At her initiative, children's canteens were created across the state, along with other essential charities to serve the needs of the poor.
Her mother and father Andrés Chacón and Ventura Amarillas move to Guaymas, Sonora, where she spends her childhood and young adulthood.
[1] At her initiative, the first-ever children's and poor people's canteens were created in Mexico, which served stew, milk, and bread.
[citation needed] When Natalia's condition worsened, the work of accompanying the president was carried out by her daughter Hortensia, who became the official replacement for the first lady.
[3] During the last day of Plutarco Calles's presidency of Mexico in 1927, Natalia Chacón Amarillas fell very ill with a pulmonary embolism and was transferred to a hospital in Los Angeles, California, where she underwent surgery on 23 May.