The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 272, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 26, 1922 Page: 3 of 8
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July 26, 1922
HRE-AND FIRES
in
% •
Md
Hot Days
BTeA
are
urrived at.
loss alone and this amount does not
e
I
They an GOOD!
We are, of eourse, a people Ng
Solid Growth
"Present conditions on some of the
and children are made
Your
rs.
These illustrations are only five in
should be refused the privilege of
zen
THE CITIZENS STATE BANK
A
93
HERRICK
ALMOST
ICE BOXES
ground have been rented by those j representatives and attend the confer-
who will camp there during the meet-j ence. Among those invited were:
ing. * Frank Kell, of Wichita Falls, director
All Herrick
Ice Boxes
LaeI)
LOCAN & WHALEY
8
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=
—
2
CARD OF THANKS, i
YELLOW CAB---Meet All Trains
Meet AU Trains
SOMETHING NEW
ELBERTA PEACHES.
YELLOW CAB
Phone 68
rte
tery.
The News Want Ada for Resuita.
I
F
-j*
ns
ggK52
2:
SCOTTSVILLE
CAMP MEETING
Keep Cool
These
building and printing trades before
Dallas declared for the open shop and
took the stand that no American citi-
men, women
homeless.
RAILWAY STRIKE
BECOMES CHIEF
CONSIDERATION
When one considers that some little
careless act was responsible in all
probability for all of these disasters
I have named with the exception of
the Moscow fire, which was a delib-
erate act of military necessity and the
San Francisco disaster, which was no
doubt an act of God, one cannot help
but feel the immediate necessity of
strict preventive measures toward the
control of fire.
are
are
Une the Morning Hews Clasaifled
Colamn for boat resulta.
French hemstitching
neatly and promptly
done, any width desired.
Phone 445.
7-26p SINGER SHOP.
4
sce
$165,000,000 in property damage. Chi-
cago suffered again this year in the
loaa by fire of the now famous "fire-
proof" Burlington Building on March
15th—the worst conflagration the
city has known since 1871. Loss: $8,-
000,000.
In May, 1851. 2,500 housese were
burned in San Francisco with a loss
upwards of $10,000,000. In June of
the same year another fire occurred
in which 500 buildings were destroy-
»
g r ■'
injury!’ ”
All of the open shop cities of Texas,
the Texas Chamber of Commerce, the
East and West Texas Chambers of
Commerce and prominent citizens from
over the state were invited to send
But since the inauguration of the
open shop with its American principles
of employment, Dallas has gone for-
ward and our craftsmen and their
families have been detter off than
ever before.
“If you want the open shop to con-
tinue in Dallas and elsewhere, you
will have to give it at all times your
personal and whole-hearted support.
If you want the railroad systems of
Texas to continue their normal oper-
ation in the interest f the public wel-
fare, you will have to use your in-
fluence to prevent lawless interfer-
ence with their operation. Both these
problems can be solved by proper ap-
plication of one of the fundamental
There are none better made. Call before
they are gone.
TELEPHONE
CALL !
is our self-starter )
Johnson Transfer Co.
Baggage, Too
Vw
4
s e
-
WE WILL SELL AT COST AS LONG AS
THEY LAST
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Tex-
as; E. A. Holmgreen, president, San
Antonio Open Shop association, and
Sidney Cornelius, secretary of the
same body; L. J. Black, Beaumont; J.
A. Phillips, Greenville; C. B. Dorches-
ter, Sherman, and T. B. Bryan, Paris.
Polar Club Electric
Fans
8
d
-
k
ed with a further loss of $3,000,000 versy have become such a menace to
On April 18, 1906, San Francisco was the public welfare that they compel
again visited with death and devasta- the earnest attention of thoughtful
tion in the greatest fire known to the citizens.
endangered, thousands of lives
lost and tens of thousands of
K.IWADARE
E.=,m ■.,
esi -
Made to operate on either
110 volt A. C. or 4
D. C. current____UU
The American fire loss last year ba borne in mind that when a home
; amounted to three hundred and four
or a factory or a forest is burned its
value in the wealth of the land is de-
wrisons
state-
Directors:
E. Key
E. J. Fry
Chas. Cobb, Jr.
O. M. Heartsill
W. T. Twyman
J. F. Womack
Jesse I. Carter
occur and there are no known means
N23
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_8
€\8VI
Bemera
___________________________________________________1
Yellow Cab—Phone 68
Meter rates 80 cents first mile, 10 cents each additional one-half mile.
15 cents each passenger over two passengers.
Pay Only Miles You Ride
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 customers to grow solidly.
They’re small but they sure
make these hot days “cool
ones”.......
stroyed and its power for good is for-
ever test it cannot be replaced.
SOMEONE loses ths amount of the
value of the thing destroyed, and we,
collectively, as owners-in-fact of this
potentiany wealthy country of ours,
are just so much the poorer notwith-
standing the fact that some insurance
company may have reimbursed the in-
dividual owner to the amount of th
loss.
Nor must it be forgotten that as
the result of fires thousands of lives
Auertahenyzaha "‘"2
smmamnduzronm.
—to build for permanence.
K
K
TRUNKS DELIVERED
Meter rates 2.entafirsomileoforemmtruskedntssetenrnchnadditional ot
history of man. It is of so recent a
LETTER SERVICE
Typing and Rotospeed Printing
LILIAN BELL
STENOGRAPHIC
SHOP
Over Mareus-Kariel Phone 205
l IL . f millions of dollars. Three edollars
It is net the intent of the writer per capita! Three dollars for every
to dwell too long on the mass of Sta-! man, woman and child in the Union,
tisties which must necessarily be re- Three hundred miions is a sum so
viewed in. order that satisfactory eon- staggering that we can scarcely com.
dusiona and deductions regardirg fire1 prebend it. But this amount is the
losses and fire insurance rates may bo amount of the improved property
land on 400 different streets end
lanes, loos: Six people killed; $55,-
000,000 property damage.
May 5th, 1842, in Hamburg, Ger-
many. a tire started that raged for
IM hours. During the fire the city
was in a state of anarchy; 4219
buildings, including 2,000 dwellings,
were destroyed. One fifth of the
population was made homeless, 100
lives were lost and the property less
amounted to over $30,000,000.
In 1812 the Russians fired the city
of Moscow to drive out the invading
. army of Napoleon. Nine-tenths of the
• city was destroyed, 30,800 houses
were burned with a property loss of
$150,000,000.
i October 9, 1871, Chicago wu^
। strayed in the fire said to have Men
, caused by a widow’s cow kicking over
a lantern. Many lives were lest and
several hospitals, bridges
and many public building
ly edifices dovpying 486 acres of
He will, however, as occasion may j include losses from damage to for
demand, quote from the wealth of ests by forest fires nor to growing
data which comes readily to hand, crops.
in order to bring with the greatest Enough standing timber is destroy,
possibie force to the attention of the’ed annually to build one hundred
thoughtful and conservative men and; thousand five-room homes enough to
women of this community, the perti- house a half million persons. Every
nent facta about that invaluable ser-
Matt Cramer
LaWxEE
one 9zramdamsizut P
GeeiFetimancomkta
Tomorrow marks the first day cf
the annual ten-day camp meeting that
is held at old Scottsville Camp. Al-
yeady most of the houses on the camp
The beautiful park and cemetery ,
surrounding the camp ground is visit ■ .
ed daily by tourists and by those who
want to take a run out from Mar-
shall to some beautiful, cool spot in ,
the country. Cool benches under gi-
gantic oaks; driveways, a well kept
park filled with neatly trimmed trees
and fine flowers; a tiny lake covered
>with golden-centered, big white flow-
ers and lily pads; these things have
a lure that draws people to them ev-
ery day, and on Sundays many go.
There is a rustic, vine-grown church,
too, that often causes people to ex-
claim, “the prettiest thing I ever
saw.”
It is in these surroundings, eight
miles from Marshall, that the Scotts-
ville Camp Meeting is held.
1 And it is here that preachers who
have power and feeling and spiritual-
ity and intellectuality come. Those
who have heard Bob Young and John-
son know what to expect in them,
and they will not be disappointed in
the other preacher and the song lead-
er. Johnson Las the Bible in his head
in books, capters, verses and sen-
| tences. He can tell you exactly where
to find any bit of Scripture in the
Bible.
I Jitney service will be provided at
| convenient hours and it will be com-
paratively easy to go to and from the
meeting.
loaa even such aa this. But it must
This is the weak to do canning and
preserving, $2.50 per bulbil John
Fox, just east of Seottsville ceme-
cu
4*M.'
It is needless to state that NO fire. „00U,
loss is NECESSARY But fires WILL I dolla
articles will well remember it Loss: which formerly existed in our local
$360,000,000—over a third of a billion
7 —....... ~
frenzy and devours a whole eity in
forty hours.
On Sept 22, 1666, the “Great Fire”
ouned in the ety of London. It
began in a wooden house in Pudding
Lans and burned for three days, eon
suming 13,200 houses, 86 churches.
Dallas, Texas, July 254The pres-
ent railway strike and conditions re-
sulting from the strike were the chief
considerations before the stae-wide
conference of business men called by
the Dallas Champer of Commerce,
which opened here this noon. Fran
M. Smith, president of the (Chamber
of Commerce, opened the meeting with
a short talk on tee purpose to the
meeting. He said in part:
“Today we face a serious test of
our patriotism as American citizens,
not the patriotism of war, but the
patrotism of peace. la our demo-
cratic country the public welfare must
be considered above the interests of
any individual, any business institu-
tions, or any particular group at
citizens. "
"During times of stress it is right
that a public opinion should be ex-
pressede and made known to the of-
ficials elected by the people as their
agents to enforce the laws of the land
' and give protection to all citizens in
their constitutional rights to peace-
ably engage in labor without fear of
1 interference or injury.
I "This meeting was not called for the
' purpose of trying to help settle the
I present railroad controversy. How-
ever, certain aspects of this contro-
- - I didn't happen to belong to a certain
two hundred and fifty years, their । social, religious or labor organization,
losses reach the awe-inspiring total - ‘
of three quarters of a billion dollars'
STOP THAT ITCHING
Use the reliable Blue Star
Remedy for all skin diseases such
as: Itch, Eczema, Tetter, Ring-
worm, Poison Oak, Prickly Heat,
Cracked Hands, Old Sores and
sores on children. Sold on a guar-
antee by
Matthewson Drug Co.
— .----- year forest fires burn an area equiv-
vast of mankind, fire, who, hydra- alent to a strip ten miles wide reach-
headed like the animal of the fable, ing from New York City to Denver,
turns now and then and devours its an area more than eight times ths
I wish to than kthe voters of Harri-
son county for their support in my
race for Assessor, especially the la-
dies and if elected in the run-off with
my opponent I will, with your coop-
eration, do my sworn duty to the best
of my ability and will appreciate the
votes of those who voted against me
for their favorite on the 22nd.
TOM C. ROSBOROUGH.
conflagrations.
It might be well to review here a
few of the notable fires that history
records. In so doing bear* in mind
the truth of the old adage. “Big oaks
from little acorns grow.” The only
striking difference in the similarity
of the oak and the fire is that an
will often spend forty years in grow-
ing to maturity, while the fire, grow-
ing from a flame as small as the
acorn, whips itself into a fiendish
l principles of American citizenship—
R ‘Protection of the right to work with-
L out fear of interference or personal
LOUIE PATTON
Plumbing and Gas Fittin
Phone 849-. 8C8 E. Rusk
mmmumumum
maater. lacreage of the French fotests dam-
One who is in a position to see and . aged or destroyed during the four
learn of the immensity of the annual years of the World War.
loss by fire to the public at large is We are, ot course, a peopie big
surprised and appalled at Ra enot- enough and rich enough to withstand
mous size.
Are you using PRIDE
OF MARSHALL Cof-
fee? It pleases others;
it will please you. Roast-
ed fresh every day.
Huntsberger Coffee Co.
Phone 609. 907 East
Houston Ave. 16-tf
1 A---------
-33
d: i 2
*5,33*9 ’
mer 2‛d 1
date that all of the readers of this? railroads are similar to conditions
K. Iwadare, managing director of
the Nippon Electric Company, Limited,
of Tokyo, who in 1896, with H. B.
Thayer, at that time general mana-
ger of the Western Electric company,
and now president of ths American
Telephone and Telegraph company,
formed the first joint stock enterprise
in Japan in which foreign capital was
invested. Mr. Iwadare has returned
to the United States after an abeence
of 16 years, to study ths latest devel-
opmonte In the American electrical
industry.
whereby they can be wholly eliminat: number. Although they do not repre- ...____________e_______
ed. And it is to be regretted that . sent more than a few per cent, per- working in our community because he
thoughtlessness, carelessness and of- ] haps, of the fire disasters of the last
times gross negligence are the causes *— —— — d —• r**" -—■ thei
1 of a large fraction of our fires and
Phone 68
~s,n. bcts A
HERRICK
DF AtR 55TEM
RE FRIG EH ATOR
DR. IDA G. T. HAGESTAD
Osteopathic Physician
Mareus-Kariel Bldg.
9 to 12------Hoare------1 to 1
PHONE 1339
IM". .
”-0i J - pn
(rem ®
W geeah •
13 . • ■
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78 : P,
Ak N
ga X —-h
J. T. LACY, Insurance
Life, Aceident, Health, Fire and
Automobile Insurance
Fidelity and Surety Bonds
CITY HALL PHONE 421
A Good Suggestion.
"When I write a story.” said the
struggling young author. "I make out
a list of magazines to send it to, and
I usually get mighty doos to the end
before I sell it.’ "If that's the case,"
returned the practical man. “why in
the world don’t you begin at the other
•ml of the listr Boston Tranecript
r Aj
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 272, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 26, 1922, newspaper, July 26, 1922; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1411312/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .