The Nocona News. (Nocona, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1922 Page: 6 of 8
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WATSON.
ns'bimi
For
One
M
rpEDERAL JUDGE WILKERSON In
" Chicago formally entered the tem-
porary injunction obtained by Attor-
ney Genera' Daugherty against the
railway shopmen, having sustained It
on all points. The proceedings were
perfunctory ano the attorneys for the
union did not concern themselves
with the form of the order. They
said they hoped to be permitted to
take the case direct to the Supreme
court of the United States on appeal.
QOME twenty the..-and veterans of
vJ the Civil war assembled In D :
.doilies, la,. fo • the fifty-sixth nati "I; ■
encampment >. the Grund Army of the
Republic. On Wednesday th
fourths of t’.es • grizzled warriors, es-
corted by two re rlments of the re re-
lur army, marched in >. the yearly
parade an event that grows mere
and more pathetic as the yean ■
They were revie' , ed by their com
nmnder-ln-i I '• -f I!< S. Pilcher, an 1
by Hanford M::cN!der. national co: i-
mender of ’ e American Ix*glon.
tragedy marked the occasion.
Maekenhausen of White Bear Lake.
Minn., dropped deml after two hours
of marching. .Tmk'o .1. W. Willett f
Tnmn. la., was de -ted commander -In.
ehlef for the coming year.
’T'HOMAS E. WATSON. I nite I
States senator from Georgia, one
of the most I! ry pol't! al figtree
the time, tiled suddenly of
Tuesday In Wa Idngton. For ' i
years he was active in state and na-
tional polities, ami he was the Populist
nominee !'or vice president In ISttt and
for ITes'.i.nt in tlhit. The PoptlH-n
elc'trd b!"i to the house of repre-
sentatives ’a I'bl. .-'id In he was
elected se at' ". !•■' v.as opposed to
Woodrow V 'Isoii and Ids policies and
wits espec'." il.> against the Leagut of
Nations
'T'llE grand jury In Million. I!!..,
A which investigated the Herrin coal
mine massacre. Indicted 70 men for
participation in the outrage, 44 of
them for murder. All of the latter
group have been put under arrest, and
of the total 20 are still at large. Eight
of those accused of murder are held
without ball. The others were re-
leased on bonds, which were furnished
by the leading citizens of Marion.
The defense of the men. ns already
outlined by their lawyers, will be, In
brief, that this Is n “private persecu-
tion by a political boss and a labor-
hating organization." the allusion be-
ing to Attorney General Brundage and |
the Illinois Chamber of Commerce.
—
LISTED BELOW ARE A FEW OF THOSE
Let us Prove our Claims
ENCLOS-
ENVELOPE
BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENTS; WEDDING STATIONERY;
URES; SALEt BILLS; HAND BILL; PRICE LISTS; ADMISSION TICKETS; EN-
VELOPES; BUSINESS TICKETS; WINDOW CARDS; TIME CARDS; LETTER
HEADS; LEAFLETS; LABELS; STATEMENTS; BILL HEADS; CATALOGUES:
MILK TICKETS; MEAL TICKETS; SHIPPING TAGS; ANNOUNCEMENTS; IN-
VITATIONS; CALLING CARDS; CIRCULARS; COUPONS; CHECKS; POSTERS;
BLOTTERS; LEGAL BLANKS; FOLDERS; MENU CARDS; PLACARDS; RE-
CEIPTS; DODGERS; PROGRAMS, IN FACT ANYTHING THAT IS PRINTED.
Leases; Assignment of Oil and Gas Leases; Royalty Contracts; Warranty Deeds,
Two Forms, with or without Vendor’s Liens; Vendor’s Lien Notes; Deeds of Trust;
i
I
us.
tha we put up right in Nocona to show.
Anything that is printed—we can put up right. ..And just because your job is out
of the ordinary run, is no reason for sending your work out of town before seeing
..The chanees are about ten to one that we hare samples of the same work
Things we Print and Print Eight.
to your Entire Satisfaction.
Modern Equipment—QuickC Service—Pest Quality—Satisfied Patrons.
Come and see our samples. We have the goodsjand^work to show you.
rous other things necessary for the office.
Release of Vendor’s Lien; Rental Contracts; Typewriter Papers; Typewriter Rib-
acts; Typewriter Papers; Typewriter Rib bons; Adding Machine Paper; adn nume
Prompt, Careful and Efficient Attcr.ticn giun to tvcry detail. Ccuitecns treatmint ana every ic-
c<mmodation possible giun ard exttrdtd to all. lit us estimate the cost of your work. •
We have in stock: Stock Certificates; Form 88 Producers Special Oil and Gas
sizes, what the public in our County aro
Subscribe today.
Si’LNS, railway ofli-
i. »-ho was appoint-
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE is
taken internally nml acts through the
Blood on the Mm-ens Surfaces of the
But it
Mille-, ■>
“me'
contra v.
and
xtf
tion and restoring normal conditions.
All druggists, Cb-cilnr: free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo Ohio.
inched tall. She has a vivacious ir..”
ner ana Keen mind cnai g;v. ner o»
He then as . d ; elded personality.
to
eulty, by loans from the American
people, who had nu reason to expect
that they would not be repaid.
Cold in the Head”
She was
in St. Louis, has dark brown
up, we may not tell of much of the
meanness that is going on, but we
will try to tell you about the things
Keep Up With Your Home Town By that are likely to make our com-
; Subscribing For The Nocona News, munity better.
As a rule it takes long hard work ;
to get to the tep in pictures.
He i was easy
also drew attention to the American I beautiful
suspicion that if the loans were for-
given the money ’bus released might
lie used In new wars.
If you recieve a sample copy of
’• The Nocona News, it is an invita-
tion for you to subscribe. Send us
I ijpirwrucr paper, any size iu dui. - , .
.vt.. 1 only 1* an“ 50c ‘or • w“Ole years
■ you. Copy papers, news, onion skin, ' T
• and manila. Blotters and mann- reading of home people doings, of
[ colored. Envelopes of all
High grade stationery, linen
1 bond.—At The News office.
System, thus reducing the inflamrna- ■
for Patey Ruth
*c vent ten-ycar-old
star, who recent y won a
She was visi'.rg tie.’ parents in Cali-
fornia whr.:: a c.rec’or saw her at the
beach md talc’ I er be wanted her ,n
a photoplay. She worked in that pic-
ture. then •.••ar’ *• another rtudio,
/^ONRAD E.
A-1 einl of Ch’_____ _____ ..... ____
ed federal fuel distributor under the handed in her photograph and prompt-
act passed by congress, started In by ■ tJ°C another engagement,
warning the various states that hi- , born
powers do not extend to coal mined j hair, brown eyes and is 5 feet 2,/f
and sold within a given state and inches tall. She has a vivacious
their officials must look after that
end of the proposition,
eight leading ra!! "ay executives
serve as an advisory committee in the ! —
fuel transportation emergency and '
named 13 prominent business men as i '
members of an advisory committee for I lg „n acute ()f Xasal Catarrh!
industry, to keep in touch with the . Those subject t ■ frequent "colds in '
distribution of fuel supplies for In-' the head" will nnd that the use of
dustries in their respective districts. | HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE will!
Large Industrial consumers are asked j build up the System cleanse the Blood
to eonfliK
der present conditions
current needs ns safety permits;
suspend accumulation of advance
Stocks of coal until the present emer-
gency pressure on production Is re-
lieved; to unload coni cars immedi-
ately and return them to service and
to promptly furnish material required
for new railroad equipment or repairs.
Typewriter Ribbons for sale at1
The News office. Also carbon paper,
both 8 1-2 x 11 and 8 1-2 x 14.
dii-iriiii consumers are asked , ''ui'.G up iht- S.vs.vu . rirunse liie Biisjil ; Typewrlter PaPer> any Size to suit j
i<* their purchuscs of coal un- i J’nd render them h"-s Jhtble to colds. ; you. Copy papers, news, onion skin,
tent conditions as closely to ‘ KePoated attacks f Acute Catarrh ! and manila. ]
......'rrnii!s " HALL:S CA?LtRHCMEDICINE Is ' co,ored' Envelopes
the
The Nocona News
I
NOCONA, TEXAS
TELEPHONE 87
A (’CORDING
4 * jourt'r*
Valera
Irish re ••
succeeded hit-*
tn the Freeman's |
of D'lhlln, Enmon do |
■ 1 •’•'•n'ed ns leader of t .e j
end Liam Lynch In; • |
The newspa' e" ••••.•»
this dcstro’ s h'”»e of a rational |>eace
as Lynr* Is driving Ids followers to
firht to t’ '• ’ Ittnr end. The re'c'’, j
ilcnns me 'eevlnr up their guerrilla
carfare, but the Free Staters i”v
steadily rloen’n- them np. evpcIaHy
now tn Cnur.t" Kerrt.
“The Home of Good Printing”
NEWS REVIEW Or
CURRENT EVENTS
' Io have free passage through them.
KING CONSTINTINE OUSTED
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
i
of Thrace
.n
■4U
Bulgaria is an agricultural country
and ; v.itlimit her participation
a,• nt ntriiltiuf 11or Intopoutu ”
IV-
railway, i
< ’oncressmnn Bnr-
■ a member of the
" *s In London, and
led by prominent
the
pointed out thnt
Xnwrlra wore not
•’’owing treasury
I sending of reinforcements to Thrace.
o
Allies Ready to Permit Turkey to
Regain Her Former Terri-
tory in Europe.
lilt gill ill Hill HF, <111(1 (
i | can take Constantinople.
Ims
At the
de-
the I
D
the government,
pected, came on schedule time,
troops that hn/1 returned from
scene of disaster In Anatolia
Greek Army Compel* Him to Abdi-
cate and Declare* for War to
Keep Thrace—Federal Fuel Die-
trlbiitor Spens Get* Bu*y—
Death of Senator Watson.
/CONCILIATION and concession were
Vi the order of the day in the Near
East. — — ...------ .
a mandate to deni with Kemal. The
stipulation of the allies was that the
Dardanelles, the Sea of Marmora and
the Bosporus must remain free and
open to all nations. The British also
Insisted that the neutral zone, which
embraces the straits ami Constanti-
nople. must not be Inxadcd by the
Nationalists during the peace negotia-
tion*.
Early In the week Kemal gave a
long Interview to a correspondent of
the Chicago Tribune. In which he snld
thnt he had no desire to provoke hos-
tilities with Great Britain, but that
he Insisted on complete lmle|»endonce
Of the Turkish empire and complete
freedom of the strait- to nil nations.
Ho snld Turkey Imd mi wish to for-
tify the Dardanelles, tint thnt she
must control the Sen Marmora and
the Bosporus to secure the safety of
her capita!—Constantinople, on Wed
EVOLT by the Greek army against
which was ex ,
The
the '
and •
were concentrated In the archipelago '
Islands rebelled and, using battleships
and destroyers as transports, sailed to |
the mainland and moved on Athens :
under the leadership of regular olll- I
j cers of the army and navy. Military j
airplanes dropped In Athens procin- i
motions demanding the abdication of ,
; King Constantine, the formation of a I
' ministry friendly to the allies and the ,
dare that they look with favor upoh
the desire of Turkey to recover Thrace
Bp to the Marltza river, and Adrian-
ople." It was even Intimated thnt
Russia would be admitted to the con- I
and M. Franklin-Bouillon. ' she would not recognize “any decision
agree- j concerning the Turkish straits taken
or arrived
BEAT BRITAIN has offered to |
pay $."i0.0fl0 000 of interest due I
the United States, and the World war
.... ... .... debt funding commission has been ]
all British forces en route be recalled ' considering the propo-illiom
and the British shall not fortify the into of 5 per cent the Interest due In
the Nationalists . the next two Im’n'lrients. October 15
and November 1
000. but the fm •'
I 1
■ ’ part
Ji Dimitri Stancloff,
I ' to England, denies this. “Bulgaria is
J i firmly resolved to avoid participation
x In flnv tnlllfnrv nnflrxn ** onLl Kz»
knew of no neutral zone. To the
French he explained that he had oc-
cupied these places because the Brit- '
! Ish had disregarded the neutrality of
! th(> straits by permitting the Greeks
neutral zone: that
■ball occupy Thrnce before the confer- , and November 1 ’mints to Siri.OOO.-
e*ce, at which Russia. I’krnlnln and ’***. but the fm ■' law authorizes a
an countries bordering on the Blnck ( rate of 4’, per er', so It Is suggest-
ed that the (WIMM>000 he paid Or.
tol-er 15 nml a ’’usiments lie worlfed
nut with Sir Robert Horne, who Is
'•omlng over so.
ton of Ohio, w‘
funding", •minis
nt n lum hism : -
financiers he sn' nlninly that
United S’ntes e- 's- t«»d Great Britain
to pay In full,
the |onn« mmle
elven out of nr
hut were raised s.. etlmes,with dlffi-
Terence, nnd M.
who last year negotiated an
ment between the Nationalists i
the French, was sent to Smyrna with ' at against her interests.'
■
’ I n <a« tv (.'(.mil xlirilW. j
J ( Army nnd navy lenders fully support
• ; the Thracian war, and they say they |
■ 1
A ('CORDING to an agreement
4* about completed between the
United States nnd Japan, the intermi-
tional technical control of the Chi-
nese Eastern railway by the Stevens
commission will soon be terminate':.
It Is provided that the eomml-'n’o::
i shall cease to function upon enmp!
i tbm of the evacuation of Japanese '
1 troops from Siberia. The Chinese
, government is to lie made responsi
Ide for the continued operation and
protection of the railway, and If it
falls In this, there will be a resump-
tion of internatiniml control. The
other allied powers aro In accord '.vlth
this plan. That is the news that
comes from Washington. From i‘i
come reports that put another face on
the matter. The president of China
has suspended the Russian Boxer In- ■
. deimdty of about Se.ooo.ixxi annually
nesday tin- Kemallsts announced they | nnd the soviet gov rnment. In Its
would respect the neutrality of the ' l'Lv of protest. Intimates thnt It will 1
straits pending an armistice confer-
ence with the British generals. They
then formnlated their reply to the
allied peace proposals. Not given to
the public at this writing, this answer
la understood to provide, among other
things, that the Nationalists shall oc-
cupy all strategic positions prior to
the opening of the conference; that
WING to the military and
diplomatic skill of Mustu-
pha Kemal Pasha and his col-
leagues In the Turkish Nation-
alist government, and to the
strong determination of the
people of the allied nations not
to embark in another war. It Is
practically certain that Turkey
will regain the territory In Eu-
rope which she lost In the
World war and probably a con-
siderable part of Mesopotamia,
now under British mandate. Do
you and your friends think the
Turks are entitled to this resto.
ration and are really no worse
than most of their neighbor*?
Or do you believe it it worth
another great war to keep them
PMt of Europof
in any military action," said he, "not '
only because the country is practical- j
ly disarmed, but also because the new
s oruer vi mt uuj ••• ->••• Bulgaria Is an agricultural country 1
The allies, In formally Inviting ‘ nn,l doe* not wish to risk a repetition I
the Turks to a peace conference, as- <’f ber previous misfortunes ”
sured them that they "will take ad-
seize the Chin -c E: stern railway, i
John F. Stevens, the hc.id of the com-
mission. according to n correspondent.
Is convinced the Hi e Is lost to Chinn.
vantage of this opportunity to de- OoVIET Russia formally declared ['
that thav ianv with fav.w nnoh herself the champion of Islam last !
week. She sent a note to the en- , •
tente, the Balkan nations and Egypt
demanding the restoration of Turkey
in Europe and warning the world thnt
ish commanders made several
mands for the withdrawal of
( Turks, but Kemal responded that ho
knew of no neutral zone. "'
ses shall he represented ; thnt If these
conditions are accepted, the Nation-
alists agree to an nrmlstlce confer-
ence st Mudanla. which Is to he fol-
lowed In three days hv the opening
of the peace conference In Smyrna.
Meanwhile Kernnl. who has freely
expressed hla distrust of the British
and especially of Lloyd George, sent
variooa units Intn the Asiatic part <»f
fBe neutral *nne and occupied strate-
gic positions front which hr vlrtuhlly
controlled the DaadawMes The Brit-
J In charge of the government. The
i ! object of the coup d'etat us an-
[ 1 nouncod In Athens was to oust Con-
l stantlne in order to unite the country i
! In firm opposition to the Paris confer- |
■ ; ence’s peace terms to Mustapha Kemal 1
1 Pasha and to wage an immediate and 1
aggressive war to retain Thrace. I
{ on Wednesday the cabinet resigned
J and Constantine formally abdicated j
I | file throne in favor of Crown Prince
• I George, who was sworn In. For the i
■ present a revolutionary committee is !
’ in charge of the government.
< | z I 'I iOI’GH It had been reported thnr
• | A Bulgaria was ready to seize the 1
which she claims.
Bulgarian minister 1
i ' to England, denies this.
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1-Captain Porter, chiei of tederul secret service In Chicago, and bogus money factory of big gang of
counterfeiters uncovered In that city. 2—Scene at national conference of boy scout executives nt Blue Ridge,
N. C„ when Daniel Carter Beard, national comtnlssloner, was presented with gold eagle badge. 3—Girls of
Jackson, Cal., laving Howers on collins of -III victims of the Argonaut mine disaster.
V ■> , ,
' '
Patsy Ruth Miller
- ■
THE NOCONA NEWS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20TH, 1»22.
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dOEfe BOBta
cigarettes
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A million men
have tinned to
One Eleven
C irettes
~a firm verdict for
superior quality.
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The Nocona News. (Nocona, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1922, newspaper, October 20, 1922; Nocona, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1372635/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Friends of the Nocona Public Library.