The Mart Herald (Mart, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1922 Page: 4 of 8
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of
as
15,000 persons paid a .shilling
but
tat ion, and the cost of handling. f°ur nations
In
There is one thing that will
The
the
Wilson
recom-
look-
worth
Quality
Service
BUILD A HOME FIRST
taining
sanitary
and
we
I
and
fdth.
are
be
serve you
m
castoria.—Manila
Wm. Cameron & Co. Inc
aBnSn
SI
Rival Irish Forces
Accept Truce Terms
and various other items.
Keeping that money at home
does two important things,
increases the money in circula-
tion at home, and it gives em-
ployment to local people.
the bright side of every gloomy
: will the sooner be visi-
Civil Service Problems.
Approximately I
have
central
washed away
the boll weevils and much of
*
-
I
I
|
, this summer he will
make a drive for the spot un-
■ ri
Encouraging
The action of the Southern
Pacific management in ordering
a large number of new automo-
bile freight cars built is indica-
tive not only of the improving
Read The Daily Herald ads.
cept for the optimistic sugges-
tion which
A ton and a half of stone tak-
en from Culebra Cut of the Pan-
ama canal is to be erected as a
monument over Theodore Roose-
velt’s grave at Oyster Bay.
Are Insects Drowned?
It is to be hoped that the ex-
< essive rains that have fallen
.over north and central Texas
----
i The founders’ medal of the
I Geographic Society has
'been awarder’ to Col. Howard
No doubt it will be
up- forthcoming in time.
munity.
Warm weather is due, and it
if 1
connection, m
Cheer Up!
The Herald is reminded
week
$100 Reward, $100
Th* md*r« of t’llH r>-.( r will
As we get it, the difference
between Wilson's ano Harding's
remedies for conditions is about
the same as that between cas-
tor oil and
Bulletin.
Somewhere the sun is always
shining. If in the heart, the
clouds do not obscure its rad-
iant rays. But if only in the
heaven.*., the cloud.' envelop the
heart and keep it in impenetra-
ble gloom. Let the sunshine in
and the clouds will quickly de-
part.
Look Facts in the Face.
When a merchant sella an ar-;
tide he makes a
over and above 1
cost of the goods, the transpor-
There are more than 300,000,-
i in India, of
whom more than 220,000,000
.are Hindus and 60,000,000 are
Mohammedans, the remainder
belonging to minor tribes.
Dublin, May 4.—A truce be
tween rival Irish republican ar-
my forces has been declared, it
was announced today
and those
ignore I
tic trips which culminated in
his discovery of the South Pole,
and Peary discovered the North
Pole, so the Norseman has no
chance to be the first man to set
foot there. Nevertheless, he
has decided that he can be the .. ...
first man to cruise around injthe £n Jhby,
vicinity of the North Pole, real-
ly "to look hte ground over, as it
were, as <
A League of Nations.
Prvident Harding and l..~.
republican party leaders u,t’n
fought the “league of nations’* | soil,
so hard, largely, no doubt, be-!the kind of
cause1 I"
other plans of procedure, which ( you
the mind
democrat, have
ratified a
bid lair
The price of cotton advanced
more than $6 a bale the first
. Exces-
sive rains are retarding the
planting of this year’s crop.
However there is ample time for
Texas to raise a good crop ot
Cotton nrovided the worms and
Weevils do not get P as has been
the recovery of the railroads
from the blow the war and gov-
ernment gave them. Rehabili-
tations of the railroads has
been one of the biggest prob-
lems before the country since
the war ended. There can be
no more encouraging sign of
economic improvement. The
whole country may be said to
lie on the high road of prosper-
ity when they reopen f‘
The man who knows himself
knows what others think of
government. <
en to direct taxes for nine-ten- and happiness,
ths of the $5,000,000,000 an- We may not all be able
nually to support the govern ("paint up,” but all can
ment. The people have a right up,” i
to know the views of every can The conditions
didate for the house and senate ] now for a clean
as to what powers he will eon- beautiful Mart,
f ...... ” .......
—Cullen F. Thomas.
use m
I
in
volume of trade, more money in
circulation, and that money
pa-sing from hand to hand
I’n -perily is the natural result
If you have any savings stow-
ed away you are quite safe in
bringing them out and putting
them to work.
The time for action is here.
Lady Astor, native Virginian
and first woman M. P. of Eng-
land. says she came to the Unit-
ed States to attend the Pan-
American women’s conference
in Baltimore and not to lecture.
She did appear before an aud-
ience in the New York town hall
<n her first night in spit of that.
She is a sister of Mrs. Charles
Dana Gibson, and is quoted as
saying: "I wish that America
had been at Genoa. Maybe it is
Europe’s fault, but it will
our fault if we don’t help.
am not criticizing America,
that i* ,ntarrh <
Inflir n< ♦ d by <> r.riituttcnnl condition*
r*qulr*« 'OMtltutlenal trratm»r.t llall'a
Catarrh la tahen Internully and
acta thru th* I Ind on th« Mucous Fur- i , a , , .
far** of Or Fvatrn th»r<hy dr»troyln« Tied them into the Gulf,
th* foundation of th* dl**a*<-, giving th*
patient »tr<r>»*h ty bulldin* up th* con-
■tltiitl<M and < **i*t|n* nafur* tn doln* It*
wot*. Th* priprlrtor* ■<> much
th? • p.w.n of Hnil'*
Catarrh M*rtt in* that they offer On*
Hundred Hollar* fur any < ana that u fall*
to cur* Send for lint of t-atlmonlala.
Addt*a* F J CHENEY * CO.. Toledo
Ohio Bold by ah 1’iugglat, Ttc
na- i
peace!
general and'
understanding made at j
a- a
time forming yfart
“Home Builders”
Phone 89
The force has
, „ , 1 from I - ' ».
if there is a poor, de- snarl at any attempt at cnrrec- but the same old problems con ting the money is tjuite another
1* • That isn’t so cute. r~ . . ? ‘ ’ *’ ‘
ehd as they start, and the start sion with regard to
James is up to the parents. pointments, < '
aries. New legislation is urged
to solve all the problems of the 000 inhabitants
service.—The Dearborn Inde-
pendent.
be ,
1 f»Hh In *h«-
not criticizing America, ■
mind, but I wish she had been
at Genoa ”
we would like
To get busy and mark time
To the tune of “Clean Up” all the
time.
“Swat the fly.” Don’t mind time,
But late and early overtime
Wage war ’gainst dirt and flies.
due time
You’ll reap reward; and one time
Be blessed—yea, for all time.
—The Pennant.
. J>---... ummWl . . . be
pl<nr*>1 to karn that th»r* I* nt least this spring have
on* drradfd d.-***- that »zl»nc* ha* " .. . •
b**n all* to cur* In all It* >'»«« and ’h<« boll Weevils and much
catarrh t»ing <r**t>r the insect tribe which usually
at I * taJIrteen I t irxeta *
infests the cotton and other (
{crops of these sections, and car-i
It is an ill wind that blows no-
body good, and doubtless a good
crop year will follow the present
wet season. Let us hope and
work to that end. , . ,
Come to Mart I
“It is hard to give away a
It sure
siderable extent. The principal
reason for this is the low sal-
aries paid by the government, “charge” when the "Light Bri- .
’ " * . * * guns at
Balaklava, recently died in Liv-
erpool- He possessed 16 medals
for valor and is believed to have
been the last survivor of
“gallant six hundred.”
“Call and get a Fly Swatter”
The United States has won its
> allied powers
by'for a settlement of the $241,,-
000,000 due from Germany for
been greatly the maintenance of American
the high mark, (troops on the Rhine—but get-
or thousands is taking it from
its hiding place and i,s buying
bonds. I
mistic of the future,
increased
and consequent prosperity
ahead, and he is right.
Every bond issue that is
floated means more work for
idle people It means an expan-
sion in business, an increased
Physical Culture Week.
This week. May 1-8, is being
observed over the country as
“Physical Culture week.” The
matter of correct diet, whole-
some exercise, proper sanitation
and regular habits of clean liv
ing. is worthy the attention of
our nation, if we are to main-
tain a vigorous and virile man-
hood and womanhood.
of a 1
interests or protect their
interests as 1
situation requires. ! ble to ua wjtj1 exercise of ner by these workers. They re- mix well with business, and that
We were easily entangled fajth, hope, patience, courage
once before, without any league an(, cheerfulness.
I' * ’* . ‘ ‘ “
war can be easily provoked with
“Home Builders” is our slogan and
to have the opportunity of helping you plan
select your home. To make this easy for you,
have 250 photos and blue prints of homes that
have been built over Texas. I o go through these
plans is like going to a large city and looKing thru
250 modern homes. Our service and plan
free and we will be only to glad to
any way possible.
The soil around Mint is ad-
membership in the league’of na-imitted to be of the best on the
'* * a i globe. It produces when other
a sections fail. Unless insects
whe-|get it, th*1 fanners do .
Come to Mart!
Swat the Fly!
Follou’ing so much rain and
the washing away of the filth, it (
is a good time to think of main- i
taining sanitary condition*!
about the home and in the com- '
L « .. XL 1. 11 x not to us as hiuiviuuhib.
Though it be of the humblest, CHme about aK the resuit of prj.
the home that is clean and tidy vate operators bringing in the; -
and tasty is attractive, wealth well on Htate-owned land on Con each for the privilege of view-
bayou in Orange county, Texas ing Princess Mary’s wedding
. The state gets presents. The proceeds went to
• one-eighth royalty. The public charity.
i school system needs the money ---------o-------
.. and we’re in favor of assisting 18 spring Time;
afh»n “SOme y0Ung Person to ge! an Which ia the high time,
,na education with our part of it.— And furthermore, right time
i Gainesville Register.
.‘1 theii 'i’iled, anti about 500,000 addi-1
iway with it by tional had to be appointed to do case before the
The parent’ the work made necessary I
As the years the war.
to maturity
oil pre |
i (K
we i Put up screens, if possible1 B
secure sewerage connection.' ■
keep weeds cut, destroy or haul ■
"Men will quibble and quar- off all rubbish r~ 1 “
rel about tariff schedules, but lime, etc., freely.
the tariff is of less importance! An investment of cleanliness, ij|j
today than ever before as a common sense and hard work JR
means of revenue to support the applied at the right time will in- (fit
('(ingress is (I i' i v- • „ re a j>ay i ng di vidend of heal’ h
...V VX... (till,
$5,(MX),000,000 an- We may not all be able t<>
govern- “paint up.” but all can “deal jP1
a right up." and keep clean if we will. I
i are propitiou’|
Mart and a . I
. Ixet’s maintain
fer on the federal tax gatherer.” the highest standards of health.
Caller. F*. The~e“. beauty and sanitation about our |
homes and places of business ||
this year in the history of .Mart
Swat the mosquito!
Swat the fly!
Do it now!
It Looks Good.
Watch the bond market and
you will get a fair indication of
what the near future will bring
us.
For some time past the mar-
ket has lieen strong. Buying
has lieen heavy and prices have
been kept well up.
’Chin means but one thing.
People who have money are
regaining confidence and arc
seeking means of investing it.I
j un-
their roadbeds with new steel jless due precaution is taken to i
and bridges and plan i
He'Ts 'no,ionger,npessb extensions. This is what is be I
He sees
commercial activity
prosperity
600,000 per- million,” says John D-
.11 ____^#it_ xr___
| the United States, it is prob- Ex.
able that every phase of human
. i - —--a---
Oh boy, oh joy. we own an in-
terest in a 6,000 barrel oil well
—and so do you, if you’re a
Texan. But the royalty from
the gusher of liquid gold will be
paid into the state treasury ano
not to us as individuals. It all
the home that is dean and tidy vate operatorB bringing in the;
lain!., ! r» n 4 4 *« . > 4 ■ ««zi * * . . a
rain is falling in torrents, ex- may add gorgeousness, but it
happiness alone. It is the mind
and the heart that make or un-
make the home. All else is but
incidental and of little
worse
&
it all away?
For purposes of
we will say the dealer’s profit is
15 per cent, or $75,000.
If the people send away for
this $500,000 worth of goods
all of the money they send away
will stay away- We will never
see it again.
If, <>n the other hand, the peo-
ple buy those goods from local . A. , - - . , . . ,
dealers the only money to be ing their own separate interests h the discovery
sent away will be the wholesale. Fhere are adxantages and dis-; m
cost of the goods and the trans- advantages either WI*y, perhaps,
portation charges. but we predict that after worry-
The 15 per cent profit will re- H'K “l°ng f(,r months and years
main at home, as well as the ov- of disturbed and unsettled con-
erhead expenses, such as cleri-' ditions trying to satisfy our re-
Cftl hirt* inmirftnep KfaI litrht P^mhCAJI stfitCBnicn anti those —
<ai nire, insurance, neat. iignT ^^^ the hardships without number
changed status of our interna-] ^e various Arctic and Antarc-
. . . 1a* *11 1 ♦ ’*• iviYxo ,1’ninn z>nlm mot n/l in
tional relations, we will find our-
selves wondering why we didn’t
all get together at first as a
league of nations on some com-
'' People who'are^inH7he habit "|on Kr»u"d of understanding
of patronizing their home ner- ’,*<e Woodrow Wilson recom-
chants invariably have a better mended,
and more prosperous communi-
ty than those who have the cat-,
alogue habit, or ride off to the
city.
These are facts
ing in the face.
. gr ------- jiicnc nuincin ainrjn oiv.
........
There **«.«* w,v***..■*.««>.^** -■—
obtain competent workers thru medal ia
competitive examinations. This tion for what the society con-
next to impossible during J aiders tne most notable geo-
..._ _..J even now graphic achievement in the last
this condition prevails to a con- twelve months. , -
— ... _ the case in times past
The trumpeter, who blew the ---♦--
T.. •• -1- x HY • _A __! 1
Thousands left the service for gade” rode up to the
’ higher salaries elsewhere dur-
ing the war and the boom per-
iod that followed. With the
mounting cost of living they
could not support their families
‘Uncle
Sam. The civil service thus lost
many of its most efficient
op^s^V^the^’dMh’’ worktfra’ Their P|aces had t0 h® him-
that carried Peary to the top of
the world, and he can be th* frar« beaiu-1 g»
first man to reach both Polas. {|g ™
business in automobiles, but of I Therefore,
x* Z* X « •* * . *^.* 1» *% x I ■
known to all but Peary.
™...a ... ,v. c t ... - - . th^ir will be easy for flies and mos- '
“The fellow with a few hundreds build new cars, improve quitoes to breed and thrive —
needed | reduce their number to a mini- B
' mum. Now is the time to en-: F
ing done in various parts of; force sanitary regulations and B
the country now. It means big- use every essential means to g
ger markets for materials and (suppress and kill the summer 5
employment for thousands of i crop of flies and mosquitoes.
men. No thinking man will All standing water, cisterns, IH
feel any apprehension at signs etc., should be looked after
»f r* turning prosperity to th*. Free use of Kerosene oil pre- |
railroads, for they are as good1 vents mosquitoes.
an economic barometer as
have.—Houston Post.
activity is touched in some man-1
iceived their appointments thru'is printer's ink.
competitive examinations.
These workers not always are
efficient, i
It is one of the
..ne Pale tn hi« credit There the civil service commission to Mt. Everest expedition.
enough *hP!h"I»bUi" wrker’ 'hl'1'’m«‘“l “ « •’>preri‘-
should rest on his laurels, and i
he has plenty of laurels to rest 'Yas 1
on. He is getting on in yegrs, the war J*™1’ and ev«n
he went through trials and >
in
that
I this is "Cheer Up” week in
Weather condition.-; ar<
not conducive to cheerfulness
for the average mind when the
can not supply taste, or tact, or )Mt
_ _ 1* a. .*%*■*• ** I M *-* 14 • C* 4 *-* MA * # I
the Herald passes
_____ __ ; it is worth,
that ‘we always have good crops
after a wet spring.” That be- Th
ing true, this should be a ban-
__ yours.
- w •
So let’s cheer up and help-ov-
, . . . ercome anv inclination to de-
group of four, which will excite presMjon of gplritg
on the part _ . . . .
illustration, the jealousy and determination of any of our frjen<j8< The sun sons are in the civil service of is. You have to get one first.—
larger group to combat our js shining behind the clouds and <*■*-■*— •■* »- -*
—t—t their own tne - -
lh.ey. niay fancy the outlook
, ,,, I uie in .
entangled faith
**r««* Inn.vlin I
of nations, and another world
war can be easily provoked with
various groups of nations seek-
They front the civil service sommis- matter.
1 new <.
efficiency and sal-
Comc to Mart! ! Some children disobey
the, “The foundation rock of r parents and get a
who'prosperous agriculture is a good smiling sweetly.
It makes little difference; think it is cute.
seed, cultivation, take them nearer
the plan was a product of (rainfall or the expert knowledge they disobey with impunity and reduced
.. _ j , u*c ... .. ...
f Woodrow Wilson, a j pleted, worn-out soil, for there tion.
perfected and (will be a lean pocketbook as a
four-power pact” and .final and direct result.”—
to get us (the U. S.) Sargent, demonstration agent in
anti the rest of the world Into1 Pulaski county, Arkansas-
trouble more surely than wouki!
tions. It is a question of
league of four nations or
I* ague of forty or more—
ther the entire family of
tiona co-operating in a
program with a
mutual
one time, is as effective
i certain profit f«w of them at a
the wholesale separate alliances.
Will our being yoked up with
1 as nearly insure
This rule applies the world ov 1 ptace for ourselves and tho
er. ! rest of the world, as would a
Suppose the people of this'common understanding among along foTwhat
community have $500,000 to (the entire 40? .. . .----.------
spend within a given length of | We fear not, judging the fut-.
time. |ure by the past. It will be the
Is it better to keep the profits name old story of rivalry for ner crop year,
at hekie and in circulation, supremacy between certain
among us. or is it wiser to send groups. Our nation is in a
THE MART HERALD FRIDAY. MAY 5, 1922
— 1
1HE MARI HERALD.
Price $1.50 Per Year
.....TEX Ab
J. L. SPENCER, Editor and Pubikhcr
TH AS. R. YANCEY, A»*ociat« Editor
-**>*r«d at th* Post Office at Mai
'axa*. a* 2nd claa* mail mattar
Notice to the Public.
Any error or erroneous reflection
afon the cnaioiter, etanding or repu-
bti< n of any person, firm or corpora-
on which ma) appear In the column*
It The Heruld will be gladly corrected
epon i«ing brought to the attention of
he manag >m*nt.
Published every Friday.
. . .
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Spencer, J. L. The Mart Herald (Mart, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1922, newspaper, May 5, 1922; Mart, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1239335/m1/4/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .