Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 319, Ed. 1 Monday, October 27, 1930 Page: 4 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Amarillo Daily News and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Texas State Library and Archives Commission.
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way of breeking
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1 the answer t any and all af these 4uestlons is vy
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loss of sleep is also noticed
over the telephone, then the measure of that girl’s IT is zero.
Al
if every girl who comes near him
to powder her nose and get
The Dally Newa to an in
ibil
the
sleep hungry. When we need sleep
WHEN YOU CANT SLEEP
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trade-Dav4 Qufnn, seeretary of the
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ta Maka them conacious of
of thaaa nervous patients
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sified
There are many people who find it it seems that we should be abia to go
difficult to relax sufficiently to go back to sleep easily, but we know
to aloep and who are nevertheless this is not always true. This diffi-
husbands and children barely endure them because h in their duty to.
If they will, the boy rates la the hundred per cent IT class, but if he
is only tolerated by girls because he is a good thing and a useful pack
animal to convey them to places they want to go; if they love him for his
automobile aad dinners and suppers and presents; if he has to pay hie
My way of joking is to tell Ue truth. That is
the funniest joke la the world— George Bernard
if no girl keeps a date with him if something with more pop in it offers,
then he is a complete washout so far as IT is concerned.
It isn’t goodness, for some of the best people in the world are the
least loved. We all knew women who have worked their fingers to the
question when we have thought all along that there
was only one side and so we might pause long
enough to consider what adjustments or readjust-
ments might possibly be worked out in our whole
economie order. Howeyer, that is no easy task and
it might be safe to say that it is not so much an '
economie readjustment of our economic system as
it is a moral adjustment.
And the girl would aay that if yen want to find out how much IT
a boy baa, watch eat and ooe if every girl falls for him at sight. Notice
12;
114
We may know we are too heavy or too lightweight socially, but how
are we to thin down ear bulkiness and become volatile and airy, or how
are we to add the weight of eharm and magnetism to our thinness!
I am sure a good slzed bench b
iuch to um in a day.
5
Many
he to
r am too long I know I am too long.—King
Christian of Denmark, who is • foot 5 inches toll.
groat that business men and institutions are willing
to resort to privilege buying in order to further
their own ends would lead as to believe that busi-
mess is deliberately furthering and abetting the
sale of the criminal forces.
That gives us two sides to this so-called crime
it le as easy to get the heft of ear personallty as it is oar weight
on a penny in the slot-weighing machine, but after we hare it. what-
are we going to do about ItT That fa the question that troubles snoot
of us.
It Isn't Intelligence, because we all knew learned ladies whose society
we arold as we would the plague, and wo know other women who never saw
a college, and who have never even read the six best sellers, whose babble
entertains and amuses us and to whom we can lieton for hours without
yawning.
6
tocsin see she
The fur-benring animate are diappearing with
alarming-repidity as a result of trapping for the
This skater has marked, on the ice, sixty-four points and ho proposes
to start from his present position end cross every one of the points in
fourteen straight lines. There is no objection to his passing over any
point more than once. but his last stroke must bring him back to his
origiaal starting point.
f the d
Thea th
ni
I or the I
th
A> its I
ris
Why, any
them how to <
to
trying to make the
aeme-ethertime.m
signed and the contracting parties agree on any
I changes.
The bureau translates all foreign eo mm unieat lour
i to the White House, diplomatic notes and annexed
For It is a gift of the gods capriciously bestowed at birth upon certain
lucky infants, and human ingenuity has been unable to Invent any work-
able substitute for it Invariably those who have tried to copy the per-
sonality of some one largely endowed with IT have found that their syn-
thetic charms did not work. The mannerisms that make one man fascinat-
ing and original made another seem a fool. The cute little kittenish tricks
of one woman make another woman look like a performing elephant
So there we are. We know that so far as winning and holding levs
and attracting our fellow ereatures to us are concerned, it is better to
have IT than it Is to have beauty and brains and virtue combined, but
how to attain this mysterious quality we do not know.
U
amount of IT that we poasess, or unfortunately may possibly lash. Only
they doat deseribe this quality as IT, as we lowbrows do. Taey call it “an
individual’s social-stimulus value." _
busy with her lipstick aad roll her eyes at him. Observe whether girls
would rather ride with him la a flivver than in a Rolla?Royce with
some other boy. Note whether they will turn down another date on a
gamble that he may happen along. Observe If they just melt down like
ice cream la the sea whoa he deigns to notice them. See if they will
pat up with rodeo too, with eritictam,s with neglect, with stinginess,
with greeches aad glooms aad jealousies from bias. 1
boll aad making boys take her to placee of amuse-
meat to meet other men and etil held them la
Hinet
sAD-C
in nervoup disorders, and yet it has
been my experience that most of
those who think they are troubled
with insomnia, because of nervous,
nose, are really being irritated physi.
cally by the pressure of impacted
feces or gaa in the colon, but which
has not been sufficiently pronounced ,
I
stomach sad intestinek. I find that
those patients who woken regularly
about 1 or 1 in the morning are in
every case troubled with gaa pres-
sure, due to the remains of the last
meal which is fomenting infde there
nad causing gas. This flatulence in
also often responsible for the night,
mares which disturb sloop.
Other physical conditions whiN1
assy produce an inability to sloop, on
a disturbed sleep,'ares intense itch-
k 7:00-1
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wa
Fuff goes to the barber to
shave.
Since his hair is too short for
And we know other women who have been selfish and self-seeking, who
have taken the best of everything for themselves, who have been too lasy
even to make comfortable homes and who have virtually enslaved their
families to them, yet their husbands and children adore them.
Special to The News
SAYRE, Okla., Oct. 26—-After do-
liberating 36 hours the jury in case
of Luther Neighbore, charged with
complicity in the death of J. L,
Hacker, age 63, father of IS children,
near Elk City last February, reported
that they could not agree and were
discharged by Judge CIny. This has
been one of the most stubbornly
fought eases ever tried in Sayre. At-
torneys consumed 11 hours in arguing
the case after it reached the jnry.
George Stephens is to be tried oa the
same charge next month. George
Cupp, who is also charged with com-
plicity in death of Haeker, has never
been apprehended.
4
“It Is as Easy to Get Um Heft’of Our Person-
ality as it la Our Weight oa a Penny-in-the
in the two Inspeetloa tours I have made I didst
see one single drunken man.—Prohibition Adminis-
wo
61
riaging
tione, A
to know bow much IT a girl hea. count the number
of her dates. Observe how many cut-ina sho baa at
a dance Tako note of her birthday and Chrletmas
presenta. Does she have to buy her own flowers
and candyt Do boys peas up prettier girls for her!
Can she put away with murder, •o to speak. In the
The firry old doctor, with his picturesque
white whiskers, has long since passed across
x the nver. hut I think about him whenever
the newspapers begin to talk about the
danger of “Red Riots” and the police break
up a harmless mass meeting with their lubs.
England, older and wiser than we in many
. respects, manages these things much better.
She knows that an, agitator is harmless uo*
or tub A9SQCIA
newe
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enjoy acrefreshing night’s sleep a
day or two after a fruit fast ac.
companied with enemas to clean >q
the intestines of accumulated waste
material. Many people find that an
enema taken just before retiring will
empty out the colon and insure a
deep sound aloep. Others are soothed
into sleep by a warm sponge bath. A
hot water bottle placed at the feet
will sometimes serve the purpose of-
drawing the blood awly from the
brain.
I have never known a case of in.
somia which could not eerily be
cured by a combination of treatment
for removing Uo stomach and intes-
tiaal irritation, having the patient
take more physical exercise. and the
use of some simple mental sugges-
tioas on going to bed. Lie perfectly
relaxed and repeat over and over
slowly, “sleepy, sleepy, sleepy." In.
hale and exhale slowly without effort
while you are repeating the word
mentally and you will find that the
.conscious mind can be readily lulled
into a deep aloep. Even the meet
stubborn cases of sleeplesaness will
usually yield to the above measures
which are to be preferred to the
habit of using sleep producing drugs.
s
lag, coughing, choking, stoppage of
the nose adenoida, heart trouble,
censtpation, bladder weaknesa, diar.
rhea, worms, high blood pressure,
in the wn and toxie cohdi-
Some *^1 unabl to 6o back tpiblhg
once they awakes during the nigh.
Others Ito in bed for hours hopin
tor sleep meanwhe counting sheep
l . ' a ,
ud"eusraiaess"4mirt
Dap and Ml temstetid Fuem Leased Wise gerrise
whas
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, S sotweee • und*teAt3l " m. ________
need sleep the most, are the
who find it hardest to fall in
sound, refreshing sleep.
There are many causes of steep
nens, but undoubtedly the most
mon of all is due to IrrltatloM
duced from Indigestion and the pre
sure of large quantitles of gaa in the
HEAITHDIET ADVICE
3 Dr Frank McCoy
adkeHestz/hd
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THE CASE OF MR. DIAMOND
The excitement occasioned by the. first news of
Mr. “Legs” Diamond’s shooting having subsided,
there is something infinitely boring about the sub-
sequent daily accounts of the efforts of tho New
York police to run to earth his assailants.
What makes it all so boring is the way it fellows
the tredifonal pattern. The same old stereotype
to Mug used, and most of us are over-familiar with
it. The police are “baffled," once more; suspicious
characters are being picked up end released, a dozen
different theories are being advanced, the victim
refuses to toll who shot him—and so on, ed infini-
tum. juat ae in all other gang shootings.
If the nation did not already know that Ito bir-
sest eities are helpless before their undetworlds thia
might be interesting. But that knowledge le ell
but universal, and the Diamond case offers nothing
new on it.
The ptala truth is that the world ia passing
through a perfectly natural end normal reaction.
Slowly but oerely the forees that will bring about
revival MO at work.— Francis H. Bisson, Now York
bank executive.
Worse still, when we lack IT nobody knows just what It Ie that alia
us. It tent that we lack beauty, becaune we all know women who are
living pietures whom nobody cares a rap about, aad we know plenty
of homely women over whom everybody ta crazy and at whose entry
into a room every fare brightene.
And that’s that. It is easy enough to measure our wocial-atimulus
value. But altering it is something else yet again. * DOROTHY DIX.
MORAL INFLUENCE AND
LEADERSHIP
Making a somewhat different approach to what
is fundamentally the same problem, Edwin U James,
writes for the New York Times, and Sir Henry
Thornton, president of the Canadian National Rail-
ways, give us some thoughts on America’s moral •
influence and leadership that should hsvo serious
thought by individuals.
Mr. James thinks that our moral influence
throughout the world to nil. He to quite certain that
"America's great world political position le not due
primarily to our moral leadership but primarily to
our wealth and economie position." In other words,
ae Owen B. Young has said, "America is too rich
to be loved," but we mu powerful at the memsnt
because of our great resources end wealth. The
manner in which vs um that power, according to
Mr. James, "to the greatest question of world poli-
ties"
According to Bir Henry Thornton, our leadership
is of the economic rather than moral kind and ie on
trial today. He throws out this stirring challenge:
"Business and industrial leadership cannot afford
to ignore their moral obligation to promote the wel-
fare of mankind."
m. Mbero are mum Interesting pointe of view end not
Icoming froM so-called toreigners either.
WASHINGTON LETTER
By RODNEY DUTCHER
WASHINGTON, Oct. 26— Moot treaties between aa-
tions are written in two or more languages aad tome-
times the misinterpretation of a word in translation is
likely to caune a dispute, which migkt lead to war or
something.
Bo ths linkuistie experts in the Translating Bureau
of the State Department have to know their stuff. Last
year Emerson B. Christie, chief of the bureau, and
his fear technical assistants, translated about 3,000,000
foreign words into English. These words were written
in a total of >1 languages.
Treaties are only a part of the work but the check-
ing of parallel texts le a vital matter. Except la a
treaty witk an English-speaking country tkey ere writ-
ten in two columns, one containing the text in English
and the other in another laguage.
Different interpretations have led to many argu-
ments, as each country follows the text in its own
language and in times past some actally serious con-
troversies have arisen when it was claimed that texts
didn’t agree.
We made a basic treaty with Turkey (a IMO and the
controversy oyer Interpretation lasted from 1868
through the World War, nearly causing rupture of
diplomatic rotations on a couple of oceasions.
Must Check Treaties .
Commodore Porter, however, had originally agreed
that in case ef doabt the Turkish text should be fol-
lowed and that made argument more difficult for the
State Department. Under present practice the Trans-
lating Bureau has to check texts before treaties are
von Were. Okiahoma
Dorothy Dix Says.
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One day, when Davie wae a mere working fig-
urine around the Woods office, getting hie career
under way, he noticed a well-dressed. Intelligent
looking young Chinese sitting ia the maltlag room.
For several days afterward, he noticed the same
young man there. He mentioned it to Woods.
“Oh. ho just some guy with a play hunch "
But upn the next day, Davis stopped to talk
with the stronger. What were the chanees, the
stranger asked, of getting a play written! New
here was the idea—and the young princes had a
goodly sum of money—and they would send to
China for fabulously lovely costumes . . . cos-
tumes direet from the royal households. The play,
of course, had to preseat the empress ia a ridicu-
lens light.
The empress meant nothing in the life of Davis.
But a "backed" play did. He sat down aad wrote
“The Marked Woman.** And in due times costumes
of each value came from Chlaa that the duty mao
MS,000. The cast was chosen, the play put together
—and they opened in Pittsburgh.
• • •
A few days .after the opening a note came to
Woods
“Unless that play is closed within two days, the
mea mho are potting up the money—mall known
to us— will be killed." And it was signed "The
Allied Tongs." or something like that.
Woods sent a polite reply to the effect that one
of a producer's first duties is to the playwright.
The play had been written, time had been spent
and the playwright was entitled to a showing and
a chance.
A couple of days more passed end a note that
weat something like this came to the producer’s
desk:
“We have waited some time for that play to be
closed. It is still being produced. If it la atill
going by the ead of this week, the body of Mr. A. H.
Woods will be found, with throat alit, floating ja
tho Harlem river.”
The drama was soon removed.
Indicating that the story, if ia aay particular
true, shows that melodrama can come right up aad
bite a producer. Which, according to the old for-
mula. ta "news." GILBERT SWAN.
Marconi hanamindlke my ewu—Thomae A.
Edison. '
“cheap martyrdom” at the government’s
expense.
A wise man of an earlier day was a Phan-
see named Gamaliel When the first perse-
cution of the Christians began he protested
“Refrain from these men and let
them alone for if this counsel or
this work be of men. it will come to
naught But if it be of God, yc can-
not overthrow it. lest haply ye be
, found even to fight against God.”
If the Pharisees had taken his advice the
new and struggling little sec might con-
ceivably have passed out in obscurity. But
they went on with their persecutions and
“the blood of the martyrs became Ihe seed
of the church."
• u.Chue Nemnese Syndican.
(Tenalla)
Question: M. B. C. writes: "I anjoy
rendine your queation and anawer eolumn,
and would Ilke to uk a quention, myeeir.
I had my tenalla taken oat about four
month, neo, bat when exposed to wind or
in n real warm place I have eoushin
npells. Plemse ndvise mo if you ay provo
of having tonsila taken oat if they are
dinensed. Also if the exponure to wind
and bent after n eertain length o€ time
win eenne makine me roach. Ie it an early
eign of tubergloata of the throat T“
Answer: The enuse of any eough should
be very thoroughly investigated. Yes, it
le true that it may be an early sigh of
tuberculosis of the throat, but not name
anrily eo, ae it may be simply a result from
your operation, t do not ndvine promin-
cuoue femovel of tonsils. They are com-
posed of lymphoid timsue snd when die-
eased saa be made healthy agaih through
dieting and following the proper hgzlenia
habits.
JURY DISAGREESIN
SAYRE DEATH GAS£
—-mFam-K
„tam-e-ean
NEW YORK LETTER V
NEW YORK Oet. 26,—This ta a tale som. SS
years old, told me by Tommy Devin the other night
in the shadowed corner ef a night resort,
it's about Owen Davia, the playwright, who has
written More dramas then yen are years eld, even
if yen happen to be Zaro Agha. And about Al
Weeds, the famous|Broadwey producer, who started
en the New York streeta with little er nothing, and
now has twice as much.
And the lata goes like thia:
it wm at a time whan the Emprens Dowager ef
China wm in bad ataading with certain ether royal
groups. A concerted propaganda effort was being
made to diseredit the empress in the eyes of the
world. Scores of princelings were scattered hither
and yon over the globe to spread atories of her
shortcomings.
And a number of them name to America. They
attended the universities and mixed with the better
people. They appeer to have had aa unlimited
spending fund, and need it Furthermore, they were
able to eend back home far each amounta aa wore
necessary to eld their campaign.
a 5′4
(Celum»
Question: O. J. aeksi "Can a 1
ent too much eeleryt le one bund
mueh in a dayF*
Anewer: I do not belleve anyom
hurt htmseit oat i ne too mueh eelerv.
In one food that neeme to agree with '
1220
23
r
AMARILLO DAILY NEWS
r X
IT WAS once my privilege to witness the
I establishment of a new religion.
The founder was John Alexander
Dowie, who first appeared in the Chicago .
newspapers as an obscure exhorter with a
talent for strong language Though he
went through the city and suburbs holding-
outdoor meetings, he attracted comparative-
ly little attention until one night a hoodlum
hit him in the eye with a rotten egg
At once he assumed a new character and
importance Instead of being merely a
sensational denouncer he became an in-
cipient martyr—a prophet persecuted for
his faith Converts flocked to his banner,
money poured tn, he founded fits own city,
and finally proclaimed himself the rein-
carnation of Elijah
He had undoubted talent, but it was the
- stupidity of his opponents which persecuted
him into success
manant wave.
Leaning back la tba chal he reeelves
qutte a thrill
When, Inatead •! • tazor, Uta Stork
wielda hi bin
NOTICB TO TBB runuC
i reflestim upos tba eharaeter, rtenOua e w
MSIvtfuai. Hrm. eaaaata. ar eorvoratiee tbai
Mm qdattM giTte Net-iet will to fliMb
eelled to Ite attentios at Ite edntor kiwi
l ehla mewupape 'ta -roeet, aw or tmujur aM
x eenee w erporation aad aamatlaaa will w
iented aa oremfnenw W wa ite wreg vab-
> or eruele
TE ACDIBMEAU or cncuLATONa
4 made living sacrifices of themselves for their familles, whose
___************* "42 •
-ema:
documents, laws and proceedings at international con-
ferenees of interest to tba department, arzuments and
documenta submitted at international eonferenees in
which thia country takes an interest and unofficial
communications to the department.
"Two-thirds of all oar work is in Ftench and Span-
ish," aay a Mr. Christie. "Foreign missions in Wash-
ington correspond either in French or their own lan-
guage. Japan and China use English. Eighteen am-
bassadors or miniaters use Spanish. France, Belgium.
Switzerland, Haiti and Turkey use Freneh. Moat for-
eign diplomata use good English, but when they com-
mit their own governments they want to use their own
to ague.
"People all over the world write to the White House
and about 38 per cent of our work comes from there.
The work continually inereases.
» Know Everything?
"Tha perfect translator has to know everything,
so there isn't any 100 per cent translator, though our
man Wilfred Stevens known 28 languages. It taken a
lot of technical knowledge when one of us has to col-
lect the radio laws of the whole world Md translate
them. Treaties— they may concern flab, migratory
birds, debentures or tariff nehedules—are often highly
technical. • translator has to knew the subject well
to avoid making a ball, which fa very easy to do.
“All foreign dictionaries are inadequate. So much
has developed since the war, including radio aad avia-
tion terminolozy and many other scientific terms. It
takes a lot of research to handle there words correctly.
Every language has great difficulties la ita pro-
found depths and none la worse than German," added
Translator L. s. Perkins, a veteran linguist specialising
in European tongues. “Theta’ becsuse of their tech-
nical terms. In German oxygen become wour-stuft,
nitrogen hecomes mother-stuft, carbon becomes cold-
stuff, and hydragen ie water-staff.
Japenese Moot Difficult
"From a general standpoint, Japanese might be eon-
sidered the meat difficult language. The Japanese have
three alphabets and yen have to know them aU beeause
you're likely to find tkem all Med ia the space of a
few paragraphn."
Yen might think that these veteran tranalatora, who
have to have an understanding of international aftairs.
a *
QUESTIONS AN ANSWERS
(Symptema et Thyrold Derangement)
Question: Mrs. F. writes: “I have a
queer teelin in my throat, just above ths
two small bones in my chest Seema as it
nomething were premaing hard on my wind-
pipe. Also have pains in my handa and
arms whenever I put them in eola water.
- Anawer: You are doubt lam bufterine
from some derangement of the thyrola
eland which would produce the aymptome
you write about. I will be sled to eend
you some upecial articles on the subjeet, of
the cease and cure of thyroid trouble y
you will forword a Iarge, meif-addresdd,
etamped envelope. •
PRIVILEGE BUYING
Col. Robert I. Randolph, president ef the Chicago
Association of Commerce and organiser of the secret
eommittee of six which has been making investiga-
tions of racketeering in that midwestern metropolis,
has some interesting things to say about that city's
crime situation. In a recent address hn spoke of
the underlying eanses of crime in Chicago, one ef
which he stressed as the “increasing tendency or
willingness on the part of many business seen ead
institations to purchase special privileges la the
increasing copapetition of economie life”
That tbught presents a rather new and novol
slant on the erimesituation. We have heard a fat
about the apparent laxity of low enforcement or the
inability of officials to enforce the law with the
result that the crooks of today have little ee ae
fear of being caught and are pretty apt to get away
with whatever crime they decide to undertake. We
have heard a lot about the power of organized crime
and the organized underworld but Colonel Ran-
dolphin atatement gives us something else to think
His intimation that economie competition is so
* *
*e
# *
* *
less you try to suprest him Only then doe*
he become a menace She’sets aside one end
of Hyde Park for the exclusive use of the
agitators There, every afternoon, and
especially on Sundays, they meet and shoot
off their faces against the government, the
church, and whatever else they dislike
One of the wisest things President Hoover
has done was to release the foolish young
men and women who were arrested for
picketing the White House He said that he
“yea," then B giri has IT, plus. But if she is one of the
girls whose mothers have to entertain for them to get them beaus end who
here to tell mea to the house by feeding them; if whenever the goes eel
with a man she has to furnish the sutomobile and the theatre tieketa; if
she has to remind boys of her birthday aad that Christmas semes ea ths
25th of December this yeM| if every mas who dancer with her has to be
led to the alaughter by hie bootoes end wears the expression of an Early
wide technical knowledge and a eomplete aequs
with languages, would be paid commensurate i
by Ute government. They aren’t. Chief Christ
MAM n year ead the others got from HAM to
An attempt fa being made to have them aU
for aalary purposes in the "professional end ecA
'group. Aust now they're under "elerieal." I
----- • • I
trator Amos W. Woodcock.
adent Democratie
tmpartially, ead
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 319, Ed. 1 Monday, October 27, 1930, newspaper, October 27, 1930; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564965/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.