The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 346, Ed. 1 Friday, October 21, 1921 Page: 4 of 8
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TBS MARSHALL MORNING NEWS
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HEARS MYSTERY VOICE
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THE SADDEST THING
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THEN AND NOW
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THE PUBLIC
The State of Texas.
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1921.
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FOB BENT.
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wards will be said and then the caskets will I agree for them.
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Quick aid needs for accidents of all kinds. Cotton, bandages.
STILL SPEND YOUR MONEY
We will supply you with the
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LET’S GO
THE LAW OF THE SEA
—Sweet Milk
—Pure Pork Sausage
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FREE DELIVERY
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Une Sanitary Diatnfected Flopx
Sweep. Made in Manhall and guar-
anteed by Morgan McCowan. Phone
About 60 acres of land, a good
house on it, 3 1-2 miles east of the
court house on Shreveport road. Ap-
ply in person st Gold's Store. 10-26pd
trict Court of Hopkins county, Texas,
Vol. "Q" page 612 to 516; and on the
1st day of November A. D. 1921, being
Sall the
through a
Fresh c
WEB ROI
THINKS BROTHER
IS REINCARNATED
Oh, how proud we were of them when they
went out in our defense. How the tears started
m our ezes as they marched by to martial music.
How manly and brave they looked, their young
, —»
in
One lot of Men’s Brown Kid and Brown
Calf English Walking Lace Shoes. These
shoes formerly sold for $12.00 and $15.00
of Hopkins county, Texas, on a judg-
ment rendered in said court on the
24th day of August, A. D. 1921, in
favor of the said The First State Banx
of Sulphur Springs, Texas, a corpor-
ation and against the Bal'd J. B. Bene
field. No. 3182 on the docket of said
court, I did on the 6th day of October
A. D. 1921, at 10 o’clock a. m., levy
upon the following aescribed tract or
parcel of land, situated in the county
of Harrison, and being a part of the
W. R. D. Ward survey sold by M. R.
Andrews to L. W. Benefield, beginning
at the S. W. corne of a tract sold by
Benefield to Ray, a stake in the S. B.
line of a 387%-acre tract sold by
Andrew to Benefield; Thence north
2% east 1136 varas to the N. W. cor-
ner of the Bay tract; Thence south
82 ft West to the N. E. corner of a
tract sold to Griffin; Thence south
2% feet west with Griffith’s E. B.
Une to his 8. E. corner; Thence east
500 vrs to the place of beginning.
Containing 100 acres of land, and be-
ing Block 3 set apart to J. B. Bene-
field in the partition among the heirs
of L W. Benefield and Vianah Bene-
field as per report of commissioners
of record in Civil minutes of the Dis-
But Captain Randall did not command the
good ship St. Paul on her return trip to New York.
New York Man It Convinced That
He Recently Saw Relative
Who Died Yean Ago.
Phone 375-WATSON’S—Phone 375
—Dressed Chicken —Cranberries —Celery-Lettuce
The government has issued a bulletin showing
that the cost of living has decreased 18 per cent
duy
Begins Syatematic Seareh in Conndent
Bellef That His Biother Has ‘
Been Reborn Upon This Earth
—stranger in Subway.
be lowered.
Tapa.
Like bread without the spreadin',
Like pudding without the sauce;
Like a mattress without the stuffin',
. Like a cart without the boss;
Like a door without a latch-string,
Like a fence without a stile.
Like a dry and barren creek bed,
is the face without a smile.
Fire in
Fov
MOMER M. PRICE......
NATHAN a GOLDBERG
X E. BLALOCK..........
HUGH LANE............
$050
5.00
fire
the home
Bedell, ou
was put c
timely arr
men from
• hurriedly
can tram
room and
by hard fi
ed it with
b outside
there beir
flames we
with gunn
blood pulsing through their veins.
But now we are so busy. The cares
Why should you worry? You can buy
what you want at
JOHN SANDERS,
Sheriff Harrison County,
Texas.
-
f‘beebda,"c.
MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Associated Press is exclusively entiteld te the use
iblication of all news dispatches credited to it, or
___ _irwise credited in this paper and also the local
mews published hereto. _____________ _____________
U. S. prohibition enforcement agents working
along the east coast and along the Canadian bor-
der find there’s too much whisk in whiskey—-
Manila Bulletin.
' ARE YOU PREPARED FOR
ACCIDENTS? BURNS? BREAKS?
Sr k
r •
—Ballony Sausage —Bopeless Ham
—Albatross Flour
If it comes from Watson’s
it is the best
fms.“
Editor and Publisher
..........News Editor
. Advertising Manager
.. .Circulation Manager
you must
see what's
-ntered as second-class matter September T. 1919, at
ahe note office at Marshall, Texas, under the Ate of
March 3, 1897." ______ ______________
Special $5.00
/
Come down and be fitted. No sale shoes
sent on approval.
T TOOR______ *
The Marshall Morning News
FRY-HODGE DRUG COMPANY
The REXALL Store
Russell-Graham Co.
WHERE FASHION REIGNS
Hfe burden us down and we forget. We must go
on with our money making. Our pleasures must
wt be curtailed.
And unhonored almost those boys will be con-
. argued back to mother earth.
But He who, one morning 1900 years ago, gave
His life for others; will He forget ? "
< • f •
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Friday, October 21, 1921
■ ' ■ y™.....—
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Fe month, by carrier. ..................
Per month, by mail.....................
Pe year, by carrier....................
Like a house without a dooryard.
Like a yard without a flower,
Lika a dock without a meinsgring.
That vill never tell the Borme;
A eing that always makes yea fitat
A hanger al the wha--
The mMt thing that ever «•
ha face without a sme.
—Selected.
I_______
COST OF LIVING DOWN, "BUT YOU CAN
SPECIAL
For Friday and Saturday!
, ■
rou must have and things
ook over your etock and
MORNING PRAYER
O Lord of Hosts, in whose bento are all the
counsels and events of earth, guide this nation
safely through the crisis that threatens and write
anew in the hearts of men that Rule. Bright and
Golden, that thy Dear Son gave when He came and
died for us on a Cross. Amen.
)
(
Stunned by Mutual Recognition.
’ recalled, also bore a very remarkable
physical likeness to another ot his
brothers, who was said to hare closely
resembled the deceased Infant in his
youth. Shocked and stunned by an
inexplicable mutnal recoznition, the
two gazed at each other in rapt at-
tention, and without making any move
ment or sign, until the swaying, jam-
ming crowd had separated them—per-
haps forever. From that day to this,
Mr. Davies has spent all his time in a
systematie search tor his reincarnated
brother, and in a sclentifie study of
occult phenomena that may throw
' Ngkt upon his quest.
Befleves in Soul Tronamigration.
Ho is convinced absolutely o the
MR truth of th detime of the trans
miizatibn of souls after death, and
dnbms to have developed, through
logteal and scientific methods, a theory
that can be, and Indeed has been, be
says, proved objectively and demon-
strated. If he actually succeeds in
finding his brother who was dead and
is alive again, hia theory will have re
celved very startling confirmation.
According to thia theory, his bratbar
te la Ma present incarnation of Anglo-
Sazon or, Celtic race, born within a
week of July 22, 1895, now being in
modest circumstances, and devoting his
life to the good of his fellowmen. To
all persons who seem to fit this de-
scription (and there are probably a
great many) Mr. Davies proposes to
put certain peychological tests which
will immediately demonstrate the pos-
ability or tmponsibiity of there being
aa actual ego-amnity to sack particular
tuatanee.
NOTICE OF SALE.
<9
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A pathetic little article appeared in all the
papers this week. No one of the papers used
any big type in its heading. So far as we have
noted it appeared on no front pages. One leading
paper in Texas had it at the bottom of a column
on the market page. Another let it appear in
an inconspicuous place on the sport page. No-
where did it appear in a place of prominence.
What was this article? Simply an announce-
ment that a vessel had landed at New York bring-
ing back to this country 684 bodies of American
boys who had died in France that the balance
of us might live in peace. FORTY-FOUR of these
boys had gone out from homes in Texas. Just
two or three years ago they were young and
healthy Texans, pulsing with life, “loving and be-
ing loved.”
When the press dispatch was sent out their
bodies rested on the pier at Hoboken along with
the hundreds of others from other states. These
caskets were unloaded there late in the evening.
Night was coming on. Mayhap one or two
men may have kept vigil as the long hours of the
night went by.
The next day they would be transferred to the
express cars and started home. As this article
is being written forty-four caskets are on their
way back to mothers and fathers in Texas. Forty-
four poor broken bodies coming to be buried in the
soil they died to defend. Forty-four caskets with
the flag of their country draped around them.
In a day or two, in forty-four different towns
and villages, a few friends will gather, a few
they were before the war. Food products fire
nearly back to pre-war prices. Clothing went
down 30 per cent since January and had prior to
that time suffered a great reduction. Dry goods
generally show great declines. Shoes probably
have declined less than most necessities and yet
a good pair of shoes can be bought for almost one-
' half of the price asked two years ago.
The trouble is that some of us absolutely re-
fuse to recognize these evident facts and still
kick about high prices. It maybe true that some
isolated articles are still too high. The way to
handle such articles is to either cut them out or
buy sparingly.
AU this dedine in prices, however, does not
mean that you can’t spend all the money you
want to spend. There are just as many ways
to blow it in as there ever was. But for the man
who wants to live simply and wholesomely, the
way is open again to do so end to save for
a rainy day.
R. P. WATSON
"rELEPHONE 875
New York.—A few days ago the
following advertisement appeared la a
New York paper:
July z-s, UK Did your birthday nap:
pen to fail with or near that tmel
On October S. 1894, a utue child dued
There la acienue basia for the theory
that this child's spirit pursued a con-
tinuous exlatence on earth and expers-
anted another physical rebirth about July
-28, 1896. This theory can be establishe
only through practical demonstration, and
a rigorous test method has been de-
vised for that purpose. Such demonstra-
ton will throw new light upon a number
of human problems which seem Impossible
ot solution at present. inquiries, ag-
cestiona, honest criticisms, will receive
every courtesy within my power. The
child was my brother. Hold Davea
Twenty-six years ago Reid Davtes
and Ms brother, aged seven and five
respectively, lay ill of the same siek-
nesa. One day Reid heard a voice,
which he described as having sounded
like “the voice of Christ on the cross,"
calling “Go to Roy. mamma, he wants
you.” He cried out, bls mother came
to haste, and they found his brother
dead. Since that time Reid has con
tinuslly felt the spirit of Ms younger
playmate to be closely bound to his
own, through some quite definite but
mysterious ties. His dead brother, he
declares, has been the most powerful
influence that lias ever been exerted
over his life. . •
Stranger In Subway.
Two years ago this feeling of com-
munion with the departed gathered
wonderful strength in the mind and
soul of Reid Davies. Some. mighty
force seemed to have taken possession
of all his faculties, bending them
whither it would, regardless of his
wllL While in this condition he found
himself one day looking steadfastly
into the eyes of a stranger in the sub-
way. ara In them recognizing unmis-
takably the spirit, or ego, of his lost
brother. The young man whom Mr.
Davies then saw, as be afterward
4
tain latitude and longitude was a waterlogged
bark that would probably not sink under forty-
eight hours and that there were three persons on
it. In a few hours two vessels had answered the
call and taken the men on board.
It might be thought that Captain Randall had
played a leadin* part in the saving of these lives.
But he had violated the laws of the sea, those
unwritten laws that those who have .“gone down
to the sea in ships" have established through cen-
turies of danger and hardships.
When Randell’s ship landed in South Hampton
he was relieved of his command. The same wire-
less messenger that had called to the aid of those
men on the sinking boat had proceeded him with
its clicking, flashing message.
There was no statute law, no rules of steamship
companies that Captain Randall had violated. He
had in his care hundreds of passengers on import-
ant business who were in a hurry. Did he not
have the United States mail there in the hold
of the ship, bags upon bags of it? There was
plenty of time for some slower going vessel, one
that mayhap, was only carrying steerage passen-
gers or wheat to starving Russia, to rescue
these men.
But how about this law. Captain: “Every
possible effort must be made to rescue lives in
danger?” It is not in the statute books written
by man, but it is written in the hearts of those
who sail the ocean. It is fundamental and the best
understood of all sea-faring laws.
No seaman can indulge in the luxury of break-
ing the laws. Germany as a nation declared a
holiday when the Lusitania went down. And that
day sealed Germany’s doom.
In case of Captain Randall no harm resulted
i from his violating this law of the sea but he was
* held to strict account. The laws of the sea are
( made to be enforced and the law-breaker of the
briny deep is a menace.
But the breaker of the laws of sea, once he is
deprived of his position, can come on the land and
break and evade half of our laws and still be con-
sidered a smart fellow.
plasters, ete. Things
be prepared to use.
Captain Randall up to a month ago was the
commanding officer of one of the biggest pas-
•eager steamers that plies between New York and
South Hampton. The vessel belonged to the
Hotted States Shipping Board and was one on
which the rich only could afford to take passage.
Leaving New York with every cabin full and
with hundreds at bags of mail, the St Paul sailed
Angust 26. Two days out at sea the great ship
passed a frail little bark in which were three
human beings. Their boat woo waterlogged and
as the groat liner came along they throwed up
IWi pun j signals at distress. *
Captain Randall sounded the alarm that led
to the rescue of these men. He had his wireless
operator to dick out all over the sea, that in cer-
since the first of January. This, with the drop
of this ‘of last Fear, is fast bringing prices back to where
gentlemen have entirely lost*sight of the one
hundred millions of people who are not railroad
owners or railroad employes. In effect the presi-
dent of the Erie says: “I believe that it’s a good
time to crush out the labor unions. They are a
menace to our business. The interest of the
public be d—d.” Mr. Lee in effect says: “We
represent possibly a million men who believe the
railroad companies have not treated us fair-
ly. To make them do so we will tie up the coun-
try’s transportation, we will practically dose
down every factory in the country. We will
throw, not only our million of members out of
employment but we will cause the ten million
more men’s wages to stop.”
There must be a way to ward off this calamity
and at the same time deal justly with the road
owners, the road’s employes and that great bulk
of the people, called the general public. The peo-
ple just now expect the Labor Board to find that
way. Certainly the country is not going to com-
mit commercial and social suicide because less
than one-fiftieth part of our population cannot
agree between themselves what is right. If they
can’t agree, then they must let somebody else
and to Mid property.
Witness my hand and official signa-
ture this the 6th day of October A. IX
omem
gu.
0 ec . .
mi
The president of the Erie railroad says he
“welcomes the strike.” The president of the
trainmen’s brotherhood says: “We are going to
tie up the country; we are going on the greatest
strike the world has ever known.” Both of hese
Dog Stole Cat’s Kittena,
Cape Girardeau, Mo—Ordinarily
•ess are enemies of cats and shako
thelfeoutof them at each opportunl-
ty, but George Blow, a sign painter of
this dty, has a dog that to so fond st
them that he has stolen three kittens
from a mother cat and la now ralstng
them. And to the meantime the
mother cat has been grleving over the
leas of her babies and ssercbse every-
where, but in the kennel, tor dhen
WHEREAS, by virtue of an order ■ the first Tuesday of raid month, be-
-j 1 , .1 ni- con- tween the hours of 10 o’clock a. m.
of Mle issued out of the District Court and 4 o’clock p m on said day, at the
courthouse door of Mid county, I will
offer for Mle and sell at public auc-
tion, for cash, all the right title and
interest of the Mid J. B. Benefield, in
• V . c.
f‘"
-ga.
wanted and send your order,
best and at the fairest prices.
When Werwen Took Snuff.
Queen Charlotte opened a snuff
■ecount at the Old Snufr house to Hay-
market. In 1799. and continued with-
out a break unt 1818 Prtncems
Charlotte (In 1909) and Princes
Elzabetb (1812 were good customere.
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 346, Ed. 1 Friday, October 21, 1921, newspaper, October 21, 1921; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1406793/m1/4/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .