Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 132, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 17, 1926 Page: 4 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
PAGE FOUR
L.MARILLO DAILY NEWS
TitAt
SATURDA
IT,
Amaruio Daily News
"Established Nov. 4, lire rublistwd by Dr.
AD Nunn, Jan. 5. 1910. •• Jan 1. 19.
- fublishva by the Amarir’o Globe-Neas rib-
liahan €omany,
Sixth and Fillmore Birveta
Gene A. Howe. Editor and l’ublisher
Wubur o. Hawk, Gen rai Manager.
Caioria. Department . ............./non di1
Cremation Department..........* Tone MD8
Advertising Deparuinem ........... SM
" Only morning and eventig newspapers vul-
lished the panandle cuttry Covers the
Fankandle of Texas, eastern New Mixteo,
southern Colorado and western oktahemna fromn
twelve le twenty-four hours in advance e I
Denver, Dallas. Fort Worth, OkihubA CH
and other papers car "YILE complete dirpatehre.
Entered as second class matter at the l’ost
Other at Amarilo. T*3 "ndei me 41 of
BULscugrion MATES BY
MAIL IN ADVANCE
in Texas. Oklahoma, Colorado and
New Mexico
1 nisaib . .... 1 i” 1 • "-■ ^ •. f l '
1 months . 1 • • $2.00 ' 1 .rar ......56.30
Outside Texas, New Mexico and
Okishpma
1 month.....$ 43 I veas $*.V0
BY CARRIER IN AMARILLO
1 month . .....$ .79 • months .... 4400)
A month.... $2.00 1 year.. $5 0)
"MEuBEn OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
D The Associated Press la exetusivety enuitid
to the use for I -publication ut all news din 1
patches credited to ut not otherwise credited
in this paper and also local newe vukilahed
All right of publication ot ope mi a patches
herein are also reserved.
L.PAX and niehit Associated IT*** *4 Wire I
7 Mkr OP AUDI BTrat or
________CIRCULAT K ON
OUT OUR WAY-
By Willliams.
NOTICE 10 THE ruBL it:
Any erroneous reflection upon the character
standing er reputa.lom of any ladividual firm: 1
concern or corpo ation that may sppras is 1
the delumr’s of The News sin he gladly -4
rested when 04.100 te the attention of 1
tor it is no the intention kt this ne
ger to wrongly 40 or injure any lull
firm, concurs or corporatiin and 1
:= 1
ctiuns
will be made when warranted as prominently
•I was one wrongly published reference of
article
A Thought.
Love not sleep lest thou come to
poverty; open thine eyes and thou
shaft be satisfied with bread. I’rov.
20:13.
An idler is a watch that wants
both hands.—Cow per.
LOST ART OF PENMANSHIP.
A surprising explanation of
the poor penmanship of these
times is offered by Dr. Root of
the University of Pittsburgh
School of Education. "As a rule,"
he says, “those of low mentality'
are good handwriters," and this
is because “a person of low men-
tality has nothing else to think
about but the shaping of his
letters." On the other hand, "in-
telligent people think twenty
times faster than they can write
and therefore the result is a poor
scrawl." An intelligent writer’s
thought does run far ahead of
his pen, but this was true in the
past as well as in these hurry-
ing times, and the beautiful pen-
manship of George Washington,
‘Thackeray and other great writ-
ers of the past remains to be ac-
• counted for. They were not per-
- sons of “low mentality” and
their thought rushed ahead of
their' pens, yet they produced
perfectly legible manuscripts.
Of course the obvious explan-
ation of the change is that in
SHE C OOM
' FROM DEES
WAY , LAK
- FIRE CRECKA-
PLOP!
' 15 GENRL
THEM NEW
MARRIED FELLERS
ATA'T DOMT,EAT
THER WIRES PE.
LETS SEE NOW,
WHO's BEEN
MARRIED LATELY!
over the banister. I’m never going to
do so again, so help SMI Good-night”
He turned, ran down the steps, took
ths girl's face between his hands, kissed
her and turned away.
You’re a sweet little kid," he told
her, “but you have me up against the
hardest problem I’ve ever tried to solve.
Good-night, dear.”
Morton was deep in thought when he
arrived at his office the next morning,
and sat, his arms folded on the desk
before him, for more than an hour,
scarcely stirring. At last he rang a bell
and young Parrish appeared.
“I’ve got to go back to Chicago to-
i night,” he told Parrish. “You’ll have to
abandon your music lessons for a time,
unless you find a teacher there. Oet a
drawing-room for Audrey and lower
berths for you and me."
Parrish witndew and Morton turned
to his dictating machine. Leisurely he
gave orders, memoranda, letters and
miscellaneous instructions to the little
black, whirling machine. When three
cylinders had been filled he pressed a
burner and told the stenographer who
answered that he would expect the type-
written sheets to be ready for him be-
fore he left that evening.
As the girl went out the door he
lapsed into thought again. Finally a
slow smile spread over his face. He
summoned Parrish.
"John.” said he, "Write my personal
check for five thousand dollars and
bring It in for me to sign. Then I want
you to take it down to the bank and get
it cashed in large bills--get five bills for
a thousand each. Taks the money and
carry it to thia address."
He took a scratch pad and hurriedly
penciled a memorandum.
"Here is ths street number and the
number of an apartment,” he continued.
DESPAIR
“Of course I know now, Julle,” said
Morale, somewhat hysterically, “that
both these notea were very ‘high-hat,”
but I did not know as much about the
Ufa of ‘a poor wolking goll‘ as I do
now.
“Sometimes 1 think that it la all the
bunk to try to heap straight.
“Here I am all broken up because to-
sight at the restaurant 1 saw Buddy
Tremaine, wall dressed among charm-
ing people, eating the most expensive
viands on the menu.
”1 thought to myself, if I had not been
so grand and virtuous. I might have
been for the last two years in aU places
where Buddy Tremaine could be found.
I could be reveling in love and luxury.
“Beside all that I might be almoat
ready for grand opera instead of with-
out hope of ever taking another voice
lesson."
Mamie could not apeak for parox-
yams of sobs.
I let her cry for a while and then she
raised her tear-stained face to me and
said:
"Julia, do you think it's worth it? Up
to date I’ve not found any grant reward
in being strictly virtuous."
I. Julia Dean, sat there stunned. For
the first time in my life I realized the
temptations a girl had to face. I was
almost sure I would not have come
through Mamie’s unscathed.
Poor, poor, Mamie!
I truly wondered if she were not right
when she said that she had made a
great sacrifice and had not even got
out of it tbs satisfaction of feeling scat,
she had made herself a martyr to a
particularly good cause.
“What am I now, Julia?" she asked
despairingly.
“I’m just a hatgirl is the Beaux Arts
Restaurant in Chicago. Who cares
what I am or who 1 am? Who cares,
beside myself, whether I am virtuous
or not? I will probably hold this posi-
tion until 1 grow old and ugly and then
what is there for me for the reet of my
IfeF
“Every night I see women come into
the restaurant, eat the finest food,
laughing and seemingly happy. They
are covered with jewels, and the men
beside them see no one else but them,
and yet I knew in my heart that these
women are not what the world calls
‘good.’ ---------
“I’m getting sick st that word ‘good.’
I am sure if I had to run away from
New York and come out here to Chica-
go, I could have held Buddy Tremaine’s
love and some day I could have given
to the world a glorious voice and added
to the pleasure of thousands of music
lovers.’’
(Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.)
Tomorrow—An offer of Hope.”
0126 a NtA SERVICE. INC
SHERLOCK AND THE MUSTERV OF
THE SLAB OF LEMON PE.
THESE WOMEN
1 " craze ay tits annice a.
BEGIN HERE TODAY
AL DREY, adopted daughter of
HARRY MORTON, middleaged,
wealthy, handsome, is in love with
him and wants him to marry her.
Morton, whose business the town
gossips never have learned, main-
tains a home in Dallas and an ex-
pensive apartment in Austin. Nona
also in love with Morton, has of-
fended him in a jealous rage—
comes to ask forgiveness, and is
confronted t>y Audrey, who declares
War love.
Morton hires JOHN PARRISH
as his secretary, instructing Par-
ish to study music and dancing so
he ran be a companion to Audrey.
He takes Parrish to dinner, but
when he leaves the two together,
she dismisses Parrish, and demands
of Merton whether lie is trying to
marry her to Parrish, and if be
loves Nona.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY-
JRwLLams
4-0
dogs, and kittens. They are affection-I anybody."
ate, and bestow their love on the per- "Do you love Nona? she asked.
Min nearest at hand That’s what you’ve Norton's favorite motion, when puz-
done, Audrey dear,” zled, was to brush the bridge of his
The girl made a sweeping motion of nose with his fingers. He did this now.
"It isn’t so—it isn’t so!” she "I like Nona," he said. Again he
touched his nose, as if to drive from at
an imaginary fly. “You see, Audrey, 1
have known a number of women in my
life. 1 know a number of them now."
The girl nodded. “I know it—they
are after you in swarms."
Norton made a movement of protest.
“Oh, they are," she said. “I’ve seen
protest,
cried.
“I love you because you are
the most wonderful man in the world 1
ever COULD lover
“I’m older than you are," Morton told
her. "1 really know what I’m talking
about. I’ve always had you with me.
because it gave me pleasure to show
you pretty sights, and buy you pretty
tilings. It was a mistake, maybe." She
shook her head, but he went on. “I’m
too old to be a mate for a girl as young
as you. I'm not aged, of course— my
health is good, and all that. But the
gap of years between us is a wide one.
It cannot be bridged. When a girl of
your age, and a man of mine, are mar-
ried. they wander down through life on
opposite sides of a great chasm."
“Don’t
(The names and situations in this quickly,
tory are fictitious.)
CHAPTER X
Except in moments of great passion,
when the habits of years are swept
aside, it is the custom of men to ward
off emotional crises. Women Instinct-
ively expose their souls, when they are
with the men they love. Men never do.
when they can avoid it.
past times good penhanship was
imperative, but now for the most
part the typewriter renders it
unnecessary. A metropolitan ed-
itor recently noted that “with all
the volume of typewritten ‘liter-
ature’ that pours forth from mil-
lions of desks every day, with
signatures identified only by
typewritten interpretations, we
seem to have lost the personal-
ity which the pen had in the
hands of men before the type-
writer came both to bless and
curse us.” It is true that the
typewriting machine has cursed
as well as blessed us, for, being
depended on for the bulk of the
work, slovenly and illegible pen-
manship has become almost the
rule, and even seems to be a
source of pride on the part of I’
Following his masc uline instinct.
Norton sought to divert the conversa-
tion.
"I received an important piece of
news this evening, Audrey,” he said.
“My income has increased about fifty
or sixty thousand dollars a year.”
The girl was not to be shaken.
“Money does not count between you and
you love me?” she asked.
Morton took her in his arms. “Of
course 1 love you! It would be impos-
sible for anybody on earth to love you
more than I do." 1
Her voice rang out triumphantly.
"Then why SHOULDN’T we be mar-
ried? If you love me, and I love you
better than everything else on earth,
that’s all that counts?” Her voice drop-
ped on the last two words, and a start-
led look appeared in her face. “But
maybe you lore Nona better! Daddy,
do you love Nona better?”
Morton rubbed his knee slowly with
the palm of his hand. She scarcely
me" she said. "I am glad you have.
succeeded, in whatever it is: I’m glad if
It makes you happier. But daddy, dear.
won t you answer my two questions?"
Morton sought an additional moment
or two to think. “Tell me the questions
again.”
"Are yon trying to marry me to Mr
Parrish, and do von love NonaT* Her
eyes widened A she looked anxiously
into his "T'1 me dear."
Morton caressed the back of her
hand. "I always think of you as a
child" he confessed “It is hard for me
to realize that J am talking to a wom-
grown woman." He paused. "T
promised you T would talk about Par-
All right."
many whose signatures require a
typewritten interpretation.
THE CRIME PROBLEM.
He got
elected a
up croswed the room, and
cigar from the humidor that
taboret, heside the organ
drew a breath aa she waited for him
to speak. The look of triumph that
flamed In her face a moment before had
disappeared, and as he still delayed his
answer, there came a droop of misery
to her lips.
“Do you love her better than you do
me?” she asked.
4
Morton started up. “Good grief, NO!
Good heavens!" he walked rapidly up
and down the room. "Nor he said
again. "I don’t love anybody as well
as I love you!’
“Then why—" she began. But he in-
terrupted
"I CAN’T marry you, Audrey! he
cried ‘Thrrr are reasons why I can't
do It—I simply cannot. It can
be: Abnlu ely?
them looking at you! And, daddy dear,
I don't blame them for that. But do
you love them—or any of them?"
"Well, I like several of them, I guess."
He said this with an air of frank con-
fession.
“I’ll bet I know! the girl said. “You
meet them and smile, and don't pay any
further attention. That makes them
crazy with curiosity, and they go right
after you! Women do that way.”
"Where did you get that philosophy?"
Morton wanted to know.
“I’m a woman myself," she said. "I
know that when a man shows he's In-
terested in a woman, she runs away—a
I little. Not too far, though, if she likes
him. But if he doesn't run after her at
all, she runs after him."
Changing the subject abruptly, she
continued:
"You didn't tell me if you were trying
.to have me marry Parrish.”
Morton seated himself on the table,
and swung his feet. “I'll own up,” be
said. “I hadn't actually thought of your
marrying him, but I was offering him
to you as a substittue for me."
She followed him, and stood before
him, gravely,
'"There never can be any stubstitute
for you, and I'm never going to speak
to that man again!”
He raised his hand in a laughing ges-
ture of despair.
"Don't abuse that boy!” he protested
"He didn't have anything to do with
this. It was my scheme entirely.”
“Coming around here, with his guitar
and bis dancing lessons?’ she said, in
dignantly. 'I never heard of ouch'ef-
frontery in my life.”
“You will find a young woman there.”
“Tell her 1 want her to take this five
thousand dollars and buy with it either
a ring or A necklace. Tell her to buy
only one article of jewelry—it must bn
a good one.'
Parrish hesitated. “What name shall
I ask for, sir?" he asked.
“Don’t ask for any name at all," Mor-
ton said tersely. “Go to the apartment
and give the money to the young wo-
man w ho answers the door. Give her my
message. Tcat’s all!” A
Parrish did not move.
"Go ahead, man," Morton ordered, hie
eyebrows rising.
“I don’t think I ought to, sir," said
Parrish.
"What?
‘‘I don’t believe I want to go on er-
rands of that kind," Parrish repeated,
deliberately.
Morton rose hastily to his feet. Then,
as if considering, he sank back in his
chair, and fixed his eye on the young
man. Parrish was fumbling uncertain-
ly. “Go and write it, and bring it in to
not meet hie employer’s gaze.
"You have not yet written the check
I told you to write," Morton said, quiet-
"Now, take it to this address as I told
me, and I'll sign it."
Parrish left the room, and in a min-
ute or two was back, with the slip of
green paper. Morton took the check,
and scratched his name at the bottom.
"Now, take it to this address as Itold
you before."
Parrish eyed the paper that his em-
ployer held out to him, but he did not
take it.
"I won’t go,” he said.
(TO Be Continued)
(Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.)
OLD PAINTING FOUND
( (By Associated Press)
RICHMOND. England — A picture
which is supposed to be the combined
work of Rubens and Van Dyck has
been found in an old house here.
On the back of the canvas is pasted a
letter, said by experts to be about 150
years old, which states that the picture
is the work of these two masters. The
title of the panitlag to given as “Time
Leading on the Young Artist,'’ and the
letter says that “Time" to a portrait of
Ruben’s father.
CHINESE TYPEWRITER HAH
FIVE THOUSAND CHARA TENS
(by The Associated Press)
SAN FRANCISCO— From out of the
Orient with its mysteries and ancient
lore, has come an Invention worthy of
Occidental genius in the form of a type-
writer capable of transcribing the
thousands of ideographic crypts of old
China. It is be nig marketed here.
The machine, fleet of its kind, was de-
signed by Tzequon, a native of Shanghai.
It is the product of years of toil and
experiments with various machines of
foreign make, in which was involved
the tedious task of collecting nearly all
of the common-use characters needed
for the expression of the Chinese lan-
guage of commerce.
There are 5,000 characters on the
machine. Three are transcribed to pa-
per through the medium of the familiar
rubber roller, line shifting apparatus
and inked ribbon.
Instead of each character being
mounted on an individual arm as is the
case with American and European ma
chines, however, the characters rest on
a sliding table and a single key rad
drops down, picks up the letter wished
and after it is used drops the type back
into its respective slot. The entire ap
paratus weighs about 40 pounds.
It is claimed the ordinarily educated
Chinese, with two months practice can
acquire a speed of 2,000 characters an
hours which equals speed possible on
European machines as each sign or
character may represent several words.
MEN GAIN RANK WITH WOMEN
(By Associated Press)
DUBLIN—Bachelors have been pleced
on per with women as to salary by the
Irish Free State civil service.
If single men enter the civil service
and marry later they get a lump sum
payment on marriage equivalent to
twelve months back pay of the the dif-
ference between the two scales. In ad-
dition allowance subject to a maximum
of 75 pounds is payable to them in roe
pect of each child up to the age of six-
teen.
PARENT’S DAY
OBSERVED AT
HIGH SCHOOL
Yesterday was visiting day at the
Amarillo high school and many parents
were present visiting ths various classes.
The high school band furnished music
for the occasion In the latter part of the
Parents’ day is observed once each
year for the purpose of bringing about
a closer relationship and better co-oper-
ration between the home and the school.
The high school hand furnished music.
FLAPPER FANNY SAYS:
+EF
ABE MARTIN
“Tut, tut, tut! He took her by the
shoulders and shook her. “Don't be so
never darnod—so < ounfoundedly well, fem-
NOW A PLAYGROUND.
MosCOW.—Tsarskoe-Selo, once the
favorite summer home of the emper-
ore and empresses of Russia, is now a
playground for the children of the
Russian masses.
Orens ay lies Nice, me.
FLAPPER FANNY SAYS
The bullfighter who meditates la
tossed.
Get back
that lost weight!
When you start to waste away to a
shad», when the color leaves your
cheeks and your poor, tired legs will
hardly boil up your weakened body it’s
high time you started taking a fine
tonic and builder like Tanlac.
Tan'ac will build you up and make
you feel that life’s worth living. Made
from roots, herbs and mark gathered
from the four corners of the earth and
compounded under the exclusive Tanlac
formula. Tanler is just what the poor,
starve! body needs.
First of all it cleanses the blood
stream and puts the digestive organs
in order Yon find, after a few days’
tronament, that you want to ret Pretty
soon the welcome color steals back Into
your cher he and the scales tell you that
you’re gaining weight From then on
it’s only a short time until you're feel,
ing fit as a fiddle
Millions of men- and women have
taken Tanlac with great benefit. More
than one hundred thousand people have
written as glowing tributes to this
wonderful tonic.
When you know it has worked won-
ders for so many folks It’s folly not to
take advantage of Tanlac’s help your-
self. Don't put It off another day. Get a
bottle at your druggist's now and start
inine!"
He modified the shaking he had given
her by administering a little friendly
pat on the shoulder.
“Seriously, you don't have to marry
The rir ramie to him, and held him
by the arm
I “Is—ix it Nona? she asked, her voice
I so low he -earrely could hear it.
I “You’re a, y> uni: girl, Audrey,’ h"
I him if you don't want to. All I was
returned to hi vent. - : nid. Thereinre thineerou can’t know looking for was a nice, decent young
"Here Ro, he Raid “I am the only , “ b itnes you ten : r About fellow who could take you around places
man you ex: have seen in an your Yon exmeand I can tell when I’m busy. You need some young
life, except for a few casual contacts with - 1 ' in—companionship. There isn't anything
- - .., , "You are young. It to the instinct ' t am wrong with him, now is there?’
gang of holdups, known as the of young thing - to seek a mate. Young* ll d ohiianmr and lifted“He has blue eyes and 1 don't like
“cake eaters.” Drink, bad com-human beings are not unlike puppy he note him piesninety: she mid.
panions and nights in Harlem {softly. Ana angay. if you love me I’m
negro cabarets, after the loosen-of compunction. Heartless and ready to forgive anything, and over- matrimonial him
ing of home ties with the death cruel, wise beyond their years in look anything, and forget anything. 1 yourelt " matrimonial agent for him.
of his mother, are given as the knowledge of the workings of she nrew him . little closer to her and those other women you spoke of.
cause for the killing of a restau-
ichting it, he puffed reeflectively, and
Sentence of death has been im-
posed upon Herbert Koerbert,
A. 18-year- old leader of a youthful
blue-eyed men," she said. Then she
laughed at herself. “Oh, I suppose I'd
like him all right if you hadn't made
Anyhow, he doesn’t worry me. It’s Nona
rant owner.
This youthful gang was “just
a bunch of kids gone wrong, tak-
ing joy rides, drinking booze,
singing and raising the deuce
generally,” was the plea of the
defense. This may seem to be an
adequate explanation of the
causes to a few people but it
failed to impress the jury who
sentenced him to death after de-
liberating for only forty minutes.
There to A world of meaning
in the plea of the defense. This
to not the first time that the
flame plea has been given for
thoseyouths who have been con-
tinually seeking some sort of a
thrill. Taking joy rides late at
night, drinking bad liquor, going
to the lowest and cheapest dives
could anyone expect a condition
other than this. Inflamed with
these things, and hardened to
every emotion for good or hon-
esty, this gang preyed on other
people and finally when their
1972.2250*.
the underworld, deep-dyed in
pollution and skilled in crime.
their thoughts were of a low
character and their desires of a
beastly nature. Here is Ameri-
ca’s crime problem.
“I know that if you did anything-
anything you can’t tell me, you didn't
do it to hurt anybody. Trial's the only
thing that is evil. You told me so
yourself!"
Absently, more to him- "If than to
her, he said “I didn't mean to hurt
“You won't co around with them any
more, will you?"
He threw his arms far aloft, waved
his hands with a resigned gesture and
started up the stairs.
“I ought to have learned by this time
never to debate with a woman,” he said
T' mix with th' gaiety o' Miammy
you'd think th' Ten Commandments
wus all dumped an' forgotten at Al-
bany. Georgia. It’s jest about got so
th' only safe way t' reach the other side
o' th’ street is t‘ cross with a cow.
System toned up;
gains 30 lbs.
"A shed dcorder unada ..
three years after the 1920 flood. 1
fellaway to 125thehadno energy:
could neither eat nor sleep nor-
mally. Tanise helped from the first
dose.I’mtinenow, weigh 155 lbs.”
DNZEE
San Antonio, Tex.
the good work right away Take Tanlae
Vegetable Pills for constipation.
BRINGING UP FATHER
MAGGIE-IT5 50 NICE
OUT 1 THINK I’LL
TAKE AlLIT TLE
---! STROLLS
THATSA
COOIDEA
AND NO
CAN TAKE
POM-POM
WITH YOU ,
A FULL PAGE EVERY SUNDAY IN FOL E PAGE COLORED COMIC SECTION
By George McManus.
I’M DOOIN' 1
WITH ‘OU - 1
WRIT UNTIL
I GET MY
HAT- r—'
IF I DON’T YOULL
START BAWL IN •
1926 ev ley L Fearune Service In
WHAT’S
ALL |
THIS?
I YOUR WIFE DAYS THAT
TOO SHOULD TAKE 7
THESE PACKAGES 1
BACK A’ LONG -)
AS YOU ARE L (for
GOING OUT. /e.e
* Brita, vigho reenve)
THERES NO 0SE
TALKIN • * THINK
TOO MUCH- -
4-17
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.
Matching Search Results
View six places within this issue that match your search.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. 132, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 17, 1926, newspaper, April 17, 1926; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1671328/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.