The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 301, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 30, 1922 Page: 4 of 8
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Wednesday, August 90, 1922
Wedni
THE MARSHALL MORNING NEWS
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The Marshall MorningNews
ACCOUNT
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8
ANNOU!
MORNING PRAYER
MARSHALL HAS IT, MR. FORD
where he was then
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my affairs so that I could neglect them
to any manufacturer to know that he has this
Ph
lem will be solved forever in Marshall.
landing net.
L..
3
9
Solon
*
$
G
ards that the world has ever known, is amply
(‘
Don’t
A.
Kountry Klub to be owned exclusively for mem-
ROBERT M. LA FOLLETTE ]
ben of the Ku Klux Klan.
!
grounds and magnifi-
cent buildings.
The envelope containing this prospectus shows
* "Marshall postmark and on
*
prospectus is written this message:
i1
AA ■
r
t
a
I,
’ Meat recent portrait of
Robert MJ
La Follette. United States senator
4
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♦
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We al
suppl
■and at his door this problem would be solved.
With an abundance of hardwood in East Texas
ferred, he
she had ex
set my heart on marrying you.
r you explained that. I arranged
1
i 3
I
Scott’
Scott’
Scott’
Scott’
Boys’
Brow
Dress
Maxw
)
I
Arabs Um Opium Bait,
novel way of catching tsh by
friends and ask them if they have anything to
compare with it and let ps know what you find."
. No name was signed.
Just to satisfy our anonymous correspondent
the News showed the beautiful picture of the
Yesterday
a scare of
hospitality
zhe lawn of
John Taylor
••
capable of carrying them to a successful con-
elusion.
place to raise a family and properly educate them.
Marshall is situated in the great fruit belt of East
Terns, it is truly a country of sunshine and rain.
Mr. Ford, look us over.
Eliza's Courtship
Plan
E
EGG
heavy labor in a rarefied atmosphere
that make* the slightest effort fa- #
tiguing to newcomers, says the Sci-
entific American, and Canadian act-
Francs encourages Aviation.
France recognizes the value of air
travel and its importance to the future.
She has budgeted 154,878,000 francs
for civilian aviation for the year 1922.
Naturally, Paris la the great center of
French commercial aviation, th* Le
Bourget airdrome in"the suburbs taking
on the appearance of a busy railway
terminal. Airplane* to and from Lon-
don (five departure* daily) and Brus-
■el a carry the largest number of pas-
arc ger*
his race.
And since we started this article we just hap-
pened to take up a newspaper, and under an At-
1 - ‘ ” , we notice that the great Klan
much about a few
months ago had ceased to function. The young
men and women of the South did not seek its
doors and for some reason its instructors had not
been paid their salaries. Its doors are closed.
except Monday to Um
Te Pte*** set.
ment one day to find Fred Titus in
th* uttie reception room. Th* cousin
had admitted bias. but having aa er
rand had left him alone in th* apart
i ■
M-
pasned and th* mild days of aprine
were alternating with warm day* of
were treated there annually. He showed picture
after . picture of orphanages and hospitals and
Magdalene homes where the erring girls might go.
And finally he showed a picture of an old priest
standing before a very unpretentious bilding.
The scene was an island on the Pacific ocean. The
building was a leper’s hospital and the old priest
was named Damion. He had gone to this lonely
island when a young man, now he was old and
weary and bent. In the distance could be seen a
vessel leaving the island and the old man, holding
his hand above his eyes, was looking at its fast
departing sails. It had made its semi-annual trip
Few Persons Know Real Meaning of
th* Word* They Are Mak-
ing Um Of.
ENTERTA
Mrs. Em
s small but
joyable bri
noon in hot
Moat of t
mates or el
making the
a moat ap
। served to 1
M. Adama
Howard of
Taylor of <
Miss Mar
Lothrop Ji
the hostezs
in nil the g
friends of
grand jury without bail today, on
charges of first degie ‘murder, by
Municipal Judge W. M. Quinn, of
aae
8.6
k
l
g.,
I- ■
said, not to see her. Mace
____plained tear plan to hum.
Then. after the str .moattea had
forgotten that only 18 miles from Marshall, near
Ore City, lies large-deposits of iron ore rich in con-
tents. The late Colonel Featherstone had plans
perfected for the organization of a strong com-
pany for the purpose of developing this ore but
. Av to war conditions had to postpone his project,
fater being called by death. Mr. Ford, in Mar-
shall you would not have to be bothered with the
price of steel.
Today will surely bring its triala and ear* and
temptations and'lay them at my fact. I cannot
meet them alone. O teach me, Dear Father, to seek
help from thee. Amen.
grace to leave them aloqe, would be
---Advertising Manager
----Cireulatio Manager
—.....Telegraph Editor
__________Local Editor
Her Orbit.
“John the cook has gone."
“Doe* shie expert to retumr
"I don't know, but she’s the rotating
zind. She may pass through a dozea
familles and get back to us in a year,*
w
4 town* ■> er publishod exery
•mm Marshal building. Mar*
02XEE
ITOGH LANE...-----------
WALTER STEEL----------
WAM JASPER--------
us what ha* become of the much heralded hpspi-
tal that was to be built at Dallas. Has the Koun-
try Klub absorbed the funds of the hospital?
In conclusion let us give our hooded friend
- । '
El Paso, Aug. 29.—Four El Paso
striker* were seised in th* federal
court here today on charge* of con-
tempt in connection with the alleged • ,
violation of a federal court injunc-
tion issued in behalf of the Galveston,
Harrisburg A San Antonio Railway.
The four men were accused of ston-
ing a crowd of railroad workers. •
-—gi
- ne -
There are many expressions made
use of by persons every day who little
know the reel meaning of the words
they are making use of. Why, for
Instance, doe* A l mean "first rate?"
and why does "first rate" mean some-
thing of the highest degree of ex-
cellence? Alto derived from the sym-
bol danating ship* in th* best condi-
tion to "Lloyd's Registry at Shipping.*
and “Arst rate" is an allusion to a
wershtp of the highest class. To have
an axe to grind to from the American
backwoodsmen's practice of calling at
houses ostensibly to grind an axe, but
to reality to obtain a drink. Bogus:
From Borghese, a swindler who about
1837 in Boston passed worthless se-
curitles. To take the cake: Allusion to
the prize of a cake in negro cake-
walking contests. The deuce > From
the German "das daua" Possibly con-
nected with the Celtic "dus," * wood
demon. To mind one's Ps and Q‘s: A
reference to the pints and quarts
chalked up in country public houses
against credit customers.
-G
a little and I started studying medi-
cine I have been working at medical
college ever since. I have sometimes
. seen you to the extension lecture
rooms. I’ve done extra work all win-
ter to make up for lost time. I have
“So far as I know,” he said, "no Jewish or-
ganization has ever built a.eountry dub or a
strictly recreational building. I admit the klan
has us bested. But J would like to show you
momepictures of some institutions the Jews have
buithat have, in my opinion, some considera-
- - •
Te Mak* Scientific Investigationa.
Mountain miners in the Andes do
this information:
Hospitals and orphanages and universities are
not built by the agencies of hate and prejudice
and intolerance. It takes greater motives than
these: “Faith, Hope and’Charity, and the great-
—-----SUBSCRIPTIONRATES,
Pe month, by ------------------------$050
•w Tont, by ^carrier-------------—----------Sao
Sntezed a* second-class matter September71919,at
•* post office at Marshall, Texas, under the Art of
MarAK IMH.”_______________ _ _______
“ MEMBER THE ASSOCIaYRD PRESS
The Aaaaeteted Press is exelusively, entitled to the as*
tor ropublication of all newe dispatches credited to it, or
sot otherwise credited to this paper and also the local
sgws published herein."
and a fair sized Indinn sloth bear tea* i from Wieconain.
a weight of from 200 to 300 pounds |
• •
to any manufacturer to know that he has this bringing supplies and more lepers for the hospi-
lignite to back him up. Mr. Ford, your fuel prob- tal. There was quite a history on the back of the
on a definite proposal she seemed to 1 rd
command all her powers of reasoning. Aft
“I've been doing a lot of thinking."
rad Lothrop
gold guest
- • most attra
rugs, table*
growing ato
gan the pro
etable court
•d in with I
eral other •
wiched wit
delicious ice
coder was ■
topping th
when this
th* tiny et
thia announ
Inas Tayloi
was a deci
the girl frie
of Mr. an
loving felic
•rod on 1
them sweet
crop*, ma
And eyes.
ation of merit.”
And he looked and from his papers produced
A picture of a great building located at New Or-
i—■ it was the Jewish Orphanage and children tnese: razun, za0pe a.
were playing before its doors and flowers bloom- est of these is Charity.”
entists are in Peru to discover
whether this immunity of the migers
is due to change* in the blood or
to other functions. The scientists will
yield their own blood, both at sea
level and at three-mile* altitude, and
the samples will go to our universities
for analysis.
to be at Dallas. It is a
leper. He attended to the wants and needs as
best he could of this more than 200 of God’s
stricken ones.
No doubt old Damion believed in the temporal
The Marshall Chamber of Commerce, through
its secretary, Bryan Blalock; the Lions Club,
through its president, Pete Shuford, and the Ro-
tary Club, through its president, E L. Wells,
have sent an invitation to Ienry Ford to investi-
gate Marshall as a manufacturing center,
Mr. Ford realises the potentialities of the
great South and Southwest. He knows that this
section of the United States possesses the natural
resources that some day will bring it into its
own. Only recently Mr. Ford submitted a bid for
Muscle S hoals for the purpose of utilizing it in
the development of the South. His proposition is
still pending before Congress and it is the hope
of the vast majority of the people that he
will get it
Look us- over, Mr. Ford. Marshall is located
in the heart of the population of the four great
Southwestern states, Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas
•nd Louisiana. Marshall is located only eighteen
miles from one of the largest gas fields in the
world. Marshall is located only nine miles from
one of the largest lignite deposits in the South.
Although the life of the Bethany Gas Field is
estimated to be fifty years, it will be of interest
Gary.
Menwhile federal agenta, th* of-
flciala of Indiana and Illinois, and
railway investigators, continued thelr
inquiry in an effort to elear up all
the detail* of the conapiracy. The
chart* resulted to th* pulling of J?
■pike* from a rail before th* Mich-
igan express, and a plot which fail-
ed to. wreck the Twentieth Century
Limited on th* Now York Central
Officials of th* latter road an-
nounced that every mil* at Ito rignt-
of-way was under heavy guard.
Paul Glasser, an Indiana attorney,
who appeared as counsel for th* men,
held to th* ground on th* charge at
murder, declared that he would ask
habeas corpus writs for th* release
of all of them, declaring that they
were innocent but had been so abused
by the police that they could have
admitted anything. All of th* men
were said to be striking shopmen.
Fort Smith, Ark., Aug. 29.—Offi-
cer* were rushed-to th* Missouri Pa-
cific shops at Van Buren, Ark., eatly
tonight, when a report was received
that several vollie* of shot had been
fired at the buildings.
power of the Pope. Unquestionably he thought
that same head of his church was infallable. Cer-
tainly he believed in purgatory, that there was
in the great hereafter another chance for the sin-
ful ones; we have not the least question but that
he prayed to the Mother of God; that he heard the
In Marshall Mr. Ford could make glass for confession of the sins of those poor unclean men
wind shields and lens. With cheap gas .and glass andsyanannhoimndreyhatwb£ death 3225
relieve one of these poor diseased brothers or sis-
ters this old priest gave them the extreme unction
. Damion certainly believed it was
with the most loathsome of diseases.
But the picture of theleper hospital is not so
_______________beautiful as the Kountry Klub, oh, no, not near so
This Kountry Klub is beautiful. In fact in comparison it is actually
beautifully printediconsnptihfiy we showed the Kountry Klub pic-
’ ture to a member of a race that only half a cen-
tury ago was in slavery, and neither he could show
a paoopo.us —-J us any picture of a country club, but he showed
the margin of the pictures of a great institute over in Alabama
where the youth of his race were being taught in-
dustry and trade and agriculture. He showed a
“Show this to your Catholic, Jew and Nigger letter from the Governor of Alabama which stated
that no graduate of the Tuskeegee Institute had
ever been convicted of a serious crime. And he
showed pictures of various educational buildings
and orphanages managed and supported by
and plenty of efficent labor, automobile spokes of the church,
could be manufactured at a minimum cost. 1
prospectus, beautiful
WRECKING TRAIN
■ ■■ /
"omengtptkpix.“hoturhedtaekatter
‘still a good many year* to go, bat
there to no rule in the medical college
that a student should not marry-betore
he graduates. And fortunately I can
afford to marry when I choose. A*
far as you are concerned—you could
cut out that course in dressmaking
and housekeeping and motor driving.
T guess we won't have to economize as
mueb as that I don't want you for a
chauffeur or a cook or a housekeeper.
Don't you think that I've gone half
way? You wanted to marry a doctor
and I've started out to be one so you
could marry me Instead of some one
you might not love. And you do love
me. don’t you?"
“Love you—of couse I do.” said
.Eliza. But she didn't say that the
reason she had taken courses in medi-
cine and the facts behind all her little
plan were that she thought Fed Titus
ought not to content himself with
merely looking after his own money,
and that after careful consideration
she had decided that what he was best
suited for was the career of a doctor.
EXPLAIN SOME EXPRESSIONS
mem until Ellza’s return from elasues.
“Are you still sworn t* your planr held to
Fred asked her after the brief prellmi- J -
Bear* Very In Weight
An adult polar bear (white bear) la
said to weigh sometimes as much as
1,800 pounds, and to have * length of
nine feet or more. The Kodiak, or
Alaskan bears—found on Kodiak Is-
land, Alaska, and the mainland near
it—are said to be extremely large,
some of them (not th* heaviest),
weighing 1.200 pound*—while the
measurement given for the skin of one
was nine feet from paw to pa* across
th* shoulders. A good-sized American
grizzly has a length at nine feet and a
weight of about 1,000 pounds. Russfan
brown beers have been known to weigh
800 pounds; the American black bear
rerely weighs myr than 400 pounds.
And Mrs. Gifford did make or find
an excuse and pointedly remarked as
she left Eliza and Fred together after
Eliza had returned from lectures that
she would not be back until half past
aix, and that Hazel. her other charge,
would not be back until after dinner.
So there was an hour and a half be-
fore them. Surely troth could be
plighted in that time after, after all
preliminaries had been so carefully at-
tended to.
Eliza refused to be the least bit sen-
timental. As soon as he launched out
Klan Kountry Klub to the friends as suggested. 1
The first one called upon was a member of the lanta date line,
Hebme race h. x»w at a carefully ana
shook his head.
picture about this leper colony. Damion was the
Steel prices have jumped up. It must not be only human on that barren shore who was not a
MEN CHARGED
a* that ah* mignt Mt foal that he
bore her any resentment. He pr•
__au . ___________________ . for the spiritual good of the dying one and possi- i
822 f fePunkkromtn Bit ;
-----‘ - - Who knows?
The entire history of this priest Damion and
his devotion to the unfortunate lepers of the Is-
lands of the Pacific, can be had in most libraries. ,
Marshal is . good place to live in. It is . good Taeplntman izdendrwangeristederyothidiprder
have succeeded him. We would suggest that our
anonymous correspondent read about the work .
done by this priest and his successors. Of course, '
neither our correspondent or this writer, believe
in the temporal power of the Pope, or the confes. I
s ion al, or purgatory, but still there is somewhat
to admire in a religion that sauses men to devote ,
their lives on a lonely island to the care of people
Eliza began. “Of course it would be
the easiest thing in the world to give
in completely, yield to the natural in-
clinatlou and promise to be your* for-
ever—“
"Then you love me—Eliza—please "
“Don't be foolish or impatient That
isn't really the point at issue. I tell
you I have been thinking a lot lately.
Girls have the hardest roles to play
in this question of choosing mates. A
man goes ahead from the time ha la a
boy and searches out his natural bept
and educates himself to that on* goal
in view. He wants to be a doctor, or
he wants to b* a financier, or be
wants to build a house—and aU his
education I* directed to that end. He
marries snd he goes right on being a
doctor or financier or a carpenter and
his wife lives in a realm of doctoring
or financing or house building for the
rest of her married life.
“But when a girl starts in to edu-
cate herself she has In the back of her
mind that, though she would perhaps
rather live in the realm of doctoring
or financing than anything else, ahe
had better not become too specialized,
because, after all, the chances, ar* that
■he will marry. To becme too spe-
cialized rather unfits on* for marrlage
—that is, unless one is lucky enough
to marry a man who baa specialized
in -the same way that ah* has Sb*
always goes about with the feeling
unat she might marry a lawyer or *
writer or a college professor and that
"she musn’t do anything that would un-
fit her for anything. So you see a
girt, wastes a lot of time and mental
energy.
“I discovered this state of affair*
some time ago,” continued Eliza. “I de-
cided that I really did want to marry;
that I was best salted to a married
life. But I also wanted to hsve some-
thing to do with doctoring. Every
one tails me that my talents all Ue to
that direction. So, though I am not
studying medictoe for a degree, I have
begun taking courses st the medical
college. I am going to marry a doc-
tor—" ’ -
“But suppose the doctor doesn't turn
up? That is, suppose you don't hap-
pen to fall to love with any of th* doc-
tors that want to marry you."
Eliza smiled • little indulgently.
"You pat thing* go Bluntly sometimes,"
■aid Eliza. “My point 1* tbat a woman
ought to ba specially educated to be
a helpful and iptelllgent wite, and
that It to easier to select a boaband
to nil your capabllities than to modify
year capabilitfes to suit the Srat ma*
you take a fancy to."
"That’s certainly a very Interesting
theory," agreed Fred Titus. “And you
are gait* frank to explaining it instead
of beating around the bush and keep-
ing me in suspense." Fred held out
his band and said good-by. Obvi-
ously there .was only one thing he
Paul Sanitarium at Dallas. It was a magnificent -
pile of brick and stone and, he assured us, that thte, apartment
thousands of patients with all manners of disease “
aummer, Uto. returned to herapat‘a,meAmocu— Pmm
Chicago, Aug. 29,— Four men
charged with killing two engihemen
by the wrecking of • Michigan Con-
trol express train aweak ago, ware
the Lake county, Indiana,
in< in the yard. On the same leaflet was a pic-
ture of the Tom Sanitarium in that city built
by Jewish money.
Looking a little further he produced the pic-
ture of the greatest tubercular hospital in the
world, located at Denver, built by and managed
by the National Jewish Benevolent Society.
Searching again he found pictures of great milk
depots, a dozen of them, established in New York
by a company of Jews, headed by the great Straus
family. The milk depots have saved, so the cir-
cular said in quoting the New York Health De-
partment, on an average of 25,000 babes
every year.
But certainly these were Jewish children in
the orphanage, Jewish patients in the hospitals,
and surely only Jewish babes were furnished the
pure nourishing milk. But our Heorew friend
assured us that this was not true. The only con-
ditions to be met at the orphanage was to be an
orphan, at the hospital was to be sick and at the
milk depots that the babe needed milk.
But, search as he would, he could find no
building erected by the people of his race for
pleasure only.
Then we went to see a Catholic friend and
showed him the Klan Kountry Klub prospectus
and asked him if he could show us anything to
compare with it. The man looked it over and
shook his head.
“No, our church has no clubs so far as I know.
They have builded no pleasure rtsorts to my know-
ledge. But,” he said. “I can show you some rather
fine buildings that we have erected.”
And he produced a picture of the great St.
By JESSE DOUGLAS
$00000000000000000000008
• an22. by MeCiure Mewp-pe ynaieet
The prellmnartes at courtship
had progressed smoothly tengugh.
Fred Titus bad known Eliza Stone
only a month; they had danced to-
zether, ridden together, motored to-
gether. Fred had called several
times at lb* apartment where Eliza,
with another young woman, lived to
town with a distant cousin of age to
act as chaperdiae. He had alaa spent
the day at the Stone country place,
where Eliza spent week-ends—this to
give Eliza’s parents and brothers and
sisters an opportunity to say pleaaunt
or unpleasant thing* about him. So
far, so good. It seemed aa if the
rest—pleasant little episode of mak-
ing desperate love to Eliza and being
accepted— would be supremely easy.
"Eliza has a lot of funny notions."
suggested Mrs. Gifford, who played the
role of chaperone, one day when Fred
dropped la the apartment on his way
from u canter in the park before Eliza
had come home from one of her lee
rures. "She like* men and she thinks
a lot of you—it isn't that ahe to averse
to marriage. But she takes herself
.seriously, or at least with a different
sort of seriousness from that of giris
when I was young."
This ouly served to spur Fred on
to the final declaration 6t his love.
He determined that the time should
be that evening and the place. If
Mrs. Gifford would have the pood
be bad reached the threshold, "Any
v, you have no personal objection*—
that to, if I happened t* fit to with
your scheme of activities you would
give me a chance."
Eliza looked reproof. “You know
I would, Fred," ob* Mid. "Please don't
make me feel any wore* about it than
1 doy
After that. Mx months paxsed, but
Fred 1 w 'never culled at the apart
Arabs was described by Lieutenant .dh
couunander A. 8. Elwell-Sutton in de- T v
sribing the work of the British mn- U. B
bouts on the river Tigris above Bagdad. c",. • Y”
The natives, there, he said, laid a "A Agl”
ground bait of lumps of dough on- 19, IT
talning a small quantity of opium. The
flab swallowed that and, becoming stu-
pelted, floated about with their white
bellies uppermost. Arabs went in pur-
suit of them on blown-out sheepskins
which they maneuvered with their feet
while the hands were free to hold th*
t vc.
" -h- 0m - I
naries of greeting.
■ "Why, yes," said Eliza, though Fred
thought without as much conviction as
ahe had shown aix months before.
"Have you found your doctorr
“No—that to. I haven't found any
who appeal to me as possible hus
bands. But of course Fm ready to
marry anyway. After I fntsh my
lecture* in medlelpe I intend to spend
a year studying domestie sclence. so
that I ran keep house as I should. I
want to learn to drive a car, for there
will be times at th* start when my
husband cannot afford a chauffeur. I
would like to take a course in dress
making, because at first doctors have
small Incomes and we ran save no
' much if I would make my own dresses
lit will all take a long tiie. But it to
1 all part of my plan—I shall never give
jit up.”
“Do you know that I too have a
plan?" Mid Fred, bringing his chair
nearer to Eliza. "I want you to let me
explain it to you."
“I never Imagined you had thought
about such thinga," Mid Eliza. "That
la. I thought you just took life aa It
Jrame You have enough money. I
‘ thought just keeping track of that was
enough to keep you busy. I—”
! “Let me explain," Interrupted Fred.
"I think it to very important for a man
, to do the kind of wok be is best suited
for, but I think that very often be
doesn't know what he to beat suited
for. Often it is chance, often he fol-
lows the work of his father before him.
The important thing is to be thorough-
ly trained and to make up hla mind to
make a success. There's another Im-
portant thing for a man, and that 1* to
marry the girl he loves—especially."
said Fred, looking very intently into
the eyes of Eliza, "If that girl really
I loves him."
“Well." continued Fred, “you'd- set
। your heart on marrying a doctor and
KLAN KOUNTRY KLUB
— {
The Morning News has received a picture of
the proposed buildings and grounds of the Klan
L
• +
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 301, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 30, 1922, newspaper, August 30, 1922; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1411341/m1/4/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .