Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 143, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 10, 1921 Page: 12 of 20
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or III ASSOCIATED PKKS8.
The i«KK-UU«] Prem t( «Xflu»lv«ly e«-
tltted t« tlx um fur republication of *11
Mart dlspntchn oredltfl to It or not oth«-
*Im crrdlted In thl» P«t*r «n4 also th«
lacal etas pubt!*h*d hwrln.
PAIT-Y TELEGRAM .K»teMI*h*d IS07
DA1I.Y TRIBl'NK E»tal>l!«h«d »S«
(Consolidated January. 1910.)
EXMTTIVK STAFF:
E, K. WILLIAMS Onwal M»nn(j*r
OH AS. VV. INGHAM MnnaRlng Kflttor
Wm STHPHENS Bunlnesn Mannpfr
K. COHEN Advertising Manager
SrUSCKlPTION PIUCE:
Daily and Sunday, per yenr IS 00
Dally and Sunday, six month* 4.25
D»a* and Sunday, iter month...,'. Tf>,
Tatoykon* (all «»parcm«nt») Ill
l*ubllphfd every morning br the Tt'lefrrnm
Fukliahlng Co., (Ibc.) E. K. Williams, prtsl-
HOMEBUILDING
Next to the family altar, that historic institution which
once wielded so much power over the destinies of men, the
dining table is perhaps the most important factor in the in-
fluence it exerts in the daily lives of the members of the
family. Eating is one of the major processes in the home
life and the manner in which it is carried on has much to
do with the morale of the home.
If the housewife is always willing to cook without com-
plaining; to cook when the husband wants his meals, is
clean about it; studies the tastes of the members of the fam-
ily and makes a reasonable effort to satisfy them; prepares
the food well; makes it appeal both to the eye and the taste,
but especially the latter; serves it properly with neither re-
grets nor apologies; skilfully guides the conversation along
pleasant lines and at the same time conforms to the rules of
economy to make it as easy as possible on the husband's
bank account, she will be going a long ways toward making
the home what it ought to be.
It's a big contract, but the result is well worth working
Avenue A, Temple. Texas.
- Tfniple Dally Telepr.im Is a number of
the Audit Bureau of Circulation*.
The British minors would rather
strike than dip.
mm ♦
Sometimes it is hard to distin-
guish between human curios and
just plain nuts.
That $10,000 da mace suit in Illi-
nois shows that Ouija, like every-
body else, souetimes talks too much,
There are red Russians and white
Russians in Russia, and, strangely
enough, almost all Russians are
blue.
Knterod at tlx poateffic# in Temple, Tex.,
Oclolwr, 1507. as second rIa*s mall matter,
under the Act of Congreas Mnreli 3, 18711. ^ _
office »f Publication: iii »nd in we*t for, a hsppy, contented home.
A Dallas cafe has a sign in front which reads: "If your
wife can't cook, don't divorce her; eat here and keep her
for a pet." In a way, rhe housewife has to compete with the
cafe. The husband expects to get a service at the home
table which he cannot purchase downtown.
A person can obtain a can of sardines and a box of
crackers at a grocery store, to say nothing of the service
! for sale at the modern restaurant. When the housewife
just scraps up a little something it is calculated to start a
scrap. The convenient meal is a disappointment even
though the husband be generous enough not to make his
| disappointment visible. A 'few meals of that kind can be
forgiven, but they constitute a liability which bobs up on
the housewife's ledger at every trial balance.
Cooking is drudgery when approached as such. After
all, it is the little things, the unexpected favors, the pleasant
little surprises, the extra touches here and there, the un-
catalogued and unrequired things which count for most.
These are the things that endear the housewife to her family
and earn for her the sacred title of "mother." This spirit
upon her part and the other members of the household
make a "home" of what otherwise would only be a family
It was more than a drop in the
backet when beer drinking in Ger-
many dropped 750,000,000 gallons
in a year.
There may be some grammatical
question as to whether "drive slow"
•r "drive slowly" is preferable, but
there ie no question but that either
is safer in practice than th.e way
eome people step on it.
The municipal council in Faris
has decided to place a large memor-
ial stone at each and every place
where a "Big Bertha'' shell fell, but
these are not intended to "he monu:
ments to German marksmanship.
Marshal Foch may change his
mind ■bout visiting the I'nited
States when Rene Viviaiii gets back
home and puts a bug in his ear
about the attitude of the republican
senators toward the peace treaty and
the League of Nations.
AMKHKAMSM.
Greatly a» a man must deplore
fhe necessity of censuring a woman
there can be no question of the ap-
propriateness and pertinence of the
reeolutions adopted by the American
Legion post at Shreveport, La.,
branding the language and charges
of Mrs. KaU; Richards O'Hare, as
both false in fact, and Insulting to
tkt American citizenship. Proclaim-
ing herself a lecturer upon the doc-
trines of socialism this woman, en-
joying the protection of the American
flag, American laws and guarded by
the chivalry of American manhood,
went upon the platffn in the city
hall of Shreveport aud made the
preposterous statement thg.t the ma-
jority of men arrested for crimes are
former service men and their crim-
inal condition is the result of being
forced into military service by the
government.
The average man in the street
leading this charge, probably, will
marvel that the American Legion
members confined themselves to
simple resolutions, without calling
in persou upon Sirs. O'Hare and de-
manding the evidence, which she
said she had gathered showing the
conditions that she charged. To say
that the crime wave of tli»>?e days
it the work of ex-service men is to re-
flect upon every gallant soldier,
whether drafted or volunteer, who
did his part in the achievement of
world liberty.
It is to denounce our government
ss oppressive and degrading to the
noble young mauhood of the land, it
i? to admit that barking anarchists
and reckless socialists have sowed
the seeds of poison in the minds of
enough persons lo insure them an
audience before which to exploit
their libels and slanders.
At a time when there is a great
clamor going through the country
from vociferous socialist leaders de-
manding the release of Eugene V.
J>bs and his fellow socialists, it
.would seem that persons as irrespon-
sible In public utterance as Mrs.
O'Hare would be held under re-
straint and not permitted to scatter
fUch wholly false and slanderous
fharfes about the country.
Socialism mffst stand sponsor for
this ;woman and every ex-service
Htan, every relative and friend of
}ke e*-«ervice men of this nation,
>111 resent with vigor and incouteal-
, ■ ;T: 1 —I-'IP1
and cklf those blessed who have made
this discovery aad gives It practical
application. Those more thsa three
score men sod women who pesaed
through the lava pillars ot Ksllhi's
gates again to greet the world and
its pleasures, have been brought
hack from the desd, is a war. be-
cause when a leper waa consigned
to the hospital the gates of the
world were shut against him and he
waa regarded as wholly out of touch
with the human family, except for
companions afflicted like himself or
the doctors under whose treatment
they may have been placed.
Truly the powers or modern sci-
ence have been demonstrated in a
way that has brought light and life
into the existence of the once exiled
victims of leprosy. The >oy of the
occasion described in the press dis-
patches was exuberant and enthu-
siastic; while the group of sixty-
four filed along one side of a hedge
to go again Into the outer world
there was another group on the other
side of the hedge, their faces beam-
ing with happy smiles in anticipa-
tion of the day when they too will
be sent out to join those then being
released. They were filled with the
Joy of hope? no longer were they
herded into the tdough of hopeless-
ness: Science had given them eman-
cipation; in time they too would be
sent out sing'ng as were these others,
th?ir hearts bursting with the bound-
Jeps joys of being again enabled to
take their places in the ordinary
walks of life.
This cure for leprosy has been
given the most complete and thor-
ough test; those who were sent away
from the colony as cured the other
day being a second batch of victims,
tbe others having been released a
long time ago and although they
have been mingling with the world
for more than a year sinee they
were released, there has not devel-
oped the slightest trace of a return
of the hideous malady. Their cure
has been complete; they can come
and go among other humans wilhrfUt |a Grange it may seem
the least danger of infecting olhers
or ot the disease recurring upor,
their own bodies.
Arts are to march hand In hand with
the AJmlghty dollar, all to the glory
of the Pilgrim and the Puritan. This
at least Is tb» theory.
Real eatate experts who 'have also
been consulted make a report in
which they kindly est I mat* that, as
the result of the expenditure, of about
tMfO.OW, the state would cents* into
possession of treat tracts of land
created where there is now only wat-
er, or flats a id other waste land. It
is predicted that this land could be
sold for $19,000,000. The commission!
itself, including in its financial state-
ment the estimates of the real estate
men, comes to the conclusion that the
exposition might finally show an
excess of receipts over expenditures of
about $8,000,000, the state still hold-
ing in addition land of a value , of
$2,500,000. Perhaps these utilitarian
aspects of the matter would appeal to
the Pilgrim Fathers quite as forcibly
as Home of the artistic consideratlons.-
Large doubt arises concerning some
of the Items mentioned In the est.-
mates. It is assumed that foreign
governments might pay $5,000.000 to
retain possession of the sites oft their
buildings, which would. In that case,
be permanent. But foreign countries
already owe a great deal of money to
the United States. They are not now
feeling* like adding to their obliga-
tions. Whether the opportunity to be
permanently represented on thi banks
of the Charles would appeal to "heni
is perhaps open to questioh. Sister
States of the union are underwritten
for an additional $3,000,008, but
again there may be question as to (
how keen their desire would be to j
become landholders in Boston.
However, it is an astonishing pro-
ject and an Interesting report. It
suggests great possibilities, artistic
and financial. It recalls the stern
virtues of the storied past, and makes
th? commonwealth a "realtor" on a
Science has sought through gen-
occupying a house.
It is this spirit of willingness to do more than is ex-
pected which lightens the burden of the whole and makes
the daily routine endurable. It may be a long jump from
the physical to the spiritual, but are not the every-dayi
things of life the battleground of the soul? Is it not in the erat'°"s 10 fnul a n,re f"r !opros>'.
spirit and manner of preparing and serving the daily meals
that the mother has one of her chief opportunities of giving
expression to her virtues and qualities and"exerting that
most sacred of earthly influences over those she loves?
. tins (oats Star tOMKs
a livjng br working, not bjr exhibiting
myself for money. I figure that rf an
ordinary shed man teaj* do a good
day's work I ought nk be able to do
at least M per cent more."
"Yes," remarked one of the felkrw-
passengers, "you ought to be able to
reach up even as high as the Cost o*
Living is roasting at the present time."
BITS OF BYPLAY
(By Luke Melukt.)
(Copyrighted by Cincinnati Baqulrcr.)
You Know Him.
A mean old cuae la Oswald Brakes,
He isn't fair, and he Is yellow;
For every time he makes mistakes,
lie blames them on the other fellow.
Mean finite!
"Why Is it that all the world loves a
lover?" Kighetf Miss Old Girl.
"Because the world likes to lie
amused, 1 suppose," growled Mr. Qld-
batcft.
Fooey!
"What's in a name?" the Bard once
mused.
And by his statement Pin enthuyd; %
Limburger by another nanie,
I am afraid, would Smell the same.
l*«'t. .
Wealth dots not make men humble,
Pill.
A thoughtful man declares;
You'll find the heir to millions will
I'ut on a million airs.
lartie scale. In it are the glories of
tradition. There are also millions in
it, if the estimates are correct, and
European nations are in the market
for Boston real estate. The report
goes to the legislature. It will be in-
teresting to see what tbe legislature
does to it.-—Boston Transcript.
WHAT'S IN A NAME?
(By Mildred Marshall.)
(Coiij*ightod by the Wheeler Syndicate.)
Xw .loke.
"The self starter hai bcMi n great
thing for the automobile," said the
Motorist.
"Yes," agreed the Pedestrian. "But
it would help some if some one would
invent a self-guider for I he automo-
bile."
Crops.
"The weather won't cause me alarm,"
Announced o'd Farmer Topps;
"For I will start a chicken farm,
And 1 will have full crops."
Well. TlwU'd Help Some, Barrie.
(Nashville Tennessoean.)
If beer is to be sold only in nine
states, let us ltopt', for Luke Mcl.uke'S
sake, that Ohio is at least two of
them. /
ible evidence the allegations that the
ex-service men have been trans-
formed into criminals through being
called to the defense of their coun-
try's flag. The friends of Debs aud
all other socialists must answer for
what this woman has breathed
against our soldier heroes. She has
abused the hospitality of the nation,
of the state and of the city In which
she has been permitted to speak and
as the delegated apostle of an of-
ficial socialistic publication, she ap-
pears as the responsible agent of that
.party and the party must answer for
her conduct.
The recurrence of such Incidents
as that reported from Shreveport is
not calculated to foster a spirit of
toleration for those who spew their
venom against American institutions
v.hile cringing in the shelter of the
American flag.
The standard of Americanism is
aloft in the land and the men and
women of America have rallied to
defend it.
A GOOD POLITICIAN IS MR.
HOOVER.
"Are you an expert statistician?"
asked Mr. Hoover.
"I am not, "hut—began the
candidate.
"Then you are not the man for
I he place. Good day," cut in Mr.
Hoover.
In this unceremonious fashion Sec-
l etary Hoover the other day received
and disposed of a candidate who
came Inlo his office to apply for the
post of director of census. There
was no delegation to accompany the
applicant; no congrersman or sena-
tor on hand to speak a good word
for the gentleman; no private ad-
viser around to say just how mutjh
the appointment would strengthen
the republican administration in
Bingville or Kalamazoo. Mr. Hoover
says he doesn't think any of that
i? necessary to man his department
efficiently.
The incident recalls a criticism that
has often been hurled at Mr. Hoover,
and that is he is not a politician.
But will the criticism stand up?
It depends not so much on the
political power of Mr. Applicant and
the wires he manipulates as it does
upon the ability of the secretary to
let the world know just what he is
doing. Politicians run up against
a stone wall when they face a record
leplete with incidents like that re-
corded above, and in this instance
Mr. Hoover got on the wire with the
story first. It was an abrupt way to
but until now it has been un.i'ile to
ileal with the disease effectively.
Now, however, the glad achievement
ha5; teen made and its success has
given humanity the greatest bless-
ing it has enjoyed in centuries.
There is not the least doubt in the
m nds of the scientific, mj.n under
whose observation and treatment
these vicjjins have been, that the
(lire is a real, permanent and last-
ing one. \
Thus another horror has been
suppressed, the hearts of thousands
of afflicted mortals have been made
glad and music and laughter now
leign in the wards ot the hospital
once given over to (he doomed vic-
tims of the plague—veritable out-
casts, who were sent there to wait
until death came to hide the hideous
marks of their malady and bring
that relief which up to that time
science had been unable to furnish.
The world has been made brighter
for the entire human family through
dispose t)l an office seeker, to be
sure; but it was business-like, and "1'8 marvelous disco\ery of medical
that is what the voters want.
Mr. Hoover may not think he is a
politician, but if he Keeps on going
at the pace he- has set he will de-
velop into a premier vote-getter
whether he wants to or not.
THE CTRE OF LEPROSY.
Humanity has been the recipient
of no happier boon than the assur-
ance that a cure actually has been
fcund for that awful malady, leprosy.
In a dispatch from Honolulu, Ha-
waiian Islands, dated April 7, a most
pathetic and inspiring account is
given of the release of sixty-four
men and women, former lepers, who
had been treated at the leper colony
of Kalihi,. These men and women
were sent back into the world to
mingle with their fellows, free from
Ihe "unclean" taint with which they
had been afflicted and which through
generations has been held to be abso-
lutely incurable.
It is a great victory for science,
indeed, when such an achievement
is recorded; and the world will rise
science and it is a matter of just
pride and gratification that AmericBu
physicians hare been instrumental In
giving thfs priceless boon to man-
kind.
/
EDITORIAL OF THE DAY
roundly tussfng each other, ever'more,
Union you live serenely your Ills 1
cannot curs; so long you've acted
meanly It's made your blood impure.
For giving way to passion gives rise
to many ills,' and you. In angry fash-
lojt, keep'kicking o'er the thrills. Go
home and quit expounding the riot act
to Jinks, and health and peace
abounding will soon remove your
kinks." Ills counsel, wisely given, I
took, and saved my life, and from
my head were driven all thoughts of
hate an* strife; and now glad smiles
and dimples are strung around my
map, where once unseemly pimplei
were pron%to overlap.
TABLOID TALES
Mean Bnttc. '
Carried away by the beauty of the
heroine on Ihe screen, he murmured,
unconsciously, "Isn't she lovely?"
"Every time you see a pretty girl you
lorgit you're married," snapped his
better half. "You're wrong, my dear,
nothing brings home the fact with so
much force."—Buffalo Commercial.
Hie Habits of dte Maid.
"Hear you have a new maid." "We
haven't any more." "What, did she
leave?" "Nothing worth mentioning.
On l« r second night here she took
about alf the portable furnishings."—
American Legion. "s-
wurn
The Hog Show in Columbus, Ohio,
is being held in the Katjt Building,
Gay »nil lifgh streets.
Rosamond has nothing to do with
The
name means "famed protection," and
is of extremely ancient origin. The
first* Hrosmond was the fierce chjef-
tainess of the Gepidae, whom her
Lombard husband forced to drink his
health in a grisly goblet composed of
ihe skntl of her slaughtered father,
and who later avenged the insult -by
a midnight murder.
Out of this tragedy, the name of
Rosamond gained great popularity
among the peasantry and in some mys-
terious way penetrated the land of, And wh„, she ,,ot holne she
the Norman Cliffords, by whom it
was bestowed upon Fair Rosamond
Names 1< Names.
Ruby Ring lives in Match, Tenn.
1 - 0
Our l>a!ly Special.
A llish Flyer Seldom Reaches
Top.
1" he
Luke Mi Luke Says
Once upon a time a girl walked a
mile to a Drug Store for a jar of
of ballad lore. This lovely lady's his-
tory ha*.been much changed by Cer-
vantes, who makes his Persiles and
Sigismunda encounter her in the Arc-
tic regions, fulfilling a dreary penance
among the wehr wolves.
Her name, in its supposed inter-
pretation, gave rise to the I^itin epi-
gram, "Rosa mundi, sed non Rosa
munda" (the rose of Ihe -world, but
not a pure rose*, according to one
historian. The ballad however, as
well as ihe general aura of romance
which surrounds the name of Resa-
moud, established her popularity in
England aud all Englieh speaking
countries. H
The ruby Is Rosamond's talisman!*'
gem. Its promise of power, bodily
strength, and haughty pride will be
fulfilled in her. Saturday is her
lucky day and 4 her lucky number.
HUMAN CURIOS
(By Wtlllam >eho« Tuft.)
(C«t>yi irht, 1 SiO. by Public Ledger C« )
A Yast Pilgrim Exposition Scheme.
The commission appointed under a j
resolve of the last legislature to con-
sider the holding of an International
exposition in or near Boston as part
of the tercentenary observance of
the landing of the Pilgrims has made
a report in which it sets forth its
reasons for believing that the venture
mk;ht be made to yield a profit in
dollars and cents if held on an island
in the Charles river basin and on the
shores of the river. This site the
commission favors for many" reasons.
It holds that here is the best oppor-
tunity for erecting buildings which
may be retained as permanent memo-
rials. Here, also, in the judgment of
the commission, Is the site which, of
all those suggested, is the most ac-
cessible to the multitudes of visitors.
The consulting architects have pre-
pared plans that reveal the aesthetic
as well as the utilitarian advantages
The Tallest Mmn in tlie World.
Only recently there arrived at New
York a native of Amsterdam who is
reported to be the tallest man in the
world, Johan Van Albert, by name.
Van Albert is 8 feet 5 inches tall and
modestly reminded those who com-
mented on his height that he is only
19 years of age and "hasn't nearly
stopped growing yet." ,
The "Hutch giant" wears a size 14
glove and a 9 1-4 hat, while it fakes
six yards of cloth to make a suit for
him. Even clad in' overalls, it is ap-
parent that his bills for tailoring
would be almost as high as his reach.
On tbe trip over on the Mauretania
a special bed was constructed for him
in a companion way, all the regular
stateroom berths being too small for
him to sleep In all at once. "No mat-
ter how I twisted and turned," Van
Albert told reporters who met him
and gazed admiringly upward, "1
couldn't get my legs in, from the
knees downward.
The Hollander says that he has six
brothers and sisters, but they are a 11
of normal size. "I'm the only Wool-
worth Tower In the family," he added,
just to prove that he was quite up to
date-in his knowledge of America and
discovered that the exercise had made
her checks pink.
You can't sometimes always telt
The Soulful I.o'ok of Deep Yearning
in a girl's eyes may be caused by"
Biliousness, not Love.
Every town likes to lie regarded as
a Literary Center. Yet advertising
writers continue to make twice «s
much money as poets.
The Hank of Hair comes from a
store. And the Bone is draped in a
Rag cut as low as the law will per-
mit.
Some Christians are so much in
earnest about beins ^>od that it
amounts to a grouch.
What has become of the old-fash-
ioned man who used to be presented
with a Gold-Headed Cane?
A girl's mind is centered on her
looks when she looks ns though she
didn't know you were looking.
Women have more ingenuity than
men. If a woman Is driven 10 II, she
can make a dress out of an old ham-
mock.
When an orf tor stars out by "look-
ing down tbe long dim vista of the
veers," yoij might as well take a nap.
Ton are not going to miss anything.
A woman can find out more by pre-
tending that she doesn't care than a
man can by asking questions.
And where is the o. f. woman who
used to have to stop and count up
when she was asked how many chil-
dren she had?
When your wife discovers that her
suspicions were baseless she gets some
more suspicions.
RIPPLING RHYMES
(By Will •
(Copyrighted bjr'Georcc Matthew A»l«tn».)
'Jin' Wise Physician.
I had a lot of pimples upon my
princely mug, and I took yarbs and
simples and bltt<-rs by the Jug. My
blood was out of order, my life was
full of care, and I was near the bor-
der of bottomless despair. And many
learned physicians prescribed their
capsules gray; alas, alas, conditions
grew punker every day. And then 1
sought a healer who just had come
to town, and many a boosting spieler
proclaimed bis wide renown. No
silly, trifling question was by this
doctor sprung, concerning my diges-
.Ir.st Is Right.
"Henry," ejaculated Mrs. Smith, "I
see In Hie paper that Wll'iam Simpson
just $:ot married!" "Just got mar-
ried?" rHorted Smith, making ready
for a swift exit. "Ain't that enough?"
— Exchange. >
riMitt.
Two country women were arguing
on the matter of thrift. "D'ye see that
puree?" demanded one with a
triumphant air. "It's the one I
bought when 1 was married twenty
years ago, and it's as good as new
yet." "Thai's nothing:" sneered her
friend. "You fcnow my husband,
John?" "Of course I do. What
about him?" "Well, he's my first
husband, and you've had three. Don't'
you preach thrift to me!"—Edinburgh
Scotsman.
Much Interested.
Mr. Tarxan Jones was sitting down
to his breakfast one morning when he
v as astounded to see in the paper an
announcement of his own death, lie
rant up friend Howard Smith. "Hello,
Smith!" he said. "Have you seen the
announce incut <>f my death in the pa-
per'.'" "Yes," replied Smith." "Where
are you speaking from?"—Houston
Post.
With th<> Trimmings.
Mrs. Newly wed (giving first order
lo butcher over phone)—"Please send
me a pound of steak."
Butcher—"And what else, please ."'
Mrs. Newl)wed~"And—and some
gravy."—New York Centra' Lints
Magasiue.
QUESTION BOX
q. who w»» th# Invttmor »f th« »<r»w
pi'vyeller ufctii oa uif«vii st^auisliii'aCuii-
ovu.
' A. John Krlclxon, of 8wt(lcn, lnv«nt'd
the screw pi«p«ll»r. H» was a famous c«-
of SwixWa. He iuov«i1 to I.ondon \r.
ami * few y*»f» later rame to ih.»
rouBiry, S'ttllut in New York City. Ha waa
also tb* tavautor of tha caloric cugino »">1
turret aliipa. tha Mist of which was llva
ilohltor. ii*«hI i» (h« Amarlcau Civ-'! war.
Ht tfietl in ISJJ.
Q. W"e» Charles Pi, !t«ns horn In I^n<1-
p«rt or CliattoaiH ?—Sturt#nt.
A. He 111 born t« Landport. Portsmouth,
is 1*12. but i« 1S2I moved to ChaUium
ivliar* lit* imly fell into poverty.' Dlckena
dietl ill 1S1Q.-
DAILY HOKOSCOPK
(Covyriihtfd. 1M1. Wy the McClure News-
jitter indicate.)
April It. 1021.
Thin in not a f»Tombk day for moM <t
tlie wrtitiOt hi mi nnd women. Aitrnlo*
**!•» that Ntptunt and Mar? are stnm*-
ly mho*-, Jupiter, Saturn and Uit*
Sun are lu V»*n#fi« aspect.
The planetary Influence* are likely to rila-
turU tue mind, caurittf reitleffiieaa anil dis-
content.
Uurinjf sway self-control If impvta-
t ve smt should he exercised even in (he
smallest matters.
This should be n rule favorable to ihe
clergy. si4»ce It imps its the power to Is/d
and entitles those who speak to prtethl
vt or da couvinrliiRly.
There is h 1u« ky sign for all who seek the
companionship of their superiors, whether In
or posit en.
It is m propitious day for visiting vela*
tlvfs and frieuds, even "those from whom
fa vol's sie expected.
Office-seekers will do well to make the
most of today's opportunities for seeking the
siippoit of persons already in positions in
the Sun.
There !• to he n great honor bestowed
upon iv woman, the seer* prophesy.
The New Moon of this month Is blllevf«l
to portend many evils for Great Hritnin A
change in government is foretold »nd there
will be luovenitui to*anl a naval demon-
stration, while a war Is not far off.
A great amount of ran seem a to he fere-
cast for the remainder of the spring.
Persons whose hlrthdate it is have the
augury of it prosperous year, if they e\er*
else care and foresight.
Children born on this day mav he <v.
termined, persistent and Individualistic.
These subject! of Aries have Mars uk a
' principal filler.
BRINGING UP FATHER
GEORGE McMANUS
I'VE fcFEM MARRIED
JUVT A XEAR, AND
IM THE1 HAPPiEbT
MAN IN THE WOLD
t o day -
\GU OTTIN
A DIVORCE
MY DEAR; FELLCW-
Wrd ARE foOT H HAvPPV
I'itCAU'bE v/E fiOTH
T HAVE ' Wl L L PCWEft •
VE<b btoT
V/A.IT UNTIL
"<CUR V;iFE
OF. VF LOPE *3
SOME WON'T
n POWER-
■ I*' it.
•<v//
THAT
'jGursD'b
CaOGD
Y/HX-MY V/IFE
AND I AQF ONE -
BUT ro LIKE TO j
«bEE. YOJ BOTH
TRY TO <^\T IN A
THEATRE. Clt OHE
TICKET-
•V INT'L FBATVI*! StUVICt INC
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Ingram, Charles W. Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 143, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 10, 1921, newspaper, April 10, 1921; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth470436/m1/12/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.