The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 179, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 6, 1921 Page: 4 of 8
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1
THE MARSHALL MORNING NEWS
FOUR
Wednesda
2
1
SOC
Edit
FEDERA’
MORNING PRAYER.
4
SILK
$
MADRAS
PERCALE
CIRCIMSTANCES OVERRULED.
COMPLIME!
$1.25 to $7.50
GRANNY HILL.
Hats!
SES
$3.00 to $6.50
Russell-Graham Co.
MERCHANDISE OF MERIT ONLY
few !
random from
P
V
FOREST HILL NEWS.
TURKEYS FOR THANKSGIVING
«
I
a
the morning. and a larger one at night.
c
I
dow, and the fretful cry of a child in the street
seen piled to the ceiling with great stacks of war
I
*
C
FATTEN COCKERELS IN YARD
W
"h
HY
EAR
IRY
men in Texas today who will understand what I
HISKERS
?
4
GRAINS DEFICIENT IN LIME
A
THE STAR CAFE
Mid. “Ob. mother.
v
14
. J
noon.
Mrs. W. H. Crawford entertained
The war left the world so flat that Volivia
may be excused for denying that it is round.—
Greenville (S. C.) Piedmont.
friends and relatives this week.
Mr. and Mi's. Robert Deckard call-
$0.50
.40
5 00
1
I
to enjoy very much.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Keasler of Cen
tral. spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Roe.
he kept free from lice, and in clean,
dry roosting quarters.
There are many things, dear God, which this
world needs which in my weakness I cannot give—
but the one thing needed most is love, and of this
I can give without measure. Give me to love my
kind as thou has loved me. Amen.
Men’s New Spring
SHIRTS
HQ situs
has chan
/ears, since s
worth their w
time and taler
hats for little
Beginning wit
think out the
terpret girlhoc
little girls to
niors" on the
They take in
types of girls i
to quaint, snuc
tog. handling
tit are pott
milltnery.
Many mothe
eholce all hat
than a ribbon
under sixteen
bats in fine (
to never tn q
in the matter
the training of
neveral advant
tors. It helps
being distracte
makes them ei
eoming to the
(By Strickland Giilan.)
I passed a stagnant marsh that lay
Beneath a reeking scum of green,
A loathsome puddle by the way;
No sorrier pool was ever seen.
I thought: "How lost to all things pure
And clean and white those foul depths be."
<ext day from out that pond obscure
Two queenly lilies laughed at me.
of the war she “keeps a grocery”.
Instead of the thud of the tread of thousands
of marching feet, she hears the clatter of the
wooden shoes of a little peasant child, come to
buy sugar for a franc. The boom of the monster
guns has given place to gentle scratching sound
of her quill pen as she casts her accounts at her
desk.
With the roaring swoop of the bombing plane
and the rattle of the machine guns still sounding
in her memory, her ears can only catch the hum-
ming drone of the honey bees outside her win-
One Application Usually to Sufficlent
to Remove Trouble — Other
EMelent Remediea
......... Telegraph. Editor
..... Advertising Manager
......Circulation Manager
many, contributed by those who came under
Granny’s influence:
Her influence on the lives of scores of Uni-
versity of Texas students will count for more
than the millions with which the University of
Texas has been recently’ endowed, for so much1
COULD ANY OTHER BUSINESS STAND SUCH
METHODS.
Russell-Graham Co.
WHERE FASHION REIGNS
MADAMOISEII.E EMIIAENNE MOREAU
KEEPS A GROCERY.
I passed a hove! ‘rcund whose door
The signs of penury were strewn;
I saw the grimed and littered floor.
The walls of logs from tree-trunks hewn.
I said: "the gates of life are shut
To those within that wretched pen”.
But, lo! from out that lowly hut
Came one to rule the world of men.
that produce it are worth on the mar
Begin Feeding Small Ration In Mom.
Ing and Larger One at Night—
Boil All New Corn.
Our foreign relations seem to be poor relations.
-Toledo Blade.
E. E. GLASS
Plastering and Cement Work
Plain or Ornamental
PHONE 620.
Give Two Meals a Day of Mixture of
Cornmeal, Beef Scrape and Bran
Mixed With Milk.
Miss Velma Ingram is visiting with an m m
3uI—c
elief
TARANTELLA
The Vulveraai Safety R»—r
Temperamental.
Sir-year-old Bessle, returning from
church and eager to tell the newa.
Eventually Uncle Sam may accept a place in
the League, buit it won’t be that of official ax-
grinder.—Muskogee Phoenix.
Before hiring a bank clerk, it might he a good
idea to ask his opinion of Judge Landis.—Buffalo
News.
She seemed alwavs conscious that a hov far
awav from home needed a friend whose viewpoint
and impulses were those of a mother and that
most of all he needed this friend when he was in
the wrong. With her this was not merely a the-
ory ; it amounted to a creed and she lived up to it.
Naturally, she came to know boys and boy-nature,
like few people ever know them. She could see
the danger signals long before the individuals
themselves suspected they were approaching
shoal or eddy, yet she never inspired the fear
that she would lecture. She was as wise as she
was ioving and she frequently steered boys into
the right course without. I am sure, their sus-
pecting that Granny knew. But when worst came
to worst and a boy was in real trouble, when his
college friends wore exhausted and the faculty
was exasnerated. Granny took a hand. There are
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Fer month, by carrier.........................
Pe month, by maM ...........................
Nr year, by carrier ..........................
MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS.
The Marshall Morning News___
A newspaper published every day except Monday to
dhe Hotel Marshallbuilding, Marshall, Texas. Phone 993.
HOMER M. PRICE, E. L WELLS JR.
Editors and Publishers
"b-
A splendid variety of patterns and colors faultless in
fit, finish and workmanship. All sizes--14 to 17%.
$1.25 to $7.50
We are showing our new
spring line of Men’s Straw
Hats—
& I
The mddle of October la not too
early to begin fattening turkeys for
-"a '
\ / A
KBEWNNS
INdiGE51o)
6 Bell-ans
55 27 WvX j
ft* - /
S
A
)
"Entered at second-class matter September 7, 1919,
• MAfe Poit office at Marshall, Texas, under the Act of
have a new
if the turkeys are overfed
There was a grave-yard-working
at this place Saturday, and dinner on
the ground, which everybody seemed
village in France where this young heroine of the
war “keeps a grocery”.
She has known the smoke of battle. She has
dared the rain of bullets and of shrapnel. She has
felt the exalted thrill of sacrifice. She has heard
the plaudits of a nation—of two nations. And
A
- U
1-
paragraphs, selected alomst at
Y r
“_e
Mrs. N. P. ’
sence of Mrs
from Miss Blai
to indorse app
local school bo
orable action a
Hey read treat
follows: Total
contingent, $1
piano, $106; 11
librarian salar
bonds, $215. 1
Lit Martin w<
Marshall P. T
and Mias Page
and alternate t
tag. Circus co
of 110 each gi
school and 110
for greatest n
looted for clear
tee also fount
dean.
Blade Shar
Scaly legs in fowls to a disease, the
result of myriads of small parasites
whieh burrow under the small scales
of the leg, and as these multiply and
burrow under, these scales become en-
larged and loosen from the leg, and
the birds are seen picking at the legs
much of the time which proves that
the parasites cause irritation.
If the disease is allowed to go un-
disturbed It sometimes happens that
the body becomes infected and the bird
A healthy cockerel will fatten well
In two weeks if confined in a yard of
moderate size and furnished two
meals a day of a mixture of cornmeal,
ground oats, beef scraps and a little
bran mixed with milk. Another meal,
the evening feed, should consist most-
ly of cracked corn. Plenty of grit and
charcoal should be furnished these
cockerels so that their digestion may
be of the best.
Material for Manufacture of Egg
Shatto to Lacking In Food
Given to Fowla.
Fowls need more lime (ealcfum»
than to ordinarily found in their tued
Most grains and some other foods are
deficient In time. and neither the hen
■or the duck can eat enough bulky
food to make good shehs during the
heavy laying period. The ume la
oyster shells or ground bone wn -up
ply this need. It to also import .at is
provide a regular supply of vg -tabu
foods rich in lime.
2 Hot water
2° Sure Relief
ELLENS
ness, its history and traditions. She visualized
I MON BROWN .....
. Il BLALOCK ...
’ MUGH LANE.....
completely its tremendous power for good. and
more than once she said to me that she could not
look at it as a school, but rather as the mother of
3 host of children nurtured and trained and Sent
out as a share of the world’s work. J verily be-
. lieve that she excluded not one of the students of
As her eyes scan the pitiful little rows of the .University from her heart but, aside from
goods on the shelf of her little shop she thinks I thst, he.universityitsel was to, her a living
. , 11 1 , P , , Going, to be defended and loved.—E. E. McInnis,
pernaps of the miles of great warehouses she has ; ’04.
A GREAT PROBLEM SOLVED
Dtn't Utmu owny wur
used bladn ‘
8
1*)
Va
Thanksgiving. A pound of turkey will
bring In far more than the grains
ket. Begin feeding a small ration in
foraging gives. The night meal may
be a mash made of boiled new corn, I
tor every
KEROSENE CURES SCALY LEGS
day afternoon.
Sunday School began Sunday with
a large crowd and we hope it will
continue nicely.
Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Ingarm called
on Mr. and Mrs. Will Hopper awhile
Sunday night.
Mrs. Aubrey Ingram called on Mrs.
Edd Hiett Friday afternoon.
We are sorry to report Mrs. Ben
Davis has been sick.
Mrs. Bev Davis and son, Luther
Ray, called on Mrs. Bob Frazier Wed-
nesday afternoon.
Miss Poly Page spent Saturday
night with Mr. and Mrs. Edd Hiett.
Miss Clyda Hiett spent Saturday-
night and Sunday with Miss Lurlie
Pitts.
Mr. and Mrs. Jule Ford spent Sun-
day with Mrs. Nora Crawford.
Mr. Ray Ingram called at Aubrey
Ingram’s Wednesday night.
The Associated Press to exclusively entitled to the
kN for republication of all news dispatches credited to it.
er mot otherwise credited in this paper and also the local
News published herein.____________________________________
potato and other vegetable skins the young folks with a party Satur-
with or without bran. Do not give day night which everybody reported
new corn without boiling, as It is apt’a nice time.
to cause bowel trouble in the tur Mr. and Mrs. Will Hopper, Mr. Mal-
kovs. Sour milk is a most valuable colm Connor and sister Lena, of Sul-
addition to the ration. Keep cracked phur Springs, and Miss Jones spent
charcoal and grit before them. Don’t from Friday until Sunday with rela-
give them all they will eat the first tives here.
feed: use the same caution in getting1 Mr. and Mrs. Seth Davis and fami-l
ed on Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Ingram
Sunday.
Mr. Willie Crawford called on Mr.
Charlie Hitt, Jr., Saturday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Edd Black called at
in the Edd Hiett’s Sunday.
morning, they will not go out to for-' Miss Clyda Hiett attended preach-
age, and will thus lose the best parting at Mulberry Saturday night, Sun-
of their fattening ration—the natural day and Sunday night.
food of bugs, grasshoppers and worms; । Miss Sue Whitford called on Miss
they will also lose the appetite which Clyda Hiett awhile Saturday after-
0
r
The postmaster general-of the United States
it the head of the biggest business institution
in the world. He receives a salary of $8,000 per
year.
Mr. Hayes, the new head of the postal de-
partment, is a lawyer. It isn’t at all likely that
he could tell you what is 3rd class mail or
whether you can send 7 pounds or 70 pounds by
parcel post into the second zones.
He was appointed because of his political
standing and his knowledge of who the faithful
are that should be rewarded with office.
But he will have 300,000 employes under him
and will disburse $500,000,000 per year. He will
appoint men to be postmasters who know no more
than he does, who will administer the biggest
business that there is in every city in the coun-
try. Could anything be more unbusinesslike?
Yet Mr. Hayes probably knows just as much
about the postal service as did Mr. Burleson.
Isn’t it strange that the postal service is as
efficient as it is? What could not the rank and
file do if they had intelligent direction to guid
them?
Some weeks ago there was printed in this
column a short mention of the death, in Austin,
of Mrs. Homer Hill, better known to the thou-
sands of boys and girls who have attended the
state university as Granny Hill.
The March number of the Alcade, published
by former students of the University, “puts on a
purple dress in honor of Granny—purple the
emblem of unselfish devotion; it prints some
faltering words of praise from hearts that her life
has touched and ennobled;” it is a memorial num-
ber.—to Granny Hill.
Since our university puts its stamp and exerts
a strong influence on our state, and since Granny
• Hill’s influence on the student body of the uni-
versity was strong and constant for good during
. many years of time, it is not exaggeration to say
that she has—or rather that she will, for her
"boys” have not yet reached their period of great-
est usefulness—exerted a real influence on Texas.
Few people in the ordinary walks of life—
men and women—have a real appreciation of the
influence they exert on others. We venture to say
that Granny Hill had little idea of the value of the
work she was doing among the boys and girls of
Wednesday. April 6, 1921
-----------------
Below tiie News prints a
3
turkeys on full feed that you would Iy called in Central Community Sun-:
use for fattening hogs. They must
Moreau,— vhose name was in every newspaper in
France, who was received and decorated by the
president himself,— President Poincare.
Among tin shanties and wooden shacks that
now take the place of the substantial old struc- the university,
tures of pre-war days there is a little shop in a
A Case of Scaly Lega.
may finally die of exhaustlon. We
once lost a fine hen thia way, not
knowing the cause or remedy, which
la very simple, and has the a 1 vantage
of always being available at home.
There are different remedies which
will remove the trouble, but none is
better than common kerosene, says a
writer in Successful Farming. To
ply. take the fowl in the hands, hold
the legs together and immerse them,
full length. In a can filled with kero
sene; hold them there two or three
minutes. One application will usually
cure, but sometimes a second applies*
tion is necessary. Lard and kerosene,
half and half, is another excellent
remedy, as is also common machine
oil, or Just common axle grease well
rubbed in. two or three times at In-
tervals of three days. Soon the scales
will drop off and the legs become
smooth and clean.
The roosts should also be cleaned
off well and nibbed with machine oil.
which will help to rid the fowls of
scaly legs and red mites, as well. Thte
same remedy is also good in case of
lice. Keep roosting poles well oiled
and rub a little lard under wings and
around vents of infested birds and
they may be kept practically free from
these pests.
Hays to “humanize” postal service.—News
head-line. If to err is human, it is already suf-
ficiently “humanized’’.—Norfolk Virginian-Pilot
terror in the choir."— Boston Tran-
script
supplies, of the massed bodies of fighting men,
equipped for war, reaching as far as her eye
could see.
We believe Mademoiselle Emilienne must sigh
as she goes about her humdrum tasks—they
seem so small, so trivial, so little worth while.
All over the world today there are millions of
brave veterans of the world war who figuratively
speaking “keep a grocery". In every city anc
hamlet in America and on the farms there are
spirits that droop with a vague unrest—the
world has grown so small—the simple duties of
daily life press so on the spirit—there is a vague
doubt whether they are worth the doing.
i
t
: ।
We nerve good dinners every day—
40 cents. Short orders at all hours.
If you eat with us once you come
again. Good cooking. Come and see
us. In Davidson-Blalock Bldg. (4-llc
Recent press dispatches inform us that Em-’
ilienne Moreau, the herois of Loos, the idol of the
British troops during the war, the winner of two
decorations now “keens a grocery"—Emilienne
The quiet of home life for which they when ............. aucanu w.a. .
on the other side had so often longed, and the : mean —Jno. E. Green. Jr., ’09.
petty details of business and industrial life hang Alwavs she prompted us to higher and better
over them tike a pall. things. That is why her memory to us is sacred.
TL. io „ . .11 . a . That is whv we look back to her hearth stone as
There is a courage to do or to dare, and a to a holy shrine.—Morris Sheppard, ’95.
courage to endure; a courage to fight and a cou-
rage to "keep a grocery". Many of those who
charged the Hun machine gun nests and who
went over the top with a shout, now face the te-
dium of life with a sigh.
But as the months pass they are finding their
places, and their work, and as the fever of unrest
abates the delights of peace and of home and of
kin take deeper hold—and the ugly memories of
war become dim and unreal, like a troubled dream.
WON
• Meets at th
noon with Mrs
now, with the same quiet efficiency with which does love transcend cold dollars and cents that it
she bore her noble part in the fury and <*rnage|^^ their relative values
Granny Hill was one of the purest-minded
women I ever knew. She had high standards for
womanhood, and was hurt when any of her ac-
quaintance fell short of them. The world will
never know the many different spheres of useful-
ness which went out with her life.—Pearl C.
Jackson, ’95.
She knew the university, its strength, it weak-
peeeeeeeeeeceeeeneeeeneeeeeeeeneet
POULTRY
FLOCKS
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eration busines
eration.
mahe ot Blad
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TARANTELLA CO .
Pulltser Baldtac Naw Teat
Miss Kather
beautifully apt
ner last evenii
"y guests Miss Li
tram Zachary,
tered with sple
bowl on a refit
• mints were r
strawberries i
accented the c
place cards we
grooms with
thereon. Mr.
spiciously hap
nage of all the
• him. The gue
Furrh and Mr
matrons of hon
Miss Leia Maj
Misses Janie F
ley and Mary
Miss Lancaste:
. Five delicious
with beautiful
The road back to normalcy produces a lot of
punctures.—Columbia Record.
«. .3 ’ ; '
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Price, Homer M. & Wells, E. L., Jr. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 179, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 6, 1921, newspaper, April 6, 1921; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1406625/m1/4/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .