The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 154, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 7, 1920 Page: 1 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Che Aarshall Etlorning lews
Number 154
Marshall, Texas, Sunday, March 7,1920.
Volume 1
I j
ANU-BAILEY FACTION PLANS CAMPAIGN
*,4
VON BERNSTORFF ; Texas Pro- Wilson Leaders
DIPLOMACY SLIP
dent Wilson Informed of Action.
0
TO BE DECIDED
DELIVERS SPEECH
BY THE TREATY
be named throughout the state.
4
I dared that Democratic Senators al-
tude of the executive and that com-
4
Lodge of Massachusetts, the Republi-
r
sections of the state participated in
gation.
i
4
Marshall Teachers Will Not Accept
The teacher in the public schools of
she
I that these would be no schools next
Reduction In Use Of
*
not
Armed Bandits Loot
action was unanimous and represents
I
$
?
)
court the
I
I
{ By The Arwociated Pre«g.
Washington, March 6.—A resolu-
Permit Use Of Name’
PINEAPPLE CROl.
San Francisco, March 6.—Herbert
V
*z
journs After Holding 80
Sessions in Washington.
revealed whether the President would
grant the requested conference with
Senator Simmons of North Carolina,
representing the Senate Democrats in
Mr. Daniels States That if the U. S.
Ratifies the Treaty and Becomes a
Member of the League of Nations
He Mill Recommend Round - Out
Construction.
THE PAPER
THAT GOES
INTO 3400
HOMES
of time, that they will not longer
work for us, for a much less wage I
Six reservations besides that relat-
ing to Article 10 remain to be disposed
ventions Mayl, when delegates will be
chosen for county conventions the fol-
NAVAL BUILDING j
PROGRAM DRAWN
Officias Close to the President De-
clare That Democratic Senators Al-
ready Are Aware of the Attitude
of the President and That a Com-
promise May Come Thru Lodge.
A
»
By
was
cam-
Ju-ge, who had heard of the prisoner’s
ability to jig, asked him to show the
MOVE TO OBTAIN
WILSON’S VIEWS
MEETS SETBACK
In discussing the request for a con-
ference between the President and
Senator Simmons, White House offi-
cials pointed out that Senator Glass,
Democrat, of Virginia, recently had
talked with Mr. Wilson, who on that
occasion, they said, made clear his
views on Article 10. Later in the day.
however, Senator Glass denied on the
Senate floor that he had gone to the
White House as an emissary of Demo-
cratic Senators, while many of his
colleagues asserted privately that they
had not received from him any re-
ports that they considered final of de-
finite as to what the President would
accept as a compromise.
i
(1
»
the entiic teaching force of 55 whit*
tenchers.
gation that will stand solidly and un-J
reservedly in approval and support of
the w ilson administration.
State issues, it was decided, will be
her diplomacy and attitude that
was willing to join.
speedily to an end.
Officials close to the President de-
6
r
MEASURES BEFORE HO!SE
NAT AL COMMITTEE.
I
4
EXECUTIVE VIEW
IS THOUGHT FIRM
MEMBER
OF THE
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
ASSERTS GERMANY MUST TAKE
UP STRUGGLE WHERE IT
WAS DROPPED.
FIRE DAMAGES
RESIDENCE O N
WEST HOUSTON
today. The handling of supplies has
again been placed by the food depart-
ment in the hands of a board of con-
trol. The censorship. the correspond-
ent adds, has been restored beginning
today.
Bank Of Harrisburg Foote today when District Attorney
______ I Clyne ordered the defendants freed
PEACE TREATY IS PRONOUNCED
DEAD BY IRRECONCIL-
ABLE OPPONENTS.
CONFERENCE TO
SUBMIT REPORT
OF ACTIVITIES
Egypt Is Threatened
With Food Shortage
Under Head H. C. L. 1 negro, who claimed to be the champion
— _‘4" . V. — cotton pieker of Galveston, Texas, to-
ing the Monthly Teachers Institute at
the High school yesterday, the teach-
. day danced himself out of the boys’
court when arraigned on a charge of
1.
f
M
k
any "wolf cry" about it. Promises of Hoover will not permit his name to be
something in the distant future is net used in the California presidential pri-
accent their present assignments.
The
34 Degrees Below
At Billings, Mont.
4
1
set aside until after the pricinct con-
on was that exempting the United
States from paying expenses of the
’ League of Nations without congres-
ing him of this action and acquainting
him with the purpose of the cam-
paign the conference had decided on.
By Th# Ansociated Press.
Honolulu, T. H., March Final
figures on the 1919 pineapple pack,
received by the Hawaiian Pineapple
Packers' Association, show 5,071,976
cases put up in the islands of the
group, compared with 2,000 cases in
1901: 1,313,363 in 1912 and 3,847,315
in 1919.
ed by usually well-informed personscation were accomplished let the
uld include for the three years 20 to indicate that a definite policy has President decide whether he would ac-
A resolution adopted by the confer- the conference and several were ap-'
ence unequivocally and a telegram pointed to the committee of plans and
was sent to President Wilson inform- organizations and resolutions.
son" Democrats made plans for a
Chairman Ball stated that Texas
wbuld include several women in its
can leader in the Senate. It was not
taking a hat from a department store.
SAYS WILSON LET pick Up Gague Of Battle
DIPLOMACY SLIP Hurled Down By Enemies
When Jones came into
... n n .. ; tion of the White House officials re-
V lews On ! residency fleced the views of the President fur-
Marshall went on record yesterday
alluring to one who must work for a
living when they have a chance to
realize the future promise in a cer-
tain proposition now. Marshall can-
not hope to keep her schools open by
The Associated Press.
Washington, March 6.—The move
to bring President Wilson actively
into the peace treaty compromise neg-
otiations got such a setback at the
White House today that the irrecon-
i ciliale Senate opponents of ratifica-
tion again pronounced the treaty dead
and a request to advertisers to re-
duce their space ten per cent during
the present emergency, were urged in
a resolution adopted here today by the
board of directors and paper commit-
tee of th American Newspapers As-
sociation. In case advertisers will not
co-operate the resolution advises
publishers to raise their advertising
rates sufficiently to bring about pro-
poned reduction.
and gave notice that they would
move Monday to bring the debate
Spirited Meeting of Various Candidates Seeking the Governorship
Is Held in Dallas; Resolution Adopted and Presi-
/o‘0
• *
| By Ths Amociated Press.
Chicago, March 6.—Johnny Jones.
ther delay of the ratification vote
ANI DDAII I D I IANI By Th. A-nciated Pre... was only so much time wasted.
UI INUlbllIUI New York. March 6._William G
McAdoo again made plain his inten-1
Former German Ambassador Declares
That in Punishing Germany the
Entente Forgot to Take Cognizance
af the Economical Conditions of
the World at Large.
volunteer subscriptions $8,448
raised at the conference for a
paign fund.
Bailey Scored.
It came about in this way: Follow.
tion authorizing the United States
Grain Corporation to sell $5,000,000 of
soft wheat flour to needly European
countries on credit was approved to-
day by the House Ways Means Com-
mittee. It will be offered as a sub-
stitute for the Treasury Department's
proposal that loans of $50,000,000 be
made to Austria, Poland and Armenia
for food relief.
Br Th. Asociated Presa,
Berlin. March 6.—German diploma-
cy “must take up the struggle at that
point where President Wilson per-
mitted it to slip away from him" said
Count Von Bernstorff, former German
ambassador at Washington, at a mass
meeting of university student* in a
discussion of the nation's foreign poli-
cy.
Von Bernstorff declared that the
President had merely toucheri upon the
problems of negotiating a just peace,
but failed to solve it after being first
to assert that the war was not to end
in the creation of a new balance of
power.
Count Von Bernstorff said he had
warned against any attempt to ach-
ieve a revision of the treaty through
negotiations with individual entente
powers. Such a proceedure he chara-
cterised as a “dangerous illusion”
duction of ten per cent in consumption .. .
of newsprint paper by all newspapers, for next year at present salaries.
proper place to grapple with the
labor problem is in the individual
plants, the second industrial con-
terr nee will tell President Wilson
in its final report. The conference
adjounrnes today after having
held 80 sessions since its first
meeting Decemher 1. Its report,
adopted unanimously. w ill go to
the President next week and will
be made public in about 15 days.
Specific recommendations re-
garding hours of work, wages,
women and children in industries,
unemployment and similar prob-
lems have been made the con-
ference announced, and a definite
stand on collective barganing. the
roek on which the first conference
came to grief, has been taken.
B, n» Assocated Prem.
Billings, Mont., Mareh •— A drop of
33 degrees in about 12 hours establish-
ed a new record for Billings last night.
At 6 o’clock last night the thermomet-
ter stood at one below zero and
reached its lowest point at seven to-
day, when 34 below was registered.
By The Asociated Presa.
Washington, March 6.—The
court He demonstrated his skill and
day on the Simmons reservation, one
of the list of fourteen adopted last
November. The reservations voted
Democrats led by former Senator
Joseph Weldon Bailey.
Meeting here in an official state-
wide conference, these “Woodrow Wil-
thn they are offered elsewhere. j _ _
The time for passing resolutions tion not to permit his name to be en-of. the Senate having acted during the
.. . . that we think our teachers under paia ByTheA-mciatedPren. on presidential preference bal-
strike. They have simply notified the has passed. Money talks. n hicaxo. 2Pare 6 ‘ aJ"'_ | lots when he sent a telegram today to
public in plenty of time that they will ________2________ Darlymple of Iron River “whiskey re-; B. F. Ewing, chairman of the Demo-
bellion" fame lost two cases before cratic State Committee of California.
• United States Commissioner Mark reuesting that he be kept out of the
California primary.
By Tn# Asmociated Pre*#.
London, March 6.—Egypt is threat-
ened with a serious food shortage, the
Exchange Telegraph correspondent at
Cairo reports in a dispatch received
of the economic conditions of the
world at large. The vanquished with
, the exception of the United States, is
bankrupt."
In connection with his declarations
Germany must convice the entente
that she was unable to meet the
treaty's conditions unless given raw
products and ample credits which will
enable her to work off the indemnity,
he declared.
Discussing the League of Nations:
he said that Germany should not beg
to be received into it, which would be
undignified, but must indicate through
troi of the state convention and send bition amendment and bring I
to San Francisco an anti-Wilson dele- liquor. Many women from various I proposed. - . . ... .
said, would cost about S195,000.000 vicinity, the Chinese Eastern railway | superflous.
He gave no estimate of the cost of aland the stratigetic railroad junction in The development caused unconceal-
new three-year program. the Trans-Baikal region, according tojed disappointment among the Republi-
Included in the tentative three-year official information received here. cansand Democratic Senators working
BEFORE STUDENTS By The Ansociated Press. | Thos. H Ball of Houston, chairman
Dallas Tex., March 6.— Democrats of the conference, soon will appoint a
of Texas, supporting the administra-state Democratic committee of fifteen
. . . .. members and a Democratic state cen-
tion of Wilson today picked up the tral eommittee of thirteen members,
gague of battle hurled down by the county and precinct chairman are to
anti-administration factions of state • • •
SEC’Y. DANIELS LAYS THREE
program, Mr. Daniel’s outline were Dispatches from Honolulu yesterday • for an eleventh-hour compromise, but
ten dreadnaughts and six battle crusi- reported that the Japanese govern-i it did not put a stop to their negotia-
delegation to the national convention ers. but he added that he would askment had decided to withdraw fromtions. Some on both sides openly de-
__' appropriations for the first year for; Siberia beginning March 20. Lack of elared the only course left was the ef-
only two battleships and two battle. confirmation from Tokio was report-; fort at agreement and then if a ratifi-
cruisers. In addition the program'
year, so far as they were concerned,
| unless there was a raise in their sal:
Paper St rongly Urged aries. There is no disposition on the
’ _______ ' ! part of the teachers to threaten or to
By The Ansocisted Press.
. . i Many speakers at the conference Washington. March 6.—Three pro-
campaign to send to t e nationa ion bitterly scored former Senator Bailey,1 visional naval building programs, de-
vention at San Francisco a exas e 6! who recently announced his guberna- pending on Senate action in the peace
torial candidacy on a platform oppos-j treaty fight were laid before the
ing “the progressive Democratic ad-, House Naval Committee today by
mary as he is not a candidate for the
office, according to a telegram from
him, read here today by Gavin Mc-
Nab at the Democratic State Com-
mittee meeting.
The home of Mrs. Fannie Cocke.
603 West Houston avenue. was con-
siderably damaged by file at about
1:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon.
The fire caught in the attic from a
bathroom heater flue, and the roof
was badly burned. The loss amounted
to probably $150.
The fire department did excellent
work, and through their prompt ar-
rival the building was saved. Accord-
ing to Mrs. Cocke, the firemen were
on the scene within three minutes af-
ter the alarm was turned in.
ministration of Woodrow Wilson and! Secretary Daniels ---------
urging a return to the principals of If the United States ratified the IIIII AIA
I homas Jefferson. treaty and became a member of the IAPAN Will NGVI
Cullen F Thomasof Dallas, branded League of Nations. Mr. Daniels said/h IL TV ildU 11V 1
u ., Mr Bailey as “a stalling horse of the; he would only recommend new con- CIVW IID CNTRAI
lowing Tuesday, which in turn will R. publicans " and said he and James | strue tion to round out the fleet now UlVE UUUNIKVM
select the personnel of the state con-, ' .. . their heads togeth-building; if the Senate rejected the ■ nrrnrAI 1 clared that Democratic senators al-
vention of May 25 when the Texas’E hgomont’Pightthdpemoratic treaty and the United States defini- OF VLADIVOSTOK— were fully advised of the atti-
delegation to be sent to San Franeiseo without and the other within. I tely ide < not to join the league, he •
wiil be chosen. Former governor Ferguson headed the; said he would urge duplication of the ------ , promise proposals should be addressed
Four Candidates Present. group of Democrats who withdrew1 three year’s program of 1916 with o F F r C r A L INFORMATION TO inot to Mr. Wilson, but to Senator
Four candidates for governor—Pat from the state party last fall and 1 some modifications, with a view ppppe ic p"epiyo
M. Neff, Waco; R. E. Thomason, El fo-med the American party. ! making the fleet uncomparably the, THIS EFFECT IS BEeEI ED
Paso; E. F. Looney, Greenville; Hobby Speaks. greatest in the world." IN WASHINGTON.
Dwight L. towelling. Dallas—agreed Governor W. P. Hobby, who has an-' In case the Senate took no final ac-. _
to confine their campaign activities nounced his candidacy for election' tion on the treaty at this session of
until May 1 to the national issue, as delegate at large to the San Fran- ' Congress, the Secretary said he would By Te Arociated A .... ■ .....
with a view of defeating the efforts cisco convention, referred to the Bailey I present a 69-ship program, i Washington, March 6Althpugh a final effort at compromise but the
of the Balty faction which seeks con- movement as on to destroy the prohi- Se retary Daniels told ’he commit-! planning to withdraw the bulk of her । White House of f.ciah .intimated that
back'tee it must choose between the three troops from Siberia, Japan will not they thought further efforts to in-
’. The 69-ship program, he relinquish control of Vladivostok and quire into the President’s views was
which was calculated to expose Ger-
many to the charge that she was in-
trigueing. -
- “In punishing Germany," he said,
’ ' • “the entente forgot to take cognizance
Moulton. Secretary; Miss Maud Perry, $5,000, and made their escape, ,, .
reporter. A half hour later a customer enter- Alimony Also Comes
The question of salaries was dis- ed the bank and. hearing yells from
cussed and everyone of the 55 teachers the vault, notified the sheriff,
made statements that they were un- V ' «’ The press,
able to live on the presentsalaries May Subject Turkey ! Topeka, March 6.—Alimony like
and by a unanimous vote, decid t at To Drastic Action wages is subject to revision on account
they would not accept positions next ’ ° 'as < 'll ° of the high cost of living, the Kansas
■ year, unless they were paid a living i Supreme Court held today. It affirm-
l wage. A News reporter has inter- London, March 5.—Ahe allies dis ed a decision of the Shawnee County
viewed quite a number of thos pres- patched a note to the Turkish govern- District Court in which Grace
ent, and from what he can learn. Mar- ment today. . Hie terms of the corn - Nixon brought suit for an increase in"as discharged^__
shall had better get busy, or see the munication were not disclosed, but it alimony from her fnrmer husband i .
schools practically closed. The entire is understood they are drastic andlra Nnxon. She pointed out that he( ommittee Authorizes
teaching force has made up its mind will be followed by drastic action if was able to pay more alimony because Credit Sale Of Flour
that they will no longer refuse more the necessity arises. he was receiving a larger salary than I ______
renumerative positions else where, and ---—---—-----— when she obtained the divorce
many of them have already made ten- Hoover Declines TO ---
—— Mr. McAdoo reiterated the state-sional action,
because they had been ai rested with-.. 1. ,.41.. + c.;.6 -
Associated Press Correspondence. । .... a ment he recenty made to Georgia
i Houston, Tex.. March 6.—Two arm 0 _ "arran 8- 1 Democrats that he favored the sending
ed men walked into the AmericanInvestigations.diselosed that Majorjof instructed delegates to the national
________ State Bank at Harrisburg at noor.Palrympless prohibition axentshadconventions.
i «. r. «r ra. Latr . . . . . 1 forced their way into the mens homes,__
ers. with Mr. D. W. Johnson as cnair- today, covered the cashier, two wo-i .... . . . I
man. organized the Marshall Teachers men assistant* and two customqesithdrmonsrorowhrskey. TXrThj Negro Boy "Jigs"
Association with these permanent or- with pistols. ordered them into the, .. ’ . I ww* m,I
.x i l w . . ,, , .’new ruling arrests without warrants' B nr HIS H’reAior
ficars: D. W. Johnson, president. W. vault, took all available money and’ . . — --- *
•i . r u . . . . . ‘ :are barred.
C. Homeyer, Vice-president, 1*. n. liberty bonds, something less than
UP BY SECRETARY । Second ’ Industrial Meeting Ad-
Wo i
n , . . AT J If A a n 4-01* light crusiers and a large number of, not yet been agreed upon, due to the cept or reject it.
lOSltlOnS Next car At resent dlarles smaller craft. ‘old conflict between the civil and mill- Among the irreconciables however,
i ------ | tary authorities. I it confidently was asserted that no
iPAI RVMDT UUAC " agreement never could be reached on
offering teachers salaries far below MHlhIIIILL IIHh McAdoo Again States |surh a basis and that if the declara-
The teachers have in a very proper ANOTHER DEFEAT
wav. But positive, notified us in plenty
tative arrangements to teack in other
cities and many others are consider-
ing proposit iorPmade them.
The News does not believe there is
Br The Ansociated r—*.
New York, March 6.—Immediate re-
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 154, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 7, 1920, newspaper, March 7, 1920; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1406292/m1/1/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .