Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 140, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 1, 1922 Page: 4 of 16
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IW.-T-
DAILY DEMOCRAT.
PART ONE.
. JANUARY 1,
Mi
. u. . .
p
yyy sryyytrs*' yyp sfyyjz
TjE ; m&x®, i v^"J;
m' Ci
ysp&yyy- /^yyyyyyc ^y<^yjr^~ —
^jtry^yz^JLjr 4&?*yjryyy<&&sr
yyy /O/pj^sy^scyy^^sy^ sy/srzf-
^r swsy& /^fir^ry^r
-the oldest service. Then will come
+'th* ftftvyr W j Admiral Kobert K.
uorpii Bfiort,
a'..
A Gorfceous Official Display>
♦ and Bobtail — Fifty Hands]
^ President Hardii
in All Its G
111
TI<jH Jo
Ragtag
Ca Minute lor
Diplomatic"
■ try. I - ■;
with Major General John A. Lejeune
at its head. Like the diplomat*', and
others whb preceded them. they will
ored In all shades, jfell-to-do and
poor. neatly dressed and raggedy—In
people, thousands
m
' net fHvf* "exjtWOlnjf TH llYor beyond
Is to be a New Yenr's rr- will be closed, and- -thousand* will go •— • -
&sy>y. &/*7*f7i'r s*sjyr ,*?yy<Asy&*
yy-pry rs> &ir/^fr/r/^z^
'SCS'-CWJ*r*"rcrs:S. a - n"n ■' •—'
"'""""Ul" , mako their toss* to Alt si. Harding,
. •'Q.W&iH)- " - . / ■' '"Afr T*t!ootid«feand the wives of iba
|B. ... .. II
option at the White House, the lawny disappointed.
first that haurboen held for eight!- .The #*** ^rly birds" will be on
ears. It. will bo h<ld. of course, hand some hours lii'"advance,'so juh to
u Monday. January 2. - • get good places in the waiting line.
■ . ..f r
J. Everybody who 1'* to he received by
Mr. and Mrs. l/arding must enter ihe'
i r. —
AYtfba^sa,cnSr.
.Vlhrehlcnne;
Mr. Hughes* vacated plue# at the
left of Mr. H&rcUng will b«- instantly
taken by a sodflpfrly-looking- ,nan 'n
No President up t,** Mr* Wnson's
timfc thought, of omitting this tradi-
tional! event, but he thought best to
which. %vilt extend along Pennsylvania'
Avenue, andaround the south end/of
the War, State and Navy building, for
discontinue It. * Thl* fyis displeasing at- least a third of am He.
Kir Auckland
ctie Italian Ambassador,
L.
u yvv"V ■
to Washington. Truo.„tJhe New Year's
••eceptlon Is of.no importance what-
ever from a fashionable st|indYioint,
but It offdrs the only available oppor-
tunity forube public at large to meet
*nd shakeV hands with the President
Othtf -WhiflS House receptions—to the :
Diplomatic Corps, to the .Con arias'
etc.
The Kcccliliig I'arty Forms
At- exactly five miiJ utes tTefoie 11
A. M.- two buglers, *'ution«.d _on 'the
mnin floor of th** VVhHe House, will
|sound the notes of the "President's
i-ail," J*"and th^ftww/w,^Ur.- artd Mrs.
Knr4in?F"wi;i come downstairs *o-
UnrOMt■ de CtTtlCI de
tl H Ambassador ' of _
Japan, l?ii?ort Kijuro Shhlehara; th<rt*,u; President's, military aide. .5>0pr
An basa^or ot Peru. Senior Don Fed- \ com<; meinbws of 'the U. S. Su-
IJIne Room from the w-m side—i. , ,-ico Peak; the lirastlian- AmbasSa-l pJ>"'e J,01"*!' , lh« Judge*
from i:.ai Parlor. The f.r- t per; i ,,or.. Mr. Aug„,r„ de Ab-m-ar; the|of ^ 1 °Urt °f ***** * *&* ®
I son to pars riiro^gh be.door will be .Ambassador,
Vice-President " Coolidge,. who will bo n ,, ,
* >i . , i . ... ... lieoti* s. aiiU
followed by the members of the Oabl- . -
,,'t i„ tilt* ..r lhfir.>uihl ot«K- *>"" "
ce; sion to> the Presidency"; "Secretary MAjjiiiflccnt Costumes •
of State Hughes rij ^t.aiuJ Secretary- oi After the ambassadors will comj
Labor-.Davis last; ' jthe mifiltters plenipqteiitiuty, headed
lmmediatelyrhereupon Mr. Hngbes ■ by the J^ortjuyuese Minister. Viscoukt
will take his place at. the left of lhe d'Alte, and .followed by diplomatic
'Pfesident. In order to introduce the '.secretaries, attaches. « t«\ As a |>o
-t memberM of th- Diplomatic Corpsvjthe diplomats \\S 11- present a gorge
It ong.ht perhaps to be ex-
plained that the ladle* tin tViii occa-
sion do not slYSke hands; they merely
ttre-full dTess; uniform of the amy;i„oii„t) tlwlr heads graciously and
jq^E- tfiem, eager to shako the Presi-
dent's hand *n4P~get %- look at bis
wife. A score of policemen will keep
them ib line, steering tbem Into ttta
lfl° Red Parlor and thence Into Lifc Blue
relatively exclusive ad mis- while tbc^ajdJ^e-- Hand. In t.lie j whd by this, time are asyeanbled and i spectacle lii their gobl-la^ed unifori
alon being only by card 'grcaf vitst Ibulo'"" plays. •"Hail to th"( waiting - in the R«d ' Parlor. Thejthe sll.keo • robe.-, of the Chinese lend
Th.r. will be . big jam on January I .f;h."r" rrrnU, \y, jnomni ! ing adash pithe Waarre.
— ~ ' there Dn'^fTff&.T «<i the f orps. because, he has \\Tieii Mr." Hughes has
engineers, This is Colotiel" Shefrill. : smile.
Presidents military aide. ,Xow The Marine Corps will be'followed
by
-District of Columbia militia and his
staff. Then, will come the secretary
Appeals and the Supreme C ourt of and regents of tiie Smithsonian Insti-
the District.of Coiuinhiu. Alost of tutlpti, and after them the assistant
these members of the Judiciary will; secretaries belonging to the various
have their wives with them. ' egecuttve departments, chiefs of bu
Congress Come^ to t'all
Next in order will come th'e mem-
bers of. the I'liW Btateu Senate, the
Representatives. In Congress and the
Commissioners, of t lie District of
Columbia. - . .■**- >—fy-*
In the riieantime" there will~have
be«f bu'iy doings across the streetxjn
the War, State and Navy, building,
The army. * navy andh mlyrlne "rorps
|J.,
1 hasd for the occasion, and of these a
large traction will Inevitably miss th£
"IffftiirT^ in view, for the simple
reason that Mr. Harding cannot pos-
mlnute. and the time *}}oued for the
performan&Su will lrot tHtich exceed an
Thsn the White House gates
Calvin Coo 11 <1 re «
t The Pino Room is of oval sbap^. Its
south end forming a great, bbw-win-
slbly shaite more-than fifty hands a alow a' th<- rear of the White House.
Int this bow-window the President
will stand,!With Mr:. Harding on his
right and Mrs Coolidgu and the CabT-
must get ready to make a New Year's
c~al 1 upon their commander-in-chief,
arid the officers of thone services, at-
tired In full-dress uniforms, with
wrh-!tf——+uve* and ■* <:
flnjl assembled there—Hitf|MS8E5r^3T*"th<> Corps, because', he has; -VTHen'Mf/ H'aghes has finished the
'Wives of the members of the Cabinet {I>a«n longeat 4n WawBtngtort. and *.-> Job at introducing' the .lib? and .littie
and the Vice-President's wife... Me*....such -he will come first. He wilt be diplomats to the Pr^ldent. he will
followed by Senor Don Juan Piano y l fjuit suddenly, arid, making bis way
Qnyangos. the Ajitbassador ot. Stialu^Lout., of, the White Ifoiiwj will Jump-j „
Then will cornc the Russian Ambassa- j Into his motor with;'the brief word, j line two abreast in the corridors nre-
dor. Mr. Hons HaklifrietcfT; the Ag -1 "Holno* James." t.He has got to get , paratory to marching- out and down
bassador o: Chile, Senor Don H^ltrair' thern jhnii' k i.< a 'the t oon, hour ihe granite etepa on the east side.
Mathieu; the Argentine AVnbassador.; approac?W>. ami at 12 sharp he anilL Tho army (headed by Qertertll
Mr. Tomas A. Le Breton; the Belgian.- the ladles of his family must be In i Pershinui will go first, because It Is
tea us aud -min^r offictalsj The line, of.
privileged guests winds up with socle-
ties of war veterans and jlhe Oldest
Inhabitants' .Association o£ the Dis-
trict. ■'' ■ ' ' ^ •
Ttirn of the Common People
Of course, all of this business will
take a good deal of time. In facfr. by
the time the oldest inhabitants have
gone past, the clock Is likely to rtfffti*
ter the hour of 1?.45, The President
will bo tired from tfand -sha b i ng; the
ladles will be weary of standing on
their feet and bowing and smiling.
iWfVf'TTi~uTen minutes, therefore, will be al-
lowed for a recess, and then the
\Vhite House doors will be (hrown
open to the general public.
In through the front door"they will
pour, old ahd young, white arid vol
Room. They will. uhtler constant
watch by at least a doxen secret.serv-'
Ice mecC ready to grab any person.,
whose actions seem In the slightest
degree *usplcidua< - '•
Tlmo Is getting short. They will be
hurrletl past the Prssldent so. q^ulckly^
that a good many will get by him be-
fore they are .aware of the fact. Of
each person his or her name will be
asked by Colonel Sherrlll. and |>y. him
communicated to Mr. Harding. , Some
wjlll want to. pauie and say a word to "
the"- President, "Incidentally io the
handshakt , tnit the latter Is given lr
such a way as to urge the caller along.,
'while the grasp Is transferred to the
next individual In line. Fifty shakes
a minute is about the limit of possi-
bility.
Such a rate, if kept up. would mean
S.Q0O' shakes an hour; but even so, all
t4lb people could not be greeted in the
time available. At 1 o'clock the gate*
erf the White House will be closed,
and a "queue" still extending for *ev-
eral blocks outside will be left hope-
less of admission. All those shut In
by the gates at that bour wlll be re-
ceived, but those shut out must await
a future opportunity to m*et, tha
Presldept and his wife.
/!
(\
C V
Says Business Prospects For WL
Holds Encouragement For All
w.
\
r
Attoclated Preti Dispatch
New Yoik, Dec. 31;—'Business pfos-
pects for 1W21' are. in general, hopeful,
according: to statements bv prominent
bankers, made public t<xla.v by the
American Bankers' Asocial ion.
••the future of business and finance
In the Culled Stales is encouraging."
saUl Thonuis B. McAtlanis, preshlent of
th#*A'wo«'lat1on.
He emphasized the isaportan*^- < l
thla eCMiutry Interesting lti*elf ill the
profUatha of Eufoi^' Tu 'OMfFt Th
erlcan prosjierity uiay be maintkiued
He said that, altbongh some leading
politic>*08 and newspapers opposed ex-
tending aid to Europe at this time, "fu-
SYSTEM
3
HKKAD PKOBI IM IS TIIK f^loner of AgrUnlture^ said help must
JiRK.-lT PKiHtLUM IN RCSSIA. <orn«. iroyt-abtciatl,
e.i
rlyAmarl-
You
Sherman.
ht KT WORTH STRIKERS
r.VRU)K «ITV STREETS.
■ '
A*seck ted Prem OUpaick
Moscow, .'il-r-The bread prob-
leih orershatlowkl all others In the All
Russian Soviet Congress, sii!eh closed
tonight. How to feed 2lMMX>,t)06 Jllin- AtI<>riate4 P*e*a Punntch
gr.v person ; in Volga, how*to get seed. For? Worth. Texas, I)ec. ,'U— Strlk-
horsvs, cattle and Itow to persuade ing packin,; house employes graded
the peasonl throughout the country j the'str«s«ts her-.' today* carrying ban-
re-establlsh agriculture and prevent aj ncrs advertising their side of the
general <cllaps < nnd-^Jthcr questions sirfke issue. It Is estimated twelve to
\v. re considered. M. Osinsky, Commis? fifteen htuulred participated.
AVILL BE CLOSED AGAIN MONDAY
, ^OR.iLS IS 65 POLNTS
IIKillEK.
ERECTED IRE
Sherman Democrat Office. Dec. 31—.
New York and New Orleans markets
'were closed Saturday and will, be
t losed again Monday. y
Liverpool futiyes closofl 14 to 17
points up. .
Spot uu.ikets were closed. •
Cotton set! oil was 1 ot 8 points
dows. _ '. '—r^—-' - ■ 7 -
Graiq was unchanged to 65 points
«P. •' Z
FOR 1922
Wishing You and All Yours a Happy
;
:* %
- >
New Year
Cordially yours
City Building Inspector H. A. McKin- , ti.,„nnfti <
stt-pv begun the construction Saturday i V V: Q,
ot thP first nott of what will be level-1 Mverpool Dec.
ture prospcrltj" dejientled fa the way' fi- opeil atjwmc lime Into a.clty.wJde po- u
rnnetal America answers the will." Ucc'phone on the "wtilte way" pole at, ««f«- " 1 11
"the time for anxiety -seeuts to he the northeast coring of the Court House '
entirely past and the middle of 19*22 Square, pwvid ng tj^ick communication *'nn ••
' h«"ld see recovery well fstahlished.'^between the patrolmen on the street • fj*^n
declared John - -l^nwlale. president and the polite office, and vice versa.j * !• *
of the National Bank of Commerce of "The uew phone w|ll not Connect ,J V 3 '
gt. touls. "All of. the things necessary thl-ough 4ie local - telephone exchange, 1 - -'
to commercial betterment seem to ha.ve ,hut will be a private Hue for excltisfve
t>eeo &et#dO mnitlbn, so that 1022 should police use. It will do away with the
.M.
-1^1
— .4 r
SHOP
Yesterday Today
11.27 11.41
.. .11.22 SL1.S9
11.10, U.2T -
.; .....10.01 11.07 .
*•
4hml ^ .. ..JBL,.,
see the beginning ot the era of bur pres^j^^^tT^HW^^e by the local
great< st and most golden prosperity." police de^irtment, of comuiutikatlng
Prosperity amoug our farmers, tuauu with street men, which is to ask p(*rs« *
ftirtu'rers and merchants is directU' al': at various places of business about the
fected by the unsettled condition of square, especially restaurants.-to blow a
finance and politic* in Europe, accord- whistle kept there for the purpose: Any
. to j. A. House, president of the city officer hearing this whistle, Im-
Trust Compunv division and tiuardtlin" mediately communicates \vitli the„office
Having and Trust Company of Cleve* anAlearns what is wanted.
land. ffee northeiftst < ..i ncr of the square,^
'^1S must l>e remedial," he added known as "Six shooter corner," becauw
**1t b apiwtrcnt also that strikers for a city' or county officer can generally
higher wages are certainty In ke<*p- be found there, was chosen for the first
ing vritb present order of things." I, hoi unit, l+eeause of it being a place where
must hear its fair share in future 4e an officer can generally l>e found,
flation." Other tmits will be added as the need
^r. ilou^o emphasized the TM*ed of the fpr them d vclops.
rebabllitation of the .railroads nnd said ,
ron^tt-ss shotild pass equitaule tax db^^ciPTlMmnf1
Ja^a..to .encourage. ^ • AvFH TlfF 192'* OIITI/MIK
through channls whfch woujtd jueah- in ^ LAni*
^ iorlt Futiiros.
• 1 ar^ct^closed today and Monday.
1 j 4< V
* New Orleans Futures.
"TSfiflfrket closed to<lay and Mouday.
m*
<*W
'iN'
TIM
XL
ooo
«/('
Yesterday Today
' Chicago Grain.
Chicago. 111.. Dec. 3V-Grain-closed
a A follow*:
Month
Wheat— A
May
July .. ,
Corn-
May ... .
' July .. .
Oats-
Dee .
May*,..
"iA*'
«Nr -
i • • • • *
.. f
.1.10$ A
1,*^
.1.04
3 04
. M
/«%
.54%
. .?w "
•" ,S2Va
; •
WISHING
A VERY PROSPEROUS AND
HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL
o 4 - ' '' "•
' ' y . . ' .*♦. .
Qur store Will be closed all day
Monday.
« >« Prrtt Mnpatrh
> J<A* W Pnsli^.e vti* president of . ™~r7 JZ c 'i „
the Ant#i' iui BaiUa'Jxk.Assoi-iation. said Wwhlngttlin, De< . 31. .,
the -^as' towrtrdfi Mi«er"'iiioiiey'' bert-Hoover^* Aaw^Wr * statement to-
rates and there whs nothing to indicate night said the American people could
that this could not continue.' " ' look forwa^r ,(1° \
"The strongest factor, in,.,tiiejjresent fn 2L£2f
SW? 5'rrag"1 "f""
. "It ta our belief dw-larot U.S. Hecht. of the clo^ln* year we have lota
president ot the State Munk division of "> be choorfnl wer. aod baa. ab^^t
tlie American Bankers asaoolalion, V® TCry swbatantlal li >pc. (f steady Ixn
■'that we ,*AB «ot asain have ri al pros I'loveuient home anil abrrti^s
* ^l^HnratTy until some jciud
..restoration has been ac-
imJSuropc and a stable basis
fo^ In tenia tlon^jtrad^ worked out/% ^
OBBKC.ON SRNDS CiKFETlNOft " "
)£JTO AMERICAN FBOPUE
m r.W.-fWJL- A %,y; \
.. I
Cdtton Seed Oil.
Want Negro Pardoned.
.M
f
Month
Jan ..
Mar ..
May . • "j •
July
, J,'"
• 581-
. • S.97
.... 0.24
Tester- To*
Close Close
:% ■
APPY
NEW
EVERYBODY
Km,-*"
PRESIDENT HARDING^ . .
PROPOSAL FOR FlTI RE ■
CONFERENCE CONSIDERED
' ^
r
——
■4'.
d$pftctr**d PrtiM niap<itc% *
Wasiiington. Dec. 31—With the
Washington negotiations approaehing
"A conclusion. President Harding's pro*-
posal for a "future series of similar in-
ternational meetings is coming to the
frotit otMV moro in tho foruifll discus-
slons of the delegates. ^
Thus far If outward manifestations
may be taken as a guide, the future
MexiS Dec i President OV «*ult on a white woman, developments
^S ni, • ' e Kovernor'a office revealed thla
to c*m^-ey his jifersonal New Tear's ; m , .
5££fn I I>e troyed.
5Se^SJS2L.'« iES'H? 0«Te™n,™f i.weo.tM Pr,„ DU^icK 5ir
^ lil 4T Va« D <'. tire be-
' maintain re- to have (ttarted from a drfeotlve
ixwm wna atexicq ?t.. , Jl &&&*. inst n ght destroyed three
vi.nr. t .1 . - r;.-.. residence^ on Grape street, with a^total
•+ntoctntcd Pre** 7)(*«tmrll
Austin, Texas, Dec. 31. —Efforts
are being made to have Gov. NefT par- „ .
ontei-ht George MeKlnley Grace, conference question has been one of
negro, who la sentenced to hang In San the least clearly defined pf all the la*
An<o to -next Friday for crhninul as- NUes considered.
Mosrof the delegates believe they
ean see the end of their lahbrf $P cojjir
uection «rit|- both the ar/nament and ,.
•''" {£,r« ra«IT ^ W^HI^to-.
men's organization in the RhiS9 UmrMtM F-*e* T)i*r>ntrh -v
i -w- 'Dcc.- 8Lr5; *""* "■
yrivf Alltel Hub ,* ommission |oi - }naan, garbed as a maij, held up a res
£ a raiiJ'oaU trilse. itaurant here early toda;
" WL' '.
mr*.
Far East, hut none seem tdlhave a
clear Idea of what action 1* likely to
be taken in the directl/ n of reconven-
ing the powers to dismiss world prob-
lenrwr. ■■■MMMHli
"sasrs ™N
v^ ;_ ^ ■ ■
OMMOMM
Ml I I I II I.
s'v> -r
i<y«> W«I wilt. !'**<'"C*
L
MONG our assets we like to
count the only one that money
cannot buy—yoiUL^good will,
and so at this Holiday Season we
extend to you-^not as a customer?
alone, but as a friend—the Re s. * of
Wishes for the coming year.
it*'
t * nrt tr4
;; jT-.
remler IJoyd
George confered ftifornwlly, today upon
arrival here to attend the meeting *
' "e Allied Supreme Council nevt •
Cannes. France, Dec. $L
dor George Harvey and Pi
SETTLE & SETTLE
Style Headquarters.
i'.'l
BUY IT IN SHERMAN
DURING 1922
raw
in
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IF IT'S SHOES
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 140, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 1, 1922, newspaper, January 1, 1922; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth194181/m1/4/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .