The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 191, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 22, 1920 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Marshall Morning News and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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THE MARSHALL MORNING NEWS
Thursday, April 22, 1920
5
COUNTY GETS MORE ROAD MONEY.
SOCI
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Edite
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(Continued frm Pao One)
(Contniued on Pao Five)
allowed for the Culberson Highway which re-
WHY THE COWS CAME LATE.
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Baker
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CITES THE AUTHORITY.
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Marshall Electric Co.
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MILL
For Wc
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awSENNSM
McClar
Transfer as
that this great Democracy
not hinder.
— Thats’ th
Millinery w
can please ;
how exactil
your requir
in, we will b
you our ass
Cook The Electric Way
—Right at Table
bi
We understand that about the worst disap-
pointment that can possibly happen to a Bailey
man is to travel 25 miles to hear the ‘‘Great and
Only” and find the house in which the Ex-Senator
is speaking too small to hold the crowd and then
be compelled to hear Oscar Calloway talk to the
overflow crowd. We are sure this would be very
sad for we heard Oscar once. We never will again.
Prompt
Dependable
Courteous
WANTED-Cheap Leasesh
MARION, HARRISON, RUSK and PANOLA Counties
j
1
1
—A demonstration any time.
Today, for instance.
1
schools. He atated that aha had ap-
pointed a committee, some members
of the Association, to meet in Austin
to map out a course of study in musie.
He also praised Miss Blanton for ap-
pointing for the first time in Texas,
a State Supervisor of Music, “who in
........... Editor
........Telegraph Editor
.. Advertising Manager
..... Rae Inees Manager
—Electric table appliances—grills, percolators, toast-
ers—in all the standard makes at prices within the
reach of all.
for the
* afternoon.
Messrs.
You want
Day
p
MUSIC TEACHERS
HAVE BUSY DAY
Hu
Millinery S
Lease Holders—
IF YOU HOLD ORIGINAL LEASES taken by you ad-
vise price, number of acres and developments; also lo-
cations made around same. No high prices considered.
More acreage you have the better. If you really want
to sell, write us. We have nothing to sell—we buy..
Crimson sunset burning.
O’er the tree-fringed hills;
Golden are the meadows.
Ruby flashed the rills,
Quiet in the farm-house.
Home the farmer hies;
But his wife is watching.
Shading anxious eyes.
While she lingers with her pail beside the barn-
yard gate.
Wondering why her Jenny and the cows come
home so late.
Percolated Coffee, Delicious
Toast, Crisp Bacon
Jenny, brown-eyed maiden.
Wandering down the lane;
That waa ere the daylight
Had begun to wane.
Deeper grow the shadows;
Circling swallows cheep;
Katydids are calling;
Mists o'er meadows creep.
Still the mother shades her eyes beside the barn-
yard gate.'
And wonders where her Jenny and the cows can
be so late.
T<
/ %
2
Loving sounds are falling.
Hamtward now at last.
Speckle, Bess and Brindle
Through the gate have passed.
Jenny, sweetly blushing,
Jamie, grave and shy.
Take the pail from mother,
Who stands silent by.
Not a word is spoken as that mother shuts the
gate.
But now she knows why Jenny and the cows
came home so late.
4 "
Thursday,
“Entered as second-class matter Biptambar T, 1111, at
Rs post office at Marshall, Texas, under the Act of
Mareh 3, 1879."
SURSCRIPTION RATES
—Done right at table—without leaving your chair.
The day’s made better and brighter. Breakfast is
changed from a haphazard scramble to a leisurely
enjoyment of well prepared food.
"BO-LA-BO"
A new Ted Lewis Jazz Col-
umbia Record, No. A219S.
...........
5.00
......AM
-
The Marshall National Bank
The Stronghold of Careful People
1 l
Farmers—
IF YOUR FARM IS NOT LEASED—write us your
price and numbers of acres; also developments near
farm and give Company’s name or parties making lo-
cations around your farm. Give name and location of
farm in headright.
-
-
1
Mr. C. Latimer has called the attention of the
Morning News to a passage in the Bible where
there was efficacy in the healing of the sick from
handkerchiefs. The sending of handkerchiefs to
Brother Isaiah, therefore, would seem to have
Scriptural sanction, granting, of course, that the
old man has power to heal. The passage is from
Acts 19, 12th verse and reads:
“So that from his body were brought unto
sick handkerchiefs or aprons, and the diseases
departed from them, and the evil spirits went
out of them.”
The person referred to above was St. Paul.
,o *
NYTEX DEVELOPMENT CO.,
news came from the Highway Commission that'
$100,000 would be allowed on Highway No. 8, icaused by organisation and co-operat-
which is the north and south road. No aid waa' ion on the part of the Teachers.” Mr.
• - - "• ■ - ■ - . Council said that you no longer could
RING
93
JOHNSON TRANSFER
COMPANY
Baggage and
Service Can
Day or Night
What the country needs is a law that will
make a just stirke unnecessary and an unneces-
sary strike impossible. Now, we have diagnosed
the case, all that is necessary is to pass such leg-
slation as will bring about this desired condition.
It don’t look so easy, does it?
It is estimated that should the entire manhood
of the United States go to wearing overalls that
it would increase the price of cotton to $2.00 per
pound. The movement originated in the south.
We wiU make wooden nutmegs down here yet.
Georgia Democrats seems to have turned
down two favorite sons in the Presidential pri-
maries held there Tuesday. But just look who
they were—Hoax Smith and Tom Watson. The
voters appear to have instructed for A. Mitchell
Palmer. We think this was done, not because the
voters love Palmer more—but because they loved
Smith and Watson less.
sutnitana h.Ui . Dal las, Texas
ROME* M. PRICE .....
J. B. NORRIS............
3. # BLALOCK ........
BRYAN BLALOCK .....
. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS.
The Associated Prese is exclusively entitled to the use
Ber republication of all news dispatches credited to it. sr
Mt oberwise credited in this paper and also the local
mew published herein.
(97
should at least Chicago on account of the outlaw strike. It looks
like the Brotherhood is in earnest.
Fer month, by carrier .........
Per month, by mail ....J.......
Pe year, by carrier ...........
^r year, by mail.......j.......
Mesdames C. E
Pomp Edwards,
Henry Aechterna
• Shreveport
Miss Annie 8
San Antonio to
. she is visiting tl
’ Sallie Grete Ela
a wonderfully g
Mrs. Will Pit
ge Silent Sixteen
afternoon.
Mrs. Bryan 1
Tuenday from
■he was called I
of a brother-in-
Mr. Ed Bradl
ill at his room <
Y asterday his ph
ed to the home
. Bradburn, 403 J
♦ Mr. and Mrs.
children are he
get a *160 reduction on a piano by
guessing the number of beans in a
bottle or by guessing the number of
spots on a cat advertisement in the
papers. He invited the teachers to
meet in Dallas next year.
Mrs N. P. Turner introduced Presi-
dent E. Clyde Whitlock of Fort Worth
by saying “The most efficient presi-
dent the Texas Music Teachers As-
sociation has ever had”. Before she
could finish the members extended Mr.
Whitelock a great ovation by rising
and applauding for five minutes. Mr.
Whitelock said in part: “We are now
completing the fifth year of the exis-
tance of the Texaa Musie Teachers
Association. Can we account for
these five years? Is music accorded
better recognition now than it was
five years ago? And can we claim
that through the activities of the
Association music occupies a better
position than it did at that time? I
believe we can answer this in the af-
firmative.”
“One of the finest results of the ex-
istence of the association has been its
most obvious physical fact, the peri-
odical bringing together of the teach-
ers of the state into one place. The
first responsibility of an association
is to secure organic strength. In this
particular 800 the association has
hardly begun to accomplish what it
may. In strength we are now exceed-
ed by only four or five associations.
Our membership, however, is only
fairly representative of the territorial
extent of the state.”
Mr. Whitelock told of the crude
manner in which most newspapers
make musica criticisms He said
that upon one occasion a Fort Worth
paper in reporting a performance by
the Chicago Opera Association stated
in their news columns that “th« or-
chestra played throughout the even-
ing”. He said that some one sent a
==—---==-==-
The County Commissioners’ Court members
have returned from a trip to Austin where they j
went to try to secure additional government aid!
for Harrison county highways. Yesterday the}
-
I
I
k-/wC.
19
.1
We don’t believe the United States should in-
terfere in the internal affairs of Mexico, nor do we
think it is any of our business to aid the Car-
ranza government to whip back the revolting
states of Sonora and Sinaola. We believe that if
those states wish to withdraw from the-Mexican The Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen has
government and set up a sure enough republic, revoked the charter of two of its lodges in
moves the last objection to therimmediate build-
ing of the Harleton and Elysian Fields roads. It
is understood that the Court is a unit in favor-
ing the advertising for bids for these two
roads at once.
This certainly will meet with the universal
endorsement of the people of the county. There
has been much delay in the starting of road build-
ing in this county on account of complications
arising from one cause or another but there is still
time to get these people of Harleton and Elysian
Fields out of the mud before another winter. It
will take quick work but it can be done. Our
| neighboring county of Upshur voted road bonds
after we did and many miles of road have already
been constructed there and it is claimed their en-
tire system of roads will be completed by Sep-
temper the first.
The Morning News congratulates the Court
on securing this additional $100,000. We be-
lieve this is more than that given any other
county in the state. It will enable the Court to
build every mile promised by the Campaign Com-
mittee and when those promises are carried out
Harrison county will have the finest system of
roads of any county in Best Texas and the city of
Marshall will experience the greatest forward
movement in its history.
But we hope the Commissioners' Court will
be as persistent now in quick road construction as
they have been in seeking state and—and as
successful.
copy to a musical Journal and that
this was used aa a contribution to its
funny colum.
“A convention of musie teachers can
not proceed long without the introduc-
tion of the subject of school credits
for music. This is of course, a mat-
ter of the most vital importance- The
musically talented pupil is so con-
stantly being deprived of a full op-
portunity to acquire an adequate gen-
eral education without sacrificing the
on* thing in which he is most gifted
that his capacity for social usefulness
is much lessened.”
The President praised the interest
that Miss Annie Webb Blanton had
taken in placing music in the public
attention to all banking matters entrusted to
us. Your banking business invited.
• ««<» > -j > . ini? - bo
a
This is the verdict of George M. Bailey—the
George M. Bailey, who makes interesting the
editorial page of the Houston Post: “ ‘Personal
liberty’ will have a nobler appeal when it gets
something more respectable than the liquor traf-
fic to contend for. An ossified liver, an atrophied
will, a petrified conscience, a mushy brain and a
pair of reeking kidneys are all that the liquor
traffic can boast in addition to its rapacity and
corruption. What have these things to do with
personal liberty?"
The MarehaH Morning New
nwpaperpublishedeverydayexceptMonday
otel Marsha building. Marshall, Texas.
Jackson, and Qu
force are back f
enjoyable fish on
r man Henderson j
(upper one nigh
' Mr. Gilbert De
• phis for the Ba
Mn. W. B. J
• Little Rock for
her parents, Mr
Wilson.
, Mn. Joe Laki
are home from
and Fort Worth,
is with them.
Mn. Eugene 1
Turner, of Dal
relatives and a
Teachers’ Conve
- Mr. Carl Schi
Dallas yesterday
• shall relatives.
Mr. J. S. The
" from Omen whe
of his wife for 1
X and a sister cam
- Mn. C. A. S
at her home on
• Dr. W. G. Ha
. attend the Ame
ciation, meeting
. weeks, in eye, <
clinics.
Clisto Adams
Mn. Wallace
dinner yesterda
Roberts and J. f
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 191, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 22, 1920, newspaper, April 22, 1920; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1406331/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .