he no greater mistake on the part of the parent tlian to
peek to bend the boy's design where his genins does not incline. The
world does pot demand that any man ahull be a famous lawyer a skilful
historian an eloquent orator or a merchant prince
but that with a noble purpose a high endeavor and a
useful end in view you shall make yourself master
in your line.
There is a plujfl for everybody and when a man
is on the right track he will krtow it by the way things
Lrun. If you have been boring away in the same hole
for years without striking oil either your auger is too
. short or you are in the wrong iiole. When a man has
found his true calling he will not find nature putting
any barriers in his path. In the right plate 'you will
4he resourceful and happy you will expand and grow
and be at least comparatively successful.
Ignorant
of
es
of Insanit1
By DR. CARL A. TVICKLAM
TfLf
tO0O
Jkmk i
.ww-.v -aye?
Twr. KrV that UNLOCKS SUCCESS IN BUSINESS Is
GIVING CUSTOMERS GOOD VALUE FOR THEIR MONEY p
WE HAVE DONE THIS. THAT'S WHY WE HAVE A
BIG. GROWING HARDWARE BUSINESS.
ir YOU'VE NEVER DEALT WITH US. "URACC UP
IT'S TIME YOU WERE GETTING ACQUAINTED WITH US
EX3SEZZCZX!
Iti.-;
- II n mm.
PHONE THIRTY
C. T. HERRING
Prldnt
C. P. SMITH
Gn Manafar
Eminent alienists agree that clinic re-
veal nothing of the causes of insanity.
Dr. W. M. Coplin director of the
bureau of health and charities Philadel-
phia says : '"Intimity in most cases is un-
accompanied by any perceptfhlo change in
Ihe brain structure. The brain of tno pa-
ij"nt when examined r.hder a inicroVcopo
shows absolutely nothing which differ in
any way rum the appearance of (he Irain
of a perfectly (sound person."
Ir. A. W. Cninpliel! another authority!
says: "insanity neither cileuU lior disar
ranges the brain structurally."
Dr. William II. Thompson physician to tho Roosevelt hospital New
York has alluded to the unexpected discovery that insanity ia not a dis-
ease of the brain because no anatomical investigation microscopical or
otherwise can show tho least difference between cither brain cell or fiber
of a person dying insane and the healthy brain of one killed in an accident.
The underlying cause that the symptoms indicate is ignored and this
principally because it lcada to the unpopular subject namely demoniacal
or spirit obsession. ......
On tho other hand research in abnormal psychology has . so far ad-
vanced that it has now become feasible to transfer the insanity in gifan
cases to a psychic sensitive who exhibits all the symptoms of the insane
patient with the result that the latter is relieved. This has actually been
done in a number of eases and if carried out on a large scale would soon
solve the problem which confronts every state institution in the land.
When the medical profession becomes willing to devote more atten-
tion to tho psychical side for causes more rapid progress will be made
in the treatment ahd cure of insanity. " ' : '
THE AiMILLO NATIONAL
Lifer Insurance Co.
GUARANTEES t
Double the face of the policy in case of accidental death
Policy becomes paid up if permanently disabled.
Annual reduction of premiums
Automatic extended insurance
Paid up assurance
Loan and ensh values
PRIVILEGES
Change of beneficiary
Dnyj of racc in paying prerni'im
Funeral benefit dv;ft
I Reliable Agents Wanted i
Carson Building'
AMARILLO TEXAS
BSKSBSBEKSEOEDaSSBI
Unclean
Fly Oyv
Worst
Enemy
Is there on law or any feature of our
sanitary laws that will compel landlords
to provide screens for the doors and win-?
dows of houses and flats to protect their
tenants from the worst enemy we have
tho common house fly?
The egg of the fly is laid in filth
hatched in filth and the parasite feedsv
upon' filth until it is able to fly and enter
ouf homea and deposit its germs. ' r .
It is scientifically proved that thcom-
mon hou3e fly is the cause of more fatal
disease than any other thing we contend
with. -
' The fly by fUT nature ia a filthy thing. The fly is born in" filth
feeds upon filth and takes naturally to filth. The he enlew our homes
and promenades 'upon our' meats our fruits our bread; he falls into coffee
he gets into our milk he.gets into bur sugar bowl. He leaves the bacteria
of a dozen t more dkcaseTj on and in the food we eat
Tpjpjovo this catch' a half-dwn flies and put them under a micro-!
scope. x iThere you may Bee tho bacilli. To prove them dangerous bacilli
take them to some medical laboratory and you will find the truth of my
ByL W.rACKlXD
AMARILLO NATIONAL BANK
Capital & Prof is $200000
We know your wants and want your
business
B. T. Vare Pres. . W. M. Lay. Vi:i Pre j
C. L. Ware Cashisr.
FranK B. Salter Ass. Cash. C. f. Ware Asi. Cash
Tarry Thompson Ass. Casiiier.
statement.
Ofl'L
.JIT
1 ITMiH 'lafcilTf W!
S FRESH FRUITS TODAY j
AT FELTMAN'S
405 POLK ST.
PHONE 539
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The Sunday Morning Herald. (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 29, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 14, 1910, newspaper, August 14, 1910; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth289006/m1/4/: accessed May 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .