The Nocona News. (Nocona, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, October 27, 1922 Page: 5 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Montague County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Friends of the Nocona Public Library.
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AW
THB NOCONA NEWS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1TTH, 1#2L
——
| * | SCHOOL DAIJS
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WHA7 TO HAVE FOR BREAKFAST
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NEWS REVIEW OF
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CURRENT EVENTS
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IDDIES SIX
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PEACE CONFERENCE ON NOV. 1
FOODS A CHILD MAY HAVE
ant.
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By MARY MARSHALL DUFFER
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ASKING QUESTIONS.
the
ate
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s
THE ROMANCE OF WORDS
“MOB"
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Vegetables are necessary J
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mid
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pacts.
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Mudania Protocol Is Signed and
Greeks Are Fleeing From
Turkish Territory.
blips
chib.
I
2—What 16-inch shells did
3—Replica of vessel In which Juan Sebastian
Here’s a world that suffers sorrow.
Here are bitterness and pain,
And the joy we plan tomorrow
May be ruined by the rain.
Edward Gueat.
I/W
|U
Nor win renown upon the way;
But I, at least, can scoff at fate.
For I .am master of today.
lHE. FooTPrinTS
ih TUe old CemcnT SifeP
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LLS-
7B.
XM
t
ited
TR
AB
sti-
les
I
Iu t-cwe vco
AS LON6 *5
T>ev ST*i btae
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I do not quarrel with the <ae,
Our modern ranee la fine;
The ancient etove waa doomed to pa—
1'rom Time', grim tiring line.
Yet now and then there come, to ta*
The thought of dinner, good.
Ami pies and eake that used to be
When mother cooked with wood.
- Edgar Guest
THE RIGHT THING
at the
RIGHT TIME
’VoIU'
ery
lird
L Y
teir
i T
off-
3rd
all.
MP
tan
<**♦--------------_---------------------------—
'T'URKEY for the Turks—that Id a
A word will be the effect of the pro-
tocol signed by the allied commanders
and the Kemallsta Thursday morning
<£ by McClure Newspaper Syndicate'
----O----
iaob
4.
c.
iT.
and
*1*1-
---u—--
Chance to Observe
'There's Mie ’hlng about the new
ityl**."
“What, for InetanceT"
“f never raaUaed before there were
so many good looking girl* hi this
fowl.”—New York Suu.
Dock
______*
01.
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KJEW YORK Giant*, champions of
I v the National league, won the
world's series in decisive fashion, de-
feating the New York Yankees, cham-
pions of the American league, In four
games out <>f five, the fifth being a
draw called on account of darkness.
1 may not win a golden store,
Nor e’er achieve undying fame;
But I, at least, can strive the more
Tc squarely play life’s little game.
’dr '
liSiiimmiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiD
=
Will M. Maupin |
1922, Wentern N’ewRpaper Union.)
yield, and this he did with good grace. > 'pss,'1s sailed with their usual supplies i
The Greek representatives sent a note
saying they could not sign the pro-
tocol, but the Turks were assured that
it would be effective In three days
despite this refusal. “Let’s sign," said
Isuiet, and the signatures were append-
ed and the threat of war faded out.
Latter Greece decided to sign.
The terms of the Mudania conven-
tion .are substantially as given tn this
column a week ago. Greece is given
fifteen days to evacuate Thrace as far
apple Come good, come ill. I will not yield
To sullen frown nor adverse grasp;
With utmost strength 1'11 stand and
wield
One ounce of l he Juice or fruit The weapons that my Im nds may clasp.
- J waste no time in idle thought
Of what the future hides away;
As given me, so have I wrought,
And I am master of today.
(Copyright by Will M. Maupin.)
----O----
Isinld areas, in the Constantinople pen-
insula and In Gallipoli are to be de-
■ ttned by mixed commissions and are ;
to be respected by the Angora govern- !
juent.
it is understood the peace confer-
■enee will open on November 1 in
iScutari, or possibly in some city in
Italy. It Is probable tliat Bul-
garin, Georgia and the Ukraine will 1 j
lie invited to send representatives, but
not the Moscow government,
nations that are 1 \
gates, in addition to Great Britain [.year's Interest on the British debt to
. Sir Robert Horne, who is
coming to help adjust the terms of the
may not arrive before the end of the
.month.
It is stated in Paris that France will
.not be able to pay any jiart of her
•debts for four years, since all receipts
Mor that period must be devoted to re-
■entrenched, and the talk of retiring , construction of the devastated regions.
Prime Minister Lloyd George, whick I
broke out furiously a few days ago, is
His opponents at home,
indeed, now huve no fit man to sug-
gest as liis successor, for Bonar Law,
upon whom they had counted, has re-
newed his fealty to the Welshman, us
luis Lord Birkenhead. The Unionists
are said to have decided to stick by
the coalition und make It practicall.,
a permanent party when the gei.eral
election comes, which probably will be
about Christmas. The premier, after
a week of retirement in the country,
made a notable speech Saturday in
Manchester, telling his opponents
what he thought of them and demand-
ing the support of the country lV,r his
policies.
An! ibj
-els, notified by wireless KI
i at once sealed tlie'r liquor supplies and I I I
I are turning them over to the author! ' L
Many foreign I
rfplRer/CoojBook
rles,
delicious,
with the
often.
Muffins, waffles, griddle cakes andt
hoi gems of various kinds art' nlwayas
acceptable ns a breakfast bread. ,
<©, 1922. Western Newspaper Un1»a->
cooked for two minutes
ened with bread crundts.
•TITHE foods in the following list ar*
those a child may have, though
they should not all be served in one
•meal, and the mother selects the food»
' most appropriate.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
■■!«««« -.w-^ « —• . « AA
A TTORNEY General Daugh- 1
er-ty has ruled that no In- 4
toxicating liquor may be served 1
on any American vessel any- 4
where, and that .no veuel what- 4
ever may bring liquor within the J
three-mile limit, even though it •
be sealed. De you agree with the j
opinion that this ruling will In- 4
crease the clianoes of paesage of 4
the ship subsidy bill; and what 4
do you think ef that measure? 4
by the Wheel., Hyndlcsts, Inc.)
........
relating to prices,
rudeness to nsk
friend how
A TTORNEY General Daugherty
■fa certainly stirred up the animals
when he barred liquors not only from
all American vessels, but even from
all other ships while within the Ameri-
can three-mile limits. At first there
was a storm of comment punctuated
with excited predictions of what for-
eign governments would do to us in
the way of retaliation and with pre-
dictions that all foreign steamship
lines would divert their ships to Can-
adian ports, leaving New York, Bos-
ton, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Seat-
tle and our other coast cities to go to
wreck and ruin. With the subsidence
of the tempest these facts appear:
The British government says It has no
interest In the domestic legislation of
the United States, which it has a per-
fect right to put Into operation, and if
British subjects break United States
law they will have to take the conse-
quences. The French government may
send a protest to Washington, bat will
wait to see how the decree Is enforced
and how It affects French Interests, j
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TODAY
pulp are removed from the fruit.. Thfc»
should be carefully done before serv
ing to a child. Buked in their akina-.
linked after peeling, basting with twat
ter mid lemon Juice, with a little sugar.
Sliced with lemon juice and sugar, or
sliced, served with cereal and creamt
A good baked apple is a fruit ubuf
i.lly well liked for breakfast. ParesaSR
core good flavored apples and arraapr
in a well buttered baking dfsfc
Sprinkle slightly with sugar and ctwe
numon; baste often with melted bafr-
ter and serve with rice or other cerr-
als, using the juice for a sauce.
Apples buked with figs, with bar
nanus, with dates, with currants, cher-
gooseberries or prunes are aP'
Core and fill the cavftyr
fruit, then bake, basting:
A,
vnarpy reoelvefl instructions from j
Paris, where Lord Curzon had be
V »
j
if UCHAREST was en fete Saturday,
when King Ferdinand and Queen
.Marie were formally crowned as rulers
of the kingdom of Rumania which the
war enlarged by the addition of Bes-
sarabia and Transylvania. The cere-
monies were gorgeous and many other
nations were represented by princes
and high dignitaries. In view of the
fact that soviet Russia still threatens
Rumania, it is worthy of note that
France sent Marshal Foch and with
him General Weygand, who organized
Poland's successful opposition to the
Bolshevik! two years ago.
T CARE not wlut the future holds
For me alone. I only know
In summer heats and wlater colds
I'll do the best as on I go.
I'll face the future with e smile,
Content to meet whate’er may be;
And say to all 1 meet the while,
Today is good enough for me.
---- 1 ,
■ French labor circles are concerned be I
. ! cause the French law provides that'
in conference with Premier Poincare, j sa*l°rs must be g ven wine daily. Alli
and announced that France adhered t<> '1 American -• .-. els, notified by wireless
the terms proposed. Isiqet Pasha. | i,f 'i'"'"
losing thus the support he may have '
Canned Carrots.
Cook a pint of diced carrots untW
tender. Make a sirup of a pint
pineapple Juice, one inedium-slseti
1 orange sliced thin, one cupful of sugar
Boil for five minutes, add the carrsC
and mange to the sirup and cook until
the carrots are clear. Seal in hot Jara
Bananas are found in the marke*
the year round. The following arv-
some of the ways one may prepanr
tla in for breakfast: Serve in the
skins, one for each person. Skin and
scrape witli a fruit knife. Many who
cannot ent bananas ordinarily will tfanJ.
them harmless if the veins and striagy
T IKE “shatu." “mob" had Its
-L-f birth in one of the most
disagreeable periods of English
history; that between the Res-
toration and the Revolution. It
originated in a certain club in
London toward the end of the
reign of Charles II. for. says
North, in his “Exanien," "1 may
note that the rabble first
changed tlieir title and were
called the ‘mob’ in the assem-
of tlie GrVen Ribbon
It wa« tlieir beast of bur-
den. und was Hist 'mobile vul-
gus,' but fell naturally into the
contrnilion of one syllable, and
over since is In < nine proper
English."
In spite of tlie writer's opin-
ion as to tlie propriety of the
word, we find in "Tlie Specta-
tor," at a considerable later pe-
riod tlie statement: “J dare
not answer that rnoh. rap. pos.
incog and tlie like will not In
time bo looked nt as part of
our tongue. In fact, 'Mob,' is
already one of the many words,
formerly slang, v.-hich are now
used hy our host writers, and
received, like pardoned outlaws.
Into the body of respectable cit-
izens."
Could this writer return to ex-
amine the literature of today,
and particularly newspaper
headings where short words are
naturally favored, he would find
that three-fourths of his propli-
• «... i..... “li-,.-,___>
at the little village of Mudania, If the ! France, Turkey and Italy, are Jug®- | America.
Near East peace conference soon to Slavia. Rumania, Greece, Hungary, coming ti
Austria, Czechoslovakia and postilbiy debt, is delayed by tire unsettled state
■Boland. ! oi1 foreign und domestic policies and
j moar nnt u**s>t«>A sJxax
AVING avoided war with Turkes
without losing dignity, and re-
taining for the present the actual con-
4101 of the Dardanelles, the British
government seems once more solidly ,
Not time, nor fate, nor circumstance
Can crush the hopes that in rue lie;
. The storms tliat rage, the lightning's
glance,
But dear the atmosphere and sky.
I fear no future, for 1 know
V.’tialeer lietide along life's way,
For me the flowers bloom and blow.
Am! I nm master of today.
TN THE old days when it was justTw*
much a part of the young girl’s
cation to be taught what was calFev:
“good manners-" as algebra or ganc
raphy—more Important for thar matt
ter—tliere was a- prevailing netion tMar.
it was bad manners to ask questlaer-
And when a woman indulged in praap
Ing her friends und her neighbor* IK
was usually concluded that she ItartF
not had the proper bringing up.
"Goodness knows," said an old-fealK
ioned old lady to me the other *K-
“there are times when I would
to ask questions. I've got Just as mac*
curiosity as anyone else, but we were
taught that it was not good manueras.
They train girls different nowaday*
As a matter of fact they don’t tnrtl*
them at all. and if 11 irirl does not re-
ceive such Instruction at home or
not have an instinctive feeling that f
is had form to ask personal questwnrs
she is pretty apt to acquire the pomp-
ing habit and to make herself a note*
ance and mayhap a source of an-rne.-
merit.
Especially obnoxious are quest tee
It is the height' «r
even an intimate
any-
recetveze
Solid foods are introduced gradually
after one year of age in the diet of
a normal baby.
The first meal should have as a be-
ginning a dislt of cereal, gruel, proper-
ly salted and served with milk; a piece
of zwieback or crumiis of bread made
soft with milk, or an egg occasionally, i
and thick- • I may not build a future great
This is the i - -
time to form the baiiit of slow eat-
ing and perfect mastication. It is so ’
important tliat other tilings should lie
. as it
lifelong habit .for health or
The International Mercantile Marine
•corporation obtained from Federal! I
jiudyre Hand a temporary restraining I
•order enjoining New York officials!
from molesting the liquor on the steam-
ers Finland und St. 1'auL
The American Steamship Owners’
association decided to abide peacefully
>by the ruling provided the proklbltiiin-
an
much she paid fot
' thing, how much money she
■ ns it salary, or wimt she pays an oom
. ployee.
I .........
/'COMPLETION of the armistice pro
VJ toco! was accomplished at sh
o’clock Thursday morning and the doc
umeot was signed by Generals Haring
ton, Charpy, Mombelli and Ismet Pasha,
for Great Britain, France, Italy and
the Turkish Nationalists respective
ly. Full agreement was reached onlj
after many anxious days during whict
Ismet's excessive demands were mel
by General Ilnrlngton's calm and un
afraid firmness. The Englishman td<
the Turk plainly that his government
bad said its last word, and that If lt|
terms were not accepted the Turki
must take the consequences. He re
mleded Ismet that England had C
Strong navy, a good army and at
abundance of guns. “While the Brit
Ish people want peace" said ha, “the)
• *H^ue fall
T^oneuti
>! Genera
B
Vk 7'
Hom Republic,•■ns in tlie form of a pas- ! preparntlon of the foods,
toral letler strongly condemning guer- i Feedings for child from
rills i . :f;iie against tlie Free Stat" I
govertmient und <!<•< I.iring “the killing 1
of National soldiers is murder before
God.”
■!i
la «
1—s>ieL-i at upenlu^ uf ..utioual couveuuou of American Red Cross in Washington.
to steel target In gun tests at Aberdeai proving ground, Maryland.
Elcano made first voyage around the world, built for tercentenary celebration of tliat event nt Guetaria. Spain.
, .
* <
when it comes up for passage Xk -con-
gress.
! HEAT BRITAIN, through Assliae-
AJ sudor Geddes, has Just paid to
Other ! -the United States .$50,000,000, which
likely to huve dele-| .is approximately the amount of this
^'^■--4 7
Quite as obnoxious are persons,
questions concerning one's state of
. health. To he sure, it is only kind't®
! ask generally for a friend's health. Inn.
| to pry too closely into such things to
; extreme rudeness
When the interallied tinancLul congress
meets in Brussels tlie French goverw-
mi-nt will probably submit a plan
■drawn up by Premier Poincare. Lt
calls for a revision of Germany's to '
on!... I a irzzvu mat «* «z>fnn] aszsa • .
■ /!' A M
ecy has com® true. "Mob" and
| “rap" huve taken up a pernm-
■ nent position in English, “Incog"
is an allowable contraction, but
I “pos" Ims passed into the ranks
j of the totally obsolete.
1® by the Wheel,. Inc.)
-Stu
__ff. J A#. <. >
PRESIDENT Harding has apjtointed
I seven nationally prominent men
ns members of the coal fact-finding I
commission created by congress. They '
are: John Hays Hammond, Califor-
nia and Washington, mining engineer.
Thomas Riley Marshall, Indiana, for-
mer vlee president of the United
States and former governor of Indiana.
Samuel Aischuler of Illinois, Judge of
the seventh United States Circuit
court. Clark Howell. Atlanta, editor of
the Atlanta Constitution. George Otis
Smith, Maine, director of the United
States geological survey. Dr. Ed-
ward T. Devine, Iowa, now of New
York, editor, teacher and publicist.
Charles P. Neill, Illinois and Washing-
ton, commissioner of labor in Roose-
velt’s administration.
a SIMPLE though sustaining brea*-
j to* last, is needed to start the day
right tor the average person. Toast.
' < ggs bacon with coffee and a cooky
' or doughnut is the most common;
' Lrenkfaat, und these may be so variarfl
I by serving ill different ways that then*
I inn) never he a monotony. A litttw
fruit with a small dish of cereal make*
a good beginning to the bruakAtflL-
Fruits vary as to season, so that cocraat
will always find a change. During the
cold tall mornings a plate of grifltRte
cakes and sausage is enjoyed.
be held follows along the same lines.
Something like a million and a half
Greeks who have been residents of
Asia Minor, Constantinople and east-
ern Thrace are Beeing westward, fair-
ly panic stricken .at the thought of
massacre and outrage which Christian
peoples have been taught to expect
from the Moslem. An added incentive
to their flight is afforded by the fear
•f Turkish reprisal for the acts of the
Greek army In Anatolia and the Greek dying down,
civilians in Constantinople.
Truly the plight of these refugees is
most serious. Abandoning their long-
time homes and sacrificing their poa
sessions, they are struggling In disor-
ganized masses to get out of Turkish
territory, and the means of transpor-
tation are pitifully scant. Pestilence
already is appearing in the crowded con-
centration camps, and food is scarce.
Of course they are all -trying to get to
Greece, but what will become of them
there, Is a problem. The government
at Athens is striving to devise meane
( of •caring for them, but the country al-
i ready is crowded and has neither the
g food nor the money to provide for
. these hundreds of thousands of new-
*, comers. In eastern Thrace tlie Greeks
are working feverishly to save nil they
can of their harvest. There is a lot
of wheat there and the Greek govern-
ment may purchase it to help stavs
off a famine. The Thracian delegates
tn the Greek parliament have cabled
to Secretary Hoover for aid from
America.
Another throng that is trying to get
out of Turkish territory is composed
of the many thousands of Russian ref-
ugees. They believe that Kemal has
secretly promised the soviet govern-
ment that he will send them back tc
Russia, and the record of the Bolshe-
vik! leaves them in no doubt as tc
what their fate would be there.
ara equally determined ♦ |
play and are dongerr
aroused.” Mur
JAPAN notified Washington lust
week that tin: official documents of
ratification of the Washington treaties
were on tlie
bassy had been given full
exchange ratifications. This was most
gratifying to tin- administration, which
is beginning to get a l>it atmoyed by
France's long delay in ratifying the ■
I’tiiis dispnielies say action by
the French parliament Is not likely
during the forthcoming session be-
cause-of the great mnnlier of domestic
Issues and tin- Near East affairs.
one and <
This amount in- ■
; eludes nil milk used in tlie cooking and [
' . . : .....1
Feedings for child from twelve *
months to eighteen, are five in 24 hours. •
Cereals are given once a day, always {
: well cooked. Vegetables are necessary 1
' for a healthy biiby past a year and a j
baked and served |
Attorney General Daugherty** “Dry
Sea**' Order Create* a Stir—May
Help Ship Subsidy Bill—Great
Britain Pay* America $50,-
000,0® J ntere«t.
1 Ists will reciprocate by giving itheir
New neutral zones in the Chanak and : support to the ship subsidy bill, it
I cannot be denied that the attorney
[ general’s decision met with general ap-
proval throughout at least the Middle
i West and South, and it is believed Its I
j effect will be greatly to improve the |
chances of the ship subsidy measure j sighted rather tlmii i»egh-7-t this.
.... .... * .._ .. means a
indigestion witli its ills.
Fresh bread, hot breads and rich bis-
cuit should never be given. Always
serve bread stale enough to crumble.
A good way th serve it is to cut in I
small squares and browin in the oven.
For the child from the twelfth to 1
the eighteenth month, fruits such as
orange, pineapple, stmained 1 '
sauce, prune Juice and mashed pulp, 1
is esiieciaily good, as they contain
valuable mineral salt*, citiimines and
acids. (' ... . . . ...
pulp given one-half to*u,r before or p;i
one-half hour after the.ir milk.
Broth*.—Mutton, ebu-ken, veal or
beef broth, with rice or stale bread
•crumbs, five ounces; beef juice, three
ounces.
Cereals.—Gruel, or cereal Jellies
made of oatmeal, barley, farina, rice I
or wheat, four ounces. !
Breads.—Zwieback, dry toast, stale •
’bread and butter, graham cracker.
Eggs.—Soft cooked in sheM, coddled, •
Scraped rare beet, one ta- •
1 1
one-lnilf {
; half. Potato well I
! with biittcr, spinach, asparagus tips. !
I carrots and cauliflower well cooked J
| and mashed, one vegetable daily until 1
, ; two years of age. then green vege !
11111 111 11 r e,n' j tables mav he given occasionally with •
P°wer to j the potato.
I Meats are given sparingly at first up 1
■ to the third year, and should be finely |
chopped or cut. Desserts should he |
given sparingly up to ton years, and I
candy never until two years old, and [
then but one piece dally, always after I
a meal.
'I I f U X wreAC. ;
““ --------- ----- ‘ I
Kflll
F' l .>,
debtedness on a basts of actual rej>-
arations only, wiping out ail charges
tor pensions, war allowances and the | er soft poached,
like. I'i m.re's c.a .11 would thus Ue ; Meats.—
reduced by almost 25 per cenL > bilespoottful.
---w I Milk.—One
npHE Irish hierarchy last week de- i -4^ hours.
a iliveied n shrewd blow at the rebel-
lion* Republicans in tlie form of a pns-
countcii -on, had no alternative but to | ,ties ou reaching port.
i of boose, in order to bring about test1
J cases, and tlie Cunard and Anchor1
Steamship companies began proceed-1
ings in the United States district
court -in Now York to restrain govern-
uicnit officials from seizing their ship* '
or the liquor aboard them. Thest;
companies attack tlie legality of the1
Daugherty order on the ground that it
Is lu contravention of tlie general com-
mercial treaty of 1815 and a misiuter-
pretatlon of the Volstead act.
west as the Maritza river, handing over
the -civil powers to the allied authori-
ties, who will immediately transfer
[them to the Turkish authorities. Turk-
iish gendarmerie In limited numbers
will control the territory for the tlmi-
Ibelng, with allied troops on guard to
•prevent disorders, but within thirty
days after Greece gets out Thrace is
•to be turned over wholly to the Turks.
HTTDl
liF1
h.
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The Nocona News. (Nocona, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, October 27, 1922, newspaper, October 27, 1922; Nocona, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1372636/m1/5/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Friends of the Nocona Public Library.