The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 154, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 9, 1920 Page: 4 of 8
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THE MARSHALL MORNING NEWS
Tuesday, Mar. 9, 1920
Tu
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Dave Culberson Hiway to be built fur thet
i
price
this county .
That-
$0.50
asC=s 7
No. tis Park Street, Lewiston. Me.
SELLS COTTON AND COWS—ALSO HIS
DOESN’T BLAME THOMASON.
♦
Twixt
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5
March 7, 1920.
Marshall by Fry 1
JC
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JESSE !.CARTER. Cashier
I
7
Some Good Preliminaries
INFLUENCING MANY.
NEWMAN’S HALL--8:30 P. M.-WEDNESDAY
his box of trinkets. En
<81.10 Including War Tax)
I bet they gits there money’s
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SUBSCRIBER.
Kolasky, the Russian Lion
e
LADIES ESPECIALLY INVITED
(
)
usbaamasleuanzacsa
ckuimusa
yb
■ •
, hez the glass eyes in
Mrs. Alice McCluskey Says She
Wishes She Had Heard of!
Ar
the
for
Th
typ
off]
ate
en thet there is jist ez much gravel in
ez there is in Upshire.
Be
mon.
tert,
terni
—THE Citizen’s
—STATE Bank
—IS a Bank
— FOR Father
— FOR Mother
—FOR Daughter
— FOR Son
—AND in fact
— A BANK for
—EVERYBODY
—YOU are invited
—TO open a checking
—ACCOUNT no matter
—HOW small it may be.
—CITIZEN’S State Bank
—CHECKS is the
—SAFE, convenient
— BUSINESS-like way
—TO pay all
- SHOPPING bills
—ALSO please remember
— THAT our motto is
—SERVICE
—STRENGTH
— COURTE
—CONVENIENCE
I
1
A.
Tail.
Buie
offie
alter
clotn
ing-
vce.
wor H
You want a Service Car
Day or Night
Phone
Professional Wrestler
Switchman
p3
/
T
F2
5
J. D. Johnson
Steam and Gas Fitting.
Plumbing, Repairs
PHONE 787
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v
Tanlac is sold in
CITIZEN’S STATE
BANK
Dr. A. W. Hinchman
Osteopathic Physician
—Offices—
10712 West Austin Street
PHONE 625
Per month. by mail ...........................
Per year, by carrier ..........................
Per year, by mail .............................
MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS.
CLARK A BIBB LAUNDRY Co.
P. H. CLARK * C. S. BIBB
Proprietor*
FIRST CLASS LAUNDRY WORK
Cleaning and Pressing
Phone 501
En ef the bidding feller asts ’bout them 5
thousand a mile mads in Upshire County don’t
go to laffin’ en tell him thet them fellers up there
don’t know a hiway from a hog path. Don’t tell
him that we want shore enuff roads, roads thet
cost big money. But tell him yes you hev hurd
• <1
48
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155
McClaran’s Stable
Transfer and Moving Vans
,5
PHQNE
787
ZACIRY’S
Cleaners and
2
“h
wh
ove
No
u
RES
No
g
the
mo
| Ne
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’ reft
relil
spim
bull
alill
mom
HOW HE
LEWISTON WOMAN IS
NOW WELL AND HAPPY
5
6
5.
L
t
I
OUR CORRESPONDENT TELLS
this county en he lcoked at me like I wuz a
durned ijit. Course there weren’t enything you
cud build a road outen in this county. You hed
meet in’ thet when they at last!
went to huntin' fur the rock en gravel thet they
found it. I wunder how they expected to find it
unless they hunted fur it.
I
—
“I have been trying for twenty (
long years to find a medicine that I
would overcome my troubles, but my I
SI BSCRIPTION RATES
Par month, by carrier ................
Tanlac Twenty Years Ago—
Mould Have Saved Lots of
Suffering.
sumthin like this: You fellers be a tradin’ et
Longview cause thet blamed county hez built
mads fur you to git there on en we air not goin’
to build you a road to the county sete fur fear
1 vou mite want to use ’em to git on the Greg
i .ounty roads. Ez if the merchants et the county
sete didn’t hold their own with a Longview store
Hit looks iike blamed foolishness to me. I hev
never seed but 1 or 2 feller thet wudn’t rut her
SUBSCRIBER.
Twixt the Big and Little Cypresses.
ways suffer afterwards. I would most
EXPERIENCE IN UPSHUR COUNTY-
do all my housework without the least j
trouble. I don’t get tired like 1 di.1 !
and after doing my work I can get out '
promised. Entertainment will be
News Want Ads wield tre-
mendous influence—an influence
that radiates to every walk
in life.
News Wants appeal to in-
dividuals and to big and little
businesses and they help many,
in solving, business* and house,
hold problems.
News Wants are equally ef-
ficient in meeting the pressing
needs of the household and pro-
viding for mapy other urgent
needs as welle
News WAnts will furnish a •
satisfactory solution for many
problems.
P. S. No. L—I sees thet the young folks at
I Harleton is goin’ to hev a nuther theater. It’s
to lie sumthin’ ’bout ole mades. J dout ef j shall
| ing as good health now as I ever had
in" “ in all my life. I have gained about t
11 pounds in weight and can again
well-known and most highly re-picte ’
woman of that city.
“I just feel like I would give the |
world to meet everyone who suffer
I
-i
W5 wuz a pickin’ it en thet it got stained en hez
a lot a trash in it. En thet mebbe there is sum '
half en half in it. No. Sur, I don't tell Dick to be
keerful. I tells him it's a fine long staple bale
euil to them fellers' cotton in Red River County.
I figures Dick can look our fur hisself, en he gin-
erally duz.
cum ridin’ in en I wuz ‘fraid the blamed thing
to bring in on a train frum the Goodness oniy wud fall with him a lookin’ at me. But I lit en ast j
knowedwhur. but it wud shore cost a pile of him What he thought of our new hoss. Now. Bill • ■ BBS ■ ■■ H a ■ gw
"" Wrest ing Match!
the bag two. You sez in your paper thet he sed "hat hedn t in 6 hours. En whuther you b’lieve; 4 -520 —“-6MwE2
at thet Rowtarien meetin' thet when they at last ‘ it er not thet fine filly thet hed cost me a purtv i
good hoss en 12 Wheels hed glass eyes. Yes. sur ANTON KOSAK.
shore enuff eyes maid of glass. I hear thet then J. ‘ BROWN
is a hoss doctor up there thet makes a livin’ a ’
fitten glass eyes into hosses heds. I traided the ___
; blamed filly to a nigger in Marion County for 6
HOMER M PRICE ............................ Edito,
CLEBURNE HUSTON .................... City Editor
J. B. NORRIS .............Telegraph and News Editor
J. H. BLALOCK ................ Advertising Manager
BRYAN BLALOCK .............. Business Manager
"Entered as second-class matter September 7, 1919, at
the post office at Marshall, Texas, under the Act of
March 8. 1879."
less 'an 14 and 16 thousand dollars fur each mile, en she looked sound ez a dollar. En the
I wuz down to the County sete 2 weeks ago en I sez what you sez? En 1 ast him what he sez en
hurd it every whur I went. They wuz sayin' like hesez 1 wants 20 bucks to boot. En I sez you be
this: That darn fool cummittee thet don't know 10kin en he sez no darned ef he be jokin! (But
whuther you bys gravel by the pound er peck sed h Cid in 1 say darned, but you writ me not to
thet roads cud be built fur 10 thousand fur alwhat he did say ez you cudn’t put cussin’ j„
mile en they will cost 2 times thet much. En I Paper • Well, after 3 long perlaver he tuk
hurd thet you jist cudn’t git eny body to wurk hos5 en 12 wheels en rid off home. I bumbed and was hardly able to ge around
on the roads thet the day wurkmen wuz bein' paid round a le tie en then put the saddle on mv filly at all.
frum 5 to 8 dollar a day en thet the price of stuff en pulled out fur Twixt the Cypresse. En I never wl-oucan imaxine how happy ' wa-
to build the road wuz higher then a cats back eni in,.my ale life hed sitch a ride. Thet blamed 'of Tanlac* I Aingonna, wloteg
thet you cudn't git it then. I never hurd sich dole- il stumbled et everything in thet road frum improvement in my condition! wh
fu tails in my hole life. I jist 'bout cum to the J ~ inch resk to a stump. She wud walk rite on it was just the medicine I neeled all
'pinion thet roads jist cudn’t be built. I sed to a tree er enything. Once I got down to look the time and 1 continued taking it
1 feller thet mebbe they cud git the gravel in at her eyes but they wuz all rite en got back on until now Lam perfectly well again.
. K gravel en went a hed with thet hoss a stumblin' en an truthfully say that 1 am enjoy-
fallin till I got home. Bill wuz out to see me ‘ -----•—------—-
Shreveport got a hard lick Friday when the
Always
REMEMBER
hoss I had. He wuz a party fair hoss but he
40 didn t jist suit me. Course he warm no Jo
4 00 I atchen or a Nancy Hanks but he cud stand up
to sorter half wurk en wuz a site better then no
The Associated Pres « exclasively entitled to the use h . He wuz spavined a lettle. en wuz sway
for republication of til e ws dispatches credited to it, or backed en wuz subjected to the bots en once in a
notsopuoyizeaszedutnd in this paper and also the loca while wud buck, but excusin' that he wuz all right. „
En so I tuk him up to Gilmer to trade him I eforts failed me completely until )
.rid bim slow en got there with him lookin’ Nirt, i commenced tahing Tanlac," was the
Atvlish F, 1 .1 1 ooKm P»nv remarkable statement made tecentiv
— ’ 1 sh.Ez turned the korner et thet swoppin’I by Mrs. Alice McCluskey, resid ing a 1
ard I hed him in a lope en drawed him sudden
| en he riz on his hine legs like he wuz a 4 year
old instid of 17.
En the fellers cum around en sez: Swoppin’
, hoss? En I sez not pertickulur but ef they hed
the Big and Little Cypresses, sumthin fine I mite swop ef I got nutf boot. well.
census people announced her population at 43.000.
A citizen of that city only Thursday was claiming
86,000. We hope no such a jolt is coming to Mar-
shall. The News had a guess recently of 16,400.
Dr. C. S. Sargent tells us to put him as saying
17,500 and Mr .C. W. LaGrone ventures 17,000.
Let us hear from others.
En ef you think them Upshire County fellers
is fools you got a nuther think a cumin. I thought
that way 1 time en went up there to trade off a
________ -______
Dyers
menameremomenhm
En ef l hev a cow fur sale en I finds a feller
thet mebbe mite buy her I don’t begin to tell
him thet the cow will kick him over when he
tries to milk her en thet she will hook his children
en thet she will jump eny 10 rail fence in the
county en thet she sucks herself en is trubbled
with the holler horn. I hev hed sum purtv ni
AKe this but when I went to sell ’em I hain’t yit
ever toid i on T’ It ‛s allus a gentle, wel dis- go. Ole mades be folks thet I cud never git'along
Posishioned.cow1 gells. I never drives her out ! with. ! liked the Dither* show they give. It warnt
,u 0 these 3 okes on cm thet keeps i nuthin like thet variety theater I went to in
emnumjumpinlafence. En when I offers 1 furEllpassow. Course ef they shud send free
5 She pain no muzzle on to keep her frum passe- 1 wvd go. They cud send them to vou en
4 suckin her own self. No, sur. thet ie the wav cud send them to me. Arthur Massey aassat ’
tosellisottonan cow - it's the way to vit ajtellwho t gits male fur i my understand in :
'cording my way thinkin' r '■s No. 2 thet row Jo en thet frfte
4, , , the fener cums to make a bid tell himTommerson is into. Ez I understand it. Jo wante
thet we hev more gravel then enyhody, thet we Tommerson to cum to Washington en run it off I
Bev more Poor farmers who will wurk cheeper in Jo‛s home town. I didn’t blame Tommerson fur I
then eny county, in the state or Louisianny not exceptin’. Course Jo cud beet him whur Jo
throwed in. Tell how cheep he can git feed fur lives.
Kis hosses en thet the roads air alreedy graded
en thet ’bout all he’s got to do is to cash his!
checks. J shore wudn’t be tellin’ him to be keer-
ful, I wud tell him to wade in.
But I wuz a thinkin’ ef 1 of these fillers thet
makes bids to build roads hed hev hurd all the , - ------------, ... -
tails I hurd en ef he hed cum to make a bid ef day o1 work in a nu ground last winter en Bill
he wudn’t hev left town on the fust train. It’s a i M ‘ “ "ine "2 * -- ------... —
queer thing why our peeple shud keep a tellin’ yer once in a while he will ast me sumthin’ sassy
every feller they meets, fellers thet want to bout my Upshire County trade.
bid, en fellers from Twixt the Cypresses, en ev-'. Fur ez 1 can see them Upshire County fellers
ery other feller, jist keep on a tellin’ thet theis hard to fool en I ’ . . ______
feller thet is goin’ to make a bid on these roads wurth on them 5 thousand dollar roads,
better be keerful er he’ll git stuck.
.. ■ jee 4 , •
. Xx . -- ... -t-p ■■
—A cordial welcome to all.
cum to Marshall to tarde ef they cud. I see frum
। vour paper thet you haven't moved to thet Long-
l view town en when you do you en me quits.
So long.
Teller thet is goin’ to make a bid on these roads unn on tnem 5 thousand dollar roads. 1 haint
better be keerful er he'll git stuck. hurd of eny of them a warnin’ a road bidder
Thet haint the way I duz when I wants to bout the hi cost of labor and gravel.
make a trade. When I takes a bale of cotton down It looks to me sorter 1 ike frum sum of the
to Harleton to sell I don’t take Dick Taylor to 1 argyments thet air bein’ maid ’bout sum of us
side en tell him to be keerful when he goes to buy JS fellers thet hev to go to Longview to trade be
my bale. I don’t tell him to watch out thet mebbe
its got rotten stuff in the center en thet it wuz
baled too wet en thet there wuz a rain cum when i
told in words. This trouble finalls Hog. nri, c. ,0,
got so bad I could hardly walk ant'
sa j my arms pained me so I could scarce 1
in the |y raise my hands to my head. I
t't my even had to give up my housework
The Marshall Morning News ‘bout them Upshire County roads, thet you hear
A new* pa per published every day except Monday in thet the State Hiway Commission must think
** n**1 Marshal building. Marsbal, Texas. I purty well of them roads ez they air allowin’ the
gpee
Mal..uiiu
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as I did and tell them about th; •
-........ medicine. If I could only have got- B ♦
they showed me several en I looked 'em over enten Tanlac twenty years ago it would Mrs. Alice MeCtskey. Well-knw .
Editor Morning News: ishuk my hed. En finally a feller frum south of have saved me lots of suffering and_Lewiston..Nlaine.Woman.
Well. I sees thet the County Judge sez thet j Gilmer dow nto wards Big Sandy showed me 1 of My principle trouble was
8 thousand dollars a mile will do the job. He wuz , nes , 00 in, Mes ever see. I wuz keerless l tion, and for many years I could no
a uttu 1n , ,10. ... . U - V ee cud be but 1 kept a lookin’ at the filly outen aat meat or pastries for I would a)
a lettle long a tellin it but seems to me thet he. the tail of my eye. Drectly the feller got on her " ‘
rung the bell. I jist can’t make out what all that en rid her round the lot en she looked most like a always have a distressed feeling afte
talk meant ’bout the roads cudn’t be built fur no! race hoss. When he cum back I looked her over i eatin Kandinothing seemed .to agre and walk for Blocks and feel just finei
' ‘ ‘ ejepi"l»m Then to a.M to the rest ofwhen , get back home. I earnesti,
feller my sufering. I contracted rheuma-advise everyone who sufFers is I did
tism in m shoulders and hips and th- to take Tanlac.. j
awful pains I suffered can never be
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 154, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 9, 1920, newspaper, March 9, 1920; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1406293/m1/4/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .