The Mart Herald (Mart, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, May 27, 1921 Page: 4 of 8
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THE MART HERALD. FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1921
EX-
medical practice into
•»
. or
Idle ossip which fruit* in base
new
3968.
to
that
who
St., Mart, say*:
we humbly salute
the
uneon-
fidelity!
earth, bu* people will
make
x27c adv
<»
>troy.
xtfc
ed in mistrust.
idepression, he added.
absolutely good.
xtfc
children
val-
x28c
stocks
ing said.
Our boys and girls can't start
ever kick* himself?
week.
er
H
Earm work, lawn mowing and
going to meeting is the*order of
the day in and about Mart this
him boost it.
bune.
Putting Your Town First.
The patriotic citizen is f
one who puts his home town
ahead of all others.
He trades with his neighbors
which may appear in the columna
tf The Harald will be gladly corrected
■pon being brought to the attention of
be management.
Price 11.50 Per Year
Natke to the Pabhc.
JLay error or *
publish
of < ‘
> our
The Feast of Taberna-
record
is ill urn i-
If there is anything sweeter
than the sweet girl graduate, it
must be the June bride.
No. 5850.
Extension No.
wjunelO
Suspect your
the remedy
Ask your
A NEW ONE. TEACHING
TYPEWRITING BY MUSIC
<>verv
seasons
First National Bank,
F. & M. National Rank.
First State Rank.
w27 <127-27-1-2<
FORDS FOR SALE.
One self-starter, 5 passenger.
One '19 model, 5 passenger.
One '16 model, 5 passenger.
Those cars are in good shape
with good casings. Will sell or
trade. See us for bargains.
COOPER BROS.
at Cooper’s Barn.
the , life.
Idle ossip which fruits in base
j slander poisons everything it
; touches. James well says that |
The Sabbath.
When are holy days happy
i are con-
Let
The Herald is ' about
hard work, conservation,
his home in the poorest town on ing one another, they reinforced
. ‘ ”1 make a their fellows in
beaten path to his door to hear fashion.
Waco News-Tn-
The consideration shown
Gov. Neff to his aged mother.1
"Does any state claim to have
• originated razor-back hogs?
“Is the valley of the Ubedam
river good farming land?"
Harding and the hull is now at Ticonde-
roga.
Klinik I NOTICE OF CHARTER
TENSION.
THE MART HERALD.
J. L. SPENCER, Editor and Publisher i
CHAS. R. YANCEY, Associate Editor
<A«T TEXAS
•wtared at the Post Office at Mart,
laxaa, aa 2nd claas mall matter.
Published every Friday.
masters of the first, second and
i third class who were regular
appointed and confirmed by the
senate, such ruling to stand for
the term for which they were
appointed.
.......-...... i a ■ —.
Why is it that a chronic kick-
Christianity reconstruction times.
We ne< ‘ '
I A Run on a Bank with Some
Lemons.
We have rarely seen ]
so stirred as it was i
when hundreds of people
—- -o----
It has been well said that one
The Medizinische
quotes from a letter in the Vien-1
A chair made from a rib of
one of the first American war- SPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK
One 1918 Ford touring, good;
$260.
One Dort, good as new; $476.
One new Overland Four, $850.
One Dodge touring, same as
new; $1,000.
These cars
No junk.
WALTER DUNN
———• -o- ■ • ■■. ■
Startling Facta.
65,000 girls disappeared
year in the United States,
yet some parents continue
The Tyler Commercial Col-
lege of Tyler, Texas, in line
with the progressive policy that
has made it the largest business
college in America, recently con-
ducted some experimental tests
with music in their typewriting
classes, and found the results
so gratifying after thorough
and exhaustive trials that they
have adopted it as their regular
method of teaching.
At first glance it seems al-
most laughable to combine
music with the clatter of a
typewriter, in a business insti-
tution. But a little study makes
the remarkable results that
have been obtained perfectly
clear. Which typist will do the
most work and the best work?
The one who writes spasmodic-
ally, in jumps and starts, who
The debt of this country is
now $24,000,000,060. The ratio
between the per capita debt and
the per capita wealth is about
the same, as it was at the end
of the Civil war. At that time
the per capita debt was $68 and
(Jefferson Davis’ birthday) are
legal holidays, and the
signed banks of Mart will
. Our cus-
tomers and friends are request-
doing to give them the per < apita debt is now $223 and
i^? .per capita wealth $2,322.
J. V. ROGERS
General Blacksmithing and Re-
pair Work—Horseshoeing
Solicits your patronage
Old Wininger Stand—South
Pearl Street
WHEN EVERY MOVE HURTS
Lame every morning, achy
and stiff all day. worse when it’s
damp or chilly?
kidneys and try
your neighbors cse.
neighbor!
The famous railroad car in
which the armistice was signed
> ar-
hav? been so loosely kest as to
be largely unreliable, then C..
editorial fraternity is quite jus-
tified in refusing to publish the '
names of alleged draft evadors
until information can be sup-
plier from a source that is de-
pendable.
It is better to let 100 guilty
men escape than to publicly hu-
miliate .one innocent veteran.
** \
I
Dallas ,ones?—All holy days
recently nected with great events.
.•h con-1 us not forget the splendid mem-
gregated at one of the largest ories they should recall to
“ j--there by .minds. 7 1 T_‘
withdraw cles reminded the Israelites of
rumors (kid's care for them ..
circulated over the days in the wilderness.
to the effect that the bank, anniversaries i
•■Wrongest financial i days recall deeds
n/14 nnln iw _1 V
btion of any person, firm or corpora- but in Texas, was likely to fail.. great men whom we delight to
... ... Tk. ...... .... — _____ -I___I. '•
ed the same day, however, and
the next i
were normal. We refer to this
incident to draw two or three
lessons, which may find applica-
• tion in almost every phase of
Rented to President Harding by
•rs. The Revenge
was sunk in Lake Champlain
by the British in 1776. In 190
prone,
Treasury Department
Office of Comptroller of the
Currency
Washington, May 7, 1921.
Whereas, by satisfactory evi-
dence presented to the under-
signed, it has been made to ap-
pear that “The First National
Bank of Mart,” in the town of
Mart in the County of McLen-
nan and State of Texas, has
complied with all the provisions
of the Act of Congress “to en-
able National Ranking Associa-
tions to extend their corporate
existence, and for other purpos-
es,” approved July 12, 1882;
Now, therefore, I, Thomas P.
Kane, Acting Comptroller of
the Currency, do hereby certi-
fy that "The First National
Bank of Mart” in the town of
Mart, in the County of McLen-
nan and State of Texas, is auth-
orized to have succession for
the period specified in its
amended articles of association:
namely, until close of business
on May 7, 1941.
In testimony whereof witness
my hand and seal of office this
.seventh day of May, 1921.
(Seal.) T. P. Kane,
Acting Comptroller of the
will honor the heroes who have _o_„
• lessons
f the the children of the world in
operation and confidence in
' another.—Baptist Standard.
cause of Christ, and we wo
be guided with new strength to I
' win grander victories for God.
Robt. S. MacArthur.
Questions for Mr. Edison.
wrong and turn out right. What the per capita wealth $719. The going to meeting is the*order of
are you doi— *■—*“ "— — ’* * ** * “ * * ------
right sta«?
A nature’ist pleads with wo
men to cea^v wearing furs dur-
ing the summer at least, lie-
cause fur-bearing animals are
being destroyed so rapidly that
in 30 years there will be practi-
cally none left.
CLASSIFIED ADS
courses of training by
pondence. Positions
for all graduates. Write
large free catalogue.
Name
na Allgemeine Zeitung, written I
by an Austrian physician who
has recently returned from
Russia. He says that the final ,
step in the transformation of,
medical practice into a state
function has been taken recent-
ly by the soviet governmnt. This
prohibits private practice by
physicians. This was the last
, private business still permitted,
as arrangements had to be made
for free dispensaries at avail-
able points. The physicians
living near the dispensaries are
given charge of them, at a fixed
salary. The sanitariums and
private hospitals had been taken
early for the purpose, retaining
their former proprietors as di-
rctors. The writer adds, “The
middle classes whose fate in all
socialistic movements is to be
ground between the millstones
of capital and labor, have sim-
ply been ground out of existence
or crushed down into the pro-
letariat. The forbidding of pri-
vate practice now consequently
has scarcely any significance for
the physicians of Russia.”
-
Honor the Fallen.
May 30 is Decoration day.
Again the American people
win nonor me neroes woo nave i .,
fought and died for their coun-1 ‘ barter
try. I ,
It will bring sorrow and sad-laav
ness to a nation of people, and |
' painful memories to many'
hearts. But it is a sacred duty |
wo owe to those who have made,
the great sacrifice. It is a priv-
ilege to those who have benefit-
ted through the misfortunes of
FRESH MILCH COWS for sale
or trade, at Cooper Bros,’ Ram.
x28c
FOR SALE—Typew iter rib-
bons and carbon paper at Herald
office. Let us supply your
needs. xtfc
writes one easy, familiar word
at “ninety miles an hour" and
has to slow down to pick out
the next word because it isn’t
easy, striking one letter hard
and the next one light because
he writes in spurts, or the ty-
pist who write easily along at
a steady, regular, constant
speed, striking all letters exact-
ly alike, and not slowing down
for difficult words because he
has learned to maintain a con-
stant speed. It is obvious that
the typist who has a regular,
1 even touch will the fastess
and the most accurate. And
the best known way to develop
this regular, even touch »s to
start the student in with music,
having him write in time to the
music, which can be fast or slow
in accordance with the ability of
the class. Continued practice
with the phonograph fixes the
habit of regular, rythmic writ-
ing, which means Speed and
Accuracy.
The Tyler Commercial Col-
, lege has adopted this system of
teaching typewriting because
they have found it to lie the
liest. This institution has al-
ways employed only the most
modern and up-to-date methods
in all departments of the stud-
ents’ work. They give the most
Thorough, Complete and Prac-
tical courses of Rookkeeping,
Shorthand and Typewriting,
Telegraphy, Cotton Classing
and Business Administration
and Finance that can be had, in
Half the Time and at Half the
Cost of similar courses in other
schools, and also offer valuable
corres-
secured
for
FOR SALE—First year Kasch
cotton seed, per bu. $1.00—
culled. Second year seed 50c
per bushel. J. P. Christian,
Mart R. 3. w!2p
(Christianity shall be adjusted to
’ men,
be adjusted to
Appendicitis: A modern pain. I
costing about $200 more than
jt’ne old-fashioned stomach ache.1
-•Foolish Dictionary.
department have been found t<o
be so unreliable the press of the
country hesitates to publish, ,
them until the record of each mot he r
man has I
If the records of the war de-1
partment and the draft boards
th* will be made' to disturb post-: there in metheglin?.
fend by the mail order houses, tame, is full of deadly poison..
He takes pride in the schools Individuals and institutions suf-1
and the churches. fer unjustly from evil reports.;
He tells every prospector that The world would la* spared
AB 1 • « BAX AB AB —A A>B AM 4 Lx AB Lb AAAbL wb AB AB «BB 1 AB I aba. L. ab mb — a a
God ever made. take heed to our ways that we
He boosts each new enter- sin not with our tongues,
prise that is opened up and al-
ways declares that there is wonderful way, the spirit of
room for more.
No man ought to live in
place unless he thought
place was the best location be
neath the sun.
. Society is founded
faith. Because men have
confidence in one another, great
financial, social and religious
The fallen institutions are made possible.
We were convinced, too, of
the ability of our existing finan-
yet in spite of'the <'»«! system to meet
when a
and talk hard times and to .
question the honesty of all usual, the bank remained
those around him. we never go until 6 o'clock, and by that time
back to have another conver.-a- the deposit
tion with that fellow.
Hard times come to
community; there are
wl
fid heart to see the sunshine.
But there is something so
able about the citizen who talks
of the silver lining to the clouds
that he can always have a crowd tional forces that
gathered about him. <o-operation. We have won
Someone has said something great victories in the Lord’s
similar to this, hut we are go- cause because everywhere our
ing to say it anyway: The man comrades stood together. In-
who is an optimist might make stead of criticising and malign-
in a
co-
Ioperation. As soon as the run
a j began the clearing house, repre-
that senting every bank in the city,
gave out a statement that the
He reflects on other banks of the city would
his intelligence when he kicks, reinforce in every way possible
because he has full freedom to the bank involved. In addition
go where he pleases. Men who to this the Federal Reserve
are worth something to a com- bank announced that it had
munity, to society, to civiliza- $80,000,000 in cash on hand to
tion, are the ones who have meet any emergency that might holy day; do not make it a holi-
faith in those around them and arise, and sent over nearly $2.- day, or work day.
who find that which is com- 000,000 in cash, although addi- What are happy days holy
ones?—When they are free
from wrong. A day may seem
to have been a happy one to a
boy or girl who has spent it in
making others miserable. Per-
haps he has merely quarreled
over a game, said angry words
which have been soon forgotten,
but that burst of temper has
marred the day.
Birthdays and Christmas
days are happy days, but if they
have been filled with selfishness,
if we have thought all the time
only of ourselves, then they
have not been holy days,
are apt to forget to whom we
owe our good times.
The bank came out I day m
in their
Great
and public hoii-
of sacrifice
birthdays of
who find that which is com- 000,000 in cash, although addi-
mendable in their town, rather tional funds were iwt needed,
than that to fall out with. A number of individuals and
When we visit a city the in- corporations each mad? deposits
dividual who wins our respect of $50,000. One great business
and friendship is the one who man who did not have an ac-
begins to tell us about all the count with the bank deposited
good things in that city. The $100,000. The response of the
more enthusiastic he become, business interests of this city,
the better we like him. But the practical expression of the
fellow begins to knock Dallas spirit, was thrilling. In-
hard times and to stead of closing at 3 o’clock as
the honesty of all usual, the bank remained open
en sons.
No word that we may utter,
no act that we may perform,.. - , , .
will add to or detract from the P1® °Pen Lnr business,
nobility of their rent service to 1,lnd
I their country. I1*” to their arrangements
Rut we may be true to our-:at‘cor<^J!8'y; .. .. . _ .
selves, to our country, and to
our God, by reverently com-
memorating the noblest act ofj
"‘’ mankind—the sacrifice of life
that home and country may be
, , , '*?" 1,111 a preserved and that others mav
holy when there has o;en , Hvp and progper
nornitinn (./wl r no ; .. • - .. . • .
. .. , ... , Heroes of all American wars!
of all good gifts. Innocent j() humility and sadness of
pleasure good temper, a spirit I heart> in ide and ] of
of unselfishness and gratitude • vour achievements. in ‘
will consecrate any day.—I J. -
Van Ness.
That Flacker Lint.
Including the names of
iant ex-service men among the
list of slackers leads unbiased
people to suspect that the per-:
<ons who kept the records
should head that list.
The lists sent out by the war
We saw revealed, too,
rr, days
spared when you put them to their
t uses. This is the whole
secret. I don’t think you can
get happiness out of anything
unless you put it to its proper
use. How did Jesus use the
Sabbath? Look at our Scrip-
ture passages. He went to
church. He helped the church.
He taught the church. He went
for a walk in the cornfields or
by the sea, on His errands of
mercy. He healed the sick. lie
kept and used the day for God
for the doing of good.
God made the Sabbath to be a
Tn humility and
j heart, in pride and
achievements. in our
knowledge that heaven is a fit-1 -
ting abode for all real heroes, • Mrs. Bettie Tucker, 409 Smyth
we humbly salute the uncon- Mart, says: "I have taken
querable spirit of vour valor and D°an 8 Kidney Pills for rheu-
- matic trouble with splendid re-
sults. I wish everyone who suf-
| fers from rheumatic trouble
would try Doan’s. They would
then see how quickly they
would be relieved of those pains
that cut like a knife through
• their bodies. Never have I
j known Doan’s Kidney Pills to
I fail in giving splendid results
to those who have taken them.
I It is a pleasure to endorse a
medicine that has such merit as
i Doan’s Kidney Pills have.”
j 60c, at all dealers. F’oster-
N.
adv WANTED—Your car for stor-
age at Green’s Garage.
Play at Kirk.
There will be a play given by
the people of the Kirk com-
munity on Friday night, May
27, at the Kirk Tabernacle at 8
o’clock, benefit Kirk cemetery.
others. - Admission 15 and 25c. w27p
A nation is only as great as 1 .
its people, and the record of _ . f®*1®** . ..
America's greatness is illumi- . Monday, May 30th (Memoi-
nated by the graves of her fall-'1 I aa‘ ^,.ll1a^uiin.a
under-
not
s of t<he day had ex-
ceeded the withdrawal more
than half a million dollars, and
there was so much money on
hen it takes a stout and hop1- hand it could not all be put in
"■ the vaults. ' '..
like- )}f the ordeal stronger than ev-lno recognition of God. the Giver |
I', . 4* 11 I •• i ft u 9 T n< nt
We covet for our denomina-
same spirit of
We have
the
every wh<>re
stood together.
Bearing the Burden of Others
If any one is weak that one's
weakness is the burden which ■
we are to help him to bear. His
infirmity is his claim upon our
greater strength. As we would
wish to lift a weight that had !war basis until the
fallen upon a brother and was I
crushing out his life, so shall we ’
in the spirit of Christ run to his
rescue when temptation is near,
when disappointment has come,
and sorrow has taken up its I
abode in his heart. We need
heart’s large enough and true
enough to feel every brother's
sorrow, hands strong enough to
aid. and words kind enough to
cheer the weakest saint in. life’s
battle. Every day men.' are
tempted to cheat and to Me, to
sell their honor, their manhood,
their religion, for gain. Who
may look coldly on his tempted
| brother? Tomorrow he, him-
js’elf, may be that tempted and
. . . ' !na i tailing brother. Did we but help
large banks alike ' - - - - - •
a conquering
That spirit will win
anywhere in the world. The
lack of it will hurt everything.
We had a demonstration, too,
f faith in a great institution,
last Mr. Cullen Thomas, who. in a
and brief talk in the bank, allayed
in_ the fears of all who heard him
different to’ tendencies that de- saal that all institutions are
stroy. The church, the school l”,'lt <»» f'bth a”d are maintain-
and the state fight against vice *‘d by faith,
and corruption. The funda- on faith,
mental warnings however,
should first be received by the
child in the home. 72.„ .
boys outnumber the fallen girls.
The parent can not shirk respon-
sibility. and yet in spite of the <'i«l system to meet emergen-
saving influences of home and 'Again and again, through
state, they are inadequate with- ‘he trying days of the war and
out the leaven of Christianity reconstruction times, we have
and common sense. We need been saved from panics by the
to make proper estimate of real federal
values in life and then trod the banks
path
ness.
that brings hell on earth
brings more than war. The‘The children of the Kingdom;
saving of the younger genera- may learn some lessons from
tion is a first obligation of the , the children of the world in co- i
present one. operation and confidence in one!
has been transported to the
my museum in the Invalides.
i and cabinet
are arranged in it exactly as
they stood on the morning of
Nov. 11, 1918.
wag tremendous, Mr. 1
|said, and almost beyond human
--------*:— Measured in dol-
rv hund’re.ls’wouhl be’sav’i to the |j. l300.L00.?C
we wo t
of the United States.
“But we i
recuperation.
expect normal conditions
!there is further progress
While Mr. Edison is answer- ] (.an nof be (]on<> by extreme leg- above the Creator
riuest ions a former wants to
ask him a few.
of furnished the following list:
There is sometimes ap- T
to discredit one’s parents as be- hi nd* he raised them on?
ing out of date. Ixive is kind,
and the command to "I
It must be brought ’
by productive energy,1
„, time
Did Carter really make more al|d patience.”
When retail stocks become
i depleted, as there is every rea-•
grass a great and nf replacement will be given to
mt- ii rinu ,, .. . . the jobber and t *
been carefully traced. •" ’th *t the promise of reward.’ ’’What scientific phenomena | anf| there undoubtedly will be
The postoffice department lazy Jorances
has announced that no attempt . *
by
whose death occurred last week questions a farmer wants to jglation.
at the age of 91, is a worthy ex- him a few. The Herald is about I
ample to our young people
Texas. T ... i'_ „t.
parent in our day a disposition na’R than he could stack on the
i I ______*______________
.. 7 ’.‘...I, "Was the Johnson that start- :son fo t^lieve they will, orders'
Honor thy ‘ ‘I Johnson „ „ ' /* ,, K,ra,
carries K°°d man ? : (be jobber and manufacturer,
"What scientific phenomena jan<j there undoubtedly will be a II(V 1IIUM.UII1 ...
i* appeurance of revival of business, Mr. Hard- The table, chairs
"What per cent of alcohol is
World Recovering From War
While he believed America
can not return to a strictly pre-
world re-
covers from the last war, such
■conditions are rapidly approach-
ing, W. P. G. Harding, governor
of the federal reserve board,
'told members of the Oklahoma
Bankers’ association this week.
Stimulation of foreign trade
would be a material factor in
bringing about sataisfactory ' Miiburn Co" Mf:rs.'. ‘ Buffalo,’
conditions, he thought. ,y
Charges of profiteering; ’
against the Federal Reserve
banks, Mr. Harding said, were
"born of ignorance and conceiv-, ships’the Revenge "is" to be pre-'
ed in mistrust.” The country-- --
needs no longer to fear financial fellow publishe
The cost of destruction and
reserve eyatem. Snu-f t-;diing"i;r..t’her’"i7i(i'we'but heip Was,e < 1,y M*? *ar nu^-d’from’l'h^ lake'll
e. in lit- and then trod the "a"*« and large lianks alike. admoniHh our weak broth-
1 of safety, dutv and happi- where properly managed, have Lrg jn 1hf, irit of Hjm whf) said, and a
. War is not the only thing bnek of them the entire finan- for fhe fainting Peter |conception.
brings hell on earth. SIN ‘Jal strength of our country, jl 1It;(1 r . wnilH Im> lars, it wo
uld 1000,000, greater than the wealth of our big problems is “whether
are heading toward rneet the requirements of
. We should not Or shall man L_
until meet the requirements of God."
. . t°" In our selfishness we are
ward restoring this wealth. This to place the will of the creature
banks, many drawn
curiosity, others to
their deposits. Wild
• had been
dty
JLay «rror or on«ou« reflection one of the ( '
the charecte., standing or repu- institutions, not only in Dalias, ( and heroism
The run on the bank was check- honor.
What chances for enjoyment
morning conditions (and friendship holy days bring i
Take the Sabbath day alone.
Think of its opportunities for
worship and good times at
church and Sunday school, and
among friends at home. Think
of the rest it brings to the
weary. Of what it has done
.through th<- centuries for tile
in spite of the inducements of-I the tongue, which no man can best things of life. No one can
|ever sum up what the world
owes its Sabbaths.
Holy days are happy
t them to
he lives among the best people \ much anguish if all of us would right
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Spencer, J. L. The Mart Herald (Mart, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, May 27, 1921, newspaper, May 27, 1921; Mart, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1239657/m1/4/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .