The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 37, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 20, 1920 Page: 2 of 8
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Wed
Wednesday, October 20, 1920
I
THE MARSHALL MORNING NEWS
TWO
CEJE
BISHOP COLLEGE
At The Theaters
FIN ANCI AL HELP
I
TO MERCHANTS
TODAY AND TOMORROW
be-
ginning Wednesday.
AT THE QUEEN
Q
1
A
i
TO THE HARRISON
COUNTY DAIRYMEN a tour of investigation of Brazil, the
WEDDING
r4
a
< “ <
Action as vividly piercing as the vibrating peals of the Tolling Bells
PARK YOUR CARES AT
L
BEST PICTURES & MUSIC
■
LADY ROSE’S DAUGHTER
f
/
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
NOTICE!
A Matrimonial Mirthquake
Three different periods are occupied
I
MARRIAGE LICENSES
=
)k
FOR SALE
THEATRE
ELK
i
MARRY
EVE R
DONT
TODAY ONLY
MORE
One of the Greatest Human Stories
8
6
6]
4
Is
In Modern Fiction
M. M. BARNES.
IIIiIiIIIItiliIIliaINIIliINIIlEIIIMIIlNMiliILIlllIIIHiIliAIEIIl
1
/
dPanmounbeiricnaftgicur
III
%,
f i
Telephone 1057
AND PATHE NEWS
208 WEST AUSTIN STREET
PHONE 211
3
ever
marry
My home place on the Culberson Highway. House -
has eight large rooms, bath room, six clothes
closets, sleeping porch and front and back stair-
way, halls and porches, upstairs and down; elec-
tric lights, water from overhead tank, garage,
barns and outbuildings: fine orchard and pecan
trees. Acreage to suit customer. Will make easy
payments, or will trade for either city or country
property.
Enrollment sat the college have now-
reached a total of 382, the largest in
I
i
ALL
T
iness transactions have taken place
which amount to close around a mil-
lion dollars.”
Austin, Texas, Oct. 16.—There are
46,610 esses of tubereulosis in Texas,
according to the estimate of Dr. Don-
Nation
Claii
F2
Argentine Republic, Chili, and several
other Latin-American countries.
Aust
point
Texas
athleti
ments
those 1
400 p
300 mt
makin
trainin
cursior
of hyg
Will appear tonight at the City Au-
ditorium. Seata on sale at Fry-Hodge
Drug Co.
Beautiful Elsie Ferguson plays three
roles in her new Paramount-Artcraft
"Mrs. Turner is a splendid musician with a lovely voice—
a real artist"— Yvonne de Treville.
H
i ■
Wage Increase High
In Allegheny County
All those who disobeyed the warning are here-
by summoned to appear and show cause.
Bring your own—we do the uncorking—cases
called in order.
Womack Cotton Gin
Is Scene Of Fire
2
ft
46,610 CASES TUBERCULOSIS
REPORTED IN THIS STATE
The Irish Tenor,
Allen McQuhae
The feature picture at the Queen
Theatre today breathes the air of old
MAY MgAVOY.,
BRUCE GORDON
WE
HOUSE OF THE
TOLLING BELL
A Blockton. Production.
#
Revealing the love-life of a woman who found that her “blue blood"
was rad and followed her heart to things not blazoned on eoats of
arms.
HIS WEDDING STARTS
TROUBLE FOR BENSON
the history of the institution which
covers a period of 39 years. All dor-
mitories have been crowded to the
to stress the point that this amount
of cash is brought from distant parts
of the United States and placed in
circulation among Marshall’merchants.
After it has changed hands ten or a
dozen times a year, it means that bus-
Also
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
Admission: Adults 30c; Children 20c
BIVINS LUMBER CO.
P. O. JAMES, TEXAS.
Mill 7 miles west of Harleton in Harrison County.
MRS. NATHANIEL P. TURNER
Teacher of Singing
Studio 102 E. Border St.
'Louisiana. Few pictures have been
made which so convincingly carry the
i atmosphere of its locale. The exter- I
iors are pel feet because the producer
evidently went into the very heart of
the country with which the story deals
and shop-his scenes direct from the
——Also--
ALICE HOWELL in “HER LUCKY DAY”
AND A PARAMOUNT MAGAZINE
eT -
by the picture—1860, 1890, and mod-
ern times, and Miss Ferguson’s per-
formance is a good deal more than a
nice defferention in costuming. She
portrays a grandmother, a daughter
and finally a granddaughter, and to
each role, she imparts a rare sympa-
thy and understanding.
In the main story, Miss Ferguson is
Julie Le Breton, who is never allowed
to forget that she is the illegitimate
daughter of Lady Rose. She lives as
a companion to a distant relative La-
dy Delafield, in a rather cramped at-
mosphere. She is deeply in love with
Captain Warkworth, an army officer,
played by David Powell. Because
Julie will not give him up, Lady Dela-
field banishes her from her home.
Uncertain as to what to do, Julie
goes to the captain's apartments, and
while there learns of an affair which
he is carrying on with another wo-
man.
the struggle for possession of a half
tumble down manor house, believed
by the superstitious natives to har-
bor "spooks." The atmosphere of
mystery and superstition is closely in-
terwoven into the theme of the story
and very convincingly exploited in
the picture.
May McAvoy is splendid in the role
of a poor little Southern girl and B.
Gordon is a considerate and manly
into by marrying. It will be the at-
traction at the Grand Theatre,
4
Over one hundred thousand dollars
taken in from outside sources was
spent among Marshall merchants last
year by Bishop College authorities,
»eeord i ng to the statement made yes-
terday afternoon by President Maxon
of that institution.
"Considering the very large increase
in attendance for this year, which
has reached the highest mark in the
history of the college,” said President
Maxon. "I would estimate that mon-
ey expended locally by our school this
year will probably reach the one hun-
dred and fifty thousand mark. I wish
________ original. The interiors show a fine ap
fullest capacity, while over two hun- preciation of old Southern homes.
dred applicants have been turned down The story is absorbing and moves
on account of lack of accommodation, with increasing speed as the action
——------------ i i eaches its climax. It has to do with
■iniiimiiiHiiiiiiiHiiiiniiummiiimmR
= You Don’t Have to Send =
Out of Town for
| RUBBER STAMPS! f
= See W. C. Keasler at The News =
= office, or write P. O Box 312. =
■iiiniiNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiitiiitiiiuia
To People Of Harleton and Sur-
rounding Country.
We nave about exhausted our timber supply at
present location and therefore have quite a bunch
of stock for sale cheap, such lumber as is sunta-
ble for the building of bams and outhouses. Also
lumber for the building of homes.
Lumber has recently taken a tumble in price and
now is the time to build. Our lumber is cut from
virgin pine and is good as the best. Avail your-
selves of this opportunity. Come over with your
wagons or trucks and load up. Our stock is yet
intact and we can furnish anything needed in the
building of a home.
First to come will get the best bargains.
I cern. He has just arrived here from
---Also- —
“GETTING HIS GOAT”—Comedy
The Turner- Busby Courses of Study for Made Clubs
"Your courses of study show intelligent musicianship
and eareful preparation—they are the best I have ever
seen"—- CL.arfes Wakefteld Cadman.
The following marriage licenses
were issued by County Clerk N. A.
Green yesterday:
B. S. Taylor and Mias Orene Har-
kins.
Pete Andrews and Verne Greer.
E. G. Richey and Miss Lucy Lee
Moore.
Will Reagan and Ella Jackson.
G. L. McClaren and Miss Carrie
Billner.
J. H. Wilson and Miss Edna Car-
yenter.________________________________
-
hero. Several striking characteriza-
“Don’t Forget” To Phone 211
We are doing cleaning and pressing for the following prices:
Men's and Ladies Butts leaned and pressed ..................
Men's and Ladies' Suite pressed .............................
Pants cleaned and pressed..................................
Coats cleaned and pressed ...............................W
Satisfaction guaranteed.
Suite cleaned, pressed and dyed ................ »4 w
THE MODEL TAILORING CO.
There will be such a large crowd
at the wedding Oct. 2cth, that it will
take place at the City Hall instead of
the church. There will be ne printed
invitations, but all are invited. 10-21e
All who wish to contract your milk
at your price will please meet at the
court house next Saturday at 10:30
o’clock sharp. A party will be present
to contract for all your sweet milk.
Now be on hand in full force. We
have won our hard fight.
Yours,
10-21p W. H. CARTER, Roustabout.
Rev. A. C. Stribling. pastor of the
Cumberland Presbyterian Church an-
nounced last night that the Congrega-
tional meeting. which was to have
been held this evening at the Cumber-
land Church had been postponed until
next Wednesday evening.
This meetig is to be held for the
purpose of discussing ways and
means of erecting a new church build-
ing on the site of the present church,
which is one of the most centrally lo- i
rated in the city.
Fire of unknown origin broke out
in the seed house of the Womack
Cotton Gin on South Washington ave-
nue yesterday afternoon about five
o’clock. The fire was first discovered
by workmen when a huge puff of
flame was seen to shoot out of the
Adolph 2ulok y— i4
‛ tlsie -2%
ergusom^
r Roses Daughter e
seed house, which is about fifty feet in--- - . - . . .. .
from the main building, which houses tions by other members of the all-star
the"gin. The alarm was turned in cast are most worthy of praise-
and was answered by the entire city
“Don't Ever Marry” was the in-
junction given Joe Benson just three
hours before he was secretly married
to the girl of his choice. “Troubles
always start with marriage,” was the
rest of the warning and within twelve
hours after his wedding Joe had ac-
cumulated enough to last an average
man through a life time.
“Don’t Ever Marry” is the title of
the latest Marshall Neilan production
which tells the funny fascinating story
of the troubles which Joe Benson ran
Pittsburgh, Oct. 18.—The average
daily wage of every person employed
in Allegheny County, one of the coun-
try's greatest industrial centers, in-
creased 70.2 per cent in three years,
according to James F. Woodward,
State Secretary of Internal Affairs.
The per capita daily wage for 1919
was $5.08, while that of 1916 was
$2.85, Mr. Woodward said. He used ald B. Armstrong, assistant secretary
the latter year for comparison be-of the National Tuberculosis Asso-
cause he said it was “fairly normal, ciation. Which was quoted in a recent
whereas 1917 and 1918 were abnor- statement from the Texas Publie
mal, owing to the war. Health Association. This association,
Although production valuation dur- in an effort to familiarize the people
ing the war years was greater than of Texas with the symbol of the fight
in 1919. Mr. Woodward s figures show- against the white plague -the double
ed wages had increased steadily from barred red cross—recently sent cuts
1916 to 63.53 daily in 1917, and $4.71 of this emblem to 600 Texas news-
in 1918 to 65.08 in 1919. papers.
Production value in 1919 amounted ’ .___________________
to $1,900,226,400 as. compared with SOUTH AMERICA ACQUAINTED
$1,619,322,200 in 1916, an increase of WITH THE MIDDLE WEST
17.3 per cent. In 1917 and 1918 pro- _______
duction value reached weU over the Galveston. Oct. 19 — South America ,
62.000.000,000 mark, has got acquainted with the Middle-'
The per capita wealth of the county West and the gauchos of the pampas
was $2,580, or twelve times the av- have begun to order “cowboy clothes”
erage per capita wealth of the Unit- from Chicago mail order houses, ac
ed States. cording to Ed Lewisohn, a “business
scout” of a Chicago implement con-
fire department and the flames were
rapidly extinguished by use of the
chemicals.
About one hundred dollars worth
of seed cotton was destroyed. picture, -Lady Rose’s Daughter,” the
L. J. Womack one of the owners ttraction to be shown at the Elk thea-
of the gm stated last night that he, tre Wednesday only. The story is of
was practically certain that the fire the highest bred type which Miss Fer-
was not of incendiary origin Helguson fits so well. It was adapted
said that twosmall hoys werechased from tbe late M" Humphrey Ward's
out of the building about an hour be , novel of the same name.
fore the flames were discovered and
he believed that the origin of the fire
might possibly be traced to them.
Cumberland Church
Meeting Delayed
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787.
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 37, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 20, 1920, newspaper, October 20, 1920; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1406484/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .