The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 218, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 23, 1922 Page: 2 of 8
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■ i
THE MARSHALL MORNING NEWS
At the Theatres
child
AT THE PALACE.
5-25-
$
C
FOREST HILL NEWS.
Realart star one of the best roles in
zu
I
SPRING IS HERR
LAST DAY
AT THE QUEEN.
M3
X
WRIGLEYS
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0
A
3
$
ODOM & ROGERS.
tfc
n
5
LITTLE PARIS"
of rainbow hues through
great gorge
on its
2
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Au
85
♦
A STEIN & COMPANY
V
Chicago
New York
X
3his trademark identtfiu th* genaint
Am
I
Quail
EPALACE
Cord Non-Skid
LAST DAY
MAY McAVOY
Savings Accounts are Silent Partners
CA
Guaranty State & Savings Bank
61
A Guaranty Fund Bank
w.
*u
1
‘EVERY
AFTER
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ie
3
8.:
P
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{s siis
Next time you need gasoline, try our filling station, for
Service.
$24.50
125.50
don, and a truly remarkable
player, Master Joseph DePew.
The Tires named below are all Firsts and Fully Guaranteed.
No one can give you more for your money than we can.. See
for yourself.
Fabric
Non-Skid
Non-Skid
Non-Skid
Non-Skid
Non-Skid
.$7.75
$ 9.00
115.75
$16.00
$17.50
Get out that Panama or straw hat
and let us make it look like a new
30x3
30x3%
32x4
33x4
34x4
FROM GIRLHOOD
TO WOMANHOOD
PARIS
)GARTERS
No metal
can touch you
her brief picture career.
Charles Ogle and Guy Oliver, fam-
ous character actors, are irresistibly
funny as a pair of matchmaking mas-
culine old maid uncles while Lincoln
Stedman brings added laughs in one
ef his well-played fat boy roles.
3000 Mouas
o Solid Comfort
in every pair at 50P
He kissed his own wife—a most
improper thing to do.
For unbeknownst to both of them
their marriage had been annulled—
just as the man learned to love the
bride who had loved him all the time.
All of this happens in “A Home-
spun Vamp," the May McAvoy pic-
ture now showing at the Palace The-
ater. The story of the unwanted little
wife who made her husband love her
in spite of himself offers the youre
The aff
* Katherine
v Mrs. Fran
arrest of 1
taken awa
keeping u
• guilt can I
to the bu
BEST PICTURES & MUSIC
11 IL MI
of the cast includes J. Barney Sherr,
known for his work in many Marshal!
Neilan productions, Gypsy O’Brie:,
whose dark beauty vividly animates
the role of Marie Beauvais, Roy Gor-
TIRE PRICES ARE
DOWN at SMITH Garage
John Gilbert in “Shame” at the
Grand, last time today.
•#
differ
*
y
Notice to People Going
to Lake
AFTER
zmimas?
Mr. Harry Brown will play the role
of official announcer at the corona-
tion ceremony of the May(le) Queen.
5-23
THE BIGGEST LIAR
WEST OF ST. JOE
Mashall Planned
And Marshall Manned
i
i
Something new
forSummev!
27/
874>
4
High Wheel Ball Bearing
Lawn Mowers at Logan & Wha-
MEAL
i
i
NFLUENZA.--au
| hale digheend momine
Y^JKS
rMIED
“Get The
SMITH GARAGE
---Phone 462---
9 %3N
,3
d ' N
kk
Silence”
------with ------
ZENA KEEFE
Jeane learned to love but first
learned to hate.
---also-—
A 2-REEL COMEDY
-----and------
A NEWS REEL
2, 3:45—7:30 and 9:15 o’clock
Send your children to the Queen
Theater.
For several years I
had severe pains at
menstrual periods,
making me very
weak an d interfering
with my regular du-
ties. I tried several
remedies without ob-
taining relief. I was
induced to try Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound by
friends and it re-
F'
u
QUEEN
Admission, 10 and 30 cents
LAST DAY
“The Broken
We are sorry to report Mrs. W. H.
Crawford on the sick list.
Most everybody from here attend-
ed the singing at Central Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Ingram spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Bill In-
gram.
Mrs. W. A. Gage is spending a few
days with Mrs. John Hall of Mulberry.
Rev. W. H. McClelland and John B.
Henderson were callers of Edd Hiett
Monday night.
Mrs. Sam Killingsworth and Mrs.
Jule Ford called to see Mrs. W. H.
Crawford Sunday.
Mrs. Harry Roe called on Mrs. C. N.
Hiett Tuesday.
Several from here attended the B-
Y. P. U. at Mulberry Spring Sun-
day night.
Luther Ray Davis called in Tryen
community Saturday night.
Boyd Killingsworth called in this
community Sunday night.
Harvey and Joe Crawford attended
’.he Baccalaureate sermon at Long-
view Sunday at the First Baptist
church which was preached to the
graduates of Longview this term.
There will be services at this place
Sunday morning and singing in the
| afternoon. Everybody invited to come.
’ All the good singers be sure and come.
which a mighty river roars
Habit is repeated action. You act upon a good sugges-
tion and you are certain to acquire good habits. Saving
is a habit. It follows suggestion and action. You must
“GET THE HABIT.”
EVERY
----3
stored me to normal health. I often
have occasion and do recommend your
Vegetable Compound to my friends who
have troubles similar to my own. You
may use these facts as a testimonial.
Eva Aldrich, 218 Union St., Emporia,
Kansas.
There are many women who first used
our Vegetable Compound during their
girlhood days. They found it a valuable
help during trying periods. In later ,
years they use it whenever they feel ,
those annoying symptoms which women
often have.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound is a woman’s medicine. It is pre-
pared carefully from the bestquality of
medicinal plants, whose properties are
especially adapted to correct the troubles
women have.
Woman Relied Upon Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound
Emporia, Kansas.— “I began using
Lydia E Pinkham ‘s medicines years ago
when I was a girl.
We are now handling ice in car
lots and you may depend on us at all
times. If you wish to avoid the
trouble of handling your ice from
here to lake, you can get same from
our storage at Collin County Club,
in charge of Mr. Bob Huff, on lake.
We also carry almost any kind of
groceries you need at camp or club.
Will appreciate your trade.
Habit”
Their extremely light, cool
and comfortable features
score an instantaneous suc-
cess. Note the small shield
and the narrow, long-
stretch, peppy, half inch
silk elastic. A delight clear
through. Patterned in the
PARIS Perfection Way.
which sheJhas yet been seen during history recounts various causes fo
- their withdrawal from professional
way to the sea, hundreds of square
miles of great forests and broken,
saw-toothed crests, and you have a
combination which will inspire even
a cowboy. Everything is on a giant
scale. Distances are great, canyons
are of terrifying depth, mountain
peaks raise their lofty crests to in-
conceivable heights.
“The northern and western en-
trances are most used. In the early
history of the park, most of the travel
came in by the northern entrance,
which is but a few miles from Fort
Yellowstone, where, at,one time, was
stationed a very considerable force of
cavalry.
“From Yellowstone the road fel-
lows the Madison river to its junctio.
with the Firehole river, where it
branches. One road follows the Gib-
bon river to the north, while the
other follows up the Valley of the
Firehole. The road along thee Fire-
hole is particularly beautiful, as it
clings for miles to the very edge of
the river until it reaches what is
known as the lower Geyser Basin. In
this basin are the famous Mammoth
Paint Pots, which are really nothing
but mud geysers, the contents of
which look and act like nothing so
much as vividly colored much that U
being boiled and tossed by escaping
steam.
“Old Faithful Geyser may be seen
to spout, with its never interrupted
regularity, at intervals of one hour
and five minutes. From the veranda
may also be seen many of the gey-
sers aet on the road on the eastern
border of the basin, and the entire
surrounding has the appearance of a
manufacturing town with the innu-
merable jets of steam rising from
nnseen escapes.
“There is no doubt that the Faits
cf the Yellowstone river in the can-
yon are among the finest in the world.
At the Upper Falls the entire rive,
passes over a drop of one hundred
and nine feet. The Lower Falls is a
drop of three hundred and eight feet.
The canyon is approximately one
thousand feet deep, and its walls and
sloping sides are of the most varied
hues imaginable.
‘Fort Yellowstone has quite an air
of romance surrounding it. It has
some of the most distinguished
soldiers in the army, many of whom
received their medals of distinction in
the fights in the Northwest.
Now, the soldiers like the real cow-
boys are gone. One of the moot in-
teresting natural phenomena in the
circles—too fat, too skinny, or some-
| times too old. The list includes Mis-
ses Leia Hawley, Fraulsie Davis,
Rolprta George, Connie Conrad,
Franklyn Armstrong, Gordenia Boone,
Henrietta Columbus, Augusta Carter.
The maids of honor are Frankly,
discarded belles which have ceased to
ring—but given another chance.
These are Misses Cliffie Andrews
Levitha Grenn, Dorwina Hartt, Arline
Justice. Jonetta Scott, Willie Hartt,
Marshall planned and Marshall
may("e) manned—such is a descrip-
tion of the “Festival" to be presented
by the City Federation at the City
Hall Friday evening for benefit of
the library building fund.
The cast offers a display of talent
seldom found in a show of this type.
The program of clever specialties fea-
tures particularly a brilliant corona-
tion ceremony in which their majes-
ties King Lea and the Mystery Queen
renew the resplendent assemblage of
"burlesquery."
The Princesses are recruited from
ex-ballet choruses of the Chicago
Grand Opera Co., Al G. Fields and
Barnum and Bailey. Their personal
v ------«i4 Jk)
"WIIAM FOX V-
SHANE
park is the Mammoth Hot Springs,
which is built of a number of tei:
races formed by the depositing of
salts from solution in the hot water
of the springs. The colors of these
terraces change from day to day, and I
offer a never ending source of inter-
est and wonderment to the visitors.
“The park is the largest of the aa-
tional system and contains over two
million acres. There are hundreds of
miles of trails, innumerable lakes,
streams and wonderful mountain
peaks, together with an infinite va-
riety of natural phenomena, all of
which offer sufficient interest to en-
tertain the most exacting for a period
of several months.
“That the number of visitors is in-
creasing every year proves Jim
Bridger was right"
Tailor Shop, in Masonic Building Anita Smiley and Bonnie Bloodwor"h.
Phone 787. tfc 1 The flower girls are flappers of
1922 and introduce Misses Willie
Krauter, Natilee Dobbs, Bertha
Scheer, Frances Adams, Jometha Ag-
ner. Colie Cole, Bettie Petigo, Jose-
phine McCarthy.
10 for 5c “2
Sugar jacket just T/4
“melts in your mouth,” E
then you get the delec- §
table gum center. ’
I And with Wrigley’s three old
standbys also affording friendly
aid to teeth, throat, breath, ap-
petite and digestion.
Soothing, thirst-quenching.
Making the next cigar
taste better.
-------in-------
"A Homespun Vamp”
Marry In haste and annul at leisure.
She vamped her own husband.
----alee-----
A MACK SENNETT COMEDY
“THE NIGHT”
" Blo
- C
With John Gilbert and Rosemary
Theby and an all star cast. A
story of marvelous human inter-
est and dramatic power which
sweeps from San Francisco to
Alaska. Don’t Miss It!
ALsO A PATHE NEWS
Coming---
Thursday Only
“ARE YOU FIT
TO MARRY?”
The picture a nation is discussing.
Remember the day
Tuesday, May 23, 1922 7 4
•
Ashton, Idaho, May 20.—Back in
the “fifties” when there was not
even a trail between here and Salt
Lake City a man arrived at a spot
not far from this place, slipped off
his horse and looked around. He saw
boiling hot water shooting up out of
the earth. When he got back to the
other side of the Teton range and
told the folks about it he establish-
ed for hie lifetime at any rate a re-
putation of being “the biggest liar
west of St. Joe.”
The man was Jim Bridger and he
had discovered Yellowstone Park.
Few believed his tales of sky
mounting smokea and egg boiling
geysers. “Loco” was the term ap-
plied to Jim. That was long ago.
Yellowstone will in June celebrate its
semi-centennial as a national park
for on May 1, 1872, Congress passed
the bill creating it. The opening day
is June 18. Last year 81,651 people
“made” the park. Officials hope to
see the 100,000 mark reached thia
season.
In 1869 Bridger’s stories had re-
sulted in C. W. Cook and David Fol-
som making the trip. They saw all
that Bridger had seen and more.
They were followed by the Washburn
expedition. These army men got the
idea of a national park. In this par-
ty were Gen. H. D. Washburn, Lieut.
G. C. Doane and several civilians.
“The sky over Yellowstone Nation-
al Park is not shell pink,” says a
monograph of the American Forestry
Association, “the trees are not blue,
the waters of the great lake in no
wise resemble red ink and the gey
sera do not spout streams of molten
metal, as some have been led to be-
ijeve. It is possible to traverse the
woodland trails and pass many trees
without seeing a grizzly bear. The
uffaloes and antelopes do not crowd
the tourists and stages from the
highways. It is quite possible te
epend a week in the park without be-
ing molested by “denizens,” as some
nature lovers delight in calling the
hapless bears and other animals of
the park.
“Buffalo, antelope and bear abound
in this largest of national parks, and
that they may be seen without diffi-
culty. but that they are so numerous
as to interrupt one in the pursuit of
pleasures, is purely a figment of the
imagination.
“There are more natural pheno-
mena to be seen in Yellowstone Na-
tional Park than in any other equel
area in the United States. Add to
this the fact that there is a great lake
fifteen miles wide at its widest point,
and twenty miles long, the placid
surface of which is seventy-eight
hundred feet above the sea level, a
1 ' T
If all the motion pictures produced
were like “The Broken Silence,” the
screen version of James Oliver Cur-
wood’s story which opened yesterday
at the Queen Theater for a two-days’
engagement, there would be no agi-
tation for censorship or no call fo:
“better pictures.” “The Broken Sil-
ence” is as clean as the wind that
b ows over the silent places that Jas-
Oliver Curwood knows so well and
writes about so entertainingly.
The story tells of the love of Camer-
on Bruce, an officer in the Royal
Northwest Mounted Police, for Jeann:
Marat. Jeanne, by the way, is more
<han ably played by beautiful little
Zena Keefe, one of the most talented
artists before the camera today, while
the role of Bruce is in the capable
hands of Robert Elliott. The balance
Apce)
Nc
G)-KI It‛s a
1N/L2 DOUBLE treat
UM8dEi —Peppermint
S Jacket over Pep-
Owl permint gum
one. Dugan Hat Shop, with Zachry
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 218, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 23, 1922, newspaper, May 23, 1922; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1406969/m1/2/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .