The Denison Herald (Denison, Tex.), No. 119, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 14, 1921 Page: 4 of 22
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willing to swear allegiance to the
kin*. That was the. great obstacle
to a settlement as far as South Ire*
land was concerned. It was tho nyk
oil which the pears negotiations were
almost shipwrecked And finally, aft-
er nearly everyone had given up hope,
the situation was saved by what diplo-
matists call a "formula." It Is on*
that is worth studying by amateur
statesmen.
The Irish are to "swear true faith
and allegiance to the constitution of
the Irish Free State as by law estab-
lished,” and also to swear that they
will be “faithful to his majesty. King
George V, and hi* heir* and successors
in law." Thus both sides win.
“Allegiance** to the king is intole*--
nbte, but the Irish are wilting to toa
"faithful” to him. To an American
observer, it looks like a distinction
without a difference. But one word
made the Sinn Feiners bristle and the
other does not offend them. What
matter, then, if it works out the same
way?
As Oarlydo remarked, in politics
“man shall not live by bread alone
but by catchwords.'' In diplomacy,
the formula’s the thing. There may
Murphy Orsw------■*>»*)*.!■■■>■■■»j
(can’t understand them and what Is;
. . .. ■ -‘ a - .* _I
A BACHELOR'S VIEWPOINT.
NEWSPAPER READING
- t
college studies were asked to
i "the five features which in ter-
you moat. " Just under J» per
Not your decent voted for "general news;" Jrtst
under IS for editorials. Just under IS
for • politics,'* a little over a for fi-
nance, not two years after tbe armis-
tice a little over < for foreign news,
3 ‘a for loau, nearly > for business, and
l‘i to 1 per cent for news about "tabor*’
!a scattering said they were most in-
terested in sport* special articles, the
theater, advertisements, cartoons,
books review* “accuracy,** music,
stories, stopping, school news, “cur-
rent news,” print. Disregarding these
about S7ii per cent picked as tbe moat
“ethical ton*” ' society, brevity, art,
interesting features news and opinion
that dealt with public affairs This
was a mixed college group. Tbe girls
professed greater interest than th«
boy* In general neifs, foreign new*
local news, politics, editorials, the
theater, music, art. stories, cartoons,
advertisements, and “ethical tone.” Ths
boy* on th« other hand, were more
absorbed In finance, sports, business
page, "accuracy” and "brevity." These
discrimination* correspond a little too
closely with the ideals of wbaA Is cul-
tivated and moral, manly and decisive,
not to make ono suspect tbe utter ob-
jective of the replies.—Walter Upp-
rnan, in Century Magazine. ^ ^
ae Second Clam Mali Matter
PRICJff OF SUBSCRIPTION
BY CITT CAHRlfcR
"If our academies and college-* would
change their curricular.** said an el-
derly bachelor noted for his eceen-
’and make a clean-up on their
i tricit}’,
oloffcs, the divorce courts would bo ! uncle—he l* for peace, once, twice and
kept Idle. The trouble with the*;ialways.'* \' r
places of learning is that they don’t! "Then, you think that all married
specialise on any of ths branches of men are in turmoil?*’ he was asked,
life and they send their girls out into ’’Mor«v or less.’* he reptkd "If they
the world simpering little fools with stay at home much, .it > snore—and
their heads* packed full of nonser.se. If they manage to absent themselves.
• "These academics and coll* ges and it is less There Isn’t a man living
’ # -
schools are too plumb full of the who cannot be domineered by a worn-
wrong kind of ologies.’’ said the ec- an, and that i* why 1 keep awsy from
centric old man "Th* y take a young, them.*’
sklddlsh girl and cram her head full "But didn't you ever Uiink of tnk-
of biology, zoology, anthropology, and ing unto yourself a spouse?" he was
a dozen other of their worthless kinfolk, questioned. Tbe old man stroked his
and she hasn’t a half chance—no hu- smooth-shaven chin and gazed out at
man being would with such brain-! the rolling expanse of his ranch
draining tomfoolery in his mind. What pensively. “Yes,** he • said, and then
the Institutions of learning should do ; paused, whereupon we Immediately
Is to Institute a new, compulsory bent forward with renewed Interest,
course of mendology, bakeology, sensing a romance. “When was It?*1
sweepoiogy and general wifeology— we questioned, '"fell us about It?”
then a poor man might get up tin And then his pensive mood vanished
courage to pop the question.” Here and his serious face burst Into his
in his characteristic fashion, he characteristic rosy unites. "It was
•ix months (If paid In advance).. * 25
On# year........................*■*»
BY MAIL
FIRST AND SECOND ZONES
On# month j..............-.......* ■50
Three months ................... 1-25
On# year .J..................•'••• &-®0
The Daily Herald Is on sale at the
following news stands op the I’nton
News Company: Denison, Texas;
Muskogee. Okhw; Sedalia, Me., and
♦Wnco. Texak _ _
Foreign Advertising Representatives
G LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY
WESTERN OFFICES
Chicago....,*.....T48 Muquette Bldg
Detroit..................Kresge Bldg.
Ft. Paul..........24J4 University Ave.
«• h.
eastern offices
PAYNE. BURNS. ftJ^lTH. JNC.
Mr York ..........fifth Ave. Bldg.
wton. ..*... .TVv.. t.l Winter Street
OUR thoughts
turn to those
j WHOSE FRIENDLY
TELEPHONE' NUMBER 701.
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1921.
business
has made
POSSIBLE BIGGER
AND BETTER '
THINGS.
AND WE EXTEND
TO YOU A
HEARTY GREETING
FORA
MERRY CHRISTMAS
AND A
HAPPY. PROSPEROUS
NEW YEAR.
Denison Motor Car Co.
• W. Lankford, Prop. 100 East Main St
EDUCATION FOR LEI8URE.
HELPING THE FARMERS.
The "emancipated" women of Amer-
ica are on trial. It is more than an
open question whether, la indulging
what some of them are pleased to call
an escape from slavery, they are not
bringing into question their capability
and disposition to distinguish In a
practical way between liberty am! li-
cense. We think that at least most
people will concede that growth of
A minister who has devoted ntuch
time to the study of the problems of
the employed, who constitute a large
part of his congregation.
“Helping the farmers" happens to
be a phpaae that has found much fa-
vor with -certain members of some
legislative bodies. no| the leaat of
which is the congress of the .United
States Soinueh ha# “Keen said and
attempted along- that Une that the
farmers, -mas* of them, have really
come to to legislation for relief
from all the ills that beset them.
Particularly la'Tt
believes
thut what education needs today is
fewer trades schools, devoted to teach-
ing men how to work In shops, and
more schools which teach the shop-
worker how to use his leisure wisely.
Inside the shop, ths minister points
out. the "iron man," the automatic
machine, does the worker’s thinking
for him. When he leaves the shop he
What his
Juvenile delinquency and the new so-
phistication of youth began coinci-
dentally with the emergence of wom-
en from the home into buslnena and
professional and finally into political,
Ufe. We believe it Is a fair charge
tha# in their pursuit of outside inter-
ests, in their desire for pleasure and
excitemcn* modern American women
are shirking their legitimate Jobs and
acting the rote of slackers In the war-
fare of life. Sometimes—though not
always -those who talk most about the
duty of women to society and the coun-
try are ths ones guilty of the most
flagrant neglect.—Detroit Free Press.
rorreita his freedom; she may appear
to be as meek as a lamb, but the most
docile woman that ever lived can leave
her sting, and so yours truly never
felt like risking his liborty with wom-
an.”
“Woman-hater?" he was asked.
“No, woman-fearer," he readily an-
swered. "I always, liked the ladles,
but I am afraid of them, that is all. I
true of southern
represenfatTte#, *or ‘representative* rep-
i renting agstoultusai sections, that
their entfce voted and their
thmighta^cwitered in securing what
Mr. 8umn«rof Datfatf terms "substan-
tial adtlon" for tilw fanners Just what
that “subatonHat ,act 1*V may be or
what it ean^acOpmpiish is so chimeri-
cal ss to raise (he, suspicion of gbod
faith on pert of those who. both in
and out of season, grr Clamoring for It.
As the Dallas News quite wisely
points out, there is J^tle relief for
producers to be had from legislation.
Certainly improve*! marketing condi-
tions and relief from the streiss of
transportation difficulties is possible
of attainment, but^ success of agricul-
ture rests inJthj^tas^ analysis upon
the man who tills the-soil. It Is the
absence of business methods as ap-
plied to the farming industry, a dis-
position to take things as they come,
trusting to the seasons, to the «»pe<m-
Ittors, to the markets and more to
good luclt to bring returns than in
netting about fo fhbet conditions and
even make conditions wherever nec-
essary.
It to unfortunate that the people
htiv# come to lean so heavily upon the
government. No matter what ill be-
falls, whether It Is a prolonged drouth
or the visitation of fiords, the depre-
dation of crop pests or an epidemic
of disease, the very first thing thought
of is to appeal to congress for relief.
And congressmen, being Jealous of
tbehr tenure and anxious to continue
to serve in national councils, never
fall to respond and attempt tho im-
possible, simply for the political ad-
vantages they may reap.
The plight of the. farmers at this
time to deplorable, and, there to not
one who would decline to do anything
calculated to brtriir ' FeTtaf. But ex-
perience has taught that legtolat|pn
will not produce better crops nor In-
sure a favorable market after they
are made. These are conditions aris-
ing from natural causes and it is the
individual farmer- acting with business
f< resight and JudgiPMtt .who can turn
the tide in his favor. No other agency
can.
must think for himself,
thoughts will bo nnd where they will
lead him will depend upon the kind
and degree of his education ns re-
gards Interests and diversions.
"Let the schools get busy not upon
lathes, but upon the Instincts of the
average man. that he may Invest hte
human capita! wisely outside the shop
walls," says the minister, prime and
wasting are the logical resources of
the undisciplined mind. Education
which provides for the man’s working j today. \Ve ride through
hours, but leaves him with no whole- <>r high in the imp
— •- «->»-** ■»,
leisure, fails short. living over sea* nnd eon*
THE WONDROUS AGE.
wonderful expression of man’s triumph
over the resistant mysteries of mind
and matter. What will be the end?
What heights and depths of knowledge
may yet be seated or pluinbed by the
If a big man dresses up, he to in
peril of looking too overwlielmingjy
imposing.
HOMES WITH GARDENS.
It ta a good thing to have a home,
but the ideal condition for happiness,
permanency and economy is a home
with a little garden spot around It.
This la tho opinion of Warren Pow-
dery, president of the American Fork
ft Hoe Co.
The caviler will think that Mr. Pow-
dery has a hoe to sell, If not an axe
to grind, but the thoughtful will ad-
mit that he is right, no matter what
he sella
The flower garden is a delight to
the eye. ‘The vegetable garden pro-
ship!
U_£ at Madison Wls., a few evening#
l&go the Cincinnati Symphony orches-
,tra, under the leadership of Ysaye,
tplaying before a great audience of
more than two thousand people in the
auditorium of the University of Wls-.
consin, was heard far and wide in
many other cities throurh amplifiers,
which carried the glorious music to the
ears of the delighted thousands. Tbe
music soared from the university hall
to distant* Minnesota and North Da-
kota and other states. It was one more
vide# a financial return on the homo
investment-—If not in surplus
vege-
tables to sell, at least in provision for
the family table. The process of gar-
dening is a stimulant to the health
and to that Imagination and pride and
possession which make life pleasure-
able.
The people who have gardens
“stay put.** 4
After the recent years of over-
crowded. Shifting, extravagant life of
the city, homes with gardens are what
America needs.
By James Whitoomb Riley.
No wonder the Sherman high school
football team successively defeats
Denison on the gridiron—it to tbe In-
ducement of a glorious feed as a re-
ward that spurs them on to the goal.
Host tangible of |Q ths gods that bo,
0 Sants Clous—our own sinot infancy I—
As first wo scampered to the*—now, u the
Take ns as children to thy heart again.
Thank heaven, the Yap controversy
has been settled. It Is refreshing to
know that we can now go to our beds
at night secure in the thought that
wo will not be awakened by the tocsin
of war over control of an island in
the Pacific that few know anything
about.
?• wholly good to ns, jnst as of old;
A* s pleased father, let thine arms enfold
Us, homed withiji the haren of tL% lore,
And all the cheer and wholeeomenees thereof.
FROCK COATS.
Ho! Santa Ohw-w ***^Jf££
Meet tangible of nflUii[«•**£,,, * ft*
As first we ignpwi £
Take ns as children to thy heeffta^V |iky.
—Copyright by Jamee Wbi^0®*
i our best wishes at this
Uk ..wl »wran»ritV in the y*®1*
John D Rockefeller Jr. may be wel-
comed Into the great American sar-
torial demoeracy. Ho Jjas no frock
coat. At least, he had nee* with him
when he visited the Orient, and there-
fore felt himself embarrassed some-
times. because the backward far east'
I* given to enrh garb. ’’
In Tokio, he relate#, ho was invited
to attend a reception At the royal pal-
ace, He felt bound
Railroad
operators assort that 1
transportation rates can not be re-
duced until wages are lowered. Em- !
ployes retaliate that wages can not j
be reduced until the high cost of llv- j
lng comes down. And since.neither :
shows an inclination to budge, we are j
wondering what tbe outcome will be? I
.....tSJSto** as many
A fellow-citizen of his baa felt op cor-
responding tfdP&ifdnsC tscause he
tacked the proper dethMf. it ia de
rigueur to wear frock seals to therm-
Texas cattlemen
appeared before
J9hl*. ©■ reckoned the senate committee before which to
A”b*"®*<1or War’ Pending the Fordney tariff bill and
a man of sartorial urged an advalorem duty on hides.
ad'tWtf such uni- In view of the fact that hides are now
d oa John D. to such a drag on the market that It
8o hs went to doesn’t pay to bring them to town
Just as any of us while leather goods command prohlh-
re were not proud, itlve prices, we fall to see Just what
Amsrieaa will be relief the imposition of a duty on th«
ln#d to order a product will bring to the producer. Tt
iar what Ms w«fale»*sse 4o us that the committee c«i|Bl.i
•assuring to learn bast direct Its attention to an laves-
: *ay dress salt, tlgatton of tho why# and wbsiwfor» *
tfatt to too orach ef cheap hides and the trememfa.,.
DOMT FORGET THAT
Electric Iron
mmmB
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The Denison Herald (Denison, Tex.), No. 119, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 14, 1921, newspaper, December 14, 1921; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth571479/m1/4/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .