The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 257, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 8, 1922 Page: 6 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Marshall Morning News and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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THE MARSHALL MORNING NEWS
Saturday, July 8, 1922
SIX
THOMAS THINKS
A PEACE FIGHT
NURSE BLEEDS HER
Satu
IS STILI. ALIVE
Then Hurriee to Undertaker, Telle
f
Nice
Funeral.
United
for
the
oul- i Thomas, candidate
482
A Remarkable
E
BIBLE
Af
TWYN
OFFER
1 ■■
1
E 3
I
“I Cut Her Wrists."
Red Letter Edition Bible
FOR JUST A LITTLE EFFORT ON YOUR PART
It is Yours for Securing only
i
had beaten her with her fists, a charge
The News Want Ads for Results.
I
q"erors and Franeis ans and filled up J
. I GROCER SAYS BANDITS
and e
“Dope.”
Fred Coon where he got his "dope."
t
1
7
3
replied his CHAS. M. BRADSHAW.
#
i.
BOUND IN THE
Where X Rays Are Fatal
J.
PACE.
the ablomen
Roentgen
V
.J
#
■
Hmm
mamummmasmmss
was careful to glee her an opiate first
and now I would like to zive her a nice
nurse, of Trenton. N. J., as she calmly
discussed with an undertaker the de-
tails of how she had taken the life of
Kansas City. Mo.—"Ethics" prevent-
ed Orvak Phillips from telling Judge
FOR REN
Conveniei
nin. Phone
FOR RENT
ed rooms
Street Rent
see A. C. N
NOTE THE EASY READING TYPE
AU Names Marked for Pronouncing—Handy Size
Specimen of Type
and two hundred days in the work-
house ought to teach you the mean-
ing of ethics."
W. M. HIGHTOWER.
A. R. ODEN.
HIRAM W. SCOTT,
Five Subscribers
for the News
FOB REN
Dei Lafe
Motas, two
porehes, ne
Mina Dure
FOR REN
men in
if desired.
at Perry 1
FOR R4
rooms, ft
in town, i
Phone 632
ton avenue
“Where did you
Judge asked.
FOB RENI
North Frai
200 feet on
of T. & P.
H. Conway
Gro. Co.
The Morning News has made an arrangement by which
it can offer a
• liver the hand-embossed leather •
• medal to Albert Belanger. Chi- 0
• cago grocer. •
BEST LEATHEROID, MOROCCO GRAIN, DIVINITY
CIRCUT, ROUND CORNERS, RED EDGES
the mines.
Sam found one ef these mines—the
Commissioner, Precinet 4—
JEFF DAVIS.
JOHN H. BASS.
Constable, Precinct 3—
JACK MUNDEN.
H. T. KIRKFIELD.
Justice, Precinct 1; Place Na 1—
FOR BIG "STRIKE”
Aged Mining Prospector Take*
One More Chance.
Sheriff—
J. C. SANDERS.
delegates to the National Education
’association convention here today
“I tell you upon good authority
that the legion is not satisfied with
BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED SUNDAY
SCHOOL SCHOLAR’S
5
W. R. SMITH, M. D, D. C,
Practice Lmited to
CHIROPRATe
Bam Conger, Eighty Nina Yean Oid,
•till in the Harness and Confident
He Will Win.
Not only will we give you this fine Bible but we will help you get the sub-
scribers. We have a plan that we do not think can fail. If you want to try
to secure the Bible either come to see Mr. Price at the News office or write
him and see how easy the plan will be for you to get the five subscribers
The Morning News makes this offer because it does not doubt it can ho) a
the subscribers as permanent readers of the paper after it goes into the
home for 30 days. Every pleased subscriber is estimated to be worth
$10.00 to a newspaper. Therefore, the News is offering a $4.00 Bible for
the opportunity of going into five homes for one month.
• Member Legisiature, Harrison Ce.-
V. D. FUGLER.
I
This Nelson’s Red Letter Bible contains all the words spoken by the Mas-
ter printed in red, thereby instantly attracting the reader’s attention.
i
LARGE NONPAREL SELF-PRONOUNCING TYPE
Size 16mo, 5x7% inches and 1% inches thick
funeral.”
The undertaker detained Miss Con-
solioy in conversation while an assis-
tant telephoned for the police, omeers
hurried to the Consolloy home and
found the teacher lying dead in bed.
Arteries in both wrists had been opened
with a pair of embroidery scissors, and
Conway Bull
Phomes: Offie, (»; _____
CW—hatiia Fraa
“JIGG!
questioned she became irrational and
now is a raving maniac under guard
at the state hospital for the insane
It is believed that she worried over
her sister's alleged school difficulties
until her mind became unbalanced.
She has asked that she be sent to the
electric chair. ।
Miss Estelle Consolloy, the vietim. I
had previously filed charges with the
a™"
agitated in the campaign now on in
Missouri for the nomination for sena-
tor in both democratic and republican
parties ?
"Have the democrats of Texas for-
conditions in the room Indicated there .
had been no struggle. An autopsy
man," accord-
52
This Bible contains the Old and New Testaments, King James Version,
printed from clear large Nonparel self-pronouncing type, illuminated with
31 full page half-tone illustrations printed from copper etching in sepia
Every one of these pictures is a work of art and illustrates the Bible scenes
and events referred to in the scriptures.
Besides the Bible and illustrations there are Selected Bible Helps consist-
ing of 4,000 Questions and Answers, full descriptions of the leading char-
acters in the Bible, Harmony of the Gospels, Miracles and Parables of
Jesus, How to Study the Sunday-School Lesson, and twelve full-page beau-
tifully colored maps. There is a presentation page in the front of the
Bible with spaces for suitable inscriptions which always give added value
and personal interest.
FOR SALI
second ha
Lumber wa
24x64 feet,
of flooring
Womack's 1
FOB SALE
age, gas,
ries heater,
old and in g
sell right. ।
personally.
The News
dollars' fine
drive acrosf the Great Plains with
"Pikes Peak or Bust” on the wagon
canvas and then began his 70 years of
pronpe tiug for the precious metals.
showed that deuth had been due to
loss of blood.
While Miss Consolloy was being
Um Sai
weep. Ma
anteed ky
IMA "
FOR REN’
reduced i
iences. Clos
FOR REN
. south of
Marshall,
Convenient
lege of Mai
• Dr. C. E. I
These five subscribers must be paid in advance for one month only. That
is, if the subscriber lives in Marshall you must collect 50 cents from each
and if to go by mail 40 cents each.
of the American Legion and its first day, said in part: gotten the contest in the building of a
consideration is to fight the peace “Personally I decline to treat the platform for the national democratic
battle for the blind, the insane, the liquor question as a dead issue. He rarty. at San Francisco? Will the
sick and the wounded, and to see that is both blind and deaf who does not thinking men and women of Texas
SISTER TO DEATH STILL REMAINS LIQUOR PROBLEM
FOR THE LEGION •CLLL5"
A “Tall, dark
Trenton. N, T—“She was the mar 8 The Assoetated Prem
Boston. Mass., July 7.—The
Chicago.—For kindness
Story and Aska for
dent’s cabinet demand it as a sort of
panacea for the present unrest and
discontent ? Is not the old association
I against prohibition still on the jok,
। financing the movement through the
country, with branch headquarters in
Texas? Is not the issue being openly
prove fetal in a larue numher of ex
perl men is on doge, w idle the same
rnys over the thorax produce no ill
effects. This Important fact has been
learned by many experiment made at
the Untverslty of California medical
wehnol by •. L Warren and Dr O. H
whtppie. who report details for the
Journal ot Nsperimental Medicine.
land. The guaranties are idle with-
out their application. We have the 1
word of the law; let us live up to it.!
LOUIE PATTON
Plumbing and Gaa Fitting
Phone 849-. 808 E. Rusk St, ,
I.atr Sam (onger went
vHpeu "at wate UI sryuratuu: and
go thrtuahideth not the fire ye shall make
24 Andye shall wash j
seventh day. and ye si...
afterward ye shall come int------
25 And the Lord spake unto
saying. —
36 Take the sum of the prey that was
taken, both of man and of beast, thou, and
Erle- zar the priest, and vhe chief fathers
of the congregation:
27 And divide the prey into two parts:
' which had been denied both by Miss
McPherson and other members of the
teaching force. The Consolloy sisters
were inseparable rhinns and their sis-
terly devotion was so great as to at-
tract attention.
For Rent
ment. T
Twyman
of the n
; for sunn
airy roon
ern conve
tfe
J , For State Senator.—
• i R. L. SPIVEY, of Shelby County.
ARE REAL NUISANCES : J G. strong.
Stephenville, July 6.—Cullen F
Dog Die* of Grief.
Denver, Colo.—Tiffany, a fox ter
rler dog, formerly the property of
James Peters, Is dead of grief. Pe
ters enlisted In the army early In Feb-
ruary. When he was ordered to a
training camp Tiffany was taken to
a home for animals. Although appa-
rently perfectly heaithy. the dog re
fused food and spurned company. Two
weeks after the departure of Petars
Qa terrler died.
tyrof other teachers and the only thing Boaton. Mass., July mThe out Thomas, candidate for the Unitedi
to do wee to kill her," explained Mise standing and overshadowing problem states senate, speaking here Wednes
Oornela Consolloy, * fifty year-old . ' -- • ‘ -nd "iret ..
ANNOUNCEMENTS'
FOB BEN
B. Houst
Call at 51
1195-W.
FOR REN
brand ne
gaa, water
in at 214 :
Dr. Cowan
1060. By
proposition
FOR REN
able for
nin St., or
| “To this principle the American Le-1
gion has thrice committed itself inl
1 JOHN W SCOTT
Ground ReltanersRefund i commissioneripreclnet -
A. N, Bis A I i.
FOR REN’
veniences
room house
from squi
Phone 1123
ne got mi. aope. B- H. TIMMONS.
buy the drugs™ the ' Commissioner, Precinct 2—
W. S. BALDWIN.
College Receiving.
A disastrous fire in one of the
builoinzs Prin« eton university re-
cer tiy destroyed a pan of the racio
equipment. While the lo~s was amply
cove:ed by insurance, ii Was an unfor-
tusai- necleent, since th* ina:ter of
arranzlug for a broate asting ~rvice
was just about completed. The idea
of a tronde asting originatei with L. S
Gatter (1912) uni was taken up ut
once by those in charge of the station.
The University of Wisconsin and the
University of Minnesota already have
established broadcasting stations for
general unversity news, says Scientific
American, as well as for results of
athletic contests. The set to be in-
stniled will have a sending range of
1,(M miles and wiil operate on 340-
meter wave length. .
. , . /The first battle is to emasculate thecandidack for the senate of‘the for-
ley, of Texas. National Amer- Volstead law. The voices are many mer governor of Texas whese fol-
Commission director told the and loud for the return of wine and lowers are rallying round him as they
’ " beer. The forces are organized and, boldly crusade for the return of beer
militant to increase the percentage of an‘ "ne ‘
alcohol in beverages. -------—-----
St. Lazarus. And until the boy of •
gold or+ was workel olt it was a good •
3+xco. He r+ad how mutiny sinoul
d-r~! anonz the Irdiens, how they
•rose murderel both Spanish con
producing mine.
Sam has always wanted riches—not
thousane!s. but millions. Then he could
'fix everyhody up.” and he has notions
of "en-dew-ing" some’hing.
Sam is the last of the old prosnec-
tor~—simple, kindiy, brave. And at
pizhty-nine he is still walking over the
mountains in paths he trod when he
was a lad.—Milwaukee Journal.
for me to let you go."
honor. “One hundred
. JOHN B. HENDERSON.
• County Attorney—
• Ing to Belanger's report tn the • JAMES T. CASEY.
. poll-m, entered his store and . JOHN E. TAYLOR.
“Does not a member of the presi- Rend The New* Want Ada.
Recently news came that the oldest
active mining prospector in the world.
Sam Conger eighty-nine years old.
wes going hack to the Rockies, deter
mined to make his last big strike.
“hem Conger," the story said. “la
the Grand Old Man of the Mountalns’
—be has prospected in the Rocktes for
more than seventy years. In addition
to locating many of the best paying
gold and silver mine* in the state, he
discovered tungsten, the rare metal of
Oolorado He ts known to every old
mining man abd, espite his elghty-
nine yeara, Sam Conger, game to the
backbone, ts golng to the mountains
laden with pack. pick. pan and shovel
resolute in the faith that he will make
one more big strike."
It wes in Boulder county that be
made hb first big strike with his dis
covery of the Buckeye lead in 1862
while tbe battle of Antietam was be-
ing fought Since then he prospected
in California, Oregon, New Mexico,
Arize us and studied leads- and velns
•nd stmta in every mining section of
Coloraco But it wus always to Boul-
der county tint he returned to make
the big strike one time it was the
Caribou mine. Inter sold to capitalists )
of Helland. Them after long pros
pectit 2 in other s- tions. he came
back to Boulder and discovered* the
Poor Man mine, where the ore ran
$10,000 to the ton There were the
Fourth of July and the Diantha and
many othere
Near Boulder City in the middle
*9us he came on a strange black
nluerat. Sum <’onger did not then
k. x Lat be had di~vered tungsten.
Il trgon he lehrned the great value
of :2 tntnerul H burrie back to
(lorar? and. Its he streets of Den-
ver. met his old partner, who in Ari-
zona hnd alse lenrned that the black
ore WAS tungsten.
the treatment of our sick and wound-
ed.” Mr. Owsley added. “Confusion,
red tape, short-sightedness, public^
apathy and selfishness have stood in
the way of a speedy solution of our
hospital situation." !
After telling of the organization of
the legion, Mr. Owsley said: “What
is war? It is the means of making a
just peace, nothing more or less. J
Therefore the organized legion, be it J
Roman legion or American Legion, s
primarily and fundamentally a forged
and tempered instrument of peace.
“The American Legion today is car-
rying on the first great educational
census ever attempted in the history
of any nation. Our great national
I organization enables us to accomplish
such a task most thoroughly. The re
suits of this census will afford a basis :
for the building of the first great
national educational program in the
history of humanity.
“It is a sad realization at present
| that statistics before us—that of 25.-
1000,000 children of school age in
। America. there are 10,000.000 that are
j not attending school.
"Let us take counsel together for.
the awakening of America to her edu-'
! cational needs. Awakening is the i
thing that is needed. The laws stilli
stand on the statute books of nearly 1
all the states that call for the attend- j
ance of every child at school. In the
! constitution of every state in the un-
| ion is written the guaranty of ade-
! quate education for the youth of the
no uncertain terms.
“The principle of one flag and one I
language should apply; nay it must
apply to that great element that we
term our foreign bom. This great
percentage of our people cannot re-
main outside the pale of American
citizenship; such a thing would con-
stitute the gravest peril. For ail in-
। habitants of America alike here must
| be one flag, one country and one
tongue, the English tongue, the offi-
cial language of the Republic."
== HSISsSS
49 And they said unto MS’ses Thy
taken the sumQr’the me
0 war which are under our charge and
there lacketh not one man of us.
San tongeri- rungsten claim was
ofercd t* tie Ab* comnpany of Mil-
waukee and turned down. "There Is
not a fre&t demand for tungsten, an
official said. ' and if it should be found
to such quantlties as Conger says, the
price w ill fail to tire lowest point."
Congers option expired. Then An-
drew (arnegle took over the tungsten
claims Each year since they have
produced their moic iia.
Conger was born in Ohio. As a lad
of seventeen he heard that the lead
mines of southwestern Wisconsin
a ere the places for big stakes, but in
Wisconstn all the talk was of the rich-
ness of the lead deposits of Missouri.
And to Missouri he heard of the re-
cently discovered gold at the junction
of Cherry creek and the Platte river.
in New England.
The Taconic range along the western
border of Massachusetts is the link
that connerts the f’atskilis of New
York with the higher penks of nortie
ern New England, say- the Arue ri* an
Forestry Magazin- (ireylwk — the
Saddleback of ~arlier days- 3,535 fret.
Id the northwester c,rnen of tse
state, fs the hirhest in the cotime
wealth, ami Mount Everett the Imme
of Ilie Taconic-. ' 2,6524 feet m i e
sonthwestera comer, the next lofiiest.
Both are state reuprvatjons
DR. IDA G. T. HAGESTAD
Osteopathie Phyalcias
Mareus-Karlel Bldg.
• to 13 Hxr*-— 1 to |
PHONE 1339
: started tickling his ribs with a J Superintendent Public Instruction—
, revolver. . J. w CYPHERS.
• , Herynanitpulithatstum , CHESLEY F. ADAMS.
• in here, Belanger told the bund ep m.2i"
: It as he selzed the g..... Get : ForPistric C lerkpm
e out" e -lih. - M1AkhlP•
J The bandit "got" am] Belan- J County Clerk
• ger tosse«] his weapon after him • N. A. (Bl D) GREEN.
! into the street. ! For County Treasurer:
• -xow take this and beat it," • MISS FAWN BALDWIN.
• the grocer enjoined, and the • MISS RUTH HENLEY, Re-election
• burglar did. •Hu Assewsor —
• “These fellows are getting to * C C. GEORGE.
J be nuisances," was Belanger’s J TOM C. ROSBOROUGH.
• comment as a customer drifted • A. L. HOWARD.
; in. • I H. L. CALLOWAY.
• • Tax Collector—
• GORDON R. BELL.
••ETHICS” BRINGS LONG TERM County Judge,
______ I PAM D. HALL.
“It wouldn't bo ethical to tell," re- Commissioner, Precinct No. 3—
piled Phillips. T. S. CAVEN for Re-election.
“Well, I gues it wouldn’t i>e ethical DREW M MOORE.
J generosity to hold up men de- J W. H. ATTEBERY.
For Public Weigher Preeinet 3—
J. P. (Jip) WOMACK.
G. W. (Slim) AKERS.
For Flotorial Representative—
CABY M ABNEY.
For County Surveyor—
CHARLES LANGLEY.
BEHN COOK. a
her sister, Mlaa Estelle Consolloy, aged those as yet unprovided for shall find know that it is a live practical isaue ignore the plausine and promising
forty year*, a public school teacher. | their way to comfort and ease, Alvin Tie firsi...... . .. candidack *ha —... *he "o
"I cut her wrists ao she would bleed to M. Owsley, of Texas, National Amer-1 Volstead
death,” said tha nurse to the under- icanism C---iesion dirertor told the . .
taker “But it didn’t hurt her any. 1 delegate
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 257, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 8, 1922, newspaper, July 8, 1922; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1411297/m1/6/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .