The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 273, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 27, 1922 Page: 3 of 8
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Thursday, July 27, 1922
HOUSTON HEIGHTS,
FIRE-AND FIRES
the
2
1
years to
Y •of
court house on Houston avenue.
3
ind
MANHATTAN
■V
SHIRTS
V
Here Are The New Prices:
•tony hill.
L
Solid Growth
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wnTT
THE CITIZENS STATE BANK
I
STOP BELCHING!
AN
$
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T
The National Trade-Mark
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$
4
Advertising is your protection
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2, 4
U. S. ARMY SHOES
Aut* BA he
(bM/hvrb
st subtle nature, a flash of the
light, an intelligent substance
Coma eat.
phons 268.
$5.00 Manhattan Shirts ..
$6.00 Manhattan Shirts ..
$7.00 Manhattan Shirts ..
$8.50 Manhattan Shirts ..
$10.00 Manhattan Shirts ..
$12.00 Manhattan Shirts ..
$2.50 Manhattan Shirts.......$1.65
$3.25 and $3 Manhattan Shirts.$2 1.25
$4 and $3.50 Manhattan Shirts. $2.85
very
lived
m
DIRECTORS TO
PUSH WORK ON
SABINE ROAD
MORNING NEWS
human organism was held to be ot
..
HARRY V. STROUD,
8-11
For Sale in Marshall by
THE MATTHEWSON DRUG CO.
Starting Today
OUR SUMMER CLEARANCE
OF ALL HIGH GRADE
That is why a manufacturer, or a merchant, places the
whole reputation of his business at stake every time he
advertises. His goods must be as advertised.
and Catholic churches may be said to to employ fire without allowing it to
be a survival. The Reiga, Rome’s sa- destroy us? Can we not keep it se-
it pays you to read the advertisements. It pays you to
buy advertised products.
year to pay. Gm and paved street.
Lighta and water soon. Ono mile east
Darkens Beautifully And Re-
stores Its Natural Color And (
Lustre At Once
et
I
So, in looking through this paper remember this: the
man who spends his money to invite your consideration
of his wares, backs up his belief in his goods and leaves
the final decision to you.
COMB SAGE TEA
INTO GRAY HAIR
Only good goods, fairly priced, can flourish in this light
of publicity. For no merchandise and no business can
thrive under the weight of public condemnation.
Service Car
Day and Night
PHONE 155 .
Prompt and Courteous
Service
H. M. FOGLE
at MeCLARAN’S STABLE
3 *■ -58983
* si
-"s1
ers,
ork,
ody
•da
lli-
cot
bar
In like manner, manufacturers, who stand back of their
wares, identify them with trade-marks that are your
guarantee of quality. By advertising these trade-marks
they focus on their products the searchlight of attention.
Use the Manuag Nawa Classified
Column tor best resulta.
..
m1E T-
adlanu
pavement of the sky.
The Dakotas claim that their an-
cestors obtained fire from the sparks
which a friendly panther struek with’
his claws as he scampered upon a
1
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.3
Directors:
E. Kev
E. J. Fry
Chas. Cobb, Jr.
O. M. Heartsill
W. T. Twyman
J. P. Womack
Jesse I. Carter
Ware’s Black Fowder Rcliczea
Indigestion, Ges, Bad Tasto
and Other Stornch and
. Bowel Troubles
■
...
I
A
■ - 2
I
Matt Cramer
LAWIER
Office Over CItizena State Bank
Marshall, Texae
General Praetice to aS Courta
4
Life was compared to a flame or a I
torch; and no comparison is more
true.
As has been mentioned there are no
historical references made to the era
when fire was unknown. The hearth
fires are continually referred to by |
the ancient Greek and Roman writer*.
References are likewise made by them
of fire used by their contemporaries
....$3.45
....$4.25
....$4.95
....$5.85
....$6.95
....$8.35
Ciu
A
T. ------
These beautiful iota now selltng at
low prices and on easy term*. Three
vant The book of Joel opens with
an allegory in which the judgment of
God takes the form of fire. This is
perhaps the most graphic description
ot fire ever written.
Common garden sage brewed into a
heavy tea, with sulphur and alcohol
added, will turn gray, streaked and
faded hair beautifully dark and lux-
uriant. Mixing the Sage Tea and Sul-
phur recipe at home, though, is
troublesome. An easier way is to get
the ready-to-use preparation improv-
ed by the addition of other ingredi
ents a large bottle, at little cost, at
drug stores, known as “Wyeth’s Sage
and Sulphur Compound,” thus avoid-
ing a lot of muss.
While gray, faded hair is not sinful,
we all desire to retain our youthfr
appearance and attractiveness. By
darkening your hair with Wyeth’s ..
Sage and Sulphur Compound, no one
ean tell, because it does it so natural-
ly, so evenly. You just dampen a
sponge or soft brush with it and draw
this through your hair, taking one
small strand at a time; by morning
all gray hairs have disappeared. After -
another application or two your hair "
becomes beautifully dark, glossy, soft
and luxuriant and you appear years
younger.
The board of directors of the Chan-
ber of Commerce met in regular ses-
sion last Tuesday night at the offices
of the chamber.
• A committee composed of M. Tur-
ney, W. L. Barry, E. B. Hayes, T. L
Whaley and J. H. T. Bibb, was ap-
pointed to make final arrangements
for the purchase of the old M. & E. T.
railway and to report back to the
board as to the plans of operation.
The committee will probably make a
trip to Henderson, the latter part of
the week to inspect equipment used
on the Henderson to Timpson railroad.
Similar equipment is contemplated
for the road out of here.
Discussion of the proposed interur-
ban from Dallas to Marshall was dis-
cussed and the secretary was instruct-
ed to go to Canton, Van Zandt county,
Friday where a barbecue is to be held
and several east Texas towns will be
present to discuss the interurban.
George Huffman, chairman of the
good roads committee, and R. S.
Smith, president of the Merchants’ as-
sociation, were present and reported
on the road through the Sabine river
bottom. They stated that the far-
mers of that community were now
hauling the 600 yards of rock that
they had pledged and that they were
looking toward the county to complete
the road. The committee was in-
structed to take the matter up with
the commissioners’ court at an early
date.
Do you have that yncomfortable
“full’’ feeling after eating? Are you
troubled with bad taste in your mouth
or “sour mouth”? Have you dyspep-
sia, “heartburn”, or plain old-fash-
ioned stomach ache? Ar yo-
constipated or bothered v‘t dysen-
tery, colic, diarrhoea and sometimes
headache. nausea and other eilmenta
that come from stomach trouble?
If so, use Ware’s Black Powder. It
is a scientific preparation formulatea
by the celebrated I'-. James Ware,
one of the South’s best known phy-
sicians. Ware’s Black Powder
neutralizes the acids of the stomach,
overcomes the poison of auto-intax-
ication in the bowels and keeps tha
alimentary canal in good condition
Ware’s Black Powder is often
prescribed by physicians. Eusid i
helping ordinary cases of iadigastior •
it often is of benefit in serioua Cuses.
Read this unsolicited testimonial
recently received from a minister of
the Gospel (name on request :
“About five weeks ago, I began
using Ware’s Black Powder for
Intestinal Indigestion, with which I
had been" troubled for about th.es
years and six months, having taken
treatment of seven doctors in three
states but was no better. After
fairing about 1 + bottles of the family
size, feel quite well and suffer no
more as I did so long. Several who
have seen the good it hrs done me
have inquired where they can get it
Ware’s Black Powder contains no
narmful drugs. It does not.urgs.
The same ingredients used in Ware s
Black Power are also combined in
aconvenienttabletfornacaHodWare 3
Black Powder Tablets. The Tablets
are especially recommended when
only one or two doses are required
to check a case of indigestion coxing
on, to relieve a slight heartburn or
to sweeten the breath. Used for
40 years. Sold at drug stores. 50c
and 61.00 the package. Send for
booklet on the care of the stomach-
free. The Ware Chemical .Cor
Dallas, Texas. Adv.-l
!
e7mna
ALD silversmiths, in order to help people tell pure
• silver from cheaper imitations, marked the real
thing “sterling.”
li
A squash may be grown in a few months,
but it takes years to develop an oak. Bus-
iness and personal suecess are much the
same—it takes time to insure solid growth
—to build for permanence.
for purposes of destruction. Aristo-
phenes mentions the lens for burning,
-. ' 2
• V : 1
ih ~
them and that these very tribes had
words expressing the idea of flame
fire, oven, coals, roasting and cook-
ing. Although there is nothing im-
possible in the existence ofa fireless
tribe, it cannot be said that such a
tribe has been found.
Prometheus is said by the ancients)
to have brought fire to earth in a
papyrus reed.
.North American legendsnarrate and the story of Archimedes Ming a
thatA Ereptsnbua, carkenn’mirror to set fire to the shipe at an-
thrughsthe Plains, maderspargsft lcient Syracuse is familiar to every
in the nigbesettins5hesrairiksab zejechookboy. History abounds with
b’wmhet’dhtsmeidthfintheindu tales othesqekine andfiring,ota
mzresogz"msmmggnnsr“annspagrenssetoKaaiz"mia"rome
o A. -A, horses om the “A tSasradnbistorvtoakrscnaalsvannum-
HL
< By G. K. WINES.
While we are considering fire and
ita prevention it might be both inter-
esting and enlightening to delve some-
what into the myth* and legends which
toll us poetically although not always
truthfully, something of its origin.
So general is the knowledge of fire
and its uses that it is a question
whether we have any authentic in-
stances on record of a people or tribe
altogether ignorant of them. Profane
history certainly does not mention its
original use and it is not at all im-
probable that fire was employed a
million or more years before reliatle
historical records were made.
Stories are told by missionaries and
explorer* of tribe* in Eastern Africa
who lived like monkeys and to whom
fire was unknown. To these stories
other investigators object, stating
that pottery and other fire-made do-
mestic articles have been found among
:0 btecu < 1
2-g,m.2!
POWER
MARKET
PHONE 628
109 8. Wellington St
Airplane Service
Submarine Prices
---
ns mi
Finnish tribes deseribe how “fire,
the child of the sun, came down from * qaperple v ’ the flocks of
Heaven, where it was rocked in a tub i have no, pasturej **• theufok *
of yellow eopper in • large pail of TheeTwill I cry; for the fire hath de-
There was not an ancient people of vouredthepastureszofthe wilderness,
c,m,p Ap,-, , ia nd the flame hath burned all the
GreecenorRomeraAfricor.China, trees of the field. The beasts of the
elsewhere, which did not have a myth field ery also untoThee, for the rivers
concerning fire and most of them had of waters are dried UP. Blow ye the
a character which they deified as . trumpet in Zion, and sound an alarm
fire-god. Tribal and popular legends in my holy,moun taini Letaal the in:
in describing the advent of fire, in- habitants of the land tremble! For,""
. 2, -1 u .. . 2, 2. a fire devoureth before them; and be-
vari hi h ideredit it gift .hind them a flame burneth; the land
God, which undoubtedly it was. | Eden them,
Humancu r re may be h idtohave and behind them a desolate wilder-
begun with fire, of which the uses »
increased in the same ratio as culture ne8 ’ •
itself. To save the labor expended So it appears that fire given us as
in the initial process of procuring ■ willing servant, comes to us also at
light men hit upon the expedient of times with a vengeance It is ‘a day
a fire which should burn day and night of clouds""*and thick darkness, and
in a public building. The Egyptians ‘the fire is "as the morning spread
had a fire in every temple, and the upon the mountains, and the flames
i Greeks. Latins and Persians in all are •» * strong people set in battle
towns and villages. Of these fires array,"
1 the “eternal lamps” in the Byxantine God willing, can we not continue
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I tion. The heat thus evolved in the tery.
cred center, stood close to a fountain; questered in our own temples as did
it was convenient to draw from the the Romans in the Temple of Vesta,
same spot the two great requisites, useful and life-giving, harmless and
fire and water. , secure?
' „Fn ELBBSTA PEACHES.
and taught that the generation of fire | This is the week to do canning and
by the friction of two woods was the preserving, $2.50 per bushel. John
exact counterpart of human genera- Fox, just east of Scottsville ceme-
tfe
..........
DR. IDA G. T. HAGESTAD
Osteopathie Physican
Mareun-Karlel Bldt.
• to U-----Boon-----1 to •
PHONE Uto
Use the Morning Item CtaaaMW
(Umm for qtekees WtoRo, - _
On the farm or in town money helps.it
pays to earn a reputation for reliability.
This bank has attained its present position
through adhering to sound banking prin-
ciples and helping customer, to grow solidly-
Brand new. Save from $1.00 to
11.50 per pair. _____
STROHES STORE
7-29e N. Washington Ave.
; •
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Eg"rp - gus-
,2026 a 51 . uiuiedh,,, \
• gd,cardle n 2 1 ti,ch
^7-;— ---........
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THE
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 273, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 27, 1922, newspaper, July 27, 1922; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1411313/m1/3/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .