The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 257, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 8, 1920 Page: 6 of 8
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THE MARSHALL MORNING NEWS
Thursday, July 8, 1920
Thun
EIGHT HUNDR
JIGGS--
4
e
••
1
MAINTAIN ROAD AFTER BUILT
By The A
dPrea
it
4
3
HOLD WHISKEY PERMITS
V
v
Hot Weather and Bad Roads
*
The General Tires
to file quarterly reports of the amount
R
$
MTS
DANCE.
I
S. E. WOOD, JR.
large rubber factory in Ohio,
« gang
C
of
men on a callendering machine
Distributor
Cl
J
",
Report of Condition of
The First National Bank
A
4
PH
FC
OUR
RESOURCES
8
Loans and Discounts
$1,545,209.03
Specialty
U. S. Bonds, Certificates and Stamps
486,108.00
Bonds, Securities, Etc
130,497.50
Perscriptions
Real Estate Owned
2,950.00
Banking House and Fixtures
38,000.00
Cash With Other Banks
$431,412.95
Cash in Vault
129,707.79
561,120.74
Total
$2,763,885.27
IMPROVED ROADS IN QUEBEC
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock
$
Surplus Fund
Undivided Profits
73,166.37
Circulation
98,200.00
s
Reserve for Interest and Taxes
20,000.00
W
The Rexall Store
Unearned Discount
5,000.0°
Certificates Issued for Liberty Bonds
189,950.00
<
Dividends Unpaid
PHONE
Bills Payable With Federal Reserve Bank
787
DEPOSITS
I
Total
ZA
Y‘
e
. *
ER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
M
M
A
jr. Mt. ..
u
011
34 I
I
200,000.®°
50,000.00
2,072,568.90
$2,763,885.27
FRY-HODGE
DRUG CO.
5,000.00
50,000.«o
of whiskey purchased during the
quarter, the amount dispensed and to
whom; while doctors are required to
Perry, outfield.
Froley, outfield
Meyers, outfield.
Strickland, outfield
Mead, outfield.
One cent 1
minimum chi
Two cents
ssues, minim
Four cents
week, minim
WANTED—Capi
take training
muneration $10.
board while train
rolled out 24,450 yards cf tube stock
during the month of February.
Prof. E. B. House of the Colorado
Agricultural College is a firm believer
in the importance of maintaining a
road after it to built. He supplies the
following. taken from The Engineer
tng News-Record, and says of it “It to
so true and hits the nail so squarely
that I quote it direct":
“The tendency in road Improvement
is to select types of roads which re-
quire very little annual maintenance.
The general feeling among laymen
seems to be that when a road surface
requires some annual maintenance to
keep it in good shape. It is an expen-
give type and should be avoided. Yet.
If the interest on investment and the
repairs are taken Into consideration.
Of Marshall, Texas
At close of business June 30th, 1920.
SA
91
OF
wa
said Mr. Tedrick. “We have been ad-
vised of a number of bad checks up
to date.
Albright, c.
Melancon, p.
Jones, 1b.
Gaffield, 2b.
Mason, ss.
Johnson, 3b.
The derrick for the U. S. Driling
Co.’s well near Harris Lake to to be
completed today. This well to locat-
ed upon one of the most favorable
locations in the county, according to
oil geologists.
The well is being drilled by the U.
S. Drilling Co. upon land furnished by
W. J. Milburn, president of the Hom-
aokla Oil Co.
Moore A Co. of Shreveport have
I
I
3- T
NEw
me
No les than 30,000 tractors will
be used this year in the great agri-
cultural districts of Canada.
U. S. Drilling Co.
Derrick Almost Up
MILLION PEOPLE
HAVE MALARIA
Improper Methods Have Placed Eco-
nomical Types in Disrepute,
Saya Colorado Expert.
FOR RENT—T
for light houi
Bowie, Phone 5
. ’ FOR RENT—L
vate entrance
Near business
Phone 191
“We go a long way to make friends”
1
i
Studebaker Cars, Federal and
Stewart Trucks
The General Tires
are adjusted on the following basis:
FABRICS, 7,500 miles.
CORDS, 10,000 miles.
JUMBO-SPECIAL, for Fords and other 30x
3% rims, 10,000 miles.
Adjustments made locally
The lowest priced tire on the market—mileage
considered.
WA
Thia pape
-omes each :
pe surprised
tainable thro
OVERALLS USED BY CHECK
SWINDLERS IN NORTH
have not caused a single blowout to
GENERAL TIRES
in Harrison county. This is remarkable consider-
ing the great number in service.
Slogan ef “Gcod Roada"
Vrom all sides lAws and reechoes
the slogan of "Good Roada"
By The Amoclated Presa.
Hutchinson, Kansas, July 7.—Over-
alls are used aa a camouflage for
check swindlers in the harvest districts
according to a warning issued by W.
T. Tedrick, secretary of the Reno
County Credit Men's Association.
"Dressed as harvest hands, they
present checks to merchants signed
by representative farmers, declaring
they have been harvesting wheat,”
RATS DAMAGING CROPS
IN THE GULF SECTION
In Five Years Government Spent $15,-
774,369 for Development and
Improvement.
Former Citizen Of
Marshall In City
George R. Vincent Says Steps
Must Be Taken To Stamp
Out Causes.
Cleaners and
Dyers
the derrick contract and Mr. G. W lit has developed into a live city. He
Eason, foreman, is on the job. . states that we would appreciate it
The Bruner well is at an approxi- more if we had to stay away.
mate depth of 2700 feet, drilling in I--
shale. On account of a fuel short 1,480 FIRMS AND PERSONS
Benefits of Good Roads.
Good roads bring automobllists.
They spend money. Good roads bring
trade and Increase property values.
They attract homeseekers and Indus-
tries.
• write or apply to
■ * pitol, Marshall,
' WANTED—Dres
sewing. Satii
I * 1608 Washington
I WANTED—Ligh
harness. Call
many cases prove to be the more sat-
isfactory and economical.
"It is not uncommon to see roads of
a good type constructed and then,
after they begin to show signs of wear,
to see them neglected entirely or some
method of repair or maintenance Im-
posed which has been found by long
practice to be defective. When we see
mud holes in earth roads filled with
riprap, crushed stone or cinders. It is
not the engineer's fault that an enor-
mous price is paid for the repair mate-
rial ; the road engineer knows that
proper drainage, and repairing with
earth from the side of the road, are
the economical methods of mainte-
nance.
“Old gravel and macadam roads are
often repaired by filling ruts and de-
pressions with inferior material that
is readily displaced by traffic or
WANTED—Use.
w Old cars bout
you want to bu;
main business i
cheap but good,
yinced. Econom
' , ington St, Cros
r
age operations were suspended for a ।
few hours yesterday.
_______________________ Ry The Associated Prem.
Locals Will Meet thAustin, HunharaExactlygnns
Longview Sunday firms and corporation hold permits
_____ - to dispense liquor in Texas under the
cases with concrete. In a number of
streets and roads recently inspected,
brick was used to patch concrete sur-
faces. and concrete used to patch brick
turf aces.
“When careless methods of this kind
are applied to the maintenance of
public highways, the result is that a
good type of road is made to appear
unsatisfactory and uneconomical, and
rood improvement is discouraged— ;
particularly the cheaper types of Im- i
provement, which in most localities are
the best if properly maintained. It is i
the utter neglect of maintenance and
the many Improper methods of repair
that have molded public sentiment
against types of roads requiring an-
nual maintenance, and have led road
promoters and officials to disregard
many economical types," i
The development of good roads in
Quebec to a subject at present much
discussed from one end of the prov-
ince to the other. In the five years
from 1911 to 1916 the Quebec govern-
ment spent $15,774,369 for good roads.
The following figures show the num-
ber of miles of roads systematically
maintained by the municipalities of
Quebec, with the aid of subsidies from
the government of the provinces: In
1907, 1,000 miles; in 1909, 2,000 miles;
in 1911, 8,500 miles; in 1913, 15,000
miles; in 1916, 18.000 miles. Since
1911 more than 1.214 miles of mac-
adam and 497 miles of gravel roads
have been made in Quebec.
MANGE
LOTION
por mHE
HUMAN HEAD
Into the scalp thoroughly nt
night. It removes the dandrufi,
improves the growth and lustre
of the hair.
At all dealers, 45 cents.
Bent Kedicine Co., Newburgh, K. Y.
You will like the odor.
ground to dust Bituminous surfaces
are often patched, tf patched at all,
with loose stone or gravel. and in some
sMa:25j2
ri Mas SIMM M HMtlUM. 11 s •
Eoz, *ies MnaM Oi vdM to tn> SmsMs V
«OREIN oo, Btatiee F. Mow Yerk ci
De Net Build Roada
Large appropriations and paper
pane for higbway development do not
build roads
FOR RENT—T
rooms. Appl
Street or Tele]
FOR RENT—T
Apply 1401 E
FOR RENT— T
Mahon Buildii
Building, East 1
FOR RENT—1
for light ho
Also one south
ing bath, downs
Be Slender
„Tatmze, arpaujarzagraz
unitzt-.ma" AS
H22L
report every preacription made for
whiskey with the date and name of
the person to whom issued. It to
largely tsem these reports that the
state comptroller determines whether
the law to being obeyed or not.
FOR RENT—T
rooms for
close in. Apply
or Phone 910.
FOR RENT—F
light housekee
A Wonderful Treatment for
the HAIR. Rub
blood of human malaria carriers.
“Public funds are a necssity in the
control of malaria as wed as hook-
worm,” the review continues, “and
are now being appropriated faster
than sanitations can be found to do
the work.
“Hookworm control has proved to
be a most successful means of con-
vincing communities that health is a
purchasable thing, and during 1919
control measures were carried on in
25 different states and countries, with
a general tendency toward a reduc-
tion in the prevailing and inteasity of
the infection; more efficient and
more widespread sanitation, and the
education of communities in the pos-
sibilities of general health policies."
READ THIS
Economy Land Saver kills trees,
sprouts, grass, bull nettles, kills the
roots. There are no sprouts from
anything killed by this scientifically
prepared liquid. Does not injure the
soil. Kills anything in from 3 to 10
days. Sold only by Economy Man-
ufacturing Co., at crossing of the
M. A E. T. and S. Washington St.
________________7-14pd
, FOR RENT—Fi
light housekee
Fannin street o
p. m._____.
FOR RENT—o
tures in the
, Texas. Four-w
ground to keep
Prices: Mules
month per head;
H. Clark, Eaglet
northwest of Hi
E. T. Railway.
terms of the Dean Prohibition Law,
The Marshall Ball Club will cross according to reports filed with the
bats Sunday, July 11, with the Long- State Comptroller. This total in-
ft » ‘ftST'S the cheaper wearing surface may -
view team. If those games that have eluded physicians who have permits to
gone before are indicative of what white prescriptions for liquor.
this game will be, Marshall fans an- Under the terms of the prohibition
assured a classy exhibition. act, wholesale and retail druggists.
Fuller and McClain are the batteries manufacturers and doctors, in fact all
for Longview, while the following sithose who have permits are required
the prospective line up for Marshall: f ’ ’ - “*
New York, July 6.—Eight hundred
million people living in the world’s
“malaria tone," which practically co-
incides with the tropical and semi-
tropical regions of the earth, are sub-
ject to the "eripling and deadly in-
fluence of the disease,*' acording to
George E. Vincent, President if the
Rockefeller Foundation. Residents
of the southern part of the United
States, Mexico, Central America, the
West Indies. and the northern part
of South America are included in this
"malaria belt,” said Mr Vincent, who
today issued the second of a series of
reviews on th Foundation’s work
against malaria and hookworm for the
year 1919.
Pracitcal methods for fighting ma-
laria, as used by the Foundation’s
sanitariums, includes elimination of
the germ carrying anopheles mosquito
by preventing its breeding; the screen-
Every druggist claims to
be a prescription specialist.
We claim to have a number
of prsecription specialists
on our force. We have the
most up-to-date and most
completely stocked pre-
scription department. We
have the latest and finest
of measuring and weighing
utensils. We have the
largest and most complete
stock of the best approved
drugs and chemicals. Alto-
gether we are better fitted
to fill your prescriptions
and are better fitted to spe-
cialize in this work than
any other drug store we
know.
WANTED— Thre
rooms for ligh
A ple without ehili
• reference. Add
N
By The Associated rress.
Corpus Christi, Texas, July 7.—Rats
have multiplied so rapidly in the Gulf
coast district that they are damag-
ing growing crops, according to far-
mers. As a result, and entirely aside
from any consideration of health that
might dictate their extermination.
Campaigns of wholesale rodent slaugh
ter are being organized. The cam-
paigns were inaugurated in Klegerg
county. At a meeting here farmers
said rats were eating corn and other
growing crops and gnawing the bells
from cotton plants.
W. J. Bradburn and wife, former-
ly of Marshall, are in the city. Mr.
Bradburn states that it has ben over
twenty-seven years since he and his
wife have been in Marshall. Mrs.
Bradbum was formerly a Marshall
girl, Miss Jennie Sanderson. At pres-
ent the Bradburns are stopping with
Mr. Gabe Witt, an old friend.
Mr. Bradburn states that Marshall
was always a good town but that now
Saturday, July 10, 8:30 p. m., W O.
W. Hall, Longview, Texas. Every-
body invited. 7-9p
Inner tubes for automobiles tires
are made by the yard, and at one
seP"
L - .. .. ।
, - I
L . : 'i.
Splendid Type of Road, Well Taken
Care Of.
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 257, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 8, 1920, newspaper, July 8, 1920; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1406396/m1/6/?q=%22~1~1~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .