Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 28, 1922 Page: 6 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Garber Sentinel and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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14011TiV4 NEVSPAPta JINION
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-V46 0 ELL well well" said the
'"-' 4 Old Year "it is so nice to
te !
it - see you New Year I cony'cv0-
gratulate you and as the
good people say I wish you
1111 a Happy New Year"
'4 "Thank you thank you"
A
it - -
11 '' said the New Year in a
sweet young voice "I
have great respect for you Old Year
You have been so wise and so good
You have done so much that is tine
Now how I shall be I do not know
at all I feel so uncertain of my-
self" "Oh you'll get over that" said the
Old Year "you -are a little nervous
now but you will be all right in no
time at all
"Why I remember last January—
my very first month of all—I was all
over my nervousness before the monthl
was over"
"Were you indeed?" sald the New
Year "Well that id most encourag-
ing to hear"
"Yes" said the Old Year "one gets
over one's nervousness very quickly
when one is a year I don't know how
It is with people but I know how it Id
with a year
"Of course I suppose a person might
need more than a few weeks to get
over nervousness but then a person is
about so much longer than a year
After all a year isn't so long"
"Where are you going now?" asked
the New Year
"Why don't you know?" the Old
Year asked
"I've never been told" said the New
Year "You see I have lots to learn
Ira so young" and the New Year
sighed a little
"Oh you mustn't sigh" sald the Old
Year' "les so beautiful a thing to be
young and strong and new and brisk
of course too it Is especially nice for a
year because so much Is learned in ad-
vance as It were
"You don't have to begin and learn
- everything over again as though you
were the tirSt year that had ever been
And people help you so inuch too
They go on Just IN they were going
on before and try to keep you from
feeling sensitive and shy
"People make it so easy for you
You'll discover that
"But you svere asking me where
was going so I must tell you"
"I would so much love to know" said
tile' Ness' Year
"I am going" said the Old Year "to
the Beautiful Valley of Memories Oh
they tell nie It 18 140 wonderful a
place and because It Is ! p ! p! p! p!
-
-
no one minds growing older or any-
thing of that sort
"That is why I am not sad and why
I can greet you so gayly and so cheer-
fully "The Beautiful Valley of Memories
has ever so many living there Of
course all the old years are there and
'hat good times they do have com-
paring notes
'Then they have hurried visitors
from away too You will notice from
time to time how people will remember
some lovely thing that happened some
time ago
"It is then that we receive hurried
visits from these people so hurried
sometimes they scarcely realize they
have come to visit us as they're so
quickly off again
"But they are With us long enough
to know how beautiful is this Val-
ley of Memories
"You can't Imagine how lovely It is
until you have been there I was
given just a little look at it today
and you see already I talk as though I
were an old Inhabitant
"There are houses there and they are
so sweet and so pretty with lovely
flower gardens tilled with favorite flow-
ers All our flowers have wonderful
memories There are forget-me-nots
In one bed because they are the fa-
vorlte flowers of one who has so many
memories about them
"The trees are favorites There are
favorite pines And there are all sorts
of lovely things there
"Oh the Old Year is not sad to leave
for the Old Year Is going to have so
good a time And you have no Idea
how our valley is loved Everywhere
around it Is known and many people
know of It thong!' they do not know
Just where it Is
'4 The Beautiful Valley of Memo-
ries' they say 'oh it seems to nae I
know of that Didn't I spend a part
of my childhood there? It sounds so
very familiar I am sure I spent happy
days there onee'
"so New Year I visit you well It's
a splendid Avorld and you'll meet ever
so many tine men and women and boys
and girls
"Good-by and the bent of luck"
The Old Year was gone and evpry-
one was shouting "Happy NVW Year"
and the New Year felt especially
!miff to think that the Old Year too
would be happy!
BEGAN NEW YEAR MARCH 25
—
March '25 1nsthe usual New Year
among most Christian peiples in early
medieval days but in Anglo-Saxon
Europe December 21 was New Year
day William the Conqueror ordered
the observance on January 1 at the
time of the German conquest' but
later England with the rest of Christ-
endom begun her new year on March
-k
THE GREGORIAN CALENDAR
The adoption of the Gregorian Calen-
dar in 15S2 restored January 1
New Year day stud this svus accepted
by all Homan Catholic countries tst
Once by Germany Denmark and
Swedqa about MO and England In
1751-
THE GARBER SENTINEL GARBER OKLAHOMA
NEW YEAR'S DAY
THE storm-wind sank the moon rods
high
Set round with silver haze
Where late sky-spaces wonderful
Showed green as chrysoprase
Within the old gray church anon
The gathered folk would sit
I met the old year on the hill
And bade farewell to It
The woods around stood stark and dim
But at my feet white birds
Fluttered the wraiths of kindly deed
And sweet remembered words
Above me from Orion's belt
A great gem flashed and fell
Was it it seraph prince sped by
Michael or Gabriel?
Then though my lonely heart must mourn
For some that come no more
White sails of Hope I seemed to see
Set to a sapphire shore
As he who dreamed a New World sailed
On an uncharted sea
From Palos with his caravels
Lured by a mystery
So under flaming Asian skies
Or by the still white Pole
That Great Adventure the New Year
Beacons the human soul
—L M Little in Boston Herald
umminffitiliwilliiiimmininimu
E---:---- Pulling
--
-
the Throttle
-
i tne Inrotue
6" By Christopher E
Cs Hazard
E511111111111111111111111111111mu1111 11111 iE
(D 1922 Western Newspaper Union)
IT IS the custom of a certain rail-
way engineer to have his boy
with him now and then in the en-
gine cab The youngster states that
he has "ringed the twit and blown the
whistle" but that he has not yet
"pulled the throttle"
This seems to be the matter with a
good many older ones of the present
generation and it may explain their
' lack of progress They have rung the
bell and they have blown the whistle
but they have neglected to open the
throttle
That invisible force that ix In us all
responds wonderfully when we call
upon it but is only a useless and di-
minishing energy until we (10 Bell
and whistle may advertise that we
have steam up but they cannot get
Us along They may both be active
while we are really slowing up like
the train that approaches a stop
The station may he a permanence
((Jr us when we could go a good deal
farther we may arrive ata dead lino
In life while yet young because Ave
have shut the throttle instead of open-
ing it turned off steam instead of
turning It on
There never was more chance for
progress than this New Year is offer
lag Never before did opportunity
beckon more earnestly Never VaR
talent so much In demand never was
capacity so much needed Never was
ability so largely rewarded Great
positions wak---for those who can fill
theta Ambition may plan Aspira-
tion may hope
Blt I wouldn't want a fast young
man on my road I wouldn't have a
1-md young woman in my office
Cigarettes shut off steam The call li
not for noise but for efficiency!
can watch a young mans smoke whes
that is about all there ix of him I
can bear a belle ring when I would
prefer to have tier lousy I
Neu5A1e4Irls
)11 e Otr- 6
Di nolo
"The lenses
too flat with
"
IP
10
60 -------
(NOTE—This article printed in the
Boston Globe in VA predicted many
things which have become a reality in
much less time than anticipated)
ElIS New Year's eve
w
19p5while I lounged
ulthnothingelse
to do l scanned
each column of
the Globe and al-
most ere I knew a
growing dimness
stole across the
printed page I drew it nearer and be-
hold! ttwas yellowed with age
Nly hands I found had wrinkled
grown my locks were changed to
gray my form was bent my vision
dim my teeth had passed away And
as I gazed I heard a voice "Good
morning grandam dear! I wish you
many many times a Happy Glad
New Year" Then tall men said they
were my sons and daughters fair to
tee told me this wasn't ninety-three
but nineteen forty-three
Said "My memory has failed
bow goes the world today?"
"You shall go out this afternoon and
see the town" cried they
At that the tears flowed down my
cheeks Quoth I "The days are ended
when these poor eyes could see the
sights"
"Oh no! we'll have them mended"
A grown-up son then seized a knob
and gave three pulls upon it:
three pulls upon it:
"The car IN 111 I I be
h
f mother or at putonce
ii your bonnet" And
while he spoke
the coupe came
'twin' wonderful
11
-t to me how fast-
rV ill er than e'en
-(71 fabled horse was
electricity
(
My
lb son just turned
6 te
VA and touched a
screw you'd
r091
la-- ill think I'd lost my
flkIr'61 mind If I should
tell how fast we
ali 1 flew for we left d
the wind behin
70-"--' We went to see
the surgeon first
erystaillne have grown
age" he said "We must
put Dew ones in"
With that he hypnotized my mind
In some peculiar way such rare sweet
visions floated by then quickly passed
away
I woke my eyes were strong and
well and hastening to depart we paid
the fee and entered next a gallery of
art But as to pictures when I turned
so very strange they seemed I thought
the artist must have sketched the
stories he had dreamed
"We never think of painting now"
my guide said with a laugh "These
are but landscapes in the moon taken
by photograph"
"What! are there people in the
moon 7"
"Oh yes indeed!" said he "Here Is
a lunar telescope look through and
You will see"
I gazed and to my great surprise
distinctly saw them walking I listened
at another tube and there I heard
them talking
"You see" said he "we've learned
to catch such swift intense vibrations
in the thin ether that we hear their
slightest intonations You look sur-
prised" my son went on "I'll show
those eyes of yours a sight worth
while our famous scheme that beats
the Paris sewers These little gutters
ramify through all the streets and
streets and catch the rain and hail
and melting snow These tiny gratings
! match conducting down to pipes be-
neath which take it miles below
straight towards the center of the
earth where the great heat you know
will turn it into steam of course and
Up it comes again by other pipes to
spin and weave and cook and print for
men It feeds the factories through
the land with no expense for fuel it
polishes for artisans full many a
precious Jewel We've laid large pipes
through all the streets to warm the
winter Nr ea t her so rheumatism's out
of date and done with altogether
"Now mother we will go and lunch
In Africts sunny clime" and drawing
out his watch he said "I see there's
ample time The sub-Atlantic tunnel's
done we'll take it over there The
cars are sent through every hour by
the force of compressed air" He
placed me on a cushioned seat within
an egg-shaped car suspended in an
iron tube I felt a sudden jar and
then to my astonishment conscious of
nothing more I found that we were
standing upon the farther shore
And soon Ile reachem a city near
the Mountains of the Moon (They
told me Ethiopia would be admitted
soon as one of the United States for
China late had been) We found a
place to order lunch by three tall men
brought In They served us well but
spoke no word while gravely bowing
low
Quoth me: "I thought that slavery
was done with long ago"
"So its" said be "Then who" I
asked "are these three stalwart felIowa--
Clubs promise most to our insistent yout
And diamonds glitter to our later gaze
But melancholy spades our hopes amaze
And leave them buried after all forsoott
: ---'42r(tc6
:gs
We count the riches of the passing days
Our gains our losses and our gain withal t
Our greatest gain the one that once so small
Ever increasing stays with us always:
11'1
IC
4JA 110-'
5
—
I illibth vicissitudes of this changing lime and with- the onsciousness of
L temporariness Mat comes with the flight of a year it is pleasant to think
of the enduring character of the best thing in life unfailing love as does the writer
014hiefollowing verses: 0
locon-vx tXy- oll-ec
- ARDS and the game are ours as time flits by
-
1 d deals us chances on the uncertain stage
But while ours wisdom may increase with age
We seldom yin however151 we iry "1-4Ar
4 4
To
41''
Joy after joy approaches and departs 111''c
But we have kept the fellowship of hearts!
Nu 'VIVIAN NIVIt&PUI UNION
"They are not human mother dear:
they're only tame gorillas"
Much as I feared the tunnel
then I feared gorillas snore and glad
was I to come again back to our
beloved shore
"When home once more my son re-
marked: "You'll want tit see the play
at the Olympian
1 v
os t(40 l theater it is their
--4-irms- i
- 11 maj In e e "
P" -2ii j1 1 'ti
t l n k Id like
(41 1740 i to stay indoors"
froI said "and rest
-?
I awhile"
-
— "Oh well you
f:8: lx- i ::
-tel need' not leave
--er-1)13)-'-- - the house' " be
c
tziL-- -2 t'U M i-4
f 14 (--ornoN answered with a
017Itt smile "We do not
! d ) 1
p 2 Xtlic'tN go to theaters
4 r Y - '1 ' ! ti
like the canaille
''''' '?
' rn I hope Just dark-
'i en close the
t -0:t frr: drawing - r o om
- 1 and tbl w
e dilll see
' a you
I the actresses the
cornices and
frieze Beside it stands the telephone
and you can hear with ease"
"What is a dioscope?" I cried
"A small objective lens so placed
as to command the stage (as all the
world now kens) connected by elec-
tric wire with yen white plate of glass
that's framed In panel on our wall
and over this will pass the scenery and
actors both until the play is through
By electricians it was tried in 1882
But that is quite old-fashioned so I'll
show you something new You'll want
to ride in my balloon directly after
tea I'll take you if you're not too
tired up to the Polar sea"
his kindness overpowered me and I
began to weep when someone shouted
in my ear "You are crying in your
sleep"
The Globe had fallen on the floor
the lamp was growing dim so what
my son might yet have said is known
to none but him
A fact
BANISH THAT STRAW MAN
—
Supposing you thought you had been
able to ward of all bad luck during the
coining year by merely throwing a
straw image out of your house on the
last day of December You would
have thrown out not only one image
but a dozen And supposing that with
the discarding of the straw effigy you
had thrown away all your sins This
Is what the people of far-away Korea
believe On the day before New Year's
the wise and far-seeing head of each
family carefully makes a rough image
of straw which with great ceremony
Is taken to the door and thrown away
with all the vigor a man would exert
when he threw away ill fortune
NEW YEAR OF ANCIENTS
The ancient E41-ptians Phoenicians
and Persians began their new rear at
the autumnal solstice (September 21)
and the Greeks until the Fifth century
B C began the year at the winter
solstice (December 21) In 432 II C
the Greeks changed the festival to June
21 the beginning of summer
THE JULIAN CALENDAR
In the Julian calendar Noy Year day
occurs 12 days later than in the
Gregorian and the countries in which
the creek church predominates olt-
serve the kollday on January 13
C?
—Timothy Barry
WI M I
s 111
The ld All of a
Tug Boat
TN Otriztophor Q Hazard
kw 1922 Western Newmpaper Union)
THE matter with Andrews is that
he cannot keep upon any on
course He tacks all over the
bay but does not make any port Shift-
ing as a weather vane he is as con
tradictory He started upon the road
to a profession but landed in a brick
making concern Then lie concluded
that he was meant for big business
but he tried to start too high up A
chicken farm was his next employ-
ment and it netted him a large amount
of costly experience Ile now thinks
of trying mining but will undoubtedly
dig up disaster If he ends as a good
shoeblack it will be at the bottom
where he ought to have begun and he
will be nearer to true progress
The tug boat that was proceeding up
the river was named 'Patience" It
was tugging a long following of canal
boats at a slow pace It was making
its way towards a definite point and
over a prescribed and limited course
And it was going to get there All its
energy was pledged to perseverance
In the practice of the proverb "It's
doggedness as does it" The eagle
over the pilot house had its wings
spread although it could not fly yet
The boy who stood at the bow said
"I'm only a ship's boy now but I'll be
a man tomorrow"
Can success find such a leap year as
will enable it to land at the end of a
twelvemonth without plodding towards
it from its beginning? Is there any
recipe that will enable a young fellow
like Andrews to obtain his father's
position and wealth without pursuing
his father's path of long and patient
toil? Must not the well of a bucket
shop run dry? Can a gambler finally
break the bank?
Andcan a Jack-at-all-trades be a
master of any? No 1 The times call
for specialists rather than general
practitioners It will be a New Year
indeed for everything in general whell
it becomes something In particular
Better the patient persistent tug boat
than the more exciting but less profit-
able airplane The ship's boy of today
must prece the captain of tomorrow
NEW YEAR'S CALES
From old Dutch times to the middig
of the Nineteenth century New Year's
day in many American cities was de
voted to the universal interchange of
visits Every door was thrown ope
and it was a breach of etiquette tak
omit any acquaintance in the annual
calls when old friendships were re-
newed and family differences amicably
settled
NEW YEAR GIFTS
The custom of giving and receiving
gifts on New Year day which originat
ed in Rome still survives in France
and Scotland although in most coun-
tries the exchange of gifts at Christ-
nuts has taken its place
WHAT SHALL WE WRITE?
What shall we write on the falai
new page called 1023? Can we not
make it a record of golden deeds1-9
Youth's' Companion
Z - -
- 3
-eN h
no one minds growing older or any- NEW YEAR'S DAY 14) -4)1
66-
thing that sort
g o — 1 I
"e -1
"That is why I am not sad and why Tim storm-wind sank the moon rods 0
e
high
rg ' -' lil I - - 'It'
- r I can greet you so gayly and so cheer- with silver haze Set round ji ! 0
--"' --11 fully Where late sky-spaces wonderful
71 "The Beautiful Valley of Memories Showed green as chrysoprase 1 fik 14
II i has ever so many living there Of eimtrilify t t'!"Pt 4
Within the old gray church anon
---- "N course all the old years are there and The gathered folk would sit 7-" :11 gi!24
Acesor- What good thues they do have coin- I met the old year on the hill
ratparing notes And bade farewell to it
-nien they have hurried visitors
from away too You will notice from
time to time how people will remember
The woods around stood stark and dim ti
But at my feet white birds
Fluttered the wraiths of kindly deed - 1
f -7oal
some lovely thing that happened some And sweet remembered words
- TIIE GARBER SENTINEL GARBER OKLAII03IA --- - -
-
-------)7----- - '
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- ' V Boston Globe in ISA predicted manl
things which have become a reality it
much lean time than anticipated)
A130
HIS New Year's evi
- -i - ---- - - :if:- :-
- m title I lounge
4 (
::: ::'-':- A t' si !‘ '
-
' 7- 1 It - - - 1 91 with nothing els
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t - - - J fj 1 :::lhoglitoi til ::::::: to do I scanne
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--vkt r- e the Globe and al
'4 Nemt--Air s- most ere I knew
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growing dimnes!
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for"4--
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stole across tilt
i 2I'' L''''71: printed page I drew it nearer and be
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s--L-- -04 old! 'twits yellowed oter' with age
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- ) ray Nly hands I found had wrinkled
grown my locks were changed tc
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) Z my form was bent my visior
I s'"‘Zs"-' z1" t I ' $411°11"4"ss' ssk " I dim my teeth had passed away And
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s as I gazed I beard a voice "Good
64-n S : ntarnin randma dears I wish cit
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"is k:rfz''''' many many times a Happy Glad
t
' New Year" Then tall men said the3
A 5 ''' s'''1 -' ' 1 were my sons and daughters fair to
we told me this wasn't ninety-three
i s but nineteen forty-three
1
Said I: "My memory has failed
' ''''
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- '''''" '- - s
- s bow goes the world today?"
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"You shall go out this afternoon and
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see the town" cried they
At that the tears flowed down my
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ft It - ' ' s
4 k
' gc:gieleitkss
r Quoth I "The days are ended
s
when these poor eyes could see the
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' "Oh nol we'll have them mended"
' A grown-up son then seized a knob
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' --11 s - 400"'s‘4s s -
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'
q p gc4-Amk s - 1 -' 1
'--- and gave three pulls upon it:
v- - '" '' 'imli " ' " T h e car will be
'"- -a 1 A here at once
' 1 il W lit(11q11 mother put on
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A —- - ---- -- ---- -- ----- ---- -- - ------ -- - -- - --7 - --- t igureues snot on stenni Sine Call II "'— I — f WHAT SHALL WE WRITE?
I
the' New Year New Year day nod this was neeepted Julian calendar New Year day
not for noke but for efficiency! Quoth me: "1 thought that slavery In the J
1
“I am going" said the Old Year "to by all 'Ionian catholic countries 4t eau Vi a t e h a young mans smoke whes was done with long ago" occurs 12 days later than in the 1V1iat shall we write on the fats
CernianY Denmark ond that is about all there i of im s h 1
1 the Beautiful Valley of Memories Oh once by "So 'tis" said he "Then who" 1 Gregorian and the countries in which new page called 1023? Can we not
they tell nie it is NO wonderful a Swedqn about 1720 and England in can bear a belle ring when 1 would asked "are these three stalwart fel- the creek church predominates obt make It a record of golden deeds?-
-
place and because it Is so beantit1 a 1I prefer to have her busy! lows-- serve the ksilday on January 13 Youth's Companion
- I
1
seidomAvin however rd we try 4-2)
fcbosia : c
33 promise most to our insistent yout
I diamonds glitter to our later gaze rml14
melancholy spades our hopes amaze
leave them buried after1a11 forsgo1ilv7
Ilr ' --1'9-
I 41 -
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Atilteibe vicissitudes of fhb chanzing time and with- the c nsciousneit I
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0
stays with us always:
e
3
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roaches and departs e:''
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Peters, S. H. Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 28, 1922, newspaper, December 28, 1922; Garber, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2078240/m1/6/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.