Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 94, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 18, 1930 Page: 4 of 14
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MARCHIS,
FPUa
e
OUT OUR WAY
AMARILLO DAILY NEWS
THOUGHTS
E—Kg
We have alaned.
we have epoken
a
i
Lord, and againat thee; pray unte the
Streets.
For apiritual
a
the
Ajawet: Eaceyslve eweating
r
and modest.— Jeremy Taylor,
I
in your ner
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— •
" "And
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1fa
6
33,
222
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4
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ow.m’ wFE 6HE UNDERSTANDS »t
4
deaf.
J R.wLLAMS
ABE MARTIN
(
•N
The Woman's Day
fled their intentjon to attend.
time I saw him hr wuz usn‘ per-
Ciseo, Cal.
SezHu8h
TWO SIDES.
I
megt far a you
albumin
nawer: Tbe going te bed treatment
beot
man who
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1
Seen About New York
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Fugitive Reaches Aircraft
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ABOARD!
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152
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haw near a hundred you bat.
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deal
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ibt
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aal
irce
-aua~
A REAL
MAN 5M0VIDHNV
A SHILLALAH
TO SMOKE, To.
lag the kinks in the colon and in this
war a partial eliminatton may be car-
th.
that
vetual ani
them he
Far and away
scen la many a
W.
=
8
*
portuaat,
blessinga.
v this man’s town has
Ur's "The Green Pas-
fima that iour merve
dlutetle ekror and
6+e‘s GEEN •OME PET5 Ger MAE, (
BUT T MDS HANE SELN A PCTURE )
TAT NO WORDS CAN EVER CHANGE. (
so suP AROUND, ALL wUREELF, .Me
ANO GET 1T FIRST APPRAIsED, "8
BEFORE VoU SHoW •UR FAMI/
-H* PLACE WHERE Vu WESE RAIGED.
—GILBERT SWAN,
(Copyright, 1980, NEA Service, tM.)
Monday night.
Brough was to leave Tuesday mom-
Ing for Lubbock wherp he is to ad-
dress the Lions Club there.
CLARENDON LEGVONNAIRES
TO CHILDRESS MEETING
W. B. Hamilton, president of the
Wert Texan Chamber at Commerce,
N. H. Martin aad i. J. Perkins, of
Wichita Falls, Judge W. >. Hamil-
ton of Dallas and George Martin of
Denver, are in Amarillo this week
in conneetion with the Dial ranch
law adit now up la Judge W. E. Gee's
court.
this was aupposed to ha the eartai a man's eue,
and down came the curtain, although the getaway
chorea had not been sung.
i
F2", i "
84
stanager.
ment am
( fl
ev'o
r NEW!
09
t
ah
8
ter, as we read the ghastly news; and
we talk the same old patter while we don
our overshoes. "All the jails are over-
crowded, which the prisoners resent; and
they are by gloom enshrouded, while
upon their labors bent And the eats they
have to swallow don't include a decent
26
roast, and there is no pie to follow, and
they have no quail on toast. And the cells are dark and
By PHILLIP NOWLAN
ad BICHARD CALKINB
standing position to see if an ob-
struction has been formed.
Chronic obstruetion is not as se:
rero as acute obstruetion, but the full
eontents may become greatly packed,
accompanied with some pain in the
colon and, sometime, vomiting. Often
peritonitis is noticed with the colitis
which a!ways extatt.
In old people It la net unusunl for
the bowels to be stopped up as long
aa two weeks without produeing any
severe aymptoms. Sometimes the con-
tents of the small intestine may sue-
More than 500,000 fish were caved
from backwaters elong the Missis-
alppl in afew weeks this winter by
etale fisheries men in Wisconsin.
Uulo ponuoneal use to a young
hea ouch a perlous disorder of
eBennys
Note Be K I
The Daily Newa Ie aa tndependent Demoerasie
mewspaper, publishing the news impartially, and
eupponting what it belleves to be right regardless
of party politica
tures." . Then. there’s “The Last Mile,1' “Topake,"
“June Moon," "The Apple Cart," "Meteor," “The First
Mrs. Fraser," and ""Death Takos a Holiday."
placed upon their honor woofer as the making of
change or payine for their paper is concerned.
Then atands are provided with a eoverless cigar
box, which generally contains about a dollar or more
in change, aad as the late afternoon wears along,
the amount will reach several dollara. The purehaser.
very frequently has to make hie ova chance, and'
invariably is honest about it.
A check of these standa ahowa that the petty
thieves, who might rifle the corner grocery, are me-
ticulous ia their honesty when faced with such open
temptation. There is absolutely sothing to prevent
any small-change lifter from makine the rounds of
these spota aad making d'good hizht’a haul.
But the statisties show that they doat do IL
Them pinces are seldom, if over, robbed or abort-
changed.
288
085229,
Speeini to The Xewa
CLARENDON, March 17—The Au-
byn, E. Cloth Fest of the Amerian
Legion of this city will send a^p-
gation to the district mooting iffMail-
dress next Sunday. The members of
the poet are securing caps aa a par
at the regalia for the oecasion. Cem-
Walt Mason Himself
The World’s Most Famous Rhymster
mom of your trouble you wil ae
— -----------^j^neng
It becomes nacessary just before Lent, to revise
the entire list of "boot shows."
principal epesker during theamu
banquet of the chamber of eoiMei
r our or 1?
w w¥ N
MON6QSE
mandoe Andie stated at the Last meet-
ing that several members had if---
mg man who boa a ereat
i? Na ba. been tvind to
_ Y
Two wild dope killed 11 door nar
Pueaahod 22 De • - Muf
J.'p.uwMae Uomuan.
58
2
dal arucle him "Your Detlz "•mA'
(Coorricbt, 1M». bp Jto Bett Sydiett
POSTAL RECEIPTS AT
TEXLINE IIP 100 PER
CENT FOR JANUARY
; SRr GO •*
subject.
"Wonde
He murm
"Ui
“I remi
derly ma
sald Joyc
H. cast
"Do yo
“He th
Reserve,
rtirit
.' r her
172
•But’y
uRAZun
____________The life of the party
(Copyright, 1030, NEA Service, 1m.)
There are at least four mistakes in the above picture. They may per-
tain to grammar, history, etiqueute drawing or whetnot. See if res wa
find them. Then look at the nerambled word below-and nserambie it, by
switching the letter areobd. Grade yourself to (or ench of the mtntak
Wzg"8pam,s8xum.6484ue
FLEiG yicekQ HAJD
h tWTSOAL
8,,
ll
PRISON RIOTS
In the prisons men are brooding, serving five to fifty
years; making projects most deluding, they arise as mutin-
eers. Heedless of official orders they have smuggled in
some gats, and they shoot some startled
warders, shoot some turnkeys through
the hats. Broken, is the' Sabbath quiet
of that penitential place, there are scenes
of blood and riot, and it’s all a big dis-
grace. Then we wonder what’s the mat-
3"
un07964EC(•
■M, V. t. PAT. ovv. CI MB BY MA SERVICC, me.
3.453
Phone counecting aS depar
asua’uxsrsjs
irritating impuritica which may be
EX-GOVERNOR BROUGH,
ARKANSAS, AT UMESA
sneissT March 17.—Lamesa had
aa a distinguished guest Sunday and
today Hon. Charles Hittman Brough,
former governor at Arkansa and
noted Southerner. Brough has made
five addresses here to estteyated
crowds at 2,000 pereons. Ha addfssed
two church congregations snday
and appeared before the student body
of the local school Monday morning-
Bo was a luncheon guest of the
Lions Club Monday at noon and was
Anahb
G-,BAMg"A#
WMmAS oymsotr OF 50
FLEEi eEL vcewO»•
.4
S HDIDRAGONS / Nddf
r a FlkMo GRLS 222
4:855
gloomy where the convicts have to sleep, and their joints
grow stiff and rheumy, it’s no wonder that they weep."
But the convicts’ evil humors are not based on bills of
fare; they are always hearing rumors of the crime boom
everywhere. Into prison there come creeping stories of the
gangsters’ reign, of the bandits who are keeping coin
enough to load a wain. Stories of the low defeated, of the
victories of sin. of officials scorned, unseated, In the war to
conquer gin. Grim-eyed convicts hear such stories by their
grape-vine telegraph; while outsiders harvest glories,
they’re in jail to stand the gaff. When they lie on spring-
lees couches they can dream of out of doors, and their
hearts are full of grouches, and their soulsare full of sores.
They are thinking of hi-jackers who are free to ply their
trade, garnering all kinds of smackers, eating pie and
marmalade. So they think the cops are hellions who hav
put them in such shape, and they stir up fool rebellions
in vain efforts to escape. <
Copyright, 1930, by George Matthew Adams.
enesepelk -upaand. X5
ni "Wiu"asoeeuto"vouvocfs
no tatweso S H v'uhvk u. ■»
" MBMBBM OP THE A8SOCIATQ* PIUMe"""""
The Awoclaic1 6 enelusivel, entitled tote pet
meeblicatios W ali newe dWuuxbw credited to ar poq qtherwue
•mdtud i» ul vepen and ho locgl pewe putijaheg haren.
- nairshtg,of vublication ofapecial dpatehe herein mu Mw
go
" notick m ras runuc. 1 '
Aap etoneow tWIactwu pon the charaeter, utandtne ar re
utation el ana ImdivedusL- firm,, concern, or corporation that
map U>|» u Um olumas atrme New-Globe will be uMU
Mrmui when eniled to the attention at the editor. it W 0«
ehetntentiqe at this 0»wr»0>v« to wronety ata ar tmjun ear
(ndividuel, tirm, «>■ rwv or corporatign and eorrpetioma will to
mede when warransed m promiggnu, m wa, too wrong vub-
Bsbod. iViwmi or totirlo.__________________________________
mkunEaov T ADIT AUEAUOV CIRCULATIONS
SEW YORK, Mar. 17.— The innate honesty at
the human race, when accepted ethical practices are
invoived, to Sally demonstrated ia Manhattan.
There 11, for instance, the matter of the thoue-
andt of ewspaper stands which stand unattended.
These ar generally operated by some small shop-
? keeper whs is too busily engaged with bio little buei-
ness to give attention to the peddling of papers
Tens of thousands of homegoers stop by to perches,
paper*.
Because there is ae one to watch them, they are
BUCK ROGERS, 2430 A. D.
1, let our prayer bo im-
perseverinu tat temporal
oneral, short, conditional
, Vp
r' sV-nt,
he take away the merpeuta tvom •a. And Mones
ptayed for the psspl* Maraheea Mil.
• • •
T90s.
A WAL IRISNMAN
FROM COUNTY GALL- .
owAY- SHOULD HAVE
A err OF SHAMROCK
ON ST.MATRICK’ DAY.
ANO DID YOU SEC TNT
NSW NATIONAL FLAG-
ivE HUNG ON TAE wau?
g
Pa
• G
Special to The New*.
TEXLINE, March 17—Postal re-
ceipts in the Texline post office for
Janary, IMO show an inerease of
nearly 100 per cent over those for
January. 1029.
Receipts of the Texline poet office
during January, 1029, wore $163. Dur.
ing the first 23 days of January,
XMO receipta reached $233.37, the
month’s total being $280.37.
Receipts for February 1029 were
$157 as compared with $106 for Fah-
ruary, IMO. March, 1020 receipts
were 9149 and receipts in the office
for that same period thia year bid
fair to exceed the IMO figures.
WILL THEY SEE TEXAS?
Aa Associated Frose dispatch from Chicago; "A
good will party from the Chicago Association of
Commerce will tear the Southwest next month. The
group will visit Becomont, Houston, Galveston, Saa
Antonio, Waco, Fort Worth aad Dalias in Texas."
It ia obvious that the Chicago delegation will fall
to see much of Texas, in feet the best part of the
state. They are overlooking West Texas and the
Plains country. Unless their itinerary is changed to
bring them through West Texas they will miss ths
sections of tfe state which are setting the pace
for the retire Southwest in general development.
They will have no coneeption of the .great
changed taking place in Texas in agriculture, eil
and gas develepment, highway and rail construction,
immigration and se on down the Hot if their teip
brings them ae farther north than Dallas and no
farther weel than Fort Werth.
They eeat eoe Tezas unleas they see the rich
farmlag area around Abilene, the sheep and ell
of San Angelo, the deifying and dry farming of
Plaipview and Labbock, the millions of acres of
growing wheel In every direction from Amarillo, the
railroad and distributing eeater of Amarillo, and
the two oil eapitals of Texas— Berger and Pampa,
with the refineries, carbea black planta and hun-
dreds of producing wells at their very door*.
Whoever made out the route for the trip played
a huge joke on the Chicago business men.
The employment of animals in Breedway pro:
ductions bee olmert invariably led to some eventual
ludicrous situation or some show-stopping behavior.
The latest ineident occurred pa ths opening
night at "Simple Simon." Ed Wynn, the elown of the
piece, appeared at the flaal curtain with a goose
hiddan under hie coat. All through rehearsals the
goose had behaved perfectly. When the eoat was
opened, the goose bopped out and started strutting
over the stage. It was a "big laugh" for the finale.
But when it earns to the night of tbo show, the
goose just wouldn't behove. Before it was brought on
the stage it turned end bit the comedian. Thon
when Wynn opened his coat, the goose refused to
move. Wynn tried to pry it out, only to be nipped
again. At which the jester dropped the goose to the
5
vg us 4 2 15
34,
$h'a \‛ KV.
Yestidday me and Puds Simkins and
Shorty Judge and Sid Hunt made up e
conspiracy to kidnapp Side fox terrier
Teddy and hold him for a ransom, the
ransom being 10 dollers reduced from
a thousand, and the password being
Beware, and this morning Puds rang
my doorbell for me to wawk to skeol
with him, me opening the front doer
and wispering. Beware.
Beware, Puds wispered back, and
who wai np at the corner waiting for
no but Sid and Shorty the other I
conspiratora, them toying, Beware,
and me and Pads toying Beware.
And we sterted to make plena about
the kidnapping wkilo wo was wawk-
ing to skeol, gid saying. Ten can put
on your black masts after supper end
come and wisale in ths alley outside
oar back yard, and III be all reddy to
unlock the gate. But G youll haff
to have a special secret wissle or cite
somebody sits will wissle and ill
think its you and Ill'open the gate
at the wrong time, hersd.
G, that* rite, Short} Judge sed, and
Pads sed, All rite, S short wissles
Mei. SouUsro Coiofad"'an Wema "ossetma.tan.s.n
—um“utusamuwrs"unA
Bra Oto Ntoto Asssmiol Newe Loosed Wine Swvtoe~
“‛4-T3
I gz,
6
= R
St
S
i
h i
i-
; w \ OLIM
5A ockes
LDOP
"Oh, he's Jest, gone to nothin'. He
got to speakin' at luncheons, let hl«
business git away from him, triee -------T-----,
rtltlh* auto polieh an' falled, hi. wite nworming ortunnelingthei
an' children left him, aa' the last "ay Ehroukh the hardened feces He-
svsscuurjion EATES •» HAIL IN ADVANCE
imazft «
Raiiasauo. ravAULS IN bvai2"
_______ w • o " -ft*
■utocrtpUM to XMri Daily New* le Combququan Wild
_9
mueh. drill you please publish a eur tat
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Bish M-od Frewure
Qusstion:"1. D, wiites; “I have been
paralyzed for neveral montha from high
blood .reei ore. Il fine atarted in two
fln.cn on the left hand and finally went
up in the arm and alt mar the left Vida
Heve taken eleetrie treatmenta, and have
done everythine I know to do. hot geta 2e
better. Cao you help me ia any way t"
Anaweri Your htgK Mood pregsure eon
be reduced to praetically normal through
footing and dieting. The parhiyris will
diiappear m coon ae the blood-clot has
been absorbed, but you can only aacem-
pllah this by lyin on the moot rigid diet.
The D’Arenvo! high frequmey trestment
will temporarily reduce your blood pre-
•ure atter each treatment, bat does not
hare any permanent attart.
Bright’s Disease
Questions U 7. aN»»I “Will you kindly
UI l me what would be the correct trent-
and then I long ones and then 4 mor.
abort onto and then one more long
one. kowe that tar a seeret wissle. No-
body would be libel to wisnle that
way axaidetly, or anyways not 3 fol-
lows at enee, he sed.
And me and Puds and Shorty start-
ed to praetice it, getting partly mixed
up but sounding pritty secret any-
waya, Sid saying, Well new the ques-
ttbn is, whose going to beep Teddy la
their yard while we’re waiting for
the ransom?
Being a unexpected question be-
cause none of us would proberly be
aloud to, and Puds sed, Weil l weald,
eny the belt on eur bask gats Is se
loose Teddy le libel to jump up and
open it himself and run hackhome
without any ransom, and Shorty ned.
Well I would, ear we got a rat that
chases dogs, and Teddy would get aa
wore out be wouldent be worth a
ransom.
Well then Benny has to, Sid sed.
Me thinking, Heck, why dident !
quick think of something ferst before
they did?
Wich just then the next to the loot
bell rang, and we all sed Beware and
quick ran Inta skool.
Children go through the thankless days of child-
heed doing just about everything wrong.
Thankless days, I say besaueo whatever they de
la judged by aa adult standard and of course eriticized.
Billy doesn't wash behind his ears, not beeause bs
Is s dirty boy, but beceune his mind is on something
else-s new knife, a tramp he's going to take, the
shanty the boys are building.
Patty breaks a wow cup, because she forgot and
piled them up in three, instead of twoa, and they fol!
over.
Dey dreams, torgetfulness, childhood! In the aver-
age boy’s er girt', life Ibero seems to be a reprimand
waiting at every romer.
Not m good, thia high-banded ayatem of ours. Be-
cause what children need more than anything else in
the world !• encouragement.
Encourage carolesaness? Praise their mistakes?
Condone forgetfulness?
Well, yes, and I’ll tell you why. Under much of thle
seemingly slipshod conduct of youngster., th.ro I. a
potent power at wort, an influence that 1. the very
yeast at Ilf. and which later SB, If It is not billed in
the beginning, will be an enormous factor la the mak-
ing of bi. sueeess.
That power ia imaginatien.
That is all that day-dreams are. Day-dream, are
accountable for forgetfulness, earelessness, lazinese, all
sorts of thing, that exasperate paraate to the limit of
endurance. Wool-gathering we era pleased to call IL
Aad maybe is to. But wool bringa a pretty penny and I
there lo na need to despise it.
That’s half at IL The other half io easier to see.
It's Sometimes Costly
When this yest of imagination begins to froth
over we get something more tangible to scold about
The experimental stage begins. Patty wants to make
fudge. She burns II Sho makes it again and borne
it again. Twa good rakings over the coals. She quits
fudge, but the cooking tnetlnct is strong. One day she
tries a pie when the family is out and she has the
kitehen to herseif, A mess, another failure, another
scolding. After a few trials she's sff ths piss tee.
Cooking and artistic natures often go together.
Chased out of the kitchen she turns to the attic. She
invites in some chums and they turn eel ths tranks fat
a dress-up party. Dramatic instinct plain and almple.
Bat they need pin*, needles, and help. But you're busy,
you don't want the attic messed up anyway—:you chase
them out. Poor Patty's imagination left an orphan again.
Billy is going to break your heart right when his
imagination begin, to work overtime. A boy l. a. full
or exporimenta aa strawberry is at seeds. Often they
are vague, indeterminate, unfinished. If you can tend
enough sympathy and time and advlee to help him car-
ry some at these through to a finish, even a crude fin-
leh, 1 think tke years to come will reword you. Nothing
in life is so valuable as the experiment carried to
completion.
And so, after thinking it ever, perhaps we may
learn to be les. exacting with these developing young
natures and to make allowance for that stirring rerm
that causes disorder and havoc as it grows.
mr
Thon there is a chain of restauranta in this
town where no check Is ever given to the customer.
Tbs operator has built up eno at the most success-
ful busineases in New York by trusting his cus-
tomers to name their individual check.
Thus, any diner may eonsult huge signs that
hang about and add up his own seers sard. He then
goes to the cashier and remarks; "I owe you 50
cents.” And the cashier does not question him.
The old soured pessimists would have you be-
lieve that a flock of "spotters" is never very far
away, and that if anyone tried to flim-flam the
cashier there would be embarrasaing consequonces.
There are two sides to every question. • This is
just as true in advertising as in an argument. In-
advertising there.is ths side of the advertise* and
the side of the public.
From tbo viewpoint of the advertiser in the
newspaper, advertising it a means of inereasing his
volume of buslasss. Commereial development has
made advertising s* necessary ts retell business as
customera. Witboat eustomers the advertiser could
not remain in business, so he advertises ts attraet
custom sr*.
The other side of the question is that at ths
publie. To the Rublie newspaper advertising moans
the bringing at the store shew coses te tbs office
and living room. It is a servicemeztended to the
publie by the advertiser, beeause It olds the customer
n asceftaining where that which Is wanted can be
purehased at the most advantageous prise. News-
paper advertising has abolished shop-searehinz. To
save time for the shopper lengthens his day.
So although there are two sides to newspaper
advertining, there is no disagreement between the
two. Finding that advertising serves the public as
well as business the merchant has two reasons in
steed of one for advertising, and ths customer learn*
that ths most progressive merchants are the most
extensive advertinera, so there to a- double attrac-
ties. By the nature of business, if advertising
didn't help the buying public it could not help the
advert tour.
puume"sNitaf and the patlent be totally
" "hol’tbeaome butter”S aware of the obatruetien.
pie?.
metabollam to have a reat deal of
albumin to the urlne. He peeds diet and _ S. a ~//,
exerqise to correet the faulty metabellem om*‛ 77/
Oftem WHENTAERE'S
M thto b A onlhopt “A GOQD TME OMING-,
etine. Band* ....(5A GOOD TME COMING..
Wvo'wv Mee-- wnm t * neve
about wha
Joyce si
think ha s
lived in a
street. A
er-on abou
gan. He-
office boy
things for
got me tl
And he—l
Dargon bi
brought o
from the
He shoo
to hear an
to tell yo
and if
head?" -
He spol
for an ex
' smiled as
portunity
door that
KIKS AMD PROLAPSU5
(Continued)
When the bowel has become twisted
on Stself it forgas a hind of kink
known a. a volulus, which comes
from the Latin term, volvere, to roll.
These eases often occur in the sig-
mold flexture above the rectum. Long
standing constipation to the meet fre-
-quent cause of volvulus.
Another serious form at intestinal
kinking to called intus-susception,
whieh refers to the slipping of one
pert of the intestine into another, a
kind of swallowing of the intestine
by itself. When this condition occurs,
it is easy to see that there are three
thieknesses of bowel in the place. The
Intus-susception may be from a half
inch in length to as much as a foot.
Common sites are where the small
and large intestine join together and
in tbo descending colon.
In order that you may understand
this article more clearly I suggest
that you fled an anatom leal drawing
at the intestines la some medical book
and have it beside you when you are
reading thto article.
Should there be any interference
with the nerves or muscles of the in-
testines. a kink forms, as one section
of tke intenatines does not move as
rapidly as Its neighboring sections.
Tkls may be caused by blows to the
abdomen, operetions, inflammation, or
excessive quantities of gas.
Tbo symptoms of an acute obstruc-
tion will be a sort of colicky pain
drawing through the abdomen, which
later becomes severe and persistent.
The patient has an exhausted appear*
ance and may vomit his last meal,
which is often followed by vomiting of
greenish bile and sometimes evsn the
vomiting of fecal matter which has
been carried bach from the intestines
to the mouth by a reverse movement.
Sometimes the bowel can throw off
the point at obstruetion, but often no
movements at all occur. As a rale,
tho higher the ebstruction in the in-
teatine, the more pein. The abdominal
region is sore and tender and may
be greatly distended from gas. Ths
amount of urine is lessened, since the
pstlent may remit up most of his
fluids. Ths shin becomes clammy and
the tongue greatly coated. Sometimes
the obstruction csn be felt with the I
fingers as a tumor-like enlargement.
Where there to a very stubborn eon*
•tipation, one should have a very
careful x-ray exomination in the
5
e -n - et
m AMARILLO
...........
KCi dae ins
V/)AME RICAN
d/HISTORY
CLEVELAXDS BIRTH
On March IS. 1837, Urover Cleve*
land, twenty-second and twenty-
fourth proaident of the United States,
was born at Caldwell, N. J.
When his father died aeon after
tho family moved to Naw Yerk
etete, yeeng Cleveland was induced
by an uncle to make bio homo In
Buffalo. Hero he studied law. and in
1850 was admitted to the bar. Four
years later he become assistant dis-
trict attorney for Erle county. Sub-
sequently he became sheriff of the
county, mayor of Buffalo and gov-
ernor of New York.
Jr each of those offices Cleveland
demonstrated such good judgment,
firmness and independence that he
was easily the outstanding Demo-
eratie candidate for president In
1884. Elected after a hard campaign
against James G. Blaine, Cleveland
showed the mim vigor and spirit
that characterised his enrlier offices.
The creation of the Interstate Com-
meree Commission and the admission
of four new states wsre the out-
standing measures of his first ad*
ministration.
His second term proved to be one
of the most remarkable In American
polities, end un erent which helped
make it so was his Venezuelan mas*
saga sent to Congress in 1895, Great
Britain, which for a long time had
been encroaching on the territory at
Venezuela, refused to arbitrate the
subject. Cleveland’s impulsive mes-
sage hintod war, and England, thor-
oughly upset, aecepted the arbitra*
MM, This was called "the most sig-
nal victory of American diplomacy
in modern times."
HkSe
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 94, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 18, 1930, newspaper, March 18, 1930; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564865/m1/4/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.