Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 25, 1920 Page: 4 of 10
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TEMPLE DAILY TELEGRAM. TEMPLE. TEXAS. THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25, 1920.
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TEMPLE W TELEM
I IU1IHCK Of THE UMfiUTII) fMHS
T6« AasoclatfO Prtm la •lulucltal} »n-
dtM to th« um (or rcpubllnatlnn of all
Mm ttapurlm nrcdltad to It ot oot othtr-
ercdlttd In thla paper and alao tb*
il o»«a puhllahrd k.rrla.
TEMPLE POST IS DUE HIGHEST
COMMENDATION
DAILY TELETGHAM Eatabllahtd 1M7
Daily thihiine Eat*t>it«h»d 1 ss*
(OonaolldAied Jnnunry. 1110.)
EXECUTIVE 8TAr»:
K K w 11.1,1 A MS General Mnnnaer
CHAS W INOKAM Min»*tri* Editor
STEPHENS Bnatne» Mnniftrr
■ COHEN Ad»rrtl«lnn Manager
Published every u.nrntng by the Telefram
Pabllablnc Co., (Inr.) E K. Williams, preal-
<eot
srnscHkfTioN price:
Dally and SumJay i ei year $1 Oft
Dally and Sunday ail mnnthi 4.36
Dally and Sunday pir mnntt- 7f
IVIephone rail departmental Mt
<5?
ENGLAND VM> THK SOVIET.
Recognition of (he soviet govern-
ment of Ku.ipla under the arch bol-
thevik leaders, Lenine and Trotzky
by Great Britain again complicates
world af'airs in a way that makes
progress toward lasting world prate
again remote and uncertain. In this
recognition these revolutionary and
disturbing leaders are given frrah
hor.e and renewed strength to meet
the opposition of the rest of the civ-
ilized world. Great Britain permits
the representatives of the bolshevik
government all the privileges of am-
bassadors while the recognition io
pretended to be confined to the in-
terchange of commerce.
_. It is a recognition which gives the
revolutionist bolshevik a grip upon
.heir fast receding power that will
embolden them to press their claims
upon other nations and may, in event
of being refused, as already they
have been by France, lead to un-
pleasant and perilous situations.
In the proposed agreement be-
tween the bolshevik leaders of Rus-
sia and Great Britain there are ten
articles and these provide not only
for the appointment of one or more
official agents to reside and exer-
cise their functions in the territor-
ies of the other with immunity from-
arrest, but also provides that such
agents shall have the rights accord-
ed to diplomatic representatives of
the vise of passports and the liberty
of communicating by code and ci-
pher. Provision also is made "that
the official HgentB shall be :\l lilu ity
to receive and dispatch couriers villi
scaled baps which shall be exempt
from examination."
The soviet will hail this recogni-
tion given it by Lloyd George with
wildest delight and will at once pro-
ceed to new extremes of barbarism
and outrage against civilized gov-
ernments in the hope of. t-xpanilii-."
its scope of influence, all the while] ;
spreading its dangerous and i; >ifli-
otis propaganda among the peoph s
of all the world through all m.'i'ii-ei
of deceit, falsehood and misivpn
sentation.
France firmly adheres to
stand against giving any fort -or ,i
cognition to the bolshevik govern-
ment and the United Slater- ha.-, not
taken any action looking to r- os.. .
tion and, if tjie wisln-s and desire -
of the people at large are consumed,
will not take any such action. This
country already lias felt and .-•itv> ml
the ill effects of the vile propiiaai -l i
•f the bolshevik and wants none of
•them.
England has embarked upon a per-
ilous-experiment and should be left
to work out its solution alone.
Announcement that Temple Post of the American Le-
gion, the local organization of ex-soldiers of the world war,
had closed negotiations for the appearance of a great and
popular singer in Temple, under circumstances and at rates
to the public that places the splendid entertainment within
the reach and enjoyment of everybody, is one of the most
pleasing news occurrences chronicled recently. That it is
in accordance with the suggestion made immediately follow-
ing the magnificent success that attended the celebration
of Armistice Day in Temple, under the auspices of the
Temple Post, in the face of most discouraging drawbacks
and handicaps, shows that the post has essayed to fill a
most important role in maintaining interest in its own or-
ganization, while at the same time providing entertainment
of the hghest merit at popular prices for the people of the
community.
The bringing here of Madame Stanley, an operatic star
of the first magnitude, whose usual fee for an appearance
is not less than $1,000, attests most pleasingly that the
post has set its standards high and suggests that the gallant
soldier boys, showing in this as they did when they went
"over the top" a spirit that refuses to balk at obstacles and
strives only for victory in its every effort, shpuld meet the
undivided and unanimous support and encouragement of
the whole community. It is hoped and confidently believed
that such support will be given these grave and aspiring
heroes and that the coming of Madame Stanley will be but
the first of many entertainments under their auspices in
this city.
The house should be filled to its capacity; the artist
and the high character of her performance warrant this; and
the efforts of the legionnaires to provide this and similar
entertainments deserves the fullest recognition at the box
office. In this connection it may not be amiss to recall
that only a few nights ago the auditorium in which Madame
Stanley is to appear was packed to the doors when the at-
traction was test of physical prowess and endurance be-
tween two men. The singer who is to come soon has
charmed thousands upon thousands with her sweet notes
and finished artistic accomplishments; she has given her
services unstintedly in the war, singing for the boys in
camp, in the field and in the hospitals. Her rank as one of
the highest priced and most captivating stars in the operatic
firmament certainly justifies the hope and the confident
that her presence in Temple, one of the very few she will
make in Texas, will be appreciated in a way that will crown
with success the efforts of Temple Post of the Legion and
attest the appreciation of our people for artistic merit of
such rare quality.
The Telegram cannot close comment without again ex-
pressing its approval and we feel also the approval of the
entire community of the undertaking of the post in this
direction and to bespeak for the ex-soldiers that encourage-
ment which will make sure the coming- here of other at-
tractions of like merit and quality. Let the Temple post of
the American Legion know that it has the support and
indorsement of the community and there will be provided
throughout this and coming seasons a character of enter-
tainment that will appeal tu all that is best and most artistic
in our people.
Germany stood next, with 1,185,000
tons—that la, the British excelled the
Germans by nearly four to one.
When the whole British empire Is In-
cluded, they stood as nearly as possi-
ble exactly four to one In comparison
with Germany.
In June, 1920, In spite of the war
losses, the United Kingdom still had
18,111,000 gross tons of shipping, a
net loss of 781,000 tons. The British
dominions, however, had mntie nn n
part of this loss by Increasing their
tonnage by 400,000.- Germany had
been practically wiped out She is
credited with 419,000 tons, but these
are only small ships, all of them less
than 1,600 tons. The United States,
however, had forged ahead enormous-
ly. Haying only 2,027,000 tons }n
June, 1914, we had gone^up to 12,406,-
000 tons by June, 1920-—that is, we
have more than twice as much ship-
ping as the Germans boasted on the
eve of the war.—Philadelphia Public
Ledger,
X
CENTRAL TBXAS PHESS
lalfsts. He by wise management ami
|.,ound and alert diplomacy almost
j 1>:might to full realization the dream
of resuscitation for which Byron had
: fought and for which Ureeee long
ihad yearned; he brought almost to
dazzling dawn the day when Greece
(could establish the capital of it« eni-
| pi re at Byzahtiuni; and then Greece
in an exhibition of national ingrati-
EIMTOKI.AL OF THE DAY
cx-
UXGRATKFrii <<IIKK<'!-'.
if Byron was living today
poetic inspiration would find
presslon in new songs deploring the
decadence of Greece, a land he loved
almost with the devotion h
his native Kngland. In on-
tude turned upon him, deposed him
and turned in smiling favor toward
the exiled monarch, under whose
rule the country faced absolute ruin
and probable total annihilation.
In executing his great plans for
Greek reestablishment Venizelos had
taken his life into his hands in op-
posing the policies of his autocratic
brother-in-law, William II of Ger-
many, but in its ingratitude Greece
forgot this and spurned him. Truly
such a display of ingratitude upon
the part of the people of nation saved
from defeat and made more power-
loved j ful in arms and territory through
his I the splendid work of this genius
most brilliant verses he
departed glories ot Gr
"•bus:
i nd
KI Fill.
Hut bit, -I
7he recent elections n C
%hich Venizelos was o -i'l
Iriven from control f the
ment gives evidence of iiif
that shows that monarchic -
publics, ever are ungrate-
owes to Venizelos n< •
among the nations <> tin
day and the Philadelphia
commenting upon the result of the!
any of the | would seem to merit rebuke, even to
■< > (loci,ig being stripped of the benefits and
! advantages gained for them by him.
j Now, with the return to the throne
j of ("onstantine imminent, and the
(rtain antagonism ami disfavor ol
he entente powers threatening,
Howards of a (Jivnt Ntnolist.
William Detm llexv- Ms, in a word of
advice to youthful T. B. Aldrich, told
him not to hold himself cheap, and
he nn ant the injunction in every
sense. The sum of $20t»,(tti0, ;il which
it i-- announced Howells' estate is
valtnd. does not startle us as either
too little or too much. Though How-
ell- was one of our two greatest nove-
lists of the half century, not one of
his books was among the sensational-
ly high sellers. Not for him was the
circulation of "Men Hur" in 2,000,000
copies; of "Richard t'arvel," which at
n stride reached 400,000, or "Janice
Meredith;" leaping to 300,000. Some
will see in his slender royalties of the
last five years from Harpers and
Houghton Mifflin. $10.317. or $2,063
a year, evidence that his work lacked
due appreciation. It is true that the
youngt r generation too much ignored
his great books of the eighties and
nineties, but It is only natural for the
younger gem ration to turn to its own
new writers. New York Kvenlng
1'ost.
Our Sliippl.ti. Mice*
How many Americana realize that
the I 'lilted States has r. placed Gcr-
nianv as I he only s< rious competitor
of (if at Britain in the field of mer-
cantile marine? In fact, we are a
mm It more serious competitor of the
In a current issue of the Brady
Standard there, is a lengthy editorial
dealing with the cotton situation un-
der the heading, "A Story With a
Moral." Here is (he story around
which the Brady editor arranges his
timely comments and it Is well worth
repeating:
"A good many years ago there lived
on Silver Creek, near Weatherford, nn
old man named Isabel. He was not
regarded particularly as a progressive
citizen or a leading citizen, nor was
he one who would be expected to set
the world on fire. Butf one thing was
certain, year in and year out old man
Isabel had corn to sell, and he sold it
uniformly at. the price of 50c a bushel.
When corn was plentiful and sold for
25c per bushel, his neighbors laughed
at old man Isabel for wanting 50c for
his corn which was no better than
any 25c corn. Isabel gave no thought
to his neighbor's jeers, however, but
stored his corn away in his junple
warehouses. Perhaps the next year
the corn would be worth 50c or even
more a bushel—when the neighbors
would gladly avail themselves of the
opportunity to buy old man Isabel's
corn at his uniform price of 50c per
bushel. The old man never worried;
lie always had a living and always
had com in his cribs. In fact he did
not neetl to worry because of the corn
lie had in his cribs. He could not be
accused of profiteering; he simply
placed a certain value upon his pro-
duct. and sold it when he could get
what, price he asked, regardless of
whether the market was high or low."
Mr. Isabel was wise. He knew
what it cost him to produce corn and
he set a price upon his product that
would give him a reasonable profit
and waited until he received that
amount. He was not selfish for he
did not take advantage of the short
years when he could have sold his
corn for more than his regular price.
He was enabled to fix a price upon
his product in those days and keep it
because conditions were more stable.
There is so much change in the cost
of production just now. of course, that
he would have to adjust his price
more often. But he had a splendid
idea.
It is significant, however, for the
j purpose for which this story is relat* d
that he had the ability to e^iry out
his idea. And that is just, where the
rub conies in trying to tell the farmer
what he should do, which we never
attempt. The average farmer is not
situated like this man Isabel. He
j does not have tl>e warehouses to take
care of his products and especially his
principal crop, cotton. Neither dot s j
he have the financial ability to wait ]
until the market advances to his price. '<
But through co-operation of the
proper sort the farmers could have j
Warehouses and secure credits upon
iheir products enabling them to wait
like old man Isabel until they git
their reasonable profit above tile cost
of production, if is some such plan
as this that the Farm Bureau is seek-
ing to put into operation now.
The farmers through this organiza-
tion are attempting to do just like
Isabel did and it is only through co-
operative efforts In pooling and mar-
keting their products that all can pro-
fit as he dhl. 'Ihey have the sympa-
thy and moral support of everyone
e\<ept perhaps, a few speculators in
products of the farm in the carrying
out of their program. And it has
been demonstiated in this community
already that they can obtain the
hearty co-operation of the bankers
and business men, especially in such
a crisis as now exists in the cotton
situation.
which age has brought wisdom. The
old fellow knojvs how to get it.—New
Orleans States.
New York has more fine shops than
Chicago, but Chicago has a long lead
in murders. No city has everything.
—Chicago Tribume.
The Providenoe Journal Is still rav-
ing about autocracy at Washington.
Hasn't the Jounrnal heard that the
election is over and that even a rabid
Republican can afford to talk sensibly
again?—Charleston News and Courier.
chalance!" Bpouce—"John Henry,
come home with me this minute."—
Cartoons Magazine.
Easily Settled
Kicker—"A Judge ^ias ruled that a
woman shouldn't spend more on
clothes than on rent." Mrs. Kicker—
"Well, then we shall have to pay big-
ger rent."—Edinburgh Scotman. -
Over in New York they are going
to open a drive for a $5,000,000 "Pol-
Ice Hospital." It one may judge by
the conditions in Gotham, what the
police need is not so much a hospital
as a kindergarten.—Boston Globe.
Count von Bernstorff sSys that Ger
many's most urgent need is an under-
standing with the American people.
What—don't they understand yet?
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The control of Greece seems to lie
between George Ithallis and Prince
George, with an increasing disposition
on the part of King George of Eng-
land to let himself do it.—Boston
Transcript.
Somebody should tell Cal Collidge
that four years is a long time to be
camping out in a tent on the Capital
grounds.—Washington Post.
After all, considering how innocu-
ous must be our mince pies, how can
this be a real Thanksgiving?—Balti-
more American.
WHAT'S IN A NAME?
(Ify Mlltlrrd ManliaH.)
Mllliccnt.
The affected young miss who
changes her name from Mildred to
Millicent-in lhe fond belief that the
two arc interchangeable, is really re-
christening herself. The two names
are utterly dissimilar.
Millicent, which is translated to
mean work strength, comes from that
remarkable word 'amal', meaning
work, which appears in some similar
form in all languages. We have our
word 'moil' from it. Many feninine
names have been evolved from amal,
the first probably being Amalaswinth,
the unfortunate queen of Eombardy,
whom the Romans could not protect
from the treachery of her favorites.
Historians call her Amalasontha, but
in Burgundy she became Melisenda,
Melicorte, and Melusine.
Spanish ballad lore reveals a Meli-
senda as the wife of Don (Jayferos,
who was taken captive by the Moors,
and we hear of her through Don
i.Juixote. Melusine was the nymph
wife of Lord de Leezignan, who ac-
cording to old legend, retired from
public view every Saturday and turn-
ed into a serpent.
■Princess Melisende carried the
crown of Jerusalem to the house of
.Yhjou, and through the Provencal
connection of the English court, Hady
Meiisent Stafford, who lived during
the reign of Henry II, established the
name in England, it soon came to
be spelt Melicent and finally Milli-
i f nt. prevailing as such today. •
The simplest of all gems, the tur-
(|iieise, is .Milhcent's talismanie stone.
It is said to protect its wearer from
all dangers, whether she walks or
rides—or flies, the present-day legend
must add. It is an augury of good
fortune if she sees the new moon re-
flected in the stone.
Saturday is he lucky day and 1 her
lucky t im ber, and holly is her flow-
er.
RIPPLING RHYMES
f Pt» Walt Mama.)
dispatch, causing them to remain in
one place and to Increase and multi-
ply instead of being on the move
hunting food, as they used to be when
Milwaukee discoverer, who llVew on
Scott street, advises the use of sticky
fly paper on bed posts as a bug dis-
courager.
ask-
Weary of Virtue.
'For months I save the dollars with
energy sublime, and wear old shoes
and collars to save another dime. For
months I am a. student of thrift in ev-
ery guise; I am so beastly prudent I
make men blink their eyes. I preach
on self denial beneath my own roof-
tree, till life becomes a trial to all
who live with me. For months I
keep on raving about the penny gain-
ed; then I get sick of saving, by thrift
my soul is pained. And so I blow my
money as though I had no sense, and
live on milk and honey, regardless of
expense: I patronize the tailor and
buy a fordmobile, and like a jingled
sailor I burn the hard earned wheel.
Then, tired of misbehaving, I gently
simmer down, and once again I'm
saving the guilder and the crown.
And such a course seems dotty to
people safe and sane, who think such
orgies naughty, and villainous and
vain. But saving, though a virtue,
may soon become a fault that's bound
to badly hurt you, unless you call a
halt before the shining dollar to you
seems so immense that all the world
looks smaller than its circumference.
The thrifty man is wiser than is the
spend-thrift jakc; but, oh, the greedy
miser! He makes my innards ache. —~
BITS OE BYPLAY
(By l.ilif Mcl.uk*.)
Haw, llaw!
"WMl, how is my son doing?'
ed the Proud Father.
"Oh, he seems to be very fond oi
work," replied the Manufacturer who
had given the Son a position.
"That's nice," smiled the Father.
"Yes," added the Manufacturer,
"ho is so fond of It that he goes lo
sleep alongside of it every day."
Shame on Them!
A mean old cuss is Ignatz Doyle,
May his heart ache!
He telliThis kids that castor oil
Is nice to take.
—Luke McT.uke.
A mean old man is Robert Bolt,
And this is true,
He whips his boys for doing what
He used to do.
—Hastings (Neb.) Tribune.
Polloo!
Do the authorities know that Skin-
ner, Cheatam and Steele are Pay Of»
ficers in the United States navy?
Our Dally Spccial.
Don't Monkey With The Man Who
Smiles When He Gets Mad.
Aw, Gwnn!
'A man can't lift a mountain,
lie is too weak," said Buff:
"But you have often seen. 1 ween,
A weak man throw n bluff."
A Striking Resemblance.
The other day we saw a copy of the
latest portrait painted by Ossip Perel-
nia, the Russian artist. And there lie-
fore us on the canvas were the fea-
tures of the Immortal Mr. Pecksniff
at all. It was the portrait of Willyum
Jay Bryan.
Terrible!
"It must be terrible to have to
spend your days in a place liko this!"
slid the nosey Reformer who was
visiting the Penitentiary.
"It sure is," replied the Convict.
' We has visitors like \mi almost ev-
ery day."
Ho, IImil!
Some men are slickers. I will say,
And they cause you to frown:
The man who shakes your hand to-
da; .
To-niorr
>w shakes you down.
famous Meats
1 "irst.
Second.
tabloid tales
Happy Ignorance
Georgette—"George, I've sot some-
thing I must confess to you before
we're married." George—"Oh, that's
all right, (bar. I'm not particular. Any
good i ating place suits me."—Boston
Globe.
Summer.
S ten m.
Tropical.
I iiood.
White.
1 Yickly.—■
V
Boh Leake, Temple, Tt xas.
Bang!
•'s dead. But don't send flow-
Luke Meljuke Says
Any married woman can tell you
that no man ever looks as handsome
in a union suit as the underwear ads
in the magazines make him look.
Man is a queer fish. Men wh«
never thought of taking a drink when
the kaifs were open won't refuse a
nip nowadays.
No matter how useless a husband
turns out to be his wife is glad tha»
the Other Woman didn't get him.
Some of the girls must imagine that
men regard women as toys. Anyway,
they keep themselves covered with
bright paint.
There was a time when a womat
wore a petticoat to keep her leg,
warm. But these days she wears out
so she won't Show Through.
If he has a bright line of kidding
repartee when he calls on a girl, h<
is a trifler. But if he sits around
dumbly like a sick sheep, he's in love/
With women on the Juries, it be-
hooves a married man to walk in the
Straight and Narrow path. Womer
know what liars married men are.
Every time a wringer agent or an
insurance solicitor calls on a woman,
the other women in the neighborhood
have a terrible time tr^ng to peel
out of the sides of the window shades
without being seen.
Women are not entirely to blamu
for the indifference brought about by
years of married life. A husband gets
to that he kisses his wife with all the
fire Tind passion of a bowl of cold
mush.
A girl can say more with a two-
second smile than a man can say in n
two-hour lecture.
Most of us cross our fingers when
we pray to be led away from Tempta-
tion.
L
QUESTION BOX
Ci, Is the simi Mn lurty in It. I.ml i i
• it to 1,51 ittbli ru!i- t-b Who ,u- tl.v
"i,!:u k ttuU tans'' Ik ncfa tit
A. Yt-e. (S). A sort cf -«> tit smu
organisation ot tin) British got ■ i una. lit..
Q. Wlu-ii v il)
1 - matiKui attu V
A March 4. 1'
all V I
■iilont -
'•i
i.l ■ H
Oot h jal> t"
Sul'.H-i ibei : AI-oi;t lain a:
Ti
|i- Oil
Till 'K-
N'eoe.sslly of the Times
"Why do you insist on trying to
reduce'.'" "In order," replied Mr.
lleviwate, "that I may have a chance
of finding a flat that I am not too
large to fit."—Washinton Star.
Took Her at Her Word
"For goodness sake. Minnie, whose
soi ks are you darning?" "They be-
long to Willie Sharp. When 1 re-
fused him 1 said I'd be a sister to
him and he took me at my word." -
Spare Moments.
G' eece presents a sorry spectacle ol j British than the Germans ever were
national decadence and Bvron's | "" of their prosperity. The
figures are almost starling. In June,
i I *' 1 ». the t :t,-i| Kingdom possess* il
tons of shipping, while
Byron's
irds again apply with tragic pro-
"i v "All except her sun is sel." I is,sii2,noo
eree for all
Possibly there
! be peace when
England's Irish polices founded upon
In lands'* English polity. Louisville
Courier-Journal.
We have no doubt that a much-en-
vied person is the SH! yetM-old citizen
of orange, X. J , ^vlio has been ar-
rested for getting drunk the 127th
What He Don't Know
Any man knows what the girl who
! doesn't talk thinks about, but il is im-
I possible for him to discover what the
girl who doesn't talk thinks about.—
Hamilton Herald.
The World's Wisdom
In this little book (the New Testa-
ment! is contained all the wisdom of
the world Ewald.
His Wife Knew
Husband, rather vividly conscious
of the bathing beauties lolling about
I hit him hard, by jing!
lie t; lk'-d to me for two whoh
And never said a thing.
daily HOBOSCOPB
hours
Pan Knows f'.ovr\thing.
Willie—i'aw, is pie a necessity of
life?
Paw—Xo. my son. But it is a nec-
essity in politics.
mid Inn ;
time. This seems to be a case in the silver screen - "What perfect non-
Goliiig l"p!
Old Mother Harket.
Went to tho market,
To see if some eggs shi
Then she held her head.
And nearly dropped dead.
For two-dollar eggs are too liiKh.
What's llie Fare To Covington?
(The Covington (Tenn.) Leader.)
1 aip now a licensed auctioneer and
have succeeded Dr. Win. Murray in
that capacity. Anyone in need of my
services can find me at the ham-
burger stand on the north side of thi
square. Will, ilartlwiek.
Names Is Names.
Some people imagine that they are
perfect. But what we started to tell
you was that Moore Perfect lives i?
Columbus. Ohio.
The Horrors of Prohibitii.-i.
A Milwaukee man has made the
discovery that prohibition is causing a
plague of bedbugs. He i laims that
men spend more time in bed since the
country went dry, and the bugs get
their meals with more regularity and
n
BRINGING UP FATHER
TliunitH), No> pmlirr i5,
"W.hiJ* i.'. in . i..i '!•" •« ru!*- !'•>nu1 \ ft v
g(><i(l tiuvirit? ti." (In?, mtorduu; to u-i
I*! a nils rill* * 8trt*i ;;ly !t<r mi 1 in th* » cii.nc.
Tliis should ' c ' vntbio rtJWi
for wliiui.ver wealth >-miich ironi the earth.
Ml n't *, thorffore, ?*hou!<l binctit.
It i* rsjw ittllv bcni'fk'i; I to what- vei ii
manufactured from lli< h . >r iut t 1.
Kn«;in»'#>r* it:.I ; 11 w\io <• <*ncagntl in
rjnstniotive woik sliinUl benefit at thit
tin)**. Tin * t* will bt» imirh ft»i them to tio
in tin • omiiik \ «'ii i uii'l (h*> will lu.ikt laige
profit*.
K.irimr* should find this dny nn fiU t-
j.Wious on*1 for th*M» tulricst*. Crops ratb*r
1)1.n slot k will benefit from tins rule of
(h«- star*.
All the sljfii> stein t f i iiitl ,itf t Jt.it fhot*
will bo .i sever.' v. i;.!'j Much u ilid i* iu«
<!i«-at» d.
Tho tfouth will m<
.ift* • tin# the i < i"
prosper
California h - ! ,>•
events of Ki*Ht i
>.'f w « l sattiz ii i*'i:
piiiguofttieaicd. These will enter the field
of business.
When l"runup fdvorse it in held thai
the mind Ih more «»i* n to deception thau i»t
« lli« r times. Tins <hv. >-houl*i bo lived wise-
ly. tor it is i- ■>;»t to iloe, i\e oneself thru
auybody else.
.American ..it - i.-.w «.;bjrcf to a rule that
set Mi* to promt* great advancement.
iieaiity will h«» appreciated more an*}
more in this country, the sepr* forecast
.•ml every day tiniifcs will bt measured 11
its standards hs io'vci before.
JVr«ona wbi>«e Mrthdate it Is should net
ulate In tl»o coming vai Th^y hnv%
the nugurv of an ictiv. and *u< ces ful time,
if they make nn changes.
Children bora on tins day will probably
bo ht' .a«j\. pt «.-e\ei uk :,nd <'him n litfous.
They will ii.se i.tpiUly m an\ prol sion they
choose.
v. it a in'ti v problem*
but busiuem should
ore- ',*t of sensational
it to the nil lion.
women ag:\in are
elections, recommend-:
preme allied count il.
of Nations, make Gr-
the extensive gains ■
the deposed premier,
reminds the world th^
that the ftti-
r the Lrami.-
ete dit^oise
: • d for it by
The liet ord
I liiiu it hot
been for Venizelos tireem would
tot Into lhe war in allianre
* wltli Germany aud now xould be in
Ike same position as Buli:, .< a:-
Turkey. In other void? G:<*i- ,,
. would now be in the attitude or i
defeated nation with heavy nd' n-
Bitlea to pay instead of enjojing a
wide addition to her territory. Veni-
aeloa through his brilliant v.;t--
aanshlp cot for Greece almost a
. »f Tkrace; b« added Smyrna an<: ti •
country back ot it, and also got s;
proval from the Supreme .Ml. j
Council to fight the Turkish Nucou-
CH: ^tfj
tmi J rj
* cX)lT I IKE
RELA.T PROTECT
ION V/HN" NCO fCOLO
tall err a rxiiLDiNc,
By GEORGE McMANUS
f - JONI *3 -
. A' CONE UP TO THE
'vt| HC'jPnAL AM <',IV
TOUR "OUIT- IT
MAX I3E. ALL Rl<nr
t"CR FCOT Pv\LL
P>UT NOT TOR
f v/tLl.
NCU LE hO
ME THAT
NOV/ I LL CO
HOME AN TALK
liACK TO MACC.IE
t vmthout FEAR
e»o: here
COME'b THE.
bio loaeer:
roUlT-
ONCb1
AtsO MCI
.ptt hurt y
i 1 l.*r-
© 1920 • r Iwf i. Fcatusc ficavicv. I«C.
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Ingram, Charles W. Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 25, 1920, newspaper, November 25, 1920; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth470464/m1/4/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.