The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 157, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 9, 1922 Page: 4 of 8
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Thursday, March 9, 1922
THE MARSHALL MORNING NEW8
FOUR
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SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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95c
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ITS UP TO DALLAS NOW
Dallas has a whipping case on hand now.
P
MORNING PRAYER
THE PATH AROUND
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Russell-Graham Co.
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CAST OUT THE UNWORTHY
COTTON ACREAGE IN THIS COUNTY
/y Coughs and Cot is
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has gone wrong.
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tors, firemen, brakemen and switch-
he can live at home in order that he can use his
men.
UP IN THE PANHANDLE
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GOOD FOR THE BROKERS
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EXIDE BATTER]
Phome 1348
nt Part Ava
Phone 462.
3-21p
Rooms and Board
et
Horse-power has sufficiently developed in the
REWS WANT ADS FOR RESULTS
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I
IS
DrBell
Pine"TarHon
The folks who really love you come
Around the house.. It seems that some
Will use the front door to the end—
But, when around the house they wend.
Well, then you know you’ve got a friend.
Udi
elean
Chicago, March 8.—With conditions
in the coal mining industry critical
ROADS WANT TO
CUT WAGES, MEN
WANT INCREASE
WOMEN’S $7.50, $10.00, $12.50 SHOES
—Colon Black, Brown and Gray; sizes 1% to 4%,
on sale today—
And Mother from her marketin’.
And neighbors who have just run in.
And all of those who never need
An invitation first to read
Or any etiquette to heed.
SUPPORT URGED
FOR COLONY OF
FEEBLE-MINDED
The front’s for strangers and for style,
For callin’ card and frozen smile;
The path around is set apart
For folks who aren’t proud or smart.
But walk right into house and heart.
—Douglas Malloch.
allowing it to become a master. The majority of
our farmers know better how to raise cotton than
anything else. What is needed is to plant other
crops in conjunction with cotton.
But very few crops outside of cotton can be
depended on as money bringing crops. This means
But the fact that the Dallas klan goes in masks
and disquises is the cause of this man’s punish-
ment. It was cither done by the klan or by others
working under the proetction of the klan.
It is up to Dallas now.
bonds shall be issued, for that would decrease the
price of Liberty Bonds.
We do not understand finances but common
sense makes it plain that if we am raise money
Knotty Problem Before The U. S.
Labor Board That Must
Be Settled Soon
—The long-life battery.
Ask. the man who has
one.
SMITH’S GARAGE.
on bonds, there are only two classes who can be
called on to pay the bill. The doughboy must
pay or the public. But Wall Street, having bought
a man being maltreated who if guilty of the crime
J. D. Johnson
Plumbing, Gas Fitting
The children laughin’ with delight
When school lets out—and then at night
Comes Father, weary with the day,
Yet glad to work if only they
tan grow and learn and run and play.
Gainesville, Tex., Mar. 8.—“Ade- (
quate support" of the state colony >
for the feeble-minded was urged by
Dr. Carrie Weaver Smith, superintend-
ent of the Girls’ Training School, is a
DR. J. D. THOMPSON
DENTIST
Davidson- Blalock Bldg.
Office Phone 1388 Ree. Phone 1116
ice organizations, nor the switchmen
are included in these hearings. They
Matt Cramer
LAWYER
Office Over Citizens State Bank
Marshall, Texas
General Practice in all Courts
Per month, by carrier
Per month, by mail-..
Fer year, by carrier.-.
O Father, let me hold fast day by day to a faith
in thy wisdom and leva for there are an problems of
life which each faith cannot solve, nor any burden
which it will not enable me to bear. Amen.
are back in 1920 form.
Frank P. Walsh, attorney for the
By h
hot s
a.
the public demands the right kind of pictures and exception of the engineers, conduc-
the farmer should raise sufficient food crops that refuses to patronize the other kind. t—. . ‘ ‘
4 ------
The path around the house—the way
The common folks use ev’ry day,
Near neighbors, and the family—
Why, that has always seemed to me
The very best of all to be!
the colony for the feeble-minded was
properly supported and adequate hous-
ing facilities provided and a proper
commitment law passed together wtih
compulsory mental examination of
school children in early grades, the
FIFTY-ONE PAIRS
Men’s Black and Brown Calf and Kid Shoes; values
up to $9.50—
Clean-Up Price $4.95
Landlord in For Drubbing.
Employe representatives will at-
tempt to prove that the cost of living
has not decreased sufficiently to jus-
tify a reduction. They, too, have
many exhibits, one of the most com-
plete of which is a bitter indictment
of the American landlord. Every dime
that has come off the cost of corned
beef and cabbage, they are prepared
to contend, has been added on rent.
When the board has completed the
shop craft hearing, the biggest of
the lot, it will take up other classes
of employes until it reaches the sec-
tion hands on the Yuma Desert and
the station agents in the piney woods
of Georgis.
None of the- "Big Four” train serv-
PISOS-
SAFE AND SANE
for Coughs & Colds
This syrup to dlfferent from an others.
Quiek relief. No opiates. 35c evervwhere,.
road Labor Board starts hearings
Monday on the applications of the
railroads for reductions in the pay of
more than 1,000,000 employes.
Headed by Bert M. Jewell, presi-
dent of the American Federation of
Labor railway department, represen
tatives of the six big railway shop
crafts will step before the board and
declare that, far from being in a po-
sition to stand a pay cut, they must
have a 12 per cent raise.
• ♦ •
Win Encounter" Regrets.
Miss !
leader c
tremely
era Bout
Writings
gracious
gave Mi;
The <
Missions
Church,
Mr. W
Road. I
had the
from the
ihes ■
tion of
brouyh:
for the c
The ladie
the delici
•octal ph
cotton money for buying what he cannot raise.
The boll weevil menace must be met in an in-
telligent way. So far there is no way to success-
fully combat the weevil after its appearance in
great numbers. Early planting seems to be the
most promising remedy..
examples or Sunday school lessons. But thereMay Take Away Rest.
is no reason why we can’t expect clean fun on! Qn July 1, 192, the board raised
the screen, nor is there any reason why we should Sherpaxnohallamhessdayssnsepyearthe
have to view pictures where the marriage relation board took $400,004,000 of this away,
is dragged in the mire. The entire world loves July 1 this year will probably de-
a love story and it doesn’t have to have the im-cide, in the opinion of some.obser:
...... . ... .. .. . 1 lers, that now is the time to take the
moral in it. Movie makers will realize this when of it from all classes with the
Theodore Price says that the soldiers bonus
bill as at last determined on by the Republican
Congress means a harvest for the brokers but lit-
tie for the soldier. Abraham Lincoln paid the sol-
dien of the Civil War with greenbacks; McKinley
paid the Spanish-American soldiers in gold cur-
rency, while now with all the wealth of the world
almost, in our treasury, we propose to give out
defenders a piece of paper that they can borrow
60 per cent of its face .value at the bank. Maybe
they- am borrow, but just how the banks can do
what it is claimed the government cannot do, we
can’t understand. The strain, it is said, will be
too much for the treasury. Certainly the banks
cannot loan money at as low a rate of interest as
the government can float bonds. If the banks
Austrian Jew, although a naturalized American
for twenty years, was taken from home, from the
room with his wife, beaten, teeth knocked out
and back all cut with cruel whips. We have no
information as to why this was done. He and his
wife both asert his innocence of the crime he
was charged with. This man sacrificed what lit-
tle possessions he had and left town. We have
no information regarding the morals of the men
who proposed to administer punishment for some
infraction of the moral law. . They went in masks
and disguises. Possibly if they had let God’s
sunshine on their faces they would have been in
the same fix thos men were who two thousand
But not “the floks," your very own.
Between the boards the grass has grown
The front door way. An endless tide
Keeps smooth and hard and glorified,
The , little path round the side.
— $0.50
— .« for railroads, ship subsidies and for rivers and
_______
There is no reason why the motion picture
business should be tabooed because there are some
immoral actors producing films. The immoral
Cotton experts claim that if the same acreage
is planted in cotton during 1922 that was planted
in 1921 that under ordinarily favorable conditions
that the yield would be about 10,000,000 bales.
This with the 3,000,000 bales carried over would
be just about what the world could use at a fair
price. It is thought such a crop can be kept above
15 cents and possibly nearer 20 cents. A crop
this year of 13,000,000 bales would mean less than
10 cents, say the experts.
In this county the acreage should not be in-
creased nor would it be wise to decrease it. Bet-
ter grades should be planted, fertilizer used wher-
ever possible and the boll weevil outwitted by
planting early.
It is folly all this talk about advising that no
cotton be planted. Cotton can be made the ser-
vant, and a valuable one. What we must avoid is
Too much sweet stuff puts the
atomach out of order. A dose o
Prickly Ash Bitters correcta the trou
ble, restores appetite and good dige
tion. Price $1.25 per bottle. Mat
Cleaned and repaired. Work guaran-
teed and prices reasonable. Riley
thewson Drug Co., Special Agents.
DON’T FAIL TO SEE
One of the season’s very best plays,
ideal American in character, up to the
minute in thought, to be staged Fri-
day evening at 8 o’clock in the City
Hall auditorium, by the Philomath-
ean Literary society of the College
of Marshall.
This play is a farce comedy in three
acts; depicts American life to a fin-
ish. The title of the play, “It Pays
To Advertise," was staged at C. O.
M. last week, but because of a num- ’
ber of requests for a repetition, it
was decided to put it on again. There
are twelve characters in the cast, all!
of which played their parts well last
week, and some who played like real
"professionals." If you do not believe
in advertising now, you will after
you have seen this play. It is worth,
well, your time and the small charge
which will be made to see it. You
just can’t afford to miss seeing it;
if you do, you are going to be sorry,
for, to put it mildly, and in the ar-
tist’s language, “It’s a scream” from
start to finish. Some of the most
clever lines that you ever heard. It’s
no love story; it’s something differ-
ent
The balcony seats are reserved for
the colored people, and they are most
earnestly urged to be present.
Another feature of the evening will
be the splendid music which the high
school band will furnish. This alone
will be worth your time and the small
charge.
Admission: 35c and 25c.
The most energetic workers feel
lazy and low-spirited at times. This
condition is caused by impurities in
the stomach, liver and bowels, which
should be gotten rid of before the;
bring on a sick spell. A few doses of
Prickly Aah Bitters, the remedy that
men use, cleanses the system and
sends new life and vigor to every
part of the body. Price $1.25 per bot-
tle. Matthewson Drug Co. Special
Agents.
employes, will then arise, according
, , . to present plans, and say that the
charged could not have been punished by the laws I railroads have made no serious ef-
of his country. This poor Austrian Jew may have i fort to hold hearings with the em-
been guilty of some infractionof .. dleyconenotersyyezganypstttornarord, has
not know whether he was guilty or not. We only no place before the board. He will ask
know he had no ppportunity to prove his innocence that it he referred back to the men
The Mardudl Morning New
AnEwsaveripublmhedevery day except Mondaygin the
building, Marshall, Texas. Phone 993.
womfr m PRICE --_____--.Z-Editor and Publisher most of the Liberty Bonds, has advanced them to
J. H. BLALOCK------...........Advertising Manager almost par and it has been decreed that no more
WOGH LANE------------...... CreulaUon Manager
_ as second-class matter September 2 1919, at
it office at Marshall, Texas, under the Act of
1, 1897."______________________
State of Texas would do more to sup-
press crime and delinquency than in
any other way.
“The state colony takes care of less ■
than 200 children. It should be en-
larged to take care of 2,000 immed-
iately and adequate supervision should
be given through the public schools i
and juvenile courts to thousands of
other children whose mental equip-
ment is not sufficient to enable them
to steer themselves through the in
tricacies of our modern life. Many =
feeble-minded children can be taken -
care of qutside of an institution pro-:
vided they are kept under constant
guidance.
“This supervision and custodfhl
care undoubtedly will cost Texas a
great deal of money but the amount
will not be comparable to the amount =
being spent in convicting and housing _
adult criminals which is reaching well!
into the millions at present.”
MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
EerApanscatom‛gzrncuzaspatdhenttiattdac6%,"o
Mt otherwise credited in thia paper and also the local
mews published berate. ___________________________
A
ones should be weeded out. Every time any pic-
ture house puts on a show with any of the salu-
brious ones appearing, the public should refuse
to patronize.
As well say we must quit attending church are ineudin ph
because here and there some preacher disgraces lems with the carriers through region-
himself by some immorality, or withdraw from a al boards.
Masonic lodge because some one who has taken) It is fully, expectedinarairqad.cin
-2, -.1. mt 11: I 1 eles here that the board will cut wages
its obligation has proven unworthy. The thing toin all classes of railroad labor except
do is to kick the preacher or Mason out who (train and yard service from 10 to 25
per cent. This will mean ^reduction
, ,2 , .of from $150,000,000 to $00,000,000
The motion picture business has come to stay.. annually and -win be the last bit of
it can be made one of our greatest assets in a'wartime high pay in possession ot
moral and educational way. We do not mean by [ railroad workers, outside of the train
this that the screen should show mathematical service flasses . . .
Some
marr
ROY
P«ny
Meb
because of proposed wage cuts Apri
l, another tender spot in the basic in-
An dustries will come up for critical diag-
nosis when the United States Rail-
_ motor. What we need now is the development of
charge a higher rate to the boys than that paid a little horse sense in the driver.—Baltimore Sun.
The railroad representatives will
then smile sadly and say that as much
as they would enjoy accommodating
, .. ... ... . . ..the faithful employes that a raise is
years ago when told if they were without sin that impossible. In fact, they will add,
they could cast astone at a poor trembling girl jit is their unpleasant duty to show
who had been caught in sin. • why present wage envelopesmmust.be
, placed in the steam room until -ne-
The Morning News has no defense for the — *
violator of moral laws but we have yet to hear of
creeks and harbor that we could raise it for our
soldiers—if we wanted to.
if he was innocent. We do not know who his pun- and their employers and that the near
ishers are. They may be men without stain on1 inFhbtdrd’is expected to answer
their moral character or they may be guilty of that inasmuch as all parties have
worse crimes than their victim was charged with, proposals before it that the hearings
There is no way to tell when masks take the place. wil.g° ranrasasrderd been allotted
of the open court room. . ! five days to prove that present wages
Dallas it is said has thousands of men who)are too high. They have compiled
belong to the klan. Thes originator of the
says any lodge that resorts to violence will have 1 phe same capacity as in railroad shops
its charter taken away from it and the names of (have accepted wage reductions and
its members given to the officers of the law. We are still living; a thing the union
presume the Dallas klan will deny that they had leaders claim can
aught to do with the whipping of this poor Jew.
WHY COUGH ANB-
COUGH AND COUGH?
•
A RE you going to let it,stick and
P become a chronic condition ?
Of course not i Not when you
know you have a preparation like Dr.
Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey to loosen it up
... . and so allow Nature to rid you of it.
Health Week statement. . . ____
than the problem of the control of the ielievedby Dr. Bell’s Pine-1. ~Honey.
feeble-minded,” said Dr. Smith. “If Keep it on hand. Alldruggiats. 30c.
It seems that the Catholic priest who was
tarred and feathered out at Slaton, in the Pan-
handle, was not attacked because he was preist
of the Catholic church nor because he was a Ger-
man. It appears that he was not handled by the
Ku Klux but by a crowd of citizens composed of
Protestants and Catholics alike. His offense ap-
pears to date back to the time of the war when he
was intensely pro-German. Just why his punish-
ment was delayed until three years after the war
is not explained. But the citizens in mass meet-
ing assembled—Protestants and Catholics—en-
dorse the action of the maskers and at the same
time expressed it to be the sense of the meeting
that no feeling in Slaton is antagonistic to the
Catholic church or to a German. Of course if this
man persisted in his un-American talk, this may
have been the cause of his having a coat of tar
and feathers. But it is not plain at this distance
the manner of his offense.
Close in. Special rates to
souples. Phone 1048.
DR. C. A. WYATT
Medicine and Surgery
Office Mahon Bldg.
Phone, Office 184 Rea 1226-
MARION B. STINE. D. C.
CHIROPRACTOR
Palmer Method
117 WEST RUSK STREET
Office hours: » to 12; $ to 1, •—
Others by appolntment ,
72.
Of course we have a sidewalk there
In front that’s swept and kept with care.
The big front door it leads you -to.
And knock and they will welcome you—
But that’s the way that strangers do.
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 157, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 9, 1922, newspaper, March 9, 1922; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1406905/m1/4/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .