The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 216, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 23, 1923 Page: 4 of 8
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* FOUR "
THE MARSHALL MORNING NEWS
Wednesday, May 23, 1928 '
Wedi
ci
BRIDG
MORNING PRAYER
r«De*elepe HtfioMH Flavor si hgnitnta
KEEP IT HERE
MARSHALL
SALE
J.
x
ZA(
a I until UP FOR HISTORIAN
7|
—Peggy.
HARD TO DECIDE
LOYALTY TO MARSHALL
>1.00
40e
SI
2
Admi
DANGER!
or fish in
tfe
M
■y Ad-Carter
BRUJ
POOR WEAK HUMAN NATURE
Phone 738
I
PROTECT THE WILD FLOWERS
J
it
Studebak
IN co,~Q
lUMFORj.
WE K
v>(
IN
1
I
1
Then, little town, more lovely you will be.
If—mark the proviso—gaining rest to thrive,
Yon lose, oh, lose not the gentle
Kindly human spirit that makes yon
Lovely now.
Where else do violets smile in the
Face of a January sky, daring the breath of the
Norther that in a twinkle changes balmiest
Air like sunny May’s to coldest
Blasts of December?
You will awaken perchance some day.
Yes, that day may dawn when April’s kisses
Call, in answer will come, as now, hosts of
Dainty primroses to deck—the unsightly ditches all
gone—
Well-kept lawns and surprising by-ways: nature and
art as at one.
Some say you’re asleep, little town.
Is it true?
Where else are people so kind, so gentle,
So hospitable?
Where else do girls wear such showers of
Natural curls, and boys and girls alike such
Courteous manners, such
Frank, bright smiles?
Where else does April waken such hosts of
Pir.k-and-white primroses that
Lovingly clothe old ditches and spots neglected:
Beauty's reach for perfection,—like faithful wives
Striving to bide from all eyes bad husband's
Limitations ?
Little town, girdled by vistas of blue- shadowed hills.
Where else does nature paint such
Red-hued earth, such trees of
Lambent green—a picture
After a rain?
The death of a man in thia county the other
day, in which the circumstances unerringly point-
ed towards the cause of his death being the drink-
ing of poisoned bootleg liquor, should make the
man who has been in the habit of buying this vile
stuff let his think machine do a little thinking.
The Morning News fails to understand how
any man of ordinary intelligence can work him-
self up to the point to buy this stuff from a boot-
legger. The bootlegger is a man who is willing
to sell poison for money, a man who is willing to
wreck homes for dollars, a man who is willing to
sell what he knows may cause death for a few
paltry dimes—and yet intelligent men will pat-
ronize him. (
complaining subscribers along this line and as-
sure them that the News wants to please every-
body, fans and non-fans alike.
practically nothing but the sport news. There
are a great many who never read that part of the
paper at all.
It is absolutely necessary for a paper to print
all kinds of news matter for it has readers inter-
ested in every kind of happenings. Possibly we
give too much space to base ball, we are inclined
Writer Call* Attention to R*ai Value
of Congressional Record, Not of
Common Knowledge.
have the call—light, cool
stylish looking.
Twenty per cent discount on
every hat in the house. Three
days only—
Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday
Corner
Texas and Poplar Sts.
This sale
portunitj
under thi
SCK
Mrs. Ho
will appi
••del si
reason for taking measures to perpetuate them.
The charm of the woodlands and all the great out-
doors has become available to thousands who for-
merly knew little of such beauties through the
present extensive use of the automobile and the
Dear Father, I thank thee for the tasks thou hast
given me and know that in their performance thou
wilt give me the needed strength. Amen.
improvement of roads. With the disapearance of
the forests there is a real danger that many of the
finest wild flowers may become extinct.
If care were used in gathering wild flowers
they would continue to propagate themselves, but
in many instances the plant is destroyed by tak-
ing away the foliage, or by leaving no blossoms
for the development of seeds. Protection of wild
flowers by law would be difficult, although wild
animals are protected against hunters. The worst
vandalism is practiced by those who pick wild
flowers and throw them away before reaching
home because they wilt quickly.
An aroused public sentiment would do much
to preserve wild flowers that are rapidly disap-
pearing. They are much more beautiful in their
natural surroundings than in a vase to be dis-
carded in a few hours and never again to repro-
duce their kind.
Mis* Ar
guest at a
pitallty in
on Saturda
ley being
ments wer
and the ho
hostess wit
Phone IS to-day
Phone 18 tomorro
Phone G. H. Conway
Every other Day
About the Bargain
Counto
MARSHALL
TAILORING CO.
CLEANING AND PRESSING
MAYME HUDSON
Phone 526
Very Reasonably
Priced
$15.00 to $35.00
I ,
L 1
•
regard
KGKC-I
Circle 1
Church mt
Mr*. Molli
home.
co
Marcus-Karie!
Clothing Co.
The Marshall Home of Hart
Schaffner and Marx
C. L. LANGLEY
Surveyor
NOTARY PUBLIC
Phone 1127—Court House
k
r
30x3y2
6,000 mil
ROO
To Pr
I
ft
''J
Lf
25°“
KC
Su
FOR
spi n n
SAY “BAYER” when you buy Aspirin
••
:T
DE
25g and 1
A
•BA i
Jl
AdJwtsW. Curv*.
There la a moot Ingenious drawing
instrument for making curves, which
was Invented by a Massachusetts man.
Tills device consists of a bow, a flex
Ible rule pivoted at its ends to the ends
of the bow and having a pair of In-
wardly extaadlng studs, a flat reinforc-
ing spring contracting with the Inner
aide of the rule and having slots re-
ceiving the studs and a screw-thread-
ed adjusting device extending between
the center of the spring and the bow.
By adjusting the screw-threaded mem-
ber the curve may be changed to meet
all requirements within the range of
the instrument. Perhaps the greatest
application of thia device Is In laying
out parabolas of varying atse*.
One of the hardest things for a newspaper like
the Morning News to decide is how much space to
give to base ball. Some of our subscribers say
we give too much while others say we do not give
Summer Suits
Yesterday’s temperature was
jus( * warning of what’s to be
expected later.
—yesterday’s business in our
store was an indication of the
trend of Marshall Men’s desires
in the way of warm-weather
clothing.
Tropical worsted summer suits
and
POWERS MARKET
PHONE 628
IM 8. Wellington St
AIRPLANE SERVICE
SUBMARINE PRICES
Loyalty is the shibboleth that has Opened
more avenues to the attainment of hopes and am-
bitions than anything else. Constant, faithful
fidelity will ever merit and receive its reward,
Nutritious
''Home Baked Foods \
Hot breads, cakesand pastry raised with \
Rumford are easily digested even by deli- \
cate stomachs, because this perfect leav- \
ener develops dough or batter just right \
for proper baiting. The pure phosphates \
in Rumford add more real nourishment 1
to your own good materials.
RUMFORD
THE WHOLESOME
BAKING POWDER/
NATHAN WEIS
MERCHANT TAILOR
Designer and maker of high grade
clothea. Phone 872.
Corner Austin and Wellington
MARSHALL, TEXAS
Wild flowers are in danger of extermination
in many sections of this state. The fact that
Dr. J. D. Thompson
DENTIST
Dsridaon-Blalock Bldg.
Office Pbona 1388 Rea. Phone 1118
1
WATCH
Mils this
Mspac
.’.'i
The Congressional Record is the butt
ef the humorist of today and the store-
house of political knowledge for the
historian of tomorrow. It I* the tar-
gat at which the satirist shoots hla ar-
row* of wit, but It contain* a compen-
dium of Information which stand* a*
a permanent contribution to political
science through the age*, when those
who have cast their jibe* and sneer*
have been forgotten. A mariner cast
away on a desert Island with nothing
to read but the debate* ot congress
coeld come away In a few years a*
crammed with fact* a* a college stu-
dent on the eve of anwxamination. He
wooed know something about nearly
•eery subject under the sun. Including
romantic literature and poetry. He
would have a substantial grasp upon
the development of government, eco-
noatles and political philosophy, say*
the Washington Post.
Every man who has ever spoken on
the floor of the senate or house baa
added something to the sum total of
what the Record contain*. Even the
errors propagated in debate are use-
ful : they hrtp one to ascertain the ul-
timate truth. Thomas B. Reed once
aald that every member of the bouse
was an expert on some one thing; that
It would be discovered that there wae
a substantial reason explaining why |
every man was there. A great deal
of matter get* into the Record every
dsy which st the time may a»em Ir-
relevant. With the passing of the
year* Importance I* emphasised. In
2022 the Congressional Record of to-
day will be an Invnluabte repository of
fact* bearing upon all phases of Ufa
as It Is now lived.
w
’ The Marshall Morning News
a newspaper published every day except Monday la the
Motel Marshall building, Marshall, Texas. Phone 993.
aOMER M. PRICE —Publisher
HUGH LANE Advertising Manager
BENJAMIN WOODALL. Circulation Manager
WILLIAM JASPER Telegraph Editor
SUBSCRIPTION'RATES
Per month, by carrier--------------------------80.50
Per month, by mail — —-------- .40
Per year, by carrier 5,00
“Enteied as second-clast matter September 7, 1919,
at the post office at Marshall, Texaa, under the Act of
March 3rd, 1897.“
MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ne Associated Preaa is exclusively entitled to the use
for republication of all news dispatches credited to it, or
not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local
newt published herein.
general. Accept only “Bayer” pack-!
ages which contain* proper direc-!
tions. Handy boxes of twelve tab-1
lets cost few cents. Druggist* also
sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is
the trade mark of Bayer Manufac-
ture of Monoaceticacidester of Sal-
icylic acid.
Insulated ghovcL
Where laborers are at work on an
electric railway of the third-track
class there Is always danger If ordi-
nary tools are employed, for the
touching of the third rail with a pick,
shore! or crowbar may lead to fatal
results. There was patented some
time ago a tool which 1* Insulated
for the purpose of protecting the work-
men on electric railways. In the case
ot the usual shovel there Is placed an
Insulating sleeve over the metallic
handle so that there is no possibility
of grounding the current through the ,
workman should the tool come Into sc- I
cldcntal contort with the “live" rail.
Furthermore, there is made use of an
Insulating material of aome distinct
color, which Is an additional precau-
tion.
JI®
r »
Not long since a local newspaper made note
of the arrival of a thousand mail order house
catalogs to be distributed in this locality.
It deserved more attention than it received.
Not because a thousand catalogs is a very big
item in a distribution center like Marshall but
because it means a lot of money is going to some
other city.
The man who trades at home keeps his money
in circulation here and runs chances of getting it
back some day in return for service rendered. He
who spends his cash in another city deprives
somebody in his home town of employment, cuts
down the volume of business on which the pros-
perity of the community depends and depletes our
supply^? ready money.
When a Marshall man has $20 and spends half
of it here, Marshall still has that $20 in cash.
When he sends half of it away, Marshall loses prescribed by physicians over twenty-,
$10. That means if everybody did this the man
who first had $20 would not likely be able to ac-
RJST KBPS— m «** *
aswvil u w as* V- v v-a 113tA X L CSX X VX S V X X wZ Vv c«X LX«
and this is equally true in every phase of life. It en0u8h. . There are a few of our readers who read
matters not what your vocation may be or part
played in the work, the same loyalty is expected
and demanded. The call comes to the laborer with
the same insistence as to the executive.
In the home life, loyalty is the sesame which
opens and keeps wide the door to happiness and
contentment. It assures the cementing of love
and affection of parents with each other and with t0 think we d°. but we “k the indulgence of many
their children.
Imagine what would happen if the employee
of a bank, its cashier or file clerk, were to be
responsible for the circulation of a report that the
institution was short of cash or otherwise in
trouble, or of a clerk in a mercantile establish-
ment telling customers that their prices were
in excess of what should be charged or that lack
of funds was handicapping his employer. The
result would be instant dismissal. He would be
told to get out and stay out.
And so we come to Marshall. Your town, the
home of your family and friends, of your busi-
ness and employer. The home that is truly en-
titled to your loyalty. Are you absolutely loyal
to the city, its churches, schools, organizations
and agencies for the moral and physical better-
ment of its people and business establishments?
You may knock, be disloyal without having meted
out to you the fate of the unfaithful employee.
You will not be dismissed or told to get out and
gtay out, but you will receive the righteous con-
demnation of the good citizens. You will be de-
nied that by them which should be of greater
value than gold; their approval and praise.
Let loyalty be your watchwonj. Disloyalty
is dishonor.
piece, 1-pound
Certified Luncheon Meat, very
flee, 1-pound 85*
I will give to the first 25 ladle* that
come to my store Saturday morning
one box Breakfast Bacon FREE. Doer
opens at seven o’clock.
Sliced Baked Ham and Boiled Ham
for everybody
—2 Trucks —2 Phone*
—NUF BED-
FRANK E. WOOD
THE GROCER
160---Phones---161
YOU TELL ’EM
We SeD ’Em!
Saturday, May 26th
ONE DAY ONLY
WILSON CERTIFIED MEAT
Fancy Sagar Cured Hams, lb..... 25c
Fancy Certified Breakfast Bacon
1-pound box ,....45c
Certified Pure Hog Lard,
5-pound bucket
Certified Breakfast Bacon, by
The Morning News published recently a dis-
patch that the boll weevil has appeared in the cot-
ton fields of India. Human nature is so weak
that it is doubtful if this piece of information is
not received (secretly at least) with a certain de-
gree of satisfaction by practically every citizen of
the South. India has been raising more and more
cotton every year and since the boll weevil struck
, •. — , .. Southern States of America, has become a
L ?ffor^ lhe dan»erous competitor. The Indian government is
• claiming that the weevil has been shipped from
’ the United States in cotton seed. The charge is
' made (covertly) that this country was not care-
i ful to see that the seed were not infested. And
ijthere may be truth in the charge.
Unless you see the name “Bayer”
on package or on tablets you are not
■ getting the genuine Bayer product
two years and proved safe by mil-
lions for colds, heedaches, tooth- J
ache, earache, neuralgia, lumbago,
cumulate more than $10, because there would be rheumatism, neuritis, and for pain in I
only half as much money as previously in his home
toWn. Every dollar sent away makes Marshal!
poorer. Every dollar kept working at home makes
us that much richer.
The salaried man would think it hard if his
employer discharged him and hired a man in an-
other city to do his work. The wage earner would
be sore indeed if the railroads or other industries
brought outside men to Marshall to do the work
of the town and then sent them back home with
their wages at the end of the week. So the mer-
chant has a right to feel injured when the shop-
per goes elsewhere. If the city as a whole pros-
pers we all prosper; if it is damaged in any way
all of us are hurt. The thousand catalogs ought
not to take its toll of money out of this town
this spring.
.... -,r..
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 216, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 23, 1923, newspaper, May 23, 1923; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1407122/m1/4/?q=waco+tornado: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .