The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 62, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 17, 1923 Page: 4 of 8
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I
" FOUR
Saturday, N
IBB MARSHALL MORNING NEWB
Saturd
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—Here’s Hoping We Beat Texarkana
2-Trouser
a
“steady” ycung man should object, but men folks
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SUITS
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MORNING PRAYER
The Ph
V
$30 $35 $40 )
HOI
n
—MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S
\
\
214 E
Located in the new Tumey build-
WHAT IS COMING TO US
Bowie streets.
Now
Hicks & Keith
Phone 519
DEATHS
MRS. FANNIE HEARTSILL
----$
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22
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4
11
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7
Tir
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11,328,066,747.09
21,613,778.59
307,252,211.79
NOT OUR JOB
OF DOLLARS.
Uptown Office Phone 130
With Russell-Graham Co.
negligence in suffer-
There should be a—
day morning at the
Emperor Simmons, Ex-Wizard Clarke, Parson and bring it or send
Will call for it.
RADIO
A
9
—in your home
x31-2 Gates Tire
4
1
owe his girl. It’s what keeps the old world going. dollar, and should the marks regain their pre-war
F
l
*
ij*tth
TM
Our radio receivers will bring the world’s
best music, lectures and sermons to your
home. Easy monthly payments if desired.
Editor and Publisher
Advertising Manager
.Circulation Manager
billion of dollars and the following shows what
loaned other nations:
ORRIS
TED BY
MARTIAL
HILLIARD
& GREEN
and honored
feared by t
tie settleme
story is th
brother, a
who disgra
respected b;
The role
The unpaid interest amounts to more
than $1,500,000,000.
It is estimated that a man could take one
thousand dollars and invest it in German marks
at the present rate of three trillion marks to the
P(
a
Ridley and Publicity Agent Fox. By the time he
has entered his defense of these high officials the
News may be ready to say a good word for his
fellow-klansman. Jack Walton.
Buy your furniture where you
can get more for your money.
We buy and sell all kinds of fur-
niture.
Armenia_____
Austria______
Belgium______
Cuba________
Czecho-Slovakia
Esthonia_____
Finland______
France _______
Great Britain _
Greece________________
Hungary______________
Italy_________________
Latvia________________
Liberia_______________
Lithuania_____________
Nicaragua_____________
Poland________________
_____________________
Russia________________
Serbia and the S. H. S____
The loans to European al-
lies in the war_________
The loans to allies outside
of Europe ___________
The loans to war-succession
states ______________
Sho
stoc
and
in v
E
HILI
E
13,673.174.37
26,942,394.00
437,179,129.59
7,740,50000
106,292,205.32
16.088,771.26
9,294,362.27
3,814,132,250.77
4,746,862,560.29
15,750,000.00
1,888,136.89
1,932,715,485.51
5,775,864.01
29,518.85
5,728,872.23
170,585.35
153,281,676.81
41,982,599.28
232,313,968.15
59,098,683.50
—They double the wear and he will like
their style, too—
we
I
]
Mr. B. F. Young, chairman of the
Board of Stewards of the First Meth-
odist Church requests all members of
the church and other friends having
autos to please have them at the home
at 10 o’clock to convey relatives and
friends to the ehurch and later to
the cemetery.
f
Thoes trips are what make homes and homes make
society and civilization.
But the News thinks it rather a matter that
shouldn't be put in print. Let the young folks
work out what they intend to do without any
LETS NOT PUBLISH THE YOUNG FOLKS’
AFFAIRS
The Oldest Roofing is
Still the Best
/\
c
I
Fre
HOMER M. PRICE_____
HUGH LANE.........
BENJAMIN WOODALL
WILLIAM JASPER____
Uncle Sam w
ckey.
_.Lpeciallv fap
APPIEST TIME OF HIS LIFE
Thi
and
sev
get
I
We
We
moi
RILEY BOONE
THE RADIO SHOP
vho commanded des-
3 on the night of the
tember 8, was acquit-
5
r
The Marshall Morning News
Aorawsapen.rabliahnd rxcept Monday in the
s
m was certainly an easy mark.
donated by local instnu--
“All-American” friend to praise Governor Walton, I
as the high kleagle or wizard or something of the J., Nov. 16.—Captain
a cloth shower for
Don’t
la the-t
to lodg
constipa
helper-
cooked
ALL B
you pei
tiont ]
relieves
pation 1
Brin
sweeps i
knocks (
and fre
Try Ke
it regul
day; «»
eanes.
different
Kello
O let me not murmur when I stand in the dark-
mems, if only through that darkness I am moving
towards love and light in Thee. Amen.
w.' .-..m-,------1---■—n.--L . i, । j---mi-«— k
Tell the Merchant if You Saw His Ad in The News
Buckner Orphan’s
In figuring on what the war cost this country.
in dollars and cents we doubt if many of our read-'
ers have much idea of the vast sums we loaned
other nations, most of which is certainly in the’
doubtful list, so far as any hope of its ever being !
paid back. We spent on our own hook fourteen
publicity. And then, maybe some girl has already
fixed things up with some young fellow and she
happens to have another caller. If we publish the
fact, there is liable to be trouble. There isn’t
5'
S2 1
The Morning News must again tell its corres-
pondents that we can’t put in the social news
about a young man calling on his girl. Not that
it is not important. Heaven knows there isn’t
anything much more important than this thing
of a young man dolling himself up and going to
is therefore approximately FIFTEEN BILLION church. Always in her place, whether
at the church services, the Sunday
ing, corner of Washington and/on the bord
his word hl
u4,
The Morning News has received the following
anonymous communication:
“Editor News: Why don’t you defend your
great champion Governor (?) Jack Walton? I
have never seen a line of commendation of Jack ini
your paper. You won’t print this.
Yours truly, ALL-AMERICAN.” 1
We have never defended Governor Walton nori
condemned him. We rather think it’s up to our
Baptist church. If
Mrs. Francis A Heartsill died yas-
terday morning at 6:30, after an ill-1
ness of three weeks. She died at her
home, corner Rusk street and Rail-
road avenue.
Mrs. Heartsil was born December
20, 1845 at Ashley, Missouri, her par-
ents being Mr. and Mrs. G.A.A. Riggs
When Mrs. Heartsill was a young girl
the family moved to Natchez, Missis-
sippi, and later to New Orleans. She
came to Marshall January 1, 1869 and;
has lived here ever since. She was
married to Mr. John R. Heartsill
June 14, 1871. To them were born
four children, Lucy, John, George and |
Frances. Frances is the only sur-1
: viving child. John and George died i
[in infancy and Lucy (Mrs. Love
Banks) three years since.
Mrs. Heartsill was the pioneer music
teacher of Marshall and this city’s
reputation as a musical center is due
, more to her than anyone else. For
fifty-four years she has taught the
girls of Marshall and three genera-
. tions of the same families have re-
l ceived her instruction. Gently, kind-
! ly but firmly and thoroughly she
[taught these girls, some of them now
grandmothers, many of them mothers, ’
TER, ITCH. Guaranteed by Fry e conducted by her pastor, Rev. W.
ll-17p Hodge Drug Co_________10-14tfF. Renfro.
We know girls have a way sometimes of en-
couraging the visits of one young man to make a
certain other young man a bit jealous or to stir up
his lethargy, but they have a way of letting such
visits be known without putting the fact in cold
type. There isn’t anything very romantic about
type anyway, and the old Mergent haler type-set-
ting machine is liable any time to get things
mixed up.
The News cut out more than a score of such
items this week from its correspondents’ copy.
We are glad the young men are making these
visits for it bodes good for the country. But it’s
hardly news. Of course they are going to see the
girls—they always have and always will, but let’s
let them work out their own salvation with fear
and trembling, and there will be fear on the young
man’s part and trembling on the girl’s part when
the moon comes up over the hills and HE begins to
stammer—but that’s none of the public’s affair.
“Entered as second-einss matter September 7, 1919.
=t the post office at Marshall, Texas, under the Aet of
March 3rd, 1897."
MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use
for republication of all news dispatches credited to IL or
mot otherwise credited in this paper and also the local
=ewspublishedherein._________________________
many young men who would like to see in the
________ Telegraph Editor > paper that some other young blade is going to
SUBSCRIPTION RATES see his girl. Of course it’s unreasonable that the
Per month, by carrier__________________________$0.50
Per month, by mail___-_________-_____-________ .40
Per year, by carrier____________________________5.00 are built that way.
n
PITLER ADR
INSPECTED La
mark. ‘There are dimerent grades for different purposes. Ask
us for full information about them. Don’t tail to call or write
for a copy o£ our booklet "Distinctive Homes." "
----Sold By----
C. H. MAUTHE, PHONE 69
MARSHALL, TEXAS
and some little toddling girls.
Not only did she leave her impress'
on the musical life of the city but her,
influence extended to every move-
In addition to the above Germany owes us for ment that.was to\ the culture or bet- i
- ,. , .° 23 । terment of her adopted city.
our army of occupation and for claims allowed,! Al her life she has been a devoted
the sum of $1,500,000,000. Our total amount due and true member of the Methodist
you to defend a brother klansman when he gets otieE
into trouble. •
But we might add that when our correspond-
ent of unknown name goes into the defending
business w would like to hear what he thinks of
school, the women’s societies, in the
homes of the sick, the comforterer of 1
the bereaved or unfortunate, she fully
charitably inclined people. exemplified the life of her Master.
Dr. W. B. Carroll, a native of Dal- Possibly she, dried.more,tears,
. j __ 0+'e nstilled more faith, given more com-
las, and a graduate of Bay or Uwve visited and ministered to
sity, who has conducted the Hellnore people in trouble or distress,/
in charge and Miss Jessie E. Vanhan any one who has ever lived in
Training school for Nurses, as super- Her life has been a benediction to
intendent. The superintedent recently yery one who came within the sphere
■pent 10 da vs at the Imperal c^un.»f her influence, and many people who
. il hospital .Shreveport, La., profit-lave felt the kind ministrations of her
ing bv precedants established thereresence intime of d.s tress, will be
during the several months the Louis- hankful this day that this woman
iana Shrine institution has been in ived and loved and labored among us.
operation. Treatment of patients is She is survived by one son, Frances
entirely by ortheopedic surgery and feartsill ofWashington, three grand-
admission is to children under 14.hildren, Heartsill Banks of Little
There is no restriction as to race. lock. King Banks of Delta, Colorado,
creed or fraternal connection.Hhe Hel-nd Miss Sallie Love Banks of Mem-
la Temple hosptal is located in thezhis, and a devoted sister, Mrs. Mary
j «ame section containing the city and’arham, of Marshall. Her son is
county hospital, Hope Cottage Free iere from Washington as is her
man Memorial Clinic. This zone iscrand-daughter. Miss Banks.
to be eventually maintained by the The funeral will be this morning at
city park board . he First Methodist Church at 10:30,
_________he church she loved so well and serv-
Use EZMA for ECZEMA, TET d so faithfully. The services will
value that he would have enough money to buy
the Solar System. And it would be as reasonable
to think he could buy all the planets and the sun
i as it is to imagine marks will ever get back to
par value.
I
_ The following relatives and friends
vill bear the casket: C. F. Adams.
Tomer Price, F. S. Riggs, E. C. Wha-
ey, Ira Green, Joe Lake and W. E.
Arnold.
These will act as honorary pall-
searers: Ernest Powell, Dr. R. P.
Iamill, Judge P. O. Beard, Dr. W. J.
■ ane, M. Scully, E. B. Gregg, J. F.
Qavis, T. B. Owens, M. Turney, Bert
iergson, F. E. Wood, W. H. Sedberry
mnd W. E. Lake.
The interment will be in Greenwood
Cemetery, beside the husband of her
youth and happiness.
klan in Oklahoma swore the other day that Wal-
ton was a member of the klan, that he adminis-
tered the oath to him, that he took Governor
Jack’s ten bucks, and that so far as he knew that s organization to go
Walton was a member in good standing at thisorthe genercourt
time. And so, friend “All-American,” it’s up to
uug is oeaut-
be clean and
remote tradi
of the Roya
lce, whose,
the borderla
The ther
around the
member of
/U14/00244
Skg
Milt on S. Hershey, of chocolate fame, startles
the world by announcing a donation of $60,000,000
to brighten the lives of orphans. “After all,”
asks Mr. Hershey, “what good is money unless
you use it for the good of the community and
humanity in general ?” Henry Ford and Mr. Her-
shey might engage in an interesting conversation.
Mr. Ford does not believe in Mr. Hershey’s brand
of charity. It is true he has given some funds
to a hospital but no man with his large fortune
has probably given as little. He says the only
true charity is in helping men to help them-
selves. He gives men the opportunity to earn
good wages and to save and to have something to
retire on. In his way Henry Ford is a true
philanthropist, Mr. Hershey, like Mr. Ford,
started in life with nothing but the will to suc-
ceed. He scored three failures and paid up every
time. He was old and lonely. He has never mar-
ried. He was left an orphan at three years of
age and was a cripple. Years ago he established
an industrial school for orphans. The school be-
came his hobby. He saw the children develop un-
der the care and training his wealth provided. His
loneliness began to leave. He had found happi-
ness. Some philanthropists treat charitable in-
stitutions very liberally in their wills. But they
never know whether their wishes are carried out
or not. Mr. Hershey knows where his wealth is
going. He says he is happier than he ever was
in his life before.
^COULD BUY TH^SOL^R --
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 62, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 17, 1923, newspaper, November 17, 1923; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1411557/m1/4/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .