The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 132, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 11, 1920 Page: 4 of 8
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THE MARSHALL MORNING NEWS
Wednes., Feb. 11,1920
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RAILROAD WAGES NOT HIGHEST.
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Have Your New Suit
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Made-to-Order!
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throughout the country.
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In Avery Hop wood's Celebrated Farce said his nan
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To
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TIP-TOP TAILORING CO.
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401 1 North Washington
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MAX AND WOMAN.
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Announcements
Paris, Feb. 9.— The treaty by which
NO DANGER FROM THE BALLOT BOX MAN.
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bible class, at 10:45 Sunday morning
50c by Carrier.
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County Clerk—
4
CHARLES W. HOLLINSHEAD.
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and advocates it through the ballot box there down at his typewriter and perpetrated the fol-
—USE CITIZEN’S CHECKS
If •
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! Justice Peace, Precinct 6—
I
G. W. (JUDGE) BLALOCK.
For County Commissioner, Precinct 2
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[CONVENIENCE
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FOR BARGAINS
In used cars, see Elliott, East End
WE
POLITICAL PICKING.
Gr
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SAFETY
STRENGTH
rieM
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Don't Carry
Much Money
LOUIS A. POPE
BEHN C. CHADD
You I
ery
know
Wils
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mmmmmmmmmmmmmmummummmmgV
and the ret
rest is a roa
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CHARLES E. McNEILL
STEVE W. SCOTT
J. J MOORE.
W. S. BALDWIN
That Mexican earthquake did not take full ad-
antage of its cpportunities.—Los Angeles Times.
SERVICE
STRENGTH
COURTESY
CONVENIENCE
HOMER M PRICE
CLEBURNE HUSTON
J. B. NORRIS ........
J. H. BLALOCK ......
BRYAN BLALOCK ...
N. A. (BUD) GREEN.
BEHN COOK.
Make This
YOUR BANK!
FOR DISTRICT CLERK—
JOHN B. HENDERSON
Intern
Tomorrow—
J. D. Johnson
Steam and Gas Fitting,
Plumbing, Repairs
PHONE 787
A
us
For Justice of the Peace, Princint 3.
Place 1.
J. W. PACE >
—the safe,
convenient
business-like
way to pay all
shopping bills.
—your
checking
account
invited.
For Sup. Public Instruction.
H. G. (GRADY) HALL
J. W. CYPHERS
For County Attorney—
FRANK SCOTT.
For Sheriff
JOHN C. SANDERS
P. C. TUCKER
Adm. 15 & 25 Cts.
(War Tax Included,
5
GRE.
•FOB
. SB
For Commissioner. Precinct 3
C. W. LIVINGSTON
, For Tax Collector—
GORDON R. BELL.
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Commissioner, Precinct 4—
M. A. STEELMAN.
R. W. TAYLOR.
. 5.0u
. 4.00
County Judge
H. T. LYTTLETON
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BUTT
43
• IA EXTENDING POWER
TO NORWAY IS SIGNED
165
.................... Editor
............... City Editor
Telegraph and News Editor
...... Advertising Manage!
......Business Manager
DEATH CLA
UMH
For Cemmissioner, Precinct 1—
J. L. WOODLEY.
A---------
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PHONE
788
For first class
Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing
and Alteration
VAWTER’S
Tailor Shop
M. C. A. is offering the ex-service men of Harri-
, son and surrounding counties the opportunity of
' securing, without charge. training that will fit
them for a wider and more useful life than they
enjoyed before the war.
I
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4
We extend to you a cordial invitation
to open an account with us be it
large or small.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Per month, by carrier .......................
Par month, by mail ...........................
Fer year, by carrier ..........................
Per year, by n.ail .............................
MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS.
36rE2ETTETT•
12 COURTESY
I
Citizen’s State Bank
JESSE 1. CARTER, Cashier
Coming Monday Night—The Big
Road Attraction
“BUSINESS BEFORE
PLEASURE”
The Farmers State Bank
OF HALLSVILLE
A strong guaranty fund Bank
$58**
1
Choose Your Own Style
and Your Own Cloth
Have Your Next Suit Represent Exactly
) our Own Ideas of Dress—
COME IN AND LOOK THEM OVER
A Fit or No Sale—When we say “Made-to-
Measure” we mean CUT and TAILORED
precisely to your body dimensions. If we fail
to fit you or if we do not properly execute
your ideas of style, the sale is cancelled and
your money is refunded. Our GUARANTEE
OF SATISFACTION is the most liberal that
has ever been issued.
N"E
9
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‘•The Ga
FRIDAY
Char
In his own
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“A DAY’
—YO
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Read The News before Breakfast_
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Our accommodations, conveniences
and cordial personal service will
make you feel at home with us at all
times.
quite erroneous. Take the wages paid to the T. __
& P. shopmen as an example. Our understanding =
is that the standard pay for machinists and other =
mechanics and wood workers is 72 cents per hour. =
Yet journeymen carpenters and painters and E
brickmasons here in Marshall are on a scale of #
The Associated Pres, is exclusively entitled to the use
for republication of .. ws dispatches credited to it. o
not otherwise credited in thia paper and also the local
news published herein.
As a rule, woman keeps her teeth clean,
and her husbands pockets in the same shape. I
She imagines she is the Queen of the
chicken family—and she is.
She don't grow whiskers, but does grow
corns on her toes—GOD BLESS HER!
No one can ever doubt the miracles who sees)
he minister living on his salary fixed ten years'
ago, and keeping out of debt.— Universalist t
Leader.
I
NEW OPPORTUNITY FOR EX-SERVICE MEN. =
— Comedy —
“Fair and Warmer”
other day from a good woman friend of his:
MAN.
Man is the queerest of all animals. He is
born barefooted, and dies baldheaded. The
more you know about him. the less you un-
derstand why the Creator did not make the
horse first and then quit.
An average man will shave a note and clip
coupons but insists on having a barber to
mow his whiskers and crop his locks.
Man is of many ways and full of prunes.
It takes him a year or so to learn to talk,
but he never knows when to talk. He will
lie all night and dream and lie all day and
scheme. He is a complex assembly of
egotism, stomach and stubbornness, believ-
ing that a dog which belongs to him is better
than a dude that is the property of a neigh-
bor.
Man is an unfinished piece of common
furniture. He spends all that he can borrow
getting rid of his appendix. He imagines
himself the king of beasts and yet it takes
him longer to learn how to walk than it
does a jungle monkey and longer to grow
whiskers than a billy goat.
The gentleman after cogitating a little sat
There is some very unwise criticism being made
in many of the leading papers regarding the
movement of the American Federation of Labor’s
announcement that that organization will enter
the realm of politics. In the opinion of The
Morning News this criticism is wrong. The Fed-
eration of Labor proposes to adjust its wrongs by
the way of the ballot box. This is the constitu-
tional way. There should be no railing, no abuse,
for the majority must rule. If our entire economic
system should go down by the ballot box route
it would only be in line with a democratic form of
government. Many of us might not favor the
changes, yet if the majority decides for a change
By The Asmoa
London,
extensive
American
■continent.
Chamber <
.The Cha
inv estigat
that Anil
make lard
provind t
cording to I
there is J
the Conti
general dd
can and 11
The evidence in the trial now being held at Grand
Rapids indicates that millions of dollars were
spent to carry the election. There is more dan-
ger in seating such men as Newberry than there
is in seating a few Socialist members of the New
York legislature. The presiding judge in the
Newberry case has ruled that $3600 was all that
could be legally spent on the election while the
testimony shows that more than $5,000,000 was
paid out to politica! boomers from one bank alone.
It took lots of money to beat Henry Ford, for no
matter what you may think of Ford's ability as a
lowing and sent it to his correspondent:
WOMAN—“MAY THEIR TRIBE INCREASE’’
A woman is a funny animal—she is al-
ways cussing the men but at the same time
laying in wait to nab them. She don’t ex-
actly run after, but is constantly weaving a
web to ensnare th?m.
The more man thinks he knows all about
women, the more he shows his ignorance of
them.
She comes into the world naked, and yell-
ing—not for food but. raiment and adorn-
ments—and goes through life with the same
complaint.
Man may be full of prunes, but woman is
full of olives, salads, and small talk—mostly
scandal. She, unlike man. man know when
to talk, but she does not know when to shut
up. She likes neither man nor woman, that
can out talk her.
She stays in bed most of the night, and
likes to do so most of the day. The sun has
no effect on her, other than her complextion
—some like to be fair, others tanned, ac-
Our “melting pot” is like others: it can not)
sonvert refractory ores.—Wall Street Journal. I
The system of free vocational training for ex-
service men which is being inaugurated here is
worthy of the heartiest support on the part of the
people and the various schools and colleges of Mar-
shall. Through this work, the Y. M. C. A. is of-
fering something that will be of inestimable value
to the young men who served during the war—
something that no former service man who finds
himself in need of additional education can af-
ford to miss.
Many young men have awakened to their need
for an education during their service in the army.
Many have had new ambitions awakened within
them which they can hever realize without addi-
jtional training along some special line. The Y.
Bs The Associated
Brownsville.
has claimed Je
ictment for in
ran : Martin,
nt Norlas, in
essed from ia
co:pus proceec
home near Ra
Pastor Makes Long
Flight In Airplane
- statesman, the common, ordinary citizen believes
he stands for a fair deal all around. Newberry’s
plac is in jail—not in the United States Senate. )
8,6
E8
“-226
________ |
America is now in for a dry cleaning.—Bal-'
limore American.
The Marshall Morning News
A newspaper published every day except Monday in
Ike Hotel Marshall building, Marshall, Texas.
his customary place, teaching his
Be The Aswociate Pre-s. Norway is given soverignty over the
Chanute. Kan., Feb. 10.—A flight Spitzbergen Archipelago was signed
jfrom Wichita to Chanute. approxi- in the cloak hall of the foreign minis-
mately 100 miles, in an airplane, was try at 4:30 this p m.
made by the Rev. E. A Blackman. Hugh C. Wallace, the American Am-
i pastor of the Chanute Christian bassador to France, signed the treaty
I Church, to enable the pastor to be in for the I nited States.
should be no criticism.
One may think that the Federation of Labor
has made a mistake in taking this step, that it
will be impossible for it to carry its ideas to a
successful culmination and yet it is folly to say
hat it should not have the right to take the
step. ” !
The News even fails to see any objection’
Grip, Influenza
Hamlin's Wizard Oli a Rellable,
Antiseptic Preventive
During infuenza epidemics spray
the nose and throat several times a
cay with one part Wizard 0:1 and
‘wo parts water, using an atomizer.
If you haven't an atomizer, gargle
ine throat and snuff the mixture up
1e nose. This treatment sets up an
antiseptic wall of defense against
"I lu" germs___
are representative of wages paid generally
"mrrmrem mnmm
“Entered as second-class matter September 7. 1919, at
■ the post office at Marshal'. Texas, under the Act at I
March 3, 1879."
whatever in the course mapped out by Mr. Gom-
pers and his conferees. The farmers of the
Northwest have gone in together and are elect-,
ing men of their way of thinking as governors
and congressmen and senators. The advocates of
tariff protection in the Eastern States send only.
high tariff men to Congress. The Louisiana peo-1
pie have in the sugar districts deserted the.
Democratic party and sent men to Congress who
will protect the susar interests, It is therefore
nothing but natural that the great body of or-
ganized labor should desire to elect men who will,
at least, be not antagonistic to its interests.
There should be no abuse of the man who pro-,
poses to settle at the ballot box. And such men
should not be confused or in any wav connected
with those who would settle by the bomb route.
The two classes have nothing in como, although
many would try to make us believe their plans
and methods are identical. The republic is in no
danger from the man who proposes to go into a’
voting booth.
There is a prevalent idea that railroad em-
ployees are receiving larger wages than prac-
tically any other class of workmen. The idea is
Garage, dealer in used cars. 701 E. I
Bowie St. 3-101c
cording to the likes or dislikes of the “poor
man" she is trying to ensnare.' j For Constable. Precinct 3.
Man pays a barber to change his appear- JOHN C. BANKSTON
ance from a goat to that of a smooth faced _ ---—
monkey, but woman pays $5.00 for 10 cents For Constable Precinct 6
worth of sweet smelling “flour,” and $1.00 I
for a stick of lip paint.
Woman is a delicate piece of furniture,
and thinks she is no good until draped in laces
and skins—she likes all fancy things, and
likes to make man sweat to pay for them.
Woman cares nothing about the size or
shape of her leg, but is darned particular
about her waist line.
80.50 pay of $1.00 per hour. We believe these figures =
09
ble
IS 73
I #
°0* 6
ImE#,M W/M
A Marshall man received the following the
Of all the fine political picking there has been
, nothing to equal the “barrel” that Senator-elect
I Newberry and his friends opened up in Michigan.
For Tax Assessor—
H. L. CALLOWAY.
» CHAS. S. BOURNS.
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 132, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 11, 1920, newspaper, February 11, 1920; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1406272/m1/4/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .