The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 237, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 14, 1922 Page: 1 of 8
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Volume 3
Number 237
MUCH MONEY IS
James E. Jones
।
SUBSIDY BILL
\‘
$4,000,000,000.00
A NEW PAYING PLAN
NEW YORK LEADING CONFERENCE SOON
IS FIRST OPPOSITION
A
)
N
member of the Aztec club of 1847.
5
5
SUBJECTED TO AN
HOUSE COMMONS 300 PERISH IN
the
(aboard ship at 20 cents a drink "and
list from
the steamship President
we can
we can at
•y The Amoelatee rres
tional Park
bedded in it!
sent a relief expedition here.
years in solid ice.
CHINESE DISEASE
By The Asnoclated Press
Orin Junction, Wyoming, June 13._
I
ilkner, *
»
The Bible Can Be Seen at The News Office
iulta.
*
(ie
1
I
03
FLOOD IN THE
SANSALVADOR
A. J. FREY DIES
I FROM A DEADLY
SPECIAL SESSION
IF SHIP SUBSIDY
BILL NOT PASSED
ORDER SHOWS A
RAPID GROWTH
Ill For Weeks With A Disease
Of Which There Have Been
Only 69 Cases Known
This Was The First Attack Made
By The American Federation
Of Labor On The Harding Ad-
ministration, But It Is Under-
stood There Will be More
Num-
re in
wing
rado
nver
New Proposal Offered By Senator
Ladd For Issuance Of $2,500,-
000,000 In Legal Tender Trea-
sury Notes To Pay A Cash
Bonus To Soldiers
tat
er.
A.F.OFL OPPOSE
PASSAGE OF SHIP
FAMILIES ARE
FLEEING FROM
MANCHANG CITY
tral Competitive Fields Will
Meet For Discussion
GRASSHOPPERS
ARE PRESERVED
IN ICE GLACIER
Number Of Returns Filed;
Texas Income Is Approxi-
mately $720,720,162.00
NOT IN FAVOR OF
SIDE-TRACKING
THE TARIFF BILL
110.14.
For the calendar year 1920 there
were 7,259,944 personal income tax
K
ya.
Wants Speedy Consideration On
The Bill, It Is Reported
From White House
Jamaca rum—think of it—for twe-
bits.”
Holding up what he said was a wine
American Gunboat "Isabel" is
Stationed Ready To Protect
American Property
Understood Harding Disfavors
Laying Aside Tariff Bil
For Soldier Bonus
Nelson’s Beautifully Illustrated
Scholar’s
By The Assoctated Prear
San Francisco, June 13.—The im-
for only a slight effort on your part
It is a remarkable offer and we have only made arrange-
ments to furnish one hundred of these Bibles on the terms
given. Remember, it will not cost you a cent to possess this
Bible with its Helps of 4000 Questions and Answers.
Imperial Council Of The Order
Welcomed To California
By Governor
Some Sayin’s
Of Si Bones
THE WEATHIR.
East Texas: Wednesday and
Thursday, generally fair.
Washington, June 13.—An attack
on the shipping board for permitting
the sale of liquor on American ships
was made in the house today by Rep-
resentative Gallivan, Dem., Mass.
There was a roar from members as
Torrents Of Rain For Two Days
Cause Abnormal Rise
In Rivers
Opposition Comes Simultaneous-
ly With Harding’s Request
For Its Passage
RED LETTER
BIBLES
control - enough coal production that
any wage agreement they would make
with the miners would be the basis
for pay htroughout the central com-
petitive field, which in turn is the bas.
Five Are Dead In
Fight Of Officers
MARSHALL has the
Cheapest Industrial
and Domestic Natural
Gas Rates of Any City
in the Southwest
“meat and have been given a stone.”
By The Assnelated Press
Washington, June 13.—Net incomes
of individuals reported to the govern-
MARSHALL, the place
“ where Cheap Fuel
and Raw Materials
Meet, Invites You To
Become a Citizen
on it, declaring it
in its provisions and that it
-z- tgasy
SALE OF LIQUOR
ON S. B. VESSEL
IS ATTACKED
‘2
coming year, the admission of new
temples and the selection of the next
meeting place.
I
along with the plan.
A cdnference this week, Mr. Green
said, could not be held and if the plan
: went through, the earliest date that
miners and operators could get to-
gether would be some time next week.
ATTACKONFLOOR GEORGE RESISTS
Washington, June 13.—The admin-i AN ATTACK FROM
Z.S-m-----ue,gave more power to the shipping
znate Atetday; Their present terms board than good men ought to **’t or
expire at midnight tonight. bad men ought to have.
Read the Morning News Plan
on another page whereby you can secure
ment during 1920 increased by nearly
34,000,000,000 and the number of re-
Son, when the knockers git
atter you en you stop to ex-
plane, you air slippin' shore'n
thunder.
No, bud, you air mistaken
‘bout a feller thet plays poker
bein’ the biggest fool in town.
Its the feller thet thinks he kan
play thet iz the big wun.
Thinkin’ thet this wun time
dont count hez alius bin upper-
most in a fool's mind.
I hev alius tried to pay my
fare on life’s road, en ef the
trip iz ‘bout over I am reddy
to give ole Father Time hiz tip
en chainge cars.
Ef you kno sum th in’ bad en
sum man er wummun don’t tell
it until you think God wants
you to.
Plans for consideration of the bonus
- still are very indefinite. Some lead-
ers desire that a party conference
pas} on the question of the right of
way as between the two bills, but
should such a conference be called. |
senator McCumber and other oppo-
By The Assoelated Presu
Washington, June 13.—Senate re-
publican leaders who are opposed to
the plan of Chairman McCumber of
the finance committee to sidetrack
tile tariff bill for the soldiers' bonus
have the support of President Har-
' ding. The executive committee, it
was stated officially today at the
White House, regards tariff legists-
8" ”
Date Will Be Set For The I
Operators To Get Together, 11
Which Will Probably Be Some P
Time Next Week i
By The Ajsociated Press
Cinei mati, June 13.—That a move-
ment has been under way for some I
time among coal operators of the cen- |
tral competitive field to come togeth- i
er in conference with the miners look- j
ing to a settlement of the national Recent photograph of Brig. Gen.
coal strike was admitted here today Forati Gates Gibson,retired,whoon
, — _ , . May 22 celebrated his ninety-fifth
by Wm, Green, secretary of the Unit- birthday. Gereral Gibson is the oldest
I " terest received from the foreign in- in his opening speech,
debtedness. Senator Ladd’s plan eon-' Samuel E. Burke, grand master of
templates a tax on all banking in- the Masonic order in California, we!-
stitutions having a capital stock of comed the imperial council in behalf
I • $100,000 or more, equal to 50 per cen: of the Blue Lodges of California. He
I of the profits in excess of 12 per cent said the history of Masonry in Cali-
and all other taxes. Should these fornia dated back to the days of 49.
taxes and the intereest on the foreign Gov. Stevens spoke as a past po-
debt be issued to the veterans, the tentate of Al Malaikah of Los An-
, deficiency would be made up out of geles and an honorary member of Is-
the federal treasury. 1 lam Temple of San Francisco. After
Characterizing the certificate plan the address of welcome the council willow furnitureL“Which
of the McCumber bill as little more went into closed session which will
I . than a /‘bread bill” for the veterans, last until adjournment Thursday, the
Senator Ladd said they had asked for business it will transact including the
choosing of imperial officers for the
he tlarshall tlorning Ik in 0
--MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS-SIX THOUSAND WORD NEWS REPORT RECEIVED DAILY
__Marshall, Texas, Wednesday, June 14, 1922
nents of the bonus are expected to
make a fight against delaying senate
action on that measure until the tariff
bill has been disposed of. Senator
McCumber has given notice that he
I By Th* Aanoclated Press
Washington, June 13.—A. J. Frey,
of Los Angeles, vice president of the
j shipping board’s emergency fleet cor-
I poration, died today at John Hopkins I
| hospital, Baltimore, after an illness I
of several months, according to an an-
nouncement by Chairman Lasker of
the board. He had been ill with San
Joaquin valley disease of which only
69 cales are said to havee been known
to medical science and of which 57
proved fatal. The disease was declar-
ed to be of Chinese origin.
Pennsylvania Is Second And If The Plan Goes Through
Illinois Comes Third In The
। —8,- • n-rouuce it tomorrow—
and the notice served by the President,
will ""---persos to its sup-
port Republican committeemen say.
p ___. . . „ . .. While the merchant marine commit-
' Keappointed Member Shipping Board, tee was working rapidly to have the
1a--Nomtnation1
Wimamers.Benson,ndeEraa, Aopira domosraticamember, the
appointment as members of the ship- “vicious1
ping board were confirmed by the
T _ , , , । turns by nearly two million over 1919,
James E. Jones, assistant to Prohi- while the taxes received fell of by.
bition Commissioner Roy Haynes, has about $195,000,000, according to pre-
been waging war on druggists who fill | liminary statistics issued tonight by
counterfeit physician’s blanks for in-Internal Revenue Commissioner Blair,
toxicating liquors. j Returns from incomes between $l.-
— i 000 and $2,000 increased by more than ed Mine Workers of America.
$500,000 in 1920 as compareed with
Looting at the hands of the south-
ern troops is feared. American mis-
sionaries at Manchang also are pre-
pared to leave if it becomes neces-
sary for the forces of Wu Pei Fu,
the military power of the Peking gov
ernment, to evacuate Manchang.
The American gunboat Isabel is
stationed here ready to protect Amer-
ican interests if the necessity arises.
Dr. Sun’s army has captured Kan
Chow Ki in the south of Kiangsi
Province.
A report from the south June 10
said the forces of Wu Pei Fu were
retreating northward.
flood was caused by a two-day tor- l
rential rainfall. The government has
Washington, June .—Warning by cially provided" foF "reldeniedtay thesneretnr-
cent to 50 per cent on porch and win-Hat exercised mysterious functions or
dow blinds, baskets, shades and usurped the function of parliament
screens, of bamboo, wood, straw or or enabled the prime minister to
palm leaves. {override the parliament’s decision.
ing scale for all other soft coal fields families and valuables are fleeing
operating union mines. I from Manchang, capital of Kingai,
Information as to the operators who Province as the army of Dr. Sun Yat
were being brought together for the I Sen, the South China leader, advances
---- ... — — ' northward.
Massachusetts representative
, grasshoppers of an extinct species, session if it failed to take up the ship
which must have been flying over the 1 subsidy bill prior to adjournment, was
— ‘ “ was determined to press unremittingly
for action now.
DERIVED FROM OorTo ENS THE I General G Gibeon
INCOME TAXES BIG COAL STRIKE
pins, 35 per cent ad valorem on house ject, predicted that no minister in the Th: bodies of inn m.n womon ..a sea.
or cabinet furniture of wood not spe-' future would cast away this new ,na-! chindrenoaiready have been” Ahd ----------------------------
to the soldiers to be paid by the issue San Francisco 20 years ago to an 1
of $2,500,000,000 or Jess of legal ten- enrollment of more than 500,000 at T ADIL'F DII I 10 ”
der treasury notes to be retired over the present time .was described by IAIIFI DILL I3
a period of 25 years out of proceeds Earnest Ellen Cutts, of Savannah, |
from special taxes on banks and in- Ga., imperial potentate of the order.
The President’s views on the ques-
tion of an extraordinary session were
set forth in a letter written May 26 to j
Chairman Campbell of the house
rules committee, expressing hope that
the committee in charge of legislative
Thomas E. Tubb and his wife are dena’ped EVnswderldtioPene the measure
pndithree other persons, including Framing the bin—which was ready
Deputy Sheriff John McPherson, are tonight to introduce it tomorrow-
seriously wounded as the result of a -ud sie aUlice se
battle here late today between Tubb, will rally many
officers and others. • - ■
will call up the bill soon. He has not.
yet fixed a definite date, however.'
Some leaders said today that there perial council of the ancient Arabic -------
was a probability that the bill would order, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine romurns,filed representing a totalin-
l be called up the latter part of next1 i .0 , come of $23,735,629,183 and yielding
I _ v i . "ere welcomed to California today by a total tax of 31 075.052686 ‛ m
week or early in the week following „ 0 ... "2T“ . .? 311070,093,686 as com-
I. unless an agreeemnt was reached in Gov. Stevens and Mayor Rolph, both pared with 5,332,750 returns for a
party conference to defer action. members of the Shrine. Their addres- total income of 319.859,491,448 and a were oemg prougnt togetner tor tne
Meantime, subsequent proposals ses took place at the opening of the - * >'le*d of $1,269,630,104 in 1919. conference was lackin, Mr. Green
for the amended house bonus bill are imperial council session in the Scot-Lu* ew leads that of states in; said, and added that he could not say I
• being put forward. The latest was of-1 ti-k Rit. anditlrim the number of returns filed, the i if a sufficient tonnage had beeen as-
fered today by Senator MeCumbers “ auditorrum., . . “mount of income reported and in tax I sembled until he saw the names of i
colleague. Senator Ladd, Rep., N. D.1 Krowth of 1116 organization yield, while Pennsylvania was second the operators who were willing to go
it would provide for a eash bonus from 57,000 members when it met in and Illinois third.
4
•2
The Net Increase Over Year 1920 Operators And Miners Of Cen-'
Was Around The Sum Of
.------ ------ The statement was made by Mr.
1919, while those for the larger clas- Green following a report from Cleve-
ses of income dropped heavily. Re- land quoting T. K. Maher, President
turns for incomes of $1,000,000 and, of the Maher Collieries company, as
over falling from 65 in 1919 to 33; saying that conferences of operators
in 1920. The average net income re- j were gqing on throughout the country-
turns for 1920 was $3,269.40, the av- in an erffort to end the strike,
erage amount of tax, $148.08 and the Mr. Green stated that it would ap-
a‘ erage tax rate 4.53 per cent, while [pear from the Cleveland dispatch
25 relating to the entire population that a sufficeint tonnage is being as-
of the country subject to the federal sembled to insure a conference of cp-
income tax, the proportion filing re-erators and miners. He explained
turns was 6.85 per cent, the per cap-that it would be neceessary for the
ita.net income reported was $223.87 operators joining in the conference to
and the per capita income tax was
* tion as most important and worthy A NINVITIAIT A n A nIN
’ of the undivided attention of the sen- AUIEN £ AKABIC
ate.
- :
■ e
e 4-
By The Assoclated Press *
Cincinnati, June 13. — Unqualified
condemnation of the ship subsidy bill
was voted unanimously today by the
delegates at the American Federation
of Labor convention, almost simultan-
eously with President Harding’s dis-
patch of a letter asking Congress to
pass the measure under threat of an
extra session. The convention also
voted to send a protest against pass-
age of the bill to senate and house
leaders. The bill was termed by the
resolution adopted as a “cunningly de-
vised scheme” to enrich certain
classes of so-called American ship
owners at the expense of the truly
American taxpayer and also to pro-
vide patronage which is certain to be
used for purely political purposes.
The resolution concluded with the
statement that the bill was condemned
as inimical to the public interest and
particularly destructive to the nation’s
hope for sea power.
The action by the delegates was
their first attack on the Harding ad-
ministration, which, it was indicated
by federation executive committee re-
ports, would be the brunt of other at*
tacks during the two weeks’ conven-
tion. While the action on the shipping
bill was the outstanding development
of the convention, interest among tha
delegates also was centered in the
first movement for a contest of mem-
bership on the federation's executive
council. Joseph A. Franklin, president
of the Boilermakers Union, announced
his candidacy for treasurer, opposing
Daniel Tabin, president of the Team-
sters Union, who is a candidate for
re-election.
Mr. Franklin’s announcement came
after a meeting of the chiefs of eleven
rail unions which control almost one-
third of the convention vote and the
candidacy of Mr. Franklin was re-
garded as a movement to give the
rail organizations a representative
By The Armodated Press
Kuikiana, Province of Kiangsi,
June 13.—Wealthy Chinese with their
THE
3 LARGE TYPE
iHANDY SIZE'
,7 ANSWERS
H RIHEF
istration tariff bill was subjected to |
another geneeral attack in the senate!
by Senator Simmons, Dem., N. C.,
who declared the committee duty of
60 per cent ad valorem on reed and | BvTheAmodatedPreas
willow furniture—which subsequently London, June 13.—Premier Lloyd
was approved—was illustrative of the George successfully resisted another
plan of the majority as outlined in powerful attack in the house of com-
the whole bill. mens today when a proposal to re- !
. Attacking what he described as theduce the vote for the cost of his cabi- !
“furniture trust,” Senator King, Dem. net secretariat was rejected 205 to
Utah, said this “trust” had charged I ill, amid scenes of excitement. The
enormous prices, especially during the I majority was considerably smaller
war, and that if there was anything than customary and occasioned shouts
that could be done to force the lower-1 of “resign.”
ing of prices it should be done. | The secretariat consists of the
Sen. Underwood, Alabama, the dem-' premier's private secretaries with a "The sondatad. 7" Kr .c,
ocratic leader, gave notice when tho large staff costing about 33,000 , anavado r, Republic of Salvador, 1 read from the list to show that Amer-
Wood schedule was taken up that at i pounds yearly. It is an outgrowth June 13 Three hundred persons per-ican rye whisky could be bought
[the proper time he would move to J of the war and in the opinion of the sons are known to have been drowned ' ......
j restore logs of fir, spruce, cedar and opposition is no longer needed giving and many are missing following an
Wgstern hemlock.to the free ‘lSt; Althe premier too great an executive abnormal rise in the Acelhuate and
duty of $1 per thousand board feet control, especially in the domain of Arenal rivers which overflowed their
measure was approved by the house foreign policy, besides destroying the banks and jined together in ton -----
end.the committee. Aside from the traditional cabinet secretary as the stream, inundating the Candellaria ‘ Pierce, paid for, he added, by federal
60 per cent duty on reed furniture, members of the secretariat now at- I e.1- • . . anrronriation. Mr Callivon Aealaced
7
By The Associated Press
Washington, June 13.—“Very much
unheard of before,” one of the glacier |
experts of the Geological Survey said (
skeptically when recently shown re-
ports and photographs of the Grass-
hopper Glacier which lies just outside
of the northeast corner of the Yellow-
stone National Park.
However, the glacier is there for
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 237, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 14, 1922, newspaper, June 14, 1922; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1406988/m1/1/?q=Cadet+Nurse+Corps: accessed June 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .