The Weekly Herald (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 26, 1922 Page: 3 of 12
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mm
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;
jpyous treat
to sit down to
abowl of
Kelloggs Com Flakes
You’ll agree that you never ate such delicious, such
satisfying cereal as Kellogg’s Corn Flakes! Those big,
sunny-brown “sweet-hearts-of-the-corn” are so fasci-
nating in flavor and so crispy and crunchy that you don't
wonder the children are thrilled to eat them!
Compare Kellogg’s with imitations to realize their
quality, their appetizing appeal, their wonder-crispness!
Unlike imitations, Kellogg’s are never tough or leathery
or hard to eat! Each heaping spoonful of Kellogg’s is
even more joyous than the last—there
is no end to the happiness that is yours
eating Kellogg’s Corn Flakes!
ASK FOR KELLOGG’S! Be sure
that you get Kellogg’s—the delicious
Corn Flakes in the RED and GREEN
package that bears the signature of
W. K. Kellogg, the originator of
Toasted Corn Flakes. NONE ARE
GENUINE WITHOUT IT1
* *CORN FLAKES
AUo Mktn of KELLOGG'S (CRUMBLES and KELLOGG'S BRAN, eonkad and krrmMed
IP
:R! HRS Of WILSON WAR
CABINET MADE PUBLIC
WIDOW FORMER SECRETARY OF
INTERIOR LANE. PUBLISHES
CORRESPONDENCE
Bj Auni'iiini rr*-.»
Boston, Oct. 25.—A series of his-
toasted
CORN
flakes
By Assented I’reM
London, Oct. 25.—Formvr’ Premier
Lloyd George told the Coalition end
Liberal members of parliament at a
meeting today that be would support
any party and any government t£at
pursues the policy of peace, economy 1
and steady progress. He declared that j
Great Britain must {>ay America all!
her debts. jtory making letters, describing in do-
Unity of action between Great Bri j taM the American war cabinet and
tain and the United States was urged giving an intimate picture of Wood-
by Lloyd George. "I am for the Lea-trow Wilson as he appeared while
gue of Nations, but until you get the'presiding over the secret meet-lugs
United States, all the nations of Eu-;„f bis official family, is made public
rope, as well as the small league, will for the first time Tuesday. The let.
be crippled and cannot serve its full ters, written by the late Franklin K.
purpose.” He said that “America and La,,,, secrPtary ot the interior in thf
Great Britain must work together.” cabinet of President Wilson from
1916 to lain, have been collected and
edited by his widow, Annie Winter-
mute Lane, and have been published
by Houghton -Mifflin company. The
volume is just off the press.
The correspondence reveals among
other things, how the President fre-
MUST POSSESS COURAGE TO
QUALIFY AS MISSIONARIES
By Associated Pre»»
Evanston, 111., Oct. 25.—Men and
women must have daring, patience;
and tact In addition to piety in order j....... ‘ " v“'> * ,T™”
.... . . Iquently lost patience with the tre-
to qualify for overseas missionary,
_________ _ u______ 'niendous problems confronting him,
and how at other times discourage-
service. according to addresses and
reports given at today’s session of
the 113th annual meeting of the
I ment crowded him to such a degree
American Board of Commissioners!
; that he was prompted to turn bit-
for Foreign Missions.
Arnogn the speakers were four of
the men who have been In Smyrna
and other points in Asia Minor dur-
ing massacres of Christians by the .... , , .
„ . . , , ' tel] how he regarded the proposal to
Turks. These missionaries describ. \________L . .,____
ed some of the scenes the witnessed
in connection with the slaying of
teriv upon his advisers when they
failed to agree with him.
The letters give an indication of
Mr. Wilson's attitude on prepared,
ness before America entered the war,
Hr
^ THE NEW
^Diamond
CORD TIRE
L\ Hows this for an Ex-
ceptional Value in
Cord Tires
30x31-2C0RD$12.50
There are no better tires
IMM'I than the DIAMONDS
We Have them in all Sizes
CORDS AND FABRICS
FRANTZ HARDWARE COMPANY
WHERE YOUR TRADE IS APPRECIATED.
■1m
to be done.
In a note dated March 1 1918, he
said:
“Yesterday, at cabinet meeting, we
aged at times. On Jan. 19, 1920, he
wrote:
“The whole world la akew-jee, aw-
ry, distorted, and altogether pep-
had the first real talk of war in verse. The President is broken la
weeks—yes, in months. Burleson b°d>’ and obstinate In spirit. Bte-
M
MAN POWER A8 CAPITAL
*
There is widespread interest in
the fact that a New York bank lent
the United Mine Workers' Union coming their own bankers. The Bro
mon^y in large sums, for any leglli-
mate purpose, almost as readily as
employers.
Indeed, labor organizattlons are be-
arm merchant ships, describe his op-
! position to anything approaching the
... ... . .. „ . . |“code duel'* spirit at a time when
Christians and the efforts ™de by. 8ta(„ neutral and
Min mlcoirtnuKiA« C/» nnti* hAlnlnoo
them when great questions were
pressing him for decision tell how he
encouraged his cabinet to talk of
trivialities while he went along on
his own course to solve the huge
' „.....' T J 1 Ur, "" problems facing his administration
The President said he didn’t Wish
the missionaries to save helpless
men. women and children from death I
These four speakers were Dr. Mark
H. Ward, a physician, the Rev. J. s
Riggs Brewster of Saioniki, the Rev.
James K. Lyman of Marash, and the
Rev. Ernest A. Yarrow of Tiflis.
Dr. Cornelius H. Patton of Boston
brought up the matter of Russia—
would we support Japan in taking
Siberia, or even Vladivostok? Should
we join Japanese activltty—in force?'
$100 000 during the coal strike. Here
ip a new phenomenon in industry,
which may be said to mark the be-
ginning of an era.
theriiood of Locomotive Engineers!'
millions on deposit, it owns a mod-
ern office building in Cleveland worth!
"The President said ‘no.’ for the a dance in hell.’
very practicf reason that we had
no ships. We had difficulty in pro-
viding for our men in France and for
our allies. (The President never
uses this word, saying that we are
not allies.)
In a note dated March 12. 1918-
Secretary Lane wrote:
seln has declared the law of gravl.
tation outgron and decadent. Drink,
consoling friend of a pertured wo rid
is shut off; and all goes merry a§
LAW TAKES UP TASK
OF FORMING CABINET
London, Oct. 20.—Andrew Boner
Law appeared to be making rapN
“Nothing talked of a cabinet that !*"*«■» todar in formin* a **
would interest a nation, a family or
replace the fallen
ment
coalition goVer*
Me I It was announced that Marquis
A
to pay for food and lodging for needy
strikers.
The bankers concerned, express
border why anyone should be sur-
prised at their lending a labor union
money, and doing It without secur tio» °f «" th« ordinary sense
^ . to see either side win—for both had
who pave a report on rerrulUnK men . _ „ . . . .. . . .
* been equally indifferent to the rishta
and money in America for the work . . , .. . ,
. , y of neutrals, Mr. Lane wrote to his
overseas tn the non-Christian lands, brotbrr on „>b n m7> comnient.
________ __ ___ .. ,Sab' tba* t,1f,re wel(> 6** pcsons ri- on a particularly animated cab-la child. No talk of war No talk
has a thriving bank of its own. with cru*<e<* during L e last year. ■ jnpt (|iSCU88i0n.
"The service to which the foreign' „ .. .. . , , ... KtI1 . 1 zon ana the Earl of Derby have
On the subject of preparedness. Adoo about some bills in congress, *
field summons the Christian youth’ , .... „ .L .v n a «. . _t i _ ,u„ to serve under him in any cn]
even a few months before the United:by the President about giving the1 1
of America was never more difficult , .... ...
[States entered the war, Mr. Lane
than it is today,” said Dr. Patton. . . „ ., . . ,
quoted President Wilson as being
In seveial of the fields the <',e'|not jn '‘sympathy." Writing again to
ment of personal risk is not lacking.L|b brother_ Feb 18, m7
Is Cnr-
agreei
The money was used apparently » t0UP'« «f million d*>,lars. and re;
centtly paid $2,500,000 for a new
bank building.
Thus union labor itself is turning
capitalist. There a^e two lines of
development. One is the accumula.
in this situation a new "radical me-
nace.” r It Is really nothing of the
Ity, on the responsibility of the un-
ion officials. The loan was made,
say the bankers, on "the integrity
of 900,000 miners and their families."
and as far as the principle of the
thing was concerned the sunt might
sa well have been $6,000,000. They
point out that the United Mine
Workers are an organization which
though not incorporated, has a nor.'
mal income of half a million dollars
a month.
Such procedure, once started, may
ecotne the usual thing hereafteri
Labor unions may be able to borrow *’m'»l°>ln8 capitalists instead of light-
ing them.
—--♦- -■
THE STRAIN OF SPEED
In the form of money and property.
The other is the recognition of labor
power or man power itself as a form
of capital affording a basis for busi-
ness transactions.
The rising tide of nationalism makes
our task more delicate than ever
before.
Missionaries today must have pa-
tience and tact of a high order if'
they are to cooperate with the people ]
of mission lands in finding their'
high destiny in the great world bro-j
Some timid conservatives may find!therhood None but the best whom
Mr. I.ane
said:
"At our dinner to the President last
night he said he was not in sympathy
with any great preparedness—that
Europe would be mad and money-
poor by the end of the war.'1 Con-
tinuing, Mr. Lane added a few ob.
servations of his own.
“The army and navy are so set and
pact**
Bonar Law cannot officially announo*
the formation of the ministry until h»
is electee head of he Unionist party Mi
succeed Austen Chamberlain. It In
generally conceded that this electiqp
will be only a formality.
veterans of the Spanish war leaves
with pay to attend their annual en-
campment. And he treated this se-
riously, as if it were a matter of I
first importance.
“Yesterday we had a cabinet meet.)
ing," he wrote under date of Oct. 23, j kills is CHICKENS TO
1918. “All were present. The Presi-j FIND RING IN GIZZARM
dent was manifestly disturbed. For
some weeks we have spent our lime
at cabinet meetings lafgly in telling
Peoria. 111., Oct. 23.—When Henry
Waganer lost a $250 diamond ring
stories. Even at the meeting of a here, he reported the loss to the p#
week ago, the day the President sent
his reply to Germany—his second
note of the Paris series—we were
given no view of the note- which
was already in Lansing's hands and
transmitted at 4 o'clock. Germany
came back with an acceptance of the
Mars and Morpheus President's terms, a superficial ac-
since the appeal
!.
,we can find is adequate to meet this ,sterotype<1 standpat that , am
need. The task is more complex hopeUwh fls ,() movlB|t them
sort. It is rather a promise of in-itban evfir ^ "as before an<* * j to tthe wise, large and w holesome
dustrial cooperation, staillty and|IUOr? challenging and mote cleaily' b„ be wrote “They are governed
progtess. As the labor unions them-! n 8P®nsa e> J by red tape worse than any union,
selves become recognized capitalistic! appeal with fresli insistancejxhe chief of staff fell asleep at our
organizations in the realm of busL i to the friends of the board to kindle Itoday
... ... . , ... tile imaginations of the young people . „
they Will come to work with B 1 in one- ceptance at least
of their churches and homes to the...... _ . . .
Again he wrote his brother. Feb. to the cabinet yesterday,
greatness of this work, so that the!,. . ,
T1 .. .... ,, i-“• • “This was his opening
American Board can send to the f.eld | ..0n nMav We had one of the
some of our choicest men and women, ^ animated sessi()ns of the cabl.
Who shall fulfill their great mission' * , ______ . . . , ,
jnet I suppose has ever been held
to the world- j under this or anv other President. It
Dr. Patton said that when an Hron* oui ot a ^ry innocent w*
American board met |in Chicago jti0ll . of n)ine as to whether it was
I thirty years ago. the board had 634 tba, tbp wtvpB of Amwlc.n
.missionaries while now it has more' ___________ „ ________ _____
himself stand It? That is the ques.! , „0(| | consuls on leaving Germany had been
tioy that will Imve to be answered! ' ' !_ !stripped naked, given an acid bath
lice, who, on questioning him, learaeM
it had been missed shortly after
he had fed his chickens. They
vised hint to look to his chickens.
After killing eighteen of his flock
be found the missing gem in a gis-
sard. He has invited his neighbors
to a chicken dinner.
, TWO MEN TAKEN FROM TEN-
NESSEE JAIL AND SHOT
.
.. |
it has been demonstrated that man
can make machines that will travel
more than 200 miles an hour and1
stand the strain—but can the man
before we have sun chasers circling
TOLL OF THE HIGHWAY
jto detect writing on their flesh and
the earth in 24 hours, or anythnlg, _ [subjected to other indignities.
approximating that dream. | In spite of all the warnings andj “Lansing answered that it was
Lieut. Maughun, an army aviator, all of the moralizing, carelessness j true. Then 1 asked Houston about
making an average speed of 206'and reckless driving continue to ex. [the bread riots in New York. This
miles an hour in the first big race,act a terrible loll of death on trojled to a discussion of the great prob-j
at Detroit, lost consciousness several|highway. This is particularly lhe'lem which we had all been afraid to
times from the terrific speed with case on Sundays when more than j raise—why shouldn’t
which he sweat through the klr. He
"I do not know what to do. 1.
must ask your advice. I may have
made a mistake in not properly safe-
guarding what I said before. What
do you think should be done?"
"This long query was followed
by a long silence which I broke by
saying (hat Germany would do any
fling he said.
“What should I say?" he asked.
“That we would not treat until
Germany was across the ‘Rhine.’’
“This he thought impossible.’’
Mr. Lane himself became discour.
Nashville. Tenn., Oct. 20.—Ed Hart-
ley and son, George Hartley, Yrko
were recently convicted of manslaugh-
ter, were taken from the jail at Cam-
den at midnight last night and shot
to death in a vacant lot near the jaU.
They were. convicted in connectloa
with the killing of Connie Hartley, Ed
Hartley's nephew, in Benton county,
last February.
Miss Maurine Jones of Mineral
Wells is vf-.-iting at the home of Miss
Aline Holloway.
was overcome particularly when mak-
we send our
the usual number of automobiles arejshipR out with guns and convoys?
in operation and when we seem to‘Daniels said wo must not convoy—
ing turns at high speed. Other avi jhave more than the ordinary quota;that would be dangerous. (Think or
atom at Detroit admit the same,of inexperienced drivers. |» secretary of the navy telling of
weakness. It Is not a new phenonte-' The great need Ib to educate theidanger!) The President said the
non. and It is coining to be a prob- people to the danger trat confronts I country is not willing that wo should
iem to reckon with. jthem by somo striking illustrations. I take any risks of war. I said that
Fortunately the tainting spell usual-jl’1 niills and factories, safety devices!I pet no such sentiment out of the
lv lasts for but a few moments, and are saving many lives, but for some j country. This the President took as
the pilot regains command of his'reason it seems to be difficult to j a suggestion that we should workup
faculties in time to avoid accident.! keep down the number of faccidents;a propaganda of hatred against Gen
Fortunately, too, airplanes are being j on the highways. One of the rein many. Of course. I said I had no
made more nearly automatic so that] sons for this is that the congestion | such ideas but I felt that in a de-
|in the large cities grows greater j mocracy the people were entitled to
year by year, while the number of know the factst. McAdoo. Houston
the human factor assumes less lm-|
portance. But flying machines can
never fly altogether of themselves,
and with their Increasing speed there
is bound to be this Increasing peril
to nerves never made to stand such
strain Man is net yet a super-
man.
ROYSE CITY MAN DIES AS
RESULT OF INJURIES IN FALL
Dnllus. Texas, Oct. 24.—'Thomas B.
Houset. age 32, of Royse City, died at
a hospital bera this morning. He was
injured when he tell from the balcony
at a rooming houee last night. It In
thought that he walked on the balcony
In hit steep. No ene saw him fall-
vehicles increases at the same time.
It cannot be said trat the police
are indifferent, because they are con-
stantly engaged in improving and
modernizing the traffic rules. One
of teh troubles no doubt is the ten-
dency to h«Bte no the part of every-
body, in machines and afoot.
The "Stop, Look and Listen” signs
at railway crossings did a great
deal of good in their way and in
their day. Poatihly some clever
person will Invent a caption that
will be just as effective for automo-
biles bn the public highways/
— .....«■.——
t««T 'O* PRINTIN'! AT HCRALf
and Redfieid joined me. The Presi-
dent turned on them bitterly, espfv
daily on McAdoo, and reproached all
of us with appealing to the spirit of
■code duello.' We could not get the
idea out of hla head that we were
bent on pushing the country into
war. Houston talked of resigning
after the meeting. McAdoo will—
within a year, I believe. I tried to
smooth them down by recalling our
past experiences with the President.
We had to push and posh to get him
to take any forward stop. He comes
out every night hut he is slower
then a glacier—and things are very
disagreeable whenever anything baa
HOT DRINKS
—We are now serving Hot Drinks of various kinds, to
meet the winter demand. Also Cold Drinks of every de-
scription.
CANDIES
—Fancy Boxed Candies at a low price. Fresh Home
Made Candies that please the most particular.
FRUITS
—Apples, Oranges, Bananas, Grapes, Cocoanuts and
everthing in the Fresh Fruit Line.
SMOKES
—Cigars, Cigarettes, Tobaccos, Pipes, Etc., Etc.
I
I
WALTER BROWDER’S CANDY
KITCHEN
KJJT SEDB SqUARI
.............
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The Weekly Herald (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 26, 1922, newspaper, October 26, 1922; Weatherford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth585116/m1/3/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .